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THE DULUTH HERALD
VOLUME XXIX— NO. 6.
SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 16, 1911.
PUBUC BONDS ISSUED
IN MINNESOTA TO BE
EXEMPT FROM TAXES
RUMOR SAYS DEUTH
MAN WILL WIN MRS.
BELMONT AS BRIDE
Important Senate Measure
Has Been Passed By
the House.
W31 Encourage Local Bond
Buyers \% Take Minne-
sota Securities.
Slate-Wide Primary Bill Now
Special Order in the
House.
(By a Staff Correspondent.)
St. Paul, Minn.. April 15. — tSpecial to
The Herald.) — Under a senate Wll by
Senator Carl L. "Wallace of Minneapo-
lis, which the house passed this morn-
ing. all public bonds hereafter issued
In this state, whether they are bonds
of the state or of any of Its subdi-
visions, will be exempt from taxation.
It does not apply to bonds now out-
etanding'. The hou.se adopted a sllg'.it
amendment necessitating the return of
th© bill to the senate, but it will reach
the governor for his signature before
the close of the session.
This is considered to be a very Im-
portant measure. In that it will en-
courage local purchasers of bonds to
select Minnesota securities. It will
also work to keep Interest on bonus
within the state instead of sending
It abroad, and it will enable the com-
munities issuing bonds to dispose of
them at better flgure.s than is possible
now when bonds are subject to taxa-
tion.
Representative J. N. Johnson of Can-
by opposed the bill because he feared
it concealed some advantage to the
cities at the expense of the state, but
it was adopted by the house, 75 to iiO.
« • •
The house also passed the following
bills:
By Senator Klein — Requiring rail-
Dr. John Jackola May Marry
Millionaire Widow of
New YorL
AHACKS ON AGUA PRIE
JUAREZ IMMINENT; RESIDENTS
OF AMERICAN CITIES IN DANGER
a^k^ «^>A^^^«^l^
WEALTHY NEW YORK WIDOW AND
DULUTHIAN WHO WOULD WED HER
^^^^^^t^t^
New York Paper Broadly
Hiots That It k All
Settled.
(Continued on page 16, sixth column.;
WINE GROWERS
AGAIN RIOTING
Mob Attacks Houses of Mer-
chants and Takes Fur-
niture for Barricades.
Epernay, Department of Marne,
France, April 15. — Following a day of
calm, violent rioting again occurred
late last night in the disturbed cham-
pagne region. At Trepail, a mob of
wine growers sacked the houses of two
wine merchants and destroyed the fur-
niture, with which they erected barri-
cades in the streets. Troops sent to
quell the disturbance were greeted
with a shower of broken bottles, but the
soldiers, charging with their sabers in
the air. dispersed the rioters.
RETIREMENT OF
HILL REGRETTED
Relations of Ambassador and
Emperor Always Very
Friendly.
Berlin, April la. — The retirement
from the German capital of Dr. David
Jayne Hill, whose resignation as am-
bassador of the United States to Ger-
many, it was announced yesterday,
will become effective July 1. is re-
gr«^-tted at the foreign office, where
the relations between the govern-
ment officials and Dr. Hill have been
of the very best. It is felt here that
Dr. Hill's tenure of the embassy has
done much to further German- Ameri-
can friendship.
The ambassador's resignation ap-
parently did not come wholly as a
surprise, though no official expres-
sion of his Intention to abandon the
diplomatic service had been received
at the foreign office before Dr. Hill
left Berlin on March 10 for America.
Particular attention is called in offi-
cial circles to the fact that the re-
lations between Emperor William and
the American ambassador are most
cordial. ^ ^ ^ *i. *
American rumors to the efcect that
Heinrich von Bernstorff, the German
ambassador at Washington, was
simultaneously resigning, which re-
ports, it was thought, might give po-
litical significance to Dr. Hill's re-
tirement, were promptly and eni-
phatically denied at the foreign ol-
The date upon which Ambassador
Hill's resignation becomes effective
will enable him to participate in the
reception which is beln^ planned for
the visiting American warships dur-
ine Kiel week, and which promises to
be one of the most important demon-
strations of the German-American
good relations In recent years. Ac-
cording to the itinerary of the pro-
posed cruise of the Second division of
the American Atlantic fleet to the
Baltic, the American ships will be at
Kiel from June 22 until June 30.
The Wilhelmshaven squadron of the
German fleet, comprising the most
modern battleships of the German
navv. will be at Kiel from June 18
until June 25, but it is possible that
the Wilhelmshaven squadron will be
detained at Kiel until June 30 in or-
der to welcome the visiting Ameri-
cans.
IVER J. LEE.
Representative From Pope County.
ROOSEVELT
AT ^PAUL
Former President Addresses
Members of Minnesota
Legislature.
Advocates the Enactment of
Progressive Reform
Legislation.
J. O. RUSTAD,
Representative From Fillmore County
FOUR DROWNED
IN A CESSPOOL
Father, Son and Two Friends
Lose Lives at Corona,
ID.
Corona, 111., April 15.— Father, son
and two friends were drowned in a
cesspool here today. The son, an Ital-
ian laborer in trying to clean the pool,
was suffocated by gas and sank into
six feet of water at the bottom. The
father. In grappling for him while
he was struggling, was also over-
come and pitched forward into the
pool. The other ' laborers who at-
tempted to rescue the first two were
similarly dazed and drowned.
<By ■ Slalf Corr*Mpondent.)
St. Paul, Minn., April 15.— (Speci&l
to The Herald.) — Col. Theodore Roose-
velt got a cordial reception last even-
ing at the hands of the Minnesota leg-
islature and of as large a section of
its friends and of the population of
St. Paul and Minneapolis as could
crowd into the house chamber.
Also. Col. Roosevelt, as is his habit,
talked straight out and fearlessly on
many matters of wide public interest
now pending before the legislature.
After his reception by a committee
of the legislature, headed by Governor
Eberhart, Lieutenant Governor Gordon
and Speaker Dunn, and dinner at the
St. Paul. Col. Roosevelt went to the
capltul, where a crowd large enough
to fill the house chamber had gathered
inside, and a vastly larger one, doomed
to disappointment, had gathered out-
side the doors. His entrance was the
signal for an . outburst of cheers and
W AITE ON DISTRICT BENCH.
Takes Place Created By Legislature
in Hennepin County Court.
St. Paul, Minn.. April 15. — Judge E.
F. Waite of the Minneapolis municipal
court was appointed by Governor
Eberhart yesterday to the district
bench, to fill the extra place made by
recent legislation. Judge Waite will
devote his time largely to juvenile
court work.
Edmund A. Montgomery, a Minne-
apolis attorney, was appointed by the
governor to fill the place in the mu-
nicipal court left vacant by Judge
Waite.
Dr. Jackola WiU Not Deny
It When Questioned
By Reporter.
Is Dr. John Jackola of Duluth about '
to win Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont as a
bride?
The New York Am*-ri\'an says that
he Is, and In an issue of that paper
received in Duluth today, there is a
lively story which broadly hints that
the engagement is alerady an estab-
lished fact.
Mrs. Belmont Is the widow of the
late Oliver H. P. Belmont,- -the New
York traction magnate, who left his
widow a fortune of many millions,
when he died in 1908. Mr. Belmont
was her second husband as she was
the former wife of William K. Van-
derbilt. Dr. Jackola 1« a prominent
physician of Duluth. He left this city
last January to attend some special
clinics In Berlin, and since his return
to this country a few weeks ago, has
been lecturing in the EaJ«t, speaking
before the Vassar students and before
a number of women's clubs. He has
spoken a number of thnes before the
women? clubs of Duluth and was
forced to break an engagement with
the Twentieth Century olub to take his
trip abroad. He Is very well known
In Duluth, and the following report
from the New York American will be
read with much Interest here:
•■Even in suffrage circles, where ro-
mance is erroneously presumed to abide
but fllttingly, the dlKni?^" t»"t Intense
admiration of Dr. John Jackola. famous
Finnish advocate of woruaii suffrage,
for Mrs. Oliver H. P. Belmont, the
wealthiest and one oX th«. most ardent
promoters of the cause In -America, has
begun to cause interested tomnient.
•*Dr Jackola has been a._ 'Enthusiastic
supporter of Mrs. Beimel's ideas and
ideals for the last two Iftl '.^^^JL^*?
not until last Saturday thr -. the hint of
heart interest on his part developed.
On that afternoon a reporter for the
American saw Dr. Ja< kola at Mrs. Bel-
mont's place In Hempstea , L. I. There
was to be a suffrage me»;ting in the
great garage in the ev.'ilng, and it
was supposed that the docior was there
simply because he was to address the
meeting. . , .
IVot Tbrre for Public Addresa.
"He didnt address It, though. In-
stead he was the principal figure at the
Joint meeting of the William Lloyd
Garrison Equal Rights association and
the Nineteenth Assembly District Wom-
an Suffrage club In the Master Music
Studios, at Broadway an<i One Hundred
and Eighth street, Manhattan. He was
overheard making arrangements to
speak before the Woman Suffrage
Federak Are Advancing on
Former Town With Ma-
chine Guns.
Both Rebels and Federals
Are Racing Toward
Cuidad Juarez.
American Troops Wifl Stop
Fighting If Americans
Are Menaced.
(Continued on page 16, •! .th column.;
-''«)!> rife'li'.i'il I'V (jcurgc <ii:iiiilum Hain.
MRS. O. H. P. BELMONT.
WANDERS ABOUT
WITH $200,000
Dr. Halsey J. Howe Picked
Up By Pofice of
Cleveland
Cleveland, Ohio, April 15. — The eld-
erly man found by the police last night
while wandering about the streets wltli '
1200,000 worth of securities and valu-
able jewelry' in his possession, today
was identified as Dr. Halsey J. Howe,
a retired <K-ntlst of 69 East Third
street. Dunkirk. N. Y. J. M. Connors,
a former resident of Dunkirk, made
the identification.
Dr. Howe, until today, imagined that
he was In Pittsburg. Pa. He told the
police that when found last night he
was hunting for the home of a friend,
Frank Miller, oh High street of that
city.
Investigation of a tin box which Dr.
Howe carried, revealed, in addition to
the securities, a bankbook showing
that he made a deposit of $21,198 in
the First National bank at Jefferson
City, Mo., in March.
DR. JOHN JACKOl-A.
inIavotof
REClPR(XCrrY
First Speech m Debate Made
By Representative
Kitchin.
Believed Bill Will Pass the
House By Laige
Majority.
Agua Prleta, Mex.. April 15.— With
an attack momentarily expected on the
1,000 insurreetos now holding Agua
Prleta, residents of Douglas, fearful of
a repetition of the occurrences attend-
ant on the battle Wednesday, when
Douglas was bullet swept and two
Americans killed and eleven wounded
In the city, pin their faith to the abil-
ity of Capt. Julian E. Gaujot and his
100 troopers of the First cavalry to
compel the federals to attack from a
direction that will place Douglas out
of tlie line of fire.
The rebel commanders last night
agreed to do their share in protecting
the American city, of which Agua
i'rleta is practically a part, but point-
ed out that if the federals attack from
the south, shots would be certain to
enter Douglas. As the attacking force
carries several machine guns, loss In
Douglas In this event would be heavy.
The federals will be Informed by
Capt. Gaujot that they must fire from
such a position that no bullets fall
upon American territory and that in
case either side fires across the line,
the United States cavalry will be used
to stop the fighting. This is taken
here to mean that Capt. Gaujot has re-
ceived orders to use strong measures
to protect ilves and proj)eity of Amer-
icans should either side fire into Doug-
las.
Capt Gaujot, on the other hand, will
take .steps to prevent Americans from
standing on the boundary iu case of an
Douglas Is crowded with Americans
who have come in from all points of
the Southwest.
4dvaiiclB|K OB Juares.
El Paso, Tex., April 15. — Witn Col.
Antonio I2oba0o at (lie Kr-Acl ytt lb
federal cavalry force said to number
from 600 to 1,500 reported advanoins
from Chihuahua the Insurreetos ad-
vancing on Juarez and the garrison In
that city making every preparation for
defense, civilian Juarez today is await-
tContinued on page IS, fourth column.)
CANADA'S BIGGEST
FURNACE STARTED
Lake Superior Corporation at
Canadian Soo Starts Up-
to-Date Plant
Sault .Ste. Marie, Ont., April 15. —
(Special to The Herald.) — The largest
blast furnace in Canada commenced
operations this morning at the steel
plant here of the Lake Superior cor-
poration. It Is also the only blast
furnace in Canada blown by a gas
driven blowing engine. This is a new
departure by which the furnace uses
the gas generated within it. It was
lighted by Miss Ruth McDonald and is
in charge of Supt. R. H. Watson. Mor*
than a year was occupied in construct-
ing it.
BELIEVED TO BE
TRAIN ROBBER
Bellefontaine, Ohio, April 15. — Tim-
othy jMcCoy. arrested here last night
by Big Four detectives, is believed to
be the lone bandit who two weeks ago.
held up the pa.ssengers on the Big
Four Express Train No. 27 at Muncie.
Ind.. and took their jewelry and money.
The conductor of the train says Mc-
Coy answers the description of the
robber. The Muncie. Ind., chief of
police arrived here today and claims
McCoy is the man for whom the police
of two states have been searching.
TO MAKE THREE SPEECHES.
President Taft Accepts Invitations
for Middle of May.
Washington. April 15. — President
Taft has accepted the invitation of St.
John's lodge of Masons of Newark. N.
J to attend a dinner on the night of
the 150th anniversary of the lodge, on
May 13. From Newark the president
will go to New York, where he will
speak the same night on the subject
of criminal law at a dinner, to be
given by the Prison association, the
New York Bar association, and the
Academy of Political Science. The
president will spend the night in New
York and the next day will go to Har-
risburg. Pa., to address the conven-
tion of the Brotherhood of Railroad
Trainmen.
I tHD OF LENT. i
1 Fkhing season is open for "OM Nick.** J
W^ashlngton, April 15. — The reci-
procity Dill. embodying President
Taft's tariff compact with Canada and
differing In no essential cetalls from
the McCall bill, passed bj the house
last session, was taken up In the house
today. For three days, it is expected
to hold the attention of that body. At
the end of that time Denocrats and
Republicans are expected to join In
passing It by a large majority.
The debate on the measure was be-
gun by Representative Claude Kitchin
of North Carolina. In an hour's ad-
dress beginning with a review of
Democratic pledges and ptjrformances,
he declared that the Canadian reci-
procity bill was the first riove toward
a downward revision of the tariff.
"A united Democracy gives thanks
to President Taft for calling this ex-
tra session of congress," said Mr.
Kitchin. "granting an op))ortunity to
Democrats to quicken the fulfillment
of their pledges to the piiople. How
well they have embraced the oppor-
tunities thus far, the records of the
last ten days will show."
Mr. Kitchin declared the Democratic
house had done more In tho two weeks
of the present resslon than Republican
congresses had accomplished In ten
years. He referred to the passage of
a resolution for direct election of
United States senators; economy in
house management; election of the
committees of the house; passage of a
bill for pre-election publicity of cam-
paign funds and the takin j up of tar-
iff revision.
Affects all MongollaB*.
Washington, April 15. — Animmi-
(Continued on page 16, sixth column.)
chinaIorrows
fifty miluons
American Fmancicrs Sign
Papers at Pekiii for
Big Loan.
Pekln. April 15.— The »5'),000.000 loan
to China by a group of An erlcan finan-
ciers, negotiations for whl:h have been
going on for some time, was signed
here today.
The loan of >50.000.000
in furthering currency
other interests of the Ch
The loan was first proj
American enterprise pur.
originally sought by the
political purposes.
An Imperial edict Issuec
authorized the loan from
American financiers, who
a bond issue to cover th
The bonds were to mat
forty to forty-five years 1
and to bear 5 per cent In
a suggestion was made tc
pean capital to take pari
and after negotiations co\
months, an agreement
providing that four bank!
the United States, Kngls
and France, should parth
In the loan and that the
viser to the government
to the use of the loan
from a neutral European
The banking houses c
the Morgan, the Hongkon
Banking company, the L^
China, and the Deutsche
bank.
will be used
-eforms and
nese empire,
ected as an
;ly and was
Chinese for
1 Oct. 29 last
a group of
were to take
s loan at 95.
ure in from
rom Issuance
lerest. Later
allow Euro-
In the loan,
ering several
was reached
ng groups of
nd, Germany
•ipate equally
financial ad-
wlth regard
should come
state.
oncerned are
g & Shanghai
ank of Indo-
K&Bt Asiatic
(Continued on page 16, fifth column.)
TAFT WUTmAKE
WEEK-END TRIPS
Expects to Spend Sundays at
Summer Home if Con-
gress Continues.
Washington, April 15.— If congress
remains in session through the hot
weather President Taft probably will
become a pronounced week-end com-
muter, journeying from Washington to
Boston and Beverly whenever he gets
an opportunity. The president hopes
to get some sort of a vacation in nis
new cottage near Beverly if he has to
take It a few days at a time.
Mrs Taft will go to Beverly late in
June, according to present plans. After
Mrs. Taft and the Taft children open
the cottage the president Is expected
to begin his week-end trips. From
here to Beverly is only a little more
than a twelve-hour trip and the presi-
dent, by leaving Friday nights, can
have two full days' vacation and still
be back at hia desk in the White House
on Mondays.
hondurans will
probably get loan
Treaty WiH Be Taken Up
By Senate When It
Reconvenes.
Washington, April 15.— The Honduras
loan treaty which was reported to the
senate last session will be referred
back to the committee on foreign re-
lations when the senate next meets in
executive session. This action will not
be taken because of opposition to the
measure, but on the ground that there
are to be a number of changes in the
personnel of the committee, and friend*
of the measure feel that new members
should be given an opportunity to study
the convention before it Is called up for
ratification.
Chairman Cullom of the foreign re-
lations committee Is of the opinion
that the treaty will be ratified at the
present session. It was held up last
session because some of the members
of the senate wanted to satisfy them-
selves that It would not confer special
advantage upon the banking group
composed of J. P. Morgan & Co.. Kuhn-
L^Tb & Co.. the National City bank and
the First National Bank of New \ ork.
which group would finance the Central
Amerlcin republic. On this phase of
the question a full statement has been
made by Secretary of State Knox, and
this Is on file with the coraniittee.
The convention resulted from the ef-
forts of Honduras to extricate Itself
from national insolvency and provide
for a loan of $7,500,000 on 5 per cent
bonds. Friends of the agreement held
that although the proposed loan was
made possible through the good offices
of the United States, this government
would not be Involved in any flnanci*l
I responsibility.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
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Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 15, 1911.
WILL REPORT
ON UCENSE
Council Committee Has In-
vestigated Alleged Dive
on Lake Avenue.
Mayor Asked for Action-
Railroad Franchise Will
Be Up Again.
The council committee on police and
license will probably report Monday
night on the recommendation of Mayor
Cullum that the saloon license of Dun-
lop & Thatcher at 22S Lake avenue
south be revoked.
The mayor sent a letter to the coun-
cil last uight stating that such action
ought to be aken. His principal
grounds were that the saloon was be-
ing operated in connection with a house
of ill fame run by Minnie Cookman and
Immediate Effect of Great Kid-
ney Remedy Is Soon Realized.
I want to tell you what Dr. Kil-
mer's S%vanip-Root did for me. I was
completely broken down. My kidneys
hurt me so that when I was down, I
couM not get up unless I took hold
of something to pull myself up with.
I would have to urinate five or six
times during the night and It was
full of sediment like brick dust.
I tried different kinds of kidney
pills, but they did me no good. Some-
one told me to try Swamp- Root. I
had no faith in it but to please my
wife, I purchased one bottle and took
it. I saw it was beginning to help
me and kept on taking it until I had
tniTAn six bottles .and it straightened
me out all right.
Swamp-Root is the only medicine
that did me any good. I thought I
would write this letter and tell
everyone that is afflicted as I was. to
take Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. The
six bottles I took cost me five dol-
lars, and did me five hundred dol-
lars Worth of good.
Yours very truly.
GEORGE H. Hl'RER.
Atlanta, 111.
State of Illinois.
Logan County
I. M. M. Hoose.
and for the said
in the State of
by certify, that
known to me
ss.
a Notary Public in
county of Logan.
Illinois, do here-
George H. Huber,
to be the same
person whose nam© is subscribed to
the foregoing instrument, appeared
before me this day in person and
acknowledged that he signed, sealed
and delivered the said instrument as
his free and voluntary act.
Given under my hand and Notarial
Seal this the 12th dav of July A. D.
1909. M. M. HOOSE,
Notary Public.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Blnghnmtou, N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing-
hamton. N. Y., for a sample bottle.
It will convince anyone. You will
also receive a booklet of valuable
information, telling all about the kid-
neys and bladder. When writing, be
sure and mention the Duluth Daily
Herald. Regular fifty-cent and one-
dollar size bottle for sale at all drug
stores.
Pour and five rooms, newly fur-
nished, 815 East Fifth street. Tele-
phone Zenith Grand 466.
«J. B. IVIIDDLECOF-F,
301 AI>Torth Iliilldlng, Duluth.
that an agreement had been made be-
tween her and the saloon keepers to
sell only a certain brand of beer. There
was but one copy of this agreement
and this was kept In the safe of the
brewing comi)any"s local branch office.
The members of the police and license
committee are: Aldermen Hoar. Whar-
ton and Curren.
Tlie proposed amendments to the Ca-
nadian Northern franchise, one of whlcli
will enable the road to place posts in
the middle of Fifty-ninth avenue west,
will probably come up again. The
matter has been discussed several times
and was laid over last Monday night in
order to get a report from the city en-
gineer.
The Monday night meeting Will be
the last at which City Clerk C. S. Pal-
mer will act. He has been filling the
place while State Senator Harry W.
Cheadle ha.s been attending the legisla-
ture at St. Paul. The session will come
to a close ne.vt week and it Is expected
that he will qualify as city clerk di-
rectly he returns to the city. He was
elected at the annual meeting of tlie
council in March. Mr. Palmer has made
a most acceptable city clerk and will
become first deputy after Mr. Cheadle
again assumes the reins.
•
See the Duluth Hardware Co/s
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
JOHNSTAD
SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND.
Learn Gregg. Pitman or Spencerian
.shorthand. Touch typewriting. Day
and evening sessions. School open all
summer. Enroll now. Booklet free.
Centra] Garase BullfllnKt
:{I5 Went Flrnt Street.
Gopher Shoe Works.
The high grade footwear offered by
this store In men's, women's and chil-
dren's shoes for Easter is attracting
much attention. From a small repair
shop a few years ago tills concern, by
pleasing its customers has grown to
be not only the largest repair house in
the Northwest, but has also built up
this year a large retail business in
stylish shoes at riglit prices. The store
and work.s are l9cated at 17 Second
avenue west. A typographical error in
the display advertisement in last night's
paper gave the location on First ave-
nue west.
See the Duluth Hardware Co.'s
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
'00 LATE
TO CLASSIFY
One Cent a Word ESack Insertion. -
No AdvertUement L.eM Tkan IS Centa ,
SUPERFLUIOrS HAIR, MOLE.S,
warts, removed forever. Miss Kelly's
Manicuring and Massaging Parlors,
l."}! West Superior street.
COMBINGS MADE INTO SWITCHES,
and 25 per cent off on all hair goods.
MaiinelTo hair shop. Fidelity block;
next to Freimuth's; take elevator.
^^«^>^>^«^>^^^»^>^^^>^^»»^>»^^^^^^^»^^N^I^>^>^«^>^>^l^l^>^>^»^IJ»»»^^»N#^>^'^^*»*^^^«^^»l
AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE. 4
New 1911 model M, Thomas *■
livers, seven-passenger. Private ^
service a specialty. Both 'piiones ^
694. *
G. W. D.^ZIEL. *.
Solicitor and Operator. f.i
FOR RENT— MAY 1— L.\TE RESI-
dence of M. S. Burrows, 1830 Jefferson
street east; all modern conveniences.
Call for information 205 South Six-
teenth a%enue east.
FOR RENT— STE.\M HEATED SINGLE
room: r^nt dcnlrabl<:>; all conven-
iences and use of 'phone; gentlemen
preferred. Call 201 East Second
street.
Furniture, finishing, paper hanging,
painting and hardwood finishing.
'Phone your orders and I will call
anywliere in city. A. Johnson. Mel.
738; Zelnth, Lincoln 369.
BUY NOW AND ST-ART THAT
clilcken farm you have talked about
so long — ten, fifteen and twenty acres
close to Proctor, at bargain prices.
E. H. Culkins & Co., 510 Palladlo
building.
BIRTHS.
L.\RSON — A daughter was born to Mr.
and Mrs. O. Larson of 3615 Coates
street, April 13.
THOMP.SON — A son was born to Mr.
and Mrs. F. B. ThomjSson of 531 2
East Superior street, .-Vprll 13.
PAF^YN — A son was born to Mr. and
Mrs. A. Palsyn of 732 Twenty-fourth
avenue west, April 13.
I DEATHS AND FUNERALS |
MONUMENTS — Hundreds In stock. P.
N. Peterson Granite Co., 332 E. Sup. St.
DICAIRE— Mrs. Lillle Martha Dicalre,
5S years old, died yesterday morning
at the state hospital at Fergus Falls,
which she entered March 21 last.
Besides her husband, C. G. Dicalre.
412 Lake avenue south, she leaves
one sister, Mrs. A. E. Sherman of
Chippewa Falls, Wis. The body
will be sent to her former home at
Chippewa Falls for interment.
VIOLET — Th» body of James Violet,
51 years of age, who died Thursday
at St. Mary's hospital of injuries re-
ceived by being kicked In the head
by a horse about two months ago.
was ent to his former home at
Cromwell, Minn., last evening for
interment. It was accompanied by
his wife.
DOLSON — The funeral of Joseph Dol-
son, the Northern Pacific railroad
man who died Thursday afternoon,
will take place Monday afternoon at
2 o'clock from Crawford's under-
taking rooms. Interment will be at
Park Hill cemetery. The services
will bo conducted by Rev. J. G.
Leitch. Mr. Dolson was a resident
of Duluth Height.s for twelve years,
and is survived by three children.
They are left alone, as their mother
died .some years ago.
CARD OF THANKS^
WE DESIRE TO THANK OUR .MANY
friends and neighbors for the beau-
tiful ttoral offerings and also the
Modern Woodmen for their kindness
and sympathy shown us during our
late bereavement, the death of our
beloved son, George T. Wilton.
MR. AND MRS. THOM.XS J. WILTON.
WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANY
friends and relatives and Catholic
Order of Forester^ for the beautiful
tloral offerings and kindness shown
us during our late bereavement, the
death of our beloved husband and
father. (Signed)
MltS. FRED BUJOLD AND FAMILY.
BUILDING IpERMITST""^
To A. Berresford, frame cot-
tage, Vinland street and
Portal avenue $ 500
To K. Jones, frame dwelling.
East Second street between
Fourth and Fifth avenues.. 2,000
To P. Ziska. frame dwelling,
New Duluth 400
To D. Stamound, frame cottage.
West Fourth street between
Thirty-seventh and Thirty-
eightli avenues 400
To C. Nelson, frame dwelling,
East Tenth street between
Ninth and Tenth avenues... 1,000
To board of education, school
house. West Fifth street be-
tween Thirty-ninth and For-
tieth avenues 65,000
LUSTER AGAIN PRESIDENT AND
EVA SECRETARY OF CLUB
p-t^t^l^t^t^^N^k
a A. LUSTER.
C. A. Luster was re-elected presi-
dent of the Duluth Commercial club at
the annual meeting of the directors to-
day. Mr. Luster was first elected to
the office ' a year ago.
Other officers elected today are:
First vice president. J. A. Ferguson;
second vice pre.sident. Bentley P.
Neff; treasurer, George A. Gray; sec-
retary and assistant treasurer, Hubert
V. Eva.
Mr. Luster and Mr. Ferguson were
re-elected to the directorate of tlie
H. V. EVA.
club at the election Wednesday. B. P.
Nel¥, James Maney and W. J. McCabe
took their places on the directorate
today, S. H. Jones, L. C Harris and
W. H. Hoyt retiring. The other direc-
tors, wliose terms will expire next
>ear are Harry Hurdon, C. W. Kies-
wetter, George A. Gray, C. D. Brewer
and A. C. Volk.
Mr. Eva's election as secretary of the
club today was the ninth with which
he has been honored by the club, the
year just closed being the eighth he
ha.4 served in tliat capacity.
»^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^»
LAKESIDE BOYS CATCH
TROUT IN LESTER RIVER
Five trout were taken out of Lester
creek, right under the railroad bridge,
earl^ this morning. The Lester Park
kids were on the Job early and it is
believed that these are the first catches
of the season.
James Wharton, son of the attorney.
LESS COIN
FOR STAMPS
Postal Receipts for First
Quarter Show a Slight
Contraction.
and one of the enthusiastic fishermen
of the city among the youngsters,
caught three. The largest one weigh-
ed something life four pounds.
Young Johnny Neimeyer caught one
weighing three and one-half pounds
and George Rhodes caught one weigh-
ing six pounds.
According to the statement of these
boys the fienlnfr Is great.
and does not include receipts from
money order fees.
SPRING TERM
vrlii bcKin at the Duluth BniiineNs Uni-
versity OB M<»Bday« .'Iprll 17. The eol-
leire office ^-111 be open from O a. m.
to 5 p. m. Satarday, April in, for the
enrollment of Mtndentn. Location, IIH-
ISO Fourth avenue wcMt, (brlittle bllds.
Revenues for Fiscal Year
Increase — All Records
May Be Broken.
Duluth postoffice receipts for the
quarter ending April 1 show a slight
falling off, the receipts for the period
this year being $79,»87.53, against
$81,249,32 for the same period last
year, a decrease of $1,261.79. For
the period of the fiscal year from
July 1 to April 1, the receipts are
$11,161.89 in excess of the receipts for
the corresponding period of the previ-
ous fiscal year, however, and the de-
crease in the period which just closed
is but a small recession from the to-
tal gain made in the two preceding
periods.
Receipts for the period just closed
were $27,097.29 in January, $24,497.81
in February and $28,392.43 In March,
a total of $79,987.53. During the
same period in 1910 the receipts were
$27,340.33 in January, $24,371.39 in
February and $29,537,60 in March, a
total of $81,249.32.
Receipts for the first quarter of the
current fiscal year were $83,815.02,
and for the second quarter $94,092.24,
the total of the three quarters being
$257,894.79. For the first quarter of
the precedinfg year the receipts were
$77,585.31 and for the second quar-
ter $87,898.27, a total of $246,732.90
for the three quarters.
With an Increase of $11,161.89 for
the three quarters of the current year
it is expected that at the end of the
current quarter, which will also be the
end of the fiscal j-ear. a substantial
increase in the total year's business
will be shown ov3r the year which
ended June 30, 1910.
The postal receipts include only the
revenues from sales of stamps and
stamped envelopes. wrappers. etc.,
NEWBRO'S HERPiaOE
Did Not Disappoint.
Don't become discouraged simply
because your hair falls and is thin,
weak and wisi)y, until you have tried
Herpicide. "I first began to use
Newbro's Herpicide three years ago.
after a spell of fever, which caused
Tne to become almost bald. Herpi-
cide soon restored the quantity and
natural color of my hair. I feel
lost without a bottle of Herpicide in
the house," Thus Mrs. Anna C. Layn,
821 Second Ave., Louis^llle, Ky., tells
In her own words how she lost her
hair and how she got it back. Mrs.
Layn's experience has been dupli-
cated a thousand times and can be
repeated thousands more.
Newbro's Herpicide keeps the hair
and scalp In a perfectly healthy con-
dition. When the hair papilla has
not been destroyed by the ravages of
the dandruff germ, the hair wlli re-
sume its suspended growth.
Newbro's Herpicide kills the dan-
druff germ and checks falling hair.
The Itching of the scalp stops almost
instantly. Others imitate and make
similar claims, but the original dan-
druff germ destroyer is Herpicide.
Applications of this wonderful
remedy may be obtained at any good
barber shop.
Send 10c in postage or silver for
sample and booklet to The Herpicide
Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich.
Lyceum pharmacy and Lenox drug
store. Duluth, are special agents and
guarantee one dollar size bottles.
Norihiland Printer^.
Good Printing. Call Zenith 494.
♦
Haa Good ^'Indow Dlaplay.
The tempting display of Raster
things is not confined to the windows
of the mercantile establishments along
the streets of Duluth today. There are
a number of windows that carry a
splendid array of good things to eat.
One of the most tempting of these is
that of the Public Meat market on Lake
avenue, near the corner of Superior
street. One of the show dindows hai?
a neatly arranged display of smoked
meats, eggs and cheese, while the other
Is heaped with fresh dressed poultry,
fancy roasts, chops, steaks and sau-
sages. The win<lows are centainly an
aggravation to that hungry feeling.
1 ♦
Prlntlnir and Bookblndlnir
Thwlng-Stewart Co. BoUi 'phones, 114.
^
Mra. Bartlctt'a Funeral.
The funeral of Mrs. B. C. Bartlett,
will take place at the familv resi-
dence, 912 Kast Second street, Monday
afternoon at 2 o'clock. Interment will
be at Forest Hill cemetery. Thomas
Bartlett, a sqn of the decedent is ex-
pected to arrf'.w^ from Washington to-
night or Sunday morning.
— » »
Pnlfbrd, How A Company
Have moved tbeir offices to No. 609
Alworth building.
♦
ArrcMted on Aaitault Charge.
Charged with having beaten and
kicked William Maki unmercifully in
a Lake avenue saloon, Isaac Salo was
arrested last night and booked on a
charge of assaalt. He entered a plea
of not guilty in police court this morn-
ing and will be tried later. Maki's
lip was Fplit and his face badly bruised.
Salo claims that he was not the man
who struck Maki.
For Eaater Sundar
A special dinner with good service, ex-
cellent music and the sweet singing
of Louis La Valle. the grand opera
star, will make this feast day a pleas-
ant one at the St. Louis hotel.
Kfaval Rcuvrve Dance.
The annual Easter dance of the
First Division of Minnesota, Naval
Reserves, will be held at the Armory
Monday evening. Flaaten's orchestra
win play.
Vlavl.
Vlavi, 208 Temple building.
♦
Elaatcr Monday Dance.
An Easter Monday dance by the
Adams Athletic association, will be
given at Lincoln Park auditorium.
There will be music by Flaaten'a or-
chestra.
Five Acre Tract* at Procior!
A snap. John Q. A. Crosby, 305 Pal-
ladlo building.
.»
Tribute to Superior OfUcer.
The Duluth policemen will send a
beautiful floral tribute to the funeral
of Policeman Roy L. Jackson of the
Superior force, who died yesterday
morning from bullet wounds received
about three weeks ago when he was
trying to arrest a couple of thieves.
The funeral will take place tomorrow
afternoon from the residence of the
late officer, 244 Third street, Allouez.
»
Thayer Fuaeral.
The funeral of the late Napoleon B.
Thayer, a land attorney, will be held
from the family residence, 727 West
Second street, at 9:30 o'clock Monday
morning and at 10 o'clock from the
Catholic cathedral, Second avenue west
and Fourth street. Interment will be
in Calvary cemetery.
I
I
I
PERSOITAL
Mrs. A. H. Overland of Two Harbors
is at the McKay.
C. F. Mahnke of Moose Lake is at the
McKay.
Albert G. Humble and wife of Ely
are registered at the McKay.
P. A. Young of Bemldji is at the Mc-
Kay.
George F^sk of Chisholm is at the
Lenox. <
P. T. Hennessey of Hlbbing is regis-
tered at the St. Louis.
wiLLvisrr
INDllLUTH
Mbs Harriet M. Mills, Kin-
dergarten Expert, to
Lectnre Here.
Branch of International Union
Responsible for Her
Coming.
Miss Harriet M. Mills of the New
York University Kindergarten Train-
ing school and formerly of Columbia
university will visit Duluth and Supe-
erlor next week under the auspices of
the Duluth-Superior branch of the In-
ternational Kindergarten union She
will be in Dulutii Wednesday and
Thursday.
Wednesday afternoon she will give
a talk on "Gifts and Occupations" at
the kindergarten of the Washington
school at 4 o'clock, and Wednesday
evening a round table will be con-
ducted in the same place on the same
subject.
Thursday morning and afternoon she
will spend in visiting the Duluth
Kindergarten and 4 o'clock of that aft-
ernoon will conduct a round table on
"Music and Stories" at the Washington
kindergarten.
Tliursday evening she will give a
lecture at the pnblic library club room
on the "Relation of Kindergartens to
the Primaries" whicli will be of es-
pecial interest to ail. This will begin
at 8 o'clock.
Friday sht will go to Superior and
will visit the Superior kindergartens
until 4 o'clock in tlie afternoon wlien
she will give a talk on "Program
Work" at the Blaine school. A round
table will be conducted there in the
evening on the same subject.
Saturday morning at 10 o'clock she
will conduct a round table at the
"Blaine school on general subjects In
kindergarten work and Saturday aft-
ernoon a reception will be held for her
at the .Superior normal school.
These meetings will, of course, be of
the most interest to the kindergarten
and primary teachers of the city but
others who are Interested may attend.
A slight admission will be charged
l>oth for the talks and the lecture
Thursday evening at the library.
Miss Jessie Davis of Superior, who
Is the president of the local branch
of tlie union has been in charge of the
arrangements for this course of talks
and the program committee was com-
posed of Miss Caroline Barder of the
Superior normal school, Mrs. Addle M.
Boer, Miss Boardman alid Miss Alta
M. Owens of Duluth.
It may be hard to find a good servant
by advertising — but It's harder if yoU
try some other way!
NAVALBOARD
VISTRCITY
Inspectors Look Over Sup-
plies of the Minnesota
Naval Mifitia.
Standards of the Regular
Navy Are Being
Applied
A naval board of Inspection consist-
ing of Capt. White, Naval Constructor
Nutting and Paymaster McMillan, with
A. E. Meecham as recorder, is in Du-
luth today looking over the supplies of
the Minnesota naval mllltla and de-
termining what Is needed to keep the
equipment up to the standard required.
A new system of accounts, identical
with those in use in the regular navy,
will also be Instituted here.
A meeting of the officers of the Min-
nesota militia and the members of the
board was held at the Spalding hotel
this morning and the militia officers
were Instructed in the requirements of
tlie navy department for the reserve
forcej. The changes in the regulations
as to the keeping and distribution of
supplies are not entirely new to the
mllttia officers, but they call for a more
rigid adherence to the naval rules than
It has been customary to demand here-
tofore.
The greater liberality of the navy de-
partment In furnishing supplies to the
naval militia, the more rigid Inspection
given the state forces and the applica-
tion of the rules of the regular navy to
the state sailors of late years, have
shown the trend of sentiment in the
navy department. The members of the
board here today say that the govern-
ment Is coming to recognize more and
more the fact that the civilian sailors
are a potent force In the country's
naval force, and would be very valu-
able in time of war, if kept up to a
proper grade of efficiency in time of
peace.
The standards of the regular navy
are being applied to the naval mllltla
all along the line where practical. On
the annual cruise and In drill, naval
discipline and naval etiquette prevail.
Regular officers are stationed on each
ship of the Great Lakes fleet during
the summer maneuvers, and last year,
for the first time In the hlstor.v of the
naval mllltla on the lakes, an admiral's
Inspection was glvfn the fleet. The
mllltla of the coast states Is given
cruises and maneuvers on the regular
ships during the summer and the navy
department is showinsr a disposition to
do everything possible to encourage the
mllltla and keep It up to a grade of ef-
ficiency, which would allow the state
forces to step on regular ships and
operate them if the occasion 8houl<»
require.
JAILED ; TWO
GET $1DAILY
Uncle Sam Holds as Witnesses
Men Freed of Grand
Larceny Charge.
Owner of Many Sitamps b
Still Under Sus-
picion. .
Charges of grand larcsny against
Billy Zaba and John Kosh, who wore
arrested after the burglary of the post-
office at Cromwell, Minr., were dis-
missed when the men were taken be-
fore United States Commissioner T. H,
Pressnell this morning. The two men
are detained in the county jail, how-
ever, as witnesses In the case of An-
drew Cooper, who was bound over to
ihe July grand jury of the United
States district court after a hearing
before Commissioner Pressnell.
Cooper Is charged with fprand larceny
and the authorities profess to believe
that he entered the sto -e ond poiic-
office conducted by Charles Morse at
Cromwell from which were taken %aZ
in stamps, $6.70 in money, a revolver
and some cigars.
The testimony broughi; out before
the commissioner yesterday tended to
show that Cooper was on a train run-
ning from Wright to Duluth on the
morning after the post^>ffice had been
entered, that ho may have heard Morse
talking about the affair and thus
feared capture, that while he was In
the toilet room a quant) ty of cigars
and a revolver were noticed in his
overcoat. Currency found in his pock-
ets corresponded in amount and de-
nominations with the money alleged to
have been taken from the postoffice.
Tlie other two men, who were ar-
arrested while attempt ng to sell
stamps at Sawyer, said they found the
stamps near the track aid an exam-
ination of the locality they Indicated
resulted in the finding of two cigars
of the brand taken from Morse's store
and a revolver. Author: ties believe
that Cooper threw away the stamps
and revolver while he was in the
toilet room of the car.
After the evidence ws.s submitted,
Commissioner Pressnell h jld Cooper to
the next term of court :ind fixed his
bonds at |5,000, in default of which
he was committed to the county jail.
The story of Zaba anl Kosh that
they found the stamps they
attempted to sell was partially
substantiated and the charges against
them were dismissed. They were held
as witnesses and their bDnds fixed at
$500. In default of bail they were
committed to the county jail, where
they will be held until the trial, their
compensation being fixed at $1 a day.
•
Hints for Homeseekers.
NHEWaltham Watch Com-
pany produces more than
seventy styles of move-
ments, ranging from the size of
a nickel to larger than a dollar. There
is a Waltham movement perfectly
suited to your purse and personal needi
"If$ Tinu You Chimed a WaUham."
Send for descriptive booklet.
WALTNAM WATCH CO..
Applied common sense
perlty.
If you would succeed, g
cess Is possible.
To succeed, climate, 1<
kets, soil, water, schoo
roads, also the character
borhood, must all be con
choosing a rural home.
All the above requisite <
to be had on the Rancho
ioining Sacramento City
lere nature abundantly
faithful husbandman wltl
Ing crops of cereals, clover
all small fruits and her
walnuts, almonds, peci
oranges, lemons, grape-
figs, grapes, etc.
Here you can earn 100
your Invested capital ann
enjoying the comforts of
ideal surroundings.
Price and terms of pur<
able.
"Seeing is believing."
cursion on April 20th ai
pleasure of a first-class tr
ticulars see J. S. MacDoni
hotel, Duluth.
brings pros-
0 where suc-
catlon, mar-
ls, churches,
jf the nelgh-
sidered when
iondltions are
Del-Paso, ad-
CalJfornla.
ewards the
1 never fall-
3, vegetables,
ries, English
ins. filberts,
trult. olives,
per cent on
ially, besides
a home amid
base reason-
Join our ex-
id enjoy the
Ip. For par-
ild. St. Louis
STOCK MARKETS
NOT IN SESSION
Brokers Take a Kloliday —
Trading W Be Re-
sumed Monday.
There were no stock markets today
either In this country or abroad. Trad-
ing win be resumed in American mar-
kets Monday. Some of the foreign
markets will remain cloted on Mon-
day.
• • •
A meeting of stockholders of the
Lake Superior & Nevada Development
company will be held In Duluth Tues-
day afternoon. The meeti ig. it Is said,
may not be harmonious.
• • •
The production of blistjr copper by
the Calumet & Arizona In Marcli was
1,960,000 pounds, and by the Superior
& PitUburg, 2,540,000 pounds.
SUPERIOR MAN IS
ALLEGED BURGLAR
Fired Upon in Minot, N. D.,
But Escapes — Companion
Is Captured
Minot, N. D., April .5. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Several shots wer
fired in attempting to prevent the
escape of Ed McGahn of Superior,
Wis., charged with breaking into the
Jacohson & Fugelson hardware store
last night. McGahan esicaped amid
shots fired by Clarence Parker of the
Leiand hotel, but Georgo JZHxon w^as
arrested as he attempted to climb out
of a basement window. D.xon pleaded
guilty and was bound over to the
district court. McGahan is still at
large.
AUNT FAILED TO MEET
CHILDREN AT TRAIN.
WALTHAM
WATCH
Two small children, brc ther and sis-
ter, toddled into the Glen hotel at
Twelfth avenue west about 7 o'clock
last evening and asked the clerk why
their aunt, a Mrs. McAl^er, had not
met them at the depot when they
got off the train from Staples. They
were informed that thex aunt had
not been at the hotel for a long time,
whereupon they started to cry. They
soon cried themselves ta sleep and
were tucked away to bed. They were
at the hotel this morning, and their
aunt appeared this alteriiooa to tak*
charge of them.
Georice CarT- EfCKle«t»a, author of
Civil war and Southern stories." died In
New York April 14 of a complication
of diseases. Mr. Eggleston was born
of Virginian parents at Vevay, Ind., 71
years ago; served thiough the Civil
war in J. E. Stuart's cavalry and, at
its close, settled at Cairo, III., and later
in New York. From 1875 until 1»00 he
was connected In an editorial capacity
with several newspapers and maga-
zines here and upon his retirement
from journalism devoted his energies
to writing novels. He was a brother
of David Eggleston, also an author.
Dr. John A. Mlakey, former national
squash rachet champion, died April 14
at Overbrook, near Pliiladelphia. His
death was due to asthma. Dr. Miskey,
who was 31 years old, had been prom-
inent in athletics since boyhood. He
three times won the national squash
racquet championship.
D. H., 4-15-'ll,
T
omorrow
—IS-
Easter
Sunday
Come in tonight and
buy yourself some-
thing new to wear.
A new suit, if you
can, a new hat, to
be sure, and at any
rate, a fine spring
shirt and a pretty
tie.
Where }
Of course at the one
store where selec-
tions are always the
best and where you
get the most for
your money*
At Third Ave. W.
Foot- Note.
Columbia J3. 50 Slioes for Men and Women.
PROGRAM OF EXAMIIATIORS
FOR COMMON SCKOOL CERriFICATES,
>IAY 4, 5, AXD 6, 1811.
Duluth — N. A. Young, conductor:
Ev-'oleth — B. O. Greening, oonductorj
Hlbbing — Herbert Blair, conductor;
Tower — W. H. Certwriglit, conductor.
TlIl'KSD.W, MAY 4th.
(First Grade Studies).
8:00 a. m. — Enrollment.
8:30 a. m. — Geometry.
10:15 a. m. — Physics.
1:15 p. m. — Algebra.
2:46 p. m. — Physical Geography or
General History.
4:15 p. m. — Agriculture.
FHIDAV, MAY Sth.
(Second Grade Studies).
8:00 a. m. — Enrollment.
8:30 a. m. — Professional Test.
9:30 a. ra. — .Spelling.
10:00 a. m. — Arithmetic.
1:15 p. m. — Geography.
2:45 p. m. — Composition.
3.45 p. m. — Reading.
4:40 p. m. — Panmanship,
SATLRUAY, MAY 6th.
(Second Grade Studies Continued).
8:00 a. m.— I'. S. History.
9:43 a. m. — Kngllsh Grammar.
11:30 «. m. — Music.
1 :1.^ p. Di. — PhysioluET-Hygten..
2:43 p. m. — Clvlfg.
4:00 p. m.— Drawing.
Note — AU appiiraiiui for complete crdftcate* wtB
be reQulied to irntd on Piofcjalonal IVst.
N. /K.. YOUNG,
County Supt. of Schoola.
D, H., April 15, 22, 29, 1911.
3
Single Men
Living in Duluth
Will find in Uie fireproof Bachplor Apait*
mentft, juat ihe kind of hutne U>ey bare lone
desired.
Here, tbe single man may Uve in ease and
comfort.
lie always lias at hla rommsnd hot and cold
water, whenever lie wants It : plenty of licht.
and the be^t of funJture equipment.
You are Invlfpd to call and Iruspect the
Bachelor Apartoienta, 320 West First etreet.
W. C. SHERWOID t CO.,
lis Manhattan Bids.
DR. MITCHELL
Moves to Larger Quarters
Suite 300-30 1 ColBinbiaBMg.
Third Ave. West and Superior St.
More Room Was Needed
for His Offices.
His phenomenal success has made
great demand for his treatment. Dr.
Mitchell has thousands of cured pa-
tients, and that is why he is a busy
man. If he can cure you he will tell
you, if not he will give you his belt
advice in regard to your case
I
-_1.
4 .
\
,^^^
^
—
• '1
II will III
U a«.
* ■«
+
AGENTS FOK
THOMAS, CHALMERS, HUDSON
See our second-hand Barsrains
and gel some of the snaps we ara
offering In Supplies.
IVIUTUAL A.UXO CO.,
CENTRAL GARAGE.
DItiTRIBtTERS, Dl LLTH.
Zenith
Dye House
Largest exclusive
Clothes Cleaners
and Dyers at the
head of the Lakes.
230-232 East Superior St.
Talk of
the Town
Tlie iitw Steam Bak-
er and t'arlsbaj
M tuTiil Treatments
are a po>^ilivr I'ure
fcr a'.l K.'iciuuatio
.\:Imfiit*. roiisul-
tation anil rxamiD-
alion Free.
S. KASSMIR,
Prof.ssloml Mas-
fcnr aal Specialist.
Mchuj- Hctrl Turkish Ratlis. FlTUi aTeniie
vtrt aiiJ KlrsJ street.
Open day and ni<lit. Xxn. 'pbcnt. Grand.
ISliU-A.
SEEKINS
FLORIST
302 Eaut Soperlor Street, Dnlatb.
BOTH PHONES.
Orders for special occasions
promptly and satl.'sfactorlly filled.
Corsage and Bride's Bouquets.
Flowers for dances and parties.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Frc4 H. LsQMberry.
Prank Makawakl.
F. H. LOUNSBERRY & GO.
General Printing
Blank Books
Loose Leaf
Devices
Mall Orders Promptly Filled.
PROVIDENCE Bl'ILDIXO,
Fourth Ave. Weat and Superior St.
Duluth Bedding
Company
>2aniifactarera of the Beat
Make of
Mattresses
In the Northwest.
Insist on Duluth Bedding Co.*
Goods, whan buying Bedding.
SOS Lake Avenue Sooth,
DLLLTH, MI»N.
THE PHOTOGRAPHER
30 East Superior St.
PHONES:
Oiriret Old, >iclr«»ie, 2«7.
New, (;rand, ::os:;-.A.
Reatdcneei Phune, Lakealde, SO-K.
SICK MAN
Why suffe
stay weak
Why stay
through e r
youth and
We can c
We guara
cures. Con
Free, from
m. Sunday
r? Why
and .sick?
poisoned
r o r s of
mistakes?
ure you!
ntee our
suit us
9 to 8 p.
s, 10 to 1.
Pro^ressiye Medical Association,
No. 1 Weat Superior Street,
Upstairs.
40,000 FEET OF GLASS.
J. J. L@iOHiioy!
921 East Third 5treet
BOTH PHONES.
0. MOISAN,
French Hair Dressing
Parlors,
212 \AEST FIRST STREET.
My specialty is Wig and Toupee
making. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Manicuring, Shampooing. Facial
Massage and Scalp treatment.
Expert Hair Dyeing and Coloring.
Combings and Cut Hair made
up In beautiful Swltche.'^. or any
shape desired, fl.no and up.
Mall Orderti Given Spevial
Attention.
204 -Stores -204
39 Years in the Businesf—
21 Years in Duuth—
It looks as though we might
be depended upon.
If not a patron, try us now.
>Ve are "Spexlallsts In Teas and
Coffees."
GRAND UNION TEA CO.,
lie East Superior Street.
(After May 1st, «t 214 West
First Street).
We Fool the Sun
Now Is the time to order your
Awnings, Porch Curtains and
Outdoor Sleeping Tents.
EVERYTHING IN CANVAS.
Poirier Tent and
AwningCompany
Established, 1881
Incorporated, 1911.
106 East Superior Street.
Both Phones.
For a PlTylolan's or Buwlnesa
Man's Car, the 4-Cjllnder
REO
ROADSTER
has all the requisites, and at
a price within the reach of all.
Daluth Aatomobile Co.
31« West First Street.
It Is Time to Paint
If you anticipate paint-
ing, we refer you to our
display window.
The Sherwin-Williams
Paints and Varnishes
for all purpcses.
Northwestern Paint Co.
323 West First Street.
Both Phones, SU<I.
Ask for Color Card and show It
to your wife.
City
Wood Yard
1 1? Second Ave. W,
J. D. O'CONNELL, Proprietor
Wood, Posts and
Piling.
BOTH 'PHONES
Bliss
Native Herbs
The Great Spring Blood Purifier,
Kidney and Liver Hcgulalor.
200 DAYS' TREATMENT $1.00
For Sale only by
FRED GABRIELSEN
IB W^est Superior Street.
L K. DAUGHERTY
Dealer In
SHELF AND
/^ BUILDERS'
HARDWARE
PAINTS AND FARMING
IMPLEMENTS.
601 Blast Fourth Street.
Old Phone 703. New Phone 1«93-A
For=
Prescriptions
to be ftlled accurately
and with dispatch, go to
LeRICHEUX'S
DRUG STORES
405 East Fourth Street, or 432
West First Street.
BOTH PHONES.
Our Bread Is As Good
As Our Cakes
The cake mother u.sed to make.
A Duluth product. Best ingred-
ient.« used.
You may find some as good,
hilt none better.
Zenith Home Bakery,
427 East Fourth Street.
Zenith Phone. Grand 1S79-D.
l»on't forset to order your
Easter wants early.
We are now ready for business
In our new store, the finest west
of Chicago. We sell QenuJne'
Needles, Oil and Parts for all
Sewing Machines. We have re-
liable machines from C6, up, to
the White Rotary, the finest me-
chanically construsted machine
made, which you can buy for 75c
Per Week.
WHITE SEWING
MACHINE COMPANY
W. L. SMITH, Manager.
O East Superior Street
ELECTRICAL
WORK
In All Its Brandies
REPAIR WORK.
THOMAS n. C. WRIGHT
PRACF'.CitL ELECTRiCIAH and CONTBACTOH
207 WEST FIRST STREET.
City Gun A
Store
for all kinds of Fishing Tackle,
Hunting and Camping Goods,
and outdoor sports, you should
see our line.
Home of the
Brilliant Search Light
We Repair BverTthlng,
402 W^est Superior Street.
Opposite Palladlo Building.
R C. KRUSCHKE
Will Go on
Your Bond"
CONTR.\ (TORS' BONDS,
FIDELITY BONDS,
OFFICIAL BONDS,
DEPOSITOR V BONDS,
COLRT BONDS.
American Bonding Com-
pany of Baltimore
GEO. R. L-WBOVRN, Agent.
14 Pboenl.T Bloek.
Duluth
Gas Engine
Works
PARK POINT.
We make all siae.s of speed
propellers, brass, aluminum cast-
ings, and machine work of all
kinds.
All Work Guaranteed.
Victor Huot's
Candy
went Into every state in the
Union In December, (so our ex-
press books show). Does not our
phrase.
"None Nicer.
1 1
fully cover the recipient's letter
of thanks to you.
You Sent Some.
CENTRALSlfE
so Bast Superior Street,
The leading Business College In
Duluth. We say thl.s. because we
teach the most up-to-date sys-
tems, have the best facilities, the
most competent faculty, and are
graduating people who are in de-
mand, because they are compe-
tent.
Write to us, or call at the of-
fice for full information.
BARBER & Mcpherson
Proprietors.
Perfect Bread
Both you and your grocer agree
that
DIAMOND BREAD
is a decided success. It's your
idea of perfect bread.
FRESH DAILY.
E. BJORLIN
BAKER.
2205 West First Street.
Both Phones.
To the Man
Wiio Siiaves Himself—
Wc tre bere aot merelf to lell jvn •
rnzoT but to mak* tou •» expert sharer. Not
m«fti; tr« w* s«Uing r»son. w* u« MUinf
tluiTliut enjoytneot. ibtrtni •atlffactlgn.
W« try to be c«.reful — we in> careful — but
w« make ulftakes oni^e In a while. You wlU
cenfer uo greatrr Utot upon u* Utan to i«U
tu about any mUtake we may ntake In our
bualuees deaUnsi Mtb you — plcatanth'. if
Iicsslble — but tell ui anyway. Buch Infonn-
aUon 1» not taken by uj as a crltlciaB, but
at a kindnesa. It woa't Uk* lone to sake
the wrcDf rtcbt.
Aerial Cutlery Supply,
319 West First Street.
C. F. Anderson.
Arthur Fnlk.
Duluth Pattern &
Model Works
1631 WEST SIPERIOR STREET.
DULl'TH, MIN.N.
Both Phones.
Machinery Patterns
and Models
Patterns for Steel, Iron. Brass
and llluminum Castings.
Do You Want to Look Wall and
Enjoy Good HoaltliT
Then let Herb-
aqneen Remc-
dles do the
work.
They are won-
d«erful cures
for blood, skin
and female dis-
eases; also can-
cers and tum-
ors.
Call and be Convinced.
E. AIMGERIV^EIER
31 E, Superior St. , UpFtairs
Manufacturer ol Herbaqueen Remedies
House=Cleaning
Time
We are prepared to clean your
house with our Invincible Reno-
vator. We send a compet-ent
man to do the work. Our prices
are reasonable.
loterstatd Carpet Cleaoiog Co.
SINNOTTE & VAN NORMAN,
Proprietors.
1028 West .MIohlKsn Street.
Both Phones
FITGER
BEER
The Kind That Satisflw.
Fitger Brewing Co.,
DULUTH, MINN,
SPIRELLA
CORSETS
made to order according to meas-
ure. The only perfect and un-
breakable Corset made. Guaran.
teed tor One Year.
Made to Measure Petticoats.
MRS.E.A.NASH
6S1 East Superior Street, upstairs
Zenith, 1780-D.
RELIABLE AND UP-TO-DATE
GARON BROS.,
Wheleiale antf Retail ,
Dl«n«nd*, Wateliea. Cloekt, Jewelry snd
SHverware. High fr*^d« only. Lewrtt Prieea.
WATCHES CLEANED. $1.00.
MAIN SPRINGS. tl.OO.
Fxperti. Watch and Clock Repairing. Best
work and Io%t prices. All work fuaranteeJ.
New "phofte 113*-A. Old 'phcne, Uelroee 3549
213-215 Weet Firet Street, Dtilutk. Minn.
Out of the Hl(h Rent Dtotrlct.
Duluth Fur Co.
Importe
FUR
STORAGE
Manufacturers.
riace your furs
In our care
during the summer months. We
Insure them against Moth, Fire
and Theft.
Fvrt lo qrdcr— Repaired an4 Kcnsdeled.
325 West First Street.
Melrose, 4836. Zenith, 624.
LAUNDRY
Fancy Launderers
French Dry Cleaners
A Plione Brings a >Vagon
TTeimbschs
is detachable — interchangeable,
thereby worn on either shoe,
which assures double wear and a
level heel at all times. Has no
nails to scratch floors or nail
holes to carry In dirt.
HEIMBACH RUBBER
HEEL COMPANY
DVLVTH, MINN.
mts X WindUnM.
Wm. B. Wcadlandt
WendlandtBroSe&Co.
Blank Book
Manufacturers
LOOSE LEAF DEVICES AND
MAUAZINE BI.\U1NG.
114 and 116 W^est First Street,
DULUTH, MINN.
Zenith Phone, 528.
BEER
FOR HOME, ri,l n OR CAFE
AND HOTEL.
Pure and W^holesome.
ORDER BY PHONE.
PEOPLE'S BREWING
COMPANY
FORTY-SECOND AVENUE. W.
Both Phones.
The Taste
Tells
how good our Maple Walnut
Chocolates are. and the mtmory
tells you that these extra good
chocolates were made by "Wink-
lers. Thess are the choolates
with that better taste. iiuy a
box today.
WINKLER BROS.
DULUTH, MINN.
FOiO— $7S0
Fully Equipi'cd.
R4. W. TURNER. Agent
COWEN & ZIMMERMAN
531 E. Superior St.
FURNISHERS <fi:
DECORATORS
Fine Fabrics and
Wall Papers.
Estimates cheerfully given.
BOTH PHONES:
Kew, Grand 304. Old, Melroi e S489
A $12.00 Rocker for
$6.95
Write (or iUuctration and description
of this rocker.
8 C. Superior St.
DULUTH.
^^^^K
A. LNorberg's Optical Parlor
The home for spectacle wear-
ers. Examination of children's
syea my specialty. Artificial
eyes carried and Inserted. Con-
iul tation free.
Pau^ori Roon* 110, Oak Hall
Building.
Trunks
Bags
Cases
m HORTHERN TRURK CO.
are home manafacturers.
•UY PROM THE MAKKW.
328 WEST FIRST STREET
EDWARD Jtt. STONE,
Wholesale and Retail
BOOKSELLER and
STATIONER
Blank Books. Office and Type-
writer Supplies, Drawlnjf Mate-
rials and Engineers' Supplies.
Anything in the book line we can
fret for you. Write for our cata-
oga.
321 West Superior Striict.
DULUTH, MINN.
WE 8JPBCIALIZB on out-of-town
Or^rs for
Printing
Card Engraving
Steel Die Embossing
and everything in the Rubber
Stamp, Stencil and .Seal Line.
CONSOLIDATED
Stamp & Printing Co.
14 Fourth Avenue West,
DULUTH, MINN.
John Wahl
Candy Co.
Duluth, Minn.
Ma,nufacturer9 and Jobbers of
High-Grade Candies
Distributers of Rez and Sparrow
Chocolates.
West End
Furniture House
2012 West Superior Street.
JOE POPKIN, Prop.
Zenith Phone — Lincoln, 447-A.
The best place in the West end
to buy Furniture, Carpets, Rugs,
Stoves, etc.
Either Cash or Credit
Wc Boy Second-hand Furniture.
H
OLLIHAN &
MILOSTAN
401-403 East First Street.
Roofing, Metal W^lndows,
Coriflce, Fire Doora,
Skylights, Ventllatliag,
Steel Ceilings, Stnokc Stacks,
Heat Rcgalstors,
Guttem and Spo-.ii^itg,
Warm Air l<'^rnac« '.
General Jobbing in Shert Metal
TELEPHONES f
Grand, 701. Melruiie, 2261.
West Duluth
Cement Block Works
H. C. BROW N, Prop.
Manufarturers Cement Blocks,
Tile, Brick, and Fence Posts.
PRICES UPON APPLICATIO.N.
Residence: Calumet, 167-M.
Office: Zenith phone, 3123-A.
Office: Calumet, 246-L.
N. W. Corner 6<tth and Grand
AvenucM West.
N. P. Track, USnd aud Grand Ave-
nues Weat.
Phone Rings.
"Good heavens, John! The of-
fice Is on r.re!"
"Never mind, Jane! All ray
books and papers are in my Her-
rlng-Hall-MarvIn Safe, v hlch is
guaranteed fire proof, und the
office furniture Is Insured."
Can you feel an secure?
Buy your Safe and Office Fur-
niture at
Christie Lithograph
& Printing Co.
E« GOPHER Ss
Famous over the Northwest for
SHOE^s^
REPAIRING
WHILE YOU WAIT.
We also sell High -Grade Shoes
for Less than you pay elsewhere.
SHOPS AND STORES,
Duluth and Superior.
JNO. HOGAN k CO.
PAINTERS and
DECORATORS
22 East First Str•^et.
Time Is here to paint your
house and we are ready to sell
you the famous
Harrison Bros..'
Town and Country Paint
The best on the market.
?!^
AD Disease
'^ :v .■■J
Is Caused
Bj Piflwhed
Nerves
Get cured
without
drugs hjr
Dr. D. W.
Rlcsland,
A--^<L
The
Chlroprae.
tor, at 70T-
7O8-709-710.
ril-712 Pal-
ladlo Bldg.
7 —
/
/
J
1
1,
;
; -
1
1
-
1
1
.
I
I
^-
-r
»<^>raiigi
■wv
1
1
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-•*»
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i
Saturday,
THE DULU'^'H HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
t^esT ^ worn ff f «s
BRANCH OFFICES I
A. Jen«»«. 330 North 6Tth Arm. W. J. J. Moran, Sl«% Nortfc Central Av*.
SERVICES
ATJUNRISE
Eleven Congregations Will
Unite to Welcome Easter
Sunday.
RUSH WORK
ONJRESTLE
Canadian Northern Contract-
ing Crews Drive Eighty
Piles a Day.
Young People of Asbury No Action By Commercial
Church Will Present
Program.
Sunrise services will be held tomor-
row at Westminster Presbyterian
church. Fifty-eighth avenue west and
Kamsey street. Eleven congrregations
of West Duluth will take part: West-
minster Presbyterian, West Duluth
Baptist. Third Swedish Baptist. Asbury
M. i:.. Merritt Memorial M. E., Bethany
Norwegian- Danish M. E., Elim Swedish
Lutheran. Our Savior's Norwegian
I-utlieran. Holy Apostle's Episcopal,
Swedish Mission and the SmithviUe
M. E. churches.
Charles I. Towner, superintendent of
the Kunday school of Westminster
I*resh.\ terian church, will conduct the
meeting. Tlie music will be furnished
by the Asbury choir. The program is
as follows:
Song service
Scripture reading
Anthem
Asbury M. E. Choir.
Prayer
Anthem
Our Savior's Evangelical Lutheran
Choir.
Leadei's remarks
Charles I. Towner.
Solo
Mi.»s Belle Nettelton of the West
Duluth Baptist church.
Open meeting
Anthem
Asbury M. E. Choir.
Prayer
Benediction
• • *
Under the auspices of the Toung
People's Society of Asbury M. E.
churcli. Sixtieth avenue west and
Raleigh street, tomorrow evening, the
following program will be rendered at
Asbury church;
Marcli
Chorus — "Hail the Blessed Easter
Morning"
Prayer
Keiitation — "Easter Greetings"
Ellnora Brolln. Matilda Fyfe, Astra
Brolin.
Recitation — "I Am a Little Child"..
Maggie Botten.
Chorus — "Easter I..iUe3"
Scripture reading
Marion Velie.
Chorus — "A Broken Seal"
Recitation — "Watchman"
p]va Crosby.
Recitation — 'The Joys of Easter-
tide"
Margaret Armstrong.
Recitation — ^"Three Easter Lessons".
Mary Tyfe and Alice Botten.
Solo — "d Wonderful Hills'
Ethel Crosby.
Recitation — "Easter"
Stanley Toor.
Recitation — "Easter Flowers"
Stella Ransbottom. Chri.stlna Brolin
and Lucile Armstrong.
Chorus — "Sing Children, Sing "
Recitation
Raymond Wollan.
Recitation — "The Master Is Risen"..
Glenees Velie.
Choru.« — "Mtrry Bells"
Recitation — ".Send the Tidings" ....
Julia Dykins.
Duet — "Go Home and Tell'
Ethel Cro.«by and Winnie Green.
Recitation — "Ciown the Saviour"....
Ethel Anderson.
Recitation — "A Little Seed"
Lucile Armstrong.
Recitation — - "Immortality — Hindu
Cliild Widow"
Ethel Crosby.
Offering
Hymn — "Crown Him With Many
Crowns"
Congregation.
Benediction
DOIBLE-HEADER FOR
WEST Dl LITH TEAM.
Club on Overhead
Crossing.
Pile driving work for the Canadian
Northern's elevated trestle, about a
mile and a half long, from Fifty-ninth
avenue west to the bay front, which
was started Monday, gained a consid-
erably headway during the past week.
On the average eighty piles a day are
sunk. At least 1,800 piles will be nec-
essary for the strociure.
Al street crossings, steel and con-
crete overhead spans will be placed.
The route has not been definitely de-
cided upon from Grand avenue and
Fifty-fourth on to the bay front, but
this matter will be adjusted by the
time that the piles are placed between
I'ifry-ninth and Central avenues.
There are now enough piles on hand
to keep the crews busy for some time.
Several more carloads of material have
been shipped and will be here in a few
days. The piles are placed six to nine
in a row and the rows fourteen to
eighteen feet apart. Sixty men are
employed and the contract is handled
by the Wililain Hanson Contracting
com pan V.
At the meeting of the West Duhith
Commercial club last evening, N. J. Up-
ham and W. D. Bailey, as representa-
tives of the road, discussed the Fifty-
ninth avenue west bridge proposition
with the members in an informal way.
Plans drawn by the company's en-
gineers of the clear span show that a
ten-foot girder is needed and that the
avenue must be depressed five and one-
half feet at its lowest point. The other
plan, which provides posts in the street
to support the strucure, would carry a
flve-foot girder and the depression
would only be four feet.
No definite action was taken by the
club.
IS MOROBITO IN
MOUNTAIN IRON?
West Duluth Fugative May
Be With Former
Sweetheart
Has Jensie Talerioo. a deserted bride
of 17, Kone back to lier former sweet-
heart. Joiin Morobito, who Is a fugi-
tive from justice?
Rumors to this effect are current in
the Italian colony at West Duluth, and
although no effort has yet been made
bv the authorities to capture Morobito
for the shooting affair at West Duluth
two vears ago, it is thought that he is
at Mountain Iron, Minn.
On the evening of June 6, 1909, Moro-
(r
In order to give candidates a tryout
for hi.s te--,i, James O'Brien, manager
of the Uiuon Match company baseball
team, has scheduled two games to-
morrow afternoon on the Fifty-second
avenue west grounds. Tlie first will
be played at 2 o'clock with the Twin
Ports Clothing company aggregation
and the second at U:3U o'clock with the
Fitwells.
CHOSEN ORACLE
OF ROYAL NEIGHBORS.
Mrs. J. O. Winton was elected oracle
of Zenith camp, Royal Neighbors of
America, of West Duluth, at a meet-
ing of the lodge last evening. Mrs.
Winton succeeds Mrs. Louis Silger,
who resigned. Mrs. Silger will leave
in a few da.vs for Minneapolis, where
she will make her home. Mrs. Win-
ton lives at 611 Central avenue.
Will Visit Ireland.
Rev. W. G. Boyle, pastor 6t the As-
bury M. E. church. Sixtieth avenue
west and Raleigh street, will spend the
aummer In Ireland. He will leave to-
morrow evening. His parents live at
Ennlskillen. Ire. Mrs. Boyle will re-
main in West Duluth. He has been
pastor of Asbury church about four-
teen months.
Has New Touring Car.
Dr. Judson of West Duluth has pur-
chased a 4-cylinder 24-horse power
touring car. It Is an air-cooled "Cam-
eron" roadster and the first one of its
kind in the city.
t
Dread of an Operation.
N. Manchester, Incl. — Mrs. Eva Ba-
sliore, of this place, says, "I suffered
female nii.sery of every description.
Two doctors attended me, and ad-
vised an operation. I lost weight un-
til I weighed only ninety pounds. I
dreaded an operation, and, instead,
began to take Cardui. In a short
time, I gained 25 pounds, and feel as
well as I ever did. Cardui, I am sure,
saved my life." Cardui is today used
in thousands of homes, where it
relieves pain and brings bacic strength
and ambition. It is a woman's medi-
cine, for women's ailments, and you
are urged to try it for your troubles.
Ask your druggist. He will tell you
about Cardui.
1
JENSIE TALERICO.
blto lay In wait for Michael Talerico
in an empty building on Raleigh street,
and when he passed, assaulted iiim.
Talerico was shot twice and Morobito
was disfigured by Talerico's teeth.
Talerico was the girl's stepfather and
objected to her marriage with Morooito.
She was then 15.
After the shooting, Morobito escaped.
He was never apprehended. It wa3
supposed that he was cared for by some
friends at West Duluth, who harbored
him from the police. Talerico nearly
died from the wounds. He finally re-
covered after several weeks at the Du-
luth hospital.
The girl married a relative about a
year ago. One day he was reported
missing and it was supposed that he
deserted his young wife. Jensie a short
time ago went to Mountain Iron to live.
A man answering to Morobito's de-
scription has been seen witii her at
that place and it Is believed that she
has returned to her former sweetheart.
BOY NEARLYsEVERS
FOOT WITH HATCHET.
WRITING POEM
FOR THE CZAR
LYDIE KOLOGRIVOFF.
The czar has given orders to a Rus-
sian poet, Lydle Kologrivoff, to write
the book for a cantata and opera
glorifying the house of Romanoff.
This house has governed Russia since
the election of Michael Romanoff to
the rulershlp in 1863. Ipolltoff Ivanoff,
the director of the Moscow conserv-a-
tory, will supply the music. The work
will be presented at the celebration
of the 300th anniversary of the founda-
tion of the dynasty.
home for himself at 715 North Fifty-
eighth ovenue west.
Richard Schell has returned from a
business trip to Chicago.
F. H. Wade is expected
Monday from Dallas, S. D.,
has been looking after his
O. Carlson is building a
North Fifty-ninth avenue
to return
where he
farm.
home on
west, just
above the Bay View Heights road.
Mrs. K. E. Johnson of 5301 State
street entertained the Girls' Sewing
society of the Elim Swedish Lutheran
church at her home this afternoon.
Anton Larson of 1017 Central ave-
nue Is recovering from an attack of
pneumonia.
Frank Herald has bought a home at
lulj North Fifty-eighth avenue west
and will move his family there from
the West end.
Watch repairing. Hurst, W. Duluth.
Basil Morris and sister. Miss Ar-
limles, of 217 South Sixtieth avenue
west, are the guests of friends at
Grand Rapids. Minn.
Slever Thompson returned toda.v to
his home at St. Paul alter a visit with
West Duluth friends.
H. Johnson of South Fifty-ninth
avenue west left today for the range
towns on a short business trip.
P. Liberty of Chicago is here to
spend several months with his daugli-
ter, Mrs. H. H. Lumley of 419 North
Fifty-first avenue west.
For rent — Nine-room house on North
Fifty-third avenue west; electric light,
water up and downstairs; will rent to
one or two families. Inquire 209 North
Fifty-third avenue west.
The union committee In charge of
arranging for the reception of the
grand lodge of the Scandinavian Good
Templar order of Minnesota, which
meets in annual session In this city
ne.xt summer, will give a basket social
next Tuesday evening at Victor hall,
552S Grand avenue west. The proceeds
will go to the fund now raised by the
committee for entertaining the dele-
gates while In the city.
\AVAL MILITL\ WILL
ELECT NEW OFFICERS.
When Clarence E. Toor, a lO-year-
old West Duluthian, was presented
with a hatchet by his father, he did
not pull off the cherry tree stunt, like
the "father of his country," but in-
stead nearly cut off his foot with it.
Clarence is now under a doctor's
care. He received a bad gash in his
leg from a misdirected blow, self in-
flicted. Clarence lives with his parents
at 318 South Sixtieth avenue west. The
wound will probably not have any se-
rious results.
An important election will be held
at the meeting of the Second division,
Minnesota naval militia, next Friday
evening. The appointment of Lieut.
Clyde W. Kelly as ordnance officer of
the Minnesota militia, leaves the post
of the commanding officer of the Sec-
ond division vacant and the election
of a commanding officer will probably
cause a shift among the officers.
Lieut. Rene T. Hugo, junior grade. Is
in line for election to the honor of
commanding the division and wearing
two full stripes, the mark of a lieu-
tenant, senior grade. Ensign Joseph
Carhart is«in line for the junior grade
lieutenancy and a new ensign will
probably be elected.
The post of lieutenant. Junior
left vacant a year ago when
.^mlth was elected commanding
of the First division is still
filled. It will probably be filled
the time for the summer maneuvers
with a full complement of officers.
grade,
Lieut,
officer
to be
before
IN.SURED AGAINST BANDITS.
The bandits of Manchuria and Mon-
golia have adopted a new way of ac-
quiring at least a portion of the goods
of the traveler. Tnese mounted high-
waymen in bands not only constantly
attack the peaceful native population,
but even rob travelers in broad day-
llglit.
As a provision against this danger,
says the Oriental Economic Review,
an Insurance bureau where one buys
a banner at a cost of about 1-500 of the
value of the property to be insured. Is
established there.
This banner carried by a traveler
will save him from the bandit's attack;
for curiously enough they themselves
conduct this insurance business. But
it has Its limitations.
"We paid our premium at the in-
surance bureau," says a Japanese trav.
eler, "secured a red banner, and our
party then started from Harbin, using
several sturdy ponies for ourselves and
the carrying of our luggage. After
traveling about ten miles, we reached
a sinall town called Takln, where we
put up at an inn for the night in order
to do business with our customers
there.
"Several of these customers came to
see us In the evening and warned u.^!
that there were many mounted bandits
In the neighborhood. When we told
them there was no cause for anxiety
on there account because of the In-
surance, they Informed us that by It
our safety was guaranteed only on the
highways, but the bandit bureau was
not responsible for what might happen
inside of any building."
ADDITIONAL
SPORTS
FROM FAME
TO OBLIVION
»
Old Detroit Team Went to
Pieces in One %ort
Year.
Bad Using Streak Caused
Fall of Famous Old
Diamond Heroes.
Hardie Rich-
In 1888 we
race for the
went nicely
that time we
and we were
Then some-
From world's championship fame to
oblivion within twelvfe months was the
unprecedented record of the old De-
troit club of 1887, writes
ardson in the American,
got a good start in the
pennant and everything
until the 9th of July. At
had the field strung out,
three games to the good,
thing broke. It may have been bad
luck, but bad luck does not usually
follow a good team so persistently. We
lost sixteen straight games, and it
took the crimp out of us. Things went
from bad to worse. People would not
patronize us either at home or on
the road.
The players were put up at auction
and sold to the highest bidders. Sam
Thompson went to Philadelphia; Rowe
and White to Pittshurg; Bennett, Gan-
zel, Dan Brouthers and myself were
disposed of to Boston. Thus passed the
Detroit world's champions of 1887, in
many respects the greatest bunch of
athletes ever assembled in one club.
By the way, it was at the expense of
Boston, the club to which I was later
sold, that Detroit broke its long losing
streak finally. Getzine pitched for us
that day. He had vowed some time
previously that if he ever did win again
he would drop dead. And he almost
kept his word. As the last man was
retired Getzine took a back fall. In
doing so he struck the back of his head
with such fOFce that he was rendered
unconscious for some hours. It was
feared at first that he had fractured
his skull.
Meet ^'AnsH" Wben TralaloK.
But If we made a sorry showing after
a good start that year we sure had a
lot of fun getting the start. We
trained in the spring at Mobile, Ala.
There we met a rabid fan named Jack
Hooper, who had cleaned up 160,000
bets on us against the
Browns the preceding fall
said he had done so, and
in
St. Louis
At least he
as he bad
plenty of money always with him we
didn't think it necessary to argue. He
wished to dine the players to a wine
supper every night we were there.
But, of course, Mimager Watklns set
his foot down hard on the proposition.
Watty couldn't see how such generos-
ity could improve our batting eyes.
But Hooper was determined to show
his appreciation of our valor and of-
fered to pay all the expenses of con-
ducting a monster benefit game for us.
Not having enoin?h players to make up
two teams we had to draft some local
talent. Watklns was manager and
Hanlon was captain of one side. Hooper
managed the other nine, which I cap-
tained. Hanlon and Hooper tossed for
choice of players and naturally Hanlon
got the better team. When the game
started it looked like a 100-to-l shdt
for our chances. But we had lots of
luck, nlayed above our speed, perhaps,
and managed to hold the issue a toss-
up all the way.
Paid for Rxcltenaent.
At the end of the ninth inning the
score stood a 1-to-l tie. Hanlon's team
couldn't score In the tenth. There were
two outs for us when Thompson
cracked out a two-bagger. The next
ball was hit to Shelbeck, but he slipped
as he started for it and it rolled past
him for a ba.se knock. I have often
seen excited fans. But this man Hooper
had every one beaten forty ways. He
blew^ us to the grej^est dinner he could
buy and Insisted in adding a handsome
sum to our several portions from the
receipts. I do not think that any of
us will ever forget Jack Hooper.
In Boston the following year those of
us who were sold to that club came In
contact with some of the best baseball
men the countrj' has ever produced.
James A. Hart was manager, John
Clarkson and Radbourne were pitchers.
Dick Johnson was one of the greatest
outfielders of all time. Then there was
M. J. Kelly, the great catcher. He was
the class and brains of backstops, and
was always doing the unexpected. If
he saw a man not watching the game
he would try to hit him with the bait.
In this wav he kept every one keyed
up to the situation.
One of Kelly's Coupti.
One day KHly came to Hart when
we were playing the Philadelphia cluti
and asked for a ball the color of the
one In play. It was near the close of
the game and the Quakers needed two
runs to tie.
••What do you want with the ball?"
asked Hart.
on, I need it in my business," he re-
plied.
Two Philadelphia players had' been
retired in the ninth inning and a man
was on first, when Sam Thompson am-
bled to the plate. He hit a line drive
that cleared the right field fence by
inches. But Just as the ball went over
there was another that hit the fence
and bounced back into Kelly's hands.
Kelly was playing right field that aft-
ernoon. Kelly got the ball to second in
time to flag Thompson. The funny part
of It all was that nobody but Kelly
realized at the time what had been
pulled off. He was so clever that he
got away with It, and of course he
knew enough not to peep about it for
a long time.
College BasebaU.
Chicago, April 15. — Chicago and
>Iorthwestern universities will open
the spring outdoor athletic season to-
day with a baseball game. Glen Rob-
erts will pitch for Chicago university
Mary Wolinskt Dies.
Mary Wollnski. wife of John Wolln-
ski of 6411 Elinor street, died this
morning at her home, after a long ill-
ness. She was .'57 "j'ears old and leaves
no family. The funeral will be held
Monday from the Polish Catholic
church with Interment in the Polish
cemetery.
West Duluth Briefs.
John Winness has returned from a
trip to Chlsholm.
C. Bergqulst Is erecting a $1,000
This is the National palace at the City of Mexico, which Is the present
home of President Diaz. How long it will be his home is a question. He has
occupied it for thirty-five years. Just aow It is tlie ambitioyi o£ the revolu-
tionists to get him out of It.
ARTIST WHOSE FIRST FINANCIAL
EXPERIENCES WERE DISHEARTH^nNG i
dies, 28 violin strings, 20 teaspoonful*
of salt and 1 pound of loaf sugar.
Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller
Institute, New York, has been conduct-
ing a series of experiments which seem
to point to the future possibility of
taking the component parts of a man
and endeavoring to develop from them
a living, breathing being. Dr. Carrel
has been able to take tissue cells and
grow them separate from the livin*
organism, to alter the character of
these cells and even to take cells from
a body from which life had departed
and cause them to grow and multiply
as the.v did when a part of the body.
Incredible as it may appear Dr. Car-
i-el has found that by surgical oper-
ation it Is possible to graft the vital
organs of animals on other beats In
such a fashion that the strangest crea-
ture of ancient mythology can be cre-
ated. He has made the kidneys of one
cat grow in anottier, the leg of ona
dog grow on another and there is n
pdssibility that the legs of one animal
could be grafted on the body of an-
other, and so forth until the weirdest
combinations had been made.
In growing tissues taken from liv-
ing organisms they are put Into a
plasma, or nutrified fluid, and sealed
In hollow glass slides. These slides are
kept at a temperature slightly higher
than that of the blood. The tissue of
an old animal will slowly develop new
cells under these conditions, and then
if artificially grown cells are taken
away and Incubated under the same
conditions they grow with remarkable
rapidity like the tissue cells of A
young animal.
A heroic bronze figure of "Peace," Just unveiled In the Metropolitan Museum
of Art in New York, is the work of Jules Butensky, a hitherto ur recognized
genius of New York. Mr. Butensky came to America only a few years ago
and succeeded in getting a number of orders. But our financial methods upset
him. He executed a bust of the president of a trust company and three days
after he delivered it. the company failed. Then he took an order from a well-
known lawyer with a rich father-in-law; and while lie was executing it, the
father-in-law had the lawyer put in jail and consented to his release only on
his promise to get out of the country. Mr. Butensky was beginning to thlnK
that the United States offered too uncertain a footing for genius, .\bout that
time, however, the clay model of his "Peace" group was shown to Jucob Schiff,
who was so much impressed by it that he ordered it done in bronze. i> feet high,
and presented it to the Metropolitan museum. Mr. Butensky now thinks he
will stay with us a little longer.
and Steinbrecher will catch; the North-
western lineup was not given out.
Bloomington, Ind., April 15. — Indi-
ana university will meet Rose Poly-
technic this afternoon on Jordan field
in the first regular game of the base-
ball season. During the season, Indi-
ana will play nine conference games
and win wind up the year with two
ga»ies with the Waseda Japanese
team, one to be played here .June 9.
and the other in Indianapolis on
Jane 10.
Indiana has practically the same
team this year as last. Coach Roach
is giving Andy Gill, the star halfback
of last season's football team, a try
for the pitching staff and may shift
him from short.
nVE PLAYERS
DRAW RELEASES
Darby O'Brien Swinging Ax
— The Weeding Process
Has Begun.
Another letter from Darby! Jawn
Desmond received one this morning,
in which the orator gives up the news
of the first beheading of the season.
Fi\'e players have recelevd the axe.
Kohl, Van Ulm, Selig, Mountain and
Allen being the recruits who have been
informed, gently, if firmly, that their
services would have to be dispensed
with for the present season.
It was thought that youifg Kohl, a
brother of King Kohl, nov with the
St. Paul team, would make good with
the Sox. Woeful weakness with the
willow is said to i>e the reason for the
release of the kid.
Van tTlm failed to show class at the
first station, and for that reason went
the way of all ball players who fail
to produce. The other three failed to
come up to expectations and will have
to seek employment with ;jome other
team.
The Sox are scheduled i.o open at
Mansfield, Ohio, this afterioon. The
team will also play there tomorrow.
From the Indications, there should be
very large crowds out to a;e the two
games. So far the Sox have not played
a single exhibition gsme.
From the tenor of the missive sent
by O'Brien, the squad looks very good
and the orator believes it will win the
majority of games on the training trip.
HUMAN PENCILS AND CANDLES.
New York World: As every man
may feel a personal interest In know-
ing what the average full-grown Indi-
vidual is composed of, here Is the of-
ficial formula: He has stcred within
him sufficient material for 13 pounds
of candles and the follo'^i'lng other
useful articles of commerce: One pound
of nails, 800 carbon pencils, binding
for 16 books (octavo), 500 knife ban-
C. L RAKOWSKY & CO., l^^
...Insurance...
Bonds.
Loans.
200-1-2 Exchange Building.
Rentals.
MaMMacbusettfl Bonding A Insurance
Cum pa ay.
Frincipal office: 77 Slate street, Boston. Mass.
(Organized In i;t07.) T. J. Falvey. president; Joliii
T. Buriieu, secretary. Attorney to at-oept senke in
UimiesuU: Cotamtssloner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL JJOO.OOO.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums recelTed (Net) —
Fidelity and surety |.j81.218.91
Burglary and theft 86.U38.07
Total net premium Income t 668.136.98
From interest and reiiia 33,22ll.».i
From all otiier sources 882.37
Svea Fire and tAt* Innarancp Company.
Principal offloe in tlie fulled .><tuUs: 100 William
street, New York, N. Y. (Cflminenied business In
the mited States 1884.) M. L. luncan. general
j manager In tlie ITnited States. Att( niey to accept
sen ice in Mimiesota: Commiasloasr (f Insurance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL, |210,M0.
INCOME IN ISIO.
Premiums other tliau perpetual* $ 710. 934. 22
Bente and Inteiest 39,7.'.7.12
From all other sources 851.00
Total bicoma $ 737,342.34
Total income $ 702,262.19
Ledger assetd Dec. 31 of previous year. .$1,094,580.77
Sum $1,796,842.93
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Claims paid (Net) —
Fidelity and surety $31,866.83
Burglary and theft 18,1)34.49
Net paid poUcyholdcrs $ 50.801 .31
Inrestigation and adiustment of claims 8,193.80
Commi.ssion» 169,909.50
Divldenda to stockholderj 3(5,680.00
Salaries of officers, agents, employe!, ex-
aminers' and Inspection fees 110.606.76
All other dUbursemeuts 78.071.00
Total dtobursemenU I 447,582.51
Balance
$1,349,260.44
LEDQER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Mortgage loans $ 5.000.00
Book value of bonds and stocks 966.419.30
Cash 111 office, trust companies and
hanks 187.895.68
Pi-emlunis fai course of coUcctluua 189,808.98
All other asseU 136.50
ToUl ledger assets (as per baUnce) $1,349,260.44
NON-LEDOER ASSETS.
Interest and rent* due and accrued $ 10,187.37
Oross assete $1,359,427.81
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Premiums In course of collection (past
due) $ 26.377.59
Book Talue of ledger asseu orer market
value 18,909.19
.Special deposits lees $12,479. i>2 UabiUty
thereon 13,670.09
Total assets not admitted $ S8.
Total admitted asseU $1,30».
LIABILITIES.
Claims— .. . ,,
In process of adjustment and reported...* 57,
Ue«lsl«d 58,
953.88
473.95
418.19
9«i2.20
ToUl » U«.380.39
Deduct reinsurance 1,449.09
Net unpaid claims except UabUlty
clalm.s t IH.OSL.-iO
i;iieanied premiums 336.008.22
( 'ummLsslons and brokerage 45.760.78
.Vll other llabiUUeri 33.666.19
Kxpen:4es of inrestigatlon of claims 5,150.00
CaplUl slock paid up 500,000.00
ToUl UabiUttes, including capital $ 1,035,516.70
Surplua over all liabilities $ 264,957. 1«
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
Premiums UeceiTed. Losses Paid..
Fidelity $23,479.81 $ 49.16
surety : 8.679.27 20.59
Burslary and theft 6,291.35 2,342.69
Totals
,$38,450.43
$2,371.28
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. Tiiat tlie Annual SUtement of
the Masaachusetta Bonding and Dmurauce Com-
pany, for the year endUig December 31st, 1910. of
which the above is an abstract, has been received
and filed la this Department and duly approved
by me.
J. A. O. FEEUS,
CommiMloner of Ituursaot.
Ledger a^seU Dec. 31 of prmlous year.$ 1,286,382.15
Sum
.$ 2.043,924.49
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses f
CiHiimlssions and brokerage.
{salaries and fees of officers, agent* and
employes
Taxes, fees, rents and other real eettte
expenses
.\11 other disbursements
Gross loss on sale, maturity or a4Jui<t-
meiit of ledger assets
374
198
e.'i.'i.Sa
376.85
47,170.91
6,
35.
259.66
263.76
93.75
Total disbursement* I
Balance
681,820.16
$ 1.362,104.33
LEDQER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book Talue of bond* and sto<-ks $ 1
Casli in office, trual companies aid
banks
Aicents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, taken for preniiumi.
.111,
107
143
390.48
,704.03
009.82
Total ledger assets (as per balance) $ 1,362,104.33
NON-LEDGER ASSETf.
Interest and rent* due and accrued $ 11.721.27
Gross assets $ 1,373,823.60
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
.Vgents' baUnces $
All other aaseta not admitted.
41
,077.15
,040.48
Total aaset* not admitted $ 44.917.63
Total admitted aasets ,
$ 1.328,
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1)10.
Unpaid losses and claims $
Unearned ppemiums
Salaries, expen;>es, taxes, dividend* ajul
Interest due
Commissions and t/rokerage
All other liabilities
Deposit capital
649,
12,
2,
210,
907.9T
984.94
612.05
512.53
452.4S
471. J3
000.90
Total Uabilitles. Including deposit capital 953.033.27
Net surplus ■. $ 375,874.70
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, IBIO I USINE88.
•Fire risks written during the year $76,134,9.10.00
Premiums received tttereon.
960,413.83
Net amount In force at end of the year. .$96,931,998.00
•—Including buslnea* other than "llarine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
insurance placed.)
Fire Bixks.
Risks written $1,641.40:;.00
Premium* received 22.73.'.. 26
I,,osaes Incurred 18,090.21
l,o«e8 paid 17.993.11
.\mount at risk 2,636,408.00
.State of Minnesota. Department of Innmace:
I Hereby Certliy. That Uie Annual Statement of
the Svea Fire & Life Insurance Co npany, for th«
year ending l>ecember 31st, 1910, of iiliich the above
ia an at»tiacl, lias l>een received anl filed In tkM
D«partment and duly apioved by me.
J. A. 0. PREU9,
OMuniaionor of Insuraaoa^
Buy in Duluth.
CITY NOTICES.
NOTKJE OF CONFIRMATION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR SEWEll IN WYOM-
ING STREET —
Office of the Board of Public Works,
City of Duluth. Minn., April 1."), 1911.
Notice Is hereby given that the as-
sessment of Sixteen Hundred Forty-
four (1644) dollars and Eighteen (18)
cents, made bv the Board of Public
Woiks upon Alarch 27, A. D., 1911,
against the property specially bene-
fited bv the construction of a sewer In
Wyoming street In the City of Du-
luth, Minnesota, from Fifty-fourth
Avenue East to the sewer In Sixtieth
Avenue East, was by said Board, upon
notice dulv given, confirmed on April
10, A. D. 1911. and said assessment lias
been duly entered by the Board of
Public Works in a book kept by it for
that purpose.
OLOF G. OLSON,
Pi-esldent.
Attest:
R. MrnCHI.«!ON,
Clerk. Board of Public Works.
(Seal, Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H.. April 1."), 1911. D 586-
NOTICE OF CONFIRMATION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR SEWER IN GLAD-
STONE STREET —
Office of the Board of Pulillc Works.
City of Duluth. Minn., April 15, 1911.
Notice Is hereby given that the as-
."essment of Three Thousand Seventy-
eight (3078) Dollars and Forty-four (44)
cents made by the Board of Public
Works upon March 27, A. D. 1911,
against the property specially benefited
by the construction of a sewer in Gl/id-
stone street In the City of Duluth.
Minnesota, from Fortieth avenue east
to Forty-fifth avenue east was by said
Board, upon notice duly given, con-
firmed on April 10. A. D. 1911, and said
asse.'^sment has been duly entered by
the Board of Public Works In a book
kept by It for that purpose.
Attest: OLOF G. OLSON.
R. Ml'RCHISON, President.
Clerk, Board of Public Works.
(Seal Bo^rd of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H,. April 15, 1911. D 587.
NOTICE OF CONFIRMATION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR SEWER IN
SEVENTH ALLEY EAST.
Office of the Board of Public Works.
Citv of Duluth, Minn., April Ifi, 1911.
Notice Is hereby given, that the as-
se.ssment of Two Hundred Forty -seven
(247) dollars and Twvnty-slx (26)
cents, made by the Board of Public
Works upon Marrh 27, 1911, against
the property specially benefited by the
construction of a sewer In Seventh
Alley In the City of Dulirth, Minnesota,
from a point 20 feet east of Sixth Ave-
nue East to the Sewer in Sixth Avenue
East, was by said Board, upon notice
duly given, confirmed on April 10, A. D.
1911, and said as.sessinent has been
dulv entered by the Board of Public
Works In a book kept by It for that
purpose.
OLOF G. OI>SON,
Attest: President.
R. MURCHISON,
Clerk, Board of Public Works.
(Seal Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H., April 15. 1911. D 588.
NOTICE OF CONFIRMAf ION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR SEWER IN SEV-
ENTH ALLEY WEST—
Office of the Board of Public Works,
City of Duluth, Minn., April 15, 1911.
Notice Is hereby given. That the as-
sessment of Fourteen Hundred Seven
(1407) dollar.s and Forty-seven (47)
cents' made by the Board of Public
Works upon March 27. A. D. 1911,
against the property specially benefited
bv the construction of a sanitary sewer
In Seventh alley. In the City of Duluth.
Minnesota, from Forty-second avenue
west to Fortv-elghth avenue west, wltli
outlet, was by said Board, upon notice
duly given, confirmed on April 10, A. D.
1911, and .said assessment has been duly
entered bv the Board of Public Worka
In a book' kept by it for that purpose.
OLOF G. OLSON,
Attest: President.
R. MURCHISON.
Clerk, Board of Public Works.
(Seal. Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H., April 15, 1911. D 584.
NOTICE OF CONFIRMATION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR SEWER IN SIXTY-
FIRST ALLEY WEST-^
Office of the Borad of Public Works.
City of Duluth, Minn., April 15, 1911.
Notice Is hereby given that tlie as-
sessment of Thirty-four Hundred
Ninety-two (3492) dollars and .Sev-
enty-six (76) cents made by the Board
of Public Works upon March 27, A. D.
1911. against the property specially
benefited by the construction of a
sewer In Sixty-first alley west In the
City of Duluth, Minnesota, from a
point 250 feet north of Worden street
to Sixty-first avenue west, thence In
Sixty-first avenue west to the sewer
in Grand avenue, was by said Board,
upon notice duly given, confirmed on
April 10, A. D. 1911, and said assea-
ment has been duly entered by the
Board of Public Works in a book kept
by it for that purpose.
OLOF G. OLSON,
Attest: President.
R. Ml'RCHISON,
Clerk Board of Public Works.
(Seal Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H., April 15. 1911. D 585.
NOTICE OF CONFIRMATION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR SEWERS IN FIFTY-
NINTH ALLEY WEST. FIFTY-
NINTH AVENUE WE.ST, SIXTIETH
ALLEY WEST, SIXTIETH AVENUB
WEST, AND IN GRAND AVENUE
WEST TO THE OUTLET AT SIXTY-
FIRST AVENUE WEST.
Office of the Board of Public Works.
Ctiv of Duluth. Minn., April 15, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that the as-
sessment of Three Hundred Fifty-two
(352) dollars and Sixteen (16) cents
made by the Board of Public Works
upon March 27, A. D. 1911, against the
property specially benefited by the con-
struction of sanitary sewers In Fifty-
ninth alley west from the Sewer at lot
9, block 133. West Duluth, Fifth Di-
vision, to Fifty-ninth avenue west;
thence In Fifty-ninth avenue west to
Grand avenue and In Grand avenue to
the sewer at Sixty-first avenue west;
also in Sixtieth alley west from Elinor
street to Sixtieth avenue west, and In
Sixtieth avenue west to Grand avenue,
in the City of Duluth, Minnesota, was
by said Board, upon notice duly given,
confirmed on April 10, A, D. 1911, ahd
said assessment has been duly entered
by the Board of Public Works In a
book kept by It for that purpose.
OLOF G. OLSON,
President.
Attest:
R. MURCHISON,
Clerk Board of Public Works.
(Seal Board of Public Works. Dulutl^
Minn.)
D. H., April 15. 191L D SM.
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Saturday,
THE DIJLUTH herald.
April 15, 191L
NO HOPE IN
GRAINTRADE
Not More Than Thirty Car-
goes for Shipment
From Duluth.
Package Freighters Will Carry
Much of It — Some
Ore Estimates.
readv loaded, but just how soon these
boats win .«tart for the Head of the
L.akfs depends on the ice conditions at
the Soo.
ICE IS SOLID IN
ST. MARY'S RIVER
Trip
Steamer Hamonic on
Up But Cannot Get
Through.
Soo. Mich.. April 15.-^(Special to The
Herald.) — Experts who have been over
il.e entire length of St. Mary'.s river
say boat!' cannot pos.sibly pa.ss up the
river before April 20. The ice Is still
solid and in some places is thrte
feet thick in Mud lalte. which is al-
ways the \B.M point to breaii up.
The Hamonic is scheduled to arrive
here tomorrow from Sarnla, Ont., but
cannot get tlirough.
Heavy concrete work on the walls of
the Weitzel lock canal is still uiifin-
islied and will hold back the operation
of that lock for at least another week.
OKE HAlLIXr. STARTS
FROM MR'HKiAN MINES.
Escnnal'a. Mich.. .April 1'.. — (Special
to The Herald, t — The ore hauling sea-
son has started on the Escanaba (it.
Lake Superior railroad. By the time
the boats are ready to get to the docks
tlicrc will be plenty of ore on hand to
load them.
TX'ltli not more than S. 000. 000 bushels
of grain at the Head of the Lakes the
prospects are that the package
freighters will get the bulk of this
movement. leaving very little grain to |
move by the bulk freighters. I
One of the reasons for the moving
of the grain by the package freighters i
is the lightness of the east-bt^und
package freight movement, early in i
the season and the further fact that '■.
the big freigliters are not In the '
market yet. as the low rate does not !
induce owners to tit out their boats.
Tliere will prolably be a late move-
ment In grain. There are several
reasons for this. One of the most im-
l>ortant reasons is that much of the
grain has not i»een sold. Eastern
miners are holding off until they know
something more «lefinite about the way
e»)iigress will handle the reciprocity
measure. With no duty on Canadian
grain they could buy it clieaper than
the present price on American grain.
The rate of consumption of Hour has
also been low this winter, and the
aiiu.unt of grain at the Head of the
Lakes, while small under ordinary
(ircumstances. Is large when the small
flour consumption is taken into con-
sideratiun.
About thirty boats of average size
would be needed to move the 8,000,000
bushels, so the grain movement does '
not offer a very promising field to the |
owners of independent boats, especially i
when the package freighters will cut
Into tne business so heavily.
Among vessel men there is some dis-
cussion of the probable amount of ore , .._ _
which will go down the lakes during i Thomasen to the station. The check
the present esason. An unofficial esti- I was mjxde out to Ray Jacobsen ana
mate is from 35,000,000 to 40,000,000 I signed with the name of H. S. Collins,
tons. I Thomasen is said to have admitted that
Of this amount it is said that the i 1 e forged Jacobsens name when he In-
boats of the IMttsburg fleet will carrv > dorsed the check. He said that he
something like 25,00.000 tons, leaving i wanted to pass the check "for fun," as
about 10,000.000 or 15.000,000 tons to he had $11 in his pockets when ar-
1
TRIES TO PASS
ANOTHER^S CHECK
Youth Says He Committed
Forgery "for Fun" —
Is Arrested.
James Thomasen, 17 > ears of age,
was arrcj'ted yesterday afternoon on a
charge of forgery. It Is alleged that
he tried to pass a check, to which he
had forged an* indorsement, in a sec-
ond-hand store in payment for two
cheap revolvers.
The clerk said he thought there wa.s
something wrong with the check and
notified Patrolman Dlckman. who sent
be divided among the independent own-
ers.
Reports that have reached the Head
of the Lakes from time to time state
that the ore docks at the lower lake
ports are crowded and that there will
be no pressing need for ore for some
time. Therefore the estimate running
to 40,000,000 tons is considered large in
some circles.
It is also stated that there Is a large
coal fleet at the lower lake ports al-
rested. He says that he came iiere
from South St. Paul with a view to
getting a Job on a lake boat with the
opening of navigation.
Thomasen waived exapilnation when
arraigned in police court this morning,
and was bound over to await the action
of the next grand Jury.
• ■
See the Duluth Hardware Co/s
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
VINCENT TO
SEEJULUTH
Then Citizens Who Go to
Commercial Club May
Meet New "Proxy."
Women Will Greet Educator
in Afternoon and Men
in Evening.
Arrangements were completed to-
day for the entertainment of Presi-
dent George E. Vincent of the Uni-
versity of Minnesota next Wednes-
day. President Vincent will be
given an opportunity to see the city,
especially its educational institutions,
and will make several addresses.
The visitor will arrive Wednesday
morning and will be met at the train
bv a reception committee. He will
address the Central high school stu-
dents at chapel extrcises at 9 o'clock
and will speak to the normal school
students shortly before noon. He
will take lunch with President E. W.
liuhannan of the normal school.
From 2:30 to 4:30 o'clock Wednes-
day afternoon President Vincent will
be the guest at a reception for the
women of the city at the Commercial
club. As the banquet in the evening
will be only for men, It will be the
only opportunity of the women to
meet the educator during his stay.
All women are invited to attend the
reception.
The banquet in the evening will be
at 7 o'clock and will be followed by
a talk by President Vincent and lo-
cal men. A large number of invita-
tions have been sent out and the re-
sponse has been good, especially on
the part of members of the Commer-
cial club, of the Minnesota University
Alumni association and the Yale
Alumni association of the Head of
the Lakes. President Vincent is a
graduate of Yale and some of the
Yale men in Duluth were his class-
mates. The alumni of the University
of Minesnota naturally are anxious
to meet the new head of the univer-
sity and many of them are expected
to attend the banquet.
If the weather is propitious and
time permits, President Vincent will
be taken about the city in an auto-
mobile.
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SUPERIOR
There is No Slogan Like the Old Slogan —
mm OBTY
A BOOK ON DULUTH.
PICTURES !
Portraits of Representative
Men.
Beautiful East End Residences
Many Public Buildings.
Mines and Mining.
Picturesque Scenic Views.
Wholesale Houses and Busi-
ness Blocks.
Logging Camps. Ships.
SUBJECTS !
In Days of Old.
Duluth Eulogized.
Ships and Shipping.
Good is the Ground.
Wealth Underneath the Ground
Felling the Forests.
Big Men Doing Big Things.
Climate, Water, Scenery and
Scores of Others.
The best there is of Duluth in Story and Picture.
Push the city of your choice by buying copies and sending
them where they will do the most good. On sale at
E. Jfi/l. SXOIVE,
221 West Superior Street.
AND
MEET DEATH
INBASS^PARK
Superior High School Students
Drowned While on
Canoe Trip.
Lowell Beghnger and Chester
Adams Were Caught in
Wind Storm.
Board of Trade Building.
ARE YOUR VALUABLE PAPERS
where your family could easily find them if some acci-
dent should happen to you? Rent a safe deposit hex at
once for all your personal papers — $3.00 and up.
I..owell Begllnger and Chester Adams,
.Superior high school students, were
drowned yesterday in Bass lake, near
Gordon, Wis., when the canoe In which
they were crossing the lake was upset
by a wind storm. The overturned canoe,
together with the paddles and the hat
of one of the boys, w;is found on the
shore of the lake, but the bodies have
not vet been recovered.
llesldents of Gordon, Wis., and par-
ties from Superior are searching for
the bodies. Chester Adams is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Adams of 528
West Fourth street. He was a stu-
dent at the Nelson Dewey high school.
Henry Begllnger, secretary of the
boara of public works, Is the step-
father of the Begllnger lad.
CHESTER SAXBY HONORED.
Superior Boy Selected as State
Peace Orator at Baltimore Event.
Chester Saxby of Superior, a Beloit
'phe Northern jyational fiank
A.L.WORTH BUIL.DING.
OUR PLATES
The plate depart-
ment of this office
is under the per-
sonal direction of
Dr. Greer. Every
plate we make Is
tried In the mouth
before It is com-
pleted. This allows
the patient to pass
upon the size, shape,
color and length of
the teeth used. Our
success m this particular line of work Is due to the fact that we take
pleasure In pleasing particular people. If you want a plate to look
natural, feel comfortable and stay up, ask for Dr. Greer.
NOTE OUR PRICES:
finest 22 g|-» SILVER FILUHGS J'e?ter%t SflC
any price In city or ehsewhere.
$3
WHALEBONE PLATES HI ^It $5
uea. SS and T^
ues. $8 and
GOLD CROWNS Karat.
No better at any price for.
BRIDGE WORK Ve'^Utr'^O
beauty and quality has never Aj|
been excelled ^
All Work Guaranteed Ten Years.
UNION PAINLESS DENTISTS
DR. FRANKLIN GREER & CO., Owners, 3 1 7 W. Superior St. Duluth
Open From 8:30 «. m. to 8 p. nu Sundays, 10 to 1.
iBcludinff BoNch luaKneio, PreMt-0-Ll(e taokf
IcaK laiiipN, three uil InmpM, horn and toolti.
Detachable Fure-donm, 915.
How to Be Sure of a Good
IVIotop Car Bargain
Getting a good bargain when you buy an
automobile is not just a question of price. It
is a question of features — of what is in the car
— the design, materials and workmanship.
If it is possible to get more for your
money in one car than in another, you want
to know it. Ability to pick out a car that will
giv£ yon the most for your money, depends
upon knowing the important points on which
to judge and then comparing cars on the basis
of these points, ft is a question of having the
right standards.
A diamond expert will select the one most
perfect stone from a handful of diamonds.
The horseman, looking over a string of
thoroughbreds, will pick out the one or two
best horses of the lot.
They arc able to do this because they
know the standards by which to judge a dia-
mond and a horse.
The same is true of motor cars. \Vc ask
you to compare Chalmers cars carefully with
others. Wc give here a few standards which
may help you to get an unusual dollar's worth
of value for every dollar you put into your
motor car.
<iuicker-acting brakes than any other car in
its class.
The design, material and construction of
the steering connections are no better on any
<ar — no matter what the price — than on the
(Thalmers "30." It would be possible to make
the steering apparatus of the "30" more costly
liy putting more expensive wood in the steer-
ing wheel. But this would not make it any
better in any particular. All steering con-
nections on the Chalmers "30"' are protected,
jind the cross steering rod is back of the front
axle, out of danger from shocks of the road.
Simplicity of design is one good standard.
The Chalmers "30" has cylinders cast en bloc.
Motor, clutch and transmission cast in a unit.
Working parts thoroughly protected from
dust and yet easily accessible. The Chalmers
"30" was the first American car to have all of
these features. There is no other car with
these features which is so thoroughly tried
and proved as the Chalmers. Many cars that
looked all right in design failed in use. What-
ever you do, buy a proved car.
Good looks is another standard. The
Chalmers "30" has good looks. It has beauti-
ful lines and it has fine finish. Those who are
most competent to judge, say there is no more
beautiful car at any price.
As for finish, you positively cannot find
a car to equal the Chalmers "30" except at
nearly double the price. For attention to de-
tails, compare this car with those costing twice
and three limes as much. Only in that way
can you appreciate how all of the "little
things" — that seem so big when neglected—
have been provided in the Chalmers "30."
Ease of control and comfort for both
driver and passengers is one of the best stan-
dards. The Chalmers "30" is easy to control
because it has one pedal for brake and clutch;
because the control levers are just where you
would naturally reach for them; because of. a
big steering wheel and good steering connec-
tions. It is no trick to learn to drive a Chal-
mers. We guarantee to teach every buyer
without additional expense how to drive and
care for his car.
TbiN moiioKrani on Ihe
radiator NtandM for all you
van aHk iu a motor car.
This car has a 115 inch wheel base. The
body is swung well between the axles. The
scats are tilted and have good springs in them.
The upholstery is luxurious. The rear springs
arc long, three-quarter elliptic and of the fin-
est steel for the purpose. The majority of
automobile engineers have voted this type of
spring tlic best.
Without fear of contradiction, wc say
there is no car in the world which is more
comfortable under all conditions than the
Chalmers "30." Yet the price of this car is
only $1,600 including Bosch Magneto, gas
lamps, Prcbt-o-litc tank.
Weight is another standard.
The Chalmers "30" motor is lighter per
horse power than any other motor. The com-
plete car is from 200 to 600 pounds lighter
than any competing car of the same size and
roominess. The "30" has all the weight that
comfort and efficiency demand yet no useless
weight to consume gasoline and wear out tires.
Have you ever ti'ticcd the difference 'n
the riding qualities oi -in ordinary railrond
coach and a Pullman chair car? The day
coach is light. It shakes and rattles. It trans-
mits every inequality of the road-bed or the
vails straight to the passengers, giving them a
fiuccession of jars and vibrations.
The Pullman coach is compact and solid.
ft goes smoothly at any speed. It is com-
fortable. It gives a sense of security.
There is just the same difference between
■iding in the cheaper cars and in the Chalmers.
Cars that have light wheels and frames can-
not be comfortable or safe.
You are buying a car to ride in. Y'^ou will
often be in it hours at a stretch. Insist that it
jive the utmost comfort.
You trust your own life and the life of
>'our family to it. Insist, therefore, that the
factors of safety be of the best design, finest
aiaterials and workmanship.
The Factors of Safety are a standard
which you should have in mind at all times.
The four main factors of safety in any motor
car are Frame, Wheels, Brakes, Steering Con-
nections.
The Chalmers "30" has the heaviest,
strongest frame in proportion to total weight
of any car in its class. Relatively this frame
is as strong as in any car at any price. These
"30" frames are built of special heat-treated
steel. They are strong enough to sustain many
times the weight they are called upon to carry.
They are staunch and heavy enough to give a
feeling of solidarity, without which no car is
comfortable.
The wheels of the Chalmers "30" are
made under the same specifications and of the
same material as those on the highest-priced
cars.
The Chalmers "30" has bigger, stronger.
We have made strong claims in this ad-
vertisement— the strongest that could be made
for a car. Because we have stated that ac-
cording to certain important standards, the
Chalmers "30" is preferable to any other car
selling at anywhere near the same price. And
In some respects, the equal at least — if not the
superior — of any car made at any price.
We have made these statements advisedly.
We know that they are right.
We could not make them unless we had
the car to back them up. The car does back
them up. It is the best automobile value to-
day. Study It for yourself. Compare it for
yourself with others.
If you don't agree with us after you have
studied the situation, why, of course, we can-
not hope to sell you a car.
But at the same time, wc believe that if
you do study this automobile question care-
fully, with the right standards in your mind,
you will decide the Chalmers "30" is the most
you can buy in an automobile for $1,600. And
that, relatively, it is more than you can buy in
any other car, regardless of the price.
Come and see these cars as soon as you
can. Let us arrange a demonstration at your
convenience.
MUTUAL AUTO CO.-CENTRAL GARAGE
313-31S WESX FIRST STREET, DULUTH, MINIM.
^^:
J
W. J. FLYNN,
Who Has Been Making a Sensational
Record Raiding Gambling Houses.
Mayor Ga3mor Is Very Much
Pleased With His Record and It Is
Said Considers Him in Line for
Promotion.
college student, who won the state ora-
torical collegiate contest, held this
week at Milwaukee, has been elected
president of the Peace Oratorical asso-
ciation of Wiscon.'^ln and will go to
Baltimore, Md.. next month to compete
in the Interstate event. \ oung oaxb>
Is the son of Mrs. Olive Saxby of the
Nemadji apartments. Belknap street.
COAL COMPANY WILL BUY
TRACT FOR IMPROVEMENTS.
With extensive Improvements in
view, the Lehigh Valley Coal company
will purchase a tract of land adjoining
Its dock at the corner of First street
and Banks avenue. The exact nature
of the improvements has not been
Klven out. The adjoining property is
owned by the Omaha railway and the
Scott estate of Philadelphia.
Resigns Deputyship.
Mrs. M. B. Sheridan has resigned as
deputy for the National Fraternal
league In the northern part of Wiscon-
sin with headquarters in Superior and
has gone to Iowa, where she expects to
remain. D. E. Canty of Green Ba>.
well known to many Superior people,
will probably be her successor.
♦
New Department Store.
Siegel Bros, of Washburn. Wis., de-
partment store proprietors, will open »
new store in the Board of Trade build-
ing, first floor, within a few weeks, ine
work of remodeling the ground floor to
meet the needs of the new tenants, has
been started and will soon be com-
pleted. ^
MEETING CALLED
FOR MONDAY NOON
Bar Association Wfll Prob-
ably Recommend Candi-
dates for Fiitb Judge.
Notices have been sent out by Secre-
tary W. E. Whipple of the Eleventh
Judicial District Bar association to
members announeingf a nieeting to be
held Monday noon at thf Commercial
club.
At this meeting the matter of the
recommendations of the association for
the new Judgeship for this district will
be taken up.
It is probable that two or three
names will be selected and sent to the
governor. A number of prominent Du-
luth attorneys have been suggested
for the place.
SUNDERLAND
LUCKY MAN
Chicago Bay Farmer Gets His
$200 Back From Al-
leged Crooks.
Other Victims Also Reim-
bursed and Lawyers Get
the Balance.
that
Jacob Sunderland, the Chicago Bay
farmer who was swindled out of the
$200 with which he had come to Du-
luth to buy a horse, got his money
back at the police station today.
Andrew A. Gunderson, alias Mc-
Carthy, and Gust G. Brown, alias
Johnson, the mvn who are charged
with having taken his wealth from
him last Monday in a "big mitt" game,
returned it to him today. The two al-
leged crooks also turned over J75 to
John Hamerin, the woodsman who was
touched for that amount the latter
part of last month, and $50 to Charles
Might Be Dead Today.
Garden City, Kan. — In a letter from
Mrs. James Hamner, of this city, she
says, "I firmly believe that I would
not be alive today, if it were not for
Cardui. I had been a sufferer from
womanly troubles all my life, until I
found that great remedy. I feel that
I can't praise it too highly." Are you
a woman, suffering from some of the
troubles to which a woman is pecu-
liarly liable? If so, why not try Car-
dui, the woman's tonic? You can
rely on Cardui. It is purely vege-
table, perfectly harmless, and acts
gently but surely, without bad after-
effects. 'Twill help you. Ask your
druggist. a
Morris, the Canadian who lost
sum in a three-card swindle.
Lastly, they gave th«:ir attorneys
an order for $400, practically the com-
plefe balance in thvlr possession. Fol-
lowing their preliminary examination
in police court this morning they were
bound over to await the action of the
next grand Jury.
Sunderland told how h«^ had lost his
$200 in a Superior street saloon and
positively identified Gunderson and
Brown as the men who had gotten
it away from him. The saloon keeper
identified them as thw rien who had
played cards with sundtrland in one
of the back rooms of his place last
Monday. No testimony \.'as put in by
the defendants. .
SPRING TERM
MONDAY
APRIL
16TH
BROCKLEHURST BUSINESS COLLEGE
Second Floor— Next to paldiof Hotel
BIG PRIZI-S
ARE OFFERED
It Wdl Pay to Have Agri-
cultural Exhibits at
State Fah'o
Secretary J. C Simpson Tells
of Plans for Big An-
nual Exhibilion.
J. C. Simpson, secretary of the state
agricultural society, is n Duluth to-
day .the guest of C. P Craig, agri-
cultural director of the Jtate fair.
"The prizes for the agricultural dis-
play," said Mr. Simpson, "will aggre-
gate $9,100, or about 15 per cent more
than last year. The state fair will
offer more money for agrlcultral ex-
hibits than any other fair or exhibi-
tion in the United Stateii.
"The legislature did not make an
appropriation for a state fair agri-
cultural building so we will be Incon-
venienced by a lack of space. Last
year twenty-four counties were repre-
sented by exhibits In addition to th»
Individual displays. Thus far thia
year Mr. Craig has received applica-
tions for space from six or Hevea
counties which were not represented
by displays last year. We will meet
the problem for space when it come*
up, but it may be a dlflflcult question
to solve.
• The county exhibits are the feat-
ure of the agricultural display. Com-
paratively few people can come to
Northeastern Minnesota to look over
the agricultural lands of this commu-
nity, but thousands can gain a good
Idea of the resources of this territory
when the fruits of the soil are brought
to them. The county exhibits draw
many farmers from this and other
states an<] enable new settlers to de-
cide to which locality they will go for
the purpose of establishing homes."
Mr. Simpson believes the state should,
have an agricultural department
Planned after the federal govern-
ment's. There Is a lack of statistical
information regarding Minnesota and
there is now no accurate method In
vogue of obtaining it. He thinks the-
state should make a liberal appropria-
tion for the support of such a depart-
ment which he believes would be one
of the most Important If not the most
Important adjunct of the state govern-
ment. Minnesota does not issue com-
prehensive bulletins regarding its
crops and their developments. On the
other hand Iowa and other states,
especially Kansas, make a specialty ol
this work.
"When I came to Minnesota from.
Iowa," said Mr. Simpson." Mr. Craig
told me about the agricultural re-
sources of Northern Minnesota and
what was being done on the Jean Du-
luth farm near this city. 1 coula
hardly believe that the soil in thl«
part of Minnesota was so rich, but
since I have been in the state I have
received ample proof of Its fertility."
HOME FAT REDUCER
Works RapMly and Safely— RequlrttNt.
Exarolsing aid Allows Yoo to Eat
V;iiatYOHUko-Ciit
TMs Out.
For the »)cnfnt oT Uio«e who wUh to rrduoo tbalt
nc«h quJrkly and safely, we will jlve the rereiiA »!>*
dlrocUons in full for a. slmule household remedj th«t
can be obtained at Irlflnc coal frtim any grod dnic
ttuie; H ouooe MarmoU, H ounce FluUI Extract
Caacara Arooutlc and 3H ounrea PeT>f>ennlnt
Water. Atl three are cheap and wholesome, but jou
should take care to get an unbrokm pa-kaire ao
that you get Marmbla and not a substitute. \Vhea
you get home mix the Uiree tt;gether by ahaUog them,
together In a larve botUe an<l tak« one teaapoonful
after eacb maal and at bedtime.
Follow tbeae direction! and you will lia*a the k«l
fat reducer that money can buy. It will take «(r
the fiwh at tbe rate of at least two pounds a week
without disarranging the stomach or causing wrinkle*,
while best of all. no exercising or dieting to re-
quired to help it out. You can get reauiu and •&
th« same time tak« thlnga t*ij and eat what yo*^.
Uto— as much a* you like ind wtmcret fou Uki^
7"
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Saturday,
THE DULU^^H HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
PURE MILK, FRESH MEAT AND CLEAN BREAD;
HOW DULUTH'S FOOD SUPPLY IS KEPT HEALTHFUL
HEALTH COMMISSIONER
WEBSTER.
Duluih is taking a position as one
of the foremost cities in the country
In the matter of insuring its citizens
clean, pure, wholesome food.
This protection is given by the city
health department, which has several
bureaus with difterent inspectors at
the head of each. The principal
branches are the dair>' inspection,
the meat inspection and the bakery
inspection, each of co-ordinate im-
portance.
The men who are in charge un-
der the general supervision of the
health commissioner are on the job
every day in the week. They go over
the same ground month after month,
always on the lookout for defects
which will endanger the health of the
public, and are gradually increasing
the extent of their territory.
The dairy inspection is under the
direction of Grant E. Owen, who has
the title of milk inspector, and he is
assited by Conrad AVicklund. deputy
milk inspector. Not only do they
make it a point to see that the milk
which is delivered to the public for
consumption is up to the standard,
but they make it their business to
have the surroundings of the dairies
as s:init;iry as po.ssible. They are re-
sponsible for a great number of im-
provements, such as the installation
of efficient drains, proper ventilating
apparatus, new milkhouses, proper
feeding of the cattle and proper
lighting. Cows are no longer milked
In filthy, reeking stables: the milk is
not allowed to stand about in the
barn In uncovered pails. and the
dairymen are cooling their milk
properly before selling it to their
customers. All herds of cows in the
•city are regularly tested for tuber-
culosis, and all these in which the
disease is detected are cut out and
condemned. They are also keeping
tract of the restaurants to compel
them to furnish their trade with milk
which lit up to the standard required
by the state law, which calls for 3 Va
per cent butter fat.
The attention of the inspectors is
not confined to Duluth, but they
make regular visits to all dairies out
of the city which ship miik into the
city. Those who persisted in being
filthy were put out of business and
their shipments of milk into Duluth
were stopped. As a result of their
efforts Duluth is getting good milk.
Outside experts who have made visits
here declare that the Duluth system
Is one of the best they have ever
MILK INSPECTOR
OWEN.
GRANT E.
seen, and state men who have made
investigations here are emphatic in
the statement that Duluth is the first
city in the state in dairy excellence.
Tlio Meat Iii.siHftor,
Since Lee Bernhardt, meat inspec-
tor, took up his duties a year ago,
Duluth butcher shops have shown a
radical change, as has the quality of
the meat which is shipped In here
from outside points. Every shop In
the city has made a decided improve-
ment. They have been giving more
attention to sanitation and to the
proper care of their tools. Sausage
machines have been cleaned up and
kept clean; back rooms have been
scrubbed out regularly; many shops
have enameled Interiors and new ice
boxes; none of them use the same
water for washing their blocks and
counters and their hands, and most
of them have put in city water. In-
spector Bernhardt is now scoring all
the meat shops in the city, and when
he Is finished it is expected that most
of them will have high averages. *-^^
Every shop in the city is visited reg-
ularly and all of them have shown a
willingness to comply with the sug-
gestions of the Inspectors.
In the last year the inspector has
condemned about eleven tons of meat
which was declared unfit for con-
.sumption. The great bulk of this
was sent to the dump during the hot
weather of last summer, when large
quantities of veal were sent in with-
out having been properly cooled be-
fore it was loaded into the express
car. The result was that it was putrid
when it got here. Every train was
met by the inspector, and every veal
was passed upon as soon as it was
loaded onto the trucks on the plat-
form. The negligence of the ship-
pers cost them so much that they
soon changed their ways, and the veal
which now comes is is in first class
shape. There has been no let up in
vigilance, however, and no meat
which is not In good condition is al-
lowed to go out to the public.
Bakery Inspector.
When Joseph Prr.tt was first ap-
pointed bakery inspector some of the
bake shops were being used as bed-
rooms. None of them were as clean
as they should be. When the new
bakery ordinance was passed he
caused a big change. Bakeries which
had been running in dark basements
were put out of commission i.f they
did not change; the men were re-
quired to keep scrupulously clean;
individual tov%'els for the employes
were put in; the sleeping quarters
MEAT INSPECTOR BERN-
HARDT.
were eliminated, and a general,
thorough house cleaning instituted
and kept up. Careful attention has
been given to the delivery of bakery
products. They are no longer handled
by men whose hands might or might
not be clean; they aren't tossed Into
open baskets with the wind blowing
quantities of filth Into them, and the
wagons themselves are not dirty.
"The aim of the department has
been to educate the men with whom
the different inspectors come in con-
tact," said Dr. Webster, health com-
missioner. "We have endeavored to
show them how it would be to their
own advantage to follow the pro-
visions of the ordinances which have
been drafted in order to enable us
to protect public health. I am pleased
to be able to state that we have found
a general willingness to do so. Our
work has been made easier and more
BAKERY INSPECTOR PRATT.
pleasant, and we have been able to
get results much more quickly than
would otherwise have been possible.
At first we had to adopt stringent
measures to convince them that we
were In earnest and no^ just talking.
Several arrests had to be made and
there was unpleasantness, but when
it became absolutely .apparent that we
were not trying to make grand stand
plays this "was not necessary. The
Inspectors have been doing good
work in their respective branches and
it has been m<JBt gratifying to ob-
serve the great improvements which
have been caused in the last year. I
am also gratefiii to the council for
the assistance which they have given
us in the passage of needed or-
dinances, for without the ordinances
it \Ct)uld have b^n almost impossible
to get nearly .*o far ahead as we are
today."
MOVEMENT OF TRADE IS VERY SLOW
Steam, Energy, Vitality
ARE ESSENTIALS TO SUCCESS IN
ANY LINE OF BUSINESS OR SPORTS
Mr. S. P. Cutack, the well-
known big league umpire,
tells of how he was bene-
fited.
3216 Lowe Ave., Chicago, 111.
I was just thinking today of how
long I have been a user of your val-
uable pure malt whiskey. The first
time it came to my notice was
about fifteen years ago. While I
was training in the spring I con-
tracted a severe cold and Duffy's
Pure Malt Whiskey was prescribed
for me, my doctor telling me that
it would not only cure my cold but
would act as a tonic stimulant and
be beneficial to me in my athletic
work.
It did me so much good and kept
me in such fine trim that I have
never been without it in the house
since that time. It keeps a person
full of steam, energy and vitality.
I absolutely know that a person
can do more hard work and stren-
"uous training and be in better con-
dition physically if he uses Duffy's
Pure Malt Whiskey as prescribed.
I always rcommend it when any
one in our league is not feeling
quite up to the mark.
New York, April 15. — R. G. Dun &
Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says:
The whole movement is dlsai>pointingly
slow notwith.standing the fundamental
sound industrial and agricultural con-
ditions. The earlier outlook of the
year for increased activity has not
been confirmed and reports from the
largest trades are of recessions rather
than of progress. Current demand
shows a falling off in pig iron and
finished materials, and, unless new or-
ders soon expand, the rate of output
much necesarily be reduced. Moreover,
tl»e foreign inquiry has subsided, while
tiiere has been no important buying by
the railroads since the recent Harriman
rail contract for 72.000 tons and pre-
vious expectations regarding tl»e pros-
pective volume of business from this
source, are now being modified.
Existing conditions in pig iron re-
flect distinct dullness, and even at the
low prices named, consumers do not
appear disposed to purchase for ex-
tended deliveries. Some sales of .South-
ern iron have been sold below $11 for
early shipment, and concessions have
been granted on open-hearth billets
and sheet bars, while a contract for
plates at the West was closed at a re-
cession of $2 per ton.
Primary textile markets rule quiet
CONFERENCE
AT HIBBING
Methodist Episcopal Ministers
Will Meet on Range
Next Week.
Duluth Pastors Will Read
Papers and Take Part
in Discussions.
MR. S. P. CUSACK.
^ '^•^^*«'«5s;s^
If you wish to keep strong, vigorous and active and enjoy perfect
health, take Duffy's Pure Malt W'hiskey regularly, according to di-
rections. It builds up the nerve tissues, tones up the heart, gives
power to the brain, strength and elasticity to the muscles and richness
to the blood. It brings into action all the vital forces, it makes diges-
tion perfect and enables you to get from the food you eat all the
nourishment it contains. It is a wonderful remedy in the prevention
and cure of nervousness, thphoid, spring fever, malaria, every form of
stomach trouble, diseases of the throat and lungs, and is prescribed
as a medicine by doctors of all schools.
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is the only whiskey that was taxed by
the Government as a medicine during the Spanish-American war.
If m need of advice, write Medical Department The Duffy Malt Whiskey
Company, Rochester, N. Y., stating your case fully. Our doctors will send
you advice free, together with a valuable medical booklet. Sold IN SEALED
BOTTLES ONLY by druggists, grocers and dealers, or direct. $1.00 per
large bottle.
The Dulutli district, Nortliern Minne.
sola conference of tlie Methodist
Episcopal church, will be represented
by delegates at a meeting In Hibbing,
Minn., April 18 to 20, inclusive.
Rev. M. S. Rice, pastor of the First
Methodist Episcopal church of this
city, will preach at Tuesday evening's
service. He will lead the devotional
service Wednesday morning. Rev.
Charles K. Oaten of the L.e6>ier Park
church, Dulutii, will read a paper on
"The Crisis in Methodism." Rev. J.
A. Roberts oi the Garfield avenue
church, Duluth, will lead the discus-
sion. Rev. T. Stanley Oadams of Two
Harbors, Minn., will read a paper on
"Tne Way of Early Methodism's Suc-
cess. Rev. A. L. Richardson of Aitkin
will lead the discussion.
Wednesday afternoon Rev. Jotin
Walker Powell, pastor of the Endion
church, Duluth, will read a paper on
"The Place of the Deaconess in Metli-
odism." Mrs. Kreidler, superintendent
of the Deaconess Home, Duluth, will
lead the aiscussion. A paper, "The
Care and Preservation of Church and
Parsonage Property," will be read by
Rev. Charles P. Keast of Chisliolm,
Minn. The discussion will be led by
Rev. Charles W. Ramshaw of Proctor,
Minn. Rev. William H. Farrell of Ely,
Minn., will read a paper, "Mannerisms
that Spoil Pulpit Efficiency." The dis-
cussion will be led by Rev. W. G.
Boyle, pastor of the Aabury church,
Duluth.
Rev. Charles Fox Davis of Brainerd,
Minn., will speak at 8 p. m. Wednes-
day, on "Metliodism and the World
Field." Rev. Daniel B. Brummitt,
editor of the Northwestern Christian
Advocate, will speak on "The Litera-
ture of Methodism."
Report^ will be received Thursday
morning. Three short papers will be
read on ''How to Preach." The papers
will be written by Rev. B. D. Hanscom
of Eveleth, Rev. A. L.. Richardson of
Aitkin, and Rev. G. H. Blake of Clo-
quet. In the afternoon Rev. R. W.
Wilcox of Virginia will speak on
'•Methodism's Opportunity and Respon-
sibility on the Iron Range." Rev. J.
F. Pickard of Hibbing will lead the
discussion. Rev. E. F. Stidd, president
of the district Epworth league, will
read a paper on "Our Relation to tlie
Young People of the Duluth District."
Rev. J. J. Parish of Grand Rapids,
Minn., will lead the discussion. Bert
N. Wheeler of Duluth will speak on
*'The Sunday School and Its Place."
Rev. J. H. Murray of Grace church,
Duluth, will lead the discu.sslon.
Thursday evening Rev. M. P. Burns,
with more firmness sliown in cotton
goods and yarns, bpt buyers are not
satisfied as to the stability of the higli-
er prices and have withdrawn from tiie
market. The curtailment of operations
in cotton mill center.s is increasing and
only 105.000 pieces of print clotlis were
sold during last week at Fall River,
of which 40,000 were .spots. Agitation
in tlie tariffs att'ecting cottons and
woolens is naturally causing hesitation
and coupled with sub-normal counter
demand throughout the country, the
dullne.ss is readily exaggerated Credit
conditions in ivool and worsteds are re-
ported better than usual In the matter
of collections and in accounts due. Ex-
port sales of cotton goods continue in
excess of a year ago. The develop-
ment of a radical style trend toward
rough fabrics in dress goods is at-
tracting considerable attention.
Trading in footwear has shown some
improvement, due to the more season-
able weatlier demand tlie past week,
although conditions are far from active.
The demand from domestic tanners for
hides continues conservative, but the
market is well maintained, principally
owing to limited receipts Jind supplies.
Leather conditions are generally dull
and unsatisfactory.
superintendent of the Minneapolis dis-
trict will speak on "Tlie Message for
tlie Hour."
Safe Medivlne for Children.
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound is
a safe and effective medicine for chil-
dren as it does not contain opiates or
harmful drugs. The genuine Foley's
Honey and Tar Compound is in a yel-
low package. All druggists.
^^»^>^»^^^>^>^>^>^^>^^>^>»^>^i^«^»^>^»^»^^^^^^^
FOR SALE
Eight Forties - 4-62-12,
Vermilion Range.
Address C 286, Herald.
«^k^>^«^>^^^'N^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^%rf^^^^^^^m
FIVE FROM MINNESOTA.
More National Oiiardsnien Wilt Be
Sent to Texas.
Washington, April 15. — True to its
promise of permitting as many as pos-
sible of the nnilltia officers to play at
the game of war now in progress at
San Antonio, Tex., and San Diego, Cal.,
the war department yesterday desig-
nated the number of officers from each
state who will compose the second de-
tail of militiamen with the regulars
for Instruction purposes. These na-
tional guard officers will go to the
two southern camps on April 25 for a
stay of two weeks, relieving the first
detail sent southward early in the
month. Two hundred and one militia
officers will go to San Antonio and
thirty-five to San Diego. These will
go from Northwestern states as fol-
lows: Iowa, 5; Michigan, 5; Minne-
sota, 5: North Dakota, 2; South Dakota,
1; Wisconsin, 5.
KILLS SON BECAUSE
HE COULD NOT SPELL.
Goderich, Ont.. April 15. — Because his
7-year-old son could not spell a word
correctly, George Van Stone beat him
to deatli with a club. At the assizes
last evening he was sentenced to im-
prisonment for life In the penitentiary.
POPULATIONS OF THREE
MORE CITIES GIVEN OUT.
Washington, April 15 — Population sta-
tistics of the Thirteenth census an-
nounced, include:
1910. 1900.
Kaukauna. Wis 4,717 5.115
Little Chute, Wis 1.354 944
Miles, Mont 4.679 1,938
INSURGENCY
DEVELOPS
Some Democrats Vote With
Republicans to Amend
Rucker Bill
I
BLOOD
POISON
Cured by th* Marvel of the Century
the Obbac Syetem,
DtItm out blo(xl pciison In any %t».se penDaneotly,
without de.idlT merrurr, or irdlde of potash, but with
purel; vecptable, , saf« logredleiitf. To prore U w«
will send you a
30 Day Treaimoni Froe
Sjrmpt: ms leaw iiulck. Cure yuurueif at home now. Send
for frco trc^iUueut oiiU rtsmurkalile took on Cut* o(
Blo'd PotM>n.
TME OBBAC CO.. <M OkfeM BUI|.. Chicaik
Measure for Publicity of Ex-
penses Finally Passes in
Original Form.
Washington. April 15. The Demo-
cratic pasty met its first serious
trouble In the house of representatives
yesterday. At the close of a session
marked by Insurgency in the Demo-
cratic ranks, by reason of which the
Republicans narrowly missed scoring a
triumph, the house passed the Rucker
bill for publicity of campaign con-
tributions before election.
The flglit arose over the extent to
which publicity should be applied.
But for the vigorous and continued
use of the Democratic party whip, an
important liepublican amendment ex-
tending publicity to the individual re-
ceipts and expenses of candidates for
congress, would have been retained in
the bill when it finally passed.
As it was, the amendment was
adopted over the protest of tlie Dem-
ocratic leaders by the support of
fifty-two of the Democrats wlio voted
with the solid Republican strength.
Resort to a parliamentary naore en-
abled the Democrats to stall off . the
amendment, but twenty-eight of their
number refused to change their atti-
tude and stuck with the Republicans
in opposing the Democratic majority.
Riieker BUI Fleally PasMed.
The Rucker bul passed finally by a
unanimous vote, but only after a
stormy scene. The amendment offered
by Representative Jackson, a new Re-
publican member from Kansas, re-
ijuired all candidates for congress to
file statements of the source and use
of their individual campaign funds. In
both the primary and general election.
Tlie amendment met instant support
from the Republican side and encount-
ered the opposition of the Democratic
leaders. Mr. Rucker of Missouri,
cliairman of the committee in charge
of the bill, asserted that it would so
change the form of the law that it
might endanger Its final passage.
Tills did not deter many Democrats
from supporting the Jackson amend-
ment. They, with the solid Republi-
can forces, gave the amendment a
majority that resulted in its adoption.
172 to 131; and the announcement of
the vote was followed by a storm of
ajiplause from the Republican side.
There was a hurried conference of
Democratic leaders as the progress of
the vote showed the success of the
amendment. As soon as the vote was
announced, Mr. Rucker moved to re-
commit the bill, with its new amend-
ment, to the elections committee, with
instructions to that committee to send
the bill back to the house without the
Jackson amendment.
This parliamentary move to squeeze
the amendment out of the bill brought
about a split in the ranks of the
Democrats who had favored the Jack-
son amendment. Twent-eight of
them stood by their former action and
voted against the motion to recommit
the bill, but the Democxatic leaders
mustered enough votes to carry their
point 157 to 149, and the bill technic-
ally was sent back to the committee.
Aiii'enduient I<ett Out.
Mr. Rucker gathered the members
of the committee around him and
without leaving the floor, they in-
structed l»im to report the bill again
without the .-ackson amendment. As
soon as the vote had been announced,
he once more reported the bill to the
hou.se with the Jackson amendment
left out of it. and this action carried
164 to 139. The bill, in its original
form, then passed the house without
a dissenting vote.
The Democrats who stood out
against the efforts of party leaders to
dispose of the ^ackson amendment
were:
Akin and George, New York: Alex-
ander and Berland, Mis.sourl; Buchan-
an and Stone, Illinois; Bulkeley, Sher-
wood and Whltacre, Ohio; Burke and
Konop. Wisconsin; Cox and Grav. In-
dianapolis; Dupre, Kstopinal. Pujo,
Ransdell and WicklilTe, Louisiana;
Goodwin. Arkansas; Hamlll, Townsend,
Tuttle, New Jersey; Hardy, Texas;
Pepper, Iowa; Baker, California;
Sweet, Michigan; Thayer. Massachu-
setts; Wilson, Pennsylvania.
The bill, as finally pa.'^sed, makes
more stringent the campaign publicity
law passed in 1910. That law requires
publicity of funds after election. The
Rucker amendment will require pub-
licity of funds by the campaign com-
mittees ten days previous to election,
and the filing of supplemental state-
ments every three days thereafter,
until election day.
The bill limited publicity of cam-
paign expenditures to sums of $100 or
over, but Mr. Rucker accepted an
amendment of Mr. Kopp, Republican
of Wisconsin, requiring the publicity
of all payments in sums of $10 or
over for campaign purposes. Through-
out the debate Perry Belmont, presi-
dent of the National Publicity Law
association and a former member of
the house, occupied a seat on the
floor.
Violets, Roses, Carnations.
American Beauties. Big stock; prices
right, at Victor Huofs.
FOR RENT
No. 21BH Weat Flnit Street and Sec-
ond Floor, 40x50 feet, to be rented
toKethrr; llrat-claHa place for Ilsbt
manufacturing, tailor ahop, dvar
factory, etc. Hot water heat.
MYERS BROS. CO.,
205 THE LYCEUM.
C £. ROE TALKS
ON GARDENING
— ^W^— km —
Tells Lakesiders What to
Grow and How to
Care for IL
At a meeting of the Lakeside club
held last evening in the town hall, C.
E. Roe of Woodland told the Lake-
siders about gardening.
Mr. Roe said that while the sea-
sons were a good deal shorter in
Lakeside than they are in Woodland
and that while the sun does not shine
so brightly at the lake shore suburb
as it does further back from the
shores of the lake, it might be pos-
sible to have a garden even though
one lived in Lakeside.
Mr. Roe told what had been done
in Woodland and gave the i^akesiders
some good hints on what to grow and
how to plant and care for it. His
talk was practical and there was an
C
»pring
Medicine
Is
Made a Yearly
by
Impure Blood.
The Best is Ffood's Sarsaparilla, Which Cures
All Humors and All Eruptions,
Relicrves that Tired Feeling,
<3reates an Appetite.
More Profit is the object of sub-
stitution. If urged io buy any
preparation said to be "Just as
good" as Hood's you may be sure
it is Inferior, costs less to make,
and yields the dealer a larger profit.
Insist on Having Hood's, whlcli
effects its wonderful cures, not
simply because it contains sar-
saparilla, but because it combines
the utmost remedial values of
twenty different ingredients.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Makes people well and keeps them "well. Get it today.
jB4WukJb
Providence Building,
Fourth Avenue West and
Superior Street.
In Mourishment-
A Quart Of Good Beer
Is Equivalent to J^lb. of
Beef. 1
"*HIS information is furnished by **The Hospital" of
London in commenting May 1, 1909, on a report
made public by a Special Government Commission. Good beer
is thus proven a very viluabie liquid food which together with its
acknowledged tonic properties makes it the ideal beverage for
every cUy family use — ideal for nursing mothers and convalcs-
cen'tS. But all good beers are not alike. If you would drink
the one of most delicious
flavor order Fltgef's BcCf
It is used in many hospitals
and prescribed by the best phy-
sicians. Keep a case in your cel-
lar and the doctor won't nec'l to call so often.
FITGER BREWING CO., Duluth, Minn.
overflow meeting of would-be gar-
deners to hear him.
Arthur Crassvveller gav.j a talk on
"Decorative Gardening." His talk was
most interesting. It was devoted to
shrubs, flowers and things grown
more for beauty than for sale.
The residents of Lester Park asked
that the council be petitioned to give
that suburb more policemen. The
residents stated that last year there
were several blind pigs conducted at
Lester and that drunken men on the
streets were not an uncommon sight.
A committee was appointed to take
the matter up with the t:ity council.
BENEHT FOR
ORPHANAGE
Receipts of Monday Matinee
Win Go to Chluritable
Institution.
Hundreds of tickets have been sold
for a matinee performance to be given
Monday afternoon by the Ilaude Leone
Associate Players at the Lyceum for
St. James* Orphange at Woodland and
It Is expected that a big sum will be
cleared for the institution.
The matinee is possible through the
generosity of C. A. Marfhall, owner
and manager of the Lyceum; H. E.
Pierce & Co., under whose direction
the Maude Leone company is playing:
the members of the company, and Jens
Flaaten and his orchestra. Miss Leone
has taken a warm personal intrest in
the matinee
The sale of tickets has been under
the direction of different individuals
and organizations interested in the
orphanage and they have met with
success. They hope to be able to
crowd the Lyceum from parquet to the
top of the balcony. Two years ago a
similar matinee was given for the or-
phanage and a large sum was cleared.
The Maude Leone company has
proved to be more entertaining than
ever this year and the present engage-
ment has been an unqualified success.
The matinee Monday afternoon will
merit a large attendance on account
of the ability of the company, but with
the added merit of the Institution for
which the benefit Is given it Is expect-
ed tliat a great crowd will attend.
•
The Great V^oXt Spider.
A most unnatural family Is that of
the wolf spider. The female carries
the young about with her on her
baek when they are first hatched,
giving her an uncanny appearance,
like a wrlggliner animated ball. When
the family has grown large enough
to discover their power, they turn to
devour their mother. Those who
have happy healthful families, where
golden grain belt beers are served at
meal time, can hardly imagine a nat-
ural social system of that cannibal
variety. Telephone your dealer or
duluth branch mlnneapolis brewing
company.
•
Barnes Acaultted.
Anderson, Ind., April 15. — Benjamin
C. Barnes of Washington, D. C, was
acquitted by a Jury in the circuit court
late yesterday on the charge of having
forcibly entered a sleeping car berth
occupied by Miss Cecil Hill, foster
daughter of Prof. William Hill of the
University of Chicago, on a Pennsyl-
vania railroad train as it was passing
through tills county on the night or
Jan. 26.
For the mother in the home to be
strong and well, able to devote hm
time and strength to the rearing of
children, is one of life's greatest
blessings. Often the bearing oi
children injures the mother's health,
if she has not prepared her system
in advance for the important event.
Women ivho nse Mother's irriend are saved mnch of the discomfort and suffering
so common with eq^ectant mothers. It is a penetrating oil that thoronghly lubri-
cates every mtiscle, nerve iind tendon involved at such time% and thus promotes
physical comfort. It aids nature by expanding the skin and tissues and per-
fectly prepares the systeci for the
coming of baby. Mother's Friend
assures a quick and nAtural. recovery
for every woman who usea it. It is
for sale at drug stores. Write for
free book for expectant mothers.
BBADFIELD BEQUIATi^B CO.,
Atlanta^ Oa.
■
fi — nrtii itiT-iiri'i 'ni^ ,
^
<k
-•^A
■ ' 1*111
1^
a»M
■ni» w I
.
■»MH«i
P^
irrT^*
t
*#-
Saturday,
THE DULUtk^HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
^^
IN DEFENSE
OF COWAN
■ ■ ■ ■■ ■—
Witnesses Testify in Contra-
diction of Stories of
Drunkenness.
Judge Cowan Closes Remark-
able Address Lasting
Seven Hours.
Bismarck. X. D., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Judge Cowan clo.sed
his seven-hour address, which was the
opening statement for the defense, late
yesterday afternoon. It is admittedly
the most remarkable address ever de-
livered In Nortli Dakota. Taking up
the cliarge of delayed cases. Judge
Cowan sowed a remarkable memory
by bringing before the court the va-
rious points of law that were involved
in each case, what the attorneys for
the oppo.slng .sides contended, and
what action he had taken. At times
he grew sarcastic in his reference to
this or that piece of evidence, but more
often lie would chaj-ye personal ani»
moslty and a political maneuver as the
motive for evidence that had been ad-
ducetl. While the senate rules provid-
ed that only three huurs should be al-
lowed for the opening statement, there
was no disposition to invoke the order
against him.
Judge Cowan said that after ad-
journment Thursday his attention had
been vailed by a fellow citizen to a
remark which he wished to correct,
this remark being to the effect that
A. B. Kerlin was a member of the
Civic league in Devils Lake. In ask-
ing him to make such a retraction the
judge said Kerlin had remarked that
he liad enough sins to answer for any-
way."
These remarks brought from Counsel
George liangs for the prosecution the
querv as to whether or not the mem-
bersiiip papers of the Civic league
would be allowed as evidence. Bangs
was informed that this matter would
be t;eated In It? porpor order.
HnrborM \o III F^e«liiiKti>
Another tilt came when Judge
Cowan stated that it had been intimat-
MAY PROVE
FATAL
When Will Dulutli People Learn the
luiiHjrtance of II?
Backache is only a simple thing at
first;
But when you know "tis from the
kidneys;
That serious kidney troubles fol-
low.
You will gladlj- profit by the fol-
lowing experience.
•Tis the statement of a Duluth citi-
zen.
Mrs. A. Christiansen, 2529 W. Sec-
ond St.. Duluth. Minn., says: "About
two years ago 1 had kidney trouble,
m fact, I had noticed symptoms of
It for several months. I did not pay
much attention to the matter until I
knew that I could not neglect it any
longer. My back was so weak that
1 couldn't lift anything and all the
strength seemed to leave my hands
and arms. I was In bad shape when
I began using Doan's Kidney Pills,
but was surprised to find that they
helped me at once. After taking the
remedy two days, my back was as
Btrong and well as ever and my kid-
neys were normal. Since then I have
always kept Doan's Kidney Pills on
hand and when I have used them
they have done good work.''
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cpnt.s. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name — Doan's —
and take no other.
ed to members of the senate in the
last few days that dire consequences
would result to those who had been
responsible for the impeachment pro-
ceedings. To thl9 he declared that
life was too short to waste time "get-
ting even." and that he would harbor
no 111 feelings.
More than one tear was wiped away
when Judge Cowan, speaking of his
feelings toward those who were fight-
ing him. alluded to the fact that this
was a holy day. and .«:poke of the pray-
ers offered by his wife at the altar of
her church, both for himself and for
those opposed to him.
"1 say to the men and women who
have spied and spotted upon my pri-
vate life that they may bring me and
my family, my Chrls^tlan wife, bring
my poor boys and innocent girls down
In degradation at their hands," said
Judge Cowan. "1 say to these men,
gentlemen, that they, today or here-
after will never feel the spirit of re-
venge, either from myself or from my
wife. 1 know that on this holy morn-
ing inv Christian wife's prapers have
been offered at the altar of her church,
for their forgiveness as well as for
my safety and success, and I leave this
question with them, with her, and my
fellowmen." ^ , a^
In speaking of the charge of de-
layed cases, he declared that it was
for the prosecution to show wherein
he had delayed declnions for ^orrupt
purposes, for personal gain or for gain
of this or that litigant, before such
delays were made I'^Pea^-hable of^^^f'^
lOach of the cases was taken up in us
order and thoroughly dlscu^ sed.
Oeaic'M UelnK nrunk.
Charees that he had frequented
drug stores notoriously kn«^:»,/J' ^f
places where liquor was . dl«Pf"«^2
were passed over briefly by ;'"<>se
Cowan who contended that even if
tlev were true the offense was not
Impeachable. He stated that on one
.'."^Two occasions he had taken drinks
of liquor In such stores. The asser
Uo„ that he had been drunk in the
nevils Lake courtroom during the
hearing of drug permit cases was
'"■^he'ila^nsb"o"rSi shirt changing 'n-
cident was set forth as the result of a
wrestling bout with a friend rather
than the sequenl of a "drunk. lo
aAswer the CJiurchs Ferry «:,h'\^rge tliat
he was -loaded on a train by th.ee
friends, he said^ there w'ould be flat
contradiction. Charges * '^t . jiejui'i
been Intoxicated in «''b*"tson s f urnl
ture store and in Blsbee were aisi
without foundation he said.
As to the seventeenth charge, tnat
of intoxication In the ^^erk of cour s^
office at Hugby, June 19. J^'. ^'''^5
the prosecution did not touch and
which he himself toolc occasion to ex-
plain, he declared /hat the ent re
charge was made out of the fact that
atier a court session continuing u.iti
11 o'clock at night, he and several
o hers had gone with the clerk of
court to his room (the clerks) and
had each taken a glass of beer.
Contradict Pro«etutlon.
The first witness for the defense
was then called and his evidence was
directly contradictory of the testimony
elven bv the prosecution s witnesses
on the skme Incident of alleged drunk-
^"Three instances of alleged drunken,
ness upon thfe part of Judge ^o^^^J
were d'lsputed on the ,w»tness stand
this morning by Judge J. L. Palda Jr..
of Mlnot the 'Irst witness called toUa\
for the defense. These were Instances
of June 18. 1910. at Rugby, testified ^<^
bv Rex and Campbell; at the Minoi
stockvards. testified to by D. C. Grt-en-
fearand in Burke's office in Mlnot
testified to by Attorney Kelso for the
prosecution. ._ , , „,na
On each of these occasions Palda was
present and he declared en the stand
today ti at on not e of them was Judge
Cowan intoxicated. ,
With reference to the R"eby Inci-
dent, Palda said that Judge Cowan
opened court about 9 o'clock on Juno
?F.^ working steadily through three
cases without intermission; that Cowan
arrive! at the courthouse on the atter-
noon of that date before Paul Camp-
bell: that it was an extremely hot da>
and that the attorneys and all others
except the Judge, removed their coats
in the courtroom. And that at no time
during ills stay in the city or in the
courtioom was Cowan intoxicated.
ADDITIONAL
SOCIETY NEWS
R<ov. and Mrs. H. B. Sutherland and
family of 4527 Cambridge street, re-
turned this morning from Virginia,
Minn., where they spent the week.
* « •
The Misses Ada Foot of East Orand
Forks, Josephine Crawford of Fari-
bault, Clara Waddick of Minneapolis
are guests for the week end of Miss
Bessie Furrie of 120 East Third street.
« * «
Rev. John Walker Powell gave on in-
teresting talk this afternoon at the
Lenten tea given by the ladies of the
Second circle of the Wom-en's Guild of
the Endlon Methodist church, at the
parlor.«» of the church on Browning's
two poems "Christmas Eve" and
"Easter Day." He brought out the
lessons in each of the poems, that in
"Christmas Eve." he said. Is tolerance,
UNDERWOOD
Standard Typewriter
is built to meet the peculiar needs of modern
accounting. It shows a tremendous saving of
time and operating expense. It insures neat-
ness and accuracy.
The UNDERWOOD led the way in Writ-
ing-in-Sight Construction, Built-in Tabulators,
and Modern Bookkeeping Appliances. There
is none to compare with it for originality,
durability, speed and adaptability.
The Machine You Will Eventually Buy.
UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER COMPANY.
Duluth Office— 323 West Superior St.
A. C. KIENLY, Manager.
7
%H
This Is a troop of Mexican soldiers at Cullacan on the Pacific. They are having a comparatively easy time, because
the insurrectos are not nearly so active on the Pacific coast. However, even in Chlhualiua, where the insurrection is
most active, the troops are not taking manv risks. Francis Floyd-Jones, who hag Just returned to New York from
Chihuahua, savs that the town Is full of troops, but they do not go out to fight the enemy. They stay comfortably In
their barracks" and wait for the enemy to come after them. Governor Ahumada has notified these soldiers, however,
that If there is going to be anv fifehting it will be done outside the city of Chihuahua. He say.s he does not propose to
have the lives of women and children endangered and If tiu- insurrectos ever attack Chihuahua ho is going to send the
troops out to meet them. Governor Ahumada Is very generally liked by his people and evidently with reason.
and in "Easter Day" the essential
spiritual demand is religion.
• * *
The Sunday school of the First Bap-
tist church will hold a special Easter
service tomorrow at 12 o'clock, Im-
mvdiately following the regular church
service.
Good results always follow the use
of Foley Kidney Pills. They give
prompt relief In all cases of kidney
and bladder disorders. Try them. All
druggists.
Best Cut- Over Lands in
Northern Minnesota at
$2.50 and Upwards per
Acre.
JOHNQ.A.CROSBY
Farm, Timber and Iron Land*
305 PALLADIO BLDG.
RAILROADS
LOOKING FOR
FARMSFTES
Agricaltural Committee Will
Ask Regents to Make
Early Selection.
Land Must Be Typical of
District and Easy of
Access.
CHANGES IN
mONS
Rumored That Shakeup Will
Take Place in Northern
Pacific.
which has supplied more than 90 per
cent of the railway telephones now In
use In the United States.
Delayed Train Arrives.
The delayed train of the Canadian
Northern, running over the Mlssabe
tracks from Virginia to Duluth, ar-
ilved late yesterday afternoon. The de-
lay was due to a wreck ahead of the
train, north of Virginia.
Brainerd and Duluth Officials
Deny All Knowledge
of Them.
ARE YOU GOING
TO MOVE?
If HO, give liii the Job. Our prloeii are
reaNouahle and we have experienced
help. Expert pinuo aud Mafe moi Ing,
trunkM aud baggage to and from all
depotN. I'ronipt Mervlce. Call either
*phune 334.
Stewart Transfer Line,
Office! 1»H Fifth Avenue West.
Brainerd, Minn., April 15.— (Special
to The Herald.) — General Manager W.
H. Gemmell, of the Minnesota & In
ternatlonal railway when interviewed
today regarding the rumored changes
to be made in various Northern Pacific I
divisions stated he had heard nothing
about such changes.
The rumors emanating from Staples
forecasted several changes, most radi-
cal In their nature. The Minnesota and
fet. Paul divisions were to be combined
with offices at Staples In charge of
.«upt. Sovereign. The Duluth Short
Line was to be taken from the Lake
Superior division and made a division
v.'itli the St. Paul terminals under
Supt. Kline. The Minnesota & Inter-
national railway was to become a
part of the Lake Superior division un-
tier Supt. Nlcoles. Ii this latter change
was to go into effect it would mean
the discontinuation of many of the
local offices at the Minnesota & In-
ternational department in the depot,
as such business would be handled
at St. Paul. This change might help
the railroad, but It would certainly
not benefit Brainerd.
Now that the establishment of the
state demonstration farm school at
Duluth has been assured by legisla-
tive appropriation, the people who
pushed the matter successful pro-
pose to lose no time in carrying the
plans into effect. At a meeting of
the agricultural committee of the
Commercial club today, it was de-
cided to ask the regents of the state
university at their meeting May 4 to
appoint a committee to select a site
for the school and, in the meantime,
the members of the committee will
be busy looking up the available sites
and locating them so as to facilitate
the work of the committee when it
comes to Duluth, which will very
probably be early in May.
The regents will undoubtedly re-
quire 200 or more acres of land
typical of the soil and physical char-
acter of the land in this section of the
state. Another requirement will be
accessibility, as the experience has
been that land too remote from the
towns and railroad stations has been
not entirely satisfactory for demon-
stration farm purposes.
The agricultural committee of the
club is anxious to get as many suit-
able sites as possible in view so that
the regents may have a selection from
which to obtain the best. They are
anxious that ariybody knowing of a
site that would meet the require-
ments and might be obtained by the
state should communicate with Sec-
retary Eva of the Commercial club so
that it may be added to the list.
BAXQL ET POSTPOX ED.
Minnesota Democrats to €elebrate
Jefferson Day Later.
St. Paul, April 15.— (Special to The
Herald.) — Democrats of Minnesota
probably will hold their annual Jeffer-
sonian banquet between May 1 and 15.
The date primarily set was April 19,
but because Woodrow Wilson, who has
been counfed on as the principal speak-
er, had made an earlier engagement, it
was decided to postpone the event un-
til a time when it would be convenient
for him to come. The state central
committee is now in correspondence
with him, and expects to set th«e date
soon.
It is probable th%t the banquet will
be held In the palm room of the Saint
Paul hotel, and that plates at the din-
ner will cost 11.50. Approximately 500
invitations will be Issued. Fred B.
Lynch is expected to head the commit-
tee which will have charg«e of local ar-
rangements, while S. D. Works of Man-
kato, J. A. Hartlgan, former state In-
surance commissioner, and Judge T.
D. O'Brien will take an active part In
general arrangements.
•
Xo CTiolco In Colorado.
Denver, Colo., April 15. — The
bunched anti-Speer Democrat votes
were cast for T. J. O'Donnell in to-
day's ballot for United States sena-
tor. Republicans concentrated on
Vail. There were a number of ab-
sentees. O'Donnell received 31 votes;
Speer 35, and Vail, 33. Necessary
for choice, 61.
The above dispatch was shown to
K. M. Nlcoles, superintendent of the
Lake Superior division of the North-
ern Pacific today, that official stating
that he had not been Informed of any
of the changes mentioned.
USE TELEPHONE
IN DISPATCHING
hron Range Road hstalling
New System on Its
Lines.
The telephone has begun to replace
the telegraph for train dispatching on
the Duluth & Iron Range railroad.
A circuit is now being Installed be-
tween Two Harbors and Ely, with a
branch from Allen Junction to Virginia
and Eveleth. The new dispatching sys-
tem will cover 123 miles and there will
be fifteen way stations. The dispatcher
will be located at Two Harbors.
Although the telegraph has been
considered the standard for handling
train movements for nearly two gene-
rations, many railroads in the past few
years have adopted the telephone be-
cause of Its greater safety and econ-
omy. More than 37,000 miles of rail-
road in the United States are now
equipped with the telephone dispatch-
ing system, and not an accident has
been reported as resulting from the use
of the telephone.
The way stations on the Duluth &
Iron Range railroad are being equipped
with telephones and selectors furnished
bv llie Western Elei-trlc company,
R.M. CLERKS
ARE REDUCED
Postmaster General Dis-
charges Two for Trying to
Foment Discontent.
PRAISE FOR
mCiNSIN
Roosevelt Says the State
Leads Nation in Pro-
gressiveness.
Former President Congratu-
lates LaFolIette and Work
Accomplished.
Madison, Wis., April Hi.— Col. Theo-
dore Roosevelt arrived in Madison this
morning over the Northwestern road to
be the guest for several hours of the
Wisconsin legislature. Owing to the
Easier vacation a large <;rowd of uni-
versity students was at the station, to-
gether with a large number of towns-
people.
The colonel was met at the depot by
the members of the reception commit-
tee. He was introdticed to each one in
turn and when As8embl;-man Michael
O'Connor was presented, Col. Roosevelt
said: "O'Connor? I like that name."
"It's a fine old Irish iiame," replied
O'Connor.
"That's true — I'm half "rish and half
Dutch, myself — but it's all United
States just the same," said the colonel.
When the party drove to the execu-
tive residence for breakft st, the guests
of Governor M'cGovern gave three
cheers and a tiger for "Teddy."
Col. Roosevelt fl;st addressed the
joint session of the legislature. He said
the legislators of Wisconsin had done
much for this state anc; In doing so
have put not merely the state, but the
entire nation under a heavy weight or
obligation. ,...,.
"For what has been accomplished In
Wisconsin under the lead of Senator La
Follette, urdcf the direct Inspiration of
the men I am now addressing." said
Mr. Roosevelt, "has been of such qual-
ity as to mark a genuine and long
stride fcr worth in our political, social
and economic development as a nation
and I come here not merely to con-
gratulate you, but also because I de-
sire, in so far as possible, to call the
attention of other comm mitles includ-
ing my own to what you have done In
the state of Wisconsin. The progres-
sive movement lias been eane In Wis-
consin.
"Had it been merely progress and
working without reasoi, you would
have hurt the state and damaged the
movement itself. You have accom-
jilished so much because you have been
willing to do with good reasons, "iou
have been willing to test a measure by
Its actual results In practice and have
been willing to put It In such shape
as to create the great* st probability
that it would work successfully."
All Would Follow MlHConalB.
Mr. Roosevelt said t lat he found
everywhere on the Pacific slope and
in the Rocky Mountains that the am-
bition of each state was to follow Wis-
consin as the wisest and most far-see-
ing progressive state Knd to secure
the same co-operation in their states
between the government and their uni-
versities, in rendering nervice to the
state which obtains in Wisconsin, be-
cause of the way In w ilch the state
government has used the university
and the way in which the university
has rendered service to the state's gov-
ernment for the benefit of the people
as a whole. He then made a plea fa-
voring the election of United States
senators by direct vote.
Touching the quest on of water
Mr. Roosevelt said that
Are Then Appointed Clerks
in Postoffices at Reduced
Salaries.
40A to 4la Strtett m Park Avt.
^ New York'
ONE block from Grand Central Sta-
tion — Subway. ExpreM and
-Elevsted aM Svrfacm
Car line*. This widely anil favorably
known Hotel crown* Mivray Hill—
the moat deurablo of central loca-
liona. with the fashionable choppins
aiwl dieatre diatricts directly at hand.
Eztenuve improvementa complete.
Popular price* — European plan.
We requect your patrona«c.
Louis P. RoBEiiTS J'r>../;irtr»rt
Gbo. T. Sandalls, Managir
St. Paul, Minn., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Postmaster General
Hitchcock struck again today at the
newly organized Brotherhood of Rail-
way Mail Clerks, by discharging Clyde
L. Duff, 1697 Minnehaha street, for
"pernicious activity in endeavoring to
foment discontent on the part of fel-
low employes in the railway mail
service."
Duff's resignation is requested at
once, and he is ordered to report for
duty as soon as possible as a postaf-
fice clerk at Minneapolis. Yesterd.ay
Mr. Hitchcock dismissed Carl C. Van
Dyke, another St. Paul mall clerk, on
similar grounds and appointed him a
clerk in the St. Paul office. Duff's
transfer carries %vlth It a reduction of
1200 a year in salary. Van Dyke and
Duff have not decided whether they
will take the positions offered.
As a result of the two dismissals,
which are viewed as a renewal of the
department's attack on the individual
clerks, the railway mail men of the
Tenth division are up in arms.
Telegrams were sent this morning to
Senators La Follette, Polndexter, Ciapp
and Nelson and Representative F. C.
Stevens to Secretary Morrison of the
American Federation of Labor and to
Congressman Victor Berger, the Mil-
waukee Socialist, informing them of
this new step of the department and
asking that the congressmen demand
some kind of an investigation and a
statement from tlie postmaster gen-
eral.
power.
he
FIRE IN MINNEAPOLIS.
Blaze
in Arehambo Block
Damage of $63,500.
Does
Minneapolis, Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The eHrald.) — Fire in the Ar-
ehambo block, 315-321 Fifth avenue
south, Minneapolis, shortly aftei^ 7 a.
m. today, did damage to the extent of
$63,500. R. A. Hursey, 814 Third ave-
nue south, was the only person in-
jured in an explosion of turpentine
which preceded the fire and whicli is
believed to have caused it. He is In
the city hospital and will recover.
The building, A. J. Arehambo, the
owner, figures was damaged to the ex-
tent of 115,000. Other losses are:
Shcdd-Wright company, advertising
novelties, |20,000; Robert A. Johnston,
confectionery, $12,000; Walter M. Low-
ney, confectionery, $7,000; Liquid Car-
bonic company, $7,500; Arehambo
Heating company, $2,800.
All losses are covered by Insurance.
The blaze started in the Shedd-
Wrlght loft, on the sevond and third
floors, and spread rapidly. Thirty
girls are employed in the Shedd-
Wright loft and all got out of the
building without trouble or panic.
earnestly hoped that the legislature
would pass the rule In tills state: Keep-
ing the fate of the water power In the
state and that any corjioration which
is to use the water powtr shall be per-
mitted to use it to advantage and for
a length of time to se:ure an ample
reward for what it doeji. but that the
State shall not part wltl, the fee itself.
Don't Give Away Anything.
"Don't make your children feel that
you have given away what would
have been to their inteiest for you to
have retained," he said
Ho repeated former utterances In
regard to the inltlatl\o referendum
and recall.
He hoped that the legislature woull
pass a thorough-goir.g workmen's
compensation act.
At the conclusion of liis address Col.
Roosevelt was given an enthusiastic
ovation.
Following the speech of Col. Roose-
velt, resolutions on behalf of Chinese
students In the Middle Western states
were presented to the colonel, express-
ing gratitude for what he has done In
making possible the education of many
of the Chinese young nen In this and
other parts of the United States.
Col. Roosevelt left for Chicago at 1:30
this afternoon.
SENATORHITcArOi^
FALLS UNCONSCIOUS.
Washington, April 15. — Senator
Hitchcock of Nekraska was stricken
with vertigo today an<l fell uncon-
scious to the sidewalk as he was en-
tering the pension office. He was hur-
ried to a hospital where he was re-
ported resting easy and his condition
is not critical.
ADMIRAL MASON Ti)
BE GIVEN LESS WORK.
Washington, April 15. — The resigna-
tion of Rear-Admlral N. E. Mason,
chief of the bureau of ordnance in the
navy department, was announced to
day. The resignation has been accepte 1
by Secretary Meyer. The admiral will
remain on the active list but will be
assigned to less arduojs duties as a
result of ill health.
Reaches For Ssilf ;
Picks lip Pepper
Srfentlst Telia How T..it(le Slicaa Point
To Approachlns Decay.
CANDIDATES FOR WEST
POINT AND ANNAPOLIS.
Washington, April 15. — (Special to
The .Herald.) — Representative Davis
today named Lorenz O. Jost of Le
Seuer to take an examination for ad-
mission to the naval academy and
nominated John J. Lied of Fairbault
to be examined for a cadetship at
West Point
GOCARTS
The
Stork Line
The Kind That
Really Collapse
Nickel mud guards; steel
fork for wheels; side, end
and front curtains; ball
and socket-bracing; col-
lapses with hood in one
motion.
The Greatest Folding
Cart Ever Made. Ex-
clusive Agents.
PRICES
$2.95 $10.75
$6.35 $12.50
$9.00 $15.00
$18.00
SI. 00 Down and
SI. 00 per Week
8 East Superior Si
THE HOUSE WHERE TOUR CREDIT IS GOOD
Growing Old
Is a Habit
Avoid Acquiring It
USE
MALT EXTRACT
A Tireless Builder of
New Blood and Tissue
ITS PALATABLE TOO
15c per bottle — $1.S0 per dozen
at all Drug Stores
Qll^ro. ^umm
Sr^mutQ do.
SAINT PAUL :: MINNESOTA
Jay We Anderson,
AGENT
DULUTH BRANCH*
Phones-
Zenith 1800. Duluth. Meh-ose IflOO
It is said by an authority on nervous
condition.s, that they are the little nerv-
ous sierns rather than the bier ones
which indicate the approach of early
decay of the nervous sjstem. Twitch-
ingrs, loss of memory, lack of decision
in little things, growirfif nervousness,
loss of confidence and caurage indicate
that the nerves are in a bad way.
With nerves that camot stand the
natural demends upon it, a man or
woman is only one-half a man or wom-
an. Without nerve-strtngth there can
be no courage, no vitality, no prosperi-
ty, no enjoyment of life.
There is a n^rve invigorator which la
truly remarkable for Itii power, safety,
blood-purifying qualilies, and its
promptness in produciig results. It
stands supreme among ill nerve build-
ers for men and women.
This nerve-invigorator is Make-Man
Tablets. It is made for any nervous
disorder. Its results are remarkable
on Run-down Condition, Nervous Pros-
tration, Nervous Dyspepsia, Catarrh,
Kidney or Liver Troubles and Rheu-
matism.
Make-Man Tablets are sold at all
drug stores at 1»0 cents a box. If you
want to try them before buying, just
drop a line to the M(.ke-Man Tablet
Co., Make-Man Bldg.. Dept. 10, Chica-
go, 111., and they will send you a trial
treatment absolutely fr?e.
Sold and recommendei by all leading
druggists, and A. E. Swedberg, White
Swan Drug Store. 3 East Superior
Street; also 2015 West Superior street.
SPRING STYLES
SorenMQ Shoes
_ SorensM Priees
AND SorsRsen Guarantee
Your monej rliwrfnUj
KfuDded If you want It.
Can TOU beat tliatf
See our window* "where the btnls t\y."
S. T. SORENSEN,
317 Weft S«Hri«r StrMt.
Tlie best end most modern «ulcfc r««air (hM
IbM li' Duluth.
\ FLAT FOR REIT \
to man and wife for one year; com-
pletely furnished; ready for house-
keeping; six rooms, modern. Upper
side First street between Eighth
and Ninth avenues east.
R. P. Dewte 4 Ce. 106 Previdene* Bid.
nr/\V T1>C to EUROPE.ORIENT,
I \f U Ki9 around the WORLI>
PinST CLASS ONLY. Programs FBKB. Altc .'.ul»-
nobUe Tuun. escortrd and prlvHte (32d ^eix).
OE POTTER TOURS. 17 Broadway. N. V.
■»l "
AdYfirtJse in The Heralit
t
-^
tr
>Wil»'
■ Ifl «iipd
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
THE DULUTH HERALD
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
— ESTABLISHED APRIL •, I8«S—
Published evi ry evening except Sunday by
THE HERALD COMPANY.
Herald BuildiiiK. Opposite Postofflce Square.
421' and 424 West First St., Duluth. MUin.
Lnlercvl as secoad-dau matter at the Duluth jwstofrie* under the act of
(H>n(re3s of March 3. 1879.
TKLEPHOXES — Bell and ZenKhx
Business Office; 324. Editorial Rooms. 1126.
wrong assumption. " The object of mutual guar-
anty of bank deposits is not to make up losses to
depositors, though that is one of the things that is
a natural result of its operation. The ultimate ob-
ject of the plan is to put a stop to reckless bank-
ing through the influence, direct or indirect, that
contributing institutions can bring to bear on those
that show signs of getting into unsafe methods.
The writer cites the operation of the bank cir-
culation redemption fund in operation in Canada,
and shows how that works to increase the inter-
OFFICIAL PAPER CITY OF dUlUTH est taken by banks in each other's welfare, and con-
suBSCRn>noN rates:
(By mail payable in advance.)
three months ^^'^r^
one month
six months
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Snturday Herald, one year ''"22
Weekly Herald, one year l-'*®
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letter r expn'* orJer. Make all rt-mlttances payable to The Herald
Cuiupai.y Ulve postpfflcc address Id full. Including state and countj.
BY CARRIER— CITY OR SUBURBS.
Dally, one week > 1^
Daily, one month -^s
Daily, one year 5.00
Subsorilwrs will roi.fcr • favor on the drcuUltlon department Yiy
ealllng :;U1. either 'phone, and making kn. wn any complaint of service.
It 1* important irlien desiring tlie address of your paper aianged to
(lie tx>th the old and new addicBsca.
Daily,
Daily,
Dally.
Daily.
.3&
2.00
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The Duluth Herald accepts advertising contracts
with the distinct guarantee that it has the largest
circulation of any newspaper published in Minnesota
outt^lde tl;e Twin Citlfs. Its value as an adverlismg
medium is apparent.
The mutual guaranty of deposits should
have the same efTect, as undoubtedly it will
In time in Oklahoma. If it does not, then the
public authuritv must be interesting itself in
promoting ratlier than re.strainlng reckless
banking. The purpose and effect of a guaranty
policy must be to check unsound banking and
prevent failures. It i.s of course bound to fall
If dealt with otherwise.
•
This cannot be disputed. If the guaranty is
made to serve the purpose of an excuse for reck-
less banking, it deserves to fail and must fail. But
if it is conducted as a means to restrict bank man-
agement to a proper degree of conservatism, there
is much to be said in favor of the plan, and it
should not be condemned until it has at least been
given an opportunity to prove its success and value
on that basis.
"Jose tried to get away, but he was collared by
Eustice," and once "Hosking was forced to save."
It was raining hard, now, but •"Cambourne pressed,
but a free enabled the Devon men to relieve their
position." In spite of the bad weather, "Plymouth
seemed like scoring on one occasion, but Morrissey
rushed up and got away with a dribble." And no-
body scored in that half.
Maybe the American sporting writers are at
fault, but it must be admitted that our English
cousins are learning — after a fashion.
EASTER.
There are few days that are celebrated in vir-
tually the same way on the same date throughout
Christendom. In the United States we have our In-
dependence, Memorial and Thanksgiving days that
are peculiarly our own. England has .her royal
anniversaries, her bank holidays and other dates
tliat the people remember and recognize. So does
France, and so docs Germany. So, indeed, do all
nations. But New Year's day, Easter and Christ-
mas are nearly- universally recognized.
That this is true is a striking example of the
all-pervading character of the Christian religion.
New Year's day, to be sure, is not religious in its
character as are the other two named, and its
recognition means nothing more than the use of the
calendar system which brings the first of the year
at that particular time. Yet. it was due to the in-
fluence and results of Christianity that the use of
that calendar became so general, therefore even
New Year's day may be said to bear a relation to
the Christian religion.
But the particular religions sentiment that be-
longs to Easter and Christmas is essentially that of
Christianity. Buddhism, Brahminism, all faiths
known to man have special days that are kept in
remembrance by the followers of each particular
creed. But with none of them is there associated
any more beautiful thought than those that attend
on Christmas and Easter. And between these two
there can be no question that Easter brings the
brighter message.
For while Christmas typifies the glory of moth-
erhood, the spirit of self-sacrifice that is taught by
Christianity, the relation of man and Divinity as
that relation is set forth in Christian teachings,
Easter is the time that presents the hope of the
Christian, the proof of the truth of the teaching
that accompanied the Christmas season. Christ-
mas is the time of promise, but Easter is the time
of realization, the time when hope is given its real
basis in the story of the Resurrection, in the estab-
lishment of the life after death.
Of the beauties of the Easter teaching nothing
need be said, for they are apparent, not only in the
teachings themselves but in the symbols that ac-
companj- them — the new-born blossoms and the re-
viving life of plants and vines. Perhaps it is this
beauty that makes the Easter time appeal to all
men more strongly than any other period in either
the religious or the secular calendar, for with the
renewal of life that comes with spring there is born
in the human heart and mind a new hope, a new
resolve to live rightly and accomplish good things,
even though one may not be in full sympathy with
the church's Easter teachings. The message of
hope, of good things to come, that accompanies the
renewal of natural life in the spring time, finds its
expression in Easter and its religious functions,
and this fact makes the day one of significance to
every man and woman, a time of joy and hope, a
day on which to remember, if not the symbolism
which the devout Christian sees in its ceremonies,
at least the beauty and hope that Nature teaches
through her visible forms.
RESTRICTING THE SALE OF WEAPONS.
What has become of the "scare" which it was
reported had been "thrown into" the dealers in
firearms as a result of the prosecutions that grew
out of the murder of Police Officer Harry Ches-
more? Two men were identified as the ones from
whom Melodrowski and Johnson purchased the re-
volvers used in their escapades at the McKay hotel
and in an interurban car, escapades that cost the
life of a city officer and landed the two boys in
the penitentiary. One of these men was fined, and
it was given out then that the dealers in such
weapons had taken tlie lesson to heart.
Evidently the lesson has been forgotten, for
yesterday' a man in a Bowery second hand store
tried to sell two revolvers to a boy 17 years old.
The only reason he didn't complete the transaction
was that the boy presented a check in payment,
and the dealer suspected the check was a forgery
and turned it and the boy over to the police.
If there is any way to get at that man he
should be punished. The state law makes the sale
of such weapons to persons under 18 years of age
a "gross misdemeanor." Are the willingness to
commit the offense and the attempt to commit it
to go unnoticed?
The ordinances of Duluth include no provision
against the sale of dangerous weapons to minors.
They ought to, anjl they also ought to include a
provision that will reach the man who offers to
make such a sale. TThe putting of firearms into the
hands of boys is a criminal act in character, if not
in law. Any man who is willing to do such a thing
is not fit to be allowed to deal in firearms. This
Bowerj' case should be taken up by the authorities
and an example made of this dealer. It is the only
way to insure protection against another Melo-
drowski case, and Duluth wants no more of that
kind of thing.
OKLAHOMA'S BANK AFFAIRS.
It takes but a few incidents to supply the op-
ponents of any theory with material for a great
outcry against it. The incidents may be the result
of weakness in the theory, or they may be only the
natural consequence of mistakes in the application
of the theory to actual conditions, it makes no dif-
ference to the opponents. They raise their voices
just the same and declare the whole proposition at
fault.
Such has been the experience of mankind as
far back as history gives us any record, and such is
the experience in Oklahoma today. There have
been active opponents of the bank deposit guaranty
scheme, and they have sought every possible op-
portunity to attack it. Now, with the banks of
that state turning, one after another, to the ac-
ceptance of national charters and so getting out
from under the restrictions and liabilities of the
state deposit guaranty law, the opponents of that
measure are making a great outcry to the effect
that the law has been found impracticable and bur-
densome.
It is too early in the game to pass anj' such
opinions. The failure of the system, as is pointed
out by the Springfield Republican, may be due in
this case to the way in which it has been adminis-
tered. "We should," says the Republican, "avoid
the conclusion that the mutual guaranty of bank
deposits under public control has necessarily by
this experience been demonstrated wrong as a prin-
ciple of practical application. The Oklahoma ap-
plication was started hurriedly and more or less
inconsiderately. It seems to have been assumed
that the beginning and end of a mutual guaranty
system were to establish a fund at the expense of
the banks in general and pay it out for the recom-
pense of depositors in particular banks which hap-
pened to fail."
As the same article points out, "This was a
ENGLISH AT HOME AND ABROAD.
Ever}- once in a while somebody bobs up with
a plea for the reformation of the language in which
the newspapers of this country publish accounts of
athletic contests. We are told that the expressions
used are vague or meaningless to the average read-
er; that the language is being distorted to useless
purposes and the mother tongue corrupted. Very
frequently our English cousins are pointed out as
examples that we ought to follow in this matter.
But it seems that our English cousins are not
such high and mighty examples as some people
would have us think. Here, for example, is a copy
of "The Cornishman," published at Penzance, and
labeled "A newspaper for one and all." Included in
the news columns of this sheet is an account of a
rugby football game that makes interesting reading
for the American at all familiar w^ith the way such
things are handled in this country. The heading of
the story is put in two lines, thus:
CAMBOURNE v. PLYMOUTH.
CORNISH CHAMPION'S VICTORY.
There is nothing in the head to tell whether the
game was close or "a cinch." And throughout the
story there is nothing more to show who won than
might have been guessed by the spectators during
the contest. The first paragraph, too, is entirely
lacking in the snap that the good sporting-editor of
any American paper tries to get into the "stuff."
Here it is, verbatim:
i
Great interest was taken in the game be-
tween Cambourne and Plymouth at the Cam-
bourne Recreation Ground on Saturday after-
noon. There was a downpour of rain during
practically all the play, . and the ground waa
in a wretched state. In spite of tlie inclement
weather, there was a large attendance. The
teams lined out as follows:
After the lineup (or line-out, as our English-
man probably would say) there begins the de-
tailed account of the way the plays went. And it
is here that the writer forgets that he is expected
to be a shining example to the language corrupters
on this side the Atlantic. For instance, we read
that "Bickell secured from a scrum, and, feeding
Conybeare, this player passed to Jose, who got in a
nice run before he was grassed." A little later
"the home forwards put in a hot attack, biit Hosk-
ing relieved finely." Play got a little more active
and exciting after this "relief," and after some
"clever maneuvering" by two men "the leather was
passed to W. Lovelock, who tried a drop goal."
But he didn't make it, at which the other team no
doubt felt "relieved" in its turn.
After that there came "a fine bout of passing,"
which ended "in Jose being collared almost on
Cambourne's line." Then "the visiting, front rank
pressed." But Plymouth got real dangerous and
Lance was forced to save. Cambourne got a free
for offside," which the context leads one to believe
meant that somebody kicked the ball. The next
sensation came when "Rule made an opening, and,
gathering nicely, gave to Bailey." R'ile must have
been somewhat of a star, for the next thing that
happened was that "Rule feigned to pass, and after
evading Bickell, handed to Bailey," who "kicked
high and followed up," though how high he fol-
lowed deponent sayeth not.
"Half-time" came with the score 3 to 0 in favor
of Cambourne, and after chronicling that fact the
writer takes up the story of the "re-start." Through-
out this half the visiting forwards "pressed," and
"tried their hardest to equalize the scoring," but
"Lance relieved beautifully every time." Once
A TEACHER OF HUMANITY.
The public cares not a whit about the various
"schools" of dramatic construction or interpreta-
tion. It has certain standards that it demands shall
be met, both in the quality of the production and in
the nature of the play. The standards, to be sure,
admit of wide latitude, embracing everything from
musical comedy to tragedy and the problem play.
Yet there are limits to what the theater-goers will
endure. It has been the plea of men engaged in
the production of dramas that they are bound by
the public taste. They maintain that they cannot
continue in business if they undertake the uplifting
of that taste. In fact, that their task. is to amuse,
not to teach; to please, not to instruct.
But every once in a while some man brings
out a play that not only amuses and pleases, but
teaches, too. Something that people like to see
and hear. Something that they may not talk about
as much as they would of a suggestive scene or a
disreputable character, but that they go to see and
enjoy, and from which they learn the great lessons
of humanitj-, the beauty of human love and sym-
pathy, the smallness of mean and selfish thoughts
and actions, the honor of honesty, and the debas-
ing qualities of deceit. The lesson may not be ap-
parent even to the learner, but it comes, and it
stays.
Such a work was that accomplished by Denman
Thompson through "The Old Homestead." His
play was not the first of that nature ever pre-
sented, but up to the time of its presentation at
least it was bj' far the best. So much so, indeed,
that it has given its name as a classification to a
certain character of pastoral dramas in which
homely "Virtue is exalted and petty vice demeaned.
Denman Thompson was essentially a teacher of
the humanities, both in his acting and in the play
which he made famous, and which reciprocated in
kind. That he was a great or powerful p4aywright
nobody will seek to claim. But he knew the hearts
and minds of men, and by his production of "Tlie
Old Homestead" he did a work for the American
drama that surpasses in value all the catchy, fast-
moving, jingling output of George M. Cohan, all
the sordid spectacles of the writers of "problem
plays" and all the merriest farces ever put upon the
stage. For he not only showed the beauty of the
better things of life, but proved to men that they
enjoyed those better things and could appreciate
them.
His work has been completed, as far as his
personal effort is concerned, but "The Old Home-
stead" will live for many years to come. Its power
lies in its appeal to humanity, to the things that
every man respects, the things that make any life
worth while, whether it be lived in the midst of
wealth and grandeur or in the homelier surround-
ings of a simple home and plain community. And
as long as "The Old Homestead" continues, Den-
man Thompson will be honored as one who loved
and helped his fellow men.
THE OPEN COURT.
(Readers of The Herald are invited to make free use
of this column to express their Ideas about the toplci
of general Interest. Letters sliuuld not exceed SuO
wordA — the shorter the better. They must lie wrlttea
on uue side of the paper only, and they must be ac-
companied In every case by the name and address of
the trrlter, though these need not be published. A
signed letter U aiwaya more eSectlve, bowerer.)
NOT SATISFIED WITH
BOARD'S EXPLANATION.
3IINXES0TA OPINIONS.
A TOTER OF BILLIONS.
"I expect I have carried about as much money
in my tiine as any man, alive or dead. The biggest
amount I ever had in my pockets at one time was
$12,000,000. I carried millions and millions every
day. Sometimes it was in cash, but mostly it was
in checks.
"If all the money I've carried could be put to-
gether there wouldn't be vaults enough to hold it.
I never lost a cent. I never was attacked on the
street and I never had any trouble with anybody."
There is a record that you will say at first
thought must belong to some captain of finance in
the Wall street district of New York City or to the
treasurer of some rich European court. Guess
again. It is only a reminiscent statement made by
"Jake," a negro, 68 years old, who has just retired
from active business. There is another paragraph
to his story that contains more real meat than
those quoted above. Here it is:
"No, sir; I won't go down to the office in the
morning. It'll be the first time I've missed, saving
holidays and Sundays, for forty-five years. Mr.
Morgan told me I needn't come any more unless
I felt good and spry, but that I'd be well taken
care of."
Jake, whose full name is Jacob Henry Ritter,
became a messenger for J. Pierpont Morgan's
father in 1865. How faithfully he has worked since
that time, first for the father, and later for the son,
his own story tells. He has been literally a toter of
billions during his "business" career, and in all that
time has never lost a cent, has never succumbed to
the ^ temptation to tamper with other people's
money. Now he is to be "well taken care of." How
well, Jake explained to the reporter who talked
with him, "is a personal matter," but according to
the New York World it is generally understood
and believed that Jake is to receive $40 a week for
the rest of his life.
Jake's life evidently has been uneventful. His
work has been just the running of errands, that
was all. He began work under the same condi-
tions and with just the same chances that thous-
ands of others have faced, and doubtless has gone
through the same discouragements and disappoint-
ments that thousands of others experience. But he
has stuck to his job; he has been on hand every
day and has attended strictly to his task of running
errands. His record, uneventful as it ts in the
matter of adventure or variation from routine, is
perfect, or as nearly so as a human being's record
can be.
Jake's record is one to be proud of. His ma-
terial reward is enough, undoubtedly, to arouse the
envy of many a man who has worked or is work-
ing as hard and as faithfully as Jake ever did.
Still, it must be rememberetl that Jake himself did
not know of this good fortune that was to come
to him. He did his work because it was his work,
and he did it faithfully. His reward is not only in
being "well taken care of." He also has a char-
acter, a personality that has been built up on the
solid foundation of integrity and honesty. And
that is a reward that can be won by anybody, if he
will. And it is the best rewjU'd of all.
To the Editor of The Herald:
Replj'ing to the water board's argu-
ment that present rates are correct aid
equitable I wish to submit the follow-
ing:
The co.st of any or all of the water
IS not simply the cost of pumping. Tlie
actual cost of every 1.000 gallons
pumped and sold during 1910 according
to the statements and admissions of
the board of manager was at least as
follows:
Pumping, 1.5 cents; services. 2.7
cenfs; Interest on bonds, 5.6 cents,
making a trifle under 10 cents for eacli
1,000 gallons pumped and sold without
any allowance for depreciation or a
sinking fund.
The board's argument of the excess
receipts over pumping co^t oelng profit
can be carried still furll.er and the
claim made that all of the receipts are
profit except the cost of oil and elec-
tricity aa all of the "other expenses
must be paid anyway by the familit-3
and taxpayers."
All of the water sold at less tiian 10
cents for each 1,000 gallons was sold
below cost. The pumping charge is
the least Item in the three divisions
of cost. .. « ^
Certain data relating to the Proctor
supply asked of the "very best au-
thority" was refused Lo be given to
avoid "embarrassing" the board. If
facts will einbarrass the board they are
due to be embarrassed.
The pumping charge to Proctor to
supply a million gallons daily lot only
includes double pumpafes but an in-
creased size of mains and more pumps
which will cause an addition.al interest
burden of several thousand dollars an-
nually.
The provision that they are required
to sell on the same scale as charged
in Duluth makes no difi-'?rence either
way to the citizens of Duluth.
I challenge the Proctoi' "Water com-
pany to submit the figures; for August,
1910, to show a loss with the w.^ter
.sold at the rate of 23 1-3 cents for each
1,000 gallons (The present meter rate
to families in Duluth).
If the railroad company at Proctor
uses a large proportion and pays only
4 or 5 cents a 1.000 gallons and a large
proportion of the services are un-
inetered it is on a basis to show a loss
till the end of time.
The argument of Proctor being ii
neighbor and requiring pure water to
avoid disease and epidemics also ap-
plies to Superior, and for one I am in
favor of supplying both neighbors and
St. Paul and Minneapolis at a fair
profit but to neither at a lojo.
In the warm weather when certam
conditions exist the board will adn.U
that the water In all of the reservoirs
will become affected by the anlmaicuiac
found in the warm waters of the bay
and carried out into the lake.
The board stated that the double line
of pipe, one leading into and the other
from the West Duluth reservoir would
cause constant circulation that would
keep the water pure and healthful. The
further increase of circulation by sup-
plving Proctor at a fraction of tht
cost is simply an excuse thought or
later. The Proctor bird is not a gooae
laying golden eggs but a gander.
However, the only business the citi-
zens of Duluth have in the matter of
the Proctor supply is the price they
pay.
The practice with other municipal
plants as far as heard from Is to sup-
pi v water to suburban towns at a
profit above all expenses.
Many think that hydraulic elevafrir.<»
cause water rams that injure the itiain&
and plumbing, and therefore a, source
of lo.'^s and damage so that the loss
of that business would be of benefit
to the plant.
It Is commonly supposed that water
used in boilers is better for being pure
and free from material causing scale.
The board is silent in di.KCUSsing the
rates as applied to the hotels and laun-
dries, although several of the largest
u.^sers in August were of this class.
There Is no user in the position to
demand wholesale rates as being able
to take the whole output but all are
comparatively small users and are in
a position of taking only what they
need from time to time and of shutting
off the supply at any tinie.
Therefore, an equal met-or rate per
1.000 gallons to all users bl.iiilar to
the method of distributing the gas
among all users is the most eqtiltable
and with a fuller understanding by the
community will be demanded.
A commission in Wiscon.sir. has been
established for several years and one
of its duties Is to fix rat5s for munici-
palities. In a recent case they divided
the charge for water Into two parts,
one for usual size of meter of 25 cents
a month and the other for water as
follows up to and including 7.', 000
cubic feet a half year at the rate of
6 cents per 100 cubic feet, above tliat
at rate of 5 cents. That Is close
enough to an equal meter rate to all
consumers.
The board will do well to read the
method of arriving at the cost of
water by the highest authority In the
land, the United Slates government in
the fourteenth annual report of the
commissioner of labor.
The assertion that large users will
quit if the rate is Increased can only
he met with the other assertion that
they will not quit.
The Hillside clubs desire to bring
the rate question and other questions
before a fair and impartial tribunal.
Yours truly.
CHAN SMITH.
Duluth, April 14.
•
Not Sorry. '
Collier's: A sensitive contemporary
calls the welcome given in Seattle to
Mr. Balllnger "as honest and as sin-
cere" as the "Corruption of Kirby"
manifesto of President Taft: and then,
with tears In its ink. this contemporary
asks:
'*We wonder if Collier's is really
proud of this piece of work? Some-
times It seems to us that an editor
after having hounded a man for years,
like Collier's hounded Balllnger, final-
ly accomplishing the double purpose of
getting him out of his Job and doing
considerable damage to the administra-
tion which appointed him, must feel
Just a little bit worried as to whether
he has rightly used the great power
of influencing public opinion, the great
power which a mighty fine command
of the language and a large circulation
give him."
May Mr. Balllnger And in Seattle
health, diversion and a competence, but
as to helping (with so many other pub-
lications, and with so many determined
citizens) to drive him into private life,
never in our whole existence were we
further from regret. One of the first
things he did the other day, when he
reached Seattle, was to attack the Ap-
palachian law. the most intelligent pur-
chase congress has made in years, and
connect it with the high cost of living!
In the same speech he gave direct elec-
tion of senators as an example of a
"conglomerate compound of Populism
and Socialism," and described the di-
rect government movement in certain
Western states as turning our govern-
ment "over to the mob." This is the
year 1911!
»
Lost Inlaad o* Dead Sea.
Chicago Tribune: The Dead sea Is
encroaching upon the land about it so
rapidly in this decade that whole for-
ests of trees which formerly grew at
some distance from its banks are now
partially submerged.
Maps of the sea made twentv years
ago show an island near the northern
extremity of the lake which was not
found during a recent survey, and it
is supposed that this has been lost in
the rising waters. The Turkish gov-
ernment sold the mining rights on the
shores to a syndicate for about 1370,-
000. and if the sea for some unknown
reason continues to rise these hold-
ings will be almost unattainable.
. •
The Trail of a Nation.
Los Angeles Express: It is said that
one already can trace the border-line
from end to end, on the American side,
by the continuous trail of peanut
■bells.
A Vote for JiiMtlce.
Wheelock's Weekly: Senator Ole O.
Sageng has become one of the marked
men in the state senate beeaubc of ois
abilitv, his Integrity, and the Judicial
fairness of his character. • ♦ * A
case in point was the senato- s refusal
!ast week to vote for the 'lour se«-a-
lor." afterwards the "^ix senator' bill,
which proposed to limit th« senators
from any county, regardless of popu-
lation, to six. Many specious .J^''^"-
ments were made in favor oi this bill,
but its operations assuredly would be
unjust to some parts of the state. Its
injustice was toward the la'ge cities,
and many country senators therefore
supported it. Not so Senator Sageng.
His clear mind saw its unfai "ness. The
argument that it would meiely repay
Injustice by injustice did not appeal
to him. He spoke and voted against
the bill, and Wheelock's Weekly de-
clares that his action was cne of the
finest Incidents in bis legislative
career.
SATURDAY
NIGHT TALK
Party CaneuseM In the LeslMatnw.
Sherburne County Star-News: There
is a good deal of wonderment among
old-time politicians at tie absense
of party caucuses in the legislature.
We do not recall a legislative sosslon
where the party caucus cut much ice,
even in the old times, and ir the pres-
ent day of political progressiveness it
would seem absurd to organize a legis-
lature on party lines. The !)arty cau-
cus may be well enough in congress,
where great issues are di »posed of.
but it would be absurd to imagine that
the people would ever stand the dicta-
tion of a party whip on mast of the
legislation that comes befoie state
legislatures.
The Bee Inspector,
Princeton Union: An exchange would
like to know what constitutes the du-
ties of a bee Inspector. We .earn from
one who claims to be posted that a
bee inspector's duties consist of making
occasional visits to apiaries, watching
the busy honey makers through a tele-
scope from a safe distance, ascertain-
ing whether they are suffering from
epizootic, lumpy jaw, trachoma, in-
growing toe nails and other ailments,
and giving such information regarding
the care of bees as the apiarists al-
ready know.
A'^aluable Rain Stonn.
Moorhead News: During the past
week there has been sufficient preci-
pitation to assure the staring of the
crops this spring in splenlid shape.
The shortage of rain last yeir and the
small amount of snow durinif the win-
ter, together with the long stretch of
fair weather this spring had caused
considerable apprehension among the
farmers of the Red River valley. Then
came a couple of light snows followed
by good soaking rains. Thin had sup-
plied plenty of moisture tc give the
crops a good start. But veiy little If
any seeding has been dor e as yet,
and the heavy rain of yesterday arid
last night will delay starting the seed-
ers for several days. The benefits to
the country by the downpour of rain
will be very great, and witn very or-
dinary weather during the coming sea-
son the farmers of the Red River val-
ley should harvest a spUndld crop
next fall.
niMtory Repeats ItM-lf.
North Branch Review: The old adage
that history repeats Itself must cer-
tainly be true. In the thi:"d chapter
of Isaiah reference is made to "women
walking with head and shot Iders bent
forward and a mincing sttp." Surely
the hobble skirt must have been in
vogue in those days.
The Beat Booiitcr.
Wadena Pioneer Journal: That farm-
er who intelligently and iniustrlously
applies himself in an effort to raise
better crops than he ever lid before,
is the right kind of a boostjr, and the
kind who succeeds.
ANOTHER FORTY IMMORTALS.
Boston Transcript: They have got
up a new Academy of Immortals in
London. Forty of them are to be
chosen. The score so far is thirty.
These are members of what is called
the Academic Committee of the Royal
Society of Literature. ,,,,., „ ,.
The following is the full list of the
academic committee so far thosen:
Alfred Austin, Arthur Christopher
Benson, Laurence BInyon. Ar drew Cecil
Bradley, Robert Bridges, Joseph Con-
rad, William John Courthope. Austin
Dobson, Edward Dowden, James George
Frazer, Edmund Gosse, Richard Bur-
don Haldane, Tiiomas Hardy, Maurice
Hewlett, Henry James, William Paton
Ker, Andrew Lang, Sir Alfred Comyn
Lyall. John William Mackail, Thomas
Sturge Moore, Viscount Morley, George
Gilbert Murray, Henry Nenbolt, Ed-
ward Henry Pember, Sir Arthur Wing
Pinero, George Walter Proth.sro, VN alter
Raleigh, Arthur Woolgar Verrall.
George Wyndham and Will am Butler
An "academic" committee it certain-
ly is. But it is by no mear.s a list of
the first thirty Englishmen of letters.
Any list that has not Kipl ng's name
and the names of a hall-dczen others
need scarcely be taken seriously. Fancy
such a list that has Alfred Austin and
not Rudyard Kipling or James Bryoc
or even Conan Doyle! And if there is
Alfred Austin, there should be by all
means William Watson. Stephen Phil-
lips is certainly as famous iS William
Butler Yeates. Henry Arthur Jones is
as fit as Pinero, and J. M. E;arrie is as
worthy as almost as any one on the
list. Then there are Georgt' Trevelyn,
the historian, and the Rt. Hon. A. J.
Balfour, writer of phllosoph cal works,
who belong there, without doubt. A
few more moments of searching would
undoubtedly bring to mind a dozen or
so equally as deserving. W -sll. a short
life and a merry one to these aca-
demes! However, let us see what they
meiiU to do
1. To take all possible n easures to
maintain the purity of tie English
language, and to hold up .i standard
of good taste In style.
2. To encourage fellowship and co-
operation among those who are disin-
terestedly striving for the perfection
of English literature.
3. By discourses of rec€ption, and
obituary addresses to mark i;he current
of literary history in this country.
4. To recommend the naries of per-
sons fitted to receive the medals of the
society.
6. To make awards of merit to par-
ticular literary works.
• •
Clnma Time.
Collier's. Clowns and trainers, acro-
bats and artists, have rounded Into
trim for the season. Where once the
solitary elephant reigned, a whole herd
trumpet (or may trumpet). In place
of a few moth-eaten animiils, a con-
fusion of Jungle creatures now decorate
the cages. The Wild Man of Borneo
does not flourish, but a chimpanzee
lives In a glass house, uses a fork,
and has a valet. Mostly, hcwever, the
spirit of the menagerie is unchanged:
"There's the lion! — see his tail!
How he drags it on the floor!
That's the tall giraffe, my boy,
Wlio stoops to hear the moining lark;
'Twas him who waded Noah's flood.
And scorned the refuge ot the ark."
The ring has seen the greatest alter-
ations. Time was when on<i family of
ground and lofty tumblers might suf-
fice to provide the necessiry thrill.
"The present circus staff of somersault
artists, bareback queens, damsels who
rango the sky in inverted automobiles,
delight the rising generation not more
than in the days of Van Amberg, the
"Lion Lord." P. T. Barnum is immor-
tal, aQd along with Tom ri'humb and
Jumbo. W^hat modern circus hero is
immortal?
Terminus or Gateway.
Life and death, two great realities,
one no more avoidable than the other,
although some people think they can
keep death at bay by taking a journey
to another clime or by employing phy-
sicians and nurses.
Life and death, two constant neigh-
bors, always in the sharpest contrast.
We have our cemeteries great and
.^mall; but these "cities of the dead"
are not the only places ^uched by
the angel of death. You come out of
your home on a bright spring morning
in perfect health, leaving your dear
ones well and happy. You walk down
the street blithely, with fceen antici-
pation of the day's work, when your
attention is suddenly arrested by the
sight of crape on your neighbor's door
bell. You draw back with a shudder,
feeling at first as if there wauj some-
thing incongruous with the brlgiitness
of the morning In that bit of crape,
that signal oi sorrow and bereave-
ment.
But one learns as he grows older to
reckon upon the presence of death in
places where it would he ordinarily un-
anticipated and at times when the
suddenness of the experience strikes
like a knife to the heart. So it comes
about that there Is no phrase more
frequently on tlie lips of some persons
than this: "In the midst of life we
are in death." It is never so far off as
to become altogether unfamiliar. It
steals in upon us through avenues we
had thought barricaded against It.
"O mother, praying God will save
. Thy sailor, while thy head Is bow d.
His heavy-shotted hammock-shroud
Drops in his vast and wandering
grave."
Life and death, two great mysteries,
one reallv more a mystery than the
other. For who has measured th,e
hights and depths of living? Who
reallv knows wliat life itself is, whence
It comes, what it is for, into what It
is capable of being developed, what its
hidden resources, what its ultimate
destlnv? Death Is a different kind of
nivsteiv; but both life and death are
often "baffling, bewildering, stagger-
That is. they 5*eem thus to us if we
have never found the keys to either
mystery. Little bits of steel, notched
here and there, open the ponderous
doors of otherwise impregnable safes.
So an idea, a hope, a vision, appar-'
ently at the first look insignificant, if
cherished and used, swings back at
least a little way the doors that guard
the mvsteries of both living and dying.
The key to life is made up of two ele-
ments, love and service. The moment
one begins to love and serve, many of
the tangles around liuman existence
vani.sh. The key to the mystery of
death is faith which learns to look
upon dying as a mere incident, not as
the end of a long, perhaps weary or
perhaps joyous road. On the contrary,
faith looks upon death as a gateway
into a larger, richer life. No one can
reach that realm of ampler existence
without passing through this gateway,
but faith dwells less on the passage,
than upon tlie eternity of joy and fe-
licity which awaits the redeemed soul.
Faith voices its Ea-ster song in the
sweet belief of Whiitier:
"That death is but a covered way,
Tliat opens into light,
Wherein no child of God ca|^ stray
Far from th'e Father's sight."
So if death be not the* terminus of
life, but the beginning of the best
kind of life which we can possibly
conceive, it pays to begin and relate
one's existence here to one's existence
bej'ond.
"Prepare to meet thy God" was the
sign tliat the Salvation Army soldiers
used to paint on the rocks along tlie
highways. The solemn admonition
may be narrowly Interpreted, but it
contains a great truth. As Joseph
Cook once remarked. "A man to be
liappy in lieaven must have a iieavenly
mind." He who every day thinks nob-
ly, feels deeply, acts worthily, is pre-
paring himself to meet his God by and
by through living in His presence liere.
Glorious indeed it is to seek to live
constantly as He lived whose rising
from tlie dead Christendom celebrates
today. THE PAR.SON.
A MOMENT \^ ITH THE \MTS.
Mice Eat Leslalatom* i'tmnkpu.
Dover correspondence Wilmington
Every Evening: After all i.he wrang-
ling that the members of tha house ex-
perienced early in the session in get-
ting, through a resolution relative to
supplies for the members including
stamps, it seems that all tt.eir trouble
is not over yet.
It is not a question now of getting
the stamps, .but of keeping them after
they do get them. The house is in-
fested with mice, and they show a de-
cided preference toward Uncle Sam's
stamps. They have mutilated, eaten
and carried away nearly the entire
supply of stamps furnislied several of
the members.
Chicago News: "They say," remarked
the student, "that truth lies at tlie bot-
tom of a well."
"I guess that's right," rejoined the
old lawyer, "judging by the amount of
pumping we lia\e to do in order to get
a little of it."
Chicago Post: J. Adam Bede says
there's nothing in this 'higher c'>st of
living" racket. But, tiien. J. Adatn
is a humorist.
anv
Baltimore American: "Is there
opening in your business for a fellow
"Certainly. Easiest business I know
of to get one's self in a hole."
Judge: The street car conductor
opened the door to the front platform
to collect his fares. He encountered
five policemen riding home from work.
"Five coppers," remarked the con-
ductor, slamming tlie door, "and not a
nickel in the bunch!"
Judge: "Say." inquired the office
devil, "shall I empty your waste
basket?"
"Yes," returned the editor fiercely
"and instead of using the street box,
dump tills load Into the furnace —
these spring poems keep coining back!"
Washington Star: "Are you never
frightened when you make a flight?"
"i had one good scare," replied the
business aviator. "Some one told me
the moncv they were putting up for
the exhibition was counterfeit."
Chicago News: Mrs. Neighbors —
They tell me your son is in the col-
lege football eleven.
Mrs. Malaprop — Yes, indeed!
Mrs. Neighbors — Do you know what
position he plays?
Mrs. Malaprop — I ain't sure, but I
think he's one of the drawbacks.
St. Joseph News-Press: Another man
has dropped dead while telling a Joke.
Drat those dispatches; wliy don't they
tell what the joke was?
Toledo Blade: The Poet — Do you
mean to say that you won't read my
new poem?
The Editor — That's what I mean.
What have you ever done for me?
' ♦
Reflect lona of a Bachelor.
New York Press: The hardest habit
to acquire is having money.
The baby seems to grow more and
more like its father every day it does
tiot. , . ,^.
If a woman is displeased with a
man's flatter it's because there isn t
more of it. ...
The more anybody could Improve on ,
his own morals, the more he would
think it was somebody else's turn.
A man could make all the money
In the wortd by inventing for women
a lookingglass that would show only
good figures^
Havoc 1%'ronKht by a Diamond.
The Northwestern: A recent night in-
spection of a station on the Minnesota
division revealed the fact that ths
only waiting room was poorly lighted.
Some of the kerosene lamps had no
chimneys at all. One lamp was spruced
up a bt by having a mutilated half
chinmey that by comparison tirew m
respectable light. , . ^,
On Inquiry the agent explained that
the duty of taking care of the lamps
fell to the baggageman, who recently
bought a diamond ring which he wors
on all occasions. Cleaning chimneys
at this particular station is accom-
plished by blowing Into the globe and
rubbing It until daylight is visible. Ths
diamond in this instance wrought BSa
havoc with the chimneys, which wers
so bad y etched by it that a slight
knocked them into amithereens.
-
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Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 15, 1911.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
TaAen From the Columns of The Herald of Thia Date, 1^^91.
•••The Northern Pacific railroad has
a party of surveyors in the field work-
ing up the Mississippi from Aitkin
towards Grand Haplds. It is said that
In addition to building this line, the
r Northern Pacific will parallel tne Du-
uth & Winnipeg from Grand Kap'di
to Cloquet. where it will connect wi'.h
Its road to Duluth.
•••At a meeting of the Duluth Plas-
terers" union last night, action was
taken with reference to the rate of
vagos and hours. At present they are
\iorking nine hours a day at 44>^ cents
an hour. After May 1 they propose to
vork eight hour.s a day at 4a cents an
hour. The present day's pay is I4, and
the new arrangement contemplates
13.60.
••••V party of young business naen
of I'-onwood. Mich., passed through
I>uluth to<iav on their way to Tower.
They will take a guide there and go on
a hurting and fishing expedition In the
directl-m of Rainy Lake. In the party
are Kdltor F. J. Goodwin of the Times,
John Alio. Will Cook, Dr. Griswold,
hfOTSf Faragher. Will Teatz, John
Mels. Owen Flnlan. L. C Walktr, Will-
iam Cotter, John Kaglie and Jeff
Lynde.
• ••About thirty members of the Du-
luth Football club held a meeting la.st
t\lght and elected the following offi-
c.rs: Honorary president. Simon Clark;
rre-il If-nt, A. ri. Wilson; vice president.
Colin Tltomson; captain. Walter Brown;
pil.-iaptain, A. A. Nicholson; secretary.
"W U Hkkev; treasurer. C. 10. Brown.
The club will play assoclallou rules
•♦•Alex Grant of West Duluth left
yesterday for Grand Kaplds. Minn.,
where he will overhaul and repair the
river steamer Andy Gibson.
• ••J G. Banks, who has been run-
ning a photograph gallery on Superior
street, Duluth, for several months, Is
now located at West Duluth.
••♦E L Hobson, Jr., of Richmond,
Va., has returned from the South. Mr.
Hobson was formerly secretary of the
Minnesota Steel Car company.
•••The Imperial Mill company today
paid a semi-annual dividend of 6 per
cent. It amounted to |20,000.
•••A brakeman named Andrew John-
son, about 25 years old, was badly-
trashed between two cars at Cloquet
yesterday. The doctors fear that he
has been hurt internally.
-••♦Hiram Smith, editor of the
Stephens, Minn., Leader, passed through
the city today en route to Grand Kap-
Id.-!, where he is thinking of starting a
paper.
•••The plans of Barber & Barber of
Duluth for a five-story business block
to be erected in Marquette by the Mar-
quette County savings bank have been
accepted. It will be the finest building
in the Upper Peninsula.
•••J D Miller of the real estate firm
of Wliliman. Harris & Miller is very
ill at his residence, 7:.!
street.
West Firs't
escapes would have prevented this dis-
aster, to my mind. Is foolish and de-
ceives the public as to the real value
of these so-called Iron 'fire escapes.'
The ordinary fire-escape is built as
cheaply as possible, and Is so con-
structed that it Is a difficult matter
for any one to walk down safely under
normal conditions, much less in the
frenzied excitement of a fire. Many
of these fire escapes are so steep that
It Is necessary to go down backwards.
"What is wanted In tall buildings In
the matter of escapes in case of a fire
are Isolated stairways, or some ar-
rangement in a properly enclosed
space, so constructed that the occu-
pants of the building can make their
exit without requiring thought on their
part. When dozens of people are
rushed out on steep iron ladder-like
fire escapes In case of fire, consider-
able strength, skill and presence of
mind Is required for safe descent. Be-
sides, descent of the ordinary Iron lad-
der escape Is too slow to accomplish
much In emptying a building filled
with many people.
"In the matter of escapes from a
JUSTICE TO THE DEAD
By SAVOYARD.
The following from a leading and
usually well-informed newspaper from
the Kastern section of the republic Is
niipgled with truth and error:
•John G Carlisle was 4S when he
took the gavel in the Forty-eighth
congress. He had won hl.s spurs by a
course of cold reason In the ranks of
the minorltv. He had studied the sil-
ver question, and was regarded as the
ablest man championing the silver
cause. He had studied the tariff ques-
tion and was accepted as an authority
an the rev.-nue tariff idea. He was a
e.orching disputant, but always fair
and deferential. His opponents, whether
til his party or the other, never feared
a trick of any kind from him as re-
Bpected figures of speech or any kind
of figures. It is true his early silver
rt'ford arose at last to plague him. but
he wrangled with his critics on the
basis of their own quotations from his
deliverances."
Mr. Carlisle "won his sours" in the
ranks of the majority, not In the mi-
nority. In 1877 he entered the national
c 'uncils as a member of the Forty-fifth
consress that had a pronounced Demo-
cvatic majoritv. Samuel J. Randall the
apeaker, and Carlisle "won his spurs"
at the very beginning when he spoke
to the constitutional question involved
III the then Republican Idea of the em-
plovment of the United States army as
a police force at the polls In the states.
From that day he was the first con-
Btltutlonal lawyer and the greatest
philosophical statesman in the Ameri-
can congress.
« • •
Mr. Carlisle had not "studied the sU-
\'er question," and was never the
"champion of the silver cause." On the
Ci)nlrarv, he- distrusted the idea of
Filand and agreed with the idea of Jef-
ferson that the true ratio between the
two metals was that fixed by the mar-
ket the only economic proposition as to
vhi'ch Jefferson and Hamilton were
agr»»ed. He never made but one speech
on the silver question while in con-
f tress, and that was to convince the
lou'^e of representatives that the
limited coinage of the Bland-Allison
Mil. that provided 12.000,000 a month,
was better than unlimited and free
coinage at 16 to 1. , , ,
That was the speech that was garbled
In 1S96, and they who did it misled
In that meanest way that wickedness
c.in be perj)etrated — by suppressing the
truth. I defy anybody to show a single
utterance of John G. Carlisle In favor
of the 16 to 1 as advocated by Richard
V Bland. On the contrary, the entire
six years he was speaker he packed
the committee on coinage, weights and
measures against 16 to 1, just as he
packed the committee on education
the Blair educational bill. The
it was John G. Carlisle and not
Cleveland who killed 16 to 1.
• • •
I know that in 1877, or 1878, his
first congress. Mr. Carlisle voted for
the Bland bill, but he did It under
protest and as a perfunctory act of
party discipline. That bill passed both
Itie Democratic house and the Repub-
lican senate and was vetoed by R. B.
Hayes The outcome was the compro-
rjise Bland-Allison limited coinage on
government account of $2,000,000
monthlv. Mr. Carlisle advocated that,
bill as I said before, and championed
li against Bland himself and those who
thought as Bland did. It is also true
that in his single speech In congress
on coinage. Mr. Carlisle denounced
th« demonetization of silver by cer-
tain governments of Europe as a crime
tl.at had wrought more havoc and
riore misery than war or pestilence,
but he also held that only by inter-
national agreement could silver be re-
habilitated and made "basic money.
But when the silver question threat-
ened to crowd the tariff out of the
t.aramountcy, as the thett of the presi-
dency did In 1877, Mr. Carlisle set
about a thorough study of the coinage
problem. He was a genius— a won-
derful Intellect — and ordinarily his
mind saw things as they were at a
elance but he could also labor like
an ox' when at study, and he rose
from the contemplation of the silver
question as pronounced a monometallst
as Tilden or Cleveland, and a far more
pronounced gold man than John Sher-
man, or Ben Harrison. And such,
Carlisle continued to the end, and hl.s
utterances on the subject were the
clearest and ablest ever delivered in
the Western hemisphere.
* * •
T know they lied about him as few
men have been lied on. Ill tell you a
cock-and-bull story I heard a man
against
ftct as
drover
narrate about a year ago. It ^/^ t^**?-
Carlisle opposed the issue of bonds
while he was secretary of the i\^f^,^
ury, and proposed to put himself at the
head of the silver party if s»me mem-
ber of the Kentucky delegation in the
rtftv-third congress would resign, ana
cause his constituency to elect car-
lisle to congress In his stead, to cham-
pion 16 to 1. The delegation met and
drew lots, and it fell to Asher Caruth
to resign, who agreed but by this time
Carlisle raised his bid and said he
must have Joe Blackburn s seat In the
senate, but Joe peremptorily ,re/used.
and thus Carlisle was thrown into the
arms of Wall street. There never was
a bigger lie Invented by the dev 1 him-
self than that, unless It was the one
that J. Pierpont Morgan was fool
enough to give Secretary J^,ar»lsle a
bribe of $12,000,000 cash pald In gold
to sell him at a premium $6»,000 000
bonds pavable in coin, either Rold or
silver. ^Thousands of folks believed
that too. and vet the authorities let
'^"^''^r?lsfe^l%fi"en^ds\?et!ld the ^IWerltes
to print entire Carlisle's speech which
they garbled, and which practical
forgery was responsible for the com-
mon e^ror that' Carlisle was a de-
serter from the silver cause. As I
.S his original view was that there
should be free coinage, not at 16 to i,
in t at the market ratio; but after his
luminous mind profoundly "meditated
on the subject he. quickly saw that
concurrent free coinage of gold and
silver at anv fixed ratio whatever had
never been ' practical in any country
St anv time and that It was impossi-
ble anywhere and at any time. And
on that stubborn fact the Democratic
party wrecked itsejf In 1896!
Except Henry G. f urner. Mr. Carlisle
was the gentlest public man of his
dav Vie never allowed his tongue to
speak evil of any one. He never rai ed
against his bitterest enemy. He loved
neao" and order. He was the greatest
iurist of his age and would have been
he greatest of 'judges on the bench^
VVliile his intellect was frlK'^i '" "
logic, he had a keen sense of hjimor
and if he had be>n endowed with t4io
Aggressive self-assertion of many a
smaller man he would have reached
the presidency. President he would
have been anyhow. If the silver ques-
tion had not Intermeddled to the
anarchy of politics. „„_,
What a mark for slander he was!
He wrote the sugar schedule of the
Wilson tariff as It passed the house of
representatives In 18;.4. jThen the
sugar trust rose In arms and descended
on the senate and mustered its cohorts
so that when the tiling was "Gorman-
Ized" the sugar schedule was Perfectly
satisfactory to the sugar trust. "Then
?he liars began. One fellow was abso-
lutely circumstantial and that Is \%hat
ruined him. He said that a certain
hour of a particular day, John G.
Carlisle secretary of the treasury,
with a folded umbrella for staff,
walked through Wall street, entered
the office of J. Pierpont Morgan, and
got his bribe for the sugar schedule
5f the Wilson tariff; but on Investi-
gation it developed that that very day
Mr Carlisle did a day's work at hi.^
desk in the treasury department, and
the weather bureau showed that at the
identical time this fellow said Carlisle
was walking in Wall street with a
closed umbrella It was raining furi-
ously In tliat street.
• • •
I.lke every other secretary of the
treasury from Hamilton down, Mr.
Carlisle consulted with the bankers,
as Mr. Bryan's secretary of the treas-
ury would have done had Mr. Bryan
been elected in 1896. How would a
farmer follow the plow If his stomach
was deranged'.' Nor can the country
thrive when Its banks, which a,re the
stomach of business, are out of whack.
A secretary of the treasury can no
more run his department without con-
sulting banks than a lawyer can prac-
tice his profession without consulting
books.
When Carlisle voted for the first
Bland bill, not one man In a thousand
knew anything about the subject.
Nearly everybody was for 16 to 1, as
netarly everybody had been for green-
backs. I that write this was a howling
16-to-l-er, and so profound and so de-
fiant was' my Ignorance of the thing
that I mu.st needs write an absurd
book about it. I am devoutly glad It 1?
out of print, except one copy John
Rhea of Russellville, ,Ky., got hold of,
and some of his friends say it Is. the
only book John never read.
John G. Carlisle was a very great
man and an eminently good man.
A*-
HEALTH NEEDS AND CIVIC AaiON
Philanthropists Are Giving From Misinformation— Utilization
of Health Knowledge of Host Importance— New
Facts About Medicine Less Necessary,
By WILLIAM H. ALLEN,
DIrecfor. Burean of Municipal Research, Xew York City.
<Kxciaalve Sergio*, the Survey Preaa
Bureau.)
A New York philanthropist last year
received 4,400 appeals for money which
amounted to $112,000,000. Of this total
fl, 075, 000 was asked for various co-
operative purposes and only $45,000 or
less than one-half of 1 per cent was
for preventive health work. The rest
was for hospitals, dispensaries, clinics,
©tc. Although hospitals received dur-
ing 1910 In wills and in large gifts over
SlO.OOo.OOO, the National Committee of
ne Hundred could not raise $10,000
to show the necessity for a national
bureau of health. Does this show that
the rich prefer to spend their money to
cure a handful than to protect a town-
tul? No. It means they are giving
• from misinformation not from choice.
ralanced information the promoters of
ealth movements should give.
It Is true that health topics which
were deemed impossible for use In the
press ten years ago. are given prom-
inent places. The physician has lost
his monopoly of knowledge of health
laws. Huge factories have been built
to cater to the new appreciation of
health laws. The advertisements of
vacuum cleaners, incinerators, sanitary
drinking fountains, disinfectants, show
this fact. However, although we can
be enthusiastic over the strides recent-
ly made in the health department, the
work that remains to be done is great,
and there are many misconceptions
now current.
1. Because newspapers and maga-
zines have devoted miles of space to
medical examination and inspection of
school children a great many people
reasonably well informed are under the
impression that the greater number of
20,000.000 school children enjoy the
benefits of these widely proclaimed ad-
The body of the late Tom L. Johnson was burled on this lot. Mr. Johnson's
brotiier bought a plot in that cemetery syne years ago and Is burled there.
Kventually all the Johnson family will be Interred in this cemetery, which is
one ot the most beautiful in the United States. The lot is near to that upon
which Henry George is buried
vanced methods. Yet medical protec-
tion to school children is actually pro-
vided for in but ten states, and In New
York the state education and health of-
ficials believe that it is not wise t« In-
troduce a measure providing for physi-
cal examination of all children in all
schools. Indianapolis is the only place
where children in private and parochial
schools as well as public schools are
assured by law the benefit of medical
inspection and examination.
2. With but few exceptions, the
discovery of physical defects goes bo
further than the statistical records oi
the board of education or the board of
health. In New York city, which has
been heralded as a leader In this field,
the city superintendent reports that
last vear only a little more than one-
third of those in the schools were ex-
amined, and of the defects very much
less than one-half were remedied.
Even this proportion of defects rem-
edied was obtained by counting the
health Inspector's advice to use tooth
brushes as treatment for defective
teeth.
3. Millions upon millions have been
poured Into hospitals. Now we know
that many of these millions have been
wasted because dental knowledge has
not been applied within hospital and
dispensary walls. So much moi-e is
now being done than formerly by den-
tists to enlist the co-operation of the
layman that the Impression has gained
currency that the world Is aroused to
the need for dental care. Many a city,
however, has had the experience of
New York; Sv^hool children have been
given physical examination without
proper inspection of the teeth; records
of defective teeth have been piled up
with almost negligible facilities for
securing treatment; children's teeth
have been extracted when they should
have been repaired and cleaned. The
opening of one or two dental clinics
have been heralded as evidence that
dental need has been recognized.
Promises of wholesale co-operation
between dentists and public schools
have been followed with practically
no examination or treatment of chil-
dren.
4. The national committee of one
hundred has never had the money
which Its opportunities justify and re-
quire, nor has it ever dared to ask for
money enough to meet the mlseducat-
ing campaign of the quack medicines
and the quack medical men who fear a
national health bureau at Washington.,
It Is hard to realize that at the very
time when this national health policy
needed public support, nearly $300,-
000,000 was given away for public pur-
poses by the private citizens who re-
fused to help that same nation-wide
crusade for individual and public
health.
The health grams of Dr. William A.
Evans, the health officer of Chicago,
could, IT generally known and imitated,
do more to promte the health of the
nation than 1,000 hospital. Is it worth
while for private philanthropists to
work in a few spots a part of the time
while newspapers, street railways and
bill boards are allowed to advertise
all the time to all the people nostrums
which aggravate disease and manufac-
ture misconceptions?
B. En energetic campaign has been
waged against Infant mortality. Yet
in New York city when last .summer
hundreds of thousands of citizens, in-
cluding practically all mothers of
young babies, read headlines to the
effect that there was no hope for re-
ducing infant deaths because the hot
wave would last another week, private
agencies, instead of using these same
sources of information, to show
mothers how to save their babies in
spite of heat utilized the torrid wave
to advertise their own need for funds.
The health department Itself finally
accepted the assistance of the papers
and told the New York public that
babies died because the milk was warm
and not becau.se the weather was hot.
We are never going to have private
agencies enough to undo the evils of
Inefficient administration of public
officials who are working for good or
evil every day In a way that affects
100 per cent of the people in each
comiBjunlty. Clean streets are more
deadly enemies to tuberculosis thau
are hospitals. As Supt. Young Illus-
trated by opening Chicago .school win-
dows, it is more Important to give
100 per cent of our school children
proper ventilation than to start open
air schools for the anaemic and tuber-
culous.
Utilization of health knowledge al-
ready known requires attention now
raoro than the discovery of new facts.
We can stamp out most of the disease
common to man without knowing a
single new fact regarding medicine.
The great problem Is to convince all
that the supreme need Is for adminis-
trative use of medical knowledge al-
ready In hand through the only
agencies which belong to all of us.
our city, county, state and national
governments.
BUILDING LAWS ANTIQUATED
Philadelphia Structural Engineer Says Federal Government
May Have to Enact Legislation to Insure Better
Protection Against Fire.
'»^^^^^%^>^>^>^^^^^V
(By Raymond 'W. Pullman.)
Washington, April 15. — That the fed-
eral government may have to step In
and enact legislation to insure better
protection against fire, if city and state
governments continue to shirk the
responsibility of adopting and enforcing
proper building laws, is the opinion of
Richard L. Humphrey, who has been
recognized In this country and Europe
as one of tlie foremost authorities on
structural materials of the present day.
Mr. Humphrey Is the Philadelphia
structural engineer who was in charge
of the extensive structural material
investigations made by the United
States government after the Baltimore
and San Francisco fires, and Is best
known for his official report on the
effect of the San Francisco earthquake
and fire on structures and structural
materials. He has been In Washington
for several days on business, and has
been called Into conference frequently
by bureau officials intere.sted In the
les-sons to be learned from last Satur-
day's holocaust.
"Conditions In New York and almost
every other large city are such," said
Mr. Humphrey, "that by reason of the
influence of greedy commercial and
realty Interests the local authorities
are unable as well as nnfitted to revise
properly the building codes. The city
of New York has one of the most anti-
quated building codes in this country,
a fact all the more deplorable for the
reason that New York often serves as
a model for other cities.
"The recent attempt to revise the
code, and thereby provide an adequate
building law for the city, resulted in
a disgraceful controversy In which cer-
tain commercial interests were able to
exert sufficient influence to modify so
seriously the provisions proposed that
as a' matter of public safety and de-
cency the mayor was compelled to veto
it It is deplorable that those responsi-
ble for the adoption of adequate laws
affecting public safety should hold the
question of dollars and cents above
human lives. k,.ii/»i^™.
"One of the reasons why the building
laws of European countries are so ef-
fective Is that the essential features
are promulgated by the government
and the authorities of the various cities
make only such modifications which
are necessitated by local conditions,
and \frhich do not effect the general
law. This policy might be followed ad-
vantageously by the United States
government. Little real progress In
the making of building codes can be
recorded until we get a general law,
for It is a fact that commercial Inter-
ests of a city always fear that the en-
actment of strict and honest laws
which compel the erection of safe
building of fire resistive types will
drive capital to places where the build-
ing regulations are lax.
"The enormous annual property loss
by fire in this country exceeds $2.50
per capita, against the low annual loss
of only 33 cents for the principal cities
of Europe. In contrasting our defec-
tive laws and lax methods of enforce-
ment with the laws In Europe, which
make possible such low annual losses,
we must, of course, keep in mind the
fact that European fire regulations are
the result of years of legislation ia
RICHARD L. HUMPHREY.
building, our American firo fighters
may turn with advantage tc the fire-
men of Europe where by means of
canvas chutes, exit is made i^aslly and
quickly from the lower wln<lows of a
building. I have advocate 1 on nu-
merous occasions simple iron and steel
construction" like the 'down and out'
arrangement at pleasure resorts as a
means by which people can be shot
out of a building safely and quickly.
This escape may be constructed on the
exterior of a building, or pla«:ed on the
inside and enclosed with proper lire
barriers. It does not occupy much
space.
"Following the Iroquois tl.eater fire
in December, 1903, the public insisted
upon safe theaters, and playl- ouse con-
struction has been very much Improved
as a result. The people are still some-
what indiffernt about modem fireproof
construction and emergency exits in
other types of buildings, ard it may
take many more calamities like that
In New York last Saturday io awaken
them to the folly of risking humans
in death-dealing fire traps."
countries many years older than our
own.
"The regulations of Europe provide
for properly protected stairways for
exit in case of fire, with the number
of stairways depending upon the num-
ber of people occupying the building,
require walls and roofs to be of non-
inflammable material, limit the size of
unbroken floor areas, and restrict the
height of buildings.
"In this country, the presence of in-
numerable fire-traps and the existence
of lax laws permitting the erection of
buildings which often are as Inflam-
mable as tinder boxes, make necessary
the malntalnence of expensive fire de-
f»artments and additional water serv-
ce. Besides, there is a great annual
tax put on the property feither becau.^e
of the hazardous character of the
buildings, or Its surroundings, or both.
"The New York flre occurred in a
building where the words 'fire-trap'
fail adequately to describe the condi-
tions. The laws which permit such
structures to exist should be immedi-
ately and honestly revised) and where
satisfactory regulations have already
been enacted, but are not enforced, the
authorities responsible are guilty ot
criminal negligence and should be pun-
ished. Had there been several en-
closed stairways of the approved flre-
reslstlve type, and had the buildings
been provided with proper fireproof
doors and windows, with flre walls
properly dividing the floor area, it is
certain that the occupants could have
escaped from the building without loss
of life. The fire would have been con.
fined to the point of origin.
"Tbe statement that ezterior fire
Mk.
7"
aOQUET PROUD OF ITS SCHOOLS
CLOQUET BOYS AT MANUAL TRAINING.
NEW GARFIELD SCHOOL.
LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL.
Cloquet, Minn,, April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.)— The Cloquet schools
have an enrollment this year of over
1,500 students, and few schools in this
section, perhaps none, outside of the
range towns, have grown as rapidly.
The last census gave Cloquet a pop-
ulation of 7,031. Ten years ago the
population was about 3.000. There
were three school buildings. The high
school occupied a room in the Wash-
ington building. On the site of the
j)resent beautiful Lincoln high school
building was the old Garfield, In a
sense an old landmark, since It has
been moved at various times, and at
.•<ome period of Its history has occupied
the present location of most of the
other buildings. Preceding the erec-
tion of the Lincoln school, the Wash-
ington was enlarged to accommodate
nearly twice as many pupils. Then
came the Lincoln, the old Garfield be-
ing moved to the East end. And at
the satjie time of Its removal to the
neighborhood In which It was set
down was adjacent to farms, and a
school house In that locality seemed
to many rather a farce. Since that
time the city has grown out to the
school and blocks beyond It, and last
year the new Garfield building was
built beside the old. the finest, most
modern school In the city.
Manual Tralnlns Added.
In recent years the schools have
added a manual training system. Wil-
liam Todd has been in charge of this
department for the past two years
and the boys have made splendid
progress. He has also taken an enthusi-
astic interest in the athletics of the
school, and under his training we have
had a winnln*' basket ball team.
Domestic science was added to the
school system at the beginning of
school last September, under the direc-
tion of Miss Clara Clausen. It was
entirely an experiment, and was
thought by many citizens to be a use-
less expenditure, but in six weeks the
class In cooking, which already num-
bered fifty-three girls, were enabled
to enter the list of contestants for
prizes offered by the Minnesota Edu-
cational association, and they were
winners. Cloquet students were award-
ed seventeen of the premiums, thirteen
of them being money, and this after
the department had been organized
only six weeks. In domestic science
now there are forty-one high school
students taking 80 minutes each
day and forty-three grade nupils, 60
minutes each day. They have a room
In the Lincoln building 23 by 33 feet,
and $850 has been spent this year on
this branch of practical education, not
Including $675 salary.
Instmotlon* In Aicrieuitur*.
A pro rata salary of $225 has been
spent on teaching agriculture. In
which there are enthusiastic students,
the number of whom could be in-
creased were the funds at hand sufi-
cient to make their instruction feasi-
ble Thirty-one high school students
and twenty grade pupils take this sub-
ject. One hundred and seventy-eight
students above the sixth grade have
taken these three studies this year,
and $2,742.50 has been expended on
teaching manual tra.wlng, domestic
science and agriculture. Sewing Is
taught to seventh grade pupils by Miss
Lena Rinkle, and it Is expected that
next year the school will at least be
able to extend the Instruction to high
school students. At the Jefferson, an
independent sewing school has been
formed by the prlnclnal. Miss Archi-
bald, and Is proving a success.
Aside from the pupils living In the
cUy, there are thlrt/-Blx children
PETER OLESON.
Superintendent of Cloquet Schools.
Tiy Th is
Treatment
Free.
THE TRUE REMEDV FOR
Kidneys, Bladder
Rheumatism
Not • SmopU, Not a Test, Not a Trial
or Proof Treatment, bat a Regular
Foil Complete Course of Remodiea*
TO TRY FREE
t will •end, chtMPM vt\fL TO TBY FREE, » FnlL
Complete, Thr©t>-Fol<r CV>mbin«><l I>»ioid (V>urBe of
Treatment to anv guffering man or woman who needa
the riKht kind of help. 1 do nut .ti^k for a penny in ••«
vanco, not even a po«ta«e ntamp. I will atand tb«
entire expense my««Ir and send the Treatment charaea
paid. 'rb<*re are no promises to m.'ike, no papers ta
■ifni, no rofurenoes to givo, no C. t). D's. to pay. and
50U arc not obliR(>d to np«nd a penny. I am makina
this offer because I wii»U to prove to ovpry sufferer
that r«lelf can be had, that the nights of jpain and
•leopleiwaeas and davs of mi!<ery and denpair oaa ba
turned into onus of napplnfNiB and oomfort.
For ray woudnrfiil Tnvttment Ir now helping thoQ»
ands to regain tlipirhpalih. Tho-SkSufferinK for .v<<ata
with th«> moetchronip, sevorp. ob-.tlnato, longxtandiaa
cases find roleif after all other remedies fa.ivo failaa
to cure them. Among all claMes, among eith<>r bos,
among rich and poiir, are thot>o who can testify to tha
wonderful curing powers of mv Treatment, and now
I offer it to you TO TBY F£LE£-take It, UM U,
and aee for yourseU. „. . . „
If you have Ba.kjM^he. Kidney, Bladder Trouble or
Rheumatism. Dlitinefw, Puffy H««"iliugs I'nder tha
Eves, or in tne Feet and Anklen, Nervousneiw. Tired.
Worn-Uut Fooling. If your urine is light and pala^
dark color or cloiioy, if you make water often, gettiaa
up during Uie night. If it tmartfi and bums \«hii« yo«
paosit. if these Is 8«;>dim<>nt or brick dust when 1%
stands.' write for this Iroatineat wiihuut out a
atMd«Ur«
STOPS BACKACHB
t>on't spend another needleM doy f f aaff**^
Inv, My new Tbr.M.-lold LKXOIU Treat meat
ta now savlur ttiousaiids from Uii»»_^ltncll-
Breaking. DUrlnc. Twlstlnar. Terrible Tortur*
Ina A»ony, Eases Kllff .loInU, Quiets tlioaa
lleart-Wrluctna Rh«-iimntJc ijlaliis, tSoothsa
those unbearable Bladder Troubles aaa
qiilrkir stop* the pain.
It would bo practioalb impoaaihle to take It wltnla
the human system without ••auning rcitults. \%
drives away the poisonous impurities that <-lo« tha
kidnevg and cause the troublf. <.'loanH<>s, I'urlfle^
Htr<*ngthens, Invigoriiles, and Kncoiirages the Kidney*
to Hroiit-rly Filter the Blood. Hi.ips the pain, kivs*
Btrongtn to the nerves, life and ambition to the niind
and body, aad does it Quicklj , auietly. without loasoC
I want erery safferar to know to oome, and try this
Treatment, and see for themselves. I will send a fnU
complete course, charges paid, rtMdy to use, TO THY
FHEK. Take it when ftcomes. I'SE HALF OF IT. an4
see just what It does. Then when .von know it Is help-
ing you, when you know you are gi^ttiug better, just
send me a small amount, an amount ulthin your easy
reech, an amount yon cBneasil.vaffordtonpare. That's
all I' II ttHk. If you are not suUsru^il when you bara
taken bolt ot It. retura what's left aud par
notblnc.
I am the only ona todar sending a full Treatment
TO TRY FHKK. I couldn t afford to do it If 1 wnitn*»
sure It would help you, if I didn't know what the '\ roa^
ment would do. But >ou are to be the judge. Vb
must satisfy you, it must help you, and you uru tha
one to say. I don't want a p<'nnr If It fails. I would
not take a cent I am not entitled to. I will leava
It right with you younwlf. I know what my 'I'reat-
meut nlll do, that's vth> I am making you the broad-
ast, moat straightforward, fair, most liNTal, ono-(>ided
offer ever maoe. When I have oouGdeuoe enough ia
mv Treatment to send It to vou this wav, I know yoa
will be willing to try it FRKK at m.veiiM-nse and that's
all I ask. IKm't send a i>enuy In your letti^r. notevna
a portitge stamp, juxt your name and whent to h« nd that
Treatment. AddrosH vour letter ti> riiep'-rsonallv. Ilk*
this: l>r. IT .M uhell UeWerth ;oiL«xoid Buildiac
Olevelaad, Ohio.
Send No Money;
Just This Coupon
DB. H. MIOHKLL DkWERTH.
291 Lkxoio Bldo., Ci.KTEi.Ain>, Ohio
Please send me your regular, full, complete
three-fold Lcioid Course of Treatment .is yiiu
promised above, all charges paid. TO I'KV FHKK.
Also vuur FKKL BOOK a.\y>»t Criu Acid. K.ldaey.
Bladder Xroubls and Kheiimattsiu.
My name Is...
Post Ufflcs..
St. or R F. D State ...„
rienxe write nam* and adiltefls plolbly
The Typewriter Thai's
Ten Years Ahead Is the
Typewriter for You.
from surroundlne farms, but who are
within the district, who are brought
to the city every day by a livery rig
hired by the school board, at a cost
per year of $540.
SUNNY
MONDAY
Cleaner, sweeter, whiter
clothes, is the result when
you use Sunny Monday Soap.
Sunny Monday is white,
and contains not an ounce of
rosin, which is one of the
chief ingredients of all yellow
laundry soaps. Clothes cost
more than soap and it, there--
fore, pays to use the best soap,
even for laundry pur]>oses.
Ask your grocer fc>r Sunny
Monday.
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
CHICAGO
Every operating device inbtdk %vhere k
should be — under die operator's hand.
You don't have to reach all over the
machine. Even the line-space and carriago
release lever is operated without taldag
hands bom correct keyboard podtioa.
THE NEW MODEL
L. C. Smitli & BrotsTypewriter
With B«0 Beimnga tlwougboat and all
the wridag alwajrs ia tidit. mMHoes up
tk VNKj poiot to the hicheat scale of
OMWiiini biuineM ocicdt.
Better work and more of it, greater effici*
ency through and through, the L. C. Snilk
6c Bros. Typewriter is ten years m tfio
lead. The writing machine that's ten yeaa
ahead is die writing machine (or yoq»
Send (or die Book and read k.
'I
L C Smidi & Bros. Typewriter Ctb
18 THIRD AVE. WEST,
DULUTH. MHiN.
\\
I
1
"
Saturday,
-1
^
p
^H
■ ^^■i
^
^^^^^^^
THE DXJtUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
ABANDONED TUGS AND RUBBISH
ON HARBOR FRONT TO BE REMOVED
ONE OF THE SUNKEN TUGS.
-Photo by Fenney.
•
•
I L E S
HERALD RACE
TO HI6BING
Much Interest Being Displayed
First Annual
Event
m
Other Automobile Stunts Being
Planned for the Coming
Smnmer.
AUTO KEEPS
BOYMFARM
Many County Lads Have No
Desire to Live in
City.
Distance Is Shortened and
Old Dobbin Is Relegated
to Rear.
THREE
The last chapter In many a ro-
mance of the Great Lakes Avill be
written when the old hulks and dere-
licts scattered along the harbor front
are removed the cominK summer, in
accordance with the program which
has been laid out by Harbor Master
Thomas Burke.
Many of them have been half sunk
or run on the sands for years past,
or put out of commission in one way
or another. Some have just natural-
ly been abandoned because they have
outlived their usefulness, outstripped
by the newer and more modern, more
efficient boats of later years. Some
have been so badly damaged by ac-
cidents that they were not worth
while repairing, and others have been
tossed on the shores as wrecks, bat-
ARE ABANDONED.
MUST ALSO GO.
tered to pieces by savage north-
easters.
Could the timbers tell their own
stories, or could they be garnered
from different men who are familiar
with their histories, many an inter-
esting tale of the sea would be forth-
coming. Each of the hulks has a
storj-. more or less fascinating. Some
of them would rival those of Robert
Louis Stevenson and the writers of
the ancient Spanish main lore. They
have been through disasters and near
disasters: they could tell of hair
breath escapes, of fatal catastrophies.
of desperate battles with the fresh
water seas, and of commerce illicit
as well as legitimate.
Now they can be classed as little
more than eye sores. The pasts
THE FIRST AUTO ROAD RACE
It Was Held In 1887 and the State Gave the Winner
Ten Thousand Dollars.
Buttonhole your automobile histor-
ian and ask lilm to give you the date
of the first speed contest of self-pro-
pelled vehicles held in the United
States, aays the Kansas City Star. If
your historian is well versed In hlo
subject he will tell you that the first
race of this kind was; held In 1895
that it was conducted under the
auspices of the Chicago Times-Herald:
that the total dii^tance was seventy
miles, and that the speed attained
averaged seven and one-half miles an
bour.
Yet while every automobile racing
h|j;tory written so far will agree with
him. your friend is wrong, betau.'^e the
llrst race of self-propelled vehicles
was held in the United States in 1877
— til ivty-three years ago.
In addition to the credit of being the
llrst motor vehicle race, the event has
the distinction of being the only road
race held under government au.«pices
and also the first one in which a state
government was both race organizer
and donor of the liighest prize ever
givt»n to the winner of any motor ve-
hicle race.
This "prehistoric" race evolved a
winner who covered the distance of
200 miles at an average speed of fif-
teen miles an hour, which is twice as
fa.«!t as the gait maintained by the
nrlnner of the Chicago race held eigh-
teen years later.
That such a race was held many
years before the so-called pioneers be-
pan to realize their dreams of the
hor.seless carriage is a fact that has
been dug out of the records of the
state of Wisconsin, after being buried
and forgotten amidst the spectacular
progress made in the automobile busi-
ness during the last fifteen years or
more.
The race was conceived early In the
"Winter of 1876. It sprang from one of
those nightly gatherings at the coun-
try stores when villagers sat around
en empty cracker boxes and sugar
barrels, discussing politics, live stock,
leligion and agricultural problems.
The conversation drifted to horseless
vehitle.s. Instinctively they moved
away from the crackling fireplace to
give the subject cool Oshkosh Judg-
ment. "We have machine shops and
men with fertile minds," they mused.
••Why not have the state offer a prize
for the best product?" And it was not
long before the town politicians had
a plan that would forever stamp Osh-
kosh as the leader *n one of the
world's greatest Industries. The legis-
lature ••fell" for it and appropriated
flO,OUO. This was to be paid to the
man or men who would build a ve-
hicle that would propel U.self without
help across 200 miles of road.s running
nortli and south through the state of
"Wisconsin In the most satisfactory
manner and in the shortest time. Thus
It will be seen that the race was not
between previously built machines, but
a speed contest between vehicles which
were designed and built for this par-
ticular occasion.
Under the legislative act. Governor
Smith was empowered to appoint four
Judges or state commissioners whose
duly was to declare the winner. The
iudges decided that the start should
e made at Green Bay and the route
should carry the contestants in a
southerly direction through the cities
of Appleton, Oshkosh, Waupun, Water-
town. Fort Atkinson and Janesville, at
which place they were to turn and
proceed north to Madison, the capital
of the state.
Originally there were five entrants,
one broke down on the way to the
starting point and failed to arrive on
time. Another did not get farther
than the starting line. A third ve
hide had practically no chance. The
contest, therefore, narrowed down to a
race between a machine that was built
at Green Bay and one built at Osh-
kosh, by A. Gallinger and tyo part-
ners.
Tlie greatest excitement prevailed all
along the route. Thousands ot persons
lined the roadways. Farmers drove
many miles to get a good position
along the course. Country stores closed
up, and farm hands took the day off.
When the officials fired the starting
gun, the huge vehicles plunged for-
ward. Dense clouds of steam and
smoke obscured the cheering multi-
tude. Many persons made an effort to
follow the vehicles, not knowing just
what speed they .would be able to
maintain. The racers, however, man-
aged to outdistance all pursuers, and
it would have required a pretty fast
horse to keep up with them. Good
time was made as far as Fort Atkin-
son, when the judges called a stop and
imposed upon the contestants a side
contest which they had not anticipated.
The Green Bay and Oshkosh ma-
chines were the only two to reach this
point. They were required to haul
gang plows and to plow seven acres
of land. This event worked the people
of the entire region Into a frenzy of
excitement. The plowing contest was
arranged to take place the following
morning.
The difficulties encountered by the
machines in this part of the race are
not set forth In detail in anj* of the
records of the event. They merely
state that the plowing contest was suc-
cessfully conducted, both machines
having performed the allotted work
of turning over an area of seven acres.
The same train of procession of car-
riages was drawn to Fort Atkinson by
the self-propelled vehicles, receiving
the applause of immense crowds along
the line.
The following morning the start was
made for Janesville and Madison. The
last leg of the journey proved to be
the worst that was encountered on the
entire run. It proved fatal for the
Green Bay machine, for this vehicle
broke down within twenty miles of
Madison, having covered 180 miles un-
der its own power, in addition to the
plowing performance. The Oshkosh
machine, however, surmounted all dif-
ficulties and reached Madison without
trouble, completing every requirement
set forth by the state.
The builders of the winning vehicle,
Mr. Gallinger and his associates, im-
mediately claimed the $10,000, but the
claim was protested by the Green Bay
entrant, and a controversy was waged
for a long time before the judges fin-
ally made their award. Their decision
CONTRACTORS
WANTED
For clearing land at Meadowlands,
St Louis county, on the D. M. & N.
r ad. Call or write
liAND DEPT.. D. & I. R. RY. CO.,
Wolvin Bids.. Dulutb.
which they recall cannot be seen, and
few people who look at them stop to
thinTi of the romantic side of their
existence. They are scarcely any
good as junk, and will simply be
hauled out to deep water and sunk,
be blown to pieces or be removed in
some other way. Whichever is easiest
will be adopted.
They are unsightly and do not give
the passenger on the steamer coming
into the harbor the most pleasant
impression. Their removal will be
a great improvement to the harbor,
bettering Its appearince 100 per cent.
At the same time other debris along
the water front will be removed, as
will some of the old, tumble down
docks which are rotting away in idle-
ness.
divided the purse Into two awards of
$5,000 each, and the Oshkosli winner
was obliged to accept this sum of
money, although the judges admitted
that he had averaged fifteen miles per
hour during his running time for the
entire liOO miles. It was asserted that
the hand of politics was found in the
award but no evidence was adduced to
show that the appointment of the gov-
ernor's brother as judge resulted In
undue advantage to either machine.
Modern automobile enthusiasts must
marvel at the speed which was main-
tained by these machines. To imagine
a vehicle with steel tires averaging
fifteen miles an hour and over such
roads as were found in the state of
Wisconsin thirty-three years ago, gives
some Idea of the difficulties these men
had to overcome. Mr. Gallinger, who
is still living in Oshkosh, said that
every bone in his body was sore for a
month from the rackng and jarring he
received on the running piatform of
his machine. How badly other con-
testants suffered Is not known. It is
certain, however, that these primeval
"racing cars" Inflicted severe physical
penalties. On the other hand, they
showed some advanced thought and
sound engineering principles that are
found in our modern and luxurious
cars.
Mr. Gallinger Is the only living repre-
sentative of the Oshkosh entry. He
Is now living In that city and enjoying
the use of a modern gasoline motor
car.
The Herald automobile race to Hib-
bing for the Mutual Automobile cup,
donated by E. J. FiUtrault. will prob-
ably take place about the middle of
July. This is not definitely settled uis
yet, but the event will be pulled off
about that time.
The Herald race will be open to all
and there will be no entrance fee. The
cup was donated by Mr. Filiatrault. It
was thought at that time that the race
would be made an endurance contest
to the Twin Cities but as a great num-
ber of local enthusiasts thought that
the trip would prove too long and
take too much time, it was switched
to Hlbblng. The roads to the range
city were also thought to bo In better
condition than the roads to Minneap-
olis.
A race was planned to Hibblng last
year but before the arrangements
could be made, the weather became too
cold to make the run. This year it is
planned to start things early.
The race to Hibblng will be the fir.^t
of Its kind ever pulled off In this part
of the country. Jiange people will be
eligible to enter the contest.
This event Is not the only one being;
fdanned for the amusement of auto-
sts for the coming season. Some
weeks before the Hibblng run thero
will be a "blind time" contest to one
of the range towns or to the White-
face river so that the drivers may be»
come acquainted with the roads. The
blind time contest will be very in-
teresting. Only three people will know
the time set for the run. It may be
either slow or fast. The driver whb
goes slow has as much chance of win-
ning as he who drives fast. These
blind time contests have proved very
popular In other parts of the country
and it is likely that they will here.
In addition to these races there will
be contests of other kinds during the
summer. The Duluth Automobile club
plans on an autumn leaf parade, some
hill-cUmblng contests, and some pleas-
ure runs to different points of Interest
about the country.
The auto club is now a live number
with a big and enthusiastic member-
ship and "live wires" are at Its head.
There will be something doing most of
the time in Duluth for those interested
in automobile sports.
The Hibblng race will be the big
feature of the summer's sports and
plans are now being made to make it
a bl&r success
A number of speedy and powerful
cars have been received in the city
this spring, and many owners have
already planned to enter the race.
Permission will be obtained from
the small towns to run through at a
fairly fast rate, and where there Is
any posslbiiltv of danger to specta-
tors along the road, every pre-
caution will be taken to avoid acci-
dents.
The Hibblng race promises to be a
real contest and It is being looked
forward to with interest both by the
autoists and by the spectators along
the road. ^ „. ^
The race will be known as the First
Annual Herald race for the E. J. Filia-
trault cup. After being won three
times the cup will become the perma-
nent property of the winner.
DRIVER JOE DAWSON
IS NOT SUPERSTITIOUS.
"None
Huot's delicious
Nicer."
candle.«i.
fresh
DOCTOR GETS LOST WATCH.
Timepiece Dropped By Middle River
Man While Hunting Recovered.
Middle River, Minn.. April 15. —
(Special to The Herald.) — Dr. Juliar
had an unexpected piece of good for-
tune Wednesday morning in recover-
ing a good gold watch which he lost
last fall. It was lost In one of his
hunting expeditions up the river and
was found by one of the Gulllkson
boys. The doctor wound it up and it
started runnlg as fine as ever and is
apparently not damaged a particle.
Joe Dawson, whose name Is •well
known as a driver of the Marmon cars,
is now trying out a new speed marvel
from the Marmon shops at the Indian-
apolis Motor Speedway, in preparation
for the Decoration day 500-mlle race.
When the number were drawn for the
big event, the new car was numbered
31 and Dawson Is figuring and looking
forward to see if there is any real
truth In the superstition as to lucky
numbers. No. 31 was assigned to him
In the Cobe cup race at the Indian-
apolis speedway last July and the yel-
low Marmon car covered the 200 miles
in 163 minutes, breaklnpr many records
and adding the Cobe trophy to the Mar-
mon collection. However, superstition
plays but a small part in the make-up
of the young, driver, and he says he
relies much itiore on the mechanical
perfection of his car to cover the five
centuries and win a substantial part
of the $32,000 prize money.
Anything that bridges distance and
annihilates time is a tool of civiliza-
tion and a utility producer. These ele-
ments in the motor car are what have
made the farmers throughout the coui.-
try ready buyers of automobiles
There is no class of people who havo
received more direct or tangible bene-
fit from the motor car than the farmer.
The "tiller of the soil" has been,
naturally, a little slow in recognizing
the utility side of the automobile be-
cause for several years tha tiorselass
carriage was looked' upon as a pleasure
vehicle only. This Is due to the fact
that the demand was greater than the
supply, and manufacturers were too
busy producing cars for pleasi-re par-
poses and did not have the li:ne to
study the utility side of the motor rar.
There is no question that the auto-
mobile represents an economic s:i>^lng.
and the thrifty farmer is symbolic of
everything pertaining to ecTnomy be-
cause farming as conducted tiday has
gotten down to a scientifio basig j nd
is a purely business proposition.
The Automobile has done much f.>r
the farmer and his family. It has been
the cause, so say those who know, of
keeping thousands of boys on the farm
who would otherwise have drifted Into
the city. It has made tlie boy m-ire
contented with farm life, because after
the day's work was done lie nad a
new pleasure to occupy his mind — the
automobile would take him through the
country, to the town, to the dance or
wherever he wislied to go. It wo-ild
take him home in time for x good
night's rest, something his driving
horse rould never do. It wa3 a new
sensation, this being whirled tiiroUj?h
space. It could not be compared ta the
slow-moving horse, so the boys have
remained on tlie farm, made .1 st idy
ot farming and forgotten :he desire to
live in the city.
On the other hand, the motor rar
wiped away border lines: it
bj ought the farm near the city;
ha-j raised the value of farm land,
thrifty farmer has learned that
motor car will churn his milk,
heir fill the silo, will chop and
the wood and do any kind of woric
other gasoline motor will do.
ha
iios
it
The
the
will
saw
any
Automobllists!
Do you like being deprived of the
use of your car while waiting tlie
arrival of new parts?
No. Th«n let us save you both
time and monej by welding your
cracked cylinders, cranks and dlfCer-
ential cases, and practically all
breaks.
Buck & Spring
313
Bant
Uoth
Miclifgan
PhoueM) U7
Street.
1.
Hints for the Motorist.
'^^'ashing tires and washing a car
are two different propositions. Water
alone should be used to wash tires and
as little of It as necessary. After
every run the envelope should be wiped
clean with a damp sponge or well-
wrung cloth.
A common" mistake made by motor-
ists is to mix kerosene with the water.
This may be advisable when washing
the body of a car to remove mud and
dust from the varnish, but it should
never be done when washing tires be-
cause kerosene eats rubber. This fact
can be readily proved by Immersing a
small piece of rubber In kerosene and
allowing It to soak. The rubber will
soon swell and lose its elasticity. The
reason for this is apparent. Kerosene
is rich in" fatty properties which re-
main after the evaporation of the
gases. Every time a tire Is washed
with a kerosene mixture the rubber
is deprived of more of Its strength.
When washing tires it is best to sim-
ply dampen a sponge with clean water,
care being taken that the sponge is
not soaked and dripping. Then wipe
the tires dry with a cloth or handful
of waste.
This, and many other phases of the
tire question are intimatelj- covered
in the "Book of Bibendum" sent free
to motorists upon reijuest by the Mlch-
elin Tire company of Milltown, N. J.
OLDDRIVIER
ENTERS^ItACE
"Herb" Lylle, Dean of Amer-
ican Racers, Will Pilot
Apperson.
Thirly-Five Cars Are Entered
in Big Memorial
Day Event
Indianapolis, Ind., Apri: 15. — Gath-
ering in one by one the world's prem-
ier motor racing pilots, the 500-mlle
International Sweepstakes race at the
Indianapolis Motor speedway next Me-
morial day has assumed yreater pro-
portions than any other race in the
history of automobile contests. There
is but one great driver le :t on Ameri-
can soil who is not nominated to drive
a car in this long classic — "Wild Bob"
Burman, the successor of Barney Old-
field. Burman will be in Ihe race — his
word has been given.
This wonderful condition Is made
possible by the entry of Herb Lytle.
the daddy of them all. desn of Ameri-
can drivers. in an Apperson Jack
Rabbit. Tlie entry was made by Lytle
himself as owner, and thu association
of his name wtii the ve:eran racing
car from Kokomo makes i he roster of
the great race look natural to the
older fans of the motor racing sport.
Along with the netry of Lytle came
the entry of two Fal cars from Chi-
cago. J. F. Gelnaw and W. H. Pearce
were nominated as wheelmen for these
two. They are the 1910 team drivers
for the Fal. The former won the class-
ic Coco Cola trophy at Atlanta last
November and the latter 'vas the win-
ner of the G. & J. trophj race at the
Indianapolis brick track last July.
They had great success ivitii the Fal
cars in the past year and are looking
forward to the winning ol new laurels
during 1911.
The driving Iilstory of v-eteran Herb
Lytle reads like an interesting account
of the greatest events in the annals
of motordom. Tlie story of his career
starts way back in 1S95. -virhen he par-
ticipated in the Cosmopo itan race in
New York city and later, in 1906, went
to Europe In the London to Brighton
race. Five of the great Vanderbilt
cup races have seen Lytlr in the run-
ning and he has performed notably in
most of them. The Apper:jon is Lytle's
old love and his coming back to It Is
one of the notable features of the sea-
son. In making his entr;', Herb said:
"I've gone back to the car whlcn I
had the greatest success ^vith, and I m
going to use parts of the old car in
making this new one. I shall take
the stock motor, which is as fast as
they are built anywhere, and use parts
of the old chassis which made the
other Apperson Jack Rabbit famous I
know now that the car will travel bet-
ter than 100-miIes ap lour without
trouble, and believe that I have taken
the best mount I could aave for the
race.
"While I was In Europe I had the
offer of four or five of .he best for-
eign cars, but I think that the Ameri-
can cars can outrun the riachines sent
from the other side, so I'll take th-a
Apperson this time.'
Lytle will have his car ready for
tuning within a few weeV s. The motor
which he will use is the same as the
one which made the fastest lap in the
Lowell road race of 19)9 and has
turned off a mile on the rc>ad In :44 2-5.
It has five and one-half .nches stroke
and five and three-quarters Inches
bore, with a piston disilacement of
571, being rated at SO-horse power.
The total list of entries for the
race now stand at thirtj-flve, by far
the largest number of cars ever en-
tered In any race, and the Speedway
management is confident that eight or
ten more will be named before the en-
tries close on May 1.
tempt to be made tomorrow to estab-
lish new records, was instantly killed
when his machine threw two tires and
turned over. A mechanic riding with
Crane was dangerously Injured.
Crane's body was not mangled OT
crushed. The car that Crante was drly-
Ing, which was of a 90-horse-pow^er
type, was making a fast turn when th»
accident occurred. The front tire burst
and the machine turned over thre^
times.
Crane was thrown with great f orc»
on the hard dirt track. W'hen he wa»
picked up his head was doubled under
his chest. His neck was broken.
Bert Dodge, a mechanician who wa»
riding with Crane, was hurled from the
car and fell In the center of the track
several yards from where Crane's body
landed. At fist It was thought Dodg©
was killed, but after a few minutes he
recovered consciousness. It Is believed
his Injuries are not dangerous.
On half-mile unbanked tracks. Cran»
held three records. He made a half
mile in 39 215 seconds, a mile in 1
minute and 20 seconds, and two miles
in 2:40 2-5 in Rochester, N. Y.. on Aug.
6, 1910.
On May 30 last Crane negotiated 10»
miles on the famous Indianapolis irack
in 1 hour, 15 minutes and 3-5 seconds.
The racer's home was in Philadelphllk
Prices
Huot's.
Easter Plants.
right; big stock.
VlctO»
MAY REMOVE SCHOOL. i
North Dakota Adventists' Instita*
tion May Be Shifted.
Vallev City. N. D., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to TheHerald.)— Rev. C. J. Buhalt!^
president of the state conference or
the Seventh Day Adventists for North
Dakota, is anxious to remove the
school from Harvey, its present loca-
tion, to thi.s city and for that purpose
he has made a proposition to the
Commercial club. He proposes to build
a school building and two dormitorle*
at a cost of from $60,000 to $76,000 It
the city will furnish the site, eighty
acres in the valley or 160 acres on the
prairie, or $15,000 in cash. The club i#
favorable to the offer and has ap-
pointed a special committee composed
of George M. Young, G. D. Jones, and
L. P. Hyde to investigate the matte*
of securing the site.
VOCALIST GOING ABROAD. i|
Grand Forks Musical Instructor t»
Take European Trip.
Grand Forks, N. D., April 15.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Volney L. Mills
who has been at the head of the voice
department at Wesley College conserv-
atory for the past two years has re*
signed in order to spend a year ia
study in Europe and In company witft
Manager Wagner of the St. Paul Syna-
phony orchestra will sail from New
York on June 12. Mr. Mills will speoialr
ize in concert and oratorio work and
will probably do no more teachings
having been much In demand as a
tenor soloist for the past two years.
Miss Rose Adelaide Marquis, head of
the conservatory violin department has
also resigned but neither of their suc^
cessors have yet been secured.
STAPLES COMMERCIAL CLUB
ELECTS ITS OFFICERS.
KILLED WHILE
AT PBACTICE
Car Overturns While Driver
Crane k Speeding 90
Miles an H«ur.
Kansas City, Mo., April
Crane, driving a Buick racing
practice test at Elm Rid,?e
late yesterday, preparatory
15-
car
-Ned
in a
track here
to an at-
Staples. Minn., April 15. — (S-pe lal
to The Herald.) — At the annual meet-
ing of the Staples Commercial <lub
held In the Commercial clubroome
Thursday evening, the following offi-
cers were elected for the en.«-uiii|f
year: A. F. Borchert president; J. R.
Nims, treasurer; A. A^ . Newman, ssec-
retary.
The reports of the various officers
and committees showed the affairs of
the club to be In a flourlshinp- and
prosperous condition. The main fea-
tures of this year's work of the ciub
will be an attempt on the part of the
members of the club and the citizens
at large to secure additional railroad
shops and other contemplated railroad
Improvements.
A resolution was also passed te
build a potato warehouse and commit-
tees were appointed to look after the
matter of the incorporation and the
building of same at an early date.
PRESIDENT VIXCEXT"
TO SPEAK AT STAPLES.
staples Minn.. April 15. — (Special te
The Herald.) — George Edgar Vin«<nt.
president of the University of Minne-
sota, has accepted the invitation of the
board of education to deliver the com-
mencement address on May 2. The
largest class in llie history of the high
school, sixteen In number will be
graduated on that date. Miss Florence
Thompson is valedictorian and Miss
Florence Sharkey, salutatorlan.
Staples
. Minn.
Gr«etM Colonel.
Staples, Minn.. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Upon invitation of the
Staples Commercial club. Col. Roose-
velt addressed -1,000 citizens and 1.000
school children at noon yesterday, ar-
riving on Northern Pacific coast train
No. 6, and for fifteen minutes delivered
one of his characteristic addresses de-
fining verv plainly the duty of evei
American citizen. The Immense crowt
from the city and surrounding com-
munity and the Citizens band gave him
such a reception as thoroughly pleased
the famous visitor.
wd
SIXTH DISTRICT BAXKERS
Hold Meeting at St. Cloud This
Week and Elect Officers.
St. Cloud, Minn.. April 15. — At a
meeting of the Sixth District Bank-
ers' association held in the city on
Wednesday the following officers for
the ensuing year were elected: Presi-
dent. C. L. Atwood; vice president,
A. H. Turrlttin. Sauk Rapids; secre-
tary, M. C Schoenberger, Park Rap-
ids; executive committee, E. H. Sher-
man, Monticello; J. E. Flynn, Park
Rapids. Park Rapids was selected
as the place for the annual meeting
which will be held June 19.
Grand Forfca School Bleetlon.
Grand Forks. N. D., April 15.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The annual elec-
tion of members to the city board of
education will be held Monday ami
members are to be chosen from four
wards. In three of these there arc
contests. Dr. Frederick Slyfield oppos-
ing H. N. Wells In the Third; W. H.
McGraw and Dr. A. A. Westeen being
the candidates in the Fifth, and P. O
Thorson and August Schave the Sev-
enth ward opponents.
RESTORE HEALTH AND VIGOR
WEAK MEN, WAKE UP! WHY DO YOU WAIT?
Are you satisfied to turn the grindstone for the other
fellow all your life? Are you content to be a plodder all
your days? There's nothing in it, and you know it. Then
why not brace up and be a inaii? We are making hustling,
energetic Aen out of wrecks every day. In every walk
of life you'll find these men — men whom w^e have saved
from lives of wretchedness and despair — men who are
making their mark in the world — men who will tell you
that their success in life dates from the time that they
began the only absolutely safe and sure remedy for a weak
man — a broken-down man.
Our remedy is an honest remedy, a logical remedy, a
time-tried remedy. You have seen our advertisements for
over twenty years, if you have been on earth that long,
and if you'll write to or consult some of the men who have
been cured by our scientific methods, then why do you
wait if you are weak and suffer go-down the road of self-
destruction? You know you are not the man you ought
to be — what's the use in bewailing your fate? We can
help you!' We guarantee our cures to be lasting and
thorough
If it's fresh strength and energy you want, VIM and VIGOR, that's
what we 'tah give, you, and you'll be a long time getting anything like
that by arty other man.
If your stomach don't work, refuses to digest your food; if your
bowels do not move regularly; if your kidneys are weak; if your liver
is sluggish] if your blood circulation is poor and your blood is full of
Uric Acid or other impurities; if your powers are weakening; if your
Head Aches, Debilitating Losses, Urinal Disorders, Irritability, De-
spondency, Sleeplessness, or any other signs of Nervous or Physical
Established In Duluth for
20 years.
>'or<kTrei«<*ii Moat Reliable Spe-
clallHt iu DlHeascM ot Men.
breakdov/n, stop and THINK! Don't depend upon drugs
to build you up; they'll never do it. Don't you know that
all such symptoms are crying out the fact as loudly as
they can that the nerve-cells of your body are robbed of
their pover — their vitality? Don't you know that it is
nerve power that operates every organ, every function of
the body? Don't you know that the basis of nerve power
is health? Then why not get it?
We can cure you of Rheumatism, Catarrh, Cancer,
Tumor, Discharges, Blood Poison, Piles and all Chronic
Diseases.
Vari:ocole. This disease is often associated with
Hydrocele, enlarged prostate gland, stricture, bladder
and the whole train of associated diseases is brought on
by that secret vice or habit which destroys body and
soul, even of the best and of the most hopeful of young
men. . . ,•
We found in former years that cutting and dissect-
ing out these veins did not cure our patients. The
deep-seated nerves that control the function and nutri-
tion wee still causing the patients trouble and more
pain than before. AiUr our discovery of the poisons in stagnant
circulation of the veins, we invented the "Direct Method of the Dis-
solving Process," and this method is as superior to the old-time cut-
ting and blood letting ;ind drugging as the modern electric light
perior to the old-fai^hioned tallow candle.
We are Specialists in Men's Diseases Only, and we are as success-
ful in the cure of these diseases as we are in the cure of all and any
men's ailments. Men, if you want a cure for your suffering, no matter
what your trouble is and how long you had it, come to us and you
will not look any long< r for the restoration of your health. Consulta-
tion is free from 9 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sundays, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m.
PROGRESSIVE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
NO. 1 WEST
SUPERIOR ST.
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Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
U
OPERATIONS
SUSPENDED
By Several Lake Copper Com-
panies and Others to
Do likewise.
Unfavorable Condition of the
Metal Market Is the
Cause.
ALEX-SCOn
IS PRODUCER
Opened Up on Six Levels,
All Prodncini! High-
Grade Ore.
Adding Materially tt Butte
Output and on Earn-
ing Basis.
Houghton. Mich.. April 15. — (Special
to TJie Herald.) — The unfavorable con-
dition of the metal market Is l)esinninff
to have its effect on the operations of
the Lake Superior copper mining com-
panies. Several have already suspended
operations pending an Improvement in
t!ie financial situation, and others give
promise of early doing likewise. The
mortality since tlie tirst of the year has
been greatest anions the non-produc-
ers, tliose companies engaged In ex-
ploratory work and the development of
known copper depoi>its. The producing
companies, with tew exceptions, have
been able to meet their financial re-
quirements through the sale of their
products, despite the low prices pre-
vailing, but in a number of instances
the margin of profit has grown decid-
edly slim, and it has become necessary
to reduce forces and curtail develop-
ment work in t!ie eiTort to keep going.
Production has been at low tide for a
j'ear past, and though the March out-
turn of the entire district reached
nearly 20,000.000 pounds tine copper,
the total production for the first three
nionths of 1911 was several million
pounds lesis than in the corresponding
period a year ago, and about on a par
■with that of three years ago. In the
case of nearly all the dividend payers
the earnings on production during the
past year did not equal dividend re-
gulrotnents. a cut in the dividend rate
ail along the list is quite Inevitable,
unless there be a niaterlal Improvement
In the metal situation during the pres-
ent year.
Man*
The Mass Consolidated Mining com-
pany continues to open an excellent
grade of copper ground in its "C" shaft
on the Butler lode. The task of un-
watering the long idle "B" shaft is
nearing completion, and development
work in that shaft Is already in prog- , - "[„ 36 per" ceVt"coppVr." Some stoplng
ress on the upper levels. The water In -** lo •>• v^k ^'^' "• <»'.^_ — „i-.,*^ •„
ORE OUTPUT
IS INDOUBT
Much Speculation as to Iron
Ore Shipments This
Season.
Active Operations at Mines
Do Not Indicate Small
Movement
PILOT MINE
TO itESUME
J
Men Who Mack the Tuolumne
Are Now in Pos-
session.
First Shipment Is Made By
the Amazon-Montana
Company.
Butte, Mint., April l.">. — The Butte
Miner says: After having passed
through the vicissitudes of various
ownerships and managements, the Alex
Scott mine, adjoining the West Colusa,
has developed into a producer of con-
siderable importance and is now con-
tributing materially to the monthly
output of copper in the Butte camp.
The property is now owned by the I
Butto-Alex Scott Mining company, in
which a large number of the people ot |
Butte are interested as stockholders. N. i
F Hugo, the president of the company
of Duluth, was in the city for several
davs during the past week. He left
la.st night for Duluth, highly pleased
with the development of the property.
l!UBht I'er Cent Copper.
During the past two years a great
amount of underground development
work has been done in the Alex-Scott
mine, and a number of extensive ore
bodies have been opened up on the
various levels. The shaft is 1,600 feet
in depth, and crosscuts and drifts nave
been run on the 500. 1.000, 1,200. 1,400,
1 500 and 1.600-foot levels with most
encouraging results. The mine is now
sending an average of more than a car
a day to the Kast Butte smelter, the
average value being 8 per cent copper
and a fair amount of s»ver. Up to
April 1 the company produced 1,200,000
pounds of copper and earned a net
profit of more than $10,000 a month.
New ore bodies are being opened up
as rapidly as good and economical min-
ing will permit, and as soon as the
metal market will warrant the output
will be greatly increased.
Or* on the 500.
The latest development In the Alex
Scott is on the 500-foot level, where
a crosscut south has been driven a dis-
tance of about 500 feet, inter.sectlng a
vein of considerable width. W here In-
tersected the vein lies quite Hat, but
it steadily straightens up. The pre
is exceptionally high grade, carrying
from 30 to 60 ounces of silver and from
these workings lias been lowered suf-
ficiently to permit of an examination
of the old workings as far down as
the fifteenth level, and opens a consid-
erable area of commercial copper
ground that can be made available at
a comparatively small cost. Explora-
tory work has also been resumed and
one drill outfit Is now drilling In that
part of the Mass property known lo-
cally as the "east leg," of which a geo-
logical cross-section will be made. This
work Is expected also to disclose the
southern extensions of the several cop-
per bearine beds under development on
the Adventure. Algomah and Lake
properties. The company isViaking a
small production of copper In its opera-
tions in the Evergreen l>eU, and in this
is breaking about even on its opera-
tions.
Gratiot.
The Gratiot Mining company, a Calu-
met & Hecla subsidiary, has suspended
operations for an indefinite period. The
company has given considerable time
*nd attention to the development of
the Kearsarge lode, and in July of last
year was enabled to begin production
on a small scale. The mill returns
were not satisfactory and further pro-
duction was ceased about two months
ago. The property is developed through
two shafts bottomed at average depths
of about 1.800 feet, connected on several
level.s by drifts. Development work
has shown more or less improvement
with depth, and at last reports the
north shaft was bottomed in commer-
cial ground. The mine is a low grade
propo.sitlon.
AlKomah.
The Algomah Mining company la de-
veloping a most remarkable body of
copper ore. remarkable In that it is
the first ore body of any size opened
in this district of native copper mines.
Drifting is In progress both ways at
the 104-foot level In the exploratory
shaft, and for a distance of quite 1,300
feet reveals commercial ore, much of
which will average better than 20 per
has been done, and the ore chute Is
widening out in a most encouraging
manner.
On the 1.200-foot level a great amount
of development work has been done by
crosscuts and drifts. The main vein
liere shows a width of about 28 feet
between well-defined granite walls.
The ore has been sloped to a height
of about 50 feet. On the 1.400-foot level
the same vein has been opened up
quite extensively and has been sloped
for 70 feet.
Copper Glance.
The ore chute is extensive and car-
ries much copper glance and bornlte.
On the 1,500-foot level the ore body is
showing a decided tendency to widen
out, and in the face of the drift there
is now about two feet of solid copper
glance and bornite. as well as some
covelite. Thla lense of ore Is showing
permanency and a tendency to widen
as the drift proceeds. The ore has
been sloped up to the 1,400-foot level,
and all the faces are In rich ore. On
the 1,600-foot level the same vein has
been drifted upon, showing only a
slight dip and continuity of the ore
body, which promises to be one of the
largest ore bodies yet developed In the
property. The veins are well main-
tained. Two new slopes have been
started on this level and the ore is
being blocked out for future shipments.
The Little Annie.
One of the assets of the Butte-Alex
Scott company that is not to be under-
estimated is the Little Annie mine, ad-
joining tlie celebrated Goldsmith, north
of Walkervllle,. The Goldsmith has
proved one of the richest silver prop-
erties in the Butte camp, and warrants
the development of the Little Annie
on an extensive scale. It was operated
for a number of years by means of an
incline shaft. , This portion of the
property will be leased, however, and a
new straight shaft will be sunk. The
latter has already been commenced
and Is now down about 40 feet. The
foundation Is being constructed for an
electric hoist with capacity for sinking
cent copper. The vein shows a width to a depth of about 800 feet, and this
■of 8 to 10 feet, and with the exception of
several lean streaks in the south drift
offers a direct smelting ore. Proba-
bly less than 25 per cent of its con-
tents will necessitate concentrating be-
fore smelting. The extent of this ore
body is not known beyond its dis-
closure in the shaft and drifts, but drill
borings made at depths of 400 and 800
feet show similar mineralization
though to a less extent. The ore
body Is generally expected to turn to
native copper at greater depth. The
property is equipped for development
work only.
Franlclin.
The Franklin Mining compan.v has
made a rich strike of copper ground
In drilling south on the twenty-third
level from the No. 1 Pewabic shaft.
This drift Is being sent out to con-
nect with the new No. 3 shaft, and at
a point about 1.300 feet In encountered
copper ground of exceptional richness.
A cut six feet deep across the lode at
right angle to the drift Is all in heavy
copper ground. Developments else-
where in the mine are without mater-
ial change. The No. 1 shaft has
reached a depth of nearly 3,200 feet
•where the thirty-second level will be
established. Franklin is making a
small production. Just enough to keep
the mill going, but is mainly concerned
•with development work, and in the
many years that this work has been
In progress very little ground has been
sloped out so that the nr.lne today has
far more than the usual proportion of
reserve ground. A large part, how-
ever. Is rather low grade and of ques-
tionable commercial value, requiring a
most economical handling to return a
profit on the operation. The company
Is Installing a larger hoist, and Is
equipping the No. 1 shaft in prepar-
ation for heavy production expecting
to handle 1.500 to 1.800 tons of rock '
dally through this avenue alone
Asthma Catarrh
WHOOPING COUGH CROUP
BRONCHITIS WUGHS COLDS
5;STABllSMCO 1«7S
. , e and effective trealment for br»a-
ebial Uoubl.t, without doting rhe Mooiach witb
dnigi. U*ed with tucces* for thirty years.
The air rendered Mrongly aaiiieptic, Inapircd
vricb every breath, malcct breathing easy, tootbea
the M>rc :broat, and slop* the cough, auurlng rcat.
fol night). Creaoleoe it inraloable to nothert
with youn{ chUdrea and a i**n to aufferera from
Astbtra.
Scad u« postal for descrlprWe booklet.
ALL DRUGGISTS.
Try Creioleae Anti-
•eptic Throat Tablet*
for the irritated throat.
They are liin pic, effect-
ive and antiieplic. Of
your druggiit or from ua,
IOC in itampf.
Vapo Cresoteoe Co.
«2 Cortludt St., N. Y.
will be in place within the next week
or two. An electrically driven air com-
pressor is also being installed. A con-
tract for electricity has been made
with the Missouri River Power com-
pany.
VALUES AT DEPTH
IN COEURD'ALENES
Discoveries of the Past Six
Months Are Most
ImportanL
Spokane, Wash., April 15. — Discov-
eries In the Coeur d'Alenes during the
last six months are most important
ever made in the district, according to
E. H. Moffilt of Wallace, Idaho, man-
ager of the Finch and Campbell prop-
erties, who said, among other things:
"These discoveries show that the big-
gest ore bodies in the country all lie
deep and in the Burke quartzlte. This
formation underlies the St. Regis and
Revett quartzites, in which all the
workings of the Morning and Hunter
mines at Mullan hitherto have been. In
the deeper levels of these two mines
they now are getting the same grade
of ore that has been found heretofore
only on Canyon creek.
"The deepest level of the Morning
mine now shows fifty to sixty feet of
ore, one-half of which will average 35
per cent In lead and twelve ounces of
silver to the ton. The strike in the
Hunter is equally important. It Is the
first time in the twenty-flve years' his-
tory of the property that its owners
have been able to see thev would not
have to go down Into their pockets for
money to meet the next payroll.
"We are getting encouraging results
in the drift to the east from the lower
crosscut tunnel In the Alhambra. We
have picked up some nice ore, but the
body has not provided continuous so far.
At greater depth we believe that it will
prove extensive enough to make the
Alhambra a mine."
■I
The approximate amount of ore that
will be shipped from the Lake Supe-
rior iron region during the season now
on the verge of opening is a matter
productive of interested speculation in
mining circles. Not all opinions agree.
This Is not surprising, however. So
much ore Is at the lower lakes or in
furnace yards and so comparatively
few contracts have been placed that
estimates necessarily are founded on a
basis admitting of considerable varia-
tion One authority has ventured the
assertion that the lake fleet will move
not to exceed 30.000.000 tons. Another
one gives 35,000,000 as his figures. Still
others, more optimistic, express the
belief the season's outgo will foot up
practically the same as that of last
year, whtn 42,500,000 tons were carried
down the lakes. It may be stated that
this latter view possesses the most ad-
vocates. There certainly la no indica-
tion at the mines that shipments are
to experience a decided slump. Opera-
tions, both from the standpoint of de-
velopment and production, have rarely
if ever been more active at this time
of the year. It is argued from this
that while market condUions at the
moment may appear of rather dubious
nature, there is a well-grounded be-
lief in those circles which have to do
with placing ore contracts that a ma-
terial improvement is on the way.
There is no expectation that shipments
will start off briskly or that any par-
ticular activity will be shown, perhaps,
until June. This occasions no worry,
however. The lake fleet and the bet-
tered facilities for discharging cargoes
are capable of handling 60.000,000 tons
a season and if necessary practically
all of this could be cared for easily
after June 1.
•iiinicinK noserM Sliaft.
An Interesting operation is the work
of sinking the shaft at the Rogers-
Brown Iron company's Roger mine in
the Iron River district of the Menomi-
nee range. The ledge is down 13.<
feet, all the "ground" above which
point is quicksand Impossble of pene-
tration by ordinary methods. A con-
crete shaft is nece.ssary. This is cir-
cular in shape, twenty-nine feet in
diameter, and is* being lowered by the
so-called drop method. A clamshell
bucket operated from a derrick, is used
to «coop out the sand. No effort is
beig made to keep tlie shaft free of
wiler. The bucket is dropped to the
bottom, takes a •"bite" of sand and is
hauled up and swung to one side,
where it relieves Itsoif of its load. As
the 'ground" Is excavated the shaft
sinks of its own weight and when
necessary a ring of concrete is added
above. It is believed that It will be
possible to continue this process until
the ledge is reached. Should the shaft
refuse to respond to the operation of
the clamshell. It will be sealed and air
pressure will be applied. Huge com-
pressors are on the ground, ready to
be connected up. They will have to be
used, In any event when the concrete
walls reach the ledge. Then the shaft
win be sealed, the air pressure applied
and the water forced back into the
sand so that the concrete may be
anchored firmly in the rock and the
connection made absolutely and
permanently watertight. It is expected
the sand will have been penetrated by
the fore part of June.
The Hoose & Person Construction
company of Iron Mountain, Mich., Is
preparing to resume operations at the
Rogers-Brown company's Portland
mine in the Mlchigamme district of the
Marquette range, the ore of which it
lias a contract to mine and ship. Ow-
ing to the unsettled condition of the
ron trade the tonnage to be taken
out this season lias not been definitely
fixed. However, it will not be less
than 50,000 tons. The Portland is an
open pit. Tlie only other active prop-
erty In tlie field Is the Cleveland
Cliffs Iron company's Imperial mine.
This property has been given a new
hoisting plant and a new battery of
boilers and providing sales are made
it will send out a very considerable
output this season.
AddlnK to Mine Force.
The Breitung interests, operating on
the Marquette range, have made con-
siderable sales of ore recently, as a
result of which 100 men are being added
to the working force at the Mary
Charlotte property at Negaunee. The
payroll will further be increased ■with
the opening of navigation. The com-
pany is operating the Breitung Hema-
tite and the Milwaukee-Davis mines,
in addition to the Charlotte, at Ne-
gaunee, and it also is producing ore
at the Baron property at Humboldt.
Considerable stock piles have been ac-
cumulated and in the aggregate a
large amount of ore will be sent out
this season. The company has in con-
templation the development of an Im-
nortant deposit in the Randvllle dis-
trict of the Menominee range. It may
be that this work will not be under-
taken for some time to come, however,
for the reserves in the Negaunee field
are of very great extent and In them-
selves are sufficient to keep the com-
Sany busily employed a number of
ecades.
Oorrlgan. McKlnney Jb Co. of Cleve-
land have Installed an electrical haul-
age system at their Armenia mine at
Crystal Falls, Menominee range. It
will take care of the tramming both
under ground and on surface. This
company is exploring the old Barasa
mine, in the Negaunee district, but as
yet no results of particular moment
have been met with. There is ore In
this properly, but a sufficient large
body has not been located to give as-
surance of profitable production. A
diamond drill is being used.
«
A Reiiable Medicine — Not a Narcotic.
Mrs. F. Marti, St. Joe, Mich., says:
"Our little boy contracted a severe
bronchial trouble and as the doctor's
medicine did not cure him, I gave him
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound in
which I have great faith. It cured
the cough as well as the choking and
gagging spells, and he got well in a
short time. Foley's Honey and Tar
Compound has many times saved us
much trouble and we are never with-
out it in the house." All druggists.
CATARRH
^CAPSULES**
BLADDER
RslieTed In
THE DIFFERENCE IN SPEED.
Cleveland Plain Dealer: The profes-
sor of shorthand In a local business
college adduced this unanswerable ar-
gument In an address to a new class
the other day:
"We are told that It took Gray, au-
thor of the well known 'Elegy In a
Country Churchyard,' seven years to
write that famous poem. If he had
known stenography he could have done
it in seven minutes. We have grad-
uates who have done that same poem
in that length of time."
.N'S
ULCERINT- SALVE
la arore cur* for Chromlo Ulcers. Bone IIileeni«
Scrof alons Ulears, Tarleose 171oers,Bf«ireai>-
ial BlcerHjVeTer Sores,GancTene,Bi ood Pol*
Boninr> White Swelling, Poisoned 'Wonnds,
all sores of long standlDC-PMltlTBlT never falls.CafW
also Cats, Barns. Boils, Felons. CarbnneleSf
Absoe)<>i<>s. For sale bydrnntsts.lIalia6oaDd60o.
^. P. ALLEN MEDICIWEXO., >St. PapX, MlCTy
Butte. Mont., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The Pilot-Bulle JJlning
company has passed into the possession
and control of the men who made the
Tuolumne mine and developed it into
a dividend-payer within a few years,
and the Pilot mine is now being
equipped with machinery preparatory
to a resumption of work after the first
of May. The Pilot-Butte Is capitalized
for only 100,000 shares, having a par
valuf- of |10, and It Is proposed to dis-
pose of 55,000 sliares of treasury stock
on the first of May to raise additional
working funds. The directors and prin-
cipal sliareholders of the Filot-Butte
are Edward llickey. the man who dis-
covered the famous Anaconda mine and
is president of the Tuolumne com-
pany; N. J. Bellenberg, vice president
of the Tuolumne; J. J. Haggerty, sec-
retary, and J. W. Pratt, a director of
the Tuolumne. The shaft on the Pilot
Is nearly 700 feet deep, and arrange-
ments have been made with the Butte
& Superior company by which the Pilot
will be permitted to extend the 1,600-
foot level of the Butte & Superior to a
point under the Pilot shaft and raise
to connect, by which method the Pilot
ground will be crosscut at a depth of
1,600 feet and the shaft will be opened
to that depth at a great deal less cost
than if sunk from the top and the
waste were hoisted.
The Tuolumne people are confident
that they will be able to develop the
Pilot into a producing mine and divi-
dend-payer in a comparatively short
time. The Pilot is situated in the
midst of producing mines, W. A. Clark's
Kim Orlu and Poser mines adjoining
the Pilot on the north and the Berlin
of the North Butte company on the
southeast, while the Butte & Superior
Is less than 500 feet north of the Pilot
and the Badger State of the Anaconda
company, which is becoming one of the
most Important mines of the Anaconda,
is about 600 feet south of the Pilot.
Tlie Elm Orlu is mining on a vein
which has a northwest and southeast
strike and passes through the Pilot.
On the 1.200-foot level of tlie Elm Orlu
the vein has been worked up to the
sideline of the Pilot, where the ore
body is twenty feet wide. It is knowl-
edge of this fad that makes the new
officers of the Pilot so confident that
the latter can easily be developed into
a producing mine.
Into Amalsamated'a Treasurr.
The stock of the various companies
purchased by the Anaconda company is
gradually finding its way to the treas-
ury of the Amalgamated Copper com-
pany. The Boston & Montana and the
Trenton companies, purcha.<»ed by the
Anaconda for stocK, have already been
dissolved and the stock received turned
over to the Amalgamated. The Butte
& Boston company will past out of ex-
istence in a short time, the preliminary
steps with that end in view having
been taken, and the Anaconda stock
received by that company will also be
turned Into the Amalgamated treasury
in due time. The dissolution of the
Parrot company may be some time off,
owing to the protest by some minority
holders In Boston to the sale on the
ground that the property is worth more
than was paid for it by Anaconda stock.
In the complaint filed by the minority
holders in the federal court, gross fraud
and various other things are alleged,
and to this the Anaconda company has
filed a demurrer which was argued be-
fore Judge Rasch the other day by at-
torneys representing the protestants
and the Anaconda company, "rhe de-
cision on the demurrer was taken un-
der advisement.
Uiiio-KeatinK.
A short time ago the Ohio-Keating
Gold Mining company decided to in-
crease its capital stock from 500.000 to
800,000 shades of a par value of $1 per-
share. The directors are satisfied that
they have a good mine and are anxious
to resume work. With this object in
view it has been decided to issue 200,-
000 shares of tho new stock in order
to provide a fund for the starting up
of work again. The property is located
right In the very heart of mines which
are making a verv excellent showing.
Pliosphate Rock Deposita.
President C. H. Bowman of the state
school of mines in this city has made
an interesting statement dealing with
the recent discovery of phosphate rock
deposits about thirty miles southwest
of this city. He spoke of the im-
portance of the discovery and said
that the average selling price of all
phosphates mined in the United States
Is about $500 per ton. After treat-
ment, when ready for use as a fer-
tilizer, its value on the market is
usually more than double. President
Bowman calls attention to the gen-
erally accepted fact that each dollar
spent in phosphates will return $5 in
increased crops. He said that since
the discovery of the deposits in the
Northwest the total amount in the
United States is estimated to be
267.000.000 ons, or sufficient to last 100
years at the present rate of consump-
tion. In speaking about the report
that there is a possibility of a plant
being established in the immediate
vicinity of the Washoe smeller for the
treatment of the phosphate rock, he
pointed out that it would undoubtedly
prove a profitable Investment under
certain conditions. Certainly the way
could be found for producing cheap
sulphuric acid. He said that enough
sulphur Is going to waste to treat not
less than 4.000 tons dally of pure
phosphate rock. The establishment of
such an Industry would be a measure
along the lines of conservation of the
very highest order. "Men would be
emnloyed." he pointed out, "lands would
be reclaimed and made productive,
while a by-product, useless and wasted
at present, would be turned to great
advantage." Mr. Bowman's statement
is attracting considerable attention
among those who are looking for a
chance to inve.st some of their money.
Tuolumne.
The declaring of the second quar-
terly dividend by the Tuolumne com-
pany Is fully Justified by the showing
the company is making under even
present conditions. Although only
sending to the smelter about 100 tons
a day, development work is going on
and shaft sinking proceeding at a
?:ood rate, the exi>enses all being paid
or from the earnings with money left
over for the treasury. Drifting south
and north on the 1.600-foot level is
proceeding at the rate of about nine
feet a day, and President Hickey be-
lieves that the Edith May vein from
the south will be encountered in the
next two weeks.
Heinse'M Intentlona.
The report in circulation In the
East that F. Augustus Heinze is to give
up copper mining and devote his time
to gold mining in the Porcupine dis-
trict is not credited in this city. Those
who are supposed to be on very friend-
ly terms with Mr. Heinze do not be-
lieve it. and General Manager Bacon
of the Heinze interests In the West has
not received any definite word as to
his coming to this city to wind up his
affairs and abandon this part of the
country for good. Heinze has still
large ownership in several properties
In Montana and I^aho;.and thos«i who
know him best do Bot Welieve he would
dispose of his property " except for a
good round sum.
Bntte's PvMlntftlon.
The production of tnla district for
the month of March exceeded the
February production by 300.000 pounds
and the January production by 1,000.-
000 pounds. Tlie figures for March are
21,900,000 pounds, being the output of
the two Amalgamated company smell-
ers, and in addition the East Butte
smelter produced 1,001,300 pounds. In-
cluded in the East Butte figures are
the ores from several small properties,
•while in the Amalgamated company
smelter returns are about 500,000
pounds belonging to the Tuolumne
company turned out at the Washoe
smelter at Anaconda.
AmazOn-Montana.
President Smitli of the Amazon-Mon-
tapa company, has returned from a
visit to the property and says that a
first shipment has been made, showing
an average of from $30 to $50 a ton
in gold, silver and lead.
MINING IN THE
BLACK HILLS
hcreased Shipments and Out-
puts From the Mines
Continue.
Deadwood. S. D., April 15. — Increased
shipments and outputs from the vari-
ous mines In this locality continue.
The United States assay office declares
that receipts of bullion for March were
the heaviest in some years, while Feb-
ruary, a short month, showed better
than Januarv, which was an Increase
over tlie latter part of last year. This
is In a measure due to the mild winter,
which permitted steady work in all the
producing mines. Then the Bald
Mountain country is each month now
increasing its output. It Is now send-
ing out over 800 tons dally of all
grades of ore from the Portland and
Clinton, Golden Reward, Mogul, Bert-
schey lease on the Imperial and a few
smaller individuals. Part of this is
treated at the L\ndberg. Dorr & Wil-
son mill In Terry, a larger portion
shipped to Deadwood to be treated at
the mills of the companies and an
average of 100 tons per day shipped
to Denver for treatment at the smelter.
This Is the higher grade ore that has
been reaching such sensational figures
recently. At the rate of steady in-
crease from the Bald Mountain coun-
try It Is expected that this summer
that section will be producing as high
as 1,000 tons a day.
The recently discovered ore on the
Forest City claim near Hill City Is
opening up even better than expected.
When first discovered the ledge was
twenty-two Inches wide and by drift-
ing thirty-five feet on it this has
opened up to four feet. The rock
shows liberal quantities of free gold.
Development of an ore body close to
town Is shortly to be begun by local
men. A body of zinc ore lies Just
over the Hills from Deadwood on the
Aaron Dunn properly. Some mining
men here have known of its existence
for vears, but believed that it could
not be properly treated. Recently
tests have been made. The ore wa.s
found to contain $4 in gold, five
ounces silver, 10 per cent zinc and 5 to
6 per cent lead. It is almost pre-
cisely similar to the zinc ores now
being treated at Mldvale, Utah, and
Plattevllie. Wis. It has been found
that a Huff electrostatic separator will
reduce the ore by extracting the zinc
after the ore has been run over Wllfiey
tables or something similar, crushed
and concentrated. The zinc concen-
trate thus saved is to be sent to
Pueblo, Colo , where there is a zinc
smeller, for final treatment, the new
feature of the Black Hills being the
opportunity to save the zinc. The
Dunn ore body on the Belle Eldredge Is
ten feet thick and outcrops over 2,000
feet on the surface, but has not been
much developed.
OLD COLORADO
CAMP REVIVED
Drainage of Aspen Mines
Followed By Important
Discoveries.
Denver, Colo., April 15. — Aspen, In
Pitkin county, as the result of a suc-
cessful and in some respects unique
drainage project, is prepared to resume
its old rank among the principal min-
ing camps ot Colorado. The Smuggler
Mining company has completed the un-
walerlng of the Free Sliver shaft,
which was allowed to fill in 1897, and
is now putting in an electric pumping
plant that will be equal to all emer-
gencies. Drainage to a depth of 1,200
feet has been provided for a tract three
miles square, including twenty impor-
tant mines.
Under the direction of H'arbert A.
Wilcox, superintendent, and David
Davies, master mechanic pumping the
water from the Free Silver shaft was
started in June, 1910. It was com-
pleted In February of the present year.
In addition to a normal inrtow of 1,800
gallons a minute, 90,000,000 gallons a
month wei«a taken out of the shaft.
The capacity of the plant was 8,000
gallons a minute.
In the bottom of the shaft, there
had been ever since the mine was
drowned a large duplex plunger Jeanes-
vllle pump, and after the water had
been lowered to within 116 feet of the
bottom an attempt was made to put it
in repair for assistance in completing
th« work. Two deep-sea divers, Fred-
erick Johnson and George Peterson,
from the Merrltt & Chapman Derrick
& Wrecking Co. of New York, were
brought to Aspen and tried to reach
the submerged pump, but the pressure
was too great. The other pumps final-
ly got the water down to within
forty-six feet of the submerged pump.
After several failures the divers suc-
ceeded in getting it into complete re-
pair, and the unwatering of the shaft
was soon finished.
Aspen was at one time one of the
big silver-producing districts of Colo-
rado. Even after the drowning of the
Free Silver shaft and the submerg-
ence of the lower levels of the prin-
cipal mines tn 1897, a production of
two to four millions annually was
maintained from the upper levels for
the next ten years. In 1907 the pro-
duction dropped to l«ess than one mil-
lion, but now that the deep ore bodies
have again been made accessible a re-
turn to the old figures may be expected.
The Smuggler Mining company has al-
ready been rewarded with a strike of
good ore in level No. 12, and within a
few days the cages will, for the first
time in many months, be coming up
to the surface loaded with cargoes of
siU^r and lead ore. The vein dis-
covered is one which in former years
has been worked extensively In the
upper levels.
DOCTORS LOST A
THOUSAND DOLLARS
J. D. Clark Was Willing to Pay
That Amount fdr a
Cure.
"Of all aad words of tongue or pen.
The saddest are these: It might have
been."
The above quotation applies very
aptly to the case of any of the doc-
tors who lacked the reqilsite knowl-
edge and skill to cure J. D. Clark,
•who has been a sick mar for the past
sixteen years. Mr. Clark •was in such
a conditon that he states he would
have gladly paid a fee of J 1,000 to
any doctor who could have cured
him, but he found no such a one
though he tried many. XK. last, •with-
out hope of being cured but with
despair and desperation in his heart,
he called upon the United Doctors.
He did not pay them $1,000 for they
only demanded a modest fee — less
than $100. But what is much more
important to Mr. Clark, they gave
him back his life and health.
Speaking of the mattjr yesterday,
Mr. Clark said:
"For over sixteen yearn I have been
almost a constant sufferer from con-
stipation and its long chain of sjTnp-
toms. If I did not take some physic
every night my bowels would not
move at all. As a result of my con-
stipation I had a great deal of head-
ache, my nerves became a •wreck and
at times I was utterly u if it for busi-
ness The ■worst of it 'vas that the
more physic I took the more I had
to take and it seemed flat there was
no cure for me; that I would suffer
the rest of my life. I often made
the remark that I wouli give $1,000
for a cure. I tried everything, many
doctors had failed to ci; re me and I
tried all kinds of patent medicines.
Many things helped for a w^hlle, but
none were curative.
"Finally I went to ses the United
Doctors, who have their institute on
the third floor of the Co.umbia build-
ing. They examined me thoroughly
— gave me the best examination I had
ever had from any doctor, and •with-
yout asking me a single uuestion, they
described my case better than I could
have done it myself. I was at once
convinced that I had fcund a doctor
at last who understood my case and
when they told me they could cure
me I gladly placed my case In their
hands and gave them a check for
their fee — ^which was not $1,000. They
didn't even ask a hundred.
"They have cured me sound and
well. My aches and pains are ^one;
my bowels move naturally, my nerves
are built up and I feel like a new
San. I give all praise to the United
octors' system of treatment The
reason I went to the United Doctors
was that I met a travelingr salesman
on the train who had been cured of
rheumatism and kidney trouble by
their treatment in the East.
"When I saw what this wonderful
new treatment was doing for me 1
advised a friend who had gall stones
to go to the United Doctors for treat-
ment. He had been a sufferer with
gall stones for years and several
times I thought he would surely die
when the terrible pains came on. He
had used sweet oil, morphine, opium,
calomel, phosphate of soda and
everything the doctor prescribed but
he kept getting worse and at last the
doctors told him that he would have
to have an operation; that he would
die if he did not. It took a lot of
talking on my part to persuade him
to go to the United Doctors but
finally he went and now he is well
and he says that the biggest favor
I ever did him was when I made him
go to the United Doctors for treat-
ment.
"I am a real estate dealer. I travel
a great deal but my permanent ad-
dress Is Mackinaw, 111. I will gladly
answer any Inquires in regard to my
case. In my travels I have visited
the United Doctors' institutes in three
different states, and in each institute
I found the same large crowd of pa-
tients and all of them I ever spoke to
were well pleased with the United
Doctors' treatment. I would not take
a thousand dollars nor five thousand
dollars for the good I have received."
"(Signed) JOHN D. CLARK."
News of the wonderful cures being
made by the United Doctors has
spread over the country and people
come hundreds of miles to see them.
If j'ou are suffering from any chronic
disease of the nerves, blood, skin,
kidneys, bladder, liver, bowels, heart
or lungrs, you are safe In going to
these master medical specialists.
Their examination is free and if they
cannot cure you they will tell you so.
They have so many callers that It
keeps them busy treating the curable
cases; they refuse to take any in-
curable ones.
THE
FIR$T HATIOIAL
BAIK
OF DULUTm,
CiplM $SOO,K»
Mriht iM rnfflt, . t1,ilt,000
-WE issue-
$10, $20, $50, $100
Travelers' Checks.
Safe, convenient, self-identifying.
Payable everywhers for full face value.
PRINTING
That Satisfies All Our Customers.
Are You One of Them?
MERRITT ft HECTOR,
rUIITEKS AND RINDEB9.
Kmh Or«crs a Pica > ant. US Heal Firai Street
FAIVIEILY TRADE
HAVE A CASE OF
or
BF OUGHT TO YOUR HOUSE.
CaU New. 4&I. Old— Melrose, 4689.
117 WEST FIRST STREET.
DULUTH BREWING & MALTING CO .
When nothing else will
start dirt Yoa KNOW
SAPOLIO
WILL DO IT
Works Without Waste
CLEANS-SCOURS-POUSHES
WHOLESALE
JOEJBERS AND
MANUFACTURERS
OF DULUTH. MINNESOTA.
Reliable and U]|>-to-Date Concerns Who Do a Stridly
Jobbin.s and Manufacturing Business.
ASBESTC'S.
A. H. Kriegcr Co.
BAKERSL
Crescent Belcery.
BLAST FUR1!4ACE.
Zenith Furnace Co.
FURNITURE.
DeWitt-Seits Company.
FOUNDERS and MACHINISTS.
Clyde Iron Works.
BREWEFlS.
Dttluth Brewi-g & Malting Co.
Fitger Brewing Co.
BUTTER AND ICE CREAM
MANUFACTiRERS.
Bridgeman-RusitcU Co.
CEMENT AND PLASTER.
D. G. Cutleir Co.
COMMISSION AND PRODUCE.
Fitssimmons-Paiiner Co.
CONFECTIONERY.
National Caniy Co.
(Duluth Factory.)
DRUGS.
L. W. Leithhead Drug Co.
DRY GOC>DS.
F. A. Patrick ft Co.
GLASS. PAINTS AND BUILD-
INQ MATERIALS.
Paine ft Nixon Co.
GROCERS.
Gowan-Peyton-Congdon Co.
Stone-Ordean-Well^ Co.
Wright-Clarkaon Mercantile Co.
HARDWARE.
Kelley-How-Thomson Co.
Marshall-WeUs Hdw. Co.
WHOLESALE AND MAN'F*S
OF MEN'S FURNISHINGS.
Christensen- M endenhaU-
Graham Co.
PAPER.
Duluth Paper & Stationery Co.
McClellan Paper Co.
Peyton Paper Co.
■•■
I
i
1
HI^M^fcl ■ III II
\
I
t >■■»■
npii««
^^mmi
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
I AT THE LYCEUM |
A production maFslve and elaborate,
gorgeous in Its stage settings, and
brilliant In Its costumes, two score
of catchy songs, scenes full of rol-
licking fun, a well-balanced and at-
tractive chorus, and novel features, to
say nothing of a cast of Broadway re-
nown, are promised when "The Mid-
night Sons,"' Lew Fields' big spectacu-
lar musical show. opens Its three
nlglits' engagement at the Lyceum on
Tliursday. April I'O, playing a matinee
Saturday. April 22. , ^ ^
The cDinpanv is headed by Oeorge
W. Monroe, who will appear as 'Pansy
Burns," the cook lady, a diaracter
which lie has made famous and wliich
was the principal hit of the production
during its long run at the Broadway
tlieater in New Vork. Mr. Monroe Is
surrounded by a company of princi-
pals, nianv of whom appeared in the
original production. Prominent in the
cast is txeorge Schiller, one of Ameri-
ca's best and most representative
actors; Alma Youlin. a prima donna
who is very popular with audiences
in tiiis vitiniiy. liaving appeared in
Duluth a number of times witli some
of tlie most popular musical successes;
Elizabeth .Mayne. Teddy Burns, Mona
Desmond, liosalle Ceballos. and a
scoie of others who have won tlieir
spurs with musical comedy successes.
In addition to tl;e cast of principals
there Is a chorus of sixty, an aug-
mented orchestra, and otliers In the
mechanical department which brings
the total number of people carried by
the organization up to nearly 100.
There Is probably le-^s plot in "The
Midnight Sons " than anytliing else, but
there are, it is claimed, so many en-
joyable features In the entertainment
that no one really cares for the story,
whiih is based upon the adven/ures o'T
the four sons of a millionaire United
States senator. Tired of the manner
In wliicli tliey are spending his money,
he gives to each one of them a cer-
tain amount and tells them to go into
business, the only stipulation being
that the money must be doubled with-
in a year. One of them elects to be the
"angel" for a vaudeville star: the sec-
ond sets up a broker"s office; the
third goes jnto tlie shoe business; and
the fourth starts a hotel.
It's the same old story. All go broke
within a short time, the only assets
being numerous boxes of cirgarettes.
But what's the use of describing a
story of this kind? What is of more
Interest to the audience is the fact
that the supposed plot is a vehicle for
Introducing in almost kaleidescoplc
rapidity the many and thoroughly
novel vaudeville features.
The latter consist of several head-
line acts which are Introduced in the
big theater scene of the second act.
Several of these acts have been recog-
nized headllners In vaudeville for sev-
eral years and have been engaged to
appear In only this portion of the en-
tertainment. Prominent among these
features Is the remarkable wiiirlwlnd
dance executed by Rosalie and Ililarion
Cabellos. a solo dance by the fascinat-
ing premier. Mile. Prager, a Spanish
dance by Mona Desmond, and a novel
specialty by an imported English pony
ballet, headed by Marion Sanford.
"The Midnight Sons" is promised as
one of the biggest and most expensive
organizations ever sent on tour, re-
quiring for its transportation a special
train of six cars, consisting of three
baggage carloads of scenery and three
sleepers. In addition to the regular
company carried of 100 people, the
services of 100 "extra"' people Are util-
ized In the big theater scene, while
sixty stage hands, electricians and
property men are required to operate
the scenery and effects, making a total
of over 250 people employed back of
the curtain line during each perform-
ance.
* • «
For more than thirty years the com-
ing of Sarah Bernhardt has been a
brilliant event in American theatrical
history. Judging by what the review-
e»"s are saying, the present visit re-
veals no indication that It will be the
last.
And why should It be? Her first
"farewell" tour brought her In 1SR7.
FarewelHng was one of the specialties
of the man who managed her In those
davs. But, to be .iust to his memory
and his rrenius. it should be added that
Mme. Bernhardt was then In frail
heaUh. Only her amazing enerpv kept
her on the stage. Now, In her 67th
year, she appears to be in vigorous
health.
This wonderful woman for fully a
third of a century has been the fore-
most exponent of the dramatic art.
"One moon effect Is enough!" cried
Perrin. directing a rehearsal of "Le
6'phlnx" at the Comedle, when Crol-
zette. her old schoolmate, was pushing
her for first honors. "'Tiirn it off for
Mile. Berhardt."' But soon Orolzette
was eclipsed, and since then "the di-
vine Sarah"' has reigned supreme. Her
Bwav has been without parallel in the-
atrical history, not for duration alone,
but for brilliancy.
Kachtls visit to America is generally
spoken of as being unworthy of her.
But nothing like than has ever been
said of Bernhardt. She was glorious
even in the tents to which theatrical
powers banished her during the Amer-
ican tour of 1S95-6.
Time has been kind to her person-
allv and to her an it has kept adding
more and more luster. For this reason
two generations as well as two worlds
have been charmed by this queen of
the dramatic stage. She will be at the
Lyceum May 29 in "Madame X.
• ♦ »
Tomorrow afternoon the Maude Leone
Associate Players will present for the
approval of Duluth theater-goers their
second big production of a play with
music and songs. One of the most
succissful shows of this type ever pro-
duced in America has been chosen for
the second invasion of the musical field,
"The Clirl Question."
Coming from the fertile brains ot
three men who have made national
reputations in the light musical com-
edy field, Adams. Hough and Howard,
this piece scored one of the greatest
>-uccesses of anv musical play ever pro-
duced at the La Salle theater. Chicago.
It ran for over 300 nights in Chicago
and was acclaimed on all sides as one
oi the brightest, catchiest and cleverest
shows that ever held undiminished
patronage through the sultry summer
months of a Chicago season.
It will be produced In this city by the
Maude Leon Associate Players with the
full strength of the company and the
as.«istance of an enlarged singing
chorus. It will be mounted with an
elaborate set of scenery.
For the past ten days three rehearsals
have been held every day. New mem-
bers of the chorus have been secured,
special scenery has been built and new
business has been originated. Time and
effort and expense have not been spared
to make the Hough, Adams and How-
ard Play the best production ever staged
in this city by the company.
The story deals with Jo Forster and
Con Ryan. Jo is a waitress in the
restaurant that Con presides over in
the capacity of manager. Jo loves
Con and he never suspects the love of
the girl. Con Is in love with the
cashier, Elsie Davis, and her smile
holds a world of brighiness for him.
Old Man Sears, with more money
than he can possibly use, buys the res-
taurant and turns it into a real estate
office. Con is thrown out of a position
and takes to selling books to keep the
wolf out of the front hall.
Joe comes Into a snug fortune, quite
large enough to keep two young
people quite comfortable during their
lives. She meets Con and notes his
plight. It is here that Con Ryan first
learns of the love of the girl, a love
that has remained loyal to him through
the ups and downs of their acquaint-
ance.
The love affair of Harold Sears with
F:isie Davis, tlie coming of Baron Von
Tasner, and the part he plays in the
affairs of the lives of Joe and Con,
are Incidents to the plot that make
the story interesting throughout the
three acts.
Miss Maude Leone has been cast for
the part of Jo Forster. In the three
acts of the play Miss Leone is called
upon to play comed^;4_ to do some real
serious work and aisO to give a little
pathetic scene that is one of the pret-
tiest things in the show.
Justin Cooper will play Con Ryan,
happy go lucky Con. Mr. Cooper
stepi-ed into the character of Kid
Burns with twenty-four hours" notice.
He had neither opportunity for study
or rehearsal. That he achieved the
success he ddl, speaks well for his
ability.
He has had ample opportunity to
work the character of Con Ryan up
and to give it the proper study.
William Donovan will have the part
of Baron Von Tasner, which will be
one of the strongest parts that this
actor has had during his Duluth en-
gagement. Coras Morris will be Elsie
Davis, the cashier, and James Rennle
will have the part of Harold Sears,
son of the multi-millionaire. Miss
Helen Aubrey will play Mrs. Sears, and
E. Forrest Taylor, who has made an
excellent impression In all of his char-
acter parts here, will handle the part
of the elder Sears.
"The Girl Question" opens with the
matinee tomorrow and will run until
Wednesday evening, with a special
matinee Monday afternoon ad another
matinee Wednesday afternoon.
»««»«««|l«<»«««««<»J|l«»«»iMt»*«»««»»»»r«»«*««»»«»»»»»»»»]|
AT THE ORPHEUM
Buster Brown and his dog, Tlge, In
disguise will be the feature of the
Orpheum bill this week.
Buster Brown. In real life is Master
Gabriel, and his dog. Tlge. is Edwin
Lamar. For vaudeville purposes they
have assumed the parts of Little
Tommy Tucker and his dog. Mutt, and
they present a new act with all the
comedy and clever pantomime that
made Master Gabriel famous In "Bus-
ter Brown"' and ""Little Nemo."
Master Gabriel is a man "26 years of
age. but he has the appearance of a
very precocious boy of about 10 years
of age. For his vaudeville sketch he
has surrounded himself with an all
star cast consistlnp- of: Edwin Lamar
of the Drury Lane spectacle: J. Hooker
Wright, recently with the Sir Henry
Irving companies; Al Lamar, who has
been associated with Master Gabriel
for the past ten years; Nan Dodson,
recently of Denman Thompson's com-
pany, and Vida Perrin, the Canadian
beauty.
Ashton Stevens, on© of the best
known, theatrical critics of Chicago,
wrote as follows of Master Gabriel's
act: "Regular vaudeville of the best
and most regular kind is submitted
by Master Gabriel and his company in
'Little Tommv Tucker.' Imitations
have only accentlated Master Gabriel's
vivid characterization. Here is a boy
that almost ranks with Mark Twain's
Tom Sawyer, i-e loves a prank and
loathes a sham. He is a civilizing an-
tidote against the seriousness and
pomposity of his seniors. He Is a
real Christian Scientist, and an
apostle of optimism. Joseph Jefferson
would have been proud to include him
among the children of Rip, and, Barrle
himself might invent a new dramatic
kennel for Edwin Lamar, who plays
Mutt, the dog. His pantomime is per-
fect. It abounds in the sort of humor
that characterizes great cartoonists.
It suggests not only the animal In its
comic aspect, but the human animal
to borrow from Ambrose Brice, the
onlv adequate word. The supporting
cast includes an all star aggregation
rarely seen in a single vaudeville
sketch. Such an act keeps the theater
young. It makes an unwritten law
against vulparil^'. We do not pa./ at
the door to be Insulted."
The Farrell-Taylor company is a
well-known trio of funmakers and
blackface comedians, consisting of
Frank Farrell-Taylor, Blanche Daven-
port and Tom Carter. They present an
offering called "'The Minstrel Man."
in which the comedy is interspersed
with popular music. The two men in
the act are well-known minstrel
: ii'iii I -'l |V>---^---'--^- '" ■ - - - • ..-^-■-•■^:-:..:^:^:.:-^■- ■-:::.:- • -:.:.:..>-- v.:::-^^!.:^.
MISS PEARL YOUNG,
The Girl at the Piano at the Empress Next Week.
have provided an elaborate setting for
their act. In front of a golden green
curtain they do a number of difficult
balancing and posturing stunts.
The overture by the concert orches-
tra and the Orpheum motion pictures
will complete the bill, which will con-
tinue all week with a dally matinee.
The opening performance of the new
bill will be given Sunday afternoon.
• • *
Bonltam. "The Real Girl," and Clay-
ton Wliite and Marie Stuart in
"Cherie" will be seen at the Duluth
theater in the near future.
called off. John, then sorrc
reluctantly consents to tak<
Katherine, to the theater,
Gallagher, one of the prize f
pears upon the scene. It a
Bill knew Katherine when .«
New Haven and he wjis a
However, she knew him t
name, George Wilson, and 1
he would ever adopt a pu
reer. Bill, realizing Katheri
ance as to his profession, i
keep her from knowing the
discovers the truth, but onl;
ment, for Bill and her brot
their mistake, get up a schf
Bill off as the new minlste
at the church attended by
The deceit Is easily practice
finale, when Katherine disco
dismay that her one-time ^
is none other than Bill Gal
pug. Mr. Case Is a very c
dian and his support is a
first-water and tliis with t
vehicle, makes their ofterin
spot on a very good bill.
The Musical Wilsons brini
one of the classiest musics
has ever appeared at the
Their offering consists of
good selections upon varlc
instruments. The majority
acts "fake," upon most of
ments used. In other wor
seelctions upon each Instr
Musical Wilsons, however,
upon each instrument used
eacli selection with an ar
that proves them musician
merit, according to a Milwa
As the extra added featu
brings to Duluth, Barnard'
A great many manikin attrs
been presented on the vaud
but the latest importatio:
Sullivan and Considine cin
nard's Manikins. Not on
little figures act like hur
but there are no end of i
their manluplation, with e
fects and transformations,
and laugh provoking. Th
senling a pickaninny pas
Coon's Itevelry." As a chi
ture this is one of the
well as one of the most enj
elties appearing over the
The moving pictures will
ly seelcted and will be in k
this excellent bill. A matl
daily at 2:45 and evening p
at 8 and 9:30. Seats may
one week in advance by
phone. A special school
matinee is given every
2:30. All students under
age admitted for 5 cents,
tention Is paid to the er
and amusement of ladies i
at all times.
»*it»»»)H»»)l(«».«*»».«***»**'**»*»»** »»3K»»»»lK»»irHit-^MHNH^»»»*^
wfull.v and
his sister,
when Bill
ghters, ap-
jpears that
he lived in
Yale man.
y Ills real
lad no Idea
gilistic ca-
ne's ignor-
.ttempts to
truth. She
' for a mo-
her, seeing
me to pass
r, expected
Katiierine.
d until the
vers to her
ale athlete
lagher, the
ever aome-
Iso of the
heir clever
g a bright
5 to Duluth
1 acts that
Empress,
some very
us musical
of musical
the instru-
.is they are
jment.' The
are soloists
and present
tistic finish
s of real
ukee critic,
re, this bill
5 Manikins,
ctions have
»ville stage.
1 for the
uit is Bar-
y do the.«e
lan beings,
urprises in
ectrical ef-
all realistic
ey are pre-
time, "The
Idren's fea-
prettiest as
oyable nov-
lircuit.
be especial-
eeping with
nee is given
erformances
be reserved
either tele-
children's
Saturday at
14 years of
Special at-
tertalnment
nd children
NEW PROGRAMS
OF PHOTOPLAY
Next Week's Bi!is at the
Odeum and Lyric
Theaters.
At the Lyric theater next week th»
films will include '"The Inherited
Taint," a simple story in which the
Interest is aroused by the question*
it raises. **"^
"Italian Coast .Scenes," a descrip-
tive film showing tlie Italian coast.
"The Resurection of John" is A
comedy film, and "The Atonement of
Thais" Is a dramatic film. I. 3.
Mlstachkln will sing, "Under the Wish-
ing tree."
At the Odeum the feature is "1S61."
The film shows the dangers attend-
ing the professional warrior. It give*
an imitation of a battle In the Civil
War. "A Visit to Nassau," shows
scenes near Nassau, Bahama. West
Indies. "The Chief's Daughter." Is a
dramatic story and "Best Girl of All"
Is another strong dramatic photoplay.
George Lenz will sing "'My Irish
Dearie."
The popularity of these two theaters
has been growing steadily this winter,
for the standard of the photoplay iS
never allowed to fall off.
AT THE HAPPY HOUR
At the Happy Hour this week a big
show is promised. Owing to an unfor-
tunate misunderstanding last week U^9
engagement ot the Etta M. Free Dinky
Dorum company was postponed. Tins
company will open on Monday, pre-
senting an act that is expected to be an
eve opener to Happy Hour patrons.
■ The Mikado Queen will be s^hown,
featuring "Ko Ko," played by Mr. T.v-
satt of "The Isle of Bong Bong. m
this cast will also appear Mr. Howarti,
recently of Billy Watson's company, a
comedian. "The Ballet of Beauty will
oe another big act. There are ten peo-
ple in the cast.
One moving picture film will show
AMUSEMENl
AMUSEMENTS.
AT THE EMPRESS
«»««»»»«*«*»T&***»***JK*«**»»*i»**)>**«»»»««»*»»»»Ol(
comedians, and their Instrumental
numbers are a distinct feature. It is
a comedy turn pure and simple, and
Judging from notices received In
other cities, a good one.
The Nambas are Japanese acrobats.
The following notice from the Minne-
apolis News tells what may be expect-
ed of this act: "The Nambas offer
one of the best Japanese acrobatic acts
ever given on the Orpheum boards. The
feature Is the upside down stair climb-
ing stunt of one of these agile Yankees
of the Orient, who makes the trip up
a stairway on his head, at the evident
risk of breaking his neck or caving in
his skill." They also have some other
difficult and Intricate feats.
George Austin Moore has a new
vaudeville act. made necessary by his
recent marriage. Mr. Moore was for-
merly a monologlst on the Orpheum
circuit, but cupld provided a partner
for him. He was recently married
to a Louisville young woman, who Is
said to have been socially prominent
in the Southern city, and they are now
doing a "double" act consisting of
singing, dialogue and dancing. Moore
stories in the negro dialect and Cor-
delia's graceful dancing and clever
singing are the features of the act.
The following notice from the Minne-
apolis Journal describes their act:
"George Austin Moore and Miss Cor-
delHa Haager had catchy songs, at-
tractive dialogues, a good joke or two,
were good looking, and In fact, had
the best act of a bill that will be re-
membered as being distinctive." Miss
Cordellia's gowns are a feature of the
act, and she is claimed to be one of
the best dressed women on the circuit.
The Ward Brothers also have a sing-
ing and dancing act, but of an alto-
gether different type. They are two
clever young Jewish performers, who
present some character songs and
dances. Together with Master Ga-
briel and Mr. Moore and Cordellia,
they come to Duluth from St. Paul,
where they were one of the genuine
hits of the bill this week.
The humorous side of the life of a
soldier Is brought out In the brisk
little comedy hit offered by Joseph L.
Browning and Henry Davis, and en-
titled "Nearly a Soldier." It tells a
story of the attempts of a raw young
German to enlist in the United States
army. The first part of the act con-
sists of the comedy dialogue between
the young German recruit and the re-
cruiting officer, and they finish their
turn with two or three songs of a
popular type.
'The seventh act on the bill is a pos-
turing turn presented by Ernest Yerxa
and Adele. This is one of the few
posturing acts on the circuit, and Is
said to be one of the best. They
Joe Welch will be at the Empress,
opening Sunday matinee. This an-
nouncement will no doubt create a
great deal of Interest among the the-
ater-goers of this city, as Mr. Welch's
appearance Kas long been advertised
and he is recognized as being one of
the greatest Hebrew character comed-
ians before the public at the present
time. This will be Mr. Welch's first
appearance west of New York in ten
\ear?, and It was only after much
persuasion and some very flattering
offers that he finally consented to make
a single and exclusive tour of the
Sullivan and Considine circuit.
Joe Welch probably gained more
fame as the star of "'The Peddler" and
"The Land of the Free," than In any
of his great success, but It Is doubtful
if he ever met with greater success
than he Is attaining on his present trip
over the Sullivan and Considine circuit.
He will be seen In this city In an in-
imitable comedy creation, "A Study
From Life." The material for this
offering has been gathered by Mr.
Welch, through his association with
the Hebrew language, and there Is
none of the burlesque that Is so com-
mon with the majority of the Hebrew
comedians. Mr. Welch is himself a
foreigner, and his endeavor is to por-
tray the true Hebrew character. His
success Is ample proof of the manner
in which this ig done. The secret of
liis popularity seems to be not so much
In his vehicle, as In his personality, and
he Is one of the most widely copied
and imitated comedians on the Ameri-
can stage. Mr. Welch does not resort
to bolBterousness and extravagant ges-
tures. He scarcely moves from where
he stands In the center of the stage,
with his arms forded, but his eyes, his
abrupt sentences, his delicious dialect
and sudden voice inflection render his
sayings practically Impossible to imi-
tate. He Is said to be one of the
greatest laugh producers before the
public.
Pearl Young, wh» has won unstinted
praise and wide popularity as a soloist
with Sousa's band, will present a series
of songs and display her talents at
the piano. , ,
"There Is an altogether charming lack
of self-consciousness, a spontaneous
grace and delicious vivacity about the
pianologues of this winsome young
miss which give every auditor the im-
pression that he or she Is the very
special guest of a delightful young
woman, and not a mere playgoer who
has paid for the privilege of watching
and listening to a pretty dark-haired
girl," says a recent criticism. "Miss
Young Is the possessor of a very clear
soprano voice, which she uses to great
advantage, and her part of the program
is distinctive for Its daintiness and re-
finement."
As a special feature, Paul Case and
company will offer an extremely funny
playlet, "The New Minister."
This playlet was wrlten by Mr.
Case, himself, and is said to be one of
the cleverest comedy playlets that has
f raced vaudeville In several seasons,
here are plenty of bright lines and
ludicrous situations and as the skit
was written for laughing purposes
only, it is minus an Intricate plot.
The sketch is written around Kath-
erine Newton, a girl of domestic taste
and fond of a quiet home life, who is
keeping house in Milwaukee for her
brother John, an enthusastlc fight fan.
On this particular night John is about
to attend a prize fight to be held with-
in a block or so of their home. Kath-
erine tries to prevent John from at-
tending, but just as he Is about to
leave for the contest, a message comes
to the effect that the fight has been
AMUSEMENTS.
AMUSEMENTS.
"The Atonement of Thait"— Gaumont (Dramatle.)
"Italian Ceatt Seenes" — Gaumont (Educational.)
"The RMurrmtion of John" — Edieon (Comedy.)
"The Inherited Taint"— Vitafraph (Dramatic.)
Illuetrated Sont, "Underneath the Withim Tree."
Publithed by JoK:ph W. Stearnt, aunf by
Mr. I. S. Mlstachkln.
ODEUM
"The Chieft Daughter"— Bloiraph (Dramatle.)
"1861"— Sella (Dramatle.)
"Best Giri After All"— Lubin (Dramatie.)
"A Viait to Naasau. Bahama. West Indies —
Lubin (Educational.)
Illustrated soni, "My Irish Dearie." Sung by
Mr. Georie Lenx.
LYCEUM
4 DAYS a°e' Easter Sunday.
Regular Matinee Wednesday
H. E. PIERCE & CO. Present
MAUD LEONE gBfr^ll"'"*"!-
IN THE GIRI.Y MUSIC PLAY
T£ GIRL QUESTION?
SISTER PLAY TO — "THE TIME, THE PLACE AND THE GIRL.'»
12 SONGS - IS PRETTY GIRLS - lOOO LAUGHS
830 CONSECUTIVE TIMES IN CHICAGO!
Same Old Prices:
MATINEES, 25 CENTS.
NIGHTS, 25 AND 60 CENTS.
GEORGE AUSTIN MOORE,
With "Moore and Cordellia," at the Orpheum Next Week.
^HAPPY HOUR^
A Dollar Show for lOe.
"THE MIKADO'S
QUEEN"
A $600 Production.
10— People— (0
General Admission 10 Cents.
Wortii it. Don't Miss Tiiis One.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, APRIL 20-21-22 ^JSiSkr
LEW FIELDS
Preaenta the Stupendoaa Speotacnliir Mnstral Prodnctloa in Two BIk
Acts and Eight Mammoth Scenes.
A JOYOUS BILL FOR GLAD EASTER
STARTING SUNDAY MATINEE
SULLIVAN & COMSIDlHi: VAUDEVILLE TESTED AND APPROVED BY 15000
—PEOPLE WEEKLY IN DULUTH
JOE
WELCH
PML
@ASi
A spl e n d 1 d
feature In the
sketch line,
'THE NEW
MINISTER.**
— THE —
WDLSOii
A Spectacular Musi-
cal Fete.
Selliieii@M©!r's>
OirisllDgitiira
In a Special Easter
Musical Program.
MATINEE DAILY—
PV^2:45
10 and 20 Cento
AMERICA'S GREATEST
HEBREW COMEDIAN-
The Eminent Star who
will be seen in liis In-
imitable Creations.
"A STLDY FROM
LIFE.**
YOiiQ
The Piquant
Party at the
Piano — one
of vaudevilles
Best Artists.
iairiiDaird'i
Europe's Gre a t e a t
Aggregation of Life-
Ivlke Mechanical Ac-
tors, Presentmg a
Pickaninny Pastime.
"THE COONS'
REVELRY."
iniiipir@its@P@
Photoplay of Rare Excel-
lence.
Two Shows
Every Night
at 8 and 9:30
lOc, 15c, 25c
ISO People Employed
3 Car Loads off Scenery
\ 6S In the Chorus
THE
MIDNIGHT
H SONS'
TravelinK Exclusively By
Special Traln-38 Weeks
Br«idw'yTlieif'r,N.Y.CIty
THEATER
INTERNATIONAL VAUDEVILLE
WITH
GEO. W. MONROE
And the BlmMt Company and Largest Seenic Equipment Ever Sent om
Tour A HoKe Entertainmeaf, ComprlslnB Farce, Maalcal Com«-d7, Panto-
mime, Ballet, Spcetaele, Novelty Vandevllle and All the Imaslnatloa Can
Conceive, Sasscat or Dealre.
The Greatest Musical
Production Ever Staged
THIS THUTER M » PMT OF THE GREAT ORPHEUM CIRCUIT.
BlU FOR WEEK OPEHINS SOHAY MATIIEE, APRIL 16th
__. .^. nnlnthlana will remember Master Gabriel
MASTER fiABHIEl E%^T.'^;.5;.r„"7. r «".i-~^
next week, In a new act called "Little Tommy T«cker.'»
FARRELL-TAYLOR TRIO
ThU act will be one of the blsKeat
comedv hit* Uiiluth ever st.»v la
vandevllle. They are three ver> clever
blackface comedians, vflth a hllarloonly funny ■<?«'
iiAiiiBirHioorE ^i^^^s^'^'^^--
ThiM lathe
ncateat, clev^r-
^^^1 B-*^^ ■ ■■■ ■(.■^w^»B_ . >— — CMt and uiuNt
reHned Uttle comedy alaglng and daartnn act the Orpheum haa yet played.
..-_^^ AiajawillBIhA The»e two brothers are two very clever yonag
WARD BROTHhRS Et.:\ '.".~'JS.ru.."i'Ji.! '" —'•'-'-
GEO. AUSTIN MOORE AND CORDELLIA
BR0WNIN6 & LEWIS
ERNEST YERXA AND ADELE
These two clever performers present an
amuslns little akit that shows »<»"• «>»
the funny events In the H'« •' ■ ■«'°'*^'
*»**&A*ft •»•••••*-
\.
y
. 2Sc to f 1.80
NICHTS... ~ SOc to $2.00
NO TELEPHONE ORDERS TAKEN.
PRICES : ^ISK^..
This Is a postarInK act, one
of the few on the circuit, and
one of the beat.
THE KIIODROME AID THE ORPHEUM COICERT
ORCHESTRA WIU COHIPLETE THE BILL
MaUaees, 25 Cents, except Snadaya aad Holldaya.
15, 25, 60 iiad 75 Centa.
NIskta,
■*
I ■ i»
*> — nil
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-*.
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4
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1
I
4
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rVSI ■
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Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
13
I^lttle Marv in Cuba. The other films
are a Thanhouser and a Powers picture
play ^
*'THE PINK LADY" IS THE
LATEST NEW YORK CRAZE.
Pink became fashionable because of
the espousal of that color by Miss
Ilelen Taft, daughter of the president.
Then came Klaw & Erlanger'.s bi^ suc-
cess. "Tlie Pink Lady," which is now
running in New York with Miss Hazel
Dawn in the title role.
In "The Pink Lady," the gowns worn
came from Pari.s and the New York
feminine theatergoers are flocking to
the show in mobs to see the creations.
The show i.s first-class, too. but the
beautiful actresses and their exquisite
gowns are the chief drawing power.
The styles shown on the stage are in
advance of the season's offerings. Klaw
& Krlanger have made a big hit by
their Innovation.
Barnum & Bailey will start their
road season April ::3 and work towards
the West. They opened the season at
Madison Square Garden, New lorK.
March 25.
• • •
Rlngllng Bros." circus opened the
season at the CoH.<»eum, Chicago, April
1, and will continue for another week
before starting East.
• • •
The Sells-Floto circus will be in Los
Angeles. Cal.. next week. It is re-
ported lo be better than ever this sea-
son. ^ ^ ^
The Forepaugh -Sells Bros.' circus will
go out again this season, opening In
Columbus, Ohio, on April 30,
• • «
The Hagenback-Wallace circus will
start the season in Peru, Ind., next
Wednesday.
• • •
The Gollmar Bros.* circus will start
on its road tour from Baraboo. Wis.,
early in May.
• • •
The Campbell Bros." circus Is on the
road, having opened the season in Den-
Ison. Tex., April 5.
• • •
Buffalo Bill has started on his fare-
well season, the Biiffalo Bill and Paw-
nee Bill Wild West opening In Wash-
ington, D. C, this week.
• • ♦
Miller Bros.' 101 Ranch opened the
season in Boston. Mass.
• • • •
Duluth is on the route sheet of the
Barnum & Bailey circus and the show
will be here in July.
• • *
Jay Rial, Dexter Fellows and Whit-
ing Allen are in charge of the press
department of the Barnum & Bailey
circus this season. They are the g'reat-
est trio in the business.
• • •
Harry Llndley is again one week in
advance of the Kingling Bras.' circus,
furnishing the papers interesting
stories of the famous shows.
« • «
Ned Alvord, a Duluth boy, holds the
important position of contracting press
agent with the Barnum & Bailey circus.
« « *
Otto Ringling. who died in New
York, was buried in Baraboo, Wis.,
within sight of his early home. His
funeral was attended by all the prom-
inent circus owners and managers in
the country.
GOSSIP OF THE RIALTO
Adele Ritchie is to appear in London.
• • •
Paul R. Benjamin will have a stock
company this s()ring at Knoxville.
Werba and Luescher will have three
"Spring Maid" companies next seasoa
• • •
Helena Frederick will appear in the
one-act romantic opera "Gypsy Love.
• • •
Lulu Glaser will be her own manager
next season in a new musical play.
• • •
Henry W. Savage la to give a pro-
fessional matinee of "Everyworaan m
New York.
• • •
•"The Genius," in which Harry Wood-
ruff has been starring, closed its sea-
son last week.
• • •
'The Pink Lady." by C. M. S. Mc-
Lellan and Ivan Caryll. has made a
big hit in New York city.
» • •
Connie Edlss has made a hit in Lon-
don in "The Girl In the Train." in
which she Is being featured.
• • •
Maclyn Arbucle may have dramatized
for his use "The Prodigal Judge," a
novel by Vaughan Kester.
• • •
Wright Huntington will head one of
the companies which will be sent out
next season with "The Gamblers.
• • •
Robert Mantell has made some suc-
cessful real estate investments, and
owns a fine estate at Atlantic High-
lands.
• • •
Consuelo Bailer, who has been play-
ing the leading role In "Baby Mine."
was compelled to retire temporarily
through illness.
• • •
Edmund Breese is to star next sea-
son under the direction of Joseph
Weber, in a play by a Philadelphia
minister called 'The Decision.""
• • •
The 150th performance of "Nobody's
Widow" was performed last week In
New York with Blanche Bates in the
title role.
• • •
Mav Bucklev, who was seen here In
the "Little Damoxel." has joined the
cast of "Little Mis.s Fix-It." in which
Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth are
starring.
• • •
It is reported from London that Mary
.\nder.son Navarro is Robert HIchens'
collaborator on the dramatization of
his book. "The Garden of Allah."
• • •
Mrs. Patrick Campbell has given up
tragic roles for the time, to play com-
5
The last big free homestead
tract of the undeveloped
West is now accessible to
homeseekeis.
The Oregon Trunk
Railway
is completed for 115 miles
south of the Columbia River.
10,000,000 acres of fertile
free homestead land is made
accessible to settlers. Ask
about the low homeseeker
fares to Central Oregon
and the personally- cr?:daci.e<i
tourist parties via the
Great Northern Railway.
Wrke or c«ll and get oar free book
on Central Oregon teilinf about
the op;)OrtunJiies for farmera,
■tockmen and fruit-growers, and
how to reach the new couQtry.
^
T
edv, and is to play in "The Soul of
Patricia,"' by Rudolph Bessier, the au-
thor of "Don."
• • •
Fritzi Scheff, after her first appear-
ance in her new opera, "Mile. Rosita. '
in Boston, was taken 111 with laryn-
gitis and was compelled to stop sing-
ing for several days.
• • •
The 100th performance of Louis N.
Parker's comedy, "Pomander Walk,"
has been celebrated in New York,
where the play has established Itself
for the rest of the season.
• « •
Henrv W. Savage has a new farce
called "The. Million," which is now
running in Paris. The manager, among
his other ventures, will have two
"Merry Widow" companies and two
'Madame X" companies on the road
next season.
• * •
Charles J. Ross Is considering the es-
tablisliment of a theater in New York
where new vaudeville may be tried out
for tl>e considieratlon of managers, and
where players and plays will thus have
a chance of practically demonstrating
their value.
• * •
Constance Collier has received an
offer from Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree
to play the leading feminine roles in
his Shakesperean revivals this spring.
Her acceptance of th-e offer depends
upon whether the run of "Thais," in
which she is playing the title role, is
cut short by warm weather,
« « •
A leading New York manager has ac-
cepted a three-act comedy entitled "The
Girl From Kokomo,'" by Edward J.
Dean of Baltimore, a brother of Tunis
Dean, well known in this city, and
now on the staCf of David Belasco.
The piece will be s-ent out with a prom-
inent young actress in the leading role.
• • •
VIda Whltmore, who is appearing In
"The Balkan Princess. " has made an
agreement with the Shuberts whereby
she is to have a reg-ular morning dan-
cing class through the spring and
summer for the people who are to ap-
pear In the Shub'^'rt production next
season. The clags will be limited In
number and will Include both princi-
pals and chorus girls.
• • •
Next season Papline Perry, a vocalist
but little known in the East, will sing
the prima donna role In a Viennese
operetta by Franz Lehar, to be pro-
duced by E. A. Well. At the present
time Miss Perry is appearing in vau-
deville In a miniature musical comedy
called "The Silver Bottl-e.' She pre-
viously appeared in the South with
one of the "Climax" companies.
• • •
Following the suggested inquiry of
her play, "In Search of a Sinner." Lil-
lian Russell says she has found tlie
fellow she Is looking for, even If he
dees not fit Into the story of the com-
edy. This man received a notice from
the Black Hand crew that unless he
turned over J3,000 in cash to them
within twenty-four hours they would
do away with his wife. He answered:
"I haven't got a cent, but your letter
interests me."
• « •
Another story of Eugene Walter Is as
follows: After Walter had completed
'Paid in Full" he racked his brains un-
successfully for a nam-e for the piece.
One day he received from a club a
statement for due.s. He went to the
club that night, handed the bill and
the requisite amount to tlie man behind
the desk. Dipping his pen in red Ink,
the man wrote across the face of the
statement, "Paid In Full," and handed
It back to Walter. The young author
looked at the receipt for a moment,
and then a satisfied sigh escaped his
lips. At last he had found the name
for his play.
• * *
The grand opera which has been
written by a French composer, Jean
Nougues, and is founded on "Quo
Vadis," is to be given In English.
Werba and Luesclier are to make the
attempt. The opera has just been
given Its American premiere by the
Chlcagd-Phlladelphla Grand Opera
company. It is a big spectacular af-
fair and musically inconsequential.
• • «
Rose Coghlan is to return to vaude-
ville, and begins in that capacity to-
morrow. The sketch I.s a condensed
version of her latest success, "Forget
Me Not."
« • *
Marie Doro has been enjoyed for a
brief season as stock star of the sum-
mer company conducted by Manager
Oppenhelmer in St. Louis. Elsie Janis
has also been offered a similar en-
gagement.
« • *
A. E. Thomas, the author of "The
Havoc," has written another play
called "What the Doctor Ordered,"
which is to be produced by Wagenhals
and Kemper after Easter.
• • •
The London production of "The Con-
cert" is being deferred awaiting the
close of the play's present run in New
York, In order that I..eo Dletrichstein
may go over and play In the English
capital the role he has been assuming
here. Charles Frohman. who has the
London rights. Is especially desirous of
having Mr. Dietrichsteln start the hall
a-rolling in person and keep at It until
his presence In America is again re-
quired.
• * *
Lee Arthur's comedy-drama, "The
Fox, " is to be produced at the Garrick
in Chicago, on Easter Sunday. The
cast Includes Violet Heming. Helena
Lackaye, Orme Caldara, John Westley,
Ralph Delmore, A. Byron Beasley.
Hardee Kirkland, J. H. Huntley, Fred-
erick Gilbert and others.
• • •
Harry Kelly will shortly go on a
starring tour again under the manage-
ment of Alfred A. Aarons, playing "His
Honor the Mayor."
• * *
Immediately following the engage-
ment of "The London Follies" at Web-
er's theater, Mr. Weber will present
Edmund Breese In "The Decision."
• * *
Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree has de-
cided to revive "A Midsummer Night's
Dream" for a uMnth, comiueucinK on
/ \
^
ft ■w^
?*jy
■X '■■
^
Is This Man
With Strange
Pow«r ?
Prominent People Say He Readt
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A GROUP OF SHOW GIRLS,
With "The Midnight Sons," Coming to the Lyceum.
Saturday. Much of the scenery will
be new, and the costumes, designed
by Percy Anderson, will have many
points of difference from tho.«e used
in the beautiful revival of 1899. Ar-
thur Bourchier will be the Bottom.
Sir Herbert will postpone his pro-
posed revival of '"Macbeth" till next
season.
• • •
Margaret Mayo's new play. "Behind
the Scenes." will have its first hear-
ing at Rochester Easter Monday.
• • *
Though the new Sheldon play, "The
Boss." has been a big success In New
York at the Astor, It has to leave their
theater at the entf of this week to
make way for another production.
Consequently Holbrook Blinn and his
supporting company take to the road
after the Easter bells have chimed.
• « *
George Lederer has a new show for
next season. It Is called "The Clair-
voyant." The book for this musical
play has been written by Edward
Peple, the author of "The Prince
Chap." Carl Hoschna wrote the
music.
• • •
Josephine Cohan, sister of George M.
and -daughter of Jerry and Helen
Cohan, is ill. Miss Cohan, accom-
panied by her husband. Fred Nlblo. has
sought the milder climate of the South
and will probably remain there until
recovered. She asserts that she has
given up the stage for good, but this
may be only the temporary decision
Inspired by ill health.
« « «
E. Lawshe's comedy drama, "Peace
on Earth," was produced In Los An-
geles last week by the Belasco Stock
company under the personal direction
of the author, with McKee Rankin in
the star role. The play is a story of
Kentucky mountain life. After Its
engagement In Los Angeles '"Peace on
Earth," with Mr. Rankin as the star,
will tour.
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senior class play from which an un-
usually large amount of money was
taken In. As the recelp:a of the
senior class plays help In the publica-
tion of the Zenith, Mr. Gla.ss has
also been a conslderablu factor In
the financial success of Ihe Zenith.
The assistant editors are Gladys
Lenning, Mary Whiple, Florence Ol-
sen. Helen Smith, Lydla Woodbridge,
Madeline Cheadle,' Marie n Mooney,
Florence Robertson, Edna Berg-
quist, Stanley Lamb, Joseph Boyle,
Walter Glass, George Hing, Dave
Wanless, Bruce Sibbald and Mort-
imer Bondy. Julius Nolto represents
the class of 1912 on the Z;nlth board.
The work will be taiten to the
printers next week and It is hoped
to have the book on sale about
June. 1.
* « *
Although this week is vacation
time in the schools, many of the
teachers and students are busy at the
Central high school. Mr. Sprague
has a senior English class this week
for those students whose knowledge
of "English IV" is not satisfactory.
Mr. Romleux and Mr. Ging are also
holding classe. The other teachers
of the high school are outlining theiij
work for the last half of the present
semester and the majority of the
students are reviewing the work
gone over this season.
* • •
The senior girls have been diligent-
ly practicing basket ball n the gym-
nasium the past week for their game
with the faculty, which takes place
next week. Both teams are confi-
dent of victory and cons derable en-
thusiasm has been arouiied among
the students.
* * *
No definite arrangements have
been made for the sophomore-fresh-
man dance, but It is expected that
the date will be set within the next
two weeks. Because of the fact that
the two lower classes ha\e united In
giving their party, a larger number
of students and alumni are expected
to attend.
THE HIGH SCHOOL ZENITH BOARD.
The 1911 Zenith board at the Cen-
tral high school completed the great-
er part of Its work last week.
Palmer Bevis is editor-in-chief of
the 1911 book and has been doing
creditable work in editing the Zenith.
He has been striving to make the
book he represents superior to any
previous publication of the Zenith.
Miss Chelsie Final' if tl)e associate
editor.
Raymond Hancock, who Is the
business manager, has made possible
the great financial success of the
1911 publication. With the a.sslst-
ance of Walter Glass, Dave Wan-
less and George King, all assistant
editors, Mr. Hancock has contributed
a considerable sum to the finances
of the Zenith board.
Walter Glass was manager of the
THE QUEEN OF SWEDEN
The Queen of Sweden has Introduced Into the Royal Palace at Stockholm an American innovation. It Is a very
beautiful building overlooking the river; and it faces the parliament house. They used to show visitors the billiard
room of the late king and his collection of pipes hung against the wall, for he was a great smoker and preferred pipes
to cigars. The voung queen, who was a British princess before she married the heir to the Swedish throne, has had a
roof garden built on the top o£ the palace and here she has establised a conservatory which she make* her personal
charge.
The Sonnd .Sleep ot Good Health.
Can not be over estimated and any ail-
ment that prevents It is i menace to
health. J. L. Southers, Eau Claire,
Wis., says: "I have been unable to
sleep soundly nights, because of pains
across my back and soreness of my
kidney.s. My appetite was very poor
and my general condition was much
run down. I have been taking Foley
Kidney Pills but a short t; me and now
sleep as sound as a rock, my general
condition Is greatly Improved, and I
know that Foley Kidney Pllla have
cured me. All druggists.
MARCUS MAYER.
Marcus Mayer is one of the best
known of ocean traveleru. There is
hardly a first-class steamship on the
ocean on which Mr. Mayer has not
crossed. He has already celebrated
his 100th crossing and ho jes to make
it 200. Mr. Mayer is as wull known in
London as he Is In New I'ork. He is
a theatrical manager of large inter-
eats.
PARkER'B
HAIR BALSAM
Clcuues and betutiflM tha baSx.
Proinoiw • lazaiUnt growth.
Karer VaU* to B«ator* Ormf
Hair to its TouthAil Color.
C«w lealp diiMwi k hklr islUa^
Attention of the mystioally Inclined
peems to be centered at present upoa
the work of Mr. Clay Burton Vance,
who, although laying claim to no ■!»•-
clal gift of supernatural powers, at-
tempts to reveal the lives of people
through the slender olue of birth-dates.
The undeniable accuracy of his de- -
llneatloQg leads one to surmise that
heretofore palmists, prophets, astrolog-
ers and seers of divers beliefs have
failed to apply the true principles o(
the science of divination.
It la not to be denied that astrologers
have excited the Interest of enlightened
people of all ages, but there have been
many earnest thinkers reluctant to ae-
oept the theories of the ancient Chal-
dean sclenoe. One can only Judge the
gotenoy of the science of Astrologjr
y a personal application of its prln-
ofples. To have all the cardinal events
of your life spread out before you; to
read an undevlatlng desorlption ot
your true oharaoter, habits and Inoltna-
ttons. Is proof positive that the mighty
power that shaped the universe and
set the hands on the dial of time to
mark the destiny of man has not left
us without the means through which
we may know ourselves, through which
•w DUir fathom the mysteries of life.
Asked to explain the method by which
be give* his delineations, Mr. Vance
replied: '1 hitTe simply resurrected an
anoient Mlenoe and moulded it into
a key to human nature."
The foUowlDf letters are published
as evidence of Mr. Vance's ability. Mr.
Lafayette Reddltt writes: "My Reading
reeelved. With the greatest amase-
ment I read, as step by step you out-
lined my life since infancy. I have
been somewhat Interested along these
lines for years, but li*d no idea that
such priceless advice eould be given.
I must admit that you are indeed a
very remarkable man, and am glad you
use your great gift to benefit your
clients."
Mr. Fred Dalton writes: "I did not
expect such a splendid outline of my
life. The scientific value of your Read-
ings cannot be fully appreciated until
one has his own Reading. To con-
sult you means success and happi-
ness."
Arrangements have been made to
give free test Readings to all readers
of The Herald, but it Is especially re-
quested that those who wish to avail
tliemselves of this generous offer make
application at once. If you wish a de-
lineation of your own life. If you wish •
true description of your oharacteristios,
talents and opportunities, simply send,
your full name, the date, month and
year of your birth, and also state
whether Mr.. Mrs. or Miss. Send your
letter to Mr. Clay Burton Vance, Suite
548, No. 14 Rue de Richelieu, Parle.
Prance. If you wls/i you may Inclose
10 cents (stamps of your own country)
to pay postage, clerical work, etc.
Please note that 5 cents postage is
required on letters posted to France.
Do not inclose coins or silver In your
letter.
One -Way
Settlers Fares
To points in North Dakota, Montana, AlberM^
Manitoba and Saskatchewan.
Minimum rate of $12.50. Ticket* limited for
continuoua ptaasage. Honored in electric -lighted,
leather upholstered tourist sleeping cars, upoo
payment of regular berth rate; operated via the
Northern Pacific
Railway
TKKETS
344 W.Superior Si.
Duluth
Both PhoMS
214
TICKETS
817 Tomer Av^
Superior
Both Phonea
4226
Wherever there is Pain
apply an
Alleock^
PLASTER
Th« World's Orestest Exf rwl Remedy
CHICHESTER S PILLS
DP ^r
.^^LiC-s. THE I>IAMONI> BKAND.
t>B<ll««t A*k jomr ItrumgUl fot ,
(hl.ebea-tcp'a IMam»ii7Br«a4/
IMIU in Rc4 >nd t)«Id i&Mallic>
boT«, se>l»] with Blue Ribbon.
Take no olkrr. Buy of Toar
DuSmND liRAND PILLM^ <^ •il
yc*n known ks Best, Ssfest, Always Reliable
SOLO BV DRUGGISTS EVERnWEM
Subscribe for The Heral^
1
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*
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
.9/*
THE ,
WEEK
m LEAGUE
wnmPAND
Four New Clubs Wfll Be
Added to Fast Amateur
Association.
TING EVENT:
THE PAvST wee:
THE HERALD CART'
Meeting Called for Wednesday
to Consider Plans for
Season.
If the present plans of the officials
of the Commercial Baseball league go
through, that organization ■will be ex-
panded from a four-club league into an
organization embracing eight clubs.
A meeting of the officials of the
league and tlie club managers of last
season has been called at the North-
ern ;?lioe company's office next Wed-
nesday, when plans for the coming
seast.n will be discussed, the most im-
portant being the taking in of four
clul'S.
Last season the Wolvins. Northern
Shoe company s team, the F. A. Pat-
rirlis and tlie Bankers composed the
league. It is proposed to take in the
ytoTie-Ordtan-Wells team, the Gowan-
Fevton-Congdon company, t'le Mar-
shall-^'ells and the Duluth Board of
Trade teams. This action, it is be-
lieved by the officials of the league,
v.ill make the organization the strong-
est at the Head of the Lakes.
.Joseph Berini of the F. A. Patrick
company, is president of the league,
and G. H. Hargreaves of the Northern
Shoe companv. secretary. Both of these
officials are very optimistic over the
success of the larger league and also
state that the coming season will be
the best in the history of amateur
bastball in Duluth.
All of the teams will have uniforms,
and steps will be taken toward the
securing of baseball grounds for the
Saturday games.
It is e.xpected that a schedule com-
mittee will be appointed at the Wed-
nesday evening meeting and definite
plans made for the opening of the play-
ing season at an early date.
In the various companies that will
make up the league there are some of
the fastest players in tlie city. The
games oi' the four-club league last sea-
son were attended by large crowds,
and with the growth of interest in the
league, more enthusiasm in the suc-
cess of the various teams should re-
sult.
• N^N^>^l«N^^^>^
'5raw me so^^ , o
PLAWS FORCATCHlM^
BkOOK TROUT'
/»'-»
"OLJf KIPPER
Rye
-TRY IT
TRyOOR „
MAKES B£ST
OAIT-
■^Si^T
"Roctxy ROM
\r's REAL '
Nose. PAINT
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P, M<DOWf^Ei.L. wrLL USB.
SAME OLJ) AOTO $fe.
M/*De ALL Hl^ RECORDS.
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^^ i FRANK. HB.{tM<^\< AND ^AM/£
'^1 M/RON >\RE. THE. ^WP BE5 i
ij TT/-H TROUT RSHE^MEN^ir
PAf^K
pRE.5E(vn-SjULP7T<
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'\\
RAYMOND LOOKS
AWFULLY GOOD
Reformed Rube Has Been
Pitching Some Great Ball
for McGraw.
The ore obstacle that has stood be-
tween the Giants and the pennant for
the past four years appears to be rap-
idly disappearing. That obstacle, as
all knov/, was the lack of strength of
the pitching staff. McGraw knew this
months before he came to Marlin, and
that is why he held on to Kube Mar-
quard with such desperation and took
the almost hopeless task of trying to
reform Bugs Raymond. He did not ex-
pect help from his recruits, and if he
had held such hopes he would have
been disappointed. New pitchers can
help the old staff by finishing out
games, but It is very rarely that a new
man can take the veteran's place the
flr.st year out. McGraw has never had
a pitcher who developed the first sea-
son, and the same thing can be said
of most other clubs.
Two Only, Last Y*«r.
Last season the only pitchers on
•whom the Giant manager could rely
with anv degree of assurance were
Wathewson and Crandall. Ames w-as
ill for several months, and AA iltse did
not acquire his strength all season.
Drucke was too young In the business
to be considered seriously, and Mar-
quard was completely out of the run-
ning. With that kind of a staff Mc-
Graw went ahead and fought it out
the best he could, and it is considered
little less than marvelous that he man-
aged to finish second. That is why
most of the prominent players on other
clubs have picked the Giants to win
this season. Hard luck does not usu-
ally hold that strong for two seasons
in "succession.
NHrite tb* Pitehers,
The pitching staff this spring has
been handled with the greatest of care
and it is Just beginning to show Its
strength. One of the strongest spokes
in the wheel just now is Bugs Ray-
\^
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</^*
T^At^
THE BA^EFaTu season 0PE(V5^
' OU> PARK—
TojROMAM"WiTH^A-^TUFFEj> MOO^EL
AT- . Ev ^^y
mond. He appears to have become so
proud of liis .^eat on the water wagon
that he is bound to last for a few
months, anyhow. He says that he
hopes to be as good as Mathewson as
a winning pitcher, and McGraw is try-
ing to encourage the rivalry. Not a
man has scored on Raymond in his last
three games. He went in for the regu-
lars against the colts, and the young-
sters were stuck dead still. They
learned for the first time what diffi-
culties the big league batters have had
in y^atting against Raymond since he
first swept across the baseball horizon.
When he began to dissipate he lost his
balance, and with that went his con-
trol and brute strength. He did not eat
properly and that, added to lack of
sleep, sapped his power.
It has been three months now since
Raymond took a drink. When he be-
gan to live regularly his appetite in-
creased naturallv and he took on a lot
of surplus weight. McGraw says that
weight is what saved him, because it
gave him sometlilng to work off this
spring. It is very likely that he will
pitch the opening game In New York.
Ames has positively declared that he
will not take up the burden, as it has
been a hoodoo to him for the past two
vears. Mathewson will probably be
kept in cold storage for at least two
weeks after the season begins, and
Wiltse Is not quite strong enough to
start. Drucke could not be relied upon
for such an important game, and Mar-
quard as vet is out of the question. Mc-
Graw wants to work him in gradually.
Baseball candidates for the Central
High School team will be out for prac-
the weather permits.
be held at Athletic
tice next week, if
The practice will
park.
Prospects for a
bright at present
dates, who will
Nolte, catchers;
good team are very
Among the candl-
report, are Kelly and
McLaren, Greenfield,
TO COMMAND
ATTENTION !
You must be well dressed. To be
well dressed you mu.st wear tailor-
made clothes. To have the best fit
and latest .styles. y..u must
1.KT ^IK V.NKE Vt)in CLOTHES
and vou will not fail to receive at-
t'?ntibn. and I will give you the
highest satisfaction.
LEKVE— TAILOR
UUAftD OF TK\t»E.
Third Avenue We.Mt Kutraueo.
INTERCLASS
HOTEL
HOLLAND
,,. European,,.
ABSOLl'TBLY FIRE-PROOP.
Clab Breakfast, Popular Priced.
Lnneheoa and Dinner.
Music at Dinner, 6 to 8 P. M.
BNTERTAIBT.MENT NIGHTLY
AFTER 10 ISO.
BASKET BALL
Strong Senior Quint Will
Meet Central Lower
Class Men.
Next week the star senior class
basketball team of the Central high
school will play a picked team of the
lower classmen.
As four of the Central first team
men are seniors, the upper classmen
expect no very strong opposition. But
the game promises to be interesting
because of the rivalry between thtj
classes, and from the fact that there
is some excellent material in the lower
classes from which to pick a team.
The seniors will play Harris and
Waldron at forward. Johnson at cen-
ter and Solheim at guard. All of these
men are first team players. The other
guard will be chosen from the senior
Inter-class team.
The other team will be picked from
.Teronimus and Osman of the first
team, and K. Harris. Kelly, Mars. St.
Clair, Kerns, Elder,^ Brown and Currie.
One Conductor Helped Back to Work.
Mr. Wilford Adams Is his name, and
he writes: "I was confined to ray bed
with chronic rheumatism and used two
bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy with
good effect. The third bottle put me
on my feet and I resumed work as con-
ductor on the Lexington, Ky., Street
Railway. It will do all you claim in
cases of rheumatism." It clears the
blood of uric acid. All druggista
Harris and Brown, pitchers; Waldron,
Wharton, Nolte. Boyle, E. Harris. K.
Harris and N. Brown, who will all
try for the infield positions: Spenoer.
Jeronlmus, Johnson, Kerns and Craig
who will be out for the field jobs.
A meeting of the Athletic Board of
Control at Central will be held next
week. A student manager will be
chosen at this meeting.
The matter of a coach has not been
settled as yet. The student body is
in favor of Mr. Schilling and all the
students hope the basketball coach
will also consent to coach the baseball
team.
A schedule will be filled as soon as
a student manager is chosen. The
Grand Rapids High School has re-
ported the fact that it has a game
with the Central team, but no one In
authority at Central has been notified
of the contest. Still it is hoped that
suitable arrangements can be made
and the game played.
Cloquet, Two Harbors, Virginia,
Hibbing. Eveleth and the schools of
Superior will be included in the Cent-
ral schedule.
EIGHT GAMES ARRANGED.
Cass Lake High Nine Plans for
Some Ball Games.
Cass Lake, Minn., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The High school boys
have arranged a schedule of baseball
games to be played this summer com-
mencing today, when they will play
their first game against the alumni.
Besides the game this afternoon eight
others have been arranged for and
they will take place as follows: April
22, Mission Indians at Cass Lake;
April 29, Walker at Walker; May 5,
Park Rapids at Cass Lake; May 6,
Deer River at Deer River; May 12;
Akelev at Akley: May 13, Bemidji at
Cass "Lake; May 20, Grand Rapids at
Cass Lake; May 27. Bagley at Bagley.
PLAYERS COULD WEAR
SPECS, SAYS BROUTHERS
"There are no players now in the
fast company who wear glas.ses to
remedy defects of the eyes," said old
Dan Brouthers recently. 'Of course,
the sun fielders of every club wear
glasses while chasing flies in the gar-
den, but they are smoked glass with
plain lenses and have nothing to do
with the sight of the performer. Black-
burne of the White Sox. I am to d.
wears glasses now while off tne neio.
and if this is the case, his faulty sight
may have been the cause of his poor
showing both at the bat and ;n the
field during the past season.
•No inflelder or battery player In anj
league, as far as I have heard, wc-ars
glasses now nor has there been a spec-
tacle wearer since the days of Will
White of whom more anon. And yet.
It often seemed to me that many good
ball players could be added to the list
of active stars if fellows who wore
gla.sses were given consideration or ir
their natural reserve and shyness did
not keep them" out of the game.
GlaMSCM Didn't Prevent.
"A man who has properly fitted
glasses can play just as good ball In
certain positions as anybody else- i.
shouldn't imagine that an infielder
would get along well with goggles on
NEW YORK GIANTS WITH STRONGER
PITCHING STAFF HAVE PENNANT HOPES
THE NEW YORK GIANTS.
The baseball season opened In New York Wednesday of this week. The Giants P^sent the same lineup as last
season. McGraw has, however, strengthened his pitching staff by the addition of Rudolph an^ Tesereau and the re-
turn of Bugs Raymond and Rube Marquard to form. McGraw believes that he has a good chance at the pennant,
hut is not claimini; it Just now. . — .-
-a bounding ball might rut him out of
business, and on a hot afternoon, when
the rims of glasses get \<et from per-
spiration, he might lose them while
bending for a grounder. &till, why
thouldnt an outfielder, if he could see
better with lamps on, weir them? And
why shouldn't a pitcher use glasses?
And a catcher, with a good mask on.
would have his lenses lerfectly pro-
tected.
"I saw some college giimes the last
few year.s. In which several lads wore
glasses, and, take It frc'm me, these
spectacled rah-rahs were as good as
any of the others. Long f.go I saw the
second baseman of the University of
Virginia, named McGulre, playing the
infield with enormous B;jectacles like
those they put on CJerman professors
in a caricature. And this McGulre was
there strong with the bat, ami on the
middle station. He'd lave made a
crack professional, glasses and all, if
he had wanted to go into the game.
W bite the Laiit.
"Will White, I .suppose was the last
of the eye-glassed profesfionals. Near-
sighted as Roosevelt- -and Teddy could
play a good game of ball, I'll bet —
White was, nevertheless, a great pitch-
er. He had the curve.s. the speed and
all sorts of scientific trickery. As a
batsman. White was tte limit. He
batted. I think, about .OOS each reason.
The poor fellow couldn't hit a blamed
thing, and toward the later part of his
career, simply swung the bat three
times and retreated benchward.
"One afternoon, with he bases full
and two out. Will came to bat. Up In
the press box a dLscussion had been
started about the chancts of baseball,
and one of the reporters remarked that
even such a batsman as White was
likelv to soak a home run any time.
Another man raised a loud guffaw, and
exclaimed: 'Make a little bet with you.
My gold watch, worth |200 against a
nickle that White doesn't make a home
run.'
"The watch and nickl< were solmn-
ly deposited in the handu of a respon-
sible stakeholder, and jus: as the stakes
were put up White made his third
blind swing al the ball. And his bat
struck the leatlier full aid fair on the
equator!
"The ball rose high and floated out
far beyond the farthest fielder. They
ran and whooped and aeckoned, and
Wnite steamed slowly <n around the
ba^es. Up in the press box the man
who had staked his walci turned white
as a ghost and his breath came in gasps
of horror. And just a? Will turned
third he stumbled, rolled over and his
glasses fell off. While he was groping
for his glasses the ball came In and
they tagged him out. , , ^. , .
"The man who had stsked his watch
got up and pocketed the nickle. Then,
still verv pale, he raised his right hand.
Never again, bo help rie.' said he
'shall I attend another game of ball.
And he never did. Hi lived thirty
years after, as I heard the story, and
never again set foot Insltie a ball park."
«
Foley Kidney Pills contain In con-
centrated form. ingredlontB of estab-
lished therapeutic value for the relief
and cure of all kidney and bladder
aliments. Foley Kidney Pills are anti-
septic, tonic and restoiatlve. Reius*
I substitutes. All dru«slsui.
DILLON IS
COMING FAST
Indianapolis Fighter Looked
Upon as Coming Middle-
weight Champion.
Hoosier Boy Has Made En-
viable Record During
Two Years.
A young Knockinvar has come out of
the West,
Through all the wide border his puncb
is the best.
New York, April 15. — Rising me-
teorically from the humble but
honorable position of newsboy on
the streets of his home city of Indian-
apolis to a place in the hall of pugi-
listic fame, where he is conceded to
have a chance of some day wearing the
middleweight crown, Jack Dillon, the
"Hoosier Hurricane," is the latest sen-
sation to come out of the West.
Unlike most of the ring stars who
have sprung up in tliat section of the
country, Dillon has not been heralded
by any great blast on the press agent's
trumpet. Attention has been attracted
to him by the fights he has been mak-
ing against some of the hardest game
in the land, and the fact that his rise
has been more rapid than that of any
other ring star now performing before
the public. ^ ,,
For young Dillon Is but 20 years old
and has been in the fight game for the
short space of two years. Hut young
as he is and short as has been his ex-
perience he has accomplished more
than many a mixer who has spent a
lifetime at the sport. Many experts
who have seen him perform declare
him to be the greatest lighting ma-
chine of the age, and there is none but
concedes him a chance at the throne
left vacant bv .Stanley Ketchell.
FlglitM Like Ketchell.
Dillon is a fighter of the Papke-
Ketchell school. He never laid claim
to being much of a boxer, tliougli he is
not tlie easiest man in the world to
hit, and possesses a delense all his
own that some of the cleverest inen In
the world have not yet been able to
penetrate.
Sturdily built. Dillon, young in years,
strong in physique and stolid in tem-
perament, possesses all the attributes
of a great fighter. When he enters the
ring he sits idly in his corner until the
preliminary arrangements are over.
Then he gets up for action. And action
Is what he always gets up for because
he liardly rests once throughout an en-
tire fight. Even in the minute inter-
mission his seconds pay little attention
to him and he scorns to ask for more
than a sip of water. He is very long
on aggressiveness while his powers ot
endurance have never yet been put to
the test. , . ., „i„._
It is three years this month since
Dillon had his first experience in the
ring. And how he came to break in no
one seems to know. For temperament-
ally Dillon is one of the quietest fel-
lows you could meet. Among his news-
boy companion? he was a regular king.
This position he did not attain by
bullying tactics, but by his readiness
to take^ up the battle of a weaker
friend. But to fight .lUSt for fights
sake was not in his being.
Good ButilnetiM Hend.
Dillon is a fellow who thinks for
himself and what decided him more
than anvthing else was the fact that he
oould make more money as a fighter
than at anything else just at that time,
\nd that is what he is m the game for
now to accumulate enough during his
good days to tide him over when the
rainv ones come. There will be none
of the white lights in his repertoire
because he possesses more horse sense
than the average battler.
Jack broke in a.« a lightweight and
in his first year of fighting scored fif-
teen knockouts out of tewnty-one ring
battles. This attracted the attention
of fight fans and promoters in the
middleweight and from that time on
his rise lias been most rapid. A great
number of his best fights have been in
Pittsburg, where he is a great favorite
and where he has many people pulling
for him to get to the top as in his
home city of Indianapolis.
Possibly the one ring engagement
that gave him the most prominence
was his ten-round battle with Jimmy
Gardner in Indianapolis. fliere is
hardly a man alive at his weight that
has much chance with the masterful
Lowell boy in a limited round con-
test. But Young Jack D^'on prove^
that he was one of them. ,W^r. ail
of his wonderful ring generalship and
sirpassing cleverness, the Hoosier car-
ried the battle to him and beat him In
nractlcally every round. Then people
started to take notice and there was a
demand for his .services on every hand
Just recently he performed the feat
of fighting three battles and traveling
over 800 miles in one week. On Tues-
day night he knocked out Jimmy Mel-
lody at Brazil. Ind. The next night
he went over to Indianapolis and went
ten hard rounds with Yoting I-^^»Kh-
rey Then he jumped over to Buffalo
and on Friday went in and gave Mike
(Twln> Rullivan an awful lacing. When
he had finished he was as fresh a? the
average human being after a nights
sleep. . . ,
He'a AmbltiooM.
Dillon is ambitious. He ■^^ants to
get to the top. He takes a dlffereiit
Ylew of the game than most of the bat-
tlers than afe in It. With him his word
is his bond. He believes that the Kame
should he run on business principles
and once his word is given he will go
through with whatever it may be Ho
has n%ver been mixed up n anything
questionable and never will be.
Dillon Is under the management of
Rov D. Schooley, manager of the
Nortliern club, of Pittsburg, and a
former well-known newspaper man of
this city Dillon has shown many
times atPchooley's club and the friend-
ship thus formed has grown Into a.
bu.'sineRS relationship. Nat*irauv
Schooley is the strongest booster DlT-
lon has. but this is more prompted by
a personal feeling for the boy thaa
anvthing else. . ,
"Jack is not claiming any champion-
ships nor will not until he wins them.
says Schooley. "He may not do this
immediately, but he is is made of the
material that will win. In the
first place, he Is one of the
most manly fellows that ever
lived There was no real cham-
pion that did not possess true manli-
ness. Jack will take the course to
the top by easy stages and will not
harass the public with exorbitant
claims either before or after he ar-
"^'slfhooley would like to match B\\)on
before one of tbe ciubs near Clevo-
land.
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Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
U
T*'-'**
4-
-" - -
•K— ^
MEETING OF
CHAMPIONS
\kX of Entries for Penn-
sylvania Field Meet
Has Class.
Record Holders of East and
West WUI Come
Together.
Philadelphia. April 15. — Entries for
the relay races and special field sports
on Franklin Field on the last Saturday
tn this month :jhow tiiat the class of
athletes who will compete In the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania's seventeenth
annual carnival of athletic events is
one of the best that has ever been
brought topeiher In this country. The
meet will include nearly all the usual
track and field events, one mile relay
races for different classes of colleges
and the one. two and four-mile national
it-luy championships.
Tlie meet will be largely a duel be-
tween Kastern and Western champions,
livery Western intercollegiate champion
is entered except Nelson, the sprinter
vho lives on the Pacific slope, and
Haker. the distance runner, for whom
tiiere Is no event, as his college has no
two or fi>ur-mile relay team. Every
Eastern cliamplon except four who have
C^raudated are entered.
Though Nelson, the Western cham-
pion, will not compete, Wasson of Notre
r>aiiie. who was a close second to him
and Is a ten-.«econd man, is entered and
Hill make Kamsdell of Pennsylvania,
the l-"a.>«tfrn champion, Oooke of Prince-
ton and other Eastern tilers, hustle.
EdWiirds. the Western champion
hurdler, will meet Ohisholm of Vale,
the Kastern champion.
Wusson win be In the broad Jump
against Roberts of Amher.st, the East-
ern champion.
In the high Jump. French, the West-
ern cUampion. will meet Porter, the
Olympic champion. and Burdick of
Pennsylvania, the Intercollegiate cham-
pion.
T!ie Western champion pole vaulter,
Wuiphy of Illinois, will compete wiLh
Gardner of Harvard, and Holman of
Dartmouth, with good records.
Pliilbrook. the Western champion
shot-putter, ^-ill meet Horner, the
Eastern champion, and Talbot, ex-Cor-
nell and Kilpatrick, Yale, dangerous
men.
Talbot, who is a Westerner, is looked
upon as tlie possible winner in the
hammer throw. His opponents will
be Murphy of Pennsylvania, Speers and
Simons of Princeton.
Besides the special events, Daven-
port of Chicago, looked upon bv many
as the fastest middle distance runner
|n America, will compete on his relay
team in which race he will meet Reid-
path of Syracuse, the Eastern 440-yard
champion.
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Philad. Iphia l» o 1000
Pitt.iburg 1 0 1000
St. I.o'ils 1 0 1000
Brooklyn l' 1 ,667
Boston 1 2 . Z-i?>
Cliicago 0 1 . 000
Cincinnati 0 1 .000
Kew York 0 2 .000
. « .
Games Today.
St Louis at Chicago.
Brooklyn at New York.
Pltt.sburg at Cincinnati.
Philadelphia at Boston.
CUBS LOSETrfER^A
HARD PITC HERS' BATTLE.
Chicago. April 13. — St. Louis defeat-
ed Chicago :: to 1 here yesterday in a
hard-fought pitchers* battle. The horn-
team made its score on a base on balls,
an error, a sacrifice hit and a long fly.
fit. Louis made two runs on a base on
balls, a single followed by a long fly
after two were out. The score:
T> XT C7
Chicago 00010 0000— l' 6" 1
St. Louis 00 000 2 0 00—2 4 1
Batteries — Pfelster and/ Arclier; Har-
mon and Bresnahan. Umpires — Fin-
Dernan and Rlgler.
BOSTON PITCHERS ARE
EASY FOR BROOKLYN.
Boston. Mass., April 15. — The Brook-
Ivn Nationals found the Boston pitch-
ers for sixteen long lilts in their final
game of the first series yesterday, win-
ning by the score of 15 to 2. Three of
the locals' string of pitchers were used.
The score: B. H. E.
Boston 0 0 010001 0 — 2-7 a
Brooklyn 0 3 2 4 0 10 2 3—1516 3
Batteries — Parsons. Pfeffer, Tyler
and Graham: Schardt and Bergen. Um-
pires— Klem and Doyle.
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
T^-ashinglon 2 0 1000
Hew York 2 0 1000
DeMou .:::: 2 0 loo.-
Bt. Louis 2 1 .Gbi
Cleveland } 2 -^
i:;iVi?,°. ;;::::::::::::: :
PJiiiadelphia • 0 2 .000
Games Today.
New York at Philadelphia.
Chicago at Detroit
Boston at Washington.
Cleveland at St. Louis.
PLAYERS >VEARCREPE
FOR ADDIE JOSS.
St. Louis. April 15.— Out of respect
to the memory of Addle Joss, the
Cleveland pitcher star, all the players
In yesterday's game between the local
and the Cleveland American league
teams, wore a band of crepe with their
uniforms. The visitors won their first
game i.f the season by a score of 7 to
5. "Lefty" George was knocked out
of the box. The score: t^ tt ti-
It. ti. iii.
St. Louis 000000300— 5 9 1
Cl*»veland 0 0 3 0 10 0 2 1—710 0
Batteries — George. Pelty, Hamilton
and Clarke: Mitchell, Krapp and Smltn.
Umpires — O'Loughlln and Dlneen.
TIOERS BINCHHITS AND *
POUND OUT A VICTORY.
Detroit, Mich., April 15. — Detroit
bundled hits off Lange In the first and
eighth innings and defeated Chicago
again. 6 to 0. Willett allowed five
singles and was never in trouble.
Crawford secured two doubles, a single
and a base on balls In four times at
bat. The score:
R. H. E.
Chicago 0 000000 00 — 0 5 2
Detroit 20000004 x — 6 11 0
Batteries — Lange and Payne; Willett
and Stanage. Umpires — Perrine and
Sheridan.
"TOMMY" CRAWFORD HAS
LONG LIST OF KNOCKOUTS
Washington, April 15. — Boston-Wash-
TOMMY CRAWFORD.
Crawford Is in Duluth at the Present Time Looking for a Match With
Steve Hawkins.
Crawford'M Record.
Leo Craig, knockout, 3 rounds.
Cub Wlilte, knockout, 5 rounds.
Australian Jimmy Ryan, knockout,
1 round.
Billy Griffith, knockout. 8 rounds.
George Gunther draw, 12 rounds.
Frank it. Jeffries, knockout, 3
rounds.
I'nk nu.<soll, lost, 5 rounds.
Unk Ilussell, won, 10 rounds.
ington game postponed: rain.
PlUladelpiila, April 15. — New York-
I'liiladelpliia contest postponed; rain.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Minneapolis 3 0 1000
Kansas City 1 0 1000
Indianapolis 2 1 .667
Milwaukee 1 2 .333
St. Paul 0 0 .000
Columbus 0 0 .000
Loulsvlle 0 1 .000
Toledo 0 3 .000
Games Today.
Milwaukee at Indianapolis.
Mliineapoli.s at Toledo.
St. Paul at Columbus.
Kansas City at Louisville.
BREWERS TAKEThIRD
FROM INDIANAPOLIS.
Indianapolis, Ind., April 15. — Milwau-
kee won the third game of the series
from Indianapolis yesterday, 4 to 0.
tSony McGlynn pitched good ball when
the bases were occupied and kept the
hits scattered. The errors of the locals
figured in the score of the visitors. The
score: B. H. K.
Indianapolis .. .0 0 0 00000 0 — 0 S> 4
Milwaukee 00003100 0—4 6 2
Batteries — Cheney and Carlsch; Mc-
Glynn and Breen. Umpires — Bierhalter
and Weddldge.
RUBE TAKES SECOND
GAME FROM TOLEDO.
Toledo, April 15. — Bube Waddell yes-
terday won his second game from To-
ledo, 4 to 2. The Minneapolis crowd
won by getting to Schultz In the fifth
Inning for five singles and a double.
Hohnhorst, .secured by Toledo from
Cleveland, made his first appearance In
the Une-up and Nlles was brought Into
the field. The score: R. H. E.
Toledo 00100100 0—2 8 1
Minneapolis 00 10 30000 — 4 10 1
Batteries — Baskette, Schultz and
Hart; Waddell and Smith. Umpires —
Chill and Ferguson.
♦
Columbus, April 15. — St. Paul-Colum-
bus game postponed; rain.
Louisville, April 15. — Kansas Clty-
Loulsvllle contest postponed; rain.
Easter Monday Dance
^-Glren by—
ADAM.«!* ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIOX,
L.I.\COLN PARK AlIDITOHIfM.
FLAATKX'S OUCHKSTllA.
TlcketM, 50e. Duor rlghtM reserved.
Unk Russell, won, 8 rounds.
Harry Mansfield, knockout, 8 rounds.
Billy Clark, knockout, 5 rounds.
Jack Brady, knockout, 7 rounds.
Alf Greenwood, knockout, 4 rounds.
Joe Thomas, lost 5 rounds.
Cy Flynn, knockout, 6 rounds.
Cy Flynn. knockout. 8 rounds.
Mickey McDonough, knockout, 6
rounds.
Al Kaufmann, exhibition, 4 rounds.
stands, if reconstructed, shall be built
of fireproof material.
President Brush was too 111 to take
any active part in the settlement of
tlie temporary troubles of the club. He
long has been In favor of building a
fireproof concrete structure, but could
not on account of the uncertainty of
the future of the Polo grounds. Many
times the question of cutting streets
through the grounds has been raised,
and all efforts to buy the property
have failed. The lease has ten years
yet to run.
JOHNSON WINS
THE HIGH JUMP
POLO GROUNDS
MAY BE GIVEN UP
Authorities Will Insist on
Fire-Proof Structure If
Rebuilt
New York, April 15. — The New York
National league club^ may never play
baseball again at the Polo grounds.
City authorities will iiMist on fireproof
structures to replace the grandstand
and part of the bleachers destroyed by
fire early yesterday, and this raises a
serious doubt as to whether the pro-
moters care to invest thousands of
dollars in steel and concrete on a leased
site.
The club will use until further notice
the American league park on Washing-
ton Heights, beginning a series with
Brooklyn there tomorrow. President
Ebbctts of the Brooklyn club offered
liis grounds, but conflicting dates
makes acceptance out of tlie question.
The coroner's office addressed a peti-
tion to the building department, asking
the department to insist that the
H. H. Johnson won the running high
jump In the competitive indoor pro-
gram at the Y. M. C. A. last evening,
clearing the bar at 5.4. There was a
large field out for this event, and one
of the best competitions of the season
was the result. Following is the or-
der of the finish:
\. W'oleven 5 ft. 2 in.
J. Nasalund 4 ft. 10 In.
K. A. Johnson 4 ft. 8 In.
William Stevens 4 ft. 8 In.
Carl Bessenbossel 4 ft. 8 in.
George Balloy ....4 ft. 6 In.
W. R. Cameron 4 ft. 6 In.
George Jacobson 4 ft. 4 in.
A. Ulvang 4 ft. 2 In
William Otto 4 ft. 2 In.
Walter Berklemann 4' ft. 2 in.
H. MuUln 4 ft.
Brown 3 ft. 10 In.
Last evening the date of the banquet
of the physical department of the Y. M.
C. A. was announced. It will be held
on the evening of May 3 and it is ex-
pected that a large number of the
members of the Institution will attend
«
Blue Jays V.'etors.
Yesterday afternoon at the court-
house grounds the Blue Jays defeated
the Fitwell Juniors at baseball by the
score of 29 to 22. The fielding of
Fogarty and Gallagher and the pitch-
ing of McGraw were features of the
game. Team managers wanting games
can schedule contests with the Blue
Jays by calling up Manager McGraw,
new phone. Grand, 1922 X.
Ed. Geers, the famous driver, may re-
tire from the track this season and
devote his time to training horses. He
says he will never stop training horses
as long as he lives. Geers is now 65.
His home is in Memphis, where he has
just bought a lot in wblch to build a
home.
COMMENTS AND OPINIONS
ON THE SPORTING PARADE
Legalized Boxing in Other
States— Pitchers and What
Is Expected of Them— ISe
Ciihs Have Nerve and
Brains Left, Anyway—
lEe Commercial League.
(BY BRUCE.)
URING the present week
Da committee of the Illi-
nois legislature favor-
ably reported a bill le-
galizing In that state
six round boxing con-
tests. Opinion is that
the bill will be passed
by both houses. The passage of the
bill will mean boxing placed on a safe
and sane basis in the bribe state.
Wisconsin at the present time has a
bin whicli permits tiie iioldlng of lim-
ited round bouts in regularly organ-
ized clubs. Also, it might be added,
tliey are holding limited round bouts
In Indiana, Missouri, New York, Okla-
homa, Tennessee, Massaciiusetts, Rhode
Island and many other sections of the
country.
In all of the states where the ex-
periment has been made with legal-
ized boxing, the plan has been found
satisfactory. It is not the legalized
boxing tliat Is meeting with the se-
rious objection of reformers at the
present time; rather. It Is the numer-
ous bush fights where absolutely no
precaution is taken in regard to the
condition of the principals.
At tlie present writing there is a
limited round boxing bill before the
Minnesota state legislature. Many
boxing fans throughout the state have
watched eagerly the work of the legis-
lature, hoping against hope that tlie
bill may pass. As tlie time for the ad-
journment of the solons draws near,
tlie friends of the bill are slowly los-
ing hope that any favorable action
will be taken.
If no fights were permitted in this
state, there might be some cause for
the members of the legislature to hesi-
tate In passing such a measure as has
been Introduced Into the present ses-
sion. But with buih fights being held
on the "quiet," ^hich from time to
time cause rlghteotis lodignatlon upon
the part of the officials at St. Paul,
the natural conclusion Is that it woud
be better to have boxing handled In a
businesslike manner.
It Is certain that the fans In the
northern part of Minnesota want box-
ing. It Is also certain that many of
the citizens of St. Paul and Minne-
apolis would patronize and enjoy the
sport, were It placed on a legal basis.
Until some law Is enacted, either plac-
ing boxing upon a legal footing or
making It a grave offense to hold box-
ing matches. It Is generally believed
by those who have followed the sport
In this state, that the glove game will
prove a thorn in the side of both state
and county officials.
It Was the Elements; Not Morris.
NDER the heading "OKLA-
UHO.MA CYCLONE DOES
GRAVE DAMAGE." a head
line on the prosaic telegraph
page of the newspapers of
the country caused the sport
lovers to look siiarply and see
if Carl Morris has laid another victim
low with his ponderous fists.
In this case, however, the cyclone
proved only a peeve of nature and not
I he activities of the "Hope" of the
Caucasian brother. Even the weather
man seems oonspirlngi to keep the
name of Morris before the public eye
Hard Luck for Poor Brooklyn.
AP RT'CKER. star slabman for
the Brooklyn l>aseball team,
and the same pltclilng marvel
whom Cliubbv Charley Mur-
phy of the Cubs tried to cor-
ral some few seasons ago, in
sliding into first the otlier
dav, injured his ankle to the extent
that he may not be able to do box duty
lor weeks to come.
When an accident the like of thl?
happens, there are always those who
cry that tlie pitcher should not take
chances and should let the eight men
behind him do the heavy fielding
stunts.
That Is bosh — piffle. If you will stop
to meditate for a moment, you will
find that the greatest pitchers, at
least some of them, have been those
slabmen who liave been the greatest
fielders.
Brown, the three-fln/jered wonder of
the Cubs, Is one of the best fielding
pitchers in the business. The same goes
for the peerless Matliewson. Many a
hard fought game has been won by
the fielding ability of the pitcher.
Just the other day Fred Clarke, the
brainy leader of the Pittsburg Pirates,
let a youngster go back to the minor j.
simply becau.se tlie youth could not
field his position. This is one of the
first casej of this kind, and, mark you
it may be a precedent.
Come to think of it, there is no rea-
son in the world why a pitcher should
not hit and field tvith the other mem-
bers of the team. He does the most
work in the game, 'tis true; yet you
must know that he only works about
two days a week.
The day is com.Tg when more work
will be required of the pitchers, for
competition Is growing in baseball,
just as It is in other lines of business.
They do say that when the pitch-
ing days of Mathewson are over he
can go out in the garden and chase
files. That is the kind of a pitcher
who proves valuable to his team, and
the kind of pitchers the club owners
are ever on the lookout for.
Those Old Cubs Have Nerve.
BHEY may be in, and they may
fall badly in the N. L. race
this season, and yet when the
last word has been said, you
must give It to the Cubs, the
dear old Cubs, for the nerve
they possess. Jimmy Schek-
erd has been going along for years in
the left garden. In the opening game
with St. Louis the vet gathered three
two-baggers, while Kling came through
with a double. Chance got a triple and
Tinker, the actor, clouted one for three.
All those hits came when they did the
most good.
It is hard to beat the Cubs, because
they have brains and nerve. A man
with brains, when he has nerve, is
worth three men who possess nerve
without the guiding quality of gray
matter. Brains and fighting qualities
have won four pennants and two
world's championships for the Chance
machine, and it will take a good team
to beat the old boys right today.
Some of the Murphy pets are not as
young as they wcfe back in 1906, when
the Cubs galloped through the older
leagL'e, winning the pennant by the
high percentage of .763, and age will
tell on a ball player; but Chance loves
fighters, and he has Imbued his men
with his great spirit, and a figlitlng
man Is always to be feared.
There is always a respect for the
great. The passing of a great team Is
always something that touches the
sympathetic feelings In men who loved
sport for sport's sake. There are a lot
of us who would like to see the Cubs
come back and play grand ball, after
the disastrous defeat banded out by
the Athletics.
Looking back over the grand ma-
chines of the past. It Is very doubtful
if there was ever a greater team than
the one which has pulled the National
league bunting down four times, and
missed winning it another season
through hard luck and unfortunate ac-
cidents.
The old Baltimore Orioles were a
great aggregation. Pittsburg has had
one of the grandest teams ever gath-
ered together. The New York Nationals,
winning twice in succession, made up
another grand team.
But taking all these teams, compar-
g
^>^»^>^>^»^>^>^>^»^>^>^^^>^>^>^>^>»«<
GOTCH DEdARES HE WILL
BEAT HACK IN TWO FALLS
"POP" COREY
Allan Lyle Corey Is a son of W. E.
Corey, the former head of the United
States Steel corporation. Young Corey
Is In his senior year at Yale and la
captain of the baseball team of 1911.
He has made some rather remarkable
records In athletics at Yale. He is
engaged to marry Miss Marguerite
Hendrlckson Johnston, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George Johnston of Detroit.
The wedding will occur In the near
future.
Ing their work with that of the Cubs,
most intelligent and fair-minded ba.se-
ball historians liave agreed tliat the
Cubs are, or perliaps were would be a
better word, tlie greatest aggregation
ever assembled, not .so much because of
the stars, as the wonderful machine-
like play.
Push the League Along.
ITH the announcement of the
starting of activities of the
t^ummcrclal league, a baseball
organization that last season
did much to promote Interest
in the game in Duluth. comes
also the welcome news that
the league will expand. It is planned to
make an eight-club league, bringing in
four new members. With eight clubs
In the league, and games every Satur-
day afternoon during the season, the
Commercial league tne present season
should take rank as the strongest base-
ball organization at the Head of the
Lakes.
Tlie teams represent some of the best
and biggest institutions in the city,
and one of the notable features of the
success of the organization last sea-
son, was the very fact that these
houses took a real Interest In the suc-
cess of the teams that bore their
names.
With firms like the Marshall-Wells
company, tlie Northern Shoe company,
V, A. Patrick, Stone-Ordean-Wells, the
Gowan-Peyton-Congdon company and
other Institutions sucli as the Board
of Trade and the banks of the city, all
taking an Interest in the success of
their teams, success for the league
seems assured.
The expanding of the league Into an
eight-club organization will add In-
terest. The organization did much last
season to make this city a better base-
ball town, and with renewed efforts
the present season along with the com-
mendable growth, there is reason to
Itelleve tliat the Commercial league
will enjoy the best season in the his-
tory of amateur baseball at tiie Head
of the Lakes.
STAR rOLLECiE Rl WER
PASSES THROLGH DULUTH.
Stanley Hill, captain of the Univer-
sity track team and one of the fast-
est sprinters ever developed at Minne-
sota university, was In town Friday,
on his way to Minneapolis. He is just
returning from a weeks' stay at
Eveleth wliere he did underground
surveying. Hill received a condition
in tills work last June when he went
down from the range to represent
Mlnne.«ota at tlie conference meet at
Chicago. Taking advantage of his
Easter vacation Hill went up and has
removed the condition. With Hill's
reapparance on the track this spring.
Minneasota'g chances have taken a
leap, as Hill is almost a sure point
winner in the 100-yard dash, 2l'0-yard
dash and tlie quarter mile. His show-
ing in these events at the conference
meet, to be held this June at Mlnnea-
apolis, will be looked forward to with
interest, as many consider" Hill the
best short distance man that has ever
represented Minnesota In Intercol-
legiate competition.
MCK (OXSTAXTINE BACK
FROM WISCONSIN TOWN.
Eveleth. Minn., April 15. — fSpecial to
The Herald.) — Nick Constantlne, the
local pugilist, returned yesterday from
Hurley, Wis., where he has been mak-
ing his quarters during the winter.
wTille In Wisconsin he knocked out
Billy Drescoll In seven rounds at Ke-
nosifia, and fought a draw at Bayfield
with Jean McGovern of Milwaukee.
He win start training soon for his
fight with Jimmy Brennan of Chicago,
which will take place on April 19. He
is also arranging a match with Kid
Brown of Hibbing, for the state light-
weight title.
' Prank Gotch, the work's champion
wrestler. In an Interview v^ith a Cleve-
land correspondent last week, sa.id
that he will beat Ilackenschmldt In
two straight falls when th«;y meet, pro-
vided the Russian does no'. quit before
the falls could be secured
"The Russian Is a rank quitter," said
Gotch. "I proved this In our last
match. He found he could not get any
of his favorite holds on me and be-
came exasperated. whlla I simply
laughed at him, and feinted him into
knots, and made him fall e.11 over him-
self. Then when I found that he was
tiring I went at him and by a quick
dash secured a hold and Drought him
down like a ton of bricks, and hla
shoulders and hips 'hit the fioor at the
same time. It was really a four-point
fall, but he was away before I got
down on to him to pin him.
"That fall broke his heart and he
quit in the rankest of fashion. I went
to England after him when I read of
his talk over there. In which he ac-
cused me of foul tactics. 1 offered him
every Inducement to wrestle me on his
own territory, but he ducked away,
and I had to return without a match.
"Next time we meet 1 will adopt
other tactics, and you can take it from
me that I will give him a oeating that
he will long remember, and 1 will
throw him two straight falls."
^/^^^^^^^M^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*
SPORTING NOTES
"Why did I send Tom .fones to the
minors?" retorts Presider.t Navin of
the Tigers.
"I knew Tom Jones was on the down
grade, and Tom himself knew It. To
stand pat on a club means to drop to
the second division. I won't do It. I
would rather have a coiner who Is
fairly good, but getting better all the
time, than a man who Is lair, but get-
ting worse all the time. This Is plain
to any one wlio has followed baseball
So there was on use sending Jones
South this season. A new lirst baseman
had to be developed. Gain:>r looks like
the man for the job."
• • *
The absence of two veterans, Jake
Stahl at first and aHrry Lord at third,
will be a terrible handicap for the
Boston Red Sox this season. Patsy
Donovan's outfield. Speaker, Lewis and
Hooper, Is the class of the American
league.
• • •
"It's the start that counts," says
Manager Duffy of the Wilte Sox.
"If we can take a few battles right
off tlie reel when the umpire calls
time we'll be on top at the finish. I
guess I am pretty superstitious, but I
believe a team like the Sox are now
can win if tlie start is a good one. I've
been In the game many years, but
never was with a team that looked
hotter to me than the \'.'hlte Sox of
today. Not only have we a magnificent
staff of pitchers and ca:cliers wliom
you can always bank on, but we have
a hard hitting, crack fielding bunch of
infielders and a couple of natural .300
hitters In the outfield.
"It takes a team of fighting baseball
players with snap and ginger to win
a world's pennant In thesu days of ad-
vanced baseball. In the Yt'hlte Sox we
have such a team. Every mother's son
of the regulars is a born scrapper,
with the possible exception of Amby
McConnell, and he is such a grand lit-
tle ball player with so much speed and
brains, that he is an excdptlon worth
having with tlie club."
• • *
"Baseball's a delightfully uncertain
game," cackles Manager Clarke.
• • *
Can Fred Hunter, Pit sburg's first
ba.seman. hit? Sinoky City fans are
worrying over the recruit's prowesij
with the stick.
• • •
Hans Wagner Is having difficultv
observing the rule forbidding infielders
tossing their gloves at the ball.
• • ♦
That fake about baseball men rais-
ing a $250,000 "slush" fund to fight
for .Sunday ball in the Now York leg-
islature was one of the t.muslng inci-
dents of the week. Neith?r the Giants
Highlanders particularly want
on the first day of the we<»k.
day receipts run :io high they
to worry.
• • •
President Murphy has installed a
piionograph In Chicago's clubhouse The
players have rented a "b.Tby grand."
Charley threatens to hire a
wlien Griffith is in town.
• • •
"First a winning ball team, then
new steel and cement star ds," declared
tlie president of the St. Lo iis Cardinals.
• • ♦
In an ante-Eastern writeup the St.
Louis Globe-Democrat predicts the Na-
tional league teain.s will finish as fol-
lows: New Y'ork. Clncinratl. Chicago,
Pittsburg, Pliiladelphia, St. Louis,
Brooklyn and Boston.
"According to our days of figuring"
adds the Globe-Democrat, "the New
York Giants for first place and Cin-
cinnati for second place looks to be
about the right dope, with Chicago and
Pittsburg fighting it out for third
place."
• • •
Georgp Mullen will pitch the opening
game fur the Detroit Tigers.
• • *
"I hear ballplayers ssy that their
arms are as good as ever," says Bill
Bernhardt, manager of the Memphis
club. "I hear players S2 y that they
have not gone back. This is especially
true of tlie pitchers. Many, many
pitchers tell you that the aid arm Is as
strong as ever. My arn feels good,
too, this spring, but it Is lot as strong
as ever. If It was I wouldn't be in
the Southern league, and if the arms
of those other pitchers W';re as strong
as ever, they also would lot be in the
minor leagues."
• • •
Bil Bergen, Brooklyn's veteran
catcher, sent home from Hot Springs
for hitting the high places, has re-
fiorted to Manager Dahleii and says he
3 ready to catch.
• • •
Los Angeles is building a $700,000
amateur athletic club. T le swimming
pool, 100 by 33 feet, is on the third
nor
games
Week
don't have
Chubby
street band
can uncover
floor.
L'^nless
pitching
winning
nil!
• * •
A spike shy ballplayer is too timid
on the bases. A baserunner must take
Chicago
star the Cub's
tlie pennant ars
a new
chances of
practically
When Capt Herbert Wilson and Capt. Hardress Lloyd arriv<! on the Lu-
sltania they will probably go directly to Lakewood where they will find the
thirty-three ponies of the English polo team ready for practice. The ponies
were taken from the Minnetonka Tuesday and shipped direct from the steam-
ship pier to Lakewood. There were some famous ponies in the lot Includlnif
Milton, (belonging to Capt. Wilson), and Energy, a dark chestnut mare, wblcli
hag never been beaten in the ring.
chances to be of great value to his
team.
• • •
Connie Mack has signed a chaplain
to pray for his players.
• • •
Fred Tenney is batting seventh in
Boston's order. Batting seventh la al-
ways a refiectlon on a player's ability.
• • •
111 fares the land.
Where men accumulate to play.
To hastening ills a prey.
Tennis and croquet.
— With apologies to Goldsmith.
»
* TODAVVS OAMR^i AXD
^ THK WKATHKR CO>'DITIONS.
*
^ Brooklyn at !N>w York, cloudy,
fSLtlk p. lU.
Pblladelphia at BuMtoa, cloudy,
3 p. ni.
^ PIttMlturK at CinclnBafI, clear,
* 3 p. m.
^ St. I..UUU at Chicavo, clear, StSO
^ p. Uk.
American^
Xe%v % iirk
cloudy, 3:3U p.
BontuB at
3t.'tO p. m.
< bleaan at netrolt,
(levelaud at !!it.
3t30 p. ni.
at
III.
W aNhluKton,
Pbiladrlphia,
rain,
cIcHr, 3 p. m.
LuuIm, clear.
Aiii»oo1«tlon-^
MtDueapoIlM at Columbna, 3
p. ni.{ clear.
St. Paul at Toledo, 3 p. m.t clear.
KauitaH City at Indiauapolii*, 3il5
p. m.; clear.
.'Ullviaukee at Loulnvillc, 3 p. m.:
fair.
WOULD YOU LIKE
TO BE THE TRAINER?
How would you like to be the train-
er? p:spccially first aid to the Injured
on a ball club boasting of thirt\'-five
head-liners and near-greats? That's
the little task assigned to Prof. A. Bert
Sommens, masseur extraordinary and
maker of oxygen croam. "Doc" has
been on the Cub job four seasons and,
like wine, improves with age. His
liours may be anything from 7 in the
morning until the dawn of another
day, for higli-salarled diamond nota-
bles, like rosebuds, hyaclntlis and oth-
er hot-house products, must be handled
with care.
Tile trainer's duties begin Immediate-
ly after birakfast lias been served and
the players have headed for the bail
park. Once within the gates of tha
pastiming orchard "Doc" must prepare
the drinking water, mixing it with
voodoo pills, are guaranteed to spell
Instant death to malaria g<rins. Tlien
he has to answer the beck and call of
every veteran, keep over-heat<'d ath-
letes provided with sweaters, attend to
the bats, chase wayward baseballs
fouled over some inconvenient section
of the fence, lake part in the "high-
low" game, and guard tlie players
against the attack of Pre.«ldent Charley
Pranks pet monkeys — Henry and Hen-
rietta and Rosetta, a woe bit of a
scamp who bounded into the monkey-
house shortly before the advent of
Ciiancft's betltled fence busters.
Like the baby cub at the West Side
park, Ro.setta disUke.s the jeers and
taunts of the baseball contingent, and
woe unto the luckless artist caught
annoying the pride of the zoo.
Talking about the New Orleans club
house brings up the bright thought at-
tributed to Clark Grlftlth, champion of
all that's riglit and proper In the line
of club quarters. Remember how the
Old Fox punned Mr. Murphy for his
failure to provide palatial, up-to-the-
minute apartments for visiting athletes
at the West Side park; Well. Griff
might pick up a million pointers dur-
ing a flying trip around the Southern
circuit. The N<-w Orleans grounds can
furnish everything In the animal af»d
bird Kingdom, from buzzards to mon-
keys, with a few cows, horses, geese
and canary birds thrown in for good
measure. "The regular New Orleans
zoological gardens are situated in an-
other portion of the city, but it's a safe
bet the ball park freaks will stay aa
Icng as Frank remains at the head of
the ship.
But getting back to the trainer, who
Is really the hero of this narrative —
his labors are many and far-reaching.
With practice over, all hands bolt for
the street cars traveling down Canal
street and In the general direction ot
the Young Men's Gymnastic club where
everything In the way of comfort has
been provided for the benefit of tha
plavers. Baiha. rubdown.^ and all that
sort of thing follow. Perhaps soma
overzealous athlete has developed a
bruise, bettor known In the baseball
vernacular as a "raspberry." while
skidding feet foremost into one of the
•oases. Right there Is where the train-
er gets in his fine Italian hand, apply-
ing the soothing ointments, wielding
the lueodescent lamp or otiier electri-
cally operated implements of torture,
and it isn't long before the ailing per-
former rises to pronounce himself fine
and dandy.
Perchance some member of the team,
usually a ve'eran. awakens during the
middle of the night feeling stiff, sore
and dead mean against the sporting
world. What's his first thought? Of
none other than the trainer, and a
hurry-up call brings Semmens hot-
footing it to the bedside of the ag-
grieved athlete, armed with his medi-
cine chest.
There Isn't anything too heavy for
"Doc and his tireless attention to the
mil lion and one duties heaped upon
his broad slioulders usually In well re-
warded when the worlds champion-
ship days roll around. For every mem-
ber of the team kicks In with a small
portion of his prize money and the
lump sum makes a swell little nest egf
for the dear doctor.
DAVE CALLAHAN GOES
TO NEW ORLEANS CLUB.
Word was received 'lere yesterday
that Dave Callahan, ."tar outfielder of
the 1910 Eau Claire team, and of the
Mlnnv league for that matter, has
been "let out to the New Orleans team
of the Southern league by the Cleve-
land Americans.
It was believed by some of the fans
of the Minnesota-Wisconsin league
that tlie Callahan boy would stick
with the Naps. But the coming of
Joe Jackson, one of the sensations of
the American league, threw Dave out
of an outfield job.
With the New Orleans team the
former Mlnny league player should
make good from the jump.
•
Exqnsite Flowers.
Choice stock. Prices rlK^t at Huot*^
Wi
.k... m
Ml
I
I
wmt^*
Saturday,
THE DUrUTH HERALD.
April 16, 1911.
ON THE IRON RANGES
HIBBING MINES
SHIPPING ORE
Both Missabe and Great North-
ern Are Startinj Ore
Towards Docks.
Mftchel, Minn.. April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.)— The first train of ore
from this section went down Wednes-
day and comprised cars from the Buf-
falo and Susquehanna shop. In addi-
tion to this about twenty-flve cars a
day are soing out on the local to Proc-
tor from the same shaft and every-
thing Is belnjc placed in readiness for the
opening of the season. The ore is not
vet being .shipped direct to the docks
"but is being held in the Proctor yards.
The shipments of pulpwood and mine
lagging are over for the season and a
verv successful winter has been ex-
perienced in this line. The log run
Is not yet through, a large number of
lors being still piled high alotig tne
loading stations and ready to be hauled
to the sawmills. The Mitchcl yaraa
will probably continue to handle logs
for several weeks to come.
*
Grvat Northern AUo ShlpplnfiT.
Kelley L.ake. Minn., April 15. — Tue
Great Northern railroad is already
Handling quite an amount of ore. The
first shipment went through two weeKS
ago, April 1, and regular conslgnmenls
have been going through ever since
that time. Capt. Wearne of the Lauia
mine was the first to ship ore over the
Oreat Northern line for th,is season anl
this mine was >lK>rtly after followe.1
bv the Stevenson, on the 7th: tht
Klizabeth was the next to ship over
the road. Both the Mahoning and the
Croxton started yesterday, the Mahon-
ing having booked SOW tons out for a
starter. The train crews at Kelley
I>iike are very busy, five work trains
being recently put Into service to over-
look and repair the tracks and yaru.s.
etc. Tile season's pulpwood and log
haul is finished, but lagging is still
coming through over the line but will
finish up within a few days now.
HUGE WATER TANK
OF CHISHOLM READY
Has Capacity of 300,000
and On« of Largest in
the United States.
gathering. The ladles voted to hold,
an Easter sale of aprons on Friday,
April 21 and to serve a lunch at the
sale.
C. M. Beek, station agent at the
Missabe- depot, is soon to move to
Hemlock street, near Third avenue,
in the Kneebone house.
EVELETH MASONS
TO AHEND CHURCH
Elaborate Programs to Be
Given in Church of the
Range City.
Eveleth, Minn., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.)— The Eveleth Masonic
lodge. No. 239, will attend services at
the Methodist Episcopal church tomor-
row morning. In the evening an Easter
rallv will be held at the same church.
The following program will be given
at the morning service; Organ prelude,
anthem, "O Joyous Easter Morn,"
Schenker. choir; The Apostles Creed,
congregation: Invocation, Rev. E. K.
Copper, Duluth; •Remember Now Thy
Creator," Custance, choir; Scripture
reading. Rev. B. D. Hanscom; solo,
•The Resurrection," Mrs. Edward K.
Medler; offering and notices; offertory,
sermon. Rev. M. P. Burns, Minneapo-
lis; "Why Seek Ye Living Among the
Dead," choir; benediction; baptismal.
At the evening services this program
will be given: Organ prelude,: "'All
Hail the Power of Jesus' Name." con-
gregation; anthem, "He Is Risen,"
choir; Scripture reading. Rev. E. K.
Copper; anthem, "Awake Thou Thai
Sleeps." choir; prayer. Rev. B. Hans-
com; duet, Mrs. E. K. Medler and Ray-
mond M. Dingan; offertory, sermon,
Rev. M. P. Burns; benediction. Choir,
tenors, Fergus R. Ellsworth, E. B.
Hill, R. J. Coole; sopranos, Mrs. E. K.
iledler. Miss Teckla Jackson, Miss Ida
Moulton; altos. Miss Jenkins, Mrs.
Charles Ruity, Miss Talboys; bassos,
Raymond Dungan, Dr. Edward K.
Medler, E. J. Banks; chorister, R. M.
Dungan; organists. Mrs. H. E. Dungan
and .Mrs. James A. Robb.
At the Swedish Lutheran church.
Rev. Herman Drews, of the St. Mat hew
church. Duluth, will hold Easter serv-
cies for the German Lutherans of this
city. The Lord's supper will be served
in connection with the regular serv-
ices.
of Good Templars held here, delegates
from twelve local organizations were
present; five being from Duluth and
Superior. The following officers were
elected: Chief templar, Peter Larson
of Two Harbors; vice templar, Frank
Carlson of Eveleth; council, August
Brodin of Chisholm; secretary, Conrad
Wicklund of West Duluth: treasurer,
P. A. Nelson of Duluth; past templar,
L. A. Simonson of Two Harbors. The
next meeting of the district lodge will
be held at Nashwauk, Minn., Nov. 10,
1911.
Besides the election of officers and
choosing the place for the next meet-
ing, a number of new by-laws were
passed and the district degree con-
ferred upon fifteen members; a ma-
jority being from the local lodge.
PARENTS OF PUPILS
Urged to Attend Yirginia School
Board Meeting Monday Evening.
To the Editor of The Herald:
Tlie Virginia school fight is getting?
warm, owing to the constant strife
that seems to exist between the school
board and the superintendent of schools
of the Independent school district of
Virginia, which is by no means doing
the schools of Virginia any great good.
The people have at last decided to take
a hand in the matter, and a committee
called on Mr. Bliss Tuesday evening
and Instructed him to send out notice
through the children to inform their
parents that they were requested to at-
tend the meeting of the school board
on Monday evening, April 17. It Is be-
lieved that a good many will turn out,
and that at this meeting the school
board will be asked for an explanation,
and if the same is not satisfactory,
steps may be taken to remove certain
mertibers of the board from office, as
the people of Virginia are about tired
of the unpleasant notoriety the schools
of the city have been getting.
JAMES W. DAILEY.
Virginia. Minn., April 14.
dancing party on Thursday evening.
Knutson's orchestra furnished the
music.
Cvrllle Glode of Eveleth is spending
h«K vacation in thl« city at the home
of his aunt. Mrs. Iver Wisted, Jr.
Jake Kolstad and wife departed this
week for Virginia to make their home
there.
The fire department have been pretty
busy the past few days, an alarm be-
ing turned in five times on Thursday
and once on Friday. The calls were all
chimney fires, but with such terrific
wind extra precaution was necessary.
Rev. T. Hughes was a Duluth visitor
for a few days thiai week.
Mrs. Hanson and Mrs, J. Anderson
went to Duluth Thursday for a few
days' v'sit.
Mrs. Gus Colberg and Mrs. Albert
Wienzlel of Tower were Ely shoppers
this week.
Miss Bessie Lonkin of the agricul-
tural school of St. Paul is at home to
spend her vacation.
Edith Ellefsen, who is attending the
Northwestern Conservatory of Music at
Minneapolis, arrived home this week.
Ethel Prisk. Edith Trezona and
Walter Eisenach of the state univer-
sity are home for Easter.
Among- the teachers who are out of
the city spending their vacations are
Miss E. Rockwood, St. Paul; Miss
Heritage, Hudson. Wis.; Miss Poole,
Two Harbors; Mr. Scharr. St. Paul; Mr.
Abercrombe, Hudson; Miss Raleigh,
Duluth; Miss McMinn, Duluth; Miss
Barrett, Duluth; Miss Morey, Fari-
bault; Miss Stringham, Duluth; Miss
Jones, Duluth; Miss Nelson, Duluth.
Dr. Matthews of Minneapolis is vis-
iting in the city.
Miss Emma Kinsman departed for
Buhl Friday afternoon to spend Easter
with her parents.
Miss Edythe Anderson entertained a
number of her friends on Saturday
evening with a luncheon in honor of
Bert Johnson.
Dr. I. W. Parker has had his brother
from the state university, visiting him
this week.
Melville Odgers went to Chisholm
this week, where he has accepted a
position.
A. J. Fenske has been a business
visitor in Duluth all week.
^^^%^%^>^»^N^fc^ *
OFFICIAL MAP OF THE WEATHER
Ml ST MOVE THE SHOPS.
TWO HARBORS PROGRAM.
Chisholm. Minn., April 15 — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The new water
tank at the head of Lake street is
complete, and soon will be ready to
have the water pumped. The new
tank holds 300,000 gallons of water j gpr^-'i^p -phe following
and is one of the largest in the musical program^
C. J. Sullivan
Easter to Be Observed in the First
Presbyterian Chnreh.
Two Harbors, Minn., April 15. — Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — There will be a
special Easter program morning and
evening at the First Presbyterian
church; J. F. McLeod, pastor. A union
sunrise meeting will be held at 6
o'clock in the morning. Morning wor-
ship commences at 10;45; subject, "His
Resurrection." At the evening wor-
ship, 7:30, the subject will be "The
King in the Midst." Bible class will
be held at the close of the morning
will be the
Before Commencing Extensive
Stripping at the Adams Mine.
Eveleth, Minn., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The rumors that much
ground would be stripped at the Adams
mine in the vicinity of the old machine
shops are set at rest by Supt. Mitchell,
who states that the shops will have to
be removed or dismantled to allow un-
derground mining operations at that
point, but that no stripping work will
be done near the shops. The dryhouse
and office building at that point will
be moved nearer to the Adams No. 6
shaft. The "dry" will be moved by
the mining company, while outside con-
tractors will be awarded the contract
for moving the office. It Is known
that many bodies of good ore are situ-
ated there, and work on moving the
office and dryhouse will soon be start-
ed. Machine shops are being erected
at the Leonidas, and the tools of the
old Adams shops will be removed to
the new shops, while the old structure
will be dismantled or removed.
RECALL CASE IN COURT.
"United States. C. J. Sullivan, super-
intendent of city water works, says
that the pressure from the new tank
will be approximately ?5 per cent
greater than from the smaller tank
now in use. It is considered that
Chisholm"a supply of water is now
abundantly adequate no matter how
fierce a fire may break out.
Chisholm News Notes.
About one-third of the teachers
of the Chisholm public schools are
out of town this week spending their
Easter vacation either at their homes
or at the homes of their friends.
Nels Oyalla. sometime ago surface
boss at the Shenango mine and later
in charge of the sinking of the new
MORNING.
Organ Voluntary — "Morceau Rus-
tique" Munro
Anthem — "The Voice of Triumph"..
Hughes
Mandamus Against Virginia Clerk
Will Be Aired.
Virginia, Minn., April 16. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Judge Martin Hughes to-
day will hear the mandamus proceed-
ings commenced against City Clerk
Bickford to compel him to show cause
why he did not acknowledge as legal
the eighty-three petitions to the recall
document filed with the council against
Alderman Kimball;
The petition was filed with the clerk
on April 3 and was afterwards referred
Organ Voluntary — "Morning" Read
Anthem — "Jesus Christ, King of | back' to the signers. The city clerk
Glory" ^. . . . Adams alleges that forty-seven out of the
■ petition
Organ Voluntary — "War
Priests"
March of
Mendelssohn
EVENING.
Organ — "Chanson Triste"
Tschaikowsky
Anthem — "First Fruits of Them That
Slept" Lorenz
Anthem — "The Voice of Triumph"...
Hughes
Organ — "Under the Leaves". .. .Thome
King of Glory"
Anthem — "Jesus,
in cnarge oi me sinKniK oi inc no* ^ i-r' '■,' ' \' '..v; ' " ' i' ' V. Aaams
ihaft af the Webb mine in Ribbing, 0'-f,t" v..> ol^ntary-"Grand Festival
has given up his position with the
Shenango Mining company and has
returned to Chisholm.
The official board of the M. E.
church has voted a vacation of about
thirty days to the pastor, Rev. E. P.
Keast. Mr. Keast intends to spend
the time visting relatives of his In
Bllin.i?, Mo. During his absence from
March"
.Richmond
CHISHOLM PROGRAM.
Elaborate Easter Exercises in M.
E. Chureh Sunday Evening.
Chisholm, Minn.. April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The following Easter
the Chisholm church the following | program will be rendered by the
persons will supply in the pulpit: On Methodist Episcopal Sunday school in
Sunday, April 23, MLss Effle McLaird ' ' - r,._^_...
of Minneapolis, a W. C. T. U. speak-
er; on April 30, John Pearce, a local
speaker; on May 7 Rev. Orris Suver
of Marble.
Mrs. C. M. Beek and Miss Winni-
fred and Thomas returned Wednesday
evening from New Richmond, W^is.,
where they attended the funeral of
Mrs. Beek's father. Miss K. Johnson,
sister of Mrs. Beeks, came with her
from New Richmond and will visit
In Chisholm for some time.
The night force at the Hartley pit
has been laid off. Most of the un-
maried men have already gone to
other places, and some of the families
are moving out of the location.
The Ladles' Aid Society of the
Myers, Hartley and Shenango loca-
tions met on Wednes<!ay at the home
of Mrs. Burfield and had a delightful
$3.50 Recipe Cures
Weak Kidneys, Free
Relieves Urinary and Kidney
Troubles, Backache, Straining,
Swelling, Etc.
Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kidneys
and Back.
Wouldn't it be nice within a week or
Bo to begin to say good-bye forever to
the scalding, dribbling, straining or
too frequent passage of urine; the fore-
head and the back-of-the-head aches;
the stiches and pains in the back; the
growing mu.scle weakness; spots before
the eyes; yellow skin, sluggish bowels;
swollen eyelids and ankles; leg cramps;
unnatural short breath; sleeplessness
and the despondency?
I have a recipe for these troubles
that you can depend on, and if you
want to make a quick recovery, you
ought to write and get a copy of it.
Many a doctor would charge you $3.50
Just for writing this prescription, but
I have it and will be glad to send it
to you entirely free. Just drop me a
line like this: Dr. A. E. Robinson. K
94 Luck Building, Detroit, Jlicli., and
I will send It by return mail in a
plain envelope. As you will se« when
you get it, this recipe contains only pure,
harmless remedies, but it has great
healing and palnconquering power.
It will quickly show its power once
you use it, so I think you had better
see what It Is without delay. I will
send you a copy free — you can use it
and cure your.seif at home.
the church on Sunday:
Opening song
Sunday School.
Invocation
The Pastor.
Recitation— "A Little Girls' Prayer"
Ruth Jetzlaff.
Recitation — "Little Brown Seeds" . . .
Mabel Vanberg and Sarah Powers.
Recitation— "A Little Daisy"
Olive Jordan and Leona Train.
Song
Recitation — •'God's Love"
Edna TetzlafT.
Song
Sunday School.
I Recitation — "A Heavenly Vision"...
Erma Mitchell.
Recitation — 'A False Report"
Mary Oust.
Drill— *A Crown of White Lilies"..
Girls from Miss Hllyer's Class.
gong — "Under the Ground"
Mrs. Keast's Class.
Recitation — "Glad Easter Lilies"
Willie Roberts.
Drill — "Little Gardnerers"
Girls from Mrs. Keast's Class.
Recitation
Eileen Arneson.
Drill — 'From Darkness to Light"...
Ten Girls from Mrs. Taylor's Class.
Song •
Stmday School.
Recitation — '"The Watchman"
Silvia Hirstro.
Recitation
Lila Twa.
Recitation — ••Blue Bird and the
Circus"'
Dorothy Johnson.
Drill — "Who Helped"
Eleven Girls from Mrs. Taylor's Class.
Recitation— "Wake ITp"
Mamie Bey.
Drill — "Easter Lilies"
Seven Girls from Miss Hllyer's Class.
Closing song •
The School.
The program begins at 7:45 Sunday
evening.
eighty-three signers to the
were not qualified electors and there-
fore the petition Is as null and void.
The petitioners claim that every
name on the list is legal and their
mandamus proceedings were instituted
upon those grounds.
City Attorney Otto A. Poirler ap-
pears for the city and Judge Montague
for the petitioners.
Madame Navarre will be In her Vir-
ginia shop the remainder of this sea-
son.
FORT FRANCES SHOPS.
Rumored Canadian Northern Will
Build Them in That Place.
Fort Frances, Ont, April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — There is a well
defined rumor that the Canadian
Northern Railway company has plans
prepared for the construction of car
shops here to care for the Western
system as well as for the line to
Duluth. As a distributing point to
the southwest and east Fort Frances
is considered an ideal location and of-
fers a most advantageous position for
an Industry of this kind especially.
TWO HARBORS NOTES.
Two Harbors, Minn.. April 15. —
(Special to The Herald.) — James Bur-
wick, a well known lecturer, will ad-
dress the men's meeting next Sunday
at 4 p. m. at the Y. M. C. A.
The Boys' Sunday club will also meet
at 4 p. m. In the boys' building. All
tovs invited.
A very profitable series of lectures
has been given this week at the
Y. M. C A. on •'Poultry," by Prof. E.
R. Chapman, who is a state lecturer
on poultry, and Prof. Brown, who is
assisting In this course Is stationed at
Crookston In this poultry business.
Mr. Chapman Is satloned at Owatonna
at the state experimental farm. There
is a large attendance and all who arc
taking the course are very well
pleased.
The Survey club held their closing
session for the season Monday night at
the Y. M. C. A. New officers were
elected who will take up their duties
the first Monday night in October
Those elected were: John Larson,
president; Charles Strom, vice presi-
dent; Alfred Johnson, secretary; J. H.
Dahlen, treasurer; Hllding Pearson,
censor.
LIBRARIANS TO
MEET WEDNESDAY
Gathering of People Con-
nected With Such hstitu-
tions at Two Harbors.
Two Harbors, Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Next Wednesday
an interesting meeting will be held at
the Two Harbors public library. In-
vitations have been issued by the li-
brary board to the librarians and
boards of Duluth, Superior, Cloquet,
Sandstone, Grand Rapids, Aitkin,
Brainerd, Coleraine, Hibbing, Virginia
and Eveleth to attend a roundtable
meeting here on that day. These
meetings are held once a year in dif-
ference places for the purpose of dis-
cussing informally the practical pro-
blems met with in library administra-
tion. The visitors will be entertained
at luncheon by the Two Harbors li-
brary board and will be shown around
the city and ore docks.
Miss Baldwin, secretary of the Min-
nesota library board commission, will
preside. The public is cordially in-
vited to attend. The main topics for
discussion are "The Library and the
Municipality," and "Plans for Library
Extension."
During the morning session, the fol-
lowing topics will be discussed:
"Plans for Library Extension,"
"Country Extension," "Individual Rural
Loans," "Work with Schools," "Books
for Foreign Readers," "Advertising
the Library.''
Afternoon session: "The Library and
the Municipality," "Per Cent of Taxa-
atlon Neecled for Adequate Support,"
••The Library Budget," •Cost of Serv-
ice and Administration," "Amount
Needed for Books," "The Library as
a Civic Center," "Relations to (Jlubs
and Associations," •'Civic Leagues,"
"Municipal Reference Collections,"
"Rest Rooms," "Lectures and Exhibi-
tions."
FORECAST TIIX 7 P. M.
SVNDAV
For Duluth, Superior and Tlcinitjr,
Inrludlng tlie Uesaba and VennU-
lon Iron rangpo: Fair weather to-
nJght and Sunday; lowest temper-
ature tonight 33 deg. to 30 deg. ;
moderate weiterly winds.
txPLANATORY NOTES
Oti.rrv*Ucw lakM at 8 a. ro. atv*ntr.&fib omAAm tkt^. Air fiMiin
ndaeed to tea lrv«l
^ iMBABa, or oootiaaoai ■■«. pati Umwgb ^Ibu oI aquiJ lir |i laiil.
.' IxmiaBMa, cr 4>«t«* Uaea, pMi throunh polBU ol «iu»l «»p«M«»i ••Jf
will be drawn galy iv mn. fraenac. «>% ^ '*•' ^
Sraaota (pdicaU (Uto of wMtbcr Q •>«v;-9 >ar«yali«Ay;- ^
el(Mdx:(g)nia;(§)^e«: ^BMCimMac Amim tf <^k1^wt^ «i*
figiirr, terapvatuic; aMniKi. SMMfar^iaiofaL it H aqvab ti kckl ttM «!■(
vtlotity el 10 Biha per boor or mom.
ftlcideratc
Hieli
Gale
Hurrlcioe
H. W.
.15 lo 25
35 to 50
50 to 65
65 r.nd atior*
RICHARDSON,
Local Forccaatar.
.^
If anybody who
lived within reason-
able walking dis-
tance didn't walk
to his ofrice this
morning he should
blush to tell it. The
temperature wasn't
exactly summery,
but there was a
crisp coolness to
the air that only
added to the charm
of the bright sun-
shine and clear sky. After the menac-
ing clouds and sharp w^nds of last
night the weather this morning was a
welcome change. Today is fair and
cool and continued fair weather is
promised for tonight and tomorrow,
with the mercury around the freezing
point.
W^arm weather prevailed a year ago
today.
The sun rose this morning at 5:20
and it will set at 6:56 this evening,
giving thirteen hours and thirty-six
minutes of sunlight.
Mr. Richardson makes the following
comment on weather conditions:
"During the last twenty-four hours
snow or rain fell over the lake region
and light to heavy rains occurred in
the Ohio and Lower Mississippi valleys
and Atlantic states In connection with
ATTACKS ON AGUA PRIETA
AND JUAREZ IMMINENT
(Continued from page 1.)
the disturbance which in the meantime
moved its center from Western Ontario
to extreme Eastern Canada. Brisk
westerly winds continued throughout
the greater part of the lalce region.
Chilly weather prevails over the West
and Northwest. Killing frosts occurred
this morning in Kansas. At the Head
of the Lakes fine weather m ill doubt-
less prevail during the ensuing thirty-
six hours."
lowest
today:
fur twelve, ending at 7 a.
m.
High. Low.
Abilene
Alpena ♦*
Atlantic City .50
Hattlcford 48
BlBinarck 44
Hols© 5*
Boston 63
Buffalo :.6
Calgary ^0
Cliarlostcn 72
„ . w, J Chicago r»6
General Forecantn. Ooidus ChrisU .T8
Chicago, April 15. — Foreca.«=ts for Denver 40
twenty-four hours ending at 7 p. m., n^„g^*'i^'^ \y/H
Sunday: DoUee 52
Upper Michigan— Fair tonight and g'^'^gl^'^ ! ■.;::. 49
Sunday. Uurango 48
Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa — Fair Kaatport .'0
tonight and Sunday; hot much change Edmonton 52
in temperature; frost tonight. Esainaba 6^
North and South Dakota-Fair to- "'';;*f*°S„ •; ' ".
night and Sunday; warmer ir west por- ^«nd ua^en ...m
tion tonight. , ^ ^ Hatter** " .68
Montana— Fair tonight and Sunday; i JJ^J'^'**;;;?^
warmer tonight. ; Helena 48
Shippers' forecast: Protect 3€-hour i Houghton
shipments of perishables against tem- Huron 52
perature 20 deg. to 30 deg. in Eastern i jaoksonTille ....78
North Dakota, Northern Minnesota, | KanUoops 50
Northern Wisconsin and th< Michigan
.36
...44
...S2
...48
Copper country.
Upper Lakes: Moderate west winds.
Fair tonight and Sunday.
WERE MARRIED IN DULUTH.
MANY CHIMNEY FIRES.
Posts and Poles
And Other Timber Products.
McLEOD-DAVlS TIMBEn CO.,
515 Lycruiu Biilldlns*
Diilnth, Mine.
TWO HARBORS CREAMERY
TO AGAIN BE OPERATED.
Two Harbors, Minn.. April IB. —
'Special to The Herald.) — Arrange-
ments are being made whereby the
local creamery will be operated again
by the local company, and It is hoped
that the creamery will start early in
May, although, on account of the
backwardness of the season it may
run until the first of June.
During 1909 there were over 1500
pounds of local cream secured for
and churned by the creamery, and
26,562 pounds from outside districts.
In 1910 the creamery was leased to
the Bridgeman-Russell company of
Duluth, and the local cream collected
was in excess of that collected in 1909,
showing that the business was on the
increase. ^ , .. ,,
There are many dairy farmers liv-
ing around Two Harbors and it is of
a great benefit to them to have a
place to disspose of their cream, and
it is hoped that this will be a banner
year for the local creamery associa-
tion.
•
Good Tcmnlara Meet.
Two Harbors, Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — At the district
convention of the Independent Order
Ely Fire Department Has Many
Calls— Other Ely News.
Ely, Minn.. April 15. — (Special to The
Ileiald.) — Mr. and Mrs. Iver Wisted
were pleasantly surprised Thursday
even'ng when a large number of their
friends dropped in to spend the even-
ing. Five Hundred was played. Mrs.
Felt and Mr. Olds capturing the prizes,
after which a delicious lunch was
eerved.
The Ely club entertained with a
If "Out of Fix"
It may he the food.
Try
Grape-Nuts
''There's a Reason.
99
Story of Wedding of Eveleth Teach-
ers Confirmed By Principals.
Eveleth, Minn^ April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — "The Eveleth story in
Friday's Herald, telling of the wed-
ding in the Zenith City Tuesday of
Principal Arthur Cannon of the local
high and Miss Olive Pfiffner, principal
of the Spruce school, came as some-
thing of a surprise here, but its truth
is confirmed by Rev. Mr. Hanscom,
who has returned from the Zenith
City, and who witnessed the ceremony,
as well as by the principals. The mar-
riage occurred at the home of Rev.
S. M. Rice, who officiated with Rev.
Mr. Hanscom assisting.
The couple left on the Tuesday noon
train, and It was believed that Mr.
Cannon was en route to Shelbyville,
Ind.. his home, and Miss Pfiffner for
Stevens Point, Wis., her home. Mr.
Cannon has only been connected with
the local schools since September, dur-
ing which time his acquaintance with
Miss Pflffer, who has. taught here for
seven years, was made. Nothing was
known here of their intentions, until
Wednesday, w^hen word was received
here from Duluth. Rev. Mr. Hanscom,
who was In Duluth at the time, was
requested to be present at the cere-
mony. The couple have returned and
are at present staying at the Glode
hotel. Many school organizations and
residents wished to welcome the couple
with a charivari, but were not ap-
prised of their return until too late.
The couple are very well and popu-
larly known here, and it Is expected
that they will continue to make their
home here after the close of the school,
in June.
EVELETH MINER BURIED.
Infant Daughter of Same City Is
Also Buried
Eveleth, Minn., April 16— (Special to
The Herald.) — The funeral of Jacob
Garr who died Wednesday after a long
illness, was held yesterday from the
Finnish Lutheran Concoidia church,
Rev Mr. P. C. Keranen officiating. The
deceased was a miner, and had resided
here for two years, coming from Michi-
gan. He was 23 years of age and is sur-
vivd by his wife and an 18-month-old
daughter. Interment was made at
Grenwood cemetery, Virginia.
The funeral of Prank, the 6-montn-
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gersic of
the Adams location, who died Thurs-
day after a long illness, was held from
the Holy Family Catholic church yes-
terday afternoon, with Rev. Father M.
Bllban officiating. Interment was made
at Virginia.
— . ♦ '
Brought to Poor Farm.
Eveleth, Minn., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Frank Ottow, a lumber-
jack who was picked up by the police
Tuesday suffering with rheumatism,
and who has been confined in the city
jail was taken to Duluth yesterday,
where he will be sent to the poor farm.
He is about 65 years old and in a crip-
pled condition. ^
Diea In Hibblne Honpltal.
Hibbing, Minn., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Mrs. Sophia Jaglowskl,
a resident of the Shenango location at
Chisholm, died at a Hibbing hospital
Friday of blood poisoning. The body
was snipped to the former home of the
deceased at Willow Springs, Minn. Mrs.
Jaglowskl leaves a husband and three
children.
• — •
Runa With BleedinK Hand.
Buhl, Minn.. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — With his hand bleeding
from a cut he sustained while chopping
wood, Barney Bragg, who was injured
a mile from town yesterday ran here
to the hospital leaving a trail of blood
and had the hand treated at the hos-
pital. He will llT*.
Ing the outcome of the race between
the marching forces. If the insur-
rectos arrive first and attack, it is the
opinion they will take Juarez. On the
other hand, should Col. Robago arrive
ahead of the rebels it is predicted the
insurrectos will be unsuccessful or
abandon the attempt without any
fighting whatever. If both forces ar-
rive simultaneously it is expected that
one of the hottest battles of the pres-
ent revolution will be fought and that
El Paso will be in more danger than
Douglas when Agua Prieta was at-
t£lcIC6d
While the garrison at Juarez Is
making preparations. Gen. Navarro,
tlie federal commander, professes to
have no information as to whether the
rebels are near Juarez. However, his
men are digging trenches and scan-
ning the surrounding country from
housetops and other vantage points
and waiting the arrival of Col. Ro-
bago's force.
♦^
Will Protect American CHIca.
W^ashlngton. April 15.— 'The battle of
Agua Prieta and Its resultant loss of
American lives and damage to Property
has riveted the attention of the Ameri-
can government to the situation along
the entire Southern frontier.
The representations, which the state
department so far has made to the
Mexican government have been Of ja
precautionary and warning character
The question of indemnity for the loss
of life and property at Douglas has not
yet been raised. That Is a matter for
the future. It Is pointed out that the
pressing need at this time is to see
that no American settlement is ex-
posed to danger from either federal or
rebel bullets. ^ , .
Supplementing Its first representa-
tions in regard to the border situation,
the state department today requested
the Mexican government to extend pro-
tection to the Canal Development com-
pany, an American concern, whose sup-
plies at Mexican, Cal.. according to re-
ports received here, are threatened
with destruction by insurgents. It is
on this plant that the Imperial valley
of California depends for Its water sup-
ply. According to official Information
here there are between 500 and 700 fed-
eral soldiers In the neighborhood of
Mexican, and it is confidently expected
that the Mexican government will or-
der an adequate guard to the scene.
Surprlaed In London.
London, April 15. — The news cabled
here from Washington that a force of
marines with a Maxim gun from the
British warship Shearwater landed last
Tuesday at San Quentln, Lower Cali-
fornia, to protect that town against an
attack of Mexican insurgents, came as
a complete surprise to the British for-
eign office. Nothing whatever has
been heard regarding the incident, was
the statement given out this morning
by the secretary In charge of the for-
The admiralty similarly disclaims any
knowledge of the landing of a British
force at the Mexican town, though it
U admitted that the Shearwater was
expected to call at San Qtientin en
route from La Paz, Mex., which port
the warship left April 3, bpijnd for
San Diego. The admiralty officials say
that when Capt. Vivian commander of
the Shearwater, reported his arrival at
San Diego, he made no mention of the
San Quentln Incident.
-^
Britlata Land at Sam Quentln.
Washington, April 15. — A force of
thirtv men and a Maxim gun from the
British man-of-war Shearwater were
landed at San Quentln, Mex., to protect
that town against a threatened attack
of Insurgents. The revolutionary move-
ment however, did not materialize, and
the Britishers and the gun were with-
drawn. This, the first actual landing
of foreign forces on Mexican soil In
connection with the present revolution,
was reported to the state department
yesterday in a telegram frona American
Consul Schumacker at Ensenada. The
telegram did not state just when the
landing occurred. , _, ^ *,
When all danger to San Quentln
from the insurgents had passed, the
Shearwater sailed for Ensenada, where
it arrived yesterday, and its comman-
der advised the American consul of the
action he had taken at San Quentin
for the safety of the town, San Quen-
tln is a port of Lower Calltornia, 125
miles south of Ensenada.
Arrangements are nearly complete
for Consul Schumacker to make the
trip from Ensenada to Alamo to in-
The Tempcratnrca,
Following were the hlghei-t tempera-
tures for twenty-four houis and the
vestlgate the plight of th« American
women and children who are held
prisoners there. Some qu?stlon was
raised by the Mexican government as
to whether the Journey would be a safe
undertaking for the American official.
In view of the fact that the territory
was largely occupied by insurgents.
The state department also was ad-
vised that the revolutionists had oc-
cupied Cuatla, near Puebla. and Far-
aiso, In the state of Tabasco.
Kansas City . . 52
KnoxvUle 70
lA Crosse
Loul«vUle 62
Madison 52
>Iarguett« 46
Medicine Bat . 50
Memphis 58
Miles City 50
Milwaukee 54
HJitii. Ixw. .
52 44 , Mlnnolcsa
34 Mo(ier..% ...
48 I Montgomery
24 I Mniitreal
30 iMiK.rhead i*
32 'New Orleans 84
48 New YorJt 58
34 NVrth PUtte 52
28 I OklaJic ma 53
64 ; Omaha 59
40 Tarry Sound 44
66 iriioonix 80
2e 1 Pierre 52
34iPlUi>bJrK «e
20 Port -Arthur 44
28 Portland. Or 64
;^^ Prince Albert 42
25 Qu'Appelle 40
i4 HalcieU '0
4(1 IUl«i<l City 48
30 Roseburg 68
30 Roswell 64
72 Sf. Louis 52
36 St. Paul 52
30 Salt Lake City .. 42
6(i Kan Diego 78
30 San Frans'isco ... 68
26 Sa-.ilt Ste. Marie. 40
28 Seattle 54
SO .^lierldan 46
66 ShreteiKirt 86
;^ .sious City 58
38 Hpokane !^6
48 Kwift Current . . 46
34 , Tampa 86
46 > Toledo 56
32 WashlLgton 62
38 WiUlaton 46
28 Wliinemucca 50
46 Winnipeg S4
28 iLCllowstcoe SO
36)
2a
i«
6i
3«
2a
6«
50.
IS
4ft
3S
4«
34
40
2a
4S
2i
ea
30
3a
40
44
30
33
50
SO
3<
31
3»
5«
30
20
68
tl
2»
M
a
NOTICE!
I resbarpen all kind* of Sitfety Ra»or
Bladen — aatiafactlon Kuaranteed or your
money back. All doublc-edKe bladea, 3
cents eacbi all Mingle edgre bladea, 2*4
centa eacbj bollow ground HatMlemt 10
■ad IS cents eaeh.
R. E. STEl^'ART,
222 'West Superior Street.
For Mall Orders, Include Postage.
RUMOR SAYS DlLUTKl
MAN WILL WIN MRS.
BELMONT ^S BRIDE
(Continued from page 1.)
club at a meeting to take place in the
near future.
•Hitherto, It was known, Dr. Jack-
ola had spoken only at the various
branches of the Political Elquallty as-
sociation, of which Mrs. Belmont Is
president and interest was aroused
by the report of his intention to ad-
dress the Woman's Suffraire club.
"An American reporter called at
the Hotel Marseilles to as* Dr. Jack-
ola about It. He admitted that he
had addressed no suffraga organiza-
tions but the branches o;' Mrs. Bel-
mont's association, but ha explained
that this was due only to the fact
that he had known Mrs. IBelmont for
two years, while the leaders of the
other organizations had beon strangers
to him.
Does Not Deny the V.nnior.
mance .was dropped. The reporter
"He promptly replied that that was
seized it and ventured tt. ask the
doctor if there could be a;iy basis for
a rumor that he had been making his
addresses — not the equal sjHrage kind
— to the noted leader of the cause.
"Finally Dr. Jackola admitted he
a personal matter and h'j could not
answer the question.
" 'Finally Dr. Jackola admitted he
could not deny that such (i, rumor was
well founded. He absoluiely refused
to say another word."
IN FAVOR OF RECIPROCITY
(Continued from page 1.)
gratlon bill affecting all Mongolian
people was introduced today by
Representative Hayes oi California.
The bill provides that all laws now
in force prohibiting or regulating the
coming of Chinese or persons of
Chinese descent In the United States
be made to apply to Japanese,
Koreans, Tartars, Malays, Afghans,
East Indians, Lascars, Hindoos and
all persons of Mongolian or Asiatic
race or extraction.
It is further provided by the bill
that all persons affected by the pro-
posed law now in the United States
other than those engaged as teachers,
students, merchants, bankers, profes-
sional men or persons touring the
country for pleasure, mv st within a
year after the passage of the act,
apply to the secretary of commerce
and labor for a t:ertiflcate of resi-
dence. All such person,} who have
not a certificate of residence will be
arrested and be subj-jct to de-
portation.
The bill was referred to the com-
mittee on foreign affairs.
PUBLIC BONDS ISSUED
IN MINNESOTA TO BE
EXEMPT FROM TAXES
erant physicians pay 1600 license.
By Senator Clague — Appropriating
fS.OOO to create the Alexander Ram-
sey state park in Redwood county.
By Senator Stebblns — Providing a
penalty if railroads do not settle
claims for freight over-charges within
six months.
By Senator Stebblns — Giving the rail-
road and warehouse commission au-
thority over track scales and power
to order them Installed.
• * •
A fight arose over the bill by Sen-
ator J. D Sullivan allowing railroad
men and commercial travelers to vote
away from home on certificates from
their home precincts, and the bill was
laid over.
« • *
The house took up the miscellaneous
appropriation bill .and passed it with
some amendmentfi. Representative C.
H. Warner got an amendment adopted
appropriating $15,000 for schools on
Indian reservations where the taxable
property is not sufficient to support
schoolP. Representative Mattson added
$12,000 to pay state drainage assess-
ments in Northestern Minnesota.
• • *
The state-wide primary bill is a spe-
cial order In the house this afternoon.
• * «
Up to this day 154 bills have become
laws and of these 83 are senate bills
and 71 house bills. ^ ^
STILLMAN H. BINGHAM.
RHEUMATISM
Remarkable Michigan External
Remedy wliieh is raring thou-
sands sent TO TRY FREE
JUST MAIL MY COUPON
Don't take medicine to draw out
impurities but help Nature expel
them through the pores in her own
simple w^ay.
FREDERICK DTEB, Correspondlnf See*?.
Send my coupon to<l«y. Return msil will brlnt yon
a regular $1.00 pair of Matie FMt Drafts, tlw gn»X
Mlchlean remedy wlUch Js curing thousanUs. TO TRY
FREE. Then If you are satUfJed with th« benefit
rectlved send us One Pollar. If not, send nothing.
Y«ti decide and we Uke your word. Magic Foo«
Drafts are curing vmmkm* /'
R b • u m • t lam !■ -^ '''''■■^
erery form — Mnteu-
lar, Selatic, Lum-'
kafo, Qout, etc., no
matter In what
sUge of progress
or liow many pUyslclans have f.nilcd. The slmpw
principles underlying ihls wonderful tre-tnitnt ar«
fully explained In our Illustrated free book. Don't
ilelay, hut send the coupon now — today — wfclU ywi
can. Scad iio mouey — }uat the coupon.
— This SI Coupon FREE -
Good for a re«uUr $1.00 pair of Magic Foc-t
Urafta to be seiil Free to ta («■ explained
above) to
---'♦
(Continued from puge 1.)
roads to protect crossings with roads
and streets. ,, , , .^.
By Senator Proshaug— Making Itin-
Name.
Additss.
MaU thla coupoq to Magic Foot Draft Com-
pany, KB 15 Omer Bldg., Jactaou. Mich.
w
"•*
*i
•"ll
I
If
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'#
4^
i
*i i«fci
I**
TCTBTI
•»«=
Saturday,
DULUTH HERALD.
functions
and lenten
has observed Lent
than In previous
churches outside of the
Kplscopal churches have
meotinRs than formerly.
A series of noon meetings has been
given at the Young Women's Christian
Association building during the forty
davs, on Wednesdays. The pastors
from the various churches In the city
have given short talks before these
meetings which have been well at-
tended. The guilds of the churches
have taken advantage of the social lull
to do some extra sewing and have had
sales of home cooking and plain sewing
which have netted them quite a sum
for their Easter offerings to their
churches.
Most of the travelers have returned
from Southern climes and the Easter
vacations In most of the schools and
colleges are over and the students are
settling down once more for the finish-
ing stretch of the school year. The
students who have been home from
tile University of Minnesota are re-
luming tod.-^y and tomorrow to Min-
neapolis and the teachers in the pub-
lic schools here who have been out of
the city for the past week spending
their vacations with friends ana rela-
tives will return today or tomorrow
to resume their school duties Monday
morning.
Informal Jiffairs
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nolte of Wood-
land entertained at bridge Saturday
and Monday evenings at their home.
The game was played at four tables
each time.
* • *
The members of the Girls' Bridge
rlub finished their season with an
Orpheum party Saturday afternoon, fol-
lowed by a lunch at the Spalding. Mrs.
M. L. Parker and Mr.s. Feter McAlpine
chaperoned the members, who were:
Misses —
Grace Parker.
Charlotte Crowley
Helf n Harbison,
Constance WIl-
llard,
• « *
Miss Effle Burr of West Duluth was
hostess at a birthday party Saturday
afternoon in celebration of her 11th
birthday anniversary.
The afternoon was spent in playing
games after which a lunch was sei-ved
by Mrs. William Burr, assisted by Mrs.
Oliver Doiron. The guests were:
Misses
home. The game was played at nine
tables and tiie favors were awarded to
Mrs. C. A. Bronson and Mrs. Henry
Bridgeman.
• «
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hnebach enter-
tained at four tables of Ave hundred
Monday evening at their home In the
Portland flats. The favors were won
by Mrs. B. W. Hintz and Dr. William
Konkler.
• • •
Mrs. R. E. Moore of 42* Twelfth ave-
nue east entertained at dinner Wednes-
day evening for her daughter, Cora.
Covers were laid for:
Misses —
Marianne Will- Mattie Mousse,
lamson I>orothy Gordon,
Hazel Roberts, Florence McKay,
• • «
Mrs. Robert Forbes of Hunter's
Park entertained at cards Wednesday
alternoon in compliment to Mrs. Alfred
Baker. Five hundred was played at
five tables and the pi^es were won by
IS. Eyforth and
April 15, 1911.
Joe Stevenson,
Ai^ong
guests
John Trwln,
William Cooley,
James Magle,
Peter Grant, '
Roderick Mc-
Kenzle.
Martin HofT.
Myrtle McKenzie.
Helen Mo Alpine.
Alva Pattenaude,
Annie Hugo,
Ella Gamble.
Ellen BIsley.
Marion Harris^
Mildred Lee,
Rachel Burr.
Mr. Ernest Mitch-
en.
many beautiful
Mrs. Jack
were:
Mesdames —
Fred Cosford.
Charles McPher-
rln,
John Nafe,
Daniel Ryan,
Jack Franey,
Bruno Eyforth,
Jack Burnett,
Misses —
Florence Forbes, Susan Irwin,
Ruth Osborne Joe Stevenson.
After the games the guests were en-
tertained with violin numbers by Miss
Hazel Forbes and vocal numbers by
Mrs. John Nafe and Ml»a Florence
Forbes.
* * *
The Northwestern Whist club was
entertained by Mrs. Anna Slversen. 116
Twenty-first avenue west, Tuesday
evening. Cards were played at three
tables and the favors were won by
Mrs. B. Rudd, Mrs. J. Wold,
G. H. Lord.
* « *
Miss Sophie St. Clair gave an infor-
mal afternoon tea Tuesday at ner
home In honor of Miss A»ice Miller of
St. Paul, her guest.
effectively decorated with tea roses,
carnations and ferns.
The bride wore a pretty white lin-
gerie gown and carried bride's roses .n
a shower arrangement. She was at-
tended by Miss Claire Beler as brides-
maid, who wore pink and carried a
bouquet of pink carnations.
Burdlck Krelwitz was best man.
Mr. and Mrs. Eisenbrandt left last
evening for a trip and will be at home
after May 15 at 518 Lake avenue north.
* • •
Invitations have been received from
Mrs. James Watkins of Minneapolis
to the wedding of her niece, Miss
Beatrice Palmer, formerly a resident
of Duluth, to Jayson P. Root of Min-
neapolis. The event will take place
on Tuesday evening of next week at
the Church of the Redeemer, Inglehart
Place. Minneapolis, Minn.
• « *
The wedding of Miss Gladys Recs,
daughter of Mrs. Stephen G. Rees. to
Chauncey Ray Pattinson took place
yesterday morning at* the manse
of the Pilgrim Congregational
church. Rev, Alexander Milne read
the service at 8:15 o'clock, after
which Mr. and Mrs. Pattinson left for a
wedding trip to Montana, where Miss
Rees' relatives live. They will be gone
about three weeks and upon their re-
turn will be at home at 1218 East Fifth
street, May 15.
Mr. Pattinson has been connected
with the water and light department of
the city for several years.
Miss Sherwood and Arthur Kreltter
were the attendants at the wedding.
The bride was married In her travel-
ing suit.
Personal IIKntion
Sixteenth
:!rom a
East Sec-
frlends in
MISS CONSTANCE DAY.
Announcement has been made of
the engagement of Miss Constance
Day, daughter of Frank A. Day, for-
mer Democratic leader in Minnesota,
and Everett Tawney, son of the ex-
congressman. Both of these young
people are well known In Duluth.
They spent last Sunday here as the
guests of friends. Miss Day is teach-
ing in the Virginia public schools
this year and frequently
luth. She is spending
visits in Du-
her vacation
NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE
BENEFIT APRIL19,8P.M.
Y. M. C. A. BTmnaslum. Ticket* 2V. Orrhestra.
I>anl«l Boone boys In "Kir Oareth' of Askney."
Vocal solos. Junior Y. M. C. /.. boya. Trained
animals. Readings. Y. W. C. A. Uaket t*U.
Selma Ring.
Marguerite Gib-
bons,
Ethel Glbbon.«.
Marie Genevau.
Elizabeth Mitchell
Elnore Cashln.
Miss Burr received
presents.
• « •
Mrs W. F. Mernian of 509 East Third
street entertained at a prettily appoint-
ed dinner of ten covers Sunday at
her home In compliment to her sister,
Mrs. J. E. Cummtnps of Chlsholm. who
has been her guest, and Mr. and Mrs.
Casey and Mr. and Mrs. O'Xell, also of
that cltv, who were guests in Duluth
for the week-end. Carnations were
used as a centerpiece for the table.
« • •
Mr. and Mrs. William O'Malley . of
1502 London road, entertained at four.,
tables of cards Saturday evening at
their home. Prizes were won by Mrs.
F J. Small, Mrs. C. D. Fraln, Frank J.
Small and E. Stebner. Those present
were:
Messrs. and Mesdames —
by Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. McFadden
gave a cabin party Monday evening at
the Wa-Pse-Ke club cabin on Lester
river for Miss Irene Krantz. who was
the guest of Miss Louana Phelps this
week.
Miss Alice Laskey of 1210 West First
street entertained a few of her friends
from 2 to 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon
in honor of her fifth birthday. The aft-
ernoon was spent in playing games,
after which luncheon was served to the
following guests:
Misses — „ ,
Pearl Rud, Agnes Ruden,
Gladys Banhke, Angle Kruse,
Helen Carney,
* « «
Miss Hazel Young entertained
Wednesday evening at her home, 221
North Twenty-seventh avenue west in
honor of Dorothv and Harry Llpton of
Holyoke. Mass. The rooms were pret-
tily decorated with yellow and white.
The guests were:
Frank J. Small,
J. Kennell,
J. Mulhern.
Charles J. Knox,
E. Stebner.
C. D. Fraln,
A. Segers,
Misses —
Rose Bertrand, Lettice Elliott.
« • «
Dr. and Mrs. William Konkler en-
tertained at a dinner of twelve covers
Monday evening at their home, 418 West
Fourth street. Carnations were ef-
fectively used In decorating the table.
• * •
The Woman's Relief Corps met
Thursday afternoon at Memorial hall.
Miss Barbara Samposn was hostess
during the social hour which followed
the regular meeting.
• « •
A crowd of young people chaperoned
Fannie Brlggs,
Gladys Bl.shop,
Dorothy Young,
Fay Abbett,
Verna Anderson,
Ruth Olson.
Robert Smith,
William Le Claire,
Dwight Sidell,
Ralph Hanson,
Bert Munson,
Fred Peterson.
A Skm of Beauty is a Joy Forever.
D
*.= »-!
R. T. FELIX QOURAUD'S
Oriental Cream or
Majical Baautifler.
Removes Tan, Pimples. Freck-
les, Moth Patches, Rash and
Skin Diseases, anJ every
blemisJi on beauty. anJ de-
fies detection. It has ktocd
the test of 54 yeai5, and is so
harmless we taste it to be
sure it is properly made. Ac-
cept no countetfcli of similar
name. Dr. L. A. Sayre said
to a lady of the haurton (a
patiemi: "As vou ladles will
use them. I recoamend
•GOURAl"D'S CRHAM' as
ibe least harmful of ail the
sliin preparations." For sale
ly all druegists and Fancy
G<«tls Dralers In the I'niMd
Sutes, Canada and Hurope.
FerC T. B«»kins. Pr»».. 376reat J«ii«« St. New York
Mlsses-
Frelda Hanson,
Mary May Bishop,
Dorothy Lipton,
Hazel Young,
Dorothy Lucille.
Evelyn Smith.
Margaret Nelson,
Messrs —
Clyde Ralph,
Harold Carr,
Herbert Seer,
Harry Llpton,
Fred Grogan,
Arthur White,
Dolorous Hoyt,
« * *
Miss Nellie McFadden, who Is home
from the University of Minnesota, was
the guest of honor at a bridge party
given Thursday evening by Dr. and Mrs.
Charles A. McFadden of Lakeside. Four
tables were used for the game and red
carnations were the flowers.
« « •
Mrs. Edward Cook Bradley was host-
ess at an informal afternoon tea yester-
day afternoon at her home, 1922 East
Fourth street In compliment to Miss
Miller of St. Paul, who Is the guest of
Miss Sophie St. Clair. About fifteen
guests were entertained.
« « •
Miss Ida Persons entertained at a
linen shower at her home 5005 Tio^-a
street Monday evening for Miss Ellen
Renstrom, whose marriage to C. A. Per-
sons will take place the latter part
of this month. Those present weie:
in Albert Lea, Minn., this week.
The wedding will take place in
July at Fairmont, Minn., and they
will locate at Seattle, where Mr.
Tawney will have charge of the Pa-
cific coast custom house inspection.
He has been in the employ of the
treasury department in the capacity
of tariff expert and has made his
headquarters in St. Paul. He was or-
dered to New York for special work
this week and will be there about two
weeks before returning to St. Paul.
honor of his 17th birthday. He was
presented with a handsome watch.
* • «
Mrs. Wallace Piatt Welbanks of 2419
I-:ast Fourth street entertained this
afternoon at an Orpheum party for her
daughter, Jcanette, followed by a
luncheon served at her home. Jonquils
were prettily arranged on the luncheon
table. The guests, were:
Ml.«<ses —
Dorothy Rowe.
Dorothy Patton,
Katherlne Lutes,
L>orothy Moore,
Marlon Dight,
Mary Winton,
Beryl Wallace,
Charlotte Dun-
ning,
« « •
Miss Hedwig Benson was pleasantly
surprised Tuesday afternoon at her
home, 1916 M'est Second street. The
afternoon was spent with games and
a dainty lunch was served at which
covers were laid for:
Misses —
endagemciits
The engagement of Miss Katherine
Sullivan, daughter of Mrs. J. J. Sulli-
van. 210 West Second stieet. to Hugh
Brown, also of this city, has been an-
nounced .
Margaret Hoyt,
Marlon Lutes,
Wlnnlfred Par-
sons,
Catherine Mac-
Gregor,
Frances Winton,
Elizabeth Horr.
Have your Coronet Braids and
Switches made into the pop-
ular six-strand braid.
KNAUF SISTERS,
24 WEST SrPERKm ST.
Second door from Giddlngs.
&tm ?Mni
The Minnesota Naval Militia,
Division will give a^ dancing
Monday evening
liirge number of
sent out for
J:i8v Johnson,
Wlletta Cole,
Nomle Johnson.
Bernice Stewer-
wold.
Gwendolyn Cole,
Blanch Benson.
Florence Messier,
Hedwig Benson.
The Misses Lillian OLsson, Hilda Nel-
son and Johanna Miller entertained the
junior league at a birthday party last
Wednesday evening. Those present
were:
Elva Olsson,
Tracey Krause,
Esther Olson.
Olga LindabI,
Arthur Newman,
Albert Bauers,
Paul Olson,
Ruben Paulson.
Misses:
Viola
Ellen
Irene
Viola
Olga
Julia
Velna
Shelgren,
Ren.strom,
Jensen,
BJorkiund,
Johnson,
Bergqulst,
Frederick-
Have You Your
Easter Hat?
Our Fourth street location low-
ers our expenses. W^e give our
patrons the benefit.
MissFitz Patrick
902-
MILLINER
Kant Fourth Street.
/
ye Gifte 6uiiae
26 WEST SUPERIOR ST.
Buy yonr Easter cards early and
Rct your choice of our lovely se-
lection. Many beautiful designs in
hand-colored cards. Our baskets
and a host of other small articl-s
make splendid prizes or gifts.
Kalo Sllveri^are
Kalo Jewelry
son,
Ruth Johnson,
Hattie Wilson.
Kate Swanberg,
Stella Johnson,
Hepzibah Hag-
berg,
Astrid Sjostad,
Gertrude Fredln,
Mildred Berg-
quist,
Edith Frederick-
son,
Clara Person,
Selma SJolund,
Elizabeth Lund-
mark,
Hulda Landstrom,
Mesdames:
E. Nelson,
A. Henry,
Mildred Oman,
Gladys Rensirom,
Emma Black-
berg,
Hulda Paulson,
Vlvlenne Peter-
son,
Gertrude Olson,
Esther Beckman,
Hulda Skoglund,
Ruth Beckman,
Lena Skoglund,
Esther Johnson,
Anna Skoglund,
Ida Jacobson,
Hedwig Plerson,
Carrie Erlckson,
Anna Jacobson,
Agnes Jacobson,
"" " .Sjolund,
Hartlg,
Edlund,
Lindgren,
K. Erlck-
Freda
Lydia
Sarah
Tekla
Annie
son.
Misse
Mabel Nelson,
Dagny Zahk,
Flossy Hansen,
Gertrude Palni-
qulst,
Messrs. —
Laurence Essay,
Herbert Moeller,
Wilbur Walsh,
Dick Walsh,
Ernest Ruden,
• * *
Miss Susan Stryker and Miss Made-
line Miller gave a children's party
Thursday afternoon at the Glen Avon
Presbyterian church for the children of
the congregation.
• • *
Mrs. W. C. Sherwood of Woodland
was hostess at a rretty little luncheon
partv Tuesday at her nome in compli-
ment of her guest. Miss Janet Rankin
of Minneapolis, who Is visiting here
during her Easter vacation. She is
studying at .Smith college this year.
At the luncheon covers were laid for:
\1 f B g ^ n I
Elizabeth Olcott, Dorothy Olcott,
Madeline Miller, Susan Stryker,
Maude Matteson, Ramona Hoopes.
• • *
Mrs. H. L. Dresser, 16 South Nine-
teenth avenue east was hostess at
bridge Wednesday afternoon at her
at
the
E.
M.
*
wShelgren,
Persons.
• *
The members of the Adelphla society
were entertained Thursday evening at
the home of Mrs. M. L. Olander, 1019
North Fifty-ninth avenue west. A mu-
sical program was given and games
were played. There were twenty pres-
ent.
« « «
Master Stanley Laskey was pleasant-
ly surprised Wednesday afternoon at
his home, 1210 West First street, in
honor of his 15th birthday. He was
presented with a signet ring. The
evening was spent in playing games
and music, the favors being won by
Miss Esther Anderson and Master Nels
Neunder. Those present were:
Misses —
First
party
at the Armory. A
Invitations have been
the affair.
* ♦ *
Companv C Third infantr>', Minne-
sota National Guard, has invitations
out for a dancing party to be given
Wednesday evening or n»Tt week
the Armory. Those in cJarge
Ofticers-^W. O. Flodln,., captain; P.
H. Wood, first lieutenant; E. Hunker,
second lieutenant. ^ ,» x- »
Committee — Sergeant C. H. Foster,
chairman; Sergeant R. C. Nelson, Ser-
geant O. H. Sorenson; Cdrooral A. C.
Heller, Private C. A. Johnson
« « «
The Christian Endeavor Society of
the First Presbvterlan church will give
an Easter social next Wednesday even-
ing In the parlors of tl>« church.
« » •
Mrs. Robert Bruce Uggett has
left for Minneapolis to visit Mrs.
W. M. Liggett and other friends
there. Monday afternoon she will
read at a large oenefit card party
to be given at the Radisson hotel for
the Free Bed club for tne Thomas
hospital. Others who will have numbers
on the program will be Mrs. Frances
V^incent Covenv, Miss Ann De Witt
Cooke, Miss Dorothy Overnilre and Ber-
nard Ferguson. ,, „. ,
Mrs John G. McNutt and Mrs. Charles
E. Van Nest, who visited her here a
few weeks ago, have invitations out
for two bridge parties next week in
compliment to her.
• • *
The children of St. James orphanage,
who will sing the offertory at the high
mass at the Sacred Heart cathedral to-
morrow morning, will be the guests of
the girls of the cathedral high school
at an Easter luncheon tomorrow noon
In the cathedral high school building.
• « •
Invitations have been sent out by the
women of Trinity Pro-cathedral to the
members of the parish for a supper to
be served in the guild hall of the
church Monday evening. It will be
complimentary supper and will be
lowed by the annual parish
• « •
Mrs. William McGlll, 702 West Sev-
enth street, will entertain at bridge
Monday afternoon at the Webster tea
rooms.
« • *
President George Vincent of the Uni-
versity of Minnesota will be the guest
of honor at a reception on W"ednesday
afternoon at the Commercial club,
which Is being given for him In order
that the women of the city may meet
the new president of the University or
Minnesota.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Frick of 2231
East Second street have returned from
a trip to New York.
• • «
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Mather of Jack-
sonville, ria., are guests of Mr. and
Mrs. O. L. Mather, 201 South Twenty-
first avenue east.
• * •
Dr. J. B. Weston's little daughter,
Betty, was taken home from the con-
tagious hospital the first of the week,
where she has been ill with scarlet
fever.
• * *
Mrs. R. W. Daniels of 613 East Fifth
street is entertaining Mrs. French and
two sons of St. Paul.
• • *
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Hartman, 2400
East Superior street, returned Thurs-
day from New York city, where they
have been for the past ten days.
Mrs. George C. Stone of Twenty-
third avenue east and Superior street,
left Thursday for New lork
city, where she will be joined by Mr.
Stone, who has been spending the past
month in Augusta, Ga.
« • •
Mrs. J. L. Washburn and Miss Gene-
vieve Washburn have returned from a
trip abroad and are now at their win-
ter residence at Tryon, N. C. They
are expected back here about June 1.
M. Washburn has returned from his
Southern stay.
• • «
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hoyt of 313
South Twenty-first avenue east have
as their guests, Mr. Hoyt's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. A. V. Hoyt of Minneapolis,
for a week.
• • *
Mrs. G. G. Hartley and family of
1305 East Superior street returned
Wednesday afternoon from the Hartley
sugar camp near Coleraine, Minn.,
where they have been spending a few
weeks.
• • •
Miss Ray Abraham and Miss Doro-
thy Loeb left Sunday for Minneapo-
lis, where they will be the guests of
honor at several social functions, this
week.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Fitzslmmons and
children, Mary. Charles and Edward,
of 1431 East First street have returned
from a two months' stay In California.
• • •
Mrs. W. H. Burris and Miss Frances
Burris returned Wednesday from Cal-
ifornia, where they have been
spending the past two months.
• • •
Mrs. J. B. Mlddlecoff and daughter
Lucille returned Thursday from a three
weeks' visit In Houston, Texas. Judge
Mlddlecoff and son Hudson have been
home several days.
Paul, 3 West Superior street 'or sev-
earl weeks, left Wednesday evening for
taelr home in Saginaw, Mich.
• • •
Miss Sara Ter Horst of 14 Chester
terrace has returned from H short
visit in Milwaukee. Wis.
• * •
Mrs. Sewall Chandler visited friends
In Minneapolis this week.
• • •
Miss Janet Rankin of Minneapolis Is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. 3. Sher-
wood of Woodland during hei Easter
vacation. She attends Smith college.
• • *
Mrs. H. W. Hanson of 513
avenue east has returned
month's stay In California.
• * •
Mrs. Q. T. Ogllvle and daughter Amy
of 4218 East Superior street, a.-e visit-
ing friends In Wentworth, Wl»i.
• • •
Misses Addle and Lou Kilchll of 212
Thirteenth avenue east, were In Min-
neapolis for a few days this week vis-
iting relatives.
• • •
Miss Vera Stephens of 216
ond street was the guest of
Minneapolis this week,
• • *
Miss Bazle Mclntyre of 1610 East
Superior street returned Tuesday from
Minneapolis, where she spent the week
end with friends.
• • *
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Miller of Park
Point have a's their guests Mr. and Mrs.
J. B. Carlisle of Eveleth, Minn.
• • *
Miss Beatrice Ole was home this
week from Albert Lea, Minn., where
she Is attending school this yjar.
• • •
Mrs C. D Trott and son Dudley of
104 South Sixteenth avenue east are
visiting In St. Paul.
• • *
Mrs. G. T. Ogllvle and daughter Amy
of 421S East Superior street ere visit-
ing friends at Wentworth, V.'is., this
week.
• « *
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Oestreicl. arrived
from Cleveland, Ohio, Tuesday to at-
tend the funeral of E. A. Ciestreich,
which took place Wednesday. They
will return home Saturday.
• • *
Mr. and Mrs. Don Loranger of 124
West Fourth street left Tuesday for
a visit in St. Paul and Minneapolis.
• • *
Miss Nettle Dlrr of Ontonagon, Mich.,
Is visiting her mother, Mrs. C. F. Dirr
of 19 West Fourth street,
• • «
Mrs. C. C. Huebsch of 516 East First
street has returned from a month's
visit In Minneapolis and Eaa Claire,
Wis.
• • •
Miss Proxle Kusnlerek has left for
Ivanhoe, Minn., to visit relatives for a
few weeks.
• • «
Dr. W. A. McClaran and iton,
vlUe, have returned from a s lort
In Minneapolis.
• * *
A. H. Crasweller has returned
a trip to California,
« * *
Harlow Tlscher of 913 Ea? t Eighth
street returned Thursday fron, the Ohio
Northern university- at Ada, Ohio,
• « *
Miss Alice Miller of St. Paul is visit-
ing Miss Sophie St. Clair of 2) Twelfth
avenue east this week.
« • *
Miss Hazel Aske of Lakeside Is the
est of friends in Minneapolis for a
weeks.
• « *
Mrs. H. W. Coffin of Hunter's Park
has returned from Manka- o, Minn.,
where she has been visiting h<r mother.
• • *
George B. Bingham and son
of Winona, Minn., visited
in Duluth and Superior this
MINNESOTA }
HISTORICAL j
Mel-
vllst
from
f:ueg
ew
Mrs.
Earle
friends
week.
Mr.
Kent
from
They
New
N. J.
* * *
and Mrs. C. G. Dlckernan of 55
road returned Tuesday morning
a two months' trip In ihe South,
visited In Pas Christian Miss.,
Orleans, La., and Atlantic City,
Mrs. C.
daughter,
street, left
they will
a
fol-
meeting.
OleddiNds
Edith Robinson,
Lillian Page,
Alice McFadden.
Esther Anderson,
Martha Berg,
EUaZahl,
Mollle Robinson,
Masters —
John McPhail,
Ernest Watts,
Joseph Huttle,
Nels Neander,
Harold Berrldge,
Earl Manke,
* • *
George Fredrickson of 127 Third ave-
nue west, was pleasantly surprised
Sunday by a number of his friends in
John Burke,
Elmer Wahl.
Rueben Peterson,
Lester Peterson,
Edwin Linquist.
The Nipple Can't
Collapse on the
TIEARIESS"
NURSING BOHLE
This ridge, on side of neck
absolutely prevents it. by
allowing air to enter, under
nipple, as milk is drawn out.
Preven'ta CoUc — Baby has no chance to
swallow air.
EaMily Clea«ed — Owing to the shape of
bottle, and the wide mouth.
Any Good Mpple fits it.
Full directions with every bottle. See
that you get them.
lOe Eacli— At All DrusglKtM.
F. H. RHENO COMPANY,
3109 Fifth AvcBue. Chleaso, 111.
The wedding of Miss Inga Kirkemo
of this city to August Bowman of Min-
neapolis, took place Tuesday morning
at the probate court. Judge Gilpin per-
forming the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs.
Bowman will live in Minneapolis.
• * «
Announcement has been made of the
wedding of A. H. Durdin and Miss
Selma Gustafson, which took place to-
day in Virginia, Minn. Both young
people are well known in the city. Miss
Gustafson has resided in the West end
for some time and Mr. Durdin Is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Durdin
of 1811 South street. They will make
their home in Grand Rapids, Minn.
« * «
Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Thomas of 1715
West First street, announce the mar-
riage of their daughter Marie, to Alex
McRae. The event took place Wednes-
day afternoon. Mr. McRae is a clerk
in the office of the Standard Oil com-
pany and will make his Jionoe here with
his bride.
« • •
Miss Adele Elizabeth Krelwitz be-
came th«» bride of Benjamin Klsen-
brandt at a pretty home wedding Tues-
day evening at the home of her parent."^,
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Krelwitz, 1820 East
Seventh street.. Rev. Robert Yost read
I the cereraonv before oiJy relatives and
Immediate friends, lae rooms were
Mr. and Mrs. J. Uno Sebenius have
returned from French Lick Springs,
where they have been for two weeks.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Agatln of 2402
East Fifth street, have returned from
a ten days' visit at French Lick Springs.
• • •
Miss Jessie Leads left Wednesday
evening for Montreal, from which
£olnt she will sail for her home in
ondon, Eng.
« • •
Mrs. J. N. McKlndley and Mrs. Kath-
erlne Van Loo left Wednesday evening
over the Soo line for Washington, D. C.
• • •
Mrs. Frederick J. Patton of 1607 East
Fourth street left Thursday afternoon
for Minneapolis for a few days. She will
spend Ea.«ter at St. Mary's hall at
Faribault with relatives and will re-
turn to Duluth next week.
• • •
Mrs. T. L. Chapman of 1430 East
Third street left Thursday for a visit in
Minneapolis.
W. Bridenthal and little
Louise of 1513 East Second
Thursday for Chicago, where
Join Mr. Bridenthal.
« * •
Mrs. F. C. Berry of Chester Terrace
has as her guest her daughter, Mrs.
Harry Johnson of Coleraine for ten
days.
• • •
Miron Bunnell and Max Pulford re-
turned yesterday from Williams col-
lege to spend a week at their homes.
» • •
Kenneth Braden, who has been study-
ing at the University of Michigan,
spent the week with his parents. Dr.
and Mrs. A. J. Braden.
• • •
Mrs. Henry Turrlsh and daughter
Vivian of 403 East Second street, have
returned from the East where they
visited Miss Marie Turrlsh, who is
studying music in New York city and
Miss Nannie who is studying at Miss
Bennett's scnool.
• » •
Mrs. E. H. Smith of 2319 East First
street left Wednesday for Chicago to
Join Mr. Smith, who has been In New
York. ^ ^ ,
A M. Washburn, who Is studying
law at the state university, spent his
Easter vacation in Duluth with his
father, J. L. Washburn, at the Spalding.
• • «
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. McManus left Tues-
day evening for Chicago. Mr. McManus
will go on to Madison for a few days
on business and Mrs. McManus and
Miss Rhea will remain In Chicago until
his return.
« • «
Mrs. Angus Cameron of 1829^ East
Superior street, returned Thursday from
Eau Claire. Wis., where she has been
visiting relatives for the past ten days.
• « •
and Mrs. John Jackson who have
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
* • •
Mrs. J. G. Scott and children and
Mrs. P. E. Aim of Grand Mar ils, Minn.,
are visiting their sister, 3£rs. G. N.
Stevenson, In Lakeside.
« • •
Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Northrop, Jr., of
the Barrlngton apartments i^iU leave
next week for their new home in Min-
neapolis.
Mrs. Robert Morris Seymour of 2008
East Fifth street has returned from a
short trip to Minneapolis.
* « *
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Baldwin and
children of 1529 East Second street
have gone to Tryon, N. C, w here they
will spend a month.
* * •
Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Myerj: returned
Thursday evening from a short trip
to St. PauL
« * *
Mr. and Mrs. Waller
William Carr arrived In
day and are guests at
Mr. and Mrs. Carr
W. Carr and
Dulath Thurs-
the Spalding.
Just returned
have
from their wedding trip In Europe,
where they have been since their niar-
rlage last October. Mrs. Can was Miss
Blanche Wlnnlfred McCarthy of
buque, Iowa,
• w •
the
guelt of MLsa. .Bertha G.JCleworth of
317 Cast 'SimittieVt. Shfc will return
Suniay. Miss Rood wad formerly a
teacrrer-rrmre'trffBnosrcrhools here.
« * *
Mr. and Mrs. James G. Keough of
1186 Lincoln avenue, St. Paul, Minn.,
are in Duluth to spend Easter.
• * *
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Shaw of 721 East
Second street have as their guests Mrs^
James Spence and children, Mary and
Gordon Spence, of London, Ont.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. D. B. McDonald and
daughter, Margaret, of 1831 East Third
street are home after taking a trip to
Memphis, Birmingham and Hot Springs.
• • *
Mrs. R. Henry of 1904 East Fourth
street has as her guest her cousin.
Miss Marguerite Warner of Virginia,
Minn.
• * •
Mrs. C. F. Haley of 2401 East Fifth
street has as her guest her sister, Mrs.
Emmett Jordan of Seattle, Wash., who
is on her way to New York city. She
will remain several weeks.
• * •
Miss Julia Peterson of the normal
school left last evening for Tower
to spend the week-end with relatives.
• * «
Miss Florence Hall of 1220 West Su-
perior street left today for Big Falls,
Minn., for a two weeks' visit with
relatives.
• • *
Mrs. Edith Atkinson and Miss Frank
Curren of Lakeside have left for their
farm at Wrenshall. Minn., where they
will spend the summer.
• • •
W. O. Francisco was in Duluth
Thursday from Saginaw, Minn.
• • •
Mrs. Charles H. Fugle of 629 Forty-
third .avenue east is expecting her sis-
ter, Mrs. H. F. Baker of St. Paul to
arrive tomorrow to spend Easter here
as her guest.
• • •
Fred Smith of Eveleth arrived yes-
terday to spend Easter with his
father, S. L. Smith of 4309 McCullocU
street. Lakeside.
Miss Flora Flett. who is v'sltinK
Miss Llna Goodell of Jacksonville, Fla..
motored to Atlantic Beach and was a
guest at a house party there during
the automobile races. Miss Goodell
was formerly a resident of Duluth.
• • *
Mrs. W. B. MacMahon and two sons
have gone to St. Paul for a months
visit with Mrs. MacMahon's mother.
• • •
Slgur W. Lonegren, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joeeph Lonegren of 1130 East
Third street, has left for Newport. R.
I. where he ha« enlisted at the
United States Navy Training station
for three years.
• • •
Miss Margaret Barrows. who has
been spending her vacation with
friends In New York City and Areola,
a surburb of New York City, returned
today to Dwight school.
Miss Hope Washburn, who is also
studying at Dwight, has been at
Tryon, N. C, with Mrs. Washburn and
family during the week.
• • •
Miss Edith Fitzslmmons has been
spending her Easter vacation with
friends in Cleveland and Akron, Ohio.
• • •
Mrs. W. C. Brundage og 2408 East
Second street returned Thursday from
Larlmore, N. D.. where she has been
visiting her parents.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Gilbert of
1601 East Superior street left this
week for a several weeks' stay at Hot
Springs, Ark.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice .Scrogglns of
320 North Sixteenth avenue east are
planning to move to Minneapolis.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Sweetland and
family of 322 East Fifth street left
last evening for Decatur, 111., to re-
side.
• • •
Mrs. J. E. Hamilton of Tacoma,
Wash., Is visiting her sister Miss
Gillen. She Is on her way to Eastern
Canada to visit relatives.
• • •
Mrs. F. C. Marshall and son of
Woodland have returned from Illinois,
where thev have been visiting rela-
tives for the past ten days.
• • •
Mrs. John McNaughton of the San
Marco flats has returned from a week's
stay In Chicago.
• * •
Mrs. William White and Miss
White of 171S East Superior
have returned from Minneapolis
they went the last week.
• « •
Miss Henrietta Mears
Buckbee of Minneapolis are visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence T. Mears.
« • •
Mrs. Ethel Hardin of the Y. W. C. A.
has returned from St. Paul where 6h«
spent the week with her sister.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Merritt have re-
turned from a trip to the Bermudas
and California. They have been away
two months.
• • •
Du-
• • *
Miss May Rood of Minnearolls Is
Annie
street
where
and Miss
Dr. Nathaniel
comes to Duluth
to give a series
auspices of the
ment of
for the
the Twentieth
benefit of the
I. Rubinkam who
the last of the month
of lectures under the
philanthropy depart-
Century club
Neighborhood
** Correct Dress /or Women"
^ Extend a cordial invitation to
their Patrons of the Northwest to
make their headquarters at the Gid-
ding Stores when visiting in Cincin-
nati or New York.
^ Charge castomers are invited to feel at
home, and to enjoy the same privileges in
either of the other Gidding Stores, as here
in Duluth.
Mr.
been
Where are your Furs?
fire and
you
and
se-
Packed away without
burglar Insurance?
Perhaps safe from moths. If
keep continually unpacking
airing them.
Or do you store them where
curlty is absolute?
Our fur vault is burglar proof,
fire proof, moth proof and our stor-
age receipt shifts the* worrying
about your furs from you to us.
Inspect our vault at any time, If
Interested.
Northern CoM Storage
and Warehouse Co.
rp-Totrn Agents t
Columbia Clothing Co.
Dulntk and Superior.
100
(►ricntal Rufls
TO CHOOSE FROM!
100
These rugs vers selected
from the stock of Maxtcell^
Forbes and Stillmav^ in response to a demand for a rug com-
bining beauty and utility at a moderate price. The selection
ranges from a TABLE MAT at tS.OO to a ROOM RUG at
$176.00. You are cordially invited to inspect these rugs and
compare values with^mt obligation to buy.
JANE LISTMAN'S SHOP
at the "Sign of the Samovar'
509 East Superior Stri*tt
DEFECTIVE PAGE f
/
t
I
f
19
Saturday,
house which the club Is conducting? In
the West end, will be the guest of Dr.
and Mrs. A. E. Walker of 2107 East
First street during his stay In the city.
His friends here who wish to see him
during his visit will be welcome to see
him there.
• * ♦
Mrs. M. H. Schuffler of Minneapolis
has been the guest of Mrs. W. G. Col-
brath of 224 Fifth avenue east this
week.
• • •
Mrs. r. D. Campbell and son, of Eve-
leth are the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
James M. Campbell of Lakeside.
• * •
Mrs. H. D. Foster of 2427 Sixtieth
avenue east has as her guest her sis-
ter, Mrs. N. O. Stadum.
Miss Louana Phelps, who was home
for the week from the University of
Minnesota, had as her guest Miss Irene
Krantz. who Is also a student at the
university.
• * •
Ml.'Js Alma Kruschke of Minneapolis
spent the Easter vacation with
her parents. Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Krusch-
ke. of 1923 Greysolon road.
• « •
Miss Estelle Chase of Proctor spent
the week end In Duluth as tlie guest
of Miss Fanny Lumm.
• • *
Ml.««s Jessie Todd Is spending the
week with her sister at Kinney, Minn.
« • •
Mrs. C. E. Wallace of 430 Eleventh
avenue east. Is the guest of friends in
Minneapolis and St. Paul for ten days.
• • •
Miss Esther Berg of 720 East Fourth
street is visiting her sister. Miss Eliza-
beth Berg at Buhl, Minn., for a week.
• * *
Miss Annie Hugo will le^ve Monday
for a visit in Kentucky ana other points.
She will go to Washington in June for
the graduation week at National Park
seminary before returning to Duluth.
• • *»»•
John A Mulvahill and daughter,
Agnes, of Hibbing are viSFltlrTg Mr. and
Mrs. J. T. Doyle of tlie Baldwin flats.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Miller of Hunters
Park liave as tlieir guest thtlr son,
Wyniuti Miller of Chisholm, Minn.
• « •
Mi.«s Mabel Baillie of Hunters Park
left Saturday for a week's visit with
her aunt in Minneapolis.
Mrs. G. W. Eilert of 117 North Twen-
ty-seventli avenue west left Sunday
fveniug for Oslikosh. Wis., to visit her
mother, wlio is ill.
• • •
Miss Ida Nelson of the Y. W. C. A.
left Monday for Portland, Or., to reside.
• « «
Miss Vera Campbell returned Monday
from Minneapolis, where siie repre-
eente<l the Young Woman's Chri.stian
association at the Playground institute.
• • •
Miss Ethel Douglas of Minneapolis
Is the gue.<t of Mrs. J. B. Kohagen of
«32 East Third street.
• « •
Mrs. J. E. Cummlngs of Chisholm,
who I'as been the guest of her sister,
Mrs. W. V. Mernian of 50!> East Tiiird
•treet, returned to her home Tuesday.
• « •
Mrs. C. H. Merritt left Monday morning
for a week's visit with her parents.
Mr. and Mis. U. Gregory of .Marquette,
Mich.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Victor F. Rakowsky
have returned to tlieir home. 1814 Jef-
ferson street from u trip lo Rochester,
Minn.
• * •
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Butchard of
Lakeside have as their guest, Mr.
Buichart's mother, Mrs. E. B. Norell of
Wenatehee, Wash.
Mrs. William J. Bites of the St. Elmo
flats liad as her guest this week her
mother. Mrs. F. S. Hyland of Staugh-
ton, \Vis., who Is on her way home
from a visit in Portland,
• « «
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Williams and
daughter. Helen, of 931 East Fourth
street returned Tuesday from French
Lick Springs, wliere they have been for
two weeks.
« « *
Charles Kellev and Arnold Fitger
arrived Thursday morning from
Madison, wlicre tliey have been at-
tending the University of Wisconsin,
to spend tlie Easter vacation here.
• • •
Miss Fannie Stevenson, who is
teaching in Tower. Minn., this year Is
home spending her Easter vacation
with her mother. Mrs. Fannie Steven-
son of 4501 Gladstone street. Lake-
side.
• • •
Miss Lena Ward was home from .\nn
Arbor. Mich., for her Easter vacation
this week.
• • *
Mrs. W. ■«■. Wells of 431.'> Luverne
street and her sister. Miss Caroline A.
Blackmarr of 4609 Cambridge street
have gone to Mason City, Iowa, for a
visit with Mrs. Myron W. Stevenson.
Mrs. Wells will return in two weeks
but ^[iss Blackmarr will remain a
montli.
• • •
Mrs. Fred Downey Rollins of 1.t14
East Fourtli street has as her guest
her sister, Mrs. J. W. Rates of Minne-
apolis. Mrs. Bates will be here two
weeks.
• • •
Mls.s Blanche Reals of Duluth was
the guest of her parents In Eau Claire,
Wis., for the week end.
• • «
Miss Olive Colbrath was home this
week from Minneapolis?, visiting her
parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Colbrath
of 224 Fifth avenue east, during her
Easter vacation.
« « •
Mrs. Fondy. Mrs. Hogati and daugh-
ter, Fanny, left Monday for Ann Arbor,
Mich., where they will make their
home.
• • •
Mi.ss Carolyn Blackmarr and Mrs. W.
"Wells are visiting friends in Mason
City, Iowa.
• • •
Miss Fanny Steplienson was down
from Hibbing, where she is teaching
this year to spend the week at her
home,' 4525 Gladstone street.
«
Park Point notes
Mr. and Mrs. Hart and children,
formerly of 3324 IMnncsota avenue,
bave moved Into "The Birches," at
Twenty-fiftii str^^et for the summer.
• * •
Harold Burnett of 2209 Minnesota
avenue left Friday for Minneapolis,
w^here he will resume his studies at
the university.
• • •
Mrs. R. S. Chamberlain and family
have moved Into "Camp Summer
Haven." at Thirty-sixth street, until
their eottage at Thirty-fourth street
Is completed.
• • •
Mrs. Wineberg of 3117 Minnesota
avenue, who lia.s been .spending the
winter In Minneapolis with her son,
returned home Friday.
• « «
Mrs. Valentine of Thirty-eighth
street left this week for Minneapolis
w^hei-e slie will visit lier parents of that
city.
• • •
Mrs. Harry Harrington of 3240 Lake
avenue was hostess to the Ladles of
the Mission Guild, Tuesday after-
noon. Reports were given on the bazar
Just given. Over 1 40 was cleared.
• • •
Mrs. Schmltz of 2125 Lake avenue
was hostess to the ladies of the Pres-
byterian Guild Thursday afternoon.
Mrs. P. Berg will be the next hostess.
• * «
Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Kingsley of 2114
Minnesota avenue entertained In honor
of their sixth wedding anniversary at
dinner Wednesday evening. Tlie guests
were; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Brooke and
Miss Elizabeth Brooke. Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Llehe, and Miss Liehe, Miss
Ida Waller, and John Allan and P.
Peters.
• * •
Clarence Foster of Thirty-eighth
street, has returned«to his home, From
Mississippi, where he has been spend-
ing the winter months. Mrs. Foster
will spend two months longer in New
York where slie Is visiting her sister.
• * «
Mrs. McDunnough of Twentieth
street entertained Wednesday evening
for her daughter. Miss Nora McDun-
nough. The guests were: Miss Qraco
Knapp. Miss Jean Hauslalb. Gladys
Dow, Miss Elizabeth Peterson, Mis?
Helen Osborne, and Miss Nora Mc-
Dunnough, and Howard Dlteman. Law-
rence Dow, Argyle Chamberlain, Burly
Peterson, Clifford Marion, and William
Mcl>unnougli. The evening was spent
in playing games. Argyle Cliamber-
laln won the head prize.
* • •
Miss Therese Gude of Twenty-third
street, Park Point, will return to the
University of Minnesota Monday after
spendng the vacation with her par-
ents.
* • «
Miss Mary Marvin, who has been
spending the vacation with her par-
ents on Park Point, will return to the
University of Minnesota to resume her
studies Monday.
* • •
Miss Fannie Hogan spent the week-
end w^lth Miss Mary Marvin on Park
Point and Monday Mrs. Marvin enter-
tained at dinner for her and he**
mother, Mrs. B. Hogan and Mrs.
Fonda, who all left that evening for
Ann Arbor, Mlcli., where they will
make their home.
The Thalian Llterarj' society has
posted the following program which
will be given next Friday:
Roll call — Limerick's.
I^iaiio solo
Original poem — "The Faculty"
Adeline Buckley.
Vocal solo
Winifred Warner.
Farce — "The Yankee Doodle Kitchen"
CAST.
China supervisor Mary Myron
Brush manipulator Edna Schaeffer
China Juggler Louise Coe
Queen Of the tub. .. .Elizabeth Strlck
Head presser Amy Gilbertson
Floor manager Hazel Hlmebaugh
* • *
The seniors held an Important class
meeting yesterday at which Miss
Logan announced the names of tlie
cast wliich the faculty has chosen for
the play. The play Is one by George
Elliot, called "Armgart." The cas^ for
the play is as follows:
Armgart — A Prima Donna
Maud Matteson
Leo — Her Music Master. .Elsie Becker
Graf — Her Lover Adeline Buckley
Walpurga — Her Cousin
Elizabeth Wasley
For a curtain raiser. Miss Long has
chosen a farce entitled "A Briton."
The following cast has been selected
for this:
Professor — Rudolph Blnger
Marie DriscoU
Gabrlela — His Wife Evonne Roberts
Carl Blatt Winifred Warner
Bertha Wallen — A Cousin of Gahriela
Minnie Hanson
• • •
The Greysolon literary meeting
which was to have been held today
has been postponed until next Friday.
• • «
In chapel r*rlday morning the
Boys' club from the model school sang
a "Vesper Hymn." Edwin Skinner.
William Stephenson. Robert Finken-
steadt. John Pakowsky, and Charles
D. Richeaux are the members of the
club. In their song Fridav morning
they were assisted by Miss Winifred
Warner, Miss Rhoda Wilke. and Miss
Myrtle Pierce, with Miss Taylor as ac-
companist.
• « *
Miss Post entertained the eirls at
the house meeting Wednesday even-
ing by a talk on "Friendsliip."
« • •
Among those who visited the school
this week were: Miss Hazel Alien and
Miss Nellie McFadden of the state uni-
versity; Miss Winn if red Leonard, Miss
Sadie Stevens, Miss Pearl Elivet«h.
Miss Hilda Olson, Miss Rebecca
Walker, Mis.s Margaret Cunneen. Miss
Martha Taylor, Miss Gertrude Carey.
Miss Elsie Overman, Miss Alta Owens
and Irving Wilke.
• « •
The junior class play which was
given last Saturday evening was a
great success, and It proved to the au-
dience that the cass possesses unusual
talent In the dramatic line.
• • «
Several of the girls from the hall
are spending Saturday and Sunday at
their homes. Mary Savolainen and
Hattie Lipke are In Virginia; Anna
Einsweiler Is in Ashland, Wis.; Bessie
Weatherby and Blanche Wyatt are the
guests of Miss Weatherby's parents,
at Two Harbors; Amy Gilbertson la
at her home in Bralnerd; Blanche Rus-
sell, Josie Cohen and Laura Eiberson
are visiting In Proctor; Julia Peterson
is in Tower, and Maud Williams Is
the guest of friends in Floodvvood,
Minn.
• * «
Miss Marie Thomas, a member of
the junior class, has left school.
• * *
Miss Pettlngill is recovering from
her recent operation and It is hoped
that she will soon be able to take
up her work again.
« • *
The superintendent of ichools at
Willow River visited the school yester-
day to consult with some of the senior
girls about teaching.
EVENTS OF INTEREST IN
CLUBS AND MUSICAL CIRCLES
Matinee Musicale Closes its
Year and Annual Reports
Are Presented —Oratorio
Society Will Meet.
The Matinee Musicale closed Its
year Monday afternoon with the last
regular meeting at the Y. W. C. A.
auuitorium. An Interesting program
was rendered and Miss Ruth Rogers
gave a report of the biennial conven-
tion of the National Federation of
Musical clubs which she attended In
Philadelphia the last week in March.
She said that from comparison of the
work being done by the Matinee
Musicale with the other musical clubs
re)>resented she felt that no club was
doing more than the Duluth club. She
gave some of the interesting points
brought out by some of the speakers
on music in general and on the vari-
ous branches of its study.
After the program the active mem-
bers of the club held the annual busi-
ness meeting at which reports of the
club work for the year were read.
Miss Florence Hyland, recording sec-
retary for the club presented her re-
port, parts of which were as follows:
"The eleventh session of the Matinee
Musicale club opened Oct. 3, 1910, with
a special program given by Miss Ruth
Rogers. Miss Bradshaw and Miss Si-
monds. Special Interest was mani-
fested as Miss Rogers had just re-
turned from study abroad. This pro-
gram was enthusiastically received by
the large number present and the sum
of $;i54 was taken in for membership,
the largest amount ever taken on an
opening "day.
"The other days of special Interest
were the exchange programs. The
Thursday Club of Minneapolis sent us
one of the best programs ever given
before the club, and the Schubert Club
of St. Paul sent a progi'am which was
very delightful.
"Our representatives to the Twin
City clubs were Miss Ruth Rogbrs.
Miss Mary Syer Bradshaw "nd Miss
Simonds. they gave a high-class pro-
gram and Avere enthusiastically' re-
ceived.
"The plan of work this year was of
a very high standard, the study of
the Symphonies being especlaliv edu-
cational. At the same time It was
very hard to fill the pragrams, in view
of the fact, that so much work was
required of those taking part. Our
programs, as averaged for the year,
however, have been good.
"The organ day has become quite
a feature, and is enticipated by our
members. This year it was especially
delightful, owing to the beautiful
Cantata. 'The Legend of Granada."
Mrs. Atwater and Mrs. Stocker had
charge of this program. A special
feature of the cantata was the beauti-
ful accompaniment, played by Mrs.
J. N. McKindley.
We were most fortunate in our three
artist concerts, the choicest of wlilch
was the one given by the Kneisel quar-
tet. Miss Christene Miller, with her
finished accompanist, gave a program
that reached the hearts of all present.
Great Interest was also manifested in
TORKEL SCHOLANDER.
Torkel Scholander. who arrived yes-
terday in New Y^ork on board the
steamer United States, represents the
most modern type of an artist and
aviator. Mr. Scholander comes here to
tour the country as a recltallst of
songs to the lute In four or five lan-
guages, but also for the making of
aeronlc studies, theoretical and prac-
tical.
Mr. Scholander, who has had the
training of a civil engineer before be-
coming an artist, comes with strong
letters of recommendation to the best
American authorities on aeronautics,
such as Gen. Allen of the United States
army, and is the accredited emissary
and representative of the Aeronautic
club of Stockholm for the purpose of
establishing more intimate connec-
tions between this organization and
similar ones In this country. Sweden
is a pioneer country In this line of
technical activity, it being enough to
recall that the man who with two com-
panions, first conceived the plan of
reaching the North pole in a balloon
and who sacrificed his life In the at-
tempt, *was a Swede — S. A^ Andree.
Mr. Scholander comes of a well
i
known family of artists, his father be-
ing in his day one of the leading spirits
in the Swedish Royal Academy of Fins
Arts, a painter, etcher, architect, au-
thor, poet and composer. An older
brother, Sven Scholander, was one of
the first men to revive the singing of
lyrics and humorous songs to the lute,
and a great personal favorite of Em-
peror William, to whose court he Is
called at least once a year for the ren-
dition of his songs.
Torkel Scholander will spend several
months In this country, and his tour
is thus laid out that he may travel
from on3 city to the other In aeroplane
or automobile, for Mr. Scholander Is
deeply interested In this form of loco-
motion, also having letters of intro-
duction from the Swedish Royal Auto-
mobile club and Count Clarence Von
Rosen, a gentleman horseback rider,
automobllist and aviator of interna-
tional repute and connections.
Mr. Scholander Is scheduled to make
a descent on Duluth to give a recital
at the new auditorium. Third avenue
east and First street, Sunday after-
noon. May 14, under the auspices of
Svea Glee club and Orpheus Singing
society.
-«-»
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 15, 1911.
the Horchard concert, and he was en-
thu.sjastlcjllly received. *
"Tlie study class of the Matinee
Musicale has become a vital factor.
Great credit Is due Miss Simonds for
her faithful efforts Iri this line.
"The Beethoven Symphonies, first,
second, third, 'fourth, seventh, eighth
and ninth, were studied, also Schu-
mann's Spring Symphonic.
"Several of these were given before
the club as eight-hand numbers, and
great credit Is due the pianists wiio
worked so faithfully on these.
"The philanthropic work has been
continued and several programs have
been given at the Y. W. C. A. and the
Children's horat.
"Our club was represented at the
biennial meeting of the Federated
Musical clubs, which has recently met
In Philadelphia, by Miss Ruth Rogers.
We feel that It was a great credit to
the Matinee Musicale to be able to
send so talented an artist to represent
us.
"It Is a matter of regret to the club
that Miss Simonds finds It necessary to
retire from the presidency. Those who
have had the privilege of watching
her work for the past two years feel
that she has made many sacrifices and
Is entitled to a respite from the labors
which she has so conscientiously per-
formed. The club desires to extend
to her a vote of thanks."
Mrs. G. Herbert Jones submitted her
report as treasurer of the club with a
most full list of all expenditures and
receipts. The money on hand at the
opening of the club year was 1125.25.
The amount received during the year
from membership dues and initiation,
guests at artists' recitals and regular
meetings was Jl,215.35. Tlie money
disbursed for artists' recitals, rent, ad-
vertising, exchange programs, printing,
donation to the prize composition fund
of the National Federation of Musical
clubs and sundries, |1, 132.79, leaving u
balance on hand of $82.56.
Oratorio Society Will Meet.
The Duluth Oratorio society will hold
a business meeting In the Commercial
clubrooms on Monday evening, April 17,
at 8 o'clock. Ail of the old members
and those Interested are Invited to at-
tend. T. W. Hugo will be in the chair.
«
Bishop's Club Program.
The regular meeting of the Bishop's
club will be held Tuesday evening at
the clubrooms with Miss Charlotte
Crowley as leader. The program for
the evening follows:
Bible reading
Miss Luclle Whltlen.
Vocal solo
Miss Constance Wlilard.
Current events
Miss Helen Mc.Uplne.
Piano sola
Miss Edna Z. Harris.
Paper — "Pottery and Porcelain of the
United States "
Miss Charlotte Crowley.
Thank Donators.
The board of directors of the Chil-
dren's Home acknowledge with thanks
donations in March from the following:
Mrs. D. D. McDonald. George S. Mun-
sey Friends from Knights of Pythias
hall, Presbvterlan church, Mrs. D. Mc-
Donald. Mrs. S. Clark, Gray-Tallant
company, J. U. Sebenlus. Mrs. J. J.
Moe, Mrs F. Berry, Mrs. T. J. Davis,
Mrs. Coulter, Circle 1 Endion M. E.
church, Duluth Marine Supply com-
pany.
New Secretary Appointed.
At the meeting of the board of di-
rectors of tlie Young Women's Chrla-
tlon association, which was held Tuesday
morning at the association building.
Miss Millie Older, who has been office
secretary for several years was ap-
pointed general assistant secretary,
that place having been vacated by Mrs.
Cecil Hockln. after her marriage last
month. Mrs. Hockln wag Miss Margaret
Stewart and has held that position for
several years. Miss Carrie Woodward
of South Bend, Ind., was appointed of-
fice secretary to fill Miss Older's place.
She is expected about the middle of
May.
ROOSEVELT AT ST. PAUL
(ContinYied from page 1.)
applause, which was repeated with
new energy when he rose to speak,
after liis introduction by Representa-
tive W. I. Nolan of Minneapolis, chair-
man of the reception committee.
Beginning slowly, but with increas-
ing rapidity as he warmed to his sub-
ject, but speaking throughout with
characteristic vigor and Incisiveness,
Col. Roosevelt kept his hearers with
him at close attention throughout an
address lasting an hour and a half. He
said, in part:
A Reciprocal Obllaratlon.
"One of our chief objects ought to
be to make the legislatures of the
country more directly representative
of the country, and to make the aver-
age legislator feel more and more
that he Is In the fullest sense a rep-
resentative of the people as a whole,
and that In order to be such a repre-
sentative of the people he must not
only be resolutely bent upon repre-
senting them in thouglit and in sym-
patiij' and In purpose but, moreover,
must first of all represent his own
conscience. I speak for genuine pub-
lic government — I speak for the people
of the United States, for the Ameri-
can people — wh^n I ask that they have
from each public servant the fullest
response to tlieir desires, tempered
only but tempered always, by his ad-
herence to what his conscience tells
him Is just and straight. I should like
to preach the reciprocal obligation to
the people on the one hand and to
their representatives on the other to
preacli to the people that they owe a
duty to their legislators and executive
officers, just as the executive officers
and legislators owe a duty to them;
tliat the duty of the public servant
Is to be absolutely frank and open with
the public, to serve them with his
whole heart and soul, to hold himself
accountable to them, and yet to hold
himself accountable first to his own
conscience.
"To the people on the other hand
I would like to preach the doctrine
that it behooves them to remember
that they will never get the best serv-
ice from any nubile servant save from
the type of man who places fealty to
righteousness and his own conscience
higher than anything else.
'I come to speak to you as a pro-
gressive, because according to my
tiieory a great democracy must be
progressive, under penalty of ceasing:
to be great or democratic. We cannot
slay still; we must either go back-
ward or forward. So it seems to me
tliat we have no alternative save to
be progressive, save to go forward. It
is Incumbent on all our public serv-
ants, legiselators and executive offi-
cers alike, to go forward. for this
country would not be wliat It Is now.
and this would hardly be a nation.
If It had not been for the progresslve-
ness of the fatliers of the republic, and
for the fact that they took account of
the needs of the forward march of
mankind.
Direct RIectloB of Senators.
"I think it Is necessary as things
are now to have an Increase in popu-
lar control. For instance. I belleye
the time has come when it is im-
peratlvelv necessary that we should
have the popular election of United
States senators (applause.) While we
should pay full deference to the wis-
dom of the great Americans of the
past, we should not forget that they
could not see the needs of the pres-
ent day. and we should not be hamp-
ered by the dead hand of the past,
any more than we should attempt to
lay a dead hand on the centuries of
the future. For Instance, the fathers
thought the electoral college a great
thing, but experience has shown It To
be a failure, apd we have practically
abandoned It. So It Is with the old
system of electing senators. The
state of Illinois recently showed one
of the effects of that system, and the
senate Is still busily engaged In try-
ing to disitifect Itself (applause.) I
hope that the constitutional amend-
ment will be passed providing for this
change. With it should go a strong
primary election law with efficient
corrupt practices acts. In order to do
everything possible to discourage the
lavish use of money In elections.
"Personally, X believe in the initi-
ative and referendum, and I earnestly
advocate ^ts passage with a sufficient-
ly hlfirii percentage to Insure that it
MUD HOLE IN FRONT ^ ARD MAY BE
CAUSE OF LAWSUIT AGAINST THE CITY
I'
STAGNANT WATER THAT MENACES HEALTH OF WEST END RESIDENTS.
'Phuto by LaaJIn.
mtsmt»*^<m i tmi* •«>»
Because a pluged sewer backed the
water up In the front yard making It
an eyesore to the community and an
unhealthful place to live. Carl Carl-
son will probably institute proceedings
against the city and certain private
owners to recover damages.
Carl Carlson Is owner of two flat
buildings at 2214-2216 West Second
street and admits that he has the
worst looking front yard in the West
end, although it Is no fault of his. In
fact, he, says, he has spent consider-
able money in trying to remedy con-
ditions but to no avail.
Between Twenty-second and Twen-
ty-third avenues and Second and First
streets there Is a big hollow, through
which a small creek runs. There are
several houses In the hollow and had
the creek its usual outlet clear, no
water would back up and fill the hol-
low.
When the Wiberg building was
erected at the corner of Twenty-sec-
ond avenue west and First street, the
outlet for the creek was plugged up
and the water backed up on (Carlson's
front yard. since that time Carlson
claims that he has spent considerable
money In devising a drain for the
water, but he claims It has been In
vain and that conditions are getting
worse.
Any heavy rain would flood the
lower portions of the houses In the
hollow. And besides the water has
been standing for several days and is
stagnant, covered with green slime
and not at all conductive to the health
conditions of the neighborhood. The
two houses belonging to Carlson were
moved Imck from the street to the
alley, Mr. Carlson spending about
94, 000 in improvements.
JOHY SMJTH DIES.
Aged Resident of the West End Dies
at His Home.
John Smith, 80 years old. died this
morning at his home, 1921% West
Third street, as a result of a general
breakdown due to old age. He came to
the West end last fall from Proctor.
He has been a resident of the Head
of the Lakes for ten years.
He is survived by a wife, three sons.
J. J. Smith of 207 North ffinteenth ave-
nue west; Herbert O. Smith of '207
North Twenty-ninth avenue west, and
Henry R. Smith of Water lOO, Iowa, and
one daughter, Mrs. Add:e Thuttel of
Cedar Falls, Iowa. Sho is here to
attend the funeral.
Smith came to Procto • from Cedar
Falls, Iowa. No funeral arrangements
have been made.
Slab Piles a Meiace.
People who live on the lower side
of Second street between Twenty-third
and Twenty-fourth avenaes west, are
protesting against the practice of pil-
ing slabs on the upper side of First
street between the two ai^enues, where
there is considerable vacant property.
Because of the danger of fire, they
want the council to take action to pre-
vent the piling of mill wood so close
to the residence property.
«
Easter Monday Dance.
The Adams Athletic association will
entertain its friends at an Easter Mon-
day dancing party at Lincoln park pa-
vilion Monday evening. Flaaten's or-
chestra will furnish the music. The
following committee Is in charge of
the affair: Helnier Otterson. Helmer
Grenner, Andrew Otterson, Frank Bau-
dette, Paul Nyman and William Wes-
ton.
W>st End Brii'fs.
John A. Sandgren. grund secretary
of the Order of Svithioc, with head-
quarters in Chicago, olficlated last
evening at the organization of a lodge
at the West end. Therj were forty
charter members. The society is a fra-
ternal and Insurance order and meets
at Sloan's hall.
Mrs. John Nord, who ha^ been ill
at her home. 301 North Twenty-second
avenue west, is convalescent.
Rev. J. J. Daniels of the Swedlbh
Mission church, and Rev. M. Berglund
of Cambridge, Minn., were speakers
yesterday at the union Good Friday
services held at the First Swedish M.
E. church. Twentieth aveiue west and
Third street.
A. J. Berglund of Albeit Lea, Minn.,
is the guest of relatives In the West
end.
Rev. J. T. Moody of the Bethel will
preach at both services tomorrow at
the Second Presbyterian church, 1516
West Superior street.
Mrs. J. W. Preston of 2509 West
Second street has been called to Fill-
more. Wlf., on account of the Illness
of her mother.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Simonson of 2102
West Superior street liave as tlieir
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Abrahamson
and daughter, of Mason, Wis
Rev. W. E. Riesinger, Sunday school
missionary for the Baptists of Minne-
sota left yesterday for St. Paul. He
has been conducting a series of revival
meetings at the First Swedish Baptist
church, Twenty-second avenue west
and Third street.
The Lion drug store has moved to
the new Anderson-Thoorsell block.
2030 West Superior street.
TWO ROUTES TO
BE INSPEQED
Water Board Will Pass Upon
Dispute Between West
Enders.
A close investigation will be mads
Into the nierita of the two routes.
which have been proposed by the two
factions of the West End Hillside club
for the extension of the water mains
to the Ensign school district. The
water board will look over both routes
carefully and take the one which Is
the more practical and will benefit the
greater number of home owners.
The "regulars" In the hillside club
advocate the bringing of the mains
up Thirteenth avenue west to the
boulevard, from there to the Intersec-
tion of Twentieth avenue west and
Seventh street, from there to Piedmont
avenue and up Piedmont avenue to
Twenty-third avenue west and Tenth
street.
The "Insurgents," who have seceded
from the club and elected officers of
their own. want the mains to go up
Thirteenth avenue to Twelfth street
and from there to Twenty-third ave-
nue and the Ensign school.
*■
b
..Mhadl^H I.
BLANCO. SOLIZAR. 1:ERRAZAS.
This picture of three of the Insurrecto leaders was made at their headquarters In the state of Chihuahua Gen.
Blanco "and his chief aide, Sollzar. stand on the steps, Blanco weiirlng a sombrero hat. Terrazas is the man to the left
of Sollzar Irolding a newspaper In his hand.
win not be invoked wantonly and
recklessly, thus leading to its condem-
nation as a mistake. I wish the ex-
periment of using It to succeed, and I
wish its first use to be surronuded by
conditions that will minimize the
chance of failure.
No Recall for Judiciary.
"When It comes to the recall, I feel
that It should not apply to the judi-
ciary. The judge should not be sub-
ject to the sway of momentary popular
clamor. But .viien the people feel that
a public servant Is no longer useful to
them, thev should have the means of
getting rid of him. I hope you will not
Include the judiciary in the recall, but
If you wish to do so that is your affair.
Arizona chose to do so, and It is her
affair, not ours, and it should not de-
prive her of statehood. On the other
hand California needs the recall for
the judiciary because the Southern Pa-
cific has exercised an unspeakable in-
fluence upon the selection
"I should like to have '
cate the workingmen's
act, because I l>elieve
hence it will seem Incn
descendants that we left t
worker to bear the full I
risks of employment, instc
utlng It over the Indus
should like to see you pr
vation measures, and to
water power Is alienated
state.
•To the people themse
say that I believe In good
best laws are worthless u
the right type of citizen
the laws, rhe people sh
get their rights, but I fee:
essary to talk to them ab
ties."
STILLMAN H.
of judges,
ime to advo-
compensation
a generation
rdlble to our
he dependent
>urden of the
ad of distrlb-
itrv Itself. 1
ovide conser-
sec that no
In fee by the
Ives I would
laws, but the
nless there Is
ship back of
3uld not for-
it more nec-
out their du-
BINGHAM.
Seeks #10.000 for Fath.
Iron Mountain, Mlcii..
»*■ Death.
April 15. —
(Special to The Herald.) — Michael Ds-
Crescenzo is suing the Chicago. Mil-
waukee & .St. Paul railroad for $10,000
damages for the death of his father,
who was killed by a train being started
unexpectedly while he was engaged
In making repairs under the cars.
Exquisite Flowers.
"None nicer." Prices right at Huot'i
CONTRACTORS
WANTED
For clearing land at Meadowlanda.
St. Louis county, on the D. M. &. N.
road. Call or write
liAND DEPT.. D. A I. R. RY. OCk»
W<dTia Bids.. Dalath.
"^ m-
'f
I
t
6-
3_a^
t
1
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD,
April 15, 1911.
It
€a$tcr in tbc Dulutb Cburclm
tDc €a$ur Creed.
Vafcttcred Life, tkc Cre«d of Creeds,
Will quicken Man to nobler deeds,
And rlMioK to the helKl>tH MUbllnie
Win link Ktemlty ^Itk Time.
At ChrlHtmaii-tlde Mankind besran
To ^velcome God as "J»on-of-.Mant"
In Lent, Man bent beneath the rod
Aad Kanter welcouiea Man aa God.
Am Man, Chri«t came to relfcn and aave,
Aa God he triamphn o'er the gravel
"The l>ord 1« risen" the angels ■lag.
From heart to heart the eohoea rln«.
masie womb
life will rend
the
Aa aprtngr-tlde la ■
>Vhence new-born
tomb; , .- .,
So Ea*ter la the "Fea«t of »'«'* '
ImpellloK growth In spite of strife.
When iillent ahade* of Micht Klve way.
The IJfEht revives at dawn of day;
ho Easter Is the "Feast of Llsht"
That makes the heart's* recessea bright.
And like the shafts of pointed raya.
That token clear and cloudless days,
Will F-amer shine as "Feast of liOve
To raise Man'a heart to God above.
fSo Man In days of sorest need
*»hall And true Joy In Faster s Creed,
And in the Klsen Lord shall see
The "Flrst-Frulta" of Eternity.
ARTHUR H. TN'URTELE,
Dean of the Pro-cathedral.
Musical services In Duluth churches
tomorrow will be unusually elaborate.
Easter programs have been
for most of the morning
In many churches meetings
held In the week almost
Special
arranged
services,
have been
dally and tomorrows services gener-
ally will be the concluding features
of the observance commemorative oi
the death and resurrection of <-hrist.
In the Episcopal and Catholic churches,
there will be services oh Monday.
• « •
Second Chnrch of Christ, Scientist —
A' the Second Church of Christ, fccien-
Alworth building Is open dally, except
Sunday, from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m.
« • «
St. Stephena' Cierman-EnKliah La.
theran — At St. Stephens' German-Eng-
list Lutheran church, Sixty-seventh
avenue west and Raleigh street, Wal-
ter Slevers, pastor, special Easter serv-
ices win be held Sunday morning at
10:30 o'clock and In the evening at 7:45
o'clock. The morning services w^ill be
conducted In German and the evening
services In the English language. At
St. Stephens' East end branch, Fourth
avenue east and Fifth street, services
will be omitted Sunday.
• • •
First Fnltarian — At this church. First
street and Eighth avenue east. Rev.
George R. Gebauer, minister, special
Easter serrice will be held in the Sun-
day school and church. Sunday school
will be at 9:45 a. m. and church serv-
ice at 11 o'clock. The subject of the
sermon will be "On the Earth, the
Rroken Arcs; In the Heaven, a Perfect
Round." The musical progrom f j'lows:
Organ voluntary Schumann
Miss Morton.
Solo — "Within This Sacred Dwelling"
Mozart
Louis Dworshak.
Quartette — "Tlie Winters Gone, the
Spring Comes On" Allen
Mrs. Winton, Mrs. Ross, Mr. Dworshak,
Mr. Ingersol.
Organ postlude-
A. S. Sullivan
-•'Hallelujoh Chorus"
Handel-Hopkins
Service at 6
Organ prelude-
6 p.
lude-
m.
First
10:45
tist. Burgess hall. 312 ^VNest
street, services will be held at
a m.. the subject being "Doctrine of
Atonement.' The Wednesday evening
meting will begin at 8 o clock. Kead-
ins room. 310 West First street, will be
cpen dally except Sunday irom 2 uuiil
» o'clock.
• • •
Grace Methodist Episcopal — At the
Grace Methodist Episcopal church,
Twenty-second avenue west and ihira
etreet. the Easter program by the bun-
dav school, and special Easter music
will be given at 10:30 a. m. There will
be no Sunday school. Epworth League
will be at 6:30 and the Easier sermon
bv the pastor at 7:30 p. rn. The regu-
lar annual benevolent offering wiU be
received.
• • «
First XorweBlan Lutheran— At the
First Norwegian Lutheran church.
First avenue east and Tiiird street, the
pastor, J. H. Stenberg, will preacli in
the morning on Mark xvi, l-t: ;>^ hat
We See at the Grave of Jesus, and
In the evening on "Fear Yielding to
Love. ' The musical program will be
es follows: ,„^^
MORNING SERVICE.
Preulude — "Andante Cantabile ' ....
Tschaikowsky
East'eV anthem— "Christ, Our ^Pfss-
(,ver" Schilling
Offertory— ''Theme and Variations"..
Haydn
..Knabel
Postlude- "March Milltalre".
EVENING SERVICE.
Prelude — "Adagio Pathetlque". ..Muller
"1 Kllppegrod" •p'-3i',',i-'chV,stlansen
"Sing bur Savior's Glory" ..Schneckee
Offertory— "Prelude" c 'A^^^fir
••Hall. Holy Cross" Schnecker
Postlude Llndeman
Alice M. Olpcn Is orgajiist and John
Olsen, director.
Swedish Lutheran Ellm— -At the
Swedish Lutheran Ellm church. Fifty-
Bixth avenue west and Elinor street,
there will be Easter services, as fol-
lows. 11 a. m., high mass, when Rev.
J A. Krantz will conduct the service,
and the Ellm choir will render some
Bpeclal Easter service. At 7:45 p. m.
a special musical Easter program will
be rendered by the Ellm choir. The
program will be as follows:
Pipe organ solo — Alia Marcla In p
31, HackeiT
A. F. Lundholm.
Hemlandssang
Congregation.
Scripture reading and prayer.
Rev. J. A. Krantz. D. D.
gcng — Selections from Easter can-
tata, -Light Out of Darkness ....
Adam Glebel
Elim Choir and Mr. Roy Prytz.
Instrumenta trio — Simple Confession
Thome
llr.'Fred EdVund, violin; Mrs. A. F.
Lundholm. piano, and A. F. Lund-
holm. pipe organ. .„ , ,
Vocal duet — O Undranvarda Budskap
Miss Edith Nelson and Floren-e
Nelson.
Hemlandssang
Congregation.
Instrumental trio — Serenade. .Schubert
Mr. Fred Edlund, violin; Mrs. A. F.
Lundholm. piano, and A. F. Lund-
holm. pipe organ.
Baritone solo — Selected
Mr Roy Prytz.
Pipe ogan solo — Sketch... Alf Physick
A. F. Lundholm.
Song— Man Er L' ppstanden
Elim Choir.
Closing remarks and benediction....
Rev. J. A. Krantz, D. D.
Hemlandssang
Congregation.
Pipe organ solo — Grand Processional
V. A. Petrall
A. F. ' Lundholm. organist and choir
director.
• • «
Plrat Christian — At the First Chris-
tian cluircli, We.st tourth and Mesaba
avenue, Ray E. Hnnt, minister, regular
services will be held. The program
will be as follows:
MORNING.
Prelude v • v 'v;.' " ^f*^*
Hymn — "Father, In Need I Come to
Thee ' •
Scripture lesson and morning prayer.
. Anthem— -King of Glory" Coomb.s
Offertory • .."^^"
Antliem — "As It Began to Dawn • • •
Vincent
Communion voluntary ;.-,^*^
Solo — "'My Redeemer and My Lord . .
Buck
Miss Elizabeth Maddox.
hermon — "'A Living Hope"
jiy,„n^-'"I Heard the Voice of Jesus
Say"
EVENING.
Organ prelude Schumann
Hvmn — 'Hail to the Lords Anointed'
Hymn — "Oh Eyes That Are Weary . .
Lesson and evening prayer.
Anthem — "Hallelujah. Christ Is
Itisen" Trowbridge
Offertory Richard Ferber
Anthem— 'The Strife Is O er". .Bogrlck
Solo — Selected „: • • :
Miss Jean Wanless.
Sermon — "The Kingship of Jesus . . .
Hvmn — "Just as I Am" • • • •
Miss Leona Grieser is organist. The
quartet is composed of Miss Elizabeth
Maddox. Mi.<?s Myrtle Pierce, Mr. Pantel
and Mr. McClaln.
• • * ■>
Lakeside rresbyterlan — At the Lake-
side Presbyterian church. Forty-fifth
avenue east and McCuUoch street,
Easter day will open with an early
morning service, at 6:30 a. m., conduct-
ed by the Christian Endeavor society.
The music committee will have the
service In charge, and a special mu-
sical program will be rendered. Easter
services by the congregation will be
held at 10";30 a. m. The pastor. H. B.
Sutherland, will preach on "The Resur-
rection a Natural Sequence. " The choir
will lead in the Easter worship and
praise. Sundav school will open Its
Easter session "at noon, which will be
the closing service for the day.
* • «
First Church of Christ, Scientist —
Regular services will be at 10:45 a. m.
and 7:45 p. m. jn the church. Ninth ave-
nue east and* First street. Subject:
••Doctrine of Atonement." Regular
"Wednesday evening meeting will be
at 8 o'clock. Free reading room at 411
First Methodist Episcopal — At the
First Methodist church. Third avenue
west and Third street, the pastor, M.
S. Rice will preach at the morning
service at 10:30 o'clock. There will be
a special Easter service with sermon
on "The Conquest of Death." Even-
ing service, will be at 7:45 p. m. with
sermon theme, ""Noah's Failure" in con-
tinuance of the series on "Where Men
Fall." Sunday school will be at noon,
W. S. Moore, superintendent; Epworth
league will be at 6:45 p. m. Easter
music will be given at all the services
of the day.
MORNING.
The musical program follows:
Hymn— "Christ the Lord Is Risen
Today"
Anthem — "Hosanna" Granier
Solo
Master Edward Wood and Choir.
Anthem — "Hallelujah" ("Messiah") . .
Handel
Offertory solo — "Christ's Victory"
(new) Neldlinger
Mrs. E. L. Zimmerman.
Hymn— -'I Know That My Redeemer
Lives"
Hymn — "Our Lord Is Risen From the
Dead"
Postlude — March Potlficate ..Lemmens
EVENING.
Hymn— "Hall the Day That Sees Him
Rise"
Anthem — "Jesus Lives" Macfarlane
Solo
Mrs. Zimmerman and Choir.
Anthem — "Sing the Lord" ("Crea-
tlon") Haydn
Solo — "Hall, Thou Risen One" «new)
Ward-Stephens
Arthur McFadyen.
Hvmn — "Lift Up Your Glad Voices". .
Postlude — "Hallelujah" Beethoven
Horace W. Reyner Is organist and di-
rector of the choir.
• • *
First Baptist — At this church. First
street and Ninth avenue east, the pas-
tor, R. Edward Bayles, will preach In
the morning and evening. Sermon
subjects will be: At 10:30 a. m., ""The
Power of Christ's Resurrection": at
7:30 p. m. "If a Man Die Shall He Live
Again?"
MORNING MUSIC.
Prelude Llfebure Wily
Anthem — "Welcome Happy Morning"
Shackley
Offertory — "Cantilene" Dubois
Anthem — "The Magdalene" Warren
Postlude Barrett
EVENING MUSIC.
Prelude Massenet.
Anthem — '"The Choir Angelic "
Hanscom
Offertory ' Guilmant
Anthem— "O Ught That Broke Froin
Yonder Tomb " Dressier
(Violin obllgato. Leslie Moore.)
Anthem— "We Would See Jesus"....
Ailing
Anthem— 'They Have Taken Away
My Lord" Harrington
Solo — "Judge Me. O Lord" Buck
Mr. Hlgbee. ^ ,
Postlude •••.••• •.•„S^'°"1^
The regular quartet choir will be as-
sisted at the evening service by Leslie
Moore and by Mr. Hlgbee. Mr. Hlgbee
has been for some time past the bass
soloist In the Memorial church which
the Studebaker brothers built in meni-
ory of their father at South Bend, Ind.
The choir will be as follows: Mrs. E
C. Brown, Mrs. H. C. Anderson,
Gearhart and Roland R. Morton.
The ordinance of baptism will be
ministered at the evening service.
Trinity Pro-cnthedral — At Trinity
Pro-cathedral. Twentieth avenue east
and Superior street. Rev. Arthur H.
Wurtele. rector and dean servlces„for
Easter Sunday will be as 'oyo,^s. Hol>
communion and unveiling of new win-
dow, 8 a. m.: Sunday school, mite boxes
to be offered, 10 a. m.; morning pra>'er,
sermon and holy communion, 11 a. m-.
preacher. Bishop Morrison His ser-
mon will be "The Resurrection ' Cnll-
dren's Easter service will be at 5 P. m--
preacher. Dean Wurtele. His subject
will be -The Easter Story." The an
nual dinner and parish meeting will
on Monday evening. Officers will
elected and reports received. The mu-
sical programs follow
Organ prelude — Andante
At
Its
'Andantlno In D flat'
E. H. Leraare
Proces'sionar hymn— "'Come Ye Falth-
jui" Sullivan
Gloria and Nunc Dlmlttls Barry
Solo — "Easter Dawn"
Miss Myrtle Hobbs.
Children's hymn— "At Easter Time . .
Offertory solo — •Easter Bells
Master Francis Hall.
Recessional hymn— "'Christ, the Lord.
Is Risen Today"". ......•••••• -Monk
Organ postlude — "War Martch of /he
Priests"' Mendelssohn
William Chester Smith is organist
and choirmaster.
• * *
Trinity NorweKlan- At the Trinity
Norwegian-Lutheran church. Fifth
street and Fourth avenue east, John
Hoel will speak at the morning serv-
ice and Rev. Peter Nilsen will conduct
the evening service. The Sunday school
will take part in the morning service.
An offering for foreign missions will
be received.
• • •
St. Mark's A. M. E At St. Mark's
A M. E. church. Fifth avenue east and
Sixth street. Jonathan Brewer, pastor.
There will be preaching at the morn-
ing service at 11 o'clock, by the pastor.
The theme of the sermon will be The
Power of the Resurrection. At the
evening service at 8 o"clock there
will be a special Easter program.
3 p. m. the Sunday school will have
Easter exercises, consisting of songs
I and recitations. Song and praise serv-
ices will be led by Mrs. A. S. Mason, at
7-30 p. m. The choir will sing special
I Easter music. Mrs. Samuel McNlel Is
organist, and Harvey L. Plttman, di-
rector.
• • «
St. John's English Lutheran — At St.
John"s English Lutheran church. Lake
avenue north and Third street. Rev. J.
E. Shewell, pastor. Special Easter
services will be at 10:30 a. m. at
which time special music will be sung
and the sacrament of the Lord's sup-
per administered, subject of sermon:
"Rock Rolling."" Sunday school will be
at noon. The Sunday school will have
charge of the services in the evening
at 7:30 p. m. The Luther
meet on Tuesday evening
of Miss Lillian Olsen,
Eighteenth avenue east,
• « *
St. Paul's Episcopal — At
Lake avenue and Second
communion will be at 8 a
school, 10 a. m.;
sermon. 11 a. m. .
at 7:30 p. m. On Easter Monday, holy
communion will be at 10 a, m. The
Parish meeting will be at 8 p. m. in
tlie church.
• • «
Endlon Methodist — Rev. John Walker
Powell will preach at the Endlon Meth-
odist Episcopal church. First street,
corner of Nineteenth avenue east, at
10:30 a. m., on '"The Triumph of
Christ." The Sunday school will give
a special Easter concert in the lecture
room of the church at 4:30 p. m. The
usual session of the Sunday school will
be omitted. The following is the pro-
gram of Easter music:
Organ Prelude — Grand Chorus. .Dubois
Anthem — "They Have Taken Away
..ly Lord"' StaineT
Response — "Father, Hear Our
der Milne, pastor, will preach In the
morning on, "•Thanks For the Vic-
tory," and in the evening on, "The
Resurrection and Salvation." The fol-
lowing musical programs will be
given:
MORNING.
Prelude Orleg
Anthem — "Break Forth With Joy""...
Barnby
Solo — Gloria Puzzi-Peccia
Miss Hyland.
Offertory Grieg
Anthem — "God Hath Appointed a
Day " Tours
Postlude - » . . Gounod
EVENINQ.
Prelude TchalkowskI
Anthem — "Eaater CJarol" Jenks
Offertory Foote
The choir consists of: Soprano, Flor-
ence Hyland; centralto, Mrs. R. C.
Buck; tenor, John C. Nafe; bass,
Harry G. Gearhart; organist and choir
director. Faith N. Rogers.
« • •
First PresbyterUia — At the First
Presbyterian church. Second street
Third avenue east, there will be spe-
cial Easter services at 10:30 a. m. and
7:45 p. m. The pastor. Rev. Robert
Yost will preach In the morning on
the subject: "Christ Is Risen."' His
theme for the evening will be "Life's
The musical program fol-
League will
at the home
102 South
this church,
street. Holy
m., Sunday
holy communion and
Easter carol service
Humble Prayer
Anthem — ''Death Is
Victory"
Offertory — Elegy
Solo — "Awake, Triumphant
Don
ad-
be
be
In G
Edouard Batiste
Processional— "Jesus Christ Is Risen
Todav" W. H. Monk
Solo — "The Resurrection" ;,L"ii'
Harry Rowe Shelley
G. Roy Hall.
Anthem— "Christ Our Passover" Chapel
Bass solo, C. H. Smith; soprano solo.
Miss Jean Wanless.
Gloria Patrl No. 2 G. J. Elvey
Te Deum in C A. F. M. Custance
Jubilate No. 120 .....Oxford
Solo — "The Victory of the Cross ... .
Miss Jean Wanless
P. A. Schnicker.
"Kyrle Elision" Roland S^mart
Gloria Tibl •,• ■ Roland Smart
Hymn— "At the Lamb's High J^^^^
OfTertoVy ' anthem— "'as it ' Began to
Dawn"' George C. Martin
Soprano solo. Miss Myrtle Hobbs.
Presentation No. 405.
Sursum Corda
Sanctus • ,v' ".; '
Benedictus Que \enlt.
Solo by C. H
Agnes Del
Solo.
. .Roland
. .Roland
. .Roland
Smith.
.Roland
Smart
Smart
Smart
Smart
C H. Smith; solo. Miss Myrtle
Hobbs: solo. Mr. Johnson.
Communion hymn — "Bread of the
World" C. J. Dickinson
Gloria In Excelsls ..Old Chant
Nunc Dlmltls C. A. Barry
Recessional hymn — "Christ Is Risen"
.Hanscom
Swallowed Up In
Hollins
Lemare
Morn"...
Schuecker
Mrs. Walsh.
Anthem — "Magdalene" Warren
Postlude — Easter March Flagler
The quartet consists of Mrs. Mark
Baldwin, Mrs. J. F. Walsh, T. J. Long-
tin, George E. Suffel, organist. Miss
Carlotta Slmonds.
• * •
First Norwegian nanlsh — At the
First Norwegian-Danish M. E. church,
corner of Twenty-fourth avenue west
and Third street. At 6 o'clock in the
morning there will be a sermon by the
pastor; also at 10:30 and special music.
Rev. J. Sanaker of Minneapolis will
preach the sermon and administer the
sacrament of the Lord's Supper. The
Sunday school exercises will be held at
7:30 p. m. Rev. Edward Erickson is
pastor.
• « •
Bethesda Lutheran — At Bethes^a
Norwegian Lutheran church, corner
Sixth avenue East and Fifth street, the
pastor. Rev, Theodore J. Austad, will
conduct services Easter morning at
10:30 In the Norwegian language, and
evening at 7:45 in the English lan-
guage. The program will be as follows:
MOIiNING.
Organ Prelude — F A. Relssiger
Duet — "Mln Lykke og Glade"
J. Sether
Miss Olson and Miss Einarson.
Sermon — ""The Value of Chrlst"s Res-
urrection to Us"
Song — "Op Han Stod Han er el Her"
J. Sether
Choir.
Offertory — "Therefore With Angels"
V. Novello
Postlude — B. Malllochand
EVENING.
Organ Prelude — F. A. Relssiger
Soprano Solo — Selected
Miss Betsy Duclett.
Sermon — "The Risen Lord, the First
Fruits of Them That Slept"
Song— "Arise, Shine!" C. Gabriel
Choir.
Offertory — Leyback
Postlude — B Malllochand
Miss Ella Hanson, organist.
There will be no Norwegian Sunday
school. English Sunday school will
meet at 12:30 p. m.
« • *
Glen Avon — At Glen Avon Presbyteri-
an church, the pastor, John Culbert Fa-
rles, will preach at 10:30 on '"The Livin
Christ." The Bible school will meet
12 o'clock and the Endeavor society at
6:45. The topic for the evening ser-
mon will be "The Triumph of the Blbl«
— The Reformation." There will be
Easter music morning and evening.
The soloist win be Miss Barbara Rup-
ley, who will render the following solos:
MORNING.
"As It Began to Dawn"
F. Flaxington Harter
"The Earth Is the Lord's
Arthur Schmeld
EVENING.
"The Strife Is O'er" .Harry Rowe Shelley
* • *
St. Lake's Danish Lutheran — Easter
service will be held Sunday at 3 p. m.
In the Norwegian Lutheran Synod
church on Roosevelt street and Fifty-
seventh avenue west; N. C. Carlson,
pastor.
* • *
PIlKrIm Consnregatlonal — At the Pil-
grim Congregational church, Alexan-
"a^
Sunset,
lows:
MORNING.
Organ I*relude Gounod
Anthem — 'Christ Our Passover"....
Arthur Foote
Response — ^"O Come Unto Him"
Hanscom
Offertory — "Chant du Soir" Bossl
solo — "Hosanna" Holden
Miss Reynolds.
Anthem — "Magdalene" Warren
Organ Postlude Gounod
EVENING.
Organ Prelude Saint Saens
Anthem — '•Magdalene" Warren
Offertory Guilmant
Anthem — "'They Have Taken Away
My Lord" Stainer
Organ Postlude — "Hosanna"
Paul Wachs
Miss Ruth A. Rogers is the organist,
and the choir consists of Miss Gladys
Reynolds Miss Glenn Bartholomew,
J. R. Batchelor and Philip G. Brown.
• • •
St. PauPs Lutheran — At St. Pauls
Lutheran church, corner of Twentieth
avenue east and Third street, Easter
services will be held at 11 a. m. and
will be conducted in the English lan-
guage. Rev. E. Wulfsberg, the pastor,
will preach on "The Glad Tidings or
Easter." The musical program will be
as follows:
Credo Hayden
"O Blessed Easter Day" Kreutzer
Choir.
"Hail! Glorious Morn "... .Adam Geibel
Mrs. E. Wulfsberg.
"Incline Thine Ear" Hummel
"Gloria" Mozart
Miss Marion Koefod, organist; Rev.
E. Wulfsberg. choir director. Sunday
school will meet at 9:45 a. m.; Luther
guild. Wednesday at 8 p. m.
Tmmannel Lutheran — At Immanuel
Lutheran church, corner of Fifty-sev-
enth avenue west and Roosevelt street.
Easter services will be held at 7:45 p.
m.. and will be conducted in the Nor-
wegian language. Rev. E. Wulfsberg
will preach on "The Consolation of the
Resurrection." The choir and the male
quartet, directed by E. J. Sponheim,
will sing the following numbers:
"Heavenly Comforter"
"Glory Be to God "
"The Watchers on the Mountain' . . .
Miss TllUe Clementson, Is organist.
There will be no Sunday school.
First Swedish M. E. — At the First
Swedish M. E. church. Twentieth avenue
west and Third street, services will be
held Sunday morning at 11 o'clock.
Rev Edwin Stromberg will speak. At
7:30 p. m there will be a program by
the Sunday school; music by the choir
and a solo by Miss Esther Wilson.
* « «
Holy .4p«stle8 Episcopal — Services in
Holy Apostles Episcopal church. Fifty-
seventh avenue west and Elinor street,
on Easter day will be as follows:
Morning prayer, holy communion and
sermon, 10:45 a. m., with special music
by vested choir. Sunday school will
be at noon, evening prayer and ad-
dress, 7:45 p. m. Rev. Ellsworth B.
Collier, rector.
AV est minster Presbyterian — At the
Westminster Presbyterian church.
Fifty-eighth avenue west and Ramsey
street, Rev. John G. Leltch, pastor,
services will be as follows: 6:30 a. m.,
union service prayer meeting; 10:^0 a.
m., morning worship; noon, Sunday
school; 3:30 p. m.. Junior Endeavor.
For the morning the following Is the
musical program:
Voluntary
Doxology
AnThem— "See the" Place' Where Jesus
Lay"
' Choir.
Solo — "Beautiful Lilies"
Miss Blanche Irwin.
Miss Florence Melln Is organist.
« * *
« • •
Union Church — The services of the
Union church are held in the K. P.
hall. 11© West Superior street. Sunday
morning at 10:50 and In the evening
at 8 o'clock. Sunday school will be at
noon. Christian Enj^eavor at 7 i). m
The morning subject will be "The
Universal Church." B. V. Black is the
pastor. Following are the musical
programs: ^^^^^^^
Prelude
Hynin— ^Ail' Hail' the' Power of Jesus'
AnthTm— '••They ' 'Have "Taken" Away
My Lord" Lorenz
Offertory
Solo— "The Risen Master" Stearns
Miss Dora Nelson.
Sermon
Hymn — "Love That Opens Heaven
to Me"'
EVENING.
Hvmn— "Faith Is the Victory*
Scripture reading
Prayer j^Vjj^- Excellent" •fhy'Narae
afternon service Mr. Harvey "Wood
will sing a solo. "'The Holy City."
• « «
Second Presbyterian — Services In the
Second Presbyterian church, 1511 West
Superior street, will be held at 10:45
a. m., and 7:45 p. m.. Rev. J. T. Moody,
D.D., will speak both In the morning
and evening. Musical programs fol-
low:
MORNING.
Organ Prelude — "Christ Is Risen"...
Ashf ord
Anthem — "Hall Easter Mornlngr"...
Gabriel
Offertory King
Anthem — "Our Risen King". . .Cranner
Postlude Hander
EVENING.
Organ Preludie Beethoven
Anthem — "Lift Your Glad Voices"..
Davis
Offertory Mendelssohn
Anthem — "As It Began to Dawn"...
HIn?
Postlude Wagner
• • •
St. Andrew's chapel — At St Andrew's
chapel. Park Point mission. Twenty-
eighth street and Lake avenue, service
of the holy communion will be at 9
a. m.. Sunday school Bible class and
catechism competition will be at 3 p. m.
Evening service and baptisms will be
at 8 p. m.; speaker. Dean Wurtele; sub-
ject, "Death and Life." Music will be
under the direction of A. H. Deeks.
• • •
First Gcrnian Methodist Episcopal —
At the First German Methodist Episco-
pal church. Fifth avenue east and Sixth
street, the pastor, Rev. W. A. Weiss,
will preach at 10 a. m. Sunday school
will meet at 11 a. m. The Sunday
school's Easter festival will be held In
the evening, commencing at 7:30
o'clock.
• « •
Hope chnrch — At the Hope church of
the Evangelical association, Sixth ave-
nue and Fifth street, the Sunday
school will meet at 10 a. m. At 11
a. m. the pastor, R. R. Werner, will
f (reach. Instead of the regular even-
ng service, the Sunday school will
give an appropriate Easter program,
beginning at «:30 o'clock. On April
27 the annual business meeting of the
congregation will be held in the
church.
• * «
TO WED GRANDDAUGIHTER
OF QUEEN LiLiUOKALANI
S^^^>^>^ff^^^f^f^>^^f^f^f^f^ny^^^^^^^<^*^)^»^»^>^
JAY GOULD,
Second Son of George J. GduM, Has
Obtained a Marriage License to
Wed Miss Annie Douglas Graham,
Daughter of John Graham and
Granddaughter of Quetn Lydia
Kamekeha Liliuokalani ol the Ha-
waiian Islands.
St. Mathcw's German Lntheran — At
St. Mathew's German Lutheran church.
Fourth street and Sixth avenue east.
Rev. Herman Drews, the pastor, will
conduct the Easter services and ad-
minister the holy communion. Con-
fessional will begin at 10 a. m., and
services a half hour later. There will
be no Sunday school and no evening
services, the pastor celebrating the
holy eucharlst at Eveleth at 7:45 p. m.
Special Easter music will be furnished
by the choir. On Monday a special
business meeting of the congregation
will be held in the church at 8 p. m.
* • •
Asbury Methodist Episcopal — At the
Asbury Methodist Episcopal church.
Sixtieth avenue and Raleigh street,
morning worship will be at 10:30
o'clock; evening at 7:30; Sunday
school at 11:45 a. m.; Junior Epworth
league at 3 p. m.
The pastor will preach In the morn-
ing on "God's Immutable Promises."
The sneclal Easter music at this serv-
ice consists of two anthems by the
choir, a solo, "Glory to God," by Miss
McLyman. B. Brooks will sing "Cal-
vary."
* • •
Theosophical — The Theosophlcal so-
ciety holds Its regular meetings for
members on Thursday evenings at 8
o"clock In Room 28, Winthrop block,
Fourth avenue west and First street.
Use the avenue entrance. Open classes
are held on Monday evenings. The
study Is about "Esoteric Christianity,"
and public classes on Sunday after-
noon will meet at 3 o'clock, to wiilch
any one Interested in Theosophical
study is welcome.
* * •
Immanuera Lutheran — At this
church Fifty-seventh avenue west and
Roosevelt street services will be co'n-
ducted In the evening at 8 o'clock In
the Norwegian language. A male
quartet and the choir will sing.
* • «
St. Paul's Lutheran — At this church
Twentieth avenue west and Third
street, there will be English services
at 11 a, m., 4|h which the following
gl
Away" . .
Anthem — "I
Am He That
LU-eth"...
Simper
; . , Bourgeios
Doxology
Offertory — Selected
Sursom Corda Adlam
Sanctus Adlam
Benedictus Qui Venlt Adlam
Hymn— "And Now, O Fathe:-, Mind-
ful of the Love" • • • •
Agnes Dei Adlam
Gloria in Excelsls Adlam
Nunc Dlmlttls Turle
Recessional — "The Day of resurrec-
tion"
Organ Postlude — Selected
Mrs. William Drummond, organist
and choir director.
• • •
West Duluth Baptist — At the West
Duluth Baptist church, IMfty-nlnth
avenue west and orand a-venue. on
Easter Sunday, the pastor, R<>v. H. P. J.
Sellnger will preach in the riornlng on
"The Resurrection In Court" and in the
evening on "Transformed Tears." Sun-
day school win be at nocn, Charles
Dahlqulst, superintendent. H. T. P. U.
will meet at 6:45 p. m. At both services
the congregation will sing the old-time
Easter hymns and the folloving musi-
cal program will be given by the
choir: _
MORNING.
Offertory — "Praise the Lord"'........
McAulay
Anthem— "Coronation" Ashford
EVENING.
Solo — "Cihrst Is Risen "
Miss Wallace.
Offertory solo — "The Resurr ?ctlon". .
Mr. McGillillan.
Anthem — "Lift Up Your HeJ.ds"
Choir.
Mary Barnes, organist.
• • ♦
Bethel Rescue Mission — At the Lake
Avenue Bethel services will be hf Id at
7-30 p. m. W. D. Edson 'vlll speak.
Sunday school at 3 p. m.. Miss Frances
McGlffert. superintendent. Services are
held every night in the week and all
those Interested In the spiritual welfare
of the unchurched men of Duluth are
Invited. The Branch Betl el Sunday
school meets In K. of P. hall at
L. A, Marvin Is superntendent.
ACT AT ONCE!
Positively the last week
for contestants and prize-
winners to call for their
prizes and select a piano.
It's an opportunity that
will never come again.
Our stock consists of
some of the finest instru-
ments ever shown in the
city, and every piano is
marked in plain figures.
"We sell at the Chicago
wholesale prices — one
price to all.
Store Open Evenings
Until April 22.
■«s
•■1^
"■
music will be given:
Credo
"O Blessed
Haydn
Kreuzer
CO.,
(Kimball Factory Store).
203-5 E. SUPERIOR ST.
p. m.
, Anthem— "HOW Kxceiieni iny ^^'^^^^^
Offertory •• • • •
I Solo — •'Resurrection . . . . • • •
Miss Jessie McGhle.
I^eli'^drction— "'•"it" "is" "Weli" ■ w'uh
Soul" '»■*■;■■■•
central Baptist — At the Central Bap-
Surch "irst st.eet and Twentieth
west. Rev. J. W.
.Holden
My
list
service,
as fol'
Young people of the various churches
will join with the Christian Endeavor
societies of the city In their annual
Easter morning sunrise meeting Sun-
day. Four of these meetings will be
held: One in the Pilgrim Congrega-
tional church for the societies in the
central part of the city, one at Lake-
side for the members in that suburb,
another at the Second Presbyterian
church, and another at West Duluth,
In the Westminster Presbyterian
church. The subject to be studied will
be "The Spirit of the Resurrection."
and the lesson reference is Romans
At the Pilgrim Congregational
church at 6:30 a. m.. Miss Winifred
Warner, president of the Pilgrim
Young Peoples society of Christian En-
deavor, will be the leader. At the
Lakeside Presbyterian church the
meeting will be held at 6:30 a. m., and
an excellent musical program has been
prepared. The Second Presbyterian
church meeting will be under the lead-
ership of Oscar Heiam. president of
this socletv. The Endeavorers of this
church have been holding their own
Easter service for several years and
It Is expected that many of their
friends will join with them. Charles I.
Towner will lead the meeting in the
Westminster church at 6:30 a. m. The
Westminster and Smlthville Christian
Endeavor societies and societies of the
following churches will attend: West
Duluth and Third Swedish Baptist, the
Asbury. Merrit Memorial, and Bethany
Norwegian-Danish Methodist churches,
the Ellm Swedish, St. Stephens
Evangelical, Immanuel Norwegian
Synod, Our Savior's Norwegian
Evangelical Lutheran, the Holy
Apostle's Episcopal and the Swedish
Mission churches. Music by the choirs
of several of societies will be given.
On account of the early morning
meetings very tew of the societies
win hold evening meetings, the only
ones reported to the Union being the
Glen Avon society, which will meet at
7 p. m. under the leadership of Miss
Julia Nolte. Westminster Junior so-
ciety will meet at 3:30 p. m. Mr. C. I.
Towner will have charge of the meet-
ing. Second Presbyterian society met
for business Monday evening, Apill 10,
at the home of Ralph Page.
avenue west. «ev. .,. >v. L?ughridge
will preach at 10:30 a. m. en 'New Life
and New Purpose" and at 7:30 p. m^on
*The Goal." Mildred Downe Culbert-
Bon will sing at the morning
The musical program will be
SSbm^-^'-wllcome "HkppV 'Mo-*;"^' „
"Choir. • ""'^^
Solo-"1 Know That My Re«5«^'"«^-,
Llveth" • Handel
Cecil GlUeland.
Postlude • • • • •^^ENi-NG. •••••
^"iiiToTd'^':*''. .".^."' . .''^'''" • L^rLz
Choir.
^i^s" """"^ '^')"^.^.^''.'srr^lzk1
"mIss Ruth Glover.
Anthem— "Jesus Christ, the King of
Glory" • • • •, Adams
Choir.
Solo— "The Joy of His A^^^'^^'Xlel
Mrs. Mae Ba'lille.
Quartet— 'Hail, O Glorious Morn^.^.^.^.^^^
Mrs ' Leigli "Ounther,' George Jewell. E.
Downle. Frank Glover. _.
Anthem— "My Friend of Calvary
Lorenz
Choir.
Mrs. 'Leigh Gun tlier.
Solo
Postlude
« * •
St. John's Episcopal— At St. John's
church. Lakeside, services will be as
follows: Holy communion, 8 a. m.:
Sunday school, 10 a. m.; morning
prayer and holy communion, 11 o'clock,
children's service, 4:30 p. m.; evening
prayer, 7:30; the Easter music for the
morning service wUl Include the fol-
lowing: .. -,. ,
•Christ Our Passover" Chappel
Te Deum .Maunders
Sanctus • • Stainer
Agnus Del ..;.•• • Adams
Anth em— "Easter Triumph ' Holden
The hymns and anthem will be re-
peated at the evening »€rvlce. At the
Easter Day" . .
Choir.
"Incline Thine Ear" Hummel
"Hail! Glorious Morn!". . .Adam Geibel
Mrs. E. Wulfsberg.
Gloria Mozart
Miss Marlon Koefod is the organist
and Rev. Wulfsberg Uie choir director.
• « •
Bethany Swedish Lutheran — At the
Bethany Swedish Lutheran church.
Twenty-third avenue west and Third
street, services will be at 10 a. m.
There will be no Sunday school. The
children's Easter festival will begin at
7:30 p. m.
• • •
Lester -Park Methodist Episcopal—
The Easter festival will be celebrated
tomorrow at the Lester Park Metho-
dist Episcopal church with special
services In which music of an appro-
priate character will be given a promi-
nent place. The pastor. Rev. Charles
R. Oaten, will preach at the morning
service on the theme, 'Some Certain-
ties of the Easter Gospel." and at this
service the following musical program
will be given:
Solo — "The Resurrection Morn"
Rodney
Miss Marlon Brown.
Solo — "Everv Flower That Blooms"
H. T. Hare.
Solo — "The Resurrection" Shelley
Miss Ida Bogan.
Anthem — "Jesus Christ Is Risen"
Adams
Choir.
Solo
J. C. Myron.
At the evening service at 7:45 the
Sunday school will give an Easter pro-
gram, as follows:
Voluntary
Orchestra.
Scripture reading
Superintendent.
Prayer
Pastor.
Exercise and song
Miss Norrls' Class.
Recitation
Master Victor Snyder.
•Two Little Hearts"
Lucille Snyder and Marian Young.
Song «:•,;■;
School.
•Easter Pansies"
Mrs. Smith's Class.
Solo
Nellie Perrott.
•'Easter Gifts"
Miss Bush's Class.
Song •«•...•..
School.
Recitation »
Miss Esther Wood.
Easter Lilly, exercise and song ....
Miss Lovald's Class.
Piano solo
Ronald Myron.
Exercise .-
Miss Clemens' Class.
'•At the Cross"
Mrs. McDowell's Class.
Song •
School.
"Easter Lights"
Miss Marie McDowell's Class.
•'Easter Temple"
Mr. Thomas' Class.
Offertory
Orchestra.
Song ^M";
School.
Benediction
« * *
Bethany NorwcKlan- Danish Metho-
dist Episcopal — At this church. Sixty-
fifth avenue west and Polk street. Rev.
C. W. Schevenlus, pastor, Sunday school
win be at 9:45 a. m. and church serv-
ices at 10:45 a. m. There will be no
Epworth league services. At 7:45 p.
m an Easter program will be given
by the Sunday school and Epworth
league. , , «
gt. Peter'a Episcopal— Rev. W. E.
Harmann will preach on The New
Life" at 11 a. m. Easter morning at
the celebration of the holy communion.
A service will be held in Swedish at 8
o'clock In the evening. The program
which will be given at the morning
service follows:
Processional— "Come Ye Faithful' . . .
Versecles , Festal
Anthem — "Easter Gladness '
Children's voices.
Kvrle Adlam
Gloria Tibl ^Adlam
Hymn — "Angels, Roll the Rock
See Huot's for
Easter Favors.
novelties.
new
— • —
CONFERENCE
* IS DISCUSSED
am
CONTRACTORS
WANTED
For clearing land at Meadowlands,
St. Louis county, on the D. M. & N.
road. Call or write
Lu\ND DEPT., D. & I. R. RY. CO.,
Wolvln Bld^., Duluth.
Trades Assembly Members
Are Working for Success
of the Meeting.
At the largest and best meeting of
the Federated Trades and Labor as-
sembly held in many months, plans
for the coming conference between
all the labor unions of the city were
enthusiastically discussed last even-
ing in Kalamazoo hall.
The conference will be held Mon-
day evening, April 24, 8.t Rowleys
hall. Every union in the city has
promised, it is said, to have repre-
sentatives present and at the present
time the outlook for a successful
meeting is bright.
The object of the conference is to
bring the unions of the city closer
together that they may work to bet-
ter advantage for the advancement
of the label in this city.
Representatives of the carpenters
and electrical workers' unions re-
ported that their unions were steadily
increasing.
president of the as-
for the committee
Labor ciay celebra-
The reports showed
that over $600 had been cleared by
the souvenir program printed at that
time.
It was reported that a new shoe
repairers' union with foriy members
and a new garment woikers' union
with twenty-five member j had been
organized in Duluth.
FINE FARM NEAR WADENA
SOLD FOR $62.50 AN ACRE.
Wadena, Minn., April 15. — Tuesday
Wiliam Blair, a well-known citizen
of Wadena, bought the Wiswell farm
at the edge of this city for $10,000,
or $62.50 per acre.
The Wiswell farm co;nprises 160
^H Amerlci
American Excbange Nst'i
>
Richard Jones,
sembl-«% reported
in charge of the
tlon of last year.
r A Recomineiidatioii
I That Counts!
% Have you ever thought
of a savings bank book as
a letter of recommenda-
tion in seeking a position
where responsibility and
trustworthiness are re-
quired ?
A eavinss book showing
regular deposits covering an
extended period, tells a story
of thrift, energy, and ambi-
tion tliat cannot be denied.
A dollar deiwvltcd in the
8a\ings department of thlg
bank will start an account
which will bo your best
friend when out of work.
AMERICM EXCHANGE
UTION/kL BANK
\
"^
American Exchaaf e Nat'l
;
■
1
OmecTa
The Gr<»at
Family
Liniment
ForlUiflummtism. Lumbairi. Spndna,
BniisM, Sore Throat. Cokl in ChMt.
Aathnia Bronchitis, Difflci; It Breath-
ins, Col>i in Head and Catarrh. It
gives quick relief. lOc. 2>c.. 60c
acres of good land and there are
buildings on the place worth several
thousand dollars. The residence Is
one of the largest and best in this
city or the vicinity, and the barna
and other buildings are all that could
be desired. A new granary and a
large new barn were erected on the
farm not lone since. This very de-
sirable farm lies at the edge of Wa-
dena, and is not more than half a
mile from the buslnes center of the
town.
TAMARACK CHILD BURNED.
Little One Expires Before Reaching
Hospital at Brainerd.
Bralnerd. Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.)— Spencer, the 3-
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleave of Tamarack, set fire to hl»
clothing while playing with a stove
and filling it with bark. Attracted
by his cries his father awakened and
extinguished the flames, but not be-
fore the child was seriously burned.
He was hurried to a Brainerd hos-
pital, but died while being placed in
the ambulance.
— •
Girls Have Cioi^e Cull.
St. Louis. Ai.ril 15.— •i^vo hundred
girls and women employed in a shirt
factory on the seventh floor of a Wash-
ington avenue building left with as-
sistance of firemen down the fire es-
cape following an explosion and fire
late ye.^terdav on the third floor. One
woman leai.ed to the sidewalk from the
second floor and was picked up uncon-
scious.
«
Buy in Dviluth.
-•-
—
'
/
1
i
J
1
f
J
/
■
i
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t
1
(
I
1
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■1^
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Saturday,
- PlUPf
■•^**>«^ax
^•a^Pi
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fmi*^
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THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
THE FIVE YANKEES WHO WHI REFORM PERSIA'S FINANCES
I
They Are All Young Men and W. Morgan
Shuster the Head of the Body Began ffis
Active Governmental Career as a Stenogra-
pher—At Twenty-Four He Was One of the
Big Officials in the Philippine Islands-The
College Student Who Went to Fight in the
Philippines and Remained to Help Govern the
New Possessions— The Youngest of the Quin-
tet Is Just Thirty— Awakened Persia Giving
Heed to the Example of the People of the
United States— Some Recent Truly Wonder-
ful Persian Reforms. /. .'. /.
• •
Written for The Herald by E, J. EDWARDS r Holland")
cza
(Cnpyright. 1»19, by E. J. EdwarJs.)
^^^■■■i^^IVE young: Americana
|^^^\| sailed the other day to
I M I undertake in tha Old
I i I World the solution of a
*■ ^ problem In finance and
government administra-
tion of the first order.
Their task is nothing less
than the entire reorganization of the
fisial system of the ancient but now
awakened monarchy of Persia, with
the object of placing that country on
a self-!-ufficlent and Independent basis
tinanciMllv. As a mere matter of finan-
cial administration, the undertaking,
which presents dltficulties and perplex-
ities as vet but dimly outlined, will be
watched wllli keen interest by all who
are concerned with finance in its rela-
ti'in to government. As a matter which
indirectly may have an important bear-
ing on the course of events in the near
East, it win be followed with equally
kten interest by those who are students
of world politics.
•It is a big job which these five
young Americans have been called upon
to accomplish — the reorganization of
the finances of Persia." said one of the
foremost bankers of the country the
other dav. "It la a task calling for
ftrst-cla.-<s ability supplemented by
thorough e.vperience."
The C'nited States has. on a number
of occasions, on request sent experts to
other countries to assist by counsel and
advice in the solution of difficult prob-
lems of finance or government adminis-
tration. American experts, for instance,
have been called upon more than once
to advl.se the Chinese government In
mattt-rs of peculiar difficulty. When
Mexico decided to change from a silver
to a gold monetary basis, experts from
the United States were called in to ad-
vise the government of that country
how best to effect the operation.
American experts assisted San Domingo
in the reorganization of its customs
service. In these and other cases, ex-
cept that of San Domingo, where Amer-
icans did actually assist in the admin-
istration of the suggested reforms, the
part taken by the experts was purely
advisory. But the five young men who
are going to assist Persia will be called
on not merely to give advice. They will
possess sweeping executive or adminis-
trative powers and will be. in fact and
in name, officers of the Persian gov-
ernment. The Intrusting of such au-
thoritv to American citizens by a for-
eign government is without exact prec-
edent.
The Five Men Who Will Help Persia.
\V .vlorgan Sinister who is to have
supervision of the fiscal reorganization
in the kingdom of Iran, has been ap-
pointed not onlv financial advisor of the
empire, but treasurer-general as well.
In the latter capacity he will have su-
pervision of the collection, custody and
disbursement of all the revenues of the
Persian government. Each of the four
Americans who will assl.>4t him in this
work is to hold a formally designated
administrative office. Thus, F. S. Cairns
is to be director of taxation. Charles I.
McCaskey Inspector of provincial reve-
nue, Ralph W. Hills chief In charge of
the accounting and auditing system,
and Bruce G. Dickey inspector of taxa-
tion.
The work to be undertaken is two-
fold. First, the most available source.-
of revenue in the empire are to be
ietermined and then the administra-
tive machinery for its collection, with
proper ard sufficient checks and safe-
guards to Insure the deposit of the
total amount collected In the treasury,
mu.st be devised and set In motk-n.
This is an undertaking which will
doubtless require several years to com-
plete. Mr. Shuster and his associates
are under contract with the Persian
government for a minimum period of
thrte years.
With a single exception, the men
chosen to form the Persian financial
administration have all acquired ex-
perience in the administration of gov-
ernment in the colonial possessions of
the United States. Fifteen years ago
it would have been a mucn more diffi-
cult matter than It proved at this time
to find In the United States men thor-
oughly qualified to solve Persia's prob-
lem of finance; for fifteen years ago
the United States had not become a
colonifll power, and no opportunity was
afforded young Americans to master
the science of government administra-
tion in the midst of a foreign popula-
tion. While the experience which has
made these American experts dates
back to the time when the country un-
dertook the administration of colonies,
it is not surprising that they are all
young men, whose ages average about
33 years.
The Rise of a StenoKrapher.
W. Morgan Shuster first began to be
heard about in connection with the
work of the American government In
Cuba just after the war with Spain
and. subsequently, in connection with
the government of the Philippine isl-
ands. In both Cuba and the Phil-
ippines he held successively many im-
portant government posts. In which he
had to deal with the problems arising
from the organization of new govern-
ments, and became e.specially conver-
sant with matters pertaining to taxa-
tion.
Mr. Shuster is a Washlngtonlan. His
parents have been life-long residents
of the capital city and he was born
there Just at the close of President
Grant's second administration, Febru-
ary, 1S77. He was graduated from
the Central high school of Washing-
ton, and during his post-graduate
cour.se there, was colonel of the Wash-
ington high school cadet regiment, an
organization which became famous the
world over when Sousa wrote for It one
of the earliest and probably tlie most
popular of ills marches.
While his friends thought at that
time that Morgan Shuster was likely
to embrace a military career circum-
stances brought it about that he should
find his work in the civil branch of the
government. At the outbreak of the
war with Spain, he was a stenographer
in the United States war department, in
which he displayed such ability that
when the evacuation commission, which
had charge of the evacuation of Cuba
by the Spanish government and troops,
was appointed, he was chosen, although
then only 21 years of age, to the posi-
tion of assistant secretary to that body.
When the commission's work was ac-
complished, Mr. Shuster was trans-
ferred to the Cuban customs service. In
which he remained three years, finally
attaining the position of special deputy
collector of customs for Cuba.
Mr. Shuster's work in Cuba had es-
pecially commended itself to Secretary
of War Elihu Root, and In 1901. al-
though Mr. Shuster was then only 24
years of age, Mr. Root appointed him
collector of customs for the Philippines.
Thus, at an age when many young men
nowadays are Just finishing their tech-
nical training this young man was
placed at the nead of a great adminis-
trative bureau of the government. But
the duties with which he was charged
In this position were not merely admin-
istrative. "They were creative as well.
For on him devolved the work of re-
vising the new Philippine tariff laws
and of reorganizing the entire Philip-
pine customs servce. Not only that, he
was also charged with the enforcement
of all the Immigration, navigation and
registration laws in the Philippine isl-
ands.
A YounsMter'M Big; Contract.
That was something of a contract for
a youngster of 24. Mr. Shuster was
employed In this work for five years,
and succeeded so completely in It, that
Mr. Taft. then secretary of war, recom-
mended that he be placed in clmrge of
the next big piece of creative adminis-
tration In the islands, that which had
to do with the organization of the edu-
cational system. In accordance with
Mr. Taft's advice, therefore. President
Roosevelt appointed Mr. Shuster in 1906
secretary of public instruction in the
Philippines and also a member of the
Philippines commission, which was at
that time the sole legislative body in
the islands. Mr. Shuster's new duties
were multifarious. He had charge of
the bureau of education, employing
nearly 8,000 American and Filipino
teachers, he was the responsible head
of the entire prison system, and man-
aged the bureau through which all sup-
plies for the government of the islands
were purchased. Furtliermore, he had
charge of the bureau of printing, and
the Philippine Medical college, and he
organized the government university In
the Islands, the Philippine university,
as it is known.
Another Important piece of work for
which he was largely responsible was
the codification of all the American
legislation affecting the Philippines,
covering a period of ten j'ears. He
was chairman of the code committee
of the Philippine commission, which
successfully accomplished this work In
1907.
For the past few years Mr. Sinister
has been engaged In the practice of
the law in Washington. He is a mem-
ber of the bar of the United States su-
preme court, of the United States court
of customs appeals and of the supreme
court and court of appeals of the Dis-
trict of Columbia. He married in 1904
Miss Pearl Bertha Trigg, the daughter
of Col. H. C. Trigg, a prominent banker
and railroad man of Kentucky. Mr. and
Mrs. Shuster have two daughters, both
of whom were born in Manila.
A Stndeat Who Went to War.
Until he was 20 years of age, Charles
I. McCaskey, who is to be Inspector of
provincial revenue In Persia, lived at
various army posts in th<3 United
States. He is the son of MaJ. Gen.
William S. McCaski^y. and he was born
at Fort Snelllng, Minn., in 1877.
He was attending the University of
Kansas at the beginning of 1S99 wh^n
the Twentieth United States Infantry,
which his father was commanding, was
ordered to the I'hlllppines. In tjic
chance to accompany them .vnlch r.as
offered him young McCaskey saw his
opportunity, and he abandoned his col-
lege course. For a whole yt^ar .ne was
with his father's regiment tn the field
and was In action against the Filipino
Insurgents on man/ occasions.
Returning to Manila In the sprang of
1899, he obtained a position as inspec-
tor in the Philippine customs service.
He remained In this service until 1897,
by which time he had been promoted
to the position of deputy surveyor of
customs at Manila.
His Pihllippine Bervlce was roman-
tically interrupted In 1905. He returned
to the United States in the spring of
that year on leave of absence, and on
arriving in San Francisco he was mar-
ried to Miss Seldon S^nt of Holly
Springs, Miss. On accottm of the seri-
ous Illness of his wife two yeiars
later, Mr. McCaskey was compelled to
leave the Philippines, and he secured a
transfer from the customs service at
Manila to that of the port of New
York. About a year after his arrival
In New York he was promoted to the
position of acting deputy surveyor of
the port, which position he held when
he was selected for the work In Persia.
Ralph W. Hills Is the only one of
the five who has not had a colonial ex-
perience. The position that he is to
fill In Persia relating, as It does to
matters of bookkeeping and account-
ing entirely, does not make necessary
that special training. He is a native
of Cleveland, Ohio, and he is now In
his 36th year. His father, Capt.. Charles
W. Hills of the Forty-first Ohio volun-
teers, served with distinction during
the Civil war, and received several
wounds, which eventually caused his
death. Mr. Hills, after being gradu-
ated from the Washington high school,
entered Columbia university, from
which he was graduated In 1897 with
the degree of Bachelor of Science. For
a time thereafter he was In the em-
ploy of a bonding company In New
York, but he soon left that to enter
the government service in Washington.
A few years later he decided to study
law, a.id took the course at Oeorge
Washington university, from which he
holds the degree of Bachelor of Laws.
Since 1906 he has been practicing as an
attorney In the District of Columbia.
In 1909, when congress placed the
building and loan associations in the
District of Columbia under the super-
vision of the controller of the cur-
rency, Mr. Hills was appointed to make
the semi-annual examinations of those
institutions. He has been engaged in
this work, in addition to the general
practice of the law, since that time.
Mr. Hills is a son-in-law of the late
Senator Arthur Pue Gorman of Mary-
land, whose daughter. Miss Mary Edna
Gorman, he married in 1901. They
tiave one son and two daughters.
The Yonnsest of the Qnlntet.
The youngest of the five experts Is
Bruce C. Dickey, who is just 30 years
of age. When he was 18, he left Pine
Island, Minn., where he was born and
had always lived, and went to the
Philippines. He at once found em-
gloyment in the customs service at
lanlla as an Inspector of Immigration.
The good work he did in that place
brought him promotion to the position
of appraiser of merchandise. Subse-
^f/p&mis^!^i\ mm^
GUARANTEE OF QUALITY AND PURITY
Copenhagen Snuff is made of the best, old, rich, high-
flavored leaf tobacco, to which is added only such in-
gredients as are component parts of natural leaf tobacco
and absolutely pure flavoring extracts. The Snuff Pro-
cess retains the good of the tobacco and expels the
bitter and acid of natural leaf tobacco.
AMERICAN SNUFF COMPANY, 111 Fifth Avenue. New York, N. Y.
quently, he was made chief of the pas-
senger and baggage division of the
Manila customs house, and finally as-
sistant cashier. He resigned from the
latter position to return to the United
Slates in 1908.
Like Mr.- Shuster, F. S. Cairns, who
is to have charge of direct taxation
In Persia, acquired his experience In
both Cuba and the Philippines. He
had been for several years a special
agent in the United States treasury
department, when in 1899, after the
first American occupation of Cuba, he
became chief of special agents of the
Cuban customs service. After two
years* service in this position he was
appointed surveyor of customs for the
Philippines, which office he held until
last year, when he was appointed col-
lector of customs for the port of Hollo,
the second largest port in the Philip-
pines. He is an expert in tariff and
customs matters and the subject of
taxation generally.
Great Cha^Kes In Ferula.
The changes that have taken place
recently in- Persia are not, pernaps,
generally appreciated in this country.
The desire for and determination to
have a sound and effective fi<,'sal sys-
tem manifested by the Persians is only
one Indication of the new spirit by
which they are ruled. Severe tests
have shown that they are firmly set
on carrying out a modern, progressive
and enllghfeiied policy In all directions.
The "Mullahs'' or priests, who were
formerly the bulwark of the old
regime, are among the strongest ad-
vocates today of Western Ideas of gov-
ernment and progress, and they are
now by their solemn deirves en.lolnlng
upon the P< r&lan people the duty of
upholding tha new order of things.
A great Impetus has been given to
education by the new 'eglme. Hun-
dreds of modern schools have been es-
tablished, and among the people gen-
erally there is a great eagerness to ac-
quire modern learning. Even the wom-
en, though veiled from men bl the
laws of their religion, are participat-
ing in the enlightenment that Is
spreading aver the country. In the
past two years thirty schools for Per-
sia girls have been founded by pri-
vate suljscrlptions, and many Persian
young women now speak French and
English fluently, where only a few
years ago hardly one of the middle
classes could do so. Women even con-
tribute articles to the press.
The public press is one of the most
remarkable of the developments of the
past five years in Persia. It publishes
artcles advocating with perfect free-
dom the principles of constitutional
liberty, and explaining the sources of
progress in other nations.
With the equalization of opportuni-
ties the Persians of all classes are
working In harmony to preserve the
Independence of their country, while
the spread of knowledge has aroused
In them a great Interest In Institu-
tional life, and has resulted in the for-
mation of many clubs, educational and
literary societies and similar organiza-
tions.
America fiN an Example for Pen«la.
In all these activities the Persians
are giving special attention to the ex-
ample of the people of the United
States and are showing a strong desire
to profit by American experience. Part-
ly because of this circumstance, and
partly because Persia felt that she
could place no reliance in fiscal agents
selected or recommended by Russia and
Great Britain — for both nations have
shown a strong desire to Intervene in
Persian affairs — Persia has turned to
this country for help In placing her
finances on a sound basis.
"I wish you could have been here at
the "time the new Persian parliament
voted In favor of a resolution asking
the president of the United States to
select some young American financiers
for appointment as a commission to
show Persia how to get an income,
how to raise revenue and how to create
THE ARMY CANTEEN
BEFORE AND AFTER
By LOUIS DUCHEZ.
United States Army, In New
ID CONGRESS make a
mistake in taking the
canteen away from the
soldiers? Does this ac-
count, in part at least,
for the remarkable in-
crease in desertions dur-
ing the past five years?
Is the canteen a detriment or a benefit
to an army post?
These questions have been asked
many times since the enlisted man lost
his canteen. But they are now being
asked of tener than ever. The great in-
crease in desertions and in drunken-
ness and the spread of dangerous con-
tagious diseases throughout the army
not only have alarmed army officials,
but citizens as well. Also the exten-
sive use of "dope" in the form of mor-
phine, cocaine, opium, etc., with the
resulting increase of insanity in nearly
every army post, has aroused the heads
of the nation to the fact that
something radically wrong In
tlon with the regular army
United States. ^^ . ^ »u^
What are the facts? What is the
canteen, anyway? What part did It
play in the Social life of the regular?
Finally, should it be restored?
Few people outside the army seemed
to know exactly what the canteen was.
Many thought it meant that the gov-
ernment had a large storehouse
sorts of intoxicants, where the
could go with his canteen, get
then drink "booze" to his
isfactlon. Few citizens
meant anything else but
for soldiers to carouse
themselves. As a
there is
connec-
of the
for all
soldier
It filled,
eternal sat-
thought It
a grand place
and disgrace
matter of fact, the
canteen was the social club of the sol-
diers. It was conducted solely for en-
listed men along the same lines that
the officers' club is conducted today.
Only beer and soft drinks were
handled; the stronger alcoholic bever-
ages, such as whisky, were prohibited
in the canteen.
The canteen was the greatest gather-
ing place of the post. Cards, checkers
and dominoes were generally supplied.
During the afternoons and evenings
the men off duty gathered In these can-
teens, plaved games, chatted and met
their friends. In this way the dull
rout'ne of military life was made less
burdensome. Those who cared to read
could look through the magazines,
which were furnished also. Those who
wished to spend an hour or so in the
gymnasium, which was located In the
same building, were privileged to do
that. Often there was a piano in the
same building, and, with the assistance
of musical talent, of which there is con-
siderable among the regulars, harmless
fun was furnished for an entire gath-
ering. The glass or so of beer which
the soldiers drank rarely intoxicated
any of them. It was more as a social
club, as a medium for social Intercourse
rather than a "saloon" that the regu-
lars valued the canteen.
A commissioned officer was placed in
charge of every canteen. Under him
was a non-commlssloned officer ( a ser-
geant or a corporal), who had immedi-
ate charge and attended to the clerical
work of the Institution. The profits
made from the canteen were divided
among the various troops and com-
panies, and used to swell the company
funds Every month a statement was
made to the commanding officer of
each "outfit." Many a fancy Sunday
dinner was furnished the soldiers as a
result of these monthly dividends,
which were used to purchase foods not
Issued by the quartermaster's depart-
ment in the regular rations. Every
week canteen checks were Issued by
the "top" sergeant. These checks could
be redeemed at the canteen for card-
board or brass "chips" designating
purchases from 1 to 50 cents.
Today the canteen is no more. The
enlisted man no longer has his social
club. Congress, by giving In to the
whim of temperance organizations un-
acquainted with Inside conditions in
the army, practically compelled the
soldiers who drank, and many who
didn't to run to saloons and dives out-
side the posts. At the same time it
abolished the enlisted men's social club
Now, Instead of drinking beer, which
underwent close inspection when the
canteen existed, the soldiers drink
"rotgut" and "varnish."
When the canteen existed a large
percentage of the regulars seldom left
the army posts. They found compan-
ionship and social intercourse among
their comrades in the canteen. Today
most of the soldiers spend their spare
time in and around the dives and dens
in the vicinity of the army posts and
beyond military Inspectors. As a rule,
the soldiers who were subject to the
excessive drinking could be taken care
of when the canteen existed. The of-
ficers In charge had them spotted and
watched that they did not drink too
much, which was seldom when the
drink'ng was confined to beer. Then
the canteen waa located a few yards
a good svstem of taxation." In this
%vay. Mrs. Sarah A. Clock, ^v^ho has long
been a medical missionary at Teheran,
the Persian capital, wrote to a friend
In New York city. Mrs. Clock has
gained the confidence and respect of the
authorities and the people of Persia, for
she served well both as ji missionary
and as a physician.
"I was present," she continues in the
letter, "when the Persian parliament
adopted this resolution. M> pride In my
country was stimulated by the enthu-
siasm and the confidence the Persian
parliament revealed when f.dopting this
resolution. Of the sevenly-six mem-
bers of the parliament, sevj-nty voted In
favor of it. All Persia Is a^raltlng, with
the most Intense interest, the arrival of
the American finance commission; for
It Is believed tliat these men will be
able to show Persia how slie can secure
the income nece.ssary to riaintaln her
army and thoroughly to police Persia
and to protect all property Interests In
this new constitutional monarchy. They
believe that America, through this
financial group, will give Persia the
high position she ought to have among
the nations of the earth."
How the I-lve Were Selected.
The Persian gorernment instructed
it.s charge d'affaires at Washington,
Mirza All Kuli Khan, to tike up with
President Taft the matter jf the selec-
tion of the five experts. Mr. Kuli
Khan is a statesman thoroughly rep-
resentative of the new Persia, an en-
thusiastic believer in the progressive
Ideas that now dominate the ancient
Iranian empire, and most eager for tiie
success of the many reforms, admin-
istrative, educational and social, now
under way in his country His wife
is an American, and he has not only
a wide knowledge of American institu-
from the barracks, and th< intoxicated
ones could be sent to their bunks— or
placed in the guard housj until they
sobered up. The canteen officers exer-
cised the same authority as a police
officer in civil life. Besides, when the
habitual drunkards could <lraw checks
for beer during the month, they gen-
erally spent all their money in the
canteen before payday ani, therefore,
did not have any money lel't to carouse
outside the posts. This worked to the
advantage of the "mess funds" of the
various "outfit.s," Instead of encourag-
ing the development of a horde of
"bootleggers" and parasites, which
may be observed around every army
pest.
Today the outskirts of nearly every
army post proves the mistake and the
folly of abolishing the car teen. Now
every army post, nearly, las its "can-
dump." In the lockers of the soldiers
may be found tin buckets which are
used to carry beer from these "can-
dumps." At Jefferson barracks, about
eight miles from St. L.ouii«. Mo., there
Is one that is a disgrace to the state
and to the nation. It is located Just
outside the military reseriation. No
police officers are there to see that the
laws are obeyed. In and around it
scores of the most debased women live
from one month's end to tlie other ana
leech upon the soldiers Jefferson
barracks is a recruiting rendezvous
where "rookies" are giv.m the fl"t
rudiments of military trailing and this
is a fine environment In which to begin
their army careers. At thu army posts
where there are no "can-dumps," sa-
loons and "speak-easies' answer the
same purpose. Or. what is woi^se.
"bootlegging" is carried on to a fright-
ful degree.
There is no doubt that ihe abolition
of the canteen is directly and indirect-
ly responsible for a larg<i percentage
of the Increase in desertions In the past
few years. In the latesit report of
Adjt Gen. F. C. Alnsworth we learn
that nearly 5,000 soldiers deserted In
the last fiscal year. Think of it! Fill-
ing themselves with poisonous intoxi-
cants, which take away their physical
mental and moral stamira, they be-
come discouraged. The loutlne drills
and vigorous exercises become bur-
densome to them. They lAke "French
leave" to escape, many never to return
unless compelled to under guard of a
civil officer, who is anxious to get the
JoO reward offered for a deserter's ap-
prehension. Those who return after
a few days' absence without permis-
sion are "slammed In the mill," where
the spirit is again crushed and the
climb to honor and respect made more
difficult than ever. Caujrht and sen-
tenced for desertion, they i^re no longer
citizens of the United States — truly
men without a country. "I'hese desert-
ers, then, make fine material for crim-
inals. , . , ,
The use of "dope" and the spread of
contagious diseases are due, in a very
large degree, to the use of poisonous
Intoxicants which the soldiers get in
these "can dumps" and dives. When
the system Is undermlne-i with such
tlons, but keen appreciation of Amer-
ican ideals as well.
With President Taffs warm ap-
proval, Mr. Kuli Khan conferred withi
the state department
"You will find Just the man you want
to take charge of this work right her*
In Washington," he was informed. "Mr.
W. Morgan Shuster has had the experi-
ence necessary to fit a man to put
through such a reform as is proposed,
and hlfl record in the service of tiie
United States government is the best
guarantee that he will accomplish the
task successfully."
Mr. Kuli Khan was quickly satisfied
that Mr. Shuster was the man for the
Job, and he forthwith ratified the
choice. In the selection of the four
other financial officers he consulted
with Mr. Shuster, and he selected them
on Mr. Shuster's recommendation and
approval.
poisons, the individual becomes the
prey of all sorts of vices. At Presidio,
Cal., last year. It was stated by an
army surgeon In charge that 20 per
cent of the men at that post are ad-
dicted to the use of cocaine, morphine,
etc. There are other posts in which a
similar state of affairs exists. It is.
Indeed, no wonder that insanity Is In-
creasing among the men of the regular
army.
In several posts the sale of drugs to
"dope fiends" has become a profitable
business for peddlers. Of course, this
Is against army regulations, but like
many another rule with reference to
the health and wellbeing of the sol-
diers, it Is violated. Many soldiers
have given up whisky, beer, etc.. for
the stronger poisons. It is needless to
say that those who reach this condi-
tion cannot remain very long In the
army. Thev either desert or are given
a term In the guardhouse, after which
they are dishonorably discharged from
the army. In the last report of the
Judge advocate general there is no
mention of the number of dishonorable
discharges, outside the desertions. If
this were known the facts would be
more startling even than the number
of desertions, because, since the heavy
penalties have been placed on deser-
tion, many of those who want to get
out of the army before their three
years are up break the rules In order
to get five or more "summary" court-
martials, and then they are tried by a
"general" court-martial and dis-
charged from the service.
When 90 per cent of the army officer*
want the canteen restored to the en-
listed men it Is about time that con-
gress recognizes its mistake. Those in
a position to know have learned that
by depriving the soldier of his beer
and and his social club, instead of en-
couraging temperance among the regu-
ars the government has encouraged
drunkenness and paved the way for a
score or more of evils. Even the offi-
cers' wives ace demanding that the
canteen be re-established. How long
win It be until congress realizes Its
mistake?
(
■ ■
?
:
)
♦-f
Neurali^ia
pains stop when you use
SLOANS
LINIMENI
PrteM, 9S€,, SOe., amd 0t.OO.
h >^
A
» ^M
4
i-
T»"*i"l
i^«
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
21
OTour
Aitkin. Minn.. April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Miss Esther Seavey is
8pen«llns a week in Minneapolis and
S t F*& u I
Mrs. E. E. Erlckson is visitingf rela-
tives in Brltt. Iowa.
Robert Cleary has gone to Spooner
where he has a position as clerk In
a hotel. _ , , .
C. H. Mills of Bramerd was In town
on bui»iness Thursday.
Charles Swedberi? of Malmo has gone
to Portland. Or., and will later be
Joined by his family.
A. E. Roubik has closed his cigar
factory here and moved his outfit to
Spioner.
Mrs. Delamater of St. Paul Is the
guest of her daughter, Mrs. W. t.
Murphy. ,, ,
A son was born Monday to Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Zoerb.
Mrs. Nye of Minneapolis has been
the guest of her daughter. Miss Mar-
Miss Isaacson who has been a teacher
In the Aitkin high school for the past
three vears. will teach In Redwood
Falls next vear. and Miss Mabel John-
son will teach In Minneapolis
Miss Anna Madden of Aitkin, who
has been teaching domestic science in
the Winona university during the past
year, has been re-elected to the same
position for another year witli an In-
crease in salary. ^ ^ „ , ,.„
E. A. Gyde of the Red Cross drug
store has purchased the stock and fix-
tures of the Panewick drug store and
win combine the two stores in one.
E O. SJodin has discontinued his
business here as a tailor and moved
to Crosby.
The fire department was called out
Thursdav morning by the burning out
of a chimney on the Grand Central
hotel. No damage was done.
Nels M. Hokanson of Chicago, a
former Aitkin boy. addressed the social
center meeting in the high school
auditorium Tuesday evening. Mr.
Hokanson has been engaged In settle-
ment work connected with Hull House
In that city and gave a most inter-
esting account of his work and the
scope of the movement.
Miss Wheelock of Eau Claire. ^ Is..
Is the guest of her aunt. Mrs. \v.
Potter. . ^ ^ J
Edward Greenhagen of Crosby and
Miss Hazel Gillette of Aitkin were mar-
ried last week In Bralnerd and have
gone to housekeeping In Crosby, where
Mr. Greenhagen has a position with
a mining company.
Mrs. Margaret Baker of Minneapolis
gave three addresses In the courthouse
this week to the Aitkin ladles on the
subject of domestic science.
Mrs. Frank ONell and children of
Shovel Lake are visiting Mrs. O Neils
parents. Mr. and Mrs. D. Kane.
Mrs. C. H. Warner and daughter Ada
went to St. Paul the first of the week.
Grover Chamberlln left Monday for
E H Krelwitz has been confined to
his home with an attack of erysipelas.
Charles Lowery has returned from
Mlnneapoll.s where he has been taking
a musical course. . . .
Mrs. Eugene Racliflfe was brought
down frora Shovel Lake last Saturday
and taken to the local ho.'spital where
she Is receiving treatment for com-
Dlcations following an attack of grip.
Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Hodgeden have
returned from Minneapolis. ^^ . ,
Col Potter arrived home Wednesday
from California where he spent the
witi tor
F P McQulUin and daughter, Miss
Margaret, arrived home Sunday from
the South where they have been spend-
ing several weeks.
Mrs Gust Johnson was given a
pleasant surprise at her home on
Fourth street last Friday afternoon by
a company of friends who remembered
her birthday. ^, ,
H McCain arrived home recently from
Waiertown, S. D., and is preparing to
move his family to that place where
he Is engaged In the cement business.
The Social Set has issued invitations
for a grand ball in the opera house
Easter Monday. A Duluth orchestra
will furnish the music.
F. J. OHara has returned from a
trip to Pennsylvania.
C. N. Howe, who has been 111 In the
Rochester hospital for a few weeks.
Is regaining his health.
There are several cases
fever in town. ^^ti,.
Frank Phillips who was recentlj
elected village recorder, has resigned
as a member of the school board of
which he was president. H. J- Pe\ra-
borg has been appointed to fill the
vacancy. At the last meeting of the
board J. B. Galarneault was elected
president.
here Thursday to attend to business
matters. „
Francis Durkin went to Fargo Mon-
day to visit relatives.
The sawmill began operation W ed-
nesday, a month later this year than
last. It emplovs about 600 men, both
shifts, running three band saws with
an output of 325,000 feet every twenty
hours. The payroll amounts to |30,000
a month, half of which is paid every
two weeks. , „r ■,
Mr. and Mrs. Rice returned on Nved-
nesday from Rice.", Minn. Mr. Rice
has charge of the driving operations
up river. . . ,^ », i
The farmers In this vicinity had
started seeding, but the cold wave has
Interfered with planting. .
George Tillet of Bemidji arrived
home Saturday. xti„v,,io
The first drive for the Nichols-
Chisholm company commenced \^«a-
nesday with a crew of fifty men. Ihey
will begin work in Helght-of-Land
1 o If ^
Cleveland Graham has taken the con-
tract for picking up deadheads all
along the river for the Nlchols-Chls-
holm company. . ^, ,,,
A series of evangelistic meetings will
commence at the Baptist church Sun-
day. April 30. and will be In charge of
Rev E H. Rasmussen and C. L. Kings-
burv. They have conducted meetings
at this church last year.
W O. Gelsenhvner returned on
Monday from a business trip to St.
Paul
'Mrs Dudrey of Moorhead spent this
week in Frazee on business, returning
home Thursday. .. o* t .1=
Mrs. Kate PMtzpatrlck of St. Louis
arrived here Sunday and Is working
here In the Interest of the Rebekah
James Dalv was a Detroit business
caller the latter part of the week.
William Hoffman arrived home from
Fort Madison. Iowa, Monday, where he
has been visiting during the winter.
the
for
her
Hill City, Minn., April 15 — (Special
to The Herald.) — Theodore Busegaard
of scarlet
has returned from Minneapolis, where
he attened his mother's funeral.
L H Lange returned from a business
trip to Duluth Thursday.
Thomas Busegaard returned from
Minneapolis Thursday.
Mrs. Charles Doran returned trom
Duluth Mondav, much Improved In
health, after undergoing an operation
at a hospital. _
W. W'. Rabey returned Tuesday from
a business trip to Duluth.
The Infant daughter of a late cousin
of Mrs. W.andle, whom the latter re-
cently brouglit with her from Canada,
died Monday last. The funeral was
^Rev. C.B. Ellis left Monday for dif-
ferent points In the state, after hold-
ing a series of revival meetings at this
Harry Pwenson left Wednesday for
Duluth and Iron River, to be absent
for a few days. , , ■,, -tn
Mrs. A. Johanson. mother of Mrs. t.
E Sprout, departed Monday for Mliine-
ota for a visit with relatives.
The Royal Neighbors of America
held a social In the Munn & Asslln
building AVednesday evening. which
was well attended. „,„„i
The baseball fans will give a grand
ball next Monday evening.
Postmaster Taylor has made some
change? In the interior of his office
room and added a large number of
new lock boxes, which the patrons will
appreciate. .
A. K. Sv,'enson has a crew of men
and teams at work getting out logs
for W. W. Rabey. also the townslte
company. „. , ,
Edward Gaulet of Iron River is in
this vicinity at present looking over
the prospect for securing a contract
for getting out a quantity of logs
different parties. He Is figuring
F. B. Sprout at present.
A little child of Mr. and Mrs. John
Bolauen died Monday morning. The
funeral occurred Tuesday.
R H Underhill arrived here from
Minneapolis the first of the week
Is the geust of Gay C. Huntley.
The ladles' aid met with Mrs.
Beardsly. Wednesday.
A special school meeting will be
held \Ionday evening. April IJ- for the
purpose of voting bonds for building a
new school building.
ganlzatlon of the order at the Nelson
opera house Tuesday evening, April ^o.
An excellent program has been pre-
pared, the committee in charge being
H E. Sarette, Fred Northrup, Fred
Hurelln, Gordon Gamble and bam
Thompson. - ,, .. *
Orvllle Schilling left Monday for
Miles City. Mont., where the family
will probably locate. Mr. Schilling sold
his home on Ninth street to Frank Mc-
Kay
Miss Grace Rowell of North Branch
has been a guest this week at the L,.
A. Pauley home In this city.
Mrs. Robert Leith, who Is teaching
In Moose Lake, spent the fore part
of the week In Cloquet. „♦,«„♦
Mrs. Knickerbocker of Third street
is visiting relatives In La CTosse, JJ\ Is.
Ray De Lescallle arrived here Mon-
dav from Davenport, Iowa.
Miss Laura Hunt, who has been
guest of Miss Margaret McLeod
several weeks, left Monday for
father's home at Augusta. y» is
John Chlsholm accompanied his wire
a" far as St. Paul Monday on her way
to Saginaw, Mich., where ^she was
called by the death of a brother.
Mrs Harry I'ollng returned Monday
from a visit with relatives In W Iscon-
sln. Mrs. Poling was accompanied
home by her little niece, Iris Rtngleka.
Mrs Gay Huntley of Hill City spent
the fore part of tlTe week with her
sister-in-law, Mrs. Fred Hall.
Mesdamos W. H. Skemp Clarence
Kelly and C. H. Blake will entertain
the Ladies' Aid of the Methodist church
In the league room Tuesday afternoon.
Clare Dutton and wife of Duluth
spent Sunday In Cloquet with Mr. Dut-
ton's parents. _ . „ ;.
Max Long went to St. Paul Tuesday
on business. _ ^, , i
Mr and Mrs. Louis G. Clark and
daughter of Mlnnneapolls, who have
been visiting at the J. E. Atkins home,
departed Monday.
Henry Brunell came home from Min-
neapolis this week to visit his parents.
Dr. and Mrs. Brunell. ^ , ,^
Miss Nannie Holm of Duluth was a
Sunday gutst of her sister. Miss Hulda
Holm. . ,,_j _„
O. J. Fryklund has gone to Madras,
Or., on business.
Mrs. Oscar Huseby Is visiting
daughter, Mrs. M. L. Hostager,
Bralnerd. . ^, , . „ .*
W L Smally, a brother-in-law of
Dr. M. k. Whlttemore, was the latter s
guest Monday. ,
Phil Walker is in Winona on Dusl-
Sylvester Wood and wife of Siiperlor
arrived here tonight for a several days
visit with relatives.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. A.
Max Markowltz Is in St. Paul on bus-
Heige Berglund went to Aitkin the
fore part of the week on business^
Rev. C. W. Lowrle was in Duluth the
first of the week on business.
Adelord Santerre returned Saturday
from Minneapolis. t^^^ „
Mrs. A. Fuller has returned from a
visit with relatives at Kaukauna, Wis
County Attorney J. E. Dlesen went
to Sawyer on business Thursday.
Andrew McKenzle of the Con^panles
store went to Duluth Wednesday on
The city council Monday evening will
discuss the question of raising saloon
and poolroom licenses.
An examination for rural mall car-
riers will be held at the postoffice in
this city May 13.
Mrs. A. Halvorson will entertain
Wednesday afternoon at her home.
Miss Florence Skemp and Miss Fan-
nie Pelton went to Duluth Friday to
spend Easter with friends
Paul Leonard was a
TJ* f* I r1 o \'
Dr. "and Mrs. Dolan spent Friday In
Duluth.
'U.
marshal at the salarj- of $60 per month.
Andrew Johnson, a prominent iron
man of Superior having large Interests
on the Cuyuna Iron range, was in the
village Wednesday and conferred with
J. A. Stetson.
The Presbyterian Ladles' Aid soclet
met Wednesday afternoon with Mrs
W. Macomber. The ladles .spent a very
pleasant afternoon.
The Methodist Ladles' Aid society
met Thursday with Mrs. H. L. Searles.
Miss Sadie Koop and Miss Elsie Eng-
lish of Bralnerd visited -the Misses
Bishop on Wednesda.v.
Mrs. De Lalttre of Aitkin delivered
a lecture on the "Passion Play" at the
Methodist church on Friday evening.
A large audience was present.
Mrs. H. J. Ernster Is visiting her
parents at Owatonna.
Chester D. Tripp, general manager
of the Rogers-Brown Ore company, was
the guest recently of Supt. and Mrs. 11.
J. Kruse. In company with Mr. Kruse
he visited the company's properties and
the scenes of its growing activities and
was well pleased to see the progress
manifest in all places.
Miss Bessie Regan of Cleveland.
Ohio, is visiting friends In the village.
Gust Swanson. superintendent of tn»*
drills of the Carlson Exploration com-
pany, has gone to Hlbblng.
Rev. Sharpless of the Presbyterian
church, held services last Sunday at
the Lutheran church.
The Rebekahs held a meeting on
Thursday evening and initiated three
members. An appetizing luncheon was
served.
E. W. Hallett, the contractor, is erect-
ing a building in the First addition for
Mr. Thilstad.
B. Magoffin, Jr.. went to Duluth on
Wednesday.
Mrs. L. C. Kressal has returned from
a visit at Bralnerd.
that corn-
remainder
her
at
Duluth visitor
Gilbert, Minn.. April 16.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Saturday the manual
training department of the school was
moved Into Its new! Quarters In the
new high school. TwD Iron lathes have
arrived for this department. This week
has been a busy one in the perparatlon
of the new high school for occupancy.
The kindergarten and all the grades
from the fourth to the eighth are now
in the new building, as are also the
domestic science and physics depart-
ments.
Roy McQuade attended the Masonic
concert and dance given in Virginia
Friday night.
Mrs. Klrcher and daughter were In
Virginia between trains Saturday.
Bulletin No. 1, issued by Superin-
tendent of County Schools Noah A.
Young, gives the following figures for
School District No. 18: I.«tnd included
in the district, village of Gilbert, vil-
lage of McKlnley, village of Sparta,
town of Blwablk, town o Missabe
Mountain and W% T 67 and W% T.
59, R. 16, real estate valuation, $8.-
128,452: personal property valuation,
9.589; a total valuation of J8.458.-
$329
050.
for
with
and
J. J.
KELSEY
Kelsev, Minn.. April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Mrs. Wallace Stevens
and children were in the Zenith City
Mr.^Zacker of Iron Junction was the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Person Sunday.
Ole Anderson attended presbyter,
at Virginia during the week as a dele-
late from the First Presbyterian
church of Kelsey.
Will Stevens went to
Thursday on business.
P. Hagen was in Hibbing during the
Among the Duluth vl.^ltors
the week were John Hogue, N.
din and Ernest Hogue.
Rev. W. H. Lanktree went to Vir-
ginia Tuesday to attend presbytery.
Religious services will be held .Sun-
dav at 10:30 at the M. W. A. hall, and
Sunday sciiool Immediately afterwards.
NEW DULUTH
April 15.— (Spe-
— Mrs. C. Beck-
Becklngler were
Meadowlands
during
O. Nor-
Frazee, Minn.. April 15. — (jipecial to
The Herald.) — Judge Baldwin spent
the fore part of this week on business
in Detroit. „ , . x.
Mr. Grafsland of Lake Park is here
visiting his son. Dr. Grafsland.
A. Markell of Perham was a business
caller here Thursday. ....
Mrs. Frank Albertson of Akeley ar-
rived here Tuesday for a visit.
Mrs C. C. Graham and Marjone
Schlnlher were In Detroit Tuesday on
business. . ^ , ,^
Geor.ge King left Tuesday for a visit
with his son at Clifford. N. D.
Frank Murphy of Sansborn, N. D., ar-
rived here Wednesday.
Miss Nettle Wellman returned to
Thief River Falls Saturday.
Mr. Kallstrom of Milaca arrived
Wednesday, for the summer.
Miss Clara Daggett returned W^ednes-
day to her home in Missouri, after
spending several months liere with
friends.
School will begin Monday. April 17,
after a vacation of one week.
Lizzie Wtlllnshen and Chris Smeider
were married Saturday. The young
people will live at the Adam Scheiler
farm, east of town.
Miss Janke returned Saturday from
a vear'H stay at Schandon. S. D.
Hulda Funske came from Fargo to
visit friends here.
A fsignal maintalner's house was
shipped here from Staples and put up
on the north side of the track across
from the depot. Mr. Shannon Is the
signal malntalner.
Business is Improving here. Fam-
ilies are coming In every day, but have
to store their goods on account of the
•carcity of houses.
C. O. Wheeler of Minneapolis arrived
\ gOQUET :j
Cloquet, Minn.. April 16.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Hugo Schlenk returned
Sunday from a business trip to the
Twin Cities.
Ross Campbell was at home this
week from the state university, where
he is a student. j , i„
G H Kopp this week moved his
household goods to Virginia, where he
recently purchased a drug store. The
Kopp house on Chestnut street will be
occupied by the Fred Lingren family.
Cameron McLean came home from
the state university this week, to
spend the vacation, and is 111 with the
measles. ^,
Mesdames W. G. Dolan, Sherman L.
Coy, Huntington Taylor, and Misses
Ruth Dixon and Isabel McNalr spent
Saturday shopping In Duluth.
Mrs. C. L. Dixon returned Saturday
night from severay weeks' visit In
Stillwater. ,^ , ,, _ .
The little so nof Mr. and Mrs. John
Fagen has been seriously ill all the
week with pneumonia, following an at-
tack of measles. , ^ , ,
Mrs. C. B. Watklns returned Friday
from a visit with relatives at Cham-
pagne, 111.
Mrs. Joshua Wright has been seri-
ously ill for several days, at the
Wright hotel. ^ „^ ,
Miss Louise Lowe returned Wednes-
day morning from a visit with Miss
Carolyn Johnson at Chlsholm. Miss
Johnson formerly taught In the Clo-
quet high school. „ „ , ,^
Miss Baldwin of St. Paul, the secre-
tary of the state library commission, Is
coming to Cloquet next week to meet
with the public library board, for dis-
cussion of projects that would benefit
that Institution. While here. Miss
Baldwin will be the guest of Miss
Louise Lowe.
The North Country Study club met
this afternoon with Miss Pearl BIsson.
Mrs. Frank Delwo goes to Duluth
Monday to enter St. Marys hospital,
where she will undergo an operation.
Mrs. Delwo's mother, Mrs. Demers,
came up from Shakopee, Thursday, to
take the Delwo children home with her
for several weeks. She was accom-
panied by Miss Schlenk of Shakopee,
they left yesterday afternoon.
Spencer Bowman of Eau Claire,
Wis., Is the guest of his grandparents,
.Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Bowman, for the
spring vacation.
Miss Helen Ford has accepted a po-
sition In Fred Ostlund's shop.
Mrs. Ell Garceau took her daughter,
Blanche, to Duluth this week to con-
sult a specialist in regard to the girl's
eyes, which have recently been giving
her serious trouble.
Grace Mckenzie entertained a party
of little girls Tuesday afternoon on the
occason of her 10th birthday.
Miss Louise Lowe will spend part of
next week In Two Harbors.
Indian Agent A. A. Bear was In Du-
luth Thursday on business.
Mrs. John Mahoney took her lit-
tle daughter to Duluth Thursday to
consult an eye specialist.
Mrs. Jake Hlttler of Duluth was a
Sunday guest at the E. S. Schlebe
home.
Local Odd Fellows will celebrate the
ninety-second anniversary of the or-
was In Duluth
New Duluth, Minn.,
cial to The Herald.)
ingler and Miss Ethel
in Duluth Tuesday. „^ , ^. .,
W C Tower and Charles Strand
made a business trip to Duluth Tues-
day in the interest of the New Duluth
Commercial club.
Rev. Mr. Black of Dawson,, con-
ducted services at the Presbyterian
church. ^ „ ...
W. L Hicks and son of Baudette,
Minn., are visiting friends and rela-
tives here. ^, .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Blayer and
Lillian Blayer were In West Duluth
Sunday. „, , j,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Woods and son,
of Duluth, were the guests of Mrs.
Jerry Lockhart, Sr., Sunday
Mrs. C. H. Glddlngs
Tuesday. _ ^ ^ .
Mrs. Charles Pearson transacted
business in Duluth Thursday.
Daniel and Dave KutaszerwIcz at-
tended the Empress theater Thurs-
day. -
Alderman Otto Krueger made a
business trip to West Duluth recently.
H T Toben and family moved to
10 Second avenue west, Friday.
Charles Carlson and George John-
son were in the city Friday. They
attended the matinee at the Orpheum
theater. . .^ : ^^ ., »
Nobel Sampson was in Duluth Satur-
day.
Frank Rundl was in Duluth Wednes-
day on business.
Mr and Mrs. Damkroeger enter-
tained Mr. and Mrs. Dash, and Victor,
and Dorothy Dash of Smithvllle, and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dash of
Duluth. Sunday.
Peter O'Connell spent Sunday
his father. Mike O'Connel.
Jerry Lockhart. Sr., entertained
urday evening in honor of Mr.
Mrs. Harry Woods and son, Edward, of
Duluth. Her guests included Messrs.
and Mesdames Henry Murphy, Louis
Fischer, Jerry Lockhart, Robert
Crager of New Duluth, and Messrs.
and Mesdames John Lockhart and
Hughle, of Duluth. .^ , .^
Mrs. Ralph Hanson was In Duluth
Wednesday.
Mr. ana Mrs. William Lewis and
daughter, Mrs. Vernon Laldely, left
for Wellsville, N. Y., where they will
reside. -...„- ^ •.
Officer S. A. Root of the West end
was transferred to New Duluth. He
will move his family here In the near
future. _ J -TN , ii.
Mrs. C. W. Peters was in Duluth
Thursday. . -
Pearl Mjulton left for Wmdorn,
Minn., Wednesday, where she will visit
relatives for a couple of weeks.
Walter Dash spent part of the week
on the range, where he transacted
business. . ^^ _
Mrs. Widen was In the city
day.
Mr. McEachIn was in
dav on business.
Miss Anna Brand was In Superior,
visiting friends from Monday to
Wednesday. , ^ . . ,
Charles Miller made a business trip
to Minneapolis the first of the week.
Mrs. Marten spent Monday in Du-
luth. ^ . « .,
A daughter was born to Mr. ana
Mrs. Sherman Wiseman, April 9.
New
with
Sat-
an d
The Simons building which burned
Jan. 1, has been torn down and work
has started on the new building for the
Lyceum theater.
The village has a crew of men at
work tearing up the old crosswalks
and constructing new ones on Broad-
way.
Mrs. John A. Juten returned the first
of the week from a visit with friends
In Buhl.
Miss Mabel W^allace, who has been
visiting her father, W. J. Wallace re-
turned to her home In Duluth Tuesday.
. Mr and Mrs. D. M. Mouser moved
into their handsome new home on
Minnesota avenue Monday.
P. R. Cosgrove Is having the old
front of his business place on Broad-
way removed and an up-to-date one
put in. He will also have the place re-
modeled. ^. . ^ , w 1
Supt. Vaughn of the Chishoim schools
was in town Tuesday, inspecting the
Gilbert schools. He was very favor-
ably impressed with the new high
school here and also with the way the
schools of Gilbert are progressing.
Mat Ruahu, a Finlander. was arrest-
ed for being drunk and disorderly
Tuesday and was fined |5 and costs by
Judge Welch. ^ %.. v
Mrs Kate Preatol was brought be-
fore Judge Welch Tuesday charged
with hindering John Tomsic from pass-
ing along the street. It Is stated the
woman went Into the street and tipped
Tomslc's wagon over. She was given
a strong talk by the Judge and let go
on suspended sentence.
James Dowllng was In Duluth Tues-
day on a combined business and pleas-
ure trip. Mr. Dowllng has the <?Dntract
for clearing away the ruins of the
Othello fire at Eveleth.
Supt and Mrs. Webb of the Schley
location were In Duluth Monday.
Miss Mansfield gave a party Thurs-
day night In honor of her sister, of
Eagle Bend, who has been her guest.
The Ladles' Aid Society of the Pres-
byterian church will bold their Easter
sale in the Bailey block on April 15.
Landlord and Mrs. Teller of the Gil-
bert hotel visited with friends In Mc-
Klnley on Sunday.
Mr and Mrs Nicholson Were guests
of Dr. and Mrs. Darrow at Aurora
Sunday. , , ^, ^-
G. J. Roop attended a meeting of
timber men in Aurora Saturday night,
returning Sunday.
Miss Julia Costin visited friends
Hlbblng Friday.
Judge Adamson of Aurora
town on business Saturday.
Miss Delia Murphy of Tower was a
guest of friends in town the first of
C G. Vanderpoel and Paul Erlckson
of Virginia transacted business In Oil-
''''^ri.^TT Ducklow was reported
seriously ni the first of the week, but
Is much better at this writing.
J B Thompson was a business Ms-
Itor to Duluth Friday and Saturday.
R. Hlckox of Aurora was in Gilbert
on business Saturday. ,, „ ,„
Misses Lilllhan and Ring, teachers in
the Gilbert schools, were guests of
friends In Virginia Sunday.
Dr M. L. Strathern of Coleralne Is
now located at Sparta where he has
charge of the hospital, replacing Dr,
Molr, who will start a practice.
pany and will appear with
pany In the East during the
of the season.
James L. Nankervls has returned
from an extended Western trip.
Mrs. Henry Sibilskl and children are
visiting relatives in Milwaukee for sev-
eral weeks.
A son has been born to Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas T. Treslze.
D. L. Prevllle, in charge of St. Anne's
parochial schools during the past win-
ter, has gone to Jollette, Que. Thomas
La Forest has succeeded him.
M. E. O'Brien has gone to Butte,
Mont., on a short business trip.
R. W. Wilson has returned from a
business tirp to Marquette and other
Iron country points.
Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Simonson of the
C. & H. and son. Albert, have gone to
Dallas. Tex., where they will spend the
remainder of the winter.
Mrs. Rose Roso of Virginia, Minn.. Is
visiting In Calumet. She was called
here by the death of her sister, Mrs.
Andrew Foster. ^ ^
Mrs. Arthur Carlson, wife of Dr.
Carlson, of Los Angeles, a former Calu-
met young man, is visiting at the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jo-
seph Soddy of Red Jacket.
Chris Nitteberg, wife and children,
have gone to Seattle, Wash., where they
will remain for some time.
E. G. Zlegler, accompanied by his
sister, Mrs. William Franks, of Detroit,
who has been visiting at the Zlegler
residence for three months, has gone
to Detroit, where Mr. Zlegler will spend
a short lime. ^ , , ^
Frank Meyers has gone to Alabama
and Florida, where he will visit fruit
and farming lands. He will be awajj
two weeks. - .
L W. Klllmar and wife have gone to
Minneapolis, wheie they will visit.
F. C. Moore of Duluth Is visiting
friends in Calumet. , ,
August Sandberg, a mining engineer
of Sonora, Mex.. Is in the city.
A. M. Peterson of Duluth Is spending
a few days here with friends.
Mrs. James Hoatson and niece. Miss
Florence Hoatson, have gone to Chi-
c3firo
Thomas Pearce has gone to Cam-
borne. Eng.. for a visit at his old home.
A Mum has gone to San Francisco,
Cal., where he will spend some time.
Mrs. W. W. Wright has gone to Man-
istlque to attend the annual meeting of
the Lake Superior presbytery.
E. C. Stewart and wife have gone to
Chicago, where they may decide to lo-
The funeral of the 2% -year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Puhek
took place Tuesday with services at St.
Joseph's church and Intern»ent in Lake
View cemetery. ^ ^ j.
John Granstrom has gene to Port-
land, Or., where he will remain for
some time. . ^ .. *».
Invitations have been Issued for the
marriage of Miss Lucille Whlsler,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. S. Whls
lor to Dr. Charles Emmet Varler.
ceremony will take place April
the First Congregational church. •
The members of the Mlscowaublk
club and their wives were entertained
Tuesday evening by Prof. Mallnl, who
gave a sleight of hand peiformance at
the club rooms. . ^ ^ ,
John F. Gately, head of the Gately
firm of furnishing houses with head-
quarters In Chicago, was In Calumet
Monday. James F. Wiggins of this
city accompanied him to Ishpemlng.
The second annual charity ball will
be given April 2) at the armory. The
committee on arrangements is made up
of Mesdames J. D. Gaul, W. J. Uren,
John Knox, A. B. Mills and R. M. Wet-
W. J. Coombe, assistant bookkeeper
at the First National bank, has been
appointed a state bank examiner. He
Is receiving the congratulations of his
friends. ...
Word has been received here of the
death of Mrs. Sophie Welsenborn, for-
merly of Calumet, at Portland, Or.
Roy Cullls. the baseball player, has
gone to Chicago. He was accompanied
as far as Ishpemlng by his wife.
The funeral of tne late John Ahola,
aged 80 years, took place yesterday,
with services at the Finnish church.
Rev. A. L. Heldeman officiating. The
decedent's wife died six weeks ago.
Dr. Wlnfield S. Hall of Chicago, dean
of the Northwestern University Medi-
cal school, was in Calumet over Sun-
day.
The funeral of Aug. Palfa took place
yesterday with services at the Finnish
Apostolic church. He Is survived by a
wife and three grown children.
A daughter has been born to Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Lunburg.
John Rundell has left for Duluth.
Detroit and other cities, where he w'll
spend his vacation.
John D. Cuddlhy. i|resldent of the
First National bank, has gone to Chi-
cago.
A daughter has been born to Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Cornelier. Mr. Corneller
Is manager of the Eagle drug store.
Frank Rundle has gone to Lead, S.
D.. to remain for some time.
James MacNaughton, general man-
ager of the Calumet & Hecla Mining
company, has gone to Detroit to at-
tend the hearing of the Osceola Injunc-
tion proceedings.
Joseph Fiazer, one of the instructors
In the commercial department of the
Calumet high school, has resigned his
position.
Harry Berg has gone to Astoria Or.
Dan Murphy has gone to Butte. Mont.
George Malboeuf has gone to Eu-
gene, Or.
A daughter has been born to Mr. and
Mrs. John Klarlch.
looking up the latest stylen in milli-
nery in the East, has returned.
Miss Agnes Schwartzer, kiidergarten
teacher In the high school, la spending
her Easter vacation with her sisters In
Chicago.
The funeral of Mrs. Richard Harvey,
a resident of Iron street, who died
Monday from heart disease, was held
Thursday afternoon from the Mitchell
Methodist church. Rev. D. C. Pianette,
the pastor officiating. The children
surviving are: Mrs. Julia I:;artlett, R.
H. Harvey, Mrs. S. Treloar of Kalama-
zoo Thomas Harvey of Crj stal Falls,
and Mrs. Michael Cox of Nefraunee.
Will Curley has returned to the Me-
saba range, after a visit of several
weeks here.
The Negaunee fire depariment w^ill
hold their annual Easter Monday ball
as usual. A supper will be served in
the new fire hall.
William Yates and wife, have re-
turned from Chicago, where they have
been confined In one of th< hospitals,
both undergoing operations for appen-
dicitis.
The Scandinavian society gave a lit-
erary program Friday evening. T. A.
Thoren and Rev. G. Fletwood. pastor
of the Swedish Lutheran church In
Ishpemlng were the speakers.
»WMWMMM^>^^M^^k^A^^^^^^^
f^^^^^^^^
BARNUM
off
the
It
The
27 at
Barnum, Minn.. April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Mr. Little ruports that
the school rig which he Irlves was
practically wrecked by beln? blown
the bolsters of the wagon during
high wind that prevailed Thursday,
was unoccupied at the timt.
Frank Shillln's two teams came from
Duluth Tuesday, bringing a oad of fur-
niture. James McGreavy wo a in charge
and returned Thursday to bring the
balance of the household goods.
H. E. Glenn attended the meeting of
the Duluth presbytery at Virginia this
B. Peterson and J. H. Kahrlng went
to Carlton on Sunday, where they are
serving as Jurymen.
William McGllvray has just ^pur-
chased three lots from Al Woodbury
and Intends to buUd in the near future.
Easter services at the German Luth-
eran church Sunday at 3:30 in the alt-
ernoon. Rev. O. Hattstadt. pastor.
Mabel Stone, a daughter of B. M.
Stone of Duluth is spending her Easter
vacation at the home of H. '5erlach.
The Ladles' Aid of the I'resbyterlai;
church met with Miss Flora Goodell
Thursday afternoon and elected oftl-
ccrs.
Louis Hecker, who has .lust bought
forty acres of land pn the Military
road, moved on to his new farm Wed-
nesday. . ^ ^
Several carloads of potatoes were
shipped from here last weeV; by the dif-
ferent merchants and the i'armers as-
sociation. , „
H. E. Glenn ••HI preach Sunday-
evening at the Presbyterian church.
Special music has been arranged for
the Easter service. . , , »
Tuesday Mr. Katzele bought forty
acres adjoining his farm from Wilson
C. Brown. The land. It Is reported, is
for one of Mr. Katzelo's sons.
H. C Hanson went to Eiskine Tues-
day to give a talk to the farmers of
that place on the handling ind market-
ing of their cream and egKS-
The schools are closed and Misses
Fuller and Cannon will spend the In-
terval with relatives at liibblng and
Superior.
Dr. Shannon has moved lito the resi-
dence he recently purchased. The
stable he Is having built Ir the rear of
his residence Is nearly completed.
Rudolph and Frank Katzele, who
have been working In the woods fifty
miles north of Ely for the Hlnes Lum-
ber company, are home for the sum-
mer.
F. E. Weatherwax of Di.luth was In
the village Tuesday. He In In the real
estate business at Duluth and reports
considerable inquiry for Carlton county
lands.
Sunday morning, was held Wednesday
afternoon from the home of her
brother, August Betzler, Eighth ave-
nue, Rev. E. A. Wahlqulst officiating.
Interment was made In the Two Har-
bor's cemetery.
A Scott Nelson has moved his family
to Blwablk, w^here he Is employed as
boUershop foreman by the Duluth &
Iron Range railroad.
J. F. Tesar was called to St. Paul
Saturday by the sudden death of a
nephew.
Hugh Doerr of Minneapolis, who was
called here by the Illness and death of
his sister Sarah, returned to Minne-
apolis Sunday.
Miss Nina Dana, a domestic science
Instructor from St. Paul, has been the
guest of Dr. and Mrs. E. P. Christen-
seiv this pairt week.
E. H. Schriener Is having a garage
built for housing his new automobile.
George Spurbeck is erecting the build-
ing. .,
John J. Larson was elected delegate
from Lake county to the State Camp,
M. W. of At, to be held in Faribault,
May 3.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Bender, Sixth avenue. April 8.
A baby girl was born to Mr. and
Mrs. C. A. Erlckson, Third avenue,
April 11.
James A. Wharton was here from
Duluth Tuesday on legal business.
J. E. Chandler, storekeeper for the
D. & Iron Range railroad. Is In Chi-
cago, on a business trip.
Peter Nelson of Beaver Bay was In
the city on business this week.
The birthday club held their annual
party on Mrs. Silas Irwin at her home,
Tuesday. Mesdames Scott. Stein. Fish-
er, Smith, Geydenskog. Altsialt, Nlg-
gler, Belland, Irwin and Dawson were
present. An enjoyable time was had
byall present.
are planning on an-
May 5.
has been appointed
The band boys
other concert for
Axel Rlngdor
city patrolman.
"The log house and other hulldlngfc
on Frank Walker's place at Mile 39,
were burned Tuesday. It Is thought
the fire was started by hoboes.
Miss Jennie Jones has been ill the
past week. Her place at the Johnson
school has been filled by Helen Olson.
Silas Irwin has sold his residence on
Sixth avenue and Maple street to Mr.
Coursolle, Sr. Mr. Irwin has moved his
family to Second avenue for the pi'es-
ent.
Teddy Tucker, a former Duluth A
Iron Range railroad bollermaker, re-
turned to Tacoma, Wash., Sunday even-
ing, after a week's visit with friends
here.
Dr. Peterson of the Two Harbors
hospital addressed the boys' moral club
of the high school at their monthly
meeting held Thursday evening at the
Y. M. C A.
George E. Spurbeck received a tele-
gram, Monday, from his wife announc-
ing the approaching death of her
father, N. Bucker of Mantorvllle, Minn.,
Mr. Spurbeck left immediately to Join
his wife. Mrs. Spurbeck was called
home last week when her father suf-
ifered a stroke of paralysis. The old
gentleman Is 78 years old.
N C. Nelson returned home from
Washington last Saturday. Mr. Nel-
son, who was recently appointed post-
master of this city, has sent his bonds
to Washington for approval and will
assume his duties Just as soon as his
papers are accepted and returned with
his commission which he expects will
be the latter part of this week or the
first of next.
Articles of Incorporation have been
taken out for the First Presbyterian
church of Knife River, Minn. Messrs.
William Abernathy, Leonard Jones and
Col. Reynolds have been chosen as
trustees to serve one, two and three
years respectively. A church building
Is now under construction and there Is
a large membership to start with. This
church will be the first one in the vil-
lage. For the present, Rev. J. F. Mc-
Leod, pastor of the First I'resbyterian
church In this city will supply the
pulpit at Knife River.
in
was in
NEGAUNEE
Thurs-
Duluth Mon-
15. — (Special to
Stephens has
to San Fran-
Deerwood, Minn.. April 15.— (Special
to The Herald.)— President Harry Pat-
terson of the Deerwood Commercial
club has announced his committee ap-
pointments. . , ^^ -„
At the last session of the village
council the clerk was Instructed to
write Attorney M. E. Ryan of Bralnerd
and ascertain what his charge would
be to act as attorney for the village.
M. S. Lamey wa» appointed village
T
Calumet, Mich., April
The Herald.) — Ernest
gone to Chicago.
Joseph Outila has gone
cisco
John Kangas has gone to Helslng-
fors, Finland. ..„,..
John Bennetts has gone to England
for a visit.- .. „
A daughter has been born to Mr. and
Mrs. H. Brunette.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Wells have gone to
Detroit. Mich.
Johnson Vivian has gone to In-
dianapolis, Ind. ....
Andrew Matllla has gone to Astoria,
Or.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Forster of Elm
street entertained a number of their
friends the other evening. Cards and
music furnished the entertainment and
a dainty lunch was served.
Capt. John Knox has been made gen-
eral superintendent of the C & H. and
subsidiary companies. -
Robert Olson has returned from Du-
luth, where he spent the past two
weeks. ^ ^ .
Mrs. A. W. Cuare has returned from
Madison, Wis., where she has been vis-
iting for some time. ^
Richard Morgan of this city has
'joined the Kuppenhelmer Show com-
Tf-
Negaunee, Mich., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — George J. Maas and
family have returned from CJhicago
and Milwaukee, where they spent sev-
eral weeks
Mrs. Edward Charles has gone to her
home at Hlbblng, Minn., after a week's
visit In Negaunee.
Dr. A. W. Haldle attended the an-
nual meeting of the Michigan' State
Dentist society at Grand Rapids, Mon-
day, Tuesday and Wednesday.
The Negaunee high school basket
ball five was defeated for the first
time this year by the Y. M. C. A. boys
In a game played In the gymnasium at
Ishpemlng last Saturday evening. The
score was 25 to 21.
The 8-year-old son of Napoleon Mar-
ketty, who has been confined to his
home with an attack of smallpox. Is
improving.
A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
John Goudge Tuesday noon.
R. W^. Bauder, assistant superin-
tendent of the Breltlng mines, has re-
signed the position and has gone to
Wilbur, Ont., where he will accept a
similar position with an Exploration
indicate.
Mrs. Bert Rosevear and child have
returned from the Copper country,
where they visited relatives and friends
for several months.
George Kappes, who has been doing
diamond drill work In Mexico for the
last year, has returned to the city.
Arthur Trathen, who Is employed on
the local street car line and G. H.
August have opened tf candy kitchen
In the Scandinavian society's block on
Gold street,
Mrs. Edward PIggott recently under-
went an operation for appendicitis In a
Hancock hospital, and is reported to
be getting along nicely.
Miss Catherine Wleber, Instructor of
English in the high school, left
Wednesday for Chicago, where she will
spend the Easter vacation with her
father and sister, of Houghton.
Richard Harvey Is here from CrysUl
Falls, having been called because of
the serious illness of his mother.
Gust Will roan and wife of Escanaba
have returned to their home at Esca-
naba, after a visit with relatives here.
Mrs. M. £. Arland. who has been
Midway. Minn., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Mrs. F. Stumpf of the
range has been visiting with her
mother, Mrs. E. Hendrlckson, this
The Young Peoples' society met at
the Swedish Lutheran church Wednes-
day evening.
Nels Johnson has sold out his saloon
business in Duluth and is moving back
to his farm In Midway.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Jacobson are
visiting with friends and relatives In
the southern part of the state.
Notice has been received from
Washington that a rural free delivery
route has been established, beginning
at Proctor and extending through Mid-
way. Service Is to begin June 1 next.
Midway postoffice Is to remain and
will be supplied by the rural free de-
livery carrier on the nev route, In-
stead of a star route currier, as at
present. . . ^. , ^.
At the regular weekly rieting of the
Midway Literary society Thursday
evening a debate was helc. on the sub-
ject: "Kesolved, That the love of money
has led to more crimes than anger,"
which was hotly contes:ed on both
sides. The Judges awarded the de-
cision to the affirmative side. Henry
Norman, Paul Derby, Mlus Ella Jen-
sen and Adolph Johnson. Those on
the negative side were Gust Twelth.
Miss Frances Anderson, Fred Hen-
drlckson and Miss Ruth Larson. The
iudges were Miss Glna Jensen, Miss
label Larson and Ar:hur Helmer.
After the debate a short literary and
musical program was glv< n which was
enjoyed by all. The next meeting or
the society Is to be held at the Mid-
way school house, Thursday evening,
April 20. A mock trial Is then to be
held, and a musical and literary pro-
gram given.
Two Harbors, Minn.. April 15. — (Spe-
cial to the Herald.)— Miss Viola Fowler
of Duluth Is visiting Miss Majorle
Hayes of Third avenue.
Miss Inez Graham, who Is attending
the Northwestern School of Music In
Minneapolis Is spending her Easter va-
cation with her mother, Mrs. Frank
Mrs.' C. W. Stark aad daughter.
Myrtle, came from Duulth Tuesday
evening for a short visit with friend.s.
Miss Ruth BJorge of Duluth Is visit-
ing Miss Thelma Overlard.
Miss Myrtle McKInnon sf Duluth has
been visiting Miss Lela Porger the
past week.
David H. Lawrence las recovered
from his recent Illness.
Harlon Andrews, who Is employed
on the Eastern Mesaba branch, under-
went an operation at St. Mary's hos-
pital, Duluth, last week. He Is mak-
ing a fine recovery.
Miss Edna Giles. Miss Olara Elfrink,
and Mrs. R. J. Gillon of Duluth were
guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
H K. Gillon, the first of the week.
'Miss Lela Porger entertained a num-
ber of young people at h<?r home. Fifth
avenue, Monday evening. In honor of
her friend. Miss Myrtle McKInnon.
E. W. Beaton of Duluth has been
appointed deputy collector of custoois
at this port by Customs Officer L. M.
Wllcutts. The appolntmrnt did not go
to a Two Harbors resldrnt, as no ap-
plicant from here had tiken the civil
service examination. „ . ,
The funeral of Miss Licy Betzler of
Beaver Bay, Wis., who dl«A In Dulutli,
!!
Bemidji, Minn.. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Jack Peterson, who Is
attending the state university, re-
turned Wednesday to spend his Easter
vacation at home.
Mrs. Fred Brlnkman left Wednesday
for Duluth Chicago, Michigan City.
Ind., and West Baden ^:iprlng^, for
several weeks.
W. H. Gemmell, general manager of
the Minnesota & International railroad,
spent Thursday evening in I'.emidjl.
Mr. Gemmell was but recently ap-
pointed a colonel on tlie governor's
official staff.
H. C. Baer left Wednesday for Min-
nepaolls wliere he will meet his par-
ents, who have spent the winter In
Mexico. Mr. Baer Is the cashier of the
Security State bank in this city.
Omer Bailey, who has been the guest
of Bemidji relatives during the past
several weeks has left for his home
In Billings. Mont.
Mrs. H. a. Tenny of Spokane. Wash.,
arrived in the city Tuesday evening,
having been called here to be present
at the funeral of her mother, Mrs.
Joseph Williams, which took place
Wednesday.
Mrw. Anna O'Connor of Bralnerd ar-
rived In Bemidji this week for an ex-
tended visit with her daughter, Mrs. J.
A. Youngren.
A. A. Melges. formerly of Bemidji,
but now of Minneapolis, has returned
to Minneapolis after having spent the
past week In Bemidi.
Dr. J. D. Taylor of Grand oFrks, who
has a summer cottage at the head of
Lake Bemidji, and who has spent the
summer months here for the past few
years, was in Bemidji Tuesday attend-
ing to the repairs on his cottage and
making other arrangements relative
to the moving of his family here some
time in May. Dr. Taylor recently re-
turned from an extended trip in Eu-
rope.
Mrs. Ike Black has returned from
Merrlam Park, where she spent sever-
al days visiting her mother.
John Meyer and son, John, have left
for Medicine Hat, Can., where they will
spend the coming summer.
W. N. Sanborn of Faribault, has re-
turned to his home after having spent
several days as the guest of his son.
Dr. C. R. Sanborn.
Mrs. Florence Hearn of Superior ar-
rived in Bemidji recently for a week's
visit with her sister, Mrs. Henry Titus.
Mrs. A. E. Henderson has returned
from North ome, where she went to
visit her brother. Dr. C. R. Ward.
Misses Rackel Racard and Nellie
Knott, who have been teaching school
at Hornet have returned lo Bemidji
for their Easter vacation.
J. A. Fenton. formerly of BemldJl,.
but now of Grand Rapids, visited Be-
midji friends Sunday.
Lee La Baw has returned from Grand
Rapids, where he went last week to
relieve George Moody, court reporter-
for Judge W. S. McClenahan, for sever-
al days. Mr Le Baw Is Judge Stan-
ton's reporter.
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Wlllson have re-
turned to BemldJl from Minneapolis.,
they having been called there by the-
death of Mr. Wlllson's mother. Mr.
Wlllson's mother came to Minnesota Itv
1869 and settled in Minneapolis, mak-
ing that city her home until death.
She Is survived by her husband and
two sons.
Dagney Mosen, who has been attend-
ing school during the past winter at
Red Wing has returned to BemldJl to
spend her Christmas vacation at the
home of her parents.
N. O. Bang of Park Rapids arrived
in Bemidji recently to accept a poal«
tion with N. L. Hallerup.
Miss Marian ^HUte. dauchter of Ifik
I
I »■■
•4
»m
.ifH
t
Saturdajr.
THE DULUTH HBRAI.D,
April 15, 1911.
OTOW
and Mrs A. P. White of this city, re-
turned Wednesday evening from Ht.
Cloud, where she is a student at tne
normal school. Miss White will return
to resume her school work next Mon-
*Mlss Ivis Roberts arrived In Bcmldjl
Thursday from Northfleld where she
Ig attending Carlton college. Miss
Roberts will spend her Easter vacation
with her mother, Mrs. Sara Roberts of
Bemidjl. ^ ^ ^ -♦
Merrile Flesher. who has been at-
tending Hamllne university during the
past year, is spending his Kaster
tlon at the home of his parents
ci t. V
Count V Attorney Oscar Stenvick of
Clearwater county was in Bemidjl
Thursday on official business.
County Commissioners Nelson
Welte of Clearwater county were In
Bemidjl Thursday on official business.
vaca-
in the
and
BROOKSTON
.been
been
at
re-
iu-
re-
the
Dr.
Wednes-
business
his
Hr....lc.^ton. Minn.. April ^o— ^i^Pt^'^i
to The Herald.*— Z. B. .^oyt, walking
boss for the Northern Ltnnbef companj
of Cioquet. was in the \-i"af,^„^»'"": vall
day, having come down fj^"} ^.*^.« ' ^ *"
source of fcitony Brook. Mr. Ho>t feajs
there are almost 21,000,000 feet of logs
to be driven down the brook, and with
a few more days rain he expects to be
able to start the logs down stream
The Cioquet Tie & Post company vv ill
also have a considerable amount of tlm
ber to drive after the logs have
brought down.
A. K. Kunle of Proctor, has
spending the past ten days with Jacob
Johnson on tlie latter's homestead near
here. Mr. Kunle is employed on the
Duluth, Missabe & Northern rallvka>,
and will return to Proctor within a few
days to be on hand for the opening of
the ore season. . . „.._.
Miss .Sophia John, who spent some
weeks in Cioquet on account of illness.
has returned to the village tully reco\ -
.*'^F J McMahon transacted business in
Duluth the first of the week.
Oliver Olson, who recently sold his
Jand south of town, will probably take
Tip hi.'S residence within the v...ags.
Chris Lee, who has been emplojed
with the Erickson & Lrf>ng company
Eveleth during the winter, has
turned and wUl remain here for an
definite period. ,, , , »,„
The wife of Joel Honkala, who
sides on a homestead claim west of
village, has been quite sick latelj.
Nvqulst was called last week, and pro-
nounced the case quite serious
Rudolph Hantz.<5ch returned
day from a couple of days
trip to Duluth.
M. C. Beargrease^recentlj cut
knee with an axe and has been laid up
as a consequence. , „j „„
Thomas Xeedham, who has worked as
telegraph operator at the local station
for some months, has been transferred
to Kellv L^ke. where he will be em-
©loved in the Great Northern dls-
patcliers office during the ore season.
The vacancy here has been fllled b>
William Mack.
Edward Donley was a Cioquet busi-
ness visitor Thursday.
Miss Jessie Michle of Superior, has
accepted a position at nie Dougay
restaurant. ^ , ^.v, ^„j
George Nasi and was in Duluth and
Cioquet on a business mission the tlrst
of the week. . .^ . ,
The adjourned meeting of the stock-
holders of the Brookston Townslte com-
pany will be held at the secretary s ot-
flce in this village on Wednesday of
next week. A board of seven directors
will >>e elected and other business ol
Importance will be transacted.
Mrs Oliver Olson and two children
departed Thursday for yuperior. where
tiiey will spend several days with rela-
tives and friends. ^ „«.
Mrs. StanchHeld and grandson re-
turned to Minneapolis, Thursday, after
spending two weeks with J. O
field at the homestead
west of town. , -
John eastern, a timber cruiser from
Cioquet. was In the village Thursday.
He was accompanied by several parties
Mho were looking over the available
homestead tracts, which are to be
opened to entry in June.
Mr and Mrs. A. Christenson returned
last week from a several days visit
with Superior friends. ^ „, .
Thumas Hlckey and W. E. Slocum of
Stillwater, have been spending the
week in this vicinity looking over some
homestead lands in this vicinity.
ment of the state university, who vls-
Islted his parents here the past week,
returned to Minneapolis yestertiay.
The Ladles Aid society of the t Irst
Presbyterian church held a successful
Easter sale of potted plants. W ednes-
day and Thursday at the City drug
store
The Ellis, a dry goods store, was
opened In the Sax block this week.
J. C. Mitchell and Rev. A. Schwarz,
Jr., have returned from \ irginia.
where they represented the local 1- irst
Presbterlan church at the annual
spring meeting of the Duluth Presbj -
Former Chief of Police Nick Kent,
and familv, have removed to Virginia,
where the former has accepted a Po-
sition as superintendent of the LUiey
'"A^number of local Elks attended the
entertainment given by the Virginia
order Wednesday evening.
C E. Simmer visited at Grand Rap-
ids the fore part of the week on busi-
Assistant County Attorney Edward
F. Boyle transacted legal business at
Hibblng this week. , .^ , ,
Prof. John S. Peoples of the local
sch.^ols Is visiting at Detroit, Minn.
The Eagles wll give their sixth an-
nual Easter dance Monday evening at
hall.
Twig. Minn.. April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Miss Emily Newberg
left here last Monday for Superior,
where she will be employed for some
time. . , .. .
Charles Peterson, who has been vis-
iting with his parents here, Mr. and
Mrs. C. E. Peterson, returned to Du-
luth Saturday, wher he Is employed by
the Duluth Street Railway company.
Barnard Clauson was in Duluth on
business the first of the week.
James Bacon is bulldin a house on
his land here.
Miss Annie Mitchell spent Sunday at
the C. E. Peterson home.
B. Clauson has quit his job as time-
keeper for the Canadian Northern rail-
way and is now engaged In farming.
John Bolland and John Webb are be-
ing employed with the Candian North-
ern engineers at present.
Fred Newberg was a Hcrmantown
visitor this week, coming back with his
mother, who will visit with him for
some time.
The foundations
the Cioquet river
Northern railway
the steel.
Reginald Hood was
last week.
Oscar Liljren is erecting a
chicken cooj on his farm heer.
Henry Trotz has found good gravel
on his farm in Section 23 and Is going
to furnish some for the Canadian
Northern railway.
Gust R. Wester was to Duluth on
busleas last week. ^
Mrs. M. Solberg and children of Du-
luth are spending a few days at the
home of Ole NickelSon.
W. G. Hammond of teh Hammond &
Anderson company returned here last
week from Embarrass, Minn., where he
has spent the winter. They expect to
start their shingle mill at Martin's Sid-
ing next week.
on the bridge across
for the Canadian
is ready to put on
a Duluth visitor
new
tory that Is about to be established
at that place.
Walter Kuntze. bookkeeper for the
Ross & Ross Cedar company called on
friends here the first of the week.
J. B. Wllm. editor of the Northome
Record, made a business call in the
village Monday.
Mrs. Ola Bloss visited friends at
Big Falls Tuesday.
Mrs. Charles Gllbertson of Interna-
tional Falls spent .<ieveral days In town
this week visiting friends.
Rev. J. B. Astwood left the first of
the week for a trip over In the Iron
range country
Mrs. Lawrence Christenson was re-
ported on the sick list the first of he
week, but is now said to be Improving.
Frank Foster, the flour and feed
man, made a business trip to Gemmell
Monday.
C. C. Hanson, the Insurance man, was
a business caller In town the first of
the week.
FOND DU UC
Fond du Lac, Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Lauer and C. F. Luebke of the"
power house were in the city Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Relnheart
of Duluth spent the first of the week
In Fond du Lac and were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Hewitt.
Mrs. T. HoUenbeck was in the city
Monday.
Mrs. L. T. Brazeau spent Sunday in
the city.
Mrs. Gust Johnson was In the city
Tuesday.
Judge and Mrs. Cant and tJv.eir son
Howard spent the first of the week
In Fond du Lac.
Mrs. M. E. Chambers was in the city
Wednesday.
Mrs. Phillip McCrary of Duluth spent
a few days visiting Miss C^ara John-
son.
Mrs. M. E. Chambers had as her
guest during the week her sister. Mrs.
Havnes of West Duluth.
Mrs. C. Hewitt visited friends In the
city the week end and was a guest
of her sister, Mrs. Theodore Relnheart.
Murace Hogstad of Duluth si>ent
Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
E. L. Hogstad.
Mrs. Fred Murphv was a guest of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Olsen
during the week.
M. H. McMahon and his little daugh-
ter of Duluth, were guests of Mrs.
M. E. Chambers Monday.
Ralph Bishop left for Powers, Minn.,
Wednesday to join his family.
Miss Hilma Peterson and Miss Celia
Durfee spent Thursday in the city.
Mr. Oasser of Duluth Is erecting a
summer cottage at Fond du Lac.
charge of the Boo railroad yards at
that city for an Indefinite time.
Messrs. Georgre Llnd. Swan Lind and
Tomas Decolsey went to. SmithvlUe
Saturday afternoon to attend a dance
at that place. They all enjoyed a very
good time and returned Sunday morn-
ing to Alborn.
Will Berblg, who has been employed
In Duluth the past several years ar-
rived in Alborn Saturday to visit with
his parents over Sunday.
P. Grandin went to Duluth Sunday
to stay for an indefinite time.
Charles Wlckstrom and Hans Skar
left for Grand Lake. Monday morning,
where they will stay the remainder of
W. J. Holman, superintendent of the
iron ore drill made a brief call to the
Zenith City Saturday. He returned to
Alborn Monday evening.
Rev. Mr. Olson of the Swedish Beth-
any Lutheran church in Duluth held
services at the Swedish Lutheran
church in Alborn Monday evening.
Miss Grace Heyden, who teaches in
School District. No. 14, was taken sick
Sunday with the measles. Miss Hey-
den went to Superior to stay at home
until she will be able to assume her
duties in the schoolroom.
Mr.s. J. F. Kenney had as her guest
her cousin from Payne. Minn., Tuesday.
Mrs. F. A. Trolander went to Duluth
Thursday morning, returning in the
evening.
Dorothy Mills, Martha Park, Jennie
Johnson. Mildred Jones, Signa Peter-
son, Vivian Beatty. Artel Norton. Mil-
dred Almen, Florence Miners, Myrtle
Everett, Lilly Simon, Alice Anderson,
Dorothy Colvln, Avis Lundeen, Helen
Dane; grooms, Ludvik Milos, Charlie
Pagnucco. Teddv Johnson, James Bren-
nan. Carl Goldthorpe, Rudie Globoker,
William Everett, Robert Junsola,
Arthur Olson. Edward Koen, Teddy
Lofquist, Stanley Green.
HERMANTOWN
NORTHOME
to
at-
from Black-
He was In
Woodmen of
there, going
of the local
Stanch-
several miles
PKELAKE
Pike
to Ttie
killed
buried
Lake
Lake. Minn., April 15.— (Special
Herald.) — Olof Shirley, who wait
at Rice Lake last week, was
Monday In the cemetery at Pike
He had a very large funeral,
over 100 people attending.
Miss Florence Butler and Olof John-
son of Caribou Lake drove to the But-
ler home Sunday.
James Barnard of Minneapolis is a
Pike Lake visitor. . . , ^
Fred Fish of Rice Lake visited at
Pike Lake this week.
Mrs. H. J. Butler and daughter. Sara,
were Munger visitors Tuesday.
Charles Olson visited at Louis An-
derson's Monday evening.
the
and
and
and
and
to
Cotton. Minn., April 15. — (.Special tc
The Herald.) — Mi.ss Alma Jacobson of
this place and Erlck Abrahamson of
North Dakota were married In Duluth
last week. A big dance was held heic
Saturday of last week In honor of the
couple.
Erlck Abrahamson and Mr. Paul
Herman have left for North Dakota to
tend to their farms..
Martha Nelson was a visitor in Du-
luth last week.
Rev. Mr. Thornberg of Cook was
here Sunday and also held services at
the home of Abraham Wlckstrom.
Mrs. Erick Abrahamson and John
Abrahamson and family left last week
for North Dakota, where they will
make their future home.
Otto Nornjan of West Duluth is vis-
iting at the home of his sister here
during the week.
The Ladies' Sewing society will
meet at the home of Mrs. P. Dardell,
April 12.
Miss Christina Hay left Monday for
Superior, where she is employed.
Misses Ida and Jennie Rolandson
of this place were Duluth visitors Sun-
day.
Jack Anderson of Duluth was a
caller here during the week.
The river drive will soon begin
here as the snow and ice is all gone
and lots of water In the river.
Gust Norberg of Wallhollow was a
business caller here Monday.
Erick Nelson Is erecting a house on
his land here, near the Whiteface
river bridge.
Mrs. A. Johanson left last week for
Duluth with her sick son, where he
will be operated on.
Ishpeming. Mich.. April 15 — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Robert Northey
and wife of Gwlnn are in the city
visiting relatives.
Mrs. J. P. Outhwaite who has been
visiting Mrs. C. M. Leonard of Gwlnn
has returned to this city.
W. H. Moulton, Charles Rutledge and
E. C. Thompson were Gwiiin visitors
this week.
The Forum debating club held a
program in the auditorium of the high
school Thursday afternoon. They were
assisted by the boys glee club and the
orchestra.
A. J. Rich of Beacon was a visitor
W\ is w'6^k
E. H. Phillips, a butter specialist.
Is In the city for a few days.
John Nunan of Globe, Ariz., has ar-
rived In this city and will probably
spend the summer here.
D. J. Nlckerson, the J. E. Swift com-
pany's traveling salesman, was In the
city calllns on his business this week.
R. 8. Raley of Chicago, was In the
city this week.
Some of the births recorded in
city this week were: A son to Mr.
Mrs. Frank Ongle; a son to Mr.
Mrs. John Kandelln; a son to Mr.
Mrs. Harry Beal; a son to Mr.
Mrs. Jacob Narotsky; and a son
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Konsteri.
The funeral of Prof. John North-
more was held from the Presbyterian
church at 2:30 Wednesday afternoon.
He was 76 years of age.
Edgerton Cooley Is home from the
Michigan agricultural college for his
Easter vacation.
Mrs. Joseph Kerr of Ribbing is in
the city attending to her sister, Mrs.
William Hocking, who is critically ill.
The funeral of James McCutcheon
who died in Duuth Wednesday after-
noon, was held at the Presbyterian
church In this city this afternoon.
A son has been born to Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Aho.
Ben Wills is visiting at the home
of James Matthews.
David Anderson and wife are the
parents of a son, born Wednesday.
Mrs. John Ryan arrived home
Wednesday Improved in health after
spending three weeks in a Chicago
hospital.
Joseph Gill of Ironwood is in the
city on a visit.
The funeral of the late James
Southey was held Thursday afternoon
from the Salvation army barracks.
Svdney Veal, who tried to run away
with a Negaunee girl, was returned to
this city and locked up In jail Thurs-
day. He Is married and has five
children.
The schools were closed for the
Easter vacation Thursday.
Allen Wilson is visiting with friends
and relatives In Gwlnn.
Mrs. Rickstad Is visiting her daugh-
ter. Mrs. Robert Trudgeon in Gwlnn
this week.
Northome, Minn.. April 13. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The funeral of Mar-
garette, the 4-year-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. Cunningham of Island
Lake, who died April 6 after a short
illness, was held at the Presbyterian
church here Saturday. Rev. J. B. West-
wood officiating. Interment was made
In Forest Hill cemetery.
Misses Florence Fletcher and Olga
Evenson, teachers in the local public
school, are spending their Easter vaca-
tions with their parents, out of town.
Mrs. Estella Whipple, county superin-
tendent of schools of Itasca county, was
In the village Friday.
Cashier Fred Labrie of the First State
bank at Mizpah, was a business caller
In the village Monday. He said the
Mizpah bank would close Its doors
April 15th, the owners having decided
to discontinue business there.
M. J. McKieneavy, formerly of this
place, but for the past year or so a
resident of International Falls, was in
town Tuesday looking after hfs prop-
erty at this place. It is rumored that
Mr. McKieneavy and his family intend
to return to Northome in the near fu-
ture.
Mrs. A. E. Henderson of Bemidjl
visited her brother, Dr. C. R. Ward of
this place, this week. Mrs. Henderson
was accompanied by little Martha Er-
wlg, her grandchild.
The members of the Northome band
announce a grand Easter ball for Mon-
day night, April 17. Special efforts
will be made to make this dance the
social event of the season.
H. T. Mcintosh and W. E. Sykes went
to International Falls Wednesday
morning on business.
Rev. F. B. Luce, pa-stor of the Metho-
dist Episcopal church, went to Big
Falls Sunday morning, where he con-
ducted services that day.
Rev. F. B. Luce will hold Easter serv-
ices at Island Lake Sunday afternoon
at 3 o'clock.
Special Easter services will be held
at the M. B. church Sunday morning at
11 a. m., conducted by the pastor, Rev.
F. B. Luce, who will deliver a sermon
appropriate to the occasion. Mrs. Luce
will recite a poem entitled "The Resur-
rection." The music will be In charge
of Mrs. M. C. Paul, who is arranging
to make this service of Interest to all.
In the evening, at 8 p. m.. the Sunday
school class will give an Easter enter-
tainment under the direction of Mr. M.
C. Paul, superintendent of the Sunday
school. Rev. F. B. Luce will deliver an
address during the evening.
Baudette, Minn.. April 15.— (Special
to The Herald.)— Rev. Father Beyne
spent Monday evening in town look-
ing after some affairs relative to the
building of the new Catholic parson-
I M. Nesie. who was with the party
who were in Florida the past three
weeks Investigating land there, re-
turned here Saturday.
Attorney C. R. Middleton went
International Falls on Monday to
tend to some legal affairs. c,^,^„
Mr. Songhurst of Sleeman s Siding.
Ont., spent Tuesday of this week in
town
Jolin Mansfieia of Roosevelt. Minn.,
was a pleasant visitor in town last
Tuesday. , . ,,„»«,
J. A. Kennedy, who has been re-
lieving Customs Officer Hollar of in-
ternational Falls the past two months,
has returned and resumed nis duties
at this port.
J. R. Dundas returned
duck on Friday evening,
attendance at a Modern
America convention held
as one of the delegates
M Kiewell of the Kiewell Brewing
company at Crookston, Minn., spent
Wednesday in town. ,„„„
C N. Kennedy of Frontier. Minn.,
made a business trip to this place on
Saturday of last week. .
T. J. McGulre of Winnipeg is In
town for a few days attending to some
business affairs. Mr. McGulre will be
remembered as a former business
man of this place. ,
Mayor Williams and W. T. Noonan
have returned from a few days visit
In Bemidjl and other neighboring
towns.
Mike Culliton of Pitt was in town
on Wednesday. , t^ «-
T A Brown, a contractor of Deer
River returned to town Thursday.
J. I. Walsh returned from •> few
davs' business trip to Duluth.
Owing to a wreck on the D. R. U
& W. rallwav early Thursday morn-
ing the passenger, which usually ar-
rives here at 4 a. m., did not arrive
until 5:30 p. m. ^. „. ,,
The new addition to the Riverside
hotel is well under way and when
compelte will give Baudette one of the
finest hotel In this section of the state.
The new bridge between Spooner
and Baudette Is about completed.
Excavatlnar has been commenced
for the Williams block.
Emll B. Peterson started his plan-
ning mill in operation this week.
Hermantown, Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Miss Lydla Fa-
gerstrora, who Is teaching school in
Floodwood. is spending her Easter va-
cation at her home in Solway.
Olaf Stomprude of Hermantown left
Saturday for North Dakota, where he
will visit friends and relatives for a
1 f* \V \^' f C^ tC fl
Mrs. Edwin Johnson has been on the
sick list.
Miss Ellen Fagerstrom of Solway
was a Duluth visitor Tuesday.
Miss Cora Bell Giddirgs, who was
on the sick list last week, is much
better and has started to school.
Mr. Nigren of Biwablk visited his
sister. Mrs. John Anderson, of Five
Corners tliis week.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Polzlne of
Adolph visited the Nels Johnson home
last Sunday.
Edward Hanson of Spokane, Wash.,
Is visiting friends here.
The teachers of school district No. 6
closed school Thursday to go to their
homes to spend the Easter vacation.
Miss Leonora Ukrud visited some of
her friends Thursday evening.
Miss Lydla Fagerstrom was a Duluth
visitor Thursday.
Miss Mary Tlndahl of Duluth re-
turned to her home Thursday evening
to spend her Easter vacation.
Rudolph Martin transacted business
in Duluth this week.
Miss Selma LIndahl visited some of
her friends and relatives of Duluth
for a few days this week.
Charles Dahlen of Solway transacted
business in Duluth this week.
The Solway Sunday school will give
a program Sunday at 2:30 p. m.
Emll Fagerstrom and John Johnson
of Solway were Duluth visitors
week.
day evening for the Easter vacation,
and several of the teachers are spend-
ing their vacation at thtir homes.
Another remittance Mas received
from the county treasurer this week
and as a result Cass Lake village war-
rants registered prior to Nov. 1, 1910,
are now due and payable.
The senior class of the high school
will give a play on Friday evening,
April 2S.
B. L. Perry, chairman of the county
board and J. B. Spencer, also a mem-
ber and state game wai-den were In
town Saturday on buslmsss connected
with the establishing of the new judi-
cial highway on the Cass- Hubbard
county line west of here.
W. J. Adams of Kltichi spent Tues-
day in ' town.
H. G. Knouf of Wilkinson was in
town Tuesday.
Dr. Thomas F. Rodwell left Thurs-
day for Washington, D. C, on private
business matters.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Richards of W 11-
kinson were Cass Lake visitors Tues-
day. . ^
J. P Foote of Crookston was in town
Wednesday looking after affairs of the
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY
SHOmNG IN DULUTH
SOME DULUTH FIRMS WHO WANT YOUR MAIL ORDERS!
Write for What You Want, Every Order
Will E e Given Prompt Attention I
this
HALLOa
Buy YOUR CLOTHING
BITS, SDOES AND FURNISHINGS
IN DULUTfl
And set the benefit of our low prices
and larKC asnortmenta.
«The Darlivht Store.**
Second
Superior St.
/.Vb'lVhAbtRCtS
Dry Goods,
Millinery,
and Women's Ready-
to-Wears.
First Ave. W. and Superior St.,
Duluth, Minn.
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15. — (Special to
meeting of the
$400 was ap-
county exhibit
fall, and C. J.
was appointed
Eveleth. Minn.. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Rev. D. B. Hanscom,
pastor of the Methodist Episcopal
church, returned yesterday from Du-
luth. where he met his wife and three
children, of Maine, who will make
their home here.
Supt. Burton O. Greening, returned
Wednesday evening from an extended
visit to Chicago and other large cities.
Ben Wilk of the engineerlns depart-
Zim, Minn.. April 15.— (Special to The
Herald.) — Mrs. Matt Ekola is seriously
ill with pneumonia. , , , ^ , .. ^
Richard McCne, administrator of the
Charles Murphy estate, was here Tues-
dftv
Anthony Pryor of Eveleth spent the
week-end here as the guest of U. D.
Kenworthy. „ ^ ^ t^ i *v,
W. S. Johnson was called to Duluth
Tuesday to attend the funeral of his
son-in-law. Mr. Coughlin. ,., , .
Among those who were In v irglnia
Mondafj- were: MLss Rika Gradine and
Messrs. W. S. Johnson and John Lund.
William Byrnes and Adolph Carlson
transacted business In Eveleth Wednes-
day.
Miss Margaret Smith of Duluth vis-
ited with Mrs. S. W. Levin Tuesday.
Miss Marie Gabriel met with an ac-
cident Monday. While out driving the
horse became frightened and ran away,
causing her to be thrown out of the
buggy. She was not seriously Injured.
&. w. Levin w^as taken to the Rood
hospital Thursday. He is very ill with
pneumonia.
Mrs. S. W. Levin and daughter. Myr-
tle returned Sunday from Hibblng,
where they visited with friends.
Charles Stenlund was a caller in
Eveleth Thursday.
Hallock, Minn.. April
The Herald.) — At the
county commls.«ioner3
propriated towards a
at the slate fair this
Estlund of Kennedy
manager with $1,000 bonds and Charle?
Clow of Northcote, assistant manager.
A daughter has been born to Rev.
and Mrs. Court.
Nels dander's valuable collection of
firearms has been sold to the Rogers
hotel at Minneapolis. The collection
consists of a complete a.^sortment of
guns from the very finest Inventions to
the modern firearms and are neatly ar-
ranged In glass cases.
A the convention of the M. W. A.
the following delegates were chosen to
attend the state camp meeting at Fari-
bault: John Solebakke of Robbin and
W. L. Peter.son of Lancaster.
Moen & Sons are building the Tabe-
tha Lutheran church at North Red
River.
Louis Hill is making some extensive
building Improvements on his farm at
Northcote
Vernon E. Farr of Shevlin and Miss
Eva Herd of St. Vincent were married
at the Presbyterian parsonage by Rev.
Sheile last Sunday.
Stella Omundson, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ole Omundson of this city,
died from a severe attack of brain
fever at an age of 9 years. The fu-
neral was held from the Lutheran
church. Rev. Mr. Lundgren afflclating.
Editor J. E Bouvette has returned
from a month's visit in Texas.
Mrs. Charles Sandberg of Red River
died at the Warren hospital at an age
of 20 years. Her parents were Mr.
and Mrs. Alfred Larson of Bronson.
The funeral took place from the Lu-
theran church on Saturday, Rev. Mr.
Lundgren officiating.
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The same speoial p)*loe8 will be
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AT WHOLESALE
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109-104 W^eet Michigan Street,
DULL'TH, MINN.
aal«aa<Mite«*jJt»r- '» 'in
MEADOWLANDS
Mizpah, Mlnn^. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — F. W. Foster recently
signed up a large contract for grub-
bing and clearing land near this place.
Success in large chunks is the wish
of his many friends.
William Hanchett transacted busi-
ness at Gemmell Saturday.
J. W Stewart of the Bemidjl Lum-
ber company was a business caller here
the first of the week.
William Ensign and Marion foster
visited at the Scully home Sunday.
William Travis, the M. & L pump
man and ball player of Northome, was
among the out-of-town callers in our
village Monday.
Fred Labrie, cashier of the local
bank, transacted business at Northome
Monday.
William Ross, vice president of the
State Lumber company at Gemmell,
was a business visitor in town Satur-
day.
Lieu Latterell, the Funkley merch-
ant, came up from his home Monday
morning on special business, returning
home on the freight.
James Labrie and Albert Holmqulst
were callers at Houpt Sunday. Mr.
Holmqulst belns interested In a fac-
Bovey, April 15. — (Special to The
Herald.) — Will Mackle left for Duluth
Thursday morning, where he will visit
ov^r Sunday.
Mrs. Stirms returned to her home In
Duluth Thursday noon after a pleas-
ant visit at the P. K. Priest home.
Miss Harriet Hurly, who is attending
the State university returned Sunday
to spend her Easter vacation with
her parents.
The Presbyterian ladles' aid society
win meet at the home of Mrs. Blther
Wednesday, April 19.
Henry Blnnet, who is attending the
state unlv«erslty, will spend the Easter
holidays with his parents here.
Mrs. Barlow and Mrs. Whltmas drove
to Grand Rapids Friday.
Ed Krause and E. J. Porter left
Wednesday evening for Red Lake Falls
to spend the Easter N'acatlon with
friends.
Mrs. Larson and son, Edwin, visited
Saturday in Taconite.
Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Hartley returned
to their home In Duluth after a three
weeks' stay at their sugar farm on
Trout lake.
J. K, Jaspv?r made a business trip to
Calumet. Saturday.
Mrs. John Specht is recovering from
her recent Illness.
C. J. Frautl made a business trip
to Grand Rapids Monday.
ALBORN
15.— (Special to
Borg who vi.slt-
Moose Lake the
Alborn, Minn., April
The Herald.) — Charles
ed with his parents at
past week returned to Alborn Thurs-
day, where he is employed at T. T.
Mvklebye's.
Miss Llllle Haakeoneau from St.
Luke's hospital of Duluth passed
through Alborn en route to her home
at Riverside, Saturday evening. She
returned Sunday morning to Duluth.
A. O. Johnson of Proctor visited with
his parents, Capt. and Mrs. S. G. John-
son Saturday and Sunday.
Peter Hanson left Moose Lake Sun-
day afternoon. Mr. Hanson will take
Biwablk. Minn., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Mrs. Stuart of Elba
was here visiting friends Friday.
Misses Gertrude Hayes and Kath-
arine Sullivan returned to their homes
in Two Harbors Monday.
Mrs. G. R. Smith and daughter, Irene,
were in Virginia on business Satur-
day.
Miss Nellie Dunstone was In Vir-
ginia visiting friends Saturday.
Miss Julia Enright has been ill for
several days this week.
Miss Margaret Riley was in Hibblng
visiting friends last week.
Miss Jennie Johnson was over from
Aurora Sunday, visiting her parents.
Miss Marlon Thompson of Two Har-
bors visited Miss Ellen Johnson this
week.
Miss Evelyn Morrell of Eveleth was
here visiting friends Friday.
Miss Katharine Guthrie went to her
home In Duluth Friday to spend her
Easter vacation.
Misses Agnes Carey, Gertrude Hayes,
Marie Carey and Hazel Watts were In
Virginia on business Saturday.
Jordan Crawford was In Virginia on
business Saturday.
Miss Glbbs Was in Virginia on busi-
ness Saturday.
A program was given in the high
school auditorium Friday evening by
the school children.
"The Smuggleman" was the title of
the play and the cast of characters as
follows: The Smuggleman, Robert
Pickett; Fairy Queen, Cornelia Faber;
Singing Fairy. Ethel Johnson; Herald,
Willie Pickett; Toots (a naughty boy),
Hugh Riley; Billy (a good boy), John
Sims; Toot's mother, Marie Carey;
Billy's mother, Sophie Junsola; six
boys. Glen Howerton, Oliver Pickett,
Earl Gulmont, George Hogan, Arthur
Strom, Myles Salmon; knights, Joe
Cohen. Slaughter Salmon, George
Goldsworthy, Harold Rowe, Martin
Williams, Earl Howerton. Louis Lof-
quist, Gabriel Mistachkln; horses,
Mildred Mandel, Mabel Blbeau. Dotothv
Cohen, Marie (julmont, Ruth Syrstad.
Elizabeth Bray, Gunda Engen; Sun-
flower. Eddie Cox; fairies, Alice Watts,
Meadowlands. Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The Meadow-
lands Farmers' Co-operative associa-
tion held their annual meeting this
week. The following officers were
elected: W. A. Thompson, president; J.
N. Tldd, treasurer; J. H. Peterson,
Elvln Spuce, D. O. Anderson, J. N.
Tldd and W. A. Thomson, directors.
The members subscribed $80 to the
Duluth Co-operative association.
Sanders Olson of Osceola, Wis.,
bought an eighty-acre tract of land
from the land department of the Du-
luth & Iron Range. , ^, ,
Henry L. Wagner of Chicago, who
was visiting his brother, F. C. Wagner,
returned home Tuesday.
Max F. Grosh, who bought the
Ahearns farm, moved here Tuesday
from Barley. Neb., with his family, and
car of emigrants' movables and stock.
D. O. Anderson shipped three cars
of cedar posts to West Duluth this
w e e k .
O. F. Mller, who was visiting with
J. L. McCarthy, went to Milwaukee
Monday morning.
Mrs. Henry Wagner and Mrs. Mary
Oaksley, went to New York Friday on
a visit with relatives.
Gust Johnson went to Duluth Fri-
day on business.
R. J. Holtz of Utica, Minn., arrived
here Tuesday with his family and car
of emigrant movables and stock and
is moving out on his farm southwest
of town.
Mrs. J. W. McCarthy arrived home
Thursday after three months' visit with
relatives at Cameron, Wis.
Mrs. Ella Snow of Mitchell, S. D..
arrived Thursday on a visit with her
sister, Mrs. J. W. McCarthy.
August Olson went to Duluth
Wednesday to see a dentist and have
some -wfork done. _ .. ,, ,
Miss Martha Miller, Miss Julia Nel-
son. Miss Lvdla McCarthy and O. F.
Miller, J. L. McCarthy and Leroy Mc-
Carthy, were the guests of Mrs. W.
Bailey of Elmer, Sunday evening, at a
dinner party. Games were played and
music rendered and a very pleasant
time enjoyed. ^ , ^,.
Mrs. Fred Strong went to Duluth
Friday.
George P. Dover went to Duluth
Friday on business.
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Duluth.
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SPECIAL ATTENTION GITEN TO
MAIL ORDERS.
CASS LAKE
Cass Lake, Minn., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Mark Burns, special
agent of the Indian department arrived
Wednesday from New York, accompan-
ied by his wife. They are the guests
of "Grandpa" Burns. Mark left Fri-
day morning for Cioquet to spend a
day or two on important business.
A telephone booth has been installed
in the Great Northern depot and con-
nected with the local exchange. Com-
munication can be had by dropping a
nickel in the slot.
A "hobo" social will be held at
Strawbrldge hall next Wednesday
evening, commencing at 8 o'clock.
County Attorney Funck made an of-
ficial visit to Pillager Tuesday.
Cashier Charles A. Graham of the
First State Bank of Remer was a visi-
tor in Cass Lake Tuesday evening.
The vlllago schools closed Wedne«-
SHOE SATISFACTION
For entire family. Sorosis Ladles'
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WIELAND
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222-224 West Fli-st Street.
Shoes for Everybody
All klade that
up to 9«.00 and 87.00.
are nevr aad soodf
Special Talnea
■t 93.00 and 94.00.
The SUFFEL
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103 West Superior St.
DULUTH.
I^F
"The One Price Store.**
Orders for Hale
Attire will be properly and promptly
fllled by the
Colflmbia Clotlhing Co.,
Formerly "The Orett Eastern."
Third Ave. W. A Superior St., Duluth.
W. &L.
SHOE CO.,
218 'WEST SUPERIOR STREET.
Duluth, MlBB.
The Leading:
Shoe Store of
Duluth.
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IT Fourth Aveuiie West.
The largest and riost complete
line of photographlo materials In
the Northwest.
lapcrt DcTcloptes sud Prtntluv.
If You Do Not
See Advertised
Here What You
Want Write
The Herald
for It.
ite
/.
ti
a yr i
JU^ft-U
Jij.riiiit^yi-
pai«iMaBi«H
«PiiW«i
HVM
Saturday,
THiS DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
OTOIW?
First National bank. In which he la In-
terested. . .
Peter Hammerel of St. Cloud spent
a few days here this week and while
here leased a dwelling and will mo^e
his family here next week.
Frank "Suitor and Henry Sellye
about completed preparation
construction of a summer
Islana as soon as the
Ice. The
Probate
have
for the
hotel on Star
lake is free from
bulldinK will be 24 by 110.
Judge Jamison was up from
Walker last evening to look into the
case of Knglneer Crouty, whose mind
has become unbalanced. Mr. Crouty
was injured in a railway accident at
Cohasset some time ago receiving a
scalp wound from the effects of which
he has not fully recovered. An exam-
ination was held last evening and the
man committed to the asylum at Fer-
us Falls to which place he was taken
Deputv Sheriff Kennedy, assisted
fy
by K. F. Mlskella. ^ _ ,^^,
Clavton Hendrickson of Bemldjl was
a Cas"s Lake visitor Friday.
Shtrlff Robert De Lury came up from
Walker Thursday evening and took the
night train for Bena where he spent
yesterday on business. , „, ■,
Charles Schwenk returned Wednes-
day from a visit of several weeks with
his son in Saskatchewan, Can.
George Cochran came down from Ke-
mldjl Thursday and Is spending a day
or two looking after his stock at his
logging camps north of Cass lake.
Axel Nelson returned Wednesday
evening from a visit of several weeks
■with his brother at Leech Lake.
Martin Surface, who was Injured
the crating factory one day last
Is again able to attend to his
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Tapley are
sick list
Blattman Bros., have leased a tract
of land north of town and have fenced
It in for pasture.
day evening In the Masonic lodge
rooms to all Masons and Eastern Star
members and their families.
Louis Kdstrom escorted his two chil-
dren to Northtield Tuesday, where they
entered the Oddfellows' home.
An appropriate Easter program has
been arranged for Sunday morning at
the M. B. church. Special music and
songs will be rendered.
April 28 Is the date for the enter-
talnn.ent to be given by the local min-
strel troup at Larson s opera house.
A good program has been arranged
with "Bones" Follett and "Tambo Ro-
bey as the stars.
The Eagles will give their fifth
nual ball at Larson's hall on
Monday. _ . j j
The funeral of Ole Englund. aged
was held Wednesday. Services were
conducted by John Gjertson of the
Swedish Mission church. Deceased was
one of the pioneer residents of Sand-
stone, but lived alone and had no rela-
tives In this country.
an-
Easter
67.
at
week
duties.
on the
the ladles
be largely
N.
Cuvuna. Minn.. April IJ.— (Special to
The Herald. (—The M. E. Ladies Aid
will serve "old fashion" supper at Ben-
ron-s hall next Friday evening. This
is the first social given by
this season and promises to
attended. _ _ _ ,,
James Nemetz of Cogswell,
arived here Wednesday Mr. ^Prnftf
is a jeweler and has purchased the
Jewelry store from H. K. Dlmmick.
He is the first jeweler to locate in
The ideal theater Is showing
crowded houses each night, being
only theater on the Cuyuna range
**'Th^ ^ local "schools closed Thursday
for the holiday vacation. Miss Effle
Johnson and Miss Edna Volner. the
teachers, have gone to their respective
homes, the former to Alexandria, and
the latter to Staples.
Easter will be appropriately
served in the young mining
There will be services In
churches. „ ^ ,r j_..
The baseball dance Easter Monday
promises to be largely attended.
her sister,
during the past
to
the
ob-
town.
all the
Crosbv. Minn.. April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.)— R. L. Kilpatrlck, super-
intendent of the Inland Steel company,
returned the tlrst of the week from a
business trip to Minneapolis.
E E Krueger of Glenwood will erect
a large store building and start in the
furniture business. , _ , ,^ ^. ^_„
George Crosby of Duluth. the pro-
moter of the town that bears his name,
•was in the city recently Mr. Crosby
seemed much pleased with the rapid
progress and up-to-dateness or the
young city.
When the warm weather comes many
people are expected to Crosby, as the
young mining town, although unusual.
Is well known as a splendid summer re-
sort Several summer homes were
erected on the lake last summer.
Walker. Ml.nn., April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Mrs. Mearow has been
quite silk at the home of
Mrs. Harry Brumund,
ten days. , ^ ^^
Ray Dally of Laporte came to
Walker this week and will spend the
summer here, being employed as car-
penter. His brother. Earl Is also here
to take up his work on the steamer
Northland as pilot.
The I..eech Lake band has advertised
an Easter dance for next Monday.
T A. Barker, formerly of Deerwood.
has opened up a jewelry store here
and is already enjoying a good trade.
He was formerly in business here be-
fore going to Deerwood.
T. M. Robert and family left for
Iowa this week. Their log house was
purchased by the village upon the ad-
vice of the board of health, and burn-
ed. The house has apparently been a
breeding place for germs as all fami-
lies living in It have been afflicted
with some contagious disease.
Lorin Chase is home from St. Thomas
college where he has been attending
school. , . , ^ ^
Dr. Benz of Nebraska has decided to
locate in Walker and has already es-
tablished offices here.
Mavor Kinkele, who Is at the hospi-
tal at Rochetser Is progressing nicely
and on Friday was able to leave Ma
bed. He Is expected home In a short
tl'"^- .^ ^
S. Hocking has charge of the Grand
theater during the absence of A. L.
Inenfelt, who has gone West to look
up a business deal.
E. T. Crltchett, assistant inspector
of state graded schools, was In town
this week looking over the Walker
Institutions of learning.
M. Erickson and J. E. Kulander have
moved into tJie Farmer McCabe build-
ing and are fitting It up for a confec-
tionery and Ice cream parlor.
Mrs. Edward Rogers has received
word that her sister Miss Flossie Bal-
ton Is seriously sick at Minneapolis,
with tuberculosis of the stomach. Miss
Balton is well known In Walker.
Chris Swenson is making good pro-
gress on his residence on Cleveland
boulevard.
Mrs. G. H. Nelson and son. Earl, of
Minneapolis are stopping at their cot-
tage here this week. '
George Revlere dislocated his shoul-
der Thursday while at work at the
sawmill.
The village council has served notice
that no more ball playing will be al-
lowed on the public streets in the
business portion of the city. Bicycle
riding on sidewalks has also been
prohibited.
Gustave Kulander and F. A. Dare
were In Minneapolis the first of the
week on business.
J. W. Rice and sons arrived in town
Thursday from Mildred and will again
engage In the pressed brick and
cement business here.
of the East Norrie mine Wednesday
night. He was taken immediately to
the Oliver Iron Mining company's hos-
pital on Ayer street. His whole left
side is cut up badly, and at first they
had fears that he would lose his eye-
sight, but later it was learned that his
sight will probably be saved.
Miss Bertha Lofberg is expected
home the last of the week from a six
weeks' trip through several cities in
Wisconsin and Mhhigan.
George May and Bert Smith left Fri-
day morning for Duluth to spend
Easter. , „ ^
Mr. Ninness. teamster for the F. J.
Hager Lumber & Fuel company, was
hurt by falling lumber, receiving a cut
In his head.
Mrs. Pearson Wells and children have
returned from Milwaukee, where they
visited relatives for a couple of weeks.
The fire department was kept busy
on Tuesday answering alarms, being
called up five times during the day.
The fires were all small, very little
damage being done.
The Knights Templar will attend the
First M. E. church on Easter Sunday
morning In a body for worship. There
will be special services held there dur-
ing the day. , , „ ^
George A Currv has leased the Post-
office block from Fred M. Prescott,
and is having the Interior of the
)>uildlng remodeled, new postoffice fix-
tures being put In place.
here with
Quacken-
ipendlng the Easter vacation
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
bush. ^ . ^ r
Mr5. R. A. Folkerls spent che last of
the week in Duluth.
Charles Elmburg of Duluth was a
guest at A. G. Renstrom's residence
M Schaffer of the Armour Packing
company transacted business here
Tuesday. , ,, ,_
Robert Malcome, Arthur Mahoney.
Oliver Buhl, Louis Chrlstensen. George
Dunleavv of Duluth were here Friday
and visited at the steel plant.
ROSEAU
THIEF RIVER FALLS
Roseau, Mlnn^ April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Eddie Norman has left
for Raddl3.son, Sask., to Join his father,
L. P. Norman.
Adolph Anderson, the 14-year-old son
of Gustav Anderson, died from typhoid-
pneumonia.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Nelson and daughter
of Osakls who have been visiting with
Rev. Knat Gjesfjeld. left Tuesday for
Stanley, N. D.. where they will spend
the summer with their son.
The family of August Hedin of Ma
lung Is quarantined for
there being four cases
11 y.
Mrs. Erlck Rjoberg
pleasant surprise party
birthday by a number of
At the convention of
of Roseau county, J. G
scarlet
In the
fever,
fam-
was given a
on her 62nd
her friends.
the M. W. A.
Stein of War-
road was elected to represent the
county at the state convention.
At the meeting of the board of edu-
cation Misses McLaughlin, Beers. Al-
rlck, Bralsle and Degermah were elect-
ed for another year and Prof. J. P.
Bengtson was directed to ascertain if
the ladles named would accept and re-
port at the meeting the board holds
todav. Mr. Bengston has been re-
eneaVed for a term of three years at
a saliry of H.IOO. 11.200 and $1,300.
Erlck Carlson has been granted a sa-
loon license at Badger for $1,500.
Spooner. Minn., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald. I— The Rainy river Is now
open as far down as Plnewood, Ont.
The rainfall of the past few days Is
just what everyone has been wishing
for as It will help to get the timber to
Albert Berg left for Duluth on Mon-
day evening to remain over the Easter
holidays. ^ , ,
Martin Halvorson left for a few days
business trip to Roosevelt on Tuesday.
Mr Kelly of Barwlck, Ont., spent
Wednesday" In town.
Walter Soneson. who Is working on
the drive at Sturgeon river for the In-
ternational Boom company was In town
Wednesday. , , , *
The new Queen River hotel was for-
mally opened to the public on Monday
It is" an up-to-date hotel and one that
Spooner can be proud of. vr„.»,
Mr. Rickerman of the Sheflln-Math-
Ifu Lumber company's office force, re-
turned from a month's vacation to his
home in Jefferson, 111- ^^ ,
During the high wind on Thursday
t of the roof on the Weeks Hard-
comrany'H new building was torn
par
ware
off No 'material damage was
other than putting the telephone
Ice in that part of town out of
»m Issi-m.
done
serv-
com-
SANDSTONE
Sandstone. Minn., April 15.--( Special
to The Herald.)— The Carleton Glee
club gave a splendid concert at tne
opera house Tuesday.
William Nein of Willow River has
b«-en visiting at the H. A. Sandwick
home the past wet^k.
Q X Wvckoff returned from the
Head of the" Lakes last Sunday accom-
paiiUd by his ulfce, Miss Froney. of
Superior. _ , .,
Kev ^V. S. Middlema.ss was a Duluth
visitor the first of the week.
The ladies of the Eastern Star thim-
ble bee met Fridav afternoon at the
hom.e of Mrs. A. S. Webb
The Catholic Ladies' Aid society will
meet with Mrs. Maloney on Thursday
evening. April 20.
The Norwegian Lutheran Sewing so-
ciety meets Monday afternoon with
Mr.s. H. Opstad. ,, , ^ ,„
The Ladies' Unity Reading club will
be entertained at the home of Mrs. C.
Colbv next Monday evening.
Kev. William stegeman left for Iowa
Monday to attend a gathering of mem-
bers of the Duluth Reformed church.
Mrs. Harry Madison, Albert Larson
and J. H. Samuelson were delegates
from the local lodges to attend the
Good Templars' convention at Two
Harbors this week.
Ed Kourke. who has been visiting his
brother. Tom, here for several weeks,
left this week for the northern part of
the state.
Chris Rudisuhle returned Wednesday
from a ten days' visit at his former
home in Houston county.
John Erickson returned to Seattle,
Wash., after an extended visit with his
parents here.
Mrs. Ida Fogg returned to Princeton
Thursday after a few days' visit with
Mr.s. G. I. Nickerson. The latter will
leave with her -childj-en for Montana
next week to jolr her husband there.
Miss Nellie OJey returned to her
home in Minneapolis Monday after a
month's sojourn with friends here.
J. S. Ingalls of Minneapolis gave a
lecture on "Socialism" here and ai
Bruno this week.
A dinner will be served next Wedues-
Ironwood, Mich., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Olaf Peterson came
here from Biwabik, Minn., to attend the
funeral of his sister. Miss Elsa Peter-
son, who died of pneumonia. The de-
ceased had be^n a dressmaker In Iron-
wood for about twenty years.
F. O. Ekholm has returned from St.
Paul and Minneapolis, where he did
some spring buying for his store.
Walter S. Goodland, the newly elect-
ed mayor of Racine. Wis., was a resi-
dent of Ironwood for many years, hav-
ing been C. E. Houk's predecessor as
postmaster of this city and having
founded the Ironwood Times.
General Manager Luther C. Brewer
and Master Mechanic E. G. Cullen of
the Newport Mining company are tak-
ing a month's trip through the larger
mining camps of Arizona, Colorado and
Montana.
Mr and Mrs. E. D. Nelson are In
Topeka, Kan., visiting their daughter,
Mrs. Philip Kaye.
At the triennial county convention of
the Modern Woodmen of Gogebic coun-
ty held at Bessemer, Andrew Anderson
of Bessemer was chosen delegate to the
state camp to be held at Sault Ste.
Marie next month, and E. R. Bayllss
was chosen alternate. Delegates were
present from Ironwood, Bessemer and
Wakefield.
Dr. D. C. Pierpont of the Newport
medical staff returned from a six
weeks' trip to California and other
Western states.
-The Wisconsin Teleplione company
will soon begin the construction of a
new long-distance line between Iron-
wood and Woodruff, Wis., a distance of
about fifty mile.s. The route will be
along the Northwestern railroad, and
will be much more direct to Chicago
and Milwaukee than the one now in use
by way of Ashland.
Work was begun this week on tho
foundation of the new store building
being erected by J. A. Federstrom, op-
posite the St. James hotel. The con-
tract for the foundation was given to
Peter Lofberg of this city.
Thomas Oliver, who has been visit-
ing Ironwood relatives here for the
past ten days, returned to his home In
Eveleth, Minn., Tuesday morning.
A. A. Bowden of Hurley, Wis., is en-
joying a visit from his mother, whose
home is In Houghton. Mich.
Timothy KJJeen was summoned
to Lake City, Minn., by the serious ill-
ness of his father, who Is 71 years of
age, and who was operated on this
week for cancer. Little hope Is held
out for his recovery, his son staying
with him all the time.
Mi.ss Olga Tacku, former clerk in F
O. Ekholm's dry goods store, was mar-
ried last Monday evening at 8 o'clock
at the home of Anurew Happala, North
Curry street, to Henry Serkela. Rev.
Mr. Wurnos performed the ceremony.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Serkela are well-
known young people of this city, the
bridegroom being the manager of John
Helll's store.
Mrs. J. C. Shea was called to Hough-
ton Mich., this week, on account of the
serious Illness of her mother, Mrs. Julia
Shea. , , . ,
Mrs. Courtney, a very highly re-
spected old lady of Jessieville and
mother of Mrs. John Noonan, was
buried Monday morning from St. Am-
brose Catholic church. Deceased wa.s
73 years of age. The funeral was very
largely attended.
Miss HUma Ahlsten has gone to .\sh-
land to spend the Easter vacation with
her sister, Mrs. Kastman.
The members of the Foreign Mls-
.sionary Society of the First Presby-
terian church weift to Ashland on Fri-
day.
Patrick Shea, an old resident of Iron-
wood, waa hurt by a blast In "D" shaft
Warren. Minn, April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The new council at Ar-
gvle decided this week to grant saloon
fl'censes at $1,000 each. „ ,, ^ , „♦ „#
Rev. Father Stolyer. Polish priest of
Winnipeg, occupied the pulpit In the
Catholic church here Sunday In place
of Father Poisseau, who is ill.
A potato organization has been or-
ganized here with C. L. Spaulding as
president and Morris Munger as sec-
rct.fl.ry
J. A. Frank has returned from Min-
neapolis. ... 1 J
Licenses to marry have been issued
to Edward Ruprecht and Eivlna Sl-
monson, both of the eastern part of
the county. , ^ , ., ^
The time of the spring term of the
district court in Marshall county has
been changed from the fourth Mon-
day in June to the fourth Monday in
J. H. Baugh of this city -has been
appointed engineer on a judicial ditch
In Norman county.
The Civic league of Warren has been
perfected with the following officers:
O. A. Abrahamson. president; J.^ \N^.
Thomas, vice president; H. L. >N ood,
secretary and treasurer
P A. McClernan of Stephen has been
elected as delegate from Marshall
county to the slate convention of M.
W. A.
T. Aasland. who has been employed
In the Warren cigar factory for more
than a year, has left to locate In North
Dakota. His wife Is visiting relatives
at Ada.
About a dozen school arotjnd Stephen
are trying to form themselves into an
organization for the purpose of Intro-
ducing domestic science, manual train-
ing and agriculture In their schools.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mossefln of
Fertile have arrived to spend a few
days visiting at the home of Mrs. Mos-
sefln's mother. Mrs K. J. Taralseth.
Thief River Falls. Minn.. April 15. —
(Special to The Herald.) — All the local
churches have prepared elaborate pro-
grams for Easter. Several have strong
choirs and will present particularly
high class music.
Miss Nettle Ove entertained a num-
ber of her friends last Monday even-
ing.
Attorney Richardson was in the
county seat of Marshall county on
legal business Monday last.
Miss Volga Evenson, who Is teach-
ing school in Kooclil<hlng county. Is
visiting her relatives in this city.
Miss Bertha Olson, who Is a student
at the normal at St. Cloud, Is visit-
ing her parents In this city during the
present week.
Krank Kratka, a civil engineer stu-
dent at the state university is home.
Several of the young people who are
students at Institutions of hl^ier
learning in this and adjoining states-,
are home for the holidays.
Mrs. Jason and Mrs. Weatherhead of
Ada, Minn., are visitors at the Herrick
home in this city.
F. C. Niclal is in Crookston. where
he is receiving medical trealmeiit for
some trouble of the ^es. He has been
forced to cease his trips on the road
In the Interest of hi^ cigar factory.
L. M. Hoag returned from the Pa-
cific coast last Tuesday and reports a
pleasant visit there.
If the weather Is propitious the jun-
ior band organization will present
their first public concert from the band
wagon on one of the prominent cor-
ners down town ne.vt Saturday even-
ing.
Mr. and Mrs. Anton
the city on Sunday en
In North Dakota.
H. T. McAnuty, former county super-
intendent of Red Lake county, trans-
acted business In this city last Tues-
day.
Fred Efflnger of Harvey, N. D.. Is
visiting for a few days with relatives
in Thief River Falls.
A new picture show house was
opened in this city on Thursday.
Miss Goldle Stebbins Is spending
the week with her aunt at Bemldjl.
The M. B. A. lodge gave a dancing
party at the Odd Fellows' hall last
Monday evening. About fifty members
took part In the festivities.
The traveling men who make this
city their headquarters have organized
a baseball team for the summer's cam-
paign. They already have arranged
games with similar teams from neigh-
boring towns.
Emll Plodson, who recently re-
moved here from Iowa, Is llie new sec-
retary of the Northern Minnesota
Land company of this city, succeeding
O. L. Erickson, the former secretary.
H. O. Hjomme, an attorney of Minne-
apolis has arrived and opened a law
office.
Mrs. John Torrlson entertained the
card club at her home for the last
party of this nature this season.
George Lipscomb has sold some of
his personal property and left for the
West to find another location. He may
decided to dispose of all his holding's
in this city and move his family.
The Brago singing society Is prac-
frequently for the singlngfest
will take place in this city next
transferred from Minneapolis to take
The Modern Brotherhood lodge cele-
brated the fourteenth anniversary of
the supreme order on Tuesday evening.
A class of candidates was initiated and
a program given at which the state
manager, W. E. Kinman. of Minneapo-
lis, and the district deputy, I. E. Leigh-
ton, delivered addresses.
Hose company No. 3 held Its annual
election of officers on Monday evening.
Clyde McDonald was elected foreman.
Brainerd's tag day will be held on
.'Vprll 20. The funds gathered will be
used to support a visiting nurse for one
vcsr
Mrs. Agnes Freeman, who died at
Duluth after a short Illness and who
was a bride of but a month, had two
uncles In Bralnerd, Charles Holmblad
and Charles Holmstrom. who, with
their families attended the sad funeral
at Duluth. ^ ,
The funeral of Hermon G. Ingersoll
was held on Wednesday afternoon with
a large attendance. He was the father
of N H. Ingersoll, the postmaster of
Bralnerd and one of the publishers of
the Bralnerd Dispatch.
speaker of the occasion, in a talk on
■'The Course of Empire."
The Five Hundred club will meet
Tuesday evening at t'ne iKme of Mr.
and Mrs. Alfred H. Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Berijstedt are
building a fine eight-room house on
their farm west of the city and will
have It for a summer borae, and go
Into the truck farming business on
quite an extensive scale.
The Prlscilla club met lust evening
at the home of Misses Anna and Mar-
garet Gillespie.
Miss Lottie Olson has a'*cepted the
position of assistant in the office of
County Auditor Auguest ]\. Norman,
and commenced upon her duties this
week.
F. A. Watklns, Judge of jTobate, has
been absent on business In Minne-
apolis this week.
Mrs. M. S. Searls was a visitor in
the city from Cloquet Wednesday, to-
gether with Miss Coyken>lall. They
were guests of Mrs. Henry Oldenburg.
Attorney Spencer J. .Searls expects
soon to move his household effects
over here from Cloquet and reside In
a house on Chestnut stree: belonging
to the Paine estate. His mother will
be his housekeeper.
Six new members Joined
Luthern Bethesda cliurch
Palm Sunday. Rev. Mr.
Norby were in
route to points
ticing
which
June.
BRAINERD
last of
of Mrs.
the blasting
em railroad,
heavy blasts
residents to
Smlthville, Minn.. April lo.— (Special
to The Herald.)— Mrs. Axel Petersen
and her son. Grant, spent the
the week In Duluth. the guests
J. Erickson.
Miss Clara Anderson, one of the
teachers here. Is spending the Easter
holiday with relatives at Grantsburg.
Wis.
Mrs. Thomas Havron and daughter,
Edna, spent Tuesday In West Duluth.
J J. Hankensen, resident engineer
for the Canadian Northern, spent the
last of the week In Duluth.
The Christian Endeavor society will
meet at the schoolhouse Sunday even-
ing at 7 o'clock. ^ . , .
Contractor Anderson, who is doing
for the Canadian North-
had occasion to use some
Saturday. He asked the
stay In the house at the
time and sent out men to watch. The
blasts were heavy, windows being
broken in several houses. No further
damage was done. ^ ^ . ^ ^
The voung people entertained at a
dance Saturday evening at the hall.
Refreshments were served. The guests
were: Mesdames A. G. Renstrom, F.
Newbauer W. A. Dunn, Morgan Gus-
tafson J. Slogan, A. Boyd, Misses Helen
Renstrom, Kate Newbauer, Annie New-
bauer, Mary Dunn. Agnes Newbauer,
Nettle Amundson, Evelyn Dunn. ^Ij'rtle
Amundson, Ethel Oveston, Agnes Boyd.
Mildred Boyd, Hazel Olsen; Messr.s. Ld-
ward Dash, Arthur Renstrom, Ralph
Thompson, John Hogan, William Dunn.
Charles Elmburg, August Lundqulst.
August Newbauer, Andrew Dunn, Sel-
der Boyd, Erwine Amundson, Oscar
Amundson, Iver Johnson, Alfred Bruce
Morgan Gustafson, Don Boyd, Wlnfred
Boyd, Don Doneto, S. Lind, A. Llnd of
Alborn, Minn. . » . ^
Miss Agnes Newbauer entertained
some of her school mates Thursday
evening. Dancing and music were the
amusements. Refreshments were served.
The guests were: Misses Dorothy
Swenson. Bernlce Johnson. Amelia
Swenson Nellie Swenson. Irene Ren-
strom, Clara Amundson, Ruth Ren-
strom; Messrs. Albert Overton, Allen
Bovd. Bennie Amundson. Wilfred Boyd.
Ed"mund Johnson, and H. Newbauer.
Miss Mildred Simons of West Duluth
.spent the week here, the guest of Ethel
Overton. _
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Renstrom and
children spent Sunday in Duluth.
Peter Olsen of West Duluth was the
guest of his sister, Mrs. Thomas Hav-
ron.
Swan Llnd and August Lind of Al-
born, Minn., were the week-end guests
of Don Boyd. ^ , ..
August Benson was In Duluth
Wednesday.
Alfred Quackenbush. who attends the
MacAlester college in St. Paul, is
rr^
Brainerd. Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The new
Iron Exchange hotel was Informally
opened on last Thursday. Nick Lauer
Is the proprietor and is well known as
a hotel and restaurant man who for-
merly conducted tlie Horse Shoe res-
taurant on almost the same site.
The funeral of Edward Strehlau was
held Monday afternoon, Rev. Paul A.
Weiss of Wadena officiating. The de-
ceased was employed twenty years In
tlie car shops of the Northern Pacific
railway.
Five directors were eletced Friday at
the Y. M. C. A.
Kenneth McDonald has been recently
appointed oil Inspector of Crow Wing
county.
W. H. Gemmell. general manager of
the Minnesota & international railway,
has been appointed by Goveinor Eber-
hart as aide-de-camp on his staff with
the rank of colonel.
At the annual meeting of the Park
Region Land company, George D. La
Bar was elected president; H. W. Stone
of Benson, vice president; J. M. Elder,
secretary and manager; F. A. Farrar,
treasurer.
Mayor-elect H. P. Dunn is confined
to his home with an infection of the
face, which originated from some nasal
trouble.
Mrs. Samuel Hawkins and little son
and Mrs. Guy Warren went to Duluth
last Saturday.
Mrs. Andrew Gustafson has returned
from a vis't with her son, Arthur Gus-
tafson, at Moline, 111.
Miss Marion Orton, the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. C. H. Heath, has returned to
her home in Orton, Iowa.
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Marx visited
St. Paul recently.
Mrs C. B. Rowley and daughter vis-
ited friends in Staples last Sunday.
Mrs. E. S. Houghton and son. How-
ard Houghton, have returned from a
week's visit at Backus.
Mrs. G. W. Vandersllce. the guest of
Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Ingersoll. has re-
turned to her home in St. Paul.
Mrs. Amanda Holly of Sioux City,
Iowa, Is the guest of her daughter, Mrs.
J. N. Blever.
R. Buchman of the Buchman Mer-
cantile company has returned from a
business trip to the Twin Cities.
Mrs. W. 1*^. Larrabee accompanied her
mother, Mrs. E. M. Larrabee to her
home in Duluth last week. She had
spent the winter with her at Bralnerd.
Miss Mamie Fltzpatrick and Miss
Clara Routheau, guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Klebler, have returned to their
homes in Fergus Falls.
Governor Eberhart has appointed W.
H. Gemmell, general manager of the
Minnesota & International railway, and
Attorney S. F. Alderman, d< legates to
attend the Northwestern Development
meeting at Helena. Mont., on May 4
and 5. - , ^
J. C. Barber, the owner of the country
seat, Twin Oaks, at Nokay lake, has
arrived from Chicago and Is attending
to spring Improvements on his place.
Miss Geraldine Fleming and Miss
Bessie Wleland have returned from the
university at Minneapolis and are
spending their Easter vacation at home.
Mrs F. S. Parker accompanied her
daughter. Miss Ruth Parker, to Fari-
bault, where she is attending St, Mary's
hall. , ^ , ^ ^ ^
The Brainerd Gun club expects to
have its first shoot of the season on
Sunday. April 23. ^ , .
Misses Dorothy Hannaway and Jule
O Brien have returned from the uni-
versity at Minneapolis to spend their
master vacation at home.
Mrs. Olaf Skauge and son. Otis, have
returned from Minneapolis, where they
visited friends and relatives.
Henry Gingall night opyator of the
Western Union offices, has returned to
Dulum and R. C. Njrlund has been
Tower, Minn.. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Easter services will be
held at the Episcopal church Sunday
morning. There will be special music
by the choir.
Members of the Eastern Star lodge
very pleasantly surprised Mrs. W. H.
Mctiuade last Saturday afternoon, the
occasion being the anniversary of her
birthday. Five hundred and bridge
were plaved and lunch was served.
Mrs. S. Syms, who has been spending
the winter at the home of her nephew,
E. J. Atkins, agent at the local D. &
I. R depot, and wife, returned to her
home in Oshkosh. Wis. Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. t^dward Mahar of Vir-
ginia are rejoicing over the birth of
a daughter Mrs. Mahar was a former
Tower girl.
Nels Lee, who was engaged In the
butcher business here a few montlis
ago, but who is now in the same busi-
ness in Duluth, is visiting relatives
here
The Victor Rebekah lodge, I. O. O. F.
will celebrate the ninety-second anni-
versary of the I. O. O F lodge at Odd
Fellows hall Saturday evening, Rev.
John Schenck of Aurora, has been in-
vited to make an address. There will
be music and a banquet.
Several little friends of Master Rus-
sell Nopler's assembled at the home
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Nopler last Saturday, the occasion be-
ing the third anniversary of his birth-
day, after a number of chlldrens
games a dainty luncheon was served.
Mns. E. J. Atkins, who has been
visiting her mother in Superior for sev-
eral weeks, has returned to her home
In this city.
J. W. Osborne of Ely, was In the city
Mrs. Agnes Chlldres returned to Ely
after a short visit with old Tower
friend.s. __
Guy A. Terry of the Forestry service,
who has been stationed at Harding the
past two years, was in the city re-
cently and visited headquarters at h-ly.
Mr Terry left the last of the week
for Missoula, Mont., where he will be
stationed, his family having preceded
him.
Mrs P. O. Helstrom and son, Law-
rence, have returned from Virginia,
where they have been visiting rela-
tives for a few days.
Mrs. J. D. Murphy went to Virginia
Wednesday morning to visit her son
for a few days.
Mrs. Fred Helm has returned from
her Denver, Colo., trip. She
oft at Minneapolis for a few days, visit-
ing with her son and family.
Eleanor Congdon entertained on Sat-
urday afternoon several of her little
playmates at the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Congdon, It being
her fourth birthday anniversary.
There will be Easter services at the
St James Presbyterian church Sunday
evening Special music by the choir.
Rev. Hughes of Ely will occupy the
pulpit.
Mrs. Dan Hadley of Virginia, a
former resident of Tower, visited
friends here Wednesday and Thursday.
Joseph Bracco and family, who have
spent the winter In Ely, arrived last
Tuesday and will make their home on
their farm this summer.
Miss Ina Martin Is visiting rela-
tives and friends In Aurora and Vir-
ginia.
Miss Sellna Palmer has returned
from a short trip to Duluth.
Miss Effie Pflffer went to Virginia
Thursday for a short visit with rela-
tives. , , „ ,
The Misses Pearl and lone Morln are
visiting friends in Duluth.
Master Howard Umbrelt celebrated
his sixth birthday anniversary last
Thursday afternoon by entertaining
several of his young friends at his
home. After a series of amusing
games, a dainty lunch was served.
Miss Marie Colberg entertained a
number of her friends Thursday after-
noon, In honor of her eleventh birth-
day. Games and music furnished the
amusement. In the clothes pln con-
test Miss Rose Stephanlch received the
head prize and Marlon Pfelffer, the
consolation prize. Those present were:
Alberta and Mintle Kltto, Lillian and
Lena Murphy. Helene and Jeanne Gal-
lien, Olga Lofgren, Edith Egen. Marion
Pfelffer, Rose Stephanlch, Marcella
Colberg, Rose and Bernlce Levis,
Lillian Bystrom, Florence Elkrem,
Unlce Aubln, Helen Hill, Lern Peter-
son, Anna Mae Johnston, Irene and
Marie Colberg.
Miss Jennie Johnston gave a party
on Saturday last. Games and music
furnished the amusement, after which
a delicious lunch was served. A pleas-
ant time was reported.
A pleasant surprise party was ten-
dered Miss Helene Galllen at the A. S.
Kltto home Monday afternoon. Games
were played. Afterward a picnic lunch
was served. Among those present
were: Elsie and Esther Sovde, Leora.
Clara and Florence Elkrem, Irene and
Marie Colberg. Alberta and Mintle
Kltto, Anna Mae and Jennie Johnston,
Helene Galllen. Ethel Burgess and
Lugenla Jeftery. .. ., , *v.
Agent Thompson and family of the
Tower Junction have moved Into the
house formerly occupied by Fred
Bystrom. ^ . ,
The Murray family, who were burned
out on Monday last, have moved Into
the vacant house across the street
from their former home. , . ,
Misses Crawford and Rankin, teach-
ers In the high school, are spending
their spring vacation in Minneapolis.
;he Swedish
society on
Peterson is
meeting with good encouragement as
the new pastor.
County Auditor Auguest R. Norman
and D. J. Smith last Friday received
from the state fish hatchery at St.
Paul over 100,000 trout fry, which
they distributed in streams in the
vicinity of Carlton — to bait the
anglers.
The proposed new parsonage for
the Methodist Episcopal church is
progressing very favorably. It will
be a cottage with dlmlnslons of 22 by
28 feet In the main part, besides the
kitchen. Rev. Henry Huline is push-
ing the arrangements to g:et it built
at once.
Copious rains that have fallen dur-
ing the past week have pleased the
farmers, as they say the ground Is
in better shape to receive the spring
seed than it has been at this time
of year for several seatons and a
bumper crtp is expected.
W. R. Mayer of Corcoran, Cal.,
former postmaster and cruiser, who
resided at Thomson In Ills boyhood
days, has been in the city on a visit
this week, and will remain for a time
to worK for the Iron Range.
Emll Newqulst of this c ty has been
drawn as a juror to serve at the
United States district court to meet
on April 25.
United States Marshal Mallory was
up from Duluth Wednesday and served
subpoenas on Sheriff Ha)ry W. Mc-
Klnnon and Deputv Sheriff John Flynn
to appear at Duluth Friduy to act as
witnesses in the preliminary hearing
of the fellow Cooper, anc the others
accused of robbing the Cromwell post-
office last w^eek.
Clerk of Court John B. Thomson at-
tended a banquet given by the Masonic
orders at Duluth Thursday evening.
The Ladles' Aid Society of the Pres-
byterian church met with Mrs. B. J.
Quinn Wednesday afternoon.
The Young Peoples Society of
Christian Endeavor of th; Presbyter-
Ian church held a recejtlon in the
church parlors Saturday ijvenlng. Re-
freshments were served and officers
were elected for the society for the
ensuing year as follows President
Miss Annie May Wood worth; vice
president, George Waugi; secretary
and treasurer, Miss Avis Woodworth;
corresponding secretary. Miss Lottie
Dunphy; chairman social committee.
Miss Maytle Beatty; chairman prayer
meeting committee. Miss Margaret
Gillespie; chairman lookoi t committee.
Miss Mabel Olson; chairman mission-
ary committee, IIIss Margaret Olden-
u iioiii j burg,
stopped I ""'»• ^
a thirty-day Jail sentence for assault
and battery.
James Brennan was tried In Judga
Langland's court on the charge of sell-
ing liquor illegally, but the Jury dis-
agreed after being out several hours
and was dismissed.
Mrs. J. W. Collins is home from St.
Paul, where she spent the winter.
Mrs. Charles Johnson Is here from
Crosby looking after their property in-
terests.
Miss Gertrude Jones of Clark, S. D.,
Is visiting at the home of her sister,
Mrs. W. E. Lawrence.
Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale are vlsitlngr
at Minneapolis, their former home.
Attorney Franz Jevne was over from
Big Falls this week.
Miss Jeanette Ogaard was a guest at
the home of her Yincle, Editor C. S.
Jameson, of Llttlefork. this week.
Sheriff Hazen of Bemldjl was amonff
our visitors this week.
Miss Thompson, principal of tho
public scohoJn, is spending the Easter
vacation at the home of her parents
north of Crwokston.
Mrs. R S*^- Pendergast and little
daughter are guests of Minneapolis rel-
atives, i ,
The new city council organized on
Tuesday and re-elected F. G. Nelson as
president. John Berg was appointed
street commissioner and O. A. Sklnvik
janitor of the city hall. The new coun-
cil will hold its first regular session
next Monday night, at which time
Mayor Colburn will read a message
containing much of Importance with
reference to public Improvements which
should be made during the ensuing
year.
The fire department gave its banquet
to the city officials at the Hotel
Koochiching on Tuesday evening and
the event Is said to have been a great
success. A feast of many courses was
spread and the guests and hosts spent
several hours around the festal boards,
partaking of the goods things to eat
and drink and listening to 'he toasts,
the principal address of the evening
being by Attorney W. V. Kane. Gar-
wood's orchestra furnished the music.
INTERNATIONAL
FALLS
International Falls, MIrn., April 16.
— (Special to The Herald.) — It is re-
ported that the steamer Keenora is to
run again this season ir the tourist
trade between Fort Fran<;es and Kee-
nora, after being out ol commission
several years. . , .
George E. Mertens of Shakopee Is in
town looking after the aldltlon prop-
erty Interests of his siste:*. Miss Dora,
who Is now visiting on the Pacific
coast.
Dr. George F. Swinnerton has been
appointed deputy county cproner to as-
sist Coroner A. M. Jensen of Big Falls.
Hugh Mcintosh of Northome was
here this week.
The public school pupils are enjoy-
ing a vacation this week
J. O. Meyers and E. H. Northrop. Fort
Frances real estate men, are Minneap-
olis visitors.
George B. Wallis Is home after a
winter trip which extended to Cali-
fornia. He says that after having seen
the best new sections o:' country in
the West and having visited many
cities, he comes home strong in
conviction that International Falls
Northern Minnesota cannot be beaten
for opportunities.
Miss Schlbner, one of the local teach-
ers is spending her Eajjter vacation
with a sister at Bemldjl.
John Stone and daught-ir. Miss
tha, of Duluth, are gues' s at
Clemens sanitariums. ... * v-.
The big sawmill, which is said to be
the third largest in the state, is now
under roof and the placing of the ma-
chinery has started. _.,.
John Smith and William Allison
were bound over to the grand Jury
Thursday in municipal court on the
charge of grand larceny. They cleaned
UD a sleeper In one of t le saloons to
the tune of $«0 by ripping out the
pocket o£ his undershirt with a jack-
Joe King, an aged darky who has
been around town for so-ne time, was
sentenced by Judge Langland to serve
the
and
Mar-
the Mt.
Carlton, Minn.. April 15.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The entertainment In
the Odd Fellows' opera house Tuesday
evening was given under the auspices
of the Modern Brotherhood of America
order was one of much merit and
high-class in every respect.
John Habhegger of Wrenshall, who
owns forty acres of land south of
town, this week received a carload of
young cattle from St. Paul and will
try the experiment of feeding them
for market on pure clover pasture
with which his fenced >n land abounds.
The Carlton horse market tried the
experiment last year with great sue-
C^SS
Tlie students of the hight school
are to give a lecture in the Odd Fel-
lows' hall next Friday evening. April
■•l for the I'eneflt of the school piano
fund. J. Adam B«d« will be the
Important to the
Ladies of the
Iron Range:
Owing to the fact that Madame
Navarre Is going out of business,
she will not retain her shop In
Duluth, having 8hipp< d her Mil-
linery goods to Virginia to be
sold at your own prici;.
A most "elegant line of Import-
ed Novelties of every sort are In
the stock.
She has just visited the market
and Is cognizant of every new
effect being shown. ,5he will be
in her Virginia shoi- until the
goods are disposed of, giving her
services gratis.
Madame Navarre
Iron River, Wis.. April 15.--(Speclal
to The Herald.)— It Is reported that a
Duluth firm is investigating coiidl •
tions around Iron River with a view
of establishing a potato warehouse in
Uiis city. Rev. E. B. Day, secretary
of the Farmers' Produce Exchange,
was in Duluth the first part of the
week, on business connected with the
move. '
On Wednesday and Thursday even-
ings of last week the local declama-
tory and oratorical contests were held
to choose representatives from Iron
River. Philip Elliott and Gladys Camp-
bell carried off the honors. The Di-
vision contests of the Chequamagon
League will occur this month, tha
declamatory at Hayward on April 22,
and the oratorical at Washburn oa
April 28. , ...
The Iron River Baseball association
was formally organized at a meetln*
of the fans held at the town hall last
Tuesday night. The object of the asso-
ciation being to build a first-class ball
park on a site to be selected later. The
following officers were chosen: Presi-
dent, W. B. Clublne; secretary ana
treasurer, H. H. Butts; secretary, Will-
lam B. Johnston; manager, P. J. Bogle.
The season for the catching of
brook, rainbow and other varieties of
trout opens next Saturday. April 15.
Andrew Anderson a resident of the
town of Oulu, who has experienced
some trouble in getting his mail at
Iron River postoffice, on account of
there being five others of the sam*
name, has changed his name to An-
drew Tandberg and this week he for-
warded the necessary papers to the
register of deeds, to make the change.
FYed Antonson, chairman of the
town of Orienta, received word re-
cently that his brother, Andrew An-
tonson, was found dead In his well on
the prairies of Alberta, Can., during
the month of February.
Gunder Erickson, who was a resident
of this city for a number of years and
is well known here, dropped dead in
Duluth last Friday.
A grand ball will be given by the
Iron River Nest No. 1132, order of
Owls at the opera house next Monday
evening.
William Hilderbrant of Lake Nebaga-
mon died last Tuesday evening of heart
trouble after a long illness.
Marriage licenses were Issued Friday
by County Clerk Oscar to Emmanuel
Luick and Miss Hattle Buck and to
Arthur Gamaale and Miss Julia M. Be-
rube, all of Iron River.
John Thompson, who was taken to St.
Joseph's hospital In Ashland two weeks
ago for treatment. Is reported much im-
proved.
Miss LIda Miles left Thursday after-
noon for Minneapolis, where she will
visit for a few days with friends.
Miss Nell Conner went to Duluth Sat-
urday for a couple of days' visit with
friends.
H. J. Benoit made a business trip to
International Falls this week.
Mrs. P. J. Savage and daughter, Zoe,
visited Ashland today.
Mrs. McHugh of Chilton, Wis., Is vis-
iting In this city at the home of her
son. P. F. McHugh.
Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Helmer visited
with relatives and friends in Superior
last Monday.
John Harpster has taken a farm
down in Washburn county and will
farm there during the coming season.
Mrs. John Nell and daughter, Ethel,
arrived in this city Tuesday evening to
visit with Mrs. Harvey Nelmner.
Mrs. H. Bead and daughter. Jennie,
of Superior are visiting in this city at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Sulli-
van. Mrs. Sead is Mrs. Sullivan's aunt.
Miss Maud Irving, a school teacher in
the public schools at North St. Paul,
is spending her Easter vacation visiting
at the home of her brother.
Myron Ripley spoke to the high
school students Wednesday morning on
the subject of banking.
B. T. O'Hara. who has spent the
winter with his brother at Bella Plains,
Iowa, is expected back here for the
season and will reopen his shop.
R. E Daly, who was employed on
the State Experimental farm here last
year was In town for a day or two tho
first'of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Gust White and family
left last Friday evening for Boyne
Falls, Mich., where Mr. White haa
secured a position.
William Maltland visited Ashland
Monday evening.
George S. Barnes made a trip to St.
Paul the latter part of last week.
Sheriff Clark of Sawyer county waa
In the city yesterday subpoenaing wit-
nesses in the Dletz trial.
Mrs. Kingsbury of Montlcello. Minn.,
arrived In this city last week to visit
for a few days with her daughter, Mrs.
A. H. Miles.
Mlss Judith Hedqulst came down
from Superior Friday evening to spend
Easter vacation with relatives.
John Maxwell has disposed of hla
residence property on George street to
Mrs. L. B. Jacobs, and has moved his
family to West Duluth.
Miss Nellie Grace came down from
Duluth last Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ole Moxness and family
left Monday evening for Ashland,
where they will reside. Mr. Moxnesa
will be employed In the American
Eagle Clothing company store.
T. B. Nelson, acompanled by his two
daughters, was in town last Sunday
between trains.
Thomas OTool,
some weeks ago by
a wood cart, is still
Chairman Peter
who waa injured
being thrown from
In very poor health.
Sorenson of the
town of Clover, was a visitor in thla
city Monday. Mrs. Sorenson accom-
panied him.
Mr. and Mrs. William Wilkinson ot
I ■ I
(
I
I
■
<
/
r
t
'^m
24
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
Conjuringf Creek, Alherta. arrived here
last Saturday evening and will visit
here fa» a few days, when they wl 1
leave for Alabama, where they win
lo<ate. Mrs Wilkinson was formerly
Mrs. Nettle Roix ot this city.
Nick Welt, who has been running a
bakerv at Deer River since leaving
here some months ago, was in the city
Sntur.iay and spent Sunday visiting old
friends.
NEWS OF THE NORTHWEST
Aurora. Minn., April 15. — (Special
to Tlie Herald.) — "Mr. Bob," a two-
act drama, was given at the Fin-
nish hall Thursday night under the
auspices of the high school band. The
play was clever and was raui-h enjoyed
by t!io large audience. The young
people have received much praise from
many sources. A dance was given fol-
lowing the play. , , , ..
Charles T Murphy was a legal visitor
at Mar Me the first of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Myers of Biwablk
were visitors in town Monday.
Mrs Glbeau of MesJaba was the guest
of Miss Freldheam Tuesday.
Miss Maud Graham of International
Falls is a guest at the home of her
brother. Charles H. Graham.
Mr. and Mrs. K. T. Sandberg were
Virginia visitors Wednesday.
Capt. T. J. Niv-holaa and son Lester
were Uuluth visitors several days this
week.
Mr and Mrs. Mat Alto are tlie happy
parents of a baby daughter which ar-
rived at their home Thursday niornlng.
F. C Wltte attended a meeting of
Elks at Virginia Wednesday night
Mrs. Ous Mattson and daughter Ella
were Virginia visitors Tuesday.
E. H. Yarlck wa.s at Biwablk on busl-
nes." Tuesday afternoon.
Miss Goldstein of Gladstone. Mich.,
wai» the guest of Mrs. G. E. Webb this
Miss Chlnn of Elba was the guest of
Miss Louise Foble last Sunday.
Carl Borgstrom was up from Two
Harbors on business this week.
G. K. Webb was a business visitor on
the Cuvuna range this week.
R. W. Mk*cox was a Virginia visitor
the first ot the week.
Loiils Beckstrof was a Duluth visitor
over Sunday.
Max Cohn of Biwablk transacted
bu3lnt.-.«s In town this week.
Miss Savage of Aitkin was a recent
visitor in town.
An addition to Rutz's pool hall is
belnj< built for the accommodation of
additional tables and two bowling
alleys.
August Knuti has started the foun-
dation for a new home on Second ave-
nue.
Park Rapids, Minn., April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The new appoint-
ments by the village council are John
Moran. street commissioner; S'. C. Ten-
nis, superintendent of water works; U.
G. Wray, village attorney; C. A. Hous-
ton, health officer: and A. M. Way and
J. H. ONeal, miMubers of the heallli
board: AV. K. B. Sniythe, member of the
park board.
Cold weather continues and seeding
Is being delayed. The frost is mostly
out of the ground.
Fred Bumgardner of Bemldji was a
visitor here Tuesday. He came down
to visit his parents, who reside here.
Fred Rima and A. T. Jacob have gone
up to the Iron range country and will
visit the new Cuyuna range on their re-
turn trip.
Mrs. Sumner, mother of B. L. Sum-
ner, died at the home of her daughter
today.
T. C Cochr.in ha.s purchased the Var-
ney property on Main street, and wlli
put in a fruit and confectionery store.
The Cal Benham building is being
built ovor and will be used as a mov-
ing picture room. P. Mace having taken
a long lease on the building.
Clav Wright, son of Judge B. F.
"Wright, who has been in St. Paul for
several months, has returned and will
remain at home for the present.
Hank Perkins was in the Twin Citle?
this w<:>ek purchasing machinery fo:'
the latli mill now being put in by the
Park liapids Lumber company.
Prof. .\. M. Bank was a Twin City
visitor tlie fore part of this week.
Mrs. L. H. Rice, wife of Hon. L. H.
Rice, went to St. Paul Saturday. The
oaughters are attending the slate uni-
versity, and Mrs. Kice will remain until
the Ifg'islature adjourns.
Mrs. Harry Crawford came from Se-
beka Monday for a visit with relatives.
B. L. Sumner of Sebeka was called
here by the death of his mother and
will remain until after the burial.
Rev. C. C. Warner of Crookston will
hold services in the Congregational
church Sunday.
Tlie Congregational church has ex-
tended a call to Rev. Roach of North
Dakota. If he accepts the call he will
take up his work of the minlstrv about
Hay 1.
Joseph Stolqulst of Bemldji came
here Tuesday for the purpose of re-
moving the remains of B. Kronquest
from Straight River to Bemldji, where
Mrs. Kronques^ is buried.
John Mertis, living four miles west,
met with a serious accident last week.
He was working on the roof of his new
barn and in some manner lost his foot-
hold and fell some twenty feet to the
fround. breaking three ribs and jarring
him up considerably. He is now recov-
•ring.
H. F. Burch has gone to Minneapolis.
He will be away most of the summer.
H. A. Conner Is making additions and
•hange.s in his residence here. While
the home is undergoing repairs he wil)
•ccupy the Stangler home.
Your
Good Looks
should be a sonrce of pride to yon.
Sallow skin, pimples, blotches and
eruptions call for immediate attention.
It should be your aim to get rid of
these disfiguring signs of impure blood
— quickly, certainly, inexpensively.
No outward application will purify
your blood.
BEECHAM'S
PILLS
help naturally from within. They
cleanse the system and enable your
stomach, liver and bowels to work as
Nature intended.
Try a few doses and see how
quickly you will be rid of impurities,
a!id how your blood and your looks
will be benefited. Thoroughly tried
and proved good this &iaily remedy is
The Best of
Beauty's Aids
I For females, Beecham's Pills are specially
»uitah|e. See instructions with each box.
Sold Ercrrwlier*. la boxes 10c. and 25c.
MANY GOING
TO GRAFTON
Tri-County Teachers' Asso-
ciation Meeting in May to
Be Well Attendei
Prominent Educators Expected
to Be Present and Discuss
Pertinent Topics.
Grafton, N. D., April 15.— (Special
to The Herald.) — Prominent educa-
tors of North Dakota have been se-
cured as speakers at the annual meet-
ing of the Tri-County Teachers' asso-
ciation which will be held in this
city May 12 and 13. E. J. Taylor
of Bismarck, state superintendent of
public Instruction, will be present,
also Dean Joseph Kennedy of the
university. Dr. A. li. T. Wiley of
the state institute for the feeble
minded and Prof. Thomas A. Hlllyer
of the Mayville state normal. The
Grand Forks symphony orchestra
will furnish the music, giving a con-
cert for the Friday evening session.
Mayor to WelfOine AH.
Mavor J. E. Gray will welcome the
teachers, who will be from Grand
lorks, Walsh and Pembina counties,
and the response will be made by the
president of the association, H. F.
Davis of Fairdale. All papers will be
followed bv general discussions and
the first wi'll be by Supt. F. L.. Whit-
ney of this city on "'The Socializa-
tion of the Public School," • Miss
Hillesheim of Pembina will speak on
•Character Building," Henrj' Woll of
Arvilla on "Regularity of Attendance"
and R. Kirkconnell of Walsha on
•School Libraries." Friday's session
wil close with Dr. Wiley's address.
Saturday morning Miss Rose Baker
of Grand Forks will read a paper on
•Phj-sical Culture and Sanitation,"
and J. S. Bjornson will give on on
•Agriculture." Supt. E. J. Taylor
and Prof. Hillyer will deliver their
addresses and Volney Mills of Grand
Forks will give a song recital.
The Saturday afternoon session will
be devoted to election of officers.
Dean Kennedy's address and a paper
on "Domestic Science and a Manual
Training" by Miss Mary Sutherland
of the Grand Forks school.
MOOSE LAKE WILL
ENTERTAIN G. A. R.
Carlton Xounty City to Be
Host to Park Region
War Veterans.
Moose Lake, Minn., April 15.—
(Special to The Herald.) — Moose Lake
this year will entertain the Park
Region G. A. R. encampment. A
meeting of the Commercial club was
held Thursday night and appointed
the following committees: Aiurange-
ments and finance, C. F. Mahnke, S.
A. Jacobson, W. Westholm, C. J.
Dodge, H. T. Carlson, J. H. Mattson,
H. K. Lower; entertainment and ac-
commodation. S. Swanson, M. F. Ol-
son, H. D. Cooper, D. O. Olson, T. A.
Sebasta and Johan Olsson. Arrange-
ments will be made to take care of
about 3,000 people. Speakers from
abroad will be engaged and it Is
planned to make the enca»mpmeilt
here the best ever held.
Moose Lake is particularly well
situated for the holding of pubilc
gatherings of this kind as it has a
natural pine park of 58 acres, a large
pavilion located in the park on the
lake shcWe. Fishing is good in the
lake and a large number of boats and
launches will be provided that all
who desire . may take advantage
boat rides. «
NORTH DAKOTA UNIVERSITY
STUDENTS PLAY "EVERYMAN
ff
of
CARLTON COIMY COURT.
Only Due Case Decided in District
Court This Week.
Carlton, Minn., April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Only one case has been
decided in district court here this week,
NEW NORTH DAKOTA
SCHOOL INSPECTOR
THE PALM ROOM
At the SPALDING
MOST DELIOHTFUL AND LUXXTRI-
OUS RESTAURANT IN DULUTH.
Grand Forks. N. D., April 15.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — To the Sock and
Buskin society of the University of
North Dakota belongs the distinction
of presenting the first thorough mor-
ality play in the state, and to Fred-
erick H. Koch, the society's director
and founder, belongs the distinction of
being the first man to take the leading
role as Everyman since Its original
production.
After weeks of preparation this Im-
pressive morality play of the fifteenth
century was presented by the Sock and
Buskin society as its second annual
public play and with much greater suc-
cess than was Its first play, "Twelfth
Night," which was presented at com-
mencement time last year in an out-
door theater, modeled after the custom
of Shakespearean days.
Being especially appropriate to the
solemn passion week of the lenten
season, the play had an added Interest
to both theater and church goers and
for that reason drew one of tne largest
audiences ever attracted to the Metro-
politan theater. Sanford Dodge, the
Shakespearean actor, was among them
and after the play took occasion to
publicly congratulate the society on
Its successful presentation of the heav-
iest play ever attempted by amateurs.
Members of the university laculty who
had seen Edith Wynne Mathieson
in the role of Everyman, with the Ben
Greet players, stated that their un-
ftrejudlced opinion was that Mr. Koch's
nterpretation was superior in a great
many ways to hers.
UnlTeralty'H Bei»t Talent.
The entire cast was composed of the
university's best dramatic talent as
students are only admitted to the
Sock and Buskin society, after pas.sing
a rigid dramatic examination given by
the English department, and each one
acquitted himself with great credit to
the Institution and to Mr. Koch, under
whose direction the cast was trained.
Miss Myrtle Helmer as Good Deeds,
the character second in importance to
Everyman, was exceptionally fine.
Prof. Meyer Jacobsteln took the part
of Messenger: Relnnart Kamplin,
Adonal; John A. Taylor, Dethe; Fred-
erick H. Koch, Everyman; William
Torgerson, Felashlp; Bernice Veltch.
Kynrede. Roy Thompson; Cosln. Law-
rence Fisher, Goodes; Myrtle Helmer,
Good-dedes; Christine H. Boyson.
Knowicdgj. William Bacon; Confes-
sion; Gertrude Cunningham, Beaute:
Anabel Batten. Strengthe; Temple
Irwin, Dvscretlon; Edith Londergan.
Five Wvttes; Lola Peterson, Aungell,
and Cecil McKay, Doctor.
that of Jonas Ralha, who was given a
judgment for $650 against the Northern
Pacific Railway company. The jury
reported Tuesday. When the Jury
went out on that case another was
immediately commenced, being a joint
action of four cases. These cases were
all against the Northern Pacific Rail-
way company, demanding damages for
timber land burned over by fires caused
bv the company's engines last fall. The
plaintiffs are all from near Wright
and are Isaac Walli, asking for $716;
Erik Nelson, $500; John Savuoja, $1,360.
and Jalmar Suhonen, $400. This case
was taken up Mondfiy and was not
finished when court adjourned Thurs-
day evening. It will he taken up again
Monday morning. Messrs. Washburn,
Bailey & Mitchell are defending for
the railway company, and Loulsell &
Saari and O. J. Larson have the side
of the plaintiffs.
OVER 1,800 TREB
ARE BEING TAPPED
Big Maple Sugar Camp of
Peter White Company in
Alger County, Mich.
Marquette. Mich., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — In the vicinity of
Deerton, east of here in Alger county,
the Peter White Land company of this
city Is operating the largest maple
sugar camp in the upper peninsula.
The industry was launched a year ago.
The output this spring will not be less
than '500 gallons and It may reach 800,
depending on the length of the period
that the sap will flow. Six men and
a team of liorses are employed in con-
nection with the work. The average
daily pioduction to date has been forty
gallons.
The magnitude of the camp can be
appreciated when It Is stated that 1.890
trees have been tapped. The manufac-
tory is located on comparatively level
ground. Back of it are two ridges
covered with maple. To these ridges
extend three pipe lines, ranging in
length from 300 to 800 feet, and de-
signed to lessen the labor of getting
the sap from the more distant points
to the storage tanks. The sap is col-
lected in tanks holding five barrels
each and drawn by horses. That pro-
cured on level ground close to the
manufactory is hauled directly to the
plant, and that from the more distant
trees is drained into the pipe lines.
The storage tanks are of 80-gallons
capacity.
Evaporator 1m Modern.
The evaporator In which the syrup
Is made Is a thorovighly modern plant.
The regulation of the flow of sap Into
It Is automatic, more sap being drawn
in as the syrup is boiled to the proper
constituency. The finished product is
tracts for the erection of buildings to
be used by business enterprises have
already been let.
The mining companies are sinking
four shafts In this vicinity.
It Is reliably stated that a hotel will
be eretced at the cost of $50,000 in the
near future. The proposed hotel is
deemed necessary.
Mr. Lamb, one of the "promoters of
the Ironton townsite, is about to have
another forty platted in lots. He has
had considerable inquiry about the fu-
ture of the new town and has prac-
tically sold all the lots in the original
townsite.
JAMES iMcCUTCHEON BURIED.
Ishpeniing Pays Honor to Man Who
Died in Duluth.
Ishperaing, Mich., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The people of Ish-
peming and neighboring towns today
paid fitting honor to the memory of
James McCutcheon the former well-
known citizen who died Wednesday
night In Duluth, where he had been
living for a vear. The body arrived
from the Head of the Lakes early Fri-
day and was talcen to the Masonic
temple where It was viewed until 1:20
this afternoon, when short Masonic
services were held. The cortege leav-
ing the temple for the Ishpemlng
cemetery at 2 p. m. Not only Masons,
but Elks and Odd Fellows also Joined
in the throng at the grave, as he was
prominent also in those orders. For
about a quarter of a century Mr. Mc-
Cutcheon yas connected with the
Oliver Iron Mining company here as
surface superintendent in charge of
construction operations, being one of
the best equipped builders In the Lake
Superior region. He served three terms
as alderman and was one of the old-
est members of the local Masonic
lodge.
Mr. McCutcheon was born in Green-
ock. Renfrew, Ont.. Sept. 20, 1850. It
was at this place he learned the trade
of mason and stone cutter. He re-
mained there until 1872, when he went
to Grand Island to work on the fur-
nace. His wife died In this city some
years ago and be is survived by his
daughter, Mrs. Schofleld, and one son,
Walter McCutcheon, who resides In
Ishpeming.
ST. PAUL ELKS' LOSS.
the line. Their contract calls for
making fire-breaks along the line
from Cass Lake to Federal Dam. A
three-year contract has been entered
into with the railroad company and
besides Uieir present work the firm
will also put In numerous irrades for
sidetracks along the line. The catmps
are at present located about three
miles out at the old Mann location
east of Pike bay.
*
New Eaat Gnuid Forks Ohnrcli.
East Grand Forks, Minn., .\prll 15. —
(Special to The Herald.) — The trustees
of St. John's Evangelical Lutheran
church recently organized in this city,
has filed a certificate of Incorporation
and It is their intention to erect a
church edifice this summer. T. A.
Bydal, Cornelius Bydal, L. II. Hanson.
Christ Nelson, Andrew Fai-stad and
Paul C. Anderson, the trustees, have
been looking over available sites and
will replrt at a committee meeting
early next week.
Anna Argall, well-kno^Ti young peopl*
of Ishpemlng, were united in marriage
Wednesday afternoon at the home or
the bride's father, William Argall.
James M. Eade supported the groom
and Miss Sarah J. Carlyon was brides-
maid.
DAKOTA BRIEFS
MINNESOTA Bl^IEFS
SUPT. N. c. McDonald,
Mandan, N. D., Man Who Has Been
Appointed Inspector of Rural and
Graded Schools. This Is an Office
Created by the New School Bill
Passed by the Legislature and Be-
comes Effective July 1.
To Get
Its Beneffidal Effeete
Always Buy the &nuiM
SYRUpfies
una
manv&ctured hyihe
5old by all leading
Druggists
One5izeOn|y,5(K a Dotile
FREDERICK H. KOCH,
As Everyman.
drained from the evaporator directly
into gallon cans, and neither sap nor
Hvrup Is touched by the hands of the
workers at any stage of the process.
Hardwood is used for fuel under the
evaporator, and the consumption of
fuel Is heavy, as the sap must be kept
at a high degree of temperature
throughout the process of syfup-mak-
Ing. The boiling process goes on
throughout the day. In the night the
flow of sap usually ceases, unless the
weather is more than ordinarily warm.
The best syrup is produced when the
days are warm, which makes for a
free flow of sap. and when the nights
are cold, absolutely stopping the flow.
manyIcSsto
be thrown open
Expected 30,000 Acres Will
Be Available in Cass
Lake Land District
Cass Lake, Mian.. April 15.— (Spe
cial to The Herald.) — Althoush the
order has not yet been received, it Is
expected that some time during the
l!itt»r part of the present month
some 20,000 or 30,000 acres of land
will bo opened to homestead entry
in the Cass Lake land district.
When the ora*r comes It will be
fjven publicity and parties c'eslring
io secure homes ct<n tiicn go upon
il-.e lands, maite settlement and es-
tablish residence prepaittcry to the
order for entry at th-j lan.l office,
ivhich will be is&ued later.
♦
Crooknton F^ars Some Clashes.
Crookston, Minn., April 15. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Some clashes are ex-
pected over the opening of the ceded
portions of the-R^d Lake Indian reser-
vation. The bill opening the lands,
which was passed March 16, Axes the
date of opening April 15 and entry In
the local land office May 15, Trouble
is exnected to re.sult, as the act says
"Hereafter all land shall be opened to
entry," while the department circular
sets the date of settlement for today
and date of entry for May 15.
A number of people have rushed in
upon the land and secured some of the
choicest, and last night others left
Thief River Falls. Red Lake Falls and
other points, to be on the land immedi-
ately aft<»r la this noon. Without
doubt there will be some clashes be-
tween those who went on the land as
soon as the opening was announced
and those who followed the instruc-
tions sent out by the department at
Washington to the Crookston and Cass
Lake land offices, but it will not be
known for a day or two to what extent
the trouble will develop. Some of the
land is very valuable, and inquiries
have been received regarding it from
many of the central and Eastern states.
BOATS ARE Rli\XIN(J.
Navigation Opens on Lake of
Woods Later This Year.
Roseau. Minn.. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald,) — Navigation on the Lake
of the Woods has been a little later
in opening this spring than previously
but the warm weather has broken up
the Ice and some boats have been out.
Owners of big boats that ply these wa-
ters in the summer have everything
ready. The traffic this summer on
the lake will be greater than previous
years both from a commercial and pas-
senger standpoint, as the lake shore al-
most all around Is settled up. The
Northwest angle Is to be designed as
a good shipping" point for timber that
will have to loaded on boats and
landed at Warroad on the American
t^lde of the lake and everybody is look-
ing for a busy season around there this
summer.
Destruction of Their Fine Home
Mas Very Costly.
St. Paul, Minn., April 15 — Losses in-
volved in the destruction of the club-
house of the St. Paul lodge of Elks on
the night of March 13 were $42,335.50
on the building and $3,600 on the
contents, according to a report made
by the insurance committee of the
club pt the regular meeting of the
lodge Thursday night at Hotel Ryan.
The committee, of which Exalted
Ruler James J. Healv is ex officio
chairman, reported the§e sums after
spending some weeks with insurance
adjusters.
According to. Mr. Healy, the prop-
osition to rebuild the house was not
acted upon at the meeting, but it is
expected that within a week the com-
mittee will take the matter up. The
insurance amounts to $45,000, and
according to Mr. Healy this sum will
be collected shortlj'.
LAST OF TRIO DEAD.
One of Three Michigan Convicts in
Crime Succumbs.
Menqrminee, Mich.. April 15. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Armedol.^
Lamy, aged 60, Is dead after a short
illness. He was a brother of Laurant
Lamy, a saloon keeper of this city.
Many years ago Lamy, with two com-
panions. Fay and Dashner, were con-
victed for the murder of a man
named Bishop. Fay was soon re-
leased from prison, but Lamy and
Dashner served many years, but both
were ultimately pardoned. All three
are now dead.
MOOSE LAKER APPOINTED.
C. F. Mahnke Is Receiver for Law^
ler, Minn., Concern.
Moose lake, Minn., April 15. —
(Special to The Herald.) — C. F.
Mahnke has been appointed receiver
for the firm of Whiting &^ Wiggins
of Lanier. Minn., and was^ at that
place Friday in regard to the matter.
He also met with Messrs. Whitin,?
and Wiggins and their attorneys in
Duluth to negotiate for a sattlement.
BELOIT WINS '
DEBATING CONTEST.
Milaca — County Attorney Ross was
summoned to Milaca on Monday even-
ing to prosecute in the casie of State
of Minnesota vs. Erick W. Johnson.
The defendant was charged with using
obscene language toward a woman.
The case came up for tria; on Tues-
day morning before Justice Goebel,
when defendant pleaded guilty and was
fined $10 and costs.
Princeton Rails and ether sup-
plies have arrived here for putting in
a spur on the west side o:'. the main
track, north of the depot, lor the ac-
commodation of the potato men who
have warehouses located there. The
railroad company does not contemplate
running a spur to the warehouse of
the Princeton Produce company at this
time.
St. Cloud — Postmaster Grlnols has re-
ceived word from the authorities at
Washington that the savings bank de-
partment of the local postoffice would
begin on May 1. The blanks and di-
rections will be along In a I'ew days.
North Branch — Frank Douglas, who
has been here for some mor.ths buying
up potatoes for a Southern commission
company left Saturday for his home In
Illinois having completed his work
here for the present season.
Wadena — At an early hour Wednes-
day morning, fire broke out In the
store of C A. Benson & 2o., In the
Eagle bloc"k, which was totally de-
stroyed. All of the stock In both the
Benson store and the grocery of J. H.
Rice went up in smoke. Benson's loss
was $7,000; Rice's, $1,600. Both were
insured.
St. Cloud — Deputy Sheriff Tames Con-
ley was Thursday given papers to re-
cover two little girls, ag€d B and 3
years. At the order of the :ourt, these
children, In the charge of Robert C.
Ritter, were to be taken from the
Little Falls — The populaion of the
village of Bowlus Increases rapidly. On
Monday fifteen men arrived there from
Chaska to work In the Bovlus brick-
yards and It Is said that msny of these
will move their families Io the new
Soo town for a permanent residence.
Littlefork — Engineer L. A. Ogaard
of the county seat, has started the
work of surveying the juiiclal ditch
located last September, wh ch is to be
opened in the Lost river C(»untry near
Kelllher. Part of the proposed ditch
Is In this county and part in Beltrami.
Moorhead — John Swanson, section
foreman on the Chicago, Milwaukee &
Puget Sound railway at Ranler, Wash.,
left that point March 18 and on April
5 he was found dead In h.s bed at a
hotel In Tacoma, Wash. A. Oonelin,
the agent at Ranler, writes that he un-
derstands deceased had a jrother liv-
ing on a farm near Moorhead. He Is
very anxious to locate John Swanson's
Pine C'ty — Examinations were held
In the rural schools throughout the
county Wednesday, and another will
be held Monday.
Bemldji — The funeral of Mrs. Mary
Williams of Island Lake, who died
Tuesdav was held In BemklJI Wednes-
day. Mrs. Williams was iS years of
age and had been HI during the past
winter and died Tuesday of brain fever.
She is survived by her husband, two
daughters and three sons.
Mankato — The city no loiger has to
pay for killing and burying old or
injured horses, neither do the owners
of the same. Mr. Robey, who runs a
fertilizing plant north of the city,
down the river, is glad tj get these
animals without expense tc any one.
Crookston — Supt. C. G. S ilvig of the
Crookston School of Agrliulture, re-
turned Thursday mornltig from a
week's trip, during which he attejided
a national conference of superintend-
ents of schools of agricjlture and
others Interested In agricultural edu-
cation.
Fargo. N. D. — Rev. J. M. Cleary of
Minneapolis, Minn., has been secured
for the next number of the citizen*
lecture course, which occurs on Thurs-
day, April 20, in the agricultural col-
lege armory. Father Cleary is one o*
the great orators of the day.
Beach, N. D. — There has been a great
deal of' snow and rain In the golden
valley, and prospects for a good crop
are fine. Several farmers have don»
some seeding. one farmer havlngf
seeded 300 acres of wheat already.
Vashtl, N. D. — This township is re-
ceiving a number of Immigrants this
vear. Two families of relatives cam©
In from Eastern states, one family
having previously lived here and re-
turned. Three German families ar»
moving a little farther west Into the
hills, coming from Chicago and thejr
report others soon to follow.
Fargo, N. D. — Invitations have been
Issued by the Yeomen for their large
Easter ball which will take place next
Tuesday evening in Pirle's hall. A
large number of new members have
recently been taken into the lodge and
the ball Is to be given In their honor.
Grand Forks, N. D. — A great oppor-
tunity will be offered to music lovera
In the symphony program which la to
be given on Thursday afternoon, April
20. Beethoven's eighth symphony 1«
the big number and although tliis is
one of the most pleasing of all sym-
phonies it is not often played and for
this reason Is less well known.
Fargo. N. D. — D. B. Holdt, C. O.
Smith and C R, Adams will become
candidates for re-election to the city
school board of Fargo. Tlie friend*
of the three men who are to retire
soon from the board, unless re-elected,
have had some stickers printed oa
which are placed the names of these
men.
Grand Forks. N. D. — Dr. J. E. Doran,
who was arraigned in the municipal
court and given a fine of $50 for prac-
ticing medicine without a license ia
accordance with house bill No. 100 of
the recent se!<sion of the legislature,
left the city Wednesday night.
Devils Lake, N. D.^M. J. Courtney,
boiler inspector for the Great North-
ern, is in Devils Lake for a few daya,
looking after the locomotive boilers.
The Great Northern has recently ap-
pointed several additional Inspectors of
boilers so that the requirements of the
government may all be met before the
law providing for government inspec-
tion of locomotive boilers goes into
effect July 1.
WISCONSIN BRIEFS
Beloit, Wis., April 15. — Beloit high
school won the Interstate debating
league championship Friday, defeat-
ing Freeport in the finals. Beloit
pre\iously had defeated Janesville
and Kenosha. Freeport had won
from Rockford and Elgin.
«
Gutting Soo Fire- Break.
Cass Lake. Minn., April 15 — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — ^John A. Jack-
son & Co. have commenced the clear-
ing of the right-of-way ulong the
Soo Line east of here for tho purpose
of having a suitable fire-break along
E
IRONTON IS GROWING.
New Hotel Among Possibilities of
Its Ftitnre.
Ironton, Minn., April 16. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Ironton is growing at a
rapid rate. The town is about seven
months old and now has an estimated
population of 400, ' Nearly every lot in
the original townsite has already been
sold and there are numerous houses
under construction.
Prospects are bright for much activ-
ity bere this Hummer. Xsiuueroua con-
Gives Color, Lustre to Faded
and Gray Hair— Dandruff
^ Quickly Removed.
From time Immemorial, tag* and snl-
phar have been used for th« hair and
scalp. Almost CTeryone knows of the
Talue of such a combination for darken-
loif the hair, for curlns dandruff and
falling hair, and for making the hair
grow.
In olden times the only way to get a
hair tonic of this sort was to brew It In
the home fireplace, a method which was
troublesome and not always satisfactory.
Nowadays almost every up-to-date drug-
gist can supply his patrons with a rtady-
to-use product, skillfully compotinded in
perfectly equipped laboratories. The
Wjeth Chemical Company of New York
put up an Ideal remedy of this sort,
called Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hilr
Remedy, and authorize druggists to sell
It under guarantee that the money wlU
be refunded if It fails to do exactly as
represented.
This preparation is offered to the
public at fifty cents a bottle, and is
recommended and sold by all druggists.
Special agent. Max Wirth, It West
Superior strdot.
PENINSULA BRIEFS
,^fl^^^^k0*0>0*^*<>^^^^*^ *
Ishpemlng — X consignmeit of 30,000
trout fry was received in the city from
the flsh hatchery at the Soo Friday for
distribution in the streams In this vi-
cinity. « . . ^^
Negaunee — George Qerlach, an old
veterinarian and well knt.wn in Ne-
gaunee, where he worked at his pro-
fession a number of years, died Tues-
day at the county poor liouse. The
deceased had been in poor nealth for
some time, and about ten years ago he
was taken to the county house for
treatment. . . _
Marquette — The civil sei vice exam-
ination Wednesday at tie Federal
building for positions in the weather
bureau service was taken jy only one
applicant, Chester O. Tucter, a mes-
senger boy of the Houghton bureau.
Hancock — The children of the St. Jo-
seph's oarochial school are rehearsing
daily for the entertainment which win
be put on at tlie Kerredge theater the
evening of May B.
Houghton — Miss Regina iVIartln, sec-
retary of the Houghton <ivll service
board, has been instructed to hold a
clerk-carrier examination for the
Houghton postoffice on Ma> 20. It will
be held In the high school building on
that date and all who desire to take it
should advise Miss Martin iit tlie post-
office before May lo.
Hancock — The board ol education
has taken steps towards rjmoving all
debts standing against the school dis-
trict. The remaining $i;0,000 bonds out-
standing against the E. L. Wright
school, will be taken up immediately.
The school was built and furnished at
a cost of $35,000, of which $15,000
worth of bonds Issued had previously
been taken up.
Houghton — There will be seven con-
testants In the Upper Peninsula ora-
torical and declamatory contests in
Houghton Friday evening April 28.
There will be three in oratory and four
In declamation.
Calumet — Old songs and old scenes
will be recalled at the war concert, the
first annual, to be given by Camp Pe-
termann, Spanish War Veterans, and
Company A, Calumet encineers, tho
evening of April 24 at the JJght Guard
armory.
Mcnoralnee — The W'omen's club of
Menominee, an organization which has
done much to stimulate civic pride, will
superintend a general cleaiilng-up day
In Menominee. All good <^ltlzens will
co-operate with the womer In making
Menominee a new, spotless town.
Calumet — August Herrmunn of Cin-
cinnati, grand exalted ruler of the Be-
nevolent and Protective Orler of Klks,
may visit Calumet as a gu?st of Calu-
met lodge. No. 404, Wednesday, May 3.
An invitation has been extended to him
on behalf of the lodge by E calted Ruler
C. E. L. Thomas, and a definite answer
Is expected In a few days.
Negaunee — A. H. Knight left Wednes-
day night for Duluth in r<sponse to a
message announcing the serious Illness
of James McCutcheon, who died later.
Mrs. Knight went to Dululh earlier in
the week and was with Mr. McCutcheon
when he passed away. The funeral Is
to be held In Ishpemlng Saturday.
Republic — Charles Johnson has re-
turned from the Mesaba ringe, where
he spent three months wjrklng. His
father, Peter Johnson, will leave short-
Iv for Sweden, where he vlll visit his
old home. The family will accompany
him to Chicago, where thoy intend to
Ishpeming — George Harris and Miss
Ashland — The following delegates
attended at the meeting of the Wom-
en's Missionary society of the Chip-
pewa presbytery, Tliursday, iield in the
Presbterian church Thursday nightl
Mrs. Sodal, Hudson Mrs. Callen, Chip-
pewa Falls; Mesdames Runkel, Grimes,
Wilson, Somerville, Kimball, CampbelU
Wedge, McConnell, Smith and Brace,
of Superior; Mesdames Sherwin, Flan-
ders, Fisher, Weber and Miss Sherwin,
of Bayfield; Mesdames Winchester,
Tourtellot, Healy, Hicks, Abel, Baker
and Kmma Healy of Ironwood.
Gren Bay — State Veterinarian Clarlc
and his chief assistant. Dr. Wolcott,
were in the city Thursday afternoon
to witness a tuberculosis test of cows
conducted by Dr. F. A. Wilson. Three
cows were killed and the test admin-
istered. All were said to be affected.
Racine — William H. Armstrong,
former city clerk and manager of the
Racine baseball team, has been ap-
pointed assistant treasurer of the Ma
Alltchell - Lewels Motor company, to
take the place of Henry Plow. Mr.
Plow goes to London. Kng., where the
company will open a large office, and
take entire charge of the foreign busi-
ness of tlie company.
Ashland — Joe Marx will leave for
his Polk county farm in a day or two
where he expects to raise a bumper
crop this season. A year ago last
summer he tried farming, but between
the drouth and early and late frosts,
he was not as successful as he hoped.
He expects to put In the greater part
of the coming summer on the farm.
Raoine — Ernest Plache, 19, the lone
bov b/indlt, who has terrorized saloon
keepers the past month, pleaded guUty
to highway robbery In municipal court
and was sentenced to eight ears' servi-
tude In the reformatory at Green Bay.
He halls from Milwaukee.
Eau Claire — The largest casting to
be turned out in Eau Claire is bein^
made at the Phoenix foundry. It Is for
a gigantic stump puller to be used on
land along the Soo line. In order to
fill the order It was found necessary
to remove a portion of a wall in the
casting department at the foundry.
Milwaukee — The Wisconsin state
dairy and food department is said to
be Interested in promoting the Mil-
waukee pure food show becatise of its
educntlonal value to merchants, whe
are the first to suffer in prosecutions
of violation of the pure food laws.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured.
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as Uiey cannot reae*
Ut« sett of tba di^ieaM. Catarrh la a blood or con-
aUtuUonal dUeaae, and In order to cure It you muil
take Internal remedloa. Hall's Catarrh Cure ia tak-
en Internally, and acta directly on the blood an4
mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not %
quack medldne. It was prescribed by one of tlia
best physlclaas In this country for years and Is %
regular prescrlpUon. It is composed of the best
tonics kiiowu. comblued with the best blood puri-
fiers, acting directly ou the mucous surfaces. Th«
perfect combination of the two Ineredieiita Is what
produces such womlerful resulti lu curing Catairtt.
Send fur testimonial free.
F. J. CnK.NFV & ro.. Props.. Toledo, O.
Bold hy druggists, price 75c.
Take Hall's Famlb' PI Us for constipation.
RUNDOWN, DISEASED
"WORNOUT"
MEN
Young, Middle-Aged, Old.
WONDERFUL ^\f\
CURES 4>1"
Not a Dollar
Need Be Paid
Until Cured
on oar professional tee
tlO for any disease, if you
desire to prove our cure
. , ^ In doubtful casea Ner-
Eiaminatien Free vousness. General Debil-
ity. Womout, Run-down from overwork
and carelestiness of health mles. Pain in
the back, Kidney and Bladder troubles. Ob-
structions, Rupture enlargements, Varicose
veins end Varicose ulcers, Poor stomach.
Headache, Coated tongue, Skin and blooo
disease. Rheumatism, Piles, Colds. Catarrh
and catarrhal dischargea Come to a good
doctor— while the ordinary doctor is ez-
perimenting and making mistake* we ac-
complish cures. Come now and get our
special low oOer. Bebt medicines furnished
from our own laboratories. Consultation
free and invited. If you cannot call, write
for symptom blank, advice and book free.
NEIDELBERQ MEDICAL INSTITUTE
Cor. rif th A Jackson SU., St. Pa«l. man.
Old and Reliable— over ISO.OOO men have
applied to them tor treatment, why not yout
Men from all paru ot the country are
gning to these specialists to be eared.
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JU^S>4S
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THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
P^^i^^BAL ESTATE?
UNITIES
•^f^r^^VN^^^M^I^k^k^k^h
HRST CLASS HOTEL TO BE
BUILT IN DULUTH IN 1912
Old Windsor Hotel Corner
Win Be Site of New
Bmlding.
Iliree Stories to Be Added
to Holland Hotel
This Year.
Twenty -fourth avenue east and Fifth
Bids will be opened In Bray & Ny-
strom's office May 8 for the new school
building at Mountain Iron. Figures
are now being taken.
* • •
are making
brick school
Vernon
plans for
building
about $2
rooms
a cost
J. Price & Co.
an eight-room
808 Al worth
The
Kitchl
at Deerwood.
;,000 complete,
will be provided
of about $13,000.
• * *
financing of the
It will cost
but only four
at present, at
A modern hotel building, fronting
■eventy-flve feet on Superior street and
Michigan street and ninety feet on
Filth avenue west is a building pros-
pect for 1912. Leases on the old Wind-
sor hotel property expire May 1, 1912,
and on that date the destruction of the
old buildings will be begun. C. E.
Henderson of Baltimore, Md.. the owner
of the property, has engaged Kelly &
Ljgnell to prepare sketches for the
new building, and the plans will be
ready by the time the leases expire.
Two years ago, when the present
buiUllngs were repaired after a fire,
concrete supports for the proposed new
building were put In. They are strong
enough to support a modern fireproof
twelve-story building, but the height
of the structure to be erected ne.\t
year has not yet been decided upon.
The corner is regarded as the tinest
^otel site in the city. The site is large
enough for a fine commodioug building;
It fronts the union depot and the Su-
perior street route of travel from the
dock's and the Soo depot. It Is believed
that If Mr. Henderson were Inclined to
Bell, the corner would bring a higher
price than any corner of equal size In
tiie city. ^ •
There Is room for another first-class
hotel in Duluth. and there will be need
for it by the time the new building can
be completed In 1912. The Holland
hotel was erected a year ago, and It
must be enlarged already. All of the
Duliith hotels are crowded during the
summer and much of the time during
the winter. The transient trade In Du-
luth l.« probably greater than in any
city of Duluth's size In the country,
and there Is no doubt that, if Mr. Hen-
derson's plana go through, the new
h'>tel will gain popularity and patron-
age quickly.
♦ • •
Plans for the addition of three stor-
ies to the Holland hotel are being pre-
pared hv Brva & Nystrom. The addi-
tion will have fifty rooms, each with a
bath and will Increa-'e the accommo-
dations of the hotel to 170 rooms. The
Holland was originally planned for
ten stories, but only seven were erect-
ed at first. A year after the new ho-
tel opened the need for the additional
room is apparent. S. I. Levin owns the
building.
• • • ^ ,
Brav & Nystrom have prepared plans
for a "brick garage for C. F. Haley at
proposed new
GanimVclub building is about
arranged and it is expected that the
plans will be made soon. The new
building win be a fine structure cost-
ing about $250,000 and will be erected
at Ninth avenue east and Superior
street.
« • •
Austin Terryberry is making P^ans
for a moving picture theater tor Max
Stlpetich at Eveleth.
• • •
Kelly & Lignell are making plans
for a modern eight-room house with
terra coita exterior for George Tweed
at Hunter's Park. The bids on the ho-
tel building for the Cook Investment
company on the lower side of touperior
street, near Sixth avenue west, will De
opened next Friday.
• • •
Building totals for March from sixty
cities throughout the country show a
decrease of 12 per cent f 'Om ^Iar<;^t 9^
last year. The decrease in Duluth is
-.2 per cent, the total for last month
being $264,550 against $o48.S20 in
March a year ago. Louisville. San
Diego and Houston showed great in-
creases last month, while the greatest
decreases were In Pueblo, Lincoln and
^ FoUowing are the building permits
issued during the past week by Build-
ing Inspector S. M. Klelley:
To Wahl & Me.sser, steel cell-
ing. Lake avenue, between
Superior and First streets... $
To P A. Johnson, concrete
foundation, Bristol street
To Mrs. Mary Garvey. concrete
foundation. West second
street, between Eighteenth
and Fir avenues ;••,;•
To M. Mandelin, frame dwell-
ing East Eighth street, be-
tween Thirteenth and Four-
teentli avenues
To L. J. Klippen, contractor,
brick store, West Michigan
street, between Ninth and
Tenth avenues • • . •
To L. Hansvick, brick d^velllng.
West Third street, between
Twenty-third and Twenty-
fourth avenues
To Bergauist Bros., alterations,
"West Superior street, between
First and Second avenues...
To Charles Somers, frame
dwelling. Fourth avenue
west between Fifth and Sixth
streets
To N. Basto. fram dwelling.
New Duluth
To De Caigny & Papke, frame
dwelling. East Eighth street
between Eighth and Ninth
avenues
To J. Nordby, repairs. Hfty-
fiftli avenue west and Bristol
street
To D. Adams, frame dwelling
Twenty-eighth avenue west
between Superior and First
I.akeMlde — Ele-
gant 50 - foot lot,
paved street, cement
walk, sewer, water,
gas: on McCulloch street near For-
ty-third avenue; exclusive; f750.
$100 under the mark.
Haseiwood — Seventh street and
Forty-second avenue west; 100 by
132. fl,050.
Wheeier'a Addition— 33 by 132, on
Grand avenue west; $10 cash, $10
per month, no interest; better than
a savings bank.
Thlrty-i»lxtli avenne rr^mt — 50 by
132 on Traverse street, one block
from car line; upper side of street:
water guarantee on file. 9675; half
cash; very cheap.
Modern Home
in East end, must be sold in thirty
days: large grounds, garage; every-
thing complete.
950O Cash \%'ill Handle It.
L-OTS FOR BUILDING
at bargain prices.
G. L. Rakowsky & Co.,
201 Exchange Building.
475
300
500
1,000
7,300
4,000
500
1.000
1,300
2,000
200
Streets f .2.000
To Anderson & Gow. repairs.
West Third street between
First and Seconds avenues.. 300
To Anderson & Gow, porch.
East First street between
Eighteenth and Nineteenth
avenues 300
To F. Huttle, frame dwelling.
West Sixth street between
Tenth and Eleventh avenues. 500
To F. Nervick. frame dwelling.
Eighth avenue east between
Eleventh and Twelfth
streets 1.000
To P. Burns, frame dwelling,
Pitt street between Forty-
seventh and Forty-eighth
avenues 1,000
To J. Ankestrom, frame dwel-
ling, Fond du Lac 500
To Duluth Street Railway
company, remodeling Incline
and powerhouse and erect-
ing six stations 15,000
To Fidelity Investment com-
pany, brick warehouse. Lake
avenue 10,000
To J. Larson, alterations. West
Third street between Twen-
ty-sixth and Twenty-seventh
avenues 200
To Mrs. Mary McGregor, frame
cottage. Eighth avenue west
and Fifth street 500
To L. Pearson, frame dwelling,
Minnesota avenue and Elgli-
teenth street 1,000
To R- J. Borland, brick apart-
ment building. East Fifth
street between Seventeenth
and Eighteenth avenues . . . 10,000
Get a Truck Farm Fronting on the
Most Beautiful Laice in America-
That's Lake Nebagamon, of course! YOU can do it: if
you want to, 'cause it only takes a few dollars down—the
balance can be paid BY the property while you are living
on it and taking your fun out of it
Just think of it! A home on your own grounds, running right down to the
water^s edge of the finest lake in the best hunting and fishing district in the
world ! Lake Nebagamon just SWARMS with bass and pickerel, while the
Nebagamon river and the Brule river (Nebagamon river flows out of Lake
Nebagamon into the Brule at a distance of five miles from the lake) are both
so full of Rainbow Trout that they have to climb out on the bank when they
want to turn and start swimming down stream instead of up. otate
fish commission plants streams yearly. The primeval pine and hardwood
forest still stands in parts of this beautiful lake district, and in the wooded depths
all kinds of game animals make their home against the time when the hunting sea-
son opens and they don't need any more home. The soil is a rich, sandy-clay
loam, admirably adapted to diversified farming.
Lake Nebagamon has one of the most perfect bathing-beaches in the world-
firm silver sand sloping gradually into crystal clear waters over which canoes, sail-
boats and nfbtor launches glide in all directions. The town of Nebagamon, situ-
ated just 28 miles from West Superior and 36 miles from Duluth on the Duluth,
South Shore & Atlantic, has a sufficiency of stores to attend to all ordinary re-
quirements. Four trains daily besides auto roads. Just think of YOUR^^hLb
owning a self-supporting farm in this Sportsman's Paradise!— and you CAN if you
decide to do something QUICKLY towards making a reservation.
We won't have many of these large sized tracts with lake frontage— and, of course, YOU
want one on the lake! Our surveyors are now busy plotting out the land into little tracts of
which we will have quite a number-we control every foot of saleable land on the shores of the
lake BUT IF YOU WANT A TRACT BIG ENOUGH TO GIVE YOU ANY KIND OF A
PROFITABLE FARM, YOU WILL HAVE TO GET BUSY! The prices are low— the terms
are easy, there isn't a reason in the world why YOU shouldn't own one of these tracts-all it
takes is your say so — NOW !
Burg Acreage & Townsite Company
No. 300 and 301 Alworth Building, DULUTH, IMINN.
FOR SALE !
SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE, one block from street car, on Thirty-
ninth avenue west. House in good repair ; city ^4 l^ffA
water ; sewer in street. Price ^A^vV"
SIX-ROOM HOUSE on Eleventh avenue east, near Third street,
stone foundation, hot air furnace, electric lights, water, sewer,
bath, gas for cooking, full cement basement, mantel grate, hard-
wood floors downstairs ; lot 40x50 feet. Favorable ^Q AAA
terms. Price ^OfVVV
R, P. DOWSE & CO.
GENERAL INSURANCE. 106 Providence Bldg.
IDEAL RESIDENCE SITE l?,r/H^Ja°r!vVr
This property has a frontage of 200 feet on Third street, which is
paved, and a depth of 140 feet. It is practically on the brow of the hill,
with a view of the harbor, lake and North shore that can never be des-
*''°^'^'*' AN ENTIRE HALF BLOCK.
If you don't want it all. get a friend to take half of it with you,
and let us show you the most perfect residence location in the city.
Price only $10,000. Will be worth $20,000 in three years.
A. W. TAUSSIG & COMPANY
407 PROVIDENCE BUILDING.
Greysolon Division
East End— Cheapest- Best— Liberal Terms— Torrens Title.
LAKESIDE LOTS— Large List— Some Special Bargains
E. W. MARKELL, 306 Lonsdale Building
FOR RENT!
:S IN LYCEUM BUILDING.
•Mre-Proof'— Desirable.
LITTLE ft NOLTE, «8>"t*-
Here is a singularly compact and
convenient "home" of moderate cost.
It is interesting and attractive in
external appearance, and unique In
plan. Entering the house by a small
vestibule, with a coat closet and lava-
tory off. we enter the main rooms.
The living room with its Inglenook
•would be a very attractive room and
thm hall-sittlns room with an open Or**
place is always a singularly pleasant
apartment that can be used for many
purposes. The kitchen has been ar-
ranged with all the fixtures antl fit-
tings In the kitchen and pantry and
china pantry so that it may serve as
a family dining room.
The second floor shows a well laid
out plan of three bedrooms with good
Closet acoommodatiooa, ftad a batb-
r'
room with toilet separate.
The Uiternal finish would be stained
oak in the living room and hall, birch
In kitchen and pantries, and in the
second story pine for enamel finish,
and wlfli maple floors throughout, such
a home could be built in Duluth or
vicinity for about $5,000. Anthony
Puck & Holstead, architects, Duluth,
Minu.
MONEY TO LOAN
S, SV^ and 6 per ceat.
FIRE INSURANCE
Old Reliable Comiianiea.
REAL ESTATE
Monthly Paynient Plan.
MONEY JO LOAN
ON REAL ESTATE
ROPERTY
AT WEST DULUTH IS IN-
CREASIN8 IN V/lUE
EVERY DAY I
We offer the following and con-
sider them first class bu>s.
fl.e.'M) — Buys seven-room house with
city water, electric lights, hard-
we-od floors, on Fifty-sixth avenue.
fl,600— Buys seven-room house with
city water on Fifty-second ave-
nue. In best repair.
f 1,600 — Buys six-room hjuse with
city water, electric lights and
fixtures, Hiardwood f oors. on
Fifty-seventh avenue) one-half
block from the Irving school.
fl,S50 — Buys house and t vo lots on
Wadena street, with concrete
foundation; large barn and chlck-
' en coop; )200 cash, balance
monthly. A rare chance.
92,000 — Buys eight-room house and
,^t*wo lots on Sixty-fifth avenue,
ctiy water, electric lights and
hardwood floors. A' fine home.
Every one of these properties is
a good Investment and will rent
promptly.
fS50 — Buys four lots on corner of
Sixty- sixtli avenue and Main
street.
$.350 Each — Buys choice of five of
the finest residence lols at West
Duluth, north of Grand avenue
and east of Central avenue, with
every Improvement on property.
We have on hand and for sale sev-
eral excellent first mortgages
drawing 6 and 7 per cent.
SGOn-KREIDLER
COMPANY
405 Central Aveiine.
You Can't Afford
To Overlook These
Bargains.
91,750 — Tn West Duluth, store 25x
40 feet, six living rooms up-
stairs; lot 25x125. $200 cash, $20
ner month. Can be rented for
$40 per mpnth. This is a bargain.
93,500— Ob Nineteenth avenue east,
duplex house, rents for $42.50;
strictly modern; $500 cash will
take thlSf balance to suit.
92,200— Five-room house, one and-a-
half stories; good barn; lot 25x125
feet. West end. All Improvemeuta
made.
91,400 — Modern six-room house; lot
25x100 feet. East end. A snap.
Terms if desired.
93,000 — House of seven rooms, mod-
ern; 100x200 feet of ground; 200
feet bay frontage; boathouse 14x
16; good slde%valks, Twenty-
seventli street and York avenue.
Park Point. Terms.
10 ACRES— Near Chester Park, good
level land, good platting proposi-
tion. Price 92T5 per acre. Don't
miss this.
40 ACRES In Carlton county, on
Great Northern railroad, three
and one-half miles from Steel
Plant. Price 945 per acre. Terms.
160 ACRES— Aitkin county, near
county seat, on lake and main
road; buildings worth $2,000. 100
acre* under cultivation, for quick
sale can be bought for 93,000| part
cash, balance at 6 per cent.
120 ACRES seventeen miles from
Duluth; iwenty-flve acres cleared.
Price 91,500. Liog house and barn
This is a snap.
125 ACRES— Timber land, near
Glendale, Ore., on good stream;
4,000,000 feet of pin^a can be
logged easily. Will sell for 94.000.
This is positively a snap.
WE HAVE 6,000 acres of land in
British Columbia, easy of access,
well located, with good niill site;
over eight hundred million feet of
vellow pine, red cedar, spruce,
Alaskian pine and hemlock. This
is a bona fide proposition. For
particulars call and see ua.
30,000 ACRES of Wisconsin land In
Improved and unimproved farms,
near Cumberland; good soil; near
railroad and dlfPerent cities.
We have properties of all descrip
tlons In all parts of the city. Also
acreage near steel plant In both
states.
. Some good bargains In Cuyuna
and Vermilion mining? properties,
al.so town lots in Crosby. Ironton
I and Deerwood. Several good farms
1 both Improved and unimproved.
' BusineFB chances of all kinds. Tf
you will give uh a call we can please
I you and treat you fairly.
J Our motto Is to live and let live.
Don't forget us if you are looking
for bai-galna.
TWIN PORTS
REALTY CO.
510 MANHATTAN BLDG.
SOLON
SPRINGS
FOR SALE
•
My summer place of fourteen acres,
with cottage, furnished, running
spring' water at the door; lake
frontage; all high and dry; good
garden plot; beautiful location. I..e.s8
than fifteen minutes' walk from sta-
tion. Address the owner,
C. W. BISHOP,
Superior, Wla.
COOLEY ft UNDERHILL,
200-10-11 Exchange Bnlldlns.
IVIONfECY
LOANED
At lowest market rates on im-
proved Duluth Real Estate.
Money Alwar* on iSand.
MENDENMIALL
& HOOPES
209 First National Bank Bid*.
■^^^^^•^^ ^^m^k^k^k^k^k^l^
JLDC.
BEST C0NTRACT-IEA5T COST
Ten acres, 2% miles fr
nice level land, easily c
the place for gardening
ranch. $100 cash, balai
month. Price 9500.
Twenty aores, near th
soli, lays well, in Hen
Maple Grove road. P;
$200 cash, balance, terrai
164 acres, well Impro\
una range; good mlnen
Cheap at 95,000.
We write fire Insuran
companies.
om car line;
leared; Just
and chicken
ice, $10 per
e city; good
nantown on
•ice, 91,000.
I to suit,
ed, on Cuy-
il prospects.
Reliable
HERAID
Has announced that everything
for sale In or near the city
will be In this issue.
THE HERALD
WAS RIGHT!
Everything worth while in or
near the city is in the hands of —
ebert,walker
& Mcknight
See this special for the week
— 1,600 acres of Aitkin county
land in the mineral belt — 90-00.
REAL ESTATE LOANS,
IXSUUAXCE.
"Speoialisto In Rapid Deals.**
311-319 Torrey Building.
LOCKER-DONAHUE CO. i J. d. Howard & co..
416-17 L.onMdale Bulldlas.
Park Point
Lots.
Camping time Is almost here. Own
a lot and summer on the Point.
We offer five 40x100 lots; Torrens
title Easy terms. On Minnesota
and Lake avenues, from Eighteenth
to Twenty-seventh street.
Price $350 and $400 each.
2i« Wast «iip»Hor Str««t
Hi
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••■•■^Wl
TRANSFERS
OF M WEEK
Little Activity in the Real Es-
tate Market in
Duluth.
^i^
t:;*'
Good Deals in the Air Ex-
pected to Be Closed
By May 1.
A large number of residence trans-
fers, notably in West Duluth, marked
the week at the register of deeds' of-
fice. Deals closed and reported by
the downtown olfices were very few
and were almost entirely residence lots
entailing the payment of very little
money.
The outlook for the spring is bright.
Although the season has been back-
ward. Several good deals In down-
town property are said to be In tiie
air, but they will not be closed much
before Mav 1.
• • •
John P. Zygmanski has sold to
Minnie Milne a proptrty fronting
twenty-five feet on the lower side of
Third street between Nineteenth and
Twenlietli avenues west for |1,300.
• • «
The estate of John L. Dodge has sold
to Arnold Karson a property 125 by
140 feet on tlie southeast corner of
Eleventh avenue east and Sixth street
for 13,500.
• • •
Hannah C. Davis has sold to Fhilip
Sher a property fronting fifty feet on
the lower side of Third street between
First and Second avenues east for
|6,oo0. It is Improved with a two-
family flat building.
• • ♦
Kate Herzog has sold to Edward
M« Keever a property on tlie northeast
corner of Eighteenth avenue east and
Kighth street for |1,400.
• • ♦
Harry H. Campbell has sold to F.
C. Scoit a property on the upper side
of Regent street between Forty-third
and Forty-fourth avenues east for
13,500.
• • ♦
Swan Johnson has sold to Peter Jen-
sen a property fronting twenty-five
feet on the lower side of Third street
between Twenty-third and Twenty-
fourth avenues west for |2,000.
« « «
The follow ine were the real estate transfers for
the week :
Amelia St. Germain et m.-ir to .lohn H.
Hi-liml(U et al.. lote 11, 12. bik. 80. West
Duluth, .slith division $3,000
A. P. SUilman et lui. to Fred V. Cram, lot
20. blk. 37. first addition. Brooklyn 1
B. H. Uaym et al. to James P. .Monai?. lota
15. 16. blk. II. Mes^ba Heights. Se<-ODd
ditiMon 125
Vincent B. .SUliman to A. P. Silliman. lot
6. blk. 12. r.rookbn 1
Joscfii Stodola to Albert Vanecek, lot 28,
blk. 8!>. Sceond addition. Virginia 1.125
Andrew Nelsun to P.. W. fc P. K. R. CO..
part »wVi of ne^i. section 18. 55-16 10
Steel Plant Land Co. to l.lngi Omeneto et
al.. let 13, Uk. 1, Ironton, Fourth dlris-
ion 1
Swan Johnsi'u et lu. to Peter Jen^cIl w'j
tot :i8u, blk. 88. Duluth Proper Second
ditisiun 2,000
hvuU Wulfrcm et ux. to Nellie A. Pcrrln.
part lots !>. 10, blk. 21. London addition.. 1
Cef'Txe Cjmpbell to .Nathan C. Batley, lot
II. blk. an. West l>uluth. Fir:.t division.. 40O
HaD'> H. Berger to OeoTge i'. Lindsuy. neV4
of ne>4. section 22. nw'* of nw>4, s?4 of
nw'4, section 23, 66-21 1
Sofia Andeisun et mar. to Hans Jardlne.
w'a lot 1. blk. 12, Helm addiUou 425
B. H. Hayes et al. to Anton Hrlbar. lot 15.
blk. •-•. Mtsaba Heights, SJeeond division.. 75
Fred Trombley to Mrs. Louise U Woods, lot
7. lilk. 2. First addition, Prot-torknott SCO
8ou(!i .**lde Kealty Co. to Zananen Sekarsky,
kits i:i, 14, blk. 1U4, Seiond addition
Vliglula 1
Woodland Co. to Charles C. Staache. eVfc
»\v»4 of nw'A of »e»4, sertlon 22. 51-14.. ?.0i)
Korth Townsite Co. to John Push, l(Jt 7,
blk. 7. Northern addition. CtOsholm 150
H. >I. Phelps et ux. to NeU Oscar .Sund-
aulst. sl^ of iw\i, s'/ii of seVi. section
10. 56 16 900
Crick T. Christen^on to KImou D. Harding
et al. lot 1. n>3 of ne>4. section ZQ^ tiv'ri
of nw'i. aecUon 29, 84-12 1,60«
Kels H. .Nylmn et us. to Nris K. Anderson,
tut 14, Uk. 126, West Duluth. Fifth divis-
ion 1
Thomas Severson et ux. to A. J. Balgard,
part lot 12. blk. 78, West Duluth, SUth
(Uvtslon 50
Kels K. Anderson to Nels H. Nyhua, lot 3,
blk. Wi. West Duluth, Second division 1
Lena .McGhle et mar. to Ole Fo.<seuo, lots
30. HI. blk. 5, Princeton Place addition... 1
Lake View Home Co. to Hans Brakstad, lot
1016, e'i lot 1017, Crosiey Park addition.. 1
B. U. Hayes et al. to Nels Johnson, lots
I. 12. blk. 16. Mesaba Heights addition... 125
B. H. Hayes et al. to J. 9. Johnson, lots
^0. 31. blk. 1. .Mesaba Heights addition... 125
George S. Clements et ux. to James Di Santo,
commciK-lng at point 35 feet north of
•outhwe^terly comer lot 4.".1, thence ran-
nliig noith alung west side of lot line 35
feet. DO feet, thence south parallel with
east side lot 429, 35 feet tlienoe west 'JO
feet to beginning, tieing in blk. 79, Duluth
Proper. Second diiision 1
Carl l.rf>land et u.t. to Charles Kgerdahl, lot
16. bik. 65. Harrison Brookdale division... 1
Andrew Otuni et us. to Carl Ldand, lota 14.
15. 16. blk. 65, Harrison Brookdale divis-
ion 1
Beicn )I. Klyn et ux. to h^dwin S. Lee, lot
4. blk. 60. Oneota 1
George W. Norton et al. to Thomas Sever-
son. lots 11. 12. blk. 78, West Duluth,
Sixtii .liii.sion 500
Henry H. Kndeis to George F. Lindsay.
seVi nf !►?%. section 5. 66--1 1
Mary I'cterso-n et mar. to Mary L. Swan-
sun. iie'A of se'/i. section 29. 57-13 200
Andrew .\iidien et ux. to Os<-ar .Suiidquist.
fraitional nw^t of swVi. section 10. 5(i-15 1,000
W. K. King et ux. to John J. '(Vangetsteln
et at. iit'4. set-tioii 11, 51-13 1
Charles W. Kilen et ux. to K. T. Serrurier,
undi\!iled 1-6 of se',i of nw*4. section 28,
68 l!l 450
John McKay et ux. to Klr^t Presbyterian
Chunh of Kelsey. beginning at point 47
feet southwesterly frcm ne corner of ne^t
section 22, 54-18. etc 1
Daniel Uose et ux. to Howanl Investment
company, lots 2 ncrtherly .50 feet lot 4,
soutlurly JO .feel lot 5. blk. 34, Lester
Park Third division, lot 6. northerly 46 2-3
tvel iols 7. 8, blk. 29, Lester Park Tiilrd
division 1
John Woznlak et ux. to Michael .Maciyewski,
w<4 lot 85, blk ISO, DuiuUi Proper Third
division 1
Matti Itaapala et ux. to Conrad Mattson, lot
29, blk. 21, Virginia 1
John P. Zygmanski et ux. to Minnie Milne,
westerly 20 feet lot 308, easterly 5 feet lot
310. blk. 92. Dulnth Proper Second division 2.500
Hlraai K. Jones to Thomas Krysiak, westerly
40 feet lot 393. easterly 20 feet lot 395, blk.
15H. Duluth Proper Second dlvUion 1,300
Augu&l Tlieilen to Tlieodtxe Theileo, lots
17. 18. blk. 12, Hibblng Heiglits 1
bnll Kntsman et ux. to Anttl Tanska, lot 6,
blk. 2U. Clilsbolm 440
Estate of John L. Dodge to Arnold Karon,
lots 1. 2, 3, 4. 5, blk. 121>a-I22 Portland
division 3,500
Scott- Krrldler Co. la Emll Oettel, lot 6,
bik. 7S. West Dululh Sixth division 1,575
William K. Smith to Umar R Johnston, lot
e. blk. 5. I,ester Park First division 1
Adam Snyder et ux. to Kobert .M. PriU-hart,
weiit US fret loU 13, 14, blk. 3. Southern ad-
dition, Htbblng 3,»00
Charles I>e Vo.ss to Camlel De Caigny. lots
8. 10. 11. sVs of sw>4. secUon 9. 65-17 2,504
B. U. Uayes «t al to Lend Carlson, lots
23, 24, l>lk. 5, Mesaha Helglits Second
division 125
Hannah C. Davis to Philip Sher et al.. lot
21, Kast Tltird street, Duluth Proper First
divlslcTi 6,000
L'no Llndstrom et ux. to Vlnoenzo Granato,
lot 5. blk. 27, Bay View addlUon No. 1.. 1
Same to Herman SanUne, lot 4, blk. 6.
Springfield addition 1
Same to Mo.se Giansantl, lot 13, blk. 27.
Bay View addition. No. 1 1
Wllilam E. Smith to Omar E. Johnston, lot
6. blk. 5, I.«ster Parli, First <Uvislon 1
Thomas H. .Markle et ux. to John Knudson.
lot 16, blk. 8. Holm's addiUon 1
.MIL-inoe Keal Flstate Corporation to Matilda
Johnson, lot 15, blk. 5S, Harrison's Brook-
dale division 2,000
Ch.iries N. Clark to James IL Constantlne,
lot 3, blk. Ill, West Duluth. Fifth dlvU-
lon 500
L. B. Manley to the Cor^ord Co.. lots 15
to 24 Inclusive, blk. 1; lots 31, 32, blk. 3:
lots 1 to 10 inclilstve, blk. 4. Altered Flat
London Park addition 1
B. H. Hayes et al. to Annie Vltali, lot
it*, bik. 12, Mesaba Heights addition 65
Same to Farini Salvatore, lot 11, blk. 12,
same (S
Same to N. Faggettl, lot 29. blk. 12, same.. 65
Same to same, lots 23, 24, blk. 7. same 140
Same to Bernardo Scala, lot 6, blk. 12,
same 65
Sama to Frank Grosso, loU 25. 26, blk. 6,
same 137
Same to F. Balduzzl. lot 7, Uk. 12. same 65
Same to Julius Gi-osso, lots 1, 2, blk. 12.
same 125
B. H. Hayes et al. to Peter Balduzzl, lot
8, blk. 12, Mesaba Heights addition 65
Same to P. Tito, lot 28. blk. 12. same 65
Cliarles K. Hamilton et ux. to P. Huttel.
lot 161. blk. 70, Duluth Propel Third divU-
lon 1
Home & Garden Co. to James U. Whelan.
lot 426. Homecroft Park 1
Same to Hans P. Jenson, part w^ of se>4>
secUon 34, 51-14 1
Lucy Hilchcack et mar to Fred Tliomp.'ion,
lot 11, blk. 186. West Duluth, Seventh
division 1
H. E. Smith & Co. to Hans Christiansen,
uudlviued 1-16 interest In t\i of seV4. sec-
Uon .1, 62-14 1
Fred A. Robinson, trustee, tu Terzeya Ton-
Islch. lot 12, blk. 22, Second addition,
t>eleth 150
Lars J. Flemming et ux. to V. J. Kendall,
lot 7, blk. 9, Roosevelt addition. Hibblng. . 200
Koose%elt Addition Co. to Johnson Br\js,
lot 21. blk. 4, UooseveU addition. Hib-
bUig 125
San^ to Thomas Kyau, Jr., lots 23, 24,
blk. 2. same 250
.Steel Flunt Land Co. to Emll Otallc, lot
24. blk. 14. Itciiton, Fourth division 1
Bert Kribsback et ux. to George Kreager.
fractional lot 12, e^ fractional lot 11,
blk. 143, Portland division, lot 17, eVi
lot 18, blk. 1. Axa division 1
Kate Hertzog to Edward McKeever, lot ' 16,
blk. 28, HlgiUund Park divison 1,400
George Kreager to Mary KtUbsack, fractional
lot 12. eH lot II, blk. 143. PurUand
division, etc 1
A. N. Kowe et ux. to C. F. McCllntlc et al.
lot 4. .Section 1, 64-21 1
Louis Vertrlest to Chaly Vergoven. s'a of
8W>4. section 15, nH of uw^4, sei'Uon 22,
65-17 750
Arthur S. Kltto to A. H. Lowe et aL lot 1,
ee«tlon 33, 63-16 1
William G. Drew et ux. to Joseph A. GUlls,
lot 6, blk. 28. London addiUon 1,050
Roosevelt Addition Co. to James H. Ryan,
lots 21, 22, bik. 2, Roosevelt addition,
Hibblng 250
Chisholm Improvement Co, to James Don-
ovan, lot "K," blk. 28, Central avenue,
rearrangement, Clilsholm 250
Toledo Investment Co. to Samuel G. Craw-
ford. wH of sw>4, section 10, 49-15 1
Charles P. Klelnmann et ux. to Francis
Klelnmann, ae^ of neU, ae\i of se^t,
secUon 12, 63-20, lot 2, se>4 of DW14,
section 7, 83-19 1
Elizabeth Bums et mar. to Duluth Home
Co., lot 399, Lake avenue. Lower Duluth.. 1,200
Charles A. McFadden et ux. to Hanford
Investment Co., lot 12. blk. 16, Leeter
Park, Second division 1
Annie E. Rodgers to Ole Sather, lot 13, blk.
133. W>;st Duluth. Mfth division 1
Andrew Dahl et ux. to Nels Anderson, north
25 feet of south 70 feet, lots 3, 4, blk.
14. Vlrgiida 1
Jacob Krause et ux to Range Lumber Co.,
lot 19, blk. 7, Northern addition, Chls-
holm 350
Clurles Jacobson to George W. and Tliomae
H. Martin, e^ of nw\4. sw^4 of nwH,
nw>4 of ewl4. section 32. 56-16, s'i of sw\i,
w>8 of ae^t. section 33. 55-17 2,000
C. A. Hedman et ux to Hllma Saltwlck,
fractional bile 2, Uazelwood additkn.
Oneota 1
Kuskl Improvement Co. to William T. Moyle,
lots 2, 3, blk. 2, KoskivUle 250
Hlgglns Land Co. to George W. and Thomas
H. Martin, e'4 of seVi. sertlon 29, ne^i
of ne^i, section 32. 56-20 898
Slmou Clark, Jr., to John P. Caiello, lot
17, Wk. 7, Princeton Place addition 160
Ole P. Wick to Hans L. W!ek, lot 1, blk.
5, Lloyd's division. West Duluth 906
Harry H. Campbell et ux. to F. C. Scott.
lot 15. blk. 35. London addition 3,500
Nels Johnson et ux. to F. W. L. Manske,
e*i of nw'4, seV4 seeUon 7, 49-15 1
F. W. L. Manske to Bertha M. Johnson.
e^i of nwVi. se^i. section 7, 49-15 1
Frank Welczcrklewcz et ux. to 8. C. Mach-
inaw^ki, part nVi of ne% of neU. sec-
tion 21. 52-14, etc 1
\. P. Catello et ux. to Nazalre Dubrinel.
lot 16. blk. 7. Princeton Place addition... 200
.\igenion E. Gllliat et ux. to Michael Moore,
loU 1. 2. 3. blk. 19. London addition 450
Boston & Uuluth Farm Land Co. to Frank
Zimmerman et ai., nwVa of n\\%, section
8, 51-15 320
.Simon Clark. Jr. to Nazalre Dubrinel, lot
15. blk. 7, Princeton Piai-e addition 200
C A. llsmiagton et ux. to Matt Schultz. lot
8. blk. 9, Soutliem addition, Hibblng 1
John Gradln et ux. to Martin J. Soibeig,
lot 8, bik. 3, Sharp's addition 1.230
Minnesota Land & Colonization Co. to Nat
Raiitlo, neU ot nwVi. section 11, 51-21.. 120
-North Townsite Co. to Louis J. Fleming,
lot 31, bU. 10. Northern addition. Chis-
holm 150
.\rthur A. FUler et ux. to David G. Loewus,
lot 8. blk. 113, Portland division 1
.Vltiert E. Dyer et al. to Tony Pluth, lots
19. 20. blk. 11, Hibblng Heights 125
D. W. Freeman, trustee, to Joseph Grabek.
lot 8. blk. 18, Gilbert 156
Davis Real Estate Co. to Elmer Oss, lots
248. 249. bik. 22. Croeley Park ad.lltlon.. 250
Stanlslaw Szybczynskl to John Wozidak. lot
78, blk. 125, DuluUi Proper Tldrd division.. 1
Lake View Home Co. to Jens Jacobscn, lots
1784. 1785, 1786, 1787, Crobley Park ad-
dition 1
I..ako View Home Co. to Joiin S. Fredricks,
lots 1776, 1777. Crosiey Park addition 1
Lake View Home Co. to Ben Peterson, lots
•2276. 2277, 2274, 2275, blk. 160, Crosiey
Park addition 1
Home & C.iriien Co. to Thoralf J. Johnson,
part w'/i of se%, section 34, 51-14 1
Charles B. Lovett et ux. to J. S. <'haffee.
lots 23. 24. blk. 24. Spirit Lake addition.. 1
B. H. Hayes et aL to Emllo Rosa, lots 13,
14. blk. 12, Mesaba Heights addition 123
B. H. Hayes et al. to N. Romano, lot 44,
blk. 12. Mesaba Heights addition 65
B. 11. Hayes et al. to Charles Romano, lot
28. blk. 6, Mfsjiba Heights addition 65
B. U. Hayes et ai. to John Trlnko. lots 39,
40, Wk. 12, Mesaba Helglits addition 125
B. H. Hayes et al. to G. Franzlnelll, lot 9.
blk. 12. Mtsaba Heights addition 65
B. H. Mayes et al. to B. Bendettl, lot 46,
blk. 12. Mesaba Heights addition 65
Brewer H. Soderstadt et ux. to Victor
Malmsten, e'4 of neV* of aeU, section 34,
52-12 1
Home ft Garden Co. to John Sjoblom. let
287. Auditor's plat. Mornlneside tract.... 1
.VUas l^nd Co. to Charles R. Stal, lot 3,
blk. 2, Woodland Park, First dlvi.slon 500
Buhl Investment Co. to Alfred B. Wolff, lots
13. 13, blk. 5, First addition. Buhl 80
B. H. Hayes et al. to .\xel .\ulin. lots IJ,
16. blk. 3, Mesaba Helglits addlUon 125
J. U. Barnes et ux. to Park Realty Co., loU
97. 99, I.,ake avenue, Cpper Duluth 1
J. II. Barn« et ux. to Park Realty Co., lot
116. St. Louis avenue. Upper Duluth, etc.. 1
James E. Gardner, Jr.. to Frank Wleckor-
kiewUcz.. part of uVa of ne^ of ne^,
section 21, 52-14 23S
WE ARE BUILDING
MANAGERS
We rent and collect rents and
give improved property thv^ proper
care. You are invited to investigate
our system. We want your bunl-
neaa*
Whitney Wall Gompanyi
REAL. ESTATE, L,0.4iNS AXD FIRE
JXSVRANCE.
301 Torre y BalldioK*
WEEKLY SURVEY OF REAL
ESUTE DEVELOPMENTS
Strengthening of Specula-
tive Spirit and Stiffening of
Tone— West Duluth Out-
look -The West End Hill-
side Dbtrict— Rentals and
Ownership.
NOTHER quiet week la
the real estate market
has passed, the only de-
velopments being a
strengthening of the
speculative spirit and a
stiffening up of the tone
~ all along the line. The
development of the tone has been the
principal factor In the market this
spring and real estate men are now
looking for something more substan-
tial.
Prominent dealers along the street
say that there are a number of big
deals in the air and they should come
down before May 1. Business prop-
erty along Superior street and on the
avenues in the business section is re-
garded as a good purchase for invest-
ment at prevailing prices. Some own-
ers will not release their holdings un-
less they are given prices which
amount to an anticipation of profits,
but others are willing to sell if they
can get a fair price for their property.
The speculative spirit will undoubt-
edly have an effect on tlie Investment
market, for people with a desire to
get in on some of the good things
around Duluth will turn over some of
their investment property in order to
obtain money for speculative purposes.
In speaking of speculation as it ap-
plies to Duluth real estate, one does
not use the word in the same sense as
it applies to stock market operations
or any other form of operation In
which one has a chance to make big
money, and may lose everything. Stu-
dents of the Duluth real estate situa-
tion can't see a chance to lose any-
thing, much less everything. Any
residence lot, any piece of acreage,
any lot in a prospective business dis-
trict is offered for sale at a price that
does not measure up to boom values.
The speculative side comes In through
the fact tliat the purchaser hopes to
obtain a good return on his money
through appreciation In value, and
nobody can see how an impairment of
the original capital can come about.
Of course, tliere are some proposi-
tions on the market — very few In
number — which may entail a, long wait
for returns. One wouldn't advise a
man to put all his savings into such
a proposition if he hoped for speedy
returns. But one doesn't have to go
into Buch propositions. There are so
many good propositions that offer a
good prospect of returns in a com-
paratively short time that anybody who
goes into the other kind may be pre-
sumed to be doing so with his eyes
open.
* * *
BHE large number of deals in
West Duluth property is a no-
ticeable feature of the list of
transfers filed with the regis-
ter of deeds this week. West
Duluth is getting more at-
tention every day, but it has
not yet been given the attention it
merits or the attention it will have
when more people begin to realize the
opportunities offered In lliat section of
the city.
Buplneps, factory, residence, dock
and acreage property are all available
in West Duluth and that is the only
sect*on of the city of which that is
true. Just now residence property Is
to the front as far as the number of
deals closed, but a number of deals for
factory sites and dock sites are said to
be in the air. Although the speculative
deals of the season will center on the
land In the vicinity of the steel plant,
there is going to be a good healthy
movement of West Duluth real estate
this year and the season is going to be
the best West Duluth has bad in a
good many years.
• • •
iHE prospect for expansion over
the hill Is shown by the dis-
position of the water and
light department to carry the
water main extension to the
West end hillside around
above the boulevard back of
Central park. The territory back there
is easily reached by way of the incline
and the Improvements to the Incline,
which will insure adequate service,
will boom property .sales and property
values in that district. There is a vast
territory In that section of the city
that has been shut off by the point of
rocks, but It is building up rapidly and
the growth will be more rapid when
the incline work Is completed and the
water main extension is made.
Incidentally the growth of the West
end hillside district during the past
few years has been wonderful. A few
years ago the district around the pres-
ent site of the Ensign school >ya» al-
most entirely barren of Infiprovements.
Now there are houses In every block
and the prospects for this year are that
scores of homes will be erected. While
the people in . the central part of the
city are Judging growth by the hillside
immediately brought to their view, the
outlying districts have been growing so
rapidly that tlie street railway system
and the water and light department
have been on the jump to keep up with
them.
• ♦ ♦
» I L iHT^ HER.^D today presents
I ^¥^ I "Aid to House - Hunters"
111 through the classified ad de-
^^^^J partnfent, which carries ad-
^^■n vertisements of almost every
wK^ house, flat and room to rent In
teh city.
• • •
/_ ^\AY 1 is approaching and leases
I m JT I are being closed. Rental
I fV£ I agents report an almost un-
I^^^mI precedented demand for de-
E5m^ tached houses and a disposl-
IsbSmv tion on the part of an un-
usually large number of peo-
ple to take flats only If they are un-
able to get detached houses to suit
them. ^, ,,>.,.
The same disposition is reflected this
year in the business of the pay-rent-
as - Installments - on - ycur - home com-
panies which report an unusual demand
on their accommodations this year.
Scores of houses will be erected this
year and turned over to people who
will pay for them on installments. The
business of those companies is largely
responsible for the growth which Is
being shown In the suburbs. It Is hard
for the wage earner or clerk to get
enough money together to put up a
home of his own. He realizes that
every dollar he is paying for rent is a
dollar gone beyond recall and when he
begins to realize the amount of money
that goes for rent each year and Is
given an opportunity to make that rent
money count for something substantial,
the obvious course Is before him.
fl,40«— For 108 feet on Woodland
avenue near Kent road, or will
sell Inside 50 feet for feso.
f2,500 — We have one six-room house
at Tenth avenue east and Eighth
street with water, sewer, bath,
?;as, electricity, hardwood floors,
ust being finished, which we will
sell on very small cash payment
and balance In small monthly
payments; lot 25 by 140 feet.
EBY & GRIDLEY,
015 Palladio Bailding:.
LAKESIDE, EAST END,
HILLSIDE HOMES
Eeaiitifnl five, six, seven and eight-room homes at Lakeside
— fine locations; easy terms.
CITY HOMES on every street, above and below Superior
street. A large list of all kinds and sizes. Prices range from
$1,000 to $15,000.
GOOD INVESTMENTS in duplex houses and flats— some
good propositions where you can live in part of the house and
get an income from the balance.
GREENFIELD
310-11 COLUMBIA BUILDING.
$6300 BUYS
MODERN HOME
1417 East Second street, eight rooms, hot wa-
ter heat ; lot 50x140; $1,500 cash. Don't fail to
look this up. — 5-2.
We are offering a nine-room house on East Second street, at
a very low price; lot 55x150 feet; hardwood finish and floors;
hot water heat; fine barn. — 7-10.
For Rent — several desirable houses, flats and offices.
'sft- ^^ •
OFFICES FOR RENT IN
FIDEUTY BUILDING
NEW, FIRE-PROOF, MODERN.
Show window space on Superior street, in
heart of shopping district.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
WOLVIN BU1LDIN6, DULUTH, MINN.
RENT PAYERS
return vou 7 5% of
vour rent money A PROFIT, not A LOSS ! Think ! Think hard, and
then if vou can *t do yourself justice, lei' us do your thinking for you.
LAKESIDE LAND CO.
f WHY continue
looking for a place
to rent when we
can give a propo-
sition whereby we
501-5 Seliwood Bldg.
Phones 408
^^*^>^*^>^^^^*^^^^^^^>^^f^>^f^>^>^f^f^f^>^^^>^f^'
STRVKER, WAMLEY I BUCK
IX ONE OP THE BEST LOCATIONS
at the West end, we offer a brick
building containing four flats of
five rooms and batli, electric light
and gas, hardwood floors through-
out and hardwood finish In main
rooms. The lot is 50x140 feet,
and there is a two-flat building
on the rear. The total rental is
$1L'7 per month. Price .... f 13,000
OX SECOND AVEMTE WEST — near
Fourth street, a seven-room housb
with bath, gas, laundry tub, gas
range and hardwood floors down-
stairs. Price 93,000
on very easy terms, monthly pay-
ments if desired. — (5757).
ON TWELFTH AVENUE EAST —
near Third street, a seven-room
hou.se with bath, electric light,
gas in kitch-en, liardwood floors
throughout — on very reasonable
terms at 93,000
— <3076>.
A VERY GOOD PROPOSITION in an
eleven-room house, arranged for
two families, concrete founda-
tion, hot water heat, two bath
rooms, electric light, gas for
cooking, hardwood floors nearly
all through; central location.
Price 95,000
On reasonable terms. — (5767),
ON NINETEENTH AVENUE EAST,
near Jefferson street, «eIght-room
house, stone foundation, fufnace,
bath, gas and electric light, har^
wood floors all tlirough; paved
street and cement walk. Price,
only 94,500
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE — Owner of-
fers good home at a very moder-
ate price. House has ten rooms,
stone foundation, liot water heat,
hardwood finish first floor, hard-
wood floors tliroughout, on paved
street, at the East end. — (3338).
UPPER SIDE OF BOULEA^ARD
DRIVE — Nine-room house, with
stone foundation, new hot water
heating plant, bath, electric light,
gas for cooking, grate and mantel,
laundry tubs, Georgia pine finish
and floors; sightly location, beau-
tiful view. Price 97,000
Stores, Honaea and Flats For Rent.
Uood atore In beat retail location
on Superior atreet.
MONEY TO LOAN.
STRYKER, HIAHLEY ft BUCK
$6,300 — An eight-room house on
Jefferson street; modern plumb-
ing, electric light, gas for cook-
ing, furnace heat; fine loca-
tion. (851)
$2,200 — Six-room house on East
Sixtli street; has water, sewer,
gas. hardwood floors, cement
walks. (173)
$6.000 — Xew seven-room house on
p:ast Fourth street; hot water
heat and thoroughly modern;
lot 50 by 140 feet; easy terms.
(16)
$7.000 — A very desirable corner,
100 by 140 feet, in the normal
school district; Street paved (636)
We have several other very fine
building sites in this district.
$-1.200 — 100 by 140 feet on East
Third street; street Improve-
ments all In. (8)
N. J. UPHAM
18 THIRD AVE. WEST.
WEST END
BARGAINS!
92,.<i00 — No. 318 North Twenty-eighth
avenue west, six-room house. In
first-class condition, all conven-
iences except heat; 35-foot lot.
$600 cash, balance $25 per month.
93,250— No. 609 North Forty-flrst
avenue we.st, big eight - room
house, on 66-foot lot; modern in
every way; stone foundation. $700
to $1,000 cash, balance on easy
terms.
94.350 — No. 15 North Twenty-fourth
avenue west, eleven-room house,
for two families; stone founda-
tion; modern except heat. Month-
ly rental. $43. $1,000 cash, bal-
ance easy terms.
94,500— No. 2021 and 2021% West
Fourth street, six-room house,
with stone foundation, all conven-
iences. Five-room house in rear.
Both in good condition; lot 50x140
feet. Easy terms if necessary.
EXCLUSIVE SALE BY
WESTERN REALTY CO.
1»2S Weat Superior Street^
SuMte for Tbi Hnall
GLARKE-WERTIN GO'S OFFERINGS
Double dwelling, Lake avenue north $3,750
Modern duplex brick dwelling. East Fifth street $6,500
Modern, strictly up-to-date flat building, brick, four flats, seven
rooms each, in East end $21,000
Three brick dwellings, modern in every respect, centrally lo-
cated, containing ten rooms each, hardwood finish, hot water
heat. A bargain at $30,000
Three new brick dwellings and one frame dwelling in East end,
each containing from seven to ten rooms. Strictly modern
and up-to-date. A great bargain at $24,000
Cottages on PARK POINT, new and modern, at "snap" prices.
We also have a modern cottage of six rooms at SOLON
SPRINGS on th<i lake front, large improved lot. Row boat
and launch. Cotiage furnished nicely and completely. Vcrv
cheap at $1,700
We have quite a large list of medium priced dwellings in all
parts of the city.
We also have a large list of good dwellings which can be bought
at prices ranging from $6(K) to $4,000. Some in Woodland and
West Duluth.
Two new modern seven-room dwellings, all hardwood finish;
hot water heat ; laundry ; large improved lots, for sale at less
than cost. Built in 1910. A snap at, each $6,500
We have Residence Lots, Acres and Business property — a large
list to choose from.
We are agents for the HOME and other large Fire Insurance
Companies, and i)ay particular attention to writing Fire In-
surance. We also write Plate Glass, Burglary, Automobile,
Rental and Liability insurance, and furnish bonds of all kinds.
Drop in or call us up. Both Phones, 2249.
CLARKE-WERTIN CO.
200 ALWORTH BUILDING.
Meadowlands Truck Growers
Get the Ribbons
Thebigblue ones that say "Hrst Prize"
The MEADOWLANDS soil produces the Blue Ribbon
Quality. The short distance from market and the splendid
railroad facilities enable the growers to place their product
on the markets in prime condition, which attracts the con-
sumer and GETS THE MONEY. Ten-acre tracts cleared and
ready for crop. If you want some of this, don't wait too
long. Better get in now, while the price is within reach of
your bank account.
L. B. .^iRNOLD, Land Commissioner,
Duluth & Iron Range R. R. Co., Wolvin Bldg., Duluth, Minn.
Lots in the toinsite of New Duluth for sale by
THE NEW DULUTH CO.
OFFICE, 411 LONSD^kLE BUILDING
DULUTH, MINN.
:REAL BARGAINS IN
EAST END CORNERS
150 feet square on Twenty-third avenue east, below Fourth
street. All conveniences, beautiful trees, pavement, Torrens
title, and high-class residences. Will divide, facing avenue,
seventy-five feet to desirable parties.
Our price is way down and only good for a short time.
LONDON ROAD CORNER
100x140 feet for $1900, for a short time only.
Call or write
L. A. LARSEN COMPANY
Exclusive Sale i Agents 2 1 3- U- 1 5 Providence Bldg.
r
i
tat^ti^t-i^^MUi^^i^im
X!*
— ■»■ >*
■*- ^
^,
IT
'»' »
•9
M!
AM4iiS
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
«
IDIHI0Q6E iy:
• m-
CROSBY, MINN.
Just a few business lots left on Main St.
They are being picked up fast, and will
double in price within a very short time.
Secure your location — get established
in business and grow up with the town.
Electric lights, fine streets, cement side-
walks. Headquarters for all mining com-
panies operating on the Cuyana Range.
FOR
PRICES OF LOTS SEE
GEO. H. CROSBY
DULUTH, MINN.
CROSBY, MINN.
$5,700 for a new six-room housa.
bath, electric lights, laundry tubs;
strictly modern; 50-foot lot, upper
side Sixth street, near Nineteenth
avenue east: $1,250 cash. balance
monthly.
H. J. MULLIN,
Both 'phones. 403 Lonsdale Bldg.
f\
AWAY FROM THE
DUSTY CITY
Awav on the beautiful peninsula of Bayfield in Northern Wisconsin — wher©
6pring means something — not just a cliance to leave off your vest and
eat sundaes— THATS WHERE YOU OUGHT TO BE NOW! THINK OF
Bpendlng these beautiful Sprltig; days in your own fruit orchard. In the
warm sunlight, with the smell of the waking: earth in your nostrils, and
the fresh green things under you and to KNOW that every ray of light,
drop of water and tap of health-giving work, is adding to YOUR fortune!
If you work for others in the city — come out to Bayfield and be your own
boss: If your health is bad from the confinement of the city — come out
to Bayfield and be n'EL.L.1
Two dollara ■■ ■«* down will buy you an orchard in this fertll^ fruit
Jstri. t, (exactly Id.-ntical In soil and climate to tlie Grimsby Fruit District
fn Ontaro, where land sells up to a thousand dollars an acre)— the orchard
Itself will pay the balance while It is earning a good living for you and
eettin? vou on the road to permanent Independence. ^4, "\^, *?<*"L *""*
RIGHT NOW. I will gladly pay your fare to have you SfcE. this land.
C. A. KNIPPENBERG,
300-301 AL WORTH BUILDING, DULUTH.
^■"^'^
Look Up This Choice BuUdtaig Site!
Eighty Feet on Second Street Between Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth
Avenues East.
All Improvements in and paid for- If you intend building in the fin-
est restricted district, this will interest you. The owner will sell for
less than any adjoining property can be bought.
CHAS. P. CRAIG & CO
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS.
501-5 SELLWOOD BUILDING.
•f
If this property could speak it
would shout
T.W.TILKE
KALESUUANDIN5UUIUI
y£^f "I'm the Biggest
THE
COMING
SPOT
mSSm
Bargain Offered
Today!"
Six-room house, all conveniences, corner lot, 75
by 75; nice lawn, surrounded with 20 beautiful shade
trees; nea.r Central avenue, one block from street car.
$1900-$500 Cash!
Don't you think it would?
FINE SCHOOL BUILDING FOR THE CUYUNA RANGE j| WORK WELL
UNDER WAY
/>
^J|JuI>'^
« ( - .-.
joeoM
M^lyK^Aw^C .^i^*ff9Aic?MC«<^^J^y>^-y
<^0fr-CX4C«M«&«>.-^,
%>.*s-V^'-'*'*^ "■''■'
o
•wi'^/yyVK' •* --^
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t^/'/f/'mvy'^ffifr^y^^''-'^Vf^ '
^y^<f^
,,>,^>>^0.tf^0>^^^fr'»^^^i$r^^<^>^y^^^
'^•rio&^ivf^''^^^'"'
Plans for Duloth's MidsDm-
mer Water Carnival Are
Definitely Outlined.
AQ Comnnttees Are Working
Hard for Success of
the Venture.
STEAMSHi; 3.
St Lawrence Rente to Europe
L.BSS THAN FOl'R^^^^^
DAYS AT S EA ""^^^^
White Star-Dominion
ROYAI. MAIL STBAMERS
Montreal— Quebec— Li vcrpo al
•♦Laurentic" and ♦•Mexantlc"
Lanett And Mott Modern Staamtrt In the Cana-
dian Sen-Ice. Luxurious •ctommodaUana for
First BMond and Tliird Claaa.
Sailing 111 coMj unction with the
Popular Twin-Screw Steamart
"TEUTONIC"— "CANADA"— -OOIIIHIOII"
Carrying One Claw Cabin passenger* (called
Second Cabin). C-omfort at moderate ratea. Also
nilrd Class passagea.
Apply CoiBi»n>jr"s Office.
119-121 So. 3rd St. (Guaranty BIdr)
Minneapolis.
0. E. BRECKE, Pua. Ast.. or Local Aientt.
,
NEW DEERWOOD SCHOOL.
Front Elevation From Drawing Furnished by Vernon J. Price & Co. of Duluth, the Architects.
T7.00am •7.00pm
7.30am 7.30pn
2.4Spm I0.40pni
LIXCH OX LAKE SHORE
INTERRUPTED BY POLICE.
Erick Masnuson and Carl Sehert
begg:e(l an armful of food from Kast
end residences ye.'*terday afternoon and
then repaired to the- lake shore to en-
jov a fea.st. which they washed down
with a big bottle of whisky. Officer
Thomas Forre.stal interrupted their
good time, however. Complaints had
been made of the men and he sent thetn
into the police station on charges oi
MODERN HOMES!
$11,000 — Attractive modern home
in East end: 13 rooms and bath,
hot water heat, hardwood floors
and finish, gas and electric, 3
grates; full basement, stone
foundation. concrete walks;
small barn; lot, 100 by 150; %
cash will handle it.
$7,500 — Nine-room frame house
on Tenth avenue east; large
rooms; bath, gas, electric, hard-
wood floors, hot water heat;
stationery laundry tubs; brown
stone foundation; lot, 46 2-3 by
75. Easy terms.
$3,150 — Nine-room house on Park
Point; bath, gas, electric, hard-
wood floors, large cellar; good
conditon, built 1906. Will make
terms.
$1,900 — New five-room cottage on
Park Point; water, gas, electric,
hardwood floors. $500 cash re-
quired.
$3,000 — Full lot on upper side of
Second street, 1% block from
courthduse. with old seven-room
house; water and sewer. This
property will increase rapidly in
value.
$5,000 — New flat building, central-
ly located on Sixth street; mod-
ern except heat; exceptionally
well built. Annual rentals, $708
— a good investment.
D. W. SCOTT & SON,
402 Toirey Bldg.
drunkenness. They entered pleas of
guilty in police court this morning and
were sent to the county Jail for ten
days each, being unable to pay fines of
$10 and costs.
RNE SERViCES IN
CLOQUET CHURCHES
■ f
Easter Will Be Appropriately
Observed in Nearby City's
Houses ot Worship.
Cloquet, Minn.. April 15. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Easter will be observed
quite extensively in the various
churches here. At the Presbyterian
diuroh tomorrow morning the follow-
ing is the order of services: Organ pre-
lude; doxodogy; invocation: carol, •'Hall,
All Hail, the Easter Morning," choir;
hymn, -'Lilt Up i'our Voices," congre-
gation; Scripture lesson; anthem, choir;
prayer; announcements; offertory: solo,
"They Came to the Sepulchre," Mrs. C.
VV. I..owrle; baptism of children and
reception of members; reception of
members by letters; hymn, "Jesus
Christ Is Klsen Today," congregation;
sermon, pastor. Rev. C. N. Lowrie;
prayer; hymn, "The Day of Resurrec-
tion," congregation; benediction.
In the evening, following the Scrip-
ture lesson, an elaborate Easter can-
tata will be given. 'Light Out of Dark-
ness." by the choir. Part 1 — Organ pre-
lude; chorus, "Dark and Drear the Mid-
night Skies;" recitative, bass. "I Am
He That Watches on Yonder Hilltop;'
solo, "Be Not Ca-st Down;" chorale, "Oh,
Christ, Who Died for a\\\" recitative,
contralto, "Raboni;" solo, "The Song of
the Magdalene;" chorus. "O Ye That
Mourn. Be Ye Comforted;* duet, so-
STREET TO
BE^ADED
Roadway 40 Feet Wide Will
Be Provided on Ninth
Street
■ ■
Work Must Be Completed
Aug. 1 to Insure Rail-
way Extension.
Leave.
$2400 — Six-room house with bath,
3 223 West Third St., hardwood
floors, city water. gas. $400
cash, balance monthly payments.
$2000 — Five-room house with
bath, 3227 West Third street,
hardwood floors, city water, gas,
$300 cash, balance monthly
payments.
PULFORD, HOW & CO.
609 Alworth Bldg.
m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
LEGAL NOTICES.
ORDER FOR HE.\RING ON PETITION
FOR ADMINIriTRATIOK—
State of Minnesota, County of St.
Louis. — ss.
In Probate Court.
In the matter of the estate of Don
Medich. Decedent.
THE PETITION OF Mllo Dukich of
Buhl. Minnesota, having been filed In
this Court, representing, among other
things, thit Don Medich, then being a
resident of the County of St. Louis.
State of Minnesota, died Intestate in
the County of St. Louis, State of Mln-
ne.sota, on the 7th day of June. 1910;
leaving estate in the County of St.
Louis State of Minnesota, and that
said petitioner Is the first cousin of de-
ceased and holds a power of attorney
from father and mother of said de-
cedent, and praying that Letters of Ad-
ministration of the estate of said de-
cedent be granted to Pete Badakoylch.
IT IS ORDERED, That said petition
be heard before this Court at the Pro-
bate Court Rooms in the Court House
In Duluth, in said County, on Monday,
the 1st day of May, 1911 at ten o'clock,
A. M., and all persons Interested In
said hearing and in said matter are
hereby cited and required at said time
and place to show cause, if any there
be, why said petition should not be
granted.
ORDERED FURTHER That this Or-
der be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald, according to law, and
that a copy of this Order be served on
the County Treasurer of St. Louis
County not less than ten days prior
to said day of hearing.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 8th,
1911.
By the Court.
' S. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal. Probate Court, St. Louis County,
Minn.)
D. U., A9tM 8. 15 and 22. 1911.
InYestment, Sacrifice
and Home Combined
Kast End — 50x140 teet — Tbrec
Hou«e8 — Two In rear and one In
front, stone foundations; hot water,
healing plants, concrete walks;
beautiful neighborhood. Owner
must sacrifice. Cash f4,B00, balance
of $3,750 long time. Another big
snap — 25x140 feet, two houses, all
modern, heating plants; all fixtures,
and shades go with this deal. Don't
miss this snap — f5,250.
THE SMITH REALTY CO.,
6:24 Manhattan BldK-
quartet, "O Glad and Glorious Easter;
chorus, SIp" Glorious Hallelujahs.
I^art II— Carol, "Song of the Easter
Bells:" solo, soprano, "O Divine Re-
deemer;" recitative, tenor, "Ho Ye That
Once Were ."sad;" solo and quartet, "Go
Ye and Teach All Nations;" chorus.
"Behold a Great Light Hath Come Out
of the Darkness."
Those taking part In the cantata
are: sopranos. Miss Bothine, Miss
Bakke: altos. Miss Parker, Mrs.
Lowrie; tenors. Mr. Wendei Davis, Mr.
Trimble Davis, Huntington Taylor;
basses. Mr. Sherman L. Coy. Mr. Mey-
ers.
Other Cbnrrh Servicea.
At the Methodist church there will
be special Easter music. The morning
subject will bo "Alissionary," and In
the evening the Sunday school will
take charge of th« services. On
Easter Monday the Sunday school will
hold an Easter festival in the parlors
of the church. v
At Our Saviour's Ndrweglan church
the program will be as follows:
morning service, sermon, "Proofs of
Christ's Resurrection;" vocal solo,
Robert Rebertstad, song, "Golgothas
Morke Svandt." chorch choir; evening
service: song. "Du Som Verldar Har
Til Rlke," male quartet; sermon, "If
a Man Die Shall He Live Again;" vocal
solo. "The Sparrow's Song." Anna
Mlchaelson; song. "The Lord Is Risen."
church choir. Itev. T. T. Roan Is the
pastor of the church.
At St. Andrew's Episcopal church.
Rev. F. C. Coolbaugh rector, there will
be three services on Easter day. at
7:00 In the morning, midday, at 10:45,
and children's festival at 3:45 p. m.
•
Your Vacation Trip
To beautiful California can be taken
with a personally conducted private
car party at less cost than you can take
It alone, tourist. The next party leaves
St Paul April 20th, p. m. For particu-
lars see McGllllvary. Room 311 Alworth
building, 'phone 821-A Grand.
"Most Excellent."
Victor Huot's fresh dally candle*.
The grading ot Ninth street, with a
forty-foot roadway flanked by gutters,
is the plan which the Central Hillside
Improvement club hopes to carry out
in order that a street railway exten-
sion may be obtained. At the meeting
of the club at the Franklin school next
Wednesday night, the property owners
will sign the petition and It is ex-
pected that a sufficient number of
signatures will be obtained to Insure
the work being done.
The street railway comi>any has as-
sured the property owners that if the
route Is graded by Aug. 1. the exten-
sion will be made this year. The route
up to Ninth street Is not definitely de-
cided upon, but It Is assured that the
line will run east on Ninth street
from Seventh avenue east to Chester
park. It is planned to grade the road-
way this year, but not to pave for
two or three years. Thus the roadway
will have plenty of time to settle be-
fore the pavement is put on.
The part of the olty lying above
Sixth street between Fifth avenue
east and Chester park has had a
steady growth, but has been retarded
by lack of street car service. It Is a
very desirable residence district and It
will be brought into close touch with
the central part of the city by the
new street car line. The land has a
slope that is Just enough to give good
drainage and to give the residents in
the houses set high up a good view of
A school will be erected next year at
Twelfth avenue east and Eighth street,
and steps will be taken soon to obtain
needed water extensions. The dis-
trict is going ahead rapidly and it is
expected that In two or three years it
will be one of the most popular resi-
dence districts in the city.
The estimated cost of the work that
will be done on Ninth street this year
is $30 for each twenty-flve feet of
frontage.
Leare.
The committee In chs.rge of the
summer carnival to be given in Du-
luth this summer is ra«.eting again
this afternoon at the Commercial
club.
The preparations for Duluth's mid-
summer celebration to be held July
20, 21 and 22 are going forward
rapidly. During the pant week the
sub-committees having ir charge the
program of sports, the illuminated
water pageant and the sp.?cial decora-
tions, have been doing much hard
work. Most of the plans have been
defintiely outlined and much of the
actual preparation for carrying out
these plans has been accomplished.
"Work on the midsu mmer water
carnival is progressing ir a very sat-
isfactory way," said Bentley P. NefE,
chairman of the special carnival com-
mittee today. "The comniittee started
out with the expectation of putting
in a good deal of time and hard
work on this affair and has gone at
the planning and preparations with
an earnestness that has already ac-
complished many valuable results. We
have counted on the voluntary co-
operation of every citiz<tn of Duluth
and in this we have not been dis-
appointed. Duluth people, especially
our leading business men, are show-
ing an enthusiastic interest in the
coming celebration that iromlses well
for the successful carrying out of
every feature of our midsummer pro-
gram. The public spirited action of
the Duluth Commercial club in tak-
ing charge of the publicity for the
water carnival and in issuming the
responsibility of Duluth'ji out-of-town
visitors has assured the success of
the celebration as a ci'ic entertain-
ment.
"Duluth has a splendid reputation
for hospitality to stransjrs. Duluth's
business men have been ever ready
to extend a cordial rece]?tion and en-
tertainment to repres«intative citi-
zens from all parts of the world. But
the hospitality that we must extend
to our visitors this summer will have
to be on a far brocider scale. Every
citizen of Duluth will have to take
a part In making our thousands of
guests welcome. I consider that the
celebration in July is an opportunity
for Duluth people to gain the repu-
tion for themselves and their city of
warm-hearted thoughtful hospitality
to all comers. Portland, Or., at the
time of their rose festval; Lios An-
geles, at the time of their midwinter
festivities; Omaha, during her Ak-
Sar-Ben celebration, hav'e all showed
a spirit of hospitality and kindliness
toward strangers that his given them
increased popularity with travel-
ing America. Duluth hiis the natural
equipment, in the first place, the
charming people who can play the
hosts most gracefully, all natural
beauties In woods and ^vater, a beau-
tiful city and a refrething summer
climate. Let us g"ve Duluth a fair
name as entertainer ol visitors. Du-
luth can become first in hospitality
among the cities of thin country."
The Merchants' Part.
There has been a growing feeling
among the merchants J.long Superior
and First streets that ihey may well
get together and add :heir share to
the festivity of the summer carnival.
It is believed that If tlie retail mer-
chants uptown will get together and
join in decorating Supe-lor and First
streets along with the ci-oss streets be-
tween them, there can be a part of
the carnival evening July 21 spent
by the festival crowds on these
streets. Bands of musis and carnival
decorations will bring the immense
crowds from the harbor and Park
Point to Superior street after the
evening's performance is concluded.
Such an arrangement as suggested
will be of greatest adv<!rUsing advan- *» "Saa
take to the retail storus^ and^ ^*'®^^' | ^^'••
rants, because '" ''* K-t«„, ^m.
j ALLAN LINE—
Plctureiqua St. Lawrence Bontak
Weekly Salllnci from
MONTHEAL TO UVEHPOOL. GLASGOW
MONTIIEAL TO lX)NDON. HA\aU!:. Frenc*.
FortnUliUy froia
PHn.ADEl.PHIA and BOSTON to GLA8(M)W.
SplnuUA scenery, ahorteat paasage. low raut.
Any Local A«ent ot
ALLAN & CO.. General Agenti^
174 Jackaon Blvd.. Chicago.
RAILROAD TIME TABLES.
Minneapolis. St.Paul
phj'SaultSte.MarieRy.
UNION jiTATIOM—Supenor St. ana SHrth Aye. W«A
Arrive.
L*»»e. TWIN PORTS EXPRESS.
DULUTH •S.WMiM tS.Sapa
Superior S.SOaai 5.00t«
8Lad>imlUi ... 8 15am lO.SOaa
tS.OOpai ll.45»n uweia 4.00aoi t7-5Sa«
1-orKau 3.49am 0«Uko«Ji 1 2. 01 am From H.
Claire and CUUi and
ChlDpewa CWwewa
FalU 7.15am... MUwauke* ... B.SOpm FalU
eS.OOam Chlcagu •7.00pm
Dining Cars. PaUce Slctpem and Ubrary Obaerva-
Uon Cars. Ve»llbuU-d — Vacuma ClMoed — KlecUU
IJ«»>ted. _^ . , .. .
JCounertlon at LadyamlUi with Train 8 fox Manla-
tlque, Uladttoiia and lutermeJlaJe polnU.
BROOTEN EXPRESS.
Artra.
t5.43am UuluU> t« 00pm
t7.00am 6.15am Superior «.30pm iS.OOpm
10. 00am 8.22am Moose Lake 6.20pm >2.35pa
8.10pm 10.20am Wahkon 4.42pm J2««»
t4.00«m 10.50am Onamla 4.25pm ti.4»«a
tl.20pm Broolen tl-45pm
ConnocUona Bt Urooteu lor Twlu Citie*. Wortara
Canada and the PaclTIe Coast.
Leii>e. DULUTH. WINNIPEQ LINE. Arrlre.
t 9.30am Duluia t •• 'Oa*
10.05am Suiwrlot .'. 4.40pm
li.2Sam Mouae Lake ,? i?'""
4.00pm Caa* Lake lO.ZSam
4.37pm Benildjl ? *1*"
7.30pm Thief River Palla 7. 00am
Comieclions at Thief Kl»er KaUa for VVlunipcg.
CUYUNA RANGE LINE.
Arrive.
t 7.208m PuluUi M *?"■
7.55am Superior ? 95""
S.SOam l-awler 4 lOpm
10. 02am tail Lake I ,?'"■
10. 24am Darina ^^r'""
10.35am Boscberg ? fj*"
10.48am Aitkin ..•• It?"
|l.4Sam Iron Hub ." 2.5S4>m
Arrive. H 15am OEERWOOD 2.40pm Lt-a^__
t 2.M»H
2.«S»fi
til. 57am Cu>una
12.05pm Caoiby
•l>MUy tUailj eju.'ept Sunday.
DLLLTH, MISSABE & NOUlil.
ERN RAILWAY.
Office i 420 Wcat Superior St.
'Pkune. IW».
Leave
Arrl»a.
( nibbing. Cliliholm. Virginia, live- j
< letli, Colerrtne. SUanu (UutU). \
tMounfn Iron. tSparta. t»l»ablkj
Ulbbliig. Chlsholm, Sharon j
(Uuld). VlrglnU, EveictU. \ ♦I0.8I««
JColcralne. J
Virginia, Cook, Ualncr. Fort I
•7.10pm < Krances, Port Arthur. Bau- \
t dettc. Warroad. Winnipeg. J
*7.40am
»3.50pm
*3.2ltm
•S.Slaa
•Ually. tUally except Sunday. „ « —
Cafe, Observation Car, Mesaba Ranffe
Points. Solid Vestlbuled Train, Modern
Sleepers through to Winnipeg.
Ideal East End Home
Just Completed
Eight rooms and bath, hot water
heat, hardwood floors and finish,
gas. electric lights, equipped with
every convenience.
Located only one block from car
on a lot 50x150 feet. »2,00« kandica
It. Price, 96,500.
C. E. ROE
412 PROVIDENCE BLDG.
FARM LANDS
In ten. twenty, forty and eighty-
acre tracts, handy to Duluth, suit-
able for truck gardening, poultry
raising and dairy purposfs: good
Boll; plenty of timber for building
and fuel. Prices and terms reason-
able.
All of section 7, township 50,
range 19. near Gowan, suitable for
stock farm; good soil; small lake.
94,000, half casta, balance easy terms.
A. W. KUEHNOW
403-4 C4»lambla Bids.
THE DULUTH & IRON RANGE
RAILROAD COMPANY.
"VEIUIILIOX llOLTK"
DCLUTU—
I Leave. | Arrive.
Knife Uiver, Two Harbori, Ti.v»cr,
Ely, Aunira. Blwablk. McKlnley.
EveleUi. Gilbert and Virginia.
•7.30amitlZ-Oi«
t2.45pmi *6.IO»m
•UaUy tL>aUy exctpt Sunday.
DULUTH A NORTHERN HINNESO-TA RAILWAY.
Offieea. 510 Looadale Bldp., Duluth.
Trains connect at Knife Klvtr ,laily(excei.l Sunday)
wlUi D & L U. traliu Icavliig iJuluth at . .M a. aa..
and arriving at UuluUi at 6:30 p. ni. CounecU U
Cranier with Grand Marali aUge when running.
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
Leave.
*4.00pm.
•B.OOam.
•7.30pm.
Aahla&d and Eart
.Aabland and ilast
.Minn, and DakoU Expreaa.
North Coast Llmlud
ArtlM,
,. •11.15am
,. *«.40pm
,. •O.ISam
.. ve.aspm
$ MOHEY $
When yon need It
QUICKLY apply to
the Loan Depart-
in«it of
W,M.PraiieftCo
N*. S Loudalc Wd9-. Datolli. Mlu.
D. H. 4-"-ii
IS FINED FOR
BEATING WIFE
Wife Denies That She Was
Kissing Another
Man.
Leonard Snell, arrested on a charge
of having assaulted his wife yesterday
afternoon, entered a plea of guilty In
police court this morning and was fined
f25 and costs, with the alternative of
forty days In the county Jail.
He claimed that he saw his wife kiss-
ing another man at the foot of the
stairs leading to their home.
Judge Wlndom. who heard the case,
declared that it made no difference as
to what the provocation, he had no
right to strike his wife, or any other
woman. Mrs. Snell declared that she
was uptown all the afternoon and had
not been with any other man. She
claimed that her husband was of an in-
sanely Jealous disposition.
PRISONER DIES
AT HOSPITAL
Man Arrested for Dmnken-
ness lives But a Few
Hours.
John Reynolds, a lumber inspector,
was arrested last night on a charge of
being drunk. Suffering from delirium
tremens he was hurried to St. Luke s
hospital, where he died in a few hours.
The body was taken to the undertaking
rooms of J. L. Crawford.
It was stated at headquarters this
morning that he had been taken from
the house at 17 North Seventh avenue
west, and that he had been on a pro-
longed spree. Further than that he
was in the lumber buslneM, little Is
known of him.
_ it would bring im
mense crowds of meriy makers pas
the show windows ol these estab-
lishments, which may be decorated
especially for the occasion.
Careful preparations are being
made by the Duluth Ccmmercial club
for taking good care of all out-of-
town visitors at this tme. The Du-
luth Commercial clul' haa assumed
entire responsibility ol' seeing to it
that every visitor has an ample op-
portunity of viewing al. the events of
the three-days' program of water
sports and water caralval. It has
been decided to have ti folder placed
in the hands of all visi:ors giving full
explanation of how they may arrange
to view the events of :he celebration
and of how they may see the points
of interest in and abovt Duluth. This
folder will contain a list of drives,
parks, etc. It will contain a com-
plete program of events. In addi-
tion to these the regulation fares for
transportation to points; of interest on
both land and water will be set down
in this folder for the benefit of
visitors. It is the plai of the Com-
mercial club to make it evident to
all the visitors that they are not
only being treated fairly but that Du-
luth takes great care to look after the
comfort and enjoyment of all Its
guests. It la believed that by carry-
ing out this careful arrangement of
entertainment a good -ioundation will
be built for Duluth's future as the
summer resort of the Middle West.
tt.OOam
• I. 55pm.
il.iOpm.
"Uuiutb SboA Una"
8T. PAUL
.. MINNEAPOLIS ...
Arrive.
•6.30MI
,. t2.
,. •7.
•UaUy. tDally except Sunday. 'Phone 214.
Depot at 334 Weat Superior atnaet.
Unloi
imrrH-WE9TERH ilMEl
L»»3.30pm ♦6.15pm... Pulutb .
LT*3.50pm e.35pm... Superior .
Aj 7.45am.. Milwaukee
Ar 7.00aM S.ISam... Cblcago .
.Ar^9.26am •I2.20»m
.Ar 7.53am ll.4SWii
.Lv 7.45pm
.Lt >.25»m IO.IO»w
LTt«.50am •4.35pm... Duluth ...Art3.35pm •"•Wj"
LvVlOam 4.55pm... Superior ...Ar3.05pm 9.35pm
Ar4.30pm 0.50pm. ...St. J**"!- • J'^ ••;»" J-^SSI
Ar S.Oipm 10.25pm. Mlnneapolla .L» 7.»0«m «.«■»■
•Dally. tDaU7 except Hutiday.
Offlca. 308 Weat Superior St.,
Duluth.
Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic
LeaTC.
STATIONS.
ArrlT*.
CONTRACTORS
WANTED
For clearing land at Meadowlands,
St. Louis county, on the D. M. & N.
road. Call or write
LAND DEFT.. D. & 1. R. RY. CO.,
Wolvin BldK.. Duluth.
~t7 4S«m *6 . 1 Spm . . . Duluth ...•I0.30*m t5.4«p«
(tjoo Line L'ulon Station.)
t* 12am •«.4Spm... Superior ...•lO.OOam tS.IOpM
(Soo Line Union Sutton.)
t« 20an •«.»6pm... superior ... •9.50am t(.00r«
(Union DefwL)
Arrive. t*aTa.
t7.56pm 5.40*m.. Ho»»gUton ••t"00p«
ta 55am «.30am... Calumet ...tlO.IOpm
t7'0SBm •4.20am.. labpemlng ..•12.20am t*.20Ml
t7 4»pm •S.OOam.. Mamuette ..'1 1.30pm tS.Mam
^ •I0.20am8«alt 8te. Haila •5.25pm
•B 00am... Montreal ... ••.50pm •8.20pm
••.20pm.... Uoaton ....•!•. 00am ••.SOftm
tlO.OSpm '10. 20am... New Torti... •7.15pm ?•■»»•■
t Dally except Sunday. •Dally.
Leave.
THE GREAT NORTHERN.
STATIONS. AiTl»«,
18. 00am |
•S.ZSpm^
• ll.lOpm I
•8.45«m r
•e.55pm i
t2.20pm..
te.OOam..
«T. PAUL tlO.ISf"
m4 \ •!»»•■
MINNEAPOLIS J **^>^
Crookston. Grand F'-rka. ••.3S»m
Montana and Coirt J •'■!**"
.Swan KiTer, Hlbblng, Vlrgl^a. ..t rWjm
St. Cloud. WUmar. Sioux City. . .flO.lagm
Hotel J^uperior
—SUPERIOR. WIS.-i
Laadina Hctal af the elty. Flaa Cafa Sarvlca at
popular prieea. Larpa Sample liaam. But meeti all
*"* "'EUROPEAN PLAN— 75a t» $2.50 per day.
._6»Mlsl WoaUy Rata*.
Imperial Hotel
Thoroughly modern und up-to-date
in every reiipect.
ROOMS, 76e AND ITP.
200-208 Weat 8aferie» Street.
•Dally. tDaUy except Sunday. Twin City ali
re«dy at B p. m. Office. Spalding hoUL
HOTELS.
N«w Bititdiat:
New E«Hl»m«Bt— Rata*. t2 aad VLU.
Hotel McKay
Corner FIrvt St. aad Flftli Ave. Weat. DULUTH.
Adelphi Hotel
2MI-2W3-2M5 Wapt 6«p«1m' StraaC
J. B. DUNPHY. Prap.
Beat aaulppad. ateam-beatad, batel la Wait m^»
IMfaoma. all madara aoavaalaaeM: aaw kiriMlaai
laow a^iamaat. Batfal la aaaaaatlaa.
I *
bates; •».•• rSR WEEK AMD UK ,
» - ^
I
h
i^^— •^— »■
SfiAa^Hi'^NUMM
T' WPi
1
!
1
«
-
p^»^
fr-
■fva
;
J
1
J
1
^^^^
^^^^
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
STATISTICS
ARE_BULLISH
BuUs Force Values Upward
Sharply — Foreip News
Unfavorable.
Sttrm Destroys 1,000,000
Bushels of Wheal — Crop
Advices Good.
Duluth Board of Trade, April 15. —
Wheat went up sharply today. The
foreign batoli of statistics was bullish.
Even the elements favored the bulls, a
■torm turning over an elevator at St.
Louis, which toppled into the Mississ-
ippi river with its store of 1,000,000 bu
of wheat. Eleventh hour shorts were
severely punished.
Armour and Lichstern are credited
with being behind the May deal. They
• re punishing their enemies who wore
auccessful Dji the long decline. Whether
they can unload at a pioflt remains to
be seen.
Argentine shipments are smaller
than last weeVc being «',720,000 bu
against 3,7£8,000 bu. Wheat and flour
shipments exclusive of North America
are estimated this weelc at 10.400.000
bu against i:.'. 876, 000 bu last weelt.
There is a sharp decrease In the ex-
ports from this country, which are
placed this week at 1.634.000 bu against
2.143,000 bu last week.
Argentine weather continues favor-
able for the new wheat crop.
The strength In wheat was enhanced
by reports of frost for tonight in Kan-
•as and Nebraska.
May wheat advanced 2 He and .July
went up '2c. Durum gained I'c, oats ad-
vanced *&c, rye and barley were un-
clianged and cash wheat was ic over
the May delivery. May flaxseed was
Strong, gaining 3c and July went up
tc also. Winnipeg May closed at 12.46.
Flour Situation.
Flour is higher. Millers have ad-
Tanced prices 10 to 20 cents from the
limits prevailing a week ago, winter
Wheat grades being marked up 10
cents and spring wheat grades 20 cents
In a few instances. This is the first
decided upward movement that the
market has had for a long time. In
fact, ever since about the middle of
January prices have been sliding
downward. Because an advancing mar-
ket Is something of a curiosity trad-
ers are disposed to look upon it with
more or less suspicion. There Is still
a fairly general feeling that the ad-
vance will not be maintained and that
prices will go lower than they were
before it occurred.* This feeling is due
In part to the fact that confidence has
not been restored, traders still being
Influenced by the severe losses already
made, many buyers tiavlng been
eaught by the severe winter decline.
Primarily the rise In the cost of
flour Is due to the decidedly stronger
tone of domestic wheat markets, and
as the markets In the Northwest have
developed the most strengtli the firm-
ness in flour is most apparent in spring
wheat grades. Minneapolis wheat was
advanced about 4 cents a bushel, which
Is equivalent to about 20 cents advance
In flour. A factor that favored higl-.er
prices was the active demand for cash
wluai at Minneapolis, millers show-
ing so much interest that there was
a shai-p advance in premiums, espe-
cially for the choice grades. This was
Interpreted as showing that millers had
come to the conclusion that the price
of wheat was about as low as it was
likely to go. Another influential de-
velopment was the unusually light re-
ceipts which caused stocks to decrease
quite materially.
The advance in wheat options is
credited mainly to manipulation. There
Is nothing in the crop situation to
cause an advance, but on the contrary
the latest Information is decidedly
bearish. Not for many years have the
•"crop killers" been so inactive as this
season, and it is a matter of common
knowledge that no opportunity for
?essimlstic talk is ever neglected by
hese so-called experts.
Leading mills report that business
has been better during the past few
days, but that the improvement is more
In the direction of shipping Instruc-
tions on old contracts than in new
business. In the former respect there
Is less difficulty experienced in getting
buyers to name a time. The only ones
who are si ill holding out are those
who are making every effort to reject
contracts.
M«»re Xew RuMlnenM.
The volume of new busine.«s while
AMERICAN WHEAT MARKETS, APRIL 15.
May— Open. High. Low. Close. April 13.
Duluth I .9«b I .98**b % .96b I .98b I 15 (?*»,,„
Minneapolis ... .95% .97'54 .95% -^^^^ ^^^ **
Chicago 88^4 .91% .88% .91%b .89b
Winnipeg 91% .93% .91% .93% "f?!*"^^
New York 95 .95% .96 .95% .94%
St. Louis 86%-% .88 .86% .88 •fS,^-^»
Kansas City ... .83% .85% .83% .85% .83%
Dulu^th'*!~ 97 .98^ib .97 -11^*^ 'IVW
Minneapolis ... .96% .98% .96% •^?;**'v -er^t
Chicago 85^ .87% .85% -12^-^ 'IIV
AVlnnipeg 93 .95% .93 .95% .92%
New York 93% .93%-% .93% •2?%-% • |3
St. Loufs 83% .85 .83% .85 -f^J^''"
Kan.^as City . . . .81% .82% .81% ^-82% .80%
SouUiwestcm and Winnipeg quotations furnished by B. E. Baker * Co.
DULUTH DURUM MARKET.
Open. High. Low. Close. April 13.
May .84% .86% .84% .86%b .84^a
July 88% .87%b .85% .87%b .8o%a
DULUTH LINSEED MARKET.
Open. High. Low. Close. .April 13.
May |2.53b $2.56 |2.53b |2.56b »2.53b
July i^ 2.56n 2.53n
Duluth close: Wheat— On track: No. 1 hard|1.00. On track, to ar-
rive- No. 1 northern. 99c; No. 2 northern, 96-97c; May, 98c bid; July. 98 %c
bid- Seotember. 91%cb id. Durum — On track, iij store, to arrive: No. 1,
86%c- No 2. 84>.c; May. 86%c asked; Jirty, 87%c bid. Flax: On track to
arrive, $2.57; May, $2.56 bid; July, $2.56 nominal. Oats, 32c. Rye, 82-84c.
Barley. 99c-$l. 10. Feed barley, 83-95c. „, „„„ ^ , ,-aAK.,. loo*
Receipts— Wheat, 14,211 bu; last year, 84,768 bu; oats, l.i90 bu; last
year, 18.492 bu; barley, 1.783 bu; last year, 16.459 bu; flax 636 bu; last year,
4 549 bu
' Shipments— Oats. 4,000 bu; last year, 5,130 bu.
still unsatifactory to settlers is, how-
ever, larger than in most previous
weeks. It is still a supply trade but
there is more of it. Bookings as a
rule are confined to single carlots and
are obtained from dealers are now low
in supplies. There are a few excep-
tions where larger quantities have
been ordered and where buyers are dis-
posed to look with more favor en
prices as giving a good opportunity to
lead up. There is no excitement, how-
ever, and the general disposition is
to go slow.
A prominent miller writes as fol-
lows: "There has been a decided Im-
provement in the demand for flour.
Jobbers and bakers are, as a general
thing, getting pretty well cleaned out
uf old contracts and we are likely to
see during the next two or three
months a brisk revival of business to
compensate for the long period of dull-
ness through which we are Just pass-
ing."
Aside from the advance in wheat the
feed situation is an important factor
in determining the cost of flour. Values
of feed are holding up remarkably well
and have been further advanced dur-
ing the past week. This enables mill-
ers to take their profits from this end
of the business and put them In a
position to quote prices for flour that
are lower than they would otherwise
be. But as the mills get to running
more actively and pastures freshen up
there is certain to be a sharp and se-
vere drop In feed prices. This will, of
course, affect flour and make the pres-
ent price of the latter look all the
more reasonable.
A fair quotation for spring patents
is from $5 to $5.40, no good flour being
offered in wood at less than $5 and up
to $5.40 per barrel being quoted by
some Minneapolis producers. Kansas
hard wheat patents known to be satis-
factory to the trade are offered In
sacks by millers at prices In the range
of $4.40 to $4.70 per barrel.
Millers of soft winter wheat flour
as a rule are quoting an advance of
10 cents, yet straights are offered by
New York state and Michigan mills
at $3.90 to $4.10, and by Ohio and Indi-
ana mills at $4.30 to $4.50 per barrel.
Possibly a bid of $4.25 might be ac-
cepted for the latter. Winter wheat
patents range from $4.35 to $4.60, and
clears from $3.75 to $4.10. the lowest
quotations for both grades coming
from New York and Michigan mills.
The new crop wheat options have
not entirely shared In the advance of
the old, and barring serious accidents
to the crop between now and harvest
it would seem as though there ought
to be a fairly good opportunity for
some export business in winter wheat
flour, as we are now very close to a
working basis.
♦
Cauli Sales Saturday.
Xo. 1 hard. 1 car
No. 1 northern. 1.000 bu, to arriTe
No. 1 nurthern. 1 rar
No. 1 northern. 106 bus
No. 1 norlhem. 1 car
No. 1 northfm. 2 cars, to arrlre
Rejected wheat, 10 bu
No. 1 durum. 1 car
No, 1 durum, 1 car
No. 1 durum. 1 car
No. 2 durum, 1 car
No. 1 flax, 127 bu
No. 1 flax, 1 car
No. 2 flaz, 1 car
.$ .99
. .97H
. .97'i
. .97%
. .98
.99
.88Vi
.85
.85%
.86%
.84%
2.37
2.54
2.51
A GOOD FIRM TO SHIP
YOUR GRAIN TO
ATWOOD-URSON
COMPANY, Inc.
Special attention given to cash
grains. We give all shipments our
personal attention.
i
DVLVTH.
minne;apoi.is.
21
225
9
174
36.000
If you will bring your
Calumet & Arizona and
Superior & Pittsburg cer-
tificates to Paine, Webber
& Co.'s office, we will have
them transferred into the
new Calumet & Arizona
stock for you.
Zenith, 1404. Dolath, Mel. 2215.
Martin Rosendahl & Go.
(INCORPORATED.)
COPPER STOCK BROKERS
St. Mary Assessment
Rtofkholtlers whose holdings are
registered in the names of others
will take notice that we have no way
of reachlnjr them except through the
public pres.s. To prevent the sale of
your stock you are cautioned to pay
the assessment of two cents per share
at once, either at 103 East Second
South street. Salt Liake City, Utah,
or at the Duluth office as below.
St. Mary Mining Company
401 Providence Bulldiui;.
Last
year.
78
148
27
126
50,000
Last
year.
3
4
5
Cars of wheat inspected: No. 1 north-
ern, 11: No. 2 northern. 2; rejected, 2;
no grade, 1; No. 1 durum, 3; mixed, 1;
total wheat, 21; last year, 78; linseed,
none: last year, 3; barley, 2; last year,
15. Total, 23. On track, 56.
« * •
Cars of wheat received —
Today
Duluth
Minneapolis
I Chicago
Winnipeg
St. Louis, bu
• * •
Cars of Unseed received —
Today
Duluth
Minneapolis •
Winnipeg ••. «
• * <*
Clearances — Wheat, 108,000; flour,
two days, 23.000: corn, 200,000; oats,
I.UOO; wheat and flour, 212,000.
• « •
St. Louis wired — Modern Miller said:
Weather conditions have been highly
favoraljle for the winter wV-at crop
and reports show a general improve-
ment since tlie month opened. Plenti-
ful rains were beneficial, especially in
regions where drought was prevent-
ing growth. Western Kansas has re-
ceived needed moisture. Damage by
lield pests Is Insignificant.
« • «
Primary receipts of wheat, 427,000;
last year, 386,000; shipments today,
662,000 vs. 597,000. Corn receipts to-
day, 653,000 vs. 342,000. Shipments,
549,000 vs. 388,000.
• • •
Forecast: Illinois, Missouri — Fair to-
night and Sunday, not much change In
temperatures, probably light frost to-
night. Indiana — Fair tonight with
light frost; cooler In extreme south
portion: Sunday fair. Wisconsin, Min-
nesota, Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas — Fair
tonight and Sunday, not much change
in temperature; frost tonight. North
and South Dakota — Fair tonight and
Sunday; warmer In west tonight.
« « •
Bradstreet's estimate of exports of
wheat and flour this week, 1,634,000;
previous week, 2,143,000; last year,
1.836.000; corn this week, 1,179,000; pre-
vious week. 1,616,000; last year 941,000.
• « *
Cable from Liverpool: Broomhall es-
timates the wheat and flour shipments
for the week, exclusive of North Amer-
ica, 10,400,000 bu against 12,876,000 bu
last week. Of this total Europe will
take about 9,600,000 bu. The total ship-
ments last week amounted to 14,742,000
bu and last year 12,448,000 bu. Arrivals
of breadstuffs into the United Kingdom
will aggregate about 3,600,000 bu. He
predicts that there will be moderate
changes in the quantity of breadstuffs
on passage. Argentine weather con-
tinues favorable for the new wheat
crop, It being warm and wet. Plata
holders are offering freely. Indian
shipments for the week are 1,048,000
bu: last week, 968,000 bu; last year.
Wheat — This week, 2,720,000 bu; last
week. 3,768,000 bu; last year, 2,152,000
bu. Corn, 153,000 bu vs. 8,000 bu vs. 11,-
000 bu. Visible supply in chief ports
Wheat now 3,080,000 bu; week ago
3,904,000 bu; year ago 2,560,000 bu.
Corn, 76,000 bu: week ago, 230,000 bu;
year ago, 203,000 bu. The wheat mar-
ket is quiet with a declining tendency
and the demand small. Arrivals from
the Interior are fair with the quality
satisfactory. The corn market is firm
with sellers reserved. Arrivals from
the interior nil.
• • •
Minneapolis puts were 96»4@96%c;
calls, 99 Vic asked. For July puts were
97»*®97%c, and calls. 99^40.
CHICAGO 'market.
Falling Off in Wheat Stocks Causes
an Advance in Price.
Chicago. April 15. — With worlds
shipments showing a falling off, and
with stocks in this country diminish-
ing, wheat advanced today In a lively
manner. Forwardings from the Ar-
gentine especially were much less than
a week ago. Particular attention also
was given to the fact that stocks at
Minneapolis had decreased heavily of
late. Offering here proved utiusually
light, and in consequence eager shorts
bid up prices, impelled in part by bull-
ish crop advices from Hungary and
France. The opening was %c higher
to %c off. May started at 88%^ 89c,
unchanged to V4c lower and then rose,
to 90»ili90%c.
Good business at flour mills. North-
west added to the firmness of the mar-
ket. Closing figures were strong with
May at 91%c, a net gain of 2 3«c.
Better weather prospects weakened
corn at the outset. SympatTT>' with
wheat however, led to a rally. May
opened a shade down to a like amount
up at 49 %c to 49?4c, touched 49 Va®
49 %c and then advanced to 50c.
Later the wheat strength carried
the market up another notch or two.
The close, however, was easy with May
at 49 "^@ 50c, a net gain of >4c.
Oats were swayed by corn. May
started %c to h»@Mc easier at 31%c
to 31%@3194c and recovered to 32c.
Foreigners and shorts took the buy-
ing side of provisions and caused an
upturn. Initial ales were 2^^c to 20c
higher, with May options at J15.37>i
to $13.40 for pork, 18.05 for lard and
18.50 for ribs.
Ship-
Articles — Receipts, ments.
Flour, bbl 36,000 16,100
Wheat, bu 28.800 24.500
Corn, bu 312,500 249,200
Oats, bu 352,800 435.300
Rye, bu 9,000 1,000
Barley, bu 111,600 31,900
Car lot receipts: Wheat, 9 cars,
with 4 of contract grade; corn, 126 cars,
with 4 of contract grade; oats, 81 cars.
Total receipts of wheat at Chicago,
Minneapolis and Duluth today were 2ri5
cars, compared with 186 cars last week
and 244 curs the corresponding day a
year ago.
Cash close: Wheat — No. 2 red, S9'^(Q
91%c; No. 3 red, 87®90c; No. 2 hard.
8914 (Tt 92c; No. 3 hard, 89® 90c; No. 1
northern. $1.01 ©1.03; No. 2 northern,
98c@$1.01: No. 3 northern, 97cfi$l: No.
2 spring, 92 @ 97c; No. 3 spring, 92 (tf
97c; velvet chaff, 92(g:96c; durum, 82
@88c. Corn— No. 2, 60%»folc; No. 2
white, 50%@51c: No. 2 yellow, blM'ip
51V4c; No. 3. 49%@50%c; No. 3 white,
49Si®50V4c; No. 3 yellow, 50i4@51c;
No. 4, 49((i'4«>%c; No. 4 white, 49(5, 4niic;
No. 4 yellow, 49Mi@49%c. Oats — No.
2, 31%®)32c; No. 2 white, 34(&34S4c:
No. 3 white, 33@33%c; No. 4 white.
32ai@33c; standard, 33%(S3A^/ic. Rye —
No. 2, 91® 92c. Barley, 70c @ $1.10.
Timothy, $11.75. Clover, $15.
Open. High. Ix)w. Close.
.88Ti-89 .91H .88T& .91H
.85%-86 .87H .85\ .87Vt-H
.8534-H .87-H .SST* .seTk-s;
Wliett—
May . . .
July . . .
Sept ...
Com—
May ..
July . . .
Sept . . ,
Oats-
May . . .
July ..
Sept
given. Sheep — Receipts, 200; market
light; sheep, $1.00%5.00; lambs. $3.75@
6.00.
Corn and Wheat Bulletin.
For tlie twenty-four houn endlnt at 8 a. m.,
urday. April 15:
Sat-
BTATIONa
8taU of
WMtberl
TemperatuN.
S
S
■a
i
E
s
B
■a
Rain-
fall.
?5
11
.Alexandria Clear
48
28
.02
Campbell Clear
50
26
0
Oi-i'kston ; Clear
34
24
0
Detroit City i .....'. . .Clear
52
24
.04
HalsUd ..........Clear
32
54
56
44
54
54
24
28
SO
24
30
28
0
Muiite>'l(leo .,.;.;.. .Clear
0
New I'lm Clear
0
Piirk Kaplda Clear
0
ll<>chester Clear
0
WInneljago CHy Clear
0
Wortlilnjton Clear
54
28
0
.\inenla Clear
44
26
0
I/iitigilon Clear
32
34
48
46
32
16
26
26
30
22
0
l.arlmoie Clear
0
Lisbon Pt. Cloudy
0
Minot Clear
0
Pembina Cloudy
0
Alierdeen Clear
48
28
0
Mlllhank Clear
50
30
0
Mlt( hell Clear
46
50
30
30
0
Urdfifld Clear
0
JUlsniarck Pt. Cloudy
44
30
0
JDevlu l.ake Cle-ir
34
20
0
l>iiluth .- Clear
49
25
0
tHuron Clear
52
30
0
ILii Crosse Pt. Cloudy
, ,
34
0
MinnetipolU Cleiir
54
32
.01
{.Moorliead Clear
44
28
.02
tPien* Clear
52
34
0
t.<t. Paul Clear
52
30
.04
Winnipeg Cloudy
••
0
RKMAKK.S— Light rains fell over Ohio and Ken-
tuclty. Freezing temptrature ocx-urred In Nebraaks
and Kansas.
H. W. RICHAnDSO.N,
Local Forecaster.
T. Indlratea Inappreciable rainfall. *Mazlmum for
yesterday. t.Minimum for twenty-four hours, ending
8 a. ra. 75th meridian time. {Minimum temperature
for 12-hour period ending at 8 a. m.
NOTE. — Ttie average maximum and minimum tem-
peratures are made up at each center from the actual
number of reports received, and the average rainfall
from the number of stations reporting .1 inch or
more. Tlie "state of weatiiei" la tliat prcTalllog
at time of obeerratlon.
New York, April 15.— Bradstreet's bank clearings
report for Uie week ending April 14, show an ag-
gngate of $2,926,564,000 as against 13.317. 005.000
last week and |3.152.:84.000 In the corresponding
vcosk last year. The following is a list of the cities:
Pet. Pet.
New York . . .
Chlcigo
Boston
Philadelphia . .
St. Louis
Kansas City .
Pittsburg
.San Francisco
Baltimore . . . .
Cincinnati ...
Minneapolis . .
Cleveland
Ne\t Urleant .
Detroit
Omaha
Los Angeles . .
LoulsTlUe
Milwaukee . . .
Seattle
St. Paul
AtUnU
Portland
Buffalo
Denver
Washington . .
.Salt Lake
Tacoma
.Siivaimah ....
Spokane ,
I>E« Molnrs . .
Duluth
Oakland
Sioux City
Urdnd Kapida
Oklahoma
Davetip. n . . . ,
Ivalamazioo ...
Topeka
Cedar Rapid*
.'Sioux Falls ..
Helena
Fargo
Waterloo ....
Iloiutun
Galveston . . . .
.|l,6r,6.693,000
. 272,807,000
. 158.067.000
. 142,831,000
77,122,000
50,3<J1,000
52,676,000
45,246.000
34,784.000
27,789,000
18,535,000
24.357,1100
18,052.000
19,451,000
13.821,000
19.160.000
12.779,000
13,141,000
11. 756,000
11,104,000
12.406.000
12,135.000
10,089.000
8.598.000
7.608.000
6,673,000
4.363,000
4,823.000
9,098,000
3.970,000
3.113.000
3,301,000
2,593,000
2,715.000
2,343,000
1,326,000
694,000
1,678.000
1.254,000
1,168,000
837.000
478,000
1,103.000
24,475,000
14.022.000
Inc.
2.9
1.0
2i!e
3.4
"sis
2.6
9.6
U.i
1.4
14.2
3.6
7.3
'3'. 2
28.1
4.3
14.2
ioii
20. S
Dec.
11.1
6.0
'2.'%
3.0
12.7
'".6
10.1
19.8
isii
1.2
13.0
a.i
i'.i
23. S
's.i
11.5
32. •
26!3
5.2
8.0
8.0
10.3
1S.2
Yellow, lOO-lb 3.5«
Red. per bu 1.50
Spanish onions, per crate 1.90
Sets, white, pcf bu 2.00
N UTS-
Walnuts, new. California, 110-lb sack, per lb.. .17
Mlberta, Sicily, per lb 16
Brazils, extra large, per lb 14
Pecans, extra fancy iMllshed. per lb 15
Almonds. Taiaganla, per lb 20
Mixed nuts. lUO-lb and 50-lb boxes, lb new.. .14
Black walnuts, lb 05
Cocoanuts, [er doi 85
New hickory nuts, latge or small, pet lb 08
Pecans, halrca. shelled, extra fancy, S-lb car-
tons, per lb 50
Wahiuts, siielled, extra fancy, 5-lb cartons, lb. .48
Chcbtuuts, per lb 10
Almouds. siielled, extra fancy, S-lb cartons, lb. .45
DATta AND FIGS —
Haiiowi dates, 70-lb boxes, new 4.50
llallowi dates, 30 p.-tckagcs, per box 2. 25
Fard dates. 12-Ib boxes, new 1. 40
Sugar walnut dates, 9-lb tmxes, 1.39
New C^allfomla figs, 12-pkg. box, per box.... 1.00
New Smyrna fig9, 5-crowa, 20-lb box. per box.. 3.75
New Smyrna figs. 7-crowo, 100-lb box. per
box 14.50
New Smyrna figs. 3-crown. 10-lb. per box 1.25
FRKSU VEGKTABLES—
Head lettuce, liamper 2.25
Lettuce, leaf, per bu twx 1.10
Beans, wax, per bu 4.50
Parsley, home grown, per dos 33
■•••■••■••••
per crate.
Urge buncbea, doz.
.40
2.75
3.50
Green onions, doz.
Gretn onions, box
Cauliflower, California,
Splimcb, box
Round radlsbea, hothouse.
Long radishes, doz ,
Hothouse cucumbers, per doz
Green pei>per3, liothouse, per basket.
Celery, Calif urnla, per bunch
Celery, Florida, crate
Endive, New Orleans, per bbl
New beet«, i>er doz
New carrots, per doz
Florida tomatoes, basket
Tomatoes, crate (2.50@
Louisiana strawberries, case of 24 pta. .(3.75(1$
Pie plant, per box 3.75
Garlic, pound 15
ROOTS—
Table beets, per cwt. .
Table tuitfas. per cwt..
Horse radish, root, per bbl.
1.25
.75
.40
1.75
.65
.85
3.00
6.00
.75
.76
.50
2.75
3.50
1.75
1.75
0.50
HoiEe radish, per lb 14
Table carrot.s, per cwt 1.75
Table parsiiH)!!. per cwt 2.00
JUSCELLAN EO US-
Beans, navy, per bu 2.60
Beans, brown, per bu 3.75
Fruit baskets, pei hundred 1.25
MEATSi—
Beef, per lb 7M® .09H
Mutton, per lb 07
.15®
.18®
.12^
.IIH
.lOVi
.11
.11
.18
.15
.24
.21
.13
.15H
.15^
.15^
.20
.13
.13
.12
.13
.10
.08
.13
HaUbut W
Pork loins, per lb.
Veal, per lb
Lamb, per lb.
Lard, per lo
DRESSED POULTRY—
liens, fancy, fat, per lb
Springs, per lb
Turkeys, per lb
Ducks, per lb
Geese, per lb
LIVE POULTRY—
Hens, per lb
Small hens, pel lb
Springs, vet lb
Turkeys, per lb
Ducks, per lb
Geese, i>er lb
FISH—
Trout, Lake Superior, frozen.
Whlteflsh, frozen
Pike, frozen
Pickerel, frozen
Salmon
Herring, frozen
Flnuau haddle
.03
.10
.10
.18
.14
Chicago Livestock.
ClUcago. April 15.— CitUe. receipts estimated at
200: market steady; iMeves, $5.20#C.75r 'Tncaa
steers, $4.3065.70; wertem steers, $4.85@5.8.'>;
stuckers and fceilers, $4.1»(ff5.80; cows and heifers,
$2.70(^5.85: calves, $5(^7. Hogs, receipts esU-
nuted at 7.000; market 5c higlier; light, $6.25@6.65;
nUiLCd,' $6.10^6.55; hea^y, $5.85«%6.40; rough, )5.85(^
6.05; good to choice heavy, $6.05(<i6.IO: pigs, $6.25®
6.55: bulk of sales, $6.1'0(30.45. Sheep, receipts esti-
mated at 1,000: market steady: native, $3(s4.70;
wesU-rn. $3.15^4.70; yearlings, $4.40(<:5.40: lambs,
native. $4.75(36.15; westeni, $4.75@6.15.
Midway Horse Market.
Sllnncsota Transtcr. Su Paul, iliun., April 15. —
Btirrctt & Zimmerman report: Trade was on the
retail order, with few heavy sales being booked.
Shipments were made to Pennock, Clear Lake and
Duluth. Minn.; Mott, N. D.. and Rhlnelander, Wis.
Gcod Inquiry for saddle horses and well mannered
family drivers. Valuea have a downward tendency.
Drafters, extra $185(g24«
Drafters, choice 120@170
.40H-%
.60%-H
.51%-H
.50H-U
.SOTi-Jl
.52
.49H-%
.50H
.51H
.31H
.31H-!I4
.31^
31H-% .32H
.31H-^ .32%-«4
.31V4-H .32M,
Mess Pork, pi"r bj>l —
May ....15.37H-40 15.85 15.37^
July ....15.00 15.30 15.00
Lard, per 100 lb-
May .... 8. 02^-05 8.25 8.P2H
July 8.10 8.35 0.10
Sept .... 8.12H-20 8.35 8.10
Sept .... 8.12>i-20 8.40 8.12^
Short Ribs, per 100 lb—
Miiy ... 8.60 8.72>4 8.57H
July 8.12>i-13 8.32H 8.12H
.49*/i-50
.50H
.51T4-52
.32>4
..12%
.32-H
Sept .... 8.07 M
8.2U-22H 8.07>4
15.72'i
13.25
8.20
8. 27 '4
8.27>4
8.35
8.70
8.30
8.20
MLWEAPOLIS MARKET.
Strong Cash Demand Gives AVIieat
Prices Sharp Advance.
Minneapolis, Minn., April 15. — Wheat
prices registered a sharp advance to-
day. The upturn was caused by the
continued strong cash demand and the
big decrease of 300,000 bu for one day
in local elevator stocks. Shorts were
forced to cover. Minneapolis led In
strength and outside markets followed.
May closed 2V4@2%c hlgh'er than
Thursday. July at 2%@2»4c higher
and September at l%c higher. Further
precipitation in North Dakota over
Friday beneficial.
Minneapolis today received 225 cars
of wheat against 148 a year ago; Du-
luth 213 against 78; Winnipeg 174
against 126.
May wheat opened 95%c, high 97%c,
low 95%c, closed 97»/4c; July opened
96%c, high 98%c. low 96%c, closed
98%c- September opened 89c, high
90 %c, low 89c, closed 90 %c.
Cash wheat In very strong demand.
Offerings far from equal today. No.l
northrn sold for 3@3^c above the
May contract. Close: No. 1 hard,
$1.01%; No. 1 northern, $1.00® 1.01; to
arrive, 99%c@1.00V4: No. 2 northern,
97@99c; to arrive, 96%®98»/ic; No. 3
wheat, 94@97%c; No. 3 yellow corn,
49c; No. 2 white oats, 31^@32%c; No.
2 rye, 86@86%c.
Millstuffs — Shipments, 3,408 tons.
Market strong and steady. Excellent
demand for Immediate shipment, but
not so strong for deferred. Bran in
100-pound sacks. $21.50© 22.00.
Flour — The market continued fairly
active. Prices advanced today on ac-
count of sharp upturn In wheat. De-
mand moderate and shipping directions
coming In more freely. Shipments to-
day 91,300 barrels; for the week, 298,-
459; last week, 297,055; year ago, 213,-
320. First patents, $4.65@4.85; seconds,
$4.45^4.75; first clears, $3.05@3.50;
seconds, $2.05® 2.70.
Flax — Receipts, 4 cars; year ago, 18;
shipments, 1. Demand continued strong
for both spot and to arrive at Ic above
the Duluth may contract. Closing
prices, $2.57.
Barley — Receipts, 76 cars; year ago,
16; shipments, 63. The market was a
trifle firmer today and the demand is
good, especially for choice malting
grades and prices l(8>2c higher. Clos-
ing range, 70c® $1.06%.
•
New York Grata.
New York. AprU 15.— Close: Wheat— May, 95?4c;
July, 93He83%c. Com— May, 57c.
*
Soath St. Paal LlTeHtoirk.
South St. Paul, Minn. April 15. — Cat-
tie — Receipts, 100; light; unchanged.
Hogs — Receipts, 1,100; market steady
to strong; ranse. |6.00@)€.30. Bulk not
Drafters, common to good....
Farm mares and horses, extra.............
Farm mares and horses, choice. ............
Farm horses, common to good
Delivery ^
Drivers and saddlers ..•••.••
Mules, according to size
95@115
140(3180
115(^135
65@100
140@195
130@223
150(3250
Dnluth Securities.
SKCURITIES —
I Bid I Asked
First National Bank |
American Kx^ange National Bank
Oty National Bank
Noilbem National Bank
St. Louis County Bank
Western State Bank
Dulutb-Superior Traction Co.....
do pf d
Duluth Street Railway, IK g. 5a 30 M *
N. A
Duluth Edison Electric, 1st g. i. f. Bs
March. 1931. op. M. it S. A
Great Nortbern Power Co. bonds
.American CarboUte. par $1
Zenith Furnace Co
SS5
ISO
ISO
S«0
140
77
83H
00
08
80
S.85
85
82
81
101
100
i!2S
100
THE PRODUCE MARKETS.
CALIFORNIA ORANGES—
Extra fancy navels, 150-216 $3.
Fancy navels. 96-126 3.
Fancy navels, 80 2.
Fancy navels, 150-216 2.
FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT—
46's to 80's. box 4.
Grapefruit, extra fancy, box 4
CAUFOHNIA LEMONS—
Extra fancy, box, 300's and 350'a 4
Imported limes, box..' 1
PINEAPPLE.S—
Cuban, 30'b, crate 4
Cuban. 30'8, dor >.
GRAPtS—
Malaga grapes, keg 1.
APPLES—
Baldwins, box ......««.••••.•... 2.
Ark. beauties, box S.
Roman beauties, bos 3.
Greenings, box 8.
Ben Davles, box.. ........................... •.
Varieties, box 8.
Spltzcnbergs. box ....; S.
Wine saps, box >.
CRANBERRIES—
Jersey, bu crate ...*•■•••.••.•••.■••••.. 3.
Michigan, crate... •.•.«••••..*•.*•.•••••«..,, 3.
FRUIT JUICES—
Ora nge. keg ...a............................. 4.
Raspberry, keg ...•••...............■•......* 3
Cherry, kef '
Grape, keg 3
Cider, keg 3.
BANANAS—
Bananas, per lb
BUTTER-
Fancy creamery, pel lb X3H9
Dairy, per lb 160 .
CHEEoJ;—
Wisconsin, full cream, per lb
American, full cream, per lb
Block Swiss, per lb. No. 1
Primost cbeese, per lb
Odorless brick, per lb..... ,
Wheel Swiss, per lb
EGGS—
Eggs, fresh, per doi It\k9 •
PEANUTS—
FaiKT, raw, per lb by tbe aaek
Fancy, roasted, sacks, per lb
Fancy, roasted, less than sacki
Salted peanuU. 30-Ib palU S.
Salted peanuts, 10-lb sacks 1,
Fancy Jumbos, roasted, per lb..,.. ..<...
Fancy Jumboa, raw, per lb
M.\PLE SYRUP—
Vermont, per gal 1.
Olilo, 5-gal. can 3.
MAPLE SUGAR—
Iowa, assorted pkgs.. 30-lb box. pet lb ,
POP CORN—
Snowball pop com. 40-pkg. box 3,
Santa Claus pop com, case 1,
Pop com, on the cob
Pop com. shelled .
HONEY—
Wisconsin white clover, per cas«, 34'a 4,
CABBAGE—
Home grown cabbage, per ton 35
Home grown cabbage, per crate, large 3
Holland cabbage, frtsb and fine, per cKt 3
POTATOES -
Potatoes, per ba....
Jersey sweets, per banper. 3
ONIOXS—
Beds. 100-lb tack. «...m..... S
Smoked whlteflsh
Smoked Chinook E.ilmon
Smoked halibut
Oysters, standard, per gal 1.40
Oysters, medium selects, per gal 1.75
Oysters, extrt selects, per gal 1.00
Frozen smelts, per lb 13^
Fresh frozen mackerel, each 35
Frozen eels, per lb 13
Roo Shad, each 1. 35
Shad roe, per pair 50
Steak, cod, per lb 12Vi
Scallops, per gal 1.90
HAY AND STRAW—
Choice timothy, per ton $16.50@17.00
No. 1 choice timothy, per ton 15.50@17.00
No. 1 choice tmothy, per ton...
No. 1 mixed tlmotiiy, per ton. .
2 mixed timothy, per ton. .
1 upland, per ton.
No.
No.
So.
No.
No.
15.50(817.00
14. 00^16. 00
12.00(ai3.00
13.50(314.50
per ton 11.50(812.50
2 upland,
1 midland, per ton 10.0u@12.00
2 midland, per ton 7.00(9; 8.U0
Rye straw, per ton 6.50® 7.00
Oat straw, per ton 6.500 7.00
Bran, per ton 22.00
Mlddilngi. per ton 26.00
$1,391,370,600; increase, $6
culatlon, $45,767,10; decrt
Reserve, $379,449,500; Inci
100. Reserve required, $3
crease, $1,533,575. Surplu
Increase, $5,128,525. *Ex-i
included, $1,582,100; deer
Deposits included, $lklll
Actual conditions: Lo
187,300; increase, $2,885,
$308,806,300; Increase, $9,1
tenders. $74,691,800; decrt
Ex-deposits, $1,399,923,0(
$11,854,900. Circulation, $
crease $87,300. Reserve,
Increase, $8,705,500. Rese
$349,980,750; increase, $2,:
plus, $33,517,350; increas
Ex-U. S'. deposits lnclud<
decrease, $4,800.
Summary of banks an<
panies in Greater New Yoi
ing to the clearing house
145,885,500; increase. $10.'
cle, $115,491,100; decreas
Legal tenders, $19,082,0'
$203,100. Total deposits,
increase, $6,975,700.
134,300. Clr-
ase, $371,900.
•ease, $6,662.-
17,842,650: In-
s, $31,606.85;
J. S. deposits,
ease, $21,000.
ans, $1,355,-
500. Specie,
>6,300. Legal
ase, $480,800.
0; increase,
15,815,900; In-
$383,498,100;
rve required,
163,725. Sur-
e, $5,741,775.
d, $1,560,000;
I trust com-
k not report-
Loans, $1,-
153,600. Spe-
e, $1,772,300;
)0; Increase,
$1,257,084,000;
LEGAL NOTICBS.
ORDER Of'UeaRING^nT'ETITION
FOR ADMlNISTRATIOJf —
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis,
ss. —
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of .John
Hedeen, also known a.s John Hedln,
also known as Johan Jiedln, Deced-
ent.
THE PETITION OF Alfred Hagstrom
having been filed in this Court, repre-
senting, among other thirgs, that John
Hedin, also known as .'ohn Hedeen,
also known as Johan Hedln, then being
a resident of the County of St. Louis,
State of Minnesota, died intestate, in
the County of St. Louis, State of Min-
nesota, on the 23rd day of February,
1911; leaving estate in the County of
St. Louis, State of Minnesota, and that
said petitioner is a creditor of said de-
cedent, and praying that Letters of Ad-
ministration of the estate of said de-
cedent be granted to Axel Carlson,
IT IS ORDERED, That said petition
be heard before this Court, at the Pro-
bate Court Rooms in the Court House
In Duluth, in said Countj-, on Monday,
the 24th day of April, :911, at ten
o'clock, A. M., and all lersons inter-
ested in said hearing and In said mat-
ter are hereby cited and required at
said time and place to stiow cause, if
any there be, why said petition should
not be granted.
ORDERED FURTHER, That this Or-
der be served by publication In The
Duluth Herald, according to law, and
that a copy of this Order be served on
the County Treasurer 5f St. Louis
County not less than ten days prior to
said day of liearing.
Dated at X>ulutb, Mini., April 1st.
1911.
By the Court,
S. W GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal, Probate Court, St. Louis Coun-
ty, Minn.)
ANDREW NELSON,
Attorney for Petitioner, Duluth,
Minn.
D. H.. April 1. 8 and 16, 191L
if any there
should not
place to show cause,
why said petition
granted.
ORDERED FURTHER, That this or-
der be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald according to law, and
that a copy of this order be served on
the County Treasurer of St. Louis
County not less than ten days prior to
said day of hearing.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 4, 1911.
By the Court,
S. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal, Probate Court. St. Louis County,
Minn.)
ALFORD Sf HUNT.
Attorneys.
D. H., April 8. 15 and 22, 1911.
Contineiital CaMnalty Company.
Principal office: Hammond, Ir.d. (OrgaiiUed IB
ISO'.) H. O. U. Alexander, president: WUlUm H.
B?tts, secretary. Attorney to accept sertlce lo Mla-
nesoca: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, $300,000.
INCOME IN 1010.
Premiums recelred (Net) —
Aceidint 12,424.597.58
Health 658.806.68
Total net premium Income.
From Interest and rents....
From aU other sourcea
Total income
..$3,083,404.3*
57.052.03
. iio.roLis
.$3.257. 158.34
I.edger assets Dec. 31 of previous year. .$2,045,063.1
Sum
New Vork.
New York, April 15. - Butter — Firm; receipts,
4,093 packages: creamery specials, 20c; extras, 20'^c:
flrsU, 18i4(<jl9Hc; eec-onda, 16^(!Jl7Hc; creamery,
held special, 19^(f!20c: txtras, 18>i&10Hc: firsts,
I'fel'^c; seconds, 15»4@16c; state dairy finest, itiaS
20Hc; god to prime, 18(3 Itfc; comou to fair. H(^
17c; process, special, 17 He; extras, 17c; firaU, 16c;
seconds. Uhi&lTc; Imitation creamery firsts, 16(si
16M:c; factiiry current make firsts, IS^c; aeconds,
15c. Cheese — Steady; receipts, 2,101 boxes; state
whole milk special, 14@15%c; special quality fancy
colored, 13e<13'»c; wlilte, 13c; siuumer and fall
make colored, choice, ll>4(S12'.4c; white, ll»4fel2^c;
late fall, good to prime, colored, 10%@ll%c; same
winter, 10^(sllc; god to prime, coiond, 10%i(^ll%c;
same white, 10H(3llc; current make, best, 10i4(sllc;
same common to fair. y(nlOc; skims, 2(3 10c. i':ggs—
Irregular; n-celpis, :i6.43» cases; fresh gathered,
extras, 17^(S18»4c; firsts, 16fe 16%c; seconds, 15'^(S
15^c; fresh gathered dirties. No. 1, l4Vic; No. 2,
13(a'14c; fresh gathered checks, 12(« 13c; slornge packed
ttrsts, 17(rfl7>4c; state Pennsylvania and i*earby heu-
uety white, 19fe21c; same gathered white, 18®20c,
same hennery brown, 17>,4(3l8Vic; same gathered
brown and mixed, 16^i®17»4c; western gathered
wliite, 18^10c; southern duck eggs, 2j(s3oc: western
duck eggs, 20 (s 33c.
Chicago.
Chicago, April 13.— Butter— Urm; creameriee, 15®
21c; tfciirles, 13fel3Hc. Eggs— Weak; receipts, 27,-
471 cases: at mark, cases included, 13(s! lalic; firets,
14V4c; prime firsts, 15c. Cheese— Steady ; daisies, 14
igU'iic: twins, ]2%(3l3c: young Americas, 13%^14c;
long horns, 13(a'14c. Potatoes — Firm; choice to
fancy, 55(357c; fair to good, 52@53c. Poultrj-—
Steady; turkeys, dressed, IBc; fowls, Uve, 15c;
springs, live, 15c, Veal— Steady; 50 to 60 lb wts.,
6(s7c; 60 to 85 lb wts.. •(s'Jc; 85 to 110 lb wts.,
8ii@10c.
HIDES, TALLOW AND FIRS.
No. 2.
$ .08)4
.o-%,
.07H
.11^
.TO
2.60
.13
2319
38
25
00
90
00
SO
50
35
75
00
00
33
35
SO
35
35
35
50
35
50
50
75
75
75
75
75
04H
33
IT
15
18
15H
09
IS
17
ir
or
07 H
08
75
40
10
08M
75
50
,10
50
,TS
03%
.04
,35
.00
.25
.04
OS
M
OBEXN SALTED HIDES— No 1.
O. 8. steers, over 60 lb t .09^
a. S. steers, 25 lb and up and steers
under 60 lb 08)4
a. S. long haired kips, 8 to 25 lb.. .09
O. S. veal kips, 5 to 25 lb 13
a. 8. Deacon skins, under 8 lb 80
O. S. liorsehldes 3.60
DKY SALTED—
Dry flint liides. over 15 lb 16
Dry Minnesota, Dakota. Wisconsin
and Iowa hides • .. .1*
Muskrat, winter 40(ff34 ...
Murrains }5^
Dry kid 1° •'"
Dry salted calf 20 .19
TALLOW AND GKEASE—
Tallow, In cakes 06H .05%
Tallow, In bbl 06 .05
Urease 05% .03%
I'KLTS-
Pelts, large, each T5 1.00
Pelts, medium to small 35 .60
Dry pelts, butcher, Montana and
Waslilngton 12H .11
Dry sliearlngs. each 10 .05
WOOL— —Per lb-
No. 1. No. 2.
Unwashed medium wool 18 .20
Uuwa:>hed coarse wool 16 .18
Unwashed fine medium 15H .17V&
LLATHER— —Per lb-
No. I.
Texas oak sole A
Texas oak sole
Hemlock slaughter sole xx t .35
Hemlock slaughter sole No. 1 34
Hemlock dry hide sole 31
Hemlock harness leatber 38
Oak harness leather 42
Medium.
33.00
2.00
1.50
.75
.85
.20
5.00
Wolf,
Wolf,
Wolf.
Bear,
.05
2.25
5.00
4.50
4.75
3.00
12.00
9.00
6.00
1.00
SO. 00
15.00
7.00
5.00
.50
.15
3.75
3.00
3.50
2.25
$3«21
No. 2.
8 .«
.42
t .37
t .86
i .32
i .41
i .44
Small.
$2.00
1.50
1.00
.50
16613
CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED
STATES, DISTRICT OP MINNE-
SOTA—
Fifth Divisloi.
Alexander B. Scully, Trustee,
Complainant.
V8.
Northwestern .Steam Boiler &
Manufacturing Company, a
corporation,
Defendant.
The report of David Divls, the duly
qualified and acting receiver in the
above entitled cause, of the sale by the
receiver of the real property of the
defendant having been 51ed, and the
sale of said real property, as shown in
said report having been culy confirmed
by an order of tnls court; and It ap-
pearing that there are certain liens
and enctimbrances on said real prop-
erty prior and paramount to the title
vested in and sold by the receiver, and
said sale having been made subject to
said liens and encumbrances. In ac-
cordance with the order of the court
pursuant to which said s:ile was made,
on motion of Thos. J. Davis, solicitor
for the receiver,
IT IS ORDERED as fo lows:—
First: That all questions concern-
ing the validity of each lien claim and
encumbrance, and thj aggregate
amount of each such lleii and encum-
brance found by the court to be valid,
including unpaid interest, if any, on
each such lien claim, co-nputed up to
and including the 10th day of April,
A. D. 1911. being the dite on which
said sale was made, be heard at the
L^nited States court roon In the post-
office building In the city of Minne-
apolis, Minnesota, on Saturday, the
22nd day of April, 1911, at 10 o'clock
in the forenoon, or as soon thereafter
as counsel can be heard:
Second: That a copy of this order
be published twice in eac 1 of two daily
newspapers published ir the city of
Duluth, and State of Minnesota; that a
copy of this order be sen'ed on the so-
licitors for defendant and upon North-
western Trust Company, trustee in the
mortgage securing the mortgage deed
on the said real property, and a copy
of this order be mailed t J. each credit-
or, who has filed with the receiver a
proof of claim against defendant, and
each other creditor apptaring on the
hooks of account of defendant, also to
each judgment creditor ind holder of
any of the proinlsory notes secured by
safd mortgage, so far as the holders
of such notes are known to the re-
ceiver, at their respective ptostofflce
address so far as known or reasonably
ascertained by the receiter; that each
such publication, service and mailing
of copies of this order be completed on
or before April 19, 1911.
Dated April 16, 1911.
By the Court,
CHARLES A, TTILLARD,
Judge.
FUllS— Large.
Bkuuk, black $4.50
Skunk, short stripe 3. 00
Skunk, loog narrow stripe 2.00
Skunk, broad stripe and white. 1.00
Muskrat, fall S0®27
Mujikrat. kits
Itaccoon 3.50
Mink, dark and brown 6.50
Mlidt, pale 6.00
Beaver 7.00
Cat. wild 4.00
FUher. dark 18.00
FUher, pale 15. 00
Fox, red 8.00
Fox, gray ..•••.••.•... 1.-5
Lynx 27.00
Marten, darti 20.00
Marten, dark brown 10.00
Marten, light brown and pale.. 6.50
Weasel, white
Weasel, stained, damaged
Wolf, timber
brush, cased 4,00
open 3.50
coyote, cased 3.00
aa to sice
Badger, civet and bouse cat, cross and kit fox.
mountain lion, opossom and wolverine command mar-
ket price*. Tbe above prices are for Prime No. 1
sUus. Nos. 2. 3 and 4 In proportion.
1.50
3.25
3.00
3.25
1.75
7.00
7.00
6.00
.75
13.00
10.00
5.00
3.25
.25
.10
2.50
2.00
1.75
1.50
STATEMENT OF
NEW YORK BANKS
.STATE OF MINNESOTA,
ST. LOUIS.
District Court, Eleventh
trlct.
J. H. Parker,
PI
vs.
Samuel R. Crozier and
Crozier, his wife.
Defend
The State of Minnesota
named Defendants:
You, and each of yoi
summoned and required
complaint of the plalntffl
entitled action, which 1
in the Office of the Clerk
and to serve a copy of
thereto, upon the subscr
office In tne City of Dul
County, within twenty t
service of this summons
elusive of the date of su
If you fail to answer
within such time, the
apply to the Court for re
therein.
Dated this 14th day
A. D. 1911.
COURTNEY & COUI
Attorneys for
506-506 First National 1
r
D. H.. March 11, 18. 25,
1911.
COUNTY OF
Judicial Dis-
alntiff,
Olive
ants.
to the above
1, are hereby
to answer the
in the above
as been filed
of said Court,
your answer
ibers at their
uth, St. Louis
ays after the
upon you, ex-
;h service,
the complaint
plalntin^ will
lief demanded
of February,
:tney.
Plaintiff,
lank Bldg.,
•uluth, Minn.
April 1, 8, 15,
$5,303,123.1*
DISBURSEMENTS IN I9I8.
CUlms paid (Net) —
.Occident $;'96,:i0.e8
Health 259.251.95
Net paid policyholders $1,255,962.08
InvestigaUon and aOjustmeot of claims... 15.304.04
Commissions 633.769.88
Dividends to stockholders 60,000.00
Salaries of officer;, agents, employes, ex-
aminers' and inspection fees 836.426.83
All other disbursements 263.494.10
Total disbursements
Balance
.. $3,063,9 J7.53
$2,238,164.57
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book value of real estate 8 54.147.41
Mortgags loans 631.950.00
Bonk value of bonds and stocks 507.951.09
Cash In office, trust companies and banks 96.751.11
Premiums In course of collections 663.399.08
AU other asseto 324,964.81
ToUl ledger assets fas per balance) $2,239,164.57
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and r<nu due and accrued $ 18.711.08
Market value of real estate, bonds and
stocks over book value 4,727.58
Gross asseU $2,262,603.21
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Premiums In course of collection (past
due) I 6,407,88
Boo4( value of ledger assets over marfeek
value 20.062.01
All other assets not admitted 154,053.93
TVital aaseU itot admitted $ 180,524.78
Total admitted assets
LIABILITIES.
Claims-
In process cf adjustment and reiwrted.
Itcsbted
.$2,082,078.48
.$ 187,129.08
30.825.08
TctKl $ 217.954.08
Deduct reinsurance 14,uoo.tf8
Net unpaid claims except liability
claims $ 203,954.00
Unearned premiums 771.320.73
Conuuisslons and brokerage I (18, 539.05
All other liabilities. Including reserve 260.475.73
Expenses of investigation of claims 1. 000.00
Capital Etock paid up 300,000.00
Total liabilities. Including capital $1,645,289.51
Surplus orer all Habllifles $ 436.788.94
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
Premiums Received. Losses Paid.
Accident $76,346.58 $4o.2S2.9T
Health 30,118.20 16,220.18
Totals $106,464.78
856,473.18
Stat« of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of
tbe ConUntntal ♦asualty Company, for the year
ending December 31st, I'JIO, of which tbe above is aa
abstract, has been received and filed lu Uiis Depart-
ment and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PIIEUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
National ItrevTern* Inaurnnce Companx*
Principal office: Chicago, 111. (Or-
ganized in iy06.> W. H. Rehm, presi-
dent; E. Uraham Ithood, secretary. At-
torney to accept service in Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. |200,000.
Income In 1810.
Premiums otlier than per-
l)etuals I
Rents and interest
From all other sources.
35,103.86
13,792.85
1,277.42
Total income
50,174. 1<
Ledger assets December
31st of previous year.f 338,819.81
Sum
f 388,993.96
Disbantcments In 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses % 6,020 . 48
Expenses of adjustment
of losses 77 . 52
Commissions and broker-
age 8,775.97
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes 2,500.00
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses 212. 3T
Dividends and Interest. 20,000.00
All other disoursementa 8,705.47
Total disbursements
46,291.81
Balance I 342,702.15
Ledser Ammftm Dec. 31, 1010.
Book value of bonds and
stocks I 306.344.20
Casli in office, trust
companies and banks. 31,946.25
-■.gents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ctivable, take i for
premiums 4,411.70
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) I 342,702 . 15
IVon-Ledgcr Asset*.
Interest and rents due
and accrued S 3,962 . 90
Gro3S assets $ 346,665 . 05
Deduct Assets .\ot Admitted.
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value. I 6,474.20
New York, April 15. — The weekly
statement of clearing house banks
shows that the banks hold $31,606,850
more than the requirement? of the 25
per cent reserve rule. This is an in-
crease of 15,128,525 in the proportion-
ate cash reserve as compared with last
week. The statement follows:
Daly average— Loan, |1,350,697,300;
decrease, $754,600. Specie, $304,456,000;
Increase, $5,803,700. Legal tenders, $74,-
»»3.500; increase, $868,400. •-Depositc.
ORDER OF HEARING ON PETITION
FOR PROBATE OF "WILL —
State of Minnesota, Couni.y of St. Louis.
In Probate Co art.
In the Matter of the Eslate of Samuel
Brooks, Decedent.
A certain instrument purporting to
be the last will and testament of
Samuel Brooks, having been presented
to this court and the petition of Helen
B. Mahon being duly filed herein, repre-
senting, among other things, that said
decedent, then being a resident of the
county of St. Louis, Stite of Minne-
sota, died testate In the county of St.
Louis, State of Minnesota on the 16th
day of March, 1911, and that said pe-
titioner is a daughter ar d sole legatee
and devisee of said deceased, and that
the executor named In said instrument
to be executor thereof Is now deceased,
and praying that said instrument be
allowed and admitted to probate as the
last will and testament of said dece-
dent, and that letters of administration
with the will annexed be Issued to said
petitioner, Helen B. Mahon thereon.
IT IS ORDERED, That said petition
be heard before this court, at the Pro-
bate Court Rooms In th*; Court House,
In Duluth, in said Coun :y, on Monday
the Ist day of May, 1911, at ten o'clock
A. M., and all persons Interested In said
hearing and in said mat' er, are hereby
cited and required at ti&id time and
Total assets not ad-
mitted $ 340,190.85
LlabllltCM Dec. 31. 1010.
Unearned premiums ....$ 18,403.70
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due 750.00
Capital stock paid up... 200,000.00
Total liablliti s. In-
cluding capital $ 219,153.70
Net surplus $ 121,037.15
Risks and Premlnms, 1810 Business.
(a) Fire risks written
during the year $
Premiums received there-
on
Net amount in force at
end of the year $
(a) Including business
"Marine and Inland."
Basiness In Minnesota In 101O.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written $101,000.00
Premiums received ........ 1.29S.7J
Losses Incurred 6.98
Losses paid 6.98
Amount at risk 101,000.00
4,439,580.00
42,598.41
3,756,297.00
other than
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance: ^ . ^ ^._
I Hereby Certify, that the Annual
Statement of the National Brewer.s' In-
surance Company, for the year ending
December 31st. 1910, of which the above
is an abstract, has been received and
filed in this Depa:-tment and duly ap-
proved by me.
^ J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
No Matter What
You Want
A Want Ad in this pa-
per will meet the eye of
some one who can sup-
ply it.
««■
■*"
T
*
I
^ M
i
r
T"
■ I Tr T I B I
rsi, r"p ^ ■> «* dii» 'if'-gwur*
t
if
■Umi \,r --gj
I ■>»■"'
^mm^^Bamm
mmiBmmm
W^
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
n
ADDITIONALr WANTS
From Pages 30, 31 Und 32.
FOR RENT— HOUSES.
% WHY PAY RENT? *
* WE WILL. BUILD FOR YOU *
it A nice ttve-room cottage on a lot *
^ 50 by 150 feet, only one and one- *
^ half blocks from car; |500 down *
^ and Jl'5 per month and no Interest. *
* Come in and see our plans. *
^ C. E. ROE. *■
* 412 Providence liullf'*"*?. *
rOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM "O^SK,
modern except heat. ^.^S. ^^> ''"^"1.-
son 515 Torrey building: both phones.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE.
211 South Seventeenth avenue east,
S27.50 per month. Call 817 Torrey.
Melrose. 1138. .
FOR RENT— MAY 1. NINE-ROOM
house 109 East Third street with
bath. furnace. laundry, fireplace,
suitable for roomers or boarders. JaO.
Applv to E. D. Field company, 203
K.xclKinge building.
FOR RKNT — TWELVE STEAM HEAT-
ed rooms suitable for lodging house;
be.st location in city, opposite union
depot. Call at Fifth Avenue Cloth-
ing store. W. Goldstein.
FOR liKNT— FOUR-ROOM COTTAOE
731»Tj West First street. Inquire lliiY
West Michigan street.
LOST AND FOUND.
LOST— ON FIRST AVENUE WEST,
Monday afternoon, April 10, J60 in
bills; finder will be rewarded If same
is returned to The Herald. ^^^
FOUND — PAIR OF ONE-HORSE BOBS,
red running gear. Owner may have
same by paying charges. Inquire
Herald.
FOUND— A SMALL SUM OF MONEY
on road leading from end of Wood-
land car line to Snlvely's farm. Sun-
day. April 9 last. Address James
Mohan. R. F. D. No. 3. Dulutli.
LOST— A SMALL POCKETBOOK CON-
taining between $5 and |6. on Supe-
rior street between Freimuth's store
and Third avenue east. Finder re-
turn to Herald office for reward.
1X>\1 RENT — HlX-ROOM HOUSE;
water, gaa, toilet and lights. 81»
Fifth avenue east.
FOR RENT — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
all conveniences. 317 West Fourth
street. Inquire 319 West Fourth
street.
FOR RENT— A FIVE-ROOM HOUSE,
with three lots for a garden. No.
J»27 Ninth avenue west. Apply to
H. Gould, Eighth avenue west and
Tenth street.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM HOUSE ON
Duiuth Heights, >9 per month. In-
quire 21 West Quince street.
LOST — THURSDAY. GENTLEMAN'S
gold watch on Lake avenue, between
Superior and Second streets. Finder
return to 827 East Third street for
reward, or call Grand 1952-X.
LOST— PACKAGE CONTAINING HAIR
switch, between First and Second
avenues west on Superior street, ad-
dressed to Rice Lake. Finder return
to Herald for reward.
SWEDISH M.\SSAGE.
A. E. ii.vNSEN. MASSEUR. 400 NEW
Jersey building. Old "phone 4273 Mel.
rose.
Mrs. Westlind, massage, treated at office
or at your home. Zen. Grand i:246-X.
MRS. H. WIKING. SWEDISH MAS-
sage. 305 East First St. Melrose 4494.
HORTICULTURIST.
# PENDERGAST. the pioneer hor- *
# ticulturist of Lake Superior. *
•;\i wishes to say to all who will want *
# choice, hardy shade or fruit trees. ■*
# shrubs, vines or bulbs, that he will •^
h be ready to assist them in select- •^
^ Ing varieties that he knowg are *
■^ best suited to climate, son and #
■;\i season for Duiuth. and will super- *
# intend setting and pruning. Send ■^i
■)(. postal card to II. H. Pendergast. *
-.V- 4327 I-uverne street. Duiuth. and ^
% he will call. *
MMIrnl »jamli>*t'» few an* liMpwHon
of rlik» 80.538.53
Salaries of offlrefs and •ai»\t»m.y 323.711.85
I,eg;il expenses ...'...* o, 786. 08
46.408.39
gee.CM.so
..> 12.194,0«7.«9
ASHES AND GARBAGE.
REMOVED PROMPTLY, ZENITH 2378-
X. 807 Sixth avenue west.
REMOVED ON SHORT NOTICE— DICK
Barrett. 1122 E. 4th St. Zen. 1945-Y
ASHI^S, GAIiBAGK AND MANURE RE-
moved promptly. Melrose 1390; Ze-
nith 1488-X.
STORAGE.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE Company.
210 West Superior St. Both* phones
et\\ expenses
(;r<>.4» lorf on sale, maturity or •djust-
luent of leilger asfteti -.
All other dUburiemenU ,.i..^.
Total dbbiineoienta •»>...•>.
Balaoc* « 90.111,459.28
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. I»I0.
Value of real estate onucd $ j)97.001.31
Mortgave loans ,.,..'. 46.731.662.22
Collateral lo*iis 1,320.470.78
Premium notes and policy loans 8.:52:). 149.36
Itouda and atocks owned 30,016.431.51
Cash, In offli-e, banks and trust oom-
paiiie. 3.072.191.14
Blllii receivable aud agents' Iwlanceg.. 48,552.98
Total ledger assets (as per l«l.ince)..$ 'JO.llX. 459.88
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Iiitere-it and rentd due and awTued $ 1,702.455.71
ilarket value nf bonds and stuiks over
book value 2.4f>0,236.79
Net deferred and unoaid premiums..,. V95, 512.21
I petuals f 157.301.12
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turltv or adjustment of
ledger assets 23,007.91
Total income I
Gross asaeti » n3.2S'9,663.99
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
.\gents' dfblt Iwilanees t 31,696.48
\\\ other a.i^t4 not admitted 22,075.54
Pr«mlum note* and loans 48.31
180,309,03
Ledger assets December
31st of previous year..| 962.124.19
Sum
9 1.132.433.22
DlaburMemrnta In 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses I
Expenses of adjustment
of losses
Commissions and broker-
age
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses
All other disbursements.
17.259.49
213.74
36,084.80
21,823.44
3,037.35
19,661.54
Total disbursements
98,080.36
GEORGE WILSON
GENERAL AGENT
WOLVIN BUILDING
State Mvtaal Life Inauraace
panr.
Corn-
Total aasets not admitted I
.Vdoiltted assets.
53.820.33
life budnew t 93,245,843.66
.Vdmltte<l assets (accident and llablUty
department)
$ 5.756.734.30
Total $101,002,577. 96
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Net value of uutstandlnis P'lllcles $ 82.791,149.00
Present value on supplenieniary con-
tracts aiul canceled policies
Claims due and unpaid
Claims aiijusied and not due, and un-
aiUusted and reported
Claims reslMtod •
Premium* pai<l in aiivanee
Oi\iilends due pulicyholders
.Special resei ve •
MX otiwr lUbilUles
302,254.09
io;;,6:'0.4i
150.084.00
42.618.<)|
21.»54.99
1.3:j»,578.92
704,525.00
1,214,709.51
Balance I 1.034,352,86
Ledger Amteta Dec. 31, 1010.
Book value of bonds
and stocks I 961,762,18
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks 32,909.34
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for pre-
miums 39,6*1.34
Total ledger assets (as
per balance( I 1.034.352.86
Non-LedKer AMttets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued I 11,7 40.41
All other non-ledger as-
sets 9,000.00
Principal oflTlce: Worcestjr, Mass.
(Organized in 1844.) Burton K. Wright.
President; D. W. Carter, iSecretary.
Attorney to accept service in Minne-
sota: Commissioner of Insurance.
Income ia 1010.
First year's premiums....! a65,181.07
Dividends and surrender
values applied to pur-
chase paid-up Insurance
and annuities 108,089 . 67
Consideration for original
annuities, and supple-
mentary contracts, in-
volving life contingen-
cies 33,970.00
Renewal premiums 4.361.526.07
TIMBER LANDS.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE
with bath. 215^2 East Fifth street.
Hartman-O'Donnell agency. 205 Lons-
dale building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FURNISHED
bungalow; large attic; hot water
heat, bath, all conveniences 3239
Minnesota avenue, Park Point.
FOR RENT — A COMFORTABLE, WELL
arranged home in the East end; mod-
ern in every respect; $42.50 per
month. Whitney Wail company, 301
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM HOUSE AND
barn; modern except heat. Inciuire
1615 East Fifth street.
FOR RENT— HOUSE. FIVE ROOMS;
424 East Fourth street; nice yard;
|18 per month. W. M. Prindle & Co.
FOR RENT — HOUSE, 832 EAST SEC-
ond street; six rooms; furnace heat;
$3^.50. W. M. Prindle & Co.
FOR RENT — TWO SIX-ROOM BRICK
houses all modern; large basement;
27 and 29 West Fourth. Inquire
27';^ West Fourth street.
FOR RENT— HOUSE. 125 NINTH AVE-
niie east; six rooms, furnace iieat;
13 4.50. W. M. Prindle & Co.
FOR RE.VT — THREE-ROOM COTTAGE
downstairs, all brand new, all con-
veniences except bath and heat. A
bargain to right party. Call 1030
West First street.
FOR RENT — FIVE-IiOOM HOUSE.
Thirty-ninth avenue west; city water
free. $10 per month. J, D. Howard &
Co.. 216 West Superior street.
FOR RENT — 1531 EAST THIRD
Btreet, furnishv^d. $85. 1204 East
Third street, $25. 328 Third avenue
west, $25. West end and Park Point.
C. L. Rakowsky & Co.
FOR RENT— DETATCHED DWELL-
ing, 1127 East Superior street, eight
rooms, modern, $45 per month. J. D.
Howard & Co., 216 West Superior
street.
TIMBER AND CUT-OVER LANDS
bought: mortgage loans made, ^ohn
Q. A. Crosby. SOS Palladio building.
FOR SALE — FORTY ACRES LAND,
all white pine and spruce timber. In-
quire 709 Hammond avenue, Superior,
Wis.
I buy standing timber; also cut-over
lands. Geo. Rupley. 615 Lyceum bldg
FOR SALE — 40 ACRES LAND. ALL
white nine and spruce timber. In-
quire (09 Hammonnd avenue, Supe-
rior. Wis.
Homesteads and timber claims located.
From 40 to 80.000 acres of timber
lands for sale. 401 Palladio Bldg.
UPHOLSTERING.
FURNITURE. AUTOMOBILES. CAR-
rlages; reasonable prices. E. Ott. 113
First avenue west. Both 'phones.
BOARD WANTED.
WANTED — BOARD AND ROOM AT
reasonable rates with private fami-
lies for a number of young men and
women who will enroll at the Du-
iuth Business university on Monday,
April IT. Apply at once at the col-
lege office, sixth floor of Christie
building.
WATCHES REPAIRED.
Guaranteed Main Springs. $1.00; watch
cleaned. $1. Qaron Bros.. ^13 W. 1st.
MEDICAL.
Liabllltl« on policyholders' account,
life business I 86,633,332.96
UablUtles, accident and healUi depart-
ment 4.282.609.14
Capital stock paid up % 2,i>00,OOO.OQ
Total » 92,918.142.10
UnasHlened fund-* (surphwi S.oSii.iriS.SO
EXHIBIT OF POLICIES. 1910 BUSINESS.
No. Amount.
Policies In force nt hcirlnning of
the year- (l.:i*t column only > 165,160 $293,523,232.86
Policies lu force at close of Uie
170.208 307,102.649.03
Gross assets $ 1,055.093.27
Deduct .%Maetn ^ot Admitted.
Book value of ledger as- .„„ ,„
sets over market value$ 21,527.18
All other assets not ad-
mitted 9,000,00
year
LADIES — $1,000 REWARD!
tively guarantee my great succesaful
"Monthly" remedy. Safely relieves
some of the longest, most obstinate,
abnormal cases in three to five dava
No harm, pain or interference with
■work. Mali. $1.60. Double strength,
12. Dr. L. M. Sougthinton & Co,
[ansas City. Mo.
Net Increase 4.148
bsucd. revived and Increased
durUi« th9 ye^ir 20,507
Total terminated during the
year • 15.8.'59
By death *.*54
By maturity •• 1.844
By expiration *•-<"*
__ By aurrender *'li2
T T>r»af •*>' '»P'^ ..
1 f uai- I By decr*Mse ^
BUSINESS IM MINNESOTA IN
•No.
PoIlcl« in force at beginning
of the year 3,427
Issued during Um year 457
Ceased to l)e li) force during the
year *■•'
- ... 3,436
SEEDS. PLANTS, TREES.
FOR S.VLE — TREES AND SHRUBS,
plants and flowers; gardening done
by the day or contract. Call O. R.
Mercer, Mel. 3545.
In force Dee. 31 last.
13,579,416.17
35,903.750.28
23,414. r.3t.ll
3,8S8.322.72
2.716.146.00
1,744.387.00
5,787.687.63
7,407.248.00
870,542.74
1910.
Amount.
$5, 03.5.1. -,6.35
600,163.03
567,915.00
5,U87,404..'!8
Total assets not admit-
ted I 30.527.18
1,024,566,09
1010.
9.397,19
96,875.03
2.500.00
500,000.00
608.772.22
Ijoism and claims Incurred during the
year •
Loanes and claims settled dvirlng the
W3.539.00
\etna l.lfe Inmirance t'ompaay.
PrincliKil offliie: 6.i0 Main street. Ilart/ord. Conn.
(Organized In 1820.) M. O. Bulkeley. president; C.
K. Gilbert. se<Tetary. Attorney to an-ept service la
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH C.VPIT.VL. $2,000,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
First year's premiums I 1,127.623.42
Dividends und surrender values applied
to purchase paid-up Insurance and
annuities 193,480.13
Consideration for original annuities, and
supplementary contract*. luvolvhig
life contingencies 124.831.73
Renewal premiums 9,238.683.64
Total premium Incom© $ 10,684.628.92
Rents and interests 4.400,4.'55.18
From all otlier bources 221,354.37
Total Income % 15.306,430.45
Ledger asseU Dec. 31 of prerious year. 86.999.096.52
Sum $102,303,526.97
DISBURSEMENTS OURINB 1910.
Death claim* and matured endow-
ments $ 6,599.349.46
.Vnnuitlea and premium notes voided liy
lap« 33.371.41
.Surrender value* to policyholders 1.887,978.21
Dlvldenda to poll< yholders T84.567.42
Dividends to company 177.315.35
ToUl paid policyholders $ 9,482,881.83
Dlvldenda held on deposit surrendered
during the year 203.914.75
nivldenas to stockholdeni 200,000.00
Oomnils.»ton.s and Ixmuses to agent* first
year's prendiun 400.087.20
Commissions on renewal* 507.406.64
Commissinits on annuities 5.438.03
Commuted renewal rommlssions 14.489.90
.Vgency supervision and other espeusa*.. &U, 1*32.85
year
liOdses and claims unpaid Dec.
31.,
103.450.00
2.948.00
Oecetved for premiums • 162,493.18
State of Minnesota. Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement of
I he .\eiiia Life Insurance Company, for the year
ending December :Ust. 1910. of whi.-h the above -Ai
n\\ alwtract. has been rei-«-ivcd and filed in thi* De-
partment atid duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PRF.in^,
ComnUsiiouer of Iiisuranc*.
Jf. E, Meyepss,
SUte Ag«nt.
1201 Guaranty Bldg., MinnaapolU.MInn.
Total admitted assets. $
Llabilitleit Dec. .11.
Unpaid losses and claims.!
Unearned premiums ....
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due
Capital stock paid up...
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing capital I
Net stirpliis $ 415.793.87
RIakN and l*reiulum«, lUlO Butilneaa.
(a) Fire risks written
during the yoar $ 24.142.116.00
Premlumss received there-
on 214.453.41
Net amount in force at
end of the year 16.644.499.00
(a) Including business other than
"Marine and Inland."
BunlneHH In MlnneaAta la 1010.
< Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written $512,334.00
Premiums received ''iH aa
Losses incurred 7 i 6.00
Losses paid 99.18
Total premium Income. $ 5,068.766.81
Rents and interests 1,648.968.78
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets 34.010.47
From all other sources... 184.815.44
mltted % 406.930. SI
Total admitted assets. .$36. 359.052. «f
L.laMIltleM Dec. 31, 1010.
Net value of outstanding
policies $32.155. 087. 0«
Present value on supple-
mentary contracts and
canceled policies 198,342.04
Claims due and unpaid... 1.297. 00
Claims adjusted and not
due. and unadjusted and
reported 177.457. ©•
Claims resisted 17.000.00
Premiums paid in advance 53.206.53
Dividends due policy hold-
ers ........ . a .......•• 314. 491. 43
Special reserve 26.236.00
All other liabilities S86,824.2»
Total liabilities on policy
holders' account .
.$33.328.891. 2S
Unasslgned funds (sur-
plus) $3,030,161.44
EUblblt Of PoUclea, 1810 Buaiaeaa.
Total Income $ 6,836.561.50
Ledger assets Dec. 31 or
previous year 33 669.793.17
Sum $40 506.354.67
DiHbiirMementH Durlns; 3.010.
Death claims and matured
endowments $ 2 170,106.23
Annuities and premium
notes voided by lapse... 16,473.88
Surrender values to policy
holders 700,350.36
Dividends to policy hold-
ers 726.906.94
Dividends to company.... 93.508.80
Total paid policy holders $3,707,346.71
Dividends held on deposit
surrendered during the
year 41.902.93
Commissions and bonuses
to agents first year's
premium 238.866.49
Oomml8.ston.^ on renewals 244,257.66
Commissions on annuities 781.20
Commuted renewal com-
missions 780 . 42
•Vgency supervision and
other expenses 4.799.39
Medical examiner's feea
and Inspection of risks. 37.119.00
Salaries of ofTlcers and
employes 121.065.07
Legal expenses 21.67
Gros.*; loss on sale, matur-
ity or adjustment of-
ledger asset.s 88.150.68
-Vll other disbursements.. 353.S24.20
No.
Policies In force
at beginning of
the year 51,044
Policies In force
at close of the
year 53,884
Net increase... 2.840
Issued, revived
and Increased
during the year 5.711
Total terminated
during the year 2.871
By death 471
By maturity .... 276
By expiratloii ... 103
By Burreri'der .... 957
By lapse 986
By decrease 78
Amount.
$130,271>.70l.0«
138.626,892.00
$ 8,351.190.00
647.606.00
8,296.416.00
1.500.806.00
706.548.00
173.043.00
2.154.240.00
2.389,899.00
1.321,880.00
BuaiuetMi in MinncMota In 1010.
No.
Policies 'in r^force
at beginning of
the year , 2,460 |
Issued during the
year .....,' 402
Ceased to be in
force ' during
the year 209
In force Dec 31
last 2,653
Amount.
6,960,958.00
1,037,169.00
634.760.00
7.463.367. -to
Losses and claims incurred
during the year $ 80.763.02
Losse.'» and claims settled
during the year 80.723.02
Losses and claims un-
paid Dec 81 f
40.00
Total disbursements ...$ i, 838.413. 42
State of Minnesota. Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Standard Fire Insur-
ance Comi)any. for the year ending De-
cember 31st. 1910, of which the above
la an abstract, has been received and
filed in this Department and duly ap-
proved by me. ,,„
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
Mandard Fire InNurance Company.
Principal office: Hartford, Conn. (Or-
ganlzed in 1905.) M. L. Hewes, presi-
dent; H. B. Anthony, secretary. Attor-
ney to accept service in Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $500,000.
Income In 1010.
Premiums other than per-
Read The
HeraldWants
If a few more table guests would
make it profitable for you to keep
boarders, then you have business for \
a Herald want ad.
Balance $3.'..667.941.25
LcdKcr Anaets Dec. 31, 1910.
Value of real estate
owned $ :;,678.650 . 00
.Mortgage loans r, 177. 464. 00
Collateral loans 6.000.00
i'retnium notes and policy
loans 1.502.150.78
Bond i: and stocks owned.. 2 t. 662.974. 67
Cash In otTice, banks and
trust companies 627,614.60
Ail other ledger assets... 14.087.24
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $3 >. 667, 941. 25
Non-fjcdRcr Annetii.
Interest and rents due and
accrued $
Market value of real es-
tate over book value...
Net deferred and unpaid
premiums
W\ other non-ledgttr as-
sets
419,416.16
86,000.00
678,626.69
Received for premiums. | 266,247.58
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certlfv. That the Annual
Statement of the State Mutual Life In-
surance Company, for the year ending
December 31st, 1910. of which the above
is an abstract, has been received and
filed In this Department and duly ap-
proved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
20.000.00
Gross assets $36,765,983.00
Deduct Asaeta Not Adstltted.
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value. $ 381,412.67
All other assets not ad-
mitted 25.517.64
Total assets not ad-
SOME DINER OUT.
De Kalb County. Mo.. Herald: This
scribe and Charles Uphoflf were repair-
ing the lines and resetting posts that
had rotted off for the De Kalb County
Mutual between Clarksdale and their
home, and also between their home and
Stewartsvllle. While working on the
lines mentioned in the foregoing item,
we were invited to eat dinner with Er-
nest Marks and family and accepted.
They have built a fine home on a lot
of over two acres on what is known
as the College farm, Just went of
Stewartsvllle. Mr. Marks and family
are certainly occupying a beautiful
home. We enjoyed the visit very much.
The day before this, when we were
repairing the line running south from
the German church, we were invited in
by Uncle William Ilamann to dine with
him, and we likewise aocepted, of
course. In both of these places the
women are fine culinary artists. If
the writer could dine on at places like
this all the time there is no telling
how fat he would get. It is certainly
fine to be working along the lines this
way and be Invited to dine with yo^r
friends.
FOR RKNT OR
Lakeside; half
$12 a month,
avenue.
SALE— COTT.\GE AT
block from car line.
Inquire 215 Mesaba
FOR RP:NT — NEW FOUR-ROOM
house; all modern conveniences. 421
North Fifty-first avenue west.
FOR RENT— NINE ROOMS WITH
bath, furnace, fireplace and laundry.
109 East Tliird str-iot, $50. E. D. Field
company, Exchange building.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE
on Nineteenth avenue east with fur-
nace, bath, etc., one block from cars.
$32.50. E. D Field company, 203 Ex-
change building.
HEPWORTH-KIRBY AGENCY
Insurance In All Its Branches
Sellwood Building.
Duiuth, Minnesota.
J'OR RENT— TWO
flats with bath, etc.,
D. Field company,
building.
THREE-ROOM
$15 and $8. E.
203 Kxchange
tOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
rear 7 West Fourth street. Inquire
at Louis Oreck, 416 West Superior
street, curio store.
FOR RENT— NINE OR TEN-ROOM
house, 1007 East Second street; all
conveniences; $40. Apply N. J. Up-
ham company. 18 Third avenue west.
FOR RENT— EIO <T-ROOM HOUSE.
No. 1 West Flftl street: water, sew-
er, bath, gas and electric lights, hot
air furnace for rent May 1. $30 per
month. R. P. Dowse, 106 Providence
building.
FOR KENT— COZY SIX- ROOM COT-
tage; modern except heat; best loca-
tion; fine lawn. 213 Twelfth avenue
east^ ^
FOR RENT— 506 FIFTH AVENUE
east, six-room house and bath. gas.
free water. $20 per montli. Stryker.
Manley & Buck. Torrey.
^OR RENT CHEAP— SEVEN-ROOM
hou.se, on Seventh street. West end;
city water and gas. Call new 'phone,
Lincoln 474.
rOR RK.NT— 1803 SOUTH STREET,
five-room house, water and sewer;
free water, $15 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck. Torrey.
rOR RENT — A MODERN SEVEN-
room house on E^st Second street,
near Nineteenth avenue east; two
bath rooms; hardwood finish; hot
water heat; $42.50 per month. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey build-
ing^ ,
f^OR RENT — SEVEN- ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son, 515 Torrey building, both 'phones.
FOR RENT — 1309 BAST SECOND
Street, nine rooms, modern; $45 per
month. See M. Henrlcksen, at Hen-
rickaen Jewelry company.
BrltlNh .\merlca ^MHurancc Company.
Principal office: 18 and :J0 Front street east, Tor-
onto, Domiidon of Canada. (Commenced business In
the United .States 18:4.) W. B. Mellde. eeneral
manager. Attorney to accept <»«rvlc« In &UniieaOt»:
Commissioner of Insurance.
DEPOSIT C.VP1T.VL. $210,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuails $ 93T.082.73
Itent« arui Interest 57,9o0.07
Gross profit on sale, maturity or ad-
justment of ledser assets 214.90
Ftum all other sources 250.51
Total Income
985,539.11
Led«er aaseta Dec. 31 of previous year. . I 1.530.947.59
Sum I 2,586,48ti.70
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses $
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes
Taxes, fees, rents and oUier real estate
eipenses .».
Returned to home office
All oUier disbursements
Gross loss on Kale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
168.876. 5T
214,!>8-.2.J0
100,342.18
37,050.53
71.488.00
53,47(J.:3
2,236.00
Total disbursements
948,652.33
Balance I 1.637,334.37
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. St. 1910.
Book Talue of bomU and stnclw f 1,339.648.20
Cash in office, trust companies and
banlB 157,881.38
.\geiits' balan'-es. unpaid premiums and
bills receiTable, taken for premiums... 140.304.59
The Continental Insarance Company.
Prluclpul office; 4tt Cedar street. New York. N. Y.
(Organl^d In 1853.) Henry Kvans. president; C. R.
Tuttle, secretary. Attorney to accept serflc« In Min-
nesota: Comiidssioner of Insurance.
CASH C.VPIT.U.. $L'.O0').0OO.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premluma other tbuu perpetuaLs | 7.308.442.92
HenU and Interest 989,747.77
Gross profit oti sale, maturity or ad-
justment of ledger asset* 847,085.00
l-'rom all other sourcett 7,953.42
Total Inooma $
9.153,829.11
[.edicer assets Dec. 81 of prevloui year.l 23,179,680.63
Sum
$ 32.333,300.76
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for los.ses $ 3,079,739.13
Kxpenses of adjustment of Insees 93.618..57
Commissions and bmkerage 1.501,790.95
Salaries aiul feea of ofi'icers, agents
and employes 638,222.00
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses 318.097.97
Dlvldeiidd and Interest 1.73O,UOJ.O0
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger a.ssets 579..^54.00
AU oUier disbursements 311.368.28
Niagara Fire TnNnranire Companr.
Principal office; 2S Liberty street. New York. N
Y. (Orgaidzed In 1850.) Harold Herrick, president;
(ieorge W. Dewey, secretary. Atlumey to accept
aeivlce in Ulnncsula: Commla«lonet of Insurance.
CASH C.VPITAL. $1,000,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
l*remlums other than perpetuals $ 3,151.210.91
ItenU and Interest 243.783.15
From all otlier sources 1.234.46
ToUl Income $ 3,398,228.52
I.edger asseU Dec. 31 of previous tear.f 5,817.222.20
ToUI dlsbutsementa $ 8,301,393.90
Balance
.$ 24,032,115.86
FOR RENT — 927 EAST THIRD
street, five-room cottage; bath, elec-
tric lights; possession may 1; $22.50.
H J. MulUn, 403 Lonsdale building.
^OR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage. 3439 Minnesota ave-
nue. Park Point. Inquire 102 West
First street. Bloom & Co.
OR RENT— SIX-ROOM HOUSE AT
Lakeside. 6427 Oneida street; water,
bath, furnace heat electric lights.
?25 oer month. R. P. Dowse & Co..
06 Providence building.
S'OR RENT — 216 EAST THIRD StT
Modern eight-room brick house. Hot
wate.- anat. A. H. Burg & Co.. JOO
Alworif building.
CLAIRVOYANTS.
PROF. GIRARD, THE ONLY RELI-
able clairvoyant In Duiuth. 20 West
Superior street. Upstairs.
ilADAM ANNA, CARD READING AND
business advice. 329 West Superior
street. Room 12. Melrose 3267.
5lAD.\M STERLING. PALMIST. CARD
reader. 129 East First street, oppo-
site Armory.
Total ledger assets (as per balance).. $ 1,637.834.37
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued $ 19.536.23
All other uon-ieiiger assets.
1.15
Gross assets $ 1.657,371.73
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances t 2,447.81
dger assets over market
58.920.86
8.743.35
Total assets not admitted I
Book value of ledger assets over market
value
SperUl deposit, less 127.330.43 UabUlty
thereon
70,112.22
Total admlUed asusets $ 1,587,259.53
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
Unpaid liases and claims $ 104.120.79
rnearned premiums 787.846.94
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
Interest due 12.0.39.35
Commissions and brokerage 3.104.07
Deposit eiipiUl 210.000.00
ToUl liabilities. Including deposit cap-
ital $ 1.117.111.15
.Net surplus t 470,148.38
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written during the year $150,000,684.00
Premiums received thereon 1,406.269.93
Net amount In force at end of the year. $154,447,168.00
• — Including' inislness other than ■'Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including relnsuninte received and deducting re-
insurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
$1,953,973.00
27.283,19
16,621.93
2,022,191.00
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book value of real estate $ 1,200,000.00
2.700.00
IS.390,580.00
3,389,123.49
1.049,710.37
Mortgage loans
Book value of bonds and slocks
Cash in office, trust coiupanies and
banks
Agents' tjalanoes, unpaid premiumti and
bills recelvattle, taken for premiums.
Total ledger assets (as per balance).! 24.032,115.86
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued..! 184,426.42
AU other nou-iedger assets.
3.429.45
Gross assets % 24.219,971.73
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances $ 4,196.54
.Special deposit, less $3,599.99 lUbUlty
titereon 49,400.01
AU other assets not admitted 17.737.18
Sjm $ 9.215.450.72
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Nt't amount paid for losses f 1,477,189.39
llxpenses of adjustment of losses 36,985.19
Coimulsslons and brokerage 392.961.30
.-salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes 308.357.76
Taxes, feea, rents and other teal estate
e.TpeDsea 129,643.43
Dividends and Interest 475,000.00
AU other disbursements 136.S14.41
Total disbursements $ 3.176.631.44
The Pennsylvania Fire InMnranee Com.
pany.
Principal cfHce: 510 Walnut street, Plilladelplfla,
Pa. (Organized In 1823.) R. Dais Benson, presi-
dent; W. Gardner Crowell, secretary. Attorney to ac-
<.-e|)t service lu Mhinesota: Commissioner of lusur-
aitcs,
CASH CAPITAL, $750,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Pt^cmiums other titan perpetuab $ 3,447,585.92
Premiums on perpetual risks 27,717.31
llenU and Interest 292,428.34
Gross profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets S,I14.S0
From all other sources 403.00
Total Income $ 3,776,249.77
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year.$ 7,344,287.55
Sum $ 11,120,537.32
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910,
Xet amount paid fur losses $ 1,955,864.55
l-ipenscs of adjustment of losses 15,230.60
ComiuU-sioiis and brokerage 829.946.32
■■sahiries and fees of officers, agents and
employes 209,321.93
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estat«
expenses 124.461. J7
Dividends and Interest 206,250.00
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of Ifdger Bitsets 303.80
.\11 other dlsbursemeiiU 153,814.08
Royal InMHranee Company, Limited.
PrUidpal office In the United Statis: 84 William
street, New Y'ork, N. Y. (Cummen«d business In
the United Stales 1831.) Kdivard Filch Beddall.
general attorney In the United States. Attorney to
accept service in Minnesota: Coumilssloner of In-
surance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL, $450,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals II 7,047,497-40
Premiums on perpetual risks 1.66
Rents and Interest 010,860.82
llocelved from lioms office 236,115. i)3
ToUl Incoms |
8.494,475.81
J,edger assets Dec. 31 of pre\-loaB yearl 11.300,507.14
Sum
Total dUbuisements.
.$ S.497,192.47
Balance $ 6,038,799.28
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1010.
.\(ortgage loans 717.000.00
Book value of bonds and stocks 4,493,281. 86
Cash in office, trust' compaides and
banks 322,993.09
.Vgents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bUls rei'elrable, talieu for premiums... 305.324.33
Total ledger a.ssets (as per balance)..! ti,038, 799.28
NON. LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued $ 20,296.24
195.169.14
Market value of real esute, bonds and
stocks over book value
Total aasets not admitted.
71,3.33.73
$ 24,148.638.00
31. 1910
$
Total admitted assets
LIABILITIES DEC
T'npald losses and claims $ 526.052.26
I'i»eamed premiums 7,917,531.92
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
interest duo 170.068.40
Ct)mmi-»ions and brokerage 102.788.87
llelnsiirance premiums 31,188.93
ConlUigent reserve : 2.">0.0«0.00
.VU other liabilities 136.786.42
CaplUl stock paid up 2.000.000.00
Total UaUUtles. Including capUal. .! 11.134,436.82
Risks written
Premiumii received
Losses Incurred . .
Ixisses paid
.Vmomit at risk....
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of
the British America Assurance Company, for the
jear ending December 31st, 1910, of which the above
is an abstract, has been received and filed In IhU
Department and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner of losuraac*.
Net surplus ...., ! 13.014.201.10
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written during the year $1,059.403.944. 00
Premlunta received tliereon 8,869,841.34
Net amount In force at end of Uie
year 1.430.563,682.00
• — Including business other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
Insurance placed. )
Fire risks Tornado Aggregate
Risks writ-
ten !23.482.00B.0O !9,719. 449.00 !33. 201,457.00
Premiums
received . 260,953.33 40,000.13 301,621.73
Losses
liKurred 181.806.47 161,806.47
Losses paid 111.162.12 10.374.14 154,336.26
.\ mount at
risk 46,456,281.00 19.841,602.00 60,297,883.00
Gross asseU ! 6.234,264.66
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances ! 3,227.22
27.719.16
Special deposit, less $19,975.84 lUbUlty
thereon
Total assets not admitted.
32,?46.38
Total admitted assets ! 0,221,318.38
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims ! 331.179.62
I'nearneti premiums 2,777,577.98
.Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
Interest due 51.915.77
Commi-ssions and brokerage 12.50*). OO
Koiasurance premiums 34.7.16.08
Capital stock paid up l.OOO.eoO.OO
Balance ! 7,623,344.85
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book value of real estate $
Morigage loans
189,377.07
197,000.00
173.106.98
292,413.18
Collateral loans
Book value of bonds and stoclcs
Cash In office, trust companies and
banks 172,169.29
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bill* receivable. Uken for premiums... 599.278.63
Total ledger assets (as per balance)..! 7,623,345.13
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued ! 83,687.63
Gross assets ! 7,707,032.80
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances ! 25,129.01
,'alue of ledser assets over market
164,310.23
Bonk value of ledger assets over market
value
SpecUl deposit, less $16,879.78 UaUUty
tbereou v
36,620.22
Total assets not admitted
226,259.46
Total admitted assets $ 7,480,773.34
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1010.
Unpaid losses and claims $
DISBURSEMENTS IN I
.Vet amnunt palil for losses
t^mmUsii'ns and brokerage
.Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes
Taxes, foes, rents and oU>er real es
tate expenses
Uetumed to home office ,
.VU oUior disbursements
<iross loss on »ale, maturity or adjust
meut of ledger assets
t 19,694,982.93
!IIO.
I
3,.564. 515.90
1,338,009.27
792,131.84
272.580.91
1,465.156.79
764.;i33.65
87.50
Total disbursements % 8,196.835.86
Balance | 11.408,147.09
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1010.
Book value of real estate % 4,174.899.61
Mortgaffe loans 403.100.00
Book value, of bonds and stocks 5,225,335.43
Cash in office, trust companies and
banks 380,864.20
Agents' balances, unitald premiums and
blUs receivable, taken for premiums. 1,31.3,047.89
Total ledger assets (as per balance).! 11.498,147.09
NON-LEDGER ASSETll.
Interest and rents due and accrued t 85.003.41
All other non-ledger assets 54,519.84
Royal Indemnity Company.
Principal office: 84 William str.-et. New Vortc. W.
Y. (Organized In 1910.) Kdw.ird F. Beddall. pr«l-
dcnt; J. Ilaruld Pcarch, secrctar>-. Attorney to ac-
cept service In Minnesota: Coiamisslouer of Insur-
aiioe.
tASn CAPITAL, $500,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Received from stockboldea $1,043,500.50
Total Income .,
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Paid for Interest accrued on securiUes. . . .
.01.015.504.SO
.668 72
Total disbursements !
7,«6«.7»
Balance !1,037,837.78
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1010.
Book value of stocks and bonds ! 980,850.00
Casli In office, trust companies and
banks 58.987 78
Total ledger assets (as per iMlance) !1, 037, 837. 78
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued on
bonds $ 7.688.72
Gross assets $1,045,306.50
LIABILITIES.
Salaries, expenses for organization $ 10.075.91
Capital stock paid up 500,000.00
Total Uabtlltles, Including capital $ 518.075.9i
Surplus over all lUbllltles ! 527, 430.50
No business done In Mlmiesota in 1910.
Gross assets ! 11,637.669.84
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' baUncee ! 28.354.10
Book value of ledger assets over mar-
ket value 74,760.68
Total assets not admitted $
103,114.78
Slate of Minnesota. Department of Instirance;
I Hereby CerUfy. That the Annual sutoment of
the Royal Indemidty Insurance Company, for the
year ending Decem»>er 31st. 1910, of which i!ie above
is an abstract, has beei\ received and fUed in UU*
Department and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
Total admitted asseU $ 11.534,335.00
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims ! 734.948.76
Unearned premiums 7,380,634.29
Kecialmable on iierpelual policies 95,102.87
Reserve and liabilities In special de-
pariment 90,473,00
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
Interest due 180,754. IT
Comndsslons and brokerage 18.988.95
AU other liabilities 181.611.88
Deposit capital 450.000.00
Total UabiUtles. Including capital $ 4,197,909.45
State of Minnesota. Department of Insurance.
I Hereby Certify, Tliat the Annual Statement of
the Continental Insurance Company, for tiie year
ending December 31st, 1910, of which the above Is an
aljfitract, has been received and filed In this Depart-
ment and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Inwtnincia
Net surplus $ 2,023,408.83
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written during Uie year $398..>90.144.00
Prvmiums received thereon -. 4.348.429.48
Net amount In force at end of the year.. 528,909,680.00
•—Including business other than' "34arlnc and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting n-
Insurance placed.)
Fire risks. Tornado. Aggregate.
RUks written.... !3,321,016.00 $190,610.00 $3,312,526.00
Premiums
received 55. 304.10 907.6! 53.211.72
I>«ses Incurred.. 37,100.70 - 25.40 37,126.10
I,0S9e8 pal.l 37.8M.21 25.40 37.876.61
vmoant at risk.. 3,942,860.00 218.475.00 4.101,333.00
State of Minnesota, Departmeot of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of the
Niagara Fire Insurance Company, for the year eiid-
ii;g December 31st. 1910. of whloK the ab"jve is an
atistract. has be«i received and Bled lu this De-
panmeut and dulj approved by me. „„„..„
J. A. O. PREUS.
Oomml^tlouer of lasursmo.
Unearned premiums
itecUlmable on perpetual poUcles
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
interest duo
Capital stock paid up
383,922.63
3,211,473.50
913,496.58
30,000.00
750.000.00
Total UabiUtles, Including capital $ 3,290,802.71
Net surplus ! 2,189.080.63
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks vvriUen during tbe year $410,923,328.00
Premiums received thereon 4,413,288.90
.Vet amount In force at end of the year. 584.382.088.00
*— lucludUig business other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
insur.ince placed.)
Fire RUks. Timado. Aggregate.
$4,842,731.00 $303,451.00 $5,146,182.00
RLsks written. . .
Premiums
received
Losses Incurred.
Losses paid
Amount at risk.
76.706.00
47.940.00
48.987.00
2,018.00
150.00
150.00
78,724.00
48,090.00
49,i:<7.00
7,995,046.00
SUte of Mlimesnta. Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of
the Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Company, for lite
year ending Decemlier 31st. 1910, of which the aJiove
Is an abstract, has been received and filed In this
l>epsrtmeut aitd dulj approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS.
OommlssloBer of InsuianM.
Total UabiUtles, including deposi:
capital $
9,132,516.02
Net .surplus $ 2,402.039.04
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
»Flre risks written during the year. $1,011,3.50,745.00
Premiums received thereon 10,753.070.03
Marine and lidand risks written dur'
Ing the year 39,724.374.00
Premiums received thereon 223.664.72
Net amount in force at end of th»
year $1,386,998,744.00
• — Including business other tluin "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1010.
(Including reinsurance lecelved aid deducting re-
Insurance placed.)
Fire Risks. Tornado. Aggregate.
RLsks
written ..$10,323,979.00 !1. 007, 415 00 !1 1,331.394.00
Premiums
received . 154,650.00 6,247 34 100,897.43
I /uses
incurred . 135.417.13 123.43 133.540.56
lyosses paid. 179.059.08 133.43 179,182.52
.\wount at
risk 21.281,145.00
Slate of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, Tliat ihe Annual Slatement of
the Royal Insurance Company, for the year ending
l>ecember 31st, 1910, of whicli the above is an ab-
stract, has been received and filed In this Depart-
m4nt and dull aBprovcd by me.
J. A O. PREL-H,
OwImOiiii I of Insurai
IF yoa have some-
thing yoa think
somebody ^ wants
-tell them about it in
The
Herald
Thafs where every-
body eke advertises
when Quick Results
are an objed
1
asyu^a t—M~r i ■
:. a:
H^
I— "-»•
1
I
■i9tm*
i**^
ill
/
• — —
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■ ■■■ I II ■ ■ mi '■ ■
Bs«;
30
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15. 1911.
PRINT A HE^RALrD WANT AD^AND THC FINDE^IL
WILrLr PROBABLrY be: OLrAD TO RKTVRN IT TO YOV
FOR SALE MISCELLAXEOIS.
(Continued.)
#*'*-********J¥«#***********|
WONDERFUL OFFER IN A FINE
VICTOR TALKING MACHINE.
One of the verv latest Improved
Victor raahogany-cased machines,
with large maliogany horn. A
won<leri'ul reproducer, clear, per-
fect and llfeltke. This machine
and -<lx ten-inch double-faced rec-
ords, your own selection, for only
$64.50. 15 cash and |5 a month
buys this outflt.
FRENCH & BASSETT.
it
*
*
*
*
*
«^^\i;y*^*';^i?^.-i^^^¥^«'*^'5«^^'^^^^
MERCHANTS,
WAKE UP AND TAKE
NOTICE!
Our lease expires May 1. Will sell
pairs or whole stock of men's shoes
at a large di.«coiint from our whole-
sale prices. Stock will now invoice
about $2,000.
Remember the early bird gets the
worm. This is your opportunity to buy
a bargain.
We have discontinued making hand-
made men's and boys' work shoes.
Have already sold our plant and must
Bell our stock before moving time.
Time will be given to well-rated
Fiarties. All of our display tables are
or sale.
Stock on sale at retail at 32S West
Buperior strett, St. Louis Hotel block.
P. LARSON. MANUF-\CTURER.
328 WEST SUPERIOR ST.
DULUTH. MINN.
**«-',i,V-!t*****^*^lf **Vi?^^S^ jlf^^^T.--*
if
a-
*
MUST
MUST
MUST
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE.
BE SOLD AT
BE SOLD AT
BE SOLD AT
ONCE.
ONCE.
ONCE.
Two showcases, two counters,
shelving, one stove, one pair
scales, one meat rack, one broom-
ho!der, one candy floor case, one
cofTee mill, one paper holder. Will
sell if taken in all for |35. Act
quick. Call at
113 FIRST AVENUE WEST.
a-
4^v.-^i-'i■4i■J4-H-'V'l-'.t-''t.u-v•'i-u-^i-'i■lWtJSi•u•^,-^t-^i4t>i
***^******^**«*****-X*«;'^?StS«
VICTOR MACHINE AND
RECORDS. 136.10,
*
it Here is a splendid Victor outtlt
# for little money. Fine oak-cased if
^ machine with large black horn, ■^
# with six ten-inch single-faced ^
it records. Very latest improved ^
^ macliine; a wonderful entertainer. -^
# |3 cash and |1 a week buys it
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE— OFFICE FURNITURE,
also household furniture, dining ta-
ble, chairs and china closet. Call 1101
Alworth building. Phone Melrose.
Grand 201.
FOR SALE— SQUARE PIANO. WAL-
nut bedroom set and other house-
hold articles; prices reasonable if
taken at once. 109 East Third street.
FOR SALE— WAGON AND HEAVY
double harness: cheap. 6S4 Grand.
FOR SALE— ORIENTAL RUG— TUII-
kish Muskabad, 10 ft. by 15 ft., in
good condition. Apply 1029 East
Fifth street.
— TWO drop-hf:ai)
and 123; four drop-head
$10, $12. $15 and $25;
$5 up, all in fine shape.
FOR SALE
Whites, $18
Singers at
others from ... _^, — —
White Sewing Machine store, Lake
avenue and Superior street.
FOR SALi:— COAL HEATER. PARTY
leaving town. 130^ West Fourtli
street.
FOR SALE— $15 GO-CART. FIRST-
class condition, only $5. 706 East
Fifth street. Phone Grand 1528-\.
FOR SALE — GAS ENGINE, TWO AND
one-half horse-power, $30: tiiree
horse-power, $48: five horse-power,
$15: eight horse-power. $95; twenty-
foot boat complete, $160. Duluth
Gas Engine Works.
FOR SALE — SEED POTATOES, V.\-
rieties. Carman and Rose; grown in
Carlton county. only twenty-two
miles from Duluth: yield 340 bushels
per acre; this seed has been carefully
selected for eight years; strictly
first-class, hand-sorted seed, free
from scab, only $1 per bushel; sacks
frte; satisfaction guaranteed. F. B.
McLeran, Wrenshall, Minn.
FOR SALE — A NEW WESTERN SAD-
dle. Inquire 732 East Fourth street.
FOR SALE — BLACK ORPINGTON
eggs, for hatching. Fine large stock,
$1 per 15. Mrs. Parks, 614 West
Fifth street.
FOR SALE— UPRIGHT PIANO IN
good condition: $75. 618V& East
Second street.
FOR SALE— OFFICE ROLLTOP DESK
and swivel chair. Alley, rear 220
West Third street. Monday and
Tuesday, 1 to 4, afternoon.
FOR SALE— GOOD QUALITY FURNI-
lure, cheap, at one-story building in
alley at 220 West Third street; Mon-
day" and Tuesday, 1 to 4 o'clock aft-
ernoon. Couches. rockers, chairs,
sofa, lady's writing desk, tables,
pictures, walnut beds, mattresses,
springs.
FOR SALE — CHEAP — TWO-YEAR
old fox hound; also pretty marked
fox terrier, or will exchange for
Beatte hound. L. B., 213 West Ninth
street.
FOR SALE— PIANO: WILL SELL
cheap: party leaving city. 832 East
Second street.
FOR SALE— WHITE W Y A N D OT T
eggrs for hatching. $1.50 for fifteen
eggs; $8 per 100 eggs. Rose comb
White Leghorns, $1 per fifteen eggs;
$5 per 100. E. D. Krebs, 3S05 West
Sixth street.
FOR SALE — OAK DINING SET, TEN-
'foot extension table and sl.x chairs,
corner cabinet and small sideboard
all In first-class condition. Second-
hand dealers need not apply. Ad-
dress B. F. Myers, 1127 London road.
FOR S.VLE— $100 PIANO AND FURNI^
ture; a snap If taken at once. Call
19 Lake avenue north or Grand 619-A
FRENCH & BASSETT.
*
il^^:i':^iirititi<iSiti^ii^itii^ititit^^irtii'k'^^
^ it
« FOR SALE. i^
« «
it Furniture in a four-room flat, for it
■^ bedroom, dining room, kitchen ^
^ and parlor; also a fine oak Rhine- -^
* hart piano to be sacrificed; furnl- ff
^ ture in excellent condition. Apply i$
^ Flat No. 1, 12 First avenue west, it
it fi
ie'ii^:}it-:f^ititi(^itii'it^:i^''^it^i^}^i^:t-}i4
FOR SALE— LIVING MUSIC BOX DAY
or night .singers, rollers and chop
note canaries: come and hear my
new stock of canaries sing; wild or
tame animals of any kind can be had
by order at 1013-1015 West First
street, Duluth Bird store.
FOR SALE— INCUBATORS, BROOD
ers and all poultry supplies; baby
chicks 15 cents and up; any breed
hatched to order; flower and garden
seeds In bulk; northern grown;
shrubs, roots, bulbs and trees. W.
W. Seeklns. rlorist, 302 East Superior
street.
FOR SALE — LARGE STEWART
range. No. 8. 309 West Fourth street.
FOR SALE — STEWART COAL HEAT-
er, No. 9 Peninsular range, Estate gas
range, dining table, refrigerator,
steel couch, etc. Will sell entire
furniture of five-room flat in a lot;
price reasonable. Owner leaving
city. Call any time. 624 First ave-
nue east.
FOR SALE — THIRTY-FOOT CABIN,
gasolene launch; 15 horse power
Campbell motor. L 300, Herald.
FOR SALE— SEVEN-DRAWER SING-
er sewing machine, cheap; practically
new. 119 West Second street.
FOR SALE — OR TRADE, SECOND
band automobile for two or five pas-
senger; slightly damaged. Call or
give us offer at 203 Providence build-
Ing.
FOR SALE— WANTED A FEW MORE
butler customers. Owing to a recent
Increase In our dairy herd we can
accommodate a limited number of
people with butter. Jean Duluth
farm. Telephone evenings.
FOR SALE— CHEAP: TWO COUNTERS
and bookkeeper's desk. Apply Mu-
tual Electric company.
FOR SALE— WAGON SHOP. MACHIN-
ery stock. W. M. Smith, 26 East
First street.
FOR SALE CHEAP —
dray. Call 1924 West
or Lincoln 324.
TWO-HORSE
.Second street.
HORSES, VEHICLES, ETC.
HORSES! HORSES! HORSES!
MIDWAY HORSE MARKET.
I "THE HORSE AND MULE HEAD-
. quarters of the Northwest;" 500 to SOO
I head of horses and mules constantly
on hand; part time given If desired.
Private sales daily. If you need draft
horses, general purpose horses, de-
livery horses, mules or railroading
or other purpo.'es, drivers or saddlers,
we can fill your order. Every horso
sold guaranteed to be as represented.
BARRETT & ZIMMERMAN,
Midway Horse Market, St. Paul. Minn.
FOR SALE— TWENTY HEAD DRAFT
and driving horses. 1111 West Furst
street. Western Sales Stable com-
pany.
FOR sale:— ONE GOOD LIGHT DE-
liveiy horse. Apply Olson, half mile
north of Catholic cemetery.
FOR SALE— NICE DRIVING HORSE.
Call evenings. 219 North Twenty-
ninth avenue west.
FOR SALE— 1 SADDLE PONY, BROWN
— 1,000 lbs., 1 saddle pony, roan, 800
I lbs. Both cheap if taken at once.
I Old phone, Melrose. 1S36.
FOR SALE— BARBER OUTFIT, FOUR-
chulr combination, four barber
chairs, Columbia; a snap. Sellwood
building barber shop. Apply to H.
Brown.
FOR SALE — DRESSMAKING FORMS,
wax figures and busts; also shirt-
waist forms and skirt hangers; two
glass cases for hats, glass parti-
tions that can be used for any pur-
poses; must dispose of them; will
sell cheap. Call 4 East Superior
street, upstairs over candy store.
FOR SALE — RAISE CHICKENS — IT'S
easy with the Jewel Incubator — any
one can get good results. We have
'em in all sizes. See our latest
hatch. Kelley Hardware Co.
FOR SALE— EGGS FOR HATCHING
from Single Comb Rhode Island Reds
that are bred for utility and exhibi-
tion, $3 and $1.50 per fifteen; $7 per
hundred. O. H. Tarun, 422 Nineteen
and Half avenue west, Duluth.
FOR SALE — NEW AND SECOND-
hand engines, boilers, portable saw-
mills, planers, matchers, resaws, pul-
leys, shai'ting, hangers and boxes.
'Phones 91.
DULUTH MACHINERY CO.
FOR SALE— AT A LOW PRICE. SEC-
ond hand full dress suit and white
vest in good condition, size 42, at
Karl J. Hagberg's tailor shop, 9
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR SALE— SAFES. OFFICE FURNl-
ture, architects' anrt engineers' sup-
plies, typewriters and supplies. J. S.
Kay <k Co., 406 W. Sup. St. 'Phones.
FOR SALE— ONE LARGE TEAM, HAR-
ness and light wagon; will sell separ-
ate. Call tonight or Sunday morn-
ing. 5602 Albion street. West Du-
luth. 'Phone Calumet 190-L.
FOR SALE— ONE SET OF LIGHT
double harness, one single rubber-
tired buggy, both in good condition,
cheap .f taken at cnce. Apply 18
Thirty-first avenue west.
HORSES ACCLIMATED HORSES.
Young heavy horses; several teams
for sale. Red Cliff Lumber company,
barn, Thirty-ninth avenue west.
FOR SALE — GOOD PAYING BUSINESS
and stock, horse, wagon and harness.
Call or write 432 North Fifty-ninth
avenue west.
FOR SALE— LARGE BLACK MARE, 6
years old, weighs about 1,500 lbs.; or
will trade for light team. Call at
1206 West First street.
For Sale — Forty head of draft and gen-
cral purpose horses just out of woods
to be sold cheap. 209 W. 1st St.
FOR SALE— TWENTY-FIVE HEAD OP
horses at 811 Lake avenue north.
FOR SALE— 30 HORSES AT ZENITH
Sale & Boarding Stable, 524 W. Ist St.
FOR SALE — HORSES. 826 EAST
Third street. H. Inch.
FOR SALE^-HORSES AT L. HAMMEL
company.
WANTED TO RENT.
WANTED TO RENT— A YOUNG COU-
ple with a 3-year-old child want to
rent a small house or flat with con-
veniences by May 1. Address Her-
ald, M 20.
WANTED TO RENT— ROOM AND
and board In private family by
young lady employed during the day.
Central. Address M 115. Herald.
WANTED TO RENT— BY MAY 1.
three or four-room house, for small
family; state price and location. S
365, Herald.
WANTED TO RENT— SMALL FARM,
suitable for truck gardening. R. D.
Bigelow, Eveleth, Minn.
FOR RENT— ROOMS.
(Continued.)
FOR RENT — TWO UNFURNISHED
rooms for light housekeeping; also
single furnished room; all conven-
iences. 1315 East Sixth street.
FOR RENT — FOUR NICE ROOMS AT
$7 per month. 1926 West Fifth St.
FOR RENT— TWO FURNISHED ROOMS
for light housekeeping on First
street. Inquire 120 Second avenue
west.
FOR RENT— .-ITORE WITH THREE
rooms in the rear, 1123 West Michi-
gan street; also eight rooms in base-
ment of the same building; all con-
veniences. 507 West Superior street.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS—
A home to right parties; full use of
parlors and library; rooms that will
please. 124 Tenth avenue east.
RENT— STORES, OFFICES, ETC.
itit^-;iitiiiiit7e?i'Xiiiti^itiiitit-!iitiii6^ti6itit
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it it
t- FOR RENT, *
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it it
it "^
it AT REASONABLE TERMS, *
it it
*. MODERN STORE, -^t
it it
if. 25 BY 90 FEET, it
it it
if- AT 17 EAST SUPERIOR STREET. *•
* it
it it
-;.4 ALSO, 13 LARGE LIGHT ROOMS H
it it
-» ON SECOND FLOOR OF it
4 it
it 17 AND 19 EAST SUPERIOR ST., *
it i^
it IN PART OR WHOLE. *
* *
it ■*
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it it
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it 320 CENTRAL AVENUE. 4
it it
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itii^tititititititiiii^'it^tititititititit^^it'^tit^
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it FOR RENT. it
it *
if. Two suites of rooms, suitable for >f
it offices or bachelor quarters. In- if.
it quire of it
f.i *
^. NORTHERN ELECTRICAL CO., *
^ 210 West First Street. *
i^i(^ti:'9titititi!-itititititit?tit?tii^i(^itititi(
itititititititititiiititit^itTtitititii rtiiititit^-
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« FOR RENT. *
* it
it New steam-heated stores, full it
it stone basements. Fourth avenue it
■^ west and First street; reasonable if-
it rent. *
it it
■» CHAS. P. CRAIG & CO. *
it ^
ititititititititititi^ii^itif'ii^ititititiirftitit
FOR RENT— FOUR- ROOM OFFICE
suite in Wlnthrop block. Thoroughly
modern. Suitable for doctor or den-
tist. Charles P. Craig & Co., 501-
505 Sellwood building.
FOR RENT— OFFICES AND DESK
room large, light, with vault. 208
Lonsdale building.
FOR RFJNT- STORE AT 907 WEST
Michigan street: $30 month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— LOFT OVER THE GLOBE
store, excellent location for milii-
nery. dressmaking, hair dressing or
tailor shop, or any otiier business.
Apply the Globe company, 105-107
West Superior street.
FOR RENT— STORE. 1829 WEST SU-
pei lor street; well adopted for
plumbing establishment. Stryker,
Manley & Buck. Torrey.
FOR RENT— FLAT IRON BUILDING.
1302 West Superior street, two store
rooms: balance suitable for small
hotel. J. D. Howard & Co.. 216 West
.Superior street.
FOR RENT— 22 EAST SUPERIOR
street; store>; heat and water fur-
nished. Will remodel to suit tenant
and give long lease.
FOR RENT— $25 PER MONTH FOR 402
East Superior street: possession im-
mediately or May 1. H. J. Mullin, 403
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — MODERN STORE. FINE
front. 25x60 feet, basement and s'ec-
ond floor, Third avenue east and Su-
perior street. See H. J. Mullin, 403
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— STORE BUILDING AND
fixtures, nice five-room flat above,
electric lights, $15, or will rent flat
separate. Inquire 421 Providence
building.
FOR RENT — OFFICE SPACE: REA-
sonable. Inquire 108 East First
street.
PICTURE FRAMING.
GUST AVE HtNNECIUS. 211 E. SUP. ST.
Marti
MANUFACTURING LOCATION.
5,000 square feet floor space on Michi-
gan street and Sixteenth avenue
west, adjoining railroads, suitable
for any kind of light manufacturing.
Rent very reasonable. Will lease for
long or short term of years. Apply
1101 Alworth building.
FOR RENT— STORE ON WEST Su-
perior street, between Tliird and
Fourth avenues west. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey building.
FOR RENT — HALL; NINETEENTH
avenue west and First street. Inquire
214 Axa building.
FOR RENT — A FEW CHOICE OF-
fices in the Torrey building; best of
Janitor and elevator service. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR RENT — HALF OF STORE. 16
East Superior street: four-year lease
if desired- rent reasonable. Both
•phones, 7l7.
FOR RENT — STORE ROOM AT 242.1
West Superior street, $20; four-room
flat upstairs, with bath. $10.
FOR RENT— FULL STORE AND BASE"-
ment, suitable for grocery or meat
market, etc.; moderate rent. First
avenue west and Fourth street. Chas.
P. Craig & Co., 501-605 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— HALF OF OFFICE. OR
desk room. 401 Columbia building.
DYE WORKS.
ZENITH CITY DYE WORXS— LAR-
gest and most reliable. All work
done in Duluth. Work called for and
delivered. 'Phones: Old, 1154-R; new,
1888. 232 East Superior street
Duluth Dye Works — French dry clean-
ing; fancy dyeing. Old 'phone. Mel-
rose 4191; new. 1191-A. 330 E. Sup. St.
Northwestern Dyeing & Cleaning Co. —
Oldest reliable dyers and French dry
cleaners in Northwest. 23 Lake Ave
north. 'Phones: New. 1516; old, 1337
NATIONAL DYEING AND CLEANING
company, 319 E. Superior St. French
dry cleaners and fancy dyers. Both
'phones 2376. Branch, 16 Lake Ave N
East End Dyeing and Cleaning Co..
926 E. Superior St. Grand 1245-X.
Mel. 4628. All our work guaranteed.
LADIES' TAILORING.
DANFORTH.
131 West Superior street.
Plumes cleaned and dyed any color.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. Miss
FitzPatrick, 502-4 B. 4th St. Both
'phones.
ADDITIOIML WANTS
On Pages 28, 31 and 32
HELP WANTED— FEMALE.
(Continued.)
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. Mrs. J. S. Lane, 421
Fifth avenue west.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework ; good wages. Mrs.
J. G. Vivian, 2323 East Fourth street.
WANTED — WOMAN COOK AT THE
Frederick hotel.
WANTED— NEAT GIRL
with housework. 801
street.
TO ASSIST
East First
WANTED— EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR
general housework; family of two;
good wages; one who can go home
nights. Call 1418 Jefferson street.
WANTED— AT ONCE. COOK; MUST
be white. Jesse Burns, Aitkin, Minn.
Call 100, Bell 'phone.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework Mrs. C. W. Wilson, 124
Fourth avenue west.
SITUATION WANTED — BY MIDDLE-
aged woman, some light work; is a
good seamstress, or would take
charge of furnished rooms. Grand
1316-X.
WANTEIV— COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework; good wages. 2003
Woodland avenue, corner Hardy
street.
WANTED — FIST-CLASS WOMAN
cook for restaurant day work; good
salary: steady position. Address Box
102, Ironwood, Mich.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework, small family. 1504 East
Third street.
WANTED — PLAIN AND FANCY
dressmaking at 3137 Restormel St.
AGENTS WANTED.
AGENTS — STOP RIGHT HERE:
something new; $45 to $90 a week;
sells on sight: 100 per cent profit: no
charge for territory; new automatic
razor sharpener; absolutely guaran-
teed for life; one agent, without
experience, took twenty-seven orders
first day out (sworn statement);
twenty-six orders next day: profit
for two days, $79.50; 400,000 sold in
four months: phenomenal monev
maker; men everywhere are excited
over the mysterious accuracy and
perfection of tliis little machine;
write today for full details free; we
want 1,000 agents in exclusive
territory, at once. Address The Nev-
erfail company, 1037 Colton build-
ing, Toledo. Ohio.
AGENTS— LISTEN! OUR "SUBSTI-
tute for slot machines" sells like
wild fire. No capital required; ex-
clusive territory. Anderson Game
company, Anderson. Ind.
AGENTS — $177 MONTHLY DEMON-
strating safety razor free with soap.
Some doubllnflr this. Live men want-
ed Immediately. Write today,
Parker Chemical Co.. Chicago.
AGENTS WANTED — COUNTY REP-
resentatlves for Success Hand
Vacuum Cleaner; $15; we challengt^
all makes of hand and power ma-
chines to public contests, to be de-
cided by disinterested parties; big-
gest kind of profits; write for terms
and territory. Hutchison Manufac-
turing Co., Wilkinsburg, Pa.
AGENTS— NO EXPERIENCE NECES-
sary;"Blg money handling our goods;
auto owners and others all want
them; write quick. Booth Supply
company. Lake City, Minn.
AGENTS — WANTED, FIVE LIVE
demonstrators; detail work; good
pay. Central Mfg. Co., Iowa City,
Iowa.
AGENTS— HERE IT IS— MARVELOUS
new fire extinguisher, wonderful;
startling; amazing; action of me-
chanical and chemical forces puts fire
out like magic; creates great sensa-
tion: will soon be fixture in every
home, office, school, factory, farm-
house, automobile or motor boat.
Edw. McGeogh, Ohio, writes made
$160 last week. Boy of 14 sold six
in one afternoon. C. E. McNichols;
sold 42 in three and one-half days;
profit $70. A. L. Hale. Connecticut,
sold 16 between express office and
his home, profit $24. Extinguisher
guaranteed; u.sed by U. S. govern-
ment: any one can use it even a
child; acts instantly: get an appoint-
ment; make $4,000 this year; send
address on card for complete Infor-
mation. United Mfg. Co., 1573 Mill
street, Lelpslc, Ohio.
AGENTS — FREE SAMPLE. NO
Splash Waterstrainers are winners.
Dally profit $6 upward. Let us prove
It. Send 2 cents (mailing cost). Seed
Filter Co., New York.
AGENTS WANTED— THE "CANCHES-
ter" is the biggest money maker
ever known; one agent made $107.50
in four days; one $73.25 in five days;
others are making from $8 to $.10 a
day selling the improved 1911 pat-
ented Canchester Kerosene Incan-
descent lamp; burns air instead of
money; six times brighter than elec-
tricity, gas or acetylene at one-
tenth the cost; burns with or with-
out mantle: burners fit any lamp:
saves 75 per cent oil; no trimming
wicks; lighting methods revolution-
ized; showing means selling: terri-
tory going fast; write today; par-
ticulars free: handsome outflt fur-
nished: beware of imitations. Can-
chester Light Co.. 26 State street,
Chicago. Department 26 L.
AGENTS — WANTED: $5 to $25 per day
selling our automobile specialty: send
for free particulars today. Jacobs
Specialty Co., 113 Charlotte avenue,
Detroit. Mich.
AGENTS — WE CAN POSITIVELY
show you how to make $10 to $50
daily. Automobile nece.ssity. Sells
at sight; information free. Economy
Supply Co., 4934 W. Harrison street,
Chicago^
AGENTS — EITHER SEX. TO DISTRIB-
ute free packages Perfumed Soap
Powder: good pay; all or spare time;
no money needed. Blue Cross Co.,
2548 Lincoln avenue, Chicago. 111.
BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
k FOR THE WORKING MAN. it
it ' it
is. VICTOR, THE OUTFITTER, H-
"^ it
i,i. Formerly of Lead City, wishes to ^
it announce the opening of his new if
■^ store at "^
it it
it 17% EAST SUPERIOR STREET it
it it
it today. He will carry a full line it
^ of ladies' and men's shoes, also a ^
i(. fine line of men's furnishings. He it
it will be pleased to see and get ac- it
it qualnted with the working men of *
i:-. Duluth. *
it "^
* VICTOR, THE OUTFITTER, *
it n^k EAST SUPERIOR STREET, it
***-:^^«^*^*^MHi^iii^?T^^^5Mf«^f^f^-;^'^
HAIR DRESSING PARLORS.
G. Moisan Is the only French hair dres-
ser in Duluth. Expert in making
wigs, toupees and hair dye. Switchen
and puffs made from combings. Mail
orders prompUy- Alied. 212 W. lat 8t
HELP WANTED— MALE.
Continued.
WANTED — REGISTERED OR As-
sistant registered pharmacist. Lion
Drug Store, 2030 West Superior St.
WANTED YOUNG MAN OVER 22
to do some collecting and soliciting;
must be a hustler in every respect.
Apply In person after 5 p. m. at Y.
M. C. A., Room 305
WANTED — HARDWOOD FINISHER
for shop work. Anderson & Gow, 322
West Second street.
WANTED — AN ELDERLY MARRIED
couple to take care of a farm and
garden on a working interest; a
good home, and all the heavy work
done by owner. W. G. Hammond,
Twig, Minn.
WANTED — BOAT BUILDER. DU-
luth Gas Engine Works.
WANTED — I WILL START YOU
earning $4 daily spare time silvering
mirrors: no capital; free Instructive
booklet, giving plans of operation.
G. F. Redmond, Dept. 197, Boston,
Mass.
FOR SALE— REAL ESTATE.
FOR .SALE— LOTS 6 AND 7. BLOCK 77,
Fourth division, West Duluth, *500
for both; $200 cash. George K. Lay-
bourn, 14 Phoenix block.
FOR SALE— FINEST 100-FOOT COR-
ner in normal school district. Twen-
ty-fifth avenue east and Sixth street;
both street and avenue paved; a bar-
gain. Laybourn, 14 Phoenix block.
FOR SALE— FORTY ACRES ADJOIN-
ing platted additions at West Duluth,
at $150 per acre. Big profit In sub-
dividing and selling lots. Laybourn,
14 Phoenix block.
FOR SALE— $350 BUYS LOT 88, BLOCK
163, Duluth proper. Third division;
street car line will be built near it
this year; a "snap." Laybourn, 14
Phoenix block.
BUSINESS CHAJICES.
Business Chances — We h ly stocks of
merchandise, paying spot cash. No
matter where located or size of stock,
write Eastern Salvage <3o., merchan-
dise brokers, Duluth, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — C DNFECTION-
ery store doing good business, three
living rooms, furniture included;
must be sold at once; owner leaving
city. Call at 511 East I'ourth street.
itit^'ititit^-^ititititi(^ti:-^-ititit^tititii^!iit^'
it EAST END. iC-
it 100 by 140 feet near Twenty-fifth it
•^ avenue east and Second street, ic
it Make an offer. i^
it PARK POINT. it
-;¥■ Ten lots at Twenty-seventh street; ■^
•^ also large cottage and tents, ^
it known as "Camp Orlando." it
# G. S. RICHARDSON, Owner. it
it 5 South Fifth Ave. W. it
it Both 'phones 376. it
ita^itifit^ititit^^titititititititit^rtitit^-itit
FOR SALE— LOT 25 BY 140,
Eleventh avenue east and Sixth
street. Street improved, cement side-
walk, water and gas service to curb
line, all paid for. Torrens title. Call
or address Louis Kusmerek, 717 West
Third street. Grand 1999-D.
FOR SALE— BUILDING AND LOT AT
1121-23 West Michigan street; 50 by
140. Inquire 507 West Superior
street, J. Altman.
L. A. LARSEN CO.. 213-14 PROVI-
dence Bldg. Phones, 1920. Will give
you square deal.
FOR SALE — TWO 25-FOOT LOTS ON
Fifty-eighth avenue west below
Eighth street; $600 takes these; lots
near them are selling for $700. Buck-
ley-Mlchaud agency. West Duluth.
FOR SALE— LOT 60 BY 140, BETWEEN
Seventh and Eighth avenues west
and Fourth street; $1,000, $700 cash.
Call evenlng-s, 406 Lyceum building.
FOR SALE — FINE SEVEN-ROOM
house; bath, toilet, full basement,
stone foundation; small cash pay-
ment, balance monthly. Address
C 220, Herald.
FOR SALE— A SNAP IF TAKEN AT
once; must raise cash on very desir-
able 50-foot lot on Second street,
near Fifth avenue east; ideal loca-
tion for a fiat; must sell on or before
May 1. Address Owner, care Herald,
and save all commission.
FOR SALE— WE HAVE A FEW DE-
sirable lots in West Duluth that we
will sell on easy weekl;t' or monthly
payments. Whitney Wall company
301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — OWNER WILL SELL
eighty feet on East Second street; a
splendid building site, in best part
of city, at a snap. Address K 212,
Herald.
FOR SALE— ACRE LOT, WITH STORE
building on same; will sell for $800
if taken at once; terms. Call 802
East Third street.
FOR SALE— CHOICE BUILDING LOT.
upper side London road, East end; a
bargain for quick sale at price away
btlow adjoining propetry. For in-
formation address C 379, Herald.
FOR SALE— 50 BY 140 FEET, NORTH-
west corner Twenty-third avenue
west and Fourth street. Apply Mu-
tual iiiectric company.
FOR SALE— BY OWNER, DOUBLE
corner in settled part of Glen Avon.
C 226, Herald.
FOR SALE — WE HAVE TWENTY
lots in the vicinity of Fairmont park,
which can be bought cheap: ideal
sites for a home. Buckley-Michaud
agency. West Duluth.
FOR SALE— $560 CORNER LOT ON
Main street: look this up. Buckley-
Mi chauda^ency^^WestDul^
FOR SALE — TWO LOTS, SEVEN-
teenth avenue east; water, sewer and
gas on lots; no rock; $860. See
Schwleger at A. B. Slewert & Co.
FOR SALE— THE MOST DESIRABLE
double corner In the Normal school
district. See Chan Smith, 405 Tor-
rey building.
FOR SALE— FOUR ACRES IN MORN-
ingslde Park and two lots In Chester
Parfl. J. M. Branscombe, 640 Garfield
avenue.
FOR SALE— LOT 5, BLOCK 26,
Endion, between Twenty-second and
Twenty-third avenue, London road,
going for $650. C. B. Woodruff.
FOR SALE— A LOT 50 BY 75 FOR
only $600; five blocks from new
courthouse; easy terms. See Chan
Smith, 405 Torey building.
FOR SALE — FOUR LOTS. WITH
small cottage and barn, in West Du-
luth; price $850; easy terms. G. A.
Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — FIVE CHOICE BUILD-
ing lots in New Duluth, adjacent to
the new steel plant. Will be sold at
a great bargain to close an estate.
F. C. Drenning, 221 Providence build-
ing.
FOR SALU— LOTS, HOUSES. ACRES;
Investments that pay dividends every
month. Talk with Fider. 18 Third
avenue west.
FOR SALE— TWO FINE. LEVEL LOTS
on Tenth street, near Tenth avenue
east. Can be bought cheap; small
cash payment, balance monthly. W.
E. Wright, 303 Palladio. Melrose,
1333.
FOR SALE— BEAUTIFULLY LOCATED
lot on Fourteenth avenue east and
Ninth street: perfectly level; unob-
structed view of the lake. Address
E 295, Herald.
FOR SALE— 50 BY 140-FOOT LOT ON
Second street, between Twenty-
seventh and Twenty-eighth avenues
east. Address R 166, Herald.
DRESSMAKING.
MISS GRAY'S SCHOOL OP GARMENT
cutting and making: practical;
terms reasonable; patterns to order
a specialty. Third floor^ Oray-Tal-
lant company. '
DRESSMAKING AND LADIES TAI-
loring. 131 West Third street.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
Hotel Grondln, Seney, Mich. Twenty-
two rooms with bar, til furnished;
18-room addition under construction,
• with store or m.irket on first floor,
barns for forty horses. Six lots In
tract. Location opposite depot. Also
160 acres farming land. Western
Land Securities company's tract of
750,000 acres, In immediate vicinity
being opened up. Address Philip
Grondln, proprietor, Serey, Mich.
COMMERCIAL BUSINES;3 BROKERS.
CONFECTIONERY STORI
— Owner going on farm;
for quick sale. Call an
ROOMING HOUSE— Good
Superior street, clears
month. Look this up.
HOTEL — 35 rooms, right
center; chance to buj
with $750 cash.
BARBER SHOP — One of
this city; owner leavin
of poor health; worth
takes this place.
CIGAR STORE— Up-to-di
way; bargain at $750.
ROOMING HOUSE— 22
with good class of ro
paying proposition; pri<
cash.
For GOOD CLEAN BUSI>
TUNITIE.S, see us, as w
the best, and will be
you call at any time.
; and Fixtures
will sacrltlce
i see.
location on
jver $100 per
in business
good place
the best in
g on account
$1,200; $850
ite in every
rooms, filled
amers; good
e $1,650, half
ESS OPPOR-
e only handle
glad to have
COMMERCIAL BUSINESS BROKERS
NO. 206 ALWORTH BLDG.
BUSINESS CHANCE.S — l^OR SALE-
Confectionery business with building
and lot in most promijung town on
Mesaba range. Last year's business,
$7,300. Building, lot, stock and fix-
tures about $3,500; $1,£00 cash, bal-
ance three years. Box 173 Coleraiue,
Minn.
FOR SALE OR TRADIC TWENTY-
four-room hotel; all conveniences,
restaurant in connection. Call Lin-
coln, 33 A.
BUSINESS CHANCES — l^'OR SALE —
Two-chair barber shop; well
equipped and building 18 by 30 feet;
best location; can be hud at low fig-
ure. Spencer Clark. Keewatin, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FDR RENT—
Loft over the Globe store, excellent
location for any line of business:
steam heat, elevator and Janitor
service: reasonable reiit. Apply to
the Globe company, 105-107 West Su-
perior street.
BUSINE.SS CHANCES -
Trustworthy, competen
$5,000 cash for permane:
both wholesale and r
known staple line. $20(
all expenses and libe
profits. Liarge, well 1
established many years
lent opening for steady.
Favorable investment;
business; right man e
$6,000 a year or better;
prospects. References
particulars address L <
- WANTED —
man with
it local store,
stall in well
a month and
ral share of
:nown house.
offers excel-
capable man.
high-class
hould make
large future
required. For
2, Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES— I'OR SALE—
Grocery store; will sell cheap If
taken at once. Reason for selling,
going Into other businiss. Call Mel-
rose 1854.
BUSINESS CHANCES— $2 ^OOO, THREE
story hotel and six lotti, bar in con-
nection taking in alone $3,000 or
better a month; clearjd $10,000 In
eleven months; $10,000 cash wiL
handle this. Balance cheaper than
paying rent. Wood Purdy Co., 501
Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— I'OR SALE—
Diamond restaurant; parties leaving
city on account of health; good busi-
ness; best location in niy; must be
sold at once. Thomas Ross, 504 Tower
avenue, Superior.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $250 GOOD-
paying restaurant, established trade;
also good fixtures, can be bought at
your own price. Wooti Purdy com-
pany, 501 Manhattan bi:ilding.
FOR SALE— STORE BUILDING AND
fixtures, nice flve-roori flat abovef
stone foundation, basenent, electric
light.s, cement walk; cose to school
and near car line. V'lll sell very
cheap for cash. Make me oflfer. In-
quire 421 Providence building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— WANT TO Ex-
change for farm, stock of merchan-
dise, with store and fixtures, located
In growing farming town. What
have you? G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey
building.
FOR SALE— POOL HALl^ FOR SALE
cheap. Three pool tallies, one bil-
liard table, sideboard and merchan-
dise; everything in good shape, In
good town of 2,000 In Northern Min-
nesota. R 344, Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES— I'OR SALE—
Blacksmith and wheelwright shop,
doing prosperous busln<>ss for twen-
ty years. A snap. Look this up.
Richard & Gilmour, 312 Fifty-sixth
avenue west, Duluth, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $1,300 BUYS
movlng-plcture show clearing from
$100 to $200 monthly $600 will
handle. Wood Purdy company, 501
Manhattan building.
FOR SALE — RESTAUllANT, COM-
plete, doing good business in best
town on range; price reasonable;
terms cash. For parti'iulars call or
write Mrs. John Burby. Marble, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— MJST DISPOSE
of real estate holdings in East end
of Duluth. Party havlr g from $3,000
to $4,000 cash can pla^e it to good
advantage, if you act In time; in-
vestigate. Address o^rner, S 370,
Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES— CONFECTION-
ery; $100 for fixtures and invoice
stock: dally sales bet er than $20;
splendid buy. Wood Ptrdy company,
501 Manhatten building
BUSINESS CHANCES — WILL TRADE
for team of horses or tiell store and
one-acre lot out at Woodland. Call
for particulars. 802 East Third
street.
BUSINESS CHANCES — MUST Dis-
pose of a two-chair barber shop
cheap; owner going vest. W 175
Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES— $(75 BUYS 18-
room rooming house, income $125
mo'nthly: best paying place in the
city. Wood Purdy <;ompany, 501
Manhatten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— TO TR.A.DE—
Equity in Carlton county land for
truck farm near Duluth. Will pay
cash difference. Addiess W. U.
Hassing, Carlton, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— 1X)R SALE—
Show cases, shelving, platform scale,
«nd other scales, count'irs, etc., must
go before 15th of this month. Call
and see them at 113 First avenue
west.
BUSINESS CHANCES — l^OR SALE—
Bargain: confectionery store; make
us an offer on this; owner sick. In-
quire Duluth Business .Exchange. 509
Torrey bulldios.
BUSINESS CHANCES.
(Continued.)
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR BALB— ^
Rooming house; first-class; verjf
central: neat and clean: big bargain;
price $650. Duluth Business Ex*
change 509 Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE—*
One Babcock soda fountain complete.
For further Information inquire Jo-
seph Shearer, lock box 27, Park Rap«
ids, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE — i
Rare opportunity, one-half interest
in a moving picture theater; price
$1,250. Inquire Duluth Business Ex-
change. 509 Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—*
Good barber shop. Address Box 55|
Bovey, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $350 BUYS
12-room rooming house: best of a
location for good trade. Wood-Purdj^
Co., 501 Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $900 BUYS ON^
of the best paying boarding housei
in the city. Wood-Purdy Co., 60|
Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— 1:.00 Bl^S THB
furniture in one of the best littl*
flats in the city. Wood-Purdy Co., 601
Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $500 BUY9
butcher shop or will hire good mal|
to manage same. Wood-Purdy Co.*
601 Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $1,000 FOH
butcher shop; this is a place that will
stand the closest investigation.
Wood-Purdy Co., 601 Manliattaa
building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $100 BUY3
fixtures and invoice stock; light
groceries and confectionery: dally
sales better than $20. Wood-Purdy
Co., reliable business brokers, 601
Manhattan bvilldlng.
BI'SINESS CHANCES — ARE YOTj
looking for acres to plat? I have %
tract of land across the St. Loui«
river from the steel plant site. This
can be sold in lots at a big profit.
If interested write W. 63 Herald.
PERSONAL.
PERSONAL — PROF. GIRARD, CLAIR-
voyant and palmist, 20 West Superior
street, upstairs. Six questions an-
swered by mail, I:. Send date of Mrih
personaT! "
madame sterling,
well known palmist and c.\rd
reader is in the city. Madame .Ster-
ling has been before the public pro*
fe.^sionally nearly thirty years and
from her long experience is prepared
to give advice on all the affairs ok
life. Madame .Sterling has been for
years teacher and demonstrator at
the College of Palmistry, New YorIC
city, the only in!?titution of its kin4
in the world. Thousands can testifj
to her ability as a reader. Lad'
are requested to call in forenoor
afternoon as much as po.^sible to
avoid the night crowds. Arrange-
ments can Ije made for entertainment
at private home if desired. Open Sun-
MADAME STERLING,
129 East First street, across from Ar-
mory.
PERSONAL— C. O. KRISTENSEN POL-
ishes pianos and furniture at youf
home. 'Phone Hogan & Co., Both
'phones.
PERSONAL— WANTED PIANO AND
organ pupils oy first-class teacher,
50 cents a lesson. K 214, Herald.
PEUSONAL — BABY BOY INFANT FOR
adoption. Call Grand 1597.
'stify
ad<el
)n or
PERSONAL— IF YOU CONTK.MPLATQ
going into the moving picture busi-
ness, better consult us, we can fur-
nish your place complete. Picture
machines, all makes, new and sec-
ond-hand hand experts to install
same. Large list of good houses for
sale. Northwestern Supply Co., 129
West Superior street, Duluth, Minn.
PERSONAL— SECRETS FOR WuMEfJ
— Send 2-cent stamp lor catalogue of
special rubber goods i-emedies and
toilet necessities. Falrbank Supply
House, Department 137 T, 60 Wabash
avenue. Chicago.
PEliSONAL — COMFORT, BEAUTT
shop, 20 W. Sup. St., upstairs. Mani-
curing, 25c; siiampooing and hair-
dressing, 50c; switches made from
combings. Both phones.
PERSONAl^-WHY NOT GET AWAl
from washday troubles by sending
your family wash to us; 5 cents per
pound. Lute's laundry, 808 East
Second street. Boin 'pnones 447.
NOTICE TO MV FRIENDS— NEW OUT-
flt, second to none; a call will con-
vince you. New barbers. Let me
know if they suit you. They are sup-
posed to be the be.st. Courtesy, good
woikmansiiip my motto. Yours for
business. Sellwood building barber
shop, second avenue west and Supe*
rior street. Prof. H. Brown, pro-
prietor.
PERSONAI MANICURING AND MA^S-
sage. 813 Torrey building.
PERSONAI^-SAVE YOUR LACE CUR-
tains from the wear and tear of the
laundry by having them done by
hand; 40 cents a pair. Call Melrose
715-X.
I'ERSONAL— LADY, 38, WORTH $20,-
000, would marry, confidential. H,
Box 35, Toledo league. Toledo. Ohio.
OLD COINS— $7.75 PAID FOR RARH
date 1853 quarters; $20 for iialt dol-
lars; we pay a cash premium on hun-
dreds of coins; keep all money dated
before 1881. and send 10 cents at once
for our new illustrated coin value
book, size 4x7; it may mean your
fortune. C. F. Clarke & Co., Cola
Dealers, Dept. 69, Le Roy, N. Y.
PEIiSONAL^-I WILL WRITE YOUK
ads, reports, pamphlets and pros-
pectuses, furnish you with facts, ar-
guments, literary and historical ma-
terial for debates, club papers and
orations, correct and revise your
MSS. and boost your enterprise. Don
Carlos W. Musser, 712 Torrey build-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2024.
MRS. VOGT, HAIR DRESSER. IS TEM-
porarlly quartered at Room 302 L*
Salle Hotel.
PERSONAL — HOUSEHOLD GOODS
packed, moved, stored and shipped
at reduced rates. Only fireproof
storage In the city. We furnish only
experienced furniture packers and
movers. Dulutn Van & Storage Co.,
210 W. Superior St. Both 'phones 492.
PERSONAL — ELECTRIC RUG AND
carpet cleaning. James Morgan. Mei-
rose 1902; Zenith 2222.
Personal — W^rlnger repairing. Int'state
Merc. Co.. 11 N. 2l8t Ave. W. Zen. 787.
PERSONAL — LADIES — ASK YOUR
druggist for Chlchesters Pills, the
Diamond Brand. For 25 years known
as best, safest, always reliable. Take
no other. Chlchesters Dianir^nd Brand
Pills are sold by druggists everx-
where.
PERSONAL — MME. MAY FRENCH
female regulator, best of all. Mailed
In plain wrapper, $2 a box. Orphcunx
pharmacy, 201 East Superior stieeC
PERSONAL — COMBINGS AND CUT
hair made Into beautiful switches.
Knauf Sisters.
CLOTHES CLEANED & PRESSED.
JOHN MUELLER. 208 WEST FIRST
street.
Zenith Valet — French dry cleaning and
repairing. 213 W>st First St.. Mel.
1834. Grand 1V34-D
PHOENIX DRV CLEANING CO.—
Skirts dry cleaned, 50c. Zenith 'phono
Grand. 1862-X. 10 Fourth avenue W.
-*
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Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 15, 1911.
SITUATIONS
if you are out of work The Herald Want
Ads ought to be of material assistance
to you. Read them over carefully.
HELP WANTED
Several hundred men and women call at
The Herald daily and look over the Help
Wanted Ads. If you need help — Advertise.
TO LET
FOR SALE— HOUSES.
TWIN PORTS REALTY CO.
16,500 — Store, six living rooms, 40 by
40; lot &0 by 150. Cash or terms.
Rooms rent for J25 per month.
|6,0o0 — Lot 60 by 150. seven-room
house, strictly modern: good barn,
holds Ave horses and carriage. This
is an Kast end snap; terms.
11^,000 — Klght-room house. fe.ast ena.
modern; lot 100 by 140; »5,000 cash,
balance on terms.
14.200 — Klegant eight-room moaern
house, with 50 by 100-foot lot. \n
choicest location In Hunter s Park,
Woodland. Part cash; a snap.
■11.000— Brick flat building of four
flats, five rooms each, built two
years; rents for |1,I00 per year. This
la a bargain; don't miss It; terms.
le sou — Duplex brick flat, separate
heating plants; strictly modern; In-
come now 1750 per year; |4,000 cash
will handle this; balance on terms.
Llast end.
• 5 ;;oo— Duplex flat, strictly modern;
two heating plants; rents for J720 per
year; |4.000 cash, balance to suit
purchaser. East Fifth street, between
Seventh and Eighth avenues.
|g 300 — Nine-room house, modern; lot
• 0 by 140; East Fifth street, well
located. Terms If desired.
18.500 — Ten-room brick flats, strictly
modern; gas ranges, shades; lot 2o
by 140; part cash. East First street,
gi'od renting property.
|l,>.f>00 — Lot 60 by 70 feet and building
on East Fourth street. This property
is a bargain; the revenue at present
Is $900 per year; one of the best in-
ve.-*tments in Dulutli.
|8,90i» — Seven-room modern house, lot
::5 by 140; stone foundation, hot air
heat. Eapt Sixth street.
■^e have properties of all descriptions
in all parts of the city.
Al.so acres near steel plant in both
states.
Some good bargains In Cuyuna and
Vermilion jninlng propertie-s; also town
lots in Crosby, Ironton an'd Deerwood-
Bevt-ral good farms, both Improved and
unimproved.
Hu.^inesa chances of all classes.
If you will give us a call Ave
please you, and treat you fairly.
Our motto Is to live and let live.
TWIN PORTS REALTY CO.,
MANHATTAN BLDG.
FOR SALE— HOUSES.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE— IN LAKESIDE— SEVEN-
room house in ttrst-class condition,
water, sewer, gas, electric light,
bath and toilet, hardwood floors
and finish, vestibule and reception
room, front and back porch, level
lot on upper side of street, a splen-
did view of lake that cannot be ob-
structed, cement walk, street fully
Improved, shade trees and shrubbery,
near car" line, convenient to school,
one of the prettiest houses In town
Inside or out. Guaranteed to be
warm. Price $2,800, part cash, bal-
ance to suit. Adress W. 65 Herald.
FOR RENT— FLATS.
(Continued.)
JOHN'X"sTI<^PHlENSON"ircO.
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvln Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM HEATED
flat at 6 North Nineteenth avenue
east; $32.50 per month.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM APART-
ment in St. Elmo building, 721 East
First street; splendid arrangements;
beautiful view.
can
FOR SALE — ON EASY TERMS, SIX-
room house. Twenty-fourth avenue
wtst and Sixth street, $1,800; sewer,
water and gas In street. \\ hltney
Wall company, 301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — NEW SEVEN-ROOM
house, all modern Improvements. In-
quire 1614 East Sixth street.
FOR SALE— THE HOUSE YOU WANT
is one of the 250 we have for sale
in every pan of the city from $300 to
$20,000. Call Greenfield, 310-311
Columbia building.
FOR SALE — $3,300, PART CA.C.H.
takes eiglit-room hou.<'e; modern; 50-
foot lot. Buckley-Michaud agency,
West Duluth.
FOR SALE— BY OWNER, — SEVEN-
room house near Fortieth avenue
west on Fifth street; also house on
East Third street. Telephone, Calu-
met, 191 M.
FOR SALE OR RENT OR TRADE—
Large lot, two-room house, large
barn. In Central Park. Superior, $800,
or trade for horses or cattle. W 62,
Herald.
FOR SALE — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
on Nineteenth avenue east, with fur-
nace, bath, etc., one block from cars.
$3,750; easy terms. E. D. Fluid com-
pany. Exchange building.
FOR SALE— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
with water, sewer and electric lights;
two lots, 25 by 125 each; price, $1,800,
one-half cash, balance to suit. Twin
Ports Realty company, 610 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM APARTMENT
in Adams apartments, 715 East First
street.
FOR RENT— ON GARFIELD AVENUE
L wing rooms on second lloor; cheap
rent.
ADDITIONAL WANTS!
On Pages 2|)^ 30 and 32
SITUATION WANTED— FEMALE.
SITUATION WANTED — POSITION AS
companion, chaperone or managing
housekeeper by a lady of experience.
AV 234. Herald.
SITl'ATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady experienced in stenography and
office work; best of references fur-
nished. R. B., Herald.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE AT
221 East Third street.
FOR RENT- FINE DRY BASEMENT
on Lake avenue south; steam heat.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvln Bldg.
FOR RENT — STRICTLY MODERN
six-room flat; East end — hot water
heat, janitor service. Call Melrose,
4864.
FOR RENT— BEAUTIFUL SIX-ROOM
flat; lentral. on First street; wl'h
bath; Just right for a young men's
club. For particulars address W 236,
Herald.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM BRICK FLAT;
heated, large light rooms, lake view,
modern, with all conveniences. Call
1407 London road.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT AND
bath, all conveniences except heat,
at 1909 »-3 West Superior street. In-
quire Bloom & Co., 102 West First
street.
SITUATION WANTED — HOUSE
cleaning done with vacuum machin-
ery. Every needle-eye of dust re-
moved and your home left spotless;
curtains of all kinds dry cleaned for
a very .small price. Call Grand 11 90- A.
714 East Fourth street. Mrs. Calhoun.
FARM AND FRCIT LANDS.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE. #
WHERE TO GET WHAT YOU WANT
Each firm a leader In its line. Consult
this list before placing your order if you
want the l>est at a price you like to pay.
SITUATION WANTED — A POSITION
as housekeeper, by a woman with
a 2-year-old child, either in or out
of city. L l>6. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— WOliK BY
the day washing, ironing and clean-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2267.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady In general office or bookkeeper
or cashier; good penman and accur-
ate. R 169, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— HAND EM-
broldery done, table linen monogram.
Melrose 3059.
SITUATION WANTED — PRACTICAL
nurse would like engagments. Ad-
dress Mrs. Henderson, 902 East Third
street, upstairs.
FOR SALE — BY OWNER, TEN-ROOM
modern hause, excepting heat, ar-
ranged for two families, rents for $3o
per montli. Price $3,000; terms. A.
W. Kuehnow. 403-404 Columbia Bldrf.
For sale — new TEN-ROOM Du-
plex house for sale cheap; easy
terms; 1016 Ninth avenue east. C. A-
Knippenberg, 300 Alworth building.
'I'hunes 597.
For sale — seven-room modern
house, on East Fourth street, near
Portland square; hardwood through-
out- good basement; cement founda-
tion and furnace heat. A bargain;
$4,500. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building. 293
FOR SALE— ELEGANT HOME; IDEAL
location; must sell. For terms see
owner, 408 Columbia building or call
Park 6155-D.
F<.»K SALE— COZY FIVE-ROOM HOUSE
witli adjoining lot. on new car line
extension. East Ninth street. C 3«4,
Herald.
Houses from $800 to $80,000 for sale
by u A. Larsen Co., Reliable Real
Estate Dealers. 213-14-15 Prov. Bldg.
FOR SALE— AN EAST END HOME Oi?'
nine rooms, large lot. modern except
heat; beautiful location; $3,j00. $oOO
cash, balance easy as rent. Sniitli
Realty company, 524 Manhattan
building.
FOR SALE — $360 TAKES FIVE-ROOM
cottage In West Duluth; gas, water,
and iiot water heat. See Buckley-
Micliaud Agency, West Duluth.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
If you want us to build a house for
you this summer, please let us know
as soon as possible. We advance all
the money and you pay us monthly,
but even at that there is a lita:t to
our capacity and to our pocket book.
If you are not familiar with our
plan write us a postcard and wo will
mail you booklets and pictures.
EDMUND G. WALTON AGENCY,
312 Exhange building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
centrally located. West Duluth; price
$1,800; small cash payment, balance
monthly; Is now rented for $19 per
month. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
FOR SALE— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE
and lot with modern Improvements,
on Second street between Twenty-
second and Twenty-third avenues
west. Call new 'phone 298-A.
FOR SALE— HOUSE AND LOT 50x
140. Cheap. Call at 11 East Sixth
street.
FOR SALE— FOUR-ROOM HOUSE AT
FOR RENT — NEW FIVE -ROOM FLAT
all modern. 515 East Seventh street.
Call upstairs.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE MODERN
five-room brick flat. First class con-
dition; hot water heating plant.
Fourth avenue east and First street.
Reasonable rent. New phone, Lin-
coln 317.
FOR RENT — FLAT 3. SECOND ALLEY
east, six rooms, water ond sewer, wa-
ter paid for, $20 per month. W. M.
Prlndle & Co.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM LOWER
floor, 16 Fifteenth avenue west, $12
per month; water paid. W. M.
Prlndle & Co.
FOR RENT— 1309 WEST SUPERIOR
street, five rooms, water and sewer;
water paid, $14.50 per month. W. M.
Prlndle & Co.
FOR RENT— TWO MODERN FLATd.
Ave and six rooms. East First street.
W. M. Prlndle & Co.
FOR RENT-
street, four
W. M. Prindle & Co
2210 WEST FOURTH
rooms, $12 per month.
SITUATION WANTED— MALE.
b-TUATlON WANTED — PUBLIC JAN-
Itor and window-washer. Prudence
Robert, the best new wlndow-clAaner
In the city. Melrose 305. La Salle hoteL
JEFFEllSON, PUBLIC JANITOR. ALL
kinds of store and office cleaning.
Mel. 2623, 219 East Superior street.
AWNINGS, TENTS, PACKSACKS.
Polrier Tent & Awning Co., 106 E. Sup.
St., manufacturer and repairing.
Duluth Tent & Awning Co.. 1608 W. Sup.
St. Zen. 347-X. Work guaranteed.
AWNINGS AND TENTS.
AMERICAN TENT & AWNING CO.. 1
and 3 East Michigan street. Zen. 2473.
ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTER.
We deliver all
best service,
service. Mel.
kinds of adv. matter;
Interstate Distributing
3547. 17 N. 5th Av. W.
ACCOUNTANT.
R. R. GRIFFITH, 419 Providence bldg.
•Phones: Melrose 1353. Zenith 1938.
KODAKS AND CAMISRAS.
Eclip.se Photo Supply Co.. 17 4th Av«. W.
Develop and nnlsh for aaiateurs.
LANDSCAPE GARDINING.
BI>ACK DIRT. SANDY LOAM AND
fertilizer for gardens, hotbeds, flower
beds, lawns etc.; grading sodding
& seeding. H. B. Keedy. Both "phones.
MACHINE WORK REPAIRING.
Auto and Machine parts made. Zenith
Machine works, 207 W. ilst St Old
'phone 2622.
KEY, LOCK AND SAFE W ORKS.
S. M. LESTER,
building. Both
413 PROVIDENCE
phones 862.
SITUATION WANTED — HOUSE
Cleaning, carpet beating. window
and wall paper cleaning. Old plioue
9652; new phone 1082. William
Chisholm, 228 Lake avenue south.
SITUATION WANTED — PAINTING
and paper hanging at low prices.
Grand 2171-D.
SITUATION WANTED— BY FIRST-
class painter; doing good work at
low prices. Address Joseph Damen,
3810 Halifax street, Calumet L 284.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN
wishes position as assistant to ad-
vertising manager; also do office
work; moderate salary satisfactory,
if opportunity for advancement on a,
par with energy and ability mani-
fested. U 19, Herald.
FOR RENT — 128 WEST FOURTH
street, five rooms, hardwood floors
and bath, $25. W. M. Prlndle & Co.
Lakeside, almost new, lot 40 by 140 ^ ?^ree^?oom heaJed 1
feet. Barn and large chicken nouse.
Fine place for garden, keeping cow
and chickens. Price $1,000. 'Phone
Grand 1S71-Y.
FOR SALE— NEW, WELL BUILT, SiX-
room liouse; modern in every re-
spect; corner lot, 37 Vi by 100 feet. 520
Sixteenth avenue east.
For sale— Bi' owner, six-room
house and lot; all improvements.
2119 West Fourth street.
ioi: sale— MODERN ELEVEN-ROOM
house, suitable for roomers or board-
ers. Full basement; hot water heat,
baih, laundry tubs, etc. Good barn
and buggy shed, on oO-foot lot. C
122. Herald.
FOi: &ALE— NINE-ROOM HOUSE AND
lot for sale clieap. Part cash. Call
3824 Sixth street west.
FOR SALE — $375 TAKES HALF IN-
terest In a six-room house, worth
$1,000; good water Duluth Heights.
Inquire 20 Quince street.
FOR SALE— AT LAKESIDE. $2,750
Ten-room double house; store found-
ation; full basement; part hardwood
floors; water, gas, electric light; two
sheds and chicken coops. Telephone
owner. Park 6149 Zenith.
three-room heated
month; fine sunny
Shervvood & Co.,
building.
LOCATION.
flat, $20 per
rooms. W. C.
118 Manhattan
FOR RENT— BitlCK FLAT, CORNER
of Fifteenth avenue east and Fourth
street; sl.x rooms, bath, laundry,
storeroom, gas range, hot water
heating plant; new and up-to-date;
$37.50 per month; no children. George
R. Lavbourn, 14 Phoenix block.
SITUATION WANTED — AN ALL
around butcher and sausage maker
wishes a position. Frank Pfoifer,
Withee. Wis.
FOll REN'r — FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. S. S. Williamson, 515
Torrey building. Both 'phones.
FOR SALE— BY OWNER— NEW SIX-
room house. modern except heat,
reasonable. 216 Vernon street.
FOR SALE— $700; GOOD FIVE-ROOM
cottage on Palmetto street; cement
sidewalk, electric lights; terms rea-
sonable. Inquire 30 Quince street, Du-
luth Heights.
FOR SALE — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
water; lot 37 Va by 140; $1,600: can
be bought on easy terms. Buckley-
Mlchaud agency. West Duluth.
FOR SALE— $500 DOWN, BALANCE
easy terms, for a twelve-room house
near high school and manual train-
ing building. See Chan Smith, 405
Torrey building.
FOR SALE — HOUSE AND LOT FOR
sale at 1111 Garfield avenue.
FOR SALP: — EIGHT-ROOM RESl-
dence; all modern conveniences; lot
70 by 140; In Normal school district;
$8,500. See Chan Smith, 405 Torrey
building.
FOR SALE— AT A SACRIFICE— SIX-
room cottage on street car line.
Park i-oint; water, electric light,
bath, gas range, fireplace, hot water
heat, cement foundation, laundry tubs,
cement floor in 1 Vz-toot basement;
beauiifui. high, dry lots; fine shade
tref s; easy terms. Save commission.
Address Owner. H 334. Herald.
JhJr SALE — SNAP — FOUR-ROOM
house and barn. $300 casli; must sell;
leaving city. 224 Forty-fifth avenue
•we-'< t.
FOR SALB: — 15-ROOM BOARDING
house; lot 25 by 125; $2,000; one-
fourth cash, balance to suit; hard-
wood floors, sewer, electric light and
city water; this property is near the
Zenith Furnace company; now oc-
cupied: rents for $25 per month.
Twin Port Realty company.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE
arranged for two families; now
rented; near new city dock; block
from street car line; electric light,
water, sewer; will net 12 per cent;
price $2,250, part cash. Address
Owner, W 67, Herald.
FOR RENT— NEW FIVE-ROOM FLAT,
719 East Fourth street, downstairs,
$25 per month; water paid by owner.
Inquire East Fourth street, upstairs.
FOR RENT— NEW SIX-ROOM FLAT;
also seven-room house, all modern
except heat. Inquire 620 Third ave-
nue east.
WANTED TO BUY.
WANTED TO BUY — A LARGE OR
small tract of land for Investment.
I 69, Herald.
WANTED TO Bl'Y— BABY GO-CART;
must be a bargain. V. O., Herald.
WANTED TO BUY — A SOUND DE-
livery horse, weight 1,150 lbs. Call
at Gasser's barn.
WANTED TO BUY— SINGLE HEAVY
harness. Inquire 1127 West Michi-
gan street.
SITUATION WANTED — AS SALES-
man on the road or in store. Ex-
perienced. Good business education.
Speak Swedish and Finnish. Now
employed. Address A B C, Virginia,
Minn.
SITUATION WANTED— BY MAN AND
wife to work out on some summer
resort. Can furnish best of city
references. R 174, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — POSITION
with wholesale house; can give ref-
erences. F. M. Wilson, 2531 West Su-
perior street.
ART GLASS AND MIRRORS.
.Vll kinds gla.ss; lowest prices. St. Ger-
main Bros., 121 First avenue west.
CARPENTER REPAIR WORK.
REPAIR OR NEW WORK DONE RF.A-
sonably; plans made; estimates fur-
nlslied. Old Heigetun, 2209 West
Second street. New 'phone Lincoln
49 2 -Y.
WORK DONE NEATLY. O. PEARSON,
207 W. 1st St. Zen. 1274-X or Zen. 6097.
We do all kinds of carpenter work. Job-
bing a specialty; work p'lven prompt
attention. A. J. Uase, 18 West Second
street. 2203-Y.
CARRIAGES, WAGONS, DRAYS.
If you want a high grade delivery wagon
or buggy that was built especially
for this part of the country, for least
money, call or write for catalogue.
L. ..lammel Co., 300-308 East First St.
Sander Bros.' Hardware
store, 203 W. 1st St Phones;
Old, Mel. 3969; New, 2288-A.
KEYS AND MODEL WORKS.
Key cutting, grinding,
fine repairs. 22 V^ E
polishing and
;nd fc.t. Mel. 3381.
MARINE MUTOilS.
A 1909 MOEEL (CAMP-
bell) Marine Motor,
10-horse power, for $325
— 5-lnch bore. 6^-inch
stroke. 1911 models of
[^ all sizes, at regular
^prices. F. F.. Holm berg,
528 Lake Av. S. 'Phones.
MUSICAL INSTRUIKIENTS.
SITUATION WANTED— EXPERIENC-
ed bookkeeper would like to keep
books evenings Herald, C 650.
SITUATION WANTED — WORK OF
any kind, by young married man;
has worked three years at machlni.st
trade; sober and reliable. Address
C 352, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— STATIONARY
engineer, with first-class experience
and sober; twenty years in the busi-
ness, desires a position at once. Ad-
dress F. W.. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — EXPERI-
enced fireman and engineer wants
position in or out of town. C 124,
Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
man in office where advancement
could be assured. E. D., Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN
accustomed to hospital work, would
like other employment. Not afraid
of work. Can furnish good refer-
ences. K 205. Herald.
FOR SALE — SEVEN ROOMS AND
bath; new fixtures and plumbing;
hardwood floors; all modern conven-
iences; nice trees and bushes; will
sell cheap if taken at once. Inquire
1620 East Sixth street.
FOR SALE — AT LAKESIDE, $2,750;
ten-room double house, stone foun-
dation, full basement, part hard-
wood floors, water, gas, electric
light, two sheds and chicken coops,
telephone owner. Park 6149 Zenith.
FOR SALE— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE
at Lakeside; strictly modern
throughout; fine location; good view
of lake, $4,200. (283) Whitney Wall
company, 301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— BUY FROM OWNER A
new. large seven-roomed Lakeside
home. strictly modern. Zenith
bo5i-X Park.
FOR SALE— BY OWNER— NICE SIX-
room cottage, 1534 Minnesota ave-
nue. Inquire at 216 V^ernon street.
For sal,e — good house and
stone foundation, with barn: owner
must sell at onco; terms to suit.
Call for chief engineer, St. Marys
hospital^
i^OR sale— BARGAIN IF TAKEN AT
once, eight-room house, barn and
$800 lot; Forty-fourth avenue near
London road, $2,500; terms; snap for
coiitiactor or carpenter. H. A. Hook-
er. 569 Frederick avenue, Milwaukee,
Wis.
FOR SALE— A HOME AT LESTER
Park lor $4,000, six rooms and bath
with modern improvements, two
blocks from the car line; 100-foot
front. For information inquire of
A. H. Davenport, 6025 London road.
i*OR SALE— DON'T FAIL TO SEE US IF
you contemplate buying a home this
spring. Minneapolis Construction Co.,
210 American Exchange Bank Bldg.
FOR SALE — MODERN EAST END
home; large grounds; illness of wile
compels sale; no agents need apply.
Addrv^ss S 368, Herald.
"WANTED TO TltADE FOR FARM,
eight-room house, on a fifty-foot lot,
located in the best residence district
in Duluth. Price $4,500. G. A. Ryd-
berg. 417 Torrey building.
i-OR SALE — ON EAST EIGHTH
strett, near Seventh avenue east, six-
room house, very comfortable, and
delightfully arranged Interior, for
$2.2t;0, witli $500 cash; balance on
easy terms. Whitney Wall company,
301 Torrev building. 262
FOR SALE— MONTHLY PAYMENTS
of $40 will purchase the right party
a good six-room house at Lakeside,
modern except heat. Price $3,400.
Cireentield, 310-11 Columbia building.
FOR SALE— FOUR-ROOM HOUSE;
low price; easy terms; within walk-
ing distance. S. WMliamson, S15
Tot rey buUdintf. Both 'phones.
AUTOMOBILES.
a-
'tr
AUTOMOBILE TIRES.
WE SELL EIGHT DIFFERENT
MAKES OF TIRES,
manufactured by responsible con-
cerns who guarantee their goods.
Let us quote you prices before the
advance.
EXPERT TIRE REPAIRING.
SATISFACTION GUARA-.NTEED.
DULUTH ATUO SITPPLY CO.,
412 EAST SUPERIOR ST.
-;t "Phones; Mel. 4102; Grand 2163-A.
WANTED TO BUY-TEAM OF DRIVING
horses, weighing 1,200 pounds, sound,
about 8 years old. Apply box 11,
Proctor.
WANTED TO BUY— A SECOND-HAND
twin baby buggy. Address O 297.
Herald.
WANTED TO BUY— HAVE CUSTOMER
for Inside business property between
First avenue east and Seventh avenue
west on Superior or First street.
What have you? Twin Ports Realty
company.
WANTED TO BUY — TO SELL YOUB
property quickly, address Northwest-
ern Business agency, Minneapolis.
WANTED TO BUY — A HOME IN THE
East end; we liave customers for all
kinds from the lowest priced to the
highest. Have you anythlpg to of-
fer? Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY— TWENTY, FORTY
or eighty-acre improved or unim-
proved farms; if you have anything
for sale bring it in. Whitney Wall
company, 301 Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY — ANY ONE HAV-
Ing a Swedish loom for sale, or rent,
will write McKay hotel, they can
find way to dispose of same.
*?.iT^^-**-7^#«-^^^^af**^fi-*^i#--^;.->\i*^
^-**Vi;^:^.i?s->>-;^*^^'*'^'Mf^^f^*#;i'^-?^?.-#*^
1910 CADILLAC.
Five-passenger touring car Cad-
illac; overhauled and guaranteed
right; mohair top. shield, presto
tank and speedometer.
NORTHWESTERN CADILLAC CO.,
316 East Superior St.
^jJe^g^f^fe*?.'^^'?^^'^^^^*^?*-^^*^'^^^^^
ii. '%
* FOR SALE, *
I *
^ Five-passenger touring car, guar- *
a- anteed to be in first-class work- ■#&
* Ing order, $250. ^ *
'4 THE RUSSELL MOTOR CO. *
WE REPRESENT MAXWELL, PRE-
mier, Oakland, Mollne pleasure cars
and Wilcox trucks. All kinds of re-
pairing, even tire vulcanizing. Old
cars bought and sold. It will pay
you to try us. Also have automobiles
for hire. Call, 'phone or write M. F.
Falk, Rapid Transit Auto & Repair-
ing Co., 2110-12 Vf. Mich. St. 'Phones
Mel. 347; Zen 47 Uncola.
WANTED TO BUY — HIGHEST PRICES
paid for men's old clothing. Phoenix
Dry Cleaning Co. Zenith, lSo2-X.
10 Fourth avenue west.
Wanted to Buy — Highest price for cast-
off men's clothing. N. Stone, 213 W.
Ist St. Melrose 1834; Zenith 1134-I>.
We buy second-hand furniture and
stoves. Lincoln 295 -X. 1629 W. Sup. st.
SITUATION WANTED— BY MARRIED
man 48 years old, as janitor or other
work around office or other build-
ings. P. C, Herald.
CARPET CLEANING.
Interstate Carpet Cleaning Company—
Sinotte & Van Norman, compressed
air cleaners and rug weavers, 1928
West Michigan street. Both 'phones.
CIVIL ENGINEERING.
Duluth Engineering Co., W. B. Patton,
Mgr., 613 Palladio bldg. Specifications
prepared and construction superln-
tenileci for waterworks, sewerage, etc.
CHIMNEY SWEEP.
H. Knulson, city chimney sweep, at No.
1 hre hall. Telephone 46.
DANCING AND LESSONS.
Dance every evening at 224 W. Ist St.,
except Monday; also dancing taught.
A. Haak<maen. dealer
and expurt repairer,
at J. W. Nelson's, 6
East Suf erior street.
OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN.
A. L. NORBERG. 201-207 WEST Su-
perior street. 110 Oak Hall building.
* 188 acres in Meadowlands. Fine #
^t- land one-half mile from Payne •J^
* station; $8 per acre; one-half min- ^
i^ erals reserved. ^
'1^ 18 acres in sectloh 9-63-18. with #
-i. frontage on Lake Vermilion; $10 #
* per acre; one-half minerals re- i^
* served. i^
* S^ of NW^4 of section 6-60-14. *•
i^ near Embarrass; $3 per acre; one- #
•gj half minerals reserved. vC-
* NW^ of SE% of section 17-51- ■»
a- 15, near P'ke lake; $10 per acre. *
-5^ All Of section 29-47-10, best sec- *
^ tlon Of land In Douglas county, 4^
■iff Wis., between Lake Nebagamon '^
i(- and the Brule; $12 per acre; one- i^
* half minerals reserved. •»
•^ NWVi of section 35-63-11. near #
•^ Section 30 mine; timber sold; price ■Jf'
'S?' $10 p%r acre; one-fourth minerals #
ilr reserved. ^
* SWVi of NWVi of section 36-49- •SJ
* 16, good farming land close to %
'^ Fond du Lac and the steel plant; ^
iC- price $50 per acre. #
*• 15 acres In section 15-49-15, half *
•Sg. mile fpem Proctorknott and ad- *
* joining West Duluth; price $160 -Af
* per acre. it.
* NEVi of SE^ of section 10-61- *.
a- 13. fine land three miles north of #
'^ Duluth pumping station; price $15 '^
•# per acre. %
it NW>4 of NW^ of 15-50-16, close *
H- to station of Munger, on D., M. & 'j^
* N. railroad; fine forty; some tim- i^
if- ber and good meadow; price $16 #
* per acre. ^
* E^4 of SE14 of section 32-52-lB. <»
^ goad eighty of land, some timber; :J^
ff- fifteen miles from Duluth on good ^
* road; $10 per acre. ^
* Lot 6 and N% of NW».4 of sec- #
* tlon 22-52-16, good land on the #
■^ Cloquet river; timber sold; price #
* $5 per acre. -^
a- NEU of NEU of section 8-56-20. *
-^ fine forty, one mile from new cut- i^
-^ off of D.. M. «c N. railroad; land ^
•* has $250 worth of timber; price #
'<^ for land and timber, $600. ■j^
* 120 acres right at Alborn, In *
* section 25-52-18; price $10 per *
* acre; one-half minerals reserved. ^
-.¥• SO acres in section 7-60- !»; 100 ■^
ii' M. tamarack. 2.000 C. ties; good ■^
* land; price $750; one-half minerals *
^ reserved. ^
* 160 acres on the Nameukon it
*• Iron range In 68-19. at $3 per ^
f^ acre; one-half minerals reserved. #
ig- 200 acres in section 26-28-55-15; *
•^ timber sold, at $5 per acre; one- ^^
^ half minerals reserved. H-
i^ 40 acres In section 27-57-21, four i(.
■» miles south of Hlbbing, at $10 per *
^ acre; minerals reserved. #
a- 280 acres close to the state farm ^
* at Grand Rapids, $10 per acre;
0- minerals reserved.
* 120 acres in section 31-60-25,
* good land and .'^ome timber, at $4
*■ per acre; one-half minerals re-
* served.
* 160 acres In section 28-60-22,
^ only pine timber cut and removed;
■X- price $4 per acre; one-half mln-
^ erals reserved.
i^ Five-acre tracts right at Proc-
* tor, a snap; good farming land.
OPTICIANS.
C. C. STAACKE, 106 WESl'
street. Open Wednesday
day evenings.
SUPERIOR
and Satur-
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING.
DON'T SCRAP A BROKEN CASTING
or machine part of any size of iron,
steel, aluminum or brajs until you
have conferred with u 3. Buck &,
Spring, 313 East Michigan street.
•Phones: Bell, Mel. 974; Zen.. Grand
974.
PATENTS.
PATENTS — ALL ABOUT PATENTS.
See Stevens, 610 Sellwood building.
DENTIST.
Dr. W. H. Olson, 222 New Jersey Bldg.
All work guaranteed. Both "phones.
MONEY TO LOAN.
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$1$$$$$$;$$$$$$$
$1 ^l^J^T^Y ON ClCEDIT. $$
SOMETHING NEW.
$$
$$ $10 upward, for hosuekeepers, $$
$$ worklngmen and salaried em- $$
worklngmen and salaried em
$i ployes, at charges that honest $)
$$ people can aftord to pay. $$
$$ DULUTH LOAN COMPANY. $$
$$ Cor. Third Ave. W. and Sup. St., $$
$1 307 Columbia Bldg.
$1 Old "phone, Melrose 2335.
'}
$«$$$$$$?$$$),$$$;»$${$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
* SPRING IS HF.RE. ^
a- If you want money In a hurry. «
* SEE US. *.
is- Our rates are the cheapest. ^
is- Our payment plan the best. •^.
* Call and be convinced. #
^ LOANS ON SALARY, FURNITURE *
* DULUTH FINANCE CO., ' *
* 301 Palladio Bldg. *
^ Open Saturdav Evenings. ^t
CITY AND VILLAGE LOANS IN MIN-
nesota. Buy or build a home on
monthly payments. C. A. Knippen-
berg. 300 Alworth Bldg. "Phones 597.
WE LOAN ON ALL KINDS OF PER-
sonal security at lowest rates. Call
on us, 430 Manhattan Bldg., and get
rates. Duluth Mortgage Loan Co. W.
Horkan. New 1598-D; Melrose 3733.
WANTED TO BUY — OLD CLOTHES,
auto and carriage tires. 328 East Su-
perior street Zenith 2013-D.
WANTED TO BUY — FOR CASH.
rooming house, hotel or would con-
sider some other business. Call at
once. 609 Torrey building.
MILLINERY.
EASTER MILLINERY.
LATEST CREATIONS.
a-
I have removed to No. 6 East First 1^
street, Loeb building, and can give #
you greater bargains than high- ie>
rent shops. #
MRS. C. SHARP. *
#*******«#7|1*-S^*«**^^'****'**V^
STOVE REPAIRS.
WE CARRY IN STOCK REPAIRS FOR
10,000 different stoves and ranges. C.
F. Wlggerts & Son. 410 East Supe-
rior street. Both 'phonea
FOR SALE— COWS.
FOR SALE — A CARLOAD OF FRESH
milch cows just arrived to J. Widdls.
421) Forty-sixth avenue west. Zenith
'phone. Cole 3133-T.
WE MAKE FARM LOANS ON VAL-
uable. productive and cultivated
lands. No delay; prompt attention.
Snyder Bros., 210 West First street.
DRAYING AND TRANSFER.
Dl/Ll^TH VAN & STORAGE Company,
210 West Superior St. Both 'phones.
STEWART TRANSFER LINE— MOV-
Ing. baggage, freight, expert piano
movers; prompt service. 'Phones 334.
Office 19 V» Fifth avenue west.
DECORATING & WALL PAPERING
See Strongqulst & Moyer at 306 E. Sup.
St., about your i>aperlng, tinting,
painting and home decorations. You'll
be satisfied. Both "'■''ones.
PLUMBING AND RICPAIRS.
JAMES GORMAN— YOUR PLUMBER;
jobbing work promptly attended to.
1 Twenty-third avenue 'vest. Zenith
•phone. Grand 107.
111 E. lit St.. Zenith
Early and late.
*
*
*
*
*•
JOHN Q. A. CROSBY,
Farm, Timber and Iron Lands,
305 Palladio Building,
Duluth, Minn.
*
*
WHITXF-V WALL COMP-^AyI "
301 Torrey BuUdluK.
FOR SALE— A FARM OF 120 ACRES,
suitable for dairy or truck farming;
forty acres cultivated, buildings and
other improvements wortli more than
price asked. A bargain, $3,600.
FOR SALE — IN TOWN OF WREN-
shall, 160 acres, three miles from
Fond du Lac, near sawmill. Land Is
heavily timbered with maple and
birch. No swamp or rock, fine, h-eavy
black loam soil. Good trout stream.
Price $17 per acre; small cash pay-
ment, balance easy month Iv pay-
ments. Will trade for small home In
Duluth.
FOR SALE-
160 acres
per acre;
title.
-NEAR BOULDER LAKE.
on Vermilion road, at $10
terms to suit. Torrens
Geo. W. Palmer,
•phone. 1688-A.
PAINTING AND PAPEliHANGING.
DO IT NOW BEFORE THE RUSH. IT
costs less and can tako time to do
better work; estimates free. Call
Zenith, 959-A and I will bring sample
books. J. D. McCurdy, corner Third
avenue west and Second street.
FOR PAINTING AND DECORATING
see Youngdalil &Dler8, 2 23 W. 2nd. St
DRY CLEANING AND PRESSING.
WOR-C GUAl-ANTEED.
Works. Old, Melrose
2474.
CITY DYE
1942. Zenith
ENGINEERING.
NORTH WESTERi.-! ENGINEERING CO..
Duluth, Minn.
Architects, Mechanical and Electrical
Eng.; Plans, Estimates f.nd Specifica-
tions. Complete Mine Equipments a
specialty. Mel. 3912. P. O. Box 585.
FLORIST.
J. J. Le Borlous, florist, 921 E. 3rd St.-
Floral funeral designs, cut flowers.
FURNITURE RECOVERED.
Let Forsell do your UPHOLSTERING.
334 E. Superior St. Zenith "phone 949.
TO LOAN— $15,000 IN SUMS TO SUIT.
on real estate. Lane, MacGregor &
Co.. 400 Alworth building.
MONEY SUPPLIED TO SALARIED
people, women keeping house and
others, upon their own names witn-
out security; easy payments. Tolinan,
509 Palladio building.
MONEY TO LOAN ON CITY PROPER-
ty; lowest rates; small and large
amounts. Scott-Kreldler company,
405 Central avenue. Both 'phones.
MONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS,
watches, furs, rifles etc,, and all
goods of value, $1 to $1,500. Key-
stone Loan & Mercantile Co. 22 West
Superior street.
MONEY TO LOAN— LOANS MADE ON
timber, and farm lands. John Q. A.
Crosby, 305 Palla<Uo building.
Money to loan — Any amount; low rates.
Cooley & Underbill, 209 Exchange.
SIX PER CENT INTEREST ON SMALL
real estate loans: money on hand;
prompt service. F, I. Salter com-
pany. Lonsdale building.
MINERAL LANDS.
EBERT. WALKER & McKNIGHT CO.,
315 Torrey bldg... offers unusual op-
portunities for big profit in mineral
lands on Cuyuna aB4 Vttrmlilon r»nse»|
FURNITURE AND PIANOS.
Finished and repaired. Theo. Thomp-
son, 336 E. Sup. St. Old •phone 2828.
INCUBATORS AND BROODERS.
INCUBATORS, $6 to $38; BROOD-
ers, $6 to $18.50. Send 4c In
stamps for catalogues and Poul-
try books. J. W. Nelson, 6 East
Superior Street, Duluth, Minn.
INTERPRETER.
V.
D. NICKOLICH, INTERPRETER
for several foreign languages, 301
Al orth building.
ROOFING, CORNICE, SKYLIGHTS.
jTlJT^lHciCToBBING^l^D'llEPAIR-
Ing. 631% E. Sup. St. Zen., 1267-A.
BI RRELL & HARMON. 308 E. Sup.
Both 'phones. First-clJiss work.
St.
RIFLES AND GUNS.
Grinding anc. Repairing a
specialty. City Gun Store,
R C. KFUSCHKE.
402 West Superior Street.
SECOND HAND DEALERS.
New and second-hand gsods bought,
sold. A. B. Davis. 1729 W. Sup. St.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE ACRES
on the west shore of Thompson lake
on Vermilion road, about fifteen miles
from Duluth. Will divide to suit.
Easy terms. Tornens title. Price
$12.50 per acre.
FOR SALE — Three forty-acre
FOR SALE — THREE FORTY -ACRH
tracts on Bug creek, adjoining sta-
tion of Pitt on Canadian Northern
railroad, at $5 per acre. Will make
easy terms.
FOR .SALE— FIVE ACRES ADJOINING
Duluth Heights, at $300 per acre.
Easy terms.
FOR SALE — A NUMBER OF IM-
proved and unimproved farms of ten
to 160 acres, near Duluth. Let us
know your wants.
SIGN AND CARD W RITING.
For signs of any destrlptlon. call
1277-D on Zen. 'phone. A. E. Schar.
STORAGE.
FIRE-PROOF BUILDINCn PRIVATE
locked room, separate c jmpartments.
Call and Inspect building. Duluth
Van & Storage Co.. 21( W. Sup. St.
Both 'phones, 492. *
TRANSFER.
HOUSEHOLD GOOD3 PACKED,
moved, stored and shcpped at re-
duced rates. General d raying. Ma-
chinery and safes moved. Duluth
Van & Storage Co., 21C W. Sup. St.
Both 'phones, 492.
HORSE SHOEING.
Shoeing crippled and Interlerlng horses
my specialty. Carl Schau, 14 3d Av. E.
IMPROVED SHOE REPAIRING.
MONEY SAW- 1 TIME SAVING. SHOE
saving. While you wait. Gopher Shoe
works.
JOB PRINTERS.
RANKIN PRINTING CO. — OUT-OF-
town orders a specialty. 821 West
Superior street.
W ALL PAPER AND PAINTS.
C. Erlckson is still in business, with
the latest in wall paper s nd fresh sup-
ply of paint. 1926 W. 2 Id, Entrance
20th Ave. W. Estlmat* » furnished.
WHITNEY A% AI,I. rOMPlNY,
SOI Torrey BniidlBK'
*. BARGAINS IX LAND. *
^ i^
* Good improved farm of 100 •a^
■jfr acres In Carlton county, three -^
# miles from station; good build- #
i^ Ings; 60 acres all cultivated; #
^ fenced; on small lake. A snap at
it $3,600.
# Several lake sites on Miller #
it trunk road and Canadian North- it
•^ ern railroad; very desirable, and it
it reasonable In price. #
* A splendid 40 and 80-acre tract it
•^ of good farming land near Holy- #
it oke, Minn., only $12 an acre; eaay it
it terms. #
■^ Come and let me show you how #
it good they are. W
it CHAUNCEY E. HAZEN, »
it 810 Alworth Bldg. #
FOR SALE— OVER 500,000 ACRES IN
Northern Wisconsin of the best stock
and dairy land on earth; produces all
grains, grasses, fruits and vegetables
that you can produce at home; active
nearby markets, low freights and
high prices; pure soft water springs,
crefelts, rivers and lakes; abundance
of rainfall and moderate climate;
only $6.50 to $20 per acre, easy terms.
Apply John P. Dlckley. 115 St. Croix
avenue, Duluth, Minn.
FOR RENT — TEN-ACRE TRACT ON
the finest road out of Duluth; on
Lester river, three miles from pa-
vilion; four acres plowed and ready
for planting: lots of manure hauled
there this winter; no stone; a small
house on the place. Call on L A.
Gunderson. 117 West First street.
CHOICE FARM.
298 acres, three miles from town, on
main road; practically all cleared; 250
tons of hav cut annually; rich In min-
eral attraction: $20 per acre; one-half
mineral rights reserved. B. M. Hun-
gerford, Aitkin. Minn.
W ATCH REPAIRING.
Watch hospital; cleanins and repair-
ing at lowest prices. Berg Bros.. 112
E. Sup. St.
Read The
HeraldWants
FOR SALE— THOSE WHO HAVE ONLY
a limited amoimt to Invest in a first-
class land proposition, young people
especially, should address W (3, Her-
ald.
FOR SALE— TWO ACRES OF LAND
and four-room house In Birchwood
Park; three-fourths of mile from
Woodland car line. Call Melrose 3017
1 ring. A Sahlln.
FOR SALE — FORTY ACRES OP OOOD
land, near Lakeside. Inquire SOT
West Superior street.
L. A LARSEN CO., 214 PROVIDENCE
building, wholesale dealers in blocks
of lands with miweral prospects
■^
m^B^m**m^tm»
8
■4—
mmtm^i
sa {99a«««s
Saturday,
THE DULUTH HERAIiD
April 15, 1911.
WANT
— AINJO REIMX
ENOUGH-
OR AF»ARX1VIEISIX
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advertisement l,ess Than 15 Cents.
TElJEPifoNi^liECIW^
— OF—
BUSINESS
HUUShS
Below you will find a
condensed list oi reliable
biislncbH tirnis. This is de-
siiined lor the couvenletioe
ol bu:>y people. A telephone
order to any one of them
will receive the same care-
ful attention as would be
given an order placed in
person. You can s&tely de-
pend upon the reiiublUty ol
any one ot these firina.
Old ^t;W
'ftaone. 'Phone.
ARCHITECTS—
Frank U Voung & Co. 4476
Bl !<I>KSS fOLl.KUE —
Tlie lirooklehurst ....2568 1004
DRl (iGlSTS —
Kddle Jvrontmus 1243 10.27
Boyce 163 163
isiiinith & .Smith 2&0 7
DVi: UOKKS —
Zenith City Dye works.lSSS 1888
Korihwestern Dyeing
& Cleaning Co 1337 1516
National Dyeing &
Cleaning Co 2376 2376
Interstate Cleaning &
Dyeing Co.. ••Kelly"8'2630 39
GRUl tlHS —
Thatcher & Thatcher.. 1907
LAL.\Dltll::S —
I'terless Laundry .... 428 428
Yale Laundry 479 479
Lutes Laundry 447 447
Home Laundry Co 478 478
Model Laundry 2749 1302
milli>i-:k —
M. A. Cox 4676
SIK.\T MAHKKTS—
Mork Bros l(i»0 189
SHOK RKPAIRING —
Olsen. 410 E. 4th St... 1029-01
REAL ESTATE, FIRE
IXSURA^XE AND
RENTAL AGENCIES.
John A. ytephenson & Co., Wolvin bldg.
K. D. Field Co.. i:o3 l-ixchange building.
L. A. Larsen Co.. Providence building,
H. J. Mullin, 403 Lonsdale building.
W. C. Sherwood, US Alanhattan bldg.
FUK SALE MISIELLANEOIS.
it ^
# FOR SALE, «
it 'st
-,t A WOXDKRFUL MUSICAL *
# IN.STKUMEXT. *
it '#
^ One of the latest style Victor ■^
it' Vlotrc'las. greatest musical instru- •j^
it' nunt In the world; either oak or ^
it mahogany. Have one In your ^
# home, entertain your family and •^
# friends. Instead of |250, or even -it
4(. >loO. you can now buy one of i^
& these, complete with records, for ii^
it only 181'. >'0. flU cash and fS a ^
# month. i^
It FRENCH & BASSETT. *
it it
FOR SALE — WILTON VELVET RUG.
Eize 10 by 13, good condition; a bar-
gain. Call at 521 East Fourth
street.
FOR SALE— EGGS FOR HATCHING
R. C. White Wyandottes; |1 for thir-
teen eggs; Black Minorca. |1 for thir-
teen eggs. Address 429 .Sixth avenue
west. New 'phone. Grand 2154-Y,
FOR S.\LE— ONE WHITNEY BABY
carriage, nickle folding go-cart, oak
buffet, gas range with water heater
attachment, iron bed and springs, all
in good condition, at less than half
price. Call 230 North Sixteenth ave-
nue east, forenoons.
* SEEDS, PLANTS, TREES. *
a- *
* *
* IF YOU CONTEMPLATE ANY *
* CHANGE OR IMPROVEMENT IN *
*' YOUR LAWN OR GROUNDS. *
* *
if- Or waat any trees, shrubs, flowers #
if- or plants of any kind, call and see i^
* '^
^ G. R. MERCER, *
* 220 East Superior Street, *
* or 631 East Superior Street. -^
jfr ^
-Jt Phone, old, 3170. •*
a- Twenty Years' Experience. #
FOR SALE— PRACTICALLY NEW
furniture of four-room flat. Oppor-
tunity for young married people to
save considerably. Same flat for
rent. 17 East Fourth, second floor.
FOR .SALE— TWO BOX BALL ALLEYS
and three pool tables; will sell
cheap. J. A. McDonald. 301 Central
avenue. West Duluth.
-.t *
-^ MEN WANTED ^t
* #
ii- To read some of the late editions i^
•^ we are carrying on the subject of ■?(■
■k- Socialism. Also a large stock of ■^
# other politif-al books by well- ^-
•^ known English authors. -;t
*. TYOMIES, 30 W. FIR.ST ST. *
'» *
FOR SALE— ORGAN SUITABLE FOll
country school, 406 North Hugo
street, Duluth Heights. Zenith 'phone
Grand 2196-X
FOR SALE — COMPLETE BED.
quire 617% West First street.
IN-
FOR SALE — CHEAP, ONE BUCK
kitchen range In A-1 condition. Call
at 305 Eighth avenue east.
FOR SALE— f70.00 PIANO CERTIFI-
cate; will sell for $5. Inquire Room
17, 210 West Second street.
* INCUB.\TORS *
* AND -jA
* BROODER.S. if
'jt i^
■rif Agency for Buckeye and Robert *
'if' E.'^sex model incubators and brood- #
■* ers. Poultry supplies. ^
■^ ft
■^ Baby chlck.s hatched to order. ^
^ 15c and up. We will incubate eggs •^
■jt furnished us for 5c each. j(.
* *
* NORTHERN GROWN tested *
if' garden and flower seeds In bulk. :^
'ft ^
* W. W. SEEKINS, Florist, ^
* 302 East Superior St. -,t
it- Both phones. f^t
it 'A
FOR .SALE— EGGS FROM BEAUTIFUL
White Leghorns at 75 cents for thir-
teen. 703 West Fourth street
FOR .SALE— TWO-PIECE MAHOGANY
parlor set; call mornings. 616 >y4
Fifteenth avenue east.
FOR SALE — LEATHER PARLOR
suite or will trade for a cow. 6114
Waseca street south. West Duluth,
FOR SALE — ALL KINDS OF MATER-
lal used in packing furniture, burlap
excelsior etc. We also furnish
packers by the hour. Estimate free
Duluth Van & Storage Co., 210 W.
Superior street. Both 'phones 492.
Continued on pace 30.
One Ckrnt a Woril Eacn Insertion.
No Advertlsejnent l^ess Than 13 Cents.
HELP \\^STED—¥mAi£.
W.\NTED — BOOKKEEPER WHO UN-
derstands stenography. Apply North-
ern Manufacturing company, Christie
building.
WANTED— C0MPP:TENT GIRL FOR
general housework. 1822 East Third
street.
WANTED — FIRST - CLASS COOK;
good wages; ' gmall family. 2505
Hast P'lrst street,
WANTED— MARKER AND SORTER
for Mesaba Steam laundry, Hibbing,
Minn.
WANTED — AT ONCE, TWELVE
young ladies to secure office posi-
tions by becoming members of the
business committee to boost the
Young People's Building Enterprise.
305 Manliattan building. Office
hours, 8 a. m. to 9:30 p. m.
WANTED — THE NEW METHOD
Dressmaking school teaches you to
become a dresamaker In six weeks;
make dresses for yourself or others
wulle learning. 310 West Second
street, next to Y. M. C. A. building.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; three in family. Apply
1121 Ixtndon road. Melrose 4S02. Old
■phone.
WANTED— GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework, private family. Mrs.
Wilson, 124 Fourth avenue east.
W.VNTE D— A PPR ENTICE GIRL TO
learn halrdresslng. Comfort Beauty
shop. Mrs. Scott. 20 West Superior
street.
WANTED — GIRU APPLY TROY
laundry. 22 East Superior street.
WANTED— NEAT APPEARING YOUNG
lady, one with theatrical experience
preferred; also amateurs. Call at 29
West Second street, between 2 and
4 p. m.
WANTED — AN EXPERIENCED W.\IT-
rcss at Sixth Avenue restaurant; |8
per week.
WANTED— GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook. Ap-
ply 1509 East Superior street.
WANTED — LADIES TO LEARN
hair dressing and the trade. Call and
let me explain how I can easily teach
you to become onek G. Moisant,
P'rench hair dressing parlors, 212
West llrst street.
WANTED— SWEDISH GIRL FOR GEN-
eral housework; newcomer preferred.
3432 Allendale avenue. Woodland,
Grand 19S6-A.
WANTED— FIRST CLA.SS WOMAN
cook; $50. 2531 West Superior street.
WANTED — YOUNG GIRL TO .\SSIST
with housework. Mrs. Norton, 40
Forty-eighth avenue east.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; small family. 12 North
Nineteentli avenue east.
WANTED— NEAT APPEARING YOUNG
lady, one with theatrical experience;
also amateurs. Call at 29 West Sec-
ond street.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED GIRL. AP-
ply Acme laundry.
WANTED— LADIES, MAKE SHIELDS,
$1.44 per dozen. Material furnished
responsible women. Stamed en-
velope for particulars. Empire Sup-
ply Co. Dept. 758, Milwaukee,
WANTED — GIRLS AT MRS. SOM-
mera' employment office. 15 Second
avenue east.
WANTED— AT ONCE, TWELVE
young ladies to secure office posi-
tions by becoming members of the
business committee to boost the
Young People's Building Enterprise.
305 Manhattan building. Office
hours, 8 a. m. to 9:30 p. m.
WANTED— LADY TO TRAVEL IN
Minnesota; good pay and tailor-made
suit In ninety days; experience un-
necessary; reliable firm. Write for
particulars. McBrady & Co., Chi-
cago.
WANTED — LADIES TO MAKE SUP-
porters, $12 per 100; no canvass-
ing— material furnished. Stamped
envelope for particulars. Wabash
Supply company, Dept. V 137, Chi-
cago.
WANTED — ANYONE CAN EASILY
earn good salary at home; no scheme;
we mean business; no canvassing; no
writing. Particulars for stamp.
Address Wagnus, 124, Scranton, Pa.
WANTED— GOOD GIRL OR MIDDLE-
aged woman for general housework;
no objection to color. Call 4211
Lombard street, Lakeside.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral housework. Apply 320 Ninth
avenue east.
WANTED —
housework;
Fifth street.
GIRL FOR
no cooking.
GENERAL.
1025 East
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; good room and good
wages for right party: no objection
to newcomer. 1828 East Superior
street.
WANTED COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework; small family and
good wages. Call mornings or even-
ings. Mrs. A. B. Walker, 2103 East
First street.
WANTED— KITCHEN GIRL.
Second street.
30 WEST
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 1916 East Third street.
WANTED— GIRLS TO BRING THEIR
combings to Miss Horrigan, Oak
Hall building, to be made Into
switches, braids and puffs, at rea-
sonable prices.
WANTED — DINING ROOM GIRT*
Royal cafe. 515 West Superior street.
WANTED— GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral housework; small family; good
wages. Apply at once, 1422 East
Fifth street.
WANTED — GOOD CHOCOLATE DIP-
per. Winkler Bros.' candy factory,
2234 West Michigan street.
Central Employment office, all kinds
of places filled and positions furnish-
ed for £irls. Room 3, over Big Du-
luth store. MeL 259. Grand, 620.
WANTt:D — COOKS. WAITRESSEl,
chambermaids and kitchen help; out
of town orders solicited. Park Em-
ployment agency. 16 Lake avenue
north.
WANTED — TWO DINING ROOM
waitresses at Hotel Lenox.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 718 Tenth avenue east-
Call Grand 2253-Y.
WANTED— GOOD GIRL FOR GENER-
al housework; good wages. 423
Fifteenth avenue east.
WANTED — GIRL TO ASSIST WITH
general housework. 1509 East Third
street.
WANTED —
housework,
street.
GIRL FOR
Apply 213
GENERAL
East Third
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework; two In family;
no washing;
be good cook.
$25 per month. Must
1032 East First street.
WANTED — CHICAGO FAMILY WISHES
to take an honest, industrious girl
of 16 to assist with housework; pre-
fer a homeless girl; excellent home
and motherly supervision. Mrs. R. R.
Forward, 2701 West Fourth street.
Contlnaed on i>«ce 30.
One Cent a Word Kaeh Insertion.
No Advertisement Le^s Than 15 ('eiuts.
HELP WAMED— MALE.
***-J¥>t*-V-**^*f.<T?^-'*'^f'*****'^Wf'^^
BOYS! GIRLS! MONEY"^ AFTER
SCHOOL!
Send us your name and address.
Wo will send you twenty pack-
ages of our Handy Sheet Bluing.
You can sell them after school.
Send us $1 and keep $1. The Nora
Novelty company, Duluth, Minn.
WANTED — Bright men to train as
chauffeurs; practical instruction giv-
en. Auto Owners' association, 1312
Hennepin avenue, Minneapolis.
WANTED— AT ONCE, TWELVE
young men to secure office positions
by becoming members of the business
committee to boost the Young I'eo-
ples Enterprise. 305 Manhattan
building. Office hours, 8 a. ni. to
9:30 p. m.
LEARN TELEGRAPHY NOW.
Earn $60 in railroad position In spring.
Excellent opportunity; don't miss it.
Write Thompson's Telegraph insti-
tute, Minneapolis.
WANTED— SALESMAN, WILLING TO
learn business; will pay $8 to $10
a day right from the start; $8 to $15
a day when you get It going; life
Job; it's work, but its house-to-house
calling, but it pays: It's a commis-
sion, but it pays; are you willing to
learn what you dont know and get
the money? If so, write Sales Man-
ager. 122 Sycamore street, Milwau-
kee, Wis.
WANTED— ACTIVE YOUNG MAN
for collecting work; one who has had
experience in laundry collecting
preferred; will be required to give
bond. Address giving references. W
ITS Herald.
WANTE1>— EDGERMEN, TRIMMER,
saw pullers, setters, and green lum-
ber grader. Leech Lake Lumber Co.,
Walker, Minn.
WANTED— MEN TO KNOW WE GROW
a head of hair or no pay. Bryant &
Co., room 12, Phoenix building. Mel-
rose 3257.
Men to learn barber trade. It's easy.
Positions waiting. Good wages. Cat.
free. Moler Bar. College, Minneapolis.
WANTED— CIVIL SERVICE EXAMIN-
ations of nearly every kind will be
held during September and October.
Those intending to take them should
commence preparing now. Full In-
formation free. Columbian Corre-
spondence College. Washington, D. C.
WANTED — GOVERNMENT EM-
ploycs. Send postal for Duluth exam-
ination schedule. Franklin Insti-
tute, Department 148-F, Rochester,
N. Y.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED EGG
candlers. Apply foreman. Bridge-
man & Russell.
WANTED — SIDELINE TRAVELING
salesmen, make $50 to $75 weekly
handling our latest productions of
advertising; fancy. Liber.il terms.
Apply at once. United States Calen-
dar Co., Cincinnati.
WANTED— CAPABLE SALESMAN TO
cover Minnesota with staple line.
High commissions, $100 monthly ad-
vance and permanent position to
right man, Jesa H, Smith Co., De-
troit. Mich.
WANTED — AT ONCE, TWELVE
young men to secure office positions
by becoming members of the business
committee to boost the Y'oung Peo-
ples Enterprise. 305 Manhattan
building. Office hours. 8 a. m. to
9:30 p. m.
WANTED — LADIES' TAILOR. FRANK
Justyn, Room 1, 13 East Superior
street.
WANTED — I WILL START YOU IN
the mirror business; best paying
trade of today: famous French
method; home work; spare time; no
capital; $12 daily; let me prove it;
free particulars. "Corey" Department
108, Omaha, Neb.
WANTED — SALESMAN, EXPERI-
enced In any line to sell general
trade in Minnesota. Unexcelled spe-
cialty proposition with brand new
featiire. Commission -with $35 weekly
for expenses. The Continental
Jewelry Co., Cleveland, Ohio.
WANTED— TWENTY-FIVE DRIVERS
on Cloquet river. Apply Peerless
Employment Co., 529% West Michi-
gan street, or 421 Tower avenue,
Superior.
WANTED — $90 PER MONTH AND
expenses to men to travel, advertise
and put out catalogues. Big mail
order house. Silverton Co., B 161,
Chicago.
WANTED — $90 MONTHLY TO TRUST-
worthy people to distribute samples
and catalogues, at home; steady
work. $45 expense allowance. S.
Scheffer, treasurer. V 261, Chicago.
WANTED — CARPENTER TO FIX UP
and move a house. Forty-fourth ave-
nue east and London road; chance to
obtain nice home In good locality for
very little; some money negded. H. A.
Hooker, 569 Frederick avenue. Mil-
waukee, Wis.
WANTED — TEN CO.MPETENT MILL-
wrlghts at International Falls; wages
$4 per day. Report to International
Lumber company. International Falls,
Minn.
WANTED — GOOD, LIVE, COUPON
solicitor at Rlsem's studio, Superior,
Wis.
WANTED — COATMAKER, J. S.
Lane, Rooms 1 and 2, over Big Du-
luth,
WANTED — FREE ILLUSTRATED
book tells about over 360,000 pro-
tected positions in the United Statc-s
service; more than 40,000 vacancies
every year; there Is a big chance
here for you. sure and generous pay,
lifetime employment; easy to get;
Just ask for booklet C 302. No obli-
gation. Earl Hopkins, Washington.
D. C.
WANTED— BIG MONEY WRITING
songs; thousands of dollars for any-
one who can write successful words
or music; past experience unneces-
sary; send us your song poems, with
or without music, or write for free
particulars; acceptance guaranteed If
available; Washington only place to
secure copyright. H. Kirkus Dug-
dale company, department 424, Wash-
ington. D. C.
WANTED — BY PITTSBURGH MANU-
facturer, a few energetic salesmen,
to sell the leading high-grade spe-
cialty of the United States today; ap-
licants must be high-grade salesmen,
as only one man can be used in a
county. Hutchison Manufacturing
company, Wllklnsburg, Pa.
WANTED— MEN WANTED— AGE 18-
35, for firemen, $100 monthly, and
brakemen $80, on nearby railroads;
experience unnecessary; no strike;
positions guaranteed competent men;
promotion. Railroad employing
headquarters — over 400 men sent to
positions monthly. State age; send
stamp. Railway Association, care
Herald.
SALESMEN W^ANTED— MAKE $1,000
monthly selling Rockport lots. $100;
new deep water harbor. W. H. Sar-
taln, San Antonio, Tex.
WANTED— YOUNG MEN AND WOM-
en — Learn telegraphy; easy work,
good pay; others learn It, why not
you? Progressive. The Whitney
School of Telegraphy, W^est Duluth,
Minn.
Continued on pace 30.
One Cent a Word Elaeh Insertion.
No Adverti8(.MneHt I.<e«'s Than 15 Cents,
On Pages 29| 30 and 31
FARafMD FRUIT LANDS. ^
* #
* FOR SALE. i^
* A beautiful natural meadow, be- ■i^
* tween 60 and 70 acres, with good *-
^ house and barn, total 120 acres. *
if- lor $500 down, balance on easy #
* terms. '^
ii- A fair, two-story frame house, a -^
* barn, a hay ghed and good well, if-
if- about seven acres cleared, total ^
* 80 acres, for only $3.50 down per H-
7^ acrp "l^
*< A ' log home, 18 by 20, with *
a- shJngle roof; a barn, 24 by 22; *
* curb well; all high land: 30 acres *
i6 tamarack, 12 double cord pulp and a-
■k- five acres under plow; total 40 if-
;t acres; »» per acre. *
if^ YOU CAN MOVE IN TOMORRO»V^. *
if- The price of our farming lands 0-
if- is $5.50, $6.50, $7,50 $8, $9, $9.50, *-
it- $10, $11, $11.60, $12 and up per ^
*• acre, and all these acres are lo- *
* cated around Duluth. st
* SNYDER BROS., *
^ 212 West First Street. *
* Vi^
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., townships 60 to 63,
ranges 14 to 17. which we will sell
In large or small tracts at very low^
prices. Good location for dairying
and truck gardening. Some fine lake
shore frontages. Settlers on ad-
joining lands raising from 250 to 300
bushels potatoes per acre. Buy some
of these cheap lands now and be-
come Independent. Call or write for
map, Minnesota Land & Dairy com-
pany, 407 Providence building.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county. Minn,, in townships 60 to 63
and ranges 14 to 17. which we will
sell in large or small tracts at very
low prices. Good location for dairy-
ing and truck gardening. Some fine
lake shore frontages. Settlers on
adjoining lands raising from 250 to
300 bushels potatoes per acre. Buy
some of these cheap lands now and
become Independent. Call or write
Minnesota Land & Dairy company,
407 Providence building.
FOR SALF:— FORTY ACRES OF LAND.
one-half mile to station; one-tiilrd
mile to school: good house, well and
barn; one-half mineral right; $1,100 if
taken at once; a snap. Apply Martin
Moe, Alborn, Minn.
500 FARMS— IMPROVED AND UNIM-
provcd, 40 to 4,000-acre tracts, mid-
way between Duluth and St. Paul;
clover, corn, potato belt; from five to
forty years at 4 per cent; good soil,
markets, roads and schools; also
land near Duluth. Come and get
your choice; no better chance any-
where on earth. Minnesota Land &
Immigration company, 801 Torrey
building.
FOR SALE— TVVO ACRES OF LAND
end four-room house in Birchwood
Park; three-fourths of mile from
Woodland car line. Call Melrose 3017
1 ring. A. Sahlln.
FARMS — CHEAP WISCONSIN HOMES.
Cutover hardwood timber lands lo-
cated In Rusk county: 65.000 acres of
fine clay loam land In the heart of
the dairy and clover -belt; close to
good markets, schools and churches;
terms to suit purchaser. Write for
nnaps and other Information to the
Arpln Hardwood Lumber Co., Grand
Rapids, Wis.
FOR SALE— A FORTY- ACRE FARM,
ten acres Improved, ten miles from
town. Inquire 2409 West Ninth street.
FOR SALE — FORTY' ACRES NEAR
Duluth; four-room house, good base-
ment; thirty-two acres cleared; good
soil; $1,600. Whitney Wall company
301 Torrey building. (70.)
FOR SALE— $450 TAKES A FORTY-
acre tract; two and one-half miles
from city limits if taken at once;
fifteen acres clear; 125 cords of cord-
wood. Call 119 East First street.
Grand 1762-X. ^
FOR .SALE— FIVE-ACRE TRACT,
Colbyvllle. facing new boulevard,
$125 per acre; also 20 -acre tract,
$150 per acre. Great snaps. Getty
Smith Co., 306 Palladlo.
TEXAS INVESTMENTS.
Buy Orchards and Garden Lands at
Aldlne, near Houston, the greatest
city In the Southwest, where values are
growing upward all the time. Address
E. C. Robertson. 501 Klam building,
Houston, Tex.
FOR SALE — FIFTY-FIVE ACRE
tract on Bordon Lake, three ml'ed
from Gordon, Wis., several trains
dally to Duluth; good soil; fine fish-
ing; beautiful shore line and trees;
summer cottages all around; price
$650, $325 cash; balance easy terms.
Helmbaugh & Spring, 1103 Tower
avenue, Superior. Wis.
Farm lands at wholesale prices L. A
Larsen Co., 214 Providence building.
FOR SALE— FORTY-ACRE TRUCK
farm, six miles from Duluth; 25 acres
cultivated; six-room house, barn, etc.
Included are two horses, cows' and
chickens Price $3,500; will exchange
for city property. G. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
FOR SALE— BARGAIN IN WELL IM-
proved farm; good frame house and
thirty acres cleared; on main road,
handy to Duluth; must be sold; good
place for chickens. Call on E H
Caulklns & Co., Palladlo building.
FOR SALE — FARM, CONTAINING
about 63 acres, fronting on lake, on
Cuyuna Iron range; 20 acres culti-
vated; good buildings; no mineral
reserve. Price $2,000. Easy terms.
G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM IN
south Cass county: all fenced; level
land; 12 acres cultivated; fair build-
ings; small stream. Price, $1,300. G
A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — 10,000 ACRES IN 40 AND
80-acre tracts, close to Hibbing and
Chlsholm; good markets; forty an-
nual payments of $16 each on 40
acres, or $32 each on 80 acres, pays
both principal and Interest. For
further Information apply Guaranty
Farm Land company, 416 Lyceum
building, Duluth. Minn.
FOR SALE — LANDS IN SMALL
tracts to actual settlers only: good
location for dairying and truck gar-
dening. For further information call
on or address Land Commissioner,
Duluth ft Iron Range Railroad com-
pany, 101 Wolvin building, Duluth,
Minn.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM ON
Crow Wing river; 20 acres cleared,
20 acres meadow; good clay soil; no
buildings. Price, $1,300. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— T^N ACRES OF GOOD
land inside city limits; cash or terms.
S. H., Herald.
SELECTED FARMING LAND&
On line of the Alger-Smith railroad.
On easy terms to settlers.
ALEXANDER McBEAN,
Sales manager. 406 Columbia Bldg.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE-ACRE
farm, close to station In Morrison
county, on fine lake: good soil; hay
meadow; five-room house and barn.
Price, $1,700. G. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
For sale — lO-acre tract* norUi M Wood-
land. W. M. GUI. 296 W. 5th St.. Superior.
One Cent a Wowl Eaeh Insertion.
No .\tlvertlisenient Less Than 15 Cents,
FOR^ENT^^^^FLATST
FOR RENT— FIVE- ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat; steel range
In kitchen. Call at 529 East Third
street.
FOR RENT— MODERN FIVE-ROOM
flat. First avenue west and Fourth
street. Moderate rent. Charles P.
Craig & Co., 601-505 Sellwood
building.
One Cent a Word £ach Insertion.
No Advertisement Less Thau 15 Cents.
FOR renCjuJoSsT'^'^^
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS;
board if desired. 301 Eist Third
street.
Continued on pace SI*
* *
* FOR RENT. , -St
^ it-
it- Three beautiful front rooms, ■it
-^ steam heated, facing Superior *
* street, suitable lor business if^
* offices. 9t
* «
* 15 E. SUPERIOR ST, FLAT 2. if-
if' *
FOR RENT — STRICTLY MODERN
seven-room fiat. Close to courthouse,
postoffice and railroad depots. View
of lake and harbor. Moderate rent
to right party. No children. Charles
P. Craig & Co., 601-506 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM FLAT; VERY
light, airy rooms; moderate rent;
East Third street, near Eighth ave-
nue. Chas. P. Craig & Co., 501-605
Sellwood building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM FURNISHED
Hat In the Lafayette flats, thoroughly
modern; heat, water and telephone
service furnished. R. P. Dowse & Co.,
IOC Providence building.
FOR RENT— TWO OR THREE VERY
desirable rooms In Dodge block; very
central. Apply N. J. Upl.am com-
pany. 18 Third avenue west.
FOR RENT — TWO AND FO tJR-ROOM
fiats; water paid; $5 anc $10 per
month. 702 E. 2nd St. Grand 1299-D.
I FOR RENT — FURNISHED BOOMS IN
very desirable location; strictly mod-
ern; one block from car Un;; with or
without board; prices light. 223
East Third street.
FOR RENT — LARGE BASEMENT
room, 50 by 140 feet, with double
door opening on alley, 312 West Sec-
ond street; $75 per month. See J. D.
Howard & Co., 216 West Superior
street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED R30M FOR
lady or gentleman; all modern con-
• venlences; rent very reasonable. 828
East Second street. Melrofe 3945.
FOR RENT — FURNISHEI* ROOM ;
steam, heat, electric light, bath, use
of 'phone, parlor and piano. 806 Park
terrace.
FOR RENT — LARGE, Pl.EASANT,
furnished front room, Lj.ke view,
central, modern, private hime; also
a smaller side room, both reasonable.
Rent to gentleman. U. 18 Herald.
FOR RENT— VERY FINE SEVEN-
room apartment in new Berkshire
apartments, corner Eight avenue east
and First street. Rental department,
John A, Stephenson & Co., Wolvin
building.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROO-M FIR.ST
floor flat; modern except heat, lib
East Fifth street.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS
and alcove; light and bath. 1218%
East Fourth street. Hartman-O'Don-
nell agency, 206 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— MODERN FIVE-ROOM
brick flat, 721 ».^ East Fifth street;
hot water heat; gas range; laundry
tub; $28. water furnished. Call
Grand 2253-A.
FOR RENT— TWO FOUR-ROOM FLATS
with four large closets, first and sec-
ond floors. 1322 Jefferson street. Mod-
ern except heat. Call Zenith 1961-D.
FOR RENT— FINE FOUR AND FIVE-
room flats; low rent. Inquire old
telephone, Melrose 1018.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. S. S. Williamson 615
Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR RENT — TWO FLATS, 114 EAST
Seventh street; all modern conven-
iences; hardwood floors; may be had
May 1; downstairs, $17 per month;
upstairs, $15 per month. Call Grand
2120-D Mrs. Hattle Schneider, or N. H.
Witt company, 12 West First street.
FOR RENT— TWO FIVE-ROOM FLATS
Garfield avenue. $7.00 each. J. D.
Howard &, Co., 216 West Superior
street.
FOR RENT— FOUR -ROOM FLAT. 479
Mesaba avenue: all modern; also
very large bathroom; " heat and
water included.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT;
318 Sixth avenue east, upstairs; bath,
electric light, gas for cooking; wa-
ter paid; $16 per month. R. P. Dowse
& Co., 106 Providence building.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM FLAT, 1201
West Superior street, upstairs, water,
toilet, electric lights, hardwood
floors; basement in connection; rent
$13. Inquire 404 Palladlo building.
Phone Grand 88.
FOR RENT— F1VF:-R00.M FLAT AT
123%^ East Fourth street. Inquire at
123 East Fourth street.
FOR RENT — SIX-ROOM STEAM
heated flat; central location; thor-
oughly modern; Janitor service;
laundry tubs. Apply Corporate In-
vestment company, Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT, 19
Lake avenue north; six-room flat, 14
West First street; all modern con-
veniences. Inquire rental department
Bridgeman &. Russell.
FOR RENT— FLAT WITH ALL MOD-
ern conveniences at 421 West Third
street. Mendenhall & Hoopes.
FOR RENT— 927 EAST FIFTH
street, five-room flat, bath, water
free, $22 per month. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT — A TWO, THREE AND
four-room flat in new brick building
only five blocks from postoffice, and
a level walk, with a beautiful view
of lake; very elaborately furnished;
hot and cold water, gas electric
lights and gas range; rent reason-
able to steady people. Call 1030 West
First street.
FOR RE.NT— FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
water, sewer and electric light. 2103
West Third street. Apply at 313
Twenty- first avenue west.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE CHEERFUL
four-room flat, water, toilet, gas,
electric light, $13; Third avenue
west. Harris Realty Co., Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT— THREE MODERN FLATS
with all conveniences. Apply to L.
Hammel Co.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM GROUND
floor flat, with all conveniences ex-
cept heat. 102 Vernon street.
FOR RENT — FOUR -ROOM FLAT,
modern except heat. 108 South
Twenty-seventh avenue west. Mel-
rose 1^4 5.
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
.Seaton terrace, $11.00 per month.
W^ater furnished. D. W. Scott & Soji
402 Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM FURNISH-
ed flat; $15 per month. Inquire 1123
East Tenth street.
FOR RENT — MODERN EIGHT- ROOM
brick flat; electric light, gas, ranges,
good laundry. Inquire at 120 Second
avenue west.
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11 per month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS;
light and bath. 208 East Fourth
street. Hartman O'Donnell Agency,
206 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat. Call Lin-
coln 52, Melrose 1052. Room 203, An-
derson & Thoorsell block. Twenty-
first avenue west and Superior street.
FOR RENT— MAY 1, TWO FOUR
room flats with bath. Hardwood 1
floors throughout. Gas, electric light,
etc. Very central location. Tele-
phone Grand or Melrose, 225. W.
C. Sherwood & Co., 118 Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT— 15
East Superior street. Steam heat,
water, gas. electric light $26 per
month, including heat. R. P. Dowse
& Co., 106 Providence Bldg.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM MODERN
fiat; central. S. S. Williamson. 515
Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED OR UN-
furnlshed fiat; $27 per month. Twin
Ports Realty company. 510 Manhat-
tan building.
Contlnaed on p«se SI.
I
SECRET SOCIETIES.
FOR RENT— TWO FRONT ROOMS,
furnished for light housekeeping. 609
West Third street; $20 p< r month;
heated; gas range, lights, bath,
phone.
FOR RENT— TWO NICE ROOMS FOR
light housekeeping. 318 East Fifth
street. Inquire 28 West Fl;-st street.
FOR RENT— ONE LARGE AND ONE
email nicely furnished, modern
rooms, en suite or separate; private
family. 412 West Fourth street. Mel-
rose, 1297.
FOR RENT— TWO FRO.NT ROOMS,
modern; $8 and $10 per month. 706%
West Second street.
FOR RENT — MODERN FURNLSHED
room; $8 per month. Cill Grand
1591-A.
FOR RENT— O.NE SINGLE FURNISHED
room in one of the most beautiful
downtown residences. 131 West
Third. Melrose 2503.
FOR RENT— VERY' DESIRAItLE FUR-
nished room. 201 West Th ,rd street.
FOR RENT — FURNISHEI> ROOMS,
also two fiats for light housekeep-
ing; modern; centrally located; newly
decorated; use of phone. Melrose
2840. Inquire at 216 W«!St Third
street.
FOR RENT— TWO LARGE NICELY
furnished modern front looms for
light housekeeping, with all con-
conveniences. 206 East First street,
third floor.
FOR RENT— LARGE LIGHT FRONT
room; furnished for gentlemen or
couple; modern; vacant April 24. 310
East Third street.
FOR RNET — 521 W^EST SECOND
street, ten rooms, steam heat, mod-
ern throughout; make a good board-
ing house, $50 per month. J. D.
Howard & Co., 216 West Superior
street.
FOR RENT — THREE ROOMS DOWN
stairs, water paid, $8.00 p.;r month.
1021% Minnesota avenue.
FOR RENT — TWO ROOMS, FUR-
nlshcd complete for houjekeeping.
Call between 4:30 and 6:30 p. m. 304
W'est Fourth street. Flat O.
FOR RENT — A COMFORTABLE PUR-
nished room in private fa;nlly. 420
East First street, flat B.
FOR RENT— NICE, CLEAN ROOM IN
private family, suitable f < r one or
two, with use of parlor. 316 East
First street.
FOR RENT— EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
also three rooms at 226 West Third
street. Call 11 East Third street.
FOR RENT— WILL RENT TO RE-
sponslble party two beautifully fur-
nished rooms for light housekeeping;
hot water heat; hot and cold water
in the rooms; no children; central lo-
cation. O ^90, Herald.
FOR RENT— ROOMS IN A MODERN
East end residence. Call Grand
627.
FOR RENT — TWO FUlflNISHED
rooms for light housekeeilng. 206
West Third street.
FOR RENT — TWO, THRIIE AND
five rooms, nicely furninhed for
housekeeping, $6, $12 and $18; city
w^ater and gas; one block from car,
two blocks from park. Ii07 South
Seventieth avenue west.
FOR RENT— NICE, NEWLY FUR-
nlshed rooms; young men preferred.
421 East Fourth street.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOM,
with use of bath and phcne. 633
East Fourth street. Melrose 1717.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ROOMS FOR
light housekeeping; strictly modern.
316 West Second street.
FOR RENT— TWO UNFUJ^NISHED
rooms; small family; w.iter and
sewer. 628 West Third.
FOR RENT— AFTER APRIL 15. FOUR
nice rooms, second fioor, 19 Twenty-
eighth avenue west; water, sewer,
toilet, electric light, $10 p<r month.
F. 1. Salter Co.
FOR RENT — THREE RCOMS IN
basement; all conveniences except
heat. 23 East Sixth street.
FOR RENT — FOUR ROOMS DOW^N
stairs, 420 Ninth avenue <ast: nice
yard; water paid; rent $14. Call 1031
East Fifth street.
FOR RENT — NICE. NEATLY FUR-
nished room suitable for one or two;
all modern, with board; $20 per
month. 125 East Fifth street.
FOR RENT — LARGE FURNISHED
room with private family; steam
heat, electric light and gas; use of
'phone and bath. Inquire 124 East
Fourth street.
FOR RENT— 3516 WEST THIRD.
Five rooms, bath, gas and city wa-
ter; $14 per month. Inquire down-
stairs.
FOR RENT— THREE ROOM.S DOWN-
stairs iu brand new cottage, all con-
veniences except bath and heat. A
snap to right party Call 1030 W'est
First street.
FOR RENT — NICELY FU:^NISHED
room; all conveniences; $8 ter month.
617% West First street.
FOR RENT— THREE ROOldS, GAS,
water and lights. Inquire 1821 West
First street.
THREE ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED
for $69; this Includes furiilture for
kitchen, dining room and bedroom.
Terms, $1.50 per week. Why not
own the furniture In your apart-
ments or rooms instead of paying
rent on It See F. S. Kelly Furniture
company.
FOR RENT — WANTED — BUSINESS
man to share with two oth.»r gentle-
men a new six-room apartment In
East end, walking dlstanc-?, or will
rent room and board for $50 per
month. Address X 267, Herald.
FOR RENT — THREE ROOM 3, BLEC-
trlc light and all convenience^ $10
per month. Inquire 1203 West Fourth
street.
Continuea oa tfmge HO,
PALESTINE LODGE. No. 79,
A. F. & A. M. — Regular meet-
ings first and third Monday
evenings of each month, at
_ 8 o'clock. Next meeting,
^ April 17. 1911. Work— Reg-
ular business. Rene T. Hugo, W. M.;
H. Nesbit, secretary.
IONIC LODGE NO. 186, A. F.
& A. M. — Regular meetings
second and fourth Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meetingv
April 24, 1911. Work— First
degree. Walter N. Totman, W. M.}
Burr Porter, secretary.
KEYSTONE CHAPTER NO.
20, R. A. M. — Stated convo-
cations second and fourth
Wednesday evenings of each
month at 8 o'clock. Next
meeting, April 27, 1911.
\N ork — M. M. degree. Charles W. Kles-
wetter, H. P.; Alfred Le Richeux, sec-
retary.
A DULUTH COUNCIL NO. SL
R. & S. M.— Next moetlnii
Friday, April 21, 1911. at 4
p. m. Work — Royal and select
masters' degree. James A.
Crawford. T. L M.; Alfred Le Richeus,
recorder.
DULUTH COMMANDERY SO.
18, K. T.— Stated coiiclava
first Tuesday of each month
at 8 o'clock. Next conclave,
April 18, 191L Work— Red
Cross degree. Frederick E. Hough, EX
C. ; Alfred Le Richeux, recorder.
SCOTTISH RITE — RKGU-
lar meetings every Thursday
evening at 8 o'clock. Next
meeting, Tuesday, April 11,
. . 1911. Work — Maunday Thnrs-
day week. Henry Nesbit, secretary.
ZENITH CHAPTER NO 26.
Order of Eastern Star — Reg-
ular meetings second and
fourth Friday evenings of
. each month at 7:30 o'clock.
Next meeting, April 14, 1911. Work-
Regular business and initiation. Eli.a-
beth Overman. W. M.; Ella F. Gearha.ti
secretary.
EUCLID LODGE NO. 198, A.
F. & A M. — Meets at West
Duluth second and fouitu
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meeting
April 12, 1911. Work— First
M. M. Mcldahl. W. M.; A.
aegree.
Dunleavy. secretary.
DULUTH CHAPTER NO. 59,
R. A. M. — Meets at Wejt
Duluth first and third
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meeting
April 19, 1911. Work— Royja
Arch degree and lunch. Roger M.
Weaver, H. P.; A. Dunleavy. secretary.
K. of p.
NORTH STAU LODGK. NO. 33, K. of P.
—Meets ever>' Tuesday evening al Cutis
hiUl. 118 WeEt Superior siriet. Sat
lureUriK Tiiisday tveriliig. .^piil 18. 8 p.
m. o'oltM'k sliarp. Klrxt rank wmis. .\li
knights .'oniJallj' iliTited. A. L. Stuigis, C. v.; 8. A.
Heani, K. «if It. 8.
DI.\MO.\D LODGE. No. 45. K. of P.—
Meeu every MiniUay evening In .Sloan'i
liall, cuiner Twtnlietli uvciiue we t and
.Superior street. All kiii^Uts turalallj ii^
Tlted. L. li. Allen. C. C; S. L. I'itict,
K. of U A S.
KITCHI G.\.MAII LODGK. .VO. 123. K. ot
P. — Ueels every Thuraday cvriiliig nt ( c.m-
Ditrcial club hall, Ciiitr.il aiiiiue. Wert
Duluth. Neit meethig Thuriiday. April
I3th. Work. sr<-oiiU raiik. AU knigliU
rordlally luTlted. K. D. Nickerson. C. C; C M.
PhllUpa. K. ot It & S.
DULUTH LODGE, NO. 28. 1. O. O. P.— MEETS
every Friday evening at 8 o'clo<-k at 041
Kelliiws' hall. 18 L4ike a«ei)ue uorth.
Next nieeUiig night, April 14. Flat
degree. J. A. Nelson, N. O.; L. G. Marlow. Ke&
Sec , A. H. Paul. Via. Sec.
WEST DULUTH LODGE. NO
168.
I. 0.
O.
F.
^
Meets
every Tuesday
night
at I.
O.
0. r.
b«ll.
W«st Duluth.
Neit
meet
Ing
night
April
11. General business
. W
£.
Cow-
den. N. G.;
W. u
Hartley, Utc.
Sec.
A
DULUTH ENCAUP.MENT. NO. 36. I. O.
O. P. — Meets on the second and foartb
Thursday at Odd PeUows hall. 18 Laka
avenue north. Next meeting night April
13. Iloynl purple degree. K. Andenon.
C. P. : L. O. Marluw. Ucc. Scrib*.
K. O. T. M.
DULUTH TENT. NO. l— MEETS EVERT
Monday, 8:15 p. m., at Maeabee ball.
21 Lake avenue north. VLsltlog mea-
hets always welcome. F. C. Fr««r,
commander, flat 4, Munger row. Wei»
Duluth; J. B. Oelliieau, record keeper.
office In baU. Hours. 10 «. m. to 1 p. m., dally.
Zenltb 'phone, Qrand 61B-X.
A. O. 0. W. __
FIDELITY LODGE. NO. 105 — MEETS
at Macc.ibec hall, SI Lake avenue iiortlj,
every Tliuraday at 8 p. m. VUiting
niembers wclccme. M. Cossl, M. W. ; A.
E. Plerlng. recorder; O. J. Murrold. fl-
nancler, 217 East Fifth street.
MODER.N SAMARITANS.
ALPHA COUNCIL, NO. 1— TAKB NO-
tloe that Samaritan degree meeta flat
and third Tliursdays; beneflcent. second
and fourth Tliursdays. Lucy A. Purdy.
Lady O. S. ; N. B. Morrison, Q. 8.; Wal-
lace P. Wclbnnks, scribe: T. A. Gall, 9.
8., First National Bank building.
UNITED OUDEB OK FOUESTEBS—
Court Eastern Star, No. 86, meeU evert
first and third Tuesday at U. O. r.
liaU corner Fourth avenue west and
First streeL Chaa. V. Har.son, C. a.
•^ 507 West Fifth street: A. R- Olund, sec-
retary 1031 West First stiet. HatiTr Mil.»es Ueaj-
urei room 23. Wlnthrop block. Zenith phone U^80-X.
M. W. A.
IMPERIAL CAMP. NO. 2206 - MEETS
at U O. r. hall. Fourth avenue w««t
and First street, second and fourth
ruesdays of each montli. Harvei W.
Wlke, consul; C. P. Earl, clerk, box 4111
F. E. Dnremua, deputy; addresa, N. *•-
rrelght office.
CLAN STEWART, NO. 50, O. 8. C—
Meets first and third Wednesdays a«cli
month, 8 p. m., at U. O. F. halL come*
Fourth avenue west and First ktreet. Next
regular meeting, .\pril 11'. Robert Fer-
^f^m^mm^ guBon, chlef; Don McLeunaa. secretary;
John Ituniett, Fin. Sec., 312 Torrey buUdlng.
ROYAL ARCANUM, Duluth CouncU. No.
1483 — Meets second and fourth Tuesday
evenings, Macabee hall, 21 Lake aveoM
north. Clinton Brooke, accretary, 491
Columbia buUdlng.
Mesaba Council, No. 1403— MeeU ftwl
and third Wednesday eveuiiigs, Columbia
balL West end. A. M. Johnson, aecreUiy, 117 Noxtk
Twentieth avenue west.
ORDER OF OWLS, DULtnfl
Nest. No. 1200— Meetings are held
every Wednesday of each month at
Owls' ball. 116 West Superloi sireeC
Joseph E. Feaks, secretary, 22 Eaat
Superior strecL
PRIVATE HOSPITAL.
MRS. HANSON, GRADUATe" MID-
wlfe; female complaints. 413 Sseveutn
avenue east. Zenith 1225.
Mrs A. Ferguson, graduate midwife;
female complaints. 2201 West Fourth
street. Zenith. Lincoln 224-Y.
& WAROE, GR.\DUATB MIDWIFR
and nurse. 215 Twenty-sixtli avenue
west. Zenith 'phone, Lincoln I'OO-D.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL— PROSPECTIVE)
mothers will find a pleasant home
before and during; confinement at
Ashland Maternity home. 208 Tenth
avenue west, Ashland. Wis. Infants
cared for.
PEHSON.iX. — Private home for ladlc«
before and during confinement; ex-
pert care; everything confidential; In-
fants cared for. Ida Pearson, M. D.,
284 Harrison avenue, St. Paul, Minn.
Mrs. H. Olson, graduate midwife. Pri-
vate hospital, 329 N. 58 Av. W. Zen-
ith 3173; Calumet 173-L.
WOMAN'S HOSPITAL. — MR& MARY
Barrel!, matron. 981 JLondon road.
Zenith 'pbo&e. 1197.
;..
>
•y»'
BC
f « *
I
i-
-;y^-j,.,
^^
til J
— ♦-
LfiST t
THE DULUTH HERALD
IS fME!
VOLUME XXIX— NO. 7.
MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 17. 1911.
HIST0Ftt6*OiCENTS.
MEXICAN FEDERALS ATTACK REBELS AT AGUA PRIETA
i"J?*
t
ARE REPESED AFTER A FIERCEANDDESPERATE BATTLE
BILL LUTING COUm
TO SIX SENATORS TO
COME BEFORE HOUSE
Is Made Special Order Bat
Not likely to
Pass.
Distance Tariff Bill Meets
Final Defeat in the
Senate.
Senate Also Kills Robert C.
Dunn s Anti-Road-
house Bill
<By m Staff Correwpondent.)
St. raul. Minn.. April 17.— (Special to
The Herald.)— By a vote of 68 to 42
the house this morning made a special
order for 3 o'clook this afternoon of
the AVeis-Moonan-Hayeraft-Duxbury
constitutional amendment limiting the
large counties to six senators each.
The bill liad been at the bottom of
general orders, with no chance of its
being reached except in this way. It
is no* likely to pass, as some voted for
the speiial order who are interested in
killing time to prevent other bills from
being reached.
* • •
The distance tariff bill, passed by
the house because of Speaker Dunn's
Insistence, met a final defeat this
morning when the senate railroad
committee, voting unanimou.sly, with
tile exception of Senator Cashman,
author of a Mil which the senate kille 1
some lin.e ago, recommended it for
indefinite postponement. When the re-
port is made to the senate this after-
(Continued on page 7, sixth column.)
ASSURANCES OF
JAP FRIENDSHIP
BIG JOB FOR
THEJENATE
Simply Cluttered With Pro-
gressive Measures of
Large Importance.
Final Days of the Session
Will Be Busy
Times.
(By a Staff CorreBponilent.)
St. Paul, Minn., April 17.— (Special to
Tlie Herald.) — The eve of adjournment
finds the house cleared of all progres-
sive measures of large Importance, and
the senate simply cluttered up with
them.
This In spite of the turbulence and
turmoil that have made the din of
battle a commonplace noise in the
house chamber, in spite of tlie loudly-
voiced charges that the organization of
the house was not disinterested in its
purposes, and In spite of an unparal-
leled waste of time in that body, three-
fourths of which has been due to the
obstructive tactics of a certain type of
"progressives."
The house has passed over to tne
senate the following measures, all of
which confronted that body when it
convened this morning for the final
days of the session:
The state-wide primary.
The recall.
The initiative and referendum.
The Keefe bill providing the Oregon
(Continued on page 4, fourth column.)
BOWED IN PRAYER;
PELTED WITH EGGS
HOlf IS 1 DOUGLAS
s'
'cc
Co
RE HIT BY BULLETS
KILLED BY
A _FANATIC
Lieut Rodney, U. S. A., Mur-
dered By Moro Thirsting
Christian Blood.
Cut Down With Bolo Without
Warning in Streets of
Manila.
Emphasized at Dinner Given
Americans By Count
Komura.
Tokio, April 17. — Count Komura, the
foreign minister, gave a dinner today
for Ambassador OBrien and the staff
of the American embassy in celebration
of the recent conclusion of the new
Japanese-American commercial treaty.
Fortv persons were present, among the
numf)er being Premier Kalsura and his
lissociates in the cabinet, and a few
prominent Americans residing here.
In offering a toast to President Taft,
Count Komura said that sincere friend-
ship had "built a foundation which
' annot be shaken by a campaign of
falsehood and ii;lsrepresentation which
IS being prosecuted with an ingenuity
worthv of a better cause. This treaty
gives added pro<.f of the solidity of the
relation.* between Japan and the United
.States and owes its existence largely
to the active interest and wise states-
mansliip of President Taft."
Itesponding, Mr. OBrien toasted the
''mperor, agreed that 'kindly and sym-
pathetic relations" as described by the
foreign minister, existed and added:
"It may be necessary to continue to
deny falsehoods and discourage unwar-
.-anted and unworthy suspicions, but
no sincere friend of mankind and pa-
triotic citizen of either country should
shrink from the task of silencing evil-
minded speakers and writers, and of
convincing the last doubter that the
two nations are designed to continue
in accord and harmony. While Presi-
dent Tatt richly deserves the encomium
pronounced by the foreign minister,
we must not forget that the emperor
always accorded his assistance with in-
terest and sympathy."
DAUGHTERS BEGIN
ANNUAL SESSION
Twentieth Continental Con-
gress of D. A. R. Opens
in Washington.
Washington, April 17.— The twentieth
continental congress of the Daughters
of the American Revolution convened
today in the memorial hall of the or-
ganization. The large auditorium was
thronged with delegates and other vis-
tors, while all remaining space was
illed by Washington women, always
ager to attend the D. A. R. conven-
tions.
Following the call to order by the
president general. Mrs. Matthew T.
i-^cott, the day's program included a
greeting from President Taft, addresses
uy the president general, by the honor-
iry president general, Mrs. John W.
■'oster; by the president general of the
'Ons of the American Revolution, Will-
am A. Marble, and by Senator Robert
Taylor of Tennessee.
Business sessions will begin this
afternoon. The chief interest of the
delegates centers in the election of
the -society's officers, which will take
dace on Thursday. The campaign Is
an acrimonious one.
Six Persons Arrested in Chi-
cago for Assaulting
Minister.
Chicago, April 17. — Four women and
two men were arrested for pelting the
Rev. Sergius Bazilevitch, pastor of a
Russian orthodox Greek Catholic
church, with unboiled eggs during the
Easter services yesterday. AVhile the
clergyman's head was bowed in prayer,
a shower of eggs was directed at him
from the rear of the church. Half a
dozen broke against his face and body
and spread over liis vestments. Police
rescued the minister, who had been
dragged from the church by members
of his congregation.
Tiie trouble Is the result of a feud
which began when the Rev. Paxdrey,
former pastor of the church, was re-
moved and the Rev. Bazilevitch in-
stalled in his place. The congregation
resented this action and opposed the
new minister.
SUED FOR DIVORCE;
ATTEMPTS SUICIDE
Woman Tries to Kill Herself
and Little Boy By Illu-
minating Gas.
Chicago, April 17. — Mrs. Pearl Mc-
Pherson, 25 years old, formerly of Ma-
son City, Iowa, who Is defendant In a
divorce suit pending here, attempted to
kill herself and her o-year-old daugh-
ter today by turning on the gas In a
room at a hotel. The would-be suicide
left two letters asking that she and
her child be burled In the same grave
She went to a hotel yesterday and
then summoned her husband, who is an
electrical worker in the employ of
George W. Jackson, Inc. She sought to
convince him that derogatory stories
which had been told about here were
untrue, but her efforts at a reconcili-
ation were of no avail.
Mrs. McPherson may not recover, but
the little girl had crawled to a win-
dow and suffered little from the experl-
Manila, April 17. — Lieut. Walter H.
Rodney of the Second United States
cavalry, stationed in the Augur bar-
racks, in the Department of Mindanao,
was murdered todav by a Mora Jura-
mentado, crazed with religious pas-
sion, who ran amuck thirsting for the
blood of a Christian.
The assassin belongs to the Moham-
medan sect of Juramentados. the mem-
bers of which have taken an inviolable
oath to shed the blood of the hated
Christian. They know no fear, be-
lieving that the performance of what
they consider a religious duty if re-
sulting In their own death, will be re-
warded with eternal bliss.
The fanatic was armed with a bolo.
and as he tore through the streets
those who saw him fled in terror. He
encountered Rodney seemingly by
chance and struck him down before
the officer could defend himself.
Lieut. Rodney was a native of Cali-
fornia and 32 years of age. He was
appointed a second lieutenant in the
First cavalry some years ago and was
made first lieutenant in the Second
cavalry on August 2 last.
EDWARD F. CROKER.
New York, Aprii I'.— Edward FCro-
ker. chief of the new New /iork fire
department, today tendered nis resigna-
tion to take effect on May 1. Deputy
Chief John Kenlon was at once desig-
nated by Fire Commissioner Waldo to
be acting chief of the department.
Lobnter Famine Broken.
Boston April 17.— Boston s lobster
famine has been broken by .ihe ar-
rival of the steamer Boston ftomiar-
mouth, N. S.. with 1,200 crates of the
crustacean. The catch off the Nova
Scotia coast is reported successful and
regular shipments will follow.
IMPORTANT
MOVE MADE
Rebels Would Draw Some
Peace Expression From
Mexica
Believed Diaz Must Act
Quickly on Present
Situation.
Washington, April 17. — Details of an
Important move by the Mexican revo-
lutionists, designed to draw from thn
Mexican government Bome delinite ex-
pression witli regard to ihe cstabllEh-
ment of official peace negotiations, be-
came known here today.
It was learned by concentrating al-
most the entire insurgent army In the
state of Chihuatiua under Gen. Fran-
cisco I. Madero, Jr., In the vicinity
of Juarez, Mex., operations similar to
those witnes.sed at Agua Prieta last
week and which it is believed will f ui -
'her involve the fecerul government
in an embarrassing situation concern-
ing the American border, were in con-
templation. Th«i rause In the move
has been brought about by Dr. Vaz-
quez Gomez, head of the revolutloni.'.t
agencv here, but the Insurgents in the
field have declared a delay may be fatal
and are urging immediate action. The
(Continued on page 9, fourth column.)
Majoiiy of Ameiican Gtizens Keep Indoors,
But Few Venture Out to See Battle.
All United States Troops AvaOable Go to Bor-
der and kt Exposed to Fire.
After Hours of Fighting in Wbich Many Are
Killed, tk Federals Retreat
DEFINITE ASSURANCE DEMANDED
Washington, April 17. — In view of the acute situation
along the border, the state department today asked the Mexi-
can government for definite assurances in advance of a formal
reply to the representations of the United States, that the
Douglas incident would not be repeated. The department
also requested information as to what preventive measures
had been taken.
I
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—Prof. Clarence Aadreira of EnKliMb Department of Amherst CoUeBC. *
' SWERRIHG IS AS NECESSARY AS ANY OTHER FORM OF LANGUAGE
ence.
TRAIN DERAILED.
Three Persons Injured in Wreck at
White, Okla.
Chicago, April 17.— Officials of the
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific rail-
road today received reports of a
wreck at White, Okla. in which an
entire train with the exception of the
two sleepers were derailed. Three
persons w-ere Injured. Those hurt ac-
cording to the report received here.
Engineer William Martin of Shaw-
nee, Okla.. hurt Internally. „.^^ .
Express Messenger W. F. Baker of
Memphis, Tenn.. slightly Injured about
^^C C^" Smith, a passenger from Mc-
Allster, Okla., wrist injured.
The train was No. 42, a local be-
tween Tucumcarl, N. M.. and Mempbla
Dougla*, Arix., April 17. — At 10:30
a. m. the flrluK eeaited vlth the
rebel* holdlns every poMltiou which
they occupied at the begii uiug of
the battle. The rebel* bef.aii dlg-
Srlug new trenches at once.
"Hed" I-opcB reported tl»e rebel
eaHunldett iu the treneheii hm light.
American troops have forced
Douslaa rcHidentM bacit to Sixth
■treet within three biocfc»i of the
center o( the city.
Douglas, Ariz., April 17. — The long
expected attack ■>? the Mexican feder-
al troops on Agua Prieta opened In
deadly earnest at 6:30 a. m. today.
The firing was fast and furhms on both
sides. The rattle of muslcetry was
continuous.
The hall of bullets from the federal
machine guns fell far withii the con-
fines of the city of Douglau.
It was evident from the outset that
the battle was to be a decisive one.
Both sides exhibited desperate cour-
age.
The federals began by massing
themselves to the southeast of the
town and moved slowly vithin rifle
range of the rebel position.
The insurrectos, facing in three di-
rections, lay low in the trenches or
flat on the open ground. The federal
fire raked over them and into both
Agua Prieta and Douglas, it was evi-
dent from the heavy firini? that the
casualties on both sides were destined
to be very heavy.
Bullets Plow Up Dougla* Streets.
The steel and leaden missiles from
the federal guns carried far over the
international line and plowed their
wav into the buildings facing along
Second and Third streets. 2nd dug up
the ground here and there over the
whole Southern end of the 2ity.
The federals in moving In. had ad-
vanced from the camp which they es-
tablished yesterday at Sulphur Springs,
a water hole J.ve miles south of Agua
Prieta. with evident intention of gain-
ing the border in order to attack the
rebel position along the Ir ternational
line. Before they were alle to gain
this coveted position, however, they
encountered the rebel cavalry which
had galloped out to inteicept them,
and there was a rattle frim the re-
peating rifles as the two advanced
into firing range.
The cavalry dropped back slowly and
the federals next came within range of
the deep entrenchments thiown up by
the rebels during Sundaj- and last
night, which were filled with Insurrecto
eliarpshouters.
KeHidenta 'U'ithin Doora.
Most of the residents of Doug:as re-
mained within doors or sought other
places of safety. Some attempted to
gain vantage points to view the field
of battle. Notwithstanding the sirlct
orders of the American troops, many
rushed to tlie international line to get
a view of the fighting. They were here
exposed to most Imminent danger.
With the firing of the first shot, Col.
Shunk ordered out all the American
cavalry available- in Douglas. They
were rUMied quickly to the border and
took up positions along the line. Many
of these men were exposed to the fire
of the main troops, though there wer«
no casualties among them during the
early part of the battle.
Company G of the Arizona National
Guard w^s also ordered out and took
up a position at the armory to await
further orders. There were four troops
of cavalry and one of militia in Doug-
las. Tb.is was considered an ample
force to protect the American line.
With the first galling fire from the
rebel entrenchments the federals were
seen to wiver momentarily, but the
movement was quickly checked.
Deadly I'^lre Contiuuea.
For fully fifteen minutes the two
armies held their respective positions
while the deadly fire continued. Thirty
minutes after the battle opened th»
rebels were seen to abandon their out-
lying positions and fall back to the
breastworks toward Agua Prieta. The
federal .advance was slow and In open
order with almcst continuous firing.
The rebels with great stubborness con-
tended every Inch of the way.
Willie the rebel riflemen were fight-
ing back to the second row of en-
trenchments they fought boidly In the
open. They were seen to stop and
take deliberate aim at the advancing
national line and fire round after
round.
The backward movements of the
rebels toward Agua Prieta, however,
was steady. Many had fallen on both
sides.
At 7 o'clock an automobile carrying
United States Marshal Overlook, United
States Secret Agent Thompson and
the Associated Press correspondent,
passed through the guard line on the
American side to the international line.
The hall of bullets at this moment
drove the party to the shelter of the
United States customs house bui the
building was in direct line with the
heavy firing from the southeast.
Bullet Strikes Anto.
One bullet struck the automobile.
H»fE OF TAtK SISTCR. (jSEt
WHEM ^HE CAM'T FiMb \/[^
[Pi/FFS-
youn. wtFO M(N» WUHCN yOV.Aft&
EGG ROLUNG AT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Annual Event Occurs in
President Ta(f s Back-
yard.
Washington, April 17.— Ifright skies
and a warm sun brought thousands of
children to the White House grounds
today for the annual Easter Monday
egg rolling. Children of all sorts and
of all ages, from those who Just tod-
dled, to others with dresnes at their
shoe tops, came trooping early today
Into the president's big back yard.
Most of them brought bs-sketa nlled
with eggs of vivid colors
The rolling had not long been in
nrogress when eggshells strewed the
grassy little hills of the AVhlte House
grounds from top to toe, while crusts
of bread and cake gave ek^idence that
the picn«c feature of the lay had not
been overlooked.
Of course, a lot of the egg rollers
came to see the president and Mrs.
Taft, and if they were looking In the
right direction at the right time they
were satisfied. No grovn-ups were
admitted unless accompanied by chil-
dren. This led to the usual traffick-
ing among small bovs who hired
themselves to strangers seeking ad-
mission at rates of from 6 to 25 cents.
The police, always on the lookout
for this, soon put a stop to the prac-
tice, however.
-• .
Hurt la Aato Accident.
London, April 17.— He rry Gordon
Selfridge, London merchant, formerly
of Chicago, his mother, vife and eld-
est daughter were all jiainfully in-
lured in an automobile accident near
AmbleS\de, Westmorelaml. yesterday.
News of the mishap reached here to-
tey- All are expecUd to recover.
uao-lPE
(Continued on page 7, fourth column.)
REVEAL ROBBER
Impressions Taken From
250 Men Before Right
One h Found.
New York, April 17. — After takinff
the finger imprints of 250 of Abraham
Stelnhardt & Bros.' employes and com-
paring them with imprints left on a
safe that had been robbed there, head-
quarters detectives arrested Joseph
Roberts, No. 2154 Fifth avenue, and
charged him with being implicated in
the burglary.
Roberts was the negro porter in the
Stelnhardt manufactory of noveltiea
and belts. No. 512 Broadway. After
laborious comparison which lasted all
day, Lieut Favrot, in charge of the
Identification bureau at headquarrers,
declared that Roberts finger prints
were practically exactly like those oa
the combination and lower cash draw-
er of the safe which was looted.
The Steinhardts said Roberts was
the only one of their employes who
did not go to work Saturday. Lieu-
tenants Duggan, O'Farrell and Marzin-
sky arrested Roberts near his home.
He denied all knowledge of the bur^r-
lary and Insisted that he remained,
away from the manufactory only be-
cause he felt ill. ^ « ..w
From the inner cash drawer of tne
safe, which was opened by using the
combination, $683 was taken, and the
inner drawer was smashed in. The
cashic-'s drawer in an adjoining room
was broken open. The detectives found
no money in Roberts' rooms nor In U»
pockets.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
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Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
WIFE PLANS DIVORCE SUIT;
HUSBAND TAKES POISON
Despondent because his wife was
planning to sue him for a divorce. Al-
bert Gronquist of 2103 West Super'or
street, stepped outside of the office of
Andrew Nelson, where he had been
consulting with his wife this morning,
and drank a bottle of strychnine,
washing it down with a half pint of
whisky. .,.»,,
He was picked up by Mr. Nelson and
taken to trie police station In the pa-
trol wagon. Dr. lU
Robert Graham was
summoned, but he had taken too much
of the poison and all eflTorts to save
his life failed. He died about an hour
after reaching the station.
Gronquist was about 40 years of age.
He and his wife had failed to agree,
and she was planning to sue him for
divorce on *^he grounds of drunkenness.
He is said to have been partly Intoxi-
cated when he visited tne attorney s
office this morning. ^ , „ , ,„
The body was removed to Crawfora s
undertaking rooms.
BEMIDJI POSTAL
BANK HAS $897
There Are Thirty-Seven Open
Accounts With Average
•f $24.24.
Washington, April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — In a statement just Is-
sued relative to receipts of postal sav-
ings banks It is mentioned that Be-
midjl had at close of business March
31. thirty-seven open accounts with
total deposits of $897. and an average
balance per depositor of $24.24.
REYNOLDS ONE OF BEST
SCALERS L\ COUNTRY.
A brother of John Reynolds, the
lumber scaler who died at St. Luke's
hospital Friday night, is expected to
arrive in Duluth tomorrow to take
charge of the body. Funeral arrange-
ments win not be made until after his
arrival.
lieynolds was one of the best known
lumber scalers In this section of the
country and had a reputation of being
one of the best men at his work in the
United States. He learned the business
in the Michigan forests years ago and
has been in this vicinity for about
fifteen years. He worked In every
port of Importance on the lakes and
for some of the biggest firms In the
lumber business. He was personally-
known to hundreds of lumbermen and
their employes and his Duluth friends
were greatly shocked by his sudden
death.
Reynolds worked for the government
on the Cass Lake reservation during
the past winter and came to Duluth
last week.
\^'E.\THER: Generally cloudy tonight and Tuesday, cooler Tuesday;
moderate to brisk winds, northeast shifting to westerly tonight.
BUSINESS NOTICES.
FOR RE.NT — BE.\UTIFUL STORE
room, second floor. Oak Hall
building; Ideal location for most
any line of business. Reasonable
rent. Applj- at Oak Hall Clothing
Store or W. M. Prlndle & Co.
ARTHUR— YES. WE WILL SOON
display an enormous stock of
Knox Straw Hats. You're right
when you say there is no stra^
hat to compare with the Knox
and that you cannot buy them at
any other store In Duluth but the
Oak Hall.
MOTHER— YES, GEORGE WORCES-
ter has charge of our Boys' de-
partment, and says to tell you he
can fit the boys out In good style
this spring. He particularly rec- ;
omniends the Oak Hall Combina-
tion Suit with two pairs of trous-
ers for $5. He says If Dick is to
be confirmed this month, to get
hlnj one of those suits.
DARBY— WHEN YOU GET HOME
bring the White Sox right to this
store — good ball players appreci-
ate a good clothing store, and you
know the Oak Hall, Darby.
LOTTIE— YES, THE SHOWS AJLE
all good this week — the Orpheum,
Empress and Lyceum are getting
better all the tlm«. Be sure to go
this week.
MRS. B.— SO GLAD YOU LIKED
Mr. B.'s suit^— It could not have
fit him better If made by Poole,
the Fifth avenue tailor, and just
think of the difference In price.
He paid us $25 — the tailor
would charge $75, and you
wouldn't get a suit worth one cent
moi«e. The Oak Hall has done
more than any one else in putting
to an end the securing of orders
here by outside high price tailors.
F. H. B— YES, THE OAK HALL
sells the Cheney silk tubular ties
that your friend wrote you about
— not necessary to send to Chicago
for them. If It's new and if It's
correct, the Oak Hall has It.
MARY — PLEASE FORGIVE ME
for wearing that dry cleaned vest
yesterday. I know you thought I
had been swimming in a gasoline
tank, but It will not happen again.
I bought a classy white v^st at
the Oak Hall today for $3.
EMiL\— MOTHER ADVI.SES ME TO
get my new suit at The Oak Hall,
and she knows best, so meet me
there tomorrow afternoon at 3 as
1 would like to have you help me
decide on a blue or gray. Harry.
PARADE IS
A BIG ONE
King Sol Smiles on the Dis-
play of Easter Finery
in Dnluth.
Nowhere else In the country was
there a more delightful spring day for
an Easter than In Duluth and nowhere
else did the Easter crowds of well-
dressed people enjoy the day better
than right here. It was .a Sunday to
be long remembered, bright sunshiny
and mild, just the brand of weather we
like to brag about.
The Increased throng that visited
the city's prominent cafes was es-
pecially noticeable.
Among those at the Spalding was a
company of younjjr business men who
were enlivening things by chafifing
one of their number because he had. it
was charged, gone out of town to
patronize a tailor for his Easter
clothes.
The cut and fit were so strikingly
attractive that the young man's tor-
mentors were sure they had the money
In their grasp when their victim of-
fered to lay a wager he had patronized
"home industry."
The money was placed and the young
business man, turning down the collar
showed the "High Art" label, the cele-
brated line of highest-class clothing
sold only by The Oak Hall Clothing
company In Duluth. and the money was
handed over to hlra without further
question. There is style merit of rare
character back of High Art models,
and It Is hard to distinguish them from
the suits of the highest priced mer-
chant tailors.
'branch OPFICESi ~
A. Jeaaen. SSO North STtli Ave. W. J. J. Moraa, 31«H North Central At*.
■ ^■■^w ^^^^^^
PROGRAM IS
COMPLETED
Good List of Speakers for
West Duluth Club
Banquet
1 Adam Bede and Alfred
L Bright Among Out-
side Speakers.
mt THE PROGRAM. ^
^ InvocatioB, Rev. D. \%'. l.ynch. *
_. \%'. L.ynrh.
_. Addr^nm of Treloome, L. A. Barnea.
» ToaiitniaNter, W. B. Getchell.
» "City of Uuluth," Mayor M. B.
life Cullnnt.
^ •♦City of Superior." Mayor Frank
* H. Crumpton of ."Superior.
^ Vocal Molo, I^ouIh Dworshafc. ^
^ '•Mnalrlpal Government,'' Alder- ^
jfe man JameA A. A^harton. •*
^ "The Press," V. S. Mitchell. *
^ «.\orthern Minnesota," Senator *
^ James P. Boyle of Eveleth. ^
it Vocal aolo, (Bciected.) *
4e "The Railroads," Alfred K. Bright. «
^ general counsel Soo road, St. ^
* Paul. *
lift "Canadian Reciprocity,** J. Adam ^
^ Bede. ^
¥ft "Affrfcultnrat Poaslbllltlea of St. ^
^jt L.OU1S County," L. B. Arnold. #
^ Other Impromptu talks. ^
0 Maslcal aelectlona by Flaaten'a 4^
* orchestra. *
*»»**»•*»»**»»************»
With few details ready to arrange,
preparations are about complete for
the ninth annual banquet of the West
Duluth Commercial club. It will be
held Tliursday evening at Wade's hall,
Ramsey street and Central avenue.
Cowers will be laid for 400.
The program promises to be up. to
the usual standard. Former Alderman
P. H. MARTIN,
Chairman of Committee on Speakers.
W B. Getchell will be toastmaster.
Among the speakers will be: Mayor
M B Cullum of Duluth. Mayor Frank
R Crumpton of Superior. Alderman
James A. Wharton, C. 3. Mitchell. Sen-
ator James P. Boyle, J. Adam Bede, L.
B. Arnold, land commissioner for the
Duluth & Iron Range railway. Alfned
E Bright, general consul of the boo
road with headquarters In St. Paul, and
others. ,,, ^ .
The supper this year will be served
by the ladles of Asbury H. E. church.
New Spring Apparel
New Coats for Spring
Every one sparkling with style. To the woman who
cares, these new coats we are now showing will surely
prove a delight. The newest and latest ideas in high-
class tailoring, at
$15, $17.50, $19 and Up
New Spring Suits
Stunning spring models, yet with all their charming new
style effects, they are practical garments which will meet
the approval of the most critical buyer. The materials,
colorings and workmanship are the best obtainable, and
the price range is —
$15, $18.50, $22.50 and Up
Spring and Summer Gowns
For afternoon, evening and street wear, displaying many
entirely new ideas in styles and trimmings. Foulards,
messalines, voiles, marquisettes and serges that are dif-
ferent from those you'll see elsewhere, at —
$10, $15, $25 and Up
Spring
Millinery
We're going to show to-
morrow, hundreds of the
smartest street, suit and
walking hats which will be
seen anywhere. All the new-
est models in Helmets and
Turbans. Not a factory-
made hat in the whole coU
lection. Every one turned
out from our own work-
rooms — copies and ideas
taken from the latest and
best models seen in Paris and
New York. Make it a point
to come in tomorrow and
see the swell collection
which will be shown at from
$5'^ $10
On Third Floor.
The brightest, lightest and
most convenient millinery
section in Duluth.
Plenty of ga*d things to eat have been
prepared andf this is the menu:
Cold Turkfey. Cranberry Jelly.
Sliced Ham.
Potato Salad, fl Cabbage Salad.
Boston phked Beans.
French and Parker House Rolls.
Olives. Celery.
Beet and Cucumber Pickles.
Currant yelly.' Apple Jelly.
Assorted Cake. Ice Cream.
Coffee. Fruit. Cheese.
The musical part of the after-dinner
program has not been neglected. Louis
Dworshak and others will sing, and
before and after dinner Flaaten's or-
chestra will furnish a program of
musical selections.
A special decorating design will be
worked out with electrical effects by
the Duluth-Edison Electric company,
other decorations will also add to the
attractiveness of the aftair.
There will be no crowding at this
year's banquet. Only 400 tickets will
be disposed of, and only a few are left.
L.ast year the hall was taxed to over-
flowing, and th«n many were turned
away. •
The committees In charge of the ban-
quet follow:
L<. A. Barnes, president, chairman.
A. G. Macautey. vice president; M.
J. Murray, secretary; George M. Crulk-
shank, treasurer; A. J. Meldahl. W. B.
Getchell., C. F. W. Korth, L,. B. Blechl.
T. W. Tllke and( Directors I* Bamstad.
David Sang, C. ^it" Brooks. P. H. Mar-
tin, K. J. Zauft, Thomas Olafson. J. J.
Frey. A. H. Merrlman, Dr. C. R. Keyes.
Andrew Myles and F. W. Jolltz.
Committee on speakers — P. H. Mar-
tin. L. A. Barnes, Andrew Myles. F.
W. Jolltz and W. B. Getchell.
Committee on supper — David Sang,
C. M. Brooks. A. J. MeldaJU. A. G.
Macaulay and Louis Blechl.
Committee on printing — Thomas
Olafson. C. R. Keyes. J. J. Frey. M. J.
Murray and T. W. Tllke.
Committee on hall — A. H. Merrlman,
E. J. Zauft, George M. Crulkshank,
Louis Hamstad and C F. W. Korth.
Reception committee — The general
committee with these additions: J. E.
Foublster, J. C. Johnson. M. J. Filla-
trault, A. Henrlkson, L. R. Clark and
J. AUyn Scott.
PARTlCIPA^ftB IN
;i FIGHT ARRESTED.
?
John Kobfc!v*harged with carrying
firearms, and Wttllam Toiskl and John
Burr, chargad with disorderly conduct,
w«re arraigned this morning in munic-
ipal court fyr engaging in a free-for-all
light at Toiskl^ place, 5808 Waseca
street, last fverftag.
Toiskl got off with a suspended sen-
tence and tke otlitr two paid $10 and
costs each. Aatos Kuchlnkol. a board-
er at the Itlbski home, an innocent
party to tlici aS«^r, was mistaken for
some one els« *nd struck over the
head, receiving a bad gash. All were
more or le&k battered as a result of the
fight. V -,.
~The policy difl-QOt learn the origin
Qf the tight. - ^
' ♦
Bofgstl^tiii FuneraL
Funeral serrices for John P. Borg-
strom. aged 77. who died Saturday
evening, will be held Thursday after-
noon at IJJO o'clock from the Richter
undertaking rooms, 425 Central avenue,
and at 2 -o'clock from the Third Swed-
ish Baptist church at West Duluth. In-
terment will be in Oneota cemetery.
Mr. Borgstrom came to West Duluth
In 1889. "He is survived by three chil-
dren, Mrs. J. J. Eklander of Willmar,
Minn, and P. J. Borgstrom and A. J.
Borgstrom of West Duluth. besides bis
wife.
W'«tep«ki Funeral.
Tlie funeral of Mary Wolinskl, aged
37, wife of Johh Wolinskl of 6411 Eli-
nor street, was held this morning from
the St. James Catholic church with In-
terment In Oneota cemetery. She la
survived by a husband only.
West Duluth Briefs.
Rev. H. J. P. Sellnger of the West
Duluth Baptist cburcti is visiting in
Chicago.
Miss Maud Wallace, formerly of West
Duluth, now ot Gilbert. Is renewing
acquaintances In the western end of
the city.
The Ladles' Aid Society of the West
Dulutii Baptist church will conduct a
rummage sale at 209 Central avenue.
Mrs. Carolina Paulson and Miss
Sarah Paulson of 20 South Sixty-ninth
avenue west, left today for Rochester,
Minn.
Miss Hazel Allen has returned to her
studies at the state university after
spending the Easter vacation with
friends and relatives in West Duluth.
B. J. Ross of 5528 Grand avenue has
returned from a trip to Goodwin, Wis.
Mrs. Dora McDowell of 410»>4 Cen-
tral avenue Is visiting relatives In
Virginia.
A funeral service was held this aft-
ernoon for Victor M. Shore, whose
body arrived yesterday from Rossland,
B. C. where he was killed In a sliver
mine explosion. The funeral took place
at 12:30 o'clock from Flliatrault's un-
dertaking rooms and at 1 o'clock from
the Finnish church, Slxty-fiftli avenue
west and Nicollet street. Interment
was in Pine Hill cemetery.
Street car traffic on the Grand ave-
nue line was tied up for about two
hours when Car No. 215 "jackknlfed"
at the Slxty-fii"st avenue west switch
about 6:30 o'clock last evening. A
wrecking crew cleared the track.
Rev. J. W. Lowrle has returned to
his home at Bralnerd. Minn., after vis-
iting with \v est Duluth friends Sun-
day.
For rent — Nine-room house on North
Flfty-thlru avenue west; electric light,
water up and downstairs; will rent to
one or two families. Inquire 209 North
Fifty-third avenue west.
P. Liberty of Chicago is a guest at
the home of his daughter, Mrs. H. H.
Lumley of 419 North Fifty-first avenue
west.
Rudolph Johnson has returned from
New Mexico.
L. D. Root, a patrolman on the West
Duluth force has returned from Claire,
Mich., where he spent his annual vaca-
tion.
A meeting of the West Duluth lodge
of Modern Samaritans will be held
this evening at the Commercial club-
rooms. A program will be given, fol-
lowed by refresliments.
Watch repairing. Hurst. W. Duluth.
ROBBERS KILL ONE, WOUND
ANOTHER IN CHICAGO.
COPPERS WEAKEN
UNDER PRESSURE
rired Holders Liquidate —
No Supreme Court
Decisions.
The copper market declined today.
The slight rally in some issues at
the close was not felt by the general
list. It is reported that a big sale of
copper Is pending. It is said that the
Amalgamated has offered 150,000.000
pounds of electrolytic at 12 cents a
pound. Four large concerns are said
to have pooled their interest and have
made a bid of 11 %c. It Is not Impos-
sible that a compromise between those
two figures may be made.
There were no supreme court deci-
sions today and some weary holders
liquidated when It was known that the
delay in deciding legal complications
affecting the market would be ex-
tended.
Amalgamated sold at $62.25 to $62 to
162.12 Va. North Butte at $28.60 to $27.75.
Superior & Pittsburg at $13.75. $13.87Vi
to $13.62>^, Butte Ballaklava at $4.62%,
$4.75 to $4.68%. Butte Coalition at $14.
Calumet & .\rizona at $49.50 to $49.
Greene at $6.37»-i. $6.25 to $6.37%,
Giroux at $5.81^4.
Red Warrior sold at 80c and 85c,
Calumet & Montana at 28c. 30c and 34c,
Clff at 99c and Tuolumne at $4.76.
* • •
The annual report of the Butte Bal-
laklava for last year was Issued today.
The company produced 2,428,346 pounds
of copper. 164,811 ounces of sliver and
42 ounces of gold. The gross income
was $202,120 and the mining cost was
$55,931. The net Income from ore ship-
ments was $146,188. The balance sheet
shows cash and bills receivable amount-
ing to $10fi.971.
* * *
Walker's copper letter in Saturday's
Boston Commercial said:
"Copper Is dull, with prices a trifle
easier. Lake Is 12 %c and electrolytic
12»/4c a pound. It seems that the recent
sharp competition and cutting of cop-
per wire prices helped a great deal to
stimulate the heavy buying of metal In
March, as since wire m-icaas were
marked up, about ten days ago. the
market for copper has been less active.
Export business Is in rather moderate
volume. Domestic consumers are car-
rying practically no copper, and as yet
there has been no development in the
situation of a character to encourage
them to begin laying In big stocks of
metal for the future.
•The Copper Producers' association
figures for March were In a measure
encouraging. Although they showed an
increase of 5,370.164 pounds in the do-
mestic surplus, this was a considerable
Improvement over the showing made
In the Immediately preceding months.
Production and imports In March
reached a new high record, being 130,-
532,080 pounds, an increase of over 20,-
000.000 pounds compared with Febru-
ary. Domestic deliveries, however,
showed an increase of 15,500.000 pounds,
and exports were larger by 14,000,000
pounds. Whereas there was an in-
crease of over 14,000,000 pounds in the
American surplus during February, the
gain was only about one-third as large
in March. The world's visible surplus
now stands at 346.286.014 pounds, which
is about 27,000,000 pounds less than a
year ago.
"The accumulations of Invisible cop-
per are much smaller than they were
in the early months of 1910, as at that
time consumers were carrying consid-
erable stocks, while their bins are now
empty. It is clear, therefore, that not-
withstanding the depressed state of
general business in this country the
world's consumption must have exceed-
ed production at the rate of at least
3,000,000 pounds monthly throughout
the past year.
•"The opening of the Copper River
railroad and Inauguration of ore ship-
ments from the Kinnlcutt Bonanza
mine to the Tacoma smelter is talked
In some quarters as a bear point on
the metal situation. Very little copper
will come from this source at present,
however, probably not more than
1,000,000 pounds monthly for the next
year.
"Some trade authorities who have
been taking a pes.slmlstic view of the
situation for several months past now
express the belief that decided im-
provement will begin to manifest Itself
In the very near future."
* * *
Closing quotations on the Duluth
Stock Exchange today follow:
FIND BODY BURIED IN
SAND ON LAKE SHORE
Lying burled in the sand 3n the lake
shore between mile posts <i and 7 on
the Duluth Sc Iron Range railroad, the
body of a man was found this morn-
ing by Charles Joklnen aid a com-
panion, who were searching for agates
along the shore.
The body was almost completely
covered by sand, and was Irozen fast.
Only the head and one of ths legs were
exposed. It was lying witli the head
CHURCH MEETING
AT THIEF RIVER
Fergus FaUs Confeience of
the M. L Church in Ses-
sion With Many Present
Thief River Falls. Minn., April 17.—
(Special to The Herald.) — ^The Fergus
Falls district conference oi the Meth-
odist Episcopal church is iii session in
this city. Ministerial delegates are
present from Alexandria, .Akeley, Ada.
Bamesvllle, Breckenridgt, Bemidjl,
Crookston, Cass Lake, Djer Creek,
Detroit, Eagle Bend. Fergus Falls.
Fosston, Frazee, Hawley, Hereford,
Hewitt, Bertha, International Falls,
toward the shore, only a few feet from
the water's edge. It is believed that
the man had been drowned in the lak*
and the body washed ashore.
The two men notified the police, and
an officer and an undertaker from
Flood & Horgan's undertaking parlors
left for the scene this afternoon to
recover the body. It was not badly
decomposed, and can probably be Iden-
tified when it is recovered.
Long Prairie, Moorhead. Managa. Mot-
ley. Osakls, Park Ra.plds, Sauk Cen-
ter. Staples, St. Vincent. St. Hllar«t
Verndale, Walker, Wadena and War-
ren.
Rev. A. H. McKee, district superin-
tendent is presiding and the address
of welcome was delivered by J. H. Hay
of Thief River Falls and the response
will be made by Rev. C. H. Flesher
of Bemldji. The conference sermon
was preached by Rev. R. Q. Greene,
Akeley. The program covers three
days and two evenings, in which all
the visiting clergymen will take some
active part.
The Women's Foreign Missionary
society will have charge of the Tues-
day evening meeting and Miss Martha
Nicholson of China will deliver an ad-
dress.
This conference has 3,852 members,
and 261 probationers. It has seventy-
one Sunday schools with 87 5 teachers
and officers and 6,396 scholars. On this
district are sixty-two churches worth
$184,000 and thirty-nine parsonages
worth $44,650. The churches paid for
improvements and indebtedness during
the last year $24,000.
Listed Stocka
Bid. I Asked.
American Saginaw ....
Butte Coalition
Butte Ballaklava
Calumet & Arizona ....
Cactus Development ...
Copper Queen
Denn Arizona
Greene Cananea
Live Oak Development.
North Butte
Ojlbway
Red Warrior
.Savanna, pt. pd
Savanna, f 1. pd
Superior & Pltt.sburg. ,,
Warrior Development .
rnllsted Stocks—
( Amazon Montana
[Butte & Superior
I Calumet & Montana. .
Calumet & Sonora
Carman Consolldafed . .
Chief Consolidated . . .
Cliff
Elenlta Development . .
Keating Gold
North American ......
Rice Bay Iron Co
San Antonio
St. Mary
Sierra
Tuolumne
Vermilion Steel & Iron
Chicago, April 17. — Samuel Meyer, a
saloon keeper, was fatally wounded to-
day and his porter, whose name was
Ernst, was killed outright by three
robbers who had attempted to seize the
proprietor's cash. In each Instance,
the slayers aimed for the heart. Meyer
received a bullet just above that organ.
The bullet which killed Ernst hit the
target exactly.
VINCENT RECEPTION
COMMITTEE NAMED.
For the reception at the Commercial
club Wednesday afternoon on the oc-
casion of the visit of President George
E. Vincent of the University of Mln-
n>esota. the following committee has
been appointed by the club:
Mesdames C. A. Luster. W. H. Hoyt,
C. E. Adams. J. L. Washburn, E. W.
Bohannon. R. E. Denfeld, W. A. Mc-
Gonagle. W. R. Peyton. George A.
Gray. Bentley P. Neff. C. H. Bagley,
C. M. Rice. F. H. Yost. C. E. De Witt,
Fred H. White and J. H. Heardlng.
President Vincent will arrive in Du-
luth Wednesday morning. He will ad-
dress the .students of the Central h/lgh
school at chapel at 9 o'clock arid the
students of the state normal school at
11 o'clock. The reception in the after-
noon will be from 2:30 to 4:30. and
President Vincent will be the guest at
a banquet in the- evening.
2%
17 y*
49?4
13c
7
6?6
17
21 \
5^
90c
13%
83
34c
73c
IVi
95c
2%
17 H
4%
50
15c
20c
11
18
28
6
1 1-1«
3\4
13%
4^
7 1-1«
4
2%
2 1-16
1
8c
2
5
3%
Total number of shares, 4,300.
TO BE HEARD OCT. 10.
Case of Commerce Commission
Against Railroads Assigned.
Washington, April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Chief Justice White to-
day assigned for hearing Oct. 10, the
case of the interstate commerce com-
mission against the Union Pacific.
Northern Pacific and Great Northern.
These cases Involve lumber rates from
various points in the West.
OBITUARY
1%'llllam Hauler* head of the account-
ing department of the Modern Brother-
hood of America and brother of T. B.
Hanley of Des Moines, ' supreme presi-
dent of the same organization, is dead
at Mason City, Iowa.
Prof. SsMucl Gal^-ln, head of the state
geological department and connected
with the science department of the
state university, died at Iowa City.
Iowa, April 17. Prof. Galvin was well
known as a geologist all over the
country.
Mrs. Arthur Rapfiey, formerly Miss
Younghusband of Portage la Prairie,
and a sister-in-law of Hugh Arm-
strong, provincial treasurer of Mani-
toba, died April 16 at Port Arthur, Ont
She leaves a husband and two small
children.
RELATIONSHIPS IN A PENNSYL-
VANIA FAMILY.
Philadelphia Record: Numerous and
very unsual relationships figure In the
family of Mrs. Nancy King, aged 87
vears, who died recently at Gllmore's
Mill. Connelsvllle township, Fayette
county. Deceased was the mother of
ten daughters and two sons. Four of
the daughters married Lelchllters, twin
daughters married TannehlU brothers
and two other daughters married But-
termore brothers. Nine children and
many grandchildren of Mrs. King sur-
vive her.
DEFECTIVE PAGE [■
**Qiddinff Corticr" — Superior St,
at First Ave. W»
ITH ELaster past, there's no excuse
for going around in the garbs of
winter! And at
MOTOR Apparel has
been receiving a
great deal of our atten-
tion this season. We've
co-operated tvith the best
designers of the continent
in producing a good as-
semblage of commenda-
ble style for motor use —
And you'll find much to
interest you among Oid
ding Motor Wear for
women.
this store selec-
tions for after -Easter
shoppers are as broad
and varied as selections
^^/^^^ Easter — for Fresh
Arrivals are incessant
here. The heads of our
Buying Force l^eing con-
stantly in New York,
keeps New Styles con-
stantly pouring in to fill the gaps of the out-
going garmen1:s. And our Three-Store Buy-
ing Advantages enable us to make Prices
more Practical than you will expect.
Gowns and Dresses
Exclusive Styles by the Best Designers.
A dress assemblage that cannot be surpassed in ex-
tent or exclusiveness by any of the Northwest! And no
fashionable modiste could exercise greater care to at-
tain Distinction than we.— Real Imported Models and
copies of them; as well as a host of charming American
styles suited to all manner of wear.
Dresses for Morning Wear at $3.00 to $15.00
Tailored Dresses for Street and Traveling. . .$25 to $50
Lingerie, Linen and Marquisette Dresses $15 to $50
Afternoon Dresses of Foulard, Marquisette, etc
$22.50 to $75
Evening Gowns at $35 and up
Special Values in Foulard Dresses
1 0 CA Should Regularly Sell at $22.50 and $25.00.
X7.«/u Smart Little Frocks of Dotted Foulards, in Blue and
White; Brown and White; Black and White, etc., in up-to-
date models, with yoke and lower-sleeves of lace or net.
Coats and Wraps
A great number of distinctive styles that one can't
describe.— Beautiful cut-a-way efects, large soft revers,
High Waist effects, Fancy-cut Styles.— Raglan Models
in swagger Auto Coats, and the new Strictly Tailored
"Johnny" Coat.— Also Beautiful Styles in Satin, Pon-
gee, Chiffon Coats and Wraps.— Prices $32.50 to $175.
Popular Pricwi Styles in Plain Tailored Coats, the
Popular "Spring Maid" Coat, and English Cravenette
Top Coats at $15.00 to $35.00.
Uncommon Suits of the Dressy Type
The woman who wants something entirely different
from styles commonly seen must be exacting and ju-
dicious in the novelty styles she selects. — But every
well dressed woman knows the caliber of Gidding Nov-
elty Garments, and recognizes the Gidding policy as to
*'advanceness of style," and absolute "correctness o£
detail."
High class Amierican Novelties and Imported Mod-
els of Cloth, Satin and Moire.— Prices $45.00 to $95.00.
Also Splendid Selections in Tropical Worsteds,
Hairline Stripes and White Serge, and Linen Suits.
Wide Range of Custom Tailored Suits at $35.00 to
$65.00.— And Popular Priced Suits at $25.00 to $35.00.
r
t
l^
I
!
-niTir 'fin'iMT ■ 'iiT%
— r
«■»
—
i\
•MiMAa
I
UaBS
CC
- *-H
Monday,
-'I
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
81
This brave cavalier-
Unconscious of fear^
Licks <?/ kinds
Whene'er they appear.
Arc you extremely
particular about your
table?
Then you are just the
one to appreciate
Campbell's Soups.
You will find they
have all the richness
and flavor you would
only expect at three or
four times the price.
You can't make a mis-
take in tr^'ing
Don't Prote Too Deep
CARA REESE.
Soups
If not entirely satisfied
the grocer returns your
money.
You've nothing to lose
and everything to gain.
Why not put them to the
test on your table today?
21 kinds 10c a can
Just add hot water,
bring to a boil,
and serve.
Joseph Caiipbki-i.
Company
Camden N J
Look for the
red-and-white
label
The program which has been ar-
ranged lor Wednesday evening to be
given at the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium
for the benefit of the Neighborhood
House of the Twentieth Century club,
has been completed. It will open with
music by an orchestra and a vocal solo
by Charles O. Applehagen. Mrs. W. A.
Kaake will read and teams from the
boys' department of the Y. M. C. A.
will play a game of volley ball. Two
teams from the Y. W. C. A. will play a
game of basket ball and a number or
•trained animals" will perform. Or-
chestra numbers will also be added.
The event of the evening will be.
however, the play "Sir Gareth of Ork-
ney" which will be presented by some
01 the boys of the Daniel Boone club at
the Neighborhood House. They played
this same piece a few weeks ago at the
House in the West end with good suc-
ces.s under the direction of Miss Mary
Paine and Miss Julia Morrow. Cos-
tumes of old time knights have been
prepared and the boys have made
spears, swords and shields to go with
their costumes. The cast for the play
will be ass follows:
Sir Gareth of Orkney Frank Jensen
l.ady l^ynette Harold Larson
Green Knight Clarence Jentoff
Red Knight William Hedeen
Lady Lynors Clarence Nelson
Sir Kay Alfred Mellin
King Arthur Dewey Mellin
Sir Launcelet Robert HuKslck
Pages and Knights William Meyer,
Jes.se Harrom and Eric Norberg.
ThLs entertainment is the first of a
series to be given to raise money to
tarry on the work at the Neighborhood
house on broader lines and to secure
more equipment. A small admission
fee will be charged and it is hoped
(hat the public will respond gener-
ously.
NEXT YEAR'S PROGRAM
Where are your Furs?
Packed away without fire and
burglar Insurance?
perhaps safe from moths. If you
keep continually unpacking and
airing them.
Or do you store them where se-
curity Is absolute?
Our fur vault Is burglar proof,
fire proof, moth proof and our stor-
age receipt shifts the worrying
about your furs from you to us.
Inspect our vault at any time, If
Interested.
Northern Cold Storage
and Warehouse Co.
Vp-Town Ascntsi
Columbia Clothing Co.
Dulutb and Superior.
Have You Seen the
New Velvet Shoes?
(BrownM and Blacks) at
CLARK, The Sample Shoe Man
11 Second Avenue \%'e«t.
Ladies' Literature Class Will
Study Tennyson and Browning.
The Ladies' Literature class wliicn
has just closed a pleasant season of
study of literature will next year study
the philosophy of literature, taking up
Tennyson and Browning. These two
poets will be taken up through some
of their poems with the intention of
getting tlie philosopliy of the poet
through his works. Instead of ^iInpl>
studying various poems as the members
aid this year.
The subjects for the twelve meetings
will be as follows:
. 1. landmarks In the lives of
Tennyson and Browning
2. Tennyson's treatment of nature.
3. Browning's interpretation of na-
ture.
4. Tennyson as a poet of humanity.
5-. Lecture — Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, and the Humanitarian Move-
ment.
6. Browning's portrayal of human
nature and conduct.
7. Tennyson's psychology of God,
life and Immortality.
8. Interpretative readings from "In
Memoriam."
9. Browning's theory of God, life
and immortality.
10. Tennyson's portrayal of woman-
hood.
11. Womanhood in Browning.
12. Lecture — Message of Words-
worth, Tennyson and Browning to the
present age.
PIANIST TO MARRY
It does not do to inquire too closely
into some things. Or, as the military
officer said, "it does not do to In-
quire too closely when in a state of
siege." His words were In reply to the
question of a brother officer who grum-
bled, "what may this stew be!" when
the chief dish of the dinner table was
set before him.
It does not do to inquire too closely
even Into the makeup of a stew, when
In a state of siege. Yet there are some
incautious people who push their in-
quiries to the nauseous limit. They
have their reward In a bad taste In the
mouth and something Inwardly to re-
gret. It were better not to Inquire too
closely into stew.s, pot stews or the
figurative kind, siege or no siege. The
digestion is more tranquil.
It were better sometimes to enjoy
what is set before you, to admire the
beautiful In art and architecture, to
revel in that which appeals as won-
derful, it were better to exercise be-
lief, hope and trust, than to inquire too
closely as to the real or imitation. It
were better not to push Inquiries too
closely as to cash tainted or untainted
When in a state of siege, be wary. It
is much the same with the necessary
venders of supplies. It does not do to
push inquiries too closely as to adul-
terated brands and doctored products
when somewhat at the financial mercy
of the dealers.
This does not mean that you are
obliged to purchase or to eat the ob-
willfully blinded to stuff or staff
and the copied painting. It does not
mean the Ignoring of the weak point
and pressing no interrogation as to the
clean or unclean, but it does mean to
stop short of turning the stomach, of
destroying all confidence, of agitating
conscience over trival alarms until
conscience fails to respond when the
overpowering danger comes.
Most Individuals are mo;-e or less In
a state of £lege. There are ties that
bind. There are bonds that hold fast.
There are citadels to be victualled and
firesides guarded. If the Individual
has faith in the cook, it were better
to allow the mysterious savory to pass
unchallenged. If there be confidence
In administrative ability :t were wise
sometimes not to inquire t«i closely into
perplexing maneuvers. If the spiritual
food goes to the right spot and benefit
Is derived. It were better not to inquire
too pertinaciously as to the personal
faith of the one who doles out. When
In a state of siege, or a condition of
dependency, or at the mercy of times
and condition, it were hotter for the
average individual to rjfraln from
pushing Inquiry too closely.
Likewise in personal mutters, which
pertain to the Individual. It is rarely
polite to push inquiry too closely. The
place for rigid questioning and cross-
examination belongs to the courtrooni
or the judiciary. Even in a state of
siege, one may smilingly refuse the
dish, or decline the unsavory. Be wise
noxious, it does not mean that you are 4 even when beleaguered.
Hints for tke Boudoir
By MILDRED WYCKOFF.
stain firadlcatora.
Ink, fruit or vegetable stains on
fingers are inexcusable, as they can be
easily removed.
The quickest eradlcator Is a piece of
pumice stone kept on the washstand.
Wet before u.'^lng and rub steadily, but
not vigorously, or the skin may suffer.
For stains under nails and In places
where pumice will not reach, lemon
Juice is good; or get your chemist to
make you up some good preparation,
telling him for what purpose you wish
to use It.
A stain remover that has proved suc-
cessful with fruit and vegetable dis-
coloration is made by adding four
drops of carbolic acid to a half-pint of
glycerine and rosewater.
A Good Motnth WaHta.
"I have always had a very unpleas-
ant taste In my mouth in the morn-
ings, and should be so glad If you
would give me the recipe for a good
mouth wash." ^ . ,
The following Is very refreshing:
Mix one ounce of tincture of orris root.
^rf^>^>^^>»^^»^^S^^>^»^>^>^>^
one ounce of essence of white rose,
one ounce of alcohol, tw«nty drops of
peppermint. Put a few drops into a
glassful of water and rinse out the
mouth thoroughly. I should advise
you to give up having lat«j suppers and
to also see if your teetl. need atten-
tion, as if they are at all decayed they
would cause an unplea^ar t taste.
SlUny Red Noii<s
"Whenever I go out Into the cold air
my nose gets very red ai.d shiny. Will
you please give me a cure? asks
"Nesta V."
I have often given acvlce for this
complaint, but possibly yau have over-
looked it. The trouble In due to poor
circulation, and you must make a point
of massaging gently roand the nose
every night and mornlnir to help re-
store the circulation. Wear warm
woolen underclothing, and be careful
that the neck, waist ani wrist-bands
are quite comfortable, an tightness In
these directions will caune the nose to
become red. Apply a little powdered
starch to remove the shine.
Have your Coronet Braids and
Switches made into the pop-
ular six-strand braid.
KNAUF sisters;,
24 WKST SUPERIOR ST.
Second door from Giddings.
After tlie Sliow
For noon lunch or supper, visit
Duluth's finest Oriental restaurant.
Dishes to please the most particu-
lar taste.
THE IVIAIMOARIIM
103 Wc»t Superior Street.
/f
FISCHER
PIANOS
Howardi Farweil & Co.
120 East Superior SL
W. J. ALLEN, Mgr.
■^
Mme. Samaroff Will Wed Con-
ductor of Cincinnati Orchestra.
The announcement of an engage-
which will be of Interest in Duluth
musical circles, is that of Mme. Olga
Samaroff, one of America's leading
pianists to Leopold Stokovskl, conduct-
or of Cincinnati Symphony orchestra.
She has announced that the wedding
will probably take place by May I fol-
lowing which they will travel In Eur-
ope. They will purchase a summer home
near Munich, and after Conductor
Stokovski's three years' contract with
the Cincinnati orchestra is up. they
will make their residence abroad.
Mme. Samaroff visited Duluth two
or three years ago, when she played In
concert before the Matinee Muslcale
club and was the guest of honor at a
reception given by Mrs. John A. Ste-
phenson at Ihe Commercial club.
RANDALL-BALDWIN.
GERALDINE FARRAR.
Geraldlne Farrar has scored another triumph In her Interpretation of the
part of Blue Beard's wife in "Arlane et Barbe Bleu." Those who know tlie
character of Miss Farrar's art will not be surprised to learn th^t ehe made of
this wife of Blue Beard a remarkable dramatic, as well as musical success.
The opera was the third of the new operas of this season at ihe Metropolitan
opera house. The music is by Dukas, whose sy>"Pbonlc poems- have attracted
favorable notice. He Is of the school of Claude Debussy. His opera is written
in symphonic form. While the music has much of the eluslveness of Debussy s
11 still has great charm. Miss Farrar's admirers have marveled at her figure
this season. Each season shows great development in her art; but this sea-
son shows a remarkable development of figure. Miss Farrar has become big-
one must not say fat in speaking of an artist — and she bids fair to have the
true operatic figure before another year has passed.
the yolk of an egg. season with pepper
and salt. Whip the white of the egg
to a stiff froth and P»r half of it in
Then form Into small bells, dip into
beaten egg and roll In bread crumbs.
Fry In deep fat to a nice brown color,
drain on paper by the fire.
♦ • •
' Kitchen Notca.
To light a fire without sticks take a
newspaper, tear It Into sheets, fold up
like a walking stick, then roll round
the hand and stick the ends in to keep
it in a round shape. Four of these are
enough to light a flre with a few bits
of coal on top. , .
Always heat a lemon beiore squeez-
ing and you will get twice as much
juice as you woald without heating.
A most refreshing cup of tea can be
made by boiling a cup of "»"!' and
water together; stir In a^ t^aspo**"'"^
of tea for two minutes and strain into
a warm teapot, or two cups, with sugar
to t £1 ^ t ^
A candle will burn twice as long If
vou let It burn level and then cover
with salt, leaving only the blackened
part of the wick exposed^
In his last passionate embrace. Then
she remembered an errand and turned
round the corner of the houses into the
dirty street. A group of girls were
standing at the corner. Shrieks of shriil
laughter punctuated thel • chatter.
Going to the theater t(»nlght. Ruin?
asked one of them as Bh<i passed.
"I don't know," she answered shortly.
"Come on, we'll cheer you up, as your
man has gone and left you, to sail over
the stormy sea," cried another, In tones
of good humored mockery.
"AH right," said Ruth, "I'll
go.
with Mrs. Sylvester Relchert, 2316 East
Fourth street. The roll call will be
responded to with current events and
Mrs. Maynard will talk on "New Eng-
land Town Meetings."
The members will work on rugs
which will be given to the Sibley
House.
Home Wedding Takes Pace On
Easter Sunday.
At a pretty wedding ceiemony yes-
terday afternoon at the home of Mrs.
M. A. Baldwin, 928 East Superior
street, her daughter. Miss Sarah Grayce
Baldwin became the bride of Freeman
Randall. Rev. Edward M. Stidd of the
Memorial M. E. church read the service
at 3 o'clock In the presence of only
Immediate relatives and a few friends.
The bride wore a pretty gown of
while silk and carried bride's roses.
Her bridesmaid. Miss Clara Randall,
wore a pretty blue silk gown and car-
ried yellow roses. Mr. Randall was
attended by Stanley Gilpin as best
man. Miss Elsie Flett played the wed-
ding march.
The home was prettily decorated
with carnations, roses and smllax, a
color scheme of red and green being
carried out.
Among the guests were the brlde'.'s
grandmother. Mrs. W. AV. Ackley of
Saginaw. Mich., and Mrs. W A. Ed-
wards of Minneapolis.
After the ceremony refreshments
were served and Mr. and Mrs. Itandall
left for a wedding trip to Chicago and
Detroit for two weeks. Upon their
return they will be at home at "Coney
Island" on I'ark Point.
Entertained in Chicago.
Mi!?s Anna Jarrard of Superior, who
is visiting In Elgin, 111., was tlie guest
of honor at a luncheon today at which
Miss Dorothy Bosworth was the hostess.
«
Church Meetings.
The members of the Young Matrons'
club of the First Baptist church have
postponed their meeting until Tues-
day, April 25, when they will be en-
tertained by Mrs. T. L. Hatton of 1422
East First street.
♦ • •
The Women's Aid of the Lakeside
Presbyterian church will meet Wednes-
day afternoon at 1 o'clock In the church
parlors. All members are urged to be
present as this is the first meeting of
the year.
Ladies of the G. A. R.
Garfield Circle No, 4, Ladles of the
G. A. R., will hold its regular meet-
ing tomorrow afternoon at Memorial
hall, at 2:30 o'clock.
SOMETHING NEW IN
SPONGES
We have Just received a shipment
of extra fine sponges, suitable for
the bath, for automobile purposes,
etc., which we are selling at the
very low prices of 40c and 60c each.
Buy your Easter perfumes at
WIRTH'S S^.%^;n
13 Weat Superior Street.
Prompt Free Delivery.
«IT PAYS TO PAY CASH."
MY PRICES PROVE IT.
THOMASSON
"THE FURNITURE mah"
ODD PKliLiOW^S* HAL.L, BlTILDIBfO
18 aad 20 Lake Aveanc Nortb.
Temple Assembly Party.
The Temple assembly has sent out
Invitations for the next party which
will be held Monday evening of next
week at the Masonic temple. The com-
mittees for this affair are composed as
follows: ^ ,, „ ,, „
Floor Committee — O. K. Sellar. Ross
Boyd, H. Trux, P. A. Dovey, William
Clifford. H. I. PIneo. . ^ ,, .
Reception Committee — A. D. Macin-
tyre, George R. Laybourn, W. A. Cov-
entry, A. M. Frazee.
Executive Committee — J. W. Kreltter,
president; H. R. Burge, first vice pres-
ident; C. E, Lonegren, second vice pres-
ident; C. C. Colton, treasurer; C. R. Pat-
tinson, secretary, and P. N. Dennis, as-
sistant secretary.
*
Will Entertain Cub.
Mrs. M. H. Kelley of 606 East Second
street has invited the members of the
Saturday club to an Informal tea at
her home Wednesday afternoon from 3
to 5 o'clock.
♦
Will Lecture at Church.
The committee in charge of the
course of three lectures which are to
be given by Dr. Nathaniel I. Rubinkam
of Chicago under the auspices of the
philanthropy department of the Twen-
tieth Century club for the benefit of
the Neighborhood house fund, have an-
nounced that the lectures will be given
at the Endion Methodl.st Episcopal
church at Nineteenth avenue east and
First street.
Personal Mention.
Miss Margaret Elder is home from
school in Milwaukee, spending a few
days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
G. A. Elder, 1407 London Road.
« * *
Miss Irene Krantz, who was a guest
at the home of .Mr. and Mrs. H. H.
Phelps last week, has returned to Min-
neapolis.
• • *
Misses Elizabeth and Dorothy Olcott
returned to Smith college today, after
spending their week's vacation with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Olcott, 2316 East First street.
• * «
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Weiss have gone
to New York for two weeks.
• • «
F. A. Patrick has joined Mrs. Patrick
in New York, where she has been vis-
iting, and they will sail for the Ber-
mudas this week. They are expected
home about May 15.
• * «
John Craig, who is studying at Yale
college, is the guest of a classmate.
Lewis Stanton in Boston, Mass., dur-
ing his Easter vacation.
Miss Amelia Kreutz has returned to
St. Paul after spending a week with
her sister, Miss Laura Kretuz, here.
Miss Laura Frlck returned yester-
day from Minneapolis, where she vis-
ited for a week.
• • *
Mr. and Mrs. Otis R. Llppett of 918
East Fifth street left yesterday for
Denmark, Iowa, where they will reside
in the future. Miss Agness Llppett
D. A. R. Meeting.
The Greysolon du Lhut chapter of
the Daughters of the American Revo-
lution will meet tomorrow afternoon
will remain here at the home of her
brother. Dr. Dunbar F. Llppett, of West
Duluth until June.
* « •
Miss Clara Thomas has returned
from her home in St. Cloud, Minn.,
where she spent last week.
* * *
Mrs. J. B. Carlisle of Eveleth, Minn.,
is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. W.
Miller of Thirty-fourth street. Park
Point.
* • •
Miss Mav Rood has returned to Min-
neapolis after a week's visit with Miss
Bertha G. Cleworth of 317 East Third
street.
* • •
Miss Clara Kenny of 1818 East
Fourth street, a teacher In the Salter
school, is 111 at her home and unable
to be at school.
* • •
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Mooney and little
daughter of 1229 East Sixth street, re-
turned yesterday from Cloquet, where
they spent part of last week, the
guests of relatives.
* • «
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Keough and
children returned to St. Paul today,
after spending Easter with friends In
Duluth.
* • *
R. T. Goodell and E. P. Alexander
have returned from a month's Southern
stay, most of which was spent in Au-
gusta, Ga.
* • •
Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Poehler are
planning to leave Duluth in June for
Minneapolis, where they will reside. Mr.
Poehler's business Is there. They have
sold their home at 2501 East Fifth
street to Edwin J. Collins. ,
« * •
Mrs. Thomas E. Irvine and children
left yesterday for Bayfield, Wis., where
they will spend the summer with Mrs.
Irvine's parents. Mr. Irvine will leave
in a few days for his station at Rock
of Ages.
Miss Frances Ea'rftart will leave
Wednesday for Two Harbors to at-
tend the library round table conference,
which will be held there that day.
Miss Olive Colbrath, who has been
home from Minneapolis spending the
week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. C. Colbrath of 224 Fifth avenue
east, and Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Shessler
of Minneapolis, who have been their
guests, also returned to Minneapolis
yesterday.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. John Killorin and son
of 516 East Second street are expected
home tomorrow from French Lick
Springs, where they have been spend-
ing several weeks.
• « •
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. McManus of 1914
East First street returned Saturday
from a short visit in Chicago.
TBEEVENING STORY
THE VISION
By R. Sykes.
Jack swung his legs ?aily over the
stile, and whistled a tun* he has picked
up In a lumber camp. His heart sang.
Three and a half years ! The spring
was here now. The meadow grass was
bright, with a clean, tender green, and
a group of children we-e hunting for
the first daisies.
"What would Ruth say to the spring
over there?" he thought What would
she think of the pretty limber houa^
with its cool veranda in the shade ana
wreathed with the wild vine? How
Bhe would exclaim when he showed her
the huge low stump of the great
spruce that he had not uprooted, but
had left as a gaiden seat, on purpose
to give her an idea of the giants li«
had fought to make his little farm.
"Come on, Ruth, here's a pink oncL
love," said a child's voice, in that
charming, coaxing tone that children
use to babies. A tiny mite of 2 year»
old toddled over to the "little mother/'
and Jack turned and gazed at the chllo.
Blue eyed, flaxen haired, with th*
same sweet, petulant rosebud of A
mouth as his Ruth had!
' WhatB her name? ' he asked.
Ruth Cross, sir," said the child, a*
she took the baby's hand.
"Ruth Cross!' echoed Jack. Could
she be Mark Cross' little child'' h»
thought. Mark was going to be mar»
rled when he left But how like RuthI
The small room was crowded witH
people. Every now and then a cheery,
well remembered face would look 'n at
the door^ with kindly, welcoming smil©
and word. "Glad to see you horn*
again. Jack."
Jack In return gave back greeting:
But the effort!
The tobacco he was smoking, though
mild, seared his mouth with bitter
heat. He felt it was even hard to
drink, for something in his throat
hurt and pressed at each draught front
the hospitable glass at his elbow. Yet
he talked and told tales of his lif*
in the West.
He did not mention the timber
house, for that was built for v
He did not mention the big spruce
stump. Every now and then an echo
would float across his brain. A wom-
an's voice seemed to repeat: 'Yea,
a good for nothing actor fellow, and
never a cent did she get from him for
the child, and never will, as I said at
the time.
Then a vision of a lovely baby tod-
dling after daisies, of a woman who
ran and screamed as she came faca
to face with him at the street corner.
A woman with thin white cheeks, and
haunted blue eyes. And, last, the pic-
ture of the empty timber house, with
its shady veranda. Ah, that other
manl
He took a fierce gulp from the newly
filled glass by his side, controlling his
contracting throat by a great effort.
A mist semed to rise before him; the
laughing face of lils old friend, John
Russell, as he told a comical story,
seemed to blend with the picture or
the house "over there."
He was back again there, and — what
was that? A cooing cry! A baby! A
little one with blue eyes stood by tho
spruce stump, patting its broad flat
top with tiny dimpled hands. He rose,
the mist wavered and wreathed around
him. He crossed the room and reached
tjie door. Tho air seemed clearer
there.
Muttering something about fresh air
he went out.
Outside the stars peeped. The awful,
ever present thought of that other
man faded Into nothingness as he
strode down the street. The only thinff
he saw was the baby by the spruce
stump.
He knocked at a cottage door at the
end of the street. A woman came in
answer to his knock. She staggered
back at the sight of him, with a stran-
gled, frightened cry.
He stepped forward and gathered
her Into nis arms.
"Ruth, dear, I've come back for you,**
was all he said.
A MARRIAGE BLACK LIST.
Vienna correspondence I^ondon Daily
Mall: The habit of making Inaulrles at
private detective offices as to the
means and mode of life of any youngf
man who la under consideration as a
suitable husband by the relatives of a
girl whom he wishes to marry lead*
to some curlnous complications In Aus-
tria and in Hungary. Young men deep
In are Inscribed on the so-called
"black list" at the inquiry office.
Good parties are, on the other hand,
put down on the "white list." Five
young Hungarian aristocrats who were
involved in debt to such an extent that
the only possibility of retrieving their
fortunes lay in making rich marriages
formed a kind of company for the pur-
pose of finding wives. Each was to be
provided with a rich bride, preferably
an American heiress, as his turn
came.
Fur Storage
"Bewrare of the Moth.**
Place your furs In our Moth,
Fire and Burglar Proof Vaults
during the summer months —
where they receive expert care
and attention.
A phone call will bring a
messenger to collect them.
Furs to Order,
Repaired or Remodeled.
DULUTH FUR CO.,
326 WEST FIRST STREET.
Zenttb. Urand 02-1} Old, Mel. 4830.
EconoBiical Iriuli Stew.
Take one pound of meat — mutton, if
possible — and cut it into pieces. &cald
three or four pounds of potatoes, half
a parsnip and carrot, tliree or four
onions, cut in thin slices, pepper and
salt to taste and a quart of liquor. At
the bottom of the saucepan spread a
layer of vegetables, pepper and salt
these, then half the rteat, add some
more seasoning, then the rest of the
vegetables; press all close and add the
liquor. Stock Is best for this, but if
you have not got It use rice water in
preference to plain water.
• • •
Potato Croquettes.
Boil three or four potatoes and mash
them through a wire sieve with a
wooden spoon, add one ounce of butter.
"You'll wait for me, won t ^ou,
Ruth? I'll come back, sure in three
years, when I've got a home together,
and then we'll get married. Say you'll
wait, Ruth." ^^ . „ . ^^
The man gazed Into the girl s race
with a look of passionate inquliy,
whilst tears filled his honest brown
eyes The girl looked round upon the
miserable scene — miserable, that Is, to
the ordinary observer — but she made
no reply.
Long rows of monotonous houses,
black roads, stretched before her eyes.
*he patch of grass upon which they
stood; in the shelter of a tarred shed,
was trodden and muddy, showing
plainly the Impression of the Iron shod
clogs of the miners across the short
cut" to the pit. She did not see the
misery and squalor of It all, only In-
tensified in the bleak cold dusk. It
was home to her, and held all she loved
The man's mind was filled with the
Picture of waving golden com, rich
pastures in which cattle browsed, rush-
ing rivers, and blossoming orchards —
the dream-land to which he was going
to make his Ruth a "dream " home.
"Say you'll wait, Ruth," he repeated,
plaintively. ^ ^ _»
"Why do you want to go away at
all. Jack," she asked in a weary tone.
"Oh, Ruth, you know! I , want you
to have a home In the sunlight. Not
here — not here!" he said quickly, help-
le.ssly. He could not find words to
explain, and he would not hurt htr by
so doing, if he could, that he had made
UP his mind his Ruth should not live
hero among the blackness and squalor
and degenerate into a slack woman,
much as the majority of the married
women became, after a few months
weary struggle against coal dust and
the smoke of the factories, in their lit-
tle homes. He thought of her mother,
her married sisters — the woman he
loved'
"Ruth, I love you, and I'll come back
for you hi three years." he reiterated.
"Say you love me, and you'll wait?
"Yes, I love you, and I'll wait," she
replied, in an even tone, not unmixed
with a slight irritation.
The woolen shawl had slipped from
her head to her shoulders. He stroked
the babyish hair, carelessly gathered
Into an untidy but exquisitely graceful
knot at the back of her head. And
even as he did so the blue eyes still
gazed towards the twinkling row of
lights in the cottages, where the
women were preparing supper for the
respective workers, whose ringing
steps could already be heard tramping
back from their work.
The next moment the man was
straining her to his heart. The sleeve
of his work coat pressed her cheek
with painful roughness. His lips
pressed hers in an agony of farewell
• • • his head dropped on her
shoulder. _ ^ j, „ v.^
"Good-bye — good-bye, dear,' he
whispered hoarsely. Suddenly he re-
leased her with a smothered sob, so
abruptly that she staggered. The next
moment he was gone— striding towards
the lights of the little station in the
She gazed after him In a slightly
dazed fashion, and gathered up her
shawl closely over her graceful throat
where the man's roughly shaven chin
had scarified ita delicate smoothneM
*'Th9 Store of QuaUty.**
The Garment Floor
keeps the New York wires and the express man busy these times
—meaning we simply can't keep up with the demand for S. & B.
Suits, Coats and other Apparel demanded by our fashionable
friends. While such markt appreciation is inspiring, it is our
opinion, price for price, and quality for quality, S. & B. garments
top others, and will well repay the confidence imposed in them.
The price synopsis we quote, but the quality, style and gen-
eral points of excellence seem to be in such high favor these
days, that further detail seems uncalled for.
Custom-made Suits $50 to $65.
Plain tailored Sui s $27.50 to $65.
Ornate Individual Types $37.50
to $67.50.
Plain Street Coats $19.50 to $50.
Touring Coats $29.50 to $45.
Novelty and Afternoon Coats
$35 to $75. ^ * « r„
Wash Dresses $2 75 to $12.50.
Marquisette Dresses $21.50 to
$37.50. ^ ^^ -,^
Lingerie Dresses $16.50 to $35.
Street Dresses $19.50 to $39.50.
Afternoon Dresses $22.50 to $75.
Evening Gowns J>25 to $125.
Foulard Dresses $22.50 to $75.
Lingerie Waists $1.00 to $8.75.
Tailored Waists $1.00 to $6.50.
Dre.'^sy Blouses $4.75 to $21.50.
Suit Waists $8.75 to $16.50.
Accessories
Smart Belts, Stockings,
Handbags, .Underwear,
Jewelry, Neckwear,
And the one hundred and one
little things so necessary to Mi-
lady's boudoir are here in exclusive
assortments, and at prices in keep-
ing with the general tone and
character of such things.
Fashionable Silks
Foulards are
season for all d
— and what fal
suitable? It we
member no othei
such high quality
"Showerproof,"
the bright clear
other foulard can
favored this
ress purposes
iric is more
:e well to re-
foulard is of
r silk yarn as
which gives
finish that no
boast.
Our assortments o( designs
and colorings are legion — small
neat figured and floral effects,
dots, stripes and bordered—
23 to 45 inches wide, and 85c
to $2.50 yard.
Sheer Fabrics in varied as-
sortments of weaves and col-
orings, marquisettes, all-silk
voiles, chiffons in stripes, dots,
figures and Buljfarian designs
—also bordered~27 to 50 in-
ches wide, and $^.26 to $5 yard.
Princess Satin, the ideal silk '
for waists, dresses and under-
lining, in all the new, popular
shades, among which are:
Coral, Helen pink, emerald
green, cerise. King's blue,
cherry red, also complete line
of street and evening shades:
26 inches wide, and $1 yard.
For Coats and Suits we have
an excellent quality of wool
black satin, in navy, blue and
black, at $3 and $3.50 yard.
Auto Silk, in jasper, 36-inch, at
$1.25 — 54-inch (note widthV
extra heavy Shantung, at $2.75
and $3 yard.
Extra Special
36-inch navy and black Messaline,
36-inch Black TaffeU — Regular
price is $1.25 yard— ^ ^ <<t
special this week Cf^^C
per yard .^'^
\
I
\
I
1
^•~ - ■..
1
t
1
1
1
i i
♦— V.
If 1
1 1
1 1
1 1
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'MW i
Monday,
THE DULU-^H HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
Your spring
Shoes Are Here!
Nobby Bostonian
Shoes and Oxfords —
$3.50 and $4.00
Boys' Spring Shoes and
Oxfords in Black and Tan
That Will Stand Hard Wear-
$J.50 to $3^50
WILLIAMSON & MENDENMALL
GLOVES
FOR SPRING
The Well Known
CROSS
LONDON
GLOVE
At Baglcy's
$1.50
The Glov of Style and Service.
For Men and Women,
Bagley Ks^ Co,
I\no\%-n Since 1885 as
F. D, DAY & CO.,
JEWEIiERS and SILVERSMITHS
315 West Superior Street.
COMINGOFSPRING
AVon't AVorrj- Vou If Yon Let the
ZENITH DYE HOUSE
Clean and press your clothes, or put
your fancy Riig^s through our pro-
cess of fleaning.
PROMPT SERVICE.
WORK GL'ARA>TEED.
Clothes Cleanem for Mea> Women
■nd Children.
KRONICK BROS. & O ARGER, Props.
Old I'hone. Broad 4:^3, \XM Tower
Avenue. Xew I'hone, Ogcden 692.
The St. Louis Inn
Offers you an assortment of
delicate viands culled from
the marts of the world, at
most reasonable prices. The
st-rvice and music are of the
best. Popular Noon- time
Lunches. Lunch or dine here
TODAV.
HATS REMODELED
We have an expert HATTER.
Work is promptlydone and well.
Dill All AC Cleaned, Bleached
r AllAmAO and Blocked.
k Conplete Hat Shop -Michigan St. noer
A. B, Siewert & Co.,
Batten and Furnishers.
3M West Snyertor Street.
AMUSEMENTS
TOxMCaiT'S ATTRACTIONS.
LYCEUM— "The Girl Question."
OHPHEUM — Vaudeville.
KMPHKS.S — Vaudeville.
ODEUM and LYRIC— Phtoplay.
MUSICALPLAY
AT THE LYCEUM
Maude Leone Players Score
a Real Hit in ''The
Girl Question/'
With a new chorus and brand new
scenery, new costumes, the experience
that comes with one successful produc-
tion and the opportunity to thoroughly
rehearse. Miss Maude Leone and as.so-
ciate "plavers gave two very successful
performances of the clever, tuneful and
catchy grlrly musical play, "The Girl
Question," yesterday afternoon and
evening.
The production in every sense was a
credit to the Individual members of the
■ompany. It was more finished than
ihe other musical effort of the com-
pany. "Forty-tive Minutes From Broad-
way." because the members of the
company seemed to have struck their
gait in musical comedy. The chorus
looked better and acted better, and
there were a number of specialties that
retlected credit on the enterprise of
Messrs. Donovan and Cooper, who have
conducted the rehearsal. , _
Briefly, tlie story of "The Girl Ques-
tion." and there is a story, has to do
with the love of Jo Forester, played by
Miss Maude Leone, and Con P.yan, en-
trusted to the hand.s of Justin Cooper.
Con is loved and never suspects. He
loses his Job and Jo inherits a fortune.
.She has been the very best pal in the
world through the ups and downs of
Con.- and finally, when things have gone
against poor Con to the very limit that
freakish liard luck will run. he sud-
denly becomes aware of how Jo loves
him and what a really fine girl she is.
Miss Leone acted Jo as If she were
quite used to musical comedy. There
are comple.xlties to the part of Jo.
Forester that enable the actress to
Jeplct some seriousness and just a lit-
tle pathos, without nuiking It seem
unreal, even if the play is but slightly
removed from nxusical comedy.
Miss Leone made the most of the
opportunities these shadings permit-
ted, and yesterday drew forth the big-
gest applause of the show at the
climax of the first act. when Jo comes
to the bitter belief that Con will never
regard her as more than a friend.
Justin Cooper as Con Ryan is more
effective than in the other musical
production, and gives a happy Inter-
pretation of a good hearted cliap who
flirted with the wrong girl. Mr. Cooper
has several songs and gets away so
well that he had to respond to two
encores yesterday. He has some slang
that is plctresque and could only have
originated in Ciilcago. and he sling)
it as If he had studied it under the
eye of George Ade.
James Rennie Is Harold Sears, rich
and ardent, and thoroughly in love
with the little cashier of the restaur-
ant presided over by Con. Mr. Rennie
has a song with Miss Morris which
proved one of the special hits of the
.how. William Donovan is a German
baron and he surprised his friends by
II n winding a German accent that rolled
like a sailor filled with high power
rye.
Miss Aubrey loooks nice and sings
well and talks fast. That is all she is
required to do, and she does It well.
Miss Cora Morris does the cashier.
Elsie Davis, gels married in the third
act and sings a song that yesterday
got three encores. Miss Morris also has
some fluent Chicago slang, rich and
expressive, which she handles with
perfect control.
Forrest Taylor plays T. P. Q. Sears.
a man who owns the most of Chicago
and is looking for the rest of it. Mr.
Taylor Is good, as he has been In all
of the productions of the company.
James Nelson Is a colored cook and
Jack Montgomery Is a tough plumber,
who has a weakness for prize fightlnjf.
Both are good. Roy Walling is a re-
porter, and Joe Kennedy an under-
taker.
The chorus has been added to and
yesterday sang and did some steps as
"i the members had been tauglit some
regular business. Considering the fact
that yesterday was the first perform-
cliorus to of the show, the work of the
iliorus is to be commended. The male
tiuartet also received a generous hand.
The scenery is elaborate and the dec-
orations of the second act reflect credit
upon the stage management. Taken ail
in all. "The Girl Question" is a bigger
and more elaborate production than
many stock companies would care to
undertake, and shows unmistakably
the result of painstaking labor and
enterprise.
The play will run until Wednesday
evening, with a matinee Wednesday
afternoon.
It might be said that the special
character part written for Mr.s. Adams,
gives that competent actress a chance
to do a little specialty which yester-
day got one of the best hands of the
play.
EASTER PARADE
AT THE ORPHEUM
Some Stunning Gowns and
Master Gabriel Feature
New Bill
The real Easter parade was down at
the Orpheum last evening. Mrs. George
Austin Moore, nee Miss Cordelia Haager
of Louisville. Ky., is a pretty young
Southern woman who has quite a little
to learn yet about how to sing a song,
but in the great American clothes pa-
rade she Is up ahead of the band,
swinging the baton. If you watch
Miss Cordelia and listen to George
Austin Moore sing his negro songs you
can get quite a lot of pleasure out of
this act. George is not hard to look at
himself, and succeeds In wearing a
dress suit without looking like a wait-
er, but In the matter of appearance he
has to tag along behind his wife.
His negro dialect songs are the best
thing he does and his act would be a
better one with more of them In It.
However, this is said to be Mrs. Moore's
first season the stage — she is a recent
first season on the stage — she Is a recent
sonality necessary for a clever singing
comedienne. The act was one of the
best features of a very good 'bill, al-
though Master Gabriel and his company
have a real headline act.
Master Gabriel has graduated from
"Little Nemo ' and "Buster Brown" Into
vaudeville and Is presenting a clever
melange of comedy and horse play,
which is called "Little Tommy Tucker."
Gabriel and his dog, who is still Edwin
Lamar, but who has changed his stage
name from 'Tlge " to "Mutt." are a com-
bination that never fails to please an
audience, no matter what the vehicle is.
Gabriel's Impersonat'on of a precocious
boy and the funny pantomime of his
dog are a vaudeville novelty that can-
not be duplicated. Al Lamar Is also
with his diminutive friend yet and the
other members of the company are ex-
ceptionally good actors. In fact the en-
tire cast is an unusual one for a vaude-
ville skit. The act Is a delightful little
comedy turn and pleased yesterday's
audiences immensely.
Probably the next best number on
the new bill Is the act of the Namba
Japs. The Japs are all very nimble and
agile acrobats, but the best feature of
the act is the feat of Toklo Nambo.
It's a good gamble that Toklo Isn't hi^
real name, for he looks like a clean
cut young American. But that Is un-
important, for Tokio climbs a flight of
stairs on his head without the assist-
ance of his hands. The other members
of the company are undoubtedly Jap-
anese, and diminutive ones at that, but
their tumbling and acrobatic work are
remarkably good.
The big comedy hit of the bill is the
act of the Farrel-Taylor company, con-
sisting of two blackface comedians and
a young woman with very ample pro-
portions and a very blue dress. They
have a sketch called "The Minstrel
Man," which is a rough and tumble
comedy of a very good type.
The custom of opening the bill with
an acrobatic act Is not followed this
week, and the Ward brothers, two good
looking young chaps who appear in
evening clothes, do a very creditable
dance and .sing several good popular
song numbers, open the bill.
They are followed by Ernest Yerxa
and Adele, who present a real novelty
In the posturing and contortion line.
They combine contortion work and
posturing !n a very clever specialty,
and do some very difficult feats In a
very easy graceful manner.
Joseph L. Browning and Henry Lewis
complete the bllhwitira comedy sketch
called "Nearly a Soldier." The youth
who portrays the German recruit Is
little more than'4i bcjE in years, but he
shows promise -Cf bSlng a first class
comedian. They finish their act witli
an amusing burlesque on the "My
Hero" number iirom... "The Chocolate
Soldier." ' *
There Is a good moving picture film,
and the usual overture by the concert
orchestra. The Jtill Will continue all
week with a Jalf>' matinee.
It*s Dinner
and Ifs Ready
jewelry nopeliiesi
There are just as distinctive styles
in Jewelry as in any other depart-
ment of dress, and at this season
of th-e year the Jewelry section Is
beginning to blossom out In fresh-
ness, beauty and brightness from
the brilliant array of new goods ar-
riving almost daily, representing all
the latest novelties in Jewelry.
C €. Relnbart
JEWELER.
7 Eaat Snperlor Street.
Advertise in Tiie Herald
Van Camp's
Spzighetti
haUfin Stylm
At Every Grocery— Rc«ij-caolMd
10c and 15c p«r can
Spaghetti
Better Than in Rome
The chefs of Italy are famed the
'world over for a delicious blend which
they make with spaghetti.
Many a traveler has wished he could
find an equal dish in America*
Now America has it — a better spa-
ghetti than ever was served in Rome.
Our chefs spent two years in perfect-
ing the recipe. There are 17 ingre-
dients used in it« each the best of its
kind.
The wonder lies in the harmony of
taste — in the unmatched flavor. No-
where in the world do they serve better
spaghetti than jrou can now serve on
your table.
We use to make it:
Dtirtxm wheat spaghettL
Herkimer County fall cream cheese.
Best creamery butter.
The same superlative tomato sauce
we use in Van Camp's Pork & Beans.
The dish comes ready-cooked. You
have simply to heat it.
The product is new but the demand
is phenomenal. We have never made
anything which so many people seemed
to like so well.
You'll like H, too. You'U be glad that
we make it.
And it costs you less than to make it
yourself if you had the recipe.
Order a few cans now.
Van Camp Packing Company ^Sf^ IndianapoKs, Ind.
NORTHERN TRUNK CO.
TRUNKS, BAGS, CASES.
Wc Arc Makers. 228 West First Street.
EILERT BROS.
5 — , .=»
JOE WELCH IS
AT THE EIHPRESS
Hebrew Comedlliii Is the Big
Feature at Local Vaude-
ville House.
One Just naturally bows low and
hands the bouquet to Joe Welch, the
Hebrew comedian, who is appearing at
the Empress theater th's week.
As a fun-maker, Joe is the class. In
the comedy line he is the original prize
package. There is no imitation about
Joe Welch. He is Joe Welch, Hebrew
comedian, and funny — uproariously so.
He put the auditorium of the Em-
press theater In an uproar three times
V6st.6rdn V
"A Study From Life" is the title of
Mr. Welch's knockout comedy stunt.
He appears with two boys, one of them
being very dull. He ambles on the
stage as though he owned It and from
that time on the audience Is just two
laughs behind. Welch and his school
boys were more than popular with yes-
terday's audiences. When they made
their exit the audience clamored for
their return and it was only after they
had given several encores that they
were allowed to depart.
The rest of this week's bill is more
than up to the standard set by the
Empress management and is thorough-
ly In keeping with the biggest head-
line feature that the local house has
provided in many a day.
"The New Minister," a comedy by
Paul Chase and company, was made to
amuse and it surely does that. The
plot includes a prize fighter who Is
attempting to act the part of a min-
ister. Mr. Prize Fighter has a hard
time of it as can well be Imagined.
His language is bad for that of a col-
lege educated preacher and he has oth-
er troubles. His troubles are funny
to the audience and the playlet is a
success as a laugh producer.
•Barnard's Manikins" have what is
called on the program "The Coons' Rev-
elry" or a "Pickanlnnny Pastime." This
act will be especially pleasing to the
ch.ldr«n during th«-jweek. At yester-
day's performaivMs the older folks also
found plenty in tt td amuse.
Pearl Young, a young woman who
is endowed "wiUi ^a more than the or-
dinary amounl^l g<>od looks, gives a
delightful mus|«fl tur^ at the piano.
She is, aside frdfel being good to look at,
a musician of abiUh* and she plays the
sort of music tKat S^ts to a vaudeville
audience. .... j ^^,
The Musical Wilsons use everything
from a bouquett to a garden gate with
which to mak« music. Their act is
elaborately set and their entertainment
is enjoyable. There are a good many
musical acts of; this kind In vaudeville
and this one iff |ib^ve the ordinary in
point of merit. ^. ^
The moving pictures are a satisfac-
tory ending to a bill of unusual
strength. There will be three perform-
ances dally, one eacR afternoon and
two each evening during the remainder
of the week. ,.
"The Midnight Sons."
Lew Fields' spectacular musical
revue. "The Midnight Sons," will come
to the Lyceum for an engagement of
three days, comnjencing Thursday, with
a matinee Satitcaay. ^^ ^ ^
"The Midnight Sons," since Its first
presentation at the Broadway theater
in New York, where it ran for nearly
a year, has enjoyed remarkable pros-
perity in the various big cities through-
out the country, having played a con-
tinuous engagement of nearly three
months in Boston, four months In Phil-
adelphia, and In many of the cities
where a week's time has been consid-
ered customary "The Midnight Sons
has found it profitable to remain from
three to four weeks. The entertain-
ment Is described as quite unique in its
way, as it contains a variety of various
features not usually found in musical
comedy. Broad farce predominates;
at the same time, clean, wholesome
comedy pervades the entire production,
it Is claimed.
BIG JOB FOR THE SENATE
(Continued from page L)
plan of direct election of United States
senators.
The bill putting control of water
power into the hands of the state.
The bill putting telephone companies
under the state tax commission and
giving that body power to regulate
rates and service and to compel the
various telephone companies to con-
nect with each other's lines when pa-
trans desire it.
The distance tarlCE bill.
A joint resolution ratifying the in-
come amendment to the Federal Con-
stitution.
If the senate gets all these measures
through it will be a fine two days'
work.
It will not get them all through,
and if some members of the senate
have their way. it will not get any
of them through. There were rumors
yesterday that a filibuster would be
started this morning for the purpose
of preventing consideration of these
Important measures between now and
midnight tomorrow, when the ses-
sion will end so far as passing bills
is concerned.
It is hard to see how it will be pos-
sible to defeat some of these measures,
however.
For instance, the recall bill and the
state-wide primary bill originated in
the senate, and were passed by the
house with amendments. When these
bills come back to the senate with the
amendments proposed by the house,
they are immediately up for action.
They cannot be referred to a standing
committee and forgotten
The senate can refuse to concur In
the house amendments. In which event
a conference committee will be ap-
pointed on each bill. If these confer-
ence . committees agree, their reports
will be adopted and the bills passed.
In any case, these measures will be
before the legislature until they are
voted down or .passed, and as both
houses have gone on record over-
whelmingly in iBLVa* of both. It is hard
to see how their passage can possi-
bly be prevented.
Recmll of JudseH.
The senate was expected to refuse
to concur in the house amendments to
the recall bill, especially as to the
amendment making judges subject to
recall. The chances are that a com-
promise will be reached in conference
by which the hou*e will recede from
this proposal. In which case the bill
will speedily go through. The one
chance for the defeat of the recall lies
in the senate standing pat against
including Judges, and the house stand-
ing pat in favor of including judges.
In that way the bill might be kept In
conference until the arrival of the
midnight hour tomorrow, when It
might die there. Such things have
happened in the Minnesota legislature,
and they may hanpen again.
There isn't much to hang a division
on in the case «f the state-wide primary
bill. The house will not materially
amend that measut*. and there is little
in the amendments it proposed to create
opposition In the senate. The senate
excepted judges from Its operation be-
cause it had ^passed an absurd non-
partisan judiciary bill, which the bouse
has stowed away at the bottom of gen-
eral orders and will forget. The house,
therefore, restored the judges under
the operation of <na primary election,
and the senat^ wil\ have to concur in
that amendment.
The only o(}her amendment of im-
portance adopted by the house was the
one proposed by Representative Albert
DEFECTIVE PAGE
Pfaender of New Ulm, providing for a
delegate convention to help the candi-
dates make a state platform. IChis
amendment removed one of tlie most
serious objections to the bill as it
passed tlie senate, whlcli was tiiat the
plan of having the candidates make
tlie platforms would lead to wishy-
washy platforms that would carry
little weight and bring little public
respect.
This amendment, by the way, was
adopted in a caucus of Democratic
house members last Thursday, and was
proposed by the Democratic house
leader. Mr. Pfaender.
"The change gave general satisfac-
tion in the house, and will doubtless
be similarly approved in the senate,
so It will be pretty hard to defeat the
state-wide primary bill by any kind
of filibuster.
* * *
The Keefe BUI.
Though a bitter fight will be made
by organization Republicans against
the Keefe bill providing the Oregon
plan of direct popular election of
United States senators, and every ef-
fort will be made to kill it, first by
hostile amendments and second by try-
ing to vote it down, there have been
evidences the last few days that there
has been a break in the Republican or-
ganization, which stood solidly against
the Keefe bill for the ridiculous Mur-
ray bill which the house killed as soon
as It got hold of It, and that the Keefe
bill will pass practically as it left the
house.
The Pfaender Initiative and referen-
dum bill, which has Just escaped from
the senate committee on judiciary, is
pretty well down on general orders,
and is much less likely to pass than
the other measurers referred to. Those
who were instrumental in framing this
measure, by the way, with Its sensible
safeguards against the abuse of direct
legislation, are highly gratified with
Col. Roosevelt's remarks on the subject
Friday evening, when he said that In
the beginning, at least, the percentages
should be high enough to prevent wan-
ton use of the privilege.
The water power bill is probably
dead, and so is the bill regulating tele-
phones. The distance tariff bill can
hardly be reached, and if it Is reached
It may be voted down. The Income tax
resolution may be reached, and if it is
reached it will be passed, though the
chances are against Its being reached.
At any rate, the senate will be the
storm center today and tomorrow,
and some interesting doings are ex-
pected there.
• « *
State-Wide Primary Bill.
Saturday afternoon tae house, by a
vote of 92 to 17, passed the senate
state-wide primary bill with the
amendments referred to above. Only
these members voted against It: Bor-
gen, L. D, Brown, Dlessner, R. C. Dunn,
cdwards, Hafften, Healy, Hoffman.
MacKenzie, H. Nelson, Papke, Peters,
Reed. Saggau, C. K. Stone, Virtue,
White.
Many others would have liked to
vote against It but dared not.
R. C. Dunn of Princeton led the fight
against the bllL Said he:
"This should be entitled 'An act to
prevent a poor man from running for
state office in Minnesota.' Unless a
man is very well known, or has the
backing of some strong corporate In-
terest, he stands mighty little show of
getting a nomination. The large cities
will control, as their vote Is compact
and fully cast, while the country vote
is scattered and is always light at the
primaries. The cities will also control
the platform convention, as the coun-
try districts will not go to the expense
of sending delegates. Platforms don't
amount to much anyway, as both
parties declared for reapportionment,
and what did it amount to? If the cit-
ies make the platforms, temperance-
measures will stand no show.
"You are g'olng to railroad thla
thing through, I suppose, but you will
regret It. I want the people to rule,
but this bin won't help them to rule."
"This Isn't a millionaires' bill, as
some have claimed," said Representa-
tive D. P. O'Neill of Thief River Falls,
•but it is a tri-clty bill, and a bill to
disfranchise the farmers. I am going
to vote for It because there is a howl
for It, but I believe that there will
soon be a howl to repeal It."
"If I were a member of the minority
party." said Mr. Dunn. "I should favor
this bill because It will work to the
advantages of that party and for the
demoralization of the Republican
party.
"That is." he hastened to add, "if
there is wanting anything to com-
plete the demoralization of the Re-
publican party."
Representative Lydiftrd, humorously
inclined, sent up an amendment pro-
viding that only one Swede can run
for any one office, but It was not
considered.
Later In the afternoon Representa-
tive Wescott gave notice of a motion
to reconsider the passage of the bill.
If this iiad stood, it would have had
the effect of holding the bill In the
house till Tuesday. N. J. Holmberg
promptly moved that the vote be con-
sidered at once and when his motion
was voted down, as he desired it to be.
the bill was free to proceed to the
senate.
Road Money for Counties.
By a resoultion adopted by the
house Saturday afternoon, the state
highway commission is deirected to
distribute road money to the counties
wliich did not get In on the pork
barrel bill before it was declared un-
constitutional. When the law of 1909
was declared unconstitutional, about
$100,000 remained In the treasury
which had not been drawn out
counties entitled to It. The
tion directs the commission (
these counties the amounts they
have been entitled to. as follow
Anoka $2,000.00 I I.yon
Becker 49.^00 I Marshall
Beltrami
Rig Stone .
Rlue Karth
nrottu
Carltua ...
?ar\er ....
Chisago
Clay
Cottonwood
Dakota
Dodke 1.80<i.i)0
Douglas
Faribault
Grant ,.
Heiiiitpln
Houston
HubhHrd
3.225.00 I Mllle Laos.
2.0(10.00 I KUUnote ..
6.000.00 t Freeborn . .
2.500.00 I Noble
2,350.00 I Norman . . .
2.350.00 loiter Tall .
1.600.01 I l*;iw
2,700.00 I PujMJ
2,350.00 fKL>l Lake .
4,050.00 I rciinlngton
" RenvlUe . . .
212.50 I Uloe
3.050.00 J St. Louis . .
1,5.-10.00 I .Scott
2,300.00 1 Mower
Murray
Sibley
.Steele
swift
Todd
Wadena
lO.OU
... 3,714.00
Jackson 4,700.00
Kanabec 750.00
Kandiyohi T50.00
Kittson 850.00
r.ac qui Parle.. 2,500.00 j Watonwan
Lake 1.600.00 | Wilkin
lie .Sueur 500.00 Wright
Lincoln 1.604.00 | YeUnw Med
The residue of the funds at t
po.sal of the commission for th
1912 is to be apportioned and di;
ed among the counties of the st
eluding the counties above me
on an equitable ba^is and In
ance with the present laws.
• • *
The session will end at noon
Wednesday. Tomorrow is the last day
for passing bills, and work mus: cease,
under the Constitution, at midnight.
However, in years past it hai; often
been the custojn to hold the clock back
until a majority of tlie membeis were
ready to quit, and sometimes tte hour
of midnight has officially been ielayed
until daylight.
STILLMAN H. BINGJAM.
by the
resolu-
o give
would
vs:
$ 600.00
. 3,806.74
. 4.200.0U
. 2.3t«0.00
. 500.00
. 2,100.00
. 1.325.00
. 2,233.47
. 567.00
. 813.00
. 250.00
. 250.00
. 2.650.00
. 1.350.00
. 4.300.00
. 2.100.00
. 2,3.->0.00
. 3.667.50
. fiOO.OO
. 827.15
4.00
14.50
. 1.05.1.00
. 1, 800.00
980.00
. 108.00
. 200.00
he dis-
e year
tribut-
ite, ia-
ationed
Biccord-
No. 215^ We»t First Street ami Sec-
ond Fluor, 4Ox50 feet, to be i«uted
togetbert flrat-cIaM* place for ligbt
mannfacturlnK, tailor Mbop, d^ar
factory, etc. Hot water beat.
MiYERS BROS. CO.,
205 THB LYCEUM.
FATHER OF DULITHIANS.
Alexander Loranger Who Died in
Copper Country, Was Pioneer.
Houghton, Mich.. April 17. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Funeral services were
held from the home on Blancho street
at 2 p. m. Sunday for Alexandei Loran-
ger, aged 78. one of the pioneer mining
men of tlie Copper country, wio dlei
Friday at his home In East Houghton
A native of Barry, Ont., he came to
the Copper country when 20, locatiiig
at Rockland, becoming nlerk of the old
Minnesota mine, continuing in that ca-
pacity till the mine closed down in
1870. He later was clerk of the Huron
mine at Hurontown and was filling
that position when that mine ceased to
operate twenty years ago.
Since the cessation of operations at
the Huron Mr. Loranger has not been
actively engaged. He lived for ten
years in Detroit and ten years ago
came to Hougton to spend his de-
clining years.
The deceased Is survived by thre»
children, George Loranger. Mrs. Louis
Dravel and Miss Jo.sephine Loranger,
all residents in Hougton. Three broth-
ers survive and three sisters, Stephen
of Ontonagon, George of Ashland,
Louis of Duluth, Mrs. Arno Jaehmg of
Laurium, and Mrs. Harriet Kitchley ol
Duluth.
WIFE PLEADS FOR
HUSBAND'S RELEASE.
Leonard Hikklla was arrested last
evening at the Union station as he
was buying a ticket for California, and
booked at headquarters on a charge
of desertion. Although he had been
arrested on complaint of his wife, as
soon as he was behind the bars she
Importuned the officers at the station
to release him. As It would be use-
less to prosecute him unless she ap-
peared against him, he was allowed his
liberty. Hikklla recently returned
from lUinol.a, having gone there under
circumstances similar to those under
which he intended leaving yesterday.
•
Dcnman TbumpMon Burled.
West Swanzey, N. H.. April 17. — Den-
man Thompson, the venerable actor,
creator and portrayer of that hi.mt'ly
New England character, "Uncle Joshua
Whltcomb," which he endeared to the
theatergoers all over the country, was
burled Sunday with simple ceremonies
in the little cemetery across the road
from his home.
Former ANhland Clerk Aconacd.
Ashland, Wis., April 17. — (.Special to
The Herald.) — Former Municipal Clerk
HJalmar John.son returned home from
Duluth a couple of days ago and was
arrested on the charge of embezzle-
ment. The complaint was sworn to by
the district attorney. It Is alleged U>at
Mr. Johnson cashed a check for $300
last October, which had been put up by
the defendant In an ar.son case, and
kept the money. He was released on
bonds.
• .
Train HIta Onc-Lcgged Man.
Mankato, Minn., April 17.— Bartlett
Rharrat of Mapleton, a one-legged man
60 years old, was struck by the south-
bound Milwaukee passenger train Fri-
day afternoon In this city and badly
cut about the head. He was taken un-
conscious to the Immanuel hospital. He
will recover.
0^4 L
Absolute!
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Royal Baking Powder helps the housewife to
produce at home, quickly and economically*
fine and tasty <:ake, hot biscuit, puddings*
the frosted layer cake, crisp cookies, crullers,
crusts and mufilns, fresh, clean, tasty and
wholesome, with which the ready-made food
found at the sho][> or grocery does not com-
pare. Royal is tlie greatest of bake-day helps.
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Sen^'- Name and Address*
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S SALE WOMEN'S SUITS
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Positive Values lUp to
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A famous maker of only fine suits closed out
all suits made of short length materials, making
one, two and three suits of a kind to us at less
than cost.
To get these suits from this maker is a tri-
umph, and beats anything heretofore accom-
plished in a single great sale.
Every j'ashionable sort of suit, every color,
every weave, every combination, checks, stripes,
mannish mixtures, imported serges, imported
suitings, in all the new colors, including plenty
„ of staple blacks and blues.
* The style range is particularly broad, and in-
cludes some exceptionally stylish suits that are
as effective as fashionable, and fit as accurately
as custom tailors could produce. The coats are
lined with guaranteed peau
^^ de cygne and sateen, high-
ly est art tailoring, latest
model skirt. Regular val-
ues up to $42.50. On sale
Tuesday at
ice. The coats are
$25
"StUk Headquarters at the Uead of the LuAe.s."
Superior Street— Lake Avenue— Michigan Street.
— »
■ ■ «•
'I
I
;i
-r— H"-
BC
Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD,
April 17, 1911.
^r»-
■« r*-
1
••■•^MMai^
,^
■♦~^-
» I Ti M^
HARRISON, GREENE AND
DANCER ARE INDORSED
HENRY F. GREENE.
At a meeting of the Bar association
of the Eleventh judicial district held
this afternoon at the Commercial club,
S. T. Harrison was named as first
choice for the fifth judgeship for this
district. Henry F. Greene was named
as .second choice and H. A. Dancer was
nominated as third.
Mr. Harrison was nominated only aft-
er two ballots had b<en taken. There
were needed sixty-eight for a majority
and on the first ballot Mr. Harrison re-
ceived but si.xty-three. Henry F.
Greene received fifty-one.
On a s«cond ballot Harison received
80: H F. Greene. 54: H. A. Dancer. 9;
W. K. Greene, 2. and W. I>. Bailey, 1.
For second choice H. F. Greene re-
ceived 70 and H. A. Dancer 45. On the
ballot for third choice H. A. Dancer
ot 85.
The question of whether or not thrve
eandidates should be indorsed brought
- - • The gov-
out a prolonged discussion
ernor in a communication to the asso- ^. -. - -~--'-.-i-- ^„,^ -^,^„^ nth«»ra
elation, asked that three or four names Gllvary, Eveleth. and many others.
S. T. HARRISON.
t<e sent to him, but many thought
that but one should be sent It was
finallv decided to send three and the
three' aiv: S. T. Harrisonll. !••
Greene and H. A. Dancer, in the order
named. ^ ^. , ^„.
The meeting was one of the largest
ever held bv the bar association. Tlie
lawyers adopted their "Indian" tac-
tics and no one was allowed to maVe
a speech. .
Many out-of-town lawyers from
points near bv were noticed. Among
them were: C. T. Murphy of Aurora.
J E Dlesen, Cloquet; J. A. Fesenbeck,
Cloqu<et: John Dwan, Two Harbors;
R C Pickering, Virginia; J. C. Mc-
ANOTHER AMERICAN I
KILLED IN DOUGLAS
John Hamilton Shot While
in the Center of
City.
Douglas, Ariz., April 17. — Another
American, John Hamilton, has been
shot. He was In Douglas, nearly in
the center of the city, when hit in the
breast by a bullet. Twenty insurgent
dead have just been brought into Agua
Frieta.
•
AnxlouMly AwaKu Message.
Washington, April 17. — President
Tafi is anxiously awaiting official rc-
i.orts of the second battle between the
Mexiran federals and Insurrectos at
Agua Prieta. ,..^.., „
Telegraph wires at the AV hite House
were busv all morning but late this
afternoon" it was stated officially that
the war department and the state de-
partment had received no reports ol
the conaict. Any action which the
president may take will await official
dispatches.
DANCE TONIGHT
GIVEN BY
Adams Athletic Association
LINCOLN PARK AUDITORIUM
Special Easter Trim. Ticket* 50e. Door riohti r«s«rved.
has not as yet announced the appo.nt-
ments of any of the captains of his
boats.
*
Back From NorthTreMt.
John Oldham returned yesterday
from the Canadian Northwest, where
he spent a month looking after some
property Interests. He says that the
cities of Alberta and Saskatchewan are
growing and prospering, and that tlw
influx of colonists continues unabated.
The crop prospects for this year are
excellent, he says.
-♦
Vonnfc Man Given Chance.
Frank Cullen. the West end man who
was arrested on a charge of petlt
larceny, was given a chance, in police
court this morning, to mend his ways.
He admitted that he had passed him-
self off as an officer and gone through
the pockets of Hugh Cameron, taking
f:i from him. The two were sleeping
In the same room In a house in the
West end. Judge Cutting told him that
he had found that his past record was
all right, but that he would have to
quit drinking and hanging around
with bad companions. His case was
continued three months. At the end of
that time. If his conduct its satisfac-
tory, sentence will be suspended.
•
Printing: and Bookblndlnif
Thwlng-Stewart Co. Both 'phones. 114.
Five Years for Forgery.
For forging a ch-eck on the Albenberg
company, Harry J. Good will sp^nd the
next five years of his lifj at Stillwater.
Hf. was sentenced Saturday by Judge
Dibell of the district court.
GueH Eamt to Bn7.
E A Sllbersteln left toda-' for New
York on a mid-season buying trip to
secure the adva ced modes of the hour
for Duluth women.
*
Meyem SelU HI* Interemt.
William Goldstein and David C.
Casmir have purchased the interest
of Charles x: Meyers in the Globe
Clothing company. Mr. Goldstein and
Mr Casmir now own the business and
have broad plans for making it one
of the most up-to-date stores in the
entire Northwest.
— - — •
Adamii Athletic Dance.
An Easter Monday ball will be given
this evening at Lincoln Park pavilion
bv the Adams Athletic association. The
music will be furnished by Flaaten s
orchestra and there will be sp'ecial
Easter decorations.
^
Meeting of Knglneem.
At the regular meeting of the Na-
tional Association of Stationary En-
gineers last Friday evening, it was de-
cided to hold a social evening, Friday.
May 5. At the regular meeting the
"Educational Work" as outlined in the
"National Engineer" will be taken up.
♦
Pulford, How & Company
Have moved their offices to No. 609
Alworth building.
♦
j PERSONAL
$2 lor $3 Hemstitehell LuDch Napkins.
An assortment of broken lines of hem-
^^ ^fl stitched lunch napkins —
^4^0\J\J our regular prices $2.50,
52.75 and $3. We will clean them up in
a hurry tomorrow at $2.00 per dozen.
Did Yoa net Your Tiress Form Yet?
Shipment Came Last Week.
.%notlier
J
117-119 Wjtit &a2«lor S:re«t, Duluth, Minn.,
$1.25 lor $1.75 iVz-yA, Linei Sheeting.
Just the kind for skirts and suits. Our
fine bleached linen sheeting tf! 1 O ^
— splendid weight — regular tp 1 9^^
$1.75 quality — special at $1.25 the
yard.
We Celebrate the Fourth Birthday of Our Rug
I dnd Drapery Department and bv GMng Awav carpet sweepers
We want you to see our Big Rug Display — it's the most
important we have ever made, the assortments are large —
patterns new and choice — and prices reasonable, and realiz-
ing that a good carpet sweeper will keep our rugs clean and
fresh and make them wear longer — we propose as a De-
partment Anniversary Special — to give a fine high-grade
Carpet Sweeper free this week with each and every rug
selling at $35 or more!
If You Want a Two-tone Effect
See our Royal Wiltons. A new
two-tone brown is just in. A new Greek
key design in green, too. See our Special
Weave.
Any two-tone effect and any size to or-
der— regular sizes in stock.
SEE OVR HEAVY AXMINSTER
Two-tone band designs, in brown or green
at popular pricea
High Class WUtons.
The finest Wiltons
made in this country are now
being specialized in our depart-
ment, and on a basis of a 9 by
12 rug the price concession is
$6.00 Guaranteed absolutely
the finest yarns obtainable —
choicest designs and colors. See
these and save $6.00 — also get
a sweeper free.
CITY BRIEFS
After Dinner
To prevent that feeling of fullness
and distress, aid digestion and quicken
the action of the liver and kidneys.
Take Hood's Pills
Sold by druggists everywhere. 25c.
SPRING STYLES
r A Sorensen Shoes
iJv Sorensen Prices
AND Sorensen Guarantee
Your money clieerfally
nefuiuleil If you want It.
Clin you beat ib;iti
where the birds fly."
S. T. SORENSEN,
317 Wett Superior Street.
The best and most midem quick repair »»»«•
thop Itk Duluth.
Falwe AlHrm of Fire.
A woman burning rubbish on the
roof of the Terrace, at Klghth avenue
west and First street, gave the fire
department a run early this afternoon.
One of the neighbor.s .«aw the smoke
and flames on the roof and naturally
supposed that the place was on fire.
No damage was done.
♦.
Card Party.
At Kalamazoo hall Wednesday after-
noon. Everybody welcome.
, -^
CltlKen'H Staff to Meet.
The annual meeting of the Citizens'
Staff of the G. A. R. will be held at
the rooms of the Commercial club.
Fourth avenue west and First street
Thursday evening. April 27, at 8
o'clock. At that time it is expected
that in addition to the regular busi-
nc'-.s, preliminary plans will be out-
lined for the celebration of Memorial
day.
— •
Ftehteni Are Released.
Dougall Mc Arthur and Joseph
Hokanson wetr arraigned in municipal
court this morning on a charge of
fighting. Kach accused the other of
starting the trouble. McArthur said
that Hokanson "bummed" him for a
drink, and that when he told him he
dldnt have the price, he said Kokan-
son "got sore." Hokanson declared
that McArthur was the man who had
done the "bumming" and had "got
sore" because he failed to have the
price. Neither of them was hurt and
as no particular harm had been done
the court didn't take the word of either
of them and handed out suspended sen-
tences.
Rev. Angus Mclver. accompanied by
his nephew, Norman McKinnon, has
arrived in the city after an extensive
tour in Canada. Th-ey are the guests
of John Hector Matheson of 224 bec-
ond avenue east. Mr. Mclver will re-
main in the city during the rest of
this week, and on Sunday will preach
In both Gaelic and English.
Frank ki. Burrell returned yester-
day from a visit to Florida.
Mrs. Edward Stevenson of 1731 Pied-
mont avenue is seriously ill at her
home. ^,
A. C. Bennett of Swan River Is at
the Spalding. „ , ^ , .. .v.
F. J. Webb of Eveleth is at the
Spalding. ,^ - ,r- < .
H. J. Walton and wife of Virginia
are at the J>eno.\-.
Miss Cora Walton of \ irginia is at
the Lenox. , ^ ^,
Oscar Bloomqulst of Cloquet is at the
Lenox. ,, , ^ .
F. J. O'Brien of Two Harbors is at
the Lenox. . ^ .,». c,*
J. A. Miselle of Chlsholm is at the St.
Louis.
Miss Laura Myers of Grand Rapids
is at the St. Louis.
Fred Erlckson of Hibbing is at the
St. I.ouls. , ^ .^ ■
J. M. I'artridge of Grand Rapids is at
the McKay.
New Scotch Rugs
A choice
new design just
in, has a Hans
and Gretchen
border in Dutch
blues. Ask to see
these if you want
a high-class rug
for bedrooms.
ENJOY THIS
DISPLAY.
You'll not be asked
to buy — we know you
don't need rugs every
day — but see our
showing now and you
won't forget it I
RAG RUGS-
Popular Prices
New rags
— all of them—
and not mill re-
fuse.
2%x4% ft. $1.25
2%x5 ft .. .$1.45
3x6 ft size. $2.00
Carefully Chosen Orientals— Prices and Quality Guar-
anteed. Many Car][>et Sizes Now.
Our first price must be right or we miss the sale— there's no haggling h^^re
on Oriental Rugs or anything else. Ours is c. personally selected stock — of the
most desirable sorts, in both the small and the large sizes! And the better judge
of rugs you are — the more 3'ou appreciate the values.
The New Youroiiks
A choice new line of these splendid
Selection at $25.00
Not many offerings to be had at this
Orientals-recommended for hard usagj— price among the Shirvans of any size but
in small and medium sizes adapted for hills these are very •"ceptional— good colore ana
Choice at »*•>•""•
Special Mention
Carpet Size Gorovans.
Some carpet size Goro-
vans of unusual colorings
have just arrived. They
are beauties — and range
from $250 to $350.
and living rooms— at from $29.00 to $49 00. 1 sizes
**Brenlin" Shades Give
Satisfaction.
Ast your neighbor If
she isn't well pleased —
try them and be free from
window shade annoy-
ances.
Estimates free — 'phone
and we will call.
indestr ucto Baggage
If you reed any luggage —
trunk — bag— suit case — ask to
see Guaranteed Baggage, an
Indestructo guarantee for every
piece — sold in Duluth only In
this store.
To Go Fishing Saturday Yon Want
BOER OIL
on Tonr boot*. Make* them water-
proo*f and keeps yonr feet dry. Try It.
At Dealers.
Pleads Guilty.
Andrew Sagersun, arrested on a
charge of having violated the sanitary
provisions of the balcery ordinance, en-
tered a plea of guilty in municipal
court this morning and paid J2.50, the
costs of the ca.se.
Quiet In Marine Circles.
G. A. Tomllnson has returned from a
business trip to some of the lower lake
ports. Mr. Tomllnson says there Is
practically nothing new in the marine
situation at the present time. Owing
to the fact that there promises to L'e
a very late opening, Mr. Tomllnson
FLAT FOR RENT
to man and wife for one year; com-
pletely furnished; ready for house-
keeping; six rooms, modern. Upper
side First street between Eighth
and Ninth avenues east.
R. P. Dowse Sl Ce. 106 Providence Bid.
RECOVER BODIES
OF DROWNED LADS
Victims of Bass Lake Double
Tragedy Are Discovered
By Fisherman
After a three days' search, the
bodies of Lowell Beglinger and Ches-
ter Adams, the two Superior high
school boys drowned in Bass lake,
near Gordon, Friday, were recovered
at 11 o'clock this morning.
John Germain, better known as
"Fisherman John," brought them to
the surface. He was trying out a new
kind of grappling hook. The bodies
lay thirty feet from the shore and
were close together.
They will be brought to Superior
this evening on the Twilight Limited
over the Omaha. No funeral arrange-
ments have been made. Lowell Beg-
linger was the son of Mrs. Henry Beg-
linger, and the other lad was a son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Adams. Both re-
sided at Central Park.
blaze which started In a bakery at 1211
Tower avenue. The burning building
was one of a row of wooden struc-
tures. The loss was about |2,000. The
lire is believed to have started near the
ovens.
AGED LETTER CARRIER
DIES AT SOUTH END.
Four and five rooms, newly fur-
nished, 815 East Fifth street. Tele-
phone Zenith Grand 466.
J. B. IVUDDLECOFF-,
301 Alworth BulldlnSt Duluth.
SUPERFLUIOUS HAIR. MOLES,
warts, removed forever. Miss Kelly's
Manicuring and Massaging Parlors.
1.11 West Superior street.
NEW SUEDE SHOES
FOR WOiMEN.
CLARK, The Sample Shoe Man
IJ Second Avenue West.
THE PALM ROOM
At the SPALDING
MOST DELIGHTFUL AND LUXURI-
OUS RESTAURANT IN DULUTH.
CHICHESTER S PILLb
l>lA*9oND ItRANll PII.LS.lbr Sft
yean known as Best. Safest. Always Rcliabl*
SOLD BY DRlGQiSTS EVERYWHERE
COMBINGS MADE INTO SWITCHES,
and 25 per cent off on all hair goods.
Marinello hair shop. Fidelity block;
next to Freimuth's; take elevator.
Furniture, finishing, paper hanging,
painting and hardwood finishing.
'Phone your orders and I will call
anywhere in city. A. Johnson, Mel.
738; Zeinth. Lincoln 369.
PREACHERS TO GATHER.
FOR SALE — ALL DRUGS AND
show cases. Apply Leno-x Drug store.
BUY NOW AND START THAT
chicken farm you have talked about
so long — ten, fifteen and twenty acres
close to Proctor, at bargain prices.
E. H. Culkins & Co., 510 Palladio
building.
BIRTHS.
STREHLAN — A daughter was born to
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Strehlan of 4210
West Sixth street April 14.
Meeting of Norwegian-Danish M. E.
Church of Red River Valley.
The annual district meeting of the
Red River Valley district of Norwe-
gian-Danish M. E. churches will be
held in Superior this week, beginning
Tuesday. Sessions will be held dally
with services as follows:
Tuesday evening — Reception to the
visiting ministers, and services by Rev.
C. A. Joransen of Ashland and Rev. H.
M. Holm of Hayward.
Wednesday evening — Services by Rev.
J. Lorentz of Crookston and Rev. Ed-
ward Erlckson of DulutJi,
Thursday evening — Services by Rev.
Chris Olsen of Hillsboro, Wis., and Rev.
A. Andreason of Valley City, N. D.
Friday evening — Services by Rev. G.
Krlshgaard of Washbiirn and Rev. O.
Rohr-Shaff of Virginia. Minn.
Sunday morning — 9:45, love feast led
by Rev. P. Jensen of Duluth; 10:45,
sermon by District Supt. Rev. James
Sanaker of Minneapolis, and the Lord's
suDpcr.
Sunday afternoon — 3 o'clock, chil-
dren's meeting, led. by Rev. K. G. Bru-
devold of Halford, Minn.
Sunday evening — 7 o'clock, Epworth
League, led by Rev. C. W. Schuenius
of West Duluth; 8 o'clock, services by
Rev. H. O. Jacobsen of McVille, i-J. D.,
and Rev. A. M. Trelstad of Landa, N. D.
Stephen H. Reeves, aged 80, died Sat-
urday at his home, 5280 Banks avenue,
South end. following a long illness.
Reeves was a mall carrier and was a
resident of Superior for the past twelve
years. He was in active service as a
letter carrier until last December,
when he was taken ill.
«
May Get Hero Medals.
For heroism displayed In saving the
lives of two East end men, Allie Howard
and August Winters, Friday afternoon,
when a rowboat capsized In Lake Su-
perior near the Wisconsin entry piers,
Carnegie medals may be awarded to
J. W. Johnson, E. L. Colbath, Louis
Gobin and C. J. Looml.s, four employes
of the government scow. Howard and
Winters were bound for the south shore
on a fishing trip. The boat capsized 300
feet from the pier. The mPb on the
scow saw them floundering in the water
and went to their aid.
♦ —
Firemen to Dance.
The annual dance of the Superior
firemen will be held this evening at the
Sons of Norway hall. Chief Olaf John-
son and a committee have worked hard
to make the affair a success. The
Grand opera house orchestra will fur-
nish the music. The street car com-
pany has arranged for "owl" cars after
the dance.
Looking for Relatives.
John Dowling, aged 80, died yester-
day at a local hospital. He was an in-
mate of the county poor farm for years
and little is known of his past. The
body was removed to the Le Sage un-
dertaking rooms, where It will be held
pending an effort to locate relatives.
SUPERSfirlOXS OF ROYALTY.
From Tit Bits: What does the fu-
ture hold for me? What Is to be my
fate? Hhese vital questions agitate
the minds of most of us, more or less.
And, judging by the revelations of the
writer of "Recollections of a Society
clairvoyant" (Nash), no people are
more superstitious In regard to signs
and portents and their relation to the
future, than royalty. Many of them at-
tach great importance to dreams, ine
czarina, the emperor of Austria and
the kaiser, for Instance, insist that
dreams have furnished them with
premonitions of various misfortunes
which have overtaken them.
The emperor of Austria has peculiar
forebodings of imminent disaster, and
for some months before the assasina-
tlon of the Empress Elizabeth at Geneva
in 1898 he was a victim of ominous
presentiments, and frequently ex-
claimed: "Oh! if this year were but
at an end." The empress was a fatal-
ist. "What Is to be will be," she once
eaid. "It has been predicted tbat I
and my two sisters will all meet with
violent death." And curiously enough,
after the assassination of the empress,
her sister, the Duchess D'Alencon, met
her death in the terrible bazar fire
In Paris, while the ex-Queen Sophia, of
Naples, the third sister, anticipates
meeting as violent a death as that of
her two sisters.
It Is a curious fact that for some
days before the empress was murdered,
and on the day of her death, a large
black raven was observed constantly
flying near her bedroom window at the
hotel where she was staying. And it
Is a tradition of the Austrian royal
familv that a black bird and a white
lady always foretell death. It is also
said that when a member of the reign-
ing house of Germany is about to die
the white lady — supposed to be the
spirit of the Countess Agnes Orlamunde,
who murdered her first husband and
her two children, as they constituted
an obstacle to her marriage with one
of the ancestors of the kaiser — always
appears. . ^ -, .
The white lady appeared to Fred-
erick the Great on the eve of his death,
and in 1806 she came to Prince Fred-
erick of Prussia before his death at
the battle of Saalfeld. A number of
officers also saw her, the prince being
at the time in their company.
The present kaiser is firmly con-
vinced that he will die by the hand of
an assassin. This has been predicted
to him several times — twice as a young
man bv Hungarian gypsies when he
was visiting his friend, the late crown
prince of Austria, at Galicla, and it Is
said that this conviction forms a con-
stant topic of conversation between the
emperor and his friends.
Like the late King Edward VII, the
German emperor is also very appre-
hensive of the number 13 In connec-
tion with any entertainment, and more
than once a subaltern on duty at the
palace has been commanded at a mo-
ment's notice to join the Imperial party
to avoid 13 being a. table.
Many members ol European royalty
consulted the writer of "Recollections
of a Society Clairvoyant," among them
being the late King Leopold, Queen Na-
talie of Servia and King Humbert of
Italy. "I did not feijl," says the author
concerning King Humbert, "that I
could tell him what I saw. It was
shortly before his £ ssassinatlon, and I
did luy best to warn him against perils
on a journey. He expressed himself
very pleased with nome private infor-
mation which I gave him. but laughed
at my warnings, and told me that he
would 'wait and sec' "
Then a few yeans ago he was con-
sulted by a pretty, falr-halred g'rl,
who was accompar.ied by an elderly
lady. "When I read her crystal," he
says "I could see a brilliant marriage
In store for her, b it I could also see
that her wedding day would be a day
of sudden death for others. I told her
this, and also that her home would be
far away from England, among stran-
gers in race and religion. 'You will
have six children — five boys and one
girl,' I concluded. My pretty client
was quite delighted and she went away
in high spirits. I was talking about
her to a lady who Is persona grata at
court, and she remarked quite enlgmat-
icallv that the Princess Ena had al-
wavs been a little unconventional, 'but,
she" added, 'I don't nay that your client
was the queen of Spain.' "
CATS' RETR1E\*ING INSTINCT.
The Scotsman: One of the regret-
table pranks of my boyhood was cap-
turing sparrows, and a tortoise-shell
kitten, progeny of the despised stable
cat. learned of its own accord to fetcn
the dead birds and bring them to my
feet. Certainly tlils example of cat
retrieving was exceptional, but the
faculty was so strongly developed as
to become transmissible, the tortoise-
shell's kittens in turn becoming expert
retrievers with \erf little teaching.
A cat's intelligence Is very little be-
hind that of a doi?, and I could cite
instances when the members of a kit-
ten family have learned tricks more
quickly than the members of a puppy
one. I do not wish to disparage the
sex, but I have found in teaching
voung cat.s to retrieve .ind do tricks
that the males are much more amen-
able to discipline and quicker at "les-
sons" than the females are, and of a
troupe of performing cats which went
the round of the mu.slc halls some
ye.'irs ago every member was a male.
Taking cats generally, the highest
Intelligence Is met with in Manx and
foreign short-hair breeds, although our
native cats might be just as clever If
they were given the same opportuni-
ties. Persians, on the other hand, are
peculiarly stupid. Unlike a dog, a cat
has not a forgiving disposition; it Is
at all times more independent, and
consequently more patience is required
in Its training, and it must never bo
cuffed.
When I owned a well known cat-
tery" of foreign short-hairs, the In-
mates would answer to my whistle just
as dogs do, and they each had namejj
and would respond Individually tp
them. The tricks they could do were
legion, but the one I looked on as
my greatest triumph was the round-
ing up of chickens as a dog rounds up
sheep, which one, and only one. learned
to do. Another would do "penance
by going down on Its knees, puttlnjc
the front of its head on the ground,
and remaining there until told to rise.
LUXURY OP A HUSBAND.
Shreveport La.. Times: In New
York city, among other interesting and
curious exhibits, there are 10.000 hus-
bands who are supported by their
wives. . , ^
Sick? No: tired — born so. . , .
About half of them married for
money, expecting to live off their w'ves,
and make no bones about it. The other
half gradually discovered that their
wives could suppoit them — would. U
they had to — and «jroceed«;d to let tbeta
Wliy don't the wives leave them?
That's the strange part of it. They de-
nounce them as worthless trash, then
proceed to scrub floors and take m
washing to keep them in beer and to-
bacco.
It's a funny old world!
I DEATHS AND FUNERALS |
MONUMENTS — Hundreds In stock. P.
N. Peterson Granite Co.. 332 E. Sup. St.
BUILDING PERMITS.
To Pittsburgh Coal company,
four coal bins. West Superior
street between Forty-sixth
and Forty-seventh avenues.. $
To W. Cudahy, frame dwelling.
West Second street between
Twenty-fourth and Twenty-
fifth avenues
500
1.500
Fountain Pen Sale!
-.■nsHTf,.; - of.r 1.: 'fc '»
THREE STEAMERS GET
CLEARANCE PAPERS.
The steamers North Lake, Northern
King and Northern Wave are the first
to take clearance papers from the Su-
perior customs house. They are load-
ing with flour and merchandise and
will leave as soon as prospects are
good for passing the Soo.
QUICK WORK OF FIREMEN
AVERTS HEAVY FIRE LOSS.
A serious fire was nipped In the bud
Saturday afternoon, when the Superior
firemen were called out to put out a
$2,000 worth of Waterman's Modern Fountain Pens, in our
window, the Best Fountain Pen Made.
The finest display of reliable fountain pens ever made in Du-
luth. It is well worth your while to see it.
$12.00 Gold Mounted, Self-filling ^9.00
$10.00 Gold Mounted, Self -filling $7.50
$6.00 No. 8 Pen Point, Self-filling $4.50
$4.00 Self-filling $3.00
Our big feature this week is a modern Waterman Pen, 14-k
gold peri point for $1.00.
Self-filling Pens, $2.00 and up. Every pen absolutely guaranteed
W. A. ABBETT,
205 West Superior Street.
THE PRESCRIPTION STORE.
QUALE-LARSEN CO.
14 and 16 West Superior Street
An Attractive Home
attracts a happy life. The Best
Paint goes a
long ways to-
ward making
the home at-
tractive.
The Heath-MuUigan Best Pre-
pare<l Paint is best, and we can
prove it. Come in and let us
sho^^' you where we can save you
money.
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THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
HGHTING
RESUMED
Battle Begins Again in the
Outskirts of Agaa
Prieta.
Exposed American Soldiers
Hold Their Positions With
Courage.
Douglas, Ariz.. April 17. — Firing at
Asua Prieta ■was resumed at 11 ocloclc
The federal maciiine guns were still
out of commission.
The American soldiers exposed to
the fire behaved with their customary
couraere and coolness. At 9 o'clock
they alone maintained their positions
along the line. Thousands of specta-
tors covered tlve housetops farther
Vack and filled the streets commanding
a. view of the battle grounds.
At 9:30 a. m. the firing continued, hut
the federal machine guns were heard
no more and appeared to be out of
commission.
The federal machine guns were orig»-
inally placed in the center of th'j fed-
eral battle line to the southeast of
Agua Prieta. wliich extended fanlike
In two directions southwest and north-
east. Tile machine guns would be
rushed forward and fired until hot,
then the .soldier."? would clos«2 up and
hold the line while the guns cooled.
After a moments rest they would
be rushed forward again. When they
came into close contact with the rebel
trenches the machine guns appeared
to have hcen silenced and the federal
line fell back.
Battle Raeen With Furr.
At 10 o'clock the federals rushed
another column of men to this point.
They crissed through the short brush
draw running at ful! speed. As they
came within the firing ranee of the
rebel ranks, they dropped flat to the
groun.l and fired at the rebel trenches.
Here the battle raged with fury. Bul-
lets raked all the ground between
Agua Prieta and the international line
and also a large zone in Douglas.
This section is a flat, open territory
and the constantly falling bullets
v.hich kicked up little geysers of dust
crave the whole district the appear-
ance of smoking ground.
At 10::?0 the firing ceased. The reb-
els still had every position which they
©•cupied at the beginning of the bat-
tle. They immediately began digging
a new line of trenches within 100 feet
of the international line running di-
agonally to the American boundarv.
Mrs. Alice Gattliff, the American
woman who remained in Agua Prieta
with the stars and stripes flying
above her little curio store, telephoned
to Douglas at 10:40 that she was still
unhurt. I..opez. who had been in her
store, told her the federals, advancing
across the open ground, had lost heav-
ily in killed and wounded.
♦
Madero, Sr^ on Peace MImIob.
Eagle Pass, April 17. — Francisco Ma-
dero. Sr., today had been well ad-
vanced on his way into Mexico and a
peace mission to his son who is said to
be In Chihuahua.
The special train which left here Sat-
urday night came to the Kagle Pass
side of the river and the difficulty of
the preceding day which had halted
Madero here was apologized for. It
Is stated that passports were duly ar-
ranged.
With Madero from here, went nls
son Alfonso and Raefel Hernandez,
representative of the Mexico govern-
ment.
• ■
CrelRhton Probably Killed.
El Paso, Tex., April 17.— Reports ap-
parentlv authentic reached Juarez to-
day that Oscar G. Creighton. "the dy-
namite fiend," as the Me.xicans call
him. met death while fighting for the
insurrectos near Juarez Saturday.
Creighton claimed to be a New }oti^
broker with a brother in Philadelphia
and a mother in Boston. He was in
charge of the insurrectos' efforts to
wreck railroad bridges in Northern
Mexico.
^
Non-Combatants Cut Off.
Chihuahua, Mex., via Laredo, Tex.,
April 17. — With information from reli-
able sources stating that railroads be-
tween important places in Durango,
Coahulla a»id Zacatecas are being dis-
abled and thousands of non-cambatants
ci:t off and many men leaving their
families to join the insurrectos, it is
believed the insurrection is rapidly
spreading to the South.
STORIES
Wealth I'ndertrronnd — Railroads
Reach Everywhere — Good 1h the Ground
Shipn of the Great Lakes — .\ Cup of
Cold Water — Near to Nnture'H Heart —
Cool \\arni Weather and Warm Cool
Weather — Felling the Forenti* — Safe
BankM and .Vgrceable Baiiker», and
many other* of Interest, all found in "A
Book on Uuluth.'* AUo profu»e «n
beautiful i-lcturca. Buy a copy. For
Male at
E. M. STONE'S and
JOS. VANDERYACHTTS.
Dlea In Electric Chair.
Ossining. N. Y.. April 17.— Robert
Francis Wood, who killed his niece in
New York city more than a year ago,
was put to death in the electric chair
in Sing Sing prison early today. W ood
shot his niece, Amelia Roach, with
whom he had quarreled.
OTICE
TO THE
In a few days we will
announce the most
PHENOMENAL SALE
i OLOTIHlii©
' FPiiilSIHiilieS
ever held in this section
of the country.
a
Mr. C. P. Meyers, man-
aging partner of the Globe
has disposed of his interest
to us and we are
FORCED TO RAISE
$40,000 WITHIN THE
NEXT SIXTY DAYS
WATCH AND WAIT FOR THE
OPENING OF THIS MOST PHE-
NOMENAL SALE ON RECORD
/OS -/arm^ySufmiioks
ADDITIONAL SPORTING NEWS
NO LUCK FOR
FISHERMEN
But Few Catches Are Re-
ported By Early Visitors
to Streams.
Shores of Rivers for Miles
Around Crowded Easter
Sunday.
Enthusiastic fishermen crowded the
shores of every trout stream for miles
about Duluth yesterday. The hole that
only a few knew last year held several
dangling lines and but few catches
are reported.
The streams are said to be more
nearly normal for this time of the year
than in many seasons. The ice is
fairly well out of all the creeks and
the snow has been carried off, for the
height of the water is said to be about
riylil and the water is clear.
Tlie trout are not hungry. They will
not jump at the angle worm as they
do later in the year and the only e.K-
planation offered by those that were
in the woods over Easter Sunday is
that It is too early in the season.
Henry Dwor.schak, Jr., and Joseph
Schwartz brought home five nice big
trout after a trip to French river.
Herb Hanson had six. The remarkable
part of the luck of these men is that
all the trout were large ones, none
of them being under nine inches.
William Lounsberry and Gust An-
derson fished Sucker river four or five
miles up from the mouth and they
were not rewarded with a single bite.
The stream, they say, looks good and,
to all appearances, the trout ought to
be biting.
Robert McDonald started for the
Gooseberry, but was informed that the
conditions at that river would not
warrant a trip there so he fished the
Knife river and had no luck.
There were hundreds of fishermen in
the woods over Sunday. But few of
them had any luck at all. They
poured into the city on the late Sunday
afternoon trains. All were tired, but
most of them had satisfied themselves
that there will be no fishing for some
weeks yet.
VISITEDlOLF
COURSES IN SOUTH
L P. Alexander and R. T.
Goodell Return After
LAST; CHANCES OFTEN
COUNT IN RING FIGHTS
Eventful Trip.
E. P. Alexander, one of the most
enthusiastic golf players at the Head
of the Lakes, and R. T. Goodell, man-
ager of the Gay & Sturgls office here
and also one of the real dyed-ln-the-
wool golf enthusiasts, returned this
morning from a tour of the Southern
golf centers. They visited about every
prominent course in the Southland.
George C. Stone was also with them
motoring up from the South to New
York, where he is at the present time.
Many miles were covered in the South
by auto. The Duluth men took a reg-
ular tour of the circuit, playing over
thirty games, participating in some of
the big tournaments that were played
at Washington, Pinehurst, Atlanta and
other golf centers of the South.
"I had the very best time of my
life," said Mr. Alexander this morn-
ing. He looked the part. He is as tanned
as a man who has worked in the har-
vest fields for a month. "We didn't
miss any games to speak of all the
time we were gone. The weather was
simply great and we had some of the
best golf games any of us had ever
played in. We left Mr. Stone several
davs ago, as he motored on to New
York cltv. If the rest of the players
of the Northland club feel like us, the
season on the local links will be the
most successful in the history of the
club."
Everybody knows that a baseball
umpire's lot isn't] alw^ays an enviable
one, and the sarlke remark applies
forcibly to the smiling gent who prom-
enades between the ropes while a
couple of earnest sluggers are endeav-
oring to tear each other's heads off.
The referee who manages to please
an entire crowd has never existed in
human form on this terrestrial sphere.
Only the other day frankie Conley
was di.squallfied by an indignant ring
judge .because Conley didn't batter
an opponent up sufficiently; and Patsy
Haley, the old-time featherweight, was
roasted because he stopped a bout
where one of the contestants was all
but out.
Haley gave as a reason for his ac-
tion that he feared a fatal termina-
tion to the bout if the beaten man had
been permitted to continue, and, there-
fore, lie saw fit in his capacity of
referee to call a halt. Patsy is, or
ought to be, a good judge of what a
fighter can stand in the way of pun-
ishment. He was some boxer him-
self In his palmy days and a better
little ring general never stood In fight-
ing shoes. It is possible that some-
thing serious might have happened,
and the immediate result would have
been a shutting down on boxing in
New York, where \J\e game is none
too strong as it is. On the other hand.
In many person.s' opinions. Haley de-
pri\*ed them of the chance of witness-
ing a sen.-ailonal climax.
Munt Vme Judgment.
There it is, you see, the point of view
again! What one fight fan considers
fine, another declares to be brutal.
What one referee thinks is too mild
might be considered by another offi-
cial as enough to warrant him In stop-
ping the proceedings. In Conley's case,
it is said that Frankie had his man
staggering on the verge of a knock-
out, but was really afraid to put over
the final, sleep-producing punch on ac-
count of his opponent's weakness. The
fact of the matter is that neither the
referee nor fighter can be bound by
any hard and fa«t rule. Each has to
think for himself, and to be governed
by circumstances. '
It is safer, howeven tor the referee
to lean toward the side of mercy than
it is for the chap who is wielding the
mitts. One never 'Hnows wlien a seem-
ingly helpless fighter may pull himself
together by a gigantic effort of will
power and, trusting all to a single
desperate punch, land a sockdolager
on the jaw that brings down the cur-
tain In a hurry. An instance of this
kind was furnished when Gunner Moir
knocked out Bombardier Wells in Lon-
don recently. Jimmy Brltt. the former
coast lightweight, now located in Lon-
don, writes as follows regarding tlie
battle in question:
"I was sorry to see Wells beaten,
because I took quite an Interest in him
and figured that with proper handling
he had the makings of a good man
in him. And it was all his own fault,
an exhibition of soft-heartedness on
the Bombardier's part which cost him
the fight. You see, Wells and Moir
have been very chummy in the past.
Botli are former soldiers, and struck
up one of those comrade friendships
one reads about.
stopped Too Soon.
"That's all very fine In its proper
place, but the ring isn't any spot for
the demonstration of the 'pal' game.
Up to the end of the second round
ANells had the Gunner so groggy that
he could hardly keep his feet. Twice
he went down from good crosses to
the jaw point. You wouldn't have
given a cent for Moir's chances. Not
half a minute before the bell was due
to ring for the close of the second
round Wells drove Moir to the ropes,
sma.shed him with right and left on
the face, and the Gunner stood there
wabbling, the blood streaming over
him. All of a sudden Wells slopped
dead In his attack and stood there
looking at Moir as if he didn't want
to hit him again.
"The Gunner made a leap forward
and threw all the weight of his body
into a right jolt over the heart, and
Wells went down. It was easy to see
that he was hurt. When he regained
his feet he clinched and hung on until
the bell. When the men came out for
the third round the Gunner was the
fresher of the two and Wells was benfc
half double and could hardly get
around. Moir went after him and fin-
ished him easily, winning on a knock-
out. I am afraid that the re.<?ult may
spoil Wells: he takes it so much to
heart. When a young 'un gets a hard
licking it often ruins his future career.
It was the most exasperating thing I
ever saw happen between the ropes.
Many years ago when Australian
Billy Murphy came to thl.s country, ha
brought with him from the antipodes
the reputation of carrying the strong-
est punch ever possessed by a feather-
weight In his right mitt. The punch
was there, all right, as more than one
of Murphy's opponents found to his
cost. I»urtng a battle with Ike Weir,
the famous Belfast Spider. Murphy re-
ceived an awful trimming from the
former. He was cut to pieces, reeling
helplessly about the ring and ready to
drop. Weir, whether through careless-
ness or moved by sudden pity for Mur-
phy's condition, let up in his straight-
arm jab-volleying attacks for an in-
stant and backed away. He half turned
as he hid so, and In that single instant
Murphy braced himself and sent his
right whirling through the air. It
landed with a crash on Weir's jaw and
the "Spider" crashed to the boards
immediately after.
Chauce Knockout.
When George Dixon was king of the
feathers, two of the most likely con-
tenders for the little colored wor\der's
title were Solly Smith and Johnny
Griffin. Accordingly, Smith and Griffin
were matched for a sort of elimination
battle, which took place at Roby, Ind..
In 1893 before the old Columbia Ath-
letic club. Griffin was a perfect artist
with the right hand, sending it true
to the mark with dazzling swiftness,
and before three rounds of the fight
had passed Smith was staggering
blindly around the ring, with both
eyes nearly closed and his face bat-
tered beyond recognition. George
Dixon. Bitting in a box close by the
ringside remarked to his manager,
•Smith won't last out the fourth
round."
The gong pealed, and Solly was aS-
sl^ed, half pushed from his corneTby
Joe Choynlskl, his second. He was so
far gone that he tottered to the ropes,
and grasped the upper one with his
left glove to support himself. Griffin
bore down upon his beaten foe, cool,
triumphant with not a mark on his
countenance to show that he had been
engaged In a battle. Smith released his
grip of the rope and stood swaying
to and fro.
Grlflfin made a preliminary low feint
for the stomach with his left and drew
back the right to swing for the chin
point. The first action left his 8i(J,e
unguarded fo rone brief second, and in
that instant Smith swung wildly. aNnr-
lessly, but with tremendous force with
his right. The punch caught Griffin
fair and square on the jowl, splitting
his cheek open to the bone, and Johnny
Hopped senseless on the padded floor.
Smith again grasped the rope and
watched stupidly while Slier counted
off the fatal 10 seconds. Griffin did not
move, and Smith was proclaimed victor
amid a storm of yells that shook the
very benches.
ance of the player and tries to draw
him out. He wants to know from the
player if he ever tries to place a ball,
inquires how he times his start in
stealing, and so by many que.jtlons
obtains all the information he d«-sires.
He will advise the player to try a cer-
tain play or show him how to n eet a
plaj' while on the defensive. The scout
probably will then stay over fcr the
next game to watch the same m.in. to
see if he takes advantage of the ad-
vice.
If the player shows some ability and
looks as if he can be taught, the scout
arranges the purchase price with the
manager or owner. Right here a word
may be said about the minor laague
managers. Much of their financial suc-
cess depends upon the number of play-
ers they sell and the price obtained.
Realizing this, when they haven't any
good "prospects" to recommend they
.sometimes try to praise a player so
highly that a big league club wli:. pur-
chase him. A scout doesn't depend to
any great extent upon sues praise; he
would rather see the player himself
and judge whether he will make good
or not.
A player purchased or drafted uiually
has his new manager look him o\ er on
the spring training trip. Altiough
many are called and few are c losen,
yet an owner will think the .scout's
salary Is a good investment if one good
player is acquired. But some of these
youngsters may show qualities that
convince the manager they may de-
velop in a year or so into players ready
for the big leagues. These men are re-
sold to a minor league under an op-
tional agreement, the big leagu«' club
agreeing to buy the player back on or
beiore a certain time for a stipulated
price.
If such a player doesn't improve to
such an extent as to warrant another
trial the club holding the option upon
him simply refuses to exercise that
option. One star player developel will
make a reputation for the scou ; wlio
unearthed him. especially if that
))layer was an unknown "busher"
without any reputation. Discovering
such a player, a scout need not wory
much about his position: it is secure.
Maat KuoiT BuaiueitB.
But the scout, like every other em-
ploye, must make good. No manager
or owner can J)e exepected to retain a
man who discovers nothing but "false
alarms." A manager cannot be ex-
pected to listen indefinitely to ecplan-
ations and excuses, while his team
gradually disintegrates. He d« pends
upon his scouts to furnish good limber
to build up his team and to k^ep it
built up. Consequently, as so few of
the young players tried out ever do
amount to much the scout must be
continually on the move.
During the playing season the scout
is seldom idle. He cannot stay idle
and depend upon rumors end recom-
mendations to procure players. Every
club has its scouts working for the
same end; consequently the competi-
tion is of the strongest. The scout
must know the business features of
baseball perfectly; know how to get
his choice and to get it at advanta-
geous terms. If an owner pavs an enor-
mous price for a player who fails to
show big league ability that owner will
surely look with suspicion upon the
next phenom his ecout discovers,
whereas if only a small price has been
paid the owner will still retain faith
in his scout. So a scout of the present
day must be a good business man in
conjunction with his ability to know
a good ball player before he has de-
veloped.
To show the prominence some of
these scouts have attained, the High-
landers' scout, Arthur Irwin, has be-
come known even in far-off Japan. Ir-
win has served in every capacity con-
nected with baseball. A star player
himself, he has been owner, manager,
secretary and, last but not least, scout.
Any of the stars now drawing salaries
from Frank Farrell were discovered by
this keen-sighted and far-reaching
scout.
The Japanese, who first Imitate and
then originate, have made an offer to
Irwin inviting him to Japan to teach
the game as he knows it. Irwin is to
take five men wl.se in the ways of
baseball with him to assist in systema-
tizing baseball in Japan. They are to
teach the game and organize teams.
With such capable Instructors and be-
ing apt pupils the Japs should make
great strides In this feature of their
sports. It isn't a great stretch of Im-
agination to look into the future and
see a real world's champlon.ship being
played between American, Cuban and
Japanese pennant winners.
The scouts should welcome such a
condition. When they have reaped the
crop from our own minor leagues they
could Jump to Japan and express back
a brand-new assortment of phenoms.
*
FEAR DYNAariTE-FED PERCH.
Wlnsted, Conn., Corespondence New
York World: Hlghlaw lake fish are at
a discount owing to the discovery that
they dine on dynamite and like it.
Workmen who are blasting in the
neighborhood made the discovery by
accident. Since then they have amused
themselves by breaking little bits from
dynamite cartridges and throwing these
"crumbs" overboard to see the perch
grab for them. Housekeei>er.s regard
the experiment with disapproval. They
fear the dynamite-fed fl.sh would fry
too noisily, and Instead of reposing
quietly on a platter might suddenly
decide to serve themselves on the
ceiling.
McKib])iD
liats
W<s>]m Dsy ftllii(B I?®®pll®
to (tlh® Km (3)1! tUh® IBrnisa
Three dollars
SCOUT IS IMPORTANT
FACTOR OF BASEBALL
CLEVELAND PLAYERS
DID NOT STRIKE.
Chicago. April 17. — President B. B.
Johnson of the American league, called
off the game scheduled for today be-
tween the Detroit and Cleveland teams
to allow players on the latter team
to attend the funeral of Addle Joss
of Toledo, according to his announce-
ment sent out today.
A report that the Cleveland team
had gone on a strike to attend the fu-
neral was denied by President John-
son. "There Is no strike, dissatis-
faction or misunderstanding over that
game," the baseball official said. "I
gave them permission to call It oft in
memory of Addle Joss. It will be
played later in the season."
*
COMPLEX AMERICAN LEGAL PROB-
LEMS.
Case and Comment: No country has
such complex and varied problems to
cope with as the United States. Con-
ditions arising by reason of the heavy
tide of immigration from all countries,
including Gentile, Jews, Greeks, Turks,
Mohammedans, those of all religions
and those with none: those coming to
promulgate socialistic doctrines, the
perplexing Chinese and Japanese ques-
tions in the West, the abolition of slav-
ery, the rights of trusts, the organiza-
tion and rise of federations of labor,
have raised perplexing questions which
have demanded the attention more or
less of the criminal arm of the law.
MEMNIG'S
OLIVE OIL and PORT WINE
EMULSION
MAKES RICH, RED BLOOD,
b DeUdout. At AH Druggists.
«*IT PAYS TO PAY CASH.**
MY PRICES PROVE IT.
TBOMASSON
"IbeFURNITCREman"
ODD FELLOWS' HALL BUILDING.
18 and 20 Lake Avenue North.
New York, April 15. — Many old-time
players and others who remember "the
good old days" of baseball contend
that the game of yesterday is on a
plane with the game of today. They
argue the players of their day were
just as skillful. Just as fast, and as
good or better batter^ than the men
playing at the present time. They re-
fuse to concede anything to the game
of today, and it isn't my purpose to
try to refute their arguments, writes
Jack Knight in the Press. Ignorance
upon my part would preclude that, but
there Is one point or feature that un-
deniably belongs to ba.seball as it is
now played — the development of the
position of scout.
The need of a competent man to look
over the talent displayed by any prom-
ising minor league player has brought
the spotlight upon the scouts, until
now their position commands almost
the prominence of a manager. The old
-school probably felt no need of such
a man, but now a good scout Is an ab-
solute necessity to a big league team.
No club gathered together can go on
Indefinitely; old players must be re-
placed, and the scout is expected to
shoulder this responsibility. Formerly
managers or owners employed men to
scour the country for promising ma-
terial, but the business was carried on
In a loose, haphazard way. Regular
scouts were by no means an Institu-
tion. They formerly were free lances,
who, upon discovering what they
thought to be a diamond in the rough,
would inform some manager, usually a
friend, who would proceed to sign the
embryo phenom. If the player made
good the free lance would be com-
pensated for his adWce.
Every Club Has ScoutM.
Now the business has been brought
to a perfected system. Each club has
its quota of men receiving salaries
for digging up and discovering bud-
ding baseball talent. At least one
man stands out prominently in each
club; he Is In close touch with all
the teams of a certain district, and
his duties are to run down any clews
that may lead to the signing of a
good player. The scout doesn't de-
pend entirely upon records made by
players, but uses very possible avenue
to gain knowledge of the prospective
big leaguer. Traveling men, managers
and players of the teams and fans
furnish the scout with a hint as to
some certain player, and it's then the
scout gets ready for action.
Looking up train schedules, he will
hie himself to the town In which the
player is performing. The scout may
sit unobserved in the grandstand or
he may watch the man in question
from the bench. He takes into con-
sideration every phase of baseball
character. He. above all men, must
have the power to look into the
future. Any one recognizes ability
when it Is developed, but the scout
must be able to discover ability where
the uninitiated see only mediocrity.
As a chain Is only as strong as its
weakest link, so a baseball team must
be strong In every* department, and
the scouting departrpent is one of the
largest and most important factors of
a big league team's life. While the
manager is responsible for the work
of his team during the season, the
scout furnishes the material. The
manager develops the player, but the
greatest wizard in baseball couldn't
make a star of a player who possessed
no ability. Consequently, the scout
must be depended upon to furnish good
timber for the manager to work with.
And in a large sense the manager's
success depends upon the scout or the
men who gather Ini his players.
In selecting his men a scout has
really nothing but his own Judgment
to depend upon. Records made in a
minor league are not definite proof
that the players who made those rec-
ords win repeat In the major leagues.
Jimmy Austin, who commanded the re-
spect of all by the whole-hearted way
in which he fought for every game,
was a striking example of this feature,
in the Western league Jimmy stole
something like ninety odd bases, but
in the big league during the 1910 sea-
son the "Pepper Box" managed to pilfer
only twenty-two.
The scout, seeking his Information
from every quarter, will immediately
depart to look over any player who has
been recommended. He usually likes
to watch his pro.spect perform without
the knowledge of his presence, A
player knowing some big league scout
Is looking him over, may try to outdo
himself and fail to show his true cali-
ber through nervousness.
Irwtn Bent Knovra.
Arthur Irwin, who is famous for so
many things that his titles read like
the name of a Russian grand duke, is
perhaps the best known of all the
major league scouts. He holds the hon-
ored position on the Highlanders' pay-
roll, and his many and varied experi-
ences attest to its hardships. Irwin's
methods may well be used to illustrate
how the young players are critically
examined, and, li they impress the
scout favorably, are signed to a con-
tract. Hearing of a proml.slng player,
Irwin watches him in a game, notes
how he handles himself at bat and In
the field, and last, but not least, how
he meets emergencies — that is, how fast
he thinks.
Afterward the scout goes over all the
evidence his eyes have witnessed and
considers the virtues and all the faults
of the players, and whether those faults
are due to inexperience or not. If the
team has morning practice, the scout is
on hand early and makes the acquaint-
Some Stores Take in Shoe
Repairing to Help Pay
Expenses,
We Do
SHOE REPAIRING
THAT PLEASES •
AND WE CHARGE LESS.
GOPHER WORKS
Duluth and Superior.
RELDABLE
i?&TeiHI
AT THE-
HENRICRSEN JEWELRY CO.
WATCH SALE
332 WEST SUPERIOR STREET.
Factory I 383 W. Michigan St..
Usual RetaU Price $22.50. Our Regular Price $20.00.
For Tues-
day's Sale
This 9x12
Tapestry Rug
Comes from a flrst-cla-ss mill. We
purchased a very large stock of
Rugs, and especially this size and
quality — and for one day only we
jffer them for only $10.95.
Caldwell's Oectrlc Cut Coffee
THE COFFEE OF NEVER
CHANGING QUALITY
Sold by All Groicers at 35 cents a pound
SniartlyTailorecl Suits
and Coats, Beautiful
Dresses, Waists and
Skirts Moderately Priced
Suits and £odt$
S15, $17,50. $19.50,
$22.50 and $24.50
iMMM
S17.50, $19.50, $22.50
mm
$1.50, $2.50,
S3. 50, S5.00
SKim--
^7,50, S 10.00,
and S12.50
When You Can Pay U» aa You Get Paid— Why Deny Yourself f
If it comes
from
Gately's
it's good.
8 East Superior Sim
'Tttrn Hous« Wher* Your Cradlt Is Oood.**
DEFECTIVE PAGE
M
r
fc— »,
„
Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
THE IRON RANGES
FROM FAMILY OF
MAINE PREACHERS
Rev. B. D. Hanscom, New
Eveleth Minister, Arouses
Interest in Eveieth Charch.
Eveleth, Minn.. April 17. — (.Special to
The Herakl.) — Since the arrival at the
M. E. church of Rev. B. D. Hanscom,
the new pastor from Maine, the attend-
ance at the services has greatly in-
creased. Mr. Hanscom comes from a
faniilv of preachers, his father beins
one of three Maine mini^^ters elected
sheriffs of their respective counties.
His three brothers are also ministers,
one having charge of the Olivet church,
Minneapolis; another a Caledonia.
Minn., Methodl.>^t church, and the third
at Providence, R. I. His uncle is also
a minister and was superintendent
the lower conference of Southern
nesota. Rev. Mr. Hanscom is
Grant mine hive completed their strip-
ping tunnel under the Great Northern
tracks .ind are now stripping on a
large scale About twenty-five men
have been put to work, but operations
have been delayed by a scarcity of men.
It is thought that a full crew will bo
working on the strir-ping by April 20.
VIRGINIA BOYS
ROB POSTOFFICE
Three Youngsters
Redhanded By
Caught
Officer
of
Min-
gradu-
Taking Stamps.
Virginia. Minn., April 17.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The juevnile court
at Duluth will have to consider the
serious charges preferred against
Elmer Erlckson, aged 14; Fred Franki.
14. and Tonv -Mark Eddy. 10, who were
caught redhanded by Officer Rlordan
rifling the stamp drawer in the local
postufflce.
Ooy CratviM Throngh OpeninK.
There had been some petty jdlferlng
about the office and Officer Kiordan
was left in the office one night, con-
cealed behind mail sacks. Pretty soon
iie lieard some one tampering with
the combination lock of one of the big
mail boxes, which are nearly a fool
square. The lock yielded and the box
was pulled out and through the open-
ing the small boy. Tony Mark Eddy, he
says, was pushed liy his two companions.
He was allowed to prowl around fo?- a
few minutes and was seen to try the
stamp and cash drawers. He appeared
to be familiar with the place and gave
evidence that he had been there be-
fore, says Officer Rlordan.
The boy was arrested and Officer
Rlordan also rushed out and caught
the two accomplices, who were on
tlie outside.
CIVIC LEAGUE ELECTION.
Will
REV. B. D. HANSCOM.
Will
ate of the Bangor Theological school,
and prior to entering the ministry was
a mechanical engineer at New London,
Conn. Before coming to Eveleth. he
had charge of a church at Mars Hill.
Me. His first charge was at Stonlnton,
Me., and later he was located at Dres-
den Me. Many changes for the better
have been made at the church since his
ariival, and under his direction the
members believe they will be able to
wipe out the debt that faces the church.
Large Kaster Services.
Easter was a banner Sunday at the
M K church. Services morning and
evening were very largely attended.
Dr. M. P. Burns of Minnearolis preached
at both services. The evening was
made notable by the taking of sub-
scriptions for the wiping out of the
debt of the church. The amount of the
debt was so nearly raised that the of-
ficials of the church expect by some
special work to wipe out the indebted-
ness entirely. *., i >-•"
Dr. Burns spoke In the morning to , ^^^
the Masonic order and the members at-
tended in a bodv. He talked about the
history and achievements of the order.
Its intents and purposes, said the order
took in the whole known world. He
said the monument at the head of the
order was Solomon's temple and at the
foot character, which should be the
chief attainment of every Individual
member. He said the principal virtue
of the order was charity, and that It
was the privilege of every member of
the order to have faith In the Almighty
and Him whom He sent to redeem the
The music was special for the day
and was furnished by a choir of twelve
voices. There was a baptismal service
after the close of the regular morning
service.
New Virginia Organization
Select Its Officers.
Virginia, Minn., April 17. — (Ppecial
to The Herald. I — The organlzatijn of
the civic league, which was started
last week will he perfected tonight
and officers elected in addition to M.
A. Murphy, who was chosen chaiiman
last week.
The meeting will be held in the
new techiiical high school. Officers will
be elected. It is the purpose of the
organization to take an interest in
civic affairs, to suggest such things
as from time to time may be taken up
and endorsed for the benefit of the city
and to make objection to anything
which may originate from some other
quarter which is not approved by the
league.
congregation. Hymns and anthems
were given by the congregation and
choir, while special vocal numbers
were sung by members of the choir.
Fine services were held at the St.
John's Episcopal church, with Rev. A.
E. Carswell In charge. The church was
appropriately decorated and large
congregations attended the two serv-
ices.
At the Finnish Lutheran Concordia
church. Rev. P. C. Keranen held com-
munion services assisted by twenty-
four members of the Sunday school.
Special services were also held at the
two Catholic churches, the Holy Fam-
ily and St. Patrick churches, with Rev.
Father M. Bilban and Rev. Father J.
B. Culligan In charge.
Many German Lutherans attended
the services held at the Swedish Mis-
sion church, last evening with Rev.
Herman Drews of the St. Mathews
church, Duluth, ofTiicating.
The Herald.) — Th« eleven members of
the present charter commission are
preparing to reslTfn aRd will soon for-
ward their resignations to the district
court judges foriaocej
new board can jne
new home rule fhar
passage at the fall el
passing of the board,
recommend flfteerT naifies for places on
the commission. ^.-
tance so that a
ppolnted and a
r drafted for
ttlon. With the
the council Is to
VIRGINIA BAND DANCE
Be Given April 28 to
Money for Uniforms.
Raise
Virginia, Minn., April 17. — (Sfecial to
The Herald.) — The Boys' Military band
entertained the people of Virginia yes-
terdav with some first-cla.ss music that
delighted the people. The boys parad-
ed about, making the spring air re-
sound with melody. The skill shown
by the musicians was a great surprise
and elicited much praise. The boys are
planning for a ball to be held April 28,
I>roceeds to be expended in buying
new uniforms.
ITAUAN MAKES
MONEY FARMING
Leaves Eveleth Mines Poor and
in Fiiteen Years Becomes
Independent.
Eveleth. Minn., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Terry Geradelli, a native
of Italy, arrived on the range about
fifteen years ago but after being em-
ployed In the mines for a few years
determined to devote his time to agri-
culture, purchasing a small plot of
ground near the Spruce location, which
he has tilled for the past ten years
with much success. When he started
farming he was in poor circumstances,
but now has saved up some money,
and has horses, cows and necessary
animals and implements for a farm.
Last week he was in Duluth, and in
company with Tony Camillo, a miner
of this city, purchased an 80-acre
tract of land near Iron Junction, which
they will clear this summer. Next year
they will commence farming there, but
Geradelli, will continue to operate his
truck farm here. Saturday he was in
town and disposed of many bushels of
potatoes, and eggs to retailers and
residents. Many other miners are pur-
chasing land near here, and judging
from the success encountered by those
who are tilling the soil in this vicinity
many farmers will be located around
Eveleth within a few years.
EVELETH HEALTH
PLANSNUMEROUS
'■"-
No Effort Being Spared to Im-
prove Range City's San-
itary Conditions.
Eveleth. Minn.. April 17.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The 5oO garbage cans
purchased by the city are being rapid-
ly sold, and will be used by many resi-
dents. A sanitary slaughter house will
be established by local cattle dealers
near the outskirts of the city as rec-
ommended by the health commissioner,
and all dealers will be required to have
their animals slaughtered there.
"Wliite wings" have commenced work
to keep Grant avenue, the main
thoroughfare In a sanitary condition
while the street department Is attend-
ing to the side streets.
The ravine at Douglas avenue and
Monroe street, will be tilled in with
dirt by the mining company which will
run a spur track from the Adams pit.
Deadwood at St. Mary's lake, the source
of the city s water supply, will soon
be removed, and a watchman stationed
at the lake to prevent fishermen from
using the waters. Notices to clean up
have been sent to all the local resi-
dents, and as soon as the contract for
hauling slops is awarded by the city,
every one will be retiuirej to have gal-
vanized cans in the rear of his resi-
dence as receptacles for garbage. The
sale of milk is also being closely reg-
\ilated, and many of those owning cows
liave had them submited to the luber-
culusis test.
RIBBING MAN ARRESTED.
GRAND RAPIDS CHURCH
BOYS ORGANIZE CLASS.
HI8BING READY
FOR METHODISTS
District Conference of Church
in Range Village This
Week.
Hlbbing, Minn.. April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The district conference
of the Methodist church will gather In
Hibblng on Tuesday and hold a three-
day conference In this city.
R. A. Barker, O. W. Randall, I...
Kaifcer and Richard Bateson form the
cominittt«s of entertainment for the
entertainment of the visitors, and are
readv for the visitors. ^Ishop Mc-
Intyre of St. Paul will preside over
the conference Thursday afternoon
the members of the party will make a
tour of some of tlie Oliver company's
mines under the auspices of Supt. W.
J West. About fifty members will
visit Hibblng with the d-elagation.
The program printed in The Herald
will be followed. Already some of
the delegates have arrived and it is
exoected the bulk will come this even-
ing and tomorrow morning.
•
Sirlpitinic Grant Mine.
Buhl, Minn., April 17. — Butler Bros.,
who have the stripping contract for the
Grand Rapids, Minn., April 17.— Four-
teen of the boys of the Presbyterian
Sunday school, from 11 to 15 years of
age, have organized a junior Baraca
class. This organization is for the
physical, mental and spiritual growth
of the members. Following are the of-
ficers; Harvey Longhurst, president;
Alton Russell, vice president: Archie
i Rassmussen, secretary; Edward Ho-
lum, treasurer; Frank Tunberg, chair-
man of athletic sports. A music com-
mittee consisting of Merrill Sundretzky.
Albert Holum and Norman Jorgenson
has been appointed. The motto Is:
"We're Out and Out for Bight."
BALLASTING NEW ROAD.
Canadian Northern Near Eveleth
Being Placed in Shape.
Eveleth, Minn., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The crews of the Walsh-
Graffan company, contractors of Dav-
enport, Iowa, who are working for
the Canadian road, from Duluth to
Virginia, are ballasting on the grade
about a mile from here where a sec-
tion house has been erected. They ex-
pect to have the road in a completed
shape by September. The section house
is at present being used by the sur-
vevors but it is believed a station will
be" established at that point, for Eve-
lethians, and that a bus line will be
run from the depot to Eveleth.
Frank Gauthier Held on Alleged Pa-
ternity Charge.
Hibblng, Minn., April 17. — (Special
to The Herald.) — On complaint of a
woman, Frank Gauthier, an Italian,
was arrested on a charge of being
father of her cliild. He was placed
under ?500 bonds today pending a
hearing April 25.
TOWER EASTER SERVICES.
Rendered
Fine
LUMBERJACK TAKES LIFE.
CIVIL ACTION WILL
BE TRIED IN HIBBLNG.
Hibblng, Minn., April 17. — Special to
The Herald.) — The adjourned term of
the district court resumed bk^fore Judge
Martin Hughes this morning in the city
hall. The balance of the criminal cal-
endar has been put over till the next
term, owing to some of the w^ltne;^es
not being able to get here in time.
Several Important civil cases are up
for trial.
RIBBING HAD FINE
WEATHER FOR EASTER.
At Fountains & Elsewhere
Ask for
HORLICK'S'
Tht Original and Genuina
MALTED MILK
Tha Food-drink for All Agas.
At restaurants, hotels, and fountains.
Ddicious, invigorating and sustaining.
Keep it on your sideboard at home.
Don't travel without it,
A quick lancli prepared in a miinite.
Take no imitation. Just say "HORLKXS.'*
in No Combine or Trust
Hibblng. Minn., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The weather for Easter
Sunday in Hlbbing was all that could
be desired and the churches were all
pack-ed to capacity at the morning-
services. In the e\ening the Masonic
order and their friends attended spe-
cial services In the Episcopal church,
conducted by Rev. Frank Durant. The
attendance was large, and the pastor
delivered a very eloquent discourse.
HIBBING BRIEFS.
Despondent Man Found Hanging to
Tree Near Ely.
Ely, Minn.. April 17. — (Special to The
Herald.) — Little has been learned about
ihe identity of th.e man found hanjjing
to a tree in a lonely spot two miles
from here with every indication of sui-
cide. The body, that of a woodsman
supposed to be Chris Bolstoff. had ap-
parently been hanging there several
weeks.
An employment ticket found In his
pocket, together- with other papers,
would Indicate that he had shipped
here for work In the lumber camps,
and probably was disappointed in get-
ting work and decided to end his own
life.
There was nothing in the pockets or
anywhere about the man to give any
clue as to where his home or relatives
may be.
EVELETH CARRIERS ARE
WEARING NEW UNIFORMS.
Programs Were
Snnday in the Churches.
Tower, April IT. — (Special to The
Herald. j — The Easter service at St.
Marv's Episcopal church Sunday morn-
ing was very largely attended. The
church was appropriately decorated
with plants ana cut flowers. The Ma-
sonic lodge attended In a body. Rev.
John Larson of Faribault conducted
the service. The music was in charge
of F E. Kolb and the following as-
.■^isted: Mesdames Taylor, Gallien,
Hiokev, Misses Fraleigh, Martin, Pfelf-
fer, and Messrs. Robertson and "Wein-
man. Miss Kitto presided at the organ.
The order of the service follows: Pro-
cessional hymn, the choir and congre-
ttatlor: anthem, 'The Strife Is 0"er,"
choir; morning prayer. Scripture lesson,
"Te Deum." second lesson, "Benedictus,
apostles' creed, collect for Easter day,
hymn, choir and congregation: solo,
■•Calvary." F. E. Kolb; sermon, offering,
anthem. "Remember Now. Thy Creator,"
choir; recessional hymn.
Rev. Mr. Hughes of Ely occupied the
pulpit Sunday evening of the St.
James" I^esbytertan church. The ser-
mon was a fine Easter discourse. The
following musical numbers were ren-
dered by the choir: "Christ the Lord
Is Risen Today' and "Consider the
Lilies." A solo was rendered by Mrt.
Taylor, entitled "The Lord Is Risen."
Miss Burgess presided at the organ.
HAVE BASEBALL FEVER.
Eveleth. Minn.. April 17.— (Stiecial to
The Herald.) — The carriers are wearing
their new uniforms. The twelve mail
boxes which are to be stationed
throughout the city have as yet not ar-
rived. A civil service examination will
be held here April 29 for those aspiring
to the positions of assistant carriers
and clerks.
EVELETH SCHOOL BOARD
CONSIDERS BUILDING PLANS.
Hlbbing, Minn., April 17.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Several theater parties
from Chisholm and Virginia attended
the Healy theaier last night to witness
the performance of "The Isle of Spice.
The Modern AVoodmen of America
will give a ball in the armory this
evening and the hall has been taste-
fully decorated for the occasion. H. L.
Dow-nle, E. L. Everett, John Roberts,
H Richter and O. W. Randall form the
committee in charge of the arrange-
Tn^n Is
Mr and Mrs. Hurley visited the home
of Mr. and Mrs. "W. C. Barrett during
the Easter vacation. , , _ ,
Miss Rose Silk, clerk of the munic-
ipal court, spent the Easter vacation
with her parents in Duluth.
MissL. Olson of the high school and
manager of the girls' basket ball team,
spent the Easter vacation at her home
In Eau Claire. "Vi^'is.
Alfred Green of No. 1 fire hall went
to Duluth on Saturday to spend the
week-end with his relatives and re-
turned this noon.
Mrs. Frank Kieffman and Mrs. E. C
Kleltman went to Minneapolis on Sat-
urday to visit Mrs. E. C. Kleffman's
sister.
Dwlght Booth went to Minneapolis
to spend Easter. , ., . . ...
Ellis Butchart of Duluth is visiting
his cousin. Dana Butchart, son of Dr.
Butcliaff of 719 Third avenue.
Rupert Swinnerton went to Good-
lands on Saturday on a business trip.
Swam Levine of Zim, Minn., was
taken ill with pneumonia on Saturday
and was taken to the Butchart & Mors-
man hospital, where he is said to be
improving slightly today.
Dr. Morsman went to Zim on
day on professional businesa-
EVELETH EASTER SERVICES.
Eveleth, Minn., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The school board Satur-
day evening allowed many bills. The
plans of Architect Bray for the pro-
posed $60,000 eight-room brick Adams
public school, were considered and a
special meeting will soon be held to se-
lect the date for holding the special
election, at which time the cost and
site of the new school are to be de-
termined. "W. F. Mitchell, was ap-
pointed as janitor of the Spruce
school to succeed John JCwarnstrom,
who has resigned.
ETeleth Fans Are Organizing Sev-
eral Teams for Season.
Eveleth. Minn.. April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — From present indica-
tions Eveleth will have more baseball
teams than ever. The Fayal office team
which was the first to organize, prom-
ises to be the strongest nine, as many
strong out-of-town players have been
secured.
■ The Adams-Spruce engineers and of-
fice clerks will also organize soon,
while the Adams mine will be repre-
sented by a strong team, led by Supt.
Burns of the stripping, who formerly
played 'v>iih. Hibbing and Eastern
league teams. The militia members
are also organizing and many of the
Indoor baseball players will try for
places. The Eagles, EJks and Modern
Woodmen will be among the fraternal
organizations that will be represented
on the diamond. The high school team
will organize next week. The usual
number of corner lot teams will again
be In evidence. There is some talk of
forming a city hall nine, under the di-
rection of City Attorney Edward L.
Boyle, a former league star. Many of
the fans are hoping- that it will be
possible to organize a strong city
team, which will be able to compete
with Hlbbing and Virginia, but the
prospects are very slim. The Indepen-
dents, who made a strong record last
vear, will again be represented In the
field.
apparent that the rebel sharpshooters
were concentrating their fire on the
machine gun operators and were slow-
ly picking them off. Time and again
the guns appeared to be unmanned.
At 7:45 o'clock, an hour and a quar-
ter after the battle opened, the ma-
chine guns were again in action and
were raking the rebel position on two
sides.
Red Cross Takes Field.
The Red Cross volunteers crossed
the border and went upon the field at
this hour. Dr. Shino of Bisbee, was
chief surgeon of the volunteers. Every
surgeon in Douglas and many from
Bisbee were being brought to the line
to attend the wounded. Women and
girls expressed their willingness to act
as nurses. It was certain that the list,
of killed and wounded would be very
heavy.
The fire from the rebel trenches was
having its elYect on the right wing of
the federal force and these nationals
were driven back. In falling back,
however, they swung around to the
east and north far enough to come into
contact with the rebels lying in the
trenches which had been dug to pre-
vent a left flank movement. Here a
heavy body of rebels was posted to
prevent the federals gaining the
American line.
School Buildlngn Hit.
As the fire belclied from these en-
trenchments, the rebel bullets sped
across the line Into the southeast sec-
tion of Douglas and into two school
buildings.
While the federals fell back, the
rebel commander in chief pushed for-
ward his men, and with others coming
up to support them, continued to en-
gage the retiring federal right wing.
The firing grew fainter as the feder-
als retired in this quarter.
Following this movement the fire
slackened to the east and it became
apparent that the flr.'=t attack of the
federals had been a failure.
As far as could be learned the fed-
erals had about 1,600 men engaged,
including 200 cavalry under Com-
mandante Barron, chief of the rurales
in .Sonora.
Tlie rebels showed remarkable or-
ganization throughout the battle.
Every point of vantage was guarded
Including the adobe guard houses on
the international line and every trench
and building In the outskirts of Agua
I'rieta had its squad of men waiting
to pet Into action.
Uallet Tiiroush Trooper'a Hat.
One bullet pansed through the hat
of an American trooper on the inter-
national line. American cavalrymen
were dismounted, standing beside their
horses. The mounts were finally moved
to sheltered positions behind the ado»-e
buildings along the line. The armv
ambulances were also held here.
A great throng gathered at Fifth
street, 500 yards from the international
line, intent on witnessing the battle,
but the American patrol forced back
all persons except those carrying
passes.
Twenty men were detailed to take
the field on the Mexican side of the
line for Red Cross work and about 100
volunteers were held on this side to
care for the wounded. A train «'n the
Nacozari railroad was made ready and
a number of automobiles were run ta
the line in preparation to go our and
bring the wounded back to the city.
i>tart to C'ollcft Wounded.
The first string of wagons and au-
tomobiles started for the front to col-
lect the wounded .\t 8:45.
Oscar Goll, who accompanied
the Associated Press correspondent,
was struck by a bullet on the side of
the head while he was watching the
progress of the fight from Fourth
street. A long gash was cut in his
scalp and blood streamed over his face,
but he was not seriously wounded.
(joU was the first American struck
on this side of the line in today's fight-
ing. He is a newspaper man, employed
in Tombstone, and was formerly immi-
gration commissioner of Cochise
county, Ariz. He was treated at the
Red Cross hospital.
The Associated Press correspondent
crossed the line and found "Red" Lo-
pez, one of the rebel chiefs, who com-
manded the garrison of the town. All
of the Lopez men had been engaged
since the early firing began. Lopez
said:
Pat Guns Out of BuMlnesM.
"We concentrated our fire of sliarp-
shooters on the two machine guns that
the federals brought into action and
succeeded in putting them out of busi-
ness. The loss of life is undoubtedly
heavy. At this hour, I believe we have
beaten the federals badly. As fast as
the government troops were thrown
into the draw. Immediately south of
Agua Prieta, the fire of our troops
mowed them down. Our men have held
every position taken by them so far
and "have repulsed the right wing of
the federal army, which attempted to
swing around toward the American
border. We expect Juan Cabral to ar-
rive at any moment and reinforce us.
But we are going to hold Agua Prieta
anyway."
As Lopez spoke, firing had been re-
newed. The rebels in the ditches along
the American line were engaged, and
the American party In the automo-
bile was compelled to retire hastily
Into Douglas.
The federal troops paid no atten-
tion of the warnings not to fire into
the United States. Fighting from low
land, elevating their aim, their bullets
carried into the city of Douglas. On
a little knoll where a Mexican ceme-
terv is located, the rebels had erected
a dirt fort 300 feet long. The federal
fire directed at this point skimmed
the ground and whizzed into the
streets of the American town. The
whole section of the city between Fifth
street and the international line was
deserted.
The American customs house was
under fire continually and the citizens
sheltered there took refuge in a deep
ditch.
Shots from the federal battalions,
which had a position a little to the
southwest of Agua Prieta. crashed
through the Fifth street home of Rob-
ert Rae. chief engineer for the Copper
Queen Consolidated Mining company,
the local Phelns-Dodge corporatlbn.
Mr. Rae and his family were driven
out.
NOTED MIEDiCAL MAN PRAISES
THE BAKE OVEN TREATMENT
MADE FAMOUS Bf lODCHIlEY ( UaCHlEY
AT 301 CHRISTIE NIIDIK, DHUTH
THE B.'VKE OVEN TREATMENT
FOR CHRONIC DISEASES.
By A. W. Meyers, M. IX, Bloomington,
111. Read befor<: the McLean
County Medical Society.
"VX'herever counter-. rrltation is re-
quired, hot air finds fruitful applica-
tion. In the cSiieeoTf of dlsea.ses in
which it haa been employed with
signal success are sirains, synovitis,
rheumatism, gout, arthritis, neural-
gia, lumbago, gangrene, phlebitis,
ankylosis not osseous, in the after
treatment of fractures and disloca-
tions, indolent ulcers and Infected
sores, uremia and ob<sity. Its sphere
of usefulness Is daily widening, and
the inviting field it presents for
profitable research has enlisted many
progressive practitioners.
A case of synovitis of knee joint,
patient on crutches, was subjected
twice on alternative days to 300 de-
grees for 30 minutes, patient went to
work the following day. Sprains are
frequently entirely relieved by one
application. In rheumatism, acute,
articular, chronic and muscular, the
improvement is marked from the be-
ginning. Deposits of gout and arth-
ritis are removed by use of hot air
bake.
men. The principal
will not be heavy,
smoke and water.
damage, which
was caused by
BILL LIMITING COUNTY
TO SIX SENATORS TO
COME BEFORE HOUSE
(Continued f roi i page 1.)
Introduced by Representative Kpee-
land at the request of the govetnor
and attorney general, authorizing the
latter to settle pending tax litigation
with the Bell Telephone companv. so
that the taxes due shall be paid in
full with Interest at 6 per cent In-
stead of the legal penaltv of 12 per
cent. The bill passed, 73 to 17.
STILLMAN H. BINGHAM.
Eveleth Charter Commliiiilon Plans.
Eveleth, Minn., April 17. — (Special to
r
Satur-
Thousands
of Genuine
Testimonials
"^
of
cx-
— the voluntary tribute
those "who know from
perience, proclaim that
change to
POSTUM
FORMER EVELETHIAN DIES.
Eveleth, Minn., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — At the First Presbyter-
ian church an appropriate Easter ser-
mon was delivered by Rev. Phillip A.
Schwarz, Jr., to a large and attentive
<3oes correct
coffee.
ills caused by
••There's a Reason*'
Rnlland Saekett, Chemist, Is Called
at Appleton, Wis.
Eveleth, Minn., April 17, — (Special to
The Herald.) — Word has been re-
ceived here of the death of Rolland
Saekett. at Appleton, Wis., after an ill-
ness of several months. He was for-
merly employed at the Fayal labora-
tory, as a chemist, and took sick in
January. He has relatives at many
range points.
"The Bandit," a five-act melodrama
was given at the Vail hall yesterday
evening, by the local Italian lodges,
before a large and appreciative audi-
ence. The play was followed by a
ball. Music was furnished by the City
band.
The Fayal band made Its first ap-
pearance of the year yesterday after-
noon, on Grand avenue and gave a
very entertaining public concert con-
sisting of classical and popular se-
lections, under the direction of Leader
Scott.
Iron Ore lodge, A. O. U. W., initiated
a class of twenty-five Saturday even-
ing, assisted by Grand Foreman J. H.
Shumaker and Department Grand
Worker E. B. Nickison. both of Du-
luth. Following the initiation. City
Clerk D. P. Mclntyre, who is master
Woodman of the local lodge, arranged
for a banquet, which was attended by
oyer 9.D..? hundred. He presided as
toastniaster.
MEXICAN FEDERALS AHACK
REBELS AT AGUA PRIETA
BUT ARE REPULSED
(Continued from page 1.)
Postum Cereal Co., Limited.
Battle Cneek, Mich.
J
Others dug up the ground on all sides
and there was a continuous whizz of
the leaden missiles overhead. It was
considered too dangerous a post and
the observing party retired across the
line to Fourth street.
Suddenly, and for some unexplained
reason, the federal machine guns were
silenced. The rebel fire was kept up,
however, without intermission. It was
\
Ob Way to Asma Prieta.
El Paso, Tex., April 17. — According
to reports received here today from a
source deemed reliable, Francisco I#
Madero, Jr., chief of the insurrecto
forces, is now on his way to Agua
Prieta. where, it is believed, he will
set up his headquarters.
The last authentic reports regard-
ing the whereabouts of the insurrecto
leader placed him in the neighborhood
of Madera in the northwestern part of
the state of Chihuahua, midway between
Agua Prieta and the city of Chihuahua.
According to some reports Madero was
at the head of the insurecto force ad-
vancing upon Juarez which engaged
the federal troops at Baucho last Sat-
urday and which had since disappeared.
These reports, however, received no
confirmation and it is considered more
probable that the insurrecto chieftain
left Madera for Agua Prieta, a distance
of about 160 miles, when news of the
capture of the latter place reached
him. Members of the insurrecto junta
here profess ignorance of Madero's ex-
act whereabouts.
Army VanlHhcii.
Whether this move on the part of
Madero is responsible for the abandon-
ing of the advance on Juarez Is a
matter of surmise, but the fact re-
mains that the rebel army that battled
with the federals ten miles south of
Juarez last Saturday had completely
vanished.
There has been no relaxation of
vigilance at Juarez, however, and
strict guard is being maintained both
within and without the city. Many of
the inhabitants are spending their
nights In El Paso and practically all
the money in the Mexican city is now
in safety deposit boxes on this side of
the river.
The first unrestricted elections in
Mexico for years have just been held
at Casas Grandes, Pearson and sever-
al small towns in the vicinity follow-
ing the abandonment of that region
by the federals. When the Insurrectos
took possession. Instead of appointing
officials as heretofore, they ordered an
election and confirmed the officials
elected by the people.
^
Fire Threatens Boston 8tate Honae.
Boston, Mass., April 17. — Fire on the
ground fioor of the state house threat-
ened the building early today. The
blaze, which started in the restaurant,
was soon got under control by fire-
noon there is little d^ubt that it will
be adopted.
• • *
R, C. Dunn's house bill prohibiting
county boards from Issuing liquor li-
censes, known as thi roadhouse bill,
died In the senate this morning when
a motion to make a special order of
it was voted down. 29 to 24. The house
bill extending local option to cities of
10,000 and less and not having a liome
rule charter was made a special order
in the senate and pai>sed.
• ♦ •
Senator Sageng thi^ morning In the
senate gave notice thai he will move
tomorrow to make a special order of
the house resolution ratifying the in-
come tax amendmen : to the Federal
Constitution, which means that it will
be passed.
• * •
The senate passed ^he house bill al-
lowing Minneapolis to stretch its patrol
limits so as to permit the sale of liquor
In two new hotels th«.t have been built
outside the patrol limits. The vote
was 37 to 18.
• • «
Senator Rockne's resolution provid-
ing for a committee cf five senators to
investigate workinpnen's compensa-
tion, and report a bill to the next ses-
sion, described in Tho Herald last Fri-
day, was Introduced and adopted by
the senate.
• * •
Speaker Dunn crea:ed a mild sensa-
tion this morning In i he house by say-
ing that complaints had come to the
desk of the presence cf lobbyists on the
floor. "The chair," he said, "Is of the
opinion that there an; lobbyists on the
fioor, and the sergeant-at-arms will
proceed to eject them." Nobody was
ejected, but there was a prompt scur-
rying to cover by a number of former
house members.
• * •
The house passed ii joint resolution
by Speaker Dunn asking congress to
provide that the validity of state laws
shall be tested In the state courts and
then moved up to the supreme court of
the United States an3 not interrupted
by injunctions bringing them into the
lower federal courts.
« • *
Representative Mattson introduced a
bill, which the house passed, author-
izing the state to itell its bonds of
other states at par and Invest the
proceeds in loans to school districts
and municipalities.
• • •
The house passed i Joint resolution
by Representative Kneeland, continu-
ing the commission to settle boundary
disputes with Wisconsin.
• « *
Representative Li ndeen introduced
his resolution comminding the aboli-
tion of corporal punishment at the lied
Wing boys' training school, but Rep-
resentative Lennon put it over to to-
morrow by giving notice of debate.
• • «
Repreesntatlve Hlllman presented a
resolution adopted ty 2,000 working-
men in mass meetings at Virginia, Chis-
holm and Hibblng, approving his bill
abolishing private employment agencies
commending Mr. Hlllman for his stand
for the bill, and concemning the legis-
lature for failing to give it fair con-
sideration.
• • •
Representative Hopkins offered a
resolution opposing :he ratification of
the Canadian reciprocity treaty as it
stands and urging the Minnesota dele-
gation to have it changed. Represent-
ative Nye put it over to tomorrow by
giving notice of debute.
• * *
The house passed a joint resolution
SAYS COWAN WAS
NOT INTOXICATED
Banker Minkler Flatly Con-
tradicts Witnesses for
the Prosecution.
Bismarck, N. D., Anril 17. — ^Special
to The Herald.) — A.^. Minkler, of
Knox, a banker, was the first witness
called by the defense today In the
Cowan impeachment case, his evidence
bearing upon Judge Cowan's where-
abouts on the night of June 18 in
Rugby when. It is claimed, he was in-
toxicated. Minkler said that Cowan
came to his room that night while he
was ill and that he remained there
several hours, and further, that he
was not intoxicated.
The prosecution has had witnesses
stand in an effort to show that
Cowan was carousing that
on the
Judge
night.
HIGHWAYMAN
DEMANDS CASH
New York, April 17. — Graham Mur-
tha, dealer in building material, col-
lected 118,000 in cash Saturday, and
as the banks were closed, he took it
to his home in Williamsburg. While
waiting for a Williamsburg bridge car
today to bring the money to Manhat-
tan, Murtha was held up by a man
whom he saw following him Saturday
and wlio demanded the money.
While scores of persons on the
bridge plaza looked on. Murtha fought
with the highwayman until a police-
man subdued the footpad with a club,
and took him to a station house.
APPEARS AS USUAL.
Toledo
in lis
Blade "Set Ip"
Wrecked Building.
Toledo, Ohio, April 17. — The Blade
was printed as usual today. In spite
of the fact that the building Is almost
a wreck from the big fire which raged
within It Saturday night and the
thousand of tons of water which flood-
ed it from the roof to cellar. Tnc
first edition of the paper was on the
street at the usual time tlils morning.
All of the work of getting out the
Blade Is being done within the wrecked
building with the exception that the
stereotyping machinery and the
presses of the Toledo Times are be-
ing employed. In addition to local
offers of assistance, newspapers from
Los Angeles to New York were Quick
with telegrams offering every possible
aid.
The owners are unable even to esti-
mate their loss until the appraisers
complete their work, which is beln^
prosecuted vigorously.
Ha! Breakfast delight!
Kggs fried or poached and a
slice or two of rich, appetizing
McMillan^s * Paragon *
am or Bacon
"The taste that's tempting.*'
Your <]ealer has McMillan** "Paragon** Ham and
Bacon. Ketde Rendered Lard ana real Country
Sausage, or can get diem for you. Ask him.
J. T. McMillan company, bcorporaled,
St Paul Minn.
p
1
■
1 1 A
I
i
■■»• «i^<
MlS
ii*i
MS*«
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•«#i
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
THE DULUTH HERALD
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
—■ESTABLISHED APRIL 9. 1883—
Published every evening except Sunday by
THE HERALD COMPANY.
Herald Buildlngr, Opposite Postofflce Square.
422 and 424 West First St.. Duluth. Minn.
KDtercd u serond- class
matter at th«
gresi of
Diilutti postofflce under th«
March 3. 1879.
act or con-
TRLKPH0>E:S — Bell and Zenith.
Business Office. 324. Editorial Rooms,
1126.
OFFICIAL
PAPER
CITY OF DULUTH.
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Sub-crlbers irlll confer a favor on the ctrculatlon department by catling 324,
llther 'phDiie. and making known any complaint of service.
It U Important when deairlug tbe addrcsa ef your paper changed to gire botll
Ihe old aivi new aiktresaea.
The Duluth Herald accepts advertising: contracts with
the distinct guarantee that it has the largest circulation
of any newspaper published in Minnesota outside the Twin
Cities. Its value ag an advertising medium is apparent.
UP TO THE REPUBLICANS.
Each succeeding event in congressional affairs but
servos to make it more plain that the question of the
ratification of the Canadian reciprocity agreement rests
on the shoulders of the Republican members of the
senate. The Democratic members of the house, among
whom, it was predicted, there would be divisions within
divisions before the new congress was twenty-four
hours (.lid. are worthing together in practically absolute
harmony on that and other questions. In fact, the
agreement and good judgment shown by the majority
in the new housc thus far has called out repeated
words of praise even from the opposition press.
What the Republicans in the senate will do is about
as mucii up in the air now as it was when the Sixty-
first congress adjourned last month. The leaders in the
so-called progressive clement in the partj- have yet to
take any definite stand on the reciprocity question. It
does not seem possible that they can reject it. since the
Democrats have made the move for the additional free
list. That is a feature in keeping with the pre-session
demands of such progressives as commented on the
subject at all, and if they reject the combined proposal
it will be evidence that they are less sincere in their
protestations of interest in the people's welfare than in
playing a political game for their own advancement.
And even if that were the case it is hard to see how they
could expect to gain advancement by trying to over-
throw a popular measure.
By proposing this extended free list provision the
Democrats have given the progressives an opportunity
to save their faces and at the same time vote for reci-
procity. It was^not necessary to make the additions to
compensate the farmer for the adoption of reciprocity.
.As the New York World says regarding the Canadian
agreement as presented to congress:
"Explanations and apologies are not needed. It is
right in itself and it embodies an idea which cannot fail
to make progress. The farmer as v.-ell as the mechanic
and clerk must see in its liberalizing tendencies the
promise of more enlightened government and of more
profitable industry and trade. If farmers could be de-
livered from the belief that taxes laid to enrich selected
interests can be made of service to them, the economic
emancipation would be almost as great as that which
freed a race in 1803. Taxed food helps only the specu-
lative middleman. Taxed clothing enriches only the
grasping combinations which buy in the cheapest mar-
ket and sell in the highest,"
The Democrats have carried out their promise to
largely extend the free list, and the introduction of this
bill may enable some of the Republicans in the senate
to vote for reciprocity with better grace. The country
needs and wants reciprocity with Canada. That the
house will grant it is assured. It is up to the Republi-
cans to determine whether the country gets its demand
granted.
THE SAME OLD BUGABOO.
Minnesota keeps getting new evidence of the wisdom
of that man who said that if he might but make the
superstitions of a people he didn't care who made their
laws. This time it is in connection with the debate on
the state-wide primary bill that the evidence has come
to light, and the superstition is the old, familiar one re-
garding the three large counties of the state in their
relation to the less thickly popu'.ated districts.
It was urged in opposition to the measure that it
"would give too mtich power" to these three counties.
It is uncanny, the way that notion hangs on with some
people. That plea is so old and worn that its thread-
bare condition ought to enable anybody with even or-
dinary eyesight or less to see through it. The charge
is nothing more or less than an appeal to a prejudice
that was born when the man who lived outside the big
cities was without most of the conveniences that were to
be found only in big communities. It was a jealousy
natural to human nature, and that is disappearing in
these days of rural free delivery, telephone extensions
and other conveniences that are uniting the nation more
closely than was possible under the old order of things.
But tb.e way in which the old spirit is being ap-
pealed to in these days is so absurd that it promises an
early death for the old. senseless bugaboo. Unless the
three big cities or the three big counties reach a point
where their population exceeds that of all the rest of
the state, it is ridiculous to claim that those three com-
munities could so dominate political and legislative af-
fairs as to rob the balance of the state of its rights. What
is the rest of the state going to do while the cities
achieve their natural growth? Stand still? Gain neither
in development nor population? Nonsense! Minnesota
has not stood still in the past and is not going to stand
still in the future. Her growth and development will
be general, not confined to any one or two or three
localities.
If it were not for the cities, the country could not
develop for lack of a ready market. If it were not for
the country the cities could not develop for lack of both
market and source of supply. The two are interdepen-
dent, and the people know it better today than they
ever did before. Then why stir up this old bugaboo and
try to make it dance before the eyes of legislators and
voters? •
There are arguments that can be made against the
primary system, arguments that are honestly and fairly
based on natural differences of opinion arising from
various interpretations of identical facts. The Herald
believes that the primary system is better than the old
combination of convention and machine. The majority
in the legislature believes the same way. The attempt
to persuade the members to the contrary by means of
the ancient "city control" gag was as foolish as it was
futile.
The only thing at present in the way of the passage
of the state-wide primary bill is the fact that the house
amended the bill so as to include the judiciary in its
provisions. To this the senate must agree before the
bill will go to the governor. It should not be difficult
to get that agreement. If there is any set of elective of-
fices in the state that should be freed from the control
of political machines, it is that which includes the judi-
ciary. Therefore the extension of the primary system to
that class of offices is highly desirable. There is no
reason why the amendinent should be rejected by the
senate. There is no reason why Minnesota should not
have a truly state-wide primary.
A POINTER FOR STENOGRAPHERS.
There is a direct and exceedingly significant pointer
for stenographers in the words of one of the officials of
the Eastern Commercial Teachers* association. He said:
Two-thirds of the young women who enter busi-
ness colleges are unable to spell the simplest
words according to Webster, and the same thing, to
a .slightly lesser extent, is true of the young men.
Yet nothing Is more Important for those who ex-
pect to do correspondence or stenographic work, or,
in fact, to hold any sort of office position. Com-
mercial colleges really ought to have some entrance
requirement as to spelling — but if they did they
would lose more than half of their prospective
pupils. American girls, even those who have gradu-
ated from colleges and high schools, simply can't
spell, and the worst of It is that they don't know It.
Nor is this a case where ignorance is bliss. The
business world is crying out for stenographers who
can compose letters Intelligently and spell words
correctly, and it is crying in vain. The average of-
fice girl can't, or wont, see the importance of cor-
rect orthography.
The businessman who has employed half a dozen or
more girls in a futile effort to get somebody who can
manipulate the English language intelligibly and cor-
rectly thinks he knows all about the failings of the aver-
age stenographer. But here is a statement from a man
in position to know infinitely more about the matter
than any employer. If his indictment of the class is
well founded — and there is no reason to believe other-
wise— there is something seriously out of gear with' the
young Americans who seek that kind of employment.
In the case of the girls it is possible that they regard
their work as only a temporary occupation, pending
marriage, but even if that is the case, it is difficult to
see what they expect to gain by being inefficient in their
work. If, for any reason, they should want to return to
it, they would find that former efficiency amounted to a
good deal in securing employment. In the case of the
men there is not even that excuse, for even though the
stenographic work be but temporary, advancement and
later efficiency must depend to some extent on ability to
use the language correctly.
But even aside from personal pride in being able to
do one's work well, there is an incentive for office em-
ployes to learn to spell. The speaker already quoted
says that "the business world is crying out for stenog-
raphers who can compose letters intelligently and spell
words correctly, and it is crying in vain." Now, when
the business '-orld gets to crying out, it is prepared to
pay for what it is crying for. Efficiency is always in
demand in the business market. The man or woman
who has it will have steadier work and get more pay
for it than the mediocre worker.
Which resolves itself into this: The girl who can
write intelligently and spell correctly is worth more
than the one who can't, and will get more for her work.
There is a valuable pointer for office employes in that
statement from the Easterner.
HE HAS FOUND A JOB.
While the nation was mildly agitating itself on the
(?uestion of what to do with its ex-presidents, the pres-
ent incumbent of that ^exofficio distinction has gone
ahead and solved the problem. It was only natural that
he should do so. He never was inclined to wait for any-
body else to do what he could do himself. So there is
nothing surprising in his settling this matter oft hand
and all by his lonesome.
And he settled it admirably, too. His adjustment of
the situation suits him to perfection, and is not in the
least offensive to the rest of the people. If congress
had remained in session continuously from the time of
his evacuation of the White House until the present, it
could not have hit on a solution so all-around satisfac-
tory as this that the ex-jiresident himself has brought
about. There would have been debates and altercations
and points of order and packing of committees and party
lines and insurges and all the other fireworks that go
to break the monotony of legislative procedure, and the
chances are that, aside from a few international jokes,
there would still be no result, and the ex-president would
be sitting around on the windward side of Sagamore
Hill, champing his bit and biting out interviews in idle
discontent.
But none of that for him. No sir-ee! Maybe he had
his eye on this one particular job all along, and just
went out and took it when the time came. Or maybe
the conception of it came to him as an inspiration, or
perhaps, even, he just naturally fell into it, the same as
an Irishman -with a pick naturally falls into an excava-
tion. Anyway he is there, and he got there himself,
without the help of anybody or anything.
This ex-presidential job that he has found is that of
chief advice-giver to the country at large. And he is
doing well at it. Nobody can deny that. He has opin-
ions— sometimes two or three- different ones, apparently
— on practically every conceivable subject except the
tariff, and if anybody wants an opinion on anything all
he has to do is wait. It will come sooner or later.
When a university installs a man in such a position
it hitches the word "emeritus" onto some other title and
pays a salary with it. But our ex-president doesn't even
:'.sk to be called an "emeritus," let alone drawing any
pay. All he asks is the privilege of giving advice when-
ever he feels like it. He enjoys it, too. For seven long
years he was hampered by the occasional outcry that
he was using his position to stir up prejudice against
somebody or something. Now he is not subject to that
charge. All he has to do is talk or write, and enjoy it.
.And nobody cares.
These are the days when the fan begins to feel that
life is worth living after all.
The streets of Damery, France, ran with champagne
the other day, but it is not reported that the inhabitants
complained that the highways were extra dry.
THE OP^N 'COURT.
(Readers of Ttie Herald ore Inrlted to make free UM
of thla column to express their Ideaa atmut the tuples
of general interent. I^cuers iLould not exceed 3u0
words — tbe ahorter the better. 'Ihey must be written
m one aide of tlie papMunly, and tliey must lie ac-
companieii in every ctmahs tlip name and aildreas of
the writer, ttiough these need not tie published. A
signed letter ia aiwayii uiure eSecUie. bowerer.)
A "DEAF" BEGGAR IS
ALWAYS 4 SWINDLER.
To the Editor of The Herald:
The warfare a^lnst imposters goes
merrily on, and the round-up of fakers
is increasing rapidly. The sense of
security, which the operators of the
"deaf and dumb''-rac!tfet formerly felt.
Is being considerably jarred In many
sections of the country. At Port
Huron, Mich., a young fellow about
twenty years of age was registered at
police headquarters as Joe Doe, charged
with begging. He was reaping a rich
harvest irum the tender-hearted, on
the plea that he needed money to as-
sist him in 'securing an education at
a deaf and dumb school."
One business man gave him a lib-
eral sum, and later on saw the sup-
posed "deaf and dumb" man in a cigar
store, smoking gold-tipped Egyptians
and talking loquaciously to the man
behind the nicotine counter. The po-
lice were notified and the faker was
arrested. As soon as the iron hand
of the law closed on his coat collar,
the fellow was stricken dumb again,
and has refused to talk.
Such cases as this injure the deaf
citizens of the community. The public
shows by Its acts that mendicancy
is expected of those who live under
the handicap of deafness. The public
proves by its misdirected charity that
it is unaware of the fact that every
deaf-mute is capable of working and
earning a living.
We want the public to know that
almost without exception, everywhere
throughout the country the deaf are
industrious and self-supporting citi-
zens, paying back to the state all that
has been expended upon their educa-
tion, and enriching the community by
the productiveness of their labor and
the clean and Intelligent lives which
they invariably lead.
We want the public to know that
the schools for the deaf, just as well
as the schools for the hearing are
free: and that no deaf youth need
beg money in order to get an educa-
tion. There are schools in every state
that Tirepare the deaf for u.seful lives,
that give a good elementary education
to all. and in addition give Instruc-
tion in useful trades, and eventually
graduate young men and women,
skilled in some special industry, or
endowed with those homely virtues
which center in the truest and hap-
piest kind of domestic economy.
The committee on legislation of the
Minnesota Association of the Deaf had
a bill introduced that has just passed
the legislature and become a law,
classinp' all sorts of fake beggars as
mendirants and making It po.ssible tor
municipal and police judges to give
them ninety days or flne them f 100.
This law was aimed especially at
"deaf" beggars. It Is almost time for
the spring crop of these undesirables
and it is to be hoped that the people
of Duluth will turn these *'deaf" beg-
gars over to the police as soon as
noticed and with the new law the po-
lice can deal with them as they never
could before. There is a campaign on
all over the country to drive these
people out of business. „^„, . „_
JAY COOKE HOWARD.
Duluth. April 16.
A REAL LIVE NEPHEW
OF YOUR UNCLE SAM.
To the Editor of The Herald:
Will you kind IT state in your next
edition whether, a male child born in
this country from foreign born un-
naturalized parents, is a citizen of the
United States or no^^ Hoping you will
give your kind attention and thanking
you. V. M.
Duluth April 1«. »^ .
(Any child born on American soil Is
an American citizen. — The Editor.)
FRENCH FRIED POTATOES.
Consular Reports: The street vend-
ing of • pommes frites," or French fried
potatoes. Is peculiar to the northern
part of France and the novelty of it
appeals to those who visit this section
of the country for the first time.
Pammes frites take the place of pea-
nuts and popcorn and are sold in much
the same fashion. Not only Is this
trade carried on In some Instances as
a regularly established business, but
workmen, wishing to Increase their
earnings, come out on the streets in
the evening and sell these fried pota-
toes from pushcarts. Their profits
often exceed their day's wages.
The pushcarts are of the ordinary
type, but covered. A coke brazier is in-
serted through the flooring, over
which Is placed the large iron cauldon
holding the fat obtained from beef
suet. Raw potatoes, after being pared,
are pressed through a special cutting
machine, coming out in long, narrow,
four-sided pieces. These are imme-
diately put Into the boiling fat and
in several minutes 'are thoroughly
cooked They are then salted, and
sold in small paper cornucopias hold-
ing 1 or 2 cents' worth.
Pommes frites have the advantage
that they supt>ly a satisfying and
nutritive meal for a few cents. This Is
especially appreciated by the mill em-
ployes during the noon hour, as they
are thus enabled to have something
hot with their otherwise cold lunches.
Rather than go to the trouble of pre-
paring the dish (to say nothing of
filling the house with the odor of
boiling fat) many families prefer to
purcliase the freshly cooked tubers
from the nearest vender. These fried
potatoes are not sold merely at meal
times, but during the wlioie day, and
are eaten like popcorn.
The trade Is a decidely profitable one
even If conducted on a small scale.
The usual price of potatoes ranges be-
tween $1.40 and $2 per 220 pounds. The
beef suet costs 1 fi*anc per kilo (19
cents per 2.2 pounds), and with 1 kilo
of fat It Is estimated that fourteen
pounds of potatoes can be cooked,
the fuel cost for the same amount not
exceeding 6 cents. The quantity of
pommes frites sold for 2 cents, while
enough to satisfy an appetite, does not
equal two ordinary sized potatoes in
amount, and It will therefore be seen
that one kilo of cooked potatoes, cost-
ing 6 or 7 cents to prepare and sold
at 18 to 28 cents, leaves the vender a
handsome profit.
A license must first be obtained from
the municipal authorities by those who
wish to engage in the trade. Permis-
sion is then secured from some cafe
or "estamlnet" proprietor to allow a
cart to be drawn up in front of his
establishment. If this is a good center
the profits will be considerable, a.s 50
to 100 kilos of potatoes will be sold In
an evening.
As each city and village in the sur-
rounding region holds an annual fair
at some period in the year, It Is a
regular business of certain venders to
go from town to town where the
fairs are being held, erect their port-
able houses or booths, and sell pommes
frites with other light refreshments.
These booths are often elaborately con-
structed with tables, chairs, mirrors,
electric lights, etc., and present quite an
attractive appearance, and sell as
much as 800 to 1,000 kilos of potatoes
per day. special paring tiiachines being
used.
Royal Phyiilclans.
I..ondon Chronicle: The German em-
peror, on whom the University of
Prague has conferred a medical de-
gree, is not the first German royalty
entitled to style himself doctor of
medicine.
The late Duke Charles Theodore of
Bavaria, father of the queen of the
Belgians, after serving with distinc-
tion in the Franco-Prussian war
studied medicine at Munich, Zurich and
Vienna. When he had taken his degree
he established an ophthalmic hospital
at Tegernsee. at wliich all patients
were treated free of charge. The duke
was devoted to his profession and be-
tween 1874 and 1S09 performed over
5,000 operations for cataract besides
treating Innumerable patients for other
diseases of the eye.
MLNNESOTA OPINIONS.
Squandered the State's Money.
Perham Enterprise: The new Demo-
cratic majority in congress has adopted
rules which will cut down the running
expenses of the house $113,000 a year.
L,et the good work continue. A Demo-
cratic majority Is badly needed to elim-
inate gratt and extravagance in the
Minnesota legislature. Besides main-
taining an army of useless employes,
our Republican administration has
squandered the state's, money with a
lavish hand in the purchase of supplies.
Here Is a sample of some of the sup-
plies bought for the 120 house mem-
bers:
260 cut-glass Inkstands $ 243.40
o5a fountain pens 1,053.75
362 pocket knives 844.42
18b pairs of scissors 254.75
;:43 rulers 84.00
o04 penholders 19.72
311 waste baskets 266.80
The above layout gives each of the
120 members an average of three foun-
tain pens at $3 each and two pocket
knives at $2.25 each. As very few
members received more than one each,
it might be in order to ask where the
rest went to, and how long' will the
honest taxpayers of Minnesota permit
this state of affairs to continue?
"Wheat Prloea and Reciprocity.
Wheelock's Weekly: By the way.
has It not occurred to those who use
the price of wheat as an argument
against reciprocity that, to be valid,
it must show that wheat has advanced
in price in Canada? It should be ob-
vious that if prices tumble here on ac-
count of the fear of wheat imports,
prices in Canada must be soaring be-
cause of the hope of exports to a big,
new customer. As a matter of fact, the
price of wheat has declined in Canada
during the past three months in just
the proportion that it has in this coun-
try. Our anti-reciprocity friends will
not assert — will they? — that both the
United States and Canada are getting
lower prices for wheat because they
are about to trade more freely across
the border.
■Won the Pcople'n Esteem.
Moose Lake Star-Gazette: Tom L.
Johnson, four times mayor of Cleve-
land, has passed away. In his death
the world loses a man who was fear-
less in performing his duties as a pub-
lic official, and who won the esteem of
the masses of the people, which was
worth to his name all the good things
the "elite" might say.
A Body Blow.
Moorhead News: Judge Sanborn's
decision in the Minnesota rate cases,
in which he decides for the railroads
and against the state on every point
in controversy Is a body blow against
the right of tbe state to take any hand
in rate regulation e.\cept In a very
modified way. The courts have a wav
of knocking out laws made by state
legislatures and congress, until a lay-
man almost wonders what Is the use
of calling these lawmaking bodies to-
gether and going to the expense of en-
acting laws only to have them declared
void by the courts. Tlie rate cases wlil
be appealed to the supreme court of
the United States, but Judge Sanborn
is no doubt sound on his law, and the
result will probably be only more ex-
pense for the state with no results.
Experiment AVortk TrylnfC.
Foley Independent: The great curse
of all legislative sessions is the vast
number of Irrelevant and often farcical
measures that are Introduced by 22-
callber statesmen, who seem to labor
under the Impression that their record
will be judged upon quantity rather
than quality. The result of this state
of affairs is that meritorious measures
are often crowded out in the turmoil
prodticed, and between protracted ad-
journment and continual introduction
of bills the people's Interests are very
often lost sight of. Why would it not
be a good Idea to limit each member to
three or four bills during the entire
session, thus reducing the number of
bills introduced and raising the stand-
ard of legislation? The experiment
would surely be worth trying.
<liiery and Answer.
Anoka Union: What made a Demo-
cratic hou.se of representatives? Joe
Cannon and the standpatters.
Whlttlcr*s Vludli>«tIon.
Red Wing Republican: The action
of the house in the state legislature in
refusing to condemn Supt. Whittler by
a vote of 53 to 30 will be gratifying to
Mr. Whittier's many friends. The at-
tempt to make the superintendent of
the boys' training school a scapegoat
for conditions for which he is not re-
sponsible was too clearly the work of
malice and prejudice to be sanctioned
by a body of fair-minded men.
Is There a Next?
St, Cloud Journal- Press: In a few
days we shall have only the memory of
the state legislature. The most valu-
able record is the good roads legisla-
tion by R. C. Dunn. Next to that is —
but is there a next?
Pointed Paragraphs.
Chicago News: A mob may draw the
line at a lynching.
The cup that cheers is a noisy piece
of crockery.
It's easy to fill the public eye if you
have the "du.st."
The dog with the handsomest collar
seldom wins the fight.
Before giving a woman advice find
out the brand she prefers.
A full beard may enable a man to
keep out of some bad scrapes.
It sometimes happens that a general
awakening follows a dull sermon.
Even a pessimist is apt to be opti-
mistic when he has something to sell.
Getting their fortunes told is but
an innocent way some women have of
gambling.
It's a wise M. D. who orders »
patient to refrain from eating the
things he doesn't like.
Some people are so su.spicIous that
when tiiey fall to get a letter thev
imagine the postmaster is deceiving
them.
When a girl's engagement is an-
nounced she likes to believe that sev-
eral of her gentlemen acquaintances
feel as though life had lost its charm
for them.
Rcflectlonn of a Bachelor.
New York Press: People want an
awful lot of praise for doing mighty
little duty.
A man can be much worse off than
he is by changing his job, so he gen-
erally does.
The best way to Insure that an In-
vestment will stay good Is for you not
to go Into it.
A man would rather tell everybody
all his doctor warned him he must do
than the best story that ever was
thought of.
When a man's wife is a good house-
keeper she earns more than all the
rest of the family put together and
gets less than any of tliem.
« .
A Tolstoi's Wtt.
London Globe: An ancestor of Tol-
stoi's, an army officer, was an ex-
cellent mimic. One day he was mim-
icking the Emperor Paul to a group
of his friends when Paul himself en-
tered and for some moments looked
on unperceived at the antics of the
young man. Tolstoi finally turned and.
beholding the emperor, he bowed his
head and was silent. "Go on, sir," said
Paul, "continue your performance."
The young man hesitated a moment
and then folding his arms and repro-
ducing every gesture and Intonation of
his sovereign, said: "Tolstoi, you de-
serve to be degraded, but I remember
the thoughtle.''sness of youth, and vou
are pardoned." The czar smiled
slightly at this speech. "Well, be it
so," he said.
•
City Horse's Reward of Merit.
Our Dumb Animals: Twenty years of
faithful service given the city by a
horse so moved the hearts of the city
fathers of Minneapolis that they at
once voted a reward of merit to the
deserving animal.
The horse is Billy, -which has been
running with the ambulance. Chief
Corriston pleaded with the police com-
mittee to retire the old horse to a life
of ease for the rest of Its days, and
the committee recommended to the
council that this be done. The council
listened to the story of the faithful
animal and Billv was turned over to
the Humane society and will be left to
roam at will about tbe workhouse
farm.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
TaX:en TVom the Columna of The Herald of This Date^ 1891.
♦••D. Duggan, who for three years
conducted the Windsor hotel, is skir-
mishing around town today for a site
on which to build a $2 a day house.
The money for the structure will be
furnished by other parties, and Mr.
Duggan will guarantee a good rate
of interest on the total inveiitment
under a lease for ten years. It is ex-
pected that a seventy-flve-room house
to fill the bill can be built for about
$75,000.
• ••Frank Jacobs, foreman of the pat-
tern shop of the Iron Bay works, has
'resigned and gone to Marinette, Wis.,
where he wll go into business.
•••The Ladles' Missionary Society of
the Duluth Presbytery last night
A MOMENT WITH THE W ITS.
••*At the session of the Western
states congress last night, Secretary
S. A. Thompson of the Duluth cham-
ber of commerce. Introduced a lesolu-
tion recommending a canal on Jnited
States soil around Niagara Falls to
connect the lakes and the A:lantic
ocean, a canal also being constructed
from lower Lake Ontario to the upper
Hudson river large enough to carry
vessels of twenty feet draft.
••♦The Duluth & Winnipeg land
grant bill has been passed by th.) Min-
nesota legislature, largely throuifh the
efforts of Representative H. C. Ken-
dall of Duluth.
•••William O'Hern of West 15uluth
has gone to Two Harbors to take hl&
old position as engineer on the Du-
luth & Iron Range road.
Louisville Courier- Journal: "My peo-
ple came over In the Mayflower. '
"All very well, dear, but my paople
are going over to the coronatior.."
Boston Transcript: Diner irritated
by the delay) — "Is there anytiilnj^: I
can ask for In this ?-estaurant and get
It promptly?
Walter — "Yes, sir— the check."
Buffalo Express: "Could you give
me a raise, sir? You know I am mar-
ried."
"But I gave you a raise so thiit you
could be married."
"Ves, I know; but I find I need a
raise more now than I did then. '
Washington Star: "You think the
man you are commending is capable
and Industrious 'r' asked the hU.h of-
ficial.
"I do," replied Senator Sorghu-n. I
believe he will work almost as hard
as I have worked to get the position
for him."
Cleveland Plaindealer: Mrs. De Sham
"Excuse me for being late, my dear
Mrs Peppry. I was detained down-
town while my hair was being washed.
Mrs. Peppry, whose luncheor has
been kept waiting — "And you had to
go all the way home to get It? That
was too bad, my dear Mrs. De Sham.
Youth's Companion: Davy ai?ed 5.
who lived in a modern householtl, was
taken to the zoo. He watched th€ cam-
els long and earnestly as they mx nched
huge bunches of grass and then i.urned
to his mother.
"Mother," he remarked, "wculdnt
Prof. Fletcher be pleased if he could
see them chewing all day?"
Louisville Courier- Journal: "Achat's
parlor socialism?" asked Grayc?.
"Having two callers at the sanu time
and letting each hold a hand" ex-
plained Maybelle.
Sphinx: He— He was a bachelor of
arts, but she was a master of arts.
She — .'Vnd so they are married now?
He — Yes; and now he will have to be
a doctor of philosophy to bear tht; bur-
den.
Chicago News: Tommy — Saj pa,
what is the census bureau?
l»a — The census bureau, my son, is
a collector of facts that are given to
the public after they are out of date.
Detroit Free Press: "What made
that woman crazy?" * , ..
"I happened to step on her trsln.
"Well'"
"Then' I raised my hat polltelr and
said: 'E.\cuse me, madam, your t.quut-
brator Is dragging.' and she loft her
temper."
ON POESY LAKE.
(Written For The Herald.)
If kindred spirits never change
Pray tell a wayward brother
Why he was thrown upon the range
Away from dad and mother.
Where every step a man 'may take
He's mingling with scrap-iron
Unless he goes upon the "lakes
With Burns, Moore or Byron.
And while a pimple on my nose
Makes me look unromantlc
And number tens oppress my toes
I'm nearly driven frantic.
Going down the hill of life,
I'rail man is apt to stumble
Unless supported by a wife
Old batch' take a tumble.
Then take a boat on Poesy lake
Where flowers both red and yellow
Are Interwoven for love's sake.
By Wordsworth and Longfellow.
— J. H. Fleming.
Virginia, Minn.
*
Human Human-Xature.
Hartford Courant: The Boston News
Bureau publishes the following amus-
ing anecdote in the form of a letter
from New York:
A large corporation held a directors
meeting a few days ago. As the meet-
ing was coming to a close one cf the
directors, reputed to be worth $10,-
000,000 ran in all out of breath. Just as
he entered the other directors were
making their exit. "Look Iiere,"
shouted the Incoming director tJ the
chairman, "I want to know why 1
haven't received notice of this meet-
ing." "I'm sure I don't know," said
the chairman. "Notice was sent to all
directors. You surely must havs re-
ceived one." The director flnishtid up
an excited tirade by saying, "I want
mv rights." Just then the secretary
of" the meeting was brought Into con-
ference, who In turn handed the late
director an envelope. He departed
with a smiling countenance.
This recalls the story so often printed
and so far as we have observed aever
used to round up daily and eat 1 inch-
eon with the employes of the Western
Union Telegraph company so as to get
his for nothing. It also recallii the
story of a New York corporation Adhere
$20 for each director was layed on the
table and those who attended divided
the whole pile. If half came each
got 140. The members were mei far
advanced In years and In riches One
day It stormed violently when a 'neet-
ing was to be held. The executive
officer did not believe a stngis di-
rector would be there but every man
of them was on hand, each hiving
figured it out that nobody else Avrould
appear and that he might swip) the
entire allowance. Human nature is
often quite human.
•
When the Thrushes Build.
John Burroughs in Country Life in
America: The other day I sat f>r an
hour watching a pair of wood thrushes
engaged In building their nest near
"Slabsides." I say a pair, thougi the
female really did all the work. The
male hung around and was evidently
an Interested spectator of the proceed-
ing. The mother bird was very busy
bringing and placing the material,
which consisted mainly of dry maple
leaves which the winter had made
thin and soft, and which were strewn
over the ground all about. How pretty
she looked running over the ground,
now In shade, now In sunshine, search-
ing for the leaves that were just to
her fancy! Sometimes she would seize
two or more and with a quick, soft
elected officers as follows: President,
Mrs. Ringland; corresponding secre-
tary, Mrs. Twoomy, Duluth; recording
secretary, Mrs. Williamson, West Du-
luth; treasurer, Mrs. McClelland Clo-
quet, and the following vice presi-
dents: Mrs. Albertson, First churcb.
Duluth; Mrs. Flndley. Second church,
Duluth; Mrs. Richardson, Cloquet- Mrat
Greenshlelds, Hinckley.
•••Clark Brothers of this city ar«
making arrangements to start a soap
factory In which they will manufacture
several brands. They are figuring on
a site for the building at West Du-
luth.
•••James A. Boggs sold twenty Me-
saba lots in Duluth, yesterday-, and lila
agents in town sold seventy-two.
•••Dr. D. D. Murray, late of Mar-
vlUe, N. D., a friend of W. D. New-
comb, has arrived In the city to tak*
up the practice of medicine.
•••S. H. Clow and family left today
on a trip to South Carolina.
•••David Myers has secured the con-
tract for building the new First
Methodist church, being the lowest
bidder at $75,243. The highest bid
was $83,000.
•••Frank South, the druggist, has
returned to Duluth after an absence of
five years In Florida.
•••P. M. Garrigan of Jamestown. N.
D.. has arrived In Duluth and will
hereafter be connected with the North-
western Witness.
flight bear them to the fork of th«
little maple sapling. Every five or six
minutes during her absence the male
would come and inspect her work He
would look it over, arrange a leaf or
two with his beak and then go his
way. Twice he sat down in the nest
and worked his feet and pressed It
with his breast, as If shaping It. When
the female found him there on her re-
turn he quickly got out of her way.
But he brought no material, he did
no needful thing, he was a bird of
leisure. The female did all the drudg-
ery and with what an air of grace and
ea.se she did It! So soft of wing, so
trim of form, so pretty of pose and
so gentle In every movement! It was
evidently no drudgery to her. the ma-
terial was handy and the task one of
love.
Swift Three LeKired Fox.
Kennebec Journal: John Davis shot
a three legged fox on the East Moun-
tain^ Bennington, the animal In spite
of the handicap of a missing front foot
giving the hound a chase of over two
hours before It crossed the hunter's
path and was killed.
The fox had evidently been caught
in a trap some time ago. Just ho^
long it had ben travelling the moun-
tains on three feet could not be de-
termined, as the stump of the leg was
perfectly healed and was covered with
fur.
Vlldcat Whlim Dors.
Williamsport Gazette and Bulletin:
Silas Bush, L. Hazzard and Lfc«rl
Schnopps while fox hunting In Juniata
township, Huntingdon county, saw the
tracks of a wildcat, which they fol-
lowed to a rocky section of the moun-
tain, where a fierce battle took place
between the pursued beast and fiva
dogs, in which the cat came out victor
and retired to a cave.
'J'he hunters got five sticks of dyna-
mite, blew the rocks away and killed
the savage creature. The cat meas-
ured 3 feet 6 inches in length and
weighed thirt.v-five pounds — the largest
killed In this part of the state in years.
AMUSEMENTS.
LYQEUM
Again TenioM.
Tues. and Wed.
Bargain matinee Wednesday. 25c. any teat. 23a.
MAUDE LEONE and Attociate Players present
tliat funny Musical Comedy
"The Girl Question"
12 S«n| Hits. 15 Pretty Girt*. 1,000 Lmgha
Matinees 2Sc; nights, 25c 50c.
STARTING THURSDAY.
Tlirae Nights, April 20, 21, 22, Saturday Mat-
inee.
LEW FIELDS
Presents the Colossal Spectacular Musical Pr*.
duction
—THE—
MIDNIGHT SONS
With GEO. W. MONROE.
And the Largest Company and Biggest Seenio
Equipment ever sent on tour. ISO People on the
Stage. Three Carloads of Scenic Surprises. 60 in
the Chorus, 30 Big Song Hits, Eight Mammoth
Scenes.
PRICES — Matinee 25c to $1.50: Nights 50c to
$2.00. No telephone orders talten. No seats
held.
NEW
Both Phenss 2410.
^^ HCIf «^ "ocn rnenss iMio.
> THEATER
>— owd Avs. Efst and Superior Street
INTERWATIOWArVAUDEVILLE.
THI.S WEEK'S BILIi.
MATINEES-
25g
Except Sundays
and Holidays.
Nights. i5e. 25s,
SOe and 7Se.
MiMter Gabriel and Company.
Farrell -Taylor Company.
The Namba Japs.
George Austin Moore and
Cordelia.
Ward Brothers.
Browning and Lewis.
Ernest Yerxa and Adele.
The KInodrome.
The Concert Orchestra.
Xgmprcss
SULLIVAN-CONSIDINE VAUDEVILLE.
BEST SHOW IN TOWN.
Today &
Ail Week
, 8:00 and 3:38
JOE WELCH
PAUL CASE & CO.,
PEARL YOUNG
MUSICAL WILSONS
BERNARD'S MANIKINS
Schaelder's Orchestra. Enspresscoya
Empress Prices— 10c« 15c, 2Sc.
"Ths Atonement of Thais"— Gaum ent (Dramatle.)
"Italian Coast Scenes" — Gaumont (Educational.)
"The Resurrection of John" — Edison (Comedy.)
"The Inherited Taint"— Vitagraph (Dramatic.)
lUustrated Song, "Underneath the Wishing Tree."
Published by Joseph W. Stearns, sung by
Mr. I. 8. MIstachkin.
ODE:UIVf
"The Chiefs Daughter"— Biograph (Dramatic.)
"1861"— Selig (Dramatic.)
"Best Girt After All"— Lubin (Dramatle.)
"A Visit to Nassau. Bahama. West ladies—
Lubin (Educatioaal.)
Iltaatrstad song, -My Irish Oaaris." Ssag hy
Mr. Gaorgs Lasi.
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Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1011.
9
OFFICIAL MAP OF THE WEATHER
FOKECAST TILL T P. M.
TIKSOAY
For Pululh. S\iperior anj Tloinlty.
Ini-luillug ttnj Mtrsaba aiiJ VermlUoa
lr>ri raimci: Ceiu-rally floiidy to-
i.Uhl .iiiU Tuestluy; ohiIit Tui's.Uay;
UK'iJirdto U bruk wiiiil-i. ujrtliciist
tilfUiK tt> westerly touUiit.
EXPLANATORY NOTES
Oh»rv.tk«M Uken (t S ». m.. «v«i.iy-6fui mendiM lim& *.c prfti.r*
|»OT«ii«<. or dolt«l lm«. PM throunh poinuiol «ja»l t»aiHtrmture. th»>
clouJx; (g) om; ® «»• ® rrpcn mm..* Am>.. «y -nib the ™d F,^t
6r». 4^p?r.1uff": »cond. W hour r«.faU. .( .1 «,«.!. Ol uicb. IhmJ. w,nd
viiocily ot 10 rtliles per houi or n^ore
triXD SCALE.
MUes Pee
Hour.
Brisk «^;°"
,..!__ 0 to 5
Light 5 °»
Moderate •? ~ ;^
Higlt 3j to 50
Uuirlcitoo 05 and aboY»
H. W. RICHARDSON,
Local Fsrecaittr.
JM
"Now for the Spring Clean-Up!"
Now's the time, folks, to get rid of the winter's accumulation of dirt and dust both inside and
outside the' home; and to get everything spick and span for the summer. For '"^ide here s nothing
to equal the Thurman Electric Vacuum Cleaner for rapid and thorough work. 1 eats up the
dirt and dust and moth-eggs-makes your carpets, rugs, portieres aad drapenes as ^'^f "• jjj^h^^^^
new as when first you bought them. Try it on your mattresses and bedding-there s nothing to
equant Before you put your furs away for the summer, clean them thoroughly with the special
tool p ovided wUh the Th Jrman. Remember our offer: We will send a Thurman out o your home
eave it there two days and then take it back (if you wish), charging only $5 which will be credited
to you again if you decide to buy this wonderful cleaner! Our demonstrator accompanies each
machine and shows just how to get the best results from it
Some All- Week Housecleaning Specials :
5c
Kaster Sunday I
wa.s!!"t Ideal in the I
matter of tenijyjr- I
atiire. ttiit It was I
so nearly so that
nearly everybody
was satisfied. The |
fashion parade was i
Kivt-n a fair .show '
ami that's more
■I \ than the weather
man has done for '
humanity in Duluth |
' for a Kood many |
years when iia.ster Sunday came ;
around. Todav Is bright and cool and 1
more coolne??s is promised for tonight '
and tomorrow. /, „ I
There was snow on the ground a
year ago today and conditions were
tar from springlike. .. - t/?
The .sun rose thi.s morninff at o:l»>
and it will set at 6:59 this evening.
Kivine thirteen hours and forty-thrto
minutes of sunlight. , . ,, ,
Mr. Richardson makes the following
comment on weather conditions:
"Fair weather prevailed generally
during the last twenty-foOr to forty-
eight hours, except that oreclpitation
occurred over portions ot the Lakt*
region Eastern Canada. Atlantic and
Gulf states in connection with the
low prts.sure areas now central over
Manitoba and off the New England
coast. Somewhat warmer weather al-
so prevails throughout the Middle
"West and Northwest. In the extreme
Northwe-st cooler weather attends a
marked increase In pres.sure. At the
Head of th© Lakes the weather will
be more or le.ss cloudy during the en-
suing thirty-six hours and with a
turn to cooler during Tuesday."
♦
General Foreea«t«.
Chicago. April 17. — Forecasts for
twenty-four hours ending at 7 p. m.
Tuesday;
Upper Michigan — Fair and warmer
tonigiit; Tuesday fair with warmer in
I east portion.
1 Wisconsin— Fair and warmer to-
i night; Tuesday probably Increasing
' cloudiness with cooler in west portion.
Minnesota — Increasing cloudiness to-
nii^ht and Tuesday: coolei- Tuesday and
in northwest portion tonight; frost In
northwest portion tonight.
Iowa — Increasing cloudiness wun
probably showers late tonight or
Tuesday; warmer tonight in east por-
tion; cooler Tuesday.
North l>akota — Generally fair to
night and Tuesday: cooler tonight.
South Dakota— Cloudy tonight with
colder in west portion: Tuesday fair
with colder in east portion.
Montana— Fair tonight and Tuesday;
cooler tonight ^ ^. , ^
Shippers" forecast — Protect thtrtJ -
six-hour shipments of perishables
against temperature about 32 deg. in
the Dakotas, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Upper Lakes — Moderate southerl.V
winds; fair and warmer tonight and
Tuesday.
tur^s for twenty-four hours and
lowest for twelve, ending at 7 a.
today;
Abllotw
Alpenii
Allantlc
Battleford
niniiiarck
lloL-c . .
Ituston
City
High- Low.
...50 4t5
....40 20
....66
....74
.30
The TeniueratiireM.
Following were the higliest tempera-
Huff ai) 36
TalBaiy **
Cliiirli'ston 88
Chl-ago ''*
i'oniud ChrlsU . . M
I>o!'.ver ;"*
IH'S VInlnes 72
UevU* Lak« «4
I)..()ge 70
l)iil)uque 83
DULUTH 47
IHirangn 04
l'.iHlI)0:l 33
lUJnioiiton 8a
K-ir;iiiaba 'i
(J.ilveston 8<J
tJruuil Hiven ...42
Cifoii llay '>0
IIutteriLd 80
Havre 83
Helena 60
HiuKliton ..
nish.
M!lwsuk(^ 50
MlniteUoia 8*
.. .Mxloni 60
32 Itoiits.iinerT 73
32|.M!mtr^al 3J
" Moorliead "0
New OrleniM W
New York 44
North Platte 72
34
34
30
8-INCH SCRUB BRUSH—
Regularly 10c, special
5-FOOT COMMON STEP LAD- ^Qr^
DER— Regularly $1.25, at ^^\^
PARLOR BROOM— Regularly
4:-3c, at -'-
35c
MODEL MOP WRINGING PAIL "IQ/*
—Regularly $1.25, at ^ ^^
22c
33c
GOLD DUST— Reg-
ularly 25c, at
SELF W:RINGING mop— Reg-
ularly 40c, at
Hurun
Jiifk-*invUl9
KuniluuVJ
Kaiua!t City ,
Kiuixrllle
La Crosse . .
I.oiilsvllle ...
Madison
Maniuette
Meil:^-lne Hat
Memplil-t
MUM cuy ..
.72
.70
.62
..72
..64
'.'.64
..34
..34
..64
..TO
..72
Oklahoma 8*
41) Oiii.iha 71
64 Parry Sound 42
31) Phoenix 5*
42 I'l'Tra "*
36lPltt.»ljuig 48
4> I'lrt AiUinr 42
3ti Partlaml. Or •
33 I till AiUKlle 6»
40;il.ilel8h 88
30 ItipM t'lty OS
32 t Ko-ebiirg tjO
24 I U":iwell 60
00! St. l.ouU 8S
28 •«. Paul 60
30 Salt Lake City.... 56
50 San Diego 8'j
3(j 1 San Fraiiolsoii w
38|Sault Ste. Marie.. :J«
20 I Seattle 4*
32 I Sherlfian *»<»
the
III.
Low.
31
42
22
30
32
32
62
31
44
48
50
20
51
Srt
31
21
38
30
41
4 J
34
:'.•»
31
38
:{fi
All- Week Specials for Garden and Yard :
Steel wheel, removable side
garden barrow — the best kind
for removing dead twigs, grass,
leaves, etc; reg. ^^ Q^
$3.50— AU weektP4&«^\/
Twenty-four tooth reversible garden rake— sharp teeth on one side tor
paths— blunt on the other side for tender young grass. The ordinary "gar-
den rake" will tear your spring grass up by the roots— this is the only
rake that should be used while the earth is soft and the grass O^^
I tender; regular 50c — All week .• mm L \^
Now Is the Time to Paint !
54 ! ShrevatU'rt
30isi<mx City ...
50 Spokan.e • ■ • • •
42 \Swift Currenf
32JTanipa
52 I ToUilo
36 1 Waililn«lou J»
28twilll.s»nu 12
30 1 Wlnnemucc* 66
aJ ! WUiuliH-g M
34 ' Vdlowitotie >»0
70
..72
...IS
..63
..82
..52
50
24
40
30
56
48
32
34
64
32
40
31
30
33
26
NEW WPE OF
RIVER_BOAT
St Paul Men Interested in In-
vention of CapL
McDougali.
Claimed to Combine Speed
With the Necessary
Shallow Draft.
The problem of Mississippi river
transportation, which centers upon a
boat that will draw a minlmun^ of wa-
ter while giving a maximum of speed,
ts believed to have been solved by
Capt. Alexander McDougali. who is
said to have invented a craft tliat wlil
meet tlie requirements of a boat for
river transportation. .St. Paul business
Interests see in Capt. McUougairs in-
vention and the river bill now before
the legislature the means with which
to make .St. Paul a seaport
The following is from the St. Pau.
Pioneer Press of Sunday:
"Alexander McDougali of Duluth. in-
ventor of the whaleback type of boat,
has notiiiod the business iiiterests of
the city that he has just nvented a
boat which will solve the river traffic
problem. A number of local and stale
capitalists were In Duluth recently and
examined liis invention. The St Louis
river traffic promoters may use the l^n-
vention between St. Paul and New Or-
leTn-s. provided the legislation author-
izing the city to make certain changes
In the river front passes.
"McDougali has a rnodel of the
craft in his Duluth workshop, and it
was the center of an interested group
of capitalists, who are anxious to link
Minnesota. through the Mississippi
river route, with the Panama canal.
The boat is fast and draws only from
three to four feet of water. One of the
serious problems in rlv.jr transporta-
tion Is to get a boat which will draw
a minimum of water and at the same
time have the nece-ssary speed.
Woiilil <ilve Cltlea Cheaper RatPM.
"Uu.'i'ess men of St. Paul believe the
pas.sage of the river and harbor biil
now before the senate would mean
ft Kreat boost for the comnrierce of
Minnesota. Attention is called to the
ben^nt the legislation will give the
cities In the way of cheaper rates.
With Improved facilities for the trans-
port lion of freiglit to Mississippi river
points and beyond, the tendency will
be to lower the present rail rates. At
present tiif Missi.ssippi river lowers the
iiill rates whenever facilities for hand-
ling freiglit by a water route are de-
veloped. ^, ^
Would Denent Kutire State.
•' 'What benettts St. Paul, as the
change in the river and harbor facil'-
ties would certainly do, would also m
a great m»^asure benefit Minnesota and
the Northwest,' .said \\. H. Bailey,
president of the First National bank, in
sptaking of the proposed legislation
It is evivlent to anv business man that
in.roHsed trackage facilities assists tlie
commercial growth of a city. Indus-
tries looking lor a location here w»U be
impressed with the trackage tacl ities
for handling both river and rail busi-
ness, such as this legislation would
give St. Paul.' . „^ ,
'• -One of the greatest benefits under
the proposed bill,' .said Loui.s Betz,
president of the Commercial cliib
•would give the city title to the riyei
front at this most important point.
The improvement would relieve traffic
conditions in the narrow throat more
than anything else ever proposed and
would In every way directly beneht the
entire state.' ., ,r ,
Would Inoreawe Property value*.
"R L. Ware of Ware-Hospes. speak-
ing of the rivers and harbors bill from
a real estate man s point of y,»f^'. ,>^
cohvinced that tlie pa.ssage of t.iis bill
will greatly iscrease the value of
property in a wide district alfected.
•ICvery business man who wants to see
the city advance, whether he lives here
or in some other part of the state,
should be lieartily In f;fvor of the pass-
age of this bill.' "
Both inside and out, before leaves and flies come to b
Hickory Paint, since labor represents two-thirds of the
any other paint.
Insidie, use Chinamel for furniture and woodwork
(a special demonstrator will be with us, showing
ht)v/ easy it is to use this preparation and what beau-
tiful results can be obtained with it, from the 17th
to the 20th.)
other. For outside painting of course you will use
cost of painting, and Hickory lasts twice as long as
Touch up tlie bathroom with Neals* Interior
Enamel and fin sh everything with Hickory Varnish
or Pratt & Lambert's 61 Floor Varnish. Rebrighten
the scarred flooi's with Hickory Floor Paint.
Paint and Varnish Brushes, 10c, 15c, 25c and up.
WEST END
FARMERS WANT
PUBLIC MARKET
West End Club May Again
Revive Old Pro-
ject
Agitation for a public market place
in the West end will be revived at the
meeting of the West End Commercial
club Friday evening.
Farmers back of the hill are making
inauirles. They want to know what Is
being done about the public market.
They have better roads this spring
than ever before, and are anxious to
know what to expect of the towns-
people before the planting of cropa
begins. , ..
We-^'t end business men favor the
Idea. They say that it brings the farm-
er to the western end of the city, who
otherwi.se would do his trading up-
town The cost ot establishing sucli a
market would be small in view of the
fact that two or three locations ha\ e
been offered grati-s. Tlie only expense
wou'd be the building of shed.s. ^,^his
could easily be raised l»y subscription.
It is believed that some definite action
will be taken at the meeting Friday.
•
Joseph Briola Dies.
Joseph Briola. 50 years old. formerly
of Ills West Mi' tiigan street, died y^s-
terdav afternoon of pneumonia at .^t.
Mary's hospital. He leaves a widow
and five cliildren. Vi-tor. Mary. Louise,
Joseph and Antoinette. The funeral
will be held Wednesday from tlie St.
Pfter'3 Catholic church, with burial at
Calvary cemetery. Briola lived in Du-
luth twentv-tive years. He wa.s a mem-
ber of the United Order of Foresters
and the Ancient Order of United Work-
men. For the past six years he was
employed by the Northern Pacitlc rail-
way.
'STOLEN" >IONEY FOUND
IN A LAUNDRY PARCEL.
Miss Selma Mattson. a laundry em-
ploye, found SB-S in a soiled pillow slip
sent to the Home laundry from a West
end liotei .Saturday afternoon.
The finding of the money solves the
mysti-ry of the loss of that amount
reported Thursday evening to the police
by John McDonald, when he was ar-
rested f«#r drunkenness. ^ ^ ^ . ,
McDonald maintained that he had
been robber and wanted the hotel pro-
prietor arrested. Tlie police believe
that McDonald placed the money in a
pillow slip and tlien forgot where ho
put it. , ^ _
The money was turned over to the
police for McDonald.
Smith Funeral Today.
The funeral of John Smith, 80 years
old, who died Saturday at his home,
1921 M^ West Third street, was Jield tills
afternoon at Z o'clock from the Proc-
tor M. E. church, the pastor. Rev. C. VN .
Ramshaw, officiating. Burial was in
the Lutlieran cemetery, Mr. bm.th
came to the Head of the Lakes from
Cedar Falls, Iowa, ten years ago and
located in Proctor, where he lived until
last fall, when lie moved to the West
end. He leaves a widow and four
children.
DonH forget to see
our BROODERS —
You'll need one for
those little chicks of
yours!
DWARE CO<
118 & 120 WEST SUPERIOR ST. DULUTH, MINN.
We have the best
equipped REPAIR
SHOP in the North-
west, and in it re-
pair everything!
^■^ii^.
music and the hall will be decorated
with Raster trimmings.
The funeral of Ralph Nelson aged
i^™fho died Friday at St. Luke's hos-
»itT will be held tomorrow afternoon
S^^2 ' o^clock%rom the Olson & Craw-
ford undertaking rooms, , 2118 W est
PMr<»t Street, with burial In L.utneran
.^einetery Nelson was unmarr ed and
iJe.l at 1923 West First street.
The Lion drug store has moved to
th^ new Ande'^rson-Thoorsell block.
2030 West Superior atreet.^
IMPORTANTMCTVE MADE
rContlnued from page 1.)
fcc^.
^
stricken With Paralysis.
Mrs. Edward Stevenson, the aged
mother of Franklin .Stevenson of the
Home laundry, suffered a paralytic
stroke yesterday afternoon at her
home, 1721 Piedmont avenue, and to-
day Is In a critical condition. Little
liope Is held out for her recovery. She
is an old resident of the city.
West End Briefs.
;oi.<.i I'eiders cognisant of the Informal
The Insurgents liave made a repre
ine UI3UIBO. ^ federal government
rhat%hTy have I iovcl ot .Nearly 3.000
men fSr oiitnumberlng the federal gar-
HsoA at Juarez and that the only a -
I'rnatfve' for ««"-,,^'\\fJ''cltr''lt'^is
'•r'^&vld 'he'^r ha '"the" Mexican
i;^ ler'lftiie^rViVrglve^Gen Na^;arro a
mstructiqns 1.o abandon his 2^^^*^^^^,
fled P^/'»«" ^rieigu'e '• ho''we^^?, to pro-
^^eT^aSiffst \^^^;iKewlse has au-
prevent a heavy los^ of ^^^e- t, ,„
The P"»;Po;'« °; f^^'the establishment
moving on J"a:re7. is in« declare
of headquarters there^ine> ^^
they would not be^ "'^^'conlider peace
session ot.-*"*'^,,'_ within easy tele-
proposals, being fhen wltmn ea >
graphic communication wlUjJ^ij^^^^^.
.San Antonio. 'Tex.. «"" insurrection
where the leaders, of tf,e»"'.^^^^^
are in charge of re%olutloni ^^^^^^^
In the meantitne Dr. «jon
mg with «?"^h t^^^eek' to Francisco I.
Sfd^r^r/r'. ifueW definite in^truc-
iril/d°\C*^%'e"--sage was do-
EASTER AN
IDEAL DAY
Weather Man Raps Out a
Clean Three-Base
HiL
Bright Sun and Warm Breeze
for the Annual Spring
Parade.
discrimlnato between tlie sun and the
yhade. _,
Church services drevr large crowds
both in the morning aid the evening.
Florists evidently did s. thriving busi-
ness as most of tlie churches were
beautifully decorated with lloral de-
signs and church-goers generally wore
Howers.
There were a few people In the
parks and automobiles and driving
equipages were more numerous than
on any Sunday this yes.r.
CLOQUEfwilTAID
?mm SCHOOL
Will Make Inducements to
Secure State bdustrial
School for City.
Here's a Special
you • shouldn't miss — the
really new fabric for the new
season — and remember, it's
only ONE out of scores of
equally good specials await-
ing you here.
For Tuesday, April 18
From 10 to 11 a. m.
We will have on sale one
case of the new ROUGH
WEAVE POPLIN in a full
range of dainty and delicate
colors. This is our 15c
Spring Leader, but for this
one hour it will go at, yard
The Women's Foreign Missionary
society of the First Norwegian-Danish
M K. church will meet this evening at
tlie church. Twenty-fourth avenue
west and Third street.
Mrs. E. A. Smith of 2311 West Third
street returned this morning from a
visit at Chippewa Falls, Wis., and Min-
neapolis.
Mrs. Alfred Thorstad of 3004 West
Third street will entertain the West
end branch of the W. C. T. U. at her
home tomorrow afternoon.
Walter J. Johnson of Spokane, Wash.,
is the guest of relatives in the West
end.
Miss Anna Truman of Calumet, Mich.,
Is visiting friends In the West end.
Hev M Berglund today returned to
his home at Cambridge, Minn., after
conducting revival services at the First
Swedish Baptist church for the past
week. ... A.
The second of a series of dances to
be held by the Adams Athletic asso-
ciation this summer will be held this
evening at Lincoln „Park pavilion.
Flaaten's orchestra will furnish the
CASTOR I A
For InfEinU and Children.
The Kind You Have Alwajs Bought
W %T< H THIS .SP \< K TLKSUAY FOR MORK BARGAINS.
Bears the
Signature ot
r.v;V%d"yerkona^^^^^
^^^^^.eVrw\rrJUTtn;ilexicanc.^
today that Dr., Gome^ also w ^^^^^^
deavorlng to a^^y^/^^^rmistice imposing
government for an ari'i ^ ^ j^j.
fhe status quo o" _Vf ^„ the revolt an
fording the P^'n^'Pf^.^u'^cate definitely
opportunity to communicate ^^^
about terms of P*="ff-,p,, out Dr. Go-
tmgency ^S^^e Sideros and other
mez would join the Ma ^e ^^^ ^^
Insurgents in »an
Paso. ^ .
Kew Ewea, Ml«h.. Mill.
Ontonagon. Mich., April ^I'^^^^^f^^
,, The Heraia^-ThevillaKe^^^^^^^
in thvj 80V« h-v.. S new modern saw-
^°.V"'*'hirh win co*t iiT the neighbor-
mill which wUl cobl m^^ ^jjj ^^ ^
tlon a"f. '\_^th„ upper penlsula. Mr.
best "^"l^ot^eKo county is the founder
Jensen of^i^tsego counvy ^^ ^^ ^^
lit g^i^Snd "ooklng^afler the building
of the mill^ ^
Montana Child Poisoned.
Livingston. Mont.. April ".-Essie
Hale, the 7-year-Old daughter of Will-
iam Hale of this city, who was strick-
en the first of last week by a mysterl-
fms Dolsonlng is dead. The physicians
T. sTm^unaSle to explain the cause of
death. Four others- of the Hale tamiiy,
who were similarly poisoned, will re-
cover.
The weather man stepped up to the
plate diffidently when he came to bat
out the Sunday weather. There was
nonchalance In his attitude and uncon-
cern In his eye, but when he swung his
trusty bat he made a clean three-base
hit which he could have stretched into
a home run if there had not been a
chilly breeze early In the morning.
In Fifth avenue. New York; Michi-
gan avenue, Chicago, and University
place, Seattle, folk were wearing fur
coats under their heavily laden straws,
but in Duluth where the soft breezes
breeze and the gentle zephyrs zeph
everybody could wear their gladdest
glad rags. . ,
Of course late In the day or early
In the morning the procession on
East Superior street seemed to be the
flossiest on the sunny side of the
street But at mid-day the tempera-
tures were so mild that people did not
CORRS.CT ^.
CXHIARSJ
Ho.lO._..
..N
' 4^y
^Colon: Whit*.
,c
GOTHAM 2d .^
I GOTHIC 2 for 25^
At BMrnUer-. ET«7wh.r. or POttP*"
on r»c«ipt of PRicit.
I GotMM Mft. Co.. Mtlwn, »0 »th A». M.Y.
Cloquet, Minn., April 17.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Cloquet has asked for
$2,500 per year from the state high
school board, from tlie fund for the
estabilsliment of schools, for such a
school in Cloquet. If the petition is
granted, and an Industrial school, sim-
ilar to the Putnam .schols, is estab-l
lished here, the city has promised to
equip before the beginning of the
next school year anottier room In one
of the school bulldlnifs for this pur-
pose. The room will l>e 23 by 33 feet.
They will also secure and develop
ten acres of land near the city, erect
a greenhouse thereof, and engage a
competent instructor In agriculture.
They will also spend $400 more in
manual training equipment for next
year, making the equipment of the
school worth an even thousand dollars.
Cloquet spent $2,742.50 on Industrial
work this year.
situation !■ Ideal.
Few cities in the state are better
located for such a scliool. Lumber has
been the great Industry here for
twenty-flve years, and will be for
many years to come; but eventually, as
has been the ca.se U'lth many other
Minnesota and Wisconsin towns,
something else must come In to take
its place. Situated in the heart of a
splendid farming land, it will in time,
if proper development is begun now,
be no longer dependent upon Its lum-
ber Industry, but become a dairying
center, and shipping point for garden-
ers. The farmers are mostly German,
Scandinavian and Finnish and are very
intelligent. They wc uld make rapid
progress could they have a little regu-
lar Instruction, such as a "Putnam
school" would give. The few farmers
who have been gardening here for say
ten years, have beautiful homes, plenty
to educate their cliildren with and are
becoming Independen ;ly wealthy.
CLOQUET"SAW[XGiEASON
Will Be in Full lUast By Middle
of W< ek.
Cloquet, Minn., Apill 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — John Moody and Dave
Fryklund of this city will play in Du-
luth next Thursday with the concert
band at the Y. M. C. A. The orchestra
consists of thirty-five pieces, Mr. Moody
plays first violin and Mr. Fryklund sec
end cornet. . „ . ,
St Andrew's Guil<3 of the Episcopal
church has elected the following offi-
cers for the year: President. Mrs. F.
P. Thompson; first vice president. Mrs.
J. W. Campbell; s<'<ond vice prt-sident,
Mr.s. Maurice Erwin; secretary and
treasurer, Mrs. Harry M. Dixon.
The Northern Lumber company's
power mill began the summer run last
week, and the steam mill of tlio Clo-
quet I.,umber comi>any will start next
Wednesday. This will open the saw-
ing season in earnest, as all the mills
In Cloquet will th<n be In operation,
and from the amount of logs tliat were
tut la.'^t winter and those liung up the
,vear before by dry weather, It looks
as though there would be a sawing
season that will last until the freeze
up npxt fall. The driving crews are
In readiness for a driving stage of
wat^r in the streams. Men h.ive been
coining Into the dty for weeks to bs
In readine.SH for the sawing season.
KILLEITnEAR KLONDIKE.
W. N. (Jillospie Cut to Pieces By
Northern Pacific Train.
Brainerd, Minn.. April 17. — (.Siiecial
to The Herald.) — The crew of a North
Pacific passenger train .Sunday morn-
ing found the body of W. N. Gillespie,
aged about 50, an»l supposed to be
single, badly mangled alon^ the tra< ks
near Klondike. Tlie body is In o/iarge
of the coroner, who is Investigating.
Gillespie has relatives at Aitkin, Deer-
wood, Oak Park and Stillwater.
Two satchels were found in the
ditch and a small sum of money on
the person. Letters show that h«
worked laat at Shovel Lake.
NORTH DAKOTA FARMERS
ARE BUSY SEEDING.
r arsro. in. D., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Far "
Fargo. N. ..,., -
xne Herald.) — Farmers in all parts of
the Red River valley and other sec-
tions of the state are busily engaged
In seeding, as the result of warm,
.sunshiny weather of the last three
days, following the precipitation of
last week. Conditions are ideal.
« •
Barrovrs Is Pirkinc Up.
Brainerd, Minn., April 17. — (Special
to Tlie Herald.) — Barruw.s. the first
townsite on the south range ol tne
Cuyuna Iron range, is coming to the
front. Although the sale of lots has
not been commenced, the Northern i'a--
ciflc railway has a crew of surveyors
at work running lines for additional
side tracks at the townsite and the
ore lards which will soon be developed
Into shaft mines. The townsite com-
pany has a force of men and teams at
work grading the streets.
nimfsTerrecl
*»* Flavoring ^
Xxtracts
are praised by
Leading
Grocers.
Because,
Hunt's Perfect
always
pleases the
Grocer's
Customers.
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m
m
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10
Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
h
■
WOMEN
MAYAVOro
OPERATIONS
By taking Lydia E. Pinkhara's
Vegetable Compound
The following letter from Mrs.
Orville Kook will prove how unwise
it is for women to submit to the
danffers of a suvj?ical operation when
It may be avoided by taking Lydia
E. rinkham's Yepetable Compound.
She was four weeks in the hospital
and came home suffering worse
than before.
Here is her own statement.
Paw I'aw, Mich. — "Two years ago
I suffered very severely with a dis-
placement. I could
not be on my feet for
a lon§f time. My
physician treated
^r, me for seven months
*/ without much relief
and at last sent me
to Ann Arbor for
an operation. I was
there four weeks and
came home suffering
worse than before.
My mother advised
me to try Lydia
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
and I did. Today 1 am well and strong
and do all my own housework. I owe
my health to Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound and advise my
friends who are aillicted with any
female complaint to try it."— Mrs.
Orville Kock, 11. K. ;No. 5, Paw Paw,
IJichigan.
If you are ill do not drag along until
an operation is necessary, but at once
take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabla
Compound.
Par thirty years it has been the stan.
dard remedy for women's ills, and has
positively restored the health of thou-
sands of women. Why don't you try it?
REUGHTING
OFCANDLES
Large Crowds Attend Im-
pressive Easter Services
at Masonic Temple.
Rev. John Walker Powell
Delivers Sermon on the
Resurrection.
REFUSED BY
LEGKLATURE
Appropriation of $75,000
For Soldier's Home
Not Granted.
I
Lost — ^An Appetite
f
}
COLUMBIA
April Records on Sale
Now.
Some of the best ever issued.
EDMONT,
330 VV. Superior St. |
The beautifully impressive Masonic
liTaster services at tlie Masonic temple,
l-ake avenue and Second street, char-
acterized by the relighliuK of tl.e
candles to signify the resurrection of
Christ, were attended yesterday after-
noon by a large and attentive au-
ciionce.
After all hnd been seated the large
aiidliurlusn was put in utter darkness.
One by one, the lights on the largo
cross whicli had been placed in the
center of the platform were lighted,
each being accompanied by a versicle
rendered by the chanter and a response
sung- by the Scottish Rite quartet, with
I'rof. A. F. M. Custance at the organ.
The lights are extinguished Maunday
Thursday evening after the banquet, to
be relighted on Easter Sunday.
Rev. John W. Powell delivered a
strong sermon, choosing as h\.a text,
•If Then There Be a. Risen Christ, Seek
These Tilings That Are Above VVliere
Christ Sittoth at the lilght Hand of
C5od." Declaring that the world hard-
ly knew the true meaning of the word
love until the first ICaster, he said that
it was the gladdest day of all the year,
when it is impossible for the gloom and
the darkness of the past to overwnelm
the present.
He said that Easter comes in tlie
spring, the time of the year nature is
stirring into a new life, and that some-
iiow faith comes back to the heart,
with the belief that it Is true that the
death which has seemed so appaling is
but another birth; the bursting of the
chrysalis Into the butterfly.
A collection was taken up among
the members of the order for the poor,
during which the quartet sang Alac-
Dougall's version of "Onward Chris-
tian Soldier. " The services were closed
with the rendition by the quartet of
Prof. Cusiance's arrangement of
•'Crossing the Bar" and the pronounce-
ment of the benediction.
Asked For an Addition to
the Old Folk s
Building.
JO
DR. CHAS. A. HOAG
The Successful Chicago
Specialist
Wni tie In Superior, Wist., at Ilotrl Sn,
perlor, ou Tiienday, April IS, 1011. Of-
fice ItutirK, i> u. III. tu it p. III., nn«l la
Aahinnil nt the UrlKKn House, ud
\%e<!nen<l«y. April 1i). 1011.
Treata KheumatlKm, Kularg^ed Veins,
Ftntuln, IMIeM and other Kectal Ula-
casei* aud IJnKerIng Allnieuta.
CATARRH, which poisons the breath,
stomach und lungs and paves the way
for Consumption, also Throat, Liver,
iicart and ail consiiiutionai and in-
tcMiul troubles: also itupture. Piles,
Fistula, Dyspepsia, £>i;irriioea and all
diseases of th'e stomach and bowel-i
tr'.aicd far iii advance of any insll-
tutiun in the country.
HL.OOU AXD SKI.\ diseases, Pimples.
Scijfula, Tumors, Tetter and Eczema
ihorougl. ly eradicated, leaving the sys
tetn la a strung, pure and lieaUhtui
btate.
A VISIT WILL TELL.
Perhaps you are sutferlng in silence;
periiaps you have been unsuccesf uliy
treated: If so,
Uu uot be aaliMlied until you bare
been eiLaiulued b> tlr. Uuaif. You may
be sent awuy happy, %vithout treat-
ment, but with advice that will save
you time and money, as well as mental
Kufftring. If you require treatment,
rou v.iil be treated honestly and skill-
ully and restored to health within the
briefest time and at the least possible
expense All palleuta examined and
trcuted by me pemonally.
CO\SlLT.\riO.\ FREE.
Address fur home treatment. Dr.
Chas. A. Hoag, C362 Minerva avenue.
Chicago, 111.
Hints for Homeseekers.
Applied common sense brings pros-
perity.
If you would succeed, go where suc-
cess is possible.
To succeed, climate, location, mar-
kets, soil, water, schools, churches,
roads, also the character of the neigh-
borhood, must all be considered wlien
choosing a rural home.
All the above requisite conditions are
to be had on the Rancho Del-Paso, ad-
joining Sacramento City, California.
Here nature abundantly rewards the
faithful husbandman with never fail-
ing crops of cereal.s, clovers, vegetables,
all small fruits and berries, Engli.sh
walnuts, almonds, pecans, filberts,
oranges, lemons, grape-fruit, olives,
figs, grapes, etc.
Here you can earn 100 per cent on
your invested capital annually, besides
enjoying the comforts of a home amid
ideal surroundings.
Price and terms of purchase reason-
able.
"Seeing is believing." Join our ex-
cursion on April 20th and enjoy the
pleasure of a first-class tiip. For par-
ticulars see J. S. MacDonald, St. Louis
hotel, Duluth.
OLD BETHEL
BUILDING SOLD
H. B. Fryberger Purchases
Lake Avenue Property
for $18,000.
The old Bethel property at the
northeast corner of Litke avenue south
and Sutphin street, was sold Saturday
to H. B. Fryberger for $18,000 cash.
The property is 50 by 140 feet and has
frontage on Lake avenue and on the
railroad tracks. It is presumed the
Bethel building figured little in the
fixing o fthe price.
The old Bethel is in the Lake avenue
jobbing district and the site Is an ex-
cellent one for a jobbing house on ac-
count of the ease with which railroad
connections may be established. The
old building has outgrown its useful-
ness for the purposes of the Bethel so-
ciety and a new building will be
erected soon.
Use Jap-a-Lac.
Don't throw your old furniture away.
Jap-a-Lac will make it look like new.
You can gel it from Quayle-Larsen
Co., 14-16 "West Superior street.
RAIL ORDERS
The ORIGINAL guaranteed hoM ars Holeproof.
They bear the name, "Holeproof" and the signature
of Carl Fresehl, Pret., on the toe. Hoee that do not
are net the cenulne HcUproof no matter who says so.
We pay an average of 70 cents per pound lor yam
though yarn can be had for 30 cents. We spend
SSS.OOO a year for inspection. The GENUINE Hole-
proof—the only ORIGINAL guaranteed hose are soft,
light and attractive. There are scores of cumbersome,
carse imitations to bo careful in buyiaf.
JU. j, UP HAM CO^
STOKK.4 AMD HOUSBS FOR RK3iT.
Property for sal* in all parts of
the city.
18 THIRD AVE.M'iC IVKST.
Woman
i
IN^'S
^
!S^';
la iBcereated ar.d should knew
about tha wonderful
MARVEL Mhirling Spray
[The nen- Tagtnal g/riaco. tnite-
tiunand .Vurfion. Ueet— Haf-
est— .'.lost Coav«nlent.
llCJeaascs laetaallr
Xot So Much Reduced as Current
Reports Would Show.
New York, April 17. — There are indi-
cations that railroad orders for equip-
ment and supplies are less reduced
than current reports reveal. The rum-
or that the St. Paul system had con-
tracted with the Illinois Steel company
for 100.000 tons of heavy rails for 1911,
while lacking official confirmation, is
accepted as correct. Other rail sales
last week aggregated about 25.000 tons
The Pittsburg and Lake Erie closed
for 2,000 and the Virginia railway or-
dered 1,000 steel cars. The Western
Maryland has contracted for thirty-
five locomotives, the Florida East
Coast for five engines and the Chicago
& Northwestern has virtually closed for
thirty locomotives. Bridge orders were
lefts than 4,000 tons last week.
Specifications for light products de-
creased, especially for tin plate, but
specifications for plates and shapes
from car and locomotive companies,
were more satisfactory.
March orders booked by the Steel
corporation were within 25,000 ton.s of
estimates and April orders are likely
to be almost as large — 975,000 tons.
Pig Iron transactions were scarcely
5,000 tons in all sections.
I
«k year dnifT>«t far It.
b« onnnot SLipplj tbs
ARWKf., accept no
Otlier. t';it «en(l slnnip for
Illustrated book -weirit. It eires
Cull i>articulaj:s and <1ir»>tir<ns ti>-
vmluablefo ladles. MAaVKl, ro..
«« JK. Uaa liT.. MKW lORJK.
Vsr Sal* k« lUa Wirtk. OrsnlaL
Sickly Smile
Wipe it off your otherwise
good looking face — put on that
good health smile that CAS-
C A RETS will give you — as
a result from the cure of
Constipation — or a torpid liver.
It's so easy — do it — you'll see.
91i
CASCARBTS lOc a box tors waelc's
treatment, all drursists. BIsreett teller
la tli« wcrld. MilUoo boss* a moatb-
To the Editor of The Herald:
For the information of citizens of
the state, and especially of veterans
of the Grand Army of the Republic,
who are more directly concerned, I
deoire space in your columns to refer
to some matters in connection with
the Minnesota Soldiers' Home, and
especially the failure of the legislature
to grant the board of trustees an ap-
propriation of 175,000 asked for an ad
ditlon to the old folks' building, in
which are housed needy veterans an 1
their wivts their mothers, or widows
of deceajsea. This building is now
crowded to its capacity and no more
old people can be admiiied. One reason
fur this writing is to notify the Grand
Army veterans of the state that they
may place responsibility where it be-
longs. We of the board of trustees
made every proper effort to secure the
appropriation. It was asked for in our
report; It wus urged by the president
of the board and other trustees befor-j
tile joint committee on appropirations,
the governor recommended It in his
liie.ssage and at our request went be-
fore the committee and personally
urged it. The conmiittee fir.st reduced
the amount to $50,000, which they
promised in the general bill, and later
dLsallowed it entirely. We of tiie trus-
tees wish our comrades in -Minnesota
to know the facts and to understan«\
that we did all in our power to secure
the appropriation — the responsibility
rests with the joint committee.
ComparcM ApproprtattoaM.
Wednesday marked the fiftieth an-
niversary of the beginning of that
great war in defense of the Union, in
wlilch more than 2,000,OCo men of the
North rushed to arm.s — and today the
great state of Minnesota, with its un-
limited resources and billions of wealth
refuses a paltry $75,000 to provide a
home for a few broken-down and
needy survivors of that great struggle
— men who. refusing to desert their
eld wives, ask a home for both. Hall
a century is a long time in tJie life
of an individual — fifty years ago these
old men were the "boys in blue" who
were marching, fighting and dying in
the defense of the republic! They did
save it, and thus made possible our
boasted "world power." Where would we
be as a nation today if Grant had
been forced to surrender to Lee? What
prevented it? -The men behind the
guns' — the comrades whose applica-
tion for a paltry $75,000 was turned
down, while $100,000 was voted for
.sleeping rooms at the Morris farm
school; |7l<,000 for a liospital at the
Slate university and several millions
to charitable, correctional and educa-
tional insiitution.s.
Msgnrdly Tr«a(iii«iit.
I have been a member of the board
of trustees for ten or twelve vears,
and 1 am free to say that our requests
for appropriations have been re-
sponded to in a most niggardly man-
ner. For years we endeavored to se-
cure $-10,000 to construct a bridge
across Minnehaha glen, while using a
wooden foot bridge which had been
condemned by liie city engineer of
Minneapolis. Through the splendid
efforts of Col. H. G. Hicks of
-Vlinneapolis and his eloquent speech
In the house, tliat body forced an
amendment into the committees omni-
bus bill, and we secured a bridge
which was needed for a dozen years
This is the manner in which the homo
Ijas been treated so far as extrador-
Ciinary appropriations are concerned
And yet it Is by every species of rea-
soning entitled to the most generous
treatment.
Xo Penslona Retained.
Occasionally 1 notice in the press
tu ®i. ^'""^^*^"^'' °^ ^^^ management of
the home, and anonymous complaints
from alleged members, as for instance,
a recent reference to the fact that thev
were charged $2 quarterly for the hire
of waitresses. At once a member of
the home introduced a bill making It
a misdemeanor to retain any i>ortion
of a soldiers pension. Under state law
all but $4 a month, and under federal
law any portion might be retained. In
our home no part is kept. The inmate
of the home Is boarded, clothed and
furnished with everything necessary
for his comfort. Formerly veterans
waited on the table and were paid $1.50
a week by the members. This became
impracticable because of advancing
age, and girls were employed and $2
a quarter as assessed, as is the practice
in many, if not all, soldiers' homes.
Veterana Out.<«lde Home.
The trustees have always felt that
the veteran in the home, who re-
ceived everything necessary and his
pension besides, was immeasureably
better off than the veteran outside the
home, who had only his pension to live
on, and we have endeavored to aid all
indigent and worthy cases outside to
the extent of our resources — the so-
called relief fund, raised by a one-tenth
of a mill tax. For this reason, and
under a state law approved by Gov-
ernor Knute Nelson (himself a veteran)
all but $4 a month of the pension was
retained some years ago and was added
to the outside relief fund. This prac-
tice was approved by our department
encampments several times, but was
later prohibited by a federal enactment,
now operative as to our home.
Vae of Relief Fund.
A few words of explanation as to the
relief fund. It is intended to aid vet-
erans and wives, widows and mothers
who are In need of partial assistance.
A reference to the last annual report
of the trustees will show that there
were during the year 1,734 applications
for relief and 1,484 granted. The total
amount paid for the year was $95,R37.60
Of the number granted relief, t)67 re-
ceived $4 a month, 539 $6 a month and
257 various amounts. Do these facts
not prove conclusively how infinitely
better off the veteran in the home Is
than his comrade on the outside? And
still, there will be. found in every sol-
diers' home In this country veterans
who will complain — "klcker.s," the old
boys call them. AVe have them in our
homes disturbers who have had the te-
merity to approach legislators against
the board's recommendations.
The board of trustees is composed of
seven members and a secretary. Its pres-
ident Is Former Governir L. F. Hubbard,
four of Its members are past depart-
ment commanders, all are veterans and
successful business men. They receive
no compensation for their time and are
willing to donate It for the benefit of
their comrades. Surely, under such
conditions their Judgment should have
weight with our legislature.
C. F. MacDONALD,
Past Department Commander.
St. Cloud, Minn., April 15.
f iijr
somewhere between Midnight and Dawn, between Lobster
Lane and Crab Alley. No use looking for it in condiments or
drugs — Nature will restore it in a natural way if you eat
Shredded Wheat and live a simple life.
The delicate, porous shreds of cooked wheat, which are full
of body -building nutriment, are easily digested by the most
delicate stomach. Puts you on your feet when everything
else fails.
REDDED WHEAT I
*1
1
heated in the oven to restore crispness and served with milk or cream (hot milk in Winter)
will supply all the strength needed for a half day's work and will keep the stomach sweet
and clean and the bowels healthy and active. Also dcliciously wholesome when eaten in
combination with stewed or fresh fruits.
Try them for breakfast for ten days and you will eat no other cereal -they are so satisfying
and strengthening. Yoior grocer sells them.
THE ONLY CEREAL BREAKFAST FOOD MADE IN BISCUIT FORM
to offset the duty Imposed by Holland
on Hour.
PROGRAM FOR
TUESDAY "POP"
"All-Star Bar Arranged By
Boosters' Club of
Y. M. C A.
The Boosters' cub of the Y. M. C. A.,
In presenting the last two "Pops' of
the season, lias endeavored to make
the programs the strongest and most
Interesting of the entire series.
The program for Tuesday night, as
arranged by J. E. Horak and Guy E.
Warren, will doubtless be in point of
interest and popularity, one of the
best of the year. They have been put-
ting forth every effort for the past
two weeks to secure the best avail-
able talent in the city, and the pro-
gram win be an "all-star" affair.
Some of the special features will be
the German dialect stories and comedy
work of Arthur Kreitter. D. E. Giffln
has consented to present a number en-
titled, "A Few Minutes In Black and
Wliite." This will be the first time
this number has ever been presented in
the city, and it will be a unique and
interesting one. The Troubadour Man-
dolin club has appeared once before,
and its numbers were so enthusiasti-
cally received that the committee has
arranged for their appearance again
this week. A. B. Wegener, physical
director of the T. M. C. A., has also con-
sented to give an exhibition of fancy
club swinging. This will be the first
exhibition that Mr. Wegener has given
In fancy club swinging in the city, and
those who know of his ability as an
expert club swinger will be interested
In seeing -this performance. He is
without doubt one of the best Indian
club swingers who has appeared in
the city.
Next Tuesday's "Pop" will be fea-
tured by a special orchestra program.
The program follows in detail:
"NatienaT Emblem" Bagley
Troubadour Mandolin Club.
German comedian in dialect stories..
Arthur Kreitter.
Mandolin and guitar duet — Selected
T. H. Jones and D. E. Giffin.
Reading — "The Mysterious Portrait"
Miss Alice Kennedy.
Vocal solo — Selected
Miss Myrtle Hobbs; accompanied by
Mrs. J. E. Horak.
"El Caballero" Pomery
Troubadour Mandolin Club.
"A Few Minutes In Black and White"
D. E. Giffin.
Exhibition fancy club swinging
Physical Director A. B. Wegener.
"Hungarian Dance Xo. 55". .. .Brahms
Troubadour Mandolin Club.
Sound Travels Hieli Above.
Records of balloonlsts show that the
beat of horses hoofs can be heard a
mile up in the air. At 4,000 feet the
splashing of ducks In water can be
heard. A woman sneezing in a crowd
was heard at a height of nearly a
mile. These are great records, but
they do not match the way the fame
of golden grain belt beers travels, be-
cause of the good they do when reg-
ularly used as a family beverage.
Don't take some one's word. Try
them now. Your dealer or duluth
branch minneapolis brewing company
will supply j'ou.
EASTER "sermon
AT THE Y. M. C. A.
ernoon at the Y. M. C. A.
Kev. Moody declared that the re-
demption of the world lay in the fact
of Jesus' resurrection, winch Ij; as well
authenticated as any fact in history.
The purpose of the re.>^urrection, he
said, was to separate the worthy from
the unworthy.
Special music was furnished at the
meeting.
TELEPHONE COMPANY
FILES ITS ANSWER.
Claiming that It has paid its gross
earnings tax to the state for :he year
1910, the Zenith Telephone company
in its answer to the suit brought
against it by St. Louis countj- to en-
force the payment of personal prop-
from personal property taxes and asks
that the court find in its favor. The
property of the company was assessed
at $100,000 and the personal property
taxes would amount to something like
$3,930. As it pays a gross earnings
tax, the telephone company a.'-ks that
the proceedings be dropped.
MINNEAPOLIS MAN IS
KILLED BY STREET CAR.
Minneapoli.s, Minn., April 17. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — A man supposed
to be Charles J. Wihson wa.s struck by
a Fourth avenue car at Fourth avenue
south and Ninth street late Saturday
erty taxes, claims that it is exempt ni.i?ht and died shortly afterward.
w-
"The Resurrection of Christ" was
Rev. J. T. Moody's theme for the
Easter address delivered yesterday aft-
Se C PIRMANENTLY CURES
•)d»W. BLOOD POISON
One reason why S. S. S. is so sttccessful in the treat-
ment of Contagious Blood Poison is that this medicine
strengthens and builds up the stomach and digestive
members while it is purifying the blood. A great many
medicines used in treating Contagious Blood Poison are
composed largely of mercury and potash, and are recom-
mended to the sufferer because they are intended to dry
up or remove the humiliating outward symptoms. But
such treatment cannot cure the disease, and its contin-
ued use will often so weaken and disease the stomach as
to make a nervous wreck of the patient. And too, when
these mineral medicines are left off the smoldering
poison takes on
REPAI
THESE FIRMS ARE LEADERS IN THEIR LINE
AND ARE WORTHY OF YOUR PATRONAGE.
PHONOGRAPHS
REPAIRED
BATES MUSIC CO.
18 Srd Ave. West. Pboncs-Ncw. 1058. Old. 2127.
ARE YOU SATISFIED?
Are you satisfied M'lth your ishoe re-
pairing? If not the
CHAMPION SHOE WORKS
will guarantee satisfaction.
C. A. LINDAU,
14 Flftb Avenue Weitt. Lyceum Bldg.
For Quick Repairs
Take Your
to
Watch or Jewelry
fl.F.PLUMMERjr.
1 6 East
p'ior
Street
I didn't find ont that I had con-
tracted Contaffions Blood Poison
nntil it had made considerable head-
way, and fortunately for me the
friend that I first consulted had had
soma experience with the disease,
and adTised me to take S. S. S., so I
didn't fool -with any doctors, but be-
?:an at once the use of your medicine,
aklnir it aa directed. Ky friend told
me to stick to it, and that was what I
did, and f ot alon» ■ '
the Tery first, and m
did, and «ot albn^ splendidly firom
the Tery first, and my
rapid. I took only about one dozen
recovery was
MILLERS FAVOR
RECIPROCITY TREATY.
A. D. Goodman, manager for the Du-
luth Universal Milling company, at-
tended a meeting of the millers' na-
tional federation in Chicago, returning
home yesterday. He was elected a di-
rector of the federation. He was a
delegate from the Minnesota associa-
tion of which he Is the president.
The federation adopted a resolution
favoring reciprocity with Canada. The
millers will urge congress to place &
duty on bulbs Imported from Holland
new life and soon the old symptoms
of ulcerated mouth and throat,
brown, scaly splotches, falling
hair, sores and ulcers, etc., return
with increased virulence. Then
the disease makes more rapid
headway because the weakened
system offers less resistance to its
ravages.
S. S. S. cures Contagious
Blood Poison and it does so by
purifying the blood and keeping
the stomach and digestive members
in perfect condition all the while
by its fine tonic effects. S. S. S. is
a purely vegetable remedy, made entirely of roots, herbs and barks of rec-
ognized virtue as blood purifiers. It does not contain a particle of mineral
and is therefore absolutely safe for any one. S. S. S. cures on the principle
that not only must the poison be removed from the blood, but the circulation
must also be enriched and vitalized with nourishing powers. S. S. S. is
known everywhere as the greatest of all blood purifiers and a safe, certain
cure for Contagious Blood Poison. Home Treatment Book and medical
dvice free. S. S. S. is for sale at drug stores.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
bottles, and am now as w^ell as ever.
When I be^an S. S. S. my face w^as so
fall of sores and eruptions that I
could not shave, and now^ there is not
a blotch or pimple on zny body.
WALTER WEBBR.
430 1-2 Fourth St., Evansville, Ind.
WHY NOT
Have Ut Do Yoir PrintiBc?
MERRITT & HECTOR
PRINTmS AND MNDKIIS
•Rn.h Order. ■ Plea.uro" 1 12 WMI FIftt St.
ELECTRICAL WORK
AND PLATINQ
Repairing and plating done on short
notice.
BERG BROS.
112 Bant Superior Street.
Formerly of 15 East Superior Street.
ROOFINCi^
Cornier, SkyllKltt*, Steel CellEnKN,
HeatloK and Ventilatloi.
Repairer.
C. L. BURMAN,
200S llV^est First Street. Zenith, 42-i-A.
THE SANITARY
PLUMBING CO.
34 West First Street.
Plumbing and Heating.
REPAIRING and CLE:AN-
ING OF WATCHES
clocks, etc., at reasonable
prices. I also reset dia-
monds and other stones.
Repairing, Blockins: and
Cleaning: Hats
Bring your hats in early and let u»
put them In shape for this summer.
THE SUMMIT SHINING PARLOR
210 WcNt Superior Street.
PETROPOML.OS 2L DRAGOTIS, Msr«.
Repairing and Clearing of
Oriental Rugs & Carpets
A Specialty By
H. ODABASH & CO.,
Phones—
New 2'4
OU 34S»
531 East Superior Street
EXPERT REPAiRJNG
ELECTRICAL PIANOS AND
other coin operatinj; machines, phon i^raphs, etc.
All \Vork Guaranteed.
B. A. COkNWELL
with Howard, Farwell & Co.
120 Kant Sniserior Street.
New Pkoue, 147K-X. (»ld Phune. 1752.
C. HAUG,
819 West First Street.
• ^^^,^^M
DDLUTQ AIT) TIRE
REPAIR CO^
Retreading aid sec-
tion work a special-
ty. We also repair
and apply solid tires.
Satisfaction iruaran-
teed.
a29 IS. Superior St.
Gramd 91(3.
A. Erickson,
Gan and Loek-
smlth.
Bicycle repairing a specialty. I re-
pair everything; all work guaranteed.
12 Lake A venae Xortk.
Automobiles&MachineParts
made and repaired on short notice.
We also set up machinery and put
up shaftings.
ZENITH MACHINE WORKS,
207 We«t Flrat Street.
Old, 2522 — PHONES — New, 824 Grand.
ARE YOU A
REPAIRER
If you are, It will pay you to state
your Specialty in one of these spaces.
HERALD. BOTH PHONES, S24.
m
DEFECTIVE PAGE p
4
M
r
j,^j,j_x,j^^^
-k-*»
f
■'■ M
p
t
r^ »>
t
rigrgr
>■* M^' 7=»W
HE*^
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1«11.
U
UnCATlON
NEARS END
Final Arguments Before Mas-
ter on Old Merchants'
Bank Case.
Frand Charged in Convey-
ances of Interest in
Mineral Land.
STEPHENSON INSURANCE AGENCY
--—Fire Automobile, Tourist and Liability Insurance.^^^
Bell, Melrose 2406.
Final arsruments In a legal squabble
of tlirt-e iiiul one-half years' standing
over the title to a three-quarters in-
terest in forty acres of land about
three niiled west of Mountain Iron are
being heard today In federal court by
M-. l>. IMson. special master. The caso
la that ot Hansen E. Smith and cred-
itors of the Merohant.s' bank against
II H. I'helps. T. A. Merritt. David L.
FairchiJd and F. L. liairowa, and It iJ
an ou'Krowth of the failure of the
Aiercharls bank. ^ .. „i ,
It is I harp;>"d by tl.ose who brought
the action tl.at the transfer of the out-
fourth inierest which was owned by
Mr. Smith, and tiie execution interest
In a juaf,'ment held by ll»e bank against
the NorilK-rn Securities company and
covering a one- half interest in the
same fortv acres, should be set aside
as having i>«en made by fraud and col-
lusion, in evasion and violation of law
and for an inadeiiuaie consideration.
L. A liarnes was trustee ot the bunK
property and H. H. I'helps was attor-
ney for Ml. l?arnes. It is charged by
tiio petitior.eis that Mr. i'helps was
also attorney for 60 per cent of ilie
trediiojd of the bank, and that, acting
In ills double capacity, he ran things
with a hii4ii hand. It is charged ihat
due notice oi creditors' meetinga a,\ as
uot givt-n creditors, and that the la.v
was evaded In giving by creditors
meetinjAS power to the trustee, which
power should come from the court or
the referee in bankruptcy. It Is charged
that without proper procedure a.s laid
down by tl.e laws being followed out.
the trustee was without power to divest I
himself of tiie Interest In the land
held by him In trust, and that the
conveyances In question ar«3 therefore
The land In question Is described as
the southeast quarter of the northwest
quarter of section 12. 58-19. Although
the three-quarters Interest brought the
estate only $750 at the time ot the saie,
the petitioners charge that the land Is
valuable on account of mineral possl •
bllltles. and that, besides being llK'gal
In methods, the conveyances were made
for considerations that were inade-
quate.
The land is now held by Mr. M?rrltt.
Mr Falrcli'ld and Mr. i^arrow.s. li. H.
I'helps is made a defendant In the peti-
tion on account of his capacity iis at-
torney for the trustee and for some vf
the creditors and his Part In the con-
veyances. When the petition first carco
up about three and one-half years ago.
It was referred to Mr. Edson as special
master, and test'mony has been taken
from time to time since. The argu-
ments now be tg heard are the 'inal
erguments in tne case.
\i. V. Gard of Superior, one of tho
attorneys for the petitioners, made the
argument this morning, and John A.
Keyes will also present an argument
for the petitioners. Thomas J. Davis
appears for the defendants.
appointees"
take places
Citizens' Insurance Company.
Principal office: Pierce bul.ding, St.
L^ouis. Mo. (Organized in 1837.) Chas.
E. Chase, president: P. O. Crocker, sec-
retary. Attorney to accept service In
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insnr-
CASH CAPITAI.. $200,000.
Income in 1910.
Premiums other than per.-
Ipetur.ls » 669.401.86
Rents and Interest 30.532.97
Telephones ZenUh, Orand 4li6.
Fireman's Fund Insurance Company
Wolvin Building, Dultith, Minn.
Principal office: San Francisco, Cal.
(Organiised in 1863.) William J. Dul-
ton president; L.ouis Welnmann. secre-
tary. Attorney to accept service In
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAl'ITAL. ?1. 500.000.
I Income in 1010.
^■"rtuaTs"'*""'. *."!*". ^'':» 5,002.233.99
Rents and Interest 302,629.38
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger a.ssets * 45r'44
From all other sources lai.-i-*
1.049.346.14
40.877.48
Total income
599.934.83
Ledger as.'^ets December
3 1st of previous year. .$
850,275.64
Total income \ 5.346.677.31
Ledger assets December
31st of previous year.. I
7.364.966.64
Sum \ 1,450.210. 4f
niMbiiriieuicnts in 1910.
Net amount paid for
losses *
Expenses of adjustment
of los 5es
Commissions and broker-
age
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses
Dividends and Interest..
All other disbursements.
315.346.63
5.550.07
99.499.83
68.181.72
26.652.89
22,000.00
27.263.14
Sum
Total disbursements
564,497.48
$ 12.711,643.95
blMburneniciitn in 1010.
Net amount paid for loss-
^g
Expenses of adjustment
of losses •••;•■••,••••
Commissions and broker-
n*^g .... ...••••••••••
Salarie.s and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes •
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses : • •
Dividends and Interest..
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment ol
Kuger assets
All other disbursements.
2,585,877.64
45,133.77
841,244.01
536.884.89
185,490.76
225,000.00
8.3S4.60
245.270.67
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for pre-
miums • • • •
All other ledger assets.. ^^
Total ledger assets (as . .^„ ,^7 c,
per balance) % 8,058.357.61
NoB-L.edKer A»«et«.
Interest and rents due
and accrued • ^^
Gross a.s.sets L ^L^^;^^^'^^
Dednct Aiwet. Not Admitted^
Agents' balances ...... .\ jj.(J<.-o
Book value of ledger as- _
sets over market value 23.«34.62
75.803.69
Orient Insurance Company.
Principal office: Hartford, Conn.
(Organized in 1867.) Archibald G. Mc-
llwaite. President; Henry W. Gray. Jr.,
Secretary. Attorney to accept service
In Minnesota: Commissioner of Insur-
ance.
CASH CAPITAL, $500,000.
fncome In 1910.
Premiums other than per-
petuals I 1,383,566.73
Rents and Interest 121,250.51
Total assets not admit-
ted '
63,531.87
Total admitted assets. $ 8,070.623.43
L.UbllitleM Dec. 31, 1910
Unpaid losses and claims.?
Unearned premiums ....
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due .• ■ 'i' ■ ■ '
Commissions and broker-
Total Income $ 1,504,817.24
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year 3,023,057.15
Tlie Phoenix Insurance Ctmpany.
Principal office: 783 Main street,
Hartford. Conn. (Organized In 1854.)
D. W. C. Skilton. president; John B.
Knox and Thos. C. Temple, secretaries.
Attorney to accept service In Minne-
sota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, $2,000 000.
Income In 1910.
Premiums otli^r than
perpetuals » 5 027,16t.l4
462.617.52
3.390,131.28
106,500.00
age
All other liabilities
Capital stock paid up...^
Total liabilities, includ-
ing capital $
180,000.00
45.000.00
1,500, 000. uo
5,684.248.80
Total disbursements ..$ 4,653,286.34
Balance
885,712.99
Ledger As-set* nee. 31, 1010.
Mortgage loans %
Book value of bonds and
stocks
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for
premiums
102,700.00
564,351.25
118,273.86
100,387.88
Balance .V " '•» ^'nuV^
Ledger AwetN Dec. 31, 1010.
Book value of real es-
tate $
Mortgag'! loans
Collateral loans •
Book value of bonds and
s t o clc s •
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks
.61
557.442.39
695.425.00
338,000.00
4,941,407.52
435,859.08
4,833,917.66
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $
Kon-Ledscr A»s»et«.
Interest and rents due
and accrued $
All other non-ledger as-
sets
885,712.99
9,987.06
249.19
Flra KI.Hks.
; 7,385,065.00
110.982.65
91,668.42
127,281.43
12.332.652.00
Net surplus % 2,386.380.63
K4.HkN and Premlunm, 1010 BuNluetui.
.a) lire ri-sks written
during the year $»96..i63.23J .00
Premiums received there-
Marine" and Inland risks ,,,„-„ „„
written during the year 519,252.8.8.00
Premiums received there- 3 g. ^^^^ 34
Net amount in force at ,„„„,, --, ««
pnrJ of the vear &Ob,JX»,J»i.«"'
?a) Including buainess other than
'•Marine and Inland."
BiiHlueM.t In MlnnC«M»*« In 1»U».
.Incrudtng reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance, placed.)
Aftgregate.
Sum $ 4.527,874.39
DlHburMementM in 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses $ 646,748.81
Expenses of adjustment
of losses
Commissions and broker-
age
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
Rents and Interest
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment ot
ledger assets
From all other sources..
403,221.29
10,164.82
f.OO
Royal Exchange Assnrance Compuif
Principal office In the United State*:
92 WlUams street. New York. (Cob»-
menced business in the United StatM
1891.) Uberto C. Crosby, general man-
ager In the United States. Attorney t»
accept service in Minnesota: Commla-
sloner of Insurance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL, $200,000.
Ineoui* la 1910.
Premiums other than per-
petuals I 1.430.154.98
Rents and Interest 80,228. 6i
Received from home of-
fice 4.702. »f
From all other sources.. 50.00
22,321.27
282,423.80
106,683.13
Total Income
.$ 5,440.550.25
Ledger assets December;
3lst of previous year..$ 8,743.939.19
Sum
59.270.83
200,000.00
12.523.30
74,972.49
Risks written •
Premiums received . . .
Losses Incurred
Losses paid
Amount at risk
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
statement of the Fireman's Fund In-
surance Company, for the year ending
1^""8828 502.40 141,072.11 1
322:547:00 1,689,010.00-,, 14,34^.50».00
.$ 1,404,943.09
.$ 3,122,930.70
December 31st, 1910. of which the above
UaT abstract, has ^eeji received and
tiled m this Departu^ent J4id duly ap-
proved by me. j a. O. PREUS.
Commislsoner of Insurance.
penses
Dividends and interest...
tiross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
All other disbursements.
Total disbursements.
Balance
LedRcr AMMetii Dec. 31, 1011.
Book value of real estate. $ 167,680.38
Book value of bonds and ,.„„,„ „,
stocks 2,4o3,042 . 61
Cash in office, trust com- ^
panics and banks 262,o06.o»
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for „,„ ,»o o,
premiums **^'on.^i
All other ledger assets.. 39b.. 11
$ 14,184,487.44
Dlabumements In 10 LO.
Net amount paid for
losses ^ ::,273.453.16
Expenses of adjustment
of losses
Commissions and broker-
age
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses
Dividends and Interest..
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
All other disbursements.
32,0S7.89
963,976.66
533,362.57
177,854.36
329,360.00
54,388.67
212,491.85
Total income $ 1,515,136.61
Ledger assets December
31st of previous year..$ 2.286,083.71
Sum $ 3.801. 220. 3»
DiNburMcmentM in 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses I
Commissions and broker-
age
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
743.232. !•
331,995. It
157.958. ST
penses
Returned to home office.
All other disbursements.
Total disbursements...
15,076.2t
1?.6,T71.97
127,724.54
1,497,759.01
895,949.23
Gross assets
beduct Asset* Xot Admitted.
Agents' balances % 837.78
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value
13,073.76
Total assets not admit- ,,011 r^%
ted ♦ l.J,»ii.ai
Total admitted assets. $ 882,037.70
Liabilities Dec. SI, 1010.
Unpaid losses and clalms.$ .|J'I^^?5
Unearned premiums 4E>8,»ii.o«
Salaries, expenses, taxe.s,
dividends and interest
due ,• •
Capital stock paid up...
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing capital $
6,342.25
200.000.00
Hartford Fire Insurance Company.
Principal office: 125 Trumbal street
Hartford, Conn. (Organized in 1810.)
Charles E. Chase, president. Fred k
Samson, secretary. Attorney to accept
service in Minnesota: Commissioner of
msurance^^ CAPITAL, $2,000,000.
Income in 1010.
^'n^tuau' «*"*-''• '^'^^ '*"':$ 15,789,688.87
Re^'ntsn'nd interesi: :::::' '903,655.41
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of ^
ledger assets 7^4?a 59
From all other sources.. 7o^nJ^
Total income $ 16.812,!>10.90
December
Ledger assets
31st of previous year
.$ 22,096,030.16
Sum
717,508.91
-»-«-
.Mm<imlLm
+-
W. A. Kennedy SucceedsHarris
Bennett as Surveyor Gen-
eral for This DistricL
W. A. Kennedy took over the office
ot surveyor general of logs and lumber
for this district this morning. Mr. Ken-
nedy was appointed to the office some
time ago by Governor Eberhart.
Harris Bennett has held the office for
the past two years. He was appointed
by Governor Johnson. Previous to that
time Mr. Bennett was for four years
connected with the state dairy and food
department, being appointed to that
position also by Governor Johnson and
he left both offices with a good record.
Mr. Kennedy has been for a number
of years cashier of the News Tribune.
Andrew Horngren today took the of-
fice of factorv Inspector. This office
was held until today by Armour Har-
vey, who was appointed by Governor
Johnson. The office of factory inspec-
tor is on the third fioor of the cdurt-
house.
UPHELD BY THE
SUPREME COURT
Appeal of Lumber Companies
Against State in Trespass
Case Dismissei
Washington. April 17.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Chief Justice White in
the suprem court today dismissed for
want of jurisdiction the ca.ses of Rat
Portage Lumber company against the
state of Minnesota and the Lesure
Lumber company against the state of
Minnesota. Tills ruling of Justice
White sustains the judgment of the
state .sup.'-enie court granting damages
for trespass on school timber lands of
the stale.
Net surplus ^ 164,528.79
Risks nnd Premiums, 1010 Business.
(a) Fire risks ^^ritten
during the year $188, 362, 59b. 00
Premiums received there- 2,197,557 . 21
43,027.00
206. 9S
on
Marine and Inland risks
written during the year
Premiums received there-
Net amount in force at
end of the year "V^" •♦»?!!
(a) Including business other than
"Marine and Inland."
Business In Minnesota In 1010.
flncludlng reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Rl,ta written... »4.72a,'J32.00 JiSl.SaS.OO »5.01J.y70.00
''rir^ .... 70.1«^«0 2.006 48 T2.m.0«
U..^ marred. 67.25...r o3.11 6..286.68
A^nt'^lt rist 5,563:200:00 459.60U.00 6.022.800.00
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
rHei^e'by Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the Citizens' Insurance
PomDanv for the year ending Decem-
ber 31 st^l 9 10. of which the {ibove is an
abstract has been received and filed in
Uils Department and duly approved by
"^®' J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
S 38,908,941.06
biitburscnieutM In 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses • • • •■•-••;♦
Expenses of adjustment
of losses • • • •
Commissions and broker-
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes : 1,4 < 9.592. lb
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses , : • •
Dividends and interest..
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment ot
ledger assets
AH other disbursements.
Agents, balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for pre-
miums
All other ledger assets..
Total ledger assets (as . .-. -,
per balance) % 23,71o.6.0.64
Non-Ledscr Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued $
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks
over book value
2,407.025.74
3.500.00
240.644.43
478,708.12
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $ 3,liJ2,9«y . «u
Non-Ledsrcr Assets.
Interest and rents due o^-,, .q
and accrued $ 30,71^.49
All other non-ledger as-
sets 4,943.16
Total disbursements ..| 4,576,955.16
Balance $"9,607,532.28
Lcdffer Assets Dec. 31, 1010.
Book value of real es-
tate 1
Mortgage loans
Collateral loans
Book value of bonds and
stocks 7,87^,<!4i.i»
Cash in office. trust
companies and banks.
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for pre-
miums
130,091.14
50,350.00
14,200.00
737,817.20
802,832.55
Gross a.ssets I 24,4.^3.023.19
Deduct Assets Not Admitted.
Agents' balances 1l.\^\.^^
Total assets not admit-
ted >$ :<
Gross assets I 3,158,586 . 35
Deduct Assets Not Admitted
Agents' balances $
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value
Special deposit, less $19,-
022.64 liability thereon
All other assets not ad-
mitted
7,312.86
56,300.11
17,377.36
280.01
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $ 9,607,53^. iJ»
Non-IiCdKer Asseus.
Interest and rents due
and accrued I
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks
over book value
All other non-ledger as-
sets
Balance ^ 2,303,461.31
Ledger Assets Dec. 31, lOlO.
Book value of bonds and
stocks * 1,990,996. 7«
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks.....
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for pre-
miums
All other ledger assets..
57,022.84
254,869.19
572.61
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $ 2,303.461. «
Non-LedKcr Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued
23.146. 8T
87,714.49
999,258.10
65.340.61
72.491.59
8.323,706.94
146,310.76
2,909,587.56
284,287.80
800,000.00
69,854.50
1,181,930.70
Total disbursements ..$ 15,195,270.4:
on
Balance ■^- ' 'U S^iiV'^""
LedKcr Assets Dec. Jl, l»10r,, ,,
Book value of real estate$ I^ViKfi'fi?
Mortgage loans 4b&,ibb.bi
Collateral loans ... •
^^rtScks'"". .°' .''.°'! '.*." 18,819,692.24
Cash in o^^cej^^i^^''^^ f °'^: 1.216.461 . 83 | deducUng reinsurance placed.)
10.000.00
Total admitted assets. .$ 24,360,531.60
LInbllities Dec. 31, l»10.^ ... ,^
Unpaid los.ses and claims^ I.^IJ-^^^-^^
Unearned premiums IJ,. »4.(4i.u<
Salaries, expenses, taxes.
dividends and interest jOO.OOO.OO
CapUal" sVock "paid up: • > 2.000.000.00
Total liabilities, includ-
Ing capital $ 17.439.667.66
Net surplus $ 6.920.863.94
Risks and Premiums, lOlO Busiuess.
(a) Fire risks written
during the year $1,<01.167,157.00
Premiums received there-
Marine' and inland risks
written during the
Total assets
mltted
not ad-
812,703.34
Total assets admitted. .$ 3,077,316.01
Liabilities Dec. 31. 1011.
19.415,663.16
Unpaid losses and claims . $
Unearned premiums ....
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due
Return and reinsurance
premiums
All other liabilities
Capital stock paid up
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing capital $
98.691.16
1.304.028.95
26.860.84
21,879.82
2,256.90
500,000.00
Gross assets % 10,749,845 . 48
Deduct Assets Not Admitted.
Agents' balances
12.188.16
Gross assets I 2,326,608 . It
Deduct Assets Not Admltte*.
Agents' balances $ 6,914.81
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value 98,831. 7»
Special deposit, less $19,-
921.76 liability thereon
28.928. 2S
Total assets not admit-
ted »
134,674.81
1.954,317.67
Total admitted assets. $ 10.737,667.32
Liabilities Dec. 31, 1010.
Unpaid los'ses and claims. $ 682.060.06
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dvldends and Interest
due ,•
Capital stock paid up...
4,325,466.01
175.000.00
2,000.000.00
year /•/''"
Premiums receiver! there-
34,399.240.00
675,894.51
Net amount In force at 4-- ^no aq
end of the year 2.261,4o6,jj-.uu
(a) Including business other than
"Marine and Inland."
BuMiuess In Minnesota la l»ip- „.
fincludlv.g reinsurance received and
panies
Firo niski.
Risks written $31,628,160.00
Premiums received skH^oIs
Losses incurerd ^SfifiTSBfi
Losses paid . B35200OO
Amount at risk 39,63o..iuu.m>
Mirlneandlnlfln-l Tom*(lo. ,,. Ag?rpgats
$553,015.00 $4,100,000.00 136,969,986.00
11062 60 20,748.77 4(6.b72.26
•i'83165 4 937.19 297,128.49
62838 4:937:19 302,238.23
653.015.00 6.150.000.00 46.238.215.00
Net surplus $ 1.122.998.34
Kinks and Premiums, 1010 Business.
♦Fire risks written dur-
ing the year $195,773,476.00
Premiums received there- „.„^„„, ,_
on 2,126,874.17
Net amount In force at
end of the year 235,731,430.00
•Including business other than "Ma-
rine and inland."
Business In Minnesota In 1010.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reln.surance placed.)
Kira KUki. Tumailo. Acgrecate.
RUks written... »4,875.tl8.00 $385,900.00 $3,'261,:!18.00
Promluiiu ,
received 61,203.08 2,259.84
losses ineiinred
l/Mded paid ........
Amouat at rink •
Total admitted assets. $ 2,191,933. 31
Llabllltcs nee. 31, 1010.
Unpaid losses and clalm3$ 147,122.81
Unearned premiums ....
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due : V ••,••• •
Commissions and broker-
1,260,154.41
26,950.00
age •
All other liabilities
Deposit capital
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing deposit capital.. $
7.800.01
12,192.97
200,000.01
1,654,220.31
63.462.87
36.W)5.52
41.490.31
9,277,312.00
State of Minnesota. Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the Hartford Fire Insur-
ance Company, for the year ending De-
cember 31st. 1910. of which the above
Is an abstract, has been received and
fil.»d In this Department and duly ap-
proved by me. ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^
Commissioner of Insurance.
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance: .... ,
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the Orient Insurance Com-
pany, lor the year ending December
31st 1910. of which the above Is an
abstract, has been received and filed
in this Department and duly approved
'''' '"^- J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
Total liabilities, Includ-
Ing capital I 7.082,526.0.
Net surplus » 3,655,131.25
Risks and Premiums, 101.0 Business.
(a) Fire risks written
during the year $ (34,809, < 15.00
Premiums received there- ^ g^^, 3^, 45
Net amount In force at ,.-.,.,„„ „„
end of the year....... «48,014,3J8.00
(a) Including business other than
"Marine and Inland."
Business In Minnesota in 1010.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire ItUks. Tonu do. Aggregata.
Risks wriueii$10.180,51i.00 $ 5:a.ll8.00 $ll,05y,76X00
Preinluins
received .
I»sses
Incurred
Loaiee paid.
Am'tuiit at
rUk
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
S 111*3. 11 CO '
i Hereby Certify, Tha ; the Annual
Statement of the Phoenix Insurance
Company, for the year ending Decem-
ber 31st: 1910. of which tic above is an
abstract, has been received and filed in
this Department and dulj approved by
"**• J. A. C». PREUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
Net surplus 1 637.713.01
Risks and Premiums, 1010 Buslacsa.
(a) Fire risks bitten
during the year $y 9,19^,503. 00
Premiums received there-
Marine and Inland risks
written during the year
Premiums received there-
on
2.314.272.90
10,718.682.00
14.450.90
127.329.33
3,215.48
130.624.81
86,589.39
85,29(3.30
9;o.0l
315.08
87,524.47
85,681.38
16,395,562.00
1.440.2( 1.00
17,835,820.00
Net amount In force »* „
end of the year $229.0H0.b77 .«•
(a) Including business other than
"Marine and Inland."
Business In Minnesota In 1010.
(Including reinsurance received an«
deducting reinsurance placedj.^^ \\,i^\in
Risks written »''^Mi«
Premiums received Y?'o9? as
Losses Incurred ic'c^ftiS
Losses paid 15,630.38
Amount at risk
3.309.056.00
State of Minnesota. Department of In-
I^HeV^e'ljy Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the Royal Exchange As-
surance Company, for the year endln»
Dccer^ber 31st. 1910. of which the above
s an abstract, has been received and
filed in this Department and duly ap-
proved by me. ^ ^ ^ preuS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
TAFT STRAIGHTENS
INDIANA TANGLE.
ted suicide during a fit of despondency
today. The artist hanged himself in
his home.
mNnSTosE
LIVES IN WRECK
Spanish Steamer San der Fer-
nando Sinks Off
Finisterre.
Oporto, Portugal. April 17.— The
Spanish steamer San Der Fernando,
bound from Huelva for Liverpool, sank
off Finisterre, the westernmost head-
lands of Spain, today. Twenty-one per-
sons were drowned. Four survivors
landed here by the steamer
Washington, April 17.— President
Taft is believed to have straightened
out the Indiana political mixup by
sending to the senate today the nom-
ination of Edward S. .Schmidt, of In-
dianapolis, to be United States mar-
shal for Indiana. Mr. Schmidt is un-
derstood here to have been a com-
promise candidate acceptable to both
factions.
were
I'ortimao.
AIMIMUAL EASTER
Given by the First Division Minne-
sota Kaval Militia at the Armory, To-
nlKht. Flaaten's Orchestra, Tickets, 75c.
NO NEW DEVELOPMENTS
IN MUSCATINE STRIKE.
Muscatine. Iowa, April 17. — Monday
morning, though awaited with some
anxiety by both sides in the labor
struggle, passed without any new de-
velopments. The working forces In
the several factories are no larger than
they were last week, and there was
no disturbance anywhere. Talk of a
possible settlement Is again current
and efforts looking to this end are
being pushed by the representatives of
Governor Carroll.
»
Artist Ends Life.
St. Petersburg. April 17. — M. Kryz-
helsky, the landscape painter and mem-
)>er of the Russian academy, commit-
NO "BIG" DECISIONS
BY SUPREME COURT.
Washington, April 17.— Another de-
cision day passed today without the
supreme court of the United States an-
nouncing Its decision In either the
standard Oil or the Tobacco corpor-
ation cases, arising under the Sherman
anti-trust law. No decision is now
expected until next Monday, at least.
France to Reinforce Troops.
Paris, April 17.— In consequenc» ot
the anarchistic conditions in Morocco.
France will reinforce her troops al-
ready there by sending Immediately
four battalions selected from the co-
lonial army.
OUR NATIONAL SWEET TOOTH.
The people of the United States con-
sume half their own weight in sugar
every year. If we take the quantity
of sugar produced In the United States
and add to this the quantity brought
from our own islands and the quantity
imported from foreign countries and
substract therefrom, the amount ex-
ported, we get a grand total of con-
.slderably more than 7.00O.000.0OO
pounds consumed In the country.
By dividing the population into this
grand total, says the Rakers Weekly,
we get an average of 81 V4 pounds per
capita, speaking In round terms, for
1910 and about a like quantity for
1909' Taking the total consumption
and comparing It with the total popu-
lation In the section known as con-
tinental United States, the average
yearly consumption of sugar is found
to be about 81^ pounds per capita
In fact, the people of the United
States are larger consumers of sugar
per capita than those of any other
country of the world except England,
for which the latest figures show a
consumption averaging 86 pounds per
capita, against our own average ot
81S pounds per capita.. The next larg-
est per capita consumption Is in pen-
mark 77% pourtds; followed by Swit-
zerland, 64 pounds; Sweden, 54 pound-s
and Germany and Holland each about
''Sot''°only"ls the United States the
second largest consumer per capita,
but the total amount consumed anniial-
ly Is much greater than that of any
other country, aggregating, as above
Indicated. more thaii J'00<>'OO^jO''<>
pounds a year, against about *'Xyj:'.;
000.000 pounds In England and about
3 000,000,000 pounds In Germany.
' About one-half of the sugar con-
sumed m the United States Is brought
from foreign countries about one-
fourth from our own Islands and the
remaining one-fourth produced in tlUs
country. The total production of sugar
In the United States now amount-s to
1 750,000,0^Bfcounds a year, of which
more tha^UbnUon pounds Is beet
sugar and ab'out three-quarters of a
billion cane sugar. ^,„/i„„
It is only recently that the produc-
tion of beet sugar In the United. States
has come to exceed that of cane sugar.
In 1900 domestic production of canfc
sugar was twice as great as that of
beet sugar, and twenty years ago was
more than sixty times as great, but
the growth of beet sugar production
has been very rapid in rocent years.
and in 1907 for the first time, exceeded
In quantity that produced from cane
and has so continued since that time.
The sugar habit is evidently a grow-
ing one with the people of the United
States and probably with those of
other countrlc'3, since the total world
production of sugar. Including all
countries for which statistics are
available, has Increased 50 per cent In
the last ten years and about double In
fifteen years. In our own case the con-
sumption has shown a rapid growth,
the per capita consumption having
been in 1880, 40 pound-^: in 1890, 51
pounds, in 1900. 59 pounds, and in 1910,
approximately 81 H pounds.
Want-advertise the flat-facts or the
house-facts which would Interest you if
you were hunting a flat or a house —
and your ad will bring results.
LEGAL NOTICES.
CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITIJD
STATES, DISTRICT OF MINNE-
SOTA—
Fifth Division.
Alexander B. Scully, Trustee,
Complainant.
Northwestern Steam Boiler &
Manufa<turing Company, a
corporation,
Defendant.
The report of David Davis, the duly
qualified and acting receiver In the
above entitled cause, of the sale by the
receiver of the real property of the
defendant having been filed, and the
sale of said real property, as shown In
said report having been duly confirmed
by an order of this court; and it ap-
pearing that there are certain liens
and encumbrances on said real prop-
erty prior and paramount to the title
vested In and sold by the receiver, and
said sale having been made subject to
said Hens and encumbrances. In ac-
cordance with the order of the cotirt
pursuant to which said sale was made,
on motion of Thos. J. Davis, solicitor
for the receiver,
IT IS ORDERED as follows: —
First: That all questions concern-
ing the validity of each lien claim and
encumbrance, and tha aggregate
amount of each such" lleAand encum-
brance found by the court to be valid.
Including unpaid Interests if any. on
each such lien claim, computed up to
and Including the 10th day of April,
A D 1911. being the date on which
said sale was made, be heard at the
United States court r«om»in the post-
office building In the city of Minne-
apolis, Minnesota, on Saturday, the
22nd day of April, 1911. at 10 o'clock
In the forenoon, or as soon thereafter
as counsel can be heard:
Second: That a copy of this order
be published twice in each of two daily
newspapers published in the city of
Duluth, and State of Minnesota; that a
copy of this order be served on the so-
licitors for defendant and upon North-
western Trust Company, trustee In the
mortgage securing the mortgage deed
on the said real property, and a copy
of this order be mailed to each credit-
or who has filed with the receiver a
proof of claim against defendant, and
each other creditor appearing on the
books of account of defendant, also to
each Judgment creditor and holder of
any of the promlsory notes secured by
said mortgage, so far as the holders
of such notes are known to the re-
ceiver, at their respective piostofflce
address so far as known or reasonably
ascertained by the receiver; that each
such publication, service and maiUng
of copies of this order be corapletea on
or before April 19, 1911.
Dated April 15. 191L
By the Court,
CHARLES A. WILLARD,
Judge.
CITY NOTICES.
the City of Duluth, by the following
named persons at the locations set op-
posite their respective names, viz:
J A. Brady. 217 West Superior St..
Charles Peterson, 513 \Je%X. Michigan
St
J G. Hagen. 103% East Superior St..
Jbhn Olsen. 1601 West Superior St..
W. G. Holmes. 123 Wesi: Michigan St..
A. Baker. 107 West First St., (being
a transfer from Henry Nesgoda at 115
Charle" Peterson, 613 fV^est Superior
St
i'g Koziarek. 31 West First St.,
Rady Orlich. 5516 Rah Igh St..
M. Monson. 617 West |5uperlor St.
Lars O. Gudgdal. 707 A^est Sup^lor
St., (being a transfer f-om 528 West
^"said°a.pplications will be considered
by the Common Council at a regular
meeting thereof to be held on Monday,
Mav 1 1911, at 7:30 o'clock P. M.
May i. i9ix, ^ g PALMER,
City Clerk.
D. H., April 17 and 24, 19U. D 589.
Rents and liittTPst • • • • • •
<"ro*5 profit on «!«•. maUirtty or adlust-
mcnt of Ic IgPT aiwotg
From all "I'le'' »«"''<;«
ll,9T4.l
4* W
.rt
Total Incom* '
Ledger »s»cto Dec. 31 of prwloua year. J^
$ H2.2i4.5t
S91.1<>9.4r
Bum
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910
Net amount pal.l U<t Iwises ♦
l-;xpenm>s of adlusfment of I018M
(•omml-yjiona and brokerage • •
.Salaries and fees of offlcets, afenta and
employes .■"".' i '
TaxM. fees, rents and other real estate
expenses
Ail otlier dlaburscments
.t 403,114.'
47.nifi.6S
l.'j-.M.t»
25,'J28.«<
1J.303.S
2.830.64
(i.lSi.TT
LEGAL NOTICB8.
City of Duluth, Clerk's Office —
Notice is hereby given that applica-
tions have been filed In my office for
licenses to sell intoxicating liquors
In the City of Duluth. by the following
"amed persons at the locations set
)po3lte their res
William Wlskl,
named persons - - ,
ODPoslte their respective names, viz:
■Ham Wlskl, 216 Lake avenue
^°M J Cook. 527 West Michigan street
(being a transfer from Theodore Sa-
dowskl at 107 West First street),
L. L Lessard, 205 West Michigan
Henry Casmlr, 102 Lake avenue
^°Ed 'De Mars. 601 Garfield avenue,
Johanne S. Hanson. 1626 West Suoe-
rlor street (being a transfer from Nels
Johnson at the same location),
James J. Fortune. 30b Central avenue,
Joseph Francel, 132 Commonwealth
avenue (being a transfer from Stenz
Pernala at the same location).
Said applications will be considered
by the Common Council at a regular
meeting thereof to be held on Monday,
Aprll24, 1911. at 7:30 gO'cl^ock^^m.
City Clerk.
D. H.. April 10 and 17. 1911. D 661.
BIDS WANTED
Bids for an Auto Wagon will be re-
ceived by th"e Board ol Water and
Light Commissioners. Thursday, Apr/i
^^Box^to be' 8 feet back of seat.
Guaranteed Horsepow<jr 30.
Carrying Capacity, 2,0 )0 lbs.
Bids must be accompanied with a
certified check equal to 10 per cent of
^^^' L. N. CASE, Manager.
Total dUbuwemenU * 99.2:.5.>t
^•""'•lEOQER- AMET8 DEC. 31. '«'«•„.,,, ^
Mortg.i«e loans v • V L" sV^-.oS
Book vaMe of bonds and sf.cks.. ■ B5.8.0.W
Ca*li m office, trual companies and „ r,g,^
Agents' balanVcV. unpaid premiums and
bUU receivable, takin for premiums...
All other ledger asseU
18.1127. n
2,949.SC
Total ledger as.=et» (as per balanf-e) .t
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and renU due and accrued
304.lSS.4r
3.30t.«a
Otoss assets
$ :i07,4«7 Ot
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED
Agrnts' balances • ♦
All otUer assets not admitted •
^otal asset) not admitted ••
877. It
2.919..>S
3.6;:S.rt
303,840.3t
6.493.M
LEONARD C. FliRGUSON,
Total admitted «««4. •••■-• .V laio
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. HIO.
Unpaid losses and lUbns • «i sus ««
Unearned premiums ..•••• • • • • ■ ■ • • •!.*»-■-
.Salaries, expenses, taxei, divlcJends an*
interest due
CaplUl stock paid up
2.0'i4.St
SuO.UOO.M
CITY OF DULUTH. CLERK'S OrFICEJ.
Notice Is hereby given that applica-
tions have been filed in my office for, ,^"::~z:z^\^,im 1
Ucenses to sell Intoxicating liquors In PtwHu-a other than perretu.1. I
AGEING
408 COLUMBIA BUILDING
Hilwankee G*rm«« Fire lB«ar«nc«
Company.
Frtodpal office: MUwaukee. Wis. (^nl»d to
1905.) Edward Schroeder. vn%\A^tX-.^V.Yva.
iecretarr. AUomey to accept wniM la MlnnewH*.
Commlslcaer °^gI~"^XpiVAI. $200.t00.
,NCO«E IN II.O. . j^^^
J
Total UaUUUea, includlns capital I 289.7a3.St
"*** ^,1k8 AN6PR«Vu«8:iiiiBuUE|^^^
•Fire rtik^ wrllt.n during Uie year ''"'T^I'iT, 2
Premiums receded Ui<-reon . ... .... .^■■- ■ '•" ;iJ-3
Net amount In forc-e at end of "^e >ear » 2 «20 .^^
•— Including buslneas other Uian Marine ana i»
^"^ BUSINESS IM MINNESOTA IN igi*.
(Including reinsurance received and deducUng «»
insurance placed.) ^^ ^,^ Aggit«.»*
Risk, written »''*?^I2?2 '-"iilnS
p4miums received *S!2 ?J »-5"»«
Lo3«e incurred a'aMM
I>,»es paid lt67 84*ir» "WW
Am/Hint at risk 1,467,B4-.UW
SUte of Mlnneeota. Department of l"»«'»j><'»-_^, ^
I Hereby Certify. . That t!.e Annual Matemetit «
th. Milwaukee German Klre Insurenre Comp:uiy, tm
above Is an absUmcU has been received and filed U
tUU D.pa.t««U M« Oul, '«'7'^^%'»«pRKUa.
OommlMlooer of Insur
i
I
III . .
r
.■11 .
1 1.
-<
tsKes^f^ iTjiii ir~i*'
DEFECTIVE PAGE
lai \\ - . .
t"*^—
.^^SCBr
12
Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911,
NEWS OF THE NORTHWEST
WILL BUNCH
THEIRKICKS
Traveling Men Making Brain-
erd Their Headquarters Have
Formed Growlers' Club.
Better Railroad Service and
Longer Hotel Sheets Are
Among Things Sought.
Brain<-nl. Minn.. April 17. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Traveling men vf the
city who reside here or make their
headquarters in Brainerd have formed
a social olub for mutual protection to
make their complaints more effective.
The following oflkials were chosen,
but none would divulge the meaning of
the mysterious letters preceding the
names of the officers: C. W. L)., Charles
Orpel of Puluth; G. of B.. Walter Kills
Of Minnt-apoli.^; A. D. II., W. F. Kunitz;
C. G., \V. F. Urcuti. Among those on
the charter list are George ililiiard,
V. v. Cocks. William 1'. Cruse. S. B.
Chrit^tophcr, rcrcy Voung, L. M. Sliul-
stad. K. M. ^Iyl)ra. K. H. ^?cott. Harry
ATatluws. tJus Newgord, Charles Peter-
son and Frank Wriglit.
Thf club makes no bones about the
matter when it states that it will en-
deavor to get tlie Northern I'acitic local
freight to stop at L>eerwood and not
skip through, as it sometimes happens,
and leave a drummer marooned In
Deerwood until tiic midnight passen.ger
luavcs In sight. Consiilerable com-
plaint I'.as been done about short bed
sheets, about towels and pillow cases,
and a committee has been selected to
draw up a polite ultimatum and pre-
sent it to some of the offending hotel?-'.
• As one enthusiastic member of the
club expressed it: *l?elieve me, fel-
lows, it s much more effective to do
your growling or roaring in a bunch
than individually."
Autuiiiubile Otvners Organize.
Automobile owners and drivers of
the county have taken the preliminary
stei'S to comi)lete an organization to
priimote good roads in the country and
good streets In the city, to map out tlie
best routes in the county and vicinity
as a guide to visiting autoists and to
afliliate with the automobile clubs of
other cities. IJ. C. Lane was temporary
chairman and P. W. Donovan tempo-
rary secretary. The committee on or-
ganization is James M. Elder, E. C.
Bane, Henry Kosko of Brainerd and
H. J. Hage of Deerwood. The com-
mittee on by-laws is J. P. Ernster. F.
A. Farrar and 1'. W. Donovan. An-
other meeting will be held on April 1»
FER(i IS TaUS BREWERY
SAYS ORDINANCE NOT LEGAL.
a plea of not guilty, and its defense i were: A. E. Skorish & Sons, mens fur-
nishings; Wearftne Manufacturing com-
pany, jobbers and manufacturers of fur
coats; Broderick & Co., leather novel-
ties.
The cause of the fire is unknown.
The building is In the heart of the
St. Paul Jobbing district.
will be that the city charter amend
ment, for violating the provisions of
whieh it has been indicted, is invalid
for tlie reason that It conflicts with
the state law.
HOUGHTON GETS
FINAL CONTEST
Declamatory and Oratorical
Competition There Friday
Evening, April 28.
Houghton, Mich., April 17. — (Special
to The Herald.) — All of the sectional
high school oratorical and declamatory
contests to choose representatives of
the different sections of Upper Michi-
gan to take part in the contests for
first honors of the peninsula and decide
on representatives for the northern part
of the state in tiie contests with rep-
resentatives of the Southern peninsula,
have been completed.
The upper peninsula contest will be
held at Houghton Friday evening.April
28. The students who will participate
are as follows: Western district — Ora-
ton, "In Glorious I'eace," Marion Ilass-
mussen, Menominee; declamation, "A
Vision of War," Clara L,hot«, Menomi-
nee. Central district — Oration, "The
New South" ( Grady >, Jam»^s Btckman,
Marquette; declamation, "The Great
American Question," Constance Cleary,
Mar(iuette. Copijer country section —
Oration, "Gustavus Adolphus," Peter
Mihelich, Calumet; declamation, "Thurs-
ton's Plea for Cuba." Irving Toplon,
Kake Linden. The Eastern section, in-
clnding all schools east of Marquette,
will also be represented, but the names
of the contestants and their orations
and declamations have not been an-
nounced.
COURTHOUSE HAS
VERY CLOSE CALL
Hubbard County Building at
Park Rapids Scorched
Sunday.
Park Rapids, Minn., April 17. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Fire broke out
in the basement of the Hubbard county
courthouse' here about noon Sunday,
gained lieadway and tlireatened tne
destruction of the building. Prompt
action by the fire department contined
the fire to tlie basement, and it was
soon extinguished. It originated from
wood near a boiler. Damage was con-
fined to the basement.
a seven-weeks' tour of the West and
Middle West. As he stepped off a
train from CMcago to take an automo-
bile.for Oyst*r Bay, he came into con-
tact with a drowd of outgoing Eastern
visitors who set up a cheer.
KILLS HUSBAND WITH AX.
USE DYNAMITE
DESTROYING DAM
Fergus Falls, Minn., April 17. — The
Fergus Falls brewery, which was in-
dicted for illegal liquor selling, entered
DRINK ALWAYS
BRINGSJSASTER
Creates Craving W hich Nothing But
More Drink Will Satisfy.
DRINKER MIST HAVE HELP.
Obstruction in Red River Near
Grand Forks Is Blown
Out of Way.
Orand Forks, N. D., April 17. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Superintendent
of Waterworks John Lunseth has had
a crew of men busy for several days
dynamlltng the city water dam located
in the Ked River of the North, directly
below the water plant.
The task of destroying the dam
has been no small one and dozens of
powerful charges of the explosive had
to be used before the mass was torn
in pieces and floated out of the way.
L.a.si fall the water level in the river
became so low that it was found
positively necessary to construct the
dam, in order to have the purity of the
water within a safe range. The city
council authorized the dams construc-
tion and it was built In a short time
and answered the purpose admirably.
The L'nited States government does
not allow a navigable stream to be
blocked by any obstructions whatever
and the big steamboats will begin
plying back and forth on the river to-
day, so the city offiicals decided to
have all obstructions out of their wav
in seasonable time and the work of
destruction was carried out this week.
The water Is now at Qulte a high level
in the river and the filter can nlcelv
handle the impurities at tlie present
stage.
Tbe dam built by the city of East
Grand Forks on the Red LAke river
will probably be kept where it is.
None of the steamboats navigate on
the Red Lake river and if that is the
case, the government will probably not
order the structure removed.
FIREMEN HAVE CLOSE CALL.
Carried Down Three Stories W heu
Bottineau Landmark Burns.
Botlneau, N. D., April 17. — A fire
which broke out at 3 o'clock Saturday
afternoon as the result of tiie explosion
of a gasoline stove totally destroyed
the oldest building in this city, a
flame structure which was the first
notel in the old town of Bottineau and
was moved to the present site in 18S7.
Three firemen, C Furguson, Fred
Beyers and Duncan McArthur, had a
narrow escape when the upper lloor
caved In with them and buried them
In the debris. They escaped, liowever,
with a few bruises — none serious.
PETITION^UGHTON BOARD.
Canadia;i Soo Woman Slays Him
Before ChiJdree During Quarrel.
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., April 17. — Mrs.
Peter Staple* of this place is held In
the district »il liere as the result of
the murder fate Sunday of her hus-
band. It is said tliat she killed him
with an ax while he was stooping and
her four small children stood near.
"Yes, I killed him, and now I am
willing to die" is a statement the po-
lice claim Mrs. Staples made when ar-
rested. The crime is thought to have
been the outcome of a family quarrel
five months ago, when Stap!es was al-
leged to have slightly stabbed his wife.
MINER KILLS HIMSELF
IN MINE IN MONTANA.
Philipsburg, Mont., April 17. — Vasco
Brojovich, an Austrian mnier, met
death in an abandoned crosscut In the
Granite Bl-Metallic mlno here.
When the day shift went on In the
morning the two leasers found scati-
tered remains of Brojovich. Death had
been caused by the explosion of dyna-
mite. Both arms and legs were torn
from the body, and from its position
and the fact that the dead man nad
been despondent for some cause lately,
it is believed that he committed sui-
cide.
the disease for the past year or more.
He was about 30 years of age. He had
been in this country about three years,
he having come to America from Fin-
land.
Ishpemlng — George Gelger of Duluth,
formerly of tliis city. Is spending a few
days in the city visiting friends.
Ontonagon — Julius Lindstedt, owner
of Recreation farms, near Matchwood,
has purchased a carload of drain tile
which he will use to drain a forty-acre
tract on his farm; preparatory to seed-
ing It down with alfalfa.
Calumet — At the last regular meet-
ing of the board of education of the
Calumet public school. District No. 1,
teachers for the ensuing year were re-
elected. There will be few changes in
the staff of teachers for the Calumet
schools, only twelve of the present
teachers having made no applications
for reappointment.
Hancock — Eugene Guistat, formerly
of Calumet but now of South Range,
was arrested by Deputy United States
Marshal Mosher of Marquette Friday,
charged with conducting a saloon with-
out the required special tax liceiVe.
Guistat was arraigned before Justice C.
O. Olivier of Hancock and was bound
over to the next term of the United
States circuit court at Marquette
Calumet — Miss Lily Manley of the
Highway, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Manley, has been named the first
honor student of the garduatlng class
of the Calumet high school.
otter Lake Farmei*s Ask for a Sep-
arate District.
Chassell, Micii., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The farmers of the Otter
Lake district, the southern portion of
i'ortage township, this county, an<l one
of the richest farming districts in
Northern Michigan, are petitioning the
Hougliton county board of supervisors
to set aside tlieir district as a separate
township.
The Otter Lake farmers have peti-
tioned time and again for a direct road
or highway to Houghton, so that thev
might market their produce. The
length of the proposed new highway
would be thirteen miles. At present,
however, the farmers of Otter Lake
must drive to Houghton by way of
Chassell, a distance of twenty-four
miles.
St. Cloud Cyclone AnnlverMary.
St. Cloud, Minn., April 17. — Sunday
was the twenty-fifth anniver.sary of
tiie tornado which struck St. Cloud and
Sauk Rapids and caused seventy-four
deaths. A bride, bridegroom, bride's
motlier, and minister and his wife were
Idlled. One man was picked up bod-
ily as he left his store and the body
carried away, never to be regained.
Minneapolis and St. Paul sent a relief
corps of nineteen phvslclans under the
direction of Mayor Ames.
^^^^«^.^*^«^«^«^h^^tf^^^^krf^rf^^M
WISCONSIN BRIEFS
Bottineau IMuneer DIeii.
Bottinf-au, N. D., April 17. — Alex-
ander Stewart, one of the pioneers of
this county, died Saturday, after an
illness of six month.s.
He was born in Perthshire, Scot-
land, Nov. 11, 1828, and came to Bot-
tineau county in 1887. He leaves a
widow and eight children, most of
theni residing in this part of the state.
The funeral will be held this after-
noon from the Presbyterian church.
Htll AldM Montana Ilonpital.
Kalispel. Mont., April 17. — To aid
citizens of Kalispel in building a gen-
eral hospital, James J. Hill contributed
$1,000 to the fund of 120.000 which is
being raised by popular subscription.
GOING TO CORONATION.
Neal Cure l>estroys Cravinjr and
Lieaves Dista»!to and Aversion '
to Liquor.
There may be successful men who
are heavy drinkers, yet they are suc-
cessful in spite of ratlier than by
reason of it. The men who can drink
and be successful are so rare in
strength of character as to make them
an unsafe precedent in considering the
avcratcf man. To the average man
habitual indulgence in intoxicants Is
practically certain to result in dis-
aster. It breaks down his nerve sys-
tem. It unfits him for business. He
loses caste. He loses money. The
habit brings sorrow to his friends and
poverty, misery and deprivation to
his family. The thing to do is stop it
and stop it now. Every successive
indulgence confirms the habit and
makes it harder to break. A man
finding himself on the down grade,
however, is constantly beset with a
craving for stimulants which he in
time is no longer able to resist, for
constant indulgence not only creates
that morbid craving but also weakens
the will power so that it is impossible
to resist. He must have help. It is
such help that the Xeal three-day-
cure for the drink habit extends to
him. It takes away the craving — de-
stroys it utterly — leaves in its place a
distaste for and an aversion to liquor.
It brings about this miraculous
change in three days. This is no
rash statement for it has been demon-
strated in thousands of cases. It
matters not how long you have been
drinking or how many other treat-
ments have failed. The Neal treat-
ment will cure in just three days. It
Is safe, harmless and positive. There
are no failures. No hypodermic in-
jections are given and no powerful
or poisonous drugs are used. There
are no bad after-effects. Every pa-
tient receives a plain contract agree-
ing to effect a perfect cure in three
days — and to the entire satisfaction
of the patient — or return the full fee
paid at the end of treatment. If you
are afflicted with the drink habit and
really want to be fre»'d, or if you
are interested a friend or relative
who needs treatment, write to the
Neal institute Co., corner Belknap
and Seventh streets, Superior, Wis.,
for their free booklet giving full In-
formatitm and a copy of their con-
tract. Jt will be mailed to you under
a plain sealed envelope and every-
thing will be strictly confidential.
You can be treated at the Superior
Institute, or at St. Paul, Minn., Insti-
tute 676 Dayton avenue, or the Min-
neapolis, Minn., Institute, corner
Fourth avenue south and Seventh
street, whichever happens to be the
most convenient to you.
PLAN NEW HATCHERY
AT CURRY'S POINT
WOl Propagate Sturgeon
Spawn and Be Only One
ot Kind in Country.
Baudette, Minn.. April 17. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Arrangements are
under way for the operation of a stur-
geon hatchery. This matter is being
taken up by the fishery department of
the state and will be located at Curry's
point at the mouth of the Rainy river.
Tills will be the only hatchery of Its
kind in the United states. The work
Many Ipper Peninsula People Plan
Attending Big Event.
Calumet, Mich.. April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Arrangements are being
made for two special trains to leave
Calumet and other Copper country
towns about May 20 for Montreal and
New York city, and to carry several
hundred Copper country people who in-
tend to go to England for the corona-
tion ceremonies attending the crown-
ing of King George V of England.
Large parties have already organized
for the trip.
SCIENTISTS HAVE MEET.
North Dakota Academy of Science
Elects Its Officers.
Grand Forks, N. D.. April 17. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The North Da-
kota Academy of Science held their an-
nual meeting at the university Satur-
day and although the attendance in
point of numbers was not unusual, the
interest In the splendid papers read
and the discussions that followed, were
instructive and beneficial to say the
least.
Prof. Waldron of the agricultural
college acted as chairman and read the
paper of Prof. J. H. Sheppard, due to
the absence of Prof. Sheppard on
pressing business.
After the program was completed a
business session was held and the fol-
lowing officers elected: President,
Lynn R. McMullen. Valley City; vice
president, H. F. Bergman, Fargo; sec-
retary-treasurer, G. A. Abbott, Uni-
versity; executive committee, M. A.
Brannon, University; J. H. Sheppard,
A. C, and E. F. Chandler, University'.
MONDOVI, WIS.* MAN "
SAW LINCOLN KILLED.
Eau Claire, Wis, April 17. — Among
those who were in Ford's theater on
the night Lincoln was assassinated was
Herbert M. Nogle. late seregant of
Company A, One Hundred and Forty-
ago. Fishery experts are confident of
winning out this time, however as the
big Lake of the Woods Is an ideal
breeding place and the natural home
of this big game fish.
Baudette and vicinity have telephone
connections with Winnipeg and West-
ern Canada. The Manitoba government
has completed its line to the boundary
about seven miles west of Warroad,
Minn., from which place the local com-
pany, Fo.\ & Jowett, have made connec-
tions.
Seed for Homenteadem.
A carload of the free seeds for the
homesteaders who lost by lire arrived
at this place Saturday. The order is
about 66 per cent of what will be re-
quired, but the people will be thank-
ful for this much aid. Mayor Williams
lias charge of the distribution and will
be assisted by Lieut. Foster of Duluth
Minn.
Herbert Bibbin, the cook who ran
amuck In the woods near Pitt, Minn.,
about a week ago. was found to be of
unsound mind by Judge of Probate
Clark on Saturday. He was at once
committed to Fergus Falls in charge
of Deputy Sheriff Cahlll.
FIRE LOSER DROPS DEAD.
Several Firemen Injured in St. Paul
Blaze Early Sunday.
St. Paul, Minn., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Alfrom E. Skorish, 67
years old, of the firm of A. E. Skorish
& Sons, died of heart failure after fire
had destroyed the building occupied by
the firm at 175-177-179 East Fourth
street early Sunday. He was over-
come while watching the fire, removed
to his home, 643 Olive street, and died
almost Immediately.
Several firemen were injured by the
collapse of the roof of the three-story
brick building while at work on the
fire.
Nicholas Remakel, Truck company
No. 1, had several ribs broken and a
shoulder wrenched and possibly In-
ternal injuries. He was taken to St.
Joseph's Iiospital. He probably will
recover.
Assistant Chief Miles McNally was
also injured.
The fire caused a loss of about 130,-
000, mainly from smoke and water.
The flrma occupying tlie building
DAKOTA BRIEFS
Sioux Falls, S. D. — Detectives in the
employ of the Great Northirn railroad
have as yet been unable to run to earth
the unknown person or persons who a
few days ago placed a charge of dyna-
mite on the track of the company at a
point about Hiree miles south of Sioux
Falls.
Minot, N. D. — Commencing about May
1. Alfred -Blaisdell of Minot and Attor-
ney Francis J. Murphy of Kenmare will
form a partnership for the general
practice of law in the city of Minot.
Oakes, N. D. — The frame work of the
Vinkle house is still standing, but the
interior is very badly damaged from
fire, smoke and water as a result of the
recent fire. It looked for awhile as if
the fire would get beyond control, but
heroic work for two hours on the part
of the firemen and citizens saved the
building from a total wreck as well as
saved the adjoining property.
Devils Lake, N. D. — Col. Joseph M.
Kelly, president of the Farmers' rail-
road, has returned from St. Paul, where
he has spent some time looking after
railroad matters. The colonel says that
his company has not entirely aban-
doned the Idea of extending their lino
into Canada this year, and that the
question will be decided shortly.
Kenmare, N. D. — A sweepstakes
tournament of the Kenmare Gun club
will be held here April 25 and a most
intertsting program has been arranged.
There will be ten trials of fifteen tar-
gets each. The entrance fee In the reg-
ular program is J1.40 each and fl each
in the sweepstakes extra.
Minot. N. D.— Mrs. Carl T. Jacbson,
aged 65, who lived in Minot for twenty
years, died suddenly at Grand Forks
Wednesday after an operation. She Is
survived by her husband and eight
sons, three of whom, D. R., Carl and
Bertie, live in Minot. The others are
Andrew, who lives at Burlington, Sena-
tor Martin Jacobson of Cut Bank, Mont.,
and Erlck of Rolla and two otiiers sons
at Sweet Grass, Mont., who are ranch-
ing.
Langdon, N. D. — William Drier, a
pioneer of Hay township, badly crippled
with rheumatism for several years and
for several months unable to leave the
house, has been taken by friends to Mt.
Clemens, Mich., for treatment.
Grand Forks — Contrary to reports in
circulation at t?he present time to the
effect that Kem Temjde patrol will
unite with El Zagcl of Fargo Is getting
a special train to Rochester. N. Y., the
local Shriners will unite with the Oz-
man patrol of St. Paul and the Fargo
Shriners will join the Zurah patrol of
Minneapolis.
Devils Lake, N. D. — Company "M"
underwent their annual inspection
Thursday by Lieut. George A. Herbst of
the Fourteenth U. S. Infantry, who is
temporarily detailed as Inspection offi-
cer, and Maj. R. R. Steadman, military
secretary to the governor.
every detail of that eventful evening
are indelibly impressed on his mind.
AMERICAN HANDLE CO. TO
HAVE HOUGHTON PLANT.
Houghton. Mich.. April 17. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The American Handle
company -will establish a factory and
big plant in this city If certain Induce-
ments will be made by the town. The
wishes of the company will be com-
plied with as far as possible, it Is said,
and it is expected work on building the
plant will be started before July. The
company Is now located at Power,
Mich. President Stratton of the com-
pany, it Is said, has his eye on hard
wood enough in this section to run his
proposed plant fifty years, working
forty men the year around.
•
Roosevelt at Home.
New York, April 17. — Ex-Presldent
Roosevelt reached home last night from
j * ^^ 'ff^^^^^V^^^^V^^V^P ^^%^^V^^\^^^^^\^P^^^^^^^\^^V^^^^P^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I From Thin to Plump
Girls.
The expressions of happiness and
gratitude of several of his young lady
patients for whom h«e prescribed, the
recently successful flesh forming prod-
uct, known as three grain hypo-nu-
clane tablets. Is related by a physician
in one of the medical publications and
it comes as a surprise to the ordinary
layman to learn the heart throbs of
distress which seems to effect so many
young people who are abnormally thin.
Also to know that the weight can be
so readily Increased by th^ use, regu-
larly for several months, of this pecul-
iarly named preparation, now obtain-
able of the best physicians and apothe-
cary shops in sealed packages with
complete Instructions for self-adminis-
tration.
Stops a headache or acute pain
quickly. Blackburn's Pain - Away -
Pills. Try them.
Iron Mountain— On Friday and Sat-
urday next the Dul'ont Powder com-
pany will give a demonstration of
stump blasting on the farm of Slgfrld
Hassell, three and one-half miles
southwest of Iron Mountain in the
town of Homestead. The demonstra-
tion will take place at 9 o'clock In
the morning of both days and will be
interesting to anyone who has land to
clear of stumps.
Hougton — James Burke and other
enthusiasts are organizing a city roller
hockey league. It is expected that at
least four teams will be organized
among the regular patrons of the
Amphidrome. The game is a new one,
being similar to both roller polo and
hockey.
Hancock — A contract has been let to
Eric Anderson of West Hancock for
the erection of a sand handling plant
to be used for loading stamp sand on
boats. The conveyor will be built at
Franklin Beach, Point Mills, for the
Asphalt Block Pavement company of
Toledo, Ohio.
Calumet — Mrs. Marlanna Lenzl, aged
70 years and a resident of the village
of Red Jackett the past thlrty-slx
years, died at 11 o'clock Wednesday
night after an Illness of about one
year. A complication of diseases and
the Ills attending old age were the
cause of death. The deceased was
very well known. Mrs. Lenzi's hus-
band died a number of years ago.
Escanaba — M. Perron, who owns a
large acreage of agricultural land in
this vicinity, which is rapidly being
purchased by new settlers. Is con-
structing a modern cheese factory.
Hancock — Peter Burg, Sr., died at his
home Friday at Hurontown after a
lengthy Illness. He was 65 years of
age and was a life-long resident of
Hurontown. Up to several months ago
he was employed at the Isle Royale
mine, but sickness compelled him to
remain at home. He Is survived by a
wife and nine children.
Crystal Falls — On next Wednesday
the electors will decide if this county
shall bond for good roads. If a majority
of those voting on that day say that
bonds to the amount of |150,000 may
be issued we will get the roads; if not
the matter will be delayed.
Negaunee — Jalmer Hanasllta, who
Friday afternoon was taken down to
the county hospital, died shortly after
arriving at the institution from ttlber-
culosis. He bad been suffering from
Washburn — The Commercial dock at
Washburn was considerably injured by
Ice Friday, the east end of the dock
being torn up and timbers and plank
piled up ten feet high. The west end
of the dock was lifted about five feet,
and big timbers were broken like
matches.
Ashland — The county board will meet
on the 9th of May, In adjourned ses-
sion. Already there are two candi-
dates in the field for chairman, Frank
Helderer of Butternut, and Dave Mc-
Cune of Ashland. The present chair-
man, Frank Staadt is from outside,
and there is some argument in favor
of a city man for chairman this time.
Madison — For the perpeuatlon of
Commodore Perry's victory over the
English In the battle of Lake Erie the
stale has been asked before a joint
informal meeting of the assembly and
senate, to appropriate |5u,oOO for the
centennial celebration to be held at
I'ut-ln-Bay, Ohio, from July 1 to Oct.
13 next year.
Mllwaukef» — Thirteen heads of de-
partments of the Milwaukee Electric
Railway & Light company attended a
farewell banquet to John I. Beggs at
the Hotel Pfister. The former presi-
dent and general manager of the com-
pany was jiresented with a bronze tab-
let, bearing an Inscription expressing
the appreciation of the donors of his
work In Milwaukee.
Round Lake — Surrounding a gypsy
encampment on the shores of Round
lake, two Chicago detectives Friday
led a rural posse in a vain search for
the kidnapers of 5-year-old Elsie Par-
onibek, missing from her Chicago home
since Saturday.
Bayfield — Mr. Barry of Phillips, dep-
uty grand patron of the order of the
Eastern Star of Wisconsin has reor-
ganized and instituted the Bayfield
chapter of the now "NTasonic temple of
Bayfield lodge, No. 215.
nell for the pur'''.a8« of
property here i.ow occ
Mathews family. Conside
The Duffys will move in
home about May 1.
Stillwater — Good Frldf
served as a holiday at the
In the morning in the chs
ous lecture wi'h good sug
delivered by Prof. G. W. E
was a band concert after t
ercises and the pri>u:iers
the usual .lollday prlvlleg
an extra lette.' and served
dinner than usual.
Fosston — Peter Dunrud
the City Meat Market
dressed pig that tipped
640 pounds. This is one c
hogs ever brOiight Into F<
Mcintosh — A. M. Dunt
tendent of the Mcintosh st
past few years, has been «
superlntendency of the scl
tlcello, and it is reported
accepted the position.
Red Lake Falls — Miss
has resigned her position
in the local posifoflice and
Thief River Falls, where
cepted a position in the
register of deed.^. Miss
will succeed to Miss Han
in the local office about Ji
Bemldjl — Although wei
tlons have be« n such tha
on the new Soo Line-Mln
ternational railroad unio
been alm'cst impossible
a residence
upled by the
ration, $1,300.
to their new
y was ob-
state prison,
pel a humor-
gestions was
. Hill. There
he chapel ex-
. were given
ts of writing
with a better
brought to
Thursday a
he scales at
f the largest
fc'Ston.
on, superin-
hools for the
:lected to the
lools at Mon-
that he has
Effle Hamry
as assistant
has gone to
she has ac-
office of the
Freda Ittner
iry's position
!ne 1.
ither condl-
t rapid work
nesota & In-
n depot has
the work is
progieseing a^ wtll as could be expect-
ed. The excavating has been complet-
ed for some time, as has the building
of the foundation. The laying of the
Bedford stone baseboard has also been
finished.
Moorhead— The father cf Mr. Wood,
the man who recently died at a local
hospital, has been located at Montreal,
Can., ard it is probable that the re-
mains will be shipped there for final
interment.
Fergus Falls — The city council re-
jected the .lalms of Mrs. Lorenlz Bjor-
naas and Mr. ilari.son for damages. Mrs.
Bjornaas broke her leg by falling on an
icy sidewalk, and asked that the city
pay her $1,500, and Mr. Hansons team
was frightened at a ski slide while he
was coming Into town.
Grand M&rais — Fred Bramer contem-
platej; the erection of a new store
building during the coming summer to
be located on the corner next to the
bank building.
Mo.-a — James Walsh, aged 59, a na-
tive of Canada, who formerly lived at
Stillwater, was buried la<5t week. He
left two daughters, Mrs. Lester Rollins
of Duluth, and one son, Joseph of Knife
Lake town.
St. Cloud — The contract for laying
five blocks of mains for the St. Joseph
water works system was let by the
council of that village. A Cold Springs
firm was awarded the contract, having
bid to do the work. Including excava-
tions and laying pipe, for $2,200.
^
t'
■^ _,
V^
MINNESOTA BRIEFS
MWWVW^V^'^'^'^^^^^'^^^^*'^^^*^^'^^'
Rush City — That Rush City has a
strong corps of teachers Is evidenced
by the fact that three superintendents
of other cities have made personal
visits here with a view to obtaining
teachers. The offers of more pay than
is paid here have been made. Nearly
all of the corps will remain.
St. Cloud — J. E. C. Robinson left for
Hudson, Wis., Friday, where he will
take two weeks' rest upon the advice
of his physician. Before leaving he ap-
pointed J. E. Jenks as city attorney in
Ills &,^s^riC6«
Hinckley — What was probably the
smallest colt ever born In Pine county
arrived in Brookpark recently. It
weighed but thirty-one pounds at birth
and stood only twenty-five inches high.
It is a pure Shetland and is owned by
C. E. Camp, cashier of the Brookpark
State bank.
Braham — F. A. Duffy closed a deal
last week with P. M. Johnson of Cor-
N
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II
1
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cc
II
Monday,
B^
•,Smms9smm^
i
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
18
LATEST SPORTING IJJEWS OF THE DAY
SOX ARE AT
FORTWAYNE
Recruits Dropped Three
Straight Games to Mans-
field Team.
Darby Thinks He Has Five
Stayers in Present
Squai
Mansfield. Ohio. April 17 —(Special to
Th- Herald >— The Duluth White Sox
recruits left for Fort Wayne. Ind., last
evening after having dropped three
s'ralght games to the Mansfield team.
The recrutf-d made their most credit-
able showing of the aeries yesterday,
when they battled gamely against the
Strong local club, losing out by a score
of 4 to 2.
Higley. who pi
day's game
1.1 ir oriil ni:i elul fc»Yt *- .-^..a —
was
mix-
a double and a single. The crowd was
so large it overflowed into the outtteld.
clirt^o 00 1000 0 00—1 a 2
Pittsbu'-g 10021000 0—4 0 0
Batteries — Brown and Archer; Cam-
nitz and CHbson. Umpires— ODay and
Brennan.
Standing
Won
Detroit *
New Y ork ^
Washington ^
St. Louis *
Cleveland f
Boston \
Chicago j:
Philadelphia ^
Teams.
Lost.
0
0
1
3
S
2
3
3
Pet.
1 . 000
1.000
.657
.400
.400
.333
.250
.000
COMMENTS AND OPINIONS
ON THE SPORTING PARADE
Saturday's Results.
New York. 7; Philadelphia. 4.
Boston. 6; Washington, 2.
Detroit. 2; Chicago. 0.
Cleveland. 7; St.
Louis. 3.
Games Today.
Boston at Philadelphia.
New Y'ork at Washington.
Chicago at St. Louis.
Many Picking New York to
Win in American— Wax-
ing Fat in Australia —
•*Jawn" Is Better— CiviUz-
ing the Sport Writers-
Women in Baseball.
BROWNS LOSE TO SOX
IN OPENER AT HOME.
ing luts
to show up
at third ani
alio appear
thinks he has
crowd. Fisher,
and Rir.ehart
bed a part of Satur-
worked four innings yVs-
lerday and did not give a .«»lngle hit.
lller was not hit hard, but be
wild and Mansfield got to hira by
wild am aa passes. Leber continued
well at short, while Brlttm
Klnehart in the out field
to be the goods.. Dajb>'
five stayers in this
Brittln. Leber. Hlgley
The veterans wlU Join
the sauad at Rockford.
The score of yesterday's game:^ ^
a .JA 3 0 0 10 0 0 0 X — 4 5 2
rubfth •••••.•.2 0^0 000 0 0-2 5 3
BaUeriA-Co:;p^r. Martin Duffy and
Batte.K.-. -. ^^gj^y ^^^1 f-isher,
April 17.— Oarby
away with the
Saturday's encoun-
al team. The Duluth
»lav-rs were out:la3sed, outplayed
P^*y V^-._. 5 1 _,»>!,>», f-aftUy looks like
8; Duluth. 1.
manager had merely a
tribe of green stuff on hand and one
in the eighth frame was their
offering of tha se.ssion. Neither
t^ie locil nine a seasoned crew^
two veterans ^^''^'^'^'^ ^J^ .J^^
lineut). It was more of a try-
■ n \Twn .itiintitv.
Sol
I rtiil«. Mo April 17. — Chicago won
^•""^ game of the opening series
local team yesterday by a
to 1 Walsh struck out
In the eighth Inning Mcln-
overflow crowd and
St.
the f.rst
with the ^
score of 7
eight men.
Se^rUH^atlSn^T'catc-h of Clark^
i,riotir- . .^?"."o^O I 0 0 0 0 0 0-?- "t- 2
rbicfeo ..00204 0 150- 7 7 5
Ba^ft^rleV— Gr-gory. Pfeffer and
Claike: Walsh and silllvan. Umpires
— O'Loughlin and IMneen^
TIGERS DEFEAT NAPS
WITH RECRl IT PITCHING.
(BY BRUCE.)
p IN the American leagu»
there are a lot of em
picking tha New York
team for the flag. Right
here In Duluth quite
few of the fans
come to the belief
the Hal Chase agg
tlon Is destined to the lead the
men to the tape.
Admitting that the New
cans look strong. It
a
have
that
5rega-
Mack-
feet of high class ^tiiff ' dealing with
Darwin and some 6f the breezy re-
marks oi Kid Voltaire- and Young
Cliaucer as well as trailing along with
Old Man Hume, llttld .Sh^Uey and ao^no
otiier names hard to pronounce and
even more difClcut to spe'.l. has now
become quite the rage with the sport-
lii" scribes.
With the spread of the uplift move-
ment, which has included the drlvmg
out of bruad territory of the works of
Laura Jean Libby and Bertha M. Clay,
we may hope some dav to hear of Mr.
Thomas Sharkey oassing opinion on the
old and much mooted question of the
lady or the tiger, or glvinar a treatise
on the evolution of the soul.
So lar tlie only evolution of the sole
that Mr Sharkev has had any experi-
ence with is elevating stupefied men
out of tlie Fourteeenth street em-
porium by tlie thick leatlier of his
boot.
MENEICEIS
A WHITE SOX
Big Sam Signs With Duluth
and Will Join Team
at Rockford.
WORK ON BASEBALL PARK
them
gall JP
a br.l-
Balling; Isler.
Mansfteld. Ohio.
O'Brien's Colts got
minus standing m
ter with the loi_
were out:la3sed,
and defeated, which really
this in figures — MansnaiUj^
The Duluth
ih
run
only
wa.i
Only
Ohloan's
rolt Mich.. April 17.— With Lively.
ruit: pitching. Detroit defeated
ind vesterdav 5 to 2. _Dout>ies
scored Cleve-
:h or In
and un-
a
of
out for Uie unknown quantit>.
Some weather! A J^'^^P^*^®., ^^
shone down from the sky but it did
'of warm the iew loyai of loyals.
neither di I It cause much of a warm-
n-33 along the players ben
the field. It was .-old— plain
adulteratedly -so
Leber Shovrs Fine.
A little fellow by tae name of Le^f^
seamed to be the mam show and sev-
eral tide at tra.ti.ns in the production
la baseball He looks the very be.t
the crew of semi-pros to which
OBrien is giving a trial I" '^.-^^^ ^*
looks to be a comer. He fields In an
easy style and at the stick displayed
the only real hitting strength
Whit.3 Sox. Out of l^our times
square hd scored a double and
^'s^^,f.fral of the squad who went with
O'Brien to Akron did not accompany
the team here. They were
ITum -S-^lig, Mountain and
of Them were from Cleveland Moun
tain was frjm Broadiok. Ohio. A.l
failed to show the proper class. ^ an
U im fteldly fairly well, but was weak
«r'tb the wiUow. Score: k. ti. t..
Dul'Vh . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10—1'^ 2
winsfleM 1 0 1 0 0 1 5 Ox— 3 1 4 0
Balterl**.-^— Smith. Hamm. Higley and
± isher, Snyder. Noble. Maul. R. Smith
Detroit
Q rocr
Cleveland "yesterdav
by Lajoie and Jackson --,.,_ _-
land's runs. Dt troit bunched hits otT
W^st in th.^ first and sixth and In the
Alehth Krapp, who relieved West with
{wo men on bas.^s and no one out was
and Sheridan. ^
Giants Win Exhibition.
At Newark. N. J.— i?-i^^2
New York Nationals r in 4
Newark Eastern League i; • • -. °,.^!i ^7
Batteries— Rudolph and Hartley, L-ee.
Sykes, Flather and Cady.
York Amerl-
is rather hard to
figure where the dope places
ahead of the Athletics^ in the
for the gonfalon. Hal Chase is
liant and brainy Playe""-^ '^"«, •':^,v ^'t
greatest players and quickest thinkeis
in baseball; yet he will, lave to show
class as a manager ana =io far he is
ni«relv an e.xperinient.
There is no experiment in the case
Connie Mack. The long-head-d
of
the
the
where
and paid
Philadelphia Irishman is one of
master minds of the game, one of
niost successful men in an age
successful men are demanded
^''fn fddii'ion to the ahUUy of Mack
there is the greatest ability of the team
he has built. The machine is made
up of just enough young playeis to
g ve it the dash and speed while the
presence of the older heads has lent
balance and coolness under fire. m
the past the Athletics have been a..-
cused of being quitters, but in the race
last season tT»ey were cleared of the
stigma and odium of being considered
in the yellow class. . , ^,
The logical conclusion. In v ew of
the wonderful showing made by the
Athletics last season, also taking Into
con-sfderation that the team has quite
a few youngsters on It. would be that
Mack should repeat. There is also the
uifcertain m baseball.- the wlucl. makes
the calculations of men look ^j? f«^ :
Ish as a Chinaman In love, "rhat is
one of the reasons why baseball la ho
happy, and another reason why we are
all on the Job every day. doping
ing. doping. Just trying
brain jump
Women Have at Last Broken In.
HE coming into part ownership
of one of the St. Louis clubs
by a w^oman must have drawn
three enthusiastic cheers from
thf* militant suffragists. Again,
there is the chance for
great reforms upon the part
of this woman
Suppose that she should Insist that
the members of her team should not
chew tobacco, as some players do. That
would be a reform striking and ghastly
and wotild cause a troubled sigh to
come from the heaving heart of the to-
bacco trust. ..!...»,..
If this woman ■wa.s inclined to be tne
l^ast bit finicky, she might even go
further and Insi.st that the members of
her team need not slide, yea. even re-
fuse to permit them to slide for
lest they get their uniforms
and jnessy.
She might insist that the players say
•I have it." instead of u-l"g the o'^
time worn expression of 1 got it.
There are many things that miglit ap
peal to the
fancy
serve
Duluth Man s Signature Means
Added Strength to
Team's Hitting.
a
all
base,
dirty
the ethical side of the
and It win be Interesting
Ju.-^t what will result.
lady's
to ob-
of
to
the
the
two
Kohl,
Allen.
Van
Mo.^t
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
on the other
d jp-
to get the
fellow.
TONIGHT
Given By
Adams Athletic
Attociation.
LINCOLN PARK AUDITORIUM
Ojor riohts retervei.
DANCE
Flaaten's orchestra. Tickets 30c.
Flesh in Australia.
Standing
Teams.
T<ansas City.
Minneapolis .
Columbus
Indianapolis
Milwaukee ..
Louisville . . ■
Toledo
St. Paul ....
Won.
.. 3
.. 4
.. 1
.. 2
.. 2
.. 1
.. 1
. . 0
Lost.
0
1
1
3
3
2
3
1
Pet.
11)00
.800
.500
.400
.400
.333
.250
.000
Saturday'
4;
Results.
and Texter and
Redman.
-♦-
CLEVELAND BALL PLAYERS
ATTEND JOSS' FUNERAL.
Detroit, Mich. April 17.— The ganie
scheduled here today between tne Oe-
ttoit and Olovelind American League
b\.s«»b\ll teara.s has been postponed In
crder that the Cleveland players may
att.»nJ the funeral if Adrian C. J'Jjs,
lornwr Cle'eland player. In Toledo.
President Johnson of the American
league. granted permission for a
postnonement late last night. Practi-
cally the entire Cleveland team has
gone to Toledo to attend the funeral.
Milwaukee, 4; Louisville. 2.
Kan.sa.s City. 8: Indianapolis.
Columbus. 2; Minneapolis. 1
Toledo. 3; St. Paul. 2
third.)
2.
(called in
he
like
diffi- I
and
Cham-
Games Today.
the
Score:
t^'olumbus
Minneapolis
Won.
8t. Loui.i 2
Plttaburg 2
rhilad-ilphia 2
Prooklyn 2
l<.">ston 2
K e w York , .... 1
Cincinnati '■ *
Chicago 0
Saturday's Results.
Chicago. 3; St. Louis. 3.
New York. " "
Cincinnati,
Boston. 5;
6; Brooklyn. 2.
3: Pittsburg, 2.
Philadelphia. 4
♦
Minneapolis at Columbus.
Milwaukee at Louisville.
St. Paul at Toledo.
Kansas City at Indianapolis.
GOOD HlTTlYli WINS
FOR MINNEAPOLIS TEAM.
Columbus. Ohio. April 17.— Minneap-
olis won from Columbus yesterday. 8
{o 0. through superior hitting. Three
infield singles, a pass and a clean drive
bv Ferris decided the game In the
seventh. First Baseman Downs was
Injured In preliminary practice and is
fourth Columbus player disabled.
Iv. rl. Hi.
00004000 1 — 5 8 2
■.00210032 0—8 15 2
Batte'rles— Packard. Sitton and Be-
mls Pea .ter, ?age. Waddell and Owens
Tnl' Smith. Umpires-Handiboe and
Owens. ^
BLUES GIVE WILD
PIT! HERS GOOD SUPPORT.
Indianapolis. Ind.. April 17.— Kansaf
City won from IndianapoU-j yesterdaj.
5 to 3, In an exciting and hard fought
contest. The visitors "^ed t^hree pltc^i-
ers. all of whom were wild, giving a
total of eleven bases on balls,
their support was sensational,
aeer Shay of Kansas City was
ed from the field by the police
quest of Umpire Blerhalter foi
too strong language In disputing a de-
cision. Score:
Indlanaoplls 00 0
but
Man-
escort-
by re-
for using
Games Today.
Pittsburg at
Brooklyn at
Philadelphia
St. Louis at
Chicago.
New York.
at Boston-
Cincinnati.
SALLEE IS STRONG AND
REDS ARE HUMBLED.
H. E.
8 3
11 1
R
10 2 0 0 0 — 3
K^ansas City 10020010 1 — 5
Batterles-Schlltzer and Carlsch;
Maddox. Selbert. Powell
Umpires — Bierhalter
and
and James.
Weddldge.
Cincinnati. Ohio. April 17. — Cincin-
nati lost to St. Louis by a score of 2
to 5 yesterday. Sallee was In fine form
and had no trouble during any part ot
the game. St Louis hit Gasper hard.
Bresnahan's batting and the fielding
of the entire St. Louis team featured.
Score "• "• ^•
St Louis 00100 2020—5 9 0
Cin-^nnatl ......OOOOOpiOl-2 5 3
Batteries— Sallee and Bresnahan;
Gasper. Keefe and Clarke. McLean. Uni-
pij-es— Finneran and Rtgler.
BIG CROWD W ATCHES
PIRATES DEFEAT CUBS.
Chh-ago. April 17.— Pittsburg defeat-
ed Chicago 4 to 1 here yesterday In
the first game of the series. Chicago s
one run waa made in a base on balls.
were
Baskette
hits cou-
■M
HOTEL
HOLLAND
.„ European.,,
ABSOLUTELY FIRB5-PROOP.
Clab Breakfaat. Popular Priced.
LumeheoK and Dloner.
Mualc at Dinner, 6 to 8 P. M.
BNTERTAINMERfT NIGHTLY
A»^E:R lOiSO.
ST. PAUL LOSES FIRST
GAME TO MUD HENS.
Toledo. Ohio. April IT.-The Toledo
club won its first game of the season
yesterday afternoon by winning from
rit Paul: 10 to 9. The visitors
unable to do anything with
until the eighth, when ti ^ ^.
nled with Butler's errors made them
dangeTous., It was the opening g^me
^olefo ''""'•. . "oV<> 0 6 10 0 x-1? U- "^6
St Paul' ■ '. ■. ...00001007 1-9 10 3
Ratterles— Baskatte. Slapjilcka and
Hart Gehring and Spencer. Umpires-
Chill and Ferguson.
BREWERS USE FIVE
PITCHERS AND LOSE.
Loulsvlll«>. Ky.. April 17.— Lotilsvllle
defeated Milwaukee in the second game
of the series yesterday by bunching
hits in the first and second innings.
Five pitchers were used by the visitors^
Four fast double plays featured the
contest. The largest crowd of the
season was In attendance. Score^ ^
r -,,i«villa 2 2 00 0 00 Ox — 4 6 i
vnuvaukle .....0000 00 0 2 0— 2 8 1
Bauerfes— Slagle and Hughes; Short,
rniisaiu Nicholson. Marlon. Graham
2nd B^^een and Marshall. Umpires-
Hayes and Eddlnger.
FLYNN AnFkAUFMANN
ARE MATCHED TO FIGHT.
Kanas City, Mo., April 17.— Jim
Fvnn the Pueblo fireman and Al
Kaufmann. the California h-?avyweighi.
were matched here yesterday to fight
ten rounds before the Grand Avenue
Athletic club during the second week
in May. The dat» wiU be decided
later.
Putting on ries
INCE one Johnny Thomps.^a
who hails from the romantic
town of Sycamore, 111., has
performed the interesting
metamorphosis of enlarging
from an indifferent ll8'J<--
welght into a middleweight,
one claiming the champlonshln of the
world, some people are wondering ir
tliere is something In the climate of
Au.stralla that adds packing to the
bones of a man. „«„.».»
When Thompson left tha gentle
shores of the American country
scaled around the 135 rnark and
Packey McFarland. found it very
cult to get some of the lighter light-
weights to meet him. One of the di.-s-
tlnct surprises of the pugilistic year
was the news wafted from Australia
way, telling us that the Sycamore
youth had i)eaten Billy Packey
was claiming the middleweight
pionship. . ,» *u .
All of the clubs are after the
Thompson man at the pre-sent time.
The same simply goes to prove that
when a man aclileves fame his .services
are wortli just about 90 per cent more.
This fellow used to beg promoters td
put him on. Now they are timidly
asking him to name his price. The
otlier day Thompson refused to sign
with Hugo Kelly, the Italian with an
Irish name, until he had been guar-
anteed $3,000 for his end.
But back to Australia- Thomp-son a
case Is the very first on record where
a flgliter has put on weight over in
the Antipodes. The re.^t of the Ameri-
can colony of fighters fared rather
badly, and years back when Kid Mc-
Coy invaded the Never Never land, he
never really did strike his gait, owing
to the peculiar climate.
It is just probable that Thompson
had some tlesii a coming — and an-
other thing Is very probable — If he
ever gives Billy Packey another fight
he Is going to have his bean frac-
tured. If he is real wise, he will get
the frog skins while the getting Is
good.
The Advance Scout for the Party.
CK McGREEVY scouted down
Chicago way the other day
ahead of the bunch. He has
returned and will take tha
bunch down Wednesday
evening. The Duluth delega-
tion will arrive in time to
the American league season openeJ
in Chicago and give the monster moose
to the Old Roman.
It is expected that the Duluth cits
will have the time of their sweet
young lives. As an entertainer Commy
has the late king of Belgium looking
like a grouch presiding over a cheese
and cracker layout. Guests of the
magnate have left Chicago In some-
what the same frame of mind that the
Queen of Sheba left Solomon, saying
that nearly all has not been piped.
The moose giving will be one of the
features of the game and will also
serve to perpetuate the name of Du-
luth as the home of big game and
good sportsmen.
YALE WILL ROW
PENNSYLVANIA
Two Old Rivals to Meet
at New Haven on
May 13.
Philadelphia. Pa., April 17— The ex-
tent to which rowing maintains Its
reputation as a sport free from pro-
fessionalism and Intercollegiate Quar-
rels received a striking demonstration
last week with the announcement that
Yale and the University of Pennsyl-
vania had arranged for a duel race to
be rowed at New Haven on May 13.
This Is merely a continuation of the
ai^uatic friendship revived by these two
in^titutlona in 1908, when the Quakers
beat the Ells in a race on the Schuyl-
kill. Yale has since had a standing
invitation to row Pennsylvania again
similar terms, but was unable un-
Big .Sam Meneice. star first baseman
and outfielder for the White Sox in
the days when Artie O'Dea had one
of the best minor league baseball
teams here that was ever gathered to-
gether, has signed with the Sox and
will the present season play either
first base or hold down one of the
outfield positions.
The news was given out today,
along with the statement that big
.Sam would join the .Sox at Rockford.
Last season .Sam i»layed the outneia
for (irand Rapids and Terre Haute in
tlie Central league. He hit at .233 and
fielded at .9tj7. Tiie big fellow was not
in the best of condition last year, ow-
ing to illnes.s, and in the Mlnn^' the
coming season should be one of the
stars of the league, as he is in the best
of condition at the present time.
Fans of Duluth remember Sam as
one of the cleanup hitters of these
parts. They always liked to see
him step to the bat where there were
men on bases or a run was needed. In
action and build he is something like
Manager Biddy Dolan of the Wausau
Lumberjacks, and with the bludgeon he
i.-i also a first-class executor of mur-
dering Intention, like Biddy.
Whethef Meneice plays first or goes
to the outfield he will prove a strong
ad<litlon to the Sox. He Is a heady and
wise ball player and will add stabil-
ity and steadiness to the youngsters
the harp has signed. In addition to this
he is one of the be.st behaved fellows
on the baseball field and Is a great
favorite with the fans of Duluth.
The signing of Meneice means that
Holstrom in al! probability will go to
the outfield. With Chesty Holstrom
going good In the garden and Meneice
hitting well and guarding tlie old first
corner as he Is capable of doing, there
will be no cau.se to worry about two
positions that gave the fans a great
deal of sadnes.s la.st seasoh.
According to the statement of Jawn
r>esmond. Meneh:? will leave within a
few days to join the White Sox re-
sults. It required a lot of persuasion
to get Ham to sign and Dfsmond is
tickled to death that the big fellow
!ias at last affixed his name to a con-
tract.
Jack Desmond, secretary and treas-
urer of the Duluth Baseball association,
who has been III with diphtheria at his
home for the past two weelts. came
down town today and Is busy complet-
ing arrangements with Contractor
Whitney for starting work on the new |
park. , M ■mr
According to the statement or Mr.
Desmond work will begin coday ^r
some time during the present week on
the baseball grounds. Desriond will
leave for a visit to his parents for a
few days, remaining with them until
he recovers his strength. Hs will re-
turn to Duluth In a few daysi and will
take personal charge of the work.
GAMBLERS TURN
TO BASEBALL
!
Contractor Whitney will have anum
ber of dredges on the Job, afccordln
to the agreement, and it is expecte
that the filling in of the sand and clar
will proceed very rapidly.
Whether the park will be opened In
time for the opening of the local sea-
son cannot be stat-jd. Work has been
delayed In starting by the Illness or
Desmond. When the work gets under
way, according to the statement made
by Jawn today. It will be pushed to
oompletlon just as rapidly as possible.
Mr. Desmond was down today greet-
ing his friends. Aside from the fact
that he Is weak he Is feeling
effects from his recent illness.
no ill
Handbook Men Are Invading
Stands and Bleachers at
New York.
New York, April 17.— Gamblers who
have lost business because they could
not arouse bettors to Interest In the
running races at Jamestown and Pen-
sacola have turned to basjball with
the opening of the season and already
handbook men and others are prepar-
ing to drag the great Amei lean sport
into the betting ring.
Betting schemes which iiave
splracy
man.
Flint
sent by
gomery
with a hard-pressed newspaper.
have
Ford
in
the
see
He WiU Be Out Today.
CCORDING to the statement of
the physicians, Jawn Des-
mond, genial baseball mag-
nate and raconteur, will be
out today. Jawn has had a
bad siege and It came just at
the wrong time. The plans
of the new park were under way lust
at the time when diphtheria got a half
nelson on the system of the manag-^r.
It will require another w^eek of rest
before Jawn Is himself again.
As the burden of all the arrange-
ments for the starting of constructivjn
of the new park have been placed on
the shoulders of Jawn, his illness
caused a delay. It is expected that
the plans will go on just as soon as
Jawn is able to devote his energies to
the numerous details Incident to the
starting •f work.
Some Classy Sporting Editors, Yes?
NE earnest and serious boak
seller, with uplifts of mind
and serious purpose of putting
class and tone Into the in-
telllgenoe of the community,
has hit our midst. Low and
behold he Is blazing the trail
for Doc Elliott's five-feet of books
— a yard and two-thirds of human and
humanizing knowledge. One of the
arguments he is using Is that all the
sporting editors of the Twin Cities
have purchased the books.
In the days of old the man on the
sporting desk was popularly supposed
to read Fox's lives; the ones that were
written under the direction and genial
spirit of Klchard K. Fox, the man wio
edits that classical barber shon week-
ly, the Police Gazette, and other curb
literature that had to do with Ivid
Broad and Kid McCoy.
But the uplift work seem.^ to be
abroad In the land and the Elliott five
>n .
til this spring to arrange such a race.
The scheJuling of this race removes
the last possible obstacle to complete
harmony in Intercollegiate rowing.
Harvard and Cornell meet in their dual
ra'-e at Cambridge on May -8, while
one week earlier Princeton will en-
tertain Cornell and Yale In a triangular
regatta on Lake Carnegie. The ar-
rangement of the Yale- Pennsylvania
race brings the Quakers into the told
Now if Syracuse and Columbia could
get dual races with some rowing
stitution In addition to Annapolis,
rowlner situation would be ideal.
It la the unanimous opinion of the
rowing critics tliat in scheduling this
race with Pennsylvania Yale has taken
a step which is bound to help her a
long way In putting the Elis on an
equal footing with Harvai-d In the row-
ing world. In most sports Yale en-
joys the distinction of leading the
intercollegiate procession. In football,
in particular, the whole college world
has been glad to follow the leader-
ship of Yale, but In rowing the Ella
have been bringing up the rear for
a number of year.s. Many of \ale3
rowing misfortunes have been due to
h-^r persistent belief that the crew
could be developed Cor the Harvard
race without the necessity of dual
races with other colleges. In short
Yale scoffed at the value of the ex-
perience to be gained in these dual
Until Harvard adopted the plan of
arranging all the dual and Intercol-
legiate races possible In preparation
for the Yale race she was losing reg-
ularly to the Elis. But the minute
Harvard began to row Cornell annual-
ly had to enter her Junior and fresh-
men eights in the American regatta,
the Crimson began to forge to the
front and shortly found It as easy a
matter to beat Yale on the water as
U was. and still is. for the Klhs to
beat the Crimson on the gridiron Now
Yale has taken a leaf out of the
Harvard's book, and If the Ells con-
centrate their ability and energy in
the development of a crew, just as they
do every year In football. Harvard s
rowmg supremacy is likely to be short
While nothing definite has been an-
nounced on the subject the victory of
Oxford over Cambridge In their dual
regatta last week, makes the pos-
sibility of an International race be-
tween the winner and Harvard more
remote than ever. Oxford has never
shown much of a di3f»ositlon to arrange
regattas of this sort, and while Cam-
bridge has never been overly enthu-
siastic, the "Cantabs' have at least
been willing to negotiate with the
Americans, and one year they did ar-
range a race which Cambridge won.
It is understood that harvard will open
negotiations with Oxford at once, in
the hope of arranging a race
summer.
BROWN FIGHTS
GARRY TUESDAY
Hibbing Boy WiU Meet Chi-
cagoan Before Wiscon-
sin Fight Club.
Tommy Garry, accounted one of the
best of the second division light-
welght.s. will meet Pal Brown before
one of the Wisconsin fight clubs tomor-
row night. Those wlio are acquainted
with the ability of the Chicago fighter
say he will give Pal the best fight he
has had yet and will make tlie Hibbing
lad go from the sound of the bell.
It is said that Garry gained a deci-
sion over Fratikle White at Memphis,
and Is a tough, rugged little fighter
If Garry Is as good as they .say
the fight Tuesday evening
one one of the best
kid has engaged in.
With only a few days intervenln
Pal will take on Frankle White.
Garry should happen to slip one over
might interfere seriously with
plans of Doc Flapper, manager for
l>romlslng young.-iter.
be said that Flapper
outcome of
not believe
been
known in Pltt.sburg, Bostor and Buf-
falo for some years are boing intro-
duced here, and it is likely they will
be followed by attempts to •make
book" at the grand stands.
Handbook men who operate on
Broadway from Forty-si Kth street
down to Fourteenth began to take bet.s
on the results of games with the very
first contest of tlie -season. Ticket
speculators, whom the new ordinance
has driven to cover and trouble, have
also gone Into the bu.slnes?.
Enright, the well known commission-
er, wiio handles much mon« y on races
and acts for poolrooms hire and in
Cincinnlatl. has prepared the most
compreliensive scheme of s.U. He has
solicitors out seeking clients for a
weekly pool on the number of runs
made by clubs In the American and
.National leagues.
He has figured out that 1,500 combi-
nations of four clubs of slj.teen in the
two leagues may be made, iind a ticket
on each of these may be made, and a
ticket on each of these nold for $1
win bring In $1,500 a we sk. Here Is
the list of prizes his solicitors have
offered:
Flr.st prize, on highest tdtal of runs
made during six days" plaj by a com-
bination of four clubs, $30).
Second prize, for secoid highest
total made by a combination of four
clubs, 1100.
Third prize. |50.
Booby prize, for lowest number of
runs made by a combination of four
clubs, $30.
Dally highest score of a combina-
tion. $40.
Dally lowest score, $10.
Thus the gamblers can pay out only
$800 a week out of the $1,J00 taken In.
That gives them a percentage of be-
tween 75 and 100 per cent.
"May be there are bettors In New
York who will like that kind of a
game," said a gambler. "There are
more farmers in this city than In any
agricultural state in the Union and
such a plan ougiit to pros;)er.
"But, you consider that In faro bank
the player has less than one-half of 1
per cent and that In rou ette he has
between 5 and 6 per cent against him,
can you Imagine how a sane man will
prefer to lose his money ;igalnst such
a bunk and still keep awfiiy from a
faro layout?"
and Graham, the two rookies
the St. Louis Browns to Mont-
In the Southern league, are
both hitting the ball hard. Graham is
playing second and Flint is behind tha
D£lt
About the last thing Harry Steln-
feldt did with the Cubs before Manager
Chance broke the news to him that ha
was tha di.scard was to hit a hom^
run drive in the exhibition game played
at Evansvllle. , . ..
Outfielder iSf^orge Anderson of the
Boston American league team, has
been purchased by the Providence
Eastern l*»ague club. Anderson went
to the Boston Americana last year from
Duluth by draft.
All Southea-stern league clubs
now picked managers. ^^>,^1^'*''„ .,^„
will manage Annlston; I^-i"K . ^,^''*^y'
Gad.sden; Billy May. 8elma; Fred Busse.
Home; Den Bert. Decatur; and J. B.
Campbell. Huntsvllle. , , ^»
Brooklyn. In clearing Its decks of
Millers has sold Fred, the left-handed
pitcher to Sioux City. Miller was with
Columbia In the South Atlantic eague
in I'JOi) and with Chattanooga in the
Southern league part of Ir.st seaso:-
Manager Hank Itamsey of the AltoO-
na club of the Trl-btate league must
build anew this year. He has but five
of hl.s old men— Shortstop Durinyyer.
Outfielders Clarke and Crist and Pitch-
era Miller and Garrlty.
When In Norfolk. Va.. the other day
with the Giants. Chrl.^ty Mathewson
visited the office of the local bas-ball
club, where he f^jund framed on the
wall the contract h*? signed ten >'•>=*/;»
a'^o '^ailing for a montldy salary of $3.>.
"president Comlskey of the White .->ox
has be.stowed upon Harley Parker ot
- the Grand Rapids club these three Pl^'V-
ers- Chief Chouneau. the Indian pitch-
er- Robert Greenslade. the semi-pro
twirler. and Outfiehler Kandzer.
The Washington club is to do sotne-
thlng appropriate. At the suggestLm
President Ban Johnson the forty-six
■»^^^^^^^rf^>^>^>^>^>^>^>^>^>^>^>»»»»^^^>^^%^»^>^»^
BASEBALL NOTES
he is,
should be
the Hibbing
ff
it
the
the
However, it may
does not l^ear the
the Garry battle, as he does
there is a IJO-pound boy in
America who can beat Pal.
A great deal of Interest Is being
taken in the outcome of the coming
encounter, as a victory means much to
the Hibbing boy.
PRONTO III TURNS
TURTLE NEAR PEORIA.
league
comes
from Mem-
to Lincoln,
Peoria, III.. April 17.— The speed boat
Pronto III, holder of last season's Il-
linois river championship and de-
pended upon to defend the twenty-foot
title in the regatta here on July '25
and 26 turned turtle in Peoria lake
yesterday afternoon while running
thirty m'iles an hour. The IWtle craft
carried James Brady and Walter Mar-
tin, engineman and pilot, respectively.
The upset came without a second's
warning, throwing its, crew into the
lake The boat Immediately sank in
thirty feet of water. The crew was
rescued. The racing machine has not
been recovered.
•
Hungry Nine Wins.
Thf> Hungry Nine defeated the Pos-
tals Saturday on the Tenth avenue and
Third street grounds, by the score of
8 to 1. The batteries were: Walter
Arnkt and Sanders for the Postals,
and Mike Krolt and E. Selfert for the
Hungry Nine.
Louisville has released Pitcher Pow-
ers to Columbia, S. C.
Boyne City, in the Ml<:hlgan State
league, has signed peter Partlow aa
manager.
Denver has released Brusse Hartford
to the Aurora club of tho Wisconsin-
Illinois league.
The Boston Nationals nave already
closed a deal to train at .Vugusta, Ga.,
next spring.
Mullln, the new Ameiican
umpire, succeeding CoUifower,
from tlie Western league.
Catcher Leo McGraw, recruit secured
by the Chicago White So
phis, has been released
Neb.
Detroit papers have been intimat-
ing tiiat a mistake might have been
made when Tom Jones
Gainer is not showing so
Ness may replace him.
Charley Frank of New Orleans says
Joe Jackson has yet to master the art
of base stealing — that he nas the speed
but does not know how to use it.
When President John I. Taylor of
the Boston Red Sox told the Denver
club it could have any
reserve list. Denver
Thoney as its first
Two prospects
Arthur Irwin.
Japanese ball
with a
boxes In the centor of the now stand
are to be named after the states of tha
Union, Instead of being designated by
the usual numbers. t> .^uv
The Cheyenne team of the 't'^'Ky
Mountain league Is taking an ambi-
tious tour for a Class D organization.
Ira Bldwt^ll. owner and manager, scnea-
uled games that took him awav o'^wn
Into Texas. The team will return to
Cheyenne about May 1; ^ ,. . .. ^,,
It Is faintly rumored that when their
paths crossed at Athmta, Manager Mo-
(iraw of the Giants .siKg- sled to Man-
ager McAlcr of th" Washington team
that he would like to have Catcher
.Street. The only grounds for the ru-
mor may be that McGraw really needs
a backstop who has class.
A tip to young pitchers: L^arn to
bat and to field your position. Manager
Clarke of Pittsburg has sold 1 wirier
•Bob" Couchman to Los Argeles simply
becau.se he can't field bunts, etc. He
has speed, control and sharp-breaking
curves but as an InfieM worker he Is a
member of the awkward sTuad.
The Boston Am«»rlcai;.s must be up
against a first-base propo.sltlon. One
sport writer in the Hub suggest-s that
Billy Purtell Is the best man available.
If little Purtell can play It then Man-
ager McAleer at Washington need not
worry about the sam.- position on his
team: he can use Kid Elberf^-ld.
"Boston will upset calculations, says
Manager Fred Tenney. "The club has
Improved more than any other In the
league. Th*- -pepper' and life shown
by my players are most encouraging.
We won't go Into the fight with an
Idea that the pennant Is beyond us. We
are going to make a fight to land in
the first division."
Springfield. Mass., announces the pur-
chase from Oakland. Cal.. of Pllch^?r
Sandy Bannist^^r, last year with the
Waterbury pennant winners, and Out-
fielder Eddie Swander. Bannister has
been one of the b^st pitchers In the
Connecticut league for .several seasons
and was drafted by Oakland last fall.
Swander is a good outfi-lder and fine
hitter He was drafted by O.ikland in
1909 and playd th-re last year.
Prt^sident Bob Brown of the \ an-
couver baseball club has ^^sn<id Pirrher
Ell Catf'S. formerly with the Washing-
ton Americans. Cates Is a right-hander
and was In the Pacific Coast league In
l'j06 The Chicago White Sox liave
turned Dode Brinker back to Vancouv-
er The former Wa.shington star ttxfim
a great showing, but a.s Comlskey had
all positions filled with experienced
men h*' sent Brlnk^r back to the North-
western for a little more seasoning.
was
well
let go;
at first.
In the
Jack
player
named
cholco.
are predlted for Scout
One is a Job coaching a
team at $5,000 a year,
five-year contrac. The other
prospect may develop later.
George McQuillen's brother. Earl,
has signed with Aurora, in the Wis-
consin-Illinois league, lie Is also a
pitcher and hopes some day to be as
famous as the Clnolnnat: flinger.
Ty Cobb admits he was only fooling
them just to have a lit le '«"• when
he slowed up— just playing off to con-
ceal his real form. Prcbably a con-
AMERICAN BICYCLE
CHAMPION IS DEFEATED.
Newark. N. J., April 17.— The outdoor
bicycle racing season opened yesterday
at the new Vetodrome track In V^ills-
burg with the defeat of Frank Kramer
the American champion, who droppefl
cut of the five-mile race, open profes-
sional exhausted after the f«"rth
mile. 'Joe Fogler won the event with
Paddy Hehlr. secon<i, and Alfred
Goulet. third. The time was 11 min-
utes and 49 second.s. .4.„.„
Fogler won the mile open handicap
from Goulet with W. P. Palmer Aus-
tralia, second. The time was 2 minute*
JO L-5 seconds.
^ «
Million Dollar Clubhouse.
Pittsburg. Pa.. April 17-— The new
clubhouse of the Pittsburg Athlet Ic as-
soclatlon erected at a cost of $l,00).00f
was thrown open to In.spection yester-
day and will be formally dedicated to-
night.
for this
ONE ANTI-BEHING
LAW MAY BE REPEALED.
Now York. April 17.— Turfmen were
Interested today In a seemingly well'
authenticated report from White Plains
that the officers and directors of the
Westchester Fair association, which
holds an annual fair near the West-
chester county seat, were considering
measures for bringing about the repeal
of the law holding 'Jfftclals of racing
associations rejponsibfle for betting
violations. This law b^s had the
of closing the big race tracks
metropolitan district., j-
The report had it that Senator Wain-
wrlght of Westchester has been asked
to Introduce a repeal nieaaur*
at Albany.
5J-, yi
-i "i.d
dm^
law
effect
m the
this week
The Army erf
G>n8tipatioii
U Growing Smaller C'
CARTER'S ' ^TTLE
UVER PILLi> an
leiponnble — they i
only gnre relief —
they permaneii '
cure CflMtipa
tiea. Mil
Uoni use
them for
BiIUm-
MM, hlif eatiM, SUk Hcadacke, SaUmr SUd.
SMALL Pni, SMALL DOSE, SMAa PRICE
r Genuine mustbeu Signature
$2.25FishingTackle Outfit $1.65
I
tackle.
>n's on now and many will need new
the rarest opportunity offered in many months,
assortment includes —
O •! A. three-jointed fine split bamboo, from 7}i to lo
*^*'^' feet long, nicely finished.
P^qI — Multiplier— capacity 8o yards of line.
[ Line — *5 yards of extra quality line.
€' Hookt — Good quality gut hooks.
3(iq( — I full box of split shot
Bait Box — Handy sire, nicely painted.
$1.65
These 6 articles, at our regular low
'*''V prices sell at f2.25. but are offered as
■ \ a very special at
^^^k Also many othej bargains In fishing tackle-
Sporting Goods Dept., Basement.
taifon&ldtti %
(
J
•
(i
/
'
1
1
/
•
I
(
1
1
1
m. ■« J« — I -t«fl> I ■
•r
^s ■
^iiN"« >-
^
"^^i r
14
Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
STEAMSHIl 3.
ALLAN LIN El—
Plclure3<iae St. l4>wrence Route.
Weekly Sailings from
XIONTRF.AL TO l.IVEHPOOL. (il.ASGOW
UONTUiiAL TO LOM'C'N. ilAVIlE. Fianc*
Kortnlghtlj from
PHTLArEl.PniA and BOSTON to GLASGOW.
8ilcud»" Ktuvtj, iHcrteit paasafo. luw raw*.
Anj Local Aeent 01
ALLAN & CO., General Agents,
174 Jackson Blvd., Chicago.
RAILROAD TIME TABLES.
MINNEAPOUS.ST.PAUL
>h;Sau^tSte.Marie Ry.
UNION STAT'.'N— bucericr St. and SUrth A»«. We»t.
Lr.if» TWIN
PCRTS EXPRESS. Arrive.
tJ.BCttn 'J UOpni. ..
. DL'LUTH 'a. 00am 1 5 30pm
130am 7 30pn...
Superior 8.30am 5.00pm
2 45pin 10 40Dm. .
lUiibMuitb ... 9 ISam 10.50am
15.00pm II 45pm...
... uweus 4.00am T7.55am
Kor t*a 3.48«m...
.. OUikoiU I2.0lafr KriniK.
I'lalrt) tidtJ
Cialic aod
CilliipCWii
CUippewa
ITails 7.ISam .
UUwsukee ... B.SOpm li'aUs
*9 00am .
. CUli-agc •7.00pm
Dlnliig Cars. rali4t-« BlenH'rs ami Labrary Obf.er»i-
tlon Cars. Vestibuitcl — VkCuuBi Cleuued — Kleclric
ICuuiiicUon at LailjsmUh wlih Tiaiu 8 foi Uaiils-
tlfluc, Ulaclstciie uid lnuriurtllate points.
Licafe.
BROOTEN eAPRESS. Arlvc.
16 45am
17 aoair, 6 I5air.
lO uoam b 22am
3. I0tn> '0 21'sm
14.U0pm lO 5l<am
tl Hlfm
CociiC('tiiii.& at
Cauac^ aiiil iLc
Palutu IS 00pm
. . SuiMrrlui b 30pm IS. 00pm
Mmw Lake.... b.2l)pm i2.35pm
... Wahkou 4 42pm 7 2bam
.. Ujiamia 4.25pm T6.45am
... Htwteu tl 45pm
Brwteu for Twin CitKw, Western
PuiJic (.'oust
t«at«.
OULUTH. WINNIPEG
LINE. ArrlTc.
t B 30am
10 05am
11 25am
••
Dujuin . . .
... ^ui'crlcr
kli.ose L.i&ke. .
t 5.10pm
4.40pm
S.iSpm
4 OCi-'ir.
. . . .Caa» Lakr. .
I0.2bam
4.37pm
7 3i>iim
Coiiutct
irijb at
Bemictil .
Th»rf liliei KaiJ
rtiiel Ki>ei I'uas
».54am
is 7.00am
lor Wiimipes.
L*iHt;.
Ct'fUNA RANGE LINE. Arrhe.
t 7.20am
7 55im
9 SOam
....
Dulalti . . .
... Suptnur ..
T 6.40pm
S.OSpm
4.10pm
10 U2ani
10.24am
10. Mam
10 48am.
11 45am
i::a9t Lake...
.... L>ariiia . . .
... HuiielMrg ..
AttklL ..••
3.5«pm
3.35pro
9.25pm
3.12pm
2.55pm
Arrive
1 15am DEERWOOO
2 40pm LeuTC.
111 5'am
|2 05cin
. L'uyuna . . .
... C'lo.-l>? . ..
t 2.08pm
2.00pm
•I'aJj
l>iiii>
except Sui.uay.
DLLLTH, MISSABE & ^ORIH-
ERN RAILWAY.
Office: 4:m WeKt Superior St.
Tlioue, tMtU.
Lel^^e
Arrtre.
I Kibt>iug. v'tiivbolm. Virginia, Eve- |
•7.4Cam -, ielU. iVieralne. Sliarvn (ISulil), i •S.2lpm
I. tUruiit II liuD. ISparla. 'BiwaLUj
*3.S(lpm i
•7. lOpm ^
I
f *IO.SIaii
HibLing. Oilsliolni. S;ii'.ron
(Biiljij. Vlrclr.ia. Evfletb,
Coieialtie. J
Virginia. Ook, Ralner. Port |
Fraures, Port Arthur. Bau- i •B.SUm
{;ttte. '.VurroaU. Wlia.;i>eg. J
•Paitv. tlV.:;j ricert KuuU.iy.
Cafe. Observation Car. Mesaba Range
Pointb. SoliU VeblibuUd Train. Modern
Sleeitrs through to Winnipeg.
THE DLLITH <^ IKON RANGE
RAILROAD CO.>fPANY.
••VER.MILIOX ROl'TE"
PILITH—
I L«uve. I Arrlee.
Kuife Hi^er. T\»c Harlors. T' wtr
El> Aurora. K.wntilk. .MtKiniey ,
K\(littj. Oiiben aiul Vlrgluia.
i*7.30am|tl2.00m
|t2.45pm| *6. lOpD
•Paii: tl/kilj eii«i>l Sunday.
DULL'TH & NORTHERN M1MMES0TA RAILWAY.
OTficet. 5>C Loradale Eldp., Duluth.
Trains i-i.i;i.eit «t Knife Untr lUllj incept Sunday)
with L'. & 1 K. trains ieavlns Dulult at 7 ;30 a. m..
iind arriving at Duluili at 6:3i; p. m. Connects at
rran.tr wltli tiranil Mar.ils stage W.ieu running.
NORTHERN FAllFK RAILROAD.
Let.'>e
•4 OOpni
•8 POam
•7 30tm
•« Oiam
Leik^e. ■•I»ulutlj bhoit Line"
19 OOam
• 1 55pm 8T. PAUL
• lllOtm MINNEAPOLIS .
Asliland and E-ist
.AsMuud and East
Minn, end Dakota E:irrcsi.
. . North L'oast LlBiittd
Arrive.
.«ll. )5am
. •6.40pm
. •fi.lSam
. •6.25pm
Arrive.
*6 30am
. 12 OSpm
. •7.00pm
•DhiIj lUiiiiy cuept Sunday. 'Phone 214.
IiciKt at ioi West Superior sirew.
L'nluD
[NORTH-VVEStERN llNE
..v'3.iOpm ♦e. 'dpm .. iMiuth . .Ar»8.i5air. ♦i2..;0t.m
V*:) .sun in e.aKam .. ^uDcrior ...Ar7.53«m 1 1.45am
■3.;50pm «G. 'dpm.
^v*3.5Upin 6.35p«
xr 7.45am
At 7.00am b-ISam.
iMiUttl
Superior
Mdwiiukec
Clilcago .
.Ar»8.i5air.
.Ar 7.53«m
l.T 7.45pm
.Lv 6.25pm lO.IOpm
1, Tib. SOam •4.33pm. . Uulutb . .Ar13.35pm
l.v 9.10am 4.55pm . fuiienoi ...Ar 3.05pm
,Vr 4.30em ».50tni S:. Puuix .. .L» 8. 10am
ar 5.056m lO.arpm UinneapoUs .!.« 7.30am
•Ually IDauj except Bundaj.
Ofn<e. 3('2 West Superior St.. Duluth.
•9.5Spm
9.35pm
4.30pffl
4.00; m
Duluth, South Shore & Atiantie.
I,eave.
STATIONS.
Arrive.
17.45am *6
18. 1 2am •&
t«.20«ni *fc
Anlve.
17 55rm
18.55pm
17.05pm
♦7".45pm
5
6
•4
•5
«IC
*b
•8.
Leave.
18 05am »»
t;0 C8rm 'iO
. I5cm .. Iiulutb .. •I0.30am tS.40pm
(Si.o Liiie Union Station.)
45pm... Suitnor •10. OOam 19.10pm
iSoo Line 'Jultn Station.)
.55pm... Suiic.-lor . . •9.40am IS.OOpin
(VnioD i>«poL>
LeaTe.
40am. noughtOD .11 1. 00pm
.30em... C'alamet ...110.10pm
20am . Ihtipeuilng ..•I2 2bain t6 20am
OUam.. Maitiuette ..'1 1. 30pm tS.20am
;:OamSau]t Sti-. Marie •5.25i)m
OOam... Montrtiii . . •9.50pm •8.20pm
20pm iio&i.ou 'lUbOam •8. 30am
15pm
20&m.
. Uuntreal .
.New \ork.
. .'iO-OCam 110. 00pm
. . •? I5pro 18.30am
tUuily tx'-epi Sunday. •Daily.
THE GREAT NORTHERN.
l*ave.
STAliONS
ArrlTt.
te OOam I
•3.25pm •(
»ll lOpm I
•8.45am ,
•8.a5pm ^
12.2bpm..
16. OOam
ST. PAUL 1 710.15pm
and > •l.S5pm
MINNEAPOLIS J 'e 3bam
Crookstii.. llrand Firka. | 'OSSpm
Moiiiuna and 'Joust J •7. ISam
Swan Hiver, llilibing. Virginia. . .112.30pm
St. CUud. Wilmar. Sioai Llty. . .ilO. ISpro
•DaJIj. Tl'.-iily ejtcept Sunday. Twin City deeper
ready at 'J p ni OfTke. Spalding liotel.
HOTELS^
New Building: New Esulpment— Rate*. $2 and $2.50.
Hotel Mcliay
Corner First St. anii Fifth Ave. Weat. DULUTH.
Adelplii liotel
2eOI -2803-2805 West Superior Strept.
J. B. DUNF-HY, Prop.
Beat fQuiCPed, iteam-htated, hotel In West end—
100 roomt, all modern conveniences: new building:
■ew equ.'pTent. Buttel in connection.
RATES. $9.00 PER WEEK AND UP.
Imperial Hotel
Thoroughly modern and up-to-date
in every respect.
RC»OMS, 75c AND UP.
200-::0.S Weat Superior Street.
LEGAL. NOTICES.
Notice of Sale of Collateral
Notice is liereby given that, pursuant
to the certain agreement and declara-
tion of trust, dated the first day of
May. 1909. between The Black Moun-
tain Mining Company and the under-
signed, the undersigned wlil, on the
nrst day of June. A. D. 1911, at the hour
of 2:30 o'clock P. M., at the Stock E.x-
change in the Rookery Building, in the
City of Chicago, State of Illinois, sell,
or cause to be sold or offered for sale.
at public auction, for cash, to the
highest and best bidder, the followinflr
securities and property, towlt:
(1) 9S94 i>bar«ii of the Capital Stock
HEPWORTH-KIRBY
NCY
Sellwood Building.
Insuranp^ In All Its Branches
Duluth, Minnesota.
Brltiob America Asaarance Company.
I'rlm-jpnl offK-e: 18 and 20 Krorit street east. Tor-
onto, lUiminlen of Canada. (Ccmmeuced business In
the ViuloU States 1874.1 W. B. Meihle. general
nunagrr. Attorney to accept service In Minnesota;
Ceminl:slonet of Insurance.
I)E1X)SIT CATITAL, $210,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Piemlumg ctbet than perp'etuala | 937.082.73
lienta and Interest 67,9:>0.1I7
Ciit>M) profit en salt, maturity ot ad-
ju»tnient of ledger is^ta. . . .'. 244.90
¥nm all otber oources 280.51
Total Income $
995.539.11
Ledger acMrte Pec. 31 of previous year. .$ 1.590.047.59
The CoAtlnental laiinrance Company.
Principal offite: 16 Ceiiiir street. New York. N Y.
(Orgai.lztd In 1803.) Henry Evans, prcwldent : C. M.
Tiitlle, 8fcr«tarj'. Attorney to &crept Bervlte in Min-
nrsota: Comnii.oslo'ier of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, $2,000,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than t>erpetuai8 $ 7,308,442.52
IlcnM and Interest 989,747.77
UroHs prcflt on sale, maturity or ad-
justment of ledger assets 847,685.0c
From all other sources 7,953.42
Total Income $
9,153,829.11
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previoui year.$ £3.179,680.65
Sum 8 2,586,486.70
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for lisscti $
('ommlKsicus r.nd brokerage
Salaries anil fees of officeis, agenta and
employes
Ta\es. fees, rents and other real estate
expenses
Retainied to home ofllce
All other ilwhursenient*
(.insfs IOS.S oil sale, maturity or adjtist-
meut of ledger assets
468.^76.57
214.982. SC
100.542.18
37.0.'0.r.3
71.4Hb.OO
53,476.73
2.236.00
TVtal dlstKiisemente $
948,652.33
Balance t 1,637,334.37
LEOCER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1010.
n<ok value of bond.s and stocks $ 1.339.648.20
Cash 1.1 office, trust companies and
baiJut 137.881. .'8
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, t^en for piemiuins. . . 14O..?O4.50
Total ledger assets (as per l>a]ance)..$ 1,637.834.37
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued... | IC.556.23
Ail other uon-i<dger assets.
l.lf
Gross assets $ 1.657.571.75
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
.^ger.ts" balances ,. $ 2.447.81
biK.'k value of ledger assets ever market
value 5«,92C.86
Special deposit, less $27,330.45 liability
thea;tu 8.74.^.55
Total assets net admitted
TVtal admitted assets
70, 1:1: 22
Sum $ 32,333,509.76
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paUl for losses | 8,079.739.13
Kjci)eiisc9 of adjastment of losses 99,618.57
(°(imiiils.Mk'ns and brt>kerage 1,504,790.99
Salaries and fees of ofricers, agents
and employes 858,222.00
Taxe.-. fees, rents and other real estat«
expenfes 318.097.07
IHvldends and Interest 1,750,1,03.00
tiross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
iuei:t of ledger assets 6T9..'i54.00
All other disbursements 311.368.28
Total disbursements $ 8,301, 393. 1<0
Balance t 24,032,115 86
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book value of real estate $ 1,200.000.00
Mortgage leans 2,700.00
Book value of boitds and storks 18,39v,58U.OO
Cash 111 office, trust companies and
banks 3,389,125.40
Agent.s' balances, unpaid premliiDis and
bills receivable, taken for premiums. 1.049,710.37
Total ledger a^'Set8 (as per bal<%n('e).$
NCN-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and ac(rueO..$
All other non-ledger assets
24,032,115.86
184.426 42
3,42<J.45
Gross assets } 24,219,97173
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balttiii-cs $ 4,196.54
Spetlfll d« posit, less $3,599.60 liability
thereon 49.400.01
All otlier assets not admitted 17.737.18
Total assets not admitted t
71,333.73
NlaKara Fire • InNnrancc Company.
Principal offk-e: || Liberty street. New York, N
Y'. (Organized In 1850.) Harold Herrick, president;
George W. Dewey, secretary. Attorney to accept
service In Minnesota: Commii-slPner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $1,000,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuaJs $ 3,151.210.91
Hents and interest 245,783.15
From all otber sources 1,234.46
Total income.
.$ 3,398.228.52
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous y«ar.t 5.817,222.20
Sum $ 9,215,430 72
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses 9 1,477,189.35
Bipeases of adjustment of losses 36,985.19
Commissions and brokerage 992,961.30
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes 308,357.76
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses 129,643.43
liividcnds and interest 475,000.00
All other disbursements 156,514.41
ToUl dislmrsements 9 3.176,631.44
Balance $ 6,038,799.28
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
.Mortgage loans 717,000.00
Book Vblue of bonds and stocks 4,403.281.86
Cash in office, trust companies and
banks 822,993.09
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills recetvaliie, taken for piemlums... 505,524.3.1
Total ledger aasels (as, per balance).. | 6,038, 199. 28
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued $ 20,296.24
195,169.14
The Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Cc«n-
pany.
Principal office: 510 Walnut street, Philadelphia,
Pa. (Organined in 1825.) H. Dale Benson, presi-
dent ; W. Gardner Crcwell, secretary. Attorney to ac-
cept service In Minnesota: Commissioner of Insur-
ance.
CASH CAPITAL, $730,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals $ 3,447,585.92
I'rctnlUDis on i>erpetual risks 27,717.51
Itents and interest 292,428.34
Gross profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets 8,114.80
From ail other sources 403.00
Total income $ 3,770,249.77
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year.$ 7.344,287.55
Sum $ 11,120,537.32
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses $ 1.955,864.55
EiLpeiists of adjustment of losses 15,230.60
Commissions and brokerage 829.946.32
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes 200,321. 93
Taxes, fees, rents and otber real estate
expenses 124,461.17
Dividends and interest 206,250.00
Grow loss on sule, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets 303.80
All otlier dLsburitemeuts 155,814.08
Total disbursements. .
■•••••••■
.$ 3,497,19247
Balance f 7,623.344.83
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book value of real estate $ 189.377.07
-MortjtaBe loans 197.000.00
Collaieral loans 173.106.08
Book value of bonds and slocks •.292,413. 18
Cash la office, trust companies and
banks 172,160.23
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
liiils receivable, taken for preuiiuais. . . 599,278.63
Maiket value of real eiitate, bonds and
stocks over l>ook value
$ 1.587.259.33
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpnld lrssi« and claims $ 104. 120. 79
l'i;e:ime>l pirmiuins 787. bib. 94
.Salaiiet- expen-es. taxes, dividends and
interest due 12,030 .'^5
Commissions and brokerage 3 104.07
Deposit capital IIO.OCO.OO
Tot.-il liabilities, including deposit cap-
ital $ 1.117,111.15
Net furplu* $ 470.148. c.8
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks wr.tttn during the year ...$150,000,684.00
I'rCTtiiunis m*lved thereon.
1,406, 1'KO '.'3
Nrt amount in ftrre .-.t em! of the year. $134.447. 16800
*— lucludiiig busibess other than "Marine und In-
land. "
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(I:><. lulling i^nsurance recviveU aod deducting re-
iiisu:;;;,i.'C piaccU. )
Fire ntsksi.
Ri.sks written $l,0ci3.073.00
rrtinlNius received 27.28.';. 19
Loe«.?» incurred 1?.32:.53
Losses paid 16.621.93
Amount U risk 2.022,191.00
State of Minnesota. Pepartment if Insurance:
I Ktreby Ctrlify, Tiii;t the Annual Statement of
the Hrltlsii America Assurance Conipiiny, for tl.c
}eiir oudliiK l>iieailicr ;ist, ICIO, of wL.ch tiie atiove
Is an alistia^'t. has bccii received and filed in this
Departmtmt and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PRF.rS.
CoiLmlasicner of Ins,;rance.
Total admitted assets $ 24,148,638.00
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
Unpaid losses .->.nd claims $ 526.052.26
I'neameil premiums 7.917.351.1)2
Salaries, expenses, taxce. dividends and
interest due 170,068.40
Commi-sfions and brokerage 102,788 87
Iteliisuruiice premiums 31,188.95
Ccntlngcnt reserve 250,'tOO.OO
All other iiabllities l.S6,786.4£
Cai'itnl stock paid up 2,000,(00.00
Total liabilities, including capital.. $ 11,134,436.82
Net stiiTlus $ 13,014,201.18
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
*Fire Ti-sks written duri: g the jear. . . $1,03!'. 403. 044. 00
Preriikinis receivtd theism 8,8611,841.54
.Vt't amount in tone at end of tbs
year 1,438.363,682.00
* — Including businesa other than "Marine and In-
land. '
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including re:i.s>ir«ntt received and deducting re-
liisumnce placed )
, mtf risks Tornado Aggregate
Bisks writ-
ten $25,482,008.00 $9,719,449.00 $35,201,457.00
Premiums
received . 5*0.955.^3 40,666.15 301,621.73
Losses
incurred 161,800.47 161,806.47
I,(i««es paid 144.162.12 10,374.14 154.336.26
Ami unt at
risk 46,456.281.00 19 841.602.00 66,297.883.00
State (f Sllr.nesct.T. Department of Insurance.
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement sf
the Continental insurance C<.nip.-i;iy, for the year
ending l>ecember Mst. lUlO. of whUli the above is an
abstract, lias l«en rettlvtil and filed in this Depart-
ment and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PRKUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
Gross assets $ e,254,264.6<j
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balan'.-es $ 5,227.22
27,719.16
Spolal deposit, less 919,973.84 UabiUly
thereon
Total assets not admitted . .
Total admitted assets
32.946.38
. ..$ 6.221.318.28
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
I'npald losses and cliUins 9 321.179.62
Unearned premiums 2,777,577.98
S.'ilaries, (xiienses, taxes, dividends and
inUrvst duo 51,915.77
Commissions and bioki-rage ]2,ri00.00
Hcliisurance priniiunis 34,71<6 08
Capital stock paid up 1,000,000.00
Total UabiUtles, including capiUl $ 4,197,900.43
Net stiiplus 9 2.023,40883
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks Hrltten during the year $398,500,144.00
Premiums rectlved thtreon 4.348,42i;.48
Net amount In force at end of the year. 328,009.680.00
•—Including businesB otber Uian "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS
(Including
Insurance placed. )
Fire risks
Risks written...
Pre mil; 1119
received
I<»«sfs incurred.
Losses paid ......
Amtunt at risk.
IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
reinsurance received and deducting re-
Toma<lo. Aggregate.
93.321.016.00 $190,610.00 93.312,526.00
52, .104. 10
87,100.70
37,831.21
3,942,860.00
907.62
25.40
23.40
218,475.00
53.211.72
37,126.10
87,876 61
4.161,335.00
State r.f Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
1 Herely Certify. That tlic Annual Statement of the
Niagara Mr* Insurance Company, for the year end-
ing l»ecemi;/er Slst, 1910, of which the above Is an
abstract, has U-en received and filed hi tlds De-
partment and duly ' approved 4jy me.
J. A. O. PP.KtTS.
Commissioner of Insurunce.
Total ledger assets (as per balance).. 9 7,623,345.13
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued 9 83.887.65
Gross assets 9 7.707.032.80
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
25,129.01
164,510.23
Royal Insurance Company, Limited.
Principal office in the United Stites: 84 William
street, Nevn Ycrii, N. Y. (Commitnceil business in
Uie United States 1851.) Edwar.l Fitch Beddall,
general attorney in the United suites. Attorney ki
accept service in Minnesota; Cos jnlssioner of in-
surance.
DEPOSIT CAI'ITAL, $4!.0,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other ttian perpetuals.. .9
Pi-emlums on perpetual risks
Rents and Inltrest ;
Received from home office
7.647.407.40
3.66
610,860.82
£c6,115.93
Total income .9
8,494,475.81
Ledger assets Dec. SI of previous yeir$ 11,200,507.14
IN
Sum
DISBURSEMENTS
Net amount paid foi losses
Commlssloris and brokerage
Salaries aod fees of officere. agents and
employes
Taxes, fees, rrnts aod other real ci-
tato ixi>enses
Returned to home office
All oUitr distMirsements
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjtist-
ment of ledger assets
9
1910.
I
19,604,982: 95
3,564.515.90
1,338,009.27
792,131.84
272,580.81
1.465,156.79
764,353.05
87.50
Total disbursements , 9 8 196 835.86
Balance ...r , 9 11,498.147.09
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. Ill, 1910.
Book value of real estate 9 4,174.890.61
Mortgage loans 403,100.00
Book value of bonds and stocks 5,225,335.43
Cash in office, trust companies ai.d
k^mks 880.864.20
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums ai.d
bills rtceivabie. taken for premiums. 1,313,947.8;
Total ledger as.sets (as per balance .$
NON-LEDGER ASS E 78.
Interest and rents due and accrued. . .$
All other non-ledger assets
11,498,147.00
85 003.41
64,519.34
Gross assets $ 11,637,669.84
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT At'MITTEO.
Agents' lialances 9 28,334.10
Book value of ledger assets over ma*-
ket value 74,760.68
Agents' balani-es 9
Book value of ledger assets over market
value
Spe<'lAl deposit, less $16,870.78 llabUity
thereon
38,620.22
Total assets net admitted...
226,259.46
Total admitted assets $ 7.480.773.34
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims $
Unearned premiums
Itcdaimable tn perpetual ptlicies...
Salaried, expenses. taxc<. dividends
interest due
Capital stock paid up
and
383,922 63
3,21 1,47?. 50
915,406.58
30.000.00
750,000.00
Total liabilities, including capital 9 5,200.892.71
Net surplus $ 2.189,880.63
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks writtep during the year.. ..$410,023 328 00
Prcniiums rei-eived thereon 4, 413,28?. 00
.Net amount in force at end of the year. 584, .182, (188. 00
'—Including busiueiis other tiian "Murine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
insurance placed.)
Fire Risks. Tornado. Aggregate.
Risks written $4,842,731.00 $303,431.00 $5,146,18200
Pn'Uilums
received 76,706.00 2.018.00 78.724.00
Losses incurred.. 47,940.00 150.00 48.090.00
Losses paid 48,987.00 150.00 49.137.00
Amount at risk 7,995,046.00
State nf Mlnr.eJKita. Department of Insurance:
1 Hcrel.y Certify, That the Annual Rlatement cf
the I'eniiEylvHnla Fire Iiisuranie Comiiany, lor the
year eliding Dei-«aiber Slst, 1010, of which the abo^e
Is an abstract, has b«<n received and filed in this
Department and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREU8.
Comtuissiouer of liisurauce.
Total aspets not admitted $ 103,114.78
Total admitted assets
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Ur.pald losses and claims $
Unearned premjuais .
Ileclaiuable en pcri>elual policies
Reserve and liabilities in special dn-
partment 90,475.00
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends aid
interest due 180.754.17
CorrniiESlons and brokerage 18,988.95
All other llablUUes 181,611.88
Deposit capital 450,000.00
Royal Indemnity Company.
Principal office 84 WllUam street, Nctv Tor* N.
y. tOrgaiiized In lOiO.) Edward F Betldall. pirxl*
dent; J Harold Pesrrh. secretary. Attorney to ao>
ccpt service in Minnesota: Commisslcijer of Iiisufl*
auoe.
CASH CAPITAL, $500,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Received from stoctiiolde.-s $1.045, 506.0S
Total income tl,045,506.0tt
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Paid for tntareet accrued on securiUcs 7,668.71
Total disbursement!! 9 7,«€8.T»
.Balance $1,037.837.T»
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value of stoeJts and bonds 9 980,850 Od
Cash tn office, trust companies and
»»*nks 56.987.T*
Total ledger assets las pet IwUncc) $1,037,837. 7i
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Intrreet and rents due and accrued on
'»«wl8 $ T,«68.7t
Gross assets $1,045,508.50
LIABILITIES.
Salaries, expense* for organization 9 18. 075. SI
Capital stock paid up 500,000.00
Total liabilities, Ittcluding capital $ 318 075 91
Surplus over all liabilities $ 527,430.58
No busiiiCbs doiM> in Minnesota in 1910.
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Herehy Certify That tiio Annual Statement oC
the Koyal Indemnity lasuranco Company, for the
year enehng Detemtwr 31st. 1910, cf nfiicli the atwva
is en abstract, has been received ).nd filed in tills
Department aad duly approved by me
J A O PREUS,
Conunissioiier of InsuraocSk
9 11,534, 555.06
734,948.7f
7.380,6S4.29
95,102.97
Tctal liaUilitiee. Including deposit
capital $
9,132,516.02
Net suriilus
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, I9i(
•Fire risks written during tlie year.
I^reuiiums received thereon
Marine i<nd inland risks written
iiig the year
Premiums received thereon
dui'-
$ 2,4(i2.0::S.C4
BUSINESS.
$1,011,330,745.00
10.755,076.83
39.724,374 00
223.664 72
force at end of
business other than
Net amount in
year
• — Iiiclaeilng
laud."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received ajU deducting
Insurance placed)
Fire Risks. Tornado. Aggregate.
tie
. .$1,386,998,744 00
'Marine and lu-
re-
Risks
written
Premiums
received
Losses
incurred
Ix'ssfs pall
Aiucjiit at
risk . . . ,
.$10,323,979.00 $1,007,413.00 $11,331,394.00
154.650.09 0,241.34 160,897.43
135.417.13
179,053.00
12;
13:
43
.43
133,540.56
170,182.52
21,281,145.00
State of Mlnnesfita, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, Tliat thu Ann lal l^tatement of
the Royal Insurance Company, for the year ending
December 3ist, 1010, of wlilch the aliove Is an ab-
stract, has tK-en received and filed In this Depart-
ment and duly approved by me.
J. A O PREUS.
Comndssionei of Insurunce.
IF you have some-
thing you think
somebody else wants
"tell them about it in
The
Herald
That's where every-
body else advertises
when Quick Results
are an object*
C. L. RAKOWSKY & CO., tefils
...Insurance...
Bonds.
Loans.
200-1-2 Exchange Building.
Rentals.
MaMsachUMetts BondtnK A luNurance
C'ompany.
Principal office: 77 Stiiie street, Bc<8tcn. Mass.
((irgr.iiixeu in 1907.) T J. I'alvey, president; John
T. Bori.ett, secretary Attorney to accept tervice in
Miiiuei'ola; ''ommlssli ner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL $300 000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premliims received (Net) —
FldeMy a.ici surety $581,il8.91
Burglary and theft 86.938.07
Tct«l net premium Income $ 668.156.08
K:tm ..ntenist and rents 33,222.82
From all othei sources 882.37
Total income . . .
Ledger assets Dec.
31
$ 702,262.18
of previous year. $1,094,580 77
Sum $1,796,842.93
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Claims paid uNeti —
Fidelity nua surety $31,866.82
li jrgiaiy and theft 18.934.49
Net paid pelicyholtlers $ 50.801 31
Invcstlgatioii au<l adjustment of claims 8,103.80
Coiiuulsslons 166.909 50
Dividends to stockholder' 36.600.00
(Salaries of officers, agents, employes, ex-
amiiiers' and inspection fees 110.606.76
All other disbursements 78,071.05
Total disbursements $ 447.3S2.31
Balance
$1,^49.200.44
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Mortgage I01.1.S 9 5.000 CO
Book value of bonds and stocks 966.419.30
Cash hi office, trurt companies and
banks 187,895.68
Premiams in course of collections 189.808.08
Ail oUier assets 136.50
Tital ledger assets (a.< per balance) $1,349,260.44
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued $ 10,167.37
Gross assets $1,359,427.81
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
P.emiums iu course cf collection (past
due) 9 26.377.59
Book value cf ledger assets over market
value 18,906.19
Special deposits less $12,470.92 llabiUty
thereon 13.670.08
Total a.ssets not admltftd $ 58.953.86
Totitl admitted asseta 91,300,473.95
LIABILITIES.
Claims —
l.T process of adjustment and reported... $ 57.418.19
kesisted 58,962.20
TotAl 9 lie.3gp.30
Deduct reinsurance 1.440. uO
Net unpaid claims except liability
dairjs $ 114.931.30
Unearned premiums 336,008.2'j
Commissions and brokerage 45,760.78
Ail (thcr liabilities 33.666.19
Kipeiises of JnvesllgaUon of claims 5.150.00
Capital stock paid up 500.000.00
Total llabllitke. including capiUl 9 1.033.516.79
Surplus over ail llaMlltles $ 204,957.16
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
Premiums Received. Losses Paid.
FidcUty $23,470.81 $ 4916
Surety 8,670.27 20.59
Burglary and theft 6,2C1 33 2.'i42.6y
Totals
$38,450.43
92.371.26
State of Minnesota, Depiirtraent of Insurance:
I Ilcrtiy Certify. Tliat the Annual Statement of
the Mus'achu.setts Bonding and Insuranee Ccm-
p.Tny, for the year ending December 31st. 1910, of
winch the above Is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly approved
by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Disurance.
$>T'ea Fire and Life Insnranrc Company.
Principal office in Uie Unltetl Slates; 100 William
street. New York. N. Y. (Commenced business in
til© United States 1884.) M. L. l>uncan, general
manager In the United States. Attorney hi accept
service in Minnesota; Commlssicr>?r ot Insurance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL. 9210,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than periHtuals 9 T16.934.22
Rents and Interest 39.757.12
From all other sources 85100
Total income 9 757.342.34
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of prcvloiis year.$ 1.286,382.15
Sum $ 2,043,924.40
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid fir losses $
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes
Taxes, fees, rents and otlier real estate
expenses
All other disbursements
Gross loss on sole, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
374,
198,
653.23
376.85
47,170.91
6,
55,
259.66
263.76
03.75
Total disbursements 9 681,820.16
Balance 9 1,362,104.33
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value nf bonds and stocks 9 1,111,390.48
Cash in office, trust comiwnies and
banks 107,704.03
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills iV'ceivabie, taken for premiums. 143,009.82
Total ledger assets (aa per balance) 9 1.362,104.33
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued $ 11,721.27
Gross asseU $1,373,823.60
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' baUnces $ 2.977.15
Ail other assets not admitted 41,040.48
Total assets n?t admitted $ 44,917.63
.9 1,328.907.97
Total admitted assets
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims 9 77,984.94
Unearned picmiums 840,612.05
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
interest due 12.512.53
(Commissions and brokerage 2,432.42
All other liabUlUes 471.33
Deposit capital 210.000.00
Total liabilities, including deposit capital 053,033.27
Net surplus $ 375,874.70
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written during the year $76,134,930.00
Piemiums received thereon 960,413.83
Net amount In force at end of the year. .$93,931,098.00
* — Including business ether than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Inoludhig reinsurance received and deducting re-
insuraiico placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written v $1,641,403.00
Premiums received 22.735.26
Losses incurred . . r. 18.090.21
Losses paid 17 99.1.11
Amount at risk 2.636.408.00
State cf MLnnesola. Department of Instirance:
I Hereby Certify, Tliat the Annual Statement of
the Svca File & Life Insurance Company, for the
year ending I>ecembtr Slat. 1910. of which the above
Is an abstract. Uis been received and filed in tliia
Department and duly aproved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commisioner cf Insurance.
of the Banco del Oro Mining Company,
organized under the laws of the Re-
public of Me.xico;
(2) 4992 shares of the Capital Stock
of the Cerro Prieto Commerciale Cia,
S. A., or Companla Commerciale De
Cerro Prieto, S. A. (Inc.), organized
under the laws of the Republic of
Mexico;
(3) All moneys transferred to the
undersigned by The Black Mountain
Mining Company;
(4) .Ml credits, choses in action, bills
receivable und account* receivable
transferred to the undersigned by the
Black Mountain Mining Company;
(5) All claims and demands of any
nature owned by The Black Mountain
Mining Company and transferred by it
to the undersigned;
(6) All statements, documents, in-
struments, or books evidencing the
above claims or demands and delivered
to the undersigned by The Black Moun-
tain Mining Company and In his pos-
session at the time of such sale.
The foregoing securities and prop-
erty will first be ofleied for Bale sep-
ariitoly and in parcels less than the
whole, anel will be. sotd In such manner
as will realize the highest aggregate
amount in oash, and will be sold with-
out recourse in any event against the
undersigned.
For further particulars In respect to
the above mentioned securities and
property, inquire of C H'. Lucht, Room
1012. No. 135 Adams Street, Chicago,
Illinois.
Dated at Chicago, Illinois, March
28th. A. D. 1911.
FRAinK G. nelson. Trustee,
135 Adams Street, Chicago, Illinois.
DP:FRBES, BUCKINGHAM, RITTER &
C.^MPBKLL, Attorneys for Trustee.
226 La Salle Street, Chicago.
D. H., April 3, 10, 17. 24, 1911.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
ST. LOUIS— 88.
We. E. P. Bradt and H. G. Champlin,
•who are respectively the President and
Secretary of the GREAT NOHTHERiN
LAND COMPANY, a corporation duly
created, organized and existing under
and by virtue of the laws of the State
of Minnesota, do hereby certify that at
a special meeting of the stockholders
of said company, held at room number
413 Palladio Building, In the city of
Duluth, St. Louis County, Minnesota,
on the 11th day of April. 1911, at 6:30
oclock P. M., held pursuant to written
waiver of notice of said meeting, and
the express written consent to the
holding of said meeting at said time
and place, and to the transaction cf any
and all business thereat, at which
meeting there were present stockhold.
ers representing seven thousand (7,000)
shares out of a total number of ten
thousand (10,000) shares of stock issued
and outstanding, the following reso-
lution was duly adopted by the unani-
mous vote of seven thousand (7,000)
sliares of stock of said corporation
out of a total issue of ten thousand
(10,000) shares of stock issued and
outstanding, being a majority of all of
the shares 01 stock issued and out-
standing, which said resolution is in
the words and figures following, to-
wlt:
RESOLVEP, That Article VII of the
certificate af Incorporation of the
Great Northern Land Company duly
recorded in the office of the Secretary
of State of the State of Minnesota,
November 12th, 1910, at Nine o'clock
A. M., in Book T-3 of Incorporations,
on page 441 thereof, be and it is hereby
amended by striking out therefrom the
words Twenty-five Thousand ($25,000)
Dollars in the last line thereof, and
inserting !n. place thereof the words
One Hundred Thousand Dollars (JlOO,-
000), 80 that when said article Is
amended It shall read as follows:
ARTICLE VIL
The highest amotint of indebtedness
or liability to which this corporation
shall at any time be subject shall be
the sum of One Hundred Thousand
Dollars (IIOO.OOOI.
RESOLVED FlTRTHEIR, That the
President and Secretary of this cor-
poration be and they are hereby in-
structed and directed to execute ac-
cording to law a certificate in due form
showing said amendment to Article
VIT, and cause said certificate to be
duly filed, recorded and published as
required by law.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, We have
hereunto subscribed our names respec-
tively as President and Secretary, and
caused the corporate seal of said cor-
poration to be hereunto affixed thly
11th day of April, 1911.
E. F. BRADT,
President.
H. G. CHAMPLIN,
' Secretary.
(Great Northern Land Company Cor-
porate Seai.)
In presence bf:
JULIA BEftGQUIST.
LOUIS M. BERGQUIST.
by me first duly sworn, on oath did say
each for liimseJf that he. the said E. F.
Bradt, is the President, and that he,
the said H. G. Champlin, is the Secre-
tary, of the Great Northern Land Com-
pany, the corporation above named,
and that they have compared the fore-
going copy of the resolution with the
original resolution as adopted at the
meeting of the stockholders of said
Great Northern Land Company held at
the time and place above specified,
and now in their legal custody, and
that the foregoing Is a true and cor-
rect copy of said resolution, and of the
whole thereof; and that the seal affixeJ
to the said foregoing Instrument is
the corporate seal of said corporation,
and was so affixed by them by due
authority.
JULIA BERGQUIST,
Notary Public,
St. Louis County, Minn.
(Notarial Seal.)
My commission expires Aug. 29, 1917.
State of Minnesota, Department of
State.
I hereby certify that the within in-
strument was filed for record in this
office on the 12th day of April, A. D.
1911. at 9 o'clock A. M., and was duly
recorded in Book U-3 of Incorporations,
on page 110.
JULIUS A. SCHMAHL.
Secretary of State.
(168343)
OFFICE OF REGISTER OF DEEDS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
— ss
I hereby certify that the within in-
strument was filed in this office for
record April 15, 1911, at 12 M., and was
duly recorded in Book 14 of Misc., page
183.
M. C. PALMER,
Register of Deeds.
By THOe. CLARK,
Deputy.
D. H., April 17 and 18. 1911.
CONTEST NOTICE—
Department of the Interior, United
States Land Office.
Duluth, Minn., March 2, 1911.
A sufficient contest affidavit having
been filed in this office by Rikkard K.
Niemi, contestant, against Homestead
Entry No. 02111, made November 2,
1908, for SEVi NW14 Section 32, Town-
ship 61 N., Range 13 W., 4th Principal
Meridian, by Manu Raukonen, Con-
testee, in which it is alleged that said
Manu Raukonen has never resided on
said land and has not improved or cul-
tivated the same for two years last
past. And that said alleged absence
from said land was not due to service
In the army, navy or marine corps of
the United Statts in time of war, said
parties are hereby notified to appear,
respond and offer evidence touching
said allegation at nine o'clock a. m.
on April 20th, 1911, before the Register
and Receiver at the United States Land
Office In Duluth Minn.
The said contestant having, in a
proper affidavit, filed March 2, 1911, set
forth facts which show that after due
diligence personal service of this no-
tice can not be made, it Is hereby or-
dered and directed that such notice be
given by due and proper publication.
CHARLES F. HARTMAN,
Register.
W. H. SMALLWOOD,
Attorney.
D. H. March 20, 27, April 3, 10, 17, 1911.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
— ss
On this lllh day of April, 1911. be-
fore me, a t^otary Public within and
for said county, personally appeared
E. P. Bradt and H. G. Champlin, to me
personally known to be the persons
who executed the foregoing instrument,
and acknowuedged the same to be
their free act and deed; and tbey being
Standard Fire Insurance Company.
Principal office: Hartford, Conn. (Or-
ganized In 1906.) M. L. Hewes, presi-
dent; H. B. Anthony, secretary. Attor-
ney to accept service In Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, 1500,000.
Income In 1010.
Premiums other than per-
petuals I
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
167,301.12
23,007.91
Total income |
180,309.03
Ledger assets December
31st ot previous year..| 952,124.19
Sum I 1,132,433.22
Disbursements In 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses I 17,259 . 49
Sxpenaea ot adjustment
of losses 213.74
Commissions and broker-
age 36,064.80
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes 21,823.44
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses 8,037.35
All other ditibursements. 19,661.54
Dividends to company
3ir 35
Total disbursements
98,080.36
Balance $ 1,034,352.86
Ledger Assets Dec. 3)., 1010.
Book value of bonds
and stocks |
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for pre-
miums
961,762.18
32,909.34
39,681.34
Total ledger assets (as
per balance ( $ 1,034,352.86
IVon-LedKcr Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued | 11,740.41
All other non-ledger as-
sets 9,000.00
Gross assets I 1,055,093.27
Deduct Assets Not Admitted.
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value$ 21,627.18
All other assets not ad-
mitted 9,000.00
Total assets not admit-
ted I 80,527.18
Total admitted assets.!
Lialiiiities Dec. 31,
Unpaid lo."sses and claims. 9
Unearned pj-emlums ....
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due
Capital stock paid up...
1,024,566.09
1010.
9,397.19
96,875.03
2,500.00
500,000.00
Total liabilities, includ-
ing capital 9 608,772 . 22
Net surplus $
Risks and Premiums, lOl*
(a) Fire risks written
during the year f
Premiums received there-
on
Wet amount in force at
end of the year
(a) Including business
"Marine and Inland."
Business in Minnesota
vincluding reinsurance r
deducting reinsurance place
Kisks written
Premiums received
Losses incurred . . .
Losses paid
415.793.87
) Business.
24,142,116.00
214,453.41
16,644,499.00
other than
in 1010.
eceived and
Fire Risks.
.|512,:^34.00
7,143.81
776.00
99.18
TnUl paid poUcyholders 9 9,482,681.85
Dividends held on detiosit surrendered
during the yenr 203,514.75
Ijlvidcnels to stockholdere 200,000. Oe
Coinmls.'l( IIS and tKnuses to agents first
year's premium 400,087 20
Commissions on renewals 607 406 64
CimmiHSiOrw on annuities 3 438.SS
('( mmutcd renewal ct.mmisslons. 14,480.90
Agency supirvislcn und otlier ex(>eiises.. 56,932.85
Medical examiner's fees and inspection
of rl-shs 8fl.638.5B
Salaries of officers and employes 323,711 85
Legal exiKTises 5,786. OS
Gross lev rii luile, maturity or adjiist-
meiit of ledger assets 46,408.39
AH other dfebursciueiits 860.G31.60
Total disbuicemtuts
Balance
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. Si.
Vf.lue ot ical estate owned
Mortfagc loans
Coliatertii loans
Premium notefi and policy loans.......
Honda and stocks owned
Casli, In of! ice", banks and tni>t com
paniee
Rills rece-ivable and agents balances.
.9 12.104. 0C7. 09
$ 90,111.439.28
1910.
.9 397,001.31
. 46.731.662.2*
1,320,470. 7e
8.325,149.30
. 80,016,431. 51-
9.072,191. U
48.552.99
Total ledger a.ssete (as per l<al»nce)..$ 90,111. 459. 29
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Int«reft and rente due and ac<-ru«d .$ 1,702.455.71
Market value of IkiiuIs and t-toilis over
bock value ■ 2,490,23«.Tr
Net deferred and unpaid premiums 995.512.21
Gross a«cts $ 95.299,663.»»
DEDUCT A8SET8 NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' debit balances 9 81.696.48
All ether asseU not admitted 22,075. S<
Premium notes and loans 48.31
Total assets not admitted (
53,820 39
Admitted asset*, life business 9 95,245,843.1
Admitted aivcts (accident and liability
department) $
5.756,734.80
State of Minnesota, Depart
surjince:
I Hereby Certify, That
Statement of the Standard
ance Company, for the year
cember 31st, 1910, of whlcl
is an abstract, has been r
filed in this Department ai
proved by me.
J. A. O.
Commissioner of
ment of In-
the Annual
Fire Insur-
endlng De-
1 the above
eceived and
id duly ap-
PREUS,
Insurance.
Aetna Life' iuMnrance C
Principal offioe; 650 Main street.
(Omanlzed In 182G.) M. G. Bulkeli
E. Gilbert, secretary. Attorney to i
Mimiesota: Cenimlssloner cf Insura:
CASH CAPITAL. $2,000
INCOME IN 1910.
First year's premiums
Dividends and surrender values appll
to puichase paid-up Insurance a
atuiultles
Consideration for original annuities, a
supplementary centracte. involvi
life ccntingencies
Renewal premiums
ompany.
Hartford. Conn,
y, president : C.
cc^t service iu
ce.
000.
1,127.625.42
193,480.13
Total prcmi-jm Income. . .
Rents and interests
From all other tources
124.83173
9.238,683.64
. .9-10.C84.6LO92
4 400.4.-.3 16
221.354.37
ToUl Income 9 15.306.430.45
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous yeir. 86,999,09C.52
gum $1<I2. 303.526.97
DISBURSEMENTS OURINIi 1910.
Death claims and matured endo t-
ments f 6.599.849.46
Auauitles and premium cotes voided tag
lapse 33,37L41
Surrender values to polirylwldca 1,887,578 21
Dirtdmito to poUcytaolden 194.591.42
ToUI JIOl
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
Net value of outstanding pcllcies $ 82
Present value on supplementary con-
tracts and canceled policies
Claims due iind unpaid
Claims adjusted and not due, and un-
adjusted and regiorted
Claluie resh-ted
I'remiuuis paid in advance
Dividends due policyliolders 1.
Special reserve
All other liabilities 1
002.577.98
794,149.09
802 234 08
lC3.6t£.41
1S0.084 08
42,618.o;8
21 934 98
339.378.02
704,323 00
214,709.31
Liabilities on poJicyhoidere' account.
life business $ 86,633,332.98
Liahillties. accident and health depart-
ment 4 282 609 14
Capital stock paid up $ 2,000,000 0«
ToUl 9 92,916.142 18
Unasslgned funds (surplus) 8,u<v«.435.8S
EXHIBIT OF POLICIES. 1910 BUSINESS.
No. Amount.
Policies in force at vn-ginnlnf of
the year— (Last column only) 163,560 $293,523.232 90
Policies in force at dose ot the
year 170,208 307,102,649 08
Net Incrpase 4.148
I&sued. revived and increased
during lh» year 20,507
Total terminated during tbe
year 15,839
By death 2,254
maturity 1,844
expiration 5,280
surrender 3 119
lapse 3,360
decirase • 2
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN
No.
PoUdfc in force at hegimdng
of llie year
Issued during Uie year
Ceased to be in force during tbe
year
In force Dec. 31 last
By
By
By
By
By
3,427
457
448
3,436
13,578,416. IT
35,903.750.28
22. 411. ."-34.11
3.888.322 72
2,716. 1'la.OO
J.744.387 00
.'>,78r,687.65
7,407,^48.00
870,542.7*
1910.
Amouat
93.035. 156.35
600163.08
567 915 08
5,087,404 38
Losses and claims Incurred during the
yeiar 9
M3.399.I
Losses and claims settled during tbe
year 9 10.1,450 00
Losses and claims uopidd Dec. 91 2,948.80
Received for premiums 9 1<2,493.10
KUte of Minnesota. Derartment of liwurance:
1 Her«by Certify, Tluit the Annual Statement al
(be Aetna Life Insurane-e Company, for the yea*
ending December 31st. 1910, of which Uie above is
an abstract, has been received and tiled In Uiis Ds-
paitmeut and duiy approved by me.
J A. O. PREUS.
Cbmmissloiier «( Insuranea^
J. E. Meyers^
1231 Ouarokty BMs., Mfaiiitopolii,MiBik
mi
■Hki
'
--^mtm^
1 1
^
e
I
- f
•TiTfll
mt
*i4>-
*
Monday,
THE bULUTH HERALD.
■^mm'*a^»a
-v—
I
-•■»
l^i^i
WHEAT IS
OVERBOUGHT
Values Decline Sharply —
Bears Jump on Market
Fearlessly.
Statistics Mixed — Supply De-
creases But Still Is
Heavy.
Duluth Board of Trade. April 17. —
Wheat declined precipitately today, the
bears jumping on the market without
much lear, apparently, from the inter-
ests who have been working on the
lonR si'le. Bulls took prottts on the
down turn and the market was soft.
The cash demand was slow and that
clement of strength was lacking.
May wheat lost IV-jc and July de-
clined l*»c. Cash was Ic over May.
Durum wheat lost l^^c, oats lost ^c,
rye and barley were unchanged.
The market was weak (rora the open-
ing. Wheat declined precipitately un-
der heavy selling. The shorts appar-
ently had been entirely run in and the
bears operated with more confidence.
Weather reports from all parts of the
country were favorable and the condi-
tion of winter wheat is excellent. Seed,
ing in the Northwest is favorable.
There was little or no cash demand In
the Northwest and this strong feature
of the bull side was lacking. The vis-
ible showed a decrease of 1. 587, 000 bu.
About 430.000 bu of wheat In an ele-
vator at St. Louis, taken out on account
of an accident In a storm, will be re-
placed later. Associated Pre.ss dis-
patclies to the effect the wheat had
been dumped into the Mississippi river
by the .storm appear to have been in
error. This wheat probably will be re-
placed in next week's visible.
Wheat on passage was heavier this
week than last week. Reports from
India said that the weather is favor-
able and harvesting and thrashing are
progressing favorably. The wheat
movement is sloy as farmers hope for
higher prices.
Wheat traders are inclined to look
for choppy markets for the next thirty
days, and there Is a good deal of in-
terest In the operations In May. The
trade Is more than ordinarily mystl-
fted by the operations in the near
month and is at a loss to know who
the big holders of the May are. There
is understood to be a big shortage yet
with the long Interest centered in
fewer liouses than a few weeks ago.
Tlie tendency of the bull traders in
the May appears to be to concentrate
their holdings in a less number of con-
cerns.
Recent operations In the May have
not served to enlighten traders to any
great extent, although it Is believed
there has been at least a partial liqui-
dation of the long lines, and it is also
the general opinion there Is May for
sale on all the strong spots. Shorts,
aside from the -hedgers. have covered
on quite a liberal scale on the ad-
vances, and to tills extent the inter-
est in May has been diminished, as
there probably has been but little new
short selling. The general trade has
been going more and more into the
new crop months, with a consequent
narrowing of the trade in May. The
result has been to make the near
month more susceptible to either buy-
ing or selling.
Most wheat traders hold the view
that the May government report will
show a better condition than In April,
and the concensus of opinion is that
the report will show less than the
usual percentage of abandoned acre-
age However, some speculators are
takins? the long side of the new crop
months on the dips, believing that tlie
bear news has been discounted to a
larg^ extent, and that with the small
receipts and slowly Improving cash
wheat and flour trade, the market will
at least be on debatable ground until
the crop is made.
Flaxseed was .'Strong. May advancing
3c to $2.59. July went up a similar
distance, although there was no trad-
ing in It. Cash was Ic over,
cash sales of the day were
Winnipeg May closed $2.47%.
AMERICAN
May — Open.
Duluth I .97*4a
Minneapolis ... .97^4-%
Chicago 91%
WHEAT
High.
I .97%a
.97^4-
,91%
MARKETS, APRIL
Close.
Winnipeg
New York .
St. Louis . . .
Kansas City
July—
Duluth
Minneapolis
Chicago . . . .
Winnipeg . .
New York
St. Louis . . .
Kansas City
8uutliwei»tem
May
July
I
and
.92'/!
.95
.87%
.85%
.98%a
.96«4
.87t4
.94%
.94
.84%
.82%
Winnipeg
.93
.95%
.87%
.85%
.98%a
.97Vi
.87»4
.94%
.94-
.»*%
.82%
quotations furnished 1)]r
Low.
.96%
.95%-%
.89%
.92
.94%
.87
.84%-%
.97%a
.96%
.86^
.93%
.93%
.83%
.91%
It. E. Baker
.96%b
.96-%a
.90
.92%
.94%
.87%
.84%-%
.97%a
.97b
.86%
.93%b
.93
.83'/(
.81
Co.
DULUTH DURUM MARKET
Open. High. Low. Close
,86%a
.87%a
.86% a
.87%a
.85
.86%a
.85%
.86%n
May
July
DULUTH LINSEED
Open. High. Low
12. 56b $2.59 $2
MARKET.
Close.
56b I2.E9
2.59n
Duluth close: AVheat— On track: No 1 lia[fi,9^%c
rive No. 1 northern, 97 %c: No. 2 nerthern, 94%-95%c
July, 977BC asked: September. 90c nominal
arrive: No. 1, 8o%c; No. 2, 83V4c: Ma>. 8_5y4C
Flax: On track, to arrive, $2.60; May
3IV4C. live. 82-84C. Barley, 99c-|1.10.
Receipts— Wheat. 56,589 bu: last year
year. 10.632 bu; flax, 533 bu: last year, 4.225 bu
Shipments— Corn. 600 bu; oats. 1,350 bu; last year. .,004
On track, to ar-
May, 96%c bid:
Durum — On track. In store, to
bid: July, 86%c nominal.
$2.59; July, $2.59 nominal. Oats,
Feed barley, 83-95c. „ „„„ ^ , „.
64,313 bu: barley. 17.232 bu; last
portion. Minnesota — Increasing cloud-
iness tonight and Tuesday; cooler Tues-
day and in northwest portion tonight;
frost in northwest portion tonight.
Iowa— lncrea.-»lng cloudiness with prob-
ably showers late tonight ot; Tuesday;
warmer tonight in east portion; cooler
Tuesday. North Dakta — Generally fair
tonight and Tuesday cooler. ,J50"th
Dakota— Cloudy tonight with colder m
west portion; Tuesday fair with colder
In east portion. Nebraska — Increasing
cloudiness with probably showers in
southeast portion tonight or Tuesday;
cooler tonight in north and west por-
tions and Tuesday in east portion.
Kansas — Increasing cloudiness south,
probably showers in east portion to-
night or Tuesday.
• • ♦
On pas.=<age: Wheat— This week. 59.-
616 000 bu last week 68.984.000 bu,
last year 50.706.000 bu; corn, this week
8 364:000 bu, last week 8,483,000 bu,
last year 4,193,000.
• • * o
James A. Patten of Chicago wired B
E Baker that he could see nothing but
the bear side of wheat. Wheat may
sell higher, he thinks, temporarily
shorts are not all in.
Receipts of wheat —
Today.
Duluth 45
Kansas City ^c aaa
St. Louis, bu 45.000
Chicago 24
• • •
Receipts of flax —
Today.
.■•*••••••• ^
o
No
• * •
puts: May^ 95 %c; July,
May, 96%^'96%c; July.
July
Siipt
Oata—
May .
Jtdy .
Stpt .
Mess
May . .
July .
Lard.
May .
July .
Sept .
Short
May .
July .
Sept ' .
.. .SO'St.-Ti .50%
.50%
.50%-%
.. .51\-T4 .5l?4-%
.51%
.51%-%
'.. .31%-32 .82%
.31%-%
.31%
.. .31V-32V4 .32%
.31%-%
.31%-%
.. .31\ .31?4
.31%
.31%-%
Pork, per bbl—
..15.90 15.90
...l.'5.32%-10 13.40
15.62%
15.07%-10
15.65
15.12%
per 100 lb—
8 30 8.30
8.10
8.12%
. .. 8.40-42% 8.42%
8.20-22%
8.25-27%
. .. 8.45-47% 8.47%
8.25-27%
8.32%
Klbs, per 100 lb—
8.80-42% 8.8S
8. TO
8.70
... 8.40-42% 8.42%
8.22%
8.2711
... 8.22%-23 8.2T%
8.1U
8.15
MINNEAPOLIS MARKET.
Favorable Weather in Northwest
Sends Wheat Downward.
Minneapolis. Minn., April 17. — Wheat
reacted from Saturday's closing. Weak-
ness in Winnipeg influenced domestic
Duluth ....
W^innlpeg .
Minneapolis
as
Last
year.
107
103
35,000
15
Last
year.
13
4
report.
markets. Seeding will
completion in three
states with favorable
Soil conditions
bu;
de-
The o:»ly
at $2.60.
Cash Salett Monday.
northern. 1.000 bu. to arrire. ..
nortliprn, 1 car
nortiiem. 1.182-30 bu
norti'^ni, 1 c^r .....••.
•|)r<ii£ wheat. 2 can
sj.rliig. 1 car
diinim, 1 car
durum. 930 bu. W arrlre
duniin. 200 bu, to arrive.
Barley. 1 car
Flax, 1 car. No. 1
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
••«•••«•■
••■■•••••
i 9S%
.98**
.9g%
.99
.92%
.S4%
.86
.8fi%
.SOh
.83
Z.60
MARKET GOSSIP
Minneapolis
9614c; calls,
97 %@ 97 3.4 c.
« * •
Visible wheat, decrease 1,587,000
corn, decrease 1,002,000 bu; oats,
crease 401,000 bu.
« « •
World's shipments of wheat: Ameri-
can, this week 2.112.000 bu. last week 1.
872.000 bu. last year 1,728,000 bu; Rus-
sian, this week 3,768.000 bu, last week
3.384,000 bu, last year 5.606,000 bu;
Danublan, this week 968,000 bu, last
week 1,128,000 bu, last year 504,000 bu;
Indian, this week 1.048,000 bu. last
week 968,000 bu, last year 440,000 bu;
Argentine, this week 2,720,000 bu. last
week 3,768,000 bu, last year 2.152,000 bu;
Australian, this week 1.280.000 bu, last
week 3,608.000 bu. last year 1,436.000
bu; Chili. North Africa, this week 136.-
000 bu. last week 56,000 bu. last year
392 000 bu. Total, this week 12.032.-
000 bu. last week 14,784,000 bu, last
year 12,448,000 bu.
• ♦ «
World's shipments: Wheat, 12,032.000
bu; corn, 2,751,000 bu.
• • •
Budapes^t cabled: "Wlieat, small
stock. Prospects of crop becoming
less favorable but it is too early to
tell much about crop."
• • •
Primary receipts of wheat, 494.000;
last vear. 479.000; shipments, 314.000
vs 1.034,000. Corn, 395,000; last year,
417.000; shipments, 666,000 vs. 734,000.
• • •
Clement, Curtis & Co. had several re-
ports which they summarized as fol-
lows: Ohio — Wheat in good condition;
oats acreage about same; 20 per cent
of surplus corn on hand. Indiana —
Wheat generally good; oats acreage
the same: 20 per cent of surplus corn
on hand. Illinois — Condition of wheat
only fair on account of Hessian fly:
oats acreage will be slightly increased;
15 per cent of surplus corn on hand.
Missouri — Wheat fine; oats acreage at
a slight Increase; 10 per cent of sur-
plus corn on hand. Nebraska — Ex-
cept in the far western section wheat
is good; oats acreage generally un-
changed; one-third of the surplus corn
still to be shipped. Te.xas — Condition
of wheat good; abandoned acreage will
be small. Oats acreage slightly in-
creased.
bu for
received
i09 a year
and Winni-
97 Vk
96®
high,
July
96%c;
No
3 yellow
oats, 313
be rushed to
Northwestern
weather now.
excellent. May closed
l.%c lower than Saturday; July lV4c
lower and September l%c lower Local
elevator stocks decreased 500,ouo
two days. Minneapolis today
253 cars of wheat against
ago; Duluth 46 against 101
peg 235 against 130.
May wheat opened, 97%c; high,
@97%c; low, 95%(&95%c; closed,
96 Vic. September opened, »*>V»c;
90Vic; low, 88 %c; closed, 89c
opened, 97 ^^c; high, 9S%c; low,
closed, 97c. „ ,
Cash wheat In strong demand. No. l
northern quoted 2M!4i3%c above the
May contract. Close: No. 1 hard.
$1.00 Va; No. 1 northern, 98%@99%^,
to arrive. 98V8@99Vic; No. 2 northern,
95%@98Vsc: to arrive, 9»%@97%c;
3 wheat, 95%(S'96Vic; No.
corn. 4Sh^&i9c. No. 3 white
32c; No. 2 rye, 86V4c.
Millstuffs — Shipments, 2,646 tons.
Market strong and steady. Demand
excellent for immediate shipment but
slow for deferred. Bran in 100-pound
sac'ks, $21.75@ 22.00.
The flour market quoted steady. All
local mills except two In operation
this week. Moderate orders placed to-
day and shipping directions improved.
Shipments, 61,676 bbls. First patents
«4.55(&4.85; seconds, $4.45<S^4.75; first
clears. $3.05(&'3.50; seconds. $2.05rd!2.7O.
Flax — Receipts, 50 cars; year ago, 20:
shipments, 4. The demand was strong
for both spot and to arrive at Ic above
Duluth May. Closing price, |2.50.
Barley — Receipts, 83 cars; year ago,
45; shipments, 66. Barley market was
steady to a trifle firmer. Demand good,
especially for choice malting grades.
Offerings liberal for this season. Prices
unchanged to %c higher. Closing range,
70c@'$1.06.
•
Corn and Wheat Bulletin.
For the twenty-four hours ending at 8 a. m. Monday.
April 17:
DECLINES
IN STOCKS
Severe Drop ii? utilizers on
Liquidation and Short
Selling.!
General Market Firm at
Slight Fraction Below
Thursday's Close.
New York, April 17. — The majority of
the active issues declined slightly at
the opening of the market today.
Trading was very dull. American To-
bacco preferred and American Woolen
declined %. United States Steel % and
Iteading and Amalgamated Copper 2.
Selling of Missouri Pacific and Wa-
bash debentures, botli of which lost
a point, kept the general market under
restraint, but the leading stocks did
hot increase their Initial losses to any
considerable extent.
Prices were somewhat lower and
speculation was as dull as last week
when trading was resumed after the
three-day holiday. The market was
heavy throughout the morning. Indus-
trial .stocks were the chief losers, the
railroad stocks except Missouri Pa-
cific falling only moderate fractions.
Toward noon trading was virtually
suspended pending word from Wash-
ington whether the supreme (fburt was
to announce its decisions In the anti-
trust cases today. The critical state of
affairs in Mexico had little effect on
the securities of the Mexican railroads.
American Cotton Oil lost 1V4; Allls-
Chalmers preferred 1^ and Virginia-
Carolina Chemical 1. National Biscuit
gained a point. Bonds were irregular.
The market closed steady. Althougli
there were further severe declines in
the fertilizer stocks on liquidation and
short selling based on a resumption of
last weeks unfavorable rumors con-
cerning the properties, the general
market was not affected, and held firm
at a slight fraction below Thursday's
close. American Agricultural Chemical-
yielded IVi and Vifginia-Carollna
Chemical 2%.
New York Bloacy.
New York. April 17. — Close: Money
on call steady. 2@2% per cent; ruling
rate, 2% per cent; closing bid, 2>4
per cent- offered at 2% per cent; time
loans sort; 60 days. 2%®2% per cent;
90 days, 2% per cent; six months,
3#3V4 per cent; prime mercantile
paper, 3^®4 per cent; sterling ex-
change firm, with actual business In
bankers' bills at $4.84.30 for 60-day
bills and at J4. 86. 55@ 4.86.60 for de-
mand; commercial bills, |4.83%: bar
silver, 53c; Mexican dollars, 45c; gov-
ernment bonds steady; railroad bonds,
irregular.
»
Chicagro Livestock.
Chicago. April 17.— C,-itUe. receipt* estimated at
18.000; market steady to shade higher; beeves. |5.20(^
6.85; Texas steers, tl.SO&S.TO; western steers. $4.90
tfi-W; stockers and feeders, |4.10(S-5.85; cows and
heifers. »2.75(a5.90; cal»e». $5(s7. Hogs, receipu
estimated at 30.000; market generally 10c higher;
Ught. J6.35e»«.65; mixed. |«.20(«6.65; heary, $5.»5(*
6.45; rough. $3.95@6.1l>: gt<od to choice heavy.
$6 15(a'6.4j; pigs, $8.3">{s6.65; bulk of sales, $6.30®
6.50. KUeep. recelptji estimated at 20.000; maritst
steady., native. $3(j#4.70; we-stern. $3.15®5.73; year-
lli;gs, J4. 40^5.30; lambs, native. $4.70(a6.15; w«»t-
eru, J4.7ai36.l5.
HHc: wtiite, ll%@l2%c: Ute faU made, good to
prime, col^-red. lo%(*lH4c: uamfc whiu. 10V4®llc;
current make. Urge, Iji-st. 10Hei«\c; "ime common
to fair, aiaioc; skims, 2teluc. fc;gg»--Easiir; re-
ceipts, 26,409; fresh gathered selected e::tras. 1T%(S
IShic; fiisla, 16<al6i4c; seconcU. 15ft 1514c; fresli
gathered dirUes, No. 1, 14(*14Vic; same No. 2. 13«S' )
13^c; fresh gathered chetks. 13(al314c; storage
packed firsts, 17 (317 14c; sUie. Penn.> ylvanla and
nearby hennery white, lSt«i21c; same gai tiered white,
18«20c; liennery brown, 17^4ei»^4c; same gath-
ered brown, mUed. llil4(sl7V4c; aouttaeri uuck tgga,
•iitS^Oc; western. 22(3>2«c.
Smith $>t. Paul LIvratoek.
South St. Paul, Minn., April 17. — Cat-
tle— Receipts^ 600; strong; steers, $4.50
^6.10; cows and heifers, $2.60 Q. 5.25;
veal calves, $2.50 1^' 6; Blockers and
feeders, $3.25@5.35.
Hogs — Receipts, 1,600; market 5@10c
higher; range. $6.25<ji 6.35; bulk of
sales. $6.05 !&' $6.25.
Sheep — Receipts. 100; market,
steady; sheep, $1^5; lambs, $S.75^6.
THE PRODUCE MARKETS.
.0J%
.07%
.01
.07^
.It
-UH
.•>
• TO
3.8II
2.60
■■••■tcaataa
•••••••••i
••••••*•
New York stock quotatloiu fumtshed The Herald by
l>lpei. JohnsoB & CaM:
BTOCKS-
I \>pca.| (Ilgh. I Low. I CIaa«
Ac*. >rdi!ig to the estimate of the
Chicago Daily Trade Bulletin, there is
120. 000. 000 bu of wheat available for
export during the three months end-
ing with June next, and for supplies
to carry Into the next crop. The sta-
tistical position, as outlined by this
authority, is: '"The movement of
wheat to the primary markets of the
United States from July 1. 1910, to
April 1. lall, was about 192,000,000 bu,
compared with 228,000,000 bu for the
corresponding time In 1909-10. The
e.\p'>rt3 of Hour and wheat during the
same time were about 56.000,000 bu,
compared with 74,000,000 bu for the
same time last year — a decrease of 18,
Oiio.ooo bu. or 24.3 per cent. The of-
ficial visible supply of wheat on April
1 was about 5,000,000 bu larger than
reported one year previous. Estimat-
ing the wheat crop of the United States
at 695,000.000 bu and allowing 88,000,-
000 bu for supplies in all positions on
July 1, 1910, aggregate supplies for the
twelve months would be approximately
783,000,000 bu. Allowing 525,000,000
bu for consumption, about 82,000,000
bu for seeding during the harvest year,
and 56.000.000 bu exported to date — ac-
counts for 6C3.000.000 bu — and there
would remain for export during the
current three months and for supplies
on hand July 1, 1911. about 120.000.000
bu. The exports from April 1, 1910, to
July 1, 1910. were about 13,000,000 bu."
♦ • ♦
Cars of wheat Inspected: No. 1 hard,
2: No. 1 northern. 22; No. 2 northern,
5; rejected, 1; no grade. 2; No. 1 durum,
7; No. 2 durum, 3; total durum. 10;
mixed. 3; total wheat, 46. last year, lOf;
oats. 1. last year. 12; barley, 8, last
year, 12; total. 58; on track, 25.
« • •
Forecast: Illinois — Fair and warmer
tonight: Tuesday probably Increasing
cloudiness becoming unsettled at night.
Indiana — Fair tonight; warmer In
north and central portion; Tuesday fair
and warmer. Missouri — Increasing
cloudiness with probably showers late
tonlgtit or Tuesday: warmer tonight;
cooler Tuesday. Wi.<?consin — Fair and
warmer tonight; Tuesday probably in-
creasing cloudiness with cooler In west
gTATI0N3.
Stat* of
weather
Temiwrataro.
-umi
1
Amalgamated
Amerii-an Car Fuimdry..
American Smelters
Atchison
Bnltlmure & Ohio
Bnvoklyii It.ipid Transit.
Cli*?sapcake tk. Ohio
Chicago Northwestern ...
C. M. & .St. Paul
Canadian Pacific
Krie 1st pfd
Great Nortlkera
Great Nortiiem Ore ....
Missouri Pacif io
Nutiunal Lead ....j,.,..
New York Central
Noi'them Pacific
Pensylvunia .
Pc'ple's Caa
Uepubllc Steel & Iron pfd.
Rock Island
Reading
.Soittiiem PacUlo
Twin City
I'lUon Pacific
United .SUtes Steel
I'lilted ^^tate■ Steel pfd..
Wabash pfd
C2Vs
52 ii
S3%
62
73%
73\
73%.
lOSH
108%
108
105H
78
78
77%
80H
80 Vi
80%
14iV4
Ui%
144V^
US'*,
llOJi
120
Tir>%
225 T»
223%
*TV4
■ 125%
62
62
eiii
48^
4SM
47%
52
1W>4
106%
106
12J^
123%
123%
124%
124Ti
124%
104
94 U
29
1.54%
194%
154^4
115
lis
114%
109 Va
1T6S
iu\
176%
76%
76%
76%
uo\.
130
iie%
37^
CALIFORNIA OllANGKS—
E:xtra fancy nAveU. 150-216...
Fanty ii.^veU. 96-126
Fancy navels. 80
Fancy naveU. 150-216
FLOltlUA ORAPiiFRUIT—
46's to i>0'«. box
Grai>efrult. extra fancy, box..<
CALIFORNIA LKMONS—
Kxtra fancy, box, 300"» and 350'i 4.50
Imiiurted limes, box 1.25
PlM;APPLk;.S—
Cuban. 30' », crate..
Cuban, 30's, doz
GRAPES—
Malnga grapes, keg.
APPLkK—
Baldwins, box
Ark. beauUea. bos. .
Roman beauties, box
Greenings, box
Ben Oavles. box....
Varieties, box
Bpltzenberga. box ..
Wine B.ips. box
CUAMJKRIlll'»—
Jersey, bu crate. . . .
Michigan, crate
KRUIT JUICES—
Orange, keg
Raspberry, keg
Cherry, keg
Grape, keg
Cider, krg
BANANAS—
Bananas, per lb....
BUTTIIR—
Fancy creamery, per
Dairy, per lb
chkkse;—
Wisconsin, full cream, per lb,
American, full cream, per lb.,
Block UMiS. per Id, No. 1
Primost cheese, per lb
Odurluss brick, per lb
Wheel .Swiss, per lb
EGGS—
Eggs, fresh, per dox
PKANL'TS—
Fancy, raw, per lb by the »»ck
Fancy, roasted, sacks, per lb. .
Faiun roasted,
-Salted peauuU,
Salted peanuts,
Fancy Jumhoa.
Fancy Jgtnbos.
MAPLE SYRUP—
Vermont, per gai
Ohio. 5-gal. can ,
MAPLE SUGAR—
Iowa. assc)rt«<i pkgs.. 30-Ib box. per lb
POP CORN—
Snowball pop corn, 40-pkg. box
Santa Claus pop corn, ca*e
Pop com, on the cob
Pop corn, shelled
HONEY—
Wisconsin white clover, per ca««, 24 •
CABBAGE—
Home grown cabbage, per ton 35.00
lb %S%9
16@
>••••■•■
.,13.38
,. 3. 26
,. 2.80
,. 2.80
4.00
4. SO
4.75
8.00
8.00
2.35
2.35
2.,'jO
2.35
2.35
2.35
2.50
2.33
8.50
3. SO
3.75
3.75
3.75
3.75
3.7S
.04%
.23
.17
.15
.18
.15%
.08
.10
.17
CblcSKO.
Chicago, April 17.— Butter— Steady; cieameries. 15
@21c; dalrle.-), 13fel8c. Eggs— Steady; ^celpta. 22,-
215 cases; at mark, cases tiicluded, I3@l3%c; firsts.
I4%c: prime firsts. 15c. Cheese— Steady : daisies, 14
fel4%c; twins. la^felSc; yoiuig Americaj, 13%@l4c;
long horns. 13%<Sl4c. Potatoes— Firm ; choioe to
fancy, 5G(s58c; fajr to good, 53(S55c. Poultry-
Steady; turkeys, dressed, I'Jc; fowb, lire. 15c;
springs, live. 10. Veal— Steady; 50 to (0 lb wts.. 6
mTc; 60 to 85 lb wtt., 7(&9c; 85 to Hi lb WU. »%
©lOc.
HIDES, TALLOW AND FURS.
GREEN SALTED HIDES — No. 1. No. 2.
G. 8. steere. o»er 60 lb $ .01% $ .08%
G. S. steers. 23 lb and up and steera
under tiO lb
O. S. lung haired kips. 8 to 25 lb..
O. S. veal kips. 5 to 25 lb
G. S. Deacon skins, under 8 lb
G. S. hotsehldes
DRY SALTED—
Dry flint hides, over 15 lb II
Dry Minnesota, DakoU, Wlsconaln
and Iowa liidea
Muskrat, winter 40(i$34
Muna lus
Dry kid
Dry salted calf •
TALLOW AND OEKASB—
Tallow, In cakaa
Tallow, la bbl
Grease • •
PELTS—
Pelta, Urge, each
Pelta, medium to small
Dry pelts, butclier, Montana and
Washington
Dry aheariuga, each
WOOL— —Per lb-
No. .. No. 2.
Unwashed medium wool U .20
Unwashed coarse wool 18 .18
Unwashed flue medium 15% .17%
LEATHER— —Per lb—
" " No. 2.
< .40
.42
.37
.36
.32
.41
.44
SmaU.
$2.00
1.50
1.00
.50
16613
Early the next morning the assocla^
tion's members gather before the death
chamber and fall In line. The stranger
who sees the large procession Is filled
with surprise. His surprise increase*
when he learns that tne dead man la
only a poor negro coachman.
"But surely," he says, "he jnust have
been a wonderful man to have so
manj' friends come to mourn him."
"Ah, no," he Is informed, "but h»
spent all his money and savings to
Join this, the best funeral association.
And I'm sure his soul at this minute
smiles down at seeing so large and
brilliant a procession In his memory.
TO SUBTRACT FAT.
.11
!ij%
.18
.21
.01
.45%
.15
.»
.12%
.10
.12
22@19
'.ii
.18
.05%
.05
.03%
1. 00
.M
.11
.Oft
No. I.
Texas oak sole A •
Texas oak aole
Hemlock slaughter sola xx I
Hemlock slaugliter sole No. 1
Hemlock dry hide sole
Hemlock hameas leatUer
Oak harness leather
FURS— Large.
Skunk, black $4.50
Skunk, abort stripe 3.00
Skunk, kmg narrow stripe 2.00
Skunk, bruad stripe and white. 1.00
Muskrat, fall 30@27
Muskrat. kite
Raccoon 8 . 50
Mink, dark and brown 6.50
Mink, pale 8.00
Beaver 7.00
Cat, wUd 4.00
Fisher, dark 13.00
Fisher, pale 15.00
Fox, red 8.00
Fox, gray 1.25
Lynx 27.00
Marten, dark 20.00
Marten, dark brown 10. 00
Marten, light broVn and pale.. 6.50
Weaspl. white 85
0
9
.13
.14
.: 1
.1:8
.•2 @
M'idlum.
i;d.oo
2.00
1.50
.75
.16%® .17
less than sacks ,
30-lb pails ,
, lu-lb sacks I
runsted, per lb.....
raw. per lb.
.OT
.07%
.08
8.75
40
10
08%
1.75
2.30 ^
.10
2.50
1.75
.03%
.04
4.23
176%
76^,
120
37%
Duluth Securities.
SECURITIES—
I Bki lAsketf
"I
A GOOD FIRM TO SHIP
YOUK GRAIN TO
ATWOOD- LARSON
COMPANY, Inc.
Special attention given to c«ah
fralns. We give all shipments our
personal attention.
DVLVTH.
MINNGAPOLIS.
CHICAGO MARKET.
Ideal Crop Conditions Start Wiieat
on the Toboggan.
Chicago. April 17. — With weather
and crop conditions ideal in all direc-
tions, wheat today slid rapidly to a
lower level. Impetus was given by
the fact that cash demand here re-
mained slow, despite an improvement
In the Northwest. Lack of support
added greatly to the weakness. Open-
ing prices were unchanged to %@i4c
down. May started at 9l»4@91%c, the
same as Saturday night, to Vic off, and
fell to 90 %c. ,, ^ , ^
Little power to rally was developed.
The market closed weak with May l%c
net lower at 90c.
Prospects of more generous arrivals
gave an easy turn to corn
shipments, too.
.Alexandria Clear|
Ciimpbell Clear!
Crookston Clear|
Detroit City Clearl
New Ulm Clearf
Park Rapids Clear]
Winnebago City Clear
Amenia Clear
Bottineau Clear
Laiigdon Clear
Larlmore Clear]
Lisbon Clear]
Minot Clear
Pembina Clear|
Atjcrdeen ...Clear
Millbank Clear
MlU'l>eU Clear
Heiifleld Clear
tBlsmarrk Clear
IDevlls Lake Cleur
Duluth Clear'
tUuron Clear
tLa Cro9.-w Clear
Mlnncapolla Cle.ir
tM'j'irhead Clear
IPierre Clear
t.St. Paul Clear
Winnipeg Clear)
66
36
0
70
32
0
82
34
0
66
24
0
66
36
0
63
30
«
70
38
•
72
30
0
70
28
0
54
30
0
62
34
0
78
28
0
74
34
•
54
34
0
74
28
0
72
36
0
74
32
0
74
30
0
74
33
0
64
36
0
47
33
•
72
32
0
32
0
62
40
0
70
32
0
74
38
0
60
38
•
56
38
0
REM.VRKS— Fair weather prevailed. Froet or
freozlng teinperatures occurred iu portiona of Ohio,
Indiana and Michigan.
H. W. RICHARDSON,
Local Forecaster.
opened a shade
49-y4^i49%c, and
Freer offerings
to an additional
World
were heavy. May
to Vh®V4c lower at
declined to 49 Vic.
from the country led
decline. The close,
however, was firmer with May at 49 %c,
a net loss of V4®%c.
Big local speculators were heavy
sellers of oats. Depression In other
grain formed an aid to the bears. May
started Ht&i^c cheaper at 31% @ 32 Vis c,
and dropped to 31V»c.
Provisions advanced sharply on ac-
count of shorts talking the buying
side, because of a rise In the price of
hogs. First sales were 2V4@17V4c up
with July options at fl5.40 for pork
and $8.40 to $8.42 V4 for both lard and
ribs. Ship-
Articles — Receipts, ments.
Flour, bbl 18.800 48,100
Wheat, bu 22,800 122,900
Porn bu 122,700 458.700
Oats." bu 167,400 109.800
Rye bu 2,000 2,800
Barley bu " 28.300 6,100
Car lot receipts: Wheat, 24 cars,
with 5 of contract grade corn, 201 cars,
with 7 of contract grade: oats. 183 cars.
Total receipts of wheat at Chicago,
Minneapolis and Duluth toda"y were
323 cars, compared with 292 cars last
week and -256 cars the corresponding
day a year ago.
Cash close: WTieat — No. 2 red, 90%
fS92c; No. 3 red, 88% (991c; No. 2 hard,
903i'a92V4c: No. 3 hard, 88@91c: No. 1
northern, $1.0001.03; No. 2 northern,
98c(a)$1.02; No. 3 northern, 97c@$1.00:
No 2 spring, 94@97c: No. 3 spring, 94
(Q>»6c: velvet chaff, 84®95c: durum, 82
®88c. Corn— No. 2, 50@50V4c; No. 2
white 50(S50V4c; No. 2 yellow, 50V4@
5oTc- No." 3. 49V4@49V^c: No. 3 white.
49i4®49V^c; No. 3 yellow. 4SVx@50ViC:
No 4 48U(fi>49c: No. 4 white. 48V4'»49c:
No' 4 yellow. 48%ft)49V4c. Oats— No. 2.
■'\%&h%c; No. 2 white, 33V4@34V.c;
No. 3 white, 32Vi®3.-{M;c: No. 4 white,
nVi@33c; standard. 33@33%c. Rye-
No 2 92c; No. 4. 85c. Barley — 70c®
$1.09. ' Timothy — $11.75. Clover — $15.00.
T. Indicate Inappreciable ralnfaU. •Maximum for
yeaterday. tMinimum for tweuty-four houri. ending
8 a. m. 75th meridian time. tMlnlmum temperature
for 12-hour period ending at 8 a. m.
NOTE. — The average maximum and minimum tem-
I>eratures are made up at each center from the actual
number of report* received, and the average raiofail
from the number of aUtiona reporting .1 mch or
mor«. The "state of weatlier" la ttuX prevaUlng
at ilflM of obeervatlon.
Flnt KaUooal Bank |
American l!^Jiange NaUotud Bank
City National Bank ,
NurtUem National Uaak...t ,
St. Luula County Bank
Western State Bank
Duluth -SuiKi lor TracUon Co
do pfd
Duluth Street Railway, 1st g. 5* 84 M *
Duluth Ediaon Electric! l«t s. a. f. 6«
March. 1931. op. M. & S. A
Orcat Northern Power Co. bond*
American Carbollte. par $1
Zenith I<\jrnace Co
«00
825
ISO
180
200
140
T7
23%
•6
•8
•0
t.85
85
THE COPPER STOCKS.
The following are the closing quota-
tions of copper stocks at Boston today,
reported by PaLne, Webber & Co., 316
West Superior street:
62 H
52H
73\
108%
105 y,
77%
804
144%
120
225%
47%
125%
61%
48%
52
106%
123%
I -'4%
104
i>8
29
ir,4% _
\}xau. Home gro^m caljiiage. per crate, large 2.25
,,"? '.Holland cabbage, frtwh and fine, per cwt 2.00
POTATOKS -
Potatoes, per bu «
Jersey aweeta, per hamper. ....••■. •.■....•.•
ONIONS—
Redi, IdO-lb BAck. . a ..•••..... a. •......•••• .
Yeili>w, 100 -lb .'.a........... ...............
Red, per bu
Spanbib oniuns, per crate
Seta, white, per tni
NUTS—
Walnut*, new. California, 110-lb sack, per lb.
niberU, Sicily, per lb
Braalls, extra large, per lb
Pecan*, extra fancy poltahed, per lb
Almond.'i. Taraganla, per lb
Mixed Buta. luO-ib and 50-lb boxes, lb new,
S2 Black walnuts, lb
81 Cocoanuts, per doz
New hickory nuts, large or small, per lb 08
101 Pecans, halves, shelled, extra fancy, 5-lb car-
tons, i>er lb
IM Walnuts, shelled, extra fancy, 6-lb cartoni, lb.
Che^tnuU, per lb
3.2s Almoiida. shelled, extra fancy, 5-lb carton*, lb.
100 DATES AND FIGS-
Hallowl dates. 7a-lb boxes, new 4.50
Halluwl daUi, 30 package*, per box 2.2S
Card dates, 12-lb boxes, new 1.40
Sugar walnut dates. O-lb boxea 1.33
New t^allfornia figs. 12-pkg. box. per box 1.00
New Smjrna fig*. 5-crown. 20-lb box. per box.. 2.75
New Smyrna iUa, 7-crowu. lOO-lb box. per
Weasel, stained, damaged. . .
Wulf, timber
Wnlf, brush, cased
Wolf, open
Wolf, coyote, cased
Bear, as to size
Badger, civet and house
miuntiin lion, opossom and
.OS
2.25 1.50
5.00 8.25
4.50 3.00
4.75 8.35
3.00 1.75
12.00 7.00
9.00 7.00
6.00 6.00
1.00 .75
to. 00 13.00
15.00 10.00
7.00 5.00
5.00 3.25
.50 .25
.20 .15 .10
. S.OO 3.75 2.50
. 4.00 S.OO 2.00
. 3.50 2.60 1.75
. 3.00 2.23 1.50
. ... |3(a21
cat. cross and kit fox.
wolverine iximmaud mar-
ket prices,
skins. Nos.
The above pricea are for
2. 3 and 4 tu proportion.
Prime No. 1
.05
2.50
2.25
S.50
l.SO
1.00
2.00
.IT
.18
.14
.13
.20
.14
.05
.83
.30
.49
.10
.43
ba
aa
All
STOCKS—
Bid. I Asked.
Copper.
Telephone
Zinc
New York Grain.
New York, April 17. — Close: Wheat —
May, 94 %c; July, 93Vac. Corn— July,
57»4c.
n-heat-
Open.
May ....
.91%-%
July
,87%-%
Sept ....
.86%-%
Com —
May ....
.49%-%
High.
Low.
Close.
.91%
.89%
.90
.87%
.86%
.86%
.86%
.83%
.88
.49%
.49%
.49%
Cotton Market.
New York, April 17. — The cotton
market opened barely steady at an ad-
vance of 4 points on June, but gen-
erally unchanged to 6 points lower
and during the first few minutes sold
off to a net loss of 4 to 7 points un-
der scattering liquidation and local
bear pressure, which seemed to be in-
spired by the absence of immediate bull
support, a feeling that the speculative
short interest had been much reduced
toward the end of last week, and an
outlook for better weather in the
South, following the unsettled condi-
tions and rains of the last few days.
There did not appear to be much long
cotton coming to market, however, and
as soon as the local selling became less
active, prices steadied on covering and
a renewal of bull support sent the old
crop back to about the closing figures
of Thursday during the middle ox the
morning. The new crop was very
quiet and ruled some 4 or S points net
lower.
Spot closed quiet: middling uplands,
14.85; middling gulf, 15.10. Sales, 70
bales. Futures closed steady. Closing
bids: April. 14.69; May, 14.79; June.
14.81; July, 14.78; August, 14.49; Sep-
tember, 13.36; October, 12.90; Novem-
ber. 12.81; December, 12.81; January,
12.78; March, 12.84.
Algomah
Amalgamated
Adventure
Ahmeek ....
Allouez
American
American
Atlantic
Arcadian
Arizona Commercial.
Butte-Ballaklava ...
Boston Corbln
Black Mountain
Butte Coalition
Calumet & Arizona..
Calumet & Hecla ....
Centennial
Cons Mercur
Copper Range ; .
Daly West -i
Davis Daly
East Butte
Franklin
First National
Glroux
Granby .'.
Greene Cananea . . . : .
Hancock Consolidated
Helvetia
Indiana
Isle Royale
Keweenaw
Lake Copper
La Salle
Mass Consolidated . .
Mass. Gas
Michigan
Mohawk
Nevada Cons
Nevada Utah ........
North Lake ....<....
Nipissing
North Butte
OJlbway
Old Dominion
Osceola
Parrot
Pneumatic Service . .
Qulncy
Ray Cons
Shattuck
Santa Fe
Shannon
Shoe Machinery
Superior Boston
Superior Copper
Superior & Pittsburg,
Tamarack
Trinity
United Fruit
U. S. Mining
Mining, pfd
^^lA ■•■■••••«••••
^S.pOJL ■ a • ••• • • • •
Cons
Copper
Mldivay Horae Market.
Minnesota Transfer, St. Paul, Ulnn., April IT. —
Barrett & Zimmerman report: Heavy shipments of
horoes arrtv>ed on the market from the woods, and the
stalls are filled with useful horses suitable for farm-
ing and rallrTMd work. Mules met with good in-
quiry. Saddle horses and drivers an In favor and
Mr. Legg 1* on the market with a choice load of
saddlers and family drivers which he botight In
Missouri and Kentucky.
Drafters, extra S185@240
Drafters, cliolce 120^170
Drafters, common to good iSS^llS
Farm mares and horMS, f:xtra 140^180
Farm msrcs and horses, choice 1I5(S185
Farm mares, common to good 6.'i(«'100
Delivery 140@193
Drivers and saddlers 130@223
Uulee, accordloc to aiae 1M#2S0
7V4
62V<i
4%
165
32
145V4
24
3
2V4
13"
4«i4
12
ii"
49
485
llVi
80
60 V4
4V4
1V4
12
8%
1 13-16
S 13-16
30 Vi
6V4
22
1%
12
12V4
2
31
4
6
. 91V4
IH
36
17%
75
&
10 V4
27%
5
37
7V4
62%
6
170
S3
145%
24
4
3
13 V4
12V4
6c
17V4
49>/4
488
12%
61
4%
1%
12»4
9 'A
15-16
6
31
6%
box 14.50
New 8m.vma figs. 3-crown. 10-lb. per box 1.29
^H^>tH VKUKTABLES—
Head lettuce, hamper
Lettuce, leaf, per bu box
Beans, wax, per bu
Parsley, home grown, per dox
Oreeii onions, dox
Green onions, box
Cauliflower, CaltfomU, per crate
Spinach, bnx
Round radlslia, hothouse, large btmcbea, dos. .
Loiig radishes, doz
Hothouse cucumbers, per doz
Ureen peppers, hul^uuse, per basket
Celery. Calif unila. per bunch
Celery. Florida, crate
Endive. New Urleaua. per bbl
New beets, per doi
New carrots, per djz
Florida tomatoes. bai>ket
Tomatoes, crate S2.50@ 2.
Louisiaui strawberiles. case of 24 pt*..|3.7S(^ 3.
Pie plant, ptr box 2,
Oarlic, pound •...•.,.•............*......*..•
BOOTS—
Table beets, per cwt 1.
2.23
1.10
4.50
.33
.40
2.75
3.50
1. 23
.75
.40
1.73
.63
.85
3.00
6.00
.73
.75
.50
75
50
7S
15
DEBATING ON
REClPROCrTY
Canadian Agreement Holds
the Attention of the
House.
Washington, April 17. — Debate on
the Canadian reciprocity agreement
continued to hold the attention of the
house of representatives today. Sev-
eral Democratic members o! the ways
and means committee are ready to
answer the argument inadii Saturday
bv Asher Hinds of Maine i.gainst the
proposed bill. On the Republican side.
Representative McCall of Massachu-
setts, who Introduced the bill In the
sixty-first congress, is ready to take
up support of the measure as soon as
Chairman Underwood yield.* the floor
to him.
Representative Dalzell of Pennsyl-
vania, who Is leading the opposition,
appeared today with the minority re-
port of the ways and mea is commit-
tee, awaiting an opportunitj- to submit
it to the house. Discussion of the bill
will be closed Tue:day night or
Wednesday morning, the debate to be
concluded -jy Mr, Underwood.
In the senate there was little to be
done, the organization of committees
with which to conduct business being
still Incomplete. Adjourntuent until
Thursday was expected.
Representative Fordney of Michigan,
a Republican member of ths ways and
means committee, to day In the house
attacked the Canadian reciprocity bill.
"President Taft," he sail, "will be
the candidate of the Reputlican party
for re-election and I will v ?te for him
gladly, but I differ with him radically
on this Canadian tariff quei-tlon."
Mr. Fordney said he had lost all the
money he had put into the f.our milling
business at the time of the Wilson
tariff bill and that he had b« en a "dyed-
In-thfe-wool protectionist tsven since."
• •••••••• •■
T5
75
0.50
.14
1.T8
2.00
U. S.
u. s
Utah
Utah
Utah
Chemung
Victoria . . .
Winona
Wolverine
Wyandot
Yukon Gold
Bohemia . . .
Begole
Boston Ely .
Cactus
Chemung 1
Cliff
Cliff Cons a..;.....!
Chino 4. ..
Corb Copper
Goldfleld Consolidated..
Inspiration
La Rose k. . .
Live Oak .,. . .
New Baltic
Ohio Copper ;a.,a
Oneco a . .,. . ,
Ray Central
South Lake ...... taAt^j
11
4%
67
15S
17V4
1
10
64V&
3%
32V^
13%
38
1872
S4
45H
30V4
2
13V4
43%
63%
lOS
3%
1V4
12V4
13
2V4
32
4%
91V4
i
87
18
77
1V4
1%
1%
10
5%
95
1%
21%
3%
«
7
9 9-16
104-
13
6
67%
16
18
1%
10%
55
3%
33
13%
40
4
189
34%
46
31
2%
13%
44
sale
2%
7
110
1%
4
2
Table bagas, iwr cvrt. .
Horse radish, root, per bbt,
Uone radish, per lb
Table carrots, per cwt
Table parsnips, per cwt...
MlSCliLLANlCOUS—
Beans, navy, per bu .•.•«•■..••......... 2.00
Beans, brown, per bu 3.73
Fruit ba^ksu, per hundred 1.2S
MEi\TS—
Beef, per lb THO
Mutton, per lb. *....•....».....•.■..*...■.....
Pork loins, per lb, .....*....•.■•.■..*... ......
VeeL per lb *9
Lamb, per lb
Lard, per lb •
DRESSED POL'LTRY—
Hens, fancy, fat, per lb 1S9
Springs, x^er lb .■••a.. ............ ...........
Turkeys, per I^ •.•••...«....*...... ..a. .. ..
Ducks, per lb. .... ..aa a.. •.......*.....•• 1*9
Qeeee, per lb .•....'•.............. 12 v
UVE POULTBY—
Hens, per lb
Small hens, pec lb
Springs, per lb.
Turkeys, per lb.....
Ducks, per lb.....
Oeeae, per lb
FISH—
Trout. Lake Soperior, froaen
Whiteflsb, frozen
Pike, frozen
Pickerel, frozen ••
Salmon J;
HaUbut 1?
• ••• •*• ••
.09^
.07
.11V4
.10%
.11
.u
.13
.18
M
all
all
alSH
alSVi
.13M
.20
.13
.U
.13
.12
.10
2%
1%
1%
7-16
4%
Sit
15
1%
22
4
S^
7%
11-16
18%
2 7-16
1%
IM
1 9-16
4%
J-'
Herring,
Finnan
Smoked
Smoked
Smoked
Oysters,
Oysters,
Oysters,
Frozen
Freeh frozen
Frozen eels.
frozen .a,aaa..........aa...a,
haddle ....... .a. .......
wbltef lah <
Chinook aauion
tialibut .a...
standard, per g«l
medium selects, per gal
ext ra selects, per gal . . .
smells, per lb
mackerel, each.....
per lb ■
.........a.
a . »« . . . . .
Boe Shad, each
Shad roe. per pair
Steak, cod, per lb
Scallops, per gal
HAY AND STRAW—
Oioice timothy, per ton 118.50(317.00
No. 1 choice Umothy. per toa 13.50^17.00
••••••«••
OS
.10
.10
.18
.14
1.40
1.75
l.»0
.12Vi
.S8
.12
1.85
.30
al2M
1.00
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
No.
1 choice tmothy. per ton...
1 mixed Umothy. per ton...
2 mixed Umothy, per ton..
1 upland, per ton
2 tipland, per ton.
1 midland, vet ton.
2 midland, per ton
Rye straw, per ton
Oat straw, per ton 0.309 7.00
Bran, per ton 2200
Midulingi. per toa 28,00
>•••••■■
13.50@17.0»
14.00(316.00
12.00@13.00
13. 50 IS( 14.50
11.50>Si2.50
10.00(^12.00
1.00(g 8.00
6.50(d 7.00
New York.
New Yoi*, April 17.— Butter— Firm; receipts. 4.978
packages; creamery specials. 22c: extras. 21c: firsts.
19^^2Uc; seconds, I6(gl'c; creamery lield extras. 18
(il9%c; firsU. 17'.4(rfl8c; seconds, lOi^lIc; sute
dairy finest. 20H@21c: good tA prime, 18(920c; com-
uvMi to lair, 15tel7c; process special. 17Hc; extras.
I7i : first.". 16c; seconds, 13c: ImitaUon creamery
flrstg, H%@lTc: factory current make. firsUs. 15"?
s(?>.iid». IS^^lSVic. Cheese — Finn; receipts, 382
baKCi: atat* whole milk, special, 14(gl.'i\c: .Stp-
le:uber quality, fancy colored, 13@13^ic; same white.
ISej oumnier and fall ouute. oelorMl akeloe, llH(g'
MERRY FUNERALS IN BRAZIL.
New York Sun: One ol the ques-
tions asked by the Brazi Ian house-
keeper in engaging a new servant is
whether she belongs to a funeral as-
sociation. These associations are or-
ganized chiefly among poor people.
Any one may Join; membership is se-
cured by the payment of i. small an-
nual fee. There are no c institutions
or by-laws, and there is on.y one obli-
gation. Every member must attend
every funeral of a fellow member. As
the associations have thousands of
members deaths occur often, and so
Brazilian housekeepers ar« often left
without servants.
It might seem burdensome to have
to go to so many funerals, but this
is not the case, A funeri.l in Brazil
is a happy occasion for nearly all Its
participants. They get a <iay off. and
a holiday is always welco ned by the
Brazilians; then they met their friends
and can gossip and flirt, and still bet-
ter, whisky and a free dinner are
served to the mourners.
They constitute one of the strange
sights of Rio de Janeiro, these fu-
neral processions. Rain or shine, long
processions of laughing aid chatting
people go through the streets. Large
umbrellas shield them from the tropi-
cal sun, and their gay colored dresses
shine out brightly undern«ath.
Neither the appearance ol' the mourn-
ers nor the tinny music tf the band
heading the procession suggests a fu-
neral. The musicians play everything,
waltzes, marches, light opera, but
never a dirge. Not Infrequently the
mourners stop at a fruit sti.nd or a bar
for refreshment. Only the presence
of a hearse dlstlngulshen these fu-
neral processions from a joyful parade.
On the night before tie burial a
few members enjoy the privilege of
representing the association at the
wake. The windows of ths house are
always wide open. The passerby can
see Into a poorly lit room. In one cor-
ner stands the coffln. Two flickering
candles standing at either end of the
casket throw shadows on the floor. A
bunch of artificial flowers adorns It.
It Is a curious fact tha': in Brazil,
where beautiful flowers grew in abund-
ance, hideously colored tnakebelieve
flowers are preferred.
In another corner or on the steps
of the house sit the womoi with their
thick black hair hanging down freely
over neck and shoulders, this being
the way to express grief. They spend
the night singing or rath«r wailing a
woful tune. The melody s'wioatly In
the minor key and consists of not more
than three bars. The women are pro-
vided with dolces or sweets to com-
pensate them for their faithful wak-
ing.
Thua they sit th« nigiit through.
"In the treatment of obesity
must study thoroughly the habits and
the mode of life of the patient,", saya
a writer in the New York Medical
Journal. "In some that do not exercise
enough the addition of more bodily
exercise enough the addition of more
exercise will accomplish our aim.
"In others a slight regulation of the
diet, the taking off of an extra sand-
wich, an extra glass of beer or wine
will correct the evil. In the majority
of cases the correction of both will be
required. We must diminish the intake
of calories as much as possible and at
the same time raise the expenditure
of energy.
"One of our greatest helps in the
treatment of obesity is the fact that
each of the three classes of foodstuffs,
the proteins, carbohydrates and fata,
caji be substituted, for one another,
provided they contain an equivalent
number of calories. Thus ten grams of
butter (one cubic inch) is equivalent
in the system to ninety grams of pota-
toes, both representing about eighty
calories.
"There are, however, certain limita-
tions to this postulate, namely, that
there must always be a certain
amount of proteins and carbohydrates
Introduced, else In the reduction the
body albumin, the muscles, blood, vis-
cera, etc., will suffer, while normally
In a reduction cure the fat only is
being sacrificed and not the body
albumin.
"Working on these principles, we
exclude from the diet for obesltv all
visible fat, for fats represent the high-
est caloric values, one gram of fat
representing 9.3 calorie.^, while one
gram of carbo-hydrate or one gramme
of protein contain only 4.1 calories,
each. We therefore exclude all visi-
ble fat such as fatty meat, fatty
fish, oil, butter, sweet cream, etc.
•We allow articles that represent the
lowest caloric values in the largest
bulk. Such articles are potatoes, lean
meat, lean fish, lean cheese, eggs, bran
bread, graliam bread in moderation,
oysters, all kinds of vegetables (pre-
pared without oil), all kinds of fruits,
soups with fat strained off. skimmed
milk, buttermilk tea. coffee, vinegar,
lemon, mineral waters. Of these
articles a fairly liberal diet may be
feelected.
"The following articles must
avoided or taken only sparingly
they contain a high caloric value:'
fatty and greasy foods, sugar, white
bread, crackers, biscuits, all kinds of
sweets, syrups, dried peas and beans
dried fruits, cereals, grap^ nuts liquors
beer, malt. The patient when put on
a reduction diet must adhere to it
else the resulting loss of flesh will
soon be regained.
"The .second factor is the raising of
the •xpenditure of the energy of the
body. Tills Is best accomplished by
mountain cllmbinga Unfortunately ft
is not accessible to every one. Manual
work, various gjTnnastic exercises,
running, rowing, .swimming, golf and
tennis playing, bicycle riding, work
about the house, gardening, deep
breathing, are all reliable means of
increasing the output of energy. Dur-
ing exercise It Is proper to watch the
heart action lest damage be done.
"Cold baths and douches are very
good. By applying "
surface of the body
warm It up some
burned up.
"Hot baths and sweating are not
good. The loss of flesh that Is secured
by them Is merely due to a loss of
water and not fat. which Is soon re-
plenished by the intake of water. Fat
cannot be sweated off. It must be
worked off or starved off. Massage re-
duces the masseur but not the person
massaged.
"A patient may be of marked obesity
that has persl.sted for years, with a
family tendency, when more exact
means at reduction must be applied.
We must prescribe a diet based on
exact caloric calculations or, which la
preferable, to do It in an Institution
where the patient can be under con-
stant surveillance. The following is
the method to pursue In caloric calcu-
lation: A patient weighing about 100
kilograms presents himself for reduc-
tion. We must determine first how
much would be the proper weight for
the size of that person.
"Let us assume that seventy-flve
kilograms would be the proper weight
for that patient. We next determine
how many calories would constitute
the maintenance diet of such a person.
Obese people as a rule are not very
active, and forty calories for each kilo-
gram would be the proper amount. The
maintenance diet therefore would be
40 plu.s 75 equal to 3,000 calories*.
"We lake the actual amount of pro-
toplasmic tissue and omit the fat from
our calculations, for It Is the protoplas-
mic tissue that is chiefly concerned in
oxydatlon proces.sos. By taking off the
patient's diet about 800 calories each
day a loss of about one kilogram |t
week win be achieved. We must there-
fore arrange diet lists equivalent to
1!,200 calories a day. These diet lista
are complied by the help of tables giv-
ing the relative caloric values of dif-
ferent articles of food."
the cold water the
gets chilled, and to
body fat must be
Read The
Herald Wants
If you will bring your
Calumet & Arizona and
Superior & Pittsburg cer-
tificates to Paine, Webber
& Co.'s office, we will have
them transferred into the
new Calumet & Arizona
stock for you.
Zenith, 1484. Duluth. MeL 221S.
Martin Rosendahl ft Co.
(INCORPORATED.)
COPPER STOCK BROKERS
TO THE STOCKHOLDERS
RED WARRIOR HIIRIH6 CO.
The transfer books of the com-
pany will close April 20th, 1911, and
will not re-open for transfer until
May l8t, 1911. on which date sub-
scription rights expire.
Whether or not you avail your-
self of the subscription rights of-
fered in the circular letter Issued
under date of April 3. 1911, please
send In your old certificates to be
trans^^rred into the permanent en-
graved certificates which are now
ready.
RED WARRKNt MINING COMPANY
By W. If. BORGBN, Seeretury.
\ ■
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IB
Monday,
THE DULUTH HEKA1,D.
April 17, 1911.
REPORTS SHOW THAT NORTH
BUHE IS "COMING BACK"
General Manager's Annual
Statement Shows Good Re-
sults of Exploration.
Former Officers and Directors
Are Re-Elected for
Another Year.
The
Butte
annual report of the North
Minins company, which was
read at a meeting of the stockholders
the comjiany'.s offices on the four-
!n
teenth flour of the Alworth building:
this afternoon, indicates that the North
Butte property Is "coming back."
The financial report Is complete to
Dec. 31, 1910, but the report of Gen-
eral Manager John D. Pope on devel-
opments and exi)loratory work covers
not only the progress of last year, but
the developments this year up to about
.\pril 10. The discoveries are the
moat Important since the original
strike of the Edith May and the Jessie
ure bcdles.
The report that the Croesus vein
was showing high values is not con-
firmed. In cros.s-cuiting tlie Croesus
vein on the l.SOO level a new vein
was discovered, which l.s of a differ-
ent character than tlie fault veins in
which the other ore bodies of the
North Butte have been found. The
vein lias been opened up ot* the 1,600,
1.800. 2.000 and I'.i'oO levels. It Is
small and irregular, but Is a persistent
ore carrier. For sixty feet on the
2.200 level it liad an average width of
4 14 feet and gave !>.3 per cent copper
and four ounces of silver to the ton.
On the North Croe.<us vein, not hith-
erto developed, drifting has been pros-
ecuted on the 1.200, l.JsOO and 2,000
levels. As tlie development Is In its
infancy the returns are meager. For
90 feet on the 1,S«'U level the vein ran
3 per tent in copper and six ounces in
silver. It was three feet wide.
One of the most important develop-
ments concerns the Edith May vein,
^'ince the first of the year the Edith
May vein has been cut and drifted
on for a distance of 100 feet and has
ceached ilie faults in both directions,
which were disclosed on the 2,200 level.
On the 2.400 level bodies of high grade
ore have been shown up, and the same
ore will soon be disclosed on the 2.300
level. Drifting on the 2,300 level on
both sides of the winze sunk from the
2 200 level has disclosed copper ore
eight feet wide, assaying 4.5 per cent
and 2.4 ounces of .»iilver.
High Grade Ure at Oeptk.
Perhaps the chief development, in its
bearing on the future of the mine, was
in the sinking of the Speculator shaft,
which i.< down 2.775 feet. At 2,740 feet
a vein was encountered which shows a
width of fifteen feet, containing a large
amount of high grade bornite and cop-
per glance. TI.e ore Is bunchy, but In
one place there was a width of five
feet wlilch assayed 24.2 per cent copper
and 13.4 ounces of silver to the ton.
This discovery indicates that the great
values which characterized the North
Butte's developments in the earlier
years of ltd existence do not cease at
the 2,200 level, but that high grade ore
exists a', the lowest levels yet reached.
At a depth of 2,490 feet the Speculator
shaft cut a vein ten feet wide, carrying J
3 per cent in copper and 1.4 ounces in
silver for a width of one foot.
The Granite Mountain shaft has been
put down 1.800 feet and will give an-
other permanent and convenient work-
ing shaft. The work Included 1,158
feet of iipraiS"?.
On the 1.600 level of the Jessie vein
prospecting disclosed a hanging wall
of ore that will add materially to the
North Eutte's reserves. This band has
been opened as far down as. the 1,800
level. AVhen it was discovered it was
three feet wide, but in drifting west It
has widened to nine feet
per cent copper and 7.8 ounces
to the ton. An intermedi
the 1,700 level directly under this polni , . , ^
showed ore for a distance of 232 'eet. * , , , ","^
averaging twelve feet wide and assay- i |^'ouiu oe
Ing 6 per c^nt copper and 7 ounces of i "® pam
silver
additional expense In the way of main-
taining the openings."
For its copper North Butte received
an average of 12.771 cents a pound, for
its silver, 54.503 cents an ounce; for its
gold, $20 an ounce. The mine was
operated at about SO per cent of nor-
mal on account of the low price of the
red metal. Last year 419,710 wet tons
were shipped and 408,528 dry tons of
ore were treated at the smelter of
which 38.043 dry tons were first-class
and 370.485 dry tons were second class
This ore produced 25,267,092 pounds of
fine copper, 988,190.54 ounces of silver
and 1,195.99 ounces of gold.
The company has perfected its own-
er.shlp to all of Us claims beyond dis-
pute by settlements and agreements
reached with the Tuolumne, Anaconda
and other interests.
The financial statement shows the
only indebtedness to be current labor
and supply costs. The company's sur-
plus is $1,677,202.16. For its gold, cop-
per and silver It received last year
$3,789,492.56. Dividends amounted to
$446,000.
Directors were re-elected this after-
noon, as follows: James Hoatson, Cal-
umet, Mich.; Thomas F. Cole, Duluih,
and Daniel M. Clemson. Pittsburg. Pa.
The following officers were re-elected:
J.Tmes Hoatson, president: C. A. Dun-
can, vice president and treasurer; Jo-
seph B. Cotton, vice president and gen-
eral solicitor; Frederic R. Kennedy,
secretary: Daniel I{. Smith, assistant
secretary; William G. Hegardt, assist-
ant secretary: Henry B. Paull, auditor.
WOULD HOLD
MONEYBACK
City Engineer Proposes Cash
Guarantees to Replace Con-
tractors' Bonds.
DULUTH MAN IS HUNTfG
ALLIGATORS IN ELORIDA
Axel E. Zimmerman, deputy city
clerk of Duluth for many years and
now a resident of Florida, Is having a
glorious time In the Southern state, ac-
cording to a letter which has been re-
ceived from him by John Connelly, sec-
retary to Mayor Cullum, and one of Mr.
Zimmerman's close friends.
Mr. Zimmerman says that he has
been hunting alligators and wild tur-
key.s, fighting ticks of all breed.s, and
living out of doors a great deal of the
time. He tells of one alligator which
they captured alive and which gave
them such a fight that he and his com-
panions were nearly drowned in the
mud.
Mr. Zimmerman has a wide acquaint-
ance In the city, and the following ex-
tract from his letter will be of Interest:
•"I have Just come In from an alll-
MARINE
City Could More Easily En-
force Its Requirements,
He Says.
City Engineer Thomas F. McGilvray
has planned another system of guar-
antees for city contracts and will for-
ward it to the board of public works
ill order that the members of the board
may have an opportunity to pass upon
the matter.
The substance of the proposition is
that the city shall hold back part of
the contract price, probably 5 per cent,
and pay this to the contractor one-fifth
each year. This Is practically giving
the city a cash guarantee, which has
been found by other cities to be mu<.li
more satisfactory than the bond which
has been put up to guarantee the work.
Under the present system the cnn-
iractor Is paid in full for his work,
and deposits a bond for 25 per cent
of the cost of the job to guarantee it
for five years. This Is not wholly sat-
isfactory as the city frequently has to
fight the bonding company In order to
get needed repairs made to the streets
after they have been paved.
With the cash in the city treasury
the officials would have a more direct
and therefore a more effectual hold on
the contractors. If he should fall to
keep the street up to the requirements,
the city could go ahead and do the
LOWER RATE
INNOVATION
Cleveland Cliffs Company Gets
First Differential tn
Lake Business.
Insurance Rates for This Year
Fixed By All Under-
writers.
thought that any hardship
worked on him. He would
be paid interest on his money at the
bn^the i,"800^ieverthe"drifrhas i ?^™e f^^® .^^ ^*^® city receives
for its
been extended on the footwall for a
distance of 239 feet, of which 167 feet
were In ore four and one-half feet
wide, assaying S.75 per cent copv»er and
6 ounces of silver. A drift west on the
hanging Avail band shows 100 feet of
ore. ttiree feet wide and assaying 5 per
cent in copper.
On the 2,000-foot level drifts have
been run cast and west a total distance
of 971 feet, of which 7e8 feet were In
ore in two ore bodies, the larger one
averaging 17i/i feet wide, and a:ssaying
5.25 per cent copper and 6.75 ounces
silver per ton. for a length of 605
feet, while the smaller one, which is
toward the west end of our prop-
erty, averaged six feet wide, assaying
5.75 per cent copper and 6.9 ounces
silver per ton for a length of 163 feet.
These ore bodies are the downward
extensions of the ore bodies shown in
this vein on the 1.600 and 1,800-foot
levels. On the 2,200-foot level drifts
have been run ea.vt and west for a
total length of 536 feet, of which 91
feet were in ore of an average width
of 61^ feet, and assaying 4.1 per cent
copper and 3.5 ounces silver per ton.
>'c«v Vein in Snovrbnil Claim.
No developments of esj^ecial import-
ance were made on the .South Gem
vein. Since the fore part of the new
year a crosscut on the l.&OO-foot level
has encountered a vein in the Snow-
Sail claim carrying bunches of exceed-
ingly iii.^h grade copper and silver ore,
where the vein was first cut. A body
I'f ore has been opened up for 100 feet,
showing an average of four and a half
feet in width. Rssaying 5 per cent cop-
per and 7.2 ounces of silver. Better
results are e.spected as development
proceeds.
On Jan. 1 ore In sight was as fol-
lows: ."^peculator vein, 4.100 tons; Adi-
rondack vein. 8.000 tons; Edith May
vein, 57T.7!'<i tons; Jessie vein. 328,055
tons; Souili Gom vein. 27.955 tons;
Croesus vein.s, 12.780 ton.". The entire
tonnage averages 4.25 per cent copper
and tliree ounces in silver.
Commenting on the North Butte's
develoi>ments. rieneral Manager Pope,
who attended this afternoon's meeting,
said:
"0-ir development work for the year.
In addition to the .sinking of the Spec-
ulator sliaft and upraising the Granite
^Iountain shaft, was done on the Jessie
vein and in the liem and Croesus
claims. In the Jessie vein we have
opened up a large body of ore on the
2.000 level, and a po.>.i amount of ore
r»n the 2.200 level, while the work on
rhe 1.800 level has .^^lightly increased
the reserve's en this level in spite of
■he fact that this level was supposed
to be fairly well prospected and that
we have mined about 40.000 ton.s from
ts stopes during the year. The work
in the (icm and Croesus claims, while
it has not shown any large bodies of
■re, has shown several fair sized veins
r-arrying u good grade of ore. and the
further prosecution of this work and
of work In the Berlin group north of
the Croesus claim should result in im-
portant additions to our reserves.
"With the development work already
lone and with a showing of high
rrade ore in the bottom of the Specu-
lator shaft, and a large undeveloped
irea in the company's holding. I can
^ee no reason why we should not ex-
pect as good results In the future as
we have had In the past. In view of
rhe above conditions, the fact that we
have maintained less than 1,000,000
tons of ore "in sight" Is not signlfl-
;ant. for we expect during the ensuing
•/ear to develop additional ore tonnage
It least equal to output. It is not ad-
visable or customary to open too much
territory In advance of stoping opera-
tions, for such procedure entails heavy
time deposits.
DR. HART WILL
CALL FOR BIDS
Plans and Specifications for
County Sanitarium Are
Finally Accepted.
The St. Louis county sanitarium
commission met this morning at Dr.
Harts office in the courthouse and ac-
cepted the plans and specifications
made by the Saranac Lake architects,
and instructed Dr. Hart to call for bids
on the proposed structures at once.
Contractors will be given several
weeks to get their bids in, and the
contracts will then be let.
This means that actual work on the
sanitarium will be in full swing within
two months. The work has been slow
up to this time, as there have been
many changes made in the drawings
that were originally submitted.
At the present time a well is being
dug on the ground, so that there will
be water for building purposes when
the work is about to begin.
EASTER PROGRAM
IN SUNDAY SCHOOL.
Cleveland, Ohio, April 17. — Under-
writers of lake hulls have granted a
differential rate to the Cleveland Cliffs
Iron company as a result of the suc-
cessful navigation of Its vessels during
the last eight years. It is the first time
a differential rate has been allowed on
lake hull business and Is a reward for
a record of small losses. The reduc-
tion for this year will be i/i of 1 per
cent under the regular rate.
Both foreign and American under-
writers have made tentative rates.
The English underwriters ofler to carry
hull Insurance on the Great Lakes at
5% per cent on a pro rata business.
The American underwriters offer
three policies to cover the year at 5V6
per cent. This amounts to pro rata in-
surance, but binds the policyholder to
a one-year contract.
Teh English underwriters have ten-
dered a proposition to ls.sue hull Insur-
ance policies attaching the date a ves-
sel sails and expiring Nov. 30, at the
pro rata of 3% per cent. The American
proposition is to issue three policies
each attaching upon the expiration of
its predecessor and the period of all to
cover one year.
To all intent these policies amount to
the same thing the English policies do.
A policy taken under the American un-
derwriters dates from Its Issue and the
sailing rate goes into effect at once or
the day a vessel puts out on its first
trip and continues until Nov. 30, when
it expires. The port risk policy, the
second of the three, then attaches. If
the vessel remains In port until the
year ends the third policy does not at-
tach, but if It sails before the end of
the year for which Insurance has been
contracted the third, a sailing policy,
attaches and continues in force until
the contract year is closed.
The Insured does not pay for the en-
tire policy at once; only the premium
of the attaching policy Is collected.
When that expires the next prejnium
Is collected, and when the third policy
attaches Its premium Is due. In effect
this scheme Is pro rata, uut binds the
insured to carry insurance with the
same underwriters for one full yeat
from the date of Issue.
WILL NOT TEST ICE.
gator hunt. We got five of them, one
alive. We capturod hnn after a long
and muddy fig)*.; /After snaring hlra
with a wire he nearly drowned us In
the mud. We wer«<in It from head to
foot, but we were bound to get that
'gator and we finalf^ landed him.
•So far 1 have been having a fine
time. 1 am novv getting ready for an-
other hunt for viore alligators and wild
turkeys. The weather is simply im-
mense. I have already been up agamst
wood ticks, allfgator ticks, fleas, jig-
gers, red bugs,' mosquitoes and sand
files. There are two kinds of alligator
ticks. I have run Into one variety and
1 expect that I will find out what the
other Is like this trip. Our favorite
dish while on the hunt, outside of
game, Is a fried bread and vegetable
compound.
have completed thirteen years of serv-
ice In Duluth, having been in charge
of the local station practically since
It was opened. The local crew Is con-
sidered one of the most efficient in the
service on the Great Lakes and has
many rescues to its credit. The station
is put out of commission in the fall
at the close of navigation. The men
seek other jobs during the winter, but
report for duty again in the spring
after the ice Is out.
RAILROADS
FISHLXG TUG^TIED UP.
Sheboygan, Wis., April 17. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The fishing tug
Southern Cross, Capt. C. Pooler, is tied
up here by the United States marshal
on claims of $1,000 alleged to be due
the J. J. Koepsell Hardware company
and C. M. Keller.
To Dredge at Sheboygan.
Sheboygan. AVis.. April 17.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The Wisconsin Dock
& Dredging company of Sturgeon Bay
has been awarded the contract to
dredge the river at Sheboygan. The
work to be performed is to cover a
period of five years
NO COURSE IN
GARDENING
Instructors Cannot Be Sent
to Duluth for School
This Year.
Provision WOl Be Made for
More Work Next
Year.
Pittsburg Fleet Will Await Clearing
of the Soo Before Starting.
From Cleveland comes the report
that about twelve of the Pittsburg
boats have been lined up for their
coal cargoes which they will carry on
their first trip up the lake.s. It is
stated that more coal cargoes are
being placed every day by the shippers,
witli the result that a larger fleet than
was at first supposed will come up the
lakes when the Ice gets out of the Soo
locks.
The steamers H. L. Shaw, H. C.
Frick and H. H. Rogers of the Pitts-
burg line will load coal this week at
Toledo. President Coulby of the Pitts-
burg company, is quoted as saying that
none of the boats of his company will
test the Ice, which Is taken to mean
that the steel company boats will get
a late start.
BOAT WITH GYROSCOPE.
The Easter program given by the
Sunday school of the First Baptist
church at noon yesterday was a great
success. A number of the Sunday
school children took part, and there
was an address by W. B. Patten.
The program follows:
School song
Violin solo
Edith Weston.
.Scripture and prayer
Pastor,
Vocal solo Morton
Kecitation
Eleanor Thayer.
School song
Primary Department.
Dialogue and drill
Eight Girls.
School song 2S2
Recitation
Dorothy Patten.
Violin solo
H. Lavlck.
Address and offering
Mr. Patten.
Closing song
FEDERAL JUDGE IS
FOUND DEAD IN BED.
Little Rock, Ark., April 17. — Federal
Judge John Rodgers of the Western
district of Arkansas was found dead In
his bed at a hotel here today by Judges
Trieber and K. M. Rose of Fort Smith,
who called to ascertain the reason for
his absence from the bench. Heart
disease is believed to have caused his
death. His home was in Fort Smith,
Ark.
•
When Cameron do^s your upholster-
ing, both price and work ia correct.
Both phones.
Ashtabula Car Ferry Will Be So
Equipped — First on Lakes.
The new Ashtabula car ferry is to be
the first boat outside the United States
navy to be equipped with a gyroscope,
the greatest and latest invention for
the benefit of the mariner. A boat
equipped with a gyro.scope will not roll
in the trough of the roughest sea.
The gyroscope, a wh^el within a wheel,
responds freely to the motion of the
boat and keeps the vessel from rolling
when the sea Is running high. The
vessel can be made to work itself
through any kind of blockade the ice
may make.
The installation of such an appar-
atus Is the result of tests recently made
by Capt. Haagenson, who will sail the
ship. The tests were made several
days ago with a boat in the Ashtabula
harbor
CAPTAIN OF MORELAND
LEAVES THE LAKES.
Capt. Claude M. Ennes. who has been
in the employe of W. H. Becker for
a number of years, and who was
slated to bring out the 600-foot
steamer Thomas Walters, building at
Lorain, has resigned to engage in
business.
Capt. Ennes was formerly in the em-
ploye of the Gilchrist Transportation
company. He sailed boats for fifteen
years and did not have an accident
until last fall, when the steamer W.
C. Moreland stranded oft Eagle River,
Lake Superior.
Capt. Ennes brought out the steamer
B. F. Jones in 1906 and sailed her until
last season, when he took command
of the steamer Moreland.
DULUTH LIFE SAVERS
REPORT FOR DUTY.
The members of the United States
life saving crew, stationed on Park
Point, reported for service for the sea-
son yesterday morning. Capt. Murdock
A. McLennan is again in charge of the
station, and has eight men under his
direction. With the exception of one
who died a short time ago, the crew
Is the same as last year.
Sept. 20, next, Capt McLennan will
Greatly to the disappointment of
those in charge of local arrangements,
and prospective students, the week
school in gardening and horticulture
will not be held in Duluth this year.
A. B. Hostetter, superintendent of
agriculture of the Commercial club re-
ceived a letter this morning from
Prof. A. D. Wilson, supervisor of
demonstration farms and extension
work, of the state agricultural school.
In which he stated that it would be
impossible for the school to furnish
instructors for a course here this
spring on account of the fact that the
fund for extension work is depleted
and nothing but work originally
planned can be carried out.
Mr. Hostetter and R. C. Coffin of the
Y. M. C. A. have been working on the
garden and horticulture school Idea for
about ten days and have lined up a
number of prospective students. It was
planned to have the course follow the
lines of the poultry course given in
March and to give as thorough a
course in the theory and practice of
gardening as could be given in the
time allotted.
However, now that the course can-
not be given this year plans will be
made for next year and provision will
be made for a course here along the
lines laid out for the course planned.
St. Louis county is under great obli-
gations to the extension department of
the agricultural school. The people
here feel that tliey have had their
full share of the attention of the
workers for the agricultural school,
and perhaps a little more, and regret
Is expressed only that the department
has not had sufficient funds to carry
put all the work that can be crowded
into the year. People interested In
agriculture believe that the extension
work is perhaps the greatest work
the school is doing and that every en-
couragement, financial and moral
should be given to extend the work
and carry scientific Instruction to thoso
who will be most benefited by it.
INVESTIGATING
CANAL PROJECT
National Waterways Com-
mission Gives Hearing
in Pittsburg.
Pittsburg, Pa., April 17. — The Na-
tional Waterways commission is In
Pittsburg today investigating the Lake
Erie and Pittsburg canal project and
flood prevention. Three days will be
occupied in holding hear!ng.s and go-
ing over the proposed route of the
canal. Members of the commission
here are: Senators James P. Clarke
and William Lorlmer, and Congress-
men D. S. Alexander, Frederick S. Ste-
vens and Irving P. Wanger. Senator
William Alden Smith is expected some
time today.
This morning the commission heard
arguments In behalf of the canal and
that the construction work be done
under the supervision of government
experts. This afternoon advocates of
the project to have reservoirs built at
the headwaters of the tributaries of the
Ohio river, to prevent floods, will be
heard.
CO-OPERATION ON
NORTHWESTERN
Efficiency Committees Will
Bring Officers and Em-
ployes Together.
As an Indication that the doctrine of
increasing railroad effiency is taking
root, tlie management of the Chicago &
Northwestern railway has decided to
organize Its entire system Into 'eftl-
ciency committees" for the purpose of
bringing about co-operation betwecii
officers and employes in promoting im-
provements in the service with the
most economical methods of operation.
The Northwestern Is to adopt the
slogan of "efficiency," just as it has re-
cently been conducting a campaign to
1 educe accidents by similar methods.
There Is to be one efficiency commit-
tee for each division on the system,
composed of both employes and di-
vision officers, who will study and
adopt methods particularly adapted to
the needs of tlielr respective divisions.
Fifteen of these committees have al-
ready been formed. The division com-
mittees will make reports and recom-
mendations to a central efficiency com-
mittee, consisting of general officers In
the operating and maintenance depart-
ments, which will work out and adopt
policies for the entire system.
The central efficiency committee will
Include the general manager or assist-
ant general manager as chairman, each
representing one of the two grand di-
visions of the Northwestern system,
the general superintendents, and the
superintendents of motive power, su-
perintendent of the car department, su-
perintendent of transportation, engin-
eer of maintenance, and superintendent
of telegraph.
The main idea is to open the chan-
nels of communication for the ideas
gained through experience and obser-
vation by the employes to their supe-
rior officers. It is believed the plan
will make it easy for employes to sug-
gest Improvements to their fellow em-
ployes on the committees, who will
then lay the Ideas before the officers
for consideration. Instructions have
been given that one of the main pur-
poses Is to improve the service in every
practical way, rather than to bring
about economies In such ways as in-
creased courtesy to patron.s, improved
conditions of stations, minimizing
smoke from engines, reduction of loss
and damage to freight, and main-
tenance of schedules by all trains.
Last year the Northwestern organ-
ized "safety committees" on the same
plan and as a result of the recommen-
dations adopted the number of personal
injuries on the road was reduced bO
per cent In six months. Part of the
decrease, however, was ascribed to
smaller traffic than in the previous
year. Officials of the road hope for
equally encouraging results from the
efficiency plan.
ADDITIONAL WANTS
From Pages 17 and 18.
MONEY TO L(>AN.
$1 MONEY ON CRiaOlT. $)
$$ SOMETHING NEW. U
$$ |10 upward, for hosuekeepers, 1$
$9 workingmen and s& aried em- $$
19 ployes, at charges that honest M
9$ people can afford to lay. j|
fl DULUTH LOAN COMPANY, ||
IS Cor. Third Ave. W. and Sup. St.. II
II 307 Columbia I:ldg. ||
II Old 'phone, Melroiie :i355. ||
S5»S**££?*«£»s»x»jt£$|$$$ $ I $ I $ I $ » 1 1 1 1 J 1 1
* bl'IilNG IS HERE «
* If you want money In a' hurry. *
* SEE US. i
*• Our rates are the < heapest £
■SJ- Our payment plan the best. *
ic Call and be con>inced. *
* LOANS ON SALARY, FURNITURE *
* DULUTH FINANCE CO.. ' #
* 301 Palladio BIdg. ^
* Open Saturdav Evenings. if.
WANTED TO BCY.
WANTED TO BUY ^r^A^LTRGE^OR:
f'^J?^" ^V**'* °' ^^^^ 'or Investment.
1 69. Herald.
CITY AND VILLAGE LCANS IN MIN-
nesota. Buy or bulM a home on
monthly payments. C A. Knippen-
berg, 300 Alworth Bldir. 'Phones 597.
WE LOAN ON ALL KI>rD3 OF PER-
sonal security at lowest rates. Call
on us, 430 Manhattan 31dg., and get
rates. Duluth Mortgage Loan Co. W
Horkan. New 1598-D; Melrose 3733.
WE MAKE FARM LOANS ON VAL-
uable, productive and cultivated
lands. No delay; prompt attention.
Snyder Bros., 210 Wes : First street.
TO LOAN— 115,000 IN SUMS TO SUIT,
on real estate. Lane. MacGregor &
Co., 400 Alworth build ng.
MONEY SUPPLIED TO. SALARIED
people, women kcepirg house and
others, upon their owr names with-
out security; easy payments. Tolman,
509 Palladio building.
BURT'S NEW POSITION.
Former Union Pacific Head (Jets
Big Chicago Job.
Chicago, April 17. — Horace G. Burt,
former president of the Union Pacific
railroad, and regarded as one of the
foremost railroad engineering experts
of the United States, has been select-
ed by the Chicago Association of Com-
merce electrification committee as chief
engineer to take charge of the Chi-
cago electrification problem. He will
assume his new duties May 1.
The Investigation to be conducted by
the committee will take up the neces-
sity for electrification, the mechanical
practicability of such a change, and
Its commercial feasibility.
LEAVES SOO RAILROAD TO
TAKE ASHLAND DOCK JOB.
MONEY TO LOAN ON CJ TY PROPER-
ty; lowest rates; small and large
amounts. Scott-Kreidl»r company,
405 Central avenue. Both 'phones.
MONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS,
watches, furs, rifles etc,, and all
goods of value, |1 to |1,500. Key-
stone Loan & Mercantile Co. 22 West
Superior street.
MONEY TO LOAN— L0A:\'S MADE ON
timber and farm lands. John Q. A.
Crosby, 305 Palladio building.
Money to loan — Any amo mt; low rates.
Cooley & Underbill, 20) Exchange.
SIX PER CENT IXTEREliT ON SMALL
real estate loans; moriey on hand;
prompt service. F. I. Salter com-
pany, Lonsdale buildin ?.
DRESSMAKIJiG.
MISS GRAY'S SCHOOL OF GARMENT
cutting and making; practical:
terms reasonable; patterns to order
a specialty. Third floor, Gray-Tal-
lant company.
DRESSMAKING AND LADIES TAI-
loring. 131 West Third street.
HAIR DRESSING PARLORS.
G. Moisan is the only French hair dres-
ser In Duluth. Expert In making
wigs, toupees and hair dye. Switches
and puffs made from combings. Mail
orders promptly filled. 212 W. 1st St
STOVE REPAIRS.
WE CARRY IN STOCK P.EPAIRS FOR
10,000 different stoves and ranges. C.
F. WIggerts & Son, 43 0 East Supe-
rior street. Both 'phoiiea
WANTED TO BUY— SINGLE HEAVY
harness. Inquire 1127 West Mlchl>
gan street.
WANTED TO BUY— HAVE CUSTOMER,
for inside business property between
First avenue east and Seventh avenu»
west on Superior or First street.
What have you? Twin Ports Realty
company.
WANTED TO BUY— WHITE STEAM-
er touring car; must be reasonable:
state equipment and price. Care or
Herald, W 61.
WANTED TO BUY— ROUND PEDES'
tal table; must be in good condition,
and reasonable. Address W. car»
Herald.
WANTED TO BUY OR RENT — WARD-
robe and three-cornered bath cab-
Inet. 'Phone Melrose 1717.
WANTP:D TO BUY— A HOME IN THE
East end; we have customers for all
kinds from the lowest priced to the
highest. Have you anything to of-
fer/ Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY— TWENTY, FORTY
or eighty-acre Improved or unlm-
? roved farms; if you have anvthlng.
or sale bring it in. AVhitney Wau
company, 301 Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY — HIGHEST PKICES^
paid for men's old clothing. Phoenix
Dry Cleaning Co. Zenith, 1862-X.
10 Fourth avenue west.
Wanted to Buy — Highest price for cast-
off men's clothing. N. Stone, 213 W.
1st St. Melrose 1834; Zenith 1134-D..
We buy scconJ-hand furniture and.
stoves. Lincoln 295-X. 1629 W. Sup. st.
WANTED TO BUY — OLD CLOTHES.,
auto and carriage tires. 328 East Su-
perior street. Zenith 2013-D.
WANTED TO BUY — FOR CASH,.
rooming house, hotel or would con-
sider some other business. Call «fc
once. 509 Torrey building.
RENT— STORES, OFFICES, ETC.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM OFFICE
suite In Winthrop block. Thoroughly-
modern. Suitable for doctor or den-
tist. Charles P. Craig & Co., 501-
505 Sellwood building.
FOR RENT— STORE AT 907 WEST
Michigan street; |30 month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 40a
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— LOFT OVER THE GLOBE,
store, excellent location for milli-
nery, dressmaking, hair dressing or
tailor shop, or any other business.
Apply the Globe company, 105-lOT
West Superior street.
FOR RENT— STORE, 1829 WEST su-
perior street; well adopted for
plumbing establishment. Slryker,.
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT— 125 PER MONTH FOR 40»
East Superior street; possession Im-
mediately or May L H. J. Mullin, 403^
Lonsdale building.
TIMBER LAN DS.
TIMBER AND CUT-OVER LANDS
bought; mortgage ioanii made. John
Q. A. Crosby. 305 Pallat io building.
Ashland, Wis., April 17. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Frank G. Johnson, for
the past four years yardmaster for the
Soo line at Ashland, has resigned his
position to take effect at once, for the
purpose of accepting the position of as-
sistant superintendent of the Clark-
son Coal & Dock company, at Ashland.
Mr. Johnson has been an employe of
the Soo railway and Us predecessor,
the Wisconsin Central, for eighteen
years. Mr. Young, the present man-
ager of the Clarkson company will
leave for Superior within the next few
weeks to take charge of the Clarkson
interests there, which will leave Mr.
Johnson in charge here. Frank Cleve-
land, bookkeeper at the Clarkson dock
for several years has resigned and wlil
go to Wallace, Idaho, where he will
work for the Northern Pacific. En-
gineer Foreman Ed Brown will suc-
ceed Mr. Johnson as yardmaster.
SAYING THE RIGHT THING.
Cleveland Plain Dealer: "I don't seem
to be able to say the right thing to
women," a bashful young man confided
to us the other day, "and that's why I
don't shine in society. I'll tell you an
Instance of It. Not long ago I met a
woman I hadn't seen for years, and I
could see that slje was trying to keep
young. So I thoQghi; I'd say a graceful
thing to her.
•• 'You carry your age remarkably
well.' says I.
"Well, the moment I said It I could
see that I was in wrong. She was
looking chilly and getting red, so I
said:
" 'Don't mind my little Jokes — I never
mean what I sajT As a matter of fact,
you don't carry your age a bit well.'
"And then she killed me with a
haughty look and sailed away without
saying good-by; Say, how should I
have put It?"
^
ATLANTIC PORTS
IN BIG RATE BAHLE.
Washington, April 17. — The cham-
ber of commerce of the state of New
York, the Merchants' Association of
New York, the New York Produce ex-
change and the New York Board of
Trade and transportalon today Insti-
tuted before the Interstate commerce
commission, a complaint against the
New York Central & Hudson River
Rallrlad company and many other
Eastern carriers, alleging that the city
of New York Is being subjected by
them to unreasonable and unlawful
discrimination in competition with
other Atlantic ports, including Phil-
adelphia, Boston, Baltimore, Newport
News, Norfolk & Montreal, Canada.
The effect of the complaint will be to
bring the whole subject of the export
shipments and the rates exacted by
the railroads for them to an Issue.
Competition among the various ports
Is keen, and a prolonged contest be-
fore the commission and jn the courts
is looked for.
FOR SALr; — FORTY ACRES LAND,
all white pine and spruce timber. In-
quire 709 Hammond avenue, Superior,
Wis.
I buy standing timber; also cut-over
lands. Geo. Rupley, 615 Lyceum bldg
FOR SALE — 40 ACRES LAND. ALL
white pine and spruce timber. In-
quire <09 Hammonnd uvenue, Supe-
rior, Wis.
FOR RENT — MODERN STORE, FINE
front, 25x60 feet, basement and s-ac-
ond floor, Third avenue east and Su-
perior street. See H. J. Mullin, 40a
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— STORE ON WEST SU-
perlor street, between Third and.
Fourth avenues west. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey building.
FOR RENT — HALL; NINETEENTH
avenue west and First street. Inquire
214 Axa building.
FOR RENT — A FEW CHOICE OF-
ftces In the Torrey building; best ot
Janitor and elevator service. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR RENT — HALF OF STORE, 16
East Superior street; four-year leas*
if desired; rent reasonable. Botb
'phones, 717.
FOR RENT— IDEAL PLACE FOR MIL-
linery or clothing store. Sixteenth
avenue west and Superior street.
New building, tile entrance, steel
celling, hardwood floors. F. I. Salter
company.
Homesteads and timber claims located.
From 40 to 80,000 acies of timber
lands for sale. 401 Patladlo Bldg.
WATCHES REPiilRED.
Guaranteed Main Springs, |1. 00; watch
cleaned, |1. Garon Bros., 213 W. 1st
MEDICAL.
LADIES — $1,000 REWA
tlvely guarantee my gr
"Monthly" remedy. St
some of the longest, n:
abnormal cases In thre<
No harm, pain or Inte
work. Mall, |1.50. Do'
§2. Dr. L. M. Sougtl:
Kansas City. Mo.
RD! I POSI-
eat successful
.fely relieves
ost obstinate,
» to five daya
rference with
ible strength.
Inton & Co.,
SEEDS, PLANTS, TREES.
FOR SALE — TREES A>rD SHRUBS,
plants an<j flowers; gardening done
by the day or contract. Call G. R.
Mercer, Mel. 3545.
MINERAL LANDS.
EBERT. WALKER & Mc KNIGHT CO.,
315 Torrey bldg.. offer.' unusual op-
portunities for big pro U in mineral
lands on Cuyuna and Veimllion ranges
DENY THAT MOFFAT
ROAD HAS BEEN SOLD.
New York, April 17. — Denial that the
Denver, Northwestern & Pacific (the
Moffat) railroad, has been sold or that
any negotiations for its sale to any
other railroad company are pending,
was made today by W. G. Evans, presi-
dent of the road, who Is In this city.
Mr. Evans stated that the Interests
In control of the road desired that It
be maintained as a Denver enterprise.
Negotiations proceeding here for the
financing of the road are declared to
be with parties Independent of any
railroad or railroad combination.
Your furniture reupholstered with
a select line of furniture coverings.
Phone Cameron today.
IVIOIVEY
At lowest market rates on im-
proved Duluth Real Estate.
Moaey Always on Ehiad.
MENDENHALL
& HOOPES
2M FInit National Baak Bide
UPHOLSTERING.
FURNITURE, AUTOMOBILES, CAR-
rlages; reasonable price?. E. Ott, 112
First avenue west. Beth 'phones.
ASHES AND GARBAGE.
REMOVED PROMPTLY, ZENITH 2378-
X. 807 S'xth avenue wijst.
REMOVED ON SHORT NCtTICE— DICK
Barrett, 1122 E. 4th St Zen. 1945-Y.
ASHES. GARBAG.K AND BIANURE RE-
moved promptly. Melrose 135»0; Ze-
nith 1488-X.
■ i^>^k^tA^k^^^>^^V
Look Up This Choice
Buildins Site !
EiKkty Feet on Srcoad Sir^tt, Be-
tween Twenty-foartk and Twen-
ty-Fifth Avnues ISant.
All ImproTementM in nnd paid for.
If you Intend building in the finest
restricted district, this will interest
you. The OMTier will sell for less
than any adjoining property can be
bought.
CHAS. P. CRAIG & CO.
EXCLUSIVE AGE NTS.
001-5 Sellwood BalldlnK'
^^^>^>^>^.^>^>^^^^^w^^^M^>^>^^^>^>^^^^>^>^>^><»
^^>^»^>^>^>^>^^>^>^^^^^^^^^^^%^^^^^^^^>^>^»^
FOR RENT!
OFFICES IN LYCE17M BUIL.DING.
Firc-Proot — D««li nble.
LITTLE & lOLTIu «(«*<*
^^^>««N^^^«MAAMMMMM^^^ «
FOR RENT — STORE ROOM AT 242-*
West Superior street, $20; four-roon>
flat upstairs, with bath, $10.
FOR RENT— FULL STORE AND BASE-
ment, suitable for grocery or meat
market, etc.; moderate rent First
avenue west and Fourth street. Chas.
P. Craig & Co.. 501-505 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— HALF OF OFFICE OR
desk room. 401 Columbia building.
HORSES, VEHICLES, ETC.
HORSES! HORSES! HORSES!
MIDWAY HORSE MAItKET.
•THE HORSE AND MULE HEAD-
quarters of the Northwest;" 500 to 8 OO
head of horses and mules constantly^
on hand; part time given if desired.
Private sales daily. If you need draft
horses, general purpose horses, de-
livery horse.s, mules or railroading:
or other purposes, drivers or saddlers,
we can fill your order. Every horso
sold guaranteed to be as represented.
BARRETT & ZIMMERMAN,
Midway Horse Market, St. Paul, Minn.
FOR SALE— TWENTY HEAD DRAFT
and driving horses. 1111 West Furst
street. Western Sales Stable com-
pany.
FOR SALE— NICE DRIVING HORSIi.
Call evenings, :ilj) North Twenty-
ninth avenue west.
FOR SALS — ONE SET OF LIGHT
double liarness, one single rubber-
tired buggy, both In good condition,
cneap ;f taken at cnce. Apply is
Thirty-first avenue west.
HORSES ACCLIMATED HORSES
Young heavy horses; several teama
for sale. Red Cliff Lumber company,
barn. Thirty-ninth avenue west.
FOR SALE—LARGE BLACK MARE, 6^
years old, weighs about 1,500 Ib.s. ; or
will trade for light team. Call at
1206 West First street.
For Sale — Forty head of draft and gen-
eral purpose horses just out of wooda
to be sold cheap. i:09 W. 1st St.
FOR SALE— TWENTY-FIVE HEAD OP-
horses at 811 Lake avenue north.
FOR SALE — ao HORSES AT ZEMTH
Sale & Boarding Stable. 524 W. Ist St.
FOR SALE -
Third street.
HORSES. 826 EAST
H. Inch.
FOR SALE— HORSES AT L. HAMMEL
company.
WANTED TO RENT.
WANTED TO RENT — ROOM AND
and board in private familv by
young lady employed during the day.
Central. Address M 115. Herald.
WANTED TO RENT— BY MAY 1,
three or four-room house, for small
family; state price and location. 8-
365, Herald.
WANTED TO RENT— SMALL FARM,.
suitable for truck gardening. R. D.
Bigelow. Eveleth, Minn.
SWEDISH MASSAGE.
A. E. tl.-i.NSEN, MASSEUR, 400 NEW
Jersey building. Old 'phone 4273 Mel.
rose.
Mrs. Weatlind. maaaage. treated at off lo*.-
or at your home. Zen. Grand 224€-X.
1IR& H. WIRING. SWEDISH MAS-
aase. 305 East First St, llelrosa 44M^
•
I
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1
1
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Monday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 17, 1911.
17
^
SITUATIONS
Iff you are out off work The Herald Want
Ads ought to be of material assistance
to yon. Read them over eareffully.
HELP WANTED
Several hundred men and women call at
The Herald daily and look over the Help
Wanted Ads. If you need help — Advertise.
TO LET
Take down that spotted placard and secure
a tenant or roomer In the modern way-
through a Herald 'For Rent' Advertisement.
FOR SALE— HOUSES.
FOR SALE — ON EASY TERMS. SIX-
room house. Twenty-fourth avenue
■west and Sixth street, $1,800; sewer,
water and ga« in street. Whitney
"Wall company. 301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — NEW TEN-ROOM DU-
plex house for sale cheap; «»»/
terms; 1U16 Ninth avenue east. U A.
Knlppenberg. 300 Alworth building.
•Phones 597.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
If you want us to build a house for
you this summer, please let us know
as soon as possible. We advance all
the money and you pay us monthly,
but even at that there Is a lira t to
our capacity and to our pocketbook.
If you are not familiar with our
plan write us a postcard anJ wo will
mail you booklets and pictures.
EDMUND a. WALTON AGENCY,
S12 Exhange building.
HELP WANTED— FEMALE.
(Continued.)
WANTED — YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. Mrs. J. S. Lane, 421
Fifth avenue west.
WANTED — WOMAN COOK AT THE
Frederick hotel.
WANTED— EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR
general housework; family of two;
good wages; one who can go home
nights. Call 1418 Jefferson street.
housewc
FOR S.ALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
centrally located. West Duluth; price
$1,800; small cash payment, balance
monthly; is now rented for $19 per
month. Whitney Wall company. 301
Torrey building.
FOR SALE— FOUR-ROOM HOUSE AT
Lakeside, almost new, lot 40 by 140
feet. Barn and large chicken house.
Fine place for garden, keepmg cow
and chickens. Price $1,000. Phone
Grand 1871-Y.
FOR SALE— $375 TAKES HALF IN-
terest in a six-room house, worth
$1,000; good water Duluth Heights.
Inquire 20 Quince street.
WANTEi:>— EXPERIENCED MARKER
and sorter; must be first-class. Model
laundry. 126 East First street.
WANTED — GOOD RELIABLE NURSE
girl to care for child during after-
noons. Call Mrs. Welles, McKay ho-
tel.
WANTED — AT ONCE. GIRL FOR
general housework or a young girl
to assist. 1020 East Second street^
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
(Continued.)
FOR 'SALE^^^^^ONE^WHITNEY BABY
carriage, nlckle folding go-cart, oak
buffet, gas range with water heater
attachment, iron bed and springs, all
in good condition, at less than half
price. Call 230 North Sixteenth ave-
nue east, forenoons.
FOR RENT— FURNITURE OF A FOUR-
room flat. Call Melrose 3841.
FOR SALE— TWO BRUSSELS RUGS,
> — GIRL FOR GENI^KAU ' 9 bj~ 12, Segar refrigerator and 30-
ork. 2122 West Fourth street.^ gallon coal hot water heater. Call
ga
711% East Fourth street.
WANTED — GIRL ABOUT 18 TO As-
sist with housework and care for
children. Apply 1610 Vi East Supe-
rior street. .
WANTED — EXPERIENCED
nery trimmer and maker.
First street.
MILLI-
6 East
WANTED— WAITRESS. APPLY ST.
Paul restaurant. 14 East Superior
street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; $25 per month. 2102 East
Third street.
FOR SALE— PRACTICALLY NEW
furniture of four-room flat. Oppor-
tunity for young married people to
save considerably. Same flat for
rent. 17 East Fourth, second floor.
FOR SALE— ORGAN SUITABLE FOP.
country school, 405 North Hugo
street. Duluth Heights. Zenith 'phone
Grand 2196-X
ADDITIONAL WANTS
ON PAGES 16 and 18
SirUATION WANTED— FEMALE.
SITUATION WAl!:TBt> — BY YOUNG
lady experienced in stenography and
ofTice work; b^st of references fur-
nished. R. B.. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — A POSITION
as housekeeper, by a woman with
a 2-year-old child, either In or out
of city. L 86. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — WORK BY
the day washing. Ironing sfnd clean-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2267.
SITUATION WANTED — BY MIDDLE-
aged woman, some light work; is a
good seamstress, or would take
charge of furnished rooms. Grand
1316-X.
BuiiDiJJ^
-^C' -^^^
liiti
lit lyfiJitr: tit ^^^
tilt]
FOR SALE— COMPLETE BED. IN-
quire 617 V^ West First street.
FOR SALE — $70.00 PIANO CERTIFI-
cate; will sell for $5. Inquire Room
17, 210 West Second street.
FOR SALE — TWO-PIECE MAHOGANY
parlor set; call mornings. 516Vt
P'ifteenth avenue east.
FOR SALE— ORIENTAL RUG — TUR-
kish Muskabad, 10 ft. by 15 ft., in
good condition. Apply 1029 East
Sixth street.
^OR SALE— NEW WELL BUILT SIX-
room house, modern in every respect;
corner lot. 376 by 100. B29 Sixteenth
avenue east.
FOR SALE— BY OWNER— NEW SIX-
room house, modern except heat,
reasonable. 216 Vernon street.
fe-OR "sale— $700; GOOD FIVE-ROOM
cottage on Palmetto street; cement
sidewalk, electric lights; terms rea-
sonable. Inquire 30 Quince street, Du-
luth Heights.
FOR SALE — SEVEN-ROOM MODERN
hous^. on East Fourth street, near
Portland square; hardwood through-
out; good basement; cement founda-
tion and furnace heat. A bargain;
$4,500. Whitney Wall company. 301
Torrey building. 293
FOR SALE— ELEGANT HOME; IDEAL
location: mu.'jt sell. For terms see
owner. 408 Columbia building or call
Park 6155-D.
Houses from $800 to $30,000 for sale
by L. A. Larsen Co., Reliable Real
E.'<tate Dealers. 213-14-15 Prov. Bldg.
FOR SALE— AN EAST END HOME OF
nine rooms, large lot. modern except
heat; beautiful location; $3,u00. $500
cash, balance easy as rent. Smith
Realty company. 524 Manhattan
building.
WANTED— AT ONCB. COOK; MUST
be white. Jesse Burns, Aitkin, Minn.
Call 100. Bell phone.
GENERAL
Wilson, 124
W^ ANTED — GIRL FOR
housework Mrs. C. W.
Fourth avenue west.
WANTED — FIST-CL.\S3 WOMAN
cook for restaurant day work; good
salary; steady position. Address Box
102. Ironwood. Mich.
W^\NTED — PLAIN AND FANCY
dressmaking at 3137 Restormel bt.
FOR S.\LE— BY OWNER. SIX-ROOM
house and lot: all improvements.
2119 West Fourth street.
FOI: SALE— NINE-ROOM HOUSE AND
lot for sale cheap. Part caah. Call
3824 Sixth street west.
FOR SALE— $500 DOWN. BALANCE
easy terms, for a twelve-room house
near high school and manual train-
ing building. See Chan Smith. 405
Torrey building.
FOR SALE — HOL-SE AND LOT FOR
sale at 1111 Qarfleld avenue.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM RESI-
dence; all modern conveniences; lot
70 by 140; in Normal school district;
$8,500. See Chan Smith, 405 Torrey
building.
FOR .SALE— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
with water, sewer and electric lights;
two lots 25 by 125 each; price, $1,800,
one-half cash, balance to suit. Twin
Ports Realty company, 510 Manhat-
tan building. _^
FOR SALE — 15 -ROOM BOARDING
house; lot 25 by 125; $2,000; one-
fourth cash, balance to suit: hard-
wood floors, sewer, electric light and
city water; this property is near the
Zenith Furnace company; now oc-
cupied; rents for $25 per month.
Twin Port Realty company.
FOR RENT— HOUSES.
FOR RENT— MAY 1— LATE RESI-
dence of M. S. Burrows. 1830 Jefferson
street east; all modern conveniences.
Call for Information 206 South Six-
teenth avenue east. _
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son 515 Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE.
211 South Seventeenth avenue east,
$27.50 per month. Call 817 Torrey.
Melrose. 1138. .
FOR RENT— MAY 1. NINE-ROOM
house 109 East Third street with
bath, furnace, laundry, flreplaco.
suitable for roomers or boarders. $50.
Apply to E. D. Field company. 203
Exchange building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM HOUSE, 607
West Third street. Apply to Henry
Taylor, 603 Palladlo building. Zenith
•phone 2066-Y. ^^
FOR SALE— ALL KINDS OF MATER-
lal used in packing furniture, burlap,
excelsior etc. We also furnish
packers by the hour. Estimate free.
Duluth Van & Storage Co., 210 W.
Superior streot. Both 'phones 492.
FOR SALE — SINGER DROP-HEAD
sewing machine; seven drawers;
practically new; cheap. 119 West Sec-
ond street.
SITUATION WANTED — WORK BY
the day Call old 'phone, Melrose
4046
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG LADY
would like general office work. Ad-
dress O 25, Herald.
SITUATION WJVNTED— BY YOUNG
lady in general office or bookkeeper
or cashier; good penman and accur-
ate. R 169. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— HAND EM-
broidery done, table linen monogram.
Melrose 3059.
WHERE TO GET WHAT YOU WANT
Each firm a leader in its line. Consult
this list l>efore placing your order if you
i/vant the best at a price you like to pay.
AWNINGS, TENTS, PACKSACKS. \ KODAKS AND CAMlilRAS.
Polrier Tent & Awning Co., 106 E. Sup.
St., manufacturer and repairing.
Duluth Tent & Awning Co., 1608 W. Sup.
St. Zen. 347-X. Work guaranteed.
AWNINGS AND TENTS.
AMERICAN TENT & AWNINO CO.. 1
and 3 East Michigan street. Zen. 2473.
SITUATION WANTED — PRACTICAL
nurse would like engagments. Ad-
dress Mrs. Henderson, 902 East Third
street, upstairs.
FOR SALE— LIVING MUSIC BOX DAY
or night singers, rollers and chop
note canaries; come and hear my
new stock of canaries sing; wild or
tame animals of any kind can be had
by order at 1013-1015 West First
street. Duluth Bird store.
FOR SALE— INCUBATORS, BROOD
ers and all poultry supplies; baby
chicks 15 cents and up; any breed
hatched to order; flower and garden
seeds in bulk; northern grown;
shrubs, roots, bulbs and trees. W.
W. Seekins, florist. 302 East Superior
street.
FOR SALE
range. No. 8.
- LARGE STEWART
309 West Fourth street.
FOR SALE— STEWART COAL HEAT-
er. No. 9 Peninsular range. Estate gas
range, dining table, refrigerator,
steel couch, etc. Will sell entire
furniture of flve-room flat in a lot;
price reasonable. Owner leaving
city. Call any time. 624 First ave-
nue east.
FOR RENT— TWELVE STEAM HEAT-
ed rooms suitable for lodging house;
best location In city, opposite union
depot. Call at Fifth Avenue Cloth-
ing store. W. Goldstein. ^
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM COTTAGE
731% West First street. Inquire 1127
West Michigan street.
LXm RENT — SIX-ROO.M HOUSE;
water, gas. toilet and lights. 816
Fifth avenue east.
FOR RENT — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
all conveniences. 317 West Fourth
street. Inquire 319 West Fourth
street.
FOR RENT — FIVE -ROOM HOUSE
with bath. 215 Va East Fifth street.
Hartman-O'Donnell agency, 205 Lons-
dale building.
FOR SALE— THIRTY-FOOT CABIN,
gasolene launch; 15 horse power
Campbell motor. L 300. Herald.
FOR SALE — OR TRADE. SECOND
hand automobile for two or flve pas-
senger; slightly damaged. Call or
f;lve us offer at 203 Providence buUd-
ng.
SITUATION WANTED— MALE.
b-TUATION WANTED — PUBLIC JAN-
Itor and window-washer. Prudence
Robert, the best new window-cleaner
In the city. Melrose 305. La Salle hotel.
JEFFERSON, PUBLIC JANITOR. ALL
kinds of store and office cleaning.
Mel. 2623, 219 East Superior street.
SITUATION W A NT ED — HOUSE
cleaning, carpet beating, window
and wall paper t?leaning. Old phone
9652; new phone 1082. William
Chlsholm, 228 l>aJce avenue south.
FOR S.\LE — WANTED A FEW MORE
butter customers. Owing to a recent
Increase in our dairy herd we can
accommodate a limited number of
people with butter. Jean Duluth
farm. Telephone evenings.
FOR SALE— RAISE CHICKENS — IT'S
easy with the Jewel Incubator — any
one can get good results. We have
'em In all sizes. See our latest
hatch. Kelley Hardware Co.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE
arranged for two families; now
rented; near new city dock; block
from street car line: electric light,
water, sewer; will net 12 per cent;
price $2,250. part cash. Address
Owner. W 67. Herald.
FOR SALE — SEVEN ROOMS AND
bath; new fixtures and plumbing;
hardwood floors; all modern conven-
iences; nice trees and bushes; will
sell cheap if taken at once. Inquire
1620 East Sixth street.
FOR SALE— AT A SACRIFICE— SIX-
room cottage on street car line,
Park Point; water, electric light,
bath, gas range, fireplace, hot water
heot, cement foundation, laundry tubs,
cement floor in 7Vi-foot basement;
beautitui, high, dry lots; fine shade
tre**s; easy terms. Save commission.
Address Owner. H 334. Herald.
FOR SALE — SNAP — FOUR-ROOM
house and barn. $300 cash; must sell;
leaving city. 224 Forty-fifth avenue
we.st.
FOR RENT— A COMFORTABLE, WELL
arranged home in the East end; mod-
ern in every respect; $42.50 per
month. Whitney Wall company. 301
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— TWO SIX-ROOM BRICK
houses all modern; large basement;
27 and 29 West Fourth. Inquire
27 Vi West Fourth street.
FOR RENT — THREE-ROOM COTTAGE
downstairs, all brand new, all con-
veniences except bath and heat. A
bargain to right party. Call 1030
West First street.
FOR RENT — NEW FOUR-ROOM
house; all modern conveniences. 421
North Filty-flr.st avenue west
FOR S-\LE— BY OWNER— NICE SIX-
room cottage, 1534 Minnesota ave-
nue. Inquire at 216 Vernon street.
FOR SALE— BARGAIN IF TAKEN AT
once, eight-room house, barn and
$S00 lot; Forty-fourth avenue near
Lon.lon road. $2,500; terms; snap for
contractor or carpenter. H. A. Hook-
er. 569 Frederick avenue, Milwaukee,
W^ls.
FOR SALE— DON'T FAIL TO SEE US IF
you contemplate buying a home this
spring. Minneapolis Construction Co.,
210 .\merican Exchange Bank Bldg.
FOR SALE — MODERN EAST END
Jiume; large grounds; illness of wife
compels sale; no agents need apply.
A.klress S 368, Herald.
WANTED TO TRADE FOR FARM,
-eight-room house, on a fifty-foot lot,
located In the best residence district
In Duluth. Price $4,500. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — ON EAST EIGHTH
Street, near Seventh avenue east, six-
room house, very comfortable, and
delightfully arranged interior, for
$2,200. witli $600 cash; balance on
easy terms. Whitney Wall company.
301 Torrey building. 262
FOR RENT— NINE ROOMS WITH
bath, furnace, fireplace and laundry.
li'3 Ea.si Third str-jet, $5o. E. D. Field
company. Exchange building.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE
on Nineteenth avenue east with fur-
nace, bath, etc., one block from cars,
$o2.50. E. D Field company, 203 Ex-
change building.
FOR SALE — NEW AND SECOND-
hand engines, boilers, portable saw-
mills, planers, matchers, resaws, pul-
leys, shafting, hangers and boxes.
'Phones 91.
DULUTH MACHINERY CO.
FOR SALE— AT A LOW PRICE. SEC-
ond hand full dress suit and white
vest in good condition, size 42. at
Karl J. Hagberg's tailor shop. 9
Twentieth avenue west.
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG MAN
desires position as clerk in grocery
store; has good experience. Apply
P. M., Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — PAINTING
and paper hanging at low prices.
Grand 2171-D.
SITUATION WJ^^NTEn— BY FIRST-
class painter; dolftg good work at
low prices. Address Joseph Damen,
3810 Halifax street, Calumet L 284.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN
wishes position aa assistant to ad-
vertising manager; also do office
work; moderate .'salary satisfactory,
if opportunity fo» advancement on a,
par with energy and ability manl-
fested. U 19. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — AN ALL
around butcher and sausage maker
wishes a position. Frank Pfeifer,
Withee. Wis.
SITUATION WANTED — AS S.^LES-
man on the road or In store. Ex-
perienced. Good business education.
Speak Swedish and Finnish. Now
employed. Address ABC, Virginia,
Minn.
ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTER.
We deliver all kinds of adv. matter;
best service. Interstate Dlstributlnif
service. Mel. 3647. 17 N. 6th Av. W.
ACCOUNTANT.
R. R. GRIFFITH, 419 Providence bldg.
'Phones: Melrose 1353, Zenith 1938.
S. M- LESTER. 412 PROVIDENCE
building. Both phones 862.
Eclipse Photo Supply Co., 17 4th Av«. W.
Develop and finish for amateurs.
LANDSCAPE GARDENING.
BLACK DIRT. SANDY LOAM AND
fertilizer for gardens, hotbeds, flower
beds, lawns etc.; gradi:ig sodding
& seeding. H. B. Keedy. Both 'phones.
MACHINE WORK REPAIRING.
Auto and Machine parts made. Zenith
Machine works. 207 W. Ist St. Old
'phone 2522.
KEY, LOCK AND SAFE WORKS.
FARM AND FRUIT L.\NDS.
(Continued.)
NOw"'7s'~yOUR CHANCE^^3lNETT
acres on the beautiful summer re-
sort lakes, twenty miles north of
Hlbblng, three-quarters mile from
new railroad; all hardwood reserved
when pine was sold; automobile road
running to door from Hlbblng and
Chlsholm; flve acres cleared and
fenced with boards; ninety rods of
shore, fine garden spot, best of fish-
ing and hunting; fine well of water
and pump; well and mllkhouse com-
bined over well; house 22 by 32 by 14
high, logs hewed on two sides; kitch-
en 18 by 22, woodshed 14 by 22, shop
18 by 20, barn and hav loft, 32 by
26, hog pen 14 by 18. chicken house,
root cellar 16 by 18; two cows with
calves, one brood sow. one York-
shire boar, one horse, 10-year-old,
sound and good driver; one buggy,
$86; one wagon. $50; two sets of har-
ness, plow, drag, cultivator, and other
articles too numerous to mention.
Poor health cause of selling. If taken
at once price $1,800. Address Owner
Bernard Smith, Hlbblng, Minn.. Stur-
geon Lake mall sack.
FOR BENT — TEN-ACRE TRACT ON
the finest road out of Duluth; on
Lester river, three miles from pa-
vilion; four acres plowed and ready
for planting; lots of manure hauled
there this winter; no stone; a small
house on the place. Call on L. A.
Gunderson. 117 West First street.
FOR SALE— 30.000 ACRES OPEN TO
settlers near Cass Lake for entry;
lowest price. Fred Steffen, locater.
FOR SALE — 160 ACRES OF LAND AT
$10 per acre In 54-17, two and a half
miles from D. W. & P. station with
food house and barn. Address A. A.
tauty. Cotton. Minn.
Sander Bros.' Hardware
store, 203 W. Isl St Phones:
Old. Mel. 3969; .N'ew, 2288-A.
ART GLASS AND MIRRORS.
All kinds glass; lowest prices. St. Ger-
main Bros., 121 First avenue west.
CARPENTER REPAIR WORK.
REPAIR OR NEW WORK DONE REA-
sonably; plans made; estimates fur-
nished. Ole Helgetun, 2209 West
Second street. New 'phone Lincoln
492-Y.
KEYS AND MODEL AVORKS.
Key cutting,
fine repairs. 22Vk ^
grinding, pclishing and
■ 2nd St. Mel. 3381.
WORK DONE NEATLY. O. PEARSON,
207 W. 1st St. Zen. 1274-X or Zen. 6097.
We do all kinds of carpenter work, Job-
bing a specialty; work civen prompt
attention. A. J. Uase, 18 West Second
street. 2203- Y.
SITUATION WANTED — POSITION
with wholesale house; can give ref-
erences. F. M. Wilson. 2531 West Su-
perior street.
FOR SALE — SAFES. OFFICE FURNl-
ture, architects' and engineers' sup-
plies, typewriters and supplies. J. S.
Ray & Co., 406 W. Sup. St. 'Phones.
FOR SALE— OFFICE FURNITURE,
also household furniture, dining ta-
ble, chairs and china closet. Call 1101
Alworth building. 'Phone Melrose,
Grand 201.
FOR SALE— SQUARE PIANO, WAL-
nut bedroom set and other house-
hold articles; prices reasonable If
taken at once. 109 East Third street.
FOR RENT — TWO THREE-ROOM
flats with bath, etc., $15 and $8. E.
D, Field company, 203 Exchange
buildings
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
rear 7 West Fourth street. Inquire
at Louis Greek, 416 West Superior
street, curio store.
FOR RENT— NINE OR TEN-ROOM
house, 1007 East Second street; all
conveniences; $40. Apply N. J. Up-
ham company, 18 Third avenue west.
FOR S-A.LE— MONTHLY PAYMENTS
of $40 will purchase the right party
a good six-room house at Lakeside,
modern except heat. Price $3,400.
Greenfield, 310-11 Columbia building.
FOR SALE— FOUR-ROOM HOUSE;
low price: easy terms; within walk-
ing distance. S. W'Ulamson, 515
Torrey building. Both 'phones.
FOR SALE — BY OiWNER — SEVEN-
room house near Fortieth avenue
west on Fifth street; also house on
East Third street. Telephone, Calu-
met. 191 M.
FOR SALE— SEVEN- ROOM HOUSE,
on Nineteenth avenue east, with fur-
nace, bath, etc., one block from cars
$3,750; easy terms. E. D. Field com-
pany. Exchange building.
FOB SALE— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE
at Lakeside: strictly modern
throughout: fine location; good view
of lake. $4,200. (283) Whitney Wall
company. 301 Torrey building.
FOR RENT— EIGHT- ROOM HOUSE,
No. 1 West Fifth street; water, sew-
er, bath, gas and electric lights, hot
air furnace for rent May 1, $30 per
month. R. P. Dowse. 106 Providence
building.
FOR RENT— COZY SIX-ROOM COT-
tage; modern except heat; best loca-
tion; fine lawn. 213 Twelfth avenue
east.
FOR RENT— 506 FIFTH AVENUE
east, six- room house and bath, gas,
free water, $20 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT CHEAP— SEVEN-ROOM
house, on Seventh street. West end;
city water and gas. Call new 'phone,
Lincoln 474.
FOR RENT— 1803 SOUTH STREET,
flve-room house, water and sewer;
free water, $15 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR SALE— WAGON AND HEAVY
double harness: cheap. 684 Grand.
FOR SALE — TWO DROP-HEAD
Whites. $18 and $23; four drop-head
Singers at $10. $12. $15 and $26;
others from $5 up. all in fine shape.
White Sewing Machine store. Lake
avenue and Superior street.
FOR SALE— COAL HEATER PARTY
leaving town. 130 Vi West Fourth
street.
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG MAN
accustomed to hospital work, would
like other employment. Not afraid
of work. Can furnish good refer-
ences. K 205. Herald.
FOR SALE — GAS ENGINE, TWO AND
one-half horse-power. $30; three
horse-power. $48; flve horse-power,
$15; eight horse-power. $95; twenty-
foot boat complete, $160. Duluth
Gas Engine Works.
FOR SALE — BL-\CK ORPINGTON
eggs, for hatching. Fine large stock.
$1 per 15. Mrs. Parks. 614 West
Fifth street.
FOR SALE— UPRIGHT PIANO IN
good condition; $76. 618 V4 East
Second street.
FOR SALE— PIANO; WILL SELL
cheap: party leaving city. 832 East
Second street.
FOR SALE— WHITE W Y^ A N D OT T
eggs for hatching. $1.50 for fifteen
eggs; $8 per 100 eggs. Rose comb
White Leghorns. $1 per fifteen eggs;
$5 per 100. E. D. Krebs, 3805 West
Sixth street.
FOR SALE — CHE.\P: TWO COUNTERS
and bookkeeper's desk. Apply Mu-
tual Electric company.
FOR SALE — WAGON SHOP, MACHIN-
ery stock. W. M. Smith, 26 East
First street.
FOR SALE— REAL ESTATE.
# EAST END. *
# 100 by 140 feet near Twenty-fifth *
^ avenue east and Second street. ^
i^ Make an offer. #
# PARK POINT. *
# Ten lots at Twenty-seventh street; -*
#' also large cottage and tents, #
^ known as "Camp Orlando." •jig'
# G. S. RICHARDS, Owner, *
# 6 South Fifth Ave. W. #
# Both 'phones 376. *
FOR SALE — LOT 50 BY 140, BETWEEN
Seventh and Eighth avenues west
and Fourth street; $1,000, $700 cash.
Call evenings, 405 Lyceum building.
CARRIAGES, WAGONS, DRAYS.
If you want a high grade delivery wagon
or buggy that was built especially
for tills part of the country, for least
money, call or write for catalogue.
L. .-iammel Co., 300-308 East First St.
MARINE MOTORS.
A 1909 MOI'EL (CAMP-
bell) Marine Motor,
lO-horse pc wer, for $325
— 5 -inch be re, 6% -inch
stroke. 191 1 models of
all sizes, at regular
prices. F. R. Holmberg,
628 Lake A}'. S. 'Phones.
FOR SALE— A FORTY-ACRE FARM,
ten acres improved, ten miles from
town. Inquire 2409 West Ninth street.
CHOICE FARM.
298 acres, three miles from town, on
main road; practically all cleared; 260
tons of hay cut annually; rich in min-
eral attraction; $20 per acre; one-half
mineral rights reserved. B. M. Hun-
gerford, Aitkin, Minn.
L. A. LARSEN CO.. 214 PROVIDENCE
building, wholesale dealers in block*
of lands with mineral prospects.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
A. Haakonsen. dealer
and expart repairer,
at J. W Nelson's, 6
East Superior street.
CARPET CLEANING.
Interstate Carpet Cleaning Company —
Sinotte & Van Norman, compressed
air cleanerii and rug weavers, 1928
West Michigan street. Both 'phones.
CIVIL ENGINEERING.
Duluth Engineering Co., W. B. Patton,
Mgr., 613 Palladlo bldg. Specifications
piepared and construction superin-
lonUeo for waterworks, sewerage, etc.
CHIMNEY SWEEP.
H. Knutson, city chimney sweep, at No.
1 Are hall. Telephone 46.
FOR SALE — FINE SEVEN-ROOM
house; bath, toilet, full basement,
stone foundation; small cash pay-
ment, balance monthly. Address
C 220, Herald.
FOR SALE— WE HAVE A FEW DE-
slrable lots In West Duluth that we
will sell on easy weekly or monthly
payments. Whitney Wall company.
301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — OWNER WILL SELL
eighty feet on East Second street; a
splendid building site, in best part
of city, at a snap. Address K 212,
Herald.
FOR SALE — 100 BY 140 FEET, SEC-
ond street and Twenty-fifth avenue
east; also ten single lots on Park
Point and one large cottage, with
tents known as "Camp Orlando." O.
S. Richards, 5 South Fifth avenue
west. 'Phones.
FOR SALE— TWO OR THREE SMALL
garden tracts within easy walking
distance of Piedmont avenue car;
cheap, to get cash for improvements
being made on division to be laid
out. If you can pay cash, call im-
mediately and get a big bargain.
Western Realty Co., 1922 West Supe-
rior street.
FOR SALE — SIX-ROOM-HOUSE AND
two acres; two blocks from car line;
$1,800; easy terms. Address W 57,
Herald.
DANCING AND LESSONS.
Dance every evening at 224 W. 1st St.,
except Monday; also dancing taught.
OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN.
A. L. NORBERG, 201-207 WEST Su-
perior street. 110 Oak Kail building.
OPTICIANS.
a'cS-TAACKETlOrWES':: SUPERIOR
street. Open Wedne»daj and Satur-
day evenings.
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING.
DON'T SCRAP A BROKIIN CASTING
or machine part of any size of Iron,
steel, aluminum or brass until you
have conferred with us. Buck &
Spring, 313 East Mlci igan street.
•Phones; Bell, Mel. 974, Zen.. Grand
974.
BUSINESS CHANCES.
Business Chances — We Uuy stocks of
merchandise, paying spot cash. No
matter where located or size of stocK.
write Eastern Salvage Co., merchan-
dise brokers, Duluth. Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — CONFECTION-
ery store doing good business, three
living rooms, furniture included;
must be sold at once; owner leaving
city. Call at 611 East Fourth street.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
Hotel Grondln. Seney, Mich. Twenty-
two rooms with bar, all furnished;
18-room addition under construction,
with store or m.irket on first floor,
barns for forty horses. Six lots in
tract. Location opposite depot. Also
160 acres farming land. Western
Land Securities company's tract of
750,000 acres, in immediate vicinity
being opened up. Address Philip
Grondln, proprietor. Seney, Mich.
PATENTS.
PA-TENTS — ALL ABOUT PATENTS.
See Stevens, 610 Sellwocd building.
DENTIST.
Dr. W. H. Olson, 222 New Jersey Bldg.
All work guaranteed. Both "phones.
DRAYING AND TRANSFER.
DULliTH VAN & STORAGE Company.
210 West Superior St. Both 'phones.
STEWART TRANSFER LINE— MOV-
Ing. baggage, freight, expert piano
movers; prompt service. 'Phones 334.
Office 19 Vi Fifth avenue west.
DECORATING & WALL PAPERING
See Strongquist & Moyer at 306 E. Sup.
St., about your papering, tinting,
painting and home decorations. You'll
be satisfied. Both '-^^ones.
PLUMBING AND RiEPAIRS.
JAMES GORMAN— Y^OUR PLUMBER;
jobbing work promptly attended to.
1 Twenty-third avenue west. Zenith
'phone. Grand 107.
Geo. W. Palmer. Ill E. lit St., Zenith
'phone. 1688-A. Early £ nd late.
PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING.
DoTt^NOwIbEFORE the RUSH. IT
costs less and can taks time to do
better work; estimates, free. Call
Zenith. 959-A and I will bring sample
books. J. D. McCurdy, corner Third
avenue west and Seconc street.
FOR SALE OR TRADE TWENTY-
four-room hotel; all conveniences,
restaurant in connection. Call Lin-
coln, 33 A.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Two-chair barber shop; well
equipped and building 18 by 30 feet;
best location; can be had at low flg-
ure. Spencer Clark, Keewatln, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR RENT —
Loft over the Globe store, excellent
location for any line of bu.slness;
steam heat, elevator and janitor
service: reasonable rent. Apply to
the Globe company, 106-107 West Su-
perior street.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Grocery store; will sell cheap If
taken at once. Reason for selling,
going into other business. Call Mel-
rose 1854.
BUSINESS CHANCES— $26,000. THREE
story hotel and six lots, bar in con-
nection taking in alone $3,000 or
better a month; cleared $10,000 in
eleven months: $10,000 cash wlU
handle this. Balance cheaper than
paying rent. Wood I'urdy Co., 501
Manliattan building.
DRY CLEANING AND PRESSING.
DYE WORKS.
FOR RENT — A MODERN SEVEN-
room house on East Second street,
near Nineteenth avenue east; two
bath rooms; hardwood finish; hot
water heat; $42.50 per month. Whit-
ney Wall company. 301 Torrey build-
ing^
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son, 516 Torrey building, both 'phones.
FOR RENT — 1309 EAST SECOND
street, nine rooms, modern; $46 per
month. See M. Henricksen. at Hen-
rlcksen Jewelry company.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage, 3439 Minnesota ave-
nue. Park Point. Inquire 102 West
First street. Bloom & Co.
FOR RENT — 216 EAST THIRD ST.
Modern eight-room brick house. Hot
water heat. A. H. Burg & Co.. 300
Alworth building.
CLOTHES CLEANED & PRESSED.
JOHN MUELLER.
Street.
208 WEST FIRST
BOARD WANTED.
BOARD WANTED — WANTED TO
board two little girls. 7 and 9 years
old, where there are no small chil-
dren. Grand 2190-D.
Zenith Valet — French dry cleaning and
repairing. ?13 West First St.. Mel.
1S34. Grand 1134-D
PHOENIX DRY CLEANING CO.—
Skirts dry cleaned, 50c. Zenith 'phone
Grand, 1852-X. 10 Fourth avenue W.
ZENITH CITY DYE WORKS — LAR-
gest and most reliable. All work
done in Duluth. Work called for and
delivered. 'Phones: Old, 1154-R; new,
1888. 232 East Superior street.
Duluth Dye Works — French dry clean-
ing: fancy dyeing. Old 'phone, Mel-
rose 4191; new, 1191-A. 330 E. Sup. St.
Northwestern Dyeing & Cleaning Co.— .
Oldest reliable dyers and French dry
cleaners in Northwest 23 Lake Ave.
north. 'Phones: New, 1516; old. 1337.
NATIONAL DYEING AND CLEANING
company, 319 E. Superior St. French
dry cleaners and fancy dyers. Both
'phones 2376. Branch, 16 Lake Ave. N
FOR SALE— CHOICE BUILDING LOT,
upper side London road. East end; a
bargain for quick sale at price away
below adjoining propetry. For in-
formation address C 379, Herald.
FOR SALE— 50 BY 140 FEET, NORTH-
west corner Twenty-third avenue
west and Fourth street. Apply Mu-
tual Electric company.
FOR SALE — TWO LOTS, SEVEN-
teenth avenue east; water, sewer and
gas on lots; no rock; $860. See
Schwleger at A. B. Slewert St Co.
FOR SALE— THE MoijT DESIRABLE
double corner In the Normal school
district. See Chan Smith. 406 Tor-
rey building.
FOR SALE— LOT 6, BLOCK 26,
Endlon, between Twenty-second and
Twenty-third avenue, London road,
going for $650. C. B. Woodruff.
East Ei>d Dyeing and Cleaning Co..
926 B. Superior St. Grand 1245-X.
MeL 4628. All our work guaranteed.
LADIES' TAILORING.
DANFORTH,
131 West Superior street.
Plumes cleaned and dyed any color.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. Miss
FltzPatrlck, 502-4 E. 4th St. Both
'phones^
CLAIRVOYANTS.
PROF. GIRARD, THE ONLY RELI-
able clairvoyant in Duluth. 20 West
Superior street. Upstairs.
MADAM ANNA, CARD READING AND
business advice. 329 West Superior
street. Room 12. Melrose 3257.
MADAM STERLING, PALMIST. CARD
reader. 129 East First street, eppo-
site Armory.
FOR SALE— A LOT 50 BY 75 FOR
only $600; flve blocks from new
courthouse; easy terms. See Chan
Smith. 405 Torey building.
WOR-C OUAl.ANTBED.
Works. Old, Melrose
2474.
CITY DYE
1942. Zenith
ENGINEERING.
NORTHWESTER^.^ ENGINEERING CO.,
Duluth, Minn.
Architects. Mechanical and Electrical
Eng.; PJans, Estimates r.nd Specifica-
tions. Complete -"line Equipments a
specialty. Mel. 3912. P. O. Box 686.
FOR PAINTING AND I»ECORATING
see Youngdahl & Dlers, ;!23 W. 2nd. St
ROOFING, CORNICE, SKYLIGHTS.
rTr^l5lciCjOBBir?5^NDlREPAIR-
Ing. fr31Vi E. Sup. St. Zen., 1267-A.
BURRELL & HARMON. 308 E. Sup. St.
Both 'phones. Flrst-cliss work.
RIFLES AND GUNS.
Grinding and Repairing a
specialty. City Gun Store,
R C. KRUSCHKE,
402 West Superior Street.
FLORIST.
J. J. Le Borious, florist. 921 E. 3rd St.—
Floral funeral designs, cut flowers.
FURNITURE RECOVERED.
Let Forsell do your UPHOLSTERING.
334 E. Superior St. Zenith 'phone 949.
FURNITURE AND PIANOS.
Finished and repaired. Theo. Thomp-
son, 336 E. Sup. St. Old 'phone 2828.
INCUBATORS AND BROODERS.
INCUBArORS, $6 to $38; BROOD-
ers, $5 to $18.50. Send 4c in
stamps for catalogues and Poul-
try books. J. W. Nelson, 6 East
Superior Street, Duluth, Minn.
FOR- SALE — FIVE CHOICE BUILD-
Ing lots m New Duluth. adjacent to
the new steel plant. Will be sold at
a great bargain to close an estate.
F. C. Drennlug, 221 Providence build-
ing.
FOR SALi: — LOTS, HOUSES, ACRKS;
investments that pay dividends every
month. Talk with Pider. 18 Third
avenue west.
FOR SALE— TWO FINE. LEVEL LOTS
on Tenth street, near Tenth avenue
east. Can be bought cheap: small
cash payment, balance monthly. W.
E. Wright. 303 Palladlo. Melrose.
1333.
STORAGE.
DULUTH VAN 4 'STORAGE Company. I
*aiO West Superior St. Botb' pbonea |
INTERPRETER.
V. D. NICKOLICH, INTERPRETER
for several foreign languages, 301
Al orth building.
HORSE SHOEING.
Shoeing crippled and Interiering horses
my specialty. Carl Schau, 14 3d Av. B.
SECOND HAND DEALERS.
New and second-hand goods bought,
sold. A. B. Davis, 172!l W. Sup. St.
SIGN AND CARD WRITING.
For signs ot any desjrlption, call
1277 -D on Zen. 'phone. A. E. Schar.
STORAGE.
FIRE-PROOF BUILDING. PRIVATE
locked room, separate compartments.
Call and Inspect building. Duluth
Van & Storage Co., 21 J W. Sup. St.
Both 'phones. 492.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—
Diamond restaurant; parties leaving
city on account of health; good busi-
ness; best location in city; must be
sold at ouce. Thomas Ross, 604 Tower
avenue, Superior.
BU.SINE.SS CHANCES — $250 GOOD-
paying restaurant, established trade;
also good fixtures, can be bought at
your own price. Wood Purdy com-
pan y, 501 Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — WANT TO EX-
change for farm, stock of merchan-
dise, with store and fixtures, located
in growing farming town. What
have you? G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey
building.
BUSI.VESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—
Blacksmith and wheelwright shop,
doing prosperous business for twen-
ty years. A snap. Look this up.
Richard & Gilmour, 312 Fifty-sixth
avenue west. Duluth, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $1,300 BUYS
moving-picture show clearing from
$100 to $200 monthly; $600 will
handle. Wood Purdy company, 601
Manhattan building.
TRANSFER.
HOUSEHOLD GOOE S PACKED,
moved, stored and shipped at re-
duced rates. General draying. Ma-
chinery and safes mcved. Duluth
Van & Storage Co., 21) W. Sup. St.
Both 'phones, 492.
W ALL PAPER AND PAINTS.
C Erlckson Is still In business, with
the latest in wall paper md fresh sup-
ply of paint. 1926 W. 2nd, Entrance
20th Ave W. Estimates furnished.
IMPROVED SHOE REPAIRING.
MONEY SA > >..U TIME SAVING, SHOE
saving. While you wait. Gopher Shoe
works.
JOB PRINTERS.
RANKIN PRINTING CO. — OUT-OF-
town orders a specialty. 221 West
Superior street.
WATCH REPAiaiNG.
Watch hospital; cleaning and repair-
ing at lowest prices. Iterg Bros., 112
E. Sup. St.
FOR SALE — RESTAURANT, COM-
plete, doing good business in best
town on range; price reasonable;
ternts cash. For particulars call or
write Mrs. John Burby. Marble. Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— MUST DISPOSE
of real estate holdings In East end
of Duluth. Party having from $3,000
to $4,000 cash can place it to good
advantage, if you act in time; In-
vestigate. Address owner, S 370,
Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES— CONFECTION-
ery; $100 for fixtures and Invoice
stock: dally sales better than $20;
splendid buy. Wood Purdy company,
501 Manhatten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— $675 BUYS 13-
room rooming house, income $12S
mo"nthly: best paying place In the
city. Wood Purdy company, 501
Manhatten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — TO TRADE —
Equity In Carlton county land for
truck farm near Duluth. Will pay
cash difference. Address W. U.
Hasslng. Carlton. Minn.
BUSINE.SS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Bargain; confectionery store; make
us an offer on this; owner sick. In-
quire Duluth Business Exchange. 60t
Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE:—
Rooming house; first-class; very
central; neat and clean: big bargain:
price $650. Duluth Business Ex-
change. 609 Torrey build'ng.
Read The
HeraldV/antsj
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
One Babcock soda fountain complete.
For further information inquire Jo-
seph Shearer, lock box 27, Park Rap-
ids, Minn.
BUSINE.SS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Rare opportunity, one-half Interest
in a moving picture theater; price
$1,250. Inquire Duluth Business Ex-
change. 509 Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—
Good barber shop. Address Box 55,
Bovey, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — ARE YOU
looking for acres to plat? I have a
tract of land across the St. Louts
river from the steel plant site. Thia
can be sold in lots at a big proftt.
If Interested write W. «3 Herald.
H SK
MM*i
Se^t^^^Um^mnrnm
DEFECTIVE PAGE
I
u
-ihmaa
GIVES EVENING PAPERS t,'ii&
ADVERTISING
HA«RY 6. CVRROLIi.
The Broadvay Department
Store of Los Angeles^ the sec-
ond largest department store
on the Pacific cost, is today
giving 75% of the firm' t ad-
vertising to the evening papers.
The Broadway Department
Store is one of the largest re-
tail stores in the country and
its advertising appropriation
reaches nearly six figures an-
nually.
Harry S. Carroll,
the advertising manager of
the Broadway Department
Store is rated as one of the
^^live wires'^ in that important
field. Mr. Carroll needs no
introduction to Duluthpeople.
His ability as a successful
advertising man was de-
veloped while he acted in that
capacity for the Freimuth
store of this city, before going
to the coast. He is a firm be-
liever in the ej^cacy of the evening
paper as a result getter,
Mr. Carroll Sayft:
"There in a grotcing tendency
among all adveriisera to change still
further to the evening paper and the
time is not long distant when the
morning papers will be used Sun-
days onlj ."
One Cent a Word Elaob Insertion.
No Advertisenient Le:«s Tluin 15 Cents.
TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
—UK-
BUSINESS
HOUSES
Belovv yiju wiii find a
coudenifea iist ol reliable
business Uriub. This is de-
BiKn<:d tor tile convtiiienow
oi busy people. A teiepuone
order to uuy une ot them
will receive ihe same care-
ful uilcntiou as wuuld be
given an order placed In
periiun. You can sately de-
pend upon the reliabiliiy of
[any one of tiiese firms.
Old New
'Flione. 'I'liuQe.
AUCHITECTS —
liank U Young & Co. 4476
Bi^i.NKSs coli.kgk: —
Tiie lirocklfchurst 2568
DKl (iUI!«TS—
Eddie Jeroulmus 1243
iJoyce 163
^mlth & .smith 260
nXtl WUKKS —
ZeiuttiCiiy L)ye works.1888
Ncrihwestern Dyeing
& Cleaning Co 1337
National L»yeir.g &
Cleaning Co 2376
Interstate Cleaning &
Dyeing Co.. ••Kelly's "2530
GHUt. KKS —
Thatcher & Thatcher..
LALADUIEIS —
I'et- rless Daundry .... 428
Y'ale i-aunury 479
Lutes Laundry 447
Home Laundry Co.... 478
Model Laundry 2749
MILLIMaK —
M. A. Cox 4576
MKAT MAKKI^TS—
Mork Bros 1590
6I10K Kt^PAIRlKG —
Olten. 410 E. 4th St... 1029-K
1004
1027
163
7
1883
1516
2376
30
1907
428
4V9
447
478
1303
189
REAL ESTATE, FIRE
INSURANCE AND
RENTAL AGENCIES.
John A. .Stepiicnsun & Co., Wolvin bldg.
E. D. Field Co.. ::03 Exchange building.
L. A. Larsen Co., Providence building.
H. J. Mullin. 40-.: Lnnsdalo building.
AV. C. .Sht-rwood, lis Manhattan bUlg.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
MERCHANTS, WAKE UP AND TAKE
NOTICE!
Our lease expires May 1. Will sell
pairs or whole stock of mens shoes
at a large discount from our whole-
eale prices. Stock will now invoice
about 12,000.
Remember the early bird gets the
worm. This Is your opportunity to buy
a bargain.
We have discontinued making hand-
made men".s and boys' work shoes.
Have already sold our plant and must
■ell our stock beiore moving time.
Time will be given to well-rated
parties. All of our display tables are
for sale.
.Stock on sale at retail at 328 West
Superior street, St. Louis Hotel block.
C. P. LARSON, MANUFACTURER.
228 WEST SUPERIOR ST,
DULUTH. MINN.
FOR SALE— EO.GS FOR HATCHING
R. C. White Wyandottes; |1 for thir-
teen eggs; Black Minorca. |1 for thir-
teen eggs. Address 429 Sixth avenue
west. New 'phone. Grand 2164-Y.
(CoutlBued on page 17.)
One Cent a Word Eacn Insertion.
Xo Advei-tiscJiient Less Tnuu 15 Cents.
HELP WANTED— female!
WANTED — FIRST - CLASS COOK:
good wages; small family. 250 j
East First street.
WANTED— BOOKKEEPER WHO UN-
derstands stenography. Apply North-
ern Manufacturing company, Christie
building.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework. 1822 East Third
street.
WANTED — THE NEW METHOD
Dressmaking school teaches you to
become a dressmaker in six weeks;
make dresses for yourself or others
wnile learning. 310 West Second
street, next to Y. M. C. A. building.
WANTED — APPRENTICE GIRL TO
learn halrdressing. Comfort Beauty
shop. Mrs. Scott. 20 West Superior
street.
WANTED — GIRL. APPLY TROY
laundry. 22 East Superior street.
WANTED — AN EXPERIENCED WAIT-
ress at Sixth Avenue restaurant; |8
per week.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook. Ap-
ply 1509 East Superior street.
WANTED— FIR.ST CLASS WOMAN
cook; J50. 2531 West Superior street.
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. Mr.s. Norton, 40
Forty-eightii avenue east.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; small family. 12 North
Nineteenth avenue ea.^t.
WANTED — GJRLS AT MRS. SOM-
mers' employment office, 15 Second
avenue east.
WANTED— GOOD GIRL OR MIDDLE-
aged woman for general housework;
no objection to color. Call 4211
Lombard street. Lakeside.
WANTED — GOOD GIrT FOR GEN.
eral housework. Apply 320 Ninth
avenue east.
WANTED COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework; small family and
good wages. Call mornings or even-
ings. Mrs. A. E. Walker, 2103 East
First street.
WANTED — KITCHEN GIRL. 30 WEST
Second street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 1916 East Third street.
WANTED — DINING ROOM GIRlI
Royal cafe. 515 West Superior street.
WANTED— GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral housework; small family; good
wages. Apply at once, 1422 East
Fifth street.
WANTED— GOOD CHOCOLATE Dipl
per. Winkler Bros.' candy factory.
2234 West Michigan street.
Central Employment office, all kinds
of places filled and positions furnish-
ed for girls. Room 3, over Big Du-
luth store. Mel. 259. Grand, 620.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. B 5, St. Regis, Second
avenue east and Second street. Call
mornings.
WANTED — HOUSEKEEPER. SMALL,
family. Call 422 East Second street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; two In family. 1924 East
Superior street.
WANTED — COOKS. WAITRESSFl.
chambermaids and kitchen help; out
of town orders solicited. Park Em-
ployment agency, 16 Lake avenue
north.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook; laun-
dress employed; reference required.
2401 East Fifth street.
WANTED — TWO DINING
waitresses at Hotel Lenox.
ROOM
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
NoAdvertidenieiit Lct>H Tliun 15 Cents.
HELP WANTED— MALE.
Hr *
* BOYS! GIRLS! MONEY AFTER *•
* SCHOOL! *
^ Send us your name and address, if
■^ Wo will send you twenty pack- *•
■j^ ages of our Handy Sheet Bluing. ^
-.^ Y'ou can sell them after school. ^
* .Send us f 1 and keep |1. The Nora *
^ Novelty company, Duluth, Minn, ie
WANTED — Bright men to train as
chauffeurs; practical Instruction giv-
en. Auto Owners' association, 1312
Hennepin avenue, Minneapolis.
LEARN TELEGKAPHY NOW.
Earn $60 in railroad position in spring.
Excellent opportunity; don't miss It.
Write Thompson's Telegraph Insti-
tute Minneapolis.
WANTED — MEN TO KNOW WE GROW
a head of hair or no pay. Bryant &
Co., room 12. Phoenix buildlDg. Mel-
rose 3257.
Men to learn barber trade. It's easy.
Positions waiting. Good wages. Cat.
free. Moler Bar. College, Minneapolis.
WANTED — GOVERNMENT EM-
filoyes. Send postal for Duluth exam-
nation schedule. Franklin Insti-
tute, Department 148-F, Rochester,
N. Y.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENER.^L
housework. 718 Tenth avenue east.
Call Grand 2253-Y.
W ANTE D— GOOD
eral hoT%sework.
son street.
GIRL FOR GEN-
Apply 1509 Jeffer-
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; small family. Call at
123 Ninth avenue east.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL FOR GENER-
al housework; good wages. 423
Fifteenth avenue east.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework; two in family;
no washing; |25 per month. Must
be good cook. 1032 East First street.
(Continued on page 17.)
Wt^NTED — LADIES' TAILOR. FRANK
Justyn, Room 1, 13 East Superior
■treet.
WANTED — CARPENTER TO FIX UP
and move a house. Forty-fourth ave-
nue east and London road; chance to
obtain nice home in good locality for
very little; some money needed. H. A.
Hooker, 569 Frederick avenue. Mil-
waukee, Wis.
WANTED— TEN COMPETENT MILL-
wrights at International Falls; wages
14 per day. Report to International
Lumber company. International Falls,
Minn.
WANTED — COATMAKER. J. i?
Lane, Rooms 1 and 2, over Big Du-
luth.
WANTED— AT ONCE, EXPERIENCED
coatmaker; none others need apply.
Madam Burns, Christie building.
W.ANTED— A RELIABLE BOY ABOUT
16 years of age to work In store.
2728 AA'est Third street.
WANTED — A GOOD PAPER HANG-
er. 2728 West Third street.
W-\NTED — MAN AND WIFE TO RUN
small clubhouse on range; must be
experienced. Inquire 706 Lonsdale
building.
WANTED— SOLICITORS; FOUR NEAT
appearing solicitors on proposition
of merit; competent men can earn
from |15 to $25 weekly or more. Ap-
ply 528 Manhattan building.
WANTED — MEN WANTED — AGE 18-
35, for firemen, |100 monthly, and
brakenien $80, on nearby railroads;
experience unnecessary; no strike;
positions guaranteed competent men;
promotion. Railroad employing
headquarters — over 400 men sent to
positions monthly. State age; send
stamp. Railway Association, care
Herald.
WANTED — REGISTERED OR As-
sistant registered pharmacist. Lion
Drug Store, 2030 West Superior St.
WANTED — BRIGHT ERRAND BOY.
at once. Gopher Shoe Works, 17 Sec-
ond avenue west.
WANTED
tel.
PORTER. ST. LOUIS HO-
WANTED AT ONCE— FIRST-CLASS
shoe salesman. Apply Gopher Shoe
works, 17 Second avenue west.
WANTED — HARDWOOD FINISHER
for shop work. Anderson & Gow, 322
West Second street.
WANTED — AN ELDERLY MARRIED
couple to take care of a farm and
garden on a working Interest; a
good home, and all tiie Jieavy work
done by owner. W. G. Hammond,
Twig. Minn.
WANTED — BOAT BUILDER. DU-
luth Gas Engine Works.
PERSONAL.
PERSONAL— PROF. GIRAKD, CLAIR-
voyant and palmist. 20 West Superior
street, upstairs. Six questions an-
swered by mail, |i. .Send date of birth
PERSONAL— C. O. KRISTENSEN POL-
ishes pianos and furniture at your
home. 'Phone Hogan & Co., Both
'phones.
PERSONAL — WANTED PIANO AND
organ pupils oy first-class teacher,
50 cents a lesson. K 214. Herald.
PERSONAL— BABY BOY INFANT FOR
adoption. Call Grand 1597.
PERSONAL— IF YOU CONTEMPLATE
going into the moving picture busi-
ness, better consult us. we can fur-
nish your place complete. Picture
machines, all makes, new and sec-
ond-hand hand experts to install
same. Large list of good houses for
sale. Northwestern Supply Co., 129
West Superior street. Duluth, Minn.
PERSONAL — COMFORT. BEAUTY
shop, 20 W. Sup. St.. upstairs. Mani-
curing, 26c; shampooing and hair-
dressing, 50c; switches made from
combings. Both phones.
PERSONAL— WHY NOT GET AWAY
from washday troubles by sending
your family wash to us; 6 cents per
pound. Lute's laundry, 808 East
Second street. Both 'phones 447.
PERSONAL— MANICURIN6 AND MAS-
sage. 813 Torrey building.
PERSONAL — SAVE YOUR LACE CUR-
tains from the wear and tear of the
laundry by having them done by
hand; 40 cents a pair. Call Melrose
715-X.
PERSONAL,— I WILL WRITE YOUR
ads, reports, pamphlets and pros-
pectuses, furnish you with facts, ar-
guments, literary and historical ma-
terial for debates, club papers and
orations, correct and revise your
MtiS. and boost your enterprise. Don
Carlos W. Musser, 712 Torrey build-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2024.
MRS. VOGT, HAIR DRESSER. IS TEM-
porarily quartered at Room 302 La
Salle Hotel.
PERSONAL — HOUSEHOLD GOODS
packed, moved, stored and shipped
at reduced rates. Only fireproof
storage in the city. We furnish only
experienced furniture packers and
movers. Duluth Van & Storage Co.,
210 W. Superior St. Both 'phones 492.
PERSONAL — ELECTRIC RUG AND
carpet cleaning. James Morgan. Mel-
rose 1902; Zenith 2222.
Personal — Wringer repairing. Int'state
Merc. Co.. 11 N. 21st Ave. W. Zen. 787.
PERSONAL — LADIES — ASK YOUR
druggist for Chichesters Pills, the
Diamond Brand. For 25 years known
as best, safest, always reliable. Take
no other. Chichesters Diamond Brand
Pills are sold by druggists every-
where.
PERSONAL — MME. MAY FRENCH
female regulator, best of all. Mailed
in plain wrapper. $2 a box. Orpheum
pharmacy. 20l East Superior street
PERSONAL — COMBINGS AND CUT
hair made into beautiful switches.
Knauf Sisters.
PICTURE FRAMING.
QUSETAVE HENNECKJB. 211 £. SUP. ST.
One Cent a Word Eacb Insertion.
No Advcrtlseuieut Le&s Than l.") Cents,
ON PAGES 16 and 17
FARM AND FRUIT LANDS.
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
Ml Torrey BulldlBC
FOR SALE— A FARM OF 120 ACRES,
suitable for dairy or truck farming;
forty acres cultivated; buildings and
other Improvements worth more than
price asked. A bargain. 18.600.
FOR SALE — IN TOWN OF WREN-
shall, 160 acres, three miles from
Fond du Lac, near sawmill. Land is
heavily timbered with maple and
birch. No swamp or rock, fine, h<aavy
black loam soil. Good trout stream.
Price $17 per acre; small cash pay-
ment, balance easy monthly pay-
ments. Will trade for small home In
Duluth.
FOR SALE — NEAR BOULDER LAKE,
160 acres on Vermilion road, at $10
per acre; terms to suit. Torrens
title.
FOR SALE— SBVENTY-FIVE ACRES
on the west shore of Thompson lake
on Vernillion road, about fifteen miles
from Duluth. Will divide to suit.
Easy terms. Torrens title. Price
$12.50 per acre.
FOR SALE — THREE FORTY-ACRE
tracts on Bug creek, adjoining sta-
tion of Pitt on Canadian Northern
railroad, at $5 per acre. Will make
easy terms.
FOR SALE— FIVE ACRES ADJOINING
Duluth Heights, at $300 per acre.
Easy terms.
FOR SALE — A NUMBER OF IM-
proved and unimproved farms of ten
to 160 acres, near Duluth. Let us
know your wants.
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
801 Torrey Ballding.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., townsliips 60 to 63,
ranges 14 to 17, which we will sell
in large or small tracts at very low
prices. Good location for dairying
and truck gardening. Some fine lake
shore frontage.s. Settlers on ad-
joining lands raising from 250 to 300
bushels potatoes per acre. Buy some
of these cheap lands now and be-
come Independent. Call or write for
map. Minnesota Land & Dairy com-
pany, 407 Providence building.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., in townships 60 to 63
and ranges 14 to 17. which we will
sell in large or »mall tracts at very
low prices. Good location for dairy-
ing and truck gardening. Some fine
lake shore frontages. Settlers on
adjoining lands raising from 250 to
300 bushels potatoes per acre. Buy
some of these cheap lands now and
become Independent. Call or write
Minnesota Land & Dairy company,
407 Providence building.
FOR S.ALR— FORTY ACRES OF LAND.
one-half mile to station; one-third
mile to school: good iiouse. well and
barn ; one-half mineral right ; $1,100 if
taken at once; a snap. Apply Martin
Moe, Alborn. Minn.
FARMS — CHEAP WISCONSIN HOMES.
Cutover hardwood timber lands lo-
cated in Rusk county; 66.000 acres of
fine clay loam land in the heart of
the dairy and clover belt; close to
good markets, schools and churches;
terms to suit purchaser. Write for
maps and other information to the
Arpin Hardwood Lumber Co., Grand
Rapids, Wis.
FOR RENT — FARM OF 25 ACRES,
with house, barns and poultry house,
three miles from car line. See E. L.'
Kimball, First National Bank build-
ing.
FOR SALE — FORTY ACRES NEAR
Duluth; four-room house, good base-
ment; thirty-two acres cleared; good
soil; $1,600. Whitney Wall company.
301 Torrey building. (70.)
FOR SALE — FIVE-ACRE TRACT,
Colbyville, facing new boulevard,
$125 per acre; also 20 -acre tract,
$150 per acre. Great snaps. Getty
.Smith Co., 306 Palladio.
TEXAS INVESTMENTS.
Buy Orchards and Garden Lands at
Aldlne, near Houston, the greatest
city in the Southwest, where values are
growing upward all the time. Address
E. C. Robeitson. 601 Kiam building,
Houston, Tex.
FOR SALE — FIFTY-FIVE ACRE
tract on Bordon Lake, three mlled
from Gordon, Wis., several tk-ains
dally to Duluth; good soil; fine fish-
ing; beautiful shore line and trees;
summer cottages all around; price
$650, $325 casli; balance easy terms.
Helmbaugh & ^rlng, 1103 Tower
avenue, Superior, Wis.
Farm lands at wholesale prices. L. A.
Larsen Co., 214 Providence building.
FOR SALE— FORTY- ACRE TRUCK
farm, six miles from Duluth; 25 acres
cultivated; six-room house, barn, etc.
Included are two horses, cows and
chickens Price $3,500; will exchange
for city property. Q. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
FOR SALE— BARGAIN IN WELL IM-
proved farm; good frame house and
thirty acres cleared; on main road,
handy to Duluth; must be sold; good
place for chickens. Call on E. H.
Caulklns & Co.. Palladio building.
FOR SALE — FARM. CONTAINING
about 63 acres, fronting on lake, on
Cuyuna iron range; 20 acres culti-
vated; good buildings; no mineral
reserve. Price $2,000. Easy terma.
G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — EIGHTY-ACRE FARM IN
south Cass county; all fenced; level
land; 12 acres cultivated; fair build-
ings; small stream. Price, $1,300. G.
A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— 10,000 ACRES IN 40 AND
80-acre tracts, close to Hibbing and
Chisholm; good markets; forty an-
nual payments of $16 each on 40
acres, or $32 each on 80 acres, pays
both principal and interest. For
further information apply Guaranty
Farm Land company, 416 Lyceum
building, Duluth, Minn.
FOR SALE — LANDS IN SfMALL
tracts to actual settlers only: good
location for dairying and truck gar-
dening. For further information call
on or address Land Commissioner,
Duluth & Iron Range Railroad com-
pany, 101 Wolvin building, Duluth,
Minn.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM ON
Crow Wing river; 20 acres cleared,
20 acres meadow; good clay soil; no
buildings. Price, $1,300. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— TEN ACRES OF GOOD
land inside city limits; cash or terms.
S. H., Herald.
SELECTED FAR-MING LANDS.
On line of the Alger-Smith railroad.
On easy terms to settlers.
ALEXANDER McBEAN,
Bales manager, 406 Columbia Bldg.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE-ACRE
farm, close to station in Morrison
county, on fine lake; good soil; hay
meadow; five-room house and barn.
Price, $1,700. G, A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
For sale — 10-acre tracts north of Wood-
land. W. JiL Gill. 296 W. 5th St., Superior.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advertisement Less Than 15 Cental
FOR RENT— FLATS.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
(Continued on
17.)
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM HEATED
flat at 5 North Nineteenth avenue
east; $32.60 per month.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM APART-
ment in St. Elmo building, 721 East
First street; splendid arrangements;
beautiful view.
One Cent a Word Elach Insertion.
No Advertisement Less Tluin 15 Cents.
FOR RENT— ROOMS.
FOR RENT — FURNISHEE ROOMS;
board if desired. 301 Eust Third
street
FOR RENT— TWO OR THREE VERY
desirable rooms In Dodge block; very
^entraL Apply N. J. Upham com-
pany, 18 Third avenue went.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM APARTMENT
In Adams apartments, 715 East First
street.
FOR RENT— ON GARFIELD AVENUE
Living room on second floor; cheap
rent.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE AT
221 East Third street.
FOR RENT— FINE DRY BASEMENT
on Lake avenue south; steam heat.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON &. CO.
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat; steel range
In kitchen. Call at 629 East Third
street.
FOR RENT- MODERN FIVE-ROOM
flat First avenue west and Fourth
street Moderate rent. Charles P.
Craig & Co., 601-505 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT — STRICTLY MODERN
seven-room flat Close to courthouse,
postoflrice and railroad depots. View
of lake and harbor. Moderate rent
to right party. No children. Charles
P. Craig & Co., 601-606 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM FLAT; VERY
light, airy rooms; moderate rent;
East Third street, near Eighth ave-
nue. Chas. P. Craig & Co., 601-505
Sellwood building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM FURNISHED
flat In the Latayette flats, thoroughly
modern; heat, water and telephone
service furnished. R P. Dowse &. Co.,
100 Providence building.
FOR RENT— VERY FINE 6EVEN-
room apartment in new Berkshire
apartments, corner Eight avenue east
and First street. Rental departnnent,
John A. Stephenson & Co., Wolvin
building.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FIRST
floor flat; modern except heat. 118
East Filth street
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS
and alcove; light and bath. 1218»^
East Fourth street., Hartman-O'Don-
nell agency, 205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— MODERN FIVE-ROOM
brick flat, 721% East Fifth street;
hot water heat; gas range; laundry
tub; $28. water furnished. Call
Grand 2 2 53 -A.
FOR RENT— TWO FOUR- ROOM FLATS
with four large closets, first and sec-
ond floors. 1322 Jefferson street. Mod-
ern except heat Call Zenith 1961-D.
I<X)H RENT— FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. ,S. S. Williamson 615
Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR RENT — TWO FLATS, 114 EAST
Seventh fetreet; all modern conven-
iences; hardwood floors; may be had
May 1; dowflstairs, $17 per month;
upstairs, $15 per month. Call Grand
2120-D Mrs. Hattie Schneider, orN. H.
Witt company, 12 West First street.
FOR RENT— FOUR -ROOM FLAT, 479
Mesaba avenue; all modern; also
very large bathroom; heat and
water included.
YOH RENT— CENTRAL LOCATION,
three-room heated flat, $20 per
month; fine sunny rooms. W. C.
Sherwood & Co., 118 Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT— BRICK FLAT, CORNER
of Fifteenth avenue east and Fourth
street; six rooms, bath, laundry,
storeroom, gas range, hot water
heating plant; new and up-to-date;
$37.50 per month; no children. George
li. Laybourn, 14 Phoenix block.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ItOOM MODERN
flat; central. S. S. Williamson, 615
Torrey building. Both 'phones.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FL.A.T;
818 Sixth avenue east, upstairs; bath,
electric light, gas for cooking; wa-
ter paid; $16 per month. R. p. Dowse
& (Jo.. 106 Providence building.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM FLAT. 1201
West Superior street, upstairs, water,
toilet, electric lights, hardwood
floors; basement in connection; rent
$13. Inquire 404 Palladio building.
Phone Grand 88.
FOR RENT — SIX-ROOM STEAM
heated flat; central location; thor-
ouglily modern; Janitor service;
laundry tubs. Apply Corporate In-
vestment company, Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE- ROO.M FLAT, 19
Lake avenue north; six-room flat, 14
West First street; all modern con-
veniences. Inquire rental department
Bridgeman & Russell.
FOR RENT— FLAT WITH ALL MOD-
ern conveniences at 421 West Third
street. Mendenhall & Hoopes.
FOR RENT— 927 EAST FIFTH
street, five-room flat, bath, water
free, $22 per month. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
water, sewer and electric light 2103
West Third street Apply at 313
Twenty-first avenue west.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE CHEERFUL
four-room flat, water, toilet, gas.
electric light, $13; Third avenue
west Harris Realty Co., Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
modern except heat. 108 South
Twenty-seventh avenue west. Mel-
rose 1845.
FOR RENT — THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11.00 per month.
Water furnished, D. W. Scott & So5i
402 Torrey building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FURNISH-
ed flat; $13 per month. Inquire 1123
East Tenth street.
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11 per month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS;
light and bath. 208 East Fourth
street Hartman O'Donnell Agency.
205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat Call Lin-
coln 52, Melrose 1052. Room 203, An-
derson &. Thoorsell block. Twenty-
first avenue west and Superior street
FOR RENT— MAY 1. TWO FOUR-
room flats with bath. Hardwood
floors throughout Gas, electric light,
etc. Very central location. Tele-
phone Grand or Melrose. 225. W,
C. Sherwood & Co., 118 Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. S. S. Williamson. 515
Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED OR UN-
furnished flat; $27 per month. Twin
Ports Realty company. 610 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE MODERN
five-room brick flat. First class con-
dition; hot water heating plant
Fourth avenue east and First street
Reasonable rent. New pbone, Lin-
coln 317.
FOR REyiT— TWO AND FOUR-ROOM
flats; water paid; $5 and $10 per
month. 702 E. 2nd St Grard 1299-D.
FOR RENT — LARGE B.^.SEMENT
room, 60 by 140 feet wllh double
door opening on alley, 312 West Sec-
ond street; $76 per month. See J. D.
Howard St Co., 216 West Superior
street.
FOR RENT — TWO FRONT ROOMS,
furnished for light houseke-^ping. 609
West Third street; $20 per month;
heated; gas range, lighis, bath,
phone.
FOR RENT— TWO FRONT ROOMS,
modern; $8 and $10 per month. 706%
West Second street.
FOR RENT — MODERN FUJtNISHED
room; $8 per month. Ci.ll Grand
1591-A,
FOR RENT— VERY DESIRABLE FUR-
nished room. 201 West Third street
FOR RENT— TWO UNFUilNISHED
rooms for small family; m ater and
sewer 620 West Third street
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS,
also two flats for light h)usekeep-
ing; modern; centrally located; newly
decorated; use of phone. Melrose
2840. Inquire at 216 West Third
street
FOR RENT — TWO ROOMS'. FUR-
nishcd complete for housekeeping.
Call between 4:30 and 6:30 n. m. 304
West Fourth street. Flat 0.
FOR RENT— FOUR ROOMS UPSTAIRS,
$8 per month, 610 East Eenth street
Inquire 215 East Superior utreet
FOR RENT — WELL FURNISHED
room; modern; $2 per week; another
at $2.50. The Latona, 122 East First
street
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ROOM, ALL
conveniences; for two ladies or two
gentlemen. Apply 405 East Third
street
FOR RENT— NICE, CLEAN l^OOM IN
private family, suitable for one or
two, with use of parlor. 316 East
First street.
FOR RENT— LARGE, FURNISHED
front room, suitable for two. 828
East Second street.
FOR RENT— STEAM HEATED SINGLt;
room; r^nt desirable; all conven-
iences and use of 'phone; gentlemen
preferred. Call 201 Eas : Second
.street
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOM;
modern conveniences; gentleman
preferred, references required. 410
Ninth avenue east.
FOR RENT— liOOMS IN A MODERN
East end residence. Call Grand
527.
FOR RENT — TWO FURNISHED
rooms for light housekeeping. 206
West Third street.
FOR RENT— NICE, NEWLY" FUR-
nished rooms; young men j>referred.
421 East Fourth street
FOR RENT — FURNISHEE ROOM,
with use of bath and 'phone. 633
East Fourth street. Melroso 1717.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS FOR
light housekeei>ing; strictlj- modern.
316 West Second street.
FOR RENT — AFTER APRIL 15. FOUR
nice rooms, second floor, 19 Twenty-
eighth avenue west; water, sewer,
toilet, electric light, $10 per month.
F. I. Salter Co.
FOR RENT — NICE, NEATLY FUR-
nished room suitable for onj or two;
all modern, with board; $20 per
month. 125 East Fifth street.
FOR RENT — LARGE FURNISHED
room with private family; steam
heat, electric light and gau; use of
"phone and bath. Inquire 124 East
Fourth street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED FRONT
room with all conveniences; for one
or two; pleasant view. 513 West
Fourth street.
FOR RENT — 3516 WEST THIRD.
Five rooms, bath, gas and city wa-
ter; $14 per month. Inquire down-
stairs.
FOR RENT — NICELY FURNISHED
room; all conveniences; $8 per month.
617% West First street.
FOR RENT— THREE ROOJiS, GAS,
water and lights. Inquire :i821 West
First street.
THREE ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED
for $69; this includes furniture for
kitchen, dining room and bedroom.
Terms, $1.50 per week. 5\'hy not
own the furniture in your apart-
ments or rooms instead of paying
rent on It. Soe F. S. Kelly l''urnlture
company.
FOR RENT— THREE ROOM.S;, ELEC-
tric light and all conveniences. $10
per month. Inquire 1203 Went Fourth
street.
FOR RENT — TWO UNFURNISHED
rooms for light housekeep ng; also
single furnished room; all conven-
iences. 1315 East Sixth s :reet.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS—
A home to right parties; tx,\\ use of
parlors and library; rooms that will
please. 124 Tenth avenue < ast.
LOST AND FOUND.
LOST — THURSDAY. GENT::.EMAN'S
fold watch on Lake avenue, between
uperlor and Second streets Finder
return to 827 East Third street for
reward, or call Grand 1952-31.
LOST — STRING OF GOLD BEADS
with locket, Sunday, in Chejiter Park
or vicinity; finder return to 209 East
Third street for reward.
LOST— ABOUT A MONTH AGO, STOCK
certificate No. S-24409. Finder please
return to Herald office.
LOST— BRILLIANT HAT PIN. FINDER
please return to Herald office.
LOST — NEAR MESABA ORE DOCK,
Saturday, black pocketbook contain-
ing sum of money. Return .o Herald
for $5 reward.
LOST— PACKAGE CONTAINING HAIR
switch, between First an<l Second
avenues west on Superior s ;reet, ad-
dressed to Rice Lake. Finder return
to Herald for reward.
AUTOMOBILES.
# AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE. A-
^ i^
if. New 1911 model M, I'homas -^
i(' flyers, seven-passenger. :^rlvate #
# service a specialty. Both 'phones it-
# 694. a-
*. O. W. DAZIEL, *
^ Solicitor and Operator. *
# ^
WE REPRESENT MAXWELL, PRE-
mier, Oakland. Mollne pleasure cars
and Wilcox trucks. All kinds of re-
pairing, even tire vulcaniaing. Old
cars bought and sold. It will pay
you to try us. Also have automobiles
for hire. Call, 'phone or write M. F.
Falk. Rapid Transit Auto ii Repair-
ing Co., 2110-lt W. Mich. 8t 'Phones
Mel. 347; Zen 47 Lincoln.
SECRET SOCIETIES.
PALESTINE LODGE. No. 7»,
A. F. & A. M. — Regular meet-
ings first and third Monaar
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 17. 1911. Work— Reg-
ular business. Rene T. Hugo, W. M.;
H. Nesbit. secretary.
IONIC IX>DQB NO. 186. A. P.
& A. M. — Regular meetings
second and fourth Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting.
April 24, 1911. Work— First
degree. "Walter N. Totman, W. M.;
Burr Porter, secretary.
KEYSTONE CHAPTER Na
20, R A. M. — Stated convo-
cations second and fourth
Wednesday evenings of eaob
month at 8 o'clock. Next
■«r 1, m, meeting. April 27. 1911,
Work — M. M. degree. Charles W. Kles-
wetter. H. P.; Alfred Le Rlcheux, sec-
retary.
A DULUTH COUNCIL NO. «.
S- ./^ ^- M.— Next meetlniT.
Friday. April 21, 1911, at i
p. m. Work— Royal and select
masters' degree. James A.
Crawford. T. I. M.: Alfred L« Rlcheu»i
recorder.
DULUTH COMMANDERY NO.
18, K. T. — Stated couclave
first Tuesday of each month
at H o'clock. Next conclave.
April 18, 1911. Work— Red
Cross degree. Frederick E. Hough, E.
C; Alfred Le Rlcheux, recorder.
SCOTTISH RITE — REQU-
lar meetings every Thursday
evening at 8 o'clock. Next
meeting, Tuesday, April 11,
. . 1911. Work — Maunday Thura-
day week. Henry Nesbit secretary.
ZENITH CHAPTER NO 26,
Order of Eastern Star — Reg-
ular meetings second and
fourth Friday evenings of
. each month at 7:30 o'clock.
Next meeting. April 14, 1911. Work-
Regular business and initiation. Eliza-
beth Overman. W. M.; Ella F. Gearha.'t.
secretary.
EUCLID LODGE NO. 198, A,
F. & A. M.— Meets at Wesi
Duluth second and fourtu
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meetintc
April 12. 1911. Work— First
degree. M. M. Meldahl. W. M.; A.
Dunleavy. secretary.
DULUTH CHAPTER NO. 69,
R. A. M. — Meets at West
Duluth first and third
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meeting
^ , , April 19, 1911. Work— Roval
Arch degree and lunch. Roger M
Weaver, H. P.; A. Dunleavy. secietary.
K. tf p.
NORTH STAR LODGE, NO. SS, K. of F.
—Meet* every Tuesday ereuln* tt Castif
hall, 118 West Sjpcrior su-cet. Norl
mf«tlii« Tuesday ereiiliin. April 18. £ p.
m. f'flork sluirp. First rank work. All
kiilgiUi cordlallj' Invited. A. L. Kturjlf. C. C; a. A.
Ileum, K. uf It. 8.
DIAMOND LODGE. No. «5, K. of P.—
Meeta ettry MoiicUy e«eiiiiig to Sioao'i
hail, corner TweuUetb aveuac west attj
Superior (Ireet. All kiiigbts cordially In-
vited. L. B. Alleii, C. C; S. L. Pitrciu
K. cf K & ».
KITCHI GAMMt LODGE, SO. 123, K. of
P. — Meela crery Tliursduy eTenliig at Com-
m'Tclal club bail. Cti,tr<il avenue. H'ett
l*ululb. Neit meetliig Tliuft.ltiy. April
ir^tb. Work. w^coDd rauK All kBlsbU
rordially liiTlted. E. l>. Nlckersoo. C C; C. M.
PhlUlDs, K. of R. * 8.
DIXUTH LODGE, NO. 28. I. O. O. T.— MEETS
every Friday evening at 8 oVluck at 0<M
telU'Wa' ball, 18 Lake avenue north.
Next meeting night, April 14. Viut
degree. J. A. Nelson. N. Q.; L. G. Mailow. Ilec.
Bee , A. H. Paul. Via. Set
WEbT DLLL"ni LODGE, NO. 1C8, 1. O. O.
P.
_j<--jr_ Meet* every Tuesday Dlglit at I. O.
/rD>^S\ hall. Weal Duluth. Next meeting
'*^ ^* April 11. General l-uMncss. W. H
o. r.
nisUt
Oow-
dea. N. G.; W. B. Hartley, It<c. Sec.
DULUTH ENCAMPMENT. NO. 86. L O.
O. F. — Meets tn tli« second and fourtb
Tliursday at Odd Fellows hull. 18 Lak*
avenue uor.h. Next meeting uiglit Ai)ril
13. iicyal purple degree. E. AnUen>>>n,
C. P.; L. G. Marhw. Kec. Scribe.
K. O. T. M.
PULITH TENT. NO. 1— MEETS EVERl
Monday. 8:1$ p. m.. at MacaL«e ball.
"1 Lake arenue north. Vliiltlng aiem-
ben always welcome. F. C. F«#r,
ti;aimander. flat 4. -Munger row. We»l
Dulu'.h: i. B. Oellneau, rectrd keeper.
of flee In haU. Hoara. 10 a. m. to 1 p. m.. Uallj.
Zeultli 'phone. Gr.'tnd 61B-X.
A. O. D. W.
FIDELITY LODGE. NO. 105 — MEETS
at Maivatjee hall, £1 Lake avenue u'-rth,
treiT Thursday at 8 p. m. VlHltlns
pieinbers wejctnie. M. C'ossl, M. W. ; A.
E. Plerii.g, reconler; O. J. Murrold. (I-
tianclcr. 217 East Fifth street.
MODERN SAMARITANS.
ALPHA COUNCIL. NO. 1— TAKE NO-
tioe Uiat Samnrttan degree meets first
and third Thursdays; beneficent, second
and fourth Thursdays. Lucy A. rurOy.
Lady G. S. : .N. B. Morrison, O. S.; Wal-
lace P. Wflbanks, scribe; T. A. Uall. W.
S.. First Nutlonal Bank building.
UNITED OKDEK OF FORESTERS—
Cfurt Eiisten) Stur, No. 86, nieeU ever»
nrst and third Tuesday at U. O. F.
hall, ccnier Fourth avenue west and
First strtel. Chn*. V. llanson. C B..
._. 507 \V«Et Fiftl> street; A. R. Olund sec-
reUrj- 1031 West First iti*t. Harry Mlbies. treas-
urei room 2a, WU-.throy block. Zenith 'paone USU-X.
fMPERIAL camp! NO. 2206 - MEETS
■t U. O. F. l»aiL Fotnli avtaue west
ami First street, st-ccnd and f"UrtJl
ruesdays of each mrnth. Hamj w.
IVSke. consul; C. P. Earl, clerk, bc« <"J
F. E. Doreraus, deputy; addresa, «. r.
•reight office. ^^_
CLAN STEWART, NO. 5U, O. S. C—
Meets first and third Wednemlayi e«cl>
month, 8 p. m., at U. O. F. hall, corner
Kourth evtnue wc»t and Flrsi streeU Sex\
regular meeting. April 16. Robert F*r-
^ , gu'on, cliiel; Don McLennan, secrcury;
Juiin wu.neit. Fin. Pec.. 313 Torrey building.
ROYAL ARCANUM. Dululb CcuncU. Wo.
HH'i — Me«ts second and fourth Tuesday
eveuiiifis. Macabeo bail, 21 Lake ateau*
nurth. CUiiiun Brooke. Mcietary, ttl
Columbia buUding.
Mesaba CouucU, No. 1493— Meets flrsl
aiid third Wednesday eveulngs. Columbia
twlL West end. A. M. Joluiaon. secteiao, 117 N«.nb
TweiiUetb avenue west.
ORDER or OWLS. DULUTH
Nest, No. 1200— Meetings are held
rveiy Wednesday of each mouth at
Owls' ball. 116 West buperioi streak
Jomph E. Feaka. secreUry. ii UmA
suptriot street.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL
MRS. HAN.SON, GRADUATE^ MID-
wife; female ccmplaints. 41i beventh
avenue east. Zenith 1225.
Mrs. A. Ferguson, graduate midwife;
female complaints. 2201 West Fourth
street. Zenith, Lincoln 224-Y.
s! WAROE, GRADUATE MIDWIFM
and curse. 215 Twenty-sixth avenue
west. Zenith 'phone. L.tncoln 200-D.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL— PROSPECTIVE
mothers will find a pleasant bouae
before and during conhnenient at
Ashland Maternity home, 2CS Tenth
avenue west. Ashland. Wis. Intanta
cared for.
PERSON^vL — Private home for ladici
before and during confinement; ex-
pert care; everything confidential; in-
fants cared for. Ida Pearson, M. D.,
284 Harrison avenue, St. Paul, Minn.
Mrs. H. Olson, graduate midwife. Pri-
vate hospital. 329 N. 58 Av. \V. Zen-
ith 3173; Calumet 173-L.
WOMAN'S HOSPITAL — MRS. MARY
Barrel!, matron. 931 London roadL
Zenith 'phona. \W.
I;
i.
-
t :
' • ■
I
i-
rrt i^r
*r^
^
il
THE DULUTH HERAL
VOLUME XXIX— NO. 8.
TUESDAY EVENING, APRIL 18, 1911.
FUM HGHT FOR JUSTICE
WAGED IN THE LEGISLATURE
CROWNING
PRODUCTION
HIGH HANDED ACTION
OF HOUSE DESK FORCE
Of the Worst Legislature in
the History of Minne-
sota.
Bill to Disjanchise People
of the Cities Is
Passed.
Two Members of the House
Nearly Come to
Blows.
(By ■ Staff rorrespondent.)
St. Paul, Minn., April 18.— ♦Special to
The Herald.* — The proposed constitu-
tional amendment providing that people
living in cities shall not have the same
voice In the affairs of the state as peo-
ple living in the country struggled
through to final passage at noon today,
after twenty-four hours of almost con-
tinuous battle, leaving behind it a wake
of demoralization that makes it prac-
tically certain that none of the pending
progressive ra^-asures can get through
in the time intervening before the close
of business at midnight tonight.
The stormiest session in many years
waxed to the stormiest crisis of its
history over this product of sectional
narrowness, by which justice has been
butchered to make a progressive holi-
dav. Stormy scenes filled the night in
the senate and scenes still stormier
wrought the house this forenoon into a
very bedlam with the speaker, standing
with the triumphant majority, striving
to favor the progre.^s of the bill and to
prevent its reconsideration.
The house, to make a very long story
short, voted down a motion this morn-
ing to recall the bill form the senate.
44 to 70. The senate shortly afterward,
by a vote of 35 to 2S, concurred in the
house amendment and passed the bill
bv the same vote. It now goes to the
governor for his signature and it is
said by lawyers in the legislature that,
being a constitutional amendment, he
cannot veto It.
It was made clear in the progress of
the debate of the house this morning
that the bill was transmitted to the
senate last evening when a motion to
reconsider was pending, and that it
was contrarv to the ruie.s. that it shotiid
be transmitted when neither house was
in session. Nevertheless, Speaker
Dunn, who was responsible for this ir-
regular action, admitted his responsi-
bility but refused to admit that his ac-
tion "was wrong.
Sevea Senators tke Limit.
As the Moonan-Weis-Haycrafi-Du.x-
bury bill goes to the governor it pro-
poses a ConstifJtional amendment lirr-
iting the three laige counties to seven
senators each As previously passed
by the senate, the limit was six sen-
ators. The house, after adopting an
amenc'iient making the limit seven,
yesterday afternoon passed the bill by
(Continued on page 6, fourth column.)
INVESTiGATOT
FORESHADOWED
Delegation of Indians From
White'Earth Agency Reaches
Washington.
•Washington. April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.) — An investigation into
the conduct of the Indian agency at
White Earth Is fereshadowed in the
arrival here of a delegation of Chip-
pewa Indians, lieaaed by Rev. C. H.
Befiulieu. Kalny Cloud and George
Berry. The Indians are here to get
some claims allowed and an -appropria-
tion for $1,500,000 due them as Interest
on sinking fund to their credit in the
treasury. They will confw with mem-
bers of the Minnesota delegation this
week.
INTIMATE FRIEND
OF PRESIDENTS
Edward A. Moseley, Secre-
tary of Commerce Com-
Rush BOl to Senate While
Motion to Reconsider
Is Pending.
Hard Fight Made to Prevent
Passage of Unjust
Measure.
St
The
CLEON T. KNAPP
Of Chisholm, Chairman of House
Special Committee That Investi-
gated the State Drainage Work.
RALPH IS
SimiNED
Drainage Engineer Held Not
Gmlty of Collusion With
Contractors.
House Committee Finds He Is
Competent, Faithful and
Industrious.
(Br a Staff CorrcMponiient.)
Paul, Minn., April 18. — (Special to
Herald.) — The desk force In the
house were guilty of a grossly im-
proper action last evening, by rushing
the Moonan-Weis-Haycraft-Duxbury
bill back to the senate, while a motion
to reconsider the vote was pending.
By a vote of 65 to 42, the house
adopted that finely "progressive" mea-
sure, the Moonaa-Weis-Haycraft-Dux-
bury amendment to the Constitution,
providing that people in the cities
shall not have the same power in the
legislature as people in the country.
It has already passed the senate, and
though the house adopted an amend-
ment slightly mitigating the discrimin-
ations against the cities, necessitating
its passage by the senate, there was
little doubt that the bill would go
through, If a vote was reached, and be
submitted to the people at the general
election in 1912, which would mean a
(Continued on page 9, second column.)
DROPS DEAD ON
WAY TO POLLS
Hushand of Mrs. Kaufmann,
Who Figured in Sensational
Case, Dies Suddenly.
Sioux Falls. S. D., April 18. — Soon
after leaving home this morning for
the purpose of going to the polls and
voting Mose Kaufmann, a wealthy
resident of Sioux Falls, dropped dead
on the street.
A few years ago Mr. Kaufmann's
wife was the defendant In a sensation-
al case in which she was charged with
murdering her 16-year-old girl servant.
SHOOTS HIS
SWEETHEART;
KIU^SELF
Double Tragedy Occurs on
County Road Near
Brainerd.
Charles Kunde Murders Bertha
Jordan in Fit of
Jealousy. ^^
Brother Attempts to Protect
Her But Is Thrown
From Carriage.
Brainerd, Minn., April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — On the way to a dance
last night at St. Mathias, Bertha Jor-
dan, aged 14. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Jordan, was shoi and killed by
her jealous lover, Charlee Kunde, aged
21 years.
In the buggy wern seated Bertha
Jordan, her brother. Otto Jordan, aged
18, and the Kunde boy. Near the farm
of David Wickham ho quarreled with
her and threatened to shoot. The
brother attempted to wrest away the
^Continued on page 6, second column.)
BODIESOFMOUNTED
POUCE ARE FOUND
Remains of Party of Six Dis-
covered on Banks of
Peel River.
Dawson, Yukon Territory, April 18. —
The bodies of the mounted police who
set out Dec. 22 from Fo-t MacPherson
for Dawson, were found not far south
MacPherson by the relief expedi-
REBELS QUIEUY EV
AGUA ?mk DURING NIGHT
O o
♦ ♦
W}
CHIEFrAIN
mission, Dead.
I
Washington, April 18. — Edward A.
Moseley, secretary of the interstate
commerce commission and the origina-
tor of much labor legislation, died
here today after a continued Illness.
He was Ga years old.
The immediate cause of death was
heart failure superinduced by acute kid-
ney disease. Funeral services will be
held herf ihursday, and the body
taken to ...ewburyport, Mass., for
burial.
As an intimate friend and personal
adviser of presidents, cabinet officers,
representatives, senators and other
public olficials during the last quarter
of a century, Mr. Moselev accomplished
notable results, particularly along hu-
manitarian and philanthropic lines.
He was recognized as an authority up-
on all measures designed to Insure the
»^ safety of railway employes and trav-
elers, and was instrumental in secur-
ing the enactment of laws requiring
the use by railways of safety devices.
In recognition of these services he re-
ceived the thanks of the legislature of
Massachusetts and of practically all
the great railway labor organizations.
The interstate commerce commission
practically suspended all business to-
day.
<By a Siaa Correapondent.)
St. Paul, Minn., April IS.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The conclusions of the
special committee to investigate the
state drainage work, headed by Rep-
resentative Cleon T. Knapp of Chis-
holm, were presented to the house to-
day. They are as follows:
1. The charges of malfeasance and
misfeasance referred to in sub-division
2 (a) are stale, and the committee
has not investigated them other than
to find that the engineer has been ex-
onerated from such charges by court
proceedings in the district court of
Polk county, Minnesota, and by a re-
port of the drainage commission com-
posed of Governor Van Sant, S. G. Iver-
son and Peter E. Hanson.
2. The engineer made a bad bargain
in Ditch Xo 86. and as to that matter
he is not free from criticism for using
poor judgment, but he was not guilty
of bad faith or wrong aolng.
3. The engineer has not been guilty
of favoritism or of collusion with con-
tractors.
4. The so-called Wawlna Land com-
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF
SCIENCES IN SESSION.
Washington, April 18 — With Sir John
Murray, of the famous challenger Ex-
pedition as one of its guests of honor,
the National Academy of Sciences to-
day began Its annual meeting of three
days in the national museum here. At
the annual banquet Wednesday even-
ing the Draper gold medal will be pre-
sented to Dr C. G. Abbott, director of
the Smithsonian Astrophysical obser-
vatory.
of
tion which left Dawson, Feb. 21.
The men in the ill-ffted Fort Mac-
Pherson v'xpedition whi-h waa- under
command of Capt. F. i. »ltzgerald, and
consisted of Constables Cirter, G. Kin-
ney and Taylor, perlshe** on the banks
of Peel river after thei • supplies had
given out and they had eaten their
dogs.
The relief expedition took the bodies
to MacPherson and returned to Daw-
son, arriving there yesterday.
FOR THB
BARGAIN HUNTER.
•^ \tf ^^*^^i^ \^ \Af \A^ *^ \^ xL" ^ ^' ^ ^ ^fc-^f A ^k i^te 1^ -^^ ^4t ^^ -^'- J
'^'^fT^*l^^^'^^f'^^^^"I^'i^ ^ ^ ^ •i^'^T^r^P ^ Jji yj\ •^ ^ *f» ^ ^ J
« JOY
$ AVadtalngion, April 18. — Every
jjt American fvoinan Ttho luvea the
^ bargain counter and vrlth Joyful
* anticipation reada "Hedaeed from
# 75 centa to 33»^ cents a yard," will
Hie be Interested In a bill Introduced *
^ In the honae by Representative *
^ Sheppard of Texas, pro^-ltllna: for ^
^ th^ colnase of a two and one-half *
^je cent piece. *
j|tiio)i)|{i|())c'3Kiit^i^tit())()tc)|(ii(^iKy y y y y y y y y
NOWHERE
TO_BESEEN
Federals Entering the Qty
Unable to Find Their
Enemies.
Washington Officials Receive
Definite Assurances From
Mexico.
An Attack on Godad Juarez
Is Now Momentarily
Expectei
^^"^"^ ^ 9 ^ ^ ^"^Tft^i f^ ^ k^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ w^ ^ ^ ^ " '
* ATTACK EXPECTED. i
•Red" Lopez at the Head of 1,000 Rebels Captured the Town of Agua
Prieta, Last Week, From the Local Garrison and on Mondajr Was at the
Head of His Men Fighting Fiercely With the Federals. He Is Known
as a Shrewd Man and a Very Brave One.
FRENCH AVIATOR
FALLS TO DEATH
Capt Carron of French Army
Drops Distance of
250 Feel
Versailles, France, April 18. — Capt.
Carron of the French army aviation
corps fell with his aeroplane from a
height of 250 feet today and was
crushed to death. ^^.
The aviator had left Orleans this
morning for this city and was midway
between ViUaooublay and Versailles
when his machine plunged to earth,
turning over as it fell. Carron was
caught under the wreckage.
TO PROLONG
THE_DEBATE
Another Day Will Be Given
to Reciprocity in the
House.
(Continued on
page
•—
9, first column.)
SIX VICTIMS OF
INSANE FATHER
Youngstown, Ohio, Man Kills
His Family and
Himself.
Youngstown, Ohio, April 18. — Pearl
Rickert, 8, and Raymond Rickert, 7,
died at 9:30 this morning from Injur-
ies Inflicted last midnight by their
father. Grant C. Rickert, making six
lives the toll of his murderous fit of
insanity. Rickert ended his own life
by shooting after he had killed his
wife, and daughters, Cliarlotte, aged
11, and Helen, aged 15. His son, Ed-
win, escaped from the father, who had
struck him on the head with an axe,
and will survive.
I SAUE OLD WOOD PILE. |
ANNIVERSARY
OF BIG STRIKE
Latrobe, Pa.. April 18, — Several thou-
sand miners and their families were
preparing to march from every section
of the Westmoreland strike field into
Latrobe. shortly after noon today, to
celebrate the first anniversary of the
strike. This afternoon a big meeting
will be held. Among those expected
to attend are: Miss Anna T. Morgan,
daughter of J. P. Morgan of New
York; Jane Addams of Hull house,
Chicago, and Harry Parker of Phila-
delphia. Prank Hay:, national vice I
president of the United Mine Workers I
of Indianapolis, Is here. 1
No Chance of Getting a Vote
on the Measure Before
Thursday.
Washington, April 18. — Canadian rec-
iprocity again was the subject of de-
bate in the house today, the third day
of the discussion and originally planned
to be the conclufling daj. It will not
be, however, for, when the house con-
vened, Chairman Under^eood of the
ways and means committee declared so
many appeals for more time have been
made to him that the dc:bate must be
prolonged at least anotJ er day.
"I do not believe that we can con-
clude the debate before Thursday," said
Mr. Underwood.
"Mr. McCall," he continued, "en the
Republican side, to whom I have al-
lotted five hours of npy time, has not
yet spoken, nor have any of the Re-
publican tjupporters of tlie bill. Their
arguments alone will tak<; up the great-
er part of a day and Mr. Dalzell has
not yet spoken. There are others on
both sides who wish to speak and I
will close the debate. I see no chance
of getting the bill to i vote before
Thursday at the earliest."
Mr. McCall of Massachusetts was
ready to ta^e up the delate to answer
some of the^ arguments made against
the bill by his party colIi?agues, Repre-
4 \%'aaIiln8rton, April 18. — An at-
^ tack npoa Ciudad Juarez, Mex., In
^ momentarily expected, aocordlnt:
^ to a telesram from Thomaa D.
lk EdwardH, Inlted Staten oonitul
* there, received at the \%hlte
^ HoRMe today. Mr. KdwardM reports
^ that he bait aMked Col. Sharpe (o
^ keep the AmerlcanM from croMiiInK
0 the Rio Grande durlns the hattle.
Agua Prieta, Mex.. April 18.— The
rebel army, after almost eighteen hours
of incessant fighting yesterday in de-
fense of Agua Prieta, quietly evacuated
the town during the night. It moved
out sileritly, and when daybreak came,
was nowhere to be seen. The Mexicaa
national troops entered the city at
dawn, encountering no resistance.
The federals approached the town
from the south and east during the
early hours, coming in slowly and cau-
tiously, lest they encounter an ambush.
Great "was the surprise of the com-
manders of the government troops,
upon finding, when they reached the
outer works of the rebel entrench-
ments, that the trenches had been
abandoned and no insurrecto.s were in
sight. The federals continued to como
in. still more slowly, exjiecting at
every moment to encounter a surprise,
but they found no rebels anywhere.
The latter had vanished as completely
as the night. There was no indication
even of the direction they had taken.
The reason for the evacuation of the
city after their all day defense of it.
was not at first apparent. The most
logical concluBlcn seemed to be that
they had exhausted their ammunition.
»
AaHurancea I^rona Mexleo.
Washingtou, April 18. — Positive as-
surances that the Mexican government
will adopt a "definite restrictive policy
along the border," and news from
Douglas that the rebel forces have
(Continued on page 6, second column.).
THREATENED
WITH DEATH
(Continued on page 5, idxth column.)
MEMBERS OF 1 A. R.
LISTEN TO REPORTS
General Officers Tdli of Work
Done Daring tib Past
Year.
Washington, April 18, — The various
general officers of the Daughters of
the American Revolution submitted
their reports to the twentieth conven-
tion of that body today. The session
of the forenoon was tak jn up by these
reports which in nearly every instance
were presented in perse n by the offi-
cers.
Among those to be heard were the
president general. Mrs Matthew T.
Scott, as chairman of the national
board of management; :he vice presi-
dent general, Mrs. Miranda Barney
Tulloch, in charge of the organization
of chapters, and the chiplain general,
Mrs. Esther Frothlngham Noble.
At the afternoon session an interest-
ing report is expected from the presi-
dent general, as chairmjin of the com-
mittee on the memorlul continental
hall. Still another report awaited with
intere.st is that of Miss Anna Caroline
on revolutionary r^^^ca.
Echo of Recent New York
Senatorial Fight Heard
at Banquet
New York, April 18. — An interesting
echo of the recent senatorial fight at
Albany was heard last night during
the dinner of the St. Nicholas fociety
at Delmonico's, when William Church
Osborn, legal adviser to Governor Dlx,
declared in an address that one of th»
Democratic legislators had been
threatened with death unless he
changed his vote. Mr. Osborn did not
name the legislator, remarking, how-
ever, that the man had '"stuck to hi»
guns."
"He told me," said Mr. Osborn, "that
his conscience would not let him vot«
the other way."
GOVERNMENT TO
OPERATE MINE
Will Extract Coal for Pur-
pose of Obtaining Scien-
tific Data.
Washington, April 18. — A govern-
ment-operated mine to be run not for
profit but to obtain scientific data, will
begin operations about May 1, when
the new experimental coal mining plant
at Bruceton, Pa., near PittsbOrg, is
opened. Scientific men and mining ex-
perts will experiment under actual
mining conditions to obtain for th*
United States bureau of mines infor-
mation which they hope will be useful
In the prevention of such terrible loss
of life as occurred in the Pancoa^t
mine at Throop, Pa., the Banner mine
at Littleton, Ala., and In the disaster
at Cherry. 111. , . , ^
The explosibility of coal dust m pur»
air coal dust when mixed with flr*
damp and with natural gas, will bo
determined and a study of explosion
waves and methods for preventing and
limiting explosions will be undertaken.
Tests of all kinds of mining machinery
will be made to determine the relative
production of inflammable dust by dif-
ferent types of machines In coal put-
ting.
To combat statements of coal oper-
ators that conditions surrounding the
tests made in the exterior gallery oC
the bureau of mines tenting plant at
Pittsburg were not the same as would
occur in actual mining operations waa
one of the reasons for establlsbins
thia experimental mine.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
«
{
^n •
■»— •"W^"
V
■ Wii»
I
I I
-±''
Tuesday,
WEATHER: Cloudy and colder to-
night with lowest temperature 25 to 30
deg:. ; Wednesday fair; moderate to
brisk westerly winds.
SPRING SUITS
FOR MEN!
Styles identical with
those that fastidious,
well groomed New
Yorkers wean
Elegant, Exclusive,
Fashionable and
Moderately Priced.
$15 to $35.
Superior St. at Second Avenue West.
American Exciunge IVat'l
A Recommendation
Thai Counts'.
% Have you ever thought
of a savings bank book as
a letter of recommenda-
tion in seeking a position
where responsibility and
trustworthiness are re-
quired?
A savings book showing
rcgnilar deposits covering an
extended i)eiiod, tells a story
of ttirift, energy, and ambi-
tion tliat cannot be denied.
A dollar dei>osited in the
savings depiU'tnient of tliis
baulk will start an aecotint
which will bo your best
friend when out of work.
AMERICAN EXCHANGE
NATIONAL BANK
American Exchange Nal'l
r
/
Kidney Trouble Overcome
By the Great Treatment
T have been a sufferer for years
with kidney and bladder trouble and
took almost everything a drug store
contained, without obtaining any
benefit.
I suffered so that I becajne utterly
discouraged, as I could not sleep, was
always dizzy and had a headache all
the time. I saw one of your adver-
tisements and as a last resort de-
cided to try your Swamp- Root. I am
now taking the third bottle and feel
like a new woman, sleep well and
have no pains whatever,
I strongly advise all sufferers to
take the only real cure for kidney
and bladder trouble. Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp- Root was a God-send to me.
You may publish this lette? if you
wish so that it may be the means of
bringing some poor suflerers back to
health.
MRS. MARY O'DONNELL.
Lander, Wyo.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this July 14th, 1909.
CHARLEY ALLEN. Notary Public,
in and for Fremont Co., Wyo.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
IliuijiiliHiutwu, X. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing-
hamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle.
It will convince anyone. You will also
receive a booklet of valuable infor-
mation, telling all about the kidneys
and bladder. When writing be sure
and mention the Duluth Daily Herald.
Ilegular tifty-cent and one-dollar size
bottles for sale at all drug stores.
Advertise in The Herald
BRANCH OFFICES I
A. JcBSca. 830 Korth S7th Av«. W. J. J. Moran, «1«H Nortli Central A.rt>
ELECTRICITY
TO SUBURBS
Smithville and New Duluth
People WUl Have Ught-
mg Facilities SeoiL
Extension of Power Wires
Will Be Made on Tele-
phone Company's Poles.
Smithville and New Duluth residents
win have electricity for lighting pur-
poses within the next two weeks.
Tomorrow morning a crew of line-
men ^111 begin stringing wire from
Seventy-first avenue west to Smithville
and from there to New Duluth. The
Duluth-Edison Electric company, which
will furnish the power, will rush the
work to an early completion.
The poles of the Duluth Telephone
company will be used for the exten-
sion. The work may be delayed some-
what on account of repairs which are
being made on the telephone company's
lines at Smithville. Even with this de-
lay, it is expected that the current will
be turned on within two weeks.
New residences and business places
which have been built recently al
Smithville and New Duluth have all
been wired In anticipation of the ex-
tension of the electric lighting system.
A number of the older houses have also
been wired and It will be an easy mat-
ter to light the suburb homes, after
the extension is made.
It is also expected that electricity
will be used In lighting the streets.
Alderman Barnes and Alderman Krue-
ger of the Eighth ward h&ve asked the
council to- order a number of new
lights for this purpose. This will prob-
ably be attended to at a future meeting
of the council.
At New Duluth some of the resi-
dences have been lighted with elec-
tricity supplied by a local box factory.
However. In view of the fact that the
facilities are limited, the arrangement
has not proven the most satisfactory
and a change will be welcome to New
Duluthians. At Smithville electric
lights will be something new for the
suburb.
MAnHEWFALLON
PASSES AWAY
Well-Known Resident of West
Duluth Dies After Long
Illness.
Matthew Fallon. 57 years old. con-
tractor and member of the West Du-
luth village police force a number of
years ago, died this morning at St.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured.
with LOCAL APPUCATI0N3, a3 they cannot reach
the seat of the diaeas.. Catarrh U a blood or cod-
sUtuUonal dUeaae. and In order to cure It you must
take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure la tak-
en Internally, and acta directly on the blood and
mucoui surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not »
quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the
bnt physicians In this country for years and Is a
regular prescripUon. It is composed of the best
tonics known, combined with the best blood puri-
fiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The
perfect combination of the two Ingredients is what
produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrti.
Send for testimonial free.
F. J. CHliNKY & CO., PMps.. Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, price 75c.
Take Hall's family PiUi for constipation.
Mary's hospital, following a long Ill-
ness.
Fallon was a resident of Minnesota
for thirty years and has been in West
Duluth for the past twenty-four years.
He made his home at 1 North Thirty-
ninth avenue west.
A wife two sons and a daughter
survive him. No funeral arrangements
have been made.
ANNUAL BANQUET
OF DANISH CLUB.
Members of the Danish Schvensil
club of West Duluth will hold their
sixth annual banquet tomorrow even-
ing at Great Eastern hall. Covers will
be laid for 100. A program of speeches
and music will be given.
The club recentlj- completed its win-
ter activities, which Included the play-
ing of a series of card games, twenty-
seven sittings of ten games each at the
homes of the different members. The
club Is composed of prominent Danish
people In the western end of the city.
The officers are: Lawrence Hanson,
president; Matt Hanson, secretary, and
Hans Lundlng, treasurer.
arrestedIjT
an old warrant.
Frank Koskl, aged 40, arrested last
evening at West Duluth on an old
warrant sworn out Dec. 7, Is charged
with the abandonment of his wife and
children.
He was arraigned this morning In
police court and his case was set over
to Thursday afternoon, when he will
have an examination. He Is held In de-
fault of $1,000 bail.
The Koskl family is a large one, four
of the children being under the age of
10 years. They are in destitute circum-
stances and have been an object of
charity ever since Koskl deserted them
several months ago. They live at 5911
Nicollet street In a small shack.
The younger children are Lottie,
aged 9; Bennle, 6; Grace, 4, and Ed-
ward, 3.
Will Retire From Business.
Emil Oettel, for the past fifteen years
engaged In the furniture business, most
of that time on Central avenue, will re-
tire, according to an announcement
made today. Mr. Oettel stated that he
had made no disposition of his business
as yet. He resides at 5814 West
Eighth street.
FIRE DESTROYS
WEST DULUTH HOME.
Fire destroyed the home of Louis H.
Gauthier, 4032 Halifax street, last
evening. The loss is about |1,500 with
no Insurance. Little was saved from
the flames, the family being driven to
the street. Department No. 8 was not
called out In time to do anything but
prevent the blaze from spreading. The
Are started from an overheated stove.
West Duluth Briefs.
The Ladles' Aid Society of Merritt
Memorial M. E. church will hold a
"work meeting" tomorrow afternoon
at the home of Mrs. Bert Wheeler of
3406 West Third street.
In honor of her eleventh birthday.
Miss Grace Myles, entertained a num-
ber of her friends at her home, 422
North Twenty-eighth avenue west
yesterday afternoon.
The Ladles' Aid Society of Westmin-
ster Presbyterian church will hold a
special business meeting tomorrow
evening in the church parlors. Fifty-
eighth avenue west and Ramsey street.
The seventh anniversary of the or-
ganization of Fraternity lodge. No. 860,
Modern Brotherhood of America, will
be celebrated this evening at Great
Eastern hall. A special program has
been arranged.
The Ladles Aid Society of the West
Duluth Swedish Mission church will be
entertained Thursday afternoon at the
home of Mrs. Gillon, 520 North Fifty-
sixth avenue west.
A basket social will be held this
evening at Victor halT, Grand avenue,
under the auspices of Morning Star
lodge, Independent Order of Good Tem-
plars.
An Important meeting of the Ladies
Guild of Holy Apostle's Episcopal
church will be held at the rectory this
evening.
Rev. E. F. *Stidd, pastor of Merritt
Memorial M. E. church, left today for
Hlbhlng. where he will attend the an-
nual conference of the Duluth district
of Methodist Episcopal churches.
H. J. Hammerback of St. Paul is vis-
iting friends In West Duluth.
An Easter Monday ball was given
last evening at Wade's hall by the
degree team of Old Hickory camp. No.
1555, Modem Woodmen of America. A
large crowd was In attendance.
Watch repairing. Hurst, W. Duluth.
Wait and Watch
For Our Big
Dissolution Sale
Me
/OS -707 y>fEsr Superiors
-THE-
CFFY NATIONAL BANK OF DULUTH
SAFETY iEPOSOT iEP^IRITIiEiT
We will be pleased to have you call at the bank
and inspected this department. You can then fully
appreciate the safety and convenience which our
safe-deposit boxes afford.
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
FOURTH SHOP
EmiRSION
West End' Phnts WiB Be
Visited By Gtizens
^Friday.
--^
Excursionists Will See Pour-
ing of Metal at Clyde
Iron Works.
The fourth shop excursion under the
direction of the publicity committee of
the Commercial club will be held Fri-
day afternoon of this week and the
Scott-Graff mill, the repair shops of
of the Duluth Street Railway com-
pany and the Clyde Iron Works will
be the indusMii^I establishments
visited. * ■*
The time of starting from the Com-
mercial club has been fixed at 2:30 in
the afternoon, which is later than usual
in order that the party may arrive at
the Clyde Iron Works at about the
time the force Is pouring, which will
be shortly after 4 o'clock. The pour-
ing of the metal Is an interesting pro-
cess and the publicity coniniittee Is
anxious to give those under its escort
an opportunity to watch it. The Scott-
Graff mill and the repair shops of the
Street Railway company are also in-
teresting points and should go far in
the education of the excursionists in
the industrial activities and possibili-
ties of Duluth.
The three former shop excursions
jtirred up considerable Interest and
the party Friday Is expected to be the
largest yet taken out. Duluthians are
deficient in information about their
own city and the shop excursions were
planned to supply that deficiency or
that part of It thtit relates to the in-
dustries of the city. The Lake avenue
wholesale houses and factories were
taken In on the first excursion, the
Fifth avenue district on the second and
part of the West end district on the
third. The next "will probably go to
West Duluth.
A harbor eoccurslon, which will take
in the ore docks, coal docks and other
points of Interest along the shore. Is
also planned and will be held some
time during the coming summer. The
ore docks are probably In the district
to be visited on Friday's excursion, but
Ihey were left out of the Itinerary on
account of the inactivity there at pres-
ent. Excursionists will be given a
chance to see them at their best later
in the season.
Violets, Roses, Carnations,
American Beauties. Big stock; prices
right, at Victor Huot's.
PICTURES
Representativa Men,
Beautiful Residences,
Public Buildings,
Ships of Old and Today, ^•
Mines, ~
Logging Cantps.
Picturesque Scenery.
Wholesale and Office Buildings.
One of th& best stories ever writ-
ten about Duluth, in forty chapters.
For sale at E, M. Stone's. 210 West
Superior street, and Jos. Vander-
yacht. Board of^ Trade building.
PARISHES HOLD
ANNUAL MEETINGS
SL Paul's and Trinity Elect-
ing Vestrymen and Dele-
gates to Convention.
The annual meeting of the parish of
St. Paul's Episcopal church was held
last evening in the church. There was
a large attendance. Dr. A. W. Ryan,
rector, presided.
The following vestry was elected:
Dr. J. E. Bowers, senior warden; Henry
Taylor, junior warden; vestrymen: H.
M. Peyton. W. J. Olcott, H. R. Spencer,
G. L Douglas, Jr., G. G. Hartley, F. W.
Paine, J H. Dight, G. A. St. Clair and
C. A. Le Due.
The following delegates were ap-
pointed to attend the diocesan con-
vention at Bralnerd in June: H. R.
.Spencer, Janies Wanless, A. C. Le Due,
H. F. Greehe. William H. Rattenbury,
William McLean- and A. E. Prudden.
The following' were appointed a
committee to take steps to form a
men's club, with^power to add to their
number: A. C. Lfe Due, W. H. Ratten-
bury, Lauren Jone.s. A. E. Prudden,
Henry F. Greene, James Wanless, R. H.
Redman and T. T. Telford.
•- ■ • .
At the annual parish meeting of the
pro-cathedral last night the following
officers were elected: Senior warden,
George H. Crosby; junior warden,
Charles T. FltzgJmmons; vestrymen, J.
W. Lyder, Jr., Tl. B. Knox, Thomas D.
Merrill, S. L. Frazer. A. Le Rlcheux,
George S. Munsey, G. Roy Hall, C. G.
Traphagen.
The delegates named to go to the
diocesan convention to be held at
Bralnerd In June are: George H.
Crosby. J. W. Lyder, Jr.. C. T. Fltzslm-
mons and C. T. Knlppenburg.
The treasurer's report was satisfac-
tory. A dinner to the members of the
parish was served prior to the meeting.
TRIAL IN MUNICIPAL COURT.
E. Angermeir Charged With Prac-
ticing Medicine Without License.
The trial of E. Angermeir, who was
arrested on a charge of practicing
medicine without a license, was
started in municipal court today be-
fore Judge Windom and a jury. The
complaining witness is Ernest Berg,
who says that Angermeir give him
pills and other medicines. The case
is being prosecuted by Walter F.
Dacey, assistant city attorney, and
the defendant is represented by At-
torney William Marx. Most of the
forenoon was spent in securing a
jury.
ANNIVERSARY OF
TRANSLATION OF BIBLE.
Masons of Duluth will son celebrate
with special services the three hun-
dredth annSversAry of the translation
of the King James version of the
Bible. Th* event will be observed by
Masons th© country over. The date
has not yet b(#n set.
At a ni^eting of Palestine lodge.
No. 79, lut evening at the Masonic
temple. W, B. . Patton. past grand
master of the Minnesota grand lodge,
gave a talk 41ong this line. The
meeting K%»>'1P*U attended.
VINCENT TO
BE WEI^MED
New Head of University Will
Be Entertained By
Duluth People.
Many Responses to Invita-
tions to Attend Banquet
in Evening.
Duluth people are today entertaining
President Harry Burns Hutchlns of the
University of Michigan. Tomorrow
President George E. Vincent of the
University of Minnesota will visit the
city and will be entertained by the
various individuals and associations
Interested In the work of the univer-
sity.
President Vincent will arrive In Du-
luth early tomorrow morning and will
be escorted around the city during the
day by a committee of Duluth men. He
will be taken to the Central high
school In the morning and will ad-
dress the students at the chapel exer-
cises at 9 o'clock. At 11 o'clock he will
address the students at the normal.
He will take lunch with President E.
\V. Bohannon of the normal.
The women of the city will be given
an opportunity to meet President Vin-
cent at a reception at the Commercial
club tomorrow afternoon from 2:30 to
4:30.
At 7 o'colck In the evening, Presi-
dent Vincent will be the guest of Du-
luth citizens at a banquet at the Com-
mercial club. Reservations for the ban-
quet have been numerous, especially by
members of the Duluth Minnesota
Alumni association, the Commercial
club and the Yale Alumni association.
Officers of tli© Commercial club hope
that the gathering will be a represen-
tative one tomorrow night. President
Vincent nas come to Minnesota at a
time when Its supporters believe the
institution is entering upon a period of
great progress. They believe that the
University of Minnesota will in a few
years be the leading educational instl-
tuton of the West, which means of the
country, and they are urging that the
citizens of the state must encourage
and join with President Vincent in his
work If It is to place .the university
in the position towards which the
natural course leads.
Tomorrow night, Duluth people will
assure President Vincent of Dtrtuth's
support and belief In him and the uni-
versity and those who are responsible
for the visit of the new head of the
university are anxious that the assur-
ance shall come from a gathering that
will have weight as representing the
whole citizenship of the city.
RETURNS PAROLE BREAKER.
Former Marquette Prison Inmate
Must Pay Penalty of Act.
Marquette, Mich., April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Deputy Warden Car-
lln of the Marquette prison. Is expected
home today from the Wisconsin state
penitentiary at Waupun, bringing Jo-
seph McCauley. McCauley is a former
convict at Marquette and Is being re-
turned to the prison for violation of
parole. The man was sent up from Go-
gebic county for larceny In 1904, being
given one year. He managed to scale
the wall and escape in March, 1905, and
was retaken in September of that year.
Subsequently he was given a parole,
but Immediately violated It by leaving
the state and not making a single re-
port. He was arrested In Wisconsin
for an offense In that state and was
sentenced to Waupun. his term in
which institution has now expired.
Buy in Duluth.
MICHIGAN TO BUY PLANT.
Will Operate Box and Lumber Com-
pany at the Marquette Prison.
Marquette, Mich., April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The state of Michi-
gan Is to buy out the Marquette Box
& Lumber company, which Is operating
a contract at the Marquette prison,
with the purpose of continuing the
business on state account. The rec-
ommendation of the board of control
and the warden of the penitentiary
that this be done has m^t with favor
In the legislature and a bill appropri-
ating 162,500 for the purpose has been
passed and has been sent to the gov-
ernor for his approval. The measure
will be signed by the state executive.
The action of the legislature on this
appropriation for Marquette prison, as
well as one of similar size for the pen-
itentiary at Jacks#n and which was
passed at the same time. Is a virtual
adoption of the recommendation of the
prison labor commission appointed by
Former (Governor Warner and com-
posed of himself and one representa-
tive each of the Marquette, Jackson
and Ionia prisons.
RESTAURANT KEEPER
WAS THE AGGRESSOR.
Eno Selkamaa, bartender at the
American saloon on Lake avenue
south, was found not guilty of dis-
orderly conduct after a trial in police
court this morning and discharged.
He and John Maki. who funs a res-
taurant in the rear of the saloon,
were arrested at the same time after
a bloodv fi«ht. both men needing med-
ical attention after their battle.
It appeared that Maki was the ag-
gresor. striking the bartender with
a poker and then slashing his face
with a broken beer bottle. Follow-
ing this Selkamaa gave Maki a
terrible beating with his fists. Maki
will have his hearing April 20. The
trouble started over the amount of
damages which Maki claimed for a
broken chair.
TELLS WOMEN HOW
TO AVOID OPERATIONS
(Chicago American)
Dr. Hyman Cohen, president of the
Chicago Health Alliance today Issued
an apeal for aid in the organization's
work for improving the health of the
people.
"Over 10,000 die annually in Chi-
cago from preventable diseases," said
Dr. Cohen, "and about 150.000 are
needlessly stretched upon the sickbed.
The number who suffer in silence and
are incapacitated through ill health
for their life work is uncountable."
Many women undergo operations
they could have avoided had they not
neglected themselves and permitted
the germs to multiply. Douching with
a simple and harmless solution made
by dissolving a teaaponful of - ala-
tone in a quart of warm water, quick-
ly kills all germs, stops the unnatural
secretions and odor, cleanses and
strengthens the organs. Alatone can
be bought at any drug store In orig-
inal 4 - ounce package. If every
woman knew this, much suflerinjc
would be averted.
<^
**Oidding Cormtr" — Superior St,
at Firtt Ave. W.
A continual inflow of new styles stamps
the service of this store different from the
service of other stores.
Others load up with a full cargo and sell 'till stocks
are badly run dovirn ; then buyers scurry to the markets
and must wait weeks for delivery of goods. In the mean-
time their patrons suffer from lack of choice.
Here it is difl erent ; our head buyers are constantly
**on the ground," and every day brings us something new
— so that the Inflow equals the Outflow, and selec-
tions are like a running stream; constantly changing,
constantly fresh, and always worth watching.
If you didnH find the garment suited to your taste here
yesterday^ it might be among the arrivals today, tomorrow^
or the next day; Come Again!
Millinery :
Tailored Street Hats $10.00 to $20.00
Semi-Dressy Hats $15.00 to $25.00
Pattern Milliner j and Elaborate Hats. . .$25.00 and up
"N
Coats :
Plain Tailored Service Coats $15.00 to $45.00
Swagger Touring Styles $32.50 to $50.00
Novelty Styles in Dressy Coats $35.00 to $75.00
Suits :
Popular Priced Tailormades $25.00 to $35.00
Exclusive Custom Tailored Garments . $35.00 to $65.00
Imported and High-Class American Styles . . $45 and up
Dresses:
Simple House Dresses $3.00 to $15.00
Tailored Street IDresses $25.00 to $50.00
Afternoon Dress<is of Foulard, etc ... . $19.50 to $65.00
Evening Gowns $35.00 and up
NEW ARRIVALS IN MESSALINE PETTICOATS— UN-
USUAL VALUES, AT $5 and $6.75.
Complete selections of Misses' and Children's Ap-
parel of the High -Style Standard that the Gidding label
stands for. /
NORTHERN TRUNK CO,
TRUNKS, BAGS, CASES.
We Are Makers.
228 West FirsI Street.
EILERT BROS.
There is No Slogan Like the Old Slogan — The Zenith City.
A BOOK ON DULUTH
PICTMESi
Portraits of Representative
Men.
Beautiful East End Residences
Many Public Buildings.
Mines and Mining.
Picturesque Scenic Views.
Wholesale Houses and Busi-
ness Blocks.
Logging Camps. Ships.
SUBJECTS !
In Days of Old.
Railroads Reach Everywhere
Ships and Shipping.
Good is the Ground.
Wealth Underneath the Ground
Felling the Forests. ,•
Big Men Doing Big Things.
Climate, Water, Scenery and
Scores of Others.
The best there is oi Duluth in Story and Picture.
Push the city of j^our choice by buying copies and sending
them where they will do the most good. On sale at
E. IVI. S5XOIME,
221 West Superior Street.
AND
«JOS. VAIVDERYACHX,
Boiird of Trade Building.
1W1IL.L.A.R F»RIIMXIIMG CO., F»ul>lisliePS
130-132 WEST MICHIGAN STREET.
m'lir >iii T
■t"
T
;
— I-
mi
i^im^tkai^m ti
«
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a
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!
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1011.
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.$68.00
. $88.00
. $99.00
$110.00
$135.00
$137.00
$150.00
$175.00
$182.50
$200.00
$212.50
$225.00
$237.50
$250.00
$262.50
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BIG PRE-INVENTORY
PIANO
SALE
I-s drawing to a close. You let the first half
of the month go by without investing in one
of our greatest bargains.
Our prices are lower than they ever can
be again. We will never offer such bargains
because we will never allow ourselves to be
caught with so big a stock at this time of
the year.
Many persons have investigated our
prices, and are consequently happy over
their purchases.
If they made money by buying, why not
you? It pays to take advantage of bargain
sales, and now is the time to do it.
Some of our very best and biggest bar-
gains are 3'et to be sold.
OUR PRICES RUN LIKE THIS:
EASr TERMS
FREE LESSONS
SCARF n
DRAY
These prices are for the live ones who
come in. No agents will call upon you to
make you come.
To make money you must hustle.
To save money you must be awake to a
bargain when it is to be had.
DULUTH MUSIC CO
30 EAST SUPERIOR STREET '
TECHNICAL EDUCATION' BIG
FIELD FOR UNIVERSITIES
Western Universities Pro-
gressing in Vocational In-
struction, Says Hutchins.
Michigan President Discusses
Modern Trend of College
Development.
President Harry Burns Hutchins of
the University of Michigan arrived in
Duluth this morning to visit the local
alumni of the institution. Today he Is
the guest of Rev. A. W. Ryan, an old
friend, and this evening he will be the
guest of the Head of the Lakes Michi-
gan Alumni Association at a banquet
at the Commercial club. He came to
Duluth direct from Ann Arbor and this
is the only city he will visit outside
of the state of Michigan on his present
trip. He will visit various points in
Michigan to meet with alumni associa-
tions and talk to them of the univer-
sity and its work.
"As the trend of population in this
country is Westward, so has the trend
of education been Westward, and that
is because of the great state univer-
sity system, in the adoption of which
Michigan was the pioneer, and which
nearly all Western states have
adopted," said President Hutchins this
morning. "Progress in education In
the West has been due to the fact that
the state universities and the state
school systems are democratic institu-
tions, the people's own institutions.
They have adopted progressive ideas
in education because they exist to
serve the people, who organized them
and who give them their life.
"The state universities have been
successful, because they are state uni-
versities and because they are founded
upon the system which contemplates
a complete consecutive system of edu-
cation through the primary schools,
secondary schools, high schools and
universities. The system, which Is
borrowed from Prussia, is best de-
veloped in the West and of course I
am proud of the fact that Michigan led
In the development.
The Two PIOBeem.
"The adoption of the Prussian sys-
tem in this country was brought about
largely through accident and largely
through the efforts of two men. The
names of those two men should be em-
blazoned in letters of gold in the halls
of every university and every high
school in what was the Northwest
Territory. Thev are Isaac M. Crary
and John D. Pierce. They were grad-
uates of Eastern universities and lived
in Marshall. Mich., in the early thir-
ties. A translation of the report made
to the French government by an ex-
pert who examined the school systeni
of Prussia fell into the hands of Crary.
He called his friend Pierce into con-
sultation and they decided to try the
system in Michigan.
"Crary was a member of the first
constitutional convention of Michigan
in 1835 and he drafted the constitu-
tional provisions relating to the uni-
HARRY BURNS HUTCHINS,
President of Michigan University.
versify. Pierce drafted the organic act
of the university. The constitutional
provisions hold today and the organic
act was so comprehensive that even
with the progre.ss we have made w«
have been unable to carry out tho
system outlined In that act. It is
really a wonderful work when exam-
ined by our present-day standards.
•'In 1810 Indiana had provided con-
stitutional provisions relating to a
university, but had evidently feared to
attempt to carry them out. Michigan
went ahead and demonstrated what
could be done and the other states have
followed and attained the results
which are now evident.
Minnesota's Mistake.
"Many states, Including Minnesota,
did not follow the Michigan plan of
making the university a constitutional
institution and I believe they made a
mistake. Under the Michigan system,
the regents are elected by the people
and are responsible to the people, not
to the legislature. The legislature has
power over the university only through
appropriations and dare not exercise
that power to withhold needed appro-
priations, or tlie wrath of the people
would descend on it. After the regent*
obtain the money, they may do with
It as they wish and the legislature
has nothing to say about It. States
in which the legislature and the uni-
versity boards have cla.shed over mat-
ters of policy would find the Michigan
system a relief.
Vocational B^acatlon.
"The development along educational
lines now of greatest Interest to an
educator, is that of vocational, or
technical education. Michigan has
made good progress In that respect and
I understand that Minnesota, has also.
I am a firm believer in vocational edu-
cation In the grades and high schools.
The percentage of grade school and
high school graduates which fltkds its
wav to the universities is necjftssary
small. The day wheo high school edu-
cation was regarded as purely prepara-
tion for higher eduoation has passed.
I believe that those who cannot carry
their education to the higher institu-
YouVe No Idea
how MUCH a Thurman Vacuum cleaner would
lighten the work of cleaning house this Spring !
If you had— you would have one.
That's just what w« want you to do — and here's
the way we propose to SHOW you just what a won-
derful dirt-eater the Thurman cleaner is: Let us serrd
one out to your 1iome and leave it there for two
days — long enough to clean house thoroughly. Our
demonstrator will come with it and show you just
how to get the best results. If you send it back, the
only charge will be five dollars for a cleaner home
than you ever thought possible, if you keep it, there
won't be any charge. TRY IT.
Some All- Week Specials—
8-inch Scrub Brush, regularly 10c — 5^.
5-foot Common Step Ladder, regularly $1.25 — 59^.
Parlor Broom, regularly 45c — 35f^.
MODEL Mop- Wringing Pail, regularly $1.25— 39c
Gold Dust, regularly 25c a package — 22^."
Self-Wringing Mop, regularly 40c — 33^. •
For Garden and Yard—
Steel wheel. Removable Side Gar-
den Barrow, strong and druabe,
regularly $3.50. All A#% OA
This Week 9^*^"
24-tooth Reversible Rake — see cut ^ ^ ^^
—regularly 50^; All This Wcek.l^f C
5r: Chi-Namel Demonstrator!
It will pay you to come in and ask questions!
'T won't cost anything and you may pick up some
valuable hints on home decoration. ANYONE can
handle CHI-NAMEL and get splendid results; it
is the IDEAL brightener of homes.
USE HICKORY PAINT OUTSIDE YOUR HOUSE-
IT GOES TWICE AS FAR AS COMMON PAINTS.
Paint and Varnish Brushes from 10^ up.
We handle Pratt & Lambert's 61 Floor Varnish.
1181120 W&r SUPERIOR ST. Duurm.Miifflb
The Best Equipped Tool Shop in the West—
EVERYTHING repaired.
Uons should be fitted for life's battle
before they are sent out to fight It.
"There are some problems which
must be solved in this connection.
Michigan is behind in the solution of
one of them and Wisconsin has taken
the lead. That is in the matter of ac-
ceptance of technical credits in admis-
sion to the university. The require-
ments of the University of Michigan
for admission are the same now as they
were before technical education was
carried to the extent it Is now, but 1
believe that will soon be changed.
Wisconsin has alfeady changed its sys-
tem. Thus if a student completes his
high school course, he has an equip-
ment for life's work that will serve
if he cannot carry his education
further, and if he can carry it further,
the work in the lower schools will
serve to gain him admission to the uni-
versity to continue his development."
» •
See the Dnluth Hardware Co.'s
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
CULVERTS MUST
BE REPUCED
Board of Public Works Makes
Inspections in Prepara-
tion for Season.
A. J. Meldahl of the board of public
works this morning inspected the cul-
verts on the Rice Lake road between
the poor farm and the city limits. He
found that the most of them were In
poor shape and will have to be replaced.
Ten are of wood construction and one
of iron. The new culverts will be put
In by the board this summer.
President Olson and George J. Bloedel
visited the gravel pit and other places
in the West end. They were puzzled to
find a proper sewer outlet for the resi-
dence section between Twenty-sixth
and Twenty-eighth avenues west. The
residents have petitioned for a sewer
with a proper outlet but have not fig-
ured out the outlet. No matter where
it Is run the board Is of the opinion
that It will be an expensive piece oi
work. The outlet sewer at Twenty-
second avenue west Is nearly filled up
because of the small fall and It la ex-
petced that It will take a crew of men
at least ten days to clear »t properly.
"None Nicer."
Huofs delicious fresh candles.
WARRANTS FOR
RESTAURANT MEN
Milk Inspector Wfll Have Law
Vitlators Arraigned
in ConrL
The police department today began
to serve the warrants which were
sworn out by Milk Inspector Grant E.
Owen for the arrest of restaurant pro-
prietors who were found to be selling
milk which was not up to the stand-
ard required by the state law.
Eleven places were found to be giv-
ing their customers milk which con-
tained less -than the required 3.5 per
cent of butterfat. The health depart-
ment has made several inspections of
the restaurants and tested samples of
milk which were found In them. At
those times the department officials
state that .they gave the people in
charge of Ihe places plenty of warn-
ing, and that hereafter where the milk
is found to be below grade, arrests
will be made. Some of the last tests
showed that milk was being sold
which contained as low as 1 per cent
butter fat. , ^. ,,.
Most of the places where the milk
was found below were of the cheaper
variety. It is claimed that the tests
were so low because the milk had been
skimmed after It had been delivered
by the dairyman.
• ,
For fine upholstering and select fur-
niture coverings, 'phone Cameron,
either 'phone.
acca0CfiC<BCCCCCCCCfi6CC£5J
The Burden of Cost
For fuel bears heavily / on every
man who haa to pay the bills.
April prices are the lowest of the
Beaton. Buy your next winter's
coal now and cave money. Be
sure and order
"PITTSTON" ANTHRACITE,
"The Coal of Quality."
PITTSBURGH COAL CO.
Comer Fourth Avenue Wc«t ftnA
Superior Street. Tctteiihopes 2100.
LAND OPENING TO
CAUSE LAWSUITS
Differences Over Exact Time
of Opening Ceded Red
Lake Lands Marked.
Crookston. Minn., April 18.— (Special
to The Herald.)— Developments since
Saturday bear out the Prediction that
the reopening of the ceded Red Lake
Indian lands will cause all kinds of
litigation. The attorneys are divided
over the proposition presented, some
believing that the regulations Issued
by the department of the Interior set-
ting the date of settlement upon the
land as April 15 and the elate of entry
as May 15 will be upheld, while others
contend that when the act was passed
bv congress on March 16 providing
that •hireafter" all said lands are re-
opened to entry wUl.hold In the courts
regardless of the action of the land de-
partment.
OUTLOOK BRIGHT
FOR NEXT YEAR
Theatrical Business Will Im-
prove, Says Manager
C A. MarshalL
C. A. Marshall has returned from a
business trip to New York with the be-
lief that the theatrical season is bound
to show an Improvement.
The prospects of a good crop year
and also the fact that some of the
Eastern railroads are letting contracts
for improvements, will, in the opinion
of Mr. Marshall, have a very good
effect on the business conditions of the
1911-12 season. ,, ^ „
While away Mr. Marshall arrangeo
for the appearance of Madame Bern-
hardt in this city and also for the local
appearance of "Madame Sherry,' one of
the reigning successes of ^»»e present
theatrical season. Mr. Marshall stated
today that 'Madame Sherry" had made
one of the greatest successes ever
known in this country, and was ijiak-
ing its three proprietors rich.
•Things are looking better In the
theatrical business." said Mr. Marshall.
"There are always a lot of actors in
New York, and the fact that there are
a great many there at the present time
should not be counted too strongly
against present conditions. I look for
a rather early closing of some of the
shows this spring apd a very good
start next fall, if the present promises
materialize. , ^ _
"They arc forming several strong
stock companies in New York. It
seems to be quite a fad down East, we
will keep the Maude Leone players
here during the summer, and have
some new plans for the fall season.
'The Store qf Quality."
_ Mid-Season Styles
Are coming in with the regularity of the tides these
days This stcre gets its quota of everything new as
soon as it appears in the fashion centers. We are in
constant touch with the sources of supply — apropos,
Mr. Silberstein is down in New York now; selecting
and sending on the latest modes in Garments and Hats.
Women who have delayed the selection of the season's
outfit will find here now the things that well drest,
modish people wear on Fifth Ave. and Broadway.
Prices, too, are the essence of moderation — that sensible
people will gladly pay.
Custom Tailored Suits, $50 to
$65.
Plain Tailored Suits, $27.50 to
$65.
Ornate Individua Types, $37.50
to $67.50.
Plain Street Coats, $19.50 to $50.
Touring Coats, $4«.50 to $45.
Novelty and Af:ernoon Coats,
$35 to $75.
Lingerie Waists, $1 to $8.75.
Tailored Waists, $1 to $6.50.
Wash Dresses $2.75, to $12.50.
Marquisette Dresses, $21.50 t6
$37.50.
Lingerie Dresses, $16.50 to $35.
Street Dresses, $19.50 to $39.50.
Afternoon Dresses, $22.50 to $75.
Evening Gov^-ns, $25 to $125.
Foulard Dresses, $22.50 to $75.
Dressy Blouses, $4.75 to $21.50.
Suit Waists, $8.75 to $16.50. ^
New Hats
Our own Millinery staff is turning out lots of new bonnets,
and with what delightful results— the most charming hats in
town, seems to be everybody's opinion. New Tailored Hats
arrive often from New York— sometimes three and four times
a week.
We use chiefly imported trimmings and take inspiration
from real Paris liats, so that one finds here delightful replicas
of the French, a ; domestic prices.
Women who haven't yet visited us have a treat awaiting
them— the prettiest hats they have seen this season.
D. H.. 4-18-'ll.
No matter whether the heads
in this town be soft or hard,
fat or round, we can hat them.
High, low, silk, crush, felt,
telescope — every kind of lid for
covering every kind of lad.
H you look for the latest
novelties, see the Columbia
iJatman.
Good hats at $1.50 and $2.
Columbia, Gordon, Hawes
Schoble at $3.
Stetson's, $3.50 and $5.
Knapp-Felt, $4.
Knapp-Felt De Luxe, $6.
and
•jCloUuns C*
At Third Avenue West
FOOT-NOTE:
Columbia |3.50 Shoes for Men and
Women.
;j
I
^ I >-
I
ARE YOUR VALUABLE PAPERS
where your family could easily find them if some acci-
dent should happen to you ? Rent a safe deposit box at
once for all your personal papers— $3.00 and up.
f he [Northern Rational gank
AL.WORXH BUIl^DINO.
W«
UAf^uwi£jl9 Providence BuUding,
Soperior StreeU
PPiNTePS^BiMDfPS^
For Quick Results Use Herald "Wants'*
'\^k^-w^K-
DEFECfiVE PAGE f
w
i«<—
>J1 il
^•^"••••■■-■•••i
THE DULUTH HERALD,
April 18. 1911.
MARINE NEWS
READY FOR
NAVIGATION
Boats Will Be Able
Pass the Soo This
Week.
to
Only Obstruction Left Is
the Ice in Mud
Lake.
Sault Ste. Marie. Mich.. April 18. —
(Special to The Herald.) — It is now-
believed that navigation will be opened
through the Soo passage this week,
and the first boat will find everything
In readiness at the locks.
The gates of the Poe lock were
Bwung yesterday. Chief p:ngineer
Green says that his department is
readv at anv time now and that the
■workings of the lock will not inter-
fere with the opening.
It mav be that the Great Lakes
I>redge & Dock company will have
some finishing up to do on the south
walls of the canal, but it is not ex-
pected that this will interfere with the
opening.
Kibbv and Shields ran the Leora M.
down the river as far as nine-mile
point this morning for the purpose of
taking observations. They encount-
ered no ice on the run and believe
that thev will be able to^ make the
"West Neebish by tomorrow.
The lighthouse tender Aspen broke
awav from her winter moorings below
tiie Weitzel lock this morning and
plowed her way through the ice to
open water. The Aspen will begin the
work of setting the aids to navigation
In the Soo river as soon as the condi-
tions will allow.
The steamer D. R. Harvey arrived
at Detour yesterday with coal for
Watson's dock, opening navigation to
that port. Todav Capt. Root will take
one of the Great L.ake tugs to the
locks for the purpose of breaking up
the Ice fields below the canal and free-
ing the tugs Xoble and West Neebish
and the government quarter hoa.t and
Bcows from their winter quarters. The
only hindrance to navigation in the
Soo passage appears to be at Mud
lake, where the ice is reported to be
from 14 to IS inches in thickness.
Notwithstanding' these conditions it Is
confidently believed that the river will
be opened during the week.
GETS ASHLAND CONTRACT.
HRST BOAT
LEAVKPORT
Steamer Harry Berwind Goes
to Port Arthur to Load
Grain.
Zenith Dredge & Dock Conipan> Is
Lowest Bidder for Work.
The Zenith Dredge & Dock corn-
pan v bid ll»cc per cubic yard for the
improvement work in the Ashland
harbor. The bid has been recommend-
ed for acceptance.
The gnvernment will spend $16,000
on dredging. There were five bidders
as follows; Zenith Dredge & Dock
company, llHc; Great Lakes Dredge
& Dock company, Chicago. 12c; Nor-
thern Dredge & Dock company. Du-
luth. 12M:c; Duluth Marine Construc-
tion company, 14c; Edwards Bros.'
Dredge company. Sault Ste. Marie, 13c.
PinSBURC, BOATS IN
COMMISSION APRIL 24.
From Cleveland comes the report
that the masters of the Pittsburg fleet
have received specific orders to have
their vessels ready for service April
24. It is also stated that the first of
the vessels will go into service next
A number of coal vessels will leave
Cleveland the first of the week for
I>ake Michigan or Lake Erie ports,
where coal will be loaded. It begins
to look at the present time as if the
early coal movement will be -heavier
than was at first supposed, though
many of the independents will be out
of the f-arly market until they at least
gain some idea of the plans for the
movement of ore.
Offices in Cleveland.
The G. A, Tomllnson company of
this citv has opened temporary offices
In the kockefeller building. Cleveland.
Mr. Tomlinson spent some time recent-
ly In Cleveland, and It was then that
the offices were opened.
k5ummitir^own
^^ and g
Qpnnxr
Get a
Man's
Shirt.
— Every Summit Town
and Country Shirt fits per-
fectly. It's roomy and com-
fortable. The collar thats
right on the shirt gives it
that dressy touch, making
it a soft shirt fit to wear
without a coat.
To be had in suitable
fabrics in coat style, at
all shops that sell shirts
Guiterman Bros., Makers
Saint Paul, Minn.
Opening of Regular Season
Depends on Clearing of
Soo Channels.
The first boat to clear the Duluth
harbor for the 1911 season of naviga-
tion was the Harry Berwind of the G.
A. Tomlin.son fleet. The big boat
cleared thi.s afternoon for Fort Wil-
liam, where a cargo of grain will be
loaded for Buffalo.
While the Berwind Is the first boat
to leave this port, the big Tomlinson
vessel may not get away for the trip
down the lakes before some of the
boats whlcli are here at the present
time. Tlie Berwind will not clear
from the Canadian Head of the Lakes
before advices liave been received that
the rfoo locks are open.
There is a large quantity of wheat
.It the Canadian Head of the Lake.-*,
and a number of vessels loading at the
elevators at the present time.
Though the Berwind is the first boat
to clear from the l)uluth harbor for
the opening of the 1911 season, it Is
very probable that ouite a fleet will
clear from this liarbor when dispatches
announce the opening of the ice-bouud
locks.
The Boland is loading with wheat
today, and the Wissahickon of the
Anchor line is also leaded. All of the
boats of the Mutual Transit company,
with the<'exceptlon of the North Sea
are loaded, and that boat vvlll be ready
to pull anciior any time after today.
The Buffalo of the Western Transit
company Is ready to start, while the
Hanna is loading with ore and will
start with the opening of the locks.
From the indications today It Is
thought that there will not be very
much ore going down until the Pitts-
burg boats start in. When asked the
luilook this morning a prominent la-
dependent man repliesl to the point,
"There Isn t any outlook." ^
According to the statement of the
traffic manager of one of the big job-
Ding and wholesale houses of Duluth,
there Is a strong inquiry for west-
bound package freight, as the trade
liere needs it badly. Several houses
are anxiously wailing for the package
freighters to get away for the flrst
trip of tile season up the lakes.
It is said that a big fleet will start
from the other end of the lakes as
.«!oon a.<! it i.'^ possible to get through.
The west-bound movement promises
to be heavy at the opening, which will
be radically different from the east-
botind movement for the first month of
tlie season, according to reliable opin-
ion and present indications.
•
One Conductor Helped Back to IVork.
Mr. Wilford Adams is his name, and
he writes: "I was confined to my bed
with chronic rheumatism and used two
Dottles of Foley's Kidney Itemedy with
good effect. The third bottle put me
on my feet and I resumed work as con-
ductor on the Lexington, Ky., Street
Railway. It will do all you claim In
cases of rheumatism." It clears the
blood of uric acid. All druggists.
everyone as "Uncle." He died in July,
1908.
Last evening the Methodist Sunday
school celebrated their arnual Easter
party, and the church parlors were
crowded with members of the school
above the primary classes, the smaller
children having oeen entertained in the
afternoon. Potato races, clothespin
races, throwing balls at a "nigger
baby," and other games were partici-
pated in. after which lunch was served.
Several prizes were awarded to the
winners In the sports.
Rev. C. H. Blake left today for Rib-
bing to attend the Methodist confer-
ence. Mr. Blake will present to the
conference a papeif ott "How to Present
a Sermon." ^^ ^ '
V Miss Baldwin, secretary of the state
library commission, -will spend Thurs-
day in Cloquet, fnd tlfct evening will
meet with the libtary bAard and discuss
problems of the licM library and means
by which the insti|tutii>n may be im-
proved. • *
Charles Gross, the secretary of the
boys' department" at M\e "Y", was in
Duluth Monday on business.
The second annual 6all of the letter
carriers of the city was celebrated
Easter Monday and was a successful
aftair The decorations were the pret-
tiest seen in the opera house for a long
time.
Cameron, the upholsterer, does the
work right. Up-to-date furniture cov-
erings. Both 'phones.
LEAVES LARGE FAMILY.
John Garceau of Red Lake Falls
Passes Away.
Crookston, Minn?) April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — John Garceau. aged
67 years, who resided with tiis son.
Theodore, a banker of Red Lal:e Falls,
died last Friday and was burie<l at Red
Lake Falls yesterday. He was the
father of eighteen sons, eight of whom
survive him. Ed Garceau of Tacoma
was present at the funeral, the other
sons being unable to be pres«-nt. He
had been a resident of Red La He Falls
for fifteen years. His flrst wife died
and his second wife was livir g apart
for some time past. The sons living
are Theodore. Edward, Fred, John, An-
thony, Joseph. Nelson and Louts.
•
BIr Neenah Paper Mill.
Neenah. Wis., April 18. — A'jcording
to the plans just drawn the new m||l
of the Lakeside Paper company,
which will be built in West Neenah,
will be one of the largest in the 8tat«.
To show what one item of consump-
tion is. the plant will draw l,500,0«t
gallons from the lower lake dalljr.
A crib w^ith filtering plant will b*
built in the lake. Construction work
will start in about a month.
Prices
Huofs.
Spring Plants.
right; big stock.
Victc
MUST SERVE
PRISON^TERM
Patrick H. Doyle's Appeal
From Long Sentence
Is Denied.
Prisoner Has Spent Half His
Life Behind the
Bars.
THE PALM ROOM
At the SPALDING
MOST DELIGHTFUL. AND LtTXURl.
OrS RESTAURANT IN DULUTH.
Patrick H. Doyle, alias Paddy
Doyle, alias George Howard, will have
to spend the next fifteen years at
the Minnesota state prison to which
institution he was committed some
time ago after pleading guilty to a
charge of breaking into a tailor shop
in the fVest end and stealing a
quantity of cloth, for Judge Dibell
this morning denied the motion of
Attorney Moer, who asked that judg-
ment be set aside on the grounds
that the statements in the indict-
ments were not full enough.
The motion was made and argued
at a special term of court held last
Saturday. Doyle had been taken to
Stillwater by Sheriff Meining a few
days previous to the time of the
making of the motion.
Doyle was indicted under the
habitual criminal act. He had served
time, it is said, in various state in-
stitutions. In fact, it was stated that
Doyle, who was about 38 years old,
had spent more than half his life
In reformatories and prisons of the
country.
Judge Dibell denied the motion and
in his memorandum states that the
claim of Doyle that the indictment is
invalid and void because it fails to
state the courts in which he was
convicted in former instances, does
not detract from the strength of the
indictment, although the court ad-
mits that the information might well
have been put in.
The judge states that the indict-
ment contains sufficient information
and that no advantage was taken of
the defendant. He had an attorney
at all times and he had two weeks in
which to think matters over before
entering his plea of guilty. He saya
there is no fair cause for reconsider-
ing the sentence.
CLOQUET NEWS NOTES.
Body Buried Three Years, Trans-
ferred to St. Panl Cemetery.
Cloquet, Minn.. April 18. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The remains of Herman
Martinke were exhumed yesterday
from the local cemetery and shipped to
St. Paul to be interred there. Mr. Mar-
tinke wfis an old cigar maker, em-
ployed here for years, and a character
about the city, kilown familiarly by
Open An
Account
Here
Easy Terms Corner First Street and _Third_Avenue>^Westi Low Prices
GREAT ECONOMY EVENT
Over 500 Iron Beds Go On Sale at Deep Price Cuts— Big Savings. Rugs and Curtains at Great
Price Reductions. Spring Drapery Material at Prices Lower Than You Ever Paid Before
All this week you can profit by such savings as are seldom offered by any retail store. You don't have to pay cash— All bargains
are sold on easy payments — this is the time of year when new beds, new rugs and draperies, etc., are being thought of, and this sale will
save Hundreds of Dollars to Duluth'.s economical buyers. Every price reduction- is genuinic.
IRON BEDS AT FROM A THIRD TO HALF LESS THAN REGULAR
75 Values
for 98c
Good substantial iron beds, in
white enamel, extra strong side
rails — plain design with square
shaped head and foot ends.
$3.00 Iron Beds $1.50
A good many stores get $4.50
for beds not as good as these.
White or green enamel.
$2.25 Values
for$1.10
You can save over half on such
beds as these — mostly in white
enamel — strong, well finished beds
at a big 'bargain.
$4.75 Iron Beds $2.75
In this lot you'll find some sur-
prising values at prices way below
what you generally pay.
$8.50 Values
for $3.95
Beds exactly like cut, in green, blue,
cream and white enamel, a wonderful
value — full size, heavy tubing, strong
side rails — and a bargain you cannot
equal elsewhere.
$15 Brass Trimmed
Beds $9.75
A variety ol' beautiful patterns, fine-
ly enameled — ornamented with gold
chills — brass tube trimming in the
head and foot. Extra heavy tubing
and side rails. Be sure and see these
bargains.
Easy
Terms of
Paymenf
It's a good
time to open
an account
here — we sell
a 1 1 bargains
advertised on
low, easy pay-
ments — ar-
ranged to suit
you. Profit by
this sale, i f
you need new
things buy
them now —
pay as you
find it conven-
ient— we will
be glad to ar-
range terms
with you.
$4.50 Iron Beds for $2.85
$3.60 Iron Beds for $2.25
$6.00 Iron Beds for $4.25
$6.50 Iron Beds for $3.50
$7.00 Iron Beds for $4.50
$8.50 Iron Beds for $5.50
$12.00 Iron Beds for. . .$6.00
$5.75 Iron Beds for $3.75
$8.50 Iron Beds for. .
$6.00 Iron Beds for..
$8.00 Iron Beds for. .
$13.00 Iron Beds for .
. $5.00
$3.00
. $4.00
.$7.50
$12.50 Iron Beds Now
Only $7.50
$17 Brass Trimmed Beds
For $12.00
Handsome
new designs,
the best grade
of baked o n
enamel. ' Extra
heavy tubing;
easy rolling
casters; . sev-
eral different
styles.
Extra fine
values, large
massive beds,
with steel tub-
ing, enameled,
with smooth
rubbed and
ba k e d on
enamel —
trimmed with
brass scroll
work.
$17.00 Beds now $12.00
$9.50 Beds now $5.50
$11.00 Beds now $6.50
$12.00 Beds now $7.50
$8.00 Iron Beds
Now $4.00
A number of
different styles
in various col-
ors of enamel,
Vernis Martin,
etc., at half
price. Every
one a big snap.
Most of these
are full size —
a few in 3-6.
SAMPLE MAT-
TRESSES AT BIG
PRICE SAVING.
We have a
few extra fine
mattressses, all
hair, and a
few fine high
grade felt mat-
tresses — the
ticks are a
1 1 1 1 e s o I led
from handling,
the prices have
been deeply cut
— they are bar-
gains. Every
one.
$24 Hair Mat-
tresses, 2 parts
— now $18.
125 Ventilated
Mattress, fan-
cy tick, »!».
$22 No - Tuft
P>lt Mattressf
$18.
$38 No - Tuft
felt mattness,
$29.
It Will Ray You to Buy Novir
»
RUGS, CURTAINS AND DRAPERY RAATERIAL AT SACRIFICE PRICES
If you are not quite ready, don't Jet that keep you from taking advantage of this sale — we will hold the goods for you until your
housecleaning or moving is over — the prices mean money in your pocket — Can you afford to pay more later?
FOR 9c>
We are offeringr wonderful values in
Colored Scrims, Sllkolines, Plain and Colored
Muslins. White and Bcru Nets. Go into any
store in the city and you'll pay at least 20c
a yard for similar good.s. Here is a saving
of 11 cents a yard, that certainly ought to
appeal to economical buyers.
FOR ISci
A yard you can buy material that ordin-
ary stores ask you 28c a yard for. In this
15c lot you'll find such rare values as col-
ored and barred scrims, flsh nets in splen-
did patterns, muslins and cretonnes.
FOR 29(
RARE VALUES IN MANDSOME CURTAINS
Many new patterns have been added to the piles and
piles of lace curtains that are now on sale at these special
prices. Last week dozens of thrifty housKJwives picked up
bargain after bargain at tiese special prices.
(5c
J A pair for lace
■ curtains in
one and two-
jp a I r lots —
I splendid values
] at about Half
Price.
"$1.95""
iFine assort-
ment of cur
tains you usu
ally pay $3.2j.
land $3.75 e.
pair for. Abo\i'
Half Price at.
this sale.
■$3-95""
J Very large se-
ll ection of
andsome new
[styles, w h I te
I or ecru. Everj'
]p al r a big
bargain.
i"$6.85 —
A lot of extra
I fine patterns —
I particularly we 1 1
made — extra
I quality, excellent
] designs and suit-
lable for any home.
You will find goods priced ordinarily up
as high as 60c a yard. A large range of fine
designs In high-class nets, muslins, scrims,
and Madras cloth — regular 50c and 60c quali-
ty. They go on sale at a price so low that
you ought not to miss this great opportunity.
OurSanitaryFeltMatresses
Are the best mattress values in the city — made of
fine, select clean felted cotton, in a bright, sunny,
sanitary factory, under most perfect conditioiita.
We use nothing but thie purest, cleanest materials:
extra heavy ticking — and guarantee every mkt-
tress just as represented — plain or fancy art ticks
— as you choose. Ask to see the fine, all-felt, sotft
thick mattresses we are selling at —
$6.50, $8.00 and $9.5Q
f, ? r •; T ■. •-•,*,''•
.C 5> -^
$8.75 for
$15 Rugs
Sixteen different patterns of
fine heavy Brussels Rugs — in
6x9 and 7-6x9 sizes. These rugs
are a big bargain at $8.75.
Select your new rugs during
this sale. Easy terms gladly
made.
At $10.75
We put on sale 25 patterns of
rugs in the very latest designs
and colors — 9xl2-foot sizes.
These rugs are of assorted
kinds — suitable for bedrooms,
sewing rooms, etc.
9x12 Brussels Rugs
$13.75
Twenty or more pjttterns
of these popular, good
wearing Brussels Rugs — In
small figured designs and
medallion effects. These
are the large room sizes —
priced in most stores from
$19.50 to $22.50 — Just the
thing for dining rooms or
living roms. We want jcou
to see our display of rugs
— ^the largest stock in the
Northwest.
200 Odd Small Sized
Rugs up to 6 ft. Long
Just the thing for hallways —
doorways — in front of the
dresser, etc. A lot of good pat-
terns and every one is a bar-
gain. Pick out some
of these at..
; IS a uai -
$2.75
YOU DON'T NEED
TO PAY CASH
If you have an account have
the things you want charged.
Pay a little down and a little
each month — Your credit Is
good here at all times.
— -
^t<
\
I**
1
N'"^
^
iiewi
ll^P»*H
*mm
■II !■■
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
FREE TO THE
RUPTURED
A N«w Horn* Cur« That Anyen* Can
Use Without Operation. Pain,
Danger or Loaa of Time.
I have a new Metliod that cures mpture and
] want you to use it at my expenic. 1 am Dot
trying to lell you a TruM, but offer you a cure
that stays cured and ends all truw-wearins aad
danger of strangulation forever.
No matter whether you have a dnele, double
©r navel rupture or one following an operation,
Uy Method la an absolute cure. No matter what
your age nor how hard your work, my Method
will certainly cure you. I especially want to
■end it free to those apparently hopeless cases
where all forms of trusses, treatments and opera-
tions have failed. I want to show everyone at
iny onn expense, that my Method will end all
rupture sufTenng and truss-wearing for all time.
This means better health, increased physical
ability and longer Lfe. Mv fre« offer is too
Important to neglect a single day. Write now
and bejrin your cure at once. Send no money.
Simply mail coupon below. Do it to-d^y.
FREE COUPON
Mark location of Rup-
ture on Diagram and
mail to
DR. W. S. RICE
134 Main St., Adams,
N. Y.
Ag*
Time Ruptured
Cau»e of Rupture
TO COMMAND
ATTENTION !
You must Vp well dressed. To be
well dressed you must wear tailor-
made clothes. To have the best fit
and latt.st stAles. you must
LET ME M.\KE VOUR CLOTHES
and vou will not fail to receive at-
tvntion. and I will give you the
highest satisfaction.
LEKVE— TAILOR
B(».\RO OF TR\I»E.
Third Avenae West Entwmec.
FREIGHT ENGINE
DECAPITATES MAN
J. Yargooa Instantly Killed and
His Companion Injured
Near Chisholm.
Chisholm. Minn., April 18.— (Special
to The Herald.) — As J. Varogna and
Frank Turdona, two Austrians, were
returning to their homes at Kittsvllle
from this village last night they were
struck by a Missabe freight engine.
Varogna's head was cut oft, while his
companion was badiy Injured. The
latter is at the Emergency hospital and
will probably recover.
Walking; Along Traek.
They were walking on the tracks of
the Great Northern railroad, which
parallels those of the Missabe road
near the roundhouse of the former
road. As the northbound Great North-
ern passenger approached, the men va-
cated the tracks for those of the Mis-
sabe, a fast freight was approaching
on this track from the same direction,
and before the men heeded its coming
the engine struck them, hurling Tur-
dona to one side of the track and
crushing Varogna beneath the wheels.
Varogna was married and leaves a
wife and two children. He conducted
a boarding house near KitflsvlUe, Tur-
dona was a boarder at the place.
HIBBING MAN
IS BADLY CUT
Going
MOTBER'S APPEAL
TO UNITED DOCTORS
Brings Little Son Hundreds
of Miles to Be Cured By
Great Specialists.
Her voice was tremulous "with emo-
tion as she valked into the office of
Dr. Duckworth, the great nerve spe-
cialist who is a member of the staff
of the United Doctors who have their
Institute in Duluth located on the
third floor of the Columbia building,
and she asked in tones in which hope
and despair were mingled: "Doctor,
will vou please examine my little boy
and tell me if there is any possibility
of curing him?'
The lady was Mrs. John Beeres,
and while the doctor was examining
her little boy she said for publica-
•'i live near Brandon, Manitoba,
Canada, which is several hundred
miles from Duluth. My little boy,
who is eight years old, received a
paralytic stroke when he was four
years of age and it rendered his right
hand and arm practically useless. He
has never been able to raise his hand
above a level and cannot grasp any-
thing with his fingers. We have been
doctoring him for four years and
have employed the best physicans we
could hear of. Finally my aunt, who
lives in Illinois, wrote me of the won-
derful cures that were being made
by the United Doctors in Illinois so I
wrote them at their Danville, Illi-
nois Institute aa 1 did not know they
had an institute in Duluth. They
answered my letter and told me to
bring my little boy to Duluth as I
could get the same treatment here.
I was very glad to do so as it
saves me the long trip to Illinois and I
would have gone, for I would go any-
where or do anything to have my
little boy cured of thia dreadful dis-
ease."
During this recital Dr. Duckworth
had been examining the boy and
pronounced his disease paralysis
from uraemic poisoning, due to weak
kidneys. Dr. Duckworth commenced
operating upon the boy with medi-
cines and within a halt hour the
little fellow was able to put his hand
to his head, something he had not
done for four years.
"We will cure your boy for you, '
then said Dr. Duckworth, "you can
take him home and treat him there
with our medicine and he will get
well." With tears of joy and many
exclamations of "God bless you and
your work, doctor," Mrs. Beeres de-
parted to make room for other wait-
ing patients.
The grand free offer of free ex-
amination and free treatment, except
for medicine and incidentals, is open
to all who call before April 20th, to
the United Doctors' institute on the
third floor of the Columbia building.
The institute is open every day In
the week also every evening from 7
to 8 o'clock, and on Sundays from 10
to 12 a. m. Any sick person Is safe
In going to see the United Doctors
for if they cannot cure you they will
frankly tell you so and not accept any
of your money for the examination.
Attacked By Unknown Man
With Knife While
Upstairs to Bei
Hibbing, Minn., April 18. — (Special to
The Herald.) — John Korpl. a saloon
keeper of Pine street was badly
stabbed Sunday night by an unknown
foreigner supposed to have been a
Finn. The saloon keeper had Just
closed up his saloon, and was going
upstairs to bed when the assailant
rushed up the stairs and made a lunge
at him with a knife. Hearing the sound
he turned around in the dimly lighted
stairway an^ made a grab for the
knile as he saw the gleaming blade
descending. In trying to ward off the
blow he was so terribly injured in the
left hand and wrist that he may even
never be aole to use his hand again.
Owing to the length of time before
medical aid was called it is said to bi
almost a miracle that the roan did
not die from loss of blood as the ar-
teries were severed above the hand.
As soon as the police heard of the oc-
currence they put in a hurry call for
the ambulance and the man's life was
saved by a very narrow margin. Ef-
forts are being made to find the per-
petrator of the crime.
GILBERT MEN HOPEFUL.
for the new depot. Definite newg with
regard to the removal of the Great
Northern depot will probably be given
out within a few days on the return
of General Supt. Philbiri after his con-
ference with the Missabe officials in
Duluth last week.
MRS. G. BRADEN AND DESCENDANTS.^
Eveleth Minn., April 18.— (Special to The Herald.)— :^oqr^keneratlon8 of
one family all living here are shown in a photograph just taken "by the t^veietn
studio. On the right is shown Mrs. G. Braden. aged 74, a .great grandnriother;
back of her stands her daughter, Mrs. J. H. Steuer, while sealed is the latter s
daughter, Mrs. M. E. Solve, holding her daughter. Bernice Esther Solve, aged 7
months. The family recently arrived on the range from the- West, and have
resided at Virginia for some time. Mrs. Braden and Mrs. Ste^r now re^de
here on Jackson street, while Mrs. Solve and daughter live at •Virginia. The
members of the family are all in good health,
mining • company. ' -Te^erday Health
Commissioner Dr. N. C. Bulkley and
City Clerk D. P. Mclntyre visited the
site of the old dumping ground and
viewed the land In that vicinity to de-
cide on a suitable location for the new
dump. It was decided to locate the
new dump a few blocks south of the
present dump, in the direction of the
Fayal mine.
ELY CHURCH CONCERT.
OFFICIALS WHO
RUN CHISHOLM
Trustees and Others in Charge
of Growing Village on
Mesaba Range.
Chisholm, Minn., April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — ^^The water was turned
into the big 30C,000-gallon steel village
water tank, just completed, yesterday,
but an accident interfered with open-
ing operations. A six-inch plug was
blown out by the pressure and before
the escape of water could be checked
50,000 gallons or so flowed away. The
force drove the plug eight inches into
the ground. A new plug was secured
and the tank safely filled. It will stand
a few days while the leaks are being
caulked; then, in about ten days, the
water will be served through this
reservoir. The tank cost-about |20,C00.
Chlaliolm Village Offlcialct.
The following are the village offi-
cials of Chisholm who have charge of
all departments of this growing range
community; President, Dr. E. H. Nel-
son: trustees, Charles E. French, C. A.
Munro and William Ritchell; recorder,
Lee Rell; deputy recorder. Frank Aus-
tin; treasurer, F. W. Hunt; attorneys,
Woods and Knapp; municipal judge,
W. A. Masters; municipal clerk, George
K. Trask; health officer. Dr. A. B.
Kirk; superintendent of water works,
C. J. Sullivan; village engineer, F. C.
Lang; street commit-sioncr. Flip Har-
rington; chief of police, M. Simonson;
chief of fire department, Thomas OCon-
noTi poor commissioner and court of-
ficer, W. E. Talboye.
Members of the water, light and
power commission — Charles Neally, L.
W. Winn. Wniard Bayliss.
Purchasing committee — Lee Rell, C
E. French, C. A. Munro.
Sewer and street committee — Dr. E.
H. Nelson, William Ritchell. C. A.
Munro.
Sub-auditing committee — Lee Rell, C.
A. MunrOj C. E. French.
Cemetery committee — Lee Rell, Will-
iam Ritchell, C. A. Munro.
The council meets every second and
fourth Wednesday in the village hall at
3 p. m. The water, light and power
commission meets the first Tue.sday of
each month in the council cliamber of
the village hall at 2 p. m.
The wages set by the council for
common laborers is 12.25 per day; for
man and team $5 per day.
|75 per month, thus saving
$50 per month.
The fire department was given the
right to hold six practices; a year, each
man turning out to be paid $1 per
meeting. The fire chief vas Instructed
to inspect the public buildings in re-
gard to their compliance with the fire
protection laws. P. J. MiicAlpine, city
clerk was given until May 1, to have
his books up to date.
CURRENT ELY EVENTS.
Mrs. Toal Entertains at Cards —
Personal Mention.
SAVES TIME AND ENERGY
Lightens All Housework
SAPOLIO
Cleans, Sconrsy Polishes
from cellar to garret
WORKS WrrHOUT WASTE
OLD SORES CURED
A1X£M'S ULCBRINIS SAL,VjB.
Cures Chronic Cloers, Bone Ulcers. Tarlcose
fleers. Scrofulous Ulcers, Mercurial Ulcers,
ever Sores. Gangrene. Blood Poisoning,
Wblte Swelling, Milk Leg. Poisoned Wounds,
All sorc0 01 long slandlDg. PotilUrely nerer fall»
Drftw* oat all poleon. Baves expense Mtd sufferlnK
Cares pennaoect. ■ For MUe by dniiTKlits. JUlU tbe. tm
•Bil«t.W J.r.ALL£MIU£DiCUIBOO^flX,PAOUMl0
Sangaine That Mining Operations
Will Be on an Average.
Gilbert, Minn^ April 18. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The outlook for a good
business season in Gilbert is not overly
bright, but the business men are not
looking for a particularly dull season.
The Petitt mine, one of the largest in
this vicinity, will close down soon for
a period of three month.s, owing to
lack of stock pile room. This mine will
sink a new shaft this summer. It is
reported that the Oliver Iron Mining
company will do nothing at their open
pit mine here and the fact that eight
of their locomotives have been shipped
to the Canisteo pit at Coleraine, lends
color to this report. The Schley, Ge-
noa and Elba mines are all working
full force, however, and the Hobart
mine will be reopened. This mine has
been closed for several months, owing
to litigation.
THREE~CHURCHES FILLED.
Chisholm Edifices Unable to Accom-
modate Easter Throngs.
Chisholm, Minn., April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The three churches of
Chisholm were packed to their capacity
on Easter. St. Joseph's church and the
Servian orthodox were so overcrowded
that many worshipers stood with un-
covered heads on the sidewalks, not be-
ing able even to get into the vestibule.
Rev. Mr. Keast preached in the M. E.
church in the morning from the text,
"But if there be no resurrection of the
dead, then is Christ not risen; and if
Christ be not risen, then is our preach-
ing vain and your faith is also vain."
(I Cor. XV., 13-14.) He was listened
to with rapt attention and the audience
was well pleased with the sermon.
The membership of the local church
is pleased because of the suitable edi-
fice they now have for their services.
The Sunday school rendered its
Easter program in the evening. Those
present say it was the best of its kind
ever rendered by the Chisholm Sunday
school and the attendance was a record
breaker.
MANYFAVOR BUSS.
Virginia School Head's Retention Is
Generally Discussed.
Virginia, Minn., April 18. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The question of the re-
tention of Supt. Lafayette Bliss, the
head of the schools, which has been a
fruitful theme for discussion at the
meeting of the Civic league at the new
technical high school last night, over
which M. A. Murphy presided and F. C,
Whiting was secretary. When the
question of indorsing the superintend-
ent and urging his retention was put
to a vote only a few in the large audi-
ence voted in the negative.
Mayor Hawkinson said that he was
pc-sonally friendly to the superintend-
ent, but he believed he had mixed too
much in local politics. ...
R J McGhee of the school board
said he thought Bliss was a good edu-
cator. , , ^.
Judge Montague discussed the water
and light plant, saying he believed the
city should buy it. Mayor Hawkinson
said he would favor such a purchase if
an Investigation would show such a
move justified.
Rev. Henry B. Neff of the Presby-
terian church also spoke.
DEBATE AT UNIVERSITY.
will be the ••commission form of city
government."
JURORS ARE DRAWN.
Men Who Will Serve on Grand and
Petit Juries.
Hibbing, Minn., April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.)— U. G. Halloway. clerk of
the range district court, has drawn the
following on the grand and petit jur-
ies to report at Virginia, April 25:
Petit jury— Hibbing, Thomas Cana-
naugh, Joseph B. Zant, Fred Klinelme,
David B. Butchart, W. S. Hardy,
Charles Calligan, John Kleffman; Du-
luth. John Jefferson, Tyler D. Knapp,
John Dahl; Chisholm, V. P. Erfpamer
Frank Gouge, E Marteis; Eveleth, Matt
Butler, William Chappie, T. Bargh, Nels
Everson. William Welsh; town of In-
dustrial, Nick Ll.cjjl.ynestad.
Grand jury— Hibbing, W. L. Gallo-
way. M. Rogalsky. W. J. Ryder, Harrv
Angst, Rupert Swinnerton. Fred Khert,
Bvfleth, D. W. Freeman. Charles Jes-
more, A. G. Klnston, George W. Dor-
merf Duluth. Charles L Harris Charles
J Hall D A. Reid, George A. Gray,
John Gogins; Chisholm W H Jalb
J. J. Hayes; Virginia. R. A. Haldnge,
W B. Shaver, F. E. Lester, C E. Hin-
drick and F. H. Gilmers.
EVELETH CURRENT"nOTES.
Eveleth, Minn., April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.) — A large crowd attended
the sixth annual Easter ball given by
the Eagles last evening at Elks hall.
A E Pfremnier, formerly of Hib-
bing now conducting a hotel at Miami,
Fla.,' was here yesterday.
Frank E. Carpenter, former manager
of the Othello theater, returned bun-
day evening from a business visit to
Great Falls and other Montana points.
Attorney John Peterson of the firm
of McGllvray & Peterson, is on the sick
list at his home on Jackson street.
School reopened today. Many teach-
ers who have been spending the ii^as-
ter vacation elsewhere returned last
evening.
J. Beatty and Miss Madden have ac-
cepted positions at the News office.
The street sprinkler made its first
appearance yesterday. Last year it was
operated by the firemen but is now in
charge of the street department.
R L. Browning, who had an argu-
ment with Officer Zidar Sunday at a
local restaurant, was tried yesterday
by Judge Prince for disorderly conduct
and fined $5 and costs which he paid.
Mayor Jacob A. Saarl, chairman of
the Associated Charities, plans on call-
ing a meeting of the Associated Chan-
ties soon to consider the large volume
of business on hand.
The Pilot lodge has abandoned their
quarters at the Runeberg hall and now
meet at the Methodist church parlors.
"Out in The Street." the three-act
temperance play, that is being re-
hearsed by the lodge, will be given at
either the Walonlahde hall or Monitor
hall.
SAMPLE WHITE WAY
STANDARD INSTALLED.
Eveleth, Minn., April 18. — (Special to
The Herald.) — A sample standard was
installed on G-rant avenue between
Pierce and Jones streets, by the John
Swanson Company of Virginia, which
secured the contract to install the
white way along Grant avenue. The
post was installed for the council's
approval and it is expected that the
contract between the city and the
company for the work will be approved
at the council meeting this evening.
William Killbrlde of Marquette.
Mich., who laid over 50,000 feet of
cement walk, last summer will soon
commence work to complete his con-
tract.
The report of Professors Hierch and
Seastone of the engineering depart-
ment of the Wisconsin university, who
recently examined the local water
works, has been received and will be
read to the council this evening.
•
Select TVevT Rveleth Damp.
Eveleth, Minn., April 18. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The city is at present
without a dumping ground, as the old
Spruce dump has been fenced in by the
Ely, Minn., April 18.— (fJpecial to The
Herald.) — Mrs. T. W. ToiJ entertained
her friends at five hund-ed yesterday
afternoon. Six tables \rere occupied
for a series of games, after which
honors were awarded to Mrs. A. A.
Ayres and Mrs. J, D. Osjorne. A de-
licious luncheon concluded the after-
noon's entertainment.
Ben Horovltz arrived Saturday from
St. Paul, for a few days' visit with his
family.
A. J. Fenske arrived home Saturday
from his week's stay in Duluth.
Mr. Fred Mockros o .' White Iron
Lake, spent his vacatio;i in the city
visiting friends.
A daughter arrived at the home of
B. L. Jenks on Saturday:
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hillman spent
Easter with Mrs. Hillmane parents in
this city.
Miss Nettle Sheridan vrent to Tower
Monday afternoon to att<nd the Easter
ball in that city.
Walter Eisenach returned to his du-
ties at the state university on Monday
morning.
Miss Georgenia Powell of Eveleth
has been the guest < f Miss Ethel
Shepherd during her vacJition.
Miss Theo Zickerick of Eveleth has
been visiting at the hom? of Dr. O. W.
Parker.
Miss May Brown of Avrora. who has
been visiting friends in tde city during
the past week, returned to her home
Sunday.
•
HibbloR Dmnkii Fined.
Hibbing, Minn., April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.) — John Mill* r was fined In
municipal couft J15 and $4.75 costs or
twenty days in the ccunty jail for
being drunk and trying to get away
from a police officer when finally ar-
rested, and sundry oth« r misdemean-
ors.
John Hoff. who was arrested for
being drunk, in court yesterday ad-
mitted having had "a coi;ple of drinks."
The judge dealt llghUy 'vith him, feel-
ing (hat the man was not a. conffrmed
drunkard, and on his piomislng to go
back to work, he was alowed to go on
suspended sentence.
«
Ely Mother'* Cln » Meet.
Ely. Minh., April 18. — i Special to The
Herald.) — The Mother's :lub will meet
Friday afternoon, April 21, at the Cen-
tral school. A fine proicram has been
arranged and the atteidance is ex-
pected to be large.
TO PROLONG THE DEBATE
the city j Representative Lenroot of Wlsconsla,
an Insurgent Republican, spoke at
length against the bill. Representa-
tives Harrison of New York and Peter»
of Massachusetts, Democratic member*
of the ways and means committee, and
Representative Crumpacker of Indiana,
Republican, advocated its passage. Mr.
Lenroot gave an emphatic statement
of insurgent policies and views. Ques-
tioned by the Democrats, he declared
that he opposed the agreement fcecaiiso
he believed it Increased many dutiea.
He declared that if the Democrats were
sincere in their desire to put more ar-
ticles on the free list, they would at-
tach the free list to the reciprocity
bill. He accused them of wanting the
president to veto their free list bill
when it passed, so as to make political
capital for them.
"The progressive Republicans have
never been free traders," said Mr. Len-
root. "I challenge anyone to point to
any speech made by a progressive Re-
publican advocating free trade. I stand
for a protective tariff measuring dutiea
by the difference of cost of production
at home and abroad."
■'Do you endorse your party's action
in passing the Payne tariff bill?"
asked Mr. Cullop of Indiana.
"I do not," said Mr. Lenroot.
"Do you consider It a violation of
your party's pledge?"
"I do," said Mr. Lenroot. "If my
party had kept Its pledge there would
have been a minority upon your side
of the house instead of a majority."
(Continued from Dage 1.)
Two Harbors and St. Paul Teams
Contest April 28.
Minneapolis, Minn., April 18. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The state cham-
pionship debate between Two Harbors
and Humboldt, St. Paul, high schools,
will be held April 28 at 8 p. m., in
the state university chapel, as an-
nounced yesterday by Prof. F. W.
Rarig. president of the Minnesota High
School Debating league. The league
directors agreed that the principals of
the two schools participating in the
final debate should select the place for
It Principal H. E. Flynn of Two Har-
bors, and D. Lange of St. Paul, chose
Uxe university. The subject for debate
Will Be Given By Presbyterian
Ladies Next Thursday.
Ely, Minn., April 18. — (Special to The
Herald.) — Next Thursday evening the
ladies of the Presbyterian church will
give a concert for a church benefit
at the Elco theater. "T^ie concert will
begin at 8:30. Jin elegant program
has been arranged as»folIows:
Piano duet — "Tne Dragon Fighter".
Mi.sses Jane and ITia. Wood.
Vocal solo — "The Danza"
• Miss Stringham.
Reading — "That Old Sweetheart of
Mine''
Miss Jane Poole.
Trombone solo
Mr. Wilson.
Vocal solo — "My Ain Folk"
Mrs B. O. Strachan.
Quartet — "Loves Old, Sweet Song" . . .
Male Quartet.
Vocal solo — Selected
Miss Fannie Staples.
Piano solo
Miss Doris Knutson.
Vocal duet— ^"Home to Our Moun-
tains"
Mrs. Strachan and Miss Stringham.
Farce — "A Broken Idol"
HIBBING DISTRICT COURT.
Some Actions Are Being Disposed
of By Judge Hughes.
Hibbing, Minn., April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The plaintiff received a
judgment of $61.03 against W. J.
Ryder, the Hibbing furniture dealer in
the case of Frank Himes vs. W. J.
Ryder, tried yesterday In district court.
The claim was for moneys alleged to
be due on building contract for the
furniture man. This was the first case
taken up after the Easter adjournment.
In the case of Dan Kakkenen vs. the
Shenango Furnace company, the
plaintiff received a verdict of 193.53.
After the consideration of this case
the court again adjourned until this
morning when the elVil calendar was
continued. The following Hibbing men
have been called for grand jury service
at the opening of tl^e district court. in
Virginia on the 25th^lnBt.: W. L. Gal-
loway, M. Rogalsky, .Harry Angst, Ru-
pert Swinnerton, W. J. Ryder and Fred
Khort.
senatives Hinds, Fordney, Lenroot and
Crumpacker.
The senate has adjourned until
Thursday.
RcpubllcaoH Against Bill.
"After a thorough c.invass of the
Republican membership of the house,
I can state positively that a substan-
tial majority of the party will vote
against the Canadian reciprocity bill."
said Representative D^yight of New
York, the Republican w.ilp, last night.
This will not prevert Its passage
even though a number of the Demo-
crats follow the course now indicated
and vote against the mujorlty of their
party. When the reciprocity bill passed
the house in the last session, a ma-
jority of the Republicans voted against
it. and the Democratic majority in
favor of it has greatly iicreased in the
new congress.
Five speakers participated in the de-
bate yesterday. Representative Ford-
ney of Michigan, a Republican member
CHAMBERLAIN
HAS RESIGNED
Paul F. Chamberlain, the general
manager of the Walsh properties, has
resigned.
He will be succeeded by E. F. Bradt.
Mr. Chamberlain and Mrs. Chamberlain
Intend to travel before Mr. Chamber-
lain returns to this locality. He has
had several offers from mining com-
panies on the Vermilion range and It
is said to be probable that he will ac-
cept one of them. Before becoming
associated in the management of the
Walsh properties Mr. Chamberlain waa
In charge of the Soudan mines of the
United States Steel corporation.
Mr. Bradt was with the Cleveland
Cliffh interests for fifteen years and haa
had charge of mines on the Mesaba at
various periods.
BYRON LETTERS STOLEN.
COUNCIL HAS
LIVELY MEET
Warm Debate By Two Har-
bors Body Ending in Re-
moval of City Engineer.
Two Harbors, Minn., April 18. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The meeting of
the council last evening was the most
interesting of the new body.
W. B. WoodwarB, justice of peace,
presented personal bonds to the amount
of J500. which were accepted. An in- | of the ways and means committee, and
vitation was received from the city
Thieves Rob San Franeiseo Book
Store of l^aluable Relics.
San Francisco, Cal., April 18. — Orig-
inal letters and manuscripts of Lord
Byron, a prayer book, the gift of By-
ron to Mary Anne Musters, and a copy
of a letter written by Madame Maln-
tenou, mistress of Louis XIV. were
stolen Saturday night from a case In
the book store of Paul Elder. They
were valued at »2,000.
The stolen manuscripts were part of
a collection brought Irorrt England re-
cently by Arthur Marlow from the
Northampton bindery of Blrdsall S$
Co. Several letters of the original
papers of Shelley and Lamb were in
the case but were untouched.
ALMONT,N. D./mAN
NEW U. S. COMMISSIONER.
Fargo. N. D., April 18. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Judge C. F. Amidon ol
the United States court has named J.
H Anderson of Almont, N. D., as the
United States court commissioner for
that section of the country. The new
commissioner Is well known in Morton,
Stark and Mercer counties and Is as-
sistant cashier in the bank at Almont
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Cures -All Sprins AHmcnta
Mrs. Marlon Bruce, Cumberland, Me.,
-pyrites; "I have taken Hood's Sarsa-
parilla for a great many years, and I
•think it the best blood medicine In the
world. I take it both spring and fall.
This last winter and spring I was in
very poor health. I was weak and had
lost all my appetite and I was all run
down. As soon as I began to take
Hood's Sarsaparilla my strength came
back and my appetite returned. I am
now well, and do my housework, and
longer have that tired feeling."
Get it today In usual liquid form or
chocolstted tablets called SarBatAba.
GRAND RAPIDS MAN
MARRIES BUHL GIRL.
Aitkin, Minn.. April 1%— Martin B.
Nygard of Grand Rapids and Miss
Helma Christina Anderson of Buhl were
married Monday at the Methodist par-
sonage In this village. Rev. A. L. Rich-
ardson performing the ceremony. The
couple left in the afternoon for the
West and will spend their honeymoon
on the Pacific coast. They will be at
home at Grand Rapids after the first
of June. V
HIBBING WOODMEN
HAVE SUCCESSFUL DANCE.
Hibbing. Minn.. April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The annual Easter Mon-
day ball held last night In the armory
by the Modern Woodmen of America
was a great success. The hall was
well filled. The decorations were tase-
ful and artistic. The music was sup-
plied bv the Venetian Harp orchestra,
an Italian aggregation of seven pieces,
and the selections played were all that
could be desired. Owing to there being
no dining room accommodations at the
city hall, the usual midnight lunch had
to be dispensed with, but some excellent
punch was passed around and greatly
appreciated by the thirsty dancerd.
Dancing started shortly after 8:30 and
within an hour the floor was filled, and
the last couple reluctantly left the floor
long after 2:30. Great credit is due
the committee for the smoothness with
which the affair was oarriod out, their
names were: E. L. Evkrett, O. W. Ran-
dall. John Roberts, i^ L. Downle and
H. Richter. i
MAKING PROGRESS ON
NEW LINE TO HIBBING.
Hibbing, Minn.. April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The xontraotors are
making rapid progr&s building the
new entrance into Hibbing for the
Missabe road, and the, cut for the new
line is now finished. . The cut. which
varies from about flv* to twelve feet,
was made in a very short time by the
"Winston & Dear compf»y. and prepara-
ticna ar« now eolnc ;pn war the site ,
librarian to attend the round table
meetings which are to be held at the
library. The bond ol a licensed city
plumber was fixed at $1,000, and L. R.
Erickson was granted a license as
city plumber, with the same privileges
as others. The matter of choosing a
city scavenger and the burning of the
dumping grounds occupied a great deal
of attention. The applications of Frank
Peterson, Herman Anderson, Oscar
Beckman and Louis Holm forHhe posi-
tion of city scavenger were received,
but no action was taken. It was decided
to advertise for bids for burning the
duniping ground, the two lowest bids
I to be accepted. The scavenger was to
be required to furnish bonds to the
amount of $250. It was suggested that
instead of having only one scavenger,
as in the past, thereby giving him a
monopoly, two scavengers be appointed,
who shall draw up a contract with the
city which shall guarantee the proper
performance of duties.
Bond Bid* Laid Over.
The matter of purchasing bonds of
the city treasurer to the amount of
$10,000 was taken up. The bids of
William E. Tracy, D. H. Lawrence and
John A. Barton were received, but no
action was taken, the matter being re-
ferred to the auditing committee. The
bids of William E. Tracy and John A.
Barton called for the same rate, $76 for
two years, while that of D. H. Law-
rence called for only $45 for two years.
It was thought that there was some
mistake, since the three companies rep-
resented charge the same rate. The
auditing committee was Instructed to
Investigate more fully and report at
the next meeting.
It was reported that the lot of John
P. Paulson on the comer of Fifth and
Cedar street, which is about three
feet above the sidewalk was caving in
and covering the sidewalk with mud.
The matter was referred to the side-
walk committee. A discussion took
place In regard to the bridge at Sev-
enth avenue underneath the Iron
Range tracks. It was recognized that
it was a place of danger and in order
to correct it. two ways were proposed:
One to bridge the creek on the south
side and the other to excavate under
the tracks on the north side. The
council as a whole will visit the place
next Sunday morning at 9 a. m. and
also at the same time they will Inspeot
the septic tank. The street commis-
sioner reported the work was under
way to fix the bridge on Pine street.
Bids received for the printing from
Theodore Johnson & Company and
A. D. Lacy Wood, manager and editor
of the Iron Port-Advocate. The city
attorney was called upon as to the
legality of newspapers. The council as
a committee of the whole will visit
the two printing plants next Friday
evening at 8 p. m.
Lively Tilt Over Elr.
Dr. E. P. Christenson made the open-
ing shot In the matter of selecting a
new chief engineer. At the last meet-
ing of the council Aaron Ely had been
appointed chief engineer at a salary of
$125 per month and S. S. Irwin, city
electrician at a salary of $110. Dr.
Christenson moved that the action of
the council in appointing Elg be re-
scinded. President Esse ruled the mo-
tion out of order on the ground that
the chief engineer was an official and
could therefore only be removed for
cause. Christenson appealed from the
decision of the chair. City Attorney
Fowler gave it as his legal opinion
that the chief engineer was only an
employe of the city and could there-
fore be removed at any time. The
council sustained his opinion. The
question was then debated. President
Esse making a short speech, injecting
much of the bitter sarcastic and even
personal into his remarks. At length
he put the matter to a vote with the
result that council rescinded Its action
by a vote of 4 to 3. There seemed to
be a split In the Socialist camp, for
the appointment of Elg was a part of
the Socialist program, but H. J. Irwin
voted in opposition. S. S'. Irwin was
then nominated for the new combina-
tion office of city elficUicIan ancl
superintendent of the water and light
plant. Esse attacked S. Irwin while
H. J. Irwin defended him. Esse then at-
tempted to attack the character of H.
J. Irwin, himself, with the result that
one of his statements was branded a
lie. On the matter being put to a
vote, 9. Irwin was appointed. 4 to 3.
He was given the power of appointing
a stationary engineer at a salary of
Millinery i'or Mist, Matron & Mother
Diversity of styles suited to all. whether it be the little miss of
6 summers or the elderly woman of 60 years. There's striking be-
oomingness to "P. & W." millinery that wins recognition and ap-
proval at first mention of the low prices. Attractive hats for little
folks as low as $1 jaunty creations for older girls, misses and ma-
trons at $2.98, $3.50, $5, $6 and $7.50 and up.
Let Us Tailor Your Suit to Measure
Our Fifth Avenue designer is turning out some remarkably
stylish suits that are pleasing discriminating women. Suits of such
charming individuality and faultless tailoring are not to be had any-
where for so little money as here.
You select your material from our complete stocks and we make
the suit to your m«;a8ure (guarantee you perfect fit and satisfaction)
furnishing all llninjfs, findings and fabrics for $32.50 and up.
TA1IX)RING DEPARTMENT THIRD FIX)OR.
Stylish Shoes for the Toddlers
Dainty and comfortable footwear for the little folks
— footwear suited to little feet, correctly fitted by an
ercpert fitter. Bring the little ones In, for —
Patent leather Roman strap sandals, $1.35.
Patent leather button shoes, white, pink, blue and
red kid tops, sizes 2 to 6, at $1.50.
. Ankle ties, patent leather, suede and tan, sizes 2 to
6, at $1 and $1.50. , . ^ ,.,. w .i
75c SboeH, (tOci Soft vicl kid shoes, with hand-
turned flexible sole, sizes 2 to 6, regular 75c values,
at (toe.
Savings in Spring Rugs and Curtains
Bright new curtains and rugs of unique and original patterns and
prettiest colorings. Complete assortments priced at material sav-
ings. Come and see!
$32.50 WUton Velvet Rugs $23.50: Newest!
patterns and color ideas, seamless styles, with [
soft velvet nap and rich Oriental lustre, size
9 by 12 feet, worth $32.60, special at $23.50.
$2.95 Axmlnstop Rugrs $1.89: 27 by 64 and
27 by 60 Axminstrr rugs, pleasing floral and
Oriental patterns, long, soft nap, worth $2.95,
special at $1.89.
White, ecru a;ad Arabian madras, Brus-
sels, Cluny and Cable net curtains at, pair,
5»c to $6.75.
Complete line ol Pt. d' Milan Imported lace
curtains, dainty n;w patterns at, pair, $3.50
to $12.50.
12»4c Scotch Iia)>ids 8c: White Scotch
lapids, 2.6 Inches vide, worth 10c to 12 He,
special 8c.
20c Oil ClotJi 15c: Best quality
white and colored table oil cloth
47 in. wide, worth 20c, at 15c
Alhambra sun fast dra-
peries, for livint: room
and library over-
curtains. 32 to 48 in.
wide, 69c to 98c.
15z28
Shirt
aM Boxes
Jap matting
covered, loorth
$2.50 at 91.98
WATCH
For Announcement of Our Annual Sale of
PLANTS, SEEDS and BULBS, To be
ready soon. Greater Values Than Ever.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
tarn t — »r-i — ^r'n
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iPP.-iK.J.
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 18. 1911.
An All Around i
Household liemedy
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is used
in Mr. Agor's home as the family j
medicine.
It should be in every medicine chest. |
It is good for everybody.
In his letter he says: "I have used
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey in my
family for the last five years. It is
certainly a wonderful remedy for
colds, bowel trouble and nervousness.
We take it as an all-around household
remedy and feel sure it can't be beat."
John Agor. R. F. D. N. 3, Ham-
mondsport, N. Y.
OFFICIAL MAP OF THE WEATHERJ
__. _. — — ^ — — — -in«-tr>«-i.-i<->r»ni- r-. r> <^^<~i -"i i*S<^ ^ »-»»«» »■ «^(
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey
has to its credit over fifty years of
public service. It is the result of years
of oart^ful work and is an absolutely
pure distillation of carefully malted
rrain. Overworked men, delicate
women and sickly children will find
In it the health and strengrth-siving
parts that are so necessary to them.
It Is a wonderful remedy in the treat-
ment and cure of consumption, pneu-
monia, tfrip. bronchitis, coughs, colds,
asthma, malaria, low fevers, stomach
troubles and all wasting, weakening
conditions, if taken as directed.
Diifrr'N Pure Malt Wfclakey I* the only
TiliiMkey that vraw taxed by the Gov-
rrnnu-nt a» a laeUlclne durinK *■•
Spanith-Vnierican war.
Duffv s Pure Malt Whiskey is sold
IX SEALED BOTTLES ONLY by
druggists, grot-ers and dealers every-
where, or shipped direct for $1.00 per
lar^t> bottle.
The Dnfly Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester. N. T.
MEN OF REFiaEMENT
will appreciate the quiet luxurl-
ousness of the
Bachelor
Apartments
at ilO West First street. The
lites are most reasonable. You
to view the apart-
FORECAST TILL T P.
WED!VKSDAli'
F'lr Duluth. Suiwrlor and vicinity,
InoliiJtng the Mpsaba and V«nnlUt>ii
Iroti ranges: «;"loudy and i-ooler to-
nl^t irlth lowest temperature 25
deg. to 30 deg. : Wedikesday fair:
moUerata to t<rUk westerly wiudd.
-A^
£XPLAfc*TC<B^ NOTE?
Otac^XHHU uktr u t t * wmit-Alik mtnAiui bow
mtucrd lo M* \r\<i
(m»au or continuotu l.na put througk Donu iJ e^val an prru^rr
I^CTMCUi... Of do4l*<l l-nf* paaT itMt>M4(fc pnim> -y «)a»l u«ipe*"»lal* t*r»
»itl *»• J'ftxni 0*0) tv ten 'Tennji 90' uvl iOQ' ^
S>«>oo tftd.cau uaw (J vmbct Q c\iv Q p*rU) cloud) 9
cloodj; ® ri.n. (g ««>- (g irpofi nii»Kn# Kmmi I, wiib Uw wiad F'"»
tfun irirarrttun trn/ius 7«.hou' rainlili i( M rquatf Ol tack Unnl «if<4
v»loc»l) <ll 10 mtitf per ho»' o* mon
t«1ND SCALE.
UUes P«l
Hour.
Brisk "to 38
CH« » l* »
IJ«tt 5^ "
ItoderaU l* "» **
Sale 50 to SJ
Qurrlci ne 85 and abuve
H. W. RICHARDSON.
La«al Fareujttr.
Qli
COLDER
are Invited
ments.
W. C. SHERWOOD 1 CO.,
MANHATTAN BUILDING.
Olive OO in a New
Delicious Form
OLIVE OIL is the greatest
food tonic known. If you
are weak^ nervous or run
down, if you are all out of sorts
from a cold or the grippe; if from
any other cause, you lack the
vigor and strength of perfect
health, try olive oil.
Mennig's
Olive Oil and Port Wine
Emulsion
contains 75 per cent pure olive oil,
yet there is not the least unpleas-
ant oily taste or smell.
It offers all the benefits of Olive
Oil in a form that is delicious to
take.
In addition there is contained
just enough old port wine to make
the greatest tonic in the world.
Get a bottle from your draggist
— today.
Originated and prepared by
H. W. Mennig Co., St. Paul. Minn.
The coolness of '
early sprinir con-
tinues to take some i
of the charm from i
the bright sunshine
anil blue skies. Yes-
terday the temper-
ature mounted to 53
^eg., but It fell to
36 deg. during the
night and colder
weather is prom-
ised for tomorrow.
It's no time for
spring flowers.
Chilly weather prevailed a year ago
today.
The sun rose this morning at 5:14
and it will set at 7 o'clock this even-
ing, giving thirteen hours and forty-six
minutes of sunlight. ^ , ,, ,^„
Mr. Richardson makes the following
comment on weather conditions:
•Low pressure areas central over
Western Iowa and British Columbia
have caused rains over the Lower Mis-
souri and Lower Mis.slsslppl valleys.
Western gulf states, Oklahoma, Oregon,
Washington and British Columbia dur-
ing the last twenty-four hours, besides
warmer weather in the lake region.
Upper Mississippi valley. Oregon, Idaho,
Washington and British Columbia.
Somewhat cooler temperatures attend a
high pressure condition central over
Southeastern Montana. This turn to
colder weather will doubtless reach the
Head of the Lakes tonight, but the
weather in this vicinity will b« gen-
SHOOTS HIS SWEET-
HEART; KILLS SELF
(Continued from page 1.)
erally fair during the ensuing thirty-
six hours."
lowest
today :
for twelve, ending at
High. liOW
m.
Higt>- Lo*
Alitena
AUantlc Cltar
BatUeford . . .
General Forecast*.
Chicago, April 18. — Forecasts for
twenty-four hours ending at 7 p. m.
Wednesday: ,., _..^
Wisconsin — Unsettled weather and H'*"*"*
cooler tonight, with showers in east
and south portions; Wednesday fair
with cooler in east portion.
Upper Michigan — Unsettled tonight
with cooler In northwest portion;
Wednesday cooler and generally fair.'
Minnesota — Generally fair and
cooler tonight; frost tonight; Wednes-
day fair.
North and South Dakota — Fair to-
night and Wednesday; cooler in east
and central portions tonight.
Montana — Cloudv weather with rain
In west portion tonight or Wednesday;
warmer tonight; cooler Wednesday.
Iowa — Unsettled weather with show-
ers this afternoon and in extreme east
portion tonight; cooler tonight with
trost in west portion; Wednesday fair.
Shipping forecast — Protect thlrty-
slK-hour shipments of perishables
against temperature 25 to 30 deg. in
the Dakotas, Minnesota and Wiscon-
sin. . , ,
Upper lakes — Moderate sonth winds,
shifting to northwest on Michigan and
Superior; unsettled with showers to-
night or Wednesday except generally
fair on Superior; cooler Wednesday.
Abilptia : 5'
.44
..t6
..51
..TJ
..39
..S8
StIMlnnednsa 52
34lltodera 6*
34 M^tllg■>mery TiJ
revolver and was thrown out of the
b'legy by the infuriated man. The first
shot at the girl missed her. Kunde fired
two more and struck her in the temple.
The murderer then leaped out and a
few minutes later the brother, Otto,
who had been injured in the encounter,
heard a shot in the bushes and found
that Kunde had killed himself, the
bodies of the girl and the lover lying
UOO feet apart. . , ^ » ,
The mother of the girl was absent In
Brainerd and the father took a lantern
and near midnight found his little girl
cold In death, her little Easter cloak
smeared with her blood. Bertha and
Kunde have been keeping company for
two years, and it is said she did not
care to receive his attentions any more
as he appeared to be very jealous.
The parents of both are well knowu
farmers.
REBELS QUIETLY EVACUATE
AGUA PRIETA DURING MGHT
(Continued from page 1^)
A Simple Remedy Brings Back
the Natural Color— Dandruff
Quickly Removed.
The TemperatureH.
Following were the highest tempera-
tures for twenty-four hours and the
in diminishing frequency throughout
the night, has put the city of Juarez
in a fever of excitement in the antici-
pation of an insurrecto attack today.
It was thought at first that the in-
surrectos were driving in the federal
outposts with the intention of an «m-
medlate as.sault upon the city, but as
the night wore on the firing dwindled
to a few scattered snots, and It was
apparent that the attackers had with-
drawn, the sound of shots becoming
fainter as the firing line moved west.
Juarez is ready for an attack. Troop?
and artillery are posted in readiness
and the town is practically cleared of
noncombatanta who have crossed into
El Paso.
Members of the revolutionary junta
here, however, express doubt regard-
ing any attack for at least two or
three days.
Last night it became known authori-
tatively that between 1,600 and 2.000
Insurrectos were at Bauche. seventeen
miles south of Juarez, awaiting rein-
forcements from Casas Qrandes over
the Mexico Northwestern railroad,
which is under the control of the in-
surrectos. This force is under com-
mand of Raoul Madero, a brother of
the commander-in-chief.
Whether this morning's engagement
with the federal outposts was with
the advance guard of this force is not
known.
Bolia
Boston
Buffalo
Calgary
aiarleston T2
Chicago 54
Cotims Chr1sU...:0
Deliver ;tt74*
D««s Moines . . . .-f *
DevlU hxiu ...%6
Dodg« .31
D'jbuqua .TO
DULUTH ,B3
Durangu .S8
Ea.^tpon 54
E'liuouton 50
Eacanaba 19
Galveston . .... .71
Grand Haven ..4t
Green Bay iW
Hateraa 68
Havre '.':S4
Helena ...-.Si.
H'jughton
Huron 78
JioluDnvllle 74
KamIoop3 33
K^naas City 70
KooxTiUa 72
La Oro.««
LouUvnid ss
MadUin 68
Marquette Hi
Madlolna Hat . Ai
MemphU 72
MUea City 50
MUwaukee 54
22
34
44
St
30
84
56
44
7')
M
Montreal
Mi>oriiead
New Orleana
New York
North Platte
Oklahom*^ . .
Omaha
Patry Sound
PhoejOx S6
Pierre 78
40
.80
..74
..50
..38
..58
..72
..42
52 ' PltUburg 48
53 ' Port Arthur 44
44 Portland, Or (JO
->4 Prince Albert ■'^4
36 ' Ou'Appelle 5i»
'ftllUlelgh 68
3S|lUpld City «({
88 Uoseb'irg 70
yt 1 Roswell 80
T<) (St. iMiiii 74
Ss ' St. Paul 78
4 2 .Sa It Lake City ">8
52 I San Diego iW
28;San ITrincUco ...74
3()iSauIt .Ste. Marie.. 48
38 iS*ftttlo 56
46]-SherlJan 56
M .Shreiveport 60
4t)j Sioux City 72
52 Spokane 38
44 -Swift Current 50
54 Tampa 82
50 i T.>U>d) ■")4
48 I Wa-ihlrartoa 36
40 1 WlUlitui 38
28 Wlniieniucda 66
54 i Wliuiiiwg 6»
34 Yellow jtoas 50
44:
28
26
52
30
42
62
34
42
52
32
24
50
46
34
32
44
26
46
34
44
4<l
54
50
88
54
50
28
40
20
54
50
44
22
58
40
38
30
30
36
24
the opponents of the bill, though un-
availing. When the hlU was reached
la:}t evening Senator Duxbury, one of [
its autliors, moved that the .senate con- I
cur in the house aemndments. Senator
Cheadle of Duluth moved as a substi-
tute that the bill be referred to the re-
apportionment committee. Senator G.
H. Sullivan moved as a substitute for
all pending motions that the bill lie on
the table. The country members, rid-
ing rough shod and determined, voted
down the Sullivan motion, 37 to 21, and
then beat the Cheadle motion, 28 to 20.
Objection Overruled.
Senator Cheadle called attention to
the fact that the bill was not properly
before the senate, as it should not have
left the house, but Lieutenant Governor
Gordon overruled his objection.
Senator Dwlnnell of Minneapolis
then moved that further consideration
of the bill be postponed to today and
his motion was voted down. 36 to 21.
On that motion Senator Wilson of
Minneapolis protested against consid-
eration of the bill because the senate
knew that it was not properly before
that body, but President Gordon over-
ruled the objection, holding that the
bill was properly before the senate.
Senator Boyle of Eveleth moved to
adjourn and demanded a call of the
senate on that motion, thus consuming
more time, though without avail, for
his motion was lost. |
Then began a filibustering on the 1
call, the opponents of the bill Insist- 1
Ing on continuing it until every mem-
ber was present, and Senators Clague
and Gunderson being absent. The
missing senators could not be found.
Finally Gunderson was brought to the
senate, but Clague was still missing,
and in the meantime Senator Wilson
of Minneapolis had disappeared. The
filibuster was kept up until 4 o'clock
this morning, when a recess was taken
until 9 o'clock.
The senate put in the entire morn-
ing on the bill, being under call most
of the time. Toward noon the senate
voted down Senator Dwlnnell's motfon
to return the bill to the house and then
the bill was repassed as amended.
Nearly Come to Blows.
It was stormier in the house, where
at one time Representative Frankson
for the bill, and Representative ONelu,
against it, were prevented from coming
to blows b> the intervention of nfeirb>
members, Frankson having charged
O'Neill with betraying hi» constituents.
At the climax of the excitement,
when Speaker Dunn was trying to
smother the matter and to prevent a
further fight against It. a vote was
taken on a motion to adjourn, which
would have ended business for the ses-
sion.
When the matter was taken up in
the house this morning. Representative
Nolan called up. the motion to recon-
sider the passage of the bill which
was pending when the house adjourned
laist night. Speaker Dunn ruled that
this could not be done, as the bill was
not in possession of the house. He
overruled all points of order that It
had gone out of the possession of the
house improperly. .. „ ,.^j
Representative Nolan then moved
that the bill be recalled from the sen-
ate There was a call of the house,
and later a motion to suspend the
call upon which the speaker ruled that
a majority could suspend. Represent-
ative Nolan took an appeal f/oi" this
decision. The chair was sustained 83
to 29, and the motion to suspend the
call carried. ^^..^^
Representative Farley moved
Quality
How often one hears th« «Tpre9tiott,
"She is gray and beginning to look old."
It la true that gray hair usually denotes
age and is always associated with age.
Tou never hear one referred to as haviog
gray hair and looking young.
The hair is generally the index of age.
If your hair is gray, you can't blame
your friends for referring to you as look-
ing old. Ton can't retain a youthful ap-
pearance if you allow ymir hiair to grow
gray. M&ny persons of middle age jeop-
ardise their future simply by allowing
the gray hair to become manifeat. If
your hair has become faded or gray, try
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy.
a preparation which a chemiat ^y tke
•ame of Wyeth derisad a few years ago.
It is simple, iaexpensire and practical,
•Bd will banish the gray haira la a few
days. It is also guaranteed to remora
dandruff and promote the growth of the
hair.
It la a pleasant dressing for the hair,
and after using it a few days itching and
dryness of the scalp entirely disappear.
This preparation is offered to the
public at fifty cents a t>ottle, and if^
recommended and sold b- all druggists
Special agent. Max Wlrth, 13 West
Superior street-
evacuated Agua Prleta. did much to-
day to relieve the high tension under
which President Taft and members of
his official family have labored for the
last few days- The assurances from
Mexico followed demands of the state
department that fighting which endan-
gered American lives in the border
towns must be stopped.
That the situation is not now re-
garded as acute Is evidenced by the
fact that leaders of both the senate
and the house with whom the presi-
dent conferred prior to the assembling
of the cabinet, declared that no ac-
tion is contemplated by congress at
this time. The president had extended
conferenecs with Senator Cullom of
Illinois, and Representative Sulzer of
New York, chairmen respectively of
the foreign affairs committee of the
senate and house. . ^ _, ^^ ,. .
Senator Cullom Insisted that he
could see no reason for Intervention
while Mr. Sulzer announced that con-
gress would not act hastily. Mr. Sulzer
Is of the opinion that thus far there
has been no overt act hi Mexico suf-
ficient to warrant Intervention.
He intimated, however that a plan
is being considered to relieve the dan-
ger to Americans near the border. This
contemplates an agreement .!or a neu-
tral zone from five to ten miles wide
along the boundary line.
Congress. Mr. Sulzer said, will not
act under any circumstances without
a special message from the president.
To his callers todav President Taft
said that his telegram to Governor
Sloan of Arizona, published today re-
flected correctly his attitude. There
was no intention upon his part, the
president told the senator to Intervene
in Mexico at this time and the two
big developments of the morning liad
strengthened him in that position.
In official circles. It is realized that
while hostilities have ceased at Agua
Prleta trouble may break out at .Juarez
or at other border towns, but they are
more than ever inclined now to trust
that Mexico will make good her prom-
ise to tceep the federal troops away
from the border.
Refneea to Intervene.
Washington, April 18. — Pre.sident
Taft last night replied to a message
from Governor Richard E. Sloan of
Arizona, asking protection for citizens
of Douglas from the fire of federals
and insurrectos, that he was loath to
endanger Americans In Mexico by tak-
ing so radical a step as sending
American troops across (he border t>
prevent further fighting.
The president, in his telegram to
the governor, stated that the situation
might justify him In ordering troops
to cross the border and attempt to
stop the fighting or to Are upon both
contestants from the American side.
He hesitated to take such a step, liow-
ever because of the possibility of re-
sistance and greater bloodshed and the
danger of having his motives mtscon-
-strued and misrepresented and arous-
ing Mexicans against many thousands
of Americans now in Mexico and
jeopardizing their lives and property.
In view of the conditions therefore,
the president felt that he could not
order the troops at Douglas to cross
the border, but he again emphasized
the advisability of the pei^ple of Doug-
are three essential fea-
tures in good c'othes.
All three are combined
in our "Morse Made,"
"Athletic Cut," "Nipson
System," "Character"
and "Clothes of Qual-
ity" at
$20 >-o $25
Other makes at
$10 a-O $15
None Better.
tyncirs
^B 8 E, Superior St.
■rHE HOUSE WHERE YOUR CIlEOIT IS GOOD"
When you can pay us as you
get paid — why go without f
the
Advertise in The Herald
Now Up to ConarreHa.
Washington, April 18. — The Mexican
situation, which is fast approaching a
crisis In Its international aspect, was
the principal subject of consideration
at today's cabinet meeting. With the
declaration by the president and his
advisers that no American soldier will
cross the border line without the con-
sent of congress, the administration's
next move is anxiously awaited, espe-
cially by members of congress.
It seems almost certain that the
problem soon will reach the halls of
cong-ess. Interest of official Washing-
ton Is keyed to the highest pitch and
the border developments brought of-
ficials of the state and war depart-
ments to their desks early today.
Every bit of information which has
been received over night was rushed
to the White House for the perusal
of the president. The executive inter-
est and concern over the entire matter
is plainly evident In the fact that every
telegram received by the departments,
whether official or unofficial, Immedi-
ately is laid before the president.
^
Rxcitement at Juarea.
El Paso, Tex., April 18. — Desultory
firing, which commenced shortly after
1 o'clock tills morning and continued
Piles Driven
Away FREE
Cases Of Extreme Torture Cured
So Quick As To Amaze All
Who Know the Terrors
Of Piles.
Even a small and recent ca.8e of
piles is bad enough but thousands are
in abject misery. Great prostruslons
render life a torture in every com-
munity and yet, right within elbow
room is certainly a drug store that
has the wonderful Pyramid Pile Cure.
If not, it will be mailed free upoa re-
ceipts of the regular price — 50c.
It works like a hundred swift
streams of water on a sudden blaze,
puts the fire out, saves lives, saves
the nerves, prevents gangrene, stops
all pain, all Itching, all bleeding; re-
duces all swellings, internal or ex-
temaal cures quick and complete to
stay cured. Many severe cases think
they are hopeless, must be operated
on. have part of their anatomy cut
and carved. Don't let It happen.
Remember anything cut off is gone
forever. Pyramid Pile Cure saves all
this, cures rationally, restores the
parts to normal healthy conditions.
You can easily and quickly prove this
by sending your name and address to
Pyramid Drug Co.. 278 Pyramid
Bldg.. Marshall, Mich. A free trial
will at once be mailed sealed In plain
wrapper and you will never after-
wards be at a loss to know what to
advise when you hear of a case of
piles no matter how severe it may be.
For sale at ail drug stores at 50c a
package and be sure you get what
you ask for.
las avoiding exposing themselves to
tlying bullets.
Governor's Appeal.
The message to the president was
aated Dougla.s 10:21 o'clock last nigh*.
It was as follow;*:
"The president, Washington, D. C.
As a result of Igday's fighting across
the international line, but within gun-
shot range of the heart of Douglas,
five Americans wounded on ^this side of
the line. Everything points to repeti-
tion of these oasauTties on tomorrow
and while the federals seem dl-^posed
to keep their agreement not to fire
into Douglas, the positions of the In-
surrectionists Is such that wlien
fighting occurs on the eaist and -south-
east of the intrenchments. people liv-
ing In Douglas are put In danger of
their lives.
"In my judgment radical mea.^ures
are needed to protect our innocent
people, and If anything can be done to
stop the fighting at Agua Prleta, the
situation calls for such action. It is
impossible to safeguard the people of
Douglas unless the town can be va-
cated. Can anything be done to relieve
the situation which Is now acute?
(Signed)
"RICHARD E. SI.OAN,"
"Governor."
President's Reply.
The reply of the president, promptly
transmitted, read:
To Governor Sloan. Douglas, Ariz.
"Your dispatch received. Have^ made
urgent demands upon Mexican govern-
ment to issue instructions to prevent
firing across border by Mexican federal
troops and am awaiting reply. Mean-
time I have <Bnt direct warning to the
Mexicans arq insurgent forces near
Douglas .
••I Infer from your dispatch that
both parties attempt to heed the
warning, but that In the strained sit-
uation and exigencies of the contest,
wild bullets still find their way into
Douglas. The situation might Justify
me in ordering our troops to cross the
border and attempt to stop the fight-
ing or to Are upon both combatants
from the American side. But if I take
this step, I must face the possibility of
resistance and. greater bloodshed, and
also the danger of having our motives
misconstrued and mlsiepresented, and
of thus inflaming Mexican popular In-
dignation against many thousands of
Americans now in Mexico and jeop-
ardizing their lives and property.
The pressure for general interven-
tion under such conditions it might
not be practicable to resist. It is Im-
possible to foresee or reckon the con-
sequences of such a course, and we
must use the greatest self-restraint to
avoid It.
"Pending my urgent representations
to the Mexican government. I cannot.
therefore, order the troops at Douglas
to cross the border, but I must ask
you and the local authorities, in case
the same danger seems to threaten, to
direct the people of Douglas to place
themselves where bullets cannot reach
them and thus avoid casualties. I am
loath to endanger Americans in Mex-
ico, where they are necessarily ex-
posed, by taking a radical step to pre-
vent Injury to Americans on our side
of the border who can avoid it by a
temporary inconvenience.
(Signed) "WILLIAM H. TAFT."
The president found the Mexican
situation demanding his attention un-
til a late hour. The evening he had
spent at the theater. Returning to
the White House, he plunged anew
Into consideration of the problems
confronting him.
FUTILE FIGHT VoR JUSTICE
WAGED IN THE LEGISLATURE
Is
previous question and the opponents of
the bill demanded and got a roll call.
Which resulted in 76 for the Pr?^^^^^
>luestlon to 38 aga nst it. Nolan s mo-
tion to recall the bill was lost, 44 to 70.
Protest Presented.
Representative Fowler of Minneapo-
lis then presented an emphatic protest
against the bill and the manner in
w*ilch the speaker railroaded it
through, signed by all the tri-county
""The speaker ordered It printed In the
Journal.
"Can't we have it read?" asked Rep-
resentative Lennon of Minneapolis.
"That can only be for dilatory pur-
poses," said Speaker Dunn.
Representative Congdon of Duluth.
a copy of the bluebook open, rose to
his feet "I wish to read to the chair
from the Constitution, the only law
under which we are working, he said
"The gentleman from St. Louis V.
not recognized." said the speaker.
•I move that we adjourn, exclaimed
Representative W. T. Stone oti^^-
Paul. There was a chorus of seconds,
and a roll call demanded on that mo-
tion It lost. 83 to 29. and then the
house, still ruffled, settled down to the
The protests which were entered In
the Journals of both houses, signed
by the opponents of the bill, criti-
cized the railroading of tiie bill, con-
trary to the rules, from the house to
the senate and protested against the
bill itself 'because it is of such a
character as to be In violation of the
rights of the individual citizens of
this state and will be Injurious to the
public and In violation of the Constit-
ution of the United States."
Tax Levy Bill Passed.
Both houses managed to pass the tax
levy bill, which levies a tax of $2,200,-
000 or a tax rate for state purposes of
1.9 mills, the highest In years. There
Is little probability that the state-wide
primary the recall, the initiative and
referendum or any other measures of
large Importance will be reached and
passed before midnight tonight, and
both bodies are as likely as not to
break up In a row, thus putting a fit-
ting close to a turbulent and fruitless
session. g^ILLMAN H. BINGHAM.
♦
Good results always follow the use
of Foley Kidney Pills. They .give
prompt relief in all cases of kidney
and bladder disorders. Try them
druggists.
How Can We Do H?
EXAMINATION FREE.
GOLD CROWNS ^TAu $3
No better at any pries for.. ▼
BRIDOEWORK^^ViUt^'eo
beauty and quality has neverA^
been excelled ^
People ask us at
times, "how can
you do d e\i t a 1
work so cheap?"
this Is our an-
swer: "We are
satisfied with a
moderate profit,
and are liberally
patronized by
people who ap-
preclate our
guaranteed dent-
tlstry."
10-YEAR GUARANTEE.
SILVER FILLINGS b^lt^tl^r'at 50c
any price in city or elsewhere.
WHALEBONE PLATES }U ^^f. JC
ues, f8 and ▼
UNION
DR. FRANKLIN GREIiR & CO., Owners, 317 W. Superior St. Duluth
Open From 8t30 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, 10 to 1.
r
<i
gaturday's Baking
^^ Home cookinjf, when successful, is most delicious,
healthful and economical No fear of failure for
the Rundord housewife. Her cake never falls,
her crust is never tough, her biscuit never heavy.
The baking is of fine texture and flavor and will
retain its freshness much longer when she uses
Dumford
JL^^ THE WHOLESDiylfi
BAKING POWDER
CONTAINS NO ALUM.^^ — ■■ "
All
BE^TTER RESUL.T3 from Herald Want Ada. Voa aave and make »
^ money when yoo adveitlae In THE HERALD. *
(Continued from page 1.)
a vote of 65 to 52. While a motion to
reconsider was tending an adjourn-
ment was forced and then the speaker
and house desk force, contrary to
proper legislative procedure, rushed
the bill to the senate. Then began a
heroic but unavailing fight tor justice
on the part of the cities and the fair-
minded men from the country, and a
ruthless *ind successful fight for the
preservation of an unfair advantage by
the men from the country.
Senator J. M. Hackney of St. Paul, In
protesting; agwnst the passage of the
bin, said: 'Tnere is a set of men in
this legislature that is determined to
do certain things, regardless of justice
and public sentiment. They are going
to pass this bill, the most dastardly
outrage ever perpetrated In this state.
The worst legislature In the state's his-
tory, by general agreement, is about to
oease Its labors, and this Is Its crown-
ing production."
The fight wis spirited on the part of
S'
'WhenlheBays
WorkkBone
YOUR APPETITE
CRAVES a liquid re-
freshment that if flatiffsriDtf De-
yond quencliing the thirst. Beer
is particularly adapted to this
purpose. AAt hilc tervin^ as a most
delicious rcTresnment it carries in
solution a large preoentage of ele-
ments wbicb build bone, ennck
tke blood and aid di|^estion. \i
you drink kecr tkercV every rea-
son you skould drink
It ku been krewed in IXuutk for
over 25 years. It if Urewcd -%vitk a«
muck skill and care as ike most famous
krews ol tke world. It luis an advantage
?7^er tke otkers in tke -water used. Lake
uperior water kein^ tlie foremost for
krewin^ purposes of any in tke Country*
Order a case for yotu: kome; tkat s -vvrkere
it*s enjoyed.
FITGER BREWING CO.. Dulutk. Minn«ot«.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
-. -.-3ii
«£
,11^
1
n^vpH
mmam ^ w w.-,t '
^
mm^
- r*"
#•
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 18, 1911.
MANY VOTES
PURCHASED
Much Crookedness in Elec-
tion in Atlantic County,
N. J.
Special Assembly, Investi-
gating Committee, Makes
Report
Trenton, N. J.. April 18. — The special
assembly committe appointed to in-
vestigate the election in Atlantic
county last November, reported to the
house today that It found there was
false registration, illegal voting and
purcliase of votes and that election
officers of the county failed to do their
duty. It is estimated by the commit-
tee that from the testimony taken
there were approximately two thou-
sand illegal registrations and one thou-
sand illegal votes.
The report states htat the testimony
of the 1)00 witnesses neanl has been
submitted to the proper officers of At-
lantic county for legal prosecution of
the offenders and, the committee says,
It IS assumed that these officers will
do their «luty.
Coiniielled to Contrlbnte to Fund.
It is stated in the report that the
office liolders in Atlantic county were
required to contribute to the Repub-
lican campaign fund and the commit-
tee further states in the report it is
satisfied 'that the misconduct and
corruption hereinbefore set forth,
whether or not It was in obedience
to the instructions of the leaders of
the political party in power in Atlantic
county, at least could have been pre-
vented bv them and to that extent they
are cliargeable with the responsibility
therefor."
The report says that much of the
evil discovered could have been pre-
vented by proper election laws and tlie
committee suggests tliat the Geren elec-
tion bill and other election measures
now before ti»e legislature and which
are expected to pass, will provide the
necessary remedy.
The report is signed by four Demo-
crats and one Republican, composing
the committee.
•
Foley Kidney Pills contain In con-
centrated form, ingredients of estab-
lished therapeutic value for the relief
and cure of all kidney and bladder
ailments. P'oley Kidney Pills are anti-
septic, tonic and restorative. Refuse
substitutes. All druggists.
♦— — ■
See the Duliith Hardware Co's
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
A GOOD REASON.
Diiluth People Can Tell You Why It
Is So.
Doan's Kidney Pills cure the cause
of disease, and that is why the cures
are always lasting. This remedy
strengthens and tones up the kidneys,
helping them to drive out of the body
the liquid poisons that cause back-
ache, headache and distressing kidney
and urinary complaints. Duluth
people testify to permanent cures.
William Bain, 1402 E. Fourth St.,
Duluth, Minn., says: "Two years ago
I gave a public account of my experi-
ence with Doans Kidney Pills. I can
now^ say that I have had no need of a
kidney medicine since. My kidneys
were so badly disordered that I was
miserable in every way. The kidney
secretions passed too frequently and
were discolored. I had backache and
felt weak and tired. Doan's Kidney
Pills quickly relieved me and the
contents of two or three boxes made
me well. I feel as though It were
my duty to recommend this remedy
when I can."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name — Doan's — and
take no other.
F^OR REIMX
IVo. 21KH We«t First Street and Sec-
ond Fleor, 40x50 feet, (o be rented
toKether; llri»t-oIfl.sM place for Hjcht
iiiaiuifactnrinAr, tailor nhnp, eltsar
factory, etc. Itot water heat.
IVIYERS BROS. CO.,
205 THE LYCEUM.
TONIGHT'S AT1RACT10NS.
L.YCEUM— Maude Leone Players in
"The Girl Question."
ORPHEUM — Vaudeville.
KMPRESS — Vaudeville.
ODEUM and LYRIC— Photoplay.
I Whooping^ Congrh
I CROUP ASTHMA COUGHS
BRONCHITIS CATARRH COLDS
eSTABLISHCD ia7«
A timple, imfc aud eifecure treatment for bron
cbial trouble!, avoidiog druiti. Vaporized Creao-
iene alopa the paroxysm* of Whoopinj Coagb tad
relieve* Cronp at once. It ii » tetn to tufTereri
from Atlbma. The air rendered atrongly antiaep-
tic, iatpired with every breath, makea breathing
easy ; toothrt the tore throat and atopt (be coogb,
assuring restful nigbta. It ia Invaluable to mother*
with young children.
Send uf poatal for deacriptlve booklet.
ALL DRUGGISTS.
Try Crtitltnt jlntinftU
Thrmt Taittts for the
irritated throat. They
are simple, effecthrc and
antiaeptic. Of yonr
druggist or from oa, loc
in stamp*.
Vapo Cresolene Co.
n Cortlaaitt St., N. Y.
"Dr. Miles* Nervine
G)mpletely Cured
Our Little Boy of
Fits."
A family can suffer no greater
affliction than to have a child sub-
ject to fits or epilepsy. Many a
father or mother would give their
all to restore such a child to health
"l a.Ti heartily gUd to tell you of
otir little boy who was completely
cured of fits. He commenced hav-
ing th<yn at lO years of age and had
them for fotur years. I tried three
doctors and one specialist but all of
them said he could not be cured,
but Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine
and Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver PilU
made a comptete cure. He is now
bale, hearty and gay. It has beca
three years since he had the lastspelL
I shall give Dr. Miles' medicines
praise wherever 1 go. You arc at
liberty to use this letter as you see
fit and anyone writing to me I will
gladly answer if they enclose stamp
for reply." , ,
F. M. BOGUE, Wmdfall, Ind.
Dr. Miles' Nervine
is just what it is represented to be,
a medicine compounded especially
for nervous diseases, such as fits,
spasms, St. Vitus* dance, convul-
sions and epilepsy. These diseases
frequently lead to insanity or cause
weak minds. Dr. Miles' Nervine
has proven most effective in reliev-
ing these dreaded maladies.
Sold by all dniggiata. If th* first bottia
fails to benefit your money Is returned
MILES MEOICAL CO., Elkhart. Ind.
^mi
COURT TURNS DOWN
PROSECUTOR HUNT
Refuses Application to File
Petition Against Judge
Hunt
Columbus, Ohio. April IS. — The su-
preme court refused the application of
Prosecutor Henry T. Hunt of Cincin-
nati, to file a petition in quo warranto
against Judge Charles J. Hunt of Cin-
cinnati, with regard to the trial of
George B. Cox, the Cincinnati politi-
cian, in this court.
Prosecutor Hunt charged prejudice
against Judge Hunt and the circuit
court held against Hunt and he ap-
pealed. Cox after many legal en-
tanglements got his case before Judge
Hunt for trial on the charge of per-
jury.
STOCKHOLDERS MAY
DIVIDE THE FUNDS
Attorney General of Ohio
Loses Suit Against In-
surance Company.
Columbus, Ohio April IS. — The su-
preme court today decided In favor
of the Union Central Life Insurance
company of Cincinnati, in the ca.se In-
stituted by the attorney general to pre-
vent the company from distributing
by stock issue |400,000 of their surplus
fund.s among the stockholders. The
attorney general contended that the
money belonged to the policyholders
and riot to the stockholders. The com-
pany has a surplu.s of almost $S00,000
and according to this decision. It may
now proceed to distribute it In the
same way, if it cares to do so.
The circuit court which originally
heard the case, decided In favor of the
Life Insurance company and the su-
preme court affirmed that decision.
SECOND AHEMPT
TO KILL ITALIANS
Explosion Throws Gang oi
Laborers Out of Their
Berths.
Danville, 111., April 18. — News reached
here this morning of the second at-
tempt in two days to murder a crowd
of Italian railroad laborers employed
by the Chicago & Eastern Illinois rail-
road, near Villa Grove, 111.
Early Sunday morning a stick of
dynamite was placed under a car in
wliich they were sleeping and the ex-
plosion badly shattered it. At about
the same hour Monday morning there
was another explosion which threw
the men from their beds, broke win-
dows and did other damage. De-
tectives are working on tlie case.
«
Exquisite Flowers.
Choice stock. Prices right at Huot's.
Green Room Gossip.
So successful have the Maude Leone
Associate Players been in "The Giri
Question" that a special engagement
will be played next Sunday. There will
be but three more performances this
week, tonight's show, the performance
tomorrow afternoon and evening, clos-
ing the engagement to make way for
one of the road companies.
"The Girl Question" is the biggest
and most elaborate production put on
by the players. It enlists the services
of a number of extra people In addition
to the large singing and dancing
chorus, which has been enlarged and
thoroughly drilled since the production
of "Forty-five Minutes From Broad-
way."
The performance is running as
smoothly as the production of a road
company and the members of the com-
pany are winning new friends by their
ciever presentation of this dainty, jing-
ling and tuneful musical play.
• • •
Master Gabriel the diminutive
comedian at the Orpheum this week
eat'* but one full meal a day, and that
meal would starve a 3-year-old Infant.
"I have it down to a science," he ex-
plained. "It doesn't take much food to
keep my little system in working or-
der, and besides. I'm never very hun-
gry. Isn't it tremendous what some
people eat? One egg completely Alls me
up I suppose I could eat more if I
was taller. Have a cigarette? Oh, yes,
I smoke. I think all men should
FUmiTURE VALUES
You^l agree with us when w^e say that it takes more than the mere quotation of a low price to make an ar-
ticle a good v^alue. A piece of goods must have some qivAlit} or it is a poor value at any price.
You'Veaiize that the above is true, and you ask yourself— how are you to be sure of this quality. We say to
you — make your purchases in a store where quality is absolutely guaranteed.
THE- BAYHA STORE puts quality before price— the quality is never lost sight of, no matter how low
the price inay be.
Quality and Satisfaction are absolutely guaranteed at The Bayha Store.
A High Qrade Fumed Oak
Dining Room Table
Worth $35.00, Special COZi 7**
at Only 4>ZT* I *J
iiiBJiJi.y.'i.^mjj
\ff^^ ,^^fe<5*^:5t s* JSA)*^!«i<»i^^^
A Special Value
-in-
Rugs
This is a Hastings Table — the top
is of solid quarter-sawed oak. Is 48
Inches In diameter, and can be ex-
tended to 6 feet In length. The ped-
estal is equipped with the famous
Tyden Duo-style lock.
MASTER GABRIEL.
WATCHING ELECTION.
Vermilion County Grand Jury Is
in Session at Danville.
Danville, 111., April 18.— The Ver-
milion county grand jury Is watching
the municipal election here today. It
went into session at 0 o'clock but as
no witnesses had been summoned. It
did notliing except to receive reports
from the various election precincts?.
Two arrests have already been made
In connection with vote selling. It Is
said. All of the polling places are
being watched by detectives brougnt
here from Chicago. The vote Is heavy.
PRICELESS WORKS OF ART
DESTROYED IN BELGIUM.
Brussels, Belgium, April 18. — The city
hall at Schaerbeek, a suburb of the
capital, together with its priceless
works of art, including notable paint-
ing.'? and gobelins, was destroyed by
fire last night.
Two flremen were killed during a
desperate effort to save some of the
contents of the buildings. It is be-
lieved that the fire was of Incendiary
origin.
IMMIGRANT NEARLY
KILLED IN COLLISION.
Barnesville, N. D., April 18. — John
Kunseman of Forester, Minn., was In-
jured in the yards Sunday evening and
It Is feared will lose his life. He was
rushed to a hospital at Fargo on a
special train. >
Kunseman and little son were bound
for Bufford. N. D., when an engine
switching in the yards bumped into
their car, closing the sliding door shut
with a force that partly crushed
Kuneman's head.
•
Poor IMaple Symp Yield.
Crystal Falls, Mich., April 18. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — This year has
been a poor one for raaple syrup.
Syrup which has been selling at $1.75
per gallon will command }2 per gallon,
because of the small yield.
smoke. No. I don't go In for it very
strong. About two cigarettes a day
satisfies me. Cigars? No, some copper
would run me to the police station if
he caught me with a cigar in my pos-
session." . . „r .
Gabriel's real name is Gabriel Wei-
gel. He's the only midget in the fam-
ily and they can't account for him, as
he's neither the youngest nor the eldest
in a family of large proportions. There
were ten children In his fathers fam-
ilv, fourteen In his grandmother's, and
al'l of them have been big folks, many
of them soldiers. Gabriel's younger
brother is a big, strapping farmer, who
stands six feet In his stockings. The
midget Is much smaller tlian Tom
Thumb and he is in no way deformed,
as many of the famous dwarfs of his-
tory were.
• • ♦
"With Joe Welch as the feature at-
traction, the bill at the Empress tliis
week Is making a decided hit. It is al-
most Impossible to describe the man-
ner in which Mr. Welch presents his
part of the program. His dialect is
natural and pleasing and there is a
simplicity and charm about his work
that takes with the audience and which
Is really the secret of his success. His
stories are all original and his comedy
Is of the quiet Infectious order. Welch
just walks out before the footlights,
starts his monologue and at the finish
quietly walks off. All of this is done
in a simple and unassuming manner.
There is nothing of the burlesque that
is so common with most character
comedians , but a natural and lifelike
presentation of the Hebrew character
that is so common on the East side in
New York city. Running a close sec-
ond to Welch are Barnard's Manikins.
These little figures sing", dance and pre-
sent a good line of comedy. This act
comes direct from England and their
week in Duluth is their first played in
America. Paul Chase and company are
presenting a clever sketch, "The New
Minister." Miss I'earl Young sings
some of the latest popular songs to her
own accompaniment on the piano. The
musical Wilsons are presenting a mu-
sical act that is better than the aver-
age. On a whole, the show is one of
the best in months.
• ♦ *
There are good photoplay shows at
both the Odeum and Lyric, the two
popular Suiierior street twin theaters,
this week.
"The Inherited Taint" is a simple
story and well presented at the Lyric.
Much interest Is aroused In the pic-
tures by the questions that are raised,
as the pictures tell the story.
"Italian Coast Scenes" is a very in-
teresting film, as Is 'The Resurrection
of John," a comedy film. "Under the
Wishing Tree" is being sung by Mr.
Mlstachkln.
At the Odeum the feature play is
called "1861." A battle scene during
the Civil war is a feature of the pic-
ture. There are many other dramatic
and comedy films at both theaters.
George Lenz is singing "My Irish
Dearie" at the Odeum.
The pictures at both theaters a*e up
to the usual standard.
• • *
The Lyceum theater will have for its
We'U Furnish Your
Home on Easy Terms
of Payment
It you do not teel that you can
pay the cash for your house fur-
nishings, come In and see us~" about
our plan of furnishing homes on
easy payments.
We are offerinj; an excep-
tional value in a good,
heavy Brussels Rug. This
rug is 8 feet 3 inches wide
and 10 feet 6 Inches long.
It comes in a /ariety of new patterns and colors and is made by
one of the best mills in the countrj-, which is a guarantee_of jts
wearing qualities; worth $16.00 — Our special price
this week
lice ui. »ii3
$9.65
Drapery Materials and Lace Curtains
Visit our second floor for these things in the n.jwest spring
goods, priced in a way that will meet with your approval.
We're showing a great variety of goods in this department and
will be pleased to help you plan any changes you wish to make In
your window and door draperies.
The Princess Line
for 19U
Has absolutely no competition
whatever. It is so far ahead of
all other Go-Carts, in style, con-
struction, convenience In hand-
ling, material, etc., that it is In
a class by leself. For years this
has been true of the Princess
line, and the comparison is even
more striking this year. We
would like you to compare this
cart with those shown in other
stores, and satisfy yourself that
it is without doubt, the only cart
to buy.
Store
Your
Furs
at
Home
Keep your
winter
clothes ab-
B o 1 u t e 1 y
safe from
moth. Keep
them in a
cedar chest
in your
own home
and you'll
always
know that
they are
safe and
that they
will como
out next
fall in the
best of con-
dition.
The Owen
Daven-o Sofa Bed
The most satisfactory article of
its kind on the market. True, it has
its imitators, all good things do, but
none of these imitations can equal the
Daven-o, for the simple reason that
the features that have made the
Daven-o a success are patented and
can be found only on the Daven-o.
At the right we show the Owen
Daven-o as it appears during the day.
In the illustration at the left we show an Owen
Daven-o In mission style with the mattress rolled
ba:k, showing the all-steel bedspring, which is en-
tirely separate from the upholstering. Another fea-
ture of the Daven-o is that you can use a good
thick mattress with it, and you fold all the bedding,
including the pillows, in the Daven-o. Make it up
In the morning same as you would any bed and
fold it up — that's all.
Mission Hall Tree
Worth $7.50, Special at €h QC
Only... _ 4>T»yiJ
The Hall Tree shown here is purely
Mission In design. It is built of oak
and finished In Fumed or Early Eng-
lish. Has swinging mirror of heavy
beveled plate and brushed brass coat
and hat hooks.
Free
Rheumeiism
Cure
A Home Cure Will Be Given FR££
By One Who Had It.
In the spring of 1893 I was at-
tacked by Muscular and Inflamma-
tory Rheumatism. I suffered as only
those who have it know, for over
three years. I tried remedy after
remedy, and doctor after doctor, but
such relief as I received was only
temporary. Finally, I found a rem-
edy tl'.at cured me completely, and it
has never returned. I have given it
to a number who were terribly af-
flicted and even bed ridden with
Rheumatism, and It effected a cure
in every case.
I will send a free trial of this
precious remedy by mail, postpaid to
any sufferer who writes for it. Just
fill out the coupon below and mail
It to me today.
Mark H. Jackson, No. 519 Janves
Street, Syracuse, N. Y.
Mr. Jackson is responsible. Above
statement true. — Pub.
Name
Addresa •
The New Wood Beds
are artistic and pleasing in their sim-
plicity of design. They come In a
variety of finishes and a variety of
styles. They are meeting with the
approval of those who like something
just a little different in home furnish-
ings. We would like to have you see
them.
Here's a Machine That Can Easily Lay Claim to
Being the Best Machine in the World
tor the Home.
Making claims and proving them are two different propositions.
It's easy enough to write the word BEST in connection with the de-
Bcription of an article, but it's another proposition to prov<! the state-
ment when that article happens to be compared with one that has
real merit. We invite you to come in and see a machine that is the
most modern sewing machine ever brought out for heme use. A ma-
chine that is built by a company of sewing machine experts. The
rompany has a record, dating back many years, for building sewing
machines that satisfy. The new Standard "Center-Needie" Sewing
Machine is here for your Inspection.
COmETE HOOSEFUtNISBERS
A & 10
DULUTH. MINNESOTA
Oopjrlcbt^ 1906, b7 Hooiler Utg. Oik
The Hoosier
Special Kitchen
Cabinet
is one article of furniture that should
be in every home. It will save miles
of steps for tired feet. It will pay
for itself in the saving of waste that
is bound to occur if you have no one
place for keeping things.
Please bear in mind the Hoosier
cabinet is the only one on the market
with the «oItd olumiaaM top, which
will not corrode or rust. It is always
clean, bright and new looking.
W^e are exclusive agents in Duluth
for Hoosier cabinets.
$1.00 Per Week Puts This
Cabinet in Your Home
attraction on Thursday. Friday and
Saturday matinee and night Lew Field s
musical production, "The Midnight
Sons,'" which is desscribed as "stupen-
dous,"' "mammoth" and "surprising in
Its scenic environment and in the un-
usually large number of people em-
ployed for the production. When ' The
Midnight Sons' was first produced at
the Broadway theater. New York, by
Lew Fields with a tremendous cast of
celebrities headed by George W. Mon-
roe who will be seen in the production
when it is presented in this city, even
Broadway, accustomed as it is to big
things, gasped at the size of the en-
tertainment presented. The company
which will be seen here numbers near-
ly 100 people and In addition to this
number, 100 "extra" people or "supers"
are employed. It requires over fifty
stage hands, electricians and property
men to manipulate the scenic effects
and with other people employed, there
will not be less than 250 people utilized
back of the curtain Line during each
performance.
"DRYS" AND "WETS"
SEEKING CONTROL
Ballot Battle Between Rival
Forces On in South
Dakota Towns.
Sioux Falls, 8. D.. April 18.— Cities
and towns in South Dakota today are
holding municipal elections. In only a
few -instances Is the campaign for offi-
ces overly Seated, but in nearly all
places tne fight of the "drys" and
wets" Is backed by the best efforts
of the leaders.
The most interestins contest is In
Pierre. A year ago that place was
voted into the dry column and today
marks the close of a long campaign to
have the capital city changed to the
saloon side.
The liquor question has been submit-
ted in ninety-seven towns in the state,
among them being Sioux Falls, Aber-
deen and Deadwood, the three largest.
The indications are that there will not
be a material change in the numl>er of
license towns.
FERRY SQUABBLE
STILL UNSEHLED
Differences Between Fort
Frances and htemational
FaHs Boatmen Hangs On.
Fort Frances, Ont., April 18. — A
more serious aspect has been given the
squabble between local and Interna-
tional Falls ferrymen by the departure
of L. W. Wilson for Winnipeg to con-
fer with the American consul general.
The Gagne brothers, the Canadian
members of the firm, have not con-
sented to sign either of the new agree-
ments drawn by solicitors for both
parties and the board of arbitration,
which Wilson readily accepted.
The second agreement was simply to
the effect that both parties to the con-
troversy re-establish the ferry service.
thus preventing further and unneces-
sary inconvenience to the public. It
was proposed that they operate their
boats day and night alternately for
intervals of one week, until their dif-
ficulties could be thrashed out in court.
The Gagne brothers would not sign
the document, thousb their solicitor
advised it.
CALLS SECOND CONFERENCE.
State Educational Institution Heads
to Meet April 25.
Grand Forks. N. D., .
cial to The Herald.) —
McVey has issued a call
of a series of conferenc
dents and boards of 1
various - state educatioi
to be held at the unlvi
day, April 25. Preslden
urated this plan for the
ing the heads of the ■
tions an opportunity to
of mutual interest an-
plans for the general i
the schools of North Da
conference was held t
Vpril 18.— (Spe-
?resldent F. L.
for the second
es of the presi-
rustees of the
lal institutions
rsity on Tues-
t McVey inaug-
purpose of giv-
,-arious Institu-
discuss matters
1 to formulate
mprovement of
kota. The first
fie first of the
school year and has resulted in muclx
benefit.
The annual state conference of higlv
school superintendents, principals and
teachers will be held at the university
May 19 and ^0, and the program is now
being prepared by the committee. Aiv
attendance of more than 100 is expects
ed this year.
•
Killed In HomeMtake.
Lead, S. D., April 18. — Gust Boekrath,
a timberman In the Home.stake goij
mine, was instantly killed Monday and
his helper, Ben Mattson, sustained a
broken leg in a cave-in In the mine at
the 600-foot level. The stope in which
the accident occurred had been declared
unsafe by the Inspector and the men
were setting timber to sustain the
walls when the roof caved.
FREE SAMPLE CURED OLD
PER!{ON'S BOWEL TROUBLE
One of the most remai'kable proofs of
the unusual laxative merit contained In
Dr. CaldwelTs Syrup Pepsin is that It is
effective not only in people In the prime
of life, but at the extrenes of ages. As
many letters are recelv< d from mothers
regarding the cures of children, as from
men and women of sixty, seventy and
eighty years of age. It n>ust be truly a
wonderful laxative.
In thre cure of constipation and bowel
trouble in old people it has no equal.
It corrects the constipation, dispels the
headache, biliousness, gas, drowsiness
after eating, etc. People advancing In
years should see to It that their bowels
move freely, and if ihey do not to
take Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin.
You can prolong your life by healthy
bowel action. Clogged bowels invite
disease. Women about to pass the
menstrual period cannot do better tlian
use Syrup Pepsin sever ai times a week
until the system has settled to its fu-
ture condition.
Among the strongest supporters ot
Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin are Mr^
W. G. Zorn of New Decatur. Ala., and
Mr. George S. Spaulding of the National
Soldiers' Home, Kansas, l>oth elderly
men. Th<e regular size bottles can be
bought of any druggist at fifty cents-,
and one dollar, but a free sample can
be had by sending your address to
the doctor.
Dr. Caldwell does not feel that the>
purchase of his remedy ends his obli-
gation. He has specialized in stomacR;
liver and bowel diseases for over forty
years and will be pleased to give the
reader any advice on the subject free
of charge. All are welcome to writ*,
him. Whether for the medical advic«k
or the free sample address him Dr.
W. B. Caldwell. 541 Caldwell buildln&
Montlcelloi 111. ^
I '
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/
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8
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
THE DULUTH HERALD
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
—ESTABLISHED APRIL 9. 1883—
Published every evening except Sunday by
THE HERALD COMPANY,
Herald building. Opposite Postoffice Square,
422 and 424 West First St., Duluth. Minn.
btend «s 8«cond-clM8 matter at the Duluth postoffice under the »ct of con-
grew uf March 3. 1879.
TULEPHONl!:!
Business Office, 324.
-Bell and Xenltb.
Kditorial Rooms, 1126.
OFFICIAL PAPER CITY OF DULUTH
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
(By mail payable in advance.) •
Daily, three mt.iths 11.00 Dally, six months 12.00
Daily, one month 35 Daily, one year. 4.00
Saturday Herald, one year fl.OO
Weekly Herald, one year 1.00
Rpmltlaiu>rit m.iy be maJe by check, postoffice order, registered letter or ex-
»r««ii or.lcr. Make all remitUnces payable to The Herald company. 01»e post-;
Iffice addras In full. Inrluding «tute and county.
BY CARRIER— CITY OR SUBURBS.
Dally, one week ' J^
Dally, one month -j^
Daily, one year *■""
Sulricrll^rs wUl confer a faTor on the circulation department by calling 324.
Ilttaer 'phone, and making known any cumplaint of service.
It Is important when dojlrtng the addreas of your paper changed to gl»e botu
Ihe old and new addusses.
^ _^ _^_^^_^^,_^ >
The Duluth Herald accepts advertising contracts with
the distinct guarantee that it has the largest circulation
of any newspaper published in Minnesota outside the Twin
Cities. Its value as an advertising medium is apparent.
Jlun is his oven star; ai%d the soul that can
Hender an honest and a perfect man
Commands all light^ all influence^ all fate.
Nothing to him falls early ^ or too late.
Our acts our angels are^ or good or illy
Our fatal shadows that walk hy us still.
—John Fletcher (1576-16^5).
taincd, at least in substance, by the affidavits and state-
ments of other men. It is hard to see how Mr. Funk
would have anything to gain by misrepresenting matters
in this instance, especially since he had cause to know
that what he said would be put to a severe investigation.
His timely assistance to Mr. Kohlsaat caught the popu-
lar fancy, and this, too, helps to establish his story in the
popular mind.
With all this in view, the senate is npt likely to turn
a deaf ear to the demands of the people. There will be
a fight, in all probability, but it does not seem likely
that it will be possible even to tack upon the bill an
amendment like the Sutherland amendment of the last
session, which aroused the opposition of certain Southern
members. '
There is great reason to expect that the direct elec-
tion plan will meet wtih the approval of the present body,
and that one of the means of grossest corruption in our
national politics will be removed.
GETTING DOWN TO BRASS TACKS.
If anything were needed to convince the people of the
country that VVoodrow Wilson is in earnest in his cam-
paign of reformatory measures, that thing was furnished
in his Indianapolis speech the other night when he
urged the Democratic party to avoid uncertainty in the
issues that it is presenting to the country. Governor
Wilson wants the party to keep out of all high-flown
oratorical fields, and get down to brass tacks in its
dealings with public questions. He is opposed to plat-
forms built out of planks that may mean one thing or
may mean something else. And since that promise of
the Republican platform of 1908, which said that the
tariff should be revised but did not specify whether that
revisicH* should be downward or upward, the people are
strongly inclined to agree with him.
This is no more than right. When a man goes before
the voters to ask them to elect him to office, they have
a right to demand that he tell them what principles he
proposes to take with him to that office, and tell them
plainly. They want no more uncertainties. They have
had enough of those from the Republicans. If the Demo-
crats adopt such tactics there will be a political up-
heaval the like of which the country never has seen be-
fore, though how it will come cannot well be forecasted.
Governor Wilson supplied a good example to his
party when he set about to define "privilege," that
power or element, or whatever one may call it, which is
being so widely attacked, and which he has wrought so
powerfully and successfully to root out in his own state.
Here is the definition as it was given by Governor
Wilson:
By privilege, as we now flglit it." we mean control
of the law. of legislation and of aflaudication, by
organizations which do not represent tne people, by
means which are private and selfish, and worthy of
all condemnation. We mean specifically the conduct
of our affairs and the shaping of our tegislation in
the interest of special bodies of capital and those
who organize their use. "W'e mean the alliance for
this purpose of political machines with the captains
of organized industry. We mean the exploitation of
the people by legal and political means.
Governor Wilson seems to have hit every phase of
the activities by which "privilege" exercises its power
for the exploitation of the people. It is not only by
political and legislative, but by judicial and legal means
that the public rights have been invaded. And it is
against this kind of exploitation, the kind of thing that
prevents representative government and makes our form
of conducting national affairs a mockery and a sham,
that this "student in politics" seeks to lead those who
will follow him in the fight.
Governor Wilson has shown by his work in New
Jersey that he knows how to fight, and he showed by
his speech at Indianapolis that he knows what he is
fighting.- He has shown the elements of a leader. It is
not strange that he is being considered in many quarters
as a possibility to be reckoned with in 1912. If, in the
next twelve months, he proves able to hold to the points
he has gained thus far, his experience in politics will
have been sufficient at least to insure his consideration
as a presidential candidate, whether he succeeds in ad-
vancing as far as the nomination or not. He has shown
that he has the ability to understand the national situa-
tion, and that is the first step necessary in preparing a
campaign for the release of the country from the system
of exploitation that privilege has been allowed to build
up under Republican rule.
LOOKS SURE THIS TIME.
If anything in the way of legislation can be positively
forecasted, that thing just at present seems to be the
success of the congressional bill providing for the direct
election of United States senators. In the house the
other day only sixteen out of 312 members voted against
it, and it will go to the senate with that record behind it.
That the senate will pass it there seems little reason to
doubt, and there apparently is equally little reason to
doubt that it will receive the necessary number of state
ratifications to make it effective.
Several influences have been at work to bring about
the assurance of the success of the advocates of the
measure in the senate. In the last congress it came so
near passing that there was some uncertainty until the
last votes were in. Since that time there have been
several changes in that body and nearly every change
was such as to change the vote from a particular state
from that of opposition to one of agreement.
Also there have been some serious and startling de-
velopments in the Lorimer case that are sure to have
an effect on the vote on that proposition, at least if the
members of that body pay heed to the attitude of their
various constituencies. The testmony of Mr. Funk, how-
ever it may be denied by the men directly implicated by
him, will not be wholly discredited in the minds of the
people of the nation, particularly since it has been sus-
THE NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE BENEFITS.
Duluth has no worthier institution than the Neighbor-
hood house in the West end, for whose benefit the first
of a series of entertainments is to be given at the Y. M.
C. A. tomorrow evening. Those who have watched the
work accomplished by the Twentieth Century club
through this institution need no urging to induce thcni
to help the cause along. Those who have no knowledge
of the work can get some idea of it by attending this
first benefit entertainment, in which some of the young
people who are being interested by the Neighborhood
house will take part.
For the information of these uninformed, it may be
said that the Neighborhood house is a headquarters for
boys and girls, where they arc encouraged to work to-
gether for mutual amusement and profit. They are given
interests that keep them out of places unfit for boys and
girls to be in, and are taught the simpler lines of work of
which they are capable. The formation of clubs is en-
couraged, and through these the work is carried on even
when the children do not find opportunity to go to the
Neighborhood house itself. In brief, the institution fur-
nishes growing youngsters with enjoyable and useful oc-
cupations that keep them out of mischief and out of the
way of evil influences; it helps them to become
honorable and industrious men and women instead of
loafers and beggars, and even criminals.
Help the cause along by going to the Y. M. C. A. to-
morrow night, and you may be sure you are investing the
cost of the entertainment in something that is far beyond
any price of any commodity for sale in the open markets
of the commercial world.
TH5 SENATE LEADERSHIP
By SAVOYABD.
When the .^ixty-aftcond congress
shall be fi|lly or^acU^l, who will lead
the majority sideiof ^e United States
.senate? Will he m* trom the East, or
from the West? Will he be a standpat-
ter or an insura«nt?nt)r will the ma
jority be organn!
to two camps,
a condition the
nted with more
y? Aldrich, the
American par-
retired from the
Eugene Hale, his
DR. VINCENT'S VISIT.
Tomorrow evening the Duluth Commercial club is to
have the honor of entertaining Dr. George E. Vincent,
recently chosen president of the University of Minne-
sota. This will be the first visit of Dr. Northrop's suc-
cessor to any city in the state outside the Twin Cities,
and Duluth citizens should be glad of the opportunity to
meet the distinguished guest.
Dr. Vincent has come to Minnesota with strong rec-
ommendations from men who know him and his work,
and much is expected of him. He is recognized as an
able educator and an excellent administrator. Coming
to Minnesota from the University of Chicago, he nat-
urally has many features of the work to deal with that
are different from those he has been accustomed to, and
he will find inspiration and encouragement in taking- up
his task if the people in the different parts of the state
show their interest in him and his efforts.
Dr. Vincent's visit to Duluth comes pat upon the heels
of the appropriation by the legislature of the funds asked
for the establishment of an agricultural school at Duluth,
which shall be a part of the state university, and this
fact makes his coming all the more interesting to Du-
lutliians. He will be the real head of the local school,
and he will undoubtedly be on the lookout during his
stay in this city for signs of interest in the coming of the
branch of the state institution, and appreciation of the
extension of its work to this region.
But even aside from the natural interest in Dr. Vin-
cent as a successor to* the much loved and much admired
Dr. Northrop, and aside from the connection he will have
with the local demonstration school, the new president
is, according to all accounts, a man worth meeting and
getting acquainted with on his own account. The Com-
mercial club expects a showing of great interest in his
visit here, and its expectations are justified. Duluth
should give Dr. Vincent a cordial welcome that will
make him eager to repeat his visit to the Zenith City.
more or less h
senate has been
than once in its h
most successful -jut.
lianientary leaders,
public stage, as is
right arm. i'ears ago John C. Spooner
((Uit the forum for the bar, and Alli-
son is dead. Who will replace these
men in the most select political delib-
erate council in the world?
In a parllamentarj' body, a leider
is as necessary as he is in a militar:'
tstablishment. Talent, coolness, cour-
age, and even audacity, are as essential
lo outaiii su-.te-is in tlie calinet as
Ihey are to gain victory on the fleli.
The timid must be supported. the
rc-calcilrant intimidated, ay, the. in-
terested cajoled, to run a republican
form of government. The imperious
will and inflexiblfi courage of Thad-
dues Stevens in congress did as much
to beat the Soutli in our great war
as the military genius of Ulysses S
(^raut in battle.
« * •
The Republican party has produced
many great senators In its infancy
were Fes-senden. Sdinner, Chase. Sew-
ard, Trumbull. Hamlin, Wade, Wilson,
and Col lamer. Later came Conkling.
Sherman, Edmunds. Morion, the Rlor-
lills. the Chandlers, the Lanes, How-
ard, Schurz. Ingalls. Carpenter. Blaine,
the Platts, Logan, and others too num-
erous to mention. Of all the senators
of the Republican faith it Is scarce
too much to say that Fessenden was
tlie greatest, take him at4-in all. The
late Thomas B. Reed held that he was
superior In intellect to the famous
George Evan.s, of whom it .may be said
that he miglu have been the rival of
Webster had he not chosen to be the
follower of that great man.
Until Nelson W. Aldrich became the
leader, power was divided on the Re-
I'Ublican side of the senate. Seward
might have been called the leader of
the Titanic battles.. of the Free-Soilers
against Douglas wlfen the Kansas-
Nebraska bill was considered, but Fes-
senden. Sumner,! Chase. Wade, Trum-
l.ull. and even the Southern Whig.
John Bell of Tennessee, bore down with
equal intrepdity an4 zeal upon "the
Little Giant." who 0ut "popular sov-
ereignty" into an act of congress. Even
during tlie war' there w^s a divided
Kepublican leadership in the senate
Wilson, was chairman of military af-
fairs and reported and took charge of
all legislation looking to the increase
of theforces in the tltild and the promo-
tion of the efficiency of the army. Fes-
senden and Sherman saw to matters
of revenue and taxation, al.so the cur-
rency, though Fessenden strenuously
opposed the creation of the greenback.
Trumbull looked after the law. and he
wa.s the author ot b.\\ three of the con-
stitutional amendments legislated by
the war. As for Sumner, he was tho
agitator. It was his task to keep the
heart of the North afire, and to make
no peace until the shackles were
stricken from every slave In the re-
public. He also looked after foreign
affairs. But it was different in the
house of repreatentatives, where Thad-
deus Stevens was "everyman himself,"
tliough he was neither speaker nor
chairman of ways and means.
• « «
After the Impeachment proceeding
failed, and Grant became president, if
the senate had a leader, it was Conk-
ling. and a powerful man he was. He
drove Carl Schurz. Lyman Trumbull
and Charles SMn^^er out of the Repub-
lican party ■and liroved himself a
match for all of lh«m in debate. Early
in his career Sumner had supported
the Democratic party, and Trumbull
was a Democrat until Douglas drove
him into the Republican party In 1855;
and eighteen years later. Conkling sent
him hack into tire party of his youth
and early manhood. It is a curious
fact that this man. who was the au-
thor of the Southern reconstruction
measures of the Republican party, be-
came the political tutor of William
Jennings Bryan, thrice leader of the
THE OPEN COURT.
TWENTY YEARS AGO I
Taken From the Columns of Ths Herald of This DatSy 1891. I \
Started your spring spading yet?
Lorimer says he isn't worrying. Why should he? It
didn't cost him anything.
The real fans have already got the names of all the
different batteries by heart.
And when you write to your friends don't fail to tefl
them about the big water carnival at regatta time.
(Readers of The HeriUd «re Invited to make free use
of thia column to express tlieir Meas about the topic*
of general interest, tetters should not exceed 300
words— the sliorter the better. They must be written
on one side of the paper only, and the; muit be ac-
companied in ererj case by the name and addresi of
the writer, tbouch these need not be published. A
signed letter is aiway* more ettective. however.)
A LANDLORD'S PLAINT.
Democratic party and Idol of the
South.
But for nearly ten years we may
say that Conkling was the leader of
the senate. Carpenter was his ablest
lieutenant, and lie was well supported
by Jolin A. Logan and Don Cameron.
While Grant was president, Conkling
was almost supreme, though Morton, a
very powerful man, was senator, and
a rival of Conkling for the nomination
by the Republicans for president In
1876. Edmunds. Hoar and Ingalls were
content lo allow Conkling to reign,
and even Sumner was rebuked and
deprived of the chairmanship of for-
eign affairs. It is another curious fact,
though a story too long to tell here,
that even tlie negro senator. Revels,
joined with Conkling in the work of
humiliating Sumner. Neither R. B.
Hayes nor John Sherman had any
love for Conkling, but even when they
ruled the executive department, Conk-
ling continued the leader of the senate,
and leader he was the four years
James G. Blaine was senator. It is
likely that Conkling would have re-
mained the leader of the Republican
side of the senate the remainder of
his natural life if the Garfield admin-
istration had not surrendered William
Mahone to the Democratic chieftains
who then voted to confirm Robertson,
and thus drove to retirement the
ablest, if not the greatest and the
most successful, leader the Republican
party ever had in the senate.
« « •
As Conkling went out. Aldrich came
in, or a few months later. And now
economic questions had supplanted the
Southern question. The negro gave
way to the tariff. The Fifteenth
amendment was nullified amid the
storm raised by the issue of the free
and unlimited coinage of silver into
full legal tender dollars at the ar-
bitrary ratio of 16 to 1. Both parties
were hypocrites and cowards when
they came to grapple wtih the simple
Issue of whether the American dollar
should be worth 100 cents. Both par-
ties enacted the Bland-American act
for limited coinage. The Republican
partv passed the Sherman silver law.
that "raised the limit." These blunders
cost the American people hundreds of
millions, and they would have cost
more than double as much more had
not Grover Cleveland, with the grip of
an Olympian demi-god, seized the Issue
and smote it till it died, and made its
gra.i with innumerable other errors,
more or less honest.
• • «
Aldrich was the real leader of his
party In the senate from 1885 till he
retired to private life. He was the
business man turned statesman. No
orator, no lawyer, no scholar, he knew
men, how to manage them, and he did
manage them. Theory he cast aside,
along with everything that was not
demonstratively practical. "Pig Iron"
Kelley was a doctrinaire, and Aldrich
accepted his preachments and put them
into practical use. He made the Mc-
ICinlev tariff. He dictated much of
the Wilson tariff. He made the Ding-
ley tariff and he made the Payne
tariff. And In the making of the last
named he executed a feat of parlia-
mentary and economic gymnastics at
which every other parliamentary leader
who ever spoke our tongue would have
stood aghast — he formed alliances be-
tween the manufacturers of the North
and the spokesmen for raw materials
at the South that not only preserved
"the protective principle," but carried
that dogma to an extent theretofore
unheard of In our country.
Verily this country will not soon
again look on the like of Nelson W.
Vldrich as a parliamentary leader.
• • «
Who will succeed him? Not Lodge,
who is more like Burke than Chatham.
Lodge is a man of thought, not of
action. It might have been Dolliver,
who gave Aldrich more trouble than all
the rest of the senate. It can scarce be
Cummins, for every standpatter would
revolt. It cannot be Smoot, for every
Insurgent would rebel. Root is the
profound lawyer rather than the prac-
tical statesman, though he was prac-
tical enough in the cabinet, that Is
very different from the senate.
On the I>€mocratlc side also we may
look for chaos till John .Sharp Willianiv
gets warm in his seat and finds the
hearings as they are. He will be a
loader, it matters not whether he sit at
the head of the table or below the salt.
instance cited a clerk received his new
pencil without returning the end.
Before the omission was discovered
the clerk was transferred to anotlier
office. Just after lie had commenced
his duties at his new post he received
an official Intimation that he had neg-
lected to hand in his pencil end. By
this time It had disappeared, but to
prevent bother the clerk purchased a
new pencil, cut off a piece about the
length of the missing bit, and des-
patched it to the stationery depart-
ment.
•••The judiciary committer of the
Minnesota house yesterday reported the
McHale anti-tights bill back without
recommendation. The bill will go to
the foot of general orders and will not
be reached at this session of the legis-
lature.
•••Duluth stockholders in tl
lean Building &. Loan Assoc
Minneapolis, who a year ago i
against the association and
broke it up In business, will
ested to learn that Bank 1
Kenyon has made a report to
ernor on the association, whic
a somewhat sensational
Attorney General Clapp will s
state has grounds for a suit
the American and ask for a r
••♦President William C. Wh
board of education leaves toe
few weeks' visit in Tenness
goes to meet S. L. Selden at I
Later they will probably be ;
W. E. Richardson, with wh
are interested in a large trac
on the Cumberland plateau,
from Rockwood. The land si
cropping of fine coking coal.
le Amer-
iation of
iroceeded
nearly
be inter-
ixaminer
the gov-
h makes
showing,
ee if the
against
jceiver.
te of the
ay for a
ee. He
Inoxvllle.
oined by
om they
t of land
not far
ows out-
•••The St. Louis County Investment
company has been incorporated with
a capital stock of 110.000. The Incor-
porators are A. Snyder. L. M. WiUcuts,
A. J. Taylor, W. W. Sanford, D. J. Sin-
clair and E. R. Mather, all of Duluth.
•••The Duluth Electric clut was or-
ganized last night by forty-two elec-
tricians, and the following officers
were elected: President, 11. G. Gilder-
man; vice president, Joseph Cummlngs;
secretary, E. J. Meagher; treasurer, R.
R. Thayer.
•••The freight department of tli«
Kastern Minnesota railway was trans-
ferred yesterday to L. V. Brown, vice
John C. Eden, who has been appointed
agent of the Eastern Minnesota docks
at West Superior for the season of
navigation.
•••Mark J. Davis and wife of De-
troit, Mich., arrived yesterday and will
make West Duluth their home.
•••C. R. Kimball has leased Lelp's
hotel at White Bear lake, but will con-
tinue his ticket business in Dulpth.
•••Mrs. Emily E. R. Howe, whose
name will probably call up a train of
memories in the minds of many Du-
luth ladies, is said to be getting up a
Kermess at La Crosse, Wis.
•••Mrs. E. A. Rose, who has been the
guest of Mr.«5. J. E. Decker of the Hotel
Argyle for the past week, returned to
her home in the South yesterday.
•♦•Col. Webster Eaton, who lived
here years ago and acquired consider-
able real estate at the Head of the
Lakes, is at the St. Louis. He haila
from Lincoln, Neb.
•••B. C. Kolp from Adams, Wis., has
I arrived to make his home in Duluth.
"I MUST."
To the Editor of The Herald:
I want to tell you that your blamed
old want ads are a nuisance and I
don't want nothing more to do with
them. I put a want ad in The Herald
two weeks ago about a flat for rent
because I heard I could rent it by a
want ad in The Herald. A friend told
me I could and I tried it. The same
day I put the want ad In The Herald
a man came and said he had seen the
want ad in The Herald and he wanted
to look at the Hat. He said he liked
it and he would bring his wife around
next day and he did and they took It.
Then I forgot to tell you to stop the
want ad -about the flat for rent and It
didn't stop till I told you to and all
the time we have had about fifteen or
twenty people every day coming to ask
about that flat and it makes my wife
a lot of trouble to have them come
when the flat Is rented already. Maybe
this won't do any good, but I hope it
will. Anyway I want to tell you
what a lot of bother your want ad
gave me. A LANDLORD.
Duluth, April 17.^
MR. FARR DEFINES POSITION.
MINNESOTA OPINIONS.
>Vaa Only ■ Dream.
Bralnerd Dispatch: Reapportion-
ment seems to have been a dream in-
stead of a reality and those who In-
sisted that the present legislature
would surely give the people some re-
lief in the matter have been subjected
to a rude awakening. If men of the
caliber of the senators who opposed
and killed the measure are to be
elected to positions of trust and re-
sponsibility no relief can be expected
in the future.
But no matter what happens down there on the Mexi-
can border, we can always blame it on the Japs.
Considering the way he has to work for this time,
George will be glad he doesn't have to be coronated
every four years.
Diamonds are trumps just now, but pretty soon the
golf season will be in full blast too, and then watch
clubs become prominent.
But just imagine the thrill of watching a comic opera
scene where you were liable to be hit by a bullet any old
time! There's a suggestion for Cohan & Harris.
■ —
Anyway, David Jayne Hill stayed in Berlin long
enough to prove to the kaiser that even a non-millionaire
American may not be such a bad ambassador after all.
That pouring out of champagne in the French streets
will convince some Minnesotans that one formerly
known as "Pussyfoot" has changed his domicile to the
country of the Apaches.
The Atlantic Constitution says: "In the event of a
long session congress will have to cancel its platform
dates and be content to fill its engagement with the
people." Not by a jugful! It can always pair itself.
To the Editor of The Herald:
Referring to the article in The Du-
luth Herald, issue of April 14, regard-
ing myself, I have to request that you
kindly publish the following:
Over three months ago I informed
the general superintendent of log-
ging for the Indian department that
I expected to resign in the near fu-
ture I furnished Assistant Commis-
sioner Abbott the same information.
The general superintendent of logging
also gave this information to the com-
missioner of Indian affairs and Supt.
Bear of the Fond du Lac reservation
at the time of Mr. Bear's visit to
Washington In February. Prior to
that visit, according to a personal
acquaintance of Mr. Bear's (not of
Cloquet), Mr. Bear was Instructed by
the Indian office to either accept a
position of farmer on another reser-
vation, or to resign.
On April S, I took leave of absence
and filed my resignation on the 10th.
On April 7. a Mr. Rowley of .Wisconsin
entered on duty in my place on the
recommendation of the -eneral super-
intendent of logging.
The article referred to was inspired
after it was known not only that I
intended to resign but in fact had re-
signed. This article also failed to state
that for over a year some flO.OOO, more
or less, was being' withheld from Indi-
vidual Indians as an expense fund en-
tirely contrary to the terms of the
timber contracts, and probably with-
out the knowledge of the Indiana,
yours truly. W. H, FARR.
Cloquet, Minn., April 17.
Geraaaa Bureaneracy.
London Globe: A good story Is go-
ing the rounds of the French news-
papers Illustrating the beauties of
bureaucratic government in Germany.
We are told that in the post-
office department If a clerk wishes a
new pencil, he has to hand in the
stump of the one that has become too
Short to work with. In the partleulsr
Know^ More Novr.
Crookston Times; There will be a
good many legislators who will be
coming back to their constituents in
a few days, after spending the past
three months in St. Paul, sadder and
wiser men. They went there expect-
ing to do wonders, but discovered that
blunders are easier to accomplish, and
that there Is a vast difference between
pre-election hot air and post-legisla-
tive session facts.
Oppones Extra SeKsloii.
Sauk Center Herald: The Minne-
sota senate has made a holy show of
itself on the question of reapportion-
ment by breaking its pledges and
showing the public that It .«tands for
self instead of for the people. If re-
apportionment should fall, the gov-
ernor of Minnesot^would make even
a greater spectacle^f himself by call-
ing an extra session. True, he made
a pledge to do it, but It was' a fool
pledge, better broken than kept. Con-
ditions do not warrant an extra ses-
sion.
Sioux City Tribune: "No use. Dad;
I will not be a lawyer and I must be
a newspaper man." So said a young
man to his father, the latter a man
of the newspaper, who thought the law
more enviable. But. being a wise
father, having himself followed the
vocation which his abilities decreed he
must follow, he yielded. So a boy
was saved, saved himself, frjm being
a medio<;re lawyer to bee ime, we
doubt not. a good newspaper man;
journalist. If you please; one less round
stick trying to fit into a sqi:are hole.
Happy the after life of the young
man or woman witli force of character
enough to insist upon learning to do
that part in the world's work for
which there is innate ability, whose
kinetic energy will not be s ;illed and
which refuses to be satisfied until the
vocation Is chosen In which it can have
full play. For to such tliero will al-
ways be "the Joy of the working," the
pleasure of toll, the absence of drudg-
ery and, best of all, the fullest de-
velopment of what Is best In power of
brain.
Wonderful is this Impelling: force of
talent, even when penius is absent.
It is the energy of the life ir the seed
bent on germination. It gives no rest.
It inspires its possessor with its in-
sistent/ "I must." It has no ulterior
object than self expression. If fame
come or wealth or obscurltj- or pov-
erty, it is secondary and Irimaterial.
The poet rhmyes, the music an sings,
the architect plans, the art: san con-
structs, the artist paints, tnough no
one sees or hears or appreciates, or
applauds. They are self-contained. It
is sufficient to be doing ttat which
one must do. And whetlier the meas-
ure of talent be small or large Is im-
material, for the measure jf joy is
proportioned to the measure >f ability.
I<ooIish Is the parent who selects
for a child a vocation regardless of,
unnoting of the special abilities of the
child. And, alas, there a^e many
such. More there are of them to watch,
not for indications of special mental
forces of their children, who let them
drift unguided into and among the vo-
cations, groping their way blindly,
caught, most likely, at last by some
uncongenial one, whose t3.sks are
drudgery, the performance ol which is
perfunctory and in which tl ere is no
•joy of the working." Wise 1:5 the par-
ent who fosters the development of
leading faculties in offspring, and wise
are those communities that realize
the varying abilities and prc>vide edu-
cation for them.
letters of his name in the desk in front
of him. As the novels would put It the
principal rushed to the spot, angrily
put forth his hand intending to grasp
the boy by the collar, when lo. and
also behold, close bv the newlv formed
letters were the initials of the princi-
pal's own name written by himself
when he was a pupil in the same school.
His grasp upon the boy's collar
loosened itself, and he returned to his
desk a sadder and a wiser teacher.
That principal is today judge of an im-
portant court in one of the greatest
cities of the world. We often won-
der whether or not In the administra-
tion of justice the judge ever thinks
of the Incident in the village school.
Pointed ParaKrapha.
Chicago News: Oh, no. Cordelia, a
wood stove isn't made of wood.
Anyway, it is better to be romantic
than rheumatic.
Many a man is afraid of doing wrong
— so he does nothing.
Don't blame the actor for trying to
make a show of himself.
Even a man who Is fond of horses
doesn't like to be nagged.
If wishes were horses beggars would
try to swap them for aeroplanes.
Time is money — with the exception
of the time made by the losing horse.
Sometimes a woman adds to her
troubles by trying to subtract from
her age.
After a man has been elected to
office he Is apt to forget those who
put him there.
Yes, Cordelia, you are probably right
In your belief that a henpecked man
Is chicken-hearted.
When bad luck begins to pour down
on a man he seldom has enough am-
bition left to raise an umbrella.
Men are continually disobeying the
laws of nature, but a hog never seems
to do anything that isn't good for
him.
•
Qneer Conrlnaloa.
Boston Globe: Mr. Taft has appar-
ently reached the conclusion that If
Charles W. Morse didn't want to live
In prison, he ought not to have done it.
AMUSEMENTS.
A MOMENT WITH THE WITS.
Chicago News: Mrs. Steppines — How
nice all your things taste! Did you
cook them all in your fireless cooker?
Mrs. Youngweddly — Oh, no! The
pickles and the butter I bought already
cooked.
Chicago News: "Papa," said small
Fred, "do you want to save some
money?"
"Certainly, my boy," replied his
father.
"Well," continued the little fellow,
"I'll tell you how you can do it. Get
me a pair of roller skates and then I
won't wear out my shoe soles."
Washington Star: "Yes," said the
determined man, "when that waiter re-
sented the smallnesB of my :ip I took
the case to the proprietor oil the res-
taurant."
"And what did the proprietor do?"
"He gave the waiter some money
out of his own pocket and upologizeil
to him for having such a customer."
Chicago Tribune: "What's the charge
against these two men?" inc.ulred the
police justice.
"They were having a quarrel over a
busted auto tire, your honor," an-
swered the officer.
rWell. we'll let them pa;ch it up
ttremselves," said his honoi, with a
slight closing of his eyelid. "Call the
next case."
Pittsburg Post: "Do the children
still write letters to Santa Cliius?"
"Not now. All the kids lave ama-
teur wireless stations."
Life: "She's very domestic in*her
tastes, isn't she?"
"Decidedly. They say she really en-
joys her husband's cooking."
Yonkers Statesman: Bill — This pa-
per says an effort is being made in
France to form a great society for the
protection of the big game of the world
Jill — Well, the big game is all right
What we want is a society for the pro-
tection of the umpires.
Now Up to "Prosfre^slves."
St. Cloud Journal-Press: Minnesota's
United States senators and some of her
congressmen are opposed to the Ca-
nadian reciprocity agreement on the
theory that it discriminates against the
Minnesota farmers. While we do not
agree with this conclusion, we have no
quarrel with any man who is honestly
trying to protect the farmers, because
they are the foundation of our pros-
perity. A bill has been introduced in
the house of representatives taking off
the duty on some hundred articles used
by farmers, which Is a supplement to
the reciprocity bill, and the sincerity
of those opposed to the pact will be
tested when they come to vote on this
bill. If Canadian reciprocity and the
farmers' free bill are both passed, the
objection from the farmers' point of
view will be overcome. The standpat-
ters will naturally and consistently op-
pose both, but the progressives who
nave been clamoring for a revision of
the tariff downward, and a large free
list, should now back up their conten-
tions with their votes.
Wonltl Donble Onr Export*.
Roseau County Times: Believe It or
not. free trade with Canada would
double the exports from the United
States the first year and double that
the fourth year. Even with the reci-
procity pact In force, our trade with
Canada will almost double In the ex-
portation of American products the
first year. Now watch, you unprogres-
slve kickers and blind leaders of the
blind.
Meggendorfer Blaetter: "I hear your
three daughters have becomo engaged
this summer."
•'Well, not precisely. It \t only the
youngest, but she has beer engaged
three times."
W^ashington Star: "You w
said the Baconian, "that Sha
autographs prove him to ha
very slow, laborious writer?"
"Perhaps," replied Mr. St
Barnes, "but my private opin:
he developed that tedious ai
lous style to discourage p(
wanted him to write passes."
11 admit,"
kespeare's
/e been a
srmlngton
on Is that
id tremu-
ople who
Xgmtjrcss
SULUVAN-CONSIDINE VAUDEVILLE.
BEST SHOW IN TOWN.
ays?.;- 245. 8:00 mi 9;30
JOE WELCH
PAUL CASE A CO.,
PEARL YOUNG
MUSICAL WILSONS
BERNARD'S MANIKINS
Schneider** OrcheMtra. Bmpreaaoopa
Empreaa Prlcea— 10c, 15c, 25c.
Bargain niatiaM WedneMlay. 2Se, any Mat, 2S«.
MAUDE LEONE and Auoelate Player* preMnt
that funny Musical Comedy
'TheGirlQuestion"
12 Soni Hits. 15 Pretty Girl*, 1,000 Laaihs.
Matinee* 25o; night*. 25e, SOo.
STARTING THURSDAY,
Three Night*, April 20, 21, 22, Saturday Mat.
inee,
LEW FIELDS
Preeent* the Colot*al Spectacular Mu*ical Prp-
duction
—THE—
MIDNIGHT SONS
With GEO. W. MONROE.
And the Larvett Company and Biggeet Seento
Equipment ever tent on tour. 150 People on the
Stage Three Carioad* of Scenic Surprise*. 60 in
the Chorus. 30 Big Song Hits. Eight Mamroeth
Scenes.
PRICES— Matinee 25e to $1.50: Night* SOo t«
$2.00. No telephone order* taken. No seat*
held.
Philadelphia Record: Mrs. Gnaggs —
You know well you were perfectly
crazy to marry me.
Mr. Qnaggs — I admit it, my dear; but
It was merely a case of temporary in-
sanity.
e
Reflectioaa of a Bachelor.
New York Press: A good deal of
courage is several parts leai' of being
called a coward.
Even going fishing would lose Its
fascination for a man If it was on sal-
ary.
The only thing needed to make any
sum of money look big to us is for it
to be somebody else's.
Give a girl the moonligl t, a path
through the trees, and a mai, and she
will lead him home engaged.
A man has an exceptionally sweet
disposition when he doesn't blame his
wife because he forgot to take the
latchkey when he went dff in the
morning and she didn't know he was
going to stay out until nearly break-
fast.
-♦
A Boy Uaee Himself.
Western School Journal: The princi-
pal of a village school In Kansas one
gifternoon detected a boy eattlns the
NEW
Botli PhoHM «4t«i
> THEATER
WTCRMATIOMAL VAUPEVILLE.
THIS ^'EEK'S BILL..
MATINEES-
25c
Except Sunday*
and Holidaytb
Night*, 15*. 25a,
50* and 7S«.
Master Qahriol and Compaay.
Farrcll-Tayler Company.
The Namba Jap*.
George Auetid M*«r* and
Cordelia.
Ward Brother*.
Browning and Lewla.
Enieet Yerxa aad Adela.
The KInedroae.
Th* Caneert OrehMtra.
"The Atonement of Thai*"— Gau moat (OramatI*.)
"Italian Coast Scenes"— Gaumont (Educational.)
"The Reeurrretion of John"— EdUon (Comedy.)
"The Inherited Tatnf— Vitagraph (Dramatlo.)
Illustrated Song. "Underneath the Wishing Troa."
Published by Joseph W. Stearns, sung by
Mr. I. 8. MIstachkin.
ODEUIVI
"Th* Chler* Daughter"— Biograpb (Oramati*.)
"1861"— Selig (Dramatl*.)
"Beet GIri After All"— Lubin (Oraaatla.)
"A Viait to Na**au. Bahama. W*ol ladie»—
Lubia (Edueatioaal.)
Illustrated song. "My lri*k D*v<*." Seag fey
Mr. GMTf* Laat.
DEFECTIVE PAGE F
> ^ ■ ^ -.-111 ■ .i
* ■" I ■!
^mmm
1
i*iite
;
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I ■■
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'fStr-
Tuesday,
THE DULaTH HERALD,
Apnl 18. 1911
P^MA^^t^i^^^^^i^^^^wN^SAAM^^^^i^^^^^tM^
WEST END
■j-f— [~~"^""""""""""
BENEFITS FOR
NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE.
The first of the series of benefit
entertainments to be given by the
Twentieth Century club for a new
Neighborhood house at the West end,
•will take place tomorrow evening at
the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium.
The Daniel Boone boys of the West
end, one of the Neighborhood house
clubs, will put on a play, "Sir Gareth
of Orkney." Fourteen will take part.
A number of the young women of the
y. W. C. A. will present a "stunt."
under the name of "trained animals."
C. O. Appiehagen will sing and Airs.
Kaake will give a reading. Volley
ball will be played by the boys' de-
Sartment of the Y. M. C. A.. A basket
all game is also scheduled. The com-
mittee in cliarge of the affair is: Mrs.
N. F. Hugo, Miss Mary Paine, Miss
Julia Morrow and Miss Jean Poirier.
" Saturdav a rummage sale will be
held at 2io West Superior street. The
proceeds will go to the Neighborhood
house fund. On April 27, 29 and May
1. Dr. N. I. Rubinkam of Chicago, a
lecturer of note, will be In Duluth
for a series of lectures. The proceeds
of this affair will also help along the
Neighborhood house cause.
It is planned to move to another
location. The present lease of the
building at 2423 West Superior street
expires May 1. An attempt will be
made to secure larger quarters in the
vicinity of Twenty-first. Twentieth or
Nineteenth avenues west. Four boys'
clubs, two girls' societies and the
West end branch of the public library
are new housed in the present Neigh-
l>orhood house.
Funeral of Mrs. Emerson.
Funeral services for Mrs. Mary
Emerson, aged -14 wife of Charles
Emerson of 322 North Twenty-fifth
avenue west, who died yesterday aft-
ernoon at her home, will be held to-
morrow at 9 o'clock from St. Clements
Catholic church. Twenty-first avenue
west and Tl:ird street. The body will
be sent to staples for interment.
Mrs Emerson is survived by a hus-
band, seven ciiildren. a mother. Mrs.
Mary Hawkins of Bralnerd. and two
Bisters, one in Brainerd and the other
In St. Paul. The children are: Ger-
trude, Louise, Walter. Leonard, Ger-
main, Bernice and a child. 1 week old.
Mr.*. Emerson was ft resi'lent of the
West end for twelve years.
•
Mrs. Anderson Dies.
Mrs Emma Mary Anderson. 25 years
old wife of Charles August Anderson,
died this morning of heart trouble at
her home, 2707 West Second street,
following an iUnes.'« since December.
Besides her husband, she is sur-
vived by ner parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Fred McClure of 2707 West Second
Bteeet, and three brothers, William
H.. Fred and Henry N. McClure. all of
this city. She leaves no children.
Funeral arrangements are Incom-
plete.
•
Luther League Festival.
The Luther League of Bethany Swed-
ish Luthrean church Twenty-third
avenue west and Third street will give
a festival. May 2. at the Pilgrim
Swedisii Lutheran church of Superior.
The Luther League of Superior ex-
tended an Invitation to the West end
society to give an affair of this kind
and the invitation was accepted. The
Bethanv Luiher league will meet this
evening to complete arrangements for
the affair.
\Vest End Shortrails.
The Ladies' Aid Society of the First
Norwegian-Danish M. E. church will
be entertained Thursday afternoon at
the h>me of Rev. and Mrs. Edward
Erick.son of 430 North Twenty-third
avenue west.
The Adams Athletic as.«ociation
gave its annual Easter Monday ball
last evening at Lincoln Park pavilion.
The decorations were elaborate and
the musical program well rendered.
A large crowd attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Abrahamson
have returned to tlieir home at Mason,
Wis., after a visit at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. L. A. Slmonson of 2102 West
Superior street.
A nieeting of the West end branch
of the Women's Christian Temperance
Union was held this afternoon at the
home of Mrs. Edward Thorstad of 3004
West Third street.
The confirmation classes of Bethany
Swedish Lutheran church. Twenty-
third avenue we.st and Third street are
preparing, for the annual confirmation
exercises to be held Sunday. April 30.
The class will be larger this year than
ever before, there being sixty-nine
to receive the sacrament.
The Parthenoi Society of the Swed-
ish Mission church, will hold an auc-
tion in the church. Twenty-first avenue
west and Second street. Thursday
evening. Refreshments will be served
and there will be no admission.
Milton Traverse of Marinette. Wis.,
13 visiting friends in the West "iid for
a few days.
The Lion drug store has moved to
the new Anderson-Th'oorsell block,
2030 West .Superior street.
♦
The $onnd Sleep of Good Health.
Can not be over estimated and any ail-
ment that prevents It is a menace to
health. J. L. Southers, Eau Claire,
Wis., says: "I have been unable to
sleep soundly nights, because of pains
across my back and soreness of my
kidneys. My appetite was very poor
and mv general condition was much
run down. I have been taking Foley
Kidney Pills but a short time and now
Hleep as sound as a rock, my general
condition is greatly improved, and I
know that Foley Kidney Pills have
cured me. All druggists.
«
See the Duluth Hardware Co.'s
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
RALPH IS SUSTAINED
pacity as such engineer for a period
of. ten years. From 1901 to 1907 he
only gave a portion of his time to
the department, the balance of hla
time being given principally to coun-
ties in connection with work on Ju-
dicial ditches. The actual work of his
dtpartment, so far as construction
work is concerned, is from the period
of time in each year beginning when
the frost is first out of the ground
in the spring until freeze-up in the
fall. This necessitates the employment
of Inspectors and field men for a
comparatively short period of time
The engineer is confronted with urgent
demands from many localities for Im-
mediate relief, and in some instances
has attempted to furnish such relief
and comply with such demand without
the proper regard to doing the very
best work in his department. For so
doing he Is excused on the ground of
expediency, and an earnest desire to
accomplish as much as possible with
the means at his command. The ad-
ministration of his department up to
Sept. 1, 1910, had not been as careful
with reference to inspection of ditches,
reports of inspectors, and the makln^i"
any payment of estimates as the very
best business practices would suggest,
but while It has in some respects been
loose, the engineer has at all times
shown a dispolstion to adopt suggest-
ions and to make improvements and
it must be said that at the present
time his office is well systematized
and his records in e-\cellent condition,
and that at no time he can not be
said to have been inefficient, with
reference to tliese matters.
Xot Properly OrKnnixed.
6. The drainage commission is not
properly organized. The commission
being composed of three state officials
who have no practical or technical
knowledge pertaining to drainage mat-
ters, and inasmuch as their duties in-
cident to their state offices consume
all of their time, it naturally follows
that the drainage commission, as at
present existing, Is not a proper or-
ganization from a practical standpoint,
to work out the immense problems in-
cident to state drainage. The subject
of drainage and the incidental ques-
tions co-related to It are of such mo-
ment that they should not be left to
the judgment of one man. Careful
study and consideration should be
given In a compreliensive way so as to
involve the whole state with reference
to the effect which the drainage of the
waters of the state from Its large nat-
ural reservoirs may have on the cli-
matic conditions, and its ultimate ef-
fect on the land. Waters from one lo-
cality should not be drained into
streams causing overilows in other lo-
calities; nor should the waters of the
state be so drained as to cause ex-
treme floods at certain times of the
year and extreme scarcity of water at
others.
The insistance of localities to de-
velop swampy and marshy areas by
drainage should not be acceded to
without a thorough understanding of
the effect upon the state. The land
will remain and little, if any, harm
will result from delay. Much harm
might result from ill considered or pre-
cipitated action.
Kooin for Improvement.
Prior to 1909 the state drainage com-
mission had no jurisdiction over county
or judicial ditches and as a result tliere
was a lack of harmony between state,
county and Judicial systems. In some
instances waters were cast into water-
ways causing overflows and destroying
or injuring valuable lands further
along the same streams. As the law
now stands, tlie commission has Juris-
diction over county and Judicial ditches
to the extent of the prohibiting of the
construction of a ditch until a suffi-
cient outlet is provided that will pre-
vent floods. There is still room for im-
provement in the law, but the whole
subject Involves questions for consider-
ation, study and reflection which this
committee has neither the time nor the
ability to give.
7. The topographical and hydro-
graphical surveys which have been
carried on in conjunction with the
federal government should be con-
tinued. Substantially all of the ditch
work which is now planned and for
which contracts have been let, which
are referred to in subdivision 6 of fi.
should be carried out. except possibly
that on ditch No. 90. In the opinion of
the committee the present engineer is
best able to continue this work.
The committee recommends that a
committee of three or five members of
this house be appointed with sufficient
appropriation, which should be at least
$5,000. to investigate the entire subject
of drainage as it relates to the state
of Minnesota and to make recommen-
dations for such a reorganization of
the department and such changes in the
laws as experience now shows to be
required.
Exquisite Flowers.
"None nicer." Prices right at Huot's.
HKiH HANDED ACTION OF
HOUSE DESK FORCE
Yotcll Do Better at Kellvs !
(Continued from page 1.)
(Continued from page 1.)
panv was not prohibited by law. It
was" not an act of wrong doing, but it
did show a lack of appreciation of of-
ficial ethics by the engineer.
Competent and Faithful.
5. The engineer Is a competent,
faithful and industrious public servant,
so far as relates to the performance
of the technical and practical work of
the commission. He has not the execu-
tive and administrative ability, nor do
his other duties permit him the time,
to manage the detail of the executive
business of the commission as closely
as the importance of the subject re-
quire.s. As the engineer of so import-
ant a department, he should not be
liampered with, nor should his tech-
nical ability be iimpaired by mere
matters of executive and administra-
tive detail. He has served in his ca-
nasty fight of city against country,
dividing the state into hostile camps.
As the bill passed the senate it pro-
vided that no county In the state, no
matter wliat its population might be,
should have more than six members of
the senate.
Tlie house, by a vote of 63 to 54,
adopted an amendment making the
limit seven. This amendment was first
offered by Representative Albert I'faen-
der of New Ulm. He withdrew it be-
cause of opposition, and Representa-
tive Congdon of Dulutli promptly re-
offered It.
While a motion to reconsider the
vote was pending, an adjournment was
forced. In spite of the fact that the
motion to reconsider was pending, the
dtsk force of the house Improperly
rushed the bill through the routine
and landed It in the senate last even-
ing when the senate convened.
FtlibiiHterlnK TarticM.
The fight on the bill was attended
by filibustering tactics, to such an ex-
tent that It was hard to say which
side should be given the largest
amount of credit for killing time. The
friends of the bill talked at length
and at large, and its opponents ex-
hausted every resource in delaying the
vote.
When the bill was taken up at 3
o'clock yesterday afternoon a call of
the house was demanded by Its advo-
cates. Presently R. C. Dunn, one of
its strongest opponents, moved that
proceedings under the eail be dispensed
with when there were nineteen mem-
bers not accounted for. A roll call was
demanded on his motion, and It was
lost, 35 to 50.
Representative Kneeland of Minne-
apolis then moved that the house ad-
journ, and a roll call was demanded on
that motion, which was lost, 27 to 84.
The bill then went to third reading,
and the reading clerk was giving It
the customary informal reading by
title when R. C. Dunn demanded that
It be read in "full, as the rules require.
This was done, consuming more time.
Harding AttaokM CItleM.
Representative Harding of Faribault
countv. one of the leading advocates of
the bill, helped kill time by an extend-
IIV A,t hi ruprnl^
^C€^.
The Urst fniL, ^^ ,
Bill Drggf^men fSror*\
Duluth
I MONEY SAVING
opportunities are always of
interest to the housewife —
and our store is just brimfull
of them every day!
The two samples along-
side are appetite whetters
—but VISIT US and see
the REST!
For Wednesday, April 19
From 10 to 11 a. m.
We offer a case of white
cambric remnants; regular
12j4c values, at, yard
7V2C
From 3 to 4 p. m.
We will sell one case of
heavy, unbleached cotton
crash; a splendid 10c value,
for this one hour, a yard
T^y^c
WATCH THIS SPACE OBT WEDXKSD.^ Y FOR MORE BARGAINS.
^
PICK A GOOD
ONE.
IT'S MUCH better for you to rent a
small cottage or a flat and furnish
it to suit your own individual
taste than it is to live in furnished
rooms where you have to take
things as they are and where
you cannot enjoy the pri-
vacy of a home.
It does not require a
lot of money to furnish
a home. You'll be surprised at
the amount of good furniture
a little money will buy at this store.
Our Easy Payment Plan is at
your disposal. Come in, select whatever
you may need, pay a few dollars down,
and we'll deliver your goods promptly.
Empress Go-Carts Are Best
The most comfortable cart on the market,
large body, padded inside, good springs, and
it can be instantly folded. The Empress Go-
Cart also has a large folding foot hood, mud
guards and extra large hood. It will be to
your interest to see this cart, as it is sanitary
in every sense of the word. We sell them on
easy payments. Other Go-Carts at $3.75,
$4.75, $6.75 and up.
Seeger, The Original and Only Patented
Siphon Refrigerator
The "Siphon System" of Seeger
Refrigerators permits keeping all
the provisions In the refrigerator
without some (A them absorbing
the odor of others. Melons, onions
and fruits may be kept in the
same compartment mithout affect-
ing milk, cream and butter.
The "Seeger Siphon System" re-
duces ice bills. The air is con-
stantly and rapidly circulating,
and every time It passes through
the Ice chamber it gets colder, and
is purified of all odors and mois-
ture
Kelly's Annual
Sale of Rugs and Carf lets
This Includes Lace Curtains and Pontieres
$26.50
Genuine Wilton Rugs
9x12 feet, regular value C9fi '7A
— 139.50; rug sale price... V*0«OW
8.3x10.6 — regular value
137.50 — lug sale price..
French Wiltunii, with fring-od ends —
'Jxl2-foot size; rug €Q7 '50
Bale price vO i-t>U
TapeMtry Kukm — ."^Ize 8.3x10.6 — a
large assortment of patterns in Ori-
ental and rtoral designs; regular
value $15.50 — rug sale ttfi Qfi
TapeNtry Rugn— .Size 9x12 — extra
quality and strictly high grade rugs,
in a large a.^sortment of good pat-
terns, worth $21 — rug ^f d AA
sale price ^1.1.MU
"Mekka" Heavy Velvet Ruk» — Seam-
less. The •'Mekka" is without any
exception the liest velvet rug on
the market. It is closely woven and
has a high pile. They come in a
large selection of patterns. Includ-
ing OrlentaLs — sizes 6x9 feot — reg-
^-^^V^''- $12.00
Size 9x12 feet — regular
value $31 — sale price
SeanileNM Velvet Rniirii — Size 9x12
feet. Another great value in I-'loral
and Oriental designs; regular value
p^fce""'"^. .'f.'* $19.50
$22.50
Lace
Curtains
Fiber Ruga for bed rooms, summer
homes, etc. A splendid line of pat-
terns: size 9x10 feet: wo'th ttiS AA
$9.25— price *W.VV
Scotch Art RnsM In plain colors,
browns, reds and gr^eens; two-tone
borders. The plain colo -ed rugs, at
exactly ONE-H.\I.F OFl
Oil Cloths and Unoleums
Floor Oil Cloth — Good quality, hand-
some check patterns; regular value
40c; sale price, per square 9At*
yard ^*'*>'
LInoleumN — a large selection of
printed patterns — the kind that .sells oivd Portierefi
kt 65c. Bring In your si'.es; jUk^ roriier«S
sale price per square yaid ^v^ ^^^ Pnlrn of NottliiK-
Bxtra Q,Hality Unoleuiii— the kind bam, Plain Nctn,
that win give good ser\ Ice. A fine Arabian and Batten- ««,,..,
line of patterns to sslcct from; berg I..aces, atONE-HAI.F PRICK.
worth 75c; sale price, p« r |i9c Dotted SwIkm, plain riffled Muslin
square yard v^^ Curtain*', worth $1.16 — at, 79c
Inlaid LlnoleuniM with bl Je pattorns; per pair ■ *'
good quality — the kind that sells at a number of pairs of soiled Mus-
$1.50; sal-e price, per square S9c Hn*'' ^t OXK-HALF PRICE.
y^^^ • silkollncH, in light and dark colors
All RemnantM of Oil Clothn and I.ln- for comforts, draperies, etc., worth
oleums, both printed and inlaid, will i2>^c and 15c, at per Qa
be included la this sa e at OXE- .-^rd •'^
IIAL.F OFF.
Matting
Extra (iiiallty CblnCNe MattiuK*
good patterns; worth 18c; 1Qtf»
sale price, per yard m.9^*
It maintains a constant circula
tion of pure, dry air which Is
forced downward over the Ice,
thence up through the provision
chamber. Passing through the
provision chamber, it carries off
all the moisture and odors from
the food and condenses them on
the ice, where, as It melts, they
are carried off through the drain pipe.
Seeger Refrigerators are beautiful in appearance, of the very best
cabinet workmanship, made of selected kiln-dried red oak.
Lined with indestructible, snowy white enamel; removable shelves;
no corners nor cracks to hide dirt and germs. Sanitary, easy to clean
and keep clean.
Come In and see the "Seeger" line and have it explained.
What Uie Siphon system is: JK."Ti"..?l! SfeWHrt RSlOge
Cook with gas; it has many advantages especially durirg the spring
and summer months. With the proper range, gas can be used econo-
mically. The Stewart Gas Range can be regulated so there will be no
waste and the construction of a Stewart means that it will outwear two
ordinary gas ranges.
We Connect Tliem Free I
When you select your Stewart Range, we'll deliver and connect it
FREE OF CHARGE. This means that we'll regulate and keep it regu-
lated as long as you use it.
Sol<l on Easx F»aymentsi
You don't need cash to buy a Stewart range. Come ni, pick out
your range, pay a small deposit and we'll deliver it promptly.
Kelly's 4-Room
Outlit
Terms, $2.00 Per Week.
Kelly's 3-Room
Outfit
Terms, $1.59 Per Week.
i
:-
ed speech in its favor. He divided the
population of the state Into several dif-
ferent kinds, saying that some are en-
titled to representation and some are
not He made a bitter attack on the
people of the cities, saying that they
are not morally and Intellectually the
equals of the people of the country and
that they do not pay so much taxes
uer capita.
Representative D. P. O'Neill of Thief
River Falls made a ringing speech In
answer to Harding. He said that the
laborers in the cities are as Intelligent
as the farmers, and that while the city
laborer may not pay much direct taxes,
when he pays rent he Is paying taxea
that are credited to the landlord. He
scoffed at the Idea that there was dan-
ger that the city members could cir-
cumvent the country members, saying
that if It were true that fifteen city
members of the senate could outwit the
forty-eight country members of that
body he would bow his head in shame
for the country. , ^ ^
Representative Frankson of tonnage
tax fame amiably insinuated that city
representatives are controlled by cor-
porate influences.
Representative John G. Lennon an-
swered Harding's charge that city
people do not pay taxes by showing
that Harding's own county gets back
from the state about $3.000 more than
Rheumatism Advice
Gives Prominent Doctor's Best Pre-
scription — Is Easily Mixed.
"Get one ounce of sjTup of Sarsapa-
riUa compound and one ounce of Torls
compound. Then get half a pint of
good whiskey and put the other two
Ingredients Into it. Take a table-
spoonful of this mixture before each
meal and at bed time. Shake the
bottle before using." This la not new
in this city as many of the worst cases
of rheumatism and backache have
been cured by it. Good results come
the first day. Any druggist has these
ingredients on hand or will quickly
get them from his wholesa>e house.
Any one can mix them.
It pays In state taxes, while St. Louis
county pays In more than $i>00,000 and
gets back only a little more than $100,-
000, while Ramsey and Hennepin coun-
ties each pay in much more than tliey
get out. •
Representative Pfaender then offered
his amendment. Increasing the limit
from six to seven senators, saying that
he did not believe it to be right to
reduce the present representation of
Hennepin county, which now has seven
senators. Opposition appearing, he
withdrew It, and Representative
Congdon promptly reoffered the same
amAidment, which was adopted, 63
to 54.
Dunn OppOMeM F'll.
Representative R. C. l>unn spoke
against the bill, saying that while
Hennepin county defeated him for the
governorship, he was broadminded
enough to overlook it. He charged
that the bill was a mere subterfuge
by which Southern Minnesota repre-
sentatives and senators sought to
cover up the fact that they had vio-
lated party pledges by voting against
reapportionment, so that they could
go home and say that they had opposed
reapportionment until they could have
the Constitution amended so that their
sections would lose nothing.
The vote on the bill was then taken,
and when a motion to reconsider was
made, a motion to adjourn was put
and carried.
• * •
Both the recall bill and the state-
wide primary bill were sent to confer-
ence yesterday afternoon by the senate
when those measures, as amended by
the house, were returned to the senate.
The senate objected to the house
amendment, putting the Judiciary un-
der the recall, and to the house amend-
ment to the Btate-wide primary bill
providing for a platform convention.
The vote on refusing to confer in the
amendments to the recall bill was 37 to
13, and the vote on recusing to concur
In the amendments to the state-wide
primary bill was 32 to JO.
• • •
Anti-Reciprocity Rcsolatlou.
Senator G. H. Sullivan yesterday aft-
ernoon offered an antl-reclproclty reso-
lution in the senate, which Senator
Wallace of Minneapolis put over to to-
day by giving notice of debate.
• • «
Senators Hackney. Slwelli Cook anfl
Dale are the authors of a new senate
bill. Introduced yesterday afternoon,
providing for experiment farms In each
county which will provide 160 acres
for that purpose, and allowing $10,000
state aid to each county avuMing itself
of the privilege.
Speaker Dunn again yesterday after-
noon, on complaint by Representative
Minette, gave notice that the presence
of lobbyists on the floor would not be
tolerated, and ordered that they b»
ejected "in the most expeditious man-
ner of which the sergeant-at-arma la
capable."
* • •
Both HoaMCii Demoralised.
The demoralization In both bodies
over the bill limiting representation
of cities. In the senate was complete
last night. Because of It the senate
was unable to reach other business,
and the house held no session at all,
thus delaying Important matters with
only one working day left.
• * «
The senate last night passed Speaker
Dunn's resolution asking congress to
prevent interference In the operation
of state laws by federal court injunc-
tions before the state courts have
passed on them.
• • •
The house bill creating Fort Rldgley
state park passed the senate last night.
* • •
The senate last night concurred in
Headaches Quit
when the stomach, liver and
bowels are kept in the good
condition m which they will
be bv the prompt use of
BEECHAM'S
PILLS
SoUETcrrwlMr*. la koBW 10c ud 28a.
the house resolution directing the state
highway commission to reimburse a
number of counties the amounts they
were deprived of by tlie supreme court
decision holding the "rork barrel" road
appropriation bill of 1907 unconstitu-
tional. St. Louis county gets $4,300
under this resolution.
STILI.MAN H. BINGHAM.
Safe Medicine for Cbiidrcn.
Foley's Honey and I'ar Compound Is
a safe and effective medicine for chil-
dren as It does not contain opiates or
harmful drugs. The genuine Foley's
Honey and Tar Compound Is in a yel-
low package. All druggists.
WILL mm
MILLER TRUNK
County Commisiuoners Will
Com Road From Eve-
kth to Didath.
Thursday of this v
commissioners will in
trunk road from Evelet
trip will be made in
nished by members of
tomobile club. By wi
trunk the distance ii
Duluttu
The entire board wl
Representatives of the
bile club will accompi
will leave Eveleth earl
so that plenty of time
Inspection purposes i
where Improvements
made.
The board will sper
Miller trunk road this
range road is one of
runs for automobillste
olub nave donated c«
'eek the county
jpect the MiUler
h to Duluth. The
automobiles fur-
the Duluth Au-
ly of the Miller
I sixty miles to
II make the trip.
Duluth Automo.
iny them. They
y In the morning
can be taken for
ilong the road
are about to be
d $10,000 on the
year. Since the
;he most popular
members of the
ra and will ac-
company the commissioners to confer
on plans for the Improvement of the
highway.
Road and Bridge Engineer E. K. Coe
will Join the commissioners at Ev<^lelb
and make the trip to Duluth with them.
CHAIRMAN NAMED
Of
Men and Religion Forward
Movement Committees.
Grand Forks, N. D., April 18.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — At a meeting of
the officers In the Men and Religion
Forward movement held yesterday aft-
ernoon the chairmen of the subcommit-
tees were named and these with the
officers will form the executive com-
mittee. The chairmen are A. J. l.Add,
publicity; W. H. Brown, social service;
Thomas Porte, boys' work; A. I. Hun-
ter, business and finance; H. E. Simp-
son, convention and rally days; H. O.
Glenn evangelism; C. C. McCown, mis-
sionary; Prof. V. P. Squires, Bible pro-
motion; H. L. Willson, auxiliary towns.
ARROm
BELMONT CHESTER
Cloeti, Peabo47 ft CompuiT, Troy, Hew Tocft
1
I
'
■
I
•^
10
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 18, 1911
HILLSMRS STILL HOTI
ON TRAIL OF WATER BOARD
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and has been made under his per-
'S^-/—^ sonal supervision since its infancy.
*^^<><c/u^ Allow no one to deceive you in this*
All Counterfeits, Imitations and** Just-as-good "are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children— Experience against Experiment,
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea— The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Sears the Signature of
Council Committee Wants
Some Specific Charges Be-
fore Investigation.
Compromise Likely on Cana-
dian Northern Franchise
Amendments.
^^
railroad. Informed th^ council that the
road is not and doesnot plan to run
trains through "West .Duluth oyer
the
The Kind You Haye Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 YearSo
TMC OINT«l."l« CO«l»»«»», TT MURNAV STBeCr, NBWrSHK W»
Round Trip From Duluth to the
North Pacific Coast
Via California
in One Direction
Tickets on Sale
April 18, 19, 20
First class with return limit of
June 30. Good on any one of our
several other daily electric -lighted
transcontinental trains. Stop-
overs both ways.
Call, phone or write for full par-
ticulars.
Following the filing of another com-
munication from the executive commit-
tee of the hillside clubs, signed by
Chan Smith and Joseph Le Moignan,
attacking the water and light board,
the light and water committee of the
council sent the executive commitee a
further request for more specific
charges. The members of the council
committee are Aldermen Hogan, Scott
and Gibson.
The council committee stated that it
would be glad to make the complete
and thorough investigation which has
been urged by the executive committee
of the hillside clubs, but that it can-
not do so if only the general allega-
tions which have been submitted are
all that is forthcoming. The commit-
tee in its communication asks a num-
ber of pointed questions which will be
forwarded to the hillside clubs' com-
mittee. . . ... . „.
The hillside clubs committee last
night declared th^lt practically nothing
has been done by the council since the
first list of charges against the water
and light department was tiled almost
four months ago, and then went on to
.set forth the charges which were made
at that time. The committee said that
many pipes and mains were laid |n the
streets and avenues of Duluth without
the authority of the council solely for
the purpose of supplying water out-
side the city limits.
Old CharKei* Rclterateil.
Previous charged as to water rates
were reiterated. and the statement
made that an expert on rates should
be called in as well as an expert to
pass on the question of supplying
water to Proctor. It was claimed that
the rates are not based on scientinc
principles but in the interest of a few
big con.sumers, which. It was asserted,
is a discrimination agaln.st a'J per cent
of the consumers and contrary to sec-
ton 172 of the charter. It was alleged
that the comptroller had audited and
approved for payment certain vouchers
of the water and light department
without proper authority. Reference
was made to one of »778, payable to
the Soo raUroad.
Speaking of the expert who had been
summoned to pass upon the local sys-
tem, the committee stated that he
would naturally be friendly to the in-
terests of his employers, but that in
spite of that he had found many things
to criticize. It was stated that one-
third of the electric pump at t if teentn
avenue east had been sent to the scrap
heap and that the rest of It ousnf to
go there. It was further charged that
the board Is now scheming to spend
hundreds of thousands of dollars for
the purpose, apparently, of supplying
water to consumer.s outside the cu>
at less than cost. It was also claimed
that extensions have been made in the
interest of certain real estate specu-
lators. The request was niade that
the council or some other impartial |
tribunal hear the evidence, putting the
witnesses under oath, and that the
water and light board be given the
same opportunity of refuting or deny-
ing the allegations.
The proposed amendments to the Ca-
nadian Northern franchise, one ot
which allowed the road to put posts
unde? The center of the trestle over
Fifty-ninth avenue west came in for
a lenethv discussion last night. 1 ne
Amendment allowing the posts was
killed Softer a lengthy debate, but still
-- Is not definitely settled.
Grassy Point bridge as had been
Planned by th* Wisconsin Central,
which franchise tlie S«o took oyer. He
said however, that ;the road would
probably be gla<5to fJut up a depot at
West Duluth If *the *ravel warranted
it In that ca.se trains would branch
off the main l;.ie to the suburb near
Garfield avenue.
* * *
The contract of J. H. Brigham to lay
cement walks at !• ond du Lac was ap-
proved. His bid, on the engineer s esti-
mate of quantities, was $770. This is
12 cents a square foot, the lowest
price the city has secured on cement
walks this year.
m * *
The council passed a resolution au-
thorizing the expenditure of $1,500 to
repair the Amity creek bridge, provided
the county spends a similar amount. A
concrete culvert and AH will be put in.
It is stated that the bridge Is about
ready to fall down.
« « •
The board of public works was di-
rected to construct storm sewers in
Grand avenue between Fifty-fourth
and Fifty-ninth avenue, and in Tenth
avenu* east between Fourth and
Eighth streets.
* • *
The custodian ol the city hall was
directed to submit a list of whicti rooms
of the building, in his opinion, ought
to be papered.
* * •
Crane and Ordway were given per-
mission to replace the sanitary drink-
ing fountain at Third avenue west and
Superior street with one which will be
more ornamental.
* * •
The sum of $250 was appropriated
for the improvement of the Morse
street dock, at the foot of Lake ave-
nue.
* • •
The council approved a resolution
granting the library board $2,000 for
the maintenance of the Carnegie
library at We.st Duluth, the site for
which has been secured.
« • •
The health commissioner was re-
quested to submit the figures on the
garbage collection and to ascertain
whether or not he could buy a horse
and harness from the fire department
which had been unfitted for further
service. The health commissioner
wishes to improve the municipal col-
lection of garbage, replacing the pres-
ent single cart witli a modern wagon
and a team.
$ L-7
IJorthern Pacific 19ailway
X^ The Scenic Highway M» Throogh the A^ L*ad ol FoHuae
rik ^ The Scenic Highway
C. P. O'DONXELL. City Pass'r Atft.
S34 West Superior Street, DulutB. Minn.
Both Phones. 214
the m*tter — - „„,.«o
Ffforts will now be made to agree
upon a compromise whereby the street
will be narrowed to a width of fifty
feet and a clear span thrown across
It In order that the matter might be
discussed by tlie railroad officials and
the city authorities final action on the
amendments was laid over another
week The compromise was suggested
by the clt.v engineer, and It seems to be
quite feasible. It would eliminate the
nosts and at the same time save money
for the railroad. The traffic is not
heavier than could easily be taken
care of by a fifty-foot street.
The council authorized the board of
ibUc Torks to spend $2,000 on the im-
publ
and Farrel
Q
W. H. MITCHELL. Atfent
817 Tower Arenue, Superior, WU.
Both Phones. 4226
(
t
WHOLESALE
JOBBERS AND
MANUFACTURERS
OF DULUTH. MINNESOTA.
Reliable and Up-to-Date Concerns Who Do a Stridly
Jobbing and Manufacturing Business.
A.
ASBESTOS.
H. Kricger
Co.
BAKERS.
Crescent Bakery.
BLAST FURNACE.
Zenith Furnace Co.
BREWERS.
Duluth Brewi-g & Malting
Fitger Brewing
Co.
Co.
BUTTER AND ICE CREAM
MANUFACTURERS.
Bridgeman-Russell Co.
FURNITURE.
DeWitt-Seitz Company.
FOUNDERS and MACHINISTS.
Clyde Iron Works.
GLASS, PAINTS AND BUILD-
ING MATERIALS.
Paine ft Nixon Co.
provement on the Sundby .-^ sj^^^nd
roads at the upper e"d of the Second
ward It is expected that this will put
The road In fair condition from the
boulevard down into the city. If this
money Is spent by the 9 t^ill^>«,?e of
ed that the county will take caie of
the road above the boulevard. It is
considered most Important, as it gi^es
the farmers back of the hill a good
rold to Duluth and the city an excel-
lent outlet into the farming country.
Some day It is hoped that a street car
twu be run Into this territory on the
new road. ^ ^
Building Inspector S. M. Klelley notl-
n.d the council that under the building
ordinance the city will have to put ul
fire escapes on the Armory and the cltj
hail. Both are classed as three-storj
buildings. ^ ^
A-ssessor J. A. Scott notified the coun-
cil that he has engaged Miss Lillian
Monaiian as a special clerk and stenog-
rapher in his office.
• ♦ ♦
The city engineer submitted an esti-
mate of the cost of grading, graveling
and guttering the Getchell road. His
figures called for J22.667.40 to put the
road into such shape.
• • «
H. B. Fryberger, attorney of the Soo
CEMENT AND PLASTER.
D. G. Cutler Co.
COMMISSION AND PRODUCE.
Fitzsimmons-Palmer Co.
CONFECTIONERY.
National Candy Co.
(Duluth Factory.)
DRUGS.
L. W. Leithhead Drug
DRY GOODS.
F. A. Patrick ft Co.
Co.
GROCERS.
Gowan-Peyton-Congdon Co.
Stone-Ordean-Welb Co.
Wright-Clarkson Mercantile Co.
HARDWARE.
Kelley-How-Thomson Co.
Marshall-Wells Hdw. Co.
WHOLESALE AND MAN'F'S
OF MEN'S FURNISHINGS.
Christensen-Mendenhall-
Graham Co.
PAPER.
Duluth Paper ft Stationery Co.
McClellan Paper Co.
Pejrton Paper Co.
ARE YOU FREE
—FROM—
Headaches, Colds, Indigestion,
Pains, Constipation, Sour Stomach,
Dizziness? If you are not, the most
effective, prompt and pleasant
method of getting rid of them is to
take, now and then, a desertspoon-
ful of the ever refreshing and truly
beneficial laxative remedy — S3rrup
of Figs and Elixir of Senna. It is
well Known throughout the world
as the best of family laxative reme-
dies, because it acts so gently and
strengthens naturally without irri-
tating the system in any way.
To get its beneficial effects it is
always necessary to buy the genu-
ine, manufactured by the California
Fig Syrup Co., bearing the name
of the Company, [^nly printed on
the front of eveiy package.
A Reliable Medicine — ^ot a Narcotle.
Airs. K. Marti, St. Joe, Mich., says:
"Our little boy contracted a severe
bronchial trouble and as the doctor's
medicine did not cure him. I gave him
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound in
which I have great faith. It cured
the cough as well as the choking and
gagging spells, and he got well in a
short time. Foley's Honey and Tar
Compound has many times saved us
much trouble and we are never with-
out it in the house^." All druggists.
MANUFAOTNG
OWN INVENTION
Hydralors Being Made By
Hugh Miscampbell in
New Factory.
Hugh Miscampbell and L. G. Bradley
have begun the manufacture of the
machine invented by Mr. Miscampbell
for hydratlng lime.
For a time the machines were made
by the Clyde Iron works, but that linn
became overcrowded with work and
had to give up making machines.
Mr Miscampbell and L. G. Bradley
have' opened a factory at 318 St. CroiK
avenue." Mr. Miscampbell is foreman
of the shop and Mr. Bradley is In charge
of the office and sales.
At the present time about ten men
are employed in making the machines.
The number -will be increased to
twenty-five as soon as an addition can
be built on the building.
The machines are shipped to all parts
of the world. Some have even gone to
Australia. The machines have a capa-
cltv of fifty tons of lime a: day, and
eight have been sold since March 1.
The industry promises to become an
important one for Duluth.
"Most Excellent."
Victor Huofs fresh daily candies.
CONDITIONS^
BE INVESTIGATED
Directors of Steel Corpora-
tion to Look Into Re-
port of Mills.
New York, April 18. — An investiga-
tion into working conditions in the
mills of the United States Steel cor-
poration was decided upon at the an-
nual meeting of the stockholders in
Hoboken,. N. J., yesterday.
Thi^ proposal came after the elec-
tion of directors, Avhen Charles M.
Cabot of Boston introduced a resolu-
tion providing for a committee of five
to investigate and report to the
finance committee not later than Oct.
1 as to the truth of statements con-
tained in a recent magazine article
alleging that employes of the dor-
poration were overworked.
"The conditions revealed, if true,
said Mr. Cabot, "constitute a serious
menace to the continued success of
this corporation, both in its business
as an employer of labor and in its
reputation as an organization which
has been willing to deal openly and
frankly with industrial conditions.
"Chairman K. H. Gary, who pre-
sided, said that the author of the ar-
ticle had been given the fullest op-
portunity to get at facts, but had
presented them in a partisan man-
ner. He moved that the Cabot reso-
lution be adopted, and this wad done.
Among the charges made in the
article were statements that a large
majority of the steel workers In the
Pittsburg district worked twelve
hours a day and that more than 13,-
000 of the 70,000 steel workers in
Allegheny county in 1907-08 worked
seven days in the week.
Directors Elected.
The following directors were elected
for a term of three years:
George F. Baker, W. E. Corey. J.
F Dryden, C. A. Grlscom, Samuel
Mather, D. G. Reid, Henry Walters
and G. M. Lane, who succeeded the
late Nathaniel Thayer. The directors
will meet on ^prll 25 to reorganize.
The stockholders today ratified all
contracts made by the directors and
finance committee since the meeting
a year ago.
Chairman Gary, in speaking of the
request made by Btockholdera for a
GUARANTEE OF QUALITY AND PURITY
Copenhagen SnuflF is made of the best, old, rich, high-
flavored leaf tobacco, to which is added only such in-
gredients as are component parts of natural leaf tobacco
and absolutely pure flavoring extracts. The SnuflF Pro-
cess retains the good of the liobacco and expels the
bitter and acid of natuml leaf tobacccK
AMERICAN SNUFF COMPANY, 111 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.
general statement, referred to tke
general conditions and prospects as
aiTectlng the Steel corporation, said:
"We are very well satisfied with the
amount of business we have done
and profits we have realized during
the last fifteen months. Our mills
are not running to their full capacity
and we should be glad if more busi-
ness were offered; but nevertheless
the business which we have been get-
ting has been large and under the
circumstances should be considered
satisfactory. * ^ ^
"The independents, so called, have
increased their capacity a little more
than we have increased our capacity.
Wo started out with about 60 per
cent of the total business of the
country and at present we have about
55 Rsr cent on the average. It is
our intention to keep a proportion up
to about that point. We do not in-
tend to have more than 60 per cent.
owxerTheld.
Jury Finds Harris and Blanck Re-
sponsible for Girls' Death.
New York. April 18.— Isaac Harris
and Max Blanck, proprietors of the
Triangle Waist company, who are al-
ready under Indictment charged with
manslaughter In connection with the
death of 145 employes by fire, were
found by a coroner's Jury to be respon-
sible for the death of one of the oper-
**^T"e verdict was returned In the case
of Mary Herman, whose escape from
th«> ninth floor was cut off. It Is al-
leled by a locked door Harris and
Blanck are responsible for the death.
Ue verdict reads "because of culpable
and criminal negligence m falling to
observe the legal precaution of leaving
the said door untocked.
SAVED FROM -^GRAVEYARD."
Bill on Direct Election of Senators
Up in the Senate.
Washington, April li— The first tilt
In the senate over the Joint resolution
providing for the election jof senators
by direct vote of the people occurred
vesterday when opponents of the meas-
Ure which was passed by the house at-
tempted to have it referred to the com-
mittee on privUeges and elections In-
stead of Judiciary. A long debate re-
sulted in postponing the (iuestion of
reference until the next meeting of the
senate on Thursday. Propositions to
amend the Constitution to provide for
popular elections of sena;ors always
were referred until last session to the
•graveyard," as the traditionally un-
friendly committee on elections was
called. Resolutions on this subject last
session were sent to the judiciary com-
mittee and one was reported to the sen-
ate in a form from which the house
measure was copied. It v. as amended
on the floor after a tie vote had been
broken by Vice President iJherman and
the change alienated some votes of sen-
ators representing Southern states, re-
sulting in the loss of the nsquired two-
If the resolution should be sent to
the ludlclarv committee It probably
would be reported back without amend-
ment while the action of the commit-
tee on privileges and elections would
be open to doubt. The Indications to-
day were that the friends of the reso-
lution would be successful In their er-
forts to send it to the judiciary com-
mittee.
. ♦
Recall Bill Killed in »(icMKan>
Lansing, Mich., April 18.— The senate
last night In committee of the whole
Killed the Dunn resolution providing
for the recall of public o«l'-»a»s t)l'*o"f.**
the amendment of the state Constitu-
erendum resolution which will come up
in the senate for third reading.
•
Measuring the World's Age.
An estimate based on a compari-
son of the quantity of salt in sea
water with the quantity continually
supplied by the inflow, shows that
nearly a hundred million years passed
before the oceans attained their pres-
ent condition. Therefore, from fur-
ther figures, it is estimated that the
minimum kge of the earth is 100,000,-
000 years. It would take that long
to convince some people that golden
grain belt beers were not the best in
the world. Let your dealer send yoii
some, or duluth branch minneapoli*
brewing company^^
Flaher Conftrmed.
Washington, April 18.— The senattt
today confirmed the nomination o<
Walter L. Fisher of Illinois, secretarjg
of the interior.
— ♦ — .
Harrison la Now Mayor.
Chicago, April 18. — Carter H. Harri-
son took the oath of office last night
and became mayor p'^Chlcago for th*
fifth time. He was Inducted Into office
without great ceremony
that the ne^ city hall
and except
was crowded
{ECIiFSS'/JiM'^sre'^ir.ei' Sjr„r.n-eU''n' oTr^rcou'Scr"^ -
(hildren
"UBfHOME
•The highest type of happiness tt
reached by having children in tbs
home; hut the coming of the litU»
ones is often attended with appve*
tension and dread. Mother's Frientf
if used hy the expectant mother In
preparation of the ordeal, carrieg
her through the crisis with safety.
This great remedy assists nature In J?/^*^,'^^!^!^ '^^r^JJli "^
tern, affords bodily comfcrt during *^^4 f ^°* ^i^l^^^g quaUties of
symmetry of form after baby comes. The ^^^'^^'^^^^^iid la «7«t«
Mother's Friend allays nausea, prevents caking of the breasts, ana »u «»«
way contributes to strong, healthy
motherhood. Mother's IPriend la
sold at drug stores. Write for our
free book containing valuable Infor-
mation for expectant mothers.
B&ADFIELD BEOUIt^^^OB CO.,
— »■
OTHERS
Friend
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Tuesday,
H
DULU
HERA
Aprn 18, 1911.
11
Quality
Store
CL.OTMIMG COHPAH
DulutK
Minn,
UA>tf.jSU»«'*iS«*-*
i-rw
MEN'S SPRING SUITS!
No store in Duluth offers a wider
range to choose from. Examine the
mai<ingof these clothes— note the fine
stitching, the thin edges of the coats.
FITWELL CLOTHES
are the best clothes sold anywhere.
The prices are
NEWS OF THE NORTHWEST
seewngIj
r"
others as low as $12.50 and up to $35
On the breakfast table— in the sick room
for making salads, puddings and other des-
serts— for a bite between meals, in the lunch
box, there is no fruit equal to the famous
^ California "Sun kist" Orange. Being tree-
_ ripened, sound-picked, packed and shipped with the
titmost skill and care, it is the most healthful and luscious of all fruits.
Stinkist Oranges are thin-skinned —
flberless — seedless. They fairly melt in
the mouth. There is so little waste in
servingand eatingthera that theyare truly
the cheapest orange you can buy.
Every Sr.nkist Orange comes in a Sun-
kist Wrapper. Thousands of familieg
will have none but Sunkist Oranges. After
you have tried them once they will win
you. Please make the trial today. Your
dealer sells them. And don't forget to
save the "Sunkist" Wrappers.
FREE
Ask for "Sunkist" Lemons
After you have eaten Sunkist Oranjes, you will
be glad to know there are Simkist Lemons,
for they, too. are the tiaest fruit of their kind.
Never blemished, marred, decayed, thick-
skinned or pithy. Sunkist Lemons
contain 50 percent more juice than
commonplace lemons, which
makes them most economl-
_ _. _ >&J«^"~C^^s*^ leal for kitchen and table
Rogers Orange Spoon ^^^^^^^^^S^^ nse. The "Sunkist'
Bare 12 Sunkist Ornnce (or T.emon) ^^S^Si*^ Wrapper Identlflos
TV rappers bcI son'l thtiu to un with 12c to ^^Ji^!^^^ them
^y charge*. paikiriK, etc., nnd we will present
Jou with agenuinf KogersCriinpo S^iixin, of beaof i-
b1 desizn and hisheot QURlity. Begin saviuc wruppors
^izn ana msiiesb tjuttiiL^ . x»vts»u»».*"^; ".'.^t'*^."
today. If yea dt-^ire morn than one. send 12 sunkist
Wrappor* anJ 12c for each additioani spoon.
In remitticg plea«e at'nd on.-cent stamps when the amount
li leas tlian He; on anounta al>ovo 24o. we prefer money crde^
•Eprwsorueror t>r»nk liraft. (Don t Send Cnsh.) We will be glart
to send \oix compic'vt> liat of vulaal.Io premiums. Ke honor Imth
"Sunkist" erd "Rod Ball" wraproi-s for premiuraa. A(\itre«»
CAUFORNIA FRUIT GROWERS* EXCHANGE
34 Clark Street. CHICAGO. ILL. (34)
/
Underwood
STANDARD TYPEWRITER
ty-ja
Underwood Bookkeeping is as perfect
as Underwood Correspondence.
The Underwood Billing, Invoicing,
Bookkeeping, Correspondence TYPE-
WRITERS make it possible to thor-
oughly systematize any business.
The Machine Yoa Will Eventually Biiy
UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER COMPANY.
A. C. KIENLY, Manager
Duluth Office:
323 West Superior Street
THE
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
OF DULUTH,
Capital WOO.OOO
Surpiui aod Prefltt. . $1,526,000
-WK ISSUK-
$10, $20, $50, $100
Travelers' Checks.
Safe, convenient, self-identifying.
Payable everywhere for full face value
REDVALLEY
Farmers in Vicinity of Crook-
ston Getting Their Crops
Into Ground.
North Dakota Drying Up Rap-
idly and Seeding Con-
ditions Favorable.
Crookston. Minn., April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Seeding started in
full blast Monday morningr in Eastern
Polk, Marshall, Kittson counties and in
Red Lake county on the lighter soil.
Work was ^also general In Norman
oounty along the line of the Great
Northern between here and Fargo,
south of Halstad. On the heavier soil
seeding will be general this afternoon
and Wednesday. The weather is ideal
and the ground in splendid condition.
The substantial fall of moisture has
made the soil just Arm enough to work
well. If the weather remains favor-
able next Saturday night will see the
bulk of the wheat crop in this section
in the ground under the most perfect
conditions of years. The farmers are
so fell equipped for their work that it
takes but from eight to ten days to
finish wheat seeding by the average
farmer when the plowing is all done
as it is this year. This will result in
all whoat. oats and flax being in the
groun<l before the end of the first week
in May, while it is considered safe to
sow wheat even as late as May l.>
when necessary. This year there will
be ample time for special cultivation
in preparing the seed bed for corn.
The corn and the potato acreage will
be large, corn probably 25 per cent
larger than last year and pototoes
about the .nanie. There will also be
considerable land that has been al-
lovv'ed to go back, plowed this spring
and seeded to Hax.
HANCOCK JUSTICE
WILL STUDY LAW
P. O. Thorson won out in the seventh
ward over August Shave. Don Mc-
Donald, in the first ward, was unop-
posed.
DE TOUR MAN NAMED.
James Bennett to Look After Upper
Peninsula Land Concern.
Sault Ste Marie. Mich., April 18. —
(Special to The H«rald.) — James T.
Bennett of Detour has been appointed
general agent for the Western Securi-
ties company, with headquarters here.
The company owns 712,000 acres of land
in the upper peninsula, and expects lo
pell 200,000 acres this summer in this
vicinity.
a O. OLIVIER.
to
Hancock. Mich., April 18.— (Special
The Herald.) — Michigan university
will have in its law department this
year a veteran of the courts who has
settled many questions with judgment
and learning, which has won for him
the praise of the highest tribunals and
the respect and confidence of every
member of the Houghton county bar.
This Is Justice C. O. Olivier, now In
the prime of life and for fifteen years
justice of the peace here.
Judge Olivier has long been de-
sirous of being admitted to the bar
and to this end he will enter the law
department of Michigan . university.
His experience as a justice and the
amount of law reading he has done,
will help toward fitting him for the
course he will pinsue. John J. J-'cn-
kern, who was elected justice of the
peace at the spring elections, will take
office here July 4. Until that time Mr.
Olivier will continue his duties in the
justice court.
MONTANA EX-BANKER
GIVEN FOURTEEN YEARS.
Butte, Mont., April 18. — Sam A.
Hall. Butte's former banker and real
estate broker and well known man of
Montana, who was recently found
guilty of grand larceny for em-
bezzling money given him to invest,
was sentenced by Judge Dolan to
fourteen years in the penitentiary.
This is the maximum punishment.
«
Curiosity Coat Both Hands.
Iron Mountain, Mich., April 18. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Clviaco Boyilla
of this city paid dearly for gratifying
his curiosity. While walking on the
Milwaukee tracks, near the bridge
which spans the Menominee river, he
discovered a torpedo. Seized with a
desire to learn its contents, he tried to
pick it open with a pocket knife. The
explosion which followed blew off both
his hands at the wrists, knocked out
two teeth and otherwise Injured
about the head.
hira
>'orth Dakota la Flae •»hape. _^
Grand Forks, N U. April 1^— '^P^*
cial to The Herald.) — Two real hot
days have dried up the fields consider-
ably and the prospects are that seed-
ing will be general by Thursday or
Friday A little seeding will be done
today in the dry spots but the fields as
a rule are yet pretty wet. In the
southern counties of the valley where
there was not as much snow seeding is
now on and several acres of wheat is
already in.
Montana Mining Man Killed.
Butte, Mont., April 18. — H. F. Po-
land, superintendent of the Boss
Tweed mines at Pony, fell from an
ore wagon and was fatally crushed
between a wheel and an embankment.
Mr. Poland was one of the prominent
mining men of Montana. He was
formerly of Boston and was a nephew
of A. C. Burage, a capitalist of that
city.
•
To Speak at BcmldjI.
Bemidji, Minn., April 18. — John
Hamilton of Des Moines will address
the citizens of this city Tuesday even-
ing in the city hall, he havin? as his
subject 'The Commission Form of
Municipal Government."
whose disappearance from her Minne-
apolis home several wneks ago under
mysterious clrcumstancjs caused the
police of four cities tc hunt for her,
has been heard from. She wrote to
her husband Friday frcni Chicago and
In the letter declared she was in a
hospital and that she had a new son.
St. Cloud — Mr. and Mrs. John Galla-
gher Saturday received news of the
death of their son, Ed vard, in Cleve-
land, Ohio, Thursday. The telegram
simply stated that he was killed. The
body will be shipped from Cleveland.
Crookston — Patricic Kelly of
Gentilly, was elected county commis-
sioner from this district on the first
formal ballot by a vote of 6 to 1. "Pat"
Kelly, as he Is known to everyone as
the Irish Frenchman, Ij a pioneer and
successful farmer of Gtntllly township,
prosperous and a man of thorough in-
tegrity.
Hawley — Thieves bro'ce Into the gen-
eral store of Petersor Brothers at
Hawley qn Thursday night, securing
?10 In cash and about $90 worth of
merchandise. Entrance was gained
through a window. It !s believed the
thieves took the first train for the
Twin Cities.
Brainerd — Mrs. Sanns Ritari. aged 66
years, the wife of Israel Ritari. died
at a local hospital following an opera-
tion for cancer. The deceased came to
Brainerd with her family from Finland
about seven years ago and they settled
in Southeast Brainerd. S!he leaves a hus-
band and four sons and one daughter.
Deer River — Harry Ochs, one of the
oldest settlers at Mud Lake, who was
taken to the hospital ut Grand Rapids
suffering from Bright'si disease, passed
away recently. The remains were
taken by relatives to Chaska, Minn.,
for burial. Deceased was unmarried
and leaves a number of near relatives.
St. Hllalre — At a recent business
meeting of members of the Synod
church the resignation of Rev. S. T.
Palm as pastor of the St. Hllaire con-
gregation was accept?d. This action
does not affect his standing with his
outside congregation \/ho granted him
a three month's vacation. Mr. Palm
has been in poor health for some time.
Little Falls — The Pine Tree company
has had men at work extending the
.spur track at the Ian ling about 2,000
feet further up the river. To do this
It Is necessary to cross a gully, over
which a bridge Is bein? built. A large
pile-driver is being used in its con-
struction.
Albert Lea — The farm residence of
Andrew Stephan, In Pickerel Lake
township, burned and the aged mother
of Mrs. Stephan barely escaped with
her life. She was almost suffocated
and received severe Injuries. The
origin of the fire is not clear. There
was some Insurance, but the loss was
heavy.
in the patrol territory,
tills is all occupied,
the petition Is granted several
buildings may be erected for sa-
purposes.
FRISIO MAN WINNER
is included
and
If
new
loon
In Egg-Eating Contest With Den-
verite in >jiuneapolis.
TIE MAKING QUITE
PROFITABLE WORK
Sawyer County, Wis., Set-
ters Furnish Omaha
Road Many.
Couderay. Wis.. April 18. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The Omaha railroad
has finished Inspecting and loading
ties along this line, more than 600 car-
loads or nearly 200.000 ties, have been
shipped to points on the line in Wis-
consin, Minnesota. Iowa and Nebraska
this year from the southern part of
Sawyer county. This is about five
times more ties than the usual cut in
this section. The ties were mostly cut
by settlers and the balance by the
small loggers. Prices were good and
the mild weather and little snow made
conditions for tie making ideal the last
winter. Tie making Is a profitable
business for the settlers in this sec-
tion.
EAST GRAND FORKS
SAWMILL STARTED
Over 3,000,000 Feet ef Logs
Available and 300 Men
Gven Work.
East Grand Forks, Minn.. April 18. —
(Special to The Herald.) — The big saw-
mill of the Grand Forks Lumber com-
pany started operations yesterday,
giving employment to 300 men. The
starting is two weeks later than last
year. Between 3,000,000 and 4.000,000
feet of logs are available and t'ne mill
is pronounced in excellent condition by
Supt. Fuller, having undergone a thor-
ough overhauling during the winter
months.
On account of the low stage of the
river several loads of logs have been
shipped in instead of being floated
down the river as usual.
in
Minneapolis. Minn., April
an egg eating contest held
at the breakfast table in the
hotel, Victor H. Mendelson
Francisco was declared
Karl Heitler of Denver,
its unique
PENINSULA BRIEFS
^^V^M^N^^^^^h^^^^k^M
WISCONSIN BRIEFS
^^^>M»»M»*^^*»^>^^»^»^*
18.— In
Sunday
Rogers
of San
winner over
Because of
character the contest
. aused the dining room to be crowded
with sightseors.
It was agreed by the contestants
to eat two dozen es^gs apiece and the
first man who balked should be de-
clared the loser. Assistant Manager
Buckner acted as referee. Both men
got away with the allotted number
and Mr. Mendelson started In on the
third dozen. Mr. Heitler balked.
TWO FIRES AT ONCE.
Fergus Falls Department Fights
Blaze in Barn and Hotel.
Fergus Falls, Minn., April 18.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Two simultaneous
fires furnished plenty of excitement
and quick work for tlie fire department
Sunday evening.
First, they were called out to a fire
in a small barn on Lincoln avenue
west. While that was burning briskly
and the firemen had their hands full,
the old Occidental hotel building on
Lincoln avenue east was found to be
all ablaze. Both were old buildings,
but the last one was in a row of
wooden buildings, and the fire in the
hotel building endangered a large ac-
tion of the business part of Fergus
Falls.
After a hard fight the fire was under
control, but a shifting or rising of the
wind would have spread the fire and
might have taken the whole block.
FORGED FOR REVENGE.
IS AGAIN ARRESTED.
Gentilly, Minn., Young Man Facing
Further Trouble.
Grand Fork.^, N. D., April 18. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Ed Dufault, the
young man who was taken in charge
here on suspicion of having been con-
nected with some burglary, for the
reason that he carried jewelry to the
amount of |1,000 in a small grip, but
later released. Is now wanted by the
sheriff of Bottineau county. He was
taken into custody again yesterday
afternoon and the Bottineau county
officer will arrive today. The young
man and his brother were both ar-
rested recently after a fire had des-
troyed his brother's Jewelry store at
Westhope, charged with arson. Ed
was later released and the brother let
out on bonds. His supply of Jewelry
has aroused more suspicion, however,
and he will be taken back. The boy
claims Gentilly. Minn., as his home,
saying his parents, worth |70,000, re-
.side there.
FLANK MOVEMENT AGAINST
BREWERY OWNED SALOONS.
East Grand Forks, Minn., April 18.
(Special to The Herald.) — A petition
is being circulated and receiving gen-
erous signing, asking the city council
to extend the patrol limits, that Is, the
territory in which liquor may be sold,
so that those saloon keepers who are
unable to secure leases from the brew-
eries may build saloons and secure
their own licenses. At nresent only
100 feet on either side of Demers ave-
nue from Fourth street to the river
Is Novel Defense ol Accused Chetek,
Wis., Barber.
Eau Claire. Wis., April 18. — On a
charge of passing a forged check on
Henry Landgraf of this city. Gus Gat-
toski, aged 29, a married man with
three children, was arrested at Chetek
Saturday by Undersheriff Henry Neher,
who brought his prisoner to Eau Claire
late the same day. Gattoski was ar-
raigned before Judge McBain yester-
day afternoon and waiving preliminary
examination, was bound over to cir-
cuit court for trial. He furnished the
bail and is at liberty.
Gattoski secured a Chippewa wom-
an's check book the other day and
is .said to have forged a check for $15
which he passed on Henry Landgraf
of this city. He managed to escape
the local police but they succeeded In
tracing hi.s movements and finally lo-
cated him at Chetek.
Gattoski is a barber and was mov-
ing from Sheboygan to Ridgeland,
where he intends to open up a barber
shop.
Gattoski explained that the woman
at Chippewa had secured some of his
money and it was mei/ely to revenge
himself on her that he took her check
book and forged her name to a check.
TWO RESOLUTIONS BEATEN
IN WISCONSIN SENATE.
Madison, Wis.. April 18. — The senate
last night killed a resolution Intro-
duced by Senator Husting. Democrat,
providing for the election of United
States senators by a direct vote and
the Zophy, Social Democrat, resolution
providing for the abolition of the
United States senate.
NORTH DAKOTA OFFICERS
ASSIGNED TO BORDER.
Bismarck. N. D.. April 18.— The ad-
jutant general received a letter yes-
terday from the war department to
detail two additional officers of the
national guarJT to San Antonio. Tex.,
for purposes of Instruction, one medi-
cal corps officer below the rank of
major and one adjutant.
Capt. R. A. Thompson of Fargo Is
the regimental adjutant and Capt. X.
McDonald of Valley City is the rank-
ing medical officer of the grade speci-
fied, and they will be given the choice
of the trip.
•
Grand ForkM School Election.
Grand Forks. N. D., April 18.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — City school elec-
tion In four wards of the city were
held yesterday aftd there was a warm
contest In three of them. In the third
ward Dr. Frederick H. Slyfield defeat-
ed H N. Wells, who has been a mem-
ber of the board for some years. Dr.
A A. Westeen was re-elected In the
fifth ward over W. H. McGraw and
Houghton — Postmaster R. B. Lang
has an official advice from the post-
oftice department that S. S. Fifield,
postmaster of Asliland, Wis., and Hon.
C. A. llouck. postmaster at Iroiiwood,
Mich., will be in Hougliton next Thurs-
day and Friday for the purpose of
receiving instructions in the operation
of the postal .savings bank.
Hancock — Hancock cliapter. Order
of Eastern Star, will attend a meeting
ol the Lake Linden chapter Thursday
evening of liiis week. A special street
car will leave the north end of Por-
tage lake bridge at 6:45 p. m.
Luke Linden — The free lecture
given at tlie local theater Saturday
evening by Dr. Winfleld S. Hall, dean
of the medical department of the
Northwestern university, was well at-
tended. His talk was of exceptional
interest to the male sex and the in-
formation imparted was of inestimable
value.
Houghton — What might have been
a disastrous fire was prevented at 2
o'clock Sunday morning when Night-
watcliiiian Borassa discovered a small
blaze on the ground floor of the Odd
Fellows' temple. He turned in a fire
alarm and tiie department made a re-
markably prompt response considering
the hour, and the fire was quickly con-
quered with a chemical extinguisher.
The damage is slight.
L'Anse — Deputy State Master R. N.
Seward of Stephenson has perfected
tlie organization of the L'Anse Grange.
No. 1498. The following officers were
elected: Overseer, Peter Clyne; chap-
lain, Carl Benten; Stewart, Dan De-
nomme; a.ssistant ste wart, William
Egerer; lady assistant Stewart, Mrs.
Peter Clyne; treasurer, W. T. Menge;
gate keeper, James Grace.
Ontonagon — Tlie senior class stu-
dents of the Ontonagon high school
are hard at work practicing for a play
which they will produce on April 21.
The cast for the play, "Tlie Kingdom
of Hearts Content," has already been
selected and the students are almost
ready for the production.
Calumet — It is expected that the R.
S Blome company, which laid Red
Jacket granitoid pavement and guar-
anteed It for five years, will shortly
put gangs of men to work repairing
breaks In the pavement. This work
was to have been taken up last fall
by the Blome people but could not be
done then because of tlie sudden com-
ing of cold weather, making it impos-
sible to do concrete and cement work
out of doors.
•
{MINNESOTA BRIEFS;
La Crosse — Louis Silberschmldt of
La Crosse was re-ele;ted president of
th"e Upper Mississippi Valley Brewmas-
ters' association at itJ annual meeting
here. The other oft leers arc: \ ice
president, Ernst Hussa of Bangor; sec-
retary and treasurer, Ernst Cliitelo of
La Crosse, and William Broesse ot
Alma. Delegates Irom Minnesota,
Iowa, Upper Illinois and Wisconsin
weiv present. ^ ^,
Milwaukee — John -farrison Fertig,
Civil war veteran and member of E. B.
Wolcot post, G. A. R., who died Satur-
day night, was buried in Granville
cemetery Monday afternoon, following
services in the residence.
Kenosha— Freaeri:k Petersdorf, aged
62 years, formerly a memb':?r of tlie
board of supervisors of Kenosha coun-
tv and one of the bi>st known of the
Cierman pioneers of the city, died at
his home here on Saturday. He had
been a resident of Konosha for nearly
fifty jvars. „ . , j,
I'ortage — At a mee ing of the board
of directors of the Wisconsin State
Firemen's association it was decided to
hold the next annual state tournament
at Fort Atkinson on .iuly 21, 22 and 23.
At the tournament in South Milwaukee
last year the Portagt firemen won the
state championship. ,,. , ^ ,
Washburn — Tlie big- sawmill plant of
the J. S. Stearns Lumber company has
been opened for the iieason. The com-
pany were desirous ol getting an early
start and were conijielled to do con-
siderable blasting ol ice In order to
loosen the logs In the mill pond.
Rice Lake — The clstrlct near this
cltv has gone into .he production of
seed peas heavily, and 1,500 acres are
now being prepared for that product.
The production of seed peas will be
carried out in connec tion with the pea
canning industry, wherein hundreds of
farmers will take part.
Milwaukee— A cab egram from Mu-
nich, Bavaria, reports the death of Her-
man Zohrlaut, founder of the Herinan
Zohrlaut Lumber coripany. Mr. Zohr-
laut was 85 years of age. Born in
Germany, he came tc this country and
founded the leather company that bears
his name In 1857. He continued to
conduct the buslnesti personally until
1878, when a stoch company was
formed. , , .. ^
Neenah— Neenah has been made the
distributing station 'or Northern Wis-
consin by th-e Valvoline Oil company.
The company on Friday purchased land
for a local station ut Green Bay and
one at New Holstelii. A big pl^nt is
to be built here and steam pumps in-
stalled for unloading the oils.
WHY WEAK
WOMEN NEED
A SAFE TONIC
Dr. Williams* Pink Pills Tone Up
the Blood and Nerves and
Are Free From Habit*
Forming Drugs.
The average woman haa too littito
blood becau.se of the work, worry and
confinement indoors consequent upon
her household duties. Her nerves are
easily irritated ; she worries over little
things; has severe sick headaches and
becomes in a general run-down condi-
tion. To such women Dr. Williams*
Pink Pills are a positive blessing. They
enrich the blood and tone up the nervea
thereby giving strength and health to
every part of the body.
Mrs. E. J. Garrison, of No. 2950 Wal-
nut street, Everett, Wash. , who suffered
without relief until she tried Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills, says:
"I suffered from weakness common
to my sex for four years, and although
treated by our doctor ^f or over two years,
fbund no relief until I tried Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills. When I began to
take the pills I had not been able to
work for over a year and could not
stand on my feet for anv leng^th of time
becau!?e of the terrible pains. My
head ached most of the time and I was
very nervous. I could not get much
sleep and my head hurt so wlienever I
would lie down that I had to be propped
up in bed. I also had a great deal of
backache.
"The doctor finally told me that he
could not help me. I then tried several
medicines but without relief until I be-
gan using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills up-
on the advice of a druggist. After a
thorough trial I noticed tliat my head-
aches were disappearing. I began to
sleep better and was not so nervous. I
kept on taking the pills for some time
longer and now feel that I am cureii."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills conUin the
elements necessary to make new blood
and, as the nerves get their nourish-
ment from the blood, have been found
invaluable in a wide range of disea-sos of
the blood and nerves, aiich as an^'iuia,
rheumatism, after-effects of the^ripand
fevers, neuralgia, nervous debihty, and
even St. Vitus' dance and locomotor
Our new booklet, "Plain Talks to
Women," will be sent free on request.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all druggists, or sent, po.>*tpaid, on re-
ceipt of price, 50 cents per box; six
boxes for $2.60, by the Dr. Williami
Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
The Typewriter That's
Ten Years Ahead Is the
Typewriter for You.
DAKOTA
Crookston — Word was received Sun-
day of the death of Mrs. Martin Lally
of Seattle. Deceased was a resident of
Polk county for forty years, living the
larger part of that time in and around
Crookston. and enjoying the acquaint-
ance of hundreds In that vicinity. The
remains will be brought to Crookston
for burial, the funeral to be held the
early part of this week.
Park Rapids — The public affairs
committee of the Commercial club Sat-
urday evening planned the entertain-
ment for the meeting of the North-
western Minnesota Editorial associa-
tion, which meets here and at Itasca
Lake June 8, 9 and 10. One of the
features of the event will be a ball
game between the editors umpired by
Governor Eberhart.
Minneapolis — Mrs. Charles Garcia,
SUNNY
MONDAY
If you want to save time
and labor; have sweeter,
whiter, cleaner clothes; take
no chance of shrinking your
woolens, flannels and finer
fabrics; be sure not to take
the color out of your colored
goods, order Sunny Monday
soap from your grocer today
and give it a good, fair trial
next wash day.
Sunny Monday contains a wonder-
ful dirt-starter which saves rubbing
and wear and tear on clothet.
THE N. K.
FAIRBANK
CHICACO
COMPANY
Grand Forks. N. D.— Halfdan lien-
deke Norwegian vice consul, returned
Saturday from a thr?e months tour in
Kurope, which Included visits to prac-
tically every country on that continent,
and an exten'ded tour through his na-
tive land, Norway.
Aberdeen. S. D.— The cornerstone of
Aberdeen's new $15(..000 Central high
school building was laid Saturday aft-
ernoon in the presence of a large crowd
who stood in the h gh wind blowing,
and listened to several excellent
speeches and watched the operation of
setting the big -stone into place.
Lanlford. fo. D.— At the meeting of
the Aberdeen presbytery at Langford,
Maj C Boyd Barr<!tt was elected a
commissioner from the presbytery to
the general assembly, which meets at
Atlantic City. N. J., on May 18. and
William McKenzie of Britton was
chosen as alternate.
Dickinson, N. D.— Walter Junken,
owner and manager of the Unique the-
ater, who was arres ;ed two weeks ago
on a charge of violating the Sunday
theater closing law, was discharged by
Judge Nuchols, the jary having brought
in a verdict of not guilty after a few
minutes' deliberatlor
Fargo, N. D.— A. L. Heyward ad-
dressed a large audience at the North
Dakota AgrlculturM college Friday
evening. He talkec. on the Canadiai,
Norhw^est and aho of the Pacific
Northwest. He told of the advantages
of a beautiful and fertile country which
lay between the coast range and the
Rocky mountains and In the valley of
'"•^afe City.^N.- D.-Mayor Platou has
decided on the comn ittee which he was
authorized to name to investigate the
local light plant and ascertain, is pos-
sible why the cost of water and elec-
tric current is so hig h to the consumers
and recommended, if possible, ^soms
manner in which It could be reduced.
He nam^d W. H. McPherson, cha'rman;
Alfred Anderson ami C. J. Lee.
Bismarck. N. D.— By the North Dako-
ta law approved March 3, 1911, the pen-
alty on delinquent r?al estate taxes has
been reduced. The penalty on delin-
quent personal property taxes remains
as under the old la^ir.
Huron. S. D.— 1 eter Granuni, an
Italian laborer, was almost Instantly
killed In the ChlcaifO & Northwestern
railway yards here. He was crossing
the tracks and was struck by a passing
engine. He was about 35 years of age
and had been In he employ of the
Northwestern compi.ny several months.
Pierre, S. D. — Janres Hall, one of the
pioneers of Hughes and Stanley coun-
ties dropped dead Satuiday at the
home of his daughter In Rapid City,
where he was visit ng. The body waB
brought to Fort Pitrre for burial.
Huron. 8. D.— Mrs. George W. Mar-
shall died at the family residence. SUe
was 45 years of ag< and the mot.ier of
six children, three of whom are mar-
ried and reside htte. Mrs. Marshall
I formerly resided in Montgomery cou«-
tjr, Iowa
Every operadng deiice inbuih where k
should be— under the operator's hand.
You don't have to reach all over the
machine. Even the line-space and carriage
release lever is operated without taking
hands bom conrect keyboard poHtion.
THE NEW MOOa
L. C. Smith & Bros.Typewriter
With Ball Bearingt throughout and all
the writing alway* in sight, meaniies up
at every point to the highert acale ol
Bftodem InisineM needs.
Better work and more of it. greater effici-
ency through and through, the L. C. Smith
& Bros. Typewriter is ten years in die
lead. The writing machine diat's ten yean
ahead is the writing machine (or you.
Send for the Book and read it
L C Smith & Bros. Typewiiter Co.
18 THIRD AVE. WEST,
DULUTH. MINN.
NEWBRO'S
HERPICIDE
Saves Worry. Saves Money, Saves the
Hair.
If you want to free your head of
dandruff and stop falling hair, you
must sooner or later resort to New-
bro's Herpiede.
By using Herpicide first you save
yourself worry, which is desirable,
you save money, which is a considera-
tion, and you save your hair, which
is the most important of all.
Why not profit by the experience
of Mrs. S. A. Lee, of 110 South 4th
St., Richmond, Va., who writes:
"Four years' residence in India
ruined my hair until it was but two
inches long and very thin. I tried
everything in Europe and America
without benefit until I was induced
to use Herpicide. My hair is now
long, soft and silky and natural color,
while before it was quite gray. My
friends never tire of admiring my
hair."
Mrs. Lee's story is a typical history
of hair troubles. After everything
else fails Newbro's Herpicide brlnjfa
relief. It would be just aa effective
if used first.
Newbro's Herpiede kills the dan-
druff germ and prevents falling hair.
It stops itching of the scalp almost
instantly. No matter what the claims
of others, Herpicide is the only
genuine original dandruff germ de-
stroyer.
One dollar size bottles guaranteed.
Sold by all druggists. Applicatlona
at good barber shopq.
Send 10c for sample bottle to The
Herpicide Co., Dept. R. Detroit, Mich.
Lyceum pharmacy and Lenox drug
store, special agents for Duluth.
Wherever there is Pain
apply an
PLASTER
The Wertd'e Greatost Extsraal RemWy
M
DEFECTIVE PAGE |»
ri
i ^
If
n
12
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
A list of subjects which will be dis-
cussed in the sectional conferences of
the Secretarial Association of the
Young Women's Christian association
In its second biennial conference
which will be held in Indianapolis, Ind.,
immediately following the third bi-en-
nial convention of the national organ-
ization of the Y. W. C. A., which will
be held in that city next week, follows:
Co-operation of the physical depart-
ment with other departments of the
association, especially the religious
work and social.
The value of a physical director on
full time in a small association.
How far should the Young Women's
Christian association compete with in-
stallation of domestic art and domestic
science in public schools?
How to finance an association in a
town of 3,500.
Co-operation of departments of the
association with the induatrial depart-
ment.
The relative importance of noon
work and club work in the industrial
field.
How to reach the girls in the stores,
factories and in domestic service.
The importance of county work in
relation to city work.
The advisability of domestic employ-
ment bureau in Y. W. C. A.
The large boarding home vs. the
cottage plan.
To what extent shall the association
centralize its work or develop
branches?
Some of the topics in the student
section will be:
The administration of a student as-
BOi'iation.
Association houses.
Missionary co-operation.
The advisory board.
Kelationship between the general
Becretary and the president.
How the association can be made
more vital to the membership, to the
cabinet, to the secretary.
Miss Ada Campbell, general secre-
tarv of the Duluth association will at-
tend these meetings and Mrs. W. J.
McCabe will go as a delegate from the
local board of directors. Miss Camp-
bell is in South Bend. Ind., this week
visiting at her home.
DONATIONS 'increasing
Twelfth avenue
her home In St
east, has returned to
Rummage Sale for Neighborhood
House Friday.
Donation of articles for the rum-
mage sale which Is to be held Friday
of this week at the old Herald build-
ing L'20 West Superior street, by some
of the women of the Twentieth Cen-
turv club, who are interested in the
work of the Neighborhood house in
the West end for the benefit of its
maintenance fund, have begun to look
promising. Any one who Is Interested
and who has something to give to the
i^ale is requested to leave their dona-
tion at the building where the sale
will be held, or. If It Is of such a na-
ture that thev cannot take It down,
they can notify the members of the
committee and it will be sent for.
The members of the committee are:
Mrs N. F. Hugo. 11107 East Third
street; Mrs. Henry Taylor. 114 South
Sixteentii avenue east, or Mrs. W. G.
Bonham. Temple building.
An entertainment will also be given
tom«-irro\v evening at the Y. M. C. A.
gymnasium for the benefit of the same
fund.
MME. DIAZ.
It is reported from Mexico that the
family of President Diaz is about to
sail for Europe and this is taken in
some quarters as an indication that the
president of Mexico is getting ready
to give up the fight against the insur-
reotos. But those who Know the stern
old man do not believe It. The wife of
President Diaz spends her vacations In
Paris and Is well known there. She is
noted in Mexico, not only for her
beauty, but for the magnificence of her
jewels and she has a world-famed
necklace of pearls.
side on Park Point after their return
from a trip.
e eas..
t. fauli
Miss Irene Wefiilef*if 1009 East Sec-
ond street has returned from the
South, where sh4 hm been spending
the winter. She also visited In Milwau-
• .4 • ^
Mrs. S. Hamilton of 129 Fourteenth
avenue east will leave tomorrow
morning for Marinette, Wis., where
she will visit for\waior three months.
*£*■ a*
Mr. and Mrs. Vr. F.Suayle 2109 East
Second street, h%Vd. ^turned from a
trip to Cleveland.
Mr. and Mrs. l^riuft A. Brewer of
2215 East Superfcr street, have re-
turned from Bell Jr«, rFla.. where they
have been for thi wikter and spring.
• « •
Mrs. Kreutzer and son. Knox, who
were the guests of Mrs. W. C. Winton
of 1509 East First street have re-
turned to their home at Wausau, Wis.
• • •
Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Ryan have as
their guest. Dr. Harry Burns Hutchlns,
of the University of Minnesota.
« • •
W. C. Winton of 1509 East First
street returned this morning from a
two months' Western trip.
• * «
Mrs. Sewall Chandler of Chester
Terrace has returned from Minneapo-
lis, where she visited for a few days.
• • •
Mrs. G. A. Tomllnson of the Spald-
ing hotel has returned from the East,
where she has been since the holidays.
• • •
Miss Irma Young left yesterday for a
ten days' visit In Minneapolis. She wlil
be entertained there by Miss Christian,
a former classmate of hers in Boston.
• • •-
Mr. and Mrs. A. .7. Raja will leave
this evening for a trip to Chicago and
the South.
• ♦ ♦
Miss Ray Abrahams and Miss
Dorothy Loeb have returned from a
weeks visit with friends in Minne-
apolis. ^
• • "•
Mrs. W. L. Smith has returned from
a short visit with friends in Cloquet,
Minn.
Wedding Invitations.
Invitations have been issued for the
wedding of Miss Cora Marguerita
Moore to Harry Herbert Avers, which
will take place on Saturday. April 29,
at the home of the brides parents.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Moore, 429 Twelfth
avenue east. The service win be read
at 8 o'clock. The young people will re-
A fine selection of moderate priced
Oriental Rugs.
JANE LISTIVf AIM'S SHOP
at the
Sign of tile Samovar. |l
SC9 kast Superior Sfreel. !(
Have 1 ou Your
Easter Hat?
Our Fourth street location low-
ers our expenses. We give our
patrons the benefit.
Miss Fitz Patrick
IV/fIL.L.irME:R
502-4 F:aiHt Fourth Street.
Bridge at Tea Rooms.
Mrs. W. D. McGlll entertained at
bridge at the Webster tea rooms yes-
terday afternoon. Easter lilies and hy-
acinths were the flowers used about
the rooms and the prizes were won by
Mrs. J C. Shepard. Mrs. C. E. Dice
and Mrs. H. L. Joyce. Among the
guests were:
Mesdames —
J. C. Shepard, T. E. Considlne,
N. B. Morrison, R. J Crawford.
G. F. Watson. G. ^ff. Preston
J. M. McNaugh- J. H. Sullivan,
ton, H. L. Joyce,
A. J. McCulloch. A. H. Overman,
C. B. Nunan, H. Van Brunt,
O. F. Wenner- J. A. McCuen,
lund. F. J. Ober
J. A. Mellin, G. E Worcester,
W. J. Bates G. D". Anderson.
C. A. Bronson, C. E. Dice.
■»
Liberty Chapter to Meet.
The Liberty Chapter of the Daugh-
ters of the Ameriian Revolution will
meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. A.
E. Walker. 2107 East First street, for
its final session of the year. Officers
for ne.xt year will be chosen at this
time.
DUCHESS OF MONTROSE.
The duchess of Montrose is one of
the most beautiful women In the
United Kingdom. She was Violet
Hermione Graham, daughter of Sir
Frederick Graham. She was a remote
cousin of her husband, whose name is
Douglas Beresford Malise Ronald Gra-
ham. The duke of Montrose sits in
the house of commons as Earl Graham.
He has a castle in Scotland and a town
residence in Pont street. London. The
duchess is one of the four women who
will carry the canopy over Queen Mary
at the coming coronation.
er. Mrs. Z. D. Scott. Mrs. Frances H.
De Groat. Mrs. Hugh Burgo. Miss Mar-
garet Ryan and Miss Agnes Wells.
♦
Engagement.
Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Johnson an-
nounced the engagement of their
daughter, Caroline, to Frank Swan-
strom, at an informal evening par^y
at their home last evening at whicli
about twenty-five guests were enter-
tained. The rooms were prettily dec-
orated with Easter lilies and lavender
hyacinths and red roses were also
used in one of the rooms. The wed-
ding will take place the latter part of
June.^
Mrs. C. S. Rogers would like to
meet all those interested In China
Decoration, for the purpose of form-
ing a class on Wednesday, Frldav
and Saturday of this week, at the
Needlecraft Shop, 26 West Superior
street.
Afternoon Tea.
Ml«<s Mildred Hoh'us was hostess at
an afternoon tea today at her home,
1421 East Superior street, in honor
of Miss i^lsie Smith, whose wedding
to Edmund M. Morgan will take place
next week. The decorations were in
green and white, tulips being the
I flowers used.
I THE EVENING STORY
THE PERFIDY OF MAN
By Jane Harris.
For Ann Arbor President.
President Harry B. Hutchlns of the
University of Michigan will be the
guest of honor at an Informal banquet
this evening at the Commercial club.
The dinner will be served at 7 o'clock
and is for the men of the university
only. After the dinner an informal re-
ception will be held at 8 o'clock for
all members of the Michigan alumni
and their friend.s. Any high school
students who are contemplating at-
tending Michigan, and their parents
and friends and all members of the
university are invited to be present
The guests will be received In the
large assembly room of the club.
The feature of the evening will be
a speech bv President Hutchlns.
The reception committee is composed
of the following members: Rev. and
Mrs A. W. Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Conk-
lln of Superior, Mr. and Mrs. Jolm
Dwan of Two Harboio. Mr. and Mrs
Loren Jones, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Danc-
j Announce Engagement.
I Mr. and Mrs Harry Brown announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Nellie, to De Lancey S. Webb of Su-
perior. The wedding will take place
in June.
!
A Skin of Beauty U a Joy Forever.
D
R. T. FELIX QOURAUD'S
Oriental Cream er
Magioal BsautifJei*.
^^^^jkjk^jk^^
CUT-OUT BORDERS
With panels of
flowers; curtains and
furniture coverings to
match — make the
most delightful Bed
Room Decorahon. The
effect u shown in the
colored sketches of
our folder.
^^^r^^^^^\
Removes Tan, Pimples, Freck-
les, Moth Patches. Rash and
Skin rii«e»sej, »n I every
blemish on beauty, anJ An-
fie^dttsction. It h»j stood
jthe tut of 64 )e«n, and if so
'harmless we taste it to b«
sure It is properly made. Ac-
ceptno count erreli of iimlJsr
name. Dr. 1_ A. Sayresaid
to a lady of the haatton (a
patient): 'As youiadiea will
use them, 1 recommend
•GOURAUD'S CRhAM" as
itc leas: harmful of all t.*ia
slkin pre 'arations." For sale
by all druccisn an I Fancy
Cools Dealers in the United
State«, Canada and I xrope,
Ferd. T. Hopkins. Prop.. 37 Great Joact St.. New Yvrk
liltiM
H. A. HALL & CO.,
DECORATORS
18 East First Street
Phone, 534
Ve 6im Guildc
26 WEST SUPERIOR ST.
Buy your Easter cards early and
get your choice of our lovely se-
lection. Many beautiful designs in
hand-colored cards. Our baskets
and a host of other small articl.s
make splendid prizes or gifts.
Kalo Silverivare
Kalo Jewelry
■>^>^^^^^^
Where are yonr Furs?
Packed away without Are and
burglar insurance?
Perhaps safe from moths. If you
keep continually unpacking and
airing them.
Or do you store them where se-
curity is absolute?
Our fur vault is burglar proof.
Are proof raoth proof and our stor-
age receipt shifts the worrying
about your furs from you to us.
Inspect our vault at any time, if
interested.
Northern Cold Storage
and Warehouse Co.
Up-Town AKentsi
Columhia Clothing Co.
Dulatfa and Superior.
Hostess at Bridge.
Mrs. J. E. MacGregor and Mrs. A. K.
Bjorkquist will be hostesses Friday
•venirig at a bridge party at the home
of the latter, 1810 East Fourth street.
I This affair is the last meeting of the
season of their bridge club.
*■
Church Meetings.
Miss Lillian Olssen of 102 South
Eighteenth avenue ea.st will entertain
the Luther League of St. John's Luth-
eran church this evening.
* • •
The Junior League of St John's Eng-
lish Lutheran church will hold an In-
formal reception for this year's con-
firmation class at the home of Mrs.
John Allen, 1409 East Superior street,
tomorrow evening. All members of
the congregation and friends are in-
vited.
« • *
The Young Ladies' Guild of St. John's
English Lutheran church will meet «t
tlie home of Miss Ragnhikl Zahl, 1402
West First street, Friday evening.
* • *
The Central Auxiliarv of the First
Presbyterian church will meet in the
church parlors tomorrow afternoon
Mrs. Charles Shannon and Mrs. Joseph
Randall will be the hostesses. The
members are requested to take their
own work.
* • •
The Christian Endeavor Society of
the First Presbyterian church will
meet tomorrow evening at the church
parlors at 8 o'clock. All members and
their families were Invited.
* • •
Mrs. J. F. Eby of Woodland will en-
tertaln the members of the Ladies' .A.ia
Society of the First Christian church
tomorrow afternoon at her home.
* • *
The Ladies' Aid Society of the First
Baptist church will give their annual
faster luncheon tomorrow at 12:30 in
the parlors of the church. A program
of readings and music has been pre-
pared, and the members of the program
committee request each woman to take
her thimble.
* ♦ ♦
The Home and Foreign Missionarv
Societies of the Lester Park M. E
church will hold a "thank offering''
meeting tomorrow afternoon at the
home of Mrs. J. J. LeTourneau, 5313
Colorado street. An interesting pro-
gram will be given and all interested
are invited.
* • •
The Ladies' Aid society of Merritt
Memorial church will meet tomorrow
afternoon with Mrs. B. N. Wheeler
3406 West Third street. vvneeier,
Personal Mention.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Lackie of 431
vVest Third street are spending the
month at the Battle Creek Sanitarium.
Mrs. J. C. Faries of Hunter's Park
is the guest of friends in Minneapolis
for a fortnight.
* • «
Mrs. C. L. Hoffman of Minneapolis
Is the guest of Mrs. W E. Whipple of
1710 East Third street.'
« • •
Misses Addle and Lou Kiichll of 212
Thirteenth avenue east, have returned
from Minneapolis, where they have
been visiting friends.
« • *
Mrs. Steven Loranger of Ontonagon
Mich., is visiting her son, Don Loranger
of West Fourth street.
« « •
Mrs. Alexander Milne and Mrs. W. A.
McGonagle are spending a few days in
Minneapolis this week.
♦ • •
Mrs. William Johnston of the Kim-
ball flats has left for London, Can., to
spend a year there with her father.
• * «
Miss Alice Miller, who has been the
guest of Miss Sophie St. Clair, 20 North
' '^_^~--^^y >^ ;>
'., J.-
DEFECTIVE PAGE
Alice Raymond was the embodiment
of long suffering. Belleville accepted
her as such. She was all the township
comprehended of roman<^e, too. And
Alice "kep' store" on Old road, which
was the acknowledged chief thorough-
fare ot Belleville till tlie new pine
school and the tin postofflce added so
much to the pretensions of Dormans
Way. After that Old road slunk into
the background.
This did not affect Alice Raymond.
Nothing affected Miss Raymond. She
was a thin, dark, handsome woman of
45, with an ivory white face that
showed neither line nor stain, a vivid
arch of black brows, and two cold,
ebony eyes. She wore nothing but
black, and that was neat and flawless.
Even the dust respected Miss Itay-
mond. Her wealth ot dark hair, parted
to the level of her eyes and carried
into a lieavy roil behind lier ears,
added to her impressive appearance.
She was easilv the most imposing
thing in Belleville.
It was generally agreed that Alice
Raymonds wrongs rriade her sacred,
and her great wrong was common
property. There was not a child over
6 in the township and district who
could not tell Miss Raymond's la-
mentable story. Every newcomer had
to hear that affecting narrative.
Twenty-three years ago, Paul Reid
came to Belleville. He was only a
stoker at the rolling mill; but he was
young and good looking, and when
off duty lie wore a better suit than
Tracker, the manager. Paul was too
partial to billiards, he smoked cigars
and his whisky bias was quite pro-
nounced, so Belleville credited him
with a good old English family and
better days.
He soon discovered Alice Raymond,
then a girl of 22, whose curious at-
tractions were rather over the heads of
philandering natives.
Even at that early age Miss Ray-
mond kept store, as her mother had
done up to within six months pre-
viously. Now, Alice was an orphan,
and alone In the world. Like her
mother, she made no friends. She was
very reserved, but Paul Reid didn't
seem to notice it. He went often to
the store, and he chatted gaily and
banteringly at Alice, precisely as if she
had been an ordinary light-hearted
human animal.
Reid worked a wonderful change
In Alice Raymond. She became suf-
fused with a hectic happiness. It was
like a fever that burnt red in her
cheeks, and glowed in her splendid
eyes. Paul alone seemed regardless of
this great transformation. He v»-as
careless of manner and always easy;
all things rested lightly on his shoul-
ders.
Belleville quite made up its mind
that they would marry, and one even-
ing, when Reid had been seven months
In the township. Redding asked him,
airily: "When do you and the grocery
consolidate?"
Reid rose, yawning.
•We don't," he said. 'Tm not of
a marrying stock."
Redding was amazed.
"I'm not such a fool as to stay and
debate the matter at length. Redding.
On a nice night for walking, 111 pick
up my heels and get over the hill.''
Reid did not give anyone a chance
to spoil his program. On the following
night he went quietly "over the hiU.^'
Tliere were reasons for an unostenta-
tious departure quite apart from Alice.
Paul had taken "the bankrupt's track."
He owed everybody money, more es-
pecially Stone, the publican, and Rich-
mond of the Belleville hotel. These
two made an effort to locate their
missing friend, but the search was
fruitless.
On the evening of the second day,
Alice Raymond appeared at Thomp-
son's gate while ' the manager was
working in his garden. She was even
paler than usual, and spoke with
marked effort.
"Mr. Thompson, I want to know
about Mr. Reid," she said. "Has any-
thing happened?"
"He's gone off, my girl," replied
Thompson bluntly.
Alice's two white hands gripped the
fence. "Rut only for a little while?"
she asked.
The manager shook his head. "The
fellow's a bit of a scamp, I'm thlnk-
Intr. miss. He'll not show his nose In
Belleville again."
For fully a minute Alice Raymond
stood there, voiceless, clinging to
Thompson's gate. When she spoke
again, her tone was quiet and as-
sured.
"You are mistaken, Mr. Thompson,"
she said. "He will be seen here again.
There was a little garden before
the side entrance at Miss Raymond's
home. The gate of this Alice opened
wide, fastening It back to the fence
with a chain and padlock. She also
cpened the side door and secured It so
with a cleat nailed along the floor. For
over twenty years neither gate nor
door was ever closed.
This action was quite In consonance
with public sentiment. Belleville gave
It a romantic interpretation. The open
door was a pathetic appeal to the
recreant lover, a touching assurance
that come what might. In her heart
there was for him an imperishable
welcome.
Every Sunday night> wet or fine,
still or stormy, Alice Raymond walked
iMmt^mfim
to the summit of the cemetery hill, and
stood by the hump backed gum that
sprawled Its gnarled limbs along the
ground where she had sat with Paul
in those brief hours of happiness
Then came the Irrisistlble railroad,
harshly materialistic, blundering over
sacred things. Alice's store must go.
The hill on which it stood was to be
cut through. Miss Raymond resisted
stonily, but pathos was vain against
the machinery of progress. The store
was lifted and shifted Into Dorman's
way. Alice was compensated. and
iron utilitarianism prepared to sweep
away the little garden, and the small
eniblems beloveds of a stricken soul
Misa Raymond could not content
herself after the change. She neglect-
ed her business, and drifted uneasilv
about the township. Siie was often
seen standing in her dismantled gar-
den on the old road. Belleville under-
stood and was full of sympathy. It
even cried out against the rallroaj
that was to bring prosperity along by
main strength. Never had Belleville
been so stirred as on the morning of
the discovery of Alice Raymond's dis-
appearance. She had gone in the night
There was little stock left In the store.
Her rooms were as usual, but Alice
was nowhere to be seen.
Public opinion was stronglv In favor
of suicide. The old shafts were
searched; the deep holes along the
creek were dragged; and Thomp-son—
an old man now — went carefully ove-
the rolling hill dam with a garden
iu ^- Returns were nil. The efforts of
the police to trace Alice by description
were not more successful.
No pallid, black haired, statuesque
woman had been seen anywhere.
Belleville abandoned tlie Idea of sui-
cide, and Paid that Alice had gone out
into the wide world seeking her lost
Five months later the cutting
t'^^ufh Mill hill was nearly com-
pleted and had encroached on Alice's
garden. It was on a Monday, at noon.
The navvies had put a big blast into
R dnl^f^ before going to crib, and
suddenly and mysteriously Belleville
became conscious that something was
wrong. The people poured from the
cut"t1nl. ^"^^'"^"^^^ly they ran to the
i^^^** ^\^^\ '^ad torn out tons of yel-
low reef, leaving a niche clean face
sSrai l^nio^^"""' '^? ',«^^ below thI
subsoil a niche was disclosed In which
ItV^^^^ ^ ^'"'J^" skeleton. The bones
were intact. Standing out from the
ribs at the back wat the buckhorn
handle of a large knife, the long blade
of which now a mere wisp of ru«t
passed through to the breast bone
Alfpf'^L^:, ^^H? \^'^ ^^^ called ^Spon
Alice and made known his intentions
tor the remains of a small narcli
containing identifiable articles lay
with his bones. ■*
The coroner's theory was that AHcp
Raymond had known all along thI
whereabouts of her lost love. He lav
^Jl}l^ ^,™I® ^^^ ^^^ <^"& for him un-
der her bed, with the long bacon knife
she wielded so cleverly fast In his
heart The jurj' returned a verdict li
accordance with that Idea.
%^>^>^>^>^»^>^>^>^>^>^^^^^^>^>^>^^^^«
A Coinpl]Linent, Not a Snul>
l;y CARA REESE.
Snuffles iu Infanta.
It Is very common for an infant's
nostrils to be blocked up with mucus
as a result of a simple cold, because a
very young child has not learned how
to expel obstruction. This is apt, if
neglected, to Interfere with the child's
feeding and sleeping.
The best treatment is to give a mild
dose (a couple of grains) of Grey pow-
der. In order to get some of the mucus
passed off through the bowels. Then
the nostrils should be sprayed with a
simple lotion such as the following:
Bicarbonate of soda, borax %id salt, 12
grains of each, glycerine 20 minims;
water to make one ounce.
Dilute a tablespoonful of this with
two tablespoonfuls of warm water, and
use two or three times a day.
At night a little weak boracic oint-
ment may be smeared inside tlie nos-
trils. As a preventive of the trouble,
see that the rooms In which the child
lives and sleeps are well ventilated,
that Is that the air Is changt-d so fre-
quently as to never to get stuffy.
It is not always wise to have open
windows with babies about, but 'a
point should be made of throwing open
the window of one room when the (Jhild
Is removed to another.
Tooth IlruHb for Children.
All children should be taught from
an early age to clean their own teeth,
and a small tooth brush should be pro-
vided for the purpose with rather stiff
bristles fairly wide apart. The teeth
should be brushed up and down. A
good tooth powder can be made of
equal parts of orris root and precipi-
tated chalk, or the chalk may be used
alone.
Food for YonnflT Babies.
If a mother cannot give a baby its
natural food, the best thing we can do
for the little mite is to give it the
neaerst food we can to mother's milk.
Mother's milk Is rich In fats, and
therefore, when a child is put onto the
bottle with Just cow's milk and barley
water, it often suffers from constipa-
tion, which shows a lack of fats In Its
food. We, therefore, add cream to
counteract this. The cream must be
quite fresh, and It Is not really expen-
sive, as you will see only a little is
needed.
Mother's milk Is more alkaline than
cow's milk, and therefore we add lime-
water to counteract the acidity, and
also llmewater is useful in making
bone. An infants' bones are quite S^ft,
and it is when they do not harden and
the child is not getting enough bone-
making foods, that rickets is developed.
Tlie milk sugar Is easier to digcf-t, and
not so liable to cause wind as ordinary
sugar.
That Is the way, the patient one is
served last, the faithful f ri ;nd must
bear the brunt of displeasure, the bad
boy Is more freely forgiven. That is
the way, the stranger given the prefer-
ence, the helpmeet the one on whom
troubleskare recklessly heaped, the old
shoes left at home on the fe:e day or
date of promenade.
Still, after all, there is a sort of com-
pliment paid the relegated "r those
given rear places. The last is some-
times first in quality and Iriportance
and this fact is obvious even to those
who dole out the favors. The wine
with the cobwebs Is the mellcwest and
best. The least is the greatest. Those
at the foot are called to the bead.
It hs a popular whim to cry "woes
me," or "did you ever?" every time pa-
tience or loyalty are apparently slight-
ed; or to sniff disdainfully over the
family rejoicing in the repentance of
the wayward while the "good boy" Is
unnoticed and shoved from the fore-
ground; of innuendo when the new in
acquaintance or enterprise seems to
take unworthy precedence over the old.
But this popular notion is not alto-
gether reliable or a safe guide. The
truth is, that in many Instances of an
apparent hurt or slight there Is the
highest sort of compliment paid.
Take the old shoes for instance.
"Every shoe in the house -at $1." has
been a bait that few might resist. The
lure of the bargain, as well as of the
new has led to indiscriminate purchase
and a desire to exhibit on public pa-
rade. But, oh, you old shoes, bles.sed
comfort, after the mincing, tortured
walk! Exchange the old for the new?
Not for a king's ransom. Tho old and
the patient hold first place ev<!r.
What higher compliment is paid to
helpmeet than to have the partner of
her Joys and troubles save up the ex-
asperations of the day, the misfit ex-
periences and the annoyances and Irri-
tations and volubly roll forth the same
in her hearing and be eased thereby?
It is not always a sign of thought-
lessness, Inconsideration or Felflshnesa
to speak your mind before your own.
or a sign of excellence to be faultless-
ly mild before your own, or the pink
of courtesy or sleek in temperament.
There is a compliment paid to the ears
that hear when there is an unloading
even savoring an anger of personal re-
flections. The ears are trusty and
honor is safe.
Again, over-zealous discipline lifts
the eyebrows when a "good child" is
reprimanded for a slight fault while
the child with more evil tendencies re-
ceives less of discredit even for graver
deflection. Yet here again Is compli-
ment paid. Much more Is expected of
the stronger, the braver and less easily
swayed. Even in criminology exam-
ples have been made of the superior
ones who knew better, who had less
temptation to err. who If unrebuked
might become .greater stumbling blocks
and a menace to humanity; punishment
is apparently greater than offense mer-
ited.
The one served last does not always
deserve the pity, the helping is some-
times more abundant. The one who re-
ceives the blame Is not alwavs entitled
to sympathy, for the greater the blame
the more Importance attached. The one
who is given the brunt to bear in trials
and difficulties is rated as a tower of
strength You are complimented, not
snubbed!
/F
$6.00 Lace Bed Sets $
=^
Wednes-
day Sale
1.9S
These Lace Bed Sets
are beauties, made of a
very fine quality of net,
they have medalions in
center, with lace edge,
also bolster cover,
these are for full size
beds; our regular price
$5.00 others usualh' ask
$6.00, for this sale, only
$1.98
»2.98
$6.50 Go-Carfs-
Wednesday Sale
This is a very well made Folding Go-Cart,
with rubber tires. We are showing an im-
mense line of Go-Carts, all the new things,
and prices are right. W< urge you to come in
the forenoon.
Your Credit Is Good.
"^
2nd Ave. East and Suiierior St.
PURE FOOD GROCERY CO.
Phones — Grand 557: Old. 31eIrose 4081.
325 EAST SUPERIOR ST.
The high cost of living Is a thing of the past, which is proved by the
prices quoted below, if you i.rade at our store our combination of Quality
Groceries, Low Prices and Free Premiums are hard to beat, no matter
where you buy.
Specials for Wednesday and Thursday:
EGGS ^F!;:;t;"i!:ri' Doz I5c
Pure Lard, per lb He
Fancy Navy Beans, 5 lbs 25c
Salt Pork, per lb lie
Flour — best patent — 49 lbs.. $1.40
Apples — Wine Saps — peck . . . .55c
Peanut Butter, 2 lbs 25c
Butter — Fresh Creamery — lb.. 25c
SUGAR g?:.'»....d 18 lbs. SI
Fancy Prunes, 5 lbs 2.'>c
Ripe Pineapples, each 20c
Brooms, regular 45c, each 29c
Mince Meat. .3 pkgs, 25c; 6 for 45c
Bermuda Onions, 3 pkgs 2.5o
Ripe Tomatoes, per basket. . . .20c
Fancy Potatoes, per bu 75c
(While they last.)
Special Discount to Restaurants, Hotels and Boarding; Houses.
This space docs not permit us to quote you more prices — get our
Price List and we will oro/e to you that we save you on an average
of TWENTY PER C J:XT.
V
^1
Glove
The genuine "Kayser*'—
Long Silk Gloves
*Co8t no more" than the "ordinary kind**
doo't wear out at the finger ends and every pair c ontains
A Guarantee that Guarantees
4(
a new pair free" if the tips** wear out before
the glove — you take no risk'
For over a quarter of a century *'KAY^».'S** have
been the standard silk glbve of America. There's
a way to tell the genuine — "look f" tfHi hem"
for the name "KAYSER," it is assurance of
glove satisfaction, and is there
for your protection.
Short Silk GloTet. SOc, 75c» $1.00
Loaf " " 7Sc.,$1.00,$1.25 $1.50
3 Jalms Ka7«er& Co., llitktfS.Nc« Tone
,vm
QuMunt
WAT
1
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A.. — , ;
r
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TT
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911
19
>" r^am^m
FOR SAFE AND
SANEFOURTH
Civic Celebration Will Prob-
ably Be Held in Lake
Shore Park.
No Fireworks Will Be Sold
at Retafl This
Year.
tions will be taken up in all parts of
the citv and anybody can donate. K
nossible. $1,000 uill be raised in this
manner, and it Is likely that an ap-
peal will be made to the city council
for some assistance. .
No time can be lost if the project
is to be a success. Although the
dealers of Puluth are prohibited from
sellinK fireworks, other cities will go
ahead as usual and manufacturers
are becoming crowded with orders. If
the Duluth order is to get the Proper
attention. It should be sent in withm
a comparatively short time.
Mayor Cullum is heartily in favor
of the big display. He thinks that
ihe -kids" are entitled to it and that
the older people will enjoy it as well.
the Smokery. 319 West Superior street.
Sale concludes in seven days.
♦-
Held to Grand Jury.
Maud Davis, colored, wa.s bound over
to the grand jury on a charge of
grand larceny, after a preliminary
examination in police court yesterday
afternoon. She l.s accused of having
relieved Frank Hokanen of $60 and
some change. Robert Turrell. who
was arrested at the same time, wa.s re-
leased, as It was not shown that he
had any direct connection with tne
alleged robbery.
NOTICE!
All member* of Progressive Lwlge. No. «.
Degree i)f Honor, are requested to attenrt
the funeral of our late sister. Mrs. Mary
Emerson. Wednesday morning. April 19, «
■it Clenieiif.^ cliurt-li. at 9 o'clock.
ESTllKJt BUTCIIAKT. Chief of Honor.
PERSONAL
f"^
4-
TlYJ
Preliminary plans are under way
for a mammoth celebration of the
coming Glorious Fourth under the
direction of the city authorities. With
the exception of the celebration of
the Country club, it will be the only
one in the city, for the city council
has decreed that henceforth Duluth
must commemorate the anniversary
of the nation's birth in a safe and
sane manner. It will probably be
held in the park at Twellth avenue
east and the lake shore, and already
$30 has been subscribed toward the
fund. ^ ^
The "kids" will not be able to hav«
any fire crackers, or dynamite caps,
or toy pistols, or anything else in the
red fire line with which to enjoy
themselves while they are running
the risk of killing themselves or
maining themselves for life. They
will not be able to gather on the
front porch and watch father send
flaming sky rockets or Roman
candles shooting skywards. The or-
dinance absolutely prohibits the sale
or keeping for sale of fireworks of
any description, which cuts father
off as effectually as it does the "kid."
Hence, if there is to be any pyro-
technical display, it is evident It will
have to be under the direction of the
city officials. To that end subscrip-
«
-.►-j«:
PrintlnK and Bookbinding
Thwing-Stewart Co. Both 'phones. 114.
. '^ —
Dies at HoHpltal.
Alex Karkow.ski, who dropped un;
conscious on the sidewalk near o-<
West Superior street abou» a week ago,
died at St. Marys hospital this morn-
Inff. Karkowski was about 4o years
oUi a laborer and nobody knows any-
i tlMng further about hlni.
AVanted In VlrKfnla.
Edward P. Oumphrey was arrested
this morning for the Virginia police.
He is charged with grand larceny m
the theft of a valuable gun. The man
under arrest denies he is the man
wanted.
^ •*
Aliened BllndplKSer.
Max Klasnna of New Duluth was ar-
rested todav on a charge of running a
"blindpig.' He will be arraigned on a
charge of selling liquor without a Ih-
cense and it l.s also expected Ue win
be charged with selling liquor to a
minor.
THE REUABLE
"CLAIRVOYANr'
FRANCIS GIRARD
20 West Suparfor St. (Upstairs)
Fire In Kenldenee.
A spark from the chimney set fire, to
the roof of a dwelling at 1013 East
Second street this morning and dia
about $.=^0 damage before the blaze was
extinguished. The house is owned by
Frank Breeze and is occupied by D. C.
\V. Musser.
He will tell you your Hfe.as an
open book. In all matters of life, of
business, law suits, wills, absent
friends and enemies. Whether your
friends are true or false. Of love,
marriage, divorce. Where you are
most fortunate, and what you are
adapted for. If you are thinking
or need the advice of a clairvoyant,
go to one who Is reliable, and one
who has helped many In the city
by his great powers, which enable
him to help and guide you aright.
Girard does not do his work as
many others do, by advertisements,
but "by honest methods. He has
been here longer than any other
clairvoyant in the city. If you are
In doubt, or trouble has come be-
tween you and loved orffes; If busi-
ness cares are annoying you. go
to the reliable clairvoyant. Six
questions answered by mall, bena
$1.00.
V. S. Seaman Visits Home.
William N. Donaldson, a seaman on
the U. S. S. New Hampshire is visiting
at his home, 329 West Fourth street,
having obtained a fifteen days' leave of
absence. Donaldson enlisted in tne
navy at the Duluth recruiting station
eighteen months ago and Is well satis-
fied with his experience thus far. Ho
was on the New Hampshire when the
old Texas was made a target for the
marksmen of the more modern ship re-
cently.
•
Northland Prlntery.
Good Printing. Call Zenith 494.
W H Farr of MiUvuakee, who re-
cently resigned as government logger
on the Fond du Lac Indian reservation,
is in the city from Cloquet today
Martin Moe of Virginia is at the St.
John Anderson of Buhl is at the St.
Fred Erlckson of Hlbblng Is at the
St. Louis. , ^ ...w a*
C. L. May of Coleraine Is at the St.
"" J. H. Nelson of Hlbblng Is at the
''s. j" Cusson of Virginia Is at the
^Mrs."'Nels Nyhus of Ely is at the
George E. Taylor of Grand Rapids is
at the McKay. - ^, „»
Mrs. Emma Magnuson of Ely is ai
the McKay.
gathewngWr
hibbing meet
Methodists Arriving for Dis-
trict Conference to Open
Tuesday Evening.
Hlbblng. Minn., April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Delegates to the dis-
trict conference of the Methodist
church, which will open tonight, are
arriving, and the attendance promises
to be representative of the district.
The bulk of the delegates are expected
to arrive this evening in time for the
opening meeting, which will be ad-
dressed by Rev. M. S. Rice of Duluth
who arrived this afternoon, and will
-speaJc at t>:30, returning to Duluth to-
morrow. , ^ , . ^
Rev. Mr. Von Stilll arrived last night
from Cohasset and is a guest of Francis
Thomas, 423 McKinley street. Rev. J.
J. Parish and wife of Grand Rapids
arrived at noon and are the guests of
James Fayle. 425 Sellers street; F. J.
Smith of Nashwauk Is a guest of Mr.
Dowd. 424 Garfield street; F. H
Pe<iuette of Nett Lake Is a guest of
Mr. Kinsman. 307 i-a Third street.
DULUTH SAUSAGE CO.
32 West First St.
CASH MARKET
WEDNESDAY
SPECIALS
Pork Roast, pef lb. . . .9^
Pot Roast, per Ih,. . . .9^
Rib Roast, per lb 15^
Beef Stew, per lb 7^
Lamb Stew, per lb ... . 7<
Ham, per lb 15^
Eggs, per doz 17^
Fine lino of Fresh Sausaices —
none better.
Fry Our PURE PORK SAUSAGES
Watch for our" ad in Friday
Evening's Herald.
SHERIFF HAS
THE TAX UST
Deputies Will Soon
Sent Out to Make
Collections.
Be
Suit Follow* Auto Accident.
Claiming that John T. Armstead op-
erated his automobile in a careless
and unlawful manner, the Insurance
Company of North America asks
$301.64. the amount the company had
to pay George H. Lounsberry for re-
pairs to his machine after the two had
collided. The accident happened a
year ago last March.
♦
Attend Card Party Tonight
At Maccabee hall, Degree of Honor,
No. 9d.
DULUTH FOR 1912
C. E. CONVExMIOxX.
For Stealiug: Wiitcb.
Peter Miller was arraigned In police
court this morning on a charge of hav-
ing stolen a watch from Frank Olson.
He entered a plea of not guilty and his
fdr
trial was set
this afternoon.
The monthly (executive Committee
meeting of the Endeavor union will be
held tonight at the First Presbyterian
church at 8 o'clock.
Several important matters will come
before the meeting this evening. Ef-
forts will be made to secure the next
state Christian Endeavor convention
for Duluth in 1912. and plans will also
be discussed for sending delegates to
the international convention to be held
at Atlantic City in July, 1911.
This committee Is composed of the
Union officers together with the pres-
idents and secretaries of the various
societies and all are urged to be pres-
ent. ^^^^^_^^^^^^^_^^__^_
I. O. O. F. Anniversary.
Central Link lodge. No. 175, will cel-
ebrate the nlnety-flfth anniversary of
the order. In Its hall on Monday even-
ing April 24, with an entertainment.
Rev. Charles Hawkln Blake of Cloquet
will deliver the address. He is a well-
known Oddfellow, especially In Min-
nesota. In the Borthern part of the
state he has been active for the past
fifteen years and he is very much In
demand on occasions of this kind. The
program of the entertainment will be
announced later.
Get ■ Box of Your Favorite CIsars
At the big tobacco sale in progress at
You Save at Least $1
on Every Pair of
iL^ jSiiSorensen Shoes
Y W AND Actually worth 13.50
11 M "7" and $4 by any com-
C ^ parlsnn. Bent new
_-j i!> « Spring Styles to meet
^^ all requirements of
the modern dressers (men and wom-
®"see our windows, "where the
birds fly." „^„
317 WEST SIPERIOR STREET.
Positively the Beat and Most Modern
Uulek Repair Shoe Shop in Duluth.
FURNISHED FLAT
For rent to man and wife for one
year, completely furnlsh'ed, ready
for housekeeping, six rooms modern,
upper side of First street, between
Eighth and Ninth avenues east.
R. P. DOWSE & CO.
106 Providence Building*
TO CLASSIFY
One Cmnt a Word Each Inaertloa.
No AdvertUement L.«s« Than IB Oamta
Amount Unpaid Is Said to
Be Much Smaller Than
Usual.
The personal property taxes of 1910,
delinquent April 1, 1911, In list form
were turned over to Sheriff Meinlng by
the clerk of the district court for col-
lection this morning.
Within a few days the deputies will
start out to collect. People who are
delinquent can save some money by
visiting the sherlf's office and settling
up as the expenses of the deputies will
be added to the amount already due
if the county is forced lo make a trip
for the money.
The list contains something over
2 000 names. There Is about $60,000
to collect. Included in this amount
are the taxes of the Duluth Street
Railway company. The taxes of that
ccmpany amount to |44.000. Some time
ago they attempted to pay the amount
they thought to be right In gold. It
was not the amount the county wanted
and It was refused.
When the taxes of the railway com-
pany are deducted there Is left but
$16 000. This Is the lowest amount to
be collected in years, according to the
county treasurer's office.
If the taxes are not paid at the time
of the visit of the officer the warrants
are returned to the office as unsatis-
fied and the county then proceeds to
confiscate the property and belongings.
The law is stringent and household
goods of all kinds can be taken.
ANEW SPRING ournx
for Every Member of the Fanuly
V
C No use of waiting !
CL Come in now and take your pick of
the splendid new assortments.
CE. Well make the terms right, and we'll
guarantee absolute satisfaction.
C You don't have to worry about the
paying part when you come here.
CL We Jiave the up-to-date styles, the
low pric<;s and the guaranteed qualities.
Women's Hats for street wear in all
the newest effects from 98c to $5.00,
New shapes received daily. See window display.
ASKIN & MARINE CO.
No. 20 3rd Ave. W.
SUPERFL.UIOU3 HAIR. MOLE.S,
warts, removed forever. Miss Kelly's
Manicuring and Massaging Parlors,
131 West Superior street.
COMBINGS MADE INTO SWITCHES,
and 25 per cent off on all hair goods.
Marinello hair shop. Fidelity block;
next to Freimuth's: take elevator.
FOR SALE— NEARLY NEW SIX-ROOM
house: hardwood finish; modern e;c-
cept heat. Apply 1615 East Fifth
street.
ADDITIONAL
SPORTS
FOR RENT — NICELY FURNISHED
rooms, $1 per week and up; light
housekeeping allowed,
ond street.
314 East See-
Too Fat I Try This
TlKiusands of oyerfat people have become sUm by
following the advice of doctors who reeommend Mar-
mola Prescription Tablets, those hannless UtUe fat
reducers that slnn»llfy the dose of the famoua Mar-
mola Prescription. ^ , , „
If too fat, don't wait for the doctors advice. Go
now to your druggist and for 75o procure a largo
'-<i3e of these tablets.
They rwluoe a pound or more a day without exer-
■Ue, dieting or any unpleasant effect whatever. If too
fat. try Uiis today.
WANTED TO BUY — SECOND-HAND
semi-fitting ladles' spring coat. 624
Second avenue east. Phone, Grana,
1722-D.
Wanted — Dressmaking at home. 522 4th
Ave. E. Old phone, Melrose, 434.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework, $20 per month.
2429 East Third street.
Can Be Cured
Chronic Diseases of Men
Healed Successfully By
Medical Specialists.
WANTED — COMPETENT CHILD'S
nurse. 2615 East Third street. Mel-
rose, 1653.
BOXING BOUT PROVES FATAL.
Waterbury. Conn., April 18.— William
Luke of this city, who took part In a
boxing exhibition here last night, died
this morning. His death was due. It Is
said to injuries during his fight wltn
Joe "Clancy, also a local man. . ■ , ,
Luke met Clancy In a bout scheduled
for six rounds. At the end of the tulrd
round he was breathing heavily and In
the fourth became so exhausted that
the referee stopped the match and de-
clared Clancy the winner. Luke went
to his dressing room and a few mo-
ments later collapsed. After he had
been revived he was removed to his
home. No serious results were antici-
pated. It is said that he was not In
condition when he entered the ring.
137 ENTRIES FOR
BOSTON MARATHON.
WANTED— DRESSMAKERS'S AS.SIST-
ant; none other than experienced
need apply. Call Melrose 2159.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral housework. 1106 East Superior
street.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM STEAM
heated flat, central location, hard-
wood fioors, hot and cold water, jani-
tor service; rent $27. Corporate In-
vestment Co.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FLAT, 123 Vi
E.ist Fourth Inquire 123 East
Fourth.
FOR SALE— $1,350 TAKES FIVE-ROOM
cottage In West Duluth; gas, water,
and hot water heat. See Buckley-
Michaud agency. West Duluth.
That there is much of mystery
and many of the problems to be
solved regarding men's ailments,
every one knows, but the fact that
thousands and thousands of suf-
ferers have been rescued by the
Progressive Medical experts In Du-
luth since 1889 alone is convincing
that these specialists have solved
many and most of the problems to
heal these stubborn ills and ail-
ments. Any and every doctor's
knowledge is limited, and no one
knows everything. We have devoted
our life and labor to only one branch
of human Ills in which no one has
ever been more successful than we.
We have letters in our office which,
if you would read, would open your
eyes as to what can be done for
human ills and suffering. If you think
that Hot Springs is the only place tq
get cured, you are badly mistaken,
for no one has cured more success-
fully than we have.
Come and read the many letters
and photographs before and after
the cure, and you will be convinced
that we can do it. We cure just as
successfully Brlght's Disease, Stom-
ach trouble, all Lung Diseases, and
those of the nose and throat. Eczema
and all Skin Diseases, as well as Can-
cer, Tumors, Growths by the world-
famous "Dissolving Process," a
method by which in these most pain-
ful and dangerous operations the
knife was the most important instru-
ment. Our method has eliminated
the knife entirely, and your opera-
tions will be bloodless and without
pain. We have found out Nature's
way of healing and we can heal
your trouble. Our specialty is the
cure of chronic ailments of men, and
if you are suffering we can cure you.
We also cure Stomach and Bladder
Troubles, Varicose Veins and Ulcers,
Heart Disease, Piles, Rectal Diseases,
Rupture, and all chronic troubles.
We cure by our famous method and
no knife nor pain Is in it. Your con-
sultation is free. Come any time
from 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. No. 1 West
Superior street
Furniture, finishing, paper hanging,
painting and hardwood finishing.
'Phone your orders and I will call
anywhere In city. A. Johnson, Mel.
738; Zeinth, Lincoln 369.
BUY NOW AND START THAT
chicken farm you have talked about
so long — ten, fifteen and twenty acres
close to Proctor, at bargain prices.
E. H. Culklns & Co.. 510 Palladio
building.
Boston, Mass., April 18.— The field of
long distance runners that will start
tomorrow noon at Ashland for the nt-
teenth American marathon run of the
Boston Athletic association will not be
quite so large as last years record-
breaking run, yet when the books
closed today, 137 names were on the
najfos and mall entries probably will
swell 'the number to 150 or more. There
weVe 193 entries last year, of whom
169 started and more than forty cov-
ered the twenty-five miles of the
course. The record for the race, made
by Tom Longboat in 1907, is 2 hours,
24 minutes. 24 seconds. ^ j„
There are nine entries from canaaa,
all anxious for the laurels which were
won twice by Caffery of Hamilton, Ont^
and one each by Longboat and Fred
Cameron of Amherst, N. S.. the last
named being the winner last year
Henry Renaud of Nashua. N. H., 's the
only entry from the former winners.
be obtained by a juncture with the
Munlslng railway of the Cleveland
ClilTs Iron company's system. To con-
nect with the latter system the con-
struction of only two or three miles
of track is necessary, and it is an-
nounced that this work will be un-
dertaken at once. The Cleveland Cliffs
company's lines extend through the
hardwood belt of Alger county and
traverse much of the Marquette iron
range, tapping the cities of Marquette
Negaunee, Ishpemlng and a number or
thriving smaller communities.
GIvea Ann Arbor New TerHtory-
The connection about to be made
win open to the Ann Arbor an Im-
portant passenger and a general
freight business which is at present
shared by other lines, and it will put
the railroad in line to handle a con-
siderable all-rail Iron ore traffic. The
Manlstlque A Lake Superior originally
was built by the Chicago Lumbering
company as a logging road. It has
not been particularly profitable except
when operated by the first owner and
has been deemed of value chiefly as
a feeder to a trunk line, such as has
now taken over the property. «-;"der
the new condition of affairs. President
Joseph Ramsey, general manager of
the Ann Arbor system, with offices in
New York, also will be manager of
the Manlstique &Lake Superior.
INCREASE IN FREIGHT
RATES SUSPENDED.
Washington, April 18.— Freight rates
advances on shipments of malt from
Duluth, Minn., to Chicago. Milwaukee
and Racine, Wis., made by the Chicago,
Milwaukee & St. Paul railway, today
were suspended by the Interstate com-
merce commission until Aug. 15, 1911.
Meanwhile an Inquiry Into the reason-
ableness of the proposed advances win
be made.
FOR FAIRm'oNTTmINN.
Hammoud Introduces Bill for a
Public Building.
Washington. April 18.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Representative Ham-
mond today introduced a bill ap-
propriating $50,000 for a site and a
public building at Fairmont, Minn.
He also Introduced a bill authorizing
national banking associations to make
loans upon improved agricultural
lands. ^
supeeiSrI
I DEATHS AND FUNERALS |
MONUMENTS — Hundreds in stock. P.
N. Peterson Granite Co.. 332 E. Sup. St.
THREE NEGROES KILLED.
Auto in Which They Were Riding
Strikes Poles.
Johnstown. Pa.. April 18.— Three
negroes, one a woman, were killed, and
five, also one a woman, werte Injured
early today In an automobile accident
while returning from a dance. Tne
machine, running fifty miles an hour
skidded, jumped onto a pavement and
ran Into a telephone pole. The dead
are- Mrs Floyd Washington, John
Mationey and Eldridge Lewis.
The Injured are not dangerously hurt.
Duluth.
BUILDING PERMITS.
To George S. Clements, frame
dwelling, London road be-
tween Fourteenth and Fif-
teenth avenues
To M. Moore, frame dwelling.
East Superior street be-
tween Forty-fourth and For-
ty-fifth avenues
To O. Transhang, frame dwell-
ing, Ninth avenue east be-
tween Tenth and Eleventh
To N. Sampson, frame dwell-
ing. New Duluth
To P. A. Falstad. fram.e shop.
East Fourth street between
Sixth and Seventh avenues..
To W. D. McSalnt, frame dwell-
ing and barn, Kenwood Park
$2,500
500
1.500
500
300
900
MARRIAGE LICENSES^ ^^
John Tinkler and Stella Schwartz.
Charley Olsen and Klara Karlson.
Hans C. Madsen and Kathrlne Lar-
son.
ANN ARBOR UNE
IN CLEVER MOVE
Strategic Action in Acqoisi-
tion ofManistique &
Lake Superior line.
Shlngleton. Mich., April 18.— (Special
to The Herald.) — ^The acquisition of the
Manlstique & Lake Superior line, offi-
cial announcement of which has been
made. Is considered a strategic move
on the part of the 'Ann Arbor railroad
system. The road Is some sixty nilles
in length. It connects at Manlstlque
with the Ann Arbor ferry system and
the Soo line and at Shlngleton with
the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic.
While access to a considerable por-
tion of Upper Michigan is „eriven
through these connections at Manls-
tique and Shlngleton, the Soo line and
the South Shore railroad both are com-
peting systems with respect to through
eastbound and westbound business and
an Independent connection has long
_ connection
appeared highly desirable.
has
This
Orrine Destroys
Desire for Drink
The man who drinks to excess
needs treatment for his condition. The
Orrine treatment can be used with
absolute confidenu^. It destroys all
desire for whiskey, b^r and other
intoxicants. It is a simple treatment,
it Is given in the home — no sanitarium
expense — ^no loss of time from work.
It is an Inexpensive treatment. Many
m«n spend more in a day for whiskey
and beer for their friends and thena-
selves than would pay for their treat-
™ We are so sure that Orrine will
benefit you that we say to you that
if after a trial you fail to get any
benefit from its use, we wlU give your
money back.
ORRINE is prepared in two forms.
No 1, secret treatment, a powder, ab-
solutely tasteless and odorless, given
secretly in food or drink. ORRINE
No. 2, in pill form, is for those who
desire to take voluntary treatment.
ORRINE coats only $1.00 a box.
Write for Free ORRINE Booklet
(mailed in plain sealed envelope) to
ORRINE CO., 457 Orrine Building,
Washington, D. C. ORRINE is recom-
mended and is for sale in this city
by W A. Abbett, 205 West Superior
St.. 9S0 East Second St and 101 West
Fourth St. .
BOXING BOUT
IS CAUED OFF
Brown-Gary Fight Promoters
Notified to Abandon
Plans.
The Superior police loday notified
the promoters of the Brown-Gary
fight, which was scheduled to be held
this evening at the ol<l Shattuck &
Hislop livery stables, tliat the match
had to be called ofl:, .and warned the
promoters against holding It In the
city. , ^ , J
Pal Brown of Hlbblng was scheduled
to meet Tom Gary of Chicago.
MERCHANT
LOSES $3,600
Money Lost or !koIen Be-
tween Ashland and
Superioi.
J. H. Binder, an Ashland Jewelry
merchant with an interest In a busi-
ness at 914 Tower averue, lost |3,600
this morning some plact between Ash-
land and his place of business in Su-
perior.
He had twenty-six $100 bills and one
$1,000 bill in his pocket when he start-
ed out but did not miss It until he
arrived at his destination. He told the
police that he did not think that he
had been "touched." He came to Su-
perior on the Northerr Pacific train.
ORIGIN OFIlAZE
PUZZLE FOR JURY
lighting Company Sned fof
Damages From Defective
Wiring.
Was a fire cracker oi defective elec-
tric wiring responsible for a blaze
which on July 4 of last year destroyea
the plant of the Am< rlcan Bedding
company?
This is a question which a Jury in
circuit court may be called upon to de-
cide A suit has been started by the
Insurance companies, about twenty m
number, and represented by a Milwau-
kee legal firm, agalnit the Superior
Water. Light & Power company.
The Insurance companies paid out
$10,000 to cover the fire losses. They
alleged that defective wiring was tne
cause of the blaae an<l hold that the
defendant company Is liable for the
damages.
» —
Annual Insp<ietion.
The annual inspection of Company 1.
Wisconsin National Guard of Sunerlor.
will take place this eyenlng at Mary-
land hall under the direction of Capt.
Murphy. U. S. A. The soldiers will be
attired in heavy marching order. Capt.
Murphy, who arrived tli is morning from
Ashland, is the first regular army offi-
cer to conduct the annual Inspection.
GET THREE YEARS EACH.
Jackson Shooting ^Inspects Plead
Guilty to Another Charge.
Thomas Hunter andi Harry Sargent
were sentenced to three years apiece
In the state penitentiary at Waupun by
Judge Smith in super or co}ift yester-
day. They were charged with shootln*
Read The
HeraldWants
at a South Shore railway brakeman at
Iron River.
Hunter and Sargent were first arrest-
ed as suspects In the Jackson shooting
affair. The evidence was not conclusive
and the authorities could not hold them
on that charge. However, it wa.s founa
that the pair were guilty of shooting at
a brakeman. who had put them off a
freight train. , , ^ ,
Both pleaded guilty and asked for
leniency.
Thompson Is Selected.
Peter A. Thompson, secretary of the
Superior Stevedore company, the or-
ganization which handles the freight
at the Great Northern railway sheds,
has been appointed superintendent of
the newly organized Lake Line Steve-
dore company.
Big Crowd at Ball.
Over 1.000 people attended the annual
dance of the Superior firemen last even-
ing at the Sons of Norway hall. The
function passed off very successfully
andaltohugh considerably crowded tne
dancers seemed to enjoy themselves.
The decorations were made with dra-
peries and electrical ettects.
♦
Double Funeral.
A double funeral will be held at the
East End Presbyterian church tomor-
row afternoon at 2; o'clock, when the
last service for Lowell BegUnger and
Chester Adams, the high school boys
who were drowned near Gordon, Fri-
day, will be conducted.
MARQIEHE SCIENTISTS
TO BUILD FIXE CHURCH.
Marquette, Mich.. April 18.*— (Special
to The Herald.)— The first Christian
Science church in Marquette will be
constructed in this city. The Mar-
quette society of that denomination
has purchased a very desirable site
In the residential district, and while
the building plans at present are In-
definite It is the plan to erect a house
of worship next year. ^^^^
Ladies Sanative Wash.
A prominent physician recommendll
the following formula as a perfect
blessing to women who need a thor-
ough-acting antiseptic sanative wash,
by injection or douche, for leucorrhea.
Obtain the ingredients separately
and mix at home If any embarass-
ment is felt. Get 2 ounces of anti-
septic vilane powder. 1 ounce tannic
acid and 1 ounce sulphate of zinc.
Mix thoroughly and use a teaspoonful
to a quart of warm water, as a douche
or Injection for diseased condition*.
Cold water may be used for a simple,
cleansing, sanative wash whenever
needed. Its action destroys microbes,
disease, germs, etc. Tones up the mu-
cous membrane and keeps the part*
in a healthy natural condition.
When used once by women it take*
Its place in her regular necessary
toilet articles, because of its reliabilty
and effectiveness.
•
Columbus Man Says:
C W. Dimmery, P. O. Box No. 202f.
Columbus, Ohio, writes: "I am raor«
than pleased to Inform you that your
Blackburn's CascaRoyal-PIlls are aU
that you guarantee them to be. *
have been constipated for years, ana
nev^r found anything to give me relief
and ease that your Blackburn s Casca-
Royal-PIlls have, and as long as I "ve
and need a medicine for a Pbyslc. I
shall always use them and reconrimena
them for continued constipation.
No matter how long you have suf-
fered or how bad your case may b«,
Blaekbiirn'. C«.caRoy.l-Plll- will sure-
Iv cure and pleasantly relieve you of
constipation, and ultimately cure you.
Send for a Free trial package to The
Blackburn Products Co. Dayton Ohio.
Sold by all druggists In 10c and S6«
packages.
RlacRburnT^
DEFECTIVE PAGE |*
-*^_-^*.-;*«--
s
I
i '
■
i
l«Bi
•MM
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
IW«*OTMMM^^lMi««A^%A^M«#«M««MA^^^*MAMMMMMMAA^«MM.
LATEST SPORTING NEWS OF THE DAY
%»^i^^>^^>^»^^i^>^i^>^>^«^>^«^%»^»N»»^«^>rf»»»#»#»<»^»^»^>^i^»^>^i^«^>^»^«^i^>^^>*.
FLAPPER IS
CONFIDENT
Pal Brown's - Manager Be-
lieves Hibbing Boy Will
Defeat Tommy Garry.
Viclory Over Chicago Fighter
Would Mean Fame for
Range Battier.
Pal Brown of Hibbing and his man-
apor. Dr. I»lapprr, are In the city to-
day. Tonight before a Wisconsin light
club T'al will hook up with Tommy
Garry of Chicago, said to be a tough
and clever niiUer. A victory over
Garry would mean general recognition
of Brown by the fight club members
throughout the country.
"We don't fear any of them," said
Flapper today in discus.^ing the
thanres of his boy against Garrv. "I
believe Pal will win before the limit,
and also believe that today he is one
of the greatest boys in America.
"All he needs is experience. Some
people are of the opinion that we are
forcing Pal too fast. In only one fight
in his career has he ever been pun-
ished, the Larsen fight, and never has
he been forced to go through what you
would call a gruelling battle to win.
•He is getting faster and has a de-
fense hard to penetrate. He is tough
and can stand a wallop to either jaw
or body. But best of all he has a kick
in either milt, and when he lands it is
generally good night.' With every-
tning in his favor you can't blame us
for being optimistic.
"We do not underrate an opponent;
we simply think Pal is better than the
rest of the boys of his weight. It may
sound sort of dreamy and visionary,
but some day I think this boy will be
fighting for the worlds lightweight
championship."
Brown looks in the best of condition
and says he has no fear of the out-
come. Frankie White comes after
Garry, and a victory in both battles
wi.uld me:in that the Hlbblng fighter
would meet some of the best in the
lightweight division.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Standing of the Teams.'
Won. L.ost. Pet
Philadelphia 3
St. Louis 2
Pittsburg 2
New York 2
Cincinnati • 2
Brooklyn 2
Boston 2
Chicago 1
1
1
2
2
2
3
3
2
.750
.667
.500
.500
.500
.400
.400
.333
Games Today.
Pittsburg at Chicago.
Brooklyn at New York.
Philadelphia at Boston.
St. Louis at Cincinnati.
GIANTS DEFEAT DODGERS
AT HIGHLANDERS' PARK.
New York. April 18. — The New York
Nationals defeated Brooklyn In the sec-
ond game of the series at American
league park yesterday, 3 to 1. Wiltse's
left wrist was injured in the second
Inning by a ball batted by Hummel,
and ne was relieved by Raymond.
Brooklyn did not hit Raymond until
the ninth. New York's hits off Bell
were timely. Score: R. H. E.
Brooklyn 00000000 1 — 1 4 1
New York 01001010 x — 3 6 0
Batteries — Hagon, Bell and Bergen
and Krwin; Wlltse, Raymond and My-
ers. Umpires — Eason and Johnstone.
ELEVEN HITS GIVE
CARDINALS ONE RUN.
innings yesterday and defeated Wash-
ington, 6 to 3. Otey, who replaced
Walker, pitched well until the final
round. The fielding of Milan and bat-
ting of Knight were features. Score:
T3 IT g
Washington ..0002000100—3 8* 3
New York 111000000 3 — 6 H 1
Batteries — Ote.v, Walker and Street;
Abel.T Warhop and Blair and Sweeney.
Umpires — Mullen and Connolly.
ATHLETICS WIN FROM
BOSTON IN GOOD GAME.
Philadelphia. April 18. — Philadelphia
broke its losing streak yesterday by
defeating Boston, 1 to 0. The game
was marked by excellent pitching by
Plank and Karger, and sharp fielding
by both teams. Barry scored the only
run of the game on singles by him-
self, Davis and Plank. Score: R. H. E.
Boston 00000000 0 — 0 7 0
Philadelphia ...OlOOOOOOx — 1 8 2
Batteries — Karger and Madden.
Plank and Thomas. Umpires — Egan
and Evans.
f
TWO HARBORS BASKET BALL TEAM
HAS GOOD RECORD FOR SEASON
t^^^0*0*^^^*0V^0^l^^^l*^^^^*0k0^^*^^^*^*0^0^^*0*^^>*t
Standing of the Teams.
Cincinnati. Ohio, April 18. — Suggs
was hit frequently but was effective In
the pinches, Cincinnati winning by a
score of B to 1. Steel was hit hard
when men were on the bases and both
he and Geyer were liberal with bases
on balls. Mitchell's batting featured.
Score: R. H. E.
St. Louis 00000010 0—1 11 1
Cincinnati 0 1003 100x — 5 7 1
Batteries — Geyer. Steel and Bresna-
han; Suggs and McLean. Umpires —
liigler and Finneran.
CUBS BREAK LOSING
STREAK ON PIRATES.
TEMPLE DEFEATS
TOMMY KILBANE
Milwaukee Boy Easily Out-
points Cleveland Fighter
in Short Bout.
Milwaukee. Wis., April 18. — Ray
Temple of Milwaukee easily outpointed
Tommy Kilbane of Cleveland In a ten-
round no-declslon bout last night. The
boys fought at 133 pounds.
The first two rounds were pretty
even with little damage. In the third
round Temple cornered Kilbane three
times, lambasting him to head anJ
body and avoiding several swings from
the Cleveland boy. In the fourth and
fifth Temple used a left Jab to the head
and drove several rights to body with
effect. Temple staggered Kilbane in
the sixth and seventh with left hooks
to head and right drives to the heart.
The remaining rounds were easily
Temples.
Mike Gibbons of St. Paul won from
Gus Christie of Milwaukee in the semi-
final.
HOTEL
HOLLAND
,,, European...
ABSCLITELY FIRE-PROOF.
Clvb Breakfast, Popular Priced.
Lnacheon and Dinner.
Sfnalc at Dinncr> 6 to 8 P. Bf.
ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY
AFTER 10:30.
Chicago. April 18. — Chicago broke
their losing streak yesterday and de-
feated Pittsburg. 7 to 2. Pitcher Adams
was wild and his teammates played
ragged ball behind him. while Mcln-
tyre of Chicago was in fine condition
and held the visitors safe, striking out
one or more times every man «xcept
Clarke, Hunter and Gardner. Score:
R IT F
Chicago 2 02 2 1 000 X— 7' b 1
Pittsburg 110 0 00 000 — 2 6 5
Batteries — Mclntyre and Archer;
Adams. Gardner and Gibson. Umpires —
Brennan and O'Day.
PHILLIES HIT HARD
AND SWAMP DOVES.
Minneapolis 5
Kansas City 3
Indianapolis 3
Louisville 2
Toledo 2
Milwaukee 2
Columbus ";.l
St. Paul 0
"Won. Lost.
1
1
3
2
3
4
2
Pet.
.83.}
.750
.500
.500
.400
.333
.333
'000
Games Today.
Minneapolis at Louisville.
Milwaukee at Columbus.
St. I'aul at Indianapolis.
Kansas City at Toledo.
SAINTS LOSE TO HENS
IN TENTH INNING.
COMMENTS AND OPINIONS
ON THl: SPORTING PARADE
Toledo. Ohio, April 18. — After Cook
had purposely passed Flick in the
tenth Inning, Niles singled, scoring
Hohnhorst with the winning run for
Toledo. Brady, who relieved Kssicn
In the sixth, pitched shutout ball, hold-
ing St. Paul hitless. Score:
T> TT -pi
Toledo 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 00 1— 3 10' 4
St. Paul 0 10100 0000 — 2 8 1
Batteries — Essick, Brady and Hart;
Cook and Kelly. Umpires — Ferguson
and Chill.
Boston, Mass., April 18. — Philadelphia
defeated Boston yesterday, 10 to 2.
Frock allowed hits and passes for four
runs in the third inning, while long hits
in the eighth netted the visitors five
more. The day was extremely cold.
Score: R. H. E.
Boston 0 0000 1100 — 2 9 2
Philadelphia ..004010050—1014 2
Batteries — Frock and Rarlden; Moore
and Chalniers and Dooln. Umpires —
Klem and Doyle.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
MILLERS BUNCH HITS
AND WIN EASILY.
Columbus, Ohio, April 18. — By bunch-
ing hits on Liebhardt In two Innings,
Minneapolis won the third game of the
series by a score of 8 to 1. Patterson
was powerful with men on bases and
a fumble by Kllllfer helped Columbus
to escape a shutout. Score:
R H F
Minneapolis 003 0004 10 — 812 4
Columbus 0 100000 00 — 1 9 1
Batteries — Patterson and Owen;
Liebhardt, Berger and Bemls. Umpires
— Owens and Handlboe.
COLONELS POUND THREE
MILWAUKEE PITCHERS.
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Detroit 4 0 1.000
New York 4 0 1.000
Washington 2 2 .600
Cleveland 2 3 .400
Chicago 2 $ .400
St. Louis 2 4 .333
Boston 1 3 .250
Philadelphia 1 3 .250
dames Today.
Boston at Philadelphia.
New York at Washington.
Cleveland at Detroit.
Chicago at St. Louis.
CALLAHAN STARS AND
SOX BLANK BROWNS.
St. Louis, Mo.. April 18. — Chicago
had little trouble winning the second
game of the series with the home team
yesterday, 8 to 0. Olmstead allowed
but four hits. Callahan's flelding and
batting was a feature of the game.
Score: R. H. E.
St. Louis 0 0 000 000 0 — 0 4 5
Chicago 011002301 — 8 15 0
Batteries — Lake, George and Clarke;
Olmstead and Sullivan. Umpires — Di-
neen and O'Loughlin.
NEW YORK BUNCHES
HITS IN TENTH INNING.
AVashlngton, April 18. — New York
bunched hits in the first and tenth
Louisville. Ky.. April 18. — Louisville
defeated Milwaukee yesterday making
it two out of three for the series. The
locals out-batted the visitors three to
one. DegrofE's home run over the right
field fence was one of the longest hits
ever made at the local park. Score:
R H F
Louisville 111000001 — i 13 1
Milwaukee 00002000 1—3 4 1
Batteries — HIgginbotham and
Hughes; McGlynn, Nicholson, Doherty
and Marshall and Breen. Umpires —
Eddlnger and Hayes.
THE WOLVERINE BASKET BALL TEAM.
Reading From Left to Right — L. James, Guard; Theodore Sulhvan, Forward;
Archie Grant, Substitute; John Woodward, Center; Ed Kernan, Forward;
Charles Dwan, Guard. The Wolverines Closed the Season Last Saturday
Champions of the Two Harbors Basket Ball League, Having Won
Fifteen Out of Twenty Games. The Wolverines Are a Higti School Team.
INDIANS TAKE LAST
GAME FROM BLUES.
Indianapoll.?. Ind.. April 18. — Indian-
apolis defeated Kansas City in the last
game of the series yesterday, 4 to 2.
The locals won the game in the seventh
inning when two men walked, two
singles and a two-base hit scored two
runners. Powers was taken out of the
box In the second and replaced by Mad-
dox. Score:
R. H. R
Indianapolis 20000020 x — 4 8 1
Kansas City 10010000 0 — 2 7 2
Batteries — Link and Carlsch; Powell,
Maddox and Rltter. Umpires — Bierhal-
ter and Weddidge.
JUST CRAZY TO
nCHT JOHNSON
THE TALK OF
THE TOWN
This picture shows the new
Invention, the Carlsbad Mineral
and Steam Baker, installed by
Sam Kassmir at his baths in
Hotel McKay, Fifth avenue west
and First street, where dozens
of patients have been cured of
Rheumatism, Kidney and Liver
Troubles. Open day and night.
'Phone appointments, Zenith,
Grand 1369- A.
Sam LaDgf§rd Thinks World's
Champion Is Side-Step-
ping Him.
New York, April 18. — Sam Langford,
the colored heavyweight, who Is Just
back from a three months' trip abroad,
told a party of his admirers here of his
experiences in Europe and his aspira-
tions for a championship contest with
Jack Johnson.
"My fight with Bill Lang in London
was easy," he declared. "Lang was
scared most to death. He didn't know
what struck him when I slammed him
in the first round. He was game,
though, and took a hard beating.
"I really beat McVey In Paris two
weeks ago. It wasn't a fake, although
It may have looked queer. I tried to
knock him out, but he hung on and
clinched for the last eight or ten rounds
so that I couldn't land him.
"So Mr. Johnson's In Jail? Well, I
knew they'd get him sooner or later for
speeding. This ought to be a lesson.
When they let him out Sunday I hope
he'll keep out. Will I flght him? Sure
I will. He can have a mill with me In
London or Paris, but I don't believe he
wants to flght me. I'd Just like to get
into the ring with him for ten or fifteen
rounds. That would be time enough
for me to prove tnat I could whip
NOAH BRUSSO NOW.
Canadian Fighter Quits Game and
Drops Fighting Name.
Lo9 Angeles, April 18. — Tommy Burns
has become Noah Brusso again. The
scrappy Canadian, who not so very
long ago was a world champion, has
quit the ring as a fighter, but will
continue in the game as a promoter.
He is at Ottawa now and says he
Intends to Join Tom Flannigan and
manage athletic associations in Winni-
peg. Vancouver and Calgary.
"I'll never be able to fight again,"
he said today. "My leg is gone and I
am getting too fat. I will not meet any
of those challengers from Australia.
Mcintosh wrote me. asking if I would
box Bill Lang for the championship of
the British empire, but I had to refuse
It is no use. I will never be able to
fight again.
"I have made a dollar or two. and I
don't think I'll worry any more. I've
been all over the world, and the West
looks good to me."
WILL PROTEST
AGAINST RUUNG
American Olympic Committee
Opposed to Early Closing
of Athletic Entries.
New York, April 18. — The American
Olympic committee will forward a pro-
test to the Olympic committee of Swe-
den this week protesting against the
early date of closing the entries for
the next Olympic games at Stockholm
next year.
The Swedish authorities announced
that the games will take place in July
and that the entries will close early in
June. According to the Ideas of the
Americans this date is too early for
the American committee to make a
team.
James E. Sullivan, secretary-treas-
prer of the Amateur Athletic union,
said today that while it would not be
impossible for America to name its
team by June, the early date would
likely tend to prevent some of our best
men from making the trip. He said:
"If the Swedish authorities refuse to
change their plans our committee will
consider a plan of holding the try-
outs this fall. Personally. I think this
would be a bad scheme. It would mean
that some of the boys would get in
the best condition for the try-out and
then lag when the time comes for hard
training next spring."
"While every amateur will be eligi-
ble to compete." says Mr. Sullivan, "it
is likely that many of our best men
will not be in their best condition
early. The weather In some parts of
the country might prevent sufficient
outdoor tra[inlng, with the result that
some, a few weeks later, might be
beaten by lesser lights and be de-
prived of a trip abroad.
"Irrespective of what action the
Swedish committee will take, America
will %end over a winning team. We
have enough champions in this coun-
try to beat the world. Our champions
are good enough to score enough points
to defeat the world, even though they
are not In their best condition."
STEVENS WINS
CLOSING EVENT
Last Event of Series Is Com-
pleted at Y. M. C. A.
Gymnasium.
Last evening at the Y. M. C. A. Will-
iam Stevens won the pole vault event,
the last of a series of twenty-two in-
door track events, clearing the bar at a
height of 8.4, which was over a foot
ahead of the nearest competitor. The
records made in the pole vaulting were
about the poorest of any of the series.
The winner of the entire series has
not been determined upon as yet. J.
Nasslund has competed In every event
and has a point standing of 1,099.
George Jacobson and William Bailey
have not competed in all of the events,
each having two to compete in. When
they have finished up the series the
winner can be decided on.
The various events have brought out
big fields and have enlisted a great
amount of interest in track athletics.
It is possible that later in the season a
field day may be held.
Following Is the order of finish of
the entrants in the event of last even-
ing:
William Otto 7 feet
J. Nasslund 6 feet 8 inches
Phil Moore : 6 feet 8 inches
Carl Bessenbosel ' 6 feet 8 Inches
MacDonald 6 feet 8 inches
Walter Berkleman ....5 feet 8 inches
Art Coning 5 feet
Joe Moore 4 feet 8 inches
A. Ulvang ,. 4 feet S Inches
"BILL" JONES 'has
SIGNED WITH WAUSAU.
Wausau, Wis., April 18. — To fill the
vacancy at third caused when Carl
Bond, last year's manager of the Lum-
berjacks, was released, after the se-
lection of Biddy Dolan to handle the
club for the -coming season, Trevor
("Bill") Jones, the fast Milwaukee
semi-pro, has been signed, according
to information received here late yes-
terday afternoon. Jones will cover
Bonn's former position at third base.
The Cream City lad had offers from
the Lansing club in the Southern Mich-
igan league and the Fort Worth club
in the Texas league. Although it will
be his Initial year in the organized
game, it is expected he will have little
trouble in holding down the Job with
the Lumberjacks
His past record in the Lake Shore
league and with Chicago semi-pro
clubs leads his friends to believe that
he will make good without difficulty.
FIRE SWEEPS
SCULLERS' ROW
Four Clubhouses, 200 Shells
and Many Trophies
Destroyed.
New York. April 18. — "Scullers' row,"
on the Hudson river, was swept by
fire early today. Four boathouses were
burned with their contents, including
nearly 200 racing shells, and two other
boat club structures were damaged.
The loss, it is estimated, will exceed
?100,000, and the burning of the shells
may cause the abandonment of some of
the regattas scheduled for the season.
The fire started In the Nassau club-
house and spread along the river front,
gutting the building where it origin-
ated and the boathouses of the Harlem
Rowing club. Metropolitan Rowing
club and the Wyanoke club. The Cres-
cent Rowing club and the Bohemian
Boat clubhouses were badly damaged.
Many valuable trophies were de-
stroyed, together with the shells in
the boathouses.
Members expressed doubt of tha
clubs' ability to participate in the na-
tional regatta at Saratoga.
The Metropolitan Rowing club had
entries In the senior eights and the
singles in the American Henley to bo
held at Philadelphia May 27.
JelfTs Useless A<iinission—
Cobb Still Very Much
Alive — Gamtlers and
Baseball— Advertising the
Minny Leaguct — Some
Fancy Billiards.
(BY BRUCIS.)
AMES J. JEFFRIES Is off
to Europe. Three cheers
for Europe. Remember
the line in the play whore
the man w; th the tragic
face says, "Before I go
I've sometl ing to say."
Before Jeftries left for
Europe he had somethi ig so terribly
momentous to say that it must have
startled the natives of Hackensack. He
stated that Jack Johhsoii beat him on
the square.
After reading the various accounts of
the fight and seeing the pictures this
admission is about as superfluous as a
corkscrew In an Indiana option county
or a refrigerator at the ;3ole, wherever
that Is. . , w
Jeems lost on the square simply be-
cause the son of Ham liad some one j
with a long head point oi t what a boob
he would be to lose, as he had prom-
ised to. One could sit down and write
several columns on that flght — and lo
what use? The only thing that the
foing of Jeff to Europe s tirs up is the
nclent memory; his declaration that
he lost on the square it the funniest
thing yet, . ^ , » j.
The spectacle of a big lob being fed
on terrapin and dined on wine trying
to convince the American public that
he was doped has a germ of humor in
it. There is no use in disturbing dead
men. and James J. Jeffries is dead a.s
far as the fighting game Is concerned.
He is off for Europe and will probably
include Carlsbad In his intinerary. His
sailing will recall the time he sailed
something like a year iigo, with the
shouts of hundreds of Americans din-
ning in his ears. Will there be any
shouts this time? The wcrld is a funny
old crust.
None of Us Reallj Knew.
NTIL. yesterday very few of us
really ever susj;ected what a
rapier-like senile of humor
Charles Comiskey had.
u
Not That Kind of a Leader.
m
WHITE HOPE MORRIS
HAS NEW QUARTERS
Tulsa. Okla., April 18. — Frank B.
Ufer, Carl Morris' manager, today
closed a two-year contract with the
Tulsa County Fair a.ssociation, where-
by he gets possession of the main ex-
hibit hall and art building of the fair
grounds, just east of this city on the
Kendal] college car line. The exhibit
hall, which Is 80 by 100 feet, will be
converted into a permanent arena seat-
ing 4,500 people. The art hall will be
converted into training quarters. The
arena will be equipped with a balcony
so that it can be emptied in fifteen
minutes. When there is need of a
larger arena a temporary structure
can be thrown up inside the race track
capable of seating 15,000 people.
The training quarters will be equip-
ped this week, and the giant "hope"
will resume regular training which he
will continue practically all of the
time. For running Morris will use the
half mile race track. Morris and his
trainer, Con Riley, and sparring part-
ners and attendants are moving here,
and will be In their new quarters Be-
fore the end of this week.
Ufer said today that Carl Morris is
not matched with anyone at present
but intimated that he might be
matched any day and added that his
opponent, whoever he may be will be a
fighter of renown.
JACKS LOSe'sCHIEFFER.
Wausau Twirler Signs With Mil-
waukee Senii-Professional Team.
Wausau, Wis.. April 18. — The Wau-
sau club has lost Tony Schleffer, its
speedy little pitcher for the last three
years, for good, and it is expected
that it will now place him on the sus-
pended list.
Schleffer signed his contract with
the Burghardts, a fast Milwaukee
semi-pro baseball club, yesterday thus
making good his threat to stay out
of organized baseball this season.
He came In for a big cut in salary
with the rest of the Lumberjacks
when the contracts were sent out in
March this year and like all the other
players, protested over the action of
the officials and threatened not to
return. Although the rest of the play-
ers, except ex-Manager Carl Bono, re-
turned to the club, Schleffer has re-
fused and the result is that he will
undoubtedly be suspended.
The little fellow was known as one
of the best hurlers In the Minny
league last year, having won 18 and
lost 15 of his games. He was also
one of the best batting pitchers in
the organization, hitting the leather
at a .2lV clip. His fielding average
was .948. During his three years with
the Lumberjacks he became feared
as a baserunner and had the reputa-
tion of being one of the speediest
men in the circuit.
MAY SEHLE THREE I
LEAGUE TROUBLES.
Y
N answer to a question that has
been sent in to the question
department, it might be stated
right here thJ^t Frank L.
(ampl Chance is the P<ierless Leader
SXbI in the sense of being a non-
^^^ pareil and not 111 the sense of
being a tobacco ohewer. Mr. Chancy
does not use the weed ar>d in a recent
advertisement advocated the use of a
certain brand of chewing .^ujn. He real-
ly should be placed right :n UjIs matter.
He Is Still Tolerably Fast.
ARLY Eeason reports had
some of us believing Ty Cobb
was quite fit for the soldiers
home. He wa| reported fat
and slow and almost wobbly
on his pins. In leading of the
game between tlio White Sox
and the Detroit Tigers it may be no-
ticed that Mons. Cobb scored from sec-
ond on a short Infield drive. After this
some of us will believe that the Geor-
gia Peach may be able to support him-
self and family, including the buying
of gasoline for the new car.
Keep the Gambling Out.
ESTERDAY two i.ien were dis-
cussing baseball. Neither of
them knew very much about
the game. One of them
stated that the national sport
was crooked and the other
man hastllv gavj voice to the
same sentiment. They said the game
was suspicious simply because they
are both men suspicious of other
sports, and not being discriminating,
Included baseball under the general
head of things not on tho square.
Think for a moment how much
worse it would be ft there was bet-
ting in the game. Think of the thou-
sands of fans throughout the country
who would be ready at the slightest
instance to call the gruat old game
crooked. Those who know anything
about baseball know thai it Is one of
the greatest and grandest games and
that it is absolutely on tlie level. Once
let the gamblers break In and there
will be suspicion in the minds of thou-
sands of fans. It is worth money and
great effort upon the part of baseball
officials through the lind to keep
gambling out of the gam<«.
The Moose Is at the B all Park,
WIRE from Chicago tells that
the moose has arrived in
safety and has been taken out
to the South side ball ground.1
Those who saw the packer!
animal marveled at its size.
There have beer several ad-
ditional stories regardiig the stag
4jarty — ibeg pardon — the noose giving,
on the Chicago sporting :>ages, and It
is a cinch that the Dulu:h delegation
will get a good hand when they assist
in the gay festivities In Chicago on
Thursday.
He Likes to Hear the ISall Games.
T
He might have rubbed tlie enamel off
if they had not grabbed him.
The old fellow made an awful yell
and called for the hotel manager, *tho
clerk and the house detective. And
all the while the kid had a bland and
innocent expression on his horribly
homely face and kept right on sawing
at his teeth.
Finally he tumbled to the fact that
all the fuss was being made about the
tooth brush he had grabbed. To the
torrid wrath of his manager he re-
plied humbly and with dejected air.
though still with puzzled counte-
nance—
"I tought it was the house brush."
Breaking Into the Daily Papers.
UST the other day the Chicago
Tribune had a write-up of
the Minny league. Almost
every day the Twin City
newspapers have something
to say about the league and
T^.ji. oi*i"^^^^ Jawn Desmond Iri the
?;J\^'**^^ ** *^ '^^'■y l'l«elv that they
U,w.^*^® something more to write of ~
This Is the first time the Minny
league has been given the proper at-
tention Of the press of Chicago since
a certain Minny league magnate fell
In the fountain at the auditorium It
is good for the league, advertising,
•X'en if some of the magnates have to
break up parties in order to get the
space in the poipers.
Some Billiards, Boys.
L"~^^EE SHAW, one of the greatest
fancy billiard shots in the
world, will give an exhibition
fiMMM." ^t the Elks' hall next Monday
jaOjL evening. In the program of
Cr^^Tg making the ball speak, roll
over and play dead and do
other surprising evolutions and revolu-
tl?."^'..**^? professor will be assisted by
Bill Hatley. After the Shaw man is
through with making the ball travel
off the table and rest on the top of a
boy s head and do various other stunts
that you would not believe po.sslble in
the case with the rather quiet and shy
billiard ball, he will engage in a 300-
balk line game with our own Bill
^..w ^ Shaw is famous in the history of
billiards. He Is perhaps one of the
greatest fancy shot men that the gen-
tlemen's game has yet produced, and in
addition lo this, can play a corking
good straight game.
The Elks will give this little enter-
tainment in their clubrooms and from
its general character It should prove
one of the best exhibitions ever given
in this city. Personally, Mr. Shaw Is
known to some of the people of this
city, and is known by reputation to
many more.
Uok Out for Several Slugs.
lEPORTS of the conditions sur-
rounding the matching of Cy-
clone Johnny Thompson and
Hugo Kelly state that the
Kelly man has received per-
mission to • wear a special
glove because of the fact that
he has a bad hand. It might he very
well for the seconds of the cyclone per-
son from Sycamore, 111., to watch care-
fully and examine closely the gloves
of Mons. Kelly, lest it be found that
under the license of the special per-
mission he has concealed a horsesrioe.
In the old days they used to pack
Iron slugs, and revivals are getting
popular.
SLTER AFTER MATCH.
Tom Scanlon. manager of Otto Suter.
claimant to the world's welterweight
wrestling championship, has written to
Duluth asking a jnatch here the pres-
ent month with Sailor Jack. As the
whereabouts of the marine remains a
deep mystery, and as wrestling has
closed in this city for the season, there
is very little chance that the two men
will be brought together.
Suter is to meet Miller in St. Paul,
according to the letter from Scanlon,
Miller and Sutter have met twice, both
matches resulting in draws. In neither
of the two matches, the first of which
was wrestled In this city. did the
much touted Miller show any advant-
age over the Cleveland boy.
«
Will Improve Grounds.
A. W. Kuehnow stated yesterday
that improvements will be made at
Athletic park this season in the ex-
pectation that many semi-professional
games would be played there, also
some of the games of the White Sox.
Work on the contemplated Improve-
ments Is due to start in a few days.
The left field bleachers will be en-
larged, according to the statement of
Mr. Kuehnow, and some improvements
made in the outfield. The spring
series between the Sox and the Supe-
rior team will be played at Athletic
park, and it is expected that some of
the games during the first part of the
season, before the completion of th©
new park, will also be played in th©
West end field.
The Kidney Cure
Without a Failure
Chicago, April 18. — A final effort will
be made to end the disputes that have
upset the Three I Baseball league for
the last several months, and to adopt
a 1911 playing schedule the members
of the league meet here today.
It is also expected that President Al
Tearney and representatives of the
Southern clubs will seek to persuade
Waterloo, Iowa, and the Northern clubs
to consent to the formation of a ten-
club league to admit Qulncy and Deca-
tur. 111.
HE manager of the Spring-
field, Ohio, baseball team has
presented a blind professor
with a pass to the baseball
games. The prof, says he
likes to "hear" the game.
He gets real pleasure out of
the shouts at the umpire £ nd the crack
of the bat and the remarks of the
fans. Maybe the owner of the team
thought It would be too much like
highway robbery to charge real money
for a blind man to "see" the games,
and so came through with the pass.
No matter how late the professor
stayed he could never S2e the home
team finish.
The Positive Cure That Revolution-
izes Treatment of Kidney Dis-
eases Rtieuiiiatisun and
Bladder Trouble.
These statements are not exagger-
ated. There is no necessity In doing
so, because every man and woman
suffering from kidney or bladder
troubles, or rheumatism can prove it
within 24 hours by getting a free
package of Dr. Derby's Kidney Pllla
at any drug store.
The Famous Face of Kid Broad.
ANY of you have heard of Kid ^^J"- I^erby's Kidney Pills are ahead
Broad. His countenance was ot the times, the only kidney and
classic in its ugliness. The bladder treatment that makes good
expression "Gee, ain't It aw- Its strongest statement. Get a free
ful!" originated when the package at your drugsrist's and see
kid was but a 111 tie fellow. A jf ^e have said a hundredth part of
passing stranger got a look ^hat these little wonder-work^ro do
at the urchin's face and tinconsclously '*^"* xnese luue wonaer-worKers do
framed the sentence. Oftei he was ac
cused of wearing a mask, but never of
being two-faced. Compa-ed to IKd
Broad, Kid Paul and Tom Sharkey
might be considered quite in the Apollo
class.
One time his manager put him up
at a very grood hotel. The experience
was quite unique. Down :n the wash-
room the kid got in awfully bad. His
debut In the big league betels was not
auspicious.
An elderly man was mopping his
map and had a swell layout strewn
around one of the wash bowls, sliver
brushes and scented soai' and a few
things that one of Outda's heroes
would have.
When the old boy turc ed his back
Kid Broad crrabbed the silvei^ tooth
brush and be^an to scour his ivorlesL
Now listen, sufferers, don't get ex-
cited. Just lay away all your present
treatments for your kidneys, back or
bladder. If you have pain in the
back, profuse or scanty urination,
colored or foul urine, rheumatism
anywhere, diabetes, pain in the blad-
der or terrible Brighfs disease, just
get a 25c package of I>r. Derby's
Kidney Pills at your druggist, and see
the difference in yourself in 24 hours.
If you think this is too good for you
to believe. Just ask your druggist for
a free sample package, and try It.
Remember, Dr. Derby's Kidney Fills
— 25c and 60c. We will send them
from the laboratory of Derby Medi-
cine Co., l^ton R&plds, Mich., if yoit
wish. They are safe, guaranteed.
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f*>icsday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
IB
PRIZE HARD
LUCKSTORY
Markko Vukonic Has Been
Victim of Fate for
Two Years.
Walked From Dickinson to
Aitkin— Stricken With
Typhoid at Poor Farm.
MAN FOUND ON LAKE SHORE
WAS PROBABLY MURDERED
W. M. PRITWDLE
X. H. HAWKES
E. A. MERRILJ^
FIR
W. IVI. PRINTDLE & CO.
LONSOALE BUILDIMG
^yTOMOISIILE, LD^iOUTT, PLME @USS,
OTOI^ @OAT llJliUIRAIHlOE
r'.'
I
Life has held little but trouble for
Markki Vukonic during the two years
he has been in this country, and if his
mind is working rightly and he Is
able to comijrehend his position, he wlU
probably ba glad when the ship on
which he Is deported pulls out rrom
New York and his Journey to Austria,
hl» native land. Is well on.
Vukonic came to this country about
two years ago and made his way to the
Pacific coast. At Fort Stellaconn.
Wash., he was placed la an asylum for
the Insane and held there for eleven
months. Efforts were made to deport
him on the ground of insanity, but
they failed and he was discharged as
cured. . . ^ r,., ,
He started East and arrived at Dick-
inson, N. D.. where his resources gave
out. He began to walk, evidently
without an objective point In view,
and he walked all the way from Dick-
inson to Aitkin. Minn., according to his
Btory. At Aitkin his condition was
Buch that he was taken In charge bv
charitable people and given transpor-
tation to Duluth. When he reported to
Brown McDonald. Inspector In charge
of the Immigrant office here, he was
worn out physically, in rags, penniless
and was evidently suffering from tu-
berculosis. He had been exposed to
freezing temperatures during his long
walk and had slept outside night alter
nlsht. HU food had been insufficient
most of the time and he was wasting
He was sent to the poor farm to wait
until a warrant for his deportation
could be obtained, but his troubles
were not over. He was taken down
with typhoid fever and i.^ now seriously
111. The warrant for his deportation
was received this morning, but he caa-
not be moved. If he recovers he will
be sent to his former home.
copperTsude on
greased toboggan
Tho unknown man who was found
burled in the sand of the lake shore
between Mile Posts No. 6 and 7 on the
Iron Range railroad tracks, about a
mile the other side of Lakeside, was
nrobably murdered.
When the body had been dug out of
the ground by the assistants from the
Flood & Horgan Undertaking company,
a bullet hole was found through his
head. The bullet went in one side
near the ear and out In about t^e same
position on the other side.
Whether he was shot on board some
boat and thrown overboard, or was
shot along the shore and thrown into
the lake, cannot be determined and
will probably never be known. Either
is quite possible, and more probable
than the suicide theory. It Is believed
that if he had committed suicide tne
body would probably have been found
higher up on the shore. And if he had
shot himself on board a boat death
would have been almost instantaneous
from such a wound, precluding the
possibility irf the man having thrown
himself g^erboard after having fired
the shot. . . ^ ^.
Tha body had evidently been there
since last fall. It wa.s in bad shape
and in such condition that it will be
rather difficult to identify him, al-
though this is not Impossible. The
dead man was about 5 feet 9 inches
tall, smooth shaven, with light hair,
fairly young, and with a suit of clothes
of good material and make. The body
was frozen stiff when It was recovered.
It will have to b© thawed out before it
will be possible to examine the Pockets
thoroughly. In one of . the outside
pockets a handkerchief and a sack of
smoking tobacco were found. . „,
The body was found about twelve or
fifteen feet from the normal shore line
It was completely burled under tne
sand, except for^the feet, which were
protruding to about the tops of his
shoes. The body was discovered yes-
terday by Charle* Joklnen and a com-
panlon. who said they were searching
the shore of the lake for agates. Both
men reside In Duluth on Lake avenue
and they notified the police as soon as
thev returned to the city, which was
early in the afternoon. The head was
facing towards the shore.
A thorough search of the beach ana
the shore in the vicinity of the body
failed to disclose any revolver or other
weapon. , ,,
The body would not have been dis-
covered had not the lake been much
lower than usual this spring. At Its
usual level the body would have been
under quite a depth of water and It
would have been Impossible to detect
it. even though one were looking for
a body In that vicinity. ,...,»»,
The disclosure of the fact that the
man had been shot opened a wide field
of possibilities. It has elven the au-
thorities another mystery, which may
and may not be solved. Several men
have been reported missing in the last
year, and the records are being
searched to ascertain whether any of
them in any way fit the description
of the man who was found with a
bullet hole through his head, burled
in the sands of the lake shore.
Scottish Union '^&' ifatlonal Insurance
Principal office In ll* Wtol 8Ute»: Hartford.
Conn. (Commenced -ftusln^a In the Unlt«d SUtes
1«80. Jjimea W. Urwv^oer. general manager I" tne
United SUte*. AaoJtei t) accept senlce in Mltt-
nesota : CommUsloneCM. lusurauoe.
DEPOSIT .tAPIJ-^. $21)0 000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than^ip^»l* *
Kent!) and Interest..;;- M.
Received from home office ft.
Orosi profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger aa*«U
2.046.112.18
20S,2T9.53
C7.9O7.50
5,133.71
Mechanics & Traders Insurance
Company.
Principal office: New Orleans. La. (OrgtnUed In
186!t. ) James NlchoU. piesldent; T. B. Norton. »ec-
ret.ir>- Attorney to accept serrice in
CommUaloaer of Insurapoe.
CASH CAPITAL. $300,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other Uian perpetuala •
Rents and Interest
Prom all other sourcea
Mlnoesot*:
732.362.82
51.491.08
171.64
100.00
AU other ledger asseta ^
Total ledger assets fas per halinc©).! l,39r.319.3«
NON-LEDGER A8»ET8. „, ..j „
Interest and rwita due and aocruid > iz.«ZT.iJ
Market value of real eetaW, bond* and
stocks over book value I.jOO.OO
Oioaa
Tjtal Income » 2.322.432.92
Ledger asaeU Dec. 81 of previous ye*r..$ 4.980.878.93
Sum
I 7.312.311.85
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paKl f >r lossi's
Comnils-sioui and brokerag?
Salaries and fees of offloera, agent* and
employes .'v.'
Taxes. fe«3. rents and other real estate
expenses
All other dlsbursemsnu
Gross luas on sale, maturity or adjiuit-
ment of ledger a^iet«
Total dlsbunemeuu
Bal&nc« ■ •
1.038.835.28
447,82D.8!t
155.237.29
89.453.05
138.747.24
2.135.70
T>U1 Income > 784.015.54
Ledger aiseU D«c. 31 of previous year. ..$ 1.264.742.38
Sum « 2,048.757.92
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910
Net amount p.ild for los-^e* I
Expenses of adjustment of losses
Commirtslons and brokerage
.Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes ,•■•■.:■
Taxes, fees, renu and other real esUt«
370.184.51
.■i.221.58
130.270.14
66,984. 3S
.$ 1.852,238.43
....t 5.490,«73.42
31, 1010.
Bottom Falls Out of Market
— Entire List Is De-
moralizei
The copper market today slid on a
toboggan well greased. There was no
resistance to the heavy selling and the
enforced liquidation. Tired holders
started the declln-a when they began
to liquidate as a result of the supreme
court's silence yesterday regarding im#^
portant anti-trust decisions. B-?ars
Jumped on the market and the Mexican
war news waa used as an argument.
The unsatisfactory condition of the
copper metal market induced heavy
selling in Amalgamated and Smelters,
and the entire list v.as arcected. It
was said that strong financial interests
bad withdrawn from the Missouri Pa-
cific and the entire railroad list went
An^algamated dropped from $62^12V.
to $59.75 and rallied fo ?50.12^. Butt?
Coalition sold at $17 to $16.50 Calumet
& Arizona .sold at $49 to J* '-^S. supe-
rior & Pitt.sburg advanced from $13.S7Vj
to $14. Greene sold at $6.25 to $6.12 Va
and North Butte was off from $27.50 to
$26.25. Shattuck sold at $17.
The old Butte & Superior sold at
84c, Calumet & Montana at 34c, Cliff at
$1 and Keating at $2.75.
• • •
The Boston stock exchange will not
hold a sv?s3lon tomorrow, which i.s the
anniversary of the Battle of Lexing-
ton.
Closing quotations on the Duluth
Btock exchange today follow:
Daughters of the American Revolu-
tion were in attendance.
The monujnent is a simple shatt
of pink granite thirteen feet high,
bearing on one face a bronze en-
tableture in alto relievo. 7 foot <
inches wide by 3 feet 9 inches high.
The composition shows sorrowing
memory, crowned with the olive
leaves of peace and leaning upon her
victorious shield, watching the de-
parture of a* small group of march-
ing soldiers, and It is interesting to
note how much more subtle in sug-
gestion is this treatment than the
more usual one of troopa confronting
the spectator.
Above the heads of the marchers
banners are flying in the wind and In
the background are seen the spars of
vessels, while In the foreground are
two small gravestones inscribed 'Ici
git un sol(iat de la France." and the
other 'Ici git un marln de la France
(Here lies a soldier, here lies a sailor
of France.) , ^ ,■ x
On the shield appears the English
inscription, "A tribute of gratitude
to the brave soldiers and sailors of
France buried here, who gave their
lives in the struggle for American in-
dependence. The memory of their
deeds will endure forever.
1783 •■ Beneath the tablet
legend, "Erected April 19. 1911,
the Sons of the Revolution."
Ontonagon railroad grant and are lo-
cated in Marqu-ette, Bar»ga, Dickinson,
Iron and Houghton counties. The
grant was made by the state as a
bonus for the clnstruction of the Mar-
quette. Houghton & Ontonagon road
from Marquette to L'Anse and which
line is now part of the Duluth, South
Shore & Atlantic system. In 1S81 the
lands were sold to the Michigan Land
& Iron company.
INSURRECrOS
DEMORALIZED
Ammunition Gone, They Break
Ranks and Scatter to
Mountains.
LEDGER ASSETS DEC
Book value of real estate
Mortgage loans
Uook value of bonds and stocks
Cash In ofttce, trust opBpanlea and
banks •
Agents' l»alances, unpaid premiums and
bills rei-elvable. taken for premiums.
Tbtal ledger asseU (as per baUncet . . .$ 5.460.073.42
NONLEDQER ASSETS.
Interest *nd renU due and accrued...! 70.452.25
0.587.50
18.000.00
51.190 39
41.928.55
312.52.5. 00
4.606,447.13
130.263.18
368.911.51
expenses
Dividends and Interast
All other disbusements
Total disbursements > 651.438.50
R-l^nee t 1,397.319.36
LEOOER ASSETS DEC. 81. .9.0. ^^^^^^^
300.00
1.258.104.30
8.869.98
107.94508
assets » 1.421.247.09
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
AgenU' balances • • • •• Z.isi.Ti
Book value of ledger assets over market ^^ ^^^ ^
valu«
Total asset* not admitted $
99.3S8.St
Total admitted a.s.seU •» 1.321.888.50
LIABILITIES DEC. M. .«.•.
Unpaid losses and claims $ ,l?lTa2«
rneamed premiums • • 531.418.56
Salarle*. expenses. taxe«, dWdeo.U and
interest due ,Mm)Soo
Captal stock paid up 300.000.00
TVital UablUties, Including capital. ..I
926,6^6.48
39S. 232.07
7.0n
1.00
Sprlngileld Fire A MaHne Insnraae*
Coinpaay.
Principal office: 195 SUte street. SprlngfMd.
Mass. (Organized in 1849.) A. W. Damon, presi-
dent; W. 1. Mackay, secretary. Attorney to aoc«^
service In Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $2,000,000.00.
INCOME IN iOIO.
Premiums other tluui perpetual*., $ 5. 243.334. 3J
Oents and Interest 361.683.41
Gr'ss profit on sale, maturity or adjust-*
menl of ledger assets
From all other souroes
4.239.00
2.816.11
Total Ittcome
.$ 5.612.042.80
liedget assets Dec. 31 of previous rear..» 8.923.577.30
Book value of real estate ■■%
Mortgage loans
Book value of bonds and stocks
Casli In office, trust companies and
banks , • •
AgeuU" balances, unpaid premiun»s and
ImUs receivable, taken for premiums. .
Gross asseU » 5.530.525.67
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances * 3.:28.I7
Book value of ledger a.ssea aver mar- „.„,,,,,
ket value 28b,7«.93
Risks written
Premiums raoelved
Losses incurred ■ ■ .
Losses paid
Amount at risk. . .
■••••..■
>•••••«••••
^'■^ mSK's AND ■pREMiuM8,V0l0BUSINES8^_
•Fife risks written dunig the yeiir ♦"ttiioaa
Premiums received thereon _• • . I,i3l.ii»».
Marine and Inland risks wrltte* during 4^1 gi^oo
tl»e year . ',■„,, . .
Premiums received thereon. ..... o,t Msna
Net amount in force at end of Ui» rear. •7.»""\2
•—Including business oUier thin •Marine and In-
'"'^ BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN .9.0.
(Including reinsurance receive. l »nd deducting re-
insurance placed.)
Hall. Mar-
;:: ''12.062.65 031.30 556.39 1 250.94
LoiusS.OO 31.426.00 1.073,1*4.00
sum » 14,535.650,
DISBURSEMENTS IN ISiO.
Net amount paid for losses t
Expenses of adjustment of losses
C immUslons and brokerage
Salaries iiid fees of ofricer^i. agenU and
employes
Taxes, fees, rents and other real eataW
expenses
DivUt-nds and Interest
Ail other dlsburi>emeaUl
Total dlsbuisemeatg.
2.863.9II.tO
30.497.Br
1.023.621.05
538.830.30
245.181.80
20O.JO(V0O
321.8!»««0
.$ 5,203.94053
31.
0 9.33I.791.7I
IOIO.
SUte of Mlnnesou. Department of Imu™"*: ^, .-
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual .SUtement or
th* Meohanlcs & Tradecs I»^"™">-'».<^°"«»l'^.',.i°I,J:^*
year endUig De.-ember 31st. lalO, of which the above
U an abstract, has been recelvsd and fUed In tbl*
Department and duly approved I>y me.^ pHEUS.
Commisiloner of Inouranoe.
Company,
Total assets not admitted •
270,454.10
Total admlUed assets » 5.260.071.57
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. .9.0.
Unpaid losses and claims $
Unearned prftntums \- : f
.SiUarles. expeiues, taxes, dividends and
Interest due
De[>oslt
T-jtal UablUties, Including deposit cap-
lul •
229.194.54
1.897.707.26
auB 40,000.00
captui. ■.■.■.! ■.',.. • %oo.m.oo
2.396.901.80
Net surplus « 2.89-3.1S9.77
RISKS AND PRtMIIUllS. IOIO BUSINESS.
«Flre rUks written dilrUlg fee year. .. .$354,706,478.00
Premiums received tlier>?<jn 3.490.)17i..j'J
The Palatine In«urance
Limited.
Principal office in the United States: Comer Pliie
and WlllUm streeU, New Yoric. (Commence.1 busi-
ness in Uie United SUtes 1900.1 A. H. Wray. gen-
eral manager in the United autea. Attorney lo ac-
cept service In iUunesota: Commissioner uf Ingur-
'"^*" DEPO.-^IT CAPITAt-. $218,000.
INCOME IN 1910. ,„„«->, „
Premiums other than perpetuaU $ l';«2.90l*i
ttenu and inter«»t f/r^-gl
ReociTed frum h.mie office ijj.ouj.bw
Qiim profit on sale, maturUy oe adjust
ment of ledger asseta
DCOUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
AgenU* balances y,;.,* M24.67
apeclal deposit. 1«M $14,013.68 UaWllty
thereon •
All other asseta not admitted
3,116.43
ToUl Uicome 0 2.020.428.48
ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year. .$ 3,227,247,10
19,986.32
54.332.87
ToUl assets not admitted.
80.743.36
. .$ 3,322.771.81
IOIO.
138.493.37
1,533,047.93
BaUno(
LEDGER ASSETS J> EC
Book value of real estate I
Mortgage loans
Collateral loans .,
Book value of bonds and stocks
Cash In office, trust companies and
banks
AgenU' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, taken for premiums..
Total ledger assets (as per l>alani'e)..$ 9.331.701.71
NON-LEDOER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued $
Market value of real esUte, bonds and
stoclts over twok value
Gross asseU t 9.980.125 00
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT AO^'JTEO.
.Agents' balances $ ll.98z.il
SpecUl deposit, leas $99,085.05 UabUltf
thereon
300.000 00
1.317,820.')O
S.OOO.OO
6,3i2.0J2 7r
475.285.04
889.743.91
57,826.13
590,597.23
78.214.1
Total assets not admitted $
84.197. IT
28,377.92
41,946.15
41,511.87
218.000.00
tjum
ITSl-
Is a
by
Net amount In force a»'ead»t the year^$^32.5U,027/)0
•—Including builneas lUifr than Marine and In-
'^""^ BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN .910.
(Including reinsumace received and dJduoUng re-
liBurancv. pUced.) , Fire Risk*.
...$0,15:{.«^8.00
t
LJMted Stock*
Bid. 1 Asked.
pd.
American Saginaw-
Butte Coalition ...
Butte-Alex Scott fl
Butte-Ballaklava
Calumet & Arizona
Copper Queen
Denn-Arlzona
Glroux Cons
Greene-Cananea
Keweenaw
North Butte
lied Warrior ........
Savannah part paid...
do full paid
Superior & Pittsburg..
^Var^pn Development.
W'arr'or Development .
UoiiMted Stockji —
Amazon Montana
Butte & auperior
Bute & Superior
Butte & Superior, old.
Calumet & Montana. .
Calumet & Corbin....
Calumet & Sonora
Carman Con.^olldated.
Ch lef Consolidated . . . . |
Cliff .1
Elenita Development. .4
Keating Gold
Nortii American
Summit
San Antonio
St. Mary
Sierr a
Tuolumne
Vermilion Steel & Iron .
■2%
16^4
4^
47%
7
15-16
6%
2
85c
17
5
4%
43
20c
7^
6
6%
13^
2%.
83c
33c
20c
73c
IVi
97c
47c
2hk
26%
90c
1 1-16
3V4
14
"4!^'
1
8^
8V4
86c
36c
"i% '
1 1-lC
4
2%
1 1-16
52c
" ' 8c "
2
5
3%
Total number shares 2,125.
BOYLE TO BE
APPOINTED
Range Assistant County At-
torney to Be Named
Under New Law.
Held Position Under County
Commissioners — Norton
Has Appointing Power.
As the result of the salary act
passed recently by th© state legisla-
ture and signed by Governor Eber-
hart on April 13. County Attorney
John H. Norton will be forced to ap-
point Edward Boyle as county at-
torney for the range.
Mr Bovle is at present second as-
sistant countK attorney with head-
quarters at Virginia. He was ap-
pointed by the county commissioners
at a salary of $1,200 a year. By the
passage of the salary act the amount
i.^ raised to *2,500 per year and the
county attorney is given the right to
appoint his own assistant.
At tha present time Mr. Boyle
Is working under the old law or the
appointment by the county commis-
sioners at $100 per month. The new
law gives him a large increase in
salary, but he cannot have it until
he is appointed under the new law
and by Mr. Norton.
There is at present a bill in the
legislature to repeal the old bill. It
has not passed as yet. If is is over-
looked there will be two county at-
torneys on the range, one working
under the direction and appointment
of the county commissioners and the
other under the county attorney.
Mr. Norton expects to appoint Mr.
Boyle within a few days.
optionISIeen
surrendered
Government Losses in Mon-
day's Battle May Never
Be Known.
Risks written
rremlums
Lua^es Incurred
Lasses paid
Amount at
received .', S^i'Jl^
It tUk 6,471,847.01
SUte Of Mlnnewta. DfpOttmont of Insurance:
1 HerebT Certify. That Ihe Annual SUtement ol
tha .■<c<hUsU Cnlon & National Insurance CompiUiy.
for the year ending Ue-.-enilwr 3Ut. 1910. of vfjilch
the alwve U an alistract, liai been recrfved and fUed
In ;U1» Department and duly appro»ed by me.
J. A. O. PREU3.
Commissioner of lusuruuce.
$ 5.247,675.58
oisBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for louses » 1,013,8^0.0^
OimnUaaion.* and brokerage •
SaUrltw and feee of officers, afents and
employes .•■■■.•;■
Taxes, fees, rent* and other real esUte
expenses
Keturne.l to home offlc*
All oUier disbursements ■:,•:•
Groas loss on sale, maturity or adluat-
meut of ledger assets
373,066.89
112:^89.34
20,864.79
107,774.48
182,514.49
5.919.90
Total dUbursementa • 1,876,759.91
R„,.„c. $ 3,370,915.67
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, "S"}- , ,,, „
Book Tilua of b-Jud-s and i-toi-Us » 2,»7I,7J-.IR
Caali in office tmst companW and ,,,.,»,,
b..nks •• l2T.066.ie
Agents' balances, unpaid premium* and
bill.* receivable. Uken for premiums..
Total admitted a»et»
LIABILITIES DEC. 31
Unpaid losses and claims
Unearned premiuma •
Saiariee, e»p?nse«. tasea, dirtdeida and
Interest due
Commissions and broker a#i
All other llabllitlea
Detwalt capital
Totia Ual>llitle». Including depoalt
caplUl t ».001.STT.Z4
Net surolua » 1.321.394.5T
•^'* RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS
•Fire ruks written during the Tear. . . .|219,402.343.«J
Premiums recelred thereon 2.491.991.00
Net amount In foice at end of ihe year. 293,730.914.00
•—Including bualncss other Han •MarUie and In-
^*'*'* BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Inclullug reinsurance lecelvid and deducting rein-
surance placed.) pj^^^^^ ^^^^„ Aggregate.
Risks written... $2,041,485.74 1103.800.00 J2.145.285.74
^%^"v'e"d 26,523.63 711.65 27,235.28
1^«« incurred. 19.663.15 6.83 19,671.98
Losses paid 18.923.77 6.83
Amount at risk.. 3,327,046.00
ToUl admitted a.s*Ptrt • 9,895.927.91
LIABILITIES DEC. SI. 1910
Unpaid losw* and claims.. f
Unearned premiums ■ •
Salariei. exi>euse8, tai«s, dividends and
Interest due ■,• •
Funds held for Munich Ralnsuranoe Co.
and In'.orest
CaptUl stock paid up
458.'>7» 2«
4.575.47I.94
5r.ri3.3a
23«.599.2«
2.000. 000. 00
369.006,64
T)t«l ledger asiiets (as per l)alance) ..$ 3.370,915.97
NON-LEDQER ASSETS.
Inter«t and reuU duo auJ accrued $ 32.600.00
Cross
asset* » 3,403,515.87
18.930.60
3,327,046.00
SUte of Mlnnesou, Departmet t of Insurance-
1 Hereby CerUfy, That the ilnnual Statement of the
Palatine Insurance Company, Umlted, for the year
ending December 3Ut, 1910, of «'4<?i '•'• ?,'?'", J*
an abstract, baa been received and fUed In Uils l>e-
partmeut and duly approved b:f me.^ ^ preuS.
• Conimlisioner of Insurauce.
ToUl lUUUtles, Indudhig capital > T.3t5,8«1.7(>
Netsurplu. » 2,570,006 21
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1918 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks writteti during tha year J5Ji.)^.>,6.»2.no
Pr«mlums received ihareon .^Vll^t't:;? ,15
Net amount in force at end of the year .53,»54.l4.J_<)»
•—Including business other than "Mirlne and in-
'*"'^ BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN ISit.
(Including reinsurance receive-l and deducting f»-
Insuranoe placed.) . . .^
Firs RUks. Tornado. Aggregat*.
RLskS written.$14,638. 119.00 $1,049.50100 $15,a87,620 OS
""^TeKe'd .. 207.355.ri 7,037.53 214.393.24
^^rr«d .. 109.375,01 28r,.*34 }6?.««V»»
Jil!e^ paid. 174,403.88 286.34 174.«90.2X
^'TlA^V'.'... 17.665.157.00 3.016.546.00 20.681.703.09
State of Mlnnesou, Department of Insurance:
1 Hereby Certify. That tlie Annual Statement of
fh« SDrtneflt'ld Fire &. Marine Insuranre Company,
f^ fhe JW endli« UecemlH-r 31st. 1910^ »' "''^
th!L abf)V8 U an abstract, has !.*» reoel»ed and file*
in thU Deparunaut and duly «*';^*"'}j ''^p^ua
Commissioner of Iiuuranc*.
BRONZE TABLET
TO FRENCHMEN
Nameless Soldiers and Sailors
Who Aided America Are
Honored.
Annapolis. Md., April 13.— On the
campus of St. John's college there
was unveiled here today a bronze
tablet erected by the General Society
of the Sons of the Revolution to the
memory of the natneless French sol-
diers and sailors who in 1781 laid
down their lives in the cause - of
American independence. President
Taft and Ambassador Jusserand both
made formal addresses. The midship-
men of the National Naval academy
did not turn out In honor of those
who prevented the capture and prob-
able attack of Annapolis, but repre-
sentatives of the Sons of Revolution
from all parts of the country, the
Sons of the American Revolution, the
Society of the Cincinnati, the Mary-
land Historical society and the
By Steel Corporation on Sur-
face Rights of Mich-
igan Land.
Marquette. Mich.. April 18.— (Special
to The Herald.)— The option held by
the Ut^lted States Steel corporation on
the lands of the Michigan Land & Iron
company In Upper Michigan for the
past year has been surrendered, and
the entire area, aggregating more than
300,000 acres, has again been thrown
open to the public In tracts of any size
to suit the purchaser. The Steel cor-
poration retains Its option on the min-
eral rights, surrendering only its op-
tion on the tmber and surface rights.
Thp option was taken out with the
understanding that the Sfeel corpora-
tion was to make a thorough examina-
tion of the lands and. if found up to
the claims of Its owner. It was to pur-
chLe the entire tract. While the cora-
oanv gives no reason for surrendering
the option? It 13 generally believed that
the action is the result of a change of
uollcy rath-ar than anything learned
^out the land itself. This appears the
only plausible explanation, as little. If
any, examination has been made pf the
acreage, such as was contemplated at
the time the option was executed.
The Michigan Land & Iron company
holdings are part of the acreage In-
cluded in tc.e Marquette. Houghton &,
Agua Prleta, Mex.. April 18.— This
morning's developments showed the
rebel army to be badly disrupted. Its
leaders gave up the fight and the men
In the ranks appear to have fled in
directions of their own individual
choosing.
Col. Madlna, who had assumed com-
mand of the rebels in Agua Prleta last
night, made hla way to the American
line before dawn and surrendered to
the United States troops. He was the
Jefe politico (mayor of the town). H«>
was immediately placed under guard
and held at the headiiuarteis of liic
American cavalry at tlie ball park.
The victorious federal force which
occupied the town this morning num-
bered about 1,200 men. Lieut. Col.
l^eynolfla Diaz was in supreme com-
mand. Under him were Maj. Luis
Medina Barron, of the rurales and
Commandant Francisco Chiapa, form-
erly prefect of the town of Moctezuma.
Louses May Never Be Known.
The government losses In yesterday's
fighting may never be known. The
federals declined the assistance of the
Red Cross today, stating that the
army would care for Its own wounded.
During the fighting yesterday the
federals removed their dead and
wounded to the rear. It is understood
that those killed were buried on the
field. None was brought Into th« bull
ring at Agua Prleta today.
"We are now making up the list,
.but as yet cannot tell what they are
either in dead or wounded," Maj. Bar-
ron told the Associated Press corres-
pondent. "We have not gathered the
dead from the rebel trenches as yet,
but later we will give you this in-
formation."
The correspondent passing in the
streets of Agua Prleta saw a few
bodies of rebels lying in the thorough-
fares. -At the bull ring there were
everywhere evidences of yesterday's
fighting and ample siens that the fed-
erals had had accurate Information of
the strongholds occupied by the rebel
forces.
Towers Shot Into .Sieves.
The main towers of the bull ring
entrance were literally shot into
sieves. Thousands of bullets pierced
them. For a time the machine guns
poured hail steadily into these towers
and over the tops of the adobe walls
from which the garrison was firing.
In the west of the bull ring were
two bodies. One was that of an Amer-
ican. At the entrance to the first
story of the tower was a rivulet of
drying blood which poured out through
the doorway and into the dust of the
bull ring.
Sitting against the west wall of the
bull ring and heavily guarded by
Mexican troops, sat a lone American
wlio had not got away with the re-
treating rebel army. His hands were
tied with ropes which passed over his
shoulders.
"They are not going to shoot me,
are they?" he asked in a terrified
voice. He said his name was Thomas
Sullivan; that he was born In Connec-
ticut- that he last worked at Cananea,
and that he came to Douglas from
Blsbee. He said he had crossed the
Mexican line yesterday; had been ar-
rested by the rebels, robbed of $100,
forced to display the scarlet ribbon on
his arm and had been driven Into the
fighting line. He still wore his scarlet
ribbon today.
AmmunKion Exhausted.
That the rebels evacuated Agua
Prleta because they had exhausted
their ammunition was apparent from
the stories related by the one or two
who did not flee and by the federals
who entered the to^n. Great quanti-
ties of empty cartridges were lying
everywhere in the trenches and bull
rings and in the protection pits In
Agua Prleta. The Insurrectos appar-
ently had used their ammunition with-
out stint. Their firing was kept up
until nearly 3 o'clock this morning
The federals, more amply supplied
with ammunition continued their bom-
bardment until that hour, principally
for the purpose, they say, of provoking
the rebels Into replying and exhaust-
ing their cartridges. As the rebels
passed out of Agua Prleta to the west-
ward, one or two members of the army
called across the Hn© to the American
troops: . ,
We are going into the mountains
when we get some
Ing of the ports of Douglas and Agua
Prleta. Com. Chiapa. In a blue uni-
form, with a red banded straw hat.
was chief spokesman for the federals.
No Battle for Day or Two.
El Paso, Tex., April 18. — Out of the
scores of conllicting rumors of firing
would also allow an opportunity to buy
up witnesses. *...,^
An equally heated reply came from
the prosecuting counsel. Only one wit-
ness was on the stand, Arthur DIck-
son of RoUa, who testified with refer-
ence to the Hansboro auto incident,
declaring that Judge Cowan was not
close to Juarez Iftst night and reports intoxicated and that the shirt-changing
that several hundred insurrectos, pre- feature took place out in the country
sumably part of the Maderist force re-
cently returned near Chihuahua are
now at Bauche, twelve miles south of
Juarez appears one concrete fact to-
day. Tliis indicates that there is no
about half a mile from the town, ratn-
er than in town.
POKER PHRASES.
Richmond Times Dispatch: In a qe-
losses • •
Expenses of adjustment of
Commissions and broker-
age :• ic'.'
Salaries and fees of onl-
cers, agents and em-
ployes ....
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses
Dividends and Interejt...
All other disbursements..
^rospeJtof abatUe^ around Juarez, for bate^ In^the^^United^Sta^es^^sen^^^^^
the
a day or two at least.
Col M. Tamborel. commanding
federal forces in Juarez deijies the re-
ports of firing last night in the vicinity
of Juarez. Half a dozen shots were
fired by American sentries near the t-i
Paso smelter about 3 o'clock this morn-
ing for some unexplained cause aria
these shots gave rise to the reports
that the insurrectos were close to
Juarez and that a battle was imminent
Dispatches received this morning from
an Associated Press correspondent with
the insurrectos refers merely to the
fight east of Juarez last Saturday in
w*iich Oscar Crelghton was killed and
says that all of the rebel force, headed
bv Francisco I. Madero. in person, are
at Sapello. This Is twenty-three miles
south of Juarez. ^A^^t tha
According to the correspondent the
entire commands of Orozc and Blanco,
numbering about 3.000 men. ar«^„l«
camp, while another thotisand Insur-
rectos are watching the Mexican na-
tional railroad to intercept any rein-
forcements from Chihuahua for Juarez.
The courier who brought in the dis-
patches, a New Mexican, says there will
be no fighting until tomorrow or later.
-He came around the outskirts of
I Juarez during the night.'
! Capt. Escuaved*. according to the
courier, was killed with Capt. Clreigh-
ton Saturday. Three federal prisoners
are being held by the Insurrectos.
Another confusing elemeht was add-
ed to the Juarez situation later this
morning by the admission by the fed-
eral officials m Juarez that 800 in-
surrectos had reached Bauche, 12 iniles
from Juarez. They compose part ot
the forces under Madero, Orozco and
Blanco. . ,„_ .. ^ -4,
But Juarez Is now ready for the at-
tack. Federal troops having complet-
ed the fortifications and mines in tne
region of the city have now returned
o Juarez and are digging trenches
close to the heart of the city and
116.477.23
2,327.49
62,741.77
40,139.46
13.964.36
24,000.00
14,299.86
within two blocks of the American
consulate.
— ♦ ■
Port of Doagia* Opened.
Douglaf, Ariz.. April 18-At 10 a. m.
the poft of Douglas was opened by the
United States authorities.
Peace Envoys at Chihuahua
Chihuahua, Mex., April 17. via La-
red?, Tex., April IJ-T^"* wUh^kafae'l
nesto and Alfonso Madero, with Rafael
Hernandez, constituting the unofficial
pe\ce commls.,lon that will attempt an
interview with Francisco I^ Madero Jr.
the Insurrecto leader In an errort 10
odify the latters views so as to per-
it official negotiations for peace in
ana will return
cartridges."
Alexander F. Dye. American consul
at Nogales. who was In Douglas all
day yesterday, visited the bull ring In
Wua Prleta today and conferred with
l^e federal comiJ^anders. His confer- duty "pon th^e
ence especially related to the reopen- 1 managers
modify the latter's views s" »» 'o Per
mit official negotiations for peace
Mexico, arrived here this afternoon.
NO ADJOUm
OF COWAN CASE
Motion of Prosecuting Attor-
ney Denied By Impeach-
ment Court.
Bismarck. N. D.. April 18— (Special
to The Herald.)— After giving over the
entiie morning to c6nslderation of the
qu'-stlon of taking ^n adjournment in
the Cowan Impeachment case, the court
at coon today decided that there would
be no respite from work until the
cloje of the case.
Morning session proved fruitful In
bringing forth bitter statements from
counsel for both aides, Tracy Bangs
declaring that 'the' request 'or t'me
upon the part of the prosecution at
"iTi- tim* was evidence of neglect of
the part of the board of
and that an adjournment
asked Senator Gamble of South Dakota
what he meant by a "jackpot. Cramble,
who.se name would signify that he
knew, was unable to make reply. Davis
failed to find out. though there were
some senators present who might have
enlightened him.
Cards, especially poker, have con-
tributed a number of popular phrases
to our language. People who do not
know the first principles of poker use
these phrases with no thought of tneir
origin. In politics we have the "stand-
natter," a man who wants things to re-
main as they are . "Bluff" is a word
which needs no definition, so common is
Its use. Church members are asked
to "chip in" to pay the preacher or to
raise funds for some purpose, but tne
expression Is hardly of ecclesiastical
origin. There is often heard the de-
mand that something be 'above board,
signifying that no concealment or
cheating shall go on. To.be flush is
a phrase denoting a condition as gen-
erally understood as it Is rarely felt.
The term "full house" is another phrase
used ordinarily to mean that there is
no more room. Then there are such
terms as a 'four flusher" and 'show
down." which need no definition among
practical q^en.
Poker has impoverished many men
and made a few prosperous, but It
must be said that the game has en-
riched the English language with some
picturesque, vigorous and expressive
phrases.
MAN'S PRIVILEGES.
Life: One privilege which man ex-
ercises is that of being absolutely
helpless when It Is a question of look-
ing for anything, and he considers it
his natural, inherent right to have
some woman find things for him. The
average feminine responds every time,
for she realizes the urgency of the
situation. .When he tries to look for
things as a rule the after appearance
of the place would make chaos, house-
cleaning and the tail of a cyclone
turn pale green at their IneflSciency.
In the house his wife finds his hat,
cravat and other possessions. In
fact. It is a family tradition that great-
grandfather used to ask: "Ma. where a
my shirt?" and for great-grand-
mother to respond. "I'm aware, Mr.
Clark, I did not hand It to you, but I
laid it right beside your bed." But
he asked her next time just the same.
She knew he would.
In the office he stands in the middle
of the room and asks where his letter
book Is. That book has been always
in one spot for the past Ave years.
In the days of the Garden of Eden.
Eve had to find the apple and give It
to Adam.
Total disbursement!! ...I 273.950.17
Balance | 674 319.11
Ledser ANiieta l>ee. 31, 1910
Book value of real estate. $
Mortgage loans
Collateral loans
Book value of bonds and
stocks • ...•••■•
Cash In office, trust com-
panies and banks
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and blllj re-
-celvable, taken tor
premiums
All other ledger assets...
65.635.70
97,250.00
10,270.00
436,100.00
25,646.81
33.150.56
6,266.04
•.Steam boiler
Burglary and theft...
•Spunkier
Workmen's collective
Total net premium in-
come f
•Excess of return and re-
insurance premiums over
price received.
From interest and rents...
From all other sources
3.871.84
87.691.42
::.3«8.72
5,420.40
742,998.18
46.158.64
37. 049. IT
Total income -I 8;:b20D.99
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year
1,614.963.04
Sum
Total ledger assets (as ^_, ,,» --
per balance) % 674,319.11
Non-Lieda:«-r Asaeta.
Interest and rents du;and
accrued ♦ 8,8 J4 . aw
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks .^ .00 on
over book value i«,488.au
12.441. 169. «a
Dtabur«ementa In 1910.
Claims paid (net) —
Accident and health 9
Employers' liability
Fidelity and surety
Plate glass
Steam boiler
Burglary and theft
Sprinkler
Workmen's collective
56,592. 7J
94.'557.23
84.565.60
36,387.16
574.25
27.226.05
120.00
2,770.61
Net paid policy holders..! 301,«13.5«
Investigation and adjust-
ment of claims i-Moa u*
Commissions H)l,&y4 . »•
Salaries of officers, agents,
employes, examiners' and
inspection fees fl;..'^?r,3
All other disbursements... 153.455. IS
Total disbursements
.$ 921.504.09
Gross assets t 699,641.91
Deduet Aaseta TJot Adniltted.
Agents' balances I 2,04^ ..57
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value. 900.00
All other assets not ad-
mltted 6,632.74
Total assets
mltted
not ad-
9.575.11
Total admitted assets. . .$ 690,066.80
Liabilities D.H*. 31, 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims. I 28,253.06
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due • • • •
Commissions and broker-
age
Capital stock paid up
226,647.16
2,650.00
2.232.37
200,000.00
Total liabilities. Iiclud-
ing capital I
459,782.58
A.A.MICHAUDCO.
• Agents.
Lonsdale BtiU«ng. - - Didnth, Minn
Net surplus » 230.284.22
Rl«lu and Premiums, 1910 Buniness.
•Fire risks written dur-
ing the year 130,345,426.00
'^'oTTM'*?^!''*.**.*'^^''^' 338,989.35
Net amount in force at
end of the year 38,578.507.00
•Including business other than Ma-
rine and Inland."
Ba«lneas In Mlnnesotn In 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written . . . % 1'1?M56.74
Premiums received ^,'cot nS
Losses incurred c'inA oa
Losses paid , a J'^ic la
Amount at risk 1.036,546.19
State of Minnesota. Department of In-
ail T*0 T106 *
i Hereby Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the German Fire Insur-
ance Company, for :he year ending De-
cember 3fst. 1910, jt which the above
is an abstract, hag been received and
filed In this Depar;ment and duly ap-
proved by me. ^ ^ ^ pn^xjs.
Commlsslcner of Insurance,
Balance Jl,519.664.94
Ledser Aiwets Dee. SI. 1»»0.
Book value of real estate.. f o^^'S^^St
Mortgage loans ^«7,J(!4.»t
Book value of bonds and
stocks (oot «••*•*"
Cash in office, trust com- „ ,., ,,
panies and banks 56,797 .5S
Premiums in course of col- „,,,„- ._
lections ^rs'Uo'tI
All Other assets 8b,iz^. 19
Total ledger assets <»»,,,„ cc* o*
per balance) 11,519,664. »4
Non-Ledser Avaeta.
Interest and rents due and ,, ... ^.
accrued • 10,405.61
Other non-ledger assets... il^.i9
Gross assets »1. 530.152 .05
Deduct Asseta Not Admitted.
Premiums in course of col-
lection (past due) I 151.49X.<J6
Book value of ledger assets
over market value 7«,86J.8»
All other assets not ad- -,-,,.-
mltted • • • • 62.73V. tf
Special deposits, less |12.- ,.--- ,.
030.83 12.969.17
Total assets not ad-
mltted % 304.0j7.79
Total admitted assets. , .$1,226,094. 2«
Liabilities.
Ad^JfstTd"*...... » 8-2«8»»
In process of adjustment ., ... ._
and reported lofil^lsl
Resisted 106,928.82
Total » 206.846. 2«
Deduct reinsurance | 7,760.51
Net unpaid claims except
liability claims I 199,085. 7S
Special reserve for unpaid
liability losses 4l',ifi oi
Unearned premiums 281, 316. oa
Commissions and broker-
g^gQ 39.066.56
All other' iiabllities d^'fuJi ' II
Capital stock paid up 600,000.00
Total liabilities,
ing capital . . .
Includ-
11.100.684.74
Oerman Fire Insuranre Company.
Principal office: Wheeling, West Va.
(Organized In 1867.) Wm. F. Stlfel.
President- F. Rlester, Secretary. At-
rorney to accept service In Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, 1200.000.
Income In 1910.
^'^^tllTs °'''^'.'.'^*".^^':i 268.285.08
Re'ifts" and- Interest .a ,.a a.
Grosi profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
29,209.94
843.71
Total Income • • • • ;• 298,338 . 77
Ledger assets Dec. 31 ot ..« o,* «,
previous year B4y,yav.»i
Sum » 948.269.28
DIabnrsementa la 1910.
Net amount paid tor
Whitney Wall Co.
Agents.
Real Estate, Loans, Insurance.
301-2-3 Toirey Building.
empire State Unrely Company.
Principal office: 84 William street.
New York. N. Y. (Organized in 1901.)
Wm. M Tomims. Jr., President; Daniel
Stewart. Secretary, attorney to ac-
cept service in Minnesota: Commls-
""^^"■^ 8aSH*CAP1TAL. 1500.400.
Incomis In 1910.
Premiums received (net)
Accident and heal'.h I ."'ll'-ji
Employers' liablly ISS'looS?
Fidelity and surety -. "5'5VV • Ji
Plate jgiass a '»•" • **
Surplus over all liabilities.! 12^*r>9-6«>
Buislneaa la MinneBota la 1010.
Premiums """
Received.
Accident » ^'SJMl
Health a"iS2
Liability lillai
Fidelity I'fftS i5
Surety , Moi 27
Plate glass ilkH
Steam boiler .... -"5«ci
Burglary and theft Z,44i.ai
Credit »•• '•**
Losses
Paid.
% 6,974.94
429.74
11,000.13
242.13
1.691. OS
484.92
2.907. 7«
Totals 120,354.25 $23,784. 49
•Excess over premiums written.
State of Minnesota, Deitfurtment of In-
I^Hereby CerUfy. That the Annual
Statement of the Empire State Surety
Comuany. for the year ending Decelta-
ber 31st. 1910, of which the above lo
an Abstract, has been received and
filed In this Department and duly ap-
pre^d by me. ^ ^ ^ preUS.
Commissioner of Insuri
1 DEFECTIVE PAGE
II
1
■
t^
-♦-
■•■««9e<
:«^
ii««
■••■
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
WEAEINGS
SHAKEN m
Little Longs Forced to Liqui-
date—Sharp Break
at Close.
Wheat Drops Under Pressure
- — Crop News Good —
Linseed Up.
Duluth Board of Trade, April 18. —
"Wheat declined today, the slump in the
closing half hour being especially se-
vere. There was heavy liquidation
from weak longs who had trailed along
with the big interests such as the
Northwestern millers, who have been
bulling wheat. They were unable to
support their holding and the flood of
wheat toward the close caused values
to slump rapidly after the market had
endeavored to maintain a semblance of
strength in the early hours.
May wheat declined Ti<i*'lc and July
was off ic. Cash wheat .was %&!<-■
over the May delivery. Durum de-
clined ^c Kye and barley were uu-
changeti and oats went up ^^c.
L,anseed was strong. A lew buying
orders lound offerings scarce and the
market was linn. May advanced Uc
to iZ.m oiu. July was J2.C1 nominal.
There was no tracing in July and only
a few lots gliaiiged uands iii May. The
iiexi delivery at Winnipeg went to
»L'.49 and dropped to J:i.4«^. The for-
eign markets were sharply higher with
Americans buying liberally of Indian
seed. p-oieigi.ers were purchasers of
Indian seed ni;t Plata seed was quiet,
although nigiier in sympathy witii the
strejigth siiown by Indians. Plata
seed at Antwerp for the current deliv-
ery closed $:;.:;08 a bushel.
The wheat market was choppy and
erratic. Nearly al; of the shorts were
in except a few and tlie market lost
its support after the bulge that came
immediately upon the opening. The
decrease of 1.178,000 bu in the
Kuropean visil le and the big decreas-e
in the world's visible of about 4,000,-
000 bu caused buying that swept the
market upward. At its height it was
a small fraction over yesterday's close.
Cables were lower but their effect
was lost after the opening which was
weak. The decline started when bears
jumped on the market and weie as-
sisted by. liquidation from Icnga who
seem to have been working solely to
make a market on which to liquidate.
That they desire to take real wheat
on May lontracts does not seem ap-
parent from tfieir actions.
The decline was helped by reports
of general rains in the Southwest.
Moisture tell today over large areas
of Nebraska, Illinois, Iowa and In-
diana. Le Count wired to Barrell that
the condition of the Kansas wheat ciop
indicated a yield from that state of
between 80 000,000 and 85,000,000 bu.
Theit was no cash demand for wheat
either in the Southwest or the North-
west Buyers were not aggressive.
The flour business is not as good as
lr»st week.
The foieign markets were stronger
JIB crop conditions abroad are Ics.s
beari.«h and Plate offers are firmer
World's shipments were not as large
as had been expected. Indian and
Argentine news was favorable.
AMERICAN WHEAT MARKETS, APRIL 18.
May — Open. High. Low. Close. April 17.
Duluth I .9614 » .97 | .95ii.%a $ .96\4-%a f .96Hb
Minneapolis ... .96-95% .96% .94% .94%-% .96->4a
Chicago 89%-90 .90% .89% .88'/i .90
Winnipeg 92 .92 .91% .91Vi-%b .92%
New York 94V6 .94% .94 .94 .94%
St. Louifcj 87 .87%-H .86% .86% .»!%
Kansas City .. . .85% .84% .83^ j83-%-84 .84%-%
July — . ■■ *
Duluth 97^ .97%a .96%a .d^^a. .97%a
Minneapolis ... .96%-% .97% .95%-% .95%-96 .97b
Chicago 86%-% .89% .85% .86->ia .86%
Winnipeg 93% .941? .9234 .S3^-%b .93%b
New York 93% .94% .93% .93% -93%
St. Louis 83%-% .84% .83%-% .85%-% .83%
Kansas City .. . .81% .82% .81% .8ivi -81^
SouUiwefctem and Winnipeg quotatioris furuished b^ B. E. BaJiei & Co.
DULUTH DURUM MARKET ^
Open. High. Low. Close. April 17.
May 86% .85%b .84% .84% .85%
July 86% .86%b .85%a .85%a .86%n
DULUTH LINSEED MARKET.
Open. High. Low. Close. April 17.
May 12.59 |2.61b |2.59 |2.61b $2.59
July 2.61n 2.59n
Duluth close: Wheat — On track: No. 1 hard. 97 %c. On track, to ar-
rive: No. 1 northern, 96%c: No. 2 northern, 93%-94%c: May, 95%-%c bid;
July, 96 %c asked: September, 89c nominal. Durum — On track, in store, to
arrive; No. 1, 84%c; No. 2, 82%c; May, 84%c; July, 85%c asked. Linseed:
On track, to arrive, $2.62; May. $261 bid; July, $2.61 nominal. Oats, 31%c.
Rye, 82-84C. Barley, 99c-$1.10. Feed barley, 83-95c.
Receipts — Wheat. 61,282 bu% last year, 61,430 bu; oatK. 1,1819 bu; last
year. 8,062 bu; barley, 16.648 bu; last year, 4,232 bu,; linseed 1161 bu; last
year 2.821 bu.
Shipments — Oats, 62,242 bu; last year, 150,760 bu; barley, 64 bu.
Cash Jialex Tuenday.
1 northern, i ■ ar
1 nortlirni part car ,
1 utrCtxtii, part r&r
i iiorUiem. 2 cars ,
Z northern. 1 rar
.NO griiUe n11e.1t part car
No. 1 dur:iii, i car
.N'o. 1 dtiruiD. I car ,
liarlcy. 1 car. i«heat;
Kiaj, 1 car, Kc. 1 ,
No
Xo
So
hv
Xo.
t .97%
.97\
.99
.96^4
.80
.K%
.85%
.00
2.60
MARKET GOSSIP
Cars of wheat Inspected: No. 1
riorthern, 10: No. 2 northern, 3; 1^0. 3
northern, 1, No 1 durum, 2; No. 2
durum. 2; total durum 4; linseed, 2;
.ast year, 7; barley. 7; last year, 20;
lotal curs, 27; on track. 37.
« • •
Cars of wheat received: Last
Today. Year.
uuluth 18 35
Minneapolis 104 63
Chicago 28 34
Winnipeg 184 212
Kansas City 7 30
St. Louis, bu 40.000 23,000
* * •
Cars of linseed received: Last
Today. Year
Duluth 2 1
.ulnncarolis 2 9
Winnipeg 10 7
* « •
Grain importers of Holland say that
there is very little prospect for the
United States being able to ship any
wheat to Europe from the present crop
at least, as Russia has enormous sup-
plies, is watching the Chicago mar-
ket very clcsely, and makes it a point
to sell wheat Just a trifle lower than
It can be offered irom this side.
♦ ♦ •
Chicago wired: Local cash wheat
men say that there is no demand for
cash wtieat from millers. One of the
big distributing houses is preparing
to have its house made regular, in
order to deliver the wheal to the
speculative trade.
• • •
Forecast: Nebraska — Fair tonight
and Wednesday; cooler tonight with
frost. Kansas — Fair tonight and
Wednesday, frost tonight with cooler
in the east Dakotas — Fair tonight
and Wednesday; cooler in east and
central tonight. Wisconsin — Unsettled
and cooler tonight, with sliowers east
and south: Wednesday fair and cooler
east. Minnesota — Generally fair and
cooler tonight with frost; Wednesday
fair. Missouri and Iowa — Unsettled
weather with showers; cooler tonight
with frost in west, Wednesday fair.
Indiana — Showers tonight and Wednes-
day. Illinois — Showers tonight-
Wednesday generally fair and cooler.'
• • •
Broomhall cabled from Liverpool-
The wheat market at the opening was
influenced by the American rise over
the holidays and firmer Plata offers and
values were %d higher than Thursday.
Our foreign crop summary showed con-
ditions less bearish than formerly in-
dicated and it is expected that the Eu-
ropean visible will show a decrease for
the week and this, together with the
fact that world's .shipments this week
were under expectations and of the
amount the largest percentage were
again directed to the continent. During
the morning the market became easier
with a lowering In values due to some
realizing on a poor spot demand and of
a decline generally of M-d in this mar-
ket and the favorable Indian and Ar-
gentine news. At 1:30 p. m. the market
was easier and %d lower than the
opening and 14 d up from Thursday.
Corn opened firm and following the
opening a further advance occurred
and at 1:30 p. m. prices were generally
%d higher than Thursday. Buying was
due to the fact of light world's ship-
ments to the United Kingdom; good
spot demand; firmness of spot market
with American grade a penny higher
and Plata half higher, which caused
active covering by sliorts. The visible
supply of wheat m Europe this week
amounts to 11.;. 160 000 bu against 113,-
336,000 bu last week, thus showing a
decrease for the week of 1,178,000 bu.
• * «
Clearances — Wheat, 13,000 bu; flour,
25.000 bbls: corn 63,000 bu; oats, 1,000
bu; wheat and flour, 126,000 bu.
# • *
Bradstreefs wheat supply of the
world decreased 3,986.000 bu.
• • »
Primary receipts — Wheat, 278,000 bu,
shipments. 346.000; last year, 230,000
vs 214,000. Corn— Receipts, 391.000,
shipments. 1,411,000; last year. 377,000
vs. 416.000.
« • «
Closing wlieat cables: Eer;in, %c
higl.ei than Thursday: Antwerp, %c
higher than Thursday: Liverpool, %@
%d up, corn. %C^%d up; Paris, %c
higher; flour, %c to l%c higher.
* « *
Buenos Ayres close — May wheat l%c
lower; June, %e lower. Corn, May,
%c up. Oats, May. unchanged.
* • «
B. W. Snow wired: Weather condi-
tions so far this sprirg have been al-
most ideal for wheat. There is every-
where an abundance of sub-soil mois-
ture and frequent showers are fur-
nishing plenty of surface moisture.
Cool weather Is preventing a too rank
rapid top growth and stimulates stool-
Ing. The conditions for the repair of
damage done last fall by drought
could hardly have been improved upon.
The plant is storing up a vitality
and vigor that Is greater than appears
in* the top growth, so that the real
crop prospect is right now better than
the appearance of fields would indi-
cate.
* • •
The government's May report will
be issued May 8 at 1:30 p. m.. Duluth
time, and will give the acreage of the
winter wheat remaining to be har-
vested and the condition of winter
wheat and rye.
» • «
Minneapolis puts — May 93 %c asked;
July. 95 %c bid. Calls— May, 96c
asked; July. 96 %c.
CHKACilO M.4RKET.
in
American mixed old, 5s %d; American
kiln dried, 4s 7%d: futures strong;
May, 48 6%d; July, 48 %d.
MINNEAPOLISMARKET.
Severe Liquidation Causes Sharp
Break in Wheat.
Minneapolis, Minn., April 18. — During
late session severe liquidation caused
a sharp break in May and July wheat.
Sei)tember was relatively firmer. Early
prices advanced on big decrease in
world's visible and higher foreign mar-
kets. Seeding progressing rapidly in
Northwest under favorable conditions.
May closed l%c lower than yesterday.
July lWl%c lower and September %^
%c lower. Local elevator stocks de-
creased 750,000 bu for three days and
prospects are decreases for week will
be biggest on this crop. Minneapolis
today received 104 cars against 63 cars
a year ago; Duluth 18 against 85 and
Winnipeg 184 against 212. Mav wheat
opened 96c to 95%c; high, 96%c; low,
94%c, closed, 94%c. July opened, 96%
@96%c; high, 97%c; low, 95%{&)95%c;
closed. 95%@96c. September, 88%c;
high, 89 %c; low, 88 %c; closed, 88 %G
88 %c.
Cash wheat offerings scarce and mar-
ket quoted about steady. Demand was
a trifle easier, but still strong. No. 1
northern sold for 2^c and 3%c above
May. Closing: No. 1 hard, 98%c; No. 1
northern, 97% # 98c; to arrive, 96%®
97%c; No. 2 northern, 93%@96c; to ar-
rive, 93%<£!)95%c; No. 3 wheat, 91% @
94 %c. No. 3 yellow corn, 48 %c to 49c.
No. 3 white oats, 31(&i31%c. No. 2 rye,
86%(S;87c.
Millstuffs — Shipments, 2,616 tons.
Market quoted steady. Demand good
for immediate shipment, but slow for
deferred. Bran in 100-pound sacks,
$21 75^22.00.
Flour — Prices lowered on account of
sharp decline in wheat late today. De-
mand improved on decline and several
good orders booked today. Shipments
show a big gain over both a week and
a year ago.
Shipments, 68,316 bbls. First patents,
$4.45^4.75; seconds, $4.35«i)4.65; first
clears, $2.95@3.40; seconds, $1.95®
2.60.
Flax — Receipts, 2 cars, year ago. 9;
shipments, 1. The demand wa* strong
for both spot and to arrive at Ic over
Duluth May. Offerings scarce. Clos-
ing price, $2.62.
Barley — Receipts, 25 cars, year ago.
19; ^hipments, 38. Barley quoted steady
today. Demand active for choice and
medium grades, but slow for the lower
varieties. Closing prices unchanged
from yesterday. Closiug range, 70®
$i.06.
DECLl
IN^TOCKS
Losses of Three Points or
More in Representa-
tive Issues.
North Butte
Old Dominion
Osceola
Parrot
Pneumatic Service
Quincy
Ray Consolidated .
Shattuck ,
Santa Fe
Shannon
Liquidation Spends Itself and
Rally in Progress
at Close.
Corn and Wheat Bulletin.
For the twenty-four hours cuiitnc at 8 a. m., Tutaday,
April 18:
Shipments.
15,400
Atx'rdeen
Mlllbauk ...
Mitchell
tBismarck
tl>eTll8 Lrfike
Duluth
I . . . .
rosise. ,
Minneapolis
tMoorhcad
JPitrre
}t?t Paul...
A GOOD HRM TO SHIP
YOUR GRAIN TO
ATWOOO-URSON
COMPANY, Inc.
Special attention given to e«sh
rralns. We give all shipments our
personal attention.
Disappointing Cables Result
Lower Prices in Wheat.
Chicago, April 18. — Disappointing
cables faced the bulls today in the
wheat pit, and resulted in lower prices.
Foreign markets showed such a slight
advantage as compared with figures be-
fore the Easter holidays, that the ef-
fect here proved distinctly bearish.
Furthermore, news was favorable from
India and from the Argentine. Besides
the domestic crop situation and the
weather outlook continued optimistic,
and cash demand locally gave no sign
of improvement. Opening prices w'^re
the same as last night to %c down.
May started at 89 %c to 90c, unchanged
to %c off and declined to 89 %c.
A big decrease in the world's avail-
able supply gave temporary strength to
the market, but the aggressive be.ir-
ish position of a leading speculator
brought about a sharp decline. The
close was weak, with May at 88 %c, a
net loss of l%c.
Rain strengthened the corn market.
Offerings were decidedly slim. May .„
opened \^c to %(a%c up at 49M:C to *"""="
49%(r('49%c, and sold at 49%c straight. \^„,^J,
The market later declined when
wheat turned weak. The close, how-
ever, was steady with May at 49 %c
exactly the same as last night.
Oats rose with corn. As in the case
of the latter cereal few traders were
dispos'id to take the bear side. May
started unchanged to a shade off at
31^«&31%c to 31%c, and then ascended
to 31 %c.
Selling by packers carried down pro-
visions. First transactions were at the
same level as last night to 10c below
with July delivery $15.12% for pork,
$8.20(g)8.22% for lard, and $8.22% for
ribs.
Articles. Receipts
Flour, bbl 15,350
Wheat, bu 31,200
Corn, bu 241.500
Oats, bu 257,800
Rye, bu 2,000
Barley, bu 75.000 19.700
Car lot receipts: Wheat, 28 cars,
with 8 of contract grade; corn, 206 cars,
with 25 of contract grade; oats, 206
cars. Total receipts of wheat at Chi-
cago, Minneapolis and Duluth today
were 150 cars, compared with 142 cars
last week and 182 cars the correspond-
ing day a year ago.
Cash close: Wlieat — No. 2 red. 90(®
91c; No. 3 red. 89 & 90c; No. 2 hard, 90
(§)92c; No. 3 hard, 89@90c; No. 1 north-
ern. $1.01 @ 1.03: No. 2 northern. 98c@
$1.01; No. 3 northern, 96c@$1.00; No.
2 spring 92 (g) 97c; No. 3 spring 92®
96c; velvet chaff, 85@96c; durum, 83
tft88c. Corn— No. 2, 49%@50%c; No.
2 white. 500150% c: No. 2 yellow. bO(fi>
50%c: No. 3, 49%^49%c; No. 3 white,
49%(Si49%c; No. 3 yellow, 49%®50c;
No. 4, 48% 41 48% c; No. 4 white, 48'4C5'
48%c; No. 4 yellow, 48%@49%c. Oats
— No. 2 white, 33%@34c; No. 3 white,
32%©33%c: No. 4 white, 32%@33%c;
standard, 33%@33%c. Rye — No. 2, 92c.
Barley — 70c(?i)$1.10. Timothy — $11.75.
Clover— $15 06.
STATIONa.
8tate of
weather
Temperature.
8
■a
s
I
?
-UIKJI
u
Atexandria Ft. Cloudy
Campbell Clo-.uly
Cr;,okgton Cloudy
IJetrolt City Cloudy
lialstad
Montevideo . . . .
New Ulm
Park R.ipld8. . .
Rochester ....
Winiieljago City
WortliiiiKton
Amenla
Bottliicau
Langdon
Lnrlmcte
LiBbon
, .Cloudy
Clear
.Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Ooudy
Clear
Cloudy
. .Pt. Cloudy
. .. .Cloudy
Mlnot Clear
Pembina Clear
Cloudy
Cloudy
, Pt. Cloudy
Pt. Cloudy
Cloudy
Pt. Cloudy
Cloudy
Pt. Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Winuijieg Pt. Cloudy
80
82
72
78
78
82
54
78
78
78
70
82
68
58
72
74
70
62
92
80
76
72
66
53
78
78
80
76
78
64
44
40
38
38
40
40
30
40
48
42
42
40
30
32
38
44
30
38
40
42
40
34
38
36
46
54
52
43
46
50
36
0
0
0
0
c
c
.oe
0
0
.04
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
New York, April 18. — A hard drive at
Missouri Pacific was the feature of the
opening of the stock market today. The
first sale was made at a loss of % from
yesterday's close, from which point the
stock was forced down rapidly to 46%,
a decline of 1%. A number of other
railroad issues receded in sympathy
with this movement, although the
los.ses were small. Interborough Met-
ropolitan preferred lost 1% as a result
of the latest developments in the local
traction situation.
Traders attacked the fertilizer is-
sues vigorously again and succeeded
in forcing them down over a point. The
persistent liquidation in this quarter
and the lack of support to Missouri
Pacific disturbed confidence to some &*-
tent and thiere was some show of weak-
ness to the standard stocks.
Prices fell away steadily during the
morning session, in which trading was
the most active of any day for several
weeks. Bear traders encouraged by
the success of their drive against Mis-
souri Pacific, enlarged their operations
and forced recessions throughout thie
list: Missouri Pacific declined 2% to
45%, the lov/est of the year.
The latest news from Mexico was a
factor In today's operations, the sell-
ing movement being encouraged by
the belief that a serious crisis is im-
minent. Selling of Interborough Met-
ropolitan came in large part from
Philadelphia brokers affiliated with
N'ew York traction interests and ap-
parently was inspired by developments
indicating that the company may not
be the successful bidder for the con-
struction of new subways. Uneasiness
over the possibility of reduced divid-
ends in certain specialties was a fac-
tor in more widespread selling of
stocks of this class. Liosses of a point
or thereabout were pnetty general In
the active list. Minneapoli.s, St. Paul
& Sau'.t Ste. Marie and National Bis-
cuit broke 3 points, American Cotton
Oil 2%, Virginia Chemical 2% and Fed-
eral Sugar 2. The |>ond market was
irregular.
Selling subsided for a while after 12
o'clock and the list rallied a small
fraction and became very dull. Later
on the market relapsed to its low
level, Reading touching 152%, Union
Pacific 174%. United States Steel 75%,
Amalgamated Copper 60%, American
Smelting 71% and St. Paul 118%.
The market closed dull with the rally
still in progress. The liquidation had
apparently spent itself by 2:30 and
there was an irregular fractional re-
covery which was assisted by covering
by the bears, who had a good profit in
the day's operations. The low level
indicated losses of 3 points or more in
many of the representative stocks.
The day's movement was the widest
and most significant since the handing
down of the rate (decisions by the in-
terstate commerce commission in Feb-
ruary last.
§l\oe Machinery ^ . .
Superior £ BosTon . ,
w»
Superior Copper
Superior & Pittsburg
Tamarack
Trinity
Unlteil Fruit
U. S. Mining
U. S. Mining pfd
U. S. Oil
Utah Apex
Utah Cons
Virginia Chemical ...
Victoria
Winona
Wolverine
Wyandot
Yukon Gold
Begole
EoE^on Ely
Cactus
Chemung
Cliff
Chief Cons
Chlno
Goldfleld Cons
Inspiration
La Ro.^ie
Live Oak
Ohio Copper
Oneco
Ray Central
Rawhide Coalition ..
So. Lake
Tono Nevada
26%
36
42-
11%
.1*
15%
16%
75
9%
3
32
13%
38
3%
187
33%
45%
30
2%
13
27
37%
105
12
5
68
16
17%
98
jr^
3%
33%
13%
40
4%
187%
34
46
30%
61% sale
13%
1%
6%
1%
1%
10
«l^
97
1%
21%
6
7
9-16
■i%'
1%
7-16
3%
4%
6%
1%
7%
108
1%
4
2%
1%
13
6
i'6-i«j
22
6%
7%
4%
18
1 7-16
1%
1 9-16
4
4%
6%
Midvvay Home IMarket.
MlnneeoU Transfer, Bt. Paul. Minn., April 18.—
Barrett & Zlmmtrm.in report: The heavy receipts of
all classes of horses together with the lignt rlear-
ance of the past few days, has caused a derided
weakening In values. Plain and mrdium QUitUly
workers are numerous and decidedly cheap In price.
Thtre is a marked falling off In Uie demand for
agricultural classes. MuleH met with fair call. The
market Ir featured Willi a large choice ccualgnment of
gblte<l sadcUeni and well broke drixere.
Drafters, extra )185^240
120@170
''.'•1 '
,...••........
I .... . • . a
.u
.10
.08
.12
.12
.03
Oeete, per lb
FISH—
Trout, Lake Superior, frozen if
Whlteflsh, frozen 12
Pike, frozen . .
Pickerel, frozen
8«lmon
Halibut
Herring, frozen
Piunan haddle .« 10
Smoked whlteflsh 10
Smoked Chhiook salmon 18
Smoked halibut 14
Oyaters, standard, per gal 1.40
Oysters, medium selects, i>er gal 1.7S
Oysters, extra selects, per gal 1.90
Frozen smelts, per lb 12^
Fresh frozen mackerel, ea<^ 35
Frozen eels, per lb 12
Koe Shad, each 1.25
Shad roe, per pair .60
Steak, cod. per lb 12^4
Scallups, per gal 1,»0
HAY ANIi STRAW-
Choice tlmolhy. per ton $16.50@17.00
No. 1 choice timothy, per ton 15.50@i7.00
No. 1 choice tmothy, per ton .... 15.50@17.0a
No. 1 mixed UmttUy, per ton 14.00(^16.00
No. 2 mixed UmoUiy, per ion 12.00@13.00
No. 1 upland, per ton 13.50@14.50
No. 2 upland, per ton 11.50®12.50
No. 1 midland, per ton 10.00(^12.00
No. 2 midland, per ton 7.00® sioo
Rye straw, per ton 6.50(^ 7.O11
Oat straw, per ton 0.50® 7.00
Bran, per ton 22.00
Mlddiiiies, per ton 26.00
»
Chlcagro.
Chicago. April 18.— Bullir— .Steady ; creamcrle!>, IE
@21c; dairle*. 13fel8c. Eggs— Steady : receipts, 21,-
792 cases: at mark, cases included. K-i@l8'/4c: firsts,
14 Vic; prime flretB, 15c. Chee^^e — SUady ; daisies.
H^ii'H'/ic; twins, 12%@13c; young Americas, 33^i(&
Hc; long horns, 13^ (g 14c. Potatoes — .Steady;
choice to fancy, r>6@58c; fair ta good, 53® 55c.
Puullry— Weak; turkeys, live. 14c; henii, live, 13Hc,
sprinEs, live, 13V4c. Veal— Steady, 60 to 60 lb wta.,
6(*7c; 60 to 83 lb wU., 7@S>c; 81 to llfc lb wts..
'JVtfelOc.
}
If you will bring your
Calumet & Arizona and
Superior & Pittsburg cer-
tificates to Paine, Webber
& Co/s office, we will have
them transferred into the
new Calumet & Arizona
stock for you.
Draf tor», choice
Draften'. common to good
Farm m<ire)> and hor:*es, extra.
Faim mnre^ and liorses choice
Farm horses, common to good..
Delivery
Drivers and saddlers
Mules, according to size. ......
95«U5
14U@1SU
iiri@i3j
65® 100
140(5100
lS0«?)22u
150®250
New "Voik stock quotaUvns fumibbed The Herald- by
Piper, Johnson it Caae;
STOCKS— I Open. I High. | Low. | Close.
KGMAliKS — Showera fell over Kastem Nebraska,
Western Iowa, Kustcrn Kansas, Missouri and Okia
homa. Freezing temperatures prevailed last night ove>
portions of Ohio.
H. W. RICHARDSON,
Local Forecaster.
T. In^catee Inappreciable rainfall. *Mazlmum for
yesterday. tMinlmum for twenty-four buurs, ending
8 a. m. 75tb meridian time. ^Minimum temperature
for 12- hour period ending at 8 a. m.
NOTIi. — Tlie average maximum and minimum tem-
peratures are made up at each center from the actual
number of reports received, and the average ralrJaU
from the number of stations reporting .1 uicir or
153,000 i "'"''*• The "state of weather" )i that preTalllng
1 172000 "' iiO'* of observation.
195,400
fitfw York Groin.
New Tork, April 18— Close: Wheat— May, »4c;
July, 93%c. Corn- May, 57 He.
W!»eal—
May ....
July ....
Sept
Corft—
May ....
July ....
<cr>«
Open.
.SOiJi-SO
.8«V4-%
.86
High.
.90%
.87%
.86%
.40%-H-\.49%-%
il "^- ■'.--
• Oat»-=
.M%-%
.5H4-%
.50%
.81%
DULUTH.
tflNNBAPOLJS.
.May
.luly
Sept
.32%
.?2H
.31H-H
.31H ,
.31H
Mees Pork, per bbl —
Miiy 15 60-65 15.65
July .. .15.12% 15. 12%
Lard, per lOO lb-
May . - 8.12% 8 l2Vi
.Fuly .... 8.20-22% 8.22%
Sept . .. 8.27% 8.30
Short Ribs, per 100 lb-
May ... 8 60 8.62%
July .... 8.22% 8.85
.Sept .... 8.10 8.12%
Low.
.87%
.85^4
.85%
.49%
.50%
.51%
.3lft
.31%
.31%
15.52%
14.95
8.00
8.10
8.20
8.62%
8.10
8.02%
Close.
.88%
.86-%
.80%%
• 51%
..1l%
.31%
.31%
15. -2%
14.97%
8.00
8.10-12%
8.80
8.52%
8.12%
8.02%
Cotton Market.
New York, April 18. — The cotton
market opened steady at a decline of 6
points to an advance of 2 points, old
crop positions bein^ lower in sym-
pathy with rather disappointing cables,
while the new crop reflected relative
firmness ot late months in Liverpool
and some further talk of delayed plant-
ing as a result of light rains in the
Western and Centra] belts. Old crop
positions sold off a few points right
after the call and the market seemed
to be rather unsettled, but ^t the de-
cline there was some demand from
commission houses and a moderate re-
newal of bull support sent all active
months into new high ground for the
movement before the end of the first
hour. The new crop led the advance
on buying by trade interests.
Spot closed quiet, 5 points higher;
middling uplands, 14.90; middling gulf,
15.15. Sales, 2,011 bales. Futures
closed steady; closing bids: April
14.70; May, 14.79; June, 14.83; July.
14,80; August, 14.50; feeptemlfer, 13.40;
October. 12.92; November, 12,82; De-
cember, 12.82; January, 12.80; March,
. 12.85,
Ijlverpool Grain.
Liverpool, April 18. — Close: "Wheat —
Spot dull; No. 2 red western no stock;
futures firm; May, 6s 8%d; July, 68
8%d; October, 6s 8%d. Corn — Spot
firm: American mixed n«w. 48 Sd;
Amalgamated
American Sugar
Amerlran Car Foundry.
American Locomotive . .
American Smelters ....
Anantnda
A. T. & T
Atchison
Baltimore & Ohio
Brooklyn Rapid Transit
Cliesapcake & Ohio
Chicago Great Western.
Chicago Northwestern . .
C, M. & St. Paul
Colorado Fuel A Iron. .
Canadian Pacific
DlaUlkrs
Lrle ...................
do 1st pfd
do 2nd pfd
Great Northtni
Great Nonliem Ore . . .
LoulsvlUe & Nashville..
Mi8!X/uri, Kansas It Texas
Missouri Pacific
National Lead
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Pennsylvania
People's Gas
Pressed Steel Car
Republic Suel * Iron..
Ro<'k Island
Reading
Soo Line
Southern Railway
Soutliem Pacific
Temiesste Copper
Twin City
Union Pacific
Utah Copper
United SUtes Steel
United SUtee Steel pfd
Wabash ^
<lo pfd
Wisccusln Ccotral
62%
118%
52%
37
73%
37%
145%
108%
103%
78
80%
21
144
120%
30
22,-.%
33%
29%
47%
37
125%
Cl%
144
32%
47%
52
106^
12»%
124%
104
32%
32
29
134%
137%
S6%
115%
36%
108%
176%
43%
76%
119%
15%
37
67%
62%
118%
52%
37%
73%
37%
145%
108%
105%
78
80%
120%
30
225%
29%
47%
125%
61%
144
■47%
52
106%
123%
124%
104
32%
'29'
154%
137%
2e%
115%
36%
176%
43%
7«%
119%
37
59%
118%
51%
36
79%
?6%
144%
10C%
104
77
7k
117
29
223%
28%
46%
124%
60%
143%
'45%
51
104%
120%
123%
103%
31%
28%
151%
134%
26%
113%
35%
173%
42%
74%
119
35%
60%
118%
51%
36
71%
3C%
145%
106%
104
77
78%
21
144
117%
2D
224%
33%
28%
47%
37
124%
60%
143%
32%
46%
51
105%
120%
123%
103%
31%
32
28%
151%
134%
26%
114
35%
108%
174%
42%
71%
119
IsTi
35%
67%
ChicsKO LlveBtork.
Chicago, April 18.— CatUe. receipts estimated at
2.000, markt steady; beeves. $.').20(*6 85; Texas
steers, t4.60<a'5.70; western steers, $4.9«®5.9C: ptoik-
m and feeders, $4.10^5. 85; cows and heifers. 12.73
@5 90; calves, $3@6.75. Hogs, receipts estimated at
10.000; market firoug to 5c hlghi-r than Mcndav's
average; light. $e.35&ti7C; mixed, J6.20(a.fiG5; htaiy,
$6@6.50; rough. $6(^'(i.20: good to chuiie heavy. $€20
@6.50; pigs. $6.c!5(a6.65; buik of sales, $6.i.0fe6.50.
Sheep, teceipts estimated at 10,000; market steady to
strong; native, $3@4.75; western, $3 lf-(*4.70; year-
llngs, $4.40@5.30; lambs. uaUve, $4.75(g<6.25.
Sonth St. Paul LIvcMock.
South St. Paul, Minn., April 18. —
Cattle — Receipts, 1,000, market light;
unchanged. Hogs — Receipts, 2,700,
market steady; range, 16,15^6.40; bulk
of sales, $6,25(6)6.35. Sheep — Receipts,
1,000; market steady; sheep, Jl.OO®
:>.00; lambs, f 3.754}'6.00.
New York.
New Yoi*, April 18— Uutter— MDng; receipts, 11,-
045 packages; creamery special, 2ir, extras, 21( ; firsts,
l!.'%<s20%c; seconds. 17 (ff 18 %c; cpsameiy held extra,
19«a2oc; firsts, lT%iifl8%c; kecontls, 16(g^l7c; state
dairy finest, 20%^i21c; good to pr-ioe, ]8@20c; com-
mon to fair, 15(al7c; process special, 17%c; extras,
17c; tirsts, 16c; seconds, 15c: Imitation creamery
firsts, 16%@17c; factory curreit make, flrets,
16c; seccnds, 15(a'13%c. Cheese — *irm; receipts, 38S
boxes; state wiiole milk, special, 14isil5%c; Sep-
tember (juality. fancy colored, 13fel3%c, same white.
13c; summer and fall made, color .Hi choice, 11%®
i;i%c; white, llVit<12%c; late fal made, good to
prime, colcred, 10%<ull%c; same wliite, 10%(sllc;
current make, large, bett, lOViWlO^ic; wime common
to fall, ItiS'lOc; skims, 2(?ll!c. Kegs— 1*1 rm ; re-
ceipts, 30,08*1; ti-esh guthtred selected extras. n%(ii
18%c; firsts, 16®16%c; seconds, 15(3'13%c; fresli
gathered dirties. No. 1. 14%feH%c. uime No. 2, 13
(a'lic: Iresh gathered checks, i;(eil3%c; stvirago
packed firsts, 17(8 ]7%c; state, Pemisylvania and
nearby hemwiry white, VJ&21c: saae gathered while.
18(a'20c; hennery brown, 17%®18%c; same galh-
ered brown, mixed, 16%<sl7%c; soilliem duck eggs,
-:;(2:;8c; wettirij, 22(^iCic.
HIDES, TALLOW AKD FURS.
THE PRODUCE MARKETS.
CALIFORNIA ORANGES—
ExXn fancy navels, 150-216 $3.35
Fancy navels. 9ti-12£ 3.25
2.90
3.90
4.00
4. SO
4.50
1.23
4. 75
2.00
8.00
2.35
2.35
2.50
2.33
3.35
2.35
3.60
2.35
.04%
.23
.17
.15
.18
.13%
.00
.10
.17
.IT
.OT
.07%
.08
8.75
1.40
.10
.08%
1.76
2.50
. 2.60
. 1.75
• .03%
. .04
. 4.25
.85.00
. 2.23
. 3.00
Doluth Securities.
SECURITIES—
I Bid lAckMl
First NatJoorl Bank
.American ExJIangc National Bank
City National Bank
Northern National Bai^
St. Louis County Bank....'..^ ,
Western State Bank ...... ...4
Duluth-Superici Traction Co..
do pfd
Dulutb Street Hallway. Ut g. 6t 3« If *
N. A
Duluth Edison Electric, lit f. •. t 6a
March, 1031, op. M. * S. A
Great Northern Power Co. bondi
American Carlwiite. par tl
Zenith ('uruace Co
400
325
130
130
200
140
77
83%
06
08
80
3.86
83
U
8i
101
100
3.25
100
THE COPPER STOCKS.
The following are the closing quota-
tions of copper stocks at Boston today,
reported by Paine, Webbtr & Co., 316
West Superior street:
STOCKS—
Bid. I Asked.
New York Money.
New York, April 18. — Close: Prime
mercantile paper, 3^ to 4 per cent;
sterling exchange steady with actual
business in bankers' bills at $4.84.25 for
sixty days, and at 14.86, 55@4. 86.50 for
demand. Commercial bills, |4.83%.
Bar silver. 53^4c; Mexican dollars, 45c.
Government bonds steady; railroad
bonds, irregular. Money on call steadv,
2'A@2% per cent; ruling rates, 2% per
cent; closing bid, 214 per cent; offered
at 2% per cent. Time loans quiet and
easier; sixty days, 2 14 ©2% per cent;
ninty days, 2% per cent; six months,
3 per cent.
♦ —
Snsar Advanced.
New York, April 18.— All grades of
reined sugar were advanced 10 cents
p«r 100 pounds today.
-II -r-^
Algoma
Amalgamated Copper..
Anaconda
-Adventure
Ahmeek
AUouez
American Telephone...
Atlantic
Arcadian
Arizona Commercial. . . .
Butte & Balk
Boston Corbin
Black Mountain
Butte Coalition
Calumet & Arizona
Calumet & Hecla
Centennial
CojisolicULted Mercur ..
Copper Range
Daly West
Davis Daly
East Butte
Franklin
First National
Giroux t. ... .
Granby
Greene Cananea
Hancock Consolidated .
Helvetia ,\ ^.'J,.
Indiana « .-. .
Isle Royale ....-4>,«c»-
Keweenaw
Lake Copper ..,«>.,..,
L/£i b&llQ .>■■••• '■»«*i<.
Mass Consolidated . .-. ■
Mass Gas .1. .... .
Miami Copper ..<:. ..4..>
Michigan ...,:,\
Mohawk
Nevada Consolidated . .
Nevada Utah |
Nipisslng ..,%». »nt\ I
a^
36H
4%
165
144%
3
2%
12 '^
4%
11V4
1614
47%
481
11%
8c
60
3H
1 7-16
11%
9
1 11-16
5 13-16
30
6
21
1
11
12
2
29%
4
6%
91
18
\\
36
17%
75
10)i I 10)4
ITsucy navels, 8P
Fancy navels, 150-216
FLORIDA GRAPEJ-'RUIT—
46'8 to 80's, box
Grapefruit, extra fancy, box
CALIFORNIA UiMONS—
Extra faucx, box, 300's and 3&0'«
ImiKirtrd llmts, box
PINEAPPLES—
Cuban, 30'a, crate
Cuban, 70's, doz
GRAPES—
Malaga grapes, keg ,
Al'l'LlJS—
Baldwins, box
Ark. beauties, b<>x
Reman benuUes, box
Greenings, box
Ben Davles, box..
Varieties, box
Spltzenbergs, liox
Wine eaps, box
CRANBirJililES—
Jersey, bu crate 8.50
Michigan, crate 3.50
FRUIT JUICES—
Orange, keg 8.75
Raspberry, keg 8.76
Cherry, keg 3.75
Grape, keg 8.7s
BANANAS—
Bananas, per lb •
BUTTER—
Frincy creamery, pci lb 22%9
Dairy, per lb , 10@
CHEESE—
Wisconsin, full cream, per lb
Anterican, fuU cream, per lb
Block Swiss, per Id, No. 1
Prtaost cheese, per lb
Odorless brick, per lb
Wheel Swiss, per lb
EGGS—
Eggs, fresh, per dot 16%9
PEANUTS—
Fancy, raw, per lb by tbc Mck
Fancy, roasted, sacks, per lb
Fancy, roasted, less than sacks
Salted peanuts, 30-lb palls
Salted i<eanuts, 10-lb sacks
Fancy Jumboa, roaeted, per lb
Fancy Juml>oe, raw, per lb
MAPLE SYRUP—
Vermont, per gal...
Ohio, 5-gal. can
MAPLE SUGAR-
Iowa, assorted pkgs., SO-lb box. per III 10
POP CORN—
Snowball pop corn, 40-pkg. bos
Santa Claus pop com, case
Pop com, on the cob
Pop corn, shelled
HONEY—
Wisconsin while clOTCr. per cas*, 24't. . .
CABBAGE—
Home grown cabbage, per ton
Home grown cabbage, per crate, large. . .
Holland cabbiige, freeh adU tine, per cwt
POTATOES —
Potatoes, per bu $5
Jersey sweets, per hamper t.SO
ONIONS—
Reds. 100-lb sack 3.25
Yellow, 100-lb . a. 50
Red. per bu i.so
Spanish onions, per crate i.eo
Sets, white, per bu 3.00
NUTS—
Walnuts, new, California, 110- lb sack, per lb.. .IT
Filberts, Sicily, pei lb 15
Brazils, extra large, per lb 14
Pecans, extra fancy polished, pet lb .15
Almonds, Taraganla, per lb 20
Mixed uuu, 100-lb and 60-lb boxea. lb new.. .14
Black walnuts, lb 05
Cocoanuts, per dox 86
New hickory nuts, large or small, i>er lb OS
Pecans, halves, shelled, extra fancy, 6-Ib car-
tons, per lb 50
Walnuts, shelled, extra fancy, 5-Ib cartona, lb. .48
Chestnuts, per lb 10
Almonds, slielkd, extra fancy, 5-lb cartoot, lb. .45
DATES AND FIG8—
Hallowl dates, 70-lb boxes, new 4.50
Uallowl dates, 80 package*, per box 3.35
Fard dates, 12-lb boxes, new 1.40
Sugar walnut dates, li-lb boxes 1.35
New Caiifomla flgx. 12-pkg. box, per box 1. 00
New Smjriia 'igs, &-cruwu, 20-lb box. per box.. 3.75
New SrajToa figs. 7-crown. 100-lb box, per
box 14.56
New Smyrna figs. S-crown. lO-lb, i>er box 1,3S
FRhijH VEGETABLES—
Head lettuce, hamper 3.25
Lettuce, leaf, |)er bu box 1.10
Beans, wax, per bu '. 4. so
Parsley, home grown, per dox 33
Green onions, doz 40
Green onions, box J. 75
Cauliflower. California, per crate 3.50
Spinach, box 1.25
Round radishes, hothouse, large bunches, doz. . .75
Long radishes, doz 40
Hothouse cutumbors, per doz 1.75
Green pcpperp, hottouse, per basket 03
Celery. California, per bunch 85
Celery, Florida, crate 8.00
Endive, New Orleans, per bbl (i.oo
New beets, per doz 75
New carrots, per doz 75
Florida tomatoes, basket.... SO
Tomatoes, crate t3.60@ 2.75
Louisiana strawberries. caM ol 84 pta. .t3.750 3.50
Pie plant. p<r box.,,. 3.75
Garlic, pound .*. 15
ROOTS—
Table beets, per cwt 1.75
Table bagas. per cwt I.75
Horse radish, root, per bbl. 0.50
Horse radish, per lb 14
Table carrots, per cwt 1.75
Table parsnips, per cwt 3.00
MISCELLANEOUS—
Beans, navy, per bu |.(0
Beans, brown, per bu S.75
Fruit baskets, per hundred , 1.36
AltlATS—
Beef, per lb TH9 .09^
Mutton, per lb 07
Pork loins, per lb llVi
Veal, per lb 9% .lOH
Lamb, per lb 11
Lard, per lb 11
DRESSED POULTRY—
Hens, fancy, fat, per lb 159 .18
Springs, per lb IS
Turkeys, per lb 24
Ducks, per lb.... 18# .21
Geese, per lb ....130 .13
UVB POULTRY—
Hens, per lb 15M
Small bens, pet lb 15H
Springs, par lb 15H
Turkeys, per lb 30
Oucka. per lb «i>t«>t*« • •••• •!*
GREEN SALTED HIDES— No. 1,
<i. S. steer*, over 60 lb | .0914
G. S. steers, 2S lb and up and cteen
under 60 lb 08%
G. S. long haired kips. 8 to 25 lb. . .09
G. 8. veal kips, 5 to 25 lb 13
G. S. Deacon skins, under 8 lb 80
G. S. horsehldes 3. go
DRY SALTED-
Dry flint hides, over 15 lb 10
Dry Minnesota, Dakota, Wiaconslc
and Iowa hide^ 11
Muslirat, winter 40® 34 . . .
Murrains ! .15^
Dry kid 18
Dry salted calf 20
TALLOW AND GKIilASE—
Tallow, iu cakes 06^
Tallow, in bbl 06
Greaso 05)4
I'ELTS—
Pelts, large, each TQ
Pelts, medium to small S5
Dry pelts, butcher, Montana and
Washington
Dry sliearings, each
WOOL—
No. 2.
t .08%
.07%
.07V4
.11^
.70
2.00
.12
32(3)19
.13
.05%
.05
.03%
1.00
.00
Unwashed medium wool.
Unwashed coarse wool . . .
Unwashed fine uediuio, .
LEATHER—
■ .12tt ,11
. .10 .05
—Per Ib-
Ilo. 1. No. 3.
. .18 .20
. .16 .18
. .15% .17%
—Pot lb—
1(0. 1.
■•••••••
No. 2.
$ .40
.42
$3.00
2.00
1.50
.75
ios
2.25
5.00
4.50
4.75
3.00
12.00
£.00
6.00
1 00
20.00
15.00
7.00
5.00
.60
.15
3.75
S.0«
2.50
2.25
|3@21
e .37
@ .33
@ .41
.44
Small.
$2.00
1.50
1.00
.00
16613
Texas oak sole A
Texas oak sole
Hemlock slaughter sole xx f .35
Hemlock slaughter sole No. 1 34
Hemlock dry hide sole 81
Hemlock harness leather 38 @
Oak Itamess leather 42 @
FURS— Large. Medium.
Skunk, black $4.50
Skunk, sliort stripe 3.00
Skunk, kMig narrow stripe.. .. 2.00
Skunk, broad stripe and white. 1.00
Muskrat, fall 30037
Muskrat, klta
Raccoon 3. 50
Mink, dark and brown 0.50
Mink, pale 0 . 00
Beaver 7. 00
Cat, wild 4.00
Fisher, dark 18.00
Fisher, pale 15.00
Fox. red 8.00
Fox. gray I.S3
Lynx 27.00
Marten, dark 20.00
Marten, dark brown 10.00
Marten, light brown and pale.. 6.50
Weasel, white 85
Weasel, stained, damaged 20
Wolf, timber 6.00
Wolf, brush, cased 4.00
Wolf, open 3.60
Wolf, coyote, cased 3.00
Bear, as to size
Badger, civet and house cat, chss and kit fox,
mountain lion, opossnm and wolverias command mar-
ket prices. The above prices are lor Prime No. ' 1
2. 3 and 4 in proportlco.
Zenith, 1464. Dniath. Mel. 2215.
Martin Rosendahl & Co.
(INCORPORATED.)
COPPER STOCK BROKERS
deducting reinsurance placed.)
T31C.1,- .... Fire Rlska.
rirJ^% '^'rltten....- | 1,990,552.82
i remiums received 12,067. 8«
ln««!^ Incurred 6.684.1$
A-fOsses patd . 6 684 19
9t'^fi'"V \} ''^^^ "■'■'■'■'.'.'.'. 1,990;552 : 8t
Burance "*'^^^^' ^^P^rtment of In-
^ilf^^I^^^ Certify. That the Annual
A •SltVi!"^ T ,*"* ., ^^^ Underwriters at
American Lloyds, for the year ending
Fhnvf'?^'' ^^£*' ^^^^- of^which thf
?^2 «i^^^" abstract, has been received
and nietl in ti^iis Department and duly
approved by me. '
■ J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
Soman; ^VcTiarV'^'H^'- ^'harles'^
cept service in K„ Attorney to ac-
er Of Insurlnce "^^''^*- ^^ommission-
First Mo.^r.J"*^'"^ *■ J»10-
Renewal premiums
rZ*"//^ premium income!
Rents and interest.
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or ad.iust.ment of
ledger assets .
From all other sources!.'
Total income . 7"
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year
90,439.85
316,098.13
406,537.98
39,432. S»
200.00
1,384.18
447. 565. OS
780.310. »8
tured endowments . s
Surrender values to pol-
icyholders . ^
ers^^^^ to policyiioidl
Dividends to company.' .' '.
169.431.88
5,863,63
1.50
S.23
8.00
8.35
1.75
7,00
7.00
6.00
.75
13.00
10.00
SOO
3.25
.26
.10
2.50
£.00
1.73
1.60
Total paid policyhold-
^rs ... *
Dividends held "on deposit
surrendered during the
Commissions and ' bonuses
to agents first year's
premium
Commissions ori renewals,
Salaries and allowances
for agencies
Agency supervision " and
other expenses . .
Medical examiner's fees
and inspection of risks
balaries ot officers and
employes
Legal expenses ..'.".' ' ' " •
Agents' balances charged
Gross loss on sale! ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
All other disbursements.*
1,640.66
949.67
177,886. 4»
290.44
58,890.62
12,486.39
9,305.81
2,237. Ot
7,174.01
16,977.08
6.00
1,422.35
806.50
36,908.99
Total disbursements...! 323,389.65
Balance |
Ledger AKMetn' Dec. 31,
Mortgage loins t '
Premium notes and pol-
icy loans . .
Bonds and stocks owned
Cash, in office, banks and
trust companies
Bills receivable and
agents' balances
904,475.73
1910.
665,980.00
13,949.00
145,316.60
71,496.08
7,735.16
skins. Is'os.
Buy in Duluth.
Balance |
Ledger Assets De«. 21.,
Collateral loans %
>Book value of bonds and
stocks
Cash in office and banks
Premiums in course of
collections
FREDERICK O'KRIEN,
CeiMral Agent
305 Phoenix Bldg.. MinneipoDs, Minn.
Underwriters at American Lloyds In-
Hurancc Compan r.
Principal office: 45 Cedar street. New
York. (Organized in 1890.) ± E
Hall and Cliarles A. Trowbridge, at-
torneys and managers; E. ;5. Hall, sec-
retary. Attorney to accept service in
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
Income in 1010
Gross Premiums and as-
sessments I 271,62-6.47
Rents and interests 35,772 00
From all other sources,. 2,000.00
Total income | 309,398.47
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year $ 922,379.10
Total ledger assets <as
per balance) |
T„« . ]Von-L«dgcr Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued %
Market value of borids"
and stocks over book
value
Net deferred and unpaid
premiums
904,476.78
10,767.40
1.446.70
86,650.28
Gross assets | 1.002,330.09
Deduct Assets Not Admitted.
Agents debit balances..! 9,136 09
All other assets not ad-
"^itted 18,726,81
Total assets not ad- " ~'
n^^tted I 27.862.41
Total admitted assets. | 974.467 68
Liabilities Dec. 31, 1010.
Net value of outstanding
policies I
Claims due and unpaid..
Claims adjusted and not
due, and unadjusted
and reported
Premiums paid in ad-
vance
Dividends due policy-
holders
All other liabilities..'
431,840.00
3,236.48
14, 177.86
1,694.90
21.685.18
8,519.10
Total liabilities on pol-
icyholders' account..! 481,062.47
Sum .. ( 1,231,777.57
Disbarsements in 1910.
Amount paid for losses.. |
Commissions, brokerage,
salaries and allow-
ances to agents, offi-
cers and employes. . . .
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses
Loss on sale or maturity
of ledger assets
All other disbursements.
68,586.15
95,033.08
6,112.84
320.00
82,198.55
Total disbursements...! 242,250.62
989,526.95
1910L
17,500.00
870,814.69
61,432.73
39,779.63
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $ 989,526.95
Non-Ledser Assei:s.
Interest and rents, due
and accrued ....; | 7,967.16
Market value of real es-
siate, bonds and stocks
over book value 1,437.43
Gross assets $ 998,931.64
Deduct Assets Not AAinltted.
Premiums in course of
collection (past due)..| 381.53
Total assets not ad-
mitted I 381.53
Total admitted assets. |
Liabilities.
Losses adjusted and un-
adjusted !
Unearned premiums |
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due
All other liabilities
998,550.01
2,945 00
162,352.00
2,750.00
106,277.81
Total liabilities $
264,324.81
Net surplus ! 734,225.20
Rinks and Premiums, lOlO Business.
Pire risks written during
the year $ !>4,894,741.00
Premiums received there-
on 366,660.35
Net amount in force at
end of the year I 14,678,024.00
Business In Minnesota In 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and
(sur-
Unasslgned funds
plus) I 493,415.31
Exhibit of Policies, 1010 BusincNS.
No.
Policies in force at
beginning of the
year — (last col-
umn only) 10792
Policies in force at
close of the year 12445
Amount-
111,426,563.00
13,502,902.00
2353 I 2,964.059.00
700
166
82
Net increase 1653 ! 2,076,339.00
Issued, revived and
increased during
the year
Total terminated
during the year.
By death
By surrender
By lapse 462
By decrease
Business in Minnesota
No.
Policies In force at
beginning of the
year 1551 |
Issued during the
year 715
Ceased to be in
force during the
year 232
In force Dec. 31st
last 2034
887,720.00
174,053.00
93,787.00
587,444.00
32,436.00
In )«10.
Amount. .
1,773,411.00
876,553.00
261, 565. 0»
2,388,399.00
Losses and claims in-
curred during the year. S 26,897.00
Losses and claims settled
during the year f 2«,950.00
Losses and claims unpaid
Dec. 31st 1,947.00
Received for premiums..!
64,497.87
State of Minnesota, Department of In>
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Scandia Life Insur-
ance Company, for the year ending
December 31st, 1910, of which th»
above Is an abstract, has been received
and filed in this Department and duly
approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
U. S. Engineer Office, Duluth, Minn..
March 20, 1911. — Sealed proposals for
dredging at Superior entry, Duluth-
Superior harbor, will be received at thi».
office until noon April 20. 1911, and
then publiclv opened. Information on
appllcaflon Oiaham D. Pitch, Lt. Col.,
Engrs. T;. LL. ^.irtiii 20, 21, 22. 23. April
18. 10. -. :
!
I
t
1
— T«
"tep-
iMMbna^Si
1
T
^^B^
MI
'HTPlBJii
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1011.
STEAMSHi:
ALLAN LINE—
Picturesque St. Uiwwnca Rout*.
Weekly Sailings from
MONTnEAL TO UVEHPOOL. OLASC.OW
SCntTiEAL To LOMWN. HAVIlfi. Frmncfc
Fortnlihtly from .„„„_
PHTLADEI.PHIA wid Bl«TON to 0LA800W.
8l.lriMua icenerr. •horteat peMW*. low t»SM.
Any Local Acent or
AIJ^N A CO.. CJeneral Agents.
174 Jackaon Blvd.. Chicago.
Tuesday, yhil i. u i. u * » aa^^» . ^ ;; _ ■
HEPWORTH'-KIRBY AGENCY
Insurance' In All Its Branches
St Lawrence Route to Europe
.I.KSS THAN FOtIR,
'daysatska
White Star-Dominion
ROYAI. MAH. STKAMKR9
Montreal- Quebec-Liverpool
"Laureotic" and "Mexantic
|Lar«e«t .nd MoH Modern 8«""«" '" !t*J^"iS;
LuJi Service. Luxurious HoconunodaUoM lot
lltJrtt. Second and Third CIM*.
Salllns In lOiOunrtlun wltii tua
"TEUTONIC"— -CANADA"— "OOMINION
lr*nJtoi One Claw Cabl« passengets (called
Kd^Cabu'. Comfort al moUerate rate* AUo
I rtitrd ClKM p«s»ajl«»»-
ADDly Comi>anj'» Office.
||».|2I So. 3rd St, (Guaranty Bld«.)
Minneapolii.
E. BRECKE, Paw. Ajt.. or Local Asentt.
Sellwood Building.
91i
rl -
Duluth, Minnesota.
BritlNh America Anaurauce Compaay.
Principal office: 18 and 20 Front street east. Tor-
onto, Dominion of Canada. (Commenced business In
the United States 187*.) W. B. Melkle, general
managvr. Attorney to accept serrlce In Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAI., 1210.000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals $ 937.082.73
HenU and Interwit 57,930.97
Gross profit on sale, maturity or ad-
justment of ledger assets 214.90
From all other sources 260.51
The Continental Innorance Companr.
Principal office: 46 Cedar street. New York, N. x-
(Organised In 1833.) Henry *:^'«»- I";^^',- *^ij.n:
Tuttle, secretary. Attorney to accept service In Min
nesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $2,000,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premium* other than perpetuals $
IlenU and Interest
Gnws profit on sale, maturity or
justment of ledger assets
From all other source*
ad-
7,308.442.95
989.747.77
947.685.00
7,953.42
Company.
N.
Total Income
993.539.11
RAILROAD TIME TABLES
MINNEAPOLIS.ST.PAUL
.hpSaultSte-MarieRy.
Ledger asseU Dec. 31 of previous year..! 1.390.947.59
Total Income
9.1S3.829.11
Ledger assoU Dec. 31 of prevlouk year.» 23,179.880.65
Sum
IN
UNION
Loiiva
STATION — superior St. and Sixth
EXPRESS.
TWIN PORTS
Ave. W*«t
Arrlte.
tr.OOam
7.30aai
2.45pia
tS.OOpn
For Kau
CUlre .ind
CtUl>lK«*
Fails 7
•7.00pm.
7.30pm.,
10 40pm.,
1 1.43pm.
3.49aM..
OULUTH
. . Superior
ILady smith
... Owens .
.. Otthkoali
.*9.00am
. e.3Uam
5. 15am
. 4.00am
.12.01am
t5.30pm
5.00pm
10.50am
t7.53ara
From K.
. . 1 5am . . . Milwaukee
•9.00ain CliU-aSJ
and
CUlie and
Chippewa
g.SOpm Falls
•7.00pm
Library Ohserra
Sum T *
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for loises %
Commlaslims and brokerage •
Sahirles and feea of officers, agents and
empliiyes ■ •
Taxni. fees, renU and other real esuto
expenses
Itoturned to home office
All other dKbursements ••/•:•
Gross los-H en 6*le, mnturlty or adjuat-
mant of ledger assets
2,5S6.486.70
488.876.57
214.1I82.3U
100.542.18
37.050.55
71.488.00
63,476.73
2.236.00
Total disbursements
948.632.33
tlon Cars.
Lighted.
jCoiinoctlon at
tlaue. Gladstone
Lady-omlth with Train 8 for ManU-
and Intermediate polnta^
LeaTC-
BROOTEN EXPRESS.
!-• T-^Yf
tS.43aM
6.l3an
8.22am.
I0.20am
10.50am
1 1. 20pm
Connections at
Canada and the
t7.0Oam
lO.OOam
3.10pm
t4.00pm
... Duluth t9.00pm
... Superior 8.30pm
...Moose Lake.... f "'"J
... WaUkon * *?""
. Onaiuia 4.25pm
Btoolen tl-*>>P'*
Bnwten for Twin CUle*
Pucitlc Co.lit.
Arlte.
tS.OOpm
12.33pm
7.26am
t6.45am
Western
Lea>«.
OULUTH-WINNIPEQ LINE. Arrive.
Balance
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31.
B.iok »alue of bonds and stocks
Cash in office, trust companies and
banks • •
AgeiiU' balances, unpaid premiums and
hliU receivable, taken for premiums...
$ 1.637.334.37
1910.
t 1,339.648.20
157.881.58
DISBURSEMENTS
Net amount paid for losses
Kxpenses of adjuilment of losses
Commissions and bDkerage
Salaries and feea of officers, agenU
and employes : • • " " l"
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses
Dlvldeu*s and Interest •■.•••.•
Gro.ss liKW on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
All other disbursements .......•••••••
.$
1910
32,333.509.76
3,079.739.13
99,618.57
1,504,790.3»
658.222.00
318,097.97
1,750.003.00
579,554.00
311.388.28
Niagara Fire Ina^m^oe
Principal office: 25 Utferty street. New Tork,
Y. (Organlxed In 1850.) HaAld HerrlOt, president:
George W. Dewey, .ecret4i». Attorney to accept
serrlce in Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $1,000,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuaa.
Rents and Interest
From all other aources
3,151.210.91
245.783.15
1,234.46
Total
income » 3.398.228.5J
The Pennaylranla V'lre Inaaranec
pany.
Principal office: 510 Walnut street. Philadelphia,
Pa. (Organlxed In 1825.) R. Dale Benaon. presi-
dent; W. (Jardner Crowell, aecretary. Attorney to ac-
cept serrloe In MlnnesoU: Commlsaloner of luaur-
ance.
CASH CAPITAL, $750,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals I
Premiums on i>erpetual risks
Rents and Interest
Gros:> profit on sale, maturity or adjuat-
meiit of ledger assets
From all other sources.........
Ledger aaseU Dec SI of prertou* year.$ 5,817,222.20
Sum
.9 9,215.450.72
Total dlsbutsementa
8.301,393.90
Balance
.$ 24.032.113.86
ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
140.304.59
Total ledger asseU (as per balance).. $ 1,637,834.37
NON-LEDOER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued $
AU other non-ledger assets.
19.536.23
1.13
asset*
% 1,657.3-L73
ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
$ 2,417.81
assets over market
Gross
DEDUCT
Agents' balances . .
Hook value of ledger
value
Special deposit, less $27,330.43 Uablllty
theneun
LEDGER
Book value of real estate .^....I
Mortgage loans •
Book value of bonds and stocks
Cash In office, trust companies and
bunks • •
Agents" balance*, unpaid premiums and
bllU recelvaUe, taken for premiums.
Toul ledger assets (as per balance).!
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and renU due and accrued..!
1.200.000.00
2.700.00
18.390,380.00
3.389,125.49
1,049.710.37
24,032.115.86
DISBURSEMEN-^ IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses %
Estwnses ef adjustment of losse*
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries and feea of officers, ageiiU and
employes ■
Taxes, fees, rents and qther real estate
expenses •.....•.•••••
Dividends and Uiterest
All other dlsbursemento../
1,477,189.35
36.985.19
592,961.30
308,337.76
120.643.43
475,000.00
156,514.41
3.447.585.02
27.717.51
292,428.54
8.114.80
403.00
Total income
.$ 3,778.249.77
Ledger aaseU Dec. 31 of prevloiu year.$ 7.344.287.55
Sum » 11.120,537.32
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses I
Royal Inanranee Company, l.lmlte4.
Principal office In the United SUte* 94 wmiam
street. New York, N. Y. (Commence I |>u*»?«" »"
the United State* 1851.) Kdward tttch BeddaU.
general attorney In the United .Slates. Attoriwy to
accept service in MlnnesoU: Commissioner of in-
surance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL, $450,0(0.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premium* other than perpetuaU % 7,647,497.40
Premiums on perpetual rials
RenU and Interest
Received from borne office
........
L66
610,860.82
236,115.93
Royal Indemnity Companr*
Principal office: 84 WlUlara strert. New Toiit, IC
y. (Organized la 1910.) K<lward F. BeddaU. presl-
deaf J. Harold Pearch, eecrelan-. Auomey to ac-
cept service In MlnnesoU: Commisslonec
ance.
CASH CAPITAL, $500,000.
. INCOME IN 1910.
of iniut*
8.494,475.81
Total Income ..•.••..*..•*.•>■••
Ledger asseU Dec. 31 of previous year$ 11.200.507.14
ToUl dlsbursemenU.
.$ 3.176,651.44
ASSETS DEC. 31.
184.426.42
3,429.15
58.920.86
8,743.55
..$
70.112.22
t 9 30am.
to. 05am.
II .25am.
4.00pm.
4 37pm
7.30pm
Duluui
. . . . Superior
. ...51oose Lake
Cas.-* Lake
. Bemldjt
.ThWf Rivet FalU. .
Comuctwns at Thief River Falls for
RANGE LINE
Leave.
t 7.20am.
7.55*m.
9.50am. .
10 02am.
10 24ain.
10 35am.
I0.4&am
ll.4oam.
CUYUNA
Duluth
, . Superior . . ■
. .. Luwlet
..East Lake....
. . . Dariua . . . .
.. Bosel>erg ...
... Aitkin ..••.
...Iron Hub
t 5.l0pn
4.40p«
3.I5»«
10.28am
9.54«m
7.00am
Winnipeg.
Arrive.
,.t 6.40pm
6.05pm
4.10pm
3.S8pm
3.3Spm
3.23pm
3.l2pn
2.5Spra
Totol aiseU not admitted
Total admitted assets $ 1,387,259.53
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
Unpaid los.^es and claims %
Unearned pronUi'ius • •
SaUrie>«. expenses. Uxes. dividends and
lutereat due
Commissions and brokerage
104,120.79
787.846.94
12,039.35
3,104.07
renU
AU other uou-ledger aaseU
Gross asseU » 24.219.871.73
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances * 4,196.54
Special deposit, less $3,599.99 llabUlty
thereon ••.. 49,400.01
AU other asseU not admitted J7,737.18
Balance
KEDGER
Mortgage loans •
Book value of bonds and stocks
Cawh m office, trust compaulas
Agents' balances, uupiud premiums
bUls receivable.
and
and
.$ 6.038,799.28
1910.
717,000.00
4,493,281.86
Kxpenscs of adjustment of losses
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries and fees of officers, agenU and
employes .••••" 1'
Taxes, fe<», renU and other real estat*
expenses
Dividends and Interest •••.VA"
OroM loss on sale, maturity or sdjust-
menl of ledger assets
AU other dlabursemenui
1,953.864.55
15,230.60
829,946.32
209.321.95
124.461.17
206.250.00
303.80
155,814.08
.$ 3,497,192.47
Total dlsbursementi
Balance » 7.623.344.85
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, ItlO.
Book value of real esUte
Stim *
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses $
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries and fees of ofQcen, agenU and
employes
Taxes, feea, reoU and other real es-
tate expenses •
Returned to home office
All other dlsbursemenU
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjuat-
meat of ledger asseU >••
19.694,982.93
3.564.515.90
1,338.00«.27
792,131.84
272,580.91
1,465.136.79
764,333.65
87.50
BeceWed from stoddtoidea
Total Income
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Paid for Interest accrued on securltle*. . . .
.$1.04S.50«.S«
.$1,045,506.50
7.668.71
7.6«8.T«
8.196,835.86
189,377.07
197,000.00
173,106. ys
6,292,413.18
322,993.09
505.524.33
Ukeu for premiums. . .
Total ledger asseU (as per baUnce)..$ 6,038.799.28
ToUl asseU not admitted.
..$
71,333.73
tll.57ani
I2.05|im.
Cuyuna
Crosby
2.08pn
2.00pm
•U.iUy tDally except Sunday^
duliSh7missabF&!^^
ern railway.
oaicei
4»0 Weat
Thone,
Superior
St.
Leave
Arrive.
Deposit capital. .
Total Uabliities.
lUl
Net surplus
RISKS AND
•I'lrfl risks
Including deposit cap-
210.000.00
$ 1,117,111.15
Total admitted asseU
LIABILITIES DEC. 31.
Unpaid losses and claims
Unearned premiums • •
SaUrtes. expenses, taiee, dividends ana
Interest due
Commissions and br>kerage
Reinsurance premiums ••••
dmtUigent reserve ......
All other iUbillties
Capital slock paid up •
capital
$ 24,148.638.00
1910.
$ 526,052.28
7,917,531.92
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and renU due and accrued.....!
Market value of real estate, bonds and
stocks over book value
20,296.24
195,169.14
Gross asseU . . .
DEDUCT
ASSETS NOT
Preuiluuii
written
received
PREMIUMS. 1910
during the year,
thereon
..$ 470,148.38
BUSINESS.
..$130.00J.684.00
1,406.269.93
170.068.40
102,788.87
31.188.93
250,')00.00
188.786.42
S.000,000.00
$ 11,134,438.82
Total UablUtles. Including
Net surplus » 13,014.201.18
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. •»"> BUSINESS
•Fire risks wriueu during tiie year. . . .$l,0a?.403.944.00
Premiums received
Net amount In
^,L*;S:posiriess$19.975.84UabUlt,
tliereoa • ' • '
■ A.-
Ty>tal asseU not admitted, ..^^^i***
Total admitted asseU . . , , . . VI ^f^ • •"
LIABILITIES DEC. '31.
Unpaid losses and claims ■ • • •
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes.
Interest due -••■
Commissions and brokerage. ...•...•.•••
Reinsurance premiums ,..,...•••••
Capital stock paid uP >•••
$ 6,254,264.66
ADMITTED.
! 5,227.22
27.719.16
32,946.38
...!
1910.
...!
dirldisBds and
6,221.318.28
321,179.62
3,777,577.98
51.915.77
12.300.UO
34,736.08
l,00U,OOU.U0
Mortgage loans
Collateral loans
Book value of bonds and stocks
Cash in office, trast companies and
banks ; V
AgenU' balances, unpaid premiums and
bllU receivable, Ukeu for premluntt. . .
Total ledger assets (as per balance) . .! 7,623.345.li
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rentt due and accrued....! 83.687.85
172,169.20
599,278.63
11,498,147.08
1910.
4,174.899.61
403.100.00
5,225,333.43
380,864.20
1,313.947.83
Total dlsbursementa
Balance $1,0S7.8»T.7S
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book ?alue of stocks and bonds $ 980,85000
Cash in office, tnist companies and
t)41jks 66.JW7.T1
ToUl ledger assets (as v» balance) $1.037,837.7i
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Intctwt and renU due and accrued on
bonds .,.••...•.,..•.•••.'
7,668.71
Total dlsbursemenU .,..•.•••••...•■!
Balance I
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31.
Book value of real esUle I
Mortgage loans
Book value of bonds and atocks
Cash In office, trust companies and
banks •
Agents' balances, unpaid premluQU and
bill* tecelTabie. taken for premitims.
ToUl ledger asseU (as per balance). i
NON-LEOGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued !«
AU oilier uou-ledger asseU
Gross asseU '• 11.837,669.84
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT AD* ITTEO.
Agents' balances \ 28,354.10
Book value of ledger aaseU over mar-
ket value 74,760.68
Gross assets . . .
Salaries, expenses
CaplUl stock paid
LIABILITIES.
for organization,
up
.$1,045,506.50
.! 18,075.91
. 500.000.00
ToUl UablUtles, including caplUl ! 518.075.91
Surplus over aU liabilities r\i,v} 527,430.50
No business done In MlnnesoU In 1910.
11,498,147.09
85.003.41
54,519.34
State of MlnnesoU. Department of I°f"""'^- ,„. .,
I Hereby Certify. TUat the Annual .staternent of
tli B^yal IndMinity Insurance Company, for the
y«r Kg C^tnber 31st. ISJ"., Vd"med""ln'^
is an abstract, has been received and filed in UUs
Deparlmeul and duly approved by me.^ preuS.
Commlsslouer of Iiuurance.
GroiS
DEDUCT
AgenU* balances
ASSETS
a»5eU » 7,707.032.80
NOT ADMITTED.
!
Book value of ledger asscU over market
SiLllil deposit, "less"' $i6.879.7'8 liaiiiltty
thereon •
ToUl asseU not admitted...
25.129.01
164,310.23
36.620.22
ToUl asseU not admitted
ToUl admitted assets
LIABILITIES DEC. 31,
.1
103.114.78
•••••••ye
226,239.46
tliereou. .
force at end
year
Net amount In force at end of the year. $154,147. 168 00
•—Including business other tlian ilarlne and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
Insurance placed.) Fire Bisks.
$1,953,973.00
. 27.283.19
13.3-25.53
16.621.9.-)
2.022,191.00
•••••••••••a
Chliholm. Virginia. Eve- I
J Ulbbing. Chlsholm. .Sharon j
•S.S«»a
.- '7. 10**
iUuhi)
VlrglnU.
Frances,
dette.
Virginia. Evoleth, |^
Colenilne. _ ^ ■{
Cook. Ralner. Tort 1
Port Arthur. Bau- \
Warroad. WUmipeg- J
*S.2l»m
• 10. Slam
•8.3lam
•DnUy
Cafe
Points
Sleepers
'^^IrT^^otcivl Mesaba.Ranse
Solid Vestlbuled Tiain,
through to Winnipeg.
Modern
Risks written
Premiums received
Losses Incurred
Losses paid
.\mount at risk
Slate of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement ol
the Brttlslj America Assurance Company, for the
jear emling December Slst. 1910, of which the above
\s an alBtract, has been received
Department and duly approved by
8,869,84 1. -ul
of the
1.438.563.682.00
Includl'ii" 't'u'sii'iess other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA I" '9<0.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
insurance placed.)
ToUl UablUtles, Including caplUl ! 4.197.909.45
.! 2.023,408.83
^tal admitted assets...
LIABILITIES
Unpaid losses and claims.
! 7,480,773.34
DEC, 31. 1010.
!
Unearned premiums
Itecialmable on perpetual policies
Salaries, dtpenses, taxes, dividends and
interest due
Capital atock paid up
Total lUblUtles, Includlni capital....! 5,290.892.71
383.922.63
3,211.473.50
»15,496.58
30,000.00
750.OUO.00
Net surplus
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written during the ye*r
Premiums received thereon..
!398,590,144.00
4.348.4-29.48
Fire risks
!23,482,008.0O
260.935.59
161.806.47
114,162.12
Tornado
Aggregate
!9,719,449.00 !35.201.437.00
301,621.73
161.806.47
154,536.26
40,666.13
10.374.14
and fUed In this
me.
J. A. O. PRBtJS,
Commldslciuer of Insurance.
Risks writ-
ten
Premiums
received .
Losses
Incurred
liosses paid
Amuunt at
risk ....
State of Minnesota. Department of Insurance.
Hereby Coitlfv. Tlial the Annual buteoient of
Continental Insurance Comiwny. for the year
December 31st. 1910, of which tl»e above Is an
has been received and filed in this Depart-
NM surplus
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910
•Fire risks writteo during the year..
Unpaid losses and claims !
Unearned premiums
Reclalmable on iwrpetual poUcles
Reserve and UablUUe* In special de-
partment
Salaries, expenses, Uxes, dividends and
Interest due
Commissions and brokerage
AU oilier UablUtles..*
Deposit capital
.$ 11,334,535.06
910.
734.948.70
7,380.634.29
93.102.97
90,475.00
180.754.17
18,988.95
181.611.88
450.000.00
Total UablUtles.
caplUl
including depoai:
9,132,516.02
46,456,281.00 19.841,602.00 66,207,883.00
I
the
ending
abstract.
ment and duly approved
by me.
J. A. O.
Commissioner of
PREL'S,
Insurance.
Nram^nt ta :^-e Vt end of Ih^ year 528.909,680 00
•-^I^chldlnS business other thin "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
Insurance pUceU.) Tornado. Aggregate.
Risk, written.... !3.?21.916.00 $190,610.00 $3,512,526.00
Premiums 52 304 10 907.61 63.211.72
received ..... Pj.ioj.iu 37.126.10
Loa-ses Incurred.. ^'•^»»'? 25.40 37.876.61
^ounf'at rUk."." 3.942^80^218,475.00 4,161,335.00
«»t.t« of MlnnesoU, Department of Insurance:
I^erebToertWy, That U.e Annual Statement of the
N-iaara Fli^ insi^rance Company, for the year end-
NUgara if ire un ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^ ^
received and filed in this De-
approved by me.
J, A. O. PRKUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
4,413,288.90
584.382,088.00
"Marine and In-
,.$ 2,189,880.63
BUSINESS.
..$410,923,328.00
Premiums received thereon
Net amount In force at end of the year._
•—Including
^'""*" BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
iDsurance placed.) ...
Fire Risks. Tornado. Aggregate.
Risks written.... $4,842,731.00 !303,431.00 !5,146,182.00
*'™e'S T6.706.00 2,018.00
I»sses Incurred.. 47,940.00
Losses paid 48,98700
Amount at risk
150.00
150.00
78.724.00
48.09U.On
49.137.00
7,993,046.00
''''*Rl8'SrAN"D"PR"EM."uM8.""."lii(i
•Fire risks written during the year.
Premiums received thereon
&larine and Inland risks written dur-
ing the year
Premiums received thereon
"fek force at end of
! 2,402,030.04
BUSINESS.
!l,011.35U.74r..OO
10,755,076.83
39,724.374.00
223,664.72
business other than
the
...$1,386,998,744.00
'Marine and In-
tng December
abstract, has
partment and
3 1st.
been
duly
Net amount
year
•— Iiicluding
'""^BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received aiid deducting re-
insurance pUced. ) . .
FUe Bisks. Tomatlo. Aggregate.
"written ..$10,323,979.00 $1,007,415.00 $11,331,391.00
Premium*
received . 154,630.09
Los.ses .....
Incurred . 135.417.19
Losses paid. 179.059.09
Amount at
risk ..... .•>•....
6,241.34
12!
,4S
.48
SUte of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
1 Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement of
the Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Company, for the
year ending December 3lst, 1910. of
Is an abstract, has been received
Department and duly approved by
J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
which the above
and filed In tills
me.
160,897.18
185.540.58
179,182.52
21,281,145.00
State of Minnesota, Department of Itisurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual SUtement of
the Royal Insurance Company, for
Decefabcr 3l8t, 1910, of which the
stract. has been received and fUet
ment and duly appi.»»ed by me.^ ^^ ^ ^^^^
Commlasloniir of Insurance.
the year endhig |
above Is an ab-
In this Depart-
IF you have some-
thing you think
somebody else wants
-tell them about it in
The
Herald
That's where every-
body else advertises
when Quick Resulte
are an object* j
THE DILITH & IRON RANGE
RAILROAD COMPANY.
.♦VKKMILIOX ROLTE"
Knife River. Two Harbors, Tower
^'^ly'. AuroV*. Ulwablk. McKlnley
Kveleth, GUbert and VUglnia.
■ •7.30am|tl200m
t2.45pml •6.10pm
'W Go On Your Bond"
AMERICAN BONDING
COMPANY of Baltimore
GEO. R. LAYBOURN. Agt.,
14 PhoenU Blk.. Duluth, Minn.
of Balti-
P.
In
MINNESOTA RAILWAY,
Connecu
running.
American Bcadiue Company
mure.
Principal office: Baltimore, Md. (Organized
1894.) Ocorge Cator. presideot; WllUam E.
vail, secretary. Attorney to accept service
nesoU: Commlsftlouer of Insurant-e.
CASH CAPIT.VL $730,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums received (Net —
Fidelity $282,579.96
Surety 8U4.323.67
Burglary and Theft 184,82L43
Total net premium Income
From Interest and rents
From aU otiier sources
Central National Fire InBurnnoe Com-
pany*
Principal office: 184 La Salle street,
Chicago. 111. (Organized In 1909.) James
13. Hobbs, president: F. M. Rice, secre-
tary. Attorney to accept service In Min-
nesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $300,000.
Income in 1910.
Premiums other than per-
petuals I
Rents and Interest
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turltr' or adjustment or
ledger assets ^•
in
Du-
Mln-
$1,271,725.06
89.3,MJ.fi9
2,986.00
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
East..
East..
M^wlm Ashland and
,« flO,« Ashland and
t?:»SSI:::..M»m. and Dakota fczpresi..
•B.06an.
. North Coait Limited..
Arrive.
.*II.ISam
. *6.40pm
,. •B.ISam
. •6.25pin
— r— - -uuluth Short Line"
Leave.
tO.OOan
• I.55PIM
•II lOpm
ST. PAUL.
illNNEAPOLIS
Arrive.
*6.30ain
. tZOSpn
. •7.00pm
ToUl Income
.$1,364,067.75
542.353.49
12.142.10
43.75
Total income f
December
554,539.34
630,9ff9.61
Ledger asseU Deo. 31 of previous year. .$2,579,571.84
DISBURSEMENTS
paid (Net)—
$ 42.715.05
191.067.91
50,762.83
Sum
IN 1910.
Claims
Ki.lellty
durcty
Burglary and theft
Net paid poUcyholders
Investigation and adjustment
Commissions
Ulvl. lends to stockholders
Salaries of officers, agents, employes
aminers' and Inspection fees
AU other disbursements
.$3,943,639.59
of claims. .
ex-
284.545.79
37.207.15
293.984.84
12'J,000.00
277.288.03
211,636.71
.$1,224,662.52
Ledger assets
3l3t of previous year
Sum » i.185.498.95
Dlsbuntementa In 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses • ♦
Expenses of adjustment
of losses ■ ■ • •
Commissions and broker-
age y-„\'
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes • :
Taxes, fees, rents and
Other real estate ex-
penses
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment or
ledger assets • • •
All other disbursements.
162,210.23
1,880.75
163,021.70
52,682,58
12,912.06
celvable, taken for pre-
miums • • • •
All other ledger assets. .
Total ledger assets( as
per balance) ♦ ^
Non-l<edKer Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued , . ♦
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks
over book value
All other non-ledger as-
sets
128,861
176
.08
.00
771.365.73
8,931.69
5,365
2,868
,51
,45
12,357.70
266.
21.159.
53
37
Total disbursements ..$
414,133.22
771,365
1010.
128,260
9,500
73
00
00
Gross assets ■} ,]}^P^^ •
Deduct Asseta Not Admitted.
Akents" balances » *.^o»
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value -5,148,
All other assets not ad-
mltted ^'^*<>
Total assets not admit-
ted *_
Total admitted assets. I
LlabUltics Dec. »1.
Unpaid losses and claims.!
Unearned premiums ....
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due ,•••'.•••
Reinsurance premluma . .
Capital stock paid o...
38
82
38
50
.68
776,173
1910.
24.076,77
281,970,80
20,511.83
19,456.80
300,000.00
each for himself that he. the said B. F.
Bradt, Is the President,, and that he,
the said H. G. Champlin, Is the becre-
tary, of the Great Northern Land Coni-
pany the corporation above named,
and that they have compared the fore-
going copy of the resolution with the
original resolution as adopted at the
meeting of the stockholders of said
Great Northern Land Company held at
the time and place above specined,
and nt>w In their legal custody, and
that the foregoing Is a true and cor-
rect coiiy of said resolution, and of the
whole thereof; and that the seal airlxea
to the said foregoing instrument is
the corporate seal of said corporation,
and was so affixed by them by due
authority. ^^^^^ bERGQUIST,
Notary Public,
St. Louis County, Minn.
(Notarial Seal.) 00 ini^
My commission expires Aug. 29, 1917.
State of Minnesota, Department of
State
I hereby certify that the within in-
strument was filed for record in this
office on the 12th day of April, A. D.
1911. at 9 o'clock A. M.. and was duly
recorded in Book U-3 of Incorporations,
on page HO-^^^^^ ^ SCHMAHL.
Secretary of State.
Administration
decedent be grant-
646,016.20
L>*3.i0pin
Lv*3.50pm
Ar
Ar 7.00am
LvTB^SOam
Lv 9.10am
Ar 4.30pm
Ar S.Oapm
•l):llly
Offn-e.
•6.13pm.
6.35pni.
7.45am.
8.15am.
. DuluUi .
. Superior .
Milwaukee
. Chicago .
Ar«8.25am ♦I2.20pn
Ar 7.53am ll.45«m
.Lv 7.45pm
.L» 6.25pm lO.IOpm
•4.35pm . . . Duluth .
4.55pm... Superior .
9.30pm.... St. Paul..
10. 25pm. Minneapolis
tUaily except Sunday.
302 West Superior St.
.Art 3.35pm
.Ar 3.05pm
..Lv 8.10am
.Lv 7.30am
, Duluth.
•9.55pm
9.3Spm
4.30pm
4.00pm
Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic.
Leave.
STATIONS.
Arrive.
t7 .45am
tS. I2am
te . 20am
Arrive.
t7.55pm
to. 35pm
t7.05pm
t7.45pm
•6.15pm... Uuluth
(rtoo Line Ufllou
•6 45»m... Superior
(Soo Line Union
•6.55pm... Superior ...
(Union Utvoi-t
...*l0.30am
Station.)
...•lO.OOsn
SUtlou.)
... •g.SOmm
• 10
•8 ouam.
•8. 20pm.
Leave.
t8.05am •8.15pm.
tlO.OVpm •lO.ZOua.
5.40*111.. Houghton
6.30am... Calumet .
*4 20am.. lihpeniing
•5.00am.. Maruuette ..,.„_
20amS>ult Sle. Marie •5.25pm
Montreal ... *9.50pm
..tllOOpm
..flO. lOpm
. .•12.20am
'1 1. 30pm
tS.40pm
tS.IOpm
tS.OOpm
Leave.
31.
..$2,718,977.07
1910.
..$2,042,420.50
banks 302.457.62
ilttJ.OiO.ul
, 75,088.44
ToUl dlsbursemenU
Balance
LEDGER ASSETS DEC
Book value of bonds and stocks
Cash In o<flce, trust companies and
Premiums In course of collections
AU other assets
ToUl ledger asseU (as per balance). .
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and nnts due and accrued...
Oross assets $2,733,223.60
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Premiums In course of coUecUon Ipast^ 10,29597
S^til deposii' 1^ ■ $28.581.97 ' liability: '. UIM3M
..$2,718,977.07
..$ 14.246.53
406,498.79
9«,070.86
Balance '^ • ' ' „.
liCdHrcr Assets Dec. 31,
Mortgage loans ♦
Collateral loans . . . .
Book value of bonds and
ft|Q^}^g •
Cash In office, trust com-
panies and banks.....
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
Fire Risks.
Risks written . ^^'Hlllttl
Premiums received 4^.»??-?'.
Losses Incurred »••
Losses paid - , =,7 Q07
Amount at risk l.^ii.Vii
Total liabilities, in-
cluding capital ,. ••••
Net surplus » 180,167.48
Risks and Premiums. 1910 Business.
(a) Fire risks written
during the year ,.,$ 47,035,131
Premiums received there-
on ivi.iia
Net amount in force at
end of the year 35.479,88^5
(a) Including business other
"Marine and Inland."
Duslncss In Minnesota In lOlOj .
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
.00
.21
.00
than
of March, 1911; leaving estate In the
County of St. Louis, Stale of Minne-
sota, and that said peti:loner is the
surviving spouse of said iecedent, ana
praying that Letters of
of the estate of said
ed to Joe Ahlin,
IT IS ORDKRED. That Said petition
be heard before this Court, at the
Probate Court Rooms in the t,ourt
House in Duluth, In sail County on
Monday, the Ist day of May. 1911. at
10 o'clock a m., and all i)erson3 Inter-
ested In said hearing and in said mat-
ter are hereby cited and required at
said time and place to show cause.
if any there be, why said petition
should not be granted.
ORDERED FURTHEF, That this
Order be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald according to law, and
that a copy of this Order be served
on the County Treasurer of St. Louis
County not less than ton days prior
to said day of hearing.
Dated at Duluth, Mi;in., April 4,
By the Court.
8. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate,
(Seal Probate Court, St. Louis County,
D.'"h..^ April 4. 11. 18. 1911.
Government
Survey thereof.
Applicant.
vs.
■W C Foster. Walter Van
Brunt, and Owen Fargusson,
and all other Person^ or par-
ties unknown, claiming any
right title, estate, lien or in-
tefesl In the real estate de-
scrfbed in the application
herein. Defendants.
The State of Minnesota to the
named defendants:
You are hereby summoned
Qulred to answer the appHcatlon^of the
applicant In the above
ceedlng and to file your
said application in the „„,.„»„
clerk of said court, in Bald county,
within twenty (20) days after the serv-
l^e of this suri^mons upon you, exclu-
l^ve of the day of such service, and,
vou fall to answer the said application
within the time aforesaid, the appll-
Tant^n this proceeding, will apply to
the court for the relief demanded
**^wttneBS J P. Johnson, clerk of said
court and the seal thereof, at Duluth.
laid county, this 8th day of AprlU
abov*
and re-
entitled pro-
answer to the
office of the
if
18,422.15
19,336.02
00
ToUl aseeU not
ToUl admitted
admitted » 249,339.00
asseU
LIABILITIES.
. .$2,483,384.60
State of Minnesota. Department of In-
TH^r'^eby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Central National Fire
Ii^surance Company, for the year end-
Hall. Tornado.
1101,430.00 I 80,400.00
6;068.17 463.86
1,102.46
1,102.46
108,676.00
Ing December 31st, 1910,
above Is an abstract, has
Aggregate.
11,607.614.00
27,917.69
19,524.61
20,438.48
1,646.612.00
of which the
been received
(168343)
OFFICE OF REGISTER OF DEEDS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
I hereby certify that the within In-
strument was filed in this office for
record April 15. 1911. at 12 M.. and was
duly recorded in Book 14 of Misc., page
183
M C. PALMER.
Register of Deeds.
By THOS. CLARK,
Deputy.
D. H., April 17 and 18. 1911.
Sale of School and
Other State Lands
in
A.
D. 1911.
J. P.
By J
Court, St.
and filed in this
approved by me.
Department and duly
J. A. O.
Commiss'oner of
PREUS.
Insurance.
. . Boston . ■
, Montreal . .
.New York..
.•10. 00am
.•lO.OOam
. '/.ISpm
tO.ZOam
tS.20ain
•8.20pm
•8.30am
tlO.OOpm
tS.SOam
Claims —
In process
llesisted ..
of adjtistment and reported.. $
129.470.89
223.859.41
I 353.330.10
'reinsurance 33.113.36
Total
Deduct
Nrt unpaid claims except UabUlty claU«i.$ 320.216.74
Unean.ed premiums ..... .• igsiSs?
Commissions and brokerage lo 46858
AU other llabUltles....... "••••••• llilloi
l.:xpet^es of investlgarion of cUhna...... 29 6^.01
CaplUl stock paid up iov.va«.v»
ToUl lUblUlles, Including capita.... $1.888.303.56
Leave.
tS.OOam [
•3.25pni <
• II. lOpm I
•8.45am f
••.55pm L
t2.20pm..
te.OOam..
THE GREAT NORTHERN
STATIONS.
Arrive.
ST.
PAUL
and
MINNEAPOLIS
Crooksion, CI rand Forks.
Montana and Coa.'t
Swan Klver. Ulbbing. Virginia.
St Cloud, WUmar, Sioux CUy.
tlO.ISpm
•1.55pm
•6.30am
•6.35pm
•7.15am
tl2.30pm
..flO.ISpm
•DaUy.
ready at 9
tDaUy
p. m.
except
Oflrice.
Sunday.
Spalding
Twin
hotel.
City sleeper
New Bulldini:
HOTELS.
New Equipment— Rates. $2 aad $2.N.
--^-B"Ji;Nl'^^"'iirNNEs6TAVN!9l'o'^-";^-^^
Dwoin «« Premiums llecelved. Losses Paid.
Fldelty and surety »"f0-65 »1M08.?1
Burglary and theft 5.8-5.38
TOUU $54,796.01
377.14
$13,786.05
Of
State of Minnesota. Department of Insurance.
I Ifcreby Certify. That the Annual Statement
.hf T^!!rican Bonding Company of BalUmore. for
Z vtTr ending DeceSiber 3lst. 1910. of which the
the year '""''^jj^^j „,, been received and tiled In
approved by me.
J. A. O. PBEU3.
Commissioner of Insurance.
liBOAIi NOTICES.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, "county OF
ST. LOUIS— ss.
We E F Bradt and H. Q. ChampUn,
who are respectively the President and
i^ppretarv or the GREAT NOKTHI^kn
l\nd COMPANY, a corporation duly
created, organized and existing under
and by virtue of the laws of <-he btatc
Sf Minnesota, do hereby certify that at
a special meeting ot the stockholders
of said company, held at room number
413 Palladlo Building, in tJie city of
Duluth, St. Louis ^ County. Minnesota,
on the 11th day of April. 1911,
o" clock
the
above Is an ...
this Department and duly
Hotel McKay
Cernar First St.
and Fifth Ave. West, DULUTH.
AdelpHi Hotel
sad'
I0l>
■sw
2»0 1 -2803-2805 Welt Superior Street
J. B. DUNPHY, Prop.
Belt equipped, steam-heated, hotel in West
,:»?n. all modern conveelsnce.: new buildiag:
tau.pmont. Buffet In eonBeetlea.
BATES. $5.00 PER
WEEK AND UP.
Read The
HeraldWants
Imperial Hotel
Thoroughly modern and up-to-date
In every respect.
ROOMS, T5c AND UP.
200-208 West Su|»erl«« Stre«t.
at 5:30
P M held pursuant to written
waiver of notice of said meeting, and
the express written consent to
holding of said meeting at said time
2nd plfce and to the transaction of^any
and all business thereat, at which
meeting there were Pre^en* stockhold-
ers representing seven thousand (7.000)
shares out of a total number of ten
fho^ullnd (10,000) shares of stock Issued
and outsUndlng. the following reso-
lution was duly adopted by the unani-
mous vote of seven thousand (7,000)
ahares of stock of said corporation
oit of a total issue of ten thousand
(10.000) shares of stock .Issued fnd
outstanding, being a maJo'^'y °' *" ,f
the shares of stock Issued and out-
standing, which said reso ution is In
the words and figures following, to-
wit: ^ ^
RESOLVED, That Article VII of the
certificate of incorporation of the
Great Northern Land Company duly
recorded in the office of the Secretary
of State of the State of Minnesota
November 12th. 1910. at Nine o'clock
A. M , in Book T-3 of Incorporations.
oii page 441 thereof, be and it is hereijy
amended by striking out therefrom the
words Twenty-five Thousand (|25,000>
Dollars In the last line thereof, arid
iisertlng in place thereof the word^
One Hundred Thousand Dollars (jlOO.-
000). so that when said article is
amended It shall read as follows:
ARTICLE Vn.
The highest amount of indebtedness
or liability to which this corporation
shall at any time be subject shall be
the sum of One Hundred Thousand
Dollars (|100,000). _^ ^. .
RESOLVED FURTHER. ^ That
President and Secretary of this
poratlon be and they are
structed and directed to
cording to law a certificate a^,^,„
showing said amendment to Article
VII. and cause said certificate to be
duly filed, recorded and published as
"^^I^N TI?STmONY WHEREOF. We have
hereunto subscribed our names respec-
tively as President and Secretary, and
caused the corporate seal of said cor-
poration to be hereunto affixed tnia
lltu day of April, 1911.
' E. F. BRADT.
President.
H. O. CHAMPLIN,
Secretary.
(Great Northern Land Company Cor-
porate Seial.)
In presence of:
JULIA BERGQUIST. .^
LOUIS M. BERGQUIST.
the
cor-
hereby In-
execute ac-
in due form
STATE
iter's
ORDER FOR HEARING ON PETITION
FOR ADMINISTRATION—
State of Minnesota, County ot St. Louis
— ss.
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of Paul
Paulson, Decedent.
THE PETITION of Henna Kort^ of
Virgina, Minnnesota, having been filed In
this Court, representing, among other
things, that Paul Paulson, then being a
resident of the County of St. Louis,
State of Minnesota, died Intestate, in
the County of St. Louis, State of Min-
nesota, on the 11th day of March, 1911:
leaving estate in the County of S^
Louis, State of Minnesota, and that said
petitioner Is the guardian of the minor
heirs of said decedent, and prayIng
that Letters of Aamlnlstration of the
estate of said decedent be granted to
"^"iT ll°ORDERED, That said petition
be heard before this Court, at the Pro-
bate Court Rooms in the Court House
In Duluth, in said County, on Monday,
the Ist day of May, 1911. at ten o clock
A M.. and all persons Interested In said
hearing and in said matter are hereby
cited and required at said time and
place to show cause. If any there be,
why said petition should not be granted.
ORDERED FURTHER. That this Or-
der be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald according to law, and
that a copy of this Order be served on
th^ County Treasurer of St. Louis
County not less than ten days prior to
said day of hearing.
Dated at Duluth. Minn., April 3rd,
1911
By the court. ^ ^^^^^^
Judge of Probate.
(Seal, Probate Court. St. Louis Co..
D.ii""April 4. 11. 18, 1911.
ORDER FOR HEARING ON PETITION
FOR ADMINISTRATION—
State Of Minnesota, County of St Louis
OP MINNESOTiL. State Aud-
^^^°^- St. Paul. April 8, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that on May
17. 1911. at 10 o'clock A. VL. in tjie of flee
of the County Auditor, at Duluth. bt.
Louis County^ In the State of Minne-
sota. I win offer for sale certain unsold
state lands, and also those state lands
which have reverted to the State by
reason of the non-paymimt of Interest.
Terms: Fifteen per c« nt of the pur-
chase price and Interest on the unpaid
balance from date of sale to June ist.
1912. must be paid at the time of sale.
The balance of purchase money Is pay-
able in whole or in part on or before
forty years from date ol sale; the rate
Interest on the unpild balance Is
Seal of District
ty, Minn.)*
J. B. RICHARDS.
Attorney for Applicant
D H., April 11, 18 and 25.
JOHNSON,
Clerk.
MOODY.
Deputy.
Louis Coun-
S.
1911.
CITY NOTICES.
OFFICE 0F~THE~'C0MPTR0LLER---
City of Duluth. April 18th, 1911.
^is hereby given that an as-
levied to defray in full the
of constructing a sanitary.
Fourth street in said city
200 feet east of Tenth
to a point 250 feet west
avenue west with outlet
west to the sewer
according to benefits,
at the office of the
of
in
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
On%hls 11th day of April, 1911. bo-
fore me, a Notary Public, ^'ih'"*"^
for said county, personally appeared
E F. Bradt and H. G. Chaniplln to tne
personally known to be the persons
who executed the foregoing Instrtiment
and acknowledged the same to be
their free act and deed; ^^"^ "^jf^ J^i"^
by me first duly sworn, on oatU did say
four per cent per annv m. payable
advance on June 1st of jach year, pro-
vided, the principal remiilns unpaid for
ten years; but if the principal if paid
within ten years from dite of sale, the
rate of interest will bs computed at
five per cent per annum.
Appraised value of limber. If any,
must also be paid at time of sale.
Lands on which the ir terest is delin-
quent may be redeemed at any time up
to the hour of sale, or Jiefore resale to
an actual purchaser.
All mineral rights a-e reserved by
the laws of the State. All sales of
land will be made subjjct to the pro-
visions of Chapter 90. General Laws of
1911
Lists of lands to be offered may be
obtained of the State Auditor or the
State Commissioner of immigration at
St Paul, and of the County Auditor al
above addres^s^^^^^ ^ IVERSON.
Istate Auditor.
Aprtl 11. 1«. 25 and May 2. 1911.
Notice
sessment
expense
sewer In
from a point
avenue west
of Eleventh
in Eleventh avenue
In Third street,
Is now payable
City Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per
be added If payment is not made on or
Sifore May 16th, 1911, and the said as-
sessment will then bear interest at
?he^i?e of sir (6) per cent from
Am-ll 15th 1911. to date of payment.
April 16 tn, '■^'^'^ g MCCORMICK.
City Comptroller.
(Seal of City Comptroller, Duluth,
Minnesota.)
D. H., April 18. 25, 1911.
cent will
D 592.
Notice
sessment
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLBR--
City of Duluth, April 18th, 1911.
is hereby given that an om-
levled to defray In full the
cvnpnsA of constructing a sanitary
lewer In Seventh street in said city
from Third avenue west to Second ave-
nue west with outlet m Second avenue
west to seventh alley, according to
benefits, is now payable at the office
of the City Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be abided if payment is not made on or
blf^re May 16th, 1911, and the said as-
sessment will then bear Interest at the
rate of six (6) per cent from April
15th. 1911. to date^of^payment^^^
City Comptroller.
(Seal of City Comptroller. Duluth,
Minnesota.) ^„
D. H.. April 18. 25. 1911. D 5>0.
D. H.
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate
Ravnlkar. Decedent. _ ,,
THE PETITION OF Vlsula Ravnlkar
Elba. Minnesota, having been filed
this Court. representing, among
othe? thugs':'' that; Frank ^ Ravnikar
then being a resident of the county
St. Lotfls, State of Minnesota
of
in
of Frank
of
intestate.
State of
in the County
Minnesota, on
died
of St. Louis,
the 4th day
SUMMONS IN APPLICATION FOR
REGISTRATION OF :-AND—
State of Minnesota, Couaty of St. Louis.
Distrfct Court. Eleven tl Judicial Court
In the matter of the applica-
tion of The Onarock C!ompany,
a corporation, to re.qlster the
title to the following de-
scribed real estate sl_.uated in
St Louis County. Minnesota,
namely: The south half of
the southeast quart* r (b. Vt
of S B. H) of Section Nine
(9) in Township Fifty (i>0)
north of Range Fourteen (14)
west of the Fourth Principal
Meridian, containing Kighty
(80) acres, more or less,
cording to the Unltijd
OFBICE OF THE COMPTROLLER--
Clty of Emluth, April I8th. l!#ll.
Notice is hereby given that an
sessment levied to defray in part
expense of grading., paving and
wise improving Tenth avenue
said City from Fourth street
street According to benefits.
tho
other-
east in
to Sixth
Is now
fiLC"
states
payable at the office of the City
Tpen^ity of ten (10) per cent will
H« added if payment is not made on op
bIfSre May 16th, 1911. and the said
assessment' will then bear Interest •*
the rate of six (6) per cent from
ArVril 15th. 1911. to date of payment
April i&tn, X. .^ ^ Mccormick,
city Comptroller.
(Seal of City Comptroller. Dulutlw
Minnesota.) ,
D. H., April 18. li. mi. D 591.
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18
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, IMl.
Li
f I
I i
LAKESIDE, EAST END,
HILLSIDE HOMES
Beantiftil five, six, seven and eight-room homes at Lakeside
— fme locations ; easy terms. .
CITY HOMES on every street, above and below Superior
street. A large list of all kinds and sizes. Prices range from
$1,000 to $15,000.
GOOD INVESTMENTS in duplex houses and flats— some
good propositions where you can live in part of the house and
get an income from the balance.
GREENFIELD
310-11 COLUMBIA BUILDING.
*»?.?s^-
STORES FOR RENT IN
FIDELITY BUILDING
NEW, FIRE-PROOF, MODERN.
Show window space on Superior street, in
heart of shopping district.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
WOLVIN BUILDINS, DULUTH, MINN.
SIX-ROOM HOUSE on Eleventh avenue east, near Third street,
stone foundation, hot air furnace, electric lights, water, sewer,
bath, gas for cooking, full cement basement, mantel grate, hard-
wood floors downstairs ; lot 40x50 feet. Favorable
terms. Price
$3,000
R. P. DOWSE & CO.
GENERAL INSURANCE.
106 Providence Bldg
$SOO CASH
S2^.00 F»ER IVfONXH,
sixth street; bath, gas, electric lights. Rent, J22.o0.
Buys a five-room house on Seventh avenue east and
You should not miss this opportunity
to get a flne little home.
Price
c cast aiiu
$2,500
SMALL MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
Will Luy you a lot In
Why don't you make a start
towards a home?
LAKESIDE LAND CO.,
SOl-2-3-4-5 SrllTrood Buildlns.
PHONES, 408.
MONEY TO LOAN
ON REAL ESTATE
6EST CONTRACT- 1£A5T QDSh
You can get a
truck farm on
Lake Nebaga-
mon on little
payments IF
you apply NOW.
Burg Acreage Jt Townsite Co.,
joo 1 Alwortli Bldg.
U. U. iiS It
FARM LANDS
In ten, twenty, forty and elghtv-
acre tracts, handy to Duluth, suit-
able for truck gardening, poultry
raising and dairy purposes; good
soli;. plenty of timber for building
and fuel. Prices and terms reason-
able.
All of section 7, township ."SO,
range 19, near Gowan, suitable for
stock farm; good soil; small lake.
$4,000, half cash, balance easy terms.
A. W. KUEHNOW
403-4 Colambla Bldg.
LISXEIV!
When You Want
MONEY
At ihe lowest prevailing rates
and want it quickly — see our
Loan l.'e^artment.
W.M.PmNDLE&CO.
Lonsdale Buildlns.
T.W.TILKE
8EAlE$1ITEANDIN5illAf(a
CODY HOTEL CORNCi
——J CODY HOTEL CORNEI
It ^SgJ
THE
COM INC
SPOT
fcl/lS5tiJ
$280 Each
Ea s y terms.
Owner must sell
several flne level
lots, three blocks
from Flfty-
seventh avenue
car line. Street
improved, wa t e r
and sewer. An op-
portunity comes
once in every
mans life — this
is yours.
Investmenti Sacrifice
and Home Combined
Kast Knd — 50x140 feet — Three
HoiiseM — Two In rear and one in
front, stone foundations; hot water,
heating plants, concrete walks;
beautiful neighborhood. Owner
must sacrifice. Cash «4,500, balance
of $3,750 long time. Another big
snap — 25x140 feet, two houses, all
modern, heating plants; all fi.xture.s,
and shades go with this deal. Don't
miss this snap — 95,250.
THE SMITH REALTY CO.,
.'S;:4 Mnnliatt
Bld«.
02100— rSix-room house with bath.
3223 West Third St.. hardwood
floors, city water, gas, $400
cash, balance monthly payments.
$2000 — Five-room Tiouse with
bath, 3227 West Third street,
hardwood floors, city water, gas,
$300 cash, balance monthly
payments.
PULFORD, ROW & GO.
609 Ahvorlh Bldg.
FOR RENT!
OFFICES IN LYCEUM BUILDING.
Fire-Proof— Dewlrable.
LITTLE & MOLTE. «cnts.
N^h^k^k^^^^^^^^«^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>^>^>^k^«^<;
STRYKER, MANLEV
_A BUCK— I
& BUCK
IN ONE OF THE BE«)T LOCATIONS
at the West end, we offer a brick
building containing four flats of
five rooms and bath electric light
and gas, hardwood floors through-
out and hardwood finish in main
rooms. The lot is 50x140 foot,
and there is a two-flat building
on the rear. The total rental is
$127 per month. Price $13,000
ON SECOND AVENIE WEST — near
Fourth street, a seven-room house
with bath, gas, laundry tub, gas
range and hardwood floors down-
stairs. Price 93,000
on very easy terms, monthly pay-
ments if desired. — (5757).
ON TWELFTH AVENUE EAST —
near Third street, a seven-room
house with bath, electric light,
gas in kitch'en, hardwood floors
throughout — on very reasonable
terms at $3,000
— (3076).
«^^k^t^k^t^k^t^kM^t^k^>^^>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^W
EAST END LOTS
We have lots in the East End
on East Fourth, Jefferson, Lon-
don Road, East Superior, and the
Normal School District, at prices
that will interest you.
Why not buy a lot in this most
desira;ble resident district and
build a house that will suit you?
CLARKE-WERTIN CO.
200 Alworth Bldg.
EAST END HOUSE
A BARGAIN!
Six-room frirne house — city
water, sewer, aad gas, hardwood
floors; corner loC25xlOO.
C.A.KNIRPENBERG
300 Alwortfa Building.
ADDITIONAL WANTS
From Pages ]Lr and 20.
SPECIAL UNO BARGUNS !
»85 AN ACRE buys thirty-two
acres close to the pumping sta-
tion.
$7.50 AN ACRE buys 400 acres
close to Adolph — vrorth Juat
t^vlee!
TWO FORTIES a few miles from
the end of the Lakeside car
line, suitable for sub-dividing —
for sale cheap!
EBERT, WALKER & MeKNIGHT CO.
^SpeclallMta in Rapid Denl«.*'
315 TORRE Y BIILU1.\G.
D. H., 4-18-11.
TWO CHOICE LOTS
HUNTERS PARK
Lot 50x175 feet, worth $1,200: can
be bought NOW ^ft7Q
Lot 50x200 feet, in center of be.st
residence district; our ^ <f A #> A
price NO\^' 9 JL W W
c. E. roe:
412 Providence Building.
FOR SALE— REAL ESTATE.
FOR SALE — HALF-ACRE TRACTS,
175 and up, in the Seventh ward
garden division, located twelve
blocks up from -Piedmont avenue car
line, facing Morris Thomas road.
The new Hutchinson road runs
through this land. Part of the land
is clear and ready for cultivation.
Inquire from the owners, Karl J.
Hagberg, 9 Twentieth avenue west,
or Andrew Bergquist, 404 Exchange
building.
FOR SALE — FINE SEVEN- ROOM
house; bath, toilet, full basement,
stone foundation: small cash pay-
ment, balance mon'thly. Address
- C 220, Herald.
FOR SALE — WE HAVE A FEW DE-
sirable lots in West Duluth that we
will sell on easy weekly or monthly
payments. Whitney Wall company
301 Torrey building.
P'OR SALE — OWNER WILL SELL
eighty feet on East Second street; a
splendid building site, in best part
of city, at a snap. Address K 212,
Herald.
MONEY TO LOAN.
» MONEY ON CI:EDIT. ||
II SOMETHING VEW. ||
II 110 upward, for hosuekeepers, ||
I workhigmen and silaried em- i|
I J ployes, at charges ihat honest li
II people can afford to pay. 11
11 ^ DULUTH LOAN CJMPANY. ||
II Cor. Third Ave. W, and Sup. St.. ||
II 307 Columbia Bldg. ||
f ',.... Old 'phone, Melrose 2355. ||
8!!i|t$$$|||$$ss$$$»<$$»mi;$^|;;};H|||
l^***^ptt#^*;^^t^^-^*-^^-^
LEONARD G. FERGUSON,
AGENT
408 COLUMBIA BUILDING
)
CROSBY, MINN.,
The Metropolis ot the Cuyuna Iron
Rausre
NO MINERAL. HE.SERVATIONS
When you buy a lot in Crosby
you get a deed not only to the sur-
face rights but to any minerals
that may be found under it, thus
insuring a permanent location where
you can afford to spend money to
build up a business, and make it
your home town.
For particulars see
GEORGE H. Crosby;
008 liOnadale Buildlnv, Dnluth, Minn
or CroMby, Minn.
Milwaukee German Fire Inaurance
Company.
Principal office: Milwaukee, Wla. (OrBanlMd in
1905.) KdwanI .SchroeOer, president: Al F. Pray.
»ecretarT. Attorney to acctpt service in Minnesota:
CommisioMer of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, $200,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Prfmlums other than perpetuals $
Rents and inttrest
Gross profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
From all other sourcea
FOR SALE— AN ELEGANT 80 BY 80
West end lot; all Improvements; a
sacrifice. See the Smith Realty
company, 524 Manhattan building.
FOR SALE — 100 BY 140 FEET, SEG-
ond street and Twenty-fifth avenue
east; also ten single lots on Park
Point and one large cottage, with
tents known as "Camp Orlanao." G.
S. Richards, 5 South Fifth avenue
west. 'Phones.
FOR SALE— EAST END 50-FOOT LOT,
three houses all thoroughly modern
and new; must sacrifice; splendidly
arranged; half cash. See the Smith
Realty company, 624 Manhattan
building.
100,229.54
11.974.26
40.00
.79
ToUl Income I 112.244.59
Ledger asseta Dec. 31 of previous year..t 291.169.47
Sum t 403,414.00
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses I 47,916.65
Rxi>enses of adiuftmeQt of losses 1,001.20
C'cmmlsslons and brokerage 25.928.08
Salaries and fees of ufficen, agents and
employes 15,303.25
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses 2,830.64
All other disbursements 6,185.77
Total disbursements $
99.255.59
WE ARE BUILDING
MANAGERS .
We rent and collect rents and
give improved property th*e proper
care. You are invited to investigate
our system. We want your buMl-
uess.
Whif ney Wall Companyi
REAL ESTATE, LOANS AND FIRE
INSIRANCB.
301 Torrev Bnlldinff.
Balance t 304,158.47
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Mortgage loans I 197.750.00
Book value cf bonds and stocks 65,850.00
Casli lu office, trust companies and
b.inlts 1P,581.04
Agents' balances, unpaid pnmluma and
bills receiTable, taken for premiums. . . 18,027.88
All other ledger assets 2,949.55
FOR SALE— TWO PARK POINT LOTS
only three blocks from aerial bridge;
corner and inside; very cheap; easy
terms. A. G. Messer, 117 North *• if-
teenth avenue east; Melrose 650
and 439.
SPRING IS HERE
It you want money in a" hurry
SEE US.
Our rates are the cheapest
Our payment plan the best.
,- , ^ Call and be convinced. -«,
« LOANS ON SALARY. I'URNITURE *
* DULUTH FINANCE CO. *
* 301 Palladio ]31dg. ' ^
7^ Open .Saturday Evenings. -j,'.
CITY AND VILLAGE LOANS IN MIN-
nesota. Buy or build a home on
monthly payments. C. A. Knippen-
berg, 300 Alworth Bldg. 'Phones 597
WE LOAN ON ALL KINDS OP PER-
Bonal security at lowi'st rates. Call
on us, 430 Manhattan Bldg., and get
rates. Duluth Mortgage Loan Co. W
Horkan. New 1598-D; Melrose 3733!
WE MAKE FARM LO.VNS ON VAL-
uable, productive and cultivated
lands. No delay; prompt attention.
Snyder Bros., 210 Went First street.
TO LOAN— 115,000 IN SUMS TO SUIT,
on real estate. Lane, MacGregor &
Co.. 400 Alworth building.
MONEY SUPPLIED TO SALARIED
people, women keeping house and
others, upon their own names witn-
out security; easy payments. Tolman,
509 Palladio building.
MONEY TO LOAN ON CITY PROPER-
ty; lowest rates; sriall and large
amounts. Scott-Kreidler company,
405 Central avenue. Both 'phones.
FOR SALE — SIX-ROOM HOUSE AND
two acres; two blocks from car line;
$1,800; easy terms. Address W 57,
Herald.
FOR SALE — A FEW GOOD LOTS,
well located; dheap for cash. See
the Smith Realty company, 524 Man-
hattan building.
FOR SALE— CHOICE BUILDING LOT,
upper side London road. East end; a
bargain for quick sale at price away
below adjoining propetry. For in-
formation address C 379, Herald.
FOR SALE — 50 BY 140 FEET, NORTH-
west corner Twenty-third avenue
west and Fourth street. Apply Mu-
tual Electric company.
MONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS,
watches, furs, rifles etc, and all
goods of value, |1 to |1,500. Key-
stone Loan & Mercantile Co. 22 West
Superior street.
MONEY TO LOAN— LOANS MADE ON
timber and farm land). John Q. A.
Crosby, 305 Palladio building.
Money to loan — Any amount; low rates.
Cooley & Underbill, 2C9 Exchange.
"'IX PER CENT INTEREST ON SMALL
real estate loans; mcney on hand;
prompt service. F. I. Salter com-
pany, Lonsdale building.
Total ledger assets dm ber balance).. $ 304.158.47
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents dtie wkI accrued 3,308.62
Gross assets S 307,467.09
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances ) 677.18
All other a&sets not admitted 3. 949.55
Total assets not admitted $
3,626.73
Total admltte<l asset!- $ 303,840.38
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpaid lo.sMs and i-luims $ 6.493.39
Unearned premiums 81,205.88
8al.irle9, expenses, taste, dividends and
interest due 2,004.59
CaplUl stock paid up 200,000.00
Total liabilities, including capital $ 289,703.86
Net sun'lus t 14,136.50
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fins rifcka written during the year $10,237,479.00
Premiums received Unreon 130,'2'2.43
Net amount In force at end of the year. .$12, 020, .''86. 00
* — Including busliicae other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting ra-
insurance placed.)
' Fire Risks. Aggregate.
lUsks written ..$1,169,1:06.00 1,011.456.00
Premiums recelred 15,292.29 15,517.13
Losses incurred 8,628.79
Lo^is paid 8,862.l<9
Amount at risk 1,467.842.00
^^^^^«^^>^^t^^t^>^^^^«^h^^^^^^^^^^^^>^
f1,400 — For 108 feet on Woodland
avenue near Kent road, or will
sell inside 50 feet for 9650.
92,S00 — We have one six-room house
at Tenth avenue east and Eighth
street with water, sewer, bath,
gas, electricity, hardwood floors,
just being flnished, which we will
sell on very small cash payment
and balance in small monthly
payments; lot 25 by 140 feet.
EBY & GRIDLEY,
515 Palladio Daildingr.
Park Point
Lots.
Camping time is almost here. Own
a lot and summer on the Point.
We offer Ave 40x100 lots; Torrens
title. Easy terms. On Minnesota
and Lake avenues, from Eighteenth
to Twenty-seventh street.
Price 1350 and $400 each.
J. D. HOWARD & CO.,
216 West Superior Street
state of Minnesota. Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual SUtement of
the Milwaukee (ierman Fire Insurance Company, fot
the year ending December 31st. 1910. of wlilch the
above la an abstract, has been received and filed in
ttiis Department and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner cf Insurance.
FOR SALE — TWO LOTS. SEVEN-
teenth avenue east; water, sewer and
gas on lots; no rock; $850. See
Schwleger at A. B. Siewert & Co.
FOR SALE— THE MO.ST DESIRABLE
double corner In the Normal school
district. See Chan Smith, 465 Tor-
rey building.
FOR SALE — LOT 5, BLOCK 26,
Endion, between Twenty-second and
Twenty-third avenue, London road,
going for $660. C. B. Woodruff.
FOR SALE — A LOT 50 BY 75 FOR
only $600; five blocks from new
courthouse; easy terms. See Chan
Smith, 405 Torey building.
FOR SALE — FIVE CHOICE BUILD-
ing lots in New Duluth. adjacent to
the new steel plant. Will be sold at
- a great bargain to close an estate.
F. C. Drenning, 221 Providence build,
ing.
FOR SALE— LOTS. HOUSES. ACRES;
investments that pay dividends every
month. Talk with Flder, 18 Thii-d
avenue west.
FOR SALE— TWO FINE, LEVEL LOTS
on Tenth street, near Tenth avenue
east. Can be bought cheap; small
cash payment, balance monthly. W.
E. Wright, 303 Palladio. Melrose,
1333.
DRESSMAKING.
MISS GRAY'S SCHOOL OF GARMENT
cutting and making; practical;
terms reasonable; patterns to order
a specialty. Third flaor, Gray-Tal-
lant company.
FOR RENT — STORE, 1829 WEST su-
perior street; well adopted for
plumbing establishment. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT— $25 PER MONTH FOR 402
East Superior street; possession im-
mediately or May 1. H. J. Mullin, 403
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — MODERN STORE. FINB
front, 25x60 feet, basement and sec-
ond floor. Third avenue east and Su-
perior street. See H. J. Mullin. 403
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — STORE ON WEST SU-
perior street, between Third and
FourtJi avenues west. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey building.
FOR RENT — HALL; NINETEENTH
avenue west and First street, inquire
214 Axa building.
FOR RENT — A FEW CHOICE OF-
nces in the Torrey building; best of
janitor and elevator service. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR RENT— HALF OP STORE, 1«
East Superior street; four-year lease
If desired: rent reasonable. Botti
'phones, 717.
FOR RENT— IDEAL PLACE FOR MIL-
llnery or clothing store. Sixteenth
avenue west and Superior street.
New building, tile entrance, steel
celling, hardwood floors, F. I. Salter
company.
FOR RENT— STORE ROOM AT 242.1
West Superior street, $20; four-room
flat upstairs, with bath, $10.
FOR RENT — FULL STORE AND BASE-
ment, suitable for grocery or meat
market, etc.; moderate rent. First
avenue west and Fourth street. Chas.
P. Craig & Co.. 501-505 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— HALF OF OFFICE. OR
desk room. 401 Columbia building.
WANTED TO BUY.
WANTED TO BUY — A LARGE OR
small tract of land tor investment.
I 69, Herald. ,
WANTED TO BUY— SINGLE HEAVY
harness. Inquire 1127 West Michi-
gan street.
HAIR DRESSING I'ARLORS.
G. Molsan is the only French hair dres-
ser in Duluth. Export in making
wigs, toupees and hair dye. Switches
and puffs made from 4;ombings. Mall
orders promptly filled. 212 W. let St
STOVE REPAIRS.
WE CARRY IN STOCK REPAIRS FOR
10,000 different stoves and ranges. C.
F. Wiggerts & Son, 410 East Supe-
rior street. Both 'phonea.
TIMBER LANDS.
TIMBER AND CUT-OVER LANDS
bought; mortgage loan is made. John
Q. A. Crosby, 305 Palladio building.
FOR SALii:- FORTY ACRES LAND,
all white pine and sprvce timber. In-
quire 70d Hammond avonue, Superior.
Wis,
I buy standing timber; also cut-over
lands. Geo. Rupley, 615 Lyceum bldg
MINERAL LANDS.
EBERT, WALKER & McKNIGHT CO.,
315 Torrey bldg., offers unusual op-
portunities for big profit in mineral
lands on Cuyuna and Vermilion ranges
Ten acres, 2% miles from car line;
nice level land, easily cleared; just
the place for gardening and chicken
ranch. $100 cash, balance, $10 per
month. Price «500.
Twenty acres, near the city; good
soil, lays well, in Hermantown on
Maple Grove road. Price, 9l,00O.
$200 cash, balance, terms to suit.
164 acres, well improved, on Cuy-
una range; good mineral prospects.
Cheap at fSOOO.
We write fire insurance. Reliable
companies.
LOCKER DONAHUE CO.
416-17 Loniidale Bnlldlas.-
LEGAL NOTICES.
ORDER OF HEARING ON PETITION
FOR LICENSE TO SELL, MORT-
G.\GE OR LEASE LAND BY REP-
RESENTATIVE OR GUARDIAN—
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis.
— ss.
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of George
Wood, Ella May Wood and Clarence
Wood and Clayton Wood, wards.
THE PETITION OF Louise E. Wood
as representative of the above named
wards, having been filed in this Court,
repre.senting, among other things, that
for reasons stated in said petition, it is
necessary and for the best interests of
the estate of said wards and of all
persons interested therein, to sell cer-
tain lands of said minors in said peti-
tion described and praying that license
be to Louise E. Wood granted to sell
the said land:
IT IS ORDERED, That said petition
be heard before this Court, at the Pro-
bate Court Rooms in the Court House,
in Duluth, In said County, on Monday,
the 15th day of May, 1911, at ten
o'clock A. M., and all persons interest-
ed in said hearing and in said matter
are hereby cited and required_at said
time and place to show cause, if any
there be, why said petition should not
be granted.
ORDERED FURTHER. That this or-
der be served by publication In The
Duluth Herald, according to law.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 17th,
1911.
By the Court,
S. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal Probate Court, St. Louis County,
Minn.)
D. H., April 18, 25 and May 2, 1911.
MEDICAL.
LADIES — $1,000 REWARD! I Posi-
tively guarantee my great successful
•"Monthly" remedy. Safely relieves
some of the longest, most obstinate,
abnormal cases in three to" five days.
No harm, pain or interference with
work. Mail, $1.50. Double strength,
$2. Dr. L. M. Sougthlnton & Co,
Kansas City. Mo.
FOR SALE — 40 ACRES LAND. ALL
white pine and spruc<i timber. In-
quire <09 Hammonnd avenue, Supe-
rior, Wis.
WANTED TO BUY— HAVE CUSTO.MER
for inside business property between
tFirst avenue east and Seventh avenue
west on Superior or First street.
What have you? Twin Ports Realty
company.
WANTED TO BUY— WHITE STEAM-
er touring car; must be reasonable;
state equipment and price. Care of
Herald, W 61.
WANTED TO BUY— ROUND PEDES-
tal table; must be in good condition
and reasonable. Address W. care
Herald.
WANTED TO BUY— A HOME IN THE
East end; we have customers for all
kinds from the lowest priced to the
highest. Have you anything to of-
fer? Whitney Wall company. 301
Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY— TWENTY, FORTY
or eighty-acre improved or unim-
proved farms; if you have anything
for sale bring it in. Whitney Wall
company. 301 Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY — HIGHEST PRICES
paid for ro«n's old clothing. Phoenix
Dry Cleaning Co. Zenith. 18o2-X.
10 Fourth avenue west.
Wanted to Buy — Highest price for cast*
off men's clothing. N. Stone, 213 W.
Ist St Melrose 1834; Zenith 1134-0.
We buy second-hand furniture and
stoves. Lincoln 295 -X. 1629 W. Sup. st.
Homesteads and timber claims located.
From 40 to 80,000 acres of timber
lands for sale. 401 Pslladio Bldg.
WANTED TO RENT.
WANTED TO RENT— BY MAY 1,
three or four-room hoase, for small
family; state price and location. S
365. Herald.
WANTED TO RENT--FURNISHED
rooms for two gentlemen; centrally
located. Address Herald. K 47.
WANTED TO RENT— SldALL FARM,
suitable for truck gardening. R. D.
Bigelow, Eveleth, Minn.
WANTED TO BUY — OLD CLOTHES,
auto and carriage tires. 328 East Su-
perlor street. Zenith 2013-D.
WANTED TO BUY — FOR CASH,
rooming house, hotel or would con-
sider some other business. Call at
once. 509 Torrey building.
SEEDS, PLANTS, TREES.
FOR SALE— TREES AND SHRUBS,
plants and flowers; gardening done
bv the day or contract. Call G, li.
Mercer, Mel. 3545.
WAT€UES REPAIRED.
Guaranteed Main Springs, $1.00; watch
cleaned. $1. Garon Bros.. 213 W. 1st.
AMENDMENTS OF
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
— OF—
GRAY-TALLANT COMPANY.
MONEY TO LOAN
5, 5H and 0 per etnt.
FIRE INSURANCE
Old Reliable Compaalea.
REAL ESTATE
Monthly Payment Plan.
COOLEY & UNDERHfU,
200-10-11 BzchaBKe Bolldlaff.
The undersigned hereby certify that
at a special meeting of the stockholders
of Gray-Tallant Company, a corpora-
tion organized under the laws of the
State of Minnesota, held at the office of
said Company at number 117 West Su-
perior street, in the city of Duluth,
Minnesota, on the 4th day of April,
1911, at which meeting more than four-
fifths of the stockholders of said Com-
pany, in number and amount, were
present or represented by proxy, and
wlilch stockholders' meeting was duly
and regularly called by proper notice
duly given each stockholder, in which
notice the purpose of said meeting was
specified, it was duly and unanimously
resolved as follows:
Resolved, That the articles of incor-
poration of Gray-Tallant Company be,
and the same hereby are, amended as
follows:
First, that Article I be, and hereby is,
amended so as to read as follows:
ARTICLE L
"The name of this corporation shall
be "George A. Gray Company.' "
Second, that Article VII be, and is
hereby, amended as follows:
By striking out from said Article
the following words: "which shall be
held on the second Monday in January
in each and every year."
Third, that a new Article shall be,
and hereby is, Inserted immediately
following said Article VII. which new
Article shall be Quno^iered VIII and read
as follows:
ARTICLE VIIL
"The annual ^meeUns of the stock-
.ja
holders of this corporation shall be
held on the 10th day of February in
each and every year at two o'clock
P M.. except that when said date falls
©n Sunday, said meeting shall be held
on the 11th day of February at two
o'clock P. M." , ^ „ ., .
In witness whereof, Gray-Tallant
Company has caused these presents to
be subscribed and sworn to by its
president and its secretary, and has
caused its corporate seal to be here-
unto affixed this lOth day of April,
1911.
GEORGE A. GRAY,
President.
HARRIET L. PECK.
Secretary.
(Corporate Seal of Gray-Tallant Com-
pany.)
In Presence of:
E. F ALFORD.
CORAH L. COLBRATH.
State of Miiifxesota. County of St. Louis.
George A. Gray and Harriet L. Peck,
each being duly sworn, depose and say,
that the said George A. Gray Is the
president and the said Harriet L. Peck
is the secretary of Gray-Tallant Com-
pany; that the foregoing certificate by
them subscribed contains a true state-
ment of the action of the stockholders
of said corporation, at the meeting
thereof as set forth in said certificate,
wherebv, at the time and place therein
indicated, it was resolved to amend the
articles of incorporation of said com-
pany as set forth in said certificate:
that the seal attached to said instru-
ment is the corporate seal of said cor-
poration.
GEORGE A. GRAY.
HARRIET L. PECK.
BIDS WANTED
Bids for an Auto Wagon will be re-
ceived by th«a Board of Water and
Light Commissioners. Thursday. April
27th. at 4 p. m.
Box to be 8 feet back cf seat.
Guaranteed Horsepowei 30.
Carrying Capacity, 2.00(> lbs.
Bids must be accompiinied with a
certified check equal to 10 per cent of
bid.
L. N. CASli:, Manager.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 10th day of April, 1911.
E. F. ALFORD,
Notary Public, St. Louis County, Minn.
(Notarial Seal, St. Louis County Minn.)
My commlssien expires Feb. 24, 1917.
State of Minnesota. Department of
State.
I hereby certify that the within in-
strument was filed for record in this
office on the 13th day of April, A. D.
1911. at 9 o'clock A. M.. and was duly
record in Book U-3 of Incorporations
on page 118.
JULIUS A. SCHMAHL,
Secretary of State.
OFFICE OF REGISTER OF DEEDS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis.
— ss.
I hereby certify that the within In-
strument was filed in this office for
record April 15, 1911, at 10:30 A. M.
and was duly recorded In Book 14 of
Misc., page 181.
M. C. PALMER,
Register of Deeds.
By THOS. CLARK,
Deputy.
OFFICE OF THE COM P":. ''ROLLER—
City of Duluth, April 18th, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in part the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer in Superior street in said city
from Twenty-sixth avenue east to a
point about 100 feet ea.Jt of Thirty-
second avenue east ^ith one outlet in
Thirty-flrst avenue east to the sewer
in Greysolon Place and the other out-
let In Congdon Park to the sewer in
Gerysolon Road, according to benefits,
is now payable at the office of the
City Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be added if payment is not made on
or before May 16th, 1911, and the said
assessment will then bet.r interest at
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
15th, 1911. to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City (Jomptroller.
(Seal of City Comptroller, Duluth,
Minnesota.)
D. H., April 18, 25. 1911. D 591.
scssments $ 229,536.63
Rents and interest 10,539.24
From all other sources... 167. 7&
Total income $ 240,243.63
Ledger assets Dec, 31 of
previous year $ 229,344. 5S
Sum I 467,588.19
DlRbursenientH In 1010.
Amount paid for losses... $ 97,434.6i
Commissions, brokerage,
salaries and allowances
to agents, offlcers and
employes 27.706.5*
Taxes, fees, rents and oth-
er real estate expenses.. 3,786.83
Less on sale or maturity
of ledger assets 288.28
All other disbursements... 77,088.77
Total disbursements $ 206,305.06.
Subscribe for The Herald
NOTICE OF CONFIRMAI'ION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR SEW3R IN SEV-
ENTH ALLEY WEST—
Office of the Board of Fulllc Works,
City of Duluth, Minn., Aj)ril 15, 1911.
Notice Is hereby given. That the as-
sessment of Fourteen H jndred Seven
(1407) dollars and Forty-seven (47)
cents made by the Boai-d of Public
Works upon March 27, A. D. 1911,
against the property specially benefited
by the construction of a sanitary sewer
in Seventh alley. In the City of Duluth,
Minnesota, from Forty-seirenth avenue
west to Forty-eighth avenue west, with
outlet, was by said Board, upon notice
duly given, confirmed on Vipril 10, A. D.
1911, and said assessment las been duly
entered by the Board of ]*ublic Works
in a book kept by it for that purpose.
OLOF G OLSON,
Attest: President.
R. MURCHISON,
Clerk, Board Of Publi.; Works.
(Seal, Board of Public Works. Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H.. April 15. 1911. D SllJ,
Balance
$ 261, 283. la
Ledeer Assets Dee. 31, 1010.
Book value of real estate.. $ 24,500.00
Mortgage loans 123,250.00
Book value of bonds and
stocks 83,389.15
Cash in office and banks.. 16,752.68
Premlum.s in course of col-
lections 13,391.30
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $ 261,283.11
Nou-Ledser AHsets.
Interest and rents, due and
accrued % ..$ 3,247.58
Gross assets $ 264,530.65
Liabilities.
Unearned premiums $ 111,778.61
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due 2,658.80.
All other liabilities 448.00.
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing permanent or guar-
anty fund $
114,885.41
Net surplus $ 149,645.24
Risks and Premlnms, 1910 Business.
Fire risks written during
the year $11,484,422.91
Premiums received there-
on 269.506.63;
Indiana Lnmbermen's Matiial Insurance
Company.
Principal office: Indianapolis, Ind.
(Organized in 1897.) C. C. Foster, pres-
ident; F. B. Fowler, 8e«#retary. Attor-
ney to accept service in Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insuranc*>.
Income In 1011 «.
Gross premiums and aa*
Net amount In force at
end of the year $ 9,738, 957. 0<k
BuHlnenM In Minnesota In 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and de-
ducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written $ 169,375.00
Premiums received 3,818.95
Losses incurred 177. 7«
Losses paid 177.7(
Amount at risk 126,175.00.
State of Minnesota. Department of In-.
surance: "^
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual.
Statement of the Indiana Lumbermen's
Mutual Insurance Company, for the
year ending December 31st, 1910, of.
which the above is an abstract, has
been received and filed in this Depart-
ment and daly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Oommissioner of InsurancO),
nr
RENT— STORES, OFFICES, ETC.
FOR RENT — FOUR- ROOM OFFICBI
suite in Wlnthrop block. Thoroughly
modern. Suitable for doctor or den'»
\\?}- „ Charles P. Craig & Co.. 601-
605 Sellwood building.
FOR RENT— .STORE AT 907 WEST
Michigan street: $30 month; watcs
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son. 40^
Torrey building. u. « •
*
U
i
!
I
^A'*^ ■
•-
I ■ ■ 1^
■ga.ni-iriiis
K«t ^^n^pa
h. I
Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 18, 1911.
19
r*-
SITUATIONS
K you are out of work The Herald Want
Ads ought to be of material assistance
to you. Read them over carefully.
HELP WAKTED
Several hundred men and women call at
The Herald dally and look over the Help
Wanted Ads. If you need help— Advertise.
TO LET
FOR SALE— HOUSES, v
FOH SALE — ON EASY TEKM3. SIX-
room hou'»e. Twenty-fourth avenue
west and Sixth street. |1,800; sewer,
water and Kaj* In street. Whitney
Wall company. 301 Torrey buildlnK.
^ J "i
FOR SALE — NEW TEN-ROOM DU-
plex house tor sale cheap; ea3>
terms; 1016 Ninth avenue east. t. A.
.KnippenV>erg. 300 Alworth ^>uildmg.
'Phones 597. .
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
If you want us to build a house for
you this summer, please let us know
ks soon as poa^slble. We advance all
The money and you pay us monthly,
but even at tliat there Is a Urn t to
our capacity and to our pocketbook.
If you are not familiar with our
Plan write us a postcard anJ wo will
mail vou booklets and pictures.
KlJMUND Q. WALTON AGENCY
312 E-xhange building.
HELP WANTED—FEMALE.
WANTED -
Frederick
(Continued)
^^ ■ »ji~^i - ■ III ' ^
- WOMAN COOK
hotel.
AT THE
WANTico— experip:nced girl for
general housework; family of two;
good wages; one who can go home
nights. Call 1418 Jefferson street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 2122 West Fourth street.
WANTEI>— EXPERIENCED MARKER
and sorter; must be rtrst-class. Model
laundry. 126 East First street.
WANTED — WAITRESS AND O^SH-
washers at the Marine hotel, 20b
Lake avenue south.
WANTED — AT ONCE. GIRL FOR
general hou.sework or a young giri
to assist. 220 East Second street.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
(Continued.)
* FOR SALE. *
* Household goods outfit of new ^
^ furniture In tlve-room flat, used *
* Just one month, for sale at a very *
a- advantageous figure. J lat ror *
* rent. A decided snap for some *
* voung couple. Enger & Olson, the *
y.i Big Furniture house. Nineteenth *
'ii, avenue west. ''*'
ADDITIONAL WANTS
OfN PAGES 18 andjO
SITUATION WANTED— FEMALE.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady experienced In stenography and
office work; b*st pt references fur-
nished. R. B.. Hpfald
WANTED— GOOD GIRL FOR GENER-
al housework; good wages. 4JJ
Fifteenth avenue east.
FOR SALJD— ORIENTAL RUG— TUR-
kish Muskabad, 10 ft. by 15 ft. In
good condition. Apply 1029 East
Sixth street.
SITUATION WANTED— A POSITION
as housekeeper, by a woman with
a 2-year-old child, either in or out
of city. L 86. Herald.
FOR RENT— FURNITURE OF A FOUR-
room flat. Call Melrose 3841.
FOR SALE— MODERN SEVEN-ROOM
house with bath; rooms all large;
fine grate, electric light and gas; all
street assessments paid; shade tree.s
and well sodded lawn; house in finQj
repair and ready to move Into; loca-
tion walking distance to busme-ss
center; terms to suit; exclusive sale
by Getty-Smith company. jOb Pai-
Ictdlo building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROO.M HOUSE;
centrally located. West Duluth; price
ll.soo; small cash payment, balance
monthly; is now rented for 513 per
month. Whitney Wall company. 301
Torrey building. .
FOR SALE— -A. GRAND FOUR-ROOM
cottage; elegant location; 25-foot
lot- cheap *500 cash, balance, easy
as rent. Smith Realty company,
524 Manhattan building.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED
nery trimmer and maker.
First street. Mrs. Sharpe.
MILLI-
6 East
FOR SALE— FOUR-ROOM HOUSE AT
Lakeside, almost new. lot 40 by 140
feel. Barn and lart;e chicken house.
Fine place for garden, keeping cow
and chicken.s. Price *1,000. "Phone
tUand 1^7 1-Y. ^___
FUR SALE— AT LAKESIDE. NEW
«even-room house, concrete ftjunda-
tlon. all conveniences except heat, lot
5') by 140; for quick sale owner will
sell at a bargain. E 29. Herald.
FOR SALE— 15 PER CENT INVEST-
ment. double house. 16 rooms, heat,
.■stone foundation, large lot; sacrince.
$'>tHM>; one-half cash; East end. Smith
Realty Co.. 524 Manhattan^
FOR SALE— BY OWNER— NEW SIX-
room house. modern except heat,
reasonable. 21i> Vernon street.
WANTED-
be white.
Call 100,
-AT ONCE. COOK; MUST
Je-sse Burns. Aitkin, Minn.
Bell "phone.
GENERAL
Wilson, 124
W A NT E D — G I R L FOR
housework Mrs. C. W.
Fourth avenue west.
WA.NTED — FIST-CLASS WOMAN
cook for restaurant day work; good
salary; steady position. Address Box
102. Ironwood. Mich.
FOR SALEi— TWO BRUSSELS RUGS.
9 bv 12, Segar refrigerator and 30-
gallon coal hot water heater. Call
711% East Fourth street.
FOR SALE — SEVEN-ROOM ^MODERN
hous.s on East Fourth street, near
Portland square; hardwood through-
out good basement; cement founda-
tion and furnace heat. A bargain;
14,500. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building. 293
FOR SALE— ELEGANT HOME; IDEAL
location; must sell. For terms see
owner, 408 Columbia building or call
Park t>155-D.
Houses from $S00 to J80.000 for sale
by L. A. Larsen Co.. Reliable Real
E-state Dealers. 213-14-15 Prov. Bldg.
FOR SALE— -\N E-\ST END HOME OF*
nine rooms, large lot, modern except
heat; beautiful location; 13.500. JaOO
cash, balance easy as rent. Smith-
Realty company. 524 Manhattan
building^
FOR SALE— BY OWNER. SIX-ROOM
house and lot; all improvements.
2119 West Fourth street.
FOR RENT— HOUSES.
* FOR RENT. *
S TEN-ROOM ROOMING HOUSE. *
* HARDWOOD FLOORS. G-A.S AND ^-
1 ELECTRIC LIGHT. *
^ 24 WEST THIRD STREET. *
% MENDENHALL & HOOPES. *
FOR SALE— AT A LOW PRICE. SEC-
ond hand full dress suit and white
vest in good condition, size 42. at
Karl J. Hagberg"3 tailor shop. 9
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR SALE— PRACTICALLY NEW
furniture of four-room flat. Oppor-
tunity for young married people to
save considerably. Same flat for
rent. 17 East Fourth, second floor.
FOR SALE— ORGAN SUITABLE FOR
country school, 405 North Hugo
street. Duluth Heights, Zenith 'phone
Grand 2196-X
SITUATION WANTED— WORK BY
the day washing. Ironing and clean-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2267.
SITUATION WANTED — BY MIDDLE-
aged woman, some light work; is a
good seamstress. or would take
charge of furnished rooms. Grand
1316-X. .
SITUATION WANTEI>— WORK BY
the day Call old 'phone. Melrose
4046
FOR SALE— $100 PIANO AND FURNI-
ture; a snap If taken at once. Call
19 Lake avenue north or Grand
619-A.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son 515 Torrey building; both "phones.
FOR SALE — NEARLY NEW SIX-
room house; water. gas. electric
light; good cellar. 1020 East Sev-
enth street.
FOR >.\LE — NINE-ROOM HOUSE AND
lot for sale cheap. Part cash. Call
S824 Sixth street west.
FOR S.\LE— 1500 DOWN, BALANCE
easy terms, for a twelve- room house
near high school and manual train-
ing building. See Chan Smith. 405
Torrey building.
FOR SALE — HOUSE AND LOT FOR
sale at 1111 Garfield avenue.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
211 South Seventeenth avenue east,
$27.50 per month. Call 817 Torrey.
Melrose. 1138. .
VOR RENT— MAY i^ NINE-ROOM
house 109 East Third street with
bath. furnace. laundry, fireplace,
suitable for roomers or boarders. $50.
Apply to E. D. Field company, 203
Exchange building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM HOUSE, 607
West Third street. Apply to Henry
Taylor. 603 Palladio building. Zenith
•phone 2066-Y.
FOR RENT— TWELVE STEAM HEAT-
ed rooms suitable for lodging house;
best location In city, opposite union
depot. Call at Fifth Avenue Cloth-
ing store. W. Goldstein.
FOR SALE — COMPLETE BED IN-
quire 6171^ West First street.
FOR SALE— STEWART STEEL RANGE
in fine condition; costs $42, will sell
for $20. Excellent, large base burn-
er heater costs $55, will sell for $25.
Call at 618 East Second street, up-
per flat.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG LADY
would like general office work. Ad-
dress O 25. Herald.
WHERE TO GET WHAT VOU WANT
Each firm a leader In its line. Consult
this list before placing your order if you
want the best at a price you like to pay.
AWNINGS, TENTS, PACKSACKS.
Polrler Tent ft Awning Co., 106 E. Sup.
St., manufacturer and repairing.
SITUATION WANTED— BY YOUNG
lady In general office or bookkeeper
or cashier; good penman and accur-
ate. R 169, Herald.
FOR SALE— TWO-PIECE .MAHOGANY
parlor set; call mornings. 516%
Fifteenth avenue east.
FOR SALE — ALL DRUGS AND
show cases. Apply Lenox Drug store.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
bath and electric lights, -water paid.
Inquire 731 West Second street^
FOR RENT — FOUR- ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage on Park Point, elec-
tric lights, hardwood floors. 1826
Minnesota avenue.
FOR SALE— ALL KINDS OF MATER-
lal used In packing furniture, burlap,
excelsior, etc. We also furnish
packers Dy the hour. Estimate free.
Duluth Van & Storage Co., 210 W.
Superior street. Both 'phones 492.
FOR SALE — SINGER DROP-HEAD
sewing machine; seven drawers;
practically new; cheap. 119 West Sec-
ond street.
SITUATION WANTED — GRADUATE
nurse of five years' experience m
private nursing, wishes position as
general nurse (excluding surgery) In
a Duluth hospital; best references.
Address Nurse, care Herald. ^
SITUATION WANTED— HAND EM-
broldery done, table linen monogram.
Melrose 3059.
Duluth Tent & Awning Co.. 1608 W. Sup.
St. Zen. 347-X. Work guaranteed.
AWNINGS AND TENTS.
AMERICAN TENT ft AW^NING CO., 1
and 3 East Michigan street. Zen. 2473.
KODAKS AND CAMERAS.
Eclipse Photo Supply Co., 17 4th Ave. W.
Develop and finish for amateurs.
LANDSCAPE GARDENING.
BLACK DIRT, SANDY LOAM AND
fertilizer for gardens, hotbeds, flower
beds, lawns etc.; grallng sodding
& seeding. H. B. Keedy. Both 'phones.
FARM AND FRUIT LANDS.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE— 160 ACRES OF LAND AT
$10 per acre In 54-17. two and a half
miles from D W. & P. station with
food house aiid barn. Address A. A.
tauty, Cotton, Minn.
FOR SALE— A FORTY-ACRE FARM,
ten acres Improved, ten miles from
town. Inquire 2409 West Ninth atreet.
FOR SALE — SMITH REALTY COM-
pany have got new prices on their
farm and acre tracts. See them early
for a good snap. 524 Manhattan.
CHOICE FARM.
29& acres, three miles from town, on
main road; practically all cleared; 250
tons of hay cut annually; rich in min-
eral attraction; $20 per acre; one-half
mineral rights reserved. B. M. Hun-
gerford, Aitkin. Minn.
FOR SALE— GOOD BARGAIN— FORTY
acres of land on railroad station, ten-
room house and surrounding btrild-
Ings; also horses, cows and farm ma-
chinery; fine summer resort. Part
cash, balance easy terms. Addres*
W 60, Herald.
WANTED— SWEDISH GIRL FOR GEN-
eral housework; newcomer preferred.
3432 Allendale avenue, Woodland.
New 'phone Grand 1986-A.
FOR SALE — GOOD FURNITURE,
cheap; roll-top desk and chair, wal-
nut beds, marble-top dressers, sofa,
couches, small tables, ladys writing
desk, rockers, pictures, mattresses,
etc. Forenoons this week. 9 to 12,
one-story building on alley. 220 West
Third street.
STUATION WANTED — YOUNG
woman with good education, desires
office position; have a knowledge
of shorthand and typewriting; will
work for small wages for the ex-
perlence. N 21. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady, position as stenographer, have
some knowledge of bookkeeping; no
objection to going out of town. Ad-
dress X 32, Herald.
ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTER.
We deliver all kinds of adv. matter;
best service. Interstate Distributing
service. Mel. 3547. 17 N. 5th Av. W.
ACCOUNTANT.
R. R. GRIFFITH, 419 Providence bldg.
'Phones: Melrose 1353. Zenith 1938.
S. M. LESTER, 412 PROVIDENCE
building. Both phones S62.
ART GLASS AND MIRRORS.
All kinds glass; lowest prices. St. Ger-
main Bros., 121 First avenue west.
MACHINE WORK RISPAIRING.
Auto and Machine parts made. Zenith
Machine works, 207 W. 1st St. Old
'phone 2522.
FOR SALE — 30.000 ACRES OPEN TO
settlers, near Cass Lake for entry;
lowest price. Fred Steffen. locator.
For sale — lO-acre tracts north of Wood-
land. W. M. Gill, 296 W. 5th St.. Superior.
L. A LARSEN CO., 214 PROVIDENCE
building, wholesale dealers In block*
of lands with mineral prospects.
KEY, LOCK AND SAtE WORKS.
Sander Bro.s.' Hardware
store, 203 W^. ;.st St Phones:
Old, Mel. 3969; New, 2288-A.
STUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady stenographer; reference. Her-
ald, O 24
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady as cashier; can also operate
typewriter. Herald. O 24
FOR SALE— STANDARD TYPEWRIT-
er, good condition; cash, or will trade
for anything that I can use. What
have you? K 49. Herald.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE;
three lots for garden; No. 927 Ninth
avenue west. Apply to H. Gould,
Eighth avenue west and Tenth street.
FOR RENT — 521 WEST SECOND
street, ten rooms, steam heat, mod-
ern throughout; make a good room-
ing house, $50 per month. J. D.
Howard & Co., 216 West Superior
street.
FOR SALE— FIVE-ROOM HOUSE AND
lot at 1723 East Sixth street. Owner
must leave city soon. Inquire at
premises.
FOR SALE FLATS— ANNUAL RENTAL
$732 three flats netting 12 per cent.
Price $6,500; $1,500 cash, balance easy
terms; on car line, near Lincoln Park.
S. W. Richardson, 201 Exchange Bank
building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM RESl-
dence; all modern conveniences; lot
To by 140; in Normal school district;
$S.500. See Chan Smith. 405 Torrey
building^
FOR SALE— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
with water, sewer and electric lights;
two lots 25 by lio each, price. $l.!iOO,
one-half cash, balance to suit. Twin
Ports Realty company, 510 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR RENT — 927 EAST THIRD
Street, five- room detached cottage,
bath, electric lights, gas for cooking;
front and rear yard. $22.50. H. J.
Mullln, 403 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — SIX-ROOM HOUSE;
water, gas, toilet and lights. 81*
Fifth avenue east.
FOR SALE— LIVING MUSIC BOX DAY
or night singers, rollers and chop
note canaries; come and hear my
new stock of canaries sing; wild or
tame animals of any kind can be had
by order at 1013-1015 West First
street, Duluth Bird store.
FOR RENT— EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
all conveniences. 317 West Fourth
street. Inquire 319 West Fourth
street.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE
with bath. 215V8 East Fifth street.
Hartman-O'Donnell agency, 20a Lons-
dale building.
FOR SALE — 15-ROOM BOARDING
house; lot 25 by 125; $2,000; one-
fourth cash, balance to suit; hard-
wood floors, sewer, electric light and
city wator; this property is near the
Zenith Furnace company; now oc-
cupied; rents for $25 per month.
Twin Port Realty company.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE
arranged for two families; ^"ow
rented: near new city dock; block
from street car line; electric light,
water, sewer; will net 12 per cent;
price $2,250. part cash. Address
Uwner. W 67. Herald.
FOR RENT— A COMFORTABLE. \\ ELL
arranged home in the East end; mod-
ern In every respect; $42.o0 per
month. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— TWO SIX-ROOM BRICK
houses all modern; large basement;
27 and 29 West Fourth. Inquire
:• '/»
West Fourth street.
FOR SALE— INCUBATORS. BROOD
ers and all poultry supplies; baby
chicks 15 cents and up; any breed
hatched to order; flower and garden
seeds In bulk; northern grown;
shrubs, roots, bulbs and trees. W.
W. Seeklus, liorist. 302 East Superior
street.
FOR S-\LE— THIRTY-FOOT CABIN,
gasolene launch; 16 horse power
Campbell motor. L 300. Herald.
FOR SALE — OR TRADE, SECOND
hand automobile for two or five pas-
senger; slightly damaged. Call or
give us ofEer at 203 Providence build-
ing.
SITUATION WANTED — WANTED
lace curtains to do up. Call Mel-
rose 715-X.
SITUATION WANTED — PRACTICAX.
nurse would like engagments. _ Ad-
dress Mrs. Henderson. 902 East Third
street, upstair*
SITUATION WANTED— MALE.
b-TUATION W-4NTED — PUBLIC JAN-
Itor and window-washer. Prudence
Robert, the best new window-cleaner
In the city. Melrose 305. La Salle hotel.
JEFFERSON. PUBLIC JANITOR. ALL
kinds ot store and ofElce cleaning.
Mel. 2623, 219 East Superior street.
SITUATION WANTED — HOUSE
cleaning, carpet beating, window
and wall paper cleaning. Old phone
9652; new phone 1082. William
Chlsholm. 228 Lake avenue south^
CARPENTER REPAIR WORK.
REPAIR OR NEW WORK DONE REA-
sunably; plans made; estimates tur-
nishfcd. Ole Helgetun, 2209 West
Seeond street. .New 'phone Lincoln
492-Y.
WORK DONE NEATLY. O. Pi::ARSON,
207 W. 1st St. Zen. 1274-Xor Zen. 6097.
We do all kinds of carpenter work, Job-
bing a specialty; work p-lven prompt
attention. A. J. Hase, 18 West becoiiU
street. 2203- Y.
KEYS AND MODEL W ORKS.
Key cutting, grinding, polishing and
tine repairs. ;J2% E. 2nd fat. Mel. 3381.
BUSINESS CHANCES.
Business Chances — We Uuy stocks o«
merchandise, paying spot cash. No
matter where located or size of slock,
write Eastern Salvage Co., merchan-
dise brokers. Duluth, Mlnn^
BUSINESS CHANCES — CONFECTION-
ery store doing good business, three
living rooms. furniture Included;
must be sold at once; owner leaving
city. Call at 511 East Fourth street.
MARINE MOTORS.
A 1909 MODEL (CAMP-
bell) Marine Motor,
10-horse power, for $325
— 5-inch bore, 6V4-inch
stroke. ;.911 models of
all sizes, at regular
prices. F. R. Holm berg,
528 Lake Av. S. Phones.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
FOR S-\LE— WANTED A FEW MORE
butter customers. Owing to a recent
Increase in our dairy herd we can
accommodate a limited number of
people with butter. Jean Duluth
farm. Telephone evenings.
FOR SALE— RAISE CHICKENS — IT'S
easy with the Jewel Incubator — any
one can get good results. We have
'em In all sizes. See our latest
hatch. Kelley Hardware Co.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN
desires position as clerk In grocery
store; has good experience. Apply
P. M., Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— BY MIDDLE-
aged man and wife, to run club
house or summer resort, experienced,
wife good cook, man can milk, care
of stock and gardening, on reason-
able salary basis. Best of refer-
ences. X 36, Herald.
CARRIAGES, WAGONS, DRAYS.
It you want a high grade delivery wagon
or buggy that was built especially
for this part of the country, for least
money, call or write for catalogue.
L. ^lammel Co., 300-308 East First St.
CARPET CLEANING.
Interstate Carpet Cleaning Company —
Sinotte &, Van Norinan, compressed
air cleaners and rug weavers, 1928
West Michigan street. Both 'pnones.
A. Hat.konsen, dealer
and e.tpert repairer,
at J. W. Nelson's, 6
East Superior street.
FOR SALE OR TRADE TWENTY-
f our -room hotel; all conveniences,
restaurant in connection. Call Lln-
coln. 33 A.
BUSINE.S& CHANCES — FOR SALE --
Two-chair barber shop; well
equipped and building 18 by 30 feet;
best location; can be had at low fig-
ure. Spencer Clark. Keewatin, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR sXlE—
Grocery store; will sell cheap If
taken at once. Reason for selling,
going into other business. Call Mel-
rose 1854.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $250 GOOD-
paylng restaurant, established trade;
also good fixtures, can be bought at
your own price. Wood I'urdy com-
panv. 501 Manhattan building.
OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICUN.
A. L. NORBERG, 201-207 WES'! Su-
perior street, 110 Oak Hall building.
SITUATION W^ANTED— BY YOUNG
man who plays vaudeville piano; also
sings Illustrated songs. Address K 55,
Herald^ ^___
SITUATION WANTED — PAINTING
and paper hanging at low prices.
Grand 2171-D.
SITUATION WANTED— BY FIRST-
class painter; doing good work at
low prices. Address Joseph Damen,
3810 Halifax street, Calumet L 284.
CIVIL ENGINEERING.
Duluth Engineering Co., W. B. Patton,
Mgr., 613 Palladio bldg. Specifications
piepared and construction supeiin-
tcncieo tor waterworks, sewerage, etc.
OPTICIANS.
^Tc'^STAACKEriOrWfciST SUPERIOR
street. Open Wednescay and Satur-
day evenings.
BUSINESS CHANCES— WANT TO Ex-
change for farm, stock of merchan-
dise, with store and fixtures, located
in growing farming town. What
have you.' G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey
buildlng.>^
BUS1NE.SS CHANCES — $1,300 BUYS
moving-picture show clearing from
$100 to $200 monthly; $600 will
handle. Wood Purdy company, 501
Manhattan building.
CHIMNEY SWEEP.
H. Iwuutson, city chimney sweep, at No.
1 nre hall. Telephone 46.
DANCING AND LESSONS.
Dance every evening at 224 W. 1st St.,
except Monday; also dancing taught.
FOR SALE — NEW AND SECOND-
hand engines, boilers, portable saw-
mills, planers, matchers, resaws, pul-
leys, shafting, hangers and boxes.
'Phones 91.
DULUTH MACHINERY CO.
FOR RENT — THREE-ROOM COTTAGE
downstairs, all brand new, all con-
veniences except tiath and heat. A
bargain to right party. Call 1030
West First street.
FOR SALE — SEVEN ROO.)IS -\ND
bath- new fixtures and. plumbing;
hirdwo-.d floors; all modern conven-
iences- nice tree.s and bushes; will
sell cheap If taken at once. Inquire
1«20 East Sixth street.
FOR .-^ALE— AT A S-\CRIFICE— SIX-
r.om cottage on street car line,
Piik Point; water, electric light,
baih, gas range, fireplace, hot water
h^ot. .-ement foundation, laundry tubs,
cement floor in 7V2-foot basenient;
bt-autitul. high, dry lots; fine Shade
tre.-s. easy terms. Save commission.
A 1 d I ess owner. H 334. Herald.
FOR SALE — SNAP — FOUR-ROOM
hou.-ie and barn. $300 cash; must sell;
leaving city. 224 Forty-fifth avenue
w e.'^ t.
FOR SALE-^BY
room cottage,
nue. Inquire
FOR RENT— NINE ROOMS WITH
bath, furnace, fireplace and laundry.
109 East Third str-iot, $50. E. D. Field
company. Exchange building.
FOR RENT— SEVEN -ROOM HOUSE
on Nineteenth avenue east with fur-
nace, bath, etc.. one block from cars,
$32.50. E. D Field company, 203 Ex-
change building.
FOR RENT — TWO THREE-ROOM
flats with bath, etc., $15 and $8. E.
D. Field company, 203 Exchange
building.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
rear 7 West Fourth street. Inquire
at Louis Oreck, 416 West Superior
street, curio store.
FOR SALE— AT A LOW PRICE. SBC-
ond hand full dress suit and white
vest in good condition, size 42, at
Karl J. Hagberg's tailor shop, 9
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR SALE— SAFES. OFFICE FURNl-
ture, architects' and engineers' sup-
plies, typewriters and supplies. J. a
Ray & Co., 406 W. Sup. St. 'Phones.
FOR SALE— OFFICE FURNITURE,
also household furniture, dining ta-
ble, chairs and china closet. Call 1101
Alworth building. 'Phone Melrose,
Grand 201.
SITUATION W^ANTED— EXPERIENC-
ed shipping clerk would like to
change his position; has been with
wholesale meat concern five years;
references A-1. Address W 64, Her-
ald.
SITUATION WANTED— BY YOUNG
married man; experienced collector
and office work, or as assistant credit
man and collector; best of refernces
furnished. Address C. Q., care Herald.
OWNER— NICE SIX-
1534 Minnesota ave-
at 216 Vernon street.
FOR S.VLE— BARGAIN IF TAKEN AT
once, eight-room house, barn and
$800 lot; Forty-fourth avenue near
LoM'lon road. $2,500; terms; snap for
contractor or carpenter. H. A. Hook-
er 569 Frederick avenue, Milwaukee.
Wis.
FOR RENT— NINE OR TEN-ROOM
house. 1007 East Second street; all
conveniences; $40. Apply N. J. Up-
ham company. 18 Third avenue west.
FOR RENT— EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE.
No. 1 West Fifth street; water, sew-
er, bath, gas and electric lights, hot
air furnace for rent May 1, $30 per
month. R. P. Dowse, 106 Providence
building.
FOR SALE— WAGON AND HEAVY
double harness; cheap. 684 Grand.
FOR SALE — TWO DROP-HEAD
Whites $18 and $23; four drop-head
Singers at $10. $12, $15 and $2^;
others from $5 up, all in fine shape.
White Sewing Machine store. Lake
avenue and Superior street.
FOR SALE— CO.\L HEATER. PARTY
leaving town. 130 Vi West Fourth
street.
FOR RENT— 506 FIFTH AVENUE
east, six- room house and bath, gas,
free water, $20 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck. Torrey. ^
f^^R RENT CHEAP— SEVEN-ROOM
house, on Seventh street. West end;
city water and gas. Call new 'phone,
Lincoln 474.
FOR SALE— DON'T FAIL TO SEE US IF
you contemplate buying a home this
spring. Minneapolis Construction Co.,
210 American Exchange Bank Bldg.
FOlt SAuE — MODERN EAST END
home; large grounds; illness of wite
compels sale; no agents need apply.
Address S 368, Herald.
WANTED TO TRADE FOR FARM,
eight-room house, on a fifty-foot lot.
located in the best residence district
In Duluth. Price $4,500. G. A. Ryd-
berg. 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — ON EAST EIGHTH
street, near Seventh avenue east, six-
room house, very comfortable, and
delightfully arranged Interior, for
$2,200, with $500 cash; balance on
easy terms. Whitney Wall company,
301 Torrey building^ 262
FOR SALE— MONTHLY PAYMENTS
of $40 will purchase the right party
a good six-room house at Lakeside,
modern except heat. Price $3,400.
Gree:ifi«ld. 310-11 Columbia building.
FOP SALE— SEVE.N-ROOM HOUSE
at Lakeside: strictly modern
throughriit: fine location; good view
of lake. $1,200. (283) Whitney Wall
compan . ;;'>1 Torrey building.
FOR RENT— 1803 SOUTH STREET,
five-room house, water and sewer;
free water, $15 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck. Torrey^
FOR RENT — A MODERN SEVBN-
room house on East Second street,
near Nineteenth avenue east; two
bath rooms; hardwood finish; hot
water heat; $42.50 per month. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR SALE — GAS ENGINE, TWO AND
one-half horse-power, $30; three
horse-power, $48; five horse-power,
$15; eight horse-power, $95; twenty-
foot boat complete, $160. Duluth
Gas Engine Works.
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG MAN
wishes position as assistant to ad-
vertising manager; also do office
work: moderate salary satisfactory,
if opportunity for advancement on a,
par with energy and ability mani-
fested. U 19, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — AN ALL
around butcher and sausage maker
wishes a position. Frank Pfelfer,
W^ithee. Wis.
SITUATION WANTED — AS SALES-
man on the road or in store. Ex-
perienced. Good business education.
Speak Swedish and Finnish. Now
employed. Address ABC, Virginia,
Minn.
SITUATION W^ ANTED — POSITION
with wholesale house; can give ref-
erences. F. M. Wilson, 2531 West Su-
perior street.
DENTIST.
Dr W. H. Olson, 222 New Jersey Bldg.
All work guaranteed. Both phones.
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING.
DON'T SCRAP A BROKEN CASTTING
or machine part of any size of Iron,
steel, aluminum or trass until you
have conferred with us. Buck &
Suring. 313 East Michigan street.
•Phones: Bell, Mel. 974; Zen., Grand
974. .
PATENTS.
PATENTS — ALL ABOUT PATENTS.
See Stevens, 610 Sellwood building.
PLUMBING AND REPAIRS.
JAMES GORMAN— YOUR PLUMBER,
Jobbing work promptly attended to.
1 Twenty-third avenue west. Zenith
'phone. Grand 107.
DRAYING AND TRANSFER.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE Company.
210 West Superior St. Both 'phones.
STEWART TRANSFER LINE— MOV-
Ing baggage, freight, expert plano
movers; prompt service. 'Phones 334.
Office 19^ l<lfth avenue west.
FOR SALE — BLACK ORPINGTON
eggs, for hatching. Fine large stock
$1 per 15. Mrs. Parks, 614 West
Fifth street.
FOR SALE— PIANO; WILL SELL
cheap; party leaving city. 832 East
Second street.
FOR SALE— WAGON SHOP, MACHIN-
ery stock. W. M. Smith, 26 East
First street.
DYE WORKS.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son. 515 Torrey building, both 'phones.
FOR RENT — 1309 E.\ST SECOND
street, nine rooms, modern; $45 per
month. See M. Henrlcksen. at Hen-
rlcksen Jewelry company.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage, 3439 Minnesota ave-
nue, Park Point. Inquire 102 West
First street. Bloom & Co^
FOR RENT— 216 EAST THIRD ST.
Modern eight-room brick house. Hot
water heat. A. H. Burg & Co.. JOO
Alworth building.
CLAIRVOYANTS.
PROF. GIRARD, THE ONLY RELI
able clairvoyant In Duluth. 20 West
Superior street. Upstalrg.
MADAM ANNA, CARD READING AND
business advice. 229 West Superior
street. Room 12, Melrose 3257.
ZENITH CITY DY^E WORKS — LAR-
gest and most reliable. All work
done In Duluth. Work called for and
delivered. 'Phones: Old, 1154-R; new,
1888. 232 East Superior street
Duluth Dye Works — French dry clean-
ing; fancy dyeing. Old 'phone, Mel-
rose 4191; new, 1191-A. 330 E. Sup. St.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN
accustomed to hospital work, would
like other employment. Not afraid
of work. Can furnish good refer-
ences. K 206, Herald.
HORSES, VEHICLES, ETC.
HORSES! HORSES'. HORSES!
MIDWAY HORSE MARKET.
"THE HORSE AND MULE HEAD-
quarters of the Northwest;" 500 to 800
head of horses and mules constantly
on hand; part time given If desired.
Private sales daily. If you need draft
horses, general purpose horses, de-
livery horses, mules or railroading
or other purposes, drivers or saddlers,
we can fill your order. Every horse
sold guaranteed to be as represented.
BARRETT ft ZIMMERMAN,
Midway Horse Market, St. Paul, Minn.
DECORATING & WALL PAPERLNG
See Strongqulst & Moyer at 306 E. Sup.
St., about your papering, tinting,
painting and home decorations. You'll
be satisfied. Both '-"-ones.
Geo. W. Palmer, 111 E. 1st St., Zenith
'phone. 1688-A. Early and late.
BUSINESS CHANCES— A CENTRAL
corner; dead ripe for grocery and
butcher shop; who wants an ideal
business corner? See the Smith
Realty company, 624 Manhattan
building.
FOR SALE — RESTAURANT, COM-
plete, doing good business In best
town on range; price reasonable;
terms cash. For particulars call or
write Mrs. John Burby. Marble, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— MUST DISPOSE
of real estate holdings In East end
of Duluth. Party having from $3,000
to $4,000 cash can place it to good
advantage, if you act in time; In-
vestigate. Address owner, S 370,
Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES— AN OPPOR-
tunity of a life In bakery, an Im-
mense paying proposition; nets $3,500
year. Standard trade year around.
Smith Realty Co.. 624 Manhattan.
RUG WEAVING.
lf];^;^^f:cCAsS^RAGANl> FILLEL RUG
weaving. Melrose 334. .^
PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING.
DRY CLEANING AND PRESSING.
WOR-C GUARANTEED. CITY DYE
Works. Old, Melrose 1942. Zenith
2474.
ENGINEERING.
NORTHWESTER., ENGINEERING CO.,
Duluth, Minn.
Architects, Mechanical and Electrical
Eng ; Plans, Estimates f.nd Specifica-
tions. Complete nine Equipments a
specialty. Mel. 3912. P. O. Box 685.
FLORIBT.
Northwestern Dyeing & Cleaning Co. —
Oldest reliable dyers and French dry
cleaners In Northwest 23 Lake Ave.
north. 'Phones: New, 1516; old, 1337.
NATIONAL DYEING AND CLEANING
company, 319 E. Superior St French
dry cleaners and fancy dyers. Both
•phones 2376. Branch. 15 Lake Ave. N
East End Dyeing and Cleaning Co.,
926 E. Superior St. Grand 1245-X,
Mel. 4628. All our work guaranteed.
LADIES' TAILORING.
DANFORTH.
131 West Superior street.
Plumes cleaned and dyed any color.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. Miss
FitzPatrlck, 502-4 E. 4th St Both
'phones.
FOR SALE— TWENTY HEAD DRAFT
and driving horses. 1111 West Furst
street Western Sales Stable com-
pany.
J. J. Le Borious, florist, 921 EL 3rd St. —
Floral funeral designs, cut flowers.
DO IT NOW BEEK)RE
costs less and can t
better work; estlma
Zenith, 959-A and I w
books. J. D. McCurc
avenue west and Sec
rHE RUSH. IT
ake time to do
tes free. Call
111 bring sample
y, corner Third
)nd street.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Confectionery store doing good busi-
ness; fine location; bargain if taken
at once. See Commercial Business
Brokers. 206 Alworth building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— CONFECTION-
ery; $100 for fixtures and invoice
stock: daily sales better than $20;
splendid buy. Wood Purdy company,
501 Manhatten building.
FOR PAINTING AND
see Youngdahl & Diei
DECORATING
s, 223 W. 2nd. St
RCmFiNGTcORNICE SKYLIGHTS.
riTQiHcirJOBBTNG^A^^REP^-
ing. 531V4 E. Sup. St Zen., 12a7-A.
BURRELL & HARMON, 308 E. Sup. St
Both 'phones. First-class work.
RIFLES AND GUNS.
Grinding and Repairing a
specialty. City Gun Store,
^ R C. KRUSCHKE,
402 "A'est Superior Street.
SECOND HAliD DEALERS.
New and second-hand Jfoods bought,
sold. A. B. Davis, 1 7B W. Sup. St
BUSINESS CHANCES— $675 BUYS 13;
room rooming house. Income $l;ia
mo'nthly; best paying place in the
city. Wood Purdy company, 501
Manhatten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—
Up-to-date double store. This is one
of the finest buildings and best loca-
catlons in Marble. Address Box 31,
Marble. Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— TO TRADE—
Equity in Carlton county land for
truck farm near Duluth. Will pay
cash dilTerence. Address W. 11.
Hassing. Carlton. Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—
Bargain; confectionery store; make
us an offer on this; owner sick. In-
quire Duluth Business Exchange. 509
Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—
Rooming house; first-class; very
central; neat and clean; big bargain;
price $650. Duluth Business Ex-
change 509 Torrey building.
FURNITURE RECOVERED.
Let Forsell do your UPHOLSTERING.
334 E. Superior St. Zenith 'phone 949.
FURNITURE AND PIANOS.
Finished and repaired. Theo. Thomp
son, 336 E. Sup. St Old 'phone 2828.
INCUBATORS AND BROODERS.
FOR SALE— NICE DRIVING HORSK
Call evenings, 219 North Twenty-
ninth avenue west.
HORSES ACCLIMATED HORSES.
Young heavy horses; several teams
for sale. Red Cliff Lumber company,
barn. Thirty-ninth avenue west
For Sale — Forty head of draft and gen-
eral purpose horses just out of woods
to be sold cheap. 209 W. 1st St
FOR SALE— TWENTY-FIVE HEAD OF
horses at 811 Lake avenue north.
FOR SALE— 30 HORSES AT ZENITH
Sale & Boarding Stable. 524 W. Ist St
PICTURE FRAMING.
GU.«!TAVE HENNECKE. 211 E. SUP. 8X.
FOR SALE — HORSES. 826 EAST
Third street H. Inch.
FOR sale:— HORSES AT L. HAMMEL
company.
STORAGE.
DULUTH VAN ft STOR.^GE Company.
210 West Superior St Both" phones
^
INCUBAi'ORS. $6 to $38; BROOD-
ers. $5 to $18.50. Send 4c in
stamps for catalogues and Poul-
try books. J. W. Nelson, 5 East
Superior Street Duluth, Minn^
INTERPRETER.
V D NICKOLICH, INTERPRETER
for several foreign languages, 301
Al orth building.
SIGN AND CARD WRITING.
For signs of any '»e«'^'^iP"°°•^^^*"
1277-D on Zen. 'phone. A. E. Scnar.
STORA(iE.
FIRE-PROOF BUILDING. PRIVA'TE.
locked room, separate compartments.
Call and Inspect balldlng. Duluth
Van & Storage Co., 210 W. Sup. bt
Both 'phones, 492^ ^
TRANSFBR.
HORSE SHOEING.
Sho^g crippled and In terierlng horses
my specialty. Carl Schau, 14 Sd Av. B.
IMPROVED SHOE REPAIRING.
MONEY SA\x-u TIME SAVING, SHOE
saving. While you wait Gopher Shoe
works.
JOB PRINTERS.
RANKIN PRINTING CO. — OUT-OF-
town orders a specialty. 221 West
Superior street.
HOUSEHOLD GC'ODS PACKED,
moved, stored and shipped at re-
duced rates. Generi.l draylng. Ma-
chinery and safes moved. Duluth
Van & Storage Co., 210 W. Sup. St
Both 'phones, 492^
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
One Babcock soda fountain compute.
For further information inquire Jo-
seph Shearer. lock box 27. Park Rap-
Id s^Mlnn^^ .
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Rare opportunity, one-half interest
In a moving picture theater; price
$1,250. Inquire Duluth Business Ex-
change. 509 Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — ARE YOU
looking for acres to plat? I have a
tract of land across the St. Louis
river from the steel plant site. This
can be sold in lots at a big profit
If interested write W. 63 Herald.
WALL PAPER AND PAINTS.
C Erlckson Is still In business, with
'the latest in wall paper and fresh sup-
ply of paint. 1926 V/. 2nd, Entrance
20th Ave W. Estltiates furnished.
WATCH REPAIRING.
Watch hospital; cleaning and repair-
ing at lowest prices Berg Bros., US
E. Sup. St
LOST AND FOUND.
LOST — THURSDAY. GENTLEMAN'S
gold watch on Lake avenue, between
Superior and Second streets. Finder
return to 827 East Third street for
reward, or call Grand 1952-X.
IX)ST— ABOUT A MONTH AGO. STOCK
certificate No. S-24409. Finder please
return to Herald office.
LOST— BRILLIANT HAT PIN. FINDER
please return to Herald office.
LOST — NE.\R MESABA ORE DOCK.
Saturday, black pocketbook contain-
ing sum of money. Return to Herald
for $5 reward.
BOARD WANTED.
BOARD WANTED — WAN-TED TO
board two little girls. 7 and 9 years
old where there are no small chil-
dren. Grand 2190-D.
CLOTHES CLEAN1:D & PRESSED.
jOHtPmUELLER. 208 WEST FIRST
street
Subscribe for The Herali^
Zenith Valet — French dry cleaning and
repairing. ?13 West First St. MoL
1S34. Grand 11S4-D
PHOENIX DRY CL.E.\NINa CO.—
Skirts drv c!raned. 50c. Zenith 'phon*
Grand 1' .'^ 10 Fourtk •vonus W.
s
•
.
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W9t<ttmi
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Tuesday,
THE DULUTH HERALTI
April 18, 1911.
F»RIISJX A HERALD
EIVOUGH-
WAIMX AD4-A1MD
-AIMYBODY HOLJSE
XHAir GOOD-
OR APARXIVIEIMX
EVERYTHING STARTS WITH A
RUSH ON THE FIRST OF MAY
The housewife starts housecleaning; she dis-
cards furniture useless to her, which is quickly
sold through a little For Sale Ad in The Herald,
and other desired articles are bought at a great
saving through a wanted to buy ad or by watching
the For Sale columns, a housecleaner, paper hanger,
painter, odd job man, a curtain laundress, or other
help quickly summoned through a work .wanted
or a help ad.
Renters make plans to become Home Owners
or move to new quarters. Flat dwellers move to
cottages — room renters down town move farther
out, etc. Their means are Herald rent ads.
The Horse Buyer, the Poultry Raiser, the Auto
Enthusiast, the Farmer, all watch The Herald For
Sale columns at this time of the year with greater
interest and care than at any other time.
IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSY TIME AND
THESE THINGS ARE BEST DOME HOW
You can insert an ad in The Herald at the low
cost of 1 cent per word per day, and if you have not
time to come to The Herald office, you can phone
your ad in and we will collect later.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advcrtlucuient Letss Than 15 G&kt&.
HELP WANTED— MALE.
'Hf ^
■» BOYS! GIRLS! MONEY AFTER #
*■ SCHOOL I *
% Send us your name and address, it
-.¥■ Wo will send j-ou twenty pack- ■Jf-
# ages of our Handy Sheet Bluing, iff
•?(■ You can sell them after school. *
^ Send us $1 and keep ?1. The Nora i^
ig- Novelty company, Duluth. Minn. #
* *
WANTED.
AN EXPERIENCED SHOE
SALESMAN.
Apply Superintendent.
PANTON & WHITE CO.
7if*«:f>^Sf***i!f-**.^«:^;f**«*^g*****
WANTED — Bright nr.en to train as
chauffeurs; practical instruction giv-
en. Auto Owners' as.soclatlon, 1312
Hennepin avenue, Minneapolis.
LEARN TELEGRAPHY NOW.
Earn |60 in railroad position In spring.
Excellent opportunity; don't miss ll.
Write Thompson's Telegraph insti-
tute, Minneapolis.
One Cent a Word Bach Insertion.
No Advertisement Less Thau 15 Cents,
ADoifiimui^^
ON PAGES 18 and 19
FARM AND FRUIT LANDS.
WHITNEY ^VALL COMPANY,
301 Torrey Uulldlng.
FOR SALE— A FARM OF 120 ACRES,
suitable for dairy or truck farming;
forty acres cultivated; bulldlng.s and
other improvements worth more than
price asked. A bargain, J3,600.
FOR SALE — IN TOWN OF WREN-
shall, 160 acres, three miles from
Jond du Lac. near sawmill. Land Is
heavily timbered with maple and
birch. No swamp or rock, fine, heavy
black loam soil. Good trout stream.
Frice $17 per acre; small cash pay-
ment, balance easy monthly pay-
ments. Will trade for small home In
Duluth.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
yo.Ad\^rtlscmentLi^8 Than 15 Cents.
forISent^^^flatS
JOHN A. .STEPHENSON &. CO.
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM HEATED
"**. ^^„^ North Nineteenth avenue
east; |32.50 per month.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROO»f APART-
ment in St. Elmo building. 721 East
i-lrst street; splendid arrangements;
beautiful view.
One Cent a Word Each InserUon.
NoAdvertisenient Less Than 15 Cents.
^^^T^or1rent^2r()()ms; "
^^ ?^.^'^.— furnish^edT^ooms-
board If desired. 301 East Third
street
^^^ RENT— TWO OR TF:REE VERY
desirable rooms In Dodgo block; very
central. Apply N. J. Upham com-
Pany. 18 Third avenue west.
SECRET SOCIETIES.
FOR RENT— TWO AND FOUR-ROOM
flats; water paid; |5 and $10 per
nionth. 702 E. 2nd St. Grand 1299-D.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM APARTMENT
In Adams apartments. 715 East First
street.
FOR RENT— ON GARFIELD AVENUE
Living room on second floor; cheap
rent.
FOR SALE>— NEAR BOULDER LAKE,
160 acres on Vermilion road, at $10
per acre; terms to suit. Torrens
title.
WANTED — MEN TO KNOW WE GROW
a head of hair or no pay. Bryant &
Co., room 12, Phoenix buildlDg. Mel-
rose 3267.
Men to learn barber trade. It's easy.
Positions waiting. Good wages. Cat.
free. Moler Bar. College. Minneapolis.
WANTED — GOVERNMENT EM-
ployes. Send postal for Duluth exam-
ination schedule. Franklin Insti-
tute. Department 148-F, Rochester,
N. Y.
WANTED — FEW YOUNG MEN TO
take subscriptions for magazines.
Apply 25 South Fifty-eighth avenue
west.
WANTED — PAPERHANGERS. 15
Third avenue east. George Statton.
WANTED — GROCERY DELIVERY
man. Call 932 East Fourth street.
WANTED — MAN AND WIFE TO RUN
small clubhouse on range; must be
experienced. Inquire 706 Lonsdale
building.
WANTED — REGISTERED OR AS^
i>istant registered pharmacist. Lion
Drug Store, 1'030 West Superior St.
WANTED — YOUNG BOYS BETWEEN
the ages of 16 and 25 years for the-
atrical work. 129 West Superior
street. Vaudeville Booking agency.
One Cent a Word £ach Insertion. One Cent a Wort! Eacn Insertion.
No .\d\c*rlis;eiiieiit Less Tiiun 13 Cents. No Advertisement Less Than 13 Cents.
TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
— OF—
BUShNESS
hUUShS
Below >uu wiii find a
couUtiUbed list oi reliable
business firms. This Is de-
Bigued lor Uio convenience
oi busy yeopie. A teieplione
order lo any one of them
will receive the same care-
ful aiientiun as would be
given an oruer plu'.ed In
person, i'ou can salely de-
pend upon the reliability of
, any one of these firms.
Old New
'Phone. 'Phone.
ARCHITECTS—
liuak 1-. ^oung & Co. 4476
Bl>I>t:SS COLl.KGK —
The lirocklenurst ....2568 1004
DKL(;til!>TS —
Eddie Jeronimus 1243 1027
Boyce 163 lti3
Smith & Smith 280 7
ZeiiUli Cay Dye work8.1SSS 1883
Northwestern Dyeing
Ac Cleaning Co 1337 1516
National Dyciitg &
CKaning Co 2376 2376
Interstate Cit:a.ning &
Dyeing Co., •ii.eliys '2530 30
GK«>ci:its —
Thatcher & Thatcher.. 1907
LAL.\UH1£:«$ —
i'eorlcss Laundry 428 428
Va:o L^unury 479 479
Lutes Laundry 447 417
Home Laundry Co.... 478 478
Model Laundry 2749 1302
SliLLIMKK —
M. A. Cox 4576
MKAT .>fAKK£:TS
Mork Brus 1590 189
SHOK l{KI>Aini>G —
Olten. 410 E. 4th St... 102'J-QC
KKAL ESTATE, FIRE
INSURANCE AND
RENTAL AGENCIES.
John A. Stepuenaon & Co., Wolvin bldg.
E. D. F'icid Co.. 203 Exchange building.
1^ A. Larsen Co., Providence building.
H. J. MuUin. 40;; Lonsdale building.
W. C. Sherv.-ood. 118 Manhattan bldg.
HELP WANTED— FEMALE.
WANTED— COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework; small family; no
children. Good wages. Apply at
312 Fourteenth avenue east.
i^ii^i^^--;i^::-ii'iciiii'f^iiiiiii^i^ii-?i^':i^i^9i'ii^
WANTED.
Experienced saleslady
maihlne department;
need apply.
for talking
none other
FRENCH & BASSETT.
WANTED
tel.
PORTER. ST. LOUIS HO-
W ANTED — DRIVER; ONE WELL
acquainted in city. Apply 232 East
Superior street. Zenith Dye house.
WANTED— AN ELDERLY MARRIED
couple to take care of a farm and
garden on a working interest; a
good home, and all the heavy work
done by owner. W. G. Hammond,
Twig. Minn.
FOR SALE— SEVENTY- FIVE ACRES
on the west shore of Thompson lake
on Vermilion road, about fifteen miles
from Duluth. Will divide to suit.
Easy terms. Tornens title. Price
$12.50 per acre.
FOR SALE — THREE FORTY-ACRE
tracts on Bug creek, adjoining sta-
tion of Pitt on Canadian Northern
railroad, at |5 per acre. Will make
easy terms.
FOR SALE— FIVE ACRES ADJOINING
Duluth Heights, at |300 per acre.
Easy terms.
FOR SALE— A NUMBER OF IM-
proved and unimproved farms of ten
to 160 acres, near Duluth. Let us
know your wants.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE AT
221 East Third street.
FOR RENT— FINE DRY BASEMENT
on Lake avenue south; steam heat.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
RENTAl DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat; steel range
in kitchen. Call at 529 East Third
street.
FOR RENT — LARGE BASEMENT
room, 60 by 140 feet, with double
door opening on alley, 3 12 West Sec-
ond street; |75 per month. See J. D.
Howard & Co., 216 Wsst Superior
street. •
FOR RENT— TWO FRO;«JT ROOMS,
furnished for light housekeeping. 609
West Third street; |20 per month;
heated; gas range, l:ghts, bath,
phone.
FOR RENT— TWO PRO]«JT ROOMS,
modern; $8 and flO per nonth. 706 Vi
West Second street.
FOR RENT — TWO RC OMS FUR-
nlshed for light housekeeping; also
single room. 420 First avenue west.
FOR RENT — MODERN l^URNISHED
ropm; |8 per month. Call Grand
1691-A.
^OR RENT— MODERN FIVE-ROOM
nat. First avenue west and Fourth
street. Moderate rent. Charles P.
Craig & Co., 601-505 Sellwood
building.
^*^?o^\?'^"^-;,^'^W FIVE-ROOM FLAT,
719 East Fourth street, downstairs,
9^0 per month; water paid by owner.
Inquire 719 East Fourth street, up-
8 t&irs.
WHITNEY WALL CO:»fPANY,
SOI Torrey Building.
17 CENTS A DAY
Or $5 a month will buy one of our
Florida farms; these farms are
smooth and level, no rocks nor
swamps and in the location where
they raise three crops a year. A.
Kolemaine, general agent, 516 Co-
lumbia builriing. Duluth, Minn.
^^^\i;^^>i&^;V;¥«^^*^^W«^^^;^>&^V***^
WANTED — FIRST - CLASS COOK;
good wages; small family. 2505
East First street.
WANTED — THE NEW METHOD
pres.smaking school teaches you to
become a dresamaker in six weeks;
make dresses for yourself or others
wnlle learning. 310 West Second
street, next to Y. M. C. A. building.
WANTED— GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook Ap-
ply 1509 East Superior street.
WANTED— NEAT GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. 801 East Third
street.
WANTED— GIRLS IN PACKING ROOM
with experience preferred. Apply
Caldwell Coffee Co., 122 East Michi-
gan street.
WANTED— A NEAT APPEARING
young lady to travel and demon-
strate a high grade food product.
.Salary and expenses. X 37, Herald.
WANTED— COMPETENT COOK 1032
East First street.
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO A.'^SIST
with housework. Mrs. Norton, 40
l-orty-eighth avenue east.
WANTED— DLSH WASHER; GOOD
wages. 2531 West Superior street.
FOR SALE MISCELLA.NEOLS.
MERCHANTS, WAKE UP AND TAKE
NOTICE!
Our lease expires May 1. Will sell
pairs or whole stock of men's shoes
at a large discount from oar whole-
sale prices. Stock will now Invoice
about 12.000.
Remember the early bird gets the
worm. This is your opportunity to buy
a bargain.
We have discontinued making hand-
made men's and boys' work shoes.
Have already sold our plant and must
sell our stock beiore moving time.
Time Will be given to well-rated
Fiartios. All of our display tables are
or sale.
Stork on sale at retail at 328 West
Buperior .street, St. Louis Hotel blOv.k.
WANTED— COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework, small family. 131
Last Second street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; small family. 12 North
Nineteenth avenue east.
WANTED — GIRLS AT MRS. SOM-
mers employment office, 15 Second
avenue east.
PERSONAL.
PERSONAI^PROF. GIRARD, CLAIR-
voyant and palmist, 20 West Superior
street, upstairs. Six questions an-
swered by mail, ji. .Send date of birth
PERSONAL — C. O. KRISTENSEN POL-
ishes pianos and furniture at your
home. 'Phone Hogan & Co., Both
'phones.
MRS. VOGT WISHES TO ANNOUNCE
to all her friends and to any one
wishing work done in the hair dress-
ing, manicuring and massaging line,
that she is again located at 17
East Superior street, upstairs, where
she will be pleased to greet them.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., townships CO to 63,
ranges 14 to 17, which we will sell
in large or small tracts at very low
prices. Good location for dairying
and truck gardening. Some fine lake
shore frontages. Settlers on ad-
joining lands raising from -250 to 300
bushels potatoes per acre. Buy some
of these cheap lands now and be-
come independent. Call or write for
map, Minnesota Land & Dairy com-
pany, 407 Providence building.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., in townships 60 to 63
and ranges 14 to 17. which we will
sell In large or small tracts at very
low prices. Good location for dairy-
ing and truck gardening. Some fint
lake shore frontages. Settlers on
adjoining lands raising from 250 to
300 bushels potatoes per acre. Buy
some of these cheap lands now and
become Independent. Call or write
Minnesota Land & Dairy company,
407 Providence building.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM BRICK
flat, steam heated, at 10 West Fifth
street, |18 per month
I-^OR RENT— FOUR AND FIVE
rooms, newly furnished. 815 East
?.^^^. J}^^^y Telephone Zenlta
Grand 466. J. B. Middiecoff, 301 Al-
worth building, Duluth.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT, UP-
stairs. all conveniences except heat;
possession May 1. Beautiful view of
lake. Call at 17 East Fourth street.
FOR RENT — STRICTLY MODERN
seven-room flat. Close to courthouse,
posto/rice and railroad depota View
of rake and harbor. Moderate rent
to right party. No children. Charles
?• .,9r**8^ * *^°- 601-505 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— VERY DESIRABLE FUR-
nished room. 201 West Third street.
FOR RENT — LARGE l^URNISHED
front room, suitable for two; private
family. 828 East Second street. Mel-
PALESTINE LODGE. No. 79,
A. P. & A, M. — Regular meet-
ings first and third Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 17. 1911. Work— Reg-
ular business. Rene T. Hugo, W. M.;
H. Nesblt. secretary.
IONIC LODGE NO. 186. A. P.
& A. M. — Regular meetings
second and fourth Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 24, 191L Work— First
degree. Walter N. Totman, W. li.;
Burr Porter, secretary.
KEYSTONE CHAPTER NO,
20, R. A. M. — Stated convo-
cations second and fourth
Wednesday evenings of eacb
month at 8 o'clock. Next
i«7 . ,. meeting, April 27. 1911.
Work— M M. degree. Charles W. Kies-
wetter, H. P.; Alfred Le Richeux, sec-
retary.
^VBaVBH^^
DULUTH COUNCIL NO. %
R. & S. M. — Next meetlnir,
Friday. April 21, I9ii, at i
p. m. Work — Royal and select
^ , .3 niasters' degree. James A.
Crawford, T. L M.; Alfrea Le Uicheu^
recorder.
rose 3945.
FOR RENT— TWO UNl'URNISHED
rooms for small family; water and
sewer 620 West Third s:reet.
FOR RENT— NICE FRONT ROOM AND
alcove; all conveniences. Melrose
2595; 1218 East First stntet.
FOR RENT— TW^O NICELY FUR-
nlshed rooms for light housekeeping
24 Seventh avenue west.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS,
also two flats for light housekeep-
ing; modern; centrally looated; newly
decorated; use of phone. Melrose
2840. Inquire at 216 West Third
street.
FOR RENT — TWO ROOMS'. FUR-
nlshcd complete for housekeeping
Call between 4:30 and 6:2 0 p. m. 304
West Fourth street. Flat C.
FOR RENT— FOUR ROOMS UPSTAIRS,
18 per month, 610 East Elenth street.
Inquire 215 East Superlc r street.
DULUTH COMMANDERY NO.
18, K. T. — Stated couclavd
first Tuesday of each month
at 8 o clock. Next conclave.
, April 18. 19n. Work— Red
Cross degree. Frederick E. Hough. E.
C. ; Alfred Le Richeux, recorder.
SCOTTISH RITE — RKGU-
lar meetings every Thursday
evening at 8 o'clock. Next
meeting, Tuesday. April 11,
^ , 1911- Work — Maunday Thurs-
day week. Henry Nesblt, secretary.
ZENITH CHAPTER NO 28.
Order of Eastern Star — Reg-
ular meetings second and
fourth Friday evenings of
_ each month at 7:30 o'clock.
Next meeting. April 14, 1911. Work--
Regular business and initiation. Eliza-
beth Overman. W. M.; Ella F. Gearha*.
secretary. v*».«.. .,o...
EUCLID LODGE NO. 198. A.
?^- ,^.A M.— Meets at West
Duluth second and fourta
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meeting
April 26, 1911. Work— Fiibt
degree. M. M. Meldahl, W. M.; A.
Dunleavy. secretary.
I-OR RENT— SIX-ROOM FLAT; VERY
light, airy rooms; moderate rent;
East Third street, near Eiglith ave-
nue. Chas. P. Craig & Co., 501-505
Sellwood building
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM FURNISHED
Hat In the Lafayette fiats, tlioroughly
modern; heat, water and telephone
service furnished. R, P. Dowse & Co,
lOG Providence building.
FOR RENT— VERY FINE SEVEN-
room apartment In new Berkshire
apartments, corner Eight avenue east
and First street. Rental department,
John A. Stephenson & Co., Wolvin
building.
FOR SALP:— FORTY ACRES OF LAND,
one-half mile to station; one-third
mile to school; good house, well and
barn; one-half mineral right; $1,100 If
taken at once; a snap. Apply Martin
Moe, Alborn, Minn.
PERSONAL— IF YOU CONTEMPLATE
going into tne moving picture busi-
ness, better consult us, we can fur-
nish your place complete. Picture
machines, all makes, new and sec-
ond-hand hand experts to Install
same. Large list of good liouses for
sale. Northwestern Supplv Co., 129
West Superior street, Duluth. Minn.
PERSONAL — COMFORT, BEAUTY
shop, 20 W. Sup. St., upstairs. Mani-
curing, 25c; shampooing and hair-
dressliig, 50c; switches made from
combings. Both phones.
PERSONAL— WHY NOT GET AWAY
from washday troubles by sending
your family wash to us; 5 cents per
pound. Lute's laundry, 808 East
Second street. Both 'phones 447.
PERSONAL— MANICURING AND MAS-
sage. 813 Torrey building.
MRS. VOGT, HAIR DRESSER. IS NOW
located at 17 East Superior street,
upstairs.
PERSONAL— IF YOU HAVE WORKED
on perpetual motion and have failed,
or If interested in it, let me know;
do not write unless you mean busi-
ness. L 41, Herald.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED LADY
pressers. Apply 232 East Superior
street. Zenith Dye house.
WANTED— KITCHEN GlIiL. 30 WEST
Second street.
WANTED— GOOD CHOCOLATE DIP-
per. Winkler Bros." candy factory.
2234 West Michigan street.
WANTED— COMPETENT GIRL TO
take care of two children and do .«iec-
o"d work. 1721 East First street.
WANTED — COOK AT 2526 EAST
First street; good wages.
Central Employment office, all kinds
of places filled and positions furnish-
ed for girls. Room 3, over Big Du-
luth store. Mel. 259. Grand, 620.
C.
P. LAR.SON, MANUFACTURER,
328 WE.ST SUPERIOR ST,
DULUTH, MINN.
W^ ANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework; one who can go
home nights. Call mornings. 128
Eighth avenue east.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 621 East First street.
WANTED — COOKS, WAITRESSEl,
chambermaids and kitchen help; out
of town orders solicited. Park Em-
ployment agency, 15 Lake avenue
north.
WANTED — GIRL "POR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook; laun-
dress employed; reference required.
2401 East Fifth street.
PERSONAL— I WILL WRITE YOUR
ads, reports, pamphlets and pros-
pectuses, furnish you with facts, ar-
guments, literary and historical ma-
terial for debates, club papers and
orations, correct and revise vour
MSS. and boost your enterprise. Don
Carlos W. Musser, 712 Torrey build-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2024.
FARMS— CHEAP WISCONSIN HOMES.
Cutover hardwood timber lands lo-
cated in Rusk county; 65.000 acres of
fine clay loam land in the heart of
the dairy and clover belt; close to
good markets, schools and churches;
terms to suit purchaser. Write for
maps and other information to the
Arpin Hardwood Lumber Co., Grand
Rapids, Wis.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS
and alcove; light and bath, 1218^
East Fourth street. Hartman-O'Don-
nell agency, 205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— MODERN FIVE-ROOM
brick Hat, 721% East Fifth street;
hot water heat; gas range; laundry
tub; 128. water furnished. Call
Grand 2 253 -A.
FOR RENT — WELL iURNISHED
room; modern; |2 per wtek; another
at $2.50. The Latona, 12:; East First
street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ROOM, ALL
conveniences; for two laaies or two
gentlemen. Apply 405 East Third
street.
FOR RENT — FURN1SHI:D ROOMS;
gentlemen preferred. 206 West First
street.
FOR RENT — THREE ROOMS AT
323% East Fifth street; v;ater, sewer
and gas; $9 per month. Inquire up-
stairs.
FOR RENT— STEAM HEATED SINGLE
room; r^nt desirable; ail conven-
iences and use of 'phone gentlemen
preferred. Call 201 East Second
street.
Arch
DULUTH CHAPTER NO. 59.
R. A. M. — Meets at West
Duluth first and third
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meeting
April 19, 1911, Work— lioyaa
degree and lunch. Roger M.
Weaver, H. P.; a. Dunleavy, secietar]^
K. of p.
NORTH ST.AU LODGE, NO. 33, K. of P.
— -Micts every Tuesday evening al Cmlla
liall, 118 West Superior stntt. Next
meeting Tu«day evening. April 18. 8 p.
m. o'clock bliaxp. First raiik wc.rli. AU
kiijgiiu loraially Invited. A. L. SUiigls, C. C; S. A.
lleam, K. cf H. 8. . —
UIAMO.ND LODGE, No. 43. K. of P.—
Metis eviry Munany evening In riloao'c
liall. comer 'rwtntlcUi avenue \vc..,t an4
Superior street. AU kniglits cordially In-
vited. L. B. Alleu, C. C; S. U i-ieret,
K. of K & 8.
FOR RENT— FOUR -ROOM FLAT, 479
Mesaba avenue; all modern; also
very large bathroom; heat and
water Included.
FOR RENT— COZY FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
West Third street, near Lincoln Park,
|14, including water rent. S. W
lilchardson, 201 Exchange Bank
building. Both phones. 2046.
FOR RENT— FARM OF 25 ACRES,
with house, barns and poultry house
three miles from car line. See E l!
Kimball, First National Bank build-
ing.
FOR SALE — FORTY ACRES NEAR
Duluth; four-room house, good base-
ment; thirty-two acre.s cleared; good
soil; $1,600. Whitney Wall company,
301 Torrey building. (70.)
TEXAS INVESTMENTS.
Buy Orchards and Garden Lands at
Aldine, near Houston, the greatest
city in the Southwest, where values are
growing upward all the time. Address
E. C. Robertson, 501 Klam building,
Houston. Tex,
FOR SALE — FIFTY-FIVE ACRE
tract on Bordon Lake, three mllej
from Gordon, WMs.. several trains
dally to Duluth; good soil; fine fish-
ing; beautiful shore line and trees;
summer cottages all around; price
$650. $325 cash; balance easy terms
Heimbaugh & Spring. 1103 Tower
avenue. Superior. Wis.
Farm lands at wholesale prices. L. A.
Larsen Co.. 214 Providence building.
FOR RENT— BRICK FLAT, CORNER
of Fifteenth avenue east and Fourth
street; six rooms, bath, laundry,
storeroom, gas range, hot water
heating plant; new and up-to-date;
$o7.50 per month; no children. George
R. Laybourn. 14 Phoenix block.
FOR RENT — TWO FLATS. 27 AND 29
West Fourth street, six rooms, all
modern conveniences; furnace, gas
and electric llglit; large basement.
Apply at 27'/^ West Fourth street.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. S. S. Williamson. 515
Torrey building. Both 'phones.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOM;
modern conveniences; gentleman
prelerred, references re-iuired. 410
Nintli avenue east.
FOR RENT— ROOMS IN j*. MODERN
East end residence. Call Grand
&27.
FOR RENT — TWO FURNISHED
rooms for light housekeeping. 206
West Third street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ItOOMS FOR
light housekeeping; strictly modern.
316 West Second street.
tK>n RENT — LARGE FURNISHED
front room. 120 First avenue west.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED HOUSE-
keeplng suites, gas, water and elec-
tric light included. La Salle hotel,
12 Lake avenue north.
FOR RENT— NICELY FURNISHED
room in private family, use of 'phone
109 West Fifth.
FOR RENT— AFTER APRIL 16, FOUR
nice rooms, second floor, 19 Twenty-
eighth avenue west; water, sewer,
toilet, electric light, $10 per month.
F. I. Salter Co.
KITCHI GA.UMI LODGE. NO. 123, K. of
P. — MeetK t\try Tliu.-stlHy evening at Com-
mcn-lal tiub Ijall, Otutral avenue. Weil
Duluth. Nut meeting Thurs.lay. Anrll
13tb. Wotk. (econd ranX. AU knlgkta
ronlially Invited. E. 1). NlckerscD, C. C. ; C \L
PliiUips, K. cf U. tt 8.
DULUTH LODGE, NO. 28. 1. O. O. F.— MEEXa
;pj^ every Friday evening at 8 o'clock at Od<l
Felions' hall, 18 l.ake avenue oortiv
Next nieeUns iJglii, April 21. Second
degree. J. A. .Velson, .\. O.; L. G. Marlow. Hec.
Seo , A. H. I'aul. Fin. Sec.
WEST DULU-ni LOUQE. NO. 168. I. 0. O.
P.
^5-=-,.^ Meets nery l\iesday nlclit at 1. 0.
(£fi=^^ kail. West Dulutli. Next mtetiiig
'"^ ^"^ AprU 11. General Lusliies*. W. E.
O P.
Digbt
Co«.
den, N. G.; W. B. Haiticy, Itic. Sec.
DULUTH fcNCAMPMliNT. NO. 36, 1. O.
O. F. — Meets en llie second and fijrth
Tliu.iiday at Odd Felions hall. IS Ijik*
avenue nortli. Next meeting nigltt At^il
'17. llcyal purple degree voting. K. An-
derson, C. I'.; L. G. Marlow, Kec. ScritML
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT-
318 Sixth avenue east, upstairs; bath,
electric light, gas for cooking; wa-
ter paid; $16 p*er month. R. P. Dowse
& Co., 106 Providence building.
FOR RENT — SIX -ROOM STEAM
heated flat; central location; thor-
oughly modern; janitor service;
laundry tubs. Apply Corporate In-
vestment company, Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE- ROOM FLAT, 19
Lake avenue north; six-room flat 14
West ir'irst street; all modern con-
veniences. Inquire rental department
Bridgeman & Russell.
MRS. VOGT, HAIR DRESSER, IS TEM-
porarily quartered at Room 302 La
Salle Hotel.
PERSONAL — HOUSEHOLD GOODS
packed, moved, stored and shipped
at reduced rates. Only fireproof
storage in the city. We furnish only
experienced furniture packers and
movers. Duluth Van & Storage Co ,
210 W. Superior St. Both 'phones 492.
PERSONAL — ELECTRIC RUG AND
carpet cleaning. James Morgan. Mel-
rose 1902; Zenith 2222.
Personal — Wringer repairing. Int'state
Merc. Co., 11 N. 21st Ave. W. Zen. 787.
PERSONAL — LADIES — ASK YOUR
druggist for Chichesters Pills, the
Diamond Brand. For 25 years known
as best, safest, always reliable. Take
no other. Chichesters Diamond Brand
Pills are sold by druggists every-
where.
PERSONAL — MME. MAY FRENCH
female regulator, best of all. Mailed
In plain wrapper, $2 a box. Orpheum
pharmacy, 201 East Superior street
PERSONAL — COMBINGS AND CUT
hair made into beautiful switches.
Knauf Sisters.
WANTED — TWO DINING
waitresses at Hotel Lenox.
ROOM
FOR
« ^^^.Il^^^^S FOR HATCHING
R. C. White Wyandottes: $1 for thir-
teen eggs; Black Minorca. $1 for thir-
teen eggs. Addres.s 429 Sixth avenue
west. New 'phone. Grand 2164-Y.
(Continued on pace 10.)
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 718 Tenth avenue east.
Call Grand 2253-Y.
WANTED— GOOD
eral hot^ework.
son street.
GIRL FOR GEN-
Apply 1509 Jeflfer-
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; small family. Call at
123 Ninth avenue east.
WANTED — GIRL ABOUT 18 TO AS-
slst with housework and care for
children. Apply 1610'>4 East Supe-
rior street.
WANTED — GOOD RELIABLE NURSE
girl to care for child during after-
noons. Call Mrs. Welles. McKay ho-
tel.
(Continued on pace 19.)
BISLNESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
■H- PHILIP D ANDREA *
i^ Will move into his new store, Mc- ^
•^ Kay Hotel building, at 20 Fifth ■ife.
71^ avenue west. He will carry a full i^.
# line of fruits, candies, tobacco. •^
i^ cigars and stationery; also will ^
^ open a ncAv Ice cream parlor, ■j^
# Would be pleased to have his #
■?(■ his friends and patrons give him a -^
# call. *
FOR SALE— FORTY-ACRE TRUCK
farm, six miles from Duluth; 25 acres
cultivated; six-room house, barn etc.
Included are two horses, cows' and
chickens Price $3,500; will exchange
for city property. G. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
FOR SALE- BARGAIN I>{ WELL IM-
proved farm; good frame house and
thirty acres cleared; on main road.
handJ*to Duluth; must be sold; good
place for chickens. Call on E H
Caulklns & Co., Palladlo building.
FOR SALE — FARM, CONTAINING
about 63 acres, fronting on lake, on
Cuyuna iron range; 20 acres culti-
vated; good buildings; no mineral
reserve. Price $2,000. Easy terms.
G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM IN
south Cass county; all fenced; level
land; 12 acres cultivated; fair build-
ings; small stream. Price, $1,300. G.
A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — 10,000 ACRES IN 40 AND
80-acre tracts, close to Hlbbing and
Chlsholm; good markets; forty an-
nual payments of $16 each on 40
acres, or $32 each on 80 acres, pays
both principal and Interest. For
further information apply Guaranty
Farm Land company. 416 Lyceum
building, Duluth, Minn.
FOR RENT— FLAT WITH ALL MOD-
ern conveniences at 421 W^est Third
street. Mendenhall & Hoopes.
FOR RENT — 927 EAST FIFTH
street, five-room flat, bath, water
free, $22 per month. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck. Torrey.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
water, sewer and electric light. 2103
West Third street. Apply at 313
Twenty-first avenue west.
FOR RENT — LARGE FJRnISHED
room with private family; steam
heat, electric light and t.as; use of
'phone and bath. Inquirj 124 East
Fourth street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHEL' FRONT
room with all conveniences; for one
or two; pleasant view. 313 West
Fourth street.
FOR RENT — 3516 WEST THIRD.
Five rooms, bath, gas and city wa-
ter; $14 per month. Inqjire down-
stairs.
FOR RENT — NICELY FURNISHED
room; all conveniences; $8 per month.
617% West First street.
THREE ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED
for $69; this includes fuiniiure for
kitchen, dining room and bedroom.
Terms, $1.50 per week. Why not
own the furniture In your apart-
ments or rooms instead of paying
rent on It. See F. S. Kelly Furniture
company.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE CHEERFUL
four-room flat, water, toilet, gas,
electric light, $13; Third avenue
west Harris Realty Co., Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
modern except heat. 108 South
Twenty-seventh avenue west. Mel-
rose 1845.
FOR RENT— THREE-itOOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11.00 per month.
Water furnished. D. W. Scott & i^on
402 Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM FURNISH-
ed flat; $15 per month. Inquire 1123
East Tenth street.
FOR RENT — THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11 per month; water
furnished. D. W, Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR SALE — LANDS IN SMALL
tracts to actual settlers only: good
location for dairying and truck gar-
dening. For further information call
on or address Land Commissioner,
Duluth & Iron Range Railroad com-
pany, 101 Wolvin building, Duluth,
Minn.
SW EDISH MASSAGE.
A. E. H.rt.NSEN, MASSEUR, 400 NEW
Jersey building. Old 'phone 4273 Mel.
rose.
Mrs. Westlind, massage, treated at oflicc
or at your home. Zen. Grand 2246-X.
MRS. H. WIKING. SWEDISH MAS-
sage, SOS East First St. Melrose 4494.
FOR SALE — EIGHTY-ACRE FARM ON
Crow Wing river; 20 acres cleared,
20 acres meadow; good clay soil; no
buildings. Price, $1,300. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — TEN ACRES OF GOOD
land inside city limits; cash or terms.
S. H.. Herald.
SELECTED FARMING LANDS.
On line of the Alger-Smlth railroad.
On easy terms to settlers.
ALEXANDER McBEAN,
Sales manager, 406 Columbia Bldg.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE-ACRE
farm, close to station In Morrison
county, on fine lake; good soil; hay
meadow; five-room house and barn.
Price, $1,700. G. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
(Continued on pace 18.)
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS;
light and bath. 208 East Fourth
street. Hartman O'Donnell Agency.
205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat. Call Lin-
coln 52, Melrose 1052. Room 203, An-
derson & Thoorsell block. Twenty-
first avenue west and Superior street.
FOR RENT — MAY 1, TWO FOUR-
room flats with bath. Hardwood
floors throughout. Gas, electric light,
etc. Very central location. Tele-
phone Grand or Melrose, 225. W
C. Sherwood & Co., 118 Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. 8. S. Williamson. 515
Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE MODERN
five-room brick flat. First class con-
dition; hot water heating plant
Fourth avenue east and Fir.st street
Reasonable rent. New phone, Lin-
coln 317.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT. CITY
water, bath, water free. $16 per
month. J. D. Howard & Co., 216 West
Superior street.
FOR RENT— THREE ROOJIS, ELEC-
tric light and all conveniences, $10
per month. Inquire 1203 West Fourth
street
FOR RENT — TWO UNFirPNISHED
rooms for light housekeeping; also
single furnished room; all conven-
iences. 1315 East Sixth .street.
K. O. T. M.
DULUTH TENT. NO. 1— MEETS EVERT
Monday, 8.1j p. m.. at Maculiee liall,
'J.I Lake avenue north. Vijilting ^em-
I)?™ nlnays welcome. F. C. Freer,
[ommander. flat 4, Munger row. We»t
Dulutii; J. B. Gelineau, record keepei;
office in baU. Hours. 10 a. m. to 1 p. m., dally.
Zenltli "phone. Grand C19-X.
A. O. U. W.
FIDELITY LODGE. NO. 103 — MEET8
at Maccabee hail, il Lake avenue i,rrih.
tvery Tliurbday al 8 p. ra. Vl$Uln«
members welcime. M. Cossi. M. W. ; A.
E. Plering, reorder; O. 1. Murfold, fi-
nancier, 217 East Fifth strctt
MODEK.N SAMARITANS.
ALPHA COU.NCIL, NO. 1— TAKE NO-
tioe that Saimirttan degree meets fl.'sC
and third Tliur^daya; t)eneflcent. Mcond
and fourth Tliursdays. Lucy A. iur^ly.
Lady G. S. : .N. IJ. Morrison. G. S. : Wal-
lace P. Welbanks. siribe; T. A. Oall. F.
S.. First Nution.tl Bank building.
UNITED OUDEU OF FORESTERS^
Court Eastern Sti:r, No. 8C. meeU every
first and third IXiesday at U. O. F.
liall, corniT Fourth axcnue west and
First street. Cha«. V. Hanson, C. R,
507 West Fifth street; A. U. Olund, sec-
retarj- 1031 West First stnt. Harry MU-.ei, trtaa-
urer. tosim 23, Wintbrop block. Zenith 'plioua USu-X.
M. W. A.
ISrPERIAL CAMP. NO. 220C — MEETS
at U- O. F. hall. Fourtli a«nue wejt
and First street , second an«j fi'iirth
Tuesdays of each month. Uarviy W.
WUte, consul; C. P. Earl, clerk, bcl 411;
P. E. Doreiuus, deputy; adUieaa. .N. i*.
freight office.
AUTOMOBILES.
*. AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE. *-
^ New 1911 model M, Thomas *■
ft flyers, seven-passenger. Private i^
t service a specialty. Both 'phones #
694. a-
* Q. W. DAZIEL, *
^ Solicitor and Operator. ■^
* *
FOR • SALE — FIVE-Pj» SSENGER
touring car and one deliirery auto,
in good condition; must l>e sold at
once regardless of price. For par-
ticulars address "Auto," care Herald.
WE REPRESENT MAXWELL, PRE-
mier, Oakland. Moline pleisure cars
and Wilcox trucks. AU kinds of re-
pairing, even tire vulcanzing. Old
cars bought and sold. It will pay
you to try us. Also have automobiles
for hire. Call, 'phone or vrite M. F.
Falk. Rapid Transit Auto & Repair-
ing Co., 2110-12 W. Mich. St. 'Phones
Mel. Z4l: Zen 47 Lincoln.
ASHES AND GARBAGE.
REMOVED PROMPTLY. ZEMTH 2378-
X. 807 Sixth avenue west.
REMOVED ON SHORT NOTICE— DICK
Barrett, 1122 E. 4th St Z;n. 1945-Y.
ASHES, GARBAGE AND MANURE RE-
moved promptly. Melrose 13y0; Ze-
nith 1488-X.
UPHOLSTERING.
FURNITURE, AUTOMOBILES, CAR-
riages; reasonable prices. E. Ott, 112
First avenue west. Both 'phones.
Jollli
CIJIN STEWART, -NO. 50. O. S. C—
Meets first and third Wednesdayj «acl|
munth, 8 p. m.. at L'. O. F. haU. corner
Kuurtii aunuc west and First street. Next
icgular meeting, April 19. Robert Fer-
guson, chief; Don Mcl>euuan. secfct^Lry;
nauiill. Fin. See.. 312 Torrey building.
ROYAL ARCANUM. Duluth CoiuuU. N«.
1483 — Meets sei-oud and fourth Tuesday
evenings. Macabce hall, '21 Lake ;ii<.a'it
DorUi. Cllritun Brooke. »cciet&ry, iul
Columbia buUdlng.
Mesaba Council, No. 1493— Meeu first
aad third WcdacMlajt e\ealiigi, Coluia!>l«
ball West end. A. M. Jthusou. secretary. 117 Nbixto
Twentieth avenue west.
MJibHL
-■i-;s
ORDER OF OWL9. DfLUTH
Nest. No. i;iOO— Meetings are held
every Wedoefday of eacii niuuib at
Owls' baU. lie West buperloi sue«b
Joseph 1>. Feaks, s«cretai7. -2
Supiiior street.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL
MRS. HANSON, GRADUATE MID-
wife; female coinplaints. 413 Seveuth
avenue east. Zenith 1225.
Mrs. A. Ferguson, graduate midwife;
female complaints. 2201 West Fourtii
street. Zenitli, Lincoln 224-Y.
& WAROE. GRADUATE MIDWIFH
and nurse. 215 Tweuty-sixtli avenu»
west. Zenith 'phone, Lincoln 200-D.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL— PROSPECTIVE
mothers will And a pleasant home
before and during conflnement at
Ashland Maternity liome. 208 Tenth
avenue west, Ashland. Wis. Infants
cared for.
PERSON..1L — Private home for ladles
before and during conflnement; ex-
pert care; everytiiing conridentlal; In-
fants cared for. Ida Pearson. M. D.,
284 Harrison avenue. St. Paul. Minn.
Mrs. H. Olson, graduate midwife. Prl-
vatB hospital, 329 N. 58 Av. W. Zen-
ith 3173; Calumet 173-L..
WOMAN'S HOSPITAL — MRS. MARY
Barren, matron, 931 London roaik
Zenfth 'phone. 1597.
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I IJ.. I ^ _ ijj J I - I I. Ill II fj ' .in.. lUU— i»; I 4li>.l|l ll^ lldl I I I II t ■ 1^ JW I I f 11 ""^^^^^ !■!■■ I Pl^ nil I ■ ijl I 4itl I I lit. II lib
THE BTTT.UTH HERALIbB
ti^imi^'^m
VOLUME XXIX— NO. 9.
WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 19, 1911.
KEEFE BILL ON ELECTION OF
SENATORS FINALLY PASSED
OREGON PLAN
IS ADOPTED
Recall and State-Wide Pri-
mary Bills Are Side-
tracked.
Duluth Given Lease of State
Property for Dock
Site.
Bill Abolishing Capital Pun-
ishment in Minnesota
Is Passed.
(By • Staff Correspondent.)
St Paul. Minn.. April 19.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Though actual adjourn-
ment did not happen until today, the
thlrtyrseventh session of the Minnesota
legislature really ended last night at
midnight, in the house after a shindy
that was characteristic of that body,
over whether or not the clock should
be turned back, and at 1:30 in the sen-
ate, through a mistake at the desk In
announcing the result of a vote on ad-
^"iT'the" house the hour of midnight,
oficlal closing hour of business under
the Constitution, arrived with the spec-
{acle of two factions, practically em-
battled, surrounding the clock— one de-
termined to set it back so that business
could continue, the other as llrmly de-
termined that work should cease
nromptly at midnight. What might
f w? been the nastiest fight of the ses-
sion wis averted by the speaker's rul-
ing t^at. unfortunate though it was
ihf hour of midnight had arrived and
no further business could be transact-
ed The house adjourned therefore
at 12.18. leaving a mass of unfinished
^^ThT senate, at 1:30. though the clock
said it was 11. held before it the recall
Mil on a report from the conference
Committee. Which had been adopted.
(Continued on page 4. fourth column.^
gouldTookTfor
new directors
Candidates to Be Selected to
Replace Warburg and
Vanderbilt.
JOSEPH R. KEEFE,
Democratic Representative From Red-
wood County, Whose Bill Applymg
to Minnesota the Oregon Plan of
Electing United States Senators
Was Passed by the Legislature.
SESSION IS
ADJOURNED
LegislatHre Divided Into Two
Hostile Camps at Its
Close.
APPEAL TO
THEPEOPLE
By Executive Committee of
Northern Minnesota De-
velopment Association.
Senators Who Broke Reap-
portionment Pledges Should
Be Retired.
(By a Staff Correspondent.)
St. Paul, Minn., April 19.— (Special to
The Herald.) — The executive committee
of the Northern Minnesota Develop-
ment association met today and gave
out the following statement:
"The failure of the thirty-seventh
legislature of the state to pass a fair
reapportionment measure is attribu-
table to any one of several distinct
causes. In the house there was no par-
ticular opposition to the Congdon reap-
portionment bill. Speaker Dunn was
from the opening to the closing day of
the session a fair minded, consistent
friend of reapportionment and he in-
sisted that the subject have fair and
honest consideration. Through the in-
fluence of their senators and from other
causes to be hereafter discussed a few
house members violated their party
pledges and the oath of their ofhce,
and voted against reapportionment.
"It is to the action of the senate, of
(Contltnued on page 4, third column.)
chicagoImeam
unfit for humans
FARMERS' FREE UST
BILL IS SUBMIHED TO
HOUSE BY COMMflTEE
.HIOTORIQAL
4__SfiCi£Etr
INSURRECTO
CENTS.
Accompanying Report Makes
Strong Argument for
Its Passage.
Would Reduce the Tariff
Revenues of Last Year
Only $10,006,945.
Majority Report of Drainage
Committee Adopted By
the House.
(By a Staff Correspondent.)
St. Paul. Minn., April 19.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Shortly after noon to-
day the thirty-seventh session of the
Minnesota legislature passed into his-
tory, and quiet and order may be ex-
pected to reign once more around the
capitol. The event probably was at-
tended with by fewer regrets either
inside the legislature or outside than
Now York April 19.— Directors of the almost any other similar legislative
M^irur^P^ctflc railway are consid- breakup in the state's history. The
cr'ing toda> he Ivaillbility of candi- session ended with the legislature
c.'tes to succeed Paul Warburg and Utvided into two bitterly hostile camps
Cornelius Vanderbilt. who resigned as I ^^ ^^e passage of the bill Un^iting
directors vesterday Immediately after ^ representation of the cities In the
Veorge J. Oould and his friends on the senate and. as the matter "ow goes
Missouri Pacific directorate elected B. before the people, it Is Ukely that It
F Bush as head of the system ^^^^ spread the dissension from the
'The .llrertors, now that Kuhn-Loen - • - --- — -♦-
t Co no longer aie the Missouri Pa-
cific bankers, win also consider new
knanciar arrangements for the prop-
erty While the representatives of
John D Rockefeller on the directorate
FT Uates and Edgar L. Marston, op
posed the selection of Mr. liu.sh. it was
said today they will "t-t ^es gn.
E D Adams, representative of tne
Deutsche bank on the board, is m coni-
municatTon with officials of the in.sti-
uition and his action will be governed
ty advices received.
Three Concerns Are Indicted
for Shipping Impure
Products.
Chicago. April 19. — Thrae Chicago
ice cream companies were indicted by
the United States grand Jury today
charged with shipping Impure ice
cream. Those indicted were:
Thompson-Reld Ice Cream com-
pany. McBride Bros. & Knobbe, Rose
A Woodhull and Addis K. WoodhuU
as the Woodhull Ice Cream company.
The Indictments say samples taken
from shipments by the indicted com-
panies were full of filthy animal sub-
stance and unfit for human consump-
tion. The shipments specified in the
indictments are:
By Thompson-Reld company to Red
Cross Drug company of Racine. Wis.;
by the McBride firm to the Kradwell
Drug company. Racine. Wis.; by the
Woodhull concern to R. L. Fellon of
Valparaiso. Ind.. all Oct. 6, 1910.
The government chemist reported
500.0"t»0.000 bacteria approximately to
one-eighth of a cubic inch of the
cream.
Quotes President as Admit-
ting That Protective Tariff
Rates Are Too High.
Washington. April 19.— The majority
report of the ways and means committee
on the BO-called farmers" free list bill,
submitted to the house today by Chair-
man Underwood, is a merger xtt Demo-
cratic political argument anfl analysis
of the proposed duty exemptions.
The report shows that the bill would
reduce the tariff revenues |10,006,945,
based on the importation for the last
fiscal year, an amount described as "in-
considerable in comparison with the
great saving and advantages to all of
our people from the additiopa to the
free list provided for."
Quoting President Taft's recent Ca-
nadian reciprocity speeches, the report
seeks to convey the impression that
the administration is convinced that
protective tariff rates are too high.
"In several public addresses.' it says, |
"he (the president) has admitted that
tariff rates are too high, that such
rates have res-ulted in excessively high
prices, felt especially in the increased
cost of living, which now bears heav-
ily on our people and that they have
not received the long-pronrH»ed bene-
fits of domestic competition under high
protective duties." „»„♦„
Referring to the^preslJenfa state^
(Continued on page 12. fifth column.)
NO DKCRJiNATION
AGAINST UNIFORM
<IR GUNS NEARER
TO CIUDAD JUAREZ
Appear to Be Makmg Prep-
arations to Attack the
City Soon.
Soldiers and Citizens Spend
the Entire Night Under
Arms.
- r«.
The Pennsylvania Legislature
Passes Bill Providmg for
Heavy Fine.
Harrlsburg. Pa.. April 19.— The state
senate today passed a house bill mak-
ing it a misdemeanor for any pro-
prietor, manager or employe of a the-
ater or other public place of entertain-
ment or amusement to discriminate
au:ainst any person wearing the uni-
form of the United States. The penally
is a fine not exceeding |500 or im-
prisonment not exceeding one year or
both The bill now goes to Governor
Tener for approval. It is known he
will sign the measure.
A. V. FAWCETT,
Defeated at Election Tuesday by W.
W. Seymour, Who Will Take Office
at End of Ten Days.
TACOMA MAYOR
IS RECALLED
Voters Will Attempt to Re-
call Four Comnussioners
in Electiin May 2.
Tacoma, Wash., April 19.— Mayor A.
V. Fawcett of Tacoma was recalled
yesterday. W. W. Seymour is the new
mayor-elect. He will take office at the
1 end of ten days. Seymour polled 11.246
votes against 10,344 for Fawcett
I Seymour and Fawcett were the two
high candidates at an election two
weeks ago. when a Socialist also was
^"sV'ymo^uT was ihTcandldate of the
^n" elecftlfr will be held May 2 to
vote on the recall of four city commis-
sioners.
MAIL STEAMER WRECKED.
Cape Town. South Africa, April 19.—
i ,e Portuguese mall steamer Lusitania
is piled up on Bellows Rock, two miles
southwest of the Cape of Good Hope.
Her 800 passengers and crew were
taken off this morning by the British
warship Forte and a government tug.
The Lusitania was bound from Mo-
zambique for Lisbon when she struck
on the sunken rocks. There is no hope
of saving the vessel.
B. F. BUSH,
Elected Head of the Missouri Pacific
Railroad. Defeating the Rockefeller-
Kuhn-Loeb Interests.
BIG CHURiCH
CONSECRiVTED
Completed Portions d Largest
Cathedral in Country
Dedicated.
Been Building Twenty Years
and Now Only Par-
tially Finishei
TRIAL MAY
BEJALTED
New Investigation Into Death
of Camorrist May Be
Hai
Case Is Resumed at Viterho
After Vacation Lasting
Over Easter.
legislature throughout the state.
...
This morning's proceedings were
purely formal. The only event of un-
usual interest was the adoption by
the house of the majority report of the
(Continued on page 12, fifth column.)
WANmRONER TO
ARREST SHERIFF
I TRYING TO CORX HIM. %
Viterho. April 19— The trial of the
Neapolitan Camorrists may be halted
and a new investigation into the mur-
der of Gennaro- Cuoccolo and his wife
ordered, on the ground that the In-
former, Gennaro Abbatemagglo, was an
accomplice in the crime. ♦^„th nf
This possibility rests on the truth or
a sensational report circulated on the
resumption of the case today-. The re-
port is to the effect that if the evi-
dence already prepared by the state
aipears insufllicient to convict the ac-
cused. Abbatemagglo will confess com-
Dlicity in the assassination of Cuoccolo.
It is said that he will swear that while
he was not one of those who struck
the death blows, he witnessed the pro-
ceedings in the role of a picket who
was polted to warn the actual assas-
sins against i.iterruption and to help
them in making their escape.
If this confession is made, the trial
will be stopped, as a new inquiry into
ihe facts of the crime will be neces-
sary.
♦.
CamorrlMtM Affai* In <^«»'»'?;,
Vlterbo. Italy, April 19;— After a
respite during holy week, the band of
(Continued on page 14. second column)
Grand Jury Foreman Unable
to Find Either of Those
Worthies.
Danville, 111., April 19.— It in prac-
tically certain that the grand Jury
will adjourn sine die this afternoon.
Foreman AVoodyard and Former Fore-
man Goodwine went into court this
morning and procured an attachment
for .Sheriff Shepard. who had been sub-
poenaed but who failed to appear.
After the subpoena v/as issued an ef-
fort was made to find Coroner Cole to
have it served, but he could not be
founi. Neither was the sheriff to be
''^Thr'ee politicians who ..were sub-
Doenaed yesterday to appear in con-
necUon with the alleged election
bribery committed during yesterday s
election did not put in their appear-
ance this morning.^
HUMANfflTAT
$10 A SQUARE INCH
Indiana Farmer Has Already
Spent $230 for New
Cuticle.
Fort Wayne, Ind.. April 19.— At the
rate of $10 per square inch, Henry
Prough, a wealthy farmer of La
Grange. Ind., already has spent |230
for live skin from his fellow men to
replace cuticle he lost in an accident
by fire a few days ago. Two neighbors
have spared a total of twenty-three
Sjuire "inches, and the Fort Wayne
surgeon, who Is performing the skin
grafting for Prough, says much more
will be needed, for which the sufferer
will pay the rate he bas established.
New York, April 19.— With solemn
ceremony and in the presence of a no-
table gathering of clerjjy and laity,
tlie completed portions of the Cathe-
dral of St. John the Divine, on Morn-
Ingslde Heights, were consecrated to-
day, according to the rites of the
Protestant Episcopal church.
The impressive offices were presided
over by the Right Rev. David H. Greer,
bishop of the diocese of New York.
Among the guests invited to witness
the function were the representatives
of many communions, presidents of
universities and officers of city, state
and nation. .
The ceremonial began with the pro-
cession of ecclesiastics, preceded by
the vested choir boys, across t);e walk
from the Synod house to the huge
masa of gray stone, still outwardly
?^ude but^ representing an important
step in the work of making the Cathe-
dral of St. John the Divine the fourth
largest cathedral in tho world.
Within the structure, where many
beauties of the decorative scheme al-
ready have been worket out, the pro-
cession proceeded under the great dome
and witPi impressive exercises the pre-
sentations of the chape, of St Savior
and St. Columba and of the altar,
organ and choir were Tormally made
and the consecration ceremonies per-
formed Music, from the great organ
ind choir, played a notable part in the
''%1X"p*Greer preached the sermon of
the day dwelling upon the value of
Ihl ?re'sent''day%t^edral as a force
for righteousness in mp^iern life.
Fonrth l.arge».t lii \^ orld.
The Episcopal cathedral or hj-
John the Divine is the largest
(Continued on page 14, second column)
SEVENlHOUiiAND
MEN GO ON STRIKE
Rebels Steal Into Agua Prieta
and Burn Raiboad
Stations.
El Paso. Tex.. April 19. — The Insur-
rectos south of Juarez moved their
cannon nearer that city over night and
appear to be making preparations for
an attack regardless of the rapid fire
guns, masked mortars and mines upon
which the federals mainly rely for
their defense.
Juarez spent the night under arms,
momentarily expecting the "battle to
open, and time and again, as the rur-
ales scouting in the mountains outside
the city fired at the curiously shaped
rocks that look so much like men, the
cry went up that the attack had com-
menced.
Delayed telegrams from Torreon tell
of the complete destruction of ttie
bridge system of the Eagle Pass branch
of the Mexican National lines.
Fifteen bridges have been destroyed
by the insurrectos on the Coahulla &
Pacific railroad between I'arral and
Torreon and railroad traffic in Coa-
hulla and Durango is badly demoralized.
Passenger service between Torreon and
Durango has been interrupted for six
days, and there is no immediate pros-
pect of resumption of train service.
Traffic is likewise paralyzed east of
Torreon. but an attempt will probably
be made to run a train to Cludad Por-
firlo Diaz over the main line of the
Mexican International tomorrow or
Friday when the bridges will have been
repaired unless the Insurrectos Inter-
This Is not Improbable as the rebels
have served notice that they will at-
tempt to destroy all bridges between
Torreon and Cludad Porfirio Diaz.
• ■
Rebels Bum Slatlon.
A^ua Prieta, Mex., April 19. — Shortly
after daylight today a daring band of
Insurrectos numbering only a half doz-
en or so, stole into Agua Prieta and
set fire to the Nacozari railroad station,
which was destroyed with its valuable
contents. The federals fired upon the
invaders and two or three of them
were killed. ,
Five loaded freight cars also were
burned. The freight depot was filled
with goods of every description in-
cluding costly mining machinery sup-
plies and provisions which had not
been moved over the Nacozari railroad
because of the burning of bridges south
of Agua Prieta. ^ a ^ ♦v,^ Ai^
Whether the men who fired the de-
pot had been hiding under It since the
evacuation yesterday ^or had dashed
across the line from the American line
IS not known. There has been talk
on this side of reprisals of this nature
W^
Long-Expected Trouble With
Grand Rapids IFumiture
Workers Begun.
Grand Rapids, Mich.. April 19.— The
long-expected strike of the furniture
workers of Grand Rapids, which has
been hanging fire for several weeks,
while a committee of iltlzens has en-
deavored to bring abcut an amicable
understanding betweer, manufacturers
and men. was officially declared on at
9 o'clock this mornintr.
The union men in nearly sixty fur-
niture factories, Including wood work-
ing shops, packed up their tools and
walked out. Between 6.000 and 7,000
union men, including varnlshers and
fln shers. as well as cabinet makers,
carvers and woodworkers, went out.
Somr 3.000 other employes who are
nof unionized are aitected by the
^^The' strike came to a head today as
the result of the me nuf acturers re-
fusal in a communication to the citi-
zens' committee of Inquiry, to grant
any concessions to tho men. The men
"sk 10 per cent increase in wages, a
^ine-hou'i- day and the abolition of
"^'The "Jn^aJifacturers leclare they will
continue to treat with their men In-
dividually, but refuse any increase in
wages basing their refusal on trade
conditions.
(Continued on page 14. fifth column.)
ARim
PROBABLE
War May Be Suspended to
Allow for Peace Ne-
gotiations.
Matter k Now Under Consid-
eration By the Mexican
GovemmenL
Washington, April 19.--The posslbll-
Ity of an armistice to arrange peace
negotiations was confirmed by a dis-
patch to the state department today
from Ambassador Wilson at Mexico
City
In connection with the delicate boun-
dary situation? the ambassador said
thJ a friendly Interpolation of the
M-viran congress on the relations ue
meen?he United States and Mexico is
inie^?. This is interpreted here as a
desire of the Mexican government to
Dlace the matter officially before the
Kxfcan people. It indicates it Is f'ald
ait the state department, that the den-
iiu^dl '^r (k"e-^nTterlt^'ls'?iw"2K
^^«>^^7.e^^t^h/"iia\e-d^ISVn]?nt^has -
t^SLr^deKe^^rd^-"rfc\il4"'"mel^^j^^^
would be adopted to prevent \^^V^^^/.
tlon of the Douglas Incident, the for
mal reply of Mexico has not yet been
'''"wuh fhe situation along the frontier
comparatively quiet. Int^'^^S^^.^'Vce
dav centers in the prospects for peace.
Of flclar confirmation of the peace move
was received with ""d'sBui.^ed satis-
far.itnn Thp tension of tne lasi be*ei»»
pe^relopmentsjn thejntercnange^be^
tween Dr. oome*. m« •^- . tms*
^a^e^^t in Washington and the^^^DU-
^enor°DrZamacon.^'\he''ne''w Mexican
embassador was officially presented to
fh^ oretldent this afternoon. Assistant
Secretary of State Chandler had made
''^^■h^rAmerlcan colony in Mexico City
iSe^ ^?n ^;i^riSua%^ion'^T^o/dirg"?;
been taken, he added. iv.tii»-
Mr Wilson said there Is a Poselhility
that the threatened strike of railroad
employea In Mexico may be averted.
/
/
DEFECTIVE PAGE
/
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Wednesday*
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
Weatker — Fair and
cooler tonigrht with
frost; Thursday
probably cloudy;
moderate t o brisk
westerly to norther-
ly windls.
BRAIVCH OFFICESi
A. Jenaea. 830 NortU BTth Ave. W. J. J. Bloran, SICH North Central Are.
For next Sunday, for any other
Sunday, for confirmation, school,
everyday use, you'll find it possible
to do more for your money in real
boys' clothes values here than you
exp^ict.
Take the eonflrmation suits-
There are black unshorn worst-
eds, blue serges (plain or self pat-
terned), fine dark cheviots, worst-
eds in exclusive effects. Double
breasted, single breasted and yoke
or plain Norfolk fashions, with
knickerbockv^r pants. They'll de-
liirlit anv boy from 8 to 18 years;
93.r>o to «i3.ri0.
The extra pair of knlcker
pants and the extreme strength
of material and tailoring give
"Oak Hall Ci>mblnatlon" suits.
You'll not find them anywhere
else — fS.
Striking thlnea for smallest boys— >
Smart reefers of regular or extra
length In golf red, blue, brown
worsteds; cov.irt, herringbone, diag-
onal topcoats; high-class sailor
suits and Russian models. The
•Tightest" styles for tots 2^ to 10,
93.5U to 912.
Dress shirts, black or white ties,
hose and other confirmation wear;
headwear, wash suits and shoes for
liDys.
Superior St. at Second Ave. West.
HNGERS BLOWN
OFF BY DYNAMITE
West Dulnth Boy Picks Cap
to Pieces With Painful
Results.
Clement Netzel, a 16-year-old West
Duluth boy, last evening had a thumb
and Index finger of his right hand
blown off in an explosion and incident-
ally satisfied his curiosity.
Clement has been employed as a mes-
senger boy at the steel plant site at
New Duluth. Yesterday he picked up
a dynamite cap, and not knowing what
it was, put it in his pocket and tooK
it home with him.
Like other boys, Clement is fond of
fishing, and last night after he came
home from work, the idea occurred to
him that the cap might fit on the end
of his fishing rod. He observed that
the cap was filled with something and
he was curious to find out what It was.
Holding it in his right hand, the lad
attempted to pick the contents out
with a pin. An explosion followed and
the report was heard for blocks around.
The boy's thumb and index finger were
torn oft and the middle finger was
badly lacerated and may have to be
amputated. This waa at 8:30 o'clock.
Clement was taken to the Duluth
hospital for treatment. Dr. David
Graham dressed the wounds and today
Clement is resting easily at his home.
He is tlie son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Netzel of 220 South Fifty-seventh ave-
nue west.
the Sod road with headquarters at St.
Paul, will not be able to take part on
the program at the annual banquet of
the West Duluth Commercial club
Thursday evening. Otherwise the pro-
gram as announced in The Herald Mon-
day evening will be given. This year,
the banquet will start at 7 o'clock, a
half hour earlier than in former years.
Only a few of the 400 tickets to be dis-
posed of, are left.
WIUDKCi^
LIVE PROBLEMS
We Sell High
Grade Shoes
For Less
Because
Men's.
Women's,
CbUdren's.
Our Expenses Are Less.
GOPHER
SHOE
WORKS
17 Second Avenue West.
Buy in Duluth.
CURLERS' DANCE
AND BANQUET
Annual Celebration Will Be
Held on May
4
The annual banquet of the Western
Curling club will be held May 4. Ar-
rangements are now being made for
the affair.
At a meeting last evening the offi-
cers, comprising the executive commit-
tee, named a reception committee with
the following members: P. H. Wade,
P. H. Martin. N. J. Buckley, Stanley
Gilpin, Kd Holland. Frank Ashley, E. J.
Zauft, Melvin Olson and W. J. Sullivan.
The program will not be of an elab-
orate nature. It will consist of short
talks by prominent members of the as-
sociation and a musical program. An
orchestra will be engaged to play at
the dinner and dance which will follow
the program.
The banquet will be served at G:30.
It is the aim of the committee to the
the program over by 9:30 o'clock so
that dancing can begin. As utual, the
affair will be neld at Wade's hall. Cen-
tral avenue ancL Ramsey street.
BRIGHT WILL NOT
BE ABLE TO ATTEND.
New West Duluth Club Is
Formed to Debate Civic
Questions.
For the purpose of promoting discus-
sion on live topics of the day and en-
couraging debate on civic questions,
the West Duluth Educational club,
with thirty charter members, came
into existence last evening. The club
was organized at a meeting at Great
Eastern hall.
J. E. Foubister, former Eighth ward
alderman, was elected president of the
new club. » Carl F. Anderson was
chosen vice president and Nels Will-
mer was named secretary. No trea.s-
urer was elected. A committee to draw
up a constitution and set of by-laws
was appointed and will report at the
next meeting, Monday evening, at Great
ICastern hall.
The organization will be completed
at the meeting Monday and the pro-
gram for the coming season will be
mapped out. It is planned to hold
literary naeetings at stated intervals at
one of the school buildings, probably
the Irving scliool. Mayor Cullum will
be asked to make the first address.
.session this morning the Methodist con-
ference toolc a recess at 11:30 for lunch
an dthlf ^afOernoon at 3:30 the entire
party accepted the Invitation of Supt.
W. J. Wfest of the Hlbbing district of
the Oliver Iron Mining company and
are looking rfyer the mines. i
There were several additional arrivals ■
at the conference today as follows: j
Rev. L. L. ^Itchfield of Moose Lake, '
who is a guest of Mr. McDonald. Ill
Washington street; H. P. Sellenger of
Duluth. guest at 102 West Mahoning
street; Alhfield Thompson, guest of Mr.
Hanson, ,f 02 Sellers street; A. M. Frita
of Hinckley, guest of Mr. King. 105
West Sellers street and Joseph Robin-
son of Minneapolis, Mr. Halscombe of
Minneapolis, H. Ketonen of Chlsholm.
Matt Patkanen of Virginia, Deaconesses
May Trimble .and AUis Martin of Du-
luth. ♦
>00 LATE
TO CLASSIFY
Oae Cent ■ l^ord Bach lasertlon.
No AdvertlscmcAt L«m Tluim IS OeB«s
*'Oidding Comer*'— Superior St.
at Firet Ave. Wi
All members of MaJeNtIc
Rebeltah iXodKe* IVo. 60., I.
O. O. F., are requested <o
attend the funeral of Mrs.
Emma M. AndrrMon at Grace M.
K. church, TTienty-Mecond avenue
Mrent and Third street, ThurMday
afternoon, at li45 o'clock. By
order of the Noble Grand.
Signed, NRTTIR MEL LI IV.
JUDGE IS NOT
YET APPOINTED
Reports That Henry F. Greene
Is Being Prominently
Considered.
St. Paul, Minn., April 19.— (Special to
The Herald.) — No action has yet been
taken by Governor Eberhart on the
appointment of a new judge for the
Duluth district. He Is liable to make
an appointment any time, and reports
are that Henry F. Greene Is being
prominently considered.
SUPERFLUIOUS HAIR. MOLK.S,
warts, removed forever. Miss Kelly's
Manicuring and Massaging Parlors.
131 West Superior street
COMBINGS MADE INTO SWITCHES,
and 25 per cent off on all hair goods
Marinello hair shop. Fidelity block;
next to Frelmuth's; take elevator.
Furniture, finishing, paper hanging,
painting and hardwood finishing.
•Phone your orders and I will call
anywhere In city. A. Johnson, Mel.
738; Zelnth, Lincoln 389.
BUY NOW AND START THAT
chicken farm you have talked about
so long — ten, fifteen and twenty acres
close to Proctor, at bargain prices.
E. H. Cuiklns & Co., 510 Palladio
building.
BIRTHS.
GOLDSTEIN — A son was 1born~to^'Mr.
and Mrs. S. Goldstein of 817 Fourth
avenue east, April 16.
I DEATHS AND FUNERALS j
Are Featuring
Fallon Fnneral Friday.
The funeral of Matthew Fallon, aged
57, an ealry resident of West Duluth,
who died yesterday morning at St.
Mary's hospital, will be held Friday
morning at 9 o'clock. Interment will
be at Calvary cemetery. Mr. Fallon
lived at 1 North Thirty-ninth avenue
west.
Albred E. Bright, general counsel of
PURE FOOD GROCERY CO.
Phones— Grand 557; Old, Melrose 1081.
325 EAST SUPERIOR ST.
The high cost of living is a thing of the past, which is proved by the
prices quoted below, if you trade at our store our combination of Quality
Groceries, Low Prices and Free Premiums are hard to beat, no matter
where you buy.
SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY:
SUGAR !;:;;»....<. is lbs. $i
Fancy Prunes. 5 lbs ISc
Ripe Pineapples, each •. 20c
Brooms, regular 45c, each 29c
Mince Meat. 3 pkgs. 25c; 6 for 45c
Bermuda Onions, 3 pkgs 2.'ic
Ripe Tomatoes, per basket .... 20c
Fancy Potatoes, per bu 75c
(While they last.)
ESGS %rj:^t^^ Doz 1 5e
Pure Lard, per lb lie
Fancy Navy Beans, 5 lbs 23c
Salt Pork, per lb lie
Flour — best patent — 49 lbs.. $1.40
Apples — Wine Saps — peck ....55c
Peanut Butter. 2 lbs 25c
Butter — Fresh Creamery — lb. ..25c
Special Discount to Restaurants. Hotels and Boardins; Housies.
This space does not permit us to quote you more prices — get our
'Price List and we will prove to you that we save you on an average
f TWENTY PER CENT.
Cases Dismissed.
The cases against Daniel Fitzpatrick.
proprietor of the Cody hotel, and F.
Neston and J. McDonald, bartenders at
the same place, who were arrested on
the charge of selling liquor to a minor,
were dismissed in police court this
morning for lack of evidence.
♦
West Duluth Briefs.
Mrs. E. J. Sponheim will entertain
the Ladles' Aid Society of the Im-
manuel Norwegian Lutheran church at
her home in the Krledler block, 230
Central avenue, tomorrow afternoon.
The body of Mrs. Clara Norlln, whose
death occurred at St. Paul, March 2,
was brought to West Duluth yesterday
and tomorrow will be burled in the
Midway cemetery. Mrs. Norlln lived
at Midway for thirty-five years before
moving to St. Paul. She was 72 years
old.
The funeral of John P. Borgstrom,
aged 77, who died Saturday evening at
his home in West Duluth, will be held
tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 o'clock
from the Rlchter undertaking rooms,
425 Central avenue and at 2 o'clock
from the Third Swedish Baptist church,
Fifty-ninth avenue west and Rampey
.street. Interment will be in Oneota
cemetery.
A. L. and M. C. Murray have returned
from a bu.slness trip to Cloquet.
The Ladies' Auxiliary of the Ancient
Order of Hibernians will entertain
their friends at a muslcale and card
party at Gilleys hall. Central avenue,
tomorrow evening. In addition to the
social features, a large class of can-
didates will be put through.
Duluth chapter. No. 59, Royal Arch
Masons, will meet this evening at the
West Duluth Masonic hall.
Martin Thomas of St. Paul Is visiting
relatives In We-sit Duluth.
Watch repairing. Hurst, W. Duluth.
ADDITIONAL
SPORTS
DEMARWINS
MARATHON
100,000 People Witness His-
toric Road Race Near
Boston.
DELEGATES ARE
VISITING MINES
Methodists Inspecting Hibbing
Properties as Guests
of SupL WesL
Hlbbing, Minn., April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Following the business
Flash, 3il0 p. m. — Demar wlna.
Boston, April 19. — More than one
hundred thousand persons, constituting
the largest group of spectators at any
athletic event in the country, gathered
at noon today on the long road stretch-
ing out of the city to witness a hun-
dred yards or so of the Boston athletic
association's fifteenth marathon run
from Ashland to this city, a distance of
twenty-ttve m&>;s.
The entire vCQld was at the start at
11 a. m. and the next fifty minutes was
occupied In physical examinations by
physicians as the final requisite for
starting.
Five minutes before noon the streets
about the railroad bridge, a mile above
the town square in Ashland, where
the start was made, were cleared and
two police automobiles left to clear
tne course for the runners.
The squad was lined up for the pic-
ture men and then George V. Brown,
four years manager and official starter,
mad© a brief speech of warning about
crowding and held aloft his starting
pistol waiting for the noon hour to
strike.
By the time Natrick Centres, nine
miles from the start, was reached Ahl-
gren was well ahead, 15 yards in front
of Masterson, while Madden held to
third place. Then came Bob Stone of
Boston, Corkery of Toronto, Brazil of
New York, Maguire of Providence,
Piggott of Medford and Ryan of New
York.
.The time was 44 minutes, 14 sec-
onds, compared with Welton's record
of 42 minutes, 18 seconds.
BRiSBEE — J. D. Brisbee, 6Z years of
age, died last night at St. Luke's
hospital of tuberculosis. Mr. Brisbee
has been a resident of the city for
the last twenty years and a large
part of that time has been residing
at the St. Louis hotel. He was
largely interested In mining proper-
ties on the range. He Is survived by
two sisters, who have been notified
of his death,
YOUNGDAHL— Mrs. J. O. Youngdahl
of 219 Seventh and One-Half avenue
west, died last night at her resi-
dence. She is survived by her hus-
band. The funeral will take place
baturday afternoon and Interment
will be at Park HiU cemtery, but the
full arrangements have not been
completed.
PARSONS — Marshall Preston, the
6-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Parsons, 516V& East Fifth
street, died Friday, April 14. The
funeral was held Saturday afternoon
from the family home.
REYNOLDS— The body of John T. Rey-
nolds, who died several days ago at
St. Luke's hospital, was sent to Chi-
cago last evening for Interment In
the family lot. He will be buried
beside his wife, who died some years
ago. Mr. Reynolds was a lumber
dealer and was well known tn the
city. The body was taken back to
Chicago by his brother, Jame* Rey-
nolds.
GRONQUIST— The funeral of Albert
Gronquist, who committed suicide in
the First National Bank building
Monday noon, will take place to-
morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock from
the undertaking parlors of J. L.
Crawford. Interment will be at Park
Hill cemetery. He was despondent
because his wife sued him for a di-
vorce and refused to go back to live
with him. He swallowed a vial of
strychnine outside the office of At-
torne-"' Andrew Nelson, washing It
down with a bottle of whisky.
MONUMENTS — Hundreds In stock. P.
N. Peterson Granite Co.. 332 E. Sup. SL
The Z^* "Spring Maid" Coat
Special at $19.50
A charming model, cut on new and up-to-date lines, with die
Mandarin sleeve ind raised waist-line effect — fits the figure grace-
fully and needs b jt little alteration — comes in plain serges and
handsome mixtures, finished off with novelty buttons and
stylish trimming touches.
Also Splendid Lines of Plain Tailored
Styles at $15.00 and Up.
New arrivals in Women's and Misses' English
Cravenette Cloats — Misses' sizes $12.50 to $16.50 and
Women's sizes $.22.50 to $29.50,
^ New Arrivals in
Plain Tailored Suits at $27.50
A large variety of handsome mannish suit-
ing materials, honiespuns and plain black
or navy serges, in full range of sizes. The
tailoring on these suits bears the same
imprint of high class workmanship that
only suits of high<:r cost usually bear —
in short comparison will show values
to be extraordinary.
• I
-ftp
I
NEW BASEBALL LEAGUE
IN UPPER MICHIGAN.
Coats, Suits and Millinery
Embrace the Latest Ideas for Spring
at Popular Prices!
f
Gloves
In all the
war, ted lengths
and shadt'.'^. In
Fownes. the
Elite and Kai-
ser's Silk and
Fabric Oloves*
Prices run from
."lOc up, in silk,
and from 91
up In these
standard makes
of kid. For the
little tots we
have Kid
Gloves which
will fit a 2-
year-old.
New Coats for Spring
The newest and latest ideas in high-class tailoring,
$15, $17.50, $19 and Up
New Spring Suits
Smart Spring models. The materials, colorings and
workmanship are the best obtainable, and the price
range is —
$15, $18.50, $22.50 andup
Spring Millinerv
A specially attractive display of Tailored, Walking
and Dress Hats, turned out from our own work-
rooms, specially designed after the best ideas of
Paris and New York —
$5,00, $10.00 to $15,00
Neck'
wear
All that's wa»t-
ed, and all
that's new in
dal n t y neck
flxing-s. A most
beautiful col-
lection of Ja-
bots, Coll a r s ,
Stocks and Ties
in lace, lawn
and linen spe-
cially priced to
sell from —
2Sc up
Marquette, Mich., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — About as good base-
ball as was ever seen in Upper Michi-
gan Is promised this year by the Mar-
quette and Delta county league. This
organization is the successor to the
Marquette and Iron county league of
last season, and the Marquette and Al-
ger county league of two seasons ago,
and is made up of the Marquette, Ne-
gaunee, Ishpeming and Escanaba clubs.
All four cities are excellent ball towns,
and each is represented by a fast team
made up of players procured in various
states. No salary limit has been fixed,
but there is a tacit understanding that
the various payrolls shall be kept
within a figure permitting of a balance
on the right side of the ledger at the
clo.se of the playing season. The money
paid out to the men will, it is expected,
average between $800 and |1,000 a
month. The season will open May 27
and will close the latter part of Sep-
tember. Only Saturday and Sunday
games will be played.
Various holidays have been left open
for contests with such teams as the
clubs may elect. Under the schedule
adopted by the league, each team is to
play a total of thirty-six games, twelve
with each of the other three clubs, half
at home and half away from home.
Each club will appoint one umpire for
the league staff. It is planned to give
the umpires extensive powers. They
will be authorized to assess fines up to
$5 as well as to remove players from
games. The officers of the league are:
P. J. Russell, Marquette, president and
secretary; Former Mayor F. E. Keese,
Ishperaing, vice president; F. M. Olm-
stead, Escanaba, treasurer.
PHILADELPHIA WINS
THE MORNING GAME.
BUILD IN G PERM ITS
To Refencha Building com-
pany, frame dwelling. East
Seventh street, between Sev-
enteenth and Eighteenth
avenues | 2,000
To Standard Investment com-
pany, four frame dwellings.
Thirteenth avenue east, be-
tween Fifth and Sixth
streets 8,000
To Standard Investment com-
pany, frame dwelling, East
Sixth street, between Fifth
and Sixth avenues 2,000
To A. Ehner, frame dwelling
East Fifth street, between
Twelfth and Thirteenth ave-
nues 3,000
To T. H. Little, foundation
East Third street, between
Tenth and Eleventh avenues 700
To Sarah U Casey, stone base-
ment. East Superior street,
between Seventh and Eighth
avenues 400
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Carl Edwin Benson and Cora Maude
Quackenbush.
Dress Skirts, Special $8.50
New and smart styles in plain tail-
ored Panama and Serge Skirts, suitable
for all manner of general wear.
Replenished Lines of Smart
Tub Dresses at $3 to $5.75
Neat and natty styles in Gingham,
Percale and Lawiu
A New Line of
Tailored
Hats
At $10 to $15
We have recuperated
from the strenuous pre-
Easter rush, and are
now ready with a fresh
supply of new and
snappy styles in Hand-
made and Trimmed
Hats at popular prices.
You'll not find Gid-
ding Styles, elsewhere,
yet prices are according
to the same schedule
that you'll find any-
wliere else!
-A
t
t
Ve ry Special for Thursday
u"gth Coats ^:%2l At $10.00
Half
A special lot of Tan Covert and Black Serge Coats in
semi-fitting styles; some lined and some unlined. The lengths
range from 36 to 40 inches.
Boston, Ma.ss., April 19. — Heavy hit-
ting, totaling four runs in the first in-
ning, won the morning game for Phil-
adelphia today, the score being 5 to 3.
The score:
IMiiladelphia 40100000 0 — 5
Boston 00002100 0 — 3
Batteries — Brown and Graham; Bee-
lie and Moran. Umpires — Eason and
Johnston.
Houser Sold to Minors.
Indianapolis, Ind., April 19. — Ben
Houser of the Philadelphia American
league team was purchased today by
the Indianapolis club at a price that is
said to be the highest paid for a big
league player this year. Houser will
play first base for the local team and is
expected to report Friday.
If "placard publicity" were sufficient
to rent or ^^cll property to advantage —
wouldn't r<jal csiute dealing be a slmpl*
occupation? '
Hie WIeland
ShoeCo's
SALE
STOCK
cannot last much longer. A
large assortment of high-grade
shoes for men and women are
yet to be closed out.
COME TOMORROW.
MEN'S $5.00, $5.50, $6.00 and
$7.00 shoes — all perfect goods —
all styles, good sizes
$2.98
WOMEN'S $2.50, $3.00, $3.50,
$4.00 and $5.00 shoes— all the
best makes — lots of styles and
sizes
$1J8
See our new pumps and ox-
fords— in all leathers — just in.
WIELAND
SHOE CO.
222 West First Street.
NORTf [ERN TRUNK CO.
i TIUNKS, BAGS, CASES. 4 s^Vy
Wc Ape Maimers. 228 West First Street.
EILERT BROS.
For Quick Results Use Herald "Wants"
65c Razor
Strop Lr
15c
These are a flrst-
class strop; but we
purchased tl:em very cheap owing to the
fact that they are made up of leather,
ju.st a little .shorter than the regular TSc
and $1.00 sellers. You will not be \^g»
disappointed. For this sale, only... **'^
$1.50 Salety
Razor Strop
.45c
This strop is made of the GII.liETT
S.^FETY RAZOR. " This is your oppor-
tunity to sharpen up some of your
blades that you have thrown away. Try
it, you will be surprised.
$2.25 Folding
Baliy Go Cart
Rubber tires. This Cart folds
flat; is light and easy to carry
around. Most dealers ask $2.65
for can s like this one. Our special, only 98c.
98e
Complete
Home
Furnisher*
*Xl^Jjmmr(b^
Second Ave.
E. and Su-
perior St.
The brew IciSt year wets as
good as t le brew this
year, and Ihe brew^ this
year will be as good as the
brew next year!
It Is ALWAYS
UNIFORM
G. Heileman Brewing Co.,
DulHth Trade Supplied by Minneapolis Branch,
419 12tli Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minn.
m
■^'1
M
^^jU^i^..
■>-^'---*^
\
n
'»' <m
'^
ass:
^
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
JUST THE THINGS YOU
AFTER FAKE
COLLECTORS
FOR YOUR SPRING CLEANING
Friday and Saturday are bargain days here for useful household articles |J^^J ^^^^^^^^ f^jf/^
need for Note our low prices. You know the quality ot the articlcs-none better made at twice
"he price. Here are bargains every economical buyer should take advantage of-it pays to trade
here. Your Credit Is Good. Have it charged if you wish.
1.
9
Dust Pans 5c
Japanned finish
with good, strong
handles — In most
stores you pay 8c
and 10c.
14^ For full
•• sized, well
ma d e Wash
Boards.
Our special "F. &
B". ironing boards
— regular $1.43
values;spe- tl IR
cial for....*'''**
10-Quart Galvanized Palla !*«
12-auart GalvnnlKed Pall* 18c
14-(l,uart Galvaolaed PalU. .
Easy Tersm
on Any
Article.
Associated Charities Will Fur-
nish Credentials to Au-
thorized Agents.
Duluthians Will in Future Be
Protected Against Im-
postors*
23c now
Mon Wrinser and Cydon* Wanher*—
Mop ^«-«»K»^j.» ly f„r blankets, com-
sold for at least f orters, car p e t s ,
$1.50— 98e ^^? '•"»=• 69c
etc.
Galvanized Wash Tubs
that are strongly made,
riveted handles, wont rust
— four different sizes:
Small
Medium . . . •
Larier
ElKtra I.arice.
2J>c
49c
69c
75e
Bench Wringer S3.98
stands solid and level on
the floor, finely made ana
a big value.
Warranted
Tub Wringer
$2.98
The Famous
"Hor 8 6- Shoe"
Brand — a splen-
did value — will
give excellent
service — has good
heavy rubber roll-
ers.
TRASH AND PAPER BURNER
0Q_ buys a gooJ,
*«»• heavy galvan-
ized Garbage Can —
cover fits on tight,
so will not blow off —
can is 16 inches wide
— 21 Inches high.
25e ^"'^ '""
sized,
well made
House Brooms — at
this price you'll find
these brooms splendid
values — buy one bow.
5-Foot Step
Ladder at 98c
Extra strong
— you'll need
one this spring
— these are
good value*
too.
Just the thing for
burning paper.s, boxes,
etc., that accumulate
about the home. This
burner has a cover,
keeps things from blow-
ing about the yard
while burning — can be
used in the house same
as a waste basket — for
Friday and Saturday
only, -■•''*•
SPECIAL.
••Credentials" will be the next sub-
ject to be taken up by the Associated
Charities.
More or less complaint has been
made to the society in regard to people
who are collecting money under false
pretenses.
From this time on every one who
is collecting money for a worthy cause
will have a letter from the Associated
Charities, for Secretary Dinwiddle will
be glad to give letters to any one who
can furnish tU« proper references and
show that his cause is a worthy one.
Many of those who have worked the
city have had credentials. Some of
them have been false although they
looked straight enough to the casual
observer. One of tlie systems seems
to be to steal letter paper belonging to
others, strike off a letter of recommen-
datio with a typewriter and sign a
name to It.
A short time ago two women ap-
peared on the scene with excellent ret-
eiices from Omaha. They were appar-
ently gathering funds for a charitable
institution in that city. Information
lately obtained states that the women
were imposters. , ». , ,,, v.«
The matter of credentials will be
looked after more carefully from this
time on and when any information re-
garding anv one who is collecting
money" is wanted, it will be furnished
bv the secretary, when called on at the
office.
COPPERS STRONGER;
NO BOSTON MARKET
Values Firm on Curb and at
New York— Dull There
and Here.
Peninsula. An unsuccessful effort
was made to amend the bill by in-
creasing the rate to 2% cents a mile.
The bill now needs only tiie gov-
ernor's signature to become a law.
Citizens of the Upper Peninsula have
been trying for eighteen years to ob-
tain passenger rates as low as those
In the Lower Peninsula.
TO GIVE ALL A
CHANCE TO TALK
Debate on the Canadian Rec-
iprocity BiU WiU Not
Be Restricted.
■Washington, April 19.— Democratic
leaders of the house hope to bring
the long debate on Csinadlan reciproc-
ity to an end tonight and to pass the
bill before adjournment tomorrow. It
is possible, however, that another day
on general discussion may be agreed
to, for Chairman Underwood of the
ways and means committee does not
desire to shut off any one who wants
to speak. „ , _„
The fact that Former Speaker Can-
non was to make one of the principal
arguments against the reciprocity
agreement today brought a throng to
the galleries.
The report of the ways and means
committee on the farmers' free list
bill, promised today, was awaited in
the house with much Interest. This
bill will be taken up as soon as the
reciprocity measure is out of the way.
The senate meets tomorrow.
Investigation of alleged extrava-
gance In the government departments
was Indorsed by the house committee
on rules today. The committee wUl re-
port favorably the resolution giving the
house committee en expenditures au-
thority to summon witnesses under
oath, to demand access to books and
records and to sit during recesses of
the present congress.
The resolution will be called up to-
morrow as a matter of privilege and
the Democratic leaders expect to pass
it at once. . ^ . i.
The first committees to begin work
probably will be those on expenditures
in the interior and postofflce depart-
ments.
provisions of the buildlni? ordinance
were to be observed. .. » ,
The building inspector doesn t take
the position that because they are
city property they are exeinpt. He be-
lieves that the city should set the
public an example by living up to its
own ordinances, and that the matter
of a few dollars should not stand in
the way. His communication to the
council relative to the fire escapes was
referred to the committee on city
property, consisting of Aldermen
Barnes, MacDonell and Hoctor.
VIRGINIA WEDIUNG.
Byron Fuller and Miss Josephine
Murphy Are Married.
Virginia, Minn., April 19 — (Special to
The Herald.) — One of the notable wed-
dings of the spring was iiolemnizcd in
the Lady of Our Lourdes church her*
this morning when Father Powers cel-
ebrated the marriage of Byron W. Ful-
ler and Miss Josephine Murphy, daugh-
ter of Eugene Murphy. The bride was
attended by her sister. Miss Bessie Mur-
phy, while William Fitzhenry was best
man. Owing to a recent death in on©
of the families the wedding was a quiet
affair. The couple left on an Eastern
wedding tour, expecting to return in
about a month. Mr. Fuller is bridge
Inspector for the Rainy L^ke road and
popular here, while the bride is a mem-
ber of one of the leading families and
equally popular.
♦
For National Forest.
Washington, April 19. — President
Taft has signed a proclamation set-
ting aside 301,360 acres of land in
Humbolt county, Nev., as the Satxt*
Rosa national forest.
Solid
$3.50
Copper Boilers, d^O 1 O
Value for ^^fc-iO
These boilers are extra heavy.
specially well made and strong—
thev are nolid copper— have sta-
tionary wood handles, strongly
riveted— special big value at »2.1S.
HOWARD
DUSTLESS DUSTERS
Take Up the
Dust
EXTRA SPECIAL—
Good cotton mop and
stick combined. For
Friday and Saturday
VIOLATES ITS
OWN ORDINANCES
City Buildings Lack Proper
Fire Escapes, Says
Inspector.
buys one of the best
easiest working, most
practical washing ma-
chines made. The ''Adams — pl;
vanizcd body— cannot leak rust or
fall apart. Big value at $5.75.
$5.75
ELECTRIC IRONS.
"Warm weather Is coming — you'll
•want a cool kitchen to work in — get
an electric iron — here are three of the
beMt ones made. Fully guaranteed —
Hot Point Iron »."i.00
Superior f ."$.75
So-Easy »3-50
47-Piece Dinner Set In
Plain White
$2.98
The Boston market was not in ses-
sion today and the tra lers in that
town celebrated tlie' anniversary of
the battle of Lexington. The curb was
open and trading was reported dull.
In New York Amalgamated opened a.t
SCO and went to »01.12V4. This stock
was liigher when shorts were run to
cover. There was no slgnittcance to
the upturn. .„ ^ , * c
Denn sold here at %7, Calumet &
Montana at 32c and 33c Cliff at 9(C
and Summit at 52c.
♦ • •
The Vermilion Iron Development
company has ordered electrical equip-
ment for its property on Pine Island,
near Tower, Minn. The new equip-
ment will arrive aboxw^ May 1 and will
consist of drills. A ni'/f office building
lias been constructed at the property
for Supt. Irving Carmichael.
• • •
The annual meeting of the Lake Su-
perior & Nevada Development com-
pany was held yesterday afternoon In
Kalamazoo hall. Stockholders „were
plentitul and the meeting was like a
public gathering. There were speeches
and considerable oratory was un-
i corked. , . ,
The company controls two mming
properties in Nevada and two In Ari-
zona. Three are said to contain gold
and the other is regarded as a copper
prospect. The company has a capital
of $1,OUO,000. held by 1,900 sharehold-
crs
August Hagberg, A. J. Bergstrom
and Albert Johnson of this city were
re-elected directors. Five others will
be elected later. ^ , ^. , ,
Don Carlos Musser, a stockholder,
objected to the directorate but he was
voted down, every other shareholder
supporting the directors.
• * *
Thompson. Towle & Co. say: We
understand that the United States
Smelting. Refining & Mining company
has under option the Gold Roads Gold
mines In Arizona, and have had forty
men sampling the mine preliminary to
purchase. This mine has an ore shoot
3.000 feet long and eight feet wide, with
ore running about $14 per ton, and
we are Informed that it Is a very
valuable and promising property, and
that the United States Smelting, Refin-
ing & Mining interests have a sixty-
day option on it for the net value of
the ore in sight."
« * *
The Butte Central mine shaft is
Is the city violating its own ordl-
•nances?
Building Inspector Kielley rather
surprised some people Monday night
when he notified the city council that
fire escapes would have to be put on
the city hall and the Armory, if the
"A Pill in Time
Is worth nine"— especially If it be ono
of Hood's Pills, and you take It when
you suspect your treacherous liven
You may save many a headache and
constipation by promptly taking
Hood's Pills. Whole box 25c., and one
pill alone may prove worth the price.
GOPHER
SHOE WORKS
The Name of—
SHOE REPAIRING
Fame.
WHILE YOU WAIT.
Duluth and Superior.
**Tkt Store qf QuaMty."
PopuIar-PricedAppard
A Wide u\ssortment <tfO^ ^/l
of Inexpensive Suits ^ -^ > • O Lf
Serge Suits with plain tailored Coats, gored Skirts, having
back panel with cluster of pleats at bottom.
Suits at $29.5(1— Serge, of course, coat has cloth band aroun^
bottom and is trinmed with self colored buttons, skirt has band
below the knee, also button trimmed.
Suits at $35 — of novelty cloths and serges, in tans, grays,
blues and blacks, set off with satin collars and other fashioa
garnishments.
Distinctiveness Plus Individualitv Are the
Keynotes of S. & B. Coats, Even at
Popular Prices
Coats at $21.f50, of heavy black and blue diagonals, have
Persian collars and cuffs.
French Serge Coats, black, with large shawl collar, fastea
over to one side with three buttons, and the price, $25.
Black Satin Coats, full lined with contrasting colors— King's
blue and gold, ai: $35 and up to $50 and $66.
The Cham^ of S. & B. Hats Even at Pop-
ular Prices is Irresistable
It is a matter of surprise, the chic hats one sees here for
$7.50, $10 and ^115. They have the characteristic tilt of brim
and color conceits one expects in high priced chapcaux only.
Judging from tlie volume of business already to the depart-
ment's credit this season, comparison of S. & B. hats with other
hats, but intensifies the superiority of our millinery at what-
ever price one wishes to pay.
3 Big Specials for Tomorrow in
Dress Fabrics
DRESS GOODS — enough for tomorrow of these 56-inch Serges
we told you about recently, that we consider ' ^
good value under usual trade conditions, at $1.50
— at the special price of
SILKS— 36-incli navy and black Messaline, also
Black Taffeta of the same width, sold here reg-
ularly at $1.25 3'ard, at the special price of.
79c
85c
WASH GOOES— 30-inch French Batiste, in unusually large
assortment— all colors— will make beautiful sum- ^ ^ j^
mer dresses, usual 18c value, at the special price Ji J_ ^
of...
69c Sheets for
SOc
10 dozen of these
goods, 72x90 inches in
size — special, at only —
down 720 feet and Is expected to reach
>00-foot point in July. The com-
pany is blocking out ore on the 100
BODY NOT YET
IDENTIFIED
■V —
Police Have No Clew in
Mystery of Body Found
ni GeoloKlsts Meet.
on Shore. Washington, April 19.— State geo-
, , logists from almost every state met
The body of the man who was found ^^^^ today with the officials of the
on the lake shore about a mUe past geological survey. The conference,
Lakeside with a bullet hole through an annual event, is for the purpose
his head, has been thawed out, but not of mapping out a program for next
identifled , vear and to prevent duplication ot
A scrap of paper with a scribble In Uyork. ^
a foreign language was found in the • ■
inside pocket, but no one was found
who could decipher It. It was badly
blurred and torn and it will be ex-
tremely difficult to make anything out
**^The body is at the undertaking rooms
of Flood & Horgan on East !• irst street.
He is thought to have been a Finn,
but nothing definite can be determine^d.
The police Incline to the theory that he
was murdered..
NOW
is the time to make early selections of Electrical Heating Ma-
terial, such as Flat Irons, Stoves, Percolators, Curling Iron
Heaters, etc., so that you will be prepared for the first hot days
of summer. 1.^1
Our stock is now complete, and we represent the best, and
most reliable manufacturer of this class of goods in the country.
Try one of our 6-pound or 7-pound irons, and see for your-
self how much nicer it will be to heat the Iron Only, instead of
heating the Whole House.
NORTHERN ELECIItlCAL CO.
210 WEST FIRST STREET.
ASPHYXIATED
IN SPOKANE
Former Duluthian and His
Wife Smothered While
They Sleep.
Their Two Children Are Un-
harmed By Escaping
Gas.
the 1,000-foot po
pany is blockln„
and 300-foot levels
« • *
Directors of the Butte Coalition com-
pany met this week to declare the
regular quarterly dividend of 25 cents
o shftrc
This company has $4,000,000 in cash
in its treasury, 3,000 shares of the
stock of the International Smelting &
Refining company, and also will have
shortly 520,000 shares of the Anaconda
Copper company. Tlilg will make Butte
Coalition the second largest holder of
Anaconda stock, with Amalgamated
first, with holdings of more than a
million shares. , ^.
These 520.000 shares are now In the
treasuries of two sub-companies of the
Butte Coalition.
* * «
Closing quotations on the Duluth
Stock exchange today follow:
Bid. I Asked.
50c
'WHERE VALUES REIGN SUPREME
TIOBC
21-23 WEST SUPERIOR STREET
SOc Wash Silks
35c
40 pieces of these
goods in plain and fancy
colors, at the special
price of — •
35c
Listed Stocki
J. O. Dalzell, formerly agent of the
Northern Pacific railroad here, was
asphyxiated with his wife In their
home at Spokane early today, accord-
ing to a report received at the local
Northern Pacific office. Mr. Dalzell
was general freiglit and passenger
agent of the road at Spokane. Two
children slept unharmed while their
parents were killed by the escaping
gas, according to the story received
here
Mr. Dalzell preceded T. E. Blanche
as agent of the Northern Paafic here
and was in the city one year. He was
well known to all railroad men in Du-
luth and to many throughout the
Northwest.
American Saginaw . . .
Butte Alex Scott, fl. pd
Butte Baliaklava
Cactus Development
Copper Queen
Denn Arizona
Red Warrior
Savanna, pt. pd
.Savanna, f 1. pd
Warren Development
Unlisted Stocks^
Amazon Montana ....
Butte & Superior
do. old
Calumet & Montana..
Calumet & Corbln...
Calumet & Sonora...
Carman Consolidated
Chief Consolidated . .
Cliff
Keating Gold
North American
Rice Bay Iron Co....
Summit
San Antonio
St. Mary
Sierra
Tuolumne ••••
Vermilion Steel & Iron
2=54
10c
7
85c
2%
5
5
15c
20c
7%
90c
1 1-16
3%
50 High' Grade Tailored Suits
on Special Sale Tomorrow
The prettiest and most desirable models we have ever shown
in a beautiful range of materials, snappy styles and strictly
first-class, in black, navy, fancy tweeds and cloice Spring
tones. No better suits shown this season <jf ^ ^ ^ /I
for $25— choice of several styles for ^U^ JL J mKJ\^
83c
32s
20c
6%
70c
1>4
1
8%
Extra Special
34c
2 11-16
51c
2%
1%
4%
7Vi
SOc
1%
4
2 13-16
2 1-16
1
63c
35 doz. Waists, made of a splendid quality of lawn, hand-
somely trimmed with lace and embroidery, Di^tch neck or
high neck, with three-quarter or full length sleeve—several
styles, all sizes— absolute value for $1.25. Your ^Qp
choice while they last for • • ^ ZrK^
See Window Display.
Linen Dept,
$1.00 Bleached Table Damask— In
beautiful floral patterns; real Irish
linen; a special offering for tomor-
row at, only, the '7^/»
yard > Ot/
75c Silver Bleached Damask — In
scrolls and dots; for to- ^O/^
morrow at, per yard %J^%y
22x22-inch All-linen Napkins— Ex-
ceptional good values at $1.75, spe-
cial for tomorrow, ^ 1 "^ ^
per dozen %]pJ.»^\J
English Long Cloth — 40 inches
wide; beautiful soft finish; worth
regularly up to 17}/4c, 1 /I/*
special at, a yard J. \^%^
2,000 Yards of Bleached Twilled
Crash— Regularly 7c value, special
for tomorrow only at, /t^/^/*
per yard ^ ' • €•
9c
2
c
3%
Total sales, 1.1 10.
UPPER PENINSULA
GETS TWO-CENT FARE.
Lansing, Mich., April 19. — The
state senate late last night without
a dissenting vote passed the Lucas-
Symonds bill providing for a 2-cent
railroad paaeenger rate in the Upper
Women's Knit
Underwear
A very extensive showing of
Lisle and Swiss Ribbed Union
Suits — Low neck suit, umbrella
or tight knee, high neck, short
sleeve and tight knee, high
neck, long sleeve, ankle length
and many other styles; trimmed
with dainty lace and insertions;
your choice of these SZf\r*
75c values, at \3\JK^
Knit Umbrella Drawers — Can
be worn in all seasons; made of
pure white yarn with durable
lace trimmings, "^
Kayser's Long Silk Gloves-
Double tipped fingers; ?L50
2„t.'?':..'' $1.00
IKSS Showing of New Millinery
for Thursday, Friday. Saturday
300 Trimmed Hats
That come to hand late for the Easter ex-
hibit. This grand assortment exhibits the
best efforts of the American designers who
carefully studied out the best copies of the
fine imported models and embodied in these
beautiful Hats the most attractive features
of American tastes.
The prices marked on these very at-
tractive Hats are only
^3.50 and $5
and are just about ONE-HALF what others
ask for similar models.
/
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nmri-nsri
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Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, lOU.
Finding Excuses
For Hof Working
p.- —
Aa Alarmlnx SIgra of Dcray.
•^n nearly every case," says a prom-
inent physician, "when a man or wom-
an loses the will to work It is because
the power to work is gone. In other
words, the fuse" or the center of the
nervous system Is burned out, and the
whole nerve-circuit is broken. When
this happens, vitality ebbs away quick-
ly and general decay of all the facul-
ties Is bound to result unless measures
are takon to restore *the circuit.' "
There are certain thinf^s which arc
known to restore nervous enerjfy and
the clearness of the blood stream in a
remarkable way. These materials when
roinblned ha%'Vj produced amazing: trans-
formations in a short time. This com-
bination i-s known as Make-Man Tab-
lets, the most popular, effective, prompt
and lastins nerve Invigrorator and blood
purlflor offered to run-down men and
■Women.
If you feel weak all over or sick, are
nervous and irritable, have Insomnia,
Kliouniatlsm. Kidnvy or Liver Trouble,
Make-Man Tablets will act in a re-
markable way.
Make-Man Tablets are sold at all
druK stores at 50 cents a box. If you
wi.«h to try them before buying:, just
drop a line to the Make-Man Tablet Co.,
Make-Man Bids.. Dept. 11. Chicago. 111.,
and they will send you a trial treat-
ment absolutely fre^.
Sold and recommended by all leading
drupgists, and A. E. Swedberg:, White
Swan Drug Store, 3 East Supi^rlor
Btreet; also 2015 West Superior strefet.
PRESIDENT VINCENT OF MINNESOTA
SPENDS VERY BUSY DAY IN DULUTH
Possess
Im to bmr0 itt yoar homo the moat
reliable and xno.%t mrtimtiemJly per-
feat Pimno known todayt A masical
iaatrnment whereia I* eontminoa
the strongest and moat caduriaM
mechaniam, and from which •nui*
natea the moat glow iona tona #r«r
produced.
Xaat&lmemt paymtata M««pttd U dMlrt4.
"aTAMDAWO OF MlQHKaT M«»tlT.'^
HOWARD, FARWEIL t CO.
120 Kast Superior Str««t.
COMEANDSEE
Sorensen will save
you at least )1 on
every pair of
^ Ladies" and Men's
ANP SH0E:S and
sl.ipf>e:rs
for Spring:- Larg-
est stock in Du-
luth to select from.
See our windows, "where the birds
fly."
317 WEST SUPERIOR STREET.
Bring us your Shoe Repairing. All
work guaranteed.
>caLrMsrjK£4ar93UKiiiBtsme£L '
House Dresses and
Long Kimonos at $1.25
Xew arrival of beautiful Long Ki-
monos, made with
waist line and silk be
Dresses of blue and
I hecked ginghams,
priced at
Short Kimonos with
gathered waist line,
at
gathered high
Also
^ouse
25
48c
Have You Seen the
New Velvet Shoes?
(Broirns and Blackitt at
CLARK, The Sample Shoe Man
11 Second Avenue AVeiit.
Birthstone
for April
Di
Ask Us to show you our
ttock and give you prices
Ask the Man Who
Has a Bagley
Diamond As To Values
Bagley ^ Co.
Known Since 1885 as
F. D. DAY & CO.,
JEWKLFRS and SILVEKSMITHS
SIS West Superior Street,
Four Addresses, Luncheon,
Reception and Banquet
on His Program.
University Must Not Have
Another Deficit, He
Says.
School Must Do Its Present
Work WeU Before
Expanding.
President George E. Vincent of the
University of Minnesota is the guest
of Duluth today. He arrived early
this morning and, under the escort
of a committee of Duluth men, he set
out immediately to meet Duluth peo-
ple, to see the city and to talk with
friends of the university about its
needs and its future. A program that
will take almost every minute of the
day and evening has been prepared
for him and he entered upon it with
characteristic energy and determina-
tion to see everything to be seen and
improve every minute of his time.
At 9 o'clock this morning, Dr. Vin-
cent visited the Central high school
and addressed tlie students at chapel
exercises. Immediately after, despite
the dampness, he cheerfully undertook
a drive around the boulevard and
through the agricultural district on
the hill, in company with his Duluth
escorts and Dean A. F. Woods of the
agricultural school. The trip was part-
ly sight-seeing and partly to give Dr.
Vincent and Dean Woods an opportunity
to view possible locations for the pro-
posed demonstration farm school.
At 11 o'clock, Dr. Vincent addressed
the students at the state normal school,
and later he was the guest of Presi-
dent E. W. Bohannan at lunch. From
2:30 to 4:30 he was the guest at a re-
ception for the women of the city at
the Commercial club. The big feature
of Dr. Vincent's visit will be the ban-
quet tonight at the Commercial club.
A representative body of Duluth men
will gather to welcome the new presi-
dent of the university on behalf of Du-
luth and to assure him that he will
have Duluth's support in his work at
the institution.
The Work at Hand.
"W^e must do well what we are do-
ing before we undertake anything
more." said President Vincent this
morning in outlining his plans for the
university. "For the next two or three
years, I believe we should concentrate
our attention on the obtaining of ad-
ditional instructors for the depart-
ments we have, on the reduction of the
size of classes so as to obtain the grat-
est efficiency, rather than on the ad-
dition of departments to those already
existing.
"I do not mean, of course, that we
will not keep our eyes open for new
ideas in education and that we will not
strive to keep in lijie in the march of
progress. We are not self-satisfied in
our own knowledge but are open to
suggestions. Just now I find that the
university has grown so rapidly that
the classes in some departments have
outgrown the facilities for instruction
and are unwieldly in size. I believe
we should correct that condition and
obtain the greatest possible efficiency
in what we are doing before adding
departments.
The Deficit.
"I am hardly in a position to discuss
the needs of the university, having
been there only two weeks. During
these two weeks I have been more the
business man than the educator, and the
business side of the president's office
will probably be uppermost in my du-
ties for some little time. Economy will
be practiced in the university — the
strictest economy consistent with effi-
cient education. The board of regents
and I must co-operate to prevent a re-
currence of the deficit which developed
during the past few years, now that
the deficit has been wiped out by the
legislature.
"That deficit grew through the
growth of the university and the lack
of funds with which to meet the
PRESIDENT GEORGE E. VINCENT.
growth. We must plan our work so. as
to keep within our appropriations and
profit by the knowledge we now have.
The university is a great business in-
stitution as well as an educational in-
stitution, and it must be conducted
along business as well as .educational
lines. The business side just now calls
for economy that will insure the great-
est return from every dollar expended
for university purposes."
Dr. Vincent combined his sight-see-
ing people-meeting visit to Duluth
with business, as he spent some little
time with H. V. Hovland. a member of
APPEAL TO THE PEOPLE
(Continued from page 1.)
course, that the defeat of reapportion-
ment must chiefly be cliarged. The
platform of the Kepublican party un-
equivocally pledged the party to reap-
portionment under existing laws, ef-
fective Immediately. The Democratic
platform was equally plain in promis-
ing a reform, but no definite time
wlierein the law was to take effect was
promised. In addition to the platform
declaration which should have bound
them, all the Northern senators signed
pledges, either generally to vote for a
fair reapportionment measure, or defi-
nitely to support the Congdon bill.
"Until after election ;he senators
from the northern and southern part
of the state ar-Pesred equally honest in
an intention to reapportion the state
on the Constitutional basis of popula-
tion. It was not until after election,
when the southern senators were final-
ly entrenched in tlieir seats tliat they
cast about for an excuse to brf>9k their
pledges and to retain their seats as
senators for an extra two years. They
then suddenly discovered that the Con-
stitution was wrong In principle and
that if reapportionment was made ac-
cording to population, the large cities
wbuld gain an undue advantage in the
legislature.
Menely a Subterfage.
"The contention coming from the
source it did was plainly a subterfuge
concealing the real reason, tliat is, a
desire to retain their seats as senators
without again facing their constituents
at the polls. The oaths of the senators
pledged them to fulfil the law as it
now exists, not as it may exist in the
future, and not as the individual sen-
A Priceless
//*/ Dinner
snd It's Rtadf
Our chefs spent two years In perfect-
ing the recipe used for Van Camp's
Spaghetti.
As made today, there are 17 Ingre-
dients, each the finest of iU kind.
The wonder lies In the harmony ol
taste — ^in the perfect blend and flavor.
Perhaps you have eaten spaghetti
In Rome. Perhaps 3rou have eaten
delicious spaghetti elsewhere.
But srou'll be quick to say that you
never have tasted a recipe like this.
We use to make Itt
Durtim wheat spaghetti,
Herkimer County full cream cheese.
Best creamery butter.
The same expensive tomato sauce we
use in Van Camp's Pork and Beans.
It comes to you ready -cooked. All
you have to do Is to heat it— or bake it.
If you prefer.
If 3rou had the recipe, and could make
It yourself, It would cost you more than
to buy It.
This is our newest dish — the most
popular dish ever produced by our
chefs.
We have never before met such a
furore of favor.
Find out why. Tell jrour grocer to
send a few cans and see what you think
of this now dinner delight.
Van Camp Packing Company ^Sf- Indianapolis, Ind.
USi
the board of regents, going over pa-
pers and figures this morning.
In his talk to the high school stu-
dents this morning. Dr. Vincent em-
phasized that the object of all work in
the schools, primary, intermediate and
advanced, should be the development
of efficiency for the formation of char-
acter. Dr. Vincent said that the de-
velojiment of efficiency as a means of
livelihood, for financial advancement,
for social service and for community
interests is often emphasized, but he
would say that the real object should
be the development of character and
the others will naturally follow.
ator believes It should exist.
"The people of the southern part of
the state are as fair-minded and honest
as are the people of the north, and are
as willing to do Justice to the northern
part of the state as is the northern
part to receive the same. To the
fair-minded honor of these people we
appeal from the selfish verdict of their
senators, trusting that the sense of
honesty and fair play of the people of
the state will induce them to properly
rebuke the narrow-minded selfishness
of the members who thus violated their
personal and party pledges. Doubtless
a contributing oause of the defeat of
reapportionment was the lukewarm-
ness of some of tin northern members
In their support of the measure, and in
the fact that a few of the northern
senators were absolute traitors to the
cause. We consider tliese men as ab-
solutely unfit for positions of trust,
and we make a direct appeal to their
constituents to retire them from public
life.
Special fnterent Hostile.
"Another cause contributing to the
defeat of reapportionment was the hos-
tile activity of a certain special In-
terest of the state which we shall more
particularly designate in the near fu-
ture. The emissaries of this interest
were particularly active in opposing
reapportionment, and it is to the per-
nicious influence of this Interest that
the defection of some of the northern
senators and the hostile attitude of
some of the southern senators can be
attributed.
"Governor Eberhart has during all
the time stood the consistent friend of
the cause, and I^leutenant Governor
ftordon ha.sj displayed eminent fairness
in his attitude toward reapportion-
ment. Each has redeemed his every
pledge In that respect. The governor
has in a measure pledged himself to
call an extra session of the legislature
to consider a reapportionment bill, but
in view of the great expense Involved
and for various other reasons we now
believe that such extra session at this
time would achieve no good results.
"W'e Intend to present our just cause
to the people ot the state, and to come
before the next legislature and ask the
enactment of a fair reapportionment
bill based upon population, and we sin-
cerely trust that the sense of honestv
and fair dealing so conspicuously ah
asset of the common people of this
state win be communicated to their
legislative representatives of the next
session, to the end that the northern
part of the state may receive its Just
dues."
STILI^MAN H. BINGHAM.
KEEFE BILL ON ELECTION OF
SENATORS FINALLY PASSED
(Continued from page 1.)
VanCamp's
Spaghetti
hciian Siylm
At Inrj Gfc«ry—RtUj-t—1ui
10c and 15c per can
The bill was up for repassage and would
have gone through had not Senator
Dunn of St. Paul moved to adjourn
The tecretary of the senate an-
nounced that the motion had carried
33 to 30. and Lieutenant Governor CJor-
don declared the senate adjourned. It
was not until many of the members
had left that it was discovered that
the motion had really been lost.
* * •
Imvortant BIIIh Lost.
The recall bill, the state-wide pri-
mary bill and the bill extending local
option to cities of 10,000 and under
were all lost by the early adjourn-
ments. So were 400 other measures,
including many of considerable im-
portance.
* * *
Through a conference on the recall
bill and the state-wide primary bill
was requested by the senate eaciy
Monday afternoon, it was not until late
yesterday afternoon that the request
reached the house for consideration,
and it was some time after that be-
fore the committees were appointed.
The committees were as follows:
On the recall — Senators Putnam,
Moonan and Coller and Representa-
tives Kneeland, J. N. Johnson and
Congdon.
On the state-wide primary — Senators
Rockne, Haycraft and Putnam, and
Representatives Holmberg, R. C. Dunn
and MacKenzle.
* • •
The state tax levy for the ensuing
two years was Oxod.at. 1.9 mills id a
bin Introduced by .Mr» Spooner, which
was passed by bolh tbe house and the
senate.
* ' * '•
Oregon Plan Adopted.
That at least one broadly progres-
sive measure would struggle out of
the precarious maws of tills session
was made clear Ig-te yesterday after-
noon when the senate, after a hard
fight which consisted - largely in
Jockeying by means^ of amendments,
passed the Oregon plan bill by Repre-
sentative Joseph "R. Keefe, Democrat,
of North Redwood, providing for the
popular election of United States sen-
J5c a yard I .^^^^t^^^ ^. ^ MM
White Goods, I ^ y/~ 0 ^J^^n^ M ^/
25c Ji^^'eimmM
Lake Avenue. Michigan and Superior Streets.
25c a yard
White Lawns
and Batiste,
Special Yard
15c
Sale of Tailored Suits !
That Would SelL in
the Regular Way up
to $42.50, Special at
$25
We told in our previous ad how we came to get these suits at such
low price figures. We can't help but impress upon your mind again
that these are the best suitj we've ever offered for $25.
Every fashionable sort of suit, every color, every weave,
every combination, checks, stripes, mannish mixtures, im-
ported serges, imported suitings, in all the new colors, in-
cluding plenty of staple blacks and blues. -:- -:-
The style range is particularly broad, and includes some exceptionally
stylish suits that are as effective as fashionable, and fit as accurately as
custom tailors could produce. The coats are lined with
guaranteed peau de cygne and suteen, highest art tail-
oring, latest model skirt; regular values up to $42.50 —
on sale tomorrow at
is accurately as
$25
Women^s
Smart Coats at
$25
Practical coats of serge,
diagonals and fancy mixtures
in black and colors, in an
endless variety of smart
styles to choose from.
Exclusive Millinery
Chaming Creations of Our Own Artists.
Our famous $7.50 to
$25.00 Millinery is be-
coming worn by hun-
dreds of women today.
Hats w th that peculiar
Freimu :h character.
The smartness of the
prevailing mode Is the r ^
basis of every creation V^
without carrying it to "" ^
excess. Every hat de-
signed and fitted for
the weirer.
For Tliursday's selling
we have ready many
distinct ire models to
choc so from at $7..">0,
$10.00. $15.00 to $25.00
Insp«xt This Gorgeous Display of Millincfy.
Be Sure to Get Your Share of the
Great Wash Goods Bargains !
15c
I Fine Printed Flaxon
Reg. 25c Value, Sale
In either plain or cross-barred; also pretty
Dimities, sheer, soft fabrics, white and colored
grounds, will make pretty summer frocks; regular
20c and 25c values, sale price, the
yard
ISc
Meicerized Suitings H ly^
Values to 35c, Yard JL I %j
30-inch (Cotton Panama Suiting — Has the appear-
ance of a wool fabric; well made, serviceable and
dressy summer frocks; shown in tan, rose, pink,
blue, champagne, etc.; "I tj^
sale pri :e J./v
Serpentine 1 C/%
Crepe XOv
Fine Cotton Crepe — In large va-
riety of rich patterns and dainty
colors — a material very much
used for pretty house dresses,
kimonos and dressing sacques;
regular 18c value, special ^ C^
yard A JC
36-mch Percflile
12V2C Sorts
Special Yd.
lOc
Mostly dark grounds, in neat
small figured patterns, suitable
for house dresses.
Batiste and "j A/%
Organdies . . . . JL U C
100 Pieces Fine Batistes and Or-
gandies— Fine sheer material, in
an endless variety of pretty pat-
terns and colors; will make
pretty, cool summer dresses; regu-
lar 12;^c quality, sale price, <| f\^
the yard lUC
tmm
ators, which had already passed the
house.
Several weeks ago the Republicans
in the senate passed the Keefe bill and
adopted the Murray bill, a substitute
piovidlngr party senatorial ni>iinna-
tions, but tlie house promptly killed
the bill.
When the Keefe measure was reached
yesterday afternoon Senator George H.
Sullivan of Stillwater. Republican floor
leader, started a series of amendments
intended to defeat the bill, but all of
them were voted down. The first amend-
ment was beaten 33 to 27, and this was
a test which showed that the friends
of the bill had strength enough to
pass it. The others were voted down
about the same way. and when the
final vote was reached the bill passed,
55 to 6. Senators Boyle and Cheadle
of St. Louis county voted for it, and
stood against all amendments. Sen-
ator Pugh voted on the other side.
This is Representative Keefe'a first
term, and it is a fine commentary on
his success *that he should have put
through what many believe to be the
most important bill of the session.
* • •
Capital Panlcthment Abolished.
Capital punishment will be abolished
in this state, the senate late yesterday
afternoon having passed the house
bill by Representative George A. Mac-
Kenzle of Gaylord, providing that the
highest penalty allowed by law shall
be life imprisonment. It Is known
that Governor Eberhart will sign th©
bill gladly, as he has no taste for sign-
ing death warrants.
This is the third time Mr. Mac-
Kenzle has attempted to pass this bill.
He offered It in 1905 and was beaten,
and he had the same experience in
1909. This time it will become a law.
* • *
Dock Site Bill Pamed.
Representative Knapp yesterday aft-
ernoon got through the bill leasing the
Oneota state elevator site to Duluth
for public dock purposes. It had
already passed the senate, so that It
AT FOUNTi|INS.HOrELS.OR EL8CWHCRE
Get the
Original and Genuine
HORLICK'S
MALTED MILK
The Food DrinkforAllAges
RICH mu. MALT GRAIN EnRACT. IN POWDER
Not in any Milk Trust
Insist on "HORLICK'S-
Take • package home
will become a law as soon as the gov-
ernor signs it, which he will promptly
do.
• • *
The .senate yesterday afternoon
passed the bill fixing the terms of
court in the iron range communities of
St. Louis county. It had already been
passed by the house.
• • •
Representative Donald Robertson of
Argyle refused to sign the najority
report of the special commit .ee ap-
pointed to investigate the state drain-
age work and Drainage IJngineer
Ralph, and yesterday afternoon he pre-
sented a minority report reccmmend-
ing Ralph's dismissal on the grounds
of incompetency.
• * *
Telephone RUl Killed.
The bill putting telephone companies
under the tax commission and giving
that body power to regulate rates and
service and to compel connections be-
tween companies died in the senate
last night when Senator Rookie's mo-
tion to suspend the rules and .with-
draw the bill from the commit. tee was
lost,
• * * '
The bill requiring non-resident
anglers to take out licenses at |1 each,
passed by the house some time ago,
went through the senate yesterday aft-
ernoon.
• • •
Local Option Bill.
The house yesterday afternoon man-
aged to kill some time by a fiirht over
concurrence in the senate amendments
to the house bill extending the local
option law to cities of 10,000 md less
not having home rule chartern. The
house bill provided that 25 per cent
of the voters must initiate proceedings
looking to no license elections both «n
cities and in the smaller communities
which now can initiate elections by
petitions signed by only ten legal
voters. The senate left towns and vil-
lages as they are, witli the provision
that ten voters can initiate, hut pro-
vided for 25 per cent petitions in cities.
It was this amendment the house re-
fused to concur in, sending this bill to
conference by a vote of 56 to \<1.
• • •
To Vote Aivay From Home.
Among the bills given final passage
last night were the following:
By Senator J. D. Sullivan — ./.Hewing
voters to cast their votes on etato-
wide officer.^ and questions away from
home on certificates furnished by the
election officers of their loca.1 pre-
cincts. Identification by two voters in
the precinct in which the vote Is cast
is required.
By Senator G. H. Sullivan— Permit-
ting the formation of trust companies
in small communities with less than
the minimum capitalization of $200,000
now required by law.
By Senator W^allace — ^Providing for a
lien on motor vehicles for labor or ma-
terial furnished in alterations or re-
pairs.
By Senator Hanson — Authorl::lng the
railroad commission to regulate the
movement of livestock by railroads. «
STILLMAN H. BINGHAM.
LUMBER COMPANY
WINS THE CASE
Settler Fails to Recover Dam-
ages for Alleged
Trespass.
After being out but twenty minutee
yesterday afternoon the jury in the
case of Henry Korpela against the Col-
vin-Robb Lumber company, returned a
verdict for the defendant. The verdict
was sealed and was opened in district
court this morning.
Korpela sued for |16,500 damages for
trespass, claiming the company con-
structed a logging road over his prop-
erty without his consent.
The case had been on for a week be-
fore Judga William A. Cant of the dis-
trict court. It was the first case tried
before a Jury by Mrs. I. C. Buell, who
lately came here from the Twin Cities
to practice law.
She made her closing argument to
the jury yesterday afternoon. Slie ap-
peared for the plaintiff and Frank
Crassweller defended.
There are said to be a number of
cases of this kind In the hands of local
attorneys.
Exquisite Flowers.
Choice stock. Prices right at Huofa.
'-vaf
Sanito
TOOTHl
is the best and
B a f e 8 1 tooth
powder foryou
to use on your
teeth. Its anti-
septic proper-
tics arrest de-
cay & preserve
the teeth.
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4
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911
sWOi^AN'S
Miss Harriett M. Mills of the New
York university gave the first of a
series of lectures on subjects of vital
Interest to kindergartners and primary
teachers this afternoon at the kinder-
garten room Of the Washington school.
She talked on -Gifts and Occupations,"
considering the regular sequence of
materials fur the kindergarten through
the building gift series and gave a
rapid survey of the traditlcnal occu-
pations the modincatlons of kinder-
carteM techniques and the educational
use of tovs and of nature materials.
t.rie is "conshlered .'in excellent au-
thority on kindergarten work and has
writtc^ widely on tlie subject
This evening slie will conduct a
round table on the same subject at the
same meeting place, opening at 7
Tomorrow Miss Mills will visit the
Duliitii kindergartens and in the_^ aft-
ernuon at 4 o'clock will talk on ••Music
8'd Story" at the kindergarten room
of the Washington school. Tins course
will present the tlieory nnd practice
of music in its bearing on child de-
velopment, it will include the seiec
tion and arrangement of song.-?,
rhythms, and pamts in the series that
follow liie normal development of child
powers.
Tomorrow evening the biggest lec-
ture of the course will be Klven by
her at the library dubroom at 8
o'clock en 'Kelation o.l Kindergartens
and Primaries."
Friday and Saturday Miss Mills will
spend In Superior. The course will
clo: e w-ith a big reception for her at
the Superior normal school.
BENEFIT ENTERTAINMENT
Program to Be Given at Y. M. C.
A. for Clubhouse at West End.
Thf benetit entertainment for the
Neich hoi hood house will be given this
evening at the gymnasium of the
Young Men's Christian association ana
an excellent program of readings, mu-
sic and gamo has been prepared. The
ftiitiire of the evening will be the. little
pl.iy given by the boys of the Daniel
Beone club, "Sir Gartth of Orkney, un-
der the direction of Miss Mary Paine
and Miss Julia Morrow There will be
mu-:ic by an orchestra, vocal numboTS
by Charles O Applehagen, readings by
Mrs W. A. Kaake, a volley ball game
by boys from the Junior Y. M. C. A.,
a basket ball game between two teams
from the Y. W C. A and some perform-
ing ••trained animals " Miss Eleanor
Kraft and Miss Georgia Evans will
give a violin duet, accompanied by Miss
Ethel Molitor and Miss Margaret Len-
ahan will sing. v, u =
These entertainments, of whicn a
series are to be given, are to aid in
carrying on the work at this house,
■wiiich is founded and is under the di-
rection of the Twentieth Century club
Work of this kind can be best carried
on by the Twentieth Century club or
Bome organization of the same nature
because the club is absolutely non-sec-
tarian and has a laige rv.fmbeTaUip.
The women have become thoroughly
aware of the fact that Duluth must
begin such a work now and see no rea-
son why this weil-started work cannot
broaden out as has the ^e!l%'*"«"'"
"Hull house' In Chicago under the di-
rection of Miss Addams.
EASTER LUNCHEON
Spring Flov^ers Used in Profusion
as Decorations.
Easter flowers and appointments
GIFT FOR QUEEN
FROM ALL "WARYS
rV
J
MARCHIONESS GRAHAM.
Ail the Marys in all the parts of the
United Kingdom — even in the colonies
— are contributing to a fund >.o buy a
coronation gift for Queen Mary. From
Mary, the slave, to Mary, marchion-
ness of Graham, they are showing the
keenest interest in this great move- sington
ment which circles the world. The
marchioness of Graham is at the head
of this movement. She was Lady
Douglas-Hamilton, the oldest child of
the twelfth duke of Hamilton. When
she married the marquess of Graham
in 1S06 she was reputed the richest
woman 'in the United Kingdom.
LADY ABINGER.
Lady Abinger is one of the American
./omen who will have a Part In the
coronation of King George. She is the
daughter ot the late Commodore
GeoTge A. Magruder .^nd married the
third Baron Abinger in 1863 sne nas
been a widow since 1892. The present
baron Is not her son, but is a second
cousin of the fourth Baron Abinger.
Lady Abinger has a country home in
Dorking, a castle In ?nvern€^ss-Sliire
and a London bouse in bouth Ken-
of the Day ' as tjie current events topic
and this was followed by "The Ro-
sary,' sung by Miss Jean ^ ^anless.
which was encored, and she sang Liit
Up Thine Eyes" as her second number
IHJ«s Josephine Saunders played three
Eood Mendelssohn numbers and Miss
Charlotte Crowley closed the Prograrn
with an excellent paper on Pottery
and Porcelain of the United States.
played a group of piano numbers. Miss
Glenn Bartholomew sang, and Miss
Elizabeth Maddox was heard In a vocal
number and a violin number. Miss Berg
played the accompaniments also.
•
Reception for President.
r!r>or£rf E Vincent, president of the home. ....^ -. - =. - « ,,
University of Minnesota, was the guest I cards and dancing by the following
of honor at a reception this afternoon guests:
at the Commercial club given tor the Messrs. and MesdameS;
Birthday Party.
Miss Kathleen Kilgore of 105 East
Eighth street entertained at a birtn-
day partv Monday evening at her
The evening was spent with
purpose of giving Duluth P^ople a
chance to become acquainted with the
new president of the state university.
" stesses who assisted at
church The tables were arranged as
a cross and suspended over them werft
three umbrellas covered with a soft
green covering and ornarnented with
flowers. One of these was immediatel>
over the joining of the two arms oi
the tables and under it was grouped a
large duster of Easter lilies. The lilies
■were the only flowers used on the
tablet-. After a delightful luncheon a
pleasing program was given contain-
ing numbers by Mrs. H Brown con-
tralto, a violin duet by Miss Eleanor
were:
W. E. W. Bohan-
non,
W A.McGonagle,
George Gray,
C. H. Bagley,
Robert Yost,
F. H. White,
F. E. Adams,
C E. Adams,
R. E. Denfeld,
E R. Peyton,
B. P. Neff,
C. M. D. Rice,
C. E. DeWitt.
J. H. Hearding.
Bridge Luncheon.
Mrs G E. Diehl was hostess at a
bridge luncheon today at her home,
1813 Ea«t Second street, in honor of
xrauo, a v.oww «.... ^, -"—- — - - , Mrs. HaJ^ry Johnson of Coleraine, who
Kraft and Miss Georgia Evans vocal ^ ^^^^ ^^^t of her mother. Mrs^ FV C_
numbers by M'^s Myrtle Hobbs anrl „j Chester Jerrace. Covers were
some readings by Mrs. R. E. bayies. M^id
The part of the parlors used for the jj.
F. M. Kilgore,
Amelia Olson,
Edith Haaken-
sen,
Pruden Austin,
Ceenia Sepola.
Gertrude Kilgore,
Ella Anderson.
Walter Kilgore,
John Kilgore,
Percy Hoad,
program was a perfect bower of
beauty being profusely decorated with
sprays of peach blossoms.
After the program the women put
the heading and ribbons on a numbe/'
of 'jmall bags which had been made
with the exception of this finishing;
by Mrs. W. B. Patton, and winch, are
to be sent to a mission.
SATURDAY CLUB TEA
Mrs. Kelley Hostess to Club
Members.
Mrs M H. Kelley of 606 East Second
Btre*^ t entertained at an afternoon tea
this afternoon at her home for the
members of the Saturday club. The
rooms were pretty with Easter lilies
and hyacinths, and a handsorne center-
piece of these flowers adorned the table
In the dining room.
Mrs. W. J Stevenson and Mrs. A. H
Brociclehurst presided in the dining
room, assisted by Misses Charlotte
Brock lehurst and Helen Harbison.
During the afternoon a musical pro-
gram arranged by Mrs. B. Frank Bar-
ker was given. Miss Frances Berg
. .... for ten guests and the table ap-
pointment! j^rejnjrel^ green.
W. R. C. Thimble Bee.
The Thimble bee Of the Woman's
Relief Corps will be entertained to-
morrow afternoon at the home of Mrs.
?^ McMillan, 432 Twelfth avenue east.
A basket lunch^win be served.
Birthday Party.
Mr and Mrs. Frank Sandstedt enter-
tained at cards last evening in honor
of Mr Sandstedts 45th birthday.
He was presented with a beautiful
oil painting by the guests, "'— -
whom were:
Messrs. and Mesdamee—
John Peterson
R. Hoad,
Misses —
Edith Janzit,
Lillian Haaken-
sen,
Bessie Engert,
Kae McLeod.
Lillian Berbig,
Lillian Grunau,
Mesdames —
Mary Anderson
Messrs. —
Henry Berbig,
Avid Sepola,
Fred Berbig, i^- .- , , u o/i
Otto Kalkbrenner Reginald Hoad,
Shandos Hoad, William Berbig.
Gust Haakensen,
Will Give Up Study.
Miss Nora Harrison, who has been
in Washington this winter, with her
mother, Mrs. J. H. Harrison of Park
Point, studying the piano with John
Porter Lawrence suffered an accident
to one of her fingers and will give up
her studying for the rest ot the year
They will return to Duluth in about
two weeks.
among
After tlie Sliow
For noon lunch or supper, visit
Duluth's finest Oriental restaurant.
Dishes to please the most particu-
lar taste.
XHE IVIAIMOARIIM
103 Went Superior Street.
William Carlson,
M. Monson,
A W. Anderson,
M. Gleason,
N. A. Bergstrom,
O. U. Loundberg,
S. Jernberg,
oohn Anilerson,
Albert Hanson,
Charles Peterson.
L. A. Gunderson,
Albert Johnson,
B. N. Johnson of
Fergus Falls,
Minn.
!
Have your Coronet Braids and
Switches made into the pop-
ular six-£trand braid.
KIMAUF- SISTERS,
24 WKST SUPEKKJU ST.
.Second door from Giddings.
Where arc your Furs?
Packed away without fire and
burglar Insurance?
Perhaps safe from moths. If you
keep continually unpacking and
airing them.
Or <'9 ycu store them where se-
Cu*rt7 1» '-Kaolutftl.
Oiir fur vault is burglar proof,
fire proof, moth proof and our atOt-
age receipt shifts the worrying
about your furs from you to us.
Inspect our vault at any time, if
interested.
Northern Cold Storage
and Warehouse Co.
Vp-To^n Ak»<«>
Columbia Clothing Co.
Dulalh and Superior.
"Mother and Child.
The Women's Ciiristian Temperatice
Union of West Duluth win meet to-
morrow afternoon at 2:30 o'cilock with
Mrs a R. Keyes 705 North Fifty-sev-
enth avenue west. The subject will be
-Slother and Child." Mrs. J. H. Bngel
v/ill talk and young mothers are es-
pecially Invited to the meeting.
Bethel Meeting.
The regular Thursday afternoon
meeting will be held tomorrow after-
nooii at the Bethel on Lake avenue, to
which all women, especially strangers^
are invited. Mrs. MacGregor will speak
to the women and there will be some
.special vocal solos. After the talk an
informal social hour will be held.
— ^
P. O. Clerks as Hosts.
The postoffice cleiks have issued in-
vitations for a dancing party to be
Klven Friday evening at Stein way hall.
Blewetfs orchestra will play the dance
music.
— ♦
Invited for Bridge.
Mrs. Henry Smith has invited guests
to bridge at her home, 1231 East bupe-
rior street, tomorrow afternoon.
. ^.^
Entertained Club.
Mrs. Edwin Kelly of Twelfth avenue
east entertained the members of the
Five Hundred club yesterday afternoon
at her home. The game was played at
three tables and the prizes were won
by Mrs. Walter Thompson and Mrs
Carrie Cox.
♦
Crood Program at Club.
An interesting meeting of the Bish-
op's cSb led b^ Miss Charlotte Crow-
fey was held last evening at the club-
"""mTs^s Lucille Whltlen opened the pro-
gram with the Bible reading, 'Judith,
the Joy of Israel," and this was fol-
lowed by a talk by Bishop McGolrlck.
Miss Constance WiUard sang a group
of delightful little songs, ammisc "-rilch
were "Love's Spring Time," ''You and
Love' and "In the Garden of My
Personal Mention.
Mr. and Mrs. Cassias H Bagley of
1929 East Superior street are expected
home the last of this week from a
three weeks' trip to New York and
Chicago.
Miss Catherine Morton of 1431 East
First street left this morning for Mln-
nlapolis, where she will be the guest
of friends for a week or ten days.
* * *
Beverly Jones of Lakeside Is home
from Port Arthur, where he has been
attending school this year. He will
spend a week's vacation here.
' 0 * m
Mrs C. H. Whitmore of 1003 East
Third street is visiting relatives In
Wabasha, Minn.
* • •
Miss Irene Wetzler of 1009 East
Second street has returned from a
four months' visit at New Orleans and
other Southern points.
* • «
Mrs. H. D. Foster of 2127 Sixtieth
avenue east is entertaining her sister,
Mrs. N. O. Stadum of Ersklne, Minn.
* « *
Miss Blanche Colombe of 116 East
Third street is visiting in Two Harbors
this week. ^
Miss Marguerite Warner returned to
Virginia last evening after a visit here
with Mrs. R. C. Henry of 1104 East
Fourth street.
* * *
Mrs Huot and Miss Josephine Huot
will leave tomorrow for a short visit in
the West. » , »
Mrs. H. W. Price is the guest of
friends in Marquette, Mich.
* • •
Mrs. Harris, who has been the guest
of her sister, Mrs. M. L. Parker of Park
Point, has returned to her home In
Minneapolis.
* « •
Miss Gertrude I- Still of St. Paul is
the guest of Mrs. W. J. Johnson, 1424
East Second street.
« * •
Miss Clara Eisenach of Neenah, Wis-
is visiting Mrs. Helen Brown of 310
West Third street.
* « *
Mrs F. A. Kurkosky, who has been
ill at St. Mary's hospital, has recovered
sufficiently to be removed to her home.
* • *
Mrs. P. E. Aim and Mrs. J. G. Scott
have returned to their home at Grand
Marais, Minn., after a visit of two
weeks with Mrs. G. N. Stevenson of
4501 Gladstone street, Lakeside.
* * *
Mrs. J. H. Egan of 1514 East Fifth
street, has as her guest, Mrs. Joseph
Egan of Bt. Paul.
Mrs C. W. Elston Of 1665 East Su-
perior street has returned from Chi-
cago, where she has been visiting for
a month.
* « •
from Belleaire Fla., having spent the
past two months there.
Mr and Mrs. W. P. Heinibkch of 1123
East First street are home from a ten
days' trip to Milwaukee and^Chicago.
Cotton Pikes for sfiks.
You can buy handsome silks at the ■
price of tine cottons at the t.ray-T.il- |
ant company's semi-annual silk sale. ^^
Opens tomorrow— ends 8atuiday night.
♦■ '^
[the EVENING STORYJ
Lucinda s Sweetheart
By Nora Pitt-Taylor.
Dinner was over in the dining room,
the table cleared, the candles extin-
guished, and those below stairs were
gathered round a board made unusually
attractive by the addiflbn of tit bits in
the savory and sweet line.
The buzz of voices and bursts of hi-
larious laughter filled the kitchen, a
rough-and-ready wit being the prevail-
ing element. Only Lucinda, the kitchen
maid an(l general drudge, ate what
cook was graciously pleased to put
upon her plate, in a miserable silence.
•Talking ot names, now, ' exclaimed
Nellie Till, the pert, fair-haired parlor
maid, addresfelg the table, "whatever
took your motner when she gave you
yours, Lucinda? It's the most silly and
senseless name I ever heard of, and f^^r
a Kin in your station of life, too. What
did she give it to you for? Do you
know that?" , ,, . ^,
Flushing a dull crimson all over her
white little face, Lucinda lifted a pair
of startled eyes to her questioner. __
■It came out of a book, Miss Till,
she said timidly. "It's got a meaning
to It what took their lancy. ,„„„„
•A meaning to it, has it? Goodness,
now, fancy that! And what may it be,
"fiJit Lucinda had evidently no mind
to give her secret away, dropping her
eyes once more to her plate and main-
taining a sullen silence.
"Come now, Lucinda, speak up.
Wheres your manners, girl? Didn't you
hear as Miss Till asked a question ol
^'^The reprimand fell sharply from the
cook , , ,,
"Id rather not say, please, cook.
There was something almost like en-
treaty in the low voice, but the curios-
ity of the table was aroused, and, wiin
an expressive wink at the footman,
Nellie Till pressed her point.
"1 have heard tell of a language of
nowns," she said. "But a language of
names, now that's something new, i
should think." xt,ih«"
"It can't be so very new Nellie.
giggled the housemaid; "not if it \yere
in fashion when Lucinda was born-
A shout of laughter greeted th s
brilliant piece of wit, two alone fall-
ing to see the humor in it — Lucinda
and Arthur Benson, the footman.
"Every name has a meaning, so 1 ve
always understood." Speaking foi the
first time, the young man glanced at
the little kltchenmaid.
"Then perhaps you can tell us w iiat
Lucinda means, Mr. Benson, ' was the
pert rejoinder. . _
"Now, then, Lucinda, answer when
youre spoken to. Tell us what you
was named after— notlang in the
beauty line, I should say. Hurry up,
now, or if you've lost your tongue
you'd best leave the table till you find
With oue swift glance at the appetis-
ing pudding in front of the speaker,
Lucinda took her courage in her two
hands. ^ , j .» v.,v
'It's Lucinda— meet to be loved, she
faltered. ^ , ,,*",>, «,„
"Lucinda — meet to be loved! Oh, my
stars, did you ever hear the like of
that? That's grand, that Is!" . ^,,^^
Nudging her companion, the house-
maid indicated the «ough, red little
'^•"w'^hen is he going to meet you, Lu-
cinda?" inquired Miss Till, with inock
gravity. 'Poor man. It'll be a shock
for him, I expect. Have it in the dark.
1 would. If I were you. "
"Lucinda won't never have no one to
meet her," interposed cook. "There s
not a man on the face of this earth
would look at her— not unless he hap-
pened to be a blind one. Shell never
have no sweetheart — not her!
"I know I'm ugly, I know my hands
is red and covered in chilblains; 1
know my hair don't curl like yours,
and I ain't got no fine cap or aprons_
You don't need to keep on telling me of
It; it hurt cruel, it does. You that s
got pretty faces, you don't know what
us others feel like!"
Before this sudden and unexpected
outburst on the part of the little beast
of burden among them, the giggles died
into silence, and, pushing back her
chair, Lucinda fled into the sink room.
Bridling with outraged dignity, cook
glaied towards the sink room.
"Mannerless little beast! You just
stay where you are, and mind youi own
business. If you can't do nothing else^
start and get them dishes washed, arid
stop snivelling into the dishcloth. Did
you ever see the like of her, Mr. Ben-
Thus directly appealed to, the foot-
man looked up.
"A little hard on her, aren't you .^
he said slowly. ^ , ,
"Hard on her! If you had as much
to do with her as I have, Mr. Benson,
Jap Matting
Covered Shirt
Waist Boxes-
Special $1.98.
Worth $2.50.
Zet Us Clean Your Gloves— Make Them New Again.
20c Best Quali-
ty Tal>le Ol
Cloth 15c.
It's 47-lnches
Wide.
Faultlessly Tailored Suits at $25.
Suits with stylish Hnes fauhlessly tailored into them, made from
serge, hairline worsted and fancy mixtures, with peau de cygne
or satin linings— garments the hke of which are not $25
to be seen anywhere at • • • • • ^
Jaunty Coats for $12.50 and $18.50 .
Exceptionally good models at either price. Some are tailored P'ainly,
some made with notch, shawl and sailor collars; all expertly designed and
finished, with a style individuality that is most pleasing.
Special display of models at these two prices Thursday.
$1.50 Lingerie Waists $1.25. Spring Model Corsets 50c.
Long and short sleeve models, made There's long, short or medium length
with high or Dutch necks, trimmed with
laces, embroideries and tuckings; regular --
$1.50 values, special Thursday at $1.25. I sizes from 18 to 6K).
Underwear Greatly Urderpriced.
75c Gowns. 59c: Trimmed with two I 65c Corsiet Covers 49c: Wide variety of
rows of embroidery and cluster tucks, made well made and ;?anit.ly trimmed garments,
with high slipover and "V" necks, from of good na;nsook; i^egular 65c values, at 49c.
"^od quality muslin; regular 75c 'values. . Combinations at $1.25: Corse cover and
you'd think otherwise!' was the scath-
ing retort. "Meet to be loved. Indeed!
1 never heard ol such a thing! Its
e
he
models from batiste and nets, made in
accord to the latest style notes, in all
good quality
special Thursday at 59c.
Cambric Gowns, with high necks and
slipover style, neatly trimmed with lace and
embroidery, full length and width; special
at 98c.
35c Corset Covers, 29c: Several attrac-
tive styles, trimmed with dainty lace and
embroidery; regular 35c values, special at
29c.
drawer conbination, trimmed with Imen
torchon and val laces or embroidery, from
good quality nainsook; special values at
$1.25. ^ ^ ,.
$1.98 Princess Slips, $1.49: From fine
quality nainsook, iace and embroidery trim-
med, nbbcn drawn, deep flounce with 3
rows of la:e and edge; regular $1.98 value,
special at $1.49.
Vast Showing of
Women's
Stylish Shoes
$2.50, $3.00 and $3.50
We specialize in wom
en's footwear at these
prices and have a most
extensive assortment of
the newest ideas that
come from foremost shoe
fashioners of ♦he country,
patent, vici and gun metal
leathers, velvet and suede, in
boots, oxfords and pumps,
each line giving values not
to be had elsewhere.
-
Inexpensive Millinery
Models at $1.98, $2.98, $3.98 aiid $4.98.
Smart millinery at very low prices has extensive showing here.
Models with very stylish lines and pretty trimmings are shown
/' at much under customary prices.
I|) Thursday we show extensive assortments
of various sizes, becoming si: apes from straw
braid, pyroxaline and burnt straw, trimmed
with flowers, aigrettes, quills and ostrich,
priced at $1.98, $2.98, $3.98 ard $4.98.
Of course, there's more exclusive shapes
from the hands of our own designers at $5,
$7.50 and $10. . .
Untrimmed Shapes for those who trim their
own hats, all kinds of braids and straws, at 98c,
- ^ $1.50, $2.50 and up to $12.
Rugs and Draperies for the House Beautiful
The advent of Spring prompts the particular hou.se-
wile to decorating— replacing the old curtains with pretty
new ones, the frayed carpets and rugs with latest pat-
terns, such as are here shown in great profusion.
Choosing from these will prove pleasing and profit-
able. , _ ^ .
New Dutch curtains, white and colored effects, pleasing
for bungalows, bed and bathrooms, set $1.25 to $3.95.
Fancy nets, 36 to 48 inches wide, 15c to $1.45 yard.
Art silk drapery, 48 inches wide, beautiful colorings, yard
$1 75.
12^c Scotch Lapids, 8c: White Scotch lapids, 26 inches
wide; worth in the usual way '\2y^c, .special at 8c. ., ,
Alhambra "Sun Fast" draperies, 32 to 48 inches ^vide, for
living room and library overcurtains, 69c and 98c yard.
$32.50 Wilton Velvet Rugs, $23.50: Newest patterns and V
colorings, seamless styles, with soft velvet nap and rich Oriental 4-^^
'lustre, size 9x12 feet; worth $32.50, special at $23.50.
We're Tailoring Most Sati«factory Suits to Measure
Women who have had suits made here tell us in a most enthusiastic way that they are better fitted
and nle^scd It less expense than ever before. Our Fifth Avenue designer is a most thorough one. H.s
yeL'^of rsLlation S s ^^^es a decided advantage over other high
^"' Ask^ the'salesman at the dress goods counter about our tailoring proposition or come to the tailor-
ing department and see examples of our work. i • ♦. co „«
^"- • --icludlng materials, li rings, etc., at $32.50 up; skirts, $8 up.
Suits made to measure, mc
Annual Sale of Seeds, I5ulbs, Plants & Bushes
"mF^s Helen McAlpine read an inter- I Mr. and Mrs.' J.' L. 'Mullln of 2115
esK paper on 'EducaUonal Questions I East Superior street bave returned
nough to turn any girl 8 head, givlni
..er such a name— as if any one woul
ever want to meet a scurecrow like
her''
"Wtll, they does, cook— so thtrel
There is one that loves me — one what
thinks a world of men and my face,
and what don't think nothing of kiss-
ing my hands, though they are red!
Dishcloth in hand. L.ucinda stood In
the ''ink room facing them all: 1 am
loved— so there! ■ she cried.
"Tell us who he is. Lucinda, and
where does he live? Can't you bring
him along to show us?"
It was Nellie Till who Bpoke, and
Lucinda met her mocking eyes reck-
^^^'Yes. I will," she said shortly. . "1
will be meeting him tomorrow evening
and I'll bring him in, so as you can all
see him lor yourselves. . „^<„,io
The following evening Lucinda
slipped out of the back door, a hunted
fook^ in her eyes. She had undertaken
to produce ber sweetheart and she
knew not where to find nim.
Down the deserted street she went,
despair clutching at her heart. , To go
back and confess the truth, tell them
that she had spoken on the spur of the
moment, filled her with a sickening
fear. To run away from them all meant
loss of character, and she would starve
^ Big^sobs^fose in her throat as, turn-
ing she started to run back to the
h use, and there get the dread confes-
sion over without delay.
"Steady, hon— steady, little girl!
It was Arthur Benson who spoke.
"It was all lies." she sobbed, wildly.
"They've sent you to spy on ine. haven t
they? Well, it was all lies. 1 ain t got
no young mkn. I ainf loved by no ontv
I just sald^lt, cos— 'COB I couldnt bear
*^ "u w^rln't no He. Lucinda--there is
one that loves you;]' Q"i«l^iy ^\e wo^^^
fell from the mans lips, and he took
the little hands in his. "I asked out
special to come and meet you, Luc nda^
l^ sooner be your fiancay than all the
lot of 'em put together. I knowed vou
was 'meet to be loved' the very first
^Iht you came. Will you have me
Lucinda, dear? Will you- take nie back
along yith you and let 'em see how
His befween you and me, and how It
will be forever and ever !
Half an hour l^lef to those assembled
in Uie kitcRen the latch of the back
door was lifted and Lucinda and Arthur
Benson entered, *her hand held fast In
'^^^'Cook " said t"he little maid shyly,
"I'v? broug?t ipy ^^r^XoVi^^'' '
you. as I i:)romised you I would.
Wide Awake Club Meets
At 117-119 West Superior street to-
morrow to share In the Gray-Tallant
fcr^panya Bilk sale. Visiting members
invited.
<<^J^:•
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An ever.t of the first importance to the homccrofter,
gardener and truck farmer, supplying as it does fresh new
seeds, bulbs, vines and plants, at a mere fraction of
their usual cost. ,nnnn •
This sal<: is planned on a prodigious scale, over 30,(IUU pieces
are offered. Plants are the HARDY FIELD GROWN VARIETY
—not hot house "shoots" of uncertain life— and thoroughly ac-
climated. Ttie roots are packed in spagnum moss and wrapped in
waxed paper to retain the moisture. Each plant is tagged with its
proper nam<.
Sale begins Thursday morning in the basement, and offers—
Plants and Bushes Worth to $1 for 15c
Wide variety of most popular plants for lawn or garden, all
hardy growth, coming from the foremost nursery of the country.
You will find —
I
}
Bulbs
Glaaiolas, 14 varieUes, cacb 2c, 4c, 5e,
10c; <loz., 20c, 40r and 50c.
Caladiiim (Elephant's Ear), 5c and 12c.
Beeonias, HinKle and douWe, each, 5c;
doz., 50c.
Madeira Vine, 3 for 5c.
Garden lily, each, 15c; and 2 for 25c.
Tube Ko«e.s each 3c; do»., 80c.
Lawn Seed
The famous Central Park variety, in-
dorsetl and usctl by John D. Rockefeller,
Tlieodore Roosevelt and others, lb. ykgH.,
15c; % lb . 10c.
Flower and Veoetable Seeda
strictly VrcsU Seeds, the Vaughan va-
riety, reco«mizcd aw the best on the Duluth
nmrket. Either flower or vegetable va-
riety; smaU packases, 5c; larger pk«s.. lOc.
noAverIng Slirut>s
Spiea Bushes,
Snowball Bushes,
lilacs, purple and white,
[Peonies.
Climbing Vines
Clematis,
Bostc 1 Ivy.
I^ull Bustles
Raspterry,
Gooseberry,
Currait.
IWf ustiroom Spawn
Selected variety, J^*^®
Spawn, in large pound
cake? each, 16c.
Rose Bustles
Crimson Rambler,
Dorothy Perkins,
American Beauty,
Earl of Dufferin,
Magna Charta,
Mme PJanticr,
Persian Yellow.
Perennial Plants
Oriental Poppy,
Double Hollyhock,
(Maroon, white, pink, red
and yellow.)
Japan Iris,
Shasta Daisy,
Larkspur, Sweet William,
Phlox, white and pink,
Syringa, Golden Glow.
Choice of Any of Above at 15c Each.
t. . 1 T«^^. Best variety, hardy plants, 4 to 5 ft. CQ^
Hy dfangea trees — high. worth tofe.50.saie pnce **v^
DEFECTIVE PAGE h
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Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19. 1911.
"I pipe all day
My cheerful lay
Of Campbell's Soups
to eat.
Then all night long
I dream the song
I piped all day
so iweet.
You never suspect it
No doubt you are
often served with
Campbell's Soups in the
finest homes of your
acquaintance. But you
never suspect that you
are eating
Soups
You would hardly be-
lieve that soup so rich and
so delicate can be produced
outside of the finest home
kitchen. But in fact only
the best-equipped of home
kitchens could produce any
soups to compare with
them.
Why not be convinced
by a trial?
21 kinds 10c a can
Jusi add hot water,
bring to a boil,
and serve.
Joseph Campbsll
Com PAN Y
Camden N J
Look for the
red-and -white
label
The St. Louis Inn
(>f:'er3 you an a-^dorctiient of
delicate viands culled from
tlv^ marts of the world, at
moat reasonable prices. The
service and music are of the
best. Popular Noon- time
Lunches. Lunch or dine here
3ew{lry noocitiest
There ire just as distinctive ."Styles
in Jewelry as ia any other depart-
ment of dress, and at this season
of th'.> year the Jewelry section is
beginning to blossom out in fresh-
n^rfs. beauty and brightness from
the brilliant array of new eroods ar-
riving? almost daily, representing aJl
the latest novelties in Jewelry.
t €. Reinbart
JEWELER.
7 E;t««t Siiporlor Street.
HATS REMODELED
We have an expert HATTER.
Work is promptlydone and well.
Cleaned, Bleached
and Blocked.
PANAMAS
A Complete Hat Slioi> -Michigan St. no«r
A. B. Siewert & Co,,
Batters and Furnishers.
904 West Saperlor Street.
FURNISHED FLAT
For rent to man and wife for one
year, completely furnlsh-ed. ready
for housekeeping, six rooms modern,
upper side of First street, between
Eighth and Ninth avenues east.
R. P. U(>\V<»E <& fO.
106 Providence BuHdinK-
Look Up This Choice
Building Site !
ElKltty Feet on .Second street, Be-
t«^eeu Twentj--f«Mirth »ud Twen-
ty-Fifth Avnueit En^t.
AI! Improvements in and paid for.
If yju intend building in tiie finest
restricted ilstrict, this will interest
you. The owner will sell for less
than any adjoining property can be
bougiit.
CHAS. P. CRAIG & CO.
EXrLrSIVE AGENTS.
501-5 Sellwood BuildluK-
IVIONEY
At lowest market rates on im-
proved Duluth Real Estate.
Money Always on Hand.
MENDENHALL
& HOOPES
200 First National Bank Bld^.
FOR RENT!
OFFICES I
Fire
LITTLE
OFFICES IN LYCEUM BUILDING.
Fire-Proof — Desirable.
WAR VETERAN
L^OUT
Fails to Compel Governor
Eberhart to Appoint Him
Boiler Inspector.
Judge Dibell Holds That
the State Law Is
Unconstitutional
Jud^e Dibell of the district court
hais decided against Albert Woolson,
the Civil war veteran who claimed
that he was discriminated ag^ainst
when he made application to the
governor for the appointment as
boiler inspector for this district, and
fallv?d to secure It.
The decision was made by Judgo
Dibell yesterday. He decided that
the act which states that old sol-
diers are to have the preference
when they seek appointments to of-
fice is unconstitutional. In his
memorandum he cites authorities and
several eases which have been decided
the same way in Minnesota.
Judge Dibell states that an act of
this kind, if enforced, would limit
the power of the governor of a state
in making his appointments. He
finds that the governor has full power
in the matter of appointments.
At a special term of court held
two weeks ago Assistant Attorney
General William J. Stevenson made a
motion to quash the alternative writ.
Last Saturday the arguments in the
case were made before Judge Dibell.
Yesterdaj- he granted the motion
made by Mr. Stevenson.
Some months ago Mr. Woolson
made application to Governor Eber-
hart for the position of boiler in-
spector for this district. He claimed
to have had thirty-five years' ex-
perience with boilers and claimed also
that he was an old soldier with an
honorable discharge from the United
States army and therefore entitled
to special consideration.
In his findings Judge Dibell states
that Mr. WooIs4)n qualified as com-
petent to fill the position but that
the governor, he thought, had full
power In the exercise of his choice.
Louis Boo, a range man, was ap-
pointed to the position and from
present indications he will continue
to hold it.
Judge S. F. "UTiite appeared for
Mr. Woolson and Mr. Stevenson de-
fended the governor. The case was
entitled Albert Woolson against Gov-
ernor Eberhart. The defense claimed
that an action against the governor
was the same as one against the state.
This is the second action of the
kind that has been heard in the local
^ourts !n the past few weeks. J. B.
SIR JOSEPH WARD.
New York, April 19. — Sir Joseph
Ward, prime minister of New Zealand,
with his family, sailed on the Lusl-
tania today for the coronation In
London of King George V, whose guest
he will be. Sir Joseph said that sev-
enteen years of woman suffrage had
worked well in New Zealand. He said
he wa.s heartily in favor of reciprocity
between Canada and the United
States and an arbitration treaty be-
tween America and Great Britain.
Flack some time ago attempted in
the same manner to become superin-
tendent of the state free employment
bureau, but the case was dismissed
without the legal point being passed
upon.
interested in boys' camps will have an
cpportunlty of seeing and hearing
about Camp Miller which will open
its fourteenth sea.son July .31.
The Seneca tent, one of 'last year's
groups, will give a little play entitled
"A Day at Camp," and Mr. McLeod will
give a st^reopticon talk showing camp
activitieij
;; « • *
Wednesdnii afternoon at 4:30 the
boys' deMa-tifcent scouts will meet to
practice iPOr ." the .scout display to be
given Friday, April 28.
« * •
The membership committee of the
boys' department will meet Wednes-
day at 6:15 to talk over membership
plans for the month. A big rally has
been planned for 7:30 when 120 boys
%vill be present.
- • • •
The bws' department school basket
ball serl*- wijl come to a close Thurs-
day afternoon' at 5:30, when the Frank-
lin and Nettleton schools will meet in
the first of three games to decide the
championship. Each school has an ex-
cellent team and the games will i)e
one of the fastest junior games ever
played in the gymnasium.
W. C. T. U. WOMAN
FOR JUDGE COWAN
Testifies He Was Not Under
the Influence of
luthians were the succe-ssful contrac-
tors and will be required to furnish a
bond of $10,000. In the competition to
land the contract for furnishing 500
feet of fire hose, the J N. Johnson
company. Eureka Fire Hose company
and the Nott Hose company, all of Min-
neapolis, put in bids. The Nott Hose
company, represented by William E
McGuffin. was the winner of the con-
tract. The council adopted a resolu-
tion deeding thirteen acres of land to
the Northwest Paper company for
$1,700 on condition that the company
erect a paper mill with a capacity of
forty tons per day and that within
five years the company Would expend
and invest the sum of $25,000 and
within seven years complete and hav?
In operation the mill. If nothing is
done at the end of that period the land
is to be redeeded to the city. A reso-
lution was adopted asking the water
and light board to expend $1,800.75 for
a rectirter system of street lighting.
current fund during the year amounted
to more than $82,000. The money on
hand In the various funds, the report
showed, is $43,135.
A patriotic entertainn: ent was given
in Continental hall last night by th«
Children of the American Revolution
and a number of state delegations tield
receptions and meetings at their vari-
ous headquarters.
DANCE
By M. W. A.
DRILL TEAM
GREAT WESTERN HALL, 21st Ave. West
and Superior Street. TICKETS, 50 cts.
Liquor.
ANNUAL FESTIVAL
A Social will be given at the Bethany
Swedish Lutheran church. Twenty-third
avenue west and Tiiird street, l>y the
Men's Society, April 20, at 8 o'clock in
the evening. Rev. Tlieodore A. Ekblad
of Superior, Wis., will be the principal
speaker on the program for the even-
ing.
NOTES OF BOYS'
DEPARTMENT
The camp committee of the boys'
department, T. M. C. A. has arranged
for the annual camp reunion of mem-
bers of Camp Miller to be held this
Friday evening.
The camp dinner will be served at
6:15. After dinner an Informal time
will be spent talking over the old camp
days and at 8 o'clock a public enter-
tainment will be held to which parents
and boys are Invited. There will be
no admission fee and parents and these
Bismarck, N. D., April 19.— (Special
to The Herald.7 — Mrs. Jean McNaugh-
ton Stevens of Towner, prominent in
the North Dakota W. C. T. U., was a
strong witness for the defense in the
Cowan Impeachment case today, testi-
fying to the effect that at no time dur-
ing the trial of the Slavens case in
Rugby was the jurist under the in-
fluence of liquor, nor did he appear at
any time as though he had been drink.
Ing. Her evidence has proved the most
convincing of any offered in the en-
tire trial.
In addition to her evidence there
was also considerable evidence by At-
torney Cuthbert with reference to de-
layed cases, while he was also ques-
tioned as to the condition of Judge
Cowan on Aue 4, 1908, when Cuthbert
said he believed Cowan had taken two
or three drinks but was not intoxicated.
WEST END
SCRATCH FROM
NAIL FATAL
DULUTH CONCERN
GIVEN CONTRACT
Pistoret & Lawrence Will
Build Sewers in- North-
east Brainerd.
Brainerd, M'nn., April 19. — (special
to The Herald.) — Three bids were
opened at the meeting of the city coun-
cil for the construction of sewers In
Northeast Brainerd and on Laurel
street. Tlie bidders were Slipp-Gruen-
hagen company of Brainerd, Ilstrup &
Olson of Minneapolis and tlae Pastoret-
Lawrence company of Duluth. The Du-
West End Man Dies From
Blood Poisoning in Tri-
vial Wound.
A scratch on the hand from a rusty
nail was responsible for the death this
morning of Ole Fritsdahl, aged 26, at
his home, 2128 West Third street.
Shortly before Christmas, when Frits-
dahl was employed at the receiving
warehouses of the Wright-Clarkson
Mercantile company, he scratched his
hand on a nail. He paid little or no
attention to the scratch at the time.
An Infection set in a few weeks later.
Fritsdahl consulted a physician, but
not soon enough to do any good. He
was laid up at his home for several
weeks. He died this morning at 5
o'clock.
Fritsdahl was a single man and had
lived In Duluth for tha past five years
He made his home with his aunt, Mrs.
Christina Anderson, 2128 West Third
street. Besides three cou;^ins In Du-
luth, Ole and Peter Peterson and Mrs.
Abraham Hjeppe, Fritsdahl has no
relatives in this country.
The funeral will be held Friday aft-
ernoon at 2 o'clock from the Olson &
Crawford undertaking rooms, 2118
West First street.
MUSICAL PROGRAM AT
DANISH M. E. CHURCH.
'':^^i:'"'P^-'-^'-^'*^'¥^^
T^^ **IT PAYS TO PAY CASH— MY PRICES PROVE IT'*
Thomasson
**THE FURNITURE man-
ODD FELLOWS HALL BUILDING, 18 & 20 LAKE AVE. NORTH.
THE GREAT ANNUAL
HOUSE-CLEANING SALE
Begins in this store tomorrow morning. This sale has been de-
layed for several weeks while the carpenters, painters and deco-
rators were remodeling the store. It is now completed and a
handsomer store, better lighted and ventilated store is not to be
found in the city. Extraordinary values here that you should
see without delay. THINGS YOU ARE SURE TO NEED.
BUY NOW I SAVE MONEY I! BUY HERE III
BUY THAT
NEW RUG
HERE!
Big values In Fine Rugs here
that you canont get In any other
store. I want you to see the
values whether you buy or not.
$3.00 AXMIi\STER RUGS $1.95.
These rugs are finest Axmlnstera
— size 27 by 54 inches; beautiful
patterns to select from — (^•i Q|^
v/orth $3.00, special «pl,7 J
$5.00 AXMINSTER RUGS $3.48.
This is a fine large rug. 36 'by 72
Inches — extra heavy quality — as-
sorted patterns — regular
$5.00, special
$3.48
$15.00 TAPESTRY RIGS $8.98.
Here is a "HUMMER" value —
Large 9 by 12 foot Tapestry Brus-
sels Rugs, elegant rugs for bed-
rooms or dining rooms — assorted
patterns — worth $15.00, d»0 QO
special yO, / O
$25.75 VELVET RUGS $14.98.
Here is a fine Wilton Velvet Rug
— .made from carpets and borders
that sell everywhere at $1.50 per
yard. Rugs are full 9 by 12 foot
size — regular low price Is $25.76 —
very special, this il 1 d. 0^
VERY SPECIAL.
A big lot of Sllkolines, Muslins.
Scrims and Curtain Goods to go In.
rl ^ this sale at this price. Regr-
I ular values up to 25c per
2^ yard. Act Quickly!
ENDORSED BY
UNION LABOR.
Be sure your new range bears
THIS trade mark. A little care In
.selecting the right stove now will
save you lots of care and worrj- in
the future. These wonderful
stoves are sold in this store ex-
clusively In Duluth. GET OUR
PRICES. By a special arrange-
ment with the BUCK STOVE &
RANGE CO., I will sell you these
wonderful stoves on
VERY EASY TERMS.
LINOLEUMS AND
9\L CLOTH
Get in at this sale and buy your
Floor Coverings at Wholesale
Prices. Bring your room sizes
with you and get a snap at these
prices.
65c Linoleums 48c
75c Linoleums 59c
85c Linoleums 6234c
$35 DINING TABLES $17.98
An attractive program, which is ex-
pected to appeal to music lovers of the
West end, will be presented under the
direction of Mrs. Elizabeth Morton
Dworshak, Thursday. May 4. at the
First Norwegian Danish M, E. church.
Twenty-fourth avenue west and Third
street.
The best of local talent has been se-
cured f >r the program. Among the
singers will be Miss Florence Hyland,
soprano; Mrs. C. W. Peters, contralto;
Mr. Bjonjuist, tenor, and Mr. Louis
Dworshak. bass.
Miss Valborg Gunderson, a talented
violinist of Superior, will appear In a
number of selections. Miss Frances
Berg and Miss Forence Denny are the
pianists. T!ie readings will be given
by Miss Eftte Brotherton of West Du-
luth.
D. H., 4-19-'ll.
Repairiuj^ €hurch.
Repair work is being done this ■week
in the basement of tne First Swedish
Methodist Episcopal church. Twentieth
avenue west and Third street. The
rooms are being redecorated and re-
painted and electric lights have been
Installed. The work has been com-
templated by the board of trustees for
some time.
Church Supper.
Preparations are being made by the
ladies of the Second Presbyterian
church for the twelfth annual supper.
It will be held Friday evening at the
Columbia hall. Twentieth avenue west
and Superior street.
West End Briefs.
The funeral of Mrs. Mary Eraer.son,
wife of Charles Emerson of 322 North
Twenty- fifth avenue west, was held
this morning from St. Clement's Cath-
olic church, T%venty-flr3t avenue west
and Third street. The body was taken
to Staples for Interment.
Rev. John H. Murray, pastor of the
Grace M. E. church, Twenty-3econ<l
avenue west and Third street, returned
this afternoon from Hibblng, where
he attended the annual conference of
the Duluth district of English speak-
ing Methodist churches.
A. Lincoln Kirk, a character Imper-
sonator, will appear In an entertain-
ment this eveniner at the Central Bap-
tist church. Twentieth avenue west
and First street. He will present a
number of monologues.
The funeral of Mrs. Mary Ander-
son, wife of Charles A. Anderson of
2707 West Second street, who died
yesterday, will be held tomorrow after-
noon at 2 o'clock from Grace M. E.
church. Burial will be in Park Hill
cemetery.
The Lion drug store has moved to
the new Anderson-Thoorsell block,
2030 West Superior street.
Herman Blanck of International
Falls, Minn, is the guest of friends In
the West end.
Have You a Smart
Overcoat for
Spring?
• Maybe the old one is a trifle
rusty. You can find with us a
"brand new fresh one, STYL-
ISH and RIGHT for a RIGHT
price.
From 112.50 up.
Stein-Bloch Garments
From $22.50 up.
It Will Fit.
.1
fmm^m^
■
!
t T •lll'Wllf I llTT -|1T 1 'I'll^ ■
CMJttnf Gift
At Third Avenue West.
FOOT NOTEi
Columbia S3.;o Shoes for men and women.
i ,
I'i'
\/uhtt J
im Art (V i fuptrJor
fCit^
Here's Your Chance
to get the material for your
new frock at a little price!
You will find 2verything
else for your new outfit at
Moe's, also all a1: a great
saving over "down-town"
prices.
For Thursday, April 20
From 10 to 11 a. m.
A beautiful stock of Sumida
Silks in all colors and many
different fancy patterns — a
soft and clinging fabric,
most popular for summer
frocks; regular 45c value, for
this one hour
tbe yd.
Watch Thin Spwoe tin Thiirwilny for .More Bargalow.
Spring Plants.
Prices right; big stock.
Huofs.
Victor
IRON BEDS
Don't buy Ray Iron Beda,
Springs or Mattreses until you see
my Una and get the prices. No
high prices here. Every one
marked at Bargain Price. Prices —
98c $1.95, $2.98, $4.50 & op
Many fine Tables left yet of the
manufacturers' samples that were
put away during the alterations.
This is a sample value — 48-inch
round top — 14-inch round pedestal
— Hon claw feet — exactly like cut.
Worth 135.00 — ^17 0Q
special at «plf,/0
$15.00 Tables $7.98
$17.50 Tables $9.95
$19.50 Tables $12.98
$25.00 Tables .....$15.75
$30.00 Tables $17.75
$42.50 Tables $25.75
TAFT RECEIVES
THE DAUGHTERS
Descendants ef Revolution
Call on Executive at
White House.
Washington, April 19. — Reports of
committees constituted the chief busi-
ness of the forenoon session of the
Daughters of the American Revolution
today. An address by Dr. J. Franklin
Jameson was included in the program.
President Taft received the daughters
at the White House after the close of
the business session.
Delegates are excited over the elec-
tion of general officers tomorrow. The
fight for president general is between
Mrs. Matthew T. Scott of Illinois, the
Incumbent, and Mrs. William C. Story
of New York. Both sides are making
claims of victory.
Mrs. Tulloch, vice president general,
In charge of organization, reported that
the present membership Is C8,652, an
increase of 5,052 over a j'ear ago.
Mrs. William C. Story of New York,
candidate for president in opposition
to Mrs. Scott, was tendered a recep-
tion by the New York delegation, all
the daughters being Invited.
"The treasurer general's report
showed that the disbursements for the
SPECIAL DRIVE
THURSDAY ON
SUITS
$IS $I9g $22g $24
.50
These Suits were secured by our New York
of] ice (636 Broadway), at one-third less than
the regular manufacturer's cost price. Every
suit is a bargain, and remeniber we do not
charge for alterations, and we guarantee a per-
fect fit.
Yon Can Pay
Us As Yon Get
Paid. Tben
'Why Dray
YounelC!
8 East Superior Sim
•'Th« Nous* Whttr* Your Credit l» Goodi**
^
-r-
-t^mn^^mm'
, \
I.
4.-^
WWi '
INSPECTS
FARM SUES
Dean Woods Makes Survey
in Interest of Demonstra-
tion School
Must Be Accessible — Com-
mittee Will Be Appointed
May 4.
The site which the board of regents
Of the state university accepts for the
Duluth demonstration farm school
must have accessibility, according to
Dean A. F. Woods of the state agri-
cultural school, who is here today with
President George E. Vincent of the
stale university. Dean Woods this
morning made a preliminary survey
of the country around Duluth to ob-
tain information for the regents as to
the best general location for the school
without going into the matter of spe-
cific sites.
Dean Woods said this morning that
no time will be lost about getting the
Si lu.ol started. At the meeting of the
regents May 4 a committee will prob-
aMy be appointed to make a selection
of a site and specific ofTers of sites
will then be considered. As soon as
the site is obtained, work on the
foundation of the school will begin.
Although the money will not be avail-
able until next year. Dean Woods says
iliat some metliod of getting the work
starttd this year will be devised.
•'The site of the farm school must
be near some established line of trans-
portation," said l>ean Wods. "We must
not make any mistake about ^''^t-
Prosj>ectlve transportation lines will
not do. We must have the tnmsporta-
tion facilities established, so that we
will know they are certain. The school
mu«t be so situated that it can be
easily reached by visitors. We will
have visitors from all over the state,
and from other states also, I Judge, and
the school must be readily accessible.
•This school will be unique in that
it will be the only one in this country.
DEAN A. F. WOODS.
as far as I know, that will be con-
ducted along just the lines that will
be followed here. The Waseca school
w ill be very much like the Duluth
school, but the method of farming will
be different. The unique character of
the school will naturally attract the
attention of agricultural educators in
other states and we expect that our
work will create a great deal of In-
^^"Of" course the school is not experi-
mental. The plan has been followed
in European countries and we know
just what we can do. We are going
to set about doing it just as soon as
possible and no time will be lost.
The FIrwt Step.
"The first thing is to obtain a site
It must be accessible, as 1 said and
should have at least liOO acres. ^ e n-
tend to lay the farm school out w-tth
an eye to the future, or twenty-five
vears of it. and we must have enough
land so thkt we will not be crampt-d.
-After the site Is selected, we will
immediately start clearing. Then a
su?Jey will be made of topogoraphy.
soil drainage and other features. A
map wm be made showing fields, roads
drainage ditches and other features of
the farm, and then the farm will be
laid out and buildings planned and
Irected We are going ahead with this
on the ''ame plan that a big factory
would be built. We will have our
Slans*" m^a^de before we «tart the work^
••This will be a model farm ana a
BchoSl combined. We will teach the
students how to pull slumps as weii
«s how to Judge soil and .seed. We
^^^, t „ tiicnrips We will combine
?^"eSy"l.it'h^ wo"k soThat the best re-
""^^I^er^on^aUy fam vfry much in favor
and ereat work can be done. The stu-
dent! wUl get the actual J^ork on the
{^.^ wTl? /o^lTo^^^r ."of laK-^f u'Jd
be of great benefit in instruction. I
fook for very beneficial results from
the Duluth school. „,aot deal
••We expect to cover a great Oeai
of ground on demonstration here. The
farming will be of the most diversified
llnd 2nd we expect to do considerable
Intensive farming. although that
J^„ /i; of the work will not be as
Ir-'^ ^-.^«^^v^h^er^^c1>nd^«tio^nl i^rl
J^l^rThaf we'ex^^t to do intensive
^^JD'^^n^ ^'oTdl^ ^^Iff %*Sa[- When the
school gets well under way about fifty
Icres will be cultivated and that acre-
age will be increased gradually.
Ga^Her^'ionviJl'ed of^e -rder of Mr.
Judge Kimbrough to ^er^e iweniy
years in the penitentiary at Chester.
SOME of the screws
, inaWalthamWatch
are so small that
12 000 of them will not
fill a lady's thimble. Yet tiie
smallest are perfectly made.
Perfection in detail makes the
Waltham a close time-keeper.
"Jt'» Time You Owned a
WaWMm."
Send for descriptive booklet.
WALTHAM WATCH CO.. Waltham. Mass.
WALTHAM
WATCH
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
Women's Styfish Spring
Shoes $2.95 the Pair
llieh grade materials, lasts and styles in women's shoes made of dull
- or patent leather— black cloth, velvet or dull tops— lace
or button — welted or turn soles — special at ?2.95 the pair.
HWK you YOUR DRES.S FORM YKT? THIS LAST
IA)T IS SELLING FAST.
117-11I» \Vi. .:.*.. SLFERIOR ST.. DlIATll. MINN.
Girls* School Shoes— Sizes ^tVz
to 2— at $1.38
Dull calf and dongola kid shoes, sizes 8j^ to 2— made with heavy
soles-button or lace Jityles-good natural last models J 1 ^O
which will properly fit growing feet and stand lots of ^» 1 .^^V
hard wear— $1.38 pair.
^ Semi- Annual Silk Sale
OPENS
THURSDAY
MORNING
Your Best Buy- i ends
ing Oppoptumty i nic«t
i— ^-u.
A If _ -1 r^^i. nm-^A tof/voKr -ft-z-ktri rwiT rfcriilnr <;
Several lots which we have secured at very low prices wi
be shov,n for the first time Thursday. While our entire stock
not included in the lots on special sale— there are thousands <
yards to seLcct from at these special prices.
Any Silks Left Saturday Night
Go Back to the Regular Price
Monday Morning.^
Mostly
75c
Values
Lot 1— Up to 75c Silks 49c
24 -inch Silk Poplin.s, In all the wanted
.shades— 75c values; 19-in<Mi Mack ana
colored messallne.s— 6'Jc valuca. and extra
duality Tr.c black taffeta— staple shades
in colored taffetas; 27-inch ,<HaB""a
Shantungs. In black only— regular $1.^0
a vard, etc.
Lot 2— Up to $1.00
Silks at 59c
Al! goods are perfect— and largely from our regular stock!
Not all qualities and kinds in the sale are mentioned here— but
from the follo.ving items you will realize how big and how nii-
portant this sale really will be!
i^tm ~ -" — — — -^J^i^^—
Lot 3— Up to $1.25 Silks 69c
for
$1.50
Silks
Lot 4— Up to $1.50 Silks 98c
A bargain you'll appreciate — 42-inch foul-
ards in bl.ncks and blues In neat strlp-.-s,
dots and figures — they're the kind that
are almost wear-proof; you'll recognize
them when vou .see them. Note the width
— ihey won't last long at a yard — 08e.
Values
Up to
$1.50
Yard
Popular 23-lnch waterspot-proof
foulards in neat effects— plenty of
blues— 19-lnch striped Loulsienes—
_8iic colored taffetas— fancy waist-
Ing and dross silks, etc.
Lot 5— Up to $1.50
Silks at d9c
$1.35 — 24-inch Crepe Amora Silks —
$1 .-iS S.ilome Silks— 36-lnch flno
black Peau de Cygne— 3r._-inch extra
weiir black taffeta— $1.2i) and $1.60
fancy waistlng and dress silks, etc
$1 Faille Bilks— $1 p«au do tachmere — $1
20-lnch -messallnes — 30-lnch cream all-
silk crepe— $1 Shantung silks In colors—
$2 naroness silk — 27-lnch black and white
stripe and check silks In taffetas and mes-
sallnes—11 and $1.25 fancy silks, etc.
Values
Up to
$3.00
Yard
Lot 6- Up to $3.00
Silks $1.69
High grade silks at a very low price— 44-
Inch Cachmere do Sole, $3 quality— 36-
lnch brocaded silks — $2.50 qualities, and
44 -inch crepe brilliants in pretty **hadj-s
— you'll appreciate them at a yard — $1.«».
The ""'^
York
Maker Made Us Liberal Allowances on These Suits
Because of
Late Delivery
$18.50
$25.00
The Suits now on sale
at $18.50 were made
to sell at $25.00.
The lot at $22.50
would regularly sell at
up to $30.00.
The lots at $25.00 and $27.50 would
regularly sell at up to $35.00
$22.50
$27.50
/■
<r'
p?*-
Had the suits came in on time, we should have been obliged
to get the prices at which they were intended to sell.
TV.^ cfxrlp.c ^rp the verv smartest and newest plain tailored models brought out
As there were only 120 suits in this lot, you should respond quickly if you wish to be numbered among the 12.) lucky
women to share in these splendid savings.
See the Smart Coats on Sale at $ 1 5.00!
THE CRAVENETTES ARE RAIN PROOF.
Ever So fj A TQ
Many New rir\ I O
Ready Tomorrow
i
>-^'^}.
S
•c^/J
You will find some hats that are
very becoming — and you'll find others
that won't do at all!
You see we must take care of
everybody — and the point we wish
to make is that our milliners will
find the hat that is most becoming
to you!
And If you require somcthInK
e^poclully niad« for you — our ar-
tistic trinuners will please you.
25c for 45c Dress Linen
in Popular Natural Color
This dress linen is 36 inches wide
you know how stylish it is and
4y ^ how practical for summer
4vOC wear— and instead of 45c,
tomorrow you may buy it at the
special price of 25c the yard.
1 15c for That 32 inch Madras
Which Launders So Well
Ever so many of our customers buy this Madras
for men's and boys' shirts, and for boys' suits as
well as for heavy tailored shirt waists— splendid
weight and launders nicely. Special, 15c yard.
15c
New Patterns in Serpentine
Crepes at 15c the Yard
For kimonos, dressing sacques, waists and house
dresses, we offer 50 different styles m pla.n colors,
Japanese, floral, stripes, dots and embroidered ef-
fects. On sale Thursday at 15c yard.
39c for 50c English Voiles,
Resemble Fine Silk and Wool
These imported voiles are made by the
finest looms in England. There are
light and dark grounds over- ^Qr*
printed with dots, figures, ^ ^
stripes and floral designs. Usually 45c
and 50c yd., special tomorrow 39c yd.
AMUSEMENTS
TONIGHTS ATTRACTIONS.
LYCEUM— Maude Leone Players In
"The Girl Question."
ORPHKUM — Vaudevlue.
FMPRKSS — Vaudeville.
ODEUM and LYRIC— Photoplay.
— ♦-
Green Roem Gossip.
This evening the Maude Leone asso-
ciate players will close their engage-
ruri.KckrpVaT ^^'h-e^iirraue^ifn^-'
wm be made a special offering next
«iin<inv matinee and evenmg.
^ With Ub c evir lines and funny slti a-
t«rm4 its jingling tunes and pretty
elr"l' thi big La Salle theater success
has i)^n one of the best offerings of
i '"^Mi^dSy "^aft^e^noon the matinee for
the St Jaraea orphanage packed the
house to the very doors. Every cent
of the proceeds went to the charitable
cause. This was made possible through
the action of Miss Leone In donating
the receipts of the performance to the
cause.
• • ♦
"I have been mimicking a dog for
so loni that I sometimes '^^el like one
and when I see a doK.^ith a bone I
begin to think of trying to take »t
away from him." declares Ed Lamar,
fjie famous animal »nipersonator who
is at the Orpheum this week with Mas-
ter Gabriel In "Little Tommy Tucker "
"How do you manage to manipulate
the eyes and tt>e ears?" the actor was
*^-By means of strings. There Is one
for every movement. If I want to grin
I null one to wink I pull another and
to on It took me about a month to
learn them all. but now It has become
Rccond nature to me. . , j, _
"Did you make a study of a real dog
to perfect the part?"
•Indeed I did. I bought a bull ter-
rlar and I used to study his eyes and
tall I got so 1 oould tell what he was
thinking of. or at least I thought I
could I am not an actor and never
sSoke a line In my life. I am a pan-
tomlmlst pure and almple. My art U
different from that of the actor, and I
claim to be a specialist in my line.
* • * •
Joe Welch continues to be a prime
favorite at the Empress this weeK
and bids fair to break all records One
distinctive feature of Mr. \f ^h s act
is that he does not confine himself to
the same monologue throughout the
entire week, but varies It at each per-
formance. Through his great familiar-
ity with the Hebrew race, he has gath-
ered a wealth of material which makes
it possible for him to do this. As a
Hebrew comedian. Welch Is In a class
by himself and has attained his great
popularity through a careful and life-
long study of the dialect, habils and
mannerisms of the Jewish PCoP^e. He
has made a study of the race and he
presents his character In a quaint and
simple way. This Is Pfo^'f-.^^^u. J^"^"
Welch's last engagement 1" ,^"'"^^- .
Barnard's manikins are also great
favorites and run Mr. ^Jf'^h a close
second Mr. Barnard has had this
man?kln act for the PaBt twenty^flve
years and his ancestors as far ^cK
as the year 1712 were in the same
I line of business.
The midweek change of program
'takes place at th« Lyrlo tbeater this
evening, and at the Odeum theater
Thursday. The new bill at tne i^y/'c
Kdet^'^'Silver Threads Among the
Gold." a dramatic fijm, A t^ara or in
troductlon." a comedy film. Big Hearty
ed Jim." a drama; and The wmow
Visits Sprlngtown," a comedy LS
Mlstachkln will smg the . '""fy^i^^
^ne "I'm Going Back to My ow
a'iTX" At the Odeum the program con-
Ssts of: "Paradise Lost." a drama;
"Wlnsor McCoy." a come,dy; .Bob
Sledding.' a scenic A)!"' ^t Lenz wlU
?ff "•iri;# ^JiT^a^r '^M%^^^oi^i^,;
Dreams." « » »
anv musical attraction. *^®"^f „,\!
MYnr^e^'who °>ad% the^ most pro^
nounced success of his career »" tnis
^a^s 7n ' a • cas?'of Strti'-^slx^'-PeaYlng
KirJcter's . 'la addition to tHU nam-
ber, there is a chor
large executive sts
the total number of
the company up to
ganizatlon travels
special train of s
which are utilized 1
tlon of the large i
utilized in the two
scenes.
us of sixty and a
.ff. which brings
people carried by
over 100. The or-
excluslvely on a
X cars, three of
or the transporta-
.mount of scenery
acts and eight
Exquisite
•None nicer." Prlc
Flowers.
es right at Huofs.
TO RESCIND ORDER.
Countervailing D
W hisky to I
Washington, Apri
months of negotiati
has decided to rescl
ing a countervalllr
spirits. The Brltlsl
urgent representat
of English whlskle
bounty within the i
visions of the Pay
uty on British
e Removed.
19. — After several
an this government
ad the order Impos-
g duty on British
I government made
ons that distillers
3 did not receive a
neanlng of the pro-
ae-Aldrlcb law. In
reaching a conclusion the treasury de-
partment was influenced by the fact
that Great Britain has fiscal policy not
only of free trade, but also a lack of
artificial stimulus to trade such as is
produced by bounties. Imports of
Scotch and Irish whiskies amounting
to several million dollars a year ar«
affected by the decision.
•-
Did you ever feel Inclined to go huntM
Ine around for furnished rooms thst
were not important enough to be ad-
vertised in The Herald?
DEFECTIVE PAGE
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Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
THE DULUTH HERALD
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
—ESTABLISHED APRIL 9, 1883—
Published evory evening except Sunday by
THE HERALD COMPANY, «
Herald Bulldins. Opposite Postoftice Square.
422 and 424 West First St.. Duluth. Minn.
bitcml M Mcood-claM
matter at the
greas of
Duluth postorrice under tb«
March 3. 1879.
act of con-
TELEPHONES — Bell and Zenith.
Business Office. 324. Editorial Rooms,
1126.
OFFICIAL
PAPER
CITY OF DULUTH.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
(By mail payable In advance.)
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Daily, one month 36 Dally, one year 4.00
.Sntarday Herald, one r^ar $1.00
Weekly Herald, one year 1.00
Remltt:incv« may be nia.le bj check, pogtofftra order, registered letter or ex-
prtea order. Make nil remittances payable to The Herald company. Olre post-
•frice tdiltvsi In full, in.luillng stale and county.
BY CARRIER— CITY OR SUBURBS.
Dally, one week I -10
Dai!y, one month ■*.■;
Dally, one year 5.00
Sutiiioribers wlU confer a fafor on the circulation department by calling 324,
itther 'pti'ine. and making known any complaint of ger^ke.
It b important VTiien desiring the address of your paper changed to give both
the oU iiiid u«w addrts^es.
The Duluth Herald accepts advertising contracts with
the distinct guarantee that it has the lar.gest circulation
of any newspaper published in Minnesota outside the Twin
Cities. Its value as an advertising medium is apparent.
A little philosophy inclineth Irian's mind to
atheism^ but depth in philosophy bringeth meti's
minds about to religion.
— Francis Bacon.
is being laid on the people each year by the infliction of
a protective tariff. It was in 1910 too, that the Paj-ne
law exercised most of its effect. How much had that to
do with the decrease in imports for consumption? And
how much effect did it have in holding up the market
prices of home made articles while it was keeping out
the clothing and other things made abroad that our own
people needed and couldn't get?
At the same time the figures given in the table show
something of the magnitude of the world's commerce, i'
a man's mind could but comprehend what vast sums they
represent. For instance, the imports for consumption in
the United Kingdom in 1910 amounted to $2,796,602,356
and the exports to $2,095,466,235. Those of the United
States for the same year were: Imports for consump-
tion, $1,584,576,199; exports, $1,852,569,487. The aggregate
of imports for consumption in 1910 in the fourteen na-
tions included in the report was well upward of $11,000,-
000,000, and the total of exports was about $10,000,000,000.
THE OPEN COURT.
(Keaders of Thp Beraid are liirlted to make free uae
of thia column to tspress their Ideaa alioiic the topics
of general interest. Letters should not exceed 3U0
words — (tie shorter tlie better. They must be written
' II one side of the paper only, and they must be ac-
cumpanied in every case by ll>e name and address of
ihe writer, thuugli these nerd not be publLihed. A
signed letter ia iMiroya 4uurt elTecUve, however.)
WHY IS A STRUGGLE
FOR EXISTENCE NEEDED?
•^t^t^t^^N^tA^^S^k^k^^N^k^^^^^^^^,
TWO ESPECIALLY GOOD BILLS.
Standing out prominently in the last hours' work of
the state legislature are the votes that passed the bill
providing tor the adoption of the Oregon plan in nomi-
nating United States senators, and that permitting Du-
luth to lease state land here for dock purposes. Both
measures are of the greatest interest to the state. It
was feared that they would be lost in the hurry of the
last hours of the session, but the industry of the two
houses made it possible to consider and pass both of
them.
The adoption of the Oregon plan is the one notably
progressive piece of legislation accomplished at the ses-
sion just ended. It means that the people will come as
near to direct election of senators as they can come un-
der the present constitutional provisions. There is no
apparent reasop to doubt that the proposal for direct
election will pass the present congress, but even after
that there must be action by three-fourths of the states
in favor of the measure, and so it may be some years
before the amendment actually is made.
Meanwhile, by the adoption )f the Oregon plan, Min-
nesota will be enjoying as nearly as possible the privi-
leges of direct election. The thanks of the people are
due to Representative Keefe of Rt Iwood county, framer
of the bill that gave the state the Oregon plan, and to
the Democrats and the independent Republicans in the
senate who, under the leadership of Senator Boyle, put
the measure through that house.
The value to the state as a whole of providing a site
for an independent city dock here has beeji discussed at
length before. It means that Minnesota's principal port
will have a place where independent vessels can tie up
to receive or discharge cargoes, in consequence of which
shippers and consignees in all parts of the state and the
Northwest will be able to take advantage of independent
rates on the Great Lakes. It is a direct blow at the
combination of interests that is seeking to control Great
Lake transportation.
THE REAPPORTIONMENT FIASCO.
After being promised in all platforms and pledged by
every individual legislator, reapportionment comes out
of the elongated session just closed as a dirty political
mess. Instead of a just, fair and constitutional reap-
portionment, the people are offered a constitutional
amendment designed to rob them of the rights guar-
anteed under our national and state form of government
and which make American citizenship mean more than
citizenship in any other country in the world.
This abortion is in the form of a proposal to limit
county representations in the senate. The abortion it
self was put through by a deliberate overriding of rules
and principles, an unfair and unjust ruling that sent it
from the house to the senate when a motion affecting it
was pending in the house.
It is unbelievable that the courts, to which appeal is
to be made, will sustain the action of the speaker and
the senate. Or even if these should be sustained, it is
impossible that tire people of the state would join with
the senate self-seekers who have fought steadily to make
the state government a farce and a disgrace.
Reapportionment, ushered in with glowing promises
and sweet harmony, has turned out to be a senseless
fiasco developed in the rankest of discords. Its action
on this question is the shame of a legislature that, start
ing with possibilities of wonderful achievement, ended
with the passage of but one really markedly progressive
measure, and meantime tried to stuff down the throats
of the people one of the most nauseating messes of un-
repre.-^entative legislation in the way of reapportionment
that ever was concocted.
SHOULD BE AN EYE-OPENER.
If anything were needed to open the eyes of the op-
ponents of reciprocity with Canada, it should be found
in the attitude taken toward that proposition by Uncle
Joe Cannon and Representative Dalzell of Pennsylvania.
Their attitude on the tariff question is too well known to
need comment. Both of them have been enthusiastic
supporters of the Payne law, and Cannon in particular
has expressed a conviction, time and again, that the
higher the tariff the better it would satisfy him. But
the things that Cannon is especially interested in keeping
up the tariff on are not the things that are affected by
the terms of the Canadian agreement. Then why his op-
position to^ reciprocity? Just this: That he sees, as do
his mates in the fight, that reciprocity with Canada will
mean the slashing of other duties in the enaction of a
general tariff law, and he fears that.
Look at the campaign the American Protective Tariff
league is making. In some parts of the West the country
is being flooded with postal cards that instruct the
members of congress to vote against reciprocity. These
cards are being sent out by the Pretective Tariff league,
with lines for the signature of whoever cares to sign
them and drop them in a letterbox. Everybody knows
what the league is, and that it stood back of the Payne
law, and that its only complaint against that law was that
the duties were not made higher than they were. That
IS the kind of interests that are opposing reciprocity and
trying to deceive the farmers and congressmen whom
the league cannot control into believing that reciprocity
would be bad for the farmers.
And that is the kind of company, it must be admitted
with regret, that Representative Davis of Minnesota has
been drawn into. There are other members of the Min-
nesota delegation, according to all report, who are being
caught in the same net, but Davis is in it to the extent
that he has, it is said, entered an open union with Cannon
and Dalzell. He thinks, apparently, that he is an ally of
the standpatters. He is wrong. He is only a catspaw,
and he will find that out when these men are through
with him, when they have used him to strengthen the op-
position to reciprocity. He is being used by the stand-
patters just as some Republican members of the legisla-
ture were used by the Democrats to discredit their own
party.
It is sincerely to be hoped that Davis and Lindbergh
and Volstead and the rest of the Republican members of
the house will wake up to the truth of the situation in
time to vote as they should on the reciprocity question.
It is to be hoped that the Minnesota senators, too, will
be too strong to fall under the influence of the Protective
Tariff league and the other high tariff interests that are
busy in Washington and elsewheie.
THE WORLD'S COMMERCE.
Under the above heading, the Daily Consular and
Trade Reports publish some figures taken from a sum-
mary made by the British Board of Trade, showing the
values of imports and exports from the principal com-
mercial countries of the world. The figures make an in-
teresting study.
The first thing one notices is the position held by
the United States in the commerce of the world. In each
of the years 1908-1910 this country ranked second in the
value of its exports with the United Kingdom first in
each year. But in 1910 the United States was $242,896,-
948 behind the United Kingdom, whereas in 1909 : was
but $116,129,289 behind and in 1908 only $82,555,306
behind.
On the side of importation for consumption, the
United States stands third in each of the three years, be-
ing behind the United Kingdom and Germany in each
year. In each case France was the fourth in the list, but
in 1908 the United States imported only $33,856,24^ more
than France, while in 1909 this country's imports for con-
sumption exceeded those of France by $280,091,407, and
in 1910 by $268,703,798.
It makes one wonder just how much greater burden
THE RED-HEADED GIRL.
Of course you remember how you used to torment
that little schoolmate or playmate of yours on account
of her red hair. You used to send her home crying about
three nights out of the week, except when the weather
was right for playing baseball, and the only reason you
didn't do so then was because you were so busy you
didn't have time to fool around with red-heads who
couldn't throw straight or bat up to .2(30. You made life
miserable for her every chance you got, and j'ou never
felt the least qualm of conscience about it.
Well, if you know where she is now, it is up to you
to look her up and apologize on bended knee. For the
red-headed girl is coming into her own. And here is
how it all happened:
Down in Louisville, a man who owns and manages
three restaurants got to checking up on the girls who
worked in them, and made up his mind that the ones with
auburn tresses were the best of the bunch. Accordingly
he determined to fill every place possible with a red-
headed girl. He advertised for waitresses, specifying that
only red-headed girls need apply. He made no invidious
distinctions. Freckles? Sure, bring them along. They
would make no difference, if only the hair was red.
Dimples? Yes, that was all right too. In fact, he rather
preferred the dimples if he could get them with the red
hair. But in the matter of the hair he was insistent— it
must be red, or the applicant would be turned down.
Well, he advertised. And just one, lone, solitary red-
headed girl responded. The restaurant man pondered
over the matter and sought the advice of friends and ac-
quaintances, and finally came to. the conclusion that there
is so much demand for red-headed girls, that they are so
superior in the work-a-day affairs of life that they are
not at leisure in the same proportion that other girls
are. In fact, that their excellence made the demand for
them greater.
What a refutation of the old theory that red hair
meant a fiery temper and an unruly disposition! Here
the world has been making that mistake all these years
and passing by the red-headed girls as something to
avoid. And all this while the men who have occasion to
employ girls have been growing to realize that the red-
headed girl is in fact as valuable in business as her hair
is red. And the fact would not have come to light now
had it not been for this Louisville man's search and its
failure to succeed.
Evidently the world has been making a seVious mis-
take. It has been entertaining an angel unawares. Or
maybe the centuries of teasing and trial that the red-
headed girls have undergone have so transformed their
spirits as to make them of exceptional value. Whatever
the cause, let us rejoice with them in the fact that their
worth is at last recognized, and take off our hats with all
the more gusto when we meet the girl with the hair that
dazzles like the sunlight and glistens like the rays from
the open fire "among the chiny on the dresser."
To the Editor of The Herald:
To a person who does a little think-
ing on his owu , account, It is some-
times amusing to hear some of our
preachers rani and rave about the ap-
parent ungQdliness of mankind and
then blame ik on the devil.
Tlie writer^ reanfently had occasion to
listen to one of our most able preach-
ers deliver a sermon on "Broken Prom-
ises," and while he handled his subject
splendidly as far as he went, he dealt
only with the superhcial things that
every one c.in see, but did not show
why this evil condition exists.
Of course it would be a fine thing If
all men could live upright lives. Cer-
tainly it would be grand if all men
were truthful and honest; that when
a man gave his word he would keep it.
But why not go to the bottom of the
question and explain the cause?
I am sure you will agree with me
when I say the liuinan race is essen-
tially good — not evil. That the mas-
terpiece of all ^creation would rather
do right than wrong.
Also I take it for granted that you
are a believer in the law of cause and
effect.
Now, then, if man, created In the
image of God, is prone to do that,
against which his very nature should
rebel, theie must be a reason for It.
We Socialists have made a study of
this question and we claim the reason
for this unhappy condition lies in the
fraudulent social system under which
we live.
As authority for our claim we have-
nothing less than the Bible Itself.
According to United States govern-
ment statistics, labor is paid as wages,
only 17 per cent of the total amount
of wealth produced in this country,
which means the workers are robbed
of the other 83 per cent, or flve-sixths
of the wealth their labor has produced.
Then, when they (the workers with
hand and brain), as consumers wish to
obtain the nece.ssaries of life, they are
forced to pay several times the value
for food, clothing and shelter, because
these things have been manipulated by
the tew who produce nothing.
Now when God said to man: "By the
sweat of thy face shalt thou eat
bread." He did not mean by the sweat
of other men's faces shaft thou eat
bread.
Is it any wonder then that men
commit fraud when our industrial sys-
tem is based on fraud?
It is often said by churchmen that
"Poverty and suffering will never be
abolished until the coming to earth of
the kingdom of Christ."
We say to you: "The kingdom of
Christ can never come In its fullest
measure until poverty and suffering
are first abolished."
Now this is just what we Socialists
aim to do. We aim to abolish poverty
and all its kindred evils such as crime,
disease, insanity, intemperance and im-
morality, by abolishing the cause of
poverty — capitalism, and bringing into
being the co-operative commonwealth,
where men will work together to their
mutual advantage — not against each
other to their disadvantage as at pres-
ent.
We will have wealth produced for
use, not financial profit.
We will inauguiate a system where
the strong will protect the weak — not
oppress them; where the enlightened
will instruct the ignorant, not defraud
them; where society will take care of
its morally weak, not make criminals
of them; where all children -s^ill be
given the advantages of education at
the expense of the state, not be made
to wear out their littJe lives In mines,
mills and factories; where the "sweat
shop" and convict labor will be un-
known; where honest toil will be re-
spected, not despised; where It will be
easy for men to be Just and hard for
them to be unjust. Instead of the very
opposite as at present.
How long, my dear sir, could a busi-
ness man remain in business and live
up to the Golden Rule?
What kind of a living would he
get if he did not commit fraud in one
form or another?
I do not believe the average mer-
chant openly misreprespnts his goods,
as to their good points, but what about
the defects, on which he is silent?
I pray you will understand me
rightly. I offer this as a criticism only
of a system, not of men.
What good then to preach against
fraud wiiile men depend upon fx^ud
for their very livelihood?
Why cry out against an effect, while
the cause remains? Could the Master
be better served than by helping to
bring about a condition where all men
would have opportunity to seek Him
in.stead of this everlasting struggle for
existence?
W^hy should there be a struggle?
J. ALVIN JOHNSON.
Duluth. April 18.
MINNESOTA OPINIONS.
One Kind of a SprlUK Tonic.
BemidjI Pioneer: Although we have
no quarrel to pick with the advertising
manager and are ready to admit that
some of the medicine which his manu-
facturing friends offer for sale may, at
least, be harmless, we believe the real
.spring tonic is not confined in bottles
and that it is to be had without cost.
We refer to the rich ozone of pine
scented Northern Minnesota. To him
whose system still holds the languor of
winter, we prescribe a brisk walk early
in the morning of one of these spring
days. The more ambitious may take a
turn around the lake and if this is done
often enough in a month the patient
will feel as strong as a Democrat in
congress and as happy as a darky with
a watermelon. Help yourself to the
glorious fresh air — the woods are full
of it. '^
Needa Many Barrel*.
Mankato Free Press: "There Isn't
much doubt but that when a new tariff
bill is Introduced In congress, white-
wash will be found on the free list,"
says the Jackson Republic. Sure thing,
and the Minnesota state legislature had
better get its order in early for a few
barrels of the stuff.
Is .Still Popular.
Moorhead News: We hear in some
quarters that the popularity of Theo-
dora Roosevelt has deserted him and
that he no longer has that hold upon
the hearts of the American people for
which lie was once famous. A perusal
of the newspapers published jn the
towns along the Northern Pacific rail-
way would disprove this assertion, at
least so far as the Northwest is con-
cerned. At every station along the
line, where the Roosevelt train passed
during the daylight hours, were gath-
ered crowds of citizens in the hope of
seeing the ex-presldent, and with
Rooseveltian courtesy the great man
appeared on the platform of his car
whenever the train stopped and spoke
brielly to the people. There can be no
doubt that the colonel still holds a
prominent place in the hearts of the
people.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Taken From the Column* of The Herald of This Date^ 1S91.
•••Mrs. Smith Fillmore and Mrs. W.
Carson of Eureka, Cal., are tie guests
of Mrs. J. B. Raab in the Pastoret-
Stenson block.
•••Ralph McKenzie of the Tribune
editorial force was on the street yes-
terday for the first time after a ten
days* Illness.
•••Eliot LK>rd, formerly of The Her-
ald Is now employed on the Boston
Herald editorial staff.
•••Rev. E. O. Sharpe and family are
now domiciled at 428 West Fourth
street, next door to the Christian
church.
•••Dr. J. M. Tufte, who lei't Duluth
a few months ago to visit Berlin and
study the Koch tubercuolsis. will re-
turn In a few days.
•••Messrs. Lewlston and F. A. Green
returned yesterday from the Brule.
They were the first on the liver this
year and claim to have caught 687
trout in two days. The river is quite
high.
•••Fred Haase. late gymnasium
teacher of the Turner society, left last
evening for Minneapolis for a short
stay. /
•••Mrs. W^ B. Hlckox
friends In the East.
is. visiting
How Much Was the BlUT
Little Falls Transcript: The news-
papers tell of a taxlcab In Harrlsburg.
Pa., which traveled 99,999 miles or the
equivalent of encircling the globe on
which we live four times. Say, please,
did the fellow that ordered the taxi
grumble any on it when cabby pre-
sented that bill
Use It as a "Bngraboo.**
Wahkon Enterprise: A number of
Southern Minnesota editors profess to
see nothing but the steel trust in every
move that is made for the betterment
of conditions In Northern Minnesotau
Is it because they don't know any bet-
ter? Or do they hold up the "steel
trust" as a bugaboo to draw attention
from the superior agricultural advan-
tages of this, the richest and most pro-
ductive section of the state?
DUgrace to the State.
Bralnerd Tribune: This senatorial
district would not in all probability be
affected in any way by reapportion-
ment. It would neither gain nor lose
representation. Yet we heartily agree
with our contemporaries In the opinion
that the action of those Soumcrn Min-
nesota senators who broke party
pledge^, and denied a just representa-
tion to the people of the state is a dis-
grace both to themselves and to the
state. They have earned for them-
selves the contempt of all fair-minded
people.
Will Not Be ForKOtten.
Pine River Sentinel: it will be well
to remember just what members of the
state senate were to blame for the
death of reapportionment. Two years
hence it will be doubly well to remem-
ber.
•••The sheriff is looking fjr W. F.
Brown, who left Duluth several weeks
ago, for an alleged defalcation of sev-
eral hundred dollars. He lived in Du-
luth about two years, assisting E. L.
A MOMENT WITH THE >VITS.
Whittmgton for six months and later
working for a law firm In the First
National bank building. He joined
Company K. sang in the choir of the
Urst Methodist church, and was a
visitor at the Y. M. C. A. rooms.
••♦Col. A. F. Naff went up to hl»
claim near Robinson lake yesterday.
•••Maj. T. B. Hoover has returned
from a month's stay in New York city.
•♦•Col. Cullyford of the St. Louis
hotel, who has been troubled with the
grip, is now very ill with pneumonia.
•••Mrs. Sarah L. Farr of Minneapolis
a former Duluth resident, is gaining
a good deal of notoriety by reason of
an absolute fast lasting two months.
Houston Post: "Papa, tell us a story.'
"All right. Once upon a time, there
was a woman who could talk but who
wouldn't — "
"Aw, we're too old for fairy stories!"
Puck: Mack — "I understand that
Van Dyke has been Iropped by society."
"Wyld — "Yes. he made hln.self un-
popular because he paid his debts In-
stead of his social obligations."
Boston Transcript: Pat — "WhafU ye
do .Moike, now that the boss has flrod
ye?"
"Mike — "Go back to me former job."
Pat — "An' phwat was that?"
Mike — "Lookln' for work, ttegforra."
Toledo Blade: Him — "I don't know
how to tell you how I love you."
Her — "Don't worry about that — I'll
take It as it comes. What yoii want to
get nervous about is bow to tell papa
about It."
Judge: Mrs. Crawford — "Do you
think that the best way to wlri a man's
heart Is through his stomacl.?"
Mrs. Crabshaw "Yes, my dear; but
after he has become dyspeptic, it's im-
possible to live with him."
MODERN FIG LEAVES.
Cleveland Leader: One of the saddest
amusements man is addicted to Is his
constant effort to dictate to lovely
woman what she shall wear — sad be-
cause he takes it so seriously and
amusing because it never has been of
the slightest use and never will be.
Just now, he is raving about the
harem skirt. A little while ago, it was
the hobble, .skirt. When he hasn't any-
thing else in the nature of feminine
apparel to fuss about he solemnly
descants on the evils of the corset and
the high-heeled shoe. False hair,
paint and powder make him choke and
throw up his hands in the futility of
trying to find words with whicli to do
the subject Justice.
A few .solemn legislatures and city
councils have perpetrated the uncon-
scious joke of enacting laws limiting
the length of hatpins. Undoubtedly
they considered that they were con-
ferring as great a benefit upon human-
ity as the English parliament did in
the reign of Charles II, when it passed
the foliowlng act:
"All women of whatever age, rank,
profession or degree, whether virgins,
maids or wiodws. that shall from after
the passing of this act impose upon
and betray into matrimony any of his
majesty's male subjects by scents,
paints, cosmetics, washes, artificial
teeth, false hair, Spanish wool, iron
stays, hoops, high heeled shoes or
bolstered hips shall Incur the penalty
of the laws now in force against
witchcraft, sorcery and such like mis-
demeanors, and that the marriage,
upon conviction, shall stand null and
void."
Lovely woman will go on seeking to
make herself still more lovely until
the crack of doom. And she will do it
without let or hindrance. Man can run
the government and the business of
the country but he can't run her
Queer that he has not found this out
long ago.
And the most curious thing about
the whole melancholic, humorous busi-
ness is that If woman should fashion
her apparel according to man's no-
tions, she would cease to be to him the
delightful, alluring creature she Is
Moreover, he can safely wager his last
street car ticekt that she knows it.
Spanklnss or Pollticar
Hinckley Enterprise: The legislative
committee investigating conditions at
the state training school at Red Wing
has found that some of the boys were
actually spanked! Isn't that awful.
Mabel! How many of the fathers on
that committee do you suppose had not
at some time or other "spanked" their
offspring? Do you suppose there was
one who had not? Had the parents of
those Incorrigible boys given more
spankings at home probably there
would be fewer boys to receive spank-
ings at the training school. There are
few boys, or girls either, who are not
the better for a good spanking applied
where nature provided a place, upon
necessary occasions. The committee
recommended the dismissal of S'upt.
Whlttier because he could not maintain
discipline without spanking and the
house very properly refused to accept
that recommendation. W^e have our
suspicions, but was it spankings or pol-
itics that caused all the rumpus?
Treed Lion Tied by Hunter.
Spokane Correspondence of Port-
land Oregonlan: Because he had for-
gotten his "climbers," C. E. Ordish,
Montana lion hunter, had to walk back
five miles after them through the snow
to Llbby. Mont., yesterday before he
could climb a tree, rope and capture
a lion which his dogs had tracked.
Ceavlng his dogs he walked five
miles to Llbby and returned with A.
G. Beager, Fred Bockman and Dr.
Auld. Mr. Ordish climbed the tree,
roped the Hon, tied its legs together
and ropped the end of the rope to
the ground. It was brought to earth,
where a collar and chain were put
around Its neck and the trio started
for the sleigh, one of the men holding
the animal by the chain and collar,
another by the hind feet and the third
man held the rope around the body.
A cage was made when they reached
Llbby. Mr. Ordish has captured six-
ten lions alive thus far.
■Social Centem and the Corn Crop.
Edward J. Ward in The Survey:
The opportunity which the public
school building In every community of-
fers for the free discussion of public
questions, ^or the giving of lectures,
musical and dramatic expression, and
for recreational activities has been
considered at the conventions of vari-
ous organizations during the past two
or three years.
But the first conference called ex-
pressly for the purpose of promoting
social centers through the wider use
and added equipment of schoolhouses
and other public buildings met recent,
ly at Dallas, Tex. Delegates were
present from five states and from more
than sixty towns and rural communi-
ties.
Conditions almost as sad as those
uncovered in Adams county, Ohio, were
depicted in the descriptions of some of
the back-country neighborhoods, ami
on the other liand there were such
cheering statements as that given by
Col. R. E. Smith, president of the Texas
Good Roads association, who had been
instrumental in opening the first social
center In Texas:
"I want to say to you that my ideas
of farming have almost been revolu-
tionized. Not long ago a good renter
was hard to find. It seems entirely
different now. Perhaps the fact that I
have taken more interest in my renters
— become acquainted with them on the
common ground of a social center —
makes them like me better, makes me
like them better and consequently
make us both do better. People meet-
ing together causes them to understand
each other; the young people are fired
wltli ambition and — If this goes on, bet-
ter corn Willi be raised over Texas
thah there ever was before."
Birmingham Age-Herald: "Say, why
didn't you stop that thief?" pe.nted the
fat policeman, as he came up ;o a man
who was calmly viewing tlie race from
a door-sUl.
"Great Scott!" exclaimed the spec-
tator, "was that a real thief? 1 thought
you and he were employed bj- a mov-
inv picture company."
Atlanta Constitution: "No," said
Brother Dickey, "I done decided not
ter go ter Washin'ton ter wait on de
congressman what I knowed so long.
He axed me ter take de trip, but I had
ter tu'n him down. I's too ol' now ter
go so fur, an' sides dat, I l<:in work
but mighty little, an' dar's too much
wMtewashln' ter do up dar!"
•••The Duluth Minstrel club is re-
hearsing in earnest in preparation for
an entertainment at the Temple on
May 8 and 9, under the directorship
of Prof. Trautvetter. Among the vocal-
ists are Scott Re.\, Fred Reynolds,
George Arbury, A. F. Hammond, G. V.
QuilUard, Jr.. E. W. Barker and R. J.
Powell. The end men are C. H. Eld-
rldge, A. Ai. Miller, Jr.. C. H. Clawson,
C. b. Morrow, Fred Scofield, Thomas
Moore, Frank Green and R. Gregory.
•••Dr. A. W. Ringland and Elder S.
T. Harrison were elected at a recent
meeting of the Duluth presbytery to
atend the general assembly at Detroit.
Mich., on April .'1.
•••H. W. Pride, who has been vis-
iting his son, C. D. Pride, at West Du-
luth for some time, returned yesterday
to his home in Drummond, Wis.
DULUTH AND THE HERALD.
A MerltorioUK Measure.
Princeton Union: We agree with The
Duluth Herald that the life-savers' bill,
which was presented to congrf»3s at its
last se.sslon and failed to be acted
upon, should be resurrected and passed
If the new congress considers any gen-
eral legislation at the extra session,
for It is a truly meritorious measure.
ReaMon io Feel Proud.
Thief River Falls Times: Duluth
has every reason to be proud of The
Herald — and The Herald has reason to
be proud of Duluth. The Herald has
ever been a persistent booster for
Northern Minnesota and its accounts
of the past session of the legislature
deserve especial comment.
Will Have Time of Their Lives.
Moorhead News: The Northern Min-
nesota Development association will
meet at Duluth June 1 and 2, and the
Zenith City will show the boys from
the north country the time of their
lives.
A Great Man's PasMinsT.
Cass Lake Times: The Duluth Her-
ald's tribute to Tom L. Johnson la
written with a golden pencil, a com-
panion piece to the poem of Edmund
Vance Cooke.
April.
Columbus Dispatch: It's April, and
he is a wise man who has an umbrella
at each end of the line. .\nd he la an
unusually lucky one who can keep
them so.
.Stratvberrien and Pcarhe*.
Greenville News: Some people are
already beginning to count the num-
ber of days before the watermelon
season opens.
aero-
Pointed Paragraphs.
Chicago News: And today's
plane may be tomorrow's jur.k.
It's easier for a man to get out of
work than out of trouble.
The more temper a man has the
more he blames his wife.
Introduce common sense into a love
affair if you would break it up.
Life is made up of what we haven't
done and what we are going to do.
It doesn't take a very cleve" woman
to make a man make a fool of himself.
Probably love laughs at locksmiths
because It holds the key to the situa-
tion.
Occasionally It happens ■;hat the
longer the engagement the sliorter Is
tlie marriage.
A man who breaks into poli.ics isn't
necessarily a burglar, but he may be
.lust as good.
A woman Is willing to put up with
love in a cottage, providing th< cottage
cost two or tnrce times as much as a
house.
^
AMUSEMENTS.
Reflections of a Bachelor.
New York Press; A pretty poor way
lo be on good terms with peo:ple is to
be on them with yourself.
A woman always seems to be look-
ing for bad news from any of the
family who are away.
The more friends you have 1 he more
you would be able to find they weren't
if you had trouble.
Because a man could get iihead In
the world by attending to ils own
business he wants to attend lo some-
body else's.
There's hardlj' anybody who can lie
awake for a cjuarter of .in hour after
going to bed without claiming the next
morning he never closed his iyes till
daylight.
NEW
Both PhouM a4ia.
> THEAT6R
•••oad Av*. East and Superior •troal
INTERNATiONAL VAUD£VILi.e. ~
THIS WFBK'.S BILL.
MATINEES-
25c
Exctpt Sunday!
and Holidays.
Niffhtt. I5e, 250,
SOfl and 760.
I Mastor Gabriel and Company.
' Farrcll-Taylor Company.
The Namba Japt.
George Austin Moor« and
Cordelia.
Ward Brother*.
Browning and Lewi*.
Ernest Yerxa and Adels.
The Klnodrome.
The Concert Orchestra.
A Telepathic Shock.
Popular Maga/.Ine: Senator Tillman
of South Carolina has the prize ten-
derfoot story of the year.
In the South It is a proverb that a
negro's head is hard enough to break
a mule's leg If the mule is foolish
enough to kick It. If he does kick it,
his leg is broken, the family binds a
paling to it, and he Is of no further
value as a beast of burden.
One afternoon a negro girl, aged
about 15, was walking up the road
with difficulty, as her feet were bound
up In immense rolls of cloth. Her
hair on the top of her head seemed
to be a little mussed up.
"Whut de matlah wlf you?" one of
her acquaintances inquired.
"Mah foots is so'e," she explained.
"Pap hit me on de hald wif his ax, an
I wuz standin' on some ole Iron."
Grandmother of Monarchs.
The Gentlewoman: It Is curious to
think how many thrones are and will
be occupied by the descendants of the
late Queen Victoria. In Prussia we
have her eldest grandson. Kaiser WU-
helm; In Norway reigns her grand-
daughter, Queen Maud.
In Sweden the crown princess Is a
granddaughter of the late queen, and
other grandchildren are the grand duke
of Hesse, the crown princess of Greece,
the empress of Russia, the crown
princess of Rumania, the queen of
Spain, the hereditary princess of Saxe-
Melnlngen.
Among the great grandchildren of
the late queen are the German crown
prince the czarewltch, the prince of the
Austrlas, Prince George of Greece, the
eldest son of the crown prince of that
Ilk. Prince Carol of Rumania, the
crown prince of Norway and Prince
Gustav of Sweden — no less than seven
kings and two of them are heirs to
empires. In a very short time there
will be no royal family in Europe that
Is not descended from Queen Victoria.
Au Object LesMOn at San Antonio.
New York Sun: The military con-
centration at San Antonio has afforded
for the first time a complete £ nd con-
vincing illustration of the evils grow-
ing out of the abolition of the can-
teen. Heretofore, It has betn com-
paratively easy to conceal the greatest
evils of the arrangement at Isolated
posts. The groggeries are not offen-
sively in evidence and the fruits of
their activities are in the guaid house
or the hospital. Invisible to coriplacent
visitors. W^hat the latter see is a well
kept barracks, perfectly sober men
on duty, and the old canteen converted
into a thinly attended reading; room.
Of course, very good people are not
expected to look beneath the surface.
At San Antonio, however, the con-
centration of so many soldiers in
camp has attracted a corresponding
equipment of rumshops, dance houses
and other demoralizing "divej ;" even
the most superficial reformers cannot
help seeing both the vicious industry
and its victims. No concealmer t of the
barrooms, music halls and baj^nlos Is
possible. The most credulous of mis-
sionaries rubs against them at every
step, and the victims who at the or-
dinary alrmy post have been kiipt out
of sight by the very nature of thelc
penalty or af fiiction now comp'jl atten-
tion from their places in the gutter.
The exhibition is not to be avoided.
There Is no longer a possibility of mis-
taking its extent or Its significance.
Even the propagandist who has shut
her eyes to truth is forced to realize
the situation and to consider the con-
sequences of abolishing the canteen
and replacing It with a whltiiwashed
wall of concealment. It is :-eported
that the W. C. T. U. is almcst con-
vinced that restoration of the canteen
would bring control, temperance and
decency. There Is no' doubt of it.
«
Matter for Doubt.
Youth's Companion: The tramp
looked shrewdly at Miss Scarha.wk and
she returned his gaze with equal
shrewdness, but her expression did not
soften in the least.
"You see, it's all like this, ma'am,"
said the tramp, humbly lower Iner his
eyes until they rested on Miss Spar-
hawk's congress shoes, neatly uhowing
below her short skirt. "Six months
ago I had a little home of my own,
but I made an unfortunate marriage.
My wife's temper was such that It
kept me in hot water all the time."
••M-m," said Miss Sparhawk, dryly.
"It Is a pity there couldn't have been
a little soap with it. Only six months
ago, did you say?"
igtntjrcss
SULLIVAN CONSIDINE V.AUDEVILLE.
BEST SHO\%' IN TOWN.
Br'y.tK 2:45. 8:00 and 9:30
JOE WELCH
PAUL CASE & CO.,
PEARL YOUNG
MUSICAL WILSONS
BERNARD'S MANIKINS
Schneidcr'ii Orchewtra. Emprewwcopa
Brnpresfl Prices — 10c, 15c, 25c.
LYCEUM
LAST TIME
TONIGHT.
Maud* Leone and Associate Player* in the Best
of Musical Comedies
"The Girl
Question"
AND THE BEAUTY CHORUS.
Matinee 25e; Nights 25e and 50e.
Next— "ALL OF A SUDDEN PEGGY."
Three Days Commencing Tomorrow Nigtit:
Matinee Saturday.
Lew Fields Present the Mammoth Musical Spec-
tacle la Two Aets and Eight Big Scenes.
The Midnight
Sons
WITH GEO. W. MONROE
And the Biggest Organization on Tour. The
Original and Only Company Presenting the
Greatest of Musical Successes.
1,000 Laugks Without a Blush; ISO People oa
the Stage.
Matinee 25c to $1.50; Night 50e to $2.00.
No Telephone Orders Taken.
"The Atonement of Thais" — Qaumont (DramaUe.)
"Italian Coast Scenes" — Gaumont (Educational.)
"The Resurrection of John" — Efliion (Comedy.)
"The Inherited Taint" — Vitagraph (Dramatic.)
Illustrated Song, "Underneath the Wishing Tree."
Published by Joseph W. Stearns, sung by
Mr. I. S. MistachMn.
ODELJIVf
"Tha Chler* Daughter"— Blograph (Oramatio.)
"I86t"— Sellg (Dramatic.)
"Bast Girl After All"— Lubin (Dramatic)
"A Visit to Nassau, Bahama. West Indiea—
Lubin (Educational.)
llhMtrated song, "My Irish Dearie." Sung fey
Mr. George Laaz.
-i
■* 9
I
I
IL
"""•——■ -^-^
«-
a^dttaita
>' »
+
^diiy II ■.im^Ti
I r
Wednesday*
Your Last
Opportunity!
MARmE
FIRST BOAT
TO ARRIVE
I •
Steamer Keefe Ctmes From
Port Arthm* to Load
Grain.
Don't let it slip unno-
ticed. We have provided
a way that somebody
else will help pay for
your piano. Don't hesi-
tate. Convince yourself
that our proposition is
bona fide.
If you were a con-
testant or a prize win-
ner in our recent con-
test, don't fail to call at
our store before it
closes Saturday even-
in .cf, April 22. If you are
not ready to take your
piano now, we can make
arrangements to suit if
you'll call before April
22. It will be too late if
you wait until Monday.
Call and look over
our special bar£]^ain list
of instruments.
KORBY
PIANO CO.
(The Kimball Factory Store.)
203-205 E. Superior St.
Clean House
With a
"Thurman"
We'll send a demonstrator out
with one to your home — leave the
clcajicr two days — a!l for $5.
Some All- Week
Specials.
8-inch Scrub Brush — Regu- tC^
larly 10c ^^^
5-foot Common Step Lad- iCQo
35c
Pail —
39c
Package Freighters Ready to
Sail — Soo Open By
Saturday.
Yesterday the Harry Berwind was
the first boat to clear this port; today
the Keefe was the first boat to make
this harbor. The Berwind went to Port
Arthur for grain and the Keefe came
here from the Canadian Head ot the
Lukes for a grain cargo, strange as it
may seem.
The boat tliat came from the Ca-
nadian Head of the Lalces Is due to
load here today.
Practically all the package freight-
ers are loaded. There is a rumor go-
ing the rounds today that the boats of
the iMutual fleet will clear tomorrow.
Other line agents have received no in-
structions from their, head offltey, so
generally it is not believed that the
Meet of package freighters will get
away before the end of the week.
There is no ore loading yet, though
there is plenty of coal being taken at
the lower end of the lakes. Just when
the ore loading will begin here is not
known. There was a story that the
Hanna would be one of the early
starters.
The Anchor Line boats are loaded, as
well as the Mutual and the one boat of
the Western Transit company tliat
wintered here. Agent Winship of the
Mutual line today received notice that
the boats of the company's lleet are
ready to sail at a minute's notice.
A telegram today to Wolvin and
Dinham, vessel agents of Duluth, con-
tained the information that the Soo
would be open for passage Saturday.
CARGOKMDST BE
MUCH SMALLER
Draft at the Poe Lock Is
Only Seventeen and a
Half FeeL
Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., April 19. —
(Special to The Herald.) — General Su-
perintendent Sabln of the ship canal
today gave out a statement to the ef-
fect that from present indications the
available draft at the Foe lock on
the opening of navigation would be
17.5 feet. This Is the lowest posted
draft at the Poe since the construc-
tion of the lock. The draft at the Ca-
nadian lock will be In proportion to
that on the American side and all ore
carriers from Lake Superior will be
required to liave smaller cargoes than
ever before.
FOUR BOATS
LOAD GRAIN
der — Regularly $1.25
Parlor Broom — Regular-
ly 45c
MODEL Mop-Wringing
Regularly $1.25,
only
Gold Dust — Regularly
23c a package
Self - Wringing
Regularly 40c . . .
Vessels Will Leave as Soon
as Soo Is Reported
Open.
The following vessels have taken
cargoes of grain in the last twenty-
four hours, preparatory to departing
for lower lake ports when navigation
is opened: North Sea. 100,000 bushels
of special bin wheat; J. J. Boland,
75,000 bushels of durum; North Lake,
60,000 bushels of special bin wheat;
\V. B. Davock, 135,000 bushels of corn
and 64,000 bushels of oats.
TUG GOES TO THE
SCENE OF WRECK.
22c
For Garden and Yard.
Steel Wheel, Removable Side Gar-
den Barrow — Strong and durable;
regularly $3.5U, a>- ^<3 Q€\
this week ^^.^V
24-Tcoth Reversible Rake— Regu-
larly 50c, all this 27C
week mf^ V*
See the
Chi-Namel
DemonstratV
It will pay you to come in and
ask questions! 'Twon't cost any-
thing and you may pick up some
valuable hints on home decoration.
ANYONE can handle CHI-
NAMEL and get splendid results;
it is the IDEAL brightener of
homes.
USE HICKORY PAINT OUT-
SIDE YOUR HOUSE— IT GOES
TWICE AS FAR AS COMMON
PAINT.
Paint and Varnish Brushes from
10<^ up.
We handle Pratt & Lambert's 61
Floor Varnish.
Menominee. Mich., April 19.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.)— The tug Hyn-
sa.ler with a lighter and crew left
Sturgeon Bay for the scene of the
wreck of the Ottawa, a schooner of 163
tons burden, which was wrecked last
week while bound to Kenosha, Wis.,
from ManistiQue. Mich., with a load of
lumber. She was in the service of the
liouer Cedar & Lumber company of
Menominee. The wreck is about six
miles from Algoma. The cargo of the
Ottawa is insured and as soon as It Is
taken off an effort will be made to re-
lease the ship.
FOUR FREIGHTERS
CLEAR FROM BUFFALO.
Buffalo, N. Y., April 19.— Navigation
on the Great Lakes out of Buffalo was
onened here yesterday, when four big
??eighters successfully battled their
way through the ice Aelds. which still
cover the lower end of Lake Lrle.
The steamers are the Adam R. Cor-
nelius bound for Toledo; Theodore
Wckwlre Jr.. for Fort William;
Theodore H Wlckwire. and Jacob T.
Kopp for Milwaukee.
BOSTONIANHiS
MAN WITH BRICK.
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911;
Mr. C. P. Meyers
ta« dlMposed of
\m IntereHt tn th<i
tilobe to thr pres-
ent manaKementk
fnd vre are furcea
u liquidate our
satire Rtock with-
in tbe next klxty
ttayst
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSNIIP SALE
Thia anparall^-;
ed »«le iplvea yo^
the opportuntlty to
•elect your aprlac
and Nummer toK^
at the arreatea*
Crductiona e^vr
nown In the
heart e( the •«•-
kOMi
Each «nd ev^ry department In tht, mammoth store will be reduced to a minimum within the next 60 days. Profits, and a good mar^r instance, cost
""' llil"^'^ pS'ly '::^:^r::^r::^inT^-.^^nI l%% during the life of this sale new and additional bargains will be added, until every dollar',
worth of our enorous W of Men's. Young Men's. Boys' and Ladies' wearing apparel is converted Into cash.
3 Clothing Bargains That Ought to Bring Evei7 Man and Young Man of Duluth Here Tomorrow
A $2o5)00 stock of Men's and Voung Men's newest Spring Suits, divided In jhrec groups as follows !
GROUP NO. 1— Consisting ol Men's and Young Men's Suits, In all tlieneW
shades and materials of the present season; formef Belhng price ^^ i^^
was $15.U0, $13.60 and $12.00— Dissolution sale price-
only • • • • • • • • ' .......».»
$7.75
GROUP NO. 2— Embraces everv suit in the house that sold before Easter up
A„ tf-on ^i,»^« e.iJfd ar« onaifivpiv the bip^pcst valueS in the city at their
to $20, These suits are posltiveiy the biggest values hi tr
regulaf prices. We will sacrifice this entire lot of $20.00,
$18 00 and $16.50 Suits during our Dissolution sale
for
I. iititii»»». >*•••>>
• 1 1 «» 1 1 •«•»»»»•»•»*»»»»»''•''•*** *
$12.75
We Call
Your
Attention to
the Most
Phenomenal
Suit Bargain
You Ever
Heard of
GROUP NO. 3.
Included in this lot you
will find the famous Soph-
omore make, as well as
other reputable makes —
strictly hand-tailored gar-
ments— every size and un-
limited variety of prevail-
ing styles and patterns
for men and young men —
Suits that are well worth
$25 and $22.50— during
our Dissolution Sale, at —
Ladies' Waish
Ladies, here Is a waist sensation
that win establish a record un-
precedented in retalldom — our dis-
solution sale Kives you the oppor-
tunity to select from over 2,000
WTilte Waists that formerly re
tailed for $3.00, $2.50
and $2.00 — tomorrow.
Friday and Saturday. . .
riy re-
95c
Dissolution Sale of Men's New
Spring Hose
200 doz. fancy
and plain Hose,
Imported and do-
mestic lisle, heels
and toes rein-
forced with
linen, embracing
every color 1 n
voeue — regular
85c and 25c qual-
ity on sale to-
morrow and while
they last at, pr.,
15c
Fcr doz., $1.75.
The Most Extraordinary
Silk Glove Event You
Ever Heard of
Women's 69c Lisle
Combination Suits 35c
Beffinninpr tomorrow morning and
no latpr than Saturday night we
will sell Women's Lisle Combma-
tion Suits, nicely trimmed with
fine lace, regular 69c
quality, dissolution sale
price
35c
The famous Kayscr 16 -button
Silk Gloves, in pongee, black and
.(vhite — the shades that will be
worn this season, are
poing on sale tomorrow,
per pair...
Sold regularly everjwhere at $1.50.
metOf^
V 111 wo
95c
i05 -107 }fHESrSQPMkioRS
The Most Phenomenal
Sale of Boys' Two-
Piece Knickerbocker
Suits E!ver Known
500 Boys Suits, in Busters,
Eatons, Sailor Blouses and
double breasted suits, sizes 4 |
to 17, cmbracinpf every desir- 1
able fabric and pattern of this
spring season; reg^ular $5.00
and $4.50 values during our
dissolution sale at — ■
$2.95
The Most Sensational Sale of Men's
Fine Spring Shoes Ever Attempted
Our dissolution of partnership
— forces us to adopt drastic meas-
ures in order to raise the neces-
sary cash. Beginning tomorrow
and durlnpT the life of this sale we
will sell the famous
Selz Royal Blue Shoes
and Oxfords
the $5.00, $4.50 and $4.00
tirades at—
This offer includes any other
shoo in the store that sold at the
above prices.
No offer like that was ever at-
tempted by any other retai.ler at
this time of the year when stocka
aro new and complete.
Sale Starts
Promptly
Tomorrow
Morning
at 8:30
TWO COLLEGE PRESIDENTS;
A LITTLE STUDY IN CONTRASTS
ri4A RP W AR ECO^
'mUMO V^tST SUPERlWl ST. OULUmMlHH
The Best Equipped Tool Shop in
the West — Everything repaired.
Boston, Mass., April 19.— Jeremiah
Mahony, a young man of Somervllle,
is at the city hospital today as a re-
.sult of injuries received during a quar-
rel In South Boston early in the day.
Coleman Kelley of South Boston, a
former member of the Boston common
council, was arrested charged with
assaulting Mahony. The two men were
friends, but became involved In a
fiuarrel during which Kelley is alleged
to have hit Mahony in the head with
a brick.
MAN KILLS HIS WIFE
AND SHOOTS HIMSELF.
Kansas City, Mo., April 19-— <^- A.
Barber, a building contractor, 45 years
old shot and killed his wife and fatal-
?y wounded himself at the residence
of his mother-in-law. Mrs. J. E.
Saunders, In this city today.
Barber and his wife had been sepa-
rated for some time and recently she
filed a suit for divorce against him.
Barber went to the Saunders residence
and concealed himself in the cellar.
He shot his wife as soon as she ap-
peared in the yard and then shot him-
self.
There are two university presidents
"in our midst" today. Each is the
head of a great Western ^nivcrsUy.
Karh is the Huccessor to a \ eteran
Educator who brought his school from
humble station to a place In the front
rank of American ""iverslt.es. Each
Is a recent elect to his present station
and each is feeling his way toward ad-
vancing the Interests of his univer-
sity They have much in common.
oAe is a tall, heavy set man with
eravlsh hair and gray moustache. He
fnelks slowly and chooses his words
cartfully He is affable, yet reserved.
His eyes are the calm, clear eyes of
Jhe thinker and the student, and his
bearing is that of the captain of In-
dustry: without the aggressiveness of
Harry Burns Hutchings, president of
ac" irthousK It dldnt make much
WIRTH'S
BUG KILLER
If you are troubled ^^^th Bed
Bugs, we have a preniaratlon which
we guarantee to kill them. Your
WIRTH'S S^uVs^o^e
FREB DELIVERY.
13 W*»t Superior Street.
difference to him. He is the type of
man with whom the passage of time
has little Interest except as he can
accomplish his work. He Is the mod-
em ••young" leader in the business and
educational world— always young in
energy and activity, regardless of
?earf He Is a quick talker and quick
thinker. He speaks epigrammatically
and makes a few words cover a wide
subject. He exudes energy at evei y
porf and has the air of the born leader
of men. who can make men do his
bidding by sheer personality, "f ts^a
man who would apparently drive him-
self to serve those relying on him and
would still find time to 'ook at the
larger Interests of life and take part
n them. He Is the type of ^college
president, who might be expected to
hLve opinions on PO»tlcal econom c
and sociological subjects-the ^^ ood-
row Wilson type He Is Dr. Gforge
E. Vincent, president of the UnUer-
slty of Minnesota.
Cordial Yet Reserved.
One would hesitate to apply the term
••live wire" to Dr. Harry Burns Hutch-
ings. although the term might fit hun.
It would savor too muc^J, o' ^^1%, "J,%
il^^^e c2n7inrs"^^o^%^^^ "ie KllKr
ra^bre;WWeabirfens^all3\l^.
Slkfs^^jru ^KnoV'l^e^^an^Jv^at^'fe
K y;^u!\u^%^if^gi^^ty;s t|5H
lifecfed"^?? il.i'' ^e«i« -p« an^^
Hrd^-r^elPe-vts^^n" h?s% \^^ol^nJ
hs work, and will do his best to serve
thinv— and that •'best" measures high
Ly' human standards. One can expec^
him to be respected and esteemea oy
the students, and one l^^o^s that he
-tvlll lead his school carefully, con-
sclent iouslv adopting innovations after
?he>" have been carefully considered.
But Dr. Vincent is of a <l»«e""^ ^YP'^a
One doesn-t hesitate to say that he Is a
•^live wire." He is all of that, iney
say he Pulle<i » 8«od oar and was a
broad jumper in his days at Yale. One
might expect him to go out and pull a
pretty good oar now, or tear off a Hun-
dred yards in respectable time — ii no-
body were looking. One nriight expect
him to be a "good mixer.' The stu;-
dents might be expected to call him
"Prexv" and look up to him as one or
themselves — moved ahead of theni by
years and experience. One can believe
that he wlU be interested In the ath-
Itics of his school ap well as in Its
classes In political economy.
He may have been a broad jumper in
his college days, but he is not a broad
Jumper now. One would judge that in-
stead of jumping obstacles, he would
push them aside and clear his patn,
behind and before, and get to his goal
Hakes Home Baking Easy
^mn^
Absolutely Pure
The only baking powaoi*
mado ifrom Hoyal Grape
^^ream of Tartar
NO ALUM,inUME PHOSPHATE
regardless of obstacles. If anyone be-
lieves that the University of Minneso a
Is not the greatest titato university m
the country today, let him lay a little
bet that the opinion will be s%vept away
In a few years, If President Vincent Is
spared to his work. He isn t the kind
of man who is content to lag behind
the procession. He wiU get up in front
of the drum major or will know tne
reason why.
Scnne of Hamor.
President Vincent has a keen sense
of humor. Like all Kreat men. a boyish
love of fun has been carried with him
into his years of nan's work. He Is
the student, the exe< utive, the business
man, the doer of things— and when he
wants to drop the grave questions or
the day for a little recreation, he has a
love of fun to find the recreation and
get appreciation of it.
For instance, sorr ebody at the uni-
versity sent a projectoscope to the
Commercial club today, thinking that
it might come in handy at the banquet
tonight. The projectoscope, be it
known, is a device that projects phono-
graphs on a sc reen just as the stere-
opticon projects IPictures *^/■^T,"^«n1
transparent plates. President Vincent
was at the club when the projectoscope
arrived, and the Commercial club offi-
cers didn't know just what to make
° President Vincent's face lighted up
with a boyish glee. , , • ,
"That machine will throw any kind
of a picture on a screen, " he said. Uet
somebody busy mating caricatures of
members of the club. You can cut
heads out of photographs and draw
caricature bodies, you kiiow. or draw
little cartoons. Wo, can have a lot of
fun with that thing tonight.
The next minutn Dr. Vincent was
asking John G. WilUarns what kind of
farming wsis done <'n the Jean du Luth
farm and was Intelligently discussing
the agriculture resources of this part
° Veave i^ to Dr. V ncent to gain popu-
larltv In the state of Minnesota and
outside of It. He ^i'lll be popular with
the students; he v ill be popular with
the citizens; he will be a national edu-
cational figure as a "ni^'ers'ty Presi-
dent as he has b. en as a university
professor. He has the ab lity to ac-
complish things, and m affairs in which
his particular brar d of abil ty doesn t
do, as he can use a personality that is
'"olorg" E. Vincent Is a ''live wire."
and there's no lese majeste in saying It.
He'll stand for it. ,
DtUuthlans who have met both or
them have been comparing the two
men who are of such widely different
types, and they have found much to
admire in each.
1
■ r~«i-t -w ■
PLRLOINERS OF AITO ARE
TAKEN TO TWIN CITIES.
Fargo. N. D., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.)— Detective Springer
of the St. Paul police department left
j'esterday afternoon for home, taking
Claude Bradbury and O. Herschy. the
two Minneapolis boys who stole the
big Thomas Flyer automobile from
Senator Fowler of Minneapolis.
The two young men are the sons of
well-to-do parents in Minnoaplis, and
although they have been surrounded
by good influences, this is not the
first time that they have been In
trouble. Bradbury Is the son of
Henry N. Bradbury of the firm of
Bradbury & Drew, real estate brol<ers,
with offices In the Xew York Ufe
building. Herschy is also the son of
well-to-do parents.
«
GoinK Over Proposed Route.
Pittsburg, Pa., April 19.— Members
of the national waterways commis-
sion, investigating the I^ke Erie and
Pittsburg canal project and flooa
prevention, today are going over the
proposed route of the canal between
this city and Ashtabula. Ohio.
HENRICKSEN
JEWELRY CO.
Wholesale
to Jobbers
332 West Superior Street
Factory— 331 West Michigan Street
i;
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I'
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10
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
AprU 19, 1911.
Dr. Lyon's
PERFECT
Tooth Powder
for clean white beautiful teeth
and a pure and fragrant breath
This Man Is Young
at 55 Years
He Is a "Health Belt Man," Therefore Has the Vitality and Hot, Red
Blood of Youth in His Veins; He Towers Like a Giant Above the
Ordinary Difficulties of Life— Be a "Health Belt Man" Yourself.
It Gives Manly Strength ; It Makes Yqn Young and Keeps You
Young All the Days of Your Life; It Takes All the Coward
Out of Your Make-Up^Let Me Give You of This Abun-
dant Vitality, Then Nothing Can Ever Conquer You
But Death Itself— 100,000 Men Have Taken
My Advice. Why Not You?
The secret of life-
long youth may be
sammed up in one
word — Vitality. If you
have tliis great natural
power In abundance
yeara count for noth-
In^T- Just the Health
Belt. No privations, no
dieting and no restric-
tions, excepting that all
dissipation must cease.
Put the Health Belt on
nlgrhtB when you go to
bed; let It send Its
power Into your nerves,
organs and blood while
you are sleeping. It
gives you a great flow
of soft, gentle, galvano-
vltal electricity during
the entire night. One
application and you are
like a new being; It
I takes all the pain and
weakness out of your
back; it makes you an-
swer the morning
greeting with "I'm feel-
ing fine." It l3 a great
strength build e r ; it
overcomes the results
_^ of earlier mLstakes and
Indlscretl jn.«>, It gives you a compelling power, so that you are attractive to
all women and men with whom you come In contact. Three months' use is
Bufriolent. C. L. Snell, Middleport, N. T., writes: "I
am a man again, thanks to you. Nothing can dis-
courage me now."
This 13 one among tens of thousands.
Ttiis Wonder Nature
Cure Book
FREE
Put your name and address on this coup-^n and get
this book at once. I will send it to you free, sealed,
by mall. It gives much Information which a man
■hould have and fully describes the Health Belt.
DINNER FOR
PRESIDENT
Head of Michigan University
Speaks to Local
AIumnL
Tells
of New Additions to
the Ann Arbor In-
stitution.
"POr DRAWS
BIGJROWD
Nearly 1,000 People at Free
I Entertainment at the
Y. in C. A.
DR. B. S. SANDER CO., 1151 Broadway, Rew York, R. Y.
Dear Sirs — Please forward me your Book, as advertised.
NJLME j_,
ADDRES3
:)!()|c»»»)i(»»»»»:^(»»»)i(»Ji(»»»»»)K»
You save and make
BKTTKR RESM.TS from Ilernhl AVnnt Ads,
* money wh«>n you advertiMe in THE HEKAI.D. *
* ■*
Round Trip From Duluth to the
North Pacific Coast
Via California
in One Direction
Tickets on Sale
April 16, 19, 20
First class with return limit of
June 30. Good on any one of our
several other daily electric-lighted
transcontinental trains. Stop-
overs both ways.
Call, phone or write for full par-
ticulars.
^ L-7
TJorthern
M ^ The Scenic Highway
C. P. O'DONTVELL. City Pa«»'r Kit.
S34 West Superior Street, Oulutll, Mian.
Both Phones. 214
l^aUway
■■^■Laad of Fortane
.., W. H. MITCHELL. Atfent
B17 Tower Avenue, Superior. WU.
Both Phones, 4226
After being: the Ruest at a dinner
given by men graduates of the unl-
ver.slty of Michigan. Dr. Harry Burns
Hulchins, the new "pre.xy" of the
Michigan institution, spoke to grad-
uates and their friends at the Com-
mercial club last night.
Dr. Hutchins reviewed the progress
made by the university In the last few
years, which Included the construction
of Memorial hall chlelly by the alumni,
the erection of a building for the en-
gineering department, a new chemical
structure and a new dental building.
An addition has been built onto the
observatory and is equipped with a
new telescope. Joint observations are
made with the La Plata university of
Argentina,
The speaker told of the last na-
tional alumni dinner in New York, at
which 1,000 men were present. There
are 10.000 graduates in the state of
Michigan. 3,045 in Illinois, 3.013 In In-
diana, 1,093 in California, 1,030 in
Pennsylvania. 1,854 in New York, and
7.')0 in Minnesota, besides many in other
states. The speaker told of .Michigan's
inlluence on the educational system
of the United States.
He said the annual expenses jot the
university are $1,270,000, toward which
the state last year contributed $600,-
iMi') and students' fees amounted to
?oOO,000. About 5,100 students are en-
rolled. The univer.slty, said Dr. Hutch-
ins, must look to bequests to carry on
its va.st work as the income from the
state and otlier sources soon will not
care for the work and leave a surplus
foi' new equipment and buildings.
Dr. Hutchins left today for a tour
of Upper Michigan.
John Dwan, an attorney of Two Har-
bors. Minn., presided at the reception,
s^everal alumni spoke.
Real Oldest City In America.
St. Augustine is not the oldest city
in the United States. Acoma, an In-
dian village In New Mexico has the
distinction of having been con-
tinuously inhabited since the year
l.jo9, and how long before the first
discoverers do not know. At that
time its population was estimated at
about 6,500 people. There are few
people tiiere now, and so benighted
that they are not familiar with the
well known value of golden grain
belt beers as aids to health. Order
of your dealer or duluth branch min-
neapolls brewing company.
•^"^^^^■V^^^^" ^'.^ ^ j|c s)^ '3|c j^' ^ j|(' in^ ^ j|( J|C jIp
STILL DRRP
I\ THE
>VOODS. $
4 he woodM ^
:%. A. «•
*ore 4
>r in 4
^ sxow
*
^ The deep Mnovr In
^ caused the death uf many deer the ^
^ iBMt winter, aeeurdlnp; to C A. A. ^jt
'ji(' Nelnon of LntMen, a north n)i
^- Mettlenient, who >vaM a viMlto
* Duluth yestterday. He Mated that *
■^ many uf them fell prey to the ^
^ fvolveci, heluK unable to run away -k
^ from them an their hoofM cut ^
4 through the crnitt while the ^
Mir wrolvet were able to run on top of -»
^ It. He aaya that there In still as 4
4 much «H two Ifeet of huow In the ^
4 woodii aluuK the Mhore Im •ome ^
* places. 4
^^ ^ W '^ ^ '^''^ "A" ^ "^ ^ ^ ^^^ ^ '^ ^ *^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ *^ ^ ^
SOUTH DAKOTA
MUCH DIVIDED
Both "Wets" and "Dry"
Showed Gains in Vote Cast
By Cities on license.
.Sioux Falls. S. D.. April 19. — The city
of .Sioux Falls voted for licensing sa-
loons yesterday by about 2 to 1. H. N.
Gates was elected commissioner.
Clear Lake voted saloons after a
hard light.
Valley .Springs shifted from "wet" to
"dry " by a majority of 3.
Pierre, the capital city, voted for
saloons by a majority of 84. The city
has been dry for tlie past year.
Fort Pierre "Wet."
Fort Pierre also swung from the
"dry" to "wet" column by a maioriti'
of 49.
Returns show that both the 'wets"
and drys" have made gains in tlie vote
on license, early returns indicating that
the wets have gained a larger number
of large towns than the drvs.
The "wets" gained the towns of
Howard, Vienna and Sherman, whiclt
have been dry during the last year.
The towns of Platte and Eagan, which
were wet last year, voted against li-
cense.
Other towns voting for licenses are:
Garretson, Hartford Tyndall, Mitchell,
Dallas, Marion Junction, Kimball,
Flandreau, Clear Lake, Madison, Mill-
bank, Geddes and Hot Springs.
These Voted No License.
" The following voted no license: Dell
Rapids, Centerville, Canton, Vlborg,
Irene, Springfield, Beresford, Hudson,
Ramona and Colton.
The vote agaist the saloons at Huron
was larger than In previous years, but
not sufficient to win.
The election at Aberdeen, the first
under the commission plan of govern-
ment, wa.s rather a disappointment, as
there were so many candidates in the
field that none of them received a ma-
jority, and another election will bo
■ ailed next Tuesday of the Ave candl-
ilates for mayor.
Blackface Turn and German
Dialect Stories Delight
Big Audience.
Nearly 1,000 people were entertained
last night at the "pop" given at the Y.
M. C. A. The show was one of the best
put on at the institution this winter
and it was appreciated to the extent
of several encores to each performer.
The Troubadour Mandolin club fur-
nished some pleasing selections; T. H.
Jones and D. E. Giffin played a man-
dolin and guitar duet; A. B. Wegener
contributed some fancy club swinging;
Arthur Kreltter told some German dia-
lect stories; Miss Alice Kennedy read
the "Mysterious Portrait"; Miss Myrtle
Hobbs gave a vocal solo, "All For
You"; and Don E. Giffin gave a real
vaudeville stunt entitled "A Few
Minutes in Black and White."
The program arranged by Quy War-
ren and Joseph Horak was Interesting
from start to finish and that It was
popular with those who attended was
proven by the liberal applause that
was showered on the performers.
One of tlie most jjopular of the
stunts was that of Don E. Giffin, who
did a blackface monologue act. Mr.
Giffin had a real minstrel turn and he
did not have to coax for laughs. His
makeup was funny, and his Jokes new,
and the turn was a genuine hit. He
was recalled several times.
Arthur Kreltter with his German
dialect stories was another very de-
cided hit. He told a number of his
stories and so popular were they that
he finally exhausted his supply.
-liss Alice Kennedy gave a pleasing
reading and tiie solo by Miss Hobbs
was greatly enjoyed.
The feature of the last "pop" of the
.season which will be given next Tues-
day evening will be a large orchestra
under the direction of Gustave Flaaten.
There will be a comedy .sketch by six
joung women and several other good
tilings are promised.
NEW STORE IS
MOST MODERN
Quayle-Larsen Establishment
One of Finest in the
Northwest
Anything from the smallest kind of
a tack to the steel trusses used in the
erection of modern business buildings
can be purcha.sed at the Quayle-Larsen
company's beautiful new hardware
.'tore In the new Fidelity building near
Lake avenue on Superior street.
The new store is one of the most
n odern and up-to-the minute stores in
the entire Northwest. The new scheme
of having as few counters as possible,
is carried out, and most of the goods
are displayed from the walls. The
effect of this idea Is striking, and the
interior Is a model for beauty and con-
venience.
At the opening recently held, more
than 10,000 Duluth people embraced
tlie opportunity to look over the store.
The building was crowded during the
hours of the opening and it had to be
kept open for some time for those who
were late.
William F. Quayle and John L. Lar-
son started with a much smaller store
a year or so ago, in cramped quarters
on Second avenue west, but they were
both well and favorably known In
Duluth and the business grew so rapid-
ly that they were soon working at dis-
advantage. They made arrangements
for the ground space in the new Fidel-
ity building and now have one of the
finest stores in the country.
The basement Is devoted to house-
hold articles. This department is In
charge of A. L. Ryberg, formerly of
Denver, Colo. Although here but a
few weeks Mr. Ryberg is enthusiastic
over Duluth. The household depart-
ment of which Mr. Ryberg is manager
is complete in every respect.
The store is one of which every Du-
luthian can well be proud.
•-
Violets, Roses, Carnations,
American Beauties. Big stock; prices
right, at Victor Huot's.
GEORGE GOULD
ELECTS HIS MAN
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt RtIief»PcnuuieBt Car*
CARTER'S UTTLE
UVER PILLS aerw.
fail. Puely ve(et-
•ble— act turdjr
but geaAy oa
ibe liver.
Stopafter^
'dinaet
distreat-
cureiodi«'
geation — improra the eompladon — bridttea
Ibeeyw. S«J1 PiO, SuU DoM, SmI Trie*
Genuine aaathax Signature
Rockefeller-Kuhn-Loeb Inter-
ests Lose Out in Missouri
Pacific Fight
New York, April 19. — Although re-
cently forced out of the position hlni'
self, George J. Gould, opposing the
Rockefeller - Kuhn - Loeb interests,
brought about the election yesterday
of B. F. Bush as his successor as presi-
dent of the Missouri Pacific railroad,
defeating David R. Francis. Mr. Bush
Is president of the Western Maryland
railroad.
The victory of the Gould faction was
followed Immediately by the announce-
ment of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.'s withdrawal
as bankers for the system and with
the resignation of Paul M. Warburg,
the company's representative on the
board of directors, and of Cornelius
Vanderbllt, an ally. Edward L. Mars-
ton, representing Blair & Co., Fred T.
Gates, representing John D. Rocke-
feller, and E. D. Adams, A/nerican rep-
resentative of the Deutsche bank,
voted against Mr. Bush, but did not
sever their connection with the board.
It Is rumored, however, that Messrs.
Adams and Marston will resign also,
although tills cannot be confirmed.
After the meeting both George Gould
and Kuhn, Loeb & Co. issued state-
ments explaining their respective sides
of the case, Mr. Gould regretting per-
sonally the withdrawal of Kuhn, Loeb
& Co., but congratulating the road on
the selection of Mr. Bush. Kuhn, Loeb
& Co., on the other hand, explained
that they did not favor Mr. Bush, and
that because of his election, Messrs.
Warburg and Vanderbllt felt "unwill-
ing to share responsibility in the man-
agement of the company ander tiiese
circumstances."
BEAUTIFUL NEW
HOME FOR C. P. CRAIG.
Contractor Richard Hanson yester-
day began work on the erection of a
modern residence for C. P. Craig on
the nortlieast corner ot Twenty-fourth
nm
avenue cast and Fourth street. The
building, for which plans were drawn
00ft German, will cost about $20,-
The residence will be In the recent
Rnsrlish style of architecture and the
exterior will be In tapestry brick. The
house will have twelve rooms and the
Interior arrangements will be con-
venient and comfortable. The decora-
tions will be elaborate.
The building will be ready for oc-
cupancy next fall.
CROSS APPEARS IN SKY.
Emblem of Christianity Seen By
Many on Good Friday.
Fulton, N. Y., April 19. — A curious
phenomena was observed in the sky
here Friday night by a large num-
ber of reputable citizens, when a
large cross was plainly discernable
over the face of the moon. The
spectacle was observed by Fred
Crane, Mr. Conoly and several others
who were on their way home about
11 o'clock at night.
The sky was very clear and the
moon particularly bright and as the
young men were on their way home
their attention was attracted by the
peculiar aspect of the moon, when
suddenly a large cross seemed to
shoot across the face of the moon.
The attention of others was called to
the sight, all of whom vouch as to
the truth of the story.
GARY SALOON MEN
WILL HAVE TO QUIT.
Gary, Ind., April 19. — Twenty-seven
saloon keepers of this city and four of
Hammond will have to quit the liquor
business as the result of the action
of Judge A. B. Anderson of the United
States district court yesterday in re-
fusing to grant naturalization papers
to them on the ground that they were
undesirable citizens.
Evidence was produced in court to
show that the men had disobeyed the
law by selling liquor on Sunday. A
new saloon regulation law, passed at
the recent session of the Indiana legis-
lature, provides that liquor licenses
shall not be granted to or renewed for
unnaturalized citizens.
proposed to close the saloons on Sun-
day and Marlon voted "wet."
Mayor Piatt of Danville running on
a "regulate the saloons" platform, was
defeated yesterday by Wii: C. Lowman.
the "open town" advocat<s by a vote
of 2.814 to 2.647. The political com-
plexion of the city council is un-
changed.
Georgetown was the only other
town in the county where the paloon
question was an issue, the "dry" ticket
headed by James Parks, defeating th»
""''»♦" led by Frank Smith, 296 to 179.
!= — I
'wef
"None Nicer."
Huot's delicious fresh candles.
VollvaHi »Ian Wins.
Chicago, April 19. — Election rows
which began before the polls opened at
Zion City yesterday, and which con-
tinued intermittently until the voting
concluded, broke out afresh after the
ballots In the mayoralty contest had
been counted and the result announced
last night. The final count showed
that W. Hurd Clendenin, who had re-
ceived the aid of Wilbur Glenn Vollva,
successor to John Alexander Dowie,
had been elected by a majority of five
votes in a total of a little more than
1,000 votes cast.
UNDER NEW FORM.
Illinois Cities Holdf Elections for
Commission Government.
Chicago, April 19. — An unusually
large vote polled in numerous Illinois
cities and towns where elections were
held yesterday for tl»e first time under
the new commission form of govern-
ment, is declared by advocates of the
plan as Indicating an increased in-
terest in civic affairs by citizens.
Among the cities holding their first
elections under the new form, were
Elgin, Ottawa, Kewaunee, Pekln, Hllls-
boro, Dixon and Jacksonville.
Four Socialist mayors were elected —
at Granite City, Grafton, O'Fallon and
at Davis in Stephenson county. Neither
"wets" nor "drys" scored any decided
victory. Alton defeated a man who
Wherever you happen to meet your friends, you ought
to want to be properly dressed for the occasion — you'll never
have any cause for worry if you wear our
Hart Schaffner & Marx
G jaranteed Clothes for Men
They're the right kind for all occasions.
They're guaranteed to be all-wool.
They're guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Suits and Overcoats, $18 and up.
Spring Furnishings
Manhattan Shirts, Wilson Bros.' Shirts, Stetson, Gordon
and Imperial Hats. The new "SENSATION" Hat for young
men. Dent's and .^^dler's Gloves for all occasions; beautiful
Neckwear, medium weight Underwear.
Skolny^s Clothes for Boys
Douglas Shoes
kenneyTanker,
409-11 V/EST SUPERIOR STREET.
DULUTH, MINN.
I
■ iT '■■-
■ ■ <\<l '
DRUMMING DII«r OUT of tlie BOUSE
CtOlfl Dust will do It — and do it ciuickly. It makes everything
It touches neat and sweet, spick and span. Many a poor woman has
worked and worn herself to a shadow from the constant strain of house-
hold cares, when Colli Dust would ha^^e relieved her of the lion's
share of it.
When you stop to think that there are hundreds of powders and
cleansers on the market today made to imitate GoM Ousl— the father
and original of them all — ^is it any wonder that GoM Dust sales are all
but equal to those of all the others combined ?
Gold Dust is the greatest cleanser ever discovered. It will do
all that any other soap or cleanser will do, and is only then beginning.
It will do more work, better work and irtore kinds of work than any
similar cleaner on the market.
•V.
Cut your household lahors tn two wUh
the aid of Gold Dust Washing Powder
Use Gotd Dust for washing clothes and dishes,
scrubbing floors, cleaning woodwork, oil-cloth,
silverware and tinware, polishing brasswork, clean-
ing bathroom pipes, refrigerators, etc, softening
hard water and making the finest soft soap.
Gold Dust is sold in ^C size and
large packages. The large package
offers greater economy.
Made by THE N. K. FAIRBANK C:OMPANY, Chicago
Makers of Fairy Soap (the oval cake)
^*lei the GOLD DUST Twins do your work**
;_B^
+
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
U
AGE IS NO OBSTACLE
TO YOUTHFUL BEAUTY
•^
Well Known Beauty Clienilst Explains
How Women tan Always
Look Youns.
"Years ago." writes F. Howarth
Drydfti in Fashions, "women took it
as a n\atter of course when beauty
fled with approaching age. Today it
Is different, for many little helps
make it possible to stay the destruc-
tive hand of Father Time.
•Little effort is now required for
milady to retain or regain a symmet-
rical form, a velvety skin and youth-
ful complexion or an abundance oi
radiant hair, and with these little
helps everv w >man can be beautiiui.
•TO R»">UND OUT THE FORM
requires more than massaging. The
starved underlying tissues should be
encouraged to healthy activity, and
when this is done angular lines van-
ish, hollows round out and the form
essiimes its true shape and harmoni-
ous proportions
purpose
method.
NEWS
THE NORTHWEST
"The best formuli for this
Vaucalre
^•^•^■p"^^^
I
is known as tho
and is here given:
Ihi cupfuls sugar,
1 pint water.
1 ounce gallol.
"The gallol should be stirred in the
syrup and two teaspoonfuls taken be-
fore meals. Thi.i will round out and
beautify the figure without increas-
ing the weight. ^,,„
'YOUTHFUL BLOOM TO THE
SKIN follows the use of a good mas-
sage cream, and the one given below
reduces large pores, rids the skin of
blackheads, pimples and banishes
sallowness or the oily, shiny condi-
tion.
1 pint boiling water.
2 ounces cerol.
•'Stir cerol In the boiling water and
thoroughly dissolve. Keep stirring
until smooth and creamy. Massage
Into the skin after washing and dry-
ing car-^fullv. and you will be sur-
prised at the delightful texture and
smothncss and rose-tint which fol-
Iow.<» its use
•MUMILT.\TTNa FI'ZZ is quickly
removed with a simple paste made by
mixing powdered delol and wa.ter.
Cov.'r the hairy surface and after two
or three minutes rub off and wash
the skin an 1 the hairs are gone. Sel-
dom d >es :t rei'.iire a second applioa-
tio.r. ■■
Central
Oregon
Is Open
DIETZ TRIAL
IS ASSURED
Despite Contrary Reports,
Prosecuting Attorney Makes
Ready for Case.
Cameron Dam Defender's Claim
Prosecution Would Be
Dropped Is Discredited.
Hayward. Wis.. April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Despite an Interview
purported to have been secured from
John Dietz in Milwaukee In which he
said he did not believe the state would
over prosecute him here for the murder
of Deputy Sheriff Harp because the
state did not want to have •'a con-
spiracy shown up," there Is nothing on
record here to show that the trial will
not be called May 2 as announced. The
same interview credits Dietz with say-
ing he wants no attorney.
DlMtrict Attorney Im DiiNy.
The fact that for three or fohr weeks
District Attorney Williams has had
Sheriff Clark serving subpoenas for
witnesses wanted by the state for the
trial does not look as if the state is
abandoning the cases, and when the
Joint trial of John, Mrs. Dietz and
Leslie Dietz for the murder of Deputy
Oscar Harp opens on May 2 there
may be a surpri-se in store for the de-
fense.
The general opinUn here is that if
John Dietz does -not appear for trial
with legal counsel, his wife and son
will, and it is certain that Judge Riid
will insist on advisory counsel for the
head of the family.
Reports from those who have heard
the Dietz children speak at defense
fund meetings show tht-y are trying to
make it appear that Sheriff Madden
and his deputies intended to extermi-
nate the Dietz family, and that a lot
of other equally ridiculous stories are
being spread by the children. This will
not win sympathy for them from the
people of this county.
SAY LIVERYMAN
IS HORSETHIEF
rial to The Herald.) — Mr. Ray and
family have arrived from Wisconsin
with a carload of household goods
and machinery and are moving to the
three-quarter section farm he pur-
chased la.st year.
Knut W. Skall died at the age of
over fio. He was one of the pioneers
of this district. He is survived by
twelve children.
the contracts for paving in Districts
No. 16 and 18 was «leferred until the
regular annual meeting of the council
this afternoon at 4 o'clock.
The awarding of the contract for
paving in District No. 15 came after an
un.successful attempt on the part of the
majority of the contractors to have ac-
tion deferred one day at least.
CARLTON COUNTY
FARMER KILLED
Crossing of Electric Wires
Caused Heavy Voltage and
He Is Electrocuted.
Garlton. Minn., April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — David Lavigne. a farmer,
was instantly killed this morning by
the shock from an electric light wire
in James Dunphy's barn. He was 50
years old and leaves a widow and six
children at their home four miles south
of here.
Yesterday two neighbors were haul-
ing lumber from Scanlon. It was rain-
ing and when they got here they slept
In a barn. Lavigne got up to turn on
the light when sshocked. Coroner Ny-
quist decided an inquest was unneces-
sary. A wire of tlie Cloquet lOlectrlc
company, crossed with the light wires,
threw a heavy voltage into the liglits.
Several other small shocks were re-
portei this morning, and one small tire
was started. Power is off today and an
investigation by the managers of the
electric company is being made.
HOUGHTON ATTORNEY IS
STRICKEN IN FLORIDA.
$3.50 Remedy Free
For Weak Kidneys
Relieves Trlnary and Kidney Trou-
bleit. Backache, Straining,
SwellluK, Etc.
Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kid-
neys and Back.
Houghton. Mich., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — This section of the
.state was shocked by the telegrapliic
news from Palm Beach, Fla.. late yes-
terday, telling of the sudden and un-
expected death of T. I. Cliadbourne,
one of the leading lawyers of the Cop-
per country as well as the whole
state of Michigan. He fell dead while
sitting on the porch of his winter
residence in the Southern resort. One
of his sons was with him, the other
being In New York. Mr. Chadbourne
was 70 years old. He graduated from
the Harvard law school in 1862, and
since then has been employed as coun-
sel for the mining companies of this
state. He was reputed to be worth
several million of dollars. Chod-
bourne was a leading figure in the
fight to prevent consolidation of the
Osceola, Ahmeek and eight other min-
ing companies with the Calumet &
Hecla.
YEGGS WORK AT BARNUM.
in
Is
CHIEF HOTEL INSPECTOR.
A. W. Crozier of Minneapolis
Named By the Governor.
St. Paul, Minn., April 19. — Governor
A. O. El)erliart yesterday signed the
hotel Inspection bill and immediately
afterwards announced ilie appointment
of A. W. Crozier of Minneapolis as
chief hotel inspector and Bert M. Len-
non of Minneapolis as deputy inspector.
Mr. Crozier is prominent in the Unit-
ed Commercial Travelers.
Mr. Lennon is a son of Representa-
tive John G. Lennon and an officer of
tlie Minnesota National Guard. He Is
now in Texas, watching tlie regular
army maneuvers.
Postoffice Loses Abont $75
Stamps and $35 Cash.
Barnum, Minn., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Yeggmen rifled the
local postoffice Monday night, getting
about |75 in stamps and $35 in cash.
Two boxes of cigars were also taken.
Two men, who ha.d been hanging
around town for a couple of days,
disappeared early yesterday and sus-
picion is directed towards them.
BLAME DINING CAR SALAD
Wouldn't it be nice within a week or
so to begin to say goodbye forever to
the scalding, dribbling, straining or too
frequent passage of urine; the forehead
and back-of-the-head aches; the stitch-
es and pains in the back: the growing
muscle weakne.'?s; spot before the eyes;
yellow skin; sluggish bowels; swollen
eyelids or ankles; leg cramps: unnat-
ural short breath; sl-eeplessness and the
despondency?
I have a remedy for tliese troubles that you can
cVeiiend on. and If you want to m.ike a QTTICK
UKfOVKItY you ought to" write for sorai- of It. Many
a doctor would charge you J3.50 Just for wrlUn« a
pi«»crlption. but I tiiive Uie medicines themselves, and
«ra now offering them entirely free of charge. How
to obtain a $:150 package of these medicines for
weak kidneys free— just drop me a line like this: Dr.
A. E. llohlnson. K24.'?2 Luck KulhUng. Detroit. Ml<h..
and I will send you free my plan by which you may
obt:iln at on».-e a fall i»Uo $3.30 package of these
modlcliiM wlthiiut a cent of expense to you. As
you will see when you use them, these medicines
contain only pure hannle.-<i remedies, but they have
great healing and paln-conquerlng power. They will
quickly show their power once you use them, so I
think you had better see wliat Ihey are without de-
lay. 1 am willing to send you the me.llclnes free —
you can um tliem and cure yourself at home.
of Typographical union. No. 186 took
place Monday evenlni? in the P'rie
hall and the music wis furnished by
Parson'6 orchestra.
Mandan, N. D. — Reports have come
into Mandan from a number of differ-
ent sources during the past three
weeks, that engineers of the Chicago,
Milwaukee & Puget Sound railway are
laying a route through Morton county
to connect with the new line some-
where above Shields and to run north
into Oliver county, croissing tho North-
ern Pacific at a point west of Man-
dan.
Fargo, N. D. — Charles Beck of Buf-
falo died at a local lospltal of pul-
monary cedema. He 1< aves a wife and
a brother and sister, ^vho were in the
city to attend the funeral, which took
place Monday afternoon. The decea.-?ed
was a retired fanner of 54 years, and
was ill only a short :lme. Interment
took place in Riverside cemetery.
Bismarck. N. D. — The Sixty-Three
Mile baseball league M'as organized at
Mandan Sunday evering, comprising
the teams of Bismarck, Mar.dan, Glen
Ullin and New Salem. The officers of
the new association are as follows:
President. F. P. McQuillan of Mandan;
secretary-treasurer, C J. Kutz of Glen
Ullin.
Fargo. N. D. — Plans were filed Mon-
day at the Fargo Builders' & Traders"
exchange for a new $12,000 school
building to be erected at Flasher. N. D.
The building will be strictly modern
in every respect and will be a brick
structure finished with Bedford stone.
was 6,687, an increase of 531. Of the
latter total, 4,879 were In county asy-
lums and 620 in the Milwaukee hospital
for the insane at Waukatosa, which in-
stitutions are not under the direct con-
trol of the state.
PENINSULA BRIEFS
MINNESOTA BRIEFS
The last big free homestead
tract of the undeveloped
West is now accessible to
homeseekers.
The Oregon Trunk
Railway
is completed for 115 miles
south of the Columbia River.
10.000,000 acres of fertile
free homestead land is made
accessible to settlers. Ask
about the low homeseeker
fares to Central Oregon
and the personally c«"r.:l acted
tourist parti ;;s via the
Great Northern Railway.
Write or call and get our free book
on Central Oregon telling about
the opportunities for farmers,
stockmen and fruit-growers, and
how to reach ttie new country.
/
/
Edgeley, N. D., Man Disap-
pears Along With Animals
and Is Being Sought.
Kdgeley, N. D., April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — L.. Carter, a local livery-
man, has disappeared and is charged
with disposing of about a dozen stray
horses along with droves of his own
he sold.
The horses were traced to Minnesota
points and some recovered their
horses. Carter has been a resident of
Edgeley for twenty years and always
bore an excellent reputation. Local
people decline to believe in his guilt,
despite his unexplained absence. War-
rants have been sworn out for his ar-
rest.
BODY IS BURIED AGAIN.
Dulutliian Goes to Neg.iunee to \Vit-
ness Parent's Rebiirial.
Negaunee, Mich., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Maurice Coffey of Du-
luth and his sister. Miss Nellie Coffey,
a Calumet scliool teacher, have been
here superintending the removal of
bodies of relatives from the old to the
new cemetery here. The bodies of their
parents, their brother, John, and a
child were reburied iii the new ceme-
tery.
AVILL NEVER BE TRIED.
1r
KILLS MXE WOLF PUPS.
Marquette County, Mich., Hunter
Gets Young But Mother Escapes.
Marquette, Mich., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Henry
19.
Harvey of
Powell township, was in town yester-
day and received $90 from the county
as a bounty on nine wolf pups, which
he captured on section 52-29 a feWdays
ago. after having followed the mother
for several days. The pups were not
more than one day old when he took
them. Havery was not able to get
within sight of the mother, though he
was very close to her on several oc-
casions. About a year ago, Mr. Havery
and a companion bagged a number of
wolf pups in a log in the same local-
ity, after an exciting fight with the
mother.
Upper Peninsula Man Who Killed
Another for Bear, Freed.
Calumet, Mich., April 19. — As a re-
sult of the examination here of John
Anderson, charged with the careless
shooting of a human being, the man
has been discharged. Prosecuting At-
torney MacDonald decided there were
not sufficient grounds for a prosecu-
tion. Anderson killed John Carlson in
a tree near Greese Point last fall,
taking him for a bear.
For Death in Minneapolis of Fond
du Lac, >Vis., Woman.
Minneapolis, Minn., April 19. — Mrs.
Sarah Treleven of Fond du I^ac, Wis.,
who died suddenly in Minneapolis
Thursday, came to her death as the
result of eating salad dressing in a
dining c^r, relatives assert. Mrs.
Treleven was en route home from the
West. The fatal meal is said to have
been eaten on a train carrying her to
Minneapolis from the Pacific coast.
A daughter who was with her became
violently ill but recovered.
BEMIDJI HEARS LECTURE
UPON COMMISSION FORM.
Bemidji, Minn., April 19. — (Special
ti The Herald.) — John Hamilton of
Des Moines, Iowa, addressed a large
gathering last evening on his sub-
ject, "The Commi.'fcion Form of Mu-
nicipal Government." As Mr. Hamil-
ton has made a study of the question,
having recently completed a book on
it. during which he toured the entire
United States in an endeavor to gain
as much information on the proposi-
tion as possible, his remarks were all
well founded.
BEMIDJI SCHOOL BOARD
WILL SEEK APPROPRIATION
HILL CITY VOTES TO
ISSUE SCHOOL BONDS.
Locating Near Greenbu.sli.
Greenbush, Minn., April 19. — (Spe-
Hlll City, Minn.. April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The special school
election held vesterdav to decide on
the question of issuing $27,000 in bonds
to erect an agricultural high school,
resulted favorably, 62 to 3.
The district recently acquired a 10-
acre tract adjacent to the present
school for the purpose of practical les-
sons in farming
The bonds are each for $1,000. pay-
able in fifteen years with interest at
5 per cent, payable semi-annually.
Case & Bromhall of Duluth. archi-
tects, are at work upon the plans and
specifications.
GRAND FORKS COUNCIL
LETS PAVING CONTRACT.
Bemidji, Minn.. April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The board of educa-
tion has decided to send a delegation
I to St. Paul Friday to be present at a
meeting of the state high school
board to try and Induce the board to
give Bemidji one of the twenty $2,500
apprcpriations for the aid of agricul-
tural departments in connection with
high schools throughout the state.
WOULD IMPEACH HEAD
OF MARQUEITE PRISON.
Lansing, Mich., April 19. — By a vote
of 77 to 19 the house of representa-
tives adopted a resolution presented
by Representative Straight of Branch
county, calling for the impeachment
of Warden James Russell of Mar-
quette prison.
BUHE rIiLROAD MAN
SHORT IN ACCOUNTS.
Grand Forks, N. D., April 19.— After
a somewhat lengthy discussion, the
city council awarded, by a vote of 10
to 4, the contract for the laying of
paving In District No. 15 to tlie Blome
Paving company. Action on allowing
COLUMBIA
April Records on Sale
Now.
Some of the best ever issued.
EDMONT,
330 W. Superior St.
I
COMINGOFSPRING
W'un't Worry You If Vou Let the
lENtTH DYE HOUSE
Clean and press your clothes, or put
your fancy Rugs through our pro-
cess of cleaning.
PROMPT SERVICE.
^-ORK GI:AR.\NTEED.
Clutbei« Clennern for Men, Women
■uil t'bildrvn.
KROMCK BROS. & Ci \Rf;ER, PropM.
Old Phune, Orund 4U3, 13::0 Tower
Avenue. Aew Phone, 0>$den ttiKi.
That enticing odor from
the Kitchen!
Is there anything so tempting as the odor
of really good ham, cooking? Fairly
makes your mouth water in anticipation
of the feast — especially if you know it is
an's
McMill
Ham
raragon
and Bacon
Butte. Mont.. April 19. — Lester Rob-
erts, assistant city agent of the Oregoa
Short Line, is missing and an examina-
tion has disclosed a shortage of $1,500.
A warrant for his arrest has been is-
sued.
L
*' Tender, rich and appetizing. '*
Your dealer has McMillan's "Paragon** Ham and Bacon, Kettle Rendered
Lard and real Country Sausage, or can get them for you. Ask him.
J. T. McMillan company, incorporated. St. Paul. Minn.
NEW SUEDE SHOES
FOR WOMEN,
CLARK, The Sample Shoe Man
II .Second Avedue Went.
PRINTING
That SatlaftM All Oar Customer*.
Artt You One of Them?
MERRITT ft HECTOR,
PBUmitS ANB IINSBKS.
KMh Orders a Plca.arc 113 Wtsi First Stt—l
FAIVIILY
HAVE A CASE OP
OP
BROUGHT TO YOUR HOUSE.
CaU New, 484. Old— Melrose, 4689.
117 WEST FIRST STREET.
DULUTH BREWING & MALTING CO .
Sues Warren for $10,000.
Warren, Minn., April 19.— (Special
to The Herald.) — Mrs. W. A. Tribble.
at one tim^ a resident of Warren, has
brought suit against the city for $10,-
000 for injuries that she alleges she
received while crossing Snake river
on the foot bridge on Nelson avenue.
She says that her left hip and leg
were severly injured by her foot go-
ing through several holes in the floor
of the bridge.
_ . «
Another Minnenpolls Dank Merger.
Minneapolis, April 19. — The Metro-
politan National and Germania banlcs
yesterday joined forces under one man-
agement, the Germania vacating its
N'icollet avenue quarters and customers
founds its officers on hand to receive
them in the Metropolitan National in
the Metropolitan Life building. The
greater Metropolitan National will be
capitalized at $300,000 and will start
with deposits of $1,500,000.
•
Plan Montana Electric I^lne.
Great Falls, Mont., April 19. — Plans
are practically complete for the con-
struction of an electric line between
this city and Lewistown by way of
Stanford. The line will cut about forty-
five miles off the distance from here to
Lewistown and will open a country of
vast farming wealth on the edge of the
Judith basin country.
Moorhead — On Saturday afternoon a
deal was perfected whereby IL A.
Leek secures the interest of his part-
ner, F. G. Perkins, in the Lyceum the-
ater. Mr. Leek thus becomes sole
owner and manager.
St. Cloud — City Engineer S. S.
Chute has been called upon by the vil-
lage of Cold Spring to assist in pre-
paring for the Installation of a sewer-
age system at Cold Spring. It is lue
Inte.ition of tlte council to cause such
a sysLtm to be layed during the sum-
mon. -
Fergus Falls — A number of no
license men have signed a petition,
a.sking J. S. Ulland to appeal to the
supreme court for a wrU of prohibi-
tion, forbidding the city council from
issuing liquor licenses on the ground
that license did not carry at the re-
c'-nt city election. Mr. Ulland. who Is
always In the forefront of the fignt
against saloons, will make arrange-
ments to bring proceedings at once.
Crookston — Sunday the Knights
Templar from Grand Forks came over
on a special car attached to the North-
ern Pacific and attended Easter serv-
ices Sunffay afternoon with the mem^
hers of Constantine commandery of
Crookston at the Episcopal church,
Kev. Owen F. Jones preaching a vciy
impressive sermon.
Bemidji — Monday afternoon the jury
in the case of the state of Minnesota
vs. George Newton of Funkley, who
was charged with running a saloon m
Funkley without a license, brought in
a verdict of not guilty.
Crookston — George and Gus Sommcrs
left Monday for Rush City, Minn.,
where they were called by a message
received in the morning announcing
the death of their sister. Miss Ida Son»-
mer.s, aged 16, whose death occurred
late Sunday evening from heart fail-
ure following a several days' siege ot
diphtheria. , . -, ^
Bemidji — Some time during Sunday
night thieves entered the Mrs. J. J.
Conger miUnery store on Fourth street,
and robbed the place of .several hun-
dred dollars" worth of plumes. En-
trance to the establishment was made
through the rear door.
St Cloud — James H. Johnson, fore-
man of the paint shop of the Great
Northern car shops, died Monday morn-
ing, at the residence of Supt. Fred
LIndt. He was a member of the North
Star Masonic lodge and also a member
of a Minneapolis G. A. R. post, having
served in the rebellion as a volunteer.
Minneapolis — After three months of
abuse and beatings from the owner
of a concrete black factory, who made
him do the heavy work of a man, Rob-
ert De Bluewue, 15 years old, a bit
larger than the proverbial midget, was
brought to Minneapolis Monday by im-
migration In.spectors to be sent back
to his home in Ghent, Belgium, whence
he came eleven months ago.
Hastings — Gilbert Fox and Edward
Mattson, the two paroled inmates of
the state training school at Red Wing,
charged with stealing G. R. Crippen's
horse and buggy, were held to the
grand jury Monday by Police Justice
A. F. Johnson.
Mankato — Henry Himmelman, Sr., for
fifteen vears a member of the city
council, and at different times a wagon
manufacturer, a hotel proprietor and
<a mattres.s manufacturer, died Mon-
day, aged 77 years, after an illness of
three weeks. He was born in France
and had lived in Mankato since 1855.
He built and conducted the City hotel
for many years and also built Union
hall, since remodeled into the Hotel
Helnrich.
Negaunee — Ed. Malloney, one of the
police officers, who was not re-elected
by the council at Its annual meeting
last Thursday, has given up his posi-
tion. Malloney fully expected to be re-
tained and he was n uch disappointed
when the council decided to get an-
other man in his place. William
Na<leau. one of the new of fleers chosen,
succeeds Malloney.
Munlsing — Village President Weiss
and Alderman Kling: returned from
Superior, Wis., Sunday morning wl-.ere
they had been to inspect the water
system of that city on behalf of Mu-
nlsing village. They ^vere accompanied
by Engineer Young cf Marquette, and
secured much informi.tion that will be
of aid and value in siolving the prob-
lem of a new and ad«<iuate water sup-
ply for Munislng.
I.shpeming — Ralph Trethewey and
Miss Elsie Beauchanip were married
Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock at St.
Joseph's church parsonage. Rev. Father
I-:. P. Bordas officiating. They were
attended by Miss NiUie Mahar and
J. Sands, both of Munislng, where Mr.
Trethewey Is employi>d.
Sault Ste. Marie — J jdge Runnels has
sentenced George Ain.sworth of Trout
Lake to seventy-five days In the De-
troit house of correction, after a con-
viction on the charge of carrying con-
cealed weapons. Ainsworth was ar-
rested by Deputy Shitrlff Rainey after
the former, who had been drinking,
had shot off a revoP'er.
Marquette — Rev. Piatt Amstutz, of
New Athens, Ohio, tD whom was re-
cently extended a call to the pastorate
of the Presbyterian church in this
city, lias accepted i iie call and ex-
pects to come to Marquette to assume
his pastoral duties about June 1.
Calumet — Dr. \Vlnfield S. Hall,
dean of the Northwestern Medical
school of Chicago, his just completed
three days of strenuous work in the
Copper country, leisturing on social
purity to audiences of both sexes.
Hancock — A pretty wedding was
solemnized at Tamarack location at-
urday evening, when Miss Lottie
James, daugliter of Mv. and Mrs. James
H. James, became tiie bride of Daniel
Nicholls. Kev. J. C. McCune, pastor of
tlie Tamarack M. E. church officiated,
the ceremony having occurred at the
home of the bride's ; arents, No. 3 Elm
street.
Calumet — The deat.i took place Mon-
day morning of the 8-month-old child
of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Richards, of
2009 Calumet avenue
Baraga — The fire department has
elected these officers: Chief, Peter
Mayo; assistant cliiei, Homer Pennock;
foreman, John Cote ; assistant fore-
man, Charles Cameijn, Jr.; secretary,
James McMahon, Jr.; treasurer, Joseph
Girard; trustee, Fred Strickland,
Adolph Girard and George Tiieobald,
Jr.
Calumet — The funeral of the late
Mrs. Jerry Cronln of Osceola took place
Tuesday morning with services at the
Sacred Heart church, and interment in
Lake View cemeterj. The deceased,
who was aged 49 years, died on Sat-
urday afternoon, folljwing a year's ill-
ness, iieart trouble being the cause.
Hubbell — Mrs. Acolph Lemier, aged
54 years, died at her home here .Sun-
day as the result of a paralytic str<)ke
which she sustained some time ago.
Mrs. Lemier had b»:en a resident of
the Torch Lake toums for a number
of years. Siie is survived by a large
family.
Hancock — Much praise is accorded
the children's choi:' of .St. Joseph's
parochial school for the talent dis-
? layed at the song service which was a
eature of the 8 o'clock mass at St.
Joseph's church Easter. The singing,
with an accompaniment by the orches-
tra of the Young Men's Catholic club,
was a specially beautiful part o_f the
service.
Houghton — W^'A. Paine of Boston,
president of the Copper Range Consoli-
dated, accompanied by his son. Ward
Paine, arrived in H«)ughton on Satur-
day afternoon in a special Copper Range
train, which brougl t him from Lake
mine. Mr. Paine arrived at the Lake
on Saturday morning and spent the
day inspecting that property.
SHE
SUFFERED
FIVE YEARS
Finally Cured by Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound.
Erie, Pa. — "I suffered for five years
from female troubles and at last was
almost helpless. I
went to three doc-
tors and they did
me no good, so my
sister aavised me to
try Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable
Compound, and
when I had taken
only two bottles I
could see a big
change, so I took
six bottles and I am
now strong and well
know how to express
again. I don't
my thanks for the good it has done me
and I hope all suffering women will
give Lydia E. Piukham's Vegetable
Compound a trial. It was worth its
weight in gold."— Mrs. J. P. Endlich,
R. F. D. No. 7, Erie. Pa.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotic or harm-
ful drugs, and to-day holds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases we know of, and
thousands of voluntary testimonials
are on file in the Pinkham laboratory
at Lynn, Mass., from women who have
been cured from almost every form of
female complaints, such as mdamma-
tion, ulceration, displacements, fibroid
tumors, irregularities, periodic pains;
backache, indigestion and nervous
prostration. Every suffering woman
owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound a trial.
If you want special advice write
Mrs.Pinkhani, Lynn.Mas.s., forit.
It is free and alwayti helpful.
THE BIG
r —
JEWELRY
SALE
DAKOTA BRiEFS
jij-i_rLn_ri ^^■^•^^m.^^.^^m^^.m^,^.^
Minot'M New Conunlimlonerw.
Minot. N. D.. April 19.— The last
meeting of the old board of city com-
missioners was held Monday evening.
W. S. Shaw and K. H. Boyer, the new
commissioners, filed their oaths of of-
fice and are now city commissioners of
Minot. The law provides that the term
shall begin on the third Tuesday in
April
•
MlBot Mau Gets Contmct.
Minot. N. D., April 19.— Col. Alex
Scarlett, president of the Scarlett Office
& Bank Supply company of this city,
received word vesterday that his bid
for the furnishing of the Interior of
the new courthouse of Divide county at
Crosby had been accepted, and he will
leave for that place in a few days to
take up the work.
Grand Forks. N D. — The steamer
Grand Forks cleared for Belmont, forty
miles up the river Monday morning.
This is the first river trip of the sea-
son. The Grand Forks is manned by a
crew of twenty-two men and will bring
down five barge loads of wheat from
the city up the river.
Carrington, N. D. — Bud Floyd was
arrested by Sheriff Atkfhs on a farm
southwest of Melville on an informa-
tion charging him with the robbery of
Henry Harrison in Carrington last
Januarv. Bud was jtiven a preliminary
hearing this week but an adjourment
has been taken until later when the
defendant will e'ther be bound over
to the district court or released.
Grand Forks, N. D. — Will Hawkes,
formerly of this city, writes that he is
now located at Montesano, ^^ as... as
manager of the Montesano Light &
Water company and that he and Mrs.
Hawkes, nee Delia Hanrahan, had Just
returned from Wenatchee, Wash.,
where they attended the funeral of the
late Harry Hanrahan, Mrs. Hawkes'
brother. . ,,
Fargo, N. D. — The fourth annual ball
Brings
ties for
and
unusual
watch
you know
opportuni-
bargains —
Esterly^s
Watches Are
Best
Come in
take a look.
tomorrow and
E. L ESTERLY
JEWELRY CO,,
I 428 West Superior St.
* ^P^^^^N^^^^^N^h^N^^^k^k^M
WISCONSIl^ BRIEFS
InterestlBK Marinette Case.
Marinette, Wis.. April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — A number of inter-
esting cases will be tried at the May
term of the Marinette county circuit
court. Among them will be the cele-
brated^ "squatter town" cases and the
Young divorce case in which the hus-
band contends that his bride of a few
weeks is an epileptic.
^'iMConHln Inmaten Increase.
Madison, Wis., April 19. — An increase
of 8 per cent in two years in the num-
oer of insane persons Incarcerated in
Wisconsin state and county asylums is
shown in compilation of statistics an-
nounced by the state board of control
today Two years ago the total was
0,156, or one to every 359 of the popu-
lation, and on March 31 of this year It
iSE block From Grand Central Sta*'
tion — Subway, Expresa and
Local — Elevated and Surface
Car lines. This widely and favorably
known Hotel crowns Murray Hill—
the moat desirable of central loca-
tions, with the fashionable shopping
and Uieatre districts directly at hand.
Extensive improvements completer
Popular prices — European plan.
We request your patronage.
B. L. M. Bates
Louis P. Roberts
> Pre^rietifrt
Geo. T. Sandalls, Manager
Ashland — Judge Parish is home
again from Randolph, Vt., where he
went to attend the funeral of his
brother. He opened the April term of
court Tuesday morning, with the jur-
ors in attendance.
Milwaukee — A wive of thievery
which has been sweeping the county
the last two weeks reach^^d the clima.v
of boldness Sunday night when eight
stores in South Milwaukee were en-
tered.
Mantowoc — Caughi under the chin
by a falling electric light wire while
at work on top of a moving bojf car,
Walter Thornton, a Northwestern
brakeman. wag dragged 150 feet by the
side of the train bc^fore he could ex-
tricate himself. His escape from death
is considered a miracle.
La Crosse — His Toot caught 'n a
switch and powerless to move, Con-
ductor E. A. Dowel, aged :56. of La
Crosse, was comoilled to wait until a
string of box cars backed down and
crushed out bi.s llf-i at Lynxville, Wis.,
early Monday morr'ng.
Manitowoc — Acjorilng to .i report
of the postoffice di^partment. 189 ac-
counts have been opened in the i>ostal
bank at Manitowo? Deposits aggre-
gate M.404, the average per depositor
being $23.30.
Fond du Lac — At the Plymouth Con-
gregational church Sunday night the
Rev. L. H. Kelier, formerly of Mil-
waukee, paid an eloquent tribute to
the Rev J- J Keenan, pastor of St.
Patrick's church f o • thirty years, be-
ing the first time In the history of
Fond du Lac that a Protestant church
service was turned into a m-imorial for
a dead priest.
Milwaukee — John J. Kiely, a mem-
ber for thirty years of the Milwaukee
poUce force, who was retired on a
pension two years ago, died in his
home, 53 4 Murray avenue, Sunday
night, aged 73 years.
Sheboygan — With the closing of a
contract for 11, OO cases, or 500,000
pounds of condensed milk, with thj
navy department, the Sheboygan Evap-
orated Milk company will supply the
entire United States navy with milk
until next Septemb< r.
Madison— Archbfshop S. tx. M-^ssmor
of Milwaukee. Mor day dedicated the
new Father Pettlt parochial school, be-
ing assisted by the Rev. Henry Dreis
of Madison, the Rev. Henry Hanz of
Belolt and the Re?. Bernard Traudt.
secretary and charceilor of the Mil-
waukee diocese. Tie dedicatory serv-
ices, which Includid the blessing of
every room in the big building were
followed by high miss In St. Raphael's
church.
DO YOU REALIZE
OIFFIGULTY OF QUITTING
Men Find It Quite Impossible to Quit
Drinking Liquor Without Assistance.
All drinking men realize the fact
they cannot quit alcohol without as-
sistance, and if they were certaia
they could be treated privately with-
out the loss of time and money, re-
quired under the old systems of treat-
ment, they would be only too glad to
take advantage of the opportunity
and have all craving for alcoholic
drinks permanently destroyed. The
Xeal Three-Day Liquor Cure destroys
all appetite for drink in three days'
time, and without the use of painful
and dangerous hypodermic injections
or injurious drugs. During the timo
the Neal Institute has been located
in St. Paul at 676 Dayton ave.. a
large number of patients have been
treated without a single failure or
bad after effect. It makes no dif-
ference what the patient drinks, or
how long he has been drinking, the
result is always the same — a cure la
only three days' time.
If you are afflicted with the drink
habit and really want to be cured,
write to the Neal Institute Co.. corner
Belknap and Seventh St.. Superior.
Wis., for their free booklet, giving
full information and a copy of their
contract and guarantee bond. It will
be mailed to you under a plain sealed
envelope and everjthing will be strict-
ly confidential. You can be treated
at the Superior Institute, or at the
St. Paul. Minn,, Institute, 676 Dayton
avenue, or the Minneapolis. Minn.. In-
stitute, corner Fourth avenue south
and Seventh street, whichever hap-
pens to be most convenient to you.
Every Womail
Is Interested sbd should know
about th« woDdtrfnl
MARVEL >» flirting Spray
tijn ix%<i Hurtxon. llnst— Saf.
est— Most Conrealent.
Ittlcaas** lastmatlf ,
Ask rear 4ranl*< '•r tt.
Iftie cannot supply the
MAKITKfj. accept no
other, but send stamp for
Ulususted book— ••«i»<i.
tall puttoulart and <tUe<>t:ons lii-
valuable I o Unites. MARVBI. CO..
«« K. lioa ST.. HBlir lOKK.
9m aato m ■» ■"■Ub
Itslrai
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Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 19, 1911.
THE IRON RANGES
CLOSE AVENUE
TO EXTRACT ORE
Part of Chisholm Thorough-
fare to Be Fenced Off
for Mining Work
Chisholm. Minn., April 19.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The south end of
Central avenue, where it crosses Hem-
lock street, has been closed tempor-
arily in order to permit the Euclid
Minins company to get out the ore
underneath the street and the avenue.
After the ore has been removed and
the cave has fallen, the mining com-
j.anv is to till in the avenue and street
again, leaving conditions ju.st as they
were before. It is estimated that the
street and avenue will be closed for
about ninety days.
A. B. Coates of Virginia, principal
owner of the Euclid mine, was here
Monday, looking alter his Interests
at tlie mine.
ISHPEMING MAN
DIES ON RANGE
Herman Jaedecke, Well-
Known Cigar Manufacturer,
Called at Chisholm.
Chisholm, Minn., April 19.— (Special
to The Herald.) — Herman Jaedecke of
Ishpemlng. Mich., died yesterday In
the Neally hotel of pneumonia. The
bodv was shipped to Ishpemlng. Mr.
Jaef^ecke was about 55 years of age
and for several years had been mak-
ing this territory in tiie interest of
the Plantation Cigar company of Ish-
pemlng. In whicli he was heavily in-
terested. He was well known all over
Norttiern Minnesota and many expres-
sions of regret over his passing were
heard.
GILBERT BOWLERS HAVE
ENDED SITCESSFIL SEASON
Gilbert. Minn.. April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The Gilbert bowling al-
leys closed Mondav for the season.
Tlie allevs have been running for the
past five' months and have proved sue-
PHYSICIAN PAYS
HIGH TRIBUTE
To the Remarkable Skill and
Success of United Doctors'
New Treatment.
cessful from the start. The Gilbert
bowling team are well satisfied with
the record made by them the past sea-
son, having secured second place
among the range teams, (jurries' Kit-
tens of Virginia being first. Manager
Morln left today for Tower, where he
will bo in the employ of the Minnesota
fish Jiatcherles during the summer.
The afleVs wlU be under his manage-
ment again next fall.
The Gilbert baseball team is trying
out their material for this summer's
team und the outlook Is good for a
fast one. They have made arrange-
ments to join the new Mesaba league
and are practicing dally.
GUN-TOTERS ARE
HEAVILY FINED
-—
Two Stevenson Men Mulcted
$50 and Costs in Hibbing
Municipal CourL
Hibblngs, Minn., April 19.— (Special
to The Her.\ld.)— Peter Orsmlch and
Joe Thomas were each lined $50 anl
$8.75 costs for carrying revolvers In
Stevenson yesterday. Deputy Sheriff
O'Donnell has had considerable trouble
with certain members of this com-
mr.nity and had previously warned the
men but it was useless so he took
them in to the Hibbing lock-up and
iliey were severely dealt with by the
court. Later in the day John Polish
liad an automobile rid© in company
witli the same officers, and faced the
cliarge of drunkenness in Hibbing this
morning as a result thereof. The mu-
nicipal court Judge sentenced eight
men for various offences yesterday at
Hibbing.
Brooklyn Cuttlns .\ffrar.
Tony Green was badly cut up In
Brooklyn last evening. He was un-
der the Influence of liquor when
brought In by the Brooklyn constable,
and the officials are on the look out
'or the parties who supplied the liquor.
-V warrant was sown out for the man
who is alleged to have hit him; the
injury having been done with a beer
bottle. One eye was very badly
lacerated, and was almost entirely
closed as a consequence, and his face
looked more like a battlefield than
anything else when he was landed in
jail.
ginians. The new home may be opened
next month.
SPARTA RUBBED
OFF THE MAP
County Auditor Is Notified
That Vfflage No Longer
Exists.
County Auditor Halden was notified
this morning that the village of Sparta
at an election held last February had
decided to dissolve.
There were but three votes cast, and
eacli vote favored rubbing Sparta oft
the map.
Some time ago the Steel corporation
wanted to open up a mine under the
site of the town and the buildings were
all moved to Gilbert.
At one time Sparta was a thriving
and prosperous town of several thou-
sand people.
There Is some question as to whether
or not the election was held strictly
in accordance with the law. The mat-
ter will probably be brought up at
tlie next meeting of the county com-
missioners.
BOTH MEN LVrOXICATED.
As a rule the ethical practitioners
of medicine lose no opportunity to
condiinn any advertising doctor as
unrfliiible and a fake. In the case
of the United Doctors however, phy-
sicians who are at all acquainted
with the methods of these master
medical specialists pay high tribute
to their exceptional skill and ability
in curing obscure chronic diseases.
As evidence of this fact, the following
occurence will be of interest.
A certain ethical doctor, whose
name is withheld for obvious reasons,
wrote to his friend, Dr. F. T. Riley,
who is one of the most prominent
phvsicians in Wisconsin, and whose
offiice is on the third floor of the
Alhambra Theater building, Milwau-
kee, in regard to the United Doctors
and their new methods of treatment.
In this letter to Dr. Riley the phy-
gican stated that he had a case which
was beyond his power to handle but
that he had heard of a similar case
whiih had been successfully handled
by the United Doctors, and desired
to know if it would be policy to call
Dr. Duckwortli of the United Doctors
in consultation. The following Is the
letter which this doctor received from
Dr. Riley:
•Dear Doctor — In answer to yours
of recent date. I have seen consider-
able work done by Dr. Duckworth
and other members of the United
Doctors' staff and have called Dr.
Duckworth in consultation on diffi-
cult cases. Especially have I reason
to thank him for his direction of the
treatment of a case of liver trouble
with an Involvement of the kidneys
and stomach. It was a desperate
case which had been brought me by
a doctor up state, for treatment. Not
feeling that I cared to assume the
responsibility of such a bad case I
called Dr. Duckworth in consultation,
and am able to state that the patient
was cured under my treatinent as di-
rected by Dr. Duckworth.
"Another time I called Dr. Duck-
worth to advise me in a case of a
patient who had weak nerves and a
bad blood disorder, and his treatment
of that case was equally successful.
I consider the United Doctors among
our best specialists in chronic and
nervous diseases. You will find them
honorable and reliable. Fraternally
yours. F. T. RILEY, M. D."
The expert knowledge of the
United Doctors is not only recognized
by physicans, but the leading finan-
ciers, business men. newspaper men
and clergymen and, above all, by the
thousands of those who were sick and
suffering and who have been made
well and happy by these world
famous medical specialists.
The United Doctors who have their
Duluth institute located on the third
floor of the Columbia building are in
receipt of hundreds of letters daily,
praising them for the wonderful
good they are doing. If you are sick
and suffering and want to be made
well and happy, call on these noted
specialists as they solicit difficult
cases which other doctors have failed
to cure. Consultation Is free to all
callers.
The United Doctors accept no in-
curable cases for treatment but they
cure many cases which other doctors
have pronounced incurable.
Pair Struck By Train Near Chis-
holm, Under Influence of Liquor.
Chisholm, Minn., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Joseph Zardovlch, the
Kittsville boardlnghouse-keeper and
another Austrian, Frank Terugona,
also of Kittsville, who were struck
by a Mlssabe locomotive Monday night
while walking along the railroad
tracks near the Clark mine while en
route home from town, the first named
being killed, were intoxicated, accord-
ing to later developments which ac-
counts for their not heeding the dan-
ger.
The two men had spent the after-
noon in Chisholm and had been drink-
ing freely and about 6:4.5 started for
home walking on the tracks.
About 7 o'clock they had reached the
Clark mine at which point the Great
Northern evening passenger coming
into Ciilsholm runs beside the Missabe
train just coming in from Wllpin Juns-
tion.
Zardovlch getting out of the way
of the Great Nortiiern train stepped
right in the track of the Missabe train
and b.?fore his partner could pull him
out of tlie way he was caught and in-
stantly killed. Terugona also had a
very narrow escape, the train striking
him on the shoulder and knocking him
over and how he escaped so fortunately
seems almost unaccountable.
Zardovich's remains were picked up
and carried into the Chisholm depot
and after they were viewed by tlie
coroner they were taken to the un-
dertaker's.
Zardovlch was 32, a married man,
and leaves a wife and two children.
He was running a boarding house at
Kittsville.
EVELETH COUPLE
GIVEN MPRISE
President Pratt of Curling Club
and Wife Celebrate Wed-
ding Anniversary.
Eveleth, Minn., April 19. — (Special to
Tlie Herald.) — Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A.
Pratt of 412 Jones street celebrated
their 39th wedding anniversary Mon-
day and were the recipients of many
greetings and congratulations from
relatives and friends. A number of
tlielr Eveleth friends gathered in- their
home, taking Mr. and Mrs. Pratt com-
pletely by surprise. Tlie evening was
spent in a most delightful manner.
Mr. and Mrs. Pratt have been resi-
dents of Eveleth for the past eight
years, having come here from ^t. Paul,
SHOAVERS OF ROCK
From Unexpected Blast Descends
Upon Dwelling in Hibbing.
Hibbing, Minn . April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.; — For the third time this
season rocks showered onto the roofs
of residences on North street yesterday
afternoon. The blasting going on in
ihe Oliver cut at the end of North
street between First and Third ave-
nues hurled a piece of rock nearly as
larg'e as ;i. man's head through the roof
of the residence of W. C. Barrett short-
ly after 4 o'clock. One mlssle crashed
Througli the sliingles, sheeting and
coming into contact with the heavy
joist with which the house is built was
stayed in its course and fell to the
lawn below. The inside of the bed-
room below the roof looked as if house
wreckers had been at work, and was
strewn with plaster and chips from
the siiattered roof. Damage to a very
considerable amount was done to the
house and contents. Other roofs In the
neighborhood were damaged in a lesser
degree. An accident in blasting la
said to have caused the affair.
the normal, and Is visiting her par-
ents.
Misses Crawford, K.inkln and Harbin
have returned to resume their duties
as teachers in the public schools, com-
ing from the Twin Cities, where they
spent their Easter yacation.
Miss Fanny Stephenson, who
visiting relatives and friends in
luth the past week has returned.
was
Du-
CLOSES CONTRAa
FOR WHITE WAY
Eveleth CouncO Also Acts Up-
on Saloon License Renew-
als and Other Things.
Eveleth, Minn., April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The city clerk was In-
structed by the council last evening
to advertise for bids for a 2,600,000
gallon crank and flywheel shape
pump.
The Mesaba Telephone company was
given perinlBsion to remove the eighty
telephone poles from iPerce, Jones,
Jackson and Hayes streets, and
Adams, Grant and McKinley avenues,
to the adjacent alleys, where cables
Avill replace the wires.
Health Commissioner Dr. N. C. Bulk •
ley recommended that a slaughter
house be erected within the city lim-
its, to eliminate the slaughtering of
animals near the outskirts of town.
The application of Kaner Brothers to
erect a slaughter house on Grant ave-
nue and Hayes street, was referred to
the board of health wltli instructions
to decide upon a more suitable loca-
tion. Enos Rennier w^ appointed
watchman at fc5t. Mary's lake for the
summer.
Vacation For Firemen.
Two amendments to the rules gov-
erning the fire department, granting
firemen tlfteen days vacation yearly
with pay, if employed one year, and
empowering the Are chief to appoint a
substitute with the pay of a truckman
to relieve those on a vacation, wercs
adopted. Max Stlpltech was granted
permission to erect a brick addition in
the rear of the Bijou theater. The
health co.mmlssioner was instructed to
send notices to residents to clean up
premises to avoia arrest. The city en-
gineer was Instructed to furnish esti-
mates for paving Jones, Pierce and
Monroe streets, from Douglas to
Aadms avenues, with macada.m. The
contract with John Swanson, granting
him until June 15, to install the forty-
six standards on the Grant avenue
white way, for >4,798, was also ap-
proved.
The applications of Edward Finch,
John Glode, Andrew Anderson, M.
Johnson, George Kotse, Anton Frits,
Oscar Enderlch, A. Labanoyic, E. An-
tilla, for renewals of tlieir liquor li-
censes were granted. Jacob Vcranc's
application was referred to the police
and license committee. E. Beck of
Two Harbors was reauested to furnl.sh
grates and a man for a one week's test
of the present coal now used at the
pumping station, and also for a
week's test of screen coal. The city en-
gineer was Instructed to resurvey
Kayal road near Klmberly avenue, in
the front of the Glr«rson residence to
determine the grades for the cement
sidewalk paving. The matter of in-
stalling sidewalks on oJnes street, be-
tween Fayal and Roosevelt avenues,
on Roosevelt avenue between Jones
and Jackson streets , and on Jones
street from Roosevelt avenue to Fayal
road, was referred to the street and
alley committee and city attorney.
City Clerk Bickford at the mandamus
proceedings next Saturday before Judge
Hughes, when he will have to show
cause why he should not accept certain
signatures to the petition asking for
the recall of Alderman Kimball.
GOES TO DULUTH FIRM.
Contract for Heating New Aurora
High School Awarded.
April 19.— (Special
meeting
Aurora, Minn.,
The Herald.) — A record
range high school board has
held here, the local board
session about twelve hours
to
_ of a
just been
being in
consider-
ing various bids for the equipment of
tlie new high school.
Twenty-one bids were received and
nearly all contained certain conditions
which had to be considered at length.
The plumbing was awarded to Joe
Polak of Biwabik, the wiring to the
Tritchler Electric company of Virginia
and the heating went to D. R. Black of
Duluth.
The engine and generator contract
was not let owing to the fact that the
board wanted to see some of the en-
gines in operation.
Virginia Firemen Dance.
Virginia, Minn., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The annual Easter
ball given by the Brotherhood of Hail-
road Firemen Monday evening was a
distinct success.
About 150 couples were present. The
hall was decorated with the American
colors and lanterns and headlights. A
feature of the evening was a moving
picture machine showing the life of the
railroad man.
To Drill In >VinconMin.
Gilbert. Minn., April 19.— (Special to
The Herald.) — M. A. Masterson, who
has been engaged by the Eastern Min-
ing company of this place to drill their
property in Vernon county, Wisconsin,
will start operations immediately. Tlie
company has leased 260 acres and ex-
pect a good thing, as the outcropping
of ore shows a depth of fourteen feet.
Farmers in that vicinity while sinking
wells have gone througli. sixty feet of
good ore.
SESSION IS ADJOURNED
(Continued from page 1.)
THOMAS A. PRATT.
LEASES FARGO THEATER.
Frank Carpenter of Eveleth Takes
Over ^ew Orphenm.
Eveleth, Minn. April 19. — Special to
The Herald.) — Frank E. Carpenter,
former manager ot the Othello tlieater,
has leased the Orpheum theater, at
Fargo, N. D., and will leave next
month with his family for Fargo, re-
taining his interests in the Healy the-
ater at Hibbing and the Grand theater
at Virginia.
EVELETH BRIEFS.
and In that time they have made
scores of good friends. Mr. Pratt Is
president of the local Curling club. He
is also prominent in the Masonic lodge
and as a member of the First Presby-
terian churcli, of which lie is a trus-
tee and treasurer. Mrs. Pratt Is an
earnest and enthusiastic worker In the
Presbyterian church, and a former
president of the Ladies' aid society.
Among those present were: Mr.
and Mrs. John Goard, Mr. and Mrs. A.
O. Sisson, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Har-
vey, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Davey, Dr.
and Mrs. Denton, Mr. and Mrs. Rich-
ard Polkinghorne, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Jesmore, Mrs. M. Sheehy. Mrs. M. E.
Ferris, Mr. and Mrs. William Chappel,
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Kingston, Dr and
Mrs. H. J. Schulze, Mr. and Mrs. R. M.
Cornwell, Mr and Mrs D. B. Austin,
Mr. and Mrs. William Emery, Mrs. J.
P. N. Ward, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Mitchell,
the Misses Eliza Feir and Dorothy
Denton and Rev. Philip A. Schwarz, Jr.
TOWER BRIEFS.
Tower. Minn., April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Mrs. John Pfelffer has
returned from Virginia, where she has
been visiting her daughter.
Miss Esther Bystrom, who has been
attending school In Eveleth is spend-
ing the spring vacation here with her
parents.
J. C. Johnston has returned from Du-
luth.
Sidney Hill of Eveleth Is visiting at
the William Hill home.
Miss Julia Pederson arrived tram
Duluth, where she has been attending
r
Posts and Poles
And Other Timber Products.
McLEOD-DAVIS TIMBER CO.,
B15 Lyceum
Dulutb,
Bulldlns.
Minn.
Eveleth, Minn., April 19. — (Special t«
The Herald.) — The Masons will confer
the master degree on a class this even-
ing at the Masonic hall. The fra-
ternal work will be followed by a
luncheon.
The Home Heating & Electric com-
pany, which have maintained tempor-
ary quarters at the plant since th-?lr
office in the Dowllng block was dam-
aged by fire, have removed their of-
tices to I'ierce street.
John Warn, Edward MiUette, Thomas
J. Trengrove, Sam Siegel, Harry Burns
and M. Hill, returned last evening
from Hibbing, where they served on
the jury.
A Swedish entertainment will be
arlven at Monitor hall, tomorrow even-
ing by August Berg and company.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Baker are cx-
r>ected bp.ck this week from Hope, N
D., where they were calied by the ill-
ness of a relative.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Sheehy enjoyed a
vl^it from Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Klrcher
of Hibbing, who motored to Eveleth
in Mr. Kircher's auto.
VIRGINIA INTERESTED
• IN BETHEL SCHEME.
Virginia, Minn., April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Interest Is taken In the
announcement made by Rev. J. Moody,
formerly of the Duluth Bethel, at the
local meeting of the Duluth Presby-
tery, that he will open u Bethel here
for lumberjacks and other needy per-
sons, If given suJttcient support by Vir-
Building
Material
for body and brain.
Grape-Nuts
FOOD
has stood the test
years—
for
So good that its users
are now numbered by
millions.
••There's a Reason**
METHODISTS ARE
HOLDING SESSION
The Subject of "Organization"
First Considered By
Hibbing Meet
Hibbing, Minn., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The district con-
ference of the Dulutli District, M. E.
church, opened in the First Methodist
church last evening at 7:30 with a
service of song and praise by Rev. W.
H. Farrell of Ely. This was followed
by an address by Rev. Dr. Rice of Du-
luth. After the address, a receptlo.i
was held in the church by the Rev.
and Mrs. J. P. Plckard, and members
of the church. A very large number
attended the services and reception.
Delicious refreshments were served by
the Dadies' Aid Society of the Metho-
dist church.
A devotional service was held this
morning at which the Rev. Merton S.
Rice of Duluth presided in the churcli
at 8:45. At 9:15 the first business ses-
sion was held, the matters being dis-
cussed being "Organization," and after
this the appointment committees were
considered.
Tlie following delegates arrived yes-
terday: Rev. Charles H. Blake, Cloquet,
Rev. James H. Roberts, Duluth; Dea-
coness Bertha Ridge, of the Duluth Dea-
coness home, Duluth; each of whom
will be the guests of Capt. Webb, 116
Garfield street; Rev. E. K. Copper, Du-
luth; superintendent of this district;
Rev. W. H. Farrell, Ely, guests of C.
M. Atkinson, 311 Lincoln; Rev. C. P.
Keast and wife, Chisholm, guest of Dan
McLeod, 330 Superior street; Rev. G. H
Voy, McGregor, Minn., guest of Will-
lam Watson, 219 Sellers; Rev. T. S.
Oadams, Two Harbors, guest of Supt.
Hanson, 502 Sellers; Rev. C. P. Oaten,
Duluth, guest of Mr. Payne, 426 Lin-
coln; Rev. B. F. Stldd and wife, guest
of Mr. Schmidt, 426 Sellers; Rev.
James W. Schenck, Aurora, guest
of Mr. Thomas, 422 McKinley street;
Rev. G. F. Silloway, Coleralne, guest ot
O. W. Randall, 314 Garfield; Rev. R. W.
Wilcox, Virginia, guest of Mr. Cox, 122
Sellers; and the Rev. Merton Rice, Du-
luth, guest of Supt. Blair, 329 Lincoln.
\%'e4lne«day Afternoon Proerrani.
The program for this afternoon and
evening follows:
2 p. m., Devotlonals, Rev. Merton S.
Rice. D.D., First Methodist church, Du-
luth; 2:30, paper, "The Place of the
jJeaconess in Methodism," Rev. John
W. Powell, D.D., Endlon church, Du-
luth; 3, discussion led by Mrs. Kreid-
ler, superintendent Deaconess' home,
Duluth; 3:15, paper, "The Care and
Preservation of Church and Parson-
age Property," Rev. Charles P. Keast,
t iiisholm; 3:35, discussion led by Rev.
Charles W. Ramshaw, Proctor; 3:45,
paper, "Mannerisms That S^poilt Pulpit
Kfficlency," Rev. William H. l«arrell,
Kly; 4:05, discussion led by Rev. W.
G. Boyle, Asbury church, Duluth; 4:30.
adjournment.
WedDeRday Evenlna:>
7:30 p. m.. Service of song and
praise, Rev. William H. Farrell; 8,
address, 'Methodism and the World
Kield," Rev. Charles Fox Davis, Brain-
erd; 8:30, address, "The Literature of
Methodism," Rev. Dan B, Brummltt, D.
D., editor Northwetsern Christian Ad-
vocate, Chicago, Benediction.
Knapp drainage investigation commit-
tee, after Representatives Robertson
ajid C. H. Warner had made a hard
iwt futile fight for the adoption of the
former's minority report recommend-
ing tlie immediate decapitation of
Drainage Engineer Ralph.
Representative Knapp moved the
adoption of the majority report. Rep-
resentative Warner moved a substi-
tute that both reports and the evidence
be referred to the public examiner, but
his motion was lost. 34 to 62. Repre-
sentative Robertson, strongly faup-
ported by Wp.rner, moved the adoption
of the minority report but the motion
was lost, ;il to 46.
Representative Kneeland of Minne-
apolis offered a resolution calling upon
the governor to summon an extra ses-
sion to consider reapportionment.
Representative Congdon gave notice
of debate which would put the resolu-
tion over the session.
Representative Kneeland moved to
suspend the rules so It could be con-
sidered at once, but his motion and
the resolution were finally disposed of
by the adoption of Representative
Davles' motion to lay the matter on
the table.
• • •
The house adopted a resolution by
Kerry Conley approving universal
peace and indorsing President Taffs
proposal of a peace treaty with Great
Britain.
• 4> *
The liouse also adopted a resolution
requiring the members to return the
knives, fountain pens, scissors and
otiier Junk tliat were part of their
perquisites.
• • *
Senator G. H. .Sullivan brought up
his resolution opposing the ratification
of the Canadian reciprocity treaty and
kept the senate under call on it, but
the senate adjourned without action
upon it.
• * *
The governor was notified of the en-l
of tlie sesson by a committee composed
of Senators ^\ ilson and Nelson and
Representatives Wescott, J. T. Johnson
and Minette.
• • *
About the only thing labor got out
of the session was the Lundeen bill
raising the limit of damages for death
from wrongful act from $5,000 to ?7,500
and Senator Rocknes resolution provid-
ing for a committee of five senators to
present a workingmen's compensation
act at the next session.
• * •
The Income tax resolution died in the
senate with last night's adjournment.
• • •
Lieutenant Governor Gordon and
Speaker Dunn were each presented
with beautiful silver sets, and the
house Democrats gave the speaker a
fine ten-volume biography of Lincoln.
STILLMAN H. BINGHAM.
I»l
L
zsd iiMMm
Id
CaldweU's Electric Cut Coffee
i6 OUNCES DELICIOUS COFFEE
EVERY LEAD SEALED CAN
IN
Sold at All Grocers Everyivtiere at 35 cts. a pound
For Baby's Comfort and Mother's Convenience
Here is the only conveyance designed for the baby that will absolutely
permit the mother to take her child everywhert. Shopping, calling, visit-
ing, riding on cars, trains, or elevators, it makes no difference where
you go or how you go, the baby need never be lifted out. The
it II combined Wheeler, Carrier, Bassinet and Jumper. It
can be pushed or pulled, carried on the arm or will stand
alone— can't topple over. Can be changed from a wheeler
to a carrier or chair In an instant. 8imply pull a cord.~
Go -Basket settles gently to the ground with the wheels out
ol' sight and out of the way. Ko complicated mechanism
to get out of order— works so simply and easily that any
grown child can do it. Come and examine it yourself.
JlM<te«a<fWEl
FARMERS' FREE LIST
BILL IS SUBMIHED TO
HOUSE BY COMMITTEE
cusslon of the free listing of fresh
meats and meat products. "Ihe exist-
ing duties on meats and m« at prod-
ucts," it is asserted, "are for the ad-
vantage of this combination only" —
a combination that "controls- the mar-
kets both in buying and se ling and
the result is a substantial acditlon to
the high cost of living from "ttrhlch the
people suffer."
•'Removal of duties on these pro-
ducts," is is argued, will place the
farmers on a free market as to food
stuffs and food products. For this
reason that the public desires protec-
tion shall not be maintained to pro-
duce abnormally high prices in any
form. The bill also seeks exemption
from duty on wheat. Hour, zmolina,
rve flour, buckwlieat flour, corn meal
and all prepared cereal foods, biscuits,
bread and similar articles not sweet-
ened.
In discussing free lumber placed In
the bill, hardwood excepted, tiie re-
port maintains that the ownership of
timber in this country haj. become
practically a monopoly and has passed
for the most part into the hands of
great corporations and Interests which
are speculating on the increasing
scarcity. . ^ , ^
President Taft is again rel erred to,
the report from his speech of Feb.
26. 1911, in which he said: "By giv-
ing our own people access to Canadian
forests, we shall reduce the :ons.ump-
tlon of our own, which In the hands of
a comparatively few owners, \.'e have a
value that requires the enlargement
of our available timber resc'urces."
Sewing machines, the report aver.s,
are sold abroad by American manu-
facturers cheaper than at home and
should not be protected. The manu-
facturers would have by the proposed
bill, the additional advantage of free
lumber.
Salt, also Included In the free list,
the report urges, should be free from
artificial enhancement In price, the do-
mestic supply being dependent upon
a limited nvimber ot natural deposits,
controlled by concentrated interests.
«
Happy Day Tomorrow.
Women will smile when they se<
the Oray-Tallant company ad on pag
7. And thev'll beam with delight wiien
they share in the silk bargains at the
sale tomorrow.
DnvUlHon UecllneN Diplomatic Job.
Madif-on, AVis., April ll'. — Former
Governor James O. Davidson has de-
cided to decline the proffer of a diplo-
matic post at either 13i>gota, Columbia,
or Montevideo, Uruguay, according to
his friends here. He feels he cannot
afford to take either place, for even
$10,000 a year will not cover the cost
of living and keep up his position at
either post.
If a few more table guests would
make It profitable for you to keep
boarders, then you have business for
a Herald want ad.
THE PALM ROOM
At the SPALDING
MOST DELIGHTFUL AND LUXUHI.
OUS RESTAURANT IN DULUTH.
I
Postum Cereal Co., Limited.
BaiUe Creek, Mich.
J
REPORT NOT DECISIVE.
Virginia Council Committee Non-
committal on Baying Plant.
Virginia, Minn., April 19. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Without recommending
or reporting against the purchase of
the local water and light plants the
special council committee that looked
into the matter made a non-committal
report to the council last night, made
up chiefly of data as to the cost of
operation, etc. The Intent of the re-
port seemed to be that the council
should go slow in purchasing the plant
at this time.
R. E. Patterson of Duluth, who re-
ported on the plants as to their worth,
placed the waterworks at |320,000 and
the light plant at |113,000.
The city attorney was directed to
look Into the franchise under which the
plants are operated.
He was also instructed to defend
(Continued from page 1.)
mcnt that the Republican party had
modified its tariff policy so as to limit
it for purposes of protection to the
difference in cost of production here
and abroad, with a reasonable profit
to the Amercan producer, the commii-
tee report says:
TmmtM FoRtereil By TnrlflT.
"This is a confession, as was the
Republican platform of 1908 that the
theory of high protective duties, as
put forth by the Republican party has
broken down, that combinations and
trusts which prey upon the people have
been fostered by the tariff and that
under high tariff protection Americr
manufacturers iiave forced unreason- 1
able profits from the people." Again
the report declares:
"The Canadian reciprocity agree-
ment now before the house is a recog-
nition on the part of the admlnlstra'
tlon of the injurious effects of the ex-
treme protective policy which has so
long been imposed upon the country
and is an effort to mitigate its ef-
fects."
The reciprocity agreement, the com-
mittee asserts, cannot afford the
American people all the needed relief
from high prices. "Action on the agree-
ment Involves the necessity of further
and immediate action in removing a
number of duties on Imports from
other countries in order that Justice
may be done to the great army of
farmers, who in the agreement have
all t.ie protection removed from their
products without a corresponding or
reciprocal removal of the protective
duties most burdensome on the com-
modities they must purchase as neces-
sary to sustain their lives and indus-
tries."
Trusts Control Implementa.
The report takes up in detail the
classified list of articles included In
the free list. Regarding agricultural
Implements it says their manufacture
Is controlled by trusts and combina-
tions that have sold in foreign coun-
tries at lower prices than at home
building up their foreign trade from
$3,859,184 in 1890 to $28,340,344 'n 1910.
Bagging and bailing material, essen-
tial in the transportation of agrlcul-
I tural products, the report says, cannot
receive benefits of protection in home
markets and duties on them "have
annoyed and burdened the farmers to
add to the profits of exacting trusts
and combinations."
Concerning hoops, bands, and ties of
iron and steel, barbed wire for fenc-
ing, etc., the report says the high du-
ties make the people dependent upon
the "giant steel Industry" which for
years has sold products lower abroad
than to domestic purchasers and says
that placing them on the free list will
be a "long delayed measure of equity
and justice."
The placing on the free list of all
forms of leather from cattle hides and
skins, together with boots, shoes, har-
ness, saddlery, etc., the committee ar-
gues will be of advantage in manufact-
uring and necessarily of benefit to agri-
cultural producers as well as to all the
people.
•<Be«( TruRt" Assailed.
"The beef trust" is assailed in dla-
POSLAM WORKS WONDERS
ON ANY AFFECTED SKIN
ECZEMA Is
Quickly CurecJ.
COMPLEXIONS Arc
CIeare(d Over Night.
PIMPLES and
Blemishes Banished.
By taking a S7nall part of the skin
affected vcith PIMPLES, MASH,
BLOTCHES, Etc., or vhich i$
UND VL Y IX FL A MED,
ITCHING or CHAFIXG, a?id
applying thereto only a small
quotiity of POSLAJif, an imme-
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the remarkable properties of this
9iew healing agent, a7id enough
POSLAM for the purpose may be
obtained FREE by the use of the
coupon belotc.
POSLAM puts a stop to iching
at once, and its readiness in heal-
ing small surfaces is evidence of
its rapid action in the cvre of ALL ECZEMAS, ACNE, TETTER,
SALT RHEUM, PILES, BARBERS' ITCH, SCALP SCALES; in
short, every surface skin affection. So exhaustively has the merit
of POSLAM been proven and so uniform is its vc^ork of healing
under all conditions, that no one
suffering from any Skin Trouble
can afford to ignore its benefits.
POSLAM is the most important
and dependable skin remedy ever
devised.
Two Sizes, 50 Cents and $2.00
Sold By the Lyceum Pharmacy,
W. A. Abbettand All Druggists.
POSLAM SOAP
Medicated with POSLAM.
Beneficial to the Skin — Anti-
septic — Prevents Disease —
Luxurious for Face, Hands,
Bath or Shampooing. Large
Cake, 25 Cents.
Sold by All Druggists.
TRY POSLAM
FREE
(COUPON No. 2041)
FOR FREE SAMPLE OP POSL.\M, slpn
this coupon and .s^nd It to th- KMER-
GF:XCY laboratories, 32 west 25th
Street, New York City.
NAMi:
ADDRESS
f
>
"■ <
i
— ^1
•t
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:3Si
A»!m.lV'*^i
■Vqp
4-
'Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 19, 1911.
IS
V"
I
LATEST SPORTING NEWS OF THE DAY
f^^l^^^^^^^*^^^^^*^*^^^*^^^^^^0^^^^^^^0^0^0^^0^f^f^^f^^^^^^^*^^^*^*^^^^^S^^^
NO MATCH FOR
McFARLAND
Tommy Murphy Is Out-Boxed
and Out-Fought By
Chicago Boy.
Packey Gives Fine Exhibition
of Ability in Ten-
Round Bout
BURNING OF STANDS AT POLO GROUNDS
WILL COST NEW YORK CLUB A FORTUNE
New York. April 19. — Packy McFar-
land, the fast Chicago lightweight, won
all the way In hU ten-round tight with
Tommy Murphy of Brooklyn at the
Fairmont A. O last night. The Chica-
go boy outboxfd and outfought Murphy.
It was a hard night for the "home-
bred champion." One round only — the
second — went %o Murpliy. w^ille tl>e
Chicago rtghter captured the last seven.
The other two were even. During tlie
latter rounds Murphy tired and McFar-
land toye<i with him.
Tlie tir;5t round gave Indications of a
good tigiit. Each opened warily and
the round en led In a draw. In tlie ^-ec-
ond Murphy brought a roar of applause
when he sent a vicious left to the
wind, staggering McFariand to the
ropes. But Murphy's lead was siiort-
lived. McKarland came hack with a
smile and from thfn on Murphy never
had a chance Miirphy fought vicious-
ly, doggedly, but he was unable to
piiss the guard of the boy from the
stockyards.
McFariand did the leading through-
out the light and gave an exhibition of
footwork and tjlocklng which brought
rounds of applause from the big crowd.
In the fifth lie bt^-gan to force the fight-
ing in earnest. With a right and left
jolt to the face he st-nt Murphy to the
ropes and followed his advantage with
another dose of tlie same medicine.
Wurphy struggled to break through
McFarland's guard, but was unable to
reach. Through the remaining rounds
McFariand furced Murphy hard, land-
ing stnigtng rlglits and lefts.
FIGHT FANS
DISAPPOINTED
Sfurprise and chagrin seized out of
town visitors as well as devotees of
the flstlc game in Duluth and Superior,
Avhen they read 'the report in The Her-
ald last evening, that, the fight sched-
uled between Pal Brown and Thomas
Garry before one of tlie Wisconsin tlglit
clubs was suddenly called off.
It was generally believed that tlie
fight would be allowed to proceed un-
der the statutes of Wisconsin. Under
a boxing law lights are held In Milwau-
kee and other cities of Wisconsin and
the men behind the proposed affair of
last night did not even anticipate any
troul)Ie with the state authorliles.
Both boys were trained to the min-
ute and one of the best tights ever Jield
In Northern Wisconsin was anticipated.
It was generally believed that Garry
would have given Brown tlie best tiglit
he has had during his short fistic ca-
reer.
The .^topping of the scheduled en-
counter may result in a clearer under-
standing of the provisions of the much
discussed Wisconsin tight law. Under
the protection of this law bouts are
being given in various parts of the
Badger state, and this fact gave the
prjnioters bei^lnd tlie proposed fight
every belief that they were acting
wiiolly within the law.
The Herald's announcement of the
action of the authorities last evening
prevented many Duluth people making
a futile visit to the scene of the fight.
but some who did not know of the ac-
tion gathered and held an indignation
meeting when the fact that the fight
would not be allowed was made known.
GOOD FIGHTS ON THE
CARD AT INDIANAPOLIS.
Indianapolis. Ind.. Apri! 19. — Younr:
Donohue of Boston and Kid Farmer of
Feoria are said to be In the best of
condition for their scheduled ten-round
bout here tonight. Both are well un-
der the 133 pounds limit of the light-
weight class.
Of almost equal Importance with the
headline will be the bout between
Harry Donohue of Pekin. III., and
Tommy Bresnahan of Omaha. These
boy.s are also In the lightweight class
and are scheduled to go ten rounds.
Jommy Wattas. bantam champion of
Indiana and Young Sharkey of Read-
ing. Pa., win conclude the card.
TOLRNAMENT OF WHITE
HOPES IS PROPOSED.
New York. April 19. — A general In-
vitation to all pugilistic 'white hopes"
to gather for a tournament at the Na-
tional Sporting club of America In this
city on Friday. May 26. was Issued by
Manager Tom O'Rourke last night. The
Invitation is addressed to all white men
weighing over 190 pounds and standing
jBlx feet nigh who aspire to the world's
championship now held by Jack John-
son.
DE ORO WINS FIRST
BLOCK FROM KEOGH.
New York, April 19. — Alfred De Oro
last night won the first block of 200
points In his 600-point match with
Jerome Keogh of Rochester, N. Y., In
dtfense of his title as champion pool
player of the world. The score was
ilS to 174. The high runs were De
Oro, 16; Keogh. 24.
Verkes" double scored six more runs.
-V feature was a triple by Collins wlta
three men on bases. Score:
R H F
Boston 00000070 6 — 13 lo' 6
Philadelphia ..1000000 40 — B 9 4
Batteries — Wood and Corrigan^Mor-
gan, Collamore and Lapp. Umpires —
Evans and Ggan.
TIGERS KNOCK KALER
OUT AND WIN EASILY.
Detroit, Mich., April 19.— Detroit
knocked Kaler out of the box In the
first inning and defeated Cleveland.
5 to 1. Gregg, who replaced Kaler.
pitched splendid ball, allowing but one
hit untU the eighth Inning. L/ajoie
was ejected from the game in the sec-
ond inning by Umpire Sheridan for
disputing a decision. Score:
• R H E
Cleveland 001000000 — l' 7 3
Detroit 6000000 Ox — 5 8 0
Batteries — Kaler, Gregg and Smith;
Mullen and Stanage. Umpires — Per-
rlne and Sheridan.
HUGHES HOLDS NEW YORK
TO FOUR SCATTERED HITS.
Washington, April 19. — ^Hughes held
New York to four scattered hits yes-
terday and as a result Washington
scored a shutout, 2 to 0. Vaughn was
hit hard but saved a larger score by
effective work with men on bases.
Hughes" batting and a catch of a dif-
ficult fly by Milan were the feaures.
Score: R. H. E.
Washington . . .0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 x— 2 12 2
New York 00000000 0 — 0 4 1
Batteries — Hughes and Street;
Vaughn, yulnn and Sweeney. Umpires
— <Jonnolly and Mullen.
•
Chlcago-St. Louis game postponed
on account of wet grounds.
COMMENTS AND OPINIONS
ON THt SPORTING PARADE
NEW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA PLAYERS AT THE POLO GROUNDS.
The burning of the grandstands of the Polo grounds. New York, following on the burning of the grandstand at
Washington. Illustrates again the virtue of fireproof constructions. The Giants will now bo shut out of their grounds
for some time and the actual loss of the stands Is very small compared with the loss of busmess due to the curtailing
of the seating capacity of the ground.s. Most of the members of the Giants and Phillies were at the fire during the
night and It would have been impossible, because of their condition, to have held the game on the following day. iue
superstitious believe the Giants' season has started very In auspiciously.
. » :=^
Wet Feet and no fish is part of
fisherman's luck-
on your boots
will cut out the
wet feet. Try
it next time—
IT'S WATERPROOF
BOER OIL
Ray Temple of Milwaukee easily
outpointed Tommy Ktlbane of Cleve-
land in a ten-round no-decislon bout
In Milwaukee last night. The boys
fought at 13:1 pounds.
Eddie Sheridan, lightweight, and
Frankle White have signed articles for
a ten-round fight at Gary. Ind.. on
Apill 24. The agreed weight Is 130
pounds at 3 o'clock.
The city council of Havana has
voted to give a silver cup and Jl.OOO to
the winner of the Philadelphia-
Havana yacht race, the cup to be the
Ifrmanent property of the owner of
the yacht that wins It twice.
President T. J. Lynch of the National
league announced last night that the
release of T. J. Dougherty by the Cin-
cinnati Nationals to the Milwaukee
American association league had been
approved.
Over a straight course of three miles
the cutter crew of the cruiser Cali-
fornia won the Paciflc fleet champion -
.ihlp boat race from the Maryland crew
In easy fashion, having a lead of 500
feet at the finish. The time was 23
minutes and 15 seconds.
Joe Mandot of New Orleans, was
given the decision over Charlie White
of Chicago at the end of their eight-
round bout In Memphis Monday night.
Mandot was the more aggressive and
the decision was popular. White was
floored twice.
That It win cost spectators a con-
siderable sum to witness the Interna-
tional polo matches at Meadowbrook,
L. I.. Is evidenced by the announce-
ment of the list of prices for reserva-
tions in the grand stands to be created
on the hig field. Boxes will cost from
175 to $200 each, while the lowest
priced seats in the tiers behind the
boxes are $3 each, with the choice
reservations |10.
• • «
The problem of high rentals result-
ing from the Increased value of prop-
erty Is proving a serious menace to
semi-profeslonal baseball In Chicago.
So far this season two semi-profes-
sional parks have been abandoned for
baseball pur|)oses and have been cut
up into building lots.
"Doc" Scanlon, a hold-out of the
Brooklyn club, signed his contract
yesterday. With Pitchers Rucker and
Barger on the Injured list, Scanlon's
services are much In deamnd and he
win probably be called on to pitch
In one of the games against the New
York Giants this week.
Harry Forges will make his first
public appearance in the ring at South
Bend. Ind., tomorow night, since he
boxed Johnny Coulon to a draw in
Kenosha. Wis., a few weeks ago.
Forbes wil meet "Young Jimmy Brltt,"
a strong little fellow, who has been
after Coulon for some time.
The bicycle racing game may be re-
vived In Chicago. Jack Prince, who
has built "saucer tracks" all over the
country, will visit Chicago next week
to confer with the officials of Rlver-
vlcw park concerning a new track
which probably will be erected there.
The proposed track will be three laps
to the mile. The promoters declare
the track will be fast enough for
motorcyclists to make ninety miles an
hour.
St. Louis Is practically assured of
two representatives In the Olympic
games to be held In Sweden next year.
Frank Hablg, a lawyer and distance
runner, declared positively today that
he win make the trip. Joe Foreshaw
of the Missouri Athletic club has
planned to enter the Olympic Mara-
thon event, and has been practicing
for several weeks In an attempt to
regain his former condition, but he
may decide later not to enter.
NATURE FAKERS, ATTENTION 1 CAN
A BROOK TROUT LIVE IN ICE?
"Can a brook trout be frozen solid
In Ice during the winter and revive
when the ice melts in the spring?"
The question has become a common
one among the fishermen of the city.
Some say that It can and some declare
that It can't. A man who asked to be
known as "A Subscriber" has written
to The Herald on the subject, stating
that he would like to learn the answer.
The Herald submits It to fishermen who
may have had some experience In that
line and will be glad to publish any
communications which will throw light
on the proposition.
Last fall the streams which are fa-
vorites with the fishermen who hunt
the wily trout were lower than they
had been for years baak. Some of them
froze from top to bottom. Some of
the wise ones declare that this killed
a considerable number of trout and
win result In poor fishing this season.
Other wise ones are just as emphatic
In the assertion that this wouldn't
make the slightest difference, main-
taining that the trout can be frozen
•tolld In the ice and start swimming
again when they are tly^wed out In the
spring. The question seems to be a
live one. at least jn Duluth. and sev-
eral Informal but spirited debates have
grown out of It. Several men who are
supposed to be experts In that line
have been requested to answer It, but
with one accord they have responded
with an unmeaning wave of the hand,
the Inference being that they didn't
care to discuss It one way or the other.
If anybody has any Information on
the subject there are many fishermen
about the Head of the Lakes who
would like to know what it Is, with
all the trimmings.
WmONA AND EAU CLAIRE
BEGIN SPRING TRAINING
HOTEL
HOLLAND
...European,,,
ABSOLUTELY FIRE-PROOF.
Club Breakfast, Popular Priced.
Luncbeon and DInarr.
Btaale at Dinner, 6 to 8 P. M.
ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY
AFTER lOtSO.
La Crosse. Wis., April 19.— With Wl-
nona and Eau Claire beginning the
season's spring training today and La
Crosse and Red Wing starting their
workouts Thursday it begins to look
like a real live baseball season In the
Mlnny league and the closer the sea-
son draws the more evident Is the
impatience of the fans.
Rochester, Superior, Duluth and
Wausau have already started to get
into shape for the opening games, so
by Thursday the eight teams will be
showing up their speed and giving in-
dications of what the fans may expect
when the real season opens and the
teams begin to battle for the pennant.
If Darby O'Brien is to be believed
there Is little use of playing out the
schedule, as the northern team alreadv
has the little piece of bunting stowed
away where the other clubs cannot
even get a look to say nothing of win-
ning it.
However, La Crosse fans cannot see
this point and are confidently awaiting
the opening of the season as are all of
ihe other clubs.
Darby O'Brien on Thursday at Ak-
ron. Ohio, assembled a number of his
players and the tryout work was taken
up with a vengeance. As he moves
Ills training trip toward Duluth new
men will be picked up and by the time
the White Sox grounds are reached
much of the pruning process will have
been completed.
Ted Corbett, manager of the Roches-
ter club, collected his pitchers and
catchers on the Mayo field on Wednes-
day, and since that time they have
been given daily and strenuous work-
outs. Yesterday the remainder of the
squad was on hand to begin the build-
ing of the 1911 team. Corbett, last year
one of Piddle Wheeler's staff of pen-
nant-winning pitchers with the South
Bend club of the Central league, has
signed up almost an entirely new team
for Rocnester and Included in the
crowd are many youngsters with only
corner-lot and semi-pro experience.
On Monday Manager Kid Taylor of
Superior will greet his squad at Racine,
Wis., which city will be the starting
point for the short training trip of his
squad. He will play several games In
Racine and Fond du Lac, Wis., before
returning to the Superior grounds to
begin a series of Inter-city games be-
tween Duluth and Superior before the
opening of the season on May 10.
Kllllan Buay.
Manager Joe Kllllan arrived in Wi-
nona early In the week and wired all
of his men whom he had signed during
the winter at Sterling, III., to report
on Tuesday. Most of last year's team
will remain Intact and only seventeen
men will be In the training squad.
There will be a lively scrap for the
third base position, three fast men be-
ing lined up for that berth.
Fred Cook, the new manager of the
Red Wing team, has been unusually
active the past ten days and has lined
up a formidable array of minor league
stars. His men will report at Red
Wing on April 20 and training will be
prosecuted Without a pause.
Silent Tom Agile.
Tommy S'choonhoven" Silent Tom," of
■"^
the Eau Claire 1910 champions, as usual
has been saying little, but he has a
valuable collection of contracts locked
away He has been at Champaign, 111.
trailing the Brewers' aggregation and
has signed up a number of the men
turned over to him by Manager Barrett,
Training beglrs »t Eau Cialre today.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Standing of tli<^ Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Minneapolis .""... 5 2 .714
Kansas City 3 2 .COO
Louisville 3 2 .600
Indianapolis 4 3 .571
Toledo 3 3 .500
Milwaukee 3 4 .429
Columbus 1 8 .2o0
St. Paul 0 3 .000
•
Games Today.
Minneapolis at Louisville.
St. Paul at Indianapolis.
Kansas City at Toledo.
Milwaukee at Columbus.
COLONELS DEFEAT MILLERS
BY HITTING WADDELL.
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Philadelphia 4 1 .800
St. Louis 2 1 .667
New York 3 2 .600
Cincinnati 2 2 .500
Chicago 2 2 .600
Pittsburg ^. . 2 8 .400
Brooklyn 2 4 .333
Boston 2 4 .333
Brooklvn at New York.
Philadelphia at Boston, (two games.)
St. Louis at Cincinnati.
CUBS BLANK PIRATES
LN FEATURELESS GAME.
Chicago, April 19. — Pittsburg was
shut out by Chicago, 3 to 0, here yes-
terday. In the final game of the series.
A single and triple gave Chicago one
and a base on balls, a sacrifice, fol-
lowed by a hit and an error, netted
two more. The game was alrtiost
featureless. Score: R. H. E.
Chicago 00100020 x — 3 5 1
Pittsburg 00000000 0 — 0 4 2
Batterels — Richie and Archer; Lel-
fleld and Gibson. Umpires — O'Day
and Brennan.
SCHARDT IS HIT HARD
AND THE GIANTS WIN.
New York. April 19. — ^Rube Marquard
held the Brooklyns at bay yesterday
and New York's hitting both Schardt
and Ragon freely won easily, 7 to 1.
Tooley played a sensational game at
short for Brooklyn. Score: R. H. E.
Brooklyn 01000000 0 — 1 4 3
New York 0 2 2 0 1 1 0 1 x— 7 11 1
Batteries — Schardt, Ragon and Erwln;
Marquard, Wilson and Meyers. Um-
pires— Klem and Doyle.
PHILLIES WIN HEAVY
HiniNG GAME FROM DOVES.
Boston, Mass., April 19. — Philadel-
phia won a heavy hitting game from
Boston yesterday by the score of 10
to 9. Boston tied the score in the
sixth, but lost In the eighth w'/on
Goode dropped Knabe's easy fly, allow-
ing Dooln to score. Score: R. H. E.
Boston 20103300 0 — 9 17 2
Philadelphia ...33300001 0—10 13 2
Batteries — Parsons, Mattern and
Rariden- Brennan, Stack, Rowan and
Dooln. Umpires — Johnston and Eason.
CARDINALS PLAY THIRD
TIE GAME OF SEASON.
Cincinnati, Ohio, April 19.— St. Louis
played Its third tie game of the sea-
son yesterday, being even with Cin-
cinnati, 1 to 1, when darkness ended
the game at the end of the tenth In-
ning. Fromme pitched almost perfect
ball until the eighth Inning, when two
bases on balls, a single and a hit by
a pitched ball netted St. Louis one run.
Cincinnati scored a run off Harmon In
the sixth on a triple and a single.
Score: R. H.E.
St. Louis 000000010 0 — 1 4 0
Cincinnati 00000 1000 0 — 1 7 0
Batteries — Harmon and Bresnahan;
Fromme and Burns and McLean. Um.
plres — Flnneran and Rlgler.
i; AMERICAN LEAGUE I
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Detroit 6 0 1000
New York 4 1 .800
Washington 3 2 .600
Chicago 2 3 .400
Boston 2 3 .400
St. Louis 2- 4 .333
Cleveland 2 4 .333
Philadelphia 1 4 .200
Games Today.
Boston at Philadelphia.
New York at Washington.
Cleveland at Detroit.
Chicago at St. Louis.
RED SOX SCORE THIRTEEN
RUNS IN TWO INNINGS.
Philadelphia, April 19. — Boston won
yesterday's game here by scoring
thirteen runs in the seventh and ninth
Innings. Morgan went to pieces in the
seventh, five singles and an error, and
two men being hit by pitched balls,
seven runs resulting. In the ninth
Collamore gave three passes and
triples by Gardner and Williams and
LoulsvUle. Ky., ^prU 19.— Louisville
defeated Minneapolis yesterday In the
opening game of the series. Wicker
settled down after the first Inning and
kept the hits scattered. While Waddell
pitched effectively, ho could not keep the
locals from hitting at the right time.
Howard's fielding and batting was the
feature. Score: R. H. E.
Louisville llOOOOOlx— 3 8 0
Minneapolis 10000000 0—1 9 2
Batteries — Wicker and Hughes;
vVaddell and Smith. Umpires — Bler-
halter and Weddldge.
LEROY DRIVEN OUT
OF BOX BY INDIANS.
What a Real Tcngh Boy
Thinks of Morris— How
the English Cousin **Re-
dgns*'— Superior's Disap-
pointment.
(BY BRUCE.)
AVE you evoi seen a prize
fighter angry? He gener-
ally slays lis words as
the Israelites of old slew
their enemies when they
were In right. He uses
the corners of his mouth
for hurrli'd exits of
wrath. He says many ihlngs which
the censorship w^ould ne^er permit to
be published, and ends It all with a
threat.
After striking civilization, Mr. James
Barry, a fighter, who has worked up
from the bottom, and has never been
on the stage, let loose seme bounding
adjectives regarding the flimsy nature
of the Morris reputation. He saw the
fight between Schreck and Morris and
laughs in his sleeve when recount-
ing It. ^ ^.
If we are to take the account of the
heavy-Jawed and double -fisted Mister
Barry Into serious and solemn consid-
eration, Morris has a herlclmer looking
like a $10,000 beauty In makeup. Mr.
Harry says Mr. Morris wanted to quit
when Mr .Schreck struck him In the
nose, but" Mr. Referee warned him not
to do anything he would regret In the
long grind, back on the engine.
Mr. Barry offered to fight Mr. Morris
and not take a cent If he didn't stop
him Inside of fifteen rounds, to which
Mr Morris replied, "How did the bird
know that?" „,
Mister Barry and Mister Flynn are
so tough that they loathe solitude,
fearing dire consequencciJ should their
tempers leap to wrath and fail to find
sufficient cause to expend or expand.
They hustled out Oklahoma way and
almost Implored for a chance with the
mammoth Morris. But trte little cross
path to fame was spottel and marked
for future reference, so hence the peeve
of the pugilistic pair. ,.. v *i.
Taking a long guess It would be the
dope to lay that both of the two men
are right and here's on 3 that Morris
will always be so far from the top
that he couldn't be dra^i-n up with a
block and tackle.
Putting in the Local Color.
last evening. There may be a lot of
things that did not come to the ruffled
surface. That Is another reason why
some explanation would prove of gen>
eral Interest.
In Milwaukee the contests have been
conducted In a manner that has not
met with the objection of very many of
the citizens of the German metropollf
of Wisconsin. If the right people gol
behind the game In Superior It Is very
difficult why a distinction should b#
made between Superior and the city
famous for a certain beverage. *
There were a lot of peeved peoplo
when It was announced everything wag
called off. Tommy Garry had been
touted as a very tough boy and there
was considerable curiosity to see Just
how he would stack up against a boy
who was supposed to be a class higher
than Murphy, Larsen and some of the
other boys that Pal has been bejiting in
the past.
It looks as If we will have to wait
for the meeting between Frankle
White and Brown to see how good the
iron ore chap Is getting.
Visitors Day at the Frisco JaiL
F THE head sharp at the Jail
whore the large senegamblan
Is incarcerated should Invite
James J. Jeffries, Thomas
Burns, Sam Langford and
James J. Corbett to walk
down the corridor and look
pleasantly at Ll'l Artha. It is to be
wondered If the language used by the
smoke would be hot enough to fry
mackerel.
Indianapolis. Ind.. April 19. — By hit-
ting Leroy hard In the first four In-
nings, driving him from the box, In-
dianapolis defeated St. Paul, 5 to 3.
Stlger, who followed him on the
mound, held the locals safe at all
times. The batting of Carlsch was the
feature of the game. Score: R. H. E.
Indianapolis ...0 2120000x — 5 9 3
St. Paul 0000021 00 — 3 6 1
Batteries — Merz and Carlsch; Leroy,
Stelger and iKelly. Umpires — Hayes
and Eddlnger.
BARRETT STARS IN
VICTORY OVER SENATORS.
Columbus, Ohio, April 19. — Batting
by Manager Barrett drove In five of
Milwaukee's seven runs, his best effort
being a triple with the bases full in
the eighth. Two running catches by
him and one-hand stops by Charles
and Lewis stopped Columbus in three
late innings. GiUigan was relieve 1
in the ninth by Marlon. Score: R. H. E.
Milwaukee 000 0 20 140 — 7 12 3
Columbus 02000001 2 — 5 6 n
Batteries — Gllllgan, Marlon and
Brcen; Penny baker and Bemls. Um-
pires—-Chill and Ferguson.
FOUR RUNS IN OPENER
WINS FOR MUD HENS.
Toledo, Ohio. April 19. — Two passes.
a sacrifice. Flick's triple. Hyatt's error
and Butler's single gave Toledo four
runs In the opening inning. Score.
R. riTE
Toledo 40000000 x — 4 4 2
Kansas City 0 1000000 0 — 1 7 1
Batteries — Slapnlcka and Rapp;
Owen, S'elbert and James and Diiter.
Umpires — Owens and Handlboe.
SCULLER WILL
BE DEVELOPED
Coach Ten Eyck Orders New
Sculling Oars for Du-
luth Crew.
That Coach Edward Ten Eyck In-
tends to develop some scullers among
the candidates of the Duluth Boat
club crews Is evident from a letter that
has been received by Julius H. Barnes.
In the communication. Ten Eyck states
that he has purchased six pairs of
sculling oars from Ward, the famous
manufacturer of boats and oars, as
well as ten pairs of the latest design
shell oars.
In several former letters Ten Eyck
has stated that he would like to de-
velop at least one crack sculler at the
club. The coming of Ten Eyck, one
of the greatest amateur scullers the
world has even seen, will undoubtedly
Interest some of the boat club mem-
bers In tli^ single events.
It is years since Duluth has been
really represented by a sculler. Prac-
tically every other club In the North;^
western International Rowing associa.
tion has a representative in both the
Junior and senior singles, and the local
officials have often urged that some of
the men at least get out and try to
make some kind of a showing In these
6V6ntS*
In his letter yesterday Ten Eyck
stated that he would be here without
fall May 2. He will take complete
charge of the candidates upon his ar-
rival In Duluth.
l/ELMONT GIVEN DECISION
OVER MONTE ATTELL.
OME one asked, Asrhlle listening
Sto the ticker returns of the
Morrls-Schreck battle. Just
what would happen if Schreck
forgot his llne.« and slipp-icl
the K. O. to Morris.
The Interesting query has
in a measure been anssvered by the
hair-raising experience undergone by
two poor fistic products, who can get
all the Western atmosphere they want
out of one of Alfred Henry Lewis
stories, or by getting clone and breath-
ing gun powder with lilex Beach or
Bat Masterson.
A man by the name ct Nate Lewis,
who Is small and only brave when he
has Imbibed, took K. O. Brown out to
Muskogee, Okla. Brown fought Joe
Gorman and knocked him out. That Is
right where he came net.r making one
of the greatest mistakes, of his sweet
and angelic young life.
The red-faced, red-shlrted and close-
to-nature cits of Muskogee, which
sounds like a drink which would Insult
your stomach, wanted Gorman to win,
and when he failed miserably to carry
out their wishes, one citizen rose right
up In the gathering aid started to
empty his gun and get some of the
deep sea peeve out of his system.
Lewis and Brown escaped from the
ring because fate vi'as smiling and In a
laughing mood that day. and because
the gink emptying his gun was filled
with Muskogee mist and couldn't tell
the sights of his cannor. from dough-
nuts and coffee.
What would happen tc the guy who
whipped poor old Carl Morris? It
would take the formality of a coroner's
inquest to give a comp.ete and com-
petent answer.
Guess I'll Resign, Siiys Cousin.
OARSMEN TO
GET ON WATER
Candidates for the crews lof th«
Duluth Boat club will be on the water
the present week, according to the
statement made today by Department
Rowing Capt. John K. Ma»'Gregor. To-
day Capt. MacGregor will go over to
the boathouse and arrange for the
placing of the boats in readiness and
the fixing of the quarters for the caa-
dldatcs.
It is said that a four was out thle
week In tlie first spin of the season and
tound the going fine. Qulniby. Lathrop
and Thompson wore among those out.
It Is said that BUI L'Estrange will
have charge of the crew candidates
until the arrival of Ten Eyck. It ia
expected that over twenty men will
respond to the first call of the season.
Just what plan will be followed ptnd-
Ing the arrival of Ten Eyck is not
known.
It Is believed that some of the men
will be rowed in fours to improve their
watermanship, whllt it is very probable
that some of the green candidates will
be sent out in lapstreaks. There will
be a strenuous season ahead, and th«
local officials are very anxious to get
tlie men on the water.
Welcome announcement came yester-
day In tile news that Hare, the Univer-
sity of Wisconsin oarsman, who rowed
I with the Duluth boys last 8ea.>*on. will
be out for a place In the eight this
season. Hares parents are making
their home in this city at the present
lime, and upon the return of the tall
blonde it Is very probable that he will
make his home here.
Every effort will be made this season
to place a winning crew on the water.
It is believed that some very promising
new men have been brought out. and
If some of the old men stiow the form
expected of them, there Is reason to be-
lieve, in spite of discouragements of
the past, that Duliith should make ft
very strong showing this season.
/^ ^%I.STER JAMES
I IkM I returned from A
I IVl I and London wit
Lga^aJ and filled with
■hAn^a as a shaggy d
ImBv filled with flea
contentment — uj
of the fleas. _ ^
One thing Is noticed
When one of the Englis
hurt they "resign." The
for It, too. Imagine the
dismay or deep disgust t
come over the handsom
of Mr. Thomas Sharkey i
struck some English bus
that person had shakei
hand and stated that he
Many of us have wor
pa.st years why they di
fighters in the tight lit
"resign" stuff will travf
up and down the dusty r
the reason why. Next t
they will be serving
rounds.
CLABBY has
ustralla, Paris
h many Ideas
conversation
og's coat is
flurries and
)on the part
In England,
h fighters get
crowd stands
expression of
lat would have
e countenance
f, after he had
ky In the face,
1 him by the
"resigned."
dered for the
in't have any
tie Islo. This
1 all the way
jad explaining
ling we know
tea between
The Way They Start, Oh Gee I
Boston, Mass., April 19. — Al Selmont,
the Boston lightweight, won a close de-
cision from Monte Attell of California
In twelve rounds of fast boxing here
last night.
S
ROM the early season start of
the Cubs and Athletics we
would gather that the two
teams that battled for the
highest honors In the land last
fall were destined to eat
crumbs from the second di-
vision brigade. -nr„if
'Tls not always as It seems. Walt
until the Mackmen strike their gait
and there should be some great base-
ball in the A. L. Connie Mack Is .so
wise that he only has an encyclopedia
In his home for the general appearance
of the thing. He has a .'well team and
take It from the general dope this ag-
gregation won't be running for Sweeney
when the season has passed the first
furlong stretch. ^
Pitchers Born, Says The Wise Guy.
^■■■■■^N ARTICLE from an enthusiast
I J^ In a Western piper says that
I >% the dear heaver? are born, and
k!^^ not made. Th s same thing
BEmr has been said o:! the poets, al-
IPaWSl though a lot af them have
^^^^ tried to kid managing editors
Into believing otherwl.st. Mister Mc-
Graw has spent Jll.OOO and a lot of
time and patience In tiylng to prove
that pitchers can be made. Last year
the pitcher failed to respond to treat-
ment, although he has showed some
signs of promise this spring.
Spoiling the Little Festivities.
MANY ENTRANTS
FOR MARATHON
UST when Sup«
chance to plact
map some polic<
with a grouch
dvspepsla, calle
Now the little
back to the
everyday existence, ant
Incident to the fight tl
held last night, will be
There should be some
regard to the Wlsconsl
They hold fights in Mil
du Lac, Kenosha and I;
other cities and villages
state. Just why fights <
In the Bister city would
Ing to know at least.
Maybe the right peop
hind the fight that was
rlor had the
itself on the
! commissioner
and a case of
d off the fight.
berg will go
monotony of
1 the flutters
at was to be
forgotten.
explaining in
n fight law.
waukee. Fond
1 some of the
of the Badger
;annot be held
prove interest-
le weren't be-
scheduled (or
Ashland. Mass., April 19. — With
nearly 150 entrants ready for the start
today In the fifteenth annual Marathon
run under the auspices of the Boston
Athletic association, weather condi-
tions were exceptionally favorable.
"Fair and warmer," was tne official
forecast, with westerly winds. Such a
wind would favor the runners, beinfc
almost directly behind their backs for
the twenty-five mile course, up hill and
down, starting at Stevens Corner, a
mile beyond this town, to the goal in
Boston. The record for this event mad*
in 1907 by Tom Longboat of Toronto
Is 2:24:24.
As there was no certainty of how
many of the entrants would start It
was difficult to name the probable
winners and place jnen. Foremost
among those of whom something may
be expected are the four Indiana^
Michael Thomas of Charlottetown. P.
E. I.; Charles M. Honeyoust of Oneida,
N. Y. ; Louis Sockaolexis of Oldtown,
Me., and Thomas Patton of Caughna-
waga, P. Q.; Henry Renaud of Nashua,
N. H., and .Sammy Mellor of New York,
both former winners;, the Canadian
delegation headed by James J. Cork-
ery of Toronto, last year's third man;
the New York men, including Alexin
Ahlgren, William Rosette, Charles
Appleyard, John J. Reynolds, Mtk«
Kyan, Harry Jensen, William Brazlll,
and Anthony Higglns; William T.
.Shannon of Pittsburg, Charles H. Fos-
ter, Chicago, and Stanley W. Roo^
Philadelphia.
CATCHER "HAS WENT;"
TEAM MAY DISBAND
Chicago, April 19 — Northwestern uni-
versity baseball team may have to go
through the college season without a
catcher — that Is, a real catcher.
John Phillips Hallowell, the star
backstop of the purple team, has dis-
appeared. The athletic council and
members of the team are 'up In the
air" over the matter and have
searched lilgh and low for the vanished
receiver, but have found no trace of
him. Hallowell reported for practice
Friday afternoon but did not don his
baseball togs. He was seen about the
athletic grounds before practice began
but since then he has not graced the
college diamond.
When Hallowell did not show up
for the Chicago game Saturday, Pha-
len, an inexperienced substitute, was
pressed into service. Phalen handled
the job In passable fashion and might
have been able to worry along through
the season, but he has not yet been
declared eligible by the faculty and
the chances are that he will not be.
Hallowell did not make his appear-
ance Sunday or Monday and aftec the
practice yesterday afternoon the team
went on a still hunt for him and de-
spite the Sherlock Holmes tactics used.
he was not found. The whole coIleKO
Is wrought up over the affair and
win be In suspense until Hallowell re-
turns or the faculty takes action on
Phalen's c4se.
The registry books show that th«
missing player is from Nebraska, but
do not give his Chicago address. H9
was a student in the college of phMr*i
macy, closed for the summer.
/
-I
r
+
f
Wednesday,
OFFICIAL MAP OF THE WEATHER
L^J- I ^^-^^.^.^.^ ^ ^. ^.^.M
FOKECAST TII.l. 7 P.
TlllRSnAY
For I>uJuih. Superior ami vicinity,
iin lulling the Me.'.aha and Vermilion
ir. u rungfs: Fair iiml ctii'ler to-
iiMilit with fnist; loWfet temperature
iiiiisiit 25 il^. to oU (leg. ; Tliurg-
.Uy probably olnuily: moderate to
r >U wtsiirly to iurtlierly uin<i-i.
EXPLANATORY KOTES. ,-^-^
Obwrviiioiu Uitn al S ». m , Mventy-fifih mcr^Jian timt. Air prM«ur»
rcducnl to sea levtl. ^
I»OBA|i», or continuout Ua<i, paai Ihrouth pomU oi tqual air pretwre.
iMtHttma, Of dottnt linM, pu* throu|(h poinU ol t^ti UmBeralurt; IMy
»iU t>r drmara aoly for lero, frecxioc, 90*, and 100*. ^
Sth!k>!j UKlicaM iUle of weather: O '''"J © P'^'^ cloudy; W
cloudy; ® fain; ©mow; (8) report muwng. Arrows fly with th* wiod. Firal
figure, t»mp*ratur»; awcnd, 24-hour rainfall, H it equals, OJ inch; third, wind
velocity uf 10 mile* per hour or more.
HIGH
WIND SCAI.B.
Miles Pel
Hour.
Sriik 25 to 35
Calm 0 to 5
Ligiit 5 'o J5
Moderate 13 '" **
High 35 to 5"
Gale 50 to 85
Uurrictne 65 ami above
H. W. RICHARDSON.
Local Farecastar.
J. Pluviiis is in
teasinK mood. He
h.is kept his sprink-
ling can at a dan-
Kerous antjle since
yesterday after-
noon, now and then
tipping it suffici-
ently to sprinkle
the earth and let
iJuluthians
is on
gentle
rain
•Should I
know
the job.
spring
woukln't be
take an um-
anil.'^s but this
brella?" kind in disconcerting. The
weather man promises that the clouds
will clear off. but the temperature will
drop tonight.
Bright, fair weather prevailed a year
ago today
The sun rose this morning at 5:1."?
and it will set at 7:02 this evening,
giving thirteen hours and forty-nine
minutes of sunlight.
Mr. Kichardson makes the following
comment on weather condition.s:
'The disturbance overlying the Up-
per Mls.'^issippi valley remained about
statiinury during the last twenty-four
hour.-. In the meantime it caused light
to cordous rains over the Mississippi
and Lower Ohio valleys and Western
Lake region and warmer weather in
extreme eastern stat»s. The Briti.'^h
Columbia depression has moved south-
ward to the Kooky mountains and has
caused rains over North Pacific states
and the plateau region and warmer
weather to the northward of Colorado
and Utah. An increase in pressure
DIAMONDS
ARE^TOLEN
Barber Shop Porter Took
"Sparklers" Valued
at $2,000.
Jewels Are Recovered By
Victim and Porter Placed
Under Arrest.
over the Lower Mifsouri valley and
Eastern slopes of the Hocky mountains
is attended by somewhat lower tem-
perature. At the Head of the Lakes
the weather will turn colder this after-
noon and tonight."
General ForeeaMtM.
Chicago. April 10. — Forecasts for
twenty-four hours ending at 7 p. m.
Tlmrsday:
Upper Michig;in — Showers and cooler
tonight; Thursday generally fair.
Wisconsin — Showeis in east portion
this afternoon; generally fair toni.:vht
and Thursday; colder tonight with
frost, except in extreme southeast por-
tion.
Minnesota — Fair and cooler tonight
with frost; Thursday increasing
cloudiness.
Iowa — Fair and cooler tonight, prob-
ably becoming unsettled by Thursday
night.
North Dakota — Generally fair to-
night and Thursday; warmer In west
portion tonight.
Montana — Generally fair tonight and
Thursdav; cooler tonight.
Shippers' forecast: Protect thirty-six
hour shipments of perishables against
temperature 25 to 30 deg. in Northern
Minnesota and Northern Wisconsin.
Upper Lakes: Moderate to brisk
variable winds, becoming northwest.
Showers toniglit. Thursday generally
fair.
lowest for twelve, ending at 7 a.
today:
Hlgli. Low.
Abilene 76 48
Aipcii.a 46 34
Atlantic City ...56 48
itattleford 58 26
Blsinan* 58 28
Boise 32 3J
B<iston 52 36
Buffalo 54 48
CalBary 56 35
Cliurleston 68 64
Cldcago 64 52
Corpus Cliristl...80 72
Denver B6 3S
Vcs Molnrs 58 42
Devils t,ake 54 32
Dodge 4'.i
DubuQue 80
DULUTH 53
I>ur:ingo 62
Eajiti-ort 48
>xlmonton 58
Escl.naba 54
Galveston 78
Crand Haven ..60
(Iretn Bay
..86
..58
...6fi
,..60
The Temiioralure*.
Follfwing were the highest tempera-
tures for twenty-four hours and the
ting a chair, he ran his hand around"
the boards above the opening.
Mr. Armstrong went into the shop In
the afternoon when but two barbers
and the colored porter were there. He
handed his coat to the porter and went
to one of the chairs. After he had |
been shaved he felt the side pocket of j
his coat to assure himself that the i
case containing the diamonds was there.
Finding the pocket empty he linme-
dlatelv notified police headquarters and
Detectives Schulte and Irvine were de-
tailed on the case. They made a thor-
ough search of the place and after the
gems had been found they placed Smith
under arrest on a charge of grand lar-
ceny.
In municipal court this morning he
waived examination and was held to
the grand jury.
Ilatteras
Havre
Ilelciut
llougliton
Huron 60
J>u'k.sonvnie 80
KamJoops 48
K.insas City 70
l\Jlu.x^ille 68
La Crosse
LoiUsvllle 64
Madison 64
Marniiette 68
Mc<lieine Hat ...66
Memphis 62
Miles City 66
MUwauliee 68
35
30
32
32
36
74
50
44
S2
38
38
36
34
66
32
50
50
50
56
52
38
24
58
43
42
Bigii.
Minnedoea 58
Modena 68
Montgomery 72
Montreal 46
Mourliead 54
.New Orleans 80
Nevr Yorlt 56
North Platte 62
Oklahoma 74
Omaha 62
Parry Sound 54
Phot nix 86
Pierro CO
Pittsour* 62
Port Arthur 44
Portland. Or 54
Prince Albert 56
Qu'-Vcpelle 54
Ualclgh 68
Kapld City 58
Uoseburg 54
Itoswell 74
St. liOUls 64
St. Paul 58
Salt Lake City 68
San DieRO 64
San Francisco ....62
Sault Ste. Marie.. 52
Seattle 50
Sheridan 64
Shrereiwrt 74
Sioux City -62
Spokane 50
.Swift Current . . . .62
Tampa 84
Toledo 64
Wa-<liington 64
Wmistoii 58
Winnemueoa 68
Winnipeg 54
YeloWitone 52
54
30
36
34
54
46
32
66
52
.X4
r»
SS
60
42
36
40
68
48
52
3f.
24
32
34
Frank Smith, a negro porter, was
arrested yesterday afternoon on a
charge of having stolen |2,000 worth of
diamonds from the coat pocket of G.
W. Armstrong, a New York diamond
salesman, while he was being shaved
at the Lenox hotel barber shop. The
negro admits the theft and says
he doesn't know why he stole
stones, none of which were set.
The jewels were found secreted .
back of the barber shop in a hole in
the ceiling. They were discovered by
Mr. Armstrong, himself, who was aid-
ing the detectives in the search. He
noticed a hole In the ceiling where the
plaster had been knocked off and, get-
FOR REIMX
Xo. 215% Wrnt First Street and Sec-
oud Floor, 40xS0 feet, to be rented
tog;ethert flrst-claMM plaee for Heht
inauufactiiring, tallur Hhop, clKar
factory, etc. Hot water heat.
IVIYERS OROS. CO.,
205 THE LYCEUM.
TRIAL MAY BE HALTED
(Continued from page 1.)
that
the
just
shackled Camorrlsts trooped into the
court of the assizes today and again
faced their accusers from within the
steel bars of the cages which occupy
the right arm of the huge cross that
shapes the interior of the ancient
church of San Francesco.
The holiday has Improved the pris-
oners physically and refreshed tliem
In spirit. All of the thirty-six except
Bartolozl were present. Bartolozl suf-
fered an epileptic attack a month ago
and la still confined to the prison hos-
pital :n the mediaeval monastery of
Gradl. —
The priest Giro Vltozzl whose flights
of oratory and exhibitions of passion
have enlivened the murder trial, is
perhaps the most cheerful of the lot
today. As he was led into court,
bound, but still wearing his priestly
garb, ne declared that during the Eas-
ter recess he had engaged In fervid
religious exercises whicli had given
him strengtli to endure every suffer-
ing. "I am," he proclaimed, "the guar-
dian angel of the Camorru, spiritually
armored against everything and every-
body."
Vltozzl's lawyer opened the proceed-
ings today with a motion that the court
order the production of the warrants
for the arrest of his client and of
Glacomo Ascrlttore who, the state al-
leges, entered Into a conspiracy to de-
nounce De Angelis and Amedeo as the
murderers of the Cuoccolos in order to
save the real assas.slns. President Bl-
anch! said he thought the production
of these warrants was unnecessary.
The lawyer, however. Insisted, saying
that he wished to demonstrate that
the carabineers had been furnished
with orders of arrest in which the date
headlines were left blank, and were
prepared to make use of the warrants
on any occasion that served their pur-
pose.
BIG CHURCH CONSECRATED
(Continued from page 1.)
IN THE SPRING
EVERYONE NEEDS
S.S.S.
spring is the season when the blood is weakest, and
our systems least responsive to the demands of nature.
It is the time of fickle appetites, poor digestion, lack of
energ}' , bodily fatigue, and many other systemic dis-
turbances which warn us that we need a tonic.
Everj'one who needs a tonic needs a blood purifier, for
it is the weakened and impure condition of the circula-
tion that is responsible for the run-down constitution.
A great many so called tonics are mere nerve stimulants,
often producing instantaneous exhilarating effects, but
acting with decided injury on the system later. ^ If your
system is weak and depleted you can only tone it up by
supplying an increased amount of nourishment, and this can come only
through pure, rich blood. Any tonic which does not purify the blood is
dangerous, because it leaves the
impurities in the circulation to
constantly prey upon the health.
S. S. S. is the greatest of all ton-
ics because it is the greatest of all
blood purifiers ; and it is the one
medicine you can rely upon to
supply the system with the best
tonic effects and at the same time
thoroughly purify the blood.
Everyone needs S. S. S. in the
Spring, because by building up
the system now they may avoid
serious illness later on. Many
people have put off using a tonic
until the system became so weak-
ened it could not resist disease, and
have paid for the neglect with a
spell of debilitating illness. S.S.S.
is nature's ideal tonic ; made en-
tirely of healthf nl roots, herbs and barks. It tones up the stomach and
digestion, and contributes to strong, robust health. S. S. S. is for sale at
^^g stores. XHE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
B. S. S. has been used extensively in
our family as a Spring tonic, given
to both young and old, and al-ways
with the best results. It thoroughly
cleanses the blood of all impurities,
at the same time it builds up the
general health, gives appetite,
strength and energy. We have given
It to oar children as intimated, and
found it to be non-injurious to the
system and always capable of puri-
fying the blood and restorina: health.
lots. OI.A.BA DAUBBBT.
SchnylkiU Haven, Pa.
TSIy blood was weak and impt
Spring, and I was troubled
ure last
lili^^. t&u\A X w no uxvtAWAw* IW 1 tn a
geixeral letting' do'tiim of the system.
Under the fine tonic and blood puri-
tyias effects of 8. S. B. my appetite
unproved. I increased in strength
and weight and my blood was re-
stored to its normal healthy oondl-
tiou. ORBIK A. HOBLNS.
289 W. Diamond Ave., Hazleton, Fa.
ecclesiastical structure In the
country and the fourth largest In
Christendom. Although only partially
constructed. It has already been twen-
ty years In building, at a cost of $3,-
500,000 and it may take as much longer
to complete It, at a total estimated cost
of $10,000,000.
Seating accommodations are now
provided for about 1,700 persons, but
although consecrated for present use,
four-fifths of the work remains to be
done, and the full capacity will ap-
proach 7,000. At present the interior
walls stand In great part as they were
laid. In Jutting tiers of rough granite;
the vaulted roof of the crossing Is only
a makeshift of terra cotta to be torn
down later; the arches from which the
transepts will spread are blocked with
temporary concrete baffles; the floor-
ing itself Is but a cement bed on which
the mosaics will yet be superimposed;
only a hint of the full glory appears;
and yet so noble Is the harmony of the
ample dimensions, and so rich the
promise of fulfillment, that the frag-
ment opened to the public today Is It-
self an invitation to worship.
No Oflflclal Source of Revenue.
"How has this mighty undertaking
been financed?" asks Canon Robert
Ellis Jones. "By the same devotion
and sacrifice," he answers, "which act-
uated the best of the mediaeval ca-
thedral builders. The cathedral has no
official source of revenue. No organ-
ized effort has been made to draw on
the interest of Episcopalians, and yet
gifts of all sizes have flowed In, from
all quarters. Five dollars come every
year from a seamstress up the Hud-
son. The Inmate librarian of a city
refuge gave one-tenth of his salary,
and a dozen old men In a church home
earned by making nets and hammocks
5250. which they begged might be 'built
into the cathedral.' "
A revenue thus derived cannot be
estimated in advance, but bequests are
now known, which, as they mature, will
be sufficient to insure continued prog-
ress. The choir Is now roofed and
partly cased with the limestone which
will later finish the entire Interior. The
eight giant columns, each sixty-five
feet high, exclusive of the capitals,
which cluster about the altar, between
the ambulatory and the chancel, are In
place, with the names carved upon
them of those whom their donors wish
to commemorate. Two of the seven
chapels In the apse of the chancel have
been completed, and with them their
stained glass windows. These are the
gifts of August Belmont and Mrs. Ed-
ward King. Seven tapestries depleting
sacred subjects and woven originally
for Pope Adrian VII In 1630 at Rome,
already hang In the spaces between the
windows of the apse and the full com-
plement will add three more.
The organ and carved choir stalls,
the gift of Levi P. Morton, are In place.
The great crossings at the Intersection
of the nave and the transepts, de-
signed for the main assembling place
of the congregation, is roofed over, ana
with the unfinished transepts and the
nave shut In from the weather by con-
crete screens, the remaining wings and
work on the lantern and towers above
can go on without annoyance to wor-
shipers, each finished unit to be thrown
open upon the main body of the edifice
as It becomes ready for use.
Scale Is Late Romanesqae.
In style the cathedral Is late Ro-
manesque, with strong traces of
Byzantine Influences, or as the archi-
tect in chief, C. Grant La Fargo, a son
of the late John La Fargo, describes
it, "so far as the cathedral in the
larger sense is Gothic, it Is the Gothic
of a very early period; the time oil
transition from the simple Romanesque
to the more complex organism." No-
where Is the constructive scheme based
on the pointed arch. The mystery of
long vistas down dim, pillared aisles
l:as been exchanged for the solemn
grandeur of a great central crossing,
wherein the congregation may mass
within sound of the preacher's voice,
lighted from above by a domed lantern
of sixteen windows, surmounted in
turn by a central tower.
The site Is the most commanding in
the city, on what once was the battle-
field of Harlem Heights, overlooking
the main plain of Manhattan, the Hud-
son river, and Long Island Sound. It
occupies three city blocks, bounded by
One Hundred and Tenth and One Hun-
dred and Thirteenth streets to north
and south, and Morningside drive and
Amsterdam avenue to east and west.
The cathedral Itself is a cruciform
structure 520 feet long, 165 feet wide
across nave and aisles, 238 feet wide
across transepts, having two western
towers in angles made by arms of the
cross, with a central tower and spire
planted on a base 100 feet square and
rearing its final cross to a height of
425 feet. As the great dome of the
crossing dominates the Interior, so the
lofty tower, soaring from the ledges
of Morningside Heights will dominate
the exterior.
Slse Is EnormoaB.
Some idea of the size of the cathedral
Is to be gained from a comparison with
other notable cathedrals. The central
tower of Trinity church, Boston, hith-
erto the most massive In America, could
stand within St. John's crossing and
leave three-quarters of Its area bare.
The dome Is of almost equal span with
that of the mosque of St. Sophia at
Constantinople and nearly 100 feet
higher. The dome at St. Paul's, London,
Is slightly wider, but thirty-six feet
lower. The rotunda of the capltol at
Washington is of the same superficial
area, but the celling stands 183 feet
above the floor and that of St. John's
-52 feet.
The total superficial area of St. Pe-
ter's, the greatest of all cathedrals, is
227.060 square feet, a little less than
double that of the next largest, at Se-
ville, Spain, which has 124,000. Third
comes the Duomo of Milan, with 107,000
square feet, and fourth St. John's, with
9»,500. Other notable churches are Co-
logne cathedral, 91,464; St. Paul's, Lon-
don. 84.025; St. Sophia, Constantinople,
70,000; Notre Dame, Paris, 64,108; West-
minster Abbey. 61,729.
Its Constractloo.
The construction Is everywhere de-
signed for all the ages. The outer
walls are of cream colored granite
from Lake Mohegan, N. Y.. faced inside
with a beautiful, soft, buff limestone
from Frontenac, Minn. The groined
vaults above the choir will be brilliant
with primary colors, and the lofty dome
of the crossing will blaze with mosaics
and gold. At Its four corners stand
four masonry piers, supporting the
ceiling of the dome, and the weight of
the tower above. Each of them is
twenty-six feet square. Its load is 34,-
718,000 pounds, and It stands on con-
crete foundations, bedded forty feet
below In the living rock. Impinging
upon the piers, and now visible in all
photographs of the cathedral, but later
to be completely enclosed by the ex-
terior wall.s, are four flying buttresses,
the heaviest ever built, which will take
up the thrust of the arches and dis-
tribute their load evenly on the piers.
It was not felt wise Injso savage a
climate as that of the Atlantic coast to
expose them, constituting as they do
the only guarantee of the structural in-
tegrity of the whole, to the attacks of
rain and frost, imperceptible at first,
but Implacably destructive In the course
of the centuries.
No iron and no wood Is used in the
frame work of the cathedral proper.
The floors are of hollow tiling, the
walls of hollow brick and the roof of
tiling again, with a copper sheathing
over all needed only for a weather
screen. An elaborate heating and ven-
tilating plant Is already In operation.
Hidden electric lights will rim the
arches of the choir with Incandescence.
A closely woven system of telephone
wires will connect the vast wings for
the use of its governing clergu. As
the choir withdraws In the recessional
Its blended voices will be brought back
to the kneeling congregation through
sounding horns, with apertures Inside
the walls. The build'ng will be as
nearly Imperishable, Indestructible and
responsive to the needs that have
called It into being as It has been pos-
sible for human Ingenuity to make It.
INSURRECTOS MOVE
THEIR (JUX8 NEARER
TO CILDAD JUAREZ
(Continued from page 1.)
because the railroad la blamed for as-
sisting the federal cause.
Mexican federal soldiers carried sev-
eral dead on blankets from the ruins
of the depot to the bull ring. These
are believed to have been the bodies
of rebels who applied the match, or of
refugees who had been hiding in the
building and were entrapped by sol-
diers who ru.«hed to the scene.
No Insurrectos were observed today.
At Clenzas Springs, twelve miles east
of here, a band of rebels was reported.
-^
To Confer on Mexico.
Washington, April 19.— The house
committee on foreign affairs today ap-
pointed a sub-committee to confer
with President Taft and the secretary
of state as to the situation on the
Mexican border. The committee con-
sists of Representatives Gardner of
Texas. Sharp of Ohio, and Foster of
Vermont. . , ^,
To this committee were referred the
house resolutions on the suVjject of
the Mexican rebellion. One directs
the committee on foreign affairs to in-
stitute an Investigation and the other
calls upon the president to supply the
committee with information.
Drink Caused Rebel Defeat.
Douglas, Ariz., April 19.— The rebel
defeat at Agua Prleta, was attribut-
able wholly to the over-indulgence of
the Insurrecto soldiers in intoxicating
li(luors found in the saloons and stores
of the captured city, according to Col.
Juan Medina, commander-in-chief of
teh rebel forces, who fled into this city
and surrendered to the United States
authorities. Recounting the story of
the battle and Its ending. Col. Medina
said: . , .. i^
"Shortly after we occupied the city,
I Issued orders for the destruction of
the liquor supply in the various stores.
"When the federals arrived and the
battle opened, 1 took a position on the
east of the town, Balasario Garcia
commanded the center and Rico and
Escandon the right wing to the west.
"I gave orders to my men except
those who had Mauser rifles of long
range, not to fire until the enemy was
within 500 yards. With me in the cen-
ter was one sharpshooter who cut
down all who attempted to man the
federal machine gun in the attack on
the center. The officer who cam-
manded this gun was among those shot
down. Another man took his place,
but I saw Immediately that he could
rot handle the gun -ffectively.
Federals Fell Back.
"I ordered my troops to withhold
their fire and permit the enemy to ad-
vance. They did this until within 500
yards, when we opened fire all along
the line, 400 In action. All Douglas s
witness to the fact that the federals
had to fall back under this fire.
"Twice again the federals reformed
their lines and advanced, and twice
were repulsed. After the third repulse
I returned to Agua Prleta and found
the men left In the town had been
drinking and were in bad shape. I
ordered the boxes of beer that had
been opened destroyed.
"I left a guard over the unopened
cases, but before returning to the fir-
ing line, found one of our officers
drinking and allowing other soldiers
to drink. 1 had troops disarm him and
place him in the guardhouse. During
the day I had no opportunity to re-
turn from the firing line.
"In the dusk the enemy concentrated
a heavy attack on the center of our
line. Garcla's men had been drinking
and had deserted their trenches with
the exception of six Mexicans and
three Americans. When Garcia noticed
this, he left his position and rushed
Into the camp to get ammunition and
round up his men, but found them dis-
persed through the town and so drunk
they could not return to the trenches.
"Before he could get back to the
central trenches the enemy had ad-
vanced and taken them. Informed of
this by a scout, I gave orders for our
troops to mount their horses and pre-
pare to evacuate, so that we could form
a new stronghold In the adjacent hills.
"At this point a man with a shattered
hip appealed to me for help. I picked
him up and started toward the line.
The United States patrol had been
moved to Fifth street, and I believed
the ground between was neutral. Just
beyond this line an American soldier
arrested me. From this time on I hardly
know what happened."
IRONWOOD EASTER BALL.
soloist; march. "Olympia Hippodrome'';
overture Lustsplel'\ bas3 solo ' Ap-
Tvolcl it the l.lon.;; George ^ieLeod
soloist- selection. "Remick Hits oi
1910''- march, "Tannha iser"; .waltz,
'chocolaTe soldier'; march, "Bom-
^Tree busses ran from the armory to
Eagle cafe, where suppe: was served.
Fofr hundred couples were on the floor
everyone reporting a good time. be\-
l?ll people came from out of town to
^'ffi- Friday saw the f^r^^^^^^l^^l
game of the season. Th? North t.ng-
landers and West Englaylers met on
the high school. grounds in a game of
rulby football. A ver;,' interesting
game was witnessed by a large crowd,
the West Englanders winning by a
score of 3 to 0 Neither side scored in
the first half. In the second half the
West Englanders came to the front
and with sharp and fast play won the
game.
ANOTHER POWEia DAM.
Will Be Constructed on the Escan-
aba River.
Wells, Mich., April 19— (Special to
The Herald.) — A second big power dam
Is to be built on the Escanaba river by
the Escanaba Traction company. In
connection with It a pulp mill is to be
constructed. A 32-foot head will be
procured and It Is estimated the dam
will develop 2,o00-horse power. It is
not improbable that later on a third
dam will be constructed. The produc-
ing capacity of the mill will be 100 tons
of wood pulp daily. There is a healthy
and a growing demand fC'r this sort of
material and the company has assur-
ance that Its entire outpv t will readily
be taken by Wisconsin paper makers.
The dam and the mill will be erected
this summer and the manufacture of
pulp will be started In the fall.
NEW LUMBER PLANTS
IN UPPER MICHIGAN.
Marquette, Mich., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — A new lumbering
plant to be established in the Upper
Peninsula this year will be that of J. a.
AVeidman & Son of Mount Pleasant, Mich.
Tlie firm owns a large acreage of
standing timber in the territory be-
tween Kenton, Houghton county, and
Watersmeet. Gogebic county, and It
Dians to operate on a considerable
scale. The location of the mill has not
vot definitely been decided upon, but It
will he In the vicinity of Kenton. An-
other sawmill to be erected In the Up-
per Penln.sula will be built by J. Jen-
nen of Otsego, who heretofore has con-
ducted his operations In Southern Mich-
i>ran. This plant will be at Ewen,
Houghton county. It will be thorough-
ly modern In all particulars and will
cost approximately |aO,000. Mr. Jensen
has a large tract of timber a few miles
from Ewen and it will be tapped by a
railroad line built especially for the
purpose.
MARQUETTE TO VOTE
ON ISSUING BONDS.
Marquette, Mich.. April 19.— (Special
to The Herald.) — For the purpose of
procuring funds for the extension of
the intake pipe of the city waterworks,
a proposition to Issue bonds In the sum
of $75,000 is to be submitted here at a
special election May 5. The proposition
has been approved before, but because
of a technicality it has been decided
that another vote shall be taken.
CASTOR I A
For In&nts and Children.
The Kind Yoo Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature o)t
m^s^
Trainmen's Lodge Gives Successful
Dance Monday Evening.
Ironwood. Mich., April 19. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The Easter ball, given
by Iron Range lodge. Brotherhood of
Railroad Trainmen, at the armory Mon-
day evening was a grand success.
Music was furnished by the Norrie
band and orchestra of twenty-five
pieces. The following program was
rendered before dancing began: F. P.
Snavely. director; George W. McLeod.
A Few of the
Designs
We Are
Showing in
The
Daven-o
Sofa-Beef
There's a design on our floor
to harmonize with every scheme
of furnishing. Styles, Woods,
Finishes and Coverings give you
a delightful variety from which
to make your selections.
The Special
Features
That have made the Owen
Daven-o the most popular sofa-
bed on the market are patented
and are found on no other sofa-
bed on the market.
There's a steel frame bed
spring separate from the up-
-holstering, all working parts
are of metal and all the bedding
folds up in the sofa. The con-
struction is simple and there Is
nothing to get out of order.
Built for every day use and
satisfaction guaranteed.
■■■k Cwapicle ■suetaraMkcrs Jfl^^
RmfA&n
Ih^ SccM«Ave.W.aa«nnlSt.^|PP
0mmm
!
1
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^
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■«s»Vi
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nBTTT'
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD,
April 19, 1911.
15
LOOKING FOR
INFORMATION
City
i«"'H
Assessor Goes to Twin
Cities to Study System
Used There.
J. AUyn Scott, city asseasor, left
yesterday afternoon for the Twin Cities
where he will make a study of the
methods followed there In making as-
sessments.
He win pay particular attention to
the system followed In making assess-
ments of real estate. May 1, the asses-
or will send out a corps of deputies to
make the personal property assessment.
The task is a difficult one and the as-
sessor does not expect that he will be
able to mike a much better assessment
In this line than has been done in the
past. The deputies who will make the
assessments will report for instructions
next Saturday morning.
John W. Roche, Aged 89, Dies in
Oswego, N. Y.
Oswego. N. Y.. April 19.— John W.
Roche, the oldest known survivor of
the Seminole war in Florida, died here
yesterday. He was born In Ireland in
1821. and had lived In Oswego since
1832. He enlisted at Sacketts Harbor
in 183a. With thirty others he es-
corted President Van Buren from
Sackett's Harbor to Niagara Falls. He
helped bury lOS white victims of the
Dade massacre in 1839 and took part
in the capture of Co-a-coo-hee. a fa-
mous Indian warrior In Florida.
FOUGHT IN SEMINOLE WAR. H AQQT 117II I
NOT BE HUNG
he did not have to have a license as
he had been practicing since 1887, be-
fore a state board was appointed. It is
expected that the appeal will be taken.
Assistant Attorney Walter F. Dacey
prosecuted the case and Attorney Will-
iam Marx represented the defendant.
* I
MI$H.%J>S IN 5
ArTOMOBILE TUIP. -»
The automobUe trip of Prenl- *
dent Georjee K. Vincent of the *
I ntverMlty of MInnesiota and Denn *
MuwdM of the aierionltural college *
^ thiit morning T»aj» not an entire *
^ Muroe.t:*. One of the autoniobileM 4f
* carrying the party was inlred and *
^ a tire on the other wa» punctured. *
* DeMi>ite nil.Hbapa, the party near- *
* Iv completed the planned trip and *
^ returned to the Contmeroial club *
^i^ on time. *
They Came
By Express Today
Beautiful new effects in Suits for Misses and
Women — and one of the most complete assort-
ments of new Dresses in Duluth. These gar-
ments are superbly tailored — made up from
worthy fabrics — with that careful attention to
detail, and that thoroughness, which insure
exceedingly satisfactory service. Suits at $25,
$35 and upward — incomparable values. Dress-
es at $13, $15, $18, $20, up to $100. New
Coats here, too, at $15 and upward.
CLOAK AND SUIT HOUSE,
7 W«st Superior Str«et
See Our Window Display of
■
\ m p®irteirs' Smirplliiiii Sto©kE
Merchants of Good Clothes
405407 W.
Superior
St., Duluth,
Minn.
405-407 W.
Superior
St., Dnlulh,
Minn.
tr
:
rtvEftV PaTR HAOC LIKE HAND StWEO
I Same as*6SSa,no*6225hoe5. j^g
BUY WALDORF 5HOE5 AT FACTORY PRICES
DIRECT FROM THE MAKER
1.50
$5
STYLE an^ QUALITY
$2
f-
The Harvard
Sold in Waldorf Stores at
175 BEAUTIFUL STYLES
Made Exactly Like Hand Sewed
WALDORF STORE
313 West Superior Street
108 STORES
Send for Catalog
R. H. LONG, Maker
Factory: Soutfe Fntningliam, Mass.
Board of Pardons Commutes
Sentence of De Meo's
Murderer.
Martin (KMalley of Le Seuer
County Also Escapes
the Gallows.
St. Paul. Minn.. April 19.— The state
board of pardons at a meeting tliia aft-
ernoon conimuted the sentences of
Michael Rossi of Duluth and Martin
O'Malley of Le Sueur county from
hanging to life imprisonment.
Tlie board has had this matter under
advisement several w^^eks awaiting
only tlie action of the legislature on
the bill to abolish capital punishment.
This bill passed last night and the
paper commuting the sentences will be
Lsued at once. The men will be trans-
ferred to Stillwater to begin their sen-
tences as soon as i>osslble.
The board will also announce its de-
cision on the cases submitted to it at
the meeting Monday.
Mike Rossi killed Antonio De Meo
in the railroad yards near Fifth ave-
nue west In September, 1909. He had
had trouble with De Meo before and
was out for revenge. He shot De Meo
first and then stabbed him several
times, the victim dying a short time
after the assault.
Rossi was convicted of first degree
murder In December of the same year
and was immediately sentenced to be
hung. Although the sentence imposed
by Judge Cant was that he be held in
the county jail for thirty days and
then hung on a date to be set by the
governor, Governor Eberhart never set
the date, evidently looking forward to
the passage of a law abolishing capital
punishment and tiie consequent com-
mutation of the sentence.
Uenfeld Will Speak.
Prof. Deufeld will address the Cen-
tral Hiiside club at its hall in the
Franklin school this-^-evenlng on "The
Vacatlonalizatlon of . the School Sys-
tem." Tlie Ninth llQe«st property own-
ers betwen Seve«m *avenue east and
Chester Park Olw . requested to be
present and sign the petition for rough
grading on that street. The street
railway company. Is anxious to run
cars on the street before the snow
flies. ^
Case It* DUmiNNed.
The case against E. J. McDonough,
a railroad man arwjsted on the cliarge
of obtaining monajp under false pre-
tenses, was disml^ed in police court
yesterday afternoon. He was accused
of having passed a check for $G on a
West Superior street saloon keeper
without having funds In the bank.
♦
Get a Box of Your Favorite Ciffara
At the big tobacco sale in progress at
the Smokery, 319- West Superior street.
Sale concludes In seven days.
in Superior today. It will be useJ In
emergency calls, when It Is not de-
sirable to take out the regular auto-
mobile patrol.
NO ADVERTISING ON THE
GRAND THEATER CURTAIN.
Advertising will not be carried on
the "act curtain" in the rebuilt Grand
Opera house. This will mean a sacri-
fice of about $1,000 a year to the man-
agement. Some advertising will be
carried on the asbestos curtain which
is lowered and raised again between
acts. The Maud Leone players will
furni.sh the attraction at the reopening
Monday night.
HARPER -SfflELDS COMPANY
General Insurance.
Moving Day.
The moving of furniture requires ex-
perienced men to be handled properly.
We can furnish them. ALso covered,
padded vans.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE CO.,
210 W'^st Superior Street.
Both "phones 492.
Notice io Stockholders
OF THE
Heimbach Rubber Heel Co.
The above conipaay offer for wale
2,OUO -Mharesi of tbefr treawury wtoi'k
at $5 per aliare. SnbHrrlpllona to
be made at the xeaeral office of tbr
company at No. 418 Ela^iit Superior
Street, Ualuth, Minn.
No wubacrlptlons taken for lesa
than ten (10> shares.
HEIMBACH RL'BBKR HEEL CO.
W. P. HEIWBACH, Prea.
Duluth, April 10> 1011.
Floater Is Found.
An unidentified man was found this
afternoon in the water near the Al-
louez ore dock. No. 2, in AUouez bay.
Coroner Geisen was notified and will
recover the body. It will be taken to
the Le Sage undertaking rooms.
TRAPPING WEASELS.
Sellwood Building.
FideUty-PhenIx Fire IiiMuranee Com-
pany.
Principal office: 46 Odar strwt. New York, N. T.
(OrgaulzeJ in 1910.) Henry Evans, president; C. R.
Street, secretary. Attorney to accept serrlco la Mla-
tiesota: Commissioner nf Insurance.
CASH CAPIT;U.. J2 300.000.
INCOME IN HIO.
Premiums other than perpetuaU % 5.8ST.342.68
Uents anl Interest 486,060.84
Gross profit on sale, maturity oi ad-
justment of ledger assets "". . . . 1,279.915.18
From all other sources 28.10i.78
Duluth, Minn.
Total Income $
7.401.422.48
Ledfer assets Dec. 31 of prerlouj year.$ 13.487.311.44
IN
.$ 20.889.733.92
1910.
Storage.
Furniture costs money, and when you
are storing, you want to be sure that
your goods are in a clean, dry and
safe building. We have fireproof and
non-flreproor" warehouses, separate bins
aud locked vaults. Special piano room.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGK CO..
210 West Superior Street.
»»
"Most Excellent.
victor Huofs fresh dally candles.
CITY BRIEFS
PERSONAL
William Burgess
In Chicago on a
Mi.ss Nellie Benoe of Virginia was m
the city vesterday visiting frleml.^ and
returned to her home last evening.
F G. Hartwell, president of the Ber-
wind Fuel company oi Chicago, was at
the Spalding last evonlng.
Judge James T. Hale of Deerwood
was In the civy yeBterday.
Judge W. S. McClenahan and George
W. Moody of Bralnerd are guests at the
Holland.
Printing and Bookbinding
Thwlng-Stewart Jo. Both 'phones.
114.
Arrested At CrookMon.
Oscar C. Olson was arrested yester-
day at Crookston for the Duluth au-
thorltle.s on a charge of having passed
a worthless check for $58 on E. E.
Esterly, a local jeweler. It Is claimed
that he bought a watch worth tiio
a.nount of the check tendered, and
ti'.at when the check was presented
at the bank he had no funds to the
credit of his account. Olson was in
trouble here some time ago on the
same grounds. He was brought here
from Warroad, a town near the Cana-
dian border, for tendering checks for
^oods when he had no money in tha
bank. That time the ca.se was settled
and he was given his liberty.
Dlea In Detroit.
Word was received from Detroit,
Mioh., today of the death of Mrs.
George Corbet, who has spent much of
her time in Duluth and leaves a host
of friends here to mourn her death. In-
terment will be made at Owen Sound,
Ont.
Auxiliary "WiW Meet.
The Sons of Veterans Auxiliary, No.
5. will hold Its regular meeting tonight
at Memorial hall. The repairs to the
hall have been completed.
Packing and Shipping.
To pack furniture properly for ship-
ping Is an art. We guarantee our pack-
ing. E.stimatea of cost furnished free.
Call up either "phone 492.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE CO.,
210 West Superior Streat.
ANCE
M. W. A.
DrillTeam
THURSDAY EVE., APRIL 20th
GREAT WESTERN HALL, 201il Av. W. k Sup. St
Admission, 50c
Art AsMociatloa Meeting.
The Art as.sotiatlon will hold its an-
nual meeting tomorrow night at the
Commercial club at 8:15. Officers for
tile ensuing year will be elected and
plana will be made for the annual
art exhibit.
^^»^.^^i^X>^>^l^^N»S<^^^
in
$SOO CASH
— $2S.OO PER MONTH.
ims.
Buy.") a five-room house on Seventh avenue east and
Sixth street; bath, gas, electric lights. Rent, $22.50.
You should not miss this opportunity
to get a fine little home.
Price
$2,500
Public Reception.
Following the banquet at th6 Com-
mercial club tonight in honor of Presi-
dent George E. Vincent of the Univers-
ity of Minnesota, the public will be
given an opportunity to meet the new
■ prezy" at 8:30 o'clock when a public
reception will be hald for him at the
Commercial club.
Sixty Days In Jail.
F. A. Meillch of the town of Cotton
pleaded guilty In district court this
afternoon to a charge of selling liquor
wltliout a license. He was sentenced
to serve sixty days in the county jail.
Cotton Prii-e.s for Silks.
You can buy handsome silks at the
price of tine cottons at the Gray-Tal-
iant company's semi-annual silk sale.
Opens tomorrow — ends Saturday night.
*
Is Given a Stiflf Fine.
Nick Klasna. arrested yesterday aft-
ernoon on a charge of selling liquor
without a license and of furnishing
liquor to a minor, entered a plea of
guilty to tlie former charge when ar-
raigned In police court. He paid a fine
of $100. The court told him that he
must abide by the laws or he would
not get off as easily the next time ha
was brought in. The charge of giving
liquor to a minor was dismissed as
both charges were a part of the same
transaction.
WOULD LOOK INTO
P. 0. DEPARTMENT
hvestigation Proposed in An-
other Resolution Presented
in House.
Washington, April 13 — Another reso-
lution directed against the postofrtce
department and calling for an Investi-
gation of the entire service, was of-
fered in the house today by Represen-
tative Saunders of Virginia. The reso-
lution asks for the Investigation to
ascertain whether abuse eitlier in the
department or In the service exlsti.
to discover In what private Interests
postmasters are engaged; the hours of
work required of all employes, and
whether postmasters participate In po-
litical campaigns
Having expected an opposition
speech from Fornn^r Speaker Cannon
as the opt iiing of the reciprocity fight
today, the house of representatives ex-
perienced a surprise when the first at-
tack of the day came from a Southern
Democratic member.
Renresentative Gudger of North Caro-
lina characterized the bill as a Repub-
lican measurn. He attacked his col-
league, Mr. Kltchln, for his speech of
Saturday, declaring he was marching
side by side with the Republican lead-
ers and that had Impugned the mo-
tives of at least three members of the
North Carolina Democratic delegation
who proposed to vote against the
measure.
Midway, Me., di.spatch to the New
York Sun: It takes some money and
very much patient application for a
man with a dozen traps to go into
the Maine woods in winter and cap-
ture enough weasel skins to line a
cloak for his wife. Weasels are
never abundant in any place. A per-
son may live in the midst of a weasel
country all winter and never see a
specimen, though by putting out a
dozen traps baited with raw beef dab-
bled in blood or with fresh fish
scorched over a fire he can often catch
from three to ten every night for
week.i.
The apparent scarcity is curious.
The weasel has no serious enemy in
the animal kingdom, and being capa-
ble of fighting ferociously and slaying
a rat four times its own weight, there
is no reason why it should not mul-
tiply very rapidly, aa It produces four
Utters of young every season, averag-
ing from five to seven to a litter. .
Most old hunters and woodsmen are
aware that the fur of the weasel is
the finest and glossiest borne by any
animal in tho world, but weasels have
never' been trapped much on account
of their apparent scarcity, and not
until the present century was well
under way did the fur dealers think
them worth quoting in the lists of
raw furs.
Six years ago the large dealers listed
weasel pelts at 10 cents each, pro-
vided they were whole and captured
in mid-winter, when the fur is pure
white with a black tip at the end of
the tall. This winter the same kind
of skins sell for from 20 to 25 cents
each, and the dealer scannot find half
enough to fill the demand. Usually
they want to buy them in lots of 500
or more, all pure white and of uni-
form texture. L.a.at winter a dealer
in Caribou offered as high as 50 cents
.apiece for the last sixty pelts needed
to complete an order for 500 skins,
which he had been three years in
filling.
"If anybody thinks It is like play-
ing, to go out and collect 500 weasel
pelts." said Billy Allen, an old trap-
per of Fort Fairfield, "he ought to
try It once and find out. I took it up
partly for fun but chiefly to reduce
my waistline last winter, and followed
it up for three months, and while my
weight was reduced from 200 to 160
pounds and my health improved every
day the re.sult of my work and- worry
was less than 100 skins that were
salable
"Think of what I undertook to do.
The average skin from the average
weasel Is 4 Inches long by 2 Inches
wide, so that a square foot of weasel
pelts when sewed together holds the
desirable parts of from eighteen to
twenty weasels. This square foot is
of no use to anybody unless twenty-
four other square feet of weasel pelts
are found to complete the lining of
the cloak, and twenty-five square feet
of pelts, representing twenty weasels
to tho square foot, means weeks and
months of hard labor in the catching
ind other weeks and months in the
skinning and tanning and still other
weeks and months in the matching
and sewing together so as to make a
uniform fabric.
"I do not know where the prepared
skins are sold finalli . Trappers of
the Hudson's Bay company around
Montreal and Quebec tell me they are
sold to private customers In St.
Petersburg and Leipsic. which are the
chief market places for rare and cost-
ly furs In the world.
"There la a story that the early
Jesuit fathers, who visited Canada
more than 200 years ago, brought
from France a secret process of
tanning and cutting small pelts and
that the secret was conveyed to a
few intelligent Indians, who passed
the formulas down in their families
from generation to generation. Any-
how I believe it is a fact that the
three most valuable furs In the world,
the black fox, the fur seal and the
sea otter, are all tanned by Canadian
Indians before th-ey are sent to Lon-
don to be sold at auction."
250.000 PLUM PUDDINGS.
Sum
DISBURSEMENTS
Not amount paid for lo.sSM ( 3.541.45R.41
Expei!S«i of adjustment "f Io«»e4 118.S19.32
CommUsloni) and brokerage l,i)ao.58i.36
Salarien and fees of officers, 8gent«
and employes 730.424.65
Taxes, fees, reula and other real state
expens.'s 2TT.308.91
r>lTldenda and Interest 50,000. 00
(jross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger a.«eUi 1,124.(502.80
AU other dlsburscmenu 405.T90.85
'Weatem Reserve Inanrance Con^iany.
Principal office: Cleveland. Ohio. (Orgaoized la
1903. Mars K. Wagar. president : F. P. BkicfonL
.secretary. Attorney to accept aerrica in MinneMta:
Commlatlonef at Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $250,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than peii)etuala t 193. 341. If
Rents and interest 19.3M.r«
From all other souroe* I,07t-M
Total Income f 213.742 M
Ledger asset* Dec. 81 of previous ysar.t 433.172.3«
IN
ToUl dlabursementa t 7.243,991.70
Balance % 13,644,712.22
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book Taluo of real esUte ( 67.300.00
Mortg;vge loans 544.r>00.00
Book value of bonds and stocks 10.49S.0i:.00
Cash in office, trust companies and
b.inks 1.517,120.03
Agenti' balancag, unpaid premium i and
bills receivable, taken for prem urns. 1.002.513.31
All other ledger assets 15. 021. 88
Total ledger assets fas per ba!i.nee).$ 13,844.742.22
NON-LEOQER AitSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrjed. .$ 96.T8.1.S0
AU other non-ledger aseeu 150.039.58
Gross assofs % 13.892.487.30
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
.Vgents' bal:inces f 35,035.35
Book value of ledger asseu oTer oiarkat
Talue 23.996.88
.Special deposit, less $219,098.74 labU-
ity thereon 8«.!^!13.28
All Other assets not adnoiltted 37.23fi 85
1910.
Sum
DISBURSEMENTS
Net amount p.'iid for losses
Exp«ii£Os of aUustment of loasee
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries an.d fees of officers, agents atid
employes
Taxins. torn, rents and other real estate
expenses
Dividends and interest
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjuat-
raeut of leiiger assets
All other disbursements
SS1.913.2a
183.111.M
3.155.51
34.3SS.I«
34.584.3r
9 493.91
S.OOO.OC
8.978.SS
17.644.4*
Total dUUifsements $ 30l.»«9.5«
Balance
t 380,445.6«
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value of !)ond8 and stocks 303.5O4.IT
Casli in office, tniat compaiUe* jn.l banlu
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums ind
bills receivable, takea for prtsmlums..
27.5*3. U
49.337.73
Net ledger assets t
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due aiui accrje<i f
Market value of real estate.
stocks over bo.>k value
bonds and
380.449. 6«
1,938.71
20.890.51
Total assets not admiued I
188.762.14
ToUl admltUd assets % 13.753.703. 18
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
TTnpald lo<aes and claims $ SSI. 255.37
rneamed premiums 8.510.489.24
Salaries. exi»enws, taxes, dividends
and Inter-st lue 178.594.05
rommlsalons and brokf r.ii?o 22.379.30
irneametl premium rescr»e 100.000.00
Keserve for contested llablUllas 640.000.00
.VII other liabUUies 23.514.67
Capital stock paid up 2.500.000.00
ToUl liabilities, including cap;lal...$ 10.556.211.63
Net surplus » 3.197,493.53
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS
*Flro risks written during Uie )ear. ..| 89.'>.4!Mi,243.00
Premiums received thereon 7.8,')5,052.92
Net amflunt in force at end of the yeartl. 149. 192,395 00
•—Including business other tlian "Marine and In-
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including n'in.surauce received and deducUng re-
Insurance pLiced.)
Fire ri»k.i. Tornado. .Aggregate.
UislB written.$9.993.330.00 $1,819,855.00 $11,847,205.00
Premiums
Gross asseU I 403.2r4.8t
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' tialaucas $ 698.50
Total asseta not admitted $ 696.50
Total admllt<»l assets
LIABILITIES DEC. 31,
lossiH atil claims
ITnpatd
Unearned premiums
Salaries, experisea. taxes.
Interest due
Capital stock paid up. . .
....$
1910.
dividends and
402.578. 3S
30.989.7t
83.914.49
4.200 09
250.000 o»
received .
Lotses
Incurred .
Losses paid
Amount at
risk
145.092.90
102.840.1T
100,811.99
15.677.2$
3.041.80
$.988.80
160.680.12
105. 522.07'
103.800.79
20.982.810.30
.^tate of Minnesots, Department of Insurance.
I Heri»by Certify. Tliat Uie Ar nual Statement of the
Fidelity -Phenix Flr» Insurance 'Jompany. for the year
ending December 31«. 1910, of which the above U an
abstract, has been received and filed In this Depart-
ment and duly approved by me. o„cT.a
J. A. O. rKr.t'?^,
Commiisloner of Insurance.
Ttotal lUblllUea. Including capital $ 369.104. H
Net surplus $ ;>3.i:4 2$
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
♦Fire ri.sk.^ written d'lring the year $3T.62i»,631 00
Preml'ima received Uiereon 467.225 53
Net amount in {■iTco at end of the year. Il.'.Mi'j.l'O 10
• — InluJing business jtiier than "Marine and la-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA I.V 1910.
(Including relnsuraiu» received and deducting re-
insurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
BLsks written $ 989.:,c;6 68
rt«Bilums received
Losses Incurred
Ii<)sses paid
Amount at risk
18.711 24
13.309.05
10,2;i6.55
1.032.085.59
State of Mtnno.wta, Department of Insumnce;
I Her;''jy Certify. That tlia Annual statement of
the Western lleserve Iiiiuranoe Company, for the year
ending December 3Ut. l;tlO. of wlilch the above Is aa
abstract, has been ret-elved snd filed Itf this deyarl-
ment aud duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
SuMpect Released.
Edward D. Gumphrey, arrested yes-
terday afternoon on suspicion of being
the man who was wanted at Virginia
on a charge of grand larceny was re-
leased this morning. Chief Walsli of
the Virginia police department said
that he was not the man wanted. The
man who Is sou^iit Is accused of hav-
ing stolen a valuable rifle.
♦
^Vlde Awake Club Meeto
At 117-119 West iSuperlor street to-
morrow to share in the Gray-Tallant
company's silk sale. Visiting members
Invited.
Faralture Coverlnsa Neivest W^eavea.
Cameron the upholsterer. Both 'phones.
Happy Dar TomorrofT.
Women will smile when they see
the Gray-Tallant company ad on page
7. And they'll beam with delight when
they share in the silk bargains at tho
sale tomorrow.
ABKermcler Fined 9100.
E. Angermeler, arre.sted on a charge
of practicing medicine without a li-
cense, was foimd guilty yesterday aft-
ernoon by the jury which heard the
case before Judge W. L. Windom. A
fine of 1100 was imposed, with a stay
of twenty days In which to appeal the
case. The defendant contended that
M. B. A. BALL
Don't forget the fourteenth anni-
versary ball Thursday eveniiu;, April
20. K. of P. Hall. 118 West Superior
street. Lunch. Diniarco's orchestra.
Door rights rtiserved.
DULUTH CENTRAL LODGE. No. 450
RUSSELL HEADS COUNCIL.
Sixth Ward Alderman Succeeds Mc-
Ouire as President of City Body.
Alderman W. R. Russell was elec'Ltd
pre.sident of the Superior council last
evening to succeed Alderman McGulre.
The Third street extension matter
came up for consideration and several
property owners appeared both for and
against the Improvement. Tne council
authorized a committee of three to In-
vestigate and report at the next meet-
ing.
Bluings park people presented a pe-
tition asking for additional patrolmen
in the Ninth ward.
HUGHITT AVENUE FLATS
TRANSFERED FOR $8,500.
Gust Egdahl yesterday purchstscd
from Robert Agrell a two-story store
and flat building and two lots at the
southwest corner of Hughitta venue and
North Seventh street for |8,500. The
purchase was made for investment
purposes.
C. R. Porter of Ashland yesterday
purchased a flat building at 1901-3
Butler avenue from Fred York. He
paid $2,450 for the property.
children with blue eyes and light hair
playing In the streets; In fact, mey are
little folk who resemble but remotely
the descendants of Pericles.
These chiur.^n on th«j Greek soil are
descendants of tlie .suite and followers
of King Otho I. Whtn the pruioe of
Bavaria was called to the throne of
Greece in 1832 he was accompanied by
soldiers, officials, prifessional men.
workmen and shopkeepers. In plain
language a good part cf the contingent
was a motlev crowd of adventurers.
Most of these remained behind after
the fall of the dynastj . and occupying
good positions today in Alliens are the
bearers of names un<riestlonably Ger-
man, for Instance HoessUn, Rlenck and
Schauroih.
The Bavarian king and queen en-
couraged the settlement of their coun-
trymen In Greece. Queen Amelia
created a model farm In Pyrgos Ama-
llas but the land uncultivated has mow
returned to a state >f nature. The
king founded a village upon which he
bestowed the ancient title of Heraclea,
and In view of the brigandage he sur-
rounded It with walls and gates At
the four corners he erected small forts.
It had new town he uses for sixty
families especially re .served for Ba-
varian artisans, but only forty were
ever occupied.
After the troubles 3f 1843 thirteen
families quitted the tc wnshlp, and the
German population hai; since then con-
tinued to decrease, but tho.se who have
remained do not seem to have con-
tracted Greek marriages.
company allotted to df^ferred dlstribti-
tlon ixjlicies tlie sum of $l.l-^J.')76.i)4
I which is carried in liabilities), making
tne total apportionment of surplus dar-
ing IIMO. $:.',.206,tJ*J].4'J.
Ledger AHwetit Oeo. .11, 1910.
Value of real estate
owned I 1,929.455.38
Mortgage loans 47,061,800.33
Collateral loans 2,014,700.00
Premium notes and pol-
icy loans 18,455,877
Bonds and .stocks owned. 41,426,158
Cash in office, banks and
trust companies 2,607,394
Bills receivable and
agent.s' balances 305,694
Bills receivable for pre-
miums 101.836
.34
37
81
5«
78
Total ledg-'^r assets <.as
per balance) $113,905,917.51
N'on-LedKer Aantels.
Interest and rents due
and accrued $ 1,397,233 . 53
Net deferred and unpaid
premiums 1,952,254.56
All other non-ledger as-
sets 11.563.98
Gross assets $117,266,969.56
Deduet ANaeta 'Sot Admitted.
Agents' debit balanco-s. .$ 23,267.07
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value 36,010.04
All other as.sets not ad-
mitted 404,670.96
Total assets not admit-
ted $ 463,948.07
Inspect Poor Farm.
Poor Commissioner Swan Hard and
members of the board of poor com-
missioners, today paid a visit of in-
spection to the county insane asylum
and poor farm at Parkland. The ob-
ject of the visit was to take notes of
repairs needed this spring at the In-
stitutions.
Police Get New Auto.
The new seven^passenger, 40-hor3e-
power Luverne tourtog car, bought for
the Superior police department with
funds raised by the department, arrived
The manufacture of plum pudding In
England Is mainly confined to London
and Is carried on by all the principal
bakeries, delicatessen and other such
establishments. The Industry was
gr*»atly boomed by the Boer war.
In the opening days of that struggle
the Yuletlde season Increased the nat-
ural solicitude for the fathers and sons
and hubbands in far away Africa, and
the plum pudding was requisitioned
In large quanaltles to express the feel-
ing at home and carry at least a spark
of Christmas cheer to enliven the sol-
diers' camp.
Thousands of pounds of plum pud-
ding were sent out, but the demand
was In excess of the supply, a fact
which gave greater urgency to the de-
mand and by concertatlng general In-
terest In the pudding added Immensely
to Its popularity, and especially as the
soldier called loudly for more. The
result Is that today the bulk of plum
pudding consumed In the United King-
dom Is supplied by public purveyors
and hundreds of thousands of pounds
are shipped abroad. Manufacturers
b«»gln active operations as soon as the
new crop of raisins, currants and other
required fruits appear In September.
All the constituents of plum pudding,
which do not Include plums, are pre-
pared and manipulated by elaborate
and expensive machinery. Currants are
washed and stems removed, raisins are
stoned, nuts are shelled and ground,
oranges and lemons are peeled, the
Eeel candled and cut up, eggs are
eaten and all other Ingredients pre-
pared by machinery.
Exclusive of milk and rum the in-
gredients used by a single manufac-
turer In supplying plum pudding to
meet the demands of the Christmas
season of 1910 aggregated 620.140
pounds, the number of puddings fur-
nished aggregating 250,000. There are
three or four other London manufact-
urers says Dally Consular and Trade
Reports, each of whose output perhaps
equalled that described, and there are
quite a large number of smaller estab-
lishments In which plum pudding was
supplied for home and foreign con-
sumption.
The pudding Is put up In packages
weighing one to five pounds each and
securely packed to insure preserva-
tion and safe transportation. Properly
prepared and packed the plum pudding
of England, with ordinary eare on the
part of tho housewife, will retain its
virtues for a year or more. '
♦
GERMAN GREEKS.
Muncher Nachrlchten: A visitor to
Athens who goes to the neighboring
village of Heraclea is surprised to se*
Subscribe for The Herald
Penn Mutual Life Inwiirnnce Company.
Principal office: 923 Chestnut street.
Philadelphia, Pa. (Organized In 1»47.)
George K. Johnson, president; John
Humphreys, secretary. Attorney to ac-
cept service In Minnesota
sloner of Insurance.
Inewme in 1910.
First year's premiums . . $
Dividends and surrender
values applied to pur-
chase paid-up insur-
ance and annuities. ..
Consideration for or g-
Inal annuities, and sup-
plementary contracts.
Involving life cout.n-
gencies
Renewal premiums . • • .
Total premium Income. $
Rents and interests.. ..
Gross profit on .sale, ma-
tur'ty or adjustment of
ledger assets
From all other sourceii..
Commls-
2,344,564.42
398,993.86
418,796.93
15.367,543.69
18.529,895.90
5,469,805.50
66,330.61
365,225.43
Total Income ••$ 24,431,257.
50
Ledger assets December
31st of previous year. .$105,653,Jii.ao
Sum $130.084,569 . 40
DUbur«ements DnrlnK 1010.
Death ^claims and ma- _„,„„„, o,
tured endowments ....$ 7,^:18, <s-.»^
Annuities and premlim
notes voided bv lap;e. 425,207.<J»
Surrender values to pol- „„.,„,„, ^g
ley holders 2, ^z», 187.33
'^iri**^"*^.' .'.° .''""^^ ^•'*?" 2,071.945 . 41
i^lvldends to company... 8,039
Total admitted assets. .$116,803,021,49
LtabilltleM Dec. :tl, 1910.
Net value of outstand-
ing policies $ 94,041, 903. 0»
Present value on supple-
mentary contracts and
canceled policies
Claims adjusted and not
due, and unadjusted
and reported
Claims resisted
Premiums paid in ad-
vance
Dividends due policy
liolders 11,326.304.38
Special reserve 3,000,643 . 00
All other liabilities 1.240,222.19
2,104,353.00
414.870.81
2.000.00
61, 339. OS
Total liabilities on pol-
icy holders' account. $116,803, 021. 49
Una.ssigned funds (sur-
plus) $
l5:xbibit of I'oiicieH, 1*.)10
No.
Policies In force
at beginning of
the year (last
column only) . ..184315
Policies In force at
close of the year.191465
4.611,381.18
BuMiueMH.
Amount.
$471,783,113.00
499.563,062.00
Net Increase
7150 27,779,949.00
14
"^^eV^i ^"^^ ^^}':'^. '!°''::% 11.952.162
Commissions and bonuses
^"remfur..^":''.."'*"! 1.022,700
Commissions on renewals 963,400
Commissions on annui-
ties. Including rent w-
olg ,
Commuted renewal com-
missions
Salaries and allowanses
for agencies •
Agency supervision ima
other expenses .......
Medical examiners fses
and Inspection of risks
Salaries of officers una
employes
Legal expenses • • •
Agents' balances charjjed
off
Gross loss on sale, tia-
turlty or adjustmenl. of
ledger assets
All other disbursements.
65
20
45
20,884.18
10,197.40
866.64
18,049.20
133.828.77
401,917.11
16,476.24
819.37
837,378.31
1.299,971.37
Total aisbursementa ..I 16.178,651.89
Balance •• • • •?1\3'»05.917.51
•In addition to abo^a abatements tn«
Issued, revived
and Increased
during the year 19842
Total terminated
during the year 12692
By death 1796
By maturity 721
By expiration . . . 1785
By .surrender .. 3269
By lap.se 5121
By decrease
BualneaM In Minnenota
No.
Policies In force
at beginning of
the year
Issued during the
year
Ceased to be in
force during the
year
In force Dec. 3l3t
last
67,747.394.00
.00
.00
,00
2454
331
•150
2635
39,967,435.
6.459.223.
1,749.448.
4,013,456.00
10,143,102.00
15.764,633.00
2,837,567. 00
in lOlU.
Amount.
5,440,937.00
1.071,608.00
•348,628.00
6,163, 917. 00
Losses and claims In-
curred during the year$ 61,28«.3«
63,050.36
750.00
Losses and claims set-
tled during the year,.
Lo.sses and claims un-
paid Dec. 31st
Received for premiums.. $ 214.336.24
•Including $58,504.00 transferred from
Minnesota on account of change of res-
idence. _
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Penn Mutual Life
Insurance Company, for the Vfar tend-
ing December 81st, 1910, of which the
above Is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly
approved by me. ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^
Commissioner of Insuraocai
H. I. PINEO, General AKent,
408-9 Columbia Building. Duluth Mlaa.
■*n ■
l<
■I
±
f
rf^pi-aiB"
■ ■ >!
i«9>
*
■IP
i«F
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
STEAMSHIl 3.
ALLAN LINE—
rktureMua St. LawTpnce Rout«.
Weekl; Sailings f»om
MO>TnEAL TO LIVEKFUOL. GLASGOW
ttO.NTKE.U. TO LONDON. HAVllE. Franc*
Fortnightly from
PHIT.ArF.tJniA MlcJ BOSTON to GLASGOW.
Si.liuO^ scene.'/, sliottcst passaM. low mm.
Anj Local A»ent or
ALLAN ft CO.. General Agents,
174 Jackson Blvd., Chicago.
RAILROAD TIME TABLES.
MINNEAPDLIS.ST.PAUL
»-5SaultSte.Marie Ry.
UN!ON STATION — ^uBfrlor S-t. ano Sixth Ave. Wwt.
Leato-
TWIN PORTS EXPRESS. Arrive.
t7 00mm *7.00pm. .
7 aOftm 7.3Ppm..
2 45pm 10 40pin
t6 OOpfn I ' 45pm
for Ymu 3 4S«ni . .
Claire aati
rails 7 ISam .
•9 COam
. DULUTH
Superior
iLaa>:*milU
... Ow'.iis .
.. OiOikukb
.•9 00am t5.30pm
8 30ain 5.00pm
5 15am 10. 30am
. 4.00ajn t7.55am
. 12. 01 am Kruni K.
Claire and
C'hippewH
. S.SOpm FaUa
.•7.00pm
UUwn uke«
Cluoafto
Dli.ine Car? Pa!ace S:wp«r« ari<! LiLrury Ohserra-
tloii inn. VestiUuIeU — Vacuum CleaueU — Uecinc
*^fcVui'iert:on at Iji.lysmith with Train 8 for Uaiito-
U«ue Ulailstoiie and intemifrilate points.
Central National Fire InRarance Com-
pany.
Principal office: 184 La Salle street,
Chicago. 111. (Organized in 1909.) James
B. Hohbs, president; F. M. Rice, secre-
tary. Attorney to accept service in Min-
nesota: Commissioner ot Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, J300,000.
Income in 1010.
Premiums other than i er-
peluals I
Rents and Interest
Gross profit on eale, ma-
turilv or adjustment of
ledger assets
642,a53.49
12,142.10
43.75
Total income I
554,539.34
Ledger assets December .
31st of previous year. .$
630,959.61
Sum
Leavo.
BRODTEN EXPRESS.
Afire.
15. 45am
Pulutli . . .
. .19.00pm
tT.OOam 6
15am
:.-!uperlol . .
.. 8 30pm
t9
OOpm
10 00am 8
3 lOrni IC
t4.U0pm H!
22am
2Uam
. Mnjsc U-ike
Wahkpii . .
.. t 20pm
.. 4.42pm
12
7
35pm
26am
5(>ani
.... Uiiani^a
.. 4.25pm
tb
43am
11
20pin
Broottu
..tl .45pm
Connect !«'
i« al
Pruoten for Twin Clue*
Weatero
Canada und tlir
Factfic Const
Le»ve.
DOLlTM-WlWNlPEfl
LINE. /
Lrrli
t 5
e.
t «.30am..
10.05am. .
I»ultiin . . .
lOpm
... Sjpirlor ..
4 4upm
II 2SaBi. .
...Miiose Lake..
3 "
lapm
4 00pm. .
4.37pm .
.. . .Cass Lake. .
BeiuUiJl . . .
lU
9
28am
54am
7.30pm..
TUtef Ki-.er FalU
J
00am
CoiiiKrcttuiis at
Tliii'f I<''er Kalis
for niruiipcg.
Irffaie.
CUYUNA RANGE LINE Arrl
re.
t 7 20tm.
7 55ain. .
L>alaUi . . .
. ... Suptrior ..
t 6 40pm
6.05pm
9 5Uam. ..
Lawlti . .
4 ""
lupm
10 02ant. .
,.
....F.u«t Lake..
i
58pm
10 24am
Oariita ...
i
35pm
iO.aSam .
Hiscljfrg ..
3/.i3pm
10 46am. .
.... AitkiD .. •
3
i^pm
1 1.45am
Iiaii ilut. .
2
55pm
Arrive tl 15am DEER WOOD 2 40»w Uave.
til. 57am Cuyuna
I2.05PK Ciusby
, ..t a C»pm
. . 2.00pm
•L'jliy *l)a»:j txrept Suixluy.
I 1.185.498.95
DlMbamementii in 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses I
Expenses of adjustment
of losses
Commissions and broker-
age
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes .... • •
Taxes, fees, rents and-
other real estate ex-
penses
Gross loss on sole, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
AH other disburs nienls.
162,^10.23
1,880.75
163,021.70
62,682.58
12,912.06
266.5.'?
21,169.37
Total disbursements ..$ 414,133.22
Balance 771,365.73
Lederer AHiietH Dec. 21, 1010.
Mortgage loans I 128,260.00
Collateral loans ... •
Book value of bonds and
stocks
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks
?ents' balances, unpaid
9,500.00
406,498.79
98,070.86
Ag
premiums and bills re-
Risks written
rremiums received
Losses incurred ....
Losses paid
Amount at risk....
ceivable, taken for pre-
miums **°'*SJnA
All other ledger assets.. lib. 00
Total ledger assets( as
per balance) • 77i,dt)o./J
Non-Iiedser AMsetM.
Interest and rents due
and accrued ♦ e.JJi.oa
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks
over book value 6,365. ol
All other non-ledger as-
gf^tg 2,860. 46
Gross assets I 788,531.38
Deduct AimetB Not Admitted.
Agents' balances I 4,Z68.cJ
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value l.lis.sa
All other assets not ad-
rnitted 6.940 . 50
Total assets not admit-^ 12.357.70
Total admitted assets.? 776,173.68
L.ial*ilitieH Dee. 31. 1010.
Unpaid losses and claims.| „^f'SZ,Mn
Unearned premiums .... ^81, 3/0. 00
Salaries, expenses, taxes.
dividends and interest „„.,,, „,
due 20,511.83
Reinsurance premiums .. ..IS'.I^^-L'!
Capital stock paid n... 300,000.00
Total liabilities, in-
cluding capital
646,016.20
130,157.48
Pire Risks.
.?1, 425, 784. 00
22,385.67
18,422.15
19,336.02
. 1,637,937.00
Net surplus I
RlMka and PremlumM. 1010 BuHlnea*.
(a) Fire ri.>-ks written
during the year I 47.035.131.00
Premiums received there- ^
QYl • lOljfc^O.i-l
Net amount in force at
end of the year 35,479,883 CO
(a) Including business other than
"Marine and Inland"
IlasIneMM in MinnCKOta in 1010.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Hall. Tornado. Aggregate.
1101,430.00 I 80,400.00 $1,607,614.00
-' ' 463.85
w. \«. prindle:
T. H. hawke:s
E. A. ^«EJIRILI«
W. ]VI. PRIIVDLE «t CO
lx>nsdai..e: BUII..DING
IFB^i, lHJITOilOillLE, LD^^IILOirY, PLM^ ©L^SS, liOTOI^ i0M O^SyMiSE
Scottinb Union ^ National Insurance
Company.
Principal offic« In the United States: Hartfcrd.
Ci-nii. (Coinmeiiced builneia In the United States
1880. J«mes W. Brewster, general nianugcr In the
T'nlted States. Altorncy to aci-epl seriiice lu Min-
nesota: Commissioner •( Insurance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL, $200,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Prcmiuma other than perpetuala I 2,046.112 18
Ucnts and Inten^t. . 20.1.279 53
Jlecelved from home office 67,007.50
Cross profit on sitle. maturity ur adiust-
mciit ol ledger assets . 5.133.71
TVUl Im-ome $ 2,322,432.02
Ledger asseta Dec. 31 0* pretious year..! 4.089,878 03
Sum
.1 7,312,311.85
5,068.17
1.102.46
1,102.46
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
suiance: .„...■. a »i
1 Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Central National Fire
Inv-inance Company, for the year end-
27,917.69
19,524.61
20,438. 4»
1,646,612.00
of which the
108,675.00
ing Decerr.oer 31st, 1910,
above Is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly
approved by me. ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^
Commiss'oner of Insurance.
DILITH. MISSABE & NORTH-
ERN RAILWAY.
Office: 42« Wewt Superior St.
'I'buue. 000.
Lrfive
Arrive.
t HiUblug Chli-holm, Virginia. Eve- I
•7 4Cam - ietii. loieraiiie. Sharon iBuhl). ^ "a.^ipm
(iMui.iit n Irci.. tSparta tBiwnbik
I Hibbiiif. ChlBliolni. SLaruu I
•3.50pm i (buhlj, VirtiiiU. Ereltth. | ♦10.31am
1 Col*raliie.
( VirBir.la. Cock, liuluer. Fort '
•7 lOpm i Fraricea, Purt Arthur, Pau-
l dctte. Warri-.ad. Winnipeg.
} •8.3lai
J
•Daily. 1l»iulj ex»-«Fl Sunday.
Cafe Ot.sirvation Car, Mesaba Range
Points' MoiiU Vestlbuled Train. Modern
Sleepers through to Winnipeg.
THE Dl LITU & IRON RANGE
RAILROAD COMPANY.
"VKRMILION RUrTE"
DILI rii—
LeuTC.
Arrive.
Knife Ki-.er. Two Harijcrs. Ti wer,
Elj Aartra, Blwabik. MiKUdej.
S«cieUi. GUbert and Virgiuia.
la-r anonH
•7 30am!ti2.00«
|t2.45p».| •e.lOpi
•Dully tl-ally escfpt SusiOay.
expense ol constructing a sanitary
sewer In Seventh alley. In said city,
from 125 feet west of i^ighteenth ave-
nue cast to Sixteenth avenue east, with
outlet In Sixteenth avenue east to the
sewer in Sixth street, according to
benefits, is now payable at the office ol
the City Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will be
added if payment is not made on or
before May 8th, 1911, and the said as-
sessment will then bear interest at the
rate ot six (6) per cent from April 7th,
1911. to date of Payment
W. S. McCORMICK.
City Ccinptroller.
(Seal City Comptrcller. Duluth, Minn.)
D. H., April 12. 19, 1911. D 574
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7, 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn.)
D. H., April 12, 19, 1911. D 569.
DULU-f H & NORTHERN WINNESOTA RAILWAY.
Office*, J 10 LtmaJale Blot.. Duluth.
Trains cc:.n«-i at Kr^e Klwr daUylcjcept Sunday*
with V i I. h. trains le.-.vUip Duluth at
and arn-.Uig at Du'.ull. al 1.30 p. m.
Cn;m« Hit:. «r-nd Uarals sUgo when running.
30 a. im.
Connects at
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
l.#«c
•4. OOpm
•8 Oliom.
•7 30pin.
•(I 05am
Le;i?e.
tO.OOam
• I 55PP1.
•II iOpm
Ashland and Fjisl. .
.Ashland and B^ast. .
Uiitn. anil Ditkot.a E-Xi:
Sortli Coa.-t Llmittd
ArnTe.
.•II. ISam
. •6.40pm
. •8.15am
. •e.25pm
Duluth Short Une" ^"J''Sn
*D. juani
ST. PAUL t2 05pm
■. WINNEAPOLIS •7.00pm
• I.sii^. IDuily ncept Sunday.
iH-yit at 331 Wtst Superior street.
I'traue 'Sli. Union
IDRTI^WEBTERW llNE
IfcTsT. pC M . a*" ol RY.!^"^ ^
L.'i-.'Opm 'eiiam. .. Duluth .
L\*3.50p''i t.;5pm... Superior .
Ar 7.45ain . MUwauke«
Ar 7.00am 8.! 5am... Chjcago
Ar»8.25am *l2:0pm
.Ar 7.53am ll.45aw
I.t 7 45pm
Lv 6 25pm lO.IOpm
LT+8.50am •4.35pir. .. Duluth ..
Lv 9 "Cam 4.r.5cm. . Supinor .
Ar 4.30pm 8.5Cpm . S'.. Paul .
Ar 5.0opm l0.25fcm. Uinne;'P'U3
•Daily 1 Daily eiccpl Sunday.
ClTue, 3t'2 Wtst Superior St.
Arts. 35pm
.Ar a.OSpm
.Lt 8 lOam
.L^ 7.30«m
Duluth.
•9.55pm
9.3bc>n
4.30pm
4.00pm
Duluth, South Shore & Atiaiitic.
OFFICE OF THi: COMPTKOLLli,R.
(Mty pf Duluth, April 12, 1911.
Nttice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
exepense of constructing a sanitary
sewer in Restormel street in said cily
fiom West line of Bryants Addition
to Duluth to Winnipeg Avenue, with
outlet in Winnipeg avenue to the
sewer in Vernon street, according to
benefits, is now payable at the office
of the City Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be added if payment is not made on
or before Mav 8th, 1911, and the said
assessment will then bear Interest at
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7th. 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller. Duluth, Minn.)
D. H.. April 12. 19. 1911. D 572.
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER—
City of Duluth, April IJ, 1911.
Notice is hereby given, That an ar-
seKsment levied to defray in full the
expeiise of constructing a sanitary
sewer In Restormel alley, in said city,
from a point 225 feet west of Atlantic
avenue to Pacific avenue, with outlet
in I'aclfic avenue to the sewer in Ver-
non street, according to benefits. Is
now payable at the office of the City
Treasurer. ^ ,,, .
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will be
added if payment is not made on or
before May 8th. 1911, and the said as-
sessment will then bear interest at the
rate of six (6) per cent from April 7th,
1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn.)
1). H April 12 19 1911. D 573.
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER.
Citv of Duluth, April 12, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer in Wellington alley In said
city from Michigan avenue to Grand
Forks avenue with outlet In Grand
Forks avenue to the sewer in Fourth
street according to benefits. Is now
payable at the office of the City
Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent wiil
be added if payment is not made on
or before May 8th, 1911, and the said
asses.«^ment will then bear interest at
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7th, 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
Cily CchAptroller,
(Seal City Comptroller. Duluth. Minn.)
.U, H., April 12, 19. 1911. D 570.
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER.
City of Duluth, April 12, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer In Sixth street in said city from
First avenue east to the sewer in
Lake avenue, according to benefits. Is
now payable at the office of the City
Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be added if payment is not made on
or before May 8th, 1911, and the said
assessment will then bear interest at
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7th, 1911. to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn.)
D H., April 12. 19, 1911. D 565.
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses 9 1,038.8S5.26
Cornmissioiia rmd brokerage 447,820.89
Salartni and fees of offlocn, agents and
tinplojcs 155,237.20
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
KX[>ense3 69,453.05
All other dlsbnrseiueuts 138,747.24
Gross l<>.£4 on sale, maturity or adjuet-
ment of ledger assets 2,135.70
Total disbursements
.9 1,852 238.43
Balance I 5,460,073.42
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910
Book value of real estate $
Mecbauies A Traders InHurance
Company.
Principal office: New Orleans. La. (Organised in
1869.) James Nlchola, president; T. B. Norton, sec-
rct.irj'. Attorney to accept service in Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, $300,000,
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuala | T32.362.82
Rente and interest 51,481.08
From all other sources 171.64
TdUI income $ 784,015.54
Ledger aatcts Dec. 31 of previous year. ..% 1,264,742.38
Sum I 2,048,757.92
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for Ioskcs % 370,184.51
Kxpeii'es of adjustment of loesee 5.221.58
Commis-slona and brokerage 130,27014
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes 66,984.38
Taxo". fees, rents and other real estate
expen.«cs 9.587.ri6
Dividends and Inteiwit 18,000 00
Ail other disbusements 51,190.39
Ail other ledger assets
Total ledger assrU (as per balance' %
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued .... $
Market value of real estate, bonds and
stocks over book value
iro.oo
1,397.319,36
22,427.73
1,500.00
Grose assets I 1.421,247.09
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances $ 2,181.74
Book value of ledger assets over mark<t
value " 97,176.80
Total assets not admitted.
99,358 54
$ 1.321,888.55
31. 1910.
Total admitted assets
LIABILITIES DEC
Unpaid losses and claims '
Unearned jreuiiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends aid
Interest due
Captai stock paid up
TVtal liabiUtiee, Including capital. J 926,656.48
85 237.92
531,418.56
10,000.00
300.000 00
Sprintrfield Fire A Marine InHoraoe*
Compauy.
Principal office: 195 State street, SpringfleUr
Mass. (Organized in 1849.) A. W. Damon presi-
dent; W. J Mackay, secretary. Attorney to aecept
service iu Minnesota: Commissioner of losurancow
CASH CAPITAL. J2,0O0,000,0O.
INCOME IN leiO.
PrcmJums other than perpetuals $ 5,243,334.3]
itents and interest 361,683.47
Grcss profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets 4,239.00
From all other aouroea 2.816.11
Total income $ 5,612,042.89
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year.. 9 8,923,57738
Sum ., $ 14,535,630.2*
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for Insseti $
Total disbuisemeuts $
651,438.56
Mortgage loans
Book Yalue of bonds and stocks
Cash lu office, trust companies and
banks
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
blllb receivable, taken for premiums.
41.926.53
312.525.00
4,606.447.18
130,263.18
368.011.51
Total ledger assets (as per balance). . I 5,460.073 42
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rente due and accrued.. $ 70.452.25
Groee assets I 5,530,526 67
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' t>alanceH $ 3,728.17
laliio of lidirtr assets over mar-
866.725.93
but.'k value of ledger assets over mar-
ket value
Total assets not admitted 9
270,454.10
ToUl admitted assets $ 5,260,071.57
LIABILITIES DEC
Unpaid losses and claims
dividends and
31. 1910.
9
UiiEarned premiums.
Salaries, expenses, taxes
Interest due . .
Deposit capital
229.194 54
1,897,707.26
40.000.00
200,000.00
Leo\e.
STATIONS.
Arrive.
t7.45am
t8 12am
t8.20am
t5.40pm
•6.15pm... Duluth ...♦10.30am
>.;,uo Line Uuiun Station)
•6 45pm... Superior . •lO.OOam
(t>iO Line Uniu" Station.)
•6.55rw... Supc/ii>r ... 'O.SOam
t Union Depot.)
Arrive Leave.
77 55pm 5.40am.. Hougl.ton ..tHOOpm
tb 5bpm f 30srr... Qaluuiet -I'" '"P"
t7 05pm »4 2Lam.. Ishpcming ..•12.20am
17 45pm *5 00am Maitjuette ..•1130pm
• i0.20air,Sault Sto. Mane •5.25iim
•8 OGaw ., Montreal ... •S 50pm
•8 20i,n: busluu •lO.OOam
t8 05a"m*' •8.!5pm... M-ntre.-il ...•lO.OOam tlO.OOpm
tlO O&pn. MO 2Cain...New York... •7.15pm r8 30am
tDaily eiceiit Sunday. •Daily.
tS.IOpm
tS.OOpm
16. 20am
is. 20am
•8.20pm
•8.30am
liTave.
THE GREAT NORTHERN.
STATIONS. Arrive.
t6 COam
•3 25p
• M lUp
•8 4Ssm I
•8 55pm t^
im I
sm {
ST. PAUL
and
MINNEAPOLIS
Crookbtcti. Grand Forks.
Monlai^a and Coa?t
tlO.ISpm
•I.Sbpm
•6.30am
•6.35pm
•7. ISam
tl2.3npm
t2. 20pm... Swan Ki-.er, ilibbing. Virginia
te. 00am ..St Ckud. Wilmar, Sioux City. . tlO- 15pm
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER.
City of Duluth, April 12, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer In Superior street in said city
from Thirty-first avenue west to the
outlet sewer near Thirtieth avenue
west, according to benefits, is now
payable at the office of the City
T) easiner.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be ad.Jed if payment is not made on
or before May fvth, 1911, and the said
assessment will then bear interest at
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7th, 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. M(:(X)RMICK,
City Comptroller
(Seal City Comptroller, Duluth. Minn.)
D. H., April 12, 19, 1911, D 571.
OFFICE OF THE CO-MPTROLLER.
City of Duluth. April 12, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an assess-
ment levied to defray in full the ex-
pense of constructing a sanitary sewer
In Fifty-sixth alley west in said city,
from Paducah Place to a point opposite
the westerly line of Lot 16, Block 93,
West Duluth, Sixth Division, thence
southeasterly in the sewer right-of-
way to Sixth street and in Sixth street
from the westerly line of Lot 22 to
the se«ver in Central avenue, according
to benefits, is now payable at the office
of the City Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be added if payment Is not made on
or before May 8, 1911, and the said
assessment will then bear interest at
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7. 1911. to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK.
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn.)
D H.. April 12, 19, 1911. D 668.
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER.
City of Duluth, April 12. 1911.
Notice Is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer In Third alley In said city from
Eleventh avenue west to a point forty
feet west of Tenth avenue west, ac-
cording to benefits, is now payable at
the office of the City Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be added if payment is not made on
or before May 8th, 1911, and the said
assessment will then bear interest at
the rate of six (61 per cent from April
7th, 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller. Duluth, Minn.)
D. H , April 12. 19. 1911 D 562.
TV>tal Uabllitlee, including depoalt cap-
ital 9 2,366,901.80
Net surplus « 2,803,169.77
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Pirc ribk£ written duHng the year 9354,706. -178 00
Prciuiums received tia-reou 3,490.877.50
Net amount in force at w»d of the year 9:<62,511,027.00
•—Including business oiher than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received aod deducting re-
iiisurunco pLiced. >
Fire Risks.
Riaks written 95,l?3.4.-i6 00
8,869.98
Balance 9 1,397,319 36
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, I9t0.
Book value of real estate 9 22,000 00
Mortfc'ago loans ^ „ 300.00
Book value of bonds and stocks 1,258,104.30
Cash In office, trust companies and
tanks
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, taken for premiums.. 107,945.08
Risks wrlttfn
Premiums received
Lofses Incurred . . .
Loesee paid
Amount at risk...
••••••••
Net surplus » 395,232.07
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1010 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written dnnig the year... -tH^-^^^;^'^"
Premiums received thereon 1,331,098.00
Marine and inland risks written during
the year ,'"ao S^
Premiums received Uiereon ., „,i o,^ „J
Net amount in force at end of the year. 87,91. .834^00
•—Including business other than "Marine and In-
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received ani deducting re-
insurance placed )
Hall, Mar-
Fire Risks. Ine and Inland Tomatlo. Aggregate.
91 022 12? 00 112,630.00 $76,!>60. )0 9l,lll.f 1?.00
■■ 12 062.65 631.30 556.^9 13 250 94
736162 24 JO 7,385.82
11,563.81 ..... 24. iO 11,590.01
1041758.00 31,426.90 1,073,184.80
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
1 Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of
the Mechanics &, Traders Insuram-e Ccmpany, for the
year ending December 31st, 1010, ol which the above
Is an abstract, has t»een received and filed In this
Department and duly approved by me. _„__,_
J. A. O. PREUS,
CommlsEioner of Insurance.
The
I'lvmluuis received
Ix)Siies incurred
LossC:! paid
Amount at risk...
66.174 S3
78,769 17
73,541.94
6,471,847.00
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
1 Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement, ol
the ScotUsli Union & National lusurnnie Company,
for the year ending Decemler 31st, ifliO. of which
the abcvn is an abstract, has been received and filed
iu Uii* Dcpaxtuuit and duly approved by me.
J. A. O PREUS,
Commisslouei of Insurance.
Palatine InMuranee Company,
Limited.
Principal office in tho United StaK^: Corner Pine
and Willi.am streets. New York. (Commenced busi-
ness in Uie United SUtes 1900.) A. H. Wray, gen-
eral manager in the United States. Attorney to ac-
cept service iu Miuaesota : Commissioner of lusur-
siice.
DEPO.SIT CAPITAL, $218,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other Uian perpetuals 9 1,701,901.31
Rents and interest 120,904.94
Rtx-elved from home office 193,505.80
Grose profit on 8.U1'. maturity or adjust-
meut of ledger assets 8,116.43
Total Income 9 2,020,428 48
Ledger ssaets Dec, 31 of previous jcar. .9 3.227,247.10
"™ ■ " ■ DiSBURSEMENTS' IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses 9
Comml-wicns and brokerage
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employee
Taxes, fees, rente and oUier real estete
expenses •
Retui-ue<l to home office
All other disbursements
Gioss loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
5,247,675.58
1,013.830.02
373,066.89
112,789.34
20,864.70
167,774.48
182.514.49
6,C19.90
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADIMITTED.
Agents' balances 9 6,4J4.67
Special deposit less 924,013.68 Uabllty
thereon P'^fS ?,
All other assete uot admitted 54,332 87
TtoUl ass^ not admitted 80,743.86
9 3,322,7'l.bl
31. 1910.
Total admitted assets
LIABILITIES DEC
Unpaid losses and claims 138,493.37
Uneanied premiums 1,633,047.93
S.".lurie8. expanses, taxes, divldeuda aid
interest due 28,377.92
Commissions and brokerage 41,946.15
All other liabiliUes 41511.87
Deposit taplUl 218,000 00
Total llabUitles, Including deposit
capital 9
Expenses of adjUBtrncnt cf losses
Commisslona and brokerage
Sal.-irtes and fees of officers, agents and
employes
Taxes, foes, rente and other real estate
expenses .
Dividends .-ind interest '...',','.
All other disbursemtute
2.863,911.30
30.497.31'
1.023.621. OS
Total dlabuisemeute 9 5,203.948.53
Balance j 9,331,701.79
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value of real estate
Mortgage loans .
Collateral loans
Book value of bonds and storlw....
Cush In office, trust companies
banks
Agents' balances, unpiiid premiums and
bills receivable, taken for premiam!<. .
and
Total ledger assets (as per balance). 9
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and tents due and accrued .9
Market value of real estate, bunds and
stocks over book value
9.331,701 72
ST,82€.19
590, 597. J3
Gross assets 9 0.980,lil5.0S
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' bal.incea 9 11,982.22
S|>eelal deposit, less 990,08o.05 UabUlty
thereou
Total assete not admitted.
31.
2,001.877 24
Net surplus .. .' 9 1,321.394. 57
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
♦Fire risks v\rittcn during the year. .9219.462 343.00
Pi'emiums received Iheroou 2,4U1,U'J1 00
Total dlsbursemcnte 9 1.876,759 81
Balance 9 3,370.915.67
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value of bonds and rtorks 9 2,874,752.87
Cafh In office trust companies and
b,.nks 127,066.16
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, L-ikcn for premiums.. 369,096.64
Total ledger a.<isets (as per l>alance) 9 3,370,915.67
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued 9 32,600.00
Grose assete
.9 3,403,515.67
Net amount In fcrt* at end of the yeir. 253,730,918.00
•—Including business other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received an<i deducting rein-
surance placed.)
Flro Risks. Tornado. Aggregate
Risks written... 92,041, 485.74 9103,800.00 $2,145,285.74
Piwmiums
26,523.63
19,665.15
18.923.77
3.327,046.00
57.713.31
2S6,599 24
received
Losses incurred.
Losses paid
Amount at risk.
711 65
683
683
27,235.28
19.671 98
18 930.60
3.327,046.00
Total admitted ttstcta
LIABILITIES DEC
Unpaid losses and claims
Unea nied premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
interest due
Funds held for Munich Relasuniuce Co.
and interest
Capital stock paid up 2. 000.000. 00
Total llabiUUes, including capital 9 7,325,861.70
Net surplus 9 2,o70.0«6 21
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Flro risks written durhig the yeai . 958'J, 093,632. 00
I'rcmiums received Ihereon 7,094,456 03
Net amount In force at end ot the ytiar 7G3,8,'i.l4a 00
•—Including business other than "Marine aud In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinhuraucc received aud di-ducting
insurance placed.)
Flro Risks. Tornado Aggregate.
Risks written 914,638,119 00 $1,049. &Ui.00 $15,687 .620.00
Premiums
received .. 207,355 71 7,037.53
iiosses
Incurred . .
Losses paid .
Amount at
risk
State of Minnesota, Department of i^nsurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of the
Palatine InsuraiK-e Company, Limit .>d, for Uie year
ending December Slet, 1910, of which the above is
an atetract, has been rK-cived and filed in Uiia De-
partment laid duljr approved by me.
3. A O. PREUS,
(jommlsslonei of Insurance.
169.37501
174,403.88
286 34
280.04
558,838.30
305 181 S.'t
200 OOO 00
321,898.60
300.000 00
1,317.820 00
6,000 00
6,342,832.77
475.2S3.M
889,743.91
72,214.93
84,197.11
.9 9,895,927.91
1910.
..$ 456.070 20
4,575,478.94
214,393.24
169,661 3B
174,690 2a
17,665,157 00 3,016,546 00 20,681, 703.«
Stato cf Minnesota, I>ei)ariment of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the AnnuuJ Statement of
the Springfield Fire & .Marine insurance Company^
fo^ the yenr ending December 31st. 1910, of whicb
Ute above In an abstract, ha.s Ijccii roccived aud fUed
in tills Department aud duly appio-.ed by me.
J, A. O PKEU8.
Commissioner uf InsuraucA.
Range 16 W., 4th P. Meridian, by
Harry H. Johnson, Contestee, in which
jt is alleged that said entryman, Harry
H. Johnson, has wholly abandoned
said land and has continued said aban-
donment for a period of moie than six
months last past, and that he has
wholly failed to establish actual resi-
dence upon said laftd; that said alleged
the applicant in the above entitled pro-
ceeding and to flit your answer to the
said application In the office of the
clerk of said court, in said county,
within twenty (20) days after the serv-
ice of this summons upon you, exclu-
sive of the day of such service, and, if
you fall to answer the said application
within the time aforesaid, the appll-
OFFlCE OF THE COMPTROLLER.
City of Duluth, April 12, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer In Superior street in said city
from a point about 45 feet east of
Forty-seventh avenue east easterly to
a connection with the sewer in Glad-
stone street, according to benefits, is
now pavable at the office of the City
absence from said land was not due to 1 cant in t»iis. Proceeding will apply to
service in the army, navy or marine 1 the court for the relief demanded
corps of the United States in time of
war, said parties are hereby notified to
appear, respond and offer evidence
touching said allegation at nine o'clock
a. m. on May 5th, 1911. before the Reg-
ister and Receiver at the United States
Land Office in Duluth, Minnesota.
The said contestant having. In a
proper affidavit, filed April 5th, 1911,
set forth facts wnich show that aflcr
due diligence personal service of this
notice can not be made, it is hereby
ordered and directed that such notice
be given by duo and proper publication.
CHARLES P. HARTMAN.
Register.
D. H., April 6, 12, 19. 26, 1911.
FOR
St.
rieasdrer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will _.. ^ __^
be added if payment Is not made on | ^f Range Fourteen (14) West
or before May 8th, 1911. and the said! qj. the Fourth Principal Me-
•DuUy tDaily ex(ept Sunday Twin City sleeper
leady at 9 p, ni OfTiie. Spakliiig hotel.
HOTELS.
New Baildlng: New Equipment— Rates, $2 and 92.50.
Hotel McHay
Corner First SL a.id Fifth Ave. West. DULUTH.
AcSelpfrii Motel
2801-2803-2805 West Superior Street
J. 8. DUNPHY, Prop.
Best equipped, rteam-heated, hotel in West end—
100 roomi, all modern conveaiesces; new buildiai:
■•w rauipment. Buffet in connection.
RATES, $5.00 PER WEEK AND UP.
Itmiperial Hotel
Thoroughly modern and ' up-to-date
in every respect.
ROOMS, 75c AND VP.
200-208 Weiit Superior Street.
Hotel tStJiperiof
—SUPERIOR, W;S.—
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER—
City of Duluth. Minn., April 12, 1911
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer in Wallace avenue in said city
from Woodland avenue to a point near
Bruce street, according to benefits, is
now payable at the office of the City
Treasurer
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be added if payment is not made on
or before May 8th, 1911, and the said
as.sessment will then bear Inter-
est at the rate of six (6) per cent from
April 7th, 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal, City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn)
D. H., April 12, 19, 1911. D. 566.
assessment will then bear interest at I
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7th, 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn.)
D. H, April 12, 19. 1911. D 563.
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER —
City of Duluth, Minn., April 12, 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray In full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer in Seventh alley in said city
from Second avenue west to the sewer
in Third avenue east, according to
benefits, is now payable at the office
of the City Treasurer.
A pen.altv of ten (10) per cent will
be added if payment is not made on
or before May 8th, 1911, and the said
assessment wiil then bear interest al
the rate of six (6) per cent from
April 7th, 1911. to date of payment.
j^VTii ' W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal. City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn.)
D. h!, April 12, 19. 1911. D 567.
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER.
City of Duluth. April 12. 1911.
Notice is hereby given that an as-
sessment levied to defray in full the
expense of constructing a sanitary
sewer in Fifty-sixth alley west in
said city from Raleigh street to Polk
street, according to benefits, is now
payable at the office of the City
Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) per cent will
be added it payment is not made on
or before May 8th, 1911, and the said
assessment will then bear Interest at
the rate of six (6) per cent from April
7th. 1911, to date of payment.
W. S. McCORMICK,
City Comptroller.
(Seal City Comptroller, Duluth, Minn.)
D. H.. April 12. 19, 1911. D 564
SUMMONS IN APPLICATION
RElilSTRATION OF LAND —
State of Minnesota. County of
Louis 88.
District Court, Eleventh Judicial Dls
Uict.
In the matter of the applica-
tion of E. C. Wright to reg-
ister the title to the following
described real estate situated
In St. Louis County, Minne-
sota, namely: The North-
west quarter of the Southwest
quarter of the Southeast
quarter (NW% of SWVi of
SE^4) of Section eleven (11)
in Township Fifty (50) North
Legal Notieea.
TO FILE
HEARING
Leading Hotel •< the city. Fine Cafe Service at
papular pricea. i.arge Sample Room. Bus meets all
trains.
EUROPEAN PLAN— 750 to $2. 50 per day.
— Special Weekly Rate*,
CITY NOTICES.
OFFICb'oF THE COMPTROLLER —
City of Duluth, April 12, 1911.
Notice is hereby given. That an as-
sessment levied to defray In full the
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER,
r;;.^. of Duluth. /j;-.:; iy, 1911.
Notice is hereby gTven that an assess-
ment levi^ to defray Ifi full the ex-
pense of constructing a sanitary sewer
In Glenwood street In said city from
Fifty-fourth avenue east to the sewer
in Fifty-eighth avenue east, accord-
ing to benefits, is now payable at the
office of the Cily Treasurer.
A penalty of ten (10) p«r cent will
be added If payment Is ifot made on
or before May 8, 1911, and the said
assesament will then b««r Interest at
ORDER LIMITING TIME
CLAIMS, AND FOR
THEREON —
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
— -ss
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of Fred
L. Neumann, Decedent.
Letters testamentary this day having
been granted to Albertlne Neumann.
IT IS ORDERED, That the time
within which all creditors of the above
named decedent may present claims
against his estate in this court, be, and
the same hereby is, limited to three
months from and after the dateTiereof;
and that Monday the 17th day of .Tuly,
1911, at ten o'clock A. M., In the Pro-
bate Court Rooms at the Court House
at Duluth in said County, be, and the
same hereby Is, fixed and appointed as
the time and place for hearing upon
the examination, adjustment and al-
lowance of such claims as shall be
presented within the time aforesaid.
Let notice hereof be given by the
publication of this order In The Duluth
Herald as provided by law.
Dated Duluth. Minn., April 11th, 1911.
S. W, GILPIN.
Judge of Probate.
(Seal Probate Court, St, Louis County,
Minn.)
D. H.. April 12, 19, 26, 191L
:ipal
ridian according to the United
States Government Survey
thereof,
Applicant,
▼8.
All other persons or parties un-
known, claiming any right,
title, estate, lien or interest
In the real estate described in
the application herein,
Defendants.
The State of Minnesota to the above
named defendants;
You are hereby summoned and re-
quired to answer the application of
the applicant in the above entitled
proceeding and to file your answer to
the said application in the office of the
clerk of said court. In said county,
within twenty (20) days after the serv-
ice of this summons upon you, ex-
clusive of the day of such service, and,
if you fail to answer the said applica-
tion within the time aforesaid, the ap-
plicant In this proceeding will apply
to the court for the relief demanded
therein.
WITNESS, J. P. Johnson, clerk of
said court, and the seal thereof, at
Duluth, in said county, this 10th day
of April, A. D. 1911.
J. P. JOHNSON,
Clerk
By B. G. RILLING.
Deputy.
(Seal, District Court, St. Louis County,
Minn.)
S T HARRISON,
Attorney for Applicant.
D. H., April 12, 19, and 26. 1911.
therein.
Witness, J. P. Johnson, clerk of said
court and the seal thereof, at Duluth,
In said county, this 4th day of April,
A. D. 1911.
J. P. JOHNSON,
Clerk
By R. E. JOHNSON,
Deputy.
(Seal.)
JAgUES & HUDSON.
Attorneys for Applicants.
D. H., April 5, 12 and 19, 1911.
losses II
Expenses of adjustment of
losses
Commissions and broker-
age
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses
Dividends and Interest...
All other disbursements..
116,477.23
2,327.49
62,741.77
40,139.46
13,964.36
24,000.00
14,299.86
Total disbursements ...!| 273,950.17
(No. 1535.)
SUMMONS IN APPLICATION FOR
REGISTRATION OF LAND —
State of Minnesota, County of St. Loulg
— ss.
District Court, Eleventh Judicial Dis-
trict.
In the matter of the application
of Standard Investment Com-
pany, to register the title to
the following described real
estate situated In St. Louis
County, Minnesota, namely: '
Lots numbered thirteen (13),
fourteen (14), fifteen (15),
and sixteen (16), in Block one
hundred fifteen (115), Port-
land Division of Duluth, ac-
cording to the recorded plat
thereof, on file and of record
In the office of the Register of
Deeds in and for St. Louis
County, Minnesota,
Applicant,
vs.
G "Willis Peters, Trustee of the
estate of John L. Dodge, de-
ceased, and all other persons
or parties unknown, claim-
ing any right, title, estate,
lien or interest in the real es-
tate described In the applica-
tion herein. _ . , .
Defendants.
The State of Minnesota to the above
named defendants:
You are hereby summoned and re-
quired to answer the application of the
applicant in the above entitled proceed-
ing and to file your answer to the said
application In the office of the clerk
of said court. In said county, within
twenty (20) days after the service of
this summons upon you, exclusive of
the day of such service, and. if you
fall to answer the said application
within the time aforesaid, the appli-
cant in this proceeding will apply to
the court for the relief demanded
therein.
Witness. J. P. Johnson, clerk of said
court, and the seal thereof, at Duluth,
In said county, this 4th day of April,
^ ^- ""• J. P. JOHNSON.
Clerk
By R. E. JOHNSON,
Deputy.
(Seal of District Court St. Louis County.
Minnesota.)
W. S. TELFORD.
Attorney for Applicant.
No. 500-5()3 Torrey Building. Duluth,
Minn.
D. H.. April E. 12. 19. 1911.
Balance -i 674,319.11
Ledger Asaeta Dec. 31, 1910.
Book value of real estate. if 65,636.70
Mortgage loans 97,250.00
Collateral loans 10,270.00
Book value of bonds and
stocks 436,100.00
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks 26,646.81
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for
premiums 83,160.56
All other ledger assets... 6,266.04
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) J 674,319.11
Non-Ledser AaKCtS.
Interest and rents due and
accrued 9 8,834.50
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks
over book value 16,488.30
•Steam boiler
Burglary and theft...
•Spi inkier
Woikmen's collective
3,871 84
87,691 42
2,368 72
5,420 40
In-
Tctal net premium
come
•Excess of return and re-
insurance premiuuis over
price received.
From interest and rents...
From all othei sources . . . .
i 742,998.11
46.168.64
37 049. IT
Total Income ....
Ledger assets Dec.
previous year . . .
31 of
.$ 826,205.99
1,614,963.04
Sum 52,441, 169. ftS
Dii*bKr«ementM in 1010.
Claims paid (net) —
Accident and health...
Employers' liability . .
Fidelity and surety. . . .
Plate glass
Steam boiler
Burglary and theft....
Spiinkler
Workmen's collective ,
Gross assets I 699,641 . 91
Deduct Anmctn Not Admitted.
Agents' balances | 2,042.37
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value. 900.00
All other assets not ad-
mitted 6,632.74
Total assets not ad-
mitted I 9,575.11
Total admitted assets...? 690,066.80
Liabilities Dec. 31, 1010.
Unpaid losses and claims. |
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due
Commissions and broker-
age
Capital stock paid up,...
FOR
226,647.10
2, 650. 00
2.232.37
200,000.00
Total liabilities, includ-
ing capital I
459,782.58
Net surplus t 230,284.22
RlHka and Preminma, 1910 BualneMa.
•Fire risks written dur-
ing the year 130,346,426.00
Premiums received there-
on 338,989.35
Net amount In force at
end of the year 38,578,507 00
•Including business other than "Ma-
rine and Inland."
BuRineNM in Minneaotii In 1010.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance pls.ced.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written I 1,101,456.74
Net paid policy holders. .|
Investigation and adjust-
ment of claims
Commissions
Salaries of officers, agents,
employes, examiners' and
Inspection fees
All other disbursements...
66,592.73
94.557 23
84,585.60
35.387.16
674. 2S
27,226.08
120 00
2,770.61
301,813.68
96,736.49
161.604.94
207,993. 9S
163,455.18
Total disbursements
.1 921.504.09
Balance $1,519,664.94
Ledger AMHetH Dec. 81. 1910.
Book value of real estate. .| 53,896.81
Mortgage loans 267,324 84
Book value of bonds and
stocks 738.352. 4»
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks 66,797.65
Premiums in course of col-
lections 315.170.47
All other assets 88,122.78
Premiums received
Losses Incurred
Losses paid ....
Amount at risk.
16,655.82
3.637.03
6,100.89
1,036,546.19
(Serial No. 07666. Contest No. 8259.)
CONTEST NOTICE—
Department of the Interior, United
States Land Office.
Dtiluth, Minnesota, April 5th. 1911.
A sufficient contest affidavit having
been filed In tnls office by Carl F.
Hanson, contestant, against Homestead
Entry No. 07665, Serial No. 07665. made
November 12. 1909, for N>^ SE% and
rSE^ NE)4. SecUqn 19. Towual^lp 66 K^
SUMMONS IN APPLICATION
REGISTRATION OF LAND—
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
District Court, Eleventh Judicial Dls-
In the" matter of the application
of George Smith and Emer-
son Yokes to register the title
to the following described
real estate situated in St.
Louis County, Minnesota,
namely: Lots Fifteen (15)
and Sixteen (16), In Block
Eighty-six (86). Endion Di-
vision of Duluth, according to
the recorded plat thereof on
file and of record In the office
of the Register of Deeds in
and for said County and State,
Applicants,
vs.
C'ltv of Duluth, Jennie E. Little,
j'ohn H. Upham and all other
persons or parties unknown,
claiming any right, title, es-
tate, lien or interest in the
real estate described In the
application herein. , , ^ |
^^ Defendants. I
The State of Minnesota to the a-Qve
named defendants:
You are hereby summoned and re-
.Qtiired to answer tte application of
A. A. MICH AUD CO.
Agents.
Lonsdale BiuMing. - • Duluth, Mfain
German Fire Inanraaee Coaipany.
Principal office; Wheeling, West Va.
(Organized in 1867.) Wm. F. Stifel,
President; F. Riester, Secretary. At-
torney to accept service in Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, 9200,000.
Income in 1010.
Premiums other than per-
petuals *
Rents and interest
Grosj profit on gale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
State of Minnesota, Depa:-tment of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, Tha: the Annual
Statement of the German Fire Insur-
ance Company, for the year ending De-
cember 31st. 1910, of which the above
is an abstract, has been received and
r filed In this Department and duly ap-
proved by me. _
J. A. O PREUS,
Commissioner ol Insurance.
268,285.08
29,209.94
843.76
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $1,519,664.94
Non-Ledger Aaseta.
Interest and rents due and
accrued $ 10.405 . 61
Other non-ledger assets... 81 50
Gross assets $1,530,152.08
Deduct Atmein Not Admitted.
Premiums in course of col-
lection (past due) i 151,492.26
Book value of ledger assets
over market value 76,863.88
All other assets not ad- _,
rnitted 62,731.4*
Special deposits, less $12,-
030.83 12.969. IT
Total assets not ad-
mitted $ 304.057.79
Total admitted assets. . .$1,226.094. 2»
LiabUltiea.
CTlalms —
Adjusted | 8,268.9*
In process of adjustment
and reported 91.648.45
Resisted 106,928.81
Total
Deduct reinsurance
206,846.28
7,760.61
Net unpaid claims except
liability claims $ 199.085.75
Special reserve for unpaid
liabilUy losses
Unearned premiums
Commissions and broker-
age
All other liabilities
44,630 84
281.316.02
39,066.56
36,585.59
Total Income I 298.338.77
Ledger assets Dec. 81 of ...... .,
previous year 649,9d0.&i
Sum » 948,269.28
Dlabamementa In 1010.
Net amount paid for
Advertise io The Herald
Whitney Wall Co.
Agents.
Real Estate, Loans, Insurance.
301-2-3 Torrey Building.
Kmplrc St«4e Surety Company.
Principal office: 84 V^illiam street.
New York, N. Y. (Orgarixed in 1901.)
Wm. M. Tomllns, Jr., President; Daniel
Stewart, Secretary. Attorney to ac-
cept service in Minnesota: Commis-
sioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $500,000.
income in lOlO.
Premiums received (ne.)
Accident and health-.^ -.1 J^.fajii
Employers' liability 160,591.49
Fidelity and surety •*?'???• 51
'I'laie glass ...... !.•.••.•••• ••.a 7,«4l.4»
Capital stock paid up 600,000.00
Total liabilities, includ-
ing capital
.$l,100.«84.7ft
Surplus over all liabilities. $ 125,409.50
Businetia In MinncMotQ in lOlO.
Premiums
Received.
Accident $1,059.25
Health 311.66
Liability 8,375.08
Fidelity 4,538 91
Surety 3,308.19
Plate glass 401.27
Steam boiler .... "gs.se
Burglary and theft 2,443.51
Credit 7.74
Losses
Paid.
$ 6.974.94
429.74-
11,000.15
242.13
1,691 .03;
484.92
2,907! 78'
Totals $20,350.25 $23,730.69.
•Excess over premiums written.
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance: ^ ,. „..
1 Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Empire State Surety
Company, for the year ending Decem-
ber 51st, 1910, of which the above t»
an abstract, has been received and
filed in this Department and duly ap-
proved by me. , ^ ^ pREUS.
Commissioner of Inauranoc
■1^
-y — -
q^V
Si^
■. I If
t
Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
17
SEEDING IS
UNDER WAY
Conditions Favorable— Wheat
Declines in a Choppy
Session.
Rally Helps Values at Close
—Bulls Active-France
a Buyer.
Duluth Board of Trade, April 19. —
Wheat declined slightly today although
a rally at the close almost swept val-
ues onto a basis equal to yesterday's
closing prices. The bulla are using
heroic measures but seeding In the
Northwest is proceeding under favor-
able circumstances and the news gen-
erally is bearish. The foreign situa-
tion was strong and gave the longs
some encouragement. Strength In
coarse grains helped wheat.
May wheat lost W&V*c and July de-
clined \^c. Cash was Ic over the next
delivery. Oats gained Tic, rye went up
Ic and durum was unchanged.
May linseed was unchanged as was
July. The market was Ufeless.
Wheat opened firm with shorts cov-
ering. The sudden decline at the close
ve.sterday. causetl chictly by selling
from the Cuduliy interests, induced
many shorts to take profits at the op-
ening. On furtlit-r rains in the winter
wheat belt and an estimate on the Ar-
gentine crop which gave the produc-
tion at 140.000 000 bu compared with
IjI.OOu.OOO bu last year, there was some
si lling and valuos slumped. A rally
at noon indicated that the market was
oversold, but the condition was only
temporary, values becoming heavy and
declining.
France bought wheat in near posi-
tions. There was no export business
either from the United States or Can-
ada. Seeding is becoming general In
the Northwestern states and Manitoba
under favorable conditions. Cables
were higher on account of Frencli buy-
ing and stronger Buenos Ay res mar-
Jiets.
AMERICAN
May — Open.
Duluth I .95%
Minneapolis ... .95\i-%
Chicago 89-88%
Winnipeg .. .. .91%
New York 94 V4
St. Louis 87
Kansas City
July—
Duluth
Minneapolis
Chicago . . . .
Winnipeg ..
New York
St. Louis . .
Kansas City
.84%
WHEAT
High.
% .96i^b
.95%
,89
.92%
.94%
.87%
.84%
MARKETS, APRIL 19.
Low. Close. April 18.
.95%a I .95%-%b
.94%-95a .94%-%
.88%-% .88%
.92% .91%-%b
.94% .94
.87% .86%
.83% .83% -84
I .94% -95a
94
.87%
.91%-%
.93%
.86%
.83%-%
.96%b
.96-%
.86%-%
.93%
.93%
.83%-%
.81%
96%b
.96%
.86%
.94-%
.93%-%
.84
.81%
.98%a
.96%-%
.85%
.93% a
.93%
.83%
.80%
doulliwestem «nd WliuUpef quotations fumlshcf! by B. E. B»kcr & Co
.96%b
.96-%b
.86%-
.93%-
.93%
.83%
.81%
May
July
DULUTH DURUM MARKET ;
Open. High. Low. Close.
.84% .85 .84% -8*^*?
.86 .85% .85%b
DULUTH LINSEED MARKET.
Open. High. Low. Close.
May |2.61b »2.61 |2.61b
July
12.61
2.61n
.96%a
.95% -96
.86-%a
.93%-%b
.93%
.83%-%
.81%
April 18.
.81%
.85%a
April 18.
|2.61b
2.61n
UNSEED.
-i> — -=
As the time approaches when the
, seeding of linseed will become general
in the Northwestern states of this
country and the three prairie provinces
of Canada, the question of acreage as-
gunies particular Importance.
In the three slates the government
figured an acreage of 2.920,000 for the
lyio crop and 2,580,000 fur the 1909
crop. The writer estimatell the orig-
» Inal acreage for the three stales last
year at 2,870,000 or 50,000 acres less
than the government. The writer gave
Montana 180,000 acres while tlie gov-
ernment got up to 20.000 acres and
then rested. The government's esti-
mate of acreage in the three states
was. North Dakota 1.800,000, South Da-
kota 650.000 and Minnesota 470.000.
On account of the high prices for
linseed and the probability that the
altitudinous values will continue into
the year 1912, it Is suposed by some
people that the acreage that will be
sown to linseed In this country this
year will be excessively larger than
the acreage which was planted last
vear.
Investigations do not prove this
» tli'»ory to contain many elements of
truth. The reason assumed to be the
stimulus for an increased acreage is
found to be the chief reason for a
contrary opinion. It Is found that in
the settled or eastern portion of North
I>akota, the Unseed acreage will be
greatly increased. In eastern South
Dakota the decrease will be less no-
ticeable. In the new countries where,
one might assume, the acreage will
be greatly increased, it is found that
the high price of the seed will cut
down tlie Increase.
Last year was peculiar, climatically.
Every crop grown in the Nortiiwestern
states was a partial failure except
corn. The linseed failure was the sec-
ond in succession. The result is logi-
cal. Farmers in settled communities
such as Eastern and Central North Da-
.- kota and eastern South Dakota will
grow more corn this year than ever
before. They will plant a greatly In-
creased acreage to this crop. The
propaganda of diversified farming has
made many converts In recent years.
Farmers have learned that the so-
called scientific agriculturalists know
a little about farming and they are
i turning to the dairy Industry and to
the rotation and diversification of their
crops.
This Increased acreage in corn and
the breaking up of the farms for
planting different crops will mean the
eradication of linseed as a crop even
of secondary importance In the dis-
tricts of North and South Dakota east
of the Missouri river. Farmers in that
territory have made up their minds
that linseed is a hazardous crop that
robs the soil of its nutritive qualities
and that it should be grown only on
the new breaking. It does not matter
how forcibly farmers may be told that
linseed takes less moisture and leas
of the mineral elements of the soil
than any of the four or five different
crops grown in the Northwest. They
have turned to corn as a new crop
and they are satisfied with their old
«* love, wheat. , , ,«- , x..
The writer has received 123 letters
from as many North Dakota bankers.
If one desires to draw the conclusion
that the financial condition of the state
as a whole is sound, one can logically
do so. But from the tenor of the let-
ters coming from those districts in
which the breaking of new ground will
he largest, one is impressed by the in-
ability of the new settlers and many
established farmers to finance their
sowing. Banks have been liberal but
In many localities good seed has been
difficult to get despite the efforts ol
crushers.
The price of pure linseed to farmers
has been running from |2.90 to |3.10
■ a bushel, the value depending on the
'locality. Some seed guaranteed to be
pure and free from foreign seed has
brought as high as $3.25 a bushel.
Farmers are averse to paying such
high prices fcr seed although sucn
priffs seem fair when it is considered
that on the seed one or two freight
rates, storage and cleaning charges
. * have been added to the original cost.
When farmers have other seed they
will grow other crops rather than sow
linseed if they are required to pay such
high prices. Reading the hundred of
letters received by seed people one
would think that the farmers in North
Dakota wanted to get their seed free
of charge. This idea of charity Is in-
dignantly repudiated by the bankers
Duluth close: M'heat— On track: No. 1 hard, 97%c. On track, to ar-
rive No 1 northern, 96%c: No. 2 northern, 93%-94%c; May, 95%c bid; July.
96 ^c bid: September. 90c nominal. Durum— On track. In store, to arrive.
No 1 84%c- No 2 82%c; May. 84%c bid; July. 85%c bid. Linseed: On
frack! to arrive?- ite'f lay, ji.61: J^ly. »2.61 nominal. Oats, 32%c, Rye.
''■'^ec^^^^ViliJ^; ^s't*^ Va'r:^|§:673^ bu: oats 1 284 bu; last
yearr25,370 bu; barley, 1,022 bu; last year. 9,7 63 bu; linseed. 1,523 bu. last
^'^^''Shipmonu-Wheat. 255.187 bu; last year 158,322 bui corn. 135.500 bu;
last year, none; oats, 66.875 bu; last year, 6.291 bu.
-r
A GOOD FIRM TO SHIP
YOUR GRAIN TO
ATWOOD-LARSON
COMPANY, Inc.
Special attention ffiven to caah
BTalna. We give all shipments our
personal atteation.
DULUTH.
MINNBAPOLIS.
of that state. High prices appeal to
the farmers when he Is selling but he
can see no justification for them when
the condition is reversed.
Bank« Important Factor.
Owing to the high cost of breakitTg
the new land and putting it in linseed
the increase in the acreage in Western
.N'orth Dakota .and Eastern Montana
will depend this year to a large extent
in the attitude of the banks. If these
developments are financed by the banks
the Increase will be fairly large but
some financial institutions are pressed
lo their limits by the demands upoii
ihem and will not be able to extend
credit as liberally as they would like
to. ^. ,
It Is said that the Argentine seed
held in store at seaboard will not be
r.eedeil In the Northwest because the
cru'^hers have decided that there is
enough seed here fOr seeding purposes.
As a matter of fact, a lot of Argen-
tine seed that had been held at sea-
board for possible shipment to the
.Vorthwestern states wouldn't stand one
chance in ten of making a crop. Kven
the best Argentine seed would be a
doubtful proposition In this territory.
The campaign carried on by the lead-
ing seeding and crushing concerns was
well devised and prosecuted but the
follow-up work was not entirely suc-
cessful because many farmers were
diffident as to whether they planted
linseed, tiiought the seeding companies
should carry them until the crop was
harvested. The linseed interests de-
clined to do this Decause of the ex-
pense and trouble incident to the open-
ing of many individual accounts. They
were also disinclined to usurp the
functions of the country banks.
Summarized, the acreage situation in
tht; United States may be described as
follows; There will be a big decrease
in North and South Dakota east of the
Missouri river. ihe increase west of
the Missouri river will be only moder-
ate. In Montana it probably will be
large. In Minnesota It will be un-
changed to slightly lower.
A moderate acreage In Minnesota
which was put under linseed last year
cannot be sown this year because of
the heavy precipitation last winter and
this spring. Streams are hlgh«r than
a year ago and much bottom land that
was under linseed last year will not be
cultivated this year because it Is under
water In this respect conditions re-
turn to normal again. Many farmers
in Southern Minnesota will make an
effort to change their acreages, sowing
linseed in fields which have been de-
voted to other crops. The linseed yield
In Southern Minnesota last year was
good and prices were attractive. Farm-
ers have sufficient seed on hand for
sowing and are favorably disposed to
the linseed crop. South of the Red
River valley where the Unseed crop
was a partial failure the acreage will
be greatly reduced. Reports from that
locality Indicate that farmers are put-
ting in wheat heavily and are increas-
ing their corn acreage, to the detri-
ment of the linseed acreage.
It is too early to discuss the lin-
seed acreage question in its relation
to the three prairie provinces of the
Dominion. On account of the largo in-
flux of settlers It will be a difficult
problem even at time of seeding to tell
with any degree of accuracy what the
acreage will be. The acreage in Man-
itoba will not be largely augmented,
but indications point to an immense in-
crease in the provinces of Alberta and
Saskatchewan. New settlers going into
the Western provinces of Canada are
well equipped with money. In which re-
spect they differ from the new settlers
in Eastern Montana. The banking sit-
uation In Canada is different from that
in the Northwestern states and this is
a feature that cannot be overlooked In
discussing the probable acreages of any
crop in the two countries.
The banks In Eastern Montana, for
instance, are as new as the settlements.
The banks In the Western provinces of
Canada are branches of the old es-
t^ablished Institutions that have been
doing business in Canada for many
years They are strongly financed, well
equipped and are able to take care of
their customers without feeling seri-
ously the demands imposed by the ne-
cessities of the thousands of now set-
tlers taking up land In the Western
provinces. A system of American coun-
try banks. Individually owned, would
be placed under heavy handicaps by
such cond'tions. , , , ,„ k..
That the new breaking will be
greater than ever before is not denied.
But this Immense Increase will not be
in the United States. It will be in Can-
ada, and the quicker the duty on Ca-
nadian linseed Is removed the better it
will be for American crushers and the
linseed oil trade. At present the Brit-
ish importer has an advantage over the
American Importer becau.se of the dif-
ferential in the Canadian tariff but this
difference docs not account to anytliing
worth considering when the freight
rates and charges to the respective
countries are taken Into consideration.
There may be some people inclined to
ask why the American and Canadian
crops are now of such importance. The
reason Is found in the rapidity of the
marketing of the Indian crop and the
fact that the next available crops or
importance will be the North American
yield.
Liberal Indian Shlpmentii.
From Jan. 1 to April 7, Calcutta and
Bombay shipped to the United States
48 000 quarters or 360,000 bushels of lin-
seed Most of this is new crop seed. In
the same period last year these two
ports did not ship any seed direct to
the United States. In the period indi-
cated above the total shipments from
India to the United Kingdom and Eu-
rope were 354.000 quarters or 2.6«>5,-
000 bu, making the total shipments of
seed from India between January and
April 7, 3,009,000 bu compared with
172,000 quarters or 1,290,000 bu In the
same period last year.
While the crop year In India begins
on March 1. the writer figures from
Jan. 1. for the purpose of includins;
the latest shipments from the old
crops of both years In order to show
the rapidity with which old and new
seed has been marketed by India com-
pared with a year ago. From Jan. 1 to
April 7, Of this year the shipments
have been twice as large as the ship-
ments of a year ago. The increase in
the yield was not of this percentage
und the ratio of increase in shipments
cannot be ascribed entirely to the In-
i reased yield.
High prices are attractive to Indian
-ellers who are letting go of their
seed The strength of the world's lin-
seed situation is emphasized by the
fact that moderate buying of Indian
seed by American crushers was re-
.sponslble for the advance in the
world's markets In the last seven
uays In the face of the unexcelled
lapidlty with which the Indian crop
is being marketed. If the Indian ship-
ments maintain their present rate
tliere will be only a small amount of
eed left to ship by mid-summer. The
world's .>-Mij>,>ly will then hinge on the
cutt' • -^e American and Canadian
crops. No one need fear that he is
over-estimating the importance of the
Lnseed yields of North America this
year. _,
The strength In quotations of Plata
linseed has been responsible for some
foreign buying of Indian seed, not only
because of the superior qualities of the
seed for making oil, but because for-
eigners found themselves at the mercy
of American holders of Argentine seed
and have preferred to buy Indian Seed
in which procedure they were at better
advantage than In the fight for Argen-
tine seed.
The official Russian linseed figures
cannot be explained, or the Russian
shipments have not been correctly re-
j)orted. The latter supposition is out
of the question, so it must be assumed
that the Russian estimate of 20,000,000
bushels as the commercial crop for
1910 is In error. The writer placed
the Russian crop at 24.500,000 bushels.
Shipments of seed from that country
have been so heavy that it cannot be
reasonably assumed that the crop was
not larger than 20.000,000 bushels. The
supposition that the high prices are
causing the exportation of heavy re-
serves is not well founded, because
high prices prevailed at this period
last year and were attractive to the
Russian peasants; neither has any one
shown that reserves in Russia were
above normal.
On account of the bubonic plague In
China the shipments of sayo bean from
that country have fallen off greatly
and buyers find it difficult to obtain
the fulfillment of their contracts. The
situation has a direct bearing on lin-
seed oil. In these days of many sub-
stitutes for linseed oil. the contraction
in the supply of any important sub-
stitute Is almost as serious as a de-
crease In any portion of the world's
yield of linseed.
The movement of Argentine seed to
seaboard is increasing, the high prices
calling out seed and deliveries being
made on contracts to arrive. Com-
pared with last year, however, the
movement is exceedingly small, being
about one-fourth of last year's vol-
ume. The outgo of linseed to the
United States has subsided. Shipments
to the continent are holding up and
are showing signs of increasing. Be-
tween Jan. 1 and April 7 the Argen-
tine republic shipped 3.137,500 bushels
of linseed to the United States. In
the same period Argentina shippgd
5.317.500 bushels to the continent and
the United Kingdom, a total of 8,505,-
000 bushels, or approximately one-
half of the commercial crop.
flnn; American mixed new. 4s 5Hrt; American
mixed old. 5s Hd; new, Anmt^n kiln dried. 4s
'%<l: futurM steady; Hajr, 4s (iHd; July, 4s 6%±
CHICAGO MAfeET.
1.
Bullish Cable News Gives Wheat
a Little Lift.
Chicago, April 19. — Bullish cable
news today gave the wheat market a
lift. France was reported as a good
buyer of wheat at Liverpool. The
British trade was also influenced up-
wara by statements that rains In the
Argentine were delaying receipts.
Complaints of dry weather causing
crop damage in the vest and south
parts of Kansas helped strengthen
prices here. The opening was a shade
to %c higher. May started %c to %c
up at 88%(gi89c, but resting commis-
sion orders to sell caused a reaction
to 86%c.
Unloading by longs because, of the
good seeding conditions in the North-
west led lo a further df-c'.ine. The
close, however, was firm with May at
8S%'S!88%c. a net loss of a shade.
Wet weather led to a rush of local
buying in the corn pit. Commission
houses, though, unloaded freely on the
advance. May opened %@%c dearer
at 49%@49%c and rose to 49%@49%c.
The market weakened when wheat
slipped down but rallied on account of
export buying. The close was firm at
49% @ 50c for May, '/l^%c higher than
last night.
Oats were carried higher In sym-
pathy with corn and wheat. May
started %c to %@%c more expensive
at 31 %c to 31%®31%c and steadied
at the upper level.
Lower prices for hogs made provi-
sions heavy. Packers took the selling
side. First transactions were at S®
I7%c decline, with July delivery |14.80
(g-14.85 for pork. $7.97%^8.00 for lard
and $8.00(§)8.05 for ribs.
Articles — Receipts. Shpts.
STRENGTH
INJFOCKS
After Heavy SeDing at Open-
ing, Good Support Is
Given.
Flour, bbls 26.300
Wheat, bu 19.000
Corn, bu 150.000
Oats, bu 241.000
Rye, bu 3,000
Barley, bu 59,000
Car lot receipts — Wheat,
47.700
36.000
604.000
215,000
2,000
23.000
22 cars.
lower; light, $6.20@6.55; mixed. $6.1 i® 6.50; bmaj,
$5.'J0^6.35: rough, $:>.90@6.10: BOoU ti cbotce hearj'.
$6.1.0@6.35; pigs. $6.20^65.5: bulk of sales. $6.io@ i
6.40. Sheep, receipts estimated at iO.euU; market. |
weak to lOc lower; native. »o(3'4.T0; vaitern. j;!.15«f |
4.7U; yearlings. |4.3«is'd.23; lambs, oattve, 94.5«<b
6.15; western, |4.T3^6.1S.
Cash Sales ^'ednesday.
No. 1 northern. I car
No. 1 northern. 1 car
No. 1 northern, 377 iNi •...
No. 1 dunim, 5 cars •••••••••
No. 1 durum. 3.000 bu
No. 1 durum, l.OOU bu, to arrUe
No. 2 durum, I oar
No. 2 durum. 3 cars...
No. 3 durum, 1 car..
*•••••••■■
.96%
.97
.97
.85
.83
.85
.82?i
.83
.81%
Barley, 2 cars 90
MARKET GOSSIP
with 6 of contract grade; corn. 100
cars, with 22 of contract grade; oats,
115 cars. Total receipts of wheat at
Chicago. Minneapolis and Duluth to-
dav were 195 cars, compared with 127
cars last week, and 119 cars the cor-
responding day a year ago.
Cash close: Wheat — No. 2 red, 88%
(r4 89%c: No. 3 red, 8Cfi)88c; No. 2 hard.
88>Afft91c; No. 3 hard, 85 1// 89c: No. 1
ni>rtliern, 99c'?ri$1.02: No 2 northern,
97c(&$l; No. 8 northern. 96c(g)?l; No. 2
spring, 92ra96c; No: < spring, 90^' 95c;
velvet chaff, 90® 95c; durum, 82 @ 87c.
Corn — No. 2, 49%®50»ic; No. 2 white, 50
r(i)50%c; No. 2 yellow. 50(S50%c; No. 3.
19%(?i4D%c; No. 3 white, 49%fi)50c;
No. 3 yellow, 49% (5 5«»C3 No. 4, 48%®
48%c: No. 4 white. 48Vt(6^48%c; No. 4,
yellow, 48«4(a;48%c. Oats— No. 2, 32c;
No. 2 white, 33%@34c; No, 3 white,
:?2M:(fr33%c; No. 4 white, 32@33c;
standard. 33%@33%c. Rye— No. 2,
91%c; No. 4. 84c. Barley. 70c©$1.10.
Timothy, $11.75. Clover, $15
Wheat-
May . .
July . . ,
Sept . . .
Corn-
May . .
July ..
.Sept . .
OaU—
.May . .
July . .
Hept
Open.
.88Ti-89
.8e<4-%
.85\-%
.49%-'*
.50%-'y4
.51%-%
nigh.
.89
.86\4
.85%
.50
.51-^4
.52
.31%
.31%
.31^
.31%-%
.31%-%
.31%-V4
Me»s Por*. per bbl-
May ....15.45 14.60
..14.80-85 11.85
per 100 lb—
.. 7.87V4 7.90
.. T.OJH-W 8.00
.. 8.10-15 8.15
Short ntla. per 100 lb-
May .... 8.43-47V4 8.47%
July 8.00-05 8.03
Sept .... 7.92%-e5 7.85
Low.
.87%
.8.'-.%
.83%
.49%
.50%-%
.51%-%
.31%
.31%-%
.31%
Close.
.88%-%
.86%-%
.85%
.49%-50
.51
.52
July
Lard
May ,
July .
.Sept
15.85
14.67%
7.80
7.87%
7.97%
8.35
7.90-92%
7.82%-85
.31%
.31%
.31%
15.. '17%
14.67%-70
T.80
7.87%
T.97%
8.35
8.02%
7.85
hices Weaken in the Gosing
Hour But Rally
Strongly.
New York, April 19. — Disruption of
the Missouri Pacific board of directors
yesterday led to heavy selling of stock
at the opening of the market today. It
declined % in the first few minutes to
a new low point for the year and then
quickly recovered half the loss. The
market was unsettled and feverish and
there were wide openings In several of
the active stocks. Wisconsin Central
lost 1% and Chicago Great Western
and New York, Chicago & St. Louis 1.
United States Steel opened at a slight
gain, and on heavy sales quickly fell
to below last night's close.
>tter the opening orders had been
executed the market lost Its feverlsh-
ness and quieted down. Traders were
not Inclined to do much pending fur-
ther developments In the Gould sit-
uation. Prices meanwhile Improved
steadily, Missouri Pacific, Reading.
Union Pacific. United States Steel, and
other leading stocks rising fraction-
ally above yesterday's closing. Brook-
lyn Union Gas receded 1 and Interna-
tional Paper preferred 2%.
The stock market fell back Into the
condition of dullness of the last few
weeks with prices well above the low
level established yesterday. The un-
certainty of the opening which unset-
tled values considerably, was dispelled
by strong support which was offered,
and covering by bears who sold heavily
yesterday also helped to steady the
market. The Improved aspect of the
Mexican situation also was an influ-
ence In elevating prices, as was the
fact that the London market for Amel--
Ican Securities was higher, despite the
severe liquidation here yesterday, pre-
sumably on buying from this side. Na-
tional Biscuit gained 2% and Minne-
apolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie 1%.
Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Paul &
Omaha opened 7 points lower. Bonds
were Irregular.
The market closed active and strong.
Prices weakened decidedly in the clos-
ing hour, earlier gains being generally
cancelled and many Issues falling be-
low yesterday's closing. The room at-
tributed tlie decline to a bear drive,
aided by the growing uneasiness about
conditions in the steel trade. Support-
ing orders made their appearance in
the last half hour and prices rallied
strongly. Missouri Pacific rose to
nearly 49 and Reading, Union Pacific,
Amalgamated Copper, American
Smelting and United States 6teel re-
bounded a point or more.
♦
New York stork quotations furaUhed The Herald by
Piper, Jolinson & Case:
••4%
.S3
.17
.19
.IS
New York Grain.
New York. April 19. — Close: Wheat
—May, 94 %c; July. 93%c. Corn— July.
58 %c.
MINNEAPOLIS MARKET.
Reading the crop reports of Rollin
E. Smith of Minneapolis, one might
think that the winter wheat plant In
Oklahoma, Kansas and Nebraska could
be plowed up and show an Improvement
in condition. The ways ot crop ex-
perts are devious and mysterious.
* • «
Speaking of crop experts, O. K. Lyio
savs that a yield of 15 bu an acre will
produce a winter wheat crop of 500,000
bu.
* * •
Chicago Record-Herald: "Chicago
elevator people can rest a.ssured of
carrying charges for wheat during the
entire 1911 crop year, unlejgs there Is a
very marked Improvement In the de-
mand for cash wheat in the next sixty
days," said President E. L. Glaser of
Kosenbaum Bros. "The East will have
to come here after more wheat than it
has been taking In the past. We have
been offering No. 2 red winter at May
price In store, giving away the eleva-
tion charges, and can find no buyers,"
« • *
Cars of wheat Inspected: No. 1
northern, 10; No. 2 northern, 3; L\o. 3
northern, 1; No. 1 durum, 2; No. 2
durum, 2; total durum, 4; linseed, 2;
last year, 7; barley, 7; last year, 20;
total cars, 27; on track, 37.
« • «
Foreign wheat cables: Liverpool,
%d to %d up; corn unchanged. Paris,
Vi^lc down; flour, %@l%c off. Ant-
werp, unchanged. Berlin, %c up. Bue-
nos Ay res, Vic off to unchanged.
* • •
Primaries: Wheat — Receipts, 254,000,
last year. 246,000; shipments, 490.000
vs. 312,000. Corn — Receipts, 315,000,
last year, 342,000; shipments, 344,000 vs.
320,000.
* « •
Receipts of linseed —
Duluth
Minneapolis «...
Wlnnpeg
« • *
Receipts of wheat —
Today.
2
3
LASt
year.
1
Today.
31
142
88
22
7
Last
year.
44
6]
224
14
28
21,000
Duluth
Minneapolis
Winnipeg
Chicago
Kansas City
St. Louis, bu 14,000
• • *
Broomhall cabled from Liverpool —
The wheat market opened steady with
prices unchanged. The weakness In
America was offset by the strength In
Buenos Ayres and firmness of Plata of-
fers. Later and during the morning
there was a firm undertone and prices
advanced %d to %d with pronounced
support In July. Buying was stimu-
lated by the firmness in spot. Improved
demand from the Continent for car-
goes arriving and the fact that France
last night paid full prices for an Aus-
tralian steamer arriving. Australian
offers were firmly held and India Is
offering less freely. There was good
support generally in the market with
offers light. At 1:30 p. m. the market
was firm and %d to %d higher than
yesterday,
« • *
Clearances — Wheat, none: flour, 13,-
000 bbl; corn, 231,000; oats, 45 bu;
wheat and flour. 59,000 bu.
• • *
Cars of wheat Inspected: No. 1
hard. 1; No. 1 northern, 22; No. 2
northern, 1; No. 3 northern, 3; no
grade, 1; No. 1 durum, 3; total wheat,
31; last year, 44; linseed, 2, last year,
1; oats. 1, last year, 7; barley. 3, last
year. 11; total. 37; on track, 33.
Liverpool Grain.
Liverpool, .\pril 10 — t'lose: Wheat— Spot dull; No.
2 red. western winter, no stock; futures steady; May. | more.
6i iM; July, 6s 8%d: OctoiMr. (• 8d.
Wheat Nervous and Unsettled With
Sharp Variation in Prices.
Minneapolis, 'Minn., April 19. — The
wheat market today was nervous and
unsettled. Sharp declines were follow-
ed by just as sharp advances. Early
.selling of May and buying of July was
a feature. May closed %c higher than
yesterday; July %c higher, and Sep-
tember %(&'V4C higher. Local elevator
stocks decreased 925,000 bu for four
days. Minneapolis today received 142
cars of wheat against 61 cars a year
ago; Duluth 31 against 44, and Winni-
peg 88 against 224. May wheat opened
9G®96%c. to %c, high, 95%c; low, 94c;
closed, 94%(8'95c. July opened 96@
96%c: high, 96%c: low, 95%®95%c:
closed, 96&96V&C. September opened
89 %c; high. 89 %c; low, 88%&88%c;
closed 89c.
Cash wheat held about steady. De-
mand strong for moderate offerings.
No. 1 northern sold for 2%@i3%c above
May contract. Close: No. 1 hard,
98c; No. 1 northern, 97@97%c; to
arrive, 96%@97%c; No. 3 northern, 94
@95%c; to arrive. 93%(Ji95%c; No. 3
wheat. 91%@94%c. No. 3 yellow corn,
49c. No. 3 white oats, 31@31%c; No.
2 rye, 87 (S 88c.
MlUstuffs — Shipments, 1,759 tons.
Market steady. Active demand for
Immediate shipment. Bran In 100-pound
sacks, |21.50@22.00.
Flour — >^oderate sales of flour made
at recent declines. Shipping direc-
tions Improved and shipments increased
over week and year ago. Shipments,
44.063 bbl. First patents, J4.45@)4.75;
second patents, $4.35@4.65; first clears,
|2.95@3.40; second clears, $1.95@2.60.
Flax — Receipts, 3 cars; year ago, 3;
shipments, 0. Market quoted steady
for both spot and to arrive at Ic above
Duluth May. Offerings scarce. Clos-
ing price, $2.62.
Barley — Receipts, .24 cars; year ago.
Inn; shipments, 26. The demand for
choice grades was strong, but the low-
er grades were draggy. Offerings lib-
eral and quotations steady. Closing
range, 70c©'|1.06.
For the
Wednesday
Corn and Wheat Bulletin.
twenty -four houii endlnc
at 8 A. m.,
April 19:
STATIONB,
StaUof
weather
Temperatur*.
11";
-ar»H
1 =
:?
•a
KTOCK.S—
I Open. I Hl(b. I Low. | Close.
Amalgoniated
American Car Coundry..
American Smelten
Anaconda
Atchlaon
Ralllmore St. Ohio
Urouklyn Rapid Transit.
Cltesapealce & Ohio
ChicaKO t»L Western. . . .
C. M. & St. Paul
Canadian Pacific
Distillers
brio ■ . . .* >•••■•••••••••
do Ist pfd
Great Northern
Great Northern Ore
Missouri Paciric
National Lead
New York Central
Northern Pacific
Pcnn^ylv.-inla
itepubllc Steel & Iron...
Hock Island . . .'.
Heading
Soo Line
Suutiieru Hallway . . .
Soulhtrn Tacific ....
Union Pacific
Utah Copper ........
United States Steel ..
do pfd
Waliach
Wisconsin Central....
•V.'
GO
61 H
59%
52
:iH
72%
71%
36?i
145 Vi
106%
108%
106%
104 '/4
101%
104%
7714
77%
7T%
78^4
78%
78%
2UH
n7H
118%
117%
224^
225%
224%
S3H
34
33%
28%
29%
28%
46 ?»
47
46%
124^4
125
124%
60%
60%
60
46
48%
45%
51%
1051i
105%
105%
121%
122%
121%
123%
124
123%
31'/^
31%
31%
■i»\i
28%
28
131 Vi
152%
151%
135
136%
134%
■ZHhi
113 Ml
ii4%
113%
174%
175%
173%
43%
43%
42%
74%
73%
74%
119%
119%
119%
15%
66%
67
66%
81%
52
72%
36%
145%
108%
104%
77%
79%
20%
118%
225%
34
2!*%
47
125
60
48%
5i%
105%
122%
124
31%
28%
152%
136%
26%
114%
175%
43
75%
119%
15%
67
THE PRODUCE MAEKETS.
CALIFORNIA ORANGES—
Extra fancy navels, 150-216 $8.S8
Fancy navela, 96-126 3.25
Fancy navela, 80 2.M
Fancy naveia. 156-216 S.M
FLORIDA aKAl'EFKUIT—
46's to 80'a, box ». 4.00
Grapefruit, extra fancy, box 4.30
CAUFORNIA LEMONS—
Kxtra fancy, box, SOO'a and 350'a 4.50
Imported limes, box l.SS
PINliAPPLKS—
Cuban. 30'«. crate 4. 73
Cuban. 30'«. doa S.OO
GRAPES—
Malaga grapes, keg 8.00
APPLH5—
UaidwLna, box ..■.••••..•.••«...••. S.33
Ark. t>eauUcs. box 2.33
Human t^eauUes. box 2.54
Greenings. IMX S.SS
Ben Davles. box S.SS
Vartetlea. box S.39
Spttxenbergs. box 2.50
Wino aap». box S.SS
CRANBtHHUa—
Jersey, bu crate. .....••.••....•.. ........... 8.50
Michigan, crate •...•..•...•.••....•.. S.50
FRUIT JUICliS—
Oninge. keg 9.TS
Raspberry, keg 8.7S
Cherry, keg 3.73
Grape, keg i 3.75
Cider, keg 8.75
BANANAS—
Bananaa. per lb
BUTTEB-
Fancy creamery, per lb 22%9
Dairy, per lb « 140
CHEESE—
Wlsconaltt. full cream, per lb....
American, full cream, per ib
Block Swiis, per lb. No. 1 15%
Primust cheese, per lb 00
Odurless brick, per ib. •••■•....••••. ......... .14
Wheel Swias. per lb. ...•••••••. • .17
EGGS—
Eggs, fresh, per dot 16%9 .17
PEA N UTS-
Fancy, raw, per lb by tiM sack OT
Fancy, ruaated, sacks, per lb 07%
Fancy, roa»ted, le^ than sacka 04
Salted peauuta, 30-lb palls S.75
Salted peanuts, 10-lb sacks 1.44
Fancy Jumbos, roasted, per lb 10
Fancy Jumbus, raw. per lb 08%
MAPi.E SYRUP—
Vermont, per gal 1.73
Ohio, 5-gal. can 8.50
MAPLl'' SUGAR —
Iowa, aasoned pkgs., 30-U> box, per 11 10
POP CORN—
SuuwImU pup corn, 40-pkg. box..... S.SO
Santa Claus pup corn, casa 1.75
Pop com. on the cub 03%
Pop corn, shelled 01
HONEY—
WUcun^n wldte clover, per casa, U'i\ 4.25
CABBAGE—
Home grown cabbage, per ton 36.00
Hume grown ciibbagc, per crate, largii 2.25
Uullaud cubl>iige. fresh and fine, per cwt 2.00
POTATOES -
Potatoes, per bu .65
Jetscy sweets, per hamper. .......... ......a... S.St
ONIONS—
Reds. 100-lb sack .,
Yelluw, 100-lb .
Red. per Ui
tjpanlsh onions, per crate
Sets, white, per bu ,
NUTS—
Walnuts, new, California, 110-Ib sack, per lb
Filberts, Sicily, per lb
Hrazils, extra large, per lb
Pecans, extra fancy polished, per lb 15
Almonds. Taragania, per Ib SO
&lixed nuta, 100-lb and 50-lb boxea, lb nev.. .14
Blade walnuts, lb 45
Cocoanuts. per dos 45
New hickory nuts, large or amall, pet lb US
Pecans, halves, shelled, extra fancy, 5-lb car-
tons, per lb 50
Walnuts, shelled, extra fancy, 5-U> caitona, lb. .44
Cliestnuu, per lb 14
Almunds. shelled, extra fancy, 5-lb ca.toiis. lb. .45
DATES AND FIGS—
Hallowl dates. 70-lb boxes. n«r 4.54
Halluwl dates, 30 packages, per box 2.2S
Fard dates. 12-lb buxes, new 1.40
Sugar walnut dates, ti-lb boxes 1.35
New Califurula figs. 12-pkg. box, pei box 1.00
New Smyrna figs, 5-crown, 'JO-lb box, per box.. 2.73
New Smyrna flga, 7 -crown. 100-lb box. per
box 14.50
New iSmyrua figs. 3 crown, 10-lb. per !]0X 1.85
FRi-iJH VEGETABLES—
Head lettuce, hamper 8.8S
Lettuce, leaf, per bu box 1.14
Beans, wax, per bu 4.50
Parsley, bumo grown, per doz 35
Green onious, doz , 44
Green onions, box 2. 73
CaulUluwer, California, per crate 3.50
Spinach, box 1 . 25
Round radishes, hothouse, large buuclics, dos.. .75
Long radishes, doz 40
llotbouae cuc'umburs, per doz 1.75
Green peppers, hutfauuse, per basket 45
Celery. Callfumia, per bunch 85
Celery, Florida, crate S.OO
Endive, New Orleans, per bbl 6.00
Now beets, per doz 73
New carrots, per doz 75
Florida tomatoes, basket 54
Tomatoes, crate $2.50@ 2.75
Louisiana strawberries, case of 24 pti..$3.75@ 3.30
Pie plant. p«* box 8.75
OtirllCf POUUU ■■■■••••••••ee«e*ae****«*ee*ee** • Id
ROOTS-
Table beets, per cwt ., 1. 73
Table bugas, per cwt 1.75
Uurse radish, root, per bbl 0.30
Horse radish, per lb 14
Table carrots, per cwt 1.75
If you will bring your
Calumet & Arizona and
Superior & Pittsburg cer-
tificates to Paine, Webber
& Co/s office, we will have
them transferred into the
new Calumet & Arizona
stock for you.
Zenith, 1464. Dolutli, Mel. 2215.
Martin Rosendahl t Co.
(INCORPORATED.)
COPPER STOCK BROKERS
.18
.03%
.04
•0314
1.00
.44
,11
.05
Dry salted calf 24
TALLUW AND OUEA8E—
Tallow, in cakes -, .04%
TaUow. in bbi .04
U left 90 • • • • •• ■ ■•e««eee*ea*e«»**e«*» evdlfc
PELTS—
PelU. large, each 73
Pelts, medium to small S5
Dry pells, butcher, Montana aol
Wsaliington 12%
Dry shearings, each 10
WIWL— — Fer lb-
No. 1. No. 2.
Unwashed medium wool 14 .20
Unwashed coarse wool 16 .14
Unwashed fine mediuiB 15% .17)4
LEATHtUt— — Fer lb—
Mo. L No. 2.
Texas oak sole A
Texas oak sole
Hemlock slaughter sole xx | .33
Hemlock slaughter sole No. 1 34
Hemlock dry tiide sole 31
Hemlock harness leuUter 38
Oak harness leather 42
FUUti- Large.
Skunk, bUck $4.50
Kkunk. short stripe 3.00
Skunk, loiig narrow stripe 2.00
Skunk, broad stripe and widte. l.UO
Muskrat, fall iOviiJ
Muskrat. kits
Raccoon 3.50
Mink, dark and brown 6.50
Mink, pale 6.00
Beaver 7.00
Cat. wild 4.00
Fisher, dark 18.00
9
I .40
.42
.37
.34
.32
.41
.44
Medium. Small.
$3.00 52.04
2.00
1.50
.75
1.54
1.00
.54
16^13
••••••eee
2.23
2.34
1.50
1.80
2.04
.17
.13
.14
Fisher, pale 15.00
Fox, red 8.00
Fux, gray 1 . 25
Lynx 27 . 00
.Marten, dark 20.00
Maritn, flark briwn 10.00
Marten, light brown and pale.. 6.50
Weas< 1, white 85
Weasel, stained, damaged 20
Wuif, tlmlier 5.00
Wolf, bru«b, cased 4.00
Wolf, open 3.50
Wolf. Coyote, cased 3.00
Bear, as to size
Badger, dvet and iwuse cat,
.05
2.25 1.54
5.00 3.25
4.50 3.00
4.75 3.2S
3.00 I. 75
12.00 7.00
9.')0 7.00
6.00 6.00
1.00 .75
20.00 13.00
15.00 10.00
7.00 5.04
6.00 3.24
.50 .25
.15 .14
3.75 2.54
S.OO 8.44
2.30 1.75
2.25 1.50
$3(SS21
cross and kit fox.
mountnin lion, npossom and wolverine command mar-
ket prices. The above prices are for Prime No. 1
skins. Nus. 2. 3 and 4 In proportion.
Read The
Herald Wants
Duluth Securities.
SECUIUTIE8— 1 Bid |
Asked
rirst National Bank | 404
American I'jt.^ange National Bank 823
City National Bank
130
Northern Nutiunai Bank..,..
134
8t Louis County Bank
800
WcAtpm HLut« Bank •..........••.
144
Diiliith-J^tincrior Traction Co .............
77
82
do pfd
83%
84
Duluth Street Railway. Ist f . 3* 30 M *
H A .
96
101
Duluth Edison Electric. 1st g. a. f. Ss
March, 1931, op. M. * S. A
»8
100
Great Northern Power Co. t>onds
80
2.85
3.83
Zenith Furnace Co
45
100
Midway Home Mnrket.
MlnnesoU Tran.sfer. St. Paul, Minn., April 19.—
Barrett & Zimmerman report; Trade was without
special feature. Few heavy sales being bookied, with
most of the trading in the cheaper classes. Mules
met with fair inouiiy. Uecelpu liberal
Drafters, extra ■
Drafters, choice
Drafters, common to good
Fiirm marcs and liorses, extra
Farm mare'i and horses, choice
Farm hontes, common to good .•.••<
Delivery
Drivers and saddlers
Mules, according to slM..
■ •••••■••t «
•••••••••••aee
$I8.>^240
120{!4i70
95ttli5
140C41R0
115@13j
65(q;'IO0
140(^195
130 @ 225
150@250
€
I
Alexandria
Campbell
Crookston , .
Detroit City
Hatetad ...
Muntovldeo
Cloudy
I Cloudy
Cloudy
Pt. Cloudy
Cloutiy
New Ulm .......Cloudy
Park Raplda Cloudy
Rochester ..>. Cloudy
Winnebago dty Kaln
Worthington Cloudy
.\menla Clear
Bottineau Clear
Langdon ................. .Clear
Laiimore ......Clear
Liaiwii ...uiear
.Minot Clear
Pembina Clear
Aberdeen Clear
.MiUbank Cloudy
.Mitchull Clear
Redfield Clear
tUismarck Clear
JDevila Lake Clear)
Duluth Cloudy)
tiluron Clear)
lU Crosse Cloudy!
VlintMKipolis Cloudyf
t.Mo<jrhead Clouilyj 34
tPierre Clearf 60
tSt. Paul Clcudyj 58
Winnipeg CDear] 34
«■
64
72
04
52
56
68
60
60
56
54
42
56
58
30
54
64
60
50
44
36
44
60
38
54
33
60
58
40
40
34
40
32
42
46
40
44
44
40
34
34
32
34
3«
24
28
34
38
32
32
28
32
35
34
SO
44
36
30
46
32
.44
0
0
0
4
•
.14
.04
.60
.12
0
4
•
0
0
4
4
•
0
.04
4
4
4
0
.04
0
.08
.46
.04
4
.64
4
IIKMARKS — Showers were general except in Kan-
sas. Nebraska and the Dakotas: cooler weather pre-
\alls In the Dakotaa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and
Nebraska.
H. W. BICHARDSON,
Local Forecaster.
T. indicates inappreciable ralnfalL *Maxlfniiui for
yesterday. tMinlmum for twenty-four hours, ending
8 a. m. THli meridian time. tMlnimum tcm{)erature
for 12-hour period ending at 8 a. ml
NOTl^ — The average maximum and minimum tem-
peratures are inade up at each center from the actual
number of reports received, aud Ihe average rainfall
frvm the number of stations reporting .1 luch ec
The "sute ot weatlMi" lo Uat prtrtlUaa
Con— Spot I at tuae ot obeenaUoK
New York Money.
New York, April 19. — Close: Prime
mercantile paper, 3%@4V4 per cent.
Sterling exchange steady, with actual
business in bankers' bills at S4.84.25
for 60-day bills and at $4.86.45 for de-
mand; commercial bills, |4.83%. Bar
silver, 53%c; Mexican dollars, 45c. Gov-
ernment bonds steady; railroad bonds
irregular. Money on_call steady, ZVi
(&2>^ per cent; ruling rate. 2\i: closing
bid, 2>4; ottered at 2%. Time loans
easy; 60-day bills, 2>4 per cent; 90
days, 2%; six months. 3.
South St. Paul Lilveatock.
South St. Paul, Minn., April 19. — Cat-
tle— Receipts, 500; market light, un-
changed. Hogs — Receipts, 2,500; 10 @ 15c
lower; range, $5.80 ©6.25; bulk of sales,
$6.15@6.30. Sheep — Receipts, 100;
steady; sheep, $1.00@5.00; lambs, $3,75
@6.00.
CottoB Market.
New York, April 19. — The cotton
market opened barely steady at a de-
cline of 6 to 11 points ill respoTisa to
lower cables, rather heavy realizing
and local selling. Prices soon showed
a net loss of about 6 to 9 points but
the new crop continued relatively
steady owing to further rains in the
central belt and as soon as the early
selling orders inspired by less favor-
able foreign advices had been executed,
the market turned steady. Private
cables attributed the easy showing of
I>lverpool to realizing, freer Southern
offerings and a less active trade de-
mand, although the spot sales amount-
ed to 10,000 bales.
Spot closed quiet, 5 points lower;
middling uplands, 14.85; middling gulf,
15.10. No sales. Futures closed bare-
ly steady; closing bids: April, 14.62;
May, 14.70; June, July, 14.73; August.
14.36; September, 13.33; October, 12.84;
November, December, 12.75; January,
12.71; March, 12.79.
Chicago Llveatoek.
Chicago. April 19.— Cattle, receipts estimated at
20.000; market generally iOe lower; beeves. $5. LI®
6.70; Texas steers. ♦4.60@5.60: western steers, 24 8C@
5.80; stockers and feeders, $4P5.T5; cows and helf-
en. ii.'O&'i.SO: calves. $4.75@8.50. Hogs, re- Murrains
ceipts estimated at 23.000; maikgt alow, 5c to lOejDnr Ud
2.00
•••••••••••a
2.40
3.75
1.25
Table parsnips, per cwt. .
MISCKIXANKOUS—
Beans, navy, per bu
Beans, brown, per bu
Fruit baskets, per hundred.
MKAl-S-
Beef, per lb 7%9 .09%
Mutton, per lb 07
Pork loins, per Ih 11%
Veal, per lb i>~ 99 .10%
Lamb, per lb 11
Lard, per ID U
DRKS.SICD POULTRY-
Hens, fancy, fat. per ib 159 .14
Springs, per lb 15
Turiieys, per lb 24
Duclis, per lb 189 .21
Ueese, per lb 129 .13
LIVK POULTRY—
Hens, per lb ...•••.•.•.••...■......•.■.. .13%
Small hens, pet lb 15%
Springs, per lb 15%
Turkeys, per Ib 20
Ducks, per lb 13
Geese, per lb ^ 13
FISH—
Trout. Lake Superior, frozen 12
Whltefl..)!!, frozen .12
l^U(e, frozen ................................. -10
Pickerel, frotea • 68
SalmoB 12
llaUbut 12
Herring, frozen • • 43
Fliman haddle 10
Smoked whlteflsh 16
Smoked Chinook salmon 18
Smoked halibut 14
Oysters, standard, per gal 1.40
Oysters, medium selects, per gal 1.75
Oysters, extra selects, per gal 1.90
Frozen smelts, tx-'r Ib 12%
Fresh frozen mucksrel, each 35
Frozen eels, per lb 12
Roe Shad, each 1.25
Shad roe. per pair .50
Steak, cod. per lb .12%
Scallops, per gal .*• 1.90
HAY AND STRAW—
Choice timothy, per ton $16.50917.00
No. 1 choice timothy, per ton 13.50917.00
No. 1 choice tmolhy, per ton 15.50917.00
No. 1 mixed Umothy, per ton 14.0U916.00
No. 2 mixed timothy, per ton 12.00913.00
No. 1 upland, per ton 13.50914.50
No. 2 upland, per ton 11.50912.50
No. 1 midland, per ton 10.00912.00
No. 2 midland, per ton 7.009 8.00
Rye straw, per ton 6.509 7.00
Oat straw, per ton........ 4.309 7.00
Bran, per ton 22.00
Mld<41l"gTj per ton 24.00
Geaerai Accldeatt Fire & Life Aanur-
ance Corporation, Ltd.
Principal office: 400 vValnut street.
Philadelphia, Pa. (Organized in 1S91.)
Franklin J. Moore. U. S. Manager. At-
torney to accept service In Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL, $250,000.
Income In 1910.
Premiums received (net) —
Accident and health $1,485,117.58
Kinployers' liability 1,077,107.08
Burglary and theft 141,952.92
Auto property damage.... 378.450.28
Total net premium in-
come $3,082,«>27.82
From interest and rents... 77,775.08
From all other sources.... 75,215.71
Total Income . . . .
Ledger assets Dec.
previous year . . ..
Sum
31 of
.$3,235,618.5*
2,407.553.8$
$5,643,172.42
DlMburaementa in 1910.
Claims paid (net) —
Accident and health $ 621,966.58
Employers' liability 470,748.18
liurglary and theft 60,141.68
Auto property damage.... 173,735.33
Net paid policy holders. .$1,326.591 .68
Investigation and adjust-
ment of claims 42,016.18
Commls.sions 907, 650. OS
Remitted to home office... 100,010.18
Salaries of officers, agents,
employers, examiners'
and Inspection fees 296,719.68
All other disbursements... 217,110.75
Total disbursements
.$2,890,098.48
Balance $2,753,073.94
LrdK^cr AdMctM Dec. 31. 1910.
Book value of real estate.. $ 213,160.58
Book value of bonds and
stocks 1,855,036.08
Cash In office, trust com-
panies and banks 159,007 .32
Premiums in course of col-
lections 515,231.77
All other assets 10,638.18
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $2.753.073 . 94
KoB-LedKcr AnMCtw.
Interest and rents due and
accrued $ 22,184.55
Gross a.ssets $2,775,258.49
Deduct AaMcta :>iot Admitted.
Premiums In course of col-
lection (past due) $ 21,686.42
Book value of ledger assets
over market value 134,217.91
Special deposit, less $6,-
154.42 liability thereon.. 5.691.82
Total assets
mltted
not ad-
$ 161,596.15
Total admitted assets.
LtabUltle*.
Claims —
Adjusted
.$2,613,662.34
16,547.00
Chicago.
Chicago, April 19.— Butter— Steady ; creameries. 13
@21c; dairies, 13918c. Eggs— Stea<ly: receipU, 18,-
709 cases; at mark, oases included, 13@18%c; flrsU,
14%c; prime flratt, 15c. Cheese.-Weak; daisies,
13%913?ic; twins. 12%913c; joung Americas,
13%Wl3?ic; long horns, 12%@13c. PoUtoes—
Strong; choice to fancy, 58960c: filr to good, 559
57c. Poultry — Live, weak, turkeys, 14c; fuwU. 13c
Veal— Dull. 50 to 60 lb wts., 6%@7c: 60 to 85 lb
wts., 798c; 85 to 110 lb wU., 899c.
New York.
New York, AprU 19.— Butler— Fir n; receipts. 12,-
398 packages; creamery special, 2::%923c; extras,
22o: firsts, 20921c: seconds. 189t9c: creamery
held eitras, 18%920c: firsts. 18(?18%c; serrinds,
16',i9l7%c; state dairy finest, 2192Jc Cheeoe—
Steady; receipts, 2,39'J boxes; state whole milk spe-
cial. 14915^c; September Quality fancy colored,
I3'i4@13%c: white, 13c: summer and fall made,
colored choice, 12912?4c: same »'hite, 119ll%c:
current make large best, 10%910)[ic: samb com-
mon to fair, 9%<310c; skims. 291 Jc. Eggs— Firm;
receipts. 30,921 cases; fresh gathered selected extras,
18918%c: same firsts. 16>A917c; seconds. 15%9
I6c: storage packed first, 17%9I7Kc: fresh gath-
ered, dlrUaa, No. 1. 14%@14%c; Siime No. 2, 13%
914c: state, Pennsylranla and nearby benneiy
brown. 17%918%c; same brown snd mixed gath-
ered, 17917%c: western duck eggs, 23926c
HIDES, TALLOW AND FURS.
GREEN SALTED HIDES— No. L
a. B. steecs, over 60 lb !i .09%
O. S. steers, 25 lb and up and steer*
under 60 lb 08%
O. 8. long haired kip*. 8 to 25 lb.. .09
O. B. veal kips. 5 to 25 lb 13
a. S. Deacon skina, under 8 lb 80
O. 8. horsehldes 3.60
DRY SALTED—
Dry flint hides, over 15 lb 16
Dry MlnnenoU, Dakota. Wlsconala
and Iowa bides 14
Muskrat, winter 4#9M ...
.15%
I ••••••••••«
Ko. 2.
8 08%
.07%
.07%
.11%
.TO
2.60
.12
22918
M
In " process of adjustment
and reported 186,734.36
Resisted 51,510.00
Total $ 254,791.38
Deduct reinsurance 28,925.00
Net unpaid claims except
liability claims $ 225,866.38
Special reserve tor unpaid
liability losses 131,604 .14
Unearned premiums 1,081,963.02
Commissions and broker-
age 183,575 . 55
All other liabilities. Includ-
ing reserve 359,406.18
Expenses of investigation
of claims 10.770 00
Deposit capital 250,000.00
Total liabilities, includ-
ing capital $2,223,185.23
Surplus over all liabilities. $ 390.477.11
BualncMa In Mlnneaota In 1910.
Losses
Paid.
$17,099.16
7, .'',28. 20
11.289.72
2,205.65
Premiums
Received.
Accident $13,161.83
Health 5,632.21
Liability 32,272.43
Burglary and theft 1,609.90
679.84
Automobile prop-
erty damage 2,440.07
Totals $55,106.44 $38,602.57
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance: _ ...
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual
statement of the General Accident, Flro
& Life Assurance Corporation, Ltd., for
the year ending December 31st, 1911, of
which the above Is an abstract, haa
been received and filed in this Depart-
ment and duly aPProved by me
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
U. S. Engineer Office, Duluth. Minn..
March 20, 1911. — Sealed proposals for
dredging at Superior entry, Duluth-
Superlor harbor, will be received at this
office until noon April 20, 1911, and
then publicly opened. Information on
application Graham D. Fitch, Lt. Col_
EMrs. D. H.. Marcb 20. 21. 22. 23, AprU
If. 19, 1911.
1
.
r
1
\
4
?
.;
_ .
I
1
""-'
1
1
i
\
1
1
1
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i
i*
■i
I
I
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{ 1
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t
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M^
Wednesday,
L R. BONDY, Agent
303 PALLADIO BLDG.
Home l.lfe Insurance Company.
Principal off.iv: 256 Hruaiiway. New York, N. T.
(Organizeil In ISdO.) GetTice K. Ide. president; Ulls
W. lilailwiii, stiTctary. AttDniey to aiiepl stnlce in
JflnnesoU: Commlssicner of Insurance.
C.VSH rvPITAI,. $125,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
flTBt year's premiums $ 349.015.71
UlTiilends iiiKl matured endowment ap-
plied t«i iiurchase paid-up Insurance
and annuities 314.610.61
Consideration for orlEinal annuities, and
supplement.-inr contracts Invoking life
contingencies 10.163.60
Uenewdl premiums 2.M8.137.46
Tntal prrmlum Incom* $3,824,927.38
nenis and lmere^t.t 1,151,763.57
Gross profit < n sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of Itdger assets 28. IIS. SI
From all other source* 53,991.07
Total Income $4,863,195.83
LedCfT asseta Dec. 31 of prerlous year. . .153.184.349.50
Sum $28,049,545.33
DISBURSEMENTS DURING I9IG.
Death claims and matured endowments. .$ 1,309.064.28
Annuities und premium ni>tes voided by
lapse 51. 553.06
,«turrvnder values to policyholders 676,806.85
Dividends Ui pullcyholdeni 437.395.79
Dividends to company 6,379.96
Total paid p<ilicTlioldep« $ 2,481,200.54
Dividends held on deposit surrendered
durhiK the year 6"6.88
Dlvldemls to sUK-klioldera 15.000.00
CcmnUssions ami bonuses to agents flKt
year's premiums 155.074.26
fommissioni on renewals 223.508.40
fommL-sions on annuities 2.380.44
Ageiio' siii-ervlslon and other expenses.. 16,141.72
Medical ixamlner's fees and Inspection of
risks '-'•;?]?2
Salaries of officers and employes 168,775.75
Legal expenses 4,394.44
tinjss li'ss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets 12.762.33
Ail other dUbursemeuts 277.263.86
TlUi dhbursements $3,384,518.63
Balance $24,665,026.70
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. I9I».
Value of real estate owiv?d $ 1.643,609.81
Mortg.ige loans 7.015,415.00
Prendiiin notes and policy loans 3.427. 4U. 02
Uonds and stocks owned 12.173.022.93
f*»h. In office, banks and trust com-
panies 392.072.57
BUla receivable and agents' balances. 17,570.10
$24,669,104.43
Uem sundry small amounts due persons
whose wherealwuts are unknown 4,077.73
Total ledger assets (as per balance) ... .$24,005,026.70
NON-LEOQER ASSETS.
Interest and rents ilue and accrued $ 195.2.'51.5!)
Xet deferreil and unpaid premiums ;)5u.29o.58
Gross assets $25,210,571.87
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Asents' debit balances $ 17,723.88
Book value of ledger assets over market
»alu8 360.012.93
Total as.-cts not admitted $ 377,736.81
Total admitted assets $24,832,835.00
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
.Vet value of outstcnding ptdlcles $20,213,575.00
Present value on supplementary contracts
and caiu-eled policies 191.486.00
rialms line and unpaid 15,9U6.13
Claims adjusted and not due, and un-
adjust -d and reported 122.767.77
riainis resisted 6,000.00
Preailuras paid in advance 23,535.31
lUvldtnd.^ due policyholders 2,304.324.81
Special reserve 43.609.81
Reserve for unreported death claims 15.UOO.00
Total liabilities on policyholders" ac-
count $23,105,886.93
t'naaslgned funds (surplus) $ 1,602,148.13
Capital stock paid up $ 125.000.00
EXHIBIT OF POLICIES, 1910 BUSINESS.
No. Amount.
Policies in fyri-e at beginning of
the j-ear— (Ijist .olumn only). 49,099 $ 92,532.533.00
Policies in foree at close of the
year 50.869 100.214.968.00
Vet Increase 99,968 7,082,435.00
Issuetl. revived and Increased
during the year 5,339 14,952,118.00
Total terminated during the
,ear 3,569 7,269,683.00
By dealli 542 931,879.00
By maturity 134 337.088.(10
By expiration 33 63.013.00
By surrender 1.481 2.875.600.00
i,y lipse 1.379 2,768.924.00
ily d*erc,ise 442.279.00
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
No. Amount.
Policies in force at beginning
If the year 1.2&0 $2,008,031.00
Issued during the year 245 570,560.46
Ceased to be in force during
the year 120 178.881.46
In force Dec. 31st last 1.415 2.401,710.00
Los.ses and claims incurred during the
,64, $31,564.46
Losses and claims settled during the year. .$25,564.46
Losses and claims unpaid Dec. 31 6,000.00
Received for pttmluma $85,269.41
adjusted I 990.00
Unearned premiums 35,857.35
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due 700.00
All other liabilities 2.070.09
deposit of subscribers.... 80,000.00
Total liabilities | 119,617.44
Net surplus .$ 140,779.74
lliakH anil Preiulnmih 1010 Busineaa.
Fire risks written during
the year |14,198,373.00
Premiums received thereon 83.375.97
Net amount In force at
end of the year 111.707.630.00
BuMlnean In Mluneiiota In 1»10.
(Including reinsurance received and de-
ducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written I 634,908.01
Premiums received 4,080.80
Losses incurred 4,156.15
Losses paid 4,156.15
Amount at risk 634.908.01
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annua.
Statement of the Underwriters at Great
Western Lloyds Mutual Fire Insurance
Company, for the year ending Decem-
ber 31st. 1910, of which the above is an
abstract, has been received and filed in
this Department and duly approved
by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
w
HEELER&PARSONC
REAL ESTATE, 0
LOANS AND INSURANCE.
808 AL WORTH BLDG.
ramden Fire InHurance Companjr.
I'rlnclpal office: 434 Federal street. Camden. N.
J. (Organized in 1841.) Edmund K. Head. Jr.,
p.-v.sldent ; Joseph K. Siiarp, stcretary. Attorney to
accept serrlce In Minnesota: Commissioner of In-
surance.
CASH CAPITAL, $500,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals $ 1,316.466.99
Premiums on perpetual risks 243.50
Heats and Interest $ 103,846.96
CJri'ss profit on sale, maturity or «d-
justment of ledger assets 55.00
From all other sources 2.367.40
Total Income $ 1,422,981.85
Leilger assets Dec. 31 of previous year.$ 2,312,972.41
Sum $ 3.735,»54.26
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Xet amount paid for losses $ 730.663.96
••Ixpenses of adjustment of losses 10.063.52
Commissions and brokerage 355.333.82
Salsries and fees of officers, agents
and employes 64,006.33
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses 27,089.83
Dividends and Interest 48,981.30
Urogs loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledgtr assets 125.15
All other dLsbursements 51.295.69
Tbtal dlsbni-sements $ 1,287,559.60
Balance $ 2,448.394.66
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Pook value of real estate $ 53.454.36
Mortgage loans 604.625.00
Collateral loans 58.500.00
Book value of bends and stocks 1,495,302.15
Cash In oiflce, trust companies and
banks 47,377.82
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, taken for premiums. . 189,035.33
All other ledger assets 100.00
Total ledger assets (as per balance)... $ 2.448,394.66
NON-LEOGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due an<l accrued $ 26.163.36
.M:irk.:t value of real estate stocks over
book value 5,695.10
Gross as.'Vts $ 2,480,258.12
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances $ 1,560.93
Book value of letlger assets over murket
value .34.423.61
Total assets not admitted $
35.984.54
Total admitted assets $ 2,444,273.58
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims $ 113,008.73
Cneametl premiums 1,143.042.28
Heclaimable on perpetual policies 23,708.30
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
Interest due 16,319.21
.*U other liabilities 25.00
Capital i>tock paid up 500,000.00
FREDERICK O'BRIEN,
General Agent.
305 Phoenix Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn.
UnderTTrlterM at American Lloyda In-
surance Company.
Principal office: 45 Cedar street, New
York. (Organized in 1890.) E, E.
Hall and CTiarles A. Trowbridge, at-
torneys and managers; E. E. Hall, sec-
retary. Attorney to accept service In
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
Income la 1010.
Gross Premiums and as-
sessments I 271,626.47
Rents and interests 35,772.00
From all other sources.. 2,000.00
Total income % 309,398.47
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year ( 922,379.10
Sum I 1,231,777.57
DIabnraementa In 1010.
Amount paid for losses.. $ 58,586.15
Commissions, brokerage,
salaries and allow-
ances to agents, offi-
cers and employes.... D5,033.08
Taxes, fees, rents and
other real estate ex-
penses 6,112.84
Loss on sale or maturity
of ledger assets 320.00
All other disbursements. 82,198.55
Total disbursements...! 242,250.62
Balance | 989.526.95
Ledger Anaeta Dec. 31, 1010.
Collateral loans ) 17,500 . 00
Book value of bonds and
stocks 870,814.69
Cash in office and banks 61,432.73
Premiums in course of
collections 39,779.53
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $ 989,526.96
Non-LedKcr Aaaetfl.
Interest and rents, due
and accrued | 7,967.16
Market value of real es-
state, bonds and stocks
over book value 1,437.43
Gross assets $ 998,931 . 54
Deduct Aaaeta Not A<lmttted.
Premiums in course of
collection (past due).. I 381.53
Total assets not ad-
mitted I 381.53
Total admitted assets. $ 998,550.01
LiabllltieM.
Losses adjusted and un-
adjusted ....» 2,945.00
Unearned premiums % 152,352 . 00
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due 2,750.00
All other liabilities 106,277.81
Total liabilities I 264,324,81
Net surplus t 734.225.20
Risks and Premiums, 1010 Business.
Fire risks written during
the year % 54,894,741.00
Premiums received there-
on 366,560.35
Net amount in force at
end of the year $ 44,678,024.00
Business In Minnesota In 1010.
(Including rein.«urance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks
Risks written % 1.990.552.82
Premiums received 12,057.86
I.,osses Incurred 6,684.19
Losses paid ^■^^^•1?
Amount at risk 1.990,552.82
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance: , ,
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement ot the Underwriters at
American Lloyds, for the year ending
December 31st, 1910, of which the
above Is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly
approved by me „
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
Surrender values to pol-
icyholders 5,863.
Dividends to poltcyhold-
ers 1. 1.64G.
Dividends to cc^pany... 949.
Total paid p^Iloihold-
ers \.: S 177,885.
Dividends held on deposit
surrendered firing the
year 290.
Commissions and bonuses
to agents tlrst year's
premium 58,890.
Commissions oa renewals 12,485.
t^afaries and allowances
for agencies -. . . ; 9,305 ,
Agency supervlsioi; and
other expenses 2,237.
Medical examiner's fees
and inspection of risks 7,174,
Salaries ot offioera and
employes 16,977
Legal expenses' 6
Agents' balances charged
off 1.422
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets 806
All other disbursements. 35,908
Total disbursements...! 323,389
Balance ! 904,475
Ledger Assets Dec. 31, 1010.
Mortgage loins ! 605,980
Premium notes and pol-
icy loans 13,949
Bonds and stocks owned 146,315
Cash, In office, banks and
trust companies 71,496
Bills receivable and
agents' balances 7,735
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) ! 904,475
Non-Ledger Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued ! 10,757
Market value of bonds
and stocks over book
value 1,446
Net deferred and unpaid
premiums 85,650
Gross assets ! 1.002,330
Deduct Assets Not Admitted.
Agents' debit balances..! 9,136
All other assets not ad-
mitted 18,726
Total assets not ad-
mitted ! 27.862
Total admitted assets.! 974,467
Liabilities Dec. 31, 1010.
Net value of outstanding
policies ! 431.840
Claims due and unpaid.. 3,235
(Claims adjusted and not
due, and unadjusted
and reported 14,177
Premiums paid In ad-
vance 1,594
Dividends due policy-
holders 21,685
All other liabilities 8,519
49
44
52
39
81
01
07
08
00
35
50
99
ADDITIONAI^ WANTS
From Pages 19 and 20.
MONEY TO LOAN.
$|$|$$|$!|$$S$$S$$$$|$$$$$$$$$$n!!$|$$
65
73
00
00
50
08
15
73
40
70
26
09
09
32
41
68
00
43
86
90
18
10
Total liabilities. Including capital... $ L7!^S.103.'>2
State of Minnesota, department of Insurance:
1 Hereby Cert, fy. That the .\nnual Statement of
the Heme I-ife Insurance Conipanj, for the year end-
ing Dcccml.tr 31. li^lo. of wliich tbe above Is an
abstract, has teen received and filed In this De-
D«rtment and duly approved by me.
i. A. O. PREt'!',
Commissioner of Insurance.
Net surplus $ 646.170.06
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Flro risks vrrlrten during the year $162,0.;."j.301.00
Premiums rweived thereon 1.846.806. 14
Net amount In force at end of the year 198,048.971.00
* — Includlns business other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deductlns re-
insurance placed.)
Fire Rlstu. Tornado. Aggretrnte.
Ui=ks wrIUeu... $2,708,629. 12 $ US.COO.OO $2,807,229.12
Premiums
received 41.750.55 558.93 42.309..")0
Lt:sses Incurred.. 34.325.4T 34.325.47
Lossts paid 42,756.34 42.7,'>6.34
.\mount at risk. 3.742,933.05 355,150.00 4,098.082.05
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the .\nnual Statement of
tlio Camden Fire Insurance Company, for the year
ending December 31st, liilO, of which tbe above is an
abstract, has been re<elved and filed In thi« De-
partment and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PRKUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
FREDERICK O'BRIEN,
General Agent.
303 Phoenix Bldg.. Minneapolis. Minn.
Uader^riters at Great \Vestertt Lloyds
Fire lujinranee Company.
Principal of lice: 4 5 Cedar street, New
York. vOrganlzed in 1892. > Edward K.
Hall. ('has. A. Trowbridge, attorneys
and managers; Kdward E. Hall, .secre-
tary. Attorney to accept service In
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
iHcoiue lu 1010.
Gross premiums and as-
sessments ! 65.821.08
Rents and intere.st 9.8SJo.7;>
Total income I 75,716.81
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of ^ .o ofio qo
previous year ♦ ..'48,Jb».»o
Sum f 323,985.71
DiMltiirMemrniN in 1010.
.■\mount paid for lo.sses..! 10,423.9a
Commissions. brokerage,
salaries and allowances
to agents, officers and
employes 25,317.18
Taxes, fees, rents and oth-
er real estate expenses.. 1,303.17
All other disbursements... 25,784.74
Total disbursements ! 62,829.04
Balance ! 261.156.67
I>e(lser AMSeta Dee. 31, 1010.
Book v;;lue of bonds and
stocks ! 213,864.50
Cash in office and banks.. 35,571.80
Premiums in course of
collections 11,720.37
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) ! 261,156.67
]Non-L.edS4^r AMSeta.
Interest and rents, due and
accrued ! 2,377.51
Gross a.ssets ! 263,534.18
Deduct A««<<etN Not Admitted.
Premiums in course ot col-
lection (past due) ! 1D5.00
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value. . 2,942.00
Total assets not admit-
ted ! 3,137.00
Total admitted assets...! 260,397.18
Liabiiities.
Losses adjusted and un-
LEONARD G. FERGUSON,
408 COLUMBIA BUILDING
Indiana Lumbermen'M Mutual Insurance
Company.
Principal office: Indianapolis, Ind.
(Organized in 1897.) C. C. Foster, pres-
ident; F. B. Fowler, secretary. Attor-
ney to accept service In Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
Income in 1010.
Gross premiums and as-
sessments !
Rents and Interest
From all other sources...
229,5?,6.63
10,539.24
167.76
Total income ! 240,243.63
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year ! 229.344.56
Total liabilities on pol-
icyholders" account..! 481,052.47
Unasslgned funds (sur-
plus) ! 493,415.21
Exhibit of Pollcien, 1010 BuaincMM.
No. Amount.
Policies In force at
beginning of the
year — (last col-
umn only) 10792 !11, 426,563. 00
Policies In force at
close of the year 12445 13,502,902.00
Net Increase 1653 ! 2,076,339.00
Issued, revived and
Increased during
the year 2^53 ! 2,964,059.00
Total terminated
during the year. 700 887,720.00
By death 166 174,053.00
By surrender 82 93,787.00
By lapse 452 587,444.00
By decrease 32,436.00
BuHlncHS In Minneaota In 1010.
No. Amount.
Policies In force at
beginning of the
year 1651 ! 1,773,411.00
Issued during the
year 715 876,553.00
Ceased to be In
force during the
year • 232 261,565.00
In force Dec. 31st
last 2034 2,388,399.00
Sum
S 467.588.19
Dinburaements In 1010.
Amount paid for losses...! 97,434.64
Commissions, brokerage,
salaries and allowances
to agents, officers and
employes
Taxes, fees, rents and oth-
er real estate expenses..
Loss on sale or maturity
of ledger assets
All other disbursements...
27,706.56
3,786.83
288.26
77,088.77
Total disbursements ! 206,305.06
Balance ! 261,283.13
Lcdgrer Aaseta Dec. 31, 1010.
Book value of real estate. •! 24,500.00
Mortgage loans 123,250.00
Book value of bonds and
stocks 83,389,15
Cash in office and banks.. 16,752.68
Premiums In course of col-
lections 13,391.30
Milvrauiiee German Fire Insuraiico
Company.
Principal office: Milwaukee, Wis. (Organized in
1905.) Edward Schroedcr, president; Al K. I'ray,
secretary. Attorney to accept service in Mltuiesota:
Commlsiuner of Insurance.
CASH CAI'ITAL, $200,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Pi<?mlums other tlian perpetuals 9
Ilents and inUrest
Urnss profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of loileer assets
From all other sources
100.229.54
11.074.26
40.00
.79
TuUl Income $ 112.244.39
Leilger assets Dec. 31 of previous year. .$ 291.169.47
Sum $ 403,414.06
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for lus.scs | 47.91«.63
KSiv^nsts of adjustment of losses 1,001.20
Cotumlrsloia and broicerage 23,028.08
Salaries and fees of ufficeu, agents and
employes 13,303.23
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses 2,830.64
.Ml other dlsburstmeuts 6,183.77
4tc BKTTEil RKSILTS from Herald 1^
^ Want AdH. Yon Have and malce *
* money vvbea you advertise In THK ^
» IIKKALD. ^
Total disbursements f 99,255.39
Balance
% 304,138.47
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Mortgase loans $ 197.750.00
Itook value of bonds and stocks 65.8J0.00
Car.h In office, trust companies and
b.ink3 10,581.04
Agents' balances, unpaid prtmiums and
bHls receivable, taken for premiiuns... 18.027.88
X\l other ledger assets 2.949.o5
Total ledger assets (as per balance).. | 304,158.47
NON-LEOQER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued 3,308.62
Gross assets $ 307,467.09
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances | 677.18
.Ul other aaseu not adnUlted 2,040.53
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) ! 261,283.13
Non-Ledger AMSeta.
Interest and rents, due and
accrued ! 3,247.52
Gross assets ! 264,530.65
Llabilitiea.
Unearned premiums ! 111,778.61
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due '. 2,658.80
.\11 other liabilities 448.00
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing permanent or guar-
anty fund !
114,885.41
Losses and claims In- _. „„„ „„
curred during the year . ! 26,897 . 00
Losses and claims settled
during the year ! 26,950.00
Losses and claims unpaid . „ „ „„
Dec. 3l8t 1.947.00
MONEV ON CREDIT. !
SOMETHING NEW. %
ilO upward, for hosuekeepers, !
worklngmen and salaried em- I,
^^ ployes, at charges that honest !!
!! people can afford to pay. !!
!! DULUTH LOAN COMPANY, !!
HCor. Third Ave. W. and Sup. St., !l
307 Columbia Bldg. !!
Old 'phone, Melrose 2355. !!
4}
!!
S?!$?>$$>$.<$!? If $»»>'$$$<$$$$$$$$$»$!$!!!
•*. .SPlMKn Is: HI.-Rt.'! Ji
SPUING IS HERE.
If you want money In a hurry,
SEE US.
Our rates are the cheapest.
Our payment plan the best.
Call and be convinced.
LOANS ON SALARY, FURNITURE
DULUTH FINANCE CO.
301 Palladlo Bldg.
Open Saturday Evenings.
FOR SALE— REAL ESTATE.
FOR SALE — HALF-AC
!75 and up, in the S
garden division, loo
blocks up from Piedmo
line, facing Morris '
The new Hutchlnsoi
through this land. Pai
Is clear and ready fo
Inquire from the own
Hagberg, 9 Twentieth
or Andrew Bergquist,
building.
RE TRACTS,
eventh ward
ited twelve
it avenue car
Thomas road.
L road runs
t of the land
r cultivation,
ers, Karl J.
avenue west,
104 Exchange
FOR SALE — FINE J!EVEN-ROOM
house; bath, toilet, full basement,
stone foundation; small cash pay-
ment, balance monthly. Address
C 220, Herald.
FOR SALE — WE HAVE A FEW DE-
sirable lots in West Duluth that we
win sell on easy weekly or monthly
payments. Whitney Vail company
301 Torrey building.
CITY AND VILLAGE LOANS IN MIN-
nesota. Buy or build a home on
monthly payments. C. A. Knippen-
berg, 300 Alworth Bldg. 'Phones 597,
WE LOAN ON ALL KINDS OF PER-
sonal security at lowest rates. Call
on us. 430 Manhattan Bldg., and get
rates. Duluth Mortgage Loan Co. W,
Horkan. New 1598-D; Melrose 3733.
WE MAKE FARM LOANS ON VAL-
uable, productive and cultivated
lands. No delay; prompt attention.
Snyder Bros., 210 West First street.
TO LOAN — !15,000 IN SUMS TO SUIT,
on real estate. Lane, MacGregor &
Co., 400 Alworth building.
MO.NEY SUPPLIED TO SALARIED
people, women keeping house and
others, upon their own names witn-
out security; easy payments. Tolman,
509 Palladlo building.
MONEY TO LOAN ON CITY PROPER-
ty; lowest rates; small and large
amounts. Scott-Kreldler company,
405 Central avenue. Both 'phones.
MONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS,
watches, furs, rifles etc,, and all
goods of value, !l to !l,500. Key-
stone Loan & Mercantile Co. 22 West
Superior street.
MONEY TO LOAN— LOANS MADE ON
timber and farm lands. John Q. A.
Crosby, 305 PalTadio building.
Money to loan — Any amount; low rates.
Cooley & Underbill, 209 Exchange.
■'IX PER CENT INTEREST ON SMALL
real estate loans; money on hand;
prompt service. F. I. Salter com-
pany, Lonsdale building.
RENT— STORES, OFFICES, ETC.
FOR RENT— FINE DRY BASEMENT
on Lake avenue south; steam beat.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
RENTAl DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM OFFICE
suit© In Wintnrop block. Thoroughly
modern. Suitable for doctor or den-
tist. Charles P. Craig & Co., 501-
505 Sellwood building.
FOR RENT— STOltE AT 907 W^EST
Michigan street; !30 month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT — STORE, 1829 WEST Su-
perior street; well adopted for
plumbing establishment. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR SALE — OWNER WILL SELL
eighty feet on East Second street; a
splendid building site, In best part
of city, at a snap. Aldress K 212.
Herald.
FOR RENT— HOUSES.
iii FOR RENT.
*. TEN-ROOM ROOMING HOUSE,
* HARDWOOD FLOORS, GAS AND
* ELECTRIC LltiHT.
* 24 WEST THIRD STREET.
*. MENDENHALL & HOOPES.
t
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son 515 Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR SALE — LOT 5, BLOCK 36,
Endion, between Twenty-second and
Twenty-third avenue, London road,
going for !600. C. B. Woodruff.
FOR SALE — AN ELEGANT 80 BY 80
West end lot; all Improvements; a
sacrifice. See the Jimlth Realty
company, 524 Manhattan building.
FOR SALE— 100 BY 140 FEET, SEC-
ond street and Twenty-fifth avenue
east; also ten single lots on Park
Point and one large cottage, with
tents known as "Cami Orlando." G.
S. Richards, 5 South Fifth avenue
west, 'Phones.
FOR SALE— EAST END jO-FOOT LOT,
three houses all thoroughly modern
and new; must .sacrifice; splendidly
arranged; half cash. See the Smith
Realty company, 521 Manhattan
building.
FOR SALE— TWO PARK POINT LOTS
only three blocks from aerial bridge;
corner and inside; \erv cheap; easy
terms. A. G. Messer, 317 North r if-
teenth avenue east; Melrose 650
and 439.
FOR SALE — SIX-ROOM HOUSE AND
two acres; two blocks from car line;
!1,800; easy terms. Address W 67,
Herald.
FOR SALE— A FEW GOOD LOTS,
well located; cheap lor cash. See
the Smith Realty company, 524 Man-
hattan building.
FOR SALE — !180 TAKES LOT WORTH
!250; !75 cash, balance monthly; also
lot at Woodland: barga n at !300. Call
206 Alworth building.
FOR SALE— DO YOU WANT Tilt,
best building lot on Fourth street,
between Seventh and Eighth avenues
west? Easy terms. 801 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR SALE — CHOICE BlflLDING LOT,
upper side London road. East end; a
bargain for quick sale at price away
below adjoining prop< try. For in-
formation address C 3'i9, Herald^,
FOR RENT— !25 PER MONTH FOR 402
East Superior street; possession im-
mediately or May 1. H. J. Mullin, 403
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — MODERN STORE, FINE
front, 35x60 feet, basement and sec-
ond floor. Third avenue east and Su-
perior street. S<^'e H. J. Mullin, 403
Lonsdale building^
FOR RENT— STORE ON WEST SU-
perior street, between Third and
Fourtli avenues west. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey building.
Received for premiums..! 64,497.87
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
1 Hereby Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the Scandla Life Insur-
ance Company, for the year "idinK
December 31st, 1910, of which the
above Is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly
approved by me. ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^
Commissioner of Insurance.
Net surplus ! 149,645.24
RImIcn and PremiuniM, 1910 Bunineiis.
Fire risks written during
the year !11, 484, 422.91
Premiums received there-
on 269,506.53
Net amount In force at
end of the year ! 9,738,957.00
DuHiuesH in Mlnnenota in 1010.
(Including reinsurance received and de-
ducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written
Premiums received
I^ossos incurred . . .
Losses paid
Amount at risk . . .
169,375.00
3,818.95
177.76
177.76
126,175.00
Total assets not admitted $
3,026.73
Total admitted assets % 303,840.36
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
I'npald losses and claims | 6.493.39
ITneurned premiums 81.205.88
.Salaries, cxpen-es, taxes, dividends and
Interest due 2,004.59
Capital stock paid up 200,000.00
Total Uabllltlea, Including capital $ 289,703.86
Net .surplus $ 14.136.30
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire rUlis wiltten during tbe year $10,237,479.00
Premiums received Uiereon 130,272.43
Xet amount In force at end of the year. .$12,020, .")86. 00
*— Including business other than "Marine and' In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reliuurance received and deductluj re-
insurance pLiced.)
Fire Risks. .Aggregate.
Risks written $1,169,206.00 1,011.456.00
Premiums received l.'5.292.29 15,517.12
LosMs incurred 8,628.79
Losses paid 8,862.99
Amount at risk 1,467,842.00
State of }kllnne80ta. Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement of
the Milwaukee Gennan Fire Insurance Company, for
the year ending Decemlier 31st, 1010. of wldch the
above Is an abstract, has been received and filed ifl
tlds Department and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREU3,
CommlMlnnOT ot ImunuiMk
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Indiana Lumbermen's
Mutual Insurance Company, for the
year ending December 31st, 1910, of
which the above Is an abstract, has
been received and filed in this Depart-
ment and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
Scandla Life Insurance Company,
Principal office: 108 La Salle street,
Chicago, 111. (Organized In 1904.)
Nils A. Nelson, President; Charles H.
Boman, Secretary. Attorney to ac-
cept service In Minnesota: Commission-
er of Insurance.
Income in 1010.
First year's premiums...! 90,439.85
Renewal premiums 316,098.13
Total premium income! 406,537.98
Rents and Interest 39,432.89
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity oc adjustment of
ledger assets 200 . 00
From all other sources.. 1,384.18
Total Income ! 447.565.05
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year .... 780,310.33
Sum ! 1,227,865.38
DlHhnriiements Dnrlns 1010.
Death claims and ma-
tured endowmenta ....| 169,431.83
LEGAL NOTICES.
AMENDMENTS^
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
— OF—
GRAY TALLAXT COMPAXY.
Thf undersigned hereby certify that
at a special meeting of tho stockholders
of Gray-Tallant Company, a corpora-
tion organized under the laws of the
State of Minnesota, held at the office of
said Company at number 117 West Su-
perior street, in the city of Duluth,
Sllnnesota. on the 4th day of April,
1911, at which meeting more than four-
fifths of the stockholders of said Com-
pany, In number and amount, were
present or represented by proxy, and
which stockholders' meeting was duly
and regularly called by proper notice
duly given each stockholder, in which
notice the purpose of said meeting was
speclfled, it was duly and unanimously
resolved as follows:
Resolved. That the articles of Incor-
poration of Gray-Tallant Company be,
and the same hereby are, amended as
follows:
First, that Article I be, and hereby is,
amended so as to read as follows:
ARTICLE I.
"The name of this corporation shall
be 'George A. Gray Company.' "
Second, that Article VII be, and Is
hereby, amended as follows:
By striking out from said Article
the following words: "which shall be
held on the second Monday in January
In each and every year."
Third, that a new Article shall be.
and hereby Is, inserted Immediately
following said Article VII. which new
Article shall be numbered VIII and read
as follows:
ARTICLE VIII.
"The annual meeting of the stock-
holders of this corporation shall be
held on the 10th day of February In
each and every year at two o'clock
P. M., except that when said date falls
on Sunday, said meeting shall be held
on the 11th day of February at two
o'clock P. M."
In witness whereof, Gray-Tallant
Company has caused these presents to
be subscribed and sworn to by its
president and Its secretary, and has
caused Its corporate seal to be here-
unto affixed this 10th day of April,
1911.
GEORGE A. GRAY,
President.
HARRIET L. PECK,
Secretary.
(Corporate Seal of Gray-Tallant Com-
pany.)
In Presence of:
E. F ALFORD.
CORAH L. COLBRATH.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis.
— SSe
George A. Gray and Harriet L. Peck,
each being duly sworn, depose and say,
that the said George A. Gray is the
president and the said Harriet L. Peck
Is the secretary of Gray-Tallant Com-
pany; that the foregoing certificate by
them subscribed contains a true state-
ment of the action of the stockholders
of said corporation, at the meeting
thereof as set forth In said certificate,
I whereby, at the time and place therein
Indicated, it was resolved to amend the
articles of Incorporatloa of said com-
FOR KENT — HALL; NINETEENTH
avenue west and First street, inquire
214 Axa building.
FOR RENT — A FEW CHOICE OF-
fices in the Torrey building; best of
janitor and elevator service. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR RENT — STORE ROOM AT 2423
West Superior street, !20; four-room
flat upstairs, with bath, !10.
FOR RENT — FULL STORE AND BASE-
ment. suitable for grocery or meat
market, etc.; moderate rent. First
avenue west and Fourth street. Chas.
P. Craig &, Co., 501-505 Sellwood
building.
UPHOLSTERING.
FURNITURE, AUTOMOBILES, CAR-
riages; reasonable prices. E. Ott, 112
First avenue west. Both 'phones.
MINERAL LANDS.
EBERT, WALKER & McKNIGHT CO.,
315 Torrey bldg., offers unusual op-
portunities for big profit in mineral
lands on Cuyuna and Vermilion ranges
MEDICAL.
LADIES — !1,000 REWARD! I Posi-
tively guarantee my great successful
"Monthly" remedy. Safely relieves
some of the longest, most obstinate,
abnormal cases In three to five daya
No harm, pain or Interference with
work. Mall, !1.50. Double strength.
12. Dr. L. M. Sougthinton & Co,
Kansas City, Mo.
FOR SALE— 50 BY 140 FEET, NORTH-
west corner Twenty- third avenue
west and Fourth streut. Apply Mu-
tual Electric company.
FOR SALE — TWO LOTS, SEVEN-
teenth avenue east; water, sewer and
gas on lots; no rock; !850. See
Schwleger at A. B. Stswert & Co.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
211 South Seventeenth avenue east,
!27.50 per month. Call 817 Torrey.
Melrose, 113S. _
FOR RENT— MAY i, NINE-ROOM
house 109 East Third street with
bath, furnace, laundry, fireplace,
suitable for roomers or boarders. !50l
Apply to E. D. Field company, 20»
Exchange building.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE AT
221 East Third street.
FOR RENT — FINE BRICK DWELL-
Ing house; eight rooms; hardwood
finish; hardwood floors throughout;
hot water heat; !60 per month. 22»
East Second street, J. D. Howard
& Co., 216 West Superior street.
FOR RENT — SIX-ROOM HOUSE, 607
West Third street. Apply to Henry
Taylor, 603 Palladlo building. Zenltb
■phone 2066-Y.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
bath and electric lights, water paid.
Inquire 731 West Second street.
FOR RENl— SIX-ROOM HOUSE WITH
LARGE GARDEN AT KENWOOD.
Inquire J. V. Krelsel. 608 West First
street.
FOR RENT — 202 LAKE AVENUB
south; best stand on Lake avenu»
for notions, cigars, fruit or second-
hand goods. Apply Wm. Craig. Tel-
ephone Melrose 2758.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FUR-
nished cottage on Park Point, elec-
tric lights, hardwood floors. 162S
Minnesota avenue.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE;
three lots for garden; No. 927 Ninth
avenue west. Apply to H. Gould,
Eighth avenue west and Tenth street.
FOR SALE— THE MOSI' DESIRABLE
double corner in the Normal school
district. See Chan Sr.ilth, 405 Tor-
rey building.
FOR SALE — LOT ft, BLOCK 26,
Endion, between Twenty-second and
Twenty-third avenue, London road,
going for !650. C, B. Woodruff.
FOR SALE— A LOT 60 BY 75 FOR
only !600; five bloccs from new
courthouse; easy terms. See Chan
Smith, 405 Torey bullclng.
FOR SALE — FIVE CHOICE BUILD-
ing lots in New Duluth. adjacent to
the new steel plant. \v'ill be sold at
a great bargain to clase an estate.
F. C. Drenning, 221 Prt vidence build-
ing^
FOR SALi:— LOTS, HOUSES. ACRES;
Investments that pay c Ivldends ev»jry
month. Talk with F;der. 18 Third
avenue west.
FOR SALE— TWO FINE, LEVEL LOTS
on Tenth street, near Tenth Avenue
east. Can be bought cheap; small
cash payment, Balanc<t monthly. W.
E Wright, 303 Palludlo. Melrose,
1333.
LOST AND FOUND.
LOST— DARK BRINDLEi BULL TER-
rerr; has but one eye; weighs about
twentv-four pounds; !10 reward will
be paid for return of dog or infor-
mation of same. Loughney &
Loughney, 301 Christ e building^
LOST — COLUMBIA E ALF-DOLLAK
watch fob charm. Tuesday morning,
between Garfield and Sixth avenue
west. Please return to 224 Fourth
avenue west, upstairs, for reward.
FOUND — THE PARTY WHO LEFT
bicycle at E. J. Campbells livery
barn can have same 3y paying for
this a<L
LOST— ABOUT A MONTH AGO, STOCK
certificate No. S-24409. Finder please
return to Herald offidj.
PICTURE FRAllING.
GUST AVE HENNECKE. ill E. SUP. ST,
pany as set forth In said certificate;
tnat the .'^eal attached to said Instru
ment is the corporate seal of said cor
poration. „,.,.„
GEORGE A, GRAY,
HARRIET L. PECK.
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 10th day of April, 1911.
E. F. ALFORD,
Notary Public, St. Louis County, Minn,
(Notarial Seal, St. Louis County Minn.)
My commission expires Feb. 24, 1917.
State of Minnesota, Department of
State. . ^.
I hereby certify that the within In-
strument was filed for record In this
office on the 13th day of April, A. D.
1911 at 9 o'clock A. M., and was duly
record In Book U-3 of Incorporations
on page 116.
JULIUS A. SCHMAHL,
Secretary of State.
OFFICE OP REGISTER OF DEEDS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis.
— ss.
I hereby certify that the within In-
strument was filed In this office for
record April 15, 1911, at 10:30 A. M.
and was duly recorded in Book 14 of
Misc., page 181.
M. C. PALMER,
Register of Deeds.
By THOS. CLARK,
Deputy.
Proposals for the Construction
of Sanatorium,
COUNTY SANATORIUM COMMISSION,
DULUTH. MINN.
SEALED PROPOSALS addressed to
said Commission, will be received at
the office of said Commission. No. 211
Courthouse, Duluth, Minnesota, until
12 o'clock noon. May 8, 1911, for the
construction of a County Sanatorium
located in the Town of Midway near
Duluth, Minnesota; all work and ma-
terial to conform to the plans and
specifications Ihcrefcr which may be
obtained at tbe »))0V0 jiamed office.
Said bids will be openod publicly at
the .said office of said Commission at
Duluth, Minnesota, at 3 o'clock P. M.,
May 8, 1911.
Bids will be received for the work
in its entirety or on one or more of
the following named cU.sses of work:
Foundations and Masonry.
Carpentry.
Plastering and FireiJrooflng.
Roofing and Sheet Metal.
Glass and Glazing,
Plumbing.
Painting.
Heating.
Electric Wiring.
Each bid must be accompanied by a
deposit equal to five (5) oer cent of the
total of the bid, which deposit must
be in the form of a certified check,
made payable to the bounty of St.
Louis. This deposit will be returned to
the bidders whose bids are rejected,
and to the successful bdder upon his
enterlnglng Into a contract with the
St, Louis County Sanatcrlum Commis-
sion, and giving a satisfactory surety
company's bond to St. Louis County,
the penalty of which shall be the con-
tract price, within ten Jays after the
date of notification that his proposal
has been accepted. Should the bidder
fail to enter Into said contract and
bond within said ten da}'s, said deposit
shall be forfeited to the County of St.
Louis.
The St. Louis County Sanatorium
Commission reserves the right to re-
ject any or all proposals or parts
thereof.
Dated at Duluth, Minnesota, April
17, 1911.
ST. LOUIS COUNTY SANATORIUM
COMMISSION,
Per W. M. HART, Secretary.
D. H., April 19. 24, Ma*' 1, 1911.
FOR RENT — 521 WEST SECOND
street, ten rooms, steam heat, mod-
ern throughout; make a good room-
ing house, $5U per month. J D.
Howard & Co., 216 West Superior
street.
FOR RENT — 927 EAST THIRD
street, five- room detached cottage,
bath, electric lights, gas for cooking;
front and rear yard, !22.50. II. J.
Mullin, 403 Lonsdale building.
FOR ItENT — ElGHT-ltOOM HOUSE;
all conveniences. 317 West Fourtli
street. Inquire 319 West Fourth
street.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE
with bath. 215*4 East Fifth street.
Hartman-O'Donntll agency, 205 Lons-
dale building.
FOR RENT— A COMFORTABLE, WELL
arranged home in the East end; mod-
ern In every respect; !42.50 per
month. Wliitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
FOR KENT— TWO SIX-ROOM BRICK
houses all modern; large basement;
27 and 29 West Fourth. Inquire
27% West Fourth street.
FOR RENT — NINE ROOMS WITH
bath, furnace, fireplace and laundry.
lt'9 East Third str-.-t^t, $50. E. D. Field
company. Exchange building.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE
on Nineteenth avenue east with fur-
nace, bath, etc., one block from cars,
!32.50. E. D. Field company, 203 Ex-
change building.
FOR RENT— TWO THREE-ROOM
flats with bath, etc., !15 and !8. E.
D. Field company, 203 Exchange
building.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
rear 7 West Fourth street. Inquire
at Louis Oreck, 416 West Superior
street, curio store.
FOR RENT — NINE OR TEN-KOOM
house, 1007 East Second street; all
conveniences; !40. Apply N. J. Up-
ham company, 18 Third avenue west.
FOR RENT— EIGHT- ItOOM HOUSE,
No. 1 West Fifth street; water, sew-
er, bath, gas and electric lights, hot
air furnace for rent May 1, $30 per
month. It. P. Dowse, 106 Providence
building.
FOR RENT— 506 FIFTH AVENUE
east, six-room house and bath, gas,
free water, $20 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT CHEAP— SEVEN- ROOM
house, on Seventh street. West end;
city water and gas. Call new 'phone,
Lincoln 474.
FOR RENT— 1803 SOUTH STREET,
five-room house, water and sewer;
free water, !15 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT — A MODERN SEVEN-
room house on East Second street,
near Nineteenth avenue east; two
bath rooms; hardwood finish; hot
water heat; !42.50 per month. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey bulld-
Ing.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son, 515 Torrey building, both 'phones.
FOR RENT — 1309 EAST SECOND
street, nine rooms, modern; !45 per
montli. See M. Henricksen, at Hen-
rlcksen Jewelry company.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage, 3439 Minnesota ave-
nue. Park Point. Inquire 102 West
First street. Bloom & Co.
FOR RENT — 216 EAST THIRD ST.
Modern eight-room brick house. Hot
water heat. A. H. Burg & Co., JOO
Alworth building.
BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
■j^. PHILIP DANDREA *
•jg. Will move into ills new store, Mc- ^
*. Kay Hotel building, at 20 Fifth •*
i^ avenue west. He will carry a full ^
•^ line of fruits, candies, tobacco, ^
4(- cigars and stationery; also will ^
•^ open a new Ice cr^eam parlor, i^
# Would be pleased to have his #
i^ his friends and patrons give him a -^
jfL call "^
SWEDISH MASSAGE.
A. E. iiANSEN, MASSEUR, 400 NEW
Jersey building. Old 'phone 4273 Mel.
rose^
Mra Westlind, massage, treated at offiott
or at your home. Zen. Grand 2246-X.
MRS. H. WIKING, SWEDISH MAS-
sage. 305 East First St. Melrose 4494.
SEEDS, PLANTS, TREES.
FOR SALE — TREES AND SHRUB^
plants and flowers; gardening don«
by the day or contract Call G. R.
Mercer, Mel. 3545.
N. J. UPHAMCO.,
STORBS AND HOUSBil FOK lUMIT.
Property for sale in all parta ot
the city.
18 THiaO ATBNl B WBMW
CLAIRVOYANTS.
PROF. GIRARD. THE ONLY KEL.I-
able clairvoyant in Duluth. 20 Weat
Superior street. Upstairs.
MADAM ANNA, CARD READING AND
business advice, 329 West Superior
street. Room 12. Melrose 32fi7.
WANTED TO RENT.
WANTED TO RENT— FURNISHEW
rooms for two gentlemen; centrally
located. Address Herald. K. 47.
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Wednesday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 19, 1911.
19
r
SOME PEOPLE DO FIND GOOD SERVANTS!
They may be "lucky/' of course. But perhaps it's more like sood
management than good luck. Most of the good servants are found
through HERALD "WANT ADVERTISING'' or through HERALD ADS.
-I
ummm t-
FOR SALE— HOUSES.
FOR SALE — ON EASY TERMS, SIX-
room house. Twenty-fourth avenue
west and Sixth street, $1,S00; sewer,
■water and gas in street. Whitney
\VaU company, 301 Torrey building.
294
FOR SALE — NEW TEN-ROOM DU-
flex house for sale cheap; easy
erms; 1016 Ninth avenue east. C. A.
Knippenberg, 300 Alworth building.
'Phunes 697.
IMPORTANT NOTIC-E.
If you want us to build a house for
you this aummer, please let us know
as soon as possible. We advance all
the money and you pay us monthly,
but even at that there Is a lim-t to
our capacity and to our poclcetbooic.
If you are not familiar with our
plan write us a postcard anJ wo will
mall vou booklets and pictures.
KL'MUND G. WALTON AGENCY,
312 Exhange building.
FOR S.VLE— MODERN SEVEN-ROOM
hou?e with bath; rooms all large;
line grate, electric light and gas; all
street assessments paid; sliade trees
and well sodded lawn; house in tine
repair and ready to move into; loca-
tion walking distance to business
center; terms to suit; exclusive sale
by Getty -Smith company, SOS Pal-
ladio building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
centrally located. West Duluth; price
|1,S00; small cash payment, balance
monthly; Is now rented for J19 per
month. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
FOR SALE— A GRAND FOUR-ROOM
cottage; elegant location; 25-foot
lot; cheap, $500 cash, balance, easy
as rent. Smith Realty company,
&-J4 Manhattan building.
FOR SALE— AT LAKESIDE, NEW
seven-room house, concrete founda-
tion, all conveniences except heat, lot
50 by 140; for quick sale owner will
sell at a bargain. E 29, Herald.
FOR SALE — A TWENTY-ROOM
boarding house furnished, also barn,
16 by 32 on lot 25 by 125 feet; located
in a thriving range city. Address H.
& S.. box 414, Hibbing. Minn.
FOR SALE — 15 PER CENT INVEST-
nient. double house. 16 rooms, heat,
stone foundation, large lot; sacrlhce,
$5,000; one-half cash; East end. Smith
Realty Co., 524 Manhattan.
FOR S.\LE — SEVEN- ROOM MODERN
hxusc;, on East Fourth street, near
Portland sijuure; hardwood through-
out; good basement; cement founda-
tion and furnace heat. A bargain;
>4.500. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building. 293
FOR SALE— ELEGANT HOME; IDEAL
location; must sell. For terms see
owner, 408 Columbia building or call
Park 6155-D.
Houses from (SOO to $S0.OO0 for sale
bv L. A. Larsen Co., Reliable Real
Estate Dealers. 213-14-15 i'rov. Bldg.
FOR t>ALE — J 100 CASH AND |1S PER
month buys nearly new seven-room
and basement house and lot; West
end; sewer, water, electric lights,
furnace, good barn, buggy and wood-
shed. K 60, Herald.
FOR SALE — AN EAST END HOME OF
nine rooms, large lot, modern except
heat; beautiful location; $3,500. $500
cash, balance easy as rent. Smith
Realty company, 524 Manhattan
building.
FOR S-VLP:— BY OWNER, SIX-ROOM
house and lot; all improvements.
211^ We.st Fourth street.
FOi: SALE— MODERN EIGHT-ROOM
huuse In East end. Inquire L. K.
Daugherty. ool East Fourth street.
FOU SALE — NEARLY NEW SIX-
room house; water, gas, electric
light; good cellar. 102o East Sev-
enth street.
FOR SALH:— $500 DOWN, BALANCE
ea.sy terms, for a twelve-room house
n^iar high school and manual train-
ing building. See Chan Smith, 405
Torrey building
FOR SALE — HOUSE AND LOT FOR
sale at 1111 Garfield avenue.
FOR SALE — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE AND
lot at 1723 East Sixth street. Owner
must leave city soon. Inquire at
premises,
FOIt S.VLE— NEARLY NEW SIX-ROOM
house; hardwood finish; modern ex-
cept heat. Apply 1615 East Fiftii
street.
FOR .SALE FL.\TS — ANNUAL RENTAL
$722; three Hats netting 12 per cent.
Price $G,500; $1,500 cash, balance easy
terms: on car line, near Lincoln Park.
S. W. Richardson, 201 Exchange Bank
building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM RESI-
dence; all modern conveniences; lot
7o b.v 140; in Normal school district;
$t(,.'jOO. See Chan Smith, 405 Torrey
building.
FOR SALE — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
with water, sewer and electric lights;
two lots, 25 by 126 each; price, $1,800,
one-half cash, balance to suit. Twin
Ports Realty company, 510 Manhat-
tan building.
FOi: SALE — 15-ROOM BOARDING
house; lot 25 by 125; $2,000; one-
fourth ca.sh, balance to suit; hard-
wood floors, sewer, electric light and
city water; this property is near the
Zenith Furnace company; now oc-
cupied; rents for $25 per month.
Tvvin Port Realty company.
FOR SALE — SEVEN ROO.MS AND
bath; new fixtures and plumbing;
hardwood floors; all modern conven-
iences; nice trees and bushes; will
sell cheap If taken at once. Inquire
1620 East Sixth street.
FOR SALE— AT A SACRIFICE— SIX-
room cottage on street car line.
Park Point; water, electric light,
bath, gas range, fireplace, hot water
heat, cement foundation, laundry tubs,
cement rtoor In 7% -foot basement;
beautiful, high, dry lots; fine shade
tie'^s; easy terms. Save commission.
Address Owner, H 334, Herald.
FOP. SALE— BY OWNER— NICE SIX-
room cottage, 1534 Minnesota ave-
nue. Inquire at 216 Vernon street.
FOR SALE— BARGAIN IF TAKEN AT
once, eight-room house, barn and
LSi>o lot; Forty-fourth avenue near
.on.lon road, $2,500; terms; snap for
contractor or carpenter. H. A. Hook-
er. 509 Frederick avenue, Milwaukee,
Wis.
FOR SALE— DONT FAIL TO SEE US IF
you contemplate buying a home this
spring. Minneapolis Construction Co.,
210 American Exchange Bank Bldg.
FOR SALE — MODERN EAST END
home; large grounds; Illness of wife
compels sale; no agents need apply.
A<Mress S o68. Herald.
WANTED TO TRADE FOR FARM,
eight-room house, on a fifty-foot lot,
located in the best residence district
in Duluih. Price $4,500. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
i'Oli SALE — ON EAST EIGHTH
street, near Seventh avenue east, six-
room house, very comfortable, and
delightfully arranged interior, for
$2,200. with $500 cash; balance on
easy terms. Whitney Wall company.
301 Torrey building. 262
FOR SALE — MONTHLY PAYMENTS
of $40 will purchase the right party
a good six-room house at Lakeside,
modern except heat. Price $3,400.
'y Greenfield. 310-11 Columbia building.
FOP SALE— SEVElC-ROOM HOUSE
at Lakeside; strictly modern
tv»*,)ughcat: fine location; good view
of lake. $4,200. (283) Whitney Wall
company. 301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE ON
cuiner; modern except heat; East end.
This is one big bargain at $1,800.
part cash. Call 206 Alworth building.
FOR RENT— FLATS.
(Continued.)
F^nnKtiT^^iyE^nooid^Fi^^ city
water, bath, water free. $16 per
month. J. D. Howard & Co., 216 West
Superior street.
FOR RENT — THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11 per month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT — FOUR- ROOM F^IRST-
floor flat; baths, heating plant, gas.
electricity. Inquire 410 Eleventh
avenue east, second floor.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FL.\T, 123 H
East Fourth Inquire 123 East
Fourth.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE MODERN
five-room brick flat. First class con-
dition; hot water heating plant.
Fourth avenue east and First street.
Reasonable rent. New phone, Lin-
coln 317.
HELP WANTED— FEMALE.
(Continued.)
WANTED — WOMAN COOK AT THE
Frederick hotel.
WANTED— EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR
general housework; family of two;
good wages; one who can go home
nights. Call 1418 Jefferson street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 2122 West Fourth street.
WANTEI>— EXPERIENCED MARKER
and sorter; must be first-class. Model
laundry. 126 East First street.
WANTED — YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework; one who can go
home nights preferred. Call 432
Eleventh avenue east.
WANTED — BOOKKEEPER ^^^^0 UN-
derstands stenography. Apply North-
ern Manufacturing company, Chris-
tie building.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
hou.sework at 706 Vi East Fourth
street.
WANTED — WAITRE.SS AND DISH-
washers at the Marine hotel, 206
Lake avenue south.
WANTED — AT ONCE, GIRL FOR
general housework or a young girl
to assist. 220 East Second street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 114 East Fourth street.
WANTED — SWEDISH GIRL FOR
general housework; newcomer pre-
ferrecL 3432 Allendale avenue, Wood-
land; Tiew 'phone. Grand 1980-A.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; B 5 St. Regis flats. Sec-
ond avenue east and Second street.
Call mornings.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED CHOCO-
late dipper; steady work. Duluth
Candy Kitchen, 307 West Superior
street.
WANTED— DINING ROOM GIRL. 151
St. Croix avenue.
WANTED — COMPETENT MAID FOR
general housework, two in family.
Mrs. T. F. Lynch, 1607 Jefferson
street.
WANTED — C;OOD GIRL FOR GENER-
al housework; good wages. 423
Fifteenth avenue east.
WANTED — TWO YOUNG ' LAT>IES
who mean business to travel and take
light parts on the stage; one for child
part. Salary. $12 a week and ex-
penses. R. Allen, manager, care The
Melrose, 318 West Second street. Du-
luth. Minn.
WANTED — GIKL FOR GENERAL
housework; family of two. Mrs. A.
W. Kuehnow, 1805 East Second
street.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED MILLI-
nery trimmer and maker. 6 East
First street. Mrs. Sharpe.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework Mrs. C. W. Wilson, 124
Fourth avenue west.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED LADY
pressers. Apply 232 East Superior
street. Zenith Dye house.
WANTE:D — KITCHEN GIRL. 30 WEST
Second street. ■'■
WANTED — GOOD CHOCOLATE DIP-
per. W'inkler Bros." candy factory.
2234 West Michigan street.
WANTED — COMP ET ENT GIRL TO
take care of two children and do sec-
ond work. 1721 East First street.
WANTED — COOK AT 2526
First street; good wages.
EAST
Central Employment office, all kinds
of places filled and positions furnish-
ed for girls. Room 3. over Big Du-
luth store. Mel. 259. Grand. 620.
W'ANTED — YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework; one who can go
home nights. Call mornings. 12S
Eighth avenue east.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENER.\L
housework. 621 East First street.
W.ANTED — TWO DINING
waitresses at Hotel Lenox.
ROOM
HORSES, VEHICLES, ETC.
HORSES! HORSES! HORSES!
MIDWAY HORSE MARKET.
THE HORSE AND MULE HEAD-
quarters of the Northwest;" 500 to 800
head of horses and mules constantly
on hand; part time given If desired.
Private sales daily. If you need draft
horses, general purpose horses, de-
livery horses, mules or railroading
or other purposes, drivers or saddlers,
we can fill your order. Every horse
sold guaranteed to be as represented.
BARRETT & ZIMMERMAN.
Midway Horse Market, St. Paul, Minn.
E'OR SALE— CLIPPING TIME FOR
your horses; one combination horse
for sale cheap. Wheaton's barn,
309% West Second street.
FOR SALE— A CARLOAD OP HORSES
just arrived in West Duluth this
morning; weigh from 1,000 to 1,600
pounds. Price from $75 to $250. part
time given if necessary. 608 North
Fifty-sixth avenue west. Zenith
•phone 3001 Cole. .
FOR SALE — TWENTY HEAD DRAFT
and driving horses. 1111 West Furst
street. Western Sales Stable com-
pany.
FOR SALE— NICE DRIVING HORSR
Call evenings. 219 North Twenty-
ninth avenue west.
FOR SALE — FIRST-CLASS DRIVING
horse; weighs 1,100 pounds; sound.
704 East Fourth street.
FOR SALE — TWO DRIVING M-\RES;
also three delivery horses, weigh
from 1,200 to 1,300 pounds. S. M.
Kaner, 1219 East Seventh street.
HORSES ACCLIMATED HORSES.
Young heavy horses; several teams
for sale. Red Cliff Lumber company,
barn. Thirty-ninth avenue west.
For Sale — Forty head of draft and gen-
eral purpose norses just out of woods
to be sold cheap. 209 W. 1st St.
FOR SALE— TWENTY-FIVE HEAD OP
horses at 811 Lake avenue north.
FOR SALE— 30 HORSES AT ZE.XITH
Sale & Boarding Stable. 524 W. 1st St.
FOR SALE — HORSES, 826 EAST
Third street. H. Inch.
FOR SALE— HORSES AT L. HAMMEL
company.
WATCHES REPAIRED.
Guaranteed Main Springs. $1.00; watch
cleaned. $1. Garon Bros.. 213 W. Ist
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
(Continued.)
* *
* FOR SALE. *
* Household goods outfit of new *
^ furniture In five-room flat, used *
* just one month, for sale at a very it
* advantageous figure. Flat for *-
ii> rent. A decided snap for some *
•j^ young couple. Enger & Olson, the H-
* Big Furniture house. Nineteenth *•
ii' avenue w^est. it
LOOK HERE!
FOR SALE — A SNAP — MAPLE DRESS-
er and commode, combination dress-
er, range (beauty), heater; all prac-
tically new. M. W. Turner, 218 East
First street, or 'phone Melrose 4166.
FOR RENT— FURNITURE OF A FOUR-
room fiat. Call Melrose 3841.
FOR SALE— TWO BRUSSELS RUGS.
9 by 12, Segar refrigerator and 30-
gallon coal hot water heater. Call
711% East Fourth street.
FOR SALE— AT A LOW PRICE. SEC-
ond hand full dress suit and white
vest In good condition, size 4J. at
Karl J. Hagbergs tailor shop, 9
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR SALE — NEW STEEL RANGE
and other household furnishings.
Call Melrose 4216.
FOR SALE — ORGAN SUITABLE FOR
country school, 405 North Hugo
street. Duluth Heights. Zenith 'phone
Grand 2196-X
FOR SALE. CHEAP— ONE TEN-FOOT
counter; one eight-foot counter. Ap-
ply Duluth Van & Storage company.
FOR SALE— $100 PIANO AND FURNI-
ture; a snap if taken at once. Call
19 Lake avenue north or Grand
619-A.
FOR SALE— COMPLETE IRON BED,
dressers, gas plate oven and other
household furnishings. Call 620 East
Fifth street.
FOR SALE— CHEAP. ONE SECOND-
hand visible typewriter. L 43. Her-
ald.
FOR SALE — COMPLETE BED. IN-
Quire 617 V4 West First street.
FOR SALE— STEWART STEEL RANGE
In fine condition; costs $42, will sell
for $20. Excellent, large base burn-
er heater, costs $35, will sell for $25.
Call at 618 East Second street, up-
per flat.
FOR SALE— TWO-PIECE MAHOGANY
parlor set; call mornings. 516%
Fifteenth avenue east.
FOR SALE — ALL DRUGS AND
show cases. Apply Lenox Drug store.
FOR SALE— ALL KINDS OF MATER-
lal used In packing furniture, burlap,
excelsior, etc. We also furnish
packers by the hour. Estimate free.
Duluth Van & Storage Co., 210 Vv.
Superior strejt. Both 'phones 492.
FOR SALE — SINGER DROP-HEAD
sewing machine; seven drawers;
practically new; cheap. 119 West Sec-
ond street.
FOR SALE — GOOD FURNITURE,
cheap; roll-top desk and chair, wal-
nut beds, marble-top dressers, sofa,
couches, small tables, lady's writing
desk, rockers, pictures, mattresses,
etc. Forenoons this week, 9 to 12.
one-story building on alley, 220 West
Third street.
FOR SALE— STANDARD TYPEWRIT-
er, good condition; cash, or will trade
for anything that I can use. What
have you? K 49. Herald.
FOR S.\LE — LIVING MUSIC BOX DAY
or night singers, rollers and chop
note canaries; come and hear my
new stock of canaries eing; wild or
tame animals of any kind can be had
by order at 1013-1015 West First
street. Duluth Bird store.
FOR SALE— INCUBATORS. BROOD
ers and all poultry supplies; baby
chicks 16 cents and up; any breed
hatched to order; flower and garden
seeds in bulk; northern grown;
shrubs, roots, bulbs and trees. W.
W. Seeklns, florist. 302 East Superior
street.
FOR SALE— THIRTY-FOOT CABIN,
gasolene launch; 15 horse power
Campbell motor. L 300, Herald.
FOR SALE — OR TR.\DE. SECOND
hand automobile for two or five pas-
senger; slightly damaged. Call or
give us offer at 203 Providence build-
ing.
FOR SALE— WANTED A FEW MORE
butter customers. Owing to a recent
Increase In our dairy herd we can
accommodate a limited number of
l)eople with butter. Jean Duluth
farm. Telephone evenings.
FOR SALE— RAISE CHICKENS — IT'S
easy with the Jewel Incubator — any
one can get good results. We have
'em In all sizes. See our latest
hatch. Kelley Hardware Co.
FOR SALE — NEW AND SECOND-
hand engines, boilers, portable saw-
mills, planers, matchers, resaws. pul-
leys, shafting, hangers and boxes.
•Phones 91.
DULUTH MACHINERY CO.
FOR SALE— AT A LOW PRICE. SEC-
ond hand full dress suit and white
vest In good condition, size 42, at
Karl J. Hagberg's tailor shop, 9
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR SALE— SAFES. OFFICE FURNl-
ture, architects' and engineers' sup-
plies, typewriters and supplies. J. S.
Ray & Co., 406 W. Sup. St. 'Phones.
FOR SALE — OFFICE FURNITURE,
also household furniture, dining ta-
ble, chairs and china closet. Call 1101
Alworth building. 'Phone Melrose,
Grand 201.
FOR SALE— WAGON AND HEAVY
double harness; cheap. 684 Grand.
FOR SALE — TWO DROP-HEAD
Whites, $18 and $23: four drop-head
Singers at $10, $12, $15 and $25;
others from $5 up, all in fine shape.
White Sewing Machine store. Lake
avenue and Superior street.
FOR SALE — COAL HEATER, PARTY
leaving town. 130% West Fourth
street.
FOR SALE — BLACK ORPINGTON
eggs, for hatching. Fine large stock,
$1 per 15. Mrs. Parks, 614 West
PMfth street.
FOR SALE— PIANO; WILL SELL
cheap; party leaving city. 832 East
Second street.
FOR SALE— WACJON SHOP, MACHIN-
ery stock. W. M. Smith, 26 East
First street.
DYE WORKS.
ZENITH CITY DY^E WORKS — LAR-
gest and most reliable. All work
done In Duluth. Work called for and
delivered. 'Phones: Old, 1154-R; new,
1888. 232 East Superior street
Duluth Dye Works — French dry clean-
ing; fancy dyeing. Old 'phone. Mel-
rose 4191; new. 1191-A. 330 E. Sup. St
Northwestern Dyeing & Cleaning Co. —
Oldest reliable dyers and French dry
cleaners In Northwest 23 Lake Av&
north. 'Phones: New. 1516; old. 1337.
NATIONAL DYEING AND CLEANING
company, 319 E. Superior St. French
dry cleaners and fancy dyers. Both
'phones 2376. Branch. 15 Lake Ave. N
East End Dyeing and Cleaning Co..
926 E. Superior St Grand 1245-X,
MeL 4628. All our work guaranteed.
LADIES' TAILORING.
DANFORTH.
131 West Superior street.
Plumes cleaned and dyed any color.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. Miss
FitzPatrlck, 502-4 E. 4th St Both
'phones.
ADDITIONAL WANTS
ON PAGES 18 and 20
FARM AND FRUIT LANDS.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE — 160 ACRES OF LAND AT
$10 per acre in 54-17. two and a half
miles from D. W. & P. station with
good house aiid barn. Address A. A.
Stauty, Cotton. Minn.
FOR SALE — SMITH REALTY COM-
pany have got new prices on their
farm and acre tracts. See them early
for a good snap. 524 Manhattan.
BOARD W ANTEU.
' WANTED— FIRST-CLASS BOARD AND
room by four gentlemen with all
good habits, within walking distance
of business district, Address W 39.
Herald.
FOR RENT— FARM OP 25 ACRES,
with house, barns and poultry house,
three miles from car line. See E. L.
Kimball, First National Bank build-
ing.
FOR SALE — 30,000 ACRES OPEN TO
entry to settlers at lowest price,
near Cass Lake. Fred Stcffen,
localer, Brookston, Minn.
FOR SALE— 500 FARMS. FROM FIVE
to forty years time, at 4 per cent.
Minnesota Land & Investment Co..
801 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— GOOD BARGAIN— FORTY
acres of land on railroad station, ten-
room house and surrounding btrild-
Ings; also horses, cows and farm ma-
chinery; fine summer resort. Part
cash, balance easy terms. Address
W 60, Herald.
For sale — 10-acre tracts north of Wood-
land. W. M. Gill. 296 W. 5th St. Superior.
L. A. LARSEN CO.. 214 PROVIDENCE
building, wholesale dealers in blocks
of lands with mln-eral prospects.
SITUATION WANTED— FEMALE.
SITUATION WANTED — WORK BY
the day Call old 'phone. Melrose
4046
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG LADY
would like general office work. Ad-
dress O 25. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — GRADUATE
nurse of five years' experience In
private nursing, wishes position as
general nurse (excluding surgery) in
a Duluth hospital; best references.
Address Nurse, care Herald.
STUATION WANTED — YOUNG
woman with good education, desires
office position; have a knowledge
of shorthand and typewriting; will
work for small wages for the ex-
perience. N 21, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — A MIDDLE-
aged widow would like a position
as iiousekeeper for a widower with
a small family, or other light work,
or nursing. K 52, Herald^^
SITUATION! WANTED — SEWING |BY
competent dressmaker. Call 315%
West Third street rear of 313.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady, position as stenographer, have
some knowledge of bookkeeping; no
objection to going out of town. Ad-
dress X 32. Herald.
STUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady stenographer; reference. Her-
ald. O 24.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady as cashier; can also operate
typewriter. Herald, O 24.
SITUATION W^ANTED — DRESSMAK-
ING and plain sewing, 2106 West
Third street.
SITUATION WANTED — MIDDLE-
aged woman desires position at gen-
eral housework. In or out of city;
good cook; can furnish good refer-
ences. Apply K 51, Herald.
SITi ATION WANTED — WANTED
lace curtains to do up. Call Mel-
ro.se 71 5 -X.
SITUATION WANTED— MALE.
fc-TUATlON WANTED— PUBLIC JAN-
Itor and window-washer. Prudence
Robert, the best new wlndow-Oeaner
in the city. Melrose 305. La Salle hotel.
JEFFEilsoN. PUBLIC JANITOR, ALL
kinds of store and office cleaning.
MeL 2623, 219 East Superior street
SITUATION WANTED — HOUSE
cleaning, carpet beating, window
and wall paper cleaning. Old phone
9tj52; new phone 1082. William
Chlsholm. 228 I^ake avenue south.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
married man as bookkeeper or time-
keeper or both; experience. Call new
'phone Ogden 739-X.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN,
good education, first-class references,
experienced scaler and lumber In-
spector, would like to work for re-
liable logging concern around Duluth
or Superior. W 58. Hferald.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN
desires position as clerk In grocery
store; has good experience. Apply
P. M., Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG MAN.
23 years, any kind of work. Call
401 Palladlo building.
SITUATION WANTED— BY MIDDLE-
aged man and wife, to run club
house or summer resort, experienced,
wife good cook, man can milk, care
of stock and gardening, on reason-
able salary basis. Best of refer-
ences^
SITUATION WANTEI> — BY"^ YOUNG
man who plays vaudeville piano; also
sings illustrated songs. Address K 55.
Herald.
SITUATION W'ANTED — FAINTING
and paper hanging at low prices.
-Grand 2171-D.
SITUATION WANTED— BY FIRST-
class painter; doing good work at
low prices. Address Joseph Damen,
3810 Halifax street Calumet L 284.
SITUATION WANTED— EXPERIENC-
ed shipping clerk would like to
change his position; has been with
wholesale meat concern five years;
references A-1. Address W 64, Her-
ald.
SITUATION WANTED— BY"^ YOUNG
married man; experienced collector
and office work, or as assistant credit
man and collector, best of refernces
furnished. Address C. G., care Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — AN AI^L
around butcher and sausage maker
wishes a position. Frank Pfeifer,
Withee, Wis.
SITUATION WANTED — AS SALES-
man on the road or in store. Ex-
perienced. Good business education.
Speak Swedish and Finnish. Now
employed. Address A B C. Virginia,
Minn.
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG MAN
accustomed to hospital work, would
like other employment. Not afraid
of work. Can furnish good refer-
ences. K 205. Herald.
TIMBER LANDS.
TIMBER AND CUT-OVER LANDS
bought: mortgage ioans made. John
Q. A. Crosby. 306 Palladlo building.
FOR SALE— FORTY ACRES LAND.
all white pine and spruce timber. In-
quire 709 Hammond avenue. Superior,
Wis.
I buy standing timber; also cut-over
lands. Geo. Rupley. 615 Lyceum bldg
FOR SALE — 40 ACRES LAND. ALL
white pine and spruce timber. In-
quire <09 Hamraonnd avenue, Supe-
rior. Wis.
Homesteads and timber claims located.
From 40 to 80,000 acres of timber
lands for sale. 401 Palladlo Bids.
BOARD WANTED — WANTED TO
board twQ little girls. 7 and 9 years
old. where there are no small chil-
dren. Grand 2190-D.
CLOTHES CLEANED Ai PRESSED.
JOmTlilUELLER. 208 WEST FIRST
street
Zenith Valet — French dry cleaning and
repairing. ?13 West Ilrst St, Mel.
1834. Grand 1134-D
PHOENIX DRY CLB.A NINQ CO. —
Skirts dry cleaned, 50c. Zenith 'phone
Grand, 1852-X. 10 Fourth avenue W.
WHERE TO GET WHAT YOU WANT
Each firm a leader In its line. Coinsult
this list beiore placing your order lj( you
ivant the best at a price you like to pay.
AWNINGS, TENTS, PACKSACKS.
Polrler Tent & Awning Co.. 106 E. Sup.
St., manufacturer and repairing.
Duluth Tent & Awning Co.. 1608 W. Sup.
St Zen. 347-X. Work guaranteed.
AW NINGS AND TENTS.
AMERICAN TENT & AWNING CO., 1
and 3 East Michigan street. Zen. 2473.
ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTER.
We deliver all kinds of adv. matter;
best service. Interstate Distributing
service. Mel. 3547. 17 N. 5th Av. W.
ACCOUNTANT.
R. R. GRIFFITH, 419 Providence bldg.
'Phones: Melrose 1353. Zenith 1938.
S, M. LESTER, 412 PROVIDENCE
building. Both phones 862.
ART GLASS AND MIRRORS.
All kinds glass; lowest prices. St Ger-
main Bros., 121 First avenue west.
CARPENTER REPAIR WORK.
REPAIR OR NEW WORK DONE REA-
sonably; plans maue; estimates fur-
nished. Ole Uelgetun, 2i!U9 West
Second street New 'phone Lincoln
492-Y.
WORK DONE NEATLY. O. PiiiARSON.
207 W. 1st St Zen. 1274-X or Zen. 6097.
We do all kinds of carpenter work, job-
bing a specialty; work Hven prompt
aiientioii. A. J. Hase, 18 West becona
street. 2203-Y.
CAiiUlAGES, WAGONS, DRAYS.
If you v/ant a high grade delivery wagon
or buggy that was built especially
for tins part of the country, for least
money. cctU or write tor catalogue.
L. ...iammul Co., 300-308 East ilrst St.
CARPET CLEANING.
Interstate Carpet Cleaning Company —
Sinotte & Van Norman, compres;»ed
air cleaners and rug weavers, 1928
West Michigan street. Both 'phones.
CIVIL ^GINEERLNG.
Duluth Engineering Co., W. B. Patton,
Mgr., 613 Palladlo bldg. Specifications
pibpared and construction superin-
leiuieo lor waterworks, sewerage, etc.
CHIMNEY SV\EEP.
H. Knutson, city chimney sweep, at No.
1 fire hall. Telephone 4U.
DANCING AND LESSONS.
Dance every evening at 224 W. 1st St,
c:\.cept Monday; aiso dancing taught.
DENTIST.
Dr. W. H. Olson. 222 New Jersey Bldg.
All work guaranteed. Both 'phones.
DRAYING AND TRANSFER.
DLLliTH VAN & STORAGE Company,
2io West Superior St. Both 'phones.
STEWART TRANSFER LINE— MOV-
ing. baggage, freight, expert piano
movers; prompt service. 'Phones 334.
Office 19% Fifth avenue west
DECORATING & WALL PAPERLNG
See Strongqulst & Moyer at 306 E. Sup.
St. about your papering, tinting,
painting and home decorations. You'll
be satisfied. Both '-^^ones.
DRY CLEANING AND PRESSING.
WOR-C QUAl.ANTEED. CITY DYE
Works. Old, Melrose 1942. Zenith
2474.
ENGINEERING.
NORTHWESTER.^ ENGINEERING CO.,
Duluth. Minn.
Architects. Mechanical and Electrical
Eng. ; Plans, Estimates rnd Specifica-
tions. Complete nine Equipments a
specialty. Mel. 3912. P. O. Box 585.
FLORIST.
J. J, Le Borlous, florist, 921 E. 3rjil St-
Floral funeral designs, cut flowers.
FURNITURE RECOVERED.
Let Forsell do your UPHOLSTERING.
334 E. Superior St. Zenith 'phone 949.
FURNITURE AND PIANOS.
Finished and repaired. Theo. Thomp-
son. 336 E. Sup. St. Old 'phone 2828.
INCUBATORS AND BROODERS.
^
INCUBArORS, |6 to $38; BROOD-
ers. $5 to $18.50. Send 4c In
stamps for catalogues and Poul-
try books. J. W. Nelson. 5 East
Superior Street. Duluth. Minn.
INTERPRETER.
V, D. NICKOLICH, INTERPRETER
for several foreign languages, 301
Al orth building.
HORSE SHOEING.
Shoeing crippled and Interiering horses
my specialty. Carl Schau. 14 3d Av. fi.
IMPROVED SHOE REPAIRING.
MONEY SA\A.ii TIME SAVING, SHOE
saving. While you wait Gopher Shoe
works.
JOB PRINTERS.
RANKIN PRINTING CO. — OUT-OP-
town orders a special'iy. 221 West
Superior street
KODAKS AND CAMERAS.
Eclipse Photo Supply Co., 17 4th Ave. W.
Develop and finish for amateurs.
LANDSCAPE GARDENING.
BLACK DIRT, SANDY LOAM AND
fertilizer for gardens, tiotbeds, flower
beds, lawns etc.; grading, sodding
S& seeding. H. B. Keedy. Both 'phones.
MACHINE WORK REPAIRING.
Auto and Machine parts made. Zenith
Machine works, 207 W. 1st St Old
'phone 2522.
KEY, LOCK AND SAFE WORKS.
Sander Brou.' Hardware
store. 203 W. :.8t St. Phones:
Old, Mel. 3969; New, 2288-A.
KEYS AND MODEL WORKS.
Key cutting, grinding, polishing and
fine repairs. 22% E. 2n(l bt. Mel. 3381.
MARINE MOTORS.
A 1909 M(
bell> Mil
lO-horse
— 5-incb
stroke. 1
all sizes
prices. F.
528 Lake
)DEL (CAMP-
rine Motor,
power, for $325
bore, 6% -inch
911 models of
at regular
R. Holm berg.
Av. S. 'Phones.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
A. Haakonsen, dealer
and eipert repairer,
at J. '.V. Nelson's, 6
East Superior street.
OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN.
A. L. NORBERG, 201-2(7 WEST Su-
perior street, 110 Oak Hall building.
OPTICIANS.
C. C. STAACKE, 106 WEST SUPERIOR
Street, Open Wednesdsiy and Satur-
day evenings.
OXY-ACETYLENE \i ELDING.
DON'T SCRAP A BROKEN CASTING
or machine part of ahy size of Iron,
steel, aluminum or brass until you
have conferred with us. Buck &
Spring. 313 East Michigan street
'Phones: Bell, Mel. 971; Zen.. Grand
974.
PATENTS.
IPATENTS — ALL ABOUT PATENTS.
See Stevens. 610 Sellwtod building.
PLUMBING AND REPAIRS.
JAMES GORMAN— YOUR PLUMBER;
jobbing work promptl;r attended to.
1 Twenty-third avenue west Zenith
** 'phone. Grand 107.
Geo. W. Palmer. Ill E. 1st St. Zenith
'phone. 1688-A. Early and late.
RUG WEAVING.
^^J^g^[CcLASs'RAGA5jD FILLER RUG
weaving. Melrose 3341.
PAINTING AND PAP15RHANGING.
DO IT NOW BEFORE THE RUSH. IT
costs less and can take time to do
better work; estimates free. Call
Zenith, 959-A and I will bring sample
books. J. D. McCurdy, corner Third
avenue west and Second street.
FOR PAINTING AND DECORATING
see Y'oungdahl & Dlers, 223 W. 2nd. St
ROOFING. CORNICE, SKYLIGHTS.
J. M. QUICK, JOBBING i..ND REPAIR-
Ing. 631% E. Sup. St Zen., 1267 -A.
BURRELL & HARMON, 508 E. Sup. St
Both 'phones. First-class work.
RIFLES AND GUNS.
Grinding ar d Repairing a
specialty. City Gun Store^
R C. KRUSCHKE,
402 West Sjperlor Street.
SECOND HAND DEALERS.
New and second-hand foods bought,
sold. A. B. Davis, 17 i 9 W. Sup. St
SIGN AND CARD V^'RITING.
For signs of a-^y de»icrlpUon, call
1277-D on Zen. 'phone. A- E. Schar.
WALL PAPER AND PAINTS.
C. Erlckson is still In business, with
the latest in wall paper and fresh sup-
ply of paint 1926 W. ::nd. Entrance
20th Ave W. Estimates furnished.
WATCH REPAIRING.
Watch hospital; cleaning and repair-
ins at lowest prioas. Iwg Bros., lU
B. Sup. St.
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BUSINESS CHANCES.
Business Chances — We buy stocks of
merchandise, paying spot cash. No
matter where located or size of stock,
write Eastern Salvage Co.. merchan-
dise brokers, Duluth, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — CONFECTION-
ery store doing good business, threa
living rooms, furniture Included;
must be sold at once; owner leaving
city. Call at 511 East Fourth street
FOR SALE OR TRADE TWENTY-
four-room hotel; all conveniences,
restaurant in connection. Call Lin-
coln, 33 A.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Two-chair barber shop; well
equipped and building 18 by 30 feet;
best location; can be had at low fig-
ure. Spencer Clark, Keewatin, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $250 GOOD-
paylng restaurant established trade;
also good fixtures, can be bought at
your own price. Wood Purdy com-
pany, 501 Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— WANT TO Ex-
change for farm, stock of merchan-
dise, with store and fixtures, located
in growing farming town. What
have you? G. A. Rydoerg, 417 Torrey
building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $1,300 BUYS
movlng-pkture show clearing from
$100 to $200 monthly; $600 will
handle. Wood Purdy company, 501
Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— A CENTRAL
corner; dead ripe for grocery and
butcher shop; who wants an Ideal
business corner? See the Smith
Realty company, 624 Manhattan
building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — h\)R SALE —
Nine-room house, full of roomers;
best location In city. L 44, Herald.
FOR SALE — RESTAURANT, COM-
plcte, doing good business In best
town on range; price reasonable;
terms cash. For particulars call or
write Mrs. John Burby. Marble, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES— MUST DISPOSE
of real estate holdings In East end
of Duluth. Party having from $3,000
to $4,000 cash can place It to good
advantage. If you act In time; in-
vestigate. Address owner, S 370,
Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES — AN OPPOR-
tunlty of a life In bakery, an im-
mense paying proposition; nets $3,500
year. Standard trade year around.
Smith Realty Co., 624 Manhattan.
BUSINE.SS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Confectionery store doing good busi-
ness; fine location; bargain if taken
at once. See Commercial Business
Brokers, 206 Alworth building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— CONFECTION-
ery; $100 for fixtures and Invoice
stock; dally sales better than $20;
splendid buy. Wood Purdy company,
501 Manhatten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $675 BUYS 13-
room rooming house, income $125
mo'nthly; best paying place In the
city. Wood Purdy company, 601
Manhatten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE —
Up-to-date double store. This Is one
of the finest buildings and best loca-
catlons in Marble. Address Box 31,
Marble, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
Bargain; confectionery store; make
us un offer on this; owner sick. In-
quire Duluth Business Exchange. 509
Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Rooming house; first-class; very
central; neat and clean; big bargain;
price $050. Duluth Business Ex-
change. 509 Torrey building.
Bl'SlNi:SS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
One Babcock soda fountain complete. ,
For further Information Inquire Jo-
seph Shearer, lock box 27, Park Rap-
ids, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Rare opportunity, one-half Interest
In a moving picture theater; price
$1,250. Inquire Duluth Business Ex-
change. 509 Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — ARE YOU
looking for acres to plat? I have a
tract of land across the .St. Louis
river from the steel plant site, ihls
can be sold in lots at a big profit
If interested write W. 63 Herald.
PERSONAL.
PERSONAL— PROF. GIRARD, CLAIR-
voyant and palmist, 20 West Superior
street, upstairs. Six questions an-
swered by ma!!, $j. Send date of birth
PERSONAL — C. O. KRISTENSEN POL-
ishes pianos and furniture at your
home. 'Phone Uogan &, Co.. BotU
'phones.
MRS. VOGT WISHES TO ANNOUNCE
to all her friends and to any one
wishing work done in the hair dress-
ing, manicuring and massaging line,
that she is again located at 17
East Superior street, upstairs, where
she will be pleased to greet them.
PERSONAL — IF YOU CONTEMPLATE
going into the moving picture busi-
ness, better consult us, we can fur-
nish your place complete. Picture
machines, all makes, new and sec-
ond-hand hand experts to install
same. Large list of good houses for
sale. Northwestern Supply Co., 129
West Superior street, Duluth, Minn.
WANTED — MANDOLIN AND GUITAR
players. L 45, Herald.
PERSONAL — COMFORT, BEAUTY
shop, 20 W. Sup. St., upstairs. Mani-
curing, 25c; shampooing and halr-
dresslng, 50c; switches made from
combings. Both phones.
PERSONAL — WANTED, PLACE TO
board 2-year-old boy. Call 19 Fiftli
avenue west
PERSONAL— WHY NOT GET AWAY
from washday troubles by sending
your family wash to us; 6 cents per
pound. Lute's laundry, 808 East
Second street Both 'phones 447.
PERSONAL— MANICURING AND MAS-
sage. 813 Torrey building.
MRS. VOGT. HAIR DRESSER, IS NOW
located at 17 East Superior street,
upstairs.
PEIiSONAL— I WILL WRITE YOUR
ads, reports, pamphlets and pros-
pectuses, furnish you with facts, ar-
guments, literary and historical ma-
terial for debates, club papers and
orations, correct and revise your
MSS. and boost your enterprise. Don
Carlos W. Musser, 712 Torrey build-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2024.
PERSONAL— ELECTRIC RUG AND
carpet cleaning. James Morgan, Mel-
rose 1902; Zenfth 2222.
Personal — Wringer repairing. Int'state
Merc. Co., 11 N. 21st Ave. W. Zen. 787.
PERSONAL — LADIES — ASK YOUR
druggist for Chlchesters Pills, the
Diamond Brand. For 25 years known
as best, safest, always reliable. Take
no other. Chlchesters Diamond Brand
Pills are sold by druggists every-
where.
PERSONAL — MME. MAY FRENCH
female regulator, best of all. Mailed
in plain wrapper, $2 a box. Orpheum
pharmacy, 201 East Superior stieet
PERSONAL — COMBINGS AND CUT
hair made Into beautiful switches.
Knauf Sisters.
WANTED TO TRADE.
WANTED TO TRADE — WE HAVE A
nubmer of Improved farms which we
will trade for improved city prop-
erty. Whitney Wall company, Xdt
Torrey buUdias.
;
I'
>»^M^I KiJi
-P"-
W' ' -^ t" " ■'■
••■•p^i^wwr"
=^
4
•^■i
Wednesday,
f
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 19, 1911.
PRINT A. HERALD
ENOUGH-FOR
WANT AD—AND REIMX THAT GOOD-
OR APARXIVIEIMX
THE HERALD HAS A SWORN
CIRCULATION OF OVER
27,000-THAT'S THE
HERALD'S REASON FOR
SELLING AD-SPACE
On which Basis
Do YOU Buv
A dvertising
Space
SOME men buy advertising space
in a paper because the paper
tells them that "It deserves
their support." not because the
space will produce results.
Then they charg'e the amount up
to their advertising appropriations!
An advertising appropriation is
the seed of the modern business,
properly sown and cultivated It will
multiply an hundred fold.
So that each cent taken from the
advertising appropriation robs the
advertiser not of one cent, but of
a potential dollar.
Be charitable, not w^ith the seed,
but out of the abundance of the
harvest! Next time a paper ap-
proahces you with an appeal for
your "support" — subscribe for the
paper out of your private purse if
you like, and have It sent to a
friend, but don't buy alleged "ad-
vertising" space and deduct the
cost from the amount you can af-
ford to spend in real advertising.
Business and sentiment are oil
and water — they won't mix. The
heavy-lidded poppies luxuriate over
the business-graves of hundreds
who have refused to accept this
truism.
And remember — every time
"buy" 10 cents worth of space
worthless advertising medium,
are throwing nine dollars and nine-
ty cents Into the lake.
That Isn't even charity — It's just
foolishness!
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Ailvertisenient Lets Than 15 Cents.
WANTED.
Seventy-five "extra" people, men
and women, for the big spectacu-
lar musical play, "The Midnight
Sons. " Apply stage door, Lyceum
theater. 1 p. m. Thursday.
***«T?^i?«**'«'*#«'SW^*******^^
><^'^^;f*#*'**^-.t'*^-'^f^**^v-*«*T**^^
BOYS! GIRLS! MONEY AFTER
SCHOOL!
Send us your name and address.
We will send you twenty pack-
ages of our Handy Sheet Bluing.
You can sell them after school.
Send us Jl and keep »1. The Nora
Novelty company, Duluth. Minn.
*
AN
WANTED.
EXPERIENCED
SALESMAN.
SHOE
Applv Superintendent.
PANTON & WHITE CO.
a-
*
WANTED.
EXPERIENCED MAN TAILOR.
APPLY TO SUPERINTENDENT,
PANTON & WHITE CO.
you
in a
you
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advoriisenicnt Less Than 13 Cents.
TELEPIiONFDIREC^
— OF—
BUSINESS
hOUShS
Below you wiU find a
conat:U:3ed ili>t ut reliable
business tiims. This is de-
signed tor the convenience
ol busy people. A telephone
order lu any one of them
will receive lUe same care-
ful attention as would be
One Cent a Word Eacn Insertion.
Xo Advertisement Less Than 15 Cents.
HELP \>^i5TED^FEMALi£
a-
I
WANTED.
Experienced saleslady
maclilne department;
need apply.
for talking
none other
FRENCH & B.\SSETT.
7^
WANTED — Bright men to train as
chauffeurs; practical ln.structlon giv-
en. Auto Owners' association, 1312
Hennepin avenue, Minneapolis.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advertisement Less Tlian 15 Cents,
ADDJfioiiMUi^^
ON PAGES 18 and 19
FARM MD FRUIT LANDS.
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
801 Torrey Balldlns.
FOR SALE— A FARM OF 120 ACRES,
suitable for dairy or truck farming;
forty acres cultivated; buildings and
other Improvements worth more than
price asked. A bargain, |3,600.
FOR SALE — IN TOWN OF WREN-
Bhall, 160 acres, three miles from
p-ond du Lac, near sawmill. Land Is
heavily timbered with maple and
birch. No swamp or rock, fine, hvavy
black loam soil. Good trout stream.
Price $17 per acre; small cash pay-
ment, balance easy monthly pay-
ments. Will trade for small home In
Duluth.
FOR SALE— NEAR BOULDER LAKE,
160 acres on Vermilion road, at $10
per acre; terms to suit. Torrens
title.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE ACRES
on the west shore of Thompson lake
on Vermilion road, about fifteen miles
from Duluth. Will divide to suit.
Easy terms. Torrens title. Price
$12.50 per acre.
FOR SALE — THREE FORTY-ACRE
tracts on Bug creek, adjoining sta-
tion of Pitt on Canadian Northern
railroad, at $o per acre. Will make
easy terms.
FOR SALE— FIVE ACRES ADJOINING
Duluth Heights, at $300 per acre.
Easy terms.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advertiisumeut Letss Than 15 Cental
FOR^RENT^^LATST
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvln Bldg.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HEATED
flat at 5 North Nineteenth avenue
east; $32.50 per month.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM APART-
ment in St. Elmo building, 721 East
First street; splendid arrangements;
beautiful view.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM APARTMENT
in Adams apartments, 715 East First
street.
FOR RENT— ON GARFIELD AVENUE.
Living rooms on second floor; cheap
rent.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.,
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvln Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat; steel range
In kitchen. Call at 529 East Third
street
One Cent a Word Each Itjsertion.
No Advertisement Less Than 15 Cents.
FoSTRENf^^RiiOMSr
FOR RENT — FURNISHEI* ROOMS;
board If desired. 301 EiSt Third
street.
FOR RENT— TWO OR THRISE VERY
desirable rooms In Dodge block; very
central. Apply N, J. Upham com-
pany, 18 Third avenue west.
FOR RENT — TWO AND FOUR-ROOM
and $10 per
Grand 1299-D.
flats; water paid;
month. 702 E. 2nd
FOR RENT — TWO FRONT ROOMS,
furnished for light housekeeping. 609
West Third street; $20 P'Sr month;
heated; gas range, liglits, bath,
'phone.
SECRET SOCIETIES.
PALESTINE LODGE. No. 79,
A. F. & A. M. — Regular meet-
ings first and third Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 17. 1911. Work— Reg-
ular businesd. Rene T. Hugo, W. M.;
H. Nesblt. secretary.
FOR RENT— VERY DESIRABLE FUR-
nlshed room. 201 W^st Third street.
FOR SALE— A NUMBER OF IM-
proved and unimproved farnis of ten
to ICO acres, near Duluth. Let us
know your wants.
LEARN TELEGRAPHY NOW.
Earn $60 In railroad position in spring.
Excellent opportunity; don't miss it.
Write Thompson's Telegraph insti-
tute, Minneapolis^
WANTED— COAT MAKERS, STEADY
work. H. W. Hodgon company, 230%
West First street.
WANTED — MEN TO KNOW WE GROW
a head of hair or no pay. Bryant &
Co., room 12, Phoenix building. Mel-
rose 3257.
Men to learn barber trade. It's easy.
Positions waiting. Good wages. Cat.
free Moler Bar. College, Minneapolis.
V.t*^lT?***#*^Jg^-*^-^^^-*^.*^i^^X-^.t^WJ
given an order placed In I -jj
person, iou can sately de
pend upon the reliability of
any one of these Anns.
Old
New
'Puone.
'Phone.
AKCHITECTS — ^ ^ ^^^^
Frank L. ioung & Co. 4476
BVSil.NCSS COLi,l::<iE
Tiie Brocklenural ....2j68
1004
DHttiGISTS — ,„.„
Eddie Jeronlmus 1243
1027
liovce lt>3
163
Smith & Smith 2!>0
7
D\K WUUKS —
Zt-niihCiiy Uye works,lS88
1888
Northwestern Dyeing
& Cleaning Co 1337
1516
National Dyeing &
Citaning Co 2376
2376
Interstate Cleaning &
Dyeing Co.. ••Kellys'2530
30
GR«)i-i:ii2i —
Thatcher & Thatcher..
1907
LAL.NUUIES—
pfcf ricss Laundry .... 428
423
Yaie Laundry 479
479
Lutc-s Laundry 447
447
Home Laundry Co 478
4/8
M^Hiti Laundry 2749
1302
MILLI.XEK —
M. A. Cox 4576
SIKAT .MAUKETS —
Mork Bros 1&90
189
SiiOK UEPAIRING —
Oli^tn, 410 E. 4th St...
1029-IX.
a-
WANTED.
Seventy-five "extra" people, men
and women, for the big spectacu-
lar musical play, "The Midnight
Sons." Apply stage door, Lyceum
theater, 1 p. m. Thursday.
VVAiNTED — GOVEHN.MENT EM-
ployes. Send postal for Duluth exam-
ination schedule. Franklin Insti-
tute, Department 148-F, Rochester,
N. Y.
WANTED— FEW YOUNG MEN TO
take subscriptions for magazines.
Apply 25 South Fifty-eighth avenue
west.
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
301 Torrey Building.
WANTED— AN EXPERIENCED MAN
to work in a small laundry; one who
can take a small financial Interest
desired. X 39, Herald.
WANTED — PAPERHANGERS. 15
Third avenue east. George Statton.
WANTED — FIRST - CLASS COOKj
good wages; small family. 250.>
East First street.
WANTED — GIRL THAT CAN GO
home nights to assi.st with house-
work and care of baby. Call at. No.
916 East First street upstairs.
WANTED —
housework;
good wages
Third street.
GIRL FOR
Scndinavian
to right party.
GENERAL
preferred;
2207 West
WANTED — GROCERY DELIVERY
man. Call 932 East Fourth street.
WANTED — MEN WANTED — AGE 18-
36, for firemen, $100 monthly, and
brakemen $80, on nearby railroads;
experience unnecessary; no strike;
positions guaranteed competent men;
promotion. Railroad employing
headquarters — over 4t.'0 men sent to
positions monthly. State age; send
stamp. Railway Association, care
Herald.
TO RUN
must be
Lonsdale
NOW IS YOUR CHANCE— NINETY
acres on the beautiful summer re-
sort lakes, twenty miles north of
Hlbblng, three-quarters mile from
new railroad; all hardwood reserved
when pine was sold; automobile road
running to door from Hlbblng and
Chisholm; five acres cleared and
fenced with boards; ninety rods of
shore, fine garden spot, best of fish-
ing and hunting; fine well of water
and pump; well and mllkhouse com-
bined over well; house 22 by 32 by 14
high, logs hewed on two sides; kitch-
en 18 by 22, woodshed 14 by 22, shop
18 by 20, barn and hay loft, 32 by
26, hog pen 14 by 18, chicken house,
root cellar 16 by 18; two cows with
calves, one brood sow, one York-
shire boar, one horse, 10-year-old,
sound and good driver; one buggy,
$85; one wago»,-450; two sets of har-
ness, plow, drag, cultivator, and other
articles too numerous to mention.
Poor health cause of selling, if taken
at once price $1,800. Address Owner
Bernard Smith. Hlbbing, Minn., Stur-
geon Lake mall sack.
FOR RENT— MODERN FIVE-ROOM
flat. First avenue west and Fourth
street. Moderate rent. Charles P.
Ci-alg & Co.. 601-506 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— NEW FIVE-ROOM FLAT,
719 East Fourth street, downstairs,
$25 per month; water paid by owner.
Inquire 719 East Fourth street, up-
stairs.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM BRICK
flat, steam heated, at 10 West Fifth
street, $18 per month.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FLAT, UP-
stalrs, all conveniences except heat;
possession May 1. Beautiful view of
lake. Call at 17 East Fourth street.
FOR RENT. — STRICTLY MODERN
seven-room flat. Close to courthouse,
postoftice and railroad depots. View
of lake and harbor. Moderate rent
to right party. No children- Charles
P. Craig & Co., 501-505 Sellwood
building.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM MODEitN
flat at 6 West Fourth street. Inquire
L. Oreck, 416 West Superior street.
FOlt KENT— SIX-ROOM FLAT; VERY
light, airy rooms; moderate rent;
East Third street, near Eighth ave-
nue. Chas. P. Craig & Co., 501-506
Sellwood building.
FOR RENT — LARGE FURNISHED
front room, suitable for two; private
family. 828 East Second si.reet. Mel-
rose 3945.
FOR RENT— NICE FRONT ROOM AND
alcove; all conveniences. Melrose
2595; 1218 East First street.
FOR RENT— TWO NICEiIy FUR-
nished rooms for light housekeeping.
24 Seventh avenue west.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS,
also two flats for light housekeep-
ing; modern; centrally located: newly
decorated; use of phone. Melrose
2840. Inquire at 216 West Third
street.
FOR RENT — TWO ROOMS, FUR-
nlshcd complete for housekeeping.
Call between 4:30 and 6:30 p. ni. 304
West Fourth sti;eet. Flat C.
FOR RENT — WELL Fl RNISHED
room; modern; $2 per wee it; another
at $2.50. The Latona, 122 East First
street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED R30M, ALL
conveniences; for two ladles or two
gentlemen. Apply 406 East Third
street.
IONIC LODGE NO. 186, A. F.
& A. M. — Regular meetings
second and fourth Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 24, 1911. Work — First
degree. Walter N. Totmao, W. M.;
Burr Porter, secretary. ___^
KEYSTONE CHAPTER NOw
20, R. A- M. — Stated convo-
cations second and fourth
Wednesday evenings of each
month at 8 o'clock. Next
meeting, April 26, 1911.
Work — M. M. degree. Charles W. Kles-
wetter, H. P.; Alfred Le Richcux. sec-
retary.
A
DULUTH COUNCIL NO. 6.
R. & S. M. — Next meetlnu.
Friday, April 21, 1911, at 8
p. m. Work — Royal and select
masters' degree. James A.
Crawford. T. L M. ; Alfred Le Richeu*;,
recorder.
FOR RENT— SMALL, BRIGHT, FUR-
nished room, $6; every cc'nvenlence.
Call Melrose 3081.
WANTED — MAN AND WIFE
small clubhouse on range;
experienced. Inquire 706
building.
WANTED — REGISTERED OR As-
sistant registered pliarmacist. Lion
Drug Store, 2030 West Superior St.
WANTED
tel.
— PORTER. ST. LOUIS HO-
REAL ESTATE, FIRE
INSURANCE AND
RENTAL AGENCIES.
John A. Stepntnson & Co., Wolvln bldg.
E. D. Field Co.. 203 Exchange building.
L. A. Larsen Co.. Providence building.
H. J. Muliin, 40:: Lmsdale building.
W. C. .Sherwood, 118 Manhattan bldg.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; family of two; must be
good cook; no other need apply; best
of wagos paid. 725 East First street.
Wanted — Dressmaking at home. 522 4th
Ave. E. Old phone, Melrose, 434.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general hou.sevvork, $20 per month.
2429 East Third street.
FOR SALE AllSCELLANEOllS.
MERCHANTS,
WAKE UP
NOTICE!
AND TAKE
WANTED — AT ONCE, EXPERIENCED
woman second cook. Call forenoons.
Esmond hotel. Twentieth avenue
west and Michigan street.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRD FOR
general housework. 1106 East Supe-
rior street.
WANTED— NEAT QIRL TO ASSIST
with liousev^rk. 801 East First
street.
WANTED — DRIVER; ONE WELL
acquainted In city. Apply 232 East
Superior street. Zenith Dye house.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework; good wages;
must furnish best of references. K
53. Herald.
WANTED —
nurse. 2615
rose, 1653.
compp:tent childs
East Third street. Mel-
WANTED — BRICK SETTERS; SET-
ting gang for brickyard of 50,000
moulded brick, daily capacity; rack
and pallett system; wages 60 cents
per 1,000. Alsip Brick & Tile com-
pany. Fort William, Qnt.. Can.
WANTED— PRESSFEEDER; PLATEN
and cylinder, or platen; good wages
and fine chance to learn. The Vir-
ginian, Virginia, Minn.
17 CENTS A DAY
Or $5 a month will buy one of our
Florida farms; these farms are
smooth and level, no rocks nor
swamps and in the location where
they raise three crops a year. A.
Kolemaine, general agent. 616 Co-
lumbia building. Duluth, Minn.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., townships 60 to 63,
ranges 14 to 17, w liich we will sell
in large or small tracts at very low
prices. Good location for dairying
and truck gardening. Some fine lake
shore frontages. Settlers on ad-
joining lands raising from 250 to 300
bushels potatoes per acre. Buy some
of those cheap lands now and be-
come independent. Call or write for
map, Minnesota Land & Dairy com-
pany, 407 Providence building.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., in townships 60 to 63
and ranges 14 to 17, which we will
sell In large or Email tracts at very
low prices. Good location for dairy-
ing and truck gardening. Some fine
lake shore frontages. Settlers on
adjoining lands raising from 250 to
800 bushels potatoes per acre. Buy
some of these cheap lands now and
become Independent. Call or write
Minnesota Land & Dairy company,
407 Providence building.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM FURNISHED
Hat in tlie Laiayetto Hats, thoroughly
modern; heat, water and telephone
service furnished. R. P. Dowse & Co.,
100 Providence building.
P^OR RENT— MAY 1, A FOUR-ROOM
flat, with bath; hardwood floors,
electric light and gas; very central.
W. C. Sherwood & Co., 118 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR RENT— VEKV FINE SEVEN-
room apartment in new Berkshire
apartments, corner Eight avenue east
and First street. Rental department,
John A, Stephenson & Co., Wolvln
building.
FOit RENT— FOUR OR FIVE-ROOM
flat, fine condition, $20 and $22 per
month; central, modern, except heat.
'Phones 597. Hudson-Lewis company,
301 Alworth building.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS;
gentlemen preferred. 206 West First
street.
FOR RENT — THREE F.OOMS AT
323% East Fifth street; water, sewer
and gas; $9 per month. Inquire up-
stairs.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOM;
will allow light housekeeping. 210
West Second street.
FOR RENT— STEAM HEATED SINGLE;
room; r^nt desirable; al conven-
iences and use of 'phone; gentlemen
preferred. Call 201 East Second
street.
FOR RENT — FURNISHE]> ROOM;
modern conveniences; gentleman
preferred, references reqsired. 410
Ninth avenue east.
FOR RENT — A LARGi:, LIGHT,
front room well furnished; reason-
able; to gentlemen only. 220 Sev-
enth avenue west.
FOR RENT
four-room
postofflce;
-TWO,
flats, only
THREE
five blocks
view of
AND
from
lake;
beautiful
furnished with all brand new furni-
ture; equipped with gas range, elec-
tric lights and every convenience.
Call and see them at 1030 West First
street.
FOR RENT — FIVE LARGE ROOMS
and alcove; light and bath, 1218%
East Fourth street. Hartman-O'Don-
nell agency, 205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— FOUR
Me^aba avenue;
very large bathroom;
water Included.
-ROOM FLAT. 4TJ
all modern; also
heat and
FOR RENT — 219 WEST FIRST
street, new five-room flat, bath, gas,
electric light; ready MSV' 1- Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY.
WANTED TO BUY —
small tract of land
I 69, Herald.
A LARGE OR
for Investment.
WANTEl^ — SIX NEAT APPEARING
canvessers. Call 5:30 to 6:15 p. m.
George Denley, 406 Lonsdale build
ing.
Our lease expires May 1. Will sell
pairs or whole stock of men's shoes
at a large discount from our whole-
sale prices. Stock will now Invoice
about $2,000.
Remember the early bird gets the
worm. This is your opportunity to buy
a bargain.
We have discontinued making hand-
made men's and boys' work shoes.
Have already sold our plant and must
sell our stock beiore moving time.
Time will be given to well-rated
parties. All of our display tables are
for sale.
Stock on sale at retail at 328 West
Superior street, St. Louis Hotel block.
WANTED — CHAMBERMAID, ONE
who can board and sleep at home.
Tacoma hotel, 515 West Superior.
WANTED — COOKS, WAITRESSE%
chambermaids and kitchen help; out
of town orders solicited. Park Em-
ployment agency, 15 Lake avenue
north.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook; laun-
dress employed; reference required.
2401 East Fifth street.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral hoiksework. Apply 1509 Jeffer-
son street.
WANTED— DRESSMAKERS'S ASSIST-
ant; none otlier than experienced
need apply. Call Melrose 2169.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral hous-owork. 1106 East Superior
street.
WANTED TO BUY— SINGLE HEAVY
harness. Inquire 1127 West Michl-
gan street.
WANTED TO BUY — .SECOND-HAND
semi-fitting ladies' spring coat. 624
Second avenue east. Phone, Grand.
1722-D.
WANTED TO BUY— HAVE CUSTOMER
for Inside business property between
First avenue east and Seventh avenue
west on Superior or First street.
What have
company,
you? Twin Ports Realty
WANTED TO BUY — WHITE STEAM-
er touring car; must be reasonable;
state equipment and price. Care of
Herald, W 61.
TEXAS INVESTMENTS.
Buv Orchards and Garden Lands at
Aldiiie, near Houston, the greatest
city in the Southwest, where values are
growing upward all the time. Address
B. C. Robertson, 601 Klam building,
Houston. Tex.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM
ed Hat for the summer..
O. Buffalo flats. Ninth
and First street.
FURNISH-
Inquire Flat
avenue east
FOR RENT — TWO FURNISHED
rooms for light houseke-jplng. 206
West Third street.
DULUTH COMMANDERY NO.
18, K. T. — Stated coiiclave
first Tuesday of each month
at 8 o'clock. Next conclave,
April 25. 1911. Work — Tem-
iar degree. Frederick E. Hough, B.
Alfred Le RIcheux, recorder.
SCOTTISH RITE — REGU-
lar meetings every Thursday
evening at 8 o'clock. No
meeting until further noticOb
Henry Nesblt, secretary.
ZENITH CHAPTER NO 25.
Order of Eastern Star — Reg-
ular meetings second and
fourth Frldav evenings ot
each month at 7:30 o'clock.
Next meeting, April 28, 1911. Work —
Regular business and Initiation. E!i;;a-
beth Overman, W. M.; Ella F. Gearhai-t,
secretary.
EUCLID LODGE NO. 198, A.
F. & A. M. — Meets at West
Duluth second and fourth
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meeting
April 26, 1911. Work— First
degree. M. M. Meldahl, W. M.; A.
Dunleavy, secretary.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED BOOMS FOR
light housekeeping; stricMy modern.
316 West Second street.
1 oK RENT — L.VRGE
front room. 120 First
FURNISHED
avenue west.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED HOUSE-
keeplng suites, gas, wate:- and elec-
tric light included. La ,5alle hotel,
12 Lake avenue north.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS;
electric lights, all conveniences; $1
to $2 per week. Inquire 705 West
Third street.
FOR RENT — FIVE ROOMS. 2322
West Sixth street; city \fd.tcr, elec-
tric light.
FOR RENT— NICELY
room in private family,
109 West Fifth.
FURNISHED
use of 'phone.
FOR SALE — FIFTY-FIVE ACRE
tract on Bordon Lake, three mlled
from Gordon, Wis., several trains
daily to Duluth; good soil; fine fish-
ing; beautiful shore line and trees;
summer cottages all around; price
$650, $325 cash; balance easy terms.
Helmbaugh & Spring, 1103 Tower
avenue, Superior, Wis.
Farm lands at wholesale prices. L. A.
Larsen Co., 214 Providence building.
FOR SALE— FORTY-ACRE TRUCK
farm, six miles from Duluth; 25 acres
cultivated; six-room house, barn, etc.
Included are two horses, cows and
chickens Price $3,500; will exchange
for city property. G. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— COZY FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
West Third street, near Lincoln Park,
$14, including water rent. S. W.
Richaidson, 201 Exchange Bank
building. Both phones, 2046.
FOR RENT— BRiCK FLAT, CORNER
of Fifteentn avenue east and Fourth
street; six rooms, bath, laundry,
storeroom, gas range, hot water
heating plant; new and up-to-date;
$37.50 per month; no children. George
R. Laybourn, 14 Phoenix block.
FOR RENT — TWO FLATS, 27 AND 29
West Fourth street, six rooms, all
modern conveniences; furnace, gas
and electric light; large basement.
Apply at 27 1^ West Fourth street.
FOR RENT— AFTER APRIL 15, FOUR
nice rooms, second floor, 19 Twenty-
eighth avenue west; water, sewer,
toilet, electric light, $10 per month.
F. 1. Salter Co.
FOR RENT — LARGE FURNISHED
room with private family; steam
heat, electric light and ijas; use of
'phone and bath. Inquire 124 East
Fourth street.
DULUTH CHAPTER NO. 59,
R. A. M. — Meets al Weat
Duluth first and third
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meetintf
April 19, 1911. Work— Roysa
Arch degree and lunch. Roger M.
Weaver, H. P.; A. Dunleavy, secretary.
K. of p.
NORTH ST.\n LODGE. XO. 35, K. of F.
—.Meets evcr>' Tuesday evenlii2 it Citstla
hall. 118 West Superior street. Nest
nxeetlnc Tuesday erenlns, April IB. 6 p.
m. o'clock stiarv. First rank wnrk. All
kni«iii;< eonllally Invited. A. l>. Sturgis, C. C. ; S. A.
Uearu. K. uf K. a
DIAMOND LODGE, No. 45, K. of P.—
Meets every &L,nday evening tu Sicun't
hall, comer TwcriUeUi vteaue west and
Ciiiperior mreet. All kntgbu cordially In-
vited. L. B. Allen. C. C; H. L. Piero^
K. or It & S.
cordially
PhlUips.
KITCm GAM.MI IX>DGE, NO. I2S. K. oC
p. — Meets eNery Tliareclay evening at Com-
mercial clul> ball. Cmtral avwiue. \\ ert
Itulutli. Next meeting Tliunsilny. .\prll
nth. Work, second rank. AU knlghta
Invited. K. D. Nickerson. C C; C M.
K. uf R. & S.
DVXLTH LODGE, XO. 28. I. O. O. F.— MiiETS
every Friday evening at 8 o'clock at Odd
Kellowa' l.ail. 18 Lake axenue north.
Next meeting niRlit. April i:i. St.-'.nd
J. A. Nelson. N. G. ; L. U. Marlow. Kec.
H. Paul. Kin. Kec.
degree.
Set" , A
FOR RENT — NICELY FURNISHED
rooms, $1 per week and up; light
housekeeping allowed. 314 East Sec-
ond street.
FOR RENT- FURNISHED FRONT
room with all conveniences; for one
or two; pleasant view. 313 West
Fourth street.
WiCST Dt'LinU LODGE. NO. 1G8. I. O. O. V.
Meets every Tuesday niglit at I. O. O. T,
=^^^ ball. West Dul.ith. Neil mretlng nlghl
April 11. General business. W. li. Cow-
den, N. G.; W. U. Hartley. Itrc Sec
DULLTH KNCA.MPMKNT. XO. 3«. I O.
O. p.— Mceii en tbe second and fn-.irtb
Thursday at Odd Fellows hall. 18 Lak«
avenue north. Next meeting night April
27 Uuyal purple degree voting. K. An-
derson, O. P. ; L. G. Marlow, Itcc. S< rlba.
K. O. T.
DULITTII TENT.
Monday. 8:1J P.
■n Lake avenue
NO. 1— MEETS EVEBt
01., at Macabee ball,
ninth. VUtlng wem-
WANTED TO BUY — ROUND PEDES-
tal table; must be In good condition
and reasonable. Address W, care
Herald.
WANTED TO BUY— A HOME IN THE
East end; we have customers for all
kinds from the lowest priced to the
highest. Have you anything to of-
fer? Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
P. LARSON, MANUFACTURER,
328 WEST SUPERIOR ST,
DULUTH, MINN.
FOR SALE— EGGS FOR HATCHING
R. C. White Wyandottes; $1 for thir-
teen eggs; Black Minorca. $1 for thir-
teen egga. Address 429 Sixth avenue
west. New 'phone. Grand 2154-Y.
FOR SALE— PRACTICALLY NEW
furniture of four-room flat. Oppor-
tunity for young married people to
save considerably. Same flat for
rent. 17 East Fourth, second floor.
(Continued on pace 19.)
WANTED — GIRL TO
general housework,
street.
ASSIST WITH
1509 East Third
WANTED — YOUNG NURSE GIRL DAY
times for 2-year-old child, walking
di-stance. 1622 East Fourth street.
WANTED — THE NEW METHOD
Dres.smaklng school teaches you to
become a dressmaker In six weeks;
make dresses for yourself or others
wnlle learning. 310 West Second
street, next to Y. M. C. A. building.
WANTED— GIRLS IN PACKING ROOM
with experience preferred. Apply
Caldwell Coffee Co., 122 East Michi-
gan street.
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. Mrs. Norton, 40
Forty-eiglitli avenue east.
WANTED TO BUY— TWENTY, FORTY
or eighty-acre Improved or unim-
proved farms; If you have anything
for sale bring it in. Whitney Wall
company, 301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— BARGAIN IN WELL IM-
proved farm; good frame house and
thirty acres cleared; on main road,
handy to Duluth; must be sold; good
place for chickens. Call on E. H.
Caulkins & Co.. Palladio building.
FOR SALE — FARM, CONTAINING
about 63 acres, fronting on lake, on
Cuyuna iron range; 20 acres culti-
vated; good buildings; no mineral
reserve. Price $2,000. Easy terms.
G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY — HIGHEST PRICES
paid for men's old clothing. Phoenix
Dry Cleaning Co. Zenith, 1852-X.
10 Fourth avenue west.
Wanted to Buy — Highest price for cast-
off men's clothing. N. Stone, 213 W.
Ist St. Melrose 1834; Zenith 1134-D.
We bay second-hand
stoves. Lincoln 295-X.
furniture and
1629 W. Sup. ST.
WANTED TO BUY — OLD CLOTHES,
auto and carriage tires. 328 East Su-
perior street. Zenith 2013-D.
WANTED — DISH WASHER; GOOD
wagres. 2531 West Superior street.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework, small family. 131
East Second street.
WANTED — GIRLS AT MRS. SOM-
mers' employment office. 15 Second
avenue east.
(Continued on imee 10.)
WANTED TO BUY — FOR CASH,
rooming house, hotel or would con-
sider some other business. Call at
once. 509 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — EIGHTY-ACRE FARM IN
south Cass county; all fenced; level
land; 12 acres cultivated; fair build-
ings; small stream. Price, $1,300. G.
A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— 10,000 ACRES IN 40 AND
80-acre tracts, close to Hlbblng and
Chlsholm; good markets; forty an-
nual payments of $16 each on 40
acres, or $32 each on 80 acres, pays
both principal and interest. For
further information apply Guaranty
Farm Land company, 416 Lyceum
building, Duluth, Minn.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. S. S. Williamson. 615
Torrey building. Both 'phones.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM fLAT;
318 Sixth avenue east, upstairs; bath,
electric light, gas for cooking; wa-
ter paid; $16 per month. R. P. Dowse
&. Co., 106 Providence building.
FOR RENT — SIX- ROOM STEAM
heated flat; central location; thor-
oughly modern; janitor service;
laundry tubs. Apply Corporate In-
vestment company, Torrey building.
FOR RENT— 3516 WEST THIRD.
Five rooms, bath, gas and city wa-
ter; $14 per montli. Intiulre down-
stairs.
FUI^NISHED
$i. per month.
FOR RENT — NICELY
room; all conveniences;
617^ West First street
■^OR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT, 19
Lake avenue north; six-room flat, 14
West I'irst street; all modern con-
veniences. Inquire rental department
Bridgeman & Russell.
THREE ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED
for $69; this Includes f i rniture for
kitchen, dining room and bedroom.
Terms, $1.50 per week. Why not
own the furniture In vour apart-
ments or rooms Instead of paying
rent on It. See F. S. Kelly Furniture
company.
FOR RENT— THREE ROOMS, ELEC-
trlc light and all conve ilences, $10
per month. Inquire 1203 ^V^est Fourth
street.
FOR RENT — TWO UNFURNISHED
rooms for light housek< eplng; also
single furnished room
lences. 1315 East
l)tfre always welcome. F. C. ire*'.
r.,mmai;der. Hat i. Munger row. Wert
Duluth- J. II. Oellneaa. rec-ord keeper.
offlce 11. haU. lloirs. 10 s. m. to I p. B-. J»lll.
Zenith 'phone. Omiid 619-X. ___^
. fl fT W
FIDELITY LODGE. XO. 105 — Mr:::Ta
at Maccabee hail, il Lake avenue i.nnh.
t,ei7 Thursday at 8 p. m M.'^l'-tof
nieinbera welcuie. M. Cos-si, M «.. A.
F Plerlng. reconler; O. J- Murvold. 0-
nancler. 217 East Fifth street. ^
m7)1)EIIN SA-MAUITA.NS.
Al-PUA COUNCIL. .NO. 1-TAIvE .NO-
lluf Uiat Samaritan degree meets first
and third T!iur=days; benetlieut, se<-on<l
aud fourth Thursdays. Luty A. rurdy.
Lady G. 8 : N. B. Morrison. G.
lace P. Welb.ink».
S.. First National
S.; Wal-
scribe; T. A. GaU. ».
Bank building.
UNITED OliDLU OF FORESTEBS—
Court Eastern Star. No. 86 meets eve^
nrst and third Tues.lay at U_ O. F.
hall, corner Fourth avenue west and
nri street Chas. V. Hanson. O. R..
'o7 West Fifth street; A. «• ,V'""<»
West First strtt. Harry MlLie:
retary 1031
ut«r, room '23. Wlnthrop block.
A.
sec-
treag-
Zenith 'phone lOSu-X.
IMPERIAL CAMP. NO. 2206
flt U 0. F. haU. Foi-rth .«uue w«rt
and F^t slr.-et. second and fo.irtll
f^esday. of each month. Uarvej W.
vme consul; C P. ^:^•rl. «^'"1^^''"» *"'
F. E. Doremus. deputy; addreaa,
rreight irfflce.
— MEETS
-N. P.
all conven-
Sixth street.
FOR RENT — FLAT
ern conveniences
WITH
at 421
ALL
West
MOD-
Thlrd
AUTOMOBILES.
FOR SALE — LANDS IN SMALL
tracts to actual settlers only; good
location for dairying and truck gar-
dening. For further Information call
on or address Land Commissioner,
Duluth & Iron Range Railroad com-
pany, 101 Wolvln building. Duluth,
Minn.
street. Mendenhall & Hoopes.
FOR RENT — 927 EAST FIFTH
street, five-room flat, bath, water
free, $22 per month. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey^
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
water, sewer and electric light. 2103
West Third street. Apply at 313
Twenty-first avenue west.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE CHEERFUL
four-room flat, water, toilet, gas,
electric light, $13; Third avenue
west. Harris Realty Co., Manhattan
building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
modern except heat. 108 South
Twenty-seventh avenue west. Mel-
rose 1845.
AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE.
New 1911 model M, Thomas
flyers, seven-passenger. Private
service a specialty. Both phones
^^^' G. W DAZIEL
Solicitor and Operutor.
it
li J nil 1 1.
CLAN STE^VAKT, NO. 50. O. 8. C.--
Metts first and third Wednesday* each
month. 8 p. m.. at U. O. F. hall, crner
lourth avenue v**l and First street. Next
iLguiur meeting, April 19. UoLeit Fer-
guson chief; Don McLennan, secretary:
Flit. Sec.. 312 Torrey building.
UUYAL AllCANUM, Duluth Coun'.U. No.
1483— Meets second anj fourth Tueiday
evenings. MacaLce hall. 21 Lake aveuj*
noitli. Clinton Brooke, secretary, 4i)l
Columbia bulldinc.
Meaaba Council. No. 1493— Meets first
and third Wednesday evenings. CoiumbU
West end. A. M. Johnson, secretary. 117 Ncr»*
ball
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR SALE — FIVE-PASSENGER
touring car and one delivery auto,
in good condition; must be sold at
once regardless of pricj. For par-
ticulars address "Auto, ' care Herald.
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11.00 per month.
Water furnished. D. W. Scott & Son.
402 Torrey building.
HAIR DRESSING PARLORS.
G. Molsan Is the only French hair dres-
ser in Duluth. Expert in making
wigs, toupees and hair dye. Switches
and puffs made from combings. Mall
orders promptly filled. '.212 W. 1st St
STOVE REPAIRS.
WE CARRY IN STOCK REPAIRS FOR
10,000 different stoves and ranges. G.
F. Wlggerts & Son, 410 East Supe-
rior street. Both 'phones.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM ON
Crow Wing river; 20 acres cleared,
20 acres meadow; good clay soil; no
buildings. Price, $1,300. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 torrey building.
FOR SALE— TEN ACRES OF GOOD
land Inside city limits; cash or terras.
S. H., Herald.
SELECTED FARMING LANDS.
On line of the Alger-Smith railroad.
On easy terms to settlers.
ALEXANDER McBEAN,
Sales manager, 406 Columbia Bldg.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE- ACRE
farm, close to station In Morrison
county, on fine lake; good soil; hay
meadow; five-room bouse and barn.
Price, $1,700. O. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS;
light and bath. 208 East Fourth
street. Hartman O'Donnell Agency,
205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat. Call Lin-
coln 52, Melrose 1052. Room 203, An-
derson & Thoorsell block. Twenty-
first avenue west and Superior street.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM MODERN
flat; central. S. S. Williamson. 515
Torrey building; both 'phones.
WE REPRESENT MAXWELL, PRE-
mier, Oakland, Moline pleasure cars
and Wilcox trucks. All kinds of re-
pairing, even tire vulcanizing. Old
cars bought and Sold. It will pay
you to try us. Also have automobiles
for hire. Call, 'phone or write M. F.
Falk. Rapid Transit Aulo & Repair-
ing Co., 2110-12 W. Mich. St. 'Phones
Mel. 347; Zen 47 Linco n.
ORDJ» OF OWI.3. DULUTH
Nest. No. 1200— Meetings ara heid
every Wednesday of cacu month ml
Owls' haU. 11« West Supcrloi street
Josiph K Feaka. secteUrj. iUJ t*i»
ijper.ur street.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL.
M Rs! HANSOnT'^GRA OU ATE Mj »-
wife; female complaints. 413 heve.uh
avenue east. Zenith 12i!6. ^
ASHES AND GARKAGE.
REMOVED PROMPTLY, ZENITH 2378-
X. 807 Sixth avenue wtst.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM STEAM
heated flat, central location, hard-
wood floors, hot and cold water. Jani-
tor service; rent $27. Corporate In-
vestment Co.
(Continued on page 19.)
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM FURNISH-
ed flat; $15 per month. Inquire 112t
East Tenth street.
(ContlKUCd OB vM:c It.)
REMOVED ON SHORT NOTICE— DICK
Barrett, 1122 E. 4th St. Zen. 1945-Y.
ASHES, GARBAGE
moved promptly,
nlth 1488-X.
AND WANITRE RE-
Melrtse 1390; Ze-
DRESSMAKIN6.
Mrs A- Ferguson, graduate midwife,
female complaints. 2^01 West tourlli
street. Zenith, Lincoln 224-Y.
S WAROE. GRADUATE MIDW1FI3
and nurse. 215 Twenty-sixth avenus
west. Zenith 'phone, Lincoln 200-D.
PRIVATE HOSPITAI^— PRObPECTlV B
mothers will find a pleasant homo
before and during condnement at
Ashland Maternity home, 20S Tenth
avenue west. Ashland. Wis. Intaut*
cared for.
MISS GRAY'S SCHOOL O]? GARMENT
cutting and making; practical;
-terms reasonable; patt«rn8 to order
a specialty. Third floor, Or»y-Tal-
lant company.
PEKSON\»X — Private home for ladies
before and during contincinent; ex-
pert care; everythlAg coniidentlal; in-
fants cared for. Ida Pearson, M. D.,
284 Harrison avenue, St. Paul. Minn.
~ Prt-
Zea-
Mrs. H. Olson, graduate midwife,
vate hospital, 329 N. 58 Av. W.
Ith 3173; Calumet 173-L.
WOMAN'S HOSPITAL — MRS. MARY
Barrel!, matron. 931 London road.
Zenith 'phone. 1&97.
'X
'^*
-cjtaiM*' tiM Taaoufc^ifc^
k^-
•\,
■*■!-
-r-»-
i«a
THE DULUTH HERALD
VOLUME XXIX— NO. 10.
THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 20, 1911.
BILLS THAT PASSED
AND THOSE DEFEATED
IN THE LEGISLATURE
Faflure to Reapportion the
State Chief Sin of
Omission.
Started Bitterest Fight in
the History of Minne-
sfta.
SL Louis County Members
Did Good Work for
Their Districts.
<lly I
St. Paul,
I Staff Correapondcnt.)
Minn.. April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Now that the poor, fu-
tile, blundering, brawling legislature
has ceased from troubling and the
wtary may be at reast from its dissen-
sions. It may be worth while to foot up
the results.
This is a story that will not take long.
Nevertheless, the results of the ses-
sion are by no means wholly negligible.
Some very good legislation was
passed, and some very bad legislation
was beaten.
Also, some very bad legislation was
passed and some very good legislation
Beaten.
Perhaps there never has been in the
history of the state a house of repre-
sentatives so contentious, so Irredeem-
ably Incorrigible, bo much like a mob.
It had neither leader nor organization,
purpose nor policy. It squabbled like a
bunch of fishwives, it came to the
verge of personal encounters several
times. It made the state reek with the
ehame of its brawlings on several oc-
casions. Speaker Dunn had an organl-
SENATOR J. D. WORKS
Of California.
(Continued on page 6, third colunm.)
ILUNOIS SENATORS
IN REAL FIST HGHT
One Gets a Poke in the Jaw
and Others Become
Involvei
Springfield. 111., April 20. — The reso-
lution providing that the question of
Initiative and referendum amendment
to the state Constitution shall be sub-
mitted to a vote of the people, was
passed In the senate today, 49 to 0.
Senator Frank H. Funk of Bloom-
Ington, and Senator Walter Clyde
.lones of Chicago, engaged in one of
the most sensational per.sonal encoun-
ters In the history of the Illinois leg-
i.«lalure during a conference of Repub-
lican senate members today. The row
•was precipitated by a discussion of
t^.e initiative and referendum.
"You're a liar!" shouted Senator
Funk, a.s he jumped over a table and
struck .Senator Jones on the point of
jaw. Senator Jones charged Senator
Funk with attempting to smother the
inlilative and referendum.
Senator Jones whipped oft his glasses
and made frantic efforts to strike Sen-
ator Funk.
Immediately other senators became
involved in the fray through their
efforts to separate the struggling com-
batants.
Senator Edward Beall of Alton,
dragged Funk back, while Senator
Samuel A. Ettleson of Chicago threw
his arms around Jones and pushed him
into a corner of the conference room.
RIGHT OF
ARIZONA
To Statehood Strongly Advo-
cated By Senator Works
of CaUfornia.
Says State's Constitution Is
Move in the Right
Direction.
Washington, April 20.— Arizona's
right to statehood under the constitu-
tion which it has presented found a
strong advocate on the floor of the
United States senate today ir the per-
of Senator Works, California's
member of the upper house of
congress. In defending the Arizona
constitution he took occasion to warn
the Republican party that unless :t
sjiould heed the demand made upon it
for an Indorsement of the initiative,
referendum and recall, "earnestly de-
manded bv an overwhelming majority
of our people of all political parties.
OFHCIALS
DEPRESSED
BY_ANSWER
Reply of Mexico to President's
Note Not What Was
Expected.
Behoved That Note Would Be
Completely Responsive
in Nature.
Taft Awaits Full Reply Be,
fore Making Any
Comment
Washington, April 20. — The receipt
here today of an outline of the reply
the Mexican government has made to
President Taffs strong remonstrance
against the conduct of warfare on the
border somewhat depressed the hope
of the officials, who had confidently
expected a completely responsive reply.
Withholding official statements until
the full text of the De la Barra note
is at hand, the president, in full knowl-
edge of the fact that it is recrimina-
tory in some points, is disposed to deal
with it leniently. The president's re-
joinder must be based upon further of-
ficial reports from the American mili-
tary officers whose impartiality in the
fighting at Agua Prleta has been im-
peached.
It is feared that a disposition pre-
vails In Mexico to make political cap-
ital out of the activity of Americans
and this will be promptly resented if it
appears as calculated to impair the
good relations of the two countries.
Ambassador Zamacona issued a
statement today in which he declared
that Mexico's reply would be found to
be "friendly in form and essence."
son
new
Taft Has AnMwer.
Washington, April 20. — A summary
of Mexico's reply to the demand of the
United States for greater precaution-
ary measures along the border was re-
ceived at the state department today
and conveyed at once to President
Taft.
Mexican Ambassador Zamacona, in a
statement, says that while the reply
refers to "lamentable events on the
border," it Is "friendly in form and
essence."
The summary may be made public
Pupe PiuM IndlHpoNed.
Rome. April 20. — I'ope Pius X Is
somewhat indisposed and has been cau-
tioned oy his private physician. Dr.
tiiuseppe Petaccl, to avoid over-exer-
tion. His holiness, however, has re-
fused to change from his daily routine,
and today celebrated mass and gave a
few private audiences.
•
Butte Get* Chawplunnbip.
Washington, April 20. — The Rocky
Mountain Rifle club of Butte, Mont.,
today was awarded the club rifle
shouting championship of the United
States for the second time by the Na-
tion Rille association of America, hav-
ing defeated by 992 to 990 out of a pos-
sible 1.000 the Winchester Rod and
Gun club of New Haven, Conn. One
man on each team made a perfect score
of 200.
the party would go down "to defeat
and final destruction and oblivion."
The real objection to the constitu-
tion, he declared, was "one phase of
the struggle that has been going on
in twhis country between the common
people and the privileged, self-seeking
Interests, auecting the right to gov-
ern the nation, the state and the mu-
nicipalities." The initiative, referen-
dum and recall, provided for in the
ATizona constitution and already in
lorce in some states of the Union,
was one method the people were tak-
ing, he asserted, of trying to blot ovt
corruption in politics. With the ex-
(Continued on page 9, fourth column.)
STRICKEN AT CLOQIET.
St. Paul Man Expires Suddenly in
Carlton County City.
Cloquet, Minn., April 20.— (Special to
The Herald.) — John Herman, a St. Paul
business man, died here suddenly yes-
terday. The body was sent to St. Paul,
where the funeral will be held Friday.
Mr. Herman was 59 years old and
had been a resident of St. Paul for
thirty years. He came from Chicago
and, for many years, was engaged in
business with his father on West
Seventh street, under the firm name of
Henry Horman & Co. More recently he
had been connected with the St. Paul
agency of the New York Life Insurance
company.
He is survived by his widow and
three daughters, Mrs. Edwin S. Miller
and Mrs. George H. Root of Jlinneapo-
lis and Mrs. Arthur G. Thomas of St.
Paul.
NICHOLAS LONGWORTH.
LONGWORTH
CONSIDERED
Son-in-Law of Roosevelt May
Succeed Hill as Am-
bassador.
WOMEN ARE
BALLOTING
Daughters of American Rev-
olution Choosing Na-
tional Officers.
Intense Excitement Among
Delegates to the
Convention.
MADERO REFUSES ABSOLIOLT
TO GRANT AN ARMISTI^
AHER THE BATTLF UF JUAREZ
MEXICAN SECRE1 ARY
OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Understood to Be Willing to
Enter the Diplomatic
Service.
Washington. April 20.— While Presi-
dent Taft has not decided definitely
upon a successor to Ambassador Hill at
Berlin, one name that he is expected
to consider is that of Representative
Nicholas Longworth of Ohio. Mr. Long-
worth is understood to be willing to
enter the diplomatic service, having
spent about all the time he cares to in
congress or political life Both he and
Mrs. Longworth, who vi'. * Alice Roose-
velt, are intimate frieiiTl of the presi-
dent, /f
One objection that n:?ht be made to
his appointment to sue an important
position as that at Berlm would be his
inexnerience in diplomatic affairs. If
not selected for Berlin, however, Mr.
Longworth may be chosen to fill some
other important post.
POUNDING TO PIECES.
Washington, April 20. — The climax
of the twentieth continental congre.-ss
of the Daughters of the American Rev-
olution, was reached today when vot-
ing began for president general. The
other national officers also are to be
elected today. The results will not be
known until late tonight. In the
meantime, excitement among the dele-
gates runs high.
Advocates of both Mrs. Matthew T.
Scott of Illinois, standing for re-elec-
tion as president general, and of Mrs.
William C. Story of New York, en-
tered today's session claiming victory.
Two years ago Mrs. Scott, after a bit-
ter fight, won over Mrs. Story by a
small margin. The present campaign
ha.s never lagged during the last two
years and lias been marked by much
acrimony.
At the elections of state officers,
held by some of the delegations since
their arrival here, in some Instances
administration candidates have won,
while in others those favored by Mrs.
Story have been elected.
Administration candidates are: Mrs.
Henry L. Mann, vice president general;
Miss Florence E. Pierce, chaplain gen-
eral: Mrs. H. L. Songkins, recording
Believes Federals Merely
Want to Gain Tune for
Reinforcements.
Says Rebels Will Fight First
and Then Consider a
Truce.
W^ashlngton. April 20. — The two-
masted schooner Caroline Gray of
Rockland, Me., went ashore a mile
south of the Wood End life-saving
station on Cape Cod Mass., during
the night and is pounding to pieces,
er crew of six men ■ as rescued by
the life-savers of the^-'^ood End sta-
tion. Keeper George H. Bickers re-
ported to General Superintendent
Kimball of the life-saving service
here todaj'. The Gray is owned by
I. li. Snow & Co. of Rockland, Me.
(Continued on page 9, fourth column.)
SHERIFF ENDS HIS
UFE; $W SHORT
James W. Carter of Union
County, Kentucky, Shoots
Himself.
Morganfield, Ky.. April 20.— Sheriff
James W. Carter of Union county fa-
tally shot himself early today. Several
weeks ago county officials in auditing
Carter's books discovered what they
declared was a |6,000 shortage in his
accounts. Rather than institute im-
peachment proceedings the county of-
ficials held a conference with the
sheriff and he was given until April £1
to provide for a correct balance sheet.
Carter failed in his effort to maKe up
the required ^6,000. It led to his sui-
cide.
F. DE LA BiVRRA.
SHOTS FROM
DOUGLAS SIDE
Wound Federal Soldier
Claim of Minister De
La Bana.
Is
Details of His Reply to Pres-
ident Taft's Protest
Made Pulblic.
de-
re-
f 'A' ?if ^ ^ ^ '^ ^ W ^
SPEED THE PARTING GUEST. i
■»»»»»»»»*•**********'
■r^t**iiitttt**trMtt**tt*ttt*tt^****'***'ff**'lf**
(Continued on
page
•-
9, fifth column.)
El Phmo'b Offer Accepted.
Washington, April 20.— The treasury
department announced today that it
had accepted the $140,000 raised by
business men of El Paso, Tex., to be
applied to the purchase of a site for
the federal building there. Congress
appropriated J60,000 for the site, but
the El Paso people wanted one costing
$200,000 and were willing to pay for it.
«
Indian Not To Be RepreMented.
Wasliington, April 20.— The Ameri-
can Indian will not be represented at
the First Universal Kaces congress in
London In July. Aborigines from all
parts of the earth will be seen there,
out the American redman will be ab-
sent, because the comptroller of the
treasury has decided tnat the Indian
appropriation could not be used for the
expense of sending representative
types of the first American.
*
Xew PontuiniiterB.
Washington, April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.^ — The president has nom-
inated Nicholas J. Kohn as postmaster
at Kort Snelling. Minn.
Representative Volstead today recom.
mended Fred W. Olson to be postmas-
ter at Raymond, Minn., to succeed Miss
Fay, resigned.
•
Wild PaninipN Kill Montanan.
Mi.'soula, Mont., April 20. — John
Hughes, truck gardner. is dead, and
George Steinmuller, an employe of
Hughes, is critically ill, as the result
of eating wild parsnips. There is slight
hope for Steinmuller's recovery. Hughes
was a pioneer resident of Missoula.
•
Old Fargoan Dead.
Fargo, N. D.. April 20. — Special to
The Herald.) — Peter Olson, aged 78
^ i.rs, died yesterday morning at a lo-
cal hospital. The cause of death was
tubercular trouble. The deceased has
no relatives that are k;.own at present,
and has been an Inmate of the county
home for about six years. He has lived
In Fargo for twenty years and has a
number of friends in the city who will
arrange for his funeraL
NO CURE FOR
DREAD DISEASE
Infantile Paralysis Must Be
Prevented as There Is
No Remedy.
Washington, April 20. — "The control
of infantile paralysis today must be by
prevention, since no specific remedy or
cure for it is known," said Dr. Simon
Flexner of the Rockefeller Institute
of Medical Research today before the
National Academy of Sciences. The
determined effort by many states to
deal with the epidemic through pre-
vention by requiring notification and
quarantine was commended by Dr.
Flexner.
Pointing out that 200,000 cases had
occurred since its appearance in epi-
demic form in the United States, Dr.
Flexner said from 10,000 to 15,000 crip-
ples had been left by the disease. No
more convincing and impressive ex-
ample of the value of the employment
of animals in the elucidation of a seri-
ous and balTling disease could be cited,
he said, than the experiments from
which accurate knowledge of infantile
paralysis had been obtained,
MORE TROUBLE L\ SIGHT.
An Anti-Estrada Outbreak May
Occur in Nicaragua.
New Orleans, La., April 20. — Mail
correspondence from Biuefields, Nica-
ragua, declares that republic is
menaced by an anti-Estrada out-
break. Several attempts have been
made on the life of President Es-
trada, it Is declared.
Estrada led a revolution against
President Zelaya in September. 1909.
A war of nearly a year followed in
which Estrada was successful. The
Biuefields correspondent declares Es-
trada has inaugurated a harsh rule
and that many of his party are on the
verge of revolt.
Douglas, Ariz., Aprl 20.— The
tails of Minister de la Barra's
sponse to President Taft's protest
against the firing into Douglas by the
Mexican federal troops and rebels
were received here today. One of tha
claims of Senor de lu Barra is that
Lieut. Troncozo of the Mexican feder-
al army, was wounded by a shot from
the American custoia house; that
shots came from this! custom house
constantly during tho struggle, and
that it was not plain whether the
shots came from revolutionists who
might have taken possession of the
custom house, or from American sym-
pathizers with the revolution who
were present In the United States
fcuilding.
The Associated Press correspondent,
who is on the ground, makes tlie fol-
lowing statement:
"On the day of the battle the In-
surgents did come very near the
American custom house, which was
situated northwest of .^.gua Prleta, but
Notifies Consuls That He
May Attack Any Time
After Midnight
El Paso, Tex., April 20. — Francisco L
Madero refuses absolutely to grant an
armistice as suggested by Dr. Gomex
at Washington. He sent in word today
that he would talk armistice after th©
battle of Juarez, and then only.
••They want an armistice to get up
reinforcements; that is ail," he said.
"We will first fight, my army will win
or be whipped at Juarez before we talk
armistioe."
This morning Madero sent official no-
tice to the consuls of Juarez that he
might attack the town any hour after
12 o'clock tonight.
♦ ■
Juarcc Prepared for Attack.
El Paso, Tex., April 20 — Daybreak
found the situation around Juarez un-
changed. There were no alarms dur-
ing the night and all is quiet at this
hour. It is reported that considerable
supplies of American ammunition were
smuggied across the river to the In-
Burrectos under cover of darkness.
Formal demand for the surrender
of Juarez within twenty-four liours
■warn made by the Insurgents last night,
according to Gonzales Garza, secre-
tary-general of the insurrecto party,
who declared that he had forwarded
the demand to Gen. Navarro, the fed-
eral commander, through the United
.States consul at Juarez. Navarro last
night denied having received tlie de-
mand.
According to United States army of-
ficers here, Juarez is well prepared for
tlie expected attack. The trenches out-
8lde the city, they say. have been so
well constructed as practically to defy
discovery and the fortifications within
the city show unusual military skill.
Juarez, in their opinion, is in a posi-
tion to resist the attack of a force
far greater than Its garrison.
The insurrectos It is believed must
attack soon after the expiration of the
twenty-four hour respite given In their
del md for surrender last night, as
they are said to be out of food.
BTom Bauche, twelve miles south
of Juarez, where they are detrained,
they advanced on foot into the hills
near Juarez, taking with them, it Is
said, no food supplies but a flock of
At Bauche, the insurrectos have their
trains under steam, ready for a hasty
(Continued on page 9, second column.)
(Continued on page 9, third column.)
DEFECTIVE PAGE
ONE MAN KILLED;
THREE^SCALDED
Copper Tank lExplodes in
Fleischman Company Dis-
tillery at Cmcinnatl
Cincinnati, Ohio, April 20.— One man
was killed and three others seriously
scalded by an explosion of a 100-gallon
copper distilling tank at the Fllesoh-
mann company distillery at Riverside,
this city, today.
The dead:
CHRIS PEIPKR.
Injured: William Quinn, Arthur
Hackman and Julius Gilcher. The cause
of the explosion is not known.
BUTTONMAKERS
ON STRIKE AGAIN
All Peace Neptiations at
Muscatine Factories Are
Endei
Muscatine, Iowa, April 20. — All nego-
tiations between the local button man-
ufacturers and their employes are
again off. At a meeling of the union
last night the men unanimously voted
not to return to work today, and not
to return until a better understanding
had been reached.
State Labor Commissioner Van Duyn,
through whose efforts a working
agreement looking toward a settle-
ment of differences ^tas reached Tues-
day, has arrived In the city but finds
himself unable to readjust matters at
this time. Before returning to Des
Moines today Mr, Van Duyn expressed
the belief that before long, a new and
better understanding between the two
forces might be reached.
In the meantime the situation re-
mains as it was before Mr. Van Duyns I for
eHorts to effect a soiUement began. | Italy.
«l
SOO WOMAN HELD
ON MURDER CHARGE
Coroner's Jury Holds Mrs.
Napolitaine for Killing Hus-
band With an Ax.
Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., April 20.—
(Special to The Herald.)— After delib-
erating but three minutes, the coroner's
Jury returned a verdict of murder
against Mrs. Peter Napolitaine this
morning. The woman is charged with
killing her husband with an ax last
Saturday. Owmg to her present phys-
ical condition the self-confessed mur-
deress will probably not be tried at the
coming assizes. ,„ii„„
Followed by a crowd of his fellow
country men the body of Peter Napo-
llialne was carried yesterday to ita
last resting place in the West end
Catholic cemetery here.
Within a few yards of the under-
taking parlors, whence the body was
taken, was his wife, incarcerated in
the district jail on a charge of murder-
ing her husband with an ax last Sun-
day. She shows a stolid indifference to
the gravity of the charge, bhe did not
make any recjuest to see her husband
before he was buried nor has she men-
tioned her four children.
BRITISH PRINCE
GUEST OF ITALY
Arthur of Connaught, Repre-
senting King George, at
Italian Jubilee.
Rome, April, 20.— Prince Arthur of
Connaught arrived here today, the
representative of King George and the
British people at the Italian jubilee.
He received an enthusiastic welcome.
King Victor Emmanuel and Queen
Helena met the guest at the railroad
station where a great crowd had gath-
ered. When the prince appeared ho
was cheered heartily and thousands
followed the carriages in which hf
and the Italian sovereigns and their
attendants were driven to the qulrlnal.
At the palace the popular demonstra-
tion was so persistent that the prince,
yielding to insistent demands, ap-
peared upon the balcony and acknowl-
edged the greetings.
Prince Arthur delivered to Kin^
Victor Emmanuel an autograph letter
from King George in which the Brit-
if.h monarch congratulated his majesty
on the attainment by Cnlted Italy of
Its fiftieth anniversary and expressed
the friendship of the British nation
the royal bouse and i>eople oC
m
I
• m
f
Thursday,
■^
WH'irlg-
^
i
I
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
URGE LLOYD BILL.
Labor Leaders Appear Before
House Committee.
Washington, Aprii 20. — Samuel
Gompers and Frank Morrisson, presi-
dent and secretary of the American
Federation of Labor, respectively, ap-
peared before the house committee on
reform of the civil service today in
advocacy of the Lloyd bill giving ©ov-
ernment employes the right tu join
labor unions. . ... ^ j
The labor leaders submitted an order
issued bv Second Assistant Postmaster
General 'Stewart last March, in which
It was set forth that "secret organi-
zations among railway mail clerks
were inimical to the interests of the
goernment." This Mr. Gompers as-
serted, had been used as a threat to
prevent mall clerks from joining
unions. He declared the department s
action was an Infringement on the
constitutional rights of the clerks. The
committee will make a thorough in-
vestigation.
WEATHER: Fair weather to-
night and Friday: probably frost
tonight with lowest temp^»rature
about 32 deg. ; moderate north-
erly winds.
for
This sprin? we've got the
srreatest line of colleg-e suits
ever retailed at $15 each. Just
to give you an idea of our tre-
mendous assortment, read the
list of new things you can
choose from at this price:
TEX new styles in chalkline
blue serges'.
TEN new styles in silk-lined
worsteds!
FIF^TEEN new styles in fancy
gray casaimeres!
FtJUR new styles in plain
gray worsteds!
FIVE new styles in butter-
scotch tans!
THREE new styles in black
and white pin-checks!
TWO new patch pocket
models!
FOUR new British styles!
There's not a suit in the collec-
tion that can be duplicated in
tailoring, weave. qualltj' and
style for less than twenty-five
dollars elsewhere. You SIS
take your choice for T ■ '^
SUPERIOR STREET AT SECOND AVER'JE WEST
Dr. Deimers Linen
Mesh Underwear
insures comfort — is clean a.'id
healthy.
All sizes to 50 — Longs and Shorts
■ — Union Suits, Shirts and
Drawers.
Underwear.
of nearly every weight, style and
fabric
50c Garment Upwards.
A. B. Siewert & Co,,
304 West Superior Street.
VERY SPECIAL TO
HOME
SEEKERS!
For the next three weeks only,
we are offering very exceptional
opportunity for six home seekers
to secure thoroughly well planned
and well constructed homes cost-
ing from $2,500 to $6,500, '.m large
lots, very desirably located, at
actual cost to us and on very easy
paytnents. We could not afford
to do this if we -lid not iiave a
good reason. This is your oppor-
tunity .Call House Deiiartment at
once. Don't delay, as this offer
is limited to si-c purch;xsers only.
W. M. PRINDLE & CO.,
3 Lonsdale Bldg.
COHAGES ON
LAKESHORE
Preparations Being Made for
Summer Season on
Lake Vermilion.
Duluth & Iron Range Has
Prepared Descriptive
Literature.
A great deal of work is being done
on the outing project of the Duluth
& Iron Rangre railroad, which has
for its ultimate aim the making the
district of beautiful lakes in the
northern part of the state one of
the most famous as well as beautiful
and picturesque summer resorts in
the entire country.
At Lake Vermilion, one of the most
beautiful of the chain of lakes and
rivers that furnish almost a com-
plete and unbroken means of navi-
gation for canoe and boat to the in-
ternational boundary line and beyond,
there are a large number of cot-
tages being built. The Vermilion
Lake & Developing company is put-
ting? up a number of cottages along
the shores of the lake, while the
Star Cutting company is also at the
present time constructing twenty
cottages.
Few people of this city realize what
wonderful scenery there is along the
shores of Lake Vermilion. The ef-
forts of the Duluth & Iron Range
road to place the natural advantages
of Vermilon lake and the many other
lakes and beautiful streams before
the people has at last begun to at-
tract attention, even from outside
sources.
Some ver>- attractive literature has
been gotten out by the company and
is being sent to many places over
the country. This literature is pro-
fusely illustrated by many photo-
graphs of scenes on the shores of
the lakes, of camps and canoe trips,
and is doing much to advertise the
beauties of the northern part of the
state, of which many of the citizens
right here at home are ignorant.
There is a summer hotel at Tower
now, and with the construction of the
many cottages and the coming of
many people to spend the summer in
this natural beauty spot, it is believed
by the officials of the railroad com-
pany that Lake Vermilion is some
day destined to become one of the
most popular summer resorts in tha
entire Northwest.
As the vicinity of International
Falls is becoming one of the most
popular sunnmer resorts in the whole
continent of North America, attract-
ing people from everj- part of tha
United States and Canada, so, too,
the officials of the Duluth & Iron
Range believe that in the not very
far future the beauties of Lake Ver-
nuilion and the many other lakes
that dot like tiny shinning mirrors
and wooded beauty of that northern
region of the state.
The fishing is unexcelled, while
the places for summer camps are so
many and so wonderful with their
natural beauty that it puzzles the
camper to decide on the selection.
There will be many cottagers at
Lake Vermilion this summer, and.
with the advertising that is being
done for the many summer resort
spots, it is believed that the activity
that is going on at the present time
is only the start of something greater.
MORE WITNESSES
FOR JUDGE COWAN
Called to Disprove Charge
That He Is Habitual
Drunkard.
Bismarck, N. D., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Evidence tending to
disprove the charge that Judge Cowan
Is a habitual drunkard was introduced
during this morning's session of the
Impeachment case.
Alex Currie, Capt. C. J. Atkins, W.
F. Atkins. C. J. Lord, Chris Olson and
P. Forrest, prominent business men of
Cando; C. H. Doyon of Doyen, and John
Dailey of DeVils Lake, were all on the
stand, and each of them testltled that
at no time during the last two years
had they seen or heard of Cowan
being under the influence of liquor.
The records of the January term of
the district court in Ram.sey county
were also introduced to disprove the
charge that he had appeared In the
courtroom and adjourned court one day
\Yithout cause, being intoxicated at
that time. Monroe Branchflower gave
this evidence, the court records failing
to show any adjournment of that na-
ture.
DIRECT LINE AND
NEW SUB-STATION
LOUIS FONG
WAS MARRIED
Chinaman Who Took White
Bride Is Virginia Hotel
Man.
The Chinaman who married an
American girl at Red Wing the lat-
ter part of last month was Louis
Fong, proprietor of the European
hotel at Virgina. The reports sent
out from Red Wing gave liis name
as Louis Wong and his home as Du-
luth. He married Florence Stol-
berg, a girl who had been In his em-
ploy. The Red Wing dispatch stated
that it was an elaborate ceremony
and that champagne corks popped
freely, while the employes of the
hotel at which they were stopping
were showered with tips. The China-
man and his bride are making their
home at Virginia.
PLANNING FOR
MEMORIAL DAY
Veterans May Not Have Ac-
tive Charge of Cere-
monies.
A Joint meeting of the Grand Army
posts, the Sons of Veterans and the
Spanish War Veterans was held last
night at Memorial hall and plans were
discussed for the Memorial day ex-
ercises.
This year the order will be changed
somewhat, although the celebration
will be about the same as usual.
The older men no longer care to
take the responsibility for the ar-
rangements for the day and it Is
quite probable that the younger men
will be asked to make the arrange-
ments and carry out the program.
The older men will march, address
the school children and take part.
At the meeting last night Asa
Daily was appointed from the Gor-
man post, Thomas Pressnell from
Culver post, John Harrison from the
Sons of Veterans, J. B. Gibson from
the Spanish-American war veterans
and Charles V. McCoy for the Maj.
Diggles camp, Spanish War Veterans.
The representatives of the different
bodies will get together Wednesday
of next week and at that time a
definite program for the celebration
of Decoration day will be outlined.
The citizens' staff will also have rep-
resentatives at the meeting.
Great Northern Power Com-
pany Will Spend $200,-
000 for Improvements.
Direct power transmission lines
from the Tliomson power station and
a new distributing sub-station in Su-
perior, are among the improvements the
Great Northern power company has
planned for Superior this year. When
completed, the improvement will rep-
resent an e.xpenditure of about $200,000.
For several years Superior has re-
ceived its electric power from the Du-
luth distributing station at the West
end. Better facilities will be af-
forded with a direct line from the
Thomson power plant.
The new distributing station In
Superior will cost about flOO.OOO. The
site ha.si not been purchas-d. but in all
probability will be near the bay front.
Plans for the structure are now being
made. Engineers are at work survey-
ing the route to be followed to bring
the lines to the city from Thomson.
LENROOfSCORED
BY BUSINESS MEN
Stand Taken By Superior Con-
gressman on Reciprocity
Severely Criticized.
Congressman I. L. Lenroot Is "In bad"
with the Superior Commercial club.
The club wants to see the reciprocity
agreement with Canada passed. Lenroot
has sided with the La Follette forces
and has taKen a stand against It.
Lest the real attidude of the Sup-
erior business men be misinterpreted
by the vote of the Superior congress-
man, resolutions which were passed
last evening at the Commercial club
meeting will be read on the floor of
the house of representatives.
The stand taken by Mr. Lenroot was
bitterly assailed by many of the speak-
ers.
Held to Higher Court.
Alexander Grabowski. charged with
the stabbing of Emil Rotokovlch In tha
St. Paul saloon, lower Tower avenue,
about a week ago, was arraigned in
municipal court yesterday. He was
bound over to the superior court and
is held in $1,000 bonds. Grabowski
is charged with assault with a danger-
ous weapon.
Large Tax Sale.
Tuesday. May 16 is the date set for
the annual county tax sale at the
county treasurer's office. The sale
will be larger than ever before. Sev-
eral thousand lots and other proper-
ties will be on sale. County Treasurer
Kenyon is now engaged in the pre-
liminary work.
Forgery Charged.
On a charge of uttering a forged
order, Henry Schommer and Arthur
Welty, two young men of Billings
park were arrested yesterday after-
noon and arraigned In municipal court.
They demanded an examination, which
was set for Friday. Bail was set at
$200 which each furni..hed.
BERME McNEIL WILL
BE WITH THE PIRATES.
Rochester. N. Y., April 20. — Bernle
McNeil, champion bowler for 1910-11
of the New York State Tenpin league
and champion pitcher of the long-ex-
tinct Catholic Baseball league, will
leave tonight to Join the Winona club
in the Minnesota-Wisconsin league.
Good wishes of all who know him go
with the wiry bowler who battled his
way to the individual leadership In
bowling the past season.
Yesterday he received a substantial
reward for his efforts on the alleys
with the Rochester team in the shape
of a gold medal, decorated with minia-
ture bou'ling ball and pins and set with
diamonds. SlcNell participated in fifty-
three games with the local state league
team, averaging 202 for the season.
For many years McNeil has been a
prominent figure, from a Rochester
viewpoint. In professional ball. Start-
ing his career as a pitcher with the
four-time champion Immaculate Con-
ception team of the old Catholic league,
for which he pitched every league
game or eighty in all, he gained rec-
ognition in the shape of a contract
from the A. J. and G. team, which was
then part of the New York State
league.
Last season McNeil displayed such
good work In th the Minne.-^ota-WTscon-
sln league that he was drafted by Win-
nipeg of the Western Canadian league
He was later repurchased by Winona.
PIOXEERAITKIN COUNTY
WOMAN DIES AT DAM LAKE.
COMMITTEE
DOEASED
New Public Affairs Commit-
tee Will Have 100
Members.
W. A. HcGonagle Is Again
Chairman — Scope of Work
Widening.
The membership of the public af-
fairs committee of the Commercial
club will tuis year be increased from
sixty-five to 100 and W. A. McGonagle
will again be chairman. The oth«3r of-
ficers, Julius H. Barnes, vice chair-
man; E. P. Towne, treasurer; and H.
v. Eva, secretary; have also been re-
appointed by President C. A. Luster of
the Commercial club. The complete
list of members will be ready within
a few days.
Th© public affairs committee has
constantly increa-sed in size during the
past few years and has widened its
scope so that all matters altectlng
Duiuth and Northern Minnesota prop-
erly comes to its attention and It in
regarded as a potent factor for good
in the community.
Several years ago when the Com-
mercial club was a small struggling
organization of business men, who had
a desire to accomplish things but lit-
tle system, there was a so-called pub-
lic affairs committee of seven men.
No meetings were ever held within
the knowledge of man and the spot
light never shone on the little commit-
tte. The seven men were appointed,
let their honors rest lightly on them,
and the honors continued to rest.
When the public affairs commit-
tee aa it is at present constituted first
came into being, it had forty mem-
bers. They worked out a plan of ac-
tivity, the field being naturally nar-
row at first. There were only four
sub-committees, those on finance, in-
dustries, municipal affairs and trans-
portation. The big problems that con-
fronted Duluth were grappled with
more or less successfully and as they
continued to woi-k and saw the re-
sults that could be obtained by intel-
ligent co-operation among busines.«
men, the members of the club saw
their field broadening out.
Succeeding committees have contin-
ued the good work. The field w'dened
and the committee entered it and, as
the work became more arduous, the
membership of the committee was in-
creased to meet the increased efforts
needed. The membership was first in-
creased to fifty and then to si.\ty-flve.
Sub-committees were added as new
subjects required the undivided atten-
tion of special committees, and last
year eleven of these sub-bodies did
energetic work.
The last year was the best In the
history of the public affairs commit-
tee. More was accomplished for Du-
luth than ever before and much was
started that, while not accomplished,
will be continued by this year's com-
mittee. The .work is so great that the
increase of over one-tlilrd In the mem-
tership was decided upon and new sub-
committees will probably be appointed.
The committees last year were ex-
ecutive, traffic, manufacturing, agri-
cultural developtnent. wholesalers and
retailers, municip^ J, harbor and water-
ways, parks, pijgfi'grounds and free
docks, state and county, finance and
publicity and statistics.
From the consideration of purely
economic questions, the public affair.<i
committee has extended its scope until
now It also takes In the consideration
of social questions. Mr. McGonagle
said in his last report that "a good city
to live In is a good city to do business
in" and the public affairs committee Is
working along that line. It realizes
that the questions of rentals, cost of
living, parks, playgrounds, the treat-
ment of minor penal offenders and
other matters of the kind properly
com.e under the consideration of a com-
mercial body, as well as questions of
freight rates, public docks, legislation
and commercial and industrial devel-
opment.
Aitkin, Minn.. April 20 — Mrs. Paul
Brodine. aged 80, one of the pioneers
of Aitkin county, died early in the
week at the home of her daughter at
Dam Lake. She leaves three sons at
Spooner and a daughter at Carlton,
beside a daughter at Dam Lake.
Mrs. Albert Zoerb, wife of one of the
proprietors of the Aitkin creamery,
died yesterday. Two weeks ago she
gave birth to a boy. Her condition took
a turn tor the worse three days ago.
"TWO TO MAKE WAR"
SAYS PRESIDENT
Taft Determined That United
States Must Not
Intervene.
Washington. April 20. — That Presi-
dent Taft is more determined than
ever that the United States must not
Intervene in Mexico became known here
this afternoon following a conference
between the president and Secretary
Knox, and a committee of the hous«e
of representatives.
The president stated that difficulties
must arise out of conditions In Mexico,
because of the proximity of fighting to
the American line.
"But,' h«d is quoted as saying, "it
takes two to make a war."
»
Stui Working for Armlstlee.
Washington, April 20. — Dr. Vasquez
Gomez has not relaxed his efforts to
bring about a cessation of military
operations despite Madero's ultimatum.
H-e has sent a mes.sage to Gen, Madero
informing him that neither side had
taken the initiative In the armistice
proposals, it having been suggested to
him by personal friends at the same
time that It had been laid before the
Mexican government. He advised Gen.
Madero that it had been suggested that
the armistioe take effect at midnight
of April 21.
Dr. Gomez has been anxious to avoid
international complications, and his
armistice proposals, to be effective in
the state of Chihuahua and Sonera. Is
In line with his desire to end the fight-
ing aJong the American border, at
I'aast.
At 2:30 p. m.. Dr. Gomez sent an ur-
gent message to Gen. Madero via El
Paso, cautioning him 'against attacking
Juarez at the present moment. Dr.
Gomez indicated that with the grave
situation In Washington concerning the
Mexican reply to the American note.
It was necessary to prevent any further
international complications.
•
Alcazar cigar, fifty two-for-25c, until
Saturday |5 per box. 319 West Superior
street.
CLOQUET PIONEER DIES.
Henry Drollet for Thirty Years
Resident of City.
Cloquet, Minn., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.)— Henrj' Drollet, 68
years of age. died at 11:30 last night
at the home of his daughter, Mrs.
Adelord Serre. He had been ill since
December. He leaves two daughters
and two sons, Mrs. Serre and Joseph
Drollet of- Cloquet and a son ancl a
daughter in Canada.
He came to Cloquet with the first
saw mill and was millwright here for
thirty years.
The funeral will be held Friday
morning at & o'clock at the Catholic
church.
DEBATE IS
CONTINUED
Representatives Hobson and
Doremus Favor Reciproc-
ity Agreement
Latter Believes Great Pros-
perity Would Follfw En-
actment et Pact
Washington, April 20. — Debate on
the Canadian reciprocity bill was re-
sumed today shortly after the house
convened and an effort will be made to
get a vote on the measure before ad-
journment. P'riends of the bill opened
the discussion.
"For every dollar the government
collects from its customs laws, It Is
estimated that private Interests collect
J7," said Mr. Hobson of Alabama, fa-
voring the agreement. Mr. Hobson
expressed the belief that a lowering
of tariff duties would not Injure Amer-
ican -farmers or business interests.
Representative Doremus of Michigan,
a Democrat, also favored the adoption
of the reciprocity. He said the busi-
ness Interests of his city (Detroit) and
he believed of other parts of Michigan,
were convinced that prosperity to the
country in general would follow the
ratification of the reciprocity pact.
Danger to farmers and wheat rais-
ers was greatly overdrawn, said Mr.
Doremus. The world demand for wheat
acted as a balance to maintain the
price of wheat. The use of a tariff for
the sole purpose of keeping up an ab-
normal price of wheat amounts to a
direct tax on the bread, he said. "We
are short on food in this country," he
added, "and long on manufactured
products."
Prouty OfferM Amendment.
Offering an amendment to the Cana-
dian reciprocity bill, which provides
for placing on the free list manufac-
tured articles to compensate the agri-
cultural interests of the country, Rep-
resentative Prouty of Iowa, made his
maiden speech in the house today in
opposition to the proposed agreement
as submitted by the ways and means
committee. ,.
"This treaty," said Mr. Prouty, 'com-
pels the farmer to sell his products in
competition with Canada, but compels
him to buy in a protected market.
That Is unfair to the fanner. Repre-
senting as I do, a farmer constitu-
ency, I should rather like to see It
tried on somebody else first. Must all
these experiments be tried on the
farmer? I think it is time to try
them on somebody else."
Mr. Prouty sala there were some
things In proposed farmers' free list
bill offered by the Democrats for which
he could vote, but there were some
things In it which he must oppose
"This bill," he continued, which
they have designated as the 'farmers
free list bill,' puts on the free list beef,
veal, mutton, lamb, pork and all kinds
of meat. This would throw the Ameri-
can farmer into direct competition, not
merely with Canada, but with Mexico,
Argentina and other countries south o^
us, where, every one knows, animals are
raised for less than half of the cost m
the United States.
Mr. Prouty's amendment would In-
clude flour, packing products and
many other manufactured articles.
*
Ftlibaater Threatened.
Washington, April L'O.— With gen-
eral debate still under way, and with
a score or more of amendments ready
to be offered as soon as the measure
reaches consideration under the five-
minute rule. It was apparent early
today that the Democratic organiza-
tion in the house has a stiff fight
ahead of it before the Canadian reci-
procity bill can be brought to a vote.
There Is not the slightest doubt
about the bill passing by a big ma-
jority but the opponents of reciprocity
are threatening to resort to obstruc-
tive tactics and will demand tedious
roll calls on the various amendments
that are to be offered. The Democrats
in charge of the bill are determined
that no amendment threatening the
integrity of the Canadian agreement
shall be adopted.
Chairman Underwood of the ways
and means committee, who has been
ciuite patient in granting time for
general debate, served notice today
that If an attempt Is made to prolong
the discussion unreasonably, the Dem-
ocrats may be compelled to bring their
well-oiled "steam roller" out of the
roundhouse. He Intimated that a fire
already had been started under the
boiler.
A number of the amendments to be
offered to the reciprocity bill propose
to put various articles on the free
list. The Democratic free list bill al-
ready Is before the house, however,
and the majority leaders will defeat
any Republican effort to anticipate it.
The senate met today for the first
time since Monday last. Senator Stone
of Missouri had previously announced
that he 'vould speak today on his
resolution calling for an inquiry Into
conditions along the Mexican border.
LAKE ANGEUNE
MINE IS SCHOOL
Many Mining Captains Grad-
uated From Upper Mich-
igan Property.
Ishpeming. Mich., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The Lake Angellne
mine here is said to have turned out
more mining captains during the past
ilfteen years than any mine In the
Lake Superior region.
The following captains employed in
various properties were "schooled" In
the Lake Angellne mine: John Sin-
cock, Virginia, Minn.; Jacob Harper,
Dexter, Mich.; John Roberts, Cascade,
Mich.; John Thomas, Swanzey, Mich.;
William H. Downing, Hlbblng, Minn.;
Ed Keskeys, Missouri; Charles Beelamy,
Virginia, Minn.; Martin Trevella, Hlb-
blng, Minn.; John Goodney, Crystal
Falls, Mich.; Thomas J. Nlcholls, Au-
rora, Minn.; William Harris. Virginia,
Minn.; John Wills, Champion, Mich.;
James Rosewell. Hlbblng, Minn.; Nels
Lean, Sparta, Minn.; Harry Tallon, Hib-
bing, Minn.; Joseph Benny, McKinley,
Minn.; Gust Seylo, Deerwood, Minn.;
Richard Hodge, Hlbblng, Minn.; James
Fayle, Hlbbing, Minn.; Charles Hodge,
Iron Cliff. Mich.; John Dunston, Blwa-
blck, Minn.; William H. Nlcholls, Knox,
Minn.: John Hudson, Aurora, Minn ;
Ed N. Corey, Negaunee, Mich.; Ed
White, Hlbblng, Minn.; James Berry-
man, New Jersey; William J. Rogers,
Virginia, Minn.; Richard Jones, Nash-
wauk, Minn.; W. J. Nlcholls. Virginia,
Minn.; John Rosewall, Hlbbing, Minn.;
Robert Creer; Thomas Hendra, Hlbblng,
Minn.
COUNTY ASSESSORS
WILL BEGL\ WORK MAY 1.
Notices were sent out this morn-
ing from the county auditor's office
to assesors throughout the county.
They will come to the courthouse
from all parts of the county on April
27 for their blanks and Instructions.
They will start work on or about
May 1.
**Oiddinff CorrnT" — Superior St.
at First Ave. Wi
uncommon and ais-
ddii
WOMEN who prize
tinctive apparel, appreciate Gidding
advantages in producing
novelty styles that are
''correcf and out -of-
tke-ordmary.
There is a vast difference in
Garments and the way they are
produced — in the quality of
materials; in the ^^CuV\ the
'■^Lines*^ and the ^^Tailoring'^ —
more than that^ a store must
get its style information from
the right source.
We are a women's apparel
organization doing business in three
representative cities of the United
States — with a service and a
prestige that makes the Gidding
label a guarantee of correct style
and superior merit,
ffigh Class ]!f ovelty
Suits at $45; to $95
Imported and Ameri<:an models by
designers of note — Sitin and cloth
Suits in high-waited effects, tailored
^yles and etons.
Uncommon Coats
$32.50 to $100
Motor models, novelly street styles
and handsome evening wraps.
New Hats Every Day
Our New York
store keeps giving us
new "tips" on fashion
all the time — and not
only that, but NEW
HATS keep coming.
Such service quickens
the enthusiasm of our
millinery people, and fur-
nishes them with food for
the designing of new and
original Hats.
Fetching Styles in the
new Rough Straws, Hemp
Strips, Fine Milans, etc.
"CHIC" is the little
French word that best ex-
presses their jauntiness
and smart individuality.
Prices are no more than
asked for iiiore ordinary
styles at other stores — ^10
and up.
Fresh Arrivals in
Custom Tailored Suits at $45.00
Fine Tailored Garments are our specialty; it is the
service we exert our efforts on — and the thing that we
excel in! We believe this new shipment embraces the
most splendid range of handsome materials that any
store in this pari: of the country could show.
Foulard and Wlarquisette Dresses at $25 to $45
A wonderful range of styles that surpass the efforts
of the private dressmakers. In Satin Foulards, Mcs-
salines, lightweight Taffetas and Marquisettes in plain
colors, stunning stripes, attractive dots, designs and
figures. Veiled effects and embroidered or beaded de-
signs— Styles that exactly fit various needs for street
wear, afternoon calling, card parties and informal
evening^ wear.
Spring and Summer Underwear
KNIT UNDEliWEAR is the predominating Underwear
of the season! The close-fitting styles demand it — and with
the usual Gidding Foresight, we have provided accordingly —
an excellent selection of Union Suits and Separate Pieces in
COTTON, LISLE, LINEN and SILK-MESH UNDER-
WEAR—(also the new LISLE-BODY Underwear v^rith SILK
TOP).
LADIES' GAirZE UNION SUITS at 50c, 75c, $1, $1.25,
$1.75, $2, $2.50, $3 and up.
NORTHERN TRUNK CO.
TRUCKS, BAGS, CASES. .
We Are Makers. 228 West Firsf Street.
EILERT BROS.
ALL ILLS OF MEN
Come either from errors of diet, wrong living, exertion and exposures,
or they come from eirors of youth, dissipation, neglected bladder
and kidney troubles, contagious blood-poison, skin diseases or un-
natural discharges. AH of these diseases may be slight at first, but
they hinder work, prevent advancement and bring depression and
misery and spoil enjoyment. You would certainly not prefer money
to health. It will cost you little to have your disease cured at our
office; it will cost you much of precious time, enjoyment and perhaps
life itself if you neglect it. All diseases of men
ARE CURED BY THE
Dissolving process, XRay, and other apparati, for which we paid
more than $10,000. You cannot find a second office as well equipped
in the state of Minnesota. Times have changed, where powders and
pills were prescribed formerly we have now instruments and ma-
chinery, which will he;il diseases Hke Cancer, and most any disease.
We guarantee to cure any case of Stomach Trouble, Piles, Rheuma-
tism, Unnatural Disch irges, Catarrh, Nervous Debility, Secret Dis-
eases, Bladder and H;art Trouble, Weakness and Blood Diseases,
Stricture and Cancer and all diseases of men.
PROGRESSIVE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
NO. 1 WEST SUPERIOR STREET.
For over twenty years in Duluth. Have cured more than 10,000
people. All advice and consulution free. Write if yon can't come to
Duluth.
<■■
'¥
14
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9
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Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
DULITH MAN MAY
TESTIFY AT SPRINGFIELD.
It Is reportefl that W. H. Cook of
this city has been subpoenaed an a
witness In the Lorimer investigation
which is Komg on In Sprlngflelfl.
Mr. Cook was questioned regarding
it by a Herald reporter this morning,
but he refused to discuss It, saying
that he intended going to Chicago
when he had business tiiere.
He did not say that he had not been
subpoenaed as a witness, however, and
refused to discuss the matter further.
THE SILK SALE
IS ON!
It's great— best spring silk sale Dulutli ever
gaw — at least well posted shoppers say so 1
Thousands and thousands of yards of desirable
dependable silks are in the sale at —
49c, 59c, 69c, 89c, 98c and $ 1 .69
Somie are special purchases — many lots are
from regular stock— these prices hold good until
closing time Saturday night— Monday those that
are left go back up to regular price I
Come tomorrow — get your share 1
WHITE GOODS AND LINEN
Remnants at Vz Price
TOMORROW AND SATURDAY.
Linens, Waistings, Piques, Lawns, Fancy
Linens, Sheetings, Muslins, Cambrics, Long Cloths,
Nainsooks and Crashes on sale Friday and Satur-
day at half price!
AlT-119 WEST SCPXIRIOB 6XZUEIET. DUMJTH. MINM.
soivie:
Basement Bargains
Just to give you a "LINE"
on what we are doing down
liere! We want you to know
that we can save you money on
practically EVERYTHING you
buy — and the best way to show
vou, is to give you samples!
Come and see the rest for your-
self!
For Friday, April 21st
From 10 to 11 a. m.
A few cases of extra-quality
Toilet Paper, 1,000 sheets to
the roll; our regular leader
at 5c; worth 8c, for AJ*^^
the one hour only. ^&C
8 rolls for ^w^
From 3 to 4 p. m.
One extra special offering in
Elite Enamelware, acid-proof
and guaranteed in every way.
Four-quart Tea Kettles; our
regular $1.39 lead- i\m ^^^
er, for the SfvC
hour
ORDERED TO
THE FRONT
Capt. Karl A. Franklin, Com-
pany A, Will Report at
San Antonio.
Wfll Remain at Scene of
Army Maneuvers Four-
teen Days.
Capt. Karl A. Franklin of Company
A, Third infantry, M. N. G., has been
ordered to report at San Antonla. Tex.,
to t e commanding general of the
maneuver camp.
Other officers of Minnesota militia
companies have also been ordered to
the "front." Before the return of
some of the officers, it is just possible
that they will see some active field
service in the shape of a skirmish with
the Mexicans.
The orders sending Capt. Franklin
and. other officers to the camp of the
United States regulars at San Antonio,
are Issued through the militia division
of the war depaitmeut, by the state of
Minnesota.
By the terms of the orders the offi-
cers will be required to take their
full tent field equipment, including
bedding and all their mess kit. In
the case of mounted officers they will
be required to take their horses.
The officers are called to San An-
tonio to participate in a joint encamp-
ment, maneuver and field instruction
of the regular army and militia. The
officers are expected to report on April
25 and their stay has been limited to
fourteen days, exclusive of the time
taken to go to and from San Antonio.
The other Minnesota officers or-
dered out are:
Maj. William T. Mollison, Second in-
fantry.
Maj. Erie D. Luce, First infantry.
Capt. Anthony X. Schall, Jr., First
infantry.
First Lieut. James E. Merrill, Medi-
cal corps.
ITINERARY FOR
SHOP EXCURSION
Duluthians Will See Big West
End Indostrlal Plants
Friday.
The fourth "Seeing Duluth" excur-
sion under the auspices of the pub-
licity committee of the Commercial
club will start from the club tomorrow
afternoon at 2:30. The trip is timed
so that the party will reach the Clyde
Iron works at about the time the
pouring is done.
The places to be visited are the
Scott-Graff mill, the Duluth Street
Railway company's repair shops and
the Clyde Iron works. At the Scott-
Graff plant, the visitors will see the
sawmill, planing mill and sash and
door factory. The veneering process
for making the most out of a given
amount of wood should be Interesting.
New methods are constantly being de-
vised In the preparation of wood for
u.se, and the modern sawmill, planing
mill and sash and door factory are so
different from the old type of sawmill
that those who are faihlllar only with
the old methods will be surprised to
see the new.
At the repair shops of the Duluth
Street Railway company the excur-
sionists will see, as announced in the
circular of the Commercial club, "Tlie
cure for the distressing ailment of
flat wheeKs." The street railway com-
pany maintains a complete and well-
equipped machine shop for the repair
of cars and there is much of Interest
to be seen there.
The Clyde Iron works Is probably
the most Interesting point on the trip.
Great machinery Is manufactured
there for the export trade and the
visitors will be shown all of the va-
rious processes of modern machinery
manufacture. The pouring Is spec-
tacular and people interested In Du-
luth Industries should not miss It.
Wegener, gaveAtfl Exhibition on the
bars. I
Among those who lontributed to the
musical prograiti wer% C. O. Applehagen
and Miss Linnahan, who sang. Mrs.
Kaake gave a re^t^lns:.
monologistIsiVis
plbasiSg program.
Before a rather small, but apprecia-
tive audience, A. Lincoln Kirk, imper-
sonator and nfonologue entertainer,
appeared In a w.ell selected program
last evening at Q^ntrll Baptist church.
Twentieth avei)ue trest and First
street.
His interpretations jnet with the ap-
proval of his auglienc^. His imperson-
ations were from the works of Shakes-
peare, Dickens, Irving and other
authors of reputation. Character
changes were made on the platform.
The entertainment was held under
the auspices of the Young People's
society.
MISS ESTHER JOHNSON
SURPRISED BY FRIENDS.
Friends surprised Miss Esther John-
son Tuesday eveninc at her home, 2611
West Fourth street. The evening was
given over to music and games. Re-
freshments were served. Those present
were: Misses Marguerite Magnuson,
Marie Eckenbyrg. Lena Peterson,
Be.«sie Englund, Inez Turnquist, Carrie,
Olson, Esther Erickson, Margaret
Nordquist, Ida Hendrickson, Lillian
Wester, Jennie Peterson, Inga Soren-
son, Selma Johnson, Alma Anenson,
Elien Peterson, Clara Gelrs, Esther
Hoffman, Jenny Anderson. Anny Carl-
son, Minnie oustafson, Ruth Wilson
and Ruby Wilson Mesdames F. Wilson,
F. Wester and Messrs. L M. Johnson,
John Johnson, Earl Wilson and Walter
Wilson.
FritsaH Funeral.
The funeral of Ole Fritsall. aged 26.
who died yesterday morning at his
home, 2128 West Third street from
blood poisoning resulting from a nail
scratch on the hand, will be held to-
morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock from the
Olsen & Crawford undertaking rooms,
2118 West First street with Interment
at Park Hill cemetery. Rev. J. M.
Nervig, pastor of Zlon Norwegian
Lutheran church, Twenty-fifth avenue
west and Third street, will officiate.
BOND ISSUE
BILL^FAILS
City Cannot Raise Money
to Budd Municipal
Dock.
April 20, 1911.
House Is Raided.
A raid was made yesterday on an al-
leged disorderly house kept by Elsie
Lute on Twentieth avenue west, near
Superior street. In police court g^ie
was ordered to leave the city before
Saturday night. Two men arrested
with her were charged with drunk-
enness.
West End Briefs.
i#WWMW^MVW^>^^^^^^AM^AAM^A^^^
WEST END
«^^«^«^rfftrftarfkrf«rfta^^rf^rf
Miss Bertha Walleen of Twenty-
tlilrd avenue west has gone to the Twin
Cities on a business trip.
Arthur J. Anderson left yesterday
for the Pacific coast on a month's
visit.
Fred C Bottwin of Calumet, Mich. Is
the guest of friends In the western
end of the city.
Mrs. Alfred Johnson of 2624 West
Third street entertained yesterday
afternoon at home in honor of her
birthday.
Another of the series of weekly
dancing parties will be given this even-
ing at Lincoln Park pavilion by the
Adams Athletic as.sociation.
Miss Ragnhild Zahl will entertain
the Young Ladies' Guild of St. John's
English Lutheran church at her home,
1402 West First street, tomorrow after-
noon.
The funeral of Joseph Briola, aged
50, of 1118 West Michigan street, was
held yesterday from St. Peter's Catho-
lic church with burial at Calvary
cemetery.
The Men's club of Bethany Swedish
Lutheran church w*il hold a festival
this evening at lh< church, Twenty-
third avenue and Third street. The
principal speaker will be Rev. Theo-
dore A. Ekblad of Superior. A pro-
gram of speeches and music has been
arranged for the affair and the exer*
cises win begin promptly at 8 o'clock
The Lion drug store has moved to
the new Anderson-Thoorsell block,
2030 West Superior street.
May Lease Land But Lack
of Funds Will Cause
Delay.
The state legislature passed a bill
leasing the state dock property near
the ore docks to the city for twenty-
five years at the nominal rental of $1
a year, but It failed to pass the en-
abling act which would have allowed
the city to Issue flOO.OOO of bonds with
which to Improve It and to purchase
additional dock property.
Mayor CuUum, who has been back of
the move to establish a municipal dock
system in Duluth, was greatly disap-
pointed when he learned that the bond
measure had not been passed.
"That leaves us practically helpless
for another two years," he said th's
morning. "Without the authority to
issue bonds to raise the necessary
money, we can't do much of anything.
Further than keep up Interest in the
matter, our hands are practically tied.
It's really a shame that that bill did
not go through, and to say that I am
disappointed is putting it mildly. Two
more years are wa.sted, and property is
Increasing in value all the lime. At
the same time the available frontage
along the harbor is getting scarcer
and more difficult to secure."
The mayor said that he did not know
of any opposition to the bill. He said
that when he was in St. Paul a short
time ago he had assurances that there
would be no difficulty in securing its
passage. Those to whom he spoke of
the bill said that it would go through
befgre the legislature adjourned. He
knew that there was strong opposition
to the bill leasing the dock site to the
city, but that was overcome and it
went through easily. After that had
passed, no one thought that the bill
authorizing the bond issue would not
become a law.
DOCTORS AT HRAINERD.
Upper Mississippi Medical Society
Meets in Crow Wing City.
Bralnerd, Minn., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The Upper Mississippi
Medical society held its thirty-second
regular meeting in Bralnerd this week,
and thirty or more physicians attended
the gathering and listened to the in-
teresting and instructive papers, read
and discussed the same in an Informal
manner. Among these present were
Robert Monahan of International Falls,
W. R. Bearsley of Crosby, John C.
Koch of Blackduck, L. B. Ohlanger,
superintendent of the state sanatorium
near Walker; A. B. Hart and wife of
Pequot, Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Sanboni
of Bemidji, F. H. Knickerbocker o^
Staples, Dr. and Mrs. G. H. Lowthian
of Akeley, Walter R. Ramsey of St.
I'aul, Paul Kenyan of Wadena. W. W.
Will of Bertha. O. V. Johnson of Se-
beka. M. A. Desmond of Akeley, E. F,
Fowler of Staples, Charles Coulter or
AVadena, Dr. and Mrs. William Reld
of Deerwood, N. L. Llnnemann. lately
from Europe; B. W. Kelly of Aitkin,
Dr. Bentz of Lincoln, Neb., who may
take up practice at Walker; E. H.
Smith of Bemidji, Dunn of St. Cloud,
J. L. Camp, G. E. Brown, B. E. Hem-
stead, O. T. Batcheller, F. J. Sykora,
Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Thabes, Dr. and
Mrs. Werner Hemstead, Dr. and Mrs.
R. A. Beise and Dr. Ide, all of Braln-
erd. The society was complimented by
Dr. Ramsey of St. Paul on Its pro-
gressive and active membership.
*^r ^ ^^ \i^ \^ ^» ^^ s^ ^f \^ ^ ^ \b ^ tAr •lAf \if ^ ^f tfc^fe^fe »If \ti' \
I'
MAKKS IT EASIER
TO GET A JVRY.
NOTICE.
E. F. Burg, Hotel, Bar and
Billiard Supplies, has moved
to 224 West First Street.
^^ ^ T< H Tins SI'.\( K OX FRIDAY FOR MORE BARG.4IXS.
NGER &
THE BIG WEST END
FURNITURE HOUSE
LSON
ISth AVE.W.and
SUPERIOR ST.
fFine Steel Beds^
Exactly Like This Picture
Usually Sold at $15.00.
These come in two-inch continuous steel posts and 54-inch fillers;
Vernis Martin or "gold" finish, very heavy and a remarkable bargain
at our special price.
E.&0. Sweepers
These splendid Sweepers are made with
a steel case, finely
I
enamelled and have
an extra quality
bru^h. "Syill do the
fanie work that an
expensive sweep e r
win do. Very spe-
cial for tomorrow —
Actual ValiM $1.78.
96c
Young folks going housekeeping can save a snug sum buying
their Furniture in the West End— Nineteenth Avenue West^
WEST END BOYS
PRESENT PLAY
Benefit Performance for Neigh-
borhood House Given at
Y. M. C. A.
An entertainment at the Y. M. C. A.
last evening, the first of a series for
the benefit of the Neighborhood house
of the Twentieth Century club, 2423
West Superior street, was well at-
tended. The proceeds will go to a
fund for securing a new location for
the Neighborhood house. The lease on
the present place expires May 1.
The Daniel Boone boys furnished
the hit of the evening. This club Is
one of the four boys' organizations at
the Neighborhood house and presented
"Sir Gareth of Orkney" a play with a
cast of thirteen.
Two Y. W. C. A. Girls, dressed as
bears, did a number of stunts as
"trained animals." They were under
the direction of Miss Cheska. This
was followed by a basket ball game
between the two teams at the Y. W. C.
A. The boys' department of the Y. M.
C. A., under the direction of A. B.
BODY OF MURDERED
MAN NOT BURIED
Funeral of JcAn Taylor De-
layed Until Funds Are
Available.
The body of John Taylor, who was
killed by Ed Davis at Brimson. March
28, Is still at the undertaking rooms.
The administrator has not as yet
been appointed and until he is, there
is no money for the burial. It is ex-
pected that the administrator will be
appointed late today and that the
funeral will be held tomorrow. Inter-
ment will be at Park Hill.
Taylor owned ICO acres of land at
Brimson. The land is worth but little,
it is said. A few hundred dollars at
the most is all that it will bring. The
body was embalmed Immediately after
the fight in the cabin which resulted
in Taylor's death.
Ed Davis, the man who is accused of
striking the fatal blow, is at the pres-
ent time at the county jail. At the
next meeting of the grand jury which
will be about the first of May, he will
probably be Indicted on a charge of
manslaughter in the first degree.
The men had gone to Brimson to
work. They stayed at Taylor's cabin.
They played cards all night and drank
heavily. In the morning the fight oc-
curred. There were no w^ltnesses.
The fatal blow was dealt with a
peavey. Davis still shows the marks
of the fight. He had a dangerous scalp
wound and sustained more cuts and
bruises than did Taylor, the man who
died.
^Tbln bill recently passed by
the leKliIatiire whtcb doen avray
^vlth ca|>ital punitthment Tiili cut ^
do^Tn the expcuHe uf the countiei*
^ to Nome extent ^hen it romcN to
in drawing JurleM,'' Maid County At-
^ torney John H. Norton thlti ntom-
# Insr.
Ijt "Heretofore we have been from
'^ two dayn to RometliueM aw many an Mn
^ three In drawing a Jury In a uiur- ""
^ der case and It wait Himply be-
-ijf cause a great many refuMed to sit
ifr on a murder cane where they
# might have to oaMt their ballot
# for guilty. They were opposed to
^ sentencing any man to death.
itt "All that will be changed now
^ and we will probably have but llt-
iit tie trouble In getting Juries to try ^
^ murder cases.*' ^
SENATOR TODAY;
CLERK TOMORROW
Palmer WOl Swear in Cheadle
and Cheadle WiU
Reciprocate.
Today It's State Senator Harry W.
Cheadle; tomorrow it will be City Clerk
Harry \V. Cheadle.
The legislature adjourned yesterday,
and this afterntion it is expected that
he will qualify as city clerk, to whiclj
position he was elected at the annual
meeting of the city council last month.
He will be sworn in by City Clerk C. S.
Palmer, and then he will swear in the
ex-city clerk as first deputy city clerk.
Mr. Palmer has filled the position
mo.'jt acceptably since Mr. Cheadle re-
signed to take up his duties as state
senator. When the latter's resigna-
tion was accepted it w^as with the un-
derstanding that he would take the
position again after the legislature had
adjourned. The senator said this morn-
ing that it .seemed good to be back In
the city again. He stated that he had
enjoyea his labors at the capital, but
was certain that it would be a pleas-
ure to get into the harness again as
city clerk, ^'hlch position he held for
years previous to his dip into the po-
litical arena.
2XMtA COLLARS.
Vi^eacA,2Art
BUSH PRESIDENT.
CUFTON LAMBS CLUB
Clnett. Pcabody A Compsny, Troy. Hew Tort
Chosen Head of Company Subsidiary
to Missouri Pacific.
New York, April 20.— B. F. Bush was
today elected president of the SL
Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Rail-
way company, which is a subsidiary of
the Missouri Pacific railway. Mr.
Bush's resignation from the presidency
of the Western Maryland was accepted
today. The vacancy on the board of
directors of the Iron Mountain, caused
by the resignation of Paul Warburg of
Kuhn-Loeb & Company, was not filled
today.
Robertson Saceeeda Bush.
New York, April 20. — Alexander
Robertson, vice president of the West-
ern Maryland railroad, was today
elected president of that company to
succeed B. F. Bush, who resigned to
become president of the Missouri Pa-
cific railway.
Mr. Bush's resignation from the road
to take effect immediate as he de-
sired at once to enter upon his duties
as head of the Missouri Pacific.
HARRIS WILL BE
PLACED ON TRIAL
Accused of Swindling John
Runquist in a Horse
Deal
John M. Harris, accused of obtaining
money under false pretenses will go on
trial In district court Monday.
Harris Is accused of swindling John
Runquist on a horse deal. He is said
to have represented to Mr. Runquist
that he was a brother of a contractor
at Virginia named Harris and to have
obtained the horses in that way.
He Is claimed to have sold the horses.
After the sale of the horses he went
away. He w^as finally found in Sioux
City, Iowa, and the local authorities
had a good deal of trouble In landing
him, as he fought extradition every
step of the way.
The case has been pending since last
August.
NEGLIGENCE CAUSES
MANY WOMEN TROUBLE
"More women lose their health by
neglecting themselves," writes Dr.
Frederick Upton in Woman's Realm,
"and permitting unnatural secretions
to accumulate than from any other
cause. This conditon can be effectu-
ally overcome — and even cancer can
be prevented at times — by the use of
a very simple and harmless douche,
made by dissolving a teaspoonful of
alatone In a quart of warm water.
Used two or three times a week, there
will be no return of the trouble and
the organs will be kept In a state of
perfect health and cleanliness.
"Women always feel a delicacy In
consulting the family physican upon
this subject. This will not be neces-
sary if they use alatone regularly.
Alatone can be purchased at any drug
store in original 4-ounce package."
TAe Store of Qualitv."
Here Are Some ''Extra Special
Price Quotations'' from the
Home of Fine Linens— for To-
morrow.
3Sc Plain Voiles, also striped, 27
inches wide, beautiful
for waists and
dresses
36-inch Waist I-inen, every thread
flax, medium weight /^ ^
for tailored waists, • ■^^/^
from 50c to \^K^\y
27-inch Dotted Swisses, small,
medium and large -^ y^
dots; regularly * ■ J/^
15c, for -*• vrC/
35c and 25c Waistings — Sheer
lawns, in stripes and checks, dimi-
ties, madras cloths, ■^ ^\
shercttes, with fancy I ^w(^
linen finish ^"^
36-inch natural color, All-pure Linen Suitings, for children's wear;
regularly 35c, yard, at 25c.
Fancy Needlework
special Prices—
American beauty Pillow with
scarfs to matth — on ecru linen,
pillows 65c, scarfs, $1.
Pillow and Scarf, stampt on
green woolen burlap, design of a
thousand flowers, to be workt in
green, gold and black — pillows 75c,
scarfs 75c.
Very handsone Centerpiece and
Scarf and Pilloir, stampt on cream
linen, in a conventional Japanese
design, to be embroidered in
shades of old lilue; selling at 65c,
Cross Stitch Pillow — Centerpiece
and workbag, workt in shades of
pink, blue, yellow and brown — 59c
for pillows, and scarf bags at 40c.
Conventional Pillow, stampt on
green woolen burlap, to be em-
broidered in three shades of gold-
en brown, three shades of green
and outlined with black. The price
is 75c.
Poppy Pillow, top stampt on
ecru, to be finisht with a hand-
some braid, for 50c.
Conventional design in Peacock
feathers, to be embroidered in
three shades of old blue, green and
gold, outlined with black, at 8Sc.
95c and 59c resipectively.
These will serve as exemplars and give an idea of the many
pretty things featured by our Art Department at this time. To
reiterate, prices are exceptionally low, as you will readily see if
you step in for a few moments tomorrow morning.
80 Acres IK [80 Acres
A Summer Home— A Fine Farm!
One of the most picturesque spots in St. TjOuIs
county — juBt the place for a summer home or fine
farm. lieautiful maple and yellow birch trees, with
1,600 feet on both sides of Lester river. Natural
chance for private trout pond, with power for elec-
tric lighting-, at a ccst that's not worth inentioninfir.
Excellent soil. On good county road, 2 miles from city
limits. Boundaries surveyed. Positively the finest
and chcaiiest property on Lester river. Why not hav©
one or more of your friends go in with you? Price
162.50 per acre. Torrens title. No trouble to show
you this.
C. FItANCIS COLMAN, Owner,
421 MANHATTAN BL1>G.
D. H., April 20, lUl.
To please you,
To fit you,
To have you satisfied
That is our ambition.
We realize it with
STEIN-BLOCH
SMART CLOTHES
$20, $21, $30.
They fit better than anj/ other clothea^
and they give you better value.
At Third Avenue West.
FOOT NOTE :
Columbift I3.S0 btioes for men aod women.
J
1
*
1
i
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1
1
j
1
'
1
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T
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Thursday,
WPI
i«9B
Tf**^
iV**i«i
i«F
THE DULUTH HERALD.
. Aoril $0, 1911.
MARINE NEWS
SHIP ORE TO
TWO HARBORS
First Trainloads Are Sent
to the Iron Range
Docks.
Steamer John J. Boiand Leaves
for Buffalo With Grain
Cargo.
The season of s'.iipping: ore has start-
ed on the Duluth & Iron Range rail-
road. Yesterday the first trains of ore
were sent from the mines down to the
company's docks at Two Harbors. Four
trains went dk»wn yesterday, and It is
stated at the local offices of the road
that the shipments will be increased.
They are loadlner about 14,000 tons
a day at tlie mines. From the state-
ment made at the Duluth offices, it is
believed that loading on the boats will
begin April iS.
Tiiere has been no ore loading report-
ed at any of the docks in West Duluth
or i>upe'rii>r. and aocordint? to the
present indications, there will be no
ore loading the present week.
The steamer John J. Boiand is the
second boat to leave. The big vessel
got away today and Is loaded with
grain for Buffalo. According to the
reports the Soo locks will be open by
Saturday and it is expected that some
ni"re boats will leave here tomorrow.
Tliere will also be a big fleet of pack-
ago freighters leaving ti.e lower lake
ports just as soon as the locks are
open.
INSISTS ON PROSEI'ITION.
State Bank ConioiUsioner Wants
Cashier Arrested.
Topeka, Kan.. April 20. — Bank Com-
missioner Dolley announced today that
If A. K. Jordan, cuunty attorney of
Mitchell county, does not cause the
arrest of E. F. Burns, tlie cashier of
the Home State Bank of Tipton, in
whose accounts a $l<i,O00 shortage was
discovered, the attorney general will
be instructed to take charge of tlie
prosecution. He says that a suit will
also be commenced to oust Jordan for
neglect of duty.
Burns and his relatives have made
g.jod the shortage, and the oCTlcers, it
i.s said, refuse to prosecute him.
H
• It It
Sarsaparilla
Leads all other medicines in the
cure of all spring ailments, hu-
mors, loss of appetite, that tired
feeiingf, paleness and nervousness.
Take k.
Get it today. In ustial liquid form or
tablet.s called Sarsatabs. 100 doses $1.
r-^
American Exehang* Nal'l
K
A Recommendafion
That Counts!
^ Have you ever thought
of a savings bank book as
a letter of recommenda-
tion in seeking a position
where responsibility and
trustworthiness are re-
quired?
A savlnjjs book showing
rcarular dep<>slt.s coverinK an
cxtfndetl iK'rioil, tells a story
of tlirift, enersy, and ambi-
tion that cannot be denied.
A dollar deposited in the
s»vin<is department of this
bank will start an aeconnt
whii-li will be your best
friend when out of work.
AMERICAN EXCHANGE
NATIONAL BANK
American Exchange Nat'l
F
RUNDOWN, DISEASED
"WORNOUT"
MEN
Young, Middle-Aged, Old.
WONDERFUL 0^1 A
CURES $1U
Not a Dollar
Need Be Paid
Until Cured
on our professional fee
f 10 for any disease, if you
desire to prove our cure
, . ia doubtful cases. Nei-
Examination Irae vousness. General Debil-
ity, Womout, RuQ-down from over-worlc
and careles.sne^s o( health rules, Pain in
the back". Kidney and Bladder troubles Ob-
structions, Rupture eiiliirgemenls, Varicose
veins and Varicose ulcers. Poor stomach,
Headache, Coated torgue. Skin and blood
disease, Rheuairvtlsiri, Piles, Colds. Catarrh
and catarrhal discharges. Come to a good
doctor— while the osdinary doctor Is ex-
perimenting and znuking mistakes ve ac-
coniplish cures. Come now and get onr
special low oiler. Best medicines furnished
from our own laboratories. Consultation
free anO invited. If you cannot call, write
for symptom blank, advice and book free.
Heidelberg medical Institute
Car. Fifth A Jackson Sts., St. Panl, Minn.
Old and Reliable— over 120,000 men have
applied to them fortreatment, why not you?
Men from all parts of the country are
r*>ing to these specialists to be cured.
ICE FIELDS
BREAKING UP
Warm Weather and East
Winds Rapidly Clearing
Soo Channel
Lighthouse Tender Begins
Placing Aids to Naviga-
tion in River.
Sault Ste. Marie. Mich.. April 20. —
(Special to The Herald.) — The east
winds coupled with the warm weath-
er are having their effect on the ice
fields of Mud lake and up tlie river
between Round Island and Iroquois
the last places on the chain of lakes
to open up in the spring. Above Iro-
quois where the slush ice Is stretched
for a distance of four miles. It is re-
ported comparatively clear today
o.ving to the warm winds of yester-
day.
Tliero is still a wide difference of
opinion as to when a boat will be able
to make the Soo passage but all agree
tiiat the channel will be opened to
navigation early next week if not the
last of this.
L'niied States vessel inspectors
Gooding and York of Marquette ar-
rived in the city today on their first
official trip of inspection this spring
The lighthouse tender Aspen left
this morning for down tiie river points
to begin the work of placing the aids
Lo navigation In t!ie Soo passage. The
spar buoys will l)e the first to be pur
in place after which the can buoys
at the encampment. East Neeblsh, \ 1-
ilal. Shoals. Point Aux Pins and other
places, will be set.
Tr.e new operating gates for the
upper end of the Weltiiel lock which
were launciied last summer and left
in the slip at the Union dock were
cleaned of tlielr coating of Ice and wul
!)e ready to move out as soon as the
slip is clear of ice It is the intention
to hang the leaves as soon as the canal
is filled and It will be necessary to
place them in po.sition before the lock
can be put in commission. The new
guard gates which liave been under
construction all during the winter will
be ready for launching in about a
month or six weeks.
There has been a report to the ef-
fect that the American canal would
be delayed In opening this spring or
account of the Great Lakes Cement
company's contract on the south piers.
Supt. Sabin denies this and says that
tile canal will be opened as soon as
there are any boats to lock through.
DRIMMOND LEAVES
THE CANADIAN SOO.
Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., April 20. —
(Special to The Herald.) — When the
steamer T. J. Drummond of the Algoma
J^teamship line left the Canadian Soo
this morning for Michipicoten to load
ore for the Canadian Soo steel mills,
navlgatio. non St. Marys river north
was opened for the season. The boat
passed Bay Mills heading for Iroquois
point proving that the ice in the river
is not impassable north of here. Be-
yond Bay Mills there is no heavy Ice.
Announcement was made this morning
that the Canadian Soo lock would open
for the season Saturday morning. Capt.
Root, local manager for the Great
Lakes Towing company declared this
morning that examinations had proven
to him that the ice in Mud lake south
of here is on Its last legs and that
by Saturday morning the entire Soo
pa'ssage will surely be open.
One Conductor Helped Back to Work.
Mr. ^Vilford Adams is his name, and
he writes: "I was confined to my bed
with cluonic rheumatism and used two
bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy with
good effect. The third bottle put me
on my feet and I resumed work as con-
ductor on the Lexington, Ky., Street
Railway. It will do all you claim in
cases of rheumatism." It clears the
blood of uric acid. All druggists.
AMUSEMENTS
TONIllHrS ATTRACTIONS.
LYCEUM— "The Midnight Sons,"
ORPHEUM— Vaudeville.
ODEUM and LYRIC— Photoplay.
Green Room Gossip.
One of the biggest entertainments
ever presented upon the local stage is
the nromise made for 'The Midnight
Sons, ' when this big musical attrac-
tion is presented at the Lyceum to-
night and the balance of tlie week,
witii a matinee Saturday.
Lew Fields, who has now become
recognized as one of the most enter-
prising producers of big show pi.eces,
is resi>onsible for this entertainnrient;
in fact, it was the first of the series
which Mr. Fields has presented since
he became an independent manager.
It has astonished the public with the
enormous size of its scenic effects and
by the unusual length of its cast, and
the number of chorus people employed.
"The Midnight Sons" was first pro-
duced at the Broadway theater in New
York, two summers ago, ran tlirough
the entire summer and was not with-
drawn until the holidays, and then
only when existing contracts required
Its transfer to another city. It re-
mained three months In Boston, four
months in Philadelphia and has been
presented in all the big cities to ex-
traordinary receipts.
It will run until Saturday night and
a special bill has been made of "The
Girl Question" for Sunday afternoon
and evening. It will be given them
for its last two performances in this
city.
* * *
There is an eligible bachelor worth
$100,000 at the Orpheum this week.
He is Master Gabriel, the little come-
dian who Is appearing In the featured
sketch on this week's bill.
Gabriel has made a fortune from the
.stage. He and Al Lamar, who plays the
role of Tommy Tucker's father, have
been associated for years in theatrical
ventures, and Gabriel now owns sev-
eral New Y'^ork apartment houses, auto-
mobiles and a big farm on Long isiand.
The little comedian has a shrewd busi-
ness head, and his ventures have been
uniformly successful. He is said to be
one of the richest performers In vaude-
ville at the present time.
•The subject of matrimony hasn't
disturbed me In the least so far," said
Gabriel. "Thus far I have escaped the
disease, but one can never tell when It
will come."
■ Interviewing Gabriel gives the inter-
viewer a very odd sensation. Although
the little fellow has the appearance of
a boy scarcely out of dresses, he talks
like a man of the world, with a keen
sense of humor and a ready tongue,
and his opinion.'? and Judgment com-
mand the respect of his associates.
Gabriel Is the owner of his act ar^d the
manager in fact as well as In name.
« « •
The new bill at the Lyric theater de-
lighted large audiences yesterday and
last evening. It ia a well diversified
Annual Sprijig Sale of House Cleaning Needs
— . T
THIS is surely the most welcome news for the housewife. A sale of house cleaning
needs of every description — articles that are needed in every house, and every day.
SALE BEGINS TOMORROW MORNING
We invite you to inspect the great values offered. Read through this list carefully; note the lov^ prices. These are but a few of the
many articles included in this sale advertised on this page.
If you do not see what you need for the kitchen, come anyhow, you will surely find what you want among the hun-
dreds of specials that wUl make this sale the most talked of trade event in Duluth.-:- »:- -:- -:- :
Curtain Stretchers
Regular $1.00 Curtain
Stretchers, special, each.
Adjustable Pin Curtain Stctchers — The.
highest grade make; sold
everywhere for $2.25, sale
price
68c
!rs— The.
$1.69
$1.25 Gas Plates 88c
tes, sole
88c
$3.75
Two-burner Gas Plates, sold
all over at $1.25—
sale price
Others at 25c up
to
Ironing Boards
The very best Folding Ironing
Tables, with iron braces, worth reg-
ularly $2.00 — sale price
— each
$1.39
Helpful Things for the Laundry at Little Prices
39c
Clothes Baskets, regular
; sale price
Round Willow Clothes Hampers,
regular $1.50 values; ^^ AQ
Zrt sale price, each ^JIL»V5r
Clothes Wringers — Rival Brand — reg-
ular $3.50 value— 0$^ |JQ
special ^MmXw^F
Wash Tubs — Heavy Galvanized iron,
regular price 75c — sale Rjito
I Uttle Things at
j Uttle Prices
I Coat and Hat Hooks at
Per Dozen 5c
48c Hammers at. . . .25c
5c Garment Hangers
at 21/20
10c Nickel Towel
Bars at 8c
5c Shelf Paper 2^c
5c Carpet Tacks. . .2^c
r
40c Ripple Glass Wasli Boards at 28c
15c Scrub Brushes— Special at.
lOc
Step Ladders
6-foot, high grade Step
Ladders, regular $2.25
values, sale ^"t iCO
price, each.^ JL •O^
4-foot best grade
worth $1.50
sale price.
$1.10
Clothes Racks
Dandy Clothes Rack —
folds up and can be put
in a small corner — worth
98c. sale 4^C
price ^v\^
Wasti Ooilers
Extra quality tin. Our
$1.75 leader, ^-f OQ
sale price <JFi.»««F
Galvanized Water Pails
Worth 50c, sale 29C
price, each *iv^
Soaps and Cleansers
»all Soap OCa
0 bars for A9K,
Light House Cleanser —
25c
21c
23c
10c
6 cans
for
Dutch Cleanser —
3 cans for
Bon Ami — 3
for
12 Dozen Clothes
Pins
Cyclone
Washers
69c
Like cut, regu-
lar $1 value —
sale price —
69c
Paints and
Brushes
75c
House and Floor Paints —
sale price, per yz gallon. . .
Japalac, Varnishes, from 20c up.
Special Prices on Paints and
Brushes.
Galvanized
Garbage Cans
22 inches high —
regular $1.50 val-
ues, sale dQ^
price tfO^
Limit, one to a
customer.
28c
I
House Brooms
Regular 35c value —
sale price
Hardwood Floor Brushes, with
long handle, worth $1.50 —
sale price — 052/^
each 70C
Bath Room
Fixtures
A complete line of fine Bath
Room Fixtures, all on sale this
week at —
25% Off
Regular Prices
t
Garden
Seeds
The John Sulzer
North em grown
Garden and Lawn
Seeds — just in — per
package —
3 cents
Colonial Glass
Water
Tumblers
Regular price 60c
per dozen.
Special per
set of 6 . . . .
Glass Water Pitch-
ers, worth % tlLg%
25c, special. . Jl3C
15c
Garden Tools
12-Tooth Garden Rakes 16<
13-Tooth Steel Garden Rake — worth CQ^
75c ; sale price 3^C
15c Garden Trowels at 10^
25c Grass | Cr% ^^^ Garden | A -^
Cutters, at. . . 1 3C Sets, for 1 ||i/
Ewer and
Basin
Worfh$1.25- OO^
Sale Price OOC
Slop Jars—
Worth $1.25, at
88c
Spring Showing of New Dinner Ware, Cut Glass, Cliina, Alumi-
num Ware and Enamel Ware at Popular Prices
Side Walk Sullcies qQo
Worth $1.50— Special at _t/V^^^
)— Special
$5.00 Folding Go-
Carts— tf O a(k
sale price 90*UU
$12 Folding Go-
Carts—
sale price
carts- jjg 43
$15.00 Folding Go-Carts at $9.98
ChOdreii's
Garden Sets
at lOe to 25e
Toy Calls
with long handle —
worth 35c— S])ecial
Freimnih's
Special
ToUet
Paper
Regularly
5c a Roll
-Special 8
Rolls for.
HBsaa
tffik«»<
bill and appeals to critical patrons ot
the photoplay house. The bill includes
"Silver Threads Among the Gold, a
dramatic film; "A Card of Introduc-
tion." a comedy; "Big Hearted Jim. a
drama; and -The Widow Visits Sprlng-
town," a comedy. I. S Mistachkin
sinKS "Im Going Back to My Old Girl.
The mid-week change of bill at the
Odeum theater will take place tonight.
The new bill consists of "Paradise
Lost" and "Reds Conquest," dranias;
'Winsor McCoy," a comedy, and 'Bob
Sledding," a scenic film. George Lenz
will sing 'Bring Me Back My Golden
Dreams.
EVIL lXFLUE.';(Ti ALLEGED.
Proceedings Brought to Break Will
of Mrs. Murphy.
Nashville, Tenn., April 20.— E.xertion
of evil Influence over Mrs. Anna H.
Murphy, who recently died In New
York, by which. It l8 declared, they
seek to Inherit her fortune of $1,250,000,
Is charged in a suit filed here today
against Thomas Felder and his wife,
whom Mrs. Murphy adopted. The pro-
ceedings are brought by Thomas Buck
and his wife of Nashville, Tenn. Mrs.
Buck was Mrs. Murphy's second cousin,
and she sues for all of Mrs. Murphy's
personal estate, valued at $250,000.
•
mtrhlns Work Stnrts.
Thief River Falls, Minn., April 28. —
(Special to The Herald.)— The North-
western Drainage company of this city
has started their six ditching dredges
in Eastern Marshall and Western Bel-
trami counties, and these machines will
throw dirt, day and night, until the
frosts of next November.
HuiitlsTerrecfc
BaldnjAmrder
«"«' Flavoring "*
Extracts
are used by
thousands
of the
Best Cooks
in the
country.
Gives Best
Results
WILL TIME
AUTOMOBILES
"Fly Cops" With Stop Watches
Will Try to Check
Speeding.
Usual Spring Complaints Are
Already Beginning to
Come in.
The police authorities are prepar-
ing to put a stop to automobile speed-
ers, against whom many complaints
are being made in all parts of the
city, but particularly In the East end
and Lakeside.
It's the regular spring campaign.
They state that the measures which
will be adopted to put a check on the
speed fiends will be more stringent
than ever. As usual they wish to
give all of them a fair warning, and
after the expiration of a reasonable
time they will start to make arrests.
They declared this morning that they
will not stop at two or three arrests,
but that they will keep on bringing
them in as fast as the evidence can
be secured by men stationed between
measured distances with stop watches.
Aj3 regularly as the warning has
been given in the spring it has been
disregarded by some of the owners.
In the past quite a few arrests have
been made, and the result has been
a temporary observance of the laws.
Autos are being driven past the front
doors of the police station and the
front window of the mayor's office In
the city hall at reckless rates. It is
estimated that some of them whirl
by as fast as twenty or thirty miles
an hour. Further east it is stated
that they go evon faster. It was an-
nounced this morning that this will
not be tolerated. Not only are the
people complaining because of the
danqer of life, but because of the
huge clouds of dust which are stirred
up in front of their homes. The dust
rolls up In banks, It Is said, making
it impossible to spend a pleasant
evening on the front porch or the
lawn.
DULUTHIANS ViSIT
THE CUYUNA RANGE
F. L House and William Har-
rison Inspect Properties
in That Section.
Brainerd, Minn., April 20. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The private
car of President F. E. House of the
Duluth & Iron Range road brought
that railroad head and guests from
Duluth to the Cuyuna range yester-
day. As guests of the president were
William Harrison of Duluth, holding
half the fee of the great Kennedy
mine, the first producing mine of
Freckle-Face
fivw Remedy Tliat Remtrvea Freckles
or Costa Nothlns*
Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-Face,
to try a new remedy for freckles with
the guarantee of a reliable dealer that
it will not cost you a penny unless It
removes the freckles, while If It does
give you a clear complexion, the ex-
pense Is trifling.
Simply get an ounce of othlne — dou-
ble strength, from Boyce's Drug Store,
and one night's treatment will show
you how easy It Is to rid yourself for-
ever of the homely freckl<es and get a
beautiful complexion. Rarely Is more
than one ounce needed for the worst
case. „
Be sure to ask Boyce's Drug Store for
the double strength othlne as this is
live only prescription sold under guar-
antee of money back if it falls to re-
move freckles.
the Cuyuna range and operited by
the Rogers-Brown Ore company. Mr.
Harrison, In addition to this aluable
property, owns many tracts and in-
terests in sections of the ran^re near
Crosby, Ironton and other points.
Others in the party were A. L. Aga-
tln, an attorney of Duluth, an 3 A. W.
Taussig, a real estate man of the
same city.
An automobile tour was made and
the Kennedy mine was inspected and
the 100,000-ton dump examined. The
properties at the Armour, Pine Tree.
Meacham. Interstate, Iroquis, Keat-
ing and other mines were vi.dted as
well as much of the exploratory work
being carried on.
SurprLsf^ at Growth.
The visitors were taken to tie town
of Ironhub, where the ore cirs will
be assembled Into trains; to Cuyuna,
the town adjacent to the ICennedy
mine; to Crosby and Ironton near 6y
and to Deerwood, where th^ offices
of the Rogers-Brown Ore company
are located. President House said
this was his first visit to the range
and that he was surprised at the
magnitude of the operations. Under
Mr. Harrison's guidance the visitors
secured a most comprehensive view
of the extent of the workings and
activities on the range. Th«i active
building operations In Cuyuna, Cros-
by and Ironton were also favorably
commented on. The party leaves
Deerwood today.
LARGE CLOQUET FUNERAL.
Many Pay Last Tribute to Late Mrs.
Fred A. Lingren.
Swenson. The occasion was an lu-
formal affair, lunch was served, and
several invited guests were present.
J. A. E. Grenier, city clerk of Clo-
quet, was taken to St. Mary's ho.spital
in Duluth Wednesday. Mr. Grenier
lias been 111 with inflammatory rheu-
matism for .several weeks and is in a
critical condition.
Cloquet, Minn., April 20. — (Si
The Herald.) — The funeral of W
A. Ldngren, who died so sudde
Friday morning, was held Tues
ernoon at the Swedish I
church. Rev. C. O. Swenson off
Mr. and Mrs. Lingren have
Oloquet twenty-six years a
church was crowded with frlei
fioral offerings were many and
ful. The church choir rend
Swedish hymn, Mrs. Lofjjren ol
sang "Face to Face." The
male quartet sang "Beautiful
Somewhere." Mr. yind Mrs.
and Mr. and Mrs. Glfford atter
funeral, also Mrs. Llngren's sis
Burg of Brattleboro, Vt.. and
and nephew, Miss Johnson, a
^urg, from the same place.
Talk on Clab Work.
Miss Baldwin, secretary of t
library commission, was a guei
North Country Study club thi
noon, and gave an Interesting
olub work at th« home of
•eclal to
rs. Fred
nly last
day aft-
lUtheran
iciatlng.
lived In
nd the
id.s. The
beautl-
ered a
Duluth
Swedisii
Isle of
Liofgren
ded the
:er, Mrs.
a niece
nd Carl
he state
it of the
s after-
talk on
Mrs, Ed
Roi-Tan, fifty 10c cigars 13.85 per
box. 319 West Superior street.
Norvveftrlan Paper for Fari^.
Fargo, N. D., April 20. — The now Nor-
wegian newspaper for . argo Is now
pratcically a certainty. Almost all of
the .stockholders have placod subscrip-
tions with the promoter.s of the new
venture and already about $7,000 In
stock has been subscribed.
It Is planned to open an entirely new
plant and establish a fully equipped
newspaper and job printing house, al-
though not a large one.
Mot hern' nay.
Pierre, S. D., April 20. — Governor
Vessey has set Sunday. May 14, to b©
observed as mothers' day in this state.
^
/ AWNING BRACES
I screwed up with J
EXPAIM S I OM
can't work loose or pull out
The screw is inserted in an ex-
pansion shield which spreads
at the inner end, forming an
immovable wedge.
Come and see our line
of Sebco Products
NORTHERN
HARDWARE CO.
4 ^^
i^
1 }
=9"^
SSSSBSSBSS^fffi
y.1 l^ilai rf 1^
Thursday^
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
.d^iJBauta
ir
LOSES'GAVEL
AND MCHER
t» i
Speaker Dunn Finds Some One
Carried OlT His
Pro|ier^«
Washburn Will Carry "Seven-
Senator" Bill Before
the Courts.
SENATOR JAMES P. BOYLE
Of Eveleth.
All roads will lead to West Duluth
toniKht.
The ninth annual dinner and "love
feast" of the West Duluth Commercial
club will be held at Wade's hall and
no rains are being spared to make the
event eclipse all former affairs. Cov-
ers will be laid for 400.
Delegations from Proctor, New Du-
luth, Two Harbors. Superior, besides
a number of prominent Duluthlans
•will attend. H. H. Peyton, president
of the Proctor Commercial club will
head the Proctor delegation, and Peter
Knudson, the New Duluth contingent.
Mayor Frank Crumpton will come over
from 8upeilor and will respond to a
toast on the program. John Dwan of
Two Harbors, well known In Duluth,
mav also be here.
W. B. Getchell. former Eighth ward
alderman, will preside as toastmaster.
The program, after the dinner is as
follows;
Invocation
Rev. D. W. Lynch.
Orchestra music
Flaaten's Orchestra.
Address of welcome and introduction
of toastmaster
L. A. Barnes.
Toastmaster
W. B. Getchell.
of Duluth"
Mayor M. B. Cullum.
of Superior"
Mayor F. R. Crumpton.
W. B. GETCHELL,
Toastmaster.
tin, E. J. Zauft. Thomas Olafson. J. J.
Frey. A H. Merriman, Dr. C. U. Keyes.
Andrew Myles, F. W. Jolitz, J E. Fou-
blster, J O. .Johnson, M. J. Filiatrault.
A. Henrikson, JL. R. Clark and J. Allyn
Scott.
•City
"City
Solo .
Louis Dworshak.
"Northern Minnesota"
State Senator James P. Boyle.
"The Pres." '
Charles S Mitchell.
"Reciprocity with Canada"
J. Adams Bede.
Solo
John H. Matheson.
"Agricultural Possibilities of St.
Louis County '
L. B. Arnold.
"Municipal Government"
Alderman James A. Wharton.
The supper will in itself be a
treat. The women of Asbury M. E.
church have prepared it and will serve
the meal. The decorating scheme has
be«=-n worked out with colored incan-
descent Mghts on the tables, about the
banquet liall and even m the street
at Central avenue and Ramsey street,
where large "Do It For Duluth' and
••Welcome' signs will attract the vis-
itors. ., i -
The affair will begin promptly at 7
o'clock. At 6 o'clock the reception
committee will meet to make the
final arrangements. This committee
has the following members: L. A.
Barnes, president, chairman; A. G. Ma-
caulev, vice president; M. J. Murray,
eecretary. George M. Cruikshank,
treasurer; A. J. Meldabl. W. B. Getch-
ell C. F. W. Korth. L. B. Blechl, "r.
W Tllke and Directors L. Ramstad,
David Sang, C. M. Brooks, P. H. Mar-
Wherever there is Pain
apply an
Alleock^
PLASTER
The Worid'« Gr«ate«t External Remedy
Blasting a Menace.
On the complaint of residents in the
vlcintiy of blasting operations on Fifty-
seventh avenue west the police last
evening stopped a contractor employed
by the Canadian Northern railway from
blasting out a cement basement in the
path of the right-of-way. It was
claimed that only two men were pre-
paring the charges and watching out
for any possible accidents and that not
enough precautions were taken.
♦
Cleaning the Lockup.
This is "housecleaning time' at the
branch West Duluth police station.
Tlie station is being renovated through-
out and the cells have had a new coat
of kalsomine put on.
West Duluth Briefs.
The funeral of Matthew Fallon,
aged 57, of North Thirty-ninth ave-
nue west, who died Tuesday at St.
Mary's hospital, will be held from the
St. James Catholic church. Fifty-sev-
enth avenue west, at 9 o'clock tomor-
row morning. Burial will be in Cal-
vary cemetery.
A celebration of the seventh anni-
versary of the organization of Frater-
nity lodge. No. 860, Modern Brother-
hood of America, was celebrated last
evening in Great Eastern hall by the
members of the order. Addresses
were given by L. A. Barnes, president,
and J. F. Dykeman of Erainerd, dis-
trict deputy.
Mrs. C. R. Keyes this afternoon en-
tertained the West Duluth branch of
the Women's Christian Temperance
union at her home, 705 North Fifty-
seventh avenue west. Mrs. J. H. En-
gel spoke on "The Mother and Her
Child."
Watch repairing. Hurst. W. Duluth.
"The annual banquet of the Danish
Schvensil club was held last evening at
Great Eastern hall. Covers were laid
for about one hundred. Among the
speakers were L. Hanson, Matt Han-
son. Hans Lunding and others.
The annual tneeting and election of
officers of the Union Match company's
baseball team will be held this even-
ing at the home of Fred Dellborn,
5119 Wedena street.
Joint memorial services of the West
Duluth and Proctor lodges of Odd Fel-
lows will be held Sunday at the Proc-
tor M. E. church. The services will
be held in the morning and Rev. C. W.
Ramshaw. pastor, will preach.
W. H. Walton has returned from the
coast.
Special sale of ladiesr' shoes now
going on. See our line of lace cur-
tains, also curtain and drapery goods
at right prices. Our hats for ladies,
misses and children marked at a "go
quick" price. P. J. Blals, 201 South
Fifty-seventh avenue west.
Miss Emma Brighton of Fond du
JAMES A. WHARTON.
Lac, Wis., is visiting in West Duluth.
Thomas Martin of St. Cloud is the
guest of West Duluth friends.
Hats for father, mother, brother,
sister; also baby. P. J. Blais, 201
South Fifty-seventh avenue west.
George Ross is visiting in Cloquet.
«
Packing and Shipping.
To pack furniture properly for ship-
ping is an art. We guarantee our pack-
ing. Estimates of cost furnished free.
Call up either 'phone 492.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE CO.,
210 West Superior Street.
Rummage Sale
Benefit Noiehborhood Huntic, April Zlwt.
^end duiiatluDN to '2'M Went iiuperior
Htreet, or phone .MelroKe J31)l, or Mel-
roMe ir»S9, tonigbt or early Friday
inornlne:.
FORCED TO
DIVIDE PAY
Thomas Clark, Jr., Says He
Helped Pay Judge Middle-
coff's Stenographer.
St. Paul. Minn., April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Me^ibcrs of the legisla-
ture quietly gathered up odds and ends
this morning. There were belonging.^
to pack up and in addition there were
final calls on the governor and other
officials. These - were not purely
formal. Among others was J. N John-
son, who was in conference for some i
t'me with J. A. A. Burniiuist. Donald
Robert.son of Argylf came up to shake
hand.s with the speaker, who was in
ills room all the morning. George
Denzer was there with L. D. Brown
of Little Falls.
One slightly damaged ironwood
gavel and a cut glass water pitcher
have been taken froju the house cham-
ber in the capitol. The property was
supposed to belong to Si>eaker Dunn
and it was his intention to carry it
back to Albert Lea with him when he
goes Saturday. This morning he
strolled up to the de.'-k where he has
tat wliile the legislative tornado raged
below, expecting to find the gavel. It
was gone. Then he sent for Chief
Clerk Oscar Arneson, but the clerk was
unable to throw any light on the dis-
appearance. At thJB instant it de-
veloped that the pitcher was gone. Mi'.
Dunn wants the gavei because of the
associations, and he intends.^ to have it,
though he has to ,9wear out a dozen
searcli warrants.
WaHbbiiru Be 1 1 lee rent.
Representative W- D. Washburn, Jr.,
of Minneapolis announced today that,
If no one else moves, he will bring ac-
tion in court to set aside the "seven
senator" bill for an amendment to the
state Constitution.
Hennepin county Wehibers determined
when the bill passed in such an irreg-
ular way, to contest it to the end, but
I they have had no consultation since
I the session adjourned. Later definite
plans for the legal fight will be made.
"The passage of tbe so-called 'seven
senator' bill, by winch Hennepin coun-
ty n6w and probably Ramsey and St.
Louis counties in the ixiture, are de-
prived of the equal rights of suffrage,
IS a gross violation of the Constitution
of the state and of the United Stales,
which guarantee to every citizen equal
rights and equal protection of tlie
law," said Mr. Washburn today.
"The bill was forced through the
house in defiance of every rule of
order, and immediately taken to the
senate In violation ol parliamentary
law."
Not Signed Yet.
Governor Eberliart has not signed
the bilh He has appealed to the at-
torney general for an opinion as to
the necessity for iiim to sign it. No
word has come from that oftitflal. If
the governor finds it necessaiy he
probably will sign it, though many of
bis closest advisers are opposed to it.
The governor said this morning that
he has not considered the Keele bill,
providing for the nomination of United
States senators by «Wrect vote of the
peoj)le He would make no statement
as to his Intentions concerning that
till.
He has been kept busy signing bills
and there are a good many still left to
consider. The secretary of state and
his deputy are also at work on the
measures, and are reading tliem for
typographical errors.
This Sale of Seeds, Bulbs and Plants Has
Awakened New Interest in Flower Culture!
Theres' much evidence that this annual sale cf plants, bulbs and seeds will have an im-
portant bearing upon the floral beauty of Duliitl- this summer. It has awakened unprece-
dented interest in flower culture and thronged th<; basement with enthusiastic homecrofters,
gardeners and truck farmers throughout the day.
The plants on sale arc hardy field grown stock, acclimated to this region, and come from one of the
largest and most reliable nurseries in the country. Salt prices represent but a mere fraction of usual
cost, and assortments are very complete for tomorrow s choosing. Be prompt and early.
2,000 American Beauty Rosie Bushes Sryo-.S;;
the kind that grew and bloomed so luxuriantly in Duluth las: spring— greenhouses would ask $i for
them— sale price is
15c
USUAL
PRICE
50c to $1
Rose Bushes
Crimson Rambler,
Dorothy Perkins,
American Beauty,
Earl of Dufferin,
Magna Charta,
Mme. Plantier,
Persian Yellow.
Flowering Shrubs
Spirea Bushes,
Peonies,
Snowball Bushes,
Lilacs, purple and white.
Climbing Vines
Clematis,
Boston Ivy.
Perennial Plants
Oriental Poppy,
Double Hollyhock, (red,
white, pinl, yellow and
maroon),
Japan Iris,
Shasta Daisy,
Larkspur, «■
Sweet William,
Phlox, white and pink,
Syringa,
Golden Glow.
Fruit Bushes
Raspberry,
Gooseberry,
Currant.
THE SECRET
of S T. .Sorensen's success — being
satisfied with a small profit ana giv-
ing his custonners
ZM g^ thf.> muKt for the
|_ 11 money, the great-
j\M est values to be
_ had. Keeping his
AMn shelves sto c k e d
.^V^ with the best
A 0^ new styles, direct
S^ from the factory.
T|J and fitting feet
■^ right, (in other
words — satisfied
customers.) You ^ave from |1 to $2
on every pair of Sonensen Shoes and
Sljpi2er.s. ..». ^. ^
See our windows, where the birds
fly."
3t7 WEST SUPERIOR STREET*
Brins Vt* Your Shoe KepalriuK.
All Work Guarauteed.
Save Sickness
The prompt relief given in acute
Btomach, bowel and liver ills, has
created an annual sale of over six
million boxes of
Beecham's Pills
Sold Everywhere. In boxes, lOe and SSc.
Claiming that J. B. MiddlecofT re
quired him to turn over $50 of the
salary he drew from the county each
month to Miss Rose Beihoffcr, who
was acting as Judge Middlecoff's pri-
vate secretary, Thomas Clark, Jr., has
brought suit in district court for $600
tlius paid, and for 160 he claims to
have expended In campaign work for
Judge MiddleccfC in August and Sep-
tember, 1908.
Clark was clerk of probate when Mr.
Mlddlecoff was judge. In the com-
plaint, Mr. Clark alleges that Miss
Beihoffer was ostensibly a stenogra-
pher tor the probate court and drew
$25 a month from the county. Mr. Ciark
was drawing $150 a month as clerk of
probate, and he claims that Judge
MiddlecoPf required him to pay $50 of
his salary to Miss Beihoffer, whereas
she was actually engaged in private
work for Mr. Mlddlecoff, he says. He
says he paid the money because of fear
of dismissal.
Garden Tools
The needed implements for beautifying
lawn or making garden, all at lowest prices.
Garden Spades, stamped steel, square or
pointed, 25c.
Spading Fork, 4 prongp, 79c and 98c.
Hoes, Warren and regular styles, 23c,
49c and 79c.
Rakes, garden variety, 23c, 69c and 85c •
lawn rakes, wire teeth, at 49c.
Trowels and Weeders, each lOc
U V
IJ.rJ»« *.,»..#& T«>.&A« B«est variety of h:i:dy plants.
Hydrangea irees 4 to e feet high. i-/\^
W'irih to $2.50; sale price, only %J\jC
Bulbs
•f-*^^^'-' ■'-^•^IW
Gladiolas, 14 varieties,
each, 2o, 4»*, 5c, 10c; doz.,
20 r, 40c and 50c,
Caladiuin ( Elephant's
Ear), 5c and 12c.
BeKouia.s. single and
d<-uble, each. 5c: doz, 50c
Maderia Vine, 3 for 5c.
Garden I.lly, each, 15c,
also 2 for 25c.
Tube Roseg, each, 3c;
doz., 30c.
Tailoring
Women'i Suitt. man
tailored to measure,
including matrrir/s,
lininfs, etc.. $32. &0
up. Inquire at
Drcu Goods counter.
Buttons Made to Order -Xlany Sizes.
Lawn Seed
Central Park Lawn
Seed, the most suc-
cessful mixture sold,
make* luxuriant lawns
— pound pkgs., 15c;
half pound, 10c.
Mushroom Spawn
Selected Ene;lish va-
riety, live spawn, in
large pound cakes,
each 15c.
Free Catalog I
Of Womrn't and!
' Childrtn'i Spring
i Apparel sent to out {
Id town cu»tomer»
upon request Write
today.
Moving Day.
FURNISHED FLAT
F'or rent to man and wife for one
year, completely furnished, ready
for housekeeping, six rooms modern,
upper side of First street, between
Eighth and Ninth avenues east.
n. p. dow.se & to.
100 Provideuee Building.
Fat Actress Made Slim
One cleTtr acfrM."!, Doris Cameron— to be exact,
4epend:> entirely upon Marmol.-i Prescription Tab-
lets fcr the preserraUon of a perfect figure. She h-ia
Mimed what tl-jjusanda of men and wuinen iilrt.Tdy
ffoTcd, Uiat this new furm of tlie famous JJanuola
PnscrJptfou safely wducea the ovcrfat body a pound
«r more a day. All dnixgl^tii sell Marmol.i Pre-
ji-rlptlon TableU at 75o for a larce case. If you
bate not uled iliem. Uo wO. Ttiey are tutmleaB aud
•OecUve.
Your eredit Is Good—Open an Ticcount
The moving of furniture requires ex-
perienced men to be handled properly.
We can furnish them. Also covered,
padded vans.
UULtUTH VAN & STORAGE CO,
ZIO West Superior Street.
Both 'phones 492.
CITY BRIEFS
BIG BARGAINS FOR EARLY
SPRING SHOPPERS. JUST
NOTE THESE VALUES I
Teachers of Deaf Coming.
The National Association of Teach-
ers of the Deaf will hold its annual
meeting this year at Delevan, Wis., in
July, and it is very likely a side trip
will be made to Duluth. An invitation
will be extended to the association
and many of the members are expected
to accept.
Cameron, tbe UpholMterrr.
Both phones. Furniture coverings
to please every fancy.
*
Bank Ci«arlnss.
Duluth bank clearings for the week
ending Thurtday, April 20, 'were |2,-
197,240.75.
FenMion Fund Officen*.
Officers ol the Duluth I'olice Pen-
sion association were elected at the
annual meeting at police headquarters
yesterday afternoon as follows: Pres-
ident, C H. Troycr; vice president, H.
W. Toewe; secretary, N. U. G. Terry;
member governing board, Donald Ir-
vine. The governing board Is sched-
uled to hold a meeting this afternoon
to receive applications from police-
men who are entitled to the benefits
of the association. The finances ot
tlie organization wer* reported to be
in excellent shape.
ment. He is dangerously 111, but it
wai< stated at the hospital this morning
that it was hoped he would pull
through.
■♦
Will Plead Guilty.
Frank Smith, the colored porter who
admitted taking diamonds valued at
>2,000 from G. W. Armstrong's pocket
while Armstrong was being shaved in
the Lenox hotel barber shop one day
this week, will plead guilty to second
degree larceny in district court thi.s
afternoon. He will not be sentenced
today.
Notice. ^ „.
E F Berg, hotel, bar and bilnard
supplies, has moved to 224 West First
street.
*
Jailer Han llecovered.
Jailer Dave Butchart, who has been
confined to his home the last few days
with a severe attack of the grip, was
at headquarters th;s morning. He ex-
pects to be back on the job in a day
or two.
. «-
Art Society .Meetlnif.
The Duluth Art Association will
hold a meeting this evening at tlx;
Corr:mercia! club to elect new officers
and to prepare plans for another ex-
hibition later in the summer. All
members and others interested wui
be welcome.
<
CSet a Box of Your FnTorlte Cigar*
At the big tobacco sale in progrtsa at
the Smokery, 319 AVest Superior street.
Sale concludes in seven days.
Storage.
Furniture costs money, and when you
are storing, you want to be sure that
your goods are in a clean, dry and
safe building. We have fireproof and
non-fireproof warehouses, separate bins
and locked vaults. Special piano room.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE CO.,
210 West Superior Street.
ATTENTION
MODERN SAMARITANS
Both degrecu of Alpha Council will
meet TONIGHT. BuMlneMM of Impor-
tance. ^ ^ MORRISON, G. S.
RIGHT IN THE BUSINESS DISTRICT
This bank is particularly fortunate in its central location.
A safe deposit box is used frequ^-ntly by business people dar-ng
working hour*. We are convenient to the whole downtown
district. Entrance to our steel safe deposit vault is from the
ground floor. Boxes rent as low as $3.00 a yeir. Every con-
venience fcr customers.
'phe [^orthern ]\)ational gank
ALWORTH BHLD1.>G— "LOOK UP— VOU CAN'T MIfeS IT:"
and was ordered to p
reimbursement of Mo
supreme court held 1
was done, but the sis
Helcy for appeal has
appeal has been filec
to have the offlice tur
at once.
The case is being I
noon.
ut up bonds for
ody in case the
or Moody. This
ty days allowed
elapsed and no
Moody seeks
ned over to him
leard this aft€r-
Cigar Siile
At the Smokery, 319
street.
West Superior
IS BEHER
THAN ROPE
Extra Heavy Extension Rods
54 Inches long — just the thing
for bed rooms,
kitchens, the bath
room or dining room;
good, heavy brass
9c
Very
Huck Towels
good quality, with
border and good size.
Ask to see these values —
Friday and Saturday —
only
fine
9c
69c
$1.29
a Yard-TABLE CLOTHS BY THE YARD Sj^k '^!!^^"se?eSl
very handsome patterns to select from — Friday and Saturday
bargain price, 60c a yard.
« n«««M CAD lllDlflllC These are twAity inches square
a UOZen run imrMlla _of a nne quality and handsome
design. At flJJO a doaen, this is an extra special offering.
Be sure to get some of these.
COCOA DOOR MATS i\".*l*"™ .^^f ?•. .^*:??. .^.^.^IT". 37c
^■'^^r%
25 PAHERNS OF
HOFI MATTING, Yd.
This celebrated fibre
matting comes in a
fine assortment of
figured patterns —
'3 soft, pretty colors —
j5 Just the thing for
your new spring floor
• covering.
PrlntinK and BookbindInK
Thwing-Stewart Co. Both 'phones, 114.
^
Burned By Oil Stove.
Dave Fields, colored, was burned
about the face and hands when light-
ing an oil stove early this morning
in his room at the residence of William
Miller, colored, 705 East Fifth street.
He was not seriously injured. He told
the firemen that he lighted the oil
stove to heat some water. The bed
clothing and some clothes in the room
were damaged. The loss will not
amount to over $50. The house is
owned by D. W. Scott.
Northland Prfntery.
Good Printing. Call Zenith 494,
WINDOW SHADES 22e
A big stock of good quality
ready-made Window Sliades —
on good rollers — all complete
with fixtures for hanging —
either dark or light ^reen.
These are 38 inches wide, 6
feet long — and big value.
Colonial Rag Rugs 69c Each
These handsome, popular rugs are big value at this price — suitable
for small spaces in bed rooma or bath room — a wide selection of popular
colors. Thtrd floor.
Take Out Clearamcen.
Clearance papers were obtained at the
United States customs office today by
the steamers Wissahlckon and Buffalo,
and they will probably leave for lower
lake ports tonight. Both are package
freigiiters, the Wissahlckon of the
Anchor line and the Buffalo of the
Western Transit company's fleet.
Card I'arty.
The newly organized Order of Mys-
tic Workers will give a card party at
Kalamazoo hall Friday evening. All
are Invited.
PERSONAL
Held for Forgery.
O. C. Olson, arrested on a charge of
second degree larceny, asked for an
examination when arraigned in police
court this morning, and his hearing
was set for Friday afternoon. Bail
was fixed at $300. The complaint was
made by E. B. Esterly, a Jeweler, who
claimed that Olson gave him a check
for *38 on the State Bank of Warroad,
and that he had no funds in the in-
stitution. He had purchased a watch
for that sum and tendered the check
in payment.
»
Cloqnet Man Very III.
C. E. Grenier, village recorder of Clo-
quet, was brought to St. Mary's hos-
pital In DululA yeat«rday for treat-
Mi.'is Mary Craig of 1825 Piedmont
avenue has returned from a year's visit
at her old home In St. .John's, N. B.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Helmerson of
Grand Marais are visiting at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. John Bohlin, 920 East
Ninth street. They will return to their
homo Sunday.
P. F. Fallon, chief of police at
Gracevlllc, Minn., is in the city, to at-
tend tJie funeral of his brother, Mat-
thew Fallon of West Duluth, who died
a few davs ago.
James Moonan and wife of Ely are
at the Lenox.
C Gamble of Cloquet Is at the Lenox.
G. W. Raymond ol Hlbbing is at the
Lenox.
William Rich of Chisholm Is at the
St. Louis.
Mrs C. R. Brown of Ely is at the
Holland.
Mis. McKenzie of Virginia is at the
Holland.
Mrs. Frank Mohrs is at the St.
Louis.
P. A. Smith of International Falls
is at the St. Louis.
Mrs. James P. Carey of* Virginia is
at the St. Louis.
R. C. Creyke of Chisholm is at the
St. Louis.
C. C. Butler and wife of Virginia are
at the McKay.
Hazel Cass of Tower Is at tlie Mc-
Kay.
Mark Elliott of Virginia, superinten-
dent of the Interstate Iron company's
properties, is in Duluth today.
RICHLAND COUNH
CONTEST ON AGAIN
Rossi Looks Forward
Lazy life in State
PrisoiL
to
"It Is a lot better than the rope,"
said Mike Rossi this morning in dis-
cussing his sentence which was com-
muted yesterday by Governor Eberhart.
Rossi is the man who twentv-two
months ago shot and stabbed Antonio
de Meo in the Omaha railroad yards.
He laid in wait for d<^ Meo and jump-
ed out upon him. Rossi was tried, con-
victed and sentenced to be hanged by
Judge William A. Cait of the district
court.
At the last session of the legislature
a ■ bill was pa.'^sed which abolished
capital punishment. Before signing
the bill Governor Ebjrhart commuted
Rossi's sentence. If he had signed the
bill and then commuted the sentence,
Rossi might have secured his release
on habeas corpus proceedings.
Rossi is in far better condition than
when he entered the county jail nearly
two years ago. Constant asso; ia-
tlon with men who speak English has
taught him the language and he now
speaks the language of the country
well. He is also in be ter physical con-
dition. ^ .
He says that he dees not intend to
work at all when taken to Stillwater.
He says that the cut in his arm which
was made before th( night of the
murder bv de Meo still bothers him.
"I will have a nice, lazy life ahead
of me. " he said.
an PAYS
EIGHKENTS
And SeUs Water to Proctor
for a Fraction Over
Three.
This Is Latest Claim Made
By Hillside Club
Members.
Why should the city of Duluth pay 8
cents for water used in sprinkling and
sell the same water to Proctor for 3V^
cents?
That is what is puzzling the mem-
bers of the Central Hillside club at the
present time, and at the meeting last
evening they discussed It in no gentle
terms.
The hillsldcrs expressed their deter-
mination cf continuing their fight for a
readjustment of water rates and some
of them stated at the meeting that they
would carry it Into the courts if neces-
sary.
The committee that Is at work on
the petition for improving Ninth street
reported that half of the necessary sig-
natures had been secured. The mem-
bers have been assured by the street
railway company that the extension of
the car line will be made as soon as
the street has been graded, and they
will proceed with the work of securing
signatures to the petition.
Officers were elected as follows:
President, C. E. Evans; vice prefcident,
A. J. Anderson; secretary and treasurer,
Arthur A. Fider.
The committees of the club for the
coming year were also named. There
are committees on legislature. City
council, finance, fire hall, schools;
streets, street railway, water and light,
press, trees, entertainment, improving
Seventh street, improving Ninth street
and improving Sixth avenue east.
Fargo, N. D., April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The Heley-Moody con-
test for tlie office of sheriff of Rich-
land county is again in court, this
time before Judge Pollock, who is
acting for Judge Allen In the latter's
absence. Judge Crawford heard the
contest in January and decided that
Moody had defeated Heley for re-
election by eleven votes.
Heley announced he would appeal
The bearing; of children Is freQuently
followed hy poor health for tho
mother. This supreme crisis of life
finding her physical Eystem unpre-
pared for the demands of nature,
leaves her "with "weakened resistive
powers and sometimes chronic ail-
^^ r'w^^»'4»»-'— --— ments. This can be avoided if
Mother's Friend is used before the coming of baby, and the healthy woman caa
remain a healthy mother. It is the only remedy that perfectly and thoroughly
prepares the system for healthy motherhood, and brings about a natural anJ
easy consummation of the term. Women who nse Mother's Friend are always
saved much suffering when the little one arrives, and recover more quickly, an',
■with no ill effects, or chronic troubles. Every expectant mother should safeguard
her health by using Kiothcif's Friend, ^ -
^Mo^fm
thus preparing her physical condition
for the hour of mo±erhood. This
medicine is for sale at drug stores.
Write for free book fox expectant
motaers.
BBADFIELD BEOIliATOB CO.,
Atlanta, Oa*
Mb^ife^
■^n •
■^'*.<W f-ii.
I
t
m^
4
_L_
I
f
Thursday,
■ 111 I I II ■ ■ m' ' ■ 'mm^'-'tmmmm
^^m^m^
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
"SIX-CYLINDER MAN WITH
THE THROTTLE WDE OPEN"
Thai Is Way Dr. George L
Vincent Impressed
Duluthians.
New "Prexy ' Electrifies Ban-
quet Guests With a
Real Speech.
All Wool
When buying your Spring
Suit be sure that the ma-
terial is all wool.
When you buy a suit here
you not only get one that
is all wool but the cloth,
linings, canvas, tape and
hair cloth is cold-water
shrunk. This is the reason
why our suits retain their
shape —
Orhers at $1 0 JL $1 5— None Better.
When you can pay us as
you get paid, why deny
yourself?
8 East Superior Si
V.
The House Where Your Credit
Is Good.
J
THE SECRET OF SUCCESS
Qeauine Merit Required to Win
the People's Coofidence.
Have you ever stopped to reason
why it is that so many products that
are extensively advertised, all at once
drop out of sight and are soon for-
gotten? The reason is plain — the ar-
ticle did not fulfil the promises of the
manufacturer. This applies more
particularly to a medicine. A medi-
cinal preparation that has real cura-
tive value almost sells itself, as like
an endless chain system the remedy
Is recommended bv those v/ho have
been cured, to those who are In need
of it.
In an interview on the subject a
prominent local druefgist says "Take
for example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-
Root, a preparation I have sold for
many years and never hesitate to
recommend, for In almost every case
It shows immediate results, as mar4j
of my customers testify. No other
kidney remedy that I know of has so
large a sale."
The success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-
Root is due to the fact that It fulfils
every wish In overcoming kidney, liver
and bladder diseases, corrects urinary
troubles and neutralizes the uric acid
which causes rheumatism.
A free trial bottle will be sent by
mall, absolutely free. Address Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.,
and mention this paper. Regular size
bottles sold at all druggists — 50c. and
Jl.OO.
George E. Vincent, the new presi-
lient of the University of Minnesota,
was the guest of iionor at a dinner a^
!.he Commercial club last evening
which was attended by about -UU
men. many of tliem graduates ot the
institution.
Dr. Vincent Is the man for whoin
the wora "strenuous" was devised. He
is a liuman hammer set on a liair
nigger, lie is a six-cylinder man.
L'sually he runs on high speed with
the throttle and spark advanced.
The brave '^00 wandered into the
banquet hall last night with evident
intentions of heroically going through
the painful ordeal of a banquet and
speeches. They preferred dinner at a
•cheap-und-speedy," or at home but
being put up against an open-raceu
vest aitair tiiey mechanically prepared
to "gabble, gabble and git."
No newspaper will have a full ac-
count of what Dr. Vincent said be-
cause the reporteis were too inter
esied m him and his remarks to make
many notes and -00 men were likewise
interested. When the Peerless leader
was making his famous gold speech
at the St. Louis convention in 1904 the
Associated Press had the time of its
life getting a report of the speech be-
cause the reporters were hypnotized
like other folk oy the Nebraskan's
eloquence. Dr. Vincent probably made
the best talk ever delivered at the
Commercial club. If he comes iiere
again folk who want to know what
l;e says must pay their money at the
gate Time is too valuable to waste
while he is talking in trying to jot
Uown his remarks. A shorthand re-
jiorttr would also have to be ambidex-
trous and work on a double sliift at
once to "get him."
Having been at the university only
two weeks, "prexy" said he had not
decided what he was going to do. He
lad been there long enough to find out
that the appropriation for the univer-
sity was insufficient. He promised to
iry to get enough money out of tlie
legislature to conduct tlie school as It
t ught to be. He promised economy
lut said his estimates of expenses
would be sufficiently generous so that
he could ave within the appropriation.
He said that the university would not
again be compelled to ask legislation
i& care for the deficiency In its treas-
ury.
A Man Aad His Work.
-A-bandoning the state's educational
irstitution as a thome, he discussed
man's relation to man. He assailed the
Idea of indlvduaiism and held a brief
for communism. Xo longer does a
man paddle his own canoe, ne Is a
aiember of the co-operative crew and
his work Is for the common good. Dr.
Vincent liked the athlete who laid
down a sacrifice hit to advance the
runner to s-icond but he did not feel
like cheering for the man who slammed
the ball to the far corner of the lot
to sliow what he could do. said ball
slipping into the big mit of a burly
outfielder.
On life's stage some folk are Just
behind the footlights. some have
.speaking parts such as "My lord, the
carriage awaits without," others carry
a spear and the rest are in the chorus.
Of course there has to be a chorus but
it should bo a philosophical chorus,
reflecting that the stage manager does
not alwayc: assign leading parts to
those capable of handling them, some
very ordinary folk being shoved into
the spotlight while some extraordinary
people are pushed back Into the
"-horus.
The speaker, as a philosopher, as-
sured his hearers, "hard-headed busi-
ness men," that he regarded them with
as much curiosity as they viewed him.
He told them they were philosophers,
too, although most of thena didn't know
it. t^ane naen follow their principles
but they make up their principles as
they proceed, changing them when it
seems necessary. Only insane men act
logically. Their purposes and their
actions are the direct results of their
premises. The relationship between
the cause and the effect, w^hen an in-
sane man la concerned, Is a straight
line. "You hard-headed business men."
said Dr. Vincent, "are philosophers but
only one philosophy Is followed at one
time." Religion Is stuck Into one pig-
eon-hole of the mind, business gets
another hole, science finds another, etc.
(Slang for "and then some.") One pig-
eon-hole Is always In action by itself,
the whole works never get a chance
gent in tho 60-horse power, fore -door, i
.six-oylmder buzz-wagon, leaving be-
hind, if not an odor of sanctity, at
least on^ of benzine. Sweeping along
In a cloud of dust this little Tjrother
of the rich, consumer of Paradise pap,
wealthy water, coryphee quinine, boob s
delight, etc., tslang for the "bubble ,
water.") this aristocrat of the road |
rides with only two seats. There is .
one for himself and one for his mechan- j
Iclan. If there were any such riders
before him, said Dr. Vincent, he hoped 1
thev would give the weary plodders a i
lift'now ami then. Some men are one- 1
cvllnder beings who make a l()t of i
noise but don't get very far. Others
have big bodies with plenty of varnish
and paint, shine and glitter, but their I
motive power Is lacking. They wourdn t i
get far in this town, said Dr. Vincent,
because they couldn't climb the hills.
The LnlversUy'* Pert. ]
A university doea not edu.-ate any i
one, .said the speaker. It merely ofters ■
an opportunity for men and women to
educate themselves. He thought this
opportunity was greater at an «'du^'i-
tional Institution such as he presided
over than at the University ot Hard
Knocks. It was quite disconcerting,
he thought, that .so many graduates
of the University of Life attained suc-
cess In this life. He hoped, perhaps,
that some day it might not oe.,'*?-
(Laughter from graduates of the uni-
versitv of Minnesota; applause trom
the graduates of the University of
Hard Knocks.)
In the game of life there are sports
and sportsmen. The sport predicts
his success. If it does not come, the
weather was not propitious, he was ill.
somebody sUpped him a package, etc.
(slang for "handed him a lemon ). The
sportsman does not boast. He says he
will do his best and he does it. if tje
loses, he congratulates the victor. He
preserves his self-respect. The sport
plays the game for himself; the sports-
man plavs It for the team.
When the City of Paris, once an
ocean greyhound, now a dachshund,
broke all speed records from Liver-
pool to New York. Dr. Vincent was a
passenger. One day was cloddy, and on
that <lay all recor.ls for a day 3 run
were broken. Reckoning on a cloudy
day might have helped, he thought. The
first cabin passengers were Joyful while
the stokers stoked away. One stoker
dropped dead, and that was distressing
news to the first cabin. No first cabin
passenger on an ocean-going vessel or
on the ship of life wants to hear such
newR. It makes him unhappy. A first
cabin passenger always should be joy-
ful and shfd sweetness and light. i=>oon
the nrst cabin heard that the stokers
were working in double shifts and
that water was being thrown on them
to keep them from collapsing. Nobody
wants to hear disagreeable news. The
first cabin passengers were quite dis-
tressed. Or course there must be
stokers, but stokers shouldn't fall dead
or keel over or do other uncomfortable
things which disturb one's peace of
mind.
A first cabin passenger can contemp-
late the second cabin passenger be-
cause the latter Is u.sually faring al-
most as well as the first-class passen-
ger but Is quite Inferior socially. This
pleases; the first cabin passenger and
a gentle light is disfused over his 30ul.
But the horrid stokers. They worked
and worked twenty-four hours a day
and the City of Paris broke all rec-
ords. As the vessel steamed past
Sandv Hook forty minutes ahead of
the fastest time hitherto made, the
first cabin passengers assembled on the
deck and cheered because the first
cabin passengers were achieving a new
trans-Atlantic record. The first cabin
passengers had done pretty well, thank
you. Let us give three cheers and a
And then, said Dr. Vincent, there
came on deck the stokers. And the
grimy men from the depths cheered as
the vessel churned through the waters
and the goal was won. The common
feeling of mutual participation in a
deed well done impelled the cabin pas-
sengers to cheer the stokers and the
stokers cheered the cabin passengers
and then descended to their stoke-
holes.
Dr. Vincent hoped first cabin passen-
gers would not blind themselves to the
life of the stokers who drive the ship
forward, that there would be more
team-work and mutual assistance be-
tween tho first cabin passengers and
the workers In the stoke-hole.
Dr. Vincent hoped the University of
Minnesota would graduate men and
women Imbued with lofty lAeal.9. If
their education has not taught them
the necessity of labor for the common
good It will have been wasted, he de-
Dean A. F. Woods of the agricultural
school described the proposed agricul-
tural school for Duluth and told of
the work that It will perform. He
said C. P. Craig was father of the Idea.
W. A. McQonagle, chairman of the
public affairs committee of the Com-
mercial club, presided.
BILLS THAT PASSED
AND THOSE DEFEATED
IN THE LEGISLATURE
(Continued from page 1.)
See Our Spring
Bostonian Shoes and Oxfords
$3.50 and $4.00
WILLIAMSON d^ MENDENHALL.
We'd Like to Show You Why
Your Spring Clothes
Ought to Be Chosen at The Big Duluth
DO THIS— Take just a few moments Friday or Saturday and step in here and
judge these Spring Clothes-creations for yourself; try them on before our long
mirrors; note their lines of style, the quality of fabric and oi workmanship; get
an idea of their character and' of the values presented. If ycu do that, we know
your Spring Clothes will wear the Big Duluth Label. The greatest assortment in
Duluth of
Spring Suits^ Overcoats and Cravcnettes
$10. $12.50, $15, 18, $20, $2L50, $25, $30, $35
Young Men s Spring Qothes
You young fellows will find much to interest you in th s display of Spring
Clothes — made especially to meet the requirements of Live Young Men.
L System Clothes $15 to $35
Other Makes $4.95 to $12.50
Snappy New
Spring Furnishings
Spring: Shirts —
A magnificent display of new
negligee and plaited effects. Many
with collars to match and French
cuffs, $1 to $3.
Spring Neckwear —
We believe we've got the finest
showing of Neckwear in the city
and we want you to see it. Rich
snappy new designs for you, at 50c
to $1.50.
Underwear —
Everything in Union and 2-Piece
Suits, 50c to $5.
Gloves —
Every new shade, in all the best
makes, $1 to $2.
This Is a Good Time to Get Acquainted With
Our Great Boys^ Store
If, indeed, you are not already one
of the thousands of mothers who
bring their boys here for complete
outfitting.
Boys' Spring Suits and Reefers
$2.45 to $16.50
Boys' Knicker Trousers, 75c to $2
Hcadwear
Hats, Caps,
Tarns and Novel-
ty Headwear for
the boys.
The highest
quality at the
lowest possible,
prices.
Furnishings
Everything for
the Boy from
Collars to Stock-
i n g s. Complete
assortments and
the highest qual-
ity in everything.
FOOTWEAR
Smart, stylish and dependabla
Shoes and Oxfords for boys of all
ages, $1.50 to $3.50.
Your
Spring Hat
may be safely chosen here with
full assurance of correctness,
quality and value.
Duluth's exclusive sellers of
Maflory Cravenette Hats
$3 and $3.50
Guyer, $3.50 and $4
Gordon, $3
^>m
1
— -~"~ — - •
I
Headquarters for
John B. Stetson Hats
$3.50 to $5
to play in concert. Each Uttle recep- zatlon, which was what the amazing
tac^e 13 on the Job now and then by Klemer meant when he charged that
itself. The contents of the mental the committees were packed, but speak-
plgeon-holes are never displayed ex
cept singly
The Hishway of Life.
In the days of the Greeks tumblers
came forth to amuse the business men
after the feast. Dr. Vincent hoped he
would have success with his mental
juggling. He appreciated the honor.
He hoped he would amuse. He walked
forward on a highway of thought and
it brought him to a figure of speech in
which was the highway of life. Every-
body Is proceeding along this high-
way of life to the City of Happiness
just over the hill, but somehow when
the cre-st Is gained there Is another
hill Just beyond.
Some folk are walking, others are
trotting, some are running now and
thin. A few are riding hungry nags
an^ occasionally there rushes by the
( THE BACHELOR
APARTMENTS
I
)
at 320 West First street, offer
VOL' all the comforts and con-
veniences of a first-class club, to-
getlier with tlie atmospli'ere of a
refined home at a very small ad-
vance over what you will have
to pay for "just rooms." Come
and Inspect them!
W. G. SHERWOOD t CO.,
MANHATTAN BVILDINO.
Mushroom Corns
!»Iost Painful of All Foot AUments.
How to Cure Them.
The Mushroom corn is so called
from its pitted cone top, resembling
a tiny mushroom. It burrows deep
into the toe and gets more inflamed rt^irT^'aH other nronosed measures
than other corns. For the quick re- j fLt'?.'?„^'L,-°'5^« JIdfnItmenT of YII!
er and organization were tossed about
on the surging surface of the house as
an eggshell might be played with by
the ocean In a hurricane.
The senate was, as usual, more se-
date, but not even that body could with-
stand the Inflammatory effect of the
Infamous Wels - Haycraft - Duxbury -
Moonan constitutional amendment re-
stricting the legislative representation
of the cities, and when the senate had
spent anight fighting over that crowning
piece of injustice, that body was nearly
as badly shattered as the house.
Ciood Presiding Offlcera.
The presiding officers of both houses
covered themselves with credit. Lieu-
tenant Governor Sam Y. Gordon of
Brown's Valley was generally admitted
at the close of the session to be as fair
and ablo a president as the senate ever
had, and Speaker H. H. Dunn of Albert
Lea was uniformly right In his rulings,
broad-minded and far-sighted in most
of hia committee appointments, and did
J.S well as any man could do to keep
in order the unruly body under him.
What did the legislature do?
Of at least equal Interest is what the
legislature didn't do.
First and most damning. It dian t re-
apportion the state.
The house passed the Congdon reap-
portionment bill, as fair a measure as
It was possible to make, and the sen-
ate after filibustering for a time, killed
THE PALM ROOM
At the SPALDING
MOST DELIGHTFLTL. AND LUXURX,
OUS RESTAURANT IN DULUTH.
■BP"
^1
lief and cure of these and all corns
and callouses the following Is the
most effective remedy known to
bcience. Dissolve
two tablespoon-
fuls of Calocide
compound in a
•^asin of hot wa-
ter. Soak the
feet in this for full fifteen minutes,
gently massaging the sore parts.
(^Lesa time will not give desired re-
sults.) All soreness instantly disap-
pears and the corn or callous can
easily be peeled off. It may be neces-
sary to repeat this for a number of
nights for a complete cure, but if
adhered to it will surely succeed. A
little olive oil rubbed on the part Is
very beneficial. This Calocide is a
very remarkable preparation for all
foot aliments and is no longer con-
fined to doctors' use, any druggist
has it in stock or will quickly get It
from his wholesale house. A twenty-
tive cent package Is usually sufficient
to put the worst feet in fine con-
dition. Bad smelling feet and tender
feet need only a few treatments, like-
wise with Inflamed bunions. This
item will be welcomed by persons who
have tried ineftectu»l powders and
tablets.
looking toward a readjustment of leg
islative representation.
As a substitute for reapportionment
the senate bassed, and the house con-
curred in, the most monstrous piece ot
injustice that ever came out of an
\merlcan legislative body — the pro-
posed Constitutional amendment pro-
viding that whatever its population no
county in this state can ever have more
than seven members of the senate. That
measure will go before the people at
the 1912 election, and upon It will be
based the bitterest fight in the state's
history — a fight between city and coun-
try, between narrowness and patriot-
ism— that may split the state Into hos-
tile camps that will not merge in a
generation.
What It Did Do.
Briefly, here is what the legislature
did:
Adopted the Oregon plan of direct
election of United States senators.
Gave the state highway commission
$150,000 a year for supervision of road-
making. ...
Submitted a Constitutional amend-
ment authoriiing the legislature to in-
crease the tax levy for roads from a
quarter of a mill to 1 mill.
Increased the state road tax from
one-twentieth of a mill to a quarter
of a mill.
Abolished capital punishment.
Created a new forest service with a
chief forester at J4,000 a year and an
annual appropriation of $75,000.
Submitted coDStitutional amendment
for commission plan of city govern-
ment and adoption of charters by ma-
lorlty votG
Increased provision for rural schools
and agricultural education.
Created two branch experiment sta-
tions in agriculture and one for dairy
and food d^^partment.
Raised state aid for county fairs to
175,000 a year.
Enacted new aatomoblle code.
Revised inheritance tax law.
Increased terms of railroad commis-
sioners to six years. ,. ^
Created state commission on uniform
legislation. ,^.. ^ ,, ,
Prohibited sale of "malt" outside of
licensed saloons.
Created state department of weights
and measures under railroad commis-
sion. , , .
Required railroads to make prompt
settlement of freight claims.
Exempted Minnjisota school, county
and municipal bonds from taxation.
Passed drastic oleomargarind act.
Established fourth state fish hatch-
ery at Detroit. ^ .^ j,
Required state licenses hereafter for
peddlers, transient merchants and
Itinerant physicians.
Granted locaJ option on liquor li-
cense to citles-.uh'ier 10,000.
Placed state agricultural society on
definite legal bajits.
Prohibited insurance companies from
transferring cases to federal cburts.
Imposed license fee on non-residents
fishing In Minnesota waters.
Provided that voters may vote for
state officers and presidential electors
where they happen to be election day.
Provided for a flat 3 -mill tax on
"moneys anfl credits."
Submitted constitutional amendment
to limit senator^ to seven from any
one county.
Provided for state regulation of em-
ployment agencies.
MeactureM Tliat Failed.
Here are aoina of the measures the
legislature failed to pass;
Reapportionment.
County option.
Tonnage tax.
Initiative and referendum.
Recall.
Woman saffrfJOi
Distance tariff.
State-wide primary.
Worklngmen's compensation.
Nonpartisan Judiciary.
Four-year terms for county officers.
Water supply commission.
County assespr plan.
Uniform assessments for purposes of
taxation.
Five per cent gross earnings tax on
railroads. ^ ^ .... ,,.
Increased damages for death. It was
supposed Tuesday night that this bill
had passed, but though it passed both
houses, the house failed to repass it
after the senate had amended it
slightly
Semi-monthly ©ay for railroad em-
ployes.
Anti-treating l»w.
Midnight lid for cities.
Reorganization of state departments.
R. C. Dunn road-house law.
Public utility regulation.
Federal Income tax.
For Nortkem MinneMota.
Northern Minnesota did not get all
It asked, by any means. Indeed, it
failed utterly to get the only really
Important thing— reapportionment. But
it got a few important things, after all.
Another very important measure
which was defeated by the efforts of
State Auditor Iverson was the bill di-
recting the state board of Investment
Catarrh Camnot Be Cnred.
wtth LOCAL AM>UC4XION8. as they cinnot reach
tba teat of tte Blseaaft CaUrrh Is t Uood or con-
sUtuUonal dlseaat. aa(^lQ order to cure It you must
take Internal remedies.'. HaU's Catarrh Cure U tak-
en Internally, aM act» directly on tha blood and
mucous surfaces. H^'s CaUnt Cure U not a
Qoack medlclna.-« Xt vas praecribcd by one of the
best physicians..^ this country for years and Is a
regular prescription. It U composed of the best
tonics known, couSblni*! with the best blood putl-
fleiB. acting dlictly lin the mucous surfaces. The
perfect comblnaUon aP* the two IngredlenU is what
produces such woudetC^ result« In curing Catarrti.
i}end for testlmditUl ftee.
r. J. CHBMfY & CO.. Props.. Toledo. 0.
Sold by diuagfats. (fflce 75c
Take HtU'i 9»i^tijf^^ ^^ conatlgattoa.
to sell the bonds of other states which
tiie state now holds and invest tlie
money in county, town, city and school
loans In this state.
Drainage appropriations, which have
amounted heretofore to $100,000, were
dropped, except enough to pay the
states assessments on work already or-
dered.
Here are some of the things Northern
Minnesota did get:
An appropriation of $25,000 for seed
for settlers whose crops were de-
stroyed by last fall's forest fires.
A bill allowing counties to appro-
priate |200 for demonstration farms.
Tlie new forestry service.
A farm school for Duluth, with an
appropriation of $65,000.
Monthly sales of state lands from
April to November, Inclusive.
Bill for tho relief of settlers on state
lands.
An appropriation of $50,000 for state
school aid In counties having untaxed
A reclamation board, with an appro-
priation of $8,000, to buy ten forty-acre
tracts, clear half of each and report
costs and methods.
St. Louis County Meaaiures.
So far as Duluth and St. Louis county
are concerned, they never were served
so well before by any delegation that
has been sent to St. Paul.
Tlie tonnage tax peril was averted
through efforts of the St. Louis county
delegation, and by a vote so large and
.so widespread over various sections
and parties that it should go far per-
manently to settle this question.
Duluth got its $C5,000 demonstration
farm, and the bill leasing the old state
elevator site at Oneota to the city for
public dock purposes went through. St.
Louis county got a fifth dL-^trict Judge,
and the range terms of district court
were changed to the satisfaction of the
range people. All the local acts needed
were passed with the exception of the
bin authorizing Duluth to issue $100.-
000 in bonds for public dock purposes,
which was cut off by the unexpectedly
early adjournment of the house Tues-
day night. The bill authorizing Duluth
to Issue $700,000 In bonds to build an
electric lighting plant went through
early In the session.
In both senate and house the mem-
bers from St. Louis county worked In
harmony and to the common end that
the best interests of the state, of
Northern Minnesota, of Northeastern
Minnesota, of St. Louis county and
their various home communities might
be served.
Made Good Rei>ords.
Senator James P. Boyle of Eveleth,
a young man and a first-termer, leaped
immediately into prominence and the
confidence of his colleagues, taking a
leading part in the most prominent
matters before the senate ably and
effectively. He became one of the
leaders of the senate, and his oratory
brought him considerable fame, so that
his mall has been filled with invitations
to make speeches. He led the break
in the Republican organization which
made the passage of the Keefe bill pos-
sible.
Senator Harry W. Cheadle of Du-
luth worked tirelessly, vigilantly and
effectively for Duluth.
Senator T. M. Pugh was, as usual,
an expert vote-getter for St. Louis
county, and bis long experience made
him a valuable aid to the newer sen-
ators.
Representative Chester A. Congdon,
chairman of the delegation, was, ot
course, one of the big men in the
house. His conspicuous abilities ma.de
him stand out above the heads of the
membership, and his advice was highly
valued by his colleagues. He was a
leading member of Speaker Dunn's
organization, and took an active and
effective part in all the proceedings of
the house.
Representative Cleon T. Knapp of
Chlsholm, though serving his first
term, proved to be a veritable "find"
for St. Louis county. A large share
of the credit for* the success of the
delegation during' the session Is due
to him. and on several measures, such
as the bill providing the new Judge,
the rest of the delegation agreed that
the credit Is entirely his. He is a
tireless worker, a good "mixer," and
few men. young or old, have sprung
into such prominence In the house In
a first term. He was chairman of one
of tlie most important investigating
committees, that on drainage, and his
service there was of great value to
the state.
Representative E. R. Rlbenack of
Duluth was another "fin 3." His serv-
ice proves most clearlj the wisdom
of those who believed thit a Democrat
or two In the delegatio i would be a
great help. Mr. Rlbenack was one of
the most popular members of the
house, and one of the most effective
members of the delegation.
Representative Anton Bergen was
"on the Job" all the tine and did ef-
fective work, as did Representatives
John A. Healy of Hibb ng and N. S'.
Hlllman of Two Harbors.
STILLMAN H. BINGHAM.
McDonnell gets part.
Duluth Contractor Given Part of
Grand Forks Paving.
Grand Forks, N. D., April 20. — After
a heated session of the city council tha
contracts for the year's paving, amount-
ing approximately to $108,000. have
been awarded. The R. S. Bloom com-
pany of Chicago secured the contract
for "two districts, the contracts on which
amounted to about $83,500, and Paddy
McDonnell of Duluth was awarded an
$18,500 contract for aspiialt concrete
paving. Six firms submitted bids and
all had representatives at the session.
3
SUFFERED TEN YEARS WITH
CATARRH OF THE STOMACH.
When
All
Efforts
Failed
Relieved
By
Pe-ru-na.
^■1
Could Not Eat Anything.
Mr. W. R. Calalian, proprietor and
stock raiser of Big Hill Farm, and
prominent fruit grower, R. F. D. 1,
Salem, Va., writes:
*"I write to express my kindness to-
ward you and your isood medicine,
Peruna.
'I had a very bad spell of sickness
and could not eat anything at all. My
head, stomach, in fact, my whole
body ached, and it looked as though
nothing would do me any good. I
had almost given up.
•'I decided to try a bottle of your
Pernua and before I lad taken half
the bottle my appetite came to me
and my head became all right. In
fact I was all right al. over. Peruna
cured me." *'
Bowel and Stomach Trouble.
Mr. W. J. Temple, 352 Union St,
Delaware, Ohio, writes:
"About three years ago last winter,
I -was taken sick with buwel and
stomach trouble.
"One doctor called It ulceration of
the bowels, another called it colitis.
Another doctor helped me tempor-
arily.
"Then a druggist recommended
Peruna and I followed his advice. I
took altogether five bottles and 1 con-
sider myself a well maiv,
"Before using Peruna, it was utterly
Imposible for me to do a day's work,
but now I can do farm work without
the least trouble or fatigue. I coa-
sider Peruna the best medicine
tMiic on the market."
i*^
I
!
I
DEFECTIVE PAGE
in^
•I,
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
I «. I I <Wi
h«-
t
I
r
«A
ARGYLEIS
UP;WDATE
Red River Valley T«wn
Boosts Agricultural Train-
ing in Schools.
Issues Booklet Showing Work
Done By Boys and Girls
of Schools.
■was a bxislness man at Cromwell, where
he was engaged in the general mer-
chandise and wood business. On the
afternoon of March 8 he was driving a
team of horses on the streets of Crom-
well, when one of the tugs came un-
hooked.
Home Klckn In Hend.
He jumped from the buggy and
reached for the tug and suddenly one
of the horses kicked him in the head,
fracturing the skull. He was taken to
the hospital at Duluth, and after a
month and five days the injuries
caused hi? death.
Mr. Violet was born March 2. 1860,
in Van Buren, Me. On June 1, 18S4, he
was married to Miss Angelina Trepan-
nier, at Wright Station, Minn. The
dec-eased left a widow and seven chil-
dren, as follows: Mrs. William l>e
Kolt of Virginia. Minn.: Mrs. Kmil
Kvpka, Albert, William, Sanford. Viola
and Alma Violet of Cromwell, Minn.
quakerIreacher
INSPECTS PRISON
Crookston, Minn.. April 20. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The Red river
valley has beea boasted about for
what it has accomplished as the break-
fast of the world, but loss attention
has been given to the practical work
of its educational institutions. Manual
training and domestic science are
now features of practically all pro-
gressive high schools or rural graded
schools, but added to these many of
the high schools of this section are
also doing excellent work in agricul-
tural training as well and the inter-
est developed is manifesting itself in
hundreds of well kept gardens in the
villages and better gardens on the
farms, due solely to the interest in-
oculated in the agricultural depart-
ments of the high schools. One very
noticeable feature of the resulting
gardens is that some attention is paid
to having them properly laid out to
look pleasing to the eye, and the
planting of various decorative flow-
ers, which add wonderfully to the at-
tractiveness of the gardens, and the
destruction of woods adjoining which
add as much to the thrifty and 'at-
tractiveness of the farm garden as to
the garden on the village lot.
Arjrylo Sets race.
The Arg>le Commercial club has
just issued a 50-page illustrated book-
let which shows most commendable
enterprise and will serve to advertise
the advantages of Northern Minne-
sota wherever it is being sent, and
the idea is to be followed by other
Commercial clubs.
The publication contains a frontis-
piece showing Argyle's magnificent
new high school building and full
page cuts are given elsewhere show-
ing the coiMng, sewing and manual
training classes at work.
But the special feature is a full
page illustration showing the students
busy in their gardens. Each boy last
year planted and oared for a garden
20 by 120 feet. Each boy has a va-
riety of vegetables, etc., and is in-
structed as to the planting and care
of the various varieties, and the keen-
est competition results. The knowl-
edge leads to better garilcns at home
and various experiments, and the re-
sult is really remarkable. The book-
let gives a resume of the courses of
study in all branches and as an ad-
vertising feature of Argj'le and vi-
cinity contains scores of homes and
business places in Argjle and some
farm views giving the names of own-
ers, which adds many fold to the
effect on the outsider inspecting the
book, and, lastly, some attractive
ri\er and landscape scenes.
CROftlWELL MAN IS
FATALLY KICKED
river last year. He claims that just
before his death and w-lille he was in
an irresponsible condition, the de-
ceased deded away a valuable piece of
mineral land located in Iron county.
He will take action to set aside this
deed. The defendants in this action
will be Leon Johnson, Martin McDon-
ough, William Helden and John Bran-
don of Iron Iliver.
DEVISES CURRENT MOTOR.
James Violet Succumbs to k-
jories Sustained When
Horse Kicked B».
Carlton, Minn., April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Kev. Father Bagley of
Duluth officiated at the funeral of
James Violet of Cromwell, Carlton
countv, held at Cromwell, Monday.
Mr. Violet died April 13 at St. Luke's
hospital, Duluth, from injuries teceived
near here.
Until about a month ago Mr. Violet
Detroit Man of Cloth Is Per-
sonally Examining Mar-
quette Penitentiary.
Marquette, Mich., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.)— Kev. S. D. Rogers, a
minister of the Quaker faith, whose
home Is at Detroit, is in the city mak-
ing a thorough personal investigation
of the Marquette prLson. Kev. Mr.
Kogers has made a study of penology
and reading some of the newspaper
stories regarding the Marquette prison,
he decided to make an investigation to
satisfy himself as to conditions. He
has been given free access to the prison
and its records and will probably spend
several days here.
ANOTHER CUYUNA
TOWN PROMISED
Rich Strike Said to Have
Been Made Across Rabbit
Lake From Cuyuna.
Cuyuna, Minn., April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — A new town will be
started in the very near future across
Rabbit lake, a mile from tiie city.
It Is reported that a rich body of ore
has been discovered in the immediate
vicinity of the proposed new mining
town and a townsite has been platted
and the lota will be put on the mar-
ket this summer.
The new promotors of the new town-
site are H. B. Blackwood & Sons. The
Blackwoods have lived on the Cuyuna
range for a number of years and have
done considerable exploration work on
their properties.
The milling operations on the
Cuyuna range promise to be more
active I'. is season than ever before
and from all indications this will be
a prosperous year In the new iron
country.
I WILL NOT IMPEACH
MARQUETTE WARDEN
Michigan Senate Kills Plan,
Aiso biii tor Aboushmg
torporai funisiiirieai.
Lan.-lufc,, Mich., April -O. — The sen-
ate, by a practically unanimous vote,
killed the bill passed last week by Uie
house prohibiting corporal punishment
In state prisons.
The senate late yesterday^ by a
vote of 11» to 9, declued not to receive
or try the Impeachment asjalnst War-
den James Kusseii of Marqueite prlsoi>,
brought to It by the house Tuesday.
The senate resolution cited that the
waruen is removable by the board of
c-ontrol, and commented on the fact
inai no formal notice of cliarges
usttlnnt the warden had been brought
to the board of control. 'ITie resolu-
tion further declared that the warden
la not a civil otflcer in the meaning
of the Impeachment paragraph of tlio
state Constitution, but Intimated that
ttio house miglit have brought pro-
ccodlngs against the board ot control.
South Dakota Farmer May Have
Solved Irrigation Problem.
Pierre, S. D., April 20. — C. J. McBeth,
a rancher on Cheyenne river, about
twenty miles north of Wasta, has
placed a current motor of hla own
devising in the stream, and by it is
pumping water for Irrigation for his
land. It Is claimed to be a success,
and If he has accomplished the de-
vising of such a motor, he has some-
thing more than Just his Irrigation
plant coming to him, as the current
motor Is one of the projects whi,.h
h.as been often tried, but never has
shown a success to any great extent.
missingIiax found
dead in lonely home.
Congressman I. L. Lenroot of Superior,
is the victim of the malady, and at
least a score of girls who stayed over
In Madison hav^ be^ exposed.
Bailsrer IJc«ii»e «],R00.
Badger. Minn., April 20.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Tlie riiew village council
has placed the saloon license at |1,500
per year, pool ttabln license at |5 and
(log license at |1 fo|f males and |2 for
females. ,
The pastor and tmstees of the M. E.
church have nt*t atld staked off the
ground for the new church which will
be built this spring. The work of
digging the bas(iment will commence In
about a week. V
1 **
MIcblKan Arbo/ Day May 2.
Lansing Mich., April 20. — Governor
Osborn has issu"ed iiis Arbor day proc-
lamation designating Tuesday, May 2,
as the day to ftt observed. He pays
particular attention lo the importance
of protecting trees and birds.
Nowfolden. Minn., April 20. — (Special
lo The Herald.) — John Hanson died at
his home In Marsh Grove township
under rather peculiar circumstances.
Just how long he may have been ill
no one knows, and he was seen the
last time about ten days before his
death. Ole Knutson went over there a
few days ago to see him and found
the door locked, and feeling sure that
something was wrong, he got two -of
the neighbors and came back and
broke In the door. They found Mr.
Hanson, who was a bachelor, uncon-
scious In bed, with no fire in the hou.se
and scarcely any bed clothing, and his
body was blue from cold. A physician
was called, who pronounced it a ca.se
of pneumonia. Mr. Hanson died a few
houis later.
MINNESOTA BRIEFS
Featherstone. He was born In Biele-
feld, Germany, June 22, 1836. He has
been a resident of the county since the
early fifties. He first settled In Hay
Creek, but later moved with his fam-
ily to the present farm liome in
Featherstone. He Is survived by his
wife and four sons.
Rochester — Miss Anna Mesky, a
young lady of 21 years, the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. August Mesky, resid-
ing three miles north of Orenoo, this
county, is dead as a result of a fire
which burned her entire body, her
clothing catching fire as she was rak-
ing burning rubbish.
Minneapolis — Homer O. Parkhurst,
58 years old, one of the oldest grocery
dealers in the city, died in St. Barnabas
hospital Monday, April 17. His father,
Orrln, In 1866, purchased the half block
at Fourteenth street and Hennepin
avenue and established a home and
grocery store, which was the first and
last stopping place for travelers on the
old territorial road coming In and out
of the city.
FIVE-STORY MINNEAPOLIS
BUILDING IS DESTROYED.
Minneapolis, Minn., April 20. — A five-
storv office building on South Fifth
street was destroyed last night by a
fire which caused a loss of $100,000. A
cafe adjoining the building was dam-
aged by water.
WISCONSIN SENATE
FAVORS THE RECALL.
Madison, Wis., April 20. — The sen-
ate, by a vote of 20 to 7, adopted a
resolution Introduced by the committee
on Judiciary providing for a constitu-
tional amendment for the recall of all
state officers except the judiciary.
MENOMINEE HOSPITAL
WILL HAVE ADDITION.
Menominee. Mich., April 20. — (Snecial
to The Herald.) — J. E. Utke. a Marin-
ette contractor, will build a $12,000 ad-
dition to the St. Joseph's hospital. Me-
nominee. It will be three stories and
basement and will be constructed of
brick and stone. The addition will be
used as a chapel and for quarters for
the sisters.
Menominee will endeavor to secure a
state armory to be built next year. The
cltv will offer a site and It is expected
that the state will erect a $30,000 ar-
mory.
*
»enah Lad DrownH.
Neenah. Wis., April 20. — After a
search of several hours, the body of
John, the little son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Daniels, was found in a canal
near his home. He had fallen in while
playing near the bank.
«
Lenroot's DauKhter Hais MeanTrR.
Madison, Wis.. April 20. — Measles
have broken out at Chadbourne hall.
Miss Dorothy C. Lenroot, daughter of
yt. Cloud — N. P. Clarke, who owns
fourteen lots along the Mississippi
river south of Tentn street bridge and
the reformatory boulevard, says he
will deed his rights to these lots to
the city for park purposes, providing
the other lots in these blocks are se-
cured by the city, and are to be used
as a park for the people.
Foley — Mike Kornovlch of Foley
lias brought suit against Lewis Larson
of Mount Morris, Morrison county, for
$2,500 for personal injuries, alleged to
have been received by him from Lar-
son.
St. Cloud — Mrs. B. H. Bookey of
Sartell sustained injuries Tuesday and
had a narrow escape from being
thrown into theTklississippi river, when
their team ran arway on the Sauk Rap- I
its bridge. A rl^ was broken and her
shoulder blade wi^s cracked, but It Is
tliought that she Will recover.
Bralnerd — Bishop Morrison of Du-
luth will speak next Sunday at the
confirmation services in St. Paul's
Episcopal church. Holy communion
will also be celebrated. At the parish
meeting of the church Monday even-
ing all the old officers of the vestry
were re-elected.
Grand Marais — The fishermen are
now making preparation to get an
early start this season, some of them
having tlielr herring nets out now.
There are seven or eight firms who
will fish from Grand Marais this sea-
son.
Crookston — The body of Mrs. Mar-
tin Lally, who died at Seattle Satur-
day morning, arrived on the train from
the west Tuesday, accompanied by her
three children, MYs. James H. Maybury,
Miss Katherine Ldlly and George Lally.
The funeral services will be held on
Tliursday morning at 9 o'clock from
the pro-cathedral, Father Wurm offi-
ciating at a solemn requiem mass.
Bemidji — Monday afternoon oc-
curred the marriage of Frank Shadiow
and Johannah Oberg. The ceremony
was held in the courthouse. Judge
Clark officiating.
Moorhead — Father Gerard Monday
afternoon was host to about thirty
of the boys of St. Joseph's school,
whom he took to Dilworth for an aft-
ernoon's outing. Included in the crowd
of boys was the baseball team known
as the Saints, and during the after-
nooon they trimmed up the Dilworth
lads in a "game that was marked by
the heavy hitting of the Saints. The
score was 28 to 8 in favor of Moor-
head.
Little Falls — Frank Oberg, an iron
man from Deerwood, purchased 900
acres of land in Rail Prairie and the
transfer was made Tuesday.
Stillwater — Julius Jonas, aged 51
and a farmer In the town of Afton Is
dead under circumstances that lead
the coroner to believe that it was a
case of suicide. A phial marked
"poison" and which contained a por-
tion of strychnine phosphate was found
in his room and it is supposed he took
an overdose from the bottle.
St. Cl"ud — P. R. Thlelman has re-
ceived a letter from J. F. Brower-
Ancher of the Northern Manufacturing
company, stating, that the St. Cloud
pickling station will not be closed
this year. Although it hs^s been found
Impossible to secure the demanded 100
acres wanted by the company, Mr.
Brower - Ancher has Informed Mr.
Thlelman that 150 acres are to be
planted to cucumbers near the city
and will be shipped In and handled at
the local plant.
Red Wing — Herman Helnrich Meyer,
one of the early settlers of Goodhue
county, died Monday at his home In
Pine street, and Clifford C. Hall, a well-
known traveling salesman, took place
at St. Peter's parson ige at 11 o'clock
Wednesday morning.
^»^^»»^.^»%^>^XN^^»»«
WISCONSIN BRIEFS
Calumet — John Bianclii, employed hy
the Calumet Brewing company as a
teamster, met with a serious accident
Monday afternoon, his head being bad-
ly squeezed by being caught between
the freight elevator and floor at Vertln
Bros, store. He was caught and held
as in a vice by the heavy elevator, for
at least two minutes before he could
be released.
Dollar Bay — The funeral of Paul R.
Pearce of Dollar Bay, was held Mon-
day afternoon from the Dollar Bay
M. E. church in charge of Rev. Louis
Keast and Interment at Forest Hill
cemetery. Mr. Pearce died at his home
Monday afternoon, following a week's
illness with paralysis. He was 55 years
of age and had been a resident of Dol-
lar Bay for about twenty years.
Hancock — Ghouls have been molest-
ing the monuments erected over the
graves of the dead in the old Catholic
and Protestant cemeteries in West
Hancock, some of the gravestones hav-
ing been found lying flat on the
ground. There Is no doubt but that
tliey were wilfully pushed over, though
what motive might animate the prepe-
trators is difficult to imagine.
Calumet — August Preiss of Calumet
avenue, a carpenter in the employ of
the C. &. H. Mining company, suffered
a fracture of the bones of his right leg
Monday, through a heavy door falling
on him. He was removed to the C. &.
H. hospital for treatment, and later
taken home.
Hancock — Mrs. Henry Nelson, an old
resident of Tapiola, died Tuesd.ay, aged
75 years. She leaves a husband and
one daughter. The funeral will be
held from her late home on Thursday
afternoon and interment will take
place at the Tapiola cemetery.
Calumet — The remains of Mr.s. L. W.
Welsenborn, whose death occurred last
week at Portland, Or., arrived in Calu-
met Tuesday. They were taken to the
home of her father, Isaac Niva of New-
ton. Funeral services were held
Wednesday afternoon at the First
Presbyterian church, with interment at
I r^ \r Q V i A \v
Hancock— United States Senator
Charles E. Townsend of Michigan, will
help Hancock observe its semi-cen-
tennial in July. He gave the Greater
Hancock club assurance of his willing-
ness to be present by a letter received
bv Postmaster Charles Rogers.
"Houghton — Justices of the Peace
Mort O'Sullivan of Houghton, and C.
O. Oliver of Hancock, and Sheriff James
J. Byers, and County Clerk Kaiser
Tuesday morning drew the jurymen
for the May term of court.
Marquette — Ernest Dow, the young
man who was injured at the new L. y.
ft I. ore dock Monday, is greatly Im-
proved, and barring unexpected com-
plications. It Is believed that he will
recover.
Ishpeming — Rev. S. Ilmonen of Wor-
cester, Mass., who has been in the city
securing statistics pertaining to the
history of temperance among the Fin-
nish people In the United States, has
gone to the Copper country, where he
will get additional data at the Finnish
college in Hancock.
Menominee — The long-winded con-
troversy between Dr. Phillips of Me-
nominee and the county board of su-
pervisors over a bill for the care of
smallpox cases has been settled by the
payment of $125 to the physician.
Marquette — Frank Webb of Duluth,
superintendent of the Republic Iron &
Steel company's properties, was In the
city en business Tuesday. — The wed-
ding of Miss Nellie M. Johnson, 609
Sheboygan — Herman Harp, aged o6,
and Albert Kriedman, aged 16, are in
the hospital here suffering from tjeveix
injuries received w^lun they fell from
the top of a load ol furnituie under
the hoofs of their team and were
kicked by the fralghtened horses.
Kritdman's right leg is broken, Harp'a
shoulder Is fractured and both are in-
jured internally.
Monroe — Completing a four-year
term for forgery at Auburn prison.
New York state, Hiirry C. Jacobson
was taken Into custody by John W.
Gardner, a Green county. Wis., officer,
cs the former stepped from the prison
doors on Tuesday, '."he officer will
bring Jacobson here io answer forgery
charges which he e^caped by break-
ing jail on May 18, IJ 04.
Waupaca — During May and June
four different organizations will hold
conventions In this city. The state
bankers will meet here late in May,
and conventions of the Northwestern
Dental association, the Wisconsin Field
Men's club and th< National Delta
Gamma lodge will be held here in
June.
Menasha — Members of the Appleton
Auto club have opened negotiations
with Menasha busin«ss men which is
expected to result in the construction
of a concrete road between this city
and Appleton. The road is five miles
long and work may be started within
a month.
Neenah — Suit for $10,000 damages for
a broken neck against the city of
Menasha and the W. T. L. H. & P. com-
pany, lias been startei by Anton Simon
of this city, son of John Simon, who
was killed by falling from a load of
cheese wlien his wagon wheels struck
the street car trackJi.
Ashland — Company D was Inspected
Monday night by Capt. Murphy of the
Twenty-seventh infantry. The inspec-
tion was very thoroigh. and the com-
pany acquitted Itself creditably. A
few members were ibsent, every ab-
sentee detracting that much from the
showing of the company as a whole
as well as marring his own military
record.
Neenah — Without light and but a
scant supply of water, due to a break-
down in the municipal plant, the city
of Menasha faced a serious predica-
ment until the wooJenware company
connected with the waterworks and
pumped a supply. Tlie city is without
light.
Racine — The will of Harvey Simpson
of Burlington was filed for probate
Monday and bequeatls an estate valued
at over $125, 00() to tie widow and two
children. Of the entire estate about
$100,000 is In personal property.
DAKOTA BRiEFS
I EPS j
Minot, N. D. — Work dismantling the
old Blakey building and the other
structures at the foot of Main street
Is progressing rapidly, and In a few
days the site for the new Soo $100,000
passenger station will be cleared ready
for active work.
Aberdeen, S. D. — Mr. and Mrs. H. P.
Blair of Ellenburgh, Wash., were in
the city Monday on their way to Mis-
souri Valley, Iowa, with the body of
F. M. Mills, who died at the first named
place last week. Mr. Mills formerly
was master mechanic for the North-
western line at Missouri Valley, but
resigned a short time ago on account
of serious illness from kidney trouble.
Fargo. N. D. — The Fargo executive
committee, affiliated with the Laymen*
missionary movement is planning on a
big scheme to get the Fargo churches
on a systematic giving basis for mis-
sions. This committee was organized
at the time of the recent laymen'a
convention.
Marmarth, N. D. — A serious accident
happened to Dr. F. A. Bordwell of
this city. While driving In the coun-
try his team ran away, throwing him
out. His back was injured so that he
was unable to move. He lay on the
ground nearly three hours, when he
was found by a homesteader. He was
taken to Stillwater, Minn., where hla
parents now live.
Krem, N. D. — H. L. Van Benschoten.
recently found a stone that contained
nearly eighteen garnets. One of these
was sent to an expert stone cutter In
Denver, Colo., and was pronounced a
fine stone, worth $3 per karat.
Minot, N. D. — D. D. Sweeney of Minot
and Miss Ella Olmstead of Seattle were
married at the latter city on March 26.
Mr. Sweeney returned to Minot last
week and will resume his run on the
Great Northern. Mrs. Sweeney will
arrive within a fev/ days and they will
make Minot their permanent home.
Fargo, N D. — The plans for the new
school building to be erected by the
state at the deaf and dumb asylum at
Devils Lake have been received at the
Fargo Builders' and Traders' e.KChange.
In the basement of the building has
been constructed an excellent gym-
nasium, 48 by 30. A viewing balcony
runs along one whole side of the room,
making ample room for spectators.
Grand Forks, N. D. — W. G. Smith has
returned from an extensive tour of
Europe. Mr. Smith was married in
Spokane about a year ago and left at
once for Europe ■with his bride and
daughter. They visited England, Ire-
land, Scotland. Germany. Italy. France
and Norway. They had a very enjoy-
able trip and visited many of the Eu-
ropean points of interest.
■•!! ■
Just Before
Retiring
Take a lahlespoonful of
Duffy's Pure
Malt \^hiskey
in milk or water.
Standard of excellence
sincv. I860.
It gives the blood
a glow and tingle
that speedily induce
sleep. You'll like
Its rich, wholesome
taste, its delicious
flavor. You'll find
it soothing yet stim-
ulating— a whiskey
of rare, unrivaled merit. You
can buy it anywhere, at drug
stores, g rocers, wine dealers
or direct . $1.00 a large bottle.
Th« Duffy M lit Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. Y.
m
■ >.-^-^,-
BoM^fy Your
Com^lexloii
Drlvo Away IJvcr Spots, Blotrlies,
Piniples and Make Your Skin
Clear and W hite.
Trial Tackaffe Sent Free.
If you want a beautiful complexion,
free from liver epots, pimples and
freckles and other discolorations. pur-
ify your blood.
Stuart's Calcium Wafers cleanse
and clear the blood, remove all poi-
sonous and Irritating influences and
permit it to flow gently and uniform-
ly all through the veins. These little
wafers are fanni«uB for their beauti-
fying effects and every lady may use
them with perfect freedom.
Thoy do their good work remark-
ably fast ov.'ing to the wondej-ful
poAver of the Ingredients which they
contain. Here they are: Calcium Sul-
phtdo, Quassia. Eucalyptus. Golden
Seal and an alterative and laxative.
Ask your doctor what he thlnlcs of
these as blood purifiers. He pre-
scribes them many times every year.
The popularity of Stuart's Calcium
Waf*^rs is great and growing constant-
ly every year. They do a woiwlerful
work with apparently little effort and
do not neocssitiite suffering and ex-
pense as so many complexion cures
occasion.
You may enjoy a fair complexion
If you will use these little wafers.
They are taken after each meal and
go into your blood, jtist like food.
Tb«y do your entire system a great
g*Ad. They help your Intestines and
relieve constipation, thereby giving
the system the power to remove and
exchide poisonous gases and flukls
which filter through the intestines
Into the system and contaminate it.
Don't despair if your complexion is
muddy. Write today for a free trial
package of Stuart's Calcium Wafers
or go to your druRglst and buy a box.
Price 6«c. Simply write your name
and address and a trial pa<;kaKe will
\),o sent vou by mall without cost. Ad-
dress F. A. Stuart Co., 175 Stuart
Sldg.. Marshall. Mich.
SERPENT LAKE BOATHsG.
Pi'owises to Be Fine This Season
With rieoty of Boats.
Crosby, Minn., April *:0. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The Ice Is nearly all
gone from Serpent lake, here, except
a little in tlie east end. The boat Twin
City Is getting ready lo make regular
trips to ai»d from Deerwood.
llie action of trie Ingalls Motor Boat
company of Coleralno Jn moving all
their boats lo Serpent lake Is exi»ecied
to boom this section as a summer re-
sort. This company's outfit consists pf
a sixty-foot pasiienger launch, Twin
City, with a 50-iiorsepower engine, 100
passenger capacity and a speed of flT-
teen miles per hour; two smaller pas- H
senger launches, Crosby and De«t-
Avood, each having a speed of ten m1lG3
per hour and carrving capacity of
twenty-live people; also fifty rowboats,
twenty-five canoes, and ample camping
outfits.
Boat houses and docks are being
constructed on the company's prop-
erty at the foot of Cross avenue, ttn,d
a barge twenty-four feet by sixty feet
will be built for plinlo parlies and
dances on the lake.
Boats will be run regularly b^tween
Crosljy and Deerwood. meeting all
trains. Special reduced fares will .be
offered to laboring men working In the
Crosby mines and residing in Deer-
wood.
x,Aj^:
WINONA MAN WEDS
MENOMINEE W OMAN.
Menominee, Mich., April 20. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — MlsS Marlon
Kimball of this dty, was married at
the residence of her sister, Mr.s. Mj U-
Wilcox, to Frederick Jarnea Belsang
of Winona, Minn. The marriage cere-
mony was performed by the lleVi Guy
V. Hoard of the Xfethodi.st church,
in the uresence of about thirty Inti-
mate friends. Tiie couple will make
their home In Winona, Minn., where
th<' groom is a member of the Belsang
Brick company.
NEW YORKER 'INVESTIGATES.
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Cbaututt^nan CIabis Uncle Was Ir-
responsible When He Made Deed.
Menominee, Mich., April 20. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Jumes Cavanaugh
of Chautauqua. N. Y., Is hero lilvesil-
Sating the death of his uncle, Jafaies
avanaugb, who was drowned in the
-i)t^^
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Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 20, 1911.
THE DULUTH HERALD
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
^ESTABLISHED APRIL 9, 1883—
Publlslipil every evening pxce>pt Sunday by
THE HERALD COMPANY,
Herald Building. Opposite Postoffice Sciuare,
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natter at
grew
the Duluth postoffice
of MarcU 3. 1879.
under the act of con-
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OF
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BY CARRIER— CITY OR SUBURBS.
» 10
to
the senators have been long enough in public service
know their people, and both of them have reputations
for honesty to maintain. If they are entirely honest in
their protestations of interest in the wishes of the people
of Minnesota, they will be found among the hearty and
active supporters of the reciprocity bill and of further
revisiott of the tariff according to the free list bill pre-
sented by the Democrats in the house.
Dally,
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year
Sub-iriliers will coi\fer a favor on the circulation ilopattment
lltber 'iJlioue. and making Unuwu any complaint of aervlce
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the distinct guarantee that it has the largest circulation
of any newspaper published in Minnesota outside the iwin
Cities Its value as an advertising medium is apparent.
ABOUT .CREDIT AND TRADE
z „ - J^y SA VO YARD.
THE NEW JUDGE.
There is no reason to quarrel with the choice of
Governor Ebcrhart in his appointment of the fifth judge
for the Eleventh district. Herbert A. Dancer is one of
the best known of the younger members of the Duluth
bar, and his local record is such that there can be no
disposition to que>tion his fitness for the place to which
he has been appointed. He was one of those recom-
mended for the judgeship by the St. Louis County Bar
association, and while either of the other nominees would
have been well qualified to fill the p3sition, the choice
of Mr. Dancer will be entirely satisfactory.
The appointment is particularly pleasing to the
younger element in the county's legal circles. Mr. Dancer
is a young man, the youngest ever appointed to such a
position in this county, if not in the state. Though only
36 years old. he has made a good reputation during the
dozen years he has been in this city, and his ability is
not to be questioned.
Nor does the appointment smack of political work.
Mr. Dancer has not been an active politician, and his
business associations here have been with men of op-
posite political faith to that of Governor Eberhart. It
is pleasant to believe that the appointment is the result
of the governor's confidence in the young men of the
state.
Judge Dancer will find himself with his hands full
as soon as he assumes his new duties. He is to take a
vast amount of accumulated work off the hands of some
of the other four judges of the district, and the courts
of the Eleventh are not noted for scarcity of litigation.
But he will go. to the task with the hearty good wishes
of his fellow attorneys and ef the entire community.
The Eleventh district is glad to recognize and con-
gratulate its youngest judge and to wish him the best
that can come to him in his new duties and responsi-
bilities.
R, I. P.
It is over. The 19n session of the Minnesota legisla-
ture has passed into history. It occupies the place pro-
vided for it in the files of the state press and in the rec-
ords of the state capitol, and its members are going back
home to hear, or try not to hear, what the folks there
think of the proceedings at St. Paul.
When a person who has been a sufferer for a long
time at last has his suffering and pain and anguish ended
by death, it is hard to feel very sad about the end having
come. Just so it is hard to find any cause for regret that
the 1911 legislature is through with its labors and trials
and tribulations. "He was a lovely youth." when he
started out. He had all kinds of hopes and aspirations
and encouragement and prospects and chances. But he
took up bad habits. He fell a slave to the strong drink
of sectionalism and the opiate of prejudice. If bad
habits are in fact symptoms of disease, he was one of the
sickest creatures that the state — or the country— ever
saw.
To be sure there were some lucid intervals. It would
be hard for even such a chaotic mass as that to spend
the bigger part of four months without a few such
moments. In these intervals it did some things really
worth while. For instance, there was the adoption of the
Oregon plan for choosing United States senators; the
passage of the good roads bill; increase of the forestry
fund; extension of the agricultural education work; the
giving to the people of a chance to get some real benefit
from the state land in Duluth available as a dock site.
All these were things worth while. They stand out in the
record of the 1911 legislature in a way to remind one of
the line in 'The Merchant of Venice,"— "So shines a good
deed in a naughty world." If it were not for these
things the record of the session just ended would be one
to make anarchy honorable.
For of all the chaotic, undirected, futile and hopeless
propositions that the state ever had to sit by and watch,
this legislature and this session furnished the most glow-
ing example. The charge that committees were "packed"
was made during the session. In view of the way things
in general went, there would have been material gains
for the state if the whole legislature had been "packed."
At least that would have meant the accomplishment of
something definite, a moving toward a definite end, in-
stead of a wild chase around and 'round the mulberry
bush, with every man's eye on his neighbor and devil
take the other fellow. The course of the bill to abolish
capital punishment is a good example of the way things
went,
passed
passed
or lack
It
senate
Introduced in the house early in January,
that body some time in March and the
it late in April. With that kind of management,
of it, the only wonder is that anything of any
ever got anywhere at all.
thousand
one, if re-
Northern Min-
kind
But it's over. Extra session? No. A
times no! Northern Minnesota hoped for
apportionment failed at this session, but
nesota is too humane to want to get that outfit together
again, on any pretext. No, let it go. We have seen
enough of this 1911 outfit. Two years from now the
change, and we'll get a new one. Let's just
old gear out on the ashpile and forget it as
It's the only way to get back to any
peace
West Virginia ^as born into the
I'nion by the Caesarian operation. At
the time, in law and Ui morals, she
was obligated for, hen proportionate
part of the public debt of the Old
Dominion which had ^^ibeen created
prior to the secession of the state of
tliose rebels, George Washington anu
Patrick Henry. For nearly half a
century old Virglnli sought to collect
this honest debt from West Virginia.
They went- to law ovef It, and a few
(lavs ago the supreme court of the
I'nited States decided tliat West Vir-
ginia owed Old Virginia abou |7,000,-
i>00 principal of tlie debt, leaving the
matter of interest for future adjust-
ment.
And here comes that rich young
parvenue. West Virginia, annex of
Pennsylvania, and asks congress to
pay her debts. She votes herself a
nie'ndicant and would billet herself on
national charity. Claiming to have
more "natural wealth" than any other
.«tate, she holds out the hat like a
beggar, hoping that congress will
prove faithless enough to fill it.
* • *
I was one day chatting with a party
of gentlemen when the late Steve
Elkins "blew in." It was a habit he
liad, always breezy, always welcome,
always delightful. It was in 1S96 and
we were discussing 16 to 1. "Steve"
butted in in characteristic style, and
it was as good a speech as was made
that year. It was something like this:
"Whether for good or evil, and I
am not sure it is for the best, the fi-
nancial world has made gold the
standard, and the standard it will
remain, even if Bryan shall be presi-
dent with both houses of congress in
precise accord with him, for in finance,
banks are stronger than governments.
There Is nothing to do but to accept
the gold standard, and we know gov-
ernments cannot, by act of congress,
send us hunting blackberries in Janu-
ary or skating on ice in August.
••There is but one thing to do and
that to pay. llepudiation is the worst
policy in the world. I frequently bor-
row money in New York. When I first
became a citizen of West Virginia
I was an official of a corporation that
needed a large sum of ready cash, and
I hurried to New York with documents
that were conclusive evidence that our
enterprise promised big returns on the
Investment. The bankers saw it and
admitted it, but I could get no money
at the rate of interest I felt justified in
paying, and I was there a week or
ten days before I found out that the
reason money was so tight for me
was that West Virginia had repudiated
her portion of the debt Old Virginia
owed in 1861. Money talks, and it
is said it did not care to make its
bed in a repudiation community. I
finally got the money, but at a fright-
ful rate of interest, and that repudia-
tion has cost West Virginia what
would have paid her part of the debt
a dozen times over. It is an inexorable
truth that credit Is the foundation
stone of prosperity, and credit is made
by payment of debts to the utmost
farthing in the best money in the
world."
* • *
As Elkins "Ijlew out," I recalled a
sentiment that grand man of Georgia.
Henry G. Turner, incorporated In a
speech on the coinage question: "It
is better to discharge a debt of $1
by the payment of $2 than by the pay-
ment of half a dollar."
In this connection I shall relate for
the third or fourth time a circum-
stance the facts of which came under
my personal observation. It ought to
be proclaimed to all the world and the
sentiment ought to sink deep In the
heart of every youth who Is ambitious
to become a valuable factor of re-
spectaljle society anywhere.
When I was a boy In Barron county,
Ky., there lived In our community
Henry Davis. He was a poor man.
THE OPEN COURT.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Taken From (he Colum.19 of The Herald of This Date^ 1891.
styles will
chuck this
soon as possible
of mind.
LENROOT HEARS FROM HOME.
Representative Lenroot of Superior is in trouble.
When the reciprocity question came up in congress he
talked and voted against it. He has been one of the
most active opponents of the plan, though he was one of
the "insurgent" Republicans of the Sixty-first congress,
one of those who declared the Republicans were traitors
to the people because they did not do what the people
expected and wanted them to do.
When the reciprocity plan v.-as made known in Su-
perior, the Commercial club of that city passed resolu-
tions indorsing it. So did some other organizations
which go to make up the constituency of Representative
Lenroot. But did that make any difference to the con-
gressman? Nary a bit. He went merrily on with his
opposition to reciprocity, and he is at it yet.
It is useless to try to classify Lenroot on any basis
that involves consistency. He called his party leaders
traitors because they did not obey tlie wishes of their
constituents, and held himself up as a model. But now
he is going contrary to the wishes of his own constitu-
ents, though he probably has not given up his ideas
about being a model congressman. His rebellion is all
the more aggravated by the fact that he had been notified
of the position of the people of Superior regarding the
Canadian agreement.
Now Lenroot is to hear from home. His failure to
represent truthfully the men who sent him to congress is
to be shown to the house and senate in its full glory, of
the other thing. That is as it should be. Having no
power to recall its member, and finding him unwilling to
represent the people who elected him, the Superior voters
are doing the only thing they can do — making the situa-
tion plain to Lenroot and his colleagues.
But while Lenroot's case is in the lime-light for the
present, what about other cases of the same kind? W^hat
about the Minnesota members of congress? Some of
them have been told by their constituents that they must
oppose reciprocity. They probably will continue to act
in accordance with those instructions, though the instruc-
tions themselves are based on a misconception of the
intention and effect of reciprocity. It would be well if
these members and the men they represent would change
their minds before the matter comes to a vote, though
there is no question about the bill's passing the house.
But in the senate it is another matter, and yet the
Minnesota senators are either on the fence or are lean-
ing in the direction of standpatism and the high tariff.
The only excuse given thus far iias been that the agree-
ment proposed does not go far enough, and that plea Is
nullified by the supplemental bill introduced by the house
Democrats, adding to the free list of the general tariff
law. So that even that poor excuse is taken away from
the senators who want us to believe them progressives,
but who are inclined to go back on their progressive
protestations.
Both Nelson and Clapp have heard repeatedly from
this state in favor of reciprocity. Both of them know
that the people of the state, as a whole, want the reci-
procity bill passed. It ought not to be necessary for Min-
nesota to tell the whole congress its wishes, as has been
necessary in the case of Lenroot and Superior. Both
THOSE CANADIANS AGAIN.
Every once in a while those Canadians do something
that makes the rest of us wonder a little. The last thing
they did that attracted particular attention on this side
the international boundary was to adopt a system of ad-
vertising that is bringing in desirable immigrants by the
thousands. And the thing is not allowed to rest with
just getting these people into the country. They are
being guided and distributed where they will do the
most good and get the most good. Instead of being
allowed to congregate in the already crowded districts
of the bigger Eastern cities, they are being placed in
the big agricultural regions of the country.
It was
(Readers of The Herald are tuTitrd to make free us*
of this column to express Uielr ideua about the topic*
of general Interest. Letlcrs should not exceed 3U0
words— the shorter the better. They must be wrltUu
on one side of the paper only, and they must be ac-
companied In every ca.se by the name and address of
the writer, thuugii these need not be published. A
signed letter is aiway^i more eSecllTe, bowevex.)
HERE'S A CHANCE
FOR NATURE FAKERS.
To
boundary
Probably
could be
a long time before the folks on this side the
realized what Canada was doing in that line,
they do not all realize it now. But if they
in Duluth sometimes — about once every ten
days, say — and see a trainload of industrious men and
women on their way to the Canadian Northwest, they
would get a good deal sharper notion of this movement
and its conduct than they have.
But Canada's latest stunt is the most surprising of all.
It appears that England, wishing to mark the coronation
of King George by means of postage stamps, sent a
supply oi them to Ottawa to be distributed throughout
Canada. The stamps were emphatically English and im-
perialistic in their design, bearing nothing that stamped
them as in any way related to Canada. And Ottawa
promptly bundled up the whole lot and sent them back
to London with a suggestion that Canadian stamps are
to be Canadian, and if England will not supply them in
that style, Canada will make them herself.
Of course Canada's stamps are made in London. But
Canada intends to say what is on the other side of the
paper her people lick, and she isn't at all backward about
doing so. Canada has grown mighty independent about
her coinage and her courts and her international rela-
tions and her navy. No wonder the British standpatters
are scratching their craniums and digging up new styles
of cement for the maintenance of the empire. She has a
livelier proposition on her hands over here on* this
continent than she ever had before, and if England
doesn't look out she will be the possession and Ottawa
the seat of the imperial government
the Editor of The Herald:
I noticed a story in last evening a
paper asking whether or not trout can
remain frozen all winter and revive m
the spring. I'd like to hear some re-
liable answers to that from somebody
who knows what he is talking about.
I've heard several arguments on the
question, but never heard a satisfactory
answer. I've known of some goldfish
to be frozen in their tank over night
and to come to when the ice was melted
in the morning. And I've heard people
say who have been fishing through the
ice that, after having been frozen, the
fish came and wiggled around when
thawed out later. They weren't ex-
perimenting, but threw the fish Into
cold water In order to make it easier
to scale them.
A FISHERMAN.
Duluth. April 20, 1911.
A FACETIOUS VOICE
FROM THE WOODS.
Don't forget the fourth shop excursion tomorrow.
will lead through some of the industrial plants of
West end.
It
the
Nick Longworth is said to be willing
diplomatic post. What's the matter? Does
to travel some more?
to take a
Alice want
Human skin sells at $10 a square inch in Fort Wayne,
Ind. Why doesn't somebody find some way to coii'
the waste during the football season?
serve
It appears plain that the Minnesota railroads are
perfectly willing to go right on being confiscated until
the supreme court shall have passed on the various
questions at issue.
To the Editor of The Herald:
Living as I do on a farm at a dis-
tance from The Herald's presses "with
their wheels and bars that almost seem
to think" I cannot hasten as L. Z., has
done to "settle the vexing questions of
philosophy" questions that, by the way,
he promised not to "settle."
He has cleared Tolstoi of the charge
of atheism — a charge, by the way,
made by the man he Is defending when
he asserted "that all anarchists are
atheists." He somehow has got the
idea that an anarchist is one who re-
bels against theocratic government.
The truth is they are almost invari-
ably the product of countries that are
theocratic despotisms such as, for in-
stance. Russia. That government would
long ago have transported Tolstoi to
the mines of Siberia as they did In
the case of his brother had they dared
to do so. He was too big a problem
for them to handle In this manner and
as the next best thing to do they
banned his writings. I can recall when
John Wannamaker was postmaster
general the Kreutzer Sonata was for-
bidden the malls of this country.
The Bill Jones and John Smiths and
Tom Browns living in a country that
derives Its authority to govern "from
the consent of the governed" doesn't
produce people of that cult.
L. Z.'s assertion that "free speech
doesn't need defending any more than
the ten commandments do" made me
wonder who the "inconsistent" man
was that he tells about.
Will he kindly tell me what Christ
was crucified for? What Ferrer of
Spain was shot to death for? Why
Servetus and Bruno were burned, and,
coming down to present times, why the
"high priestess of anarchy" Is occasion-
ally jailed for expressing her senti-
ments? Will he dodge this question
by saying that a man with a bull-dog
and a shotgun and a jail awaiting the
culprit. If caught, doesn't need the
Divine command "Thou shalt not steal"
to protect his melon patch?
It seems to me that L. Z. had better
pass the ante In this deal and profit
by the action "of those certain people
who rushed In where angels fear to
tread."
The first requisite of bravery is some-
times to be cautious.-
Before you place people In glass
houses" and post the notice "be careful
at what time you put the blinds up,"
you should dispense with colored
glasses and see with natural eyes.
And when you give to every one the
right "to peer Into the immensity of
things and then form his own opinion
as to what set It all In motion and as
to what is the origin of life or its end"
— when they have done all of these
things, and you prevent them from the
expression oC their opinion, you are an
with a family, and a renter. When he
died he owed George Thompson a small
debt, but considerable to one in his
circumstances. Thompson charged the
thing ofi: to profit and loss, and iliought
no more about it. Henry Davis left
a son — Jim Davis, noble name'. — and
that boy tolled in the tobacco patch
from sun to sun, from dawn till dusk,
denying himself even necessaries, till
he got together a sum, about $100, sut-
flclent to discharge his father's debt
to the last cent. This he took to
Thompson, who llatly refused to ac-
cept it, being a prosperous man, but
the boy forced It on him, and went
off happy in the thought that he had
honored ills parent's memory.
• • *
And so he had, but he had rendered
himself an Invaluable service also. It
was the best investment h^ possibly
could have made. He had establislted
his credit on the firmest foundation,
and want, or even inconvenience, so
far as concerned material things, ever
after passed his door without knock-
ing. 1 am glad I was a school-fellow
of that Jim Davis, though he was a
big boy and I an urchin.
And so the thing for West Virginia
to do is to pay her debts like an honest
man, and not go supplicating congress
like a contemptible beggar.
* • *
It Is announced that the promised
potash war with Germany "has been
averted." What fools these Americans
be! When they were making the
Payne-Aldrlch monstro.slty somebody
fetched In the resounding and sonorous
"maximum and minimum," and by it
we were going on an expedition of
commercial and financial "Veni, vidl,
vlcl." Here was the policy: We were
to defy all alien peoples with the
threat: "If you don't do as we would
have you do, we will lay an additional
load of taxation on our own people.
That is what the "maximum and mini-
mum" is and all it is.
First we tackled France, and France
paid not the least attention to us, for
well France knows that our enormous-
ly rich — especially suddenly rich, as
manv of 'era are — are going to have
fixln's from Paree, even though our
tariff be raised to the moon. Then we
backed down, but proclaimed "a great
victory for American diplomacy," that
some of our fools swallowed.
m * *
Then we put the horrible thre-.t up
to Germany that we would put cumu-
lative ta.xes on our own folks if she did
not mend her commercial manner.s; but
Germany budged not an inch. Tlie re-
sult was another back down by the
United States and her 'great diplo-
matic victory," just like that we gained
over France. Then came Canada, and
another retreat on our part, and an-
other -diplomatic victory" of the same
kidney. ,^. ^
Then we got In the row with Ger-
many over potash, and we threatened
her with our "maximum" if she aid not
allow us to write her ta.\ation on her
own domestic potash, which Germany
fiatly refused to do, and we again
backed down, though this time without
a "diplomatic victory." At least the
victory is not at this writing an-
nounced.
* • *
the time there Is old Eng-
her free trade, the manufac-
carrier, and the banker, in-
ternationally. I saw the statement the
other day that her increase of merchant
tonnage In the foreign trade for the
year 1910 exceeded the gross mercan-
tile-tonnage of Germany, her nearest
rival, if we can call it rival, and all
because It Is the economic teaching of
the G. O. P. that when an American
trades with another American he Is
bound to gain, but if he trades with a
foreigner he is bound to lose. Hence
we leave the field that belongs to us
to England. , ,., , . ^ .,
The Maximum and Minimum Is dead,
and Its daddy. Protection, is mighty
sick.
Intellectual thief and robber, and you
have made conditions favorable to pro-
duce anarchists: and when you have
called them "self-indulgent" and self-
sufi'icient, " and you put them in jail,
you are — consistent.
And as I pictured L. Z.'s "poor half-
blind biped standing weakly astride
his earthly grave" viewing the im-
mensity of things, I fall Into a reverie
and immagine him seeing away off into
endless space beyond the reach of the
most powerful telescope an Uncaused
Cause that caused all of this immensity
of things, and then with his spiritual
sense he weighs it and then "turns to
his fellows to babble out, 'There Is
nothing; only spirit. There is no death;
I shall "be in error for a weak and —
change."'" . „ . .,
I imagine him, too, as L. Z. s 'expert
in geometry" figuring on the problem
of how three times one could be one.
And then he varies the program by
writing in ridicule of the "music of the
spheres." , , . ^
At this point my reverie is Inter-
rupted by the voice of Brother Jasper,
the colored preacher, giving out his
famous sermon. "The World Do Move,"
and I hear the fervent voice of L. Z.
from his corner, where he has been
dozing, say "A-men."
And then with vision fully cleared I
see this "half-blind biped," and I recog-
nize him as the shades of Proctor
Knott of Kentucky, and I hear again
his prophetic words, "Duluth a city!
Why. sah, It is away up under the
zenith sky, and there Is nothing there,
sah, but polar bear and Eskimo. There
Is only three things anywhere, myself,
sah, Kentucky, sah, and — sour mash
whisky, sah." . ^ ^,
L. Z. might add these maxims to his
collection: a lawyer without a brief
should not go to court; a lawyer should
never admit his client's guilt and ex-
pect to Clear him. ^ ^ jenkINS.
Walker, April 19.
••'♦The special commi'.tee ajpointec^
by the Minnesota house to inv^^stigate
the reports of brutal treatir ent of
convicts In the penitentiary at .Still-
water reported this morning. The
committee finds the present mode of
punishment brutal and inhuman and
l elieves it sliould be discoiitiimed.
Discipline is under charge of Deputy
Warden Lemon, and the committee
recommends ills immediate discharge.
♦♦*Jay W. Anderson and Henry II.
Bell, bondsmen of Forrestal Bios., the
insolvent contractors, who for .sii-eral
^eals past have been extensnely en-
gaged in Duluth street construction,
have at last come to an agreement
with the board of public works in the
n. after of uncompleted contrai-ts. The
bondsmen will continue six of the
contracts, leaving two to be i*elet by
the city.
and I'irst stieet, .stringing new wires.
A wire becames crossed with one of
the lines of the Duluth Electric Light
company, and ONeil, whose hands
were enca.«!ed in rubber gloves, re-
ceived a tremendous sliock. An assist-
ant rushed to O'Neil's aid and he
was taken to the ground much fright-
ened, but able to continue at work.
•♦•At a meeting of the West Duluth
council, the resignation of U. S. G,
Sharp as village assessor was ac-
cepted. The petition of residents of
i;ay View Heights addition No. 2, ask-
ing to be annexed, was laid over.
•♦"New Duluth is tc have a post-
office, and K. W. Woodward has been
appointed postmaster.
•*»C. W. Hoyt,
purchased a half
lawn sprinkler,
father.
while In St
interest In a.
the invention
Cloud,
patent
of his
••♦M. W. Homo of Chicago is visit
ing his brothers, John and Ed^vard, at
We.st Duluth.
•♦♦This morning, George C''Nell a
..neman in the employ of the Duluth
Telephone company, was nearly elec-
trocuted while at the top of a
at the corner of Third avenue
pole
west
•••Lewis N. W-od, druggist, has
made an involuntary assignment for
the benefit of creditors to H. S". Lord.
•♦•Barber &
cpen a branch
Barber, architects, will
office at West Dulath.
•••A party of five persons •will leave
a few days for Zacateca.s, Mexico,
in
to work in the silver mine owned by
G. T. Porter and other well known
Duluthians.
MINNESOTA OPINIONS.
one
this
mar
And all
land, with
turer, the
Just One IsMue.
Red Wing Republican: There is
issue and only one in this statt; at
time which has power to make or
men and parties. That issue is reap-
portionment. And there is n(' u.^e in
mincing words about it. The man who
cannot see this or who, seeing it, will
not admit It and act accordingly, is a
coward or a fool or both. The party
that thinks by any concealment or
evasion or pretense to blink or defy
the Issue Is on the high road to defeat.
All the influences that have been at
work thus far to defeat reapportion-
ment are despicable. We do not un-
derstand how a man that fights it can
hold up his head in the presen<;e of his
neighbors. We cannot understind how
he can think himself fit for i^merican
citizenship or for association with
American citizens. For he is trying to
set aside and defeat the first jrinciple
of representative government. And, in
connection with that, he is pu'.ting his
little interests forward as the govern-
ing forces in this commonwealth just
as truly and just as meanly as any
man in city or state whose h mds are
filthy with the bribe of the grafter.
•♦•Capt. Eber Ward of Detroit is t»
be at the head of a new Lake Superior
vessel line that will include the pro-
pellers Saginaw Valley, Toledo, Avon,
Portage and Nyack.
A MOMENT ^MTH THE WITS.
Houston Post:
of luck."
"And yet
contented."
"That's because
That man has loads
he looks shabby and dig-
it is all bad."
Louisville Courier-Journal: "Yaas,
my trip to Europe was completely
spoiled at the very last, dont you
know."
"How was that?"
"One of the labels came oft my suit-
case and got lost."
you
Buffalo Express: "What do
know about Esperanto, Buck?"
"Onlj' what 1 have read in the pa-
pers. He's one o' them Cam'ra black-
guards in the cage in Italy. He ought
to be hung."
The Greedy Middlemen.
Montevideo Leader: The transporta-
tion companies and the commission
merchants are not in business for their
health. They make the goods 30st dear
to the consumers every time ilthough
the producers get little enot gh. No
matter whether it is the country or city
producer, he must produce at ubout
cost, and no matter whether It is the
city or country constiracr, lie must pay
all the business will stand. 11 used to
be that the producer and consumer
could touch elbows; now the> are far
apart, with a chain of greedy middle-
men between them that absorb all there
is to be made in the traffic.
\m the Doctor Bnviouii'?
Manahga Journal: Dr. Stone has
written to a friend that "Mr Klemer
did act In a child-like way and that
his constituents should patiertly wait
his maturity before returning him to
the house." Is it possible that the
doctor is envious of the offors Mr.
Klemer is receiving to go intj vaude-
ville?
Washington Star: "Hiram." said the
politician's wife, "did you say we must
economize?"
"Emphatically."
"Well, how would it do to move into
one of those districts where votes cost
only a dollar apiece?"
"Please sir,'
Detroit Free Press:
said the office boy
"Well, what is it?" demanded the
boss.
"Please, sir, could I get off again to-
day? We had to postpone grandma's
funeral yesterday on account of the
rain." ♦
Chicago Record-Herald: "Are you
very busy?" asked the agent who had
pushed the office boy out of the way
and stepped into the private office,
where the head of the firm was dictat-
ing to the stenographer.
"No; as you see, I am lolling upon a
downy couch and permitting my fancy
to roam through enchanted realms.
Nevertheless, I do not wish to sub-
scribe for anything this morning. By
hurrying, you may be able to get out
before the arrival of the porter, whom
just summoned by pushing the
under my right thumb."
I have
button
NeedH a Fireproof BulldiaK.
Red Lake Falls Gazette: ".-he sug-
gestion that the legislature make a
liberal appropriation for the construc-
tion of a fireproof building for the
state historical society has merit. "The
property and valuable records of the
society are now housed in a fir strap. In
case of a conflagration litth; of the
valuable property that it has taken
years to accumulate could be saved. At
every session of the legislature thous-
ands of dollars are appropriated for
much more Impractical purposes.
New York Sun: Bluebeard explained
the mystery.
"It was the kitchen, and the cook
killed all my previous wives when
they entered it."
Thus we see how Bluebeard was
slandered.
KINDERGARTENS.
May Prove His UmdolnK.
Stillwater Gazette: Looks more and
more as if Edward Hines, the Chicago
lumberman, who it is alleged boasted
that he elected Lorimer United States
senator from Illinois and also defeated
President Taft on the tariff question,
was getting In bad — worse e^ery day.
Hfs outbursts of personal vailty may
be his undoing.
May Be Belter Informed.
Warroad Plaindealer: Over at Ken-
nedy they all signed a petiti«m to the
president to remove the soldiers from
th© Mexican border. We miiy be In
error, but should guess that the presi-
dent ought to be better able to judge
as to the necessity of keeping the
troops there than are the good citizens
of Kennedy.
WatchlnB tke Whittle r«.
Pierz Journal: These warm sunny
days in spring always bring out the
whittlers. Whittlers are l ound m
every town and they are always a lazy,
easv-golng type of men who like to
on "the sunny side of the street
a big quid of tobacco in their
and whittle and spit, spit an 3
long shavings
pieces of white
Washington Herald:
yours must be pretty
this time."
"In his junior year
"Is he ever inclined
"No, they say he's
southpaw the team has
"That boy
well grown
of
by
at college."
to be wild?"
the 'sleadieet
ever had."
Bo.=»ton Transcript: Lawyer (an-
noved) — Better take your case some-
where else. You are too thin-skinned
for me.
Client — Hardly pay to skin me, eh?
Toledo
fool!"
"Why,
Blade: "He treats me like a
I didn't know he knew you."
sit
with
mouths
whittle
from straight-grained
pine until the sidewalk
According to statistics for the
school year 1908-09 (the latest
period for which data have been
published), compiled by the United
States Commissioner of Education, 52C
American cities having each a popula-
tion of 8.000 and over reported public
kindergartens in which were enrolled
173,911 pupils, of whom 86,301 were
boys and 87,610 were girls, under the
supervision of 5,493 teachers. Four
hundred and elglity-eight cities and
villages each of 4,000 to 8,000 popula-
tion reported for the same period a
total of 394 teachers and 11,560 pupils
— 5,611 boys and 6,949 girls.
In 1873, 42 kindergartens, both pub-
lic and private, reported to the United
States bureau of education, giving 1,-
252 as the total number of their
pupils and 73 teachers. The growth
of the kindergarten feature of educa-
tion can be traced from the following
reports of similar nature for the years
spex^ified: 1875 — 95 kindergartens, 216
teachers, 2,809 pupils; 1880—232 kin-
dergartens, 524 teachers, 8,871 pupils;
lg85 — 415 kindergartens. 905 teachers,
18,832 pupils; 1892 — 1.311 kindergar-
tens, 2,536 teachers, 65,296 pupils; 1898
— 2,884 kindergartens, 5,764 teachers,
143,720 pupils; 1902 — 3,244 kindergar-
tens, 5,935 teachers, 205,432 pupils. Sta-
tistics for the school year 1905-6 show
a total of S69 cities and villages of
4.000 population and upward In which
kindergartens formed a regular part
of the public school system; they
maintained 3,391 schools, employed
5.097 teachers, and had a total enrolL
ment of 227,390 pupils.
•
Hnge Cracker Appetite.
Londoners have the largest appetite
for crackers, or, as they call them, bis-
cuits, of any people In the world. They
eat fifteen carloads every day, while
New York takes ten carloads and Paris
five. As for the total dally consump-
tion of the whole world, the Bakers'
Weekly says it would fill a line of
freight cars extending from New York
to Baltimore.
Even the far corners of the world
are demanding crackers. Abyssinia
wants seven carloads a day; Egypt
takes eighteen, Liberia four. Morocco
nineteen, Afghanistan eight, Ceylon
seven, and even Manchuria wants sev-
enteen carloadfl every twenty-four
houra^
is covered with the products of their
energy — whittles and spit, and this
mixture always marks the ph.ce where
these whittlers are wont to hold dis-
course. There is something quaint
about them, and there is notlilng that
we like better than to see them take a
fresh quid, pick up a board with the
point of the knife and begin whittling,
and to hear them drawl out some pre-
historic story. There will always be
whittlers.
♦ ■
Reflections of a Bachelor.
New York Press: The only thing
needed to make children brij.ht is foi
them to be your own.
About the only thing that pays a
smaller dividend than hope Is a sure
investment In stocks.
When you do favors for peaple, they
can have a grievance against you
not doing more.
The money a woman puts on
back Is called waste by the man
pours his down his throat.
About the meanest thing
happen to a woman Is to have
to go to two funerals on the
at the same hour.
Philadelphia Record: "Why. Tommy,"
exclaimed the Sunday school teacher,
"don't you say your prayers every
night before you go to bed?"
"Not any more," replied Tommy; "I
uster when I slept In a folding bed,
though."
AMUSEMENTS,
for
her
who
that can
a chance
same day
Pointed Paragrapha.
Chicago News: Even some bachelors
have their troubles.
An egotist Is a man who thinks ne Is
better than you.
And every time a man loses money
he loses faith In somebody.
A man Isn't necessarily a cripple be-
cause he offers a lame excuse.
A woman may have the courage of
her conviction, but not of her defects.
Many a man tries to disgul je himself
as a gentleman by putting on a silk
hat. .
At 28 a girl will marry a man she
would have been ashamed to speak to
at the age of 18.
One way to get rich Is to lock your
money in a vault and Induce other peo-
ple to give you theirs to Invest.
And many a young man loves a^irl
for the qualities she pos.ses3es which
he wouldn't tolerate In his own sister
for a minute.
«
Claasiflcatlon of Bachelors.
Birmingham Age-Herald: 1 he tax on
bachelors in Wisconsin Is cli.ssed as a
tax on unimproved property.
One Drawback.
Louisville Courier- Journal: One
drawback to the theologlca elimina-
tion of hell is that it allows a fire
escape for those who won't V«t Are
escapes on their buUdlnffa.
MATIXEE SATL'RD.W
LEW
PrcMcnts the StapendouH Spco<ac«-
lar Miidicnl Prt.diit-tion, In Two Acts
and Klgbt Slauimuth Seeaett,
THE
MidnightSons
— ^'ITH —
GEO. W. MONROE
And the liSrsrest Company and Blc-
KCHt Scenic Kqiilpsneat Ever Sent on
Tour. Clean, Wholesome Fnn. 1,000
Laughs Without a Blush.
30 — BIG SONG HITS — 30.
PRICES: Matinee, 25c to 9IJSO.
Nights, SOc to 92.
No Telephone Orders Taken.
NEW
Beth Phoiws 8410.
TBEATER
Avf^Eaat mud Superior Street
INTCRNATIONAL VAUD£ViU.£.
THIS 'WEEK'S BIL.I..
MATINEES-
25c
Except Sundays
and Holiday*.
Nifhta. 150. 2S«,
SOe and 7S«.
Maater Gabrial and Cempaay.
Farrelt-Taylor Campany.
Tha Namba Japa.
Qeoro* Auatta Moora antf
Cordelia.
Ward Brothers.
Browning and Lawb.
Ernett Yarxa and Adala.
The Klnatfroffle.
The CoBoert Orehettra.
-*
'■Silver Threadt Amonf tha Qold"— Ediaon.
(Dramatic.)
"A Card of Introduction"— Edison, (Comedy.)
"Big Heartsd Jim"— Kalem. (Dramatic.)
"The Widow Vlait* Springtown"— Vitograph.
(Comedy.)
niuatrated aong: "I'm Going Back to My Old
Girl." Sung by Mr. I. 8. MtrtaehJLla.
ODEUM
"Pa.-adi«e Lost"— Bioraph. (Dramatic.)
"Winsor McCoy"— Vltofrmph, (Comedy.)
"Bob Sledding"- Vitograph. (Sporting.)
"Red'e Conquttt "— Selig. (Comedy Drama.)
niuatrated aoag: "Bring Me Back My Qoldaa
Orasaa." Sung by Mr. Oaersa Lest.
*
i '^
^/m
— — --"^-.^--^^ ---J--- -
I
I
(■
— I"
t
»
=?f=*»
acaoa^V
yBSriSSm
JSi I" Jjjir II T-y^ni n 1
'" * ii<»
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
» Mi
»— ^
• •
April 20, 1911.
9
A Little Sage and Sulphur
Makes Gray Hair Vanish — A
Remedy for All HalrTroubles
■»■ ■ ij
Who does not know the ralae of sag«
and sulphur for keeping the hair dark,
•oft, glossy and in good condition? As a
matter of fact, sulphur is a natural ele-
ment of hair, and a deficiency of It in
th» hair is held by many scalp specialists
to bo connected with loss of color and
vitalitv of the hair. Unquestronaibly,
there is no better remedy for hair and
scalp troubles, especially premature gray-
neps, than sage and sulphur, if properly
prepared. The Wyeth Chemical Oom-
pany of New York put up an ideal rem-
edy of this kind, called Wyeth's Sago
and Sulphur Hair Remedy, and author-
ize druggists to sell it under guarantee
that the money will be refunded if it
falls to do exactly as represented.
This preparation is offered to the
public at fifty cents a bottle, and is
recommended and sold by all druggists.
Special aprent, Max Wirth, 13 West
Superior street.
TO
Saint
Paul
Minneapolis
Three Good Week-Day Trains
— two Sundays — over the
"Short Line";
Northern Pacific Ry
Lake Superior Limited — de luxe
clcctric-hghted afternoon parlor
and observation car train, with
dining car — fast and fine.
TWIN Cmr EXPRESS
— the night train — has
electric-lighted sleeping
cars, open for occupancy
after 9.00 P. M.
Close connection at
Twin Cities for West
end South.
TICKETS:
334 TV. Superior St.
Duluih, Phones 214
817 Tim-er Ave.
Superior. PhonfS 4229
or at Stiiiion
Have you soen the new
Northern Pacific play-
ing cards? 20 cents per
pack. Try them. L4
"SO-EASY'*
Electric Iron
"So-Easy"' on your pocketbook.
This iron utilizes to the hishest
point of efficiency the electricity It
requires.
It therefore, adds little to the
amount of your regular monthly
bills.
Price $3.75.
FOR sale: bv
Duluth Elecfrical Co.|
230 W'eat First Street.
OFFICIAL MAP OF THE \VEATHER
VriXD SCALE.
MUes Pet
licur.
Brisk 25 to 35
Calm 0 to 5
Light 3 to IS
klodcrata ....^ 15 to 25
Uisti 35 to 50
Gale 50 to 65
Hurries ue 65 a nd abuia
H. \y. RICHARDSON.
Local Forceaiter.
Dampness and
threats of rain
continued through
last evening. but
this morning Ihe
light clouds In tlie
_^i wjKMJ I '^'^y ^^^ ""^^ threat-
/^Vv2^3x/ ening and the tcni-
tA ^OCSS^ perature is com-
m ^K^ fortable, though
**• N^ not warm. The
weather man prom-
ises continued fair
weather, with con-
tinued coolness and probably frost to-
night.
Fair weather prevailed a year ago
today.
The sun rose this morning at 5:11
and It will set at 7.03 this evening,
giving thirteen hours and fifty-two
minutes of sunlight.
Mr. Richardson makes the following
comment on weatner conditions:
"The low pressure condition that has
moved its center from the Upper Mis-
sissippi valley to Middle Atlantic
states caused light to heavy rains from
the Mississippi river eastward to the
Atlantic coast during the last twenly-
four hours. The high pressure central
over the Dakotas has caused a contin-
uance of moderately cool weather
throughout the Northwest and West
but no exceptionally low temperatures
for the season are reported. At the
Head of the Lakes fair weather may
be expected during the ensuing thirty-
si.K hours.
tana — Fair tonight and Friday;
much change In temperature.
Shippers' forecast — Protect thirty-
six-hour shipments of perishables
against temperature about 32 deg. In
the Dakotas, Minnesota and Wiscon-
sin.
Upper lakes — Light to moderate
north winds; fair tonight and Friday.
♦
The TeinperntiireM.
Following were the highest tempera-
tures for twenty-four hours and the
lowest for twelve, ending at 7 a. m.
today:
HJph. Low. High. 1^'W.
Milwaukee 4f. 42
Mhinedoea r>8
.Modcna 44
Miintgi'incry 70
.Mi.iitieal 52
Minrli^ad 62
New Orleans 82
New York r.i
North Platte 64
Oklahoma 82
Omaha 66
Ilorre 61
General Forecastii.
Chicago, April tfo. — Forecasts for
twenty-four hours ending at 7 p. m.
Friday: „ . ^ , ^^ ■,
Upper Miclilgan — Fair tonight and
Friday. ^ , ^ , , ,.
Wisconsin and Iowa — Fair tonight
and Friday; probably frost tonight
with cooler In east portion.
Minnesota — Fair tonight and Fri-
day; frost tonight.
North and South Dakota and Mon-
MURDERED MAN
IS IDENTIFIED
Man Found on Lake Shore
Was Jako Lauk-
Abilene 84
Alprna 50
.\tl antic City.... 52
Battleford 64
nismarck 58
Holse 72
IJoston 56
iSuffalo 60
Calgro- 58
Charleston 74
nUcago 54
Corpus Christl...84
Denver 72
T>es Moines 60
Devils Lake 54
Dodge 74
DubuQue 58
DULUTH 40
Durango 66
Kiistport 48
Kdmonton 60
Kst'aiiuha 52
CiUeston 78
Crand Haven ...''4
Green Bay 48
Ilatteras 69
Havre 08
Helena 56
Hiiughton
Huron 64
Jncksonvllle ....82
Kamloiips 60
Kansas City 66
KnuxvlUe 68
I.a Crosse
lyOUlsvUle 68
.Madi.^in 52
.Marquett* 46
.Mrd'.rino Hat ...64
Mcmi'liU 76
MiJei City 64
CO
36
42
30
34
30
36
40
30
60
44
74
40
48
36
42
44
38
30
34
36
34
PittsbuiT
Port Arthur
Portland, Or
Prince .Mbert
Su'.\{ipeUe ..
Raleteh
Rapid City .
Roiebvirg
.60
...50
...68
...56
..62
...74
...58
llosweU 86
St. Louis 62
72 'St. Paul 52
38 Salt Lake City 44
40 San Diego 62
60i£»ii Francisco ....70
30ls:iuU Sic. Marie. .60
36 Seattle 54
34 i.«ihcrldan 64
30 ;.Shn;vepi'rt 82
62 Sioux City 68
,^2 Spokane 64
50 Swift Current 64
52 ] Tampa 84
40 I Toledo 52
53 ; Washington 62
40 WUlUton 62
S8 I Wlnnemucca 46
2S Winnipeg 54
5t I YelluWitono 48
3«
38
24
62
12
36
61
41)
31
54
46
S3
46
36
40
26
30
56
34
32
44
52
42
32
56
58
38
40
26
62
44
36
28
72
43
50
S2
34
28
WILL POWER AND
DRUNKENNESS.
Will Power Alone Will Not Stop the
Excessive Use of Liquor; Must
Go to the Very Root and
Kill the "Craving."
The temperance advocate and total
abstainer are strong in their declara-
tion that drunkenness is a mean, low
and disgraceful habit, from which any
ordinary person can free himself by
the exercise of his will power alone.
Medical men. by patient research.
have demonstrated that drunkenness
is a poisoning and that the drunkard
is one In need of medical attention.
The disase of alcoholism can sure-
ly be cured, thanks to the Neal treat-
ment, which has demonstrated that
It is an infallible remedy striking at
once at the root of the trouble. There
has always been a demand for the
treatment for habitual drunkenness
which can be administered internally,
without the use of dangerous hyfio-
dermic injections.
E.xperience has taught that no in-
stitute extant other than the Neal In-
stitute in §t. Paul. 676 Dayton ave.,
has ever been successful In treating
drunkennes in less than four weeks'
time. It makes no difference how
long a man has been drinking, how
much or how little he drinks, or what
he drinks, the Neal Treatment has
never failet^, to cure in three days*
time, and without the use of that
devilish little tormentor of the flesh,
the hypodermic syringe. Just bear
in mind that there is no such thing
as a "secret cure" for drunkenness,
and you are taking great risk in ad-
minstering these remedies.
If you are afflicted with the drink
habit and really want to be cured,
write to the Neal Institute Co., cor-
ner Belknap and Seventh St., Su-
perior, Wis., for their free booklet,
giving full information and a copy
of their contract and guarantee bond.
It will be mailed to you under a plain
sealed envelope and everything will
be strictly confidential. You can be
treated at the Superior Institute, or
at the St. Paul. Minn.. Institute, 676
Dayton avenue, or the Minneapolis,
Minn.. Institute, corner Fourth ave-
nue south and Seventh street, which-
ever happens to be most convenient
to you.
kanner.
purpose of peace negotiations no po-
litical concessions would be asked. Dr.
Gomez declared that besides himself
Gen. Francisco I. Madero, Jr., probably
would appoint two other commission-
er.s. When the armistice is effected, it
was said here today, all the leaders of
the revolution, including some mem-
bers of the Madero family who have
been stationea at San Antonio and El
Paso, will gather at Juarez.
SHOTS FROM DOUGLAS SIDE
(Continued from page 1.)
The man who was found buried in
the sand of the lake shore Monday aft-
ernoon has been identified as Jako
Laukkanner from a torn receipt issued
to him for one share of slock in the
Finnish Workingmen's association of
Spirit Lake.
It was sold to him at Butte, Mont.,
Aug. 9, 1910 by one of the traveling
solicitors of the college. The writing
was so f.im that a magnifying glass
had to be used to decipher it. The
authorities at the college state that
they know nothing of the man further
than that the records show that one
share of stock was sold to him on the
date named.
Nothing has been learned as to the
manner in which he got the bullet
hole through his head. The authorities
are inclined to the belief that he was
murdered, although the suicide theoiy
is not Impossible. The body Is at the
undertaking rooms of Flood & Horgan
and is In a badly decomposed state. It
will be buried today at the expense of
the county.
MADERO REFUSES
ABSOLUTELY TO
GRANT AX ARMISTICE
(Continued from page 1.)
retreat, should their attack fail.
Advices from the Insurrecto camp
near Madera. Chihuahua, last night
declared that the force advancing oil
Juarez consisted of 1.940 men, divided
into five columns. One of these, the
dispatches stated, was under the com-
mand of Francisco I. Madero. Jr.. the
insurrecto comniander-ln-chlef. and the
others under Generals Orozco, Blanco,
Villa and Salazar.
•
l^'li: Soon Hear From Madero, Jr.
Washington, April 20.— Several mes-
sages passed today between Dr. Vaz-
quez Gomez, head of the confidential
agency of the Mexican revolutionists
here, who is conducting negotiations
for the propo.sed armistice, and Senor
Gonzales Garza, secretary of state of
the provisional government, stationed
at El Paso, Tex. ^ ^. ^
Senor Garza advised Dr. Gomez that
within twenty-four hours replies would
be received by him from Gen. Francis-
co I. Madero, Jr.. to the messages con-
cerning the armistice sent by Dr. Go-
mez. The period for which the armis-
tice should be effective and detailed ar-
rangf»ments for the susperslon of mili-
tary operations are features Gen. Ma-
edro Is expected to set forth.
Dr. Gomez was unable to explain re-
ported rebel activity around Juarez.
Mex.. and Ojinaga. He thought an
armistice might be arranged before
any of the threatened attacks were
made.
AriulHtlee Talk.
Washington, April 20. — Dr. Vazquez
Gomez, head of the confidential agency
of the Mexican revolutionists here, an-
nounced today that if all the prelim-
inary details of the proposed armistice
were arranged satisfactorily to both
sides, he would start for Juarez, Mex..
in the course of a few days to partici-
pate In the formal peace conferences
that are planned to follow the armis-
tice.
Dr. Gomez declared that the pros-
pects for an armistice were brighter
than ever today. He added that for the
at no time did they take possespion
of the building or cross Into American
territory. The American cavalry ar-
rived Immediately after the battle
opened and took possession of all
ground on the American side near the
custom house. The American troops
ran a patrol from botli sides of the
building extending along the America.,
side, both east and west. Two rebels
who were firing from the west of the
custom house backed onto the Ameri-
can line and were Immediately ar-
rested by the American cavalry, dis-
armed and not permitted to go back
into the fight.
"I stood on the porch of the Ameri-
can custom house, which extends
around three sides of the building,
east, soutli and north, and which are
the only sides that could be struck
tv federal bullets from Agua Prieta
except those passing through the
building. The building is of frame
construction, and it was pierced by the
mauser bullets.
Siel*<»eerii Had no GunM.
"Many Americans and Mexicans
crowded these three sides of the porch.
I saw not a single gun In the hands of
a sightseer, except that of the Amerl
can line riders. The customs officials
and American civil officers certainly
never fired a shot. Once when the
rebels at the railroad began a back-
ward movement for an instant, Mexi-
can sympathizers on the porch calleO
out, Viva Madero:' but they were in-
stantly silenced, not only bv An.erican
civil officers and the line i-lders, but by
the American civilians, among them
myself, as we feared drawmg the fed-
eral fire into this crowd on the porch.
-Ml this happened in Thursdays
battle while the rebels under 'Ked
Lopez were attacking Agua Prieta it
was durine- this battle that Robert Har-
rington an American switchman, was
killed in Douglas. E. E. Crow seriously
wounded and many other Americans
Injured on the American side of the
""T)urlng this battle not a .^hot was
fired from the American customs houso
and the rebels never had possession of
it. Some ground, still American terri-
tory, extends about fifty feet south of
the Amtrlcan customs house and ine
American troopers carefully guarded
this strip so that the rebels could not
get to the westward of the American
customs house to use It as a shelter.
UebelM DiMaraied.
"Maj. Schroeder of the American
armv hospital corps established his
ambulance in this strip to the west
of the custom house and a little to tne
south of it and there the wounded were
treated. These wounded were rebeis
who were shot near the line at this
point and carried by other rebels to
the American line and disarmed.
-The following day on my way to
the Mexican line I presented my pass
signed by Capt. Gaujot to the Ameri-
can troopers and was passed over the
line to the Mexican guardhouse on
Mexican territory.
"I saw an American rebel approach
Capt. Gaujot at the line. This Amer-
ican rebel was handling a gun. He
asked Capt. Gaujot, who was on Amer-
ican territory, if he. the rebel, might
send the firing i>in of his gun across
the line into Douglas to have It re-
paired. 'You certainly cannot," was the
captain's reply.
"I went into Agua Prieta also, hav-
ing a rebel passport signed by Col.
Medina, jefe of Agua Prieta. When
returning to my automobile this same
American rebel came up to me at the
machine, but he was immediately or-
dered back by an American trooper.
"I do not know what orders Capt.
Gaujot Issued to either the rebels or
the federals about trenching."
«
The Sound Sleep of Good Health.
Can not be over estimated and any ail-
ment that prevents It Is a menace to
i-frilih. J. L. Southers, Eau Claire,
A s., says: "I have been unable to
sleep soundly nights, because of pains
across my back and soreness of my
kidneys. My appetite was very poor
and mv general condition was much
run down. I have been taking Foley
Kidney Pills but a short time and now
sleep as sound as a rock, my general
condition Is greatly Improved, and I
that Foley Kidney Pills have
DIRE
DISTRESS
It Is Near at Hand to Hundreds of
Duluth Readers.
Don't neglect an aching back.
Backache is the kidney's cry for
help.
Neglect hurrying to their aid
Means that urinary troubles follow
quickly.
Profit by a Duluth citizen's experi-
ence.
Abraham Moore, 221 53d Ave., N.,
Duluth, Minn., says: "My experi-
ence with Doan's Kidney Pills has
convinced me that they are a reliable
kidney medicine. I had kidney and
bladder complaint and was bothered a
great deal by too frequent passages of
the kidney secretions. I also had
fainting and dizzy spells and at one
time fell down senseless. The use
of Doan's Kidney Pills benefited me
in every way and since taking this
remedy, I have had but little cause
for complaint. I know that I am
making no mistake in recommending
this peparation."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name — Doan's — and
take no «ther.
know
cured me
All druggists.
♦-
WOMEN ARE BALLOTING
(Continued from page 1.)
secretary; Mrs. W. F. Dennis, corre-
sponding secretary general; Mrs. G. M.
Brumbaugh, registrar general; Mrs. W.
D. Hoover, treasurer general; Mrs. C.
W. Bassett. historian general; Mrs. E.
S. Thompson, as.slstant historian gen-
eral; Miss A. Glllett, librarian general.
All are from the District of Columbia
except Mrs. Basset, Maryland, and Mrs.
Thompson. Massachusetts.
The opposition candidates: Mrs.
Myranda D. Tulloch, vice president
general; Mrs. W. E. Callender. South
Carolina, chaplain general; Mrs. Frank
Bold, District of Columbia, recording
secretary general; Mrs. W. A. Smoot,
Virginia, corresponding secretary gen-
eral; Miss G. M. Pierce, New York,
registrar general; Mrs. H. F. Blount,
District of Columbia, treasurer gen-
eral; Mrs. C. A. Thomas, New Jersey,
historian general; Mrs. C. H. Blssell,
Connecticut, assistant historian gen-
eral; Miss Aline Solomons, District of
Columbia, librarian general.
OFFICIALS DEPRESSED
BY ANSWER
(Continued from page 1.)
later in the day. Ambassador Zamacona
said he had read the note and made the
following comment upon It:
••Notwithstanding that the note ad-
dres.sed by the department of foreign
affairs to Ambassador Wilson refers
to the lamentable events on the border.
It certainly must be friendly In form
and essence, for It is impossible to
suppose that it might be In the least
unfriendly or discourteous. The rela-
tions between the two governments
have been most cordial. It would be
very convenient to wait until the note
Is made known In full, before ven-
turing to come to a conclusion which
may only be based on fragmentary and
unauthentlcated quotations. The press
at present, more than ever, may do
great good If It directs Its efforts to
prevent public opinion from being ex-
cited by any one. This would be a
great help toward accomplishing the
wishes of the Mexican people and their
government. In order to preserve the
ifrlendly relations existing between the
countries."
Will Await Fonnal Note.
President Taft will await the re-
ceipt of the formal note from Mexico
before taking the matter up further.
The president, It was said today, will
look upon the reply with a tolerant
spirit. He Is disposed to regard It as
the usual diplomatic forerunner to
formal negotiations for greater pre-
ventive measures.
The president, it is said, regards it
as natural that the Mexican govern-
ment should raise questions of fact as
to the responsibility for casualties
among Americans along the border.
Representative Slayden of Texas, one
of the early callers at the White
House, said that the president be-
lieved Mexico was sparring In the
usual diplomatic fashion. According to
Mr. Slayden the president Is still hope-
ful that peace In Mexico Is coming
You II Do Better at Kelly s^
Kelly's Basement Specials for This Week!
YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MISS THIS WEEK'S BARGAINS
Cast Iron Spiders
Your choice of Cast Iron Spid-
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No. 8 at, each 25^
No. 9 at, each 29<J
Clothes Hampers
A very durable Round Willow
Hamper — With cover; a household
necessity; small size
98^ each; extra
large size, each
$1.T3
Square Splint
Hampers — Good and
durable; small size
F'lour
Heavy Tin. Flour
Cans — Japanned in
colors; hold 100 lbs;
with tight-fitting
covers, each
$1.10
Glass Wat(;r Jugs
Large size Colonial Pattern Water
Jugs — Good clear class, ^ttjfc
each fcdU
Ironing Boards
Ironing Boards — With stand, top
of basswood; well finished T0|»
and strong; special fvU
Enamel Water
Pails
Basting Spoons
Made of heavy forged steel,
heavily retinned; 10, 12 and 14
inches long; special Vitk
each OC
Salad
Boivis
Fancy China Salad Bowls
edges, fruit designs; spe-
cialj each
-Tinted
I9c
Fancy Plates
Fancy China Plates — Floral centers
gold band edge; sp<cial, OCa
each £36
A No. 1 grade,
gray enamel
Water Pails —
Your Choice —
10-qt. size..
12-qt. size.,
.69^
.73f
Water Glasses
A good strong, com-
mon Water Glass — Not
like cut, dozen
Kitchen Sets
Here is a very convenient house-
hold outfit — consists of cleaver,
bread knife, carvinr: knife and
fork, can opener, meat saw and
knife sharpener; special at, set
Good Refrigeirators
Sanitary Refrigerators — The kind that are
easily kept clean and are economical in the
use of ice. We are offering you a fine assort-
ment of medium and high grade refrigerators
at a lower price than you woi.ld pay for in-
ferior grades elsewhere.
See our special refrigerator,
made of hardwood, finished gold-
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wire shelves; well constructed in
every waj', at
yOVR CREDIT IS GOOD
Kelly's
Three-Room
Outiif
Terms— $1.50 Per Week.
^^?"
shortlv and believes that the American
border will not again suffer as it did
at the battle of Agua I'rleta.
— •
Foley Kidney Pills contain in con-
centrated form. Ingredients of estab-
lished therapeutic value for the relief
and cure of all kidney and bladder
ailments. Foley Kidney Pills arc antl-
scptio tonic and restorative. Refuse
substitutes. All druggists.
RIGliTrOFARizONA
(Continued from page 1.)
cepiion of recall of judges, he said he
was heartily In favor of this way of
getting rla of incompetent or cor-
rupt public servants.
Touches on I^orlmer Cane.
The senator touched on the Lorimer
case In connection with his plea for
honest politics. Senator Works was
named in the resolution introduced at
the present session by Senator La
Follette calling for another Investiga-
tion of the Lorlmer case, as chairman
of the committee of investigation.
"This widespread uprising against
the corruption that, If persisted in,
must eventually overthrow our repre-
sentative form of government," he said,
"Is founded upon the most convincing
evidence that corruption is eating at
the very vitals of the republic and
threatening the perpetuity of our free
institutions. We need not go outside of
this chamber to find evidence of this
fact. The pages of the Congressional
Record of the past few montlis will
disclose a condition that has brought
the whole nation to shame. It was
charged that the election of a member
of this body was procured by corrupt
practices and the briliery of votes in
the legislature. I need not enter upon
a discussion of the evidence In tnat
case. It Is enough to say that It was
clearly and sufficiently shown that
corrupt practices had been resorted to
In the election and that some votes had
been purchased.
'•I have cited the case," the senator
continued "to show why the people of
this country may justly claim a larger
share In the election of their officers
and the control of legislation. It Is
one out of hundreds of cases where
corrupt and Illegal Influences have been
brought to bear to control elections
and the enactment of legislation detri-
mental to the public at large.
Is There No Way to Overcome Evilf
"la there no way," he asked "by
which such evil Influences may be met
and overcome? Some senators here
seem to think not. When the people
attempt to limit the power of their rep-
resentatives and assume some of that
power themselves by Ignoring the un-
faithful representative and acting dl-
To Women
Who Dread
Motherhood!
Information How They May Give
Birth to Happy, Healthy Chil-
dren Absolutely Without
Pain, Sent Free.
No women need any longer dread tne
«lns of childbirth, or remain ohlldless.
or 3. H. Dye has devoted his life to
relieving the sorrows of ^omen. He
has proved that all pain at childbirth
may b« tntlrely banished, and he will
gladly tejl you how it may be done ab-
solutely free of charge. Sbnd your
nameand address to Dr. J. H. Dye 600
Lewis Block, Buffalo N Y., and he
will *end you, postpaid, his wonderful
book which tells how to give birth to
happy, healthy children, absolutely
without pain; also how to cure Steril-
ity. Do UQt *elay but wrUtJ»d»y-
rectly at the polls, or by recalling him
and substituting an honest and faith-
ful representative in lis place, the cry
is raised that this effort to control
their own representatives and their
own government is a violation of the
Constitution of the I'nited States and
an encroachment upon the priclples of
our representative form of govern-
ment.
"That is the issue which confronts
us today. The proposed Constitution
of Arizona provides Jor the initiative,
referendum and recall. Objection is
made to the admisslor of this territory
as a state on this ground and this
alone."
Senator Works th ;n attempted to
prove by reference from sppreme court
decisions and other bigal and political
opinions that the p«!Ople of Arizona
have a right to declc.e for themselves
what form of a Reput Ucan government
they will live under to long as It does
not conflict In any wiy with the Con-
stitution of the United States or the
principles of the Declaration of Inde-
pendence. As "republican form of gov-
ernment" is not defined by the Consti-
tution, he declared that It must be as-
sumed that the phi'as.j was used in the
"generally accepted nense, if there Is
any." He then sought to prove his con-
tention that under a "republican form
of government," as provided for In the
Constitution, "the po\,rer to govern ex-
ists in the people."
MuMt Be Happy Medium.
He declared that, while he was in
favor of the direct election reforms
which Arizona wanteil, he did not be-
lieve In a pure democracy, which would
be "too weak and un? table to meet the
demands of a nation like our own. But
surely there Is a happy medium, a
middle ground between the unwar-
ranted and corrupt jower now exer-
cised by our repres ?ntatlve3 and a
system which would destroy this sys-
tem and establish in its place a pure
democracy."
Senator Works ex;>ressed the hope
that If Arizona were now refused ad-
mission, the people tl ere "would stand
on their manhood anc stay outside un-
til the politics of thlsi country is purl-
fled, regenerated and elevated so that
their progressive and enlightened Con-
stitution will be their sure passport to
statehood."
Will Look Like New.
One quart can ol Jap-a-Lac will
make your old chairsi, picture frames,
iron beds and other furniture look like
new. Quayle-Larsen Co. sells It. 14-16
West Superior street.
IROMON, MINN., SOON
TO HAVE ELF.CTR1CITY.
MONDAY
There is not an ounce of ro-
sin in Sunny Monday Laun-
dry Soap. Rosin is used in
all other laundry soaps — be-
cause it is cheaper than the
fats and oils used in Sunny
Monday. Sunny Monday costs more
to manufacture than any other laundry
soap of which we know. It is kind to
clothes — will not shrink flannels or
woolens, or turn clothes yellow.
Sunny Monday is just as pure ai
its whiteness indicates ; it is the safest
and most economical laundry soap
you can use.
1?
3
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
CHICAGO
!>'
Ironton, Minn., April 20. — (Special to
The Herald. — Poles £re being set and
wires strung and it Is expected that
within a week Ironton will be supplied
with electric power and current from
Deerwood where the powerhouse of
the Cuyuna Range I'ower company is
located. M. D. Stoner the president
of the corporation, states that withlr
two weeks day power will be supplied
thus giving the towns of Deerwood.
Cuyuna, Crosby and Ironton continu-
ous service.
Among the Duluth people who will
erect summer residences at Crosby
Beach on Serpent lake west of Deer-
wood are J. A. Stetscn, Miss Genevieve
Dunning. E. J. Gercnimus. the drug-
gist, and William Blind of F. A. Pat-
rick's. A. G. Shulind, the Cuyuna con-
tractor, will also bi lid. Ten cottage-;
are soon to be commenced In this
pretty suburb. Roac a have been laid
out, the undergrowth brushed out and
many other Improve rnents made.
(►_
Bralnerd Nenm Notes.
Bralnerd, Minn., i^.prll 20. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Gearge Laughton of
Watertown, near Pine River, was in
the municipal cou-t yesterday and
■warn held to the grand jury on the
charge iof seduction under promise
of marriage.
Commencing Friday the Swedish'
iVIlsslon church wlli hold mission
services Friday, Saturday and Sundav.
Assisting tne pajitor, liev. C. W. Bo-
tjuist, will be two prominent ministers,
the Rev. F. O. Kllng of Minneapolis
and the Rev. ^. V. BJorklund of SU
Cloud.
The case of Dr. Howard G. IngersoU
against the Northern Pacific railway,
a claim for lost and delayed baggage
containing among other things vhI.i-
hable dental Instruments, was heard
In municipal court and Judge J. ii.
Warner took the case under advise-
ment.
See the Daluth Hardware Co.*s
Npw quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
Asthma Catarrh
WHOOPING COUGH CROUP
BRONCHITIS ^UGHS COLDS
CSTABLISHCD 18T0
A tlniplc, Mte and effective Ucataeat for broa-
chial Uoublea, without doling the (temack with
drug*. Died wilb iuccch for thirty yeart.
The air rendered wrongly antiteptic. iacp'red
with every breath, make* breathing ea»y, tooibri
the tore throat, and (topt the cough, aaturing rctu
fal nigbu. Cretoleae U iDva:uable to moibet*
with young children mod • ^n to attlFeren from
Atthira.
Sead HI portal for detcriptWe booklet.
ALL DRUGGISTS.
Try Cretuleoe Antl-
•eptie Throat TablcU
for the irritated throat.
They are ttmple,efllcct-
iTe and antiaeptic. Of
your dmggiit or fr«m na,
IOC ia atampa.
Vipo Cresokoe Co.
«2 Cvlludt St., N. V.
ff
■•^•^•B
l«S>«i
t»T
*
■*— IP
i«^
13
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
Zm meek'$ Sunday School Cmon
YnarrtN for the heaalo by iu^v. j, s. kmitixy. d. d.
MM>VV SCHOOL LESSOt APRIL 2S.
11 Klnsw »l. -l-«2: Uis Juash Itepairs
the Temple.
THE CO.\>Kt'TION.
Soon after the crowning of Joash,
the goud Jehoiada aroused the people
to make a covenant witli God and with
the kini? to be the Lord's people. Then
he I'-d them to march on the temple
of H:ial. tear It down, break the altars
and linages and sJay the priest Mailan.
Next he officered the temple of CJod
and the kings palace and set the boy
king on the throne. Joash "did that
which was right in the eyes of the
Lor.l ail the days of Jehoiada. the
priest" and fortunately for the first
twenty-three years of his reign of
forty vears, he was un^ler the direction
of til."' good priest. Fatiier anil grand-
father moral prolligatcs; grandmother
and great -grandmother female demons
- — wiiat could he be.' We must not for-
get that he had some of the best an-
cestors, David, Asa, Jehosaphat; tliat
he wa.s brought up in the temple with
Its awe-inspiring appearance and his-
tory; ihat he was trained by his noble
aunt and her husband Jehoiada. His
vorli was defective in that he failed to
take away the high places and still
allowed the people to offer sacrifices
and burn incense there. That showed
lack of initiative and decision. He
married young and some time "after
this." at about 20 years of age. he
undertook to repair the tompie — a
needed piece of work.
THE LE!«SO>r.
I.
The FIrnt Plan a Failnrr. 12; 4-6.
•And Jehoash said to the priests.
All tiie money of the hallowed tilings
that is brought into the house of Je-
hovah, in current money, the money
of the j>ersons for wliom each man is
rated, and all the money that it cometh
Into any man's heart to bring into the
hou.*e of Jehovah, let the priests take
It to them, every man from his ac-
quaintance: and they shall repair the
iTeaches of tlie liou.se. wheresoever
any breach shall he found. But it was
so, that in the tiuee and twentieth
year of king Jehoash the priests had
not repaired the breaches of the
liotJse."
1. IN TUSTICE.— His original plan
■was to take tiie money out of the
treasury. That was urijust to the
|trlests. who were supported ijy that
fund. It came from three sources —
the jioll tax, the money for vows and
free will offerings. It was unjust to
the priests to get the money for re-
pairs In that way. and further unjust
to impose on them the whole responsi-
bility of doing the work. It is not
cliimeil that Joash meant to be unjust.
He was simply inefficient. That was
due p.Trtly to Jehoiada, who was regent
from the time the boy was crowned
king, and he evidently overrode his
will. Perhaps this plan was the best
tlie king could thinK out. It is to his
credit t!:at he wanted to put the old
l)uildir2:s in order. He had lived there,
protected from death, for six years. He
was indebted to old Jehoiada for that.
And the temple needed attention,
l.adlv. It had stood for 150
years, without any repairs. It
had- been looted by foreigners several
times: part of its walls had b^on torn
down to be built into the temple of
Baal, erected by Athaliah, his grand-
mother, the foundations had been un-
dermin-^'d.
2 INDIFFERENCE.— The priests
and Levites male a failure of it. for
r*»asons verv obvious to us — no heart
In their work, ar.yhow; dislike to work
on suggestions from the outside, on
account of official pride; fear of lessen-
ing their own income: possibly, uis-
ho'nest appropriation of wliat they did
collect. They would not hurry. They
took years and years, doing nothing,
till his patience was exhausted. What
was the goo.i priest. Jehoiada. doing,
all this time? Probably vexing bis
righteous soul, at the delay. Possi-
bly he was too old to have an active
part in It. Some money came in — the
poll tax, the- votive offerings and some
gifts from saintly souls — but no report
was made of it and nothing was done
with it.
II.
The Xew Plaa Outlined. 7-10.
•'Then King Jehoash called for
Jehoiada the priest, and for the other
priests, and said unto them. Why re-
pair ve not the breaches of the house.'
now "therefore take no more mone_y
from your acquaintance, but deliver it
for the breaches of the house. And
the priests consented that they should
take no more money from the people,
neither repair the breaches of the
But Jehoiada the priest took a chest,
and bored a hole in the Ud of it, and
set it beside the altar, on the right
side as one cometh Into the house of
Jehovah: and the priests that kept the
threshold put therein all the money
that was brought into the house of
Jehovah. And It was so. when they
saw that there was much money in the
chest, that the kings scribe and the
high priest came up. and they put up
In bags and counted the money that
was found In the house of Jehovah.
1. COMPLAINT.— At last, Joash
calls them down with vehemence. He
Includes Jehoiada In his criticism
though his duty was merely to direct
the collections and receive their re-
ports. The king must repair his own
mistakes, as well.
2. OFFERINGS. — The plan was to
secure all the money by freewill of-
ferings. The priests were glad enough
to stop going around among their "ac-
quaintances" and asking them for con-
tributions. The new plan was good.
The king had learned by his failures.
The best thing one ever docs Is to
make a failure, usually so, at least. He
learns some things then. There were
four points in this plan — willingness,
system, accuracy. confidence. The
money was brought in by the peojde,
of their own accord, but everything
was fixed, so as to stimulate the gifts
by the worship, facilitate the giving
bj- the boxes and justify It. by the way
the money was handled. It was regu-
larly counted and put up in packages.
in.
Great Suocensi -Vchieved. 11-15.
'■ \nd they gave the money that was
weighed out into the hands of them
that did the work, that had the over-
sight of the house of Jehovah: and they
paid it out to the carpenters and the
builders, that wrought upon the house
of Jehovah, and to the masons and the
hewers of stone, and for buying timber
and hewn stone to repair the breaches
of the house of Jehovah, and for all
that was laid out for the house to re-
pair it. But there were not made for
the house of Jehovah cups of silver,
snuffers, basins, trumpets, any vessels
of gold, or ves.sels of silver, of the
money that was brought into the house
of Jehovah; for they gave that to them
that did the work, and repaired there,
with the house of Jehovah. Moreover
they reckoned not with the men. Into
wliose hand they delivered the money
to give to them that did the work; for
they dealt taitlif ully."
1. SYSTEM. — Capable men were
for Infants and Chiidren,
Castoria is a liarmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Drops and Sootliiug S>Tups. It is Pleasaut. It
contains neither Opium, Mori>liino Bor other Narcotic
jjuhstance. It destroys Worms and allays Fevenslmess.
It cures I>iarrh<x?a and Wind Colic. It relieves Teeth-
in«" Troubles snd cures Constipation. It regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, givinj? healtliy and natural sleep*
The ChUdren*s Panacea— The Mother's Friend.
I The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
WHOLESALE
JOBBERS AND
MANUFACTURERS
OF DULUTH, MINNESOTA.
Reliable and Up-to-Date Concerns Who Do a Striiflly
Jobbing and Manufacturing Business.
ASBESTOS.
A. H. Krieger Co.
BAKERS.
Crescent Bakery.
BLAST FURNACE.
Zenith Furnace Co.
FURNITURE.
DeWitt-Seitz Company.
FOUNDERS and MACHINISTS.
Clyde Iron Works.
GLASS, PAINTS AND BUILD-
ING MATERIALS.
Paine & Nixon Co.
BREWERS.
Duluth Brewi-g & Malting Co.
Fitger Brewing Co.
BUTTER AND ICE CREAM
MANUFACTURERS.
Bridgeman-Russell Co.
CEMENT AND PLASTER.
D. G. Cutler Co.
COMMISSION AND PRODUCE.
Fitzsimmons- Palmer Co.
CONFECTIONERY.
National Candy Co.
(Duluth Factory.)
DRUGS.
L. W. Leithhead Drug Co.
DRY GOODS.
F. A. Patrick & Co.
GROCERS.
Gowan-Pe3^on-Congdon Co.
Stone-Ordean-Welb Co.
Wright-Clarkson Mercantile Co.
HARDWARE.
Kelley-How-Thom3on Co.
Marshall- Wells Hdw. Co.
WHOLESALE AND MAN'F'S
OF MEN'S FURNISHINGS.
Christensen- M endenhall-
Graham Co.
PAPER.
Duluth Paper & Stationery Co.
McClellan Paper Co.
Peyton Paper Co.
made responsible for certain tasks, to
hire workmen and oversee the work.
The priests were glad to be relieved.
Head the list of workmen and see what
they did.
2. CONFIDENCE. — No restriction was
put on them. The king trusted the
workmen because they were trust-
worthy, and they were trustworthy
partly because they were trusted. It
works both ways. The completeness
of the repairs can be Judged by the
kind of workmen employed and the de-
tails of the work given us.
WHAT THE MASTKHS .SAY.
It was probably in Jehoram's reign
and with his sanction that there
was built in Jerusalem a temple of
Baal after the pattern of the temple
erected by Ahal> in Samaria, adorned
with altars and images of Baal himself
and his fellow god.s, the same ■which
was afterwards destroyed by Jehoiada,
the high priest, in the reign of Joash.
Large numbers of the Jews were at-
tracted by this novel worship, with
Its wild gayety. and Its licentious or-
gies; the worship of Jehovah was dis-
credited and almost discontinued, and
the way was paved for those further
changes, which his widow, Athaliah,
introduced after hi.s death. — Rawlinson.
Barrie says that the remembrance
of Stevenson acted upon him like a lit-
erary conscience, condemning all
clumsy and careless work, and girding
the loins of mind and soul to pursue
the last line and hue of the most radi-
ant ideal. And so must It be when we
are conscious that we work under the
observation of the King, under "the
great Taskmaster's eye," whose heart
craves for the gift of finished work;
we shall surely be Intense in our labor,
and we shall do it with all our heart
and mind. — Pollard.
PKRTI^EXT QIESTIONS.
1. — How does the lesson sliow the
value of first impressions?
2. — What is the value of a mistake?
3. Why does privilege sometimes pre-
vent progress?
4. — Why is responsibility necessary
to reliability?
5. — What are the moral values of
accuracy?
6. — Why should houses of worship be
tasteful and be kept in good condition?
7. — Why is promptness necessary to
honesty and efficiency?
8. — What Is the present day correl-
ative of the old temple?
BOOKS ADDED
TO THE LIBRARY
Don't Grow Old Too Fast
"A man is as old as his arteries." Old age is merely
a hardening of the arteries— and hardening of the
arteries comes from excessive eating of high-protein
food such as meat and eggs. Cut do\ra the high-
protein diet for awhile and eat Shredded Wheat. It
supplies all the body-building material iin the whole
wheat prepared in a digestible form. Of course
SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUIT
will not "cure" appendicitis — nor will any other ccjreal food. The
excessive eating of indigestible foods, however, gradually brings on
stomach and bowel disorders — and these can be prevented by a
daily diet of thoroughly cooked cereals. Shredded Wheat is best
for this purpose because it is steam-cooked, shr€;dded and twice
baked, retaining the bran coat, which is so valuable in keeping
the bowels healthy and active.
Heat the Biscuit in the oven to restore crispness and serve with' hot or cold milk and a little cream,
adding salt or sugar to suit the taste. It also makes delicious combinations with stewed or preserved
fruits. Two Shredded Wheat biscuits with stewed fruit makes a wholesome nourishing meal.
The Only Cereal Breakfast Food Made in Biscuit Form
Made onlr by
The Shredded Wheat Company
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
List of Works Acquired Dur-
ing the Last Two
Weeks.
The following books were added to
the library from April 1 to 15:
PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION
Abbott, D. P., "Behind the Scenes
With the Mediums."
Dearmer, Percy, "Body and Soul; an
Inquiry Into the Kffect of Religion
Upon Health."
Hammond, E. P., "The Conversion of
Children."
SOCIOLOGY.
Brown, E. E., •'Government by In-
fluence, and Other Addresses."
Croly, Herbert, "The Promise of
American Life."
Flynt. Joslah, "Tramping With
Tramps; Studies and Sketches of Vaga-
bond Life."
Frankel, L. K., "Worklngmen's In-
surance In Europe."
Graham, H. J., "Civil Service Self-
Instructor."
Malory, Sir Thomas, "The Boy's King
Arthur."
Parsons, Theo., "Laws of Business
for All States and Territories of the
Union and Dominion of Canada."
Seagor, H. R., "Social Insurance, a
Program of Social Reform."
Van Hlse, C. H., "The Conservation
of Natural Resources in the United
SCIENCE AND USEFUL ARTS.
Arnold, J. H.. "How a City Family
Managed a Farm."
Bailey, L. H., "Cycl6pedla of Ameri-
can Agriculture."
Chamberlain. T. C, "A College Text-
book of Geology."
Doane, R. W.. "Insects and Disease;
an Account of the Way In Which In-
sects May Spread or Cause Disease."
Hall. W. S., "From Youth Into Man-
hood." . , „ .,
Dunn S. O.. "Valuation of Railways
with Especial Reference to the Physi-
cal Valuation In Minnesota."
International Library of Technology,
volumes 95 to 111:
Volume 95, "Placer Mining, Assaying,
Ore Mining, etc."
Volumes 96 and 97, "Bridge Specifi-
cations and Building, etc."
Volume 98, "Water Supply, Sewer-
I age Purification of "Water."
Volume 99. "Foreign Exchange.
i Money and Currency, Canadian Bank-
1 ill ^"^ **
I Volumes 100 and 101, "Painting and
I Interior Decoration." ^ ^ , _ ,
Volume 102, 'Letters, Catalogs, Book-
let and Folders; Mall Order System;
I Advertisement Illustration."
Volume 103, "Engraving and Print-
ing Methods; Trade Paper Advertising,
Advertisement Illustration."
Volume 104, "Manufacture of Gas,
Iron, Steel and Cement."
Volumes 105 and 106, "Principles of
Refrigeration; Ammonia Compressors;
Carbon Dioxide and Other Systems."
Volume 107, "Elements and Systems
of Steel Reinforcement; Concrete Beam
and Column Design; Reinforced Con-
crete."
Volume 108, "Sands and Cements;
Building Stone and Brick; Elements of
Stone Masonry; Concrete Building
Blocks." ^ , ^,
Volume 109, "Statics; Forces Acting
on Beams; Wooden Posts, Cast Iron
Columns, etc." , ,,, „. ^ .„
Volumes 110 and 111, "Automobile.
Engine Auxiliaries, Electric Ignition.
Transmission and Control Mechanism,
etc."
Johnson, J. B., "The Theory and
Practice of Surveying."
Lyon, D. E., "How to Keep Bees for
Profit."
McCook, H C, "Ant Communities
and How They are Governed."
Merrlman, Mansfield, "American Civil
Engineers' Pocket Book."
Rathbone, R. L. B., "Simple Jewelry."
Sadler, W. S., "The Cause and Cure
of Colds."
Servlss, G. P., "Curiosities of the
Sky."
Sparling, S. E., "Introduction to
Business Organization."
FINE ARTS.
Sturgls. Russell, "The Artlsts's Way
of Working In the Various Handicrafts
and Arts of De.slgn."
Upton, G. P., "Standard Musical Bio-
graphies."
Wagner, Richard, "Parsifal."
Windsor, H. H., "Mission Furniture;
How to Make It."
LITERATURE.
Crlssey, Forest, "Handbook of Mod-
ern Business Correspondence."
Fasnacht, G. E., "Macmlllan's Pro-
gressive French Reader."
Field. Eugene, "Poems. Complete
Edition."
Hardy, Thomas, "Wessex Poems and
Other Verses."
Holley, Samantha, "Samantha at Sar-
atoga."
Howells, W. D., "The Register; a
Farce."
Northrop, H. D.. "The Peerless Re-
citer."
Northrop, H. D., "Young People's
Percy,* Thomas, "The Boy's Percy;
Being Old Ballads of War, Adventure
and Love from Bishop's Percy's Rell-
ques of Ancient English Poetry."
Seccombe, Thomas, "The Age of
Johnson, 1748-1798."
Thomas, R. W., "A Manual of De-
bate."
Trueblood, T. C. "Winning Speeches
In the Contests of the Northern Orator-
ical League."
Watson, William, "Sable and Purple
With Other Poems."
Wood, K. B., "Quotations for Occa-
sions."
TRAVEL, BIOGRAPHY AND HISTORY.
Andrews. C. M., et al„ "A Bibliogra-
phy of History for Schools and Libra-
ries."
Blalkle, James, "The Sea-kings of
Crete."
Brooks, Noah, "First Across the Con-
tinent; the Story of the Exploring
Expedition of Lewis and Clark in
1804-5-6."
Burr. Mrs. Anna, "The Autobiogra-
phy, a Critical and Comparative Study."
Dyer, F. L., and T. C. Martin, "Edi-
son, His Life and Inventions."
Frolssart, Jean, "The Boy's Frols-
sart." edited by Sidney Lanier.
Gardiner, S. B., "English History for
Schools, B. C. 35; A D. 1880."
Hale, E. E., "William H. Seward."
"Harrlman Alaska Series of the
Smithsonian Institution."
Hitchcock. Ripley, "Decisive Battles
of America."
Ogg, F. A.. "A Source Book of Me-
diaeval History."
Pendleton, L. B., "Alexander H.
Stephens."
Robins, Edward, "William T. Sher-
man."
Spears, J. R., "David G. Farragut."
Willis. H. P., "Stephen A. Douglas."
Young, E. R.. "Stories from Indian
Wigwams and Northern Camp-fires."
PROBABLY CASE OF ARSON.
No One Killed in Fire in Chicago
Liquor House.
Chicago, April 20. — Three persons
supposed to have been burned to death
In a fire which followed an explosion
last night at the wholesale liquor store
of Joseph Morici & Co., were reported
today as having left the building safely. |
Morlcl and his partner, Peter Mis-
uracet, whom the police arrested for
alleged suspicious actions during the
fire, had each a loaded revolver when
taken into custody. Nothing was found
which confirmed theories that the ex-
plosion resulted from a Black Hand
plot or had been caused by safe blow-
According to the police, the cause
probably was one of arson.
.
Good results always follow the use
of Foley Kidney Pills. They give
prompt relief In all ca-ses of kidney
and bladder disorders. Try them. All
druggists.
PULLMAN CAR
COMPANY A MINT
Stock Dividends Have In-
creased Its Capital to
$120,000,000.
Washington, April 20. — The Pullman
Palace Car company has filed a report
with the Interstate commerce commis-
sion. It is the first ever submitted:
For approximately half a century
the company strenuously Insisted that
it was not a common carrier and not
subject to federal regulation. It
claimed to be a hotel company whose
hotels were run on wheels. But it
finally decided to tell about Its busi-
ness.
The company started nearly fifty
years ago with $1,250,000 capital. It
never had any new capital paid in ex-
cept from earnings. Stock dividends
have increased Its capital until It Is
now $120,000,000. A man who owned
$1,000 of Its capital in the beginning
would have drawn down large annual
dividends ever since and incidentally
had his capital increased to $100,000.
Last year the company gathered in
$33,334,073 from the operation of
5,283 cars. It paid an 8 per cent divi-
dend and distributed $20,000,000 \p
stock. The only roads in wh )se sleep-
ing cars tills company has n > Interest
are the St. Paul, the New Haven and
the Great Northern. The company
builds its own cars and many others;
even exports cars to foreign countries.
A steel Pullman of the most modern
type costs $24,124; of the old wooden
type, $14,722. People don't get tele-
scoped or burned up In the Siteel cars,
but they come high and have less orna-
mentation about them. There are In
operation many of the old fashioned
Pullmans, with solid black walnut
carved woodwork that could not be
duplicated today except for jimall for-
tunes.
The average Pullman earns a profit
per day of $7.62. The repoit falls to
state anything as to the wages of
porters or the amount the public pays
them for having its slioes shined.
The New York Central-"^'anlierbilt
group of capitalists are especially
strong In the Pullman compt.ny. This
is because the New York Central used
to control the Vv'agner Pilace Car
company, which the PuUmar bought.
exchanging $20,000,000 of PullmaO
stock for the Wagner business, cara^
and nlant.
«
See the Duluth Hardware Co.*s
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W,
HIBBING MAN ORDERED
TO STATE HOSPITAL.
After an examination as to his can-
ity held In probate court yesterday
afternoon, James Connors of Hibbingr,
was ordered to the state hospital for
the insane at Fergus Falls by Judgs
Giipin.
On many subjects Connors was ap-
parently rational. He has resided fa
;iib')ing for thirteen years and is well
known. Some time ago he tried to end
his life by Jumping from a high vla-
i:uft. He v.'as restrained by friends.
Excessive drink is suppcsod to ba
responsible for his present condition.
ISmiR FOR Mer, WOMEN AND CHILDREN THAN CASTOR OIL,
SALTS,OR nLLS,AS IT SWEETENS AND CLEANSES THE SYSTEM MORE EFFICIENTLY AND
IS FAR MORE PLEASANT TO TAKE.
^SYfflJP-fFlGS-^ELIXIRof^BNNA
IS THE IDEAL FAMILY LAXATIVE, AS
rr GIVES SATISFACTION TO ALL, IS
ALWAYS BENEHCIAL IN ITS EFFECTS
AND PERFECTLY SAFE AT ALL TIMES.
NOTE THE NAME
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
in tfie Circfe.
on evem Pacfia^e of iho Gonuine.
♦
ALL RELIABL£ DRUGGISTS SELL THE ORIGINAL AND
GENUINE WHEN CALLED FOR. ALTHOUGH THEY COULD
MAKE A LARGER PROFIT BY SELUNG INFERIOR PREPARA. .
"nONS. YET THEY PREFER TO SELL THE GENUINE. BECAUSE
IT IS RIGHT TO DO SO AND FOR THE GOOD OF THEIR
CUSTOMERS. WHEN IN NEED OF MEDICINES^ SUCH
DRUGGISTS ARE THE ONES TO DEAL WITM, AS YOUR
UFE OR HEALTH MAY AT SOME TIME DEPEND UPON
THEIR SKILL AND REUABILITY
WHEN BUYING
Why do the world's
greatest singers
Caruso
Gadski
McCormack
Scotti
Calve
Homer
Melba
Sembrich
Eames
Journet
Plangon
Tetrazzini
Farrar
Martin
Schumann-Heink
Witherspoon
MINIATURE PICTURE
OF PAClU^C£
No(ef6eMName of the Gompani
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS, NEAR THE BOTTOM. AND IN
THE aRCLE,NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY PACKAGE.OF THE
GENUINE. ONE SIZE ONLY. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING
DRUGGISTS. REGULAR PRICE SOc PER BOTTLE.,
SYRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA IS THE ONLY PERFECT FAMILY LAXATW^
BECAUSE IT IS THE ONE REMEDY WHICH ACTS IN A NATURAL. STRENGTHENING WAV
AND CLEANSES THE SYSTEM, WITHOUT UNPLEASANT AFTER-EFFECTS AND WrTHOUT
nUUTATING, DEBILITATING OR GRIPING^ AND THEREFORE DOES NOT INTERFERE IN ANY
WAY WITH BUSINESS OR PLEASURE. IT IS RECOMMENDED BY MILUONS OF WELL.
INFORMED FAMILIES^ WHO KNOW OF fTS VALUE FROM PERSONAL USE. TO GET IT».
BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE; MANUFACTURED BY THE
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
make records only
for the Victor?
Because they realize that the Victor is the
only instrument that does full justice to their
magnificent voices.
They want every part of every selection
to be as sweet and natural when they sing in
your home as when they sing on the grand-
opera stage — and this can be accomplished
only on the Vic':or.
Their voices on the Victor are the standard
by which they wish to be judged.
Hearing is believing — go today to the nearest
Victor dealer's and hear these famous artists sing their
greatest arias. Ydu'U be astonished at the wonderful
results secured by the new Victor process of recording.
Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J., U. S. A.
New Victor R« cords are on sale
at all dealers on tt e 2Sth of each month
And be sure to hear the
Victor- Victrola
To set best rrsults. ate only
Victor Needles >>n Victor Records
LSMmmMjJt'UW
tsesess
THE
FIRST lATIONlU
BAMK
OF DULUTH,
Cipltll $600,000
tarplM ud Profits, . $1,526 DQO
-WE ISSUK-
$10, $20, $50, $100
Travelers' Checks.
Safe, convenient, self-identifying.
Payable everywhere for full face value.
HiTun
y 1
L
«^^i^
mm-
4 ^
)♦
V*-
1.
I
*
««
rr- ■!» I I y I »
-d.il» li lliHHH*
i
=05:
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 20, 1911.
11
All Days Alike to Him
By CARA REESE.
To further the development of art in
Minnesota a prize contest for the boys
and girls in the public schools of Min-
nesota has been started by the St.
Faul In.stitute School of Art. The
achool offers a ca^h prize of $100 and
a scholarsliip for one year to the boy
or eirl whose drawing shows the
bifchest order of natural artistic abil-
ity.
This contest is open to public school
pupilj in Minnesota, outside of St.
Paul and Minneapolis, who will fini.sh
the eiifhlh grade or more this spring.
Drawings are to be in lead pencil,
not larger tlian 7 by 9 inches.
Drawings from nature, models or
oV>jects are preferred, altliough imag-
inary compositions will be considered.
r>eoi.-=ion and award will be on tlie
basis of natural ability shown, rather
than the best drawing. Wliere work
Indicates that tlie student has had
Instruction, this will be taken into
consideration, so tiiat the student who
luis had no advantages wii» have just
a.s good a chance as the one who has
Studied drawing.
Tlie drawing must bear the name
and address of the student plainly
■written, and be mailed to the St. Paul
In-uiiute .School of Art, St. Paul. wit)i
return postage, not later than May 10.
1^11.
By this offer of opportunity to stu-
dents wlio are likely to bring honor
to tile state the institute iiopes to en-
Courage and Stimulate interest in tliis
line of study.
*
Club Supper.
The members oi tlie Wa-Pse-Ke club
n-ill be hosts at a supper tliis evening
at their cabin on Lester river, in com-
pliment to Beverly Jones, one of tiieir
members who is lioine for a week from
school at Port Arthur.
Entertained in Minneapolis.
Mrs. ICubert Bruce Liggett, wlio is
TisUing friends in Minneapolis, was tlie
gu^st i>C honor today at a bridge parly
given bv Mis. John Gillit\t McNutt and
Mrs. Charles K. Van Nest. They will
entertain again tomorrow for lier and
Saturday evening Mrs. W. M. Liggett
will entertain for lier at her home.
Tea for Club.
The members of the Saturday club
bave been invited to a tea to be given
by Mrs. William A. McOonagle at
bonie in Hunter's Park on
afternoon. May 6.
her
Saturday
a business meeting this evening at 8:l3
at the Commercial club. The annual
election of officers will be held and
plans discussed for the exhibit to be
held in this city the latter part of the
summer. Every member is urged to
be present.
Duluth Girl in Play.
Miss Marjorie C. Armstrong of this
city, who is attending the Western col-
lege at Oxford, Ohio, has been showing
marked dramatic ability and has ap-
peared In several plays given by the
students there this season. The trans-
lation of Plautus Captivis, a Latin play
was presented by members of the class
in Roman comedy, Tuesday evening,
with Miss Armstrong in the cast. Re-
ports of the affair state that it proved
one of the most entertaining plays of
the year and displayed ability on the
part of all participants.
^ —
Music and Cards.
Mr and Mrs. Mathew Kris enter-
tained at a musicale and card party
Tuesdav evening at their home, 408
Kast First street, in honor of Mrs. J.
K Schwartzbein of Omaha, Neb., who
is visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs.
Mistachkin sang several numbers ac-
companied by M. Oreck on the piano,
after which whist was played and the
prizes won by Mr. and Mrs. M. Oreck
After the games a supper was served
with covers for fourteen
were responded to under
of the guest of honor.
and toasts
the direction
For Guest.
Mrs. W. E. Whipple. 1710 East Third
Street, has invited guests to bridge
next Tuesday afternoon at her home
to meet her guest, Mrs. C. L. Hoffman
Of Minneapolis.
Officers Chosen.
At the annual meeting of the Liberty
cliapter of the D. A. It. whicli was held
yesterday afternoon with Mrs. A. E.
Walker. 2U»7 East First street, reports
of the year were given and the follow-
ing officers elected for next year: Mrs.
R. E. l>enf«ld, regent: Miss Julia En-
sign, vice regent; Mrs. J. T. Watson,
recording secretary; Mrs. Jay Cooke
Howard, correspondent secretary: Mrs.
S. R. Holden. historian; Mrs. C. C.
C"kofair and Mrs. N. J. Upham, di-
rectors.
♦^ . —
Church Meetings.
The Forward Guild and the Wom-
en's Missionary Society of the First
Presbyie! lun church will entertain at
a thimble bee In the parlors of the
church Saturday afternoon at 2 20
o'clock. An interesting musical pro-
A Skin of Beauty b a Joy Forever.
D
R. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S
Oriental Cream or
Magical Baautifler.
Removes Tan, Pimples, Freck-
les, Moth Patches, Rash and
Skin Diseases, an! CTcry
blemish en beauty, an.l de*
fies dttfcrion. It has stood
Ithe t::st of 54 > ears, and is so
harmless we tasie it to bo
sure It is properly made. Ac-
cepsno cour.terfei:of similar
name. r>r. L. A. Sayre said
to a lady of the l:«iittan (a
p«tientj: '■ As you ladles will
use them, I recommend
•GOURAUD'3 CRHAM' as
ite least harmful of all tbs
skin i/re jaratlons." For sale
by all druggisu and Fancy
GooJs Dealers in tlie United
States. Canada and Lurupe.
Party at Loeb Home.
The brilliantly lighted home of L. S".
Loeb was the scene of a delightful
evening party last evening, given by
Mrs Loeb in the celebration of Mr.
Loeb's birthday anniversary. The
guests played whist and the prize-s
were won by Mrs. Henry Abraham and
L. Hammell. An informal musical pro-
gram was given and an elaborate sup-
per was served after the games. Among
the guests were:
Messrs. and Mesdames —
All days look alike to him; you must
create a new office to yourself, that of
domestic secretary.
All days look alike to him; there-
fore, it is your dutv to keep him posted
as to days and date.s. He has no in-
tuition as to the day the laundry is
done, or the days when the general
sweeping is under way, or the days the
family is expected to dine on left-
overs. With the very odor of soap-
suds pervading the premises he will
march off to the office with his over-
coat pockets stuffed with grimy hand-
kerchiefs and with raiment on his back
which should have been shed. With
the week-end overturning of the
household appurtenances, the flaying
of rugs, the kerchief bound heads and
gingliam pinafores, aye, with the
menu staring of odds and ends
of provender he will cheerfully
bring home upon the scene and hand-
out the most particular and expectant
of friends. The trouble is that all days
look alike to him. A domestic secre-
tary is your mission-
There are those who tell on their
fingers the different occupations a
housewife must fill, such as nurse,
cook, steamstross, handmaid and the
higher offices of wife and r.iother, but
they forget the task of domestic secre-
tary as well. There are merry -hearted
housewives who are boon companions,
those who are good company and the
most cheerful of helpmeets, but the
very best of them have been known to
call before the tribunal the luckless
self sufficiently forward to insert his
foot in the doorway. In a flash she re-
membered that her husband had left
valuable jewelry samples ift the safe
upstairs. She cast a desperate glance
up and down the road in search of a
policeman, but there was not so much
as a butcher boy in sight at the mo-
"lent. ,. ^^
"Pardon me, miss, ' said the brown
faced num. "We must come in. I
dare say you can guess who we are;
hut in case you don't I'll tell you.
We're from head.iuarters. and have a
warrant for the arrest of Howard Pres-
ton and also one to search this house
for' certain stolen property."
"Warrant— arre.st!" gasped Mrs.
Preston in horror stricken tones. Ant,
taking advantage of her sudden sur-
prise, the pair pu.shed her back into
day when
the paper
and the
partner who overlooks the
the curtains are dov.'n or
hangers are in the parlor
plumbers in the kitchen.
Why not establish the office of do-
mestic secretary and thus avoid con-
fusion. Tiie social secretary is here to
stay and there is small chance now of
overlooking dinner engagements, or
calls on the proper date or the social
amenities. The soiree, luncheon, con-
cert, party calls, respects paid to bridal
couples or the honored guest of state
are marshaled in due order and the
most forgetful never make mistakes.
The victim, like a newspaper reporter,
goes by the book. If the book says
•wedding today." to the wedding the
booked one goes. It is a case of the
social whirl made comparatively easy
or mechanical. Now, why not a domes-
tic secretary as well?
The domestic secretary might com-
bine the duties of social secretary in
cases like wedding anniversaries, or
birthday reminders. All days look alike
to him, even the special gift days. The
domestic secretary might save herset
much bitter rankling of heart and
spirit by being a domestic secretary in
the true sense of the word. For in-
stance, there is a date for a bouquet, a
date for a candy offering, a date for a
kiss and a trinket. There are domestic
days and dates which should ever be
remembered. Leave the book open so
that he may refer to it and live up to
his obligation, whether laundry basket
or a new bracelet. Domestic secretary,
do the work well.
MRS. BULLOCK WORKMAN.
Mrs Fanny Bullock Workman, wlio
holds the woman's record for mountain
climbing, has started for the Hima-
lavas and it is reported that she is
after another record. Mrs. Workman
comes from Worcester. Mass. She has
received a medal from tlie Geographi-
cal Society of France for her explora-
tion work. Mrs. Workman has made
five other trips to the Himalaya moun-
tains and has traversed from end to
end the greatest four glaciers of that
mountain range.
I. Freimuth,
L. Hammell,
Henry Abraham,
L. Newman,
M. Cornfield.
Max Albenberg,
Messrs. —
William Billstein.
Leon Selig.
Maurice Lefko-
vitz.
Max Shapiro,
J. B. Sattler,
B. Silberstein,
Albert Abraham.
Samuel
Samuel
Loeb,
Frank.
and closed the door behind
Plans Card Party.
Mrs. J. H. Darling of 5J2 West Third
street will entertain at cards baturday
afternoon at lier home.
light refresh -
All women of
gram will be given and
ments will be served,
the church are invited.
« * »
Tlse regular meeting
en's Missionary Society
Presbyterian church will
morrow afternoon in the
lors at 2:30 o'clock.
« « «
The Young Ladies' Guild of . St.
.Tohns English Lutheran church will
meet tomorrow evening with Miss R
S'ahl, 140:i West First street.
of the Wom-
of the Firsr
be held to-
church par-
Card Party.
Miss Marie Chambers of
Kegis flats has invited guests
hundred on Friday evening
home.
the
for
at
St.
five
her
Surprise Party.
Mrs. Peter Dryke of 320 Isanti street
was pleasantly surprised last evening
at her home by about thirty friends.
♦
Personal Mention.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Helmerson of
Grand Marals, Minn., are spending a
few days with Mr. and Mrs. John Bor-
lin, 920 East Ninth street.
« * «
Merritt will return to-
Marquette, Mich., where
visiting her parents. Mr.
Mrs. C. H.
mororw from
she has been
and Mrs.
weeks.
H Gregory for the past two
Mr.s.
Third
week's
Mrs.
street
Club Entertains.
The members of the Minnekahda club
entertained at cards last evening at
the home of William Kennedy, 11
North Nineteenth avenue west. The
honors were won by Mrs. A. Swanson
and L. Food. Those present were:
Messrs. and Mesdames —
A. Swanson.
rcr4. T. BopklBS. Prop.. WCreat JMe« St.. Mew York
Ve Gifte Guiiae
26 WEST SUPERIOR ST.
Buy your Easter cards early and
get your choice of our lovely se-
lection. Many beautiful designs in
hand-colored cards. Our baskets
and a host of other small artichs
make splendid prizes or gifts.
Kalo Silverware
Kalo Jewelry
Misses —
Irene Galbralthe,
Emily Merritt,
Bertha Hanson,
Alice Kennedy,
Messrs. —
Luke Walla.
Luke Flood.
Edward Flood,
Willis Downey,
Clarice Bangen,
Pearl Flood,
Myrtle McKenzle,
Carl Roske,
Arthur Roske,
Syrus Olson.
T. L. Chapman of 1430 East
street has returned from a
visit in Minneapolis.
« * *
F .T. Patton of 1607 East Fourth
will be home Saturday from
Minneapolis, where she has been the
guest of friends for a week.
Mrs W. A. McGonagle has returned
from a short visit in Minneapolis and
Mrs Alexander Milne, who went down
with her is expected home this evening
or tomorrow.
Mrs. J. W^ Kr*eitter o*f 712 East First
street is home from a three
visit in Ohio and Indiana,
her daughter. Miss Olive
Oberlin college.
Mrs. George Beck of 801 East Third
street has as her guest, her daughter,
Mrs. W. Springstead of Adrian,
* • •
C. H. Bagley returned
from a trip
whj
Preston we saw
last Sunday — eh,
weeks'
She visited
Kreitter at
Mich.
to
this morning
Chicago and New York.
* ♦ •
Mrs. David Davis of 602 East Sixth
street has returned from a few days
visit with her parents in Pine Island,
Minn.
* • *
Rev C. W. Wolthausen of Waseca,
Minn., is the guest of his brother, F. A,
Wolthausen of 1522 London road.
"Where
said Jim,
Talk on Travels.
Miss Palmer of the normal school
will give an illustrated talk on her
travels through Europe and the Yel-
lowstone park, tomorrow evening at
the Y. W^ C. A. building. Both men
and women will be welcome at this
meeting and a large audience is ex-
pected.
The
Business Meeting.
Duluth Art association will
hold
Whcrcarc your Furs?
fire and
Packed away without
burglar insurance?
Perhaps safe from moths. If
keep continually unpacking
airing them.
Or do you store them where
curity is absolute?
Our fur vault is burglar proof,
fire proof, moth proof and our stor-
age receipt shifts the worrying
about your furs from you to us
Inspect our vault at any time,
interested.
Northern Cold Storage
and Warehouse Co.
lIp-Town Agents I
Columbia Clothing Co.
Dalutli and Saperlor.
you
and
se-
lf
TBE EVENING STORY
OUTGENERALED
By Nancy Copeland.
H. A. HALL & CO.,
DECORATORS
18 East First Street
Phone, 534
A fine selection of moderate priced
Oriental Rugs.
«ja.ime: ustmaim's shop
at the 1 1 SIf B of the Samovar.
509 tatH Snperlor Street.
Have You Your
Easter Hat?
Our Fourth street location low-*
ers our expenses. We give our
patrons the benefit.
MissFitzPatrick
k«ii..l.ine:r
502-4 Emmt Fourth Street.
Mrs. Howard Preston's temper was
strained to breaking ooint. Her maid
the fourth within three months, had
left that morning in a sudden fit of re-
sentment on being informed that plate
powder carelessly left on spoons was
not calculated to add a desirable flavor
to the soup. Hastily packing her box,
Cynthia Brown had called a cab, and
departed without even claiming Ih-j
wages due to her.
Mrs. Howard Preston, left to herself,
first burst into tears, and then, tying a
duster round her golden head, set reso-
lutely to work. Her husband, a jewel-
er's traveler, at that moment was sup-
posed to be in New York, conferring
with his employers with regard to a
proposed journey. He was expected
home about 1 o'clock, and the problem
of luncheon loomed black on Mrs.
Preston's mental horizon.
It was now nearly 11, and she would
have to finish the dining room before
she could even start cooking. It was
not as though she had even cold meat
in the house. Was ever woman as
oadly used? Yet Cynthia had not
seemed an ill-tempered girl during the
six weeks she had been there, and,
though she had been there that length
of time, and without references, Mrs.
Preston had begun to congratulate her-
self on her good fortune.
Suddenly there came a loud, peremp-
tory knock at the door. Mrs. Preston
peered cautiously through the Vene-
tians and saw two men in long over-
coats. Insurance agents, probably, or
sewing machines, she guessed with the
experience born of three months' su-
burban residence. She had never
known them come in pairs before. She
threw aside her dustpan and brush ir-
ritably, and, forgetting her unaccus-
tomed headgear, went to the door.
Was Mr. Preston at home? No: not
at present. Any message? Afraid not.
Could she Inform them where he was
to be found? Mrs Preston chafed im-
patiently. No; she could not. What
was their business? She was Mrs.
Preston. ^ j, ^
One of the men, a brown-faced, de-
termined looking individual, who acted
as spokesman, raised his eyebrows.
"You are Mrs. Preston?" he queried,
glancing somewhat pointedly at the
duster covered head.
"Mr. Preston will be home about
1 o'clock," she said curtly. *You must
call again if you cannot leave a mes-
sage."
With a slight shock she discovered
that the other man had Insinuated hlm-
the hall
them. . ,
•Ves," said the spokesman suavely.
'Of course, we will call a constable as
well, if you like; but it's not necessary,
and will not attract attention. You
don't want a crowd.' .,
••But there mu.st be some mi.stake.
stammered Mrs. Preston. •'What is my
husband charged with? He left me
only a few hours ago. Oh, I do not be-
lieve it*." she exclaimed, with sudden
energy. ".Show me y<nir warrants. I
am his wife." ■ , ,,
The tan faced man drew a paper hall
way from his breast pocket, and then
looked at hi.s silent companion,
gave a sheepish grin
•'Not the last Mrs.
him with at Sherryg
Jim'?'
Mrs. Preston's face flamed.
"How dare you!" she cried. 'Let me
pass! I will call a policeman! 1 don't
believe — " .,,, „ . .
The man addressed as "Jim caught
her by the arm.
"Don't be a fool!" he said gruffly.
Mrs. Preston almost collapsed. Her
husband had been away on the previ-
ous Sunday, but he had told her that
he had been detained at Jersey City
until Monday morning on special busi-
ness. Oh, if what these men said
should be true, after all!
"You may be Mrs. Preston for all we
know," said tlie dark man soothingly;
••and If so I'm sorry for yo-a. But
Where's your servant?" We were in-
formed you kept one, and, of course,
we took you — " , ,
"She left suddenly this morning, re-
plied Mrs. Preston miserably.
"Ah!" said the man briefly.
I3 the telephone?" , , w, *
"ilrs. Preston motioned dumbly to-
wards the in.strument fixed in the hall.
The brown faced man stepped briskly
forward and rang up the exchange. He
called for a numb<^r.
"Police station? he a.sked. And Mrs.
Preston's last doubts died away, bne
listened as though in a trance.
•'Are you there? Detective Ashby
speaking. Preston is not here A
pause. "What! Nailed him? Goo'l'-
Eh' All right. We shall search the
house now. Right!" And the speaker
rang off, then turned to Mrs. Preston.
•'Your husband has been arrested,
he said »iuietiy. "Of cour.se we have
nothing against you. personally. Mrs.
Preston, and I would advise you to say
nothing further, but just allow us to do
our duty. We shall not disturb any-
thing unnecessarily." „„ ^ , , ,,..„
"What is the charge?" broke in Mrs.
Preston desperately. -'Oh, my heart
Howard! Take me to him! and she
swayed slightly. ^. .,
'•Now, don't you do that.
^"ilJs!* Preston pulled herself together
with an effort. , ,
•What is the charge?' she repeaed^
"Embezzlement," replied the darK
man, briefly. , , , . „„i.„
Mrs Preston grew suddenlj calm.
"Go on and do your work,'
""••W^liat is It you particularly
"••Merely missing property — jewelry."
"Jewelry?" said Mrs. Preston, quick-
ly. "Why, of course, there are my hus-
band's samples." , »., i, „^ ^„„Kt
The dark man shook his head doubt-
«"">• .. ... r.
•'We'll have a look at them, said he
"They are in a safe upstairs
Mrs. Preston. "Here is tiie key.
she held it out mechanically.
The man took It without a word
the pair followed her upstairs,
moved as though in a dream,
shock had completely dazed ner
ultiea and she was unable to
clearly A thou.sand horrible imagin-
ings fl'itted through her brain. Dis-
erace' Ruin! And through it all
loomed the terrible discovery of her
husband's faithlessness. u-.^^^if
Detective Ashby, as'he called himself
swiftly opened the safe. , Yes, there
^-ere the little cases and Mrs. Preston
bivathed a sigh of relief as one of them
was oifened and disclosed its gl|ttering
content.-^. At any rate, Howard had not
deceived her there! But why had he
left thise behind when he could so
easily have taken them with hi™? ^„ .
Detective Ashy lifted out a diamond
necklace an dexaniined it closely. Had
.Mrs Preston looked, she would have
seen his companion's eyes glittering
almost as brightly as the jewels them-
S 6 1 V 6 ^
"Ha!" observed Ashby coolly, after a
pause. "I tliought so."
•What?" asked Mrs. Preston.
"Paste," said the man laconically;
"substituted for the real thing."
'Nonsense!' said Mrs. Preston In-
creduolously. „
"I've been In the trade. said the
dark man; "and I ought to know.
'Perhaps they are intended for mere
samples," faltered Mrs. Preston.
Ashby gave a short grunt.
'He had the genuine articles from
Klrby & Son, anyway. Well, we must
take these with us. Stow them, away,
Jim." ^ ,. J,
•'Stop!" interposed Mrs. Preston sud-
denly. "Is that paste?" And she picked
up a bracelet of rubles and pearls.
Detective Ashby cast a brief glance
at it.
"Same as the rest," he answered
dryly. ^^, .
Mrs. Preston gave something be-
tween a gasp and a sigh. She said no
more, but handed back the bracelet
quietly. When they had cleared the
safe of its contents, all three de-
scended the stairs..
Suddenly the telephone rang loud-
ly, and before either of the men could
rrevent her Mrs. Preston had un-
hooked the receiver.
She had no chance to speak or hear
much. One of the men snatched the
instrument from her and thrust down
the hook, whilst the other dragged
her back roughly.
"Here, that won*t d*!" said Ashby
sternly. ' ,t ^
"What do you mean? How dare
you!" exclaimed Mrs. Preston. ^
•Can t have you telephoning, said
Asliby. "You may be giving warning
to some of your pals in the job, for
all we know. Who was it?"
Mrs. Preston bit her lip.
"I had no chance to hear." she re-
plied "You are unreasonable. Now
this dreadful thing will be all over
the place." . ^ „
••Well, it's bound to be that,' said
the man more gently. "It just struck
me for a moment you were up to
some game."
•'Stay, said Mrs. Preston, restrain-
ing lier sobs with an effort, "you may
as well know all I can tell you. I will
not sliield a liusband who has treate'l
me in this vile manner. There are
other jewels." And she paused breath-
lessly, as though unable to continue.
The two men exchanged quick
glances. ^ . . ,
•Other jewels!" repeated Asnby im-
patiently. "Where — quick!"
"They are hidden — in the cellar!
ga.sped Mrs. Preston, pressing her hand
to her side. '•He — thought them safer
there." , ,
The dark faced man gave her a pierc-
ing glauL-e. but the sight of her de-
spairing face seemed to reassure him.
•Show us. then!" he said sharply.
•'But no games, mind!" ^ ^ , , ,,. ..
Mrs. Preston gave a hysterical little
laugh.
"I shall not try any games, as you
call It," she returned bitterly. "Oh,
how I hate him — how I hate him!" And
siie stamped her foot vindictively.
■•Come!"
They followed her without another
word. Down the narrow cellar stairs
they went. ^, ^
•'There they are, in a box in that cor-
ner!" gasped Mrs. Preston,
j They pushed her roughly aside and
I entered, one of them striking a match.
Thon Mrs. Preston gave a little half
hysterical shriek, and, banging the
door, turned the key. She flew up the
stairs, heedless of the hoarse cries ot
rage which mingled with loud blows
on the stout door behind her.
Tliere was a policeman in sight. He
came across quickly.
•'Thieve.s — two men — in the cellar!
I've locked them In!" she managed to
ga.sp, and forthwith fainted on the
doorstep. ^ , ,
The policeman was a man of quick
decision. He blew his whistle loudly,
and two comrades arrived just in time
to secure two greatly annoyed jewel
thieves, who were almost too busily
engaged In reviling each other to re-
seat the somewhat rough handling they
received from the police.
•I really believed them for a little
while," .said Mrs. Preston to her hus-
band afterwards, "until they con-
demned Aunt Martha's bracelet as be-
ing paste. Then I knew they were
frauds. And when I heard your dear
old voice on the telephone I Cuuld
scarcely keei) from .■shrieking out for
help, in which case they would prob-
ably have murdered me at once."
Her husband kissed h.er soothingly.
"Well, let this be a lesson to you.
dear," said he. "No more girls without
characters. Why. she might have pois-
oned you, and taken on the whole job
herself, instead of merely acting as an
agent in advance. Black-eyed little
fraud! Never did fancy dark girls,
somehow!'" , ^
Mrs. Preston, whose nerves had not
quite recovered their normal tone, re-
strained herself from hysterics with
an effort.
she said.
expect
said
And
and
She
The
fac-
think
IHIO^II^Di^lNI':
The Hair Shop that's
''Really Nice"
M OAK HAU. BUILDINO
Gi\-lns the Babies a Fair Stnrt.
One of the revelations that sociology
has given to the world Is, that every
child has the right to be "well born."
Science has demonstrated that wonder-
ful new plants and blue ribboned
horses have been bred with the great-
est care, whereas people have been
produced by chance, and children have
been brought into the world handi-
capped by weakness and disease that
would cause alarm in a prize stock
farm.
That human beings must be made
right from the beginning of life Is a
growing conviction among thinking
men and women.
A society has been organized, its
object being to help the next genera-
tion to its "birthright of health." For
the instruction of expectant mothers,
a committee has been appointed, a
nurse employed, and most of the cases
under her supervision have been
reached through the hospitals where
they have registered for their ap-
proaching confinement.
Systematic instruction has been
given to 620 cases through the months
that preceded the appearance of a new
little life — advice and instructions as
to baths and fresh air have been given
weekly.
The registered report shows not one
of the more than 600 cases resulted in
a death from child birth, thus meaning
that the mother has been spared to
watch over and guide the little one she
has brought into the world.
A new record has been established
with the babies themselves. Seven
pounds Is the average weight which
the medical authorities quote for the
new born baby, but this society has
brought this weight up to seven
pounds and ten ounces.
The amount of $1,150 a year covers
the expense of this Investment for the
humanity of the future. This includes
the nurse's salary and car fares. It
makes the cost for each patient a lit-
tle under J3.
The services of the nurse were in
most cases gratuitous, but those
patients able to pay this amount are
encouraged to do so, so that they may
feel a sense of Independence.
The work of this society has been so
successful that they are contemplating
the engaging of another nurse who
shall have the care of pay patients
only, and who shall be competent to
go to any confinement ca.se with the
physician among those patients who
can afford to call the doctor at the last
moment only. .... . ^ ^
It Is the chief aim of this society to
carry into every home the knowledge
of what can be accomplished through
careful supervision of mothers In the
waiting months before child birth.
*
DayM DenlBrnated.
Bismarck, N. D.. April 20. — Governor
Burke has issued a proclamation desig-
nating Friday, April 28, Arbor and Bird
day.
Buy in Duluth.
/
/
DEFECTIVE PAGE
II
Skillful
Hairdressing
Shampooing
Manicuring
Dyeing and
Bleaching
A Toilet Service
You Need
— a service that satisfactorily —
delightfully — meets the needs of
everj'^ discriminating woman.
— a service in which unusual ex-
pertness — and politeness — are
conspicuous features.
— a service that is no more ex-
pensive than the less refined.
Our Special Shampoo,
any weight hair, 50c.
f " '
$8-00 BEDS $
Friday Sale....
3
.95
Like picture, and several other
styles we include in this sale with
brass rail and knobs, in 4 and 6
Inches- also in the smaller sizes.
Here Is your \^d for that summer
cottage or that extra room that
vou might just as well fit up and
rent. These are a great bargain, at
L)nl>- 93.»S.
We can show you a fine line of
MattreitMes and Sprlngii.
35c Window
Shades 4 ffc
Friday
Special
IS'
These are well inade
Shades, and are not
what is commonly called
seconds — they are waiter
colors and come In tl;e
best shades of green.
This grade of shade 3
usually retailed by
others at 3dc. Limit, 6
shades to a customer.
Wt make Shadeii to Order. A«k on for prices.
Complete
Hume
Furnliihers
"iiOlJmxjmli^
Second Ave.
R. and Su-
perior St.
MODERATE PRICES
EXAMINATIO
GOLD CROWNS ^
No better at any pr
BRIDGE WORK \,\
beauty and quality
been excelled. . . .
N FREE.
est 22
a r a t .
Ice for. .
at for
Igh t,
las never
$3
$3
The price we
charge for guar-
ante ed dental
work is quite
within the reach
of the majority
of people. Allow
us to examine
your teeth. We
will tell you to a
penny Just what
your work will
cost, and remem-
ber. Our Advice In Kelinble.
10-YEAR GUARANTEE.
SILVER FILUNGS ?eft^r%t BQc
any price in city or elsewhere.
WHALEBONE PLATES ^'' ^"^
ues, «8 and.
$25 val-
UNION RAINLESS DENTISTS
DR. FRANKLIN GREER & CO., Owners, 317 W. Superior St. Duluth
Opcu Fr>m M:30 a. ni. to 0 p. m. SiindayH, 10 to 1.
Healtk and Beauty Notes
BY MRS. MAE MARTYN.
Mrs. Ruth O.: There
sible excuse for a worn
negl'ecting her complexl
you owe yourself to Ic
and charming as posslb
encourage you to use
rubs off too easily, shi
and does no permanent
of a good lotion mad<
four ounces of spurma:
of hot water and addini
fuls of glycerine will
coarse, .sallow, oily loo
and make it soft, plnl
This lotion is an exct
and whitener and will 1
powder. It is splendid
freckles, pimples and p
ping in thie winds.
Virginia: Lack of eJercise and eat-
ing too much solid food during the win-
ter months account for your sallow,
pimply complexion and loss of energy.
What you need is a reliable system
tonic and blood purifier Try this: Dis-
solve an ounce of kardeue In a half pint
alcohol, adding one-half cuo sugar and
hot water to make a full quart. Take a
tablespoonful before et.ch meal and in
a short time you wUl feel like a nevv
person. It win give you rich, red
blood, fill you with energy and put the
color and look of health into your face.
can be no pos-
an of your age
on. It is a duly
ok as youthful
e. I would not
tace powder; it
)ws too readily
good. The u-se
> by dissolving
: in half a pint
X two feaspoon-
:ake away that
k to your skin
c and youthful,
llent beautifier
ast longer tlian
for cold sores,
reventing chap-
Sibyl H.: It Is a sha
your ag« to have wrii
complexion Jelly and >
prised how it will clea
smooth out those horri
greaseless cream jelly
mixing one ounces of
half pint cold water an
fuls of glycerine. Stl
over night. This make
inexpensive cream Jell;
the pores, keep the S;
blackheads, and is sprei
hands and face. I find
reducing the size of la
skin, and for removlr
and certain types of pi
mend it for massage pu
the skin soft and smo<
no grease or oil to cav
on the face.
Isabel R.: Don't be discouraged be-
cause your hair Is dull, faded and
streaky, as you can r« store Its youth-
ful, glossy blond-e tint if you steep an
ounce of marlax In a pint of water.
Y'ou should first wash your head with
canthrox, rinse and dry, then wash
with the marlax tea, rinse again and
dry carefully. Do this, and at little
cost and effort your bair can be kept
a light golden shade irithout the least
possible danger to hair or scalp.
me for a girl of
ikles. Try this
ou will be sur-
r your skin and
i wrinkles. This
can be made by
almozoin with
d two teaspoon-
r and let stand
3 a splendid and
.'. It will clean
cln free from
udld for chapped
it excellent for
rge pores in the
g tan, freckles
Triples. I recom-
rposes; it leaves
ith and contains
se hair to grow
Mrs. Edith: You ca:
that fuzzy growth wltl
the painful electric n
from your druggist ai
dered delatone and wl
mix into a stiff paste
the offending hairs. S
and let remain two o
i rid the chin of
lout resorting to
?edle if you get
» ounce of pow-
th a little water
enough to cover
pread on thickly
r thnee minutes.
then rub oft and wash the skin and you
will find the hairs are gone. While d<l-
atone is a trille expensive It does the
work quickly and seldom requires a
second application.
Miss B. K.: Tlie worry and bother of
wearing hair-nets and veils to make
your luiir stay up and conceal that
dull, stringy, unkempt appearance you
speak of could easily be avoided if you
would stop shampooing with soap. The
alkali in soap irritates the scalp, malcea
the hair streaked, dull, coarse and brit-
tle. If you will shampoo every two
weeks with a teaspoonful of canthrox
dissolved In a cup of hot water, your
hair will always be light, fluffy and
easy to do up, besides looking decided-
ly neat. This shampoo latliers abund-
antly, dries quickly, stops itching scalp
and cleanses as no other shampoo will.
The luxury of extreme cl'eanllness of
the scalp which comes from the use
of this shampoo has made it so popu-
lar that many of the best hairdressers
now use it exclusively. It Is inexpen-
sive and can be bought at any drug
store.
S. D.: Yes — nothing is a more Im-
portant factor In a beautiful face than
bright, clear, youthful eyes. You should
use regularly a good eye tonic. Glet an
ounce of crystos; dissolve It in a pint
of water and use two or three drops in
each eye daily. It will clear and
strengthen your eyes, remove all signs
of weakness and Inflammation and
make them bright and sparkling. For
weak, dull, expressionless eyes I think
this tonic simply wondierful. It is
very soothing and is fine for those who
wear glasses.
E. B. S.: Although gray hair is some-
times caused by worry, it is generally
due to a diseased scalp as Indicated
by such symptoms as dandruff, itching
scalp and brittle, falling hair of which
you speak. To restore your scalp to a
healthy condition, first keep it clean bjr
shampooing every ten days or two
weeks with canthrox, tlien massagw the
scalp, using a good quinine hair tonic.
You can prepare the tonic yourself by
adding on«e ounce of quinzoln to a halt
pint of alcohol and a half pint of cold
water. This Is much better than most
ready-prepared hair tonics, as it contains
nothing to make the hair coarse, sticky
or stringy. It will remove the dandruff
and stop your hair from coming out
Y'ou will find it an ideal dressing for
the hair and very refreshing to an
Itching scalp.
Mrs. L.: What a shame to have
wasped so much money In vainly trying
to get rid of your fat. I have a formula
that some of my close friends have
tried with marvelous success. Here it
is: Dissolve four ounces of pernotls
in Hi pints hot water; when cold strain
and take a tablespoonful of the liquid
before each meal. This remedy will
not injure your health or force you to
starve yourself in order to
get back your comely figure. It cuts
down fat rapidly, is not expensive and
will surely help you.
1
i
f
I
•^
■•nPvmiVi
:9ai
•'
12
Thursday,
THE PULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
^^^^^^^^^»^>^>^^<^^^M^^WW^^>WM^M^MMW^^M^^i
LATEST SPORTING NEWS OE THE DAY
P»^^<%#%»^^M»»M»»N»»»^'»»^^»^M^^^^^»^^l^^»^i^l^»^^>^^>^^»^^>^>^^»^^»^ '
D£ MAR SETS
NEWRECORD
Winner of Marathon Betters
Longboat's Mark By Near-
ly Three Minutes.
F. J. Maddon of South Boston
Is Second in Big
Event
Boston, Mass.. April 20. — Clarence F.
De Mar of the North Dorchester, Mass.,
Athletic association, in winning the
Boston Athletic association's fifteenth
Marathon race yesterday, established a
new record for the twenty-five miles
of rolllnt; road of 2 hours. 21 minutes,
29 3-5 seconds. The previous record,
2 hours, 24 minutes. 24 seconds, was
made by Tom Longboat, four years ago.
F. J. Maddon of South Boston was
second, only missing getting inside tlie
record tlirough an accident. Ed Fabore
of Montreal was third, and Kobert J.
Fowler of Cambridge a close fourth.
Although he is only 21 years old, Dt*
Mar is an old hand at long distance
racing, for he finished second in the
Marathon a year ago, and in the same
po^^ition in the race to Brockton last
fall, while he has won several first
prizes at shorter distances.
More than 200,000 people lined the
course from start to finish. In the
critical stages toward the finish there
was continuous crowding on the course.
Two miles from the finish Madden,
running strongly after De Mar, was
knocked into the gutter by a motor
car, spoiling hib chance of record-
breaking.
De Mar and James J. Corkery of To-
ronto were the favorites In the field of
143 entries, but the latter collapsed
three miles from the finish and was
carried in. Thirty-six runners finished
Inside of three hours.
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Philadelphia 6 1 .857
St. Loui.^ 2 1 .667
New York 4 3 .667
Cincinnati 2 2 .500
Chicago 2 2 .500
Pittsburg 2 3 .400
Brooklyn 2 5 .2SG
Boston 2 6 .250
Games Today
Chicago at St. Loui.«.
Niw York at Philadelphia.
Boston at Brooklyn.
Cincinnati at Pittsburg.
GIANTS 3IAKE CLEAN
SWEEP OF SERIES.
New York. April 20. — New Tork
made a clean sv.eep of the series with
Brooklyn by winning yesterdays game,
4 to 3. in a sensational ninth inning
rally. The game was played in a
drizzling rain. Score: K. H. E.
Brooklyn 0 0000000 3—3 6 2
New York 0 0000200 2 — 4 9 2
Batteries — Knetzer and Erwin;
Ames and Myers. Umpires — Klem
and Doyle.
PHILLIES TAKE TWO
FROM LOWLY DOVES.
Boston, Mass., April 20. — Philadel-
phia finished the first series with Bos-
ton yesterday afternoon by defeating
the latter. 7 to 6, in the second game
of a double-header. Piiiladelphia also
won the first game. 5 to 3. A light
rain slowed up the second game.
Score: R. H. B.
Boston 00110013 0 — 6 8 1
Philadelphia ...300100030—7 9 2
Batteries — Perdue and Graham;
Brennan and Dooln. Umpires — John-
stone and Eason.
St. Louls-Cincinnatl game postponed
on account of rain.
Standing of the Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
Detroit f, o 1000
New York 4 1 .800
Washington 3 2 .600
Chicago 3 3 .500
K»>ston 2 3 .400
Cleveland 2 4 .333
St. Louis 2 6 .2J.6
Philadelphia 1 4 . 200
Games Today.
Philadelphia at Boston.
Washington at New York.
Detroit at Chicago.
St. Louis at Cleveland.
WHITE SOX W IN
LAST GAME OF SERIES.
St. Louis, Mo., April 20. — Criss was
wild and was hit hard in the first in-
ning. Chicago winning the final game
of the series with the local team by
a score of 6 to 3. Score: R. H. B.
Chicago 500 10000 0 — 6 8 3
St. Louis 10 010001 0 — 3 8 3
Batteries — Scott and Payne; Criss
and Clarke. Umpires — O'Loughlin and
Dineen.
New York-Washington. Boston-Phil-
adelpnia and Cleveland-Detroit games
postponed on account of rain.
. «
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Standing of th<^ Teams.
Won. Lost. Pet.
MinneapolLs 6 2 .7.i0
Kansas City 3 2 . 600
Indianapolis 4 3 .571
Louisville 3 3 .500
Toledo 3 3 .500
Milwaukee 3 4 .429
Columbus 1 3 .250
St. Paul 0 3 .000
»
Games Today.
Minneapolis at Louisville.
St. I'aul at Indianapolis.
Kan.«as City at Toledo.
Milwaukee at Columbus.
MILLERS TAKESECOND
GAME FROM LOUISVILLE.
Louisville, Ky.. April 20. — Minneapo-
lis defeated Louisville yesterday In the
second gam© of the series. All of the
locals' three errors proved costly.
Kltchey's batting and a one-banded
TEAM OF VIRGINIA, MINN.
COMMENTS AND OPINIONS
ON THE SPORTING PARADE
E. TAYLOR, N. KNUTDSON. J. RIVERS, F. MORNEAU AND C.
CURRIE.
SPORTING NOTES
The Keio baseball club sailed today
from Tokio on the steamer Manchuria
for a tour of America.
Jo© Cox, the Drury college boy,
knocked out Tim Hurley of Philadel-
phia in the third round of a scheduled
fifteen-round bout In Monett, Mo.
Battling Nelson and Eddie Santry,
each one-time holders of champion-
ships In their class, have been matched
to meet in a six-round contest before
a Fond du Lac athletic club May 9.
"Fighting Dick" Nelson, the Brook-
lyn welterweight, and Dave Deshler,
the hard-hitting Boston fighter, were
matclied to fight ten rounds in New
York next Monday night.
I'itcher Rixey of the University of
Vlrgltila in Charlottesville, is among
the top notchcrs of the college perform-
ers. Since the opening of the season he
has pitched two no-hit games, his
latest effort being against Fordham.
Hal Chase's New York Americans
will soon be a college nine, if all the
recruits he is picking up make good.
Pitcher Toney Leonard, First Baseman
Eddie Wilkinson and Outfielder Nor-
man Lyncli of the St. Mary's college
nine are on their way to New York to
join the team.
Although it was a slam-bang affair
from start to finish, neither Paddy Lar •
sen of Buffalo nor Jeff Smith of Ho-
boken show any marks of their ten-
round clash in New York. Tlie honors
were about evenly divided, although
the Buffalo lad displayed the greater
cleverness.
Elaborate plans are being made for the
first game the White Sox play in Chi-
cago, when they clash with the Detroit
Tigers this afternoon. Mayor Carter
H. Harrison and Former Fred A. Bussc
will occupy boxes, Harrison throwing
the first ball. Three brass bands have
been secured.
Sam Langford, the Boston tar baby,
has gone to his home in Yarmouth, .i'.
catch by Tlossman off Stanley's bat
were the features. Score: R. H. K.
Louisville 102 2 0000 0 — 5 10 3
Minneapolis 2000 13 000 — 6 10 1
Batteries — Hughes and French;
Dawson and Peaster. Umpires — Wed-
dldge and Blerhalter.
•
St. Paul - Indianapolis. Milwaukee-
Columbus and Kansas City - Toledo
games postponed on account of rain.
Dance Tonight
Given by Adain«i Athletic ARRoclatlon,
LIucoln I'ark Auditorium. Flaaten's Or-
obeKtra. Tickets, 50 centst. Door riehta
reserved.
* f
^ JAP BALL. TEAM *
^ LOSKS FIRST G.I.ME:. ¥k
* Palo Alto, Cal., A?rll 20.— The *
^ AVaNeda Vulversity baHvball team it^
■^ of Toklo, Japan, Mas defeated In ^
^ ItH firnt game In the I'nited States ^
^ by Stanford university, 11 to 2, ^
^ yesterday. The Orlenlalii proved ifh
^ to be clever at fleldiuK and base- ^
^ stealing, but poor at throwing: 9J(
^ and batting. ^
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ -T* "T^ ^ ^ '^ ^ i^ ^ J^ ^ ^ jf!"^^"^ ^ ^ ^^"^"^^
GOLF WONDER
FROM ARGENTINA
Young Collector of Cham-
pionships Is Coming to
America.
London, Friday, April 14. — Peter
Gannon, the young Argentinian, who
holds the amateur golf championships
of France, Italy and Australia, will
pay a visit to Canada soon and also
make a detour to play in the American
amateur championships on the
Apawamis course at Rye, N. Y.
The strength of Gannon's game can
be judged from the fact that. In the
Frencli championship he beat Brokaw,
who won all his matches against the
Oxford and Cambridge golfing society
when that body visited the United
States.
In the Italian championship Gannon
defeated another stronger American In
E. S. Knapp. who carries the heavy
handicap of plus 6 (and wins competi-
tions from It) on the Rome club's
course at Acqua Santa, where the
championship of Italy is played.
HOTEL
HOLLAND
...European,..
ABSOLUTELY PIRB-PROOF.
Club Breakfast, Popular Priced.
linacheon and Dinner.
Mnalc at Dinner, 6 to 8 P. M.
ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY
AFTEIR lOtSO.
S., to be at the bedside of his sick
father. Sam declares he is still after
Jack Johnson. He denied that he
broke with Joe Woodman, his manager,
but declared he came home from Eu-
rope on account of his father's illness.
University of Illinois tasebcll fans
are predicting one of the most success-
ful seasons In the history of the school,
following the return of the ball team
from Arkansas. Huff's men won two
games out of three from the ciack
razor backs. The game which the I'llnl
dropped was their first college defeat
since 1909.
The real fight to re-establish thor-
oughbred racing In New York will be-
gin this week. The representatives of
the jockey club, who have been feeling
the sentiment of the county fair asso-
ciations, report that there is a general
belief that so-called director's liability
law Is so drastic that it will abolish
the trotting meets at all county fairs.
The racing associations believe they
will get the support of the farmers in
having the law repealed.
Phil McGovern, the New York ban-
tam who Is to meet Johnny Coulon In
a ten-round bout in Kenosha tonight,
had a good workout at a road house
yesterday, and declared he felt in
splendid shape for the fight. Realizing
that he Is to fight the best man in the
game, McGovern, who is not nearly so
rugged looking as his famous brother,
has been working hard and believes he
can give Coulon a good scrap.
Harry Forbes of Chicago knocked out
Young Jimmy Brltt of Schenectady in
the first twenty seconds of their sched-
uled ten-round bout in South Bend
Thursday night. Hardly had the men
met in the center of the ring for the
first round than Forbes sent over a
right hook to the jaw and Britt went
down. He struggled to rise, but could
not get to his knees before Referee
Santry counted him out.
OARSMEN WILL GET
OUT OX THE BAY.
Last evening Kent, I^athrop, Quimby
and Sole were out In a four and It
has been decided to make the general
call good for this evening. All oars-
men and candidates for the crew are
requested to be at the boat house at
G o'clock this evening, wlien several
boats will be taken out.
Last evening the weather was great
and the men experienced little cliilll-
ness. With the present kind of merry
sunshine the officials of the club de-
cided it would be best to get the men
out on the water.
There are a number of green and in-
experienced men and these candidates
will probablv be placed in lapstreaks.
It Is specially desired that tlie new
men get out.
EASTERN LEAGUE SEASON
IS IN.iUGURATED.
The Eastern league season will be
inaugurated today. This league is on
a par with the American association
and classed even higher by some of
the baseball sharps. Rochester was
the pennant winner last season, and
according to the statements regarding
the strength of this team, John Ganzel
has a very good chance to carry oft
the flag again the present season.
The fans in the Eastern league cities
are looking for one of the greate.-it
baseball years in the history of the
sport, and from the indications the
great national game will have a royal
reception at the inaugural festivities.
this afternoon.
Harry Frazee as a Baseball
Magnate— Duluth Crew's
Chances— Special Corre-
spondence From the Down
and Out Club — Barrel
Snuth Done Got His.
(BY BRUCE.)
A. MARSHALL is back
Cfrom New York with the
belief that Harry Frazee.
whom some of our citi-
zens met last year when
he was here and attend-
ed the banquet tendered
to James J. Jeffries and
Frank A. Gotch, has become the prin-
cipal owner of the Boston Nationals,
There havo been several rumors
crediting Mr. Frazee with the purchase
of a large share of the stock of the
club. A few details that Mr. Marshall
heard while in the East makes hlnr
think that the stories are true. He
stated further that it was rumored that
Frazee would build a fine new park for
the team and would make it one of the
finest plants In the world.
For some reason or other the men
behind the Boston National league
team have been unfortunate. It has
not been a winner, though Boston is
accounted one of the best baseball
towns in the entire country. It is
thought that if the right man secured
possession or a controlling interest in
the franchise, that a great success
might be made of the club that at the
present time Is considered very much
of a joke in the older league.
In his theatrical ventures Frazee has
shown sure enough push and energy.
He made a very large amount of money
out of the Jeffries tour. Had the big
fellow beaten Johnson. Frazee would
have cleaned up close to $1,000,000. He
may be just the man to take the Bos-
ton team and make a winner out of It.
It would be a great thing for the game
in historic old Boston.
For years the Boston fans have been
used to the best baseball in the world.
If Frazee should step into Boston and
put one of the best teams in the older
league there, he would get in strong
with the fans from the very start. In
these days a baseball franchise is a
very valuable asset.
Something Like Old Times.
HE announcement in The
Herald that the crews of the
Duluth Boat club would be
on the water the pre.'seut
week, if the plans of the club
officials were followed, recalls
the fact that spring is with
us. Any time the bare-legged young
men of the D. B. C. get out on the
water tlie cits of this village are pretty
sure that the sentimental period of
our year has at last rolled around.
One just naturally hesitates about
talking of a winning crew in the face
of the teachings of the past. Last
year was the logical year, and the logic
blew up on the back stretch. The sea-
son before that nothing very much
was really expected of the two eights
from here, and to the surprise even of
the D. S. C. cohorts the two crews
made a very excellent showing.
It Is entirely too early at the pres-
ent time to predict anything of the
crews. Ten Eyck should solve the
problem that has long confronted the
local officials. St. Paul and Winnipeg
have built their crews on precedents
established years ago. They have a
stroke that has been rowed by the
members of their crews for years.
Many years ago, even before he es-
tablishd his great reputation at Yale,
Old Man Kennedy was coaching the
crews of the Minnesota Boat club. Then
he left for the East and the stroke he
taught in the days of yore has been
taught every season since then. Lang-
ford and Jimmy Ottls have taken up
the Kennedy system and have turned
out fast and scrappy crews.
They have a stroke distinctly their
own up at the Peg. Here we
have a stroke that might be
called distinctly our own, because it is
quite different from any stroke rowed
by any of the other crews. It might
be called the laugh stroke, for all the
oarsmen at the other clubs laugh with
glee and mirth and each other when
watching it.
What we want here Is a good stroke
and then we want some men who are
willing to get out and row and then
row some more. We want a winning
crew and It will require time and in-
telligence and investigation, perhaps,
to bring this condition about.
The coming of Ten Eyck at least
means ne'w hope and a new spirit among
the oarsmen. If this man turns out
to be as successful as the officials of
the club hope, there is no reason why
the crews the present season should
not make a better showing than any
of the crews for the past four or five
years.
It Is believed that Ten Eyck will
give the local oarsmen a stroke that
will be effective and will enable the
Duluth men to start with an equal
chance with the Minnesota and Winnl-
— Copyrighted by George Grantham Bain. —Copyrighted by George Grantham Bain.
CAPT. H. WILSON. CAPT H. LLOYD.
Capt. Hardress Lloyd and Capt. Herbert Wilson have arrived to take part
in the international polo matches. They came over in time for six week's of
practice before the matches are held so they should be acclimated thoroughly.
They say they have no fear that the climate of America will prove too warm
for English team. All members of the teaai learned polo In India. The other
members of the team, Capt. Barrett, Capt. Cheap*, Noel Edwards and E. W.
Palmes, are expected In a few days.
peg men. If Ten Eyck comes up to
expectations in this regard. It will be
right up to the men to show that they
are the equal of the oarsmen of these
other two strong water organizations.
* • «
More Special Correspondence.
D" OWN and Out Clubrooms, New
York City. U. S. A., Off Broad-
way.— This morning brought
the warm sunshine and James
EJward Brltt. James and hot
air. The wonderful fighter
can come back. We know it
because he says so. He has come from
England to "come back," and the presi-
dent of the club, Jawn O'Brien, whose
confessions were quite as sensational
as Mary McLane's soul workouts, has
promised to provide us with some great
entertainment.
After two gin fizzes James seemed
quite himself. His eyes sparkled and
he executed a little shadow boxing, and
after getting his breath, went on with
the conversation.
Mister Britt will fight Mister BattUng
Nelson, according to the plans of the
club president. It was planned to have
Joe Choyinski fight Kid McKoy and
then have Kid Broad put on a match
with Young Corbett. This plan has
been abandoned for the time being, the
Nelson-Brltt fight being a much better
attraction in the eyes of President
O'Brien.
James Britt is very, very fat, but he
says a Turkish bath and a good rub-
down will condition him for Nelson.
Reports from Nelson say that outside of
the fact that he can't hear and cant
hit and Is ill with kidney trouble, he
is in great shape and ready to put up
the battle of his latter years against
Britt.
Both boys say that they will not need
very much time to train. Mister Britt
says training is very expensive when
you have a lot of friends, because most
of them insist upon taking 15-cent
drinks. Battling Nelson has trained so
often that he, too, believes that it will
be quite unnecessary to do very much
work for the coming fight.
If the Brltt-Nelson fight is success-
ful. President O'Brien Is thinking of
matching "Chicken" Clark of St. Louis
and John L. Sullivan. Both of these
boys are said to be coming youngsters.
Sullivan has done some fighting In Bos-
ton, several kinds, and is very well
spoken of.
Letters received today from Thoma'^
Jefferson Sharkey and John Paul Jones
Munroe, stated that both of these boys
are in training and would like to get a
match. Sharkey Is said to be a very
good man, for he owns a saloon and
does all his training in his own place.
Munroe has not done any fighting since
he was beaten by Jeffries?, but has kept
himself in condition by playing smear.
President O'Brien says it is a "come
back" age, and has even threatened to
enter the ring and defend his reputa-
tion against Sam Berger, a necktie
agent of San Francisco. James J. Cor-
bett, an actor, is also thinking seri-
ously of entering the ring, and has
asked President O'Brien to find some
easy opponent for him.
Peter Maher drove in from his farm
yesterday and announced that he would
meet Jem Roche for the Irish cham-
pionship. Some of the others are ex-
pected to be heard from soon.
* * *
He's Done Gone and Got It.
AHREL SMITH has done gene
and got his again. Behave,
man! Can't you win at all, at
all?
The stocky and stubby Art
Godfrey from Minneapolis
was the man to put tlie
blankets on the hopes and aspirations
of the dingy gent. At that the South
person put up a corking fight and
showed gameness that placed him In
right with the fight fan.'j.
If the senegambian had been in
better condition and had better judge
of distance, it is very probable that
the contest would have gone the limit.
l>ack of boxing is always noticeable
in the lack of good judgment of dis-
tance.
Several times Smith's blows were
wild and went wide of the mark. A
nian who has been worked out well
in his training will not do this In a
fght.
Just how Safvo beat this Godfrey
boy is a mystery. He must have just
shut his eyes and swung from his hips
at the wide world. In e\ery movement
Godfrey seems a classier boy than the
gink who beat Jimmy Barry by a very
wild and at the same time a very
lucky swing.
Godfrey is strong as a Syrian bull
and possesses a pretty good defense.
Ho is fairly fast and slams In wick-
edly with short-arm blows that count.
He punished Smith more than manv of
the spectators realized by the.se short-
arm Jolts, these blows weakening the
African to the extent that he fell easv
prey to Art's attack when he switched
to the head and begun to uppercut to
head and jaw.
Smith *3 a fair welterweight and
will make all of the second-class boyf;
go to boat him. He Is fairly shifty
and clever and covers fairly well. Why
he didn't try and box at long distance
more with a boy of Godfrey's strength,
is a question that would be interest
Ing to answer.
SIX CLUBS FOR
COMMERCIAL
From what transpired at the meet-
ing of the Commercial Baseball league
representatives, it looks as if there
will be but six clubs In the league
instead of eight, as was expected at
the former meeting.
The meeting was called last evening
at the Northern Shoe company's office.
Three clubs were represented by their
managers, the Patricks, Wolvins and
the Northern Shoe company. It is be-
lieved that the Board of Trade, Mar-
shall-Wells and Gowan-Pcyton-Cong-
don team will come into the league.
The application of the Marshal-Wells
team was received at the meeting la^t
evening.
J. L. Berlnl of the F. A. Patrick
company was re-elected president; C.
S. Power of the Wolvin building, vice
president, and G. L. Hargreaves of the
Northern Shoe company, secretary and
treasurer.
Another meeting was decided upon
for next Wednesday evening, when the
schedule will be brought up and some
decision made as to the teams that
will represent the league the present
season.
It is believed that the league will
have a very successful season and that
all the teams will be stronger than
the league members of last season.
FIRST GOLF TOURNEY
OF NORTHERN SEASON.
Lakewood, N. J., April 20. — After
months of Inactivity golfers are again
able to enter the competitive field, for
the real tournament opening In the
North Is under way today over the
links of the Country Club of Lakewood.
Fred Herreshoff of New York, and
Walter J. Travis of Garden City, pres-
ent and former metropolitan cham-
pions, respectively, are here for to-
day's thirty-six hole testing round.
The entry list Includes upwards of a
hundred players, representing various
parts of the country.
Detroit, Mich., April 20— The more
one sees of "Cy" Young, i.he more he
realizes why "Cy" Is so justly termed
the "Grand Old Man" of b.iseball, why
he is beloved by all, whether actively
engaged as players or sp<;ctators.
Baseball never did have a man who
was a greater credit to :t than this
same Cy." Big, brawny and powerful
accustomed to the warfare of the dia-
mond, to pitching his strergth of mind
and body against that of ether men of
power, to being the hero of a wildly
frantic populace, a big, luge, strong
man among men. "Cy" has never lost
that modesty which marhed him the
day he entered baseball over two-score
years ago.
His heart has every been tender and
easily touched. Today his lieart is just
as big, yes bigger than h;s body. He
Is big. in all the term Implies, in
everything. An act which could be
termed "small" never wa;j nor never
could be charged against the "G. O. M. '
Every day he shows those sterling
qualities of the broad individual that
he is. Never did a young fellow enter
baseball who had reason to fear old
"Cy." Always does he hold out the
helping hand to the recruits. His fame
hasn't lessened that broad sensible
view of life which he brought from the
farm in Tuscarawas courty twenty-
four years ago.
Letter Toucheii Cy.
A sample of the wholesome tender-
heartedness of the big fellow was
shown by the sentiment which he
showed over a letter received today
from a newsboys' club in Itoston.
"Cy" is human. He lllces appreci-
ation. But only too well has he learned
the fickleness of the crovd. Perhaps
that was one of the reasons why he
appreciated so thoroughly the letter
mentioned. The letter was sent by the
secretary of the Boston Newsboys'
club. That letter Is now prized as one
of the most sacred of Young's belong-
ings.
There was no formality about the
letter. It started out "Dear Cy," and
that was the first thing which touched
the veteran's tender chord. The letter
requested a short message from Cy
for use In the Boston News boys' maga-
zine called "The Hustler. ' A repro-
duction of the final paragraph reads
good to one who has seeti much of the
rough stuff in this old world.
"Alany a time," it says "have we sat
in the bleachers cheering our 'Cy' on
to victory, but those good old times are
gone, never to return again. But there
PROSPECTS
IN 1MINNY"
Winona and Eau CUire Look
Strongest at the Present
Time.
Red Wing Indians and Roch-
ester in the Doubtful
Class.
(BY BRUCE.;.
T IS as yet loo early to
make and iserlous pre-
dictions as to the out-
come of the race in the
Minny leagie, and yet
from the dope that has
come from the various
teams some knowledge
may be gained of the probable strength
of some of the members of the league.
From right where we f.re standing
It does look as If Joe Killlan Is going
to have a very strong teani at Winona.
That shrewd trade which the Pirate
leader engineered, bringing Swanson
and Malloy to Winona, should give the
village beautiful one of t!ie strongest
outfields in the organlzatitn.
Just why Red Wing allowed these
two men to get away remains a mys-
tery. Malloy is a star player, if a poor
manager, and Swanson is sure one of
the classiest gardeners Ir. the M. L.
Killlan is after a strong third base-
man to replace Goodman, who played
somewhat Indifferent ball last season,
and if he gets the man he is after, the
Pirates should be in the rece from the
opening ball.
If Dauss starts with anything like
the stuff he had last spring, he will be
a great help to the Kllllanltes. From
the dope at this end of the line, Georgle
is even now far from biiing a well
man.
Even though Eau Claire has lost
Callahan and Kading and Nicholson,
the freckled-faced Dutchrian can be
counted upon to have a strong aggre-
gation. Tommy is a quiet and unob-
trusive chap, but he gets a lot of
work out of his men and tias a happy
faculty of also getting :he players.
He Is after Nicholson at the present
time, and reports from Milwaukee in-
dicate that the former Mlnny leaguer
will be sent down for mort seasoning.
IndianM TVot DauKerouM.
The Red Wing Indians do not look
even imposing at the pr^isent time.
With Malloy, Swanson aid Demmer
gone, and unknown players to replace
them, It does not look at the present
writing as if the Indians were going
to climb any higher In the race than
the position they occupied last season.
With a man capable of Instilling bet-
ter discipline and organ' zing more
team work, the Indians would have
been higher in the race last season.
Those boys could hit like blazes, and
that about let them out. Cook may be
Just the man for the job and he may
also have some very good n en In sight;
but it is a case of old Missouri, and
until some showing is don?, there are
those who do not look very seriously
on the Indians.
Biddy Dolan should do something at
Wausau. He has lost some players,
but still has some good men left. How
successful he v.rlll prove as a manager
is another factor that must be consid-
ered. The old boy has pla:,'ed baseball
long enough to know it and has
steadied down during th» past few
years. At the present stage of organi-
zation, Wausau looks like one of the
strong teams.
Ted Corbett has a lot of youngsters
at Mayo field, according to the some-
what unsatisfactory news that has
come from the Corbett camp. Roches-
ter slumped badly through the race
last season. The team didr't have very
much but the uniforms. Mere is an-
other case of Missouri. From what has
been said of the men Corbett has se-
cured, his aggregation should be
pushed into the shade of the doubtful
Cl£LS9.
Kid Taylor at Superior.
Kid Taylor should get a vay well at
Superior. At one stage cf last sea-
son's race it sure did look ;ike the Red
Less. With any kind of buseball luck,
is one way to recall old remembrances
and that is by a few cheery words.
You will write, I am sure you will, for
the newsboys anyway, won't you 'Cy?' "
There's the part v/hlch touched the
old boy.
"I tell you there's a letter which I
wouldn't lose for anything," declared
"Cy." "Those boys surely will get a
few words from me. I don't recall
anything that ever made me feel bet-
ter than that little letter."
"That's all about "Cy" Young the
man. Now for "Cy" Young the pitcher.
To Cbanee Pitching Tactics.
Would you believe It If any one told
you that "Cy" after twenty-two years'
service as a major league pitcher, is
planning to start anew, to adopt a new
system? It doesn't seem reasonable,
does It? Well it is.
Speed Is the thing which has car-
ried "Cy" through all these years.
Blessed with abnormal power In his
good right arm, filled with the good
common sense which taught him that
only good living would enable him to
preserve that strength, •Cy" Is going
to start over fame principally through
the use of speed. "Cy" is going to
start over again no"w or rather to add
other things to go with that speed.
During every game in wiiich he has
pitched In the past "Cy's" main
thought has been to keep the ball
over the corners of the plate. Here-
tofore he has been contented to cut
the plate, trusting in his speed to get
away. Realizing his perfect control,
even the most timid batters had no
fears about going to the plate when
"Cy" was pitching. They could feel
almost certain that either a straight
one or a sharp curve was sailing up.
Now they'll have to be a little mora
wary. "Cy" has stopped cutting the
plate. While traveling with the Yan-
nlgans he was not worried whether
he wa.s getting the ball over. When-
ever he felt like asking any of his
teammates .about his work he in-
quired if he was getting the ball over
the corners often enough.
Heretofore "Cy" has had a spltter,
though rarely using it. That "spltter''
is going to perform its share of the
duties this season. Those are the
things which "Cy" had on his mind
when he so often declared during the
last few months that he was far from
being ready for the has-been class.
Those are the things which make the
players who were members of th<i
Yanntgan squad during the trip North
believe that the old veteran will have
another great year to add to his won-
derful record.
Artie O'Dea would have come mighty
near bringing the glory emblem to Su-
perior, quite an unusual feat, by the
way.
With Dahlgren and McCulloch going
good from the start, and one or two
players of the ability of Llzelte. one
of the best and headiest catchers la
this league, the boys of Hlslop park
should get going early in the race.
That Is, of course, believing that some
of the sweet stuff said about some of
the recruits picked up by Taylor, is
true.
The La Crosse Outcasts should make
a better race of it this season. Some-
how tile Germans grew discouraged
early in last season's play. The mem-
bers of the team lacked spirit and
didn't seem to get in the game the way
they should have. The very fact that
John Elliott, genial John, Is at the
head of the club, is a guarantee that
there will be some improvement In
the playing of the club.
Safford didn't Impress a lot of the
fans with his abilities as a manager.
Joe Is one of the best outfielders in the
"Minny," and there is no criticism to
make of his playing; It Is only as a
manager that he has failed to show
class.
Jones Is an old and experienced
player and should be able to get a lot
of work out of his men. Under more
encouraging conditions there are some
doping Dicks who look to see the Out-
casts higher in the race.
Sox Should B* Stronger.
How about ourselves? Weil, noT^
you are shouting. It is prettv nearly
a cinch tliat the Sox will be higher In
the race. Tiie team was going fairly
well at the close of the season. The
miserable start early In the race, or
the failure to start, was what made
It almost impossible to make any
showing last season.
Darby should get away well this
season, if any of his recruits show any
promise. He has some good holdovers,
and Meneice should be able to take
care of the first base job in much
better style than It was handled last
season.
To date Winona and Eau Claire look
about as strong as any of them, with
Wausau and the two Head of the
Lakes clubs trailing along.
BRUSH WILL HAVE
FINE NEW PARK
Plans Being Made to Re«
build Polo Grounds, Says
Hermann.
Cincinnati. Ohio, April 20. — "You will
find that in a couple of days John T.
Brush will be 'on the job' and there
will be something doing Immediately
afterward," sad August Herrmann. The
president of the Reds, who is a great
admh-er of Brush's business acumen,
and who also thinks well of him as a
man, does not believe the Giants will
long be homeless.
"I believe Brush has a good lease on
the Polo grounds; something like ten
years; but, of course, if he is going to
invest a huge fortune in building mam-
moth stands he will want a longer as-
surance," Herrmann said. "There la
one thing sure, any talk about Brush
getting some other location is non-
sense. That's the greatest spot In Man-
hattan, and the Giants will be roaming
around on that field a long while. The
property is owned, I think, by the Coo-
gan estate, which e.xplains the reason
of 'Coogan's bluffs.'
"As a matter of fact, there Isn't any
serious handicap In the present situa-
tion. While, of course, it is desirous
that the Giants have their own home,
they can play all season. If neces.sary,
on the American league grounds. There
Isn't a conflicting date all season be-
tween the two teams, and in addition
there are the Brooklyn grounds, which
some days will be unoccupied while the
Giants are at home. The lot across the
bridge would be available on such
davtu. I look to see greater — in fact the
greatest — baseball stands on the Polo
grounds before the season Is ended. I
received a telegram this morning froio
Brush, and, while It is said he had not
done anything as yet, he expects with-
in a day or two to make up plans for
the future. When he does, things will
progress rapidly."
DE ORO WINS skroxD
BLOCK FROM KEOGH.
New York, April 20.— Alfred De Oro,
world's pool champion, last night won
the second block of his match with
Jerome R. Keogh of Rochester for the
championship, by 198 to 170, makinrc
the total score for the two nights play,
411 to 344. Keogh made a high run
of 39, while the Cuban's best effort
was 36.
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Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD,
April 20, 1911.
18
aiaMii
r
THE
RANGES
and Susquehanna mine, then down into
i the Sellers pit. while there a blast be-
j Ing flred to show tl* members of the
' party how dynamite is used in the
: mining operations. The enKlneera and
■■ others of the hosts explained each
point of Interest. From the hellers pit
the train moved to t*e Itust mine over
the new ore route, this being the first
' passenger train to ever move over this
MARRIED THIRTY-NINE YEARS
««
TO PLANT TREE
ON ARBOR DAY
Eveleth Senior High Class
Will Observe Day in Very
Fitting Manner.
Eveleth, Minn.. April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Arbor day will be ob-
eerved tomorrow afternoon by the se-
nior class of the local high school, who
•win give a program and plant a tree
on the high school grounds. Tlie pro-
gram follows: Reading of Governor
Eberharfs proclamation, class presi-
dent. Anna Sholund; reading of Super-
intendent of School.s Schulze's letter.
Secretary Curtis Bent; music, high
school orchestra: paper on forestry.
Kalph Wilk; violin nolo, Leslie J. Tobin;
address by Rev. B. D. Hanscom; quota-
tions by seniors; music, high school or-
chestra.
To Dnry Bottle.
Following the program a bottle con-
taining the names oi" the graduates and
faculty members and also the program
will be burled undejneath the class tree,
■which will be a mouiuain ash secured
from the surrounding woods. Each
graduate will assist in planting thei
tree, and class yells, songs and colors , ^dams avenues. Two new poles win
will be given. Tlie other high school *' "- '-- "
classes will be grouped about the cam-
pus during the planting of the tree. The
tree will be cared for by the school
board and will be the first one planted
on the seliMol grounds by any graduat-
ing class.
RANGE BASEBALL
LEAGUE FORMED
Aurora, Biwabik, Eveleth, Gil-
bert and Elba Amateurs
Prepare for Play.
Aurora, Minn.. April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — An amateur baseball
league comprising teams from Aurora,
Biwabik, Elba. Gilbert and Eveleth was
organized at Aurora yesterday, repre-
sentatives from all towns represented
being present. The league will be
known as the Eastern Mesaba Ama-
teur Baseball league.
Upon organizing the manager of
each team was made a member of the
executive committee, which committee
shall have charge of all the affairs of
the league. It is the intention to play
strictly amateur baseball and to play
for a pennant or some other suitable
trophy to be selected later.
.4arora Man PreMident.
TJie e.xecuiive committee met im-
mediately upon being chosen and elect-
ed George E. Webb of Aurora, presi-
dent and Mr. Prince of Eveleth. secre-
tary and treasurer. The other mem-
bers of the committee are Messrs. A\ Ill-
lams of Elba, Mulvaney of Biwabik,
and .*:tevens of Gilbert.
After discussing proposed rules and
by-lav.s at length the committee ad-
journed to meet at the call of the pres-
ident to adopt by-laws and to arrange
a schedule. ... ,*
Teams have been organized in all
the towns represented and there has
b?en much Interest manifested by play-
ers and fans In the league, which Is
expected to have a great Influence in
promoting clean baseball on the range.
Improvlnir Eveleth Telephone !-«■••
Eveleth. Minn., Aj.ril 20.— (hpecial to
The Herald.) — Much cable, lead and
other material is being received here by
the Me.saba Telephone company for re-
construction work which will soon be
started on Pierce, Jones. Jackson and
Hayes streets and McKinley, Grant and
line. While in the Rust "pit the strip-
ping that had been doi^ during the
previous year was p<iint«fl out.
Fine View of Hi|binK.
From the Rust pit the barty went to
the Hull mine, and frotrf the entrance
to this mine the visitors enjoyea a
magnificent view of^ HiMiing and its
surrounding ore pror^rties The train
returned to the depot, at 6:30.
In addition to tfte above named
Oliver men, the following accompanied
the train and added to the enjoyment
of the .sightseers by their efforts to
explain the manner of mining Iron ore:
John Selsemeyer, mining' engineer for
tlie Crete mine; James R. Fayle, cap-
tain of the Albany mine: A. Dodd as-
sistant chief engineer, for the Oliver;
T Young of the Oliver engineering
force and Harry Webb, who is connect-
ed with the Oliver fee interests. The
visitors expressed great appreciation
for the kindness shown them by bupt.
West and the Oliver company.
TWO HARBORmiO
IN FINAL CONTEST
MR. AND MRS. THOMAS A. PRATT
Of Eveleth. Who Celebrated Wedding Anniversary Tuesday Evening With
Many of Their Friends.
be installed on McKinley avenue, while
elghtv poles will be removed to alleys
from " the other thoroughfares men-
tioned. Cables will replace the wires
in the alleys.
GREETINGS TO HIBBIXG
Are Sent By Fergus Falls District
Methodist Conferenee.
Thief liiver Falls, Minn., April 20.—
(Special to The Herald.)— The Fergus
Falls district conference of the M. E.
church, in session here, has telegraphed
greetings to the Duluth conference in
session at Hibbing.
The conference organized with the
following officers: Rev. A. H. McK.ee,
district superintendent, president; Ke\.
John T. Bisbner Smith. Sauk Center,
secretary; Kev. R. W. Duel. Osakls,
J A Hay, superintendent of public
Fch'ools. addressed the conference for
tlie city and church, eulogizing the
Methodist ministry as energetic, en-
thusiastic and full of initiative.
Rev. C H. Flesher of Bemidjl replied
to the address of welcome for tne
preachers. Rev. R. G. Greene of Ake-
lev preached the conference sermon.
"Tie -onference decided to continue
the publishing of the District Metho-
dist and elected Rev. G. E. Tindall and
Rev A H. McKee. district superintend-
ent.' as editor and publisher respect-
ively.
SORROW At'iSHPEMING
Over Unexpected Death at Chisholni
of Herman Jaedecke.
Ishpemlng, Mich.. April 20.— (Special
to The Herald.)— The body of Herman
Jaedecke. the well-known cigar manu-
facturer who died suddenly at Chls-
holm. Minn.. Tuesday. arrived from
Duluth this morning and the tuneral
will probably be held tomorrow under
the auspices of the Ma.sons of which
he way a»prominent member, Mr. Jae-
decke was one of the most prominent
residents of this city and his death
was a great shock. He was prominent
'n many fraternal orders, notably the
Mason.'?. Odd Fellows. Knights of Pyth-
ias and Elks. He also belonged to the
Modern Woodmen, Maccabees, the Com-
mercial Travelers and the Eagles be-
longing to the Virginia aerie of the
latter For some twelve years past he
had b-en a director of the^ Peninsula
bank and was at the time of his death.
Its second vice president. He also was
a stockholder in the Miners National
The deceased was 56 years of age
and besides the widow there are four
sons surviving. The latter are George,
Gordon, Clarence and Clifford Jaedecke.
George and Gordon are at home. Clar-
ence holds a position under Rudolph
Erickson. with the New York btate
Steel company at Iron River Mich.,
and Clifford Is a student at the Univer-
sity of Michigan. The two latter came
home yesterday. Two slstei^ of the
deceased are also living. They are
Mrs. Smith of Watertown. ,Wis.. and
Mrs. Beaufnich of Tomahawk, Wis.
sanity. The man has been „acllng
queerlv for some time and finally had
to undergo court examination. His
many friends hope that he will recover
sufficiently to return m Hibbing.
GROWTHOKHURCH
SHOWN IN REPORTS
District Superintendent and
Various Methodist Parsons
Te« of Work.
Hibbing, Minn., April 20.— (Special
to The Herald.)— This morning's ses-
sion of the M. E. conference was taken
up with reports showing the work and
the growth of the church since the
last conference.
The devotional exercises at the open-
ing of the session were conducted by
Will Meet SL Paul High De-
bating Team to Decide
State Championship.
Two Harbors, Minn.. April 20. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The local high
school debating team, Edwin Strand,
Leroy Pegelow and Carl Olson, accom-
panied by Supl. H. E. Flynn. Coach
Kate E. Mark, William Fortman and
Leila Budd, left last evening for Ml-,
neapolls. Tonight they will meet the
debating team from ihe Humboldt
liigh of St. Paul to decide the state
chainpionsliip, at the university chapel.
It had originally been planned to hold
the debate Friday evening, but It was
found tliat the university chapel could
rut be secured for that evening. The
commission form of city government
is the question for debate, the local
boys having tlie negative side.
DEER RIVER MILL
SOON TO START IP.
gone to Tower Junction to work as
operator for the coming summer.
Commencing Tuesday, the local
freight which leaves at 7 a. m. will
run through and lay up at Ely instead
of at Tower Junction as heretofore.
The Chandler mine has about 35,000
tons of ore stacked up and will ship
about 75.000 tons this season. They
are hoisting about 150 -tons daily at
present. »
J. Kelbe and H. Stucke have re-
signed their positions with the Iron
Range to accept telegraph jobs with
the Great Northern at Superior, Wis.,
and Swan River. Minn.
Whitney Bros. & Hill commenced this
week removing gravel from Flood Bay
beach for filling in around the piling
of No. 1 dock. „ „, ^
Assistant Yardmaster D. W^. Owens
and family will leave next week for
Jacksonville, Fla.. where Mr. Owens
will attend the convention of the Order
of Railway Conductors, as a delegate
from the local lodge.
Welghmaster William Pegelow of
Highland, was in the city Saturday on
business.
Morris Olson, passenger brakeman.
spent the first part of the week visit-
ing in the city, enjoying a few days
vacation.
The Alger-Smith line has com-
menced shipping logs to their West
Duluth mill. ^ „,.,^ , „
Conductors Harry and Wilford Sey-
mons have gone to Ridge to Work a
few weeks.
The trout fishermen, who have been
out the past week report poor luck as
the water is too high and cold.
Reddy & Anker have moved their
log loaders and outfit from Itidge to
Goo-seberry river and will soon re-
commence log shipments ,,frpm , the
Gooseberry district to tbe Mullery miU
at West Duluth.
Conductor I.afe Mills has returned
from Fountain City. Ind., where he
spent the winter.
FAVOMmiNG
BUSINESS COLLEGE
^^g^lSl^fi4PipiriHU}iifli?lifiilsmSlES2S^£3MS^^FS}^
l)f Rice of Duluth. District Supt. E.
K. Copper gave a detailed report of
SCIENTIFIC FACTS,
NOTJIRACLES
Great Cures Made By the
United Doctors Are All
Due to Science.
Tn this aee of progress we have be-
coi?o'accuftomed to .the ma^rvels^of ^oard^,by^^tomorrow^^_„ ^^^^^ ^^^^
TO ACT ON CONTRACTS.
Eveleth School Board Will Consider
Them Saturday Night.
Eveleth. Minn., April 20.— (Special to
The Herald.) — All contracts with teach-
ers are to be submitted to the school
and on Saturday
electricty, of automobiles,
flying machines. We are no longer
astonished at the marvelous ac-
complishments of science, yet we can
not but pause at the marvelous cures
being made right here In Duluth by
the United Doctors in their institute
on the third floor of the Columbia
building. ^„,
Fred Timon, a prosperous and
prominent farmer of R. R. 1. Janes-
viUe. la., says: "I began to improve
right away under the United Doctors
treatment. Now I do my own work.
Bleep well, and feel IlJie a new maii.
H. R. Woosley of Randolph. 111.,
says: 'I suffered the torments of the
damned for six months. I treated
with many doctors but continued to
grow worse. The United Doctors
cured me In a weeks' time. They
certainly know their business."
H. F. Hansen, who was afnicted
with rheumatism for a long time and
could find no relief, went to the
United Doctors and they cured him
In a day. . ^ , . ^ ^
Mrs. H. P. Russell was taking mor-
phine every day to control her pain
from gall stones and the surgeons
were preparing to operate on her.
She went to the United Doctcirs and
was cured in two weeks — cured with-
out the knife, too.
These are only a few cases se-
lected at random from a pile of tes-
timonials. Others were cured of con-
stipation, dropsy asthma, stomach
and kidney troubles, weak nerves,
etc. ... ^
These wonderful cures seem like
miracles, but. in reality, they are but
do to science. The United Doctors
cure their patients by first making a
thorough, searching examination to
ascertain the causes of the disease,
they then apply the remedy Indi-
cated, whether it be an allopathic,
homeopathic, or an eclectic remedy.
Their patients get the best medicines
to be had in ail the world.
Another reason why they cure
their patients is that they will not
treat any case they deem incurable.
Their institute on the third floor on
the Columbia building is always
crowded with patients for the fame
of the cures they are making has
spread far and wide. Patients come
to Duluth from all over this and
purounding states, to see these master
medical specialists. Examination and
consultation is free and confidential.
board the list of teachers for the en-
suing year will be announced.
Mayor Jacob A. Saari and W. P.
Vietch have opened logging camps on
the St. Louis river, four miles from
Forbes, while A. N. Peterson, also of
this city, has started a cannp near the
Whiteface river in the vicinity of Bi-
Rev Father Bllban of the Holy Fam-
ily church returned last evening from
Duluth. Rev. P. C. Keranen of the
Finnish Lutheran Concordia church Is
expected back today from Ely.
mayTose one hand.
Hibbing Saloon Man May Lose Limb
From Assault.
Hibbing, Minn., April 20.— (S-pecial to
The Herald.)— John Korpi, the Pine
street saloonist who was stabbed by
John Krogl, alias Erland Vainianapia
Sunday evening, may Jose the use or
his len hand, and it is possible that
the hand may have to be amputated.
The cords in the wrist were completely
severed. There Is also a chance that
poisoning may set in which would seri-
ou.'^ly effect Korpis life.
For that reason nothing was done to
Krogi, alias Valnianapla. arrested for
the crime, when he was arraigned be-
fore Judge Brady and entered a plea of
guilty. The court sent the prisoner to
jail to await the outcome of Korpis
injuries.
WIFE-BEATER GIVEN
COUNTY JAIL TERM.
church work In hi.s jurisdiction which
was closely followe^d by the conference
and gave general satisfaction. Then
came reports by various pastors. A.
symposium on preaching followed with
three minutes papers:
••Text Selection," Rev. B. D. Hanscom.
Eveleth. ^, ^ ^
•Data," Rev. B. D. Richardson,
Aitkin. ^ „ „, ,
-Presentation," Rev. C. H. Blake,
Cloquet. ,^ ,
The program for this afternoon and
evening follows:
Devotionals — Rev. Merton &. Rice, D.
D.. First church, Duluth.
"Methodism's Opportunity and Re-
sponsibility on the Iron Range," The
Rev. R. W. Wilcox. Virginia.
Discussion led by Rev. J. F. Pickard,
Hibbing. . ... „ ,
••Our Relation to the Young People
of tlie Duluth District" Rev. E. F.
Stldd, president district Epworth
league.
Discussion led by Rev. J. J. Parish,
Grand Rapids. ^ ^,
"The Sunday School and Its Place,
Bert N. Wheeler of Duluth, superin-
tendent Merritt Memorial Sunday
school. ^ .,,,,,
Discussion led by Rev. J. H. Murray.
Grace church, Duluth.
Thumday Kvenlnjc.
Service of song and praise, William
H. p-arrell. „ _
•'The Message for the Hour." Rev. M.
P. Burns, superintendent Minneapolis
district, Minneapolis.
Final report of committee on reso-
lutions. Adjournment.
^'Literature of MetbodlMm".
Yesterday's session closed last even-
ing with the delivery of a splendid
address on the "Literature of Method-
ism" by the Rev. Daniel B. Brummitt,
D D. editor of the Northwestern Chris-
tian Advocate of Chicago. Wedne.sday's
routine opened with devotional service
d«rected by Rev. Merton S. Rice of Du-
luth, this being followed by an address
and the business session opened at 9:15
o'clock Rev. Charles R. Oaten of Les-
ter Park church, Duluth. read a paper
on "The Crisis in Methodism." This
was followed by a general discussion.
Mlne« Are Visited.
The afternoon program was changed
owing to the desire of the committee
that all the visiting delegates should
have the opportunity of accei)ting the
invitation of the Oliver Iron Mining
company to take a trip through their
properties by special train. The flat
car special" started from the Missabe
at 3:30 under the charge of Yardmaster
W W Brown of Mitchell yards. The
Oliver* Iron Mining company was rep-
resented bv E. T. Grlese, chief chemist,
and William Rose, chief engineer.
The party consisting of approximate-
ly sixty delegates was accommodated
on a flat car specially fitted up for the
occasion with seats and hand rails,
with the nece.«sary locomotive and ca-
boose. The train went .west from the
depot as far as the Sellers switch on
the Missabe tracks, past the Buffalo
Deer River, Minn., April 20. — The
Deer River Lumber company's mill is
expected to resume operations about
May 1. The water is a little low, but
the company expects that by May 1
everything will be In shape to resume.
This mill employs a large force of men
ami its starting will bring a large
force from nearby towns.
The farmers in the Jesse Lake coun-
try north of here are talking of put-
ting In 'phones, and M. L. Smith of the
Deer River telephone exchange is ex-
pecting to put a line through soon, and
will likely try to interest Bigfork
people to extend it to that town.
KILLED IN SHENANGO.
Examining un Unfiled Blast Fatal
for Chisholm Man.
Chlsholm, Minn., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Returning to see why
one of five blasts he and others had
prepared, proved fatal for Nicholas
Stonich at tlie Shenaiigo mine yester-
day, the blast going off, his head being
torn off. Stonich was an Austrian. 35
years of age, and single. Little Is
known about him. The body will be
interred here.
HEARDING MEETS TAFT.
Duluthian and Party Are Presented
to the President.
Washington, April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Representative C. B.
Miller today escorted J. H. Heardlng
of Duluth, assistant general manager
of the Oliver Iron :Minlng company;
Mrs. Heardlng, Mrs. J. McKindley. Mrs.
Van Loo and Miss Taylor to the White
House and presented them to President
Taft.
KINNEY COUNCIL MEETS.
New Uim Man Makes Such
Proposition to Virginia
Commercial Club.
Virginia, Minn., April 20.— (Special
to The Herald.)— A. E. Brown, pro-
prietor of a business college at New
Ulm, has written the publicity com-
mittee of the Commercial club in re-
gard to the feasibility of starting a
bus-ness college here.
A. well conducted business college
should undubutedly prove a paying
proposition in Virginia as many
voung people of the ranges are
anxious to take such a cour.se but
are hampered by the big expense of
going to larger cities for tl'.eir edu-
cation. Mr. Brown states in his let-
ter tnat his work in no way conflicts
with high school work. He will be in
the city in the near future tj look
over the proposition.
FIGHT WiTHBEAR
MAY CAUSE DEATH
Knife River Woodsman Con-
siderably Worse Off i%x
His Experience.
Knife River. Minn., April 20.— While
taking a walk to a spring close by, two
men of Camp No. 5 of the Alger-Smith
company encountered a large bear.
After a hard fight In which both men
were badly hurt, the bear was killed.
One of the men, named George Black-
man, is not expected to live, but the
otlier. Jack Scanlon. will recover. It
was the largest bear seen in this part
of the country in a longtime.
PLAYING WITH DYNAMITE
Don'tStay Tai
Let IVIe Seind You a Sl.OO F»acK-
aoe Free That Will F»POve You
Can QuieKly Reduce Your
Weiglit to IMopmal.
Simply send this notice with your name filled in on dotted lines
at bottom to F. J. Kellogg, 3777 Kellogg Bldg Battle Creek, M.ch
for a free $1.00 package of a treatment that will reduce your
weight to normal wi;hout diet or drugs. The treatment is per-
fectly sate, natural and scientific. It takes off the big stomach,
cives the heart freedom, enables the lungs to expand naturally,
and you will feel a hundred times better the first day you try this
wonderful home treatment. Enclose
to help pay postage a;id packing.
cents, stamps or silver,
Name
THE-
CITY NATIONAL BANK OF DULUTH
MEll OEFOSDT il
IT
We will be pleased to have you call at the bank
and inspected this department. You ^^^J^^^nlir
appreciate the safety and convenience which our
safe-deposit box2s afford.
Eveleth, Minn., AprU 20.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Joseph Andrlgo, an old
offender who served time for assault-
ing his wife, was tried by Judge Prince
yesterday on a charge of wife beating
and found guilty. ,*».,,
Andrlgo was given a lecture by
Judee Prince, who recommended a
whlDPing post as his punishment and
got a sin fence of ninety days in the
county jail. He was taken to Duluth
today to serve his sentence.
HIBBING MAN WILL
BE MENTALLY EXAMINED.
Hibbing, Minn., April 20.— (Special
to The Herald.) — James Connors of
this city, well known and much re-
spected as one of the old timers, was
taken to Duluth yesterday to be ex-
amined by the probate court as to his
Piles Driven
Away FREE
Cases Of Extreme Torture Cured
So Quick As To Amaze All
Who Know the Terrors
Of Piles.
Even a small and recent case ot
piles is bad enough but thousands ar«
in abject misery. Great proatruslona
render life a torture in every com-
munity and yet, right within elbovr
room is certainly a drug store that
has the wonderful Pyramid Pile Cure.
If not. It will be mailed free upon re-
ceipts of the regular price — 60c.
It works like a hundred swift
streams of water on a sudden blaze,
puts the fire out. saves lives, saves
the ner\'ea., prevents gangrene, stops
all pain, all itching, all bleeding; re-
duces all swellings, internal or ex-
Three Ordinances Are Adopted, Two
Read Second Time.
Kinney, Minn., April 20— (Special to
The Herald.) — Three ordinances were
adopted and two given second reading
at the meeting of tlie local village
council Tuesday evening.
Tl-e three adopted are Nos. 3, 4 and
a, and provide for the preservation of
the public peace, the prevention of im-
morality and indecency and regulating
the business of hawking and peddling.
The two proposed ordinances regulate
the building of sidewalks and the tax-
ing of dogs. . ,
It was decided to build an eight-
foot sidewalk on Main street and the
work will be begun at once.
The contract for the construction
of a chemical engine house was let
to Charles Wilson.
Dr. Webber of Buhl was apolnted
village health officer.
The following committees were pro-
vided for: Streets and alleys, health,
finance, local assessments, fire and
water and public buildings.
gilbertite'fined"$ioo.
Several Other Trouble Makers
Haled Into Court.
Gilbert. Minn., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Two Montenegrens
started a row in front of the shoot-
ing gallery last night during an argu-
ment. Officer Karvlnen was called
and when he attempted to make the
arrest he was tackled by both men.
The officer proved game and landed
the two men In jail. They were fined
$5 and costs by Judge Welch.
Gust Kovecich and Frank Larsa
were arrested yesterday charged with
assault and batterj' and were fined
$10 and co.sts each. They assaulted
John Schuster.
Mike Kepic was arrested on a
charge of assault in the third degree
on Anton Skule and was fined |100
and costs. ^
TWO HARBORS NOTES.
the fodder will be throwr, out of the
Apuli hall and the grand march will
start at 9 p. m. Stock lood will be
served in the hall at 12 o'clock.
VIRGINIA YOUNG MEN
TO JOIN U. S. ARMY.
First Ore Train Came to Docks
Tuesday Erening.
Two Harbors, Minn.. April 2t). — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The flrst ore train
of the season came to the docks at
11:30 p. m. Tuesday.
The Iron Range has two work
tVrnaarcur-es quick and complete to Y^^m^^^^l^ i^r^^PPrlZ^ oT^DocS
stay cured. Many severe cases thlnK \ ^^ j ^jg^ ^^e work train laying track
they are hopeless, must be operated i ^t the Genoa mine and another distrib
Proves Very Serious for a Little
Soudan Boy.
Tower. Minn.. April 20.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Playing with dynaniite
caps proved serious for Eddie John-
son son of Ole Johnson of Soudan,
who with Helmer Noren. came across
the explosive. They pounded It with
a rock with the result that they are
In the hospital with hands and faces
torn and di.sflgured. t. i.. »*
A special Easter service was held at
the Mission church Easter Sunday, a
program of recitations and songs by
the Sunday school and an address by
Rev. M. Thornburg. , .i. ,r
The drive on Pike river of the Ver-
milion Lumber company is progressing
'^'^^The sawmill of the Vermilion Lum-
ber company is nearly ready to open
the season. _ ,,, ...
Rev Hughes of Ely will occupy the
pulpit of tlic St. James Presbyterian
church Sunday evening.
The roads are in fine condition in
this localltv and the advent of warm
weather will bring out the automobiles
in large numbers. Many are expected
over from the Mesaba range this sea-
^°Monday night's dance of the Macca-
bees was one of the largest attended
and most successful of the society s
balls
Belshazzar" is progresFlng finely
and Its production will probably take
place early next month. ». ,, „
At the Swedish Mission church Mon-
day evening Rev. J. L Fadum con-
ducted Norwegian Lutheran service.
This meting was held In lieu of the
regular Easter services. The confirm-
ation class met with Rev. Fadum at
7 o'clock Monday evening.
Mrs. Highland of Cook, who was
subjected to a delicate operation a
couple of weeks ago. Is recovering
and will soon be able to return to her
^°Axel Knqulst has disposed of his In-
terest in the Cash meat '-niarket to O.
C. Sovde and hereafter the firm will
be known as Sovde & Johnson. Mr.
Enquist has gone to Marble, where he
expects to engage in business.
N. A. Linderberg, representing one
of the International Bible students
association classes, spoke In the Sjve-
dl.sh Lutheran church at Soudan Sat-
urday evening In the Swedish lan-
guage^ Purdy Is home again after Jfe
trio of several months through the
Pacific coast states and Mexico.
Virginia. Minn., April 20.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Seven Vlri?inla voung
men have gone to Fort bnelling to
join the regular army. They are
Albert Olson. Olaf Berg, Walter N.
owan, Phillip P. Hogan, T Jny Bronskl.
Samuel J. Turner and Raymond R.
Scarlet. Turner has already served
six years in the army £.nd will re-
enlist for another term. Private A.
K Hallowell of Duluth states that
these young men will probably be sejit
to the Mexican border.
VIRGINIA ELKS' DANCE.
"Hard Times" Social Will Be Held
on Friday Evening.
Virginia, Minn., April 20. — (Special
to The Herald.)— In vititlons have
been Issued for a "hard times social,
which win be given tonorrow night
at the Fay opera ljo"se ')y tlie meni-
bers of Virginia lodge, N<». 1003 B. P.
O E The event will be an old fash-
ioned affair. where the customary
ball room formalities wi;i be thrown
aside In order that all present may
enjoy themselves to the fullest extent.
The ladles have been reijuested to bring
baskets and notwithstanding the 'hard
time" appearance of the affair all will
be well fed. Dancing will be one of
the features of the evening.
A pretty home wedding took place
Tuesday evening when Miss Flnia
Odegard became the bride of \N . 8.
McDonald. Miss Odegard was attended
by Miss Hazel McDonald, while Ed-
ward McDonald, a brother of th»
groom, acted as best man. Only rela-
tives and intimate friends were pres-
ent. Rev. Father Powers officiated.
—^ « .
See the Duluth Hardware Co.'s
New quarters at 19-21 Second Ave. W.
Dand^itie
on, have part of their anatomy cut
and carved. Don't let It happen.
Remember anything cut off Is grono
forever. Pyramid Pile Cure saves all
this, cures rationally, restores the
parts to nonnal healthy conditions.
You can easily and quickly prove this
by sending your name and address to
Pyramid Drug Co., 278 Pyramid
Bldg., Marshall, Mich. A free trial
will at once be mailed sealed in plain
wrapper and you will never after-
wards be at a loss to know what to
advise when you hear of a case ot
piles no matter how severe it may be.
For sale at all drug stores at 90c a
package and be sure you get what
you ask for. , —
uting ties on the Western Mesaba
branch. .. , ^^
Chief Dispatcher F. G Buell of the
D. & N. M. railway located at Knife
River, visited here Sunday.
Col. R. S. Cameron is planting brook
trout spawn in the upper Gooseberry
river and in Hay Marsh lake.
Frank Burg, William Agnew, H.
Coolidge and John McDonald were at
Duluth Sunday,
Albert La Bounty has been working
on the south end local between Duluth
and Two Harbors. ,
Relief Agent G. C. Carlson was In
Duluth, Sunday. ^ ^ ,
John Anderson has accepted a Posi-
tion as second trick operator at Bi-
wabik , i. ».
Bert Soper at AUen Junction has
MOUNTAIN IRON FUN.
Farmers of That Locality Plan Old
Style Barnstorming.
Virginia, Minn., April 20.— (Special
to The Herald.) — An old-fishloned
•'barnstorming" will be given at
Mountain Iron tomorrow nignt un-
der the auspices of the Northern
Minnesota Farmers' associatK n. and
the program Is so unique that the af-
fair cannot help being a huge suc-
^^The program follows: Charles
Walker will run the sprinkling can.
George Smith will keep the people
from fctepping on the corn, Charles
oaknmii will meet the guests, unyoke
th oxen and feed them; Barney Bragg
will run the hash machine Budoltz
and Lamoin will give an imltHtion of
"Coming Through the Rye." A prlM
will be slven the fastest pacer in the
Irish trot: L. B. lisher. P<'o»nPjeM
from Duluth will yield the goadstlok, 1
Grows HaiP
and we can
PROVE IT!
The Great DANDERINE Never
Fails to Produce the
Desired Results.
IT enlivens and invijoratea the half
glands and tissues o( the scalp.
resulting In a continuous and
increasing growth of the hair.
L«tt«ri of r''al«« "O continuallr
coming In from nearly Ell parts of
the country s'atluK that Danderlne
has renewed the growth of hair In
casei that wera considered abso-
lutely hopeless.
A lady from Brooklyn wrltas:
"After anhorttrlal my bair stopped
falling, and I now have a lovely head
ot half, very heavy and over one and
n quarter yards long." ^^^
Danderlne stimulates the scalp,
makes it healthy and keeps it so.
It is the greatest acalp invigorator
known. It ia a wholesome medicine
tor both the hair and scalp. .E^eO
• small bottle of it will put
more genuine life in your
hair than a gallon of any
other hair tonic ever made.
It shows results from tho
very start.
Now on sale at every drug and
toilet store in the land ; 3 size*
250, 50c and 91.00
Cut
This/
Out
C-^» To show how quickly
rl ■■ Danderine acu.we
will send n large sample frsa
by retunnnall to anyone who
sends this free coupon to the
Kaavllea OasdiriM Ct.. CMcaai
with tbeir name and address
•Dd lOc In sliver or stamps
to pay postage.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
- ^-^ .
■/.
■k-
t
14
f
Thursday,
\
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nr
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1
■i
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I),
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h t -
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r-
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
Rheumatism Comes
From Bad Kidneys
Once Your Kidneys Work Properly,
Kliouinatisni, Kidney Disease and
Bladder Troulilo Disappear. How
To Cure Yourself.
It is no longer necessary to spend
months and months underRoinj? a
complicated treatment for rheuma-
tism, liidney or bladder trouble, or
spend a Kood many dollars in doctors'
bills.
A new treatment can now be ob-
tained which seems to act more like
a marvel than a medicine. This treat-
ment has produced such satisfactory
results in a short time that it is now
guaranteed from first to last.
There should be no more doubt
about the rapid cure of rheumatism,
no fears of the fatal termination of
treacherous kidney disease or dropsy.
Rheumatism means nothing more
nor less than that your kidneys do
not work properly. Your blood passes
throu^'h the kidneys hundreds of
timca a day to be filtered and puri-
fied. When the kidneys are weak, the
poisons are not taken out of the
blood as they should be. This leads
to various diseases, such as rheu-
matism, terrible Brisht's disease,
dlahetcs, dropsy and bladder trouble.
The new jruaranteed treatment is
Dr. Derbv's Kidney Pills. One day's
use of them will prove their remark-
able effect. M. T. Ridenour of Lima,
Ohio, savs: "When I feel bad in my
back. I ju.st take a couple of Derby's
Kidney Pills and set immediate re-
lief."
If your have rheumatism anywhere,
back pains, cloudy, foul urine, pains
in the bladder, Bright's disease or
diabetes, put your whole confidence
in Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills, and you
will not be disappointed.
Dr. Derby's Kidney Pills are sold at
all dnipr stores — 25 and 50 cents, or
we will send them direct from the
laboratory of Derby Medicne Co.,
Eaton Rapids. Mich., prepaid if you
•wish. If you want to try them first,
just tell your drupjjlst to give you a
free sample package.
The Typewriter That's
Ten fears Ahead Is the
Typewriter for You.
Every operating device inbuih where it
should be — under the operator's hand.
You don't have to reach all over the
machine. Even the line-space and carriage
release lever is operated without taking
bands from conect keyboard position.
THE NEW MODa
L. C. Smith & Bros.Typewriter
With Ball Bearinfs throughout and all
the wiitiiig always in sight, measures up
at every point to the highest scale of
modem business needs.
Better work and more of it, greater effici-
ency through and through, the L. C. Smith
& Bros. Typewriter is ten years m the
lead. The writing machine that's ten years
ahead is the writing machine for you.
Send for the Book and read it
L. C. Smidi & Bros. Typewriter Co.
18 THIRD AVE. WEST,
DULUTH. MINN.
Of
Interest to
Property
Owners
Harrisons' Colors
Are the strongest, purest, most
permanent colors, for interior
or exterior painting. They are
the products of 117 years of
good paint making.
If you want your house to be
notable for the beauty of tone
of a paint coating which will
not present a faded appearance
after a few summer storms, spe-
cify U.ARllISONS' COIXJRS in
figuring with your painter.
Used by the best Paint-
ers of Duluth.
Made by
HARRISON
BROS. & CO.,
Inc.,
of Philadelphia, makers of
"quality" products "from the
ground up."
I^ioun by the "wreath."
FORCE THEM
TOJJAUFY
Citizenship Should Have Edu-
cational Requirements, Says
Minneapofis Man.
''The Church and the New
America" Subject of
Address.
"The Church and the New America"
was the subject of an eloquent address
delivered last evening by Rev. Andrew
Gillies of the Hennepin Avenue M. E.
church of Minneapolis at the annual
women's night banquet of the Men's
Club of First M. E. church of this
city. The club meets once every month
and once a year they Invite the women
to attend. The affair last evening was
a decided success from every stand-
point, being one of the largest gath-
erings ever held by the club.
Dr. Gillies, who came to Duluth es-
pecially to attend the banquet, said
that he would like to see an educa-
tional requirement for citizenship. He
e.\plained that all that is necessary
now Is a short residence and the abil-
ity to answer a few questions, after
which the man's vote has as much
power aa that of American-born citi-
zens.
He dwelt upon the worth of char-
acter and the need of honest men in
the country to conduct its affairs. He
declared that men are wanted who will
be honest all the time, and not only
when they are watched. He asserted
that more laws are not necessary, but
that more reliable men. He likened
reputation to a breath caught on the
mirror of life. "Reputation," he said,
•"is what the newspapers give you
while you are living and the head-
stones when you are dead, but char-
acter is what you are living and what
you are in the sight of God."
\V. L. Smithies made a most accept-
able toastmaster. Informal remarks
were made by Dr. M S. Rice, pastor of
the First M. E. church. The musical
part of the program was highly en-
tertaining. Vocal solos were sung by
Dr. Annand. Miss Luella Tyler ren-
dered a piano solo and Leslie Moore a
violin solo.
SERVICE FOR
SCOTSMEN
Rev. Angus Mclver Will Preach
in the Gaehc
Tongue.
A typically Scotch religious service,
with a sermon in the Gaelic language,
will be held next Sunday afternoon at
3 o'clock at the First Presbyterian
church. The unique service is made
possible by the visit to the city of Rev.
Angus Mclver, minister of the parish
of Uig, Island of Lewis, Scotland, who
is visiting his nephew, John H. Mathe-
son, 224 Second avenue east.
Rev. Mclver is 78 years old and a
veteran minister of the established
church of Scotland. He will speak
Sunday afternoon In the Gaelic lan-
guage and the Scotch people of Duluth
who understand their native tongue
have few opportunities to hear it
spoken in the pulpit. The music at
the service will be entirely local and
congregational and the singing will
be in Gaelic from the metrical version
of the psalms of David.
INFANT WELFARE
WORK BY MASONS
Nurse Will Be Engaged for
CharitaUe Labors in
Duluth.
"Infant "Welfare" Is to be taken up
bv the Scottish Rite Masons of the
city.
Because they haven't proper care.
NEW JUDGE OF ELEVENTH
DISTRICT ONLY 36 Y£ARS OLD
CARRIES MEMENTO
OF LATE GOVERNOR
Letter of Gratitude Written By
John Johnson When a
Young Man.
Rochester, Minn., April 20. — E. P.
McCullough of St. Paul was in the
city recently visiting with friends. As
he entered an office his eye fell upon
the portrait of Minnesota's late exec-
utive, the lamented Governor John A.
Johnson. "Well do I remember him
as he was developing from a youth to
a young man," said the visitor, with
an affectionate glance at tlie picture
on the wall. "1 was with Noyea Bros.
& Cutler while he was a drug clerk
in Henry Jones' store at St. Peter.
I had done him some little service in
the way of obtaining a position and
he wrote me the heartiest and sin-
cerest expression of thanks I ever
hope to see." By way of proving
his statement. Mr. McCullough took
from his pocket a faded envelope and
submitted a letter written by John A.
Johnson twenty-five years ago.
Sentence Reveals Character.
One sentence reveals one of the
governor's loyal characteristics: "I
shall remember j'our liindness. I mean
some day to own a store of my own
and I shall remember the one man
out of a dozen to whom I applied
who paid any attention to it. I am
your debtor."
Mr. McCulough has been out of
the state for many years and never
saw John A. Johnson after he at-
tained distinction but he never for-
got the qualities that combined to
make him a "man of tlie hour."
a French officer who .'ought in the
American Revolution.
NOTES FROM CIJYUNA.
JUDGE HERBERT A. DANCER.
Herbert A. Dancer, whose appoint-
ment as the fifth judge of this district
was announced yesterday afternoon by
Governor Eberliart, is one of the
youngest men ever appointed in this
state to hold so responsible a posi-
tion. He Is but 36 years of age.
Mr. Dancer is a graduate of the Uni-
versity of Michigan, finisiilng the lit-
erary department In 1895 and the law
depannient in 1897. Ho came directly
to Duluth after his graduation and ha«<
been here continuously since that
time, being associated with the law
firm of Baldwin, Baldwin and Dancer.
Although Mr. Dancer is young,
there Is general satisfaction expressed
at his appointment. He is thought to
be exceptionally well equipped to fill
a place on the bench. He has what Is
characterized by the lawyers as a
hundreds of babies are said to die
each year and It is for the purpose of
helping to save them by giving assist-
ance to poor families and educating
where there Is ignorance, that the
work will be taken up In this city.
In all the large cities there are
organized societies who help in work
of this kind and the death rate is
said to have been made lower in many
cities.
In Duluth a nurse will be employed
whose duty it will be to visit the
homes where tliere are young clilldren
and help and advise tlie mother as to
the best way of caring for them. At
the present time the Masons are cast-
ing about for a woman who is experi-
enced in work of this kind.
As soon as she is engaged, she will
be given offices In the Masonic
temple and she will do all her work
from the headquarters furnished her.
This matter was brought up at the
Maundy Thursday banquet and at
I.. at time It was decided to engage a
nurse and go ahead with the work.
TONIGHT
By M. W. A.
DRILL TEAM
GREAT WESTERN HALL, 21st Ave. West
and Superior Street. TICKETS, 50 ets.
ASHLAND OFFICER IS
ORDERED TO TEXAS.
"legal mind" and has a thorough un-
derstanding of the law.
Mr. Dancer's home was at Chelsea,
Mich., near Ann Arbor, where he was
born.
The appointment takes effect at
once, but Mr. Dancer stated this
morning that the law states that no
judge shall be engaged in the practice
oi the law, and that it would be
necessary for him to dissolve his
partnership with the present firm.
"I want to begin the work as soon
as possible" he said this morning,
"for I know the judges are pressed
with work, and the fifth man is needed
at once. It will take me a week or
ten days to wind up affairs here, and
withdraw from the firm of Baldwin,
Baldwin & Dancer. As soon as I can do
that I will assume my new duties."
Capt. Scott at once wire his accept-
ance and it is likely that he will be
ordered to Texas this week.
_ «
A Reliable Medicine — Not a Narcotic.
Mrs. F. Marti, St. Joe, Mich., says:
"Our little boy contracted a severe
bronchial trouble and as the doctor's
medicine did not cure him, I gave him
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound in
which I have great faith. It cured
the cough as well as the choking and
gagging spells, and he got well in a
short time. r<'oleys Honey and Tar
Compound has many times saved us
much trouble and we are never with-
out it in the house." All druggists.
RAILROAD MAY
BE PROSECUTED
Booker Washington's Wife
in "Jim Crow" Law
Mixup.
Ashland, Wis., April 20. — Capt.
Ernest Scott received a telegram
from Gen. Boardman yesterday" in
which the adjutant general says:
"Wire if you can go to Texas
maneuvers. Must report at Fort An-
tonio April 27 for fourteen days."
TO CCMUMAt^D
ATTENTION!
You must l>o well dressod. To be
well dressed you must wear tailor-
made clothes. To have the best fit
and latest styles, you must
liKT Bit: IIAKB YOUH t'l.OTflBS
and you will not fail to receive at-
t'ention, and 1 will give you the
highest satisfaction,
lEK^-TAHW
B0.4JIX> OF- TR4DB.
Third Avenue West Katranec.
Look for this Sign on Leading Garages
Yoa cannot know what a good tire is
until yoa try a Michelin properly inflated
IN STOCK BY
Duluth Auto Supply Co.,
412 East Superior Street.
Memphis, Tenn., April 20.— As a re-
sult of charges emanating here in rail-
road circles that the Jim Crow laws of
Texas, Arkansas and Tennessee had
been violated, officials of the Cotton
Belt railroad and the Pullman Sleeping
Car company may be prosecuted.
The wife of Booker T. Washington,
the noted negro educator, alighted
from a Pullman car here Monday.
Charges are made that she had been
smuggled through from Paris, Tex., in
the drawing room, and the charge is
made that as there were white pas-
sengers in the same car, the Jim Crow
laws in three states were violated.
Great secrecy was maintained and Mrs.
Washington only left the train here
long after its arrival.
BEER "COUAR''
IS DECEIVING
Munich Dealer and Waiters
Are Severely Punished
for the Fraud.
Munich April 20. — Serving short
measure in beer and the deception of
the public by filling "steins" and "sei-
dels" with froth so as to form what is
popularly known as a "collar," has just
been judged an offense punishable by
imprisonment by the criminal couit
here.
The tenant of a gigantic beerhouse,
who was charged with defrauding the
public in this way, was sentenced to
six weeks in jail and a fine of $750, and
five of his waiters to terms of from
one to three weeks in jail.
Evidence showed that it has become
customary to serve glasses of beer in
which the liquor did not reach the
legally stamped mark indicating the
proper measure, the drinking vessels
being filled with froth.
Public indignation led to the suit,
which was instituted by several cus-
tomers. It lasted more tiian five
months.
Cliallengc!^ the World.
Drink good cider, drink divine.
Tis better far than all your wine;
Juice of apples, tis the boast
Of growers near Pacific coast.
But Minnesota, boastful, too.
Applauds its golden grain belt brew.
It's challenge to the world appears,
To beat its golden grain belt beers.
Sold by your dealer or duluth branch
Of the minneapolis brewing company.
SONS OF revolution"
ELECT NEW OFFICERS.
Twenty New Homes Bi^ng Built in
Cuyuna Range Village.
Cuyuna, Minn., April 20. — (Special to
The Herald.) — George Fowler received
a letter Tuesday from the old home in
Leicester, England, telling of the
death of his father, who was drowned
near that city on March 11. Mr. Fow-
ler la one of our prominent business
men.
Twenty houses will be erected at
once by T. R. Foley of Aitkin. This
will be generally appreciated by local
people as it is now impossible to rent
a house or even a small room in the
city.
Many of the men working at the
mines will move their families to town
as soon as they can secure houses to
live in. At this time there is a great
demand for residences and if fifty
houses were erected they would all
easily sell or rent.
A first-class hotel is badly needed
■ 1 i\i. . ., The four Iccal hotels are
so crowded with working people that
they find it next to impossible to take
care of the traveling ;mbllc. Every
day no less than fifteen people are
turned away from the different hotels
owing to lack of room.
The Cuyuna Gun club was organized
Sunday with twenty-eight members.
Frank Buchanan was elected president;
V. M. Sugrue, secretary and treasurer;
Ed Rhode, field captain and J. D. Pe-
traborg, score keeper. "I'he first meet-
ing of the club will take place Sun-
day.
PHILIPPINE TREASllRER
VISITING IN MINNEAPOLIS.
Washington, April 20. — General offi-
cers of the Sons of the Revolution to
serve during the next three years were
elected at the triennial convention of
the organization here yesterday. Ed-
mund Wetmore of New York was
chosen president; James M. Montgom-
ery, New York, vice president; Repre-
sentative John W. Weeks of Massa-
chusetts, second vice president; Rev.
Dr. Randolph H. McKim, District of
Columbia, chaplain general; William
Libbey. New Jersey, secretary; Richard
II. Cadwallader, Pennsylvania, treas-
urer; George E. Pomeroy, Ohio, regis-
trar, and Marshall Haywood. North
Carolina, historian.
A committee will be appointed to
consider erecting here a statue to the
Francois Marquis De Grasse AntuUy,
Minneapolis, Minn., April 20. — John
Barrett, treasurer of the Philippine
islands and a former well known
resident of Minneapolis, is here on a
visit with relatives and friends. Mr.
Barrett arrived Monday and will re-
main in Minneapolis about a week,
going from here to Washington, D.
C. and other Eastern cities before
returning to the islands. He is ac-
companied by Mrs. Barrett. They are
the guests of his brother, Clem Bar-
rett.
John Barrett went to the Philip-
pine islands during the Spanish-
American war as a menber of Com-
pany A of this city. After the war
he remained in the island, taking a
positon in the government f* r
Two years ago he was appointed
treasurer of the islands, the position
he now holds.
DIGS HIS OWN PITFALL.
otter Tail County Man Crushed By
Rock He Tried to Bury.
Fergus Falls, Minn., April 20. — Emil
Schinbak, who resides about six miles
north of this city, met with a peculiar
accident. He wished to get rid of a
large stone and in order to do so de-
cided to dig a hole beside it and allow
it to drop in, after which he would
cover it. When he got the pit nearly
completed the earth about the stonQ
loosened and the stone fell in on top
of him. His right leg was broken in
two places, his arm was stripped of
skin from his elbow to his hand, and
he sustained other injuries. He was
held in the hole for some time, but his
cries finally attracted his family and
assistance was secured and he was re-
leased. He was brought to this city
and is now in a hospital.
•
Safe Medicine for Children.
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound !■
a safe and effective medicine for ciill-
dren as it does not contain opiates or
harmful drugs. The genuine Foley's
Honey and Tar Compound is In a yel-
low package. All druggists.
STEPS ON COLLAR BUTTON.
Gangrene Results and Racine Doc-
tor May Lose Life.
Racine, Wis., April 20. — Dr. Gus-
tave Bjorkman, one of the leading
physicians and surgeons of Racine,
lies at his home in a critical condition
and attending physicians fear for his
recovery. Gangrene in the right foot
persists, despite three operations.
Some days ago in his bedroom Dr.
Bjorkman stepped on a collar but-
ton, causing a bruise, to which little
attention was paid. Three days ago
the limb became swollen and black-
ened. Surgeons found it necessary to
amputate the great toe, and later two
other operations were necessary.
«
Hornet Men Not Gnllty.
New Orleans, La., April 20. — A ver-
dict of not guilty in the Hornet filibus-
tering case was rendered by a jury in
the United States circuit court late
yesterday In the trial of J. W^. Beer,
former owner, and Capt. Charles John-
son, former master of the steamer
Hornet, charged willi violating the
neutrality laws.
•
FallM Seven Storien and Uven.
Tacoma, Wash., April 20. — I^. Knut-
son fell seven stories yesterday to the
concrete basement of a new building
and was practically unhurt. At the
first lloor he crashed through some one-
inch boards.
McKibbiD
hats
Three dollars
Real Values
BARK ASHORE.
The Port Stanley Wrecked Off
West Coast of Ireland.
London, April 20. — The British bark
Port Stanley is aground in Ballyheige
bay, on the west coast of Ireland,
where she put In last night for shelter
from a fierce gale. The crew of twen-
ty-five was rescued with difficulty by
the coast guard.
The Port Stanley sailed from Port-
land, Or., on Nov. 15 and arrived at
Queenstown on Tuesday last, later sail-
ing for Limerick, which port she was
attempting to make when she ran Into
the gale and was forced to put into
Ballyheige bay. where she lay to. The
storm, increasing In violence, the bark
dragged her anchors and was tossed
upon submerged rocka
I
are determined more by the quality of an artide than by the price quoted.
In some stores it is absolutely necessary for you to be a competent
judge of the article you are buying in order to be sure you arc getting
the quality j'ou want. If a store will publicly misrepresent an article,
you may be sure they will take every advantage of you they can when
they get you in the store.
You can't afford to take chances in buying furniture. You want to
be sure you are getting your money's worth.
You can depend on the goods you buy here. Our established policy
is satisfaction or your money back.
Your
Credif Is
Good.
COMPLETE HOUSEFUSNISBERS
Jl^k il^%
DULUTH, MINNESOTA
A Special in
Magazine Racks
For tomorrow's special selling we
offer an exceptional value In Maga-
zine Racks. These racks are well
built of solid oak, and fij}ished in
Funwd and Early Eng-
lish. Easily worth $3.25
— our special.
nj\iait^\M III
$1.69
«
i '^
TTW
l-
l
r
i.-
i^aa^H^
3
~tt r
-•-
-•
-S
\
aSP=*=BB
_:Ziil
S5BV
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
15
MAMOBAS
ARE WORKED
Export Business Amounts to
45 Loads— Wheat
Advances.
AMERICAN WHEAT
May—
Duluth
Minneapolis
Chicago . . .
^VinIlip'?g .
New York
St. Louis . .
Kan.sas City
July—
Dultuh
Minneapolis
Chicago
Open.
.95*;
■4
.87%
.84%
.96%
High.
$ .97
.96»^8-V*
.90%
.93%
.95%
.88%
.85^
MARKETS. APRIL
Close.
%
Vv'lnnipeg f>4%
Foreign Advices
Prussian Report Aids
Longs.
DuUith Board of Trade. April 20. —
Wheat values advanced today on ac-
count of the strength at Winnipeg,
which was due to heavy export busi-
ness, and to lack of selling power,
while the longs were purchasing mod-
erately. Foreign news was bullish.
May wheat advanced l%c and July
up a similar distance. Cash
was Ic over May. Oats gained
Rye advanced Ic and durum
up IVjC. Barley was
New York
rft. Louis . . .
Kansas City
May
July
94Vh-%
84 «/^
Si
.98
.97%.
.88 V,
.95^8
.94%
.85%
.83%-
=^i
aail Winnipeg quotatiuni furnLUied by
Low.
i .95%
.95%-%
.8914
.92%
.94%
.87%-%
.84%
.96%b
.96%
.86%
.94%-%
.94
.84%
.82
B. K. Baker
$ .97a
,96Vi-%
.90\S
.93%
.95%
.88Vs-%
.85%-%
.»7%a
.97%-%
.87% -88
.95%b
.94%
•85Vi „
.831/4-%
Co.
DULUTH
Open.
.85b
.86
DURUM MARKET
High. Low. Close.
.S6b .85b 'Blf^
.87b .86 .86%a
April 19.
% .95%b
.94rg-95a
.88%
.92%
.94%
.87^
.83%
.sevib
.96-%b
.86%-V4b
.93%-%
.93%
.83%
.81%
April 19.
.84%b
.85%b
May
July
DULUTH LINSEED
open. High. Low
.$2
.61a
$:i.61a
12.57
MARKET.
Close.
$2.57
2.57n
April
$2.61
2.61n
19.
On track, to ar-
97c asked; July,
Durum — On track, in store, to arrive:
Duluth close: Wheat— On track: No 1 hard $im
rive. 99c: No. 1 northern, 98c: No. 2 northern. 95-9be, May
QTT-n jukpd- Seotember 91c nominal. Durum — t>n tracK. in --- -. - - .
No'*l l^sc: No T 8T%c; May. 85%c asked: July. .8«>c asked Linseed:
On trkck. to arrive, $2.58; May. $2.57 . July. $2,57 nominal. Oats, 32%c. Rye.
S4-Srt,- Barlev 09c-$1.10. Feed barley, 80-9dc.
Rec^lnts— Wheat. 30 730 bu: last year. 73.242 bu; corn
1650 bS last year 15.393 bu; linseed. 1,690 bu; last year. 5.18*, bu.
SMpments-Wheat 61.000 bu; last year. 211.000 bu; oats,
year. 2.905 bu; linseed, 1.098 bu.
3,07 8 bu; barley.
3.133 bu; last
WEAKNESS
IN STOCKS
Reflects Uncerlainty Growing
Out of Missouri Pa-
cific Situation.
i •
Trading Very Dull Most of
Session and Close Is
Heavy.
went
wheat
%c.
went
Linseed was weaker on
selling from the country,
bushels changed hands.
seed had been helJ for
unchanged.
account of
About 8.000
Some of the
seeding pur-
dav fair. Missouri— Fair tonight and
Friday cooler in east. Wisconsin and
Iowa— Fair tonight and Friday: frost
tonight, cooler. Minne^^ota — Fair to-
night and Friday; froat tonight. North
and South Dakota, and Kansas — Fair
tonight and Friday; not much change
in temperature. Nebraska — Fair tonight
and Friday; frost tonight.
CHICAGO MARKET.
For the
Thurs'lay.
Corn and
iwenfyf >ur
Wheat Bulletin.
eiiUing
Aprtl 20.
h>)urs
1911;
at S
m.,
STATIONS.
Temperktui*.
tl'J
8tat« of
weather
9
a
a
■a
It
ii
poses, but there was no demand for it
and high prices were attractive to
sellers. May declined 4c. Cash was
Ic over May. Winnipeg was stronger
and closed at $2.49.
The wheat market was strong from
the opening and advanced steadily; a
few recessions were only temporary.
The trade was small and scalpers were
at a disadvantage. The sentiment in
the pit is bearish, but so long as there
Is a probability of a so-called May
deal, traders are disposed to hold aloor
from the short side or to remain in
that position only for a brief time li
they espouse it.
Although American wheat was above
an export basis, the market gained
added strength ou account of export
busine!<s at Winnipeg, where one flrni
worked ten loads of No. 2 northern at
92 'gc. The total business was said to
have amounted to forty-tlve loads for
Mav shipment.
The ca.<5h demand In the Northwest
did not show much strength. Mills
are not urgent buyers. One big mill-
ing interest Is entirely out of the spot
market In the Northwest. New tlour
business Is light and bids from abroad
are out of line.
Favorable conditions are attending
field work in the Northwestern states
and Manitoba. Farm work Is being
pushed forward rapidly, according to
the Price Current. Winter wheat is
uniformly promising and has seldom
been in better condition at this time
of the year.
Foreign markets generally were
higher. The Prussian official report
was bullish and was the chief factor
In the advance. Offers frora Australia
were lighter and Plata offers were
firmer.
exports helped
The close wa.-?
90c, a net gain
No. 1
No. I
No. 1
No. 2
No. 3
Barley,
Flax.
Cai4h Sales
danm. 1 csr
durum. 500 bu
durum. 1 car. duckaa*
Jurum. I car. . • ■
durum. 1 CiT
, 1 -ir
No. 1. 500 bu. to
Shorts Rush to Cover and Wheat
Prices Shoot Upward.
Chicago. April 20.— Excitement today
In the wheat trade at Liverpool re-
sulted in shorts here rushing to co%er
and sending prices skyward. One rea-
son for bullish sentiment was a report
Placing the condition of the Pruss.at
winter crop at 76 per cent, as compared
with 84 a year ago Cab e dispatches
told also of scanty arrivals at Buenos
Ayres and of a tightening up of Aus-
tralian ofters. The opening here was
%c to m*iilViC higher than last night.
May started at 89ViC to 89%c. a gain
of \ra''^c to 1% Celiac, rose to 89**c
and reacted to 89 %c.
Talk of Manitoba
bring about a rally,
strong with May at
of 1 % (fi 1 % 0.
Alleg~ed crop failure In the Argentine
made corn strong. Clear weather over
the Northern American belt, however,
acted as an offset in part. May openej
%'fi^c to %fi)%c up at 50 %c to 50 tsC
and steadied at 50 Vic.
Export sales caused a further ad-
vance The close was tirm with May
at 50%fi5O%c, a net gain of ^c.
Oats were In good demand with a
prominent local house leading the b'-'i'-
ing Sellers were scattered. May
started unchanged to %c higher at
Slt^c to 32c, and seemed Inclined to
keep within that range. ^ ^ ^ , .
Evening up on the part of shorts led
to an advance In provislon.s. First
sales were 5c up to 5c o^- with July
"" ' pork, $7.85 to $7.90
to $7.92^3 for ribs.
~ Shipts.
11.300
1.000
392,900
197.600
Aleiandrt* »."leir 6»
Campbell t:iear 74
Cr )okston Cioudj' 5«
j DKrult Ctty Cloudy 62
1 HaUtad Pt Cloudy 60
I Montevideo Cloudy 68
I Now Ulm Pt. Cloudy 90
.Park Mipidi Cloudy ti2
I Wlimebagj Ctty Pt. Cloudy 58
WortliiiKton Pt. Cloudy 64
.\mt)iila Pt. Cloudy 62
Uottliieau Cloudy 80
LatKilm Cloudy 50
Larimoro Clear M
LUbon Pt. Cloudy W
MUiot ^'lea' ^8
Pembina Pt. Cloudy 58
Ab.T«leeu flear <»*
Millbank Clean 64
MlUheU fl>^»r 66
Uedllcld Clear 66
tBlsm.H-rck Clear 58
JDevlls Laiw Clear 54
DuluCi Cloudy 48
tllumn Clear 84
tLa CrosM Cloudy
Ml:uie.ipo:is Cloudy 52
tMoorlwad Cloudy 62
tPienw U.^'**''! 2.
;St Paul Cloudy. 52
Winnipeg Cloudvl 54
Thursday.
t
.r'h
.*5H
i».
.86
.8'! 4
.82Vi,
.95
rtv.
% ••••■•■•
. 2
.31
options $14.65 for
for lard, and $7.90
Articles —
Flour, bbl
Wheat, bu
Corn, bu
Oats, bu
Rye, bu
Barley, bu
Car lot
with 1 of
oars, with
120 cars.
40
0
32
0
S8
0
3i
0
34
0
36
0
46
0
38
0
44
.02
36
0
34
0
36
0
34
0
36
U
34
i
42
3
32
0
30
0
38
0
32
0
28
0
34
0
36
0
38
0
30
0
40
u
42
0
36
a
32
0
42
0
34
0
HKM.\UK.S— Uglit to heavy rain* fell o»er OUlo.
Indiana. Kotttucky. lUlnoU and Ml<-hlga"
U. W. UICHAUDSON.
Local trvKCASlit.
York. April 20. — The stock
developed a heavy tone in the
early trading today. Missouri Pacific
was one of the few Issues to open at
an advance over last night's close, but
after making a gain of % it fell back
%. Union Pacific lost %, United States
Steel % and Reading, Northern Pa-
cific and Southern Pacific ^.
After a further monetary dip In
prices the decline was checked, and
the list advanced to a parity with yes-
terday's closing figures or above. St.
Paul. Reading, and Missouri Pacific
rallied a point from the lowest. To-
ledo. St. Louis and Western preferred
and Wisconsin Central gained 1. Gen-
eral Electric IVi and Nashville. Chat-
tanooga and St. Louis 5 points.
Speculation during the morning ses-
sion resulted In no Important changes
m prices. Activity slackened and
.stocks eased off somewhat toward
noon. Traders watched the dealings
In United States Steel and certain of
the railroads closely. United States
Steel was sold heavily, transactions be-
ing largest around 75. There were im-
ports that prices of certain products
would be cut. Sentiment was con-
fused by conflicting statements as to
the plans settled upon for reorganiza-
tion of the directorates of Missouri Pa-
cific and other (Jould roads. Western
Maryland and People's Gas Improved
1 and American Beet Sugar 1%. Bonds
were steady.
Trading was very dull with prices
slightly below the midday level.
The market closed dull and heavy.
Further hesitation was shown In the
last hour, the list apparently reflect-
ing the uncertainty growing out of the
Missouri Pacific situation. Prices
showed little tendency toward recov-
ery. In some Instances, notably Mis-
souri Pacific, Erie. United States Steel
and fertilizer Issues, there was pro-
nounced weakness.
-^
Herald by
American, full cream, per lb 18
Block Swiss, per Id, No. 1 15^
PrlniDSt cheese, per lb 09
Odorless brick, per lb 16
Wheel Swiss, per lb X7
KUU.S—
Eggs, fresh, per doz 16^® .17
PtANUTS—
Fancy, raw. per lb by the sack 07
Fancy, roa»toJ. gacfc, per lb 07V4
Fancy, roa&ted, less than lacki 08
Halted peanuts. 30-lb palU 8.75
Salted peanuts, 10-lb sucks 1.40
Fancy Jumbos, roasted, per lb 10
Fancy Jumbos, raw. per lb 08H
MAPLE SYRUP—
Vermont, per gal 1.75
Olilo, 5-gal. can 1.50
M.\PLK SUGAR—
Iowa, assorted pkgs., 30-Ib box. per lb 10
POP CORN—
Suuwball pop com, 40-pkg. box S.50
Santa Claus pop com, caae 1.75
Pop com. on the cob T... .03^4
Pop com. shelled 04
HONtY-
Wlsc<jnalu wtdte clo»er, per case. 24'$ 4. 85
CAUBAGE—
Home grown cabbage, per ton 35.04
Home grown cabbage, per crate, large 2.25
Holland cabbage, fresh and flue, per cwt 2.00
POTATOES—
Potatoes, per bu 65
Jersey sweets, per bamiMr 1.50
OMON.S—
Reds. lUO-lb sack
Yellow, lao-lb
Red. per bu
Spanish onions, per crate.
Sets, wltlte, per bu
NUTS—
Walnuts, new, California, llC-lb sack, per lb..
Filberts. Sicily, per lb
Brazils, eitra large, per lb
Pecans, extra fancy polished, per lb
.\lmoitds. Taraganla, per lb
Mixed nuts, 100-lb and 50-lb boxet, lb new..
Black walnuts, lb
Cocoanuts. per dos
New hickory nuts, large or small, pet lb
Pecans, halves, altelled, cxira fancy, 5-Ib car-
tons, per lb
Walnuts, sltelled. extra faaoy, 5-lb cartons, lb.
Chestnuts, per lb
Almonds, slielled. extra fancy, 5-lb cartons, lb.
DATES AND FIGS—
Hallowi dates, 70-lb boxes, new
Hallowl dates. 30 packages, per box
Fard dates. 12-lb boxes, new
Sugar walnut dates. 9-lb boxes
New CallforiUa figs. 12-pkg. box. per box
New Smyrna figs. 5-crowu, 20-lb box. per box..
New bmyrua figs. 7 -crown, 100-lb box, per
box l*-50
New Smyrna figs. 3-crown. 10-lb. per box 1.23
FRESH VEGETABLES—
Head lettuce, hamper S.SS
Lettuce, leaf, piw bu box 1.10
DULUTH MAN railroads
AS WrrNESSiELECTRIC LINES
AMALGAMATE
2.25
2.50
1.50
1.90
2.00
.17
.IS
.14
.15
.20
.14
.05
.85
.08
.50
.48
.10
.45
4.50
2.25
1.40
1.35
1.00
2.75
William Burgess Yells of the
"Jackpot" to Elect
Lorimer.
Secretary of Hiies Lumber
Company Told Him
About It
large bunches, doz.
Beans, wax, per bu
Parsley, home grown, per dos
Green onions, doz
Green onions, b^jx
Cauliflower, California, per craU. ,
Spinach, box
Bound radlsliea, hothouse,
Long radishes, doz
Hothouse cucumlKMS, per doz 1.75
Green pepper). liotLouae, per basket 05
Celery, Callfonilu, per buucb 85
Celery, Florida, crate. 8.00
Endive. New Orleans, per bbl 6.00
New beets, per doz 75
New carrots, per doz 75
.50
.35
.40
S.7S
3.50
1.25
.75
.40
T. IndlciteB Inappreciable rainfall. 'Maximum for
yesterday. tMinimum lor twenty-four hours, ending
8 a. m. 75th meridian time. tMinimum temperature
for 12-hour period ending at 8 a. m.
NOTE. — The average maximum and minimum tem-
peratures are nv*<U) up at each center from the actual
number of reports received, and the average rainfall
from the number of staUons repotting .1 inch or
more. The 'slatj of weaUier" la that ptvvaUiug
at tlm« of olxervatlan.
MARKET GOSSIP
bu
bu
vs.
VJ.
Primaries— Wheat receipts today
275.000 bu; last year. 23'a.OOO bu; wheat
shipments. 295.000 bu vs 341.000 bu.
Corn receipts today. 312 000
209.000 !)u; shlmpents, 517,000
896.LIOO bu.
• • •
Broomhall cabled from Liverpool:
•*The weaker American cables yester-
dav were offered here by actives cov-
ering by shorts and values at the
opening were **d to ^d higher and
daring the mornin? the market was
highly excited with a further advance
of ^sd to ^id with the principal
strength In May and .July. Buying wa.s
prompted bv the firmness in spot tor
which there was a better demand and
the firmness of cargoes in all positions.
The e:o.sing strength In Buenos Ayres
was the leading feature and this to-
gether with firm L»a Plata offers and
a tightening up of Au.siralian offers
caused free covering and induced out-
side speculative support. The Prussian
official report wa.s very bullish
this contributed largely to the
vance. At 1:30 p. m. the market
strong and bare of offers with
Id to
After
Recpta.
. 15.000
::;;. 48.000
142.500
225.000
1.000
39.000 17.700
receipts — Wheat. 24 cars,
contract grade; corn, l')0
11 of contract grade; oats.
Total receipts of wheat at
Chicago. Minneapolis and Duluth today
were 175 cars, compared with 229 cars
last week and 96 oars the correspond-
ing day a year ago.
Cash close; Wheat— No. 2 red. 89%
(g90\ic; No. 3 red. 87'5)S9c; No. 2 hard.
39»ri@91\c; No. 3 hard. 87 @ 90c: No. 1
northern. $1.01 @ 1.02; No. 2 northern.
99c'a>$1.01; No. 3 northern, 98c@$1.00;
No ""2 spring. 92(»97c; No. 3 spring, ^2
(Til 97c: velvet chaff. 87.g'97c; durum. 82
fi38c. Corn— No. 2, 50%'g)51c; No. 2
white, 50^4@5iy4c: No. 2 yellow. 51 @
5114c; No. 3, 50@50Vic; No. 3 white.
50ai50»ric; No. 3 yellow, 50^^ ©SO^c:
No. 4. 49@43Vic: No. 4 white, 49®
49»^c: No. 4 yellow. 49(3'49=V4C. Oats-—
No. 2, 32@32V4c; No. 2 white. 33% @
34Vsc; No. 3 white, 33@33V2c: No. 4
white, 32@33y4c; standard, 33%@.?4c.
Rye— No. 2. 91%. Barley. 70c(8'$112.
Timothy. $12.00; plover, $12.00.
THE COPPER STOCKS.
New York stock auotations furnished The
Piper. Jolinson & Case:
HTOCK.S^
I Open.l High. | Low | Close.
«••••«••••
The following are the closing quota-
tlons of copper stocks at Boston today,
reported' by Paine. Webb*r & Co.. 316
West Superior street:
STOCKS—
and
ad-
was
values
l»/gd higher than yesterday,
the opening V^d higher. Corn
further advanced hsd to %d with
heavy covering bv shorts on the
strong closing at Buenos Ayres and
Argentine crop news and the strength
in spot and a good spot demand.
"La Plata linseed at Antwerp for the
current delivery was quoted at $2,112."
m * *
Closing wheat cables: Liverpool. IM
@l%d higher; corn. l%@l%d higher.
Aantwerp. IVic up. Budapest, up 5^-zO.
m * •
Aregentlne shipments: Wheat, this
week 2,S00.000 bu; last week, 2.720,-
000 bu; last year. l.'3S8,000 bu. Corn,
this week, nil; last week, 153,000 bu;
last year, 97,000 bu.
• • *
Cars Inspected: Wheat — No. 1 north-
ern. 13; No. 1 hard, a; No. 2 northern.
1; No. 1 durum. 10. No. 2 durum, l;
No. 3 durum, 2; total durum, 13; mixed
1; total wheat, 31; last yeai-, 17; lin-
seed, none: last year, 7: barley, 3; last
year. 1; total, 34; on track, 27.
Vfc- heat-
May . . .
July . . .
Sept . .
Corn-
May . .
.Tuly . .
Sept ..
Oat*—
May . .
July . .
Sept .
Me«s
May ..
July .
t.ard.
M.iy .
July .
Sept
Short
May .
July .
-Sept .
Open.
.86'4-H
.52^-%
High
.90%
.88%
.87%
.50%-"^
.5lVi-S
.52Vi-%
Low.
.80 »i
.86-V4
.150%
.51%
.32%
31*;-
■iiii
3:2%
... .S1T4-32 .32%
.. .31% .n
... .31% .31%-%
Pork, per bbl—
. 15.42% 15.52% 15.35
!..lt.tj.5 14.87%-aO 14.65
per 100 lb —
... 7.77%-80 T.85 7.77%
7.95-'J0 7.»5 7.85
. .. 7.35-97% 8.05 7.95
Ribs, per 100 lb—
. .. 8.30-35 8.37% 8
. .. 7.90-92% 8.00 7
. .. 7.85 7.92%-95 T
Clo.w.
.90
.87%
.8'3Ti-87
.50%-%
.51%
.52%
.32-%
.32
.31%-K
15.47%
14.77%
r.82%
7.92%
8.02%
.30
.90
.82%-S5
8.35
7.9.>-5>:
7.8-%-
• « «
Cars of wheat received:
T.ncit-
Today.
Year.
DuUith 31
17
Minneapolis 120
71
W-irniptg 179
198
St. Louis, bu 20,0)0
20,000
Kansas City 8
32
MLNNEAPOLIS MARKET.
Wheat Makes Good Advances on
Higher Cables.
Minneapolis, Minn., April 20.— Wheat
was strong on higher cables and prices
made good advances. No export busi-
ness reported, but neapness to export
basis caused European markets to have
a greater Influence. Support also
given wheat In Chicago. May closed
l%c higher than yesterday; July l%c
higher, and September T&c higher. Lo-
cal elevator stocks decreased 1,075,000
bu for five days. Minneapolis today
received 120 cars of wheat against
a year ago;
Winnipeg
opened
low
Cars of
linseed
received:
Last
Year.
7
10
11
Today,
Duluth ....••••• • •••
Minneapolis
Winnipeg 1
• • •
Puts, Minneapolis: May. 9573(3^960
bid; July, 96%c bid; calls, May, 97%c
asked; July. 98%(&'98>4C bid.
• • •
Total clearances — Wheat, 32,000 bu;
flour, 29.000 bu; corn, 193,000 bu; oats,
none; wheat and tlour, 163.000 bu.
• « «
Forecast: Illinois — Fair tonight and
Friday, slightly cooler tonight; light
frost in north. Indiana — Fair and
cooler; probably frost In north; Frl-
A GOOD FIRM TO SHIP
YOUR GRAIN TO
ATWOOD-LARSON
COMPANY, Inc.
Special attention given to cash
erralna. We give all shipments our
personal attention.
71
Duluth 31 against 17. and
179 against 198. May wheat
95 5:^^95 a; c, high 96Vi:(0'96%c.
95V'(iJ'95%c. closed 96y4^i/96%c;
Algoma
Amalgamated Copper . .
Adventure
Ahmeek
Allouez
Ameri'-an Telephone . . .
Atlantic
Arcadian
Arizona Commercial ...
Butte & Ballaklava. . . .
Boston Corbin
Black Mountain
Butte Coalition
Cilumet & Arizona. . . ,
Calum3t & Hecla
Centenaial
Cons. Mercur
Copper liange
Daly West
Davis Daly
jjast Bi.'tte
Franklin
First National
Giroux
Granby
Greene Cananea
Hancock Consolidated ,
Helvetia ,
Indiana
I.sle Koyale
Keweenaw ■
Lake Copper ■
La Salle
Ma.ss Consolidated , . . .
Mass. Gas
Miami Copper
Michigan
Mohawk
Nevada Con.^olidated .
Nevada Utah •.
Nipissing
North Butte
Old Dominion
Osceola
Parrot
Pneu. Service
Qulncy
Ray Cons
Santa Fe
Shannon
Shoe Machinery
Superior Boston
Superior Copper
Superior & Pittsburg.
Tamarack
Trinity
United Fruit
U. S. Mining
do. pfd
U. s. on
Utah Apex > .
Utah Consolidated ...
Utah Copper
Virginia Chemical . . .
Victoria
Winona
Wolverine
Wyandot
Yukon Gold
Bohemia
Begole ....
Boston Ely
Cactus
I Bid. I Asked.
7
61>^
5
170
32
145^
3=54
2%
13
5
12^4
5c
17
19
4S5
12
60 Tk
4^
165
i44^4
3Vi
2»,i
12^
4%
12
""16%
4SV2
480
11%
8c
60 V4
1 7-16
lUa
SVa
1 ^8
5Tft
30Ms
6Va
21
1
11%
12%
2
30
4
5%
I 91V*
18Vt
IVi
35
17%
75
10%
26%
36%
ii"
4
66%
15Vi
75c
9%
53%
3%
32
13 T4
47
3%
187
32%
45%
30
2Vi
13
43
61V4
1%
6%
AjnaltS.imaletl
.Vmerioan Car Foundry...
American Smelters
AtihUon
Itiltimore & Ohio
Br.«)ljlyn Kapld Transit
Ctias.<pi ake tfc Ohio
C. M. & St. Paul
Canadian Pacific
liidtillera
Erie
do lit pfd
Great Nortlieni
Great Northern Ore ....•
MLssiurl Pacirio
National Load
Now, York Central
Northern PaclTlc
Ponnsvlvanla
People's (iad
K'X'lc Island
Heading
8oo Line
Souliieni Pacific ......<
Twin City
I'liliin Paolfio «f
Utah C ipper
UniU-d SUtoJ Steel .....
do pfd
Waljash
61%
51%
72%
107 ?t
103%
77%
79%
118%
225%
34%
29%
47%
124%
60%
4!>%
51%
10.:%
121%
124
104%
t8%
152%
137 I
114%l
109 !
i:'»%i
43 V*
70%1
118%
16
61%
'72%
108%
"77%
79%
119
22 >%
34%
29%
49%
«0%
■72"
107%
'77%
78%
118%
224%
34%
23%
47%
105%
105%
122
121%
124
123%
152%
151%
137
136%
113%
114%
109
108%
175%
174%
43%
43
75%
74%
61
51%
72
107%
103%
77%
78%-
118%
224%
34%
28%
47%
124%
60%
48%
51%
105%
122
123%
101 Va
28%
151%
lo6%
113%
108%
174%
43
74%
119%
18
Florida tomatoes, baaket
Tomatoes, crate
Louiaiana strawberries.
Pie plant, per bui
Uarllc. pouud '
BOOTS—
Table beets, per cwt
Table bagaa, per cwt
Horse radish, root, per bbl
Horse tadlali, per lb
Table carrots, per cwt
Table par*nips, per cwt.
MISCKLLANKOUS—
Beans, na«y. per bu
Bean:*, brown, per bu
Fruit baakela, pet hundred....
MEAl-S—
Beef, per lb
Mutton, per lb
Pork loms, per U>
Veal, per lb
Lamb, per lb
Lard, per lb
DRESSED POULTUY—
Hens, fancy, fat, per lb
Springs, pet lb
Turkey*, per lb
Du^'ka, per lb
Ueese. per lb
LIVK POULTKY—
Hens, per lb
Small liens, pet lb
Springs, per lb
Turkeys, par lb ■
Ducks, per lb ■
Geese, per lb
FISH—
Trout. Lake Superior, froien
Wliitefl.-,li. frozen,
Pike, frozen
Pickerel, frozen ............
Salmon •......•.■.....
HaUbut
Herring.
Finnan
Smoked
Smoked
Smoked
Oysters.
Oysters,
Oysters,
Frozen
Fresh frozen
Frozen eela,
$2.50®
Of 24 PU. .|3.7S@
2.75
3.50
8.75
.IS
■••••■••
75
75
50
14
75
00
«0
75
.T%a
.9®
.159
.180
.12 id
1.89
.09%
.07
.11%
.10%
.11
.11
.IS
.15
.24
.21
.IS
.15%
.15%
.15%
.20
.13
.13
■ • •••••••
«••••••••••»•
Duluth Securities.
SECUIIITIES—
I Bid I Asked
KJrst NatlonH Bank I «2J
• • • « <
No. 1
98% @
No. 2
95%®
No. 3
De-
|21.50@
Goldfleld Cons
Inspiration
La Rose
I>lve Oak . . . .
New Baltic ..
Ohio Copper .
Oneco
Ray Cent
Tono Nevada.
DULVTH.
MINNBAPOUS.
Chemung . . . .
July opened 96%c, high 97%|j97%c, | cilff
low 966^0, closed 97%(§'97%; Septem- 1 Chlnp •••••• •
beT opened 89 %c, high 90c, low 89 %c. Cor»?l.n Copper
closed 89 %c, „ T^»
Cash wheat steady and strong. . De-
mand excellent for moderate offerings.
No 1 northern sold for 2%(5'3%c above
the May contract. Closing:
hard 99%c; No. 1 northern,
99 %c- to arrive^ 98 % @ 99 %c ;
northern. 9 5 % @ 9 1 % c • ^o arrive.
97 Tic- No. 3 wheat. 95y8@96%c.
yellow corn. 50c; No. 3 white oats. 31®
31%c; No. 2 rye, 88@89c.
MiUstuffs— Shipments, 2,145 tons,
mand Improved and orders being placed
for shlpnvants early In May.
Bran in 100-pound sacks,
502 00
Floiir— The market is unsettlei
Some mills reported fair demand and
others slow. Prices unchanged. Ship-
ments, 54.011 bbls. First patents, $4.45
(5)4.75: seconds, $4.35@4.65; first clears.
S"2.95®3.40; seconds. $1.95@2.60.
Flax — Receipts, none, year ago, 10;
sliipments, 1. The market was nominal
with no offerings. Prices for both spot
and to arrive, were Ic above Duluth
May, closing at $2.58.
Barley — Receipts. 18 cars, year ago.
13- shipments, 21. The demand was
stronger for choice malting barley at
nrleas about Ic higher. Offerings
scarce. Feeding grades quoted steady.
Closing range, 70c@$1.07.
• ••■••'
• ••••• I
ly*
3%
1%
1%
1%
13c
5%
97c
21%
3%
6
6%
4 9-16
1%
1%
IV4
7.16
6%
60%
4"*
1 9-16
11%
9%
1%
6
6 3-i6
"1%
12%
13
2%
31
4
6%
91%
18%
1%
36
17%
76
10%
27%
37%
102
13
5
67
15%
1
10
n^
32%
14%
48
4%
187%
,45%
30%
2%
13%
44
sale
2
7
108
1%
4
1%
18c
6
99c
22
4
6%
7
4%
18%
2
1%
1%
9-16
Amerl-an Kx.Jian«e N»Uoa»l B«iik.
City National Bank
Nortliern N.itional Bank
St. Louia County Bank
Weateni State Bank
Duluth-Superlor TracUon C«
do pfd
Duluth Street Railway, lat C Sa 34
N. A
Duluth Edison Electric, 1st 9. •.
March, 1931. op. M. & S. A
Great Northern Power Co. bond*....
American CarboUlo, par 91
Zeultli Furnace Co
M *
tie
825
130
130
200
140
77
83%
ee
98
80
2.85
83
sa
84
101
100
i'.u
100
f roxen ................
haddie ...•
whitefish ^.
Chinook iaimon
halibut
standard, per gal
medium selects, per gal.
extra selects, per gal
smelts, per lb
mackerel, each
per lb
Itoe Shad, each
Shad roe, per pair
Steak, cod. per lb
Scallops, per gal
HAY AND STRAW—
Choice timothy, per ton
No. 1 diolce tlmoUiy. per ton.
No. 1 choice tmothy. per ton...
No. 1 mlxod tlmotliy. per ton. . .
No. 2 mixed tlmotliy, per ton..
No. 1 upland, per ton
No. 2 upland, per ton
No. 1 midland, per ton
No. 2 midland, per ton
CblcaKo LIveHtock.
Chicago, April 20.— CatUe, receipt* estimated at
5500; market bIow at declUie: beevea, $5.15®6.10;
Texas steers, $4.50(3:5.60; western steers, $4.8t)(a5.75;
stockets and feeders. $4(35.70; cowa and heifers.
$2ti5@5.75; calves, $4.75(^6.50. Hogs, receipts esU-
m.ited at 24,000; market slow, gener.illy 10c lower;
liilit $S.n5(tf'>.40: mixed. $8(0C6.35; heavy. $5.75(?.'
6.20; rough. $5.75(3'5.!»5; good to dioice heavy. ♦J'-.M
<»(i20- pig*. $6.'I5C^6.35; bulk of sales. $b.lO>a'6.-2J.
Sheep reoelpU estimated at 15.000; market weak;
native, $3i3r4.rO: western, $3.15(3 470: yearlings,
$1.30(35.25; lamlj*. native, $4.50(^6.15; western,
$4!75<38.15.
♦
Midway Horse Market.
Mi!mes.)ta Transfer. St. Paul. MUm.. April 20.—
Barrett &, Zimmerman r-.-port: Good general demand
for all classes of hor-res. with the caU centering
good farm mares. Delivery and bualness
readily. Big draft pairs leas active.
Drafters, extra
Drafters, choice
Draftera. common to good
Farm nurca and horses, extra
Fanu miirea and horsM, (J'.ioice
Farm liurses, common to good
Delivery
Drivers and saddlers
Mules, according to size
Rye straw.
Oat straw.
Bran, pet
UldOllngs,
per ton.
per ton. .
ton
per ton. .
.11
.12
.10
.08
.IS
.13
.03
.10
.10
.18
.14
1.40
1.7(
1.90
.12%
.ss
.12
1.25
.50
.12%
1.90
.$16.50@17.00
. 15.5O0sl7.OO
. 15.50&17.03
. 14.00@16.00
. 12.00@13.00
. 13.50(914.50
. 11.50(312.50
,. 10.00'S12.00
. 7.00(9 8.00
. 6.30® 7.00
. 6.50(£ 7.00
22.00
26.00
Springfield, 111.. April 20.— The hear-
ings of the senate britery Investiga-
tion committee were I'esumed in the
supreme court building this afternoon.
Former United States Senator Albert
J Hopkins was on hand prepared to
take the witness stand.
A. K. Brown, president of the Ken-
wood Trust & Savings bank, was the
first witness called.
Mr. Brown declared t lat Edward Tll-
den had not carried an account with
the Kenwood bank during 1909. and
said for that reason h< could not pro-
duce any records of >i bank a.ccount
such as the commlttet had demanded
of him. Mr. Brown wis then excused
from the stand.
Bunsfmrn on Staad.
William Burge.ss. an electrical con-
tractor from Duluth. Minn., followed
Brown on the witness stand. Burgess
told of a railroad journey on the Win-
nipeg fiver between Duluth and Vir-
ginia, Minn., In March, 1911. Burgess
said that a man named Johnson, of a
trade publication; Randolph, John and
Carl Weyerhaeuser, C. F. Wlehe of
Virginia, a brother-In law of Edward
Hlnes, and another man, were in the
party which was in the smoking com-
partment of the sleeping car.
The witness said that the subject of
Lorimer's election came up. Burgess
during this chat said he expressed the
opinion that Lorimer tiad used money
to effect his election.
"You don't know what you are talk-
ing about, Wiehe said to me," testified
Burgess.
Japkpot RiilMed.
Burgess then testifli?d that Wlehe
said Lorimer never spaiit a cent, but
that a jackpot was raised by Lorimer 3
friends to effect the election.
•'I know what I am talking about,
Wlehe was quoted by Burgess as say-
ing, "because I put up |10,000 for that
jackpot."
Burgess concluded his testimony by
stating that while Et ward Hlnes and
members of the Weyerhaeuser family
were aboard the sleeper, none of them
was in the smoking compartment
Wiehe. who Is secretary of
Hines Lumber comjany
statement regarding
Former Senator Hopkins
Mr. Burgess^
COPPERS LOSE
EARLY STRENGTH
Detroit, Mich., April 20. — The Mich-
igan United railways, operating electric
lines in the lower peninsula yesterday
took over the Kalamazoo, Lake Shore
& Chicago railway, which the new
owners say, means the Inauguration of
a new rail and water route from De-
troit to Chicago. The Kalamazoo. Lake
Shore & Chicago road, generally known
as the fruit belt line, runs from Kala-
mazoo to South Haven, Mich.. 55 miles.
M. U. R. officials state that an ex-
tension will be laid from the latter
city to Benton Harbor, from whence a
line of steamers will carry the passen-
gers to Chicago.
GRAND TRUNK ALLOWED
TO MAKE BOND
London, April 20. — ^At the semi-an-
nual meeting today of the Grand
Trunk Railway of Canada unanimoui
assent was given to the Grand Trunk
railway act of 1911 and the directors
were authorized to e.xerciso the pow-
ers conferred upon them by this law.
including the raising of a mortgage
of JoO, 000,000 in Grand Trunk-^^ e.^tern
railway, the Interest on which will be
guaranteed by the Grand Trunk.
A. W. Smithers, chairman of the
board of directors, said he had no fear
that the Grand Trunk would have to
make any payment under the gu.aran •
tee. Half of the amount of the mort-
gage, he said, would remain In the
treasury, and the balance be issued ai
required.
00 LATE
TO CLASSIFY
Oae Cent a W^ord Bach laaertloa.
No AdvertlacBMrnt Lea* Thaa 16 Oaata
when
the Edward
made the
Lorlmer'a elec-
foUowed
SUPERFLUIOUS HAIR. MOLES.
warts, removed forever. Miss Kellya
Manicuring and Massaging Parlors.
131 West Superior street.
COMBINGS MADE INTO SWITCHES,
and 25 per cent ofE on all hair goods.
Marlnello hair shop. Fidelity block;
next to Freimuth's; take elevator.
FOR SALE — CARLTON HOR.SE MAR-
ket. Car horses will arrive Satur-
daj', barn Carlton, Minn. Drafters,
delivery chunks, drivers.
WANTED — NEAT <1IRL; ONE WHO
knows how to cook; references re-
quired. 10i»2 East Superior street.
WANTED — BARBER AT ONOFl;
steady job; good wages. Joseph W.
Llndek*. 220 Pine street, Hlbbing:.
Minn.
1X>>,'T— ON EAST FIR.ST STREET:
chuus geograpny; finder pleas© re-
turn to 801 East First street.
FOR RENT — FIVE-R(X)M BRICK,
flat; basement and laundry; mod-
ern except heat, 605 Vj East Sixth
street. Call Grand 17o5-Y.
Chicago.
Chicago. April 20. — Butter — Steady: creameries,
13@21c; dairies. 13@13c. Eggs— Steady; receipts,
15,119 ca'ies; at mark, cases included, IS^lfS^sc;
firsts, 15 He; prime flrsta, 16c. Cheese— Steady ;
daisies. 13'yi(g'13?'4c; twins. 12ii(gl3c; yjung Amer-
icas. 134(al3%c; long horns. Vi'^Qlic. PoUtoes—
Steady; cliolce to fancy, 5Si*80c; fair to good. 55@
57c. Poultry- Live firm; turkeys. 14c; chickens.
1314c. Veal— .steady; 60 to 60 lb wta., 6H'37c; 60
to 85 lb wts., 7(a8c; 85 to 110 lb wta., 8a9c.
horses
on
sold
.$185® 240
. 120(^170
. 95ftjll3
. 140(9180
. Il5(<rl35
. 65($(100
. 140®r.>5
. 130 (S 225
. 150^250
20.—
to 15c
to
of
C 15-16
Nevr York Grain.
New York, April 20.— Close: Wheat-
May. 95 %c: July. 94 7ic. Corn-July,
59c
•
lilverpool Grain.
Liverpool. Aprtl 20.— Close: Wlieat— Spot dull : No.
" red western winter, no stock: futiir«a strong ; May,
rts 10%d: July, C» 9%d: October, 6j 9%d. Corn-
spot firm; American mixed new, 4S 5Hd; do old.
5s Vjd: now American kUn dried, 4s 7i4d; fu-
tures strong; Mar. ■»» 7%(1; July, <• 7%d.
Cotton Market.
New York, April 20.— The cotton
market opened steady at an advance of
?.(ti!l(i points and active months soiU
6rai0 points above the closing figures
of last night right after the call on
covering by some of yesterday s sellers
who were alarmed by the firmness of
Liverpool and the big English spot
business. There was no sign of ag-
presslve bull support, however, and the
market became quiet shortly after the
call with fluctuations rather nervous
and irregular.
A continued absence of support from
the leading bull Interests, seemed to
reassure local shorts and the market
became a little easier toward mid-day
under the liquidation by early buyers
for a turn and a renewal of bear
pressure. The selling was not general,
however, and offerings were well
enough absorbed by scattering buyers
to hold prices within 4 or 6 points of
the best with active positions ruling
some 2 to 6 points above the closing
figures of last night at mid-day.
Spot closed quiet. 10 points higher;
middling uplands, 14.95; middling gulf.
15 20- no sales. Futures closed firm;
closing bids: April. 14.73; May, 14.80;
June, 14.86; July. 14.86; August, 14.55;
September. 13.39; October. 12.90; No-
vember. 12.82; December. 12.81; Janu-
ary, 12.77; March, 12.8S.
Sontk St. l^ul Livestock.
South St. Paul. Minn.. April
Cattle — Receipts, 600; market 10c
lower; quotation unchanged.
Hogs— Receipts. 2.800; inarket 20c
25c lower; range. |5.75(&6.0u; bulk
sales |5.95#6.00. , ,. .^
Sheep— Receipts, 500; market hght
to 10c to 16c loweri sheep, Jl.OO&o.OO;
larnbs. $3.75 (g) 6.00.
^
New Yerk Money.
New York, April 20.— Close: Money
on call stead. 2V4®2% per cent; i-u 11 tig
rate, 2^; closing blS 2%; offered at
2^». Time loans easier: 60 days, 2%
per cent; 90 days. 2Vj^2%; six months.
3. Prime mercantile paper, 3^ to 414
per cent; sterling exchange easy W'lth
actual business In bankers bills at
4 84.40 lor 60 days, and at 4.86^5 for
demand. Commercial bills, 4. 80%. Bar
silver, 53%c; Mexican dollars, 45c.
Government and railroad bonds, steady.
THE PRODUCE MARKETS.
*••••■*•*•••
••«••••••••••••
CALIFORNIA ORANGEa—
Extra fancy navels, 150-216
Fancy jiavels, 96-128
Fancy navela, 80
Fancy navel*, 150-218 '
FLOUIl>A GHAPEiBUIT—
46's to 80's. box
Grapefruit, extra fancy, box
CALIl'OKMA LLMONS—
Extra fancy, box, 300'» »ud 350't
Imported llmea, box
P1NEAPP1.K8—
Cuban. 30*8, cratd
Cuban, 80"*, doa
GllAPKS—
Malaea grape*, kef
APPliKS—
Baldwins, box
Ark. beauUes, box
Koman beauUea, box
Greenings, box ••
Ben Davles, box. ...f..^.^,........ •••••••••••
Varieties, box .........................
Spltzeubergs, box
Wine aaps, box
CHANBKKRlliS—
Jersey, bu crate. .......•• ••
Mk'iilgan, crate. .....•••.#...•.•■••••••♦•"•••
FKUIT JUICES— .
Orange, keg
Itasptierry, keg • ••••
Cherry, keg .•
Grape, keg • .• *
Cider, keg .,......•«•••.•••• ••
BANANAS—
Bananas, per lb...».....^
BUTTER— .. ,,„-
Fancy creamery, pel li» «S
Dairy, per lo »....• lo®
CHEtSK—
Wiscouala. full cream* pet la. ••*•••••
.9S.U
. 3. as
. 2.M
S.M
4.00
«.M
60
2S
T5
00
8.00
S.3S
2.85
8.50
2.83
2.35
2.38
2.50
2.35
3.50
2.50
S.T5
S.75
8.75
3.75
8. TO
.04)4
.23
.ir
.u
New York.
New York. April 20.— Butter— Firm: receipts. 5.811
packages: creamery specials. 23(^23^»c: extras, 22Vic:
flrsta. 20H(92U»c: seconds. 20c; creamery held
extras. 20(a20^c: flrata. H(S'19c; seconds. 17(al7Hc;
sUte dairy finest, 2Ht(5 22V2c; good to prime. ia@
204c: common to fair. ncfilSo. Cheese— Steady :
receipts. 27.820 boxoa; state tvhole milk special, 14(3
15\c: September quality fancy colored. IS^jc: white,
13o: summer and fail made, culore-J choice, 12(S
12%c: same white. ll(*ll%c: cunont make large
best. 10H(S'10?4c; same common to fair, 9?4@10c.-
sklins 2'»i0c. Eggs— Firm: receipts, 22.008 cases;
fiwih gatlicred, seleited extras, 18V4c: do firsts. UMCv
I7c- eeconds. 13%^16c: storage packed flrsta. 17V4(*
18c; fresh gatliered dirties. No. I. 14H(ai5c: do
No. 2. 13Vi('?illc; fresh gathered checks, U@Uc:
state Pennsylvania and nearby gathered brown and
mixed, 17C4lSo; Southern duck eggs, 21(523c; wert-
em, 22 (S' 23c.
EMBEZZLER IS
CAUGHT AT SOO
Morris Rosenbloom Admits
Hb Crime and WiU Re-
turn to Montreal
Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.. April 20. —
(Special to The Herald.) — Morris Rosen-
bloom, witli several aliases, is under
arrest here charged with embezzling
$900 from a Montreal Arm for whom
he worked. He had foOO In Canadian
currency and jewelry worth $200 on
his person when arrested. He admlt.s
his guilt and will go back to Montreal
without extradition papers. He has
served a term In a Canadian Jail for
forgery and received dishonorable dis-
charge fro mthe United States army.
HEAVYTONNAGE
IS REGISTERED
Duluth Is Home Port for 439
Vessek on Great
Lakes.
The quarterly report of the collector
of customs, now being prepared, shows
that on April 1. 439 vessels with a
gross tonnage of 902.223 tons and a net
tonnage of 710,799 tons were registered
at the port of Duluth. The Increase
■Ince last year Is a substantial one and
Duluth is now one of the greatest home
ports for documented veswlfl on the
lakes.
Values Close Vfeaker Than
Opening — Dullness
Continues.
The copper market C'pened strong, but
the strength did not hold and values
closed weaker than at the opening. The
decline was caused chiefly by the
weakness In the Induntrlals. Steel was
the weakest sister in the bunch on ac-
count of reports of a reduction in
prices of steel produsts. _ ^^ ^„,,
Amalgamated sold it $61. 2o $61.62%.
$60,871/8 to $61, Bulte Coalition at
$16.50. Giroux at $5.81 V4. Greene at $6
to $6,121/2. North Butte at $27. *27.3<Vi
to $27. Superior & Pittsburg at $13.75
to $14, Greene at $6 to $6.12^.
Denn sold here at $7, Red Warrior at
93c and 94c, Calumet & Montana at 33c,
Caluinet & Corbin at, 20c, Cliff at 98c,
Keating at |2.76 to |2.81%, Tuolumne
at $5.
The annual meeting: of Summit which
was scheduled for today was postponed
until Monday.
* • •
Stockholders of Superior & Pittsburg
who have not done sc should send their
dividend orders to tho Calumet office of
that company. Difficulty over \he pay-
ment of S. & P. dividends Is due chiefly to
some stockholders who have iu»t com-
piled with this formality. Dividend
checks are mailed at Calumet.
Boston wired: At the annual meet-
ing of the stockholders of the Bohemia
Copper company today retiring direc-
tors were re-elected. President
Paine, In his annual report, said:
work which has b«en done hag
disclosed any lodes imfflciently
make It seem wise 0 attempt
explorations under present conditions.
Therefore, in view of the depression
which now prevail} throughout the
copper industry, your directors feel
that the wisest thin? to do Is to care-
fully conserve our cash resources and
await developments In the mineral
range to the north 01 south of us which
furnish a reason and a guide tor
exploration of our lands.
• ' all salaries
FOR RENT — DIN'ING ROOM AND
kitchen, furnished. In fifty-room
hotel, Supori&r street 1 ication. In-
quire at Marine hotel. 206 LAke ave-
nue soutli.
Furniture, finishing, paper hanging,
painting and hardwood finishing.
'Plione your orders and I will call
anywhere in city. A. Johnson, MeU
738; Zeinth. Lincoln 369.
MARRIAGE LICENSES.^^^^
George O. Jones and Ida Gustafsoh.
BIRTHS.
WEATHERWAX — A daughter was
born to Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Weather-
wax of 5017 Oneida street. April 15.
JOHNSON — A daught-^r was born to
Mr. and Mrs. F- Johnson of 1217 East
Eighth street, April 19.
McKAY — A daughter was born to
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. McKay of 2234
Woodland avenue, April 18.
ERICKSON — A daugliter was Itorn to
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Erickson of 1028
East Fourth street, April 17.
BRANDT — A daughter was born to Mr.
and Mrs. A. Brandt of 2208 % West
Second street, April 16.
NORDEN — A daughter was born to
Mr. and Mrs. H. Norden of 923 Gar-
field avenue, April 12.
W. A.
"The
not
rich to
further
may
the future . .
During the dormant period
except a nominal salary for the treas-
urer will be cut off and the Interest on
the bank balance will be sufficient to
pay all taxes and other expenses neces-
sary to the proper care of the com-
pany's property. The balance in the
bank at this date i« $124,820."
• • ♦
Closing quotations on the
stock exchange toda/ follow:
DEATHS AND FUNERALS
1
MONUMENTS — Hundreds In stock. P.
N. Peterson Granite Co.. 332 E. Sup. St
CARD OF THANKS^
WE WISH TO THANK OUR FRIEND3
and neighbors. Elks and Masons, for
their kindness and sympathy shown
during the illness and death of our
iKloveJ father. ^^^^rr-r t^
MR. AND MRS. A. E. SCOFIELD.
Duluth
laated Stocki
Bid. I Asked.
American Saginaw
Butte-Alex Scott n
Butte-Ballaklava . .
Calumet & Arizona
Copper Queen
Denn Arizona
Giroux Cons
Greene Cananea . . .
Keweenaw
North Butte
Red Warrior ; • • • *
Savanna, part paid
Savanna, full paid....
Shattuck Arizona
superior & Pittsburjf..
Warren Dev
bulisted Stocks—
Amazon Mont
Butte & Superior..,..
Butte & Superior, old.
Calumet & Montana..
Calumet & Corbin
Calumet & Sonora ...
Carman Consolidatod.
Consolidated,
Development
Gold
Chief
Cliff ..
Elenlta
Keating
Summit
San Antonio . .
St. Mary
Sierra
Tuolumne
Vermilion Steel
Total No.
shares, 4,200
1»
BUILDING PERMITS.
To S. Allonarde, frame dwell-
ing. East Eleventh street be-
tween First and Second ave-
nues ♦
To Katherine Nowak, addition.
Sixty-third avenue west and
Nicollet street ••••
To T. A. Linden, repairs. East
Third street betweeo Fifth
and Sixth avenues ....... .
To A. Grignon, frame dwelling.
Minnesota avenue and 'Wa-
dena street •
To J H. Anderson, frame
dwelling. West Tliird street,
between Thirty-ninth and
Fortieth avenues ■•■■■■•■■•
To P. George Hanson St Son,
three frame dwellings. \n est
Fifth street between Twen-
ty-third and Twenty-fourth
avenues
To S. O. Larson, alterations.
West First street between
Twenty-sixth and Twenty-
seventh avenues
600
500
300
1,000
l.SOO
r,30o
SOO
UBiWI-
4
i
■■
If you will bring your
Calumet & Arizona and
Superior & Pittsburg cer-
tificates to Paine, Webber
& Co/s office, we will have
them transferred into the
new Calumet & Arizona
stock for you.
Spe«r Gains One Vote.
Denver, Colo.. Ap -11 20. — Mayor Speer
gained one vote f -om the forces op-
posing him in todaj-s ballot for United
States senator. Representative Roberts
of Teller county, giving him his vote.
Speer received 29 votes; Ammons. »2;
Northcutt, Republican, 84. Necessary
tor cholee. iU
Zenith, 14»4. Dulnth, Mel. 221S.
Martin Rosendahi & Co.
(INCORPORATED.)
COPPER STOCK BROKERS
7"
DEFECTIVE PAGE P
:«n i
II
10
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
AprH 20, 1911.
OFFICIAL PUOCEEDJ^iJS.
Council Chamber,
Duluth Minn.. April 17, 1911.
Regular mtetlng.
Ji'Al call;
rrcstnt — Aldermen Barnes, Berg-
etroni Bernaril, Curren, Gibson, Hec-
tor, Hoar, Hogan. Jordan. Krueger,
MacDonell, MakowskI, Miller, Scott,
I'rcsidcnt ishartel — 15.
Absent — Alderman Wharton — 1.
On motion of Alderman Gibson, the
minutes of the meeting of April 10
ivere approved as pul'lished in pam-
phlet form, by a unanimous yea vole
of all present, on roll call.
PKESENTATION OF PETITIONS AND
OTHKF; COMMUNICATIONS.
Chan Smith and Joseph Le Molgnan,
executive comniittee of the Hillside
ciubs. reiterating demand for invesli-
gi;lion of water and light department —
LiKht and Water.
The Atlas Investment company et al.,
tor the vac.ttion of certain streets,
road.>J and alleys in Williards addition
to Duluth — Streets, Alleys and Side-
walks.
Louis Ramstad et al., protesting
against the placing of posts in Fitty-
luntti avenue we^t by the Duluth, Win-
nipeg & Pacific Kailway company— Or-
dinances and Keso'.f.tiKns.
Mrs. Id;i M. FiThts et al . asking that
■VI irea be placed underground in Third
alley between Twenty-third and Twen-
ty-U'urth avenues east before the pav-
ing of siud alley — Streets, Alleys and
SSi»ie»va!ks.
Duiutli News Tribune company and
Duiutli Herald, submitting bids for
puM'talioii of offi'.ial proceedings of
the conimon council, etc. — Purchasing
and Supplies.
William Wraun et ah. for the con-
Btrut tltin of a sfauilary sewer in Eighth
alley from Fifth avenue east to the
proposed outlet sewer in Sixth avenue
ea.st :
William J. Bates et al.. that the sani-
tary sewer be extended from its present
terminus at .<ixth avenue west westerly
to a point opposite the west line of lot
ST, block 74, l>uli!th proper. Third divi-
eion: thence north between lots 5^7 and
»;t to the north line of said lots; thence
westerly along tlie center line of said
block 74 100 feet, more or less — Board
of I'ublic Works.
Arpli'-ationa for license to operate
motor vehicles;
Application and bond of Anton Szym-
czak lor pool table license at No. 2006
^Vest Superior street;
Application and bond of Charles litis
for license to operate a plumbing
shop ut No. 223 Fifty-fourth avenue
west;
Ai>p!ications and bonds for pawn
brokers' licenses as follows: Soo Line
company, "17 West Superior street;
David PoUnsky, 529 West Superior
street ;
Applications and bonds for license to
sell intoxicating liquors as follows:
James J. Wall. 310 West Superior
street; F W. Miller & Co.. 1 East Su-
perior street: A. Baker, 107 West First
street (being a transfer from Henry
Nesgoda at 113 West First street);
Charles Petersi^n. 613 West Superior
street; Ig Koziarek. 31 West First
street; Kady Orllch. 5516 Raleigh
Sti.et: M. Monson. 617 West Superior
8tre*»t; Lars O Gudgdal, 707 West Su-
perior street (being a transfer from
5-8 West Supeiior street) — Police and
License.
Estimates to sidewalk contractors —
Claims.
Re<iuisltions of city officer.s Nos.
21713 to 21764 Inclusive — Purchasing
and Supplies.
REPORTS OF CITY OFFICERS.
Building inspector, notifying city to
place fire escapes upon Armory and
city hall — City Property, Buildings and
Markets.
Chief of fire department, recommend-
ing installation of hydrants — Light and
Water.
City assessor, reporting appointment
of Miss Lillian Monahan as special
clerk and stenographer — Received.
Board of water and light commis-
Bloners, minutes of meeting of April 6 —
Received.
Cierk municipal court, reporting con-
victions for violation of ordinance gov-
erning the sale ot intoxicating liquors
— I'olice and License.
Secretary, library board submitting
resolution adopted by said board rela-
tive to maintenance of public library
In West Duluth — Finance.
City ensrineer submitting plans and
Bpecificatlons for grading and gravel-
ing of Getcliell road;
Sub.aultmg estimate cf cost of grad-
ing and graveling Getchell road; sub-
mitting plats of Bryant Addition to
Puiutii, Second division, and Glen
Avon, Seventh division — Streets, Alleys
and Sidewalks.
Relative to placing posts in Fifty-
ninth avenue west by Duluth. Winni-
peg & Pacific Railway company — Ordi-
na;ices and Resolutions.
City attorney transmitting corres-
pondence with reference to establish-
ment of a pas.<=enger and freigl;t depot
at West Duluth under the Wisconsin
Central franchise — Ordinances and
Resolutions.
Board of Public Works report on
petition of H. L. Clancey, et al . for
tlie construction of a sanitary sewer
In the alley between Fiftieth and
Fifty-first avenues west from Wadena
to Ramsey streets;
Report on petition of W. L. Pierce,
et al., for the construction of a sani-
tary sewer in Fourth alley 125 feet
west of Eighth avenue west to the
sewer in Ninth avenue west;
Report on petition of E. Mousso, et
al.. for the extension of the sewer in
Seventh alley from its present ter-
minus between Tenth and Eleventh
avenues east westerly to Twelfth ave-
nue east — Drains, Sewers and Sanita-
tion.
Report on petition of G. W. Douglas,
et al., for tne Improvement of Fifth
alley from Twenty-third to Twenty-
fourth avenues east;
Report on petition of Lakeside Land
cojupany, et al., for the improvement
of Glenwood street from Fifty-fourth
to Sixtieth avenues east — Streets, Al-
leys and Sidewalks.
Reporting error in assessment for
construction of sewer between Grey-
solon Place and Superior street and
between Twenty-sixtn avenue east and
Congdon Park, and asking permission
to withdraw said assessment — Drains,
Sewers and Sanitation.
Reporting award of contract to J.
H. Brigham for the .construction, re-
pairing and relaying of cement and
tile sidewalk at Fond du Lac for the
leason of 1911 — Streets, Alleys and
tfidt^ walks.
Asking for appropriation to repair
bridge over Amity Creek on East Du-
iutli and Lester River road — Bridges,
Viaducts and Ferries.
Bernard, Curren, Gibson. Hector, Hoar,
Hogan, Jordan, Krueger, Makowskl,
MDier, Scott, and President Sliartel— 14.
Nays — Alderman MacDonell — 1.
The resolution by the Committee on
Streets, Alleys and Sidewalks direct-
ing the Board of Public Works to omit
the block between Third and Fourth
streets in the paving of Second avenue
east was read and on motion of Alder-
man Hogan action on the same was
postponed until the meeting of May 22.
Alderman Barnes asked that the res-
olution granting permission to Law-
rence Hanson and Hans Vedo to lay a
private water pipe on the west side
of Sixty-first avenue west from Sher-
burne to Waseca streets be acted upon
at the present meeting, and the re-
quest was granted without objection.
By Alderman Barnes:
Resolved, That Lawrence Hanson and
Hans Vedo are hereby granted permis-
sion to lay a private v.ater pipe be-
tween the curb and the sidewalk on
the west side of Sixty-first avenue
west from Sherburne street to Waseca
street, provided said work shall be
done under the direction and to the
satisfaction of the city engineer, and
further provided that this permission
shail be considered as only temporary
and subject to revocation by this coun-
cil at any time.
Resolved further. That the Board of
Public Works is hereby directed to
conduct negotiation with the Northern
Pacific Railway company looking to-
ward the securing of a permit from
said company to lay said water pipe
acrc-ss their right-of-way on said ave-
nue.
Alderman Barnes moved the adop-
tion of the resolution and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Pass d April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19. 1911.
MOTIONS AND RESOLUTIONS.
By Alderman Barnes:
Resolved, That the sealer of weights
and measures is hereby authorized to
advertise for bids for moving the
scales in Central avenue to the east
side of said avenue adjacent to the
railway right-of-way. and award the
contract therefor subject to the ap-
proval of this council.
Alderman Barnes moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17. 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
Bv Alderman Barnes:
Be it Resolved, By the Common
Council of the Citv of Duluth, that the
Board of Public Works of the City of
Duluth is hereby ordered to cause the
following improvement to be made, to-
wit :
That a storm water sewer be con-
structed in Grand avenue from the
westerly line of lot 9. block 124. West
Duluth,' Fifth division, near Fifty-ninth
avenue west to the easterly line of
Fifty -fourth avenue west.
Resolved further. That the Board of
Public Works is hereby instructed to
cause said impro\ement to be made by
contract; the cost thereof to be paid
out of the storm sewer and street in-
tersection fund.
Alderman Barnes moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
By Alderman Barnes: ^ . ^ ^,.
Resolved, That the Board of Public
Works is hereby informed that it is the
opinion of this council that the con-
tract for the storm sewer in Grand ave-
nue should be included in the contract
for paving of said avenue.
Alderman Barnes moved the adoption
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17. 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
By Alderman Barnes:
Resolved, That the custodian of the
citv hall is hereby requested to report
to " this council what rooms In said
building should in his opinion be pa-
pered.
Alderman Barnes moved the adoption
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on rc«ll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19. 1911.
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of
all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
By Alderman Scott: .^ ,
Resolved That the Board of Pub-
lic Works Is hereby directed to cause
sidewalk to be constructed as follows:
A 5-foot cement walk on the south
side of Sixth street from Fifteenth to
Sixteenth avenues east.
Resolved further. That said board is
hereby directed to proceed in accord-
ance with the provisions of the city
charter to levy assessments upon the
property benefited to defray the cost
of said sidewalks, together with such
other expenses as under the provisions
of said charter may be assessed.
Resolved further. That it is hereby
directed that the cost of said side-
walks be paid out of the general
fund.
Alderman Scott moved the adoption
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of
all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17. 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
REPORTS OF STANDING COMMIT-
TEES.
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Bridges. Via-
ducts and Ferries, to which was re-
ferred communication from the Board
of Public Works relative to bridge
over Amity creek, having considered
the same, recommend the adoption of
tlie following resolution:
FRANK MAKOWSKI.
C. R. HOAR.
Committee.
Resolved, That there is herebv ap-
propriated from the permanent im-
provement fund the sum of $1,500 for
the puropse of replacing the old bridge
over Amity Creek on the East Duluth
and Lester River road, with a concrete
culvert and fill, provided the County of
St. Louis appropriates toward such
purpose a like amount.
Resolved further. That the Board of
Public Works is hereby requested to
conduct negotiations with the county
commissioners of the County of St.
Louis looking toward the securing of
such an amount for the purpose of
constructing such a culvert.
Alderman Makowskl moved the
adoption of the resolution, and it was
declared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17. 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911,
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Claims, to which
was referred estimate, having con-
sidered the same, recommend the adop-
tion of the following resolution:
WILLIAM L. BERNARD,
FRANK JORDAN,
W. M. MILLER,
Committee.
Resolved, That the estimate to D. H.
Clough & Co. in the sum of $11,384.00
on their contract for the construction
of cement sidewalk, be and hereby is
approved, and it is hereby directed that
an order be drawn on the general fund
to pay the same.
Alderman Jordan moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved A; 'I 19, 1911.
By Alderman Makowskl:
Be It resolved by the Common Coun-
cil of the city of Duluth, That the
Board of Public Works of the city of
Duluth is hereby ordered to cause the
following improvement to be made, to-
wit:
That a storm water sewer be con-
structed in Tenth avenue east, from
Fourth street to Eighth street.
Resolved further. That the Board of
Public Works is hereby instructed to
cause said Improvement to be made by
contract; the cost thereof to be paid
out of the storm sewer and street in-
tersection fund.
Alderman Makowski moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and It was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
UNFINISHED BUSINESS.
The ordinance entitled *An ordi-
nance to amend an ordinance entitled
^An ordinance granting to the Duluth,
Winnipeg & Pacific Railroad company.
Its successors and assigns, a right-of-
way over, along and across and under
certain streets, avenues, alleys and
public ground in the city of Duluth,
with the right, privilege and authority
to construct, lay down, and maintain
railroad tracks and facilities over,
along and across the same, and im-
posing certain obligations upon said
company,' passed Feb. 7, 1910. and ap-
proved by the mayor Feb. 11, 191(>,"
was brought up.
The question being upon the adop-
tion of the amendrtient submitted by
Alderman Gibson at the meeting of
April 10th. said amendment was de-
clared adopted upon the following
vote:
Yeas — Aldermen Barnes, Bergstrom,
Bernard, Gibson, Jordan, Krueger, Mac-
Donell, Makowskl, Miller, and * Presi-
dent Sharlel — 10.
Nays — Aldermen Curren, Hector,
Hoar, Hogan, and Scott — 5.
Alderman Hogan moved to amend
said ordinance by striking out of Sec-
tion A thereof the words "along the
Bay front" next to the last line of
fage 1 of said ordinance and substitute
he words "adjacent to said blocks
»long" after ilie word "on" In the
last line on page 1 of said ordinance.
The amendment was declared
adopted upon the following vote:
Yeas — Aldermen Barnes, Bergstrom,
Bernard, Curren, Gibson, Hector, Hoar.
H;)gan. Jordan, Krueger, Makowski,
Miller. Scott, dnd President Shartel — 14.
Nays — -Mderman MacDonell — 1.
Alderman Hogan mov'ed that further
action on the ordinance be postponed
for one week and the motion was de-
clared adopted upon the following
vote:
Teas — Aldermen Barnes. Bergstrom.
By Alderman Hogan:
Resolved, That permission Is granted
to Crane & Ordway company to replace
the drinking fountain now at Third
avenue west and Superior street with
one made of vitreous china.
Alderman Hogan moved the adopt'on
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
By Alderman Curren:
Resolved, That there Is hereby ap-
propriated from the permanent im-
provement fund the sum ot $250 for re-
pairs to the Morse street dock.
Alderman Curren moved the adoption
of the resolution, and It was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
By Alderman Curren:
"Resolved, That it be hereby directed
that .St. Croix avenue from Sutphln
street to Buchanan street be sprinkled,
and it is hereby directed that said ter-
ritory be Included with District No. 12,
under the contract for sprinkling of
said district at the same rate of cost as
is paid for the remainder of said dis-
trict.
Alderman Curren moved the adoption
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
By Alderman Bernard:
Resolved, That P. Geo. Hanson Is
hereby granted permission to connect
his premises Lots Nos. 370 and 372,
Block 122, Duluth Proper, Second di-
vision, with the sanitary sewer in
Twenty-third avenue west, provided
said Hanson shall first file with the
Board of Public W^orks the customary
agreement.
Alderman Bernard moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was .de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
By Alderman Miller:
Whereas this council did, by resolu-
tion passed May 31, 1910, direct the
Board of Public Works to construct
the roadway designed by the city en-
gineer for so much of the Stindby and
Farrell roads as is located below the
boulevard, and appropriated the sum
of $2,000 from the public works fund
for such work; and.
Whereas, Such work has not yet
been performed because the fund
designated by the resolution has not
been in condition to stand such ex-
pense; and.
Whereas, It appears that there is
now in such fund sufficient money to
cover such appropriation; therefore,
be it
Resolved, That the Board Of Public
Works is hereby directed to Imme-
diately pro<;eed to carry out the jro-
•ylsiohs of said resolution relative to
rthe construction of said roads.
Alderman MiUer movied the adoption
of the rasoiution, and it "was declared
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Claims, to which
was referred miscellaneous bills for
the month of March, 1911, having con-
sidered the same, recommend the adop-
tion of the following resolution:
WILLIAM L, BERNARD,
FRANK JORDAN.
W. M. MILLER,
Committee.
Resolved, That miscellaneous bills
against the city for the month of
March, 1911, be and hereby are allowed,
and it is hereby directed that orders
be drawn on the city treasurer to pay
the same, as follows:
GENERAL FUND.
John Anton, $15.00; Anderson & Gow,
$4.72; Barber Asphalt Paving company,
$82.14; E. J. Bunker, $3.60; City of Du-
luth, Water and Light department,
$9.21; Oscar Clsussen, $109.55; M. B.
Cullum, $28.00; The D. and D. company,
$218.50; Duluth Machinery company,
$8.00; Duluth Iron & Metal company,
$3.73; Du! ith Edison Electric company,
$50.00; R P. Dowse & Co., $68.75: Bert
Fesler, $'42.00; E. Fiebiger, $39.55; W.
K Fowler, $2.20; Globe Iron works,
$56.10; The Herald company, $50.85;
Kelley Hardware company, $2.91; Mar-
shall-Wells Hardware company, $8.00;
John R. Melnlng, sheriff, $204.93; Muni-
cipal Journal and Engineer, $40.50;
Northern Hardware company, $1-20;
North Western Fuel company, $117.00;
G. E. Owen, $9.89; Pittsburgh Coal com-
pany $8.00; Rankin Printing company,
$16.50; Remington Typewriter company,
50 cents; Richardson Electric company,
$215.59; Schulze Bros, company, $2.48;
Thomson & Stewart, $16.25; Union Ab-
stract company, $190; F. J. Voss, treas-
urer, $14.85; West Disinfecting com-
pany, $15.00.
GENERAL FUND (INFECTIOUS DIS-
EASES.)
Boyce Drug Store, $1.75; H. Gould,
$54 69; H. J. Jeronimus. $9.80; Mork
Bros., $41.67; Noyes Bros. & CuUer,
$37.23; Northern Hardware Co., $1.45;
Roach Bros., $4.00; John E. Roos,
$118.31; L P. Totman, $24.00.
HEALTH DEPARTMENT FUND.
Chailties Publication Committee,
$1.25; Duluth Street Ry. Co., $36.00; H.
P. Hanson, $20.80; The Herald Co. o8
cents: Kelley Hardware Co., $3.35;
Marine Iron Co., $151.12; Minnesota
State Board of Health, $50.00; J. Olson,
$2.00; Ouellette & Co., $1.00; Standard
Salt & Cement Co.. $41.88: Totnrian
Bros., $13.00; Thomsen Foundry Co.,
$23.40; Woodruff Lumber Co., $3.84;
Zenith Telephone Co., $2.50.
MUNICIPAL COURT FUND.
Brown-Yale Co., $2.50; Duluth Edl-
eon Electric Co., $6.44; Duluth Paper
& Statronery Co., $22.35; Duluth Street
Ry Co. $15.00; D. B. McDonald. Jno. A.
Stephenson, Agt., $350.00; Zenith Tele-
phone Co., $2.50.
PERMANENT IMPROVEMENT FUND.
Burgess Electric Co., $10.56; Christie
Lithograph & Printing Co., $275.00;
Gamewell Fire Alarm Tel. Co., $50.51;
A. J. Harker Co., $3.55; The Herald Co.,
$8.80; Kelley-How-Thomson Co., $6.28;
E J. Meagher, $4.50; Anton Ringsred,
$73.00; F. A. Thorwall, $206.00,
PERMANENT IMPROVEMENT RE-
VOLVING FUND.
Halvor Halvorson, $5.06; John Hol-
leran, $35.76; The Herald Co., $460.05;
Norrls Realty Co., $137.33; Rankin
Printing Co., $12.00: Chas. Schober,
$6.85: Rachel Thibideau, $2.92; Union
Abstract Co., $5.10; John Wallin, $2.91.
POLICE DEPARTMENT FUND.
Acme Laundry, $12.00; American San-
itary Products Co., $25.00; Board of
Trade Liver Co., $3.00; Duluth Ma-
chinery Co., $15.90; Duluth Street Ry.
Co., $250.00; Duluth Telephone Co.,
$48.75; Fire Department Fund, $260.00;
Folz Grocery Co., $32.85; Kelley Hard-
ware Co.. $190.20; Mutual Auto Co.,
$9.03; Rolland F. McCrlllis, $18.00; D.
S. McKay & Co., $19.67; Russell Motor
Co., $1.00; Standard Oil Co., $24.84; C.
H. Troyer, $168.88; Wagner Motorcycle
Co., $7.50; Wennberg & Widen, $20.28;
'^Zenith Telephone Co., $10.00.
, PRINTING AND SUPPLY FUND.
Chamberlain & Tayloj- Co., $70.50;
'Christie Lithograph & Printing Co.,
$6.00; Duluth Blue Print Co., $3.06; B.
Fiebiger, 80 cents; The Herald Co.,
$404.30; Huntley Printing Co.. $6.60;
W. S. McCormick. $5.00; Ouellette &
Co., $16.25; C. 9. Palmer, $8.80; Rankin
Printing Co., $10.75.
PUBLIC WORKS FUND.
R. S. Abell. $10.00; The Austin West-
ern Co., Ltd., $30.00; Burns Lumber
Co., $86.60; Crane & Ordway Co., $1.70;
D. G. Cutler Co., $5.75; City of Dulqth,
Water & Light Department, $1 20;
\..iyde Iron Works, $78.10; C. Dwinwid-
dle. Sec, $191.36; Duluth Machinery Co.,
$7.50; Duluth Street Ry. Co., $80.00;
Duliith Show Case Co., $12.40; E. J.
DuPont de Nemours Power Co., $3.88;
Duluth Lumber Co., $f23.43; Folz Gro-
cery Co.. $1.00; Greer Printing Co.,
$4.75; The Herald Co., $3.30; Huntley
Printing Co., $5.00; Kelley Hardware
Co., $16.55; Kelley-How-Thpmson Co.,
'$10.19; D. S. McKay & Co., $1.67; Millar
Printing Co., $7.25; Northern Hardware
£», $57.35; North Western Fual Co.,
55.50 r Quayle-Larsenr Co., $85.93: Rem-
ington Typewriter Co. "$90.00; Staftdard
Salt & Cement Co.ji $42.28; Twin Ports
Supply Co., $1.05; Zenith Telephone Co.,
$8.00.
LIGHT FUND.
Duluth, Edison Ele«trlc Co., $2,610.10.
WATflR FUND.
City of DulutW Water & Light De-
partment, $10,314.02.
Alderman Bernard moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted %y 4 unanimous yea
vote of all prtserpt, oq roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the Common Coupcll:
Your Committee pn Claims, to which
was referred bills against the fire de-
partment and the water and light de-
partment for the month of March, 1911,
having considered the same, recom-
mend the adoption of the following
reiiclution: ,
WILLIAM L. BERl-JARD,
PRANK JORDAN,
W. M. MILLER,
Committee.
Resolved. That bills against the fire
department and the water and light de-
partment for the month of March, 1911,
be and hereby are approved, and said
departments are hereby authorized to
draw orders on the fire department
fund and the water and light plant
fund, respectively, to pay the same, as
follow^s:
FIRE DEPARTMENT FUND.
Acme laundT V-. $42.22; W. A. Abbett,
$19.95; E. J. Bunker. $22.00; D. R. Black
company, $1.70; Burgess Electric com-
pany, $50.(i9; J. H. Cunstantlne com-
pany. $16.65; D. G. Cutler company,
$75.00; Chicago Flexible Shaft company,
$9.20; Duluth Auto Tire Repair com-
pany, $39.00; Duluth Brass Works com-
pany, $29.15: Duluth Paper & Station-
ery company, $25.80; Duluth Street
Railway company, $25.00; Duluth Uni-
versal Milling company, $76.65; Globe
Iron works, $17.15; Edith Gieser. $2.88;
George C. Hale, $4.00; interstate Auto
company. $5.50; Interstate Traction
company. $90.00; J. N. Johnson com-
pany, $4.75: Kelley-How-Thomson com-
pany, $109.35; Kelley Hardware com-
pany, $5.75: Marshall-Wells Hardware
company, $12 70; Frank Miller, $14.00;
James McMartln, $2.85; The New De-
parture Mfg. company, $22.72; North-
western Oil company, $5.75; North Land
Coal company $341.63; Peerless Laun-
dry company. $23.70; Randall. Gee &
Mitchell company, $36.00; Standard Oil
company, $20.53; Standard Salt & Ce-
ment company, $2.93; Scott-Graff Lum-
ber company, $1.50; H. J. Thompson
Furniture company. $100.00; M. W.
Turner. $20.00; Wright-Clarkson Mer-
cantile company, $7 20; Williams Drop
Forging company, $44.00; R. M. White,
$577.20,
WATER AN'D LIGHT PLANT FUND.
Board of Public works. $37.78; Bur-
roughs Adding Machine company, 51.75;
E. J, Bunker $7.54, L. B. Manley, L. N.
Case (Contingent Fund), $1,680.30;
Christie Lithograph & Printing com-
pany, $1.50; Chamberlain & Taylor
company, $3.50; Crane & Ordway com-
pany, $33.89; Duluth Telephone com-
pany $72.00: The Dunning & Dunning
company. $15.00; Duluth Fire Insurance
agency, $30.00; Duluth News Tribune
company, $3.50; Duluth Hardware com-
pany, $1.80; R. P. Dowse & Co., $57.20;
The Estate Stove company, $1.35; Eby
& Gridley, $30.00; E. D. Field & Co.,
$27.40; Fairbanks, Morse & Co., $10.67;
Globe Iron works, $7.53; W. B. Getchell,
$30.00; J. D. Howard & Co., $30.00; The
Heimbach Lumber company, $4.50;
James Henderson. $8.72; E. H. Holdren,
$3.00; The Herald company, $6.80;
Kelley Hardware cor'pany. $7.93; R. B.
Knox & Co., $15.0-, Daniel Keefe,
$19.00; H. C. Kendall, $23.50; The Linen
exchange, $2.70; Lyceum Livery com-
pany, $61.00; H. Mueller Mfg. company,
$159.94: Marshall-Wells Hardware com-
pany. $18.52; A, A. Mlchaud company,
$15.00; L. J. McDevitt, M. D. V., $4.00;
National Meter company, $32.46; North-
ern Hardware company, $21.90; North-
ern Electrical company, $1.56; North
Western Fuel company. $31.00; Neptune
Meter company, 50 cents; Ouellette &
Co., $10.75; Pittsburgh Coal company,
$285.54; W. M. Prindle & Co.. $43.60;
Quayle-Larsen company, $10.51; Rich-
ardson Electric company, $8.00;
Richardson, Day & Harrison, $30.00;
C. L. Rakowsky & Co, $30.00; The A.
P. Smith Mfg. company, $31.50; South
Park Foundry & Machine company,
$58.50; Standard Oil company, $13.04;
Roe Stephens Mfg. company, $82.51;
Smith & Smith. $3.00; The Spragufe
Meter company, $170.24; Stone-Ordean-
Wells company, $3.35; F. I. Salter com-
pany $30.00; A. A. Shea. $16.50; Thom-
son Meter company, $776.35; Thomson
Foundry company, $11.31; N. J. Upham
company, $250.00; Viscosity Oil com-
pany, $15.75; F. J. Voss, treasurer,
$105.68; Welsbach company, $25.00; The
Western Union Telegraph company,
$1.05; Wieland Shoe company, $18.24;
H. A. Wing & Co.. $41.20; T. W. Wall
& Co. $30.00; Zenith Sale & Boarding
stable' $41.90; A. C. Le Rlcheux. $3.6G;
Ethel 'l. Myron, $41.35; James B. (^low
& Sons, $130.50; The H. C Razall Mfg.
company, $11.00; Great Northern Power
company, $1,053.28.
Alderman Bernard moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea.
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the President and Common Council:
Your Committee on Drains, Sewers
and Sanitation to which was referred
the report of the Board of Public
Works, dated April 17, 1911, relative
to the petition of Henry B. Mousso and
others for the extension of the sewer
In Seventh alley east, having consid-
ered the same, recommend the adoption
of the following resolution:
H. P. CURREN,
J D. BERGSTROM,
"V<riLLIAM L. BERNARD,
Committee.
Be is resolved by the Common Coun-
cil of the City of Duluth, that the
Board of Public Works of the City of
Duluth Is hereby ordered lo cause the
following Improvement to be made to-
That the sanitary sewer in Seventh
alley, In said city be extended from Its
present terminus between Tenth and
Eleventh avenues east, easterly to
Twelfth avenue east; and ^ .„ ».
Resolved further, That Board of Pub-
lic Works Is hereby Instructed to cause
said improvement to be made by con-
tract; the cost therefor to be paid out
of the permanent improvement revolv-
ing fund; and it is further ordered:
That said Board of Public Works pro-
ceed In accordance with the provisions
of the City Charter to levy assessments
upon the property benefited by said im-
provement, according to benefits re-
ceived, to defray the cost of such im-
provement, with such other expenses
as under tn.e provisions of said charter
may be assessed. ^ .... .
Alderman Curren moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, which was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
passed, April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the President and Common Council:
Your Committee on Drains, Sewers
and Sanitation to which was referred
the report of the Board of Public
Works, dated April 17, 1911, relative
to the petition of W. L. Pierce and
-others, for the construction of sewer
in Fourth alley, having considered the
same, recommend the adoption of the
following resolution:
H. P. CURREN,
3. D. BERGSTROM,
WILLIAM L. BERNARD,
Committee.
Be it resolved by the Common Coun-
cil of the City of Duluth. that the
Board xit Public Works of the City of
^Duluth is hereby ordered to cause the
following improvement to be made to-
wit :
That a sanitary sewer be construct-
ed in Fourth alley, in said city, from
a. point 125 feet west of Eighth avenue
west to the sewer in Ninth avenue
west: and
Resolved further, That Board of Pup-
llq Works is hereby instructed to Aause
of such improvement, with such other
expenses as under the provisions of
said charter may be assessed.
Alderman Curren moved the adop-
tion of the resolution which was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the President and Common Council:
Your Committee on Drains, Sewers
and Sanitation, to which was referred
the report of the Board of Public
Works, dated April 17, 1911, relative
to the petition of H. L. Clancy and
others, for the construction of a sewer
in Fifty-flist alley west, having con-
sidered the same, recommend the adop-
tion of the following resolution:
H. P. CURREN,
J. D. BERGSTROM,
WILLIAM L. BERNARD,
Committee.
Be it resolved by the Common Coun-
cil of the City of Duluth. that the
Board of Public Works of the City of
Duluth is hereby ordered to cause the
following improvement to be made to-
wit:
That a sanitary sewer be construct-
ed in the alley between Fiftieth and
Fifty-first avenues west, in said city,
from the sewer in Wadena street to the
first alley north of Ramsey street, and
thence in said last mentioned alley to
points fifteen feet west and east, re-
spectively, of Fiftieth and Fifty-first
avenues west: and ...,,.
Resolved further. That Board of Pub-
lic W^orks is hereby instructed to cause
said improvement to be made by con-
tract; the cost therefor to be paid out
of the permanent improvement revolv-
ing fund; and it is further ordered:
That said Board of Public Works
proceed in accordance with the provi-
sions of the City Charter to levy as-
sessments upon the property bene-
fited by said improvement, according
to benefits received, to defray the c_ost
of such improvement, with such other
expenses as under the provisions of
said charter may be assessed.
Alderman Curren moved the adop-
tion of the resolution which was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, IDll.
Approved April 19. 1911.
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Drains, Sewers
and Sanitation, to which was referred
communication from the healtli com-
missioner, having considered the
same, recommend the adoption of the
following resolution:
H. P. CURREN.
J. D. BERGSTROM,
WILLIAM L. BERNARD.
Committee.
It is hereby ordered that the follow-
ing described buildings be connecteo
with sanitary sewers, to-wlt:
515 and 521 First avenue east.
1708 Dingwall street. „„ ^ ^ „. ..
727, 907, 913 and 1132 East Sixth
street.
722 and 916 East Seventh street.
326 East Eighth street.
631 Eighth avenue east.
Resolved further, That the inspec-
tor of plumbing Is hereby ordered to
give notice to the owner, agent or
occupant of said premises, of the
aforesaid order in the usual form.
Alderman Curren moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Drains, Sewers
and Sanitation, to which was referred
communication from the Board of
Public Works reporting error in as-
sessment, having considered the same,
recommend the adoption of the fol-
lowing resolution:
H. P. CURREN,
J. D. BERGSTROM,
WILLIAM L. BERNARD.
Committee.
Resolved, That the assesment made
by the Board of Public Works for the
construction of a sanitary sewer in tnc
alley between Greysolon Place and
Superior street from a point 300 feet
west of Twenty-seventh avenue east
to Thirty-first avenue east; thence in
Thirty-first avenue east to Greysolon
Place and in Greysolon Place to Cong-
don Park, with outlet in Thirty-first
avenue east to the sewer in Grey-
solon Road which assessment was
confirmed March 13, 1911, be and Is
hereby cancelled and annulled.
Resolved further. That the Board of
Public Works Is hereby directed to
proceed in accordance with the provi-
sions of the city charter to levy an
assessment upon the property bene-
fited by the construction of the abov^e
mentioned sewer according lo benefits
leceived, to defray the cost of such
improvement, with such other e::-
penses as under the provisions of said
charter may be assessed.
Alderman Curren moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Finance, to
which was referred report from the
library board appropriating $2,000.00
for the maintenance of a library in
West Duluth, having considered the
same, recommend the adoption of the
following resolution:
FRANK JORDAN,
L. A. BARNES,
-MAKOWSKI,
Committee.
Resolved, That this council approves
and confirms the action of the library
board in appropriating from the li-
brary fund tlie sum of $2,000.00 for the
maintenance of a branch free public
library building In West Duluth.
Alderman Jordan moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Finance, to
which was referred request of the
health commissioner for additional
equipment for garbage collection, hav-
ing considered the same, recommend
the adoption of the following resolu-
tion:
FRANK JORDAN,
L. A. BARNES,
FRANK MAKOWSKI,
Committee.
Resolved, That the city comptroller
is hereby requested to report to thi.s
council the total receipts and expendi-
tures on account of garbage collected
by the city's equipment.
Resolved further, That the health
commissioner is hereby requested to
investigate whether or not Is possible
to secure from the fire department a
horse and harness, unfit for use in
said department.
Alderman Jordan moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea
vote of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911,
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the Common Council:
Your Committee oh Police and Li-
cense, to which was referred applica-
tion and bond for llcens; to sell own
goods at auction, having considered the
same, recommend the adoption of the
following resolution:
C. R. HOAR,
H. P. CURREN,
Committee.
Resolved. That the application of
Monarch Oreck for llcenge to sell own
goods at auction for a P'jrlod of three
weeks at No. 309 West Superior street
be and hereby is granted, and bond ac-
companying same is hereby approved.
Alderman Hoar moved the adoption
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17. 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Police and Li-
cense, to which was ref<;rred applica-
tions and bonds for ll';ense, having
considered the same, recommend the
adoption of the following resolution:
C. R; HOAR,
H. P. CURREN,
Committee.
Resolved, That applicutions for li-
cense are hereby grant<d and bonds
accompanying same art hereby ap-
proved, as follows:
Kealy-McFadyen company, for license
to conduct a plumbing b isiness at No.
327 West First street.
James M. Holt, to operate pool and
billiard tables at No. 2816 West Third
street.
Anton Szymczak, to opt rate pool and
billiard tables at No. 2O06 West Supe-
rior street.
Alderman Hoar moved the adoption
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 19:1.
To the Common Council:
Y'our Committee on Police and Li-
cense, to which was referred applica-
tions for license to cperate motor
vehicles, having consldeied the same,
recommend the adoption of the follow-
ing resolution:
C. R. HOAR,
H. P. CURREN,
Committee.
Resolved, That applications for li-
cense to operate motor vehicles upon
the streets of the city of Duluth be and
hereby are granted as follows:
Edwin Olson, J. A. McCuen, W. E.
Judson, H. C. Huot, Victor Huot,
George Martin, F. A. Irewer, C. D.
Brewer, Victor Carlson, D. E. Sea-
shore.
Alderman Hoar moved the adoption
of the resolution, and it was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 19:. 1.
To the Common Council:
Yorr Committee on Purchasing and
Supplies, to w^hich was rsferred requi-
sitions of city officers, having consid-
ered the same, recommend the adop-
tion of the following resclution:
J. A. MacDONt;LL.
W. M. MILLER.
OTTO KRUEGER,
Committee.
Resolved, That requisitions of city
officers Nos. 21713 to 21763, Inclusive,
be and hereby are appro>ed.
Alderman MacDonell moved the adop-
tion of the resolution, and it was de-
clared adopted by a unanimous yea vote
of all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17. 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911
;al
ssild Improvement to be made by con-
tract; the cost therefor to be paid
out of the permanent Improvement re-
volving fund; and it is further ordered:
That said Board of Public Works
proceed in accordance with the provi-
'slons of the City Charter to levy as-
^sessments upon the propertjr benefited
'by Said Improvement. according to
^benefits racMved. to defray the cost
To the President and Cor.imon Council:
Your Committee on Stre«!ts, Alleys and
Sidewalks, to which wat; referred the
report of the Board of ;?ublic Works,
dated April 17, 1911, rtlative to the
petition of G. W. Dougljs and others
for the grading and paving of Fifth
alley, having considered :he same, rec-
ommend the adoption of the following
resolution:
Z. D. SCOTT,
WILLIAM L. BERNARD,
JNO. HOGAN,
Committee.
Be is resolved by the Common Coun-
cil of the city of Duluth, That the
Board of Public Works of the city of
Duluth Is hereby orderec to cause the
following improvement to be made to-
wit:
That Fifth alley. In said city, from
Twenty-third avenue eaot to Twenty-
fourth avenue east, b< graded full
width, and paved; that all necessary
underground work be dene before the
pavement is laid; that suitable curb or
combined cement curb Jind gutter be
used; and that all other Tvork be done
which is necessary or incident to said
Improvement; and
Resolved further, That Board of
Public Works is hereby Instructed to
cause said improvement to be made by
contract; the cost therefor to be paid
out of the permanent improvement re-
volving fund; and It Is further ordered:
That said Board of Public Works
proceed in accordance with the provi-
sions of the city charter lo levy assess-
ments upon the property benefited by
said improvement, according to benefits
received, to defray the cost of such Im-
provement, with such other expenses
as under the provisions it said charter
may be assessed.
Alderman Scott moved the adoption
of the resolution which was declared
adopted by a unanimous ye& vote of all
present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 19i:t.
w
HEELER&PARSONC
REAL ESTATE,
LOANS AND INSURANCE.
808 A1..WORXH DL^DG.
Camden Fire Insarance Company.
Piiiicipnl ciffloe: 434 Federal street. C.-md*n. J*.-
J. (Oiganlzed in 1841.) f^jmunil E. Kead. Jr.,
prrsldent: Josepli K. Starp, secretary. Atlcmey to-
accept eerrlce In Minnesota: Commissipner cf In-
surance.
CASH CAPITAL. jr.CO.OOO.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums ether than perT>?tuaI» $ 1.316. 466. 9>
Premiums on perpetual risks 245. ."it
Rents and interact % 103.846.96
Gross profit on sale, maturity ct ad-
justment tf ledger assets 5.5.09
From all other sources 2,367.40
Total Income ; t l.422.;<8i.8S
I,edger aMets Dec. 31 of prs^vioufl year.$ 2,312.S7->.41
Sum * 3,720.934. 2«
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses t 730.66.^96
Kxpcnses cf aUjustmint of losses lO.i'S-'t.sa
Ci mmlscioiis auj tinikerage 355.3So.iJ3
Salaries and fees of cfficers, ageiits
and employes CI. 006. 33
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses 27,089.83
Dividends and Interest 48,681.30
Grcss l&;.s on sale, m^tturity or adjuet-
ment of ledger assets 125. 15
All other disbursements 51,2S5>69
Total disbursements $ 1.287,a:.9.6«-
Balance $ 2,448,394.6a
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Rook value of real estate | 53. •554. 36
Morlguee loans 604.625.00
Collateral loans .18. .SOO. Of
Book value of Londs and stocks l,4i)3,3C2.1S
Cash In office, trust compunles and
banks 47.377.83-'
Agents' balances, unpaid preoiiume and
lulls receivalJe. UiKen tor pretuiuius.. 180,035.38-
All other ledger assets 100.00
Total ledger assets (;is per batanccV . $ £,448. 304. 6C
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due ami accnieil. . . .$ 26.1CS.3C
Market value of real estate stocks over
book Tslue 5,69.'>.lt
Grf.a» assets $ 2.lS0,2.-)8.ia
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' bal.inces t 1,560.93-
Buok value of ledger aseets over market
value 34.423.«1
Total kseeto not admitted I 3.j !>S4.3ft
Total admitted assets I 2,444,273.5»
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpaid losses aiid claims $ 113,008.78
Uitearned premiums 1.14;'l,042.2S
Itecl.-iimaUe oa prrrxtual policies 23.7U8.39
Salari('«. (xpenaes, taxes, dividends and
InU-rest due 16.319.21
All other liabilities 25.0IK
CaplUl fclock paid up 500,000.01
Total UablliUes, including capital...} 1, '98.103.52
Net surplus $ C46.170.0«
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks writU'u during the year. . . .$16;i.oa5.o04.0#
Premiums received Uierton l,84G.S!iC.14
Net amount in force at end of the year 198.048, 971. 0»
• — Including business other than ■'Marine und In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance recelTed and deducting !••
irtBurauce placed.)
Fire lii^ks. IVrn^ido. Aggregate.
nisks wriUen...$:',708,6::9.12 | 98,600. OC $2,807. 22U.ia
Prcmhims
reieivcd 41,750.55 568 i 5 42,3C0.50
Losses Incurred.. 84.325.47 34.325.47
Losara paid 42,7M>.34 42.750.3*
Amount at risk. 3,742,932.03 355,150 00 4,098.082.0»
State of Minnesota. Department of Insunnce:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of
the Camden Fire lasurance Company, for the year
ending December 31ft. 1910, of which tlie above Is aa
abstract, has been recelrcd and filed in thle De-
partment and duly aiiproved by ne.
3. A. O PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
To tht Common Council:
Ycur Committee on Light and Water,
♦ o which was referred communication
from the chief of the ftre department,
having ,considered the same, recom-
mend the adoption of the lollowing
^-esolution:
JNO. HOGAN,
Z. D. .SCOTT,
J. B. GIBSON,
Committee.
Resolved, That the board of vater
a.nd lUTht commissioners are hereby au-
thorize! to install hydrants at the fol
blowing intersections:
Vista street, one block up from
Woodland aVenue.
Fifth street and Forty-eighth ave-
nue west
Fifth street, 375 feet westerly of
Forty-cjghth avenye west.
Faribault and Kolstad streets.
T.wenty-third avenue west and Sixth
strcftt.
Twenty-second avenue west and Sixth
.street.
Forty-third avenue east and Glad-
stone street.
Forty-second avenue east and Glad-
stone street.
Seventh street and Thirteenth avenue
Eighth street and Thirteenth avenue
Sixth stre.et and Twenty-flrst avenue
west.
Fifth Btreet and Sixth avenue west.
Alderman Gibson moved tbo adaption
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on Streets, Alleys
and Sidewalks, to which was referred
petition of Atlas Invtstment com-
pany, et al., for the vaca :lon of certain
streets, avenues, alleys and roads In
WilUard's Addition, having considered
the same, recommend the adoption of
the following resolution:
Z. D. SCOTT,
WILLIAM L. EERNARD,
JNO. HOGAN,
Committee.
Resolved, That the pstition of the
Atlas Investment company, et al., for
the vacation of certain street.", ave-
nues, alleys and roads In WilUard's
Addition to Duluth. etc., be hereby re-
ferred to the city attorney for his ap-
proval as to form and sufficiency of
said petition.
Alderman Scott moved the adoption
of the resolution, and It was declared
adopted by a unanimouu yea vote of
all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17. 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911,
To the Common Council:
Your Committee on f'treets, Alleys
and Sidewalks, to which was referred
award of contract, having "considered
the same, recommend the adoption of
the following resolution :
Z. D. SCOTT,
WILLIAM L. BERNARD,
JNO. HOGAN,
Committee.
LBG.IL. NOTICES.
NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOS-
URE SALE-
DEFAULT has been made in the con-
ditions of a certain mortgage executea
by Carl M. Leone and Maria Leone, hl»
wife, mortgagors, to Michael Leone»
mortgagee, bearing date March 25th,
1909, and recorded in the office of the
Register of Deeds of St. Louis County,
Minnesota, on the 25th day of March,
1909, in Book 236 of Mortgages, on page
436.
Said default consists in the non-pay-
ment of three hundred dollars <f300.00)
upon that certain note for $300.00 dated
March 25th, 1909, which became due,
according to ite terms, on or before
March 25th, 1911, which note is secured
by said mortgage, and no part of which
has ever been paid.
By reason of such default the power
of sale contained in said mortgage has
become operative, and no action or
proceeding at law or otherwise has
ever been instituted to recover the debt
secured by said mortgage.
The property described in said mort-
gage and thereby mortgaged is Lot
numbered twelve (12) in Block num-
bered eighty-six (86), West Duluth,
Second Division, according to the plat
thereof on file and of record In the of-
fice of said Register of Deeds of St.
Louis County, Minnesota.
There Is claimed to be due, and !•
due, upon said mortgage at the date
hereof the sum of $300.50.
NOW THEREFORE, Notice is hereby
given that by virtue of the power of
sale contained in said mortgage, and
pursuant to the statute in such case
made and provided, said mortgage will
be foreclosed by a sale of the premises
above described, which sale will bo
made at public auction to the highest
bidder for cash by the Sheriff of St.
Louis County, Minnesota, at the Front
Door of the Sheriff's Office in the
County Court House at Duluth, Minne-
sota, on Monday, the 22nd day of May,
1911, at ten o'clock In the forenoon of
that dav, to satisfy the amount due on
said moVtgage (and the taxes. If any,
on said premises) and $25.00 attorney's
fees, as provided by said mortgage, to-
gether with the costs and disburse-
ments allowed by law.
Dated this 5th day of April, 1911.
MICHAEL LEONE. Mortgagee.
BALDWIN, BALDWIN & DANCER,
Duluth, Minnesota,
Attorneys for Mortgagee.
D. H.. April 6, 13, 20, 27, May 4, 11,
1911,
ORDER TO EXAMINE FINAL AC-
COUNT.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis,
SB.
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of Matt
Pahjala, Decedent.
THE PETITION of Joseph D. Sattler,
as representative of the above named
decedent, together with his final ac-
count of the administration of said
estate, having been filed In this court.
representing, among other things that
he has fully administered said estate,
and praying that said final account of
said administration be examined, ad-
justed and allowed by the Court, and
that the Court make and enter Its final
decree of distribution of the residue
of the estate of said decedent to the
persons entitled thereto, and for the
discharge of the representative and the
sureties on his bond.
Resolved, That the cor tract awarded s^jeties on nis oona.
r the Board of Public Works to J. IT ^S.^^^P^?P'.,^Jl^* ^*'*^ petitloa
H. Brigham for the construction, re
pairing and relaying of cement and
tile sidewalks in Fond <!u Lac for the
season of 1911, be and hereby Is ap-
proved.
Alderman Scott moved the adoption
of the resolution, and It was declared
adopted by a unanimous yea vote of
all present, on roll call.
Passed April 17, 1911.
Approved April 19, 1911.
INTRODUCTION AND CONSIDER-
ATION OF ORDI> ANCES.
The following entitled ordinance took
its first reading and was referred to
^the Committee on Oidinances and
'Resolutions:
By Alderman Hoar:
An ordinance to amend an ordinance
entitled "An ordinance regulating the
construction, alteration, repair, re-
moval and Insection of b jildings.within
the corporate limits of the city of Du-
luth, the protection of the lives of per-
sons therein and the protection of
jjropcrty against fire." Passed Jsd. 8, '
1906. as amended.
On motion of Alderman Hoar the
council adjourned.
O. S. PALMER,
City Clerk
tD. H., April 20, 1911. D 594.
be heard, and said final account exam,
ined, adjusted and allowed by the
Court, at the Probate Court Rooms la
the Court House, in the City of Du-
luth in said County, on Monday, tne
8th day of May, 1911, at 10 o'clock a.
m., and all persons Interested in salA
hearing and in said matter are hereby
cited and required at said time and
place to show cause. If any there be,
why said petition should not be
granted.
ORDERED FURTHER. That this or-
der be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald according to law.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 12th,
1911.
By the Court,
S. W. GILPIN.
Judge of Probate.
(Seal Probate Court, St. Louis County,
Minn.)
BALDWIN, BALDWIN & DANCER,
Attorneys.
D. H.. April 13, 20, 27, 1911.
'Subscribe for The Herald
CHICHESTER S PILLS
^y .*;»^ THE niAMOND HBANB.
^^^ LiUlMt AiAyenrr
Chl.obM.ter's l»la
l>;ila la Tied and
boxes, sealed with
T»k* MO otker. 3«t er t««p
!»nmni4. AikforCin.Cin:s.TER#
nUMOHO nUAND PILLII. for SW
years known M Best, Satet. Al*«ys Reliable
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVEmfWHERii
At^lm^^imaama^m
'
T
i
i
i
>*> »l^ ' ly 1 » 1 1 i T^
fmiSSi
"fff
!1_
:cs:
r
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20» mt
<r»-
STEAMSHI.
ALLAN LINE—
Plctureaque St. Lswrence Routai
Weekt; Salllnta from
HONTRKAL TO LIVERPOOL. GLASGOW
MONTREAL TO LONDON. UAVRE. FraoMi
Fortnlshtlj from
Pnn.AnKI.PHIA and W»STON to OLA8(«)W.
StlfDiUa scenery, ihortest p«aaa««. low nl««.
Any t/)pal Ait*nt or
ALLAN & CO., General Amenta.
174 Jackaon Blvd.. Chicago.
St Lawrence Route to Europe
.L.E9S THAN FOITR,
'days ATSEA"
I White Star-Dominion I
ROYAI. mail. 9TKAWIBRS
Montreal— Quebec— Liverpool
••Laurentlc" and ••Megantic"
rL«nett and Mo»t Modern Steamare tn the Cana-
Jlan Service. luxurious »cconuoodaUou» for
[First. SMMitf and TklN ClM*.
SaUIoX In ronjunctljti with the
Psoular Twin-Screv» Steamer*
"TEUT0NIC"-'CANAOA"--O0*IINI0N"
If^mln* On* Claaa Cabin piuseneers (called
Uecond Cibln). ComTort at mojerat* rates. Alio
1 nurd Cla*3 passages.
Apply Companj's Office,
119-121 So. 3rd St. (Guaranty BMt.)
Mlnaeapolit.
O E. BRECKE, Pass. Ait., or Local AHnt*.
HARPER-SHIELDS COMPANY
General Insurance.
Sellwood Building.
Fidellty-Pbenlx Fire In«nr«n«?e Com-
Principal ofnre: 46 Odsr street. New Torit. N. T.
(Organized In 1910.) Henry Evans, president; C. R.
Street, secretary. Attorney to accept servlco In Min-
nesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH C.MMTAL. $2,500,000. \
INCOidE IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpeUwla $
Ilents and Interest
Gmes profit on sale, maturity or td-
justmeiit uf letlRpr assets
From ail other sources
Duluth, Minn.
5.62T.S4S.68
46G. 060.81
1.273.915.18
28.103.78
Total income t
7,401.422.48
Ledger aasets Dec. 31 of prerloua year.l 13.487,311.44
Sum
RAILROAD TIME TABLES.
MINNEAPQLIS.ST.PAUL
,-ii>SAULTSTE.MARIERY.
UNION STATION— superior St. and Slirtli Aw. Wart.
Le*Te.
TWIN PORTS EXPRESS. Arrl»e.
t7.00ain ♦7.00»«i.... DULUTH
7.30MI 7.30pM Superior
2.4S»lii I0.40pin.. JLadTSQilth
t5.B0»n 1 1. 43pm..
For I':au 3.49aa..
CUIro and
Chippewa
FaUs 7.l5»in..
•9.00am
Owens
Oslikosti
MllwaukPd
Chlcas'j
..•9.00am tS.SQpm
. 8.30am 5.00pm
'.. 5. 13am lO.SOam
.... 4.00am t7.55am
,...t2.0lam Frvm E.
Clalfe and
CUlI<pfW»
... B.SOpm Falls
.•7.00pm
$ 20.888.733.92
DISBURSEMENTS IN IXB.
Net amount paid for losses I 8,541.458.41
I-lxpenses of adjustment of losses
Commleslons and brokerage
Salaries and fees of officers, agents
and employes
Taxes, fees. renU and other real estate
expenses
niTldends and Interest
Urosa loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger a.ssets
Ail other disbursements. ...•..•••••••
Weatera Reaerve Inannince Company.
Principal office: Cleveland, Ohio. (Organized la
1903. Mars E. Wagsr, president; F. P. BlckfonL
secretary. Attorney to accept serrlce In MlnnesoU:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITA!.. <2S0.00«.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetual* I
Rents and Interest .....•...•
From all other feouioes •••••••
W. \«. PRIMDLE
T. H. HAWKES
E. A.. N«ERRIL.L
W. IVI.
LONSDA1.E BUILDING
FOI^E, AyTOIiOBIILE, La^BlLOTTY, PLATE GL^SS,
PRINDLE & CO.
9T0IR BOAT liSimiRANOE
193,341.17
19,326.70
1,074.99
ToUl
Income » 113.742.88
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of preTloua year.l 488,172.38
118.819,92
1.095. 588. 36
730.424.65
277.308.91
50.OCO.00
1.024. 6<12. 80
405.79«.«3
TV)U1 dUbursemenU • 7.243.991.70
Balance ♦ 13.644,742.22
LEDGER ASSETS DEO. 31. ItIO
Book value of real estate •
Mortgage loans
Book value of bonds and stocks
Cash In office, trust companies and
banks •
AgcnU' buUnces. unpaid premiums and
bllU receivable, taken for premiums.
All ottier ledger assets
ToUl ledger assets (as per balance). $
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued. .}
.Ml other non-leUger assets
67.500.00
544.500.90
10,498.085.00
1.517.120 03
1,002.515.31
15.021.88
Sum » 681.915.22
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses I
Kxpenses of adjustment of losse*. •
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes
Taxs. fees, tents and other real estatd
expenses
Dividends and Interest
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
All other disbursements
188.111.98
3.155.51
84,523.16
84.564.37
9.493.91
6.000.00
8.976.23
17.644.40
Scottlah Union A National Inanrancc
Company.
Principal office In the United SUtes: , "'"'"'i
Conn. (Commenced business in the Lnlted otaws
1880. James W. Brewster, geneml manager »" ">•
United SUtes. Attorney to accept serrlca in Min-
nesota: Commissioner of Inswranc*.
DEPOSIT CAPITAL, |200,00«.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetaals • ''SiS'Uo}?
Kent* and interest ,.....>.... ^",-Si:;„
Received from home office... bT.woi.au
Gross profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
Mechanics A Tradera laavraaoo
Company.
Principal office: New Orleans. La. (Organlrad In
1869.) James Nichols, president: T. B. Norton, sec-
retary. Attorney to accept service In Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, $300,600.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals
Rents and interest .•....•
From all other sources.
»...••.•••*•
732,362.83
BI.481.08
171.64
5,133.71
Total Incoma
..f 2^22.432.98
Ledger asseu Dec. 31 of prwlous year. .$ 4.969,878.93
Dining Cars. Palace 8'.eepei-3 and Ubraxy Observa-
tion c2rs. Vestibul..d - Vacuum U.^iued - Uectrlc
^fc!fili;e«lon at Ladysmtth with Train 8 for Manls-
tlaue. Gladstone and IntermoJlate ptiints.
Leave.
BROOTEN EXPRESS.
A rive.
-T»f
t5.45an Duluth ..
tr.OOam 6.l5sm Superlei .
1 0 00am 8 22am Moose Lake
3 lopm 10.20am Wahkon .
t4.00pm 10 50am onauila .
tl 20sm. Btoott-n „. .
Cotm^-tlons at Btootei. tor Twin Cities. Western
C.i.adi mid the Paolfic Coast.
rZ^. OULUTH-WINNIPEQ LINE. Arrive.
.t9.00»m
. B.30pm tS 00pm
6.20pm l2.3Spm
. 4.42pm 7.26am
. 4.23pm t6.43«m
.tl.45pm
t 9 JOam..
lO.Oaam..
1 1 25ani . .
4.00pm. .
4.37pm. .
7.30«m
. . Uulutn ....
. Superior . . .
.M'ose Lake...
. .Casi Lake-..
. . Kemldjl
.ThWf Ulver Falls. .
t S.IOpn
4.40»m
• ••••• O.I 3PM
lO.iBam
9.54am
7.00am
13.644.742.22
96.783.50
150.939.58
Gross assets ■^J.^^l!t^^-*^'-^°
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
$ 33.033. SS
.Vgenfs' balances
Book value of ledger assets over market
value
.Special dep<alt. less $219,098.74 UabU-
Ity thereon
All otlier assets not admitted
29.396.88
3fi,.'>93.26
S7.2.-?«.65
Total assets not admitted t
138.762.14
ToUl admitted assets $ I3,753,70a.l6
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910
TTnpald lisges and claims $
irnrarned premiums
Salaries, exiwnses. taxes, dividends
and Interest due
Comnil-sslons and brokerage
X'noiunietl premium resone
ItrsriiTe for contested UablUties m
All other liabilities
Capital stock paid UP
Total disbursements
.$ 301.469.56
Sum » 7.3i2.31i.B3
DI8BUR8EMEMT8 IN 1910.
Net amouia paid for losses • ^'J^J-J^J**
Commissions and brokerage ■••
Salaries and fees of offloeis, agents and
employes
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses
All other disbursements
Grow loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger ass«ts
447,820.89
155.237.29
69.453.05
138,747.24
2.133.70
Total Incom*
784,015.54
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year. ..$ 1^64.742.38
Sum » 2.048.757.82
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses $
Expenses of adjustment of lossss
Cummisstoru and brokerage
Salaries and fees of offloers. agents and
cm[>loyca
Taxes, fees, rents and other rwU estatd
expenses
Dividends and Interest. ....... •...••...
All other disbusemettts
370,1*4.51
5.221.58
13B.870.14
66,984.38
9. 587.56
18.000.00
61.190.39
KO.eO
All other ledger assets.... ••• •
Total ledger assets (as per balance). II 1,397,319.36
NON-LEOGER ASSETS. „.»..,
Interest and rentt due and accrued II ia.»^/.io
Market value of real estate, bonds and
stocks over book value...
1.BOO.00
Oroa
,s«t8 » 1.421.247.00
DEDUCT ASSETS MOT ADMIVTEO.
Agents' balances ■■••» z.isiTs
Book value of ledger aasaU oyer market
value 97.\7fiM
Total asseU not admUted » 99.358.54
051.438.56
Total disbursements $ 1.852.2.18.43
Balance
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 81. 1910.
Book value of bonds and stocks........
(;ash In office, trust conipaiUes and banks
AgenU" balances, unpaid premiums and
bills leceliable. taken for premiums..
« 380.445.60
303.504.77
27,583.16
49.357.73
Net ledger
assets » 880,443.6«
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued J 1.938.71
Market value of real esuie, bonds and
stocks over book value
20.890.51
681.255.37
6,510.468.24
178,594.03
22.379.30
ino. 000.00
640.000.00
23.riU.67
2,?00.000.00
ToUl liabilities. Including capital...! 10.556,211.63
Comi
ecrtonV'aV TUiet Klver FalU for Winnipeg.
Leave.
CUYUNA RANGE LINE.
Arrive.
t 7. 20am
7 55am. .. ,
9 5Uam
10 u2am
10.24am
10 36am
10.48am
1 1 .4}am . . .
. .. DululU
, . Supenur ...
. . . Lawler
..East Lake....
, . . UarUia . . . •
,. Koseberg ...
... Aitkin ..••.
...Iron Hub
.t 6.40pm
. 6.0Spm
4.10pm
. 3.5«»m
. 3.35pm
. 3.23pm
. 3.12pm
2.55pm
.Arrive.
ll.lSam DEEHWOOO 2.40pm Leave.
til .37am.
I2.03pm.
Cuyuna
Crosby
.t 2.08pm
. 2.00pm
•l):itly tDttlly except Sunday.
Net surplus » 3,197.493.53
r"sKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS
• Fire riski written during the year. ..$ 6y...4.to.24,^.00
Premiums received thereon. . . „^- ?,•;;• "l';^
Net amount In force at end of the year»1.149.192.3yo.00
•—Including business other than Marine and In-
'■^'^ BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Ii'.chullr.g rilnsuraiice received and deducting re-
Insurance placed.)
Fire risks. Tornado. Aggregate.
Risks written.$9.999.350.00 $1.84?.S55.00 $11,847,203.00
Premiums 145,002.90 15,677.22 160,880.12
696.50
Gross assets > 403,274.88
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
.\genta" balances .$ 696.50
Total aa-sets not admitted $
Total admitted assets $
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims $
tJneamed premiums ■
SaUries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
Interest due
Cuplial stock PiUd up •
Total llablllUes. Including capital....! 369.104.16
Balance » 5,460,073.42
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
Book value of real estate I
Mortgage loans
Itook value of bonds and stocks
Cu.^h In office, trust companies and
banks
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills leoeivabla. taken for ptemiums.
41,926.55
312.523.00
4,606,447.18
130,263.18
368.911.51
Total ledger assets (as per baUnce)...$ 6,460.073.42
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and renU due and accrued... $ 70,452.25
Total disbursements
Balance $ 1,397.319.88
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value of real estate ! 22,000.00
Mortgage loans
Book value of bonds and stocks
Cash In office, trust companies and
banks •
Agenu' balances, luipald premiums and
bills receivable, taken for premiums..
Risks written
Premiums received
Losses incurred . . .
Losses paid
Amount at risk...
300.00
1,238.104.30
8.869.98
107,945.08
Total admitted "«ts. ........ .......I 1321.888 »»
LIABILITIES DEC. SI. 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims »
Unearned premiums .••••■•- ,;
Salaries, expenses, taxea. UlvlUends and
interest due
Captal atock paid up
85.237.91
531,418.56
10.000.00
SOO.000.00
Sprlnsfleld Fire A Marl»e Ii
Company.
Principal office: 195 State street. BpringfieU.
Mass. (Organized in 1S49.) A. W. Damon, preal*
dent: W. J. Mackay. secretaiy. Attorney to aocwl
servioe In Minnesota: Oinunlssioner of Insuranoe^
CASH CAPITAL. $2,090,000.00.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals $ S.243.8Si.n
BenU and interest S6i.B8S.41
Oroas profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets 4,tS9.'M
From all other souroas 2.816.11
Total Incoma
■••••••••••••••••••a
.$ 5.612.042.B9
T^rtal llabUlUes, Including eaplUl-.-t 826,6^^6.48
Net surplus
895,232.07
mSKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS
. _..!,. i^ittan aiimir the year 111J.».>7,zjj.wi
1,331,098.00
•Fire risks vfTltten dumg the year $11
Premiums received Uiereon ••■;•'
Marino and inland riaks written durlni ^^^ ^^
Uie year I'san S4
Prwnlums received thereon...... «, ovTMd n«
Net amount In force at end of the year. _?7,917,834 00
•-including business other than "Marine and In-
'*^" BUSINESS IN •«»»"*fSOTA <N I9'0.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
insurance placed.)
HaU, Mar-
Fir« Risks. Ine and Inland. Tomadc. „ AfP?"?*?-
$1022 123.00 $12,630.00 $76.960.0.1 $1.1 "."^.OO
• ' I2n«2fi5 631.30 556.3:) 13."?»J
24 2i) 7.385 8S
84.») 11,590.01
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year. .! 8.9S3.S77.3B
Sum ! 14.535,650.1»
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses $ 2,863.9ll.SB
Kxpenses of adjustment of losses 30.497,37
Commissions and brokerage 1.023.6>l.0<
Salaries and fees of oftloera. agents and
employea 658,838.30
Taxes, fees, rents and other real estata
expenses 205. 181. IS
Dividends and Interost 200,000.0*
All other disbursements t 821,898.60
Total dlsbuiaementa.
,$ 5,203,948.53
12,082.65
7,381.62
11.565.81
1,041,758.00
81,426.0) 1,073,184.00
Groas assets » 5,530,525.67
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' balances * 3,728.17
Book value of ledger assets over mar-
ket value 266,72a.93
Total assets not admitted !
270,454.10
402.578.33
.•10.989.76
83,914.40
4,200.00
230,000.00
ToUl admitted assets ! 5,"260,071.57
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
Unpaid losses and claims ! 229.194.54
received .
Ixtsses
Incurred .
Losses paid
Amount at
risk
102.840.27
100.811.99
3.041.80
2.9S8.80
105.522.07
103.800.79
20.962,810.30
DLLLTU, MISSABE & NORTH-
ERN RAILWAY.
Office: 42« West Superior St.
'Pbwne, »«».
Leave
Arrive.
( Hlbblng. Chlsholm. Virginia. Eve- 1 •
.7.40am leth. t^leralne. Shar.„ (HuhlK ■ O.aipm
tMounfn Iron. tSparta. tBlu Jbik.
r lilDblug. Chlsholm. Siiaron
•3 30pm I lUutUn Virginia. Eveleth, ■ 'lO.Slam
[ Coleralne.
1 Virginia, Cook. Ualner. Fort 1
•7 lOpm ( Frances. Pott .\rthur. Bau- h •8.31am
/.iwm 1 . vVairiad. Wlm\ipeg. J
I
detle.
Taf e ^bs^rvSn Car. Mesaba Range
yxnll: Solid Vestibuled Train. Modern
s through to Winnipeg.
Po
Sleeper
State of Minnesota. Department of Insurance.
I Hereby Certlfv. That the Annual Statement of the
Fidelity- Plicnlx Fire Insurance Company, for the year
ending l>ccember Slat. 1!»10, of wW-h the above U an
abstract, has been received and filed in thto Depart-
ment and duly approved by me. ^ ^ preUS
Commissioner of Insurance.
Net surpVos » S^*"*"
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written during the year $37,620,031.00
Premiums received thereun. I' ,, ...i'lJii ,„
Net amount in force at end of the year. 11.''0«."«,'0
•—Including business other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurauoa received and deducting re-
Insurance placed.) ^^^ j^,^,^.
Risks written » '?B-1?1!
Premiums received iv'-iiinn'^
■..osseB Incurred Tft^..R^t
losses paid iniioMSO
Amount at risk 1,03^,083.53
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, Uxes, dividends ana
interest due
Deposit cupiUl
Total llabUltlea, including deposit cap-
llg^l •, . ..ki'.. - •$
1,»97,707.2«
40.000.00
200,000.00
2,366.901.80
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual SUtement or
the Mechanics & Traders Insurance Company, for the
year ending December 31st. 1910, of which tbe above
U an abstract, has been received and fUed In this
Department and duly approved \Kf me.^ pkeuS,
C^jmmlasloner of Insurance.
Tike Palatine InNurance Company,
Limited.
Principal office In the United States: Comer Pine
and William street*. New Yortc (Commenced bus -
uess In the United SUtes 1900.) A. H. W ray gen-
eral manager in the United SUtes. Attorney to ac-
cept service In MlnnesoU : CommUsiouer of insur-
DEPOSIT CAPITAL. $218,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other U.on perpetuals $ l';?-''"-^^
RenU and interest lf,^n*.1o
llocelved from home office ...••• ia3,JUo»w
OTo.-e profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
3,116.43
StaU of Minnesota. Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of
the Western Reserve In.urance Cmpany, (or the yeor
ending December 31st, 1910, of which the above U an
atatnict, has been received and filed in this depart-
ment and duli' approved by me. ^ ^ ^ PUEUS,
Commissioner of Iwaurance.
Net sun-liis -..,.-.s....$ 2.893.169.77
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written during the »•«■«•■• •■*354.706.478.00
Frimluma received tiiereon a,4tfO,B. (.a'J
Net amount tn force at end of .the year $362,511,027 00
•— Including bu.slne8s other than Marine and In-
'"""^ BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance iwrelved and deducUng re-
Insurauco placed.)
Risks written
Pn^mlums received
Lo.s.ses Incurred
L,os.ses paid
Auiouut at risk...
Fire Risks.
$3. l.'>3. 136.00
66.174.52
78.7U9.17
73,541.94
8.471,847.00
ToUl Income
.$ 2,020.428.48
Ledger ssscta Dec. 31 of previous year. .$ 3,227,247.10
DEDUCT ASSETS HOT ADMITTED.
AgenU' balances ■■■ ^- ■::■■-■:.■ :\:^-* 0.424.67
Special d«K)sit. less $24,013.68 UaUUty
ttiereon
All other assets not admitted..
ToUl as.set» not admitted....
10.986.32
54,332.87
80.743.86
ToUl admitted a-iseU $ 3,322,77 L81
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. 1910.
Unpaid losses ar.d claims
Unearned premiums •
Salaries, exptnses, uses, dividends and
interest due
Commissions and brokerage
All other liabillUes
Deposit capital •
138,493.37
1,533.047.93
28.377.92
41.946.15
41.511.87
218.000.00
Balance ! 9,331.701.7!
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value of real esute • 800.000.00
Mortgage loans 1,817.820.00
Coliatetal loans 6,000.00
Book value of lAinds and stocks 0,342,832.71
Cash tn office, trust companies and
banks 475,285.0i
Agents' balances, unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, token for premiums,. 889.743.91
Total ledger asseU (as per balance)..! 9.331.701.71
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and actrued....! 67.8*6.13
Market value of real <isUU. bonds and
stocks over book value 690.597.23
Gross asseU ! 9,980,125.0*
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
Agents' baUr.ces ! 11,982.22
Spertal deposit, less !99, 083.05 UabUity ^
there^ 72.214.9*
Total aascts not admitted ! 84.107.17
Total admitted aweU ! 9,8J5.827.9l
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 191*
Unpaid losses and claims $
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
Interest due •• •
tninds held for Munich lielnsuranoo Co,
and Interest
Capital stock paid up
Sum
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for l.xsses $
C«mmi»aiona and broke.-age •
Salaries and feea of officers, agenU and
eniploy»38 ." ' V\l.
Taxes, tees, renU and other real esUU
expenses '
Returned to home office
All oUier disbursements •:.••;•
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger asseU
.$ 5,217,075.58
1,013,830.02
373.068.89
112,789.34
20,864.79
167.774.48
182,514,48
6.919.90
THE DILITH & IRON RANGE
RAILROAD COMPANY.
"VtJRMILION ROUTE"
ULXurii—
I Leave. 1 Arrive.
KiU:e River. Two Harbors. Tower,
Ely Aurora. BlwabU. McK nley. i
Eveieth, GUbert and Virginia.
i*7.30am]tl2-00m
lt2.43pmi •6.10pm
•Dally tDally except Sunday.
Central National Fire Insurance Com-
pany.
Principal office: 184 La Salle street,
ChlcaKO, 111. (Organized in 1909.) James
B. Hobbs, president; F. M. Rice, secre-
tary Attorney to accept service in Min-
nesota: Commissioner of Insurance,
CASH CAPITAL. $300,000,
Income in 1010.
Premiums other than per-
petuals T
Rents and Interest
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turitv or adjustment 01
ledger assets
Total income
Ledger assets December
3l8t of previous year.
542,353.49
12,142.10
128.861.08
175.00
43.75
1
654, 539. 34
1
630,959.61
Sum
I 1,185.498.95
Dlsburaementm in 1010.
Net amount paid for
losses , : ♦
Expenses of adjustment
of losses ," • * '
Commissions and broker-
DULUTH & NORTHERN MINNESOTA RAILWAY.
""'■"^Oftr.e, 510 Lo-Mlal. Bid,., Ouluth „
j^^^T-^. '^r^i^j-^^^ i:ix'^
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
age i' •«■.'
Salaries and fees of oiil-
cers, agents and em-
162.210.23
1,880.76
163,021.70
celvable, taken for pre-
miums
All other ledger assets..
Total ledger a.<5sets( as
per balance) $ 771.365.73
Non-I<edKer Aaaeta.
Interest and rents due
and accrued $ 8,jJi.t>»
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks
over book value o.^Jb&.oi
All other non-ledger as-
Bets 2,868.45
Gross assets % 788,531.38
Deduct Asseta Not Admitted.
Agents' balances $
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value <5,i48.d»
All other assets not ad-
mitted 5,940.50
state of iUnnesota, Department of Insurance:
1 Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement of
the ScotUsh Union & National Insurance Company,
for the year ending Decemlier 31st. laiO. of *b ch
the above is an abstract, has been received and filed
lu this Department and duly approved by me.
J. A. O, PBEU8. I
Commissioner of Insurance. |
Total disbursemenU
^'^'''•lEDQER ASSEfsbEd:
nook value of bonds and slocks.
,..$ 1,876,759.91
$ 3,370,915.67
31. 1910.
.$ 2.874,732.87
including deposit
$ 2.001,377.24
127,066.16
369,096.64
Oasii In office trust companies and
Agents''* balances',' unpaid premiums and
tills receivable, Uken for premiums..
Total ledger nsscts (as per balance).. $ 3,370,913.67
NON-LEDGER ASSETS. „„„„,,.„
Interest and leuU due aud accrued. ■■■$ 32.600.00
Groas asseU
.$ 3.403,315.07
ToUl UablUtiM,
capital
Net surplus > 1.321.394.57
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks whiten during tUo year.. •»219.462,343.00
Premiums received thei-eon 2,49l,UJ1.00
Net amount In force at end of the year. 253,730,918.00
•—Including business otlier than 'Marine and lu-
^*'"*" BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting rein-
surance pUced.) _ , .
Fire Risks. Tomi do. Aggregate.
Risks written... $2,041,485.74 $103,80(.00 $2,145,285.74
Prymluma
26,323.63
19.665.15
18,923.77
3,327,046.00
456,070.2*
4,675,478.90
67.713.82
236,r.99.24
2.000,0u0.0*
received
Losses Incurred.
Losses paid
Amount at risk..
711.8*
(.83
<.8$
27.235.28
19.671.98
18,930.60
3.327.046.00
SUte of Minnesota. Department of Iiaarance:
1 Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement of the
Palatine Insurance Company, LlmltfJ, for Oie year
ending Detsember Slst, lUlO, of wlilch the above is
an abstract, has been received and lUed in this De-
partment aud duly approved by me. „,_.,,_
J. A. O. PRELS,
Commiaslouer of lusurauca.
ToUl Uabilllios, including caplUl $ 7,325,861.7*
Net surplus » 2.370.080.21
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire risks written durbig the year $a8').0'...;.0..2.00
Premiums received thereon ,.Io?1f;'^X2
Net amount In f'lrce at end of the yaar 783.8j4.1tJ.O*
•-Including business other tlian "Marine and la-
"°*^ BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 191*.
(Including tfliisurance received and deducting !•-
insurance pUced.)
Fire Bisks. Tornado. Aggirgata.
Risks written.$14.038.119.00 $1,04:'.5U1.00 $15.687. 'i20.0«
Premiums ,, . ,-_ _.
207,355.71 7.037.53 214,393.1*
169.375.01
174,103.88
286.84
2*6.34
169,6C1.SS
174,690.2*
17,085,157.00 3.016.546.00 20.381.703.0*
received
Losses
Incurred . .
Losses paid.
Amount at
risk
SUte of MlnnesoU, DsDartment of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual statement Of
»)i« Snrinefleld Fire & Marine Insurance Company.
£? Th'^'^ear ending December 31,t, 1910 of wh eft
Uw above Is au al«lraot, has been received and filed
lu thla Department aud duly "f '^'^'"''J) %^?,js.
Commissioner of lusurauca.
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value 36,010.04
All other assets not ad-
mitted 404.670.96
Total assets not admit-
ted I 463.948.07
4.268.82
^^te^a ^f ?'!."°' ^.^^'''.9 12.357.70
Total admitted assets. .?116, 803.021. 49
L.iabillttea Dec. J»l, 1010.
Net value of outstand-
ing policies I 94,041,903.00
Preoent value on supple-
mentary contracts and „,.. ,,-0 ««
canceled policies 2,104.358.00
Claims adjusted and not
due, and unadjusted
and reported
Claims resisted •.
Premiums paid in aa-
vance • • • •
Dividends due policy
holders
er real estate expenses.. ol'^S^JI
All other disbursements. . . ^b,7»4.<4
Total disbursements 1 62,829.04
Balance • • • • • • » 261 a56.67
Ledeer Aaaeta Dec. 31, 1910.
^^tScks^'''' °' *'°"!''..^." » 213.864.60 Ta-xeS," fees, " rents
Cash in of flc4"ind banks.. 35.571.80 other real estate
Premiums in course of -.-nn,,
collections li.l^v.ii
414,870.81
:!,000.00
61,339.03
11.326,304.33
';t>^cial reserve 3,000,643.00
Sf other liabilities 1,240.222.19
rents and
estate ex-
ployes
Taxes, fees,
other real
penses
Gro.ss loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment or
ledger assets • .
All other dlsburs ments.
52.682.58
12.912.06
266.53
21,159.37
414.133.22
t*ave.
*4.00pm.
•8 . 00am .
•7.30pm.
•S.Osam.
..Ashland and East
.Aililanil and East
iii'nn. aud Dakota Express.
North Coast Limited
Arrive.
.*ll.ir>am
. *6.40pm
,, •S.I Sam
. •6.23pm
Total disbursements . .|
Balance 771,365.73
L.edeer Asseta Dec. 31, 1910.
•Duluth Shurt Line"
Leave.
:?:^: .^.J-^,
• ll.lOpm..
MINNEAPOLIS
Arrive.
•6.30am
, . t2 03pm
. . •7.00pm
•DaUy. tDally ex -opt Sunday.
Depot at 334 West Superior street.
'Phone 214. L'uloo
I
..ST. P. M.a« O.RT.
Mortgage loans *
Collateial loans ... •
Book value of bonds and
stoclts ...» ,...••••••
Cash in office, trust com-
panies and banks.....
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
128.260.00
9.500.00
406.498.79
98.070.86
Total admitted assets. $ 776,173.68
Liniiiiitlea Deo. 31. 1»10.
Unpaid losses and claims.^ 24,076.77
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and irfterest
due
Reinsurance premiums . .
Capital stock paid > . . .
281,970.80
20,511.83
19,456.80
300,000.00
Total liayiltles on POl" ,_-„,.,, .„
icy holders account. 1116.803. 021. 4»
Total liabilities, in- -.»«.-. ,„
eluding capital $ 646,016.20
Net surplus t 130.157.48
IliMica and PreiniumM, 1010 BuMineaa.
(ai Fire risks written
^during the year » 47,035,131.00
^'on'"^":^ "T.'"'"^. "'!^!"^: 701,225.21
Net amount In force at
^IausT^^ '""^^ •^^'""•J 4.611.381.13
B-"Wt of Pollcle^.^ 1010 B«-;;-«;^,
Policies in force
at beginning of
^!;?um'n'^oni;K''l84315 J471,783.113.00
Policies In force i-t
close of the year.l9146a
Total ledger assets (as „..-.-.--
per balance) I 261,156.67
Non-Ledffcr Asaeta.
Interest and rents, due and
accrued | 2.377.61
Gross assets * 263.534.18
Deduct AasetH Not Admitted.
Premiums in course of col- ,nr ««
lection (past due) I 195.00
Book value of ledger as- , 049 on
sets over market value.. 2.94Z.oy
Total assets not admit- «,,-„„
ted * 3,137.00
35 499,563,062.00
Net increase
Issued, revived
and Increased
during the year 19842
Total terminated
during the year
I By death
1 By maturity
7150 27,779,949.00
end of the year........ 'A' ?.!?.' ^^.I'i*^ ; By expiration
Fire Risks.
11,425,784.00
22.385.67
L\-j.JOi.iii ♦S.tapm... Uuiuib
LV3.5opm 6.33pm... Superior
^j 7.43am
Ar 7.00am 8.15am
Milwaukee
ChiL-agu .
. Ar»6.23am
..At 7.53am
. .Lv 7.45pm
. .Lv 6.23pm
'I2..:upm
1 1.43am
lO.IOpm
Lvt8.50am *4.35pm... Dmuth .
Lv 9.10am 4.55pm... Super.or .
ir4.30pm 9.5Upm. .. .St. Paul •
Ar 5.05pm I0.23pm. MinneapoUs
•Daily tUaily esccpt Sunday.
Offue 0I12 West Superior St.
.Art3.35pm •O.SSpm
..Ar 3.03pm «.33pm
.!lv e.lOam
.Lv 7.30am
4.30pm
4.00pm
Duluth.
Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic.
Leave.
STATIONS.
Arrive.
• 10. 30am t5.40pm
to. 12am
to. 20 am
t7 45am 'B.ISpm... Duluth
^ ^,^^^ Station.)
.6 45pm... superior ...•lO.OOam
(Soo Line tnlon SUtlon.)
•6.55pmrrsup«ilor ... •9.S0am tS.OOpm
(Union Depot.)
. Leave.
t7.f/pm 5.40am.. Houghton ..tn.OOpm
18 . 53pm 6 .30am . . . Calumet . . . 1 10 lOpm
t7 03pm •4.20am.. Islipeaiing ••*f*0""»
t7'45sm •3.00am.. Muruucue ..Ml .30pm
"•*^'*" .10 20amSault Ste. Mart* 'S 2a*m
Moiiireal ... •9.jOpm •B.20pm
Boston ....'lO-OOam •b.iOam
tS.IOpi
t6.20am
t5.20am
Risks written
Premiums received .....-- ,„..,., ,r
Losses incurred l2'?^c no
Losses paid 1 K^?u^7ftft
Amount at risk I.&.}7,9i57 .00
(a) Including business other than
"Marine and Inland."
nuainess In MInneaotn in 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
HaU. Tornado. Aggregate.
$101,430.00 I 80,400.00 |1,607,61 4 .00
-- 463.85
By surrender
By lapse
12692
1796
721
1785
3260
5121
67.747,384.00
39.967, 435. (rt)
6,459.229.00
1,749.448.00
4.013,456.00
10.143.102.00
15.764,633.00
?, 837. 567. 00
Total admitted assets... $ 260.397.18
Liabilitlea.
Losses adjusted and un-
adjusted *
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest
due
All other liabilities
Deposit of subscribers....
losses I
Expenses of adjustment of
losses
Commissions and broker-
age "j'-i,,-.*
Salaries and fees of offi-
cers, agents and em-
ployes •
and
ex-
116,477.23
2,327.49
62.741.77
40.139.46
•Steam boiler.
^ 3.871.84
iTurgiaryTiid' theft ^I'ttl 7I
•Sprinkler .•••••• r..;M«
Workmen 3 coUectne
13,964.36
24.000.00
14,299.86
990.00
35,857.35
700.00
2,070.09
80.000.00
penses
Dividends and Interest..
All other disbursements.
Total disbursements ...» 273,950.17
Balance » 674.319.11
L,edK«r AaHetii Dec. 31, 1910
Book value of real estate. ij 66,635.70
Mortgage loans *^250.i)0
Collateral loans 10.270.00
Book value of bonds and „„ .„„ „„
stocks 436.100.00
Cash in office, trust com-
panles and banks 25,646.81
Agents' balances, unpaid
premiums and bills re-
ceivable, taken for
premiums 33.150.56
All other ledger assets... 6.266.04
Total ledger assets (as „„.„,. ,,
per balance) I 674.319.11
Non-LedKer Aasets.
Interest and rents due and
accrued > 8,834.50
Market value of real es-
tate, bonds and stocks
over book value 16,488.30
Total net premium In-
come
•Excees of return and re-
insurance premiums over
price received,
l^rom Interest and rents...
From all other sources ....
5,420.40
742,998. It
46,158.64
37,049.17
Total income I 826,205 . 99
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of ..
previous year i.6H.ab.i.v»
Sum $2,441,169.03
DiaburaementH In 1910.
Claims paid <net> —
Accident and health I
Employers' liability
Fidelity and surety
Plate glass
Steam boiler
Burglary and theft •
Sprinkler
Workmen's collective
56.592.73
S)4.5r,7.2»
84,DS5.60
35,387.16
574.25
27,226.011
120.00
2,770.61
Total liabilities I 119,617.44
By decrease • ^ .'" iuin
Buaiueaa In Minnesota In 1910
No.
5,068.17
1,102.46
1,102.46
27,917.69
19.524.61
20,438.48
1,646,612.00
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
I^H^rTtiy Certify. That the Annual
Statem'ent of the Central National Fire
Insurance Company, for the year end-
Penn Mutual lilfe Inanrance Company.
Principal office: 923 Chestnut street.
Philadelphia, Pa. (Organized in 1847.)
108,675.00
ing Decen-.oer 31st, 1910, of which the
above is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly
app-oved by me. ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^
Commiss'oner of Insurance.
George K.
•8.00am.
•8.20pm.
Leave.
18. 03am 'O.ISpm.
tlO.Ocpm '10. 20am.
, Montreal .
.New York.
.•lO.OOam tlO.OOpm
. '/.ISpm t8.30am
Johnson, president; John
Humphreys, secretary. Attornejr to ac
cept service In Minnesota:
sioner of Insurance.
IncMtiue In lOlO.
First year's premiums... »
Dividends and surrender
values applied to pur-
chase paid-up insur-
ance and annuities. . . .
Consideration for orig-
inal annuities, and sup-
plementary contracts.
Involving life
gencies ••••••••
Renewal premiums
contin-
Commls-
2,344.664.42
398.998.86
418,796.93
15.367.543.69
TUiuly except Sunday. *Daliy
Leave.
THE GREAT NORTHERN.
STATIONS.
Arrive.
ST. PAUL
and
MINNEAPOLIS
Crookston. Ucaud Forks.
Montana and Coart
t2 20Bm...Swan Ulver. Hlbbing. VltgiiUa.
t6!00am...St. Cloud. Wlimat, Sioux City.
tO.OOam
•3.25pm
• ll.lOpm
•S.45am
•8.36pin
tlO.ISpm
*l.35pm
•6. 30am
•6.3Spm
•7. 1 Sam
tl2.3Upffl
tlO.I3pm
•Dally tl'ally except Sunday. Twin City sleeper
„adi at 9 p. m. OffUe. Spalding hotel.
HOTELS.
New Building: New Equipment— Rates, $2 aad $2.50.
- tSotel Mcliay
Corner First St. and Fifth Ave. West. DULUTH.
^ "Adelphi Hotel"
2li0l-2B03-2805 West Superior StreaL
J. B. DUNPHY. Prop.
Best equipped, iteam-heated, hotel In West •"*—
100 ronms. all modern coaveniences; asw bulldlni:
aaw emiiDment. Buffet In eoBaectlea.
BATES. $5.00 PER WtEK AND UP.
Total premium lncomo.» 1|.529.895.90
Rents and Interests.^.. 5,469,80o.bO
Gross profit on sale, ma-
tur'ty or adjustment of
ledger assets
From all other sources..
Commisslon.s on annui-
ties, including renew-
Commuted renewal com-
missions
Salaries and allowances
for agencies
Agency supervision and
other expenses
Medical examiner's fees
and Inspection of risks
Salaries of officers and
employes
Legal expenses •
Agents' balances charged
off
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
All other disbursements.
66.330.61
365,225.43
Total Income
.$ 24,431,257.60
Ledger assets December^
a 1st of previous year . . >10S.653.311 . 90
Sum $130,084,569.40
DlMburaementa During 1910.
Death claims and ma-
tured endowments .. ..»
^Tc7"h''ordeS'r.!°. 1".°: W28.U7.M
• Dividends to policy hol-
ers "
i^lvldends to company...
7.218.782.82
425,2(n-2»
2,071,945.41
8,039.14
20,884.18
10,197.46
866.64
18,049.20
133.828.77
401.917.11
16.476.24
819.37
337.378.31
1.299.971.37
Policies In force
at beginning of
the year ••
Issued during the
year ;•••;•
Ceased to be In
force during the
In^ force' Dec. sist
last _
Losses and claims in-
curred during the yearf^
Losses and claims aet-
tled during the year. .
Losses and claims un-
paid Dec. Slst
2454
331
•160
2635
Amount.
6,440,937.00
1,071,608.00
• 348,628.00
6,163.917.00
51,286.36
63,050.36
750.00
Net surplus $ 140.779.74
ItinlcH and Prenilnma, 1910 Bunlneas.
""'the '"i'el'r ""i'"'". .''."'.'."%14,198.373.00
Premiums received thereon 83.376.97
Net amount in force »*.,,„„„,,„_.
end of the year $11,707,630.00
BuKlneaa In Minnesota In 1910.
(Inclufling reinsurance received and de-
ducting reinsurance placed.)
!••••••
Risks written I
Premiums received
Losses Incurred . .
Losses paid
Amount at risk...
Fire Risks
634.908.01
4.080.80
4.166.15
4,156.15
634,908.01
Rpoelved for premiums.. $ ^ ^^^H^X^
•Including $58,504.00 transferred from
Minnesota on'account of change of res-
Idence.
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
f^Hrr'^e^iy Certify. That the Annual
Stlte" ent '^of''%he'^Penn »I"t"al Life
Insurance Company,. for the >ear^end^
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annua.
Statement of the Underwriters at Great
Western Lloyds Mutual Fire Insurance
Company, for the year ending Decem-
ber 3l8t 1910, of which the above is an
abstract, has been received and filed In
this Department and duly approved
•^^ ™"- J. A. O. PRBUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
XJross assets I 699,641.91
Deduct AaMeta Not Admitted,
Agents' balances $ 2,042.37
Book value of ledger as-
sets over market value. 900.00
All other assets not ad-
mitted 6.632.74
Net paid policy holders.. I 301,813.56
Investigation and adjust- „, _,. .„
inent of claims ,?V'i,.5Jf
Commissions 161.^04. SI4
Salaries of officers, agents,
employes, examiners' and
Inspection fees 207, 993. »a
I other disbursements... 163,4&3.l»
.$ 921,504.09
Total assets
mitted . . . .
not ad-
9,575.11
Total admitted assets . . $ 690.066 . 80
Llabilltlea Dec. .31. 1010.
Unpaid losses and claims $ 28.253.05
Unearned premiums
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and Interest:
due
Commissions and broker-
age •• '
Capital stock paid up...
226,647.16
2,650.00
2.232.37
200.000.00
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing capital I
459.782.58
ToUj paid Po"«^y^°|'?:, 11.952,162.65
Commfsslbns and" bonuses
to agents first years ^ ^22.700.20
Co^r^imTisions on -renewal; '963.400 . 45
Imperial Hotel
Thoroughly modern and up-to-date
in every respect.
ROOMS, 75c AND UP.
200-208 Weat Superior Street.
Total disbursements ..$ 16.178,651.89
Balance $113,905,917.61
•In addition to above abatements the
company allotted to deferred disti;ibu-
tlon policies the sum of $1.12b,0.b.a4
twhlch is carried In liabilities), making
the total apportionment of surplus dur-
ing 1910. $3,206,061.49.
Ledger Aaseta Dec. 31, 1010.
Value of real estate
owned I 1.929,455.32
Mortgage loans 47,061.800.33
Collateral loans 2,014.700.00
Premium notes and pol- ,-._,.__ ,.
Icy loans 18.455,877 . 34
Bonds and stocks owned. 41,426,158.37
Cash In office, banks and
trust companies z,9\}7,iy*.ol
Bills receivable and
agents' balances 305,694.56
Bills receivable for pre- ... „. .7-
mlums 104,836.78
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $113,905,917.51
Non-Ijed«er Aaacta.
Interest and rents due ,„._.„„ ,,
and accrued $ l,S97,i33.63
Net deferred and unpaid ,„.„„., .„
premiums l,9oJ,2&4.56
All other non-ledger as-
Bets 11.663.96
Ine December Slst, 1910, of which the
above is an abstract, has been received
Ind filed m this Department and duly
approved by me. ^ ^ ^ PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
.,.-»^-.fu^£?.''Si^r'D*K5.''Mlnn.
"fREMWCK O'BRIEN,
General Agent.
305 Phoenix BWg.. MinneepoUs, Mimv.
TTndorwritera at Great Weaterm L>loyda
^"** Fire ln"urance Company.
Principal office. 45 Cedar street New
Slff- cffs^^A "Tr'oVbrid^e. \^tYo"r'ne?s
?vfrl managers; Edward E. Hall, secre-
?rrv Attorney to accept service in
iffieso''ti:°c"o1?:mlssioner of insurance.
Income m iwiv.
Gross premiums and as-
sessments ........ f
Rents and interest _
Total Income . • • • ;• -f
Ledger assets Dec. 81 er
previous year ........-• »^
A.A.MICHAUDCO.
Agents.
Lonsdale Binlding, - - Duluth, Minn
German Fire Inau ranee Company.
Principal office: Wheeling, West Va.
(Organized in 1867.) Wm. F. Stifel,
President; F. Riester. Secretary. At-
torney to accept service in Minnesota:
Commissioner of Insurance
CASH CAPITAL. $200,000.
Income in 1010.
Premiums other than per-
petuals ▼
Rents and Interest
Grosd profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
Total income I 298,338.77
Ledger assets Dec. 81 of ..,._. ,,
previous year 649,»iJO.oi
Sum i »48.269.28
Diabnraementa In 1010.
Net amount paid for
268,285.08
29,209.94
843.75
Net surplus $ 230,284.22
RlMki* and Preminma, lUlO Boalneaa.
•Fire risks written dur-
ing the year $30,345,426.00
Premiums received there-
on 338.989.35
Net amount In force at
end of the year 38,578.507.00
•Including business otlier than "Ma-
rine and Inland."
BunlneHM in Minneaota In 1010.
(Including reinsurance received and
deducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks written I l.l?1.45§-74
All other di
Total disbursements
Balance $1,519,004.94
Ledger Aaaeta Dec. 31, 1910.
Book value of real estate.. $ ^^'^p^wi
Mortgage loans 267,324 . o4
Book value of bonds and
stocks 738,352. 4»
Cash in office, trust com-
panles and Lanka 56,797 . 66
Premiums lu course of col-
lections ^io-nS,!
All other assets »\i,l^^-i»
Total ledger assets <as
per balance) $1,519,664.94
Non-Ledver Aaaeta.
Interest and rents due and ,. ... .,
accrued * ^^•*t^t\
Other non-ledger assets... si.bii
Gross assets $1,530,152.05
l>edupt Aaaeta Not Admitted.
Premiums In course of col-
lection (past due) $ lol.493.25
Book value of ledger assets
over market value 7i),8bi.»»
All other assets not ad-
mitted •• 62,731. 4»
Special depoalts. less $12.- ,„„^„ ,,
030.83 12.969.17
Total assets not ad-
mitted I 304,057.79
Premiums received
Losses incurred . . .
Losses paid
Amount at risk. . . .
16.6:
82
3.637.03
6.100.89
1.036,546.19
66.821.08
9,895.73
75.716.81
248,268.90
Gross assets $117,266,969.56
Deduct Aaaeta Not Admitted.
Agents' debit balance*.. $ 23,267.07
. ..$ 323,985.71
Sum L . \o^A
Disbiiniementa In IWO- . ,,,05
Amount paid for losses.. $ 10,4-J.»J>
Commissions, brokerage,
salaries and allowances
to agents, officer* aad
employes •••:•• -i-ii.
Taxes, fees, renta and etft-
25.317.18
.N'S
ULCERINt- SALVE
la a lore «ur» for Cturoaia Uloora.Bono fUeen*
Sor^TaloasVleani, Varicose U»e«"t*^"J5:
lal UloersJ^erer Sorea.OagcrenejBl^tt'o*-
■onlnr. White SwelUnr. Po»»f!S«,.Sui^S
allsorMonong standlng.PoaltlTely Bejerfalli.C«M
aim Oato.BarM. Bella. *>JS»i3flK»?rtRSS!
y PAJXEN MEDICINE CO.. 'ST. FAPI.. MlK«,
.State of Minnesota. Deps.rtment of In-
surance: •
I Hereby Certify. Thi.t the Annual
Statement of the German Fire Insur-
ance Company, for the y<ar ending De-
cember 31st. 1910. of wllch the above
Is an abstract, has beer received and
filed In this Department and duly ap-
proved by me. ^ ^ ^^ ^^^^^
Commissioner cf Insurance.
Total admitted as.iets. . .$1,226,094.26
Liabilitiea.
Claims—
Adjusted I 8,-68. J»»
In process of adjustment ., . .„ ._
and reported iaaqoorI
Resisted 106,928.81
Total ...., I 206.846.26
Deduct reinsurance $ 7.760.51
Net unpaid claims except ,„-.„. _.
liability claims $ 199,085.76
Special reserve for unpaid
liability losses
Unearned premiums ...
Commissions and broker-
44,630.84
281.316.02
age
All other liabilities
39,066.56
30,585.59
Capital stock paid up 600.000.00
Total liabilities. Includ-
ing capital
.$1,100,684.76
Subscribe for The Heralif
Whitney W all Co.
, Agents.
Real Estate, Loans, Insurance.
301-2-3 Torrey Building.
Empire State Snret? Company.
Principal office: 84 William street.
New York, N. Y. (Organized in 1901.)
Wm M. Tomllns, Jr., President; Daniel
Stewart. Secretary. AUorney to ac-
cept service in Minneaota: Commis-
sioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL. $500,000.
Income In ItllO.
Premiums received (n Jt)
Accident and health $ 59.693.31
Rmnlovera' liability lf?-5?119
Surplus over all liabilities. $ 125.if>9.50
Baalneaa In Minnenota In 1910.
Premiums Lossea
Received.
Accident . .
Health ....
Liability ..
Fidelity ...
.Surety
Plate glass
Steam boiler
1,059.25
311.66
8.375.08
4.538.91
3.308.19
401.27
•95.36
Burglary and theft 2.443.51
Credit ^-^^
Paid.
$ G.974.94
429.74
11.000.15
242.13
1,691.03
484.92
Totals $20,350.25 $23,730.69
•Excess over premiuma written.
Employers' liability
Fidelity and surety.
Plate glasa
428,200.67
7,641.45
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
I^IIereby Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the Empire State Suretr
Company, for the year ending pecem-
ber 31st. 1910. of which the above la
an abstract, has been received and
filed in this Department and duly ap-
proved by me. ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^
-Commissioner ot Insuranoa.
/
1
;
.
/ ^ -
i
1
i
1 .
1 1
/
/
! .
i
(
'
1
Si
H
- OE
-^f
18
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 1911.
OFFICES FOR RENT IN
FIDELITY BUILDING
NEW, FIRE-PROOF, MODERN.
Show window space on Superior street, in
heart of shopping district.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON I
WOLVIN BUILDING, DULUTH, MIN
SIX-ROOM HOUSE on Eleventh avenue east, near Third street,
stone foundation, hot air furnace, electric lights, water, sewer,
bath, gas for cooking, full cement basement, mantel grate, hard-
wood floors downstairs ; lot 40x50 feet. Favorable ^ '^
terms. Price
$3,000
R. P. DOWSE & CO.
GENERAL INSURANCE.
106 Providence Bldg.
$SOO CASH
— $25.00 F»ER IVIOIMXH.
Buvs a flve-room house on Seventh avenue east and
yixth street- bath, gas, electric lights. Rent, $22.30.
You should not miss this opportunity AA TAA
to get a fine little home. d2«vUU
Price ^ '
SMALL MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
Will buy you a lot In
Why dcn't you make a start
towards a home?
LAKESIDE LAND CO.,
601-::-3-4-S SelliTOod Buildlns*
PHONES, 408.
MONEY TO LOAN
ON REAL ESTATE
BEST CONTRACT- L£A5T COSB
CROSBY, MINN.,
Tbe Metropolin of the Curuna Iron
Kange
JiO MINERAL. KESERVATIONS
When you buy a lot In Crosby
you get a deed not only to the sur-
face rights but to any minerals
that may he found under It, thus
Insuring a permanent location where
you can afford to spend money to
build up a business, and make it
I your home town.
For particulars see
GEORGE H. CROSBY,
«0S LocNdale Uulldlug. Duluth, Minn
ur Croaby, Mlun.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^s^^^^f^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^k^i
Have you seen Sixth and
Seventh Streets at the East
End?
If you want to build now
or anytime within two or
three years — here is the place
to buy.
RICHARDSON, DAY ft
HARRISON
FARM LANDS
In ten, twenty, forty and eighty-
acre tracts, handy to Duluth, suit-
able for truck gardening, poultry
raising and dairy purposes; good
soil; plenty of timber for building
and fuel. Prices and terms reason-
able.
All of section 7, township 50,
range 19, near Gowan, suitable for
stock farm; good soil; small lake.
94,000, half cash, balance easy terms.
A. W. KUEHNOW
403-4 Columbia Bldg.
TWO CHOICE LOTS
HUNTERS PARK
I^ot 50x175 feet, worth $l,20ri; can
be bought NOW $ft75
Lot 50x200 feet, in center of be.'-t
residence district; our ^ ^ ^^^
price NOW ^^ WW
Invesfmenti Sacrifice
and Home Combined
Rant Knd — 50x140 feet — Three
HoiiseK— Two in rear and one in
front, stone foundations; hot water,
heating plant.s, concrete walks;
beautiful neighborhood. owner
must sacrifice. Ca^■h 94,500, balance
of $3,750 long time. Another big
snap — 25x140 feet, two houses, all
modern, heating plants; all fixtures,
and shades go v.lth this deal. Don't
mi.ss til is snap — 95,::riO.
THE SMITH REALTY CO.,
5:;4 Manhattan Dldg.
C. E. ROE
412 Providence Building.
WE ARE BUILDING
MANAGERS
We rent and collect rents and
give improved property th-e proper
care. You are invited to investigate
our system. We want your busi-
ness.
Whif ney Wall Company,
REAL KST.-VTi:, LOANS AXD FIRE
INSURANCE.
301 Torrev Building.
FOR RENT!
OFFICES IN LYCEUM BUILDING.
Fire-Proof — Deiiirable.
LITTLE & NOLTE, 'sents.
T.W.TILKE
REALESXITEANDIN5UIUNa
,«ODY HOTEL CORNER
WESJ
THE
COMrNC
SPOT
Mjfftn
$280 Each
Ea s y terms.
Owner must sell
several fine level
lots, three blocks
from Flfty-
seventh avenue
car line. Street
improved, wa t e r
and sewer. An op-
portunity comes
once in every
mans life — this
is yours.
P2J00 — Six-room house with bath.
3223 "West Third St., hardwood
floors, city water, gas, $400
cash, balance monthly payments.
$2000 — Five-room house with
bath, 3227 West Third street,
hardwood floors, city water, gas,
1300 cash, balance monthly
payments.
PULFORD, HOW & 00.
600 Alworth Bldg.
$1,400 — For 108 feet on "Woodland
avenue near Kent road, or will
sell inside 50 feet for 9650.
92,n00 — "U'e have one six-room house
at Tenth avenue east and Eighth
street with water, sewer, bath,
gas, electricity, hardwood floors,
just being finished, which we will
sell on very small cash payment
and balance in small monthly
payments; lot 25 by 140 feet.
EBY & GRIDLEY,
515 Pallndlo Building:.
ON NINETEENTH AVENUE EAST,
near Jefferson street, 'eight-room
house, stone foundation, furnace,
bath, gas and electric light, hard-
wood floors all through; pavtd
street and cement walk. Price,
only 94,500
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE — Owner of-
fers good hume at a very moder-
ate price. House has ten rooms,
stone foundation, hot water heat,
hardwood finish first floor, hard-
wood floors throughout, on paved
street, at the East end. — (3338).
UPPER SIDE OF BOULEVARD
DRIVE — Nine-room house, with
stone foundation, new hot water
heating plant, bath, electric light,
gas for cooking, grate and mantel,
laundry tubs, Georgia pine finish
and floors; sightly location, beau-
tiful view. Price 97,000
StoreH, Honaen and Flatii For Rent.
Good store In bent retail location
on Superior Mtreet.
MONEY TO LOAN.
STRYKER, HIAHLEY t BUCK
Advertise in The Herald
Park Point
Lots.
Camping time is almost here. Own
a lot and summer on the Point.
We offer five 40x100 lots; Torrens
title. Easy terms. On Minnesota
and Lake avenues, from Eighteenth
to Twenty-seventh street.
Price $350 and $400 each.
J. D. HOWARD & CO.,
216 West Suparlor Str««t
Ten acres, 2% miles from car line;
nice level land, easily cleared; Just
the place for gardening and chicken
ranch. $100 cash, balance, $10 per
month. Price 9500.
Twenty acres, near the city; good
soil, lays well, in Hermantown on
Maple Grove road. Price, 9I9OOO.
$200 cash, balance, terms to suit.
164 acres, well Improved, on Cuy-
una range; good mineral prospects.
Cheap at $5000.
We write fire Insurance. Reliable
companies.
LOCKER-DONAHUE GO.
416-17 LonMdale Bulldins.
MONEY TO LOAN
6, 5^ and 0 per cent.
FIRE INSURANCE
Old Reliable Companlca.
REAL ESTATE
MontMy Payment Plan.
COOLEY & UHDERHILL,
200-10-11 Exchange Bulldlnc*
FOR SALE
AT A BARGAIN.
Modern eight-room house and four
lots (each lot 25x140 feet); good
chicken coop; one block from car
line. West Duluth.
EASY TERMS.
C.A.KNIPPENBERG
300 ALWORTH BLDG*
Loans!
Ill
made quickly, on the
lowest prevailing rates.
See our Loan depart-
ment.
W. M. PRINDLE&CO.,
No. 3 Lonsdale Bulldins.
"2
SOME GREAT SNAPS H^S!'^
905 AX ACRE buys thirty-two
acres close to the pumping sta-
tion.
97.50 AN ACRE buys 400 acres
close to Adolph — worth Just
twice!
TWO FORTIES a few miles from
the end of the Lakeside car
line, suitable for sub-dividing —
for sale cheap!
EBERT, WALKER k MeKNIGHT CO.
"SpeeialiHtM in Rapid DenlN."
315 TORREY BUILDING.
D. H. 4-2011
COME OUT TO
NEBAGAMON!
and see for yourself how de-
lightful it would be to own a
fine, productive truck farm on
the shores of the lake.
You can get a good-sized
tract on v<ery easy terms if
you apply right away, to
Burg Acreage & Townslte Co.,
.lOO-.'SOl Alworth Bldsr
n. TI.. •l-20-'ll.
$200-CASH-$200
Buys pretty flve-room cottage on
Park Point) balance of $1,300 by the
month. Water and electric lights in
house, and is plastered and built for
winter and summer use. Lot 40x
100; nice shade trees; beautiful view
of the lake.
This is a Real Rnrgaln, and Very
Easy TeruiM.
CLARKEWERTIN CO.
200 ALWORTH BLDG.
[HEELER& PARSON
SOS Alworth Bids.
$1050— 25-foot lot,
11. 4th, near 13th
Ave. Snap.
$3300 — Nearly new 6-room house
— strictly modern except heat.
$3200 — Dandy 5-room cottage,
upper side E. 4th St.
$15000^25 feet upper side 1st
St., near Lake Ave.
Quit "trusting in location." n
Publicity will sell goods In a u
barn If you use Herald "Want it
Ads." i i
LEGAL NOTICES.
■ a.-i.;a.
ING ON PETITION
NATION OF DE-
, County of St.
e Court,
he Estate of Anna
ORDER OP
FOR DET
SCENT OF
State of Mln
Louis, ss.
In
In the Matter 'of
Cargill. Decedent.
THE PETITION '♦f James W. Cargill
having been filed In this Court repre-
senting, among other things, that the
above named decedent died more than
five years prlA- td the filing of said
petition, and t^a< po Will of decedent
has been proved nor administration
granted on hef estate in this State:
that said petitlpnef has. and claims to
have, an IntereSt 1ft certain real estate
of decedent lying and being In the
County of St. Louis, State of Minne-
sota, described In said petition, and
praying that the descent of said real
estate be det*rmlhed by this Court,
and the same assigned to the persons
thereunto entitled.
IT IS ORDERED, That said petition
be heard before this Court at the Pro-
bate Court Rooms In the Court House,
in the City of Duluth, in said County,
on Monday, the 8th day of May, 1911,
at 10 o'clock a. m., and all persons in-
terested in said hearing and in said
matter are hereby cited and required
at said time and place to show cause,
if any there be, why said petition
should not be granted.
ORDERED FURTHER, That this or-
der be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald according to law.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 12th,
1911.
By the Court,
S. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(.«;eal Probate Court, St. Louis County,
Minn.)
D. H, April 13, 20, 27, 1911.
SUMMONS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis,
ss.
District Court, Eleventh Judicial Dis-
trict.
Sattler Brothers Company, a
corporation. Plaintiff,
vs.
Frank Miller, Defendant.
The State of Minnesota, to the above-
named Defendant.
You are hereby summoned and re-
quired to answer the complaint of the
plaintiff in the above entitled action,
which complaint Is filed In the office
of the clerk of the above named court,
and to serve a copy of your answer to
said complaint upon the subscribers at
their offices In Rooms numbered 300-
306 First National Bank Building, Du-
luth, Minnesota, within twenty days
after the service of this summons upon
you, exclusive of the day of such serv-
ice; and if you fail to answer said
complaint within the time aforesaid,
plaintiff will take Judgment against
you for the sum of $156.40, with Inter-
est thereon at the rate of 6 per cent
per annum from the 1st day of Sep-
tember, 1910, together with its costs
and disbursements in this action.
BALDWIN, BALDWIN & DANCER,
300-306 First National Bank Building,
Duluth, Minnesota.
Attorneys for Plaintiff.
D H. April 6, 13, 20, 27; May 4, 11, 1911.
CERTIFICATE OFLNCORPORATION
— OF—
RAFEXCHA BUILDING COM-
PANY.
>fa ^^ ^f ^^^^ ^^ \|g_^^ .^k-^lf .^tt ^^ ^^ %fe ^# \P ^itf \^ ^J^ ^^ ^^ ^^ *lI^ **-- ^^ ^i'
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRES-
ENTS, That we, the undersigned, do
hereby associate ourselves together
and agree upon the following Articles
of Incorporation, under the provisions
of Chapter 58, "Revised Laws of 1905,"
of the State of Minnesota, and acts
amendatory thereof and supplementary
thereto, and do hereby adopt the fol-
lowing Articles:
ARTICLE I. The name of this cor-
poration shall be "Rafencha Building
Company." It.s principal place of trans-
acting business shall be Duluth, Minne-
sota. The general nature of its busi-
ness shall be to buy, hold, cultivate,
improve In any manner whatsoever,
loase, let, mortgage, sell, transfer, plat,
convey and deal In real property in
Minnesota and elsewhere, and to con-
struct buildings of all kinds on any of
such real property or on the real prop-
erty of others, either alone or Jointly
with others, whether as a partner, as
agent for others, or otherwise, as it
may deem best; to borrow and loan
money upon real estate, personal prop-
erty, or other security; to negotiate
and effect loans of money for other
persons and corporations for a com-
pensation; to buy, own, hold, hypothe-
cate, transfer, sell and deal In bonds,
notes, mortgages, stocks in other cor-
porations and other property and se-
curities; to collect, foreclose, release
and compound mortgages and other
obligations; to act as agents for other
persons and corporations In the man-
agement, improvement, purchase and
sale of real and personal property, and
In the collection of rents and revenues
therefrom for a compensation; to act
as agent for fire, life, casualty, plate
glass, accident and other Insurance
Companies: to act as agent for Surety
Company or Companies; and to do any
and all things authorized by law that
the Directors of said corporation may
deem necessary or advisable in carry-
ing out any of the aforesaid purposes,
or for the benefit or protection of any
of the interests of said corporation.
ARTICLE II. The period of the
duration of this corporation shall be
thirty (30) years.
ARTICLE IIL The names and places
of residence of the persons forming
this corporation are as follows: M M.
Chaffee, M. N. Putman and M. M.
Grams, all of Duluth, Minnesota.
ARTICLE IV. The names and places
of residence of the first Board of Di-
rectors of said corporation are:
M. M. Chaffee, M. N. Putman and M. M
Grams, all of Duluth, Minnesota, who
shall hold their offices until the first
annual meeting of the stockholders.
The government of this corporation,
and the management of all Its affairs,
shall be vested In a Board of three (3)
Directors, who shall be stockholders of
said corporation, and who shall be
elected annually by the stockholders
of the corporation at their annual
meeting, which shall be held on the
second Tuesday In January In each
year, at such hour and place as shall
be fixed by the by-laws of the corpora-
tion. There shall also be the follow-
ing offlcer.s, who shall have such
powers, and shall perform such duties,
as may be prescribed by the by-laws,
and who shall be elected at the first
meeting of said Board, and annually
thereafter at the first meeting of the
Hoard of Directors Immediately fol-
lowing the annual meeting of the
stockholders, to- wit: A President, a
Vice President. a Secretary and
a Treasurer, any two of which
offices, except the two first
named, may be held by the same per-
son. The Directors and officers shall
hold their respective offices for the
term of one year, or until their re-
spective successors are elected and
qualified.
ARTICLE V. The amount of the cap-
ital stock of this corporation shall be
Fifty Thousand (150.000.00) Dollars,
divided Into Five Thousand (5.000)
shares of the par value of Ten ($10.00)
Dollars each: the same to be paid in
as called for by the Board of Directors.
ARTICLE VI. The highest amount of
Indebtedness or liability to which this
corporation shall at any time be sub-
ject is the sum of Fifty Thousand ($50,-
000.00) Dollars.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF. We have
MOVING DAY-
MAY 1st
Look at our houses at Lakeside
— Get a home of your own — We
will help you.
GREENFIELD,
310-11 Columbia Bldg.
ADDITIONALr WANTS
From Pages 19 and 20.
FOR SALE— REAL ESTATE.
FOR SALE — HALF-ACRE TRACTS,
$75 and up, in the Seventh ward
garden division. located twelve
blocks up from Piedmont avenue car
line, facing Morris Thomas road.
The new Hutchinson road runs
through this land. Part of the land
Is clear and ready for cultivation.
Inquire from the owners, Karl J.
Hagberg, 9 Twentieth avenue west,
or Andrew Bergqulst, 404 Exchange
building.
FOR SALE— WE HAVE A FEW DE-
slrable lots in West Duluth that we
will sell on easy weekly or monthly
payments. Whitney Wall company.
301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— AN ELEGANT 80 BY 80
West end lot; all improvements; a
sacrifice. See the Smith Realty
company, 524 Manhattan building.
FOR SALE^— 100 BY 140 FEET, SEC-
ond street and Twenty-fifth avenue
east; also ten single lots on Park
Point and one large cottage, with
tents known as '"Camp Orlando." Q.
S. Richards, 6 South Fifth avenue
west. 'Phones.
FOR SALE— EAST END 50 -FOOT LOT,
three houses all thoroughly modern
and new; must sacrifice; splendidly
arranged; half cash. See the Smith
Realty company, 524 Manhattan
building.
FOR SALE— OR WILL TRADE AN
acre lot with store building on same
for team of horses or other property.
Call at 802 East Third street.
FOR SALE— TWO PARK POINT LOTS
only three blocks from aerial bridge;
corner and inside; very cheap: easy
terms. A. G. Messer, 117 North x' if-
teenth avenue east; Melrose 650
and 439.
FOR SALE— A FEW GOOD LOTS,
well located; cheap for cash. See
the Smith Realty company, 524 Man
hattan building.
FOR SALE — $180 TAKES LOT WORTH
$250; $75 cash, balance monthly: also
lot at Woodland: bargain at $300. Call
206 Alworth building.
FOR SALE— DO YOU WANT THE
best building lot on Fourth street,
between Seventh and Eighth avenues
west? Easy terms. 801 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR SALE— CHOICE BUILDING LOT,
upper side London road. East end; a
bargain for quick sale at price away
below adjoining propetry. For in-
formation address C 379, Herald.
FOR SALE— 50 BY 140 FEET, NORTH-
west corner Twenty-third avenue
west and Fourth street. Apply Mu-
tual Electric company.
FOR SALE — TWO LOTS, SEVEN-
teenth avenue east; water, sewer and
gas on lots; no rock; $850. See
Schwieger at A. B. Siewert & Co.
FOR SALE— THE MOST DESIRABLE
double corner in the Normal school
district. See Chan Smith, 405 Tor-
rey building.
FOR SALE — LOT 5, BLOCK 26,
Endion. between Twenty-second and
Twenty-third avenue, London road,
going for $650. C. B. Woodruff.
FOR SALFi— A LOT 50 BY 75 FOR
only $600; five blocks from new
courthouse; easy terms. See Chan
Smith, 406 Torey building.
FOR SALE — FIVE CHOICE BUILD-
ing lots in New Duluth, adjacent to
the new steel plant. Will be sold at
a great bargain to close an estate.
F. C. Drenning. 221 Providence build-
Ing.
FOR SALH — LOTS, HOUSES. ACRES;
Investments that cay dividends every
month. Talk with Fider, 18 Third
avenue west.
FOR SALE— TWO FINE, LEVEL LOTS
on Tenth street, near Tenth avenue
east. - Can be bought cheap; small
cash payment, balance monthly. W.
E. Wright, 303 Palladlo. Melrose,
1333.
DRESSMAKING.
MISS GRAY'S SCHOOL OF GARMENT
cutting and making; practical;
terms reasonable; patterns to order
a specialty. Third floor. Gray-Tal-
lant company.
BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
4 PHILIP DANDREA i6
* Will move into his new store, Mc- ^
* Kay Hotel building, at 20 Fifth *
*. avenue west. He will carry a full ii-
* lino of fruits, candies, tobacco, ■}£■
^ cigars and stationery; also will ■S^
i(. open a new Ice cream parlor. ■Jj.
-J^ Would be pleased to have his *
■^ his friends and patrons give him a ^
hereunto set our hands and seals this
30th day of March, 1911.
M. M. CHAB^FEE. (Seal)
M. N. PUTMAN. (Seal)
M. M. GRAMS. (Seal)
Signed, Sealed and Delivered
in Presence of:
ROLLO N. CHAFFEE.
H. J. GRANNIS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
Be it remembered, that on this 30th
day of March, 1911, before me, the un-
dersigned, a Notary Public within and
for .'^aid County and State, personally
appeared M. M. Chaffee, M. N. Putman
and M. M. Grams, to me well known to
be the identical persons named in and
who executed the foregoing Certificate
of Incorporation, and they, each for
himself, acknowledged the same to be
his free act and deed.
ROLLO N. CHAFFEE,
Notary I*ubllc,
St. Louis County, Minn.
(Notarial Seal, St. Louis Co., Minn.)
My commission expires May 24, 1914.
State of Minnesota, Department of
State.
I hereby certify that the within in-
strument was filed for record in this
office on the 15th day of April. A. D.
1911, at 9 o'clock A. M.. and was duly
recorded in Book U-3 of Incorporations,
on page 118.
JULIUS A. SCHMAHL,
Secretary of State.
(168456)
OFFICE OF REGISTER OF DEEDS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
I hereby certify that the within in-
strument was filed in this office for
record April 18, 1911, at 1:30 P. M., and
was duly recorded in Book 14 of Misc.,
page 184. _
M. C. PALMER,
Register of Deeds.
By THOS. CLARK,
Deputy.
THE ANTI-SALOON CRUSADE.
American Review of Reviews: The
Anti-Saloon league began seven :een
years ago to teach the church how to
use the ballot effectively against the
saloon. There are 750 American pul-
pits open to official representatives of
this league every Sunday in the year,
and many of the governing councils of
the various denominations have in-
dorsed Its principles, have commended
its actions and have co-operated with
it ia Its campaigns.
More and more the Catholic church
is taking a positive stand against the.
saloon, and thousands of Catholic as
well as Protestant ballots are used
against the traffic. Archbishop Ire-
land was one of the founders of the
National A^ti-Saloon league, and many
of the archbishops, bishops, priests
and lay members of the Roman Cath-
olic church are most enthusiastic and
potential warriors against the liquor
traffic.
MONEY TO LOAN.
s$$$$$$$$$$$$$i$$$$$$$$u$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
f$ MONEY ON CREDIT. $$
$$ SOMETHING NEW. $$
$$ $10 upward, for hosuekeepers, $$
$$ workingmen and salaried em- $$
5$ ployes, at charges that honest $$
$ people can afford to pay. $$
$$ DULUTH LOAN COMPANY, $$
$$ Cor. Third Ave. W. md Sup. St., $$
If 307 Columbia Bldg. $$
$$ • Old 'phone, Melrase 2355. $$
$s$$$m?s$$»$5u*m*¥i $$$$$$ I $$$$$$$ $
* SPRING IS BERE *
* If you want money in a' hurry, *
* SEE US. Z
* Our rates are the cheapest *
•aj Our payment plan the best. ^
a- Call and be convinced. *,
* LOANS ON SALARY, li'URNITURE -S.
* DULUTH F1NA>;CE CO.. ' ^
a- 301 Palladlo Bldg. §
ie Open Saturday Evenings. 4i
CITY AND VILLAGE lOANS IN MIN-
nesota. Buy or build a home on
monthly payments. J. A. Knippen-
berg, 300 Alworth Bhlg. 'Phones 597.
WE LOAN ON ALL KINDS OP PER-
Bonal security at lowest rates. Call
on us, 430 Manhattan Bldg., and get
rates. Duluth Mortgage Loan Co. W.
Horkan. New 1598-D; Melrose 3733.
WE MAKE FARM LOANS ON VAL-
uable, productive and cultivated
lands. No delay; prompt attention.
Snyder Bros., 210 West First street.
TO LOAN— $15,000 IN SUMS TO SUIT,
on real estate. Lane, MacGregor &
Co.. 40'J Alworth building.
MONEY SUPPLIED -.'O SALARIED
people, women kcep.ng house and
others, upon their O'w n names witn»
out security; easy paj ments. Tolman,
509 Palladio building.
MONEY TO LOAN ON CITY PROPER-
ty; lowest rates; small and large
amounts. Scott-Kreitller company,
405 Central avenue. Both 'phones.
MONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS,
watches, furs, rifieu etc,, and all
goods of value $1 t j $1,500. Key-
stone Loan & Mercam lie Co. 22 West
Superior street.
MONEY TO LOAN— LO.VNS MADE ON
timber and farm lands. John Q. A.
Crosby, 305 Palladio building.
Money to loan — Any amount; low rates.
Cooley & Underhill, 209 Exchange.
"^IX PER CENT INJERSST ON S>LA.LL
real estate loans; money on hand;
prompt service. P. 1. Salter com-
pany, Lonsdale building.
RENT— STORES. OFFICES, ETC.
FOR RENT— FINE DRY BASEMENT
on Lake avenue south ; steam heat.
JOHN A. STEPHE.NSON & CO.
RENTAL DLIPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— LARGE SI ORE ROOM ON
first floor; paint shop on second
floor, 26-28 East Firs', street; willing
to remodel to suit tenant. E. A. Dahl,
510 Columbia buildini?. Zenith 1097.
FOR RENT— STORE AT 907 WEST
Michigan street; $30 month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— STORE, 1829 WEST su-
perior street; well adopted for
plumbing establlshn.ent. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torr.jy.
FOR RENT— OFFICES WITH VAULT;
also desk room; large and well light-
ed. 208 Lonsdale building^
FOR RENT — MODERN STORE, FINE
front, 25x60 feet, basement and s'^'C-
ond floor, Third aven ae east and Su-
perior street. See H J. Mullin. 403
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — STORE ON WEST Su-
perior street, betwe ;n Third and
Fourth avenues west, Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey building.
FOR KENT — HALL; NINETEENTH
avenue west and First street. Inquire
214 Axa building.
FOR RENT — A FEV/ CHOICE OF-
flces in the Torrey bJilding; best of
janitor and elevator service. Whit-
ney Wall company, 3(1 Torrey build-
ing.
LOST AND FOUND.
LOST— DARK BRINDLE BULL TER-
rerr; has but one eyts; weighs about
twenty-four pounds; $10 reward will
be paid for return of dog or infor-
mation of same. Loughney &
Loughney, 301 Christie building.
LOST— BLACK PERSIAN LAMB NECK
scarf. Finder kindly return for re-
ward to 207 West Second street.
LOST — BETWEEN FOURTEENTH AND
Eighteenth avenues cast, lace jabot.
Finder return to 11 Kimball flats for
reward.
LOST— WATCH FOB WITH BLACK
ribbon. Finder please return to 21
Wicklow street, for reward.
LOaT— ON NO. 2 DULJTH. MISSABE
& Northern train last P'riday,
between Proctor and Duluth. a pair
of gold spectacles; finder please re-
turn to Proctor general office for
reward.
LOST — COLUMBIA HALF-DOLLAR
watch fob charm, Tuesday morning,
between Garfield and Sixth avenue
west. Please return to 224 Fourth
avenue west, upstairs, for reward.
FOUND — THE PARTY WHO LEFT
bicycle at E. J. Campbell's. First
avenue West livery barn can have
same by paying for this ad.
UPHOLSTEKING.
FURNITURE, AUTOMOBILES. CAR-
riages; reasonable prices. E. Ott, 112
First avenue west. Both 'phones.
MINERAL LANDS.
EBERT, WALKER & :HcKNIGHT CO.,
315 Torrey bldg., off'jrs unusual op-
portunities for big profit in mineral
lands on Cuyuna and \'ermilion ranges
WANTED TO TRADE.
W A N'T lEEr"To'"TRADE^-\\^E"ll^ VE^
nubmer of improved "arms which wo
win trade for improved city prop-
erty. Whitney Wal . company, 302
Torrey building.
FORSALE— (30WS.
FOR SALE— CARLOAD OF FRESH
milch cows just arivtd to S. Widdes,
429 Forty-sixth avenue west. Call
Cole, 3133-Y.
HAIR DRESSING PARLORS.
G. Molsan is the only French hair dres-
ser in Duluth. Expert in making
wigs, toupees and hair dye. Switches'
and puffs made from combings. Mail
orders promptly filled. 212 W. 1st St
WATCHES REl?AUiED.
Guaranteed Main Springs, $1.00; watch
cleaned. $1. Garon Eros.. 21t W. 1st.
CLAIRVOYANTS.
PROF. GIRARD, THE ONLY RELI-
able clairvoyant In Duluth. 20 West
Superior street. Upstairs.
MADAM ANNA CARD READING AND
business advice, 329 West Superior
street. Room 12, Melrose 3257.
MADAM STERLING, FALMIST CARD
reader. 129 East Fii st street, oppo-
site Armory.
FOR SALE— HOUSES.
FOR SALE— MODERN, NEW, UP-TO-
date flats, earning 14 per cent on your
Investment; centrally located; always
rented. W 54, Herald.
FOR SALE — ON EASY TERMS, SIX-
room house. Twenty-fourth avenue
west and Sixth street, $l,S00; sewer,
water and gas in street. Wliitnejr
Wall company, 301 Torrey building.
294
FOR SALE — NEW TEN-ROOM Du-
plex house for sale cheap; easy
terms; 1016 Ninth avenue east. C. A.
Knippenberg, 300 Alworth building.
•Phones 697.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
If you want us to build a house for
you this summer, please let us know
as soon as possible. We advance all
the money and you pay us monthly,
but even at tliat there is a lim t to
our capacity and to our pocketbook.
If you are not familiar with our
plan write us a postcard and wo w^ill
mail you booklets and pictures.
EDMUND G. WALTON AGENCY,
312 Exhange buildlnsT.
FOR SALE — MODERN SEVEN- ROOM
house with bath; rooms all large;
fine grate, electric light and gas; all
street assessments paid; shade trees
and well sodded lawn; house in fine
repair and ready to move into; loca-
tion walking distance to business
center; terms to suit; exclusive sale
by Getty-Smith company, 306 Pal-
ladio building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
centrally located. West Duluth; price
$1,800; small cash payment, balance
monthly; is now rented for $19 per
month. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
FOR SALE— A GRAND FOUR-ROOM
cottage; elegant location; 25-foot
lot; cheap, $500 cash, balance, easy
as rent. Smith Realty company,
524 Manhattan building.
FOR SALE— AT LAKESIDE, NEW
seven-room house, concrete founda-
tion, all conveniences except heat, lot
50 by 140; for quick sale owner will
sell at a bargain. E 29, Herald.
FOR .SALE — A TWENTY-ROOM
boarding house furnished, also barn.
16 by 32 on lot 25 by 125 feet; located
in a thriving range city. Address H.
& S.. box 414, Hibbing, Minn.
FOR SALE— 15 PER CENT INVEST-
ment, double house, 16 rooms, heat,
stone foundation, large lot; sacrihc©,
$5,000; one-half cash; East end. Smith
Realty Co., 524 Manhattan.
FOR SALE — SEVEN- ROOM MODERM
house, on East Fourth street, near
Portland square; hardwood through-
out; good basement; cement founda-
tion and furnace heat. A bargain:
$4,500. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building. 293
FOR SALE— ELEGANT HOME; IDEAIj
location; must sell. For terms sea
owner, 408 Columbia building or call
Park 6155-D.
Houses from $800 to $80,000 for sale
by L. A. Larsen Co., Reliable Real
Estate Deakr.s, 213-14-15 Prov. Bldg.
FOR bALE— $100 CASH AND $18 PER
month buys nearly new seven-room
and basement house and lot; We.st
end; sewer, water, electric lights,
furnace, good barn, buggy and wood-
shed. K 50, Herald.
FOR SALE— AN EAST END HOME OP
nine rooms, large lot, modern except
heat; beautiful location; $3,500. $500
cash, balance easy as rent. Smith
Realty company, 524 Manhattan
building.
FOR SALE — BY OWNER. SIX-ROOM
house and lot; all Improvements.
2119 West Fourth street.
FOR SALE— MODERN EIGHT-ROOM
house in East end. lu'iuire L. K.
Daugherty, 501 East Fourth street.
FOR SALE — NEARLY NEW SIX-
room house; water, gas, electric
light; good cellar. 1020 East Sev-
enth street.
FOR SALE— $500 DOWN, BALANCE
easy terms, for a twelve-room house
near high school and manual train-
ing building. See Chan Smith, 405
Torrey building
FOR SALE — HOUSE AND LOT FOR
sale at 1111 Garfield avenue.
FOR SALE— FIVE-ROOM HOUSE AND
lot at 1723 East Sixth street. Owner
must leave city soon. Inquire at
premises.
FOR SALE— NEARLY NEW SIX-ROOM
house; hardwood finish; modern ex-
cept heat. Apply 1615 East Fifth
street.
FOR SALE FLATS— ANNUAL RENTAL.
$732: tliree flats netting 12 per cent.
Price $6,500; $1,500 cateh, balance easy
terms; on car line, near Lincoln Park.
S. W. Richardson. 201 Exchange Bank
building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM RESI-
dence; all modern conveniences; lot
70 by 140; in Normal school district;
$8,500. See Chan tJaiith. 405 Torrey
building.
FOR SALE— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
with water, sewer and electric lights;
two lots. 25 by 125 each; price, $1,800,
one-half cash, balance to suit. Twin
Ports Realty company, 510 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR SALE — 15 -ROOM BOARDING
house; lot 25 by 125; $2,000; one-
fourth cash, balance to suit; hard-
wood floors, sewer, electric light and
city water; this property is near the
Zenith Furnace company; now oc-
cupied; rents for $25 per month.
Twin Port Realty company.
FOR SALE — SEVEN ROOMS AND
bath; new fixtures and plbmbing;
hardwood floors; all modern conven-
iences; nice trees asid bushes; will
sell cheap if taken at once. Inquire
1620 East Sixth street.
FOR SALE— AT A SACRIFICE: — SIX-
room cottage on street car line.
Park Point; water, electric light,
baih, gas range, fireplace, hot water
heot, cement foundation, laundry tubs,
cement floor in l^/^-toot basement;
beautiful, high, dry lots; fine shade
treos; easy term;?. Save commission.
Address Owner, H 334, Herald.
FOR SALE— BARGAIN IF TAKEN AT
once, eight-room house, barn and
$800 lot; Forty-fourth avenue near-
London road, $2,500; terms; snap for
contractor or carpenter. H. A. Hook-
er, 569 Frederick avenue, Milwaukee,
Wis.
FOR SALE— DON'T FAIL TO SEE US IF
you conienipiate biiying a liome this
spring. Minneapolis Construction Co.,
210 American Exchange Bank Bldg.
FOR SALE — MODERN EAST ENIX
home; large grounds; illnesis of wife.
compels saie; no agents need apply.
Address S 368, Herald.
WANTED TO TRADE FOR FARM,
eight-room house, on a filty-fooi lot,
located in the best residence district
In Duluth. Price $4,500. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — ON EAST EIGHTHS
street, near Seventh avenue east, six-
room house, very comfortable, and
delightfully arranged Interior, for
$2,200. with $500 cash; balance oa
easy terms. Whitney Wall company,
301 Torrey building. 262-
FOR SALE— MONTHLY PAYMENTS,
of $40 will purchase the right party
a good six-room liouse at Lakeside,
modern except heat. Price $3,400.
Greenfield, 310-11 Columbia building.
MEDICAL.
LADIES — $1,000 REWARD! I POSI^
lively guarantee my great successful
"Monthly" remedy. Safely relieves
some of the longest, most obstinate,
abnormal cases in three to five days^
No harm, jPain or interference wltlk
work. Mall, $1.60. Double strengrtlv
|2. Dr. L. M. Sou£rtli>aton * Cq^
Kansas City. Mo.
T'^^K*
'■ '*»
r -I— urinal*
-^
— r-
r — "
(1
-♦-«■*
<»
S-^^iimi
r w"
ill.
BE^^S
Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 20, 191L
r
SOME PEOPLE DO FIND GOOD SERVANTS!
They may be " lucky/' of course. Biit perhaps it's more like good
management than good luck. Most of the good servants are found
through HERALD "WANT ADVERTISING" or through HERALD ADS.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE.
Household goods outfit of
furniture In tlve-room flat.
Just one month, for sale at a
advantageous figure. Flat
rent. A decided snap for
new
used
very
for
some
young couple. Enger & Olson, the
Bis Furniture house, Nineteenth
avenue west.
LOOK HERE!
FOR SALE— A SNAP— MAPLE DRESS-
er and commode, combination dress-
er, range (.beauty), heater; all prac-
tically new. M. W. Turner, 218 East
First street, or 'phone Melrose 4166.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOIS.
(Continued.)
FOir'^''sALE''^^^^^l?LACK ORPINQTON
eggs, for hatching. Fine large stock,
$1 per 15. Mrs. Parks, 614 West
Fifth street.
FOR SALE— PIANO; WILL SELL
cheap; party leaving city. 832 East
Second street.
HELP WANTED— FEMALE.
(Continued.)
WANTED -
Frederick
- WOMAN
hotel.
COOK AT THE
WANTED— EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR
general housework; family of two;
good wage-s; one who can go home
nights. Call 1418 Jefferson street.
ADDITIONAL WANTSI
ON PAGES 18 and 20
BOARD WANTED.
FOR SALE — BEAUTIFUL SOLID
quarter sawed oak extension dining
room table, 122 East First street.
EGCJS FOR SALE — PURE BRED
White Wj-andottes, |1 for- 13. Mel-
rose 394S.
FOR SALE— I'RACTICALLY NEW
furniture of four-room Hat. Oppor-
tunity for young married people to
save considerably. Same flat for
rent. 17 East Fourth, second floor.
FOR S.VLE^TWO BRUSSELS RUGS,
9 by 12. ftegar refrigerator and 30-
gallon coal hot water heater. Call
7114 East Fourth street.
a- ^-
*. FOR S.VLB.
One ebony-case Kimball piano,
thoroughly gone over; new strings
and hanimor.s. A snap at $135;
$lu cash and $5 per month.
FRENCH & BASSETT.
■if-
a-
FOR RENT— HOUSES.
FOR RENT.
TEN-ROOM ROOMING HOUSE.
HARDWOOD FLOORS, GAS AND
ELECTRIC LIGHT.
24 WEST THIRD STllEET.
MENDENHALL & HOOPES.
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework; one who can go
home nights preferred. Call 432
Eleventh avenue east.
W.ANTED- BOOKKEEPER WHO UN-
derstands stenography. Apply North-
ern Manufacturing company. Chris-
tie building.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework at 706 V4 Kaat Fourth
street.
WANTED — WAITRESS AND DISH-
washers at the Marine hotel, 206
Lake avenue south.
«^^-i^'-vi^^-^^-*^'^-¥'^'7V^:^-;v'«*^^X-*'*«*
l\)U SALE —
board In good
Fifth street.
MAHOGANY
condition. 1810
SIDF
East
FOR b-ALE STEWART COAL HEAT-
er. cost Jrt.j; for $30; refrigerator in
good coniHtion $5. Call before Sat-
urday noon. 0-4 First avenue east.
FOR .SALE — REMINGTON TVPE-
wrlter and upright piano; a bargain.
2;M West Superior street. Room 210
FOR SALE— HOUSEHOLD FURNI-
ture, sewing machine and piano. 12
Wost First street, flat G.
FOR SALE— SECOND-HAND GO-CART
almost new. 1j23 Jefferson street.
FOR SALE — SANITARY COUCH. COM-
plete, dresser, combined oak l)Ook-
case and writing desk; also mahog-
any writing desk. 13 West Fourth
street. _
FOR SALE — G.VS RANGE; FIRST
class; 112. Also electric heater cheap.
70i>^ East Fourth tareet.
FOR S.\LE— AT A LOW PRICE. SEC-
ond liand full dress suit and white
vest in good condition, size 42, at
Karl J. Hagbergs tailor shop, 9
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern e.xcept heat. S. S. William-
son 515 Torrey building; both "phones.
FOR RENT— SEVEN -ROOM HOUSE AT
221 East Third street.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM HOUSE AT
Lakeside; furnace heat; good barn;
on Improved street; $25 per month.
J. D. Howard & Co., 216 West Supe-
rior street^
FOR RENT — FINE BRICK DWELL-
ing iiouse; eight rooms; hardwood
finish; hardwood floors throughout;
hot water heat; $60 per montli. 223
East Second street. J. D. Howard
& Co., 216 West Superior street.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM HOUSE, 607
We.st Third street. Apply to Henry
Tavlor, 003 Palladio building. Zenith
'phone 2066- Y.
WANTED — AT ONCE, GIRL FOR
general housework or a young girl
to assist. 220 East Second street.
W.VNTED —
housework.
GIRL FOR GENERAL
114 East Fourth street.
FARM AND FRUIT LANDS.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE — 160 ACRES OF LAND AT
|10 per acre in 54-17, two and a half
miles from D. W. & P. station with
good house and barn. Address A. A.
Stauty, Cotton, Minn.
• WANTED— FIRST-CLASS BOARD AND
room by four gentlemen with all
good habits, within walking distance
of business district, Address W 39,
Herald.
FOR SALE — SMITH REALTY COM-
pany have got new prices on their
farm and acre tracts. See them early
for a good snap. 524 Manhattan.
WANTED — SWEDISH GIRL FOR
general housework- newcomer pre-
ferred. 3432 Allendale avenue. Wood-
land; new 'phone. Grand 1986-A.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; B 5 St. Regis flats. Sec-
ond avenue east and Second street.
Call mornings.
WANTED
late dipjx
Candy K
street.
EXPERIENCED CHOCO-
)er; steady work. Duluth
itchen, 307 West Superior
WANTED-
St. Croi.v
-DINING
avenue.
ROOM GIRL. 151
SITUATION WANTED— FEMALE.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG LADY
would like general office work. Ad-
dress O 25, Herald^
SITUATION WANTED — GRADUATE
nurse of five years' experience In
private nursing, wishes position as
general nurse (excluding surgery) In
a Duluth hospital; best references.
Address Nurse, care Herald.
BOARD WANTED — WANTED TO
board two little girls, 7 and 9 years
old, where there are no small chil-
dren. Grand 2190-D.
CLOTHES CLEANED & PRESSED.
JOHN MUELLER,
street.
208 WEST FIRST
Zenith Valet — French
repairing. ?13 West
1834. Grand 1134-D
dry cl«ianlng and
Firs' St.. Mel.
PHOENIX DRY CLEANING . CO.—
Skirts dry cleaned, 50c. Zenith phone
Grand 1852-X. 10 Fourth avenue W.
BUSINESS CHANCES.
Duluth's
Leading Business Chance Brokers.
DULUTH BUSINESS EXCHANGE,
509 Torrey Building.
FOR SALE— ONE OF THE BEST CON-
fectlonerles In the city; dally sales
average $17. l^^ice $1,400; easy
terms. Will stand investigation.
STUATION WANTED — YOUNG
woman with good education, desires
office position; have a knowledge
of shorthand and typewriting; will
work for small wages for the ex-
perience. N 21, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — A MIDDLE-
aged widow would like a position
as housekeeper for a widower with
a small family, or other light work,
or nursing. K 52, Herald.
WANTED— GOOD GIRL
al housework; good
Fifteenth avenue east.
FOR GENER-
wages. 423
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
biitli and electric lights, water paid.
Inciuire 731 West Second street.
FOR RENT — MODERN TEN-ROOM
house; 329 Fourth avenue west. E
H. Lower. Room 22, Mesaba block.
FOR S.ALE — PURE EARLY ROSE
sweet potatoes. Dulutli Grain &
Pro<luce Co.
FOR :SALE — FURNITURE OF SEVEN-
r.'om house, 1114 East Third street.
FOR S.VLE— SMALL
In good shape for
East Third street.
REFRIGERATOR
sale cheap. 242U
FOR SALE— FURNITURE IN A SIX-
room steam-heated flat. Address W
68. Herald.
^ FOR SALE. #
One piano player, the latest 88- •^
n<>t»»; mahogany case; beautiful ;¥■
aiti.in: inciuding twelve rolls of 9c
niu.<lc, bench, sl'>'^l an-1 scarf, for ^
$3.'.J: $25 oasii and $10 per month, ic
FRENCH & BASSETT.
FOR RENT— PLEASANT COTTAGE ON
Park Point; all convt-nlences; water,
gas, electric lights, use of boat; large
fireplace. Inquire 322i> Minnesota ave-
nue.
WANTED— TWO YOUNG LADIES
who mean business to travel and take
light parts on the stage; one for child
part. Salary. $12 a week and ex-
penses. R. Allen, manager, care The
Melrose. 318 West Second street,
luth, Minn.
Du-
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; family of two. Mrs. A.
W. Kuehnow, 1805 East Second
street
WANTED — ^EXPERIENCED MILLI-
nery trimmer and maker. 6 East
First street. Mrs. Sharpe.
FOR RENT — FOUR-i:OOM FUR-
ntshed cottage on Park Point, elec-
tric lights, hardwood floors. 1626
Minnesota avenue.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE;
three lots for garden; No. 927 Ninth
avenue west. Apply to H. Gould,
Eighth avenue west and Tenth street.
FOR RENT — 521 WEST SECOND
street, ten rooms, steam heat, mod-
ern throughout; make a good room-
ing house, $50 per month. J. D.
Howard & Co., 2 16 West Superior
street.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM COTTAGE:.
2T21 We.st Second street. Call Mel-
rose 1973.
FOR RE.N'T — FOUR-ROOM COTTAGE,
i:'>l^ West First street. Inquire 1127
NVest Michigan street.
FOR SALE— NEW STEEL RANGE
and other household furnishings.
Call Melrose 4216.
FOIt .<ALE— ORGAN SUITABLE FOR
CKuntrv school, 405 North Hugo
street, Duluth Heights, Zenitii 'phone
Grand 219ti-X
FOR SALE— SECOND-HAND DESKS,
roll top style; five at i-i each, one $13.
one $20; one typewriter desk $10;
one double standing bookkeeper's
desk $20. Apply Marshall-Wells Hard-
ware company.
FOR SALE— H.\LL S.4FE. MEDIUM
size, also telephone booth. O 27,
Herald, or call Melrose 3263.
FOR RENT — 927 EAST THIRD
street, five- room detached cottage,
bath, electric lights, gas for cooking;
front and rear yard, $L'2.50. H. J.
Mullin, 403 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
iill conveniences. ' 317 West Fourth
street. Inquire 319 Wedt Fourth
street.
FOR RENT— 212 NINTH AVENUE
east; eight rooms, hardwood floors
duvvn.stalrs, furnace heat, electric
light, gas for cooking. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey building.
WANTED— KITCHEN GIRL. 30 WEST
Second street.
WANTED— GOOD CHOCOLATE DIP-
per. Winkler Bros." candy factory.
2234 West Michigan street.
WANTED— COMPETENT GIRL TO
take care of two children and do sec-
ond work. 1721 East First street.
Central Employment office, all kinds
of places filled and positions furnish-
ed for girls. Room 3, over Big Du-
luth store. Mel. 259. Grand, 620.
SITUATION WANTED — WASHING
and ironing and lace curtains to do
at home. 718 West Fifth street.
WHERE TO GET WHAT YOU WANT
Each firm a leader in its line. Consult
this list before placing your order if j'ou
want the best at a price you like to pay.
FOR SALE— RESTAURANT DOING A.
nice business; well located. Price
$500.
VERT
rooms
choice.
terms.
FOR SALE— ROOMING HOUSE,
central; good neighborhood;
always full. This Is very
Owner must leave. Price $700;
FOR SALE — BO-^VRDING HOUSE;
without question this is the best in
the city; private and exclusive;
everything the best. Price $2,000;
terms.
FOR SALE— MOVING PICTURE THB-
ater; best equipped picture house In
Duluth. Experience unnecessary.
This Is a good thing. Price $1,800;
easy terms.
AWNINGS, TENTS, PACKSACKS.
Polrier Tent & Awning Co., 106 B. Sup.
St., manufacturer and repairing.
Duluth Tent & Awning Co., 1608 W. Sup.
St. Zen. 347-X. Work guaranteed.
AWNINGS AND TENTS.
SITU.\TI0N: WANTED— SEWING BY
competent dressmaker. Call 315Vi
West Third street, rear of 313.
— COLORED
the day. Call
SITUATION WANTED
woman wishes work by
Melrose 2229.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady, position as: stenogfapher, have
some knowledge of bookkeeping;
objection to going out of town,
dress X 32, Herald.
no
Ad-
STUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady stenographer; reference. Her-
ald, Q 24.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
lady as casliler; can also operate
typewriter. Herald. O 24. •
SITUATION WANTED — WOMAN
would like to work out washing and
cleaning by the day. Call at 621
West Second street.
AMERICAN TENT &
and 3 East Michigan
AWNING CO.. 1
street. Zen. 2473.
ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTER.
We deliver all kinds of adv. matter;
best service. Interstate Distributing
service. Mel. 3547. 17 N. 5th Av. W.
JOB PRINTERS.
RANKIN PRINTING CO. — OUT-OF-
town orders a specialty. 221 West
Superior street.
KODAKS AND CAMERAS.
Eclipse Photo Supply Co., 17 4th Ave. W.
Develop and finish for amateurs.
ACCOUNTANT.
R. R. GRIFFITH, 419 Providence bldg.
'Phones: Melrose 1353, Zenith 1938.
S. M. LESTER,
building. Both
413 PROVIDENCE
pliones 862.
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework; one who can go
home nights. Call mornings. 128
Pilghth avenue east.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework. 621 Ea.st First street.
FOR RENT— 1214 EAST THIRD; SIX-
room house; iiardwood floors, gas and
electricity, laundry in l)aseraent; very
desirable. Stryker, Manley & Buck,
Torrey building.
FOR SALE.
ii-
One large oak-case Steinl;aur
piano, almost new; good tone and
aitlon. Regular price, $:;00: sale
price, $lii5; $10 cash and $7 per
month.
FRENCH & BASSETT.
FOR RENT — 6-ROOM BRICK HOUSE;
Fifteenth avenue east; modern; hard
wood floors, furnace heat, gas and
electricity. Wahl-Messer Realty Co..
2uS Lonsdale building^
FuTi RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE
with bath. 215 Vs East Fifth street.
Hartman-O'Dounell agency, 205 Lons-
dale building.
FOR RENT— A COMFORTABLE, WELL
arranged home in the East end; mod-
ern in every respect; $42.50 per
month. Whitney Wall company, 301
ToiTey building.
HORSES, VEHICLES, ETC.
HORSES! HORSES! HORSES!
MIDWAY HORSE MARKET.
"THE HORSE AND MULE HEAD-
quarters of the Northwest;" 500 to 800
hea.l of horses and mules constantly
on hand; part time given if desired.
Private sales daily. If you need draft
horses, general purpose horses, de-
livery horses, mules or railroading
or other purposes, drivers or saddlers,
we can fill your order. Every horse
sold guaranteed to be as represented.
SITUATION WANTED — DRESS.MAK-
ING and plain sewing, 2106 West
Third street.
SITUATION WANTED — PUPILS
wanted, needlework class, Saturdays
from 10 to 11:30 a. m., at 119 Ninth
avenue east.
SITUATION WANTED — MIDDLE-
aged woman des'res position at gen-
eral housework. In or out of city;
good cook; can furnish good refer-
ences. Apply K 51. Herald. ^
SITUATION WANTED — WANTED
lace curtains to do up. Call Mel-
rose 715-X.
B.^RRETT & ZIM.MERMAN,
Midway Horse Market, St. I'aul, Minn.
FOR
also
old.
FOR SALE— OR EXCHANGE
work horse. Shetland stallion;
fast trotting stallion, 3 years
Old 'phone. East 97-R^
FOR .SALE— A NOVELTY IN RIDING
bridle, made of black and white
horsehair. 1122 Ea.st Fouriii street.
-ONE TEN-FOOT
foot counter. Ap-
Storage company.
FOR S.\LE. CHEAP
counter; one eight-
ply Duluth Van &
FOR SALE— $100 PI.VNO AND FURNI-
ture; a snap If taken at once. Call
19 Lake avenue north or Grand
61 9-. \.
FOR SALE — CHEAP. ONE SECOND-
hand visible typewriter. L 43, Her-
ald.
FOR .SALE — COMPLETE BED
quire 617 Vs West First street.
IN-
Fui: RE NT-
houses all
27 and 29
27Vi
-TWO SIX-ROOM BRICK
modern; large basement;
West Fourth. Inquire
•West Fourth street.
FOR RENT— NINE ROOMS WITH
bath, furnace, fireplace and laundry.
11-9 East Third str-.-et. $5 J. E. D. Field
company. Exchange building.
FOR SALE— CLIPPING TIME FOR
your horses; one combination horse
for sale cheap. Wheaton's barn,
309 Vi West Second street.
SITUATION WANTED— MALE.
b-TUATION W.A.NTED— PUBLIC JAN-
Itor and window-washer. Prudence
Robert, the best new window-cleaner
In the city. Melrose 305. La Salle hotel.
ji<:fferson, public janItor, all
kinds of store and office cleaning.
Mel. 2623. 219 East Superior street.
SITUATION wanted — HOUSE
cleaning, carpet beating, window
and wall paper cleaning. Old phone
9652; new phone 1082. William
Chlsholm, 228 Lake avenue south.
ART GLASS AND MIRRORS.
All kinds glass; lowest prices. St. Ger-
main Bros.. 121 First avenue west.
LANDSCAPE GARDENING.
BLACK DIRT. SANDY LOAM AND
fertilizer for gardens, hot jeds, flower
beds, lawns etc.; gradi!ig, sodding
& seeding. H. B. Keedy. Bjth 'pliones.
FOR SALE— SMALL CONFECTIONERY
with three living rooms completely
furnlslied; stock, fixtures, household
goods, everything goes for $250. Rent
is only $12.50.
FOR SALE — SMALL BOARDING
house, well located; 18 rooms, 25
boarders; cheap rent; big snap. Price
is $650; easy terms.
FOR SALE — SMALL CONFECTIONERY
with four living rooms In connection.
Price $450.
FOR RALE — POOL HALL. CIGAR
stand and shoe-shining stand com-
bined, well located; doing good busi-
ness; big snap. Price $875.
M.ACHINE WORK REl AIRING.
Auto and Machine parts made. Zenith
Machine works, 207 W. ;.st SI. Old
'phone 2522.
KEY, LOCK AND SAFE WORKS.
We have
propo.=!ltlon3.
any kind of
see
hundreds of other good
Should you caro to buy
business, don't forget to
Sander Bros.' Hardware
store, 203 W. 1st St Phones:
Old. Mel. 3969; ]^ew. 228S-A.
KEVS AND MODEL VVORKS.
CARPENTER REP.UR WORK.
REPAIR OR NEW WORK DONE REA-
Bonably; plans made; estimates fur-
nished. Ole llelgetun, 2209 West
Second street. .New 'phone Lincoln
492-Y. ^
WORK DONE NEATLY. O. PEARSON.
207 W. Ist St Zen. 1274-X or Zen. 6097.
We do all kinds of carpenter work, Job-
bing a specialty: work p'iven prompt
attention. A. J. Hase, 18 West Second
street. 2203-Y.
FOR SALE— WAGON AND HEAVY
double harness; cheap. 684 Grand.
FOR SALE— A CARLOAD OF HORSES
just arrived In West Duluth this
morning; weigh from 1.000 to 1,600
pounds. Price from $75 to $2 oO, part
time given if necessary. 608 North
Fifty-sixth avenue west. Zenith
•phone 3001 Cole. ^
FOR SALE— TWENTY HEAD DRAF'T
and driving horses. llll^West Furst
street. Western Sales Stable com-
pany. . .
Foi: RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE
on Nineteenth avenue east with fur-
nace, bath, etc., one block from cais.
$;;2.50. E. D Field company,
change building.
203 Ex-
FOR RENT— TWO
flats wUh bath, etc.,
D. Field company,
building.
THREE-ltOOM
$15 and $8. E.
203 E.vchange
FOR SALE — STEWART STEEL RANGE
In fine condition; costs $42, will sell
for $20. Excellent, large base burn-
er heater costs $55. will sell for $25.
Call at 618 East Second street, up-
per flat
FOR SALE— .STANDARD TYPEWRIT-
er. good condition; cash, or will trade
for anything that I can use. What
have vou? K 49, Herald.
FOR S.\LE— INCUBATORS, BROOD
ers and all poultry supplies; baby
chicks 15 cents and up; any breed
hatched to order; flower and garden
seeds in bulk; northern grown;
shrubs, roots, bulbs and trees. W.
W. Seekins. ilorlst, 302 East Superior
street.
FOR SALE — THIRTY-FOOT CABIN,
gasolene launch; 16 horse power
Campbell motor. L 300, Herald.
FOlT SALE — OR TRADE. SECOND
hand automobile for two or five pas-
senger; slightly damaged. Call or
give us offer at 203 Providence bulld-
ing.
FOR SALE— WANTED A FEW MORE
butter customers. Owing to a recent
increase in our dairy herd we can
accommodate a limited number of
people witli butter. Jean Duluth
farm. Telephone evenings.
FOR RENT — SEVEN -ROOM HOU.SE,
rear 7 West Fourth street. ln<iuire
at Louis Oreck, 416 West Superior
street, curio store.
Full RENT— NINE OR TEN-KOOM
house, 1007 East Second street; all
conveniences; $40. Apply N. J. Up-
ham company, is Third avenue west.
FOR SALE— NICE DRIVING HORSE.
Call evenings, 219 North Twenty-
ninth avenue west.
FOR SALE— FIRST-CLASS DRI^ ING
horse; weighs 1,100 pounds; sound.
704 East Fourth street.
SITUATION WANTED — THOROUGH-
ly conjpetent bookkeeper desires po-
sition at maderate salary, X 38, Her-
ald^
SITUATiON WANTED— AS FIRST AND
second cook by man and wife. Will-
lam King, general delivery. Duluth,
or 'phone Zenith lo92-D.
CARRIAGES, WAGONS, DRAYS.
Key cutting,
fine repairs.
grinding, polishing and
2ZiA E. 2nd tt. Mel. 33S1.
TANDSCAPE GARDlllNER.
GARDEN. GRADING, SOL DING AND
pruiiing work guaranteed; also all
kinds of trees and shruL bery at the
rigiit price. Call for Cirist Engel,
310 E. 9th St., or 'phone Zen. 1960-1'.
^^■N^^a^"
If you want a high grade delivery wagon
fr buggy tiiat was built especially
For this part of the country, for least
money, call or write for catalogue.
L. iiammel Co., 300-308 East First St.
CARPET CLEANING.
SITUATION WANTED— BY YOUNG
married man as bookkeeper or time-
keeper or both; experience. Call new
•phone Ogden 739-X.
SITUATION WANTED— POSITION AS
stationary engineer; chief's license;
good references; seven years' run-
ning experience. K 48, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — TAILOR
would like work; will leave town if
necessary. U 23, Herald.
Interstate Carpet
Slnotte & Van
air cleaners and rug
West Michigan street.
Cleaning Company —
Norman, compressed
weavers, 1928
Both 'pliones.
CIVIL ENGINEERING.
Duluth Engineering Co., W. B. Patton,
Mgr., 613 Palladio Wldg. Specifications
piepared and construction superin-
tended for waterworks, sewerage, etc.
MARINE MOTOilS.
A 1909 MOEEL (CAMP-
bell> Marine Motor,
lo-horse power, for $325
— 5 -Inch bore. 5Vi-inch
stroke. 1911 models of
all sizes, at regular
Ijrices. F. II. Holm berg,
52t» Lake Ar. ii. 'Phones.
Duluth's
Leading Business Chance Brokers.
DULUTH BUSINE.SS EXCHANGE,
509 Torrey Building.
Business Chances — We buy stocks of
merchandi.se, paying spot cash. No
matter where located or size of stock,
write Eastern Salvage Co., merchan-
dise brokers, Duluth. Minn.
BUSINE.SS CHANCES — CONFECTION-
ery store doing good business, three
living room.s, furniture Included;
must be sold at once; owner leaving
city. Call at 511 Ea.st Fourth street.
FOR SALE
four-room
restaurant
coin. 33 A.
OR TRADE TWENTY
hotel; all conveniences,
in connection. Call Lin-
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Two-chair barber sliop; well
equipped and building 18 by 30 feet;
best location; can be liad at low fig-
ure. Spencer Clark, Keewatin, Minn.
BUSINE.SS CHANCES — $250 GOOD-
paying restaurant, established trade;
also good fixtures, can be bought at
your own price. Wood Purdy com-
pany. 501 Maniiattan building.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
A. Haak^msen. dealer
and exp.-rt repairer,
at J. W Nelson's, 6
East Superior street.
OPTOMETRIST AND ()PT1CIAN.
XTTr'NORBERGT^or^ WEST Su-
perior street, 110 Oak Ball building.
OPTICIANS.
CHIMNEY SWEEP.
H. Liiutson, _
1 fire hall.
relephone
sweep.
46.
It No.
FOR SALE— TWO DRIVING MARES;
also three delivery horses, weigh
from 1,200 to 1.300 pounds. S. M.
Kaner, 1219 East Seventh street.
HORSES ACCLIMATED HORSES.
Young heavy horses; several teams
for sale. Red Cliff Lumber company,
barn. Thirty-nintli avenue west^
For Sale — Forty head of draft and gen-
eral purpose horses just out of woods
to be sold cheap. 209 W. 1st St.
FOR RENT— EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE,
No. 1 West Filth street; water, sew-
er, bath, gas and electric lights, hot
air furnace for rent May 1, $30 per
month. R. P. Dowse, 106 Providence
building.
FOR .SALE— RAISE CHICKENS— IT'S
easy with the Jewel Incubator — any
one can get good results. We have
'em in all sizes. See our latest
hatch. Kelley Hardware Co.
FOR S.\LE — NEW AND SECOND-
hand engines, boilers, portable saw-
mills, planers, m.itchers, resaws. pul-
leys, shafting, hangers and boxes.
'I'hones 91.
DULUTH .MACHINERY CO.
FOR S.\LE — SAFES. OFFICE FURNI-
ture, architects' and engineers' sup-
plies, typewriters and supplies. J. S.
Ray ^Sc Co., 406 W. Sup. St. 'Phones.
FOR SALE — OFFICE FURNITURE,
also household furniture, dining ta-
bl<\ chairs and china closet. Call 1101
Alworth building. 'Phone Melrose,
Grand 201.
FOR SALE — TWO DROP-HEAD
Whites, $18 and $23; four drop-head
Singers at $10. $12, $15 and $25;
others from $5 up, all In fine shape.
White Sewing Machine store. Lake
avenue and Superior street.
FOR RENT— 5U6 FIFTH AVENUE
east, six-room house and bath, gas.
free water, $20 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck. Torrey.
FOR RENT CH E AP— S EVEN - ROOM
house, on Seventh street. West end;
city water and gas. Call new 'phone.
Lincoln 474.
FOR RENT— 1803 SOUTH STREET,
five-room house, water and sewer;
free water, $15 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck. Torrey.
FOR RENT — A MODERN SEVEN-
room house on East Second street,
near Nineteenth avenue east; two
bath rooms; hardwood finish- hot
water heat; $42.50 per month. Whit-
ney Wall company, 301 Torrey bulld-
Itig.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son. 515 Torrey building, both 'phones.
FOR RENT — 1309 EAST SECOND
street, nine rooms, modern; $45 per
month. See M. Henricksen, at Hen-
rlcksen Jewelry company.
FOR RENT — FIVE- ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage, 3439 Minnesota ave-
nue. Park Point. Inquire 102 West
First street. Bloom & Co.
ST.
Hot
JOO
FOR SALE— TWENTY-FIVE HEAD OF
horses at 811 Lake avenue north.
FOFi SALE— 30 HOltS ES
Sale & Boarding Stable,
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN,
good education, first-class references,
experienced scaler and lumber in-
spector, would like to work for re-
liable logging concern around Duluth
or Superior. W 68. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — YOUNG MAN
desires position as clerk in grocery
store; has good experience. Apply
P. M., Herald.
AT ZENITH
524 W. 1st St.
FOR SALE — HORSES'. 826 EAST
Third street. H. Inch.
FOR SALE— HORSES
company.
AT L. HAMMEL
PICTURE FRAMING.
GUJ5TAVE HENNECKE. 211 E. SUP. ST.
WANTED TO BUY.
WANTED TO BUY — A LARGE OR
small tract of land for Investment.
1 69. Herald.
WANTED TO BUY— SINGLE HEAVY
harness. Inquire 1127 West Michi-
gan street.
FOR RENT — 216 EAST THIRD
Modern eight-room brick house,
water heat. A. H. Burg & Co.,
Alworth building.
WANTED TO RENT.
WANTED TO RENT— A NICELY FUR-
nished room with bath pri\ileges and
board in German family near Christie
building. Address Narodln Vestnik.
Christie building.
WANTED — TWO OR THREE UNFUR-
nished rooms heated, suitable for
housekeeping. X 33, Herald.
WANTED TO BUY— WHITE .STEAM-
er touring car; must be reasonable;
state equipment and price. Care of
Herald, W 61.
WANTED TO BUY— A HOME IN THE
East end; we have customers for all
kinds from the lowest priced to the
highest. Have you anything to of-
fer? Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN,
23 years, any kind of work. Call
401 Palladio building.
SITUATION WANTED— BY MIDDLE-
aged man and wife, to run club
house or summer resort, experienced,
wife good cook, man can milk, care
of stock and gardenln!^, on reason-
able salary basis. Best of refer-
ences. X 36, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— BY YOUNG
man who plays vaudeville piano; also
sings Illustrated songs. Address K 65,
Herald.
DANCING AND LESSONS.
Dance every evening at 224 W. 1st St.,
except Monday; also dancing taught.
DENTIST.
Dr W. H. Olson, 222 New Jersey Bldg.
AH work guaranteed. Both 'phones.
C. C STAACKE, 106 WES']' SUPERIOR
street. Open Wednesday and Satur-
day evenings.
BUSINESS CHANCES— WANT TO EX-
cliange for farm, stock of merchan-
dise, with store and fixtures, located
In growing farming town. What
have you? G. A. RyUberg. 417 Torrey
building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $1,300 BUYS
niovlng-piiture show clearing from
$100 to $200 monthly; $609 will
handle. Wood Purdy company, 60l
Manhattan building.
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING.
DON'T SCRAP A
or machine part
steel, aluminum
have conferred
Spring, 313 East
•phones: Bell, Mel
974.
BROKEIN CASTING
of any size of iron,
or brass until you
with us. Buck &
Mlcl igan street.
974; Zen.. Grand
PATENTS,
BUSINIOSS CHANCES— A CENTRAL
corner; dead ripe for grocery and
butcher shop; who wants an ideal
liusiness corner? See the Smith
Realty company. 624 Manhattan
building.
BUSINE.SS CHANCE.S — hXHi SaLB —
Nine-room house, full of roomers;
best location in city. L 44. Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR RENT —
Small candy store doing good busi-
ness; fine location. Herald. E 23^
FOR SALE —It ESTAURANT. COM -
plete. doing good business In best
town on range; price reasonable;
terms cash. For particulars call or
write Mr.s. John Burby. Marble, Minn.
SITUATION WANTED — PAINTING
and paper hanging at low prices.
Grand 2171-D.
SITUATION WANTED— BY FIRST-
class painter; doing good work at
low prices. Address Joseph Damen,
3810 Halifax street. Calumet L 284.
SITUATION WANTED— EXPERIENC-
ed shipping clerk would like to
change his position; has been with
wholesale meat concern five years;
references A-1. Address W «4, Her-
ald.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
married man; experienced collector
and office work, or as assistant credit
man and collector; best of refernces
furnished. Address C. G.. care Herald.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG MAN
accustomed to hospital work, would
like other employment. Not afraid
of work. Can furnish good refer-
ences. K 205. Herald.
DRAYING AND TRANSFER.
STEWART TRANSFER LINE— MOV-
Ing baggage, freight, expert piano
movers; prompt service. 'Phones 334.
Office 19V4 Fifth avenue west.
DECORATING & WALL PAPERING
See Strongquist & Moyer at 306 E. Sup.
St., about your papering, tinting,
painting and home decorations. You'll
be satisfled. Both '"*^ones.
DRY CLEANING AND PRESSING.
WOR-- GUAl.ANTEED.
Works. Old, Melrose
2474.
CITY DYE
1942. Zenith
ENGINEERING.
NORTHWEST ER.1 ENGINEERING CO.,
Duluth, Minn.
Architects, Mechanical and Electrical
Eng.; Plans, Estimates ; nd Specifica-
tions. Complete rtlne Equipments a
specialty. Mel. 3912. P. O. Box 685.
PATENTS.— ALL ABOUT
See Stevens, 610 Sellwotd
PATENTS,
building.
PLUMBING AND REPAIRS.
JAMES GORMAN— YOUR
jobbing work promptly
1 Twenty-tljlrd avenue
'phone. Grand lo7.
PLUMBER;
attended to.
west. Zenith
Geo. W. Palmer,
'phone, 1688-A.
Ill E. lit St.. Zenith
Early end late.
RUG WEAVI>G.
FIRST-CLASS RAG AND
weaving. Melrose 3341.
.FILLER RUG
PAINTING AND PAPERHANGING.
BUSINESS CHANCE.S— MUST DISPOSE!
of real estate holdings in East end
of Duluth. I'arty having from $3,000
to $4,000 cash can place It to good
advantage, if you act in time; in-
vestigate. Address owner, S 370.
Herald.
BU.SINESS CHANCES— AN OPPOR-
tunlty of a lite In bakery, an im-
mense paying proposition; nets $3,500
year. Standard trade year around.
Smith Realty Co., 524 Manhattan.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Confectionery store doing good busi-
ness; fine location; bargain If taken
at once. See Commercial Business
Brok-ers, 206 Alworth building^
BUSIN E.SS CH.'VNCES— CONFECTION-
ery; $100 for fixtures and Invoice
stock; daily sales better than $20;
splendid buy. Wood I'urdy company,
501 Manliatien building.
DO IT NOW
costs less
BEFORE THE RUSH. IT
and can take time to do
better work; estimate!) free. Call
Zenith. 959-A and I will bring sample
books. J. D. McCurdy. corner Third
avenue west and Second street.
FOR PAINTING AND DECORATING
see Youngdahl & Dlers, 223 W. 2nd. St
WANTED TO BUY— TWENTY, FORTY
or eighty-acre improved or unim-
proved farms; If you have anything
for sale bring it in. Whitney Wall
company, 301 Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY— HIGHEST PRICES
paid for men's old clothing. Phoenix
Dry Cleaning Co. Zenith, 1852-X.
10 Fourth avenue west.
Wanted to Buy — Highest price for cast-
off men's clothing. N. Stone, 213 W.
1st St. Melrose 1834; Zenith 1134-D.
We buy second-hand furniture and
stoves. Lincoln 295'X. 1629 W. Sup. sr.
DYE WORKS.
ZENITH CITY DYE WORKS— LAR-
fest and most reliable. All work
one in Duluth. Work called for and
delivered. 'Phones: Old, 1154-R; new,
1888. 232 East Superior street.
Duluth Dye Works — French dry clean-
ing; fancy dyeing. Old 'phone, Mel-
rose 4191; new, 1191-A. 330 B. Sup. St
Northwestern Dyelny & Cleaning Co.—
Oldest reliable dyer* and French dry
cleaners In Nortlrwest 23 Lake Ava
north. 'Phones: New, 1516; old. 1337.
NATIONAL DYEi:<a AND CLEANING
company, 319 E. Sui»rlor St French
dry cleaners and fahcy dyers. Both
■phones 2376. Branch, 15 Lake Ave. N
FLORIST.
J, J. Le Borlous,
Floral funeral
florist 921 E. 3rd St.—
designs, cut flowers.
FURNITURE RECOVERED.
Let Forsell do your
334 E. Superior St
UPHOLSTERING.
Zenith 'phone 949.
FURNITURE AND PIANOS.
HOOFING, CORNICE, SKYLIGHTS.
J M QUICK, JOBBING AND REPAIR
'ing. 631V4 E. Sup. St Zen., 1257-^
A.
BURRELL & HARMON, 308 E. Sup.
Both phones. First-class work.
St
RIFLES AND tUNS.
BU.-^JNESS CHANCE.S— $675 BUYS 13-
room rooming house, Income $125
monthly; best paying place in the
city. Wood Purdy company, 501
Manhatten building.
BUSINESS CHANCE.S— FOR SALE—
Up-to-date double store. This Is one
of the finest buildings and best loca-
cations In Marble. Address Box 31.
Marble, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCE.S— FOR SALE—
Bargain; confectionery store; make
us an offer on this; owner sick. In-
quire Duluth Business Exchapge. 509
Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— FOR SALE—
Rooming house; flrst-class; very
central; neat and clean; big bargain;
price $650. Duluth Business Ex-
change 509 Torrey build«ng.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE-
One Babcock soda fountain complete.
For further Information Inquire Jo-
seph Shearer, lock box 27. Park llap-
ids, Minn.
BUS1NE.SS CHANCES — ARE YOU
looking for acres to plat? I have a
tract of land across the St Louis
river from the steel plant site. This
can be sold in lots at a big profit
If interested write W. 63 Herald.
WANTED TO BUY — OLD CLOTHES,
auto and carriage tires. 328 East Su-
perior street. Zenith 20I3-D.
WANTED TO BUY — FOR CASH.
rooming house, hotel or would con-
sider some other business. Call at
once. 509 Torrey building.
East End Dyeing and Cleaning Co..
926 E. Superior St. Grand 1245-X.
MeL 4628. All our work guaranteed.
LADIES' TAILORING.
DANFOiiTH.
131 West Sapierior street
Plumes cleaned and dyed any color.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. Miss
FltzPatrick. 50i-4 fi. 4th St Both
'phones.
Finished and
son. 336 E.
repaired,
Sun. St.
Theo. Thomp-
Old 'phone 2«28.
INTERPRETER.
V. D. NICKOLICH,
for several foreign
Al orth building.
INTERPRETER
languages. 301
HORSE SHOEING.
Shoeing crippled and
my specialty. Carl
Interlerlng horses
Schau, 14 3d Av. E.
IMPROVED SHOE REPAIRING.
MONEY SA\^.f(
saving. While
works.
TIME SAVING, SHOE
you wait Gopher Shoe
Grinding and Repairing a
specialty. City Gun Store,
R C. KJ^USCHKE,
402 Vl'est Superior Street
SECOND HAND DEALERS.
New and second-hand Koods bought,
sold. A. B. Davis. 1729 W. Sup. St
SIGN AND CARD \\ RITING.
For signs o' a-nv description, call
1277-D on Zen. 'phone. A. E. Schar.
SWEDISH MASSAGE.
A. E. il.r^NSEN. MASSEUR, 400 NEW
Jersey building. Old phone 4273 Mel.
rose.
Mrs.
or
Westlind, massage, treated at ofTfc*
at your home. Zen. Grand 2246-X.
MBS. H. WIKING. SWEDISH MAri-
sage. 305 East First St Melro.se 4 494.
Mrs. Calmodeen, Room 7. Wlnthrop blk.
4th Av. W. and 1st St Grand 2078tY.
WALL PAPER ANB PAINTS.
. Erlckson Is still in }uslness, with
the latest In wall paper and fresh sup-
ply of paint. 1926 W. : nd. Entrance
20th Ave W. Estimates furnished.
Subscribe lor Tbe Heralit
WATCH REPAIRING.
Watch hospital; oleaninr and repair-
ing at lowest prices. lUrg Bros., 112
S. Sup. St
ASHES AND GARBAGE.
REMOVED PROMPTLY, ZENITH 2
X. 807 S'xth avenue west.
il*.
REMOVED ON
Barrett, 1122
SHORT NOTICE— DICK
e. 4th St Zen 1945-Y
ASHr':s. garbage:
moved promptly,
nlth 1488-X.
AND MANURE RB-
Melrose IHHO. 'Im-
SEEDS, PLANTS, TREES.
FOR SALE — TREES AND SHRUBS,
plants and flowers; gardening done
by the day or contracC Call O, V^
ilercer. Mel. 3645,
- — ^^
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Thursday,
THE DULUTH HERALD
Aprn 20, 1911.
RRirsiX A HERALD
ENOUGH-FOR
WAIMX AD#-AIVD RENT THAT GOOD-
OR AF^ARXIVIEIMX
HERALD WANT ADS
ARE BUSINESS GEHERS
S^YS WHOTiEY W^LL, WELL
mmu nEM. estate oealei^
J
Mr, Wall knows whereof
he speaks, because from
1 0 ads that he ran in the
Herald he received inquiry
on every one and made
several sales. Some of
the inquiries that resulted
in sales came from North
Dakota, Northern Wis-
consin and Northern
Michigan,
THAT'S WHY MR. WALL BELIEVES THE HERALD
WANT AD COLUMNS ARE WITHOUTCOMPETITION
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Adverti^t'iueiit Let^s Tlian 15 Cents,
teIjepi^onFdIrecto^
-OF—
bbblNtSS
hOUbhS
BeiOA yuu vviii &ad a
conden&eti ii:»t ox reliable
bublness tirius. This Is de-
signed lor tile convenience
oi busy people. A telephone
order lo any one of them
will receive the same care-
ful attention as would be
given au order placed In
person. I'ou can safely de-
pend upon the reliability ot
' any one oi these drms.
Old ^aeW
'Phone, 'i'lione.
ARCIHTECTS—
irranit U ioung & Co. 4478
BI'S1>F:$S COLl-KGli—
The iirocklehurst ....2568 1004
DIILI^UISTS —
Eddie Jeronlmus 1243 1027
LSoj'ce 163 163
Smitli & Smith... 2S0 7
DYE WOKKS
Zenith Ciiy L»yework8.1888 1888
Northwestern Dyeing
& Cleaning Co 1337 1516
Natiunal Uyeing &
Cleaning Co 2376 2376
Interstaie Cleaning &
Uveing Co.. -Kelly a 'ZaSO 30
GUUlKHis —
Thatcher & Thatcher.. 1907
LAL.NUHIES —
Peerless i^aundry .... 428
Yale Laundry 479
Lut^s Laundry 447
Home Laundry Co.... 478
:Mt.dcl Laundry 2749
MII.LI.XEK —
M. A. Cox 4576
MEAT .MARKETS —
Mork Bros 1590
SUliK UKI>AIKI.\G —
Olstn, 410 E. 4th St. ..
428
4V9
4-i7
478
1302
1S9
1029-QC
One Cent a Word Eaen Insertion.
No Advcrtl^ejiicnt Less Tban 15 Cents.
HELP VVANliD^FEiALE
a-
is-
*
a-
•J*
WANTED. 7'^
Experienced saleslady for talking •^
machine department; none other ■j^
need apply. •jg.
FRENCH & BASSETT.
'rV
>V-^ii? :^<^;'^*^*3f'**^-^g'*'****#i^S?'SW^
WANTED — GIRL THAT CAN GO
home nights to assist with house-
work and care of baby. Call at, No.
916 East First street upstairs.
WANTED— SALESLADY FOR CLOAK
and suit department; only first-class
need apply. Kris & Rcr 3 company,
32 East Superior street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; Scndlnavian preferred;
good wages to right party. 2207 West
Third street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; family of two; must be
good cook; no other need apply; best
of wages paid. 725 East First street.
Wanted — Dressmaking at home. 522 4th
Ave. E. Old phone, Melrose, 434.
WANTED — GIRL 501 EAST SECOND
street.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework, %10 per month.
2429 East Third street.
WANTED — CHAMBERMAID AT
Saratoga hotel. 513 West Michigan
street.
WANTED — CO.AIPETENT GIRL FOR
general hou.sework. 315 Second ave-
nue east.
WANTED — AT ONCe] COMPETENT
sewing girl. 2022 East Fourth street.
REAL ESTATE, FIRE
INSURANCE AND
RENTAL AGENCIES.
John A. StepMenson & Co., Wolvin bkig.
E. D. Field Co.. 203 Exchange building.
L. A. Larsen Ci>., Providence building.
H. J. Mullin, 403 Lonsdale building.
W. C. .Sherwood, 118 Manhattan bldg.
FOR SALE JIISCELLANEOIS.
WAN'Ii^D — AT ONCE, EXPERIENCED
woman second cook. Call forenoons.
Esmond hotel, Twentieth avenue
west and Michigan street
WANTED — COMPETENT MAID FOR
general housework, two In family.
Mrs. T. F. Lynch, 1607 Jefferson
street.
WANTED— GOOD, COMPETENT GIRL
for general housework; good wages.
317 East Third street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; small family. Call 11
Ea.st Third street.
WANTED — A HOUSEMAID. CALL
Melrose 3247.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework. 1106 East Supe-
rior street.
WANTED — NEAT GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. 801 East First
street.
MERCHANTS, WAKE UP AND TAKE
NOTICE I
WANTED — COMPETENT CHILD'S
nurse. 2615 East Third street. Mel-
ro.se, 1653.
Our lease expires May 1. Will sell
pairs or whole stock of men's shoes
at a large discount from our whole-
sale prices. Stock will now Invoice
about $2,000.
Remember the early bird gets the
worm. This Is your opportunity to buy
a bargain.
We have discontinued making hand-
made men's and boys' work shoes.
Have already sold our plant and must
sell our stock before moving time.
Time will be given to well-rated
parties. All of our display tables are
for sale.
Stock on sale at retail at 328 West
Superior street, St. Louis Hotel block.
P. LARSON, MANUFACTURER,
328 WEST SUPERIOR ST,
DULUTH. MINN.
FOR SALE — EGGS FOR HATCHING
R. C. White Wyandottes; $1 for thir-
teen eggs; Black Minorca. $1 for thir-
teen eggs. Address 429 Sixth avenue
west. New 'phone. Grand 2154-Y.
tFOR SALE. ii-
# One rosewood-case Steinway piano -^
i^ in splendid condition, for |125. ■^
# (10 cash and |5 per month.
FRENCH & BASSETT.
WANTED — GOOD KITCHEN GIRL.
Bon Ton bakery.
WANTED — SEWING GIRL.
405, Temple building.
ROOM
WANTED — YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. Mrs. J. S. Lane, 421
Fifth avenue west.
WANTED — COOKS, WAITRESSEl.
chambermaids and kitchen help; out
of town orders solicited. Park Em-
ployment agency, 15 Lake avenue
north.
W^ANTED— CHAMBERMAID AT ONCE.
Hotel McKay.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook; laun-
dress employed; reference required.
2401 East Fifth street.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral housework. Apply 1509 Jeffer-
son street.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advertisement Lcbs Tliun 15 t:ent8.
HELP WANTED— MALE.
ii. BOYS! GIRLS! MONEY AFTER *-
* SCHOOL! *
if- Send us your name and address, •jt-
■^ Wo will send you twenty pack- *•
-;!^ ages of our Handy Sheet Bluing. «•
■^ You can sell them after school. *
# Send us $1 and keep |1. The Nora %
•^ Novelty company, Duluth, Minn. *
WANTED — Bright men to train as
chauffeurs; practical Instruction giv-
en. Auto Owners' association, 1312
Hennepin avenue, Minneapolis.
LEARN TELEGRAPHY NOW.
Earn |60 in railroad position In spring.
Excellent opportunity; don't miss IC
Write Thompson's Telegraph lusti-
tute, MlnneapollB.
WANTED — COAT MAKERS, STEADY
work. H. W. Hodgon company, 230%
West First street.
WANTED— MEN TO KNOW WE GROW
a head of hair or no pay. Bryant &
Co.. room 12, Phoenix building. Mel-
rose 3257.
Men to learn barber trade. It's easy.
Positions waiting. Good wages. Cat.
free. Moler Bar. College, Minneapolis.
WANrED — GOVERNMENT EM-
ployes. Send postal for Duluth exam-
ination schedule. Franklin Insti-
tute, Department 148-F, Rochester,
N. Y.
WANTED — FEW YOUNG MEN TO
take subscriptions for magazines.
Apply 25 South Fifty-eighth avenue
west.
WANTED— AN EXPERIENCED MAN
to work in a small laundry; one who
can take a small tinancial interest
desired. X 39, Herald.
WANTED— MAN AND WIFE TO RUN
small clubhouse on range; must be
experienced. Inquire 706 Lonsdale
building.
WANTED — MARRIED MAN WHO UN-
derstands improving land to work on
farm. Call 703 Torrey building.
WANTED — REGISTERED OR As-
sistant registered pharmacist. Lion
Drug Store, 2030 West Superior St.
WANTED— HANDY MAN, FAMILIAR
with horses, to do general chore
work. Apply W 66, Herald.
WANTED — COUNTERMAN. ROYAL
lunch, 1021 Tower avenue, Superior,
Wis.
WAN 1 ED — MAN AND WIFE WHO
understand gardening to take
charge of a profitable garden on lib-
eral terms; no house rent. Apply
O 22. Herald.
WANTED — LOCAL REPRESENTA-
tive in each range town. 516 Colum-
bia building, Duluth, Minn.
WANTED — CARPENTERS, GRIG-
non's shipyard, Eleventh avenue west.
WANTED — YOUNG MAN, 21 TO 30
years of age, for statistical work.
Only man of previous experience need
apply. State age, married or single,
previous experience and references.
T 34, Herald.
WANTED — BRICK SETTERS; SET-
ting gang for brickyard of 50,000
moulded brick, daily capacity; rack
and pallett system; wages 50 cenlP
per 1,000. Alsip Brick & Tile com-
pany, Fort William. Ont.. Can.
WANTED— PRESSFEEDER; PLATEN
and cylinder, or platen; good wages
and fine chance to learn. The Vir-
ginian, Virginia, Minn.
PERSONAL.
PERSONAL — PROF. GIRARD, CLAIR-
voyant and palmist, 20 West Superior
street, upstairs. Six questions an-
swered by mail. |i. Send date of birth
PERSONAL— C. O. KRISTENSEN POL-
ishes pianos and furniture at your
home. 'Phone Hogan &, Co., Both
'phones.
MRS. VOGT WISHES TO ANNOUNCE
to all her friends and to any one
wishing work done in the hair drc s-
ing, manicuring and massaging line,
that she Is again located at 17
East Superior street, upstairs, where
she win be pleased to greet them.
PERSONAL — WANTED, PLACE TO
board 4-year-old boy where there are
no other children. Call 19 Fifth ave-
nue west at 6 p. m.
PERSONAL— IF YOU CONTEMPLATE
going into the moving picture busi-
ness, better consult us, we can fur-
nish your place complete. Picture
machines, all makes, new and sec-
ond-hand hand experts to install
same. Large list of good houses for
sale. Northwestern Bupply Co., 129
West Superior street, Duluth, Minn.
WANTED — MANDOLIN AND GUITAR
players. L 45, Herald.
PERSONAL — COMFORT, BEAUTY
shop, 20 W. Sup. St., upstairs. Mani-
curing, 25c; shampooing and hair-
dressing, 50c; switches made from
combings. Both phones.
PERSONAL— WHY NOT GET AWAY
from washday troubles by sending
your family wash to us; 5 cents per
pound. Lute's laundry, 808 East
Second street. Both 'phones 447.
PERSONAL — MANICURING AND MAS-
sage. 813 Torrey building.
MRS. VOGT. HAIR DRESSER. IS NOW
located at 17 East Superior street,
upstairs.
PERSONAL— I WILL WRITE YOUR
ads, reports, pamphlets and pros-
pectuses, furnish you with facts, ar-
guments, literary and historical ma-
terial for debates, club papers and
orations, correct and revise your
MSS. and boost your enterprise. Don
Carlos W. Musser, 712 Torrey build-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2024.
PERSONAL — ELECTRIC RUG AND
carpet cleaning. James Morgan. Mel-
rose 1902; Zenith 2222.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral hous*ework. 1106 East Superior
street.
(Continued on paee 19.)
WANTED— YOUNG NURSE GIRL DA-^'
times for 2-year-old child, walking
distance. 1622 East Fourth street.
WANTED — THE NEW METHOD
Dressmaking school teaches you to
become a dressmaker in six weeks;
make dresses for yourself or others
wnile learning. 310 West Second
street, next to Y. M. C. A. building.
WANTED— GIRLS IN PACKING ROOM
with experience preferred. Apply
Caldwell Coffee Co., 122 East Michi-
gan street.
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. Mrs. Norton, 40
Forty-eighth avenue east.
WANTED — DISH WASHER; GOOD
wages. 2531 West Superior street.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework, small family. 131
East Second street.
WANTED — GIRLS AT MRS. SOM-
mers' employment office, 15 Second
avenue east.
(Continued on pace 18.)
One Cent a Wwrd Each Insertion.
No Advertisement Less Than 15 Cents,
ADDlf^
ON PAGES 18 and 19
FARM AND FRUIT lands!
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
301 Torrey Building.
FOR SALE— A FARM OF 120 ACRES,
suitable for dairy or truck farming;
forty acres cultivated; buildings and
other improvements worth more than
price asked. A bargain, ?3,600.
FOR SALE — IN TOWN OF WREN-
shall, 160 acres, three miles from
Fond du Lac, near sawmill. Land is
heavily timbered with maple and
birch. No swamp or rock, fine, h<eavy
black loam soil. Good trout stream.
Price |17 per acre; small cash pay»
ment, balance easy monthly pay-
ments. Will trade for small home in
Duluth.
FOR SALE — NEAR BOULDER LAKE,
160 acres on Vermilion road, at $10
per acre; terms to suit. Torrens
title.
FOR SALE— SEVENTY-FIVE ACRES
on the west shore of Thompson lake
on Vermilion road, about fifteen miles
from Duluth. Will divide to suit.
Easy terms. Tornens title. Price
112.50 per acre.
FOR SALE — THREE FORTY-ACRE
tracts on Bug creek, adjoining sta-
tion of Pitt on Canadian Northern
railroad, at |5 per acre. Will make
easy terms.
FOR SALE— FIVE ACRES ADJOINING
Duluth Heights, at $300 per acre.
Easy terms.
FOR SALE— A NUMBER OF IM-
proved and unimproved farms of ten
to 160 acres, near Duluth. Let us
know your wants.
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
301 Torrey Building.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
couAty, Minn., townships 60 to 63,
ranges 14 to 17, which we will sell
in large or small tracts at very low
prices. Good location for dairying
and truck gardening. Some fine lake
shore frontages. Settlers on ad-
t Dining lands raising from 250 to 300
usheis potatoes per acre. Buy some
of these cheap lands now and be-
come independent. Call or write for
map, Minnesota Land & Dairy com-
pany, 407 Providence building.
BUY NOW AND START THAT
chicken farm you have talked about
so long — ten, fifteen and twenty acres
close to Proctor, at bargain prices.
E. H. Culkins & Co., 510 Palladio
building.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
county, Minn., in townships 60 to 63
and ranges 14 to 17, which we will
sell In large or email tracts at very
low prices. Good location for dairy-
ing and truck gardening. Some fine
lake shore frontages. Settlers on
adjoining lands raising from 250 to
300 bushels potatoes per acre. Buy
some of thes«« cheap lands now and
become independent. Call or write
Minnesota Land & Dairy company,
407 Providence building.
TEXAS INVESTMENTS.
Buy Orchards and Garden Lands at
Aldlne, near Houston, the greatest
city In the Southwest, where vailues are
growing upward all the time. Address
E. C. Robertson, 501 Kiam building,
Houston. Tex.
FOR SALE — 40-ACRE IMPROVED
farm with five-room house, barn.
1,400 shade trees, one acre apple
trees, good well; including farm Im-
plement.s. Price $1,400. L. A. Barnes
& Co.. 304 Central avenue. West Du-
luth.
FOR SALE — FIFTY-FIVE ACRE
tract on Bordon Lake, three miles
from Gordon, Wis., several trains
dally to Duluth; good soil; fine fish-
ing; beautiful shore line and trees;
summer cottages all around; price
$650, $325 cash; balance ea.sy terms.
Hclmbaugh & Spring, 1103 Tower
avenue, Superior, Wis.
Farm lands at wholesale prices. L. A.
Larsen Co., 214 Providence building.
FOR SALE — 30.000 ACRES OPEN TO
entry to settlers at lowest price,
near Cass Lake. Fred Steffen.
locater, Brookston, ^linn.
FOR S.\LE— 500 FARMS. FROM FIVE
to forty years time, at 4 per cent.
Minnesota I-<and & Investment Co.,
801 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— GOOD BARGAIN— FORTY
acres of land on railroad station, ten-
room house and surrounding btrild-
ings; also horses, cows and farm ma-
chinery; fine summer resort. Part
cash, balance easy terms. Address
W 60, Herald.
For sale — 10-acre tracts north of Wood-
land. W. M. Gill, 296 W. 5th St.. Superior.
L. A. LARSEN CO., 214 PROVIDENCE
building, wholesale dealers in blocks
of lands with mln<eral prospects.
Personal — Wringer repairing. Int'state
Merc. Co.. UN. 21st Ave. W. Zen. 787.
PERSONAL — LADIES — ASK YOUR
druggist for Chichesters Pills, the
Diamond Brand. For 25 years known
as best, safest, always reliable. Take
no other. Chichesters Diamond Brand
Pills are sold by druggists every-
where.
FOR RENT — FARM OF 25 ACRES,
with house, barns and poultry house,
three miles from car line. See E. L.
Kimball. First National Bank build-
ing.
FOR SALE — FORTY-ACRE TRUCK
farm, six miles from Duluth; 25 acres
cultivated; six-room house, barn, etc.
Included are two horses, cows and
chickens Price $3,500; will exchange
for city property. G. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
FOR SALE — FARM, CONTAINING
about 63 acres, fronting on lake, on
Cuyuna Iron range; 20 acres culti-
vated; good buildings; no mineral
reserve. Price $2,000. Easy terms.
G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM IN
south Cass county; all fenced; level
land; 12 acres cultivated; fair build-
ings; small stream. Price, $1,300. G.
A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
PERSONAL — MME. MAY FRENCH
female jegulator, best of all. Mailed
in plain wrapper. $2 a box. Orpheum
pharmacy. 201 East Superior street.
PERSONAL — COMBINGS AND CUT
hair made Into beautiful switches.
Knauf Sisters.
TIMBER LANDS.
TIMBER AND CUT-OVER LANDS
bought; mortgage loans made. John
Q. A. Crosby. 305 Palladio building.
FOR SALii:— FORTY ACRES LAND,
all white pine and spruce timber. In-
quire 709 Hammond avenue, Superior.
Wis.
I buy standing timber; also cut-over
lands. Geo. Rupley. 615 Lyceum bldg
FOR SALE — 40 ACRES LAND. ALL
white pine and spruce timber. In-
quire 709 Hammonnd avenue. Supe-
rior. Wis.
Homesteads and timber claims located.
From 40 to 80.000 acres of timber
lands for sale. 401 Palladio Bids.
FOR SALE— 10.000 ACRES IN 40 AND
80-acre tracts, close to Hibbing and
Chlsholm; good markets; forty an-
nual payments of $16 each on 40
acres, or $32 each on 80 acres, pays
both principal and Interest. For
further Information apply Guaranty
Farm Land company, 416 Lyceum
building. Duluth. Minn.
FOR SALE — LANDS IN &MALL
tracts to actual settlers only: good
location for dairying and truck gar-
dening. For further information call
on or address Land Commissioner,
Duluth A Iron Range Railroad com-
pany, 101 Wolvin building, Duluth.
Minn.
One Cent a Word Each Disertion.
No Advertisement Less Tban 15 Cents.
FOR RENT— FLATS.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
RENTAL DEPT..
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM HEATED
flat at 5 North Nineteenth avenue
east; $32.50 per month.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM APART-
ment in St. Elmo building, 721 East
First street; splendid arrangements;
beautiful view.
FOR RENT — SIX-ROOM APARTMENT
in Adams apartments, 715 East First
street.
FOR RENT— ON GARFIELD AVENUE.
Living rooms on second lloor; cheap
rent.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.,
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat; steel range
in kitchen. Call at 529 East Third
street
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM BRICK
flat, steam heated, at 10 West Fifth
street. $18 per month
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT. UP-
stalrs. all conveniences except heat;
possession May 1. Beautiful view of
lake. Call at 17 East Fourth street.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM BRICK
flat, only two blocks from Soo depot;
modern except heat.
FOR RENT — NEW FIVE-ROOM BRICK
flat, 601 East First street; hardwood
finish; beautiful lake view.
FOR RENT — SI»X-ROOM HEATED
brick flat. Eighth avenue east; very
desirable location; unobstructed lake
view.
WAHL-MESSER REALTY CO.
208 Lonsdale Building.
FOR RENT — SEVEN-ROOM MODERN
flat at 5 West Fourth street. Inquire
L. Oreck, 416 West Superior street.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM FURNISHED
Hat in the Lafayette flats, thoroughly
modern; heat, water and telephone
service furnlsned. R. P. Dowse 6t Co.,
100 Providence building.
FOR RENT— MAY 1, A FOUR-ROOM
flat, with bath; hardwoo'd floors,
electric light and gas; very central.
W. C. Sherwood & Co., 118 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR RENT — ELEGANT FIVE-ROOM
flat central. 508 North Third.
FOR RENT — VERY FINE SEVEN-
room apartment in new Berkshire
apartments, corner Eight avenue east
and First street. Rental department.
John A. Stephenson & Co., Wolvin
building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT, 225
West Fourth street; water and elec-
tric light; water paid. H. Liga, caro
S. H. Knox company.
FOR RENT— FOUR OR FIVE- ROOM
flat, fine condition, $20 and $22 per
month; central, modern, except' heat
'Phones 597. Hudson-Lewis compan
301 Alworth building.
impany.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT. 2408
West First street; water and sewer.
Slryker. Manley & Buck. Torrey
building.
FOR RENT TWO. THREE AND
four-room flats, only five blocks from
postoffice; beautiful view of lake;
furnished with all brand new furni-
ture; equipped with gas range, elec-
tric lights and every convenience.
Call and see them at 1030 West First
street
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS
and alcove; light and bath. 1218Vit
East Fourth street Hartman-O'Don-
neil agency, 205 Lonsdale building.
FOR REN T — 219 WEST FIFTH
street, new five-room flat, bath. gas.
electric light; ready May 1. Stryktr,
Manley &. Buck. Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FURNISH-
ed flat for the summer. Inquire Flat
O, Buffalo flats. Ninth avenue east
and First street
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT. CITY
water, bath, water free. $16 per
month. J. D. Howard & Co., 216 West
Superior street.
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11 per month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FIRST-
floor flat; baths, heating plant, gas.
electricity. Inquire 410 Eleventh
avenue east, second floor.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT. 12.1 vis
East Fourth Inquire 123 East
Fourth.
FOR RENT — VERY NICE MODERN
five-room brick flat. First class con-
dition; hot water heating plant
Fourth avenue east and First street
Reasonable rent. New phone, Lin-
coln 317. .
FOR RENT— COZY FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
West Third street, near Lincoln Park,
$14, including water rent. S. W.
Richardson. 201 Exchange Bank
building. Both phones, 2046.
FOR SALE— ^EIGHTY'-ACRE FARM ON
Crow Wing river; 20 acres cleared.
20 acres meadow; good clay soil; no
buildings. Price. $1,300. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR RENT— BRICK FLAT. CORNER
of Fifteenth avenue east and Fourth
street; six rooms, bath, laundry,
storeroom, gas range, hot water
heating plant; new and up-to-date;
$37.50 per month; no children. George
R. Laybourn, 14 Phoenix block.
FOR RENT — TWO FLATS. 27 AND 29
"West Fourth street, six rooms, all
modern conveniences; furnace, gas
and electric light; large basement.
Apply at 27% West Fourth street
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT;
318 Sixth avenue east, upstairs; bath,
electric light, gas for cooking; wa-
ter paid; $16 per month. R. P. Dowse
& C^>.. 106 Providence building.
FOR RENT — SIX-ROOM STEAM
heated flat; central location; thor-
oughly modern; janitor service;
laundry tubs. Apply Corporate In-
vestment company, Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT. 19
Lake avenue north; six-room flat, 14
West First street; all modern con-
veniences. Inquire rental department
Bridgeman & Russell.
FOR RENT— 927 EAST FIFTH
Street, five-room flat. bath, water
free, $22 per month. Stryker. Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey^
FOR RENT— VERY NICE CHEERFUL
four-room flat, water, toilet, gas.
electric light, $13; Third avenue
west. Harris Realty Co., Manhattan
building.
FOR SALE— TEN ACRES OF GOOD
land Inside city limits; cash or terms.
S. H.. Herald.
SELECTED FARMING LANDS.
On line of the Alger-Smith railroad.
On easy terms to settlers.
ALEXANDER McBEAN,
Sales manager. 406 Columbia Bldg.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE-ACRB
farm, close to station In Morrison
county, on fine lake; good soil; hay
meadow; five-room house and barn.
Price, $1,700. G. A. Rydber«, 417
Torrey building.
(Continued on pase 19.)
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11.00 per month.
Water furnished. D. W. Scott & Son,
402 Torrey building.
One Cent a Word Kach Insertion.
No AdverUisement Less Than 15 Cents.
^SS^RENT^^lOOMSr
FOR RENT — FURNISHI:D ROOMS;
board if desired. 301 Blast Third
street
FOR RENT— TWO OR THllEE VERY
desirable rooms in Dodge block; very
central. Apply N. J. Upham com-
pany, 18 Third avenue vest
FOR RENT— TWO AND FOUR-ROOM
flats; water paid; $5 aid $10 per
month, 702 E. 2nd St Grand 1299-D.
FOR RENT — TWO FRONT ROOMS,
furnished for light housekeeping. 609
West Third street; $20 per month;
heated; gaM range, lights, bath,
'phone.
FOR RENT — LARGE FURNISHED
front room, suitable for two; private
family. 828 East Second street. Mel-
rose 3945.
FOR RENT— NICE FRONT ROOM AND
alcove; all conveniences. Melrose
2595; 1218 East First street
FOR RENT — TWO ROOMS. FUR-
nishcd complete for housekeeping.
Call between 4:30 and 6:3 3 p. m. 304
West Fourth street Fla-; C.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ROOM. ALL
conveniences; for two ladles or two
gentlemen. Apply 405 East Third
street.
FOR RENT— SMALL. BRIGHT, FUR-
nlshed room. $6; every ionvenlence.
Call Melrose 3081.
FOR RENT — FURN1SHE;D ROOMS;
gentlemen preferred. 206 West First
street.
FOR RENT — THREE ROOMS AT
323% East Fifth street; water, sewer
and gas; $9 per month. Inquire up-
stairs.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOM;
will allow light housekeeping. 210
West Second street.
FOR RENT — SrEAM HEATGD SINGLE;
room; r^nt desirable; £.11 conven-
iences and use of 'phone gentlemen
preferred. Call 201 Eist Second
street.
FOR RENT — FOUR FURNISHED
rooms for housekeeping; gas, steam
heat and electric light. I(i6 East Sec-
ond street.
FOR RENT— WELL FURNISHED
rooms, $2 per week and up; nice
large room and board for two *12
per week. The Latona, 122 East
First street.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOM;
modern conveniences; gentleman
preferred, references required. 410
Ninth avenue east.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED KOOM; ALL
conveniences; $6 per month. 321
Eighth avenue west; Melrose 3991,
FOR RENT — A LARGE, LIGHT,
front room well furnished; reason-
able; to gentlemen only. 220 Sev-
enth avenue west.
FOR RENT — TWO FURNISHED
rooms for light housekreping. 206
West Third street.
t uR RENT — LARGE F URNISHED
front room. 120 First a.'enue west.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED HOUSE-
keeplng suites, gas, wat< r and elec-
tric light included. La Salle hotel,
12 Lake avenue north.
FOR RENT— TWO ROOMS' .FOR LIGHT
housekeeping; all conveniences; $10
per month; upstairs in rear of 216
East Second street. F. I. Salter com-
pany, Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS;
electric lights, all conv.jnlences; $1
to $2 per week. Inquire 705 West
Third street.
FOR RENT — F'lVE ROOMS. 2322
West Sixth street; city water, elec-
tric light.
FOR RENT — NICELY FURNISHED
room in private family, uise of 'phone.
109 West F'Ifth.
FOR RENT — TWO I 'URNISHED
rooms for light housekeeping. 206
West Third street.
SECRET SOCIETIES.
PALESTINE LODGE, No. 7».
A. F. & A. M. — Regular meet-
ings first and third Monaay
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 17. 191L Work— Reg-
ular business. Rene T. Hugo. W. M.;
H. Ncsbit. secretary.
degree.
IONIC LODGE NO. 186. A. P.
& A M. — Regular meetings
second and fourth Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 24. 1911. Work — First
Walter N. Totman, W. M.;
Burr Porter, secretary.
KEYSTONE CHAPTER NO.
20. R. A. M. — Stated convo-
cations second and fourth
Wednesday evenings of each
month at 8 o'clock. Next
meeting, April 26, 1911.
Work — M. M. degree. Charles W. Kies-
wetter, H. P.; Alfred Le Rlcheux. sec-
retary.
A DULUTH COUNCIL NO. «,
R. & S. M.— Next meeting,
Friday. April 21. 1911, at i
p. m. Work — Royal and select
masters' degree. James A.
Crawford. T. L M.; Alfred Le Rlcheux,
recorder.
DULUTH COMMANDERY NO.
18. K. T. — Stated coi»clav«
first Tuesday of each montb
at 8 o'clock. Next conclave,
April 25, 1911. Work — Tem-
plar aegree. Frederick E. Hough. B.
C. ; Alfred Le Rlcheux, recorder.
SCOTTISH RITE — RKGU-
lar meetings every Thursday
evening at 8 o'clock. No
meeting until further notice.
Henry Nesbit, secretar.v.
ZENITH CHAPTER NO 25.
Order of Eastern Star — Reg-
ular meetings second and
fourth Friday evenings of
. each month at 7:30 o'clock.
Next meeting. April 28, 1911, Work —
Regular business and initiation, Eliza-
beth Overman. W. M,; Ella F, Gear hart,
secretary.
degree.
EUCLID LODGE NO. 198, A.
F. & A. M. — Meets at West
Duluth second and fourth
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meetlne
April 26. 1911. Work— First
M. M. Meldahl. W. M.; A.
Dunleavy, secretary.
FOR RENT— AFTER APRIL 15, F^OUR
nice rooms, second floor. 19 Twenty-
eighth avenue west; w.iter. sewer,
toilet, electric liglit. $10 per month.
V. I. Salter Co.
FOR RENT — LARGE I'URNISHED
room with private family; steam
heat, electric light and gas; use of
'phone and bath. Inqui:-e 124 East
Fourth street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ROOMS IN
very desirable location; jitrictly mod-
ern; one block from car Ine; with or
without board; prices right. 223
East Third street.
DULUTH CHAPTER NO. 59,
R. A. M. — Meets at West
Duluth first and third
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meeting
April 19, 1911. Work— Roy^
Arch degree and lunch. Roger M.
W^eaver. H. P.; A. Dunleavy, sectetary.
K. of P.
NORTH STAH LODGE. NO. 35, K. of P.
—Meets every Tuesd&y ereulng tl CasUv
liaU, 118 West Superior street. .Next
meeUng Tuesday evetiiiis, April 18, 8 Ik.
ni. ii'riock siiarp. First raiik worlt. Ail
knlgliLs t'ordinlly liitited. A. L. Bturgis, C. C; B. A.
Heam. K. tf K. S.
DIA.MOND LODGE, No. 45, K. of P.—
Moeta ever; Mi;iiday evening In Sloan's
hall, corner TwuiUetli avenuj west and
Superior strecc AU knlgbta cordially In-
vited. L. U. Alieu. C, C; B. L. Pl«re«,
K. of H. & 8.
KITCRI OAJUn LODGE, NO. 123. K. of
P. — MecLs every Thursday cTenh;t at Com-
mercial club Hall, Cintral avenue. West
Duluth. Next meeting Thursday, April
13th. Work, nerond rank. AU knigbla
cordially Inrtted. E. U. Nlckerson, C C; C M.
K. of R. & B.
Phlllll'S,
DVLUTU LOUGK, NO. 28, I. O. O. F.— MEETS
every Friday evening at 8 o'clock at Odil
l''elluW8' hall, 18 Lake avenue norUi.
Next meeting night. April 21. Stcond
degree. J. A. Nelson. N. O.; L. O. Mario w, Hec
Sec , A. H. Paul. Hn. Sec
WEST DLLUTU LODGE, NO. 168, I. 0. 0.
V.
-:--»_ Meets every Tuesday night at 1. O.
/^S^g\ hall. West Duluth. .Next miftlug
'*^ ^*' April 23. General buslneaa. W. E.
O. W.
nigbt
Cow-
don, N. G.; W. B. HarUey, ittc. Sec.
DULUTH ENCAMP-MENT, NO. 36. I. O.
O. 1'". — Metis on the second and fourth
Thursday at Odd Fellows hall. 18 Lake
avenue north. Next meeting night April
2'. Itojal purplo degree voUng. E. An-
derson, 0. P.; L. G. Marlow, Ucc. .Scribe.
FOR RENT — THREE LAR 3E NICELY'
furnished rooms for housekeeping,
bathroom, sink and electric light. 3.;4
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR RENT — NICELY I'URNISHED
rooms. $1 per week an! up; light
housekeeping allowed. 314 East Sec-
ond street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED FRONT
room with all conveniences; for one
or two; pleasant view, 313 West
Fourth street.
FOR RENT— 3516 WEST THIRD.
Five rooms, bath, gas and city wa-
ter; $14 per month, In(iuire down-
stairs.
FOR RENT — NICELY' FURNISHED
room; all conveniences; $8 per month.
617^,^ "West First street
THREE ROOMS NICELY I'^URNISHED
for $69; this includes firniture for
kitchen, dining room and bedroom.
Terms. $1.50 per week. Why not
own the furniture in ;,-our apart-
ments or rooms instea<l of paying
rent on it See F, S. Kelly Furniture
company.
FOR RENT — THREE ROOMS. ELEC-
trlc light and all conveniences, $10
per month. Inquire 1203 West Fourth
street.
FOR RENT — TWO UNl'URNISHED
rooms for light housekjeping; also
single furnished room; all conven-
iences, 1315 East Slxtli street.
AUTOMOBILES.
1 AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE, i(-
^ i^
if. New 1911 model M. Thomas *
a- flyers, teeven-passenger. Private ^
'^ service a specialty, Boi.h 'phones *
■» 694, ie
S. G. W. DAZIEL, it
* Solicitor and Openitor. "j^
FOR SALE — FIVE-:?ASSENGER
touring car and one didivery auto.
In good condition; must be sold at
once regardless of pries. For par-
ticulars address "Auto," care Herald.
K. o. T. M.
DtT^UTU TENT, NO. 1— MEETS EVEBT
Monday, 8:15 p. m., at M:icabe« hall.
i;l Lake avenue north. VUitlug mem-
l)ers always welcome. V. C. Freer,
riiramander, flat *. Munger row. Weat
Duluth; J. B. Gelliieau, record keepec.
office in hall. Hours. 10 ». m. t« I p. m.. ilaiJl.
Zenllh "phcne. Grand 61B-X. ^
A. O. V. W.
riDELlTY LODGE, NO. 105 — MEETS
at Maccal*e hiiU, il Lake avenue north.
every Tiiursday at 8 p. m. Vi.sltln«
members welct.mc. M. Cossl, JL W. ; A.
E. Pieriiig. recorder; O. J. MurroW, 11-
na ncicr. 217 East Fifth street.
MODERN SAMAIIITANS.
ALPHA COUNCIL, NO. 1— TAKE NO-
lloe that Samaritan degree meet* flsrt
and third Thuridajs; beneflcem. second
and fourth Thursdays. Lucy A. Purdy.
Lady G. S.: N. B. MorrUcn, G. S.; Wal-
lace P. Welbanks, scribe; T. A. Gall. F.
S First National Bank building.
UNITED OltDEIl OF FOUESTEHS—
Court Eastern Star, No. 86, meeU evea
first ai;d third Tuesday at U. O. F.
liall, comer Fourth avenue west and
First street. Chas. V. Hanson. 0. B..
,_. 607 West Fifth street: A. »• ,V'""<*i J!?'
retarj- 1031 West First etrct. Harry MlL.es trea*-
urei. room 23. Winthrop block. Zenith 'phone 1J80-X.
(MPEUIAL*CAilP. NO. 2|!06 - M^^,
at U O F. hall. Fourth avtnue wert
and "Fixat stt«t. second and fourUl
rucsdays of e.-ich month. Hancj W.
Wlke, ooMul; C. P. Earl, clerk. I'ox «":
F. E. Doremus. deputy; addiesa. i*. r.
rrcigbt office.
CLAN STEWART, NO. 50. O. 8. C—
Meets first and third Wednesdays each
mouth, 8 p. m., at U. O. F. liaU, corner
J- ourtli avenue wist and First street. Next
retular meeting, April 19. Robert Fer-
guson, chief; Don McLennan, secretary;
Joi.n i5.iaictt. Fin. Sec., 312 Torrey building.
KOYAL ARCANUM. Duluth CouucU, No.
X483 — Meets second and fourth 'fuesday
evenings, Macabee ball. 21 Lake aveniw
north. Clinton Brooke, atcretary. 401
Columbia building.
Mcsaba Council, No. 1493— Meets first
^ and tlilrd Wednesday evenUigi. ColumliU
haa West end. A. M. Jobusou, secretary, 117 .Ncrlii
TweiiUetb avenue west.
ORDER OF OWLS, DULUXa
Neat, No. 1200— Meetings are betd
every Wednesday of each muatb at
Owls' baU, 116 W»i Superloi street.
Jostph E. Fcaks. tecietar;. -2 '
b-jperior atreet.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS;
light and bath. 208 East Fourth
street Hartman O'Donnell Agency.
205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat. Call Lin-
coln 52. Melrose 1052. Room 203, An-
derson & Thoorsell block. Twenty-
first avenue west and Superior street
WE REPRESENT MAX\^''ELL, PRE-
mler. Oakland, Moline jleasure cars
and Wilcox trucks. All kinds of re-
pairing, even tire vulcanizing. Old
cars bought and sold. It will pay
you to try us. Also have automobiles
for hire. Call, 'phone oi write M. k\
Falk, Rapid Transit Aulo & Repair-
ing Co., 2110-12 W. Mich. St 'Phones
Mel. 347; Zen 47 Llncon.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL.
MRS. HANSON. GRADUATE MID-
wife; female complaints. 413 beventn
avenue east. Zenith 1225.
Mrs A Ferguson, graduate midwife:
female complaints. 2201 West Fourth
street. Zenith. Lincoln 224-Y.
S. WAROE, GRADUATE MIDWIFE
and nurse. 215 Twenty-sixth avenue
west. Zenith 'phone. Lincoln 200-D.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL— PROSPECTIViJ
mothers will find a pleasant home
before and during confinement at
Ashland Maternity home. 208 Tenth
avenue west Ashland, Wis. Infanta
cared for.
FOR RENT— FOUR-ROOM STEAM
heated flat, central location, hard-
wood floors, hot and cold water, jani-
tor service; rent $27, Corporate In-
vestment Co,
(Continued •■ V«<e 18.)
STOVE REPAIIftS.
WE CARRY IN STOCK RISPAIRS FOR
10.000 different stoves aid ranges. C.
F. Wiggerts & Son. 410 East Supe-
rior street. Both 'phom«,
PERSON^\.L — Private home for ladles
before and during confinement; ex-
pert care; everything confidential; in-
fants cared for. Ida Pearson. M. D.,
284 Harrison avenue, St. Paul, Minn.
Mrs, H. Olson, graduate midwife. Pri-
vate hospital, 329 N. 58 Av. W. Zen-
ith 3173; Calumet 173-Lu
WOMAN'S HOSPITAL — MRS. MARY
Barren, matron. 931 London r
Zenith 'phone. 1597.
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THE DULUTH
VOLUME XXIX— NO. li.
FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 21, 1911.
3EHEE3c5^o"cENTsr
NEW AND WONDERFUL ICAMORRIST AHER A MADERO'S LATEST ETIMATIIM
DISCOVERIES MADE IN MAD HARANGUE HURLS
COSMICAL EVOLUTION GLASS EYE AT JUDGE
Government Astronomer Re-
veals Results of Years
of Research.
Every Fixed Star Has a
Planetary System of
Its Own.
Living Beings Exist Wherever
a Star Twinkles in
Space.
Philadelphia. Arrll 21.— Plsooverles
In oosmlcal evolution leading to the de-
velopment of an entirely new science,
the science of cosmogony, were an-
nounced today to the American Philo-
sophical society at Its annual meeting
by Prof. T. J. J. See, government at--
troiiomer in charge of the naval ob-
servatory at Mare Island. Cal. Prof.
See said he had traveled 3,000 miles to
give Eastern men of science a first-
liand account ot his recent discovery,
which he stated had aroused Interest
in learned circles throughout the world^
Prof See was formerly in charge of
the large telescope of the naval ob-
servatory In Washington, and while
there, is said to have made the most
retlntHl measures of the planets and
.satellites yet ucoomnllshed. For the
past seven vears he has been In Cau-
fornia studying the cause of tartn-
tiuakes and mountain formations, be-
sides making discoveries in cosmogony.
Among the results announced today
was a link in the chain of reasoning
establishing the laws of the evolution
of the solar svstem. showing that the
planets originally were small bodies
forming at a great distance from the
sun, and that their masses have been
IncVfased bv gathering up all manner
of iesser bodies from meteorites to
."satellites. Collisions in this nebular
resisting medium have reduced the size
of the original orbits immensely and
made them such exact circles that the
Greek philosophers believed the Dlety
had set the planets revolving In round
orbits because the circle is a perfect
figure The.~e collisions whlcli have
rounded up the planetary orbits and
brought the satellites nearer their
several planets have also indented the
fa' e of the moon and given rise to
large craters which were formerly be-
lieved to be volcanic, but are now
proved to be due to the Impact of
satellites against the lunar surface.
Prof See cited the Investigation oi
Prof. Lehman-Filhes of the University
of Boston, and of Prof. Stromgren of
the Roval Observatory of Copen-
hagen, as verifying his discoveries on
^Continued on page 16. fifth column.)
GOT GREEN IJAIR;
SUES FOR $20,000
Work of New York Hair
Dyers Not Satisfactory
to Frisco Woman.
New York, April 21. — Because her
hair turned green instead of black
when treated with a dye supplied by
Polly & Klark, hairdressers at No. 1455
Broadway, Mrs. Adeline K, Lewison of
San Francisco has sued them to re-
cover $20,000 damages. Maurice Meyer
Is her attorney. s, * ,
Mrs. Lewiston, who is president or
the Electro-Thermal company, alleges
that she was in San Francisco when
the earthquake came, and that her
black hair turned gray from fright.
On Nov. 8 last she agreed to pay a
substantial sum to the hairdres.sers If
they could turn her hair black again
without any injury to her. she asserts.
She underwent treatment.
Mrs Lewison contends the hair-
dressers used a poisonous dye that not
only turned her hair green, but pois-
oned her face. Her nervous systeni
was affected too, and she "suffered
severe bodily pain and mental an-
^"poliy & Klark admit they agreed to
dve Mrs. Lewison's hair, but deny they
guaranteed to do so without Injury to
her. In fact, they assert, she agreed
to take the entire risk.
BRITISiTcOPYRIGHT
BILL PROGRESSES
Measure Has Passed Its
Second Reading m House
of Commons.
London, Saturday, April 15.— The
government's long promised copyright
bill has passed its second reading in
the house of commons. The measure
not only sets forth amendments based
on the copyright convention of 190g,
but codifies the common law on copy-
right and the existing statutes, num-
bering about twenty. , , i„„.
t'opyright under the amended law
would run as a general rule during
the life of the author and fifty years
after Foreign authors may acquire
cor-viight by making first publication
within the British dominions, but may
be deprived of it by the government if
the country to which they belong re-
fuses adequate protection to British
authors Imprisonment is substituted
for a fine as punishment for piracy and
there is a clause giving authors pro-
tection against performances of any
copyrighted work from pirated copies.
Photographs, graphophone records
and perforated music rolls are to have
copyright, the term being for fifty
years from the time the negative or
plate is made.
IS THAT CIUDAD JUAREZ MUST
BE EVACUATED BY FEDERALS
WILLIAM A. DAY,
First Vice President of Equitable As-
surance Company, Elected President
by Direction of J. P. Morgan, Who
Holds Majority of Stock.
HIDE REAL
INTERESTS
Farmers Pushed Forward By
Others in Reciprocity
Question.
Representative McCall Makes
Strong Speech Favormg
Trade Pact.
Falls in Faint as Prisoners
Shout and Curse
From Cages.
Successor to Leader of So-
ciety Makes Great Grand
Stand Play.
COURIER ARRIVING AT OUTSKIRTS OF MAOERO'S
GAMP WITH MESSAGES FROM INSURREGTO GRIEFS
i^>^^^S^^^^^^^^^»^^^^>^«^>^«^
— Oopjrtghted by George Grantham Bain.
GOVERNOR JUDSON HARMON,
Who Has Been Selected by the Ohio
Delegation as a Democratic Candi-
date to Groom for Presidential
Nomination.
TO BOOM HARMON
FOR PRESIDENCY
Steps
T\'ashington. April 21.— Opening the
last clay of Canadian reciprocity de-
bate in the house, Representative Mc-
Call of Massachusetts declared that the
farmers of the United States had. been
pushed forward to hide the real inter-
ests opposed to the agreement. Mr.
McCalls speech, favoring reciprocity,
was one of the most Important of the
discussion. He had charge of the bill
in the last congress.
Mr McCall said that he spoke in be-
half of all Kepublicana \yho are in
favor of the measure. He ridiculed the
eulogies upon the farmer which he said
had characterized the majority of the
siieeches against reciprocity.
•The farmer Is not the sad-eyed
monstrositv that he has been painted
in this house," declared the speaker.
The opening up of the cheap lands of
Canada to United States market would
not be Injurious to this country said
Mr. McCall. "The lands that we fear,
he said, "are lands adapted only to a
single crop, but one which will soon
''^••The^afwaAtage of this reciprocity
agreement will not be that of reducing
the price of a single bushel of wheat
but when the time of our fcarcity
comes, it will prevent the rise in price
by giving us free access to the Can-
adian supply."
» —
AVould Force a Vote Today.
Washington. April 21.--The house of
representatives entered today upon
what the leaders hope is the final
Ohio Delegation to Take
to Present Him
as Candidate.
Washington, April 21. — Reinforced by
Lieut. Governor Nicholas of Ohio, the
Democratic congressional delegation of
that state met today in Senator Pome-
rene's office formally to launch a presi-
dential boom for Governor Judson Har-
mon. Mr. Nlcliolas arrived today. It
was expected that the conference,
which was called by Senator Pomerene
would adopt resolutions strongly in-
dorsing Governor Harmon for the Dem-
ocratic nomination in 1912.
After an hour's discussion, however,
It was decided that two committees
should be appointed later by Senator
Pomerene on publicity and ways and
means.
The latter committee will determine
upon a form of resolution to be adop-
ted at another meeting.
The campaign is to be conducted by
the lieutenant governor who read to
the delegation a large number of let-
ters he had received "Indicating ' he
said, "that encouragement is coming
from all sections of the United States.
Spectators Are Horrified and
the President Suspends
Sitting.
Viterbo. Italy, April 21 — Of all the
methods adopted by the Camorrist
prisoners to e-vcite sympathy or incite
a riot, none surpassed In novelty and
effectiveness thai of Ciaetano Esposito,
who at the end of a mad harangue
today tore a glass eye from his head
and. hurling it at. the feet of the presi-
dent, stampeded the court room. T^en
he fell in a faint and President fJiauchi
suspended the sitting.
According to the slate, Bsposlto. who
is known as a usurer, is a dangerous
malefactor and succeedd "Knricone
Alfano as the head of the CamornsX.9
when Alfano lied to the United States,
there to fall into the hands of Lieut.
Petrosino. He is charged with hav-
ing been one of those who met
at Bagnoli and condemned Gennaro
Cuoccolo to death for treachery to his
associates In crime.
\(teinp(M to Pr<ne Aliol.
Tlie prisoner attemptej to prove an
alibi so far as the meetirig at Bagnoli
was concerned. At that time he was
traveling, he said, betv.een Milan and
Rome. He gave a detailed account of
his wanderings prior to ihe murder of
Cuoccolo and hfs wife and gradually
wrought himself up to a fine frenzy.
He concluded in substance as follows:
"It is true that I concealed myself
at the time when I learned that I
was to be arrested. I was suffering,
as I am even now, from heart disease.
In my boyhood I lost one eye. I
feared that I would die in prison from
the malady which had sjready seized
me. or, what would be even worse,
lose my other eye."
BecomeH Hyut'" *.al.
Here the prisoner bet ,.ie hysterical
and sobbed violently, » - face In his
hands. Suddenly he^'^sed his head
and with a deft nioveme it of the hand,
released the glass eyes and, throwing
it on the floor before the Judges
bench, bared his face, disfigured with
old cuts, to the horrified spectators.
Thus for a few seconds he posed and
then with a choking cry, dropped to
the floor in a faint.
As Esposito collapsed a tumult was
raised. From, the steel cages the pris-
oners shouted, cried and cursed-
One of the jurymen, who is a phy-
sician went to the assistance of Espo-
sito. and President Blanchi declared
the sitting suspended.
«
Boy Whirled <o Death.
Horace. N. D., April 21— The 3-vear-
old son of B. K. Benson was whirled
to death when his clothing caught on
a shaft while his father was cleaning
seed grain and using a gasoline engine
for power. The body was beaten into
a pulp.
SCATTERS GEMS
IN THE STREET
Blind Hirse Kicks Plate
Glass Windows Oat of
Store.
New York, April 21.— The traditional
bull in a china shop was run a close
second today by a horse — an aged and
totally blind horse, at that — which
kicked his way through two big plate
glass windows of a Jewelry store at
the corner of Maiden Lane and Broad-
way and sent the $200,000 worth of
diamonds in the window flying in all
directions. Precious stones by the tens
of thousands dollars' worth were swept
into the street, buried amongst masses
of finely broken glass.
Policemen stationed at this, one of
the busiest coiners in downtown New
York, in the heart of the wholesale
jewelry district, had all they could
do to control the crowds which pushed
into the thick of the fray and watched
the proprietors and clerks of the jew-
elrv establishment In a mad scramble
to pick the gems out of the debris and
save everything possible.
The jewelers said it would take an
Inventory to tell If anybody had got
away with any of the gems.
■ • ■
McNaIr at WaHhloRton.
M'ashlngton, April 21.— "Special to
The Herald.)— C. I. McNair. manager
of the Northwest Paper company of
Cloquet, is in Washington upon husi-
ness before the Interior department.
CONGRESS
PETITIIONED
To Withdraw United States
Troops From Mexican
Border.
Representative Burger Pre-
sents Request of Ninety
Thousand Citizens.
I SERVING HIM A HOT ONE. |
\l President Taft Says Tliat It's Up to Congress to Look After the Mexican Trouble. |
m*t******'^'
(Continued on page 6, first column.)
ADVERSEREPORT
ON KNIFE RIVER
Chief ef Engineers Decides
Against Improvement
of Harbor.
Washington, April 21.— (Special to
The Herald.)— Gen. Blxby. chief of
enirineers today sent a letter to con-
Irfss Approving the findings of Lleut.-
Co! FiU^h upon a preliminary^ ex-
amination of tlie harbor at Knife
Kiver Minn., in which it is held that
the locality is not worthy of improve-
ment by the general government.
The letter says that this is a small
harbor located about .seven miles west
of Two Harbors and nineteen miles
east of Duluth. At pre.sent there is
one wharf, owned and operated by
a logging railroad company, its .prin-
cipal purposes being for the receipt of
coal for the use of the railroad. This
commodity, of which about 12,000 tons
were received In 1910. comprises the
present water-borne commerce of this
locality. Prospective commerce, in
case of improvement. consists In
somewhat larger receipts of coal and
in the shipment of forest products,
the amount of which Is conjectural.
The improvement desired appears to
be some form of breakwater for the
orotection of the harbor from east-
erly winds. Owing to deep water close
into shore, such a structure would
probably have to be located In water
100 feet or more in depth. Involving
great expense. In view of this prob-
able excessive cost, the small amount
of commerce Involved, both present
and prospective, and the close prox-
imity to two good harbors, the opinion
is that the harbor at Knife River is
not worthy of Improvement.
Washington. April 21.— Ninety thou-
sand citlzcM of the United States peti-
tioned congress today l:o withdraw the
troops from the Mexican border. It
required three men tJ carry to the
speaker's platform when the house
convened huge bundles of petitions
submitted by Victor Berger, the .Social-
ist member from Wisconsin.
"What is all tliis?" asked Speaker
Clark in surprise.
Mr. Berger explained that the peti-
tions had been recelvel from residents
of every state excep', Delaware and
from every territory except Alaska.
They declare that the presence of tlie
troops is aiding in th ; suppression of
what the petitioners believe to be a
just struggle for liber ly.
"NAVALMEHACE"
ON GRE/J LAKES
London Post Is Opposed to
Training Ships of Differ-
ent States.
London, April 21. — The ?.Iorning Post,
In an editorial on tie work of the
coming Imperial conference, suggests
that the committee on imperial defense
take the opportunity to discuss how
to meet the American naval menace in
the Great Lakes. The Post declares
that It dots not matter that these ves-
sels are called training ships; their
presence is a violation of the Rush-
Eagot treaty and a standing menace to
Canadian independence. It would be
better, from the British standpoint,
says the paper, to let the Americans
denounce the treaty if they do not wish
lo abide by Its terms.
Finally, the Post pi oposes the post-
ponement of the lord mayor's meeting
in support of the arbitration treaty
until the American government has
given an earnest of Its good faith by
dismantling Its navy on the Great
Lakes, In accordance with the existing
peace treaty.
KEPT AfBAYWlTH
LONG RANGE RIFLE
Says That Is Only Thing
to Avoid International
Comphcations.
Rebel Leader Wants City
for His Permanent
Headquarters.
Army Is Just Outside City
Ready to Make
Attack.
El Paso, Tex., April 21 —If the Mex-
ican government would avoid interna-
tional complications it must order Gen.
Navarro to evacuate Juarez at once.
This is the ultimatum sent by Gen.
Francisco I. Madero, Jr., to Dr. Vas-
Quez Gomez at Washington today to be
communicated to the Mexican govern-
ment.
In addition. Gen. Madero sent word lo
Dr. Gomez by way of El Paso junta
tliat he was well aware of the difftj-
ence between an armistice and jeac©
negotiation.s, which it was .^upKesnd
follow the armistice. Gen. Madero has
taken the position that an evacuation
of Juarez is essential before he will
consider an armistice.
He is desirous of establishing a head-
quarters from which to conduct formal
negotiations with the Mexican govern-
ment. The reply of the Mexican gov-
ernment is expected to b<- received hero
from Dr. Goniez at Washington and it
is very probable that any attack on
Juarez will be postponed until it ar-
rives. Allowing for the time of com-
munication It Is not believtd that lh«
answer will reach here before mldnig:it.
«
Madero'H Fom'*!* Clowe to City.
El Paso, Tex., April Jl. — The armies
of Diaz and Madero are marking time
this morning. Madero has given liia
word that he will not attack befoie
this afternoon, unless attacked. His
large and well armed army is waiting
just outside of Juarez. Inside the
town, heavily fortified, are the 750
loval soldiers of Diaz, waiting for the
attack. The federals, after a giiiet
night, undisturbed by shots or war In-
dications of anv cliaracter, are ready
for the battle, they declare, any time
Madero opens it. Outside the town
Madero and his men are waiting for
Purfiro Diaz, presi<lent <'f Mexico, to
send word that he is willing to resign
the presidency. This, they declare, ia
the onl" thing tliat will prevent an
attack on Juarez. Madero does nut
(Continued on page 6, third column.).
Officers Do Not Dare Ap-
proach Man Who Shot
Deputy Sheriff^
Detroit, Mich., April 21. — After elud-
ing his pursuers yesterday and last
night, D. K. De Hartler, the aged fish-
erman and hunter, \.ho fled from the
Mount Clemens shore of Lake St. Clair
yesterday In a sailboat after the
shooting of Deputy Sheriff Matthews,
was this morning hugging the shallow
water of the Canadian marshes where
the power boats of the American and
Canadian officials could not follow
him The officials were further de-
terred by the fugitive's long range
rifle Plans were made early In the
day to set fire to th.; marsh grass and
drive the old man fiom his retreat.
It is said today that Deputy Sheriff
Matthews will probably recover. Two
dozen small shot were taken from the
left side of his heal
DIRIGIBLE MEETS
WITH A MISHAP
German Airship Forced to Make
Rough Landing With Ten
Passengers.
Brunswick, Germany. April 21. — The
dirigible balloon Parseval VI met with
a mishap ten miles north of this place
today and was forced to make a roujih
landing. The passengers escaped in-
jury and the airship was not seriously
damaged, though it lies partially In a
swamp and will of necessity be dis-
mantled and sent to Bliierfleld by
train. . .
The accident brought to an ena
what had promised to be a success-
ful non-stop fllglit from Berlin to Am-
sterdam. The airship, which was oc-
cupied bv ten persons including two
military "officers of The Netherlands,
rose at Berlin at 4:S0 o'clock this
morning, sailed away toward Amster-
dam at a clip of thirty-four miles aii
hour. Oeblsfelde. Saxony, was passed
soon after 10 o'clock, the diriglMo
going strong despite rather strong
v.ind currents. , , , , ^ ^,
Between Isenbuttel and Lleforde the
aerial craft was flying low when she
encountered a gust of wind that com-
pelled her to slow up.
At that moment the free end of a
rope that dangled from the car
caught in the branches of a great
birch tree and gave the airship a yanlc
that broke her balance. This, com-
bined with the wind, made necessary
an immediate descent, which was fairly
well accomplished though with some
strain to the dirigible and the shaking
up of her passengers. „ ,..*
I A new start pending repairs was out
of the question, and the parseval \ I
' will have to go to a shed for an over-
hauling.
REPUBLICANS
HOLDING OFF
But Two Promise President
Taft lo Support Reci-
procity Bill
Washington. April 21.— Before the
cabinet se.-;sion today President Taft
turned aside from Mexican troubles,
called In a number of Republican con-
eressmen and asked their support of
fhe Canadian reciprocity bi"- The pres-
ident pointed out that it would be most
unfortunate from a Republican stand-
point If reciprocity becomes a law by
Democratic votes alone. He fears op-
posTtlon m the senate and therefor*
would like as much Republican support
in the house as pos-sible.
It is said that only two of the mem-
bers promised the president their sup-
port. Among those who called were
Kinkead. Nebraska; Powers. Ken-
tucky; Calder and Drlscoll, New Yorki
Tavlor Ohio; Wood. New Jersey; Kahn^
California, and Olmatead, PennsyU
vania.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
-\w^
I ■ I ■
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■IWX-IL ^JI^aB^H— I. ^'f '■
■i-
■•^IBWI
SVpC
^^iWi*^
■■«■
Friday,
THEDITLUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
WKATHEU: Fair weather tonlsht and Saturday: not much change In tem-
perature. •
\>l
«i—
The Top of Fashion—
KWOX HATS
WHATEVER
YOUR SIZE
AND AGE
AND TASTE
IN CLOTHES
ARE— how-
ever much or
how little you
want to pay; you
can find exact sat-
isfaction here.
Our big stocks give an
almost unlimited variety;
sure reliability ; and show
all the best style ideas.
"OAK HALL MADE"
MEANSMUCHTOMEN
WHO LIKE GOOD CLOTHES
;Men who take pains to dress well get very
sensitive to the merits and defects of clothes.
"Oak Hall" clothes are worn by many of
the best dressed men in Duluth. In every
point of good taste and good quality these
garments meet the most strict requirements.
SUflTS &M ©WEIB^OMS
are priced
We Sell
Hegal
Shoes
to $35, with specially good values
at $20 and $25.
THE BEST DRESSED DULUTHIANS
LIKE HIGH ART CLOTHES
These garments are made by experts for us,
by the celebrated house of Strouse Bros., and
are sold in Duluth only in this store.
Many Duluth doctors, bankers, brokers and
Superior street business men have found their
own ideas perfectly expressed in these clothes.
They have many features worth considering;
and you ought to look at them before you buy.
There are manv styles of Spring Suits and
Overcoats, priced' $20 to $40.
Perfect summer styles in Summer Shirts, Gotham
and Kmery makes.
'<^
SUPERIOR STREET AT SECOND AVENUE WEST
Uusoal Retail Price $22
Our Regolar Price $18
For Sat-
urday's
Sale
OE^l°i.\U Quarter Sawed and Polished Oak Top Dining Table, 42 Inches
in diameter and extends to 6 feet loni?; has quarter sawea oak rim; this
is a beautiful table for the money. We urge you to come early if you
want one of these. They do not have claw feet, but a nice roll root.
Tables exactly like picture and two other styles; full quar-
tered oak; a beautiful table; Friday, sale price ,
45c Rake— Satur-
day's Sale
20c
$19.75
This is a dandy rake, well made (price considered); has 24 teeth on one
tilde and 12 double teeth on other side; otliers ask 45c to 50c, for Sat-
urday sale, only 20c.
Superior St.
at Second
Avenue East.
"HmSirimtb^
Superior St.
at Second
Avenue East
TO BRIGHTEN
THEIR LOT
light Work May Be Provided
for Residents at Poor
Farm.
Believed That Congenial Tasks
Would Make Time Pass
More Pleasantly.
The Associated Charities haf* taken
up the Idea of providing old and crip-
pled people at the poor farm with some
sort of light work that the time may
pass more pleasantly and that they
may feel that they are still of some
little use in the world.
The scheme has been tried out In
other cities and has been found to be
a success. In other cities it has been
found that they welcome tasks such as
they can do, and that as a result of
tlie work they are more contented and
consequently more happy than if they
simply sit and wait, day after day,
for death to end it all.
Yesterday Mr. Dinwiddle and Poor
Commissioner Shogran, with two other
Dulutliians who are interested in hav-
ing such a system put into effect, visit-
ed the farm In an automobile. A pair
of stockings that had been left some
days ago with an old man to darn were
found to be well repaired, and the so-
ciety workers were much encouraged
In working out tlieir idea.
Some of the work done by old and
feeble people in other institutions la
remarkable. Pamphlets have been re-
ceived which are descriptive of the
work done. Some of the work done is
by blind people and their work is re-
markable.
Each person will, if the scheme is
worked out, be given the sort of work
that he or she can do best. There will
be basket weaving. darning, fancy
work, rug weaving and many other
forms of light work whicli will keep
the Inmates busy.
But little has been done toward in-
stalling the system at the county farm
as yet. The Inmates of the local Insti-
tution will be studied and the kinds of
work that they would like and could
do. may be given them.
The movement is receiving a good
deal of support from those interested
in social work and it will probably be
brought up at the next meeting of the
Associated Charities as well as at the
next meeting of the board.
Charles Shogran, clerk to the county
poor commissioners states that It may
be well to try the plan out. He says,
however, that what light work there
is to do at the farm goes often un-
done, because those who could do it,
absolutely refuse to work. When asked
to do any light task, they often re-
mark: "When I am able to work, I
will get a job in the city and get
money for it."
TONIGHT'S ATTRACTIONS.
lA'CEUM — 'The Midnight Sons."
OKPHKUM — Vaudeville.
ODKUM and LYRIC— Photoplay.
'W. MIDNIGHT
SONS" PLEASES
Lew Fields Production Is
Big, Bright and
Clever.
It is hard to classify "The Midnight
Sons." It has a plot that is almost
too slender to boar the name and liber-
ties are taken with it that are unheard
of in the drama. It has mu.sic — all
tuneful and catchy. It ha.-; songs tlial
are well sung. It has girls — over a
score of them and none are liard to
look at. It lias comedy — rich whole-
some comedy that Is still comedy even
when it descends to the level of horse-
play. It has scenery and costumes that
have not been excelled In beauty by
any production seen on the Lyceum
stage this season. It has a little of
everything that is known to the
amusements of the theater, and it all
makes a conglomeration that is palat-
able and enjoyable.
Wlien Lew Fields sets out to amuse
the people, he has the end of amuse-
ment in view and the consistency of
the means with which the end is ob-
tained doesn't matter much. "The Mid-
night Sons" miglit not appeal to the
devotees of the aesthetic drama, but it
docs appeal to the common or garden
variety of tiieater-goer, who goes to
the theater not to listen to some
philosophical dls.«ertation on life or
morals, or to see the fanciful creation
of some dreamer with his head in the
clouds, but to be amused. '"The Mid-
night Sons" amu.ses.
One can liken the performance to
notliing but a big vaudeville perform-
ance elaborately staged and strung to-
gether with music. Really the fea-
tures are on the hish class vaudeville
order. George W. Monroe's monologue
before the shoe-shop drop is rich
vaudeville. The tumbling by Miss
Ceballos is vaudeville. The dances
would "go with a whoop" on the
vaudeville stage, and the whole is
joined together with rapid fire comedy,
tuneful songs, pretty chorus dancing
and a variety of hor.seplay that smacks
of the burlesque stage in spots but
that kept the house last night in an
uproar.
The Scenic KffectM.
The effects of scenery were not for-
gotten in staging "The Midnight Sons."
The banouet scene in the first act is
the great piece of stage setting and
the "play" at the banquet is true-to-
llfe and good comedy. The observa-
tion car feature Is one of the best
things seen here In years. The theater
.scene is ingeniously devised and unique
in execution.
If "The Midnight Sons" lags in spots,
it more than makes up in others. When
the conversation begins to go by the
Interesting period, something glares
up, swings over the footlights, grabs
the audience and restores general good
fueling. That's a trick, the possession
of which means a fortune, and the
producers of "The Midnight Sons"
have It.
George W. Monroe, done as a coOk-
ladv of ample girth and bass voice, is
drfTC'n as the star and Is responsible
for most of the comedy. His "busi-
ness" Is horse-play, but he "gets
across" with It In great style. He's
there to amuse and he does it. He
shares comedy honors with Ted Burns,
as Dick Noyes, one of the ^ns, and
.John T. Murray as Souseberry Lush-
more. Mr. Murray has an exceedingly
funny pair of legs.
Miss Alma Youlin, as Mrs. Carrie
Margin, carries the heavy solo parts
and her abilities are up to the require-
ments. She has a good voice, a pleas-
ing personality and is natural. Miss
Mona Desmond as Merri Murray is a
pleasing little bit of femlninty, and
shows to best advantage In her
"Amina" song. Misa Elizabeth Mayne,
who sings our old friend "Rings on
My Fingers," Isn't very long on voice,
but she is full of go and spirit and
trips around on the stage as though
she liked the work. Mile. Prager, the
toe dancer, and TJosalle and Hilarlon
Ceballos, acr<](batiif dancers, are among
the features. <
Walter Ware does most of the male
solo singing \ind "(Soes it well. He is
unaffected and virile and his two songs,
"My Fire-Fly Lady," and "The Cynical
Owl," are among the best In the piece.
Strange to say, "The Midnight Sons"
has more chorus men than chorus
women. Also, strange to say, the
chorus men don't look like waiters in
dress suits and the chorus women are
not altogether stagey in evening
gowns. Although there are inconsist-
encies innmerable in the plot, as one
might expect in a plot that isn't a
plot, there are few Inconsistencies in
the staging. "The Midnight Sons" is
wonderfully true to life In Its atten-
tion to detail.
"The Midnight Sons" furni.shes a
good evening's entertainment. It isn't
food for the brain, but relaxation. A
good laugh Is as good as brain food
on the stage and in "The Midnight
Sons" one will get the laugh and a
few more for good measure. Tiie en-
gagement which opened la.st night will
include performances tonight a^id to-
morrow night, with a matinee tomor-
row afternoon.
Green Room Gossip.
"The Girl Question" has been made a
special bill for Sunday afternoon and
evening at the Lyceum, this being the
last two performances of the musical
play In this city.
« • «
Frank Farrell-Taylor, who is ap-
pearing at the Orpheum this week, in
a blackface minstrel act. was speak-
ing yesterday of amusing dramatic
criticlms he had read.
"The most sarcastic criticism I ever
came across," he said, "was one that
appeared In a little country paper
down in Iowa. An 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'
troupe had been tlirough there, and
the editor of the country weekly evi-
dently had some very decided opin-
ions about the ability or lack of abil-
ity of the members of the company.
His report was very brief. *The dogs
were good,* it read, 'but their support
was poor.' "
•Another brief but telling crticism
was on a company of barnstormers
playing 'Hamlet.' The editor an-
nounced that the Bacon-Shakespeare
controversy had been settled. 'All
that Is necessary,' he said, 'is to open
their graves. The one that turned
over after last night's performance,
wrote 'Hamlet.' "
"New York critics may employ sar-
casm and invective at times, but for
language that will burn a person, jjp.
commend me to some of the editors of
small Western papers."
4> • .
Special Saturday matinees for shop-
pers will be gi%-en at both the Lyric
and Orpheum theaters tomorrow aft-
ernoon. These twin photoplay theaters
are verv popular resorts on Saturday
afternoon, and the attendi.nce Is In-
creasing every week.
CLOQUET CLUB IS
FOR SANE FOURTH
North Side Country Club
Would Lessen the Danger
From Fire Crackers.
Cloquet, Minn., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Miss Baldwin, secretary
of the state library commission, was a
guest of the North Country Study club
at the home of Mrs. Edwaid Swenson.
There were a number of incited guests
present and Miss Baldwin spoke very
interestingly of the work o ! the feder-
ated women's clubs of the state in con-
nection with library work and along
other lines. The local clui) is a year
old, and some time ago became a part
of the state federation and Miss Bald-
win's visit to Cloquet W£ s made in
part to encourage the club workers
and discuss with them plans for ejc-
tending their usefulness.
Several Take Part.
There were several who took part Itt
an impromptu program which followed
Miss Baldwin's talk. Miss Ruth Swen-
son. Miss Parker and Miss Hubman giv-
ing readings, and Miss Draper a piano
solo. The local club is making an ef-
fort to secure a safe celebration of the
Fourth, in harmony with that which
the dry weather forced upon Cloquet
last year and the comfort of which was
appreciated. A committee of the mem-
bers have recently been the means of
having some very unsightly garbage
piles removed and the club expects to
continue the work. Miss Baldwin meet*
tonight with tlie board of the publlo
library.
•
Dickinson Landmark Burns.
Dickinson, N. D., April 21. — The St.
Paul hotel and furnishings were de-
stroyed yesterday. It was a 40-room
frame structure, erected in 1883. The
fire apparently caught from the kitch-
en and was too far advanced when dis-
covered to permit saving scarcely any-
thing. A night policeman awoke tl»«
sleeping Inmates.
Landlctrd Michael McGinley is away
in the country attending to his farms.
He carried a full line of Insurance, and
win probably rebuild with brick.
•
If a few more table guests would
make It profitable for you to keep
boarders, then you have business for
I a Herald want ad.
See the special ad on Kayser Silk Gloves, page 8. We carry full lines of Kayser Gloves in all lengths, sizes and shades.
w4
*^THE QIDDINQ CORNER'' Superior St.
at Eirtt Avenue West
Medium Priced Millinery
For Women of Refined Tastes
The "week after Easter'* has been a busy
time in the Millinery Department — arrivals have
been numerous, and our milliners have been
busy! New York always gets out a new force
of styles for after-Easter trade, and what-
ever New York has, we have.
New arrivals in Jaunty Suit Hats of the
new rough braids, in hand-made styles — and
new and attractive trinuned shapes in chip,
fine and petal milan, hemp and novelty
straws — smart styles such as you want — the
kind that you don't see duplicated.
Prices $10.00, $12.50, $15.00 and up.
Perrin Gloves
No finer Glove on the market, than Per-
rin's — full selections here, in all sizes,
shades and lengths. Prices $1.35 to $5.
Face Veilings
An unusually wide selection in all man-
ner of fine and extreme meshes. Prices 35c to $1 per yard.
Women's Plain Tailored Suits $27.50
Smart severely-i;ailored models in a great variety of hand-
some Mannish Suitings, plain Serges and English Homespuns.
The 'Spring Maid' Coat Special $19.50
New and Stylish— comfortable and graceful. Usually needs
but little alteration, and is very attractive. Comes in Plain
Serges and Handsome Mixtures.
Many excellent models in Plain Tailored and Trimmed
Coats at $15 to $35.
Half Length Coats J?'?!? At $10.00
A special lot of Tan Covert and Black Serge Coats, in semi-
filting styles; some lined and some unlined.
Foulard Dresses at $19.50
(The Rishtlul Prices Should be $22.50 and $25.00;
Neat Styles i:i *Blue-and-White, Black-and-White, and
Brown-and-White Foulard Dresses, with lace yoke and lower
sleeves.
Snappy Styles in Tailored Cloth Dresses at $25.00
Trim Little^ Tub Dresses at $3.00 to $10.00
Pretty Styles ir. Gingham, Percale, Lawn and Swiss.
Dutih Collars
Are the Vogue this Season
All the latest styles in square,
round and pointed effects, in all
widths from narrow to extreme —
of Plauen, Venice, Filtet, Irish and
Cluny laces — also exquisite hand-
embroidered styles in linen and
batiste, 25c to $5.00.
Complete and extensive lines of
Jabots to match all manner of col-
lars.
Tailored Stocks
Smart Styles 35c to $1.00
Plain and embroidered effects;
also combination colors. In linen,
pique and madras, in a groat va-
riety of attractive patterns — many
with touches of color.
Veile and
Marquisette
Waists
All-Over Embroidered Voile Waists,
made in Dutch-neck and Peasant-sleeve
Style, embroidered in Coral, Rose, Helio
and Delft Blue. Special at $7.50.
Also Splendid Showings of Printed and
Embroidered Voile or Marquisette
Waists, in mono-colors and multi-colored
Bulgarian Designs, so stylish this season.
Prices $7.50 to $25.
. Chiffon Waists, Special $7.50 {
I Of fine Navy, Black or Dove-Gray Chif-
fon, made over striped silks of corres-
ponding color, and finished with lace
yoke and lower sleeve.
Very extensive and replete lines of
Lingerie Waists, at $2.75 to $25. Also a
most unusual selection of Tailored Linen
Waists, at $2.75 to $12.50.
Knit Underwear
For Sprins and Summer Wear
Complete selections in Kayser's
fine Gauze Mesh Undcrvveur, in
union suits and a fine line <>f vests
— in cotton, lis'.e, linen and silk;
also the new lisle underwear with
silk top — trimmed or plain .styles,
in short-sleeve, sleeveless rind
shield styles; including a good line
of out-sizes —
Vests, 25c to $2.50.
Union Suits, 50c to $5.00.
Hose
Fashion says the Hose must
match the dress — and the Lace
Hose, especially in tlie old Chan-
tilly patterns, are special favorites
— and you know the Gidding alert-
ness about things in fashion! — well,
we have a full line of Black and
Colored Hose, in plain, emboid-
ered and lace styles — all prices
from 25c to $5.00.
. New arrivals in LaGrecque TaUored Princess Slips and Skirt or Drawer Combinations in weU
fitted and well finished styles— made in the new straight styles, find many without ruffles, to
conform with the modish close-fitting styles -Combinations $1.50 up— Princess Slips $2.75 up.
The Jdnior Department is filled with hundreds of delightful styles in Suits, Coats and
Dresses for girls who are "almost" young ladies— for grammar school girls, and for little tots— and every style is
chosen for its charm and its appropriateness to its youthful wearer. We have spent a great deal of time m com-
paring and changing the styles offered by various designers in order to have Gidding styles more attractive and
more sensibly priced than ordinary— and to make our Girls* Department the
center of interest for girU and their mothers— and we can't help but be proud
of the result.
Junior Suits $19.50 to $35.00 ^ ^
splendidly Styled Suits in men's wear Serges, Mannish Ma^*&
als. Pretty Stripes and Homespuns, in Plain and Novelty ^Jjjffi''^
Girls' Custom Tailored Coats "^^ %
Smaller Sizes $7.50 to $19.50— Larger Siz«8 $11.50 to^)*
Three divisions of sizes, for Little Tots, Intermediates and ^n-
ior jMisses, in correct man-tailored effects, of English Tweeds,
Tailor Serges, Mannish Mixtures and Fine Tropical Worsteds.
Girls' Novelty Coats
Smaller Sizes $5 to $21.50— Larger Sizes $7.50 to $29.50
Smart models in Trimmed and Fancy Coats, with Large Revers,
Sailor Collars, Trimmings of contrasting colors, and oddly cut
styles, in Plain Materials and Mixtures.
Girls' Wash Dresses ^
Smaller Sizes $1.00 to $10— Larger Sizes $2.25 to $12.50
Pretty Styles in Percale, Gingham, Linen, etc.. Plain or Trimmed
— Tastefully designed, and exceptionally well made.
Also excellent selections of Dainty Styles in Fine White Lin-
gerie Dresses, trimmed in fine laces and embroideries.
Fancy Dresses for Girls
Beautiful Styles in Foulard, Marquisette, Linen and Veiled ef-
fects— many handsomely Hand-embroidered. Prices $15 to $30.
""^^'^M-
Baby Wear
UtUe Tots*
White Coats
In serges,
crepella cloth,
basket weaves,
pongee, silk,
pique, linen and
dotted Swiss —
Prices $1.50 to
$12.50.
Misses' Touring Coats, English Cravenette Rain Coats, Rubber-
ized Rain Capes, etc.— also Tailored Cloth or Wash Peter Thomp-
sons, and Dress Skirts.
White
Dresses
All mancr of long and short dresses, in
plain, lace-trimmed and hand-embroidered
styles — also tailored st3les, in linen and
pique— 75c to $14.75.
Colored Dresses
French Dresses, Russian and yoke styles,
in percale, gingham, chambray, pique and
linen — also Creepers and Rompers — Prices
50c to $4.75.
Little Boys' Wash Suits — In white and
colors, at $1.50 to $8.75.
Children's Headwear
AH manner of hats, caps and bonnets, in
crocheted silk, lawn, tuscan, straw and
cloth— Prices 25c to $7.50.
Children's Undermuslins
We specialize in Princess Slips, Skirts,
Drawers and Waists for Misses and Chil-
dren.
1"^^
V ,
I
i i
n-igna«
j^H^
iMa»g.
r^JiwTiirBii^
4
<«.dM >~ r- I If.
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
WIELAND'S
218 WEST SUPERIOR STREET
\v
\t
We*U make it worth your
while to come here for
SPRING SHOES
Our line of Men *s. Wo-
men *s and Children *s
Shoes comprise a
score of new shapes
and styles.
Men's and Ladies' Tans
A new lot received— both Oxfords and Shoes— but-
ton or lace — smart shapes, at —
$3.50, $4.00 and $4.50
LADIES! We have the new White Canvas But-
ton Shoes or Pumps, besides a large variety of Pumps
and Oxfords, in buckskins, Satins, cravanettes, etc.
Every good style and material is here.
Children's Slioes
Besides the regular style of Shoes, we have the
Pumps and Strap Slippers in patents, dulls, velvets and
white canvas— all at popular prices.
Watch this department— new and popular styles are
continually added.
Look for the Golden Shoe, with the Name
EIGHT BOATS
LEAVE PORT
Fleet of Freighters Clears
for the Lower Lake
Ports.
i<:
j\
Mid-Season Gannents and Hats
Embodying the newest fashion notes and comprising the latest
Parisian novelties in all the correct shades and materials — are
trooping in fror^ Mr. Silberstein's New York headquarters. Smart
mid-season Suits, Coats, daytime and evening Costumes and Hats
that mirror the modes of the hour over in Paris.
No need of your picking out styles already passe when we
have such modish Apparel to offer our fashionable friends.
Every day brings its quota of New York express packets.
On display and sale tomorrow on our second and third floors
is a wide vista of
218 WEST
SUPERIOR
STREET
WIEUND'S
FORMERLY
THE W. & L
SHOE CO.
You save and make ^
* BETTER RESULTS from Herald \Vnnt Adu.
^ money when you advertise in THE HERALU.
If^f^H. tjf%% if:%*%***=m^>k*****'^
fc*****^M«^*********
I
Package Freighters Expected
to Arrive in Harbor
Next Week.
A large fleet, comparatively speak-
ing, cleared the haifjor yesterday for
what was practically the first trip of
the season down the lakes, though the
Harry Berwlnd of the G. A. Tomllnson
fleet, left several days ago for the
Canadian Head of the Lakes, for a
grain cargo.
The Boland left earlier in the day
than the rest of the boats. Its desti-
nation was Buffalo, and the remainder
of the fleet will also go there. By
agreement the rest of the boats leav-
ing yesterday got away at 6 o'clock.
The Boland, Davock. North L.ake,
North Sea, Northern King, .Samona,
Wlssahlckon and Buffalo were the
boats that got away yesterday. The
Anchor line agency and the Mutual
have each a boat here, but according
to the statements today, these boats
will not be sent away today. There
have been no boats In or out of the
harbor today, up until 2 o'clock, and
none expected.
The Port Huron and Duluth line
boats will leave Port Huron for this
city on April 24, while some of the
package freighters will leave the lower
lake ports either this week or the
first of next week for Duluth.
It Is expected here that there will
be a large fleet of package freighters
to reach the Duluth harbor next week.
There is a heavy movement of west-
bound package freight, and as this
freight is being walled for at the Du-
luth distributing point at the present
time, an early start is looked for.
CHICAGOm
LOWEST BIDDER
Great Lakes Company Will
Probably Get Superior Gov-
ernment Contract
Mid-Season
Styles
Mid-Season
Styles
Mid-Season
Styles
Mid-Season
Styles in
Mid-Season
Styles in
• ■*
. it
Mid-Season
Stfles
Mid-Season
Styhs
Custom-made Suits, $50 to $65.
Plain Tailored Suits, $27.50 to $65.
Ornate Individual Types, $37.50 to $67.50.
Plain Street Coats, $19.50 to $50.
Touring Coats, $29.50 to $45.
Novelty and P. M. Coats, $35 to $75.
Wash Dresses, $2.75 to $12.50.
^larquisette Dresses, $21.50 to $37.50.
Lingerie Dresses, $16.50 to $35.
Street Dresses, $16.50 to $35.
P. M. Dresses, $22.50 to $75.
Youngsters' Coats, $2.75 to $12.50.
Girls' Coats, $5 to $14.50.
10 to 14 years.
Misses Coats, $16.50 to $27.50.
14 to 18 years.
Youngsters' Wash Dresses, $1.50 to $7.50.
Girls' Wash Dresses, $1.50 to $9.50.
Misses' Wash Dresses, $5 to $10.75.
Girls' Middy Waists at $1 and $2.
Cravanette Caps, $2.50 to $5.75.
Misses' Suits, $21.50 to $27.50.
Evening Gowns, $25 to $125.
Foulard Dresses, $22^0 to $75.
Lingerie Waists, $1 to $8.75.
Tailored Waists, $1 to $6.50.
Dressy Blouses, $4.75 to $21.50.
Suit Waists, $8.75 to $16.50.
Aftcr-Eastcr Millinery
Tlio pre-Easter bonnets sped away in great numbers we have re-
placed them with new and fetching mid-season hats. Tlie newest ideas
that Paris has evolved are displayed today and along side them are
numbers of S. & B. hats turned out within the w«ek by our own de- \
1^ «'■*
BUY WALDORF 5H0E5 AT FACTORY PRICES
DIRECT FROM THE MAKER
.50
STYLE an^ QUALITY
Sold in Waldorf Stores at
175 BEAUTIFUL STYLES
Made Exactly Like Hand Sewed
$2
signers.
WALDORF 5T0RE
313 West Superior Street
108 STORES
Send for Catalog
R. H. LONG, Maker
Fictarj: Sauth Framlnshim, Matt.
Bids have been opened at the office
of the United States engineers of the
Duluth district for dreglng the Supe-
rior entry to the Duluth-Superlor har-
bor and Frencls R. Shunk, major of the
engineering corps, has recommended
that the bid of the Great Lakes Dredge
& Dock company of Chicago be ac-
cepted.
The bids follow:
Duluth-Superlcr Dredging company,
Duluth, Minn.. 163.885.
Great Lakes Dredge & Dock com-
pany, Chicago. 111., $52,110.
Duluth Marine Contracting company,
Duluth, Minn.. 161.680.
Nortliern Dredge & Dock company,
Duluth, Minn., 167.980.
Edward Bros. Dredge company, Sault
Ste. Marie, Mich.. $76,470.
Zenith Dredge company, Duluth,
Minn., $54,687.
TWO STEAMERS
STUCK IN ICE
Forced to Put Back to De-
tour After Trying the
Passage.
Sault ste. Marie, Mich., April 21. —
(Special to The Herald.) — The steam-
ers Theodore H. Wickwlre and Harry
Yates both of the American Steamship
company's line, were stuck fast In the
Ice off Sweets Point four miles west
of Detour In the St. Mary's river, last
night. Both boats passed Detour early
last evening and were tlie first to
tackle the river this spring coming
north.
At 9 o'clock this morning they freed
themselves and ran back to Detour.
The tug Sabin of the local Great
Lakes Towing company's fleet Is due
at Detour early tomorrow morning.
No word has been received from the
North of any of the boats that have
cleared from Duluth heading South.
AMERICAN CANAL
WILL OPEN MONDAY.
Silk Stockings
In addition we are receiving from :Mr. Silberstein s ^^^^^^^jr^/^^^f:
quarters a few Patterns and many trade markt tailored hats that are
worn by the best people in the East. It is a ;^-"l"^^%;^,?^^;;^[^"^^;,\\^!!
davs to see saleswomen from other stores buying Silbersteni hats
and as the saying is that is a straw which shows the way Fashion s
wind doth blow. We won't say a word about price only that women
find hats here at aviy given price supereminently desirable.
**Thank You for Admiring
the Fit of My Gown"
Yes, it is the corset that does it. This
gown was fitted for me over one of the
new corsets featured by the S. & B. Co. —
La Helene, I think the corsetere called
it. It brings out lines I had often ad-
mired in other women, but did not know
I possessed. No other corset has done
this for me.
La Helene Corsets range from $3.50 to
$25. . .
Besides, we are showing at this time,
the newest models in
Modart Corsets. $5 to $15.
"THE IMPROVED FRONT LACED." '.
Redfern Corsets, $3.50 to $12.
besides, such popular names as Warner,
American Lady and the new Rengo Belt
Corset for obese women.
It would seem this is the Corset Shop
de Luxe, not only of Duluth, but the en
tire Northwest.
appeal with particular force to every
woman. They represent not only an ideal
of luxury, but their smart trim, well drest
effect set off both gown and slipper.
S. & B. Silk Stockings range in price
from 79c to $6.50 a pair. The collection
includes all the silk stockings that are
worth while wearing.
Fresh Undermuslms
We would like to show our friends
samples of the exquisite lingerie that ar-
rived yesterday.
It includes a superfine collection of
convent made Skirts, Gowns' and Che-
mises, daintily embroidered, also Princess
fitted Combinations, Princess Slips with
narrow skirt, etc. Prices begin at $1.50
and up to $20.
jh-^-i=
««
fOur Heath & Milligan Paint Is'^
the Highest Attainment
in Paint Manufactured.
For two-score years it has been recognized as the
standard paint of' America. One gallon will cover
300 square feet (two coats.) You will be surprised
to know how little the paint will cost to paint your
house— 60 different colors. Will be pleased to give
you a color card.
HEADQUARTERS FOR JAP-A-LAC.
^' • "
The Store of Quality
QUAYLE-LARSEN CO.
14-16 WEST SUPERIOR STREET.
J
Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., April 21. —
(Special to The Herald.) — Supt. Sabin
announced today that the American
canal would open for the season Mon-
day. Work of fillinK the canal will
begin Sunday. The Great T^akes com-
pany will finish the work on the
cement piers on the .south side of the
canal and the cleaning of new chan-
nel north of Bridge Island tomorrow
so as to allow use of both channels for
the first time.
•
Photographing Our Digestion.
The Marey institute, Paris, has suc-
ceeded in bringing photography to
the perfection of photographing the
process of digestion, by the use of the
roentgen ray. It was necessary to
secure great power, catching motion
in the fractional part of a thousandth
of a second to do so. The photog-
I raphers using the device will only be
I baffled when they attempt it in a
1 habitual user of golden grain belt
beers, for digestion will be so rapid
that the attempt will fail. That's
why they are the best. Let your deal-
er and send you a case or duluth
branch minneapolis brewing com-
pany.
His First Long Pants Suit
Should be bought at the "3 Winners"
for only $10. all wool material-s, guar-
anteed to hold their shape and a per-
fect fit or no sale.^
LIVELY HIBBIXG SEHO.
Hibbing Minn., April 21.— (Special to
Th Herald.)— Johnny King of Chicago
defeated Kid Lloyd of Hlbblng In a fif-
teen-round bout here last night. King
will meet Pal Brown in three weeks in
what promises to be a fast mix-up.
•
Buy in Duluth.
DOUBTS THAT
PIPTLEAKS
Manager Case Says Joints
Should Protect In-
take Pipe.
Diver Reports That Contract
Last Fall Was Improp-
erly Performed.
"Mr. Halvorsen did not intiniate
to me that there was any chance of
leakage through the joint near the
shore and I don't think there is any
leakage," said Manager L. N. Chase
of the water and light department
this morning in discuslng the findings
of the expert diver who was sent here
by the Great Lakes Dredge & Dock
company to inspect the work done
last fall by H. H. Thompson. The
ioint In question is fitted with a band
on the outside and even if the ends
of the pipe were slightly drawn apart,
as reported, I believe the joint will
prevent any leaka£?e. The expansion
band, which Mr. Halvorsen says was
Improperly placed, was ordered put
inside of the pipe as an added pre-
caution and even if it were not there
at all, I believe the joint would not
allow the passage of water from the
outside." , ^^
There was some question of the
condition of the intake pipe last fall
and Diver Thompson was engaged to
make repairs. His contract called
for the erection of a screen at the
intake, the tightening of all joints,
the placing of rip-rap where it had
been washed away and the placing
of an expansion band inside of the
intake pipe near the reservoir. The
expansion band was to have been se-
curely cemented.
"The board has received no writ-
ten report from Harry Halvorsen, the
diver furnished by the Great Lakes
Dredge & Dock company of Chicago
to inspect the work, but Mr. Halvor-
sen made a verbal report to me this
week," said Mr. Case. "He reported
that the screen work was all right.
He said that at four joints the bolts
were loose; that the rip-rap had been
carelessly put down, the rock being
on one side of the pipe altogether in
places and in other places only lean-
ing on the pipe. In regard to the
expansion band, he reported that he
CASTOR I A
For In&nts and Children.
m Kind Yoa Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature oi'
could place his hand between the
band and the pipe, tlie cement hav-
ing fallen out if it had ever been
placed. He reported nothing else
and if he believes that there are
any leaks in the pi;ie, he did not
mention the fact to me. His written
report, which may be expected any
day, will show. I do not believe that
any joint can leak, but the expan-
sion band was ordered as an extra
precaution to satisfy some people
who had doubts."
Of the total sum of Mr. Thomp-
son's contract, the board has held
$1,000 and Mr. Thoripson also fur-
nished a bond for the faithful per-
formance of his contract. Mr Case
says that the board nill immediately
order the defective nork done over
and will hold Mr. Tiiompson if the
diver's written report shows that the
contract was improrerly performed
as the verbal report would indicate
Have Youp Clothes Pressed Free.
If vou buv your clothes at the "3
Wlnne?8' they will k«ep them pressed
free for two years.^
OHIOAN'S BODY IlECOVERED
FROM NORTH Di^KOTA LAKE.
Jamestown. N. D.. April 21.— Under-
takers were summoned from this city
to care for the body af Everett Hurl-
burt which had just been recovered
from' Round lake, near Pettibone.
where the young m5 n was drowned
last fall. His home was in Elmyra.
Ohio, where the bod/ will be taken
immediately. His i>rother. George
Hurlburt. has been about the lake
nearly two weeks hun :Ing for the body.
_ •
Cloanet Mli»iiloB«ry Tea.
Cloquet. Minn., April 21— (Special to
The Herald.)— The Vromen s Mission-
ary Society of the Pr« sbyterian church
will give a missionary tea at the home
of Mr.s. L. H. Seely, Friday afternoon,
April 28. There will be a program, be-
ginning at 2:30, as follows: Devotional,
Mrs. J. C. Campbell; roll call, respond-
ed to with missionary Items; taiisincss:
book review, •'Challenge of the City,
L A nsh; paper on the Freedmen,
Mrs. L. H. Seely; piano solo, Miss Vi-
berf vocal solo, Miss Nell Carley;
reading. Miss Malchow; piano 8ol<v
Miss Merele Redfleld.
Young Men's Norfolk Suits $15.
Blue serges, grays, Irowns and tans,
with belt, full peg top trousers, at the
"3 Winners," 115 Eat,t Superior street.
WIRTH'S
BUG KILLER
If you are troubled with Bed
Bugs, we have a preparation w-lilch
we guarantee to kill tht-m. ^ our
mon-ey back if It dont. 25c iwr bot-
tle. Special price by the gallon.
WIRTH'S s:^/si:'»
FRKK IJELIVKRV.
13 W*mt Superior Slroet.
THE PALM ROOM
At the SPALDING
MOST DELIOHTFUL AND LL'XURl.
OUS RESTAURANT IN DULUTHL
DEFECTIVE PAGE
f I —
•*mm
■^
*•
Mi
Friday,
THE DUXU.TH HERALD
April 21, 1911.
CONTRAaS
AWARDED
Water and Light 6«ard Ar-
ranges for Laying of
39,644 Feet of Pipe.
Route of Crescent View Ex-
tension Changed to In-
crease Territory.
Contracts for the laying of 19.714
feet of water pipe and 19,930 feet of
gas pipe were let by the board of
water and light commissioners at yes-
terday's meeting. The contracts call
for tiie expenditure of $21,104.50, which
Is for labor and material with the e.x-
ception of the pipe. The total cost of
the proposed extensions will approxi-
mate $45,000.
The most Important work for which
the contract was let is what is known
as the Crescent View extension, from
Woodland avenue down Thirty-fourth
avenue east to connect with Crescent
View park. The estimated cost of the
•xtension from the nearest main was
|l-'.y76 and that amount was paid to
tie water and light department by the
Ciesctnt View company. The plans
were afterwards changed so that the
extension will be made from a slight-
ly more remote point and considerable
territory outside of Crescent View
park. The cost of the extension as
now planned will be approximately
I14.O00.
The extensions for which the con-
tracts were let yesterday and the suc-
cessful bidders are:
Crescent View extension, "Woodland
avenue to Crescent View park. 4.382
feet S-inch water and 4-inch gas pipe
and 2.770 feet 6-inch water and 4-lnch
gas pipe. J. Bergman. $8,141.44. Total
es'tinuited cost. $14,000.
Fourth alley force main. Twelfth
a\ enue east to Sixteenth avenue east
to connect with 36-inch force main,
2.040 feet 20-lnch water and S-lnch gas
pipe. Pastoret-Lawrence company,
|2,6lt4.80. Total estimated cost $9 767.38.
1.008 feet 6-inch water and 4-inch
Don't Be Harsh
\\'ith your bowels. -\void strong
physios. Use the mild, effective, easy-
to-iake, easy-to-operate medicine
Hood's Pills
They never weaken but have tonic aa
:iveil as catliartlc effect. 25c a box.
HATS REMODELED
ma
We have an expert HATTER.
Work is promptly done and well.
Cleaned. Bleached
and Blocked.
PANAMAS
A Complete Hat Staoi>— Michigan St. Hocr
A. B, Siewert & Co,,
Hatters and Furnishers.
304 West Sapcrior Street.
plumes were stolen from a local milli-
nery store last night by burglars, who
left no clue.
GOPHER
SHOE WORKS
The N.uTie of —
SHOE REPAIRING
Fame.
WHILE YOU WAIT.
Duluth and Superior.
Have You Seen the
New Velvet Shoes?
4Rr<>Yvn.4 and Blacknt at
CLARK, The Sample Shoe Man
11 Second Aveaiie >\ ent.
MRS. ANNA WESTENDAHL.
The funeral of Mrs. Anna Birgltte
Westendahl, who died early yester-
day mornig at her late residence, 820
Lake avenue north, will take place
tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock from
the First Norwegian Lutheran
church. First avenue east and Third
street. Rev. Stenberg will oflRiciate.
Interment will be at the Lutheran
cemetery on London road.
Mrs. Westendahl was 3S years of
age and had been a resident of Du-
luth for twenty years. She was for-
merly Miss Anna B. Guatavson. Be-
sides her husband she is survived by
four daughters and two sons.
gas mains. Allendale and Mankato
streets, Woodland, Johnson & Johnson,
$651.84. Total estimated cost, $1,720.
540 feet 6-inch water and 4-lnch ga.s
mains In Forty-third avenue west be-
tween Fourth and Fifth streets, Adam
McAdams, $313.20. Total estimated
cost, $868.
2,350 feet 6-inch water and 4-inch
gas mains in Lewis street and Dunne-
din avenue. Hunter's Park. Johnson &
Johnson, $1,518.68. Total estimated cost.
$3,650.
864 feet 6-inch water and 4-lnch ga.s
mains in T\\enty-third avenue west
and Eighth street. J. Bergman, $1,287.62.
Total estimated cost, $2,289.
372 feet 6-inch water and 4-inrh gas
mains in Twenty-fourth avenue west
between Sixth and Seventh streets, J.
W. Preston, $265.72. Total estimated
cost. $638.
372 feet 6-inch water and 4-inch gas
mains in Magellan street between
Thirty-eighth and Thirty-ninth avenues
west. Adam McAdams, $241.56. Total
estimated cost, $913.
oOO feet 6-lnch water and 4-inch gas
mains in Ha\frA street east of Thirty-
ninth avenue west. Adam McAdams,
$iy5. Total estimated cost, $525.
1.296 feet 6-inch water and 4-inch
gas mains in Eighteenth avenue east
and Eighth street, J. Bergman, $1,973.60.
Total estimated cost. $3,532.
924 feet 6-inch water and 4-inch gas
mains on East Fourth street between
Twenty-fifth and Twenty-seventh ave-
nues. J. Bergman. $1,426.76. Total
estimated cost. $2,630.51.
780 feet 6-lnch water and 4-inch ga.s
mains in Thirty-fifth avenue west and
Traverse street. Adam McAdams
$452.40. Total estimated cost, $1,223.92
84 feet 6-inch water and 4-inch gas
mains in Cooke street west of Forty-
seventh avenue east. J. Bergman, $70.68.
Total estimated cost. $150.
1.110 feet of 6-inch water and 1.356
feet of 4-inch gas mains in Tacony
street. Fifty-ninth avenue west and
Huntington street. J. Herman, $1,492.64.
Total estimated cost, $2,842.
216 feet of 6-inch water and 4-inch
gas mains In Seventh avenue east from
Eleventh street north. J. Bergman,
$169.50. Total estimated cost $654.
276 feet of 6-incli water and 4-inch
gas mains in Twenty-fourth avenue
west north from Eighth street. J. Berg-
man. $209.06. Total estimated cost,
$475.
The board let the contract yesterday
for casualty insurance for the yeai-.
Five firms each bid $1,485, and by
li rawing lots the contract ^vas awarded
to the Lane McGregor agency.
PEOPLE WANT
RECIPROCin
Birch Bark Orator Ako
Thinks Taft Is Growing
Popular.
J. Adam Bede, apparently as opti-
mistic as ever, also apparently as en-
thusiastic over politics, believes that
the people of the United States, the
people and not some of the interests,
are in favor of reciprocity.
This statement was made this morn-
Birthstone
Tor April
INTERVENE FOR
EDDY GRANDSON
Lawyers File Motion in In-
terest of George W.
Glover, Jr.
Concord, N. H.. April 21. — Attorneys
for George W. Glover of Lead City,
filed today in the superior court the
motion of which they gave notice re-
cently for leave to intervene in the
motion of George W. Glover, Sr.,
against Henry M. Baker, executor of
the will of Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy,
and others. The motion says that if
the residuary clause of Mrs. EJddy's
Di
lamoni
A.tk- MS to ah OH- ijoH our
stock awl give ijou prices
Ask the Man Who
Has a Bagley
Diamond As To Values'
Bagley ^ Co.
Knou-ii Since 1885 as
F. D, DAY & CO..
JKWKLEKS aiMl SILVERSMITHS
315 West Superior Street.
will is found invalid as a violation of
the law of New Hampshire, and if
George W. Glover, Sr., and Ebenezer
J. Foster-Eddy, Mrs. Eddy's heirs,
have lost their right to succession by
reason of certain agreements made by
them in November. 1909. then George
W. Glover, Jr., a grandson as next of
kin, is entitled to his distributive
share of Mrs Eddy's property in ac-
cordance with the New Hampshire
statutes of distribution.
FARGO STORE BURGLARIZED.
Fargo. N. D.. April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — About $600 worth of
-^r
ing by the former congressman at the
St. Louis, while Mr. Bede \vhlled away
time awaiting for the train that is to
take him bkck^to Pine City.
"I have , Jjeeni around tlie country,
giving lectures .and attending ban-
quets." said the hlrch bark orator. "I
have covered a ftfrge part of the coun-
try and from What I have learned I
am of the optnlrrn that the people of
the country are unmistakably in favor
of reciprocity. I also believe there is a
sentiment growlHg in favor of Presi-
dent Taft. -Petfetps it is because he
aferei
would do us a great deal of good. We
are neighbors sitting with our feet un-
der the table, and we should be friend-
ly and act in close harmony. I think
that reciprocity will have to come some
day, and why. not at the present time?"
Mr. Bede stated that he was trying
to farm, on the side, at Pine City, and
had found it very difficult, owing to
numerous engagements.
Buy in Duluth.
ARRAIGNED ON
SECOND CHARGE
Brown and Gunderson Are
Also Charged With Grand
Larceny.
Gust A. Brown and Andrew A.
Gunderson, arrested on the charge
of swindling several men in Duluth
In "big mitt" games, were aralgned
in municipal court this morning on
the charge of gra.id larceny. They
have already been bound over to the
grand jury on the swindling charge,
and asked for an examination on the
second accusation. Thej
their hearing next week.
The second charge is thi
$75 from John Hamerin
man, while they were pi
with him in the back roc
perior street saloon the
of last month. He clai;
had his cash in an outsid
his coat and it was taker
will have
it they stole
a woods-
aying cards
•m of a Su-
latter part
ns that he
e pocket of
I from him.
AHORXEY CARRIES
POCKETFUL OF DIAMONDS.
Attorney Mason M. Ji'orbes left
police headquarters this noon with
a pocketful of diamonds, which had
been turned over to l.im by the
police. They were the property of
G. W. Armstrong, a diamond sales-
man, from whom they were stolen
Wednesday afternoon wliile he was
being shaved in the Lenoc hotel bar-
ber shop. They were takjn from the
pocket of his coat by Fi-ank Smith,
the colored porter, who entered a
plea of guilty in district court whe«
arraigned on a charge of granfl
larceny. The stones were recovered
by Detectives Schulte and Irvine la
a hole which had been knocked IM
the ceiling. Attorney Forbes ap-
peared for Mr. Armstrong and had
an order from the district court for
the sparklers.
DELEGATES GRATEFUL.
Hibblng, Minn., April 21. — (Special t«
The Herald.) — The delegates to the
M. E. district conference which ended
here last night are leaving for home
today. Before adjourning, resolution*
of thanks were passed to the Oliver
Iron Mining company and especially
W. J. West for taking the party around
the mine* and to Hibblng Commercial
club and automobile owners who sent
cars for party last night and to local
churches for entertainment of_«^J.f-
gates and the newspapers for report-
ing the meet.
Sale of Double Tipped Black
Silk Gloves— 50c Kinds
39c
They are made from ^ood quality Jersey silk,
full double tipped — all sizes — black only." It
is the story of a special purchase — that's the
"why" of the special price.
I^VKE AVENX'S:. MICHIGAX AND SXJPE3UOR STREETS.
25c Stationery, 19c Per Lb.
Brockfort Linen fabric paper in pure white — 4
quires to a pound — smooth writing surface; one of
the be.'.t values we have ever offered at 19c.
Envelopes to match — package of 25, Prince
Henry flap, per package, only
9c
ional Sale of Fine Suits at $25
Our Stocks of Junior,
Misses' and Women's
Coats
Comprise an endless variety of
smart snappy styles that make
their own appeal especially when
prices are considered.
Junior Coats, tailored to the needs
of growing girls at $15.
Correct Misses* Coats at $16.50,
$19.50 to $32.50.
Women's Serges and Diagonals,
very well tailored from $15 to
$59.50. Colors are tans, blues,
cadet, rose, gold, navy and blacks
besides several chic models in Polo
Coats both white and colors for
semi-dressy wear.
Women's and
Misses' Coats at
Values $321, SO
Large variety of models and all
the fashionable colors, besides
staple blue and blacks. Materials
are serges and diagonals.
Values Up to $42.50.
The way those Sale Suits at $25 have; gone the past few days is inspir-
ing! Where assortments and sizes were broken we have added higher priced
models so that Saturday brings the climax of value giving.
Every one is custom tailored of firue imported hairline suitings, men's
wear serges, diagonals, French serges, and iancy weaves, in black, blues, tans
and novelty colors.
Coats are Peau de Cygne lined and embody many distinctive tail-
ored touches. Skirts are the smart cloije fitting style v^dth slightly
inverted pleats on side. Just about enough to tide over Saturday.
Values to $42.50.
Handsome
Dresses $7.95
Well Worth $10.00.
In women's and misses' sizes — white
lace and embroidered Dresses, with ki-
mono sleeves, Dutch neck and all-over
Jj/j^^ flounce on skirt. We have sel-
W dom, if ever, offered
such good values
at...
$7.95
An Unexpected
Waist Sale
They jusi came in time to cause a flurry in the
Waist section tomorrow. A group of handsome
beaded mDdels, also Messaline Waists, in blacks,
blues, grays and tan — cleverly combined with the
new emerald green, Helen pink and ^ ^ ^\ gf
King's blue colorings, ordinarily ^w^J 7W^%
would sell at $10: Saturday ^\^m ^ %^
Great Economy in Men's
Furnishings
75c Negligee Shirts with attached cuffs,
coat style of extra good quality percale
and English madras — white with net
colored woven stripes and
figured effects, on sale
at
50c
$1.50 Men's Gloves of fine
quality Cape Kid. opera back
in* fashionable tan shades,
suitable for
spring wear
at, pair
$1.00
Last of Those 25c Men's i C ^
Sample Hose at (2 for 25c) J. OC
Enough left for a busy day tomorrow of that special purchase
that has been sellinjj so rapidly all week. Hose are of finest
quality silk lisle and lisle thread yarns — all the new spring shades
both plain and fancy — they are regular 25c hose and good value
at that, as many pairs as you wish tomorrow at 15c pair — while
they last.
Underwear Prices
Reduced
-y?
50c Combination Suits of fine cot-
ton, clear white, summer weight,
low neck, sleeveless, lace trim-
med or tight knee OO/*
style, Saturday O^C
35c Summer Vests of gauze
cotton, low neck, sleeveless,
with fancy crochet ^f\/%
yokes,; on sale at AfZf\j
Some Hosiery Specials
35c Children's Stockings,
fine ribbed, with double
knee, linen heels and toes,
fast black, all sizes, 6 to
10 inclusive — OC/%
Saturday ^OC
50c Women's Lisle Hose — full fash-
ioned, double sole, high spliced heels
and garter top, per OC/*
Their factory imperfections won't
hurt the wear one whit.
Cut-Price
Drug Sale
50c jar Green OCp
Soap ^^^
2oc Babcock's Corylop-
sis Talcum \ C-,
Powder AOV/
3 5c Vent Antiseptic
Tooth 91;^
Brushes *t\J\>
$3.00 Hughes Cushion
aV^!':"^.^. 98c
16 oz. bottle Imported
Olive trC/,
Oil *^^
50c Grandiosa *y^C
Perfumes ^\j\^
10c Castile Soap A^
— per cake ^^
25c O. P. C. Peroxide
^t'"^."^ 17c
25c Graves' \ Cp
Tooth Paste X«JC
The Best Place in Town
to Buy Shoes!
The best values at all times are to be found at the Freimuth store, and
in no section is this more pertinent than our Shoe department. Herewith
are a few of the special prices prevailing Saturday on new and stylish foot-
wear :
Velvet Pumps with instep
strap, very ;5tyllsh for
street or dressy ^Q QQ
AH new styles for
^^'olllCll in Oxfords
and Puinps at pop-
ular prices — per
?„;,':.»*..., $2.50
Patent Pumps with
ankie strap, extra
short vamp and
high arch, also
Cuban 41'^ Cfl
heel at ^l>*0\3
We have this
shoe in Gun Metal
also.
wear, at .
Women's 2-strap Craven-
ette Pumps n-ith short
vamps and
ban heels,
Cu-
only
Patent Two-B uttou
fords with velvet
very dressy,
at
Ox-
top:
$2.50
Shoes for
Children
Sold aa High as $2.50.
Bring the children Satur-
day and ljuy them a pair
of new shoes that will wear
and pay only 79c. It is an
interesting miscellany of
odds and ends — mostlj' In
narrow widths. If these
wont fit, we have plenty
others that will at especially
low prices.
$2.50 Hand Bags
Of fine plain black or stitched satin — black
and white striped satin — with fancy German
silver 8-inch frame, ball clasp and cordcliere
rope handles — a new and fash-
ionable bag, at the special price
of
$1.98
Muslin Underwear
Women's Gowiis of fine
Quality nainsook, trimmed
with lace and embroidery,
full length, reg- 'TIS/*
ular $1 value '^^
$1.25 Xalnsook Combina-
tions — Suits, skirts or
drawers, trimmed with
fine Torchon lace and
embroidery
»t ,
$1.00
$1.25 Gowns, richly trim-
med with lace and em-
broiderj', short or long
sleeves, at the
special price . .
$1.00
$1.50 Women's Mu.slin
Skirts with deeply tucked
embroidery flounce of un-
usual quality dh-1 AA
muslin at ^P±.Ul/
Fine Embroideries "^^^^^
50c Embroideries — Thousands
yards of new patterns— 18-Inch
Swiss and Nainsook ftft^n'H^i^ in
wide array of patterns,"* lb ^fX)/*
be sold at, yard...-.^.;,^^\..^'i'f^^
60c 27-lnch Swiss Flenm ingra . In
neat and attractive defeigiife^ reg-
ular prices run from^=50c
to 60c, for, yard ,
65e to $1.00 All -Over Embroid-
eries— 20 inches wide, suitable for
yokes or entire waists. These high
grade 65c, 75c and Jl.OO values
will be sold at, RO/*
yard, Saturday V\JK>
$1.50 Skirtlns Embroidery, 4 5
inches wide, in unusually attrac-
tive designs for charming summer
dresses at the low C"! AA
price of, yard iPJ-.VU
Annual Sale of Housefumishings Goes on Tomorrow
Little Things at
Little Prices.
Coat and Hat xL^
Hooks, per doz.__ ^v
48c Hammers at 25c
5c Garments Hangers
at 21^0
10c Nickel Towel Bars
at 8c
5c Shelf Paper V/^z
5c Carpet Tacks 2^c
The gist of the sale lies in the fact that the housewife can buy downstairs tomorrow, house-
hold wants of every description, from a hammer to a garbage can at less than at any other time.
Here are a few of the thousand and one things. Note the price reductions —
Curtain Stretchers.
Regular $y^ Curtain Stretchers, special,
each •;•••*
Adjustable- iPin tJurtain Stretchers — The highest
grade make^ sokl everywhere for $2.25, tf^l #\0
sale price.. . <^i«W
68c
Paiifts and Brushes.
House and Floor Paints — Sale price, per *7C|*
Yi gallon f 0\j
Japalac, Varnishes, from 20c up.
Special Prices on Paints and Brushes.
Clothes Baskets.
Splint Clothes Baskets — Regular 60c sort,
sale price
Round Willow Clothes Hampers — Reg-
ular $1.50 values, sale price, each r
. 39c
$1.09
Galvanized Garbage Cans
22 inches high; regular $1.50
values, sale price, OQ/*
only yOC
Limit, one to a customer.
Freimuth's ;!)pecial
Toilet Paper.
Regularly 5c a roll, ^C^
—special, 8 rolls for ^OVt
« ^
:
('
•*
•^m»
\
f———'~---~-~''
'\ '
■4«ib
r
r-^
« «
iT .Tiwrn-i ti !■*■ i yi ^
IMpt,<— H l»llll 1^
qgeaao^^
P IV
J.
IfcB^-M
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 191L
THE BIG
JEWELRY
SALE
Fringes unusual opportuni-
ties for watch bargains —
and you know
Esterly*s
Watches Are
Best
Come in tomorrow and
take a look.
BALLINGER
AND ALASKA
Enemies of Former Secretary
Talk of Reopening
the Case.
L L ESTERLY
JEWELRY CO.,
428 West Superior St.
J
COMINGOFSPRING
Won't Worry A'uu If You Let the
ZENITH DYE HOUSE
Clean ami press your clothes, or put
your fancy Rugs through our pro-
cess of cleaning.
PROMPT SERVICE.
WORK Gl. ARA^iTEED.
Clothes Cleanem for Men, Women
au<l Children.
KROMCK BROS. * GAROER. Prop*.
Dill I'taone, Broad «3, 131'0 To%Ter
Avenue. »w l>hune, O^den VV2.
FURNISHED FLAT
For rem to man and wife for one
vear, completely furnish<ed, ready
for housekeeping, six rooms modern,
upper side of First street, between
Eighth and Ninth avenues east.
R. P. IIOWSE & CO.
1(NS Providence Building:.
NEW SUEDE SHOES
FOR WOMEN,
CLARK, The Sample Shoe Man
11 Second .4 venue West.
The St. Louis Inn
Offers you an assortment of
delicate viands culled from
the marts of the world, at
most reasonable prices. The
service and music are of the
best. Popular Noon- time
Lunches. Lunch or dine here
TOI>AV.
FOR RENT!
OFFICES IX LYCEUM BUILDIXG.
Fire-Proof — Desirable.
LITTLE & NOLTE, «sen<s.
Ife BETTER RESVLTS from Herald
j/t Want Ads. Yon nave and make
it money when you advertise In THE
* HERALD.
"I Suffered Years
With My Back."
Backache resulting from weak
kidneys, a bad cold or other cause,
usually renders the suficrer unfit
for work and often results in per-
manent disability.
"I suficred for years with my
back, or kidney trouble, and have
tried a number of remedies from
different physicians. More than a
year ago, one of our local druggists
induced me to try
Dr« Miles' Anti-Pain Pills
and after vising them some three
months I found a decided improve-
ment in my kidneys, and I am glad
to say that I hope soon to be fully
restored to health." J. P. Allen,
Ex-Judf e City Court,-<jIasgow, Ky.
As long as pain is present in any
part of the body rest is impossible
and the system Womir^ weakened
Is cxpostcd to any form of -disease to
which the sufierer n;;;y be inclined.
Dr. Mites' Afiti-Pain RHs
by steadying the irritated nerve
centers, make refreshing sleep pos-
sible, thereby enabling the body to
recover lost strength. As a remedy
for pain of any description Dr.
Miles' Anti-Pain Pills are unsur-
passed.
Sold by alt druggists under a guar-
antee assuring the return of the pries
of the first box If no benefit results.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
Man Thinks Mrs. Taft's
nature Should Accom
pany President's.
Washington, April 21.— There Is con-
siderable talk about reopening the Bal-
linger case. The enemies of the
forn.er secretary of the interior seem
not to be satisfied with driving him
into private lite. They seem to think
that the very voluminous and even
tiresome testimony brought out, with
every facility offered for bringing it
out at the congress investigation did
not include some things which might
be told. However, it is not the general
opinion that anything would be gained
by reopening the question.
In view of the country-wide excite-
ment over the Alaska coal-land cases
and the Ballinger inquiry, there has
been much interest over the decision of
a federal judge in Seattle that a group
of coal claimants— not the Cunningham
claimants — were justified in entering
into an agreement to work their claims
jointly. This upsets the main question
on wiiicli the government might have
revoked the claims of these speculators.
As it would result In the clear-listing
oi nearlv all the J»00 coal claims in
Alaska, "the government has arranged
to take an appeal at once to the su-
preme court. Is is expected that the
court will make the case special, and
that it will endeavor to reach a de-
cision as early as possible. As the court
will soon take its summer recess, this
means that a decision might possibly
be reached by next fall. The Alaskans
and the residents of the Pacific Coast,
who always have had to pay excessive
prices for even poor coal, will hope
that the court will be able to settle
this question at an early date, as that
will expediate the opening of the Alas-
j ka coal fields under some plan ap-
proved bv congress.
WautH Mrs. TafCs SlKnature.
There is a man in one of the public-
land states who is doubtful about the
validity of a patem issued by the Unit-
ed States and signed by the president.
He is a law officer at that, judging
from the manner in whicli lie quotes
law and discusses its bearings on his
land title.
This man wrote t« the commissioner
of public lands, Fred Dennett, and com-
plained lliat tile patent he liad been
granted did not comply with the laws
of his state. "The laws here require,"
wrote he, "that a deed shalFTue signed
by both a man and liis wife as grant-
ors. This patent bears the signature
'Wm. H. Taft,' but It is not signed
bv Mrs. Taft. Her name should be
attached to the patent to make it legal
under tlie laws of this state. I note,
too. that *hile the name in the body
of the document is •William H. Taft,'
the signature Is Wm. H. Taft." The
two names should be made to corre-
spond. Finally, the signature is not
that of the president in propria per-
sona, but It is signed by a cl«erk for
him. I should like to havc the patent
corrected in all of these particulars."
Possibly it is unfortunate that these
requests could not be complied with.
The land office regards the patent in
question as a perfectly good patent in
every respect, and it is strictly in con-
form'ity with the law and the usage of
the office. Last week was not a par-
ticularly brisk wvek in government
land business, and yet about 1,800 pat-
ents were issued. If Mrs. Taft could
be required to sign each one. she would
have to sign 300 patents a day.
Goins About I'nheraldcd.
The president's wile is as fond as
the president himself of going about
Washington in an Informal way and
practically unattended. At times the
president likes to break away from his
guard of secret-service men, even as
former Presld-ent Roosevelt did, and
take long walks. Of course, the secret-
service men do not let him get far
without overtaking him, but he takes
many a long walk on foot, and some-
times drops in very unexpectedly on
his friends. He has even called at a
legation, which was said to have been
an unprecedenfed courtesy. WTien the
chrysanthemum show of the depart-
ment of agriculture was being held last
winter, Mrs. Taft was a visitor, accom-
panied by a lady friend. Her coming
was unheralded. She looked at the
flowers and departed before the at-
tendants kn-ew who their distinguished
visitor was. At th« opening of con-
gress last week Mrs. Taft, accompanied
by the presidents military aid and her
son and daughter, visited the Capitol,
and after seeing congress" open, the
party went through the senate office
building, looking into offices here and
there and exploring the palatial struc-
ture quite thoroughly.
Public Ownership.
The government is making experi-
ments with public ownership to an ex-
tent greater than most persons realize.
It has in the postoffice department the
biggest institution in this country. It
owns telegraph lines in Alaska and in
the Philippines, and operates them. It
conducts a steamship line and a rail-
road, in connection with the Panama
canal, which it is building itself under
the management of an array engineer.
It carries oit surveys of the public
lands. It does so many things that
when the Socialists succeed in electing
a majority of the members of congress^
instead of one lonesome member, ana
they decree government ownership of
various things now managed privately.
It will hardly cause a jar to the busi-
ne '.s world.
s to the success of public owner-
shl \ a reccnnft cofisular report states
that in th^-last tfie years the City of
Hull, England, has received from the
Subscribe far The Heraid
profits of the municipal street car sys-
tem over |7OO,O00, which has lessened
local taxation' by just that sum. In
addition to this, the receipts of the
street car system provided for all
operating expenses and interest
charges, maintenance in first-class con-
dition and keeping up the sinking fund.
The fare Is 2 cents, and In the morn-
ing hours it is only 1 cent This seems
to show that even under low fares
municipal operation is successful.
WESTERN UNION
OFFICIALS HERE
Several well-known officials of the
Western Union Telegraph company
were in Duluth yesterday afternoon on
a tour of inspection. They were en-
tertained by Edwin Kelley, local man-
The party included: T. P. Cook, gen-
eral superintendent of the Western
district, and M. P. Cook, commercial
superintendent of the Western district,
of Chicago; A. B. Bradley, Minneapo-
lis, commercial superintendent of this
district; B. H. Haig of the traffic en-
gineer's office and assistant to Gen-
eral Manager Carroll of New York city.
The officials left last night for Chicago
in their special car,
Norfolk Suits Only $15
At the "3 Winners," 116 East Superior
street.
The Pleasure of Dining at Our Tea Rooms Is Enjoyed By Many Epicures Each
Saturday Night, Agree It Is the Best Dinner Ever Served for $1,
Stationery Special
Good quality linen writing paper
put up in pound packages of 96
sheets, selling special. Saturday, at
2 lbs. for 25cj per lb., 15c.
Envelopes to match, per pkg. 5c.
DR CARNOT'S SOAP 10c BOX.
Dr.* Carnot's Complexion Soap,
tliree bars to the box, selling Sat-
urday, special at, box, only 10c.
25r CANDY KISSES 10 LB.
The customary Panton & White
pure variety candy kisses, that al-
ways sell for 25c, special, only 10c.
Suits Tailored Like Our $25 Ones
Are to Be Had Only at This Store
We have outstripped all competition on suits selling at $25. hX this
popular price we show a very comprehensive line of stylish garments,
such as most stores would ask $5 to $7.50 more for— and get it, too. Fact
is, there's garments in this lot for Saturday that were bought to sell at
$30 in this store, but to fill in certain numbers already sold, are offered
at $25.
Better Coats Than Are Customarily
Found Priced at $14.98 and $18.50
We will give other stores a handicap of $2.50 to $5 on these two coat
numbers, and still win with hands down. We believe they are the strong-
est values we have ever offered, and we think you will agree with us
after comparison. Those at $14.98 are plain tailored from homespun,
tweeds, coverts and serges, colors blue, tan, gray and mixtures. The $18.50
line are plain tailored or with trimmed collars and cuffs, and are made
from serges, coverts and fancy mixtures. It will pay you to see these
Saturday.
Lingerie Dresses: Most Exclusive Models at
Prices Often Asked for Commonplace Ones
It's our buyer's secret how we got such splendid dresses to sell for
so little money. It's an open fact to many women that such garments
were never before offered at so little money. Most attractively made
from fine batiste and marquisette, they are exquisitely trimmed with Val.
and Cluny laces, all-over embtoidery and panels of Swiss embroidery.
There are high or Dutch necks, long and short sleeves, priced at $7.50,
$9.98, $12,50 up. r
Special Purchase and Sale of
Men's Silk Hose at 35c
We saw a favorable hc>siery market, and quickly
took advantage of it. Pence these beautiful silk
hose at much under normal cost. Colors are black,
navy, and gray — and they are re-enforced at heel
and toe — come all sizes, s<;lling 3 pairs for $1; pr, 35c.
Men's 50c Neckwc^ar Only 25c
Splendid assortment oi new four-in-hand
ties, newest spring styles anc. colorings, cut from
the quality silk it's customary to make 50c goods
from. We got it at a considerable discount and
instead of selling at 50c, offer it Saturday at 25c.
New Soft Collars, Complete SOc
Neckwear certain of great vogue this season is the
soft collar with wash tie to match. We show complete
assortment of colors, sizes 14 to 16j^, collar tie and pearl
fastener, set SOc.
Women's Silk Hose, Guaranteed for Three
Months, Per Box-4 Pairs $3
An unprecedented hosiery offer, making it practical for every woman
to wear fine silk hose, and at no greater cost than for ordinary ones.
Our written guarantee that the four pair will last three months, or will
be replaced with new hose, goes with each box; the price for which
is only $3.
Phoenix Silk Hose 50c Per Pair
The well known and fopular Phoenix silk hose, made with lisle
heel and toe, garter top, black only, all sizes, pair SOc.
Splendidly Tailored Waists $1.49
Another wonderful value for Saturday. Big shipment of these
waists has just arrived and they look the values their maker promised.
Expertly tailored from good linene, they have plaits, or made plain
with pocket; special Saturday, at $1.49.
Have You Bought Flower Seeds, Plants, Bulbs or Rose Bushes Yet ?
Come Here Saturday for Hardy Field Grown Plants at Smallest Cost
It was a great sight to see the throngs of people here buying plants, seeds and hulbs today and yesterday. Flower cul-
turists were aglow with enthusiasm at the magnificent plants, which are to be had for so little. • , j i
The plants, all labeled with their true name, are hardy field grown variety, and Jtcclimated to this region; the seeds and
bulbs come from the foremost and most reliable nursery in the country. Sale offers —
Hydranirra Tre*«i, best variety of
hardy plants, 4, B and 6 feet
high; worth $2.50. Sale price
only 60o.
Lawn Seed
Central Park Lawn
Seed, most successful
mixture for luxuriant
lawns, lib. fiackagres.
1 5c; half lb. pkM., 10c.
3IaHbroom Spawn — Selected Engrlish
variety, live spawn, put up in large
pound cakes, selling, each 15c.
Flower Blubs
Glndlolait, 14 varieties, each, 2c
4c, So. 10c: doz. SOc, 40c, BOe.
Cnlndlum (Elepbaat's Ear), 5c
and 12c.
BcKonlaM, single and double;
each, 5c» dozen, SOc.
Maderia Vine, 3 for Sc.
Uardcn Ltly, each 15c; also 2 for
25c.
Tube Roses, each, 3c; dozen, 30c.
American Beauty
Rose Bushes 15c
Hardy, field grown plants
that villi bioom luxuriantly
this summer; the kind your
florist will ask |1 for. Sale
price —
15 cents
These Plant* Worth to $1,
Rose Bushes 1 Perennial Plants
Crimson Rambler,
Dorothy Perkins,
Magna Charta,
Barl of Dufffcrln,
Mnte. Plantier,
rcmlan YeHovr.
Climbing Vines
ClematlM,
BoKton l\y.
Oriental Poppy,
Japan Iris,
Shasti Daisy,
Larkspur,
Sweei: William,
Phlo?:, white and pink,
Syrin ja.
Golden Glow.
Only 15c
Flowering Shrubs
Spirea Bushes,
Peonies,
Snowball Bushes,
Fruit Bushes
Raspberry,
Gooseberry,
Currant.
Opera Music, Special 23c
The big hits in latest operas very specially
priced for Saturday's selling. The list includes —
(THE HAPPIEST i>IGHT
OF HIS LIFE)
"Blind Man's Buff."
"Twenty-Four Hours of
Love,'^'
"Oh! What a Beautiful
Morning,"
"Tree of Love."
(Marie Cahill. in JUDY
FORGOT)
"Turkish Love Song,"
"The World Is Full of
Woman's Eyes."
(KATY DID)
"Homeland,"
"Katy Did."
-Out With the Owl,"
"Come Closer."
(SWEET SIXTEEN)
"My Toast to You,"
"Oh! Those Boys,'
"The Wild Rose,"
"They Follow Me Every-
where,"
"Mah Honey Love."
These Operas Only 29c
Havana and others equally popular, with the
song hits that arc now so popular in Duluth.
(HAVANA)
"Cupid's Telephone."
"Hello People,"
"How Did the Bird Know
That?"
(BALKAN PRINCESS)
"W^onderful World,"
"Love and Laughter,"
"Don't Let's Meet Again."
(PINK LADY)
"Oh! So Gently."
"I Like It,'
"I'm Single for Six Weeks
More,"
"My Beautiful Lady,"
"Bring .^.long thr Camera."
Save on Ready-Mixed
Paints — Buy Them Here
Our paints are of a known high quality stand-
ard, the goods are just what the outside label
calls them, though the low prices would lead
one to think them inferior quality.
"P. & W." pure ready mixed paint, the best
on earth, at. gallon, $1.45.
(Free Color Card for the Asking.)
Best floor paint, dries rock hard over night,
only $1.45.
High grade floor varnish, gallon, $2.
Good interior varnish, per gallon, $1.10.
Muresco, for wall tinting, 5 lb. pkgs., 35o.
20c Wall Cleaner 13o: Special wall paper
cleaning compound, 1 package sufficient to
clean good sized room; regular 20c value, Sat-
urday only 15c.
$1.50 Can Carpetina $1: This preperation re-
juvenates old carpets and rugs, gives them
life and new color; regular 11.60 cans Sat-
urday at $1. , * , T -
We also have complete stocks of Jap-a-Lac
gold paint, bronze, enamel, stains and brushes.
Let Us Figure Your Decorating
Our decorating department is a most pro-
ficient organization. We do all kinds of
interior painting, paper hanging and decorat-
ing as well as outside painting. We are al-
ways glad to furnish FREE estimates and
plans without obligation on your part. Tele-
phone our estlmater to call.
Millinery for the Younger Set
Style advantages and saving chances on
little folks' hats not to be enjoyed elsewhere.
One of our trimmers has long specialized on
children's hats and she has evolved the
smartest creations ever
shown in a Duluth store.
The style range is intense-
' ly diversified, from the plain
but pretty little ribbon trim-
^med straw shapes at 69c to
; the most exquisite imported
* lace models at $12.50. Other
shapes of Manilla, braids,
burnt straw, Milans, Tuscan
and Milan braids and pyrox-
aline trimmed with bows, flowers,
quills and aigrettes, these at sat-
isfactory prices.
Man-Tailored Suits Made to Meas-
ure $32.50— in Our Tailoring
Department
Things are humrhing in our Third Floor tailoring de-
partment A complete force of man tailors is very busy
building suits, coats and skirts for discriminating women-
garments with distinctive style individuality imparted to
them by our Fifth Avenue designer.
We make stvlish suits to vour measure, furnishing cloth,
lining and all necessary find'ings, at $32.50 and up; skirts,
$8 and up.
Ask about them at the dress goods counter, or come to
the tailoring department and see specimens of our superior
work. ^, , , „
Tailoring Department— Third Floor.
Strongest Showing of
$3.50 and $4 Shoes
We are harping to beat the band on
women's shoes at $3.50 and $4, for we
have the most complete line of most
stylish footwear at that price in the
Northwest. We know this for a fact —
doze n s have
told us so.
The lines of-
fer latest mod-
els in suede,
ve 1 v e t , gun
metal, tan and
patent leathers,
all sizes, very
special, at —
$3.50 and $4 I
Specialized Junior Apparel
GARMENTI5 OF RARE STYLE AND CHARM.
Suits: Cleverest models, loose or semi-fitted, graceful tail-
ored lines, fine muterials; sizes 13 to 18, at $1».50, $23. $27.50
and tip.
Coats: Smart and graceful models that are
faultlessly tailorei from best telected ma-
terials, plain or Irlmmed styles at $12.50,
$14.98. $18.50, $22.50, $25 up.
Dresses: Tub garments from percales,
ginghams, chambiays and linens, plain or
trimmed models, sizes 13 to 17 years, $2.98
to $11.60. ^ ^^
Dainty w^hite dresses from marquisette, net
and voile, richly embroidered or trimmed
with lace and embroidery, at $7.50 to $19.50.
Children's Dresses: Prettiest styles developed
from colored lin^n, chambray, repp and
gingham, both plain and trimmed styles at
$1 to $5.
Large showing of white dresses from sheer
lawns, batiste, mirquisette, elaborately trim-
med with laces and embroidery, sizes 3 to 12
years, $2 to $10.
Children's Coats: Black and white checks
or plain colors. a?es 2 to 6, at $2.98. Other
models from fine serge covert, finely tail-
ored, plain or trinmed styles at $4.98,
Junior's Blouses: Middy style, with large
sailor collar, braid trimmed, ages 13 to 18,
special Saturday at $1.26.
Boy$* Clothing of Merit
Clothing builded to withstand the wear a
good healthy boy will give it, and yet keep its
shape during its life. Our boy's clothes are
tailored with most careful attention to style
md finish — they please the little man immense-
l^jly and suit the mother's ideas to a nicety.
Bv Norfolk Suits, newest patterns, sizes 8
HH to 16 years, at $4.95.
HB Knickerbocker suits, all-wool serges,
^^^ worsteds and tweeds, 8 to 10 years, $5.95,
$7.50, $9.95 up.
Manly little suits for boys 3 to 8 years,
all-wool materials, $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 up.
Russian and Sailor suits, sizes 3 to 7,
$4.95 to $7.50.
Blouses of white and colored materials,
SOc and 75c; fancy shirts at $1.
Hats and caps, latest styles, SOc to
$2.50.
The Entrancbig Beauty of "P& W" MUJinwy
Is Not Measured B]r Price Tickets At f i3c«d
A stipulated price falls far short of expressing the
beauty of our millinery. When $5 or $10 is mentioned,
most women have a mind's eye picture of certain hat
models, more or less pretty, usually less.
We have won a signal success at producing exclusive
headwear at very low cost this :jeason. The ability of
our designing rooms to produce inexpensive millinery^
with the ^'lines'' of high-priced hats has been gained
through years of study in French millinery circles, actual
association and residence of our designer in Paris.
The woman with a $10 limit foi- her Spring hat cannot
afford to buy elsewhere. She will find most satisfactory se-
lection here— hand made creations VMth the smack of Pans
individuality in every line. Her less or better favored sisteri w.. ^rrr
will also find trade advantages here. /■v/f
DEFECTIVE PAGE
/
Tf
ve
« —
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Friday,
TH^ DULUTH HERALD.
4_-.l
April 21, 1911.
OFFICIAL MAP OF THE WEATHER J
FORECAST TIM.
SATl RD VY
For Duluth. Siipfrior and Tlolnity.
li'.cludlng tlid M«>aba and VtmilUon
imn rantces: Kalr WMtlier tonight
and Stiturday: pribably light fio.-it
tiuiiulit in low pldi'cH: not muoti
chance in irmperjiure; moderale
easterly winJa.
Ak presurr
EXPLANATORY NOTES
0b»rv3tl9nj (iiken *t S a. m.. seventy-fifth meriJiu) tlm».
reduntt to 1C1 Irvtt ■
IsoiaM. or con'iniious lino, pu* ^^ro•J^ll point* oi equal tir proKiK
IsOTHEBM^. or dottfd Iincs. p»s» through P'>'nl-. ot equii l«oip«r»tuft; thty
utiU b* lirawn only for Mra. (n-eiioe. W. 4nd lily ' ^
STMBoti u>dii-at» ititc of wf»tbcr Q '''*'• © Pirtly tloudy; W
clouily: (B) run; (§) snow; @l rrport missing. Arro«i rty "ilb thfWind. Kirjt
iigur*. Unipcralurt. 5o<-on.l. 24-liour r«.nf»ll. if it •nu»t« .01 ini.i; third, »inJ
veUKity of to milv!i per hour or mote.
WIND SCALE.
UUn Pel
Uour.
Brisk 25 to 15
ralm 0 to *
Linht 5 to 15
Mi!(ler»t« 15 to 25
High 33 to 50
Gale 50 •« 6*
Uurrlciue 6J and aboT»
H. W. RICHARDSON.
Local Forecastar.
M
^^■hen one arDse
this morning: and
looketJ out over the
shinimerinsr surfui^-e
of the lake, retknt-
ing the bright raya
of a brilliant spring
s*iin, one felt that
life in Duluth was
worth living. When
one had partaken
of one'fl breakfast
and had started on
one's walk to the
office, one was sure of the fact that one
wouldn't live anywhere else If one
could. People who are enduring tem-
peratures over So deg. in Jacksonville,
Phoenix and other dots on the map of
the I'nlted States might think Duluth a
rather chilly town, but we are satis-
fied. Continued fair weather, withal
somewhat chilly, is promised for to-
night and tomorrow.
Chilly weather prevailed a year ago
today.
Tlif* .sun rose this mdrning at 5:00 and
It will set at 7:04 this evening, giving
thirteen hours and fifty-live minutes of
bunlight.
Mr. Kichardson makes the following
comment on weather conditions:
•'During the last twenty-four hours
light r:iin3 fell over Eastern Minne-
sota, Wisconsin. Ml«-higan. Illinois, In-
diana and North Atlantic states, large-
Ij' tlue to the low pressure condition
central oft the East Canada coast.
Cooler weather prevails throughout the
greater part of the South in connection
HIDE REAL INTERESTS
with higrher pressures there. In the
Rocky Mountains and extreme North-
west warmer weather attends a rather
decided fall In pres.sure. At the Head
of the I^kes generally fair weather
and moderate temperature will rule
during the ensuing thirty-six hours."
(Continued from pa.ge 1.)
stage of consideration of the Canadian
reciprocity bill. Strenuous effort.s .ire
being made to force a vote before ad-
journment today. Chairman I'ndor-
wooO of the committee on ways and
means, is exerting all iioasible pres-
sure to compel action.
It was agreed at a conference be-
tween Mr. Underwood and Representa
lives McCall of Massachusetts, and
Dalzell of Pennsylvania, tiiat general
debate would close at 3 p. m. and re-
marks under the 5-mlnute rul?s be In
order. Today's debate Inclu led
speeches by Mr. McCall and Mr. Dal-
zell, the former In advocacy of the
measure and the latter against It. Mr.
Underwood, as majority leader, claim-
ed the privilege of closing the debate.
The situation Is complicated b>' the
great number of ainendments offered,
•iiany of these are not gfrinane,
however, and Mill he thrown out. The
lemainder, nip.ny of which have been
offered to delay action, will provide
difficulties for their sponsors are pre-
pared to demand roll calls.
For these reasons doubt Is expressed
by some house leaders that a vote can
be reached without continuing the ses-
sion into the night. Others believe ISIr.
Underwood will resort to "steam
General Forecasts.
Chicago. April 21. — Forecasts for
twenty-four hours ending at 7 p. m.
Saturday:
Upper Michigan — Fair tonight and
Saturday.
Wisconsin — Generally fair tonight
and Saturday; probably frost tonight
in lowlaads.
Minnesota — Fair tonight and Sat-
urday; warmer in northwest portion
tonight; probably light frost tonjght
in lowlands of east portion.
Iowa — Generiillj- fair tonight and
Saturday; not much change in tem-
perature.
North Dakota — Increasing cloudi-
ness tonight and Saturday; warmer tft-
nlght.
South Dakota — Fair and warmer to-
niglit, probably becoming unsettled by
Saturday night.
Montana — Generally fair tonight
and Saturday.
Upper lakes — T-.ight northwest winds;
fair toniglit and Saturday.
«
The TemperatnreM.
Following were the liighest tempera-
tures for twenty-four hours and the
roller" methods and force action.
The Democratic 'steam roller" has
proved Itself effective this session and
the optimists of the party are pinning
their faith to It on this occasion.
lowe.st for twelve, ending at 7 a. m.
today:
High. Low. I High. Low
AbileiM 84 52 I Mlnti*d03a 61 28
.\Iptn» 5«
Atlantic City ...4iJ
Hattlcfiird 68
Bismarck TO
Boise -...44
Ui>-.ton 42
lliu"i'al'> 54
Calgary
CUarlestoti ...
Clili-ago
f.'n>u4 ChrUU
Uetifer
I)e< Moines . .
L>ewb Lake ..
Uoi'gB
Dulniqtie
DULUTH ....
Uuraiigi)
ICiiitport
Kdiuontoa . . . .
ICsraliaba
Galvestim
Grand Haven
Green l!ay ...
Hatterai
Ha^re
Helena
Hoitglitoa
HnMn
J;icfci'Mivllle . .
KiuiiUiops ....
Kansas City . .
Knoxrllle
La Crti-ise ....
Louisville ....
Madison
.Uarauette . . . .
.Viedirlne Hat .
Memphis
Mile* City
Milwaukee ....
. .6(5
..76
..34
..78
..70
..6S
..6S
..70
..06
.60
..««
..40
..80
..56
..b*4
..72
..68
..68
'.'.66
..84
..70
..60
..64
.'.66
..64
..42
..70
..70
.72
..56
Low.
52
38
38
S8
.'.6
3i
34
34
30
58
44
72
48
44
32
46
High.
Mlnn«d03a 61
Mu<lena .'>8
Monigomerjr 78
Montreal 48
Moorhead 68
New Urleaua 84
.New York 62
North Platte 68
Oklaliuma 80
Omaha 66
Parry Sound 58
Phoenix 88
36
32
Pitrrp
IMttsbtirg
Port Arthur . . . .
PorUand. Or
44 Prhioe Albert ...
36 iJu'App«ll«
: llalelgh
|IUi>id City
I Uosebiirg
I Uoswell
|.st. Loul.-*
St. Paul
|S< Lake City..
San Uiego
San Francisco ..
s.nilt Ste. Marie
! Seattle
34
63
38
3»
46
38
40
34
3 J ' .'ilierldan
62 I Sl'.reveport . . .
44 ' Sioux City . .
50 I Si)okane
42 ■^wift Current
40|Tao«>a
48 I Toledo
42 ! Washington
38lVVllUston
38 I Wlnnomucca
42 I Yellowstone . .
401
.66
..58
..46
..74
.62
.60
.64
.62
..74
.8ii
.66
..64
.46
..62
-.1
.'54
..62
..64
.70
..66
.72
..«6
..K2
.53
.54
.68
.50
.58
.56
51
38 j
40 I
34 t
43 I
28 I
36 I
44
40
42
46
54
44
36
58
5U
S4
46
46
58
42
42
40
66
44
46
34
28
30
31
UNDERWOOD ENDS DEBATE.
Urges Reciprocity as Heralding Era
of Honest Competition.
"VN'ashlngton, April 21. — "Heralding
the era of honest competition" Repre-
sentative Underwood of Alabama,
chairman of the ways and means com-
mittee, closed the debate on the Cana-
dian reciprocity agreement In the
house today.
The enactment of the reciprocity bill
into law. he said, would work the end
of the period of "exclusion In the eco-
nomic policy of the country In so far
as customs laws effect the Industrial
conditions of the nation."
'For fifty years," he said, "the Re-
publican party has maintained the
policy of excluding from the home
market, as far as it has been able to
do so, comi)etltive products from other
countries. In the beginning this pol-
icy was inaugurated with the express
declaration that It was intended to
develop new industries until they were
strong enough to stand alone and face.
In the open, the markets of the world
//'/ Dinner
and It's Ready
Van Camp's
Spaghetti
Italian Stylm
At Every GroctTT— Ready -cooIcmI
10c and 15c per can
Madam, Here*s
Something New
Here is a spaghetti, Italian styley
made better than in Rome.
It's our newest dish — the most popu"
lar dish our chefs have ever created.
They spent two years on the recipe.
They employ in the making 17 ingre-
dients, each the finest of its kind.
The main ones are these:
Dunim wheat spaghetti.
Herkimer County full cream cheese.
Beat creamery butter.
The same superlative tomato sauce
we use in Van Camp's Pork & Beans.
This dish, ready cooked, is now at
your grocer's. All you have to do is to
heat it.
It is so amazingly good that people
notice it instantly. You will find no
one who ever has eaten another spa-
ghetti like this.
Don't ask how we make it, for that
is our secret. The recipe is priceless.
But enjoy it — enjoy it to the full.
It's hearty and cheap and delicious.
Every time that srou serve it you'll be
glad that we make it.
And, however much you serve, there
will never be any left over.
Tell your grocer — now before you
forget it — to send the first supply. Then
note how often you serve it — a dish
you never had before.
Van Camp Packing Company ^Je?**** IndianapoKi, Ind.
1^
and the rivalry of our protective com-
petitors, but the greed for gain has
driven the advocates of this theory
far beyond the position they main-
tained at Its inception. Today there is
hardly a great American industry that
is not exporting its surplus products
to the open markets of the world and
selling them in free competition with
the manufactures and crops of our for-
' eign competitors. We would be un-
rivalled masters of production and in-
dustry in every land where free com-
IJetition can be obtained, if we would
but strike off the shackles that bind
us to the dead and unnecessary eco-
nomic system maintained by the Re-
publican party, that creates false
standards and wasteful conditions at
home."
Should Reduce Comt of Living.
Mr. Underwood contended that ilie
nation shouUl turn from these stand-
ards, carefully adjusting the laws to
meet new conditions without serious
Injury to capital or labor, In order to
leduce the cost of living at home and
be prepared to dispose of surplus prod-
ucts to Insure stability of prices and
employment to labor.
"The Democratic party," he con-
tinued, "does not intend to abandon
the custom liouses, but favors a policy
of levying custom duties for revenue
purposes only at rates that will not
destroy fair and honest competition in
the home market. I say that this bill
marks an era in the economic life of
the nation. Why? Not that the imme-
diate results will be far-reaching, but
because it takes one step in the right
direction; a step away from the ex-
clusive protective policy, a step toward
an honest competitive policy.*'
In reviewing recent tariff legisla-
tion, Mr. Underwood declared that "our
standpat Republican friends" were re-
sponsible for having the reciprocity
agreement now before the congress.
The Payne-Aldrich tariff bill he char-
acterized as a gold brick that glittered
without and was false metal within.
When it came to applying the tariff to
Canada he said that the president
dared not impose the maximum rate
on Canadian products, a condition
which led up to the Albany tariff con-
ference with the Canadian agents and
subsequent negotiations for reciprocity.
THE TRUTH
Of the matter is that we (the Gately stores)
are the largest retailers of Men's Clothing
in the country (95 stores). This fact alone
might not interest you; but what will in-
terest and is of vital importance to every
man in Duluth is that our enormous pur-
chasing power enables us to underbuy —
no retailer will deny this — therefore, we
can and do undersell
Suits, $20 and $25
Others, $10 and $15
(I
MADERO'S LATEST ULTIMATUM
We sell Cluett and Wilson Bros.
shirts and furnishing goods, Ar-
row collars, etc.
Shirts, $1, $1.50, $2, $150.
Underwear, 50c to $2.50.
Ties, 19c, 25c, 50c, 75c.
Hosiery, 10c, I5c, 25c, 50c
Why deny yourself when you can buy
better goods, better made, for the same
or less money and pay us as you get
paid — on easy paymtents.
ECONOMY — Practice it by taking advantage of
' out-of-the-ordinary" value giving in Suits,
Dresses, Skirts, Waists tomorrow, Saturday.
SUITS
Featuring^ at $15.00,
$19.50, $22.50, $24.50
COATS
Featurin:j at $15,
$19,50 and $22.50
DRESSES
Featuring: at $12.50,
$15.00, $19.50, $22.50
WAISTS
Featuring: at
$2.50, $350, $5 and $7.50
SKIRTS
Featuring: at
$6.50, $10 and $12.50
8 Cast Superior Street
The House Wheie Your Credit Is Good.
(Continued from page 1.)
say positively that he will open his
attacK on Juarez this afternoon, nor
does he set any time for the figlit, but
tliat if the retirement of
announced, Juarez will be
he declares
Diaz is not
stormed.
Yesterday
tice to the
morning Madero sent no-
foreign consuls in Juarez
that "Juarez may be attacked any
time after midnight April 20."
During the day persons attempting
to bring about an armistice for the
discussion of peace obtained from
Madero the statement that "I will wait
twenty-four hours longer for Diaz to
decide if he will surrender the presi-
dency."
C»ininiaKiiouer8 Xot Sure of Time.
The peace commissioners are not
sure whether he meant twenty-four
hours from the time they were talking
to him, which was 2 o'clock In the aft-
ernoon, or twenty-four hours from the
time he had informed the consuls that
the battle might be expected.
Anyhow, t-here has as yet been no
indication that the answer of Diaz is
to be favorable. At the offices of the
El Paso junta there appears to be no
iubilation such as might be expected,
if the code messages coming from its
confidential agent in Washington were
of a character Indicating a compliance
with the wishes of the insurrecto
president and his men.
The Juarez military officials appear
confident of the completeness of their
fortifications, and American army offi-
cers compliment them as excellent
examples of engineering work. Not
only is the town fortified to defend
Itself, but it has several field guns and
three or four rapid-fire guns calculated
to prove most eft'ective In scattering
the enemy when the guns are put In
action.
The rebel army has now had .Tuarez
surrounded on the northXvest, west and
southwest for more than thirty-six
hours and has been busy surrounding
the city steadily since last Friday, when
the first detachment arrived. It bat-
tled all next day twelve miles from
Juarez with a small band of the de-
fenders of the town.
Keep Inalde Town.
Since that time none of the federals
have ventured outside the city limits,
but they have been busy inside prepar-
ing for the attack.
It is officially stated in Juarez that
Gen. Antonio Rabago is en route from
Chihuahua with heavy artillery, and
cavalry to reinforce the garrison and
the federals say the rebels could not
hold the town If they took It. CoL
Guizippe Garibaldi, chief of staff to Ma-
dero, answering this report, said to-
day:
"We are not afraid of bugaboos. "W e
will take Juarez when we can. If the
federals then attack us again It will
be our business to defend ourselves."
El
quiet
two
and
Spend ttnlet Night.
Paso, Tex., April 21. — All was
at Juarez earlv today. "Within
miles of each other the insurrecto
federal forces slept on their arms
last night, but they slept peacefully,
for each soldier knew there was to be
no battle. The federal pickets did not
relax their vigilance, nor did those on
guard I" the Insurrecto camp, but on
neither side was there any great un-
easiness. The Insurrecto commander
had promised to give the peace dele-
gations another twenty-four hours to
Induce Diaz to say he would surrender
the Mexican presidency, and the fed-
erals knew he would not attack dur-
ing that time. The federals are no
match In numbers for the Insurrectos
and the latter were secure In the
knowledge that there would be no at-
tack from the garrison In the city.
By 9 o'clock last night the Insurrec-
tos were mostly all rolled In their
blankets. Many of them slept the
slumber that follows much indulgence
In intoxicants, for during the day yes-
terday and the early night numerous
flasks of liquor found the wav Into the
Insurrecto camp. There was no row-
dyism, however, and it was rather a
quiet place among the rugged hills In
the big ravines and canyons. The
sentinels walked their posts on the
mountain tops overlooking the flicker-
ing lights In Juarez. The artillery-
men slept near their home-made field
pieces.
Conrieni Are Busy.
At the Insurrecto junta in El Paso,
the clerical force was up late drafting
telegrams, deciphering and sending
messages. Several couriers left during
the night for the insurrecto camp;
others were prepared for an early
start this morning. As all correspond,
ence between Vft, Gomez In Washing-
ton and tna lofcal junta is In cipher,
the clerical force is kept busy. The
force was more than ordinarily active
last nlsh^-, Ifcej^use of the unusual
amount of business.
There is mucli expectancy In the in-
surrecto camp fttid at the Junta in \
El Paso over the coming of Francisco
I. Madero, Sr„ who is now en route
from the south and Is expected to
reach here during the day sometime.
Francisco I, Madero, Jr., has stated,
however, that while he will be glad
to receive his father, he has nothing
more to offer or accept in the way of
peace than that which he already sig-
nified. The retirement of Diaz is first
and foremost the Important object to
be accomplished, he declares, for with
the retirement of Diaz he expects to
see the country return to the normal
condition of a republic. If Diaz does not
retire, he will have to defeat the in-
surrecto army, if he can, is the blunt
assertion of the insurrecto president
and leader.
The United States troops that have
been In camp near Fort Bliss have
moved down Into the city and are now
camped close to the border. These
troops are In addition to those on
active border patrol.
Mexico
Mexico, City,
night, through
affairs, notified
ModifleM Reply.
April 21. — Mexico last
the minister of foreign
its reply to the note of
Don't Persecute
your Bowels
CARTER'S LITTLB^ ^
UVER PILLS
PorehrTcertaU*. AA,
■enllr oo the Kfi^.
wiMinW bik. aw'
■ootiMliMilelieato,
MaUMUMof
CK tbcDowd. ^
CwcCm-
I know.
SmaU PUU Smdl Dmo, SnuJl Price
Genuine nuHtbeu Signature
President Taft regarding the Agua
Minister De La Barra requested Am-
bassador Wilson to notify the state de-
partment at Washington that he de-
sired to recall that por.ion of his re-
cent note in which he expressed the
surprise felt by Mexican officials at the
crossing of the international border by
"individuals of the American army."
He referred to the Incident of Capt.
Gaujot and Lieut. Moon' who entered
Agua Prieta on the day cf the fight and
accepted the surrender of federal
troops. In view of the lite reports the
minister declared his tellef that the
officers did not cross tie line to ask
the garrison to surrender.
The minister of foreijjn affairs
brieflyl
difics
isnlii?to
11 at
tllned
re-
the
the
I he wished
ion papers
in which
lexico had
quested the amb
department and briefly lie
character of the moditicsi(|^o
to make.
He had read in til
the story from Was'
it was said the note fr{>m
created an unfavorable impression
Discussing tha attitudo of the Wash-
ington officials, Ambaiisador Wilson
asked Minister De La Birra If he was
expected to understand that Mexico
was attempting to force the United
States to Intervene.
Expressing his surprise. Minister De
La Barra assured him that nothing was
further from the intention of liis coun-
try, and that in his sts.tment he cor-
rectly reflected the attitude of Presi-
dent Diaz. He assured the ambassador
that it was the desire of Mexico to
avoid any possible mi:iunderstandlng
growing out of the controversy.
He desired to have th<! United States
to understand that there was nothing
that had occurred either in affairs of
the frontier or In the ^^ffrrespondence
that would justify the impression that
Mexico desired the Interference of the
United States.
Ambassador Wilson assured the min-
ister he would Imemdiat<ly forward the
reouest to Washington.
Confusion Cnnneti Hitch.
■V\^ashington, April 21. — Confusion as
to the Interpretation of an armistice
is believed hv Dr. "Vazquez Gomez, head
of the confidential agency of the Mex-
ican revolutionists, to be responsible
for the hitch in the trace which had
been partially arranged with the Mex-
ican government and \*hlch Gen. Ma-
dero yesterday rejected.
Dr. Gomez sent a lor.g telegram to
Gen. Madero today in wliich he pointed
out that it was necessary not to con-
fuse the armistice proposition with the
peace proposals which were to follow.
He declared in his message that nei-
ther side would gain or lose bv an ar-
mistice, the primary condition beln<
that status quo be Imposed on all mili-
tary operations, which would include,
of course, the shipment of arms or the
bringing up of reinforcements to the
North of Mexico, a thing which Gen.
Madero yesterday said was probably
the Mexican government's Idea in fa-
voring the armistice.
The ultimatum issued bv Gen. Ma-
dero to tlie effect that he would attack
Juarez today unless he was assured
that President Diaz would resign has
been formally communicated bv Dr.
Gomez to the Mexican government.
Dr. Gomez was not optimistic as to
a favorable response. It is said that
Dr. Gomez believes an assurance that
Diaz would resign should be given
only after the other conditions of
peace are arranged, which he thinks
would occupy at least a month, dur-
ing which time the country would be
returning to its normal condition.
♦
Coffins Sent South.
Galveston, Tex.. April 21. — It was
learned here yesterday that tlie war
department had ordered 500 coffins
shipped direct from New York via this
port to points in Texas. No explana-
tion of why this gruesome cargo was
coming could be obtained here.
It may be hard to find a good servant
by advertising — but it's harder if yorf
try some other way!
Victim of Drink Needs Orrioe
Drink cunningly destroys the will
power, and while the drunkard wants
to do what you tell him, he wants a
thousand times more the drink that
he craves. Medical treatment is nec-
essary. Orrlne destroys the desire for
liquor, so that the drink will not be
mlsssed and restores the patient to
health.
This remedy is thoroughly scientific
and is so uniformly successful that
it is sold with a guarantee to refund
your money if after a trial it has not
benefited. Booklet free on request.
The Orrine Company, Orrine Build-
ing, W'ashlngton, D. C. Sold in this
city by W. A. Abbett, 205 West Su-
perior street, 930 East Second street
and 101 West Fourth street.
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Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
ENGLISHMEN
LOSEJAHH
Verdicts in Recent Murder
Cases Shake Faith in
Courts.
f ioty, for the benpfit of the future little
Hose, disappeared a few dnys ago from
its accustometi place in her small l>are
room in the rear of 1415 North Thir-
teenth street.
Hurrying to a bank when she dis-
covered her loss. Aliss Kobinson was
rejoiced to learn that the money was
intact. But to resain pos8e.»<sion of it
.she was required to advertise the loss
of the deposit <ertlflcate. and she will
also ha\e to pive bond for twice the
amount of the deposit. She began ad-
vertising immediately and notified the
police f)f her loss.
•It was my wish, as a young woman,
to have a little girl of my own." said
the gray-haired little woman, 'but It
was not meant that this wish .should
be gratified, for no man ever asked me
to marry him.
"1 came to St. T>ouis thirty years ago
from England and found employment
In clothing factories as a seamstress.
I have worked in this way ever since.
I have been able to earn as much as
$6 .^0 a week when work is steady, and
1 found that I could rent a room for ♦I
a week and could get what I needed to
eat and wear for another dollar a
week
"So I began to save my money for a
baby. I decided to leave the money to
the Christian Missionary society, and
to let it select the baby after my death.
••Whenever I would put a dollar
away I would .^ay to myself: •There
is a pair of shoes for little Rose, or
There's a book for her.' That made it
easy, and I was surprised to find how
much I could save.
•fn 1898 I had almost 11,000 saved,
but I had it in a building and loan
company which collapsed and most or
It was lost. With what little was left
I started again to save, resolving that
If I could keep my' fceali^i I would
leave enough money for little Fiose
when I died. ^ , ^,
••I am unable to understand how the
box came to disappear, but I am glad
the money is not lost."
ERROR MA\^ KILL BILL.
Maximum Death Damages Measure
Passed But Title Defective.
St. Paul, Minn., April 21. — Ernest
Lundeen has discovered that his bill
providing for a maximum of $7,500 as
damages in case of accidental death
passed both houses of the legislature
unamended.
The governor has signed it, and
though it Is now a law so far as these
actions can make it, the bill Is faulty
In title, as It reads, '"An act for an
act," instead of •A bill for an act."
In this form the bill passed both
houses.
The governor said yesterday that he
signed it because he did not believe it
his dutv to kill a bill because of a
technical error. He approves the meas-
ure. , .
It is expected that opponents of the
bill will appeal to the courts In an
effort to have it annulled on account
of the title. Mr. Lundeen has been un-
able to find any rule or statute pro-
viding that the title shall read "A bill
for an act."
♦ ■
Directoni of Mlmionrl Paolllc.
New York, April 21.— The gap left in
the Missouri "Pacific directorate by the
resignation of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.. repre-
sentatives, when George Gold forced the
i president of
sterday with
5peyer of the
k Co., and H.
le Buffalo &
r. Miller will
pacity. They
ind Cornelius
election of B. F. Bush a!
the road, was filled y«
the selection of James i
banking firm of Speyer <
I. Miller, receiver of t!
Susquehanna railway. W
serve in an advisory ca
succeed Paul Warburg i
Vanderbllt.
TAFrS^^TOO SMALL
To Play in Baseball Team, So He
Carries Wator.
Watertown, Conn., Apr 1 21.— Charles
Taft. son of the president, has started
to learn baseball by acting as water-
carrier of the nine of the Taft school,
of which his uncle, Horace Taft, Is
principal. Charlie has caught the en-
thusiasm for the gm.me shown by hl«
father, and the fact that he is nephew
and namesake of the owner of the
Chicago National league team also con-
tributed to his ambition to make a
plate for himself in the national game.
He is too voung to play on the school
team but he is ambitious to beconie a
manager, a position which is often
obtained through the water-boy route.
Hence his decision to preside at the
The Hartford high school nine played
at the Taft school recently, and de-
veloped an almost unquenchable thirst
when the players learned that it was
the president's son who was rushing
the bucket in their behalf.
Nifty Bliie Serge Suits f 15
At the "3 Winners," 115 East Superior
street.
Grave Charges Against the
htegrity of Scotland Yard
Detectives.
■London, April 21. — When the new-
court of criminal appeal was consti-
tuted about a year ago, Englishmen
generally felt that an end had come tn
the time when an innocent man could
be hanged, as undoubtedly Innocent
men have been hanged under the oul
system of unrestricted trial by a com-
mon jury which prevailed in England
for centuries. It was felt that tlirto
Judges sitting far removed from the
excitement and passion of the trial
court would render an impartial ver-
dict and would speedily set aside any
veniict by a jury as to the justice of
wiikii there was any vestige of doubi.
New. however, public opinion is vcei-
Ing round to the position that the ap-
peal court has made little dlffcience.
To begin witii. its establishment was
oiq>osed by the ju<lges. who felt that it
was a reflection on their impartiality
and iibilily. and. secondly, the appeal
Judges are of the same class and rank
as iiie trial juil^es. A man who pie-
sidis at the Uld Bailey today in a mur-
der trial may sit as an appeal Judge
tomcrrow to review the acts of one of
hi.-^ brother Judges, and the next day
he n.ay be Cv>nducting criminal busi-
ness again in a provincial court. Nat-
urally, there is loyally among judges
and they don't like to upset the de-
cisions of their judicial brothers.
The <'rippen (axe.
Tlils uneasy state of public opinion
has lieen increased by the action of the
appeal court in two recent famous
case.-i, those of l>r. Crippen, the Ameri-
can doctor who was hanged for the
murder of his wife, and Etinie Morri-
son, the Russian Jew baker, who wiil
be hanged in u week or two for the
murder of a compatriot. Now, 1 don t
allege that either Crippen or Morri-
son was innocent. I'robably they boin
were guilty, and in Morrison's case, at
least, the prisoner is a man of the type
of whom a .'Scottish Judge said that "a
wee bit of hanging would do him no
harm." but I do assert that neither
man would have been hanged had he
been tried in the United States. Fur-
thermore, he would have escaped, not
because of the extreme technicality of
American law and practice, but be-
ca\ise no American jury would have
taiien the responsibility of sending a
man to death on the evidence.
The trouble is that English juries are
hypnotized by the prosecution, and the
thoorv ot prosecution by the crown is
responsible for this. The prosecutor in
English law is not in theory a prose-
cutor ill all. He is an advocate ap-
pointed to watch and .«<ee that justice
is done. If he thinks the prisoner in-
nocent, in theory it is his duty to do all
he can to free him. If guilty, he is
supposed to try to hang him. In fact,
tlie English prosecutor is just a kern
lawyer ;>iaying the legal game for all
it is worth to obtain a verdict for his
side and reputation for himself. The
prisoner i.s only a pawn in the game.
British juries generally are made up of
smiill tradesmen, of no great intelli-
gence, who are much 'mpressed by the
fact that the crown Is prosecuting and
whose minds are biased, unconsciously
perliaps. but none the less surely
against the prisoner.
The Morrison Case.
The Morrison case has been a severe
Ehock to the faith of many English-
men, not onlv in the Infallibility of the
courts, but al-so in the integrity of the
police, or rather, of Scotland Yard, as
the London detective bureau is called,
for the London uniformed policeman
Is about as good a specimen of the
genus as there is in the world. At the
lime of the murder for which Morrison
has be<»n sentenced. Scotland Yard was
smarting under public criticism for its
failure to catch the Houndsditch an-
archi''ts. and the yard made much capi-
tal over its promptitude in arresting
Morrison. At the trial, however, all
the witnesses were of the. class which
is known in London as cooper's narks
and in New York as police stool pig-
eons. It was provefl that several of
them gave perjured testimony against
Morrison, and even the police evidence
was impeached by no less a person
than a policeman. This man, a mem-
ber of the uniformed force, by the
wav directly contradicted the evidence
of the detective about an alleged ad-
mission by Morrison when he was
brought into the station on the night
of his arrest. All this leaves an ugly
taste In the mouths of those who have
been following the case.
InveMtlKadon Started.
It Is only fair to say that prompt
action has been taken by the authori-
ties in the police matter. An Investi-
gation has been begun and the police-
man who came forward to contradict
the evidence of his superiors has been
a«-;Mired that his career In the force
will not be affected In any way by any
evidence he may give. The result, how-
ever Is almost a foregone conclusion.
Unless the policeman can bring sup-
porting evidence It is hardly likely that
his word will be taken against that of
a band of inspectors and sergeants who
are fighting for their positions and
reputations.
The fact remains, however, that the
yard Is In distinctly bad odor at pres-
ent. A few years ago no one ever
thought of accusing the detectives of
making cases. Now such accusations
bv prisoners are of weekly occurrence
lii the police courts, and magistrates
have more than once recently dis-
. missed charges and censured the police
for bringing them. Of course. It may
be all smoke, but where there is so
much smoke there usually is some tire.
69 Different Styles at f 15.
In
,M mens and young men's spring
suits we show you 6;> different styles
of all wool materials for only |15. S
Winners," 115 East tJuperlor street.
SPINSfER^LlVES
ON $2 A WEEK
Saves Money to Support Some
Girl A:ter Her
Death.
St. Louis, Mo., April 20. — Miss Rose
Robinson, 61 years old, for thirteen
years has lived on |2 a week, while
Bhe has saved the rest of her meager
earnlns.s as a seamstress for the fu-
ture care and education of some or-
phan girl whom she desires, after her
death to take her name. She is an
English woman and manifests gentle
breeding Her remarkable self-sacri-
fice was brought to light through a
loss which endangered the noarded
*"An old mahogany box containing her
certificate of deposit for the amount of
the .savings, $931.50. and the will in
which she bequeatlied the whole
amount to th« Christian Missionary so-
WHOLESALE
AND RETAIL.
MSSOUmON
WHOLESAE
AND RETAIL.
TO RAISE THE FORTY THOUSAND DOLLARS WE KNOW OF ONE WAY ONLY
To make a quick and absolute clearing of our entire stock. And the only way to make a quick
clearing is by the one process of reduced prices. These reduced prices, coming at the very be-
ginning of spring, offer every member of your family complete redressing at much less than the
regular prices. A lengthy argument is not necessary— necessity knows no law.
©IFFOiTiyiiDTY DS iE¥EIR BiiiiEi iY TIHI
li k, H. TO 1ic30 F,
m^
BSE iuii. mm mfmwmiii us meibe m
tSm'S HOST MTiI©TII¥E OLiiyBi© E¥EiT.
Men's and Young Men's $12.50
and $15 Suits $7.75.
Complete Assortment— All Sizes.
Saturday will be a great day in our Men's Cloth-
ing section — handsome worsteds, cheviots and cas-
simeres in all the new and up-to-date colors, all
sizes 32 to 42 breast measure to select from; $12.50
and $15.00 values for —
We Call Your Attention to tlie Most Sensational
Suit Bargains You Ever Heard Of.
No. 3.— Included in this lot you will find the famous
Sophmore make, as well as other reputable makes—
strictly hand-tailored garment.s— every size and un-
limited variety of prevailing styles and patterns for
men and young men — suits that are well worth $25 and
$22.50 — during our dissolution sale, at —
No. 2 embraces every suit in the house that sold be-
fore Easter up to $20. These suits are positively the
biggest values in the city at their regular prices. We
wilfsacrifice this entire lot of $20, $18 and $16.50 Suits
during our dissolution sale for —
$12
Dissolution Sale
of Men's
New Spring Hose
200 dozen fancy and plain
Hose, imported and domes-
tic lisle, heels and toes rein-
forced with linen, embracing
every color in vogue — regu-
lar 35c and 25c (luality, on
sale tomorrow, and while
they last at, pair —
Per Dozen
$1.75
Unequaled Sale of
Men's Silk Hose.
The dainty embroidered
kinds, in all shades, spliced
heels and toes. Where
else can you buy embroid-
ered Silk Hose at the phe-
nomenally low
price of, per 50C
pair. » .^"^
(Worth up to $1.50 a pair.)
Investigate Our Offer of $1.00
Shirts for Men.
At the opemng of our dissolution sale Thursday
most men bought five of these $1.00 shirts, some
took a dozen or more— few are satisfied with less
than three. Little wonder, when quality and price
are considered together. Made of fine Madras and
Percale by the Lion Shirt & Collar Co.
This is a si>ecial lot, but fashioned with all the
care and style found in $1.50 and $2.00 shirts.
Coat Shirts with attached cuffs
—at
$1.00
I Some Downriglit Good
'Values in Ladies'
and Cliildren's Hose.
Ladies' Black Fine Stockings,
excelLent 25c values; dissolution
sale price —
Women's $2 and $1.50 Kid Gloves $1
These are the expensive g^radcs of Kid Gloves
for women, in 1 and 2-clasp styles— every pair
perfect, in black, white and colors, ^1 AA
regular $2 and $1.50 grades, at ^IbUU
Women's 69c Lisle
Combination Suits 35c
Women's Summer Vests at 9c
Positively the greatest offering ever made—
25c silk trimmed shaped Vests— 5,000 gar-
ments in the lot— priced for Satur- A-^
day, only ' ^^
Ladies' Waists
Bepinnlnpr tomorrow morninK and
no later than Saturday night we
will sell Women's Lisie Combina-
tion Suits, nicely trimmed with
fine lace, regular 69c
quality, dissolution sale
price
35c
Ladies, here is a waist sensation
that will establish a record un-
precedented in retaildom — our dis-
solution sale Rives you the oppor-
tunity to select from over 2,000
White Waists that formerly re-
tailed for $3.00, $2.50
and $2.00 — tomorrow,
Friday and Saturday. . .
riv re-
95c
Stockings for girls and boys
I with reinforced heels and to^es
and double knee, cheap at 25c,
dissolution sale price —
She
JL^^
ib^'WMtW^s 7 SupgffioRS^
Tlie Most Sensational Sale of Men's
Fine Spring Shoes Ever Attempted
Our dissolution of partnership forces us to adopt drastic meas-
ures in order to raise the necessary cash. Beginning tomorrow
and during the life of this sale, we will sell the famous
Selz Royal Blue Shoes& Oxfords $2.95
The $5, $4.50 and $4 grades at ^
This offer includes any other shoe in the store that sold at the
above prices. •, *
No offer like that v;as ever attempted by any other retailer at
this time of the year wlien stocks are new and complete.
The Most Phenomenal I
Sale of Boys' Two- *
Piece Knickeitocker
Suits Ever Known
500 Boys' Suits, in Busters,
Eatons, Sailor Blouses and
double breasted suits, sizes 4 to
17, embracing every desirable
fabric and pattern of this spring
season; regular $5.00 and $4.50
values during our dissolution
sale at —
$2.95
The Most Extraordinary Silk
SloveEventYouEverHeardOf
The famous Kayser 16 - button
Silk Gloves, in pongee, black and
^.jiite— the shades that will be
worn this season, are
poing on sale tomorrow,
•per pair .^
Sold regularly everywhere att $1.50.
95c
DEFECTIVE PAGE
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Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD,
April 21, 1911.
MORGAN MAN
IS PRESIDENT
Financier Dominates Election
of Head of Equit-
able.
Holds Majority of Stock
in Hands of Three
Trustees.
New York. April 21. — Against the ad-
tice of Supt. Hotchklss of the state
department of insurance, and of its
trustt'es. the Equitable Life Assurance
society, by a vote of its board of di-
rectors yesterday elected William A.
Day, J. Pierpont Morgan's candidate,
to succeed the late Paul Morton as
president of the society, at a salary
of f50.(">0 a year, as against the J80,-
000 a year paid to Mr. Morton. No
vice president was chosen to succeed
Mr. Day.
The hoard also went on record in
favor '>f mutuallzation. continued the
present coniniltlee on niutualizution
and instructed it to co-operate with
the state department of insurance, the
trustees and Mr. Morgan.
The vote stood tweiiiy-slx for Mr.
Day and three against, and later was
made unanimous. Thomas Spratt,
chairman of the committee on reor-
ganization, said after the meeting that
there had been no objection to Mr.
Day on jjersonal grounds, but that the
trustees and Mr. Hotclikiss belleveii
tlie election should have been post-
poned until a definltfe plan had been
formulated.
For an hour Mr. Hotchkis.s addressed
the directors. 'The majority of shares
in this society — to be exact, 502 sliarea
out of 1.000," he told them, 'is now-
owned by J. Pierpont Morgan and for
him held by three trustees. I believe
tliat Morgan favors mutuallzation, in
fact he has told me so; but Mr. Mot-
gan is 74 years old and we all know
what distrust, unrest and anxiety liave
attended a change in control of the
society in the past.
Has 500,000 Pollcyholdrr*.
"Here we have a corporation with
500,000 policyholders in this country.
Canada, Great Britain, Australia, India,
all over the world — as nearly perma-
nent, one may say, as any corporate
institution in the world can be. In
this corporation to be sold and re-
sold at the whim of the Individual
owner, to be perhaps exploited, to be
certainly intrigued for, or is it to be
enfranchised and own itself/"
Mr. Hotclikiss quoted from an insur-
ance report publlsh«d in March 11>05,
pointing out that the directors had
committed themselves to mutuallzation
at that time and urged that If legis-
lation on the subject is to be had, it
ought to be sought from the present
legislature.
Following Mr. Hotchklss' address, the
directors adopted following resolution:
"Resolved, that it is the sense of this
board that mutualization, as ."uggested
by Superintendent of Insurance Hotch-
kl.-^s, in his letter of Jan. 18 to Mr.
Morgan, is desirable, viz:
"In a manner that will avoid pro-
tracted litigation or substantial reduc-
tion of the free surplus of the society
I
ROYAL
Baking Powder
Economy
The manufaciurers of Royal Bak-
ing Powder have always declined
to produce a cheap baking powder
at the sacrifice of quality.
Royal Baking Powder is made from
pure grape cream of tartar, and is
the embodiment of all the excellence
possible to be attained in the high-
est class baking powder.
Royal Baking Powder costs only a
fair price, and is more economical
at its price than any other leavening
agent, because of the superlative
quality and absolute wholesomeness
of the food it makes.
Mixtures made in imitabon of baking powders, but containing alum,
are frequently distributed from door to door, or given away in grocery
stores. Such mixtures are dzmgerous to use in food. In Elngland,
France, Germany and some sections of the United States their sale is
prohibited by law. Alum is a dangerous mineral acid, and all
physicians condemn baking powders containing it.
no taboi of atum baking gtowdoro must
Bbow tho ingrodiontam
READ THE LABEL
and that the committee on mutualiza-
ion continue to co-operate with the
superintendent of insurance, the trus-
tees and Mr. Morgan to that end."
Mr. Morgan is now In Europe and
his 502 shares of stock are held by
George W. I'erkins, former Justice
Morgan J. O'Brien and Lewis Cass
Ledyard as trustees. He is understood
to have paid Jo, 000 a share and the
policyholders will have to make a cor-
responding disbursement for his hold-
ings.
THIS CLUB NOT
FOR WEAKUNGS
Early Morning Hikers Do Six
Seven Miles
or
Dafly.
There are walking clubs and walk-
ing clubs, but one club has recently
been organized, strange as it may ap-
pear, for the sole purpose of walking.
It has no side Issues such as dances,
roller skating parties, plcnic-on-the-
Polnt or straw rides. Tiie members
meet at a downtown lunch room every
morning, rain or slune, at 6:30 and
walk for about an hour and three-
c,uarters, co\ering six or seven miles
each day. Kach morning the members
decide where the walk for that par-
ticular day shall be; sometimes It is
around the boulevard, other times east
or west, and tiien again it may be over
on the Point. The members of the or-
ganization are as follows:
General — Ray Nelson.
Colonel — Norman l.a Mond.
Captain — Paul H. \\ elch.
oHnorable Private — Oscar Seit/.
In the Guard House — Jolin iXlarKell.
i'lshonorably Discharged — f". !■'.
There are a number of persons who
fancy themselves as strollers, wl;-
are loudly clamoring at tlie outer
gates for admission to this club, it is
I laiined, but as the present member^,
Co not desire to incur the expense of
ambulances and taxis to send th,«se
applicants home after they have
walked a half mile, th^-y cannot quali-
fy fcr membership for a long time to
Lome.
(i
MOST BEALTIFLL GIRL"
Found By Lord Ciunoys in Gotham—
deraldine Farrar on Pier.
New York, April 21. — Lord Camoya.
who has been here since tlie w^eddin??
of Vivien Gould to Lord Decies, sailed
for Kngland aboard the steamer Kaiser
Wilhelm II, expressing regret at leav-
ing New Vork for even a few weeks.
Some time ago I.,ord Camoys de
clartd that he had lost his heart to an
American girl who he described as tlie
most beautiful girl in the world
■'I shall not stay away from New
York longer than l" can help," he said.
'And I can a»«ure you tliat there is
no one in England that I am going to
marry. The lady whose beauty I de-
scribed some time ago is not aboard
this ship just now. You'll liear more
of me when I return in July, when 1
am going to British Columbia."
It was whispered that Geraldine
I'arrar was the attraction and she
happened to be on the pier when T..ord
Camoys spoke, waving a farewell to
her father, Sidney Farrar.
NEGRO LYNCHED ON
OPERA HOUSE STAGE.
Livermore. Ky., April 21. — Will Pot-
ter, a negro, was the central figure in
a tragedy last night when fifty citi-
zens dragged him upon the opera house
stage, and after hanging him, riddled
the body with bullets. Potter had
shot and killed Frank Mitchell, 22
years old. In a quarrel.
Potter was captured bj' Marshal V.
P. Stabler and piacea in the city jail.
Hearing the mob approaching, the
marshal swore in half a dozen depu-
ties, and the prisoner was rushed to
the opera house, where he was hidden
beneath the stage. The mob stormed
the theater, and dragged the negro
from his hiding place.
He was taken upon the stage and
tied securely to one of the uprights
while the mob gathered In the or-
chestra pit below.
A signal was given and the body was
riddled with bullets.
INSl RRECTOS STEAL GUN.
Wadena County Soldier Writes of
Unpublished Border Incident.
Wadena. Minn., April 21. — John
Bleisch of Bluffton has had a letter
from his son-in-law, who Is a soldier
with the United States army now sta-
tioned on the Mexican border. The let-
ter tells of the stealing of a cannon
fiom Uncle Sam's soldiers in broad
daylight by the insurrectos who ran
away with the gun toward nightfall
when the American soldiers were not
looking. Mr. Bleisch says he has al-
ways stuck up for Uncle Sam's soldiers,
but he has gone back on them now,
and calls them "sleepy heads." He says
that If he was the general in command
he would Invade Mexico and recapture
that cannon at all hazai-ds. •
^}.
%>
^q«
Glove
Merely ** asking for*^ Long Silk Gloves
does not insure your getting ** Kayser*s." There's a way ioieU the
genuine — Look in the Hem for the name "Kayser," it's there
for your protection and represents quality, reliability and a life-'
time experience in silk glove making.
A Guarantee that Guarantees
'A new pair free" if the "tips" wear out before the glove.
Don*t Accept tfke "Just om Good'* Kind
"Kayser" gloves "cost nd more" and are worth
■^ double in quality, style and value.
SMrt Silk GIoTe*. SOc, 75c, $1.00
Loac ** <• 7Sc,$1.00,|1.25,|l.SO^
-m
G
tURARTOS
Juliiu Kayser & Co.. M«ken
New York ^
DEFECTIVE PAGE T
Money Cheerfully
Refunded
We always do as
we advertise
THERE is just one way to know the degree of positive
excellence presented in our celebrated men's and young
men's clothes creations, and that is to see them — to try
them on, and to wear them —
$10, $12.50, $15, $18, $20, $22.50, $25, $35
HOSIERY — Importers' Surplus Sale!
LOT 1 — Men's Seamless Cotton
Hose, in black and tan; C#%
10c values wt#
LOT 2— Men's Extra Finish
Seamless Hose, black, tan, navy
and maroon; regular 15c C^^%
values ^^C
LOT 3 — Men's Sample Hose,
striped and embroidered effects
and full ranges of plain colors;
regular 25c val-
ues.
12J4C
LOT 4 — Men's Special Hose, in
black, tan, slate, wine and navy,
with neat embroidered design;
regular 35c values, 4 C^
only X 9C
LOT 5 — This lot also includes
some plain wine colors, with
embroidered patterns, and in self
and contrasting colors 4 C^^
sale price m ^r w
LOT 6 — Men's Hose, in plain
and changeable effects; njcely
finished and very styl-
ish; sale price
LOT 7— Men's Hose, all the
latest shades, in mercerized,
drop stitch goods; regu- OCkik
lar 50c values •i^w
LOT 8— Men's Shaw Knit, in
assored browns, blacks, natural
and white feet; mostly ^^C|^
50c values A9v
LOT 9 — Men's Fine Mercerized
Hose, in plain colors, all the
new and attractive
shades; sale price....
i9c
LOT 10 — Men's Fine Imported
Hose, fancy clock stitch em-
broidery; regular 50c OC^#^
values .W^^
LOT 11— Men's Pure Thread
Silk Hose, very fine and sheer;
full range fashionable and plain
colors; $1.00 val- CO^
ues 99C
LOT 12— Men's extra value,
traveler's samples, in all the
newest shades and fancj' ^ Ckgk
effects; sale price i ^r U
Spring Hats
In all the new Spring shapes
and shades from $1 to $5 —
The 'fwin Port's Special —
highest quality flT^i ^^^1
for the money ^W« W
Spring Sliirts
French flannels, with folded
soft cuffs, from the bt Jt cus-
tom shirt makers
$1 to $2.50
Spring Neclc^vear
Xew Spring Xeckwear, ni all
the popular new spring
shades
50c and 25c
Spring Slioes
Are shown here in great va-
riety of all the new spring
shapes
$5 to $1.95
All clothing bought
here is altered to
tit, pressed and re-
paired free ot charge.
All our goods are
sold on their merits.
Inferior goods have
no place in our store.
3t
405-407
West
Superior
Street,
Dulutli
405-407
West
Superior
Street,
Oulutli
INSPECT MILLER
TRUNK ROAD
Commissioners Find Main
Highway to Range in
Good Condition.
ExpfTiencing no greater mishap than
a punctured tire, members of the coun-
ty board made the trip to Eveleth and
return over the Miller Trunk highway,
a distance of flfty-nlne miles, in auto-
mobiles yesterday.
Tlie ride over the road was the an-
nual trip of inspection and all the
members of the board were well
pleased with its condition. There are
a few mud iioles and some of the small
bridges need slight repairs but on the
whole the road is in fine condition.
The frost is out of the ground and
the trip was taken at a time wlien tlie
delects would show up more than
tliey would later in the season. The
worst part of the road is tlirough the
town of l-'ayal and the first five miles
of road within the City of Duluth. The
part under the supervision of the
county was in the best shape of all.
A great part of the way the com-
missioners traveled at the rate of
twenty-five nUles an hour. A road
over wlilch this time can be main-
tained at this period of tlie year is
in good shape, they think.
The Miller-Trunk is used a great
deal by Duluth and range autoists in
trips to and from the range. Some
time ago at one of the meetings of the
county board, it was decided to spend
$10,000 on the road this season. This
amount the commissioners think, will
put it In the best of shape and make
it one of the best roacks out of the
city.
All of the commissioners made the
trip wltli the exception of Grant Mc-
Alahon of Ely. who was unable to go.
The comml.ssioners were accompanied
by County Engineer E. K. Coe and E
J, Fillatrault, who represented the
Duluth Automobile club.
ANOTHER UNCOLN
. VOTER IS CALLED
David Christenson of Grand
Forks, Formerly of Wis-
consin, Dies.
Grand Forks, N. D,, April 21. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — David Christen-
son died here at the home of his
daughter, Mrs. N. B. Black, yesterday,
aged nearly 86 years, of' general de-
bility.
David Christenson was bom in
Chrlstian.sand, Norway in 1826, Im-
migrating to th* United States in 1852
and settling at Keenah, Wis., where
he plied his trade of a machinist. In
1859 he was an officer under Warden
Hegge at the Wisconsin state peni-
tentiary at Waupun, remaining there
three years whea- he entered the en-
gineer corps of the United States army
during the Civil war. In the capacity
of machinist he \Ma.vr service in and
around Naslivllle, Tenn. He waa mus-
tered out in 18C5.
LiOoAted at Onhkosb.
In 1868 Mr. Ciiristenson located at
Oshkosh, Wis., where he was identi-
fied with the lumbering business for
a number of year*.
It was in 1882 that he and his son
located at aterrill. Wis., and together
tliey founded the famous Merrill Iron
works. Mr. Clirlstenson remained in
the firm until 1893 when he retired and
removed to Marinette, Wis. Ue waa
later identified with his son in the
lumbering business at Daggett, Mich.,
but was not active.
He continued to make his home in
Marinette till two years ago when lie
and his wife came to Grand Forks to
make their home with their daughter
Mrs. Norman B. Black.
Mr. Christenson waa wedded In
1857 at Neenah, Wis., to Anna Hoff, who
survives him. Three children were
born, A. G. Christenson, a newspaper
man of Merrill, Wis., Peter Christen-
son. deceased, and Mrs. N. B. Black of
this city. Peter was the eldest son and
his dtath took piace in 1000.
He was a Mason, having joined tlie
order at Neenah In 1861, and he was
a charter member o£ the Merrill lodgii,
launched in 1884.
In politics he was a staunch Repub-
lican and has voted for every Repub-
lican candidate for president since his
vote for Abraham Lincoln.
Try One for Only $10.
For your next business suit try a "3
Winner" for only $10. They will wear
well, look well and hold their shape, or
we will give you another suit free.
MlNOTlORMAL
WORK HUNG UP
Failure of Board to Agree
on Site May Postpone
Erecting Building.
Minot, N. D., April 21. — Tiie con-
struction of the buildings for the new
Minot normal may be delayed to an-
other year as a result of the failure
of the members of the normal board
of control, wlio have been in session
here for two days, to agree on a
site. A large number of sites were
offered but the board
agree, and decided to i
matter until a later mee
of the members of the 1
favor of postponing const
year.
Some SItrH OITei
Joseph Roach, president
ond National bank, offer*
sixty acres within a fe
Main street, just west of
dition, at the end of Sixth
This Is one of the clos
that has been offered the
Mr. Roach has also offi
acre tract nortli and ea
Lake Park pavilion on tli
This site is all in the val
sidered a good location.
Another site offered wa
acre tract by T. I<\ Renwi
cation is a part of the o
Grow farm just east of tl
on the road to Surrey.
could not
)ostpone the
ting. Some
)oard are In
•uciion for a
•ed.
of the Sec-
td the board
►V blocks of
Brooklyn ad-
street,
est in tracts
board.
ired a sixty-
it of Spring
e north side,
ley, and con-
s an eighty-
ild. This lo-
d Charles A.
le city limits
NAMES ALBERT LEA MAX.
Eugene Phillips Is Appcinted Rural
School Cominissi')ner.
St. Paul Minn., April 21 — (Special to
The Herald.) — Eugene M. Phillips has
been appointed rural school commis-
sioner by State Supetintendent of
.Schools C. G. Schulz. This Is a posi-
tion created by the legislature. Mr.
Pliillips will have charge of the con-
solidating of rural schools and the
Inspection of those receiving special
state aid.
Mr. Phillips has been superintend-
ent of schools at Albert Lea for nine
years and for seven yearn previous to
that superintendent of the high school
at Dawson. He is a graduate of Ham-
lin university and has taLen an active
part in educational affairs of the state.
He served as conductor of teacliers'
training schools and last year was an
inspector and lecturer. He will assume
his duties Aug. 1.
"WETS" WIN BY SI> CLE
VOTE IN FERGUS FALLS.
Fergus Falls, Minn., April 21. — The
Are Featuring Complete
Assortments of
The Kayser
Oloves
in all shades, sizes and lengths,
at the prices quoted in the reg-
ular Kay.ser Glove ads being
published all over the country.
See the reg^ular Kayser ad on
another part of this page.
recount of the city ballots, ordered by
the district court on petition of citi-
zens, has been completed. The total
number of votes cast was found to
be 1,113 instead of 1,112. and the license
men gained one vote in the Second
ward. This probabij' means that li-
cense has carried, as one vote was all
that was necessary for them to gain
in order to win the election, but there
are nine irregular votes, which the
count will pass upon before the re-
sult Is announced with certainty.
King of Stomach Remedies Free to Try
It is the opinion of all who have used Dr. Cald-
well's Syrup Pepsin that it has no equal in the cure
of ailments pertaining to the stomach, liver and
bowels. We only have room here to print a few let-
ters recently received, but it is a fact that thousands
have been received. In complaints like constipation,
headache, biliousness, drowsiness after eating, heart-
burn, gas on the stomach, and similar troubles,
whether in infancy or old age, Dr. Caldwell's Syrup
Pepsin is the one reliable remedy for you to take.
Its action is so mild that it can be given to a baby-
in fact, thousands of mothers buy it for their chil-
dren— and yet it is sufficienty strong so that the
most robust person will get action. People who use
Syrup Pepsin never again take salts or cathartic pills,
which often, by their violence, do much to upset the
stomach, for Syrup Pepsin is pleasant to take and
does its work permanently. Many have been able to
do away entirely with the use of medicines after but
a brief experience with Dr. Caldwell's wonderful rem-
edy. It is sold Ifl fifty cent and one dollar bottles
and any druggist can supply you. But if you prefer
to malce a trial of it first send
your address to Dr. Caldwell and
he will forward a tree sample bot-
tle to your home.
Dr. Caldwell does not feel that
the purchase of his remedy ends
his obligation. He nas specialijced
in stomach, liver and bowel dis-
eases for over forty years and will
be pleased to give the reader any
advice on the subject free of
charge . All are welcome to write
him. Whether for tne medical ad-
vice or the free sample address
him Dr. W. B. Caldwell. 541 Cald-
well Building, Monticello. 111.
77 e following are tome eztraeta from letters Dr. Caldu-eil
hat received:
"It Is with great pleasure that I recommend Dr. Cald-
well's Syrup Pepsin. For years my husband was a con-
stant sufferer from dyspepsia and indigestion and bilious
colic. I gave him everything I could thlnlc of, but he
grew rapidly worse, I liappened to think of the bottle of
Syrup Pepsin a friend had left with me. which I would
not give him at the time. I gave it to htm now and ne
improved from the first two doses. He is now a well
man and we have never been without Syrup Pepsin in
the he use since." — Mrs. D. M. Davis, Griggs viUe. 111.
"I lannot say enough for Syrup Pepsin, It is a god-
send t> suffering people. My stomach was In a terrible
shape. Am glad to say it is all O. K. now and am feeling
fine. Both myself and husband are using Syrup Pepsin
and will never be without It. I have haa three of my
neighbors get Syrup Pepsin and they think It is fine." —
Mrs. Eva Gaskins, No. 304 Madison St., Topeka, Kas.
"I hare had gtomach trouble for ot« two yean and always thought I
had heait trouble, for I h*d palna In mj left side. Mj heart and iierres
were weik I have had a good many doctors but none help**! me. 1 r*
one of jour HtUe books, read 11. bought one bottle of .'Jyrup Pepsin tfl try
The very flr»t botUe helped me and I hare uaed three 5Uc bottle* and feel
like a n. w man. I can eat, sleep and work ever)' day."— Budy Kasner. No.
364 8th «., MoUne, XIL
••I im pleased to wilt* and let you know that Syrup Pepsin li the
greatest remedy on earth for aU stomach troubles. I had bad »tn«nacn
UouWto for more than Hve cr six years and I tried all kinds of medUlne.
without their doing me any good, but now I uae only your Sjnip Pepsin
and I f«el "ke a new man. I eat anyUilng I want and U»»ae aauare meals
a d«r."--P. H. Oarellas, Wafoaer. Okla.
4 ^
'^
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v^ipii
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riTMi >— rr I n m
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
BANQUET GUESTS HEAR TALKS ON NEEDS
OF DULUTH AND NORTHERN MINNESOTA
More Than 400 Guests at
West Duluth Commercial
Club Spreai
City Docks the Theme
Address By Mayor
Cullum.
of
Senator Boyle on Legislature's
Work— L B. Arnold
on Farming.
Milked with an enthusiasm unsur-
passea at former affairs, the iiintli an-
nual banquet of the AVest Duluth Com-
mercial club last night passed into his-
tory as one of the biggest and best
"love feasts" held in the western end
of the city.
The dinner was held at "Wade's hall.
Central avenue and Ilamsey street.
More than 400 were present.
Former Alderman W. B. Getcheil,
toasi muster, was introduced by
man 1- A. Barnes, president,
a speech
Boyle
honest In its policy, It la apt fit for a
decent place on God's footstool. It is
doomed to be a llatf«oted failure and
possibly a disgrace.'
Speaking of Uuluth's future, Mr.
Mitchell «aid that the «eel plant would
undoubtedly make tll# Zenith City a
big and great city. However, he did
not want to see a fecond i-'ittsburg
with its smoke, dirt aad congested dis-
tricts. *We don't have to be big in
order to be great and lePt us have a
clean city." ;
FAVORS RECff ROCITY.
€aRf/RSTj4yE£j4Sr^Sl/P£m/FS77?££Z
Farmers Who Oppose It Cutting Off
Own Heads, Says Bede.
congressman
of I'lne City,
He also told
Aider
who matle
of wcUome. Senator James F.
of Kvelelh and Mayor M. B.
Cuiluni made the keynote speeches of
the evening. Mr. Boyle had much of
intere.si to say of tlie work of the leg-
islature, and stated tliai despite tlie
fact that barriers and setbacks had
been placed In the path of Northern
Minnesota in her efforts to get reap-
porticnment, a spirit of optimism
hhouUl prevail. The mayor spoke oi
the V harter limitations. He said that
Duluth was not a free city; that It hud
to go to St I'aal to find out what it
could do and what not. Nevertheless.
he heJd to an opiimistic view.
OlV.er speakers were e(iually Inter-
esting. C. S. Mitchell t«iasted "The
Fress. ■ He said that every newspaper
had a mission to fulfill — that of work-
ing for the common good of the com-
munity. J. Adam Bede, ex-congress-
man, told stories and other things, in-
cidentally giving some excellent point-
ers why the tariff reciprocity pact be.
tween the United States and Canada
should be adopted. L. B. Arnold, land
commissioner for the Duluth & Iron
Kangc railroad, gave some startling
Biatistlcs of what a farmer could do In
Minnesota, and Alderman James Whar-
ton, who said that he hailed from the
"sunkissed hills of 1-akeside, not far
from the snowcapped crags of Wood-
land." completed tiie program with an
eloquent plea for the commission form
of government. Mayor Frank Crump-
ton, wlio was on tlie program, could
not appear.
The dinner was an e.xcellent one,
served l>v the women of the Asbury
M. K. church. Nearly all of the speak-
ers paid their compliments to the wom-
en for the splendid repast.
The musical part of the program
was not neglected. Flaatens orchestra
gave several selections. Louis Dwor-
shak, ha.-s, sang a solo in his usual
plea.sing manner and responded to an
encore. Mrs. Dworshak was his accom-
panist. Joim Ji. Matheson. with Mrs.
A. G. Macauley as accompanist, ren-
dered two vocal selections very credit-
ably.
At the .speakers' table, where the m-
vlted gUfsts were seated, tlie following
were present: Senator H. AV. Cheadle,
Judge S. W. Gilpin. James Cromwell,
Capt. Tliomas i'ressnell. Dr. A. W.
Rvun, T. T. Hudson, Thomas Wood,
Judge Alfred Jaques, Rev. .Vngus Mc-
Iver, a visitor from Scotland; Dr. David
Graham. U. C. Tower. P. H. Martin,
George J. Mallory, Mayor M. B. CuUum,
Itev. D. W. Lynch, L. A. Barnes, W. B.
Getcheil, Senator James P. Boyle of
Kv. lelh, J Adam Bede of Pine City. C.
S. Mitchell, L, B. Arnold, James Whar-
ton and Rev. Peter Knudson.
The decorations both Inside and out-
side the hall attracted much attention.
They were mostly in the form of an
electrical display and were furnished
by the Duluth iidison Electric com-
pany.
Invocation at the banquet was pro-
nounced by Rev. Father D. W. Lynch.
of reapportionment in the last legis-
lature quite completely, taking up the
several bills which were introduced on
the subject, and condemning the un-
parliamentary procedure of the house,
which sent the last bill over In the
night, as well as the action of several
men whom thev had suppo.spd to be
with Northern .Minnesota in its fight
for a iust representation in the state b
lawmaking body. He stated that b«
was confident that if the people of St.
Louis county had realized the sollfi-
tude which would be shown for the
welfare of their county, they probably
would have been satisfied to let the
election of representatives go by the
board, thus saving the expense and
trouble incident to an election.
"One argument that was put forward
by a certain senator with whom I
talked was that in time we would
thank the men who were opposing re-
apportionment," continued the range
orator. "He said that we would thank
them for saving us from ourselves;
that we would regard them as saviors
SENATOR JAMES P. BOYLE.
ADDRESSES OF WELCOME.
President Barnes and Toastmaster
Getcheil in Brief Speeches.
In his opening remarks President L.
A. Barnes stated that his was the
easiest task of tlie evening, that of
welcoming a magnificent assemblage
to the ninth annual banquet of the
West Duluth Commercial club. He said
that he extended that welcome in the
name of the club as heartily as it
could be possible to do.
"Tiiis organization stands for pro-
gress,' he said, "it wants to do its
share in the development of Northern
Minnesota and toward the progress of
the entire state. AVe want to see It
grow in every good way and we want
to see Duluth a united city, "Doing It
For Duluth."' ^ ,, .
He then paid a flattering compliment
to the women of the Asbury M. E.
church, who had served the supper,
and introduced Former Alderman W.
B. Getcheil as the toastmaster for
the evening. When Mr. Getcheil took
the floor he said that ne had been se-
lected to save time, and not to kill
It, and he followed that course in in-
troducing the speakers who followed
him.
SENATOR BOYLE'S ADDRESS.
Reviews History of Northern Minne-
sota's Fight for Reapportionment.
Senator James P. Boyle delivered an
eloquent address on the workings of
the lust leelslature, the keynote of
-which was an expression of faith in
the people of Minnesota.
He devoted considerable attention
to reapportionment, and said that he
was glad that the bills which had
been introduced in the last session hat
not passed. He was confident that
when the legislature convened again
In 1914, Northern Minnesota would be
f'lven the Just representation to which
t is entitled. He believed that the
sectional lines were disappearing, as
shown by the treatment accorded
Northern Minnesota in everything but
reapportionment. He touched upon the
fact that he had read that the last
legislature was the rottenest which
had ever convened in he state of Min-
nesota, but said that except for the
•ectlonallsm raised by the question or
representation. the legislature had
been pretty fair to this end of the
Senator Boyle expressed gratifica-
tion at the passage of the bill grant-
ing $50,000 for the aid of the rural
schools In the northern part of the
state, where the lands of the settlers
are frequently hemmed in by large
quantities of state lands which do not
fiav a cent of taxes. He declared that
he policv thus inaugurated must con-
tinue He then mentioned the bill
calling for $'?n.000 for the relief of
forest fire sufferers, and took up the
municipal dock system. He was
£ leased to state that the bill allowing
le city to lease the state dock prop-
ertv hade gone through and was
eqtially sorry that the other, authoriz-
ing the city to issue the bonds had
failed. "Somehow, it died In that
awful last night of which we have
read so much," he exclaimed.
Senator Boyle reviewed the history
who had rescued us from the grasp of
the cities and the bonds of Socialism.
I want to say right here that l would
rather live under a regime of Social-
ism than under a regime composed ot
such men as the one of whom I am
speaking. He has no place in the sen-
ate of a free state. His place is with
one of the coterie acting as advisers
to the c'/ar of Russia."
He appealed to the young men. par-
ticularly, to watch carefully the future
progress of reapportionment. He pre-
dicted that it will cause more bitter-
ness than anv other measure which
has ever been fought out in the state.
He reiterated his faith in the people of
Minnesota and his belief that the bill
disfranchising tiie cities would never
become a law. He declared that the
laboring man is the one who will be
disfranchised and that he would be
hurt more than the business man or
the farmer, the two classes which
were so prominently mentioned in the
last Jcsslon. "That proposition is es-
sentially rotten," he said. He stated
that the Northern Minnesota Develop-
ment association has resulted in much
good and hoped that it would continue.
He said that he saw its effects In the
last legislature, and that through It
Northern Minnesota is being unjned
and put in a position to get that to
which it Is entitled.
SOME CITY PROBLEMS.
Mayor Culluni Talks on Docks, As-
sessments and Care of Prisoners.
Mayor M. B. Cullum was assigned
as his subject. "The City of Duluth." In
this connection he touched upon re-
apportionment, the municipal dock sys-
tem, permanency of public Improve-
ments, the extension of the park and
playground system, the workhouse
problem, the local assessment, and the
use of public buildings for meetings
for the discussion of current questions.
Referring to the state legislature
his sarcastic opening remarks brought
a roar of laughter. But the mayor
paid high compliments to the men who
had represented this section in the leg-
islature, mentioning particularly Sen-
ators Bovle and Cheadle and Represen-
tative RiWW*a€*.He said that the peo-
ple from the lower end seemed to think
that a)iyb<t«ly~^*>ming from St. Louis
county , would appear with a chain
around Jtls ' nja*«,' working in the in-
terests*?*^: the' .Steel corporation. He
was gl»d -tbat/tbey had learned that
MAYOR
CULLUM.
northern men might consider the In-
terests of the other parts of tlie state.
The principal remarks of the mayor
were directed to the problem of secur-
ing for Duluth a system of municipal
docks. He declared that Duluth is ab-
solutely tied In by interests which
have taken over practically the entire
length of the harbor, except for ihe
small 170-foot dock which is owned by
the state, and a few stub ends of
streets which still remain in the pos-
session of the city.
"Would any other corporation stand
idly by as the city has done and see its
most valuable holdings gobbled up
under its very eyes?" asked the mayor.
"That this condition was allowed to
come about was little short of the
wisdom of the state which wanted to
allow it all to escape. Some men in
the fctate wanted to sell even that last
remnant.
•They should realize that a system
of municipal dock.s would protect an<l
encourage independent traffic. The
Erie canal will be opened in about
three years to boats of 3,000 ton and
drawing fourteen feet of water. They
can be loaded at New York, taken
through this canal and attached to
some lake steamtr which will tov,-
them through to Duluth without
breaking cargo.
Utber Cities Not ANleep.
"Cleveland, Detroit, Milwaukee, Chi-
cago and even Superior are making
adequate provision for independent
docks. Duluth alone is the missing
link. Chicago is spending $10,000,000
on its independent docks and will
probably spent $20,000,000 or f.-JO.OOO,-
000 before it is tlirough. The short-
sightcdncss of Duluth is to be
lamented, but we must try to enlist
the hvmpathy and aid of organizations
such "as the West Duluth Commercial
club to help us In remedying this tre-
mendous mistake.
'1 know of men who stand ready, if
a complete system of ind»'pen<lent
docks is established on the Great
Lakes, to build vessels of small dimen-
sions to be put into the package
freight service. This one thing alone
means more to the welfare of Du-
luth than any other industry which
could be established here. It would
open the traffic of the Northwest an<l
build up the city as nothing else could
<lo. As It is, we have almo.st nothing
we tan call our own, while In most
cities of the old countries the munici-
palities own or control all the dock
frontage. Here we are absolutely cut
off. We can collect no taxes from
many of the big corporations, and if
an independent shipping concern wants
to come in, it has to bend Its knees to
some other shipping corporation be-
fore it can do so. It is easy to see
what a tremendous benefit the inde-
pendent docks would be to the inde-
pendent shippers. No stone should be
left unturned and wo should all pull
together in this regard and 'Do It For
Duluth.' "
The mayor then referred to the acts
of the last legislature, which passed a
measure leasing the state dock site to
Duluth for twenty-five years at tl;e
nominal rent of $1 per year, and fail-
ing to pass the bill which would au-
thorize the city to issue $100,000 of
bonds to be used in improving that
property and securing additional dock
frontage. He stated that he had every
assurance that it would go through,
but .said that in some way It died in
that awful last night during the death
struggle of the legislature.
Tho past policy of the city in spend-
ing large sums of money for improve-
ments which were not permanent was
severely condemned by Mayor Cullum.
He declared that if the city had avail-
able half the money which was thrown
away on poor pavements and make-
shift bridges, Duluth could buy half a
mile of property on the harbor line.
He declared for concrete bridges, and
said that he was disposed to veto any
resolution calling for the construction
of such flimsy structures as were in-
flicted on the local public in the past.
Petty Oirenders.
He characterized the question of
caring for petty offenders as one of the
greatest problems confronting Ameri-
can cities today. He explained that
Duluth is so hedged about by restric-
tions that It is practically helpless in
this matter, and that they should be
removed or so changed that Duluth
could take Its place with other pro-
gressive cities in this respect. He ad-
vocated an extension of the park and
playground system. He suggested that
it might be well to adopt the plan
which is followed in some other cities
of putting piles of sand in little-used
streets in which the small children can
play during the day.
He stated that he was proud of the
work that Is being done by^City Asses-
sor J. A. Scott, and that West Duluth
should be particularly proud of him,
as he Is a resident of that section of
the city. He said that tlie past assess-
ments have been little less than a
jumble, compiled without a proper sys-
tem. He labeled the personal proper-
ty assessment as a farce, and hoped
that some day a method might be de-
vised whereby It could be abolished.
"Its worst result," he went on to say,
"Is that It makes moral cowards and
liars of us all/^
NEWSPAPERS^ISSION.
Duluth Dailies Have Been Loyally
Supported, Says C. S. Mitchell.
Newspapers have a mission, accord-
ing to C. S. Mitchell. Primarily a news-
papers first duty Is to promote those
projects which work to the common
good and welfare of the comiiiunlty.
-In Duluth," said Mr. Mitchell, 'it
has been the experience of the news-
papers, that without the support of
such organizations as the West Duluth
Commercial club and other civic or-
ganizations, the press would be prac-
tically helpless in carrying out any
project." , ,^ .
He emphasized the necessity of co-
operation between the press and the
commercial bodies. "They need ea<>h
other " said the speaker. "for any
newspaper in any city is valueless
without the citizenship behind it. In
Duluth the papers have been backed
up by the clubs, they have been royal-
ly supported." .. ..4,
"In the larger cities,' he said, the
papers appeal to classes. But in a
municipality the size of Duluth. where
there is no class distinction, the paper
must reflect the sentiment and get in
close touch with the people as a
whole.
"The public expects the newspaper
to be honest an«| fairly consistent, not
faultless for even newspapers, liki^
tliuiuans.'bftv« their |ftul.ta. Ji U ia not
J. Adam Bede, former
from the Eighth district,
spoke on "Recli>rocity."
a number of stories.
Mr. Bede said that he had been giv-
ing advice on all kinds of subjects,
ranging from reciprocity down, for the
past fifteen years, and recalled the time
in congress when he advised the senate
to "swai>' the Philippines for Ireland,
so that the United States could grow
Its own i»olice.
The farmer of Minnesota has been
misinformed on the reciprocity ques-
tion, .says Mr. Bede, or he never would
be opposed to the proposition. Some
one, he declared, has been giving them
bad counsel.
AVithout free wheat from Canada,
Mr. Bode saw no future for the milling
industries of Minneapolis and else-
where in Minnesota. "They need more
hard wheat from the Canadian North-
west to mix with the southern grains
in order to maintain the present high
standard of flour produced in Minne-
sota and known the world over." He
said that the farmers were chopping
their own heads off in opposing the
reciprocity agreement for it would then
be only a matter of time before the
mills would be moved across the bor-
der into Canada, where the wheat can
be obtained.
Reciprocal free trade relations with
Canada, said the speaker, would mean
that the cost of living would be re-
duced and this alone Is an argument
for it. Protection might have been
flhe Newest of Spring Suits
Are Here at $ 1 7.50 and $ 1 5 """"^
The time is now ripe for your Spring Suit, and look where you will, no nicer
nor better suits will you find at even $25.00. The price range of $15.00 and
$17.50 includes suits of plain serge, fancy worsteds and mixture inaterials. All
made with that special care and attention so much required in manufacturing
ready-to-wear women's apparel. Navy blue and black are the most popular this
season and we are showing a big variety of these shade;;.
Suits of Wool Serge— In black or navy, at $15. OO
Suits of Black or Navy Serge and also of other cloths and shades, with or with-
out sailor collars; skirts narrow hobble or medium widths;
priced at
Suits for Misses and Juniors— In serge and | White Serg<: Suits— For ladies,
mixtures at
and
\\ 11.11 « •! « JLIl-
$17.50
or ladies, mis!
*.*^':"."T.T.'.$ V2.56 1 £1/""'.'"': °.'.": $ 1 6.50
mis?es
Coats for All Occasions at $ 1 6.50,
$14.50 and $12.50
in black. J12.50
Plain
navy
Coats
sailor
Serge Coats
or gray, at.
of serge
collars
and other
or plain.
$14.50 and.
materials, with
" $12.50
or
White Serge Coats, plain
with black or blue satin —
$16.50 and
Short Black Coats, in all sizes
wool serge
priced at . .
specially
trimmed
$15.00
up to 49,
$6.50
CO.\TS FOn CilRLS — In all cloths and
shades, sizes ranging from 6 ^O QQ
from.
to 14, at, up
Coats for misses
14, IB, 16, i: and
at $14.50, $12.50 and
Black Satin Coats for ladies
at
Black Satin Coats for girls,
6 to 14, at
Black Satin Coats for Chil-
dren 2 to 6, at $5.05 and. . .
and juniors, sizes 13,
" """^ $10.00
$16.50
$7.50
$4.95
^■p.
needed twenty-five years ago, but not
now. He asserted that the nations of
the world had entered on an era of
world-wide peace and that now was the
opportune time to work out this eco-
nomic question, for now the proposition
was not a political one. -
Mr Bede attributed the failure to
fet together on the proposlli«iJ to the
eeling of sectionalism which exists In
the law-making bodies of the country.
In congress each representative and
senator is simply a unit working for
the pecuniary Interest of his particular
constituency and forgetting that there
is such a thing as the United States.
He said that the samo' was true of the
state legislature; that sectionalism was
the root of the trouble; that the south-
ern senators were perhaps honest
enough on the reapportionment mea.s-
ure, but that they were not disposed to
inform themselves as to Its inerlts.
Every representative in the state leg-
i.olature, said the speaker, should have
the Interest of the whole state at heart
as well as that of his own constituency.
"What Is needed in this country,
concluded Mr. Bede. "is a nationaliza-
tion of thought. When the peoi>le learn
to think for themselves and not let tne
leader of some party do It for them,
they will know that the time has come
when reformers and insurgents are not
needed."
The Baby Needs a New Spring
Bonnet!
i^'^''-'V'^^J^^ New Tuscan Straw Bonnets for the little
'^^fiJ.'?5?^^#^aiBl ^^^^ ^'■^ bere in many styles and a wide range
'^^^•yKSf^^i of reasonable prices prevail.
y Y Tuscan Straw Bonnets, beiutifully 39C
?**>.- • t'i^ Jfl made and trimmed, at 48c and vv^*
:-'yr^:i:U:q^.....^4 ^\ ^^^^ grade of Tuscan Straw IBonnets with silk
-'•^W ''-fv ties and silk lined, trimmed with ^rosettes or
iS''-*ff}^^^y i^jj D ^ ribbons, choice selections at $1.25, SQO
v^; 5^ 9»t-, 75c and *'*'^
'■ ri?**^ Children's New Straw Hats
A Trimmed with velvet, very rute, 3Qc
priced at wk.
Children's and Misses' Tuscan Straw Qfip
^^^^'-■'f Hats at $1.98, $1.50, $1.25 ar d U\3^
"^"^-^^ ^y The new Straw Sailors for ladies ^I.^S
are here at $1.50 and v*»*'«'
Fresh Shipment of
House Dresses
and Long
Kimonos
$1.25
House Drcs.ses of plain blue
chambray, checked pattern
or black and white stripe
cloths are here
at
Long Kimonos of unusual
beauty, in the new sleeve de-
signs, with high empire shir-
red back, silk belt or plain;
a representative tf! 1 O ^
showing at only. V • *^ ^
More Bargains in the Shoe Department
FARM POSSIBILITIES.
County Could Easily Support 200,-
000 Settlers, Says L. B. Arnold.
L. B. Arnold, land commissioner for
the Duluth & Iron Range railway,
spoke on "The Agricultural PossiblH-
ning
$ 1 .98
on
ties of St. Louis county.
The soil, its fertility, productiveness,
its moisture and the climatic coni.i-
tlons in the county at the Head of the
Lakes, he said, have much in store for
the tiller of the soli. St. Louis, he
said, is pre-eminently a dairy county.
From a dairy standpoint, conditions
are such that It should be.f'ne of the
best In the United States, if sufficient
attention is paid to its development.
Timothy and clover grew luxuriantly
iiere and experiments whh-h are being
tried show that the county Is also a
good alfalfa country.
Koughly estimating. Mr. Arnold
stated that there were In St. Louis
county, 3,200,000 acres of land avail-
able for farming purpo.ses. Divided
into 40,000 eighty-acre tracts, witn a
family of Ave on each tract, the popu-
oltion would be 200,000. The prcsen'.
population In the farming districts is
about 20.000. . ^ .
By comparison with what is being
done in other dairying communiUe.-,
Mr Arnold produced figures to show
that the Income per annum from cows
alone ought to be somewhere in the
neighborhood of $30,000,000. "This
would mean two cows for every thir-
— raising of potatoe.-,
the honey Industry,
up new fields for the
farmer, declared Mr.
We promised to break the bargain record in footwear at the bcgin-
of this month and so far, we believe, you were not disappointed.
Here are some new, fresh bargains for Saturday and next week.
Come tomorrow if you can, as the quantities are limited.
$3.00 Ladies' Slioes at SI
This is not a mere phrase~no, no— you know this store to.
that— what we say we mean. Ladies' Patent Colt, Higi. Heel Blucher
Shoes — Made by the Woodbury Shoe company of
Boston, warranted strictly first quality $3.00 shoes; new
last; all sizes from 2^ to dVi; special bargain price
S3.^0 Satin F»umps at S2.48
These arc all the rage. Black Satin Pumps— Without s.traps;
exactly like the picture along side; sold in all
siioe stores at ?3.50, buy Ihcm here,
at
Black Velvet Pumps $1.98
A new shipment of Black Velvet Pumps
With two straps, just received; spe-
cially priced at, S 1 •98
Shoes
Button
teen acres. The
truck gardening,
loerries, etc., open
St. Louis county
Arnold. . .
The first thing that is necessary for
the development of the county, is to
educate the farmers who now reside
here to the present advantages. Some
of them are '"Doubting Thomases," said
the speaker, and is essentially neces-
only.
Black Velvet
for ladies at,
only
Velvet Top Button
Shoes for girls, at
$1.50 and
Infants' Patent Strap Sandals-
Leather sole; sizes 2V% SQc
to 6, at ^^^
$2.48
Black Velvet Pumps —
Without stra])s, at
Black Velvet Pump
With one strip, at..
$2.48
ton Patent
$1.25
Patent Shoes
' 98c
73c
Box Calf Shoes
13. a . 9g^
II
Children's $1.25
up to size 8, at.
Children's Vici and Patent But-
ton or Lace Shoes — With heels;
sizes 2 to 6 (for small
children) at, only
Baby Soft Sole Shoes and One-
Strap Slippers — In ^ C^
black or colors, at <y JC
50c
J
sary that they should boost the propo-
sition along. * -v. *« ♦« r- t>
Mr. Arnold paid a tribute to C. P.
Craig, the "father of agriculture in bt.
Louis county" for his work on the Jean
Duluth farm, and his other efforts.
COMMISSION GOVERNMENT.
City Should Be Run as Business In-
stitution, Says Alderman Wharton.
Alderman James A. Wharton of Lake-
side talked for the commission form
of government. ^ .
The object of government from a
popular standpoint, he said, was to
gather In money and spend it again for
the common good. In doing this, busi-
ness methods are necessarily needed.
A municipality, he declared, is noth-
ing more than a big business concern,
In which polltfcs should be kept out.
In Duluth, as in many other cities,
the main hindrance to the carrying out
of business administrations was the
council. He stated that no
insinuations were meant, as the fault
was in the system and not In the
men. The solution of the problem, he
said, was the adoption of a commission
In the present plan, he declared, there
Is no place to fix the respon.slblllty.
It fs usually shifted from one depart-
ment to another. There is also always
a feeling of sectionalism among wards
and tht councilmen In legislating make
ordinances for certain wards and lose
sight of the city as a whole.
Following along the line of one of
the other speakers, »([r. Wharton de-
clared that Duluth did not have a free
government; that it was hampered by
charter limitations and that it was
high time that it secured a divorce
from the state legislature and that
common
"JuBi Say"
HORLICK'S
it Mtans
Original and Genuine
MALTED MILK
The Food-drink for All Ages.
More healthful than Tea or Coffee.
Agrees with the weakest dige^on.
Ddicious, invigorating and nutritious.
Rich milk, malted grain, powder form.
A quick hnck prepared in a minute.
Take no substitute. AskforHORLICK'S.
Others are imitations.
responsibility for Its actions was fixf d
on certain men and that number re«
duced to the smallest possible. la
other words," he said, "adopt a coin^
mission form of government."
All Wool Suits $10.
49 different stylos of matfrial.« to f^e-
Icct from In all the newest cuts aii(|
makes at the "3 Winners," 116 Kas*
Superior street,
PRESIDENT VAN RISE
DENIES LEGISLATIVE STOR¥
Madison, Wis., April 21.— That tli#
cost to the state for the instructioa
per student at the University of Wis-
consin Is approximately flOO a year,
and not between 1275 and S300. as stat-
ed before the finance committees ot
the legislature by representatives or
the normal schools, is the declaratloij
of President Charles R. Van iilse ot
the University.
Further evidence is being presented
almost dally that a recent compound
of new chemical elements combine^
in a tablet with hypophosphltes is in
reality proving a blessing to the ab-
normally thin men and women, for It
can be demonstrated beyond doubt that
a regular course of three or four
months" treatment brings on an in' reas*
In weight of from 10 to 30 pounds, with
a derided improvement of health ana
color, too. For self administration ih*
most popular form Is to be found la
three grain hypo-nuclane tablets. <'b-
tainable in sealed packages from th»
best apothecary shops, with full direc-
tions.
To relieve headache and neuralgia
harmlessly. ta.ke Blackburn's Paia«
Away Pills. At drug stores.
DEFECTIVE PAGE
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10
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
THE DULUTH HERALD
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER.
—ESTABLISHED APRIL 9. 1883—
Published every evening except Sunday by
THE HERALD COMPANY,
Herald Building. Opposite Postoffice Square,
422 and 424 West First St.. Dulutli, Minn.
Cnurtd M lecond-cUss matter at the Duluth postofflce under tlie act of con-
gress of March 3. is:d.
TELEPHOXKS— Bell and Zenith.
Business Office, 324. Editorial Rooms, 1126.
OFFICIAL PAPER CITY OF DULUTH.
. .12.00
. . 4.00
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
(By mail payable In advance.)
Pally, three nn iths Jl.OO Dally, six months.
Daily, one month 35 Daily, one ye;ir
Snturilay Hernltl, one year '*'22
Weekly Herald, one year ^'"**
Rcmlltan.f-i may Ije nmde by check. po«tofflc« order, reei^'ered letter or e«-
tnas onler. Make all remittances payable to The Uerald company. Olve posl-
•fflce addnas In riiU. In.-hKlliig state aud cuunty.
BY CARRIER— CITY OR SUBURBS.
Dally, one week * -J?
Dally, one month j.-*^
Dally, one year °""
Sul.*.rtl>ers will confer a faxor on the clmitotion department by calling 321.
•kber "phone, and making knowu any cimp!.iim of .service.
It Is Important when desiring the address of your paper changed to gire Dom
0ie oM and new addresises.
MR. BURGESS' TESTIMONY.
If an\ thing were needed to convince Duluth people
that Edward Ilines was the "underwriter" of the cor-
ruption fund that elected William Lorimer to the United
States senate from Illinois, it was supplied by the testi-
mony of William M. Burgess, manager of the Burgess
Electrical company, before the Illinois legislative investi-
gating committee.
Mr. Burgess is well know^n in Duluth. His integrity
is unquestioned, and he is not the man to color a state-
ment for the sake of making an impression on his hear-
ers. Ue was not compelled to recognize the call that
took him to Springfield as a witness. He went because
he knew that he could give testimony of value in throw-
ing liglit on a shameful situation that is badly in need
of being cleared up.
Mr. Burgess' story is the only one presented to the
committee thus far bearing upon the statement by P. F.
Weihe. brother-in-law of Hines, and secretary of the
Edward Hines Lumber company, that he was one of the
contributors to the "jackpot" raised by Hines. But it
is not tlie only one that has been told, under oath, re-
garding the means by which Lorimer's election to the
senate was accomplished. Mr. Kohlsaat's testimony
aroused interest throughout the country. Its support by
Mr. Funk made the charges appear thoroughly well
founded. Then came denials from Hines and Tilden,
only to be followed by such testimony as that of Mr.
Burgess and other men who have talked with Hines and
his allies since the Lorimer election.
It will not satisfy the country at large, however well
it may do for the Illinois legislators, to have Ilines and
Tilden et al deny the charges and try to let the matter
drop there. It looks very much a.s if Hines and his
pals "slopped over" on the Lorimer business; as if they
had grown so bold in their work that they no longer
felt the need of strict secrecy. It appears that they told
several men, boa.stingly, that they had "put Lorimer
through" and had spent a huge sum to do it.
Where some of that money went has been explained
by the men who got it. Where the rest of it went is
still a matter of conjecture. The great point at present
is that the testimony of these various men has convinced
the public that the "slush fund" or '"jackpot," or what-
ever one wants to call it, was raised and was u.->ed to cor-
rupt a legislature and give special privilege another vote
in the United States senate. The testimony of these
various men has interested Duluth people, but the testi-
mony of Mr. Burgess is enough to convince them, not
because it corroborates that of others, but because the
people know Mr. Burgess and have confidence in him and
in whatever he says.
It is a rotten, putrid mess, down there in Illinois,
and Mr. Burgess is to be congratulated and commended
because, having it in his power to help clear the thing
up. he took the time and trouble to go to Springfield
and testify.
in other cities and its adaptability to Diduth; the ef-
forts of the committee in behalf of legislation in which
the city is interested; and the publicity work both
.-■.mong our own citizens and in advertising the city
in other parts of the countrj-.
In its announcement of plans for the year the club
includes the statement that it has decided to increase
the public affairs committee membership in order to
branch out yet more in the public interest. There are
several Hues that may be taken up by that body with
advantage. The question of the disposition of garbage
iS not yet settled. There is the city farm plan to be
investigated and perhaps put into operation. There is
the opportunity for further advertising of the city that
will accompany the advancing work on the steel plant.
Some e.xtensions in street car service are desired and
needed. Besides the numberless other matters of munic-
ipal concern, including the coming campaign regarding
the adoption of the commission form.
The public affairs committee has done well in the
past, and Duluth appreciates its work. It promises to
do even better in the future, and Duluth welcomes
that promise, and the spirit that prompted both the
earlier efforts and the promise of yet greater ones
to come.
MORE MEN FOR BETTER WORK.
There is good news for Duluth in the announce-
ment that the public affairs committee of the Commer-
cial club is to be enlarged to 100 members, with a
view to more active interest in municipal matters.
The work of the public affairs committee, particularly
in the last year, has been of immense value to Diiluth.
The committee has reached out in all directions, seek-
ing to cover as many as practicable of the fields of
city life and interest, and the result has been a growth
and stimulus which it is hard to believe could have
come in any other manner.
There is not a city in the country that cannot be
benefited by suggestions and action on the part of its
business men. They have the interests of the place
at heart, not only as a matter of civic pride, but
because the growth and prosperity of the city is in-
dissolubly united to their individual affairs and inter-
ests. They are in touch with other parts of the coun-
try, and they have channels of communication and fti-
formation that make it possible for them to accom-
plish things for the city that are beyond the reach
and power of others.
Duluth has been fortunate in the service it has re-
ceived from these men. They have taken hold of pub-
lic questions and sought solutions of vexed problems,
and in many instances have found the way out of diffi-
culties. Notable among the achievements of the com-
mittee that have been felt directly by the citizens has
been the organization and systematizing of the means
by which produce from the surrounding country is
brought to the Duluth market. The work done in that
one respect has bound Duluth and its neighboring terri-
tory more closely together than anything else has done
in many years. Then there has been the interest taken
in the proposal that Duluth adopt the commission form
of government and the work that members of the com-
mittee did in looking into the operation of that plan
THE OPEiN COURT.
LET MEXICO GO IT ALONE.
It is becoming more and more apparent that in spite
of the rumors and accusations being spread broadcast
regarding the administration's attitude in the Mexican
troubles, neither President Taft and his advisers nor
congress is inclined to get this country involved in the
southern .republic's affairs. This is as it should be.
The United States has no right to send troops upon
Mexican soil as long as the outbreaks do not directly
affect this country. To intervene in the struggle now
going on there would be to override Mexican rights
and would certainly result in complications, the result
of which it is impossible to foresee.
Efforts have been made to compare the Mexican
situation with those which have arisen in Central Amer-
ican countries, when Uncle Sam has used his influence
and power to bring order out of chaos. But as far as
may be judged from reports from Mexico, there is no
such general disorder in Mexico as has developed at
times in Nicaragua and Honduras. It may be, as the
insurrectos claim, that a majority of the people in
Mexico are in sympathy with the Madero forces, but
tlieir sympathy thus far is of the passive variety', and
does not warrant the United States in stepping in to
make the will of the majority effective in the interests
of peace. Nor has tlie Diaz government made anj- re-
(luest for assistance. Indeed, its attitude is such as to
remove any possible warrant for intervention by Wash-
ington.
That Japan is in any way involved in the affair does
not strike most Americans as probable, even if such a
thing were possible. Japan at present has no funds
with which to carry on international operations such
as must spring from relations with Mexico that might
demand American attention. That Japan would like to
have and would find use for a coaling station for her
navj' on this side of the Pacific is no more remarkable
than that the United States finds it advantageous to
have similar, stations on the other side. But Japan is
not prepared to go to war to get such an advantage,
and even if she were, it is hard to see what such in-
tentions could have to do with a rebellion in Mexico.
The most reasonable solution of the sending of the
troops to Texas and of the present situation is that
the army was intended to be used just as it is being
used— to put a stop to the taking of arms and ammuni-
tion from this countrj' into Me.xico, to prevent the
American sympathizers with the insurrectos from going
to join them and so paving the way for international
troubles whenever an American citizen was wounded or
killed, and to see that the belligerents keep within their
own territory instead of carrying the fight across the
boundary into the United States. At the same time,
the service is giving the troops a respite from the
humdrum and monotony of barrack life, and affords a
chance for some of the National guard officers to get
a look at regular army life in the field.
There is nothing ill-advised, hasty or sensational in
all this. The president evidently has acted wisely, and
congress is willing to abide by his judgment.
(Readers of The Ueral^ are Invited to make free u»«
of thia column to express their Ideas about the topics
of general Interest. Letters should not ex( ced ."iHO
words— the shorter the better. They must be written
on one side of the paper only, and they must be ac-
companied iu every case..tj}' tha name anil address of
ilie witter, thougti these need nut be published. A
signed letter Is aiwayn aiotr effective, howtver)
FAR3IEirS VIEWS ON
CANADIAN RECIPROCITY.
ORGANIZING THE GIRLS.
In some of the Eastern states there is a movement
on foot to organize the girls of the various communi-
ties on a plan similar to that followed by the Boy
Scouts. There is at present no central organization, as
there is of the Scouts, and each locality is adopting
a name to suit its own fancy. In one place the society
is known as the "Scouts' Auxiliary," in another as
the "Girl Scouts," in another as the "Campfire Girls,"
etc. But the idea is the same in all of these organiza-
tions— to give the girls of the community experience
in out of door life and in the kind of roughing it
that appeals to every healthy human being, when it is
not to be taken under compulsion or in too big doses.
Whatever the name, the idea is a good one. The
tendency in city life today is toward too much time
indoors. Adults and young people alike need fresh air
and exercise, and any plan or organization that in-
duces people to get into the open and move around
is worth boosting.
It is readily conceivable that by interesting the
girls in such work as the Boy Scouts have taken up,
though some of the Scouts' activities would of course
be impracticable in the case of a girls' organization,
they could be given a new conception of the value of
practical instruction in simple lines that will make
them better fitted for whatever work may fall to them
when they have reached womanhood. But even if there
be no such result from this movement, it will serve to
get the girls out into the fresh air and make them
healthier and more self-reliant than they otherwise
would be.
The D. A. R. has some insurrectos, too, but their
leaders are not being addressed as "My dear, Oh!"
St. Paul has to pay dearly for her distinction as the
capital of the state. She has to have the legislature in
her midst about every so often.
There is no reason for surprise at Lorimer's silence.
He is no more a figure in the matter than a common
councilman who has been bought by a public service
corporation.
When Mr. Kohlsaat declined, on principle, to answer
the questions of the Illinois legislative investigating
committee, he was threatened with a jail sentence. Now
Mr. Tilden, of the "other" side, declines for some reason
or other, and even refuses to appear in persoa. What
will they do with him?
To the Editor of The Herald:
Here are some of the reasons why
we believe that reciprocity will be
detrimental to the farming community
and the farmers. By reciprocity is
here meant the proposed tariff bill
such as it was dialled by the joint
commission of American and Canadian
1 eprcsentalives, and entitled "An act
to promote reciprocal trade relations
and for other purposes." After care-
ful study of the proposed treaty we
tan find nothing reciprocal about it In
as far as the farmer Is concerned, but
we believe tliat It contains a goodly
(luantlty of "for other purposes." Tlie
l)ill wipes out protection on all agri-
fultural products, not only on grain,
but on all kinds of vegetables, live
animals, poultry, eggs, dairy products,
etc., in a word, everything our farmers
produce, while a protective tariff is
retained on every item he buys, which
lie consumes, wears or has use for in
the production of his products.
It is not here a question of free
tradu and protection, in that we may
differ, but of free trade for one kind
of indttstry and protection for others,
and we consider It not reciprocal but
V la.ss legislation — a case of rank dis-
crimination against the class engaged
in agricultural pursuit in favor of
those engaged In manufacture. They
.say that a protective tariff is main-
tained to protect American labor and
the American industries, but that farm
products are raw material and as such
are not entitled to protection. We,
liowever, believe that the butter,
cheese, eggs, etc., whicli our protected
manufacturers eat at tlieir tables are as
much finished articles as anything
they ever finished; that fatted cattle,
hogs, sheep, picked poultry, etc., which
are sold to our protected packers are
as much finished articles as is the
meat from them, and which will enjoy a
protection of 1^ cents per pound; that
the cleaned grain which is sold to the
protected miller is as much a finished
article as are his offals of grain which
will enjoy a protection of la^ cents
per 100 pounds. We believe that either
and all of these items and others are
as much and more of a finished article
as la iron ore. which will enjoy a pro-
tection of 10 cents per ton. We believe
that the production of foodstuff is as
much an industry as is the operation
of any factory or mill that ever turned
a wheel. We believe that the American
market belongs to the American farmer
as much as it does to the American
manufacturer, and that the farmer is
iis much entitled to protection as is
tlie manufacturer, the miller. the
packer and the steel triust. We believe
that the man who works sixteen hours
on the farm is as much entitled to
protection as is the man who works
eight hours in the mill, the factory,
tlie packing house and the mine.
Much is made of the alleged pur-
pose by this treaty to lessen the cost
of living for the consumer, an ad-
mirable contention, but we believe
that we have reason to question the
sincerity in the avowed purpose so to
do, since a high protev^tive tariff is re-
tained on the ready-for-consumtion
article and since we realize that the
consumers eat beef, not cattle, pork
and lard, not hogs, veal, not calves,
mutton, not sheep, etc., and since a
duty of 1>,4 Cents per pound Is main-
tained for the meat from the animals;
thus protecting the packer to tlie
amount of about f 10 on a steer, $G on a
hog, $2 on a calf, $1 on a slieep, etc.,
while the jiroducers of these meats
are left vvhoHv unprotected. The same
principles apjtly to grain; for wliile all
kinds of grain are free, flour, meals,
cereal foods, and "all baked articles
of any kind of Hour" are highly pro-
tected. The same is also true of
vegetables; though leaving the pro-
ducer without protection, a duty of
IVi cents per pound protects the can-
ner, who places the vegetables in "cans
or other airtight packages."
From tlie foregoing it will be seen
that under this bill free trade woubl
not reach the consumer and we be-
lieve that liad they really aimed to
lessen the cost to the consumer, they
would not have injected a protective
tariff between the producer and the
consumer, but would have been as
eager to wipe out protection on farm
products in the condition they reach
the consumer as in the condition they
reach the middleman, the miller, the
packer, the canner, etc. The effect of
a protective tariff, omitting the phase
of revenue, is preventing competition
under American standard of wages and
mode of living. If this not true, why
a protective tariff, and if true why
single out the agricultural section of
the country as non-American terri-
tory? Talk about sectionalism. If it
Is sectionalism to ask equal national
rights and opportunities for one's sec-
tion and industries. then we plead
guilty to the charge.
These we believe will be the effects
from the adoption of the proposed
treaty:
Reduction In price to the producer
for agricultural products.
General dissatisfaction and discon-
tent among the farmers, because of
unfair treatment.
Open the bars for American migra-
tion to the vast prairies of Canada,
where before it was tempered by a
tariff wall.
Increase In the alarming tendency
of preference for city life to that ot
the country.
A still greater number of aban-
doned American farms and American
farin homes, a state of affairs already
existing to an alarming extent, and
which will not be remedied by cur-
tailing the earning capacity of the
farm. The need Is not so much for
more farms for the farmers, but of
more farmers for the farm, a fact
which every thinking man. familiar
with conditions in the agricultural sec-
tion realizes.
In the foregoing the writer has
sought to give that side of the ques-
tion which we feel has been grossly
overlooked by the press. Respectfully
submitted, ISRAEL SJOBERG.
Roseau, Minn., April 19.
A TIP FOR MOTOR BOAT OWNERS
3IINNES0TA OPINIONS.
SiifTerhiK I'rum lujiiatiee.
Crookslon Times: The measure
killed, which will result in the great-
est ulsappointmciit in Northern Minne-
sota, is reapportionment, and while it
does nut affect Polk county one way
or the other directly, no change being
contemplated In any of the measures
tor this county, other counties In
Northern Minnesota are suffering from
gross Injustice in lack of proper rep-
resentation, though more of the same
kind of some members who might be
pointed to in a number of Instances
would result in no improvement, as it
is the kind of men sent which really
is of greater Importance than the num-
ber.
To the Editor of The Herald:
Being a motor boat owner in a small
wav. I have been Interested this spring
In 'fitting out for the coming season,
and have come across one feature which
may be of assistance to others. It Is
in stopping cracks In the bottoms of
the hull. I was advised by several to
fill them with the ordinary putty which
's used commonly for setting window
glass. Yesterday I went to a man who
has had extensive experience in this
line, and he emphatically declared that
putty should not be used. He claimed
that it would set hard, becoming solid
as a piece of rock. This, he explained,
would be liable to cause other seams to
open when the wood began to swell
after being put in the water. He stated
that about the best and simplest thing
to use would be the ordinary white
lead. He said that after the can had
been opened it ought to be allowed to
settle for two or three days, and then
pour off the light matter on top. Then
he said that pulverized chalk ought to
be added until the lead Is of about the
same consistency as putty. He said
that when this had been put In the in-
terstices it would act like a rubbed pad,
effectually keeping out the water and
at the same time avoiding any danger
of causing leaks in other parts of the
hull. This may be of value to others
Interested In the subject and save them
considerable futur« trouble.
BOATER.
Duluth, April 21, 1911.
♦
Demand (or Quick Rlphea.
Buffalo Express: The movement back
to the agricultural wealth of the land
is on low gea^ compared with the race
to new districts where gold finds are
reported.
. ■ •
The Barber!
St. Joseph News-Press: The man who
shaves himself saves time and money
— but think ot tl)* information he
mises. ^- --^^^ .
Take* a Sennlble View.
Winona Independent: President Taft's
reply to the governor of Arizona
anent the danger to American citizens
from stray bullets coming across the
lin^* at Douglas, Ariz., sliows tiiat Mr.
Taft Is tak'ng a sensible view of tlie
situation. It Is not fair that the whole
nation should be plunged into war
wlien by a temporary Inconvenience
residents of Douglas can seek safety
by going fartlier from the border
line.
Follovr Adnm'M Rxample.
Fairmont Sentinel: The Minnesota
senators who killed the woman suf-
frage bill, Adam-like, fear to take tlie
responsibllltv of their acts and so lay
the blame of their fall to Eve. They
try to crawl out of a tight place by
laying the blame of their vote to
their wives. Some good women may
be charged with responsibility for a
member of the legislature getting up,
shaking his fist at a brother member
and shouting. "Shut up. you miserable
little whiffet," but we don't believe it.
The lieKiHlator'H Plea.
Mankaio Free Press: When legisla-
tors return to their homes each one
will say to his constituents: "Don't
shoot; I did tlie best I could."
AdvocateM a Public Forum.
Fergus Falls Journal: One of the
strong arguments for the commission
form of government is that there
Is the widest publicity in regard to
municipal affairs. Fergus Falls is dif-
ferent from most cities in that Its citi-
zens take a deep Interest in public af-
fairs affecting the city. These are dis-
cussed in the newspapers and at public
meetings from time to time. This
work of publicity could be stll greatly
furthered by having a People's Forum
and hold meetings at stated intervals
at the city hall In which public ques-
tions can be discussed and public senti-
ment obtained. They would have an
educational effect and at the same time
heir make city government better.
^Tiere In He At.
St. Cloud Times: The house proposes
to put 100 articles largely of benefit
to the farmer on the free list. Con-
gressman Lindbergh is not favorable
because the bill does not go far enough.
Is It not wiser to secure a hundred
free articles than to attempt to get
a thousand and lose all? Has our con-
gre.ssman become an absolute free
trader?
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Talen From the Column* of The Herald of T/iU Date, 1391.
♦••Last evening Col. Cullj ford .sub-
mitted a proposition to Butchart & Mi-
chaud, proprietors of the Merchants
hotel, for the leasing to thrm of the
Hotel St. Louis. Tlie proposition was
accepted on condition that tlie owners
of the property agree to illow the
transfer of lease. The new lease was
at onoe sent to Boston for tie owners'
signatures, and there is no c oubt that
the deal will go through. The new
proprietors will probably ah indon the
Merchants and give their entire atten-
tion to the St. Louis.
••*W. F. Hatch, a recent ar
Penobscot county. Me., has sc
acres of land of the Conser
\estment company's property
avenue west and Thirteenth
will prepare It for summer i
He will probably erect a both
and raise ]>roduce for the ea
demand.
•Ival from
cured five
.ative In-
at Tenth
street and
gardening,
ouse later
rly spring
•••Mrs. A. Rosenbush of St. Cloud
yesterday bought the Henderson house
and lot on Third avenue west at West
r>uluth. She will move here in the
near future.
A flood Wheat ReKloa.
Warroad Plaindealer: Wheat can be
grown on cleared lands in the Lake
of the Woods region, and will yield as
large crops as did the Red River val-
ley in It.s early days. The subsoil
here is the same kind of clay as the
subsoil in the Red River country, and
the top soil is just as good, being com-
posed of deca.eed vegetation ranging
in thickness from a few inches to
several feet.
TakeN a Shot At Jadam.
Wilkin County News: Poor Adam
Bede, who did some montebanking
stunts in congress a few years ago
and then, like Nebuchadnezzer of oM,
was turned out to grass. In his
"Budget" (of Buffoonery) seems to be
ag'in everything and everybody that
the common run of decent people are
In favor of. Bede Is still plugging
for the leprous Lorimer. he favored
Slippery Dick Balllnger. he Is opposed
to the people electing their own United
States senators, was a staunch advo-
cate of the Payne - Aldrich Infamy,
stood uv for Joe Cannon and all that
Joe stood for, says that Senator Jon-
athan Bourne is an outlaw In decent
society — and^a whole lot more of just
such rot wmch would be a criminal
waste of newspaper space to reproduce.
Adam, as his name implies, is a back
nmuber — a bonehead touched with a
faculty which is a distinct charity to
call humorous.
*
Krfiectiona of a Baehelor.
New Vork Pres.s: Even expert .ludg-
ment has to guess right once in a
while. , ^, i , 1,
Lving Is an art. and that Is why
every body tries It without master-
tng It. ■ .^ ^.
A woman just adores an Invitation to
something that makes her get a new
dress for It. » ^ .
The only pleasure a man gets out of
doing his duty Is the way he can bawl
through the world that he did It.
When a woman makes up her mind
to love a man, the less reason there
Is for It the more she seems able to
do it.
•
Pointed Paragraph*!.
Chicago News: Giving advice Is an
easy way to borrow trouble.
Even the toothless person may in-
dulge In biting sarcasm.
It's harder to- discover a friend than
it is to locate an enemy.
But a man is seldom cool when he
shivers In the hour of danger.
If a widow has sense, she doesn't use
it for bait when angling for No. 2.
And a woman loves to have her hus-
band's judgment go wrong so that she
can sav: "I told you so."
Somehow the average man dislikes
to kill a dog. therefore he Is reason-
ably .<:ure to have one that he Is willing
to give away.
When a widow faces the parson the
second time with a man and promises
to love, honor and obey, she usually
has her fingers crossed.
»
Son of Athens, Ere Yon Shine.
Son of Athens, ere you shine
These bespattered shoes of mine
Let me on your mind Impress
With the utmost earnestness
This, my warning orthodox:
Keep the polish off my socks!
By the gods In heaven above.
By the burning Sappho's love.
By the blood of Sclo's vine.
By Anacreon's song divine,
By Parnassus' well-known roi^ks.
Keep the polish ott my socks!
Son of Athens, hear my vow —
There will be one Helva row.
Take It even now from me,
It will beat Thermopylae.
So If you'd escape some shocks,
Keep the polish off my socks!
— Springfield Union.
•
Reciprocity and Politics.
St. Paul Pioneer Press (Republican:)
There is a decree of shrewdness e.K-
hlblted in the new Democratic house
leadership at Washington that must
discourage somewhat the down-and-
out Republicans who have been confi-
dently counting upon traditional Dem-
ocratic blu'iders as their way to a
speedy return to power.
See what ilie Democrats have done
already. Tl'o Canadian reciprocity
agreerr^ent goes In without the sllght-
e.^t alteration or compilation with any
other measure or proposition. The
very wisest thing that could be done.
Next comes a separate bill putting
pretty nearly everything the farmer
buys on the free list. Another case of
longheadedness for the majority.
The Democratic house will have Jus-
tified its support of reciprocity by add-
ing the farmers' free list; will the Re-
publican senate dare to do less than
the latter, after having approved rec-
iprocity? But If It makes these heavy
reductions under compulsion from a
Democratic house the only possible
political effect of the session must be
favorable to the Democrats.
For the creation of this distressing
situation his party leaders are blaming
Mr. Taft principally, but Mr. Taft Is
paying less attention to political con-
sequences than he was when pleading
for party solidarity two years ago. If
he could have looked ahead then and
had a glimpse of himself as he stands
today he would have been unable to
recognize the central figure of the sit-
uation.
•••Rev. W. L. Clarke has finished his
pastorate at Lakeside and will take
cliarge of the Presbyterian church at
South Superior, which is now being or-
ganized.
raced and sodded. It is understood
that the street railway company will
make a connection between the west-
ern end of the new Fourth street line,
at Fifth avenue west, and the Superior
street line by running down Piedmont
to Eighth avenue west. This wouKl
give a belt line communication between
llie downtown and Fourth street lines
and would be wonderfully convenient.
•••Secretary S. A. Thompson of th«
chamber of commerce is attending the
national meeting of the Republican
Clubs' league at Cincinnati.
•••Ramsdell & Hetherlngton of Min-
neapolis, who recently decided to es-
tablish an art engraving concern here,
have leased quarters in the Hayes
block.
••♦Rev. Father Kosmerl will act aa
pastor of the new German church. The
dedicatory exercises will take place on
the second Sunday in May.
•••The value of the new property
recently annexed to the city of Duluth,
as figured by City Assessor Cooley, ia
$3,069,958.
•••E. J. Amory has been given the
contract for grading Piedmont avenue
from Eighth avenue wes: to the
north line of Third street, nineteen
blocks, for $78,103. The avenue will be
graded thirty feet wide, the remaining
thirty-six feet being left to be ter-
A MOMENT WITH THE W ITS.
•••The first car of the Motor Llna
Improvement company was run to
Woodland yesterday. It is expected
that regular service will be opened
about May 1.
V
Llpplncott's: Presbyterian
Nae, my mon, there will be
they new-fangled methods n
Listener — 1 don't know hov
be sure.
Elder — Sure? Why, mon, gin they
tried it, the whole Presbyterian kirk
was rise up an' gang oot in a body.
Elder—
naue o'
heaven.
you can
Puck: Poet — There goes a notorious
and confirmed begging letter writer.
Friend — What! Why, I thought that
chap was an editor?
Poet — Well, he has wrlttan ine at
least a dozen letters begglrg me not
to send him any more of my stuff.
Cleveland Leader: "What makes you
think she's uncultured?"
■•She thinks Ibsen's x'lays are stupid."
"Well, a lot of people thlrk so."
"Yet; but she says so."
MoUie — ^Don't
lor.gr time to
Yonkers Statesman
>ou think a month is
put off our wedding?
Chollie — Why, your sister put hers
off a month.
"Yes, but that was last fall. The
days are getting longer now, you
know."
Louisville Courier- Journal: "Can't we
arbitrate this matter?" whined the
malefactor of great wealth.
"I have nothing to arbi'rate," re-
sponded Satan as he signaed to the
custodian of the gridiron.
Buffalo Express: "Why dii you and
your wife move out of your mother's
iiouse and take a flat by yourselves?"
"The women, of course. One pre-
ferred salt ri-sing and the other com-
pressed, whatever they are,"
Judge: "I was engaged ten times."
says the lady with tlie dcuble chin,
"before I finally married."
"Yes*;?" comments the lady with the
fur bonnet. "It's awfully hard for
some women to land a man definitely."
Chicago Record-Herald:. "I suppose
you wouldn't believe," said the man-
ager, "that It cost me $25,0'>0 to raise
the curtain on this show,"
"I do," replied the critic. "I'm sur-
prised that they let you do It even for
that price."
Chicago Dally News: Ethel — Grace
asked George whether he 'vould love
her any more if her hair were some
different color.
Edith — And what did George say?
Ethel — Why, he merely asked her
what other color she had.
•
Corporations 9io Xe^v
It Is a fact, though peopl<
gotten it, that this countrj
onlzed by corporations, say
It was set going by mono
colony at Jamestown was
1607 by the London comps
was a corporation.
The colonists who landed
outh Rock were sent out by
outh company, wliich was
tion. The pioneers who sett
represented the Alassachu
company, which was a c
And so on down the list oi
colonies.
Even after they cut 1
England tlie Americans cr«
state governments after t
of these Brttlsh corporatlo
ever would understand ful
and Its form of organizatioj
up the history of tlie Ma
Bay company and the otht
tions that tlourislied when
was king.
But these corporations di
were bought out, as the col
large and Independent, and
there were practically no C'
at all. In 1790, for Instance,
only three banking compan
kind in the whole United Si
The first corporations wi
In a blaze of patriotism aft
of 1812. At tliat time
States was mainly a farmlr
It bought its manufactui
from England. Its clothes, it
books, its tools, its furniiur
from England.
This was an Intolerable
when the United States am
lish were at war and so a
effort was made to secure
independence. Stock comp^
formed. English goods were
Factories were built. The
of business enterprise swej
young country and wherev
up sprang corporations.
«
The Mexican Dwarf
Forest and Stream: Vifixl
In Durango, Mexico, l^st
learned some facts as vo i
history of the whltetalf*d€
region, which was so sui
me that tho'y ai>pear to
noting in print.
These deer are dwarfs, a
male weighing iirobablSr les
pounds. In fact, when rum
tilt through the chaparral
much resemble jack rabl
subsist entirely upon the
the manzanlta and the ace
live oak. The latter are
whole, but my surmise Is
are thoroughly masticated
gurgitation.
Why these animals sho
diminutive In a land abound
and water and why their ha
be so different from thos
Northern congeners is surel
«
Snioke War 600 Year*
Youth's Companion: We
tomed to think of the smol
as a modern phenomenon
V. B. Lewes shows that 11
much indignation in Englan
ago that a decree was made
the use of bituminous coa
Such fuel was then a new t
In the time of Queen EH
other attempt to use bitun
was defeated by public op
the smoke. The third effo
complete success in the
century and now the quantlt
belched into the air is so
Prof. Lewes likens it to a
poison which aids in shor
killing vegetation and beg
destroying buildings.
N«t 'Yet.
Springfield Union: U&va
flowered yet?
rhlns.
! have for-
• was col-
s Busine.<^s.
voiles. The
planted in
ny, which
at Plym-
the Plyin-
a corpora-
led Boston
;jett8 Bay
orporation.
: American
oose from
rated their
16 pattern
as. Who-
ly a state
1 must dig
ssachusetts
r corpora-
George III
ed out. or
onies grew
for a time
jrporations
there were
ies of any
ates.
!re started
er the war
the United
g country,
ed goods
s boots, Its
e, all came
situation
I the Eng-
:remendous
Industrial
inies were
boycotted,
first wave
t over the
!r it went
I jh'Jinting
|)i^ng I
natural
,df that
JKlig to
1^ ttj^vorth
f t^lt errown
s than 100
ling at full
they very
)lts. They
leaves of
rns of the
swallowed
that they
upon re-
uld be so
Ing In food
bits should
8 of their
y a puzzle.
t Ago.
are accus-
:e nuisance
but Prof.
raised so
i 600 years
forbidding
1 for fuel,
hing.
zabeth an-
linous coal
position to
rt attained
nineteenth
y of smoke
great that
cumulative
:enlng life,
riming and
you may-
•••M. A. Hays has decided to take
editorial charge of the Tower Journal
temporarily.
•••William Culver, father
Culver, has gone to New York
STAGE CHILDREN.
of F. B.
divided. Mrs.
not go to ste
Blue Bird." or
the other hand
at a benefit
wl.sh to regu-
Collier's: Is it fair to treat acting as
if It had the same effect on children as
hard labor in factories and elsewhere"'
A sharp controversy on this subject 1»
going on, with some of the best of
the children's friends
Florence Kelley will
"Konigsklnder," "Tlie
"The Piper," while on
Judge Lindsey appears
given to help those who
late but fiot to abolish stajre work by
cliildrc-n. The National Alliance for
the Protection of Stage Children main-
lalns that children of tjie theatci uie
on the average better educated than
other children of the same social aiid
economic environment, and at least
equal to them In health. They ask
only that children shall be allowed to
act when they have a certificate of ap-
proval from the local Gerry society and
a permit, revocable at any time, from
the municipal authorities. The law of
New York, drafted by Commodore
Gerry, is very strict regarding the ex-
hibitions, which it forbids, but it adds:
•This flection does not apply to the
employment of any child as a singer
or musician in a church, school, or
academy; or in teaching or learning
the science or practice of music; or as
a musician in anv concert or in a the-
atrical exhibition, with the written
consent of the mayor of the city or the
president of the board of trustees of
the village where such concert or exhi-
bition takes place."
Those who think this the proper kind
of law look upon dramatic training,
rightl.v supervised, as education rather
than as labor. Ellen Terry began her
stage life at six; Mrs. Fiske, Eleonora
Duse, Salvlni, Ristorl, and a large num-
ber of the most succe.^sful actors of
our day started on the stage as chil-
dren. Little mill hands, on the con-
trary, are not fitting themselves for
mastery in business; but rather lessen-
ing all the qualities wliich make for
effectiveness.
BnngaiowN Came From India.
The word bungalow is an Anglo-
Indian version of the Hindi bangla,
which primarily means Bengali, or of
Bengal, and Is also applied to a
th;itched hut, says Country Life in
America. It may be worth while to
explain how this trivial and merely
local name came to be fixed on the
Englishman's house In India.
Early residents there, engaged In
military, administrative or trading
duties, lived .a nomadic life for the
greater part of the year in tf-nts. And
since there was nothing in the Indigen-
ous buildings of Bengal suited to their
requirements their first dwelling
iiouses, designed by themselves ana
built of materials at site, were natu-
rally planned on the model of the In-
dian service tents to which tliey were
accustomed — that is, a l;irg«e and lofty
room surrounded by double walls of
canvas enclosing space between them,
with partitions at two or more cor-
ners for bath or store rooms.
It Is probable, indeed, that in the be-
ginning the tent itself was occasion-
ally covered with the sun proof thatch
or bangla. The name and the thatch
were ail that were taken, and now the
origin of thw name is forgotten even
by most Indians, who accept the reson-
ant, trisyllabic bungalow as the Eng-
lishmen's own name for his own pe-
culiar house.
Freiih VeKotableM.
Boston Traveler: Thousands of back
yards are going to waste in Boston and
its suburbs. Soil that might produce
plenty of fresh vegetables for the fam-
ily all summer Is littered up with rub-
bish or overgrown with weeds and
grass. Why not clear away the debris
and make a garden?
AMUSEMENTS.
NEW fV B<»^ Phoaas S41 •.
THEATER
Av*. East and Suparior Straat
IMTERMA'nOMAL VAUPEVIIXE.
THIS ^VKFK'S BILL..
MATINEES-
25c
Exeept Sunday*
and Holldaya.
Night*. 15*. 25*,
50e and 75*.
Matter Oabrlel and Company.
Farrell -Taylor Company.
Tha Namba Jap*.
Qeorg* Austin Moore and
Cordelia.
Ward Brother*.
Brewnint and Lewis.
Ernest Yerxa and Adele.
The KInodrome.
The Coneert Orchestra.
LVeBUM
AGAII*
TONiaHT
And Saturday MATINEE AND NIGHT
LEW FIELDS Presents the CoioHal Spectacular
Musical Production
'THE INIDIII6HT SONS"
with GEO. W. MONROE and the Largest Com-
pany and Biggest Seenio Equipment Ever Sent on
Tour; 150 People on the Stags: three Carloads of
Scenic Surprises: 60 in the Chorus; 30 Big Song
Hits; Eight Mammoth Seen**.
PRICES— Matinee 25o to $1.50. Nights 50e to
|2. No telephone order* taken. No aeats held.
"Siffer Thread* Amang the Gold"— Edison,
(Dramatie.)
"A Card of Introduction" — Edison, (Comedy.)
"Big Hearted Jim"— Kalem. (Dramatic.)
"The Widow Visits Springtown"— Vitograph,
(Comedy.)
Illuttrated song: "I'm Qaing Back to My Old
Girl." Sung by Mr. I. 8. Mistachkla.
ODEUIi^
•'Paradise Lost"— Biograph. (Dramatie.)
"Winsor McCoy"— Vitograph. (Comedy.;
"Bob Slodding" — Vitograph, (Sporting.)
"Red's Conquest" — Selig, (Comedy Drama.)
Illuttrated song: "Bring Me Back My Geldaa
Dreams." Sung by Mr. George ttnz.
^'C*
I'
t
t
(•
Ub»«a^M »■
4 ^
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
Umhw
■•»"
CONFDENCE
INREAin
Month's Transfers in New York
Reach Nearly Forty
Millions.
Copyright H»rt Schaffn-tr & M»r»
Great Transformation Taking
Place on Beautiful
Fifth Avenue.
SOME
SATISFACTION
IN WEARING
GUARANTEED
CLOTHES
Our Hart Schaffner & Marx
Clothes are
Guaranteed to be all-wool.
Guaranteed to fit.
Guaranteed to give satisfac-
tion as long as you wear them.
New Spring Suits
$18 and Up
New Spring Topcoats
$18 and Up
Cravenettes and
Slip-ons
$18 and Up
Other splendid makes of
Suits and Overcoats, $10 and
up.
Slip-ons and Raincoats
$4.50 and Up
SPMNG
FURNISHINGS
Manhattan and Wilson
Bros.* Shirts
$1.00 to $3.50
New Neckwear
25c to $2.00
Dent's and Adler's
Dress Gloves
$ 1 .00 to $2.50
Stetson Hats
' Soft and Stiff Shapes.
$3.50 to $6.00
Imperial Hats
$3.00
New York, April 21. — With dull-
ness in the stock market for months
past and a most conservative tone to
the general business of the country,
with the decline in the prices of
many of the leading comjnodities and
the piling up of cash in the majority
of the financial institutions In this
city, the country and the world, we
have now in New York a veritable
boom In city and country realty.
For four weeks past there has been
a rush to invest, and the movement
not only embraces properties in the
heart of the city, but from Broadway
and Fifth avenue it radiates in every
direction for many miles out.
Durlni; period mentioned, among tno
deals on Fifth avenue alone from its
beginning downtown up to Nineteenth
street have been many that have
gone upward of $1,000,000 in value.
Chans:e« on Filth Avenue.
The avenue Is being reconstructed
and is losing rapidly its private resi-
dential character. .
Uelow Fifty-ninth street it is being
; transformed into a commercial
I thoroughfare, and above that plaza It
is to be. for the next decade at least,
the avenue of the most modern club-
houses and the most elegant and
luxurious apartment buildings.
To enumerate a few of the changes
of the past month, a syndicate has
purchased from Thomas F. Ryan the
house on the north<.a.«t corner of
Fifth avenue and Twelfth street,
formerly the residence of the late
James I.enox. founder of the Lenox
library and the Presbyterian hospitaJ.
The Fifth Avenue & Twelfth Street
Realty company are now owners, and
will at once proceed to erect an 18-
storv busin.'ss building upon the site
uf the old merchant's home.
A Street of Splendid Buildings.
The fine home known as the res'
dence of James A. Burden, fltiiated
1 on the southeast corner of Fifth
avenue and Seventy-second street, has
also passed into the hands of an In-,
onrporated company, and will give
place to a 12-story apartment house,,
which will rank in building and ap-
pointments with the most palatial
in the world.
A 12-story apartment house of the
finest class is now nearing comple-
tion on the corner of Eighty-first
street and Fifth avenue, and it is
current among real estate dealers
that the Progress club property, upon
the corner of Sixty-third street, will
soon be changed into an apartment
house of equal rank with any in this
city.
One of the sales which ran upwards
of $1,000,000 in consideration was that
of the Forty-second street property
belonging to the West Presbyterian
church.
The invasion of commercial houses
and the fading away of the residences
and their occupants had limited the
church's influence in that locality, and
the trustees accepted the offer of
$1,100,000 for the tract, which fronts
seventy-eight feet on Forty-second
street and runs through the very
short block with the same frontage
on Forty-third street.
The church made history under the
pastorship of sucn well-known di-
vines as Dr. Hastings and Dr. Paxton,
but Its usefulness? in the old site was
past. . , , e
Upon its site will be erected a 16-
story buildings for the Aeolian com-
panv, which will contain a magnin-
cont concert hall, and will mark the
inauguration of the transformation of
P^>rty-second street into a street or
splendid buildings, in harmony with
those upon Broadway and Fifth ave-
"xew York city is rapidly becoming
the city of the finest buildings in the
world, whether one takes residences
oftiice buildings, hotels, commercial
houses or public edifices.
IJIe Ileal Kstato Deals.
It is being made from Twenty-third
«?treet to Fifty-ninth street and from
river to river, the most commodious,
the most attractive and the most
luxurious city of modern or ancient
times. The plans of the city trans-
portation companies, supplemented a-s
they are by the full co-operation of
the great railway systems which
spread out to all the continent from
the citv. are centering in the space
referred to above, the social and busi-
ness activities of the western world.
and making it the magnet for many
of those of Europe.
Ten years from now >.ew YorK win
be as much changed from its appear-
ance of today as it stands today
changed from the SO's and 90 s of the
last century.
Its Influence wil be more powerful,
its improvements marked in every
particular, its metropolitan life tho
most attractive of all the cities of the
globe. , , „
Turning again to the actual real es-
tate dealings of the past four weeks,
which made the time a record one. 1
would cite the transaction by whlcn
the City Investing company, of which
Robert E. Dowling is president,
bought from the Pittsburg Life &
Trust companv the Washington Life
building on the southwest corner of
Broadway and Liberty strets for ap-
proximately $4,500,000. , , ^ ^
The same company which bought
the Washington Life building sold one
of its holdings a few days later for
$1,400,000.
This was the southwest corner of
Broadway and Dey streets, upon which
has just been erected a new eight-
story building. V, ji^
The new owners of this office build-
ing have since leased the entire build-
ing for the term of eighty-four years
at an annual rental which wiu net
them 5 per cent upon the investment
and leave them with all the increment
of advancing value, which must be
very great in thai long term of years.
Increase In Farm Values.
There has been enumerated here
a very few of the very many real es-
tate transactions even of the Man-
hattan borough of this city.
The other boroughs have witnessed
the same remarkable display of real-
ty investment, and outside the lines
of the boroughs, throughout Long
Island, above the Bronx and over in
New Jersey the buying has astonished
the oldest and most experienced realty
operators. The reports from the farm
lands of New Jersey show that their
average increase in value, take the
state over, has been upward of 45 per
cent since 1900.
This has co^ne for the most part
as the result of the amazing increase
of the city and town populations in
that state itself, and the great con-
centration of consumers in New York,
Philadelphia and other cities that
draw food supplies from New Jersey.
Connecticut farm lands have also
risen largely in value, and the ten
years just passed hjts seen thousands
of acres of farm lands in Long Island
become suburban property and even
sold and classed as city lots.
This sudden burst of real estate in-
vestment in New York city certainly
betokens confidence in realty values
in and out of the city limits, and
the message it carries to the country
at large is of New York's belief
in even greater business activities
throughout the Union.
Nearly $40,000,000 in value of real-
ty transfers at advancing prices with-
in one month's time in New York
city and immediate vicinity is surely
a record that gives inspiration to the
realty dealers, not only here, but in
every part of the republic.
>
AChars^
Account
here
for yoa
Tbe
In Spring Clothes for Men and Women are shown by
us in splendid assortments— more of them than ever
before, because we belieyc there's nothing too good for our
customers.
Men's Spring Suits, llats, Top-Ceats, Etc.
Ladies' Spring Suits, Fine MUHnery, SBk Dresses,
Silk and Serge Coats, Waists, Etc.
styles are the very latest and most of them exclusive. Qualities
are unsurpassed~we guarantee them. Perfect fit and no charge
for alterations. Come—look them over and be convinced.
PERMANENTLY HEALS
OLD SORES
If a quantity of normal Mood is placed xn a vessel
and vigorously whipped with a bunch of twigs, a white,
sticky substance is found clinging to the twigs and bind-
ing them together. This is a natural clement of the circu-
lation and is known as plasma, a fibrous constituent— and
is the true healing quality of the blood. This plasmic prop-
erty is frequently destroyed by impure accumulations in the
blood and this vital fluid not only loses its power to heal,
but becomes a source of irritation to any wound or open sore
or ulcer on the flesh. Continually the blood discharges the
impurities into the place and gradually the infection spreads
and the sore enlarges. The nutritive corpuscles are also
weakened, and the
I was anSering greatly from a sore
onmy left breast, which had begun to
eat, and at times deep, shoptinBT
nains would pass through It. Icon-
suited physicianB, but their treat-
ment did not benefit me very much.
I knew that the disease was heredi-
tary in my case, as an only Bister, my
mother and two of her sisters had
been similarly affected, -^ter I had
finished the first bottle of B.B.a. i
felt some better, bo continued It un-
"selTon, Mof ^MRS. J. CASSELL.
<»
blood has not sufii-
cient nourishing power with which
to stimulate the place. External
applications cannot cure an old
sore, because such treatment does
not affect the blood; the most that
can be expected from plasters,
washes, salves, etc., is a cleansing,
soothing effect on the ulcer.
S.S. S. heals old sores in a
perfectly natural way. It goes
down into the blood, and removes
the impurities and morbid matters
that are the means of keeping the
ulcer open; then the sore is bound
to heal. S. S. S. is the greatest of
all blood purifiers, and not only-
does it cleanse the circulation, but
it restores the healing, plasmic
qualities and aids in promoting-
every necessary quality for good
health. S. S. S. builds new flesh
tissue from the bottom of the ulcer to the outer skin, and makes a permanent
cure Book on Sores and Ulcers and any medical advice free. b. b». b. isior
sale at drug stores. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
In 1877 I had my leg badly cnt on
the sharp edge of a barrel. A great
Bore formed, and for years no one
knows what I suffered with the
place. I tried, it seemed to me,
everything I had ever heard ol.but I
got no relief. At last I began the use
of S S. S., and continued it until it
removed all tne poison from my
blood and made a complete and per-
manent cure of the Bor|^^ ^^^^^
108 Wyckoff St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
*'New Sensation**
Soft Hats for Young Men,
$3,00
Douglas Shoes
$2.50 to $5.00
Skolny's Boys' aothes
$6.00 to $15.00
Qothes for the LMe Tots
$2.50 jo $6.00
KENNEY & ANKER
DULUTH, MINN.
SSy/iS!XSS^^!M^^^^^
^ -
Ff(Ui Arm JUd^ Mmiitomr^^H^ I
NewYoRxCny
jotimm oummerUnmwear\
You are certain to enjoy wear-
ing Gotham Summer Under-
wear, tlie new idea in nether-
garments, loose, roomy, full fash-
ioned, and with many
special features and
fine touches in tailor-
ing and making. Espe-
cially made for men
who look for ease and
luxury in under-gar-
ments. ^
SOc, 75c., $1.00
the garment and upwards
at Good skops everywhere.
Also Gotham Mfg. Co.
Shirt., Union Suits, Pajamas
and Soft Collars.
Send {or the Beck of GetfuB Styles.
SUES FOR HIS EARNINGS.
Kidnaped Boy Tells of Being Stolen
From Cleveland Home.
Los Angeles. Cal., April 21.— That he
was kidnaped when lie was 10 years
old by a woman who crossed the coun-
try to keep him with her. forced him
to work for her, professed love for
him but kept hia earnlngrs and now
refuses to Rive them up. are charges
made in a suit for >8,500 damages In-
stituted in the supreme court by
Tracka Ladda. 24 years old. against
.Mrs. Nellie Harsey. 58 years old.
Tracka in his complr.int, says thai
he lived in Cleveland, Ohio, next door
to Mrs. Hersev, then 44 years old. hhe
kidnaped him and brought lilm to
Southern California. During their early
residence here, he says, she told lum
that his mother was dead.
As tiie years passed, and Mrs. Hfr-
sev kept him from companions of his
own age. lie says, he became depressed.
His only clothes were overalls, and in
the fourteen years he had only one
vacation, a hunting trip in the moun-
Tracka chanced to fall In love with
a girl and told her his story. .She aided
him to purchase a suit of clothes, to
get a shave and a haircut, all of which
so changed his appearance that ac-
quaintances failed to recognize him.
Tlie suit followed.
SIIT^F0R$25^0.
Elopement in Tennessee Causes
"Pa" No End of Trouble.
Knoxville, Tenn., April 21. — William
J. Cumniings, an attorney, has filed
Euit for $25,000 against John M. Callie
and Murrill Ross and W. T. Ballou,
father, mother, brother and relative of
his bride, who was Margaret Ross. He
wants damages for alleged alienation
of his wife's affections and for the loss
of her love, society and company.
They recently eloped. Three days
later, Father Ross, at the point of a
pistol, publicly horsewhipped J. Fred
Raumann. a bank clerk and young so-
ciety man, for driving the eloping
couple in his automobile to a parson-
age where the ceremony was per-
formed. .,,».*,
Mrs. Ross was so shocked by the oc-
currence that Mr. Ross took her to the
West indies under care of a n\irse.
En route they stopped at New York,
where Mrs. ('ummings Joined them,
after living with her husband no more
than a week. She also went to the
West Indies, and on their return re-
cently she refused to return to her
husband, and he now sues for mone-
tary satisfaction.
Horsewhipping is a penitentiary of-
fense in Tennessee. Young Baumann
is prosecuting John M. Ross on that
charge, but the jury could not agree,
standing ten for conviction and two
for ac<4uittal, and another trial Is
necessary.
MAGAZINE EDITOR
^%
Whose Wife Got Divorce and Re-
married, Will Wed Miss Mercer.
Chicago. April 21. — Miss Mabel Mer-
cer appeared In the office of the county
clerk and asked for a license to marry
Percivul L. Harden of New York. Mr.
Harden's age was given as 36. and
that of Miss Mercer, who lives in Chi-
cago, as 21. ... X i
At the Auditorium hotel It was stat-
ed that rooms had been reserved for
"Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Harden," but that
they had not yet arrived.
Maude Alene Sullivan llarlen go a
decree of divorce against Harden In
Chicago, Jan. 21. 1910. alleg'.n:? cruelty,
and the following day wa'i married to
William T. Hoops. .,r/.A«n *
Harden sued Hoops for $150,000 for
alienation of his wife's effections, and
was recently awarded $10,000
Hoops denied all of the allegations
made by Harden, and set forth that the
Chicago divorce obtained by Mrs. Har-
den was villd, ?nd that he married her
In good faith after Harden had aban-
doned her. , , ,. . e .i,„
Harden Is editor and publisher of the
Club Fellow Magazine of New lorK
and Chicago^
HE HAD THE STUFF AND
LIKEWISE THE PROOF.
Pottstown. Pa.. April 21.— From a
lanky Pennsylvania German plowboj.
with a few pennies in his pockets, to a
six-foot, broad-shouldered gold mine
owner, presents the wonderful trans-
formation to rural folk around Niantlc,
Montgomery county. In the life of John
Kist who suddenly reappeared among
scenes of his youth a few weeks ago
Thirteen years ago young Kist
vowed, "1 am not going to work around
here any longer. 1 am Bojng to «lo
three things— learn to speak English,
see the world and get rich.
He drifted West, and after six years
of service In the United States cavalry,
three of them spent In fighting Moros
In the PhUlpplnes he began prospecting
for gold in California. After many dis-
couragements and hardships, he made
a rich strike one year ago and Is now
the sole owner of one gold mine and
half owner of another.
But the former companions ot Kist
around Nlanlic were loth to believe
his story of good fortune aiid politely
requested proof. Laughingly he re-
^ "1 will give you two proofs — I did
not ask any of you to buy stock In
mv mines, and here Is my bank book,
full of handsome figures on the credit
side."
Men's Spring Suits, $15.00 to $28.00
Men's Spring Coats, $10.00 upwards
Men's Hats, - $1.50 to $4.00
Boys' Confirmation Suits, $4 to $7
Ladies' Tailored Suits, $15 to $35
Fine Trimmed Hats, $1.98 to $10.00
Stylish Silk Dresses, $12.00 upwards
Spring Coats, - $12.50 upwards
MENTER 8r. gifi^
HOSENftl-XO.
122 East Superior Street
Open Monday and Saturday Eve.
A
Charge ^
Account
here for you
^liieElilJR PURCHASE
*;■ -c?^^^*; *t
>i ^i^*^
Herald "Wants" Always Bring Results (
9 ^'J^
K^^
^V«.Jf>T
•v.>
^^^'
UlL
TV-?
}})00
})))m
'fff
N. J.UPHAMCO,
STORES AND HOUSES f »» «««2:
Property for •*!« In *U P»rt« of
the city.
18 THIKD AVBNIB WEST.
Ui
1"^HE HOXJSEWIFE who has learned the many
uses to which O-Cedar Product*— (Polish,
Mop and Duster) — may be put, accomplishes
mc re in less time and with less work than she could
possibly do by using any other tools or methods. She
keeps herself clean and fresh as well as the house.
Brooms and sweepers have their use — but they are fit only
to brush up matches and scraps of paper. To use a broom on
a floor wliere the dust has accumulated is both foolish and
detrimental to health. Better leave the dust alone than to fill the
air with it.
The 0-<Iledar Polish Mop makes cleaning an act-
ual pleasure — no drudgery. When you have an O-Cedar
Polish JVIop in your hands it just becomes second nature to
want lo clean — and to especially get after the neglected
plac<;s — such as tops of doors and casings, under the
bed and dresser and around the corners and crevices.
This mop cleans so much cleaner than any broom
possibly could — and there isn't a particle of dust.
The mop absorbes the dust. And in addition to
cleaning the floor and woodwork the O-Cedar Poluh
Mop leaves it polished and disinfected against all ,
veimin and germ life.
The O-Cedar Polish Duster is to furniture
and smaller surfaces exactly what the mop is to floors.
So certain are we that you will appreciate the very exceptional
merits of ()-Ccdar Products that every dealer will return
your full purchase price if within two day* you wuh to
return any gooMtls you may have bought. , , ^ ,
If you find that O-Cedar Polish is not absolutely the best
polish, return the unused remains of the bottle and Cft your
money back. And if, after you have used the O-Cedar
Polish Mop or the O-Cedar Polish Duster and for any
reason do not wish to keep them, by all means take them
bacc. . ,
But we know that you will never want to part with
C>-Cedar once you begin its use.
O-Cedar Poluh .old in 25c BOc, and $1.00 botUes
O-Cedar Polish Duster, SOc
O-Cedar Poli»h Mop, 75c and $1.50
M«de Br
Channell Chemical Company
Chicago, IlL
Ashton Brownson Co.,
St. Paul.
O-Cedar Polish
Mop U To Floors
And Woodwork
What The Vacuum
Cleaner Is To CarpeU.
Mar.ufaclurer's Agents for Minnesota. North and South
Dakota and Northwestern Wisconsin.
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IS
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
Feet Tired--
Soj;ired?
nz Slakes Sick Feet Well No Matter
AVhat Alls Them.
CHANGES IN
DECISIONS
Judges Differ as to
Sanity of Princess
Ida Rosa.
the
Which Does Not Discourage
Count Schmettow, a
Poor Suitor.
TlZ acts at once and makes tired,
fc<hin.£r, swollen feet remarkably fresh
and sore proof.
It's the sure remedy, you know, for
evorytliing that gets the matter with
your feot. It's for sore feet and for
B^^eaty. bad-snu-Ilingr feet, and for
Corns, callouses and bunions, too.
"I'or years I have Ix^on troubled
villi sore and toiuler feet; sufTerfd
Intoii-e pains. Have hiul the assi-.tani'e
Of i>hysicinns without relief. I bon«;ht
a box of TIZ, wliieli worUttl a perfect
run-, as it luus with a srcat many of
|i»y friends. I would not be without
It. All It requires Is to be known to
|h» universally used." A. F. Drc'utzor,
Chli-Jiyo.
TIZ is not a powder. Powders and
otlur foot remedies clog up the pores.
TIZ draws out all poLsonoua exuda-
tions which bring on soreness of the
feet, and Is the only romedy that
does. TIZ cleans out every pore and
glorifies the feet — your feet.
You'll never limp again or draw up
your face In pain, and you'll forget
about jour corns, bunions and cal-
loii.=5''s. You'll feel like a new per-
Bon.
TIZ is for sale at all druggists. 25
cents per box. or it will be sent you
flireet. if you wish, from Walter Luth-
er Dodge & Co.. Chicago. 111.
0 UKTTnU nK.SlLT.S from Herald
Ht Want AOr. \ou nave anil ninke
i- iii«>uo}' whca >ou advertise lii THtl
» lint ALU.
^ V?. ^ -*'"' it y j|( J|5 j|C j|? ^
COiNFIDENCE THE
GREAT FACTOR
It Is the Keynote to Pros-
perity. The World Is
Ruled by Confidence.
All the business of the world is
built on confidence. Great business
fti lions in the world are founded
fiitrriy on the confidence of one man
in another. IVlany merchants have
tti'>usands of dollars in stock capital
obtained from their manufacturer be-
cau!=.' their manufacturer has confl-
e. n. /«• in their honesty and Integrity.
Liiii-vise. the same merchants have
e iiv< at deal of money coming to
tluni from their patrons which they
can hst as capital, so certain are they
of payment because their patrons
huvf gained their confidence.
Confidence; what a world of mean-
ing tills simple word implies. It
^pell.s success or failure; It Is the
piost potent factor In all the busi-
ness and social world alike.
The United Doctors, who have es-
tablished their Institute on the third
floor of the Columbia building, in
this city, have gained the confidence
ef the people of Duluth and the en-
tire state. When the established
their permanent institute here they
Wff practically unknown. Not lit-
erally, however, for the United Doc-
tors have a national reputation made
In yeirs of dealing with the people
and . nring the sick, but it was the
tlrst intimate acquaintance with the
people here.
Since establishing their offices here
thtsi- famous specialists have gained
the confidence of the people. Why?
Ei'tause they have always shown
themselves to be honorable and hon-
est in their dealings, both with their
creditors and their patients. Every
pronii.se has been fulfilled to the let-
ter. The result of these upright busi-
ness and professional methods can be
Been at their offices; people are com-
ing from all over the country to con-
sult these celebrated specialists. They
hnve the confidence of the people
VliD know, when they consult the
t'nited Doctors, they will be told
plainly but kindly whether they can
be cured or not. If the case is a
Curr»l)!o one they will be accepted for
treatment and if it Is not. It will be
gentlv but firmly refused.
Patrick Keough of 712 Wabash
^w.. LoKansport, Ind., Is one of the
thou.sands who have confidence in
the United Doctors — confidence
gained by honest treatment and mar-
Velou.s aid. In a letter writter to the
publi<- he says:
"I wish to announce to the public
that I have suffered with dizziness
ftnd weak heart to such an extent
that at times I would fall whenever
these attacks would come on. I
bave been a sufferer with this afflic-
tion for three years and was ap-
parently getting worse so that I was
almost unable to follow my occupa-
tion as a stone mason.
"I went to the United Doctors, who
began treating me, and I received
benefit from them at once. Each
day r can see an improvement in my
condition, and I feel that these suc-
cessful physicians are going to cure
ine in a short time. I have no more
Of the attacks in which I would fall,
and nnly a slight dizziness remains.
"I am very grateful for what the
I'nittd Doctors have done for me
and will recommend them highly to
BufTtring humanity. I have been a
resident of Logansport since '6'7 and
any one wishing to know the truth
?f this statement can locate me at
12 Wabash Ave.
"PATRICK KEOUGH."
Tht^ waiting rooms of the United
Pociors' Institute is always crowded
*ilh patients. The wonderful cures
ti'hieh have been made here are draw-
ing i.eople from all over this and
adjoining states. Examination and
consultation are free to all and no in-
curable cases are taken for treat-
ment. No amount of money could
tem))t the United Doctors to take a
case they could not relieve.
Berlin, April 21. — "Have you a share
In the Sulkowski millions?" This Is
vulgar Berlin's latest catchword, and it
means, "when are you going to marry
a wealthy bride?"
It is apropos of a struggle for Prin-
cess Ida Rosa Sulkowski, whom an im-
pecunious lover Is eager to wed. He is
being opposed In the Austrian, Hun-
garian and Prussian courts, and judges
decide once a week that I'rincess Ida
Rosa maj- wed him, and also once a
week that she may not.
Ida Rosa is a real princess. The Sul-
kowskis are princes of the Holy
Roman Empire of no very ancient lin-
eage, but of a very genuine wealth.
The family estates are worth at least
fifteen million dollars. The estates
are In Austria, Hungary, Prussia
and I'oland, ana the lord and master
of them all is Joseph Mary, Prince Sul-
kowski. Duke of Bielitz. He Is a
cantankerous old man with bushy eye-
brows and a red neck; and his only
daugliter and heiress is Ida Rosa, wlio
is pretty, slim and graceful, but with
a brain which qualified experts swear
ia uncommonly Intelligent, and other
qualified experts swear Is Incurably
mad.
Tbe PrInceMtt'M Greedy RelativeN.
At the age of 19 she wedded a Hun-
garian, Dr. Alexander Taganyl, a gen-
tleman of Budapest. They went to
live at Arad above the green River
Maros. where thirteen rebel Magya
generals were shot in 1849. They
quarreled and had no children. As
Princess Ida Rosa had millions of her
own. and must legally Inherit the fif-
teen millions of her cantankerous
parent, thrifty relatives began to in-
terest themselves in lier affairs. Prince
Sulkowski's collateral kinsmen, a
whole batch of Taydas, Adolphs, Wan-
das and Stanislasses, began to ask
themselves what would become of the
heirless Sulkowski millions. And they
decided to act.
Now in Austria and Germany there
is an infallible way of solving knotty
points of heirships. It is to get some-
body declared Insane. This the kins-
men did. The Hungarian court at Arad
pronounced pretty Ida Rosa to be mad,
deprived her of the control of iier mil-
lions, and appointed guardians, among
%vliom was her princely fatiier. Of
course, no man seriously said that tlie
princess was Insane except experts,
and they merely swore It.
Lengthy lawsuits began. Tlie Hun-
garian courts persisted in the theory
of Insanity, while the Prussian courts
found that the princess was uncom-
monly Intelligent. So the princess was
sane In Prussia, while in Hungary she
might be clapped into the first asylum
for lunatics.
I,ove Rroneht a Motor Car.
Being pretty, the princess preferred
Prussia and ihlther she went. There
she made acquaintance with Clount
Bernhard von Schmettow, ex -soldier,
heir to Schloss Pominerzlg and present
posse-ssor of a heap of unpaid bills. The
count had fouglit forty civil lawsuits
and had been several times In conflict
with the criminal law. Naturally he
fell in love with the millionaire prin-
cess.-
Herr Taganyi thereupon began an-
other criminal suit against him, and
proceeded to divorce his wife. Tlds
was exactly what amorous, impecunious
Von Schmettow desired, for he Intended
to wed the princess and the estates
worth fifteen niilllons.
The course of true love ran smooth,
and on the strength of It the count
purchased a motor car. The future
master of the Sulkowski millions got
credit everywhere. Unluckily, people
raised obstacles to the marriage.
Though sane in Prussia, the princess
being mad In Austria, could not marry
without the consent of her guardians.
Ardent Count Schmettow rushed to
Vienna and got a written consent from
the prince. Three days later the old
man revoked the consent and declared
that the count had got it by false
representations. The count was too
much in love to be baffled by such
perfidy, and he devised another plan.
Court Turned the Count Down.
He decided to have the princess
transformed into a Prussian subject.
In that case he was told the guardian-
ship of the Hungarian court would be
null and void. He began proceedings.
Unluckily, the German courts rejected
the application.
The sane-insane Ida Rosa then gave
him power of attorney to dispose of
her millions as he w^ished. It had no
legal value because the millions were in
Hungary, where the princess was in-
sane. But naturally Schmettow was
not going to parade tliis Inconslder-
al»le fact to Berlin tradesmen. He
bought more motor cars. He lived as
if the fifteen millions were already in
his pocket. He paid with bills of ex-
change. And yesterday, as he was leav-
ing his rooms in Berlin's most ex-
pensive hotel, a bailiff slapped him on
the shoulder and told him to come to
Jail.
At the last minute a friend, who be-
lieves in the count's final victory, paid
the debt. It Is the same friend who is
said to be financing the count in his
great fight for justice. And every fair
mind hopes that when Princess Ida
Rosa and the fifteen millions are safe
in the impecunious count's amorous
embrace, the faithful friend will get a
reasonable share, that is, of the fifteen
millions.
PECULIAR MALADY
INRUENCE
O^ULPIT
Popular Interest in Sermons
in the Past and at
Present
Big Factors Which Go to
Make Either Success or
Failure.
\Miich Caii-ses Death of Three,
Forces Closing of Schools.
Mason City, Iowa. April 21. — A pe-
culiar malady has appeared here.
About a week ago Ernest Remlln;?
died. The d.ay lie was buried bis
younger brother Earl wp-s taken ill
and in twenty-four hours he was dean
The attending physician diagnosed tho
trouble as ptomaine poisoning.
Earl had barely been burled when
the 3-year-old daughter of Mrs. Ream
fell 111 and died. The school board, as
a precautionary measure, has closed
tile schools.
Dr. Boyd of Iowa State University is
making a thorough examination He
announced he believes death was due
to acute Intestinal trouble caused by
the use of impure water.
MURDER CASE IS
CALLED AT ASHLAND.
Ashland, TVls., April 21. — The first
case tried at the present term of cir-
cuit court, resulted in a conviction yes-
terday, when William was found guilty
of non-support. The jury was out only
a few minutes. Stack is a young able-
bodied fellow, a former bar tender,
who apparently believes that it is the
duty of a wife to support herself and
her children, without Interference from
the husband.
The case of Edward Miller, an Aus-
trian, who Is accused of murdering two
men with a sled stake at Mellen last
winter, was called at the opening of
court Wednesday.
New York, April 21. — A curious spec-
tacle was presented on Fifth avenue
the other Sunday morning. Out from
tbe big and rather somber looking edi-
fice of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian
church came at higli noon throngs of
people who had just listened intently
to the first sermon preached as pastor
of the church by the Rev. J. H.
Jowett, D.U., who has come with much
acclaim from Birmingham, Eng., to
fill one of tne most historic pulpits in
America. As those well-dressed, de-
corous people scattered up and down
the avenue they met little groups of
people coming from the Fifth Avenue
Baptist cliurcTi, sometimes called Rock-
efeller's church, which had that morn,
ing also sheltered an unusually large
congregation, drawn thither by the fact
tliat the pastor for the last three and
a half years. Dr. Charles F. Aked, was
to preach his farewell sermon, and a
day or two later take himself tp the
Pacific coast.
Dr. Jowett, now on the crest of the
incoming wave of popularity. Dr. Asked,
now on an apparently receding tide, so
far as New York city is concerned, for,
though ills eloquence and courage liave
won for him in this comparatively
brief pastorate one of the largest regu-
lar congregations in the city, his reso-
lution and diplomacy have not sufficed
for the equally important task of se-
curing a building large enough to hold
the people wlio want to liear him
preach. The problem of the Fifth Ave-
nue Baptist trustees was, If possible
to make their ambitious pastor con-
tent to preach to a relatively small
number of persons — among tiieni, it is
true, railway magnates of the caliber
of Judge Dovett of the Southern Pa-
cific, bankers of the standing of Edgar
Ij. Marston, and captains of industry
like the Rockefellers, senior and Junior.
Tlie problem of the Presbyterian, but a
few blocks distant, was to find a man
capable of filling an exceptionally large
edifice built for the days wiien Jolin
Hall was In his prime.
Are Both KuKlidlimen.
Jowett and Aked are both of them
Knglislimen. the latter as widely her-
alded when he came here nearly four
years ago as the former has been dur-
ing the last month, but both of them
Englishmen of very different charac-
teristics, yet each admittedly strong
in the pulpit. In the forefront of their
profession. But, one is unpacking his
household goods in New York, hopeful
that he will fulfill here a fruitful min-
istry of jnany years, and the other has
gone away from tlie metropolis, sick at
heart over Insuperable obstacles, and
having spent there three of the hardest
and most unsatisfactory years of his
life.
What is pulpit fame, anyway? Does
It last long? Is it worth striving for?
Does the modern world care for the
preacher as our fathers and grand-
fiithers did? Apparently the great
preachers of a generation ago are not
duplicated man for man on either side
of the Atlantic. Go to London. The
voices of Joseph Parker, LIddon. Far-
rar and Charles Spurgeon are forever
hush?d. To be sure, men like Campbell
Morgan and R. J. Campbell and Charles
Brown maintain a very high level of
pulpit work and have large personal
followers, but will history rank them
in the class with the quartet just
named? Go to New York and Brook-
lyn. Twenty-five years ago you found
such men as John Hall, William M.
Taylor, Richard S. Storrs. Henry Ward
Beecher. T. De Witt Talmage at the
height of their fame each perpetuating
a tradition of remarkable pulpit power.
Today in the churclies to wlilcli they
drew admiring throngs are men of em-
inence, as, for example. Dr. Hillls at
Plymouth church and Dr. Jefferson at
Broad wa.v tabernacle, but here again,
what will be the impartial, compara-
tive verdict of history?
Go to Boston. A glory departed from
Trinity church never to return when
Phillips Brooks died. George A. Gor-
don is easily the leader now and a mar
honored up and down New England, a
rarely gifted preacher 3nd thinker, but
Herrlck, Duryea, Uorimer. MacKenzie
and other men of their age and class
are no longer to be heard Go to Chi-
cago. Gunsaulus, the golden-mouthed,
still addresses large congregations, but
the quality of the Chicago pulpit as a
whole has hardly kept pace with the
physical and financial growth of the
city, though many a minister is doing
creditable and far-reaching work in
his pulpit and parish.
Or judged by the tfest of the printed
page: Do the volumes that bear the
names of any living preachers circulate
as widely as those of Phillips Brooks
or Charles H. Spurgeon or Henry W^ard
Beecher? Or are they likely to?
Adverse InflueneeM.
1( giants are not as conspicuous in
the Great Britain or American pulpit
of today as they were some time ago,
two things ought to be remembered.
First, that the modern pulpit has to
contend with adverse influences with
which the Brookses and Beechers and
Joseph Parkers had only begun to
reckon when thejr passed off the stage
The multiplication of popular litera-
ture, the seven days' appeal of the
daily nress, the lifting of the average
intelligence througli educational Insti-
tutions and the strong and swelling
time of interest in material things,
l)leasure, money-getting, the gratifica-
tion of a thousand personal tastes and
whims — all these things conspire if not
to lower the grade of preaching, a^
least to dull tbe ears of hearers and to
bar Its way into their minds choked
with so many other tilings.
Yet it cannot be confidently affirmed
that the level of preaching as a whol<»
in America or England probably gets
better preaching than it did a genera-
tion ago, and It is not in the great
cities alone that one can find first-class
pulpit ministrations. Take Port. and oi
Hartford or Providence or Rochester
or Toledo or Topeka or Denver or Los
Angeles, and many other cities of sec-
ond or tliird rank in population, and
you are sure to find on almost any
Sunday some men in the pulpit with
strong and distinctive messages, who
are an honor to their profession', who
are helping to maintain the highest
traditions of the Anglo-Saxon pulpit.
Many Instances, some of them quite
trifling on the surface, help to deter-
mine the success or failure of a given
pastorate; the size of the building, as
we have just noted, by being too large
or too small, the dominant spirit of the
pillars m the church, the tact or lack
of tact of the preacher, the attitude of
the daily press. Sometimes the novel-
ty of a preacher from across the water
operates in his favor. England Is
sometimes more appreciative of Amer-
ican ministers than are the congie-
gations which they customarily ad-
dress, and the reverse Is true.
As a rule It may be stated that pul-
pit success arises chiefly from tlie
ability to Interpret the ways of God
to men, to declare the good news In
such a way that it shall appear each
Sunday both good and new. Few last-
ing pulpit reputations are built on the
disposition or even the ability to dis-
cilss public questions — not that a
preacher should be deprived from han-
dling fearlessly in his pulpit the issues
of the hour, but his Influence as a
molder of public opinion on specific
points will be in exact proportion to
his power as a messenger of God, as
an interpreter of the mind of God. He
who makes it his first business to be-
come, as far as in him, lies a spiritual
expert. Is on the path to the only kind
of popularity that a true preacher
ought to desire, for despite the wis-
dom of the modern world and its ab-
sorption in things seen and temporal,
it Is still hungry at heart for God and
will turn aside from the beaten thor-
oughfare into the quiet sanctuary,
where a true prophet, humbly yet pow-
erfully, undertakes to bring God to
men and men to God.
CUP OF MATRIMONY
At Youth's Lips When Mother's
Warning Causes a Slip.
Lexington, Ky„ April 21. — Charles
Standiford. 19 years old, son of Mrs.
Maggie Standiford of this city, was
within three words of wedded to Mrs.
Ida Bryant, who had divorced two hus-
bands.
About a month ago Mrs. Standiford
left with County Clerk Lewis a warn-
ing not to issue a marriage license to
her son.
On Tuesday the boy, accompanied by
Magistrate Abner Oldham, procured a
license, and the magistrate bed pro-
ceeded in the ceremony as far as I
now pronounce you " when Clerk
Lewis, remembering the mother'ii warn-
ing, ran into the room, stopjed the
wedding, returned Standiford his fee
and tore up the license.
DAM FAMILY ARE
NOW INNEW YORK
They Arrived From Rotterdam
on the Steamship
Ryndam.
New York, April 21. — The whcle Dam
family have arrived in town. Tl:ere are
thirteen of them, including Father
Dam and Mother Dam and Brother
Dajn and Sister Dam, not to speak of
Baby Dam and the Dam toy dog.
Moreover, they all came from Rotter-
dam, on the steamship Rynda n.
Conspicuous In the family are two
sets of Dam twins. The proud father
Is John Dam, 45 years old. He Is a
farmer from Nleur Beyerland, Hol-
land, and he Is going to ts.ke the
Dam children to Pella. Iowa.
Mother Dam Is 44. Then, In order
of seniority, the Dams are aligned a>
follows: Hendrlck Dam and his twin
sister, Pleternella Dam, aged 17; Ja-
cob Dam, Jr., and his twin sister, HIl-
ligje Dam, aged 15; Johannes Dam,
11; Pieter Franz Dam, 9; SteiutJ*
Dam, 8; Leendert Dam, 6; Cornelius A.
Dam, 3, and Arle C. Dam. 1 year old.
Of the ten children three are girls.
With the Dam family was Father
Dam's brother, Jan J. Dam, who lA
going to live with them. Another biff
family on board was that of Wllhelm
Wlsse, who w^as accompanied by his
wife and ten children. The ages of
the latter go down the scale like tlifs:
Twenty-three, 22, 19, 18, 16, 15, 13. 11,
9 and 5. They came from Fernuhene,
Zeeland and they are goimr to Pa«-
slac, N. J., where Wlsse hag a brother,
Antonlus.
.:
COLUMBIA
April Records on Sale
Now.
Some of the best ever issued.
EDMONT,
330 W. Superior St.
A
*"
t
DOCTORS
FAILED TO
HELP HER
Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compouad
Pound, "Wis. — "I am glad to an-
nounce that I have been cured of dys-
pepsia and female
troubles by your
. medicine. I had
jfjbeen troubled with
both for fourteen
years and consulted
different doctors,
but failed to get any
iiiiiij relief. After using
Lydia E. Piukham's
Vegetable Com-
pound and Blood
Purifier I can say I
am a well woman.
; can't find words to express my thanks
'or the good your medicine has done
me. You maypublish this if you wish."
—Mrs. Herman Sieth, Pound, Wis.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
used with perfect confidence by women
who suffer from displacements, inflam-
mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir-
regularities, periodic pains, backache,
bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indi-
gestion, dizziness, or nervous prostra-
tion.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound has been the
standard remedy for female ills, and
suffering women owe it to themselves
to at least give this medicine a trial.
Proof is abundant that it has cured
thousands of others, and why should
it not cure you?
If you want special advice write
Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for it.
It is free and always helpful.
YOU BUY
Fitwell Clothes
YOU know that the style is
up-to-the-minute, the fit is
right, the pattern is attractive.
You know from experience
that they hold their shape.
The tailoring is perfect, the wear-
ing is long and pleasing.
New Spiring Suits
PRICXD AT
*I5 '20 »25
Others as low as St 2.50 and up to S 35.00.
All clothes purchased of us we guarantee to keep in
repair and pressed free of charge.
lu
m^'mm'
t t IH'IMM
:!i
QUAYLE-LARSEN CO.
14 audi HI
;t
ITIREET
POULTRY NETTING REDUCED!
We often read of large amounts made yearly
by men and women raising poultry. Depend
upon it. The chickens didn't simply grow up.
The hens didn't simply lay. Because: The price of eggs was high.
Probably the owner bought sufficient poultry netting to insure long
runs. Gave them good food and some attention. We can help by selling
you the poultry neeting, in full roll lots, at specially attractive prices.
Full rolls contain 150 running feet.
12
inches wide,
per
roll..
...90^
18
inches wide,
per
roll..
. $1.35
24
inches wide.
per
roll..
..$1.80
30
inches wide,
per
roll..
..$2.25
36
inches
wide,
per roll . . .
$2.70
48
inches
wide,
per roll.. .
.$3.60
60
inches
wide.
per roll . . .
$4.50
72
inches
wide,
per roll. . .
$5.40
SPADES
Made of
open
hearth steel
— taper
strap; plain
back; spe-
cial 59c
WASH TUBS
Made of extra
heavy galvaniiied
iron stationary
handles ; Red
band; a very substantial tub:
GARBAGE
CAIS
Made' of galvan-
ized iron; will
not rust; drop
handles; IS-gal-
lon size; special
CLOTHES PINS
Made of select hardwood;
large size; special, 12 doz-
en for
BROOMS
Made of good corn
straw; three sewed;
solid wire bound neck;
special
DECK MOPS
18 -oz. Cotton
Deck Mops; spe-
cial
t» ^'^
^^"
-"
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F '
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Friday,
THE DTTLtTTH HEKALD.
April 21, 1911.
13
GORDON hats— they stand grief!
That's one reason men prefer
the Gordon; another reason is
style. Buy a Gordon.
The Gordon Hat $3.00
The Triple Ring $^00
NEWS OF THE NORTHWEST
The Burden of Cost
For (uel bears heavily on every
man who has to pay the hills.
April prices are the lowest of the
•easoo. Buy your nest winter's
ooal now and save money. Be
lure and order
••PITT8TON" ANTHHAOTTK,
"The Co«U of QnaUty."
PITTSBURGH COAL 60.
Comer Fourth
Superior Street,
Avenue We«t anrt
Telephones 8100.
MARY HANSON
GIVENJONOR
Minnesota Methodist Confer-
ence Makes Deaconness
of Detroit Woman.
e?—
MM
Secretary Smith Cautions Min-
isters Against Criticiz-
ing Press.
Crookston. Minn.. April 21.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The annual confer-
ence of the Fergus Falls di.strlot of the
M. E. church, which adjourned at Thief
lliver Falls yesterday to meet at the
Hennepin Avenue M. E. church in Min-
neapoll-s In September, was marked by
thrye unusual features. One was the
licenslnR of Miss Mary Han.son of De-
troit, Minn., as a deaconess. Blie will
have the privilege of ttlUng any pulpit,
and will probably be consecrated In
Chicago by the bishop there In a slior;.
lime. She is to be the oflUial repre-
sentative of the deacone.ss" board of the
M. E. cliurch for the Norwegian work
in the United States.
Miss Hanson is a talented woman.
She was formerly county superintend-
ent of schools of Becker county
several terms residing at Detroit,
has just fiiiLshed a course in the
cago training
The licensing
court and confessed, implicating Felix
Vleau. Vieau was also found guilty,
but refused to make a statemotft. Tlie
two were convicted of having knocked
down and robbed John Marousky.
SEEDING TRACTOR
DOES QUICK WORK
First Machine Used Near
Crookston Rapidly Seeds
Fifty Acres Daily.
Crookston. Minn.. April 21.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The first gasoline
tractor seeding and cultivating outtlt
ever used in Polk county started oper-
ations on one of the farms owned by
W. H. Iloun.sville of St. Peter, four
miles southeast of the city, and worked
by J. A. McMillan yesterday afternoon.
It is a :iO-hor8e power engine. Imme-
diately following It comes a disc har-
row. Hitched next is two 22-slioe drills
and In the rear was dragged two 4 by
4 timbers to smooth the surface. These
win he changed to i^mootliing harrows
for better results. The outfit has a ca-
pacity of llftv acres, seeded and
dragged, per "day running regular
hours, or seventy-nve acres if run over
time, and Is operated by two men. The
work Is <lonH for less than half the
cost of doing It with horseflesh, and
when tlie ground is in the condition it
Is now the .work done is ideal.
mar. both attorneys located in New
York city; Humphrey and Alexander S..
both of whom are at Palm Ueach; and
Mesdames F. W. Denton of Palnesdale
and Kobert B. Harkness of Houghton.
EVIDENCE IS STOLEN.
FIDELITY BUILDING
OFFICES AND STORES
Ihe Fidelity Buildins is fire-proof; the heating and
ventilating systems are most modern ; the elevator
and janitor service is efficient and dependable. AU
offices are daylight.
Ttie court of th« ridellty Iliiiiaing
that of any otlier office building lii t.'io
ace batter llglit«a aud botttr siipplltd
whUe all stUijll feature* In theniselvea.
ence between offices that are deaifiililc-
Is nearly twire as largo as
city, roiiaequently all offioci
with tieah air. TIier«e tliliig-i.
re.iUy corutiiute the dlffer-
— that are coiuluclve to work
and comfortable to be lu. and places that are stuffy, dark, poorly
ventilated and dl-ugrecable. for l>ith the occupant and those having
n.-.-u.-lon to traiuai't l4nluess In the building. AttraiUve office* In-
spire confidence and lend an air of prosperity; Ibey create an Im-
pre^loii that Is nulla desirable.
Fv>r all Information rtgartltag .-jpaee availaMa and rates, see
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & COMPANY
WOLViN BUILDING
for
and
Chl-
school for mis.'<ionarle3.
of a deaconess is a rare
occurrence and is a distinct recognition
of ability pos.sessed by Miss Hanson.
Another event was an addre.ss by
Pwev W. C. Hodgson of Crookston, In
which he deprecated any tendency on
WESTERN SLOPE
FOR DAIRYING
TO START MINOT LIBRARY.
r
-,K--i=
Details Attended to Preparatory to
Beginning Work.
Minot. N. D., April 21.— The plans for
new Minot Carnegie library have been
approved by Mr. Carnegie and every-
thing is now ready for the contractor
to begin work.
There has been a delay in getting
started as a result of the failure of the
Carnesie people to approve the plans.
The library board did not feel like go-
ing ahead with the work until every-
thing liad been approved by Mr. Car-
negie's representative."?, but word has
now been received that everything is
O K. so that Contractor Bartleson will
begin work at once. It Is expecle<i
that the building will be completed on
Sept. 1.
RESKiXS WHEN AUTHORITY
HAS BEEN QUESTIONED.
Iron Mountain, Mich.. April 21. — (Spe-
cial to Tho Herald.) — Because the city
officials were Inclined to dispute his
authf.rity to order dogs running at
large shot on the streets. Dr. H. A.
Newklrk resigned as health officer. Dr.
Xewkirk Issued order.s In accordance
with instruction of the state board of
health. to have all dogs shot or
chained, as a result of a threatened
epidemic of hydrophobia. City Attor-
ney John O'Hara was inclined to ques-
tion the authority of the health officer
and his re.signation resulted.
SUES insoVvx brother.
Marinette Men FaU Ont Over Man-
aging Another Brother's E.state.
Marinette. Wis., April 21. — (Special
to The Herald.)— Charging his brother
with holding back the sum of $9.50.
which he claims is due him. Adell Mc-
Brlde, a well-known Marinette man,
has begun a suit against Henry Mc-
Brlde. Adell McBrlde some time ago
was committed to the hospital at Osh-
kosh having suffered a mental break-
dowii. Shortly before leaving for the
asylum he deeded over his property
worth $2,400 to his brother. Henry. The
latter It Is said paid off a mortgage of
$l.<tjO and gave $500 to the son of th->
sick man. About six months ago the
plaintiff In the suit was dismissed from
the Oshkosh institution and when he
made a demand tor the balance of th i
money due him. he alle.^es tiiat his
brother refused to give it to him.
TELEGRAPHER IN BAD WAY.
gau
Oldest Operator in Upper Miehi
May dlo Blind.
Marquette. Mich., April 21.— (.Special
to The Herald.) — F. X. Brlssette, agent
for the Duluth. South Shore & Atlantic
railway at Eckerman, Mich., has been
eyes treated.
is completely
hoped, will bo
in the city, having his
The sight of one eye
gone, but the other, it Is
saved.
Mr. Brlssette is one of the oldest, if
not the ol'lest. telegraplier in actual
service In Michigan, being 69 years of
age, and has been cintlnuously at the
key for forty-five years, thirty-one of
wliich liave been spent in the service
of the South Shore. Previous to hl.s en-
tering tlie employ of the South .Shore
he was employed by the Intercolonial
railway of Canada, and later with the
Q.. M. & O.. now a part of the C. B.
sy.stem. Mr. Brls.sette in his boyhood
days was a companion of Sir Wilfred
Laurier, the present prime minister of
Canada. At the time of defeat of the
Mackenzie government in 1878 Mr. Brls-
sette. who was then in the employ of
the Intertolonlal, which is a govern-
ment road, along with some 900 other
employes, lo.st his position, owing to
their having openly supported Mr.
Mackenzie. Shortly after he came to
Michigan and has been located near the
border ever since.
REV. J. T. BRABNER SMITH,
Who Urged M. E. Conference Not to
Antagonize Press.
DRAGS GIRL FROM
A RUNAWAY HORSE.
Sioux Fall.s, S. D.. April 21. — Tom
CasslUyir»«a Pennington county young
man, HfTPd Miss Lorlne Bobbins from
a runaway horse and thus saved her
life. Cas»elll.v Jumped from the horse
he was riding, grabbed the runawaj'
horse b.vthe neck and hung on until
he was able to lift the girl bodllv from
the back of the horse while It was
still running. Neither CassiUy nor the
girl was hurt.
the part of ministers In the church to
speculate or identify themselves too
closely with business enterprises. He
called special attention to a number or
cases where ministers had become in-
terested in projects, and on the strength
of the ministers' connection, many oth-
ers were induced to invest in pro.iectij
and schemes which resulted in disas-
trous financial failures, and thus
brought censure upon the representa-
tives of the clergy and the church it-
self. He belleve(i this should be very
carefully avoided in the future, and
that ministers should refuse to put
their seal ^( approval on business ven-
tures of which they were ignorant and
thus give the plan the coiifldouce of
the public.
Favor* Co-OperallnBr With Pre**.
A thlnl feature was an address by
riev. .1. T. Brabner Smith of Sauk Cen-
ter, the secretary of the conference,
who believed the ministers made a
great mistake In being too quick to cen-
sure the newspapers whenever they
took a stand that was In perfect accord
with the Individual opinions of the
members of the clergy. He believed
the press stood ready to aid any good
work if the mliiistera did as they
should and worked with the press, in-
stead of censuring before they were
aware of all the facts, or before any
conference had been held with repre-
sentatives of the pres.s. He believed
a vast amount of good could be accom-
plished bv co-operating with the press.
Rev. Mr. Smith called attention to
the power for good the .great majority
of papers were, both tlio metropolitan
dailies and the weeklies in their
smaller spheres of activity, and he be-
lieved the most of the newspapers ex-
hibited more charity than tlie ministers
did on a great many occasions. He
believed the papers stood ready to do
their full share If they were treatcf'
as thev should be by the ministers, and
that they did a vastly greater amount
of good, day after da.v and week after
week than most of the ministers gave
them credit for.
Rev. W. C. Hedgson's addres.'' was
thought so highly of that the gist of
it will be published In the official M.
E. paper for the Fergus Falls confer-
ence. Ministerial Etiquette, published
at Alexandria.
Dairy Head Holds Meetings in
Northwestern North
Dakota.
Bismarck . N. D., April 21.— State
Dairy Commissioner* R. F. Merrill,
assistant dairy husbandryman or tlie
federal dairy department, who Is as-
sisting Mr. Flint In dairy work In this
state, have returned to the capital city
after an extended trip tlirough the
northwestern section of the state
where they have been holding a series
of successful dairy meetings. They
were very much pleased with the re-
sults of their trip and are very opti-
mistic over the prospects for greatly
in<-reased Interest In a dairying all
over that part of North Dakota.
Among the towns which were visited
and at which meetings were held,
were Balfour, Bantry. Upham, Portal.
Coleau, Coulee. Palermo. Ray and
t^pringbrook. In almost all of these
towns there were local creameries and
the meeting had for one of their main
purposes tlie arousing of greater en-
thusiasm over local plants.
^fretinga Well Attended.
The meetings were all well at-
tended, and the interest In the dis-
cussion was very keen. Messrs. Flint
and Merrill delivered addresses at all
of the gtallierlngs. They touched upon
the desirability of keeping live .stock
and doing dairy work In connection
with gialn ralslrg for tho purpose
of insuring to the farmer a steady an 1
certain income from his farm. Cream
cry menagement wan also discussed
and tlie care of dairy products. Otl:er
topics mentioned by the speakers we.'o
the growing of feeds for producing
milk, such as corn, alfalfa and other
feeds.
In talking o fthe meetings Mr. Flint
said:
"The -Northwestern country ought
to turn its attention raj>ldly to dairy
work. It Is more or less subject t >
dry conditions as is the balance of
Western North Dakota. It is desirable
that as early as possible the farmers
divert their attention from exclusive
grain raising to diversified farming
njethod.s and when they do this will
havy become permanent settlers in-
stead of transients.
"It is an unwritten law. a funda-
mental fact, that eveiy man wlio
keeps live stock to a considerable ex-
tent In connection with farming oper-
ations, does l>ecome a permanent
settler, while one who produces grain
cnly sooner or later is obliged to
iiove through necessity or does bo
because of lack of attachment to the
farm home."
Deputy Ganie Warden Onstine Loses
Confiscated Articles.
Pine River. Minn.. April 21.— (Special
to The Herald.) — Deputy Game Warden
Onstine of Bralnerd. while here
Wednesday night suffered the loss of
a pair of field glasses and a sack of
bass and pike w^hlch he had seized as
evidence against George Gilbert of
Upper Gull lake, who pleaded guilty
before a justice here and was fined
$25. The sack was stolen from the
feed room of the livery barn, and Mr.
Onstine returned to Bralnerd Thursday
morning without recovering the prop-
erty or finding any clue to the thief.
BURIED AT CROOKSTON.
Largely Attended Fnneral of Mrs.
Lally, Old Citizen.
Crookston. Minn., April 21. — (Spe-
cial to Tlie Herald.) — The body of Mrs.
Martin Dally, shipped here from Se-
attle, where slie died last Saturday
The"se Juornlng, was laid to rest in Oakdale
cemetery yesterday after requiem mass
had been said at tlie pro-cathedral by
Itev. Father Wurm. The deceased re-
sided here for twenty-six years, bar-
ring one years' residence in Minne-
apolis, where her husband died, six
years ago. Her funeral was attended
by a very large number of the pioneers
of the valley. She was 6ri years of age.
Her two daugliters, Mrs. James H.
Maybury and Katherlne Lally. accom-
panied the body from Seattle, where
the family went to reside last Decem-
ber. The remaining son of eight
children. George Lally. resides In
Crookston.
BOSTON EDUCATOR WEDS
DEVILS LAKE, N. D., WOMAN
Devils. Lake, N. D., April 21. — A wed-
ding of much Interest to people In this
part of the Northwest occurred here
Wednesday, when Rev. Father Augus-
tine united in marriage at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Brennan In this
city their daughter. Miss Mary Bren-
nan. and Dr Charles H. Clapp of Bos-
ton. Dr. Clapp Is a member of the
faculty of the Boston school of tech-
nology, formerly professor at the North
Dakota university. At the latter place
he met Miss Brennan. then a member
of the faculty of the North Dakota
university. She was also at one time
a member of the faculty of the Devils
Lake high school. Miss Klenora Nor-
ton was bridesmaid and D. V. Brennan.
best man. Many out-of-town people.
Including member.^ of the faculty of
the I'niveralty of North Dakota, were
present.
JAMESTOWN, N. D.. A> OMAN
CLAIMS SISTER IS SANE.
ter of Mrs. Anthony Rondy of Blue
Jacket, was married 'S\edne.sday at St.
Anne's French church to William Bille-
deau. Rev. Fr. Boisonault performing
the ceremony. The groom was attend-
ed by his brother, Jossph, while Miss
Victoria Rondy. a sist;r of the bride,
acted as blrdesmaid.
Houghton — Joseph Moreau. who for
the past four years has been manager
of the Scott hotel in tills city, has re-
linquished the managenent of the ho-
tel, which has been talten over by the
owner, A. J. Scott, whs will hereafter
conduct the hotel, with William Deegan
of Houghton as manager.
Calumet — Alfred M. Harris, a clerk In
the employ of the Ti.marack Mining
company has been bound over to the
next term of circuit court by Justice
Fisher on the specific charges or for-
gery and uttering a forged Instrument
as true. Harris is a leged to have
forged checks and converted to his own
use the sums of $54 and $56.10. respect-
ively.
Houghton — George Harris has been
named as delegate from the local lodge.
Ordr of Railway Conductors, to the
convention which takes place at Jack-
sonville, Fla. early in May. He will
leave for Jacksonville May 1.
Menominee — James I. Evans, chief
clerk in the Me«omlnee postoffice, was
operated on for appen Ileitis at St. Jo-
seph's hospital and is resting easily.
Negaunee — The 5-m)nth-old sob of
Jacob lioaman of Ann street died Tues-
day. The funeral will be held Thurs-
<lay afternoon, with services at the
house, conducted by R^v. Sarinen. pas-
tor of the Finnish Lutheran church.
Gwinn — The first ore was shipped
from the Swanzey range Monday, when
a trainload was taken to Escanaba
over the Northwesteri Voad, from the
Oliver Iron Mining company's Stegmll-
ler mine at I'rlnceton.
Ishpemlng — The employes of the
Oliver Iron Mining company In this
city were paid Tuesday and tiie payroll
at the Regent properties was squared
Wednesday. The men working at the
Stegmiller mine on th a Swanzey range
and the Champion n Ine were paid
Thursday.
• #^>^M«%^«^»^k^*M^««M
Jamestown. N. D., April 21.— Maud S.
Halgiit is making an application before
Couutv Jtidge Hemml for a further in-
•lulry "into the sanity of her sister. Mrs.
H 1'. Doughty of Williston, who was
committed to the state in.sane asylum
April 11. Mrs. llalglit says her sister
was committed without sufficient
grounds and that .she Is not Insane and
Is unjustly retained. Tlie matter was
referred to tho hospital authorities.
FUNERAL IN FLORIDA.
FernruM Falls %%'laH CoMe.
Fergus Falls. Minn.. April 21. — The
damage suit brought by E. T. Bernard
again.st tills city for losses Incurred In
tho washout of the municipal electric
dam in 190a, was won by the city. The
ca.se was a test and was stubbornly
contested.
DAKOTA BRIEFS
WISCONSIN BRIEFS
Sheboygan — Peter J. Grill, aged Bo,
president of the vllh.ge of Oostburg,
near here, fell or tlirew hln^elf in
front of a rapidly mcving Northwest-
ern train and was Instantiy killed. Ac-
cording to the engineer, Grill threw
himself on the tracks when the train
was about fifty feet from him. A letter
found on his person, II is said, explains
the cause of his act.
Milwaukee — Mrs. Grant Stephenson,
daughter-in-law of Jicnalor Stephen-
son who was operatei upon for appen-
dicitis Monday morning, is recovering.
She Is resting easily. It Is not known
when she will be able to leave the hos-
pital.
Belolt — Arthur Reecler. aged 35, was
shot accidentally while shooting fish
from a boat near B«loit and died an
hour later. He wadeii out to ge.t a fish
and was climbing back into the boat
whe.T his rifle was discharged. lie
leaves a wife and two small children.
UhJnt lander — Jack Walsh pleaded
guilty to burglary on Wednesday be-
fore County Judge Billings and was
sentenced to two years in Waupun.
He has already eerv Jd nine years in
Waupun.
Asliland!t-The Presbyterians are to
have a parsonage, tho lailies' aid socl-
et.v having taken act on in the matter
at Tuesday's meeting and It has been
practically decided to purchase the
Harry I'ark residence. Mrs. Parle will
move to Evansion, ID., about May 1.
Oshkosh — M. T. Batlls, president of
the common council, vas tiie only new
officer electeil by the coun<Mi who took
up his duties on Wclnesday with the
new city administration. Appoint-
ments of Mayor Baudorob. confirmed
by the council, are: R. A. HoUister,
city attorney; W. A. Warden, president
of the board of ptbllc works; and
Thomas McEnary, member of the saino
board.
Merrill — Following a row In a saloon
south of here Tuesdry, in which otto
Grunnewald was killed, Herman Weber,
a farmer, was today arrested and
charged with the cr me. Grunnewald
w.as celebrating his 4;(rd birthday at a
dance.
Ashland — The annual Inspection of
Aslilp.nd Commanderi No. 22. Knights
Templar, took plac; Tuesday night,
under the supervision of Inspector Gen-
eral Sperry of Mar.nette. The uni-
forms, tactics, rituillstic work and
other things came urder the eagle eye
of the Inspector, and he will report his
findings later on.
HEALTHYNERVES
Impossible Without Pure^
Rich, Red Blood
A Cure Which ProT«s the Value of Diw
WUUam»' Pink PilU in the Trea^
ment of Eren Serere Nerroos
Diseases.
Mrs. Donald Galloway, of No. 1516
Hardesty avenue, Kansaa City, Mo.,
suffered from nervous prostration with-
out relief until she tried Dr. Wiiliatul^
Pink Pills. She gays :
"I suffered for a year from what th«
doctors called nervous prostration, dvm
to overwork. I was dizzy all of the
time and very nervous. I would gel
short of breath and felt as though I
would fall at etich step. At times I
would be so ner\-ou8 that I would shake
all over and it seemed aa though I wat
being pricked with needles. I could
not hold a plate for fear of dropping it.
There were severe pains in tny side. I
was reduced in weight, could not work
and was confined to bed for a mouth.
I had sick headaches twice a week and
could not sleep nif^hts.
"The doctors did not seem to help
xne and they said it would be a long
time before I would get well. I also
tried many medicines out witliout help
Mid had given up hope of getting well.
A friend recommenaed Dr. ^^'illialn8'
Pink Pills to my busuand. I did not
see much of an improvement until I
had taken three boxes of the pills.
From then on I began to slerp and eat
better and felt better in every way.
The pills did me so much good that I
kept on taking them until cured and I
have been well ever since."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are the most
direct cure for nervous trouhIo.s l>ecau9e
they remove the cause of these di.'*ea.'iei
by DuildinK tip and purifying the bl<K>d.
llie pure blood which tney make fur-
nislies the nerves with needed elcmentfl
uutil they are reelored to their normal
strength. The pills have made so many
remarkable cures in nervotLs disorders
that no sufferer can afford to neglect
giving them a trial.
They can be obtained at any dniC!»tor8
or direct from the Dr. WilUams >Ic<li-
cine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., at W
centa per box; 'hix boxes for f2.50.
While so promptly effective. Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills contain no harmful
stimulants or opiates. They aro per-
fectly safe and create uo drug hahit.
Write for a free copy of our new book-
let, "Diseases of the Nervous System."
The booklet descrilies symptom.s and
gives much aseftil information. It will
be sent ou postal card request.
Last Rites for Late Houghton Attor-
ney at Palm Beach.
Houghton. Mich.. April 21.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The funeral of the
late Thomas L. Chadbourne. the well
known Houghton atlornev who died
winter home
be held this
<•
The housewife knows. She knows when
she cuts the first slice whether ^ ham
is rich and tender. And she knows that
ian*s
McMiU
"Paragon" Ham
IS always tender, fine-grained and excep)-
tionally delicious in flavor.
"Prepared in the cleanest and most careful manner.
Your dealer has McMillan's "Paragon" Ham
Lard and xeal Counby Sausage, or can
and Bacon, Kettle Rendered
get them for you. Ask him.
J. T. McMillan company, incorporated. Sl Paul. Minn.
INDIAN TRAPPERS
WERE SUCCESSFUL
Many Fur Bearing Animals
Taken Last Winter on
Couderay Reserve.
Couderay. Wis., April 21.— (.Special
to The Herald.) — The trapping season
during the past winter proved very
successful and profitable for the In-
dians on the Couderay reservation,
near here. The Indians trapped and
shipped out skins of wolves, foxes,
lynx, wildcats, skunks, coons, mink,
mu.skrats and weasels In large nunrj-
hers from this station and received
the usual high prices paid for furs by
the large fur dealers in the cities.
The Indians being natural born hun-
ters and from years of experience
know when th© fur la In its prime and
also knoT* how to put the fur In
shape to get th© top prices when they
market It.
♦
WlMcnnfiln Crook Contemmrn.
Oconto. Wis., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Hermel Dion, after be-
ing found guilty of highway robbery,
broke down in the presence of the
Tuesday afttrnoon at his
at Palm lieach, Fla.. will
afternoon at Palm IJcach.
All of the family will be present.
Mrs. F. W. Denton pf Palnesdale and
Mrs. Robert B. Ilaj:lwiess of Houghton,
daughters of the 'deceased, left for
I'alm Bearh W'edue.sday afternoon.
It is pre.sumed that the body will be
brought to Houghton fur Interment.
Be.slde the widow, Mr. Chadbourne
leaves four son.s and two daughters:
Thomas L. Chadbourne, Jr., and Walde-
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Ailments of Men
Happily Overcome
SlCCKSSl
•ri.l.Y TltlEO BY
MANY.
Undoubtedly the following pre-
scription will work wonders for
that great class of men who,
through dissipation of their nat-
ural strength, find themselves in
their "second childhood" long be-
fore the three score and ten al-
lotted to life's plea.sures and en-
joyments are reached.
It is presumed to be Infallible,
and highly "efficient in quickly
restoring In "nervous exhaus-
tion." weak vitality, melancholia
and the functions.
First get fifty cents' worth of
compound fluid balmwort in a
one-ounce package, and three
ounces syrup sarsaparlUa com-
pound; take home, mix and let
stand two hours; then get one
ounce compound essence cardlol
and one ounce tincture codomene
compound (not cardamom). Mix
all In a six or eight ounce bottle,
shak<e well, and take one tea-
spoonful after eaili meal and one
when retiring followed by a
drink of water.
By mixing It at home no man
need be the wiser as to another's
shortcomings, and expensive fees
are avoided.
L.ack of poise and equilibrium
in men is a con.ttant source of
embarassment even when tire
public least suspects It. For the
benefit of those who want a res-
toration to full, bounding health,
and all the happiness accom-
panying it. the above home treat-
ment is given. It contains no
opiates or hablt-formlng drugs
whatever. Mix It at home and
no one will be the wiser as to
your affliction.
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Grand Forks, N. D.— The members of
the University of South Dakota debat-
ing team. I'rof. Christolelsmeyer oi
.South Dakota and Dr. James K. Boyle
were entertained by tlie 'Varsity Bach-
elor club Wednesday at a luncheon
served at the elegant home of the club.
Devils Lake, N. D. — Judge Buttz has
handed down his decision In tho case ol
Itobert Blosset vs. K. L. Turcotte and
wife. This Is a Towner county case
tried at Cando last week. The action
Involves the title to a quarter section
of land in Northern Towner county,
lying about live miles east of Holla.
Grand Forks, N. D.— Lieut. Col. S.
Marshall and MaJ. Clarence Boyd of the
Minneapolis company of the Salvation
Army will be In the city next Sunday,
and the local company will hold one of
the biggest days for some time. Lieut.
Col. Marshall has been In the city be-
fore, and those who have heard him
state that he is an excellent speaker.
Fargo, N. D. — Mayor Lovell has ap-
pointed Dr H. B. .Smith as the city
ht-alth officer for the next year. He
succeeds Dr. George Carpenter, whose
term has expired. J. W. Sutherland
was renamed the c-hlef of the tiro de-
partment, and Frank Campion was
named assistant chief of tlie depart-
ment.
Bismarck, N. D. — Monday evening the
armory presented a very festive ap-
pearance on the occasion of the third
annual military ball of Company A,
First Infantry. N. D. N. O., and tho
large crowd of select dancers enjoyed
them.«elve3 to the utmo.st until a late
hour in the morning.
Fargo, N. D.— While walking toward
town Tuesday near the Northern I'a-
clllc track.s, a man who gave the name
of John Dundee, a stranger in the city,
was struck by the fast coast train No.
4. The man evidently thought he was
far enough away from the rails to
avoid the train, but was struck and fell
u gainst some cars near by, cau.sing
slight injuries to his head.
Bismarck, N. D. — The board of trus-
tees for the completion of the Masonic
temple has changed the date for re-
<elvlng bids to complete the temple
from April 22 to April 2l>, which gives
a week's additional time in which bids
for the work may be submitted.
Aberdeen, S. D. — A pretty home wed-
ding took place Tuesday evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Wells. 12a
First avenue southwest, when their
son. Floyd K. Wells, and Miss Emma
Stock of Kenlngton. Minn., were mar-
ried. The bride wore a gown of cream
net lace and carried bride's roses, and
was unattended.
^0^^^^*^>^^^^^»^0
MINNESOTA BRIEFS
MMAMM^^^^MMA^^M^
PENINSULA BRIEFS
»»»»)»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»
Ishpemlng — At the first meeting of
the new council Wednesday there was
no opposition to the appointment of
city officials and the following were
declared to be elected for the ensuing
year: Assessor, Henry Ruthier; city
attorney, A. W. Jurma; health officer,
Richard A. Burke; president of council,
G. G. Barnott; marshal, W. H. Trevar-
row; deputy marshal, Patrick Collins.
Negaunee — Matt and bam Peura, two
brothers who figured as the principals
In the fracas that occurred at Palmer
Sunday night, were bound over to the
circuit court by Judge Verran on a
charge of assault with intent to do
great bodily harm less than the crime
of murder.* The bonds were fixed at
11.000.
Marquette — Mrs. Walter Ward died
Wednesday at the age of 44 years. Mrs.
Ward was the widow of the late Walter
Ward, at one time mayor of Marquette,
and was before her marriage Sallna
P.olduc. She was born at Morgan In
1S67 and came to Marquette when still
a child and lived here ever since. She
was horn In Morgan In 1867 and came
to Marquette when still a child and
lived hero ever since. She leaves a fam-
lly of six children.
Calumet — Miss Harriet Rondy, daugh-
Rlrthdays come around so reg-
ularly and must be so regularly
remembered, that it is often ijulto
puzzlesomo to know what to give.
As a suggestion — there Is the
blrthstone set In ring or locket,
link buttons or cravat pin.
As to other suggestions — come
and let us make them in person.
in
T. E. Reinhart,
jF.wKi.Rn.
7 Kait Superior Street.
Hinckley — .Saturday morning fifty
cans of trout fry were taken from a
carload on its way io Sandstone, sent
out by the slate fl:ihery department,
and some of the you ig trout were put
into Spring brook, Hay creek, Sand
creek and Mission creek.
Cambridge — John Gesellus, an old
and highly respected resident of Spring
Vale town, died last Saturday at the
age of 76 years, on his homestead on
section 4, where he settled when ho
cawie to this country from Sweden,
more than thirty years ago. His aged
wife and one son, August Gesellus,
who has conducted the farm fur a
number of years, survive.
St. Cloud — In honor of the late
James H. Johnston, foreman of the
paint shops, the car shops were closed
Thursday, tiie day of his burial. .Serv-
ices were held at the residence of Fred
Lindt at 8:30 a. m., In charge of the
Masons, assisted by Rev. F. W. Hill
and Rev. Paul Danslngberg, a fellow
roomer of the deceased.
Fergus Falls — I'.. S. Lambert hai*
notified the council that he would hold
the city responsible for damages to
the extent of $5,000 for Injuries which
he sustained on Ai'rll 3. Mr. Lam-
bert was coming down the hill on
Mill strot south on that da.v and fell
and broke his leg and sustained other
injuries. He claims that the fall was
due to the defectiv*. cunditlon of the
sidewalk.
Bemldjl — At a meeting called re-
cently of the farmers In and aroimd
Quiring for the puritose of organizing
an agricultural asscciatlon, much en-
thusiasm was shown, and that the
toll workers of the vicinity will work
for the good of the community was
assured.
Rochester — L. J. Miller, the rep-
resentative of Western Union Interests
here has resigned, end W. J. Volz has
assumed the posltlcn of manager at
the local telegraph office. Mr. Volz
has been with the >:orthwestern Rail-
way company at this station for the
past year.
Crookston — Father Bolsseau of Ar-
gle Is critically ill and Bishop Timothy
Corbett and Father Wurm of this city
went there Wednesday morning, ac-
companied by Father Kllnkhammer of
Park Rapids. It is mderslood that the
Argyle priest Is suflcring from cancer
of the stomach.
Minneapolis — Thomas E. Cootey. a
lithographer, for more than twenty
years a prominent c tlzen and business
man of Minneapolis, died in St. Mary's
hospital Wednesday after an illness of
seven weeks. Complications resulting
from an operation caused his death.
Mr. Cootey was borii In Kenosha. Wis.,
fifty years ago ant. passed his early
life In Chicago, coming to Minneapolis
In 1891.
Stillwater — No on«' has yet Identified
the man who was faund hanging to a
tree near Hugo last Saturday evening.
He was not the carienter, Knutson of
St. Paul.
Rochester — Dr. Charles H. Mayo
presented diplomas 'o seventeen young
ladles who were graduated from St.
Mary's hospital. ha\ Ing completed the
two years' nurses tiaining course. The
graduation exerclseji were held In the
assembly room of tie hospital a short
program being given after which a re-
ception was held. In presenting the
young ladles with their diplomas Dr.
Mavo made a short speech.
Bralnerd — The (ouncll has adopted
a resolution deeding thirteen acres of
land to the Northwest Paper company
for $1,700, on condition that the com-
pany erect a papei mill with a ca-
pacity of forty tont per day, and that
within five years the company will
expend and invest the sum of $25,000,
and within seven jears complete and
have In operation the mill. If nothing
Is done at the end of that period the
land is to be redesded to tto city.
V -^
"COZY" ELECTRIC TOASTER
. The delight and comfort of the
"Cozy' Toaster j-annot be appi^^cl-
ated tmtll It has been tried.
The "Cozy" Is the faste.'st. most
economical, convenient and duratde
toaster made. It Immediately glows
lib way Into favor wherever It goes.
PRICE $2.75
FOR SALE BY
DULUTH ELECTRICAL CO.,
280 WEST FIRST STREKT.
"Such Lovely Hair!"
The popular home - made "dry
shampoo" called forth this remark
when two friends met: "What lovely
hair! Why what have you been
doing?" Thereupon the second of the
two replied, "I have been using a
slmple home-made 'dry shampoo' for
nearly a month now, and really I do
believe It has transformed my ap-
pearance. My hair was so stringy
and oily, dead and dustrelosa that I
was Just in desjialr. 1 just purchased
at the drug store 2 ounces of anti-
septic vllane powder and 6 ounces of
powdered orris root, mixed them and
apply a tablespoonful every night or
two and then brush the hair. It re-
jnoves dirt, grease and dandrufT as
Nothing else does. I would advise its
use in preference to washing the hair
and it's not expensive either."
*
A Noted Chef Says:
"I have used Biackl>urn's C;i.'<caRoval-
Pllls upwards of a year, and always got
th'.? best results from their use. I tak«
pleasure In recommending them to all
in need of a pleasant physic"
HAROLD C. DURHAM, Chef.
State Hospital, Massillon, Ohio.
No matter what you have used In th#
past for the relief of constipation, you
win be better satisfied with Rlack-
barm'a CaM«R«yaI-I*illa If you will give
them a trial. Thousands use them In
preference to all other laxatives, ca-
thartics and physics. A P'ree trial pack-
age wMll be w.'nt any one addressing —
The Blackburn Products Co.. Duyton,
Blackburn's CascaRoyal-PllIs are sold
by all druggists, lOc and 25c packages.
BlacKburrgs
v m if ■' ■ i« ■
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Advertise in The Herald;
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Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
"The doors are not open yet, we re
fumlfirating." was the announcement
which met all visitors this morning at
the rummas:e sale which was to have
been opened today at 220 West Superior
street under the direction of a com-
mittee of the Twentieth Century club
for the purpose of raising money to
swell the fund for the Neighborhood
house at the West end.
However, the doors were open this
afternoon and many visitors delighted
themselves "rummaging around" and
a laiKo part of the stock was sold.
Many good donations were received
and iiniong tliem were several lots of
nt'W underwear sent by the wholesale
houses of the city. There were also
good looking ljat.«!, coats, suits, dresses,
shoes, and even furs, besides furniture
and household articles, books and
kitchen utensils, and all absolutely
germloss, thanks >o the fumigation
ing.
this morn
The members of
charge and their
Mesilames —
J. H. Crowley,
N. F. Hugo.
C. P. Cat 1 in,
J. B. Richards.
Misses —
Xe'iHe Brown.
The sale will
tomorrow at the
the club who had
assistants were:
W. G. Bonham,
Henry Taylor.
James H. Harper.
Dryer.
be continued
same place.
again
Last Club Meeting.
The last program of the year will
be given at the meeting of the Satur-
day rlub at the clubrooin of the 11-
brarv tomorrow afternoon. It will be
a literarv program under the leader-
ship of Nirs. E. Frank Barker, ar-
ranged as follows:
Lot! — Bourget
Mrs. Boyington.
Rostand
Miss Malthaner.
Conver.^ation —
L»emaltre. Husman. Rlchepln
Mrs. Oredson, leader.
Subject for current event.s —
"Tiie Homecroft Movement"
Luncheon at Home.
Mrs. Fred K. Keller uf 1015 East
Serond street was iiostess at a lun>h-
eon this noon at lier home.
teas next week at her home. Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday being the
days cliosen.
Three Tables of Bridge.
Mrs. Hcurv Smith entertained at
three tables of bridge yesterday aftl
ernoon at her home, 1231 Kast Superior
street and the prizes were won by
Mrs. C. C. Grannis and Mrs. C. E.
Smith.
Wedding Anniversary.
Mrs. C. H. Merritt returned last even-
ing from Marquette, Mich., where she
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.
Gregory, for two weeks. She went
down to be present at the celebration
of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory's tlfty-tifth
wedding anniversary on .April 11. The
Marqueite Mining .lournal of April 12
printed the following account of the
celebration:
••The home of H. Gregory on Fourth
street was the scene of a happy family
gathering last evening. Their children
attended a dinner at that hour in their
honor and spent the evening with them
in observance of the fifty-tifth anniver-
sary of their marriage. Mrs. Charles
H. Merritt came down from Duluth for
the occasion and three of their daugh-
ters. Mrs. Will Ellison, Mrs. Charles
Brainerd and Mrs. F]. E. Mcintosh and
their husbands were present. Only one
daughter was absent, Mrs. Will Mies of
Spokane, Wash.
"Mr. and Mrs. Gregory are enjoying
the best of health and promise to be
spared for many more happy anniver-
saries."
Mrs. Merritt was the guest of honor
at five afternoon teas and luncheons
during her visit in her home city.
Surprise Party.
Miss T.illian Grunau entertained at a
surprise party last evening in honor of
Miss Edith .lohnson. Games, music and
dancing were the amusements of the
evening. Those present were:
Misses-
thc garment edge, and the wide, floppy
revers, faced with the lining material,
are bordered in like manner.
Black mousscllne de sole trimmed
wltli Irish, Brussels or Venice lace, or
with black ChantlUy, Is effectively and
fashionable. If color Is wanted, gold or
sliver embroidery furnishes often Just
the right touch.
Immense bags are carried with even-
ing rob» s. They are of metallic tissues
or of real lace coniblned with velvets.
Long embroidered scarfs of net, sil-
vered with silver bead fringe on the
ends, are draped over a foundation of
white satin, using the fringe for the
sleeve, shoulders, tunic edge and sasli.
The trouser skirt, launched In Paris
by Madames Po'ret and Doucet, has
now made its appearance in American
fashion stores, but it Is modified, most
decidedly modified. In fact, it Is a very
modest divided skirt, giving greater
ease In walking, but without the slight-
est noticeable masculine tendency.
Long silk coats are fashionable, made
quite tight fitting to envelop the wear-
er from head to foot.
Heavy thread and metal laces are
pretty features of the millinery to be
seen now.
For evening wear gold or silver tulle
turbans are seen in company with tall
aigretten or groups of marabout.
Chains are no longer the sole re-
source for the black velvet bags that
are so popular; many have long silk
cords by which to swing them over the
arm.
The "Bisque" soft hat Is the newest
hat for spring, having no binding on
the brim and a very becoming up tilt
of the brim all around.
Plain silk parasols, having a gold
palm leaf embroidered on each panel,
and a knotted silk fringe at the edge,
cost J12.50 each.
Embroidered muslin collar and cuffs
for wear with the gingham morning
dresses are very fashionable.
Dressing oi Children
By MRS. GEORGE BRANDT WINTHROP.
Bridge for Visitor.
Mrs. Fred Downey Rollins of 1514 j
Ea-^t Fourth street will entertain at j
four tables of bridge thi sevening at j
Iier honie in honor of her sister, .Mrs. '
J. W. Bates of Minneapolis. Her
mother, Mrs. F. C. Schneider of Min-
n»apo3is. who arrived this afternoon,
will also be among her guests.
Lakeside Guild.
At a nueiing of the newly organized
WHERE TO DINE
For lunch or .«upper or after the the-
ater vou will get satisfaction and serv-
<ce at the Oriental Restaurant, where
only dainty dishes are served. Music
evenings. Try it today.
The Mandarin,
103 West Superior Street.
FUR STORAGE
••Bevrare of the Moth.*'
Place your furs in our Moth,
Fir© and Burglar Proof Vaults
during the summer months —
where they receive expert care
and attention.
A "phone call will bring a mes-
senger to collect them.
Fnra to Order.
Repaired or Remodeled.
DULUTH FUR CO.,
325 WEST FIRST STREET.
Zenith, Grand 624; Old. Mel. 4s.'{6.
GENEVIEVE CLARK.
Speaker Clark and his wife live at
the Toronto apartment house at
Twentieth and P street. They have
witli them only one of their children,
their daughter Genevieve. Phe is still
a school girl and only 16 years of age.
Miss Clark was named after her mother
who was Miss Genevieve Bennett. She
has only one brother and he lives in
Indianapolis. Another brother and an
older sister died some years ago.
Guild of St. John's church. Lakeside,
the following officers were elected for
the ensuing year: President, Mrs.
Franklin Paine: vice president, Mr.s. M.
R. Bush: secretary, Mrs. M. J. Bar-
num; treasurer, Mrs. G. V. Heathcote.
The president annoimced the next
meeting for Tuesday, April 25, at her
home. 5349 London road. A large at-
tendance is urged as this is the first
meeting of the reorganized guild, and
plans for work for the year will be
made at that meeting.
Cinch Club Plays.
The Jolly Twelve Cinch club met
yesterdav afternoon with Mrs. J. Ken-
nell of * Twentieth aveneu west ,as
hostess. The prizes were won by Mrs.
A. Evenson and Mrs. H. W. Elliott.
Among the players were:
Mesdame.*
H.
F.
A.
J.
C.
E.
A.
W. Elliott,
G. Frerker,
Segers,
Mulhern,
Q. Knox,
Stebners,
Evenson,
C. D. Fraine,
S. Small,
J. D. McClouch,
William OMal-
ley,
G. Casmir.,
Lillian Berbig.
Victoria B e r k-
man,
F.lla Anderson,
lOdlth Johnson.
Lillian Derby,
Emma Berg,
Mary D. Bernardl,
Messrs. —
George Stock,
Elmer Dahl,
Alfred Teppen,
He*iiy Skansen,
John .Stackley.
Werner Wlpson,
Haiio Xel.'-'on,
George McLean.
Hartwick Nelson,
Kathleen Kilgore.
Clara Meerie,
Alice Carlson,
Clara Berg.
?:sther Johnson,
Verr.a Landahl,
Lillian Grunau.
Arthur Amund-
son,
Bert Skansen,
Gtorge Hill,
Arthur Holt,
Rudolph Lilja,
William Berbig,
P.'rnest Johnson,
Alfred Johnson,
Grandlund-Fischer.
The wedding of Mi.-^'s Hulda Grand-
lund of .*>uperi()r to Henry Fis< iier of
this city took place yesterday at tho
bridegroom's home. They will be at
home in Duluth after May 1.
Farewell Surprise.
The entertainment committee of
Beneflcient Degree, Alpha Council, No.
1, gave a surprise party Wednesday
evening in lionor of Mr.s. William N.
Donaldson of 329 Fourth avenue west,
as slie will leave soon for Florida to
make her home there. The evening
was spent playing progressive pedro
and the prizes were won by Mrs. J.
Boy, Mrs. Beriot and Mrs. Burnett.
Mrs. Lucy Purdy in behalf of the
members of the committee of which
Mrs. Donaldson was a member, pre-
sented the guest of honor with a cut
glass cream and sugar set.
Those present were:
Mesdames
Hostess at
J. H. Darling
Cards.
Mrs. J. H. Darling 532 West Third
street,- will be hostess at cards on Fri-
day and Saturday afternoons of next
week instead of tomorrow as was
formerly announced.
^
Series of Teas.
Mrs. Daniel Ryan of Hunter's Park
will give a series of three afternoon
Lucy Purdy,
Larson,
Beriot,
Mahon,
Hogan,
Armstrong,
Murdock.
Wilson,
Fowles,
W. Gullingsrud,
H. Gullingsrud,
Brown,
Misse.s —
Williams,
Welch,
Messrs. —
Gall,
Anna Miley.
Featherly,
Johnson,
Sewerv,
Butler,
Blake,
Roy,
Jo Brown,
Rennler.
Barton,
Hatley.
Gladman.
Selg.
Welbanks.
It is well In the dressing of chil-
dren to bear In mind that the tem-
perature of the average home does
not undergo any great variation be-
tween summer and winter, and there-
fore the additional clothes which the
colder months call for are, to some
extent, only necessary out of doors.
The wearing of quanities of heavy
woolen garments is certainly far
from wise. Woolen garments are in-
clined to shrink as much from the
perspiration of the body as from wash-
ing, and it is not an unusual thing at
the end of the winter season to find
children wearing knitted vests which
have grown much too small for them.
They pull tightly over the little
chests, draw forward the shoulders,
and often the texture of the garment
has grown so close and thick as to
make the proper ventilation of the
body impossible.
Flannel which has been thoroughly
shrunk makes far more sensible un-
dergarments, but even these should be
worn as sparingly as possible, as the
heat they give in the house makes the
change of temperature In the open air
all the more dangerous to the body.
Clothes should be the means of
equalizing the heat of the body be-
tween warm and colder atmospheres.
While thick, woolly garments are
more or less injurious in the house, it
would be the most unwise to dispense
with them when out of doors.
When going into the cold air let
your child be wrapped In a warm coat
and the ordinary light play knickers
should be replaced by a pair of thick
woolen ones.
Never load the neck of a child with
windings of woolen; nine out of every
ten sore throats result from no other
cause. All great singers leave their
throats as free as possible from extra
covering and surely they have reason
to know what Is good for their voices!
It is a most essential thing that un-
derlinen should be very fr»sh and
clean. The body discharges waste
matter through the skin every moment
of the day and this naturally rubs
off upon the face of the garm< nts next
to It.
Dust is always present In the
atmosphere, and adheres very readily
to materials of any kind.
Hence, if garments are not fre-
quently changed the dust and waste
matter rub into the skin aga n. chok-
ing the tiny pores throug i which
perspiration finds outlet.
Then, just as a machine when clog-
ged with dirt refuses to work, the
skin refuses under such circumstances
to work also, and diseases ara the in-
evitable result.
The best proceeeding is to keep the
skin as free as possible from dirt by
a daily bath, and a change of linen at
least once a week.
In the case of crawling children
however. It is sometimes found neces-
sary to change some of tha under-
garments more often, though particu-
lar attention should then be paid to
thorough airing.
By Jane Harris.
MARGARET E. SANGSTER.
f^^^^t^t^>^>
NEW HATS
Added daily to our already InrRc stock make it so varied
that a tlioice will not be difficult, wlietlier you want a
••nifty*' street liat, senil-dress or a gorgoou.s dress liat.
This is tlic store to conic to for assured styles, quality and
workmanship and prices are always moderate.
Our Willow Plume sale continues tliis week; prices
from $5.95 to S24.95 each.
5 West Superior St.
Personal Mention.
Mrs. J. P. Johnson of lll.S East Su-
perior street left yesterday with Miss
Clara Johnson of Connecticut for a trip
to the Grand Canyon of Arizona, Los
Angeles.' .San Francisco and Seattle.
Thev will return about June 1.
* * «
A. Kurkosky. who has been
Mary's hospital with pneu-
recovering and will soon be
her home. Z~h "V»'est First
F.
St.
is
to
Mrs.
Ill at
monia,
taken
street.
* • •
Mr.s. F. C. Schneider of Minneapolis
arrived this afternoon to visit her
daughter. Mrs. Fred Downey Rollins of
1514 East Fourth street.
* * •
George E. Robson. 1217 East
street, left yesterday for Cali-
where she will visit lor several
Mrs.
Second
lornla,
weeks.
Mrs
^•:f\*^
f-gpa "IT PAYS TO PAY CASH-MY PRICES PROVE IT"
Thomasson
"The FURNITURE Man"
OBD FKLI-OAVS- HALL BVll.DIXG, IS AND 20 LAKE A\'E.NUE XO.
THIS $35 TABLE— EXACTLY
LIKE CUT
$17.98
I want you to
.see this Tabic, 48-
inch round top,
12-inch round ped-
estal, lion claw
feet; has movilded
table made of the
quartered and polished
d value at $:35.00—
pie sale price —
XI %
« « *
C. B. Xunan of 225 Twenty-
fifth avenue west returned today from
Staples, Minn., where siie has been
visiting.
* ♦ ♦
Mrs. M. H. Kelley of 606 East Second
street has left for a week's trip to
Chicago and Milwaukee.
« « «
Mrs. F. A. Greene of 214 East Second
street is visiting lier mother in Minne-
apolis.
* * *
Mrs. J. N. McKlndley and Mrs. Van
Loo. who have been \Slsting in Wash-
ington fi>r the past week left this aft-
ernoon for New York.
« • *
Miss Stella Le Boskey of 130 Eighth
avenue east has returned from Chi-
cago where she spent about a montli.
* • *
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Clay Smith of
No. 8 Chester Terrace will leave Mon-
day for Chicago to make their hoine
there.
One of the most elaborate of the sea-
son's tea gowns Is of pale yellow lined
with white and gold chameleon liberty
satin. There is a narrow band border
of heavy floss embroideries all about
Whcrcarc your Furs?
Packed away without lire and
burglar Insurance?
Perhaps safe from moths, if you
keep continually unpacking and
airing them.
Or do you store them where se-
curity Is absolute?
Our fur vault is burglar proof,
fire proof, moth proof and our stor-
age receipt shifts the worrying
about your furs from j'ou to us.
Inspect our vault at any time, if
Interested.
Northern Cold Storage
and Warehouse Co.
Vp-Town Agenta :
Columbia Clothing Co.
Dniuth and Superior.
It sounds a little mean of me to say
It was all Nellie's fault, but It really
was. The idea was hers, and its exe-
cution was hers. And that was every-
thing— everything except the trifling
contribution I made to the sum total
of conspiring clrcumstanee.s.
My affairs had not been quite so
flourishing as they should have been,
and I had put the position frankly
before Nellie, as I hold a htisband
should be quite frank with his wife
when things are gloomy, whatever he
may do when they are bright; and we
had discussed economies for four suc-
cessive evenings, {.nd finally agreed
that, rather than give up our jolly
little house and move -nto a smaller
one or a wretched flat, if we could get
some one to share its comforts, con-
veniences and expenses, we might meet
the difficulty.
Nellie's cousin in Chicago, had met
Kimilar difficulties in that way, and
Nellie didn't see why we shouldn't.
The notion seemed so e.xcellent. in-
deed, that I consented, and left the
whole affair for Nellie to arrange, the
more readily because she had an idea
that her Chicago cousin had mentioned
to Nellie that she — the cousin — had
said to her — that is, to Nellie — that
her (cousin again) gue.st, a German
gentleman, had mentioned having a
friend, also a foreigner, who was anxi-
ous to find accommodation in a gentle-
man's house, where he could pick up
English quickly amid congenial sur-
roundings.
For this he was prepared to pay $4
a week, according to Ills circumstances
Nellie thought she could get this
German to come to us, if she men-
tioned the matter to her cousin; and
as he seemed ail right, since he was a
personal friend of Nellie's cousin's
guest, I left the matter entirely In her
hands, as I said before.
She saw the Chicago cousin the fol-
lowing afternoon, and was introduced
to the Ger — . No, come to think of it,
he was an Italian, though it is not
material, since the real point is that
he only spoke enough English to nod
affirmatively wlien asked a question,
and shrug his shoulders and point
When he required any thing. He hac'
come to America to learn our language
by residing with people who couldn't
make themselves understood in any
other language.
•'A charming man!" she declared.
"What his lips can't say his eyes lan
He is to see his friend tomorrow — at
least, I think so; and he'll let me
know If and when his friend will
come to us — I fancy tliat's what he
meant. A most charming man. Alwynl
So genial and vivacious. So alive 1"
"Well, I hope his friend will be
equally genial and vivacious and alive,"
I ob.«erved, not particularly hopefuli.v.
Two days elapsed. Tlien Nellie was
summoned to the front door to "try
.and make sense of what a nasty
foreigner was saying," as Jane tiie
housemaid, explained. Nellie rushed lo
the door to find her Chicago's cousin's
Italian guest, who had called to Ir.v to
make her understand the arrange-
ments he had made with his friend. She
experienced great trouble In compre-
hending him but gathered from the
cirift of his volubility and gestures that
his friend would arrive to take up his
ah'^de with us the following day.
Her greatest uneasiness arose from
the fact that the charming Italian had
dropped so many words In his native
lanpTuage that she hadn't the faintest
notion which of them represented the
name of his friend. However, she con-
soled herself with the reflection that
she would he perfectly safo In address-
ing the coming guest as "signor," and
that he himself might have finished
his education In conversational Eng-
lish.
It happened, most unfortunately, that
when I arrived at business the follow-
ing morning and went through my cor-
respondence. I found It would be neces-
sary for me to start immediately for
New York.
It was extremely awkward having
to leave Nellie to receive the stranger,
and entertain him, in my absence; but
as my trip was in connection with a
big bit of business. I never hesitated
about going. So. I wired to I^ellie and
started to New York. That was part
of mv own personal contriVjution to the
beautiful affair.
On receiving my wire, Nellie at once
telegraphed to Pearl Maynard. a Phil-
adelphia cousin, to come and sfaj,' a
day or two, and Pearl arrived late in
the afternoon, and was soon made
aware of the situation Just in time to
be looking her nicest, when Jane an-
nounced that the "foreign gent" had
come.
"Fresh tea. Immediately, Jane,"
whispered Nellie excitedly, and
hastened to greet the handsome young
foreigner who stood bowing In the hall.
He seemed most pleasantly surprised
at the cordiality of Nellie's welcome
to him, but the dilTlculties of the situ-
ation were manifest to Amy at once.
He was terribly nervous, stammering
and blushing like a timid girl, and he
knew as little of the English language
as his friend, Nellie's cousin's Italian
guest.
I can Imagine the scene I have
done so, and laughed outright. It
must have been very droll.
With the greatest difficulty — having
in the end. Indeed, to take him by
tlie arm and lead him — she forced him
to overcome his nervousness sufficient-
ly to enter the parlor..
Seeing Pearl rising fo greet him, he
stopped dead, and looked down at his
feet.
"Bit ze poots, madame," he pro-
tested. "Ze poots."
"He hasn't rubbed his boots, per-
haps," suggested Pearl.
"Ah! No — no! Ze poots!" he ex-
claimed, waving his hands at his feet.
Laughingly Nellie led him to the hall
mat. and pointed down.
He regarded her sorrowfully for a
moment, then sighed profoundly, and
wiped his boots upon the mat.
"Ze shen'man — 'Im — not com, ah sa?"
he inquired with engaging innocence.
Nellie led him back Into the room
and forced tea and' cake upon him,
while she went through an elaborate
pantomime, employia£ a variety of aids
The very hint tliat good manners
may be practiced in a crowd provokes
mirth in those who have ever strug-
gled wildly In a mighty throng at a
railway terminal, a ferry, or the fa-
mous Brooklyn bridge In the rush
hours.
Yet good manners there lead the
strong to look out for the weak. Induce
to give women a chance for a
men
seat, or for their lives, and sometimes
marks the dividing line between brute
force and chivalry. American crowds
are commonly good natured, but a vast
crowd Is apt to degenerate into a soul-
less mob. so that when we enter it, as
individuals, we need to mind our man-
ners.
Hotels are temporary homes for the
traveling public. Sliould you arrive at
one late at night good manners re-
(lulre you seek your room quietly. Tlie
dividing walls between hotel chambers
are very thin. People should converse
In very low tones in their rooms, un-
less thev wish to take into their con-
fidence their Invisible neighbors next
door.
A company of guests reaching an
and great ingenuity to convey to him
the cause of my absence and her hope
for my safe and speedy return.
At first the girls found it very amus-
ing and refreshing, but no one can
imagine how fatiguing it is to keep up
an intelligent conversation with a per-
fect stranger by means of smiles, nods,
incomplete sentences, and various
gestures on the lines of Swedish drill.
There was no getting and sense from
"signor," he could not explain any-
thing as to his route to the house, lug-
gage, arrival in America, or anything
else. He assumed an air of blended
mystification and resignation, and he
held on to U doggedly.
At length Nellie took him to show
Inn by the latest train should not laugh
or chat on the stairs or in t le recep-
tion room, lest their merririent dis-
turb others In the house who have re-
tired to rest.
It should be remembered that a shop
Is a public place where one Is seen
and heard by strangers. The genuine
lady marks her goodness and wis-
dom by using polite terms of speech.
She will not say "I want such a
thing." but "Show me, if you please,
that article." A woman of good sense
ought to have a very clear idea of what
she requires before going shopping,
and she will do well to fix in her own
mind just what she wants to buy, and
how much she is able to pay for it.
A lady will always find those little
phrases, "thank you" and "if you
please." will assist very much in shop-
ping. If some other lady should be
examining goods that you wish to look
at, wait until she is through.
Never draw comparislons with goods
of another store. When you leave the
counter a slight bow is never out of
place. On the other hand familiarity
on the part of the clerk should not be
allowed, and if he is asked for advice
It should be done In such a way that
he will give It respectfully.
him his room, and with Pearl's assis-
tance she conveyed Its meaning and
significance to him, pointing to the
bed and to him, and nodding, then
pointing to his face, making i. pretence
of washing her own. She had given up
talking by this time.
"Ah sa!" he exclaimed with his
chronic smile. "An' ae poots!"
"Put them outside," said Pearl, point-
ing down at the floor and nodding. "His
boots do seem a terrible anxiety to
him," she added aside to Nellie.
Then Nellie took him in hand again,
and showed him how to lock the door,
and used the clock as an aid :o explain
to him that we dined at 8, and took
breakfast at 8:30.
He took it all with the same air of
blended mystification and resignation,
and they left him to follow them down
to the parlor at his own pleasure.
But he had not put in an appearano*
when Jane announced dinner.
"Run up and knock quietly on the
gentleman's door, and tell him," said
Nellie.
After a short absence, Jane, looking
very scared, returned to say that she
could not get any answer.
"I tell you what it Is," said Pearl.
"He's misunderstood us, and thinks you
told him to go to bed."
"That's it," declared Jane. "I heard
a horrible noise like snoring, and there
is no light In his room."
They discussed It while the vege-
tables got cold. Finally, Nellie and
Pearl went up to Investigate, and be-
ing confirmed in the belief that he had
retired for the night. Pearl knocked
loudly on his door, with the heroic in-
tention of trying to explain his mis-
It was long before a grult and sleepy
voice answered her. The fun began.
There were difficulties enough in mak-
ing him understand, facial expression,
and by aid of gestures, and intonations,
but the difficulties were multiplied by
thirty figures at least to make him un-
derstand through a locked door.
But dinner had long been stone cold
before Nellie gave up all attempt. It
seemed to her the quintessence of In-
hospitallty to order a traveller to bed
at 8 o'clock, when he had only had a
cup of tea and some cake at 6, and his
luggage had not arrived. There it was,
however, and nothing could be done.
Pearl suggested trying to slip very
thin sandwiches under his door, but
Pearl was always silly In an emergency.
There was literally nothing to be done,
except to set a tray of eatables before
his door, so that he could ta)»e it in
when he put out his shoes which he
had not yet done.
Nellie gave orders to that effect. But
the tray was still in its place, un-
touched, when Nellie and Pearl retired
for the night, and they simply had not
the courage then to attempt to Inform
him of its presence.
In the dead of night the household
was suddently arou.sed by the sound of
smashing glass and china, instantly
succeeded by some foreign exclama-
tions and thud — bumpity, bumplty,
bump — thud. Then there was a beau-
tiful calm, till the shrieking of Jane
and Luclnda on the top floor threatened
to break every pane of glass in the
house.
Nobody, however, cared to discover
what had happened. Nellie clung to
Pearl, and Pearl hugged Nellie, and
thus they spent the night in an agony
of suspense.
But daylight kindled a little courage
and curiosity, and detail by detail the
discovery was made that "signor" had
tripped over the supj)er tray and fal-
en downstairs in stealing from his
room to flv the house. He had taken
nothing that was not his, but he had
left dirty marks from his shoes on the
sheets when he had gone to bed to
feign compliance with Nellie's orders.
That was the story 1 heard on re-
turning home.
"Great Scott!" I gasped. "I clearj
forgot to tell you I'd promised that old
pair of tan shoes to the picturesque
organ grinder I took a liking to. I told
him to call one evening, and — and .
Nellie alwavs says it was entirely my
fault. I say It was not! and I leave It
at that.
AVHY THE CHILD DIDN'T CRY.
M. A. P.: Canon Rhodes Brlstow,
who is to succeed Canon Benham as
chairman of the Poor Clergy corpora-
tion, has had a large and varied ex-
perience of life in the under-world of
London.
He once had an amusing experience
at a christening. Infants usually cry
while undergoing this ceremony, but
this one was a quiet as a lamb.
Throughout it smiled cheerfully in the
canon's face. "Madam," he remarked
later to the young mother, "1 must
congratulate you on the little ones be-
havior. I have never before christened
a child that has behaved so well aa
yours."
"No wonder he behaved well, w^as
the unexpected reply, "his father and
1 have been practising on him with a
pail of water for the last ten days."
Why not live to a hundred?
You think that's a joke. Not at all. Metchni-
koff the great Russian biologist shows plainly in
his latest book that a healthy man or woman ought
to live a hundred years. And he shows that many
of us would if we lived right.
Simple nourishing food is the main thing, he
says. And he specially advises foods containing
the wholesome natural acids that promote diges-
tion, and purify the blood.
You would be surprised to know how near he
comes to describing
TOMATO
SuinAiu
OUP
Prepared by our improved condensing method— which
retains all the tonic acid properties of fresh ripe tomatoes, and
all their natural food-value— this delicious soup is rich in the
very elements most needed to sustain a vigorous healthy con-
dition. At the same time it aids the digestion of all other foods.
Many times — specially when yooT digestion is not just
right— you find that a plate or two of this palatable soup with
pmin bread-and-butter does you more good than a hearty dinner.
Some of our thicker soups — like tLe Ox Tail and Beef and
Mock Turtle, for example — are a meal in themselves.
If people realized the value of such simple reasonable
diet, and ate less heavy indigestible food, we would all live
longer. And we would feel a lot younger while we do live.
Try this yourself, and sse how true it is.
21 kinds 10c a can
Prlntantar
Tomato
Tomato -Oki*
Vegetable
VmntceU-ToMfk
Just add hoi water t bring to a boil, and serve,
Joseph Campbell Company, Camden N J
Look for the red-aiid-white label
Atparagtit
Chicken Cumbo (Okra)
M illl^tawny
Beef
Clam Bouillon
M ittoD Brotb
Bouillon
Clam Chowdet
Oj Tail
Celery
ConiommA
P<k
CUcke»
JuUenoe
KeckTurite
PtppwPo*
"Campbell's Soup for lunch",
they said.
This clock is awful slow.
Ill shove it haIi-an-)iour ahead
The coolc will tiever Icnow.
---#'
i
T<
t
!
t T m'ufwnr- ■■ « ■ m^ ,
"^-n
^•^
tm=.
»
ff
Friday,
SBSSSSS^^
BaMWMH^i
jwidi |r~«r r-
VS*'^
Wl. ■
4«
J^
Our Entire Stocks of Clothing
for Men and Boys Sacrificed on Accounf of Our
REMODEL!
SLASH GOES THE PRICES on each and
every article in our store. We must raise $10,000
by May 1. The public must help us, and we will
give them the best bargains ever offered in Du-
luth. The entire stock, consisting of Men's Cloth-
ing, Hats, Caps, Shoes and Furnishings, also La-
dies' Shoes, Hosiery, Waists, Muslin -and Knitted
Underwear, Boys' and Misses' Shoes and Stock-
ings and Boys, Caps, all go, nothing reserved.
Every price reduced just when you need the
goods, while we need the space and money.
Remember we are out of the high rent district
and our ever lower prices reduced again.
The sale that means more to the Duluth
buying public than any event of a similar char-
acter occurring this year.
Men's and Young Men's High-Glass Suits
These garments are from some of the best fac-
tories in America. Every suit perfectly tailored in
the latest styles and made from the newest and
best selected materials, and all union made.
$10.00 New Spring Suits
—now
$12.50 New Spring Suits
— now
$15.00 New Spring Suits
— now ■
$20.00 Blue Serge Suits
— now
$25.00 Blue Serge Suits
sale price — now
READ THESE PRICES!
Then come here tomorrow, where your dollar does double duty.
HANDKERCHIEFS AND
GARTERS.
5c kind > 3c
10c kind 5c
15c kind 8c
25c kind 12c
50c Garters 18c
25c Garters 12c
MEN'S UNDERWEAR.
50c Balbriggan, a snap. .25c
75c Ribbed 39c
$1.25 Fine Cashmere. . .79c
MEN'S WORKING
SHIRTS.
50c kind 38c
$1 kind 75c
75c and $1 Boys' Dress
and Working Shirts.. 45c
LADIES' WEAR.
Ladies' $1.50 Combina-
tion Suit 69c
Ladies' Night Gowns,
$1 kind 59c
Ladies' Night Gowns,
$1.50 kind 79c
75c Ladies' Petticoats. .35c
$1 Ladies' Petticoats 47c
LADIES' WAISTS.
75c up-to-date Waists.. 45c
$1 up-to-date Waists . . . 55c
$1.25 up-to-date Waists. .63c
$3.50 Silk Waist $1.95
Men's Overcoats less than
$6.75
$7.85
$9.85
$13.85
$14.85
MEN'S HATS.
$2.00 Men's Hats $1.25
$2.50 Men's Hats $1.50
$3 Men's Hats, a snap, $1.75
MEN'S CAPS.
75 Blue Serge 50c
100 Caps 69c
50 Odd Caps 15c
MEN'S DRESS SHOES.
$3.00 — a bargain . , $195
$3.50 — a bargain $2.85
$4 and $5 Packard $3.45
BOYS' AND MISSES'
SHOES.
$1.50 kind 95c
$2.00 kind $1-25
$2.25 kind $1-35
$2.50 kind.y $1-45
LADIES' SHOES UP-
TO-DATE.
$3.00 Odd Lot—
a bargain $1.00
$3.50 odd lot, a bargain, $1^37
$4.00 kind $2.25
$4.50 kind $2.50
Men's Dress Pants— a
bargain at. . . .$2 and $1.25
Men's Pants, a bargain
for $3 and $1.95
Men's Pants, a snap,
for $3.50 aid $2.25
Men's Pants, fine blue serge
a bargain for $5 and $3.25 ^.q^^
MEN'S AND BOYS'
BELTS.
25c kind 14c
35c kind 19c
50c kind 35c
75c kind > 42c
SUSPENDERS.
20c kind 10c
25c kind 15c
50c kind 25c
75c kind 35c
NECKWEAR FOR MEN
AND BOYS.
25c kind 16c
35c kind 25c
50c kind, 35c or 3 for $1.00
MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS.
50c kind, while they last, 35c
75c kind, while they last, 46c
$1 kind, while they last, 59c
$1.25 and $1.50 kind 79c
Men's Winter Underwear
less than cost .
Men's heavy Shoes, Jeffer-
son and Chippewa, at cost.
Men's Working Gloves,
the best^$I, $1.25, $1.50—
choice 7Bc.
MEN^S SOX.
15c Cotton Sox 7c
25c Lisle Sox 15c
50c Lisle Sox 25c
75c Lisle and Silk Sox. .35c
BOYS' AND MISSES'
SOX.
25c — a bargain, 6 pair . . . 50c
or 10c a pair.
LADIE' HOSE.
20c kind 10c
25c kind 15c
This is cheap for new goods.
MANUFACTURER'S
OUTLET SALES CO
15 East Superior Street, Duluth, Minn.
T
THE DULUTH HERALD
April 21, 1911.
15
ROOSEVELT'S AMBITION IS
TO BE SHOT, SAYS GREENWAY
.Tohn C. Greenway, well known
throughout tlie Northwest and particu-
larly Duluth and the ranges, is quoted
in this Aveek'.s Saturday Kvoning I'ost
as stating that the greatest ambition
of Theodore Roosevelt is to be shot on
the field of battle.
The article, which deals with Col.
Roosevelt's position today, was written
by Henry Beach Needham, a corres-
pondent of wide experience, and makes
reference to tlie time of the Spanish-
American war, when Greenway was
.'Terving under Roosevelt in the Rough
Riders. The extract, which will be cf
particular local interest, is as follows:
"Not long before Mr. Roosevelt left
the White House I was talking with
.John C. Greenway, an officer of the
Hough Riders and one of tlie colonel's
most loval friends. He asked me if I
knew what was Roosevelt's greatest
ambition. When I said that I did not,
lie recounted an incident that occurred
in Cuba. It was in one of the first
skirmishes in which the Rough Riders
were engaged. The regiment, under
fire, was lying down, impatiently wait-
ing for the order to advance. A young
West Pointer — call him Sherman — who
was near I.ieut. Greenway, in diso-
bedience to orders, kept Jumping to Ills
leet and surveying the sutuatlon. Sud-
denly, throwing up his hands, he ex-
claimed: 'I'm shot!' . ^ ^, J
"Lieut. Greenway went to him and
found, upon examination, that the
West Pointer had been shot througii
the stomach and that the bullet had
gone clean through his body. It
-eemed certain that the man would die,
and Greenwav, face to face with death
on the battlefield, tried to bid hlrn
good-bye, for the regiment might aa-
vance anv moment. Si>erman asked
Ueut. Greenway if he thought Col.
Roosevelt would come and say good-
bye. Greenwav carried the message to
the colonel, and he replied: 'Certainly
I will come.' The colonel walked
rapidlv over to where Sherman was
lying *and, as he approached, a siniie
upon his face, he waved a greeting to
him. Then, cla.sping the West Pointer
by the hand, he said, to Greenway s
awe: _,
•' 'You're a lucky man, Sherman,
you're a luckv man! You've been shot
on the field of battle. All of us will
have to go, sooner or later, and some
of U.S will not die in battle. You're a
lucky man, Sherman; you've been shot
on the battlefield: you're a lucky man'.
Good-bve. old man, good-bye.' •"'""-
Ing his hand and smiling, he
away.
'• 'Col. Roosevelt s greatest
tion.' said Greenway, 'Is to be
the field of battle.' "
Wav
walked
ambl-
shot on
Y. M. C A. BOYS GOING AFTER
200 MEMBERS IN TWO DAYS
Tlie cabinet of the boys' depart-
ment Y. M. C. A. is planning to put
on a mammoth campaign to add 200
members to the boys' department in
two days. April 28 and 29. The spe-
cial inducement will be the issuing of
a summer ticket good from Alay 1 fo
Sept. 15 for $2.
The cabinet members feel confident
that parents will avail themselves of
this oportunity of providing recrea-
tion for their boys during the summer
months. The club rooms and gym-
nasium of the boys' building will be
open overy day from 9 a. m. to 9:30
p. m. and four periods will be pro-
vided for at the swimming pool in the
Central department. The outdoor ac-
tivities will consist of a weekly swim
at Park Point, a weekly outing and
.>^hort t 'rm camps at Solon Springs,
French River, Pike Lake and Zenith
island. All the activities of the club
will be under expert supervision, and
the special summer ticket will solve
the problem tliat confronts a good
many parents as to how their boys
shall spend the summer.
The committee that will have charge
of the special campaign mot last night
and perfected plans for the hustle
which will be the biggest thing of the
kind ever attempted and will put the
Uuluth bovs' department eighth high-
eat in North America. The organiza-
tion will consist of two large teams
with Palmer Bevls captain of one side
and Richard Cullum captain of the
other. They will be known as the Reds
and the Blues. Kach side is divided
into squads. The squads and their
captains folhjw:
John
Jack
Fred in
Shields
Robt. Kerr, Capt,
Reginald Reed
N. Withington
G. Patterson
Dale Flashman
Harold Pond
S. McJLean
H. Sparks. Capt.
Eugene Rice
Eugene Norris
A. Armstrong
Leon Older
I. Moore, Ca.pt.
K. Finkenstaedt
F. Campbell
J. Brockelhurst
C. Johnson
Paul Flinn
A. Berquist,
S. McTjiggart
Earl Rydeen
Arthur Pean-'on
Ray Anderson
Ben Cheska
Arthur Spear
H. Smitliies
R. Bogen. Capt.
Ray Miller
C. Westover
M. Crassweller
Geo. Lawson
H. Strange
D. Alexander
H. Phelps. Capt.
Stanley Allen
E. Skinner
C. I^e Richeaux
R. iKnowlton
R. Duncan, Capt.
John Lynam
Warren Moore
liobert Paine
Andrew I^ee
Howard Lewis
Capt. H. Cook, Capt.
S. McGiferet
Homer Collins
P. Cooper
D. Walker
G. Hegardt
Carleton Volk
BLUES.
G. :Morritt, Capt.
Walter "Wilander
L€\slie Cromwell
H. Hallenbeck
C. Gilliland
.T. Nolte, Capt.
John Miller,
.lolin MiCabe
Cliarles Clark
Edson Miller
H. Bradley, Capt.
.lolin Sahlberg
Wm. Winship
REDS.
L. Bevi.«, Capt.
M. Stanford
Cleorge Martin
Ely Sal yards
Ralph Dunning
T. McLean, Capt.
H. S'ukeforth
K. Harris
Waldon Ifough
Walter Sleeper
D. Frick, Capt.
H. Bleakeney
Dudley Trott
J. Hallenbeck, C
Albin Lee
Forest Huyck
Sigurd Duclett
George Kolstad
R. Cullen, Capt.
Sherman Powell
Arthur Wasgatt
Clarence Gilbert
Rex. St. Clair
N. McConaughy, C
C. Burnside
R. Larson
R. Armstrong
Chas. Everett
C. Dlers, Capt.
Carl Brown
E. Hornegren
C Thomas
I>. Olson
Howard Harper
C. Harris. Capt.
Wlnfield Davis
Deane Davis
W. Anderson
Howard Cant
John Smith. Capt.
Geo. Hestrom
Adrey Stafna
Edwin Anderson
Walter Quigley
Paul Olson
R. Lonegren. Capt.
AL Goldberg
John Conistock
M. Cullen
n. McCarthy
K. Jones
G. Lonegren
O. Whiteside, Capt.
T. Peterson
Earl King
John Fee
G. McFarlane
A. Bauers. Capt-
Irving Auld
Edward Wood
H. Nelson
A. Newman
E. Kohagen
CLAIM FRAUD
IN ELECTION
Annual Contest From Brooks-
ton Will Be Heard
in Court
The regular annual Brookston
election contests will soon be on in
district court.
It was expected that the annual
cases would begin before Judge Will-
iam Cant this morning, but the court
was still busy with another case and
the matter was delayed.
Last year the cases occupied the
court's attention for several dajs.
There are eight cases this year, all
HE ATE TOO
MUCH BREAD
Charles Klis Beaten By Fore-
man in Lumber Camp and
Wants Damages.
Charles Klis has brought suit against
James Chisliolm and the Johnson-
Wentworth company, a logging con-
cern, for |S00 for an alleged beating he
took from Chlsholm, a foreman, while
in the employ of the company during
the month of February of last year.
Klis claims that one day while eating
his luncheon, which was provided by
the company, Chlsholm rushed up to
him and ordered him to eat more pork
and beans and less bread and other
things that were on the table.
Klis claims that he din not under-
.stand him and that the next thing ho
knew he was being pounded about by
Chlsholm. He claims that he was hit
and choked. He states that $800 io
Cigar Sale Ends Saturday.
Last chance to get a box of your
favorites at cost. .\lca/.ar. $3.65 per box.
Smokery, 319 West Superior street.
The papers in the action were filed
with the clerk of the district court this
morning.
brought by defeated candidates. The | reasonable damages for the assaul:
defeated candidates for the otllces of '
village president, town clerk, three
trustees, treasurer, assessor and jus-
tice of the peace are all claiming
fraud In the election and asking that
the successful candidates be un-
seated and the position turned over to
the contestants.
The first action to come up will
probably be that one entitled In the
Matter of the Contest of Arthur F.
Hutchins, Contestant, Against J. F.
Ryan, Contestee, for the Office of
village President.
Hutchins claims that many votes
were cast by people who had not
qualified as voters and many were
refused the right to vote who were
regular and qualified voters.
The election Wiis the regular an-
nual village election which was held
on March 14. He claims that Ryan
is not a resident of Brookston and
that there was fraud in electing him
to the office of village president.
Smokers, Attention; Sat. Special.
La-Flor-De-Garcia, 10c straight, on
sale tomorrow only, 4 for 25c. La
Venga, 10c straight, 4 for 25c. LaZella,
10c straight, 4 for 25c. Tampa values.
10c straight. 4 for 25c. Iroquois Club,
10c straight. 4 for 25c. Charles The
Gerat, pantellas, 5c each. These prices
for tomorow only. The Smokery, 319
West Superior street.
CITY WILL LEND TWO
HARBORS AN INSPECTOR.
Two Harbors wishes to effect some
reforms in its meat shops and bakeries
and has requested the loan of Meat In-
spector Lee Bernhardt for a few days
next week. Temporary arrangements
will be made to take care of his work
here and he will visit Two Harbors the
first part of the week. Inspector Bern-
hardt has been doing good work since
he was appointed to his present posi-
tion, and It is believed that he will be
able to render the officials at Two Har-
bors considerable assistance in a short
time.
SUMMER
QUARTERLY
STYLE
BOOKS.
Another lot on
sale todav.
WE CLRAV Kin GLOVES MCELY.
PRICES REASONABLE. PROMPT SEUVICE.
AiT-llf WEST BVFEBIOR BTKlZEnC, ©UliXTTH. MDCll*
DRESS
FORMS
WILL
HELP
you to be well
dressed.
•■•»
$25 Suits $ 1 8.50
The makers made us a liberal allowance on a belated
shipment of about one hundred twenty stylish new suits. The styles are vcry-last-minute
models— and in addition to the $25 Suits at $18.5Ci— the others run like this—
m
$22.50 for $30.00 Suits
$25 and $27.50 for Suits Made to Sell at up to $35
There Are Also Some Fine Surprises in
Coats at $ 1 5.00, $ 13.50, $25 and $35
You'll know why others were so pleased with what they bought here this week if
you see the Coats we will sell you at the above mentioned prices.
J
>
t
S I LK SALE'
The Semi- Annual Silk Sale Ends Tomorrow Night
Any of the Sale Silks Then Left Go Back into the
Regular Stock at Regular Prices,
Thousands of yards of desirable, dependable silks on
sale until 10 o'clock tomorrow night, at prices that mean great savings to the appreciative
buyers Crowds were here yesterday— they're back today, and their friends with them—
and if the weather is favorable, tomorrow will see the biggest silk-selling we've ever known.
49c,59c,69c,89c,98c,r
$1.00 $1.2S; $1.50 $1.50 $3.00
Sale
Prices
Jas;.!^" 75c
BUY TOMORROW — The Sale Silks advance to regular prices again Monday.
Wash Goods Spedals for Saturday {
121/ic ior 32-inch CoIIod Challis
A nice soft finish fabric suitable for
drapery purposes, kinomos and dressing
sacques, in cloths Ihat wash perfectly.
Special at I2}<ac a yard.
25c for 29c and 35c Fine
Silk Organdies
Pretty floral designs for party
^\ am dresses and evening wear
^# a^ — it is selling elsewhere
•^*^^at 29c and 35c the yard.
On pale here at 25c the yard.
12^
25c for 35c White
Wool Flannel
Por Infants' wear this 35c
white flannel is i very popu-
lar number. We offer a thou,
sand yards or 1; special to-
morrow at 25c a yard.
121/3C for 15c Figured Batistes
Dots, stripes and small figures—
also large floral dcsigns--for kimo-
nos and dresses — in 15c figured ba-
tiste— special at 12}/lc a yard.
19c for 3 2 -inch French
Zephyr Ginghams
Checks, stripes, plaids and plain
colors, in our best 25c V ^\ ^^^
32-inch Fench Zephyr ■ MC
to- • ^ ^^
19c the vard.
Ginghams; on sale
morrow, special at
WHEN SORENSEN
opened a branch store in Duluth last spring, the general opinion was
that you "couldn't get much of a shoe for $2.50 or $3" — Now we have
thousands of satisfied customers here — even with our large seating
m gk capacity, many of our regular customers could not find
mj room to try on shoes last Saturday and we would ask
>^" you to come as early in the day as possible to get our
"and best individual attention.
A A Best new styles, shoes, oxfords and fancy slippers,
5^ all leathers, for men and women; equal to the regu-
^ lar $3.50 and $4 kind, by any comparison.
"See Our Windows, Where the Birds Fly.**
317 WEST SUPERIOR STREET
I
{ New Fisk Tailored Hats Caime Today
Smart as a whip are these new tail-
ored hats— models that are just a little newer than any we have pre-
viously shown— and we think you'll be delighted with them.
Their beauty consists principally in their beauty of line, as well
as the masterly touch given by the elegant but simple trimming.
There Are Also Scores of Mew Ideas
From Our Own Workrooms
Where true talent works with enthusiasm— it is not necessary to
"load" up hats with costly trimmings to make something unusual. In-
stead, our clever milliners prove that with a few handsome trmimmgs, it
is easy to make a hat of real style and elegance.
And the cost is reasonable.
i^Tojy
1 *
T
I .
*
■ >•■
4-
HMMM
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
ON THE IRON RANGES
NEW FARMERS IN
ITASCA COUNTY
Many Homeseekers Are Com-
ing There and Settling
Up the Country.
Grand Rapids, Minn., April 21. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.)— A large number
of settlers from other sections are (Ind-
Ing homes In Itasca county this spring.
Many have aouuired lands in this im-
nudiate vicinity.
There is a steady stream of settlors
coining to Northeastern Minnesota and
particularlv Itasca county, and while
the movement is yet unnotlceable, ex-
cept to real estate dealers, it will not
be long ere Itasca county wakes up to
the fact that it is one of the most im-
portant counties, agriculturally, as well
as oliierwise, in the state.
Some .\ew !!iettlera.
Peter Peterson, who arrived here two
weeks ago trom Litchfield, has erected
a six-room house and a barn, 24 bv i-
feet, on his farm in section 6, on Shoal
lake. In addiliun to four good work
hors. s and a large iiuantity of ia>'"
machinerv. Mr. Peterson brought with
him ten fiead of Short Horn cattle.
A \V. Zleglir is anotlier Litchfield
farmer who will farm in Itasca couniy_.
He purchased an eighty in section .
and will have liis farm buildings com-
pleted in a few days. He expects to
move his family here the flrst of tlie
coming we* k.
W. r. Sherman of Mapleton has pur-
chased an 160-acre farm in section 32
on the east side of Slioal lake and ar-
rived lure last week with two carloads
of horses, cattle and farm machinery.
He has eight milch cows, all of Guern-
sev breed, and will undoubtedly prove
a good patron of the new creamery
addition to his own farm he has
the McCorlMick farm of 200
which adjoins his. and
until lie builds, which
coming fall.
Two Iowa Fnrnicrsi.
C. B. and \V. i:. Newtuii are tAvo Towa
farmers, coming here from Valley Junc-
tion, a suburb of Des Moines, who pur-
chased eightv acres each in Bass Lake
township. \V. K. Newton has his farm
buildings erected now. while the crew-
la winking on the residence of his
brother. C. B. Newton. They are locat-
ed on the west side of Shoal lake.
Two men from Good Thunder, whose
nanus have not been learned, have pur-
chas.'d land in section 36 and expect to
move here shortly.
Albert Hanger has purchased a piece
of land in section 12 and will move on
it this spring. Harold M. Sunstad and
H. K. Morin, both of i'oleraine, have
I'urcliaseti land in section 7, town of
Trout Lake, on the west side of the
lake, and are employed at Coleraine
and will continue their work, as it is
only a short walk to the village.
TACOXTtENEWS NOTES.
last season. Both have good twisters
and lots of speed. George Stevens of
Virginia will be one of the catchers
for Gilbert this year. The boys have
succeeded In raising $30 by subscrip-
tion which will go towards buying
new uniforms.
MAY HOLD COURT
IN NEW BUILDING
In
rented
acres,
will live there
will be late the
Virginia Term of District
Court Tuesday May Be
in New Quarters.
Virginia. Minn., April 21.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The April term of the
district court will convene here next
Tuesday. The calendar promises to b«3
a large one. Clerk U. G. Holloway and
IHputy Sheriffs William Merrill and
(.'harles Gromberg and Andrew Moilan,
wlio have been attending to their du-
ties during the sessions of the court at
nibbing, have returned home and aro
getting ready for the coming term. It
is expected that the session of court
will be held in the new courthouse and
that the offices now located in the city
hall win be removed to the new build-
ing before the term commences.
Hear .Maudanius at Hlbblns*
The manvianiuj proceedings against
City Clerk .Albert E. Bickford brought
by C. S. Sermon to show cause why he
would not recognize the eighty-tiiree
signatures to the petition for the re-
call of Alderman J. L. Kimball of the
Fourth ward, will be heard before
Judge Martin Hughes at Hlbbing to-
morrow. City Attorney Otto A. Poirler
will appear for Mr. Bickford and Judge
Montage for Mr. Sermon.
CONFERENCE HAS
ENDED ITS WORK
Garvey Addition Residents Organize
and Decide Upon New Officers.
Taconite, Minn., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The residents of the
Garvey addition of Taconlte held a
meeting In their new city hall recently.
The meeting was called to order
promptlv at 7:no p. m. by Chairman
Bteve Heckomovich. The following
o££i>ers were elected: Patrick Campbell,
president; Dennis Healy, Henry Hlgh-
pockels, Walter Donovan, councilmen;
Gus Erickson and Gus Gabrlelson. con-
stables; Harrv Goit, clerk: Ray Brando,
Justice of the peace; and Charles John-
eon, treasurer.
A motion was carried to extend the
sewer and waterworks through Main
street and other streets of the resi-
dential parts of town. The council ap-
pointed a committee to organize a
volunteer fire department and get prices
of chemical engine and hook and ladder
truek, to report next meeting, on May
8. The meeting adjourned at 10:30 p.
m. All present retired to the reception
room where refreshments and cigars
were served.
Tl:e Taconlte streets are being decor-
ated under the management of Land-
scape Gardener Gus Huhn. assisted by
John Reed with a force of seventy-
live men.
Fire Warden T. J. O'Brien is inspect-
ing llie buildings here this week.
The valuable dog Buster owned by
M. H. O'Brien, died this week from a
complication of diseases.
Albert Regal, a Florida land agent,
was here this week.
Levy Wilde, clerk at the Palace
Clothing house, is In training for his
fight with Kid Dundeen from Wi.scon-
ein, which is to be pulled off In the
tear future.
GILBERT CLUB PRACTKE.
Next Sunday Baseball Boys AVill Be
Tried Out.
Gilbert, Minn.. April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Sunday will be try-out
day at the baseball grounds for the
Gilbert players. The boys have sev-
eral new plavers and expect to have a
first class team this year to represent
the village. So far two twirlers and
four catchers have made themselves
known. The pitchers are Nell Carr,
from Southern Michigan, and Al. Ver-
vUle, who was with Tacoma, Wash.,
Gathering of Methodists at
Hibbing Pronounced Most
Successful to Date.
nibbing, Minn., April 21. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The final meeting of
the Methodist dlstrct conference was
held last evening and brought to a
close a conference that has proved in
many ways to be the best ever held
In this circuit.
Both as regards the number of dele-
gates and the importance of the meet-
ings the conference has been an un-
paralleled success, and it is felt by all
those present that the Hibbing meet-
ings will be long remembered for the
good that has been done. The first
part of last evening's session was taken
up with the reading of reports from
the various pastors and preachers, and
very encouraging results were shown
by what was mentioned.
In speaking to a representative of
The Herald last evening, the Kev. J.
F. Pickard, pastor of the Hibbing
church, said that he wished to thank
all the friends who had been so good
in looking after the entertainment of
the visiting delegates, and that on be-
lialf of the church he wished to sav
how mucli they appreciated the kind-
ness that had been shown to them.
Tlie Hibbing conference has been
among the best ever entertained In
this district.
The final report of committees was
read at the meeting last night and
many important church matters de-
cided.
Are Given .\nto KIde.
Through IIm kindness of the fol-
lowing autot. Vile owners, the dele-
gates enjoyed a ride around Hibbing
yesterday afternoon: C. A, Congdon,
Duluth; J. L. Dewis, Hibbing; Jolin A.
Healy, A. P. i-illlinan, and the Hibbing
Commercial club. The party spent an
hour and a half in seeing the most
Important places and things in the
immediate neighborhood and saw
sometiiing of tlie adjacent -mining lo-
cations. All were especially Impressed
with the splendid schools and one
member of the party said: "I don't
wonder that you have to "shoe" the
children out of your schools instead
of into them."
The program was followed closely
throughout the proceedings of the con-
vention and everything went in the
smoothest manner possible so that In
spite of the large amount of work
covered and the number of places vis-
ited incidentally by the delegates very
little time was lost.
All the delegates were heard from
during the meetings and it is impos-
sible to give any very full details of
w-hat was said but amongst the most
prominent participants were the Ilev.
.Merson S. Rice of Duluth, Dr. Burns of
-Minntapolls, Dr. Brummltt of Chicago,
the Rev. J. F. Pickard, Hibbing, Rev.
Edgar Copper. Duluth, Rev. Charles
Fox Davis, Brainerd, and many others.
bing Odd Fellows will be held in the
Odd Fellows hall, Esperamer block, on
May 1. Very e.xtcnslve preparations
are being made for the event and Past
Grand Master T. W. Hugo of Duluth,
will be one of the Important guests
of the evening. A fine musical pro-
gram will be rendered and there will
be a few good speeches and an excel-
lent supper, and a very large gather-
ing Is quite certain to take place.
LIBRARIANS HAVE
TWO HARBORS MEET
Round Table Gathering Is
Held This Week in the
Lake County Seal
Tw^o Harbors, Minn., April 21.— (Spe-
cial to The Herald.)— The Round Table
meeting of librarians held here
Wednesday was a success in every
way. The visitors were met by a
committee from liie library Iward con-
sisting of Dr. Budd, Mr. Owens, Mr.
Daniels, and Mrs. Barton, and after
inspecting the Iron Range offices,
were escorted to the public library
where the meeting was opened by an
addiess of welcome by Dr. Budd, the
president of the library board. Miss
Baldwin, secretary of the Minnesota
Public Library commission, responded
in behalf of the visitors after which
tile dicussion of the morning's pro-
gram as previously announced was
taken up. The meeting was adjourned
a little before noon to give the vis-
iting librarians opportunity to inpect
tile library,
Library Board Given Dinner.
The library board acted as liost at
a delicious dinner served in the par-
lors of the ^lethodlst church. After
dinner, Mr. Owens took the party on a
trip around the harbor In the fire tug
Torrent. Tlie visitors inspected the
fire equipment of the tug, and were
finally landed on Dock No. 6, which
was duly inspected. At the end of the
dock an engine and coach were In
waiting to take the party back to
town.
Upon repairing to the library, the
afternoon's program was taken up and
before adjournment an enthusiastic
vole of thanks was given to the Two
Harbors library board for its splendid
entertainment. Before leaving each of
the visitors was presented by Mr.
Owens with a copy of "Two Harbors
in 1910." The meetings were open to
the public and those who took advan-
tage of this seemed to enjoy the dis-
cussion as much as the participating
librarians.
idea of what is being done by the
pupils. ^ .-
Lynn Cole of the Great Northern left
yesterday for Superior, where he will
reside in the future.
Mrs. W. W. Brown went to Evelelh
this morning to ifjsit friends in that
city.
Representative John Healy Is ex-
pected back home today after com-
pleting his legislative duties at St.
Paul.
Manager Carpenter of the Othello
theater In Evelet4% who recently was
burned out in iViat city, has returned
from the West" anfi Is spending a few
days In Hibbing. '
Secretary Morrisey of the H. E.
Pierce compantfs Is In the city In con-
nection with ti»e productions, "The Girl
Question" and "45 Minutes From
Broadway" being ♦ presented at the
Healy theater. Mr. Morrlssey has many
friends here and is having a busy time.
Miss Maude Leone held an Informal
reception to some of her friends at tiie
Oliver hotel this afternoon.
P. E. DOWUNG TO
REBUILD BLOCK
TWO HARBORS WINS
DEBATING CONTEST
Lake County Metropolis Team
Wins State Debating
Championship.
Minneapolis, Minn., April 21. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The state debat-
ing championship among high school
teams was won last night by the Two
Harbors team in a memorable contest
held here at the University of Minne-
sota with the debaters from the Hum-
boldt St. Paul high school. The de-
cision of the judges was unanimously
in favor of the Two Harbors team,
Carl G. Olson, Leroy Strand and Leroy
Pegelow, who had the negative side of
the discussion as to the merits of tiie
commission form of government.
The winners are now qualified for the
Interstate debate.
The judges of last night's debate
were Prof. Beyer of Hamline; Dr. Jenks
and I'rof. Allin of the University of
Minnesota.
Duluthian W3I Repair Eve
leth Building Damaged By
Recent Fire.
Eveleth, Minn., April 21.— (Special
The Herald.) — P. E. Dowling of Du-
luth, owner of the Dowling block on
Jones street, wliich was recently de-
stroyed by fire, has decided to rebuild
the structure, and has had the premises
cleaned up preparatory to awarding
the contract. Offices will again be
provided for the Home Heating & Elec-
tric company, now temporarily located
on Pierce street, and the Eveleth Star
office. The front part of the second
fioor. which was not used before, will
be converted Into office space, while
the rest of the building will be used
for the new Othello theater, which will
be a great improvement over the old
playhouse. A new and much larger
stage w^iU be provided and the gallery
rebuilt. The first floor Is still In a
fair condition, and the four concrete
walls can again be used, which should
aid In building operations to a great
extent. The interior of the theater will
also be Improved, and but two boxes
installed on the first floor Instead of
four, as before. Mr. Dowling expects
_to have the building completed by
July.
last night the county treasurer was
instructed that |3,000 of the village
levy is for the light and water fund,
and that the same should not be used
for the general fund of the village,
and that this amount should be for-
warded to the village treasifrer and
credited to the water and light fund.
GUARDING WATER SUPPLY.
St.
Eveleth Takes No Chances on
Mary's Lake Pollution.
Eveleth, Minn., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — St. Marys lake, the
source of the city's water supply, will
be closely watched this season, and no
one will be permitted to set sail on
the lake. A fence will be enclosed
about the lake to prevent dust and
animals from entering. Enos Rennler,
the new watchman, will commence his
duties May 15, and It is planned to
erect a watch house at the lake for his
use. The deadwood at the lake will
soon be removed and the water which
is regarded as the best in the state,
tested.
BUILDING RAPIDS CHURCH.
Work Has Started Upon New Catho-
lic Structure.
Grand Rapids, Minn., April 21. — (Spe-
clay to The Herald.) — Edward Jackson
of "iJemldjl, who has charge of the
construction of Catholic churches In
this part of the Duluth diocese, has
s'arted men at work excavating for the
new Bathollc church here to take the
place of the edifice burned several
.„ months ago.
Clarence Jackson, a son of Mr. Jack-
son, has direct supervision of the work
lie re.
The building is to be about 60 by 120,
Including the wings, etc., built of brick.
A ten-foot basement will extend under
the full size of the church auditorium.
The steeple will be 116 feel high. The
building win be erected at a cost of
about 116,000.
The excavation work is well under
way. lime and tool sheds have been
built, and the hauling of material will
commence at once. Rev. Father
Buechler, pastor of St. Joseph's, expects
to have the church ready for occu-
pancy on or before the first Sunday
In October.
NTOXICE.
E. F. Burg, Hotel, Bar and
Billiard Supplies, has moved
to 224 West First Street.
GILBERT AMATEURS PREPARE
EVELEIH PLANNING
FOR NEW LIBRARY
Questien of Site for New
Structure Is Being Freely
Discussed.
Eveleth. Minn., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — David A. Larln, Dr. C
W. More and Burton O. Greening last
evening were appointed on a commit-
tee to secure temporary library quar-
ters for the summer, and to also re-
quest the school board to transfer
many works of fiction of the high
school library to the library board.
The members of the committee are
much in favor of starting a temporary
library, and as many suitable locations
are available it is very probable Kve-
leth's first public library will be opened
by June 1.
A letter from Secretary Burton of
the Carnegie library board, requesting
the board to forward plans and speci-
fications for a |1."> OOC library, was read,
and the site committee, J. C. Poole,
Solomon Sa.\ and Secretary Fergus 11.
Ellsworth, Instructed to send the plans
and accompany same with an explan-
atory letter dealing with the local
building situation.
Sites for the proposed library were
discussed and those on Pierce street,
facing the Fayal plot of ground, and
tlie lots on the corner of Adams ave-
nue and Pierce Street received the most
favor. The fee interests which own
the lots opposite the Fayal ground!
have been written to and it Is probable
that site will be donated to the board.
The board will hold a joint meeting
soon with the city council to consider
the sites and plans for the proposeti
library.
FEELEY MAN MARRIES.
Grand Rapids, Minn., .\pril 21. — Ed-
ward M. Tichenor of Feeley and Miss
Clara A. Mundy were married Wednes-
day evening at the home of the bride's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Mundy, of
the town of Harrlr, Fev. Dr. M. M.
Hursh of Cohas.set officiating.
The bride was attended by Miss Car-
rie Anderson and John Miller was best
man.
Immediately after the wedding, the
guests, who numbered over a hundred,
sat down to a wedding supper. Dancing
was next on the program, and the
guests enjoyed themselves until the
small hours of Thursday morning.
Eveleth Militiamen He-eoliMlnK.
Eveleth. Minn., April 21.— (Special to
The Herald.) — Many militiamen at-
tended the meeting at the armory last
evening, at which Col. F. E. Hesche
spcke on the local organizations and
military work. Many of the soldiers'
terms expired last month, but as many
of the old members have re-enlisted
and much enthusiasm is being shown,
it is thought that the membership for
the ensuing three year term will be
Increased.
NEW AND WONDERFUL
DISCOVERIES MADE IN
COSMICAL EVOLUTION
(Continued from i>age 1.)
Are
Rehearsing
"The
ALICE COUNCIL MEETS.
iininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
A New Preparation of
OUve Oil
When you get beyond the time of youth
— when you no longer bubble over
with energy and health — when things
begin to tire you easily — when poor
health or over work or any other causes
have made you run down, you will
find Olive Oil a wonderful help and
Stimulant.
MENNIG'S
Olive Oa and Port Wine
Emulsion is DeUdous
Is 7^1 pure olive oil and a little old Port wine
—the best stiiuulant known. No drugs.
It has none of the smell or taste
cf the raw olive oil but is posi-
tively delicious.
Try some— It will do yoti worlds
of Kood. Get a bottle at yom
UrugKist's— today.
Orifinated ataJ Prepared by
H. W. Mennig Co. , St Paul, Mma.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Lawmakers of New Range Village
Transact Some Routine.
Alice, Minn., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — Various routine matters
were disposed of at the village board
meeting Wednesday night. The follow-
ing committees were appointed for the
year: Finance — Widstrand, Karrett,
Mewhinney. Water and Light — Mew-
hinney, Wegener, Barrett. Streets and
Alleys — Felt, Wegener and Barrett.
The salary of the recorder was fixed
at $50 per month and it was decided
to pay |300 rent for the year for the
hall in which the council holds its
meeting.
Village Attorney Scott reported that
he expects a decision upon the legality
of the incorporat'on of the village from
the supreme court May 1.
A resoltuion was passed appointing
Matt Mattson as street commissioner.
Dr. G. N. Butchart was named as vil-
lage health officer. Adjournment was
taken until May 3.
to Present
Merchant of Venice."
Gilbert, Minn., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — "The Merchant of Ven-
ice," a five-act drama, will be pre-
sented at the high school auditorium
in the near future. Rehearsals are
being held regularly. The cast la as
follows: The duke of Venice. Robert
Masterson; Antonio, Oscar Engstrum,
captain of the Gilbert high school foot-
ball team; Bassanlo, his friend and
suitor to Portia. Herbert Hoskings;
Gratlano, another friend, WilHam
Matt; .Shylock, wealthy gambler, John
Nolan; Tubal, his friend, Floyd Murray,
captain of the Blwablk team; Launce-
lot Gobbo. Shylock's servant. H. Ruth-
erford; Prof. Schevelghenkaugenblu-
menkeimer, Abram Kohn; policeman,
Flur Sullivan; Portia, a wealthy heir-
ess, Nellie Shean; Nerissa. her friend,
Florence Trengrove; Jessica, Shylock's
ward. Gladys Caine; Miss Abble S.
Threedice, a teacher, Blanche Fred-
rlckson; Polly, Portia's maid, Louise
Binneg; Antonio's mother, Mary Erb;
Mrs. Gobbo, Launcelot's mother, Mary
Burns.
TWO HARBORS MARINE
BAND MAKES PROGRESS.
Two Harbors. Minn., April 27. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — The Marine band
has been making rapid progress under
the direction of J. F. Tesar of St. Paul.
Last fall the band purchased a new set
of Instruments costing nearly $200.
These have been paid for through the
diligent work of the members of the
band and the hearty co-operation of
the citizens. A full set of uniforms
has been ordered, which will cost $300.
In order to pay for them the band will
give a concert May 5. 1911. Arrange-
ments are being made whereby the
band will give four or five open-air
concerts each month during the sum-
mer.
Take Over Vlrsinin Concern.
Virginia, Minn., April 21. — (Special
to The Herald.) — William McCoy, form-
erly manager of the Edward Finch
interests at the European hotel, and
A. J. Gould, a well-known railroad
man of this city, have taken over the
Tower hotel buffet. The hotel is un-
dergoing many improvements.
•
Dulnthlans to Spenk.
Hibbing, Minn., April 21.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The ninety-second
aoniversary celebrations of tbe Hib-
HIBBING BRIEFS.
Hibbing. Minn., April 21. — (Special
to The Herald.) — The Company "M'
dance at the Armory last night proved
to be a great success, the hall being
well filled and the dances enjoyed by
all those present.
A big Socialistic meeting was held
In the Workers hall last night, a very
large number being present. Many
matters of Importance were discussed,
and many good speeches made.
An important program will be given
at the high school by the members of
the sixth grade this evening in the
auditorium. The program will repre-
sent extracts from the regular work
of the grade and will give an excellent
DISTRICT NO. 18
ENGAGES TEACHERS
C. L Newberry Again En-
gaged as Head of the
Schools of the DistricL
Gilbert, Minn., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The teachers for School
District No. 18 next year will be as fol-
lows:
Superintendent, C. Li. Newberry (re-
elected).
High school — Inez Hovey, Wlnnlfred
Chinn. Millie Johnson, Margaret Feyer-
eisen, music director; Lillian Ring, do-
mestic science;
Gilbert school — Irene Westcott, gram-
mar grades; Ellen S. Nye, primary su-
pervisor; Julia K. Costin, Dorothy Ely.
kindergarten; Anna Anderson and
Ruth Gahan, primary; Grace Webster,
primary or kindergarten; Florence l>.i-
liard, primary; Gertrude McConvlUe,
intermediate. . „ , , . ,
Sparta school — A. V. Jones, principal;
Clara Holter, Eleanor Vail, Emma D.
Carlson, primary. ^,. , ..- ^ ,,
McKlnley school — Charles E. Bell,
principal; Donna Lycan, assistant prin-
cipal; Anna C. Ball, domestic science;
Lavina Mansfield and EUabert Miller,
kindergarten; Mary E. Haglund, inter-
mediate; Grace Wasley and Martha
Wiggins, primary.
St. Louis River schooi — Grace
Rhoades.
The following teachers have been
elected to fill vacancies for the school
year beginning September, 1911:
Rena Wilson, Gertrude Vail and
Elizabeth Wasley. intermediate grades;
Phllomena De La Polnte. Clara De La
Pointe Irene Fay. Nell Wait, Ella I<ra-
zer, Pearle E. Towle, Anna M. Currer
and Elizabeth Madden, primary; Ida
HUder and Alberta Hardman, grammar
grades; Mlla Tracy, music.
The following teachers have handed
in their resignations to take effect at
the end of the school term In June:
G. L. Leufgren, A. B. Carnahan, Orrln
Fried, Bessie Ferguson. Mabel Lane,
Inez Peterson, Genevieve Tracy. Esther
Selbert, Elizabeth Lively, Berenice
Zlckrick and Ella Kellogg.
the lunar craters, and said their truth
was now established forever. Prot.
See outlined the process by which the
planets had been built up out of mat-
ter once circulated in our nebula as
comets and said the destruction of the
comets was still causing showers or
cosmlcal dust to fall upon the planets
as witnessed In tlie celebrated star
showers of 1799, 1833 and 1866. Our
svstem was once literally filled wilii
comets and Kepler was right when he
said he declared there were as many
comets in the heaven as there were fish
in the sea. ^ . ,. , ^
"And Just as the planets had been
captured and added to our sun from
without," said Prof. See, "so also the
steallites have been captured and add-
ed on to their several planets. Even
our moon is a planet which cfime to
us from the heavenly spaces and was
never thrown out of the Pacific ocean
as was formerly taught by Lord Kel-
vin, Sir George Darwin, Poincare and
their followers."
Prof. See laid especial stress upon
the proof now deduced that planetary
svstems similar to our own revolve
about all the fixed stars and that tlie.~e
planets are habitable and Inhabited
like our planets which are revolving
about the sun. He said life was a
perfectly general phenomena In the
universe and that living beings exi.st
wherever a star twinkles in the deptlis
of space.
At the
street.
Nobby Bine Serge
'3 Winners,
llj
Suits $10
East Superior
^KWm iff F^ME
LSHIHER
i;
-iH
LAST A'c PIANO BARGAINS!
Call af Onoe and Make Your Seleciion
Come in and see Lhem — it will pay you.
Mehlin & Sons, slightly used, $460, now. .$325
E. Gabler & Bros., $425, now $275
Newman & Bros. Co., $400, now $200
Arion, $275, now $150
Lagonda, $300, now $165
Used Piano .$25
We are also giving a substantial reduction on all new pianos.
i'ou cannot afford to miss this opportunity to secure a high-grade
piano at one-half the ngular price. This is the greatest and most liberal
piano sale ever inaugurated by a reliable firm. Everything must be
Bold at once. We can afford to sell Instruments at the above price, and
you possibly cannot duplicate the bargains in any other piano store in
the world. All the abdve instruments are of standard make.
HALL-KRIEDLER MUSIC CO.
214 WEST FIRST STREET, DVLITH.
After Apipll 23, No. 108 East SuixM-ior Street.
t
imm
♦
\'
Caldwell's Electric Cut Coffee
XOTIIING JUST AS GOOD. PACKILD IN' LEAD SEALED
CANS FOR YOUR PROTECTIO-N'.
35 Cents a Pound at Your Grocer.
ARBOR DAY
IN SCHOOLS
Children Plant Trees and
Discuss Beautifying of
the Groudls.
Today is Arbor day aiid it is being
ob-served in all Duluth ischools. Trees
are to be planted on the grounds of
each school and exercises. In which the
beautifying of school and home
grounds by the aid of nature will be
di.scussed, will be held in each building.
At each school, the janitors have dug
holes for the trees to bi» planted and
the boys of the school will fit the trees
and pack the earth around them. Small
elm.s, maples, mountain a.sh and laurel
leaf willows will be planted. Bach
year Arbor day is observed in that
manner and much good \i'ork has been
done by the children la beautifying
school grounds.
arm»
Tex., to watch the United .States
maneuvers. They are Capt. Itobert
Mueller and Capt. Phillip C. West-
fahl, Milwaukee; Maj. Kilward O.
Barnes, Hipon; Capt. Hugh IC. I'omeroy,
Appleton, and Capt. Krnest A. Scott»
Ashland.
Reduce the Cost of High Living
Buv vour clothe.s at the "3 Winners"
for only $10. $15 or $20. These price*
mean a saving to you of from $5 to ?18.
r
Remember
Tlie Old Comfort
before coffee did its work?
POSTUM
is a rebuilder.
"There's a Reason"
J
EVELETH ENFORCING
CURFEW REGULATION.
BREWERY SALOONS
GIVEN DEATH BLOW
East Grand Forks City Coun-
cil Passes Very Stringent
Ordinance.
East Grand Forks, Minn., April 21. —
(Special to The Herald.) — The uncon-
ditional lease ordinance that will be a
death blow to the brewery control of
saloons in this city was given hnal
passage by the city council last even-
ing by a vote of 5 to 1.
An acrimonious debate, the most
heated the city has ever known, pre-
ceded the final reading. Attorney G.
A. E Flnlayson represented the brew-
ery Interests and Attorney H. A. Bron-
son the retail liquor dealers. The coun-
cil chambers were crowded to the doors
while many more awaited outside for
the result.
Says Saioonn Will Qal*.
Attorney Flnluyson stated that 37
out of the 49 saloons In the city, those
controlled by the brewers, will close
at midnight Sunday, for they mean to
stick by their stand and will not sign
any unconditional leases which the new
ordinance demands before a liquor li-
cense will be issued. The council meets
tonight for the purpose of receiving
applications for licenses, and the action
of the breweries is awaited with in-
tense interest.
CHILDREN'S HOME '
SUPPLIED FIRST.
WISCONSIN MEN DETAILED
FOR DUTY ON' BORDER.
Madison. Wis., April 21.— Adjt. Oen.
Boardman of the Wisccn.sin National
guard has Issued an o -der detailing
five officers to proceed to San Antonio,
ROYAL CORRESPONDENCE.
London Globe: If one were a!^kea
to speculate as to the sovereign whos^
daily mail bag was the greatest one
would hazard the kaiser. But no. Them
most will say It ought to be. On th^
unimpeachable autliorlty of a Parld
contemporary we Uarn that the pop©
Is tlie recipient of the greatest number
of missives.
The mail of his holiness consists ol|
the average of 23,000 Utters, nevvspa*
pers, etc. To go through this mast,
thirty-five secretaries are kept em-
ployed.
The president of the United Slatef
erceives nearly 1,000 letters daily anq
about 4,000 journals and books.
The kaiser's mail consists of 4,000
letters and frequently the same num*
ber of books and papers. Our kinff,
we learn, is favored with 1.000 letterj
a day and over 2,000 newspapers and
books.
The czar is not overworked in this
respect for a sovereign, his mail belnjf
given at 650 letters, etc., per day. Thi
kings of Italv and Spain have to deal
with about 300 letters each.
Queen Wilhelmina is still mor*
favored, with 150 letters, etc. Bu|
President Fallleres is still more forti
nate. for we are told that he receive
few letters and hardly any papers.
UM^
'^
Eveleth, Minn.. April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The curfew law is being
very rigidly enforced. Last evening
two vouths were taken into custody.
One "was lodged in the olty jail, and
after being well frightened at the pros-
pect of spending the entire night in the
bastile, was released on promising to
obey the law in the future.
GILBERT LE\T INTENDED
FOR WATER AIID LIGMT.
OUR
^>
Gilbert, Minn.. April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — At a meeting of the
that concerns
Trianon milk.
Friends of John Uno Sebenlus, min-
ing engineer and owner of the well-
known Trianon dairy, a model of its
kind, are telling a story
his family, the famous
and the children's home.
Mr. Sebenlus furnishes the children's
home with milk so that the little
guests may be assured of a supply of
the purest milk that can be obtained,
as it forms the basis of their diet. Not
long ago the supply of milk at the
Trianon dairy was not sufficiently
lage to meet the outside demands and
the consumptive purposes of Mr.
Sebenlus' family.
Mr. Sebenlus furnished the home with
all the milk that it needed and bought
milk from another dairy for the re-
water ana ii«i»t commission Wednes- ^ (iuirements of his family..
gVERCOATS
Are also Siummer Overcoats for
Duluth dfmate — Priced at
$15 to $25
They are, everyone a snap and
you should look them over, now
that you shed your winter over-
coat.
1 1
M
FLOAN & LEVEROOS
'^ri 225-227 West Superior St.
\
r
Ir-
Es:
II
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I
1
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s
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21. 1911.
17
LATEST SPORTING NEWS OF THE DAY
-^ !•-
-I ■■
COEON HAS
BETTER OF IT
Bantam Champion Proves
Master, But Finds Danger-
ous Opponent
BcGovern in Bad Way in
Final Round But Escapes
Knockout
season here yesterday. flKuratively
wearing their "mittens and tippet and
shiverins in the sharp wind that
whistled through the grandstand, bun
spots in the grandstand were mnrh
sought, and almost halt the crowd had
left l-y the seventh inning, driven out
hy the cold, after feeling assured that
Pittsburg had captured the game from
Cincinnati. The rain of Wednesday
had made the field almost a mire.
Camnitz. repeating history, pitched
the first game at home, and, as In pre-
vlou.s seasons, won the game, the score
being 9 to 1. Score: R- H. E.
Pittsburg 0 1 2 60000 X— 9 11 •?
Cincinnati .000 00 00 10—1 8 3
Batteries — Camnitz and Gibson; Mo-
Quillcn. Keefe and T. Clarke. Umpires
— Rlgler and Flnneran.
•
New York-Pb.iladelphla and Boston-
Brooklyn games postponed on account
of rain.
TRAINING RECRUITS
IS HIS BUSINESS
Kenosha.
Coulon had
Govern in
last night,
gerou.s man
round except
Wis.. April 21.— Johnny
a big sha.le over Phil Mc-
their ten-round bout here
but McGovern was a dau-
for tlie cliampion in every
the last. At times he had
fmfiimfm^
Detroit
New York .
Washington
Chicago
Boston . -
St. Kouis
Clovclanil 2
I'hiladelphia 1
Coulon in trouble. McGovern had a
great punch, but Coulon outboxed him
uH tho way and his boxing made it
iniiinssible for McGovern to land. The
crowd was all with McGovern. ana
Coulon was repeatedly liissed for hlo
rough work. ,, _.
In the preliminaries \oung Fitzger-
ald of Milwaukee bested Frankie
Wliite of Chicago and Tommy Walsh
of Fort Sherlilan .^topped Battling Hur-
ley of Milwaukee in tlie first ri>UMd.
The attendance was small, less tlvin
::0y Chicagoans attending the contest.
.Metiuvrrn In CaiitluuM.
Round 1 — Couon did all the leading
and started after McGovern at the
sound of tiie gong. McGovern seemed
cautious and kept covered up \yhito
Coiiion pepi»ered him with short ja'^s.
It vos Coulon s round.
Bound i — McGovern got a right
the jaw which staggered Coulon.
the champion was fast on his feet
got away before McGovern could
low up ill.-; advantage. Tiiere
terrific excliange of blows,
Games Today.
COMMENTS AND OPINIONS
ON THE SPORTING PARADE
M. STAHLEY ROBISOH DROPPED
LAIfiE FORTDBE IH BASEBALL
PhMadelphla at Boston.
Wasliington at New Vork.
Detroit at Chicago.
St. Bouis at Cleveland.
CLEVELAND PITCHER
WEAKENS IN NINTH.
'\-
to
but
and
fol-
was a
McGovern
having a big advantage in the round.
Bound Z — Coulon came back strong
and McGovern crouched and covered
up. Coulon landed repeatedly with hi.s
Uft wliile McGovern kept up a rain ot
bodv blows. Coulons round by a shade.
Bound 4 — Coulon was fighting like
a tiger and McGovern seemed satisfied
with simrt-arm jab.^:. Coulon had Mc-
Govern covering and landed right to
jaw. only to get a left counter, and
both boys seemed tired. It was an
even round.
Bound 5 — Coulon landed a left up-
percut which jarred McGovern's head,
McGovern swung iiis right and Coulon
landed another on the jaw. The round
was Coulons by a big margin.
Coulon In Had I'laee.
Bound «i — McGovern landed right and
left and drove Coulon to the ropt-s.
Tiie crowd was on its feet when Mc-
Govern landed an uppercut whicr.
ushed Coulon's Head back and made
m cover and resort to footwork.
Coulon used hj.s elbow repeatedly and
the crowd hissed him. McGovern's
round by a shade. ,:,,... ,
Bound 7 — McGovern landed right and
left on Coulcn's jaw, hut the blows
lacked steam, Coulon l»elng too strong
for him, and In the end liad lue belter
of the round. ,,,.., j
Round 8 — McGovern looked tired and
Coulon rushed things. McGovern took
a dozen hard ones in succession, but
Cleveland, Ohio, April 21.— Cleveland
opened its home season yesterday liy
losing a ten-iniiinp game to St. Louis.
4 to :i. Knapp had the visitors .shut
out with only two lilts up to tlie nintli.
when he developed a wild streak, pass-
ing three batters, wliich. with two hits
resultfd in two runs. West, who was
substituted, passed tlie next hatter and
the score was tied. Hoffman won in
the tenth on his double, Austin's single
and Murray's sacrifice fly. Score:
"P H F
Cleveland 0 10200000 0— :{' tf" 6
St. Louis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1—4 6 1
Batteries — Knapp, West and SmitV.;
Powell and Clarke. Umpires — Dlneen
and OLoughlin.
Mel Sheppard to Show Euro-
peans How Good Ameri-
cans Run — T5e Down-
trodden Ball Player —
Love and the Athlete —
Duluth's Chances and the
••Minny" League Press—
Minneapolis Has Another
•*Hope.
tf
FIRST GAME AT CHICAGO
IS WON BY TIGERS.
f>U:
ill
ChicacTO, April 21. — Tlie first game of
the American league season in Chi-
cago went to Detroit, 0 to 3. The
locals made tl.ree runs on two hits, a
sacrifice and two errors. Mayor Car-
ter Harrlsaa threw the first lall.
Score: _ ^l. H. E.
Clilcago 030 0 000 00—3 4 3
Detroit 0 10 0 2 110 1—6 13 2
Batteries — Walsh and Sullivan and
Lord; Lafitte and Stanage. Umpires —
Pc-rrine and Sheridan.
WILBUR ROBINSON.
■VN'ilbur Kobinaon, the old Oriole
catcher, is taken South every year by
McGraw, manager of the Giant.s to
break In his_ young recruit pitchers.
Robinson has developed many
Giant.s' pUchers. This year
particular attention to
guard, the $11,000
"Bube" make.s good. P.obinson is •en-
titled to all the credit. BoMnson is
one of the old champion Baltimore
team but has retired from
and is running a cafe
Every spring, however
with the Giants as
friend of McGraw.
(BY BRUCE.)
EL SHEPPARD'S trip to
Europe to compete with
the best of the middle
distance runners In the
Old World, Is gratifying
from the fact that Mel
stands as about the
greatest runner In the
world, and for that reason should bring
home to the dear shores of the old U.
S. A a long list of victories.
It would have provided a great
one that would have lived long
memory of athletic-loving
Charles Kllpatrlck, in
athletic prime
Sheppard over ..--^ ;:....,^^.,.,, ..„^ ^
of the
ho paid
"Rube" Mar-
ijeauty and if the
he
in
he
is
the game
Baltimore.
goes South
a personal
Japane.se player.s
versify yesterday,
from
10 to
Waseda
1.
un
i.
Pluladelphia - Boston and Washing-
ton-New York games postponed on ac-
count of rain.
stiff left
the harder.
which made
Coulon had
flashes
Coulon
he got in a
Coulon fight
the round.
Bound y — McGovern sl.ov.-ed
of speed, but seemed tired,
following up his advantage and land
ing repeatedly with his right,
McGovern responded with
dangerous left hook, but
tired to do any harm
with a big margin. . , , , ,
Bound 10 — Coulon tried hard for a
knockout and McGovern was running
in and swinging wild. Coulon landed
a vif^lous left uppercut that looked like
knockout. McGovern went down
did not take the count. He hung
with Coulon following up with a
of blows. Coulon landed re-
but could not put McGovern
but. but forced him to the ropes re-
peatedly. Both were on their feet
when the gong sounded. ,
Standing
Minneapolis • • •
Kansas City . .
Indianapolis ...
Louisville
Toledo
Columbus
Milwaukee . . . .
St. Paul
of thft Teauis.
Won.
Lo.st.
Pet.
.. 7
2
.77.-!
. , 4
2
.667
.. 4
4
.GOO
.. 3
4
.429
. . 3
4
.429
. . 2
•>
O
.400
.. 3
5
.375
.. 1
S
.250
JEAWETTE KNOCKS
OUT AL KUBIAK
Michigan "White Hope" Is No
Ka!ch for New York
Negro.
race.
In the
men, could
the pride of his
have met the great
over the half-mile distance
Wl.al a great and wonderful
would have been'.
England has seen .some of the won-
derful running of Sheppard. In tnft
Olyjnpic games Mel beat the very best
Mefrie England could send to the tape
and thev pride themselves on llielr
middle distance runners on the other
.sid.' of the pond. ...,.»,„
In times past the invasion of the
\merican distance runnprs has sel-
dom been succes.sful, though you could
hardly call Sheppard a distance Muiner
in the strictest interpretation of the
term. If he shows the'samf t;««»a»-k-
able form that was his in the last
Olympic games, it is pretty safe to be-
lieve that there is no man in the
who can show a clean pair
llie New York boy. , , , .-^ ^„„
Hi.« stride is wonderful. He has
about everything thai a runner ever
had. which is the most pertinent rea-
son why he is the greatest cinder path
man in the world. Mel has been on
ihe truck for a number of years and It
uiav b.i that he is not the wonderful
performer he was several years back.
That is the only question In prophesiz-
ing a wonderful success for the Amerl-
"^^'Imeri"! is the home -of the greatest
athl"t1)s in the world. We have held
most of the records made In athletic
i-ompetitlou, and Melvln
is one of the greatest
ever developed.
angry. Let Willie or Otto at Eau
Claire, or little Andy at Red ^ ing
call forth the clarion sound of pennant
hopes, and the boys around the clr-
cut say in chorous there is a swell
chance and they hope the team does
Y'ou don't catch them saying any-
thing like that about the White box.
They think just because we are from
the temptations of t!ie city, that we
are all guileful and prone to many
things far removed from the prosaic
ways of the cits of the villages une-
ventful rythm. ^, , > u
In an unofficial letter the Irish
orator said he thought there was a
very good chance for the pennant com-
ing here, so there is no doubt about it.
The winning of Eau Claire was QUite
unnatural and pray don't let us think
that It will happen again. Even
Thomas Heine Schoonhoven knows how
lucky he was. If Superior liad only
got started right, or had stayed started
i-ight — ah, hut there is no use of weep-
ing over spilled milk, even though the
dairies have a combination.
However, the times may change the
nre.sent season, and there may be such
a thing as Duluth coming through
aliead of the procession.
« * *
Minneapolis Has the Frenzy.
EOBG; BABTON has launched
the second "white liope ' Min-
neapolis has sprung this sea-
son. This second one Is not
quite as big as the first one.
but much more shapely and
very much more human. One
leading characteristics of some
"hopes" of the country, is that
they have been sometliing In the
freak class and have woefully lacked
the common impulse of being human.
Mr. Barton says the second Minne-
apolis "hope" Is a young man who just
naturally loves to fight, and this love
to his coming to the Flour City. He
so-
has
for
the
the
St. Louis. Mo., April 21.— The sudden
death of M. Stanley Roblson, the re-
puted owner of the St. Louis National
League club, may result In some inter-
esting disclosures regarding the state
of his baseball holdings in the Mound
City. It is quietly hinted that a cer-
tain rival club owner holds the St.
Louis club's note for 140.000, and may
have other substantial claims against
the deceased magnate. In short. It Is
believed that, owing to circumstances
over which Roblson had no control, the
St. Louis club became a party to
called syndicate ball, an evil which
existed in the National league
many years. ^ , .
Boblson and his brother, Frank de
Haas lioblson, who died several years
ago, lost a fortune in promoting the
national game. Frank do Haas was
the purchaser of the Cleveland Na-
tional League club back in 1S88. and
his manager was Tom Lof us, who was
finally succeeded bv Pat Tebeau. M.
Stanley was the secretary of the
Cleveland club, but in those days lie
did not have much to sa:.'. In 1SV»0.
when the Brotherhood revolt was
started, the Roblsons founi themselves
bitterly opposed by a rival club in the
Forest City, which was financed by the
late Albert L. Johnson, a brother of
Tom L. Johnson.
Albert Johnson finally
and the Roblson.s, having
large sum in maintaining
monopolize Cleveland in
world, proceeded to lose
in backing a good team
Forest City fans showed
little Interest. Frank de
time heavily interested
surrendered,
burned up a
heir right to
the baseball
more money
.n whlqh the
surprisingly
Haas, at tliat
In Cleveland
traction affairs, soon became Involved
a matter that compelled him to go
of
world
heels to
He
W. Sheppard
athletes we have
New
Jeanette,
knocked
giant In
York, April
the local
out Al Kublak,
the ninth round
while
a decidedly
he was too
Coulon's round
for
a
but
on.
rain
peatedly
Games Today.
M'nneapolis at Indianapoli.s.
Kan.sas City at Columbus.
Milwaukee at Toledo.
St. Paul at Louisville.
MILLERS SCORFoNLY
RUN IN THE TENTH.
21. — George
heavyv.eight
the Michigan
of the ten-
round contest for which tliey n.et at
the National Sporting club last night
Kubiak had an advantage of nearly
twenty pounds in weight, which gav-
him a temporary
two rounds, but he
that and Jeanette
own .way.
In liie ninth, after one
fighting. Jeanette knocked
gan "white hope'
tried hard to rise,
end of tiie count
lead in the
tired qukkly
had the fight al
first
. .er
1 his
minuto of
the Mi.Mii-
on Ills l)ack. Kubiak
but fell back at tlie
NATIOHM LE&GUE
Standing
/
Philadelphia
N^w York . .
Chicago . . . .
Pittsburg . .
St. Louis . . .
Cincinnati ..
Brooklyn . . -
Boston
Won.
. . 6
.. 4
.. 3
. . <>
.. 2
.. 2
2
!" 2
earns.
•
Lost.
Pet.
1
. 857
2
.667
•>
.600
3
.50'J
2
. 500
3
.400
5
.286
6
.230
Louisville, Ky., April 21.— Minneap-
oMs won the game yesterday from
Louisville, the superb pitchlv- of Pat-
terson and Slagle sending the contest
Into ten innings. Doubles by Cravath
and Williams in the final round sent
the winning run across the plate.
Score: R- H. E.
Louisville 000 0 0 00 00 0-0 5 0
MiiieanoUs 000 0 000001 — 1 9 3
Batteries — .=?las?le and Hughe.s; Pat-
GOTCH AGREES
TO MEET HACK
They
til em
terson and Owens,
ter and Weddidge.
Umpires — Bierhal-
Ganies Today
Chicago at St. Louis.
New York at Philadelphia.
Boston at Brooklyn.
Cincinnati at Pittsburg.
BIG CROWDSEES CUBS
WIN FROM CARDINALS.
St Louis, Mo., April 21.— Twelve thou-
sand spectators saw Chicago defeat
sl Louis in the opening game of t);o
lo< al National league season b> a scoie
of 9 to 5 The visitors used two pitch-
the locals three. Schtalte's home
men on bases in the first
feature. Score: ^^ ^.
ChicaKO 4100112 00—9 9 1
St Louis .. .0 2 0 0 3 0 0 0 0—5 10 6
Batteries — Weaver, Pflester and
Archer; Golden. Steele. Laudermllk and
Bresnahan. Umpires— Brennan and
ODay. ^
PIRATES WIN GAME
IN CHILLING WIND.
GEHRING PITCHES SAINTS
TO THEIR FIRST VICTORY.
Indianapolis. Ind.. April 21. — With
Gehrlng pitching holding Indianapolis
to four lilts. St. Paul won its fir.st
victory of the season yesterday. 5
to 1. The visitors scored their runs
bv bunching hits in the sixth and
seventh inning.s. driving Moore from
the box. The locals scored their lone
run In the sixth on a single and two
sacrifice hits.
Score: Tl- H. E.
Indianapolis 0 0000100 0 — 1 4 8
St Paul 00200120 0—5 7 1
Batteries — Cheney. Moore and Car-
isch; Gehrlng and Spencer. Umpires —
Hayes and Eddinger.
FORMER "MINNY^EAGUE
PITCHERS ARE BEATEN.
Champion Will Go to Chi-
cago and Close Terms
for Match.
Cliicago,
Charni)lon
ers and
run with two
Inning was a
Columbus. Ohio, April 21.— Every
Columbus player got one hit yester-
day and MilJraukee was defeated. 6
to 3. Marioa ^a.s .Knocked out of the
box in the 'sewnd ^tuning and Nlchol-
who succeeded him, pitched well
UiiMpg. Lessard pitched
111.. April 21.— Wrestling
Frank Gotch last night
wired Matchmaker Joe Coffey of tlie
Empire Athletic club that he would be
In Chicago on May 1 to clinch a match
with George Hackenschmidt. the i;us-
slan lion, for the world's champion-
ship. The big lowan also made It
known tliut he had an open date tor
Grand Bapids, Micii., on the night ot
May 5 and that
"any man
"GoLch,"
exception
take on
son.
after the
steadily.
Score:
Columbus
Milwaukee
Batterle.s
th^r^Uii-J.
R. H.
2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 6 9
(I 0 0 1 0 0 0 0—3 7
E.
1
1
*«
Pittsburg, Pa.. April 21.— Baseball en-
wltnessed the opening of the
^Sfesurd.anifc Bemis; Ma-
rlon, Nicholson and MarsTtall.
— Blerhalter and
irsria
Weddidge.
Umpires
thusiasts
Wet Feet and no fish is part of
fisherman's luck-
on your boots
wUl cut out the
wet feet. Try
it next time—
IT'S WATERPROOF
BOER OIL
HOTEL
HOLLAND
,,. European,,,
ABSOLUTELY riRE-PROOF.
Clnb Bre«k««»t, Popular Priced.
LancheoB and Dtsner.
Moalc at Dinner, 6 to 8 P. M.
BNTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY
AFTUR lOtSO.
BLUES SCORE FOUR
IN FIRST AND WIN.
Toledo. Ohio, April 21. — James' un-
steadiness and Hlnchman's errors en-
abled Kansas City to annex four runs
In the first Inning, which handicap
Toledo was unable to overcome, the
visitors winning the final game of the
series 5 to 2. t, w ir
Score: B. ti. a-.
Toledo 00010000 1 — 2 4 4
Kansas City 40000100 0—5 6 1
Batteries — James and Rapp; Bran-
dom and Bitter. Umpires — Owen and
Handiboe. ^
KEOGH WINS BLOCK
BUT LOSES MATCH.
April 21. — ^Alfred De Oro,
champion, successfully
title by a total scoro of
.;00 to 542 although outplayed la.st
night by Jerome Keogh of Rochester
in the final block of their match. Th«
score last night
Oro, 189. Keogh
30 while 16 was
New York,
world's pool
lefended his
waa: Keogh, IVA, De
made a high run of
De Oro's highest run.
San
Clara
Japs Lose Again.
Jose. Cal.. April 21.— The .San.a
collese ball team defeated the
he would
■ on tliat night,
said Mr. Coffey, "is taking
to the statements of Man-
ager Jack Curley, acting for Hack,
about his resentment and unwiling-
ness to match with Hack and Is de-
termined to pusii the Issue for the
closing of the terms of the champion-
sliip bout." , , ^ ,
iThe Empire club received a telegram
from Manager J. H. Herman, repre-
senting Zbyszko. the Polish champion,
olYerinn- the services of Zbyszko for the
final mat program of the season at the
close next Monday night. Zbyszko s
offer was to throw any three men tlic
club might select. The club turned
down the Pole's offer as he has re-
fused to met Mahmout and other
wrestlers in other cards.
FOUR-BOUmRD
AT CLEVELAND
Bert Kcyes and Phil Knight
Go Ten Rounds to
a Draw.
Cleveland, Ohio, April 21.— Bert
Keyes of New York and Phil Knight
of L,ea,venworth, Kan., fought a ten-
round draw here last night.
Matt Brock of Cleveland knockeo
out Hughey Luden of Scott in the
sixth round of a ten-round bout.
Johnny Sinclair of Cleveland won
the decision over Johnny Albanes of
Columbus in ten rounds.
The ten-round bout between Farl
D'^nning of Chicago and Fighting
Mungie of Cleveland, went to a draw.
Schedule Meeting,
The schedule committee of the Du-
luth and Superior Amateur league will
hold a meeting this evening for tie
purpose of drafting a schedule. The
mamigers of the league will hold a
meeting next Wednesday evening, when
It is v^ry probable that the schedule
will be formally adopted.
Poop Downtrodden Player.
NK writer is charging that
l)asebail players are railroad-
ed to the busy bushes. He
Iioints to the ca.se of Harry
.St^'lnf<»ldt as an example that
tjhineth like the raya of a
high power light.
Wouldn't you be downtrodden and
even stepped upon for about Jo.ooo
per'.* That Is what some of the placers
get, and Bill, get it awfully easy
get It so easv that some ol
don't appreciate It. There has always
been a bit of humor re'.?arding some
attempts to create soulful sympatliy
lor the baseball player.
It Is said tliat In the case of the
one time great Cub third sacker, sev-
eral teams would have liked to ti»ke
liim but came to an understandmg
with the Cubs. The writer goes
f.irtiier in stating that often p ayers
are sent to the buslies througli the
medium of the perfect un.lerstandlng,
tlip gentlemen's agreement.
There are some unpleasant things
about baseball. When a player gets
too old he goes down to the bushes.
But Bill have you ever stopped to
tliin'k of" the gink pulling $18 per,
who has worked at the shift most
of his life, an.i who su.ldenly meets
the stony-eyed boss and is told to
beat 11 at the end of the week.
That geek hasn't evcn^.a bush job
to go to. iie Is up against it, and
he has been working harder than the
baseball player. It Is hard for one
of the.se husky players to go back to
the alfalfa, but think of the meek-
eyed little father of six or seven, who
trudges home with a heavy heart and
a cold and empty larder. There is
trouble to be found in lots of places.
If you go out hunting like Kid
Diogenes. ' ■ ^ . .,
Coming down from the automobile
and walking closely around the sub-
ject under discussion, it might be said
on the third thought beat that the
ballplayer of today, littld absent one.
is treated about as well as any of
the rest of us mortals who are hurry-
ing around to keep the hungry and
evil-looking wolf from the vestibule.
• • *
Love and the Athlete.
EE, ain't It funny, this love in
athletics. If ho Is ir love and
some sweet little thing Is
keeping him away from the
football team, or the baseball
team or the crew, him be-
stowing affection and fudge
on her during the sunshiny afternoon.^,
tliey say that a guy Is more obtuse
than the unthinking bullhead to listen
to the purr of the velvet voice.
But hov/ diflerent when a felloy,-
has reached the stage where he Is
really seriously and determinedly set-
t.ng out to forget about the gay and
ftstive game of athletics. They can
hurl more arguments about this mar-
riage game making an athlete bet
ter, faster and stronger
tore.
Some seasons ago the
Duluth Boat club got
organized their ciew.
led -- -.
licked all tlie men in his little town
an.l knowing that Minneapolis was a
very large place, decided that he would
go there and continue the uplift work.
There Is the story of the Frenchman
who tried to cover too much territory,
riii.^ fellow should have come to Du-
luth and cleaned out our little c'ty be-
fore going to large and crowded Min-
neapolis. ^, , - , .»
Wouldn't we all be thankful If
Thomas Jefferson O'Rourke would pu.l
off his "white hope" elimination con-
test. If Tom doesn't eliminate some
i>f them speedily, the chances are that
the police will.
There would be nothing more pleas-
ant or more relUving than to witness
tlie battle of the "white hope" clan. It
they could arrange to have all the
fight.s on the same evening, it would be
all the better. If you see one dub
licked In an eveimng, you think noth-
ing of it. But if you leave the hall
after witnes.slng three dubs severely
ehasti.«<ed. you think with fond recol-
lection of the largeness of the even-
ing
Somebody will have to do something
with tlie horde of "hopes" before long.
They are getting too all-fired scandai-
ou.s. Thev are taking themselves seri-
ous, which is often fatal. Humor
sharpens the eye and even bates the
breath; seriousness puts a man's lamp.s
in the clouds and he misses a lot of
the good stuff.
The Idea of letting the "hopes fight
It out Is a very excellent one and here's
hoping that the Minneapolis hope Is
there when the soiree is called. TN e
had a "hope" in this part of the coun-
try, some time last winter; he seems
to have moved with .spring. He la with
us no more.
to the courts to protect his bu.slness
interests, but after protracted "tiga-
tlon he was beaten, and was compelled
to transfer the Cleveland club to St.
Louis, tliereby taking tie franchise
owned by Chris von der Ahe.
Part of Redtiotion.
once
tlon of the National league from ten to
eight clubs, and It left Cleveland opea
for the Invasion of the Americaa
league. The Roblsons entrenched In
St. Louis, laughed when they heard
that C. W. Somers and his friends wer»
ready to revive baseball in Cleveland,
but as Somers and company began to
score successes at once, the Bobisona
soon realized that they had made a
mistake. Their St. Louis team, th*
Cardinals, could not play winning ball,
and as the St. Louis Browns were soon
organized the Roblsons soon found
that they were up against a hard
game.
When John T. Brush of the Giants
handed over a $10,000 check to th«
Roblsons for Outfielder Spike Shannon,
It is said that the money enabled the
St. Louis club to tide over a crisis in
its affairs. Frank de Haas died a year
later and left the club to his brother,
who lost no time In making the bltr
deal wltli Brush, by which Boger Bres-
nahan became manager of tlie Cardi-
nals and the Giants secured Schlei,
Baymond and Murray.
Nobody ever learned whether Robl-
son handed over a block of the cluli's
stock to Brush to accelerate this deal,
and well posted baseball men have
scouted the report to that effect. But
skeptics have expressed the belief tliat
when Bresnalian was allowed to leave
the Giants there was some umlerstand-
Ing between Roblson and Brush.
When Brush tried to iiave .lohn B.
Ward elected president of the National
league more tlian a year ago. however,
the fact tliat he could not line up Robi-
.son dispelled the belief that the owner
of the Giants was financially interested
In the Cardinals, but the unexpected
hostility of Uobison to Ward developed
the Interesting fact tliat Robison re-
ceived $40,000 in return for his note
given to a Western magnate who is
high in the council of organize.i ba.se-
ball. It has never been asserted that
this money took the form of a brlf>e,
but that Roblson unconsciously served
himself uji to the atiti-Ward cHciua
This duel was a
part 3f the reduc- | there has never been much doubt.
sent
grin
Jack
after
than ever be-
seniors of the
together and
The members
f.f the junior organization laughed
gleefully at the efforts of the older
men to get Into the game aga:n.
The juniors argued that most of the
seniors were married men and for
that reason has been. The seniors ar-
gued that being sober and sane men,
iitay-at-homenlglits men, they would
row faster and better than they did in
the days wh^n undamed brain dtl r.o.
lend skillful direction to rested muscle.
You can argue it both ways acro-s
the board. If they believe that the
fellow won't come out, after they
have exhausted every argument, they
say ho wouldn't have made good, any-
way because he's married now. That's
what they said about one of the oars-
men last year — after he had refused to
coniA out. ,
On the other h.ind, Julie, the left
hand, If the fellow decides to come
out, and is married, they do say with
conviction and even eloquence, that
Charles, or George or Bill will be bet-
ter tlian ever.
It is a very poor rule that will not
go both ways from tha jack.
Geiting the Boys Riled.
ii
T
falon at
Baseball
SURE does get the press
workers over the circuit real
peeved to come forth with
even the gentlest and house-
trained suggestion that there
is any cliance for the Duluth
White Sox to trail the gon-
the masthead of the Duluth
park — either one
OARSMEN OUT
FOR FIRST SPIN
Three Fours Make Trip to
Oatka Branch in (Joed
Form.
Last evening the oarsmen of the Du-
luth Boat club responded to the first
official call of the season, three fours
getting out on the water. The raw
boys, not the rah rah boys, were
out in a lapstrciak and made a
spread over the countenance of
McGregor by the way they went
the water.
Considering the fact that last even-
ing was the first time out and that
some of the oarsmen did not know of
the call, the number of men out is
considered very good. Capt. McGregor
has been assured by at least a dozen
men that thev will be out the present
week so that "this evening or tomorrow
evening there should be a crowd of
about twenty oarsmen.
The bunch went up to Oatka. Long
rows are going to be the order of the
day or evening the present season,
and the very first night out saw the
following out of this program
It is pretty generally understood that
"Louie" Thompson will be captain of
the eight this season. This boy made
a great record last year at
as a reward for this work
general sentiment that he
captain of the eight.
From what little line that could be
gotten on the new boys last evening,
they look promising. Some huskies
have promised to be out by the first of
next week, and with some of the older
men as a nucleus some fours will prob-
ably be made up of green and experl-
^''soVr!"for April at the Head of the
Lakes, the weather has proved ideal
for rowing. If the weather man con-
tinues to be good natured and dish
out this brand of cheery sunshine
stuff there should be a big bunch out
on the bay this evening.
FRANKLINS TAKE LEAD
IN BASKET BALL SERIES.
Last evening at the boys/department
gymnasium the Franklins defeated the
^'luietons at basket ball by the score
of -Hi to 12. the contest being the first
in a series for the grade school city
championship. The two teams ran to a
tie in the regular grade school league
Reason, three games being decided upon
to settle the question of 8"Prernac>.
The Franklins showed superior team
work excelled in basket throwing and
also had a more compact defense.
Neu'leto^'"''' Franklins.
FhUn^ f Grou.seth
Nelson i'. . C Stafney
bISI -.-.v. .c Hestron
[i-iron^" . : ::::::::i:::::::::: : ' Qulliey
Catholic Quint Defeated.
Last evening the Twentieth Century
second basket ball team defeated the
Catholic school quint by the score of
34 to 7 G. Peterson at forward starred,
getting nine of the baskets of the vic-
tors.
JOHNSON WILL
BE OUT SATURDAY
Black Champion Confined to
Jail Bunk With Sudden
Illness.
San Francisco, Cal.. April 21.— Jack
Johnson, heavyweight champion, who
win next .Saturday complete a twenty-
five-day sentence in the oounty jail
reckless automobile speeding
ferlng from an acute attack of
trouble. The big fellow ,h"3 t-^'^^ ^°''
fined to his bed in cell I.J for the las
'''"ll'^w'as that big dinn-*'- I..'il^"'Lfi'rt
on Easter that caused it," declared
Johnson. "The judge told me 1 would
be paroled on Sunday and after 1 hau
made all arrangements for a big cele-
bratfon the sheriff said he wou d not
stand for any such orders from the
*^"wiiile the champion's condition Is
not serious it Is not likely .'>e will do
anv more tidying up of the jail stables
during his brief slay in the county
**^An^enterprlsing photographer, who
conceived the idea of taking moving
pictures of Johnson's jail routine,
given a warm reception by the
scrapper. , .
••Vou all get away wl.h your
machine," he said, ';and doai
coming around again. „ « _
Jim Coffroth, the fight promoter,
said to have had a half Interest in
enterprise.
were
ners.
in the points for the Nine Win-
for
is suf-
stomach
KID MiCOY HAS LITTLE
CASH AND MANY DEBTS.
New York, April 21.— Norman .'?ell.y.
"Kid McCoy." the former pugilist, is
worth just $C0 and has deltts aggre-
gating $21,470, according to a volun-
tary petition In bankruptcy file<l her'*
ypsterdav afternoon. Of the '^Ji^^^:'
sets, cloUi.iig to the value of $:>0 M*
Included. The renalning $10 is given
cash on hand. The .schedule of lia-
f1.-
and
outsiand-
as --- - , .
i-ilities includes, $2.o()0 for rent,
l.-jO for a l)oat and repairs thereto
$;{,30o borrowed money
ing notes.
and
JIMMY GARDNER AND
BOB MORA MATCHED.
Milwaukee, WiZ April 21.— Jimmy
Gardner of Lowell, Mass., and Hot*
Moha of .Milwaukee, were ye.ntcrdav
afternoon matched to box ten roumij
in .Milwaukee on April 2f!. tlie w.-islt
to bo 15t pounds at 2 o'clock on lli9
day of the contest.
was
colored
picture
doan' min'
is
the
W'heelei-s Take Game.
in-
A.,
tha
The Wheelers, inpmi)ers of the^
door baseball team of the Y. M. C.
yesterday defeated the Talbot.s of
same league by the score of 11 to J.
Both teams played some very good
ba.seball. the hurling of Williamson
the winning team being one of
features of the contest.
of
tl>«
At the "3
hold their
All Wool Suits $10
winners" are guaranteed to
shape.
stroke and
there is a
will be the
OPENING OF CHESS
MATCH BY CABLE
Exceptionally Strong Team
Represents Ameirica in An-
nual TournamenL
New York, April 21. — The opening
of play today in the tl.lrteenth annual
cable chess match b<rtween America
and Great Britain begins a contest that
may definitely decide possession of the
trophy given by the late Sir George
Newnes. The British players won in
1909 and last year and have only to
capture this year's event to clinch their
title to the $1,000 trojihy.
The American players gathered in
the rooms of the Brooklyn Chess club,
between which and the Hotel Cecil in
London, the British foams' headquar-
ters direct connection has been estab-
lished. Managers of the American
team believed that they had .selected
an exceptionally Btror.g team for the
event. In addition to J. F. Barry Bos-
ton; R. T. Black, I;rooklyn; A. B.
Hodges Staten Island; F. J. Marshal,
who went from Paris to London and
will play his game o\ er ttTe board in
London; L. B Meyer. iHanhattan Chess
club; G. J. Schweitzer. Brooklyn Chess
club H. G. Voight , Franklin Chess
club.' Philadelphia, and G. H. Wolbrecht,
St. Louis, all experienced men, the
team captain will have at his disposal
A W. Fox of Washington. D. C. who
played in the international tournament
at Cambridge Springs; B. Milnes of the
Franklin Chess club. I'hiladelphia, and
G. H. Walcott of Boston, for years the
New England champion ., , ^, , ,
Two other men, S &t. Melotkowski
and G. J. Scheltzer wdl also be ready
to play, should any ol the other prin-
cipals be prevented from
In the contest at the last
HUSBAND'S "YES " AND "NO."
Gets on Wife's Nerves and She Sues
for Divorce.
Loul.s,
cause.
.St. Loul.s, Mo., .vpril 21.--After fouf
vears Airs. Caroline E. .Schmidt, tired
of nearinir Louis Schmidt. tr'ia.surer
of the Blanke-Wenneker Can. ly com-
I any answer her only in "yes an<l
"no,"' and giving his taciturnity as *
has sued to divorce him.
Mr and Mrs. Sciimidt were mairleii
forty years ago and separated last
October. Tliev liave three sons and
three daughters, all married.
In the early years of their marrlap;o
Schmidt's Income was rinall and hi«
wife says that by making the chi!-
ddren's clothes and d >ing all th*
I'ou.sework she enabled him to accun.-
ulate $100,000.
Sometimes Schmidt, his
would not even speak at all
of ten days and during the
he never said a word but
"no."
wife saM,
for perio'ls
four year J
"yes" and
participation
moment.
HAS GATHERED !iEW
IDEAS ON GOLFING.
C H Bagley, chairman of the games
comnHitee^f'^the N<"-thland Country
club is back from New York with a
Kt of new Ideas that will be used in
the golf program of the Northland
club While away Air. Bagley Inter-
viewed some of the Eastern men who
hav^ bu It up the game in Gotham, and
the result of many of the Ideas picked
by Mr. Bagley will very likely
Busted
Many • man foei broke— la Healik
—then wealth. Blames hit mind—
■aji It don't work right; but all Vhe
time It's his howels. They don** work
— llTer dead and the whole system £et»
ologffed with poison. Nothing klUe
good, olean-cut brain action Uke con-
lUpation. OASCARETS wUi reUere
|Dd cure. Try It now M
CA8CARET8 I«e » boa for • w—^'*
treatmeot AlldrurrlBtt. Bltrre«t •eller
Ib tta* world. UUlioB %ozes « moota.
I
Howard, Farwell ft Co.
120 East Superior Si
W. J. ALLEN, Mgr.
Jl
k i
up
season's program
be
on
For
some reason they Just get that
The lineup:
T. C. B.
G. Peterson f-
F. Owen t.
G Anderson c.
W. Peterson K .
W Zimmerman, .g.
Catholics.
. . . . Ahearn
.L. Granger
Nolan
• •••••• Uciy
, Atol
In-
season
history
observed in the
the local links.
In the East there is even greater
terest in the game than ever before
Some big events have been planned
with the belief that the present
will be one of the best in the
of the sport here.
Nine Winners Win.
In one of the faste nt and best games
of "baseball played so far the Present
season the Nine Winners defeated the
team of the Big Duluth Juniors by th.-
score of 18 to 8. Cuily. Carson Light,
Garvlsh and Gallop worked in the bat-
tery points for the Big Duluths, while
Finkelstein, Wittenberg and Leltman
Wholosalo Jowelors
and Jobbers
Rooms 201-2-3-4
PROVIDENCE BLDG.
HENRICKSEN
JEWELRY CO.
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18
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
^:3C^Jv^AX;<x::s5<^^tX3X3»=^
Tomorrow
After Easter Sale
Spring Suits
The success of our Easter offerings
has spurred us on to greater efforts, and
now we are prepared to offer you the
best $25 suits yet, equal ro those priced
at $35 elsewhere.
You are sure to be enthusiastic over
their beauty, their superior construction
and diversity of fabrics.
Some a little more pronounced than
others, with dainty embellishments and
extreme roll collars, or sailer, but the
ever staple "tailor-made" is here, too,
as Springlike and stylish as you could
wish for.
Fashionable shades.
k
DULUTH.
MiNfi
Duluth's Best Cloak and Suit House.
7 WEST SUPERIOR STREET.
.!^^^/^^^.
NORTHiR^kTlilNK^ €^
TRi)i0i:s;:BAGSraisiE:^^
Wc Arc Makers.. ^^^^2^..=y^
80 Acres ^ ^'''''
\ River ( 80 Acres
A Summer Home— A Fine Farm!
One of the most picturesque spots in St. Louia
countj- — just the place for a summer home or fine
farm. Beautiful maple and yellow birch trees, with
1,600 feet on both sides of Lester river. Natural
chance for private trout pond, with power for elec-
tric lighting-, at a cost that's not worth meiitioiiing.
Excellent soil. Un good county road, 2 miles from city
limits. Boundaries surveyed. Positively the fhicst
and cheapest property on Le.«iter river. Why not have
cne or more of your friends go in with you? Price
$62.50 per acre. Torrens title. No trouble to show
you this.
C. FRANCIS COLMAN, Owner,
421 3IAXHATTAN B1J>G.
For Quick Results Use Herald "Wants*'
ANOTHER DROP prices
-AT THE-
WIELAND SHOE CO.'S
SHOE SALE
AV'omen wanting Shoes will do well to hurry clown to
this store tomorrow morning. ^Ve have more women's
siioes than anything else, but at these prices they should
not last the clay.
READ EVERY ITEM.
Women's Shoes — patent, gun metal, vici kid, lace and
button — values from $3 to $5 — a table of good sizes, at —
Another Table — same as above, but smaller sizes and
widths —
Two Large Tables filled with Men's Shoes — values $5,
$5,50 and $6 —
Shoes for Everybody — Come Tomorrow,
WIELAND SHOE CO.,
222 WEST FIRST STREET.
ASSESSORS
APPOINTED
Deputies Will Begin Valuing
Personal Property on
May 1.
Real Estate Assessment Will
Not Be Made This
Year.
Twenty deputy a.sses.sors will be
sent out May 1 to make the personal
property assessment of the city. The
real estate assessment was made last
year and will not come up again un-
til next year. The men who will do
the work this year will report at the
office of the city assessor tomorrow
morning at 10 o'clock for instructions
and the necessary blanks.
In order that they will have no
doubt as to what is expected of them
I'ney will be asked to return a week
from tomorrow to see if they remem-
ber what they were told. They will
work under the direction of Assessor
J. A. Scott and Chief Deputy William
J. Stephens. The deputies who will be
appointed are as follows:
William Pfenning, F. E. Adams, L.
PP. Weissmiller, Mark S. Smith. M. J.
Seymour, L. U. Young, K. P. Peters,
Charles Boerner, David Sang, C. C
Wieland, Daniel Cole, J. B. Dye, C. V.
Nelson, A. N. Mallet, Charles Nonne-
macher, H. L. Newett, R. S. Forgy,
Victor Berg, E. W. Lund and E. N Mc-
Allister.
business is dull and that there is no
Immediate prospect of an improvement.
There seems to be a surplus of nearly
all manufactured prjlucts and until
this Is taken care of business is not
likely to improve materially. The only
favorable feature in the commercial
situation is the excellent prospect for
Immense crops.
Amalgamated sold at $60.75, $60.50,
$61.25 and then at $61.1214. Butte
Ballaklava sold at $4.93% to $5. Butte
Coalition at $r€.50. Calumet & Arizona
at $48.50 to $48.75, Greene at $6.25 to
$6.50. Giroux nl $5.87 >i. North Butte at
$27, $26.87% to $27. Ojibway at $5.25,
Superior & Pittsburg at $14 to $14.12 >^.
Denn sold at $7. Red Warrior at J)8c
and eKating at $2.75 to $2.87*4.
* • •
Closing quotations on the Duluth
stock exchange today follow:
l.lHted StockM —
Bid.
AHked.
American Saginaw ....
2%
Butte-A. Scott, full pd.
D
Butte - Ballaklava
4 15-16
5 '8
Calumet & Arizona ....
48%
49
Cactus Development . ..
lie
14c
Copper Queen
20c
Denn-Arizona
6%
7%
Giroux Consolidated . . .
5T4
6 .
Live Oak Development.
18V4
North Butte
27
5V4
27 '^
5%
Ojibway
Red Warrior
95c
Savanna, part pd
1 1-16
do full paid
3'/4
Shattuck-Arl/.ona
17%
18'*
Superior & Pittsburg . .
14
14 V4
Warren Development ..
2%
Warrior Development .
4V4
Amazon Montana
1
L-kUtte & Superior
8Vi
do old
83c
86j
Calumet & Montana
32c
35c
Calumet & Corbin
20c
25c
Calumet & Sonora
6=4
7 1-16
Carman Cons
70c
77c
Chief Cons
1'4
1%
Elenila Development...
4>/s
Keating Gold
12 ia-ifi
2 15-16
North American
2
Rice Bay Iron Co
1
Summit
50c
51c
!^an Antonio
2%
St. Mary
9c
Sierra
1%
0
Tuolumne
4 15-16
5',i
Vermilion Steel & Iron.
z4
Total number of shares, 450.
GOVERNOR WILL
SIGN KEEFE BILL
EDWARD SONNENSCHEIN.
Edward Sonnenschein, a prominent
attorney of Chicago, is in the city.
Tonight he will deliver an address be-
fore the Independent Order of B'nal
B'rith, a Jewish society, at the Temple
Emanuel, Second street and Seventh
avenue east.
Mr. Sonnenschein was much im-
pressed with Duluth's harbor. He says
that it is undoubtedly the finest harbor
on the lakes. Mr. Sonnenschein is a
member of the Association of Com-
merce in Chicago, one of the largest
commercial bodies in the country. They
have been interested in getting some
legislation for Chicago's harbor and
they hope before long to be success-
ful. They also are planning to get
more municipal dockage.
Mr. Sonnenschein says that Chicago
has very little dock room. He states
that something must soon be done for
the present dockage Is not sufficient
to take care of the business.
"Get municipal docks when you can,"
was his advice to Duluth.
TO ASK A STAY
IN INJUNCTION
Railrt ads to File Appeal in
the Minnesota Rate
Cases.
St. Paul. Minn.. April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — When the attorneys for
the state in the Minnesota rate cases
file their appeal from the decision of
Judge Sanborn tomorrow or Monday,
they will ask the court to grant a stay
in the injunction that the roads shall
restore on June 1 the passenger ard
freight lates, effective before the state
railroad and warehouse commission
compelled the reduction.
This announcement was made today
by Former Attorney Gential Young.
If the court grants the request, the
status of the six roads, not party to the
original suits, will remain as it ha;?
since the Minnesota rates were lowered
by the state commission. The S'oo line,
however, agreed to abide by the court's
decision in the Northern Pacific case.
Under these conditions the other five
roads could not go back to the higher
rates, but would have to obey the or-
ders of the state regarding the lower
schedules. This state of affairs may
lead to further extended litigation be-
tween the state and the railroads, ac-
cording to one of the state's counsel.
COPPERS HIGHER;
TRADING IS UGHT
Values Advance as Shorts
Even Up Contracts —
Dull Here.
The copper market waa dull but
stronger today. In face of the holiday
and the usual "blue Monday" there was
covering by shorts who were disposed
to take chances on a possible decision
by the supreme court Monday of in-
terest to the stock market. Even If
t/e decisions are against the corpora-
tions involved the market will rally,
according to the views of many people,
as an adverse decision in any case
has been discounted and the market
would be relieved of the suspense
hanging over it.
On the other band it is claimed that
Ipores Entreaties of Nelson's
Friends to Veto the
Measure.
St. Paul, :Minn., April 21. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Governor Eberhart
will si-^n the Kei>fe bill providing the
popular nomination and election 01'
United States senators, desinte the
entreaties of the friends of Senator
Nelson for a veto. He said today
that he would sign the bill.
W. W. RUh, deposed custodian of
the federal building, with friends of
the senior senator, visted Governor
Eberhart yesterday and asked that
he veto the bill, calling particular at-
tention to the fact that in Oregon,
which has a similar measure, a Re-
publican legislature was forced to
elect a Democratic senator.
Minnesota Republican leaders see
in this bill the possible election of a
Democrat, probaly John Lind, to
the United States senate. Those
close to the governor say a dark pic-
ture of the possible workings of this
measure was drawn at the conference
which the friends of Senator Nelson
hud with the state executive.
FIVE YEARS FOR
"BLACOANDER"
Severe Sentence for Man
Who Sent Threatening
Letters.
Chicago, .\pril 21. — Giana Alongl,
who was charged wltli being "a mem-
ber of the Black Hand society," was
sentenced to five years' imprisonment
in Fort Leavenworth prison and
ordered to pay a fine of $1,000 by Judge
K. M. Landls in the United States dis-
trict court here today. He was found
guilty of sending threatening letters
through the mails. At a former trial
the jury disagreed and it developed
after the jurors were discharged that
only one had held out against con-
viction and he, because he had been
threatened with death if he voted for
guilt.
At the same time letters threatening
the life of Judge Landis and the fed-
eral prosecutor were mailed through
the Chicago postoffice and a dummy
bomb was left in Judge Landis' cham-
bers beneath the eyes of the federal
secret service men who had been de-
tained to guard the fedei-al building.
PRAISES COMMISSION.
Taeonia Man Says New Form of
(Government Is Snccessful.
D. I. Cornell, a prominent business
man and president of the Tacoma Com-
mercial club in Tacoma, Wash., who is
in Superi.,1- on a visit at the home of
his daughter, Mrs. Walter Higbee, has
much to say in praise of the commis- f
sion form of government as it operates
In Tacoma.
"It is undoubtedly true," he said,
"that it is much easier to run a city
on a business basis with a commission
plan than under the old system. It
also saves the taxpayers' money."
SCAVENGER LOSES JOB
AND PAYS FINE IN COURT.
John Larson, city scavenger, was
yesterday discharged by the mayor and
afterwards arraigned in municipal
court for a violation of the health
ordinances. He was charged with leav-
ing a dead cow on private property
within the city limits. He paid $10
and costs. Three complaint* were
made against him, but only one was
pressed.
MUST SERVE YEAR
IN THE REFORMATORY.
Alex Grabofsky, who assaulted Mike
Rotkovlch with a knife, stabbing him
In the head a few days ago in a lower
Tower avenue saloon, was sentenced
to serve a term of one year in the re-
formatory at Green Bay. He pleaded
guilty to i charge of assault with in-
tent to kill, vr'^en arraigned in supe-
rior court before Judge Smith.
Banquet of Soldiers.
Arrangements are being made for
the annual jcfiit banquet of the mem-
bers of Hector Swift camp, Spanish-
American War veterans and the "old
Company 1" soldiers, which will take
place Friday evening, April 28. The
affairs will ba held at the Sons of Nor-
way halL
CHINAMEN ARE FINED.
Restanrant Men Fonnd Guilty of
Selling Milk Below Grade.
Three Chinese restaurant pro-
prietors, arrested on
Milk In.spector Grant E
charge of selling milk
low grade, were found
court this morning and
costs each. Sing Ton
two places, was found {
two fines. The othei
complaint of
. Owen on the
which was be-
?uilty in police
fined $10 and
Huie, who has
fuilty and paid
s were Wong
Sing and Euchee Young. Chin Onfv
proprietor of the Mandarin cafe and
official interpreter of the United
States government, was with them to
interpret for them. Police Prose-
cutor Walter F. Dacey appeared for
the city and Attorney Alexander Mar-
shall for the defendants.
Saturday Specials at Bayha's!
These specials, like all Bayha Values, ars timely money savers for the home-
furnisher and represent more value for the money than can be had elsewhere.
They come up to the standard of the Bayha iDolicv of BETTER GOODS and BET-
TER VALUES.
Economy and Lasting Satisfaction
Make the ideal Gas Range tlie
Only Gas Range for tlie User
You can profit by the experience of others
if you will step into our store and let us
show you the Ideal Gas ran^e. We can show
you original gras bills of various ranges wcrk-
ing under the same conditions as the Ideal and
using enough more gas than the Ideal usee to
pay for one of these stoves in a short time. The
difference is in the burners and in the construc-
tion of th«e stove. Come in and talk this over
with us.
3-P/ece Kitchen Set-
Extra Quality'-- T T^
Wortli 6Sc, Special DDQ
This kitchen set is made of war-
ranted steel, and is heavy enough to
give satisfactory service in every
way. It is not a cheap "bargain
counter" article, but something that
will last and do the work.
Limit, 1 set to a customer.
No Phone or C. O. D. Orders
Accepted.
Special Sale, Guaranteed
Coffee Percolators
Tomorrow we put on sale a fully
guaranteed and thoroughly practical
Coffee Perco ator. The price of these
percolators i*. within the reach of all.
The special prices make them excel-
lent values.
4-ciip Si::e $1.48
6-cup Sii:e .$2.19
9-cup Sii;e % ... $2.98
A ^40 Sewing Machine for HO
Here's an opportunity- to save money on jour homefurnish-
ings and buy a $40 sewing machine for $10.
Ptirchase goods here to the amount of $150 and we will sell
yoti one of these guaranteed machines for $10. A complete
set of attachments goes with every machine. Guaranteed high
grade in every r.espect. You can save money by taking advan-
tage of this proposition.
Robs
alway
expen
ironing day of its drudgery. Is
s ready for use, saves time and
se.
your
Credit Is
Good
CONIPLETE KOUSEFilRNISHERS
Second Ave. W. and First St.
We Do
As We
Advertise
-*<
r
)
\
'mm'
i
i
— -' —
I-
' ' —
A
— •
-
Coats, Suits and Millinery
Embrace the Latest Ideas for Spring
at Popular Prices i
f
Gloves
In all the
wanted lengths
and shades, in
Fownes, the
Elite and Kay-
•ser's Silk and
Fabric Gloves*
Prices run from
60c up, in silk,
and from fl
up In these
standard makes
of kid. For the
little tots we
have Kid
Gloves which
will fit a 2-
year-old.
New Coats for Spring
The newest and latest ideas in high-class tailoring,
$15, $17.50, $19 and Up
New Spring Suits
Smart Spring models. The Yna't^rials, colorings and
workmanship are the best obt linable, and the price
range is — '
$1S, $18.50, $22.50 andup
spring MilHnerv
Hundreds of women will tell 30U that Albenberg's
showing of Hats at popular prices, is by all odds the
best to be seen in Duluth — and r o woman in justice to
herself should select a hat without first looking at our
assortment at
SS.OO, $7,50, $10,00 and $12.50.
Neck-
wear
All th.at's want-
ed, and all
that's new in
dai n t y neck
fixings. A most
beautiful col-
lection of Ja-
bots, Coll a r s ,
Stocks and Ties
In lace, lawn
and linen spe-
cially priced to
sell from —
25c Up
Hosiery and Underwear
We are splendidly ready to meet all de-
mands for all the different weights wanted,
and at the right prices too. We can fit the
very small woman or the one who needs
an extra large size.
New Jewelry
All that's wanted in the new ideas for
spring. All sizes of mesh bags and beaded
tags, as well as the new satin and velvet
tags — Belt Pins and Buckles, Neck Pins
and Hat Pins, in a bewildering variety, at
noderate prices.
•*mr'
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^pa(n«e9a«««aiiv«aB«B^B«
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD,
AprU 21, 1911.
19
POTATOES
AREHIGHER
Old Crop Nearly Exhausted
and New Tubers Still
Scarce.
-4-—
Between-Crop Period Brings
Advance in Nearly
Every Line.
OM potatoes are going up in price.
Tliey are now selling at 83 cents a
bushel retail, wheer last week they
Vore 80 cents and the week before 75
cents. New potatoea are a little more
plentiful but are still priced at 10 cents
a pound.
Green vegetables which are on the
iriarket now, are at about the same
mm-k as last week. A nice display of
H' w long radishes was shown marked
aT two bunches for 15 cents. The little
round ones are 5 cents a bunch as
fi-e green onions also. Tile leaf leituce
i>i>ked especially good today in fresh
crisp bunches marked 3 cents a bunch
Pieplant in fresh stalks is selling at
two pounds for 15 cents and oranges
and grape gruit remain about the
eiime. Strawberries are still two boxes
for Jj cents but are tine large berries,
Jucv and ripe. Malaga grapes are
Belling for oO cents a pound.
N.w maple sugar Is now In the mar-
ket selling at I'O cents a pound. Last
veek it was piiced at 'Zh cents for a
pound cake. The maple syrup will be
In soon, too.
Pawn on Michigan street, at this
ptriod of the year when old crops are
fivarly exhausted and the new yields
of produce are not ready for market,
exc.'Pt the produce grown in extreuie
t'juiiiern states, price.■^ generally pur-
eiie an upward line. The tendency of
%*alues this year is no exception to the
rule. Piicrs of nearly all sorts of pro-
d'lce are higher. Kven the staples are
auvancing, potatoes being higher while
cabbage Is soaring and onions are go-
ing forward rapidly. Prices of green
Btuff.^ are on a hothouse basis as this
riarket is now getting its green goods
either from hothouses or from ex-
tremely distant points. Relief will
come In the near future when ship-
ments trom the Central states will be-
gin. At present the produce crops of
the Central slates are not near matur-
ity while the tail-end produce of the
extreme Southern states is being
shipped, but not liberally.
Head lettuce is sharply higher and
the supply Is small. Leaf lettuce is
stronger in sympathy. California has
advanced sensationally. The supply Is
small and receipts are scarce. Spinach
had advanced and round radishes have
gained 50 per cent in value in the last
week or two while the long kind, which
are not in favor with the high class
trade, have remained stationary, Cali-
fornia celery is selling at steady prices
but the Florida variety is higher. It
is of exceptional quality and the de-
mand has been excellent.
Strawberries Cheaper.
About the only eatable that Is cheap-
er Is the Louisiana strawberry which
is coming to this market In large vol-
ume. The demand is not as heavy as
might be expected and receivers have
been forced to make sharp concessions
to attract business. Pieplant Is slight-
ly weaker also, shipments arriving in
increasing volume from Illinois. The
strawberry season is getting into full
swing. Mississippi has started to ship
and lower prices are expected. The
quality of the berries this year is un-
usuallV good as there has been an
abundance of moisture.
Old cabbage is being rapidly cleaned
up and Holland seed cabbage has hit
the roof, prices being unusually high.
Tills we?k sales were made at $40 a
ton. Potatoes are more active and
.stronger. The demand for this stai)le
increases as prices of other goods ad-
vance. So long as flour and potatoes
are cheap the average consumer is a
purchaser of fancy goods also, but as
the prices of the latter begin to ad-
vance he confines his consumption
cliiefly to bread and potatoes.- With
Hour and potatoes both advancing and
fancy goods considerably higher, the
consumer is now paying more for the
privilege of living than at any time
within the last two or three montlis.
Xew Bermuda potatoes are on tiie mar-
ket but the fancy price of $3.50 a bushel
are asked for them. lied and yellow
onions are higher and the market is
active. New Bermuda onions, big and
sound, are new arrivals on the market
and have been selling at the stiff price
of $3.-5 a bushel. The common table
rutabaga Is slightly higher.
Little Cbanee In Krult.
The fruit market is in a .seasonable
condition. Prices on oranges have not
been changed for some time and the
trade Is moderately active. The apple
market is stronger. The supidy is com-
paratively small and many varieties are
out of the market. Florida grapefruit
is higher and the demand is firm.
The cheese market is exceptionally
active and the market is firm. It has
recovered most o£ tl»e weakness of
some time ago. At that period the
forthcoming make of cheese was ex-
pected to be exceptionally heavy, but
the opinion of traders Is now more
conservative. The demand for cheese
Is excellent, the trade in American
makes being unusually large. The
volume of business in Americans Is
steadily increasing from year to year
although the foreign varieties do not
seem to lose ground.
The butter and egg markets arc firm
and featureless. The heavy supply of
butler is being worked oft slowly at
prevailing low prices. Eggs are being
bought heavily by cold storage houses
as eggs put in storage at this season
of the year are better in quality in
the following winter than eggs placed
In storage in June or July. The pro-
duction Is large. Although the de-
mands holds up the seasonable weather
Is having the effect of Increasing the
output and shipments to markets are
liberal.
Susar Prlceii I p.
Sugar Is the chief topic of discussioij
In wholesale circles. An advance of
10c per 100 pounds on all grades oi
sugar was made this week by all ot
the New York refiners, following the
advance in prices of raw sugar. Pur-
chases of raws at from $3.92 to $3.J8
were made at the highest levels reached
this season. April delivery was bought
for $3.98 per 100 pounds. Indications
point to a light crop of sugar In Cuba.
This feature of the market is the SO\-
ernlng Influence on sugar prices which
show tendencies of seeking higher
l6V€?lS.
Advices from the coast say that
sweatbox raisins have advanced to 4
cents a pound. Buyers are not inclined
to be seriously impressed by the news,
believing it to be a bullish move by
growers and others Interested.
of Fergus Falls, Minn., and Franklin
of Duluth; Mrs. Annabell Ellseffer of
Minneapolis, Mrs. Eliza McDonald and
Mrs. Edna Teer of Duluth;
Her youngest son, Franklin, is man-
ager of the Home laundry. Twentieth
avenue west.
The funeral will be held tomorrow
afternoon from the residence of her
daughter. Mrs. A. F. McDonald of 2731
West Third street. Burial will be at
Forest Hill cemetery.
IMPORTAXfllEETING
OF WEST END CLLB.
OLD SETTLER
PASSES AWAY
Death Claims Mrs. Jean
Stevenson at Her West
End Home.
After suffering four days from a
paralytic stroke, Mrs. Jean Stevenson,
aged 69. for the past quarter of a cen-
tury a resident of the West end, died
early today at her home, 1731 Piedmont
avenue. She was strU ken Sunday aft-
ernoon at 3 o'clock and never regained
consciousness, . ^ , - c..
She was the wife of Edward Steven-
son, who survives her. She also leaves
nine children, six sons and three
.laughters. They are: William of
("anada, Duncan of Superior, Tlumias of
Minneapolis, Angus of Duluth, Donald
D. 11.. 4-21-*ll
THE ONLY
STEIN-BLOCII
CLOTHES SHOP
IN DULUTH
Knapp-Felt Hats
Manhattan Shirts
Barker Collars
Everwear Hose
Han an Shoes
J~lny 7nan who cafi be fitted in Stein-Bloch
Ready-to- Wear Clothes
an^cfcVn6t take the opportunity to be fitted is not
pli^/.ng square with himself and his bank account.
STEIN-BLOCH SMART CLOTHES have done more toward
promoting: economy and improving^ men's looks than about any one
thing: in America. That's our behef.
Try on and see about your own
looks. You can be fitted.
From $20 up.
THE COLUMBIA
AT THIRD AVE. WEST
1-
At Its meeting this evening, the
West End Commercial club will re-
vive the public market agitation and
decide what steps will be taken, if
any, to have an annual banquet this
year. Other matters, such as paving
projects, may also come up.
Inquiries are being made by farm-
ers on the Hermantown road as to tlie
prospect for a public market at the
West end this year and the Commercial
club members feel that it is essential
that such an Institution be established
this summer.
Many who own small tracts of ten or
twenty acres apiece, have gone Into
the raising of garden truck. This they
take to the city and generally manage
to dispose of It without much trouble.
However, with a public market to en-
courage them, it is figured that the
iarmer and truck gardener would be
brought in closer touch with the busi-
ness men of the West end than ever
before.
President Hardy of the club will act
as toastmaster.
ThoNC Who Will Speak.
The address of welcome will be by
Mayor Lovell of Fargo; H. A. Bronson
of Grand Forks, will discuss "Publicity
for North Dakota"; H. L. Halvorson of
Minot, "The Public Needs of the State";
Louis Betz, "The St. Paul Commercial
Club"; It. S. Adams of Lisbon, "Manu-
facturing and Urban Growth"; F. E.
Smith of Wahpeton, "The Get Together
Spirit"; W. G. Nye. "The Minneapolis
Commercial Club"; Ex-Governor E. Y.
Sarles of Hlllsboro. "HlUsboro and
Train County"; J. M. Stewart of May-
ville, "The Functions of Commercial
clubs"; M. A. Lilea of Minnewaukon,
"The Commercial Clubs in Small
Cities"; C. F. Rathman, Jamestown,
charged with manslaughter in the
fourth degree, returned £. verdict of
not guilty. The Jury in its verdict held
that the company rather than its em-
ploye was liable for the accident.
NEW IRONTON HOTEL.
Plans Drawn for Substantial Struc-
ture in Cuyuna Range Village.
Ironton, Minn., April 21. — (.Special to
The Herald.) — Plans have been drawn
for a hotel, two stories in height, cov-
ering one-quarter of a city block. Du-
luth architects are working on the
plans. The hotel will have a lobby
i 40 by 30 feet and an addi :ional one 40
by 24, which when joined will be used
nue and Fifth street. A large and
beautiful porch is one of the distin-
guishing features of the cottage. Paint-
ers are putting the finishing touches
on the building.
Redfleld & Colburn, contractors of
Cloquet and Proctor, are putting in a
large s'tore building on Ironton avenue
near Fifth street.
DUNN COIPOX BALLOT
SCHEME IS REPE.\LED.
"Merchants and Commercial Clubs"; I for convention purposes. A banking
C. L. Ciuckhohn, "St. Paul Association room will be on the main floor, store-
of Commerce"; W. J. Medland, Jud, "Thei rooms, billiard rooms, tuffet. corre-
Village Club"; J. W. Bragdon, Mlnne- spending room and a maj.niflcent dln-
apolls, "Early Days of P'argo"; O. Sank- ing room and all the corvenlences of
stad, Northwood, "Market Days"; E. L j an up-to-date hotel. On the second
THAT BOY AND HLS MARBLES.'
Millar, Duluth, "The Commercial Club";
J. D. Pierce, Larimore, "State Organiza-
tion"; Leslie Welter, Moorhead. "Our
Sister City."
Blame* Company; Not Employe.
Sheboygan. Wis.. April 21. — The jury
in the case of George Thiene, the mo-
torman who operated the electric car
which went into the river on Feb. 9,
drowning three persons, and who was
Hoor will be the sleeping' apartments
and the hotel will rival anything on
the range and in some Instances
eclipse them in new features.
A road costlg the tou'nslte $1,000
was constructed after repeated re-
quests for assistance froii the county
commissioners had been ' urned down.
Ed Syverson, who has charge of the
local agency for Ironton lots, is com-
pleting a prefty cottage en Irene ave-
Eau Claire, Wis., April 21.— (Special
to The Herald.) — The Moncena Dunn
coupon ballot adopted by the Eau
Claire countv board at the special ses-
sion a year ago, and tried at the elec-
tion Nov. 8, 1910. Is no mofe as far as
Eau Claire count.v Is concerned, as the
county board put the finishing touches
on the so-called pocket ballot by re-
j)eallng the resolution adopted a vear
ago adopting the ballot, 21 voting for
the repeal and 7 against.
Real English Slip-Ons, $10.
The only guaranteed waterproof feath-
erweight garments made, only |10, at
the "3 Winners," 115 East Superior
strr>et.
Advertise in The Herald
"That Boy and His Marbles" will be
the subject of a lecture to be delivered
from the pulpit of Grace M. E. church.
Twenty-second avenue west and Third
street, Sunday evening, by the Rev. J.
H. Murray. Rev. Mr. Murray believes
that games of childhood have much to
do with the man in after life and has
incorporated a few of his ideas into his
talk.
This will he the first of a series of
lectures at Grace M. E. church by the
pastor. On the following Sunday he
will talk on "The I'lker."
West End Briefs.
Miss Esther Anderson of Twenty-
tiilrd avenue west has gone to Madison
to visit relatives for a .^ew days.
The funeral of Ole yritsall. ugel 2G,
who died Wednesday from blood
poisoning, resulting : from a nail
scratch on the hand, was held this aft-
ernoon from the 01s<m %s Crawford un-
dertaking rooms, 2118 West First
sircet to I'ark Hill cemetery. Rev. J.
M. Nervlg, pa.><tor of Zion Norwegian
Lutheran churili officiated. Frltsall
lived at 2128 West Third street.
The twelfth annua! ' churth supper
of the Second Presbyterian church will
be held this evening at^iColumbia hall,
Twentieth avenue west and Superior
street. Elaborate preparations have
been made for the affair.
Rev. J. H. Murray has returned from
nibbing, where he attended the annual
district meeting of the Duluth di.-.trici
of Methodist Episcopal churches held
tills week. Mr. Murray is pastor of
Grace M. E. church.
The funeral of Mrs. Mary Anderson,
wife of Charles A. Anderson of 2027
West Second street was held yesterday
afternoon at 2 o'clock from Grace M.
K. church to Park Hill cemetery. The
Kebekah ladies attended the funeral
in a body. Rev. Murray officiated.
Adolph Gustafson of South Twenty-
ninth avenue west has recovered from
his recent Illness.
Martin Thorsen returned yesterday
from a buslne.'ss trip to the Twin Cities.
The Lion drug store has moved to
the new Anderson-Thoorsell block,
2030 West Superior street.
iJohn J. A foe &SonsCo\
(fbrmer/yJohmnniMoe)
The West End/^
3(gDeo^f^rnen tStore
FARGO COMMERCIAL
CLUB TO ENTERTAIN
L L Millar of Duluth Among
Outsiders Who Will De-
hver Addresses.
Fargo, N. D., April 21. — (Special to
The Herald.) — The house warming for
the Commercial club rooms will occur
this evening. The club lost its former
quarters last September by fire and for
nearly six months were guests of the
Elks. Recently the new (juarters were
fl.Ked up and tonight occurs the official
opening.
liepresentatives from the commercial
bodies of the Twin Cities, Duluth, Moor-
head and several Minnesota towns, as
well as all the North Dakota cities arc
to be present. There will be a banquet
at 6:aO, followed by a social session. I
2/if Aft iV 6 Super/or St., Duluth.
Spring Is With Us Once Again
Xovv that the sun shines 'most every day and the
weather is getting a little warmer all the time, don't
you feci that you otiglit to get your Spring Clothes
on? — They are all wearing 'em now, and you don't
want to feel "out of it." Moe's is waiting for you
with all the newest and best of the home and im-
ported things for the new season, priced, as always,
quite a little lower than you can get articles of
similar quality anj'wherc else in the city.
In the Cloak and Suit Dept. We*re Ready for Spring
llone.^tly, we ncvcd HAD so fine ."ind varied a
lot of styles and models to select from as we now
have, awaiting your inspection! If it's NF.W — it's
here. If it's stylish — it's here — and if it's here, the
price is right!
Dainty Suits for Dainty Dressers
A\'e can't begin to tell you cvcything we have await-
ing you in our well-stocked department, but here
are a few samples, just to whet your appetite, all
at the one little price of twenty-live dollars, and all
worth at least half as much again, judged by any
other standard but Moe's. There's one model in
l)lack and white Sheppard Plaid, trimmed with wide,
black satin band around bottom of skirt and jacket,
lined with an extra quality of Poir de Cygne silk;
well worth $32.50, but the Moe price IgO'? Afl
Other models in Imported Satin Venetians, lined
with Poir de Cygnc silk, in all the leading col<jrs
and in the newest styles— clinging, ^O^ AO
Grecian effects. All at ^Atl.VV
A splendid black serge suit, with sailor collar, and
trimmed with braid, lined with Poir de Cygno silk;
a nobby and durable suit; worth not ^4 O C^
less than $25, at the Moe price of V AO««lV
If You Would Rather Be Rich Than Stylish
Come in and see some of the last year's models in
suits and coats, in really dressy styles, just a little
out of tlie present march of Fashion, but thoroughly
good and wearable, in all the wanted materials and
colors. We have about 75 models to choose from;
pricedoriginally all the wayup to$35, $'1 O /^A
takt
your choice NOW, at.
TWO ATTRACTIVE SKIRT SPECIALS
One lot of •ikirts, worth
up to $3.50, in blue and
black panamas, dressy
stjlish models, ALL at
$L98.
One lot of skirts, wcrth
up to $8.50, in serges and
Panamas, and heavy
worsteds, black and all
colors, ALL at $5.98.
Special for All Day
Saturday
Apron Ginffhams In blue and hroTVTj checks.
the regular Sc value: while they last, fLg^
ON S.\Tl RUA Y — yard .W
Limit, ten yards.
Special for All Day
Monday
Flnetta Percale In neat, new patterns. In
light and dark blues, grays and blaek and
white; regular %\zc kind— ALL DAY A^
MONDAY, at yard .* "^
Don't Fail to See Our
Shoiving ol the New
Foulard Silk Frocks—
the Newest oi the New.
And Now Decide on that New Hat
You can't do better than to come in and see
the two tables full of new and stunning
models (following the newest imported
shapes), which we are making a special
leader of at the realh' tiny price of FIVE
DOLLARS. These "hats would honestly
cost you at lca^t $8.50 in any other store in
the city, while the exclusively millinery
stores would call them a great bargain at
$12.50. It's only because we want to get
you in and show j'ou that we can sell you
everything you need at a great saving, that
we make this great special inducement our-
selves. We know that you will not be able
to beat this special anywhere, either in qual-
ity or on i)rice, and we know ^C OA
that you know it! All at ^•/•W
New arrivals at $2.50. $3.00 and $3.50.
.Ml the new shapes in blacks, from $2 up.
The newest inipf)rted models, direct from
the Rue Royale, Paris at from $12.50.
Rousing Ribbon
Values— .\I1 -silk taf-
feta ribbons, AYi
inches wide; in all
the wanted shades;
actual 25c
value, at. . .
Same, but 6 inches
wide; worth 35c, IQo
lie
Muslin Night Gowns
— Made of a good
quality muslin, trim-
med with 15 rows of
tucks on yoke; the
regular 75c kind,
Saturday (>f2^
and Monday. •riJXi^
A FEW CORSET COVERS to go at a
very special price for these two days. These
covers arc right in style and quality; nre
trimmed with lace and ribbon; reg- O/^^
ular 38c, Saturday and Monday.
ii>i)»-:ii'?Sf^ • , :*-''^-
WATCH THIS SPACE MONDAY FOR MORE BARGAINS
•uf. :'i*\ii'- ^j^,.i„..
■rm^^-
■^■^'fii,^ ■•■>
The Home Beautiful
Needs no vast expenditure to obtain.
Much depends upon the garden — more
than many think. Given a beautiful gar-
den, laid out with artistic care, and cul-
tivated with an e\'e ever toward the beau-
tiful and even the plainest, dowdiest of
homes may become a Thing of Beauty —
a gem set in the rainbow-colored enamel of
its flower beds and shruberies. The posses-
sion of such a garden asks little in mere
money, it demands mostly the appreci-
ative care of the possessor and a little of
that hard work without which nothing
worth while can ever be secured. A few
hours in the cool of the evening, a few
minutes of health-giving exercise before
the morning meal — well-directed toil,
with tools of quality; and the reward is
certain. But, remember, folks, it will be
too latic to wish for one when you see
your neighbors' gardens, a blaze of color:
You must start right away! Get the im-
pulse ! — however small the spot of ground
you call your own, you can make of it a
thing of beauty if you WANT to. Let us
make the start easy: —
Gardening Tools of High Qualitv at
Specially Reduced Prices:
U8«i'l20 WE5r5UPERlOIlSr.llULUTH.MIMa
IN OUR REPAlfl SHOP, IN THE BASEMENT, WE REPAIR EYERYTHING
To get the best results from u gar-
den, small or large, first be Hur<! your
toola are right! They say that
genius rises superior to defects in
mere tools, but most of us aie not
long on genius and need no handicaps
to reduce the quality of our wort. So
get the GOOD tools — we would sug-
gest the "Planet Junior," toola of
super-quality, which we have found
to give complete satisfaction. Much
depends on the depth to which seeds
are planted, and on the proper spac-
ing of them; so we would particular-
ly recommend that this should not be
left to chance, but, by the Investment
of NINE Dollars in a Planet .Funloi:
Seeder, be reduced to mathenatical
certainty. The seeder will soon save
its cost in labor and in inc;-eased
RESULTS. For the other toola
you will need, we have taken some
excellent lines and removed the
profit — these we offer to >-ou at pracr
tlcally the wholesale cost to us. We
frankly tell you that we do this
simply to give you an inducemant to
GET STARTED towards having a
garden. \\T\en once you have jiassed
the stage of preparation and be?in to
reap your reward In a harvisst of
beautiful blossoms, when once you
find how easy and how pleasant the
care of a garden is, we know that you
will want to go into the thing on a
larger scale, that you will still need
tools of super-quality and that you
win REMEMBER.
Garden-Planting Hoe, regularly
sold at 25 c, ITC
now A ■ ^*
Malleable Tooth Garden Rake, 12-
tooth; regularly sold at 17^
25c. now * ■»*'
Spading Fork. 4 flat tines, D-
handled, regularly sold 'I'^C*
at 85c, now W\»
■^:^^m^h^
■ rii ■■ k>^
- x^
^m »
T
/
r
<»• >i mantis
tMmJBuv
1
i
•^
SgSSSSSfOI i
M
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
THE PUBLIC MEAT MARKET
0 LAKE AVEME SOITH, XEAR CORXEK SI PERIOR STREET.
R\l*iE THE Ql ALITY— LOW ER THE PRUE— That Iihh alwaj" been the
Pnbllc Meat Market- method and al«a,- .vlll be. /^ «;;* ^,';*»""-
Mtrated thin fact to thousanda who have InveMlRated. It wl" P«>
lOl to ln\eMtiKate.
LinLE PIG PORR-Per
Lb.
ail,
BonelenM Pork Roaat,
JUT !b
Extra < holee Dry Salt
Pork, j'cr lb
Pork ChopN, small and le
I>rr lb
Krenh Pork SauKaKe,
ptr lb
Home «'«!oked Plie* feet,
]ur II)
Whole or Half Ham,
li.r lb
I'aufy Narrow Strip
llneon, per lb
lOc
15c
10c
. 8c
I • • • •
15c
18c
ioibs.rD""$i.oo
EI.f;i> liRAXD
«Hr.A^iKit\ 27n
HI I ti:k, l"^r lb..*'**'
YlinnoHota tream- OB^gt
er> llutter, ib ^nr^
Dairy Rutter,
I't r Ib
Peanut Hotter,
!•* 1- lb
18c
15c
18c
Strlotly Frewh
K^cKx. P' r Uoz.
l.ei; of Mutton, per lb...
Mutton Roast, per lb....
Mutton t'bopM, per lb....
I.aiiih Stew, per lb
Fancy dreMMed thickens.
5
RENDER-
ED LARD
ONLY
Small Hams, California
stvie, i)er lb
Prime St*er Beef Stew,
per lb
Prime Steer Pot Roast,
per lb li*'l.i- and
Prime Steer Family Steak,
pt r lb
Prime Steer Illb Roant, M^^/^n
per lb !«('. Hf and **- z^*..
Choice Sirloin and Porter- ISC
houMe Steak, per lb m.v%,
Frexh Ilanihurg;er Steak,
pt r lb
^^^^^^^HB WlHConsln Full
Cream t heewe,
per lb
New York Full
Cream Chee.<«e,
per lb
German Iland-
kae!«e, 3 for ....
;:j;'"ir'. i2V2c
Imported Emnientbaler
SwIns Cbeeme.
Camemhert Cheese.
LB. PAIL
OF PURE
55
12^c
8c
10c
i2i/2C
10c
17c
20c
10c
l.'.c
. . . ir.c
. ..lOc
Speeial Male of Milk fed Veal.
W hole f rontH, per lb 10c
Whole hlndtiuarters, per \h. . . .12'/<ie
(We will cut It for you.)
Veal Breast, per lb 10c
Veal Steak, per lb 15c
(.Western style.)
IVIILWALJKEE SAUSAGE AIVO RYE BREAD
PURE FOOD GROCERY CO.
rilOXKS — GrantI 557: Melrose 1081.
325 EAST SUPERIOR ST.
GROCERIES. LOW PRICES,
OIK COMBINATION' OF QVAIJTY
FREE PREMIV.>IS IS 1IAR1> TO BEAT NO 3E\TTER
WHERE YOU WANT TO BUY.
SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY AND MONDAY
EGGS— Guaranteed Fresh, 3 Dozen for
40c
(With a ?1 order or more of other jroods. Sugar not included.)
SUGAR— Best Granulated, 18 lbs. for ....$1.00
FLOl K, (will soon advanee). Be-.t Patent 98 lb sack $2.80
(Take advantage of present low price.)
Salt Pork, per lb 10>iio
Bacon, fancy, per lb 18e
Cocoa, Pure Food Brand, guar-
anteed, regular 30c can.... 19c
No. 1 Premium Chocolate. Pure
Food Brand, guaranteed, lb. 32c
Soap, Lenox, 7 bars, 25c; 30
bars for $1
Mince Meat, 3 for 25c: 6 for. .4.5c
Seedless Raisins, regular 12 Vic
— 3 pkgs. for 25c
Onion Sets, per quart 5c
All other goods are lower on an
average of -5 per cent than else-
where. All we ask is an oppor-
tunity to prove our claim. "Watch
for our Wednesday specials. De-
liveries made to any part of th^
city.
Butter, strictly fresh creamery,
per lb 25c
Peanut Butter, 2 lbs for 25c
Celery, large stalk, each 5c
Littuce, 3 large bunches for.. 10c
Ri^ie Tomatoes, per basket. .. .20c
Ripe Pineapples, each 20c
Pure Lard, per lb He
Milk. Van Camp's, Peerless, etc ,_
6 cans for 55c
••.\rKo Starch" 7 5-cent pkgs.. 25c
Kingsford's Corn Starch. 4 10-
cent pkgs 30c
Sweet Corn, (our well known
brand), per can 8c
Baked Beans, •"Our Leader" No.
3 can. each 10c
Hominv and Pumpkin, No. 3
i;tn. 3 for 25c
Third President of
ihe United States,
Thomas Jefferson,
said:
"When a man assumes
a public office he should
consider himself as pub-
lic property."
Flr«it Mini<.ter to Enisland.
Tlit> Ablc^it Cliunipioii of Incle-
Ijendence.
Flr.^t Vice President.
/A-^2(^^^l9(^^
Third reason for using the flour the best cooks
u.-A? — \\ hen a concern makes a product, it should
nicike the best product possible.
USE
DULUTH
First and Best Flour on the
market.
UNIVERSAL) ^^^^^ ^^^ Only Flour to order.
FLOUR.
Second to no other Flour made
in the Northwest.
Duluth Universal Milling Co.
THE FLOUR THE BEST COOKS USE.
COX BROS.' MARKET
101 EAST SUPERIOR STREET
Contentment Is More Than Half the Feast!
By your meats where satisfaction is sure — where you get the best
for the least money. We can satisfy you in both quality and price.
Choice Rib Roast, at, per lb 18f and 15^
Choice Milk-fed Veal Roast, at, per lb 15^
Pot Roasts, corn-fed steer beef, at, per lb. . .12 ^2 < and lO^
Little Pig Pork Loins, extra fine, whole, at, per lb 135*
Be sure to get one of our fine Hams, at, per lb IS^J
Catib Prlren.
We have something specially nice in Milk Lamb and Poultry. To be
pleased — telephone.
Saturiay Specials
Eggs— Strictly Fresh —
6 dozen ^1.00
Butter — Creamery bulk,
5 lbs $1.00
Pork Roast— Whole, lb. . . 10^
Lard — Strictly Pure —
3 lbs, bulk 35^
Hams — Sugar Cured —
per lb 15^
Bacon — Fancy, wide,
whole, per lb 18^
Fresh Meat s , Poultry,
Lamb, Mutton, etc., at lowest
market prices.
MEAT DEPARTMENT.
NAmNAL
CO-OPERATIVE
MERCANTILE
COMPANY,
321 West First Street.
DULUTH, MINN.
PIERSON BROS,
SAMTARY MKAT MARKETS.
107 West Fourth Street.
OTHER SHOPS:
427 East Fourth Street.
104 EiiMt Fourth Street.
All MarketK Have lloth 'I'hunen.
JOHN LOGAN & CO.
032 EAST FOl RTH STREET.
T«TO PhoneM, Melrose 22G5. 2206.
.\ew l>houc 3U3.
4 Cans Corn
4 Cant Peas
4 Cans Tomatoes
Can Tomatoes—
Per Dozen
Assorted
Per Doz.
$1.25
strawberries, extra fancy; Florida
Grapefruit; California Naval Or-
anges, sweet and juicy.
Florida Pineapples
Fancy Large Ones— Each
Green Vegetables in abundance,
and the best ever to pick from.
Wax Beans
Asr)araKus
Hothouse Rad-
ishes
Long Radishes
New Cauli-
flower
Endive
Bermuda On-
ions
Peppers
Mint
Pota-
Green
Fresh
Sweet
toes
New Florida
Cabbage
Florida Celery,
crisp and
sweet.
Hothouse Cu-
cumbers
Green Onions
New Bunch
Beets
New Bunch
Carrots
Parsley
Lettuce
Spinach
4 Lbs. Rhubarb . . 25c
Florida Tomatoes OCn
Per Basket . . . ia«lv
ICECREAM
THE
VELVET
KIND
'Tis made in the most sani-
tary and scientifically equipped
ice cream plant in the country.
We use none but the purest
ingredients.
We are ready to supply your
needs on order.
Special Brick Forms, Ices,
Sherbets, Frappes and
Punches.
BRIDGEMAN-
RUSSELL CO.
16 WEST FIRST ST.
Both Phones, 352.
Duggan Beef & Provision Co.,
505 East Fourth Street.
We have opened a first-class market and will aim to
sell you high-grade meat at prices that will save you
money.
40 Eggs, 50c
SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY!
CARNATIONS, 50c
Per Dozen
921 East Third Street and 6 East Superior Street.
^i^>^S^^S^^^^S^>^S^>^X^>^t^>^*^t^'
Beef
Rib Roast 10c and 15c
Pot Roast 8c and 10c
Sirloin Steak 18c
Porterhouse Steak 18c
Round Steak 12 ^^c
Boiling Beef 6 and 8c
Beef Stew '.7c
Lamb
Legs 1^*^
Chops If <^
Stew 8c
Veal
Leg ...
Shoulder
Chop . .
Stew . . .
t2%c
..10c
, . . 15c
...8c
Mckenzie & mcGhie,
.to 1-303 EAST SUPKRIOR STREET.
Melrose 778-9. Zenith, Grand 997.
SFEOIl ALS T@liOIRBOW !
98 lb sack Best Flour $2.75
49 lb sack Best Flour $1.40
3 pkgs. Best Corn Flakes 25^
3 pkgs. Best Rolled Oats 25^
Solid Ripe Tomatoes, per basket 25^
Strawberries, per box, 10^; best ones, 2 for 25^
Asparagus, 2 bunches for 25^
Wax Beans, Green Beans, Green Peas, Spinach, Fresh Mint, Water
Cress, Cucumbers, New Beets, New Carrots and everything else that is
in the vegetable market.
FOLZ GROCERY CO
MELROSE 234-254.
117 E. SUPERIOR STREET.
Gj)ANO 234-48.
10^ box— STRAWBERRIES, extra fancy, box. .10^
lll^— PURE LARD, per lb 11^
18<'— STRICTLY FRESH EGGS, per doz 18^
(Every Egg Ciuarunteed.)
FRESH TOMATOES, per basket 25^
15^ doz— SWEET NAVEL ORANGES, doz. . .15^
Sweet Peait
Celery ^Jti.
.Mint
Parsley
V.K« I'lant
OyMter Plant
Cireen I'eppera
Cuciiuibem
Xew I*ula(oeM
>ie>v t'arrolH
Kreneh Cndive
Spinacli
RadlMhea
Onions
WalerereJW
Sitnnisli Onions
Cauliflower
Wax Beans
StrInK neanii
AMparnKiiN
Xe« HeetM
New Turnips
Pie Plant
Sweet Potatoes
BAKING DEPT.— Red Cherry Pie-Special for Saturday
We elaini to uise just as good ninlerial in our baking as you do In
your kitchen, and ue are lust as eareful in the preparation of It. We
iiave no seerot material — f;o Into our kitelieii and see for yourself.
BARTHE-MARTIN CO.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS TO CONSUMERS.
WHILE THEY LAST
Special Prices For Cash Saturday
and Next Week Only.
Special Price. Reg. Prlc*
Rumford Xo. 1 cans Baking Powder, each 19c 25c
1-lb pack. Mule-team Borax, each 9c 15c
Pint bottle Snidcr's Catsup, each 19c 25c
14 tins Russian Caviar, each 35c 60c
10-lb boxes Celery Salt, per lb l^VzC 25c
Cocoanut, per lb 125^c 25c
Cocoa, J4-Ib tins— Our Own 12^c 25c
Santa Clara Prunes, 60-70 size, per lb lie 18c
Raisins — 2-Cro\vn Muscatel, per lb 5c 10c
Knox Gelatine, per package 9c 15c
Cox Gelatine, per package 9c 15c
Le Page's Glue, per bottle 5c 10c
Lye, per can 5c 10c
1 dozen packages Safety Matches 5c 10c
Toothpicks, per package 2c 5c
Mop Sticks, each 5c 10c
None-Such ^lince Meat, per package 7c 10c
Gallon cans Black Molasses 29c 50c
No. 2 package H-O-Co Oatmeal 7^c 15c
Dill and Sour Pickles, per gallon 29c 50c
28-lb bags Table Salt, each 25c 40c
5G-lb bags Table Salt, each 45c 70c
PALM OLIVE SOAP, per bar 5c 10c
6-lb boxes Silver Gloss Starch, each 45c 60c
Rich Gallon Cans Pure Maple Syrup, each $1.35 $2.00
Brooke-Bond, 1-lb cans Tea, purple 45c 60
Brooke-Bond 1-lb cans Tea, orange 50c 70c
Campbell's Xo. 2 cans Baked Beans, per can. ..... 8c 15c
BARTHE-MARTIN CO.,
102-104 MICHiCAH STREET.
Advertise in The Herald
A. W. ANDERSOJ
TWO MARKETS.
527 EaNt Fourth Street.
PHONES:
Old, Melro.se 1382; New, Grand 1809.
Lakeside market In connection
with Edw. Strange's store. Phones;
Old, Merose 111; New, Park 6032.
THE ZENITH CASH MARKET
14 West First Street
Pork Loins, per lb 11^^
Whole Forequarters Veal — per lb 7^
Pigs, 100 to 150 lbs— per lb 11^, 12i^
Whole Hindquarters Veal — per lb 10^
Fresh Killed Chickens, per lb 154^
Turkeys, per lb 20^ Geese, per lb 20<^
Round Steak, per lb 12J4c
Family Steak, i>er lb 12^©
Sirloin Steak, per Ib 15o
Porterliousc Steiik, per Ib 18c
Leg or Lamb, per lb 11^
Lnmb Roast, i>er lb 10c
Veal Roast, per Ib 10c
Ilams, per lb l^c
Pot Roast, per lb 10c
Leaf Lard, per Ib 13c
Rib Ronst, per Ib 12 ^c
Hamburger, per Ib 10c
Breakfast Sausage, per Ib 10c
Sausage Meat, per lb 10c
Bacon, per Ib I6c
All kinds bi Fancy Smoked Sausage, Liver Sausage. Blood Sausage,
etc., at lowest prices. GEORGE O. SMITH, Manager.
LOOK!
Specials for Tomorrow and
Ail Next Weok:
Shoulder Pork '| Ol/%
Loins, per Ib....... I &2^
Chickens, lb 15<
Brick Cheese, lb 15^
Pot Roast, lb 10^
Mutton Roast, lb. 10<
Mutton, Chops, lb 12^4^
Veal Roast, lb 131^1!^
Veal Chops, 2 lbs for 25^
Everything: fre«h from the country.
NORTHLAND MIEAT CO.
1029 West Michigan St.
GASSER'S
(Ifvou want quality)
Our special combination for
your Sunday dinner will be
Fresh Crushed
Strawberry
Ice Cream
and
Pineapple Sherbet
Sunday IMoming Delivery
DULUTH PROVISION CO
17 First Avenue West
Remember we will sell you the
best meats on the market at from
20 to 40 per cent lov^er than any
shop In the city, and we will leave
it to our customers to decide.
Pork Roast, lb 8^
Salt Tork, lb 10^
Pork Steak, lb 11^
Leaf Lard, lb 10^
Pure Rendered Lard, lb..llf^
Bacon, by the Stri[», lb. . .IS^-
Spare Ribs, lb... 10<>
Veal Roast, lb 8<
Veal Chops, lb 12<^
Roast Lamb, lb 10^
Lamb Chops, lb. .... . .12^^<^
Fancy Pot Roast of Beef, 10^
Best Native Steer Prime Rib
Roast, lb. . .12^.^ and 15<^
Native Steer Beef Steak 12i^<^
Fancy Dressed Chickens, 15^^
All kinds of '^ome-niade
Sausage, fresh and fine flavor.
Stock's Cash Grocery,
928 KAST SIXTH ST.
SATURDAY SPECIALS
Toasted Corn Flakes, 3 pk^s. -250
Toasted Rice f'lakes, 3 pkg^s...23c
EGGS — Strictly fresh, doz 10c
Pork and Beans (witti tomato
sauce, 3 lb. can). 2 for 2.">c
Apricots, regular 25c can 18c
Oat.sup, regular loc tottle 20e
Flour, per 100 lb... $2.75
Olives, large size, per quart. . . .S.'ie
Strawberries. 2 boxes for 2.'>c
DULUTH SAUSAGE CO.
32 West First St.
CASH MARKET
SATURDAY
SPECIALS
Pork Roast, per lb. . . .9c
Pot Roast, per lb 9^
Rib Roast, per lb ... . 15<^
Sirloin Steak, per lb 16^
Porterhouse Steak . . ..17^
Ham, per lb 15^
Eggs, per doz 17e
t'iiie lino of Fresh Sausase:'! —
iioiio better.
Try Our PURE PORK SArSAGKS
Watch for our ad In Tuesday
Evening's Herald.
Glias. A. Anderson,
732 EAST FOURTH STREET.
— Phones. —
Old, Mel. 1459. New, Grand 706.
SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY:
Pork Shoulder Roast, lb. . . 12 H t'
Pure Lard, lb 13 »i ^
.Ml other meats priced accord-
ingly.
J. L PROSSER,
112 EAST MICHIGi.N STREET
Both Phone* 3333
Maple Sugar and Syrups,
; Hay, Grain, Flour and Feed.
SEEDS?
FIsId and Garden See<(s a tpitcisXty
Delicious
Wholesome
PIES
You are sure of petting thv? purest,
most wholesome and delicious leak-
ing In Uie city when you come here,
and we really want you to try our
l>les. They are made of the
best fruits, fresh egg^s, sweet creamy
milk, be.st flour and purest flavorings.
If you can find a fault in our bak-
ing, we'd like to know of it.
BON XOIV
M We#8t Superior street.
Cookies and Jumbles
Liffhi and DelScions
ARE BETTER AND MORE DIGESTTOLE WHEN YOU USE
Read The
HeraldWants
THE V/HOLESOME
BAKING POWDER
It thoroughly leavens and adds healthfulness to these delightful
little cakes. ITie most delicate flavors are not injured. It does
not give a bitter taste. Get some to-day and prepare
A Tnat for the Children
CONTAINS NO ALUM
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Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
AprU 21, 1911.
t^«r ftwtiw ^F^ws
BRANCH OFFICES I
Jensen. 330 North 57th Ave. W. J. J. Moran, 310 Vi North Central Arm.
ARBOR DAY
IS TOO EARLY
West Duluth School Children
Postpone Their Tree
Planting.
Altliough toiiay is officially Arbor
and Bird day in Minnesota and is the
time whin the school children are ex-
pected to plant trees. Principals Foster
and House of the Irving and Ely
soho.>l.s at West DuUitli. say that the
date is too early lor Northern Minne-
Bota. or at least for Duluth.
With the exception of a few trees
set out at the Fairmont school by the
children, there was no tree planting to
epeak of among the West Duluth
school children today. The season is
about two weeks tuo earlv for most
kinds of trees and shrubbery.
At the Ely school, a consignment of
about :.'00 apple trees will be received
■within the next two weeks. The trees
have been ordered and paid for by the
Students and are held at the nursery
until it is time for the planting to
begin. Tlie trees will be distributed
among the ciiildren to be planted at
liume.
The same idea will be worked out
among the ciiildren of the Irving
Bchool on a more extensive scale. Not
only apple trees, but various other
kinds of shrubbery, currant bushes,
etc.. will be planted and the children
encourage. 1 In starting a Home garden.
However, in observance of the official
JVrbor day. all of the West Duluth
B.-hools held exercises. In most cases,
each room had a program of its own.
At the Fairmont school there was a
Joint program in which children from
all the rooms participated.
IMPORTANT MBItInG
OF WEST DILITH ( LI B.
rantile company was fined $10 and costs
for niisbianding of a product claimed
to be Iwmon extract
Mr. Sibbald said today that food con-
ditions at West Duluth were as good
as could be expected.
— ♦
Infant Girl Dies.
The 3-months-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Super died yesterday
at the family residence, 302 Soutli
Sixty-second avenue west. The fun-
eral wlll_be held tomorrow morning
from tlieT'olish Catholic church, with
interment in the Polish cemetery.
An important meeting of the West
Duluth Commercial club will be heid
this evening.
Tiie communication, received by the
council from an attorney of the S.>o
road, stating tiiat a station would be
built at West Duluth, as soon as travel
•warranted its erection will be dis-
cusised. There will proliably he some
discussion as to the interpretation of
the letter. Some believe it to be a
promise of a new depot and othcr.s
eay that it shows the attitude of the
road to be one of indifference in re-
gird to living up to the agreement of
tie charter of the old Wisconsin Cen-
tral road, since incorporated in the Soo
8} stem.
Euually important will be the dis-
cission of the estimated cost of the
city engineer for the grading, gravel-
ing and guttering of the new Getchell
road, which is placed at $•.'!', 667. 40. Thi.s
■*vas much in excess of what the club
exjiected and may have a tendency to
h"ld up the improvement for a time.
Other matters may also be taken ui).
(iOOD SPEAKEUS FOR
NEW DlLlTH BANQUET.
A good program is being arranged
for the first annual banquet of the Nt w
X>'.iliith Commercial club, which will be
b»ld Thursday evening of next week at
Kulaszewicz haU
W. A. McGonagle, Mayor M. B. Cul-
lum, T. T. Hudson, C. E. Lovett. Mayor
Frank R. Crumpton of Superior and
others will be among the speakers who
•will take part in the program. Tne
r.usical part of thes,entertainment will
be well taken care of.
Special accommodations have been
provided for visitors, and arrangements
r.ave been made for a special train on
the Northern Pacific line, leaving l>u-
luth at 7 o'clock in the evening and
returning after the affair Is over.
Covers will be laid for about 200.
Peter Knudsen is president of the
club: t". C. Tower, treasurer, and F. W.
Damkroeger, secretary.
WEST DULFTH BOYS
AT SW IMMIXG PARTY.
Tl'.irtv-five boys from the Ely school
■v^•e^e entertained at a swimming party
at the Y. M. C. A. gynmasium last even-
ing. Aftf-r the water festival, the young
sters were escorted to the boys' de-
partment building, where an entertain-
ment had been provided for them.
IWO WEST Dl UTH
GROCERY MEN FINED.
Injured in Tunnel.
Steve Bereflch, a laborer in one of
the Canadian Northern camps at Short
l^ina Park, was seriously injured this
morning while engaged in work near
the tunnel cut. Debris dislodged by a
blast fell on him and cruslied his chest
and back. No bones were broken, but
he may be injured internally. He was
brought to St. Marys hospital.
West Dulutii Briefs.
Fine shoes and best repairing at
lowest prices. Gust Johnson. 5701
Grand avenu*'.
Charles Spinard has returned from
Virginia.
E. Z. Nelson is in Chicago on a busi-
ness trip.
A social will be held this evening at
Our Savior's Norwegian Lutheran
church under the auspices of the
Ladies' Aid society.
George Ross has returned from
Clo<iuet.
The Girls' Society of Our Saviors
Norwegian church will be entertained
tomorrow afternoon at the home of
Mrs. J. A. Rjerke. 622 North Fifty-
ninth avenue west.
George Smith' of Cross River, Minn.,
is a West Duluth business visitor today.
Th«» employes of the engine and
train departments of the Duluth. Mis-
sabe & Northern railway held a
smoker last evening at the Proctor
V. M. C. A. building. .V program of
speeches and music was given.
A meeting of the West Duluth So-
cialist club will be held at Victor hall
at 2:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon. Ar-
rangements for the annual May day
celebration of the club will be made
at tills time.
Mr. and Mrs. John Isaacson enter-
tained last evening at their home, 216
South Slxtv-third avenue west, at a
farewell reception for their daughter,
Mrs. Filmore Thompson of Estelline,
S. D., who will leave for her home
Monday after a visit for the past few
months in West Duluth.
Watch repairing. Hurst. W. Duluth.
. «
Packing and Shipping.
To pack furniture properly for ship-
ping is an art. We guarantee our pack-
ing. Estimates of cost furnished free.
Call up either 'plione 492.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE CO.,
210 West Superior Street.
FISHERMEN,
ATTENTION !
The Duluth & >orthern Minne-.
HntH Railway will begin running Itn
Sunday train on .Xpiil TA, and >vill
run it ever.v Sunday during the ttea-
Mon If trafl'lc UemnndM It. For the
prcMent the train will run onl.r an
fur aM linx liake. You ran reach
the Knife, (iooMeherr.v, Split Itock,
Header and other river** well known
to flnbermen, by thlsi train, which
eonnectM with U. & I. R. train* lenv-
iuK Duluth at 7:au a. m. and ar-
Ivlng at Duluth at U:10 p. nt.
NOT RECOGNIZED.
Two West Duluth grocerymen were
arre.«ted and fined today for selling
Impure and misbranded food products.
The arrests were made at th'e instiga-
tion of A. D. Sibbald, state food in-
spector, and the warrants were issued
bv Judge J. B. Flack of the West Du-
luth justice court.
A. P. Wick of Johnson & Jermstad
paid a fine of $10 and costs for sell-
ing cherries containing coal tar dye
products.
W. Holm of the West Duluth Mer-
Progressive Republicans Get a Set-
back in the Senate.
■U'ashington, April 21. — Progres-
sive Republicanism in the senate re-
ceived a serious setback today when
by a vote of 7 to 4 the Republican
committee on committees decided
not to recognize the Progressive Re
publicans lormally as an organiza-
tion.
The Independent Ferry Boats
Will Commence Running on
Regular Time Saturday
Morning, April 22nd.
TAKES MONTANA FOSFTION.
Master Carpenter of Oreat Northern
Division Goes West.
Brookston, Minn., April 21. — (Spe-
cial to The Herald.) — Joseph Lind-
say, who has been master carpenter
of the Lake Superior division of the
Cireat Northern railway for some
years, has been promoted to the po-
.•.•/.•.
v.' ■".•si:
m
fc^^:■::1:
m
r-*«:^
Luscious Tree-Ripened Fi^
It is not sufficient to know that orangey arp
the most healthful of all fruits. It fs"q«tt^ ^
important to know the ^ind of oranges tkat are
most healthful and most palatable. The very
finest California oranges are now packed undCt the '
label "Sunkist." Please serve "Sunkist" oranges
at breakfast tomorrow and learn the superiority of
tree-ripened, seedless, fiberless oranges over the
commonplace kind. Don't fail to save the wrappers.
There is so much "meat" and nourishment in
"Sunkist" oranges and so little wa.ste that, in addi-
tion to their extra fine flavor and goodness, they are
really the most economical oranges to buy.
^'Sunkist'' Lemons Juiciest
Lemons differ as much as orangres. Pithy, thick-slcinned
lemons contain very little juice. You waste money when you
buy them. Please aslc for "Sunkist" Lemons and note how
uniformly •ound each one is, and what a small percent-
a£e is skin and fiber.
Get This Valuable Orange Spoon
Save 12 "Sunkist" oranee (or lemon) wrappers
and send them to as, with 12 cents to pay charges,
packing. etc., and we will present you with a eenu-
Ine Rogers Orange Spoon, of beautiful design and
highest quality. Begin «aving wrappers today. If
you desire more than one, send 12 "Sunkist" wrap-
pers and 12 cents for each additional spoon. In remit-
ting, please send one-cent stamps when the amount is less
than 24 cents; on amounts above 24 cents, we prefer money order,
express order or bank draft. Don't send cash. We will be glad
to send you complete list of valuable premiums. ^« honor both
'Sunkist" and "Red Ball" wrappers tor premiums. (32)
,l1|j/ California Fruit Growers' Exchange
jy 34 Oark Street Chicago* IlL
mm
CHICKEN
WIRE
Xow is the time you want fenc-
ing— we carry the best grade of
galvanized chicken fence.
2-ft. wide, per roll $1.50
3-ft. wide, per roll $2.25
4-ft. wide, per roll $3.00
5-ft. wide, per roll $3.75
6-ft. wide, per roll $4.50
In yard fencing we have the
neatest pattern on the market at
lOf', IZf* and 16f per linial foot.
Buy your fencing from us and save
money.
WIELAND
& WADE,
329-331 Central Avenue.
Botii 'Phones.
sition of assistant superintendent and
trainmaster of a Montana division.
Mr. Lindsay will have his headquar-
ters at Great Falls, and he left the
first of the week to assume his new
position. Mr. Zienke succeeds Mr.
Lindsay.
Thomas Needham returned Tues-
day evening frotn Duluth, where he
spent a week at his home. Tom was
slated for a position in the Great
Northern dispatcher's ofTice at Kelley
I..ake, but he decided he would be
better satisfied with a situation here
and is again working the first trick
at the local station.
Moving Day.
The moving of furniture requires ex-
perienced men to be handled properly.
\Ve can ftirnish them. Also covered,
padded vans.
DULUTH VAN & STORAGE CO.,
210 West Superior Street.
Both 'phones 492.
Printing and BonkbindluK
Thwing-Stewart Co. Both 'phones. 114.
^
Keyrs Honored Uy SociallMtM.
John A. Keyes, an attorney of Du-
luth, has been Ijonored by being elected
a member of the national Socialist
committee by a referendum vote. Tlie
Socialist party does not choose Its
national committee In tlae same man-
ner as the other two leading parties
but the party members decide who the
committeemen shall be.
Furniture I'pbolHtered, HrlceM
Cameron, the upholsterer,
■phone.
RlKht.
either
SueH Mlalnte Company.
For injuries alleged to have been
sustained while at work In the Adria-
tic mine, Emil Alio, by his guardian,
Charles Aho, Is suing the Adriatic
Mining company for $2,500. The action
was begun this morning in district
court before Judge J. D. Ensign.
SnMpeoted of Theft.
Charles Hoffman was arrested this
morning on a charge of drunkenness.
He is suspected of having stolen a
watch at New Duluth and the case is
being investigated.
♦
rigrar Sale KndM Saturday.
Last chance to get a box of your
favorites at cost. Alcazar. J3.65 per box.
Smokery, 31'J West Superior street.
»
Drayman Is Arrested.
Mike Goldman, a drayman, was ar-
rested by Patrolman Montgomery this
morning on the charge of violating
the draying ordinance, whicli regu-
lates the place." the draymen may have
their stands. It is alleged that Gold-
man refused to get off Michigan street
and stand on Fifth avenue. He entered
a plea of not quilty and will be tried
this afternoon.
Careless With Air Rifle.
The police went to Tenth avenue
west and Fourth street late yesterday
afternoon in answer to a call that a
boy was trying to shoot somebody.
When they reached the place the
voungster had disappeared. It appeared
"that he had fired at some windows
with an air rifle.
♦
SIlpM on Banana Peellne.
Patrolman George Wood is confined
to his home, the victim of a banana
peeling. While patrollng his beat on
Superior street last evening be.tween
Fourth and Fifth avenues west, he
slipped on the peel and sprained his
ankle. H had to be taken home in a
cab, being unable to walk.
«
Smith Case Concluded.
Arguments were concluded in United
States court today in the case of Han-
sen E. Smith and creditors of the Mer-
chants' bank against Thomas A. Mer-
ritt F. L Barrows, D. L. Falrchild
and' H. H. Phelps. The suit involves
the validitv of a transfer of a three-
quarters interest in forty acres of land
on the Mesaba range by the trustee of
the bank. Arguments were heard by
Special Master W. D. Edson.
♦
Meet Soo Offirlals.
W W Walker, general freight agent
of the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic
railroad, and President and General
Manager W. F. Fitch have returned
fr(»m Minneapolis, where they held a
conference with President Pennington
of the Soo.
Mr. Walker stated that the call on
the head of the Soo road was nothing
more than a routine meeting and that
nothing of Importance was transacted.
♦
Steamer on Rainy River.
Announcement was made today that
the steamer Agwinda will run on the
Rainy river from Fort Frances to
Rainy River, Ont., connecting at the
latter point with the new steel steamer
Keenora, which will sail between
Ralnv River and Kenora, the beauti-
ful little summer resort at tlie head
of the romantic and picturesque Lake
of the Woods.
r
I
(
I
PERSONAL
Leander Amessa of Baraga, Mich., is
in Duluth on his way to Deer River,
wlxere he expects to follow his trade
of a sawfiler during the season.
A. Allison, commercial agent of the
Ann Arbor railroad, with headquarters
at Minneapolis, Is in the city today.
M Stoner of Bemldji Is at the McKay.
Mrs. S. C. Scott of Hibbing and her
daughter are registered at the McKay.
N. A. Young of Eveleth is at tlie St.
Louis.
W. G. Forsythe of Grand Marais is
at the St. Louis.
B F. Fowler of Two Harbors is at
the St. Louis.
L W. Nelson of International Falls
is at the Lenox.
C. H. Carhart of Grand Marais Is at
the St. Louis.
J. W. Peterson of Tower is at the
St. Louis.
•
Storage.
Furniture costs money, and when you
are storing, you want to be sure that
your goods are In a clean, dry and
safe building. We have fireproof and
uon-flreproof warehouses, separate bins
and locked vaults. Special piano room.
DULUTH VAN & STOPvAGE CO..
210 West Superior Street
2,50^ Yards of
Jor'chon Laces
On Special Sale Tomorrow.
They come ip all widths and in hand-
some patterns; values up tc '31/j/^
10c, on special sale at O l»K^
'WHERE VALUES REIGN SUPREME"
MCBC
21.23 WEST SUPERIOR STREET.
1
Hosiery Special
Women's Fine Gauze Lisle Hose —
Garter top and fast black; a big l5c
value, special tonior- "t f\/^
row, pair -» v €•
Extffi Special Suit Sale
125 Neu> $pring Suits on Special Sale Tomorrow
Twenty different styles to select from, in this season's most
desirable fabrics, and very best shades; also a strong showing
of black and navy — the tailoring, finish and style will be noticed
at a glance as being distinctly high-grade, and of the very best.
On special sale in three lots, at $27.50, Q 1 Ch ^/l
$24.50 and ^ ^ V. O 1/
These are by far the best values we ever offered.
MISSES' SUITS, in beautiful new fabrics, new styles and colors;
also black and navy— several styles. Never Ijf ^ '^ ^/)
sold better suits than these for $17.50; choice.ijj X ^m O L/
Magnificent New Spring Coats
of mannish serges, in black, navy, tan and gray; also swell coverts
and inixttrres. We have selected three great price leaders for
tomorrow — several stvles to each price — ^ -f f\ ^f\
at $17.50, $14.50 and SP J. \Jm \J \J
CHILDREN'S COATS in white serge, Uack and white checks
and fancy stripes sateen lined— very neat-
size 2 to G years — extra special
$1.98
Extra Special Rug and Curtain Sale
5Q0 Velvet Brussells and Axminster Rugs
$1.39 for Choice of These, Instead of $3.00— An exceptional
heavy quality of \'elvet and Axminster Rugs, size 27x54 — they
come in 20 choice 1911 designs, including the Oriental pat-
terns— not one in the lot worth less than ^ "t ^ O
$3.00, for %JI^ JLmKiZ:^
See These Grand llargains in Scrim Curtains, on Display in Window:
$5.00 Ecru Scrinr. Curtains — lace and inser- ^ ^ ^/^
tion trimmed • \^^» O L/
$4.50 Ecru Scrim Curtains — hemstitched and ^ ^ QH
lace trimmed \f^» >^0
$4.00 Ecru Scrinri Curtains — drawn work ^ ^ S f\
border \^^9^yJ
$3.50 Ecru Scrim Curtains — lace ^^J O O ^
trimmed %^^«^0
$2.50 Ecru Scrim Curtains — hemstitched and If ^ /^O
lace trimmed %J^ J. • v-r >^
$2.00 Ecru Scrim Curtains — lace ^ 1 "^ ^
trimmed %]^ J. • ^ O
$1.75 Ecru Scrim Curtains — fancy braid ^ ^ f\f\
trimming • • • • \^ J. • v/ v/
Wash Goods
Department
Fifty Pieces Silk and Cotton Wash
Foulards— They come in neat,
small Persian designs, polka dots
and small Dresden figures; regu-
larly priced at 50c per 'O S^^
yard, special %J\J\^
50c 24-inch Silk Shantung
—Special at 29c
They come in all the new spring
shades, amethyst, light blue, faded
rose, goblin blue, lilac, Copen-
hagen, etc.; specially priced to-
morrow at, per O O/^
15c Quality Colored
Voiles for 10c
is is a beautiful sheer wash ma-
rial, with a corded effect and
ery popular for spring and sinn-
er wear; in all the new spring
ades and black and white; a reg-
ular 15c quality, at, per ^ /J^
A Grand Showing of
New Millinery
300 Trimmed Hats
That come to hand late for the Easter
exhibit. This grand assortment exhibits
the best efforts of the American design-
ers who carefully studied out the best
copies of the fine imported models and
embodied in these beautiful Hats the
most attractive features of American
tastes.
The prices marked on these very at-
tractive Hats are only
$3.50 ""''
$5.00
and are just about OXE-HALF what
others ask for similar models.
Specials for Saturday
69c 27-inch Stamped Linen ij^/^^
Centerpieces, at, only . . . .O v/C'
SOc 21-inch Samped Linen O ^g^
Centerpieces, at, only... V^OC^
$1.25 Natural Linen O Sg^
Table Runners, at. each...^^*^
Conventional designs stamped on.
69c Natural Linen Pil- BZf\f*
low Tops, at O v/C/
39c Mercerized Pillow '^ O^
Cords, at, each ^ Ot/
SOc Silk Pillow Cords, ^ Oy-»
at, each ^ OC
MYiC Germautown Yarn "t f\/\
— In all shades, at, skein.. -M. L/C/
25c German Knitting ^ 1 /*
Yarn, at, skein ^ -^ ^
59c Sanitary Wire Hair j^ ff >-»
Rolls, at, each ^OC
Colorite, the new hat dye — In all
colors, at, at hot- ^ '^/'
15c Peroxide Bath Soap, O/^
at, a bar >'ۥ
12c Peroxide Toilet Soap, O/^
at, a bar Z^%^
RIVER IS
VERY LOW
Launch Owners Likely to
Have Trouble Navigating
the St. Louis.
Launch owners beware!
St. Louis river is lower this year
than it has been for thirty years, ac-
cording to one of the oldest in-
habitants of the Head of the Lakes
and .nc who keeps in close touch with
tlie e ndiiions on th^; river, and launch
owners are likely tb find sand bars
they never heard of before.
He states that places on the river
which in other years it was necessary
to cross in a row boat are now high
and dry and it is possible to walk
across without wetting the <eet.
l,e river is said to be at least three
foet lower than It has been in average
Engineer Darling: of the United
States engineer's office says that the
water In the lake is lower than m
years and that the river follows the
level of the lake.
. *
Smokers, Attention: Sat. Special.
5c El Toral, 8 for 25c: San Juan Porto
Rican. 8 for 25c; Newport Club, « for
25c; Homestake, 7 for 25c. Tlxe Smok-
ery, 319 West Superior street.
BANKRUPT SALE
NOTICE— I will offer for sale the stock
and fixture* of F. E. Ginster & Co.. bank-
rupts. for cash, to the hiohfst bidder. »ub-
lect to the approval of the court and reierv-
Ing the right to reject any and all bids, ofl
IHonday. April 22. at 2:30 p. «•• ■< •">
office. OEO. H. EBERT.
308 Torrey Building. Duluth.
ELECTION OFFICIALS
ARE SENT TO PRISON.
New Orleans, La.. April 21. — Twelve
election ofriclals of the city of New
Orleans, who recently pleaded guilty
In the so-called "ballot box stuffing"
cases to charges of violating the state
election laws were sentenced today to
eight inonths' Imprisonment each In
the parish prison,
AMERICANS ORDERED
RELEASED BY DIAZ.
DEFIANCE
OFTILDEN
Refuses to Appear Before
the Lorimer Investigating
Committee.
Mexico City, April 21.— President
Diaz today ordered the release of Ed-
ward H. Blatt an4./l.awrence F. Con-
verse, Americans, who were arrested
by government troops And Imprisoned
In Juarez. It was jisserted in defense
of the men that they were arrested on
American soil and taken into Mexico
by force.
« .
Held In fUMlOQ Each.
Boston, April 21.— Without going Into
the merits of the case. United States
Commissioner Hayes trtday held J. K.
Dunbar and Anthoi^y B. Yorkens, both
of Brockton, in boivJs of $10,000 each
on a charge of using the nrails In an
attempt to blackmail Daniel W. Field,
a shoe manufacturer of Brockton out
of $14,000. In default of ball, both
defendants were committed to Jail.
Evidence By Burgess One
of Chief Sensations on
Thursday.
Springfield, 111., April 21.— Three im-
portant points developed yesterday
afternoon during the hearing before
the senate bribery Investigation com-
mittee. The fir.st was the defiance of
a committee mandate by Edward Til-
den, Chicago packer and banker. Tll-
den was under subpoena to produce his
banking accounts In person before the
committee yesterday. Instead, he sent
a lawyer. The lawyer read an affida-
vit and letter to the committee from
Mr. Tilden. The affidavit said that Mr.
Tilden knew absolutely nothing and
his bank accounts showed nothing
touching directly or Indirectly upon
the election of Senator Lorimer. The
letter stated that Mr. Tilden would al-
low one member of the committee to
examine his bank accounts in confi-
dence, provided he (Tilden) was al-
lowed to name such member of the
committee.
Surprise By BurBeM*.
The second surprise was the testi-
mony by William M. Burgess, manager
of the Burgess Electrical companv of
Duluth, who testified that on March 6
or 7, 1911, P. F. Weihe, brother-in-law
of Edward Hines and secretary of the
Edward Hines company, declared that
he (Weihe) subscribed $10,000 to a
"jackpot" used to effect the election of
Lorimer to the senate. Burgess said
this conversation took place aboard
the "Winnipeg Flyer' in the smoking
compartment of a sleeping car while
he was on a trip from Duluth to Vir-
ginia, Minn. Others in the car. he
said, were: Samuel J. Cusson, manager
of the Virginia & Italny Lake company
at Virginia, Minn.; lludolnh and Carl
Weyerhaeuser, a young man from Re-
gina, Canada, and a man named John-
son, representing the Northwestern
Lumberman. Mr. Burgess stated to
the committee:
What AVlehe Snid.
"I made some remark disparaging to
Mr. Lorimer's election. Mr. Wiehe im-
mediately took up the cudgels, and
wanted to know what I knew about
Mr. Lorimer's election, and I told him
that the only thing that I knew about
Mr. Lorimer's election was what I had
read In the papers. He wanted to
know if I got my infornwition from
the Chicago Record-Herald. I told him
I got it from the local papers In Du-
luth and the Chicago Examiner, and
he made the remark that I did not
know very damned much about it. I
told him that it was credited around
the country that Mr. Lorimer had used
a considerable amount of money to
secure his election, and he said that
Mr. Lorimer had not used a dollar of
his own money for his election. He
started In to tell me how Mr. Lorimer
was elected, and finally he made this
statement: 'There was a Jackpot raised
to elect Mr. Lorimer. I know what I
am talking about, because I subscribed
$10,000 to It myself.' "
"Was anything said about tb* gen-
eral assembly of Illinois In that con-
versation?"
'He did make this remark, that it
was impossible to set anythiue of merit
r-Ti-im ts
through the Illinois legislature without
the use of money."
One Other I'reiient.
"Who was present at this conversa-
tion?"
"I think the only one present during
the talk was the ger.tleman from the
Canadian Northwest."
"Did Mr. Wiehe tell you to whom he
paid the $10,000 which he said he sub-
scribed to the jackpot.?*'
"He did not."
"What Rind of a looking man was
Mr. Wiehe?"
"If I remember he had a soft felt,
black hat on and a gray suit of clothes,
black beard, I should say four to five
Inches long, rather iroad shouldered
and a man about my height, as nearly
as I can Judge It."
"Did you attempt to identify him In
any way after the conversation?"
"I did. I arrived In Virginia, went
to the Fay hotel and Mr. Wiehe was in
the hotel when I wilked In. There
was a gentleman In tl e hotel from Du-
luth, W. T. Bailey, w'.xo is In the lum-
ber business In Virginia. I have known
Mr. Bailey for several years and upon
asking him who the nan was. he says,
•that is Mr. Wiehe of the Edward Hines
Lumber company.' "
Hopklnn' Memory Poor.
The third phase of the case against
Lorimer was opened up by Former
United States Senato- Albert J. Hop-
kins of Aurora and Chicago. He testi-
fied that Former Stats Senator McCor-
mlck of Madison county had told Mr.
Hopkins' secretary, . ohn M. Pfeffers.
that he (.Senator McC>rmlck) had been
offered $2..j00 to vote for Mr. Lorimer.
Former Senator Hopkins proved a
somewhat reluctant witness and his
memory was poor regarding many
things said to have occurred about the
time of Lorimer's eltctlon.
. ♦
i OBITTJURY
' ^^_,-(j-,jT_n-nj'LfX.n-r>-ru~t<^^<~^~' i-ww^a™.™!^! » ^ ^ ^
MaJ. George A. Pickett, son of Gen.
Pickett, the famous Confederate leader,
died on the army transport Logan
Willie en route from Manila to San
Francisco, according to a cablegram re-
ceived by the war department April 21
from Nagasaki. MaJ. Pickett, a native
of Virginia, was 46 ysars old. He was
attached to the paymaster's depart-
ment.
Charlen Chamberlata died at his home
in New Rochelle April 20 at the age of
73 .vear.s. He was well known in New
i'ork as a newspaper man and a press
agent. He was at one time mani-ging
editor of the Evening E.vpress and was
for several years press agent of Madi-
son Square Garden.
Ira B. Wheeler Is dead at his hom«
In Elizabeth. N. J., after a brief Illness
of pneumonia. Mr. Wheeler was a law^-
yer and at one time he had his office
In New York. He was counsel for Mrs.
Theodore Til ton in the Beecher-TIlton
trial. For a time, also, he was counsel
for the printing press firm of R. lioo
& Co.
Elijah Clark, an old soldier and a pio-
neer, fell from his chair dead at his
home on a farm a few miles west of
New Richmond, Wis., where he has
resided since 1866. He was 70 ye.ira
old. and is survived by a large family
of children and brothers anj sisters;
also by his venerable father, Joseph
E. Clark, now 90 years old. Tho
father and son served side b\- side in
the One Hundred and Seventy-first
Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry in th«
Civil war.
OUTLOOK BRIGHT
FOR ANaERS
Game Warden Thomas Storey, who
returned this morning from a trip
along the ranges, brought back cheer
to the hearts of trout fishermen. He
says that the indications are fine for
an excellent season. He explains that
it is a bit too early to expect a success,
ful catch, but feels certain that In a
comparatively short time the disciples
of Isaac Walton will be able to come
back with astlsfactory catches.
While at Alborn, Game Warden
Storey found and destroyed a big fish
trap and a long net. He says the trap
was one of the largest and most elab-
orate of the scores that he has seen.
It was woven of willow and must have
been made by men possessed of much
skill and patience. It was so big that
it was about all he and his deputy, Q.
H. Husebv, could do to get it out of ths
water. They had to go in up to their
ntcks to haul it to the shore. The trap
and the net had evidently been In the
stream but a short time, as the former
contained but five trout, which were r*.
placed, and the latter was empty.
J* ' ' =^ fl
■ •■TtfUTI K^
/
DEFECTIVE PAGE
-— «k—
4.
"•■«»«
ti^ *■!
-gmm
>^^™r***«
<4*i
^•"
•^^
Friday,
THE DULUTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
STEAMSHi:
ALLAN LINE—
Picturesque St. L«wr«ice Routti
Weekly Salllnt3 fTom
MOVTREAL TO LIVKIlPOOL. GLASGOW
SoNTIlEAL TO LONDON. HAVRE. Franc*
FortnighUj from .„.,„_
Pnn.APKLPHlA and IMJSTON to OLAS».OW.
Srlcnd*^ tctnta. •hortest p«s»«««. low niM.
Any local A»»nt or
ALLAN & CO.. General Agents,
174 Jackson Blvd.. Chicago.
RAILROAD TIME TABLES.
MINNEAPOLIS.ST.PAUL
.hpSaultSte-MarjeRy.
UNION STATION— yupenor »t. ant SIxtfc Av«. WMt.
A rrlve.
HARPER-SHIELDS COMPANY
General Insurance.
Sellwood Building. - - -
Duluth, Minn.
LcBte. TWIN PORTS EXPRESS.
t7.00aM •7.00PIII.
7.30«Ri 7.30pm.
2.45»m 10.40pm.
tSCOpm 1 1. 45pm.
For Eau 3.4»«m.
CUlre and
Chippewa
Falls 7. 1 Sam.
•9.00am
. DULUTH
. . Superior
{LiuljsniUh
... Owens .
. . Osbkciab
.••OOam tS.SOpm
. 8.30am 5.00pm
5. 15am lO.SOam
. 4.00am t7.S5am
,l2.(llam From K.
ClalR and
Chippt**
. 8.50pm Falls
Milwaukee . .
... ... Chicago »7.00pm
ninina Car?. rala<-e Sle«p«r» and Lilrary Obserra-
1k.li Cars. VesllbuleU - Vacuum Cle;uiif<i - tlectric
^'iclmfrtlon at Ladysmlth with Train 8 for Manls-
UQue, Ciladsli'oe aud lutcriacdlate puinta.
Fldelity-Ptaenlx Fire Inanranoe Com-
pany.
Principal office: 46 C*dar street. New York. N. T,
(Organized In 1910.) Henry Evana. president: C. K.
Strei't. sroreturj-. Attorney to accept aerrlce In Min-
nesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAI.. »•.;.. '.00.000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpctuals I
Kvnts and Inlereat ,
Cross profit on sale, maturity or ad-
justment of letlger assets
From all other sourcea •••
\%>Rtern Ileaerve Inanrance Company.
Principnl office: CleTeland. Ohio. (Organized In
1003. Mar» E. Wagar, prwldent; F. P. Blckford,
secretary. Attorney to accept service In MlnnesoU:
Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH CAPITAL, $250,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than peipetuala I 193.341.17
1,279.915.18) Kents and Interest
8,627.1^42.68
46G.060.84
28,103.78 ■ From all other sourcea.
19,326.70
1,074.99
accrued
,_ %
3,247.52
Gross assets I 264,630.65
LlahllMlea.
Unearned premiums I 111,778.61
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends and interest
due 2,658.80
All Other liabilities 44».00
Total liabilities, includ-
ing permanent or guar- ,,,RaK4,
anty fund I 114,886.41
Net surplus I 149,646.24
Rlaks and Premlnas, 1910 Baslness.
Fire risks written during
the year 111,484.422.91
Premiums received there- 269.506.53
on
Toul income ^.....$ T.401,m.«8
I^edger assets Dec. 31 of previous year I 13,487,311.44
Sum
Lrate.
BROOTEN EXPRESS.
Artve.
t5.45am Duluth tS.OOpm
t7.00am 6 I5«m Superior f^"" \l ^'Jl
lO.OOam 8. 22«m.... MtK.se Lake.... 6.20pni '2 25pm
S.IOpm I0.20am Wahkon 4.42pm 7.26a»
t4 00pm 10 50am Ouamia 4.25pm Tl>.43"m
tl.20pm Brcoten tl.45pm
Conne«kM at Bro<.ten for Twin Cities, Western
Canada and the PacKlc Coast
Z^. OULUTH-WINNiPEG LINE. Arrive.
t 9 30am..
19 05am..
II 25am..
4.00pm..
4 S7pm..
7.30P
. . I>ulutn . .
Superior .
.Moose Lake.
. .Caae Lake-
.. BemldjI ..
ThW lilver Fall*..
....t 5.10pm
4.40pm
3.15pm
.... 10. 28am
9.54am
7.00am
CuM-ccticus at Thief Iliver Falls for Winnipeg.
Leave.
CUYUNA RANGE LINE.
Arrive.
t 7 20am Duluth ..
7.55am Sup«rlor .
9 50am Lawler ...
10 02am Eaat Lake..
10.24am Darlna , ,,„_
10 35am Koset)erg 3 "pm
10 48am Aitkin ..•• 3. I2pm
If. 45am Iron
.t 6.40pm
. 6 05pm
. 4. lOpm
3.58pm
3.35pm
Hub 2.55pm
Arrive. 11.15am DEERWOOD 2.40pm Leave.
til. 57am..
12 05pm..
Cuyuna
Cioiby
.t 2.08pm
. 2.00pm
•iMlly. tDttUy except Sunday.
DLLITH. MISSABE & NORTH-
ERN RAILWAY.
Office: •*::« >Veiit Superior St.
'Pkone, 9tt».
$ 20.888,733.92
blSBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amciint paid for los5>e« t 3,541. 4i«. 41
liil>eiises of adjustment of losses
('ummlll^ions and brokerage
Salaries ami feee of offlcem, agents
and employes
Tnx«". fees, rents and other real estate
exi)eiuses
DlvideiuU and Interest
t;r.s8 los.^ on sale. m.-iturtty or atljust-
ment of ledger ,is!<et*
All other disbursements
118.!i:0.!<2
1.0e0,o88.36
730.424.65
2:7.-08.!>l
50,000.00
1.024,602.80
405,790.65
ToUl
income « 213.742.86
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year.$ 468,172.36
681,915.22
IV-tal disbursements $ 7.243.991.70
Balance » 13.644,742.22
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31. 1910.
67,500.00
544.500.00
10,498,085.00
Book value of roa.1 estate $
Mortgage loans
BiH>k value of bonds and stocks
Cash in office, trust companies and
banks ■
Agents' Uiliinces. unpaid premiums and
bills receivable, taken for premiums.
All other ledger assets
Total ledger assets (as per balancel.l
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued..!
.\11 other non-ledger assets
Sum '
DISBURSEMENTS IN 1910.
Net amount paid for losses $
Expenses of adjustment of losses
Coniml.^slons and brokerage
Salaries and fees of officers, agents and
employes 34.564.37
Taw*, fees, rents and other real estate
expenses
Dividends and interest
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets
.Ml other disbursements •••
1,517,120.03
1,002.515.31
15.021.88
13,644.742.22
96.785.50
150,935.58
Gross assets » 13.892.467.30
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED
Agents' l)alances $
Book value of ledger assets over market
value
Special deposit, less $219,098.74 UabU-
Ity ther»'«n
All other assets not admitted
Total assets not admitted $
35,035.35
29,896.88
36., 193 26
37.236.63
138.762.14
Leave
Arrive.
•3.50p
(Buhl). Virginia. Eveleth.
Coleraliie.
Virginia. Cook, Kalner, Fort
•7 lOpm \ Frances, Port Arthur, Bau-
I. dette. W.>rroad. Winnipeg.
pa
i Hlbblng. Chlsholm. Virginia. Eve- 1
.7.40«m lelh. Coleraine. Sharon (Buhl) . ^ •3.21
1 t-Mountn Iron, tsparta, tBlwabU,
f Hlbblng, Chlsholm. Sharon ^.„ -.
m \ (Buhl). Virginia. Eveleth. \ •l0.3Um
\
•S.aian
J
•Dally tliaily except Sunday.
Cafe, Observation Car. Mesaba Range
Foikts. Solid Vestlbuled Train. Modern
Sleepers through to N\ innipeg.
THE DILITH & IRON RANGE
RAILROAD COMP.ANY.
"VERMILION ROVTE"
Total admitted assets
LIABILITIES DEC
T'npald losses and claims >
T'neanied premiums ■■
Salaries, exDenses. taxes, dividends
and interest due
Commissions and brokerage •••
Unearned premium resene
Reserve for contested Uabllitlee
All other liabilities
Capital stock paid up
$ 13,753,705.16
31, 1910.
881,255.37
6,510,468.24
178,594.05
22,370.30
100,000.00
640,000.00
23,514.67
2.500.000.00
188,111.98
3.155..".l
34,523.16
9.493.91
5,000.00
8,976.23
17,644.40
Net amount in force at
end of the year. I 9,738.957.00
DustnesH In *limesot« In 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and de-
ducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks-
Risks written I
Premiums received
Losses incurred . . .
Losses paid
Amount at risk . . .
>•••••
169,375.00
3,818.95
177.76
177.76
126.175.00
Net amount In force at end of the year 198.048.971.00
* — Including business other than "Marine and In-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including relnsurajice received and deducUng re-
insurance placed.)
Fire Risks. Tornado. Aggregate.
Risks wriUen... $2,708,829. 12 $ 98,600.00 $2,807,229.12
Premiums
received 41.750.55 558.95 42. .309.50
Losses Inctirred.. 34.325.47 34.325.47
Lossea paW 42,766.34 42.7,'.6.34
Amount at risk. 3,742.932.05 355,160.00 4.098,082.0j
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual Statement of
the Camden Fire Insurance Company, for the year
ending December 31st. 1910. of which the above Is an
abstract, has been received and filed in thie De-
partment and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
L.EGAL NOTICES.
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance: . , ,
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
.«^tatement of the Indiana Lumbermen s
Mutual Insurance Company, for the
year ending December 31st, 1910, of
which the above is an abstract, has
been received and filed in this Depart-
ment and duly approved by me.
J. A. O. PRfciL o.
Commissioner of Insurance.
Total disbursements • 301,469.56
Balance » 380,445.66
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910-
Book value of bonds and stocks. ... ... 303..204.77
Cash in office, trust companies and banks
Agents' balances, unp;ud premiums and
bills receivable, taken for premiums..
27,583.16
49,357.73
Net ledger asseU :r.....$ 380.445.66
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents due and accrued .....$
Market value of real eetate, bonds and
stocks over book value
1,938.71
20.890.51
Gross assets » 403,274.88
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
AgenU' balances > 696.50
Total asseU not admitted $ 696.50
402,578.33
Total liabilities, including caplUl...$ 10,556,211.63
Net sun^Uis t 3.19T.493.53
' RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS
e risks written durUig the year. ..$ 695. 4%, 243
•Fire
.00
Premiums received thereon 7.835.052.92
Ne^ amount In force at end of the year$1.149.192.305 00
•—Including business other than "Marine and In-
^'^'^' BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
insurance placed.) _ , . .«
Fire risks. Toma<1o. Aggregate.
RUks written.$9.099.350.00 $1,849,853.00 $11,847,203.00
Premiums 145.002.9O 15,677.28 160,680.12
DCLCTH—
1 Leave. | Arrive.
Knife Kiver. Two Harbors. Tc'^er.
Eiy. Aurora. lUwabik, McK nley, 1
vvtii-th (;uberi and VlrglnU. 'Z-SOam tl2.
|t2.45ps
.OOm
•6.10pm
•Daily tDaUy except Sunday.
DULUTH & NORTHERN MINNESOTA RAILWAY.
Offices, 510 Lonsdale BIdg., Duluth.
Trains c^. 0.^1 at W.ule U.ver ^»UJ '".'^'^pt ^und^)
with D i I. R. trains leaving Duluth at .:30 a. m.,
Tnd arrifh.g at Duluth at C:30 p. m. ConnecU at
t-^„mt^ wit* Grand Maral* stage when running^
received
Losses
Incurred .
Losses paid
Amount at
risk
102.840.27
100,811.99
3.041. 80
2.988.80
105,522.07
103,800.79
20,962,810.30
Itotal admitted assets $
LIABILITIES DEC. 31. I9I0.
Unpaid lessee and claims •
Unearned premiums .••"; j
Salaries, expenses, taxes, dividends and
interest due
Capital stock paid up •
Ttotal llabiliUes, including capital $ 369,104.16
FREDERICK O'BRIEN,
General Agent.
305 Phoenix Bldg.. Minneapotts. Minn.
VnderwriterH •< Great -Western Lloyda
Fire Insurnnee Company.
Principal office: 45 Cedar street. New
York. (Organized in 1892.) Edward K
Hall, Chas. A. Trowbridge, attorneys
and managers; Edward E. Hall, secre-
tary. Attorney to accept service In
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
Ineome In 1910.
Gross premiums and as-
sessments » «'2o -^1
Rents and Interest 9,vvo.i6
Total income I 75,716.81
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of ».-, ocr an
previous year » 248, .268. »0
CERTIFICATE OFINCORPORATION
— OF—
RAFENCHA BUILDING COM-
PANY.
in Duluth, In said County, on Monday,
on the 1st day of May, 1911 at ten
o'clock a m., and all periions inter-
ested in said hearing and ir, said mat-
ter are hereby cited and 1 equired at
said time and place to show cause. If
any there be. why said petition should
^RDEflED^VTRTHER, That this
order be served bv publicai ion in The
Duluth Herald according tj law. and
that a copy of this order bu served on
the County Treasurer ol St, Louis
County not later than ten days prior
to said day of hearing.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 4th,
1911.
By the Court,
S. W. CHLPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal. Probate Court, St. Louis County,
Minn.)
E. P. TOWNE,
Attorney for Petitioner,
5 Torrey Building, Duluth. Minn.
D. H., April 7, 14, 21, }911.
plus) I 493,416.21
Exklbit of Policies, 1010 BniilneM.
No. AmounC
Policies in force at
beginning of the
year — (last col- ^_ ^^
umn only) 10792 fll, 426,563. Of ,
Policies in force at ^^
close of the year 12445 13,502.902.00
Net increase 1653 I 2,0^6,339.00
30.989.76
83,014.40
4,200.00
250,000.00
Net surplus » 33,474.22
RISKS AND PREMIUMS, 1910 BUSINESS.
•Fire rbks written during the year '^''S^^'S^l??
Premiums received Uiereoii. • **i'*"-;;2
Net amount in force at end of the year. 11.006,4.0.16
•—Including business other than Marine and in-
land."
BUSINESS IN MINNESOTA IN 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and deducting re-
insurance placed.) ^^ j^j^^^
Risk, written » ^TAHl
Premiums received i?'!tn<Vfl-|
Losses incurred • ifi'aMfi'"-
Losses paid 1 Monfi^' ^g
\mouul at risk i,uo.,UBj.a»
Sum % 323.985.71
DlnburNementa In 1910.
Amount paid for losses..? 10,423.95
Commissions. brokerage,
salaries and allowances
to agents, officers and „, ,,- ,0
employes •• ^b,Ji<.io
Taxes, fees, rents and oth-
er real estate expenses.. „J'52.Jl
All other disbursements... 25,784.74
62,829.04
Total disbursements....!
Balance % 261456^67
Ledger AaHetH Dee. 31, 1910.
Book value of bonds and
stocks •••»••■•••■••
Cash In office and banks..
Premiums In course or
collections
213,864.50
35,571.80
11,720.37
"State r.f Minnesota. Department of Insurance.
^ I Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement of the
Fidellty-rherix Fire Insurance Company, for the year
ending December 31st. 1910. of which the above Is an
abstract, has been received and filed la this Depart-
ment aud duly approved by ■"*• j ^ ^ preus
Commissioner of Insurance.
State of Minnesota. Department of Insuijnce:
1 Hereby Certify. That the Annual Statement ot
the Western Reserve Insurance Company, for the year
ending December 31st, 1910, of which the above is an
abstract, has been received and filed in this depart-
ment and duly approved by me. ^ ^ ^ preuS,
Commissiouei of Insurance.
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD.
Leave. , ^ _.
•4 oopm Ashland and East
•8 00am Ashland and East
•7 30pm ..Minn, aud Dakota llxpress.
•g 05am North Cua^t Limited. ...
Arrive.
,.«ll.l5aai
,. •6.40pm
.. •S.IJam
. . •6.2Spm
Leive.
t9 OOam
• I 55pm.
•ll.iOpm.
"Duluth Short
.. ST. PAUL...,
.. MINNEAPOLIS
Arrive.
•6.30am
,. t2 05pm
. . •7.00pm
•Dally + Dally except Sunday. "Phone 214.
Depot at 334 West Superior street.
Union
ORTHjWiSTiaiLUHE
cT«T. p. M. as O.ltY.
*6. 15pm... Duluth
Superior .
Milwaukee
. Chicago .
Ar*8.25am •I2.20pm
.Ar 7.53am 1 1.45am
.Lv 7.45pm
.Lv 6.259m lO.IOpm
Lv -a-iop
Lv"3.50pm 6.35p
^r 7.45am
Ar 7.00am 8.15am
Lvt8.50.m •4.35pm... Duluth' .. .Art3.35pm l-Mpm
Ar4.30pm 9.50pm. ...St. ^''"V "•J-! S-iS"
Ar 5 05pm 10.25pm. MtnneapcUs .Lv 7.30«m
•Daily, t Daily except Sunday.
Office. 302 Weat Superior St.. Duluth.
Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company.
Principal office: 923 Chestnut street,
Philadelphia, Pa. (Organized In 184..)
George K. Johnson, president; John
Humphreys, secretary. Attorney to ac-
cept service in Minnesota:
sioner of Insurance
Income In 1010,
First vear's premiums...!
Dividends and surrender
values applied to pur-
chase paid-up insur-
ance and annuities....
Consideration for orig-
inal annuities, and sup-
plementary contracts,
Involving life contin-
gencies
Renewal premiums
Comrais-
2,344,564,42
398.998.86
418,796.93
15,367,543.69
and reported
Claims resisted
Premiums paid
vance
Dividends due
holders
Special reserve
In ad-
pollcy
414,870.81
2.000.00
61,339.03
11,326,304.33
3,000.643.00
Total ledger assets (as „,,,.«--
per balance) ! Z61,lob.t>(
Non-Lcdgrer AMSieta.
Interest and rents, due and
accrued * 2,377.61
Gross assets I 263.534.18
Deduct Assets Not Admitted.
Premiums in course of col-
lection (past due) I 195.00
Book value of ledger as- ..„.„„..
sets over market value.. 2,942.00
Total assets not admit- „
ted ! 3,137.00
4.30pm
4.00pm
Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic.
Leave.
STATIONS.
Arrive.
"t? 43aa •6.15pm... Dulutii ...•10.30am t5.40pm
(Soo Line Union SUtion.)
ts 12am •6.45pm... Superior ...•10. OOam tS.IOpm
iSi/o Line Union Station.)
ts 20am •6.55pm... Superior ... 'S.SOam tS.OOpm
(Union DeiwL)
Arrive. Leave.
t7 55em 5.40am.. Houghton ..tHOOpm
ts'.SsSm 6.30am... Calumet ...tlO.IOpm
17 05pm •4.20am.. Ishpeming ..•12.20am tS.20«m
« 45pm •5.00am.. Marquette ..•II. 30pm t5.20am
^'- ' •io.20amSault Ste. Marie •5.25iim
•8 OOam .. Montreal ... 'O.SOpm •8.20pm
•8;20pm.... Boston ....•10. OOam •8.30am
t8 OsVm* •a I5pm... Montreal ...•10. OOam tlO.OOpm
tlO MP" •I0.20«m...yew York... •7.15pm t8.30am
Total premium Incomo.! 18.529.895.90
Rents and interests 6.469,805.60
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turUy or adjustment of
ledger assets Qcrooaia
From all other sources.. 365.wi;&.4j
Total income | 24.431,257.50
Ledger assets I>ecember
3l3t of previous year. . $105, 653,311. »u
Sum 1130.084,669.40
Disbursements Dunns IPIU.
Death claims and ma- ^-.r-ooo,
tured endowments ....! 7,il»,i8-.o^
Annuities and premium
notes voided bv lapse. 426,^07.-9
Surrender values to pol- ,,„„.„- qq
icy holders •• l.iis.i'ii -^^
• D^ivWends to policy hoi- 2.071,946 .41
L/ivldends to company .. . ^.039. 14
Total paid policy hold-
All other liabilities 1.240.222.19
Total liabilities on POl",,, . arn not 40
icy holders account. $11 6,803, 021. 49
Unassigned funds (sur- ..,,,„, .,
plus) • 4,611,381.13
Exhibit of Policies, 1910 Business.
No. Amount.
Policies in force
at beginning of
colum^n "nly)"^84315 $471,783,113 . 00
''°cloiroTtiryea"r^91465 499.663,062 . 00
Net increase
7150 27,779,949.00
Total admitted assets... $ 260,397.18
Liabilities.
Losses adjusted and un-
adjusted I „^ 99000
Unearned premiums 35,857.35
Salaries, expenses, taxes,
dividends aud Interest
due 700.00
All other liabilities 2,070.09
Deposit of subscribers.... 80,000.00
Total liabilities $ 119,617.44
Net surplus $ 140,779.74
Risks and Premiums, 1010 Business.
Fire risks written during „^
the year $14,198,373,00
Premiums received thereon 83,375.97
Issued. revived
and Increased
during the year 19842
Total terminated ,„^„„
during the year 12692
By death 1'96
By maturity 7.!l
ers
tKally except Sunday. •DnUy.
THEGREAT NORTHERN.
STATIONS.
Arrive.
Leave.
t6.00am (
•3.25pni-^
• ll.lOpm [
•6.45am I
t2 2o!IS. .Swan "Kiver,' Hlbblng, Virginia. • -t j2.30pm
t6.00am. . .St Cloud. WUmar. Sioux City. ..flO. 15pm
•Daily tDaUy except Sunday. Twrln CUj sleeper
leady at 9 p- m. Oltlce. Spalding hotel.
ST. PAUL ItlO.ISpm
and \ 'iMpm
MINNEAPOLIS J 'OSOam
Crookston, Grand Forks. | •S-35l>*
Montana and Coast J •7.15am
$ 11,962,162.66
Commfssions and bonuses
l>%mfum^''"^'^.'^.'' 1.022,700.20
Commissions on renewals 963,400.45
Commissions on annui-
ties. Including renew-
als •
Commuted renewal com-
missions
Salaries and allowances
for agencies •
Agency supervision ana
other expenses .......
Medical examiner's fees
and inspection of risks
Salaries of officers and
employes
Legal expenses •
Agents' balances charged
off
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
All other disbursements.
By
By expiration . .
By surrender
By lapse ....
By decrease
1785
3269
5121
67,747,384.00
39,967,435.00
6,459,229.00
1,749,448.00
4,013,456.00
10,143.102.00
16,764,633.00
2,837,567.00
Business in Minnesota in 1010.
Net amount In force at
end of the year $11,707,630.00
Business In Minnesota In 1910.
(Including reinsurance received and de-
ducting reinsurance placed.)
Fire Risks.
Risks w^ritten $
Premiums received
Losses incurred
Losses paid ....
Amount at risk.
!•«•■••
634,908.01
4,080.80
4,156.15
4,156.15
634,908.01
Policies In force
at beginning of
the year
Issued during the
year ;•••;•
Ceased to be in
force during the
year
In force Deo. 31st
last
No. Amount.
2464 6.440,937.00
331 1,071,608.00
•150 •348,628.00
2635 • 6,163,917.00 I
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance:
I Hereby Certify, That the Annua.
Statement of the Underwriters at Great
Western Lloyds Mutual Fire Insurance
Company, for the year ending Decem-
ber 31st. 1910, of which the above Is an
abstract, has been received and filed In
this Department and duly approved
by me.
J. A. O. PREUS.
Commissioner of Insurance.
20,884.18
10,197.40
866.64
18,049.20
133,828,77
401,917.11
16,476.24
819.37
337.378.31
1,299,971.37
Losses and claims In-
curred during the year!
Losses and claims set-
tled during the year..
Losses and claims un-
paid Dec. 31st
61,286.36
63,060.36
760.00
Total disbursements ..$ 16,178,651.89
HOTELS.
Nsw Buildlm: New Equlpmeat— Bate^ $2 a«d »2.M.
Hotel McRay
Corner rirst St. and Flftli Aw. West. DULUTH.
AdelpHi Hotel
2801-2803-2805 West Superior Street.
J. B. DUNPHY, Prep.
Beat equipped, steam-heated, hotel In Wsat end—
100 roums. all modern conveniences: aew bylldlai:
■ew ((Biipmcnt. Buffet In connection.
RATES, $5.00 PER WEEK AND UP.
Imperial Hotel
Thoroughly modern and up-to-date
in every respect.
ROOMS, 75c AND IP.
200-^08 West Superior Street.
Womail
la iQtereated ud shoidd know^
about the ironderfal
MARVEL >^hirling Spray
[The new Taglual Byriage. MJec-
tion and Auction, Uett— Saf-
aat— Moat Convanlent.
ItCieaasMlBstaatly
Balance $113,906,917.51
•In addition to above abatements the
company allotted to deferred distribu-
tion policies the sum of $1,126,076.94
^which is carried in liabilities), making
the total apportionment of surplus dur-
ing 1910, $3,206,061.49.
Ledser Assets Dec. 31, 1010.
Value of real estate
owned ! 1,929,455.32
Mortgage loans 47,061,800 . 33
Collateral loans 2,014.700.00
Premium notes and pol- ,-.._.__ „.
icy loans 18,455,877 . 34
Bonds and stocks owned. 41,426,158.37
Cash In office, banks and
trust companies 2,607,394. si
Bills receivable and
agents* balances 306,694.56
Bills receivable lor pre- ,». „. .„
miums 104,836 . 78
Received for premiums.. $ 214,336.24
•Including $58,604.00 transferred from
Minnesota on account of change of res-
idence.
State of Minnesota. Department of In-
I^Here^iy Certify, That the Anniial
Statement of the Penn Mutual Life
Insurance Company, for the year end-
ing December 31st. 1910, of which the
above is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly
approved by me. ^ ^ ^ preUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
H. 1. PINEO, General Agent,
408-9 Columbia Building. Duluth Minn.
W
HEELER&PARSONO
REAL ESTATE, O
LOANS AND iNSURANCL
808 AX^WORTH BUDG.
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $113,906,917.51
Non-LedKcr Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued $ l,397,Zd3 . 53
Net deferred and unpaid
premiums 1,96^,<J04.56
AlY other non-ledger as-
sets 11,663.96
Indiana Luntbermen's Mutual Insaranco
Company.
Principal dfflce: Indianapolis, Ind.
(Organized In 1897.) C. C. Foster, pres
idenf F. B. Fowler, secretary.
ney \.o accept service In
Commissioner of Insurance.
Income In 1910.
Gross premiums and as-
sessments f
Rents and interest
From all other sources...
Attor-
Mlnnesota:
229.536.63
10,539.24
167.76
Camden Fire Insurance Company.
Principal office: 434 Federal street, Camden, N.
J. (Organized in 1841.) Edmund E. Read. Jr..
president; Joseph K. Shaip, secretary. Attorney to
accept service In Minnesota: Commlsglouer ot In-
surance.
CASH CAPITAL. $500,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
Premiums other than perpetuals $ 1,316,466.99
Premiums on perpetual risks 245.50
Rente and interest I 103,846.96
Gross profit on sale, maturity 01 ad-
iustment of ledgor assets 65.00
From all other sources 2,367.40
Toul income $ 1,422,981.85
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of previous year.$ 2,312,972.41
Sum
..$ 3,735.954.20
1010.
. .$ 730,663.96
10.063.52
355.333.82
Total income •
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year I
240,243.63
229.344.56
DISBURSEMENTS IN
Net amotint paid for losses )
Expenses of adjustment of losses
Commissions and brokerage
Salaries and fees of olflcere. agents
and employes 64,006.33
Taxes, feee. renta and other teal esUte
expenses 27,089.83
Dividends and interest 48,981.30
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger assets 123.15
All other disbursements..... 51.295.69
KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRES-
ENTS, That we, the undersigned, do
hereby associate ourselves together
and agree upon the following Articles
of Incorporation, under the provisions
of Chapter 58, "Revised Laws of 1905,
of the State of Minnesota, and acts
amendatory thereof and supplementary
thereto, and do hereby adopt the fol-
lowing Articles:
ARTICLE I. The name of this cor-
poration shall be "Rafencha Building
Company.' Its principal place of trans-
acting business shall be Duluth, Minne-
sota. Tlie general nature of Its busi-
ness shall be to buy, hold, cultivate,
improve in any manner whatsoever,
lease, let, mortgage, sell, transfer, plat,
convey and deal in real property in
Minnesota and elsewhere, and to con-
struct buildings of all kinds on any ot
such real property or on the real prop-
erty of others, either alone or Jointly
with others, whether as a partner, as
agent for others, or otherwise, as it
may deem best; to borrow and loan
money upon real estate, personal prop-
erty, or other security; to negotiate
and effect loans of nroney for other
persons and corporations for a com-
pensation; to buy, own, hold, hypothe-
cate, transfer, sell and deal In bonds,
notes, mortgages, stocks in other cor-
porations and other property and se-
curities; to ooUect, foreclose, release
and compound mortgages and other
obligations; to act as agents for other
persons and corporations in the man-
agement, improvement, purchase and
sale of real and personal property, and
In the collection of rents and revenues
tlierefrom for a compensation; to act
as agent for fire, life, casualty, plate
glass, accident and other Insurance
Companies; to act as agent for Surety
Company or Companies; and to do any
and all things authorized by law that
the Directors of said corporation may
deem necessary or advisable in carry-
ing out any of the aforesaid purposes,
or for the benefit or protection of any
of the Interests of said corporation.
ARTICLE II. The period of the
duration of this corporation shall be
thirty (30) years.
ARTICLE HI. The names and places
of residence of the persons forming
this corporation are as follows: M. M.
Chaffee, M. N. Putman and M. M,
Grams, all of Duluth, Minnesota.
ARTICLE IV. The names and places
of residence of the first Board of Di-
rectors of said corporation are:
M. M Chaffee, M. N. Putman and M. M.
Granis. all of Duluth, Minnesota, who
shall hold their offices until the first
annual meeting of the stockholders.
The government of this corporation,
and the management of all its affairs,
shall be vested in a Board of three (3)
Directors, who shall be stockholders of
said corporation, and who shall be
elected annually by the stockholders
of the corporation at their annual
meeting, which shall be held on the
second Tuesday in January in each
year, at such liour and place as shall
be fixed bv the by-laws of the corpora-
tion. There shall also be the follow-
ing officers, who shall have such
powers, and shall perform such duties,
as may be prescribed by the by-laws,
and who shall be elected at the first
meeting of said Board, and annually
thereafter at the first meeting of the
Board of Directors Immediately fol-
lowing the annual meeting of the
stockholders, to-wlt: A President, a
Vice President, a Secretary a.nd
a Treasurer. any two of which
offices, except the two first
named, may be held by the same per-
son. The Directors and officers shall
hold their respective offices for the
term of one year, or until their re-
spective successors are elected and
qualified. ^ . ^.
ARTICLE V. The amount of the cap-
ital stock of this corporation shall be
Fifty Thousand ($.'0,000.00) Dollars,
divided Into Five Thousand (6,000)
shares of the par value of Ten ($10.00)
Dollars each; the same to be paid in
as called for by the Board of Directors.
ARTICLE VI The highest amount of
Indebtedness or liability to which this
corporation shall at any time be sub-
ject is the sum of Fifty Thousand ($50,-
000.00) Dollars. „ „ „. ,
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, We have
hereunto set our hands and seals this
30th day of March, 1911.
ovui u»j^ ^ ^ CHAFFEE
M. N. PUTMAN.
M M. GRAMS.
Signed, Sealed and Delivered
in Presence of:
ROLLO N. CHAFFEE.
H, J. GRANNIS.
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
Be it remembered, that on this 30th
day of March, 1911, before me. the un-
dersigned, a Notary Public within and
for said County and State, personally
appeared M. M. Chaffee, M. N. Putman
and M M. Grams, to me well known to
be the identical persons named in and
who executed the foregoing Certificate
of Incorporation, and they, each for
himself, acknowledged the same to be
his free- act and deed. _
ROLLO N. CHAFFEE,
Notary Public,
St. Louis County, Minn.
(Notarial Seal, St. Louis Co., Minn.)
My commission expires May 24, 1914.
State of Minnesota, Department of
I hereby certify that the within in-
strument was filed for record in this
office on the 15th day of April, A. D.
1911, at 9 o'clock A. M., and was duly
recorded in Book U-3 of Incorporations,
on page nS-j^^IUS A. SCHMAHL,
Secretary of State.
ORDER FOR HEARING PROOF OF
FOREIGN WILL —
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
— ss.
In Probate Cour:.
In the Matter of the Es;ate of Jon
Shastid, Deceased:
WHEREAS. Certain writings purport-
ing to be duly authenticat<d copies of
the Last Will and Testan ent of Jon
Shastid, late of Perry, County of Pike
and State of Illinois, dei^eased, and
the Probate thereof In Cour tv Court of
Pike County. Illinois, have been de-
livered to this Court:
And whereas, Esther C. Shastid has
filed therewith her petition, represent-
ing among other things that said Jon
Shastid lately died In sale County of
Pike, State of Illinois, testa :e, possessed
of certain real estate situated in said
County of St. Louis, and t lat the said
petitioner is the executrix named in
said will and praying that the said
instrument may be admitted to pro-
bate, and that letters tistamentary
be to her issued thereon.
IT IS ORDERED, That the proofs of
said instrument, and the said petition,
be heard before this Court at the Pro-
bate Office In said County, on Monday
the 8th day of May, A. D. 1911. at
ten o'clock in the forenoon, when all
persons interested may appear for or
contest the probate of said Instrument;
AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED,
That notice of the time and place of
said hearing be given lo all persons
interested, by publishing this order
once In each week for thrte successive
weeks prior to said day of hearing,
in The Duluth Herald, a dally news-
paper printed and published at Du-
luth, in said County, and that a copy
of this order be served on the County
Treasurer of St. Louis County not less
than ten days prior to said day of
hearing.
Dated at Duluth, Minn, this 13th
day of April, A. D. 1911.
By the Court,
S. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal Probate Court, St Lauis County,
Minn.)
BALDWIN, BALDWIN & EANCER.
Attorneys.
D. H.. April 14, 21 and 28, 1911.
Issued, revived and
Increased during
the year 2363
Total terminated
during the year. 70O
By death 166
By surrender 82
By lapse 462
By decrease
Business In Minnesota
No.
Policies in force at
beginning of the
year • •
Issued during the
year • •
Ceased to be m
force during the
year
In force Dec. 31st
last 2034
1551
715
232
I 2,964,069. 0«
887, 720. Od
174,053.00
93.787.00
587.444.00
32,436.00
In 1010.
Amount.
$ 1,773,411.00
876.553.00
261,565.00
2.388,399.00
Losses and claims In-
curred during the year. $ 26.897.00
Losses and claims settled -
during the year $ 2«,950.0O
Losses and claims unpaid „.- „/x
Dec. 3l8t 1,947.00
Received for premiums.. $ 64,497.87
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
surance: , ,
I Hereby Certify, That the Annual
Statement of the Scandla Life Insur-
ance Company, for the year ending
December 31st, 1910. of which the
above Is an abstract, has been received
and filed In this Department and duly,
approved by me. ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^
Commissioner of Insurance.
Pbocnix Mutual Life Inaurance Com-
pany.
Principal office: Hartford. Conn.
(Organized In 1851.) John M. Holcorab,
president; Silas H. Cornwell, secretary.
Attorney to accept service m Minne-
sota; Commissioner of Insurance.
Income In 1910.
First year's premiums ..$
Dividends and surrender
values applied to pur-
chase paid-up insur-
ance and annuities....
Consideration lor orig-
inal annuities, and sup-
plementary contracts,
involving life contin-
gencies
Renewal premiums
537,222.22
229,614.07,
81.975.00
3.915,387.04
ORDER FOR HEARING ON CLAIMS—
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis,
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Esitate of Ida
Doran, Decedent.
LETTERS of administration this day
having been granted to Pf.trlck Doran.
IT IS ORDERED, That the time
within which all creditors of the above
named decedent may pr^jsent claims
against her estate in this Court, be.
and the same hereby is, limited to
three months from and alter the date
hereof; and that Monday, the 10th
day of July, 1911. at te;i o'clock A.
M., in the iProbate Court Rooms, at
the Court House at Du. uth in said
County, be and the same hereby Is,
fixed and appointed as the time and
place for hearing upon the examina-
tion, adjustment and f.Uowance of
such claims as shall be presented
within the time aforesaid.
Let notice hereof be trlven by the
publication of this order l)i The Duluth
Herald, as provided by la,v.
Dated at Duluth, Minr., April 6th,
191L
8. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal Probate Court, St. I<ouls County,
Minn.)
BALDWIN. BALDWIN & DANCER.
D. H., April 7, 14, 21. I9n.
(Seal)
(Seal)
(Seal)
Scandla Life Insurance Company.
Principal office: 108 La Salle street,
Chicago, 111. (Organized In 1904.)
Nils A. Nelson, President; Charles H.
Roman, Secretary. Attorney to ac-
cept service In Minnesota: Commission-
er of Insurance.
Income In 1010.
First year's premiums...! 90,439.85
Renewal premiums 316,098.13
Total premium jncome.$ f,. 64.198. 33
Rents and Interests 1,442,54-. 40
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets fiSofccfi?
From all other sources.. »4,i;»t>.t>.t
Total income $ 6,299.251.02
Ledger assets. December „_ „„- ,-0. o«
31«t of previous year. ■$ 27,22«,<.-4.uq
Sum » 33.526.975.02
Disbursements Durlns 1910.
Death claims and ma-
tured endowments ....$
Annuities and premium
notes voided by lapse . .
Surrender values to pol-
icy holders ; • ;;•
Dividends to policy hold-
ers
Dividends to company . . .
Total paid policy hold-
ers • • • •'
Dividends held on de-
posit surrendered dur-
ing the year
Commissions and bonuses
to agents' first year s
premium • •
Commissions on renewals
Commissions on annui-
ties ,
Commuted renewal com-
missions •
Agency supervision and
other expenses .......
Medical examiner s fees
and Inspection of risks
Salaries of officers and
employes
Legal expenses •
Agents' balances charged
off ,
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment 01
ledger assets
All other disbursements.
Total premium income )
Rents and interest
Gross profit on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
From all other sources..
Total income I
Ledger assets Dec. 31 of
previous year
Sum !! 1,227,865.38
Dlsburscmenta Dnrlnv 1910.
Death claims and ma-
tured endowments . . . . !i
Surrender values to pol-
icyholders
Dividends to policyhold-
crs ••..••••••«•-••••■•
Dividends to company...
406,537.98
39,432.89
200.00
1,384.18
447.566.05
780,310.33
1.752,794. 3«
17,665.07
628,815.32
545,847.50
46,721.58
2,991,843.83
13,047.28
246.596.61
224,828.06
349.50
5,347.00
19,326.62
4 5,350.17.
160.665.24
3,375.00
8,436.36
58,074.34
430,347 .76
169,431.83
• 6.863.53
1.«4G.66
949.67
Total disbursements ..$ ,^,207,677.77
Balance • • • • - ?„'^7,ii"*^ ' * '^'*
Ledser Assets Dec. 31, 1910.
Value of real estate
owned $
Mortgage loans ........
Premium notes and pol- _ ^-, ^ia ca
icy loans . . . ., • f^S^oi?/**
Bonds and stocks owned
Cash, in office, banks and
trust companies •
Bills receivable and
agents' balances
730.852.00
17,624,998.28
6^580.290.76
609,572.91
7.772.67
Total paid policyhold-
ers >
Dividends held on deposit
surrendered during the
year
Commissions and bonuses
to agents first year's
premium
Commissions on renewals
Salaries and allowances
for agencies
Agency supervision and
other expenses
Medical examiner's fees
and inspection of risks
Salaries ot officers and
employes
Legal expenses
Agents' balances charged
off .,
Gross loss on sale, ma-
turity or adjustment of
ledger assets
All other disbursements.
Total dUbursfoiento • 1,287.559.60
Gross assets $117,266,969.56
Deduct Assets "Sot Admitted.
Agents' debit balances.. $ 23.267.07
Book value of ledger as- „, „,„ „,
sets over market value 36,010.04
All other assets not ad-
mitted 404.670.96
Total assets not admit-
ted I 463,948.07
Sum
Ash year dr«trl*t '•' H.
If he cannot supply the
HABVBf... accept no
other, but lend stAnip for
Illustrated book— waive. ItglTe*
tuU i)artlculars and ■lirections In-
ValuHbleio ladle*. MARVBI. CO.,
#« m. »ma vr.. hbw iiorik.
far
k« Mas Wtrtfe.
Total admitted assets. .$116,803,021.49
Liabilities Dec. ."tl, 1910.
Net value of outstand-
ing policies $ 94.041,903.00
Present value on supple-
mentary contracts and -,.,„,„ ...
canceled policies 2,104,358.00
Claims adjusted and not
due. and unadjusted'
I 467.588.19
Disbursements In 1910.
Amount paid for losses... | 97,434.64
Commissions, brokerage,
salaries and allowances
to agents, officers and
employes j"*:,i* ^7,70«).&6
Taxes, fees, rents and oth-
er real estate expenses. . 3,786.83
Loss on sale or maturity
of ledger assets „„ «oc sS
All other disbursements... 77.088.77
Total disbursements 1 206,305.06
Balance ' 261,283.13
Ledger Assets Dec. 31, 1910.
Book value of real estate. .$ 24,500.00
Mortgage loans 123,250.00
Book value of bonds and ooooov =
stocks oJ,do9.10
Cash in office and banks.. 16,752.68
Premiums In course of col-
lections 13,391.30
Total ledger assets (as
per balance) $ 261,283.13
Non-Ledger Assets. •
Interest and rents, due and
BaUnce $ 2,448,3»4.8«
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Book value of real esute $ 53,454.36
Mortgage loans 604,625.00
CoUateral loans 58,500.00
Book value of bonds and atocks 1,495,303.15
Cash In office, trust companies and
banks 47.877.82
Agents' balances, unpaid premium* and
bills tecelvable, Uken for premiums.. 189.035.83
All other ledger asseU 100.00
Total ledger assets (as per balance)...!
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and renu due and accrued $
Market value of real estate stoau over
book value
(168455)
OFFICE OP REGISTER OF DEEDS.
State of Minnesota. County of St. Louis
I hereby certify that the within In-
strument was filed In this office for
record April 18, 1911, at 1:30 P. M.. and
was duly recorded In Book 14 of Misc.,
P^«* "*• M. C. PALMER.
Register of Deeds.
By THOS. CLARK,
Deputy.
177.885.49
290.44
68.890.52
12,485.39
9,305.81
2,237.01
7,174.07
16,977.08
6.00
1,422.35
806.50
35,908.99
Total ledger assets <Rs .„ ,-
per balance) $ 29,319,39i .26
Non-Ledger Assets.
Interest and rents due
and accrued ••$
Market value of bonds
and stocks over book
value • ,• •
Net deterred and unpaid
premiums
427.255.10
20,884.85
358,071.80
8,363.60
Total disbursements. .. $ 323,389.65
2.448.394.66
36, 108.84
5,695.10
Gross assets • 2,480.258.12
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
AgenU' balances $ 1,560.93
Book value of ledger assets over market
Talue 34,423.61
Total assets not adailtted • 35,984.54
Balance I 904,475.73
Ledver Assets Dec. J81, 1«10.
Mortgage loans I 6S6,9oo.oy
Premium notes and PO^*-'^"' •^,, - .„ -„
icy loans id, 843 . w«
Bonds and stocks ownefi'"'' 1<6,815.50
Cash, in office, banks an<l ^ "-
trust companies -71,4»o.t>»
Bills receivable ancl
agents' balances 7,73&^i&
Gross assets •» 30.U'5.619.00
Deduct Assets Not Admitted;^
Agents' debit balances.. $ 7,i<^.6T.
All other assets not ad-
mitted "90.93
Total assets not ad-
mitted I
Total admitted assets. $ 30.117,245.40
Liabilities Dec. 31, 1910.
Net value of outstanding _ „
policies •••• 2<,<03,.84.0O
Present value on supple-
mentary contracts and
canceled policies •
Claims adjusted and not
due, and unadjusted
and reported ••
Premiums paid in ad-
vance • • • •
Dividends due policy
holders
Special reserve
All other liabilities
Total liabilities on pol-
icy holders' account. $ 28,983,461.26
Unassigned funds (sur- ..,,-8.,,
plus) ♦ 1.133, .84.11
Exhibit ot Policies, 1910 Business.
No. Amount,
Policies in force
at beginning of
cofum'if^nli^**^ 63431 $118,503,588.00
Policies in force
at close of the ^^^^^ 126,350,616.00
Net increase .... 3911 7.847,028.00
49,086.90
62.420.91
24,620.37
833,942.77
5.000.00
304,606.30
Total admitted asscU $ 2,444.2<3.58
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, lOIO.
Unpaid losses and claims $ 113,008.73
Unearned premiums 1.143,042.28
Recialmable on perpetual policies 23.708.30
Salaries, expenses, taxee. dividends and
interest due "•„?'?'
AU other liablliUes f ,«„ J*'*?
Caiiltal stock paid up BOO.OOO.Ofl
Total UabUlUes. Indudlac capital...! 1.798,103.52
KM mirolus * 646.170.06
RISKS AND PREMIUMS. 1910 BUSINESS.
•FUe rlaks written during the year $162,035,304.00
Premiums received tbanOB 1.816,888.14
ORDER OF HEARING ON PETITION
FOR PROBATE OF FOREIGN
WILL —
State of Minnesota, County of St.
Louis — SB. ^ ^ r.
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of Calvin
H. Carter, Decedent:
Certain Instruments purporting to be
authenticated copies of the last Will
and Testament of Calvin H. Carter,
and of the probate thereof In the Sur-
rogate's Court In and for the County
of Mad'son, State of New York, hav-
ing been presented to this court, and
the petition of Chauncey F. Carter and
Charles H. Klmberley being filed
herein, representing, among other
things, that said decedent, then being
a resident of the County of Madison.
State of New York, died testate in the
County of Madison .State of New York,
on the 9th day of March. 1909, leaving
estate in the County of St. Louis, State
of Minnesota, and that said Instrument
has been allowed and admitted to pro-
bate as his Will in the court above
named, and praying that said Will be
allowed and admitted to probate in
this state, and that letters testamen-
tary be Issued thereon to Chauncey F.
Carter and Charles H. Klmberley,
IT IS ORDERED. That said petition
be heard before this court, at the Pro-
bate Court Rooms In the Court House,
Total ledger assets (an
per balance) $ 904.475.73
NoB-Ledscr Aiiscts.
Interest and rents dun
and accrued f
Market value of bondii
and stocks over booh
value • ! •
Net deferred and unpaid
premiums
10,757.40
1,446.70
85,650.26
3831
Issued, revived and
increased dur-
ing the year...
Total terminated
during the year
By death 801
By maturity 147
By expiration . . . 245
By surrender .... 9*7
By lapse l'*i
7742 $ 16,438.308.00
8,691,280.00
1,576,914.00
282,914.00
333,038.00
2,108.225.00
3,783.522.00
506,667.00
Gross assets $ 1,002,330.09
Deduct Assets Not Admitted.
Agents' debit balances.. $ 9,136.09
All other assets not ad-
mitted 18,726.32
Total assets not ad-
mitted $ 27,862.41
Total admitted assets.! 974,467.68
LiablliUes Dee. :!I, 1010.
Net value of outstanding
policies $
Claims due and unpaid..
Claims adjusted and net
due, and unadjusted
and reported ... ..
Premiums paid In a<.-
vance •,:•''
Dividends due pollcj-
holders •
All other liabilities
Total liabilities on pol-
icyholders' account .f
Unassigned funds (»uir-
431,840.00
3,235.43
14,177.86
1,594.90
21,686.18
8,519.10
By decrease ^ . ,«,«
Business la Minnesota In lOlO
No.
Policies in force
at beginning of
the year ...... 10«z »
Issued during the
year ,• ■ •' ^^**
Ceased to be In force
during the year 91
In force Dec. 3lBt
last 1318 ^
Losses and claims in-
curred and settled dur-
ing the year I
Amount*
1,927,681.00
661,542.00
156,292.00
2,423.931.00
10,202.60
481,062.47
Received for premiums.. $ 7,891,102.00
State of Minnesota, Department of In-
I Hereby Certify. That the Annual
Statement of the Phoenix Mutual Life
Insurance Company, for the year end-
ing December 31st, 1910, of which the
above is an abstract, has been received
and filed in this Department and duly,
approved by me. ^ ^ ^ preUS,
Commissioner of Insuranosk .
T
1
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1
II
4
WHEAT IS
FORCED UP
Eleventh Hour Shorts Driven
to Cover— Bulls
Active.
News Bearish— Larger World's
Movement— Flour Trade
Dull
Duluth Board of Trade, April 21. —
Wheat advanced alightly today al-
tbout;h conditions and news were bear-
ish. The bulls were active and shorts
were afraid to press their cause.
Eleventli hour selltira found the market
going against them and when they
oovered the market advanced furtlier
and closed Bligtitly higher than yes-
terday.
May wheat gained ^c and July made
a like advance. Cash wheat was Ic
over May. Oats and rye were un-
changed. Barley lost 5c. Durum de-
clined "-sC.
Linseed was lightly stronger and
trading was liglit. May advanced ^c
to I2.57H!. The current delivery of
riata seed at Antwerp was quoted at
an advance at ^.i.'il.
The wheat market today was weak
in the early hours but support ap-
peared later in tlie session and values
nrmeii. The news was preponderately
bearish. There was no demand In casli
wheat and the Hour trade Is reported
to have quieted down considerably*
The larger millers report trade to be
dull and tlio small millers are not
doing any business of consequence.
This condition is nation-wide and Is
cspeciallv true of the East which Is
the biggest tlour consuming territory
in the country.
Whatever strength there was In
May wheat seemed to be due solely
to manipulation. It must be consid-
ered, however, that within less than
two weeks owners of May delivery
mu$t get out their check books or ac-
cept tfellvery of the real wheat. Tiie
dull condition that Is now troubling
the owners of the cash article will then
affect tlie speculative element also.
Owners of wlieat are ready to deliver
wheat to speculators because they
are wiling to pay more for It than
miller.-*. ,
The squeeze In April wheat at Buaa-
pest appears to be history. The Buda-
pest market which advanced 5c yes-
terday was off IVsC today and the
effect of the advance in continental
markets which was spread over recent
davs was lost, tlie continental markets
closing lower yesterday. There was
no export business of Manjtobas today
althoiiKh the market was so near to a
Working basis that the comlltion was
regarded as a disturbing element in
the plans of the bears.
Crop report."? from Russia are espe-
cial! v favorable and private cables
said that Interior reserves of wheat
are unusually heavy. Australian of-
fers are flrnf\. Argentine shipments
of wheat will be large this week, but
most of the stuff Is directed to the
continent. Argentine crop advices are
favorable. Br-K^mhall estimates the
wheat and flour shipment."?, exclusive
of North America at 10.100.000 bu.
compared with 9.920.000 bu Iflst week.
Europe will take oil but 700.000 bu.
Crop reports from the winter wheat
territory are especially favorable. The
Kansas crop Indicates a yield of be-
tween 8.",. 000. 000 and 90.000.000 bu. Il-
linois seeded 2..T00.OO0 acres and It will
harvest 2.500.000 acres, which Indicates
a yield of 40,000.000 bu. basing the
estimate on a productlQ,n 'of sixteen
bu to an acre. The average yield for
the last Ave years has been seventeen
bu.
Crop reports received today indicate
that there is abundant moisture in the
Southwest except in the extreme West-
ern and Southwestern part of Kansas,
where moisture is needed for wheat
which was especially late in germinat-
ing. Iteports from the Northwest to
The Herald Indicate that seeding of
wheat is genera! under favorable cir-
cumstances, and that the acreage will
be the largest in the history of the
spring wheat crop. Reports from the
three prairie provinces of Canada are
mixed. Some messages Indicate that
moisture is needed In scattered locali-
ties, while other.-? say that soil condi-
tions are first class.
CaMh Sale» Friday.
No. 1 northern. 1 car
No. 1 niTtliem. pnrt oar
No. I ni nliern, SOO bu
No. 2 niirtlipni, 1 car
Nn. 1 (luriini. 3 cars
No. 2 ilurum. 1 c.ir
Barley. 1 lai. wheaty
Barley, part car
No. 1 llii!.te.I. 1-3 c.ir
No. 1 liuicc'l, part car
. .'.'7V«
. .ns
. .f»6
.85^3
. .S4
. .Sg
. .81
. 2.5<J
. 2.58
MARKET GOSSIP
••Seeding Is now in full swing," said
a special Winnipeg Avire. -Special re-
ports show farmers busy on their land.
Never in the hl.-tory of the province
has .seeding started under such favor-
able conditions as to climate and soil.
Optimistic spirit prevails. Reports re-
(eived from special correspondents
throughout the West show that seed-
ing is now In full swing and by the end
of thr^ week large acreage will be sown.
Conditions as to weather and soil are
considered as eminently favorable and
farmers are filled with optimism at
prospects."
* » •
Yesterday's Chicago Record-Herald:
In his spec'lal annual summary of Kan-
sas crop conditions the Kecord-HeraU'
correspondent at Topeka sa>s: riiis
Is considered the critical month for the
Kansas wheat crop. It is in April thar
the plant gets a start that Insures a
heavy yield, if rains are sufficient to
keep the soil amply moist about the
fibrous roots. Farmers and grain men
who have carefully noted conditions
say tliat they are very favorable at this
time, with the exception of the extreme
western counties. There rain Is needea,
and much of the wheat is suffering
from high winds and dust storms. In
other sections of the state the fiehls
are taking on a fine growth and a
lieavy yield Is promised. Some St. Louis
and Chicago men who have Just visited
the wheat belt give It as their opinion
that the prospects in Kansas now are
20 per cent better than they liave been
for ten years. Corn planting is now In
progress in many sections of the state,
i'armr^rs say the .«oll conditions aro
better than for many years. A largo
acreage is being planted, and generally
the farmers ai*e using improved seed,
furnished through tlie aid of the agri-
AMERICAN
Open.
May—
Duluth
Minneapolis
Chicago . . . .
Winnipeg . .
New York .
St. Louis . . .
Kansas City
July—
Duluth
Minneapolis
Chicago . . . .
Winnipeg . .
New York .
St. Louis . . .
Kansas City
Soutliwe^teru
May
July
.9G»4-96
.89^4-%
.93V»
.95«4
.87^
.85
Friday,
WHEAT
High.
I .97 '4b
.96'S,
THE DULUTHHERALD.
April 21, 1911.
23
MARKETS, APRIL 21.
.90Vi
.94-Vi
.95%
.88Vi-%
.85%-^i
Low.
I .96Vi
.95%
.89%
.92%
.94^i
.87%
.84%-
%
and
.97%
.97Vi-
.87%-
.95
.94%
.84%
.82%
Winnipeg
.98b
^ .97%
% .88V4
.95%
.95
.85
.83%
quotations furnished by
.97%a
.96%-%
.87%
.9414
.94%
.84%-%
.82%-V2
B. K. Baket
Close.
I .97%b
.96%b
.90%-%
.94-%
.95%
.88>-4-%
.85%-%
.98b
.97%a
.88-%
.95%
.95
.85-%
.83%
Co.
DULUTH DURUM MARKET
High. Low. ^^'PiTw
.85%b .85% .8o%b
.86%b .86%a .86%b
Open.
.85%
.86%
April 20.
I .97a
.96%-%
.90%
.93%
.95%
.88Vi-%
.86%-%
.97%a
.97%-%
.87% -88
.95%b
.94%
.85%
.83%-%
April 20.
.85%a
.86%a
May
July
DULUTH LINSEED
Open. High. Low
.12.58 $
.58
12.57
MARKET.
Close.
>2.57%b
2.57 %n
April
12.57
2.57n
Brand in 100-pound sacks, 52l.50@22.
The flour market ..is without new
feature. Demand m<?iderate and ship-
ping directions fair. Prices un-
changed. Shipments, 63,046 barrels.
First patents, $4.45® 4.75; second pat-
ents, J4.35@4.C5; first clears. $2.»5(tt
3.40; second clears, $1.95(&)2.60.
Flax — Receipts, 3 cars; year ago, 20:
shipments, 2. Thp demand was tsrong
for both spot and to arrive at Ic over
Duluth May contract. Offerings scarce.
Closed. $2.58%.
Barley — Receipt*. 16 cars; year ago,
45; shipments, 22. The demand was
strong for malting barley at prices ic
to 2c higher than yesterday. Feeding
grades in slow demand. Offerings lib-
eral. Closing range, 82c(&>$1.08.
THE COPPER STOCKS.
The following are the closing quota-
tions of copper stocks at Boston today,
reported by Paine, Webber & Co.. 316
West Superior street:
Duluth close- Wheat — On track: No. 1 hard. 99V&C. On track, to ar-
No 1 northern 98 %c; No 2 nortehrn. 95%-96%c: May. 97%c bid;
9Sc'bid; September. 91c nominal Durum—On track. In store '°t?J^"
----- "-•■v. r bid: May, .85%c bid; July, 86%c bid. Lln-
No. 1, 85%c; No. 2. 83%_c
•»/. bid; July, $2.57% nominal.
-90c.
nve:
July.
seed: On" track,' to arrive, $2758%; May, $2^5 ._ , , ,
oats 32%c. Rye. 84-86c. Barley, 94c-$1.05. Feed barley, .a
Receipts— Wheat. 33,768 bu; last year. 86.645 bu; barley, o,943 bu;
year. 13.511 bu; linseed, 211 bu; last year, 5,433 bu .0004
Shipments— Wheat, 222.620 bu; last year, 491,948 bu; corn, 49,384
oats, 159.725 bu; last year. 3,043 bu.
last
bu;
cultural college and secured from other
sources."
• * «
Minneapolis wheat stocks decreased
1,275,000 bu this week.
• • *
Cars Inspected: Wheat— No. 1 hard,
none; No. 1 northern. 15; No. 2 north-
ern, 3; No. 1 durum, 1: No. 2 durum. 2:
No. 3 durum, 1; total durum. 4; total
wheat, 22. last year, 50; linseed. 1. last
year. 4; barley. 4, last year, 7; total.
27; on track, 24.
« • *
' • ♦ • ,. .
Le Count wired Barrell from York.
Neb.: "From "Wichita to York, via Mc-
Farland, Belleville and Lincoln, wheat
in splendid condition. Stand and color
good here. Weather favorable, with
abundant moisture."
Cars of wheat received — Last
Today, year
DUith 22 50
Minneapolis 129 116
Chicago 43 19
Winnipeg 114 3*>7
Kansas City 29 31
St. Louis, bu 28,000 14,000
• • «
Cars of linseed received — Last
Today, year.
Duluth 1 •*
Minneapolis 3 20
Winnipeg 4 H
• • •
puts — May, 9r.-% fff'95%c;
calls, May, 97%(&97%c;
Minneapolis
Juiv, 967^c;
July. 98 %c.
Broomhall
Wheat— There
cabled
was a
from
firm
Liverpool:
undertone
values %d higher
at the start with
and following the opening there was . r
a further advance of %d with shorts
nervous. The strength in Aemrica
and the closing firmness In Buenos Ay-
res yesterday together with the fact
that Plata offers are opened higher
prompted free supplies. Spot market
was firm with an Improved demand for
Australian offers which were firm. Fol-
lowing the opening and during the
roraainder of the morning there was a
disposition for profits as the advance
checked the demand and prices de-
clined -"Sid to %d from the high points.
The continent was selling futures here.
Argentine shipments were liberal and
the largest proportion was destined to
the continent with world's shipments
for the week expected to be liberal.
Crop advices from Argentina and Rus-
sia contin'.:e favorable. At 1:30 p. m.
the market was easier and vsd to V^d
was some Increase, too. In country of-
ferings. May opened %@»4c to %c
lower at 50V4&%c to 50%c, touched
50-%fx50%c and sagged to 60V8@%c.
The market later recovered with
wheat. The close was strong at 50%
(&51c, a net gain of %c.
Scattered selling by commission
houses proved sufficient to depress
oais. Bearish sentiment in other grain
pits furnished tlie motive. May started
%'(t%c to %c off at 31%(fe31''gc to
31 %c and dropped to 31 %c.
improvement In the hog market gave
firmness to provisions. Trade, liow-
ever, was small. First sales showed a
rise of 2%c to 2%$? 5c. with July op-
tions at $14.80 for pork, $7.95 for lard
and $8 fur ribs.
Ship-
Articles — Receipts, ments.
Flour, bbls 16.500 8.400
Wheat, bu 12,000 5,000
Corn, bu ..-. 106.200 81.600
Oats, bu 158,400 210.300
Rye. bu 2.000 7.400
Barley, bu 36,000 11,600
Car lot receipts: Wheat, 43 cars,
with 8 of contract grade; corn. 153 cars,
w'th 9 of contract grade; oats, 87 cars.
Total receipts of wheat at Chicago,
Minneapolis and Duluth today were 194
cars, compared with a holiday last
week and 185 cars the corresponding
day a year ago. ^^^
Cash close: Wheat — No. 2 red. 90 W
90%c; No. 3 red, 8S(&90c; No. 2 hard.
90'U92%c; No. 3 hard, 88Ci90c; No. 1
northern, $1.001«l.y3; No. 2 northern.
l.8^$1.92%; No. 3 northern, 98ra$1.oi;
No. 2 spring. 94(&98c; No. 3 spring, 92
$a93c; velvet clmff, 88{&96c; durum, 82
©SSc. Corn — Nt). 2, 51^51 %c; No. 2
white, 51#51%c: No. 2 yellow, 51C9
l»ic; No. 3, 50%fi50%c; No. 3 white,
fiO%(&50%c; No. 3 yellow. 50%® 51c;
No. 4. 49®49%c: No. 4 white. 49%^/
49\c; No. 4 yellow, 49%® 50c. Oats —
No. 2, 32''o32%c; No. 2 white, 33%®
34o: No. 3 white, 32%@33%c; No. 4
white. 32® 33c; standard. 33®33%c.
Jiye — No. 2, 02c. Barlej' — 70® $1.14.
Timothy — $12.00. Clover — $15.00
STOCKS —
Bid. I Asked.
off from the high and %d to %d high-
er than yesterdaj'.
Argentine wheat shipments
week, 2.>>24,000 bu; last week. 2,7
bu; last year. 1.688.UO0 bu. Corn
week, nil; last week. 153.000 bu
year, 97,000 bu. Visible supply In
ports — Wheat, now 3,S00,O0o bu
ago,
bu.
this
iO.OOO
this
last
chief
week
3.6S0,00tt bu: year ago, 2,500,000
Corn, now 34.000 bu; week ago.
76,000 bu; year ago, 227,000 bu. The
wheat market is firm with a good de-
mand. Arlvals from the interior are
moderate with the quality satisfactory.
Weather conditions continue favorable.
The corn market Is strongly held on
the unfavorable crop advices.
Broomhall estimates wheat and flour
shli>ments for this week exclusive of
North America 10,400,000 bu, against
9 920 OOO bu last week. Of this total,
Europe will take about 9,2O0,0uu bu.
Australia — The wheat shipments this
week amount to 1.7:!G,00o bu against
1,280.000 bu last week and 1.320.OOU bu
last year.
* • *
Clearances: Wheat. 47.000 bu; flour.
33,000 bbl; corn. 41,')i)0 bu: oats, 70 bu;
wheat and flour equals. 196,000 bu.
♦ ■♦ ♦
Closing wheat cables: Buenos Ayres
May, "^c up; June, 4,sC up; corn, -* ®
i-.c up; oats. unchanged. Budapest.
r%c oft'. Berlin, %c off. Liverpool,
'..d up
up.
Wheat—
Mny . . ,
July . . .
Sept . . .
Coru—
May . . ,
.lub . . .
.Sopl . . .
O.kti—
May . . ,
July . . .
Sept . . .
Mf:>*
.M..y .
July
Lanl,
May
July
Sliuit
I May .
; JiUy .
Sept .
Open.
.81) ■■;»-%
.50^4-%
.i:!U-
-9»
Hish.
.8SV,
.srw
.."51
.51^4-
.32*4
.. .31 •>4
.. .3l*«
.. .:us
I'crk, ptr
..I'i.r.o
..14.80
per liiO
.. '.n't
. . 7. yr>
lUlw. per
.. 8.:i:'a
.. 8.00
.35
.31H
bbl-
U.SiVi
lb—
s.oo
IJO lb—
8.5i%
8.02'/i
7. as
Low.
.8»H
.STVa
,83^
.50«,i-%
.51
.31%
.31%
.31%
lis. 30
It.tij
7.80
7.87'^
90
8.274
7.yo-u2%
7.85
Close.
.90»»-
.88</a
.50Ti-
.01**
.52^4
.31%
.31%
15.50
14.80
7.87 V«
7.y7b
8.47Vi
8.110
7.92V4
%
Algoma 6V8
Adventure •. 4%
Ahmeek 165
Allouez
American Zinc
Atlantic
Arcadian
Arizona Commercial.
Butte & Ballaklava..
Black Mountain ....
Butte Coalition ,
Calumet & Arizona...,
Calumet & Hecla
Centennial
Cons. Mercury
Copper Range
Daly West
Davis Daly
Kast Butte
Franklin
First National ..|
Giroux 15
Gran by |
Green Cananea
Hancock Consolidated..
Helvetia
Indiana
Isle Royale
Keweenaw
Lake Copper
La Salle
Mass Consolidated....
.Mass. Gas
Miami Copper
.Michigan
Mohawk
Nevada Cons
Nevada Utah
North I.>ake ,
Nipisslng
North Butte
OJlbway
Old Dominion
Osceola
I'arrot
Pneu. Ser
Qulncy , . ,
Ra.v Consolidated ....
Shattuck
.Santa Fe . , . .•
Shannon
Shqe Machinery
Superior Boston
Superior Copper
Superior & Pittsburg
Tamarack • .
Trlnlt.v
United Fruit
U. S. Mining
Mining, pfd
\JM 1 «■•■•■•■••••
i\p6X ••••••••••
Cons
Chemical . . .
duy
Corn and Wheat Bulletin.
four hours eiiJiug at
the twenty
April 21
8 a. m.. Fri-
'11 "i
Temperature.
-upiH
STATI0.\3.
3
a
e ^
3
3
t z:
S
^
■" f
Stats of
weather
^
a
♦-
9
•
II
u. s.
V. s.
Utah
Utah
Virginia
'N'ictoria
Winona
Wolverine . . .
Wyandot . . . . ,
Yukon Gold ..
Bohemia
Begole
Boston Ely . . .
Chino
Corbin Copper
Goldfield Cons.
La Rose
Ohio Copper .
Oneco
Ray Central .
South Lake . .
23%
4%
2%
12%
5
48%
480
11%
8c
60%
43^.
1 7-16
11%
8% I
1%
13-16
30%
6%
19%
1%
11
12
o
28%
4
5%
91
18%
1%
35
17%
68
5
10%
26%
5
36
100
11%
4%
66
15%
17%
75c
9%
53%
3%
31
13%
35
3%
186
33%
45%
29%
2%
13
58%
1%
6
■"1%'
3%
1%
■■i%*
21%
l'*
4%
1%
1%
1 7-16
4%
7
4%
170
32
24%
4%
3
13
5c
17
49
485
12
60%
4%
1%
11%
|9%
1 1%
5 15-16
32
6 7-16
20
1%
13
2%
29
4%
6%
91%
18%
1%
36
17%
72
5%
10%
27%
6
36%
103
13
5
67%
16
"i"
103
64
3%
32
14%
DULLNESS
INSrOCKS
Market Opens Heavy, Re-
covers But Becomes Easy
and Slcmps.
Some of the Leading Stocks
Drop to Near Day's
Low Level
4%
186%
45%
30%
2 '/a
13%
sale
2
6%
108
1%
4
2
2%
1%
21%
4
6%
. 11-16
1%
1%
1 9-16
4%
New York, April 21. — A brisk selling
movement was Inaugurated with the
opening of the stock market today.
Almost the entire list was depressed
Among the weakest Issues were the
fertilizer shares, Virginia-Carolina
Chemical losing 1% and American Cot-
ton Oil a point. United States Steel
opened %c lower on a sale of 1,200
shares. Union Pacific and Missouri Pa-
cific declined %.
Liberal offerings of the fertilizer
group defeated efforts to rally the
standard stocks after the opening dis-
play of heaviness. American Agricul-
tural Chemical declined 1%, Virginia-
Carolina Chemical 1% and American
Cotton Oil 1%. Bear operators sold
these stocks confidently on the belief
that the disturbed trade conditions
would compel a reduction in dividends.
The decline during the week amount-
ed to 2% In American Chemical and 6%
in American Cotton Oil and Virginia-
Carolina Chemical. Pennsylvania was
bid up a point at 11 o'clock and the
general market hardened sUgiitly in
sympathy.
Changes in prices during the morn-
ing session were negligible except In a
few Issues. Sentiment was not clearly
enough defined to bring about a pro-
nounced movement in prices in either
direction, although the buying was
considered better than the selling in
the early decline. London unloaded
some 15.000 shares at the opening,
chlefiy Union Pacific, the balance being
United States Steel and Reading. Re-
ports of suspension of work on the
construction of a large Alabama plant
of the United States Steel corporation
was given as the reason for the heavi-
ness Tn that stock. Toward midday the
tone of the market became appreciably
better and prices of representative
stocks recovered to yesterday's closing
figures. The fertilizer group, however,
continued under pressure. Rock Island
I»referred advanced 1%. Bonds were
steady.
The market closed heavy. With the
exception of a few fluctuations of a
point or so either way among active
stocks and further weakness in the
fertilizer slocks, there was no move-
ment of importance in the last hour's
trading. The last tone in general was
easier, some of the leading stocks fall-
ing gradually to near their low level
of the day.
Knights of Ak.sarben «nd other civic
organizations took part, and escorted
the Des Moines and Omaha teams to
the newly arranged laseball grounds.
The new steel and concrete grand-
stand was dedicated with appropriate
ceremonies in which President Norris
L. O'Neill of the Western league and
Mayor Dahlman participated.
•
Morrow vs. Dillon.
Syracuse. N. Y.. April 21.— Tommy
Ryan announced today that Howard
Morrow, his candidate for the middle-
weight championship, has been matched
with Jack Dillon of Indianapolis at
Buffalo before the International Ath-
letic club on May 8.
♦—
Britton vs. Baroda.
St. Joseph. Mo., April 21.— Features
of an athletic tournament here tonight
under the auspices of the Business
Men's A. C. will be 6. fifteen-round go
between Jack Britton of Chicago, light-
weight, and Jake Baroda, South tot. Jo-
seph, and a six-round go between An-
tolne Ruedy. Omaha, and Lddle How-
ard, St. Joseph.
CLERICAL ERROR
DELAYS RETURNS
Befieved Mrs. S<;ott Has Been
Re-Elected President of
D. A.R.
Washington. April 81.— The Daugh-
ters of the American Revolution await-
ed with Impatient Interest today an an-
nouncement of the results of yester-
day's election. Telhsts were at work
all night.
Early today boti factions were
claiming victory. Tlie friends of Mrs.
Matthew T. Scott of Illinois insisted
that she had been n^-elected president
general by an Increased majority. Two
years ago Mrs. Scott won by eight
votes. The supporters of Mrs. Wllliain
C. Story of New York, the "Insurgent
candidate for president general, de-
clared today that 1 he official count
would find Mrs. Story the victor.
The fight two ytars ago between
these same candidates was so close
that most of the deU gates preferred to
await the official announcement before
accepting any of the rumors which be-
gan as soon as the polls closed and
continued throughou : the night.
At 9 a. m. today the tellers were still
locked In a room on the third fioor of
Continental hall, counting the ballots.
It was said they were having a lively
session. . ^ , , ,
At 12:15 p. m. it ^I'as said a clerical
error was holding uj) announcement of
the election. At that hour, however.
the report became general that Mr«.
Scott had won. The Story force. Ju-
bilant early in the day, had practically
given up hope.
VIC.\R OF ONE PARISH 71 Y'E.\R8.
London Evening Standard: Tha
Rev. Henry Martyn Sherwood, who re-
cently completed seventy-one years as
vicar of the parish of White Ladies.
Aston, has placed his resignation In
the hands of the bishop of Worcester.
Mr. Sherwood was graduated from
Oxford seventy-six years ago and waa
ordained deacon in 1836. He accepted
the living of White Ladles in 1S39, and
four years later was also appointed
to the Incumbency of Broughton
Hackett, which he held until 1898. It
is claimed for the retiring vicar that
he Is the oldest clergyman in
diocese of Worcester.
tba
Buy in Duluth.
LEGAL. NOTICES.
CERTIFICATE OFINCORPORATION
WALHALLA IRON AND STEEL
COMPANY.
%«
A GOOD FIRM TO SHIP
YOUR GRAIN TO
ATWOOD-LARSON
COMPANY, Inc.
Special attention given to cash
grains. We give ail ahipmenta our
personal attention.
DULUTH.
MINNHAPOUt.
to %d off: corn unchanged to
Antwerp. i%c up.
r • ♦
Forecast: Illinois. Missouri and Iowa
— Generally fair tonight and .Saturday;
not much change in temperature. Wis-
consin— Generally fair tonight and Sat-
urday; orobably frost tonight in low
lands. -Minnesota — Fair tonight and
Saturday; warmer in northwest por-
tion tonight; probably little frost to-
night in low lands of east portion.
North Dakota — Increasing cloudiness
tonight and Saturdav; warmer toniglit.
South Dakota — Fair and warmer to-
night: probablv becoming unsettled by
.Saturday night. Nebraska — Increas-
ing cloudiness tonight and Saturday;
warmer in west portion tonight; Kan-
sas— P'alr tonight; Saturday probably
Increasing cloudiness.
• • *
B. W. Snow wired: '"The bulk of the
oats was seeded earlv and is making
splendid growtli. During the last ten
days there was rain enough to inter-
fere with the finish of seeding In a
few districts, but the delay In both
area and time was small and the pres-
ent condition of soil moisture more
than offsets the delay by the oppor-
tunity furnished for quick and strong
growth. The oats crop as a whole Is
starting with unusually good promise."
♦ • *
Montreal hoM 30.000 bbl of
moruinJ^jandj was asked to
000 bbl more.
:.p r.r ♦ • ♦
M'>€flaMI Miller said: The generj^l
condltiun nf tiie winter wheat crop
contlR'J^s satisfactory, the plant In
most .sections .has a healthy color and
."troBg growth. In a few localities,
notably ill NorXiiern Ohio, the growth is
thin and lacks the fine appearance of
the '-'•eater part of the crop.
« « *
Primaries: Wheat receipts today
312.000 bu; last year. 290.000 bu; ship-
ments today, ,S92,0OO vs. 590,000 bu.
Corn, receipts today. 347,000 vs. 180.000
bu; shipments today. 395.000 vs. 469,-
000 bu.
* • «
Bradstreet's clearances:
1.770,000 bu: corn. 829,000 bu
Alex.iiiilrU Clc.tr
i •amiJbell Clear
I'roiik'.itjii Clear
I Dftr>lt City Clear
I H,ilsta(l Clear
j Moiuevi.leo Clear!
I New I'Ira Clear|
1 rark iUpl'U Clear
' K.nlvcjur Clxucly
Wliiiietiauo Clear
Wurlliingloii Clearj
.^lueiUa Clea r,
Bouiiu.-iu Clear;
LaiiSilon Cleari
I.arlninre Clear!
Lisbon Clear]
Mlnot Cleari
IVralilua Cleari
.VIr n leeii 1
.Millbank Clear(
.Mil -lieU Clear)
r.eilfielil Clear'
JBUmank Cle.^r
JlXnIU Laka Clear'
Kuluih Cleari
JHurm rt. Cl'iuilyl
tl..a Cnisse Clouibi
.Mlmieaimlu Pt. Cloudy |
t.Mn'uliead Clear!
tPlerre Clear|
t.St. I'aul t'learl
Wluiiipeji Ciearj
US
74
61
til
6t>
7«
6)i
m
60
68
• 0
6S
6i
64
72
70
66
70
66
63
ea
70
68
60
66
6'i
08
66
64
38
32
32
:?o
30
38
46
34
40
44
34
32
34
30
32
32
30
30
34
38
32
34
36
32
36
;'.6
40
44
.^4
38
44
30
0
u
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
u
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.04
0
0
0
0
0
.02
0
KK.M.\1'.KS — Muderale temijeraturei prevailed
erallv. Lifiiil rains fell <«ver fiidiaiu. Uliiiou
Mulligan. U. W. UlfH.VIlDSON,
Local t'ureca^ter
gen-
aiici
flour
offer
this
30,-
Wheat,
CHIC.4G0 MARKET.
Disappointing Cables Pull Support
From Under Wheat.
Chicago, Ai)ril 21. — Disappointing
cables today pulled the support from
under wheat. Liberal world shipments
were expected, especially from Au-
stralia and the Argentine. Moreover
there was favorable crop news regard-
ing Russia. The fact that shorts here
covered on a big scale yesterday tended
also to place the market In a technical-
ly weaker position. Greater attention,
too was given the Ideal conditions both
northwest and southwest from here.
Opening prices were V^c to %<§'%c
down. May started at 89%c to 89f*c a
loss of V*c to %c. and declined to 89%c.
Absence of selling pressure led to
a decided rally. Diminished acreage in
Oklahoma helped. The close was firm
with Mav at 90»^@90V4c a net gain
of -^e^c.
Better weather eased corn. Ther*
T. Indicates InapprecLtble rainfall. 'Maximum foe
yesterday. tMinlmuiu for twenty-four hours, ending
8 a. m. 75tii meridian time. tMtulmum tempcratur*
for 12-hour period ending at 8 a. m.
NOT>^ — Tlie average maximum and minimum tem-
pcntures are made up at each renter from the actual
number of reporta rrcetved, and the average rainfall
from the number of station! reporting .1 luch or
more. The "state of wealbet" U Utat prevailing
at Umc of otaerratioa
Wheat
winter,
6s 10»,2d;
L.l%-erpooI Grain.
Liverpool. April 21. — Closing:
— Spot, dull; No. 2 red western
no stock; futures quiet; May
July, 6s 9^*d; October, 6s 9»4d,
Corn — Spot, firm; new American
mixed, 4s 6d; old, Gs Id; new American
kiln dried, 4s 8d; futures, steady; May,
4s 8d; July, 4s 7 7id.
Xew York
New York, April 2
— .May, 9.5 •'<sc; July,
58c; July, 59c.
Grain.
1. — Close: Wheat
95c. Corn — May,
MINNE.\P0L1S MARKET.
Wheat Shows Moderate Strength
Just Before Close.
Minneapolis. Minn., April 21. — Uncon-
firmed reports of export business at
.\tlantlc ports caused moderate
strength in wheat just before the close.
Karly market In very narrow range.
May and July both closed 'li <Q> %c high-
er than yesterday and September MtC
higher. Trading In local pit of moder-
ate volume and scalping profits quiet
general' y accepted. Local elevator
stocks decreased 1,275,000 bu for the
week, the biggest weekly decrease on
this croD and one of the heaviest ever
recordea In this market. Minneapolis
today received 129 cars of wheat
against 116 a year ago; Duluth. 22
against 50 and Winnipeg 114 against
3C7. May wheat opened 96*4 fi 96c; high,
965^c; low, 95%c; close, 96>4c. July,
opened. 97 >4 to 97Vbc; high. 97 %c; low.
96*i^96Ti,c; close. 97 '►gc. September
opened, 89%c; high. 90c; low, S9»mc;
close. 90c
Cash wheat steady and In good de-
mand. Offerings light and elevator
•stocks drawn upon. No. 1 northern
sold for 2V''fi3»^c the May contract.
Close: No. 1 hard, $1.00»4: No. 1 north-
ern. ggcQIl; to arrive, 98^<fi99>^c; No.
•' northern, 951^ Ct 98Vsc; to arrive, 95i^
(a98c: No. 3 wheat, nM(&96^/ic. No. 3
vellow corn, 51c. No. 3 white oats,
31c. No. 2 rye. 90c
Mlllstuff^ — Shipment.-^. 1,979 tons.
Market steady with good demand.
Cotton Market.
New York, April 21. — The cotton
market opened steady at an advance
of 1 to 3 points in response to higher
cables, the continued big spot business
in Liverpool, and further reports of an
active trade In Manchester. Weather
contlitions in the South were consid-
ered more favorable, however, and
there were also some indications of
profit-taking by larger longs around
the opening price. Fluctuations be-
came irregular after the call with
prices easing off slightly for the best.
Spot closed quiet, 5 points higher;
middling uplands, 15.00; middling gulf.
15.25; no sales. Futures closed steady;
closing bids: -\i)ril. 14.81; May, 14.87;
June. 14.90: July. 14.92; August. 14.60;
September. 13.40; October. 12.89; Novem-
ber. 12.82; December. 12.80; January,
12.77; March, 12.87.
New Tork stock quotations fumlsLed The Herald bi
Piper, Jolinson & Com:
STOCKS—
I Open. I High. | Low. | Close.
Cliloago lilveHtock.
Chicago, .\prll 21. — CaUle. reci-lpt. estimated at
l.O.til; market steady to .-trong; tieeves. $."i.l.")(n 6.60;
Texas steers. $4.."0(a r..60; fto^tern steers. $t.80(" '1.7",;
stiK'kera and feeders, $1(11 ."1. 70; cons and heifers.
$2.6'>(".';.7D; calves. $4.7j(o6.30. Hog-, receipts esti-
mated at 16.000; market sU'.idy to strinit; ilght.
%:,.•.>:•{>! e.r.O: mixeil. $.).yO«i'0.:;o; heavy. $.">.7o("0.2o;
rriugh, $."..7o^-'>.90; gi>od to choice heavy. $,"..yO(<' 0.20;
pigs. $.'>.90(<i0.25; hulk of sales. $6.10(«6.20. Sheep,
receipts Mtlnialrd at 7.000: market steaily to shade
higher. $3(a4.7o; western, $3.I.)i" 4.70; yearlings,
$4.:!0C'»'.2.">; lamljs. native. $4.50i£!U.2j. ; wcoteni.
$4.75(36.25.
MIdtvay HorMe Market.
Minnesota Tran-fet. St. Paul, Minn.. April 21.—
Itarrett & Zimmerman rp»ort: Market was featured
with an active retail demand for draft pairs and
farm mares. Drivers and saddlTs found a numl)er
of takers. Several carload of general pun>ose horses
were among the receipts.
Uiafters. extra $18.'.<ff240
l»rafttrs. cliuioa 120(«.170
Uraflcis, common to good. S>.i("ll.'>
Farm mares and horses, extra 140 (n 180
Kann mares and hor.sca. choice.... I15fel3.'i
Farm hor-es. common to good 65(?»100
Delivery • 140(nl!l.'i
Drivers and saddlers 130('i 22.>
Mules, acourdlug to size 150(<i250
Amalgamated <
.\merlcan Car Foundry. . .
.\merioan Ijocnmotive. . . .
American SmelV.'ls
A. T. & T
Atchison
Halthnore & Ohio
Itrooklyn Kupld Transit..
t'hesaiwake & Ohio
('.. M. & St. Paul
Canadian Pacific
Krie
do 1 st pfd
Gre.tt Northern Ore
Missouri. Kaiiiias & Texas.
.Ml^smirl I'acUlc
New Yolk Central
NorUieru I'aclf ic
Peniisyhana
Pc»i>le's <jas
Prmed Steel Cur ....
llri<ubllc steel & Iron.
I((H'k Island
do pfd
Reading
Soo Line
Sout'ierii ll>il\va>
Southern Pacific
Twin City
fnliiu Pacific
riah Copper
t'nited Sulc^ Steel ...
d) pfd
Waliash
do pfd
^Vloc•lnsin Central
60%
61%
60 %|
51%
51%
Sl%
35
ri"!*
72%
Tl%
llr,^
14.-.%
145
107 Vi
108%
107%
103%
107%
77%
78»*
78 Ti
78%
118H
118%
118%
224 '^
29
2a%
29
46%
60 «4
60%
60
31%
;;2
31%
48%
48%
48%
105%
105%
105%
121',
122V«
121%
12.'',%
124%
123%
104
104%
104
31%
31
28
28%
27%
3»»4
59%
59%
151%
151%
151%
i:i6
26 H
26%
26%
113%
114%
113%
108
174%
174%
174%
43
74%
74%
74%
119%
117%
119%
16
36%
68%
61%
51%
35%
72
145
108
1«8
77%
78%
118%
'29%
46%
60
31%
48%
105%
121%
124%
101%
13%
:{1
28%
59%
151%
1.16
26%
113%
10.S
174%
43
74%
119%
16
36%
68%
100 LATE
TO CILASSIFY
Oac Cent • Ward Eaek Iii«»rtl»a.
No Advcrtlacmemt Lcm Tham IS Ocata ,
SUPERPL.UIOU3 HAIR. MOLES,
warts, removed forever. Miss Kelly's
Manicuring and Ilassaglng Parlors,
131 West Superior street.
Duluth Securities.
SKCUR1T1F>S—
I Bid jAskMl
rirst Nationrl Itank |
American I';x.Jiange NaUonal Bank
City National Bank
Northern National Bank
St. Loula County Bank
Western State Bank
Dululh-Superior TracUoo Ca
do pfd
Duluth Street Railway, lit g. St 30 U &
Duluth Kdison Electric, 1st g. •. (. 6*
Match. 1931. op. U. A S. A
Oreat Northern Power Co. beads
American CarboUte. par $1
Zenith Furnace Co
40*
8S5
ISO
13*
100
140
77
u
•3%
84
se
101
08
100
80
> ■ • *
2.85
3.S8
as
100
21.—
Sonth St. Pan! LlveMtock.
South St. Paul. Minn., April
Cattle — Receii)ts, 770; market steady;
quotations unchanged. Hogs — Recei|its.
3.500; market steady; range. |5.85(g.6.10;
bulk of sales. |5.95, Sheep — Receipts,
100; market li.ght; sheep, Jl.00fe5.00;
lambs, 13.75 @ 6.00.
New York Moaey.
New York, April 21. — Close — Money
on call steady, 2>*'&2% per cent; rul-
ing rate, 2Vi; clo.sing bid. 2V»: offered
at 2 •■^4. Time loans very dull; 60 days,
2% per cent; 'j(J days, 2>/3<a'254: six
months, 2% ^3. Prime mercantile
paper, 3% to 4 per cent. Sterll'ig ex-
change steady \*ith actual business in
bankers' bflls at $4.84.40 for 60 day
bills, and at $4.86:45 for demand. Com-
mercial blU.s, $4.83 "s. Bar silver,
53',%c; Mexican dollars. 45c. Govern-
ment bonds steady; railroad bonds
steady.
THE PRODUCE MARKETS.
New York.
New Yortt. .\pril 21.— Butter— steady ; receipts, 5,47S
packages; process. Septenilxr. 18c; extras. 17%c; firsts.
l«('<16V.>c: creamery specials, 23ca2:t%c; extras, 2?%c;
flrsU. 20%(a2l%c; seconds. 2oc: creamery held
extras. 20(o2u%c: firsts. IStelSc; seconds. 17^17%c:
state dairy finest. 2l%(<ri«%c; good t» prime, 19®
20%c; common to fair. 15(<il8c. Chewe — Steady;
ri-celpts. 1.934 boxes: sute wholo milk sl>eclal, lU"'
15%c; September quality fancy colored, 13%c; white.
1:5c; summer and fall made. colore<l choice. 12@
I2%c: same white. IK^ll^^c; current make large
best. 10%(ulO%c: same common to fair. 9%(h10c-
sklius. 2(n lOc. Kggs— Finn; receipts. 23.178 cases;
fresh gathered, selected extras, 17c; do firsts, 16%(*
17%<'; seionds, 16c; storage packed first*. 18(«'
18%c: fresh gathered dirties. No. 1, 14%(3l,")c; do
No. 2, 13%(nl4c: fresli (!atlier«d checks. 13Sl4c:
state. Pennsylvania and nearby heimery Lrown. 18%
(a 19c: brown and lolxed. gathered. 17%(al8t:;
iouihem duck eggs. 21(»25c; western. 22@'23c.
DEFENSE FAILS TO
GET IN EVIDENCE
Attorney in Cowan Case
Called Upon to Retract
Statement
Bismarck. N. D., April 21. — (Special
to The Herald.) — Failure of the de-
fense to secure the, introduction of
evidence to Impeach the testimony of-
fered by Dan Brennan wiien he was
on lite witness stand, together with
the serving of a request upon Tracy
Bangs for the retraction of certain
statements made by him several days
ago, marked the proceeding of the im-
peachment court today. Judge Cowan
as respondent.
Norman Morrison was called to the
stand to refute the statement by Dan
Brennan that he had never told Morri-
son that he (Brennan) would "get"
Cowan, and the evidence failed to gain
a place In the records because of the
failure of the defense to lay a proper
' foundation at the cross-examination
I of Brennan while on the stand.
The request for a public retraction
of the statement to the effect that.
If the two weeks' recess asked by the
prosecution was granted, witnesses
would be brought up, comes from A
B. Kerllne. Joseph M. Kelly. Dan V.
Brennan and F. P. Mann, Devils Lake
residents.
FOR SALE — HOLSKHOLD PURNI-
ture for three rooms. Will sell by
piece. 1125 West First street.
WANTED— GOOD COOK. WARNER'S
cafe, 305 Central avenue. West Du-
luth.
LOST — D. B. C. WJi.TCH FOB; FIND-
er please return or mall to city en-
gineer's office.
FOR SALE— CAR LOAD OF FRESH
milch cows Just received. S. Widdes.
429 Forty-sixth avenue west. 'Phone,
Zenith, Cole 3133-Y.
WANTED — GOOD APPEARING
young lady; neat dresser; pleasing
personality to preside at cigar
counter; about six hours each day.
Apply room 206 .Alworth building.
WANTED— TWO YOUNG LADIES TO
clerk In Mars & Sampson's store, 219
West Superior street.
WANTED—
take care
ond work
COMPETENT GIRL TO
of two children and do sec-
1721 East First street.
COMBINGS MADE INTO SWITCHES,
and 25 per cent of! on all hair goods.
Marlnello hair shsp. Fidelity block;
next to Frelmuth's; take elevator.
Furniture, finlshlnj;:, paper hanging,
painting and ht.rdwood finishing.
•Phone your orders and I will call
anywhere In city. A. Johnson, Mel.
738: Zelnth, Lincoln 369.
MARRIAGE LICENSES.
Burtch J.nd Camela Geno-
Carlons
vese. ,
Peter Miller and
Anna S. Anderson.
BIRTHS.
BtTRKQUlST — A son was
and Mrs. J. Berhqulst
Fifth street, April 10.
born to Mr.
of 815 East
DEATHS AND' FUNERALS |
YOUNGDAHL — The funeral of Mrs.
J O. Youngdahl, wh3 died several days
ago, will take place tomorrow after-
noon at 2 o'clock from the late resi-
dence 219 Seventh and One-half avenue
west Rev. J. J. Daniels officiating. In-
terment will be at Park Hill cemetery.
She is survived by her husband and
five children, Olga, 13; Walter, 11;
Ruth, 4; Raymond, 2, and Ellen. 10
days old.
MONUMENTS
N. Peterson
—Hundreds
Granite Co.
In stock.
332 E. Sup.
P.
St.
BUILDING PERMITS.
To M. J. Tax, frarie cottage.
East Seventh street between
Thirteenth and Fourteenth
avenues * 400
To A. Dahl. alterations. Twen-
tv-flrst avenue w«st between
•Third and Fourt i street... 500
To A. J. Murvold, alterations.
East Fifth street between
Second and Third avenues.. 800
Know all men by these present*.
That we, the undersigned, have volun-
tarily associated ourselves together for
the purpose of forming a corporation
pursuant to Chapter 58 of the Revised
Laws of the State of Minnesota for the
year 1905, and the acts amendatory
thereof and supplementary thereto, and
do hereby adopt the following Certifi-
cate of Incorporation:
ARTICLE I.
The name of this corporation shall be
WALHALLA IRON AND STEEL COM-
PANY, and the general nature of Its
business shall be the mining, smelting,
reducing, refining and working of Iron
ore and other minerals, and the manu-
facturing of Iron, steel, copper and
other metals, and marketing the prod-
ucts thereof and the buying, owning,
working, selling, mortgaging and deal,
ing In minetal lands and other real
and personal property.
The principal place of transacting
the business of the corporation shall
be at Duluth, In the County of St. Louis
and the State of Minnesota. Branch
offices may be established by the Board
of Directors either within or outside
of the State of Minnesota, as may
from time to time be determined by the
management of said corporation.
ARTICLE II.
The time of the commencement of
this corporation shall be the 14th day
of April. 1911. and the period of its
continuance shall be thirty (30) years.
ARTICLE IIL
The names and places of residence of
the persons forming this corporation
are as follows: Abraham Wikstrom,
Cotton. Minnesota; N. A. Bergstrom,
Duluth. Minnesota; Henry Nelson. Du-
luth, Minnesota; B. E. Wellberg. Du-
luth. Minnesota; F. W. Erlckson. Du-
luth. Minnesota; J. D. Johnson. Duluth,
Minnesota; John Nord, Duluth, Minne-
sota.
ARTICLE IV.
The government of this corporation
and the conduct and management of
Its affairs Is hereby vested In a Board
of Seven Directors, who shall all be
stockholders, and, except « as herein
I provided, shall be elected by tiie stock-
holders, at their annual meeting, which
j shall be held on the second Tuesday of
I September in each vear, and who shall,
1 within ten days thereafter, elect the
• following officers: President, Vice
. President, Secretary and Treasurer. Any
; two of the said offhes may be held by
the same person, with the except'on
of President and Vice I'resident.
The first annual meeting of the cor-
poration shall be held on the second
Tuesday of September, 1911, but untU
such time and until tiie Directors
thereat elected shall be qualified, the
following persons shall be and consti-
tute the Board of Directors of this
corporation, namely:
N. A. Bergstrom, Henry Nelson, B. E.
Wellberg, F. W. Erhk.son, .\ndrew An-
derson, all of Duluth; August Anderson
of Kelsey, Minnesota, and Abraham
Wikstrom of Cotton, Minnesota; and
until such annual meeting is held, and
until the Directiir.s thereat chosen shall
have elected officers, and until sucli
officers shall have qualified, the officers
of this corporation shall be as follows;
Abialiam Wikstrom, Cotton, Minne-
sota. President.
N. A. Bergstrom. Duluth, Minnesota.
Vice President.
Henry Nelson, Duluth, Minnesota,
Secretary.
F. W. Erlckson. Duluth, Minnesota,
Treasurer.
The officers and directors of this cor-
poration, except those herein desig-
nated as euch to act in the first In-
stance, shall hold office for one yeai\
or until their successors are elected
and qualified, and In case any vacancy
occurs In any of the offices or mem-
bership of the Board of Directors of
this corporation, either before or after
the first annual meeting, the same shall
be filled by the Board of Directors until
tlie next annual meeting, and until
such vacancy shall be filled by election
held In accordance with these Articles.
The Board of Directors shall also have
power, when In Its Judgment cause
exists, to remove any such officer of
this corporation from his position and
declare the offh'e vacant.
ARTICLE V.
The amount of the capital stock of
this corporation shall be Five Hundred
Thousand Dollars (f500,000), and the
same shall be divided Into Five Hun-
dred Thousand shares (500,000) of the
par value of one ($1) dollar each, and
the said stock shall be sold either for
cash or for property and things of
value deemed by the Board of Directors
to be equivalent thereto, and such de-
termination by the Board of Directors
to be final and binding upon the parties
In interest. Of this amount two hun-
dred thousand shares shall be placed
in the treasury of said company as
treasury stock. .Said stock shall be used
and paid out as directed by the Board
of Directors.
ARTICLE VI.
The highest amount of Indebtedness
or liability to which this corporation
shall at any time be subject shall ba
the sum of One Hundred Fifty Thou-
sand Dollars (J150,000).
In testimony whereof, the under-
signed parties have hereunto set their
hands and seals this 11th day of April,
1911.
ABR.\HAM WICKSTROM.
NELS A. BERG.STRO.\L
HENRY NEL.SON.
J. D. JOHN.SON.
B. K. WELLBEHG.
FRED W. ERICKSON,
JOHN NORD.
Signed, Sealed and Delivered
in the Presence of:
ANDREW NEL.SON.
NORA TROLANDER.
Chicago. April 81.— Hutter— Steady: creameries, 15
C'*21o: ilalries, i;{(." 18c. K.fiBs— Steady ; receipts, 14.-
147 cases: it mtrk. cases 'lii'luded, ISffil.'l'.ac; firsts,
Ij'-ic; prime firsts, Ulc. Cheese — Steady; daisies.
i:;'/irfl3**c; twins. 12'i(?lSe; young Americas, THj
(air{*4c; long honis. liVi^t.V. Potatoes — Steady;
choice to fancy, 58(a«0«': fair to good. 5.'Kg .'.7c.
Poultry, live firm, turkt.vs. 14c; fowls, I4c; springs.
Veal— Steady: 30 to 6u lb w»«.. 6(0 7c; 60 to 85 lb
«rl4., 7is8c; 85 to 110 lb wu', 8feac.
Town Marshal Skot.
McCloud, Okla., April 21. — While at-
tempting to catch'two burglars which
had broken Into a general store here
today, A. E. Ai»t»*tt, town marshal,
was shot to death. Xjeorge Bowman,
who accompanied Arftett was wound-
ed. The burslars escaped.
ADDITIONAL
SPORTS
WECTKKX LE.4GUE
OPEXS ITS SEASON.
Omaha. Neb.. April 21. — The Western
league baseball season will be opened
here this afternoon with more than
the usual amount of ceremony. The
weather is all that the most ardent
fan could desire.
An automobile parade In which
Mayor Dahlman and other city officials,
members of the Omaha Ad. club,
If you wUl bring your
Calumet & Arizona and
Superior & I^ittsburg cer-
tificates to Paine, Webber
& Co.*s office , we will have
them transferred into the
new Calum<;t & Arizona
stock for you.
Zenith, 1464.
Duluth. Mel. 2215.
Martin Roscndahi & Co.
( INCORP< >RATED. )
CBPPER STOCK BROKERS
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
On this 11th day of .\prll, A. D. 1911
before me, a Notary Public within and
for said County, personally appeared
Abraham Wikstrom, N. A. Bergstrojn.
Henrv Nelson, B. E. Wellberg. F. W.
Erlckson, J. D. Johnson and John Nord,
to me known to be the persons de-
scribed in and who executed the fore-
going Instrument, and acknowledged
that they executed the same as their
free act and deed.
ANDREW NEL.SON,
Notary Public,
St Louis County, Minn.
(Notarial Seal, St. Louis C<>., Minn.)
My commission expires September 24,
1913.
State of Minnesota, Department of
State.
I hereby certify that
strument was filed for
office on the 15th day
l»ll. at 9 o'clock A. M.
recorded in Book
on page 119-
the within In-
record in this
of April. A. D.
and was duly
U-3 of Incorporations,
JULIT'S A. SCHMAHL,
. Secretary of State.
(168.'i76)
OFFICE OF REGLSTER OF DEED.S.
State of Minnesota, County of St. L<juia
— ss. . . ,
I hereby certify that the within In-
strument was filed In this office for
record April 20. 1911. at 2:15 P. M.. and
was duly recorded in Book 14 of Misc.,
^'^^ "*• M. C. PALMER.
Register of Deeds.
By TH03. CLARK.
Deputy.
■
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24
Friday,
THE DULpTH HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
CHAR-
LETTERS OF BYRON AND
LOTTE BKONTK.
■V\*o«!tmlnster Gazette: Amonpr many
Interesting documents and autoKrapn
letters to come under Messrs. Sothe-
by s liammer Is Bryan's revised proof
of "Some observations upon an article
In Blaokwoods Edinburgh Magazine.
On page 36 to 59 Hyron has written a
very interesting note on Keats:
"Mr Keats died at Rome about a
year after this was written, of a de-
cline produced by his having burst a
Mood ves.sel on reading the article
en hl3 'Endynilon- in the Quarterly Re-
view. I have read the article
and since, and although It is
1 do not thinli that a man should
mlt himself to be killed by it. •
After alluding to his indignation
Keats' depreciation of Pope, Byron
* -h'is fragment of Hyperion seems
actually inspired by the Titans and Is
as sublime as Eschylus. He Is a
lo«=s to our literature, the more so as
himself before his death is .said
have been persuaded that he had
before
bitter
per-
• •
of
he
to
not taken the right line, and was re-
forming his style upon the most classi-
cal models of the language."
This lot al.^'o includes quotations
from Keats to be inserted in the "Ob-
servations." .,, . , 1 „
At the same time will be sola a
letter written by Charlotte Bronte to
Miss Ellen Nussey on Aug. 4. 1839. It
gives an account of her first propo.^al
of marriage, made by Mr. Price, a
voung Irish clergyman, fresh from
Dublin university, after a ttrst visit.
Charlotte Bronte writes:
"His character ciulckly appeared in
his conversation — witty, lively, ardent,
clever too. but deficient in the dignity
and discretion of an Englishman. At
home, vou know, EUen. I talk with
ease and am never shy never weighed
down and oppres.scd by that miserable
manuvHlse honte which torments and
constrains me elsewhere. So I con-
versed with this Irishman and laughed
at his lests. and though I saw^ faults
in his character excused them because
of the amusement his originality af-
forded."
A few days later she received a
letter in an unknown hand containing:
"A declaration of attachment and pro-
posal of matrimony expressed In the
ardent language of the sapient young
Irishman. Well, thought I. I have
heard of love at first sight, but this
beats all! I leave you to guess what
mv answer would be, convinced that
you will not do me the injustice of
guessing wrong."
Siirrcniler lalues to pollrj holders.
DltUIends to poUcyhoIdere
160.841.89
86.697. IS
Total p.-.ia poll, yliolders $ 1.4:n.42f>.6C
Dividends to sux khoI(I«rs 50,000.00
(.'rmnilssioiis and bonusra to agents flist
year's premium 1C4.473.04
(\immi*~li'in on renewal? 47.0.'il.ll
Salaries and allonances for ageiirlcs . . . . 19,"3C.76
Mcilical examiner's fees and liidp^ctlon of
rUka 20.403.74
Salaries of offlctrs and employen loT.:<52.aj
Ixigal e.xpen.-tes 28.430.85
Agents balanoes chargf-cl off 7,143.44
Gn>ss loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger a«««>t» , 22.310.00
.^11 other di:<bun)einents 122.128.37
Total dtsbjrs^ments
.$ 2.067.950.03
'3,742.08
Balance $ 9,7
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
Value of real estate owned I 40.316 !>«
Mortgage loan* : 2,09;i.563.00
{Collateral loans 20.000.00
Premium notes and poller loans I,20ri.674.fl4
Bonds and «tock>! owned 5.488,385.76
Ca'.h. la offloe, hanks and tniat oem-
panies 7S8.8.12.72
Bills rewi\able and agents' balances.... I36.t«6y.60
Total ledger aa»et^ (as Der balanreV. . . .| 9,773,742.08
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Interest and rents dtir a;iil aocnied $
Market ^aUle if real estate over book
taltie
Market value of bonds and ftoi-ks o«er
btHik *«lue
N'et deferred and unpaid premluau
60.964.97
9,683.04
10.i.9«8..'?n
ir.9.713.89
Gross a<«ets
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT
.\gfnts' CJeblt Ivalanoes
All ciUei- aibfts not admitted...
p
Total assets not admitted S 148.178.96
JIO, 110,092.28
ADMITTED.
I 137.829.84
10.349.12
Total admitted as.-eta % 9,861,913.32
LIABILITIES DEC. 31, 1910.
.Vet T.ihie rf oulsUndlng polUies $ 8,432.847.97
I'resent < a lite on supplementary ccn-
traots and canceled ptiUirlee 41.498.74
rialms due and tnipald 4,673.33
Claims adjusted and not due. and un-
adjut^ted and reix'rtrd 5,756.00
Preiulvms paid in advance 31,158.82
I>iTldeiids due polioyliolders 586,976.41
All othti liabilities 88,457.20
T. J. MONAHAN
District Agent,
407 Columbia BIdg., Dululh, Minn.
MiitunI Doneflt I-lfe Iii.<iarance
I'onipan;'.
Prli;tipal office: 75».) Broad street. Newark, N. 3.
H»rs»ul7<d In 1843.) Fredeiick Kr^llnghuysen. presi-
dent; J. Wmiam Johnson, »e*Tetar>-. Attorney to
*i-c*iit service in Minnesota: Comralisloner of In-
turaiicv.
INCOME IN 1910.
Kir^t year's preniliiais $ 2,340, 3j9;29
l^Ividemls and s^urrendcr values applied
to purchase paid-up Insurance and
ar.nuitits 422,177.24
CfTiitdcraUin for original annuities.
ar.d supplementuiy contracts. InvolT-
li'.g life contingencies *'■?;!!•*?
Renewal prcoUums ...•..•.. 16,686.527.56
Total
O0UI,t
llaMUtles on policyholders' ac-
.$ 9.211.390.4;
Una-'-^lened funds (surplus) I 250.322.85
Capital Mo<-k paid up
EXHIBIT OF POLICIES.
1910
No.
, ...$ 500,000.00
BUSINESS.
Amount.
Policies In force at bgeliining of
the year — (Last column only). 34, 731
Policies In force at close of the
rear 34.042
Net
.Net
Increase
decrease
689
$43,376,305.13
44.983.0.'!3.02
« 1,408,729.89
6,000.00
Losses and claims unpaid Dec. 31
Rctchcd for premiums $85,269.41
State of Minnesota. TJepartment of Insurance: v
I ilercliy t'ertify. That tl:e Annual Statement of
the Home Life Insurance Company, for the year end-
ing Uetember 31. 1910. of which tiie above is an
abstract, has been received and filed In this De-
partment and duly approved by roe.
J. A. O. rREV.«!.
Ccmsiifisiuuer cf lu:surauce.
LEGAL. NOTICES.
RESOLVED, BY THE STOCKIIOLD-
ers of Gopher Real Estate Company, a
Minnesota corporation, that Articles V
and VI of the Articles of Incorpora-
tion of said Gopher Real Estate Com-
pany be amended to read as follows:
"ARTICLE V.
The amount of the capital stock of
:?aid corporation shall be one hundred
and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000.00).
to be paid in from time to time as
called for by the Board of Directors.
Said capital sto< k shall be divided Into
fifteen hundred (1500) shares of the par
value of one hundred dollars ($100.00)
each.
ARTICLE VI.
The highest amount of Indebtednets
or liability to which this corporation
shall at any time be subject thall be
one hundred and fifty thousand dollars
($150,000.00)."
Issued, revived and Increased
during the year 3.845
rotal terminated during the year 4.534
By
By
By
By
By
By
death
maturity
eiplratiou
surrender
laiisc
decrease
BUSINESS
Total premium Income $ I9.t;04. 893.23
litnts and interests 6.092,913.80
i;ri>s pi.>flt on sale, maturity or ad-
ju^tnwi.t "r ledger assets 16,324.37
Irim all other sources 420,328.76
Ti't.il iivv.me . .
ijnige- s^^iets Dec.
31 of previous year
t 26.224.462.18
123.036.266.36
Sum
DISBURSEMENTS DURING
.$1-.1.310.7
1910.
28.54
..$ 8,133.203.00
168 '64.04
2,719.323.13
3.262.086.36
Death claims iind ma'.uK'd endow-
ments
Annuities and piemlum notes voided by
laj*e
Suneii-'.er values to pt'llcyholders
I'lvi.iends to poUcyboldeis
T^tal paid policyholders $14,283.1
Commisslone ar.d bf>nusc9 to agents
' - • ' - r's piemlum
on renewals
cu annuities, tlncludlng
Policies In ft>rce at
of the year
Issued during the year,.
Ceased to be In force
the year
In force Dec. 31 last. . .
30;
1.S03
1.797
399
729
1
MINNESOTA IN
No.
beginning
during
540
1
24
517
Losses and claims
lug the year
Incurred dur-
; 7,346,686.34
5,937. 95«.t>5
401.980.05
8-20.893.60
2.577.417.72
586,208.60
1.403.862.93
147,391.75
1910.
Amount
562.749.01
1,307.66
25.1.''i2.00
538.904.67
$8,350.00
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis
"— ss»
We hereby certify that the foregoing
resolution was duly adopted by unani-
mous vote of all the stockholders and
members of Gopher Real Estate Com-
pany, a Minnesota corporation, at a
meeting of said stockholders and mem-
bers held at Duluth Minnesota, on
April 14th, 1911. at which meeting all
of the stockholders and members were
present, and executed a written consent
on the records thereof that the business
transacted at said meeting shall be
as valid and binding as if said meeting
iiad been duly called.
Dated this 14th day of April. 1911.
REINER HOCH.
President of Gopher Real Estate
Company.
W. E. DAY,
Secretary of Gopher Real Estate
Company.
(Seal. Gopher Real Estate Co., Incor-
porated, Duluth, Minn.)
8th day of May, A. D. 1911, at eight
(8:00) o'clock P. M*^ afld will then and
there receive bids for the purchase
of said bonds autliorized to be sold,
to the amount and'of the tenor herein-
after stated. Said ho^4s to be known
as "THE CITY OF l^VO HARBORS
WATER AND LIGHT-5mPROVEMENT
REFUNDING BONOS.f^and are to be
Issued and negotiated at not less than
par value thereof, the same being the
face value, which- *B $5,500.00, and
accrued interest to date of delvery.
Said bonds to be made payable in ten
years, upon the First day of February,
A. D. 19:21, and drawini{ Interest at the
rate of five per ce»t V*r annum, pay-
able semi annually on the First day of
February and Aug'ust' of each year,
both principal and inttftrest to be paid
In gold coin of the United States of
America of the present standard of
weight and fineness at the First Na-
tional Bank of Chicago.
Any person may bid on one or more
of said bonds In any of the following
named denominations, viz: $100.00,
$500.00, $1000.00; and if the said bonds
shall '.e accepted the bonds shall be
of the demoninations called for by
such bids. Where not Inconsistent
with such bids the bonds shall be of
One Thousand dollars each.
All bids must be without conditions
or qualifications; must be sealed and
have name and address of bidder on
outside of envelope. No bid will be
considered unless the bidder making
same shall have deposited with the
City Clerk of said City, before two
o'clock P. M. of the day on which bids
are to be received, a certified check
or Certificate of Deposit on a National
or State Bank, payable to the order of
the CItv of Two Harbors without con-
ditions, for an amount equal to one
per cent of the full face value of the
bonds proposed to be bid for.
Given under my hand and seal this
10th day of April, A. D. 1911.
P. J. MacALPINE,
Citv Clerk.
By GEO. J. O'CONNOR.
Deputy.
(Corporate seal. City of Two Harbors,
Minnesota.)
D. H.. April 21, 22, 24. 26, 26, 27, 28,
29, 1911.
ADDITIONAI^ WANTS
From Pages 25 and 26.
HORSES, VEHICLES, ETC.
HORSES! HORSES! HORSES!
MIDWAY HORSE MARKET.
THE HORSE AND MULE HEAD-
quarters of the Northwest;" 500 to 800
head of horses and mules constantly
on hand; part time given If desired.
Private sales dally. If you need draft
horses, general purpose horses, de-
livery horses, mules or railroading
or other purposes, drivers or saddlers,
we can fill your order. Every horse
sold guaranteed to be as represented.
BARRETT & ZIMMERMAN,
Midway Horse Market, St. Panl, Minn.
FOR SALE— OR EXCHANGE FOR
work horse, Shetland stallion; also
fast trotting stallion, 3 years old.
Old 'rhone. East 97-R.
FOR SALE— WAGON AND HEAVY
double harness; cheap. 684 Grand.
FOR SALE — A CARLOAD OF HORSES
just arrived In West Duluth this
morning; weigh from 1,000 to 1,600
pounds. Price from $75 to $260, part
time given if necessary. 608 North
Fifty-sixth avenue west. Zenith
'phone 3001 Cole.
MONEY TO LOAN. ' |
($$$$$$$$$$$$|$$$$$$$$$l$$$$$$$!!«(f?$ff
FOR RENT— HOUSES.
MONEY ON CREDIT. $$
$$ SOMETHING NEW. U
$$ $10 upward, for hosuekeepers, $$
$$ workingmen and salaried em- $$
1$ ployes, at charges that hcmest $|
$$ people can afford to pay. I*
J$ DULUTH LOAN COMPANY, $$
$ Cor. Third Ave. W'. and Sup. St., $$
$1 307 Columbia Bldg. $$
$$ Old 'phone, Melrose 2356. $$
s;$$$»$|$$$»?$?:?i.»s;$$$$lftt $$!!$$$$$$<
# SPRING IS HERE. #
^ If you want money in a hurry, #
i^ SEE US, *
# Our rates are the cheapeitt. ^
■^ Our payment plan the bent. ■S^
:¥. Call and be convinced. -^
if. LOANS ON .SALARY. FURNITURE. #
# DULUTH FINANCE CO. *
# 301 Palladio Bldg. ■^t
-P^ Open Saturday Evenings. #
EXAMINE
FINAL AC-
of St.
Lo.^es
Ing
and claims
the year....
settled duT-
9.444.65
Received for premiums .
130,017.41
State of Minnesota, Department of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify, That tlve Annual Statement of
the National Life Insurance Company of Vnlted
suies cf America fur the year ending Kecember 31st.
U'lO, of vthlch the aljove is an abstract, has been
received ,-.nd fUed In this I>epartment and duly ap-
proved by me. J- A. O. PREUS,
Commissioner of Insurance.
■8.5j
1.026,727.09
1.072.377.01
*rene^^al*. .^ v. . :;v:7. ;;v. : -■f.'i^i
Commuleil renewal commissions 8,5,.^.. 8
.•iularics and alluwam-es for agencle?. . . 336.91
A(M:iv -iiii^rvislon and ( ther expenses. 61.378.28
.Mtdical exaiiuiier'b fees and Inspection
..f il*!i« 143.781. e.'S
(>«l;'.rte-i of officers and employes 432.»70.,9
I.e4|.tl e.xpenses *8' ' 19.29
Gross lo^H on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of ledger »>.*ct3 24. .999..33
All uther disbuisemcn
is 1,104 833.77
Total dibtureemenls I 18,43'2,o79.40
Balance
LEDGER ASSETS
V.:!iie if real otaie cnued.
M' nsige leans
«'i.ilalcr:il loans
DEC.
$132,878,349.14
31, 1910.
$ 3.066.000.71
64.795,625.00
2.650.000.110
r.iiuium iK>»ei and policy loans 24. '258. 283. 12
U. lids and stocks owned 36,755,340., 1
Caxii. in offK-e, baiUis and trust com-
Pi-.nles 1'35?'?*M^
.\gei.ts" balamea
L R. BONDY, Agent
303 PALLADIO BLDG.
Home Life Innnmnoe Company.
Principal office: 256 Broadway. Ntw York. X. T.
((•nranized In 1S60. ) George E. Ide, president; Ellis
W. Gladwin, secretary. Attorney to accept service in
Minnesota: Commissioner of Insurance.
CASH C.\P1TAL. $123,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
First year's premiums $
Uividends and matured endowment ap-
plied to purchase paid-up insurance
and annuities
Consideration for original annuities, and
supplementary contracts Involving life
contlngeucles
Kentwal prtmlunw
.^tate of Minnesota, County of St Louis
On this 15th day of April, 1911, be-
fore me, a Notary Public within and
for said county, personally appeared
Reiner Hoch and William E. L>ay, to
me personally known, wlio, being by
me duly sworn, did say: That they
are President and Secretary respec-
tively of Gopher Real Estate Company,
the corporation named in the fore-
going instrument: that the seal affixed
to said instrument is the corporate
.«eal of said corporation: that said in-
strument was signed and sealed in be-
half of said corporation by authority
of its board of directors; and that tlie
allegations contained therein are true.
S. G. BYERLY.
Notary Public,
St. Louis County. Minnesota.
(Notarial .Seal, St. Louis County, Minn.)
My commission expires Nov. 1st, 1911.
BALDWIN. BALDWIN & DANCER,
Attorneys.
349,013.71
314,610.61
in. 163. 60
2,948,137.48
Total premium income \
Rents and Intereits
Gross profit on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of IfdRer assets
From all other source*
3.624.927.38
1,131,763.57
28.513.81
59.991.07
Total Income $4,865,195.83
Ledger assets Dec, 31 cf previous year. . .$23,184,349.50
22,045.45
Total ledger a««rfs 'as per b.Manoel $132,878,349.14
NON-LEDGER ASSETS.
Imrrest and renu due ami accrued... $ 2,587,449.44
.Maiket »alue of bands and sloclts ovei
N,o:c value ="'""■«"
Net deferred and luipald premiums 1.659. b09.3J
Gros^ as-wls $137,627,119.59
DEDUCT ASSETS NOT ADMITTED.
del'll bal-iijcc:^ * 24.540.30
Agents'
Total admitted as'^cts
LIABILITIES DEC. 31
Net value of outstanding policies.
l'n>ent value on supplementary
tracts and canceled ptdlcies
Claims due and unpaid
Claims- adjusted and iK>l due, and
a'iju~:e<l and reported
I'Jaim- resisted
I'r.mlurus pidd in advance
Iiivtdtiuls diu policyholders
Spe<ial reserve
All otiier liabilities
$137,602,579.29
. 1910.
....$123,421,003.00
con-
1,577.931.70
43,963.00
Sum $28,049,545.33
DISBURSEMENTS DURING 1910.
Death claims anil matured endowments. $ 1, 309. 064. 28
Annuities and premium notes voided by
lapse
Surrender values to policyholders
Olvtdeuils to pollcylKilders
Dividends to company
51.553.66
676,806.85
437,395.79
6,379.96
un-
553.710.80
49.734.90
113,.'>94,82
3,646.97:. 39
2.112.649.93
646,230.08
Total llaUUtles on policyholders' ac
» PUnt
Ciia'siciifd funds
EXHIBIT OF
is\irp!i3) . . .
POLICIES.
1910
$132,169,799.62
. .$ .-,.4:'2.7:9.67
BUSINESS
Xo.
Amount.
Pilliien III forre at beginning
of the year — (Last tolumn
.nly) '
ri.llcles in force at dose ot the
jB„ 228,591 543.658,197.00
213,.571 $.502,179,000.00
Total paid policyholders $2,481,200.54
Dividends held on deposit surrendered
during the year 636.88
Dividends to stockholders 15,000.00
CommKsions and txiauses to agents first _
veiir's premiums 165.074. .6
Ct'mml.ssJons on renewals.: 223.506.49
CnmmUsloiM on atmuitles 2,380.44
Agency sui)ervMon and other expenses.. 16,141.72
Meillca! examhier's fees and InspecUon of
risks 27.381.92
Salaries of officer* and employes 168.775. u
Legal exp<n5es 4,394.44
Gross loss on sale, maturity or adjust-
ment of leilger assets 12.762.33
All other disburaemcnts 277,263.86
ORDER OF HEARING ON PETITION
FOR PROBATE OF WILL—
State of Minnesota, County of St. Louis.
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of James
McCuicheon, Decedent.
A certain instrument purporting to
be the last will and testament of James
McCutcheon having been presented to
this court and the petition of Edith A.
V. Scofleld being duly filed herein,
representing among other things, that
said decedent, then being a resident
of the county of St. Louis, state of
Minnesota, died testate in the county
of St. Louis, state ot Minnesota, on
the 12th day of April, lyil. and that
said petitioner is a daughter of said
deceased and that A. H. Knight of
Negaunee, Michigan, and John Shand of,
Ishpeming, Michigan, and praying that
said instrument be allowed and ad-
mitted to probate as the last will and
testament of said decedent, and that
letters testamentary be issued to A. H.
Knight and John Shand thereon.
IT IS ORDERED. That .said petition
be heard before this court, at the
Probate Court Rooms in the Court
House, in Duluth, in said county, on
Monday, the 15th day of May, 1911,
at 10 o'clock a. m., and all persons in-
terested in said hearing and in said
matter, are hereby cited and required
at said time and place to show cause,
if any there be, why said petition
should not be granted.
ORDERED FURTHER. That this
order be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald according to law, and
that a copy of this order be served on
the County Treasurer of St. Louis Coun-
ty not less than ten days prior to
said day of hearing.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 20,
1911.
By the Court,
S. W.
Judge
(Seal Probate Court St.
Minn.)
PAUL THOMPSON,
Attorney,
701 I'alladio Building,
D. H., April 21, 28, May
ORDER TO
COUNT—
State of Minnesota, County
Louis — ss.
In Probate Court.
In the matter of the Estate of Marie
Antoinette Davis, Decedent:
THE PETITION OF Fellows Davis.
as representative of the above named
decedent, together with his final ac-
count of the administration of said
estate, having been filed in this court,
representing, among other things, that
he has fully administered said estate,
and pravlng that said final account of
said administration be examined, ad-
Justed and allowed by the Court, and
that the Court make and enter its final
decree of distribution of the residue of
the estate of said decedent to the per-
sons entitled thereto, and for the dis-
charge of the representative and the
sureties on his bond.
IT IS ORDERED, That said petl;-
tlon be heard, and said final account
examined, adjusted and allowed by
the Court, at tiie Probate Court Rooms
in the Court House, in the City of
Duluth, in said County, on Monday,
the 15th day of May, 1911, at ten
o'clock A. M., and all persons inter-
ested in said hearina: and in said mat-
ter are hereby cited and required at
said time and place to show cause. If
any there be, why said petition should
not be granted.
ORDERED FURTHER. That this
order be served by publication in The
Duluth Herald according to law.
Dated at Duluth, Minn., April 21st,
1911.
By the Court,
S. W. GILPIN.
Judge of Probate.
(Seal, Probate Court, St, Louis County,
Minn.)
D. H., April 21, 28; May 5, 1911.
FOR SALE— TW^ENTY HEAD DRAFT
and driving horses. 1111 West Furst
street, w'estern Sales Stable com-
pany.
FOR SALE— GOOD TEAM OF HORSES,
weigh 1,600 pounds; also harness;
will sell single. 312 East Eighth
street. Phone 1902-Y Grand.
lOR SALE— CARLTON HORSE MAR-
ket. Car horses will arrive Satur-
day, barn Carlton, Minn. Drafters,
delivery chunks, drivers.
FOR SALE— TWO DRIVING MARES;
also three delivery horses, weigh
from 1,200 to 1,300 pounds. S. M.
Kaner, 1219 East Seventh street.
HORSES ACCLIMATED HORSES.
Young heavy horses; several teams
for sale. Red Cliff Lumber company,
barn. Thirty-ninth avenue west.
For Sale — Forty head of draft and gen-
eral purpose norses just out of woods
to be sold cheap, 209 W\ Ist St,
FOR sale:— TWENTY-FIVE HEAD OP
horses at 811 Lake avenue north.
CITY AND VILLAGE LOANS IN MIN-
hesota. Buy or build a home on
monthly payments. C. A. Einlppen-
berg, 300 Alworth Bldg. 'Phones 597.
WE LOAN ON ALL KINDS OP PER-
sonal security at lowest rat<!8. Call
on us, 430 Manhattan Bldg., and get
rates. Duluth Mortgage Loan Co. W.
Horkan. New 1598-D; Melrose 3733.
FOR RENT — SEVEN -ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S. S. William-
son, 515 Torrey building; both 'phones.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE AT
221 East Third street.
FOR RENT— SIX- ROOM HOUSE AT
Lakeside; furnace heat; good barn;
on improved street; $25 per month.
J. D. Howard & Co., 216 West Supe-
rior street.
FOR RENT— NICE SEVEN-ROOM
house, garden and chicken yard. In-
(lulre 802 East Third street, or call
Grand 18S6-Y.
FOR RENT— SIX- ROOM HOUSE AT
Lakeside, 5724 Oneida street; furnace
heat, water, bath, hardwood floors;
$25 per month. R. P. Dowse & Co.,
106 Providence building.
WE MAKE FARM LOANS OS VAL-
uable, productive and cultivated
lands. No delay; prompt attention.
Snyder Bros., 210 W^est First street.
TO LOAN— $15,000 IN SUMS TO SUIT,
on real estate. Lane, MacGrcgor &
Co., 40'J Alworth building.
MONEY SUPPLIED TO SALARIED
people, women keeping hoase and
others, upon their own nam^js wltn-
out security; easy payments. Tolman,
509 Palladio building.
FOR RENT — FINE BRICK DWELL-
Ing house; eight rooms; hardwood
finish; hardwood floors throughout*
hot water heat; $60 per month. 429
East Second street. J. D. Howard
& Co., 216 West Superior street.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM HOUSE, 607
West Third street. Apply to Henry
Taylor, 603 Palladio building. Zenith
•phone 2066- Y.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE,
bath and electric lights, water paid.
Inquire 731 West Second street.
IX)R RENT — MODERN TEN- ROOM
house; 329 Fourth avenue -west. E.
H. Lower, Room 22, Mesaba block.
FOR RENT— PLEASANT COTTAGE ON
Park Point; all conveniences; water,
gas, electric lights, use of boat; large
fireplace. Inquire 3229 Minnesota ave-
nue.
CITY NOTICES.
PRO-
FOR SALE— 30 HORSES AT ZENl-TH
Sale & Boarding Stable, 524 W. 1st St,
FOR SALE — HORSES. 826 EAST
Third street. H. Inch.
FOR SALE-
company.
-HORSES AT U HAMMEL
DRESSMAKING.
MISS GRAY'S SCHOOL OF GARMENT
cutting and making; practical;
terms reasonable; patterns to order
a specialty. Third floor. Gray-Tal-
lant company.
MONEY TO LOAN ON CITY PROPER-
ty; lowest rates; small and large
amounts. Scott -Kreldler company,
405 Central avenue. Both 'phones.
MONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS,
watches, furs, rlfies etc,, and all
goods of value. $1 to $1,500. Key-
stone Loan & Mercantile Co. 22 W'est
Superior street. ^
MONEY TO LOAN— LOANS M.VDB ON
timber and farm lands. John Q. A.
Crosby, 305 Palladio buildinjr^
Money to loan — Any amount; low rates,
Cooley & Underhlll, 209 Exchange.
"SIX PER CENT INTEREST 0> SMALL
real estate loans; money en hand;
prompt service, F. I. Salter com-
pany, Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — FOUR- ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage on Park Point, elec-
tric lights, hardwood floors. 1624
Minnesota avenue.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE;
three lots for garden; No. 9;:7 Ninth
avenue west. Apply to H. Gould,
Eighth avenue west and Tenth street.
FOR RENT — 621 WEST SECOND
street, ten rooms, steam heat, mod-
ern throughout; make a good room-
ing house, $50 per month. J. D.
Howard & Co., 216 West Superior
street.
FOR RENT— FIN E.ST COTTAGE ON
Park Point, eight rooms, hot water
heat, water, bath, electric light;
grounds 120 by 200 feet; a fine lawn
with fountain. Minnesota avenue and
Twenty-sixth steet; $26 per month.
R. P. Dowse & Co., 106 Providence
building, ^
GILPIN,
of Probate.
Louis County,
.$ 3.384,518.63
Total disbursements
Balance $24.665.0'26.70
LEDGER ASSETS DEC. 31, 1910.
real cMate owned $1,643,609.81
Duluth,
5. 1911.
Minn,
Net increase
15,020 41,478.2'j7.00
Isv.ied, rcvUcd and
<1 :rlng tli'- year
Ti.t.;l ttruiinaled during
year
By dt ath
ui.iturliy
««.p!railou
"Uirt'udtr
!ap>e
decrease
BUSINESS IN M
increased
26.867 69,025.766.00
the
Hy
»>
Hy
By
n.S47
2.343
t'.!>8
3.7 8't
3,0!i7
1.920
Pilirio In
of ti>e year
Ir!>>I€d during
NNESOTA II
No.
(Tce at beginning
7.195
ttie year 75a
Ceaved tu be in force iluring the
year
In force I>ec. 31 last
315
7,639
27. .'.47. 469.00
6,569. IHlS.OO
1.61MI.565.0')
7.0<i2.604.00
7.86S.S4S.00
3,726.588.00
600,356.00
1910.
Amount.
15,657.701.00
2.050,391.00
632.122.00
17.075,570.00
Value of
Mortgage loans
Premium notes and policy loans
Bonds aikl stocks owned
CiA'h. in oftice. banks and trust com
paiden
Bills receivable and agents' balances.
Less sundry small amount* due perscrns
wluise whereabouts are unknown.....
Total ledger a^oets (as per balance* . . ,
NON-LEDGER ASSETS,
Interest and rent- due and accruetl. . .
Net defeired and unpaid premiums...
7,015.4 1,5.00
3.427.414.02
12,173,022.93
392.072.57
17.570.10
$24,669,104.43
4.077.73
.$24,665,026.70
.$ 193.251.50
350.293.58
Gross .Insets . .
DEDUCT
ASSETS NOT
AgtiiU' debit balances
Uoi.k value of ledger assets orer market
Talue
$25,210,571.87
ADMITTED.
$ 17,723.88
360,012.93
Total assets not admitted $ 377.736.81
Lo-se* and claims Incurred during the
,^, $166,307.00
Looses and claims settled during the
ypj,f $163,277.00
U*sti and claims unpaid Uec. 31 3.215.00
Received for premiums $519,641.86
State cf Minnesota, Pepartmtnt of Insurance:
I Hereby Certify. That the Aiuiual Statement of
the Mutual Heii.flt Life in.surance Company, fir the
ye-r en.ling Oeiember 3Ut. 1910. of wlUch the above
is an abstract, has tieen received and filed lu this
inpartmeut and duly appioved by me.
TcUl
DEC. 31.
....$24,832,835.06
1910.
.$20,213,575.00
admitted assets.
LIABILITIES
Not Talue cf outstanding policies..
Prfsent value on supplementary coutracis
and cancelecl policies
Claims due and unpaid
Clalm-s adjusted and not due, and un-
adjusted and reported
Claims resisted
Prcnduma paid In advance
Kividends due policyholders 2,304. .324. HI
Special reserve 43.609.81
Keserve for unreported death claims 15.000.00
191,486.00
15,9^6.13
122,767.77
6.000.00
23.535.31
J. A.
Commissioner
PRKUS.
Insurance.
Aatlunal I-lfe Inmiranoe Coinpnny of
Vnlted Stated of America.
Principal (fri<e: 159 Ui Salle street. Chicago. 111.
40rgi-nl/cd In 1808.) A. M. Jolmsun. president,
ItilHft \K Lay. setretary. Attorney to accept service
In Mlnnooia: C(.mnds>lf>ner of Insurance.
CA.SH ("AI'ITAL. $',00,000.
INCOME IN 1910.
First year's premiums $ 240,229.12
ItiYldtiida and surrender values applied
to punhase paid-up insurance and aa-
nuill^ 28.7.55.22
lletitvaral premiums ., 1.552,049.76
Total premium Income I
Rents and Intere.sts
4Ji<>is profit on aale, maturity or adjust-
mi nt of leilger assets
Kn-m all other sources
1.821.034.10
404.414.73
S9.:
93:
1.93
i.97
Total income $
Ledger assets l»ec. 31 of previous year..
2.405.637.77
9,436,064.23
Sum $11,841,702.00
DISBURSEMENTS DURING 1910.
r>eath claims anil matured endowments. $ 1,224,899.35
Annuities and premium notes voided by
Upse 6,991.29
Total liabilities on policyholders' ac-
count $23,105,686.93
I'nasslgned funds (surplus) . . .
...$ 1.602.148.13
Capital stock paid
EXHIBIT OF
up
POLICIES,
$
1910 BUSI
No.
Policies In force at beginning of
llie year— 'I.,ast column only). 49,099
Policies lu force at dose of the
year 50.869
125 000.00
NESS.
Amount.
$ 92,532.533.00
100.214,968.00
,Vet Increase 09,968
Issueil. revived and Increased
during the year 5.339
7,682.435.00
14.952,118.00
terminated during the
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
ST. LOUIS— ss.
In Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of Jere-
mias Halseth, Deceased.
WHEREAS, An instrument in writ-
ing purporting to be the last will and
testament of Jeremlas Halseth, late
of said county, has been delivered to
this Court, and there was filed there-
with the petition of Laura Alme, repre-
t;enting, among other things, that said
Jeremias Halseth died in said county on
the :Jlst dav of March, 1911, testate, and
that ,said petitioner was the executrix
named in fald last will and testament,
and praving that the said instrument
be admitted to probate, and that letters
testamentary be issued thereon to said
petitioner; and
WHEREAS, Upon the hearing of said
petition for proof of said instrument
upon the 17th day of April, 1911, an-
other Instrument in writing purporting
to be a .subsetjuent will, was presented
in opposition to said instrument named
in said petition, which other instrument
has been filed in said matter: and
WHERE-\S, Opposition has been
made to the allowance of said instru-
ment named in said petition upon the
ground that said other Instrument so
produced upon said hearing Is in fact
the last will and testament of de-
cedent:
IT IS ORDERED, That said hearing
shall be, and the same hereby is, ad-
journed to the 15th day of May, 1911,
at ten o'clock A. M., for the purpose
of hearing and determining which of
said instruments so purporting to be
the last will and testament of said
decedent, if either, is In fact, and
should be allowed as the, last will and
testament of said decedent; that notice
hereof shall be given to all persons
Interested by publishing this order
once in each week for three successive
weeks prior to said date of hearing, in
The Duluth Herald, a dally newspaper
printed and published in Duluth in said
county; that a copy of this order be
also served upon H. C. Fulton not less
than fifteen days prior to said day oi
hearing.
Dated Duluth, Minnesota, April 20th,
1911.
By the Court,
S. W. GILPIN,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal, Probate Court, St. Louis Co.,
Minn.)
D. H.. April 21, 28. May 5, 1911.
NOTICE IN CONDEMNATION
CEEDINGS —
Offlc'j of the Board of Public Works.
Citv of Duluth. Minn.. April 20, 1911.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That
the Common Council of the City of Du-
luth has ordered the condemnation of
property as hereinafter stated, and
that the City Engineer of said City
has caused a plan and survey of the
proposed Improvement to be made to
the satisfaction of the Common Coun-
cil, which have been adopted by said
Council, and are now on file In the of-
fice of the Board of Public Works. The
Board of Public Works will meet at
Its office at the City Hall In said City
of Duluth on the Eighth day of May.
A. D. 1911. at 10 o'clock In the fore-
noon of said day, and will hear any
evidence that may be presented by
parties interested in the property pro-
posed to be condemned, and will there-
after, and after viewing the premises
proposed to be taken, assess and award
the damages which may be occasioned
by the taking of private iiroperty for
the following purposes, to-wlt, for park
purposes: ^ . ». ^ ,
The property proposed to be taken
Is described as follows: Lots 1 to 20,
Inclusive, block 39; lots 1 to 12, Inclu-
sive, block :i8; lots 3 to 11, inclusive,
block 48; lots 1 to 6, Inclusive, block
59; all In Harrison's Brookdale divi-
sion; lots 17, 24 and 25, block 4; lots 1,
2 5, 6, 7. 8. 9, 24, 25 and 26, block 6;
lost 17. block 11: all In Spalding's ad-
dition; lots 401. 403, 405, block 152, and
lots 417 and 419, In block IBl, Duluth
proper, Second division; part of the
NE»4 of SW^ of SEV4 and partof SEVi
of the SE'/i of NWJ4 of Section 32,
Township 50, Range 14. None of the
benefits resulting to real estate from
said improvement shall be assessed
upon such real estate
BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS.
OLOF G. OLSON.
Official: President
R. MURCHLSON.
Clerk of said Board.
(Seal, Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H.. April 21, 1911. D 595.
1911, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon of
said day, and will hear any evidence
that may be presented by parties in-
terested in the property proposed to be
condemned, and will thereafter, and
after viewing the premises proposed to
be taken, assess and award tiie dam-
ages which may be occasioned by the
taking of private property for the fol-
lowing purposes, to wit: for park pur-
poses. The property proposed to be
taken is described as Lot 1 of Auditor's
Third Division Outlets. None of the
benefits resulting to real estate from
said improvement shall be assessed
upon such real estate.
BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS,
Oflficial. • OLOF G. OLSON.
R. MURCHISON. President.
Clerk of said Board.
(Seal Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H., April 21, 1911. D597.
LOST AND FOUND.
LOST— DARK BRINDLE BULL TER-
rerr; has but one eye; weighs about
twenty-four pounds; $10 rev,ard will
be paid for return of dog or infor-
mation of same. Loughney &
Loughney, 301 Christie bu.ldlng.
LOST— BETWEEN FOURTEE?rTH AND
Eighteenth avenues east, lace Jabot.
Finder return to 11 Kimball flats
reward.
for
FOR RENT— EIGHT- ROOM HOUSE;
also three rooms at 226 West Third
street; four rooms at 'J2^. Third
avenue west. Call 11 East Third
street. .
FOR RENT-
2721 West
rose 1973.
-FOUR- ROOM
Second street.
coTT.xor:.
Call Mel-
FOR RENT — FOUR- ROOM COTTA«iE.
.311/4 We.st First street. Inquire 1127
West Michigan street.
LOST— wat4::h fob with black
ribbon. Finder please return to -1
Wicklow street, for reward, ^
NOTICE IN CONDEMNATION PRO-
CEEDING.«5—
Office of the Board of Public Works.
City of Duluth. Minn.. April 20, 1911.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That
the Common Council of the City of Du-
luth has ordered the condemnation of
property as hereinafter stated, and that
the City Engineer of said City has
caused a plan and survey of the pro-
posed Improvement to be made to the
satisfaction of the Common Council,
which have been adopted by said Coun-
cil, and are now on file in the office of
the Board of Public Works. The Board
of Public Works will meet at its office
at the Citv Hall in said City of Duluth
on the Eighth day of May, A. D. 1911,
at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said
day, and will hear any evidence tiiat
may be presented by parties interested
In the property proposed to be con-
demned, and will thereafter, and after
viewing the premises proposed to be
taken, assess and award the damages
which may be occasioned by the taking
of private property for the following
purposes, to wit: Five acres, for park
purposes, in the southwest quarter
of northwest quarter of Section 21,
Township 50, Range 14. None of the
benefits resulting to real estate from
said Improvement shall be assessed
upon such real estate.
BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS.
Official. OLOF G. OLSON,
R. MURCHISON, President.
Clerk of said Board.
(Seal Board of Public Works, Duluth.
Minn.)
D. H., April 21. 1911. D598.
LOST — COLUMBIA HALF-DOLLAR
watch fob charm, Tuesday morning,
between Garfield and Sixth avenue
west. Please return to 22 4 tourth
avenue west, upstairs, for r ;ward.
FOUND — THE PARTY WHO LEFT
bicycle at E. J. Campbell's. First
avenue West livery barn ?an have
same by paying for this ac .
UPHOLSTERING.
FURNITURE, AUTOMOBILES, CAR-
riages; reasonable prices. I.. Ott, Hi
First avenue west. Both phones.
FOR RENT— MODERN SEVEN-ROuM
furnished house to reliable parties.
412 Eighth dvenue east.
FOR RENT— EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
all conveniences. 317 West Tourth
street. Inquire 319 West Fourtu
street.
MINERAL LANDS.
EBERT, WALKER & McKNIGHT CO.,
315 Torrey bldg., offers unusual op-
portunities for big profit l.i mineral
lands on Cuyuna and Vermilion ranges
WANTED TO TRADE.
WANTED TO TRADE— WE HAVE A
nubmer of improved farms which wc
will trade for Improved city prop-
Whitney Wall company, 302
building.
erty.
Torrey
FOR RENT- 212 NINTH AVENUH
east; eight rooms, hardwood floors
downstairs, furnace heat, electric
light, gas for cooking. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck. Torrey building.
FOR RENT— 1214 EAST THIRD; SIX-
room house; hardwood floors, gas and
electricity, laundry In basemtnt; very
desirable. Stryker, Manley &. Buck,
Torrey building. ^
FOR RENT— 6-ROOM BRICK HOU.^E;
Fifteenth avenue east; modern; hard
wood floors, furnace heat, gas and
electricity. Wahl-Messer Realty Co.,
208 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM HOLSB
with bath. 215 1^ East Fifth street.
Hartman-O'Donnell agency, 205 Lons-
dale building.
FOR RENT— A COMFORTABLE, W ELL
arranged home in the East end; mod-
ern In every respect; $42. oO pet-
company, 301
ern In every
month. Whitney
Torrey building.
5Pt
Wall
FOji^SjjiE— COWSi. ^
FOR SALE^^^CARLOAD OI" FRESH
milch cows just arlved to S5. Widdes,
429 Forty-sixth avenue west. Call
Cole, 3133-Y.
PRO-
Total
year
By death
maturity . . . ,
expiration . .
surrender . .
lap.*
decrease
BUSINESS
By
By
By
'«y
By
3,5«0
542
134
33
1.481
1,379
IN
Policies In force at
of the year
Issued during the
Ceased to be In
the year
In force Dec. 31st last.
year.,
force
MINNESOTA
No.
heglnnins
1,290
245
IN
during
120
1,415
7,269.683.00
• 981.879.00
3:^7.088.00
6:<. 013.00
2.675.600.00
2,7«8.!'24.0O
442,279.00
1910.
Amount.
$2,008,031.00
570,560.46
176.881.46
2.401.710.00
Losses
year
and clalma incurred during the
.$31,564.46
LcMs and cUims settled daring tbe jmt.. $25,564. 46
NOTICE—
Pursuant to the terms and condi-
tions of Ordinance No. 85, of the City
of Two Harbors, L.ike County. Minne-
sota, which said Ordinance is entitled,
•AN ORDINANCE PROVIDING FOR
THE ISSUANCE, FORM AND SALE
OF FIVE THOUSAND FIVE HUN-
DRED DOLLARS OF NEGOTIABLE
BONDS OF THE CITY OF TWO HAR-
BORS, MINNESOTA, FOR THE PUR-
POSE OF RAISING FUNDS WITH
WHICH TO PAY BONDS IN LIKE
AMOUNT DUE FEBRUARY FIRST,
A. D. 1911:" Notice is hereby given
that the City Council of the City ot
Two Harbors will meet in the Council
Chambers in the City Hall of said
City of Two Harbors on Monday, the
NOTICE IN CONDEMNATION
Office of \he Board of Public Works.
Citv of Duluth, Minn.. April 20, 1911.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. That
the Common Council of the City of
Duluth has ordered the condemnation
of property as hereinafter stated, and
that the City Engineer of said City
has caused a plan and survey of the
proposed Improvement to be made to
the satisfaction of the Common Coun-
cil, which have been adopted by said
Council, and are now on file in the of-
fice of the Board of Public Works. The
Board of Public Works will rneet at
its offce at the City Hall in said City
of Duluth on the Eighth day of May.
A D. 1911, at 10 o'clock in the fore-
noon of said day. and will hear any
evidence that may be presented by par-
ties Interested In the property pro-
posed to be condemned, and will there-
after, and after viewing the premises
prdposed to be taken, assess and award
the damages which may be occasioned
by taking of private property for the
following purposes, to -wit, for park
purposes: , ^ . ^ ,
The property proposed to be taken
Is described as follows: Lots 1 to 17,
Inclusive, block 15; lots 1 to 13, In-
clusive, block 16; lota 10 to 19.
inclusive, block 17; all in Hunter &
Markell's Grassy Point addition, and a
part of the southwest quarter of south-
west quarter of section 13. township
49 range 15. None of the benefits re-
sulting to real estate from said im-
provement shall be assessed upon
such real estate. „
BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS,
"" OLOF G. OLSON.
Official: President.
R. MURCHISON,
Clerk of said Board. ,^ , .^
(Seal. Board of Public Works, Duluth.
Minn.) ^^, .^ _.-
D. H., April 21. 1911. P. 696.
NOTICE IN CONDEMNATION PRO-
CEEDINGS— ^ „ ^„ ,„ ,
Office of the Board of ?"}>"« "VVorks
Citv of Duluth, Minn.. April 20, 1911.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That
the Common Council of the City of Du-
luth has ordered the condemnation of
property as hereinafter stated, and
that the City Engineer of said City has
caused a plan and .survey of the pro-
posed Improvement to be made to the
satisfaction of the Common Council,
which have been adopted by said Coun-
cil, and are now on file In the office of
the Board of Public Works. The Board
of Public Works will meet at Us office
at the City Hall In said City of Du-
luth on 4he Elgtatb day of May, A. D.
NOTICE OF CONFIRMATION OF AS-
SESSMENT FOR EAST FOURTH
STREET PAVING —
Office of the Boa»d of Public Works.
City of Duluth, Minn., April 20, 1911.
Notice Is hereby given that the as-
sessment of Seventeen Thousand Eight
Hundred Forty-six (17,846) Dollars and
Seventy-two (72) Cents made by the
Board of Public Works upon March 27,
A. D. 1911. against the property spe-
cially benefited by paving and other-
wise improving Fourth street in the
City of Duluth. Minnesota, from the
easterly line of Twenty-third avenue
east to the easterly line of Twenty-
seventh avenue east was by said Board
upon notice duly given, confirmed on
April 17, A. D. 1911, and said assess-
ment has been duly entered by the
Board of Public Works in a book kept
by It /or that purpose.
Attest: OLOF G. OLSON.
R. MURCHISON, President
Clerk, Board of Public W^orks.
(Seal Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H., April 21. 1911, D599.
HAIR DRESSING PARLORS.
G. Molsan Is the only French hair dres-
ser In Duluth. Expert in making
wigs, toupees and hair dye. Switche.H
and puffs made from combings. Mall
orders promptly filled. 212 W. let St
WANTED TO RENT.
WANTED— TWO OR THREE UNFUR-
nished rooms heated, suitable for
housekeeping. X 33, Herald
W \NTED TO RENT— YOUNG LADY
wishes to rent rather large unfur-
nished loom in house wiln modern
conveniences on Park Pont, below
Twenty-fifth street. Call Melrose
FOR RENT— TWO SIX-ROOM BRICK
houses all modern; large basement;
27 and 29 West Fourth. Inqulro
27 V4 West Fourth street. ^
FOR RENT— NINE ROOMS WITH
bath, furnace, fireplace and laundry,
109 East Third str-'tt, $50. E. D. Field
company. Exchange building. _^
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSH
on Nineteenth avenue east with fur-
nace bath, etc, one block from cars,
$32.50. E. D Field company, 203 Ex-
change building.
THREE-ROOM
$15 and $!*. E.
203 Exchange
FOR RENT— TWO
flats with bath, etc.,
D. Field company,
building.
FOR RENT— NINE OR TEN -ROOM
house. 1007 East Second street, aU
conveniences; $40. Apply N. J. Up-
ham company, 18 Third avenue west.
43S3.
SEEDS, PLANTS, TREES.
FOR SALE— TREES AND SHRUBS,
plants and flowers: gardening done
by the day or contract. Call G. R.
Mercer, Mel. 3545.
TIMBER LANDS.
FOR RENT— EIGHT- ROOM HOUSE,
No. 1 West Fifth street; water, sew-
er, bath, gas and electric lights hot
air furnace for rent May 1, $30 per
month. R. P. Dowse. 106 Providence
building. '
FOR RENT— 506 FIFTH AVENUE
east six-room house and bath, gas,
free water, $20 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey. ^
FOR RENT— 1803 SOUTH STREET,
five-room house, water and sewer;
free water, $15 per month. Stryker,
Manley & Buck, Torrey.
TIMBER AND CUT-OVER LANDS
bought; mortgage loans. made. John
Q. A. Crosby, 305 Palladio ouildtgig.
ASSESSMENT FOR SEWERS IN THIR-
TY-NINTH AVENUE WES-r, ONE-
OTA SREET AND MAGELLAN
STREET—
Office of the Board of Public Works.
City of Duluth. Minn.. April 21. 1911.
Notice Is hereby given that a con-
tract has been completed for the con-
struction of a sanitary sewer In Thirty-
ninth avenue west in said city from a
point between Reene alley and Reene
street to Oneota street. In Oneota
street from Thirty-eighth avenue west
to Fortieth avenue west, and In Ma-
gellan street from east line lot 9,
block 7, Oneota to Fortieth avenue
west; and that the Board of Public
Works of said city will meet at their
office in the City of Duluth. on Fri-
day the Fifth day of May, A, D. 1911,
at Ten o'clock A. M. to make an as-
sessment of the sum of Forty-five
Hundred Thirty-eight (4538) dollars
and Ninety-two (92) cents upon the
real estate to be benefited by such
sewers for the purpose of raising
money to defray so much of the cost
of such improvement as is assessable.
All lands situated in said city and
to which benefits result from said Im-
provement will be assessed in propor-
tion, as near as may be, to the benefits
resulting thereto from said improve-
ment. All persons Interested in said
proceeding shall have the right to be
present and be heard at said time and
place 'n relation to the making of said
assessment.
OLOF G. OLSON.
Official: President.
R. MURCHISON, ,. ^ ,
Clerk. Board of Public Works.
(Seal, Board of Public Works, Duluth,
Minn.)
D. H., AprU 21. 1911. D 600.
FOR SALii— FORTY ACRliS LAND.
all white pine and spruce Ambpu In-
quire 709 Hammond avenw. Superior.
Wis.
buy standing timber; also cut-over
lands. Geo. Rupley, 615 Ly:eum bldg
FOR SALE — 40
w^hite pine and
quire 109
rior. Wis.
ACRES LAND. ALL
spruce tl liber. In-
Hammonnd avenue, Supe-
Homesteads and timber claims located.
From 40 to 80,000 acres of timber
lands for sale. 401 Palladio Bldg.
FOR RENT — A MODERN SEVEN-
room house on East Second street,
near Nineteenth avenue east; two
bath rooms; hardwood finisli; hot
viater heat; $42.50 per nionth. \\ hit-
ney Wall company. 301 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM HOUSE;
modern except heat. S.S. William-
son, 515 Torrey building, both phones.
FOR RENT — 1309 EAST SECOND
street, nine rooms, modern; $45 per
month. See M. Henricksen, at Hen-
rlcksen Jewelry company. ^
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FUR-
nlshed cottage. 3439 Minnesota ave-
nue. Park Point. Inquire 102 West
First street. Bloom & Co.
DYE WORKS.
ASHES AND GARBAGE.
REMOVED PROMPTLY. ZENITH 2378-
X. 80? Sixth avenue west.
REMOVED ON
Barrett, 1122
SHORT NOT iCE — DICK
E. 4th St. Zen. 1945- Y.
ASHES', GARBAGE AND MANURE RE-
moved promptly. Melros*; 13»0; Ze-
nith 1488-X.
ZENITH CITY DY^E WORKS— LAR-
fest and most reliable. All work
one in Duluth. Work called for and
delivered. 'Phones: Old, 1154-R; new,
1888. 232 East Superior street
Duluth Dye Works — French dry clean-
ing; fancy dyeing. Old 'phone. Mel-
rose 4191; new, 1191-A. 330 E. Sup. St.
STOVE REPAIR!^.
WE CARRY IN STOCK REPAIRS FOR
10,000 different stoves and ranges. C.
F. Wlggerts & Son. 410 East Supe-
rior street. Both 'phonea
MEDICAL
LADIES -- $1,000 flEWARD! I Posi-
tively guarantee my great snccessful
"Monthly" remedy. Safely relieves
some of the longest, most obstinata^
abnormal cases In three to five daya
No harm, pain or interfjrence with
work. Mall, $1.50. Double strength.
iZ. Dr. L. M. Sougthlnton & Co.,
Lansas City. IfOk
Northwestern Dyeing & Cleaning Co. —
Oldest reliable dyerg and French dry
cleaners in Northwest 23 Lake Ave.
north. 'Phones: New, 1516; old. 1337.
NATIONAL DYEING AND CLE A NINO
company, 319 E. Superior St French
dry cleaners and fancy dyers. Both
'phones 2376. Branch, 15 Lake Ave N-
East End Dyeing and Cleaning Co.,
926 E. Superior St. Grand 1245-X.
MeL 4628. All our work guaranteed.
LADIES' TAILORING.
DANFORTH,
131 West Superior street.
Plumes cleaned and dyed any color.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed. Miss
FltzPatrlck, 502-4 E. 4th St. BotU
'phones.
WATCHES REPAIRED.
Guaranteed Main Springs, 1100; watc^
cleaned. $1. Qmron Bros., ilt W. lat.
r> 1
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1
1
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Friday,
THE DULU^H HERALD.
April 21, 1911.
26
SOME PEOPLE DO FIND GOOD SERVANTS!
They may be "lucky/' of course. Kut perhaps it's more like good
manasement than good luck. Most of the good servants are found
through HERALD "WANT ADVERTISING" or through HERALD ADS.
U
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
(Continued.)
* FOR SALE. *
S Household goods outfit of new ■>(■
furniture In tlve-room flat, used *
it- Just one month, for sale at a very ■*•
advantageous ftKure. Flat for *
rent. A decided snap for some *•
oung couple. Knger & Olson, the *
ig Furniture house. Nineteenth *
.. avenue west. .,.'?■
LOOK Ht:RE:
FOR SALE— A SNAP— MAPLE DRESS-
er and commode, combination dress-
er, range (beauty), heater; all prac-
tically new. M. W. Turner. 218 East
First street, or 'phone Melrose 4166.
Fun t! ALE— PRACTICALLY NEW
furniture of four-room flat. Oppor-
tunity for younji married people to
save considerably. Same flat for
rent. 17 East Fourth, second floor.
FOR SALE — TWO BRUSSELS RUGsl
9 by 12, S'egar refrigerator and 30-
gallon coal hot water heater. Call
711 '2 East Fomth street.
* A-
* FOR SALE. 1^
* *
* One eb«iny-case Kimball piano. H-
i^ thoroughly gone over; new strings ^
•^ and hammers. A snap at $lo5; if-
^ |lu cash and |3 per month. if-
* *
* FRENCH & BASSETT. *
* a
FOR SALE — MAHOGANY SIDE
board in good condition. ISIO Ea.st
Fifth street.
FOR SALE STEWART COAL HEAT-
er. cost |65; for $30; refrigerator In
good condition |5. Call before Sat-
urday noon. 6:i4 Flr.st avenue east.
FOR SALE — RE.MLNGTON TYPE
writer and upright piano: a bargain.
221 West Superior street. Room 210.
FOR SALE— HOUSEHOLD FURNI-
ture. sewing machine and piano. 12
West First street, flat G.
FOR SALE— SECOND-HAND GO-CART
almost new. 1523 Jefferson street.
FOR SALE — TWO LARGE TENTS;
very cheap. W 56. Herald.
FOR SALE— GAS RANGE; FIRST
class; $12. Also electric heater cheap.
709 Sa East Fourth tsreet.
FOR SALE— AT A LOW PRICE, SEC-
ond hand full dress suit and white
vest in good condition, size 42. at
Karl J. Hagbergs tailor shop. 9
Twentieth avenue west.
FOR SALE — RUG; SIDEBOARD. AND
other
street.
furniture. 725 East Superior
FOR SALE — PIRE EARLY ROSE
8Wr-et potatoes. Duluth Grain &
Produce Co.
FOR SALE — lURNITUKE OF SEVEN-
room house, 1114 East Third street.
FOR SALE— 1910 MODEL MOTOIiCY-
cle. four-cylinder, two-speed; used
only short time; in best condition.
Inquiie 4:S East Superior street.
FOR SALE— SMALL REFRIGERATOR
In good shape for sale cheap. 242^
East Third street.
FOR SALE— FURNITURE IN A SIX-
room steam-heated flat. Address W
68, Herald.
* FOR SALE. *
-^ One piano player, the latest 88- •^
H- note; mahogany case; beautiful Vc
ii- action; Including twelve rolls of ii-
•^- music, bench, stool and scarf, for ie
# 1375, $25 cash and $10 per month. H^
ig. FRENCH & BASSETT. fl-
FOR SALE— HALL SAFE, MEDIUM
size, also telephone booth. O 27.
Herald, or call Melrose 3263.
•* FOR SALE. ^.
* A-
•# One large oak-case Steinhaur i^-
i^ pii^no, almost new; good tone and A-
# action, liegular price. $::00; sale ^
•^ price, $185; $10 cash and $7 per *•
# nnonth. i^.
a- FRENCH & BASSETT. -,<■
* *
FOR SALE— A NOVELTY IN RIDING
bridle, made of black and while
horsehair. 1122 East Fourth street.
FOR SALE. CHE.VP — ONE TEN-FUOT
counter; one eight-foot counter. Ap-
ply Duluth Van & .Storage company.
FOR SALE — $100 PIANO AND FURNI-
ture; a snap if taken at once. Call
19 Lake avenue north or Grand
619-.\.
FOR SALE — CHEAP. ONE SECOND-
hand visible typewriter. L 43, Her-
ald.
FOR SALE— STEWART STEEL RANGE
in line condition; co.sts $42, will sell
for $20. E.Kcellent. large base burn-
er heater, costs $55, will sell for $25.
Call at 618 East Second street, up-
per flat.
FOR
SALE— STANDARD TVPI-
WRIT-
er.
good condition
cash, or \vi
11 trade
for
anything that
I can use.
What
have you? K 49,
Herald.
FOR S.VLE— INCUBATORS. BROOD
ers and all poultry supplies; baby
chicks 15 cents and up; any breed
hatched to order; flower and garden
seeds In bulk; northern grown;
shrubs, roots, bulbs and trees. W.
"W. Seeklns, florist, 302 East Superior
street.
FOR SALE — OR TRADE, SECOND
hand automobile for two or five pas-
senger; slightly damaged. Call or
give us offer at 203 Providence build-
ing.
FOR SALE— WANTED A FEW MORE
butter customers. Owing to a recent
increase in our dairy herd we can
accommodate a limited number of
people with butter. Jean Duluth
farm. Telephone evenings.
FOR SALE— RAISE CHICKENS— IT'S
easy with the Jewel Incubator — any
one can get good results. We have
'em in all sizes. See our latest
hatch. Kelley Hardware Co.
FOR SALE — NEW AND SECOND-
hand engines, boilers, portable saw-
mills, planers, matchers, resaws. pul-
leys, shafting, hangers and boxes.
'Phones 91.
DULUTH MACHINERY CO.
FOR SALE — SAFES. OFFICE FURNl-
ture, architects' and engineers' sup-
plies, typewriters and supplies. J. S.
Ray & Co.. 406 W. Sup. St. 'Phones.
FOR SALE — OFFICE FURNITURE,
also household furniture, dining ta-
ble, chairs and china closet. Call 1101
Alwoith building. 'Phone Melrose,
Grand 201.
FOR SALE — TWO DROP-HEAD
Whiles, $18 and $2:J; four drop-head
Singers at $10. $12, $15 and $25;
others from $5 up. all In fine shape.
White Sewing Machine .«tore. Lake
avenue and Superior street.
FOR SALE — BLACK ORPINGTON
egg^, for hatching. Fine large stock.
$1 per 15. Mrs. Parks, 614 West
Fifth street.
FUR SALE— PIANO; WILL SELL
cheap; party leaving city. 832 East
Second street.
FGGS FOR SALE — PURE BItEL
White Wyandottes, |1 for 13. Mel-
rose 3948.
PICTURE FRAMLNG.
GUSTAVO HSNNECKE.211 £. SUP. ST.
FOR SALE— HOUSES.
VERY SPECIAL TO
HOMESEEKERS.
For the next three weeks only we
are offering very exceptional oppor-
tunity for six homeseekers to secure
thoroughly well-planned and well-
constructed homes costing from $2,500
to $6,500. on large lots, very desirably
located, at actual cost to us and on
very easy payments. We could nut
afford to do this if we did not have a
good reason. This l.s your opportunity.
Call house department at once. Dont
delay, as this offer is limited to six
purchasers only.
W, M. PRINDLE & CO.,
3 Lonsdale Bldg.
FOR SALE— MODERN. NEW, UP-TO-
date flats, earning 14 per cent on your
investment; centrally located; always
rented. W 54. Herald.
FOR SALE — ON EASY TERMS. SIX-
room house. Twenty-fourth avenue
west and Sixth street, $1,S00; sewer,
water and gas in street. Whitney
Wall company, 301 Torrey building.
294
FOR SALE — NEW TEN-ROOM Du-
plex house for sale cheap; easy
terms; 1016 Ninth avenue east. C. A.
Knippenberg, 300 Alworth building.
'Phones 597.
IMPORTANT NOTICE.
If you want us to build a house for
you this summer, please let us know
as soon as possible. We advance all
the money and you pay us monthly,
but even at tliat there is a limit to
our capacity and to our pocketbook.
If you are not familiar with our
plan write us a postcard and wo will
mail you booklets and pictures.
EDMUND G. WALTON AGENCY,
312 Exhange building.
FOR SALE— MODERN SEVEN-ROOM
house with bath; rooms all large;
fine grate, electric light and gas; all
street assessments paid; shade trees
and well sodded lawn; house in fine
repair and ready to move Into; loca-
tion walking distance to business
center; terms to suit; exclusive sale
by Getty-Smith company, 308 Pal-
ladio building.
FOR SALE— $500 CASH AND $25 PER
month buys flve-room house, bath,
gas and electricity, central; price
$2,500. See Little 6c Nolle Co., No.
2 Exchange building.
FOR SALE— FLAT BUILDING. EAST
end, rents $88; pays 15 per cent net.
price $6,750. Easy terms. See Litlie
& Nolle Co.. No. 2 Exchange building.
FOR SALE — EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE;
centrally located. West Duluth; price
$1,800; small cash payment, balance
monthly; is now rented for $19 per
month. Whitney Wall company. 301
Torrey building.
FOR SALE— aT GRAND FOUR-ROOM
cottage; elegant location; 25-foot
lot; cheap, $500 cash, balance, easy
as rent. Smith Realty company,
524 Manhattan building.
FUR SALE — AT LAKESIDE. NEW
seven-room house, concrete founda-
tion, all conveniences except heat, lot
50 by 140; for iiuick sale owner will
sell at a bargain. E 29. Herald.
FUR SALE — A TWENTY-ROOM
boarding house furnished, also barn.
16 by 32 on lot 25 by 125 feet; located
in a thriving range city. Address H.
& S.. box 414, Hibbing. Minn.
FOR SALE— 15 PER CENT INVE.ST-
ment. double house. 16 rooms, heat,
stone foundation, large lot; saci inco.
$5,000; one-half cash; East end. Smitii
Realty Co.. 524 Manhattan.
FOR SALE — SEVEN-ROOM MODERN
house, on East Fourth street, near
Portland square; hardwood through-
out; good basement; cement founda-
tion and furnace neat. A tiargain;
$4,500. Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building. 293
FOR SALE — WILL TRADE EQUITY
in three houses bringing iu $55 per
month for nearly new high-cla.ss
automobile. If Interested call or
write. Room 104 Spalding hotel. Sat-
urday only.
f OR SALE— ELEGANT HOME; IDE.VL
location; must sell. For terms see
owner. 408 Columbia building or call
Park 6155-D.
Houses from $S00 to $80,000 for sale
bv L. A. Larsen Co., Reliable Real
Estate Dealers. 213-14-15 Prov. Bldg.
FOR SALE— $100 CASH AND $18 PER
month buys nearly new seven-room
and basement house and lot; Wesi
end; sewer, water, electric lights,
furnace, good barn, buggy and wood-
shed. K 50. Herald.
FOR SALE— AN EAST END HOME OF
nine rooms, large lot, modern except
heat; beautiful location; $3,500. $5iJ0
cu.sli, balance easy as rent. Smith
Realty company, 524 Manhattan
building.
FUR SALE— BV OWNER, Sl.X-i:OuM
house and lot; all linprovenienls.
I'lia West Fourth street.
FOR SALE— MODERN EIGHT-ROOM
house in East end. Inquire L. K.
Daugherty, 5ol East Fourth street.
FUR SALE — NEARLV NEW SIX-
room liouse; water, gas. electric
light; good cellar. 1020 East Sev-
enth street.
FOR SALE — $50(J DuWN. BALANCE
easy terms, for a twelve-room house
near higii .school and manual train-
ing building. See Chan Smith. 405
Torrey building.
WANTED TO TRADE FOR FARM,
eigiat-room house, on a fiity-foot lot,
located in the best residence district
in Duluth. Price $4,500. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE— NEARLY NEW SIX-ROOM
house; hardwood finish; modern ex-
cept iieat. Apply 1615 East Fiflii
street.
FOR SALE FLATS— ANNUAL RENTAL
$732; three flats netting 12 per cent.
Price $6,500; $1.50t> cash, balance easy
terms; on car line, nr-ar Lincoln Park,
S. Wj Klchardson, 2ol Exchange Bank
building. . .
FUR lyALE EIGHT-RUUM RESl-
denoer all modern conveniences; lot
70 by 140; In Normal school district;
$8,500. , See Chan Smith. 405 Torrey
building.
FUR SALE— SEVEN-RUOM HOUSE,
with water, sewer and electric lights;
two lots. 25 by 125 each; price, $1,800.
one-half cash, balance to suit. Twin
Ports Really company, 510 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR SALE— HOUSES.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE — MODERN EAST END
home; large grounds; Illness of wife
compels sale; no agents need apply.
Address S 368. Herald.
FOR SALE — FIVE-ROOM HOUSE AND
lot at 1723 East Sixth street. Owner
must leave city soon. Inquire at
premises.
FOR SALE— MONTHLY PAYMENTS
of $40 will purchase the right party
a good six-room house at Lakeside,
modern except heat. Price $3,400.
Greenfield, 310-11 Columbia building.
FOR SALE— OR FOR RENT, NEARLY
new four-room house, barn and large
chicken house; close to car line at
Lakeside. Call Grand 1871-Y.
HELP WAMED^FEMALE.
(Continued.)
WANTED — WOMAN COOK AT THE
Frederick hotel.
WANTED— EX PERfENCED GIRL FOR
general housework; family of two;
good wages; one who can go home
nights. Call 1418 Jefferson street.
WANTED — YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework; one wlio can
home nights preferred. Call
Eleventh avenue east.
4!?
WANTED — BUOKKEEPER WHO UN-
derstands stenography. Apply North-
ern Manufacturing company, Chris-
tie building.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework at 706 Va East Fourib
street.
WANTED — SWEDISH GIRL FOR
general housework; newcomer pre-
ferred. 3432 Allendale avenue. Wood-
land; new 'phone. Grand 1986- A.
ADDITIONAL WANTS
ON PAGES 24 and 26
FARM AND FRUIT LANDS.
(Continued.)
FOR SALE— 160 ACRES OP LAND AT
$10 per acre in 54-17, two and a half
miles from D. W. & P. station with
good house and barn. Address A. A.
Stauty, Cotton. Minn.
FOR SALE — FORTY ACRES IN TOWN
of South Range; $6 per acre; part
cash. Mrs. Carrie Green, 514 First
avenue west, Duiuth. 'Phone Grand
1901-D.
I- OR SALE— FORTY ACRES IN VIL-
lage of Lake Nebagamon: $800
worth of standing timber; cash or
terms. Mrs. Carrie Green, 514 First
avenue west, Duluth. 'Phone Grand
1901-D.
FOR SALE — $300 DOWN, BALANCE
on time, buys 160-acre cultivated
farm. Duluth Land exciiange, 516
Columbia building.
Farm lands at wholesale prices. L. A.
Larsen Co., 214 Providence building.
lUR SALE — FORTY ACRES Ol
land, .seven miles from West Duluth,
four miles from Proctor; iwo acres
clear; small house, $S00, Call 5809
Huntington street. West Duluth.
FOR SALE— SMITH RE ALT i' COM-
pany liave got new prices on their
farm and acre tracts. See them early
for a good snap. 524 Manhattan.
W ANTED — AN EXPERIENCED
cashier. Apply Boston Lunch, 206
West Superior street.
WANTED— NURSE GIRL FOR BOY
2% years old; to go home nights. Ap-
ply 3 Barrington flats, Eightli ave-
nue east.
FOR SALE — 15-ROOM BOARDING
house; lot 25 by 125; $2,000; one-
fourth cash, balance to suit; hard-
wood floors, sewer, electric light and
city water; this property Is near the
Zenith Furnace company; now oc-
cupied; rents for $25 per month.
Twin Port Realty company.
FOR SALE— REAL ESTATE.
COUNTRY PLACES.
CLOSE TO NEW CAR LINE.
In order to pay our bills for road-
making and improvements now go-
ing on upon this tract, we will offer
for the next two weeks two 2 ',2 -acre
tracts for spot cash at 25 per cent
off regular prices. Land is high and
dry, beautifully wooded and Is splen-
did speculation account of the new
car line. See us at once. W. M.
Prindle & Co.. 3 Lonsdale building.
FOR SALE — HALF- AC RE TRACTS,
$75 and up, in the Seventh ward
garden division, located twelve
blocks up from Piedmont avenue car
line, facing Morris Thomas road.
The new Hutchinson road runs
through this land. Part of the land
is clear and ready for cultlvatiou.
Inquire from the owners, Karl J.
Hagberg, 9 Twentieth avenue west,
or Andrew Bergquist. 404 Exchange
building.
FOR SALE— WE HAVE A FIOW DE-
sirable lots in West Duluth that we
will sell on easy weekly or monthly
payments. Whitney Wall company
301 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — .\N ELEG.XNT 80 BY 80
West end lot; all Improvements; a
sacrifice. See the Smith Realty
company. 524 Manhattan building.
FOR SALE— 100 BY 140 FEET, SEC-
ond street and Twenty-fifth avenue
east; also ten single lots on Park
Point and one large collage, with
tents known as "Camp Orlando." G.
S. Richards, 5 South Fifth avenue
west. 'Phones.
SITUATION WANTED— FEMALE.
SITUATION WANTED— YOUNG LADY
would like general otYice work. Ad-
dress O 25, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — GRADUATE
nurse of five years' experience in
private nursing, wishes position as
general nurse (excluding surgery) in
a Duluth hospital; best references.
Address Nurse, care Herald.
STUATION WANTED — YOUNG
woman witli good education, desires
office position; have a knowledge
of shorthand and typewriting; will
work for small wages for the ex-
perience. N 21. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — A MIDDLE-
aged widow would like a position
as liousekeeper for a widower with
a small family, or other light work,
or nursing. K 52. Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — WASHING
and Ironing and lace curtains to do
at home. 713 West Fifth street.
SITUATION" WANTED— SEWING BY
competent dressmaker. Call 315 Vi
West Third street, rear of 313.
SITUATION WANTED — SEWING, 2019
West Fourth street.
SITUATION WANTED— SEWING OUT
by the day children's clothes and
plain sewing, experienced. 'Phcne
Melrose 4582.
FOR SALE — EAST END 50-FOOT IX)T.
three houses all thoroughly modern
and new; must sacrifice; splendidly
arranged; half cash. See tlie .Smith
Realty company, 524 Manhattan
building.
FOR SALE— OR WILL TRADE AN
acre lot with store building on same
for team of horses or other property.
Call at 802 Ea.st Third street.
FOR SALIO— TWO PARK POINT LUTS
only three blocks from aerial bridge;
corner and inside; very cheap; easy
terms. A. G. Messer. 117 North r if-
teenth avenue east; Melrose 650
and 439.
FOR SALE— A FEW GOOD LOTS,
well located; cheap for cash. See
the Smith Realty company, 524 Man-
hattan building.
FOR SALE — TWO LOTS ON CON-
tract, with an equity of $J2G, in
Loebs addition. Lakeside; will sell
for $50 cash. Call Melrose 1211; party
leaving city,
FOR SALE — FINEST 100 BY 140 FOOT
corner In normal school district, sur-
rounded by beautiful homes. Little
& Nolle Co., No. 2 Exchange building.
FOR SALE— CORNER LOT. 50 BY 140
feet, on car line at Lakeside; all im-
provements; price $650. Little &
Nolle company, 2 Exchange building.
FOR SALE — $180 TAKES LOT WORTH
$250; $75 cash, balance monthly; also
lot at Woodland; bargain at $300. Call
206 Alworth building.
FUR SALE— DO YOU WANT THE
best building lot on Fourth street,
between .Seventh and Eighth avenuis
west? Easy terins. 801 Torrey build-
ing.
FOR SALE— CHOICE BUILDING LOT,
upper side London road, East end; a
bargain for quick sale at price away
below adjoiiiing propelry. For in-
• formation address C 379, Herald.
FOR SALE— 50 BY 140 FEET, NORTH-
west corner Twenty-third avenue
West and Fourth street. Apply Rlcli-
ardson. Day &. Harrison.
FOR SALE — TWO LOTS, SEVEN-
teenlh avenue east; water, sewer and
gas on lots; no rock; $850. See
Schwieger at A. B. Siewert & Co.
FOR SALE— THE MOST DESIRABLE
double corner in the Normal school
district. See Clian Smith, 405 Tor-
rey building.
FOR SALE — LOT 5. BLOCK 26,
Endlon, between Twenty-second and
Twenty-third avenue. London road,
going for $650. C. B. Woodruff.
FOR SALE — SEVEN ROOMS AND
bath; new flxtures and plumbing;
hardwood floors; all modern conven-
iences; nice trees and buslies; will
sell cheap if taken at once. Inquire
1620 East Sixth street.
FOR SALE— AT A SACRIFICE— SIX-
room cottage on street car line.
Park Point; water, electric light,
bath, gas range, fireplace, not water
heat, cement foundation, laundry tubs,
cement floor In 7%-foot basement;
beautiful, high, dry lots; fine shade
trees; easy terms. Save commission.
Address Owner, H 334, Herald.
FOR SALE— DON'T FAIL TO SEE US IF
you contemplate buying a liome this
spring. Minneapolis Construction Co.,
210 American Exchange Bank Bldg.
FOR SALE — ON EAST EIGHTH
street, near Seventh avenue east, six-
room house, very comfortable, and
delightfully arranged interior, for
$2,200. with $500 cash; balance on
easy terms. Whitney Wall company.
SOI Torrey bulldlaif, im
FOR SALE — A LOT 50 BY 75 FOR
only $600; five blocks from new
courthouse; easy terms. See Chan
Smith. 405 Torey building.
FOR SALE — FIVE CHOICE BUILD-
Ing lots in New Duluth, adjacent to
the new steel plant. Will be sold at
a great bargain to close an estate.
F. C. Drenning, 221 Providence build-
ing.
FOR SALE — LUTS, HUUSES. ACRES;
investments that pay dividends every
month. Talk with Flder, 18 Tliird
avenue west.
FOR SALE— TWO FINE, LEVEL LOTS
on Tenth street, near Tenth avenue
east. Can be bought cheap; small
cash payment, balance monthly. W.
E. Wright, 303 Palladlo. Melrose,
1333.
SWEDISH MASSAGE.
A. E. ii.-i.NSEN, MASSEUR, 400 NEW
Jersey building. Old 'phone 4273 Mel.
rose.
Mrs. Westlind, massage, treated at office
or at your homo. Zen. Grand 2246-X.
MRS. H. WIKING. SWEDISH MAS-
sage, 305 East First St. Melro.«e 4494
Mrs. Calmodeen, Room 7. Winthrop blk.
itb Av. W. and 1st St. Grand 2078-T.
TUATION WANTEI> — COLORED
woman wishes work by the day. Call
Melrose 2223.
SlTU.\TION WANTED — WOMAN
would like to work out washing and
cleaning by the day. Call at 621
West Second street.
SITUATION WANTED — PU P I L S
wanted, needlework class. Saturdays
from 10 to 11:30 a. ni.. at 119 Ninth
avenue east.
SITI.ATIUN WANTED — W.XNTED
lace curtains to do up. Call Mel-
rose 715-X.
SITUATION W ANTED— MALE.
b-TUATION W-^N TED— PUBLIC JAN-
itor and window-waslier. Prudence
Robert, the best new window-cleaner
In the city. Melrose 303. La Salle hoteL
JEFFERSON, PUBLIC JANITOR, ALL
kinds of store and office cleaning.
Mel. 2623, 219 East Superior street.
SITUATION W A N T E D — HOUSE
cleaning, carpet beating, window
and wall paper cleaning. Old phone
9652; new phone 1082, William
Chlsiiolm, 228 Lake avenue south.
SITUATION WANTED — BY MIDDLE-
aged man and wife to run clubliouse
or summer resort; wife good cook,
man can milk, take care of slock,
gardening, handy with tools; on rea-
sonable salery basis; best of refer-
ences. L 46, Herald.
SITUATION WANTED — THOROUGH-
ly competent bookkeeper desires po-
sition at moderate salary, X 38, Her-
ald.
SITL ATiON WANTED — AS FIRST AND
second cook by man and wife. Will-
iam King, general delivery, Duiuth,
or 'phone Zenith 1392-D.
SITUATION WANTED — BY YOUNG
married man as bookkeeper or time-
keeper or both; experience. Call new
■phone Ogden 739-X.
SITUATION WANTED— POSITION AS
stationary engineer; chiefs license;
good references; seven years' run-
ning experience. K 48, Herald.
SITIATION WANTED — TAILOR
would like work; will leave town If
necessary. U 23. Herald.
RENT— STORES, OFFICES, ETC.
FOR RENT— FINE DRY BASEMENT
on Lake avenue south; steam heat.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO.
liENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— LARGE STORE ROOM ON
flrst floor; paint shop on second
floor. 26-28 East First street; willing
to remodel to suit tenant. E. A. Dahl.
610 Columbia building. Zenith 1097.
FOR RENT— STORE AT 907 WEST
Michigan street; $30 month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT— STORE, 1829 WEST Su-
perior street; well adopted for
plumbing establishment. Stryker,
Man ley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT — OFFICES WITH VAULT;
also desk room; large and well light-
ed. 208 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— HALF OR WHOLE OF
storeroom, 25 by 40 feet, over No. 20
East Superior street. Dixon & Lowry.
FOR RENT — MODERN STORE. FINE
front. 25x60 feet, basement and s'oc-
ond floor. Third avenue east and Su-
perior street. See H. J. Mullln, 403
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— STORE ON WEST Su-
perior street, between Tiiird and
Fourth avenues west. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey building.
FOR RENT — HALL; NINETEENTH
avenue west and tlrst street. Inquire
214 Axa building.
FOR RENT — A FEW CHOICE OF-
fices In the Torrey building; best of
janitor and elevator service. Wlilt-
nev Wall company, 301 Torrey build-
ing.
BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT.
^ PHILIP DANDREA *
■^ Will move into liis new store, Mc- ^
* Kay Hotel building, at 20 Fifth #
■^ avenue west. He will carry a full ■^
^ line of fruits, candies, tobacco, i^
ii- cigars and stationery; also will *
iv open a new ice cream parlor. -^
■^ Would be pleased to have his ^
■^ his friends and ptitrons give him a V^
CLAIRVOYANTS.
%^^^
PROF. GIRARD, THE ONLY RELI-
nble clairvoyant in Duluth. 20 West
Superior street. Upstairs.
MADAM ANNA, CARD READING AND
business advice. 329 West Superior
street. Room 12. Melrose 3257.
MADAM STERLING. PALMIST, CARD
reader. 129 East First street, oppo-
site Armory.
CLOTHES CLEANED & PRESSED.
JOHN MUELLER. 208 WEST FIRST
street.
Zenith Valet — French dry cleaning and
repairing. 213 West First St., Mel.
1834. Grand 1134-D
PHOENIX DRY CLEIANINO CO.—
Skirts dry cleaned. 50c. Zenith 'phone
Grand. 1852-X. 10 Fojrth avenue W.
lilt
itimiii
ytttitt^^'^
—^iiititittt
WHERE TO GET WHAT YOU WANT
Each firm a leader In its line. Consult
this list hefore placing your order 11 you
i^ant the best at a price you like to pay.
AWNINGS, TENTS, PACKSACKS.
Polrier Tent St Awning Co., 106 E. Sup.
St., manufacturer and repairing.
Duluth Tent & Awning Co.. 1608 W. Sup.
St. Zen. 347-X. Work guaranteed.
AW NINGS AND TENTS.
AMERICAN TENT & AWNING CO., 1
and 3 East Michigan street. Zen. 2473.
ADVERTISING DISTRIBUTER.
We deliver all kinds of adv. matter;
best service, interstate Distributing
service. Mel. 3547. 17 N. 5lh Av. W.
ACCOUNTANT.
R. R. GRIFFITH, 419 Providence bldg.
'Phones: Melrose 1353. Zenith 1938.
S. M. LESTER, 412 PROVIDENCE
building. Both phones 862.
ART GLASS AND MIRRORS.
All kinds glass; lowest prices. St. Ger-
main Bros.. 121 First avenue west.
CARPENTER REPAIR WORK.
REPAIR Oli NEW WORK DONE REA-
sonabl> ; plans made; estimates fur-
ulsticd. Uie Helgelun, 220'J West
Second street. New 'phone Lincoln
492-Y.
WORK DUNE NEATLV. U. PEARSUN,
207 W. 1st St. Zen. 1274-X or Zen. 6097.
We do all kinds of carpenter work. Job-
bing a specialty; work riven prompt
atttntiou. A. J. llase, 18 West Seconu
street. 2203- if.
CARRIAGES, WAGONS, DRAYS.
If you want a high grade delivery wagon
or buggy tliat was built especially
for tliis part of the country, for least
money, call or write for catalogue.
L. Uammel Co., 300-308 East First St.
CARPET CLEANING.
Ititerstate Carpet Cleaning Company —
Slnotle <t Van Norman, compressed
air cleaners and rug weavers, 1928
West Michigan street. Botli 'phones.
CIVIL ENGINEERING.
Duluth Engineering Co., W. B. Ration,
Mgr., 613 Palladlo bldg. Specifications
piepared and construction superiu-
tenUeci lor waterworks, sewerage, etc.
CHIMNEY SWEEP.
H. Lnutson, city chimney sweep, at No.
1 lire liali. Telephone 46.
DANCING AND LESSONS.
Dance every evening at 224 W. Ist St..
except Monday; also dancing taught.
DENTIST.
Dr. W. H. Ulson, 222 New Jersey Bldg.
All work guaranteed. Both 'phones.
DIUYING AND TRANSFER.
STEWART TRANSFER LINE— MOV-
Ing. baggage, freight, expert piano
movers; prompt service. 'Phones 334.
Office 19^ Fifth avenue west.
DECORATING & WALL PAPERING
See Strongquist & Moyer at 306 E. Sup.
St., about your papering, tinting,
painting and liome decorations. You'U
be satisfied. Both '•"'•ones.
DRY CLEANING AND PRESSING.
WOR^C GUAl.ANTEED. CITY DYE
Works. Old, Melrose 1942. Zenith
2474.
ENGINEERING.
NORTHWESTER.1 ENGINEERING CO..
Duluth. Minn.
Architects, Mechanical and Electrical
Eng.; Plans, Estimates rnd Specifica-
tions. Complete rtine Equipments a
specialty. Mel. 3912. P. O. Box 685.
FLOiaST.
J. J. Le Borious. florist, 921 E. 3rd St.
Floral funeral designs, cut flowers.
FURNITURE RECOVERED.
Let Forsell do your UPHOLSTERING.
334 E. Superior St. Zenith 'phone 949.
FURNITURE AND PIANOS.
Finished and repaired. Theo. Thomp-
son. 336 E. Sut. St. Old 'phone 2S28.
INTERPRETER.
V. D. NICKOLICH, INTERPRETER
for several foreign languages. 301
Al orth building^
HORSE SHOEING.
Shoeing crippled anrj intenerlng horses
my specialty. Carl Schau. 14 3d Av. E.
IMPROVED SHOE REPAIRING.
MONEY SANx-fC TIME SAVING. SHOE
saving. While you wait. Gopher Shoe
works.
Subscrilie for The HeraiK
JOB PRINTERS.
R.\NKIN PRINTING CO. — OUT-OP-
town orders a speclulty. 221 West
Superior street.
FOR RENT— FLATS.
(Continued.)
for'^'rent^^^^modern sTx^ROOii
apartments, splendid location in best
resident district of W>st end, $30.
Apply P. George Hanson & Sons.
FOR rent — 1307 WEST SUPERIOR
street, five rooms, water and sewer;
stove heat. 114.50 per month. W. M.
Prindle & Co., Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM BRICK
basement fiat at 108 East Second
street. Apply Jacob Stubler, 3U«
West Superior street.
KODAKS AND CAMERAS.
Eclipse Photo Supply Co., 17 4th Ave. W.
Develop and finish for amateurs.
LANDSCAPE GARDENING.
BLACK DIRT, SAND i.' LOAM AND
fertilizer for gardens, hotbeds, fiower
beds, lawns etc.; g-ading, sodding
& seeding. H. B. Keedy. Both 'phones.
MACHINE WORK REPAIRING.
Auto and Machine parts made. Zenith
Machine works, 207 W. Ist St. Old
'phone 2622.
KEY, LOCK AND SAFE \A ORKS.
Sander Bios.' Hardware
[store, 203 W. 1st St Phones:
Old, Mel. 39t!9; New, 2288-A.
KEYS AND MODEL WORKS.
Key cutting, grinding polishing and
tine repairs. 22% E. 2nd St. Mel. 3381.
LANDSCAPE"^RDENER.
GARDEN, GRADING, SUDDING AND
pruning work guare.nteed; also all
kinds of trees and stirubbery at the
right price. Call for Clirlst Engel,
310 E. 9th St.. or 'ph>ne Zen. 1960-i'.
MARINE MOTORS.
A 1909 MODEL (CAMP-
bell) Marine Motor,
10-hors€ power, for (325
— 5-inct bore, 5Vi-lnch
stroke. 1911 models of
ail slzas. at regular
prices. .?'. R. Holm berg,
028 Laks Av. S. 'Phones.
MUSICAL INSTltUMENTS.
A. H^akonsen. dealer
and expert repatrerr
at J. W. Nelson's, 6
East Superior street.
OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN.
A. L. NORBERG, 201-207 WEST Su-
perior street, 110 Oaic Hall building.
OPTICIA!iS.
C. C. STAACKE, 106 WEST SUPERIOR
street. Open Wedneiday and Satur-
day evenings.
OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING.
DON'T SCRAP A BROKEN CASTING
or machine part of t.ny size of iron,
steel, aluminum or brass until you
have conferred with us. Buck &
Spring. 313 East Jlichigan street.
'Phones: Bell, Mel. )74; Zen., Grand
974.
PATENIS.
PATENTS — ALL ABOUT PATENTS.
See Stevens, 610 Sell vood building.
pLuMBIj^ ANDllEP]iJRSr^
JAMES GORMAN— YOUR PLUMBER;
jobbing work promptly attended to.
1 Twenty-third aven ie west. Zenith
'phone. Grand 107.
Geo. W. Palmer, 111 E. 1st St., Zenith
'phone. 1688-A. Early and late.
RUG WEAVING.
FIR^-CLASs''RAG'li5DrFrLLER RUG
weaving. Melrose 3341.
PAINTING AND PAPERUANGING.
DO IT NOW BEFORE THE RUSH. IT
costs less and can take time to do
better work; estimates free. Call
Zenith, 959-A and I will bring sample
book[|. J. D. McCurdy, corner Third
avenue west and Second street.
FOR PAINTING ANE DECORATING
see Youngdahl &Dle;-s,223 W. 2nd. St
ROOFING, CORNICE, SKYLIGHTS.
jTir^UIClC^OBBir^GrASaJllEPAlR-
ing. 531% E. Sup. fct. Zen., 1257-A.
BURIiELL & HARMO>, 308 E. Sup. St.
Both 'phones. First-class work.
RIFLES AND GUNS.
Grinding and Repairing a
specialty. City Gun Store,
R^ C. KRUSCHKE.
402 West Superior Street.
SECOND HAND DEALERS.
New and second-hand goods bought,
sold. A. B. Davis, 3 729 W. Sup. St.
SIGN AND CARD W RITING.
For signs of any description, call
1277-D on Zen. 'phor e. A. E. Schar.
WALL PAPER AND PAINTS.
C. Erlckson Is still In bu.slness, with
the latest In wall papor and fresh sup-
ply of paint. 1926 V> . 2nd. Entrance
20th Ave. W. Estircates furnished.
WATCH REPAIRING.
Watch hospital; clean in
ing at lowest prices.
£. Sup. Sb
Iff and repair-
Berg Bros.. 112
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM FLAT, 13
East Superior street; water, gas.
electric light, steam heat; J25 per
month. Including heal. R. P. Dowse
& Co.. 106 Providence building.
FOR RENT— NO. 16 FIFTEENTH AVE-
nue west four rooms, downstairs;
water and sewer, stove heal, |12 per
month. W. M. Prindle & Co., Lonsdale
building.
BUSINESS CHANCES.
Duluth's
Leading Business Chance Brokers.
DULUTH BUSINESS EXCHANGE,
609 Torrey Building.
FOR SALE— ONE OF THE BE.ST CON-
fectioneries in the city; daily salea
average $17. Price $1,400; easy
terms. Will stand Investigation.
FOR SALE— RESTAURANT DOING A
nice business; well located. I'rice
$500.
FOR SALE— ROOMING HOUSE, VERY
central; good neighborhood; rooms
always full. This is very choice.
Owner must leave. Price $700; terms.
FOR SALE — BOARDING HOUSE;
without question this I"' the best In
the city; private and exclusive;
everything the best. I'rice $2,000;
terms.
FOR SALE— MOVING PICTI'RE THE-
aler; best equipped picture house in
Duluth. Experience unnecessary.
This is a good thing. Price $1,800;
easy terms.
FOR SALE— SMALL CONFECTIONERY
wltlj three living rooms completely
furnished; slock, fixtures, household
goods, everything goes for $250. Rent
Is only $12.50.
FOR SALE — SMALL BO.VRDINO
house, well located; 18 rooms, 25
boarders; cheap rent; big snap. I'rice
Is $650; ea.sy terms.
F'OR SALE — SMALL C0NFECTT0NF:RY
with four living rooms in connection.
Price $450.
FOR S.ALE — POOL HALL, CIGAR
stand and shoe-shlnlng .«5tand com-
bined, well located; doing good bust*
ness; big snap. Price $875.
We have hundreds of other good
propo-'^ltions. Should you care to buy
any kind of business, don't forget t<i
see
Duluth's
Leading Bu.'^iness Chance Brokere,
DULUTH BUSINESS EXCHANGli
509 Torrey Building.
Business Ciiances — We Ijuy stocks of
merchandise, paying spot cush. No
matter where located or size of stock,
write Eastern Salvage Co.. merchac-'
dlso brokers. Duluth, Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — CONFECTION-
ery store doing good bu.slness, three
living rooms, furniture included;
must be sold at once; owner leavin.<
city. Call at 511 East Fourth street.
FOR SALE OR TRADE TWFINTY-
four-room hotel; all conveniences,
restaurant in connection. Call Lin-
coln, 33 A.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Two-chair barber shop; well
equipped and building 18 by 30 feet;
best location; can be had at low fig-
ure. Spencer Clark, Keewatin. Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $250 GOOD-.
paying restaurant, established trade;
also good fi.'ttures, can be bought at
your own price. Wood Purdy com-
pany. 501 Manhattan building.
BUSINESS CHANCES— WANT TO Ex-
change for farm, stock of merchan-
dise, witij store and fixtures, located
In growing farming town. What
have youV G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey
building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $1,300 BUY^
moving-picture show clearing from
$100 to $200 monthly; $600 will
handle. Wood Purdy company, 5ol
Manhattan building.
BUSLN'ESS CHANCES— A CENTRAL
corner; dead ripe for grocery and
butcher sliop; who wants an ideal
business corner? See the Smith
Realty company, 524 Manhaitaa
building^
BUSINE.SS CHANCES — rOii S.ALB —
Nine-room iiouse, full of roomers;
best location in city. L 44, Herald.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR RENT—
Small candy store doing good busi-
ness; fine location. Herald, E 23.
FOR SALE — RESTAURANT, CuM-
plete, doing good business in best
town on range; price leasonabie;
terms cash. For particulars call or
write Mrs. John Burby. Marble, Minn.
BUSINESS CH.VNCES— MUST DISPOSE
of real estate lioidlngs in East end
of Duluth. Parly having from $3,000
to $t,000 casii can place it to good
advantage, if you act in time; in-
vestigate. Address owner, S 370,
Herald.
BUSINESS CILA.NCES — FOR .SAi.E —
Or exchange for team of horses;
forty-acre tract of land in Carlton
county near school Itouse; good
roads. Andrew Pease 1626 Minnesot.fc
avenue.
BUSINESS CHANCES— AN OPPOR-
tunity of a life In bakery, an im-
mense paying proposition; nets $3,500
year. Standard trade year around.
Smith Realty Co., 524 Manhattan.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE —
Confectionery store doing good busi-
ness; fine location; bargain if taken
at once. See Commercial Business
Brok-er-s, 206 Alworth building.
BUSINESS CHANCE S — CON FECTlON-
ery; $100 for fixtures and invoice
stock; daily sales better than $20;
splendid buy. Wood Purdy company,
501 Manhalten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — $675 BUYS 13-
room rooming house, income $12»
monthly; best paying place in the
city. Wood Purdy company, 501
Manhalten building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — F'OR SALE —
Up-to-date double store. This is on*
of the finest buildings and best loca-
catlons in Marble. Address Box 31.
Marble. Minn.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE^
Bargain; confectionery store; make
us an offer on this; owner sick. In-
quire Duluth Business Exchange. 509
Torrey building.
BUSINESS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
Rooming house; flrst-class; very
central; neat and clean; big bargain;
price $650. Duluth Business Ex-
change. 609 Torrey build«ns.
BUS1NF:SS CHANCES — FOR SALE—
One Babcock soda fountain complete.
For further Information Inquire Jo-
seph Shearer, lock box 27, Park Rap-
iis, Minn.
■ r-»-r -j-
BUSINESS CHANCES — ARE YOU
looking for acres to plat? I have a
tract of land across the St. Louta
river from the steel plant site. Thi«
can be sold in lots at a big proflu
If IntM-Mted write W. %i Harald.
..
I
Friday,
THE DUIiUTH HERAIiD
April 21, 1911.
PRINT A HERALD
EIMOUGH-F^OR
WANT AD— AND RENT THAT
AF^ARTIVIENT
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
Xo Advertisement I>e&s Than 15 Cents.
BOYS! GIRLS! MONEY AFTER
SCHOOL!
fiond us your name and address.
Wo wili send you twenty pat-k-
ages of our Handy yheet Bluing.
You can sell them after school.
Send us $1 and keep Jl. The Nora
Novelty company, Duluth, Minn.
;\-^«*«**^*f^;^«««-***^^*^^^***±
'X-
^ Slurried or single men; will pay
^ salary or commission. Call
i(. MILLER HOTEL,
i(. Room 25, 1 to 9 p. m.
S.4LESMEN WANTED.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
Xo AdvertLseinent IjCss Tlum 15 Cents.
ADDifiONATiJi^^
ON PAGES 24 and 25
FARM AKD FRUIT LANDS.
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
301 Torrey Bulldinif.
FOR SALE— A FARM OF 120 ACRES,
suitable for dairy or truck farming;
forty acres cultivated; buildings and
other improvements worth more than
price asked. A bargain, $3,(iO0.
*-^^-^V^>¥*;\^;'fi¥*5^***«-^^--^****'f^^-
W^ANTED — Brlrht men to train as
chauffeurs; practical instruction giv-
en. Auto Owners' association, 1312
Hennepin avenue, Minneapolis^
LEARN TELEGRAPHY NOW.
Earn |60 in railroad position in spring,
Excellent opportunity ->-"•♦ "^lo- «»
Write Thompson's '£
tute, Minneapolis.
don't misd it.
elegraph instl-
WANTED— COAT MAKERS, STEADY
work. H. W. Hodgon company, 230 »/2
West First street.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
Xo Ailvcrtis^enient Less Tlian 15 Cents.
TELEPHONE^lRECim
— OF—
[o) BUSINESS
HOUShS
Below you wiU And a
conaeli:^t•d list oi reitablt
biisiiicbs rlrma. Tliis is de-
sigutd lor the convenience
oi' busy people. A telephone
order to any one of them
will receive the ssanie care-
ful aiieniion as would be
. given an order placed In
^ ptisi-n. I'ou can salely de-
pend upon the reliability of
any oue of these firms.
Old New
•Phone. 'Phone.
ARCHITECTS—
Frank L. Voung & Co. 4476
BISINKSS fOLLKtiK—
The Brocklchurst ....2o68 1004
DMIGUISTS—
Eddie Jeronimus 1243 1027
Duyce 1<?3 163
Snkith & Smith... 2S0 7
DM:: WOHKS— „.„
Zenith Ciiy Dye works.lSS8 1888
Northwestern Dyeing ^^^^
& Cleaning Co 1337 1518
National Dyeing & ,^ „,_^
Cleaning Co 2376 2376
Interstate Cleaning &
Dyeing Co.. -Keliys 2530 36
GR«»CEUS — .„._
Thatcher & Thatcher.. 1907
LALMJUIES — ^, ^„„
Peerless Laundry .... 428 4-J8
Yale Laundry 479 479
Lutes Laundry 447 447
Home Laundry Co 478 478
Model Laundry 2749 1303
MILLINER— ^,,^
M. A. Cox 4579
.MEAT MARKETS—
Mork Bros 1690 189
SHOE REPAIRING — ^„^. _
Olsen, 410 E. 4th St... 1029-8
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
Xo .Vdvertlsement Less Tnan 15 Cents.
HElFTvANTED— FE3IALE. '^
WANTED — GIRL THAT CAN GO
home nights to assist with house-
work and care of baby. Call at, No.
£•16 East Fir.st street upstairs.
WANTED — SALESLADY FOR CLOAK
and suit department; only flrst-class
noed apply. Kris 6c lie > company,
32 East Superior street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; Scndlnavian preferred;
good wages to right party. 2207 West
Third street.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; family of two; must be
good cook; no other need apply; best
of wages paid. 725 East First street.
WANTED— MEN TO KNOW WE GROW
a liead of hair or no pay. Bryant &
Co., room 12. Phoenix building. Mel-
rose 3257.
Men to learn barber trade. It's easy.
Positions waiting. Good wages. Cat.
free Moler Bar. College, Minneapolis.
FOR SALE — IN TOW^N OF WREN-
shall, 160 acres, three miles from
Fond du Lac, near sawmill. I.And is
heavily timbered with maple and
birch. No swamp or rock, fine, hieavy
black loam soil. Good trout stream.
Price J17 per acre; small cash pay-
ment, balance easy monthly pay-
ments. Will trade for small home in
Duluth.
FOR SALE— NEAR BOULDER LAKE,
160 acres on Vermilion road, at >10
per acre; terms to suit. Torrena
title.
FOR SALE— SEVENTY-FIVE ACRES
on the west shore of Thompson lake
on Vermilion road, about fifteen miles
from Duluth. Will divide to suit.
Easy terms. Torr^ens title. Price
112.50 per acre.
One Cent a Word Each Insertion.
No Advertisement Less Than 15 Cent&
FORRENT^^XATST
JOHN A. .STEPHENSON & CO.
RENTAL DEPT..
Wolvln Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM HEATED
flat at 6 North Nineteenth avenue
east; |32.5U per month.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM APART-
ment in St. Elmo building, 721 East
First street; splendid arrangements;
beautiful view.
FOR RENT— SIX-ROOM
in Adams apartments,
street.
APARTMENT
715 East First
FOR RENT— ON GARFIELD AVENUE
Living rooms on second floor; cheap
rent.
JOHN A. STEPHENSON & CO..
RENTAL DEPT.,
Wolvin Bldg.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
convenienoes except heat; steel range
in kitchen. Call at 529 East Third
street.
One Cent a W^ord Each Insertion.
X'o Advertisement Less Thau 15 Centa.
F0FRENT^3i003isr
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS;
board if desired. 301 P:a8t Third
street.
FOR RENT— TWO OR THREE VERY
desirable rooms In Dodge block; very
central. Apply N. J. Ujham com-
pany, 18 Third avenue wsst.
FOR RENT— TWO AND
flats; water paid; 95
month. 702 E. 2nd St.
FOUR-ROOM
and $10 per
Grj.nd 1299-D.
FOR RENT— TWO FRON'C ROOMS,
furnished for light housekeeping. 609
W^est Third street; $20 per month;
heated; gas range, lights, bath,
'phone.
FOR RENT— NICE FRONT liOOM AND
alcove; all conveniences Melrose
2595; 1218 East First stre<jt.
FOR RENT — TWO ROOMS'. FUR-
nished complete for ho isekeeping.
Call between 4:30 and 6:3(' p. m. 304
West Fourth street. Flat C.
WANTED — GOVERNMENT EM-
ploycs. Send postal for Duluth exam-
ination schedule. Franklin Insti-
tute. Department 148-F. Rochester,
N. y. .
WANTED — REGISTERED OR As-
sistant registered pharmacist. Lion
Drug Store, 2030 West Superior St.
WANTED— HANDY MAN, FAMILIAR
witla horses, to do general chore
work. Apply W 66, Herald.
WANTED AT ONCE — FIRST-CLASS
millwright for construction work.
Apply Bayfield Box & Lumber corn-
pan >%bux258^Bayneldj_V^
WAN 1 ED— MAN AND WIFE WHO
understand gardening to tr.lcc
charge of a profitable garden on lib-
eral terms; no house rent. Apply
O 22, Herald.
FOR SALE — THREE FORTY-ACRE
tracts on Bug creek, adjoining sta-
tion of Pitt on Canadian Northern
railroad, at |5 per acre. Will make
easy terms.
FOR SALE— FIVE ACRES ADJOINING
Duluth Heights, at $300 per acre.
Easy terms.
FOR SALE— A NUMBER OF IM-
proved and unimproved farms of ten
to 160 acres, near Duluth. Let us
know your wants.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM BRICK
flat, steam heated, at 10 West Fifth
street, $18 per month.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM FLAT, UP-
stairs, all conveniences except heat;
possession May 1. Beautiful view of
lake. Call at 17 East Fourth street.
FOR RENT — FIVE-ROOM BRICK
Hat, only two blocks from Soo depot;
modern except heat.
FOR RENT— NEW FIVE-ROOM BRICK
flat, 601 East First street; hardwood
finish; beautiful lake view.
FOR RENT— SEVEN- ROOM HEATED
brick Hat, Eighth avenue east; very
desliable location; unobstructed lake
view.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ROOM, ALL
conveniences; for two lac ies or two
gentlemen. Apply 405 ICast Third
street.
FOR RENT — SMALL, BRIGHT, FUR-
nished room, $6; every convenience.
Call Melrose 3081.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS;
gentlemen preferred. 206 West First
street.
SECRET SOCIETIES.
PALESTINE LODGE. No. 7f,
A. F. & A. M. — Regular meet-
ings first and third Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 17. 1911. Work— Reg-
ular business. Rene T. Hugo, W. M.;
H. Nesbit. secretary.
-*
IONIC LODGE NO. 186. A. P.
& A. M. — Regular raeetlrga
second and fourth Monday
evenings of each month, at
8 o'clock. Next meeting,
April 24, 1911. Work— First
degree. Walter N. Totman, W. M.;
Burr Porter, secretary.
KEYSTONE CHAPTER NO.
20, R. A. M. — Stated convo-
cations second and fourth
Wednesday evenings of eacli
month at 8 o'clock. Next
meeting, April 26, 1911.
Work — M. M. degree. Charles W. Kles-
wetter, H. P.; Alfred Le Richeux, sec-
retary.
A
FOR RENT — THREE
323% East Fifth street;
and gas; $9 per month,
stairs.
:?lOOMS AT
water, sewer
Inquire up-
Wanted — Dressmaking at home. 522 4th
Ave. E. Old phone, Melrose, 434.
WANT?:d — GIRL
street.
501 EAST SECOND
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework, $20 per month.
2429 East Third street.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework. 315 Second ave-
nue east.
WANTED — AT
sewing girl.
ONCE.
2022 East
COMPr.TENT
Fourth street.
REAL ESTATE, FIRE
INSURANCE AND
RENTAL AGENCIES.
John A. Stephenson & Co., Wolvln bldg.
E D. Field Co., 203 Exchange building.
L, A. Larsen Co.. Providence building.
H. J. Mullln, 403 Lonsdale building.
W. C. Sherwood, 118 Manhattan bldg.
WANTED— COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework. 716 East First
street.
WANTED— AT ONCE, EXPERIENCED
woman second cook. Call forenoons.
Esmond hotel. Twentieth avenue
west and Michigan street.
WANTED — COMPETENT MAID FOR
general housework, two in family.
Mrs. T. F. Lynch, 1607 Jefferson
street.
WANTED — GOOD, COMPETENT GIRL
for general housework; good wages.
317 East Third street.
■4-
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS.
WANTED — GIRL
housework; small
East Third street.
FOR GENERAL
family. Call 11
WANTED
Melrose
— A
3247.
HOUSEMAID. CALL
WANTED
general
street.
— COMPETENT
housework. 2416
GIRL FOR
East Third
WANTED — PARTY TO. TAKE OF-
tice and share expense telephone and
stenographer; attorney preferred.
Address H 259. Herald.
WANTED — SOBER. INDUSTRIOUS,
middle-aged man accustomed to
horses, to work about place in East
end; states wages expected. Ad-
dress E 261, Herald.
WANTED — YOUNG MAN, 21 TO 30
years of age, for statistical work.
Only man of previous experience need
apply. State age. married or .single,
previous experience and references.
T 34. Herald.
WANTED — BRICK SETTERS; SET-
ting gang for brickyard of 50.000
moulded brick, daily capacity; rack
and pallett system; wages 50 cents
per 1,000. Alsip Brick & Tile com-
pany. Fort William, Ont., Can.
WHITNEY WALL COMPANY,
301 Torrey Building.
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
countv, Minn., townships 60 to 63,
ranges 14 to 17, wiilch we will sell
In large or small tracts at very low
prices. Good location for dairying
and truck gardening. Some flue lake
shore frontages. Settlers on ad-
joining lands raising from 250 to 300
bushels potatoes per acre. Buy some
of these cheap lands now and be-
come Independent. Call or write for
map, Minnesota Land & Dairy com-
pany, 407 Providence building.
BUY NOW AND START THAT
chicken farm yon have talked about
so long — ten. flfteen and twenty acres
close to Proctor, at bargain prices.
E. H. Culkins & Co., 510 Pulladio
building^
WE HAVE 15,000 ACRES IN ST. LOUIS
countv, Minn.. In townships 60 to 63
and ranges 14 to 17. which we will
sell in large or Email tracts at very
low prices. Good location for dairy-
ing and truck gardening. Some tint
lake shore frontages. Settlers on
adjoining lands raising from 250 to
300 bushels potatoes per acre. Buy
some of these cheap lands now and
become Independent. Call or write
Minnesota Land & Dairy company,
407 Providence butldlns.
WAHL-MESSER
208 Lonsdale
REALTY
Building.
CO.
FOR RENT— SEVEN-ROOM MODERN
flat at 5 West Fourth street. Inquire
L. Oreck, 416 West Superior street.
FOR RENT— MAY 1, A FOUR-ROOM
flat; with bath; hardwood floors,
electric light and gas; very central.
W. C. Sherwood & Co., 118 Manhat-
tan building.
FOR RENT —
Hat central.
ELEGANT FIVE-ROOM
608 North Third.
FOR RE:NT— 2210 WEST FOURTH
Street, four rooms; good location, $12
per month. W. M. Prindle & Co.,
Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— VERY FINE SEVEN-
room apartment In new Berkshire
apartments, corner Eight avenue east
and First street. Rental department,
John A. Stephenson & Co., Wolvln
building.
rkVOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT, 225
*^ West Fourth street; water and elec-
tric light; water paid. H. Llga, care
S. H. Knox company.
FOR RENT — FURNISHI:D ROOM;
will allow light housekeeping. 210
West Second street.
FOR RENT— STEAM HEAT 3D SINGLE
room; r^nt desirable; £.ii conven-
iences and use of phone: gentlemen
preferred. Call 201 Eist Second
street.
FOR RENT — FOUR FURNISHED
rooms for housekeeping; gas, steam
heat and electric light. Iii6 East Sec-
ond street.
DULUTH COUNCIL NO. «.
R. & S. M. — Next meeting,
Friday, April 21. 1911. at 8
p. m. Work — Royal and select
masters' degree. James A,
Crawford. T. L M.; Alfred Le Rlcheuii
recorder.
DULUTH COMMANDERY NO.
18, K. T. — Stated conclave
first Tuesday of each montJi
at 8 o'clock. Next conclave.
May 2, 1911. Work — Red
Cross degree. Frederick E. Hough, 13.
C. ; Alfred Le Richeux, recorder.
SCOTTISH RITE — RKGU-
lar meetings every Thursday
evening at 8 o'clock. No
meeting until further notice.
Henry Nesbit, secretary.
ZENITH CHAPTER NO 25.
Order of Eastern Star — Reg-
ular meetings second i.nd
fourth Fridav evenings of
each month at 7:30 o'clock.
Next meeting, April 28, 1911. Work —
Regular business and Initiation. Eliza-
beth Overman. W. M.; Eila F. Gearha.t,
secretary.
FOR RENT — FURNISHEiD ROOM;
modern conveniences; gentleman
preferred, references required. 410
Ninth avenue east.
FOR RENT — ONE LARGE FRONT
room; bath and electrU; light. Ill
Second avenue east.
FOR RENT — WELL ITIRNISHED
room, all modern, $2 per week; dou-
ble room. $3. The Latona, 122 East
First street.
WANTED— PRESSFEEDER; PLATEN
and cvUnder, or platen; good wages
and fine chance to learn. The Vir-
ginian, Virginia. Minn.
PERSONAL.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL FOR
general housework. 1106 East Supe-
rior street.
WANTED— NEAT QIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. 801 East First
street.
WANTED — GOOD
Bon Ton bakery.
KITCHEN GIRL.
PERSONAL — PROF. GIRARD. CLAIR-
voyant and palmist, 20 West Superior
street, upstairs. Six questions an-
swered by mail, $1. Send date of birth
PERSON A1--C. O. KRISTENSEN POL-
ishes pianos and furniture at your
home. 'Phone Hogan & Co., Both
'phones.
MRS. VOGT WISHES TO ANNOUNCE
to all her friends and to any one
wishing work done in the hair dress-
ing, manicuring and massaging line,
that she Is again located at 17
East Superior street, upstairs, where
she will be pleased to greet them.
TEXAS INVEST.MENTS.
Buy Orchards and Garden Lands at
Aldlrie, near Houston, the greatest
city in the Southwest, where vailues are
growing upward all the time. Address
E. C. Robertson, 501 Klam building.
Houston. Tex.
FOR SALE — 40-ACRE IMPROVED
farm with five-room house, barn,
1,400 shade trees, one acre apple
trees, good well; including farm Im-
plements. Price $1,400. L. A. Barnes
& Co., 304 Central avenue. West Du-
luth.
FOR RENT— FOUR OR FIVE-ROOM
fiat, fine condition, $20 and $22 per
month; central, modern, except heat.
'Phones 697. Hudson-Lewis company,
301 Alworth building.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT, 2408
West First street; water and sewer.
Stryker, Manley & Buck, Torrey
building.
WANTED — EXPERIENCED CHOCO-
late dipper; steady work. Duluth
Candy Kitchen, 307 West Superior
street.
MERCHANTS.
WAKE UP
NOTICE!
AND TAKE
Our lease expires May 1. Will sell
pairs or whole stock of men's shoes
at a large discount from our whole-
sale prices. Stock will now Invoice
about $2,000.
liemember the early bird gets the
Worm. This Is your opportunity to buy
a bargain.
We have discontinued making hand-
made men's and boys' work shoes.
Have already sold our plant and must
sell our stock betore moving time.
Time will be given to well-rated
parties. All of our display tables are
for sale.
Stofk on sale at retail at 328 West
Superior strett, St. Louis Hotel blook.
WANTED — DINING ROOM
St. Croix avenue.
GIRL. 151
PERSONAL — W'ANTED, PLACE TO
board 4-year-old boy where there are
no other children. Call 19 Fifth ave-
nue west at 6 p. m.
WANTED — GOOD GIRL
al housework; good
Fifteenth avenue east.
FOR GENER-
wages. 423
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; family of two. Mrs. A.
W. Kuehnow, 1806 East Second
street. ^^^
WANTED— KITCHEN GIRL. 30 WEST
Second street.
WANTED — GOOD CHOCOLATE DIP-
per. Winkler Bros.' candy factory.
2234 West Michigan street.
WANTED — COMPETENT GIRL TO
take care of two children and do sec-
ond work. 1721 East First street.
PERSONAL— IF YOU CONTEMPLATE
going into the moving picture busi-
ness, better consult us, we can fur-
nish vour place complete. Picture
machines, all makes, new and sec-
ond-hand hand experts to install
same. Large list of good houses for
sale. Northwestern Supply Co., 129
West Superior street. Duluth, Minn.
lERSONAL— BOY AND GIRL FOI:
adoption. Call Grand 1597.
FOR SALE — FIFTY-FIVE ACRE
tract on Bordon Lake, three mlled
from Gordon, Wis., several trains
dally to Duluth; good soil; fine fish-
ing; beautiful shore line and trees;
summer cottages all around; price
$650, $325 cash; balance easy terms.
Helmbaugh & Spring, 1108 Tower
avenue, Superior, Wis.
FOR RENT— THREE-ROOM, . UPPER
and lower fiats, C03 West Third
street. Apply to Henry Taylor, 603
Palladlo building. Zenith 206G-Y.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED ROOM; ALL
conveniences; $6 per -nonth. 321
Eighth avenue west; Melrose 3991.
FOR RENT — A LARGE, LIGHT,
front room well furnisl ed; reason-
able; to gentlemen only. 220 Sev-
enth avenue west.
FOR RENT TWO, THREE AND
four-room Hats, only five blocks from
postofCice; beautiful view of lake;
furnished with all brand new furni-
ture; equipped with gas range, elec-
tric lights and every convenience.
Call and see them at 1030 West First
street.
FOR RENT— THREE BEAUTIFUL
front rooms, steam heated, facing
Superior street; suitable for business
offices. 15 East Superior street,
flat 2.
FOR SALE — SUMMER RESORT
property; one and one-half acr?s on
Bass lake. Gordon, Wis., reasonable
terms. Mrs. Carile Green. 514 First
avenue west, Duluth, 'phone Grand
1901-D.
WANTED — MANDOLIN
players. L 45, Herald.
AND GUITAR
C.
P. LARSON, MANUFACTURER,
328 WEST .SUPERIOR ST,
DULUTH, MINN.
Central Employment office, all kinds
of places filled and positions furnish-
ed for girl-s. Room 3, over Big Du-
luth store. Mel. 259. Grand, 620.
WANTED— YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework; one who can go
home nights. Call mornings. 128
Eighth avenue east.
PERSONAL — CO.MFORT. BEAUTY
shop. 20 W. Sup. St., upstairs. Mani-
curing, 25c; shampooing and hair-
dressing, 50c; switches made from
combings. Both phones.
PERSONAL— WHY NOT GET AWAY
from washday troubles by sending
your family wash to us; 5 cents per
pound. Lute's laundry, 808 East
Second street. Both "phones 447.
FOR SALE — 30,000 ACRES OPEN TO
entry to settlers at lowest price,
near Cass Lake. Fred Steffen,
locater, Brookston. Minn.
FOR SALE— 500 FARAIS, FROM FIVE
to forty years time, at 4 per cent.
Minnesota I..:ind & Investment Co.,
801 Torrey building.
WANTED — QIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; B 5 St. Regis flats. Sec-
ond avenue east and Second street.
Call mornings.
WANTED —
405, Temple
SEWING
building.
GIRL. ROOM
WANTED — YOUNG GIRL TO ASSIST
with housework. Mrs. J. S. Lane, 421
Fifth avenue west.
PERSONAL— MANICURING AND MAS-
sage. 813 Torrey building.
MRS. VOGT, HAIR DRESSER. IS NOW
located at 17 East Superior street,
upstairs.
WANTED— NEAT GIRL; ONE WHO
knows how to cook; references re-
quired. 1002 East Superior street.
t
FOR SALE.
One rosewood-case Stelnway
in splendid t-ondition. for
$10 cash and $5 per month.
FRENCH & BASSETT.
piano
$125.
*
FOR SALE— SANITARY COUCH, COM-
plete, dresser, combined oak book-
case and writing desk; also mahog-
any writing desk. 13 West Fourth
street.
FOR SALE— EGGS FOR HATCHING
R. C. White Wyandottes; $1 for tliir
teen eggs; Black Minorca. $1 for thir-
teen eggs. Address 429 Sixth avenue
west. New 'phone. Grand 2154-Y.
FOR SALE — LEATHER DAVEN-
port and leather couch; good condi-
tion; $20 for both. Bostwlck fiats.
Flat F.
WANTED — GIRL
housework at 217
nue west
FOR GENERAL
Fifty-fourth ave-
WANTED — COOKS, WAITRESSFl,
chambermaids and kitchen help; out
of town orders solicited. Park Em-
ployment agency. 15 Lake avenue
north.
WANTED— CHAMBERMAID AT ONCE.
Hotel McKay.
WANTED — GIRL FOR GENERAL
housework; must be good cook; laun-
dress employed; reference required.
2401 East Fifth street.
WANTED— GOOD GIRL FOR GEN-
eral hoa.sework. Apply 1509 Jeffer-
son street.
PERSONAL---I WILL WRITE YOUR
ads, reports, pamphlets and pros-
pectuses, furnish you with facts, ar-
guments, literary and historical ma-
terial for debates, club papers and
orations, correct and revise your
MSS. and boost your enterprise. Don
Carlos W. Musser, 712 Torrey build-
ing. 'Phone Melrose 2024.
PERSONAL — ELECTRIC RUG AND
carpet cleaning. James Morgan. Mel-
rose 1902; Zenith 2222.
Int'state
Lincoln 7.
FOR SALE — GOOD BAIiGAIN — FORTY
acres of land on railroad station, ten-
room house and surrounding btrild-
ings; also horses, cows and farm ma-
chinery; fine summer resort. Part
cash, balance easy terms. Address
W 60, Herald.
For sale — 10-acre tracts north of Wood-
land. W. M. Gill, 296 W. Sth St.. Superior.
L. A. LARSEN CO., 214 PROVIDENCE
building, wholesale dealers in blocks
of lands with mln'oral prospects.
tOR RENT — FIVE-ROO.M BRICP:
flat; basement and laundry; mod-
ern except heat, 605^ East Sixth
street. Call Grand 1705-Y.
FOR RENT — FURNISHICD HOUSE-
keeplng suites, gas, wat'sr and elec-
tric light included. La Salle hotel,
12 Lake avenue north.
FOR RENT— THE BEST ROOM IN
Duluth at the price for one or two
gentlemen; everything modern. Call
127 West Fourth street.
FOR RENT— TWO ROOMS FOR LIGHT
housekeeping; all conveniences; $10
per month; upstairs in rear of 216
East Second street. F. I. Salter com-
pany, Lonsdale building.
EUCLID LODGE NO. 1£8, A*
F. & A. M.— Meets at Wett
Duluth second and fourtU
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meetinic
April 26, 1911. Work— Fliv.1
degree. M. M. MeUlahl, W. M.; A-
Dunleavy. secretary.
DULUTH CHAPTER NO. 59.
R. A. M. — Meets at Wr=;t
Duluth first and third
Wednesdays of each month
at 7:30 p. m. Next meft:nisr
April 19. 1911. Work— Royal
Arch degree and lunch. Rojrer M.
Weaver, H. p.; a. Dunleavy, secietary.
FOR RENT — FURNISHIID ROOMS;
electric lights, all conveniences; $1
to $2 per week. Inqul)-e 705 West
Third street.
K. ut P.
NOPTH STAR LODGE, NO. 35, K. of P.
—.Meets everj Tuesday ereiilns al Castia
iiall. 118 West Sai'erior sUtet, .Vert
mefting Tutsday evening, April IK. 8 |>.
ra. o'clock sharp. First rank wcrit. All
knights cordially Invited. A. L. Sluiglsj. C. C; S. A.
Heam, K. o( It. b.
DIAMOND LODGE, No. iS. K. cf P.-«
Meets every MunUay eveiilr.B la Sloao'a
h,iU, corner Twfiilltth avenuj we.t and
Superior street, AU kclglits cordially in-
vited. L. U. Allea. C. C; S. L. Pierct^
K. of U & S.
cordially
I'idlllps,
KITCin GAMMI LODGE. NO. 123, K. of
P. — Meets every Thursd.iy evening at Com',
mirclal club ball, Cintrtl avenue. West
Uulutli. Next meeting Thursday, .\prtl
liih. Work, second rank. AU knlgbts
Invited. E. D. Mckerwu. C C; C U.
K. of R. & &
FOR RENT
West Sixth
trie light.
— FIVE ROOMS,
street; city water.
2322
elec-
:!i'URNISHED
use of 'phone.
FOR RENT— NICELY
room in private family,
109 West Fifth.
FOR RENT — TWO e'URNISHED
rooms for light housekeeping. 206
West Third street.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT AT
624 First avenue east; water, bath,
gas and electric light. Call at prem-
ises.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS
and alcove: light and bath. 1218%
East Fourth street. Hartman-O'Don-
nell agency, 205 Lonsdale building.
FOR RENT— FIVE AND SIX-ROOM
flat; modern; large rooms and
grounds. S 30. Herald.
FOR RENT— FARM OF 25 ACRES,
with house, barns and poultry house,
three miles from car line. See E. L.
Kimball, First National Bank build-
ing.
FOR SALE— FORTY-ACRE TRUCK
farm, six miles from Duluth; 25 acres
cultivated; si.x-room house, barn, etc.
Included are two horses, cows and
chickens Price $3,500; will exchange
for city property. G. A. Rydberg, 417
Torrey building.
FOR RENT — 219 WEST FIFTH
Street, new five-room flat, bath, gas,
electric light; ready May 1. Stryker,
Manley & Buck. Torrey building.
FOR RENT^FIVE~ROOM FURNISH-
ed fiat for the summer. Inquire Flat
O, Buffalo fiats. Ninth avenue east
and First street.
FOR RENT— DINING ROOM AND
kitchen, furnished, in fifty-roon
hotel, Suporlr>r street Location. In-
quire at Marine hotel. 2)6 Lake ave-
nue south.
FOR RENT — AFTER APRIL 15. FOUR
nice rooms, second floor. 19 Twenty-
eighth avenue west; water, sewer,
toilet, electric light, $1( per month.
F. L Salter Co.
FOR RENT — FI'RNISHED ROOMS;
modern; at 118 Third avenue west.
DULL'TH LODGE, NO. 28, I. O. O. F.— MELTS
every Friday evening at 8 o'clock at Od4
Fellows' i',all, 18 Lake avenue nonJi.
Next mettiiig night. April 21. Stccaa
J. A. Nclscn, N. O.: L. G. Marlow, Uea
U. Paul. Fin. Sec
degree.
Sec, A
WEST DULL'TH LODGE, NO. 168, I. O. O.
V.
j;.-7~v Meets every Tuesday nlglit at I. O.
/^kg% hall. West Duluth. Next meeting
'■^ ^'■' April 23. General business. W. E.
O F.
nigb*
Cow-
den, N. G.; W. B. HarUey. Hec. Sec.
FOR RENT — FURNISHED ROOMS
for light housekeeping. 118 Third
avenue west.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT, CITY
water, bath, water free, $16 per
month. J. D. Howard & Co., 216 Wcat
Superior street.
FOR RENT — THREE-ROOM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11 per month; water
furnished. D. W. Scott & Son, 402
Torrey building.
FOR RENT — FOUR-ROOM FIRST-
floor flat; baths, heating plant, gas,
electricity. Inquire 410 Eleventh
avenue east, second floor.
FOR RENT — FURNISH E:D ROO.M
with private bath, In one of the best
downtown residences. 131 West
Third street. Melrose 2503.
FOR RENT — LARGE FURNISHED
room with private family; steam
heat, electric light and gas; use or
•phone and bath. Inquire 124 East
Fourth street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHEID ROOMS IN
very desirable location; strictly mod-
ern; one block from car line; with or
without board; prlcec right. 228
East Third street.
FOR RENT — NICELY FURNISHED
rooms, $1 per week aid up; light
houseke^eping allowed. 314 East Sec-
ond street.
DULUTH ENCAMPMENT. NO. 36. I. O.
O. F. — Meets en the second and fcurtb
Thursday at Odd Fellows hall. 18 L«ik«
avenue north. Next meeting night AjjcU
27. Iliiyal purple degree voUng. E. An-
dersen, C. P.; L. O. Marlow, Ilec. Scrii«.
K. O. T. M.
DXHATH TENT. NO. 1— MEETS EVERT
Monday, 8:15 p. m., at Macabee hall.
•Zl Lake avenue north. VUiiiiig mem-
bers alw.iys welcome. F. C. Freer,
commander, flat 4, Munger row. West
Duluth; J. B. Gellneau, record keeper,
office In haU. Hours. 10».m.toll>.in.. daiil.
Zenith 'phone. Grand 619-X. _^
A. O. U. W.
FIDELITY LODGE. NO. 105 — MEETS
at .Maccabee hall, 21 Lake avenue unttb.
every Thursday at 8 p. m. Vi>i-.lnf
members welcome. M. Cossl, M. W.; A.
E. Plcrlng, recorder; O. J. MuiroW. fl-
nancler. 217 East Fifth street
MODERN SAMARITANS.
ALPHA COUNCIL. NO. 1— TAKE NO-
lioe tliat Samaritan degree meets tlrsj
and third Thurtdays; beneflrent. second
and fourth Thursdays. Lucy A. Purdy.
Lady G. S. ; N. B. Morrison,
lace P. Welbanks, scribe;
S., First National Bank
A.
O. S.; Wal-
T. A. OaU. r.
buUdiug.
UNITED ORDER OF FORE.STERS—
Court Eastern Btur. No. 86, meeU eve^
first and third Tuesday at L. O. r.
hall, comer Fourth avenue west and
Flr>t street. Chas. V. Hanson. I.. B.,
"w.ft Fifth ftrett; A. B. Olund. sec-
507
reUry~1031 West First stret
urer, room 23, Wlnthrop block.
Karry Mllies, trea«-
Zenith 'phone liSO-X.
Personal — Wringer repairing.
Merc. Co., 11 N. 21st Ave. \V.
PERSONAL — LADIES — ASK YOUR
druggist for Chlchesters Pills, the
Diamond Brand. For 25 years known
as best, safest, always reliable. Take
no other. Chlchesters Diamond Brand
Pills are sold by druggists every-
where.
FOR SALE — FARM, CONTAINING
about 63 acres, fronting on lake, on
Cuyuna iron range; 20 acres culti-
vated; good buildings; no mineral
reserve. Price $2,000. Easy terms.
G. A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
PERSONAL — MME. MAY FRENCH
female regulator, best of all. Mailed
in plain wrapper, $2 a box. Orphcuin
pharmacy, 201 East Superior street.
PERSONAL — COMBINGS AND CUT
hair made Into beautiful switches.
Knauf Sisters.
FOI: SALE— TWO PIECES OF SILL
timber, 6 by 6; sixteen or eighteen
feet long; perfectly sound; will sell
them cheap; call at 1012 East Sixth
street.
(Coutlnued on pace 25.)
WANTED— YOT'NG NURSE GIRL DAY
times for 2-year-old child, walking
distance. 1622 East Fourth street.
WANTED — THE NEW METHOD
Dressmaking school teaches you to
become a dresamaker In six weeks;
make dresses for yourself or others
wnlle learning. 310 West Second
street, next to Y. M. C. A. building.
WANTED — GIRLS
mers' employment
avenue east.
AT MRS. SOM-
offlce. 15 Second
(Continued on page 25.)
AUTOMOBILES.
FOR SALE— FIVE-PASSENGER
touring car and one delivery auto,
in good condition; must be sold at
once regardless of price. For par-
ticulars address "Auto," care Herald.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM IN
south Cass county, all fenced; level
land; 12 acres cultivated; fair build-
ings; small stream. Price, $1,300. G.
A. Rydberg, 417 Torrey building.
FOR SALE — 10,000 ACRES IN 40 AND
80-acre tracts, close to Hlbbing and
Chlsholm; good markets; forty an-
nual payments of $16 each on 40
acres, or $32 each on 80 acres, pays
both principal and interest. For
further Information apply Guaranty
Farm Land company, 416 Lyceum
building, Duluth. Minn.
FOR RENT— COZY FOUR-ROOM FLAT,
West Third street, near Lincoln Park,
$14, including water rent. S. W.
Richardson, 201 Exchange Bank
building. Both phones, 2046.
FOR RENT— BRICK FLAT, CORNER
of Fifteenth avenue east and Fourth
street; six rooms, bath, laundry,
storeroom, gas range, hot water
heating plant; new and up-to-date;
$37.50 per month; no children. George
R. Laybourn, 14 Phoenix block.
FOR RENT — TWO FLATS, 27 AND 29
West Fourth street, six rooms, all
modern conveniences; furnace, gas
and electric light; large basement.
Applv at 27»/4 West Fourth street.
FOR RENT— FURNISHED FRONT
room with all convenleiices; for one
or two; pleasant view. 313 West
Fourth street.
THREE ROOMS NICELY FURNISHED
for $69; this Includes furniture for
kitchen, dining room und bedroom.
Terms, $1.50 per weeL. Why not
own the furniture In your apart-
ments or rooms instei.d of paying
rent on it. See F. S. Kelly Furniture
company.
WANTED TO l;UY.
WANTED TO BUY —
small tract of land
I 69, Herald.
A LARGE OR
for Investment.
FOR SALE — LANDS IN SMALL
tracts to actual settlers only: good
location for dairying and truck gar-
dening. For further information call
on or address Land Commissioner,
Duluth & Iron Range Railroad com-
pany, 101 Wolvln building, Duluth,
Minn.
FOR SALE— EIGHTY-ACRE FARM ON
Crow Wing river; 20 acres cleared,
20 acres meadow; good clay soil; no
buildings. Price, $1,300. G. A. Ryd-
berg, 417 Torrey building.
WE REPRESENT MAXWELL, PRE-
mier, Oakland, Mollne pleasure cars
and Wilcox trucks. All kinds of re-
pairing, even tire vulcanizing. Old
cars bought and sold. It will pay
you to try us. Also have automobiles
for hire. Call, 'phone or write M. F.
Falk, Rapid Transit Auto & Repair-
ing Co., 2110-12 W. Mich. St. 'Phones
lleL 347; Zen 47 Lincoln.
SELECTED FARMING LANDS.
On line of the Alger-Smlth railroad.
On easy terms to settlers.
ALEXANDER McBEAN.
Sales manager, 406 Coluinbla Bids.
FOR SALE — SEVENTY-FIVE-ACRB
farm, close to station In Morrison
county, on fine lake; good soil; hay
meadow; five-room house and barn.
Price, $1,700. G. A. Rydberg. 417
Torrey building.
(Continued ob iMKe 25.)
FOR RKINT — FOUR-ROOM FLAT;
318 Sixth avenue east, upstairs; bath,
electric light, gas for cooking; wa-
ter paid; $16 per month. R. P. Dowse
& Co., 106 Providence building.
FOR RENT — SIX-ROOM STEAM
heated flat; central location; thor-
oughly modern; janitor service;
laundry tubs. Apply Corporate In-
vest nieiitcompa^ii>%Tjorrey_bu^^
FOR RENT— 927 EAST FI FTH
street, five-room flat, bath, water
free. $22 per month. Stryker, Man-
ley & Buck, Torrey.
FOR RENT— VERY NICE CHEERFUL
four-room fiat, water, toilet, gas,
electric light, $13; Third avenue
west. Harris Realty Co., Manhattan
building.
WANTED TO BUY— WHITE STEAM-
er touring car; must te reasonable;
state equipment and piice.
Herald, W 61.
Care or
M. w. A.
IMPERIAI, CAMP,
at V. O. F. haU.
and First street,
Tuesdays of each
t\lke, consul; C. P-
NO. 2206 — .MEETS
Fourth avtnue west
second and fourth
month. Harvcj W.
Earl, clerk, box 411;
F. E. Dcremus,
rr«ight office.
dei>uty;
address. N. P.
Johii
CL\N STh•^VART. NO. 50, O. S. C—
Meets first and third Wednescia" each
month, 8 r. m-. -It U- O- *'■ •^"'1- ="•"'»
Fourth avtnue »tst nud First street. Next
fguUr meeting. April 19. Kobert Fer-
gu-on chief; Don McLennan, secretury;
uuiiictl. Flu. sec., 312 Torrey
bull ding.
ROYAL ARCANUM. Duluth CouncU. No.
1483— Meets second and fourth TuesdaJ
evenings. Macabee hall, 21 Lake avei;u«
north. Clhitcn Brooke, secretary, 401
Columbia buUdins.
Mesaba Council, No. 1493— Meets fira
and tliird Wednesday evenings. Coluiu*>U
hall. West end. A. M. Johnson, secretary. 117 Ncnh
Tweiilleth avenue west.
WANTED TO BUY— A HOME IN THE
East end; we have customers for all
kinds from the lowest priced to the
highest. Have you anything to of-
fer? Whitney Wall company, 301
Torrey building.
WANTED TO BUY— LAUNCH, 18 TO
22-foot; must be In good condition.
Box 746, city.
FOR RENT— THREE-RC'OM FLAT IN
Seaton terrace, $11.00 per month.
Water furnished. D. W. Scott & Soj;.
402 Torrey building.
FOR RENT— FIVE LARGE ROOMS':
light and bath. 208 East Fourth
street. Hartman O'Donnell Agency,
205 Lonsdale building.
WANTED TO BUY— TWI:NTY, FORTY
or eighty-acre impro\ed or unim-
proved farms; if you have anything
for sale bring It in. Whitney Wall
company, 301 Torrey building.
PRICES
Phoenix
1852-X.
ORDER OF OWLS. DULUTH
Nest. No. 1200 — Meetings are held
every VVe<lnesday of eacli month at
Owls" lull. 110 West Superioi street.
Joseph E. Ftaks, secreUrj. Zi '
Suiierior street.
WANTED TO BUY— HIGHEST
paid for men's old clothing.
Dry Cleaning Co. Zenith,
10 Fourth avenue west
Wanted to Buy — Highest price for cast-
off men's clothing. N. Stone, 213 W.
1st St. Melrose 1834; :Senlth 1134-D.
We buy second-hand
stoves. Lincoln 296-X-
turnlture and
1629 W. Sup. St.
FOR RENT— FIVE-ROOM FLAT; ALL
conveniences except heat. Call Lin-
coln 52. Melrose 1052. Room 203, An-
derson & Thoorsell block, Twenty-
first avenue west and Superior street.
(Coi'stinued on pa^e 26.)
WANTED TO BUY— OLD CLOTHES,
auto and carriage tlrej;. 328 East Su-
perior street. Zenith 2013-D.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL.
MRS. HANSON, GRADUATE MID-
wife; female complaints. 413 Seventh
avenue east. Zenith 1.^26.
Airs A Ferguson, graduate midwife:
female complalnt-s. 2201 West Fourth
street. Zenith. Lincoln 224-Y. ^
S. WAROE, GRADUATE MIDWIFK
and nurse. 215 Twenty-sixth avenue
west. Zenith 'phone. Lincoln 200-D.
PRIVATE HOSPITAL— PROSPECTIVE
mothers will find a pleasant home
before and during confinement at
Ashland Maternity home, 20S Tenth
avenue west, Ashland. Wis. Infanta
cared for.
W^ANTED TO BUY — FOR CASH,
rooming house, hotel or would con-
sider some other buslnesa Call at
once. 509 Torrey building.
PERSON.11L — Private home for ladles
before and during confinement; ex-
pert care; everything confidential; In-
fants cared for. Ida Pearson M. D.,
284 Harrison avenue, St. Paul, Minn.
Prl-
Zen-
Mrs. H. Olson, graduate midwife,
vate hospital. 329 N. 68 Av. W.
1th 3173; Calumet 173-L.
WOMAN'S HOSPITAL — MRS. MARY
Barren, matron. 931 London road.
Zenith 'phone. 1697.
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