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THE  miTiUTH  HERAL 


Qy 


) 


MnCffI— ••O-  114. 


SATURDAY  EVENING,  APRIL  8,  1916. 


^1 


MCANS  THINK  UNITED  STATES  TROOP 

wSjforcPPERffllisli^^  lANOTKR  GAIN  MADE  BY  \hrVE  SHATTERED 
Wr^H  CItTeYIDENCED  1 BYVONJAGOW  GERIIANS IN  DESPERATE  |  FORCES  OF  VJllA 


BY  TRACTION  COMPANY 


4. 


President     and     Manager 

Have  Conference  With 

City  Commission. 


,0 


TO  m  IN  THf  fUCTRIC  tHAIR 
fOR  MUROfR  Of  POUITRY  DfAlfR 


Minister  Laugtis  at  Reports 

That  Germany  Wants 

Canada. 


Promise     Better     Service 

and  Consideration  of 

Extensions. 


Mayor    Prince    Expressed 

Delight  With  Attitude 

of  Officials. 


-^— ■ 


.. 


f 


•  ■»  "f"  * 


Better  •trret  oar  strvlie  throughout 
thf  city,  inunt-dialf  work  on  the  iitreel 
rallWHy  ext«  iipioii  to  Morgan  Tark  aud 
favorable  .i.iiBJdi  ration  of  iho  propoBed 
Ninth  »tre«-t  ext«-n»ioii  over  t'hoattr 
creek  were  promised  m»niber»  of  the 
city  cuun«  il  thi^  nuTning  by  J.  W.  Uo- 
^rtaon  of  JUimic  apoUa.  recently  ihoaen 
president  of  the  Duluth  Street  Railway 
<■■  •  canv  to  BU«c«  od  the  late  t'.  <•• 
iri.-»i.  ThH  whs  Mr.  Robertsons 
Xlist  foiMial  vieit  wltJ>  the  .oninileH- 
■loners  and  the  eoiifeience  h«  Id  In 
Mayor  I'lince  s  offUe  waa  h  moat 
frlendl>  one.  H.  rbtrt  Warren,  vloe 
I.iesldeiit  and  manager  of  the  com- 
pany.  >»aj*  also  present. 

"The  conimisHlonerM  are  rert«lnl> 
WftU  pleased  with  tho  »»"lrit  <>t  co-op- 
eration ^hown  by  both  Mr.  UoberUon 
•  nd  Mr.  Warren,'  aaid  Mayor  Fr  rue 
after  the  conference.  "The  feeling 
•h<.wn  by  the  officials  Indkatrs  their 
d»-aire  to  aerve  the  people  of  IHilutM  in 
th.-  bent  pn.st<ible  mann»-r.  This  aiigura 
Mell  for  the  future  and  I  am  sure  we 
tv  til  t;et  HlonK  splendidly  with  such  a 
favorable   atari." 

Mr  Robertson  called  Informally  on 
Mayor  Prince  and  Commissioner  Pll- 
hersleln  yesterday  afternoon,  when  It 
was  suggested  that  he  alt<-nd  a  con- 
ference of  llie  council  thin  morning, 
bringing    Mr.    Warren    with    him.      He 

O'ontinu'  d  on   page   6.  second  column  ) 

CHICAGOANVtO  HAVE  To 
THEIR  MILK  AGAIN 


Declares    Teutons     Have 

Never   Pursued   Such 

Senseless  Aims. 


ATTACK  NEAR  VEROUN 


Berlin  Announces  Capture 

of  French  Positions  Two 

Kilometers  Wi^e. 


I 


CONTINUE  AS  CHAIRMAN 
OF  NEW  YORK  REPUBLICANS 


GIUSEPPE  ARICHIELLO. 


NVw  York.  April  8 — CUuseppo  Arl- 
chlello  was  convicted  of  the  murder  of 
Barnet  Raff,  a  poultry  dealer,  In  No- 
vember. 1»14.  by  a  jury  In  the  supremo 
court  here  lust  night.  The  verdict  was 
guilty  of  murder  In  the  first  degree. 


ALLIES  WILL 
CONFER  AGAIN 


Berlin,   April   7,  via  London.   April   S. 

Recent        press        dispatches        have 

brought    word     of     statements     In     the 
Canadian     parllanuni     and      Canadian 
newspapers    that    Germany    was    plan- 
ning   after    this    war    to    plunge    upon 
the    Amerlcaji    continent    and     particu- 
larly   to    demand    cession    to     Germany 
,  of  the  Domlnkn  of  Canada.    In  r.  con- 
versation   with    Herr   von   Jagow.    nilTj- 
'   later  of  foreign  affairs,   the  Associated 
'  Press   correspondent    referred   to   these 
rumors.     The    foreign     mlnlstt  r»     first 
reply   was  an   outburst   of   laugbter. 

"How  can  people  Invent  or  believe 
such  stories?"  he  asked.  "To  any  one 
not  entirely  blinded  by  passion  It  Is 
evident  beyond  doubt  that  Germany 
never  pursued  such  senFeless  alm.s  and 
never   contemplated    doing    so. 

"Can  one  Imagine  a  state  of  affairs 
In  Europe  after  the  war  such  that  we 
should  have  the  leisure  or  a  free 
enough  hand  to  divert  cur  strength 
and  effi-rts  to  such  a  task  on  the 
American  continent? 

More  IlidleslosN  RuaiorM. 
"Equally  ridiculous,  though  un- 
fortunately this  jihase  has  a  serious 
side,  are  rumors  which  I  understand 
ar-  current  here  and  there  in  the 
I'nlted  Htates  that  Germany  after  the 
war  will  take  revenge  on  the  L'nlted 
States  bv  pursuing  an  antl-Amerlcan 
policy.  It  Is  even  reported  to  me  that 
some  apprehensive  souls  In  America 
foresee  from  victorious  Germany  an 
attempt  to  break  down  the  Mor  roe 
I>octrrne,  plant  its  flag  In  Routh  or 
Central  America  or  even  a  design  lo 
lenp  upon  the  L'nlted  States  and  crush 
them  In  order  to  attain  mastery  of 
both   continents. 

"I  need  hardly  assure  you  such  re- 
ports which  from  time  to  lime  have 
been  set  afloat  by  enemies  of  Germany 
In  the  evident  Intention  of  stirring 
feeling  against  It.  are  too  absurd  for 
denial.  1  need  only  recall  that  Ger- 
many has  never  placed  Itself  In  op- 
position to  the  American  principle  of 
the  Monroe  Doctrine." 


Troops  West  of  Meuse  Are 

Assaulted  on  Two 

Sides. 


Intermittent  Bombardment 

Continues  in  the  West 

Section. 


War  of  Producers  and  Dis- 
tributers Has  Practically 
Ended. 


Assemble  at  Paris  to 
Consider  Economic 
Questions. 


Chicago.  April  «.— The  milk  war  be- 
tween producers  In  the  Chicago  dis- 
trict an  1  the  distributers  In  Chicago, 
which  for  the  past  few  «lays  had  as- 
sumed a  serious  aspect  with  the  cur- 
tailment of  the  city's  supply.  Is  prac- 
tically at  an  end  today.  But  one  of 
the  distributers,  the  Borden  Condensed 
Milk   company,    has   not    agreed   to   buy 

milk  at  the  new  price  of  »1  ''^*'*lJ*«-": 
dred  pounls.  an  Increase  of  22  cents  a 
hundred  over  the  old  price.  Local  of- 
flclals  of  the  company  tentatively 
aareed  to  settle  at  the  price  demanded 
by  the  farmers,  but  announced  their 
action  would  have  to  be  ratified  by  the 
llrectors  of  the  company  at  New  York 
before    contracts    were    signed. 

All    the    deal- rq    with    one    exception 
have   announced   that   there   will   be   no, 
-crease  In  the  price  of  8  cents  a  quart 
hlch     consumers      now      pay.       It      is 
"thought    the    full    dally    supply    of    ap- 
proximately    1.760.000     quarts     will     be, 

received    today.  -^mi^u^^,    i     1 

Acting    District    Attorney    Michael    L.  j 
luoe     ha.s    announced    he    will    start     a  ; 
I^ederal     grand     Jury     Investigation     to 
drtermlne*^ whether  the  Milk   Producers 
association    or    the    dealers    have    vlo- 
Tate  1    the    Sherman    anti-trust    law.    as 
Applied  to  Interstate  commerce,  by   at- 

would  welcome  an   Investigation. 


Cabinet  Ministers  and  Dis- 
tinguished Delegates 
to  Attend. 


PRESIDENT  ON  WAY 
BACK  TO  WASHINGTON 

Stormy    Weather    Causes 

His  Return  From  Week- 

End  Trip. 


Paris.  April  8.— The  conference  of 
the  Entente  allies  for  discussion  of 
economic  and  commercial  questions 
will  assemble  In  Paris  on  April  20. 
It  win  be  attended  by  many  dis- 
tinguished delegates,  including  a  num- 
ber nt  cabinet  ministers  from  the 
various   countries. 

The  conference  will  extend  over  foui 
days.  President  I'olncare  will  preside 
at    the    opening    session 

Premier  Hughes  t.f  Australia,  who 
will  be  a  delegate.  Is  expected  to  take 
an  advanced  position  for  a  Joint  tariff 
system  which  will  establish  minimum 
rates  among  the  allies  and  their  co- 
onles.  reasonable  rates  for  neutrals 
and  Strong  discrimination  against  all 
dealings  with  hostile  countries. 
Otkrr  Subjects. 

Other  8«ibject«   to  b.    tsken  up  are: 

1  An  imder?tanding  concerning  all 
legislation  intended  to  regulate  com- 
mercial relations  aim.ng  the  belliger- 
ents, such  as  the  execution  of  contracts, 
the  recovery  of  credits,  sequ.stratlon 
of  goods   and    the   subject   of   patents. 

2  Precautionary  measures  to  be 
taken  against  Invasion  of  allied  coun- 
tries   by    German     products    aft»ir    the 

(Continued  on   page  6.   third   column.) 


Washlngtun.  April  8. — President  Wil- 
son, who  left  last  night  on  tfle  naval 
yacht  Mayflower  for  a  week-end 
cruise,  will  return  to  Washington  at 
one*',  arriving  about  4:30  p.  m.  today. 
Snow  and  sleet  were  given  offl<  lally 
as    the   cause   for   his   return. 

Secretary  Lansing  said  no  new  in- 
formation had  been  received  from  the 
German  governnu-Jit  concerning  the 
submarine  question,  but  it  was  ex- 
pected at  any  tim.-.  The  secretary 
plans  to  see   the  president    tonight. 


Berlin.  April  8.  via  London.  B:38  p.  m. 
—The  war  offl-  e  today  amioonoed  the 
capture  of  French  positions  more  than 
two  kilometers  wide  In  the  Verdun 
region  west  of   the  Meuse. 

Poinded  on  Two   Sides. 

London.  April  8— The  Mlient  In  the 
French  lines  west  of  the  Meuse  with 
the  village  of  Bethlncourt  at  Its  sharp 
angle  Is  being  pounded  on  both  sides 
by  the  crown  prince's  troops,  which. 
In  their  last  drive,  succeeded  In  mak- 
ing a  new  dent  In  the  line  southwest 
vt   Bethlncourt.  ,  ,         ,  „„.. 

The  success  was  achieved  near  Hau- 
court  village,  the  Important  PO"tlon 
lost  by  the  French  on  Wednesday,  the 
Germans  gaining  a^  '«o»i"i^  *"  ^\7° 
■mall  field  works  betwerti  Haijcourt 
and  Hill  N'o.  287,  which  ll'S  two-lhlrJs 
of  a  mile  to  the  south  of  the  village. 

Gn  the  other  side  of  the  eailent  there 
also  has  been  sharp  flghvlng  buf.  ac- 
cording to  Paris  today.  Um>  adavantage 
here  w-as  with  the  French  who  bested 
their  adversaries  In  grenade  combats 
bf-tween   Bethlncourt  and  Chattancourt. 

There  has  been  little  f  ght.ng  else- 
where in  the  Verdun  '•«K'^"-  ,,^  ,tt*r: 
man  grenade  attack  near  Fort  \aux 
was  repulsed  by  the  French  ^bose  posl- 
tlons  east  of  the  Meuse  have  been  sub- 
jected to  intermittent  bombardment. 

Germans    Gain    Foollagr. 

Paris,  April  8,  2:16  p.  »"•— ^»»«.;^*''; 
mans  renewed  their  attack  south  of 
Haucourt  In  the  Verdun  region  last 
nlKht  and  gained  a  fooilnr  In  two 
sniall  field  works  between  Haucourt 
and  Hill  No.  287.  the  war  office  an- 
nounced today.  w^*„,*^„ 

Fighting  with  grenades  between 
Bethlncourt  and  Chattancourt  turned 
to  the  a.lvantage  of  the  French. 

East  of  the   Meuse   there  was   Inter- 
mittent    bombardment   of   French    posi- 
tions.     Near    Fort    Vaux    the    Germans, 
made    an    attack     with    grenades     and  ! 
were   repulsed. 


FREDERICK  C.  TANNER. 

New  York.  April  «— Frederick  C 
Tanner  will  continue  to  be  chauman 
of  the  New  York  Republican  »*»»« Z*""- 
mlttee.  An  attempt  ^y^/ol'"^'«'^"  2( 
William  Parnes  to  oust  him  "•«»», \»*; 
position  at  a  meeting  of  the  committee 
hero  today  for  purposes  «>'„^' ;■««"* "J; 
tlon  was  defeated  by  a  vote  of  82 
to    ^3. 


Increase  VnreasoaaWe. 

Washington.    April    8.— Propose^i 


In- 


ereased  rates  on  iron  end  stiel  articles 

from   terminals   of   the   Great   Northern 

and    other   railroads   on    the  North    Pa- 

ilflc    coast    to    Spokane.    por.tl«n«l    an<i 

other    points    In     Washington,     Oregon,,^    »"•"•   u  »*..-o«,cV.Jr»  Qnsc^v 

and  Idaho  today  were  found  unreason-    |    British  Steamsnip  bUSSex. 

uble   by   the   Interstate   comrfierce   'om- ]  #^^^^^^^^^^^^^,^,^^^.^^^^^ 

mission. 


Mobs  ActUe  In  China. 

Amoy,    China.    April    8-^VV'*''' l.'i.'^ 
of  troops  from  Chlobe  In   Koklen,  pro- 
vince,   was   followed    by    local   d'sturb- 
ances.      Mobs   attacked   and    looted   the 
tax  and  salt  offices.  , 

GERMANS  DENY  ALL 
RESPONSIBILITY  FOR 
EXPLOSION  ON  SUSSEX 

Berlin,  April  8,  via  Lon- 
don, 6:10  p.  m.  — The  Ger- 
man government  is  able  to 
announce  that  no  German 
submarine  or  warship  was  | 
responsible  for  the  explo- 
sion    which     damaged     the 


WHO  IS  FUGITIVE 

Official  Says  Bandit  Has  Lost  All  Pres- 
tige Among  Followers  By  Running 
Like  Coward  Before  Americans. 

Original  Order  to  Funston  Was  to  Dis- 
perse Villa  Band:  Bandit  Last 
Heard  of  at  Parral. 

El  Paso,  Tex,,  April  8.— The  American  troops  have  accomplished 
their  object  in  destroying  Villa's  military  power  and  should  there- 
fore withdraw  from  Mexico  without  delay,  was  the  view  expressed 
today  by  a  well-known  member  of  the  Carranza  government,  speak- 
ing unofficially.  , 

"The  punitive  force."  he  said,  "has  done  all  that  it  could  expect 
to  do.  It  has  shattered  the  forces  of  Villa,  who  is  now  a  fugitive, 
robbed  of  all  prestige  and  power  he  ever  held  among  the  people.  The 
peons  may  be  ignorant  but  they  arc  not  fools.  They  will  never  again 
respect  a  man  who  turned  tail  and  ran  like  a  coward  before  the  Yan- 
kees, without  even  making  a  stand." ^.-.-^^ 

TO  FIND  SOME 
ALTERNATIVE 

Getting  Permission  to  Use 
Mexican  Railroads  Appar- 
ently Hopeless. 


Original    Order    «o    Fun«toii. 

Washington.     April    8. — The     original 
order     given      MaJ.-tJen.     Funston      on 
March  10  for  the  American  punitive  ex- 
pedition   Into    Mexico   made   public   for 
the    fIrHt   time    at   the   war   department 
today    did    not    Include    a    direction    for 
the  dl>ath  or  capture  of  Villa,  but  prin- 
cipally directed  dispersal  of  Villa's  out- 
law   band    that   attaekei   Columbus.    N. 
M..  on  March  'J.     <!cn.  Funston'n  orders 
read:     "You  will  promptly   orgsnite  an 
ade'iuate  force  of  military  troops  under 
the     command     of     Brig.-<'Jen.     John    J. 
Pershing   and    will    direct    him    to    pro- 
ceed    promptly    across    the     border     in 
pursuit  of  the  Mexican  band  which  at- 
ta<  ked    the    town    of   Columbus.    N.    M., 
i  and    the    troops    there   on    the    morning 
of  March  9.     These  troops  will  be  w  lih- 
!  drawn    to    American    territory    as    soon 
'as   the  de   facto  government   of  Mexico 
Is   able    to   relieve   them    of   this    work. 
In  any  event  the  work  of  these  troops 
will    be    regarded    as    flnl)«hed    as    soon 
as    villa's    band    or    bands    are    known 
to    be    broken    up. 

caTrn  tieiierni  Aothnrlly. 
"In  carrying  out  these  Ir.^truciiotis 
vou  are  authorized  to  employ  whatever 
guides  or  Interpreters  are  ne<es»nry. 
you  are  given  general  authority  to  em- 
ploy such  tran»«portntlon.  Including  mo- 

iContlnued    on    l-age    6.    third    column.) 


Imperative  Tliat  Some  Way 
Be  Found  to  Send  Sup- 
plies to  Troops. 


Antonio.    T<x..    April    8.— Faced 
apparent    hop*  lessn*  »^s    "f    g''t" 


Pan 

by    th 

ting     pel  mission 


to 


tores    over 


1  Xt/8,'®/«/«/«.«/«^/^^**«^*'******'*'*^ 


Prof.  Felix  Fake  Begins  to  Feel  tjic  Effects  of  Spring. 


1   HAVE    A  NEAT     LITTLE     SCHEME   FOR 
GRABBING   SOMf    SOFT    COlM     THAT 
D£AR    PUBLIC    W/LL    LIKE.- 


FLOOD  CONDITIONS  AT 
LA^OSSE  GROWINyfORSE 

Water      Entering      Base- '  More  Families  Likely  to  Be 


ments  Where  Much  Mer- 
chandise Is  Stored. 


Driven  From  Their 
Homes. 


La  Crosse.  Wis..  April  8. -With 
water  entering  basements  In  the 
wholesale  district  along  the  river 
front,  where  thousands  of  dollars 
worth  of  merchandlM  is  stored,  flood- 
ing railroad  tracks,  roads  and  parks, 
washing  out  banks  on  the  river  front 
and  threatening  to  drive  dozens  of 
families  from  their  ht.mes  In  the 
Uoose  iJreen  section  of  North  Ln 
Crosse,  the  Mississippi  river  flood  as- 
sumed an  ominous  a.ipect  In  this  city 
*od^y.  when  the  high  water  passed 
'  the  13-foot    mark    on    the    government 

Water  today  entered  the  basement 
..f  the  l^  Crosse  Fur  &  Hide  com- 
pany, where  $15,000  worth  of  furs  Is 
Atored,      has      reached      the      basement 


fln«.r      of      the      Farmers    /  ••-oi'^,''''^t'.\^ 
Market   eompany.   which    If*  filled    with 
thousands    of    di>llars    worth    of    seeds, 
and    is   within   three   Inches  of   flooding  | 
the    huge    warehouses    of    the     Klsson. 
iSelelstsd    Hougan   company.     It    Is   also  i 
'   lapping    at    the    basement    doors    of    a  j 
number   of  other   wholesale   houses.         \ 
!  Vndrr  Klahfeen   inebes  of  Water. 

'        The   Chicago,    Milwaukee    &    St.    I'aui  i 
i   tracks    on    the     levee     leading     to     the  i 
'   minufacturing   district    s«tuth    of    Main, 
I  street,    are    under    eighteen    Inchen    of 
'  water   today.    The    n  ain   tracks   of   all  , 
'   the    railroads    leading    Into    I.A     Crosse  | 
from   the   north   and   across   the    marsh  | 
into  S.iuth  La  «'rosse  are  almost   level 
'   with   the   water  and   the   rails  seam   as 
I   though   laid  on  the  surface  of  a  great 

1    lake. 

I  Bridges    Over     the     several     chan-  ; 

nels    of     the     Mississippi     and     Black  j 

(Continued  on  page  6,  second  column)  , 


PAV  , 0W6-  :DOi-LAR^ 


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you   KNOW    GASOLINE    IS   AWPULLy  HIQH 

My  p/PoPos»rioN  enables  am  OTO^ijST  ' 


we  G»v/£  you  AN  eMPTx  qas  can  an} 


VERy   SlMPtErALL  yOU   HAVt     WE  G»V/£   yOU    AN  tMPTr,^A5  C^n   Ajw** 
^    ici    TnCM    rtiio'^FPi  li^    TAKC.  TWO    COOPOhiS'    you     SELL     ONE.  TICKCT 
p:^A0?DA^n  rA^^eiyAND     >'  V^OR    ^Ta     DOLLAR.    ANJD    <5tT   yOUR.^ 
EVAPORATrD  GAS  CO.    '^•^'^^V  cam  v^^^FOR  Nf>THtNCi-r'-v     .    ^      _^.^^^ 


SUPERIOR  PEOPLE 
ARE  NOT  SATISFIEO 

Appeal  to  Secretary  of  War 

From   Agreement   on 

Bridge  Approach. 

Tnm  Th*  Herald  WatklmtaR  lireti. 
Washington.  April  8.— The  question 
of  the  erection  of  the  Duluth  approach 
to  the  Interstate  railway  bridge  was 
argued  before  Secretary  of  War  Baker 
late  tcdav.  The  recent  agreement  be- 
tween the  various  Interests  was  not 
satlsfaeiurv  to  certain  people  In  Supe- 
rior, who  appealed  from  the  chief  of 
engineers  to  the  secretary.  Those  at 
today's  hearing  were  .Solon  Perrln  of 
Superior,  representing  the  bridge  com- 
pany. Representative  Clarence  B.  Mil- 
ler. Senator  Hustlng  and  Representa- 
tive Lenroot  of  Wisconsin  and  John 
Brennan  of  Superior. 

THREE^iiiPSlUNK; 
ONE  MAKES  ESCAPE 

French  Passenger  Steamer 

Shelled  in  Mediterranean 

Without  Warning. 

London,    April    8.— The    loss   of    three 
more   British   vessels   was  reported   to- 
day  by  Lloyds.     The  steamship  Braun- 
I  ton   and    the   schooner   Clyde    of  Whlt- 
I  stable  were  blown  up.     The  crews  were 
saved.     The     steamship     «'haniala     waa 
I  £unk. 


The  Braunton.  4,676  tons  gross  and 
380  feet  long,  was  built  In  1911  and 
owned  at  Cardiff.  Wales.  Her  recent 
movements  are  not  reported.  She  ar- 
rlvfd  at  Spezla.  Italy,  from  I'hlladel- 
i^'.iia  on  Dec.   18. 

The  Chantala  was  In  I^ondon  on 
March  10  and  was  booked  to  sail  for 
Calcutta.  She  was  built  In  1913  and 
was  406  feet  long.  4,»49  tons  gross, 
and. was  owned  In  <Jlasgow. 

The  Clyde  of  Whitstable,  204  tons 
gross,  was  built  In  1871. 


Passenger  SteamsUp  Shelled. 

Marsellleji.  France.  April  8.— The 
large  French  passenger  steamship  Co]. 
bert  was  shelled  without  warning  by 
a  submarine  In  the  Mediterranean,  but 
being  under  a  full  head  of  steam,  es- 
caped her  aggressor  by  superior  speed, 
at  the  same  time  sending  out  wireless 
warnings  of  the  submarine's  presence 
to  other  ships  In  the  vicinity. 

The  Colbert,  of  6,384  gross  tons.  377 
feet  long  and  47  feet  beam,  was  built 
In  1»08  at  French  Mediterranean  yards. 


^hlp  ...  - 
Mexican  railroads  fr'-m  fcl  Ta^o  to  the 
troops  in  Mexl<;o.  and  re.  ognlzlng  the 
Inadequicv  of  the  present,  pvvt' m  <ȣ 
("upplv.  army  officers  at  headqu  irtera 
here  "virtually  were  convinced  todajr 
that  some  alternative  would  have  lO 
be    found.  . 

If  two  or  three  limes  the  number 
i»f  troops  now  op<rating  in  Mexico 
are  provided  the  pro^ent  line  from 
Columbus  to  Satevo.  some  300  miles, 
could  be  maintained,  hut  unle««s  the 
punitive  force  is  incr.a.-^ed  many  of 
the  officers  here  regarded  It  as  im- 
p.  rntlve  that  a  new  short  line  be  ts- 
tablL-^hed. 

Short  lAnr  PoMlble. 
Villa's  mov  iiK  nt  t<.  tlie  south  and 
east  has  made  possible  such  a  line 
from  OJinaga  or  some  point  near 
Ujlnaga.  From  OJinaga.  almost  op- 
posite Pr.  sidlo.  Tex.,  tl.ere  ext<  nds  a 
trail  to  Chihuahua  and  another  from 
Chihuahua  to  .^^atevo.  The  total  dis- 
tance   is    only     170    n\iUj^. 

It  was  pointed  out  that  th.-  n^e  of 
the  short  line  would  decrease  th« 
necessity  f.-r  sending  more  troops  into 
Mexico  immediately.  One  difficulty 
was  the  uncertainty  as  to  how  the 
Carranza  government  would  view  a 
new   line   c»f   communication. 

From  a  military  point  of  view  the 
use  of  the  railroads  from  Juarez  ta 
Chihuahua  Is  tiiore  desirable  but  un- 
less the.  right  Is  given  to  move  troopa 
along  the  line  It  was  regarded  as  <JU«h- 
tlonable  wheth«  r  the  route  from  OJin- 
aga to  the  Interior  might  not  be  ih« 
better,  

DECISION  IN  FAVOR 
OF  GOVERNOR  HANNA 

Jury  Finds  for  Defense  in 

Suit  of  Grant  Youmans 

at  Minot. 

MInot,  X.  D..  April  8.— The  lon». 
hard-fcught  damage  suit  of  tirant  8. 
Youmans,  former  president  of  the  Sav- 
ings Deposit  bank  of  Mlnot.  against 
Governor  L,  B.  Hanna  and  sev.  ral 
North  Dakota  state  officials  and  bank- 
ers was  de<  hied  for  the  defense  by 
Judge  Kneeshaw  In  district  court  here 

**Youmans,  who  asked  1260.000  datri- 
ages  charged  (.iovernor  Hanna  and  the 
other  defendants  with  a  conspiracy 'to 
wreck  the  Savings  Deposit  bank. 

Judge  Kneeshaw.  in  handing  do^^n 
his  verdict  for  the  defense,  stated  that 
there  was  no  evidence  of  duress  co- 
erclon  or  conspiracy;  that  the  plain- 
tiff had  manufactured  more  tnan 
$50.00<i  worth  of  "fake  mortgagee, 
made  to  dummies  and  sold  them  to  Ms 
own  bank,  and  that  the  closing  of  t».e 
bank  by  state  officials  waa  Just  fifd. 
The  Savings  Deposit  bank  was  c!.jst4 
In  October.   1*18. 


raire   Elevator   Baras. 

Cairo  111..  April  8 —Fire  eatly  t.^lay 
destroved  the  grain  elevator  and  prob- 
ably 160,000  bushels  of  grain  of  Samuel 
Hastings.  The  Iom  was  estimated  at 
1126,000. 


r 


^ -i-~ 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


- 


'.i 


I 


h 


Saturday, 


GIVING  UP  MY 
HOUSE 

NECESSITATES  QUICK  SELLING 
OF  ALL  HOUSEHOLD  FURNITURE 
—CONSISTING  OF  BEDROOM, 
DINING  ROOM  AND  LIVING  ROOM 
FURNITURE,  DRAPERIES,  ETC. 

Maliosaiiy  Library  Tal»l«».  Ortontul  KuKS  Davciii>ort.  Odd 
f  luiir-,  <  urtttlits  «n.l  l>ru|Ki it^.  Iw  Box  and  iimny  other 
•  loa-Mhold  i)<<<'<'«*nUI«'^.  Hvi-ry  arlklf  or  furniture  Is  in  i>er- 
iCH-t  condition  and  will  bo  N»ld  rlicup. 

SALE  WILL  START  MONDAY,  APRIL  10,  2  P.  M. 
AT  2422  EAST  THIRD  STREET 

MRS.  HENRY  ABRAHAM 


To  the  Gentlemen  of  Duluth: 

Wo  will  annaunto  that  our  full  lino  of  now  Spring  und  Hum- 
mer Wool.ns  are  now  in  and  would  be  pleased  to  have  you  call 
and  inspect  them.  All  the  new  weaves  and  fabrics.  Imported  and 
domestic  Tailored  to  your  measure,  at  moderate  pritoa.  Our 
srvice  Jind  work  1«  unexcelled.     We  absolutely  guurHnte©  all  our 


\V'>rk. 


M.  LIBERIVIAN 

30  \\i>T  1  lusr  si'iti:i:T. 


Are  You  Sure  of 
Your  Job? 


Perhaps  you  are  for  a  while.  But  j'our 
earntng  capacity  can't  last  Indefinitely.  You 
are  only  human  and  your  physical  and  mental 
machinery  is  bound  to  slow  up  aooner  or 
later. 

Kvory  one  of  the  many  active  fiavlngs  de- 
positors at  the  First  National  Bank  »eem« 
lo  realize  this  truth  and  they  are  planning 
It  so  that  their  saved  money  will  continue  to 
work  for  them  when  they  can  no  longer 
work  for  themselves. 


FIRST  NATIOITAL  BANK 

Duluth,  Minn* 


SHORT-TIME  FURNITURE  STORAGE 

Possibly  your  leas'^  expires  April  Isi.  and  you  can't  get  Into 
your  new  place  until  May.  Then  store  your  goods  here  during  the 
month.  Many  of  our  patrons  use  our  storage  facilities  one  or  two 
ri'.nths  at  a  time.  Clean,  dry,  sanitary,  storage  room*  And  very 
mJd-rato  charges. 

DULUTH  VAN  &  STORAGE  COMPANY 

1»  FOl  KTH   AVFMt:    WEST. 


HEALTH  FOR  MEN! 

SCliS.\TlFIC    MKTilOUa    OABLR    SPKCIALISTS 
TO    HI'IAL    .M.IM'    TROl'BLKS. 

Every  man  that  l«  afflicted  with  disease  should  look 
only  for  the  best  of  Specialists.  Duty  to  yourself  and 
those  who  depend  upon  you  demand  the  very  best  med- 
ical ait<-ntion.  Only  the  Experienced  Specialist  should 
be  consulted.  We  have  been  In  Duluth  for  nearly  twenty 
years  and  have  cured  possibly  thousands  of  men.  We 
have  this  ability  and  can  pivo  you  the  best  service.  We 
vould  like  to  have  you  for  a  patient  and  make  you 
liealthy   nn  1    happy. 

W«  rurr  people  in  the  Mhortemt  time  of  Blood  Pol«on. 
i  I'aralywiii,  XerTuuM  UrblllO'.  VarlcHtne  VelnN.  Heart  DIm- 
|.-aiie.  Bladder  Trouble.  BrunchitU.  IndlKcntlon.  Skin  l>U- 
eaMCM.  I'aliifiil  and  DintreMMliiK  MyntptoinM  that  aeeoMpany 
Kidney  trmibl***!.  Srlatlea  mnd  al|  dlnrnnea  and  MrnknrMM  hroij;(ht  wn  tty  biid 
habltM,  and  th<»*e  of  Opiom  and  other  druKw.  and  all  eoii(aict<mM  dlaeanei*, 
CoiiMultutlon  and  X-UMy  rxamlnatton  free  to  every  man  wiio  NrrluB«ly  de- 
Nlr<-«  to  be  rured  of  hla  troubleM.  Write  for  Myaaptom  blank  It  70a  are 
rehldlnir    el»eT»here. 


44i 


ff  DR.  EHRLICH'S  FAMOUS  REMEDY  u 


606 


ff 


914  —IMPROVED— 

THE  CURATIVE  TREATMENT  FOR  BLOOD  DISORDERS 

When  Prof.  Ehrllch  announced  to  the  medical  world  the  discovery  of 
his  now  famous  "606."  the  remakable  results  accomplished  by  Its  use  were 
at  flr«t  not  believed.  However,  the  continued  wonderful  success  of  this 
speciflo  remedy  soon  caused  leading  speclallHts  throuKhout  the  world  to 
regard   It  a.s  the  most  roniarkablo  discovery  of  the  age. 

However  wonderful  the  rewults  of  this  "606"  were,  Prof.  Ehrllch  him- 
self 9»*t  about  to  improve,  If  posHlble,  upon  his  discovery.  After  conducting 
a  number  of  experiments  in  his  laboratories  he  finally  produced  a  prepara- 
tion which  he  now  calls  "914."  This  "914"  has  all  the  beneflts  of  the  orig- 
inal "606"  and  Is  devoid  of  any  objectionable  feature  that  the  "606"  prepa- 
ration might  have  had. 

The  many  men  suffering  from  Blood  Disorders  and  all  Its  complications, 
who  have  not  taken  the  wonderful  "606" — or  who  have  hesitated  for  anjr 
reason  whatsoever  to  take  advantage  of  this  treatment — should  now  come 
to  us  for  the  famous  "914  "  We  have  been  using  th<i  famous  "606"  prepara- 
tion ever  since  its  discovery.    Have  made  more  than  100  administrations. 

If  you  have  sores,  ulcers,  pains,  plinplps,  copper-colored  spots,  body 
rash,  or  any  of  the  symptoms  of  Blood  Disorders,  don't  suffer  a  day  longer. 
In  two  to  ten  days'  time  signs  of  the  disorder  disappear  as  If  by  magic. 
The  results  are  marvelous.  Don't  continue  taking  medicine  Into  the  stom- 
ach for  months  and  months,  and  "hope "  for  a  cure.  Come  to  us  today — now. 

There  are  no  unpleasant  symptoms  after  the  treatment.  There  Is  no 
danger  whatsoever  and  you  can  go  to  your  business  Immediately  after 
treatment.  It  has  proved  to  cure  thousands  of  cases  of  Hlood  Pnlson  In 
all  the  world.  What  It  has  done  for  others  It  will  do  for  you.  A  blood 
te«<t  that  we  have  made  from  your  blood  In  Chicago  will  prove  to  you  that 
you  will  have  been  cured.  Call  today  at  our  office  at  No.  1  West  Superior 
St..  and  we  will  explain  to  you  this  wonderful  treatment.  Consultation  Is 
absolutely  free  and   confidential. 

Progressive  Medical  Doctors,  Inc.  Duluth.  Miniu 


T  U 
THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


April  8, 1916. 


JURY  ACQUITS 
CUT-RATE  MAN 

Bilderbeck,  One-Cent-Fare- 
Man,  Found  Not  Guilty 
of  Charge. 


Not  Present  in  Person- 
Bail  Refunded  to 
Attorney. 


'Aim 


i.  1) 


ar.  WILLIAM  BRACY. 


The  Aspirin  Habit 


It  took  a  municipal  court  jury  three 
mlnutt»s  yesterday  afternoon  to  a^fiult 
Wrillam  Ray  Bilderbeck.  l-Cent  Street 
Car  Ticket  Wallingford.  of  advertising 
illegally. 

Bilderbeck  did  not  .appear  In  court 
during  the  trial,  and  in  fact  has  been 
missing  »lncf  last  Tuesday,  when  he 
posted  >200  ball  to  Insure  his  appear- 
ance and  disappeared.  He  left  a  for- 
warding address  at  a  hotel  in  Laporte. 

Ind-  ^     .  .       . 

Walter  F.  Dacey,  as  Blld-rbeck  s  at- 
torney entered  a  plea  of  not  guilty  for 
his  client  and  fought  the  case  success- 
fully. Pamphlets  alleged  to  have  been 
distribute,!  by  Bilderbeck.  stating  that 
the  car  tickets  were  "good  on  all 
lines."  were  presented  by  the  state,  but 
.Judge  W.  H.  Smallwood  refused  to  al- 
low them   to  bo  accepted  In  evidence. 

The  state  contended  that  the  pam- 
phlets were  misleading,  as  the  car 
tickets  were  not  good  on  Park  Point 
lines. 

Make*   Tlblee  Cleanap. 

Police  say  Bilderbeck  is  one  of  the 
smoothest  "financiers'  who  has  oper- 
ated In  Duluth  In  recent  years.  He 
cleaned  up  between  |3.000  and  $4,000. 
they  claim,  as  a  result  of  two  days  and 
a  half  of  selling  5-cent  street  car 
tickets  at  a  cent  apiece. 

His  scheme  w-as  an  endless  chain 
Coupon  system,  whereby  each  coupon 
purchaser  was  required  to  buy  three 
coupons  at  2S  centf  apiece,  sell  them 
to  three  friends,  and  to  wait  until  the 
three  frlrnds  applied  at  the  company's 
office  and  obtained  three  coupons  In 
turn  before  No.  1  could  receive  his 
twenty-five  car  tickets  for  26  cents. 

Two  or  three  other  warrants  will  be 
served  upon  Bilderbeck  If  police  have 
an  opportunity,  they  say.  He  started 
a  similar  Hcheme  in  Chicago,  police 
say,  but  was  ordered  to  discontinue, 
and  left  the  city. 

PUBLiClSSUES 
TALKEU  OVER 


Jackson  Welfare  Club  Dis- 
cusses Some  Leading 
Questions. 


Here  Is  an  Instructive  letter  from  a 

high  school    girl: 

"I    have    been    a   sufferer    for    some 

time   from   headache  which   our   family 

doctor  says  Is  due 
10  overstudy.  He 
idvlses  me  to  leave 
.school.  But  as  I 
expect  to  graduate 
in  June  I  cannot 
Kive  It  up.  Some 
Mme  ago  I  was  told 
<»  try  aspirin,  which 
I  did.  and  It  soon 
relieved  me.  I  have 
iRken  a  great  many 
of  the  five-grain 
aspirin  capsules, 
sometimes  as  many 
as  seven  or  eight  a 
day.  when  my  head 
,.  jimi — MP  ^afhed     severely. 

but  still  want  the  aspirin  and  cannot 
be  still  In  the  house  unless  I  take  some. 
I  frequently  feel  as  though  I  would 
faint,  and  things  turn  black  about  me. 
I  never  had  this  before  taking  the 
aspirin.  Please  advise  me  if  aspirin 
Is  a  hablt-formlng  drug  and  If  It  weak- 
ens my  heart,  thus  causing  these 
strange   spell«." 

Evidently  this  young  woman's  edu- 
cation Is  faulty.  Somehow  ahe  has 
learned  to  place  "graduation"  above 
the  most  precious  accomplishment  a 
woman  can  have — good  health.  Evi- 
dently her  Instructors  are  giving  her  a 
wrong  start  In  life,  when  they  allow 
her  and  her  classmateji  to  feel  that 
"graduation"    Is    so    Important    as    thin. 

Of  course,  a  high  school  girl  is  Just 
a  high  school  girl.  Often  one-sided, 
from  carrying  too  many  books  under 
one  arm  and  too  many  data  in  her  left 
third  frontal  convolution.  But  assum- 
ing this  young  woman  Is  not  merely 
voicing  the  vagaries  of  top-heavy  girl- 
hood.  Is  she  In  danger? 

Aspirin  is  one  of  the  coaltar  derlva- 

Dr.  Ilr»(fr  wUl  %nimr  all  tUtmd  \etten  prrUtnliii  to 
tniwprH  tbrrxifh  tbew  rolusini;  It  not  It  will  be  answrr 
Dr.  Brkdf  will  n«t  pmrrliw  for  liullTtdual  rkiri  or  mike 
Mnpaper.     Pwlfctfd  bjr  Tb«  Adtmi  .Niw»p»pcr  8»r»lM. 


TEUTONS  LOSE 
200^  MEN 

Casualties  Before  Verdun 
Enormous,  Says  Semi- 
official Report. 


tlves.  Most  all  medicines  made  from 
coal  tar — Including  all  the  popular 
headache  cures — are  depressing  to  the 
heart.  Further,  they  break  down  the 
red  blood  corpuscles  and  ultimately 
ruin  the  nervous  system.  We  see  quite 
a  number  of  victims  of  the  coal  tar 
drug  habits  eventually  become  nervous 
wrecks  and  sometimes  they  reach  the 
Insane    hospitals. 

The  young  woman  "was  told"  to 
"try"  the  drug.  Who  told  her?  What 
a  terrible  responsibility!  Why  do 
human  beings  so  love  to  experiment 
upon   each   other? 

Her  symptoms  are  characteristic — 
•he  frequently  feels  aa  though  she 
would  faint,  and  things  turn  dark 
around    her. 

Acetaulllde.  phenacetln.  antlpyrln, 
acetphenetldln,  phenylacetamlde — any 
of  these  In  headache  cures,  "cold"  or 
"grippe"  cures  is  a  dangerous  drug. 
Aspirin  Is  perhaps  less  depressing  than 
the   others,  but   it   is  depressing. 

Our  high  schools,  we  have  always 
believed,  make  us  a  little  top-heavy. 
We  waste  at  least  a  year  there.  The 
sight  of  a  round-shouldered,  precocious, 
be-spectacled  young  woman  staggering 
along  home  with  an  armful  of  algebras, 
tlologles.  bugologles.  etc.,  always 
makes  us  sigh  for  the  future  of  the 
race. 


THE  figures  which  show 
Goodyear  Tires  to  be 
equipment  on   21   per 
cent  of  the  cars  counted 
in  71  cities  can  have  but  one 
meaning,  and  that  is  decidedly 
clear: — 

Goodyear  is  ^favored  tire  with 
the  great  majority  of  tire  buyers. 

The  basis  of  this  emphatic  prefer- 
ence cannot  be  price;  for  many 
brands  sell  for  less  than  Goodyear. 

It  is  Goodyear  quality  and  Goodyear 
features  of  construction  —  which 
make  Goodyear  Tires  go  farther, 
last  longer,  and  so  cost  you  less  in 
the  end. 


The  proposed  terminal  railway  fran- 
chise, the  milk  ordinance,  and  county 
ofFlclals  all  came  in  for  criticism  at 
the  regular  meeting  of  the  Jackson 
Welfare  club  held  last  evening  at  the 
Jackson  school.  John  Roos.  president 
of  the  club,  presided  during  the  eve- 
ning. 

An  outline  of  the  terminal  road 
franchise  was  made  by  Koy  Hood,  who 
attacked  the  measure  In  its  present 
form,  declaring  that  the  city's  Interests 
are  not  adequ.itely  protected.  The 
members  decided  to  watch  the  prog- 
reiiH  of  the  franchise  and  study  all 
future  drafts  considered  by  the  city 
officials. 

Attacks  Milk  Ordlnanee. 
Dr.  F.  C.  Bowman  tjave  a  short  talk 
on  the  {Proposed  milk  ordinance,  dur- 
ing which  hH  launched  an  attack  on 
the  measure,  saying  that  it  tends  to 
discourage  the  small  dairyman  and 
creates  a  monopoly  for  the  large 
deulefs.  At  the  close  of  his  talk  tne 
numbers  adopted  a  resolution  oppos- 
I  Ing  the  passage  of  the  ordinance. 

County  officials  came  In  for  criti- 
cism for  thoir  failure  to  keep  the 
steps  north  of  the  courthouse  In  proper 
condition  for  pedestrians.  It  was  de- 
clareid  that  the  steps  are  coated  with 
Ice, -making  It  extremely  dangerous  for 
walking. 

A  committee  consisting  of  Roy  Hood. 
Dr.  Bowm.'in.  Robert  Patterson  and 
J.  D,  Monitor,  was  appointed  to  con- 
fer with  the  city  commixslonors  on 
the  pl'in  to  improve  the  park  property 
near  Ninth  avenue  west  and  Second 
alley. 

< 

C;r«nd  Farka  Realty  Deals. 
Grand  Forks,  N.  D.,  April  8.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Real  estate 
transfers  in  Grand  Forks  county  dur- 
ing the  month  of  March  exceeded 
$100,000  in  value,  settinK  a  new  record 
for  the  month,  according  to  local  real 
estate  dealers.  Most  of  the  transfers 
were  of  farm  property,  the  greater 
part  of  which  sold  for  |60  or  more  per 
acre. 


Reinforcements    Used    Up 

as  Fast  as  Put  Into 

Line. 


ToCallAPluaber 


fTtLROSE 


657 


GRAND 


/^MER|CANfjEATINC[OMPANY 


Paris,  April  8. — The  German  losses 
before  Verdun  up  to  the  present  time 
have  reached  the  huge  total  of  200,- 
000  men,  one  of  the  greatest  battle 
losses  In  the  whole  range  of  warfare, 
according  to  estimates  made  public 
here  from  a  semi-official  source,  "the 
result  of  careful  Inquiry  made  In  the 
highest  quarters  In  which  the  figures 
have  been  rigorously  checked  and  ver- 
ified." 

"Documentary  and  verbal  testimony 
gathered  and  authenticated  permit 
the  giving  of  precise  details  concern- 
ing the  losses  suffered  by  the  Ger- 
mans and  by  us  on  the  Verdun  front," 
says  the  semi-official  communication 
given  to  the  Associated  Press.  "Dur- 
ing the  period  from  Feb.  21,  when  the 
battle  began,  to  April  1.  It  Is  known 
that  two  army  corps,  namely  the  Third 
and  the  Eighteenth,  have  been  with- 
drawn from  the  front,  having  lost  in 
the  first  attacks  at  least  «>ne-third  of 
their  force.  They  have  reappeared 
since  and  have  again  suffered  like 
losses. 

"The  German  reinforcements  are 
practically  used  up  as  fast  as  they 
are  put  In  line.  The  total  effective  of 
the  Eighteenth  corps  have  In  this  way 
lost  17.000  men,  and  the  Third  corps 
has    lost    22.000    men. 

Onef  Uair  Pnt  Oat  «ff  Artion. 
"Concefnlni'  the  One  hundred  and 
twenty-flrst  livtsion,  which  took  pos- 
scHslon  of  North  Vaux  about  March  12, 
we  have  precise  Information.  More 
than  one-half  of  the  Seventh  regi- 
ment of  it*  reserves  was  put  out  of 
action  by  our  machine  Kuns  in  the  In- 
effectual attack  against  the  slopes  of 
the  fort.  The  Sixth  regiment  met  sim- 
ilar losses,  of  which  the  total  reached 
60  per  cent  of  the  regiment's  effec- 
tives. 

"The  Nineteenth  German  Infantry 
had  already  suffered  similar  losses  In 
attacking  the  village  of  Vaux..  The 
Thirteenth  company  was  surprised  and 
anlilhllated.  In  entering  the  village 
houses  Its  first  battalion  was  reduced 
60  per  cent. 

"Three  regiments  of  the  Glerenth 
Bavarian  division,  which  led  the  at- 
tack of  Malancourt  and  Avocourt 
woods  on  March  20  and  22,  were  each 
reduced  by  one-half.  Their  losses 
varied  between  60  and  60  per  cent. 
The  same  Is  true  of  the  Fourth  regi- 
ment of  the  Second  division  of  land- 
wehr  engaged  imder  similar  conditions. 
Losses  D«rtng  Actual  Attack. 
"The  foregoing  are  only  losses  dur- 
ing actual  attack  and  do  not  Include 
the  losses  of  regiments  in  the  tranches 
or  In  reserve  under  the  fire  of  our 
cannon.  They  are  solely  the  current 
actual  losses.  We  know  that  certain 
German  units  have  had  very  high  cur- 
rent losses,  that  Is  to  say.  losses  from 


QI'KSTIOXS    ANn    AXSWFRS, 
Diet   for   Foar-%  ear-Old   Child. 

Please  suggest  a  diet  suitable  for  a 
child  of  4. 

Answer — ^Breakfast:  Olass  of  milk. 
Small  dish  of  well-cooked  oatmeal  with 
cream  and  plenty  of  sugar.  Raked 
apple.     Small   piece  buttered   toast. 

10  o'clock:  Two  crackers  and  glass 
of  water. 

1  o'clock:  Cup  of  cambric  tea.  Bread 
and  butter.  Creamed  taters.  Some 
stewed   fruit.     Stick   o'   candy. 

4  o'clock:     Pretzel. 

7  o'clock:  Glas*  milk.  Fruit.  Boiled 
egg.     Bread. 

I  betlth      U  roar  quwrtlon  U  of  i^nenU  Int^rit  It  will  to 

(4  prraonatlr  W  suwped,    %\Anu»i  en»»«up*  U  enclos.*. 

dl*pww^.      Addrwt.    l)t.    Wim»B»   Br»ay.    cm»   sf   thU 


artillery  fire  when  no  action  of  the 
Infantry  was  In  progress.  We  cite, 
for  Instance,  the  "rhlrty-Bcventh  regi- 
ment of  Infantry,  which  was  surprised 
by  our  fire  while  on  the  march  to  the 
trenches.  It  lost  about  600  men  and 
from  thla  fact  was  so  reduced  that  it 
could  not,  on  March  10.  take  part  In 
the  village  of  Vaux,  as  was  ordered. 
In  place  of  the  Nineteenth  regiment, 
which  had  been  decimated  by  our  ma- 
chine guns 

Faree  on  Verdan  Frant. 

"Bummarlzlng  during  the  forty  days 
from  Feb.  21  to  April  1,  the  Germans 
had  on  the  Verdun  front,  from  Avo- 
court to  Eparges.  exactly  239  battal- 
ions of  Infantry  and  prefentlnir  a  min- 
imum of  1,076  companies  of  Infantry, 
beslles  twer.ty-three  baltallors  of  en- 
gineers of  ihree  companies  each,  which 
give  an  aggregate  of  1.14-1  companies 
fully  reln-'orced.  the  companies  vary- 
ing from  260  to  280  uen.  The  assault- 
ing army,  therefore,  represented  at 
least  296,000  Infantry  alone. 

"Sln-.'e  Feb.  21  the  reinforcements 
have  been  frequent  and  heavy.  At 
least  eighty  battalloi  s  have  been  sent 
to  the  rear  to  be  recon.stituted.  Others 
have  received  their  reinforcements  on 
the  field.  It  is,  therefore,  nearly  450.- 
000  Infantry  which  appeared  upon  the 
firing  line  and  this  estimate  Is  even 
under  the  mark. 

"Declarations  gathered  from  prison- 
ers ind  oar  own  observations  lead  us 
to  estimate  at  least  one-third  of  the 
total  enaaged  as  the  minimum  losses 
of  the  Ge.-man  infantry  up  to  April  1. 
It  Is.  therefore.  160,000  men  who  have 
fallen  sol3ly  upon  the  firat  battle  line." 

MOORE  WiLTPAY 
FOB  PUYGROUND 

Duluthian  Will  Provide  Re- 
creation for  Stowe  School 


OO] 


EAR 


O  N 


T  I  RES 

EoMyiogetfiem  Goodyear  Scnlee  Station  DeaUnE}rtrymhert 


Goodyear  No-Hook  Tiret 
are  fortified  against : 

Rlm-cuttlng— By  our  No- 
Rim-Cut  feature. 

Blow-outs — Bjr  our  On« 
Air  Cur*. 

Loose  Treadt  —  By  otir 
Rubber  Riveu. 

Intecurlty— By  our  MultU 
pie  Braided  Piano  Wir« 
Bat*. 

Punctures  and  Skiddinf^- 
fiy  our  Double-Thick 
AU-Weath*r  Tread. 


This  Season. 


Watson  8.  Moore,  prominent  grain 
nuin,  will  equip  a  playground  at  the 
new  Harriett  Beecher  Stowe  public 
school  and  pay  an  Instructor  during 
the    coming    summer    season. 

Mr.  Moore's  offer  was  presented  to 
the  board  of  education  last  night,  dur. 
Ing  their  monthly  meeting,  by  Direc- 
tor H.  J.  Grannis,  and  was  accepted 
by  the  board.  There  Was  one  condi- 
tion, that  the  board  go  to  the  ex- 
pense of  leveling  off  the  ground  and 
preparing  it  for  the  apparatus. 

Recreational  Director  J.  H.  Hatehelor 
reported  that  preparations  for  the  sum- 
mere'  playground  activities  were  rapid- 
ly being  completed,  and  recommended 
crushed  rock  surfacing  for  several 
playgrounds  which  are  below  grade. 

School  attendance  was  not  up  to  the 
usual  standard  during  March,  .'^upt. 
R.  E.  Denfeld  told  the  board  members, 
because  of  a  measles  epidemic.  An 
attendance  record  on  one  day  of  the 
month  showed  only  four  full  classes 
out    of    the    210    which    were    checked. 

There  were  14,640  pupils  in  schools 
on  March  24,  which  Is  an  Increase  of 
106  over  the  corresponding  date  last 
year,  and  almost  1,600  more  than  were 
enrolled    when    school    began    last    fall. 

The  resignation  of  Leon  C.  High, 
English  Instructor  at  the  R.  E.  Den- 
feld high  school,  was  accepted,  to  take 
effect  Immediately.  He  will  accept  a 
position  with  the  Scott-Graff  Lumber 
company. 

An  offer  made  br  Kane  &  Co..  of 
Minneapolis,  to  sell  tS.OOO  worth  of 
bonds  maturing  in  1928  at  $106  and 
Interest,  was  accepted  without  discus- 
sion   by    the    board. 

BUSINESS  AND  ~ 
SENTIMENT  CLASH 


^v.- 


lkttkuhbads  cnvklopbs 
bill  hkaos         cards 
notk  ncadt        handbills 

STATCMtNTS  PRODRAMS 

112  WEST  HRST  STREET 

"Rush  Ordsr*  a  PUsssrs" 


Public  Opinion  Indorses 

this  family  remedy  by  making  its  sale  larger  than  that 
of  any  other  medicine  in  the  world.  The  experience  of 
generations  has  proved  its  great  value  in  the  treatment 
of  indigestion,  biliousness,  headache  and  constipation. 

BEEOHAIM'S  PILLS 

relieve  these  trouble*  and  prevent  them  from  beoomin?  serioui  ills  bf 
promptly  clearing  waste*  and  poiaon*  out  <^  tl^*  digestive  eystem. 
They  strengthen  the  stomach,  atimutat*  tii*  liver  and  regulate  the 
bowala.    Mild  and  harmleaa.    A  proven  familjr  reipedy.  unecualled 

For  Digostlve  Troubles 


•ale  mt  Aar  UnHtion  la  tfia  WmU. 

IOe«i 


Sentiment  and  business  may  clash 
at  the  Oneota  school.  Forty-fifth  ave- 
nue west  and  Rene  street,  within  the 
next  few  months,  because  school  board 
directors  want  to  do  away  with  the 
building,  and  residents  want  to  keep  it. 

"It's  a  matter  of  sentiment,"  said 
Anton  O.  Wicklund  of  the  Oneota 
and  Haxelwood  Improvement  club  last 
night.  In  addressing  the  board.  "We've 
tried  before  to  have  this  old  building 
replaced,  but  a  lot  of  those  people 
don't  want  to  see  the  dear  old  school- 
house  go." 

The  Oneota  jichool  originally  was  a 
seven-room  structure,  but  now  only 
three  rooms  are  being  used.  Directors 
admit  that  conditions  are  not  of  the 
best  as  regards  sanitation,  because  of 
lack    of    sewer    connections. 

"I  am  In  favor  of  redlstrlcting  that 
territory,  and  of  doing  away  with  the 
Oneota."  said  Dr.  L.  Q.  Greeley,  one 
of  the  directors.  "When  we  finish  the 
Merritt  school  addition  I  think  plans 
should  be  made  along  this  line." 

The  Oneota  district  Is  between  Forty- 
second  and  Forty-ninth  avenues  west, 
south  of  Third  street.  Eighty-eight 
pupils  would  be  divided  between  the 
Bryant,  Ely  and  Merritt  school*. 

No  matter  what  you  want.  It  will 
save  you  time  and  money  If  you  will 
use  THE  HERALD'S  WAIN'S. 


Low  Fares  to 

"Zone  of  Plenty"  States 

From  Duluth  and  Superior 


% 


32.50 


One  Vay  Colonist 
Fare  to 

Spokane 

Seattle 

Tacoma 

Portland 

Vancouver 

and 

North  Pacific 

Coast  PoinU 


On  Sale  March  25 
to  April  14  incL 


( 


27.50 


One  Way  Colonist 
Fare  to 

Great  Fall* 

Helena 

Butte 

Kalispell  ^ 

and  many 

other 

Western 

Montana 

PoinU 

On  Sale  March  25 
to  April  14  incL 


s 


10.50 


One  Way  Settlers 
Fare  to 

Havre 

Great  Fall* 

Lewistown 

Billings 

and  many 

other 

Eastern 

Montana 

PoinU 

On  Sale  Tuesday* 

March  14  to 

April  25  incL 


In  addition  Low  Round  Trip  Homeseekers  Fares  will  bo  in 
effect  first  and  third  Tuesdays,  April  to  November,  to  above 
points. 

Send  for  free  36 -page  illustrated  booklets  with  maps  in 
colors  describing  opportunities  in  the  Zone  of  Plenty  States: 
Minnesota,  North  Dakota,  Montana,  Idaho,  Washington  and 

Oregon.    A  postal  brings  them. 


A.  E.  HATHAWAY,  Dist.  Pass.  Agent 
W.  C  WOOD,  City  Pas*,  and  Ticket  Agent 

432  WeM  Superior  Street 
OULLTH,  MINH. 


Urn 


RBX  ISN'T  LIKB  ORDINART  BBERB— 
KINQLT  IN  WHOLESOMENESe,  SPARKLE  AND  FXAVOR. 

REX  BEER 

ALWAYS  SATISFIES  MEN  'WHO  KNOW  GOOD  BEER. 

MPHovc  a  Caj«  Sent  ff<Mn«*^B 

BREWED  AND  BOTTLED  BT  BREWERS  OF  A  BBnBR  BEB&. 

DULUTH  BREWING  A  MALTING  CO. 

DUIiUTH,  MOIir. 


f% 


Jt» 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


r^- 


WILL  AWARD 
TWOBIG  lOBS 

East  Superior  Street  Paving 

Contract  Expected  to  Be 

Let  for  $47,575. 


Two  big  coiitracti!.  one  fur  the  pav- 
ing of  Kast  Supfrlor  ■treet  and  the 
oth«r  for  th<r  const ru«tion  of  a  brldno 
across  TiBthtr'.s  creek,  will  «oni«^  up  for 


conMderatlon     at     th«     regular    council    la.t  week  ha.  .hown  that  the  nv^^^ 
meeting  next  Monday  afternoon.  I  cetpta  have   been   enornoua  ^>»f\n«   ^J^ 

CominiH.ion.r  Farrtll  will  Introduce  period.  £^6  total,  will  be  »*»rnta 
a  resolution  awarding  the  contract  for  ahortly.  and  the  *»*^».  .^"\*'«  ""^  '" 
paving  Superior  atreet.  from  Sixteenth    reorganizing   the  aerylcfc.     Government 


to    Twenty-third    avenue    eaat,    to    the 

♦  Jent-ral  Contracting  company  of  Mln- 
ineapolia  on  ita  bid  of  |47.676.16  for  a 
•  Trinidad    luke    aHphalt    pavement,    and 

<;omnii»«i<iii»  r  Merrlit  will  introduce  a 
leaolullon  awarding  th«  contract  for 
the  construction  of  a  stone  foot  bridge 
ever  Tiaohei'g  creek  to  J.  F.  Schleunes 
of  this  city  on  his  bid  of  114.447.90.  No 
action  will  be  taken  on  the  two  meas- 
ures until  a  week  from  Monday,  aa  the 

•  ontrncts  Involve  expenditures  more 
than   $1,000,  „  .  .         . 

lUds  on  paving  Knst  Superior  atreet 
were  opened  last  Tuesday,  and  those 
for  the  bridge  over  Tlacher'a  creek 
were  (ipened  vcsterday.  The  latter  bids 
fj.llow:  J.  F.  Schltunes.  $14,447.90; 
Hi.f;er8  &  McLean.  $14,810;  D,  H. 
flouKh  &  Co..  $17,060,  an<l  the  Paatorct 
("onstrui  tlon    company.    $16,436, 

Contracts  for  all  Inut  four  of  the 
thirteen  water  sprinkling  districts  will 
be  awarded  to  the  following  low  bid- 
ders: District  No,  1.  Domlnlck  Hcandln, 
$1G9.07;     No.       2.«     Domlnlck        Scandln. 

,  $144.38;   No.  6.  Louis  Nordl.  $164;  No.  7. 

I  .Toseph  Cavallero,  $126;  No.  8,  Tony 
'lerraro,    $130.82:    No.    9.    Frank    Mlch- 

!  eleggi.    $138.70;   Xo.    10.   l>omlnlck   Kcan- 

i  din.  $166. 3»;  No.  11.  Joseph  Caval- 
lero. $128,  and  No.  12,  Frank  Fox. 
$139.20.  Dl.mrlct  No.  1,  including  Su- 
perior street,  la  sprinkled  by  the  city, 
while  bids  on  the  other  three  districts 
will  be  rejected,  because  they  are  too 
llgh. 

Uesolutlnns  making  changes  to  the 
widths  for  the  Central  and  Minnesota 
avenue  pavements  will  be  Introauced 
by  Commissioner  Furrell.  works  head, 
following  out  the  reqtjests  msde  by  the 
property  owners.  Fifty-sixth  alley 
west  will  be  ordered  paved  from  Uan>- 
sey    to    Urlstol    street. 


ofTklals    are   expected   aoon   to   go   over 
the  field  with   Postmaster  McEwen. 

Daluth'a  Growtk  Jant  Btgrnm. 

E.  A.  Shores,  Duluth  pioneer,  now  of 
Vancouver,  ii,  C.  Is  In  Duluth  on  an- 
other of  his  pcrlodh-al  visits,  as  the 
guest  of  Dr.  and  Mrs.  A,  K,  Walker, 
2103  Kast  First  street.  Mr.  Shores 
came  to  Duluth  In  1882  and  engaged 
In  the  lumber  Industry.  L*ter  he  went 
to  Ashland  and  then  to  Vancouver.  ! 
Although  72  years  of  age,  he  Is  still 
In  excellent  health,  and  active  In  busi- 
ness. In  speaking  of  the  growth  of 
I  Duluth.  he  said  that  development  her* 
had   only   begun. 

MrKnIght    Moves    Offlee. 

A,  C;.  McKnight  has  moved  his  law 
office  to  317  Providence  building. 
Phones  1113. 

m 

Slrgd     Hardware    Conipanr 

Is    now    located    at    103    Fast    Superior 

street,     carrying    a    complete     line     of    ^,^      ^     ^      ^^^ _    _^    __^ 

hardware,  sporting  goods,  auto  supplier  I  showed  up  at  the  beginning  of  the  ses- 
and    nalnts.     Prompt    deliveries    to    all 


ANTI-LYNCH 
MENJIFIGHT 

Will   Oppose   Indorsement 

of  Committeeman  to 

a  Finish. 


Minneapolis.  Minn.,  April  S. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  anti-Lynch  dele- 
gates to  the  Democratic  national  con- 
vention practically  boycotted  the  meet- 
ing of  the  delegation   here  to.lay. 

Only  Z.  11.  Austin,  Minneapolis,  and 
Dr.    E.    C.    Hawkins    of    Granite    Falls 


City  Briefs 


WANTED 


Tivo  la«liem  to  »»«-ll  IJectrlrnI 
lluiiNchold  l.ahor-Ma^liiK  l»evle«-«. 
\o  eiperleire  needed.  A  new 
Nelllnic  P««".  F.»oelIent  opporta- 
iilty  (»  pr^Mlurers.  Apply  Man- 
■  Ker  IloiiiHehold  l>evler  I>ept., 
^OIlTllK^\  KI.KC  THK  AI.  CO., 
210-21'.:    \Ve<»t    First    street. 


SlMplez. 

TJie     n«w     system     of     file     Indexing. 
Call  M.  I.  Stewart  company.    Phones  114. 

nolland'M  <-|othea  Sho» 

has  revctlutUmlzed  the  cluthlng  busl- 
nefs  bv  cutting  ground  floor  rent  out 
'  of  your  coHt.  Clothes  that  sell  the 
world  over  for  $26  at  my  shop  for  $16. 
our  steps  save  you  $10.  Phil  Holland. 
313    We.st  Superior  street,   second  floor. 

^ 

Files  far  Hr-^leetlon. 
n.  S.  O'Neill  of  Chlsholm.  county 
commissioner  from  th»  Seventh  district, 
yesterdav  nft'-rnoon  filed  with  County 
Auditor  Odin  Halden  for  re-ele<tlon. 
Hl.s  n:ime  will  go  on  the  ballot  at  the 
.lune  primarlf^s  as  a  candidate  to  suc- 
ceed hlmsilf.  Two  others  are  already 
In   till;   ra'.e. 


» 


SETTLERS' 
RATES! 


,.—    A  .m     i^-ir 


FROM  DULUTH 

Every  Tuesday   During 

April 

TO  THE 

CANADIAN 
NORTHWEST 

Call  or  write  for  rates  ami 
full  information. 


ySilM  Wed  In  f'klrniro. 

A  marriage  license  was  Issued  this 
morning  in  Chicago  to  Albln  rpi>er 
Maywfiod  of  Chicago  and  Miss  Jennie 
Olson  of  Duluth. 


Heavy  Mall  This  Week. 

The    weighing    and    counting    of    all 
mail    dellvero<l     In     Duluth    during     the 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 


Nicholas  A.   EacobuccI  and  Josophino 
i   A.    <;rahman. 

Karl    Williams  and   Lillian    Smith. 
Frank    Uonham    and    Elizabeth    Ost- 
1  u  nd. 

W^eddlng  Announ«-ements — Kngraved  or 
printed.  Consolidated  Stump  and 
Printing  Co.,  14  Fourth  avenuo  wesj. 

HTTs  AND  22K  SOLID  GOiTd  W  ifo- 
dlng  and  engagement  rings  made  and 
mounted  to  order  at  Henrlckien's,  333 
West  Superior  street. 

Engraved  and   printed  birth  announce- 
ments.   Consfjlldated  Stamp  &  Print.  Co. 


paints.     Prompt 
parts  of  the  city. 

Jones  A  Forbes 

have  moved  their  luw  oft  ices  from  •16 
Providence  building  to  216-217  Fargus- 
son  building. 

Woodiaen   Initiate  Ten   Candidates. 

Zenith  camp.  No.  6.  Woodmen  of  the 
World.  Initiated  a  class  of  ten  candi- 
dates Into  the  order  Inst  night  «t  tor- 
esters'  hall.  W.  C.  James  of  Minne- 
apolis, state  mn"»K»''"  "'  ^*"'  order.  wa» 
guest  of  honor  and  spoke  on  ••!•  ratern- 
alism  in  America."  He  outlined  the 
hlstorv  of  the  order  In  America,  After 
the  business  meeting,  the  ^^  oodmen 
circle  gave  a  banquet  In  honor  of  * .  A, 
IJaughan  of  Duluth.  district  manag«fr 
who  will  enter  a  new  business  field 
soon.  The  state  manager  will  aucceed 
him. 

Reed    <<ioes    to    Minneapolis. 

D  A.  Heed,  manager  of  the  water 
ani  light  department,  left  yesterd.-o 
for  Minneapolis,  to  confer  with  of- 
flciRls  of  the  gas  and  w;.trr  compa- 
nies of  that  city.  He  will  return  on 
Monday. 

Kngageneiit   Annonnced. 

Word  WHS  received  her««  thi»  morn- 
ing fr«>m  I>es  Moines,  Ii.wh.  announ- 
cing the  engagement  of  Miss  R<»se 
Zei.hlk.  da-ughter  of  Habbl  N.  M. 
Zelchlk  of  that  city,  to  J.  Itablnoyltz 
of  Duluth.  The  wedding  will  take 
place  in  June,  according  to  the  dis- 
patch.   

jilorlallsts*    DlMtrtrt    Meeting. 

Th«-  Scandinavian  So<iallBt  party  of 
Northerrj  Minnesota  will  hold  a  two 
days'  session  beginning  this  evening 
at  Sloan  hull.  Twentieth  avenue  west 
and  Superior  street.  Representatives 
from  about  thirty  locals  throughout 
the  district  will  be  present.  Tomor- 
row evening  a  muss  meeting  will  be 
held  at  Woodman  hall  at  which  N.  J. 
Chrlstensen    of   Chicago   will    speak. 

Co-Operatlon   of    Labor   1'rsed. 

President  E.  <J.  Hall  of  the  Minne- 
sota Fetleratlon  of  Labor  urged  the 
members  of  Local  No.  274.  Interna- 
tional Association  of  Mechanics,  to  co- 
operate with  other  labor  men  In  as- 
sisting the  Labor  Forward  commutes 
In  Its  preparations  for  Labor  Forward 
week  to  be  held  hero  during  the  first 
week  of  May.  This  me. ting  was  the 
first  of  a  series  to  bo  held  between 
now  and  May  1.  R.  F.  Martlne  pre- 
sided. 

»      — 

Manger  Club  Will  Meet. 

The  Munger  Improvement  club  will 
meet  Monday  evening  at  8  o'clock  at 
the  Munger  school.  The  <.rganlzatlon 
will  have  a  speaker  at  each  meeting 
for  some  time  and  C.  S.  Mitchell  will 
give  the  address  at  this  meeting.  Com- 
mittees will   report. 


Bell"  Telephones 
Duluth  Alone 


Deaths  and  Funerals 


CANADIAN  NORTHERN  RY. 

424  WEST  SUPIRIOII  ST. 
Spalding  Natal 





LIQUOR  HABIT 
QUICKLY  CURED 

I  guarantee  to  remove  all  desire  for 
li(luor  ill  two  weeks'  time  and  make 
very  reasonable  char;,'ts  for  my  scrv- 
V«-s.  Call  and  read  for  yourself  the 
jiimdrcds  of  testimonials  from  Du- 
luthians  and  others  showing  cures 
effected  by  my  treatment  for  appen- 
dicitis, kidney  trouble,  dyspepsia, 
rheumatism,  dropsy  and  other  dis- 
eases. 

Will  be  glad  to  explain  my  treat- 
ment and  show  you  how  other  suf- 
[erers  have  been  cured, 

PROF.  J.  B.  FISETTE 

1706  West  Superior  Street. 


FL1:i;H— Oscar  Fleer,  «0,  died  ftt  his 
home,  40'J  Knst  Fourth  street,  last 
night,  after  a  long  lllne.ss.  He  leave*. 
a  widow,  a  son,  a  daughter  and  a| 
brother,  Hhhard.  Funeral  services 
will  be  held  from  Crawford  &  Sons'  j 
( hapel,  Monday  at  2  p.  m.,  with  In-  ■ 
n  rnjf  nt  at  For<  at  Hill  cemetery.  Mr,  | 
Fleer    lived     In    Duluth       thlrly-rf»ur 

KCIIUA— Frank  Kurra.  28.  died  at  a 
local  hospital  yesterday  ifter  a  short 
Illness.  The  body  will  be  sent  to 
,  i:mbarrass.  Minn.,  for  burial.  Mr. 
Kurra  has  a  number  of  relatives 
living   In   that   town. 

\UM.STH()N(i — The  funeral  for  Ben- 
jamin F.  Armstrong,  aged  49,  engi- 
neer at  the  Duluth  steel  olant,  who 
died  Thursday  evening,  will  be  held 
at  2  o'clock  Suiulay  afternoon  from 
the  Hammond  Avenuo  Presbyterian 
church,    Superior. 

nrtASSAltD — Joseph  Rrassard,  aged 
68.  died  at  his  home,  4920  Wadenn 
street,  April  8.  The  funeral  will  be 
held  at  9  a.  m.  April  10  from  the 
St.  .Jean  Daptiste  French  Catholic 
<hurch  with  burial  In  Calvary  ceme- 
tery. 


^  LECTURE 


MONUMENTS. 


EX-PRES. 

TAFT 

"THE  MONROE 
DOCTRINE" 

M<)M).\Y.  AIMtlli  24 

FIRST  M.  E.  CHURCH 

.VilmihNlon,  $1.00. 

The  sale  of  tickets  will  be 
limited  to  the  seating  capacity  of 
the  church.  Tickets  on  Bale  at 
'hnmberlain  &  Taylor's,  Stone* 
Book  Store  und  Kellty  Hard- 
ware Co. 


LAUGi:ST  STtJCK  OF  HKlH-cmADE 
monuments  In  the  Northwest;  call 
and  Inspect  before  buying  elsewhere, 
F.  N.  I'eterson  Oranite  Co.,  230  E.  Sup. 

m7)NUMF.NTS  ordered  direct  from  fac- 
tory; you  save  20  p<  r  cent.  Charles 
llenson,    2301    W.    2nd   st.       Lin.    S34.__ 

funi:kal  FLOwiins  a  specialty. 

Duluth  Floral  Co..  121  W.  Superior  St. 


PERSONALS 


slon. 

No  business  was  tramiacted,  not  even 
the  elei'tlon  of  a  permanent  chairman 
of  the  delegation.  Hut  especially  they 
were  there  to  protest  the  passage  of 
a  resolution  Indorsing  Frvd  B.  Lynch 
for  re-election  as  national  committee- 
man. 

In  support  of  the  position  they 
produced  the  call  for  the  meeting, 
which  did  not  state  that  any  of  these 
matters  M-ere  to  be  taken  up,  but  mere- 
ly said  that  the  meeting  was  "for  the 
transaction    of    Important   buslnebs." 

"We   will    fight   those   fellows   all    the 
way    to    St.    Louis    and    back    If    they 
try     to    put     through    an     Indorsenunt 
of    Lynch    or    to    elect      a    permanent 
chairman,    or    to    Indorse    any    of    their 
members      for      Important      committee 
places."  said  Austin.     "The  antl-Lynch 
delegates      want      nothing      for      them- 
selves,   not    even    a    committee    place: 
all   we   want   Is  a   national   committee- 
man   otl.«r    than    F.    U.    Lynch,   and    for 
tliat    we    will    fight    to    the    last    ditch. 
Hoped    for  Test    Vote. 
"Other  members  of  the  committee  ex- 
pected   that    the    matter    of    selecting    a 
national  committeeman  would  come  un. 
They  were  hoping  that  all  of  the  anils 
would   att«nd  so  there  could   be  a   test 
vote.      They   claimed   sixteen    votes   for 
Lynch  and  had  fourtei-n   of  them  pres- 
ent,   lnclu<llng    Dan    Lawl«»r,    Julius    J. 
Olson,    John   Jenswold,    Douglas   <ireely, 
M.  J.  Dalv,   Fred  K.  Wheaton,  Kd  <'on- 
roy,    C.    If'.    Helweg,    H.    F.    Nelson,    S.    J, 
Mealey,   H,  F.  Williamson,  Fred  S«  hllp- 
lln.      Two    alternates    were    preNcnt    on 
time,  W.  J.  Qulnn  of  St.  Paul  and  John 
li.   cialernault   of  Aitkin. 

Fred  E.  Wheaton  was  the  favorite 
of  the  Lynch  men  for  membership  on 
the  committee  on  resolution*,  the  iiiost 
Important  at  the  St.  Ix)ul8  convention. 
The  delegates  went  into  execu;iv«; 
session  at  noon,  the  Lynch  people  de- 
termined to  do  business  and  Ihe  two 
antls  dtter.Tilned  that  nothing  sht,  ild 
bo  done  save  to  arrange  for  transpor- 
tation and  hotel  accommodatlcra  at  St. 
Louis. 

T.  R,  Kane.  Bt,  n»fl.  antl-Lyneh 
delegate  appeared,  but  paid  he  would 
not  attend   the   meeting. 

"My  understanding  ■  1*  that  It  Is 
njerely  a  meeting  of  Lynch  followers, 
and  under  no  circumstances  will  thii 
antl-Lynch  members  of  the  delegatioi! 
have  anything  to  do  with  an  Indorse- 
ment of  F.  H.  Lynch  as  national  com- 
mitteeman," he  said. 

The  delegation  at  last  elected  Dan- 
iel W.  Lawler  temporary  chairman, 
and  Fred  SchllpUn  of  St.  Cloud  tem- 
porary   secretary. 

I-:ier<ioa  uf  Chairman  Blocked. 
An  attempt  to  « lect  a  permaj»ent 
chairman  was  blocked,  temporarily,  at 
least,  by  Z.  H.  Auhtln  of  Minneapolis, 
who  declared  that  the  delegation  had 
no  authority  to  transact  any  such  busi- 
ness under  the  call.  The  matter  of  In- 
dorsing Lynch  was  brought  up.  and 
John  Freemun.  alteinate  for  Dr.  A.  <'. 
Hawkins  of  <:ranlte  Falls,  was. granted 
permission  to  speuk  against  the  In- 
dorsement. 

A  resolution  Indorslh**  Lynch  was  In 
posfesslon  of  Fred  SchllpUn.  but  It  was 
withheld    temiiorarily. 

Fred  Lynch  was  present  at  the  meet- 
ing of  the  delegation  and  It  was  re- 
If.rted  that  he  iJitended  to  decline  to 
be  a  candidate,  had  there  been  no 
fight. 

Word  came  from  the  meeting,  how- 
ever, that  there  was  nothing  to  It. 
The  fight  had  gone  so  far  that  Lynch 
had  decided  to  a«!ce%t  an  Indorsement 
for  re-election  If  tendere'd. 

BANkTrS'' MEETINGS. 

Places   Where   Financiers   of   State 
Will  Meet  This  Spring. 

Minneapolis.  Minn..  April  8. -Secre- 
tary Oeorgw  H.  Itichnrds  of  the  Min- 
nesota Hankers'  association  has  an- 
nounced a  series  of  group  meetings 
for  May  and  June.  This  is  the  sched- 
ule ; 

First  district  group,  Winona.  May  9 
and    10.  ,,,     ^  , 

Second  district  group.  Wlndom,  June 

Third     district       group.       St.       Peter. 

Sixth  district  group.  Hemldjl,  May  17. 
Seventh      district      group.        Morris, 

May   11.  „.  ,   -      Til 

Ninth    district    group.    Thief      River 

Falls,   May    16. 


TO  DAV 


January  1,  1916 


January  1,  1915    - 
January  1,  1914 
January  1,  1913 
January  1,  1912 
January  1,  1911 


January  1,  1910 
January  1,  1909 


January  1,  1908 


January  1,  1907 


January  1,  1906 


11,702  Bell  Telephones 


11,349  Bell  Telephones 


-  10,415  Bell  Telephones 
9,553  Bell  Telephones 
8,481  Bell  Telephones 
7,533  Bell  Telephones 
5,862  Bell  Telephones 

-  5,420  Bell  Telephones 


5,150  Bell  Telephones 

5,028  Bell  Telephones 

4,720  Bell  Telephones 
3,849  Bell  Telephones 


. 


CARD  OF  THANKS. 

WE  \V1SH  TO  THANK  OUR  FRIPI.VDS 
and  relatives,  Hethesda  I.»adles'  aid 
and  English  Sunday  school  for  lov« 
an«l  sympathy  expresse..,  and  also 
for  the  beautiful  floral  offerlng.i 
given,  during  the  sickness  and  death 
of  our  beloved  wife,  mother,  daughter 
and  sister.  Olga  Jacobson. 

MH.    C.    JACOHSON    AND 

CHILDRK.V. 
MARTIN  RINNINO, 
KLMI:R    RUNNINO, 
JOH.N    RUNNINO. 
MRS.    H.    AHNESON. 


Marko  Hluth  of  Kly.  Minn.,  has  been 
In  the  city  several  days  on  business. 
While  heio  he  has  been  the  guest  of 
his  sister-ln-law,  Mrs.  David  M. 
Schwartz  of  626  Fourth  avenue  west. 

Oeorge  A.  Sherwood  of  Duluth  left 
for  Chicago  last  evening. 

I^    V.     Dlanchard     of     the 


River 


Open 

8 

A.M. 


0NLY8  DAYS  MORE 

W.  S.  KIRK'S 

SALE  OF  U.  S.  ARMY  GOODS 

We  formerlv  advertised  to  clo?e  April  10th,  hut  by  request 
of  some  of  our  customers,  hav«  decided  to  continue  sale  until 
April    17th.  . 

Note   some   of   the   following   prices,   and   remember   Kirks 
(luallty   cannot    be   beaten: 
r.  S.  Army  and   ymvr  AII-W**!  SWrU JlOO  <•  W.«<> 


..     „ _  Canadian 

Pacific,    Is    in    the    city    today. 

Mrs.   F.   A.   Chapman  of   Rainy 
is   at   the   Spalding.  .    ^    ,      ^ 

F.    W.    Merrltt.    formerly    of    Duluth, 
Is  registered   today  at   the  .^'.paldlng. 

I>wlght    Kversall   of   New   York    la  at 
the   Spalding. 

tWorge      Rreweter     of     Hibblng      Is 
here    today. 


r 


HAPPENINGS  AT  THE  DUIUTH 

BUSINESS  UNIVERSIIY 

Located  at  118-120  Fourth  Ave- 
nue We<t,  Christie  BIdg. 


DO  NOT  FORGET 

(he  last  day  for  pmjInK 

WATER  AND 
GAS  BILLS 

wKhoat  DAKORR  of  being 
shut  oir,  for  4be  Central  dis- 
Irlct.    I«    .>luiidar. 

D.  A.  HKKD,  Manager. 

1).   H.,  April   8.   1916.    T)  lOU.. 


MARINE 


as  the  <  ye  could  reach;  but  on  Thurs- 
day, another  wind  came  along  and 
blew  the  Ico  back  ayuln  and  It  Is 
pretty   well   packed    In. 

May  Buek  l>ake  lee. 
It  Is  believed  that  should  the  lake 
Ice  conditions  not  Improve  at  this  end 
of  the  route  by  the  time  the  Sault  U 
readv  to  begin  business,  tugs  will  be 
hent'out  to  bu<k  It  and  break  their  way 
through  to  open  water. 

ICE-BREAKERS  WORKING 
IN  THUNDER  BAY 

Port  Arthur.  Out.,  April  8.— The  Ice 
breakers  are  still  making  good  head- 
way In  Thunder  Bay  and  will  have 
everything  In  shape  to  welcome  the 
boats  from  the  lower  lakes  aa  soon  as 
the  Sault  river  Is  open. 

Advances  Wages  of  Crew. 

Detroit.  Mich.,  April  8.— The  Detroit 
&  Cleveland  Navigation  company  has 
announced  that  a  general  Increase  of 
10  per  cent  In  wages  of  crews  on  all  of 
the  company's  boats  would  become  ef- 
fective with  the  opening  of  navigation 
this  season.     ^ 

Plowboy  at  Ashland. 

Ashland.  Wis.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — It  Is  possible  that  the 
steamer  Tlowboy  will  run  out  of  Ash- 
land this  season.  Inquiries  having  been 
made  here  by  tjie  owner.  The  Plow- 
boy  was  brought  from  Duluth  to  Ash- 


NO  NEED  TO  BUY  A  NEW  SPRING  SUIT 

Send  us  your  last  year's  suit  and  our  cleaning  process  will 
give  it  a  new  appearance. 


Ot^pheum  Dry  Cl^^^'^^^'s 

1  3 1  East  Superior  Street 


Melrose  JJ6R 
Grand 9-6 


land  by  the  late  Capt.  Blshoff.  In  1891. 
andtet  his  death  was  placed  on  a  run 
at  Houghton.  ^     _ 

TUGS  MAKE  FAST  TIME 
DETROIT  TO  CLEVELAND 


Cleveland  In  less  than  twelve  houis, 
(.'.esplto  heavy  Ice. 

A  heavy  10-mlle  strip  of  Ice  off  the 
Cleveland  harbor  was  the  most  serious 
barrier  to  the  trip. 

» 

Farmera*  Union   Kleets. 

nismaick.   X.   D.,  April  8. — The  N'nrlh 

Dakota  Farmers'  union,  organized  at  a 
me<ilng  here,  elected  officers  as  fol- 
lows:   President.    R.   .1.   Montgomery    of 


Cleveland.  Ohio.  April  8.— The  tug  Q. 
A      fitlmore      won     for     Cleveland     thei  »•"■«'•    -  ..^o.^....^.    ....   ...   ^..■^...^^,.,^ , ,    ■^.. 

honor  of  opening  the  1916  navigation  Tappen;  vice  president.  J.  W.  Knepper 
season  for  Lake  Krle  vesterday.  The  !  of  (Joodrlci.;  secretary-treasurer.  D.  E. 
(Jllinore  with  the  A.  C.  Harding  and  Shipley  of  Dickinson;  chaplain,  Nels 
Yale  tvs'o  other  tugs,  left  Detroit  yes-  1  Christianson  of  Wing;  state  organizer, 
terday   morning  and   made   the   trip   to    Charles  Llessman  of  Tuttle. 


)•••#•*••••• 

!••••••••••*' 


!••••«•••• 


'•••••••• 


91.04)  to  95.50 
.  .75r  to  |Ut.BO 
91.30  to  $2.SO 

25« 

9I.SS  to  fl.BO 
.  .7Be  to  93.00 

W-TS 

91.00  to  92.AO 

l.egclnga,    eanvaa..lB«    to    TB« 
hegglngN,     leather.  .91 -50-93.50 

Puttees,     eanras T5e 

Pvttees,    leather.  ..  .93.00-94.00 

we  nave  a  .*i.ii«.  •»  "•   -•  ^    Army  war  Implements  con- 

veiled  Into  office  and  den  ornaments,  at  very  reasonable  prices, 
..ome  In  and  look  them  over. 


I'.    N.    Wool    UlanketM 

Middy    BluoMea     

ClotliM,    wool,    per    yard 

Khaiti    <  loth,    per    yard 

Khalii    Trou«rrs    and    Breeehes. 

Kltakl    coats     

Olive     I>r«b    Breeches 

It  libber    Fonrlioa    and    Blanket* 

I'neksneks fl-OO    to    H.50 

llaversaeka »5«    to    75e 

Kocks IBe    to    35e 

•Shoes.   75e,  9.*».0«,   and   the    V. 
S.   Army    Munson    l-aat.94'50 

AVe  have  a  large  stock  of  U 


Close 

9 
P.M. 


W.  S.  KIRK 

313  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREH 


The  demand  for  graduates  of  this 
f(h«)ol  continues  to  far  excee.l  the  sup- 
ply. Although  during  the  past  two 
weeks  we  have  advertised  for  four 
young  men  graduates  of  our  school 
for  exi-ellent  office  positions,  so  far  we 
have  been  unable  to  get  them.  Pros- 
pects never  looked  brighter  or  more 
encouraging  for  young  people  to  take 
up  this  work  than  they  do  at  present. 
New  classes  will  be  formed  In  May 
and  night  school  on  Monday,  April  10. 
to  accommodate  a  large  number  who 
could  not  b^^gln  April  3.  Owing  to 
the  excellent  attendance  In  the  night 
school,  and  the  number  of  new  mem- 
bers that  are  attending  and  wish  to 
attend,  we  have  decided  to  run  the 
night  school  all  summer.  Instead  of 
(losing  May  1.  as  heretofore.  Thf  fol- 
lowing  young  people  left  the  college 
during  the  past  two  weeks  to  accept 
the  following  positions:  Ruth  Rakken. 
stenographer  for  Central  Auto  com- 
pany: Dorothy  Meakln,  stenographer 
for  Clarke-Tomllnson  company:  Esther 
<;ronseth.  stenographer  for  Rust-Par- 
ker-Martln  company;  llemlce  Krlx. 
Htenogr.Tpher     for     Insurance     Aervlce 

agency. 

•  

nan    Mill    Cltj    Elevator. 

Minneapolis.  Minn..  April  8. — A  Urg« 
local  flour  milling  company  has  an- 
nounced that  It  would  build  a  3,000,000 
bushel  fireproof  grain  elevator  In  the 
railroad  yards  here  to  supply  the 
mllli  and  that  other  Improvements  to 
be  made  will  entail  a  total  expendi- 
ture  of   $1,000,000. 


BREAK  ICE 


!  Decayed  Teeth  Are  Dangerous ' 


NEXT  WEEK: 


It  l«  the  plan  of  shippers  now.  to 
start  breaking  the  Ice  In  the  harbor 
about  the  middle  of  next  week  so  that 
boats  may  be  moved  about  and  grain 
loaded  Into  them.  It  Is  not  thoiight 
necessary  to  move  them  before  that 
time,  and  It  la  hoped  that  In  the  mean- 
time there  will  be  enough  warm 
ji'eather  to  weaken  the  harbor  ice  so 
that  the  tugs  Wisconsin  and  Minne- 
sota, upon  which  will  UiX  the  Job  of 
opening  the  bay,  will  hiVe  an  easier 
time  of  It. 

It  was  decided  this  morning,  at  n 
conference  of  shippers  and  vessel  men, 
to  make  the  start  of  shifting  ships 
about  the  middle  and  not  later  than 
the  end  of  next  w*ek.        .       , 

Ice  conditions  In  the  lake  continue 
to  be  bad.  On  Wednesday  pight,  the 
northwest  wind  blew  the  I**  outside 
of  Two  Harbors  clear  to  the  other 
aide  of  the  lake,  and  flfteeii  to  eigh- 
teen miles  down  the  north  shore,  open 
water   could   be   seen   •satwarrd   as   far 


m 
u 
■ 
■ 
m 


m 
m 
u 
m 
m 

iS 


Because  They  Are  a  Menace  to  Health 

Statistics  show  that  a  bij^  percentage  of  ailments  result  from  defective  teeth 
and  poor  digestion.  Get  into  the  ranks  of  the  healthy,  handsome,  happy  posses- 
sors of  fine  teeth.  The  New  Method  Service  is  the  finest  in  the  entire  W  est— it  is 
easy,  prompt  and  sanitary— it  saves  you  time  and  money.  Nervous  people  receive 
special  attention. 

Look  over  these  prices  and  see  just  how  much  you  can  save  by  patronizing  us, 

22  k  Gold  Crown,  our  price $3.00  |  Silver  Fillings  only 50c 

Bridge  Work  that  for  weight,  beauty  and  |  Rubber  Plates,  $15  and  $25  values. 


quality  is  not  excelled— per  tooth, 


,$3.00 


our  price $5.00  and  $8.00 

We  Specialize  in  Plates. 
Genuine  Painless   Dentistry 

New  Method  Dentists 

28  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 

(Over  Bon  Ton  Bakery.) 


:„.^;;=;sns;^.«.."..— . — .—" 


ir 


i«  II  1 11  I  -  t 


.^^. 


»l     IIP      ■'  w 


I  ■  •-•  ■.»•  i^l    ■* 


II 


«  •.,♦  ^^•^,..  -^^.^^ 


/ 


^- 


Saturday, 


THE     D  I|  LjU  TH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


Your  New  Spring  Hat 

BUV  IT  AT  GATELVS.  WE 
HA\"E  THE  NEW  SHAPES 
AND  N1«:\V  SHADES  SOFT 
FELTS  AND  DERBIES,  AT— 

$2,  $2.50,  $3 

There  are  styles  for  every  man, 
dressy,  durable  and  correct.  A  C(>ni- 
plete  assortment  of  caps  also,  from  50c 
uj  $2.00. 

— And  Furnishings  for  Easter 

You'll  find  the  right  thing  in  Gloyes,  in  Shirts,  Ties, 
Underwear,  etc..  at  this  store.  We're  justly  proud  of  these 
new  spring  goods  and  you'll  be,  too.  Tlvey  will  help  you 
look  your  best. 


scbooU.  the  p«ace  d^iMirlin«nt  would 
nutlntain  »cho<»l«  fn  which  y»unK  peo- 
plm  would  b«  »p*>cUUy  tnttneJ  In  th^ 
Molenco  of  pacific  •tatef»man»hlp.  In 
the  art  of  hurinonltinK  dlff<iencoB  of 
nrttlonallty.  race  and  cree<».  In  th« 
skill  tffectlnK  conciliation,  and  of  de- 
v.loplnK,  throuKh  school  and  church. 
prea*  and  platform,  a  d«*fp-»ettted 
hatrfd  of  war  and  a  love  of  peace. 

"Am^rlra'a  manifest  dfBtlny  !•  to  b» 
the  apotilt?  of  peact?.  If  wt-  disregardi 
that  destiny,  and  embark  upon  elab- 
orate preparednpsB.  history  will  aooa 
write  «jur  epitaph.  The  fule  that  has 
overtaken  other  militaristic  nation* 
win  overtake  us.  If,  on  the  other 
hand,  we  heed  our  d*««tliiy.  hl*tory  will 
record  us  amon»f  the  Immortals. — a» 
the  one  «reat  nation  which.  amldnt 
K^neral  hysteria,  has  possessed  lt» 
Houl  In  calm  sanity,  and  amidst  the. 
deafealnjr  din  of  buttle  has  kept  Its 
I  vIbIob  wteadliy  fixed  on  the  alar  of 
peace." 


IIav<'  you  a 
rlutr<;«'   a«'- 
count?    Y«m 
iiiuy — hero. 


•aVPtJUOR -VlfiOMU-HIBOiNO 


DoB't  forsrrt 

wo  liavo 
SIMM'S  ul>*«>, 
$3.50   lu  $5. 


CtNTRAL  BUSINKS  COLIEGE  | 


ni1AI>»/s4aHina 


30  Kast  Superior  street.  Dululh.  Spring 
term  April  10.  Full  commerclHl  and 
titenoBiaphlc  courses;  catalogue  free, 
r.arber  &   McPherson. 


ECZEMA 

CAN  BE  CURED  ^^ 

Free  Proof  To  You 

All  I  wni.t  H  your  n.ime  and  a.Ulre^«  so  I  ran  send  rou  a  f'"^"*  ♦•^jj'tiL*!**  AC. Matxrtl.  m.9 

nx'nt     I  want  y-u  jn,t  to  try  tUi«  triMluieul-lUal  •  all-|M«t  tty  It.  okuomst 

Th.it's  my  only  :irKuuicnt.  

IvcLeon  in  ti.edrnir  h.iMncsa  in  Fort  Wiyne  for  M  yonM.  nearly  e^ryoae  know,  me  snd 

made  Ihi-t  olTer  public. 

If  y..u  liivc  Eczema.  Itch.  Salt  Rhaum,  Tattar-nevor  mind  how  ba«l-tnv  treatment  hat 
curol  ilitf  worst  luse*  1  ever  saw-«»v«  ma  •  chance  to  prove  my  c\mtm. 

S.n.l  me  yonr  imme  and  addreMon  the  coupon  »)elow  and  aet  the  tri;il  treatment  I  want  t^ncad 
V'lu'l-  lU  K.    Tlio  w..Md.r«  a<conipli«Ji«d  in  yoar  own  case  will  be  proof.  ___— 

i^aM^-MMBiM^^Maa*    cOT  AND   MAIL  TODAY   ■ -■■— ^""^  ^^^^^~ 

I.  C.  HUT2CLL,  DruKgUt,1024We»t  Main  St.,  fort  Wayn«,  Ind. 

Fleasc  send  without  cost  ur  oblitfaUon  to  ma  your  Froa  Proof  Traatmaat. 

Name ~ -- — ^"^ •~~~ 

Poat  OfQco        • • .«.«.~ ■ ~...... ..••.• Stata.«...»....«.....««».««»».~~«~«.«"»«»«« »««««« 

Street  and  No ~~« ♦..».....*.~.....~.. .«.....i[iri--.«..«.«"»«.«««    -n 'f_ 


WEST  END 


EMPLOYES  TO  ENTERTAIN. 


ttievr    Xa«enf*i«    ■ieflU>r    baa    received 

I  wor4  trum  Ui'  aathurltleM  wf  nn   lIliuMy 

:  Hty    that    he**    takin'    th'    aprlnK    Mbort 

.  ooitrae    In    broum     luakln*.       Vou    c»ii't 

be    a    Ketitteaian     the«e     daya     wlthMit 

f^iUm  thlnkln*    y«v*rc    op   t'   aumethln'. 

Cfrowrtrd  Uy  AJuu   .Vwtpkiwr  tirnrljc.J 


Id.  h..  4-s-i« 


Interest  Allowed  On  Sav- 
ings Deposits  Made  On 
or  Before 

APRIL  10th 

Northern 

National 

Bank 


TONIGHT 

TAKE  DINNER  AT  THE  FAMOUS 

CANTON  CAFE 

The  flneat  Chinese  restaurant  In 
the  city.  Beat  American  or  Chinese 
dl.shea  to  order.  The  newest  and 
fineMt  cafe  In  the  N'orthweat.  Make 
your  reservation  for  booths  by 
phone. 

X17  WKST  srPRRIOn   ST. 

Chin   n.  One.  Proprfetev. 

Melro.se    7»78.  ilrand    626. 


.Mwnrtli    niiildins; 
1>IIATH.   MINN. 


West  End  Undertaking 
Company 

2118  WKST  riliST  STRBIET. 
Nyberff  &  Crawford,  MunnKcrs. 


Duluth    Street    Railway   Men   Will 
Stage  Farce  on  "Day's  Work." 

The  d;ite  for  the  entertainment 
which  iH  belnn  arranged  by  employe* 
of  the  Duluth  Street  Hallway  com- 
pany, will  be  de<lded  at  a  meeting  of 
the  comt.ilttee  to  be  held  Monday  eve- 
ning  following  a  rehearsal.  A  cast  of 
tw-nty  men  1h  being  aelected  to  take 
part  in  the  comedy,  "All  In  a  Day  a 
Work." 

The  play  in  a  farce  on  the  opera- 
tion of  street  carH.  Many  of  the 
humorous  and  pathetic  Incldenta  that 
..fcur  on  the  car  lines  are  being  put 
in  Hhape  for  presiontatlon.  A  niinluture 
car  has  been  built  In  the  club  room 
for   UHo   In   presenting  the   play. 

The  plav  opens  up  with  the  sleepy 
cr»'W  making  the  early  morning  "pull- 
out  "  The  rtnal  scene  Is  that  of  the 
"owl."  Several  Hcenes  of  operation 
during  the  day,  Including  the  brlng- 
lt>g  of  the  Htudenla  to  high  school, 
morning  shopp^s,  noon  "l-ush,  after- 
noon mutlneo  crowds,  evening  home 
ruj4li,  show  crowds  of  the  evening  and 
persons  going  to  parkn.  will  be  the 
.subjects. 

Several  musical  selections  will  be 
Included.  Some  of  these  are  parodies 
thiit  have  been  composed  by  street  car 
employes   and   will    be   sung   by   them. 

Owing  to  the  dub  rooms  not  being 
nhle  to  accommodate  more  than  about 
JOO  people,  the  committee  will  put  the 
play  on  for  two  nlgiits  so  that  all  em- 
ployes may  witne^isi  It.  Invitations 
will  be  extended  to  the  einployeji  of 
the  Superior  lines  and   their  families, 

TELLS  OF  MjSSION  WORK. 

Rev.  Carl    Vingren    Relates   Experi- 
ences in  China  of  Generation  Ago. 

A  lecturrt  on  "Whoa  I  Was  Trans- 
formed Into  a  Clilnese."  given  by  Ilev. 
Carl  V'lngren  of  Minneapolia.  featured 
«n  entertainment  given  under  tlie 
aus»plceH  of  the  Young  Ladles'  Society 
of  th'  First  Swedish  Haptist  chnrch. 
Twenty-second  avenue  we«t  and  Tlilrd 
htreol.  hint  evening.  Hev.  Mr.  Vingr<n 
itpoke  of  his  experiences  as  a  ml.s- 
sionary    In    China      twenty-five    years 

URO. 

Rev.  Mr.  Vingren  Bald  that  he  had 
been  the  first  while  person  to  have 
e»>lere<l  Into  the  di.ttrlct  to  which  he 
wa.t  Hcnt.  His  appearance  attracted 
a  »?reat  deal  of  uttcntlon,  he  aald.  and 
hundreds  of  Chlnoste  people  turned  out 
to  8v"  him  because  of  curiosity.  He 
said  that  in  (ud-r  to  first  get  out  the 
rrowd.«4.  he  hud  circul.ited  a  rumor 
that  a  "white  devil"  was  going  to 
appear. 

While  giving  Ma  .T<ldre«fl  last  niRht 
Rev.  Mr.  Vingren  appeared  in  the 
Chinese  costume  worn  by  him  while 
on  IiIm  missionary  work.  Th<-  proj^ram 
Includ.'d,  in  addition  to  th«#  address, 
musical   numbers  and   refreshments. 

SULLIVAN  HEADS 

EPWORTH  LEAGUE 


THRK  BIG  DENTAL  SPECIALS 


UNTIL  APRIL  20th 


w^'.A^^ANTfED 


We  have  built  up  a  dental  business  sec- 
ond to  none  in  the  Northwest,  demon- 
strating the  high  quality  of  our  work  by 
offering  special  inducements  to  tlie  pub- 
^^^_^  ^,  „  lie  for  their  personal  recommendation  and 

good  will.    Special  attention  given  to  out-of-town  patients— you  get  your  teeth  the  same 
day  impression  is  taken.     We  make  the  best  Gold  Crowns  and  Bridges  in  the  world  for  $3. 


SPECIAL  NO  1— Until  March  31  we  will 
make  the  famous  Whalebone  Rub-  ^C 
bcr  Plate,  worth  $20»  for ^^ 

This  plate,  without  doubt,  is  the  nearest 
perfection  to  natural  teeth  yet  developed— 
stick  in  any  mouth— never  drop  out— you 
call  eat  an  apple — bite  corn  off  the  cob — 
noiseless  when  eating. 


SPECIAL  NO.  2  — The  Wonder  Rubber 
Plate,  considered  everywhere  as  the  most 
wonderful  plate,  at  the  price,  known  to  the 
profession.  Fit  any  mouth — won't  drop  out 
—clean— sanitary-^an't  detect  them  from 
natural  teeth — the  most  serviceable  plate  in 
the  world  for  the  money— regularly  sold 
from  $10.00  to  $12.00— until  dTC 

March  31 ^^ 


WOULD  HAVE 
PEACnUREAU 

Dr.    Lefkovits    Advocates 

New  Federal  Department 

for  World  Restraint. 


A  Federal  department  of  peace,  with 
a  secretary  to  labor  toward  the  peace 
of  the  world.  wa«  ur»cd  l»y  Dr.  Maurice 
I.,efkovlts.  rabbi  of  Temple  Einanuel. 
In  a  sermon  on  "Preparedness  for 
Peace"  at  the  regular  weekly  aervicea 
last  evening.  The  sermon  concluded 
the  series  on  "Preparedness".  Dr. 
LefkovUs  said.  In   part: 

•Thia  country  Is  In  no  d.insrer  of  fn- 
va.slon.  There  la  not  the  lea.-*t  ground 
for  apprehending  an  attack  on  thl* 
country  bv  any  powr  whatsoever,  un- 
less we  sreailjr  prepare  for  It,  Thua 
far  wo  liave  steered  clear  of  all  en- 
tanK'iriK  alllance.s.  No  past  wara  have 
left  us  with  trrudRea  against  other  na- 
tionj*.  or  hav  planted  in  them  grtidgea 
ugainat  us.  We  hn,v«  been  the  friend 
of  nil,  the  enemy  of  non^.  Why.  then. 
Hnticlpato  hostilities?  Hyaterla  only 
and  feebl.-iuindedne.<»8.  or  el.se  cunnins 
Kreed  and  nu'rcenary  calculation  will 
conjure    up   dangers   where    none   exist. 

"Hut  are  we  reallv  a*  ui»prepared  •• 
our  nlarniists  would  have  ua  believe? 
p.-ruse  the  records  of  the  bearing!*  of 
the  congre.i.jlonal  naval  romnitttee  and 
you  will  ttnd  It  atuted  by  the  most  nn- 
Impeachable  and   most  expert  authorl- 


tlea  in  this  country  that  we  have  tha 
most  powerful  navy  In  the  world,  ex- 
cepting only  that  of  CJreat  Drltain, 
and  that  our  coast  defeujies  and  land 
fortitleatlonii  are  superior  to  thuae  of 
any  nation  on  earth. 

Prrpmrr4nmm  a  Fallaey. 
"HovV'-vr,  tlur<-  Ic  no  tfreater  and 
no  deadlier  fallacy  than  tliat  prepared- 
ness maked  for  peace.  What  more 
con. iualvo  refutation  of  this  pernicious 
doftrlne  than  the  present  w(jrld  war. 
wliieh  lu  Very  truth  la  the  direct  and 
letjillniate  offspring  of  Europe's  prt?- 
pur>  diiesa. .'  For  Atnerl<-a  to  reverae 
its  irndithmal  policy  of  democracy  and 
to  finbHik  upon  a  career  of  militar- 
ism just  at  thl.i  Juncture,  when  mili- 
tarlj-tu  has  been  :«hown  to  it  ad  but 
to  ruin  and  destruction,  would  be  a 
crime  for  whicli  futiire  generatlona 
I  would  curse  uj«  and  despise   ua. 

"Who  are    thone   back   of   the  clamor 
for  war  preparedness?     They  are  those 
who    worship    at    the    feet    of    Moloch 
and  Mammon,  and   the  militarists  who 
are  hiirnirig   with  desire   to  dtstlngul.'^h 
themselves   In    battlefield   or   upon    the 
■4ea  and   those   i^ulleless   ones   who  ain- 
cerely    believe    that    they    are    serving 
the   highest   Interests  of  their  country, 
little  Muspect   that  thoy  are  being  used 
as    t<Kds   of   cunning    greed   and   selfish 
ambition.      Dr.   Johnson's   definition    of 
a  certain   kind   of   patrlotiain  oa  beln«: 
'the   last   refuge   of  a   scoundrel'    Is   not 
without    Its    application    and    affirma- 
tion  tven    in    our  day  and   age. 
DrpartHient   of   Pearr. 
"Providence    seems    to    have    singled 
out    the    United    States    to    be   the    ban- 
ner   bearer,    not    of    war,    fcut    of   peace, 
among   the    naUona   of    the    earth.   And 
just    now    Is   the   very    fittest    time    for 
it  to  enter  actively  upon  this.   Its  Ood- 
glven    nil.s.4ion.      Let    the    United  Status 
take    the    lead,    first    among    the    com- 
inoowcalth   uf   the   world.    In    adding    to 
Its   governmental   machinery   a  depart- 
ment of   peace,    headed   by   a   secretary 
of  puace.     There   was  a  time  when  iMir 
government    was    without    the    depart- 
ments of  agriculture  and   of  labor;    we 
hav«)  created  the»«   only  within    recent 
years,    and    they    have    proved    of   groat 
benefit    to    the    country.      Let    ua    add 
a    department    of    peace    and      an    In- 
rtnltely   greater   bt-nettt   will    be   derived 
fioni  It,  not  (»nly  by  our  own  country, 
but   by  all   humanity. 

"The  secretary  of  peace  would  or- 
ganise a  force  that  would  tntelllgentfy 
and  tiLsiatently  labor  toward  the 
peace  of  the  world.  Aa  the  war  de- 
partment maintain*  military  and  naval 


fSeorge  Sullivan  was  re-elected 
president  of  the  i:pworth  League  of 
tite  Grace  Methodist  church.  Twenty- 
second  avenue  west  and  Third  street, 
nt  ita  annunl  meeting  last  evening. 
The  other  officer*  are  Miss  I>orothy 
Ueatty,  tlrst  vice  prewident:  Miss  Mar- 
garet Oorraan,  second  vice  president; 
Miss  Hazel  Dtinaghy,  third  vice  preal- 
dent;  MUa  Lilllun  SullU-an,  fourth 
vice  president:  <'t.  Hill,  secretary'; 
John  Laven.  treawirer.  and  Miss  olive 
Wot)d,  organ  int.  Following  the  busi- 
neHs  nitetlng  a  penny  social  was  held 
at  which  garaas  and  music  were  fea- 
tured. 

—  — — m 

Mission  Meetings. 

Special  du^'ottonal  meetings  will  be 
held  at  the  Pentlcostal  Mis(»l(»n,  Nine- 
teenth avenue  west  and  First  •  street, 
tomorrow  and  W.-dnesduy.  The  njeet- 
InK.s  will  be  held  tomorrow  at  3  and 
8  o'clock  and  the  Wednesday  meet- 
ing will  be  held  In  the  ewnlng. 
Evangelist  Arthur  F.  Johnson,  who  has 
been  apeuklng  at  meetings  thia  we^k, 
will   be   In   charge   of   the   services. 

m 

Address  By  Returned  Missionary. 

"Missionary  Work  In  Turkey"  will 
be  the  subject  of  an  address  to  bo 
given  tomorrow  morning  by  Rev.  J. 
Tllden  at  Bethany  Swedish  Luth«^rftn 
church.  Twenty-third  avenue  west  and 
Third  street.  Mr.  Tllden  recently  re- 
turned from  ml.^Vlonary  work  In  Tur- 
key and  Armenia.  He  will  also  speak 
tomorrow  evening  at  the  First  Swedisii 
Lutheran   church. 

m 

Pastors  Exchange  Pulpits. 

Rev.  Xorman  Madson  of  Hlbblng. 
Minn  .  will  preach  tomorrow  evening 
at  St.  Paul's  English  Lutheran  church 
Twentieth  avenue  west  and  Third 
street.  The  pastor  will  speak  on 
"War  Words  t>t  the  Prince  of  Peace." 
Rev.  K.  B.  Vaaler.  pastor  of  the  local 
church,  will  speak  tomorrow  evening 
at  Rev.  Mr.  Mudson's  church  at  Hib- 
bing. 


audJtorftnn  of  the  Lincoln  high  school 
this  evening;. 

Charles  J.  Lundell  left  yesterday  for 
a  few  dayC  vUlt  with  relatives  at 
Virginia. 

The  seaior  class  play.  "Esmeralda," 
given  under  the  direction  of  MIhs 
Rack<-1  Ha«r»St  was  played  to  a  packed 
house  at  the  Grand  theater  last  night. 
It  Is  esamated  over  COO  people  aaw 
the   play. 

MlMs  Un«»«iaiith  visited  friends  ut 
the  Twin   Ports' yesterday. 

The  Womati's  Friday  club  held  Its 
regular  »«ml>montbly  meeting  In  the 
restrooms  of  the  public  library  this 
afternoon^  HhB.  Fleming  being  the 
host<*es.  rk*v  Meowing  program  was 
rendered:  »  Wpi^  call,  anecdotes  «>f 
writers:  ^.  tbpkliison  BnUth.  Mrs.  C. 
B.  TVatktns;  jijlary  WUklxia  Freeman. 
Mrs.   Albeit  C^. 

Several  >pe4B»o  from  Carlton  were 
here  last  )i^t£t  to  attend  the  senior 
class   play  aOllic  clrand. 

"The  Perltfi^  the  City"  wUl  be  the 
iiubject  of  H?f.  T.  T.  Koan's  sermon  at 
the  NorwKlau.t-uthoian  church  tomor- 
row eveniujr.  '  ,  ^      ..        . 

Mrs.  Llbbl^'of  (Irand  Rapids  Is 
spendiiiK  tkBh*-week-end  with  Miss 
Aniand.x  ifa^iup  at  the  home  of  Mra. 
John   Be««l&   V 

Mrs.  E.  a^L^Schftlbo  entertained  a 
nuaiber  of  Uaa  friends  at  five  hun- 
dred at  h<v  ij£ildenco  on  flelmuer  ave- 
nn«  yestitriHI'  nfternoon.  Mrs.  A. 
Coathup  latsinaincd  thn  Five  Hundred 
club  at  bf*  tkm^  ThuratTay  evening. 

FEW  nmisE  to 

•     SIGN  DRY  PETITION 


Few  refumls  and  plenty  of  commen- 
dation n»«et  the  men  who  are  soliciting 
signatures  ft>r  the  local  option  peti- 
tion, accontlng  to  W.  L.  Smithies,  who 
Is  actively  In  charge  of  the  work. 
Mr.  SmlthtM  is  usually  to  be  found 
at  the  offlas  opened  la  the  Providence 
building,  tm  the  alxth  floor,  and  la 
gener.ally  kept-.bn«y  answering  tele- 
phone.-i  froxfc  l^i  lieutenants  and  help- 
ers.    revorttnK"'  prfigreas. 

Mr.  SmltW'  »  ,«aid  this  morning  that 
whilo  he  underttanda  that  a  great 
many  names  {Igy*  b^cn  obtained,  he 
has  no  Way»  **ibU- of  estimating  Just 
how  many  haVe^lgned  the   petition. 

It  la  plano'-d'to  have  all  of  thoao 
who  are  handling  tho  petitions  meet 
at  tho  hcadqunrtcra  rooms  on  Monday 
night  and  whej»  It  Is  determl'-ed  how 
many  of  tfte  desired  5.000  names  are 
lacking  a  new  and  determined  cam- 
pal4;n  will  b<>  started  to  nmko  up  the 
deficiency.  Only  2.666  namea  are  re- 
quired, but  the  workers  have  set  6.000 
as  their  goal.  

DAIRY  STOREHOUSE 
DESTROYED  BY  HRE 

Jollct.  m..  April  g— The  Bowman 
Dairy  company  depot  and  storehouka  at 
Mokena.  111.,  was  partly  destroyed  In  a 
mysterious  fire  early  today.  Tho  fire 
was  discovered  a  short  time  after 
farmers  and  officials  of  tUa  dairy-com- 
pany had  aettJed  their  atrlki*  differ- 
ences. Tlie  damage  U  estimated  at 
JIOOOO.  Forty  thousand  pounds  of  milk 
consigned  to  Chicago  are  held  up  here 
as  a  result  of  tho  tiro. 

tie-upIf  cars 
proves  costly 

According  fn  Duluth  railroad  men. 
Western  railroads  are  losing  $26  a  day 
on  cars  that  are  tied  up  by  the  termi- 
nal cong»tlon  on  Eastern  rail  lines. 
On  tlje  (>\/t{  hand,  it  Is  pointed  ont 
that  many  of  the  Eastern  lines  are 
paying  at  tH»  rate  of  |13.50  for  hold- 
ing  these   cfW. 

it  WHS  saW  here  today  by  a  number 
of  freight  operators  that  the  Western 
lines  could  use  many  more  cars,  but 
that  the  cars  are  not  available  being 
tied  up  on  Eastern  lines.  The  general 
freight  situation  Is  good,  but  the 
revenue  accruing  to  the  Western 
lines  would  be  very  much  greater.  It 
Is  pointed  out,  were  It  not  for  the  fact 
that  literally  thousands  of  cars  are 
being    used    for    temporary    warehouse 

Purposes.  It  la  figured  that  the  per 
iem  charges  Eastern  railroads  are 
being  forced  to  pay  Western  road.s, 
will  mount  up  Into  a  very  large  sum 
of    money. 


,>^ 


mmw 


SPECIAL  NO.  ^— Cast  Aluminum  Plate— the  last  word 
in  successful  plate  production — without  doubt  the  most 
successful  dental  achievement  known  to  the  profession- 
light,  clean— never  wear  out— noiseless— can't  drop  out  or 
break— eat  com  on  cob— bite  anything— no  one  would 
ever  know  they  were  artificial— you  can  cough,  laugh, 
sneeze,  sing.  whisHe  and  they  will  never  drop-in  fact  they  are  solid  comfort  and  ever- 
lasting.    Until  March  31  we  will  make  these  plates  that  ordinarily  SI 2.00 

All  work  done  in  our  private  labcVa'tory  by  bkgh-priced.   skilled  mecfcanics. 

BLEEOING  GUMS 

We  administer  Emetine  Hydrochloril,  the  new  discovery  by  Drs.  Barrett  and  Smith,  «or  the 
cure  of  pyorrheror  pus  infected  gums,  causing  loose  teeth.  A-sk  U3  for  names  of  people  we  have 
cured  of  this  most  dreaded  disease. 

>tli  Extracted  _  

WE  SPECIALIZE  IN  ADMINISTERING  GAS 


Cohl   Trown*    $JI.OO 

Full  St'i  of  Teeth  us  low  as. $4.00 
nrldtfe  Work»  per  tooth .  .  .  $3.00 


«'•  w     *-«.«-,».,  %«IA0       Gold  FlUings    75c  up 

WlUte  Crowns $3.00  ,    ^^^^  i.liiimcs r>»c 

Alumiauui  PUit«s $12.00  |    Te<'lh  CU>«nod 50c 

COLD  INLAY.S— We  are  experts  In  making  good  Inlays.  The  old  painful  method  of  pounding  and 
malletlng  In  flUing  teeth  U  past— our  Inlay  operators  are  skilled  to  the  minute.  AU  our  Inlays  are 
made  to  tit  to  a  mathematical   certainty. 

NEW  YORK  AND  BOSTON  DENTAL  CO., 

216  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET— OPPOSITE  GRAND  THEATER. 

TH«>phon«- Mi-I  OtlO.  Open  daily  «:«<>  a-  ">•  ^   ^  P-  ™''  ^"»<^»y^'  *<>  *•  *">"  *  ^*__'"_- jj^gjL -^f"^"^- 


.>«CX    '*"^>v 


CASH  BUYERS  TAKE  NOTICE 

WE  ARE  QUOTING  WHOLESALE  PRICES 
AND  LESS  ON  HIGH  GRADE  FURNITURE 

for  living  room,  dining  room  and  bedroom.    Entire  stock  must  be  sold  before 
May  1st  regardless  of  factory  cost. 

WE  POSITIVELY  CLOSE  OUR  DOORS  on  or  before  above  date. 
Thousands  of  pieces  awaiting  cash  buyers  at  a  fraction  of  their  real  value. 
We  will  deliver  anywhere.  

CAMERON  FURNITURE  CO 

2110  AND  2112  WEST  SUPERIOR  gTREET. 


ine  the  addre8»t;8  dllvered  at  the  un- 
voUlnB  c^remuPlca  at  the  capltol  arul 
those  delivered  In  the  8«nato  and 
house.     Ttn  thousand  <^"P/«»  «'«/°.^^ 

available  for  the  '"'"'"VVv,^  «Pnate 
house  600  for  membera  of  the  senate 
Id  1500  copies  for  distribution  by 
members  of  the  Mmnesota  delegation. 

WILL  REJECT 
SOME  HOTELS 


LOOSE  LEAF 
DEVICES 


PRINTING 


FIf.^tm4^etiw4^ 


^/^INf  t    AV.V    •   /t/'N  />//.» 


m  WEST  FlftSr  STREtr 


the  appropriations  for  this  purpose  to 

$2,000    and    that    it    la   unconstitutional 

to    appropriate    money    to    an    endowed 

I  institution.      The  decision,    if  sustained 

:  by    the    supreme    court,    will    close    the 

I  L>a  Crosse  public  library  and  threatens 

j  to   close   every    endowed   Institution   In 

tho  state  receiving  public  support. 


West  EiMl  Briefs. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Fred  Hamich  of  St 
Paul  who  have  been  visiting  rela- 
tive* In  the  Weat  end  for  a  few  da)"*, 
\rtx   y*'»terday  for   their   home. 

Mission  services  are  being  conducted 
at  the  Hwftdish  Mlaalon  church.  Twen- 
ty-tlr»t  avenue  wtnl  and  Third  street. 
Rev.  J.  J.  Daniels  Is  being  aaslsted  by 
a  number  of  speaker*  from  out  of  the 
city.  Services  will  be  held  tonight  and 
tomorrow  n»»)mlng.  afternoon  and  eve- 
ning. 

Olson  tk  Hoppenyan.  undertakers. 
2014  West  Superior  street.     Both  phone*. 

K.  C  Acherllujf  of  Hrookston  was  • 
business  visitor  In  the  West  end  yes- 
terday. 

Hev.  Carl  Vinirren  of  Minneapolis 
left  this  afternoon  for  his  borne  after 
npe.nding  a  day  visiting  at  thu  home 
of  Rev.  Swaney  Nelson.  2212  West 
Third    street. 

Albert  Thompson  returned  yester- 
day after  spending  a  weke  visiting 
relatives  at  Barnuin.  Minn. 

Modern  shoe  repairing  at  Economy 
Shoe  Works.  204  2«th  A.  W.  A.  Tlioren. 

CLOQUET  WOTES. 

Cloquet.  Minn..  April  «. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Cieorg:e,  who  has 
been  vlailing  Mr.  and  Mr.t.  John  Lev- 
fnRS,  returned  to  her  hona«  at  "3au 
Claire,    Wis.,    ye.sterday. 

The  CloQuet  Mothers'  club  will  hold 
a     regular     monthly     meeting     in     the 


MEMORIAL  ADDRESSES 
ARE  TO  BE  PRINTED 

fnm  TlM*^N«raM  WMftliifltM   IwMt. 
Washington.  April  8. — The  house  to- 
day    passed     a     reaolutlon     authorizing 
tho    printing    of    1»,600    copies    of    the 
Henry  Mower  Rice  memorial,  contain- 


HEALTH 


Take    Hood's   Sarsaparilla,  the  Old 
Reliable  Spring  Tonic. 

Don't  let  tT\e  *<lea  that  you  may 
feel  better  In  a  day  or  two  prevent 
y<»u  from  getting  a  bottle  of  Hood's 
Sarsaparilla  today  from  any  drug  store 
and  sUtrting  at  once  on  the  road  to 
health  and  strenBtb. 

When  youi*  blood  le  Impure  and , 
impoverished  it  lacka  vitality,  your, 
digestion  U  imperfect,  your  appetite  i 
Is  poor,  and  all  the  functions  of  yourj 
body  are  Unpaired. 

Hood's   Sarsaparilla   Is   a   wonderful ' 
blood    tontc.      It    will    build    you    up  I 
onlcker  than  any  other  medicine.     It  \ 
gives    strength    to    do    and    power    to : 
endure.      It  U,  the   old  standard   tried  | 
and     true     ail-the-year-round     blood , 
purifier  and  enrlcher,  tonic  and  appe- 
tiser.     Nothing    else    acts    like    !t,    for 
nothing  else  has  the  same  formula  or 
ingredients.      Be     sure      to     ajHk      for 
Hood's;  Inlitet^on  having  It. 


Several  applications  for  hotel  licenses 
under  the  new  ordinance  will  be  rec- 
ommended for  rejection,  according  to 
Commissioner  Silberateln.  head  of  the 
safety    division. 

Preliminary  reports  made  by  the  po- 
lice and  the  health  department  on  the 
applications  filed  during  the  last  week 
indicate  that  several  of  the  hotels 
are  Insanitary  and  that  when  they 
come  up  before  the  commissioners,  the 
^fetv  head  win  recommend  their  re- 
J^;fi'on.*''jS.t  which    hotels   these   are 

So%nSl?'-*  dJ^Urlni'^fh^t  \V%"ep?.5;s 
Tre^^complete'  but  that  at  le"t  one 
or  two  will  be  turned  down  next  Moa- 

'^^•rWenty-two  more  applications  were 
^•loX^-iiire  yesterday  noon,  making  a 
filed    since    ye»i«-«v»~j       aiviv-flvp  since 

'  5;iri''„„"o„'°.'"^.)ority  .f  the  .p.ll- 
vl^V-  will  be  taken  at  the  council 
MoiSay  M  a Yarg*  number  of  the  re- 
Dor^  will  be  completed  by  that  time. 
The  P^  cp  and  health  off  ctals  are 
making  thorough  Investigations,  the 
yjSiTr  department  having  detailed 
[h^  speclkl    officers    to    prepare    the 

"^'tiSei  licenses  will  cost  |5  a  year 
and  can  be  granted  only  by  the  coun- 
clL 


ARGUMENTS  RESUMED 
THE  LORIMER  CASE 


HAIK   BALSAM 

A  t/)il*t  pr«p>r*tlun  of  mdriL 

I!h1p«  to  •nkdlo«t«  dandruff. 

For  R«stori&c  Color  aiid 

BeantrteGmy  or  Faded  Hair 

60a  and  SLOP  at  Druc^iau. 


I     DAY  IN  CONGRESS 


X  SRX.ITEL 

X       Resaaied   defcale   on   army   rear-  * 

He  gaalsatlon   bill.  ^ 

£  uocgrc  w 

«  Rivera  «ad  luirfcwrM  approjrta-  * 
£  ttoa    bill    dlMCuanlaa    eantlaued.  ij 

^  grcretary  Baker  o*  the  war  de-  « 
^  parimrnt  appeared  before  mlU-  J 
^  tary  aub-commlttee.  * 

May  naae   K»4»we<l  liifcrarlea. 

La  CroB.se,  Wis..  April  8.— .Tudge  Hlg- 
bv  yesterday  refused  to  grant  a  writ 
of  mandamus  compelling  ^Jhe  city- 
treasurer  to  pay  over  to  the  library 
board  S6.000  appropriated  by  the  city 
council  for  the  support  of  the  Hbranr 
on  the  ground  that   the  charter  llnUts 


Chicago.  April  8. — Argument  on  mo- 
tions to  quash  seven  counts  in  the  In- 
dictment charging  William  Lorimer, 
former  president  of  the  La  Salle  Street 
Truat  and  Savings  bank  with  conspi- 
racy to  defruad  in  connection  with  the 
failure  of  the  bank  in  li»1.4  was  re- 
sumed today.  Eighteen  counts  have 
already  been  dismissed  as  duplicates  of 
otlier  counts  in  the  Indictment. 

Two  embezzlement  counts  the  de- 
fense has  annouwced  It  will  not  at- 
tempt   to    have    dlsosissed. 

It  is  expected  the  first  witness  for 
tho  defense  will  be  heard  on  Monday. 

TOO  MUCH  SWEETNESS 
FOR  NEW  YORK  COUPLE 

New  York.  April  «. — Miss  Margaret 
O'Leary  was  walking  past  a  Third 
avenue  bakery  last  night  just  as  a 
truckman  was  unloading  a  hogshead  of 


molasses.      The    barrel    burst    and    the     > 

youn^r   woman  was  engulfed  almost  to  '^ 

I  her  sliee  tops.     When  she  tried  to  pass 

on   her  feet  stuck   to   the   sidewalk.      A 

youth  who  went  to  her  assistance  lifted 

!  her  bodily  out  of  the   molasses  but  he 

I  stumbled  and  both  fell  into  the  sticky 

stream. 
i      At     this    juncture,     the    police     were 
:  called   upon   fur  aid.   A  patrolman  was 
I  sent  to  the  rescue  and  bridged  the  mo- 
lasses     with      a      plank.        The      board 
dammed  the  stream  and  perched  upon 
It    the    officer    dragged    to    safety    the 
young   woman   and    her  would-lM   res- 
cuer. 


Barr«w«   Citrl   Marrlea. 

Bralnerd.  Miim..  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Rev.  F.  W.  Hill,  pastor 
uf  the  Methodist  church  in  Bralnerd, 
ofTlclated  at  the  wedding  of  Miss  Er- 
nestene  Bailey,  daughter  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  C.  E.  Bailey  of  Barrows,  and  Earl 
Flansburg  of  St.  Mathlas.  at  the  Meth- 
odist church  In  Barrows.  Miss  Evelyn 
Bailey,  sister  of  the  bride,  was  brldea- 
mald  and  Ralph  Reld  of  Bralnerd  waa 
best  man. 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE     | 


^  ■■ 


'j 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


BLACK  SHEEP 
SENTENCED 

'^Ralph  H.  Miller"  Sent  to 

Reformatory  for  Theft 

of  $1,600. 


Judge  Shields  Parents  From 
Disgrace  Brought  By 
Wayward  Son. 


0  nvKoi 


— n 


pai»«. 


To  thost  v.ho  hnvfj  known  him  na  a 
luwbr-Rktr.  Ituli-h  H.  Mlllor.  tl-lt- 
pookft  Hiiil  orot.k.  was  Kentvnc«-d  this 
moriilnt  to  «n  iMdtttrinlnale  term  of 
net  iiuro  than  ti-n  years  behind  the 
bars  >tt  th«  St.  <'lou«1  jtrfurniatory.  Uut 
to  JudKo  Dancer  and  to  two  other  men, 
vkho  kruw  and  shared  Iiis  femt.  the 
81. n  of  it  hiuhly  respected  family  stood 
di.HKruffd  b^for^B  th«  court.  And  for 
the  sake  of  tlio.^e  who  iire  conmcteVl 
witlJ  Miliar  by  ties  of  Wlood,  his  true 
nani«\  tfiough  known  to  the  court,  will 
hv  k»-i>t  out  of  the  <<>urt  rfcords.  The 
fa.Miny  will  b<-  jipared  further  hunillla- 
lit.i-    J.r   (ll.-Kiace. 

Milhr  will  bf  rrin*  inlicred  as  the 
vouMK  man  who  ^d  diftly  i»ll<v«<l  S.  I.. 
"K.ii  iuit,  trt  a.xun  r  of  tli«-  l>uh«th  Street 
Hxllwav  .•om|.an^,  of  Jl.OOO  in  an  .U - 
vai'r  In  tlu'  Fir.vt  National  biink  Kulld- 
InK  in  tills  <lty  oti  S.pt.  2:,  la.'-t.  He 
wa.s  vitli  two  Kther  nn-n  who  e.maped. 
Mill' r  did  not  have  the  in«>n<y  when 
he  wn.s  arre.'<ted  and  tlie  fl.fiOO  was 
never  r«tov<iid.  Uhm  Mr.  Kelchert 
niis.>-»d  hi.«  wallti,  he  Krahbfd  Miller 
who.  he  rein<-nil)ereil,  bad  Jo.«lled  him 
wiuii  he  .nMTfd  the  rUvatnr. 
Ilv-nlrd    New    Trial. 

On  Dec  1  l:i.st.  .Milhr  was  brouRht 
to  trial  f><  for*'  Judu*-  n«n<<i-  and  a 
Jury  found  him  Ruilty  of  the  crime  of 
grand  larceny  in  the  K<c<md  deRiee 
His  atlorn»y,  Walter  F.  Daeey,  moved 
for  a  new  trial,  but  the  motion  was  de- 
nied and  Mi'.ler's  case  was  brought  on 
for  St  nl»nce  yesterday  nfterno<m. 
Mernbera  of  his  family  ai.peared  before 
Judgr-  Dancer  b«  fore  the  eK.«e  was 
taken  up  and  aft.r  a  leuRthy  e«.nfer- 
en<  p.  It  was  decided  to  postpone  action 
until    this    mnrnlnpr. 

Judpre  l»atic(  1-  lister  '1  to  the  ploa  of 
the  brother,  father  and  stepmother  of 
the  wayward  bny  for  leniency.  They 
told  him  the  whole  story.  It  was  a 
«tory  of  heartaches  and  <ilsappolnt- 
mcnt".  They  feared  going  baek  to 
th-lr  home  elty  In  MlehlKan  and  fac- 
ing their  frlcnd.s  should  the  newspapers 
puhli.-h  lli<  true  nam.-  of  the  young 
man. 

Soerel    Is   Safe. 

But  .lo«ln«  Danc.-r  a^.-urtd  th«ni  that 
with  him  ihtlr  H.er.  l  was  safe.  This 
one.  uiiiiappy,  teur-stained  page  In  the 
family  history  will  remain  unr'ad — at 
least  so  far  as  .lu-lgc  fJaiu  ci-  is  con- 
cerned. Th  •  yojng  man's  fatlor  Is  a 
profe.tslooal  min  of  liluli  stan<linK.  Ml.* 
name,  of  course,  is  not  Miller.  Hut  h-- 
satisfied  Juilge  Dancer  that  he  was  a 
worthy    man. 

The  father  tohl  th"  Judge  that  a  few 
years  ago  when  the  boy's  mother  died 
the  h<ime  was  temporarily  broken  up. 
The  voung  man  went  to  live  with  his 
brotln  r,  hut  finally  broke  away  from 
all  home  Influenees  and  fell  Into  evil 
eompariv.  Then  he  joined  a  circus. 
\v'ithln  tlie  hist  two  years  he  has  been 
plriving  confidence  gamcis.  For  a  time 
he  "travel. ,1  with  U.  J.  Murphy,  alias 
Ulchard     Kaveniiugh.    notorious    crook. 

rn<l.r  the  n.ime  of  Milhr.  the  pris- 
oner, who  Is  only  24.  ban  a  record  of 
.•■rrcst.^,  fines,  convictions  and  st  n- 
temes  extending  over  a  p'Tlod  of  two 
years.  The8.»  «>ffen«es  were  8U<h  as 
♦iliort-chanerinw:  pa.«sengers  on  railroad 
trains  an  1   pocket  pit  kitig. 

The  two  other  n\en  who  know  and 
share  Miller's  secret  with  .ludge 
Dancer  n  re  Walter  F.  Daecy  and 
Tounly  Attorney  Warren  K.  <;reene. 
Mr.  «;r.  ene  stated  in  <ourt  this  morn- 
ing that  he  had  no  recomnn-ndatlons 
to  make  to  th«  court  as  to  the  dlsp*)- 
sltlon  of  the  case.  Mr.  Daeey  asked 
the  court  to  exercise  as  mvuh  lenlen«-y 
as  pos.'^lble  and  pl<  adcd  for  a  refor- 
matory  rather  than   a   penitentiary  sen- 

ttnoe. 

Will   Mend   \^  ayn. 

MllUr  wa.s  u.-,ked   if   lie  had  anything 


RALPH  H.  MILLER. 


to    say    before    sentence    was    passed. 

"Well.  '  he  said.  "notMiig  except  that 
I  havo  determined  to  live  right  from 
here  on.  When  I  gut  out  I'm  going  to 
straighten    up"  ^        ,,. 

Miller  told  the  court  that  he  did 
not  U8f  tobacco  or  Intoxicating  liq- 
uors. He  presented  a  fine  appearance 
before    the    court. 

Judge  Dancer  told  hint  that  he  would 
n..i  require  that  hl.^  true  name  he 
I<iactfd  on  the  re<ord,  although  It  was 
known  to  the  court.  He  HdviSid  M  1- 
ler  to  trv  to  take  his  punishment  like 
a  man  and  to  come  out  determined 
to  live  right.  He  advised  him  not  to 
try  to  deceive  the  r<  formatory  au- 
thorities, because  they  never  were  de- 
ceived   by    false    appearances. 

No  matter  what  you  want.  It  wjll 
save  vou  time  and  mon'>y  If  you  will 
use    t'HL:    lU:itAI.D-S    WANTS. 


TRUSTEE'S  SALE 

I  will  sell  for  cash  to  the  highest 
bidder,  that  certain  stock  of  groceries, 
etc.,  belonging  to  the  bankrupt  estate 

°  ~H.  G.  RICHARDSON 

2224  Tower  Ave.,  Superior,  Wis. 
Sale  to  take  place  on  Monday.  April 
10,    1916,   at    10    a.    m.,    at   the   store 
building. 

Inventory  may  be  inspected  at  631 
Manhattan  building.  Duluth. 

Sale  subject  to  the  approval  of  the 

court. 

C.  W.  GUNDERSON,  Trustee. 


probably  the  latter  part  of  this  month. 
I  Th«  1mprov»m»nt  will  be  (  ushsd  to  an 
earlv  eonjpletlon.  ho  said,  as  there  will 
bo  Jio  let-up  untlh  th«  extension  l« 
completed.  Three  new  cars  have  *1- 
roHdy  been  ordered  and  will  be  here 
this  month  ready  fo-  service  on  the 
Morgan  Turk  llnv,  h«  told  Iho  conunls- 

slonvrs.  . 

Help  Mlth   Bridge    Fills. 
Arrangements    wero    made    by    Presi- 
dent   Hoberteon.   Manager   Warren   and 
t'ommlsttluner   Farrell    to   co-operate    In 
the  removal  of  dirt  and  the  making  of 
fills  for  tho  extension,  while  the  coiri- 
pany     officials     agreed     to     assist     the 
works  division  In  Its  program  of  mak. 
log     fills    underneath     all    the    wooden 
,  bridges    of    the    city.      This    announce- 
1  ment   proved   especially   pleasing  to  the 
rommlsHloners.    as    It    wll    aid    the    city 
considerably   In   handling   the   Improve, 
ment    plans    outlined    for   this    year. 

When  asked  about  the  proposed 
Ninth  street  extension  over  t'hester 
creek.  President  Robertson  ann»)unced 
that  It  Is  being  considered  favorably 
and  that  the  program  will  be  carried 
out  In  all  probability  as  soon  as  a 
bridge  Is  constructed  by   the  oJiy. 

With     regard     to     better     service     for 
street    ear    patrons,    Mr.    Robertson    an- 
nounced   that    an    «xpert    Is    now    here 
going  over  the  schedules  and  .oiillning 
,H    more    complete    and     thorougn    pro- 
igram.  which  will  be  put  Into  operation 
•  In    th«     near    future.      Those    lines    with 
light    schedules    will    be    given     better 
service     to     meet     the     public     demand, 
he  told  the  t  ommlssloners. 

l)oMnto«vn  "Loop." 
During  the  conference  the  proposed 
fstabllshing  of  a  downtown  "h'op 
was  brought  up.  but  nothing  dertnlte 
was  said  by  the  company  officials. 
Mr.  Uobertson  declared  that  the  -loop 
In  Minneapolis  has  provtd  a  trenu- 
d«»us  success  and  that  such  a  program 
might  be  carried  out  In  Duluth  in  tho 
near  futur<'.  The  congestion  on  Su- 
perior street.  It  was  generally  con- 
ceded bv  those  present,  must  be 
r«  midi«d'  before  Duluth  grows  mu<  h 
larger  and  Indications  are  that  a 
downtown  "loop"  will  be  established 
h.  re  within  a  few  years.  The  plan 
ntost  favored  and  one  that  has  been 
recommended  on  many  occasions  Is  to 
have  the  "loop"  extend  from  Mesaba 
av«-nue  -and  Supc-rlor  street  east  to 
Third  avenue*  cast,  up  the  avenue  to 
First  street,  west  to  M<  saba  avenue 
and  then  down  that  aventie  to  .<5upe- 
rlor  street,  completing  the  circle.  This 
plan,  It  was  explained,  would  r<  lleve 
the  congestion  at  Third  avenue-  east 
and   Sup«  rU  r  street. 

"We  want  to  co-operate  with  the 
rlty  In  every  possible  way,"  Mr.  Rob- 
ertson told  the  commissioners,  ".ind 
to  work  In  harmony  and  Mith  a 
fri.'.idly   spirit   at  all    times." 


ALLIES  WILL 

CONFER  AGAIN 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


NEW  POSTMASTERS. 

Frsm  TM  HtraN  Wiikiniton  Biriai. 
Wasliington.  April  8.  The  president 
has  nominated  the  following  Minne- 
sota postmasters:  John  H.  Anderson. 
Hutterlleld:  Thomas  D.  lay.  '^''>",t 
Charles;  <'.  J.  Reagan.  Appleton;  H.  .1. 
Fssler.  .St.  Peter;  W.  K.  Vf^^y.^.V!!' ^V®"" 
son;  ().  J.  Ren.  Tracy;  Alth-  Hill,  Daw- 
son; M  H.  Raskdeld,  Zumbrota;  N.  .1. 
Knqulst.  Isanti;  J.  M.  Ihnson.  I'lnd- 
strom;  Robert  M.  Mills.  Maple  IMaln; 
W.  .J.  Struble.  Mora;  Peter  W.  Corrlc. 
MurrlBtown;  A.  L.  Rthhert.  Red  Lake 
Fa  11.1. 


passage    from    the    state-    of   war    to    the 
<tate-    of   pencf. 

3.  Reparation  of  war  damage.^. 

4.  Iteductlon  of  postal,  telegraphic 
;  and  telephone  rates  amcmg  the-  allied 
I  countries. 

6.  Agreements  relative  to  the  Inter- 
'  national    transport   of    goods. 

6.  «'reallon  c>f  an  international  pat- 
ent office. 

7.  The  rommerclnl  regime  of  the  col- 
onies   of   the    allied    eotintrles. 

8.  Internationalization  of  laws  con- 
e-ernlng  stork   companies. 

?.  Measures  Intended  to  reduce  me- 
tallic clrculailon  through  an  Interna- 
tlomil  chamber  of  cc>mptn8atl'»n  an<l 
postal    check   system. 

10.  ITnlform  principles  to 
scribed  in  tho  laws  relative 
d' signal  lc<n   of  merchandise. 

11.  Failures. 

12.  Le.(lst  itlon     regarding 


{ 

1 

* 

^ 

» 

1 

ANNOUNCEMENT 

1  winh  to  ii.f«»rm  the  pulilic  IHat 
I  Iia%e  n«<iulred  the  her»leea  of  llr. 
K(aiile>  11.  ilrniit.  u  grndnntr  of  \a- 
tlonnl  School  of  <'IUroprartle,  <hl- 
cago.  Office  hours!  9:30  to  SKIO  and 
7  to  H  r\cniiiKM|  SiindiiyM,  O  «.  ">•**» 
12.  I'hoiie.  4;ran«l  IHm-\.  Mr.  W .  II. 
KoiiUler,   50  l-.l   (olomliln    Ilulldlng. 


be      In- 
to   false 


the     loss 


and  theft  of  bonds  payable  to  bearer. 

MEXICANSTHfNKUNiTED 
STATES   TROOPS    HAVE 
.ACCOMPLISHED  OBJECT 
AND  SHOULD  WITHDRAW 

(Continued    from    page    I.) 


FLOOD  CONDITIONS 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


i 


r^ 


SI 


has  been  steady 
adn  rapid.  Modern 
niethcjds,  superior 
facilities,  courte- 
ous treatment,  of- 
ficers who  have 
tho  confidence  of 
t  h  e  community, 
and  large  re- 
sources have  been 
big  factors  in  this 
bank  attaining  its 
present  strong  po- 
sition. 

We  invite  the  ac- 
counts of  individ- 
uals, merchants, 
manufac  t  u  r  i  n  g 
concerns,  etc. 

AMERICAN 

EXCHANGE 

NATIONAL 

BANK 


=i— 


I 


j-- 


rivers  are  Just  out  of  water  and  »reat 
Quantities  of  debris  are  being  piled 
against    them,    threatening  their  safety. 

The  crest  of  the  flood  I.h  expected 
h-re    Sunday    night    or    Monday. 

St  I'aul  Is  the  only  noint  above 
here  which  shows  a  dedinu  In  the 
stage   today. 

-  ♦  ■■ 

Stationary  at   Winona. 

Winona,  Minn.,  Ai.ril  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— The  Mississippi  river  at 
this  point  was  at  a  standstill  at  16.2 
feet  above  low  water  mark  today  and 
from  now  on  Is  expected  to  fall.  Trav- 
el Is  cut  off  between  Wl.sce.nsin  points 
and  Wii.ona  except  by  rail  as  tho  wa- 
ter has  washed  out  the  approaches  to 
the  high  wagon  bridge  to  this  city  for 
a  stretch  itt  several  hundred  feet.  Men 
arc-  stationed  at  either  .side  of  the 
bridge  to  warn  travelers  of  the  dan- 
g«-r. 

The  work  done  by  the  llurllngtor' 
railway  In  strengthening  Its  roadbed 
where  seepage  developed  yesterday 
afternoon  has  prove'd  effecllvo  and 
trains  are  running  as  usual  today. 

Much  damage  has  be»-n  done  In  the 
low  portion.^  of  the  city.  The?  entlije 
swltc  h  yards  of  the  Northwestern  rail- 
road are  under  from  two  to  five  fee:?t 
of  water. 


SPIRIT  OF  CO-OPERATION 
WITH  CITY  EVIDENCED 
BY  TR.^CTION  COMPANY 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


Immediately  accepted  the  Invitation 
and  tiie  meeting  was  held  at  10  o'clock 
this  morning. 

Hearty    for   Rxtenslon. 

During  the  discussion  Mr.   Itobertson 

announced     that     active     work     on     the 

Morgan     Park     extension     would     atart 

juttt   aa   soon   as    weather   will    permit, 


•*f 


If  Or(Jinary  Rubber 
Heels  Please   You 

'eimbachs 

\RubberHeel 

Will  Doubly 
Please  You. 
Interchangeable 


CAUSE  OF 
CATARACTS 

nmong  welders  was  traced  to 
tho  violet  and  Infra  red  rays. 

^\t  Wm.  Crooks  discovered  a 
lense  that  prevents  these  rays 
from  entering  the  eyes. 

Crooks'  lenses  look  like  white 
lenses.  We  grind  them  In  our 
own  .shop  . 


ZOP^^'^^' 


29  W«st  SupeHor  ttr«ttt. 


tor  transportation  with  necessary  civil- 
ian personnel  as  may  he  ree|uired. 

"You  are  Instructed  to  make  all  prac- 
ticable use  of  tho  aeroplanes  at  fan 
Antonio  for  observation.  Telegraph  for 
whatever  reinforcements  or  material 
you  need.  Notify  this  eifflce  as  to  force 
sedected  and   expedite   movement." 

Hrlg.-Oen.  Scott.  <hlef  of  staff,  de- 
clared today  that  «Jen.  Funslon  had 
not  yet  reported  that  this  task  hud 
been   accompll.-hed. 

The  Mexican  embassy  today  an- 
nounced that  no  advlc-es  had  been  re- 
ceived from  (Jen.  Carranza  that  the  de- 
facto  government  forces  were  prepared 
or  desired  to  relieve  American  troops 
and  assume  tho  task   Itself. 

Oe  n  .'?cott  would  express  no  oidnlon 
as  to"  whether  he  be-ile-ved  the  orders 
to   <;en.    Funston    had   bc-cn    completely 

carried  out. 

« 

Villa   Near  Parrai. 

El  Paso,  Tex..  April  8.— Information 
from  Mexican  sources  today  said  that 
Francisco  Villa  had  reached  the 
environs  of  Parrai  and  had  sent  emis- 
saries Into  the  town  to  test  the  spirit 
of  the  garrison  and  also  to  secure* 
provisions.  No  verification  was  pos- 
sible, but  the  fact  that  tho  bandit 
was  reliably  reported  to  have  been 
only  fifty-five  miles  from  Parrul  two 
days   ago   gave  color   to   the   story. 

Bxpeeted  to   lOnd   Itamora. 

Washington,    April    8.— OfTlclal    denial 

of  persistent  reports  that  the  de   facto 

'  government    of    Mexlccj    had    asked    for 

i  withdrawal    of    the    American      troops 

was  expected   here  today  to  set  at  rest 

all    such    rumors.  .      ,      ,,        , 

Secretary  I^anslng  emphatically  de« 
clared  that  no  such  re-cjue  st  had  been 
made,    formally    or    otherwise. 

State    and    war    department    ofTlcials 
said   there   was   no   truth    In   border   re- 
ports that  Oeneral  Carranzn   had  given 
the    liilted    States    a    certain    time    In 
which      to      withdraw      the      American 
forces    and    that    16.000    t'arranza    sol- 
diers  were    massed   Just    bel<nv    the    in- 
ternational   boundary    line. 
»       — 
Natlvea    Aiding. 
Washington,    April    8.— <Jen.    F\»nston 
today   reported   to   the  war  departnient 
that   natives  were  beginning   to  aid   In 
secret    scouting    work    for    Oen.    Persh- 
ing m  tho  Santa  Maria  valley  and  that 
Col.     Hrown.     of     the     Tenth     cavalry, 
stated   that   high   winds   had   Ititerfered 
with      aeroplane      communication.      He 
wired       concerning       the       four       men 
wounded   at  Guerrero   as   follows: 

"Wounded     of     the     Seventh     cavalry 
very    slight,    not    considered    enough    to 
report:    practically    all    healed    now." 
The    names    of    the     men     were    not 

given. 

»      — 

On   Preali  Trail  of  Villa. 

Kxpedltlonary  Field  Headquarters, 
South  of  Namlcjulpa,  April  5,  (by  aero- 
phine  and  wireless  to  Columbus,  N. 
Mex.,  April  8.) — The  American  troops 
are  on  a  fresh  trail  of  Villa  as  the 
result  of  reports  made  by  an  army 
aviator  and  observer  who  returned 
today  fre)m  what  may  prove  one  of 
the  most  Important  scouting  flights 
of  the  campaign. 

WIRE  ENTANGLEMENTS 
FOR  CANADIAN  BORDER 


Said  the  Critic- 


"Give  us  TRACTION, 


without  Friction!" 


WHEN  there  arose,  in  the  Tire  Industry,  a  sound  of 
Many  Voices,— each  clamoring  that  its  Owner  had 
the  very  best  **Non-Skid"  design  that  ever  did  happen 
on  a  Tire,  our  Professional  Critic  said,  with  much  Chuckle,— "Give 
uaTrsLction  without  Friction  V* 

We  are  glad  to  have  i^iet  that  * 'Poser"  more  than  half-way. 
Here's  how  and  why. 

Makers  of  "Non-Skid"  Tires,  in  a  mad  effort  to  produce  maxi- 
mum Traction,  have  done  the  very  natural  thing  of  being  too  sue- 
cessful 

Too  successful  in  gaining  Traction,  not  merely  through  "Non- 
Skid"  designs,  but  through  providing  a  sandpapery  texture  in  Tire 
Tread  Rubber  which  grinds  against  the  pavement,  wearing  out  as  it 

grinds. 

Of  course  ffueh  Treads  HAD  to  be  made  very  thick,  and  the 
Tires  very  HEAVY,  in  order  not  to  wear  out  too  soon  under  such 
constant  grinding,  with  such  constant  strain  on  the  Rubber  Adhesive 
between  the  many  layers  of  Fabric  in  their  necessarily  cumbrous 
construction.  -  ,     ^ 

Of  course,  such  Tires  were  heavy  in  that  part  of  the  Car  below 
the  Springs  w^here  Engineers  say  that  every  pound  of  weight  counts 
as  more  than  twenty  pounds  placed  above  the  springs. 

But  beyond  all  this,  their  great  thickneas,  the  many  lavers  of 
Fabric,  and  the  sfoj^f  Tread  of  gritty,  sandpapery.  Rubber,  made  them 
naturally  8^(#;  unyielding,  hard  to  bend,  and  co«/orm  where  obstacles 
were  struck,— hard  to  drive  with  moderate  power,— and  slow  to  coast 
downhills  (which  proved  all  this).  ,.11.^. 

The  intention  was  good,  but  the  res^dt  was  a  relatively  hot, 
stiff.  Tire,  with  a  Traction-wave  to  overcome  that  went  far  toward 
boosting  the  Sales  of  Gasolene. 

Well, — 

—Making  the  Silvertown  Cord  Tire,  taught  us  a  few  lessons 
in  the  manufacture  of  lighter,  cooler,  more  flexible  and  enduring 
FABRIC  Tires. 


T 


^HE  "Silvertown"  Tire,  you  know,  gains  its  marvellous 

Speed  (and  the  Coasting  iiualities  that  demomtrate  its 

Speed)  primarily  through  having  only   TWO  layers  of 

Cords,  laid  transversely.  ,.1    .1.      t^-      o- 

Of  course,  these  TWO  layers  lend  more  readily  than  Five,  Six, 
or  Seven  Layers  of  Fabric  do  (or  of  Cord  would).  ^    .» .,. 

But,  we  found  it  necessary,  in  order  to  conserve  that /r^a;tmZifi/ 
(in  the  Two-cord  construction),  to  put  a  Rubber  Tread  over  it 
•which  was  equally  flexible,— equally  strong,— Sind  elastic  enough  to  act 
as  a  sort  ot  spring  between  the  Earth  and  the  Tire-casing,  when 
Brakes  were  thrown  on  at  stopping,  or  clutch  thrown  in  at  starting. 

So,  we  had  to  devise  practically  a  nciv  kind  of  Rubber, -tor 
this  purpose  TWO  YEARS  AGO.  ^       ^  , ,     .. 

This  new  type  of  black  "Barefoot  Rubber"  now  does  for 
GOODRICH  Tires  a  work  similar  to  that  done  by  the  wonderful 
Alloys  of  Steel  and  Bronze  in  modern  Motor  Car  construction. 

It  multiplies  Rubber  Efficiency,  for  Tire  purposes,  while  decreas- 
ing its  Weight,  and  without  increasing  its  Bulk,  or  its  Cost  to  you. 


A 


NOTICE. 

"Vo  Concrrn  in  Arafrica'mad*, 
or  sold,  during  its  latest  fiscal  year, 
nearly  bo  many  MotorCar  Tiren  t» 
did  The  B.  F.  Goodrich  Co. 

"Our  published  C  haUcnge,  ttiU 
uoar.&wcred,  proves  tbU." 


J 


S  we  cannot  yet  supply  half  the  demand  for  "Silvertown 
Cord  Tires     (until  enough  manufacturing  equipment 

^  ^«_  can  be  constructed)  we  decided  to  use  this  wonderfully 
efficient  black  "Barefoot  Rubber"  in  all  Goodrich  FABRIC  Tires  for 
1916. 

This  makes  them  the  most  Resilient  and  Re?ponsive-to-Power, 
—the  most  Long-Lived  and  Lively,  of  all  FABRIC  Tires,  at  ANY 
price, — without  increasing  their  price  to  you. 

We  call  this  new  Hyper-Rubber  by  the  name  and  brand  of 
"Barefoot  Rubber." 

Because,  it  CLINGS  to  the  pavement  for  the  same  sort  of 
reason  that  your  bare  foot  clings  to  a  slippery  floor,  while  being  flex- 
ible, stretchy,  springy,  and.  light.  „  , ,     „ 

TENACIOUS,   resilient,  enduring,  this  "Barefoot  Rubber 
you  today  get  in  all  black  tread  Goodrich  Fabric  Tires,— Goodrich 
Motor-Cycle  Tires  —Goodrich  Truck  Tire^— Goodrich  Bicycle  Tires 
--Goodrich  Rubber  Boots,  Overshoes,  Soles  and  Heels,  and  in  none 
!>«/ GOODRICH  products.  ,       ^ 

Get  a  Sliver  of  it  from  your  nearest  Goodrich  Dealer  s  or  Branch. 
Stretch  it  thousands  of  times,  but  break  it  you  can't. 

Then  test  out  a  pair  of   these  very  moderately   priced  black 

tread  FABRIC  Tires,  and  see  I  ^     ^^^^,^.r  ^^ 

THE  B.  F.  GOODRICH  CO. 


GOODRICH 


Akron,  Ohio, 


\ 


Tires 


Toronto.  Ont.,  April  8. — Barbed  wire 
entangh  ments  will  be  erected  along  a 
portion  of  tho  frontier  of  Canada  In 
the  neighborhood  of  the  electric  plant 
at  N'lagaru  Falls,  It  was  announced 
yesterday,  after  a  conference  of  IJrlg.- 
Otn.  Logle,  with  1'.  W.  Ellis,  chairman 
of  the  Niagara  Fall.-?  I'ark  commission 
and  J-  !'•  Jackson,  park  superintend- 
ent. 

The  area  of  tho  park  about  the  plant 
win  be  closed  to  the  public.  The  pres- 
ent armed  guard  will  he  Increased  and 
no  one  will  be  allowed  to  approach  or 
enter  tho  restricted  area  wttliout  a 
pass  Klectrlc  lights  will  lllufnlnate 
the  fence  at  night,  and  Ptrcet  cars  will 
be  escorted  through  the  enclosures  un- 
der armed  guard. 


TURKISH  WARSHIP 
IN  THE  BLACK  SEA 


IVtrograd,    via    London.      April      8. — 
News   of  the  sudden  appt-arance   of  tlie 
former   German   cruiser   Hreslau    In    the 
Black   s.a     which   It   has   been   assumed 
was  completely  under  Russian  control; 
the    Turkish    cruiser's    short    and    Inef- 
fectual   duel    with    a    Ilussliin    warship 
and  her  subsequent  disappearance,  was 
received    hero    with    consld'-rable    sur- 
prise      It   was  stated,  however,   that  tho 
Hussian  fleet,   which  was  guarding  the 
entrance    to    the      Bosporus    from     tho 
lUack   sea.   has  been   compelled   by    the 
'  necesHlty    of    concentrating    elnf-where, 
'temporarily     to     relax     their     vigilance 
and    thus    permit    the    Bre.slau    to    slip 
i  by   their  guard.     One  commentator   In- 
geniously      accounts       for     the     occur- 
'  rence  as  a  fine  piece  of  Russian  strat- 
'fgv    which    enticed    the    Turkish    war- 
'  ship  into  the  eastern  part  of  the  Black 
isea  with  the  purpose  of  preventing  her 
'return    to    Con-stantlnople    and    forcing 
'  her  to  face  Russian  naval  forces.     The 
Breslau     now     Is    apparently     cut       oft 
from   her  base   by    Ru.-!Hlan    aubmarines 
near     the     Bosporus,     which  are  show- 
ing   great    activity,    and    it    is    thought 
the    cruiser    will    eventually      be      cor- 
nered by  the  Russian  fleet. 

Wonld  Saap^nd  laiportatlonN. 

Paris  April  8. — Alexandre  Ribot, 
mil  Isfe'r  of  finance  hits  submitted  to 
parliament  a  bUl  authorizing  the  gov- 
ernment to  suspend  by  decree  the  Im- 
portation of  any  products  that  may  bo 
dispensed  with  in  order  to  diminish 
Trench   obligations  abroad.     The   pur- 


pose   of    this  Irglnlatlon    Is   to   Improve 
the  foreign  exchange  situation. 

AUSTRIAN  TRANSPORT 
SUNK  BY  FRENCH  BOAT 

Paris,  Aj.riJ  8.— It  was  officially  an- 
nounced today  that  a  French  subma- 
rine has  sunk  an  Austrian  transport  in 
the  Adriatic. 


STOP! 

HERE  IT  IS  CHEAP! 

Modern  7-room  home.  Hunt- 
er's Park,  1823  Wallace  Ave. 


eral    were    wrecked,    skidding    on    slip- 
pery pavements. 

The  final  break  in  the  conferences 
between  «)fficlal8  of  the  traction  com- 
pany and  union  officials  came  early 
today.  The  company  refused  to  con- 
cede the  closed  shop  policy,  the  right 
of  the  men  to  wear  their  union  but- 
tons while  on  duty  and  the  privilege 
which  the  union  demand^'d  of  rein- 
statement of  men  discharged  by  the 
company. 


THOUSANDS  WALK  IN 
DRIVING  SNOW  STORM 


Toledo.  Ohio.  April  8.— WMth  pros- 
pects of  settlement  of  the  street  car 
tieup  more  remote  than  ever,  thou- 
sands of  people  walked  to  work  this 
morning  in  a  driving  snowstorm.  The 
hundreds  of  motor  buses  pressed  Into 
service  were  wholly  inadequate.     Sev- 


THREE  SUFFOCATED 

IN  FIRE  IN  DETROIT 

Detroit,  Mich..  April  8.— Mrs.  Lillian 
Dibler  and  her  two  young  daughters 
were  suffocated  and  two  persons  were 
Injured  todav  In  a  fire  which  swept  the 
Diebler  home.  The  mother  and  chil- 
dren were  trapped  in  a  room  on  the 
second  floor  and  although  they  were 
not  burned,  all  were  dead  when  fire- 
men reached  th'^m. 

The  cause  of  the  Are  has  not  been 
determined. 

CROOKSTON  MEETING. 

Teachers-Parents'    Association    Has 
Very  Successful  Gathering. 

Crookston.  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Crookston  Teach- 
era'-Patrons*  association  held  a  very 
Interesting  meeting  In  the  Central 
High  School  building  Thursday  eve- 
nlnir  the  third  meeting  of  the  asso- 
ciation for  tho  year.  - 

Dr.  A-  J.  Ladd  of  the  Unlverflity  of 


North  Dakota  delivered  an  excellent 
lecture  on  "The  Home,  the  School  and 
the  Church."  A  fine  musical  program 
.was  rendered  by  school  organizations. 
The  as^soclatlon  Is  proving  a  very  val- 
uable agency  In  bringing  about  har- 
monious   action    among    all    school    in- 

t  tr  1*  ^  fl  t  f 

Mrs."  Charles  M.  Lohn  is  president 
and  Mrs.   K.  H.  Spendloy  secretary. 

The  program  Thursday  evening  fol- 
lows: Selection,  high  school  orches- 
tra; "The  Twilight  Star"  (Barnby), 
high  school  girls'  glee  club;  business 
session;  vocal  solo,  "Dost  Thou  Know- 
That  Sweet  Land"  (Mignon),  Mrs.  E. 
B  Caanan;  "The  Home,  the  School  and 
the  <'hurch,'  Dr.  A.  J.  Ladd;  violin 
solo.  Miss  Eunice  Northrup. 
.* 

Twelve  Duriied  by  Metal. 

Pittsburgh.  Pa.,  April  8.— Twelve 
foreigners  were  badly  burned  at  the 
Woodlawn  Plant  of  the  Jones  &  Laugh- 
lln  Steel  company  today  when  a  ladlo 
of  hot  metal  was  accidentally  over- 
turned and  exploded.  Several  of  the 
Injured  men,  ho.spltal  authorities  aald, 
\»  .  '  .■   In   danererou.q   condition. 


DR.  MITCHELL 

ELECTRO    MAGNETIC    SPECIALIST 
SOO-801  Columbia  IluildiiiR,  Dulutli. 

Special  Diets  and  Dietetic  Advice. 

Dr.  Mitchell's  modern  up-to-date 
treatment  will  cure  you  after  all  others 
fall  Rheumatism,  paralysis,  stomach, 
kidney,  asthma,  liver,  eczema,  deaf- 
ness, spinal  diseases.  Twenty  yeari* 
practice  in  Duluth. 


r^ 


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J  ■  '■'  I     J 


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-—  L. 


,^^M»f*-  ■«»  ^'m'^^  kr* 


■»"■'  »'.»  '  ><■'»■ 


1 1  ' 


u 


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mm* 


Saturday, 


THE    DU'LUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


DRAMA  i 

COMMENT  ON  PLAYS  AND  PLAYERS 


VAUDEVILLE  §  MOTION  PICTURES 


4  ■    *  ;>  M 


=WHAT  THE  PRESS  AGENTS  PROMISE= 


SOK    months     Duluth     theater- 
trcer-  have  speculated  oil  tlie 
tK.ssihility    of    booking   road 
attractions   at    the   Orphcum 
theater.  devotiuK  the  Lyceum 

to  a  stock  company.  , 

'Ihi,   plan   ui!l  be   ^iven  a  trial  oil 
\pril  iU  uhen  Harry  Lau.k-r  will  visit 
i>ulMth     and     will     appear     with     hi, 
vau.lfville   show  at   the  Orphcum  un- 
der   I.vctum   innnaj-cinent. 

The' future  of  the  Orpheum  is  very 
,muh  in  doubt.  The  Orpheum  circuit 
is  walcliiMK  the  conditions  in  Duluth 
cl...ely.  and  it  is  confidently  believed 
by  many  well  informed  on  theatrical 
ii.aiters.  that  the  Orpheum  vaudeM  le 
will  anain  he  pr.=;entcd  "ext  fall  n 
the  meaniime  the  theater  wdl  be  kept 
open  with  moti(»n  picture  features,  ana 
an  orcasi..nal  road  attraction.  The, 
Baldwin  stock  company  will  return  toj 
the  Lyceum  on  May  7.  an.l  alter  hat 
uny  road  attractions  coming  to  Duluth 
are  likely  to  be  shifted  over  to  the 
Oriilieum, 

During  the  last  week  Manager  J. 
1  Mi.nissey  of  the  Lyceum  theater, 
acting  for  Walter  Baldwin,  secured  a 
leading  man  and  almost  secured  a 
Icadnig  woman.  Lre.l  L.  RV'^^^-T"!^"; 
the  leading  man  ot  the  Peg  o  My 
Heart"  company  signed  a  contract  t.> 
appear  with  the  BaMwin  company  as 
tlie  leading  man  during  the  summer 
season.  Mr.  Morrissey  also  ap- 
proached   Mi.ss    Florence    Martin,    the    _ 

•Peg-    of    the    <^*^"'P^">''    ^";^,,//;.;;:     ^'^Ib.rt     Xat    V.u.nK.    lUbe    La    lU-Ue.    LIU 
secure   her  .signature     o  a  ^'>»'t«^;'^^  /*.*  |  i^^.'ijpjJrriHn,   )luny   Kl.hHr.ls.,ii.  Ksch- 
a  leatling    woman.      He  was   noi   sut-    .|.  ^^.^t^jr^  ^nJ  Hub  Sturtzmun. 
cessful.  but   was  not  definitely  '"""ned  j  ^— ^-^-^^^  — 

down.     Miss  Martin  was  made  a  very  I  gJ^|£2;Y    pARGE 


attractive  offer,  so 


attractive  that  she 


hesitated   about    turning    it    down,   t>ut 

had    to    wait    ujitil    she    lound    out    the  j 

plans  of  Mr.  Morosco  for  the  summer  j 

!'ra'";^l^„',I:"'  nl'^Inllle'^'sr:;;  -|t  Rays  to  Adveptise"  Will 

which  case  Miss  Martin  will  not  be 
available.  She  frankly  admitted  she 
would  like  to  come  to  Duluth  tor 'a 
summer  of  stock,  but   it   is  not  likely 

that   she  will. 

Mr.  P.ruce-Tiden  is  expected  to 
make  a  very  popular  leading  man. 
During  the  week  he  has  been  in   Du 


COMING  TO  LYCEUM 


Be  .attraction  Beginning 
April  16. 

Taking  sunv  tlilnfi  more  Hian  a  hhit 
from  itio  "Jack  Spurlock"  atories  of 
rtv,.  or  six  yf»rs  ago,  and  a  suKKeBtlon 


During   the   week   ne   »^^''.7''   '  '    V"   Ur  two  from  h.-ro  and  th^o.  Rol  Cooper 
luih  lie  has  made  a  surprising  number   ^^,^,,_.^    .  ...  ..^^  ^.^^.^^^,  ^,^  .^i,,  ^^ 


of  friends,  and  also  a  very  favorable 

imi)ression  in  his   role  of     Jerry. 

«      «      * 

Tyceum  bookings  for  the  remainder 
of  the  season  include  "It  Pays  to  Ad- 
vertise." -His  Majesty.  Bunker  R«^an.,] 
Kdna    Munsey    in    -The     Only     Curl. 
"Omar  the  Teiitmaker."  and  two  bur- 

lesuue  shows. 

'  «      •      • 

New    Grand    patrons    are    likely    to 


Mecru  •  and  Waller  Haekett  aff  said  to 
havf  fH.<»hlonLd  In  "It  Pay*  to  Advcr- 
ll«e."  which  is  to  b»-  the  attraction  at 
tho  Lyi--uni  tM«'at«»r  Sunday.  April  16, 
for  four  niiihia,  with  Sunday  and  Wfd- 
n*»Hd.iy  inallut'ea.  another  of  those  s-ij- 
prtMiiely  ino(.l>*rn  farce*  that  awet-p  a 
!«us.-eptlbl'  Hudlt*nce  off  Ua  ffft.  and. 
tlgur<itlv.-ly.  leave  U  panting  for  bnath 
In   the   uLtlen. 

Trick  far<e»  they  are,  to  be  sure — 
"Otfictr  6i)fi,*  "Stop  Thief"  and  olh»r« 
<.f  tl'etr  ilk— but   mighty  good   fun,  Ju!*t 


old  time    Orpheum   acts    at  I  tho  .ame.     Trick  far.;es  they  y^ 


gee    many 

the  Grand  during  the  summer  season 
Orphcum   theaters   close   during   May. 
and  im  his   recent   trip  east    Manager 
I'raiik    Phelps    signed     a     number    of 
"Kig  Time"  acts  for  the  Grand. 

REGORDBREAKERS 

AT  THE  LYCEUM 


Big 


be<aMi?e  they  aeldoni  will  stand  any  Bort 
of  chari<^ler  te.st.  The  |>renilse  Is 
nauallv  pr.po.sterou«,  the  developmrnt 
depvnd-iit  on  the  <xpect*'d  "burprlse," 
an.!  the  i  haraeter.H  usually  created 
whll"  you  wait  to  fit  the  iiltuallon.s  as 
th.*y  arise.  And  yet.  especially  when 
they  are  piodurod  under  tlu-  Cohan  and 
Harris  chaperonage,  witli  the  al»  rl  and 
t'xperienc'-d  (Jeorge  M.  Cohun  to  look  in 
at  r.hear^al.-^  and  bulltl  up  a  ncene  or 
two  Ih-y  Invariably  poH.MesH  a  liunian 
(juaiity  in  b«>ih  th<-lr  fun  and  their 
'  .^tnilnient  that  more  than  JuBllfies  them 
I  In   tlie  ainht   of   the   reasonably    intelll- 

Musical         Show       Will    ^^'V^^'-^'^rto- Advert.se."    for  instance. 

Is  built  on  the  Spurlock  theme  of  the 
rich  man's  «on  wlio  tries  to  make  good. 
Uut  back  of  all  the  fun  it  makea  of 
that  f(i miliar  and  UHually  hopeless  type 
is  ratlior  a  sound  piillosophy  that  hc- 
e.pta  hunian  nature  as  the  fundamental 
I)a.3i3  of  ehuiacter  and  gives  it  a  chance. 
.\ot     ev«'rv     idler     ia     a     pinhoad,     even 


Hold  Boards  for  Next 
Week. 


The  i)U  nuialcal  comedy  and  extrav- 
aganza company.  Jack  Held  and  *"r»;«  ,  iVo„/j,"hi',  father  "Is  "rich;  and  while 
Record  Eireakers,"  will  be  aeen  at  tho  ^  ^.^^^^'J'^^  gfnluse.s  create  their  own  op- 
I,yceum  theater  for  five  days  with  j  p„rtunities.  .>'o  does  opportunity  occa- 
nmtlnees  dally,  eommenclng  tomorrow,  j  aionallycr^^a^e  -^^^^r.l^'^i^-  ,.  ,^  j,^^,,. 
This  company  is  entirely  new  through-  I  »;^     J*''''^^-*'^,^.^.^,    „,    ^^    unique    con- 

out,  and  comes  well  recommended.  Tht.  ]  i'^'*>»  father,    a   ««'ap    magnate, 

openlnt-  and  clo..lnK  skits  abound  In  '  «P'^/''> ;,  "ei.ographcr  that  she  ean'l 
many  brinht.  cutchy  musical  numbers  ,  bets  m.-*  si -•>  8  p  ^^^  ^,^  within  a 
mou..ied  m  an  attractive  style,  and  ,  «  '*«•  "i;.,  "^^'^es  the  wager,  encourages 
b.lKhtene.l  by  chorus  rIH-s  known  «^  >'**'^.„i^'\tmal  Int  -rest  she  has  In- 
"Uly  Sinking  Iteautles."  Forty  Ptayers  '^  «  •Jl'''^''  '^^  young  man,  strengthens 
are    required    for    this   production       '^he    «P»red     n    the    >  oung    nm  ».^  cruelly 

two   skit.-,    are    billed   a»   "Hello   Frl.^oo"     hU    Plt>     for    I.m        las    n 
and    "The   Underworld."      If    the    laugh-     "  ttreJ       »»>   .^^^^.^.^fji  .  \,,  make^'good  for 
t.T   of    the    audience    la   a   criterion,    the  I  >oung   man  a  v'ni 

public  seem.^  to  enjoy  every  situation  i  ^•'';^,-;'!\^^i,^  j^^ip  of  a  youthful  visionary 
and  every  song,  and  the  dancing  is.  J^'i'^.^'i!^J:,tror^8s  agent  in  the  show- 
above    the   usual    for  these   Productions,    who  has  beeti  a  ^^ 

The  east  and  specialties  are  sal.!  to  »>«  I  >^*«n^^--  »'*- ,^i"»»*l^^^,  )/  „r  bunkoing 
of    the    best,    and    the    scenic    and    elec- .  "*?««»    w  iin    iiie    mi  _.      . 


SCENE  FROM  "IT  PAYS  TO  ADVERTISE." 
Which  Will  Be  Seen  at  the  Lyceum  for  Four  Days,  Begmmng  Apnl  15. 


well  cast.  Harold  Vermilye  plays  the 
plnhead;  Frank  Allworlh  is  the  en- i 
thusiastic  promoter;  Klmer  <;randin  is 
the  eoudervatlvt-  soap-aiaking  father. 
Adele  RollamI  the  brainy  young  stenog- 
rapher; Klza  Frederic  the  adventuress 
of  linguistic  ability,  the  best  woman 
part  In  tlie  piece,  and  Marlon  Harrle 
the  pert   French  maid. 

.« ^— — 

Lyceum  Notes. 

••His  Majesty  Bunker  Wean,"  a,  new 
comedy  by  Lee  Wilson  Oodd.  frcm  the 
novel  by  Harry  Lei>n  Wilson,  will  be 
the  attraction  at  the  Lyceum  theater 
for  two  nights  and  Tuesday  matinee, 
starting  M<.nday.  May  29.  The  action 
of  the  play  centers  around  the  ad- 
ventures of  Itunker  Bean,  a  struggling 
stenographer,  who  Is  led  to  believe 
tiiat  he  is  the  reincarnation  of  Ram- 
Tah,  an  ancient  Egyptian  king.  The 
conrtdence  in  himself  thus  gained  en- 
ables Bunker  to  succeed  in  business, 
as    well    as    his    love    affair.  • 

Taylor  Holmes,  who  Is  being  starred 
by  Joseph  Brooks,  will  assume  the  role 
jf  Bunker  Bean.  In  his  supporting 
company  will  be  Charles  Abbe.  Flor- 
ence Hhirley.  Robert  Kelly.  ,  J«ck 
Devereaux.  Lillian  Lawrence.  Walt«r 
M  Sherwin,  Marion  Kerby,  Clara 
Louise  Moores,  Harry  C.  Power,  Horace 
Mitchell.  tJrace  Peters.  John  Hogan, 
Belford  Forrest.  Annette  Westbay  and 
George    C.    Lyman.  „     .      ^  ... 

Duluth  is  to  be  one  of  the  few  cities 
visited  by  Mr.  Holmes  and  the  entire 
original  ca.-<t  Intact.  .  "His  Majesty 
Bunker  Bean"  was  the  sensation  of 
the  Chicago  season,  where  for  six 
months  the  play  was  presented  at  the 
Cort  theater  to  audiences  that  taxed 
the  capacity  of  the  theater  at  every 
perfornuince. 

*  •       • 

In  writing  "The  Only  (!irl."  which 
is  to  be  produced  at  ilie  Lyceum  tlie- 
ater  April  20,  21  and  ll::  by  Joe  ^^  ebor. 
the  author  of  the  book.  Henry  Blog- 
aom.  evidently  bore  In  mind  that  tlie- 
atergoers,  while  wlsliing  to  be  amused 
also  desire  to  have  their  amusements 
served  up  in  a  sane  fashion.  He  has, 
therefore,  so  It  is  admitted,  provided 
a  libretto  that  c<uit:iins  a  story,  both 
consistent  and  plausible,  and  has  been 
to  some  pains  to  draw  his  characters 
so    that    they    resemble    hunian    beings. 

•  *       « 

Again  joyous  Omar  Khayyam  will 
pitch  his  tent  in  Dulutli.  tiuy  Bates 
Post  will  reappear  at  the  Lyceum  the- 
ater for  three  days  commencing 
Thursday,  April  27,  in  Richard  Walton 
Tully's  magnificent  spectacle,  •'Omar, 
the  Tentniaker."  During  its  previous 
engagement  here  this  production 
aroused    great    Interest. 

As  every  theatergoer  already  knows, 
••Omar,  the  Tentniaker,"  is  based  upon 
the  life,  times  and  "Rubalyut"  of  Omar 
Khayyam,  the  beloved  I'erslan  poet 
of  the  Eleventh  century,  especial  em- 
phasis being  laid  upon  his  engaging 
love   Btory. 


CLASSY  VAUDEVILLE 
\t^  NEW  GRAND 

Clever  Animal  Act  Heads 

Show  of  Many  Bright 

Features. 

Lovers  of  good  vaudeville  and  photo- 
plays are  having  a  treat  this  week-end 
at  the  popular  New  Grand  where  one 
of  the  best  bills  of  the  season  Is  now 
on  tap.  There  is  plenty  of  fun.  aome 
lively  dancing,  surprising  novelties 
and  a  dandy  dog  and  pony  circus  In  the 
lineup,  and  they  are  all  topliners  li» 
their    particular   liue   of   endeavor. 

Dogs,  ponies  and  monkeys  trained  to 
a  remarkable  degree  make  up  Tha- 
lerio's  circus,  wiileh  is  a  feature  that 
Is  particularly  appealing  to  the  young- 
sters.- These  clever  animal  actors  per- 
form many  original  atuiits  that  are 
new  to  animal  thespians  and  go 
through  their  routine  »u.emlngly  with- 
out the  aid  of  their  tf«*.ner  who  does 
not  appear  on  the  stage  to  direct  tliem. 
The  Doghertys  deal  in  nonsense  and 
offer  a  line  of  comedy  and  songs  tliat 
are  bright  and  witty  and  full  of  ginger. 
Tlielr  turn  is  very  cleverly  constructed 
and  carries  with  it  the  necessary  In- 
gredients that  go  to  make  good  enter- 
tainment, while  tliey  are  backed  by 
personalities    that    win. 

Billed  as  th«  singing  cornetist.  I..11- 
lian  Seiger.  liy«*  right  up  to  her  bill- 
ing, displaylrfg  much  ability  on  her 
chosen  instrument  and  dlveslfying  her 
specialty  with  a  repertoire  of  excel- 
lent song  nuraliirs  which  she  puts  over 
with  a  breeziness  and  voice  that  are 
most  enjoyable. 

Hanlon  and  Hanlon  offer  a  talking 
and  acrobatic  .^kit  entitled,  "Abe  Kib- 
ble in  a  Oym."  Fun  runs  riot  all 
through  the  aXfijring  registering  these 
clever  boy.s/otf«  of  the  laughing  hits  of 
the   program. 

i:rne.««t  MaiMin  is  featured  In  '•The 
Dixie  Winner)*?  A  two-reel  story  of  the 
race  track  that  is  full  of  thrills  and 
lieart  interest.  Vernon  Howe's  sketches 
of  Paris.  "Wfl^n  Lin  Came  Home."  a 
drama,  and  th*^  Sellg  Tribune  News, 
which  lnclud*»,some  excellent  pictures 
of  American  sgldlers  along  the  )jorder 
and  In  Mexico,  wind  up  a  most  enjoy- 
able   entftrtdlnment. 

On  Monday  .the  new  bill  promises 
much  in  the  v^ay  of  public  favorites. 
The  Three  Old  Soldier  Musicians,  real 
-  of  the  Civil  war.  head  the  bill 
In  ••From  IfteVellle  to  Lights  Out." 
Merle's  Coi>k«tpos,  feathered  i)erform- 
ers  In  "Blrdland."  the  Flllls  Bisters  and 
Leroy  In  a  alnging  and  terpsiehorean 
diversion,  and  Sullivan  and  Mason, 
singing  and  talking  comedians  in 
"Breaking  the  Banks."  are  other  vau- 
deville offerings  on   the   bill. 

Heading  the  photoplays  program  Is 
a  stirring  three-reel  subject,  "The 
Devil,  the  Servant,  and  the  Man."  Ouy 
Oliver.  Kathelyn  Williams,  Vivian  Reed 
and  James  Bradbury  head  the  cast. 
Two  comedies  complete  the  program. 

YOUNGEST  SCREEN 

STAR  AT  ZELDA 


Mary  Minter  Will  Appear  in 

Stellar  Role  of  "Lovely 

Mary." 

Mary  Mllea  Minter,   one  of  the   pret- 
tiest   and    most    charming    young    act- 


advance  for  theaters  they  patronized 
that  there  would  be  such  a  wide  range 
of  choice  no  theater  would  have  days 
and  nights  enougii  in  a  week  to  show 
them  all.  The  Triangle-Fine  Arts 
company,  wiiose  pictures  appear  ex- 
clusively at  the  Rex  in  this  city,  se- 
lects its  plays  and  players  lung  In 
advance,  especially  with  the  view  of 
pleasing  the  greatest  number  of 
people. 

In    this    way    few.    If    any.    programs 
fail    to    please    the    majority.      The    at- 


ZELDA 


'Where  Everybody  Goes" 
ANY  SF..\T — lOf. 


The  Home  of  the  Metro  Wondef- 

plays  and  Big  Four  V.  L.  S.  E. 

Features. 

TONIGHT  ONLY 

VULTURES 

-OF  - 

SOQEH 

Flre-Ac't    Bijr  Four  V.   li.    S.   E. 

Drania.  StHrrtiig  Lillla  n  Drew, 

MarKnerltt'  Clayton  and 

I-:.  H.  Calvert. 


THE  DOHERTYS.  NOW  AT  THE  NEW  GRAND. 


resses  on  either  the  stage  or  screen, 
will  be  sein  In  the  stellar  role  of 
•'Lovelv  Mary."  a  five-part  Metro 
••wonderplay"  which  will  be  presented 
here  at  the  Zelda  for  three  days,  com- 
mencing tomorrow.  This  delightful 
and  gifted  young  artist  is  surrounded 
by  an  excellent  cast  in  this  big  fea- 
ture, headed  by  Thomas  .1.  Carrigan. 
her  new  leadii-g  man.  Mr.  Carrigan 
first  appeared  with  Mi*;*  Minter  on  the 
M -tro  program  in  •'Dimples." 

The  story  of  ••Lovely  Mary"  was 
written  by  Richard  Barry  and  is  espe- 
clilly  suited  to  the  talents  of  the 
screen's  voungest  star.  The  locale  of 
this  Interesting  feature  is  laid  in  the 
picturesque  surroundings  of  Florida. 
The  story  deals  with  prison  condi- 
tions as  they  were  in  Florida  a  few 
years  ago,  when  state  prisoners  were 
employed  by  private  individuals.  The 
s-torv  concerns  the  love  of  a  young 
Southern  plrl  and  a  Northerner  who 
Is  fahiely  accused  and  sentenced  to 
life  Iraiuisonment.  She  obtains  his 
freedom  by  employing  him  to  work 
on  the  little  farm  she  owns.  In  due 
time  his  innocence  is  proved  and  he 
is  married  to  his  benefactor.  There 
are  many  Interesting  complications  as 
the  plot  and  counterplot  are  unfolded. 


and  Miss  Minter  Is  seen  at  her  best  In 
the  character  of  the  heroine. 

In  making  •'Lovely  Mary."  Edgar 
Jones,  the  director,  obtained  permis- 
sion from  the  state  of  Florida  to  make 
scores  of  the  best  scenes  in  the  state 
prison  camps.  Real  prisoners  were 
used,  and  Mr.  Carrigan  worked  with 
them  for  several  days  along  the  high- 
way. He  wore  the  regulation  prison 
stripes  and  in  one  Instance  had  a  nar- 
row escape  from  being  shot  by  a 
guard,  who  did  not  know  his  identity, 
and  saw  him  wandering  off  with  the 
other  Metro  players  for  luncheon  In 
the    woods. 

As  an  added  feature  the  Zelda  will 
present  every  Sunday,  Monday  and 
Tuesday  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Sidney  Drew  in 
a  series  of  farce  comedies  which  were 
!  produced  by  the  Metro  Pictures  eor- 
'  poration.  Sidney  Drew  is  well  known 
and  these  one-reel  features  are  amonn 
the  best  works  of  his  entire  career. 
Mrs.  Drew  makes  an  excellent  foil  for 
her    husband. 

mae'marsh  at  rex. 

Will   Appear   With   Real    Fiance    in 
'Hoodoo  Ann." 

It  has  been  said  that  If  the  public 
voted    on    the    program    of    picture.-^    in 


,  his  fatlier  into  buying  him  out.     H*  »■ 

"on«ervative       They     will    be    radicals. 

They   wm  adverti«e%o  big  ho  will  have 

to     acknowledge     them     as     dangerous 

HvaU       Two    or    three    times    they    are 

..n   the  point  of  failing:  so  "!»»»„, ^'"If" 

hey  are  ftlrllng  with   success      Final  y 

i  father  sees   through    the  r  acheme   and 

'ealL    their    bluff.      But    they    meet    the 


trlcitl     effects    with    the    cestumos    and 
gowns  are  up  to  standard. 

Amusing  complications  and  mlstak- 
«-n  identity  are  the  two  themes  on 
wiilch  the  opening  and  closing  sklt-s. 
are  founded.  The  manner  of  these  com- 

flllcfttlon.^  is  ingenious,  ami  the  dla- 
ogue  is  interspersed  with  tnuslcal 
numbers  not  merely  to  fill  in  the  time,  ;  cans  i'"-"  "'"';;■  Ty,"v,,,n'  thouKh  »he 
but  which  go  to  make  up  part  of  the  lost,  and  '»'  7  "^^^  JV  ,n  "^cts  I  and  If. 
story.  At  no  time  does  the  audience  tnay  be  a  tickle  J«dP  »"  Aci«  and  gold 
lose  .sight  of  the  story  in  the  opening  |  Is  always  there  with  he  silver  and  gom 
skit.  The  closing  skit  is  entitled  "The!  in  Act  111.  and  smiles  swtetly  upon 
Underworld."  Among  the  cast  are  such  !  them, 
well-known    people    as    Ella    Reid    <Ji! 


t 


rays   to   Advertise"   Is  said   to  bo 


FOUR  NIGHTS  COMMNENCING 
SUNDAY  MATINEE,  APRIL  16 


LYCEUM 

COHAN  &  HARRIS  ARE  CONVINCBID 

"IT  PAYS  TO  ADVERTISE" 

The  Phenomenal  Farcical  Sensation  of  the  Century.    Fresh  from  a  52 
Week's  Run  at  the  Geo.  M.  Cohan  Theater,  New  York  City. 


SEATS  NEXT  THURSDAY 


MAIL  ORDERS  NOW 


THREE    DAYS    COMMENCING 
TOMORROW 

UTTLE 

MARY  MILES 

MINTER 

The  Younfffst  Star  In  the 
Wortd  In 

"LOVELY 
MARY" 

(Metro  Wonderplay) 

\  Gripping  and  Roiuautii*  SU>r7 

of   tlic   South. 

EXTRA — Mv.  and  Mrs.  Sidney 
Drew  hi  a  One- Reel  Comedy, 
••The  C«»unt  of  Ten." 


I  1  VT    li  •»  M 


SIDNEY  DREW. 

Who  Will  Appear  Eac"h  Week  at  the 

Zelda  in  One-Reel  Comedies. 


rLYCEUM--5  DAYS  SS^KSSf^SS^  APRIL  9 1 

"  POSITIVELY  THE  HlfTIEST,  SPEEDIEST  AND  CUSSIEST  SHOW  OF  m 


THE  LYRIC 

EVERYBODY'S  THEATER 

Offei-s  an  Fxeeptiiinul  BUI  for 

Next  Week 


\ 


JACK    REID 

ANO   HIS   OWN  COMPANY 

THE  RECORD 
BREAKERS 


JACK  REID 

tsfsrniBtlQO  Kid 

PRICES-25C,  35c,  SOc  and  7Sc, 


THE  SHOW  THAT   l\nz 
UP  TO  ITS  TITLE 

HAS  BROKEN 
HOUSE  RECORDS 
EVERYWHERi 

THE  Y0UNQE8L 
PRETTIEST 

AND  MOST  FASOlNAIi    i 

OIRLIE   CHORUb 
IN  BURLESQUE 


ALWAYS ^^^  -n^    .     ^.  p^ 

^"GRAND 

THE  THEATER  OF  INCOMPARABLE  AND  REFINED  ENTERTAINMENT 
TODAY  AND  TOMORROW — ZZHH 

Dogs.  Ponies  &  Monkeys  In  DazzUnff  Processional  Amazement 

THALERIO'S  NOVELTY  CIRCUS 

k  NONDUFUL  AM»T  OF  AMMAL  TMESmilS-ATHEOT  FOB  THE  KIBWEt 


The  MistresH  of  Musioi 
and  Melody 

LILLIAN  SEIGER 

8in^tuf(   Cornetist. 


A  Talkinii;  Acrobatic  Xovelty 

HANLON  &  HANLON 

**Able  Kibble  in  a  Gym." 


MATINEES-25C,  35c  and  SOc 


9 


( 


THE  DOHERTYS  SStVS.'.? 


SeHy-TrilHiwe  News-PtioteplaYS  De  luxe-Cdncert  Orchestra 

COMING  MONDAY   MATINEE 


A  MUSICAL 
NOVEin 


THREE  OLD  SOLDIER  MUSICIANS 

lulU^  Sisters  A:  1a'  Roy — Snilivaii  &  Ma^ui — Merle's  Cockatoos 
IMiutoplay  Feature — "Tlie  Devil,  the  Serpent  and  the  Man." 


SrXDAY.   MONi:>AY,  Tl'ESDAY 

ROBERT  B. 
MANTELL 

And   All-star  Cast 

"A  WIFE'S  SACRincr' 

WEDXE.SDAY    &    TillliSDAY 

CONSTANCE 
COLLIER 

'THE  CODE  OFMARCIA  CRAY' 

FRIDAV   AXD  SATl'RDAY 

MARY 
PICKFORD 

(Hotuiii    Engagement)    in 

"THE  FOUNDLINC" 

In  this  picture  iJttIc  Mary 
playetl  to  staiuiinK:  rtKmi  only 
when  in   Duluth  tlie  first  time. 

Bray  Cartoons.  Burton  Holme* 
and  <»liier  features  during  llie 
*veek. 


Mats10ci:?,Nites10c-20c 


UNiEA 


Sl'XDAY— ONE    DAY    ONLY. 

BBSSiu  barrisca'Le:  In 

"THE  CUP  OF  UFE" 

A  vivid  picture  of  a  great  moral 
problem,  showlnp:  the  White  Way 
and    the   Right   Way. 

An   lure   Featiirr 

FORD    STEHI'IM;    In 

"THE    MESSEXiER    BOV." 

Hani  and   Bu«f. 

MONDAY   AND    TUESDAY. 

'A  MAN'S  SACRIFICE' 

WHh   Edith    Storey   and    Frank 

Bunny— a   Janiur   Bumny. 

UARRY    WATSOX,   JR..   In 

Thr    MImIuip*    of    Monty    S«ffrr" 

(The    seventh    happy    whirl. ^ 

WEDNESDAY  AND  THURSDAY 

HENRY  WAI,THAM,  and 

KUXA  MAYO  in 

TheSTRANGE  CASE  of  MARY  PAGE 

Who  itilled  .Tames  Pollocii? — The 
answer   is  given   in   this  chapter. 

FRIDAY    AND    SATURDAY. 
••THE    BL.^CK    CROOK," 

The  spectacular  five-reel  produc- 
tion of  the  most  famous  musical 
extravagranxa  ever  shown. 


REX 


THREE    WINNERS 

For    Coming    Week    at    Theater 

Beautiful. 

Sunday  and  Monday 

MAE  MARSH 

— In— 

*^HOOPOO  ANN" 

Tuesday.    Wednesday,    Thursday 

H.B.WARNER 

— in — 

''THE  RAIDERS*' 


Friday  and  Saturday 

PAULINE 
FREDERICK 

— !n— 

"AUDREY" 


Key.stone  Comedies  and 
I^icto^aplt&i. 


•> 


>"i   « 


m 


I 


r»- 


"* 


-— ir 


-^m 


-»-ir 


'<*  m 


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—  1 -^  Ll'  "^•*     "'  "•"     *   "  —  ■ 


X     - 

1 

r 

' 

...— 

1 

■ 

I^HH 

Saturday, 


tructlons  at  tho  Ivex.  aiwiouncftil  today 
for  th«  rnmlnjr  week,  bear  this  out. 
Mae  Marsh,  that  dellKhtful  star,  ap- 
pear* with  her  real  fiance,  Uobert 
Harn-n  In  "Hoodoo  Ann"  beglnnlnK 
Sunday'  for  two  days.  Their  love  af- 
fair l8  strictly  a  romance  of  the  studio 
and  ucrecn  and  their  enRagement  haa 
but    rftonntly    been    announced. 

In  this  story  th«  two,  phiylntc  oppo- 
glte.  make  one  nf  the  bo«t  conibifia- 
tlon.<i  of  good  ai:tlii|r  seen  for  a  long 
time.  There  U  a  flno  and  plausible 
plot,   full   of  action   and   thrills. 

Two  screen  favorites  will  b«»  seon 
Tuesday,  Wednesday  and  Thursday  In 
a  Thomas  II.  Inoe  TrlanRle  produc- 
tion. Th'-y  arc  H.  H.  Warner  and 
Dorothy  Dulton.  It  Is  tho  double 
achleveniint  of  a  stock  broker's  clerk 
Ir.  savinK  >*-  railroad  president  from 
ruin  and  winnioK  his  dauphter  for  a 
wlft- — with  u  Kreat  deal  more  to  It 
tiinn  could  b«:  related  in  ho  brief  a 
mi'Hcf.  It  l.s  termed  the  "many- 
thrilled"    .story. 

Next  Friday  and  Satui<lay  I'auline 
Fredeiick,  In  a  Famous  IMayc  rs  com- 
pany production,  "Audrey,"  appears  in 
this  new  pl«'ture,  Hald  by  many  who 
have  seen  it  ••Isewhero  to  he  distinctly 
her  v«'ry  be.st.  The  u.sual  pipe  orKsn 
and  orchestra  music  1.x  played  throuKh- 
out  the  week,  with  Keystone  comedlen 
and    plclOKraphs   at    this    playh<»u«e. 

MANTELrAT  LYRIC. 

Noted  Dramatic  Star  Will  Appear  in 
•A  Wife's  Sacrifice." 

Robert  M.  Mantell.  whose  name  has 
been  a  household  word  to  old-timers 
for  almost  a  Bencratlon,  opens  the 
luw  week  bill  at  the  I.,yric  with  (Jene- 
vleve  Hamper  In  "A  Wlfes  Sacrifice." 
As  brother  and  sister,  Peppo  and 
•  JorKone  journey  to  I'arls  and  under 
iissunnd  names  lay  fraudulent  claim 
to  the  fortune  left  by  an  aristocrat. 
I'indinK  the-  adjustment  of  the  claim, 
they  live  bv  their  wits-  and  provirt- 
♦•noimh  excitement,  plots  and  counter- 
plots to  ."attsfv  the  most  exacting.  All 
Is  done,  too.  with  the  staRecraft  and 
liffhtinK  effects  of  William  Fox.  the 
producer.  The  pi<ture  will  be  shown 
for    three   day.i.  ,.    ,  ,        . 

Constance  ('(dlier.  who  divides  hon- 
•  ors  with  nniny  of  the  Paramount  star;-, 
vvill  he  seen  at  the  l.yrl.'  Wedne.-ddy 
«iid  Thursday  in  "The  I'ode  of  Marcku 
<:ray."  I-Jvery  woman  will  find  in 
creat  crisis  in  Marcia  iJray's  life 
Txact  iluiilic.ition  of  what  she  would 
have  to  do  .should  she  meet  the  same 
problem.  Oliver  Morosco  has  produced 
A  beautiful  picture— a  story  that 
bold    ohl    and    youn«   of   both    sexeg, 

Fiiday     and     Saturday,     next, 
•kford- "I^lttle      Mary" -returns      to 


the 
an 


will 

Mary 
rick  ford-  "iJt  tie"  Mary'v-  return 
the  I.yrlc  In  "The  FoundlinK.  When 
the  picture  was  at  the  I. yrie  before, 
hundreds  were  actually  turned  away 
from  the  doors  for  la«  k  of  seating 
«'apacitv.  There  will  be  no 
prices  for  this  enRaKem<nt. 
edly  as  the  foundllnjt  Miss 
this,   one   of   the    most  - 

rharaeter.«»  she  ever  impersonated 
the  screen,  surpasses  »^*;r*'7\- ,,.^_  „,,, 
Hurton  H<dmeH'  travel  »• '^VM^rr^^^lv 
be  shown  Wednesday  and  'Ihursday 
and  other  features.  Including  the  cele- 
brat.  d  Pray  cartoons  and  loathe  pic 
tures.   during  «he  week   at  other  times. 


Increased 
Undotibt- 
I'ickford  In 
.sweetly    pathetic 
on 


At  the  Sunbeam. 

For      the      coming      week 
Ralph    Parker    of    the     New 
theater    has    four    changes    of 
each   featuring   some   noUd   »}"'•,»"<** 
blK    f.'ature    photoplay    in    addition    to 
several    shorter    films.       The     program 
for     the      whole     we«k 
one  of  the   best  shown 

For   Sunday   there 
luce    feuiure    film 
Itessie      IJarrlscale 
Life."       This    Is    a 
great     moral 
*ih"\vlnR:    the 

"Right     way.  .  -  .. 

strong     he.irt     appeal,     giving     the     II 
hl.Ktory    of     two     shop     Rirls, 
whom    wins    success   and    the 
misery    of     failure     by     the 
path    route.     Ford    Sterling. 
Sunbeam 
seen    in     "The 


Manager 
Sunbeam 
program, 


The      .       _ 
promises    to    be 
In   many   weeks. 
wll   be   a   gripping 
starring     beautiful 
In      "The      Cup      of 
vivid    picture    of    a 
problem     in     five     parts. 
"White     way"     and      the 
The     story     is     «ine     of 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


play  in  which  Frank  Mclntyre  will  be 
starred  by  Charles  B.  Dillingham  next 
season.  It  is  the  dramatization  by 
George  Broadhurst  »bf  aj  story  which 
appeared  In  a  recent  number  of  a  pop- 
ular magaxlne. 

•      •   .'  • 

On  Tuesday  of  la>|  'vrjeek  Augustus 
Thomas*  new  play,  "Rio  (Jrande."  began 
its  New  York  engagement  at  the  Em- 
pire theater.  This  piece  was  produced 
In  Chicago  several  weeks  ago  and  has 
been  likened  In  a  general  way  to 
Thomas'  "Arizona,"  which  made  a  big 
success  years  ago.  and  was  revived 
with  an  all-star  cast  aiaspn  before  last. 

LITTLE  WIHSS 

JAIL  APPOINTMENT 

Brother   of    Commissioner 
Named  as  Fireman,  End- 
ing Dispute. 

County  commissioners  In  session  yes- 
terday afternoon  ended  the  Cowden- 
Uttle  controversy  over  the  Job  of  fire- 
man at  the  county  Jail  by  officially  de- 
posing Frank  R.  Cowdon  and  appoint- 
ing R.  J.  Little,  a  brother  of  Commis- 
sioner T.  H.  Little  of  the  Second  dis- 
trict,   to    succeed    him. 

Commissioner  Little,  rhalrman  of  the 
Jail  committee,  attempted  to  discharge 
Cowden  on  March  16  when  he  Instructed 
bis  brother.  R.*  J.  Little,  to  take  his 
place.  Cowden,  however,  consulted  with 
Commissioner  Kauppl.  who  advised  him 
that  Commissioner  Little  was  without 
authority  In  the  matter,  and  told  him 
to   stay    on    the   Job. 

The  board  ended  the  wrangle  yes- 
terday afternoon  when  It  named  R.  J. 
Little  as  fireman  and  discharged  Cow- 
den. Cowden  was  given  full  time  up 
to  todav,  however,  although  Little  has 
been  doing  the  work  since  March  16. 

Cowden  was  dismissed  on  a  charge 
that  he  has  been  repeatedly  intoxicated. 


April  8, 1916. 


With    Jack    Reid's 


MISS   LILLIAN   LIPPMAN, 
Record   Breakers"  at  the   Lyceum  for  Five  Days    Be- 
ginning Sunday. 


NEW  YORK  STAGE  REVIEW 


BV    UI\IK 

New     Yolk.      April 
developed    a     mor« 
than     that     which 
we    had    a    revival 


8. — The      present 

interesting     wee'.c 

preceded     It,     when 

of    "Captain    Rrass- 


fect  that  It 
Its  artistic 
tribute  will 
cjlumns. 


Is   a    production    that    won 

triumph.       A      deserving 

be  later  paid  to  it  in  these 


one     of 
other    the 
primroHft 
a    pouular 
omedv      favorite,      will      be 
Messenger     Roy."     and 
Hall    and    Hud    will    appear    In    one    of 
their    knockout    one-reel    comedies. 

.Monday  and  Tuesday  Hdlth  Storey 
niul  Frank  Hunny.  son  of  .Tohn  lUinny. 
will  be  tealund  in  "A  Man'.s  Sacrl- 
flc","    a    powerful    ph(.to-drama. 

For  eomedv  there  will  bo  Harrv 
Watson,  the  Inimitable  comedian  with 
his  vaudeville  c«  inpanlon.>*,  in  a  cork- 
Inu  good  lautvh  producing  chapter  of 
"The  Mishap.s  of  Musty  Suffer."  This 
Avill  be  the  seventh  happy  whirl  of 
tjiis  infectious  comedy,  all  of  which 
have    been    great    successe.M. 

Did  Marv  Page  murder  the  man  she 
hated?  'i'hls  question  will  be  an 
ivwered  tliis  week  wi»en  the  murderer 
of  .lame.s  Pollock  is  revealed.  Henry 
"Walthall  and  Kdna  Mayo  are  creat- 
ing a  fine  impres.-'ion  in  this  excellent 
(«erkx  of  nhotoplavs.  and  tlw  gowns 
Of  Miss  Mayo,  designed  by  "Lucille," 
are     (-reatlons     of     art. 

Fridav  and  Saturday  the  feature 
will  he  "The  Hlack  Crook."  a  five-part 
picturization  of  that  spectacular  ex- 
travaganza, which  was  one  of  the  hig- 
hest ttiHRe  succisses  of  two  genera- 
tions. There  will  be  many  beautiful 
scenes  shown  and  many  attractive 
chorus  girls. 


GOSSIP  OF  THE  RiALTO 


A.  Romalne  Callonder,  who  will  be 
remembered  as  a  member  of  the  Hald- 
■wln  Stock  company,  is  at  the  I'owers 
theater  in  <'hlcago  this  week,  appearing 
with  Ethel  Rarrymorc  In  "Our  Mrs. 
McChesney." 


Anita   Stewart, 
has    been    offered 
revival    of    "The 
whic.i  Is 
Shuberts 


moving   picture    star, 

the    title    role    in    the 

Helle    of    New    York," 

to  be  put  on  by   the  Lederer- 

offlces.      It    was   attempted    to 


bound's  Conversion"  by  tJrace  (}eorg« 
and  her  company,  and  a  new  musical 
play  called  "See  America  First."  This 
Is  not  In  disparagement  of  Miss 
Oeorge.  who  really  gave  an  admir- 
able performance  «>f  the  "warrior 
tamer"  In  the  Shaw  satire.  and  a 
generally  satisfactory  performance  of 
the  play  llself.  It  Is  not  the  best  work 
of  the  Irish  dramati.st,  but  Miss  Cleorge 
and  her  company  acted  It  with  skill, 
and  made   it  plausable. 

Hut  "See  America  First"  wa«  some- 
thing awful!  It  would  be  charitable 
to  pass  over  It  without  comment.  Say 
only  good  of  the  dead,  we  are  told, 
and  this  will,  or  should,  die  shortly. 
*       •       « 

Undeniably  the  moat  interesting 
and  most  notable  producthm  which 
has  been  made  this  season  Is  ".lustlce' 
at  tlie  Candler  theater.  This  Is  a  re- 
markable play  of  prison  reform,  by 
John  (Jalsworthy.  produced  In  an  al- 
ino.st  matchless  manner  by  U.  Iden 
Payne,  and  acted  with  rare  force  and 
Intelligence  by  a  thoroughly  com- 
petent ca^'t.  of  which  .lohn  Rariy- 
moie,  ().  P.  Heggie,  Wallls  Clark 
Rupert  Harvey,  Henry  Stephenson  and 
Cathleeu  Nesbitt  were  conspicuous 
numbers.  The  play  has  been  widely 
read,  but  was  deemed  unsuitable  for 
the  stage.  Mr.  Paj  ne  has  shown  Its 
presentation  In  New  York  po.'-slbio.  It 
i.s  a  forceful  drama,  with  a  closely 
knit  and  absorbing.  If  somewhat  dis- 
tressing story.  This  is  overlooked, 
however,  by  reason  of  the  ci>nsum- 
mate  art  of  the  players  and  the  pro- 
ducer. It  was  \«ell  received  by  a  llrst 
night  audience,  and  will  undo\jhtedly 
prove  one  of  tl  e  dramatic  and  literary 
treats  of  the  season.  The  cast  Is  so 
unlformlv  excellent  that  It  Is  In- 
vidious to  praise  the  individuals,  as 
each  contributed  to  the  general  suc- 
cess. 

•       *       • 

"Rio  <;rande"  was  the  only  play  to 
share  first  night  honors  with  'Jus- 
tice." It  Is  by  Augustus  Thomas,  and 
has  just  returned  from  a  successful 
premiere  in  Chicago.  LoU)  Fisher,  Is 
the  bright  member  of  the  cast,  but 
this  too,  like  the  play  before  men- 
tioned,  la  acted  with  such  excellent  ef- 


one  of  Poland's  foremost  artists,  will 
come  to  America  to  paint  ttie  :-ceio  ly. 
Another  feature  Is  an  especially  writ- 
ten score  by  Paderewskl.  the  pianist, 
and  It  Is  rumored  that  unlimited  cap- 
ital Is  behind  the  enterprise, 
«       *       • 

Klaw  &  Erlanger  have  a  new  mu- 
sical play  bv  llennold  Wolf  and  Louis 
A.  Hirsch,  which  will  be  produced  early 
next  season.  The  name  of  the  piece 
has  not  yet  been  announced. 
«       •       • 

"Th^  Dawn,"  a  comedy  by  George  D. 
Parker,  will  be  produced  by  A.  H. 
Woods,  with  a  strong  cast.  Including 
Robert  Fdeson,  Kathlene  Macdonnell. 
William  Devereaux,  Sara  McVlcker, 
Annie  Ruckley,  Jane  Kustance  and  Kd- 
ward  Lee.  Other  Important  players 
will  be  engaged  later.     Rehearsals  be- 


SEES  INDORSEMENT 
OF  HIS  PEACE  PLANS 

Ford  So  Considers  His  Vic- 
tory Over  Senator  Smith 
in  Michigan. 


Detroit, 
yesterday 
Monday's 
mary    In 


stage  Chat. 

"Success  In  acting,  like  success  in 
railroading."  declares  Kthel  Wright, 
"depends    much    upon    training." 

•  •       * 

Hilda    Englund,    celebrated    Swedish 
actress,    is    to    be    seen    In    a    group    of 
Ibsen  plays  In  New  York  this  season. 
*       • 

Ida  Hamilton,  who  was  associated 
with  H.  Iden  Payne's  repertoire  com- 
pany at  the  Little  theater,  Philadel- 
phia, last  season,  is  writing  and  not 
acting  for  the  movies  according  to 
her   correction. 

•  «       * 

Kmanuel  Relcher  will  make  no  more 
dramatic  productions  this  season,  but 
he  will  prepare  for  an  active  season 
next  year.  During  the  coming  sum- 
mer he  may  head  a  new  dramatic  con- 
servatory which  has  been  proposed 
and  which  he  has  been  Invited  to  di- 
rect. 

«       *       « 

"Pay  Day,"  the  "movie"  satire,  now 
encouraging  laughter  at  the  Rooth 
theater  In  New  York,  is  shortly  to  be 
removed  to  Chicago,  where  it  is  ex- 
pected it  will  run  all  summer.  Suzanne 
.lackson.  whose  dramatic  contribu- 
tion to  this  satire  is  really  legitimate 
and    distinctive,    will    be    seen    In    the 

Western  cast. 

*  *       * 

One  of  the  brilliant  young  players 
to  develop  during  the  present  season 
is  Paul  Gordon,  who  Is  to  be  asso- 
ciated with  the  new  Frohman  produc- 
tion destined  for  Ann  Murdock.  At 
present  he  Is  with  the  revival  of  "The 
Mfrrv  Wives  of  Windsor,"  now  play- 
ing at  the  Criterion  theater  and  ear- 
llei-  In  the  seaion  won  high  prals? 
for  excellent  work  with  George  Arllss 
In    "Paganinl." 

*  •      * 

New  York  Is  this  week  witnessing  a 
second  revival  of  i^Jeorge  Bernard 
Shaw's  "Captain  Rrassbound's  Con' 
version."  Grace  George  is  making  It 
at  the  Playhouse,  and  earlier  In  the 
season  (Jertrude  Kingston  made  one 
at  the  Neighborhood  Playhouse,  with 
John  P.  Campbell  as  the  tyrannical 
"Captain    Brassbound." 


gan  April  .3  and  the  opening  is  ex- 
pected to  take  place  on  May  1  at  At- 
lantic City. 

*  *      « 

It  Is  stated  that  Peggy  ONell  will 
be  seen  as  "Mavourneen"  In  the  pro- 
duction of  the  London  play  of  that 
name  when  the  piece  Is  put  on  by 
Corey,  inter  and  Williams.  It  Is  also 
rumored  that  another  production  of 
"Mavou*neen,"  a  play  from  the  pen  of 
Augustus  Pltou.  Sr..  will  be  revived 
by    Chauncey    Olcott    next    fall. 

*  *       • 

Elsie  Ferguson  will  next  be  seen  as 
Portia  In  Sir  Herbert  Tree's  produc- 
tion t)f  "The  Merchant  of  Venice."  The 
English  actor-manager  will  assume 
the   role   of  Shylock. 

*  «       * 

"Five    Fridays"    Is    the    name   of   the 


Mich..  April  8.— Henry  Ford 
declared  tb«  result  of  last 
presidential  preference  prl- 
whlch  he  defeated  United 
States  Senator  William  Alden  Smith 
by  more  than  6,000  votes,  was. a  vic- 
tory for  peace  rather  than  for  him- 
self. He  Interpreted  It  as  meaning 
that  a  majority  of  Michigan  voters  In- 
dorsed his  views  on  preparedness.  He 
also  reiterated  his  assertion  that  he 
is   not   In    politics. 

"I  am  glad,"  said  Mr,  Ford,  "be- 
cause I  interpret  the  honor  as  an  ex- 
pression of  a  majority  of  the  voters 
that  they  believe  as  I  do,  against  mili- 
tary preparedness,  and  the  exploita- 
tion of  the  workingman  by  the  muni- 
tions  interests. 

"I  believe  that.  If  the  people  urging 
us  to  prepare  to  get  us  Into  the  state 
of  preparation  that  they  desire,  they 
will  find  us  In  a  war  In  a  short  time. 
The  primary  vote  leads  me  to  believe 
that   the   voters   feel    the   same    way. 

"I'm  not  In  |H)lltlc8.  I  ku<m-  Senator 
.Smith  and  like  him.  If  h<?  wanted  the 
Indorsement  I'm  sorry  It  was  not  given 
him.  On  the  other  balid.  I'm  pleased 
to  get  an  expression  of  sentiment  from 
Michigan.  The  Michigan  delegates  to 
the  Chicago  convention  may  vote  Just 
as  they  please.  It  will  make 
lutfly  no  difference -to  me." 
Mr.  Ford  at  present  plans  to 
and    the    peace 


^ 


i    ■ 


■  - 


To  little  hearts  and  big  ones,  too — 
the  Wrigley  Spearmen  are  calling, 
calling,  every  day: 

Their  message  is  one  of  good  cheer 
about  this  refreshing,  beneficial  goody 
that  costs  so  little  but  means  so  much 
to  comfort  and  contentment 

Send   for  the  Spearmen's   Gum-ption   book 
for  young    and    old,  illustrated    in    colors. 

Address  Wm.  Wrigley  Jn  Co.,  1603  Kesner  Bldg..  Chicago 


to 
In 


Kurope 
May. 
•1    don't 
will  attend 
tinued    Mr. 


abso- 

return 
conference 


sentl 
Henry 
be      a 


pecure  Edna  May  for  the  part,  but 
*alllng  in  this  the  producers  offered 
the  role  to  the  screen  star.  Rene  Da- 
vles  has  been  booked  for  the  part  of 
the   comic   opera   queen    in    the    "Belle" 

ahow. 

«       «       « 

Irvln  Cobb  and  Roi  Cooper  Megrue 
have  collaborated  on  a  new  play  which 
Selwyn  and  company  are  to  produce 
this  spring,  opening  at  Atlantic  City. 
The  title  of  the  piece  Is  "John  W. 
Blake,"  and  has  prison  reform  for  Its 
underlying  theme. 

*  *  * 
A  cablegram  from  Emma  Trentinl. 
In  her  home  in  Italy,  was  received 
by  Arthur  Hainmersteln  recently, 
wherein  the  little  prima  donna  ac- 
cepted th«  proposition  offered  her  to 
appear  in  productions  under  Hammer- 
stein's  management  during  tho  next 
Ave  years.  Mile.  Trentinl  has  been 
obliged  to  remain  at  her  home  In  Italy 
this  season  by  reason  of  ill  health  and 
conditions  caused  by  the  war,  but  sh. 
has  now  fully  recovered  in  health  and 
Is  ready  to  begin  another  operatic  cam- 
paign. The  contract  with  Hammer- 
stein  Involves  a  new  opera  by  Otto 
Hauerbach  and  Rudolf  Friml  each 
year.  The  first  of  the  series  Is  ex- 
pected to  bo  produced  early  next  fall. 
«       •       # 

Cyril  Maude  will  make  his  last  ap- 
pearance in  "<;rumpy"  at  the  Teller- 
Bhubert  theater  In  Brooklyn  on  April 
16.  Mr  Maude  is  negotiating  for  the 
London  rights  to  "The  Blue  Envelope," 
which  he  will  witness  during  his 
Brooklyn  engagement,  a  special  per- 
fonnanco      being      scheduled      for      his 

benefit. 

m       *        * 

The  Shuberts  will  revive  "The  Co- 
respondent." with  Irene  Fenwlck  as 
the  star.  Norman  Trevor  will  play  the 
leading   male    role. 

t       ♦       • 

Rehearsals  were  begun  recently  of 
the  I'ollsh  play.  "Through  the  Ages." 
under  the  direction  of  Madame  Yorska, 
who,  with  Emmett  Corrigan,  will  be 
the  leading  lights  In  a  company  of 
sixty  players,  'i^e  piece  was  written 
and  produced  about  fifteen  years  ago 
In  Warsaw  by  Dr.  Jerzy  Zulawski,  and 
alnce  its  premiere  is  annually  pre- 
sented In  the  principal  Polish  cities. 
The  story  Is  designed  to  show  the 
struggle  of  the  soul  against  the  body, 
as  presented  in  various  incarnations 
from  tho  earliest  times.  Seven  acts 
»re  re(iuired  and  the  scenic  effects  are 
•f  a  startling  nature.     Wltold  Gordon, 


BEVY  OF  LOVELINESS  IN 

FAIRY  PLAY  AT  ORPHEUM 


of 
approxi- 


Tomorrow  afternoon  and  night  the 
famous  Blue  Bird  photoplay,  'Tudine,  " 
will  be  offered  for  the  last  time  at 
the    Orphouhi-Strand    theater. 

All  who  remember  the  fairy  tales 
of  their  youth  will  hail  with  Joy  the 
announcement  that  the  Orpheum- 
Strand  theater  will  present  the  Blue 
Bird  pnotoplay  feature,  "irndlne."  The 
story  of  the  film  is  drawn  from  Pierre 
de  la  Motte  Foquet's  French  classic 
of  the  same  title — one  of  the  most 
beautiful  and  abiding  fairy  tales  of 
all  time.  Half  In  water  and  half  on 
shore  the  many  and  varied  scenes 
of    the   screen-play    present    opportun- 


ities   for    spectacular      and      Impelling 

Cictur«i    of    pretty    fancy    which    have 
een    fully   realized    in    the   art   and    'n- 
ventlon    of    the    photoplay    producer. 

Miss  Ida  Schnall.  famous  athlete  and 
swimmer,  beautiful  of  face  and  form, 
was  entrusted  with  the  Important  role 
uf  "Undine"  and  her  acting  upon  land 
and  her  expertness  in  swimming,  div- 
ing and  cavorting  In  the  water,  has 
fully  realized  the  requirements  of  the 
role.  With  her  are  a  score  of  beauti- 
ful girls,  expert  swimmers,  who  con- 
stitute the  attendants  upon  Queen 
I'nda  and  form  a  bevy  of  physical 
lovc'IlntiAS. 


know  how  much  success 
my  forthcoming  trip,"  con- 
Ford,  "but  we're  going  to 
continue  our  efforts  until  results  are 
so  apparent  that  the  shell  manu- 
facturers will  have  a  few  Idle  moments 
to    look    at    them. 

"I'd  like  to  have  a  vote  of  the  men 
in  the  trenches  to  determine  the 
ment   for    peace.      The   vote    for 
Ford      in      Michigan      wouldn  t 
bagatelle  to  the  plurality  peace  would 
get    In    the    trenches. 

"I  know  the  sentiment  there.  Its 
for  peace.  But  negotiations  must  be 
started  before  our  candidate  can  be 
e  ected.  My  candidate  until  Europe  s 
returns  conic  in  will  b«  Peace  I  hope 
lo  nominate  him.  Ij.beHeve  there's  a 
saying  in  politics,  he's,  the  peoples 
man.'     That's   Peace."    ;  i 

SCHOOL  JANITORS 
ASK  WAGE  INCREASE 

scSrira^e  ?rc^kleriir^old."old"^'i"ol'^ 

*"Tn  'Jons'l-qtVen^c e  "^they  P-tlUoned  the 
board  of  education  last  night.  RSl^nK 
for  a  10  per  cent  increase  in  wages,  and 
urging  that  some  immediate  aUlon   oe 

^""This  is  the  first  time  that  a  request 

has  been  made  for  anln^nftor""  rfid 
for    the    engineers    and    flinltois,      reaa 

^'"Flfty'pe^sons,  ineludlnf  two  or  three 

women,   signed   the   Pf^«tf\"-, J^.^..^^" 
roll    of    the    engineer*   attd    Janltois 
the   various   buildings  nXw   is 
mately  $46,000.  

WAITE  INNOCUIaTED 
WITH  TYPHOID  GERMS 

deScTre^g°a%inVrh'e\^e\'llVi?rif^nr. 
Arthur  Warren  Walte  who  has  con- 
fessed the  murder  oi  his  father-in- 
law  John  E.  Peck,  of  Grand  Rapids, 
win'  be  sought  by  the  district  attor- 
neV's  officers  in  Grand  Rapids,  Ann 
Arbor.  Lansing  and  Kalamazoo.  It 
was  announced'^last  night.  An  assist- 
ant district  attorney  and  a  ^detective 
will   leave   for   Michigan   to   begin    the 

•"E^%'fnJl°"•that  Walte  inocu.ared 
himself  with  typhoid  fever  _ff*^»m« 
which  he  had  purchased  for  the  al- 
leged purpose  of  causing  the  deaths  or 
his  wife's  parents,  was  o^ta\";;^„.^y 
District  Attorney  Swann.  AValte  was 
treated  for  typhoid  last  November,  it 
was  learned,  shortly  after  he  had  pur- 
chased the  bacilli.  This  was  two 
months  after  his  marriage.  „    „   ^„ 

Bert  L.  Rich,  attorney  for  Eugene 
Oliver  Kane,  the  embalmer,  whoni 
Walte  said  he  gave  $9,000  to  testify 
th.  fluid  he  used  In  embalming  Mr. 
Peck's  bodv  contained  arsenic,  made  a 
formal  detnand  for  the  return  of  tho 
$7,800  which  Kane  dug  up  from  the 
spot  on  Long  Island,  where  he  ha  I 
bidden  It  and  turned  over  to  the  dis- 
t.lct  attorney.  Rich  .said  tne  money 
v.as  "a  gift  from  Dr.  W.ilte."  Miss 
Catherine  Peck,  sister  of  the  murdered 
man.  als )  demanded  the  money,  but 
It  will  be  held  as  evidence  In  the;  case. 

RUNftWAY"BALLOON 

LANDS  IN  SWAMP 

Pensacola.  Fla..  AUrU'  8.— The  80- 
foot  naval  observation  baloon  recently 
brought  here  for  n»an«uvers  which 
snapped  Its  anchor  <_lli«es  yesterday 
took  a  100-mlle  ung^lldM  cruise  and 
finally  landing  In  a  swamp  near 
Argyle,  Fla.  How  badly  It  was  dam- 
aged, was  unknown  to  naval  officei'S- 
A  detachment  from  th« -n^val  statlCil 
was  sent  to  bring  thf  ruttawi'av   back. 

The  balloon  was  ftifljited  when  it 
broke  away,  and  as  the  wind  carried 
it  over  the  brick  \m\\§  surrounding 
the  navy  yard  a  half  Vloren  of  its  talis 
or  tsabllizers  were  .  torn  off.  This 
turned  It  upside  do«|{n  before  it  had 
gone  far,  and  In  th«*vpfnion  of  naval 
officers,  eventually  *wam  responsible 
for  ItB  coming  to  earth. 


Sealed 

against  all 

Impurities 


WRAPPED 
IN 


\UNITED/ 


GSMm 


I 


I 


I 


WHETHER  you  are  rais- 
^^  ing  vegetables  for  sale 
or  for  your  own  use  you 
look  for  profitable  returns. 
You  expect  to  grow  those 
varieties  that  will  mature, 
those  strains  that  bear  heavi- 
ly and  are  of  the  best  quality. 
All    conditions    of    soil, 
weather  and  culture  may  be 
favorable,  but  unless  the  right 
seeds  are  used,  best  results 
cannot  be  attained.    To  in- 
!(  %/         sure  success  buy  seeds  from 

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Every  package  contains  selected  seeds  which  have  been  tested  in  five 
ways:— for  trueness  to  type,  germination,  hardiness,  early  maturity  and 
heavy  yields.  Northrup,  King  &  Co.'s  name  on  the  package  is  your 
assurance  of  reliable  seeds.  They  have  behind  them  almost 
a  third  of  a  century  of  square  dealing. 

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'f'\^ 


*««! 


II     ii«i  r  ■    mnt"^-   f.  tif*'^   ■"  tn^iii^^^f 


!' 


•^F*PP«F*»«**^»*^^" 


I 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


•^  m 


—     iCtr  i  »l 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

AN   INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER 

PnbllHlirfl     eM-ry    r^tninK     rxrrpt     Sunday     by 

The    llrmld    Company    «t    Dulath.    Minn. 

Both    Telephones— Huslnearf    OfTice,    ili, 

KdltMiial     Koonis,    1126. 

Cotncd  as  jeronil-clws  matter  at  th«  Duluth  po.tofflct  un*r  th. 

Kt  of  ronnr^w  of  March  3.   VUV. 


OFFlCIALJViPER,JIIYOL?MT»i 

mall, 


puj'Mble 
cenU:    three 


SI'BSC-KIITIOX     IlATKS—liy 

In     aclvHnce.     oin-     month,     36 
months,    Jl;    six    months.    |3;    one   year.    |4; 
Saturday     Herald,     |1     por     yeaf;     ^^  eekly 
Htrald,    |1    per   year. 
Dally   by  carrier,   city  and  suburbs,   10   ceni» 
a  week,   46  cents  a  month, 
gubscrlbers  will  confer  a  faror  by  maklnj  known  any  fomplaiut 

Wh.-!!  '.Iwinalng  the  aJ.lr««s  of  your  p»p^r.  It  U  ImporUiii  to 
gift  both  old  aiid  new   addreasFi. 

The  Duluth  Herald  accepts  advertlsinff 
contracts  with  the  distinct  guarantee  that 
It  has  the  larRcsl  circulation  In  Minnesota 
outside  the  Twin  Cities. 


The  Herald  will  be  Kind  ««>  »»■*«  »*»  **' 
tentlon  ealled  to  any  nalnleadlng  or  on- 
tme  Ktalement  which  may  appear  In  Its 
newH,    edltoHnl    or    advertUln«    eolumns. 


TODAY  IN  HISTORY,  I 


Mergenthaler  linotype  patented,  1890. 

'I'hf  llnotyp*'.  u  hii'h  has  revolutlon- 
izid  the  print  I  nK  bu.sln*  s.^,  was  In- 
Vftitod  hv  Ottniar  MfrK.-ntlmler,  who 
w.iH  bitrn  In  Wurttenibern.  (Jermany. 
In    1864,   and   came  to  the   l'nit»»d  State.s 


in     187 


Several     Ineffflive     models 


were  made  before  the  ono  now  In  wide 
use. 

KKADIMl  (atallaMc  In  Puluth  puhllc  libraryl  — 
Gmrti  lies.  •  I/-arting  AmerlcHii  liiTfnlors  '  (Intcrfstlng 
itntl  well  llliwtratfd  a.-inuiiU  of  tnveiitlouo  with  wnirthliig 
of  Ibf  ll«i-s  of  thr  inv(iitun.> 


ously,  when  the  act  to  be  protested  is 
threatened.  The  German  invasion  of  Bel- 
gium began  with  the  investment  of  Liege 
.\ugust  4,  1914.  Liege  was  occupied  August 
9.  By  the  end  of  August  the  Germans  had 
swept  across  Belgium  and  were  deep  in 
France.  Indeed,  on  September  23,  when 
Roosevelt's  article  was  published,  they  had 
been  across  the  Marne  and  days  since  had 
been  pushed  back  to  the  Aisnel 

On  September  23,  then.  Col.  Roosevelt 
and  the  Outlook  staff,  in  a  spirit  of  delicacy 
most  unlike  their  leader,  were  hoping  that 
the  president  woutd  utter  a  warning  protest 
—though  Roosevelt  S.MD  no  protest  should 
be  made — against  an  invasion  then  six 
weeks  old,  against  an  outrage  long  before 
consummated! 

Roosevelt  may  eat  his  words  of  Septem- 
ber 23.  and  welcome.  But  can  his  followers 
expect  intelligent  human  beings  to  eat  them, 
too.  and  to  believe  in  this  belated,  shallow, 
feeble,  evasive  defense  of  his  change  of 
front?     It  is  entirely  too  thin. 

One  thing  we  must  give  the  Colonel 
credit  for— he  has  let  others  undertake  this 
defense  of  him.  He  has  audacity  and  ef- 
frontery enough  for  almost  anything  im- 
aginable, but  not  enough  for  this  job,  which 
he  is  well  content  to  leave  to  Lawrence  Ab- 
bott and  his  penny  whistle  echoes. 
• 

Suffrafflsts  will  see  a  distinct  advance 
In  huniiin  thouifht  because  Walte  didn't 
Imitate  Adam  and  say  It  was  a  "Utile  bad 
woman." 


ROOSEVELT'S  "DELICACY"  ON 
SEPTEMBER  23,   1914. 

Lawrence  F.  .\l)bott  of  the  Outlook  ma- 
gazine rises  to  the  defense  of  Col.  Roose- 
velt, caught  in  a  pretty  mess  by  the  dis- 
covery of  the  sharp  conflict  between  his 
statement  in  the  Outlook  of  September  JJ. 
igi4,  and  his  present  policy  of  abusing  the 
president  for  not  doing  what  Roosevelt 
then  declared  should  not  be  done. 

Mr.  Abbott's  defense  is  not  a  defense, 
but  a  quibble. 

In    the   Outlook   of   the   above   date,   di.< 
cussing  the  arrival  of  a  delegation  of  Bel- 
gians seeking  American  interposition  in  be- 
half of  Belgium,  Col.  Roosevelt  said  among 
other  things: 

It  Is  eminently  desirable  that  ^"''e 
should  remain  entirely  neutral,  and 
nothlnfc  but  urKent  need  woald  war- 
runt  brenkhiK  our  neutrulHy  and  tak- 
InK  !»l«le»«  one  v\ny  or  another.  •  •  • 
Sympathy  U  entirely  eompatlble  with 
full  aehnowledKement  of  the  unwis- 
dom of  our  utterlnic  a  MluKle  word  of 
protest  unleHs  we  are  prepared  to  uiake 
that  proteitt  effeollvet  and  only  the 
eleiireMt  and  moMt  urRent  national  duty 
wonid  ever  JUNtlty  ux  In  devlatluK  from 
our  rule  of  neutrality  and  non-lnter- 
feretive. 


'1 


Plain  enough,  that  langua^'c,  is  it  not. 
And  true  and  wise,  too.  It  is  the  p<dicy 
the  nation  adopted  and  has  clung  to. 

But  in  this  spring  of  a  campaign  year 
Col.  Roosevelt  has  seen  fit  to  denounce  the 
president  in  unmeasured  terms  for  not  hav- 
ing "deviated  from  our  rule  of  neutrality 
and  non-interference,"  for  not  "breaking 
our  neutrality  and  taking  sides,"  for  not 
having  promptly  interposed  in  behalf  of 
Belgium  when  Germany  broke  its  pledge 
and  invaded  and  overcame  Belgium. 

What  has  Mr.  Abbott  to  say  to  this? 
First,  that  Governor  Glynn  of  New  York, 
who  first  called  attention  to  this  sharp 
proof  of  the  intellectual  and  political  dis- 
honesty of  Mr.  Roosevelt,  omitted  a  part 
of  what  he  said.  That  is  true.  He  did  not 
report  the  whole  Outlook  article,  nor  have 
those  who  have  done  their  civic  duty  by 
making  this  exposure  of  Rooseveltian  char- 
latanry. 

But  there  is  not  a  sentence,  a  phrase,  a 
word  or  a  syllable  in  the  rest  of  the  Roose- 
velt  article    that    changes    in    the    slightest 
degree  the  meaning  of  the  sentences  quoted 
above!     The  Outlook  of  that  isssue  is  on 
file  in  all  libraries,  and  any  man  who  has 
any  doubt  should  read  the  whole  of  it.   Cer- 
tainly  there   is   no   word   in   what   Mr.   Ab- 
bott   quotes    which    expresses    a   sentiment 
conflicting  with  that  quoted  above.     Indeed, 
in  the  unquoted  section  Roosevelt  enforced 
his  argument  for  neutrality  by  pointing  out 
that  neutrality  would  strengthen  our  hand 
"toward    the    re-establishment    of 
peace  when  the  time  comes.'* 

But  Mr.  Abbott  reports  what  the  Colonel 
and  the  Outlook  staff  really  thought  about 
the  matter  at  the  time  the  article  was  pub- 
lished:    "Mr.   Roosevelt— and  the   Outlook 
agreed  with  him— at  that  very  time  believed 
that  an  official  protest  against  the  Belgium 
invasion  was  demanded  both  on  grounds  of 
good  morals  and  good  Americanism."     Yet 
Mr.     Roosevelt     SAID— and    the    Outlook 
printed    it — that   "it   is   eminently   desirable 
that  we  should  remain  entirely  neutral,  and 
nothing    but    urgent    need    would    warrant 
breaking   our    neutrality    and    taking    sides 
one  way  or  another.     *     *     '     Sympathy  is 
entirely  compatible  with  full  acknowledge- 
ment of  the  UNWISDOM  OF  OUR  UT- 
TERING A  SINGLE   WORD   OF   PRO- 
TKST  unless  we  are  prepared  to  make  that 
protest  effective." 

According  to  Mr.  Abbott,  Col.  Roose- 
velt then  THOUGHT  that  we  should  pro- 
test. According  to  plain  print,  he  SAID 
that  we  should  NOT  protest. 

Why  did   he   not   say   what   he   thought? 
According     to     Mr.     Abbott,     because     'he 
hoped  the  president  was  going  to  come  to 
■      this  view,  and  he  did  not  desire  to  put  ob- 
struction  in   his   way."     Would   suggesting 
that  a  protest  be  made  have  been  obstruct 
ing    the    president    ia    makiui-:    a    protest? 
Would  not  declaring,  as  Roosevelt  did,  that 
no  protest  should  be  made,  weaken  the  presi- 
dent if  he  intended  to  make  a  protest?     Is 
there  any  more  honesty  in  this  Abbott  de- 
fense  than  there   is  in  the  chicanery  he   i« 
defending? 
When  should  a  protest  be  made?     Obvi- 


THE  FATAL  LURK  OF  THE 

"WAR  BRIDES." 

L-ouis  Jacoby,  68  years  old,  who  lived 
at  4889  riairle  avenue,  a  retired  dealer 
in  t.-xtll**a  and  embrold.'rles.  ended  his 
lif»»  in  a  room  in  the  Saratoga  hotel  by 
taklnjr    jiolson. — Chicago   papers. 

And    thereby   hangs   a   tale— an    old    tale 

hut  new  with  every  recurring  stock  market 

frenzy. 

This  unfortunate  man,  it  is  easy  to  ima- 
gine, worked  hard  to  get  his  start  in  life- 
worked  long  hours,  worked  on  small  wages, 
gained  a  foothold,  saved  his  money,  ap- 
plied himself  industriously,  got  into  busi- 
ness lor  himself,  struggled,  prospered  and 
after  ups  and  downs  finally  found  himself 
on  Easy  street— fixed  for  life. 

Retiring  with  a  competence,  he  faced 
happily  a  life  of  ease,  his  way  down  into 
the  Valley  of  the  Shadow  softened  by  an 
adequate  income,  surrounded  by  family  and 
friends,  everything  to  make  his  rest  after 
labor  happy,  including  the  feeling  that  it 
was  his  own,  that  he  had  earned  it  and  de- 
served it. 

And  then,  time  hanging  heavily  some- 
times, he  got  to  dropping  into  the  brokers' 
offices.  He  found  a  strange,  new  interest 
in  watching  the  fluctuations  of  the  figures. 
The  day  of  the  "war  brides"  came  along, 
and  he  saw  one  man  make  a  'killing,"  and 
then  another.  It  was  "easy  money,"  and 
there  was  a  vast  interest  and  excitement 
about  the  game. 

And  one  day  he  got  into  it  himself.  With 
stocks  going  up  all  the  time,  it  was  ridicu- 
lously easy.  He  bought,  and  he  won.  It 
tasted  good,  and  he  tried  again.  Then  he 
lost.  To  get  back  what  he  had  lost,  he 
plunged  deeper — then  deeper.  ...  It 
all  went. 

He  wrote  a  letter  to  his  son.  "By  the 
time  you  receive  this,  I  will  be  dead.  .  .  . 
Take  care  of  Flora  and  be  sure  and  save 
your  money."  He  took  a  room  in  a  hotel, 
went  to  it  and  ended  it. 
It's  a  great  game! 

It's  "war  brides"  now.     A  few  years  ago 

it   was   oil,  or  copper,  or  railroads.     It   is 

now  one  thing,  now  another.     Always  it  is 

!     Fascination   in   it;   excite- 


It  is  to  be  feared  that  he  will  have  to  e3^ 
pect  something  of  that  kind  in  almost  any 
church.  And  when  the  convert  discovers 
that  one  of  the  pillars  is  very  shaky  indeed, 
and  follows  a  devout  Sunday  by  six  days 
of  most  un-Christian  business  methods,  his 
eue  is  not  to  quit  in  disgust  but  to  make  up 
his  mind  to  profit  by  the  example  and  make 
sure  that  he,  at  least,  never  becomes  a 
whited  sepulcher  and  a  hypocrite.  More- 
over, it  he  will,  he  has  an  opportunity  by 
his  own  conduct  to  offer  an  example  thai 
will  shame  hypocrisy. 

While  there  is  doubtless  a  good  deal  to 
the  idea  advanced  by  the  Press,  the  trouble 
with  it  is  it  makes  it  too  easy  for  the  back- 
slider to  excuse  his  lapse;  and  if  the  con- 
vert who  weakens  bases  his  backsliding  on 
the  errors  of  others,  he  becomes  a  hypo- 
crite himself.  Any  man  who  is  looking  for 
an  excuse  for  not  joining  a  church,  or  for 
leaving  one  he  has  lately  joined,  can  always 
find  it  if  he  can  satisfy  himself  with  the  ex- 
cuse that  somebody  in  that  church  is  not 
living  up  to  his  professions.  The  church 
without  somebody  qf  whom  that  can  be 
said  is  rare  indeed. 

But  the  convert  must  stand  on  his  own 
feet.  That  others  reach  and  fall  short  is  no 
excuse  for  his  not  reaching.  All  of  us,  un- 
fortunately, fall  short;  the  glory  is  in  reach- 
ing, the  ignominy  in  not  reaching. 

The  convert,  too,  may  be  disappointed  m 
the  quietness  of  the  church  after  the  rattle 
and  bang  and  hullaballoo  of  the  revival.  To 
turn   from  a   Billy   Sunday   meeting  to   an 
ordinary  church  service  must  be  like  going 
from   a   boiler  factory   into  a   quiet  home. 
The  convert  who  is  the  product  of  the  pro- 
fessional's  revival   may  have  some  trouble 
adjusting  himself  to  the  calmer  and  holief 
atmosphere   of  the   church;   but   it   will  be 
good    for    him    to    make    that    adjustment. 
Noise   isn't   religion,   any   more   than   it   i| 
patriotism.     "The   woods   were   God's   first 
temples."   and   a   quiet   nook   in   the    forest 
heart  of  nature,  with  a  soul  there  attuned 
to  God,   is  holiness  indeed;  though  that  is 
no  fair  excuse  for  going  fishing  on  Sunday. 
The     convert,     entering     upon     his     new 
church  life,  should  look  not  at  the  conduct 
of    his    new    associates,   but    into    his    own 
heart  and  up  to  God.     He  should  not  faltef 
because  others  falter.    He  should  determine 
to  give  an  example  of  strength  and  courage 
rather  than  to  follow  an  example  of  weak- 
ness and  cowardice. 


vision  ever  recorded  itself.     Whose  word, 
whose   vision? 

They  are  the  word  and  vision  of  a  good 
man,  a  good  citizen,  a  good  statesman,  a 
good  Republican.  He  had  been  a  secretary 
to  President  Lincoln  and  later  was  to  be 
his  biographer.  He  was  to  be  a  secretary 
"jSf  state  in  the  cabinet  of  a  president  of  the 
ijnited  States. 

*  This  vision  was  seen,  and  this  word  said 
of  it,  by  John  Hay  in  a  letter  written  to 
Reward  from  Vienna  in  i868. 
'  What  he  saw  and  said  is  as  true  today  as 
it  was  then— truer,  indeed,  because  the  need 
of  keeping  dowji  democracy  by  whatever 
•means  available  has  grown  greater.  It  will 
not  always  be  kept  down— there,  here   or 

anywhere. 

• 

Some  of  our  statesmen  couldn't  «««  '"^ 
pow^r  in  our  army  even  if  It  consisted  of  Ave 
million  men.  unless  every  one  of  the  five 
«d  In  said  statesman's  district  and 


April  8, 1916, 

"The  Mountain  Evangelist' 


Mr  SaTOyarC 


iXillllon  Uvec 

had  a   perfectly  good  vote. 


Where  Is  the  philosopher  who  will  argue 
that  warfare  Is  really  the  highest  thing  U\ 
social  life,  and  that  the  race  Is  but  just  com- 
ing into  Its  own?  

"I  TOOK  THE  PAHAMA  CANAL." 

"Uncle  Sam,"  says  Theodore  Roosevelt, 
"must  never  wrong  the  weak." 

Fine!     "It  is  excellent  to  have  a  giant's 
strength,  but  it  is  tyrannous  to  use  it  like, 
a  giant." 

But— 

What  about   Colombia,    Colonel,  and   its 

canal  zone  which  "I  took?" 


How    did    the    Thaw    case     alienists     ever 
overlook   that   "little    bad    man"   stuff.' 


a   great   game 

ment  in  it;  hot  pleasure  in  it  when  you  win 
— a  great  game.  But  there's  death  in  it, 
and  woe  and  misery.  It  got  Jacoby.  It 
has  got  others.    It  will  get  yet  others. 

IT    WILL    NEVER    GET    ANYBODY 
WHO   KEEPS   OUT   OF   IT! 


If  he  Insists  on  rushing  out  of  the  house 
Immediately  after  reading  the  want  ads, 
maybe  he  saw  that  one  asking  for  "an  ex- 
perienced  lady   pressor." 

• 

THE  CONVERT  AND  THE  CHURCH. 

Evidently    there    has    been    a    revival    at 

Danville,  Illinois,  for  the  Press  of  that  city 

prints  a  piece  about  the  post-revival  shrink- 

general  I  ^«^  *"  ^^^  ****  ®^  converts,  evidently  with 

the  purpose  of  making  a  case  in  defense  of 


the  converts  who  slide  back. 

"We    haven't    much    patience    with    those 
who  will  not  stand  fir»  for  a  good  cause,'' 
says  the  Press,  "but  sometimes  there  seems 
to  be  a  pretty  fair  excuse  for  the  new  con- 
vert's taking  to  the  woods.     The  matter  of 
taking    on    church    obligations    is    not    and 
should  not  be  a  one-sided  affair.    The  new 
convert  has  a  right  to  expect  the  church  to 
be  as  good  as  it  looks  and  as  good  as  it 
pretends  to  be.     He  has  a  right  to  expect 
that  the  pillars  of  the  church  shall  be  solid 
oak   throughout  and   not   merely   so   many 
pieces    of    veneered    furniture.      He    has    a 
right  to  expect  that  those  who  talked  and 
prayed   him  into  the  church  shall  talk  and 
pray  to  keep  him  there  and  shall  make  him 
feel  that  he  is  both  welcome  and  wanted.  He 
has  a  right  to  expect  that  those  who  make 
profession  of  religion  on  Sunday  shall  prac- 
tice   it    during    the    other    six    days    of    the 

week." 

We  haven't  the  slightest  notion  of  assail- 
ing the  good  motives  of  the  Danville  Press. 
Neither  have  we  much  criticism  to  make  of 
what  it  says.  The  lecture  it  reads  the  church 
and  the  church  members  about  their  re- 
sponsibility to  the  convert  will  do  them  no 
harm,  and  may  do  them  much  good  if  they 
will  take  it  to  heart. 

But  just  the  same  it's  letting  the  back- 
slider down  too  easily.  He  has  his  respon-. 
sibilities,  too,  and  the  Press  lays  hardly 
enough  stress  on  them.  He  is  not  relieved 
of  these  responsibilities  if  one  or  more  of 
the  pillars  of  the  church  do  not  analyze  in 
practice    what    they   appear   by   profession. 


THE  WHY  OF  EUROPEAN  ARMAMENTS. 

What  is  the  greatest  fear  the  govern- 
ments of  Europe  have  had  in  the  last  half 
centtny  or  so? 

Not  each  other,  though  they  have  pre- 
tended it  was  that.  The  present  fiction— 
somewhere  it  is  a  fiction,  surely— that  all 
of  them  arc  fighting  in  self-defense  grows 
out  of  that  pretense. 

No,  it  was  not  outside  aggression  that 
was  their  greatest  fear.     It  was  the  people 

democracy.      They    remembered    France 

and  1789  and  its  awful  sequence,  i793-  They 
remembered  1848,  when  the  slumbering 
giant  Democracy  stirred  and  was  put  to 
sleep  again  with  much  pain  and  bloodshed. 
They  noted  growing  intelligence,  and  with 
it  a  growing  inquiry  into  the  wisdom  of 
keeping  up  the  burdensome  expense  of 
royal  and  ducal  privilege.  It  was  uncom- 
fortable, menacing;  it  grew  rapidly  more 
uncomfortable,  more  menacing. 

Under  Lloyd-George's  leadership  the 
house  of  lords  had  lost  its  veto,  social  jus- 
tice legislation  had  gone  far,  and  the  great 
ducal  estates  were  on  the  point  of  being 
broken  up  by  wise  taxation. 

Under  Kaiser  Wilhelm  the  Social  Demo- 
cratic party  had  grown  to  enormous  pro- 
portions, was  kept  out  of  power  mainly 
by  a  wretchedly  unjust  voting  system,  and 
was  becoming  more  and  more  bold  m  its 

demands. 

Under  the  Hapsburgs  the  polyglot  na- 
tions were  growing  daily  more  uneasy  and 
their  unrest  was  growing  more  menacing. 
The  magic  word  "democracy"  was  pene- 
trating to  the  remotest  and  most  benighted 
fastnesses  of  royalty  and  dukedom,  and 
privilege  felt  its  seat  daily  hotter  and  more 

insecure. 

These  things,  no  less  than  the  complex 
and  corrupt  and  false  and  uncivilized  chi- 
canery of  international  politics,  kept  Eu- 
rope armed  and  on   the  verge  of  war. 

Here  is  what  a  shrewd  observer  said  of 
it  forty-eight  years  ago: 

The  great  calamity  and  danger  of  Eu- 
rope today  are  these  enormous  arma- 
•  ments.  N'o  honest  statesman  can  say 
that  he  sees  In  the  present  attitude  of 
politics  the  necessity  of  war.  No  great 
power  is  threatened.  There  Is  no  'nenace 
to  peace  that  could  not  be  Immedlateb 
dispelled  by  a  <irm.Protest  of  the  peace 


RICH  HEN  AND  THEIR  SONS. 

"Recently."  says  Dr.  Russell  H.  Conwell 
in  the  American  Magazine,  "I  have  been  in- 
vestigating the  lives  of  4.043  American  mil- 
lionaires." 

Think  of  it!  Millionaires  totaling  4.043' 
And  doubtless  many  escaped  the  net  of  the 
good  doctor's  investigations,  too.  If  these 
millionaires  have  but  a  million  apiece— and 
that's  a  paltry  figure  as  such  figures  go 
nowadays— that's  more  than  four  billions  in 
the  hands  of  one  out  of  twenty-five  thou- 
sand of  the  population.  Not  difficult,  then, 
to  understand  why  many  of  the  unmillioned 
millions  find  it  hard  to  stretch  both  ends  to 

meet.  „ 

"All  but  twenty  of  these  millionaires, 
continues  Dr.  Conwell,  "started  life  as  poor 
boys,  and  all  but  forty  of  them  have  con- 
tributed largely  to  their  communities.  But 
alas!  not  one  rich  man's  son  out  of  seven- 
teen dies  rich." 

A  thought  worth  while  in  that  last.  Ima- 
gine the  process  between  inheriting  great 
.jk-calth  and  dying  poor.  Imagine  its  effects 
—its  effects  upon  the  spenders,  physical, 
moral,  spiritual;  the  effects  of  its  example 
upon  everybody  around  them. 
i  Imagine  these  things,  and  you  have  an- 
other good  argument  for  the  inheritance 
tax— for  a  real  inheritance  tax  that  will  pro 
tect  the  sons  of  rich  men  from  the  hurt  of 
unearned  great  wealth. 

At  any  rate,  no  congressional  district  In 
Minnesota  can  claim  superlorrTy  over  another 
one  on  the  plea  of  having  a  congressman  who 
voted  to  support  the  president. 

♦ 

'  The  Reign  of  Law 

By   "The  Innocent  Bystander." 

IX The   PaMIe  Opinton  of  Mankind. 

When  the  American  colonies  set  up  for 
themselves,  their  first  declaration  was  ad- 
dressed to  the  public  opinion  of  mankind — 
an  authority  to  which  no  one  had  ever  be- 
fore appealed— a  power  that  hardly  ex- 
isted. 

In  1776  what  was  public  opinion  like  In 
France?  Rather  less  than  there  is  today  in 
Mexico,  In  Russia — abotit  as  much  as  now 
In  Slam.  In  Germany — perhaps  as  much  as 
In  Sahara  now.  In  Italy — maybe  as  much  aa 
In  Somali.  In  1776  there  was  no  such  thing 
as    the    public    opinion    of    mankind. 

Today  it  la  the  strongest  force  in  the 
world,  a  power  which  no  nation  dares  defy. 

The  Idea  of  public  right — the  appeal  to 
the  public  opinion  of  mankind — is  set  before 
practical  statesmanship  as  a  force  to  be 
employed    for    the    control    of    International 

relations.  ^  , 

We   who   have    seen    the    reign    of   law   es- 
tablished   over    states    and    groups    of   states, 
kingdoms  and  groups  of  kingdoms,  dlsplac- 
ihe    rule    of    violence,    why    should    we 


•Washington,  April  8. — (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — A.  most  estimable  and  honored 
Kentucky  woman  has  asked  me  to  write 
something  about  George  O.  Barnes,  the  be- 
loved "Mountain  Evangelist,'  whose  mem- 
ory Is  venerated  in  ten  thousand  households 
of  the  "Old  Commonwealth"  to  this  day.  I 
gave  It  as  my  opinion  the  other  day  that 
Matt  Carpenter  was  the  greatest  orator  I 
erer  heard.  I  did  not  have  the  pulpit  In 
mind.  I  was  speaking  of  matters  entire- 
ly secular,   worldly,   political  civic. 

We   Judge   orators   by   many    things.      One, 
and    perhaps    the    chief    of   these.    Is   the    ef- 
fect an  address  has  upon  the  auditors.     Put 
to  this   test  Brother  Barnes  was  by  far  the 
greatest    orator    I    ever    heard.      He    was    a 
tall,  graceful,    handsome   man,   with  more   of 
that    quality    called    "magnetism"    than    any 
other  I  ever  saw — and  I've  seen   Blaine  and 
Beecher  and  Bryan — yet  he  might  have  been 
a  failure  as  art   orator  had  he  hot  been  en- 
dowed   In    such    abundance    with    that    other 
and   even   more   essential   auaMty   In   a   plat- 
form speaker,  sincerity.     With  a  splendid  In- 
tellect,  highly  cultivated,  with  a  noble  con- 
tempt  for  the   material  and  sensuous  things 
of    this    life,    with    the    broadest    charity    for 
all  human  weaknesses,  with  a  sublime  trust 
in    the    Master    and    a    resoUte    courage    to 
do   his    Master's   will,   with    the   love   or   Ood 
filling  his  great  heart  to  overflowing,  George 
O.  Barnes  preached  the  Gospel  of  Christ  and 
planted  the  love  of  God   and  the  peace  that 
passes  understanding  in  the  hearts  of  thou- 
sands of  his  fellows  theretofore  heavy  laaen 
and    wretched. 

I  am  only  one  of  thousands  who  can  de- 
voutly thank  God  for  the  ministry  of  this 
great  preacher  of  His  word.  Before  I  heard, 
him  my  poor  intellectuals  were  subject  to  the 
influence  of  Tom  Paine;  but  soon  he  set  me 
free.  Since  then  I  have  read  the  skepticisms 
of  Bollngbroke  and  heard  the  blasphemies  of 
IngersoU  without  the  slightest  adherence  to 

either. 

•       •       • 


Marie.  She  was  with  him  In  both  hemi- 
spheres, supporting  him  In  his  blessed  min- 
istry. She  Is  an  ornament  to  womannooa 
and  thousands  will  bless  her  memory  after 
she  shall   have   joined  her  father  In   heaven. 

We  can  readily  believe  that  God  kept  In 
tune  that  beloved  little  organ  that  made 
the  journey  with  them  ov^r  the  rough  moun- 
tain   roads   In    Eastern    Kentucky. 

I  don't  believe  a  rational  man  ever  at- 
tended a  serlts  of  Brother  Barnes"  meeting* 
and  remained  an  Infidel. 


Saturday  Night  Talk 


ing    

doubt  It  win  be  extended  over  the  rela- 
tions of  nations  also?  For  the  family  of  na- 
tions must  live  together  In  the  world. 

M»«*«y— *The     World     State." 

. » 

Wlay  W^oaaen   Are   More  ReIlv<oa«  Than   Men. 

Bernard  I.  Bell  In  the  Atlantic:  The  real 
reason  why  women  are  more  religious  than 
men  today  Is  because  they  are  more  human 
than  men  It  Is  not  by  nature  that  they  are 
so  Social  conditions  have  made  them  so.  As 
we  have  divided  the  labor  of  the  world  be- 
tween the  sexe-s,  the  work  of  mep  Is  almost 
entirely  concerned  with  the  production  and 
distribution  of  things;  the  work  of  women 
almost  entirely  with  the  production  and 
sustenance    of    persons.  We    all    of    us    at 

times  notice  the  great  throngs  of  men  who 
MO  at  the  call  of  the  whistle.  In  and  out  of 
pur  factories.  To  the  average  man's  mind, 
these  hundreds  of  men  are  "hands,"  and  the 
purpose  of  the  factories  where  they  are  em- 
ployed Is  to  produce  "goods;"  but  to  the 
average  woman's  mind,  these  hundreds  of 
laborers  are  human  beings,  and  the  purpose 
of  the  factories  Is  to  furnish  su.^tenance. 
through  pav  envelopes,  to  men  and  women 
and  boys  and  girls  and  babies  yet  unborn. 
In  nvost  of  our  homes  the  man  leaves  hu- 
man interests  early  In  the  morning,  devotes 
the  best  hours  of  his  day  to  the  welfare 
of  things,  and  returns  to  persons  again  only 
for    the    evening's     relaxation.  His    wife, 

meanwhile,  has  hardly  done  an  act  of  labor 
all  the  day.  has  hardly  made  a  plan  or  had 
a  thought,  which  Is  not  with  considerable 
Intimacy  related  to  human  being* 
band,    her   children,   her  neighbors. 


-her  hus- 


Rippling  Rhymes 


By  Walt  Mason 


fullv  disposed  majority  of  nations.  There 
would  be.  thereafter,  no  danger  to  aijy 
people,  but  a  vast  and  immediate  gain  to 
all  from  a  general  disarmament. 

Whv  then.  Is  this  awful  waste  of 
vniith"  and  treasure  continued?  1  believe 
FROM  NO  OTHER  MOTIVE  THAN  TO 
srSTAIN  THK  WANING  POWER  OF 
KINGS      Armies  an-  today  only  useful  In 

^"\rrGkVv^LEss\vA^*^^ro  m 

THeIr    ATTENtV^N    from    DOMESTIC 
With    the    disappearance    of 


of  "one  m'an  weigh  as  l«eavlly  as  those  of 
millions  of  his  fellow-creatures  would  be 
utterly   destroyed. 
No  truer  word  ever  was  spoken,  no  truei;!,^ 


Motoring. 

When  first  a  fellow  gets  a  car.  he 
navigates  it  slowly;  "base  fiends,"  he 
says,  "those  speeders  are— their  course 
is  most  unholy."    There'll  be  no  reck- 
less speed  for  him;  such  stuff  annoys 
him  greatly ;  he  will  not  scorch  or  scoot 
or  skim  ;  but  jog  along  sedately.    "Oh, 
safety  is  the  proper  stuff."    he    says, 
when  feeling  chatty ;  "twelve  miles  an 
hour  is  fast  enough  for  any  man  not 
batty.    The  accidents  of  which  we  read 
are  caused  by  silly  duffers  who  have  to 
hit  abnormal  speed,  and  many  a  vic- 
tim suffers."     But  when  he's  had  his 
car  nine  weeks,  he  sends  it  forth  a-hum- 
ming,  and  every  country  village  shrieks 
when    it    beholds    him    coming.     "To 
crawl  along,"  he  says,  "is  worse  than 
walking  is.  dod-gast  me !     I  don't  pro- 
pose that  every  hearse  shall  go  a-whiz- 
zing  past  me!"     And  so  he  scorches, 
in  his  glee,    and    then,    some    balmy 
morning,  he  winds  his  car  around  a 
tree,  and  furnishes  a  warning. 

.  (Protected  by  T^  ^^**'"  NewPM«  Brnlce.) 


George  O.  Barnes  was  born  In  Kentucky 
In  1827,  the  son  of  James  C.  Barnes,  a  clergy- 
man of  the  Presbyterian  faith,  yet  venerated 
and  beloved  In  the  Blue  Grass  region.  He 
was  a  John  Knox-of-a-man  and  In  the  Mas- 
ter's cause  cheerfully  he  would  have  gone 
to  the  stake,  and  of  him  It  might  have 
been  said  what  Murray  said  of  Knox,  "he 
never  feared  to  look  on  the  face  of  man." 
After  graduating  at  Princeton  "Father" 
Barnes  found  a  wife  and  a  helpmeet  In 
Maria  Stockton  Smith  of  New  Jersey,  who 
was  even  more  extraordinary  as  a  woman 
than  her  husband  was  as  a  man.  To  them 
were  born  four  children,  George  Owen  the 
youngest. 

In    the    material    things    of    this    world    the 
family   was   very   poor,   but   It  was   a   house- 
hold of  ten  thousand  and  that  humble  roof- 
tree    might*  as    well    have    excited    the    envy 
of     the     great     who     dwell     In     and     sway 
many  a  realm.     By  the  exercise  of  the  most 
rigid    economy    George    was    enabled    to    at- 
tend  the  famous  Center  college  at  Danville, 
then  presided  over  by  John  C.  Young,  whose 
superior    as    a    trainer    of    youth,    mentally 
and  morally,  our  country  never  knew.     After 
his    graduation,    young    Barnes    entered    the 
office  of  an  eminent  Kentucky  lawyer.  Squire 
Turner,   at   Richmond,   Madison   county,   as  a 
student.      He  was   only  19   years  of  age  and 
in   a  few  weeks  there  was  a  call  for  volun- 
teers   to    fight    the    Mexican    war.      He    was 
one  of  the  first   to  respond,  and  In  less  than 
three  days  Capt.  Stone's  company  was  raised. 
In    thirty    minutes    the    farmers    of    Madison 
county  furnished,  without  charge  to  the  gov- 
ernment, the  horses,  thoroughbreds,  to  mount 
it,    and    the   company   became   a   part   of   the 
Kentucky    regiment   commanded     by     Hum- 
phrey Marshall.     Young  Barnes  was  the  tall- 
est man  In  the  regiment  and   the  most  pop- 
ular soldier.  Overflowing  with  animal  spirits, 
he  led  In  every  pardonable  mischief,  though 

nothing    vicious   ever   came   from   him. 

•       •       • 

After  the  war  Barnes  heeded  a  call  to 
the  ministry  and  attended  the  Theological 
seminary  of  Princeton  college,  where  he  was 
graduated.  Then  he  became  a  regularly  or- 
dained minister  of  the  Presbyterian  church. 
Upon  his  graduation  he  took  for  a  wife 
Miss  Jane  Cowan  of  Kentucky,  and  suffice 
it  to  say  that  she  was  fit  mate  for  this 
wonderful  man.  They  went  to  India,  where 
they  were  missionaries  for  some  years,  un- 
til the  health  of  the  husband  failed,  when 
they  returned  to  Kentucky  and  Brother 
Barnes  became  the  pastor  of  a  flock  at 
Stanford. 

An  amusing  .««tory  Is  told  of  Dean  Gais- 
ford  of  Oxford  university,  who  began  a 
passage  of  one  of  his  sermons  thus:  "St. 
Paul  says,  and  I  partly  agree  with  him." 
Drother  Barnes  was  even  more  candid,  and 
after  he  became  an  evangelist  It  was  his 
frequent  custom  to  say,  when  expounding  a 
passage  of  scripture:  "Paul  was  theologizing 
there."  His  imagination,  an  Inheritance  from 
that  wonderful  woman,  his  mother,  would 
have  been  riotous  had  It  not  been  held  In 
subjection  by  his  masterful  understanding. 
His  sermons  were  as  absorbing  and  enter- 
taining as  Dickens  or  Thackeray,  and  he 
never  tired.  His  knowledge  of  the  Bible  was 
thorough.  His  sermons  on  Rahab  and 
Zaccheus  were  exquisite,  wonderful.  Utter- 
ly unconscious  of  the  gift,  George  O.  Barnes 
was  one  of  the  greatest  actors  the  world 
ever  saw.     On  the  histrionic  stage  he  might 

have   rivaled   Garrlck    himself. 

•  •       • 

As  was  Inevitable,  orthodoxy  could  not 
stand  for  George  Barnes.  He  was  tried  for 
heresy,  and  either  cut  loose,  or  was  cut  loose, 
from  the  church.  A  Kentuckian,  a  Mr.  Ows- 
ley, an  opulent  citizen  of  Chicago,  built  a 
fine  church  in  that  city  and  Barnes  under- 
took the  ministry.  He  joined  with  the  fa- 
mous Moody  in  a  series  of  meetings  and 
was  a  greater  Moody.  He  felt  the  call  to  go 
forth  and  preach  the  Gospel  "without  scrip 
or   purse,"    urged    to   do   so   by   Moody. 

•  •       • 

Soon  thereafter  we  find  him  again  In  Ken- 
tucky, proclaiming  the  Gospel  In  the  moun- 
tains. For  years  he  was  so  employed,  and 
abundant  was  the  harvest.  The  governor  of 
the  commonwealth  confessed  Christ  at  one  of 
his  meetings  and  thousands  of  others,  great 
and  obscure,  did  likewise.  He  went  to  Ohio, 
to  Indiana,  to  New  York  city,  and  wherever 
he  appeared  blessing  followed  in  the  wake. 
He  crossed  the  ocean  and  preached  in  Lon- 
don and  the  rest  of  his  life  he  devoted  'to 
the  work  of  his  Master,  proclaiming  the  one 
transcendent,  overwhelming  truth,  the  root 
of   all   good — that  God  is  Love,  and  nothing 

else. 

Here  Is  what  he  said  of  Bob  IngersoU: 
"But.  gentleman  as  he  Is.  scholar  as  he 
Is.  int^lectual  giant  as  he  ia.  and.  above  all. 
attacking  a  theological  God  who  Is  wnotiy 
Indefensible  by  Dr.  Talmage  or  Judge  Black, 
or  anybody  else,  he  stands  upon  such  van- 
tage ground  that  I  do  not  wonder  he  Is 
sweeping  the  decks  by  his  oratory  and 
ntaklng  infidels  of  thousands  upon  thousands 
of  the  best  thinkers  of  our  nation,  old  and 
young.  And  I  frankly  confess  here,  as  I 
have  often  said  from  the  plaftorm,  that  If 
1  had  no  other  God  than  the  God  whom  Col, 
IngersoU  so  fiercely,  justly  and  successfully 
assails,  I  would  gladly  take  refuge,  as  he 
does.    In    the    only    comforting    thought    left. 

that  there  is  no  God.  ^    ^     xu      /-.   .. 

"Oh,  If  he  only  knew  my  God,  the  God 
and  Father  of  our  Lord  Jesus  Christ,  I  be- 
lieve he  would  love  and  trust  and  preach 
Him  as  I  do,  whUe  abating  not  a  whit  his 
opposition  to  the  devil  enthroned,  whom  so 
many  thousands  in  and  out  of  the  church 
are  trying  to  worship  and  serve,  how  suc- 
cessfully let  the  dead  churches  and  the 
deader  church-goers  witness.  The  stream 
rises  not  higher  than  Its  source." 

I  have  not  the  space,  and  if  I 'had.  I  am 
not  worthy  to  attempt,  a  word  regarding 
Brother   Barnes'      devoted     daughter.     Miss 


Br   the   PanoB. 


The    Environment   That    Makea    People. 

We  say  that  people  are  made  by  their 
environment,  but  that  Is  not  quite  true.  It 
is  the  particular  part  of  their  environment 
to  which  they  respond  that  makes  them. 
It  Is  the  part  of  your  surroundings  that  you 
allow  to  make  an  Impression  on  you,  gently 
reader,  that  does  the  work  In  your  own 
case.  Your  physical  nature  can  pick  either 
health  or  disease  out  of  the  atmosphere. 
Both  are  there,  waiting  to  be  appropriated. 
Your  moral  nature,  likewise,  may  find  either 
food  or  poison  in   Its  surroundings. 

Let  us  Illustrate.  A  young  man  came  from 
a  country  town  to  New  York  and  fell  into 
loose  habits  that  finally  landed  him  in  the 
police  court.  Excusing  his  fall  to  friends 
at  home,  he  asked  what  better  fate  could 
be  expected  of  a  fellow  whose  only  home 
at  night  was  a  hall  bedroom,  and  whose  only 
chance  for  amusement  the  welter  of  saloons, 
cheap  theaters  and  gambling  joints  with 
which  the  region  abounded.  He  claimed  that 
any  lad  was  bound  to  be  ruined  In  such  sur- 
roundings. 

He  did  not  take  into  account  that,  hard- 
ly three  blocks  from  his  boarding  house, 
was  a  finely  appointed  Y.  M.  C.  A.  building, 
where  he  would  have  been  welcome.  He 
forgot  that,  near  by,  there  was  a  magnificent 
public  library  offering  Its  treasures  to  him. 
He  may  not  even  have  noticed  that  dally  he 
passed  the  doors  of  three  churches  from  the 
wholesome  Influence  of  which  he  held  aloof. 
He  did  not  realize  that  by  little  search  In 
that  metropolis  he  could  have  found,  al- 
most any  night  in  the  year,  some  educative 
and  enjoyable  lecture  or  concert — absolutely 
free. 

The  young  man  was  being  made  by 
environment — but  only  by  that  part  or  It 
that    he   deliberately   selected. 

With  what  different  eyes  do  men  look  out 
upon  the  world:  One  sees  the  good,  that  Is 
in  it  and  the  other  sees  the  evil.  One 
reaches  for  the  kernel,  the  other  chooses 
the  husk.  Under  exactly  the  same  condi- 
tions, moral  reactions  will  vary  for  each 
one  of  a  dozen  Individuals.  Let  the  old 
rhyme  point   its  own  moral: 

A  priest  and  tailor  took  their  way 
To   view   Passaic   Falls   one   day. 
"Thy  wonders.  Lord,"  the  parson  crlea, 
"Amaze  our  souls,  delight  our  eyes." 
The   tailor    only   made    this    note: 
"Oh.  what  a  place  to  sponge  a  coat!" 

The  ability  to  pick  out  the  worth  while 
and  noble  things  In  life,  and  to  leave  the 
trivial  and  the  evil  things  Is  one  prlm^ 
result  of  any  good  education.  The  sister 
of  the  modern  science  of  eugenics  is  eu- 
thenics.  One  deals  with  heredity  and  the 
other  with  environment.  One  takes  account 
of  taints  of  blood  that  predict  disease,  and 
the  other  studies  surroundings  and  corrects 
faults  of  training  in  order  to  overcome  the 
taints  and  swing  the  life  currents  into 
healthy  channels.  The  most  interesting  dis- 
closure of  all  thU  modern  study  Is  that  of 
the  very  great  extent  to  which  a  bad  inher- 
Itence  may  be  overcome  by  a  good  environ- 
ment. ^  ,      .    „,.,,, 

My  suggestion  to  our  young  friend,  AMU- 
lam  Weakling,  who  whines  that  all  things 
are  against  him  In  this  evil  world.  Is  to  atlr 
up  his  moral  energies.  He  cannot  shift  the 
responsibility  for  his  failure  on  bad  sur- 
roundings. Within  certain  limits,  of  course, 
there  Is  a  big  choice  open  to  any  of  us  in 
the  matter  of  surroundings.  No  one  Is  com- 
pelled to  take  poison  Instead  of  bread,  even 
If  both  are  offered  to  him  on  the  same 
platter      Doors  to  the  pit  are  open  to  every 


man  but  so  are  portals  to  the  heights.  Let 
William  set  his  feet  firmly  ^"^he  way  that 
leads   upward.  THE   PAR.sON. 


Twenty  Years  Ago 


From  Th«  Herald  of  this  date,  1896 


••♦The  meeting  of  the  St.  Louis  County 
Republican  club,  held  at  the  city  hall  last 
evening,  was  largely  attended,  and  fully 
200  new  members  signed  the  roll.  J.  H. 
Norton's  name  was  presented  for  president. 
Secretary  George  R.  Laybourn  was  also 
placed  In  nomination,  but  declined  on  the 
ground  that  he  was  a  candidate  for  register 
of  deeds.  Mr.  Laybourn's  announcement  of 
his  candidacy  was  received  with  applause, 
and  his  name  was  withdrawn.  Mr.  Norton 
was  then  elected  by  acclamation.  A.  N-  Hop- 
kins was  elected  first  vice  president,  D.  VV  . 
Freeman  of  Blwablk  second  vice  president, 
Edward  Elston  secretary 
treasurer. 


and    J.    C.     Bush 


•••Martin  Pattlson  was  elected  mayor  '>f 
Superior  yesterday,  receiving  2,685  votes, 
against  1,845  for  Carl  Wilson  and  656  for 
William   Munro. 

•  ♦•There  Is  considerable  Interest  being 
taken  in  the  report  that  the  Johnson  Nickel 
Mining  company  now  has  possession  of  25,- 
000  acres  of  mineral  land  in  Lake  an*  Cook 
counties.  The  ore  to  be  mined  Is  Htanlc 
nlcolite  and  assays  of  specimens  taken  from 
the  lands  run  from  $18  to  $190  a  ton.  It 
is  claimed  the  gold  and  silver  in  the  ore  will 
cover  the  cost  of  mining. 

•••The  Father  Mathew  Total  Abstinence 
society  has  elected  the  following  officers: 
President,  D.  G.  Murphy;  vice  president,  M. 
Flynn;  financial  secretary.  H.  Pierce;  record- 
ing secretary,  J.  B.  Morlarlty;  treasurer,  M. 
Hackett. 

•♦♦County  Auditor  Halden  has  rf^ceived 
from  Slate  Auditor  Dunn  a  list  of  all  mineral 
lands  In  St.  Louis  county  held  under  50-year 
leases  from  the  state,  with  Instructions  to 
place  them  on  the  tax  lists  to  be  assessed 
according  to  their  mineral  valuation.  The 
valuation  may  not  exceed  $600,000,  as  a  lar«re 
part  of  the  land  Is  unexplored. 

•••Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today, 
30;  maximum  yesterday,  30;  minimum  yes- 
terday,  23. 


•••At  the  annual  meeting  of  St.  Paul'* 
Episcopal  church  the  following  officers  were 
elected:  F.  W.  Paine,  senior  warden;  J.  E. 
Bowers,  junior  warden;  H.  M.  Peyton.  C.  H. 
Graves,  W.  M.  Prlndle.  A.  H.  Vlele,  W.  H. 
Hubbard,  D.  A.  Petre  and  W.  S.  Bishop, 
vestry. 

•••James  Maher.  who  has  been  here  visit- 
ing Mr.  and  Mm.  Qulgley,  left  this  afternoon 
for  St.  John's.  Nfld.,  where  he  Is  cashier  of 
the  Allan  Steamship  compan>"'»  office. 


•♦•Judge  Nethaway  of  the  municipal  court 
at  Stillwater  Is  being  urged  to  become  a 
candidate  for  the  district  judgeship  to  auc- 
ceed  Judge  Crosby,  whose  term  expires  at 
the   close   of  this  year. 

• 

C«nl«a't   G«   Far   With   It    Kow. 

Judge:  The  Self-Made  Man— "Forty  year* 
ago  I  got  my  real  beginning.  I  started  out 
In  New  York  with  $100.  What  do  you  think 
of   that?" 

New  Yorker — "Well,  it  all  depends  oa 
where  you  were  goinir.'' 


.    ^. 


*d-iMibi*>^^l 


m 


■  ■  * 


—  —  -j  If  —t-    ■■  t  — I-  •  •■  — ■- 


' 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUYH    H^-.. 


April  8, 1916. 


*    .   ■^■i 


■  »      ■       <  rm        I  «    ■!■ 

I 

■  ' '"       "■ 


What  if  your  pock- 
ets are  empty?  Res- 
olution is  a  mint 


AH  DO 


Failure  and  success 
are  measured  by  the 
same  clock-tick 


*»«•  9 


31.; ^1 * 

II  ■        ■ 


1 


>  f  *    »i 


•  ..* 


^^ 


A  Chance  for  Everybody  But  a  Quitter 


By  HERBERT  KAUFMAN 
Failure  is  a  phase  of  success.     How  can  you  tell  what  to  rfo  until  you  learn  what  to  avoid  7 
The  only  game  without  a  losing  chance  is  Solitaire,  and  that  s  a  loss  of  time. 
If  you  aren't  occasionally  wrong,  you  aren't  on  the  tight  track.    Men  who  don  t  make  mis- 

lakes  never  take  chances  and  seldom  get  them.  ui-„u»- 

Even  Nature  miscalculates;  droughts,  hurricanes,  tidal  waves,  floods,  pests,  storms,  bhghts, 

landslides  and  earthquakes,  constantly  upset  her  plans  but  don  t  alter  them. 

We  survive   only   because   the  forces  which  support  us  are  persistent.     One  bad  season 

cannot  thwart  the  Creative  Will— the  law  of  growth  is  founded  upon  averages. 

Do  you  expect  a  better  show  ?  ,  •  .  • 

Ride  out  to  the  nearest  orchard  and  let  a  peach-tree  teach  you  how  to  try  agam. 

If  a  wheat  field  had  your  code,  we  would  have  stanred  to  death  centuries  ago. 

There's  always  room  to  grow  Again— indomitability  is  the  greatest  abihty. 

There  were  no  elements  in  yesterday  which  won't  be  duplicated  in  tomorrow.  The  sky 
is  your  limit  and  aeroplanes  have  given  you  farther  skies  than  your  father  s. 

You  have  a  complete  equipment  of  the  faculties  with  which  the  first  humans  faced  the 
future,  plus  all  the  conclusions  of  the  past.  , ,      , 

Every  year  it's  easier  to  make  good  because  of  time-saving,  blunder-erasing,  energy-conserv- 
ing  ideas  placed  at  your  disposal  by  the  experimenters  of  previous  years. 

Therefore  the  vaUd  excuses  for  incompetence  dwindle  annually. 

The  generation  possessed  of  the  most  tools  should  have  the  fewest  fools. 

Surrender  of  ambition  is  folly:  real  persistence  never  accepts  defeat. 

Nothing  has  happened  to  you,  except  the  loss  of  a  few  things  which  you  picked  up  on  the 
way.  There's  a  longer  road  ahead  and  every  mile  of  it  is  richer  m  possibilities.  If  you  seek 
as  hard  as  you  used  to,  you'll  get  more  than  you  used  to  have. 

As  industries  multiply,  the  need  for  capable  administrators  grows  in  proportion— as  new 
forces  are  discovered,  so  are  openings  for  men  who  can  apply  them— as  commerce  extends  its 
scope,  the  field  for  executives  broadens— as  science  provides  substances,  a  corresponding  pro- 
vision  for  their  utilization  is  necessary  —  as  railroads  push  into  virgm  territory  and  trol- 
ley lines  nose  into  isolated  districts,  the  demand  for  business  and  processional  pioneers  in- 
creases—as inventive  imagination  pours  its  dreams  into  foundry  moulds,  the  prospects  ot 
another  group  of  men  are  re-cast. 

The  best  thing  that  could  have  happened  to  you— is  this  seeming  reverse. 

It  will  force  you  to  look  about,  to  investigate  the  season's  latest  styles  m  opportunities. 

If  you  are  still  alert,  eager,  assured  and  determined,  one  of  these  recent  developments  will 
offer  you  a  scope  which  your  former  engagement  never  possessed. 

Bad  luck  has  often  proved  a  knocker  on  the  gate  of  Fortune, 

There's  a  chance  for  everybody  but  a  quitter. 


When  Hill  Meets  Will 

When  a  man  has  one  fixed  method  and  accepts  his  first  re- 
buflf  as  the  final  decision  of  fate,  he  will  never  solve  his  problem. 
Metre  Hill  waa  not  in  the  Japanese  philosophy  and  so  it  eventu- 
ally yielded  to  their  assaults.  Port  Arthur  was  the  goal  and 
everything  in  its  path  an  incident.  A  fighter's  imagination 
wipes  out  all  barriers — a  craven's  creates  them  where  they 
don't  exist. 


These  Be  Men 


Verses 

Hcibcrt  Kaufman 


DON'T  fret  about  the  ckaiice 
that  flew, 
Another  will  soon  come  to  yon. 
Clondi   never   last,    ikies   must 

turn  blue. 
Yonr  right  to  fight  and  smite  and 

hew 
Remain.  You'll  get  your  proper  duo 
If  but  to  purpose  you  stand  true. 
One  setback  doesn't  count,  nor  two. 
The  biggest  men  we  ever  knew 
Met    with    defeat — that's    how 

they  grew. 
They    songht    and    failed    and 

fought  anew, 
Rode  through  the  stiffest  gales 

that  blew, 
Proved  worthiness  to  join  the  crew 
That  history  chooses  for  "Who's 

Who." 
Regret  is  not  a  mending  glue ; 
Reget — regain  your  pluck — dare 

—DO. 


EUIS  the  little  waiter  who  used  to  serve  you  at  the  La  Fayette,   is   serving  a 
*' seventy-five"  at  Verdun.     Etienne,  the  fat  cook  of  the  Palace  Grill,  was  dec- 
orated last  month  for  couspicuous  gallantry.     Beppo,  the  boot-black,  went  down 
before  the  leaden  sleet  of  that  awful  Isonzo  assault. 

We  suddenly  realize  that  they  were  men  after  all— these  humble  servants  of 

our  necessities.  .   .  1,1 

Valor  at  the  stock-pot,  heroism  in  an  apron,  courage  wiping  muddy  shoes— 

life  IS  queer!  ,      ..,  ,  .     ^,     x-    i-u       i. 

There's  a  crippled  valet  in  a  New  York  hotel  with  a  record  m  the  Northwest 
Mounted  Police  and  a  sergeancv  in  Strathcona's  Horse,  to  his  credit.  A  putty-faced 
butler  in  the  upper  sixties  carried  the  guidon  through  the  Tugela  River  campaign.  A 
dijsli-wiper  in  a  cheap  Greek  restaurant  answered  the  call  m  both  Balkan  wars  and 
accommodated  half  of  a  Bulgar  bayonet  in  his  groin. 

The}'  serve— these  alien  workers  from  over  seas.  We  measure  them  with  scant 
comprehension  and  judge  them  low,  because  they  do  our  menial  work.  But  can  a  na- 
tion take  into  its  veins  a  better  strain  I  How  many  a  cook  is  worthy  of  the  master  s 
place— how  many  a  master  should  be  busy  with  the  basting  spoon ! 

The  Junkman  Gets  His  Turn 

WAR  makes  strange  millionaires.     Camp  followers  have  more  than  once  died 
financiers.     There's  a  sutler  in  the  history  of  many  a  '^ proud  a ild  haughty 
family.     The  Rebellion  created  opportunities  which    turned    peddlers    into 
plutocrats.     Now  it's  the  junkman's  turn  .  t>  1  •„« 

Woolen  scraps,  linen  shreds,  bits  of  metal  are  at  a  premium.  Paper  making 
materials,  hitherto  supplied  by  Europe,  have  mounted  to  prices  unprecedented  m 
our  experience.  Shoddy  will  soon  cost  as  much  as  we  used  to  pay  for  fane  cloths- 
metal  filings,  brass,  copper,  zinc,  antimony,  manganese  steel  in  any  form,  are  quoted 
at  prices  that  make  short-handed  weavers  and  manufacturers  writhe  in  the  bank- 

bjilance 

For' some  time  past,  the  collection  of  refuse  has  been  one  of  the  best  paying 

little  businesses  in  our  midst.  j    i,  u      a 

There's  more  gold  to  be  mined  out  of  rubbish  heaps  than  Golconda  held.    An- 
other group  of  back  alley  families  seem  slated  to  move  ''up-town."     You  can  never 
tell  what  a  fellow's  beginnings  will  lead  to.     Every  business  gets  its  day. 
Old  Rags-and-Iron  is  topside  man  at  lastl 


copyright,   191iw   H.rt,Tt   Kaufm.n'.  W..kly   P..I.   by   King    Feature.  Syndicate.     Great  Britain  and  All  Oth.r  RI9M.  Reaerved.    Copyright.   1916.   by   H.rbTt   Kaufman. 


'sjuatt 


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I    i        I 


t 

> 


ma  SHMARY  Of  THE  NAVY 
DANIELS  HAS  ACCOMPLISHED 

More  Abused  Than  Any  of  His  Predecessors  Since 
Gideon  Welles,  Yet  the  Navy  Today  Is  Better  Bal- 
anced and  More  Effective  Than  Ever  Before. 

By  MAJ.  J.  0.  HEMPHILL. 


Josephus  Daniels  of  North  Carolina 
is  secretary  of  the  navy.  North  Caro- 
lina aeems  to  run  naturally  to  secre- 
taries of  the  navy.  There  was  John 
Branch  under  Jackson,  of  South  Caro- 
lina; Badger,  under  Harrison,  "old 
Tippecanoe  and  Tyler,  too;"  Graham, 
under  Fillmore;  Dobbin,  under  Pierce; 
and  now  comes  Daniels,  under  Wilson, 
who  was  brought  up  in  South  Caro- 
lina, but  got  a  part  of  his  college 
training  in  North  Carolina  and  knows 
something  about  the  quality  of  the 
North  Carolina  output  in  men  and  re- 
sources. 

Mr.  Daniels  is  now  serving  his  third 
year   and   has   been    more   abused   than 
any    of    his    predecessors    since    Gideon 
Welles,     the     Connecticut     Yankee     of 
Democratic    faith,   who   had   the   confi- 
dence   of    Mr.    Lincoln    in    time    of    the 
nation's     sorest     distress     just    as     Mr. 
Daniels  now  has  the'confldence  of  Mr. 
Wilson     in     the     most     trying;     period 
through  which  this  country  has  passed 
in     its    relations     to    the    rest    of     the 
world,     (jeorge  Creel  has  told  in  a  late 
number  of  the  New  York  World  a  mov- 
ing   story    about    Daniels    and    his    ad- 
ministration    of     his     office,     and     has 
given     in    the     secretary's    own    words 
the    first   answer   he    has    made    to   tho 
slanders    and    abuse    heaped    upon    him 
by   so    many    of    the    so-called    "leaders 
of   men."      One   of   Mr.   Daniels'   cabini-t 
associates    recently    expressed    his    ad- 
miration of  the  fine  courage  displayed 
bv    Daniels    in    the    bitter    experiences 
through  which  he  has  passed  and  who 
when  reviled  has  reviled  not  again,  but 
has  taken  his  punishment  without  com- 
plaining, confident  that  he  will  be  jus- 
tified   by    the   event.      The    story   Creel 
tells   is   the   truth   about   Daniels. 
Added  to   the  Men. 
When    he    became    secretary    of     the 
navy    he   found    that   it    was    B.OOO    men 
short   of    the    number   allowed    by    law. 
He  has  added  6,366  men  to  the  service 
in    three  years. 

There  are  700  men  of  the  navy  in 
prison  now;  there  were  1.800  when  he 
went   Into   office. 

Under  the  administration  of  Georgo 
von  L.  Meyer,  his  immediate  prede- 
cessor who  has  been  one  of  the  moat 
unfair  and  persistent  of  Daniels 
critics  and  defamers,  there  were  over 
10,000  desertions  from  the  navy.  There 
has  been  a  reduction  of  17  per  cent  in 
desertions   under  Daniels. 

Fifty-two  per  cent  of  the  men  dis- 
charged in  good  standing  from  the 
navy  under  Meyer  re-enlisted,  86  per 
cent   are   re-enlisting   under   Daniels. 

The  United  States  navy  is  not  as 
strong  as  the  German  navy  today,  not 
on  account  of  Daniels'  failure  to  do 
any  of  the  things  required  of  him.  but 
because  for  nine  years,  from  1903  to 
1912  when  the  Republicans  were  in 
charge  of  the  government,  the  recom- 
mendations of  the  general  board  of 
the  navy,  with  Admiral  Dewey  at  Us 
head,  were  disregarded  steadily,  and 
the  German  navy  passed  the  American 
navy  in  fighting  strength  three  years 
before    Daniels    became    secretary. 

The  board  recommended  a  policy  or 
continuous  building.  Of  thirty-four 
dreadnaughts  recommended^  fifteen 
were  authorized;  of  forty  cruisers  rec- 
ommended, five  were  built. 
Then  and  Now. 
There  was  not  a  single  sea-going 
submarine  when  Daniels  went  into  of- 
fice; there  are  three  now  of  the  latest 
and  largest  model.  xi.      .  .i,»r<» 

There  were  four  aviators  then;  there 
are  eighteen  now. 

There  were  1,928  men  on  fourteen 
ships  to  care  for  twenty-nine  subma- 
rines carrying  831  men  then;  there  is  a 
submarine  flotilla  now  under  the  sep- 
arate   command    of   a    rear   admiral    of 

the  navy.  .       ,      ,    _     „ui.» 

There  was  one  mine-laying  ship 
then;  there  are  three  now.  besides  a 
lUet  of  sea-going  tugs  and  a  fleet  or 
torpedo      boats      with      mine-searching 

equipment.  .  ^  j    ^,,» 

There  was  an  inadequate  and  out- 
worn system  of  wireless  equipment  on 
the  ships  of  the  navy  then;  there  are 
seventy-five  ships  with  radio  equip- 
ment  now,  besides  which  every  sufe- 
niarlne  In  the  navy  has  been  equipped 

with  radio  and  three^  '^^'^IJ'^^lli^at 
tlons  have  been  added  to   the  chain  or 

'"The''navT'now  has  thirty-one  mines 
where  It  had  only  one  two  years  ago. 
There  are  two  torpedoes  now  where 
there   was   only  one   then.  ,  ,     . 

Under  his  administration  Daniels  has 
secured  from  congress  for  the  upbuild- 
fng  of  the  navy  $70,000,000  as  com- 
pared with  $26,000,000  secured  by 
Mever  during  th«>  last  two  years  of  his 
inefficient  service  in  the  same  office 

Last  October,  according  to  the  offi- 
cial reports  of  Admiral  Fletcher,  the 
scores  made  by  the  navy  at  long  range 
practice  were  the  highest  ever  made  in 
[the  open  sea,  and  90  per  cent  of  the 
shots  fired  at  the  longest  range  would 
have  hit  an  enemy  ship. 
I  Unfounded   Stories. 

I  The  storv  that  Daniels  Issued  an  or- 
der that  the  ofttrers  and  men  should 
mess  together,  but  upon  reflecting  that 
this  might  bring  the  black  ri^eJ^  ^nd 
white   men    together  dropped   the   mat- 


ter is  an  "infamous  falsehood,"  which 
is  th^>  next  thing  to  being  a  deliberata 
He.  "No  such  order  was  ever  made  or 
contemolated."  ^      ,   ,      1    _ 

The    report      that      Mr.      Daniels    ban 
gathered  about  him  in  the  management 
of    the    navy    untried    and    Incompetent 
men   is   as    false   as   all    the    rest   of   th* 
falsehoods       Industriously        circulated 
about     him     and     his     administration. 
Victor  Blue   Is   the  chief  of   the   bureau 
of     navigation.       He     is     noted     in     tho 
Naval      Register      "for      extraordinary 
heroism    during    the    war    with    Spain, 
served  on  Admiral  KempfT's  stafl  in  tno 
Philippines,   was   a  member  of  the  first 
relief    expedition    which    marched    frotn 
the  sea  to  Tientsin,  China,  was  <hief  of 
staff  of  the  Pacific  fleet,  was  appointed 
by     Secretary     Meyer     to     the     general 
board   and    has   filled    *"^^»">:   P°';:'Vl\"   °^ 
a   modern    man   of   war.      The   chiefs   ot 
the   oth«-r  bureaus   of   the    navy   are  all 
distinguished  for  eminent  ab'/jly  '"  .^|J^ 
particular    service    to   which    l^^y    have 
been    assigned,    and      Admiral      Benoon. 
chief    of    th.»    bureau    of    naval    opera- 
tions,   and    Mr.    Daniels'    right    arm    In      . 
the  administration  of  his  e^f^^^.^^^^^^^ll 
ment     Is    concededly    one    of    the    most 
competent  officers  In  the  service. 
"I-ald  Ofr*  the  Aide*. 
When  he  went  into  the  of  fee  of  sec- 
retarv,  Mr.  Daniels  found  that  the  serv- 
ice  Was  loaded  with  aides,  an  amailn« 
amount  of  red  tape  and  correspondence 
between   the  secretary  and   men   in   aa- 
joinlng    rooms— a     system    which    con- 
gress   has    repeatedly    refused   to   sane-       . 
tlon— and    he    "laid    off"    the   aides    and 
brought  the   heads  of  the  bureaus  into 
intimate     and    direct     touch     with     the 

He  has  been  censured  for  reconi- 
mending  to  congress  that  proniotion  In 
the  navy  be  made  by  merit  and  not  by 
seniority.  Instead  of  censures  this  ac- 
tion should  have  been  received  with 
the  highest  favor  by  the  really  de- 
serving officers   of  the   navy.        .     .    ^      , 

He  has  been  criticized  for  refusing 
to  permit  naval  officers  to  seek  to  in- 
fluence legislation  by  making  addresses 
or  otherwise;  but  this  has  been  the 
unbroken  policy  of  the  navy  for  «;" 
time  In  1902.  President  Roosevelt,  and 
In  1909  President  Taft  "reinforced  the 
rule  by  executive  orders  that  estab- 
lished dismissal  as  a  penalty  for  viola- 
tion "No  one  has  been  muzzled;  sim- 
ply the  law  has  been  enforced  that 
forbids  officers  from  running  about  the 
country  for  purposes  of  propaganda,  a 
practice  in  which  99  per  cent  had  no 
desire  to  indulge." 

MilltonM    Saved. 
Under    Mr.     Daniels'     administration, 
the   United    States    is    making    its   own 
powder  for  34  cents  the  pound;   it  u»ed 
to   pay   from   50   to  80   cents.    He   saved 
the   government   $1,116,793   on    this    ac- 
count last   vear.     He   cut  out  $1,0<7,Z1« 
on  one  bid  alone  of  a  manufacturer  of 
projectiles   and   has  asked  congress  for 
money   to   build   a   projectile   plant    for 
the   government.     He   reduced   the   bids 
of    the    armor    plate    people    $1,110,084 
and    heartily    favors    the    bill    of    Sena- 
tor   Tillman    providing    for    the    estata- 
llshment  of  a  government  plant  where 
armor    can    be    made    for    $230    tho    ton 
as    against    $440    demanded    by    private 
concerns.      In    1900    congress    appropri- 
ated   $4,000,000— the    Tillman    bill    pro- 
vides for  $11,000.000— for  a  government 
armor  plant   unless   contracts   could   be 
made    at    "a    reasonable    and    equitable 
figure"     The  p'an  was   not  established 
and    under    Moody,    Morton,    Bonai)arte 
and    Meyer,   all    Republican   secretaries, 
the    treasury    was    milked    to    the    ex- 
tent of  over  $76,000,000   in   high   prices. 
Condition  of  the   Navy. 
Manifestly,   Mr.    Daniels   is   not  to  be 
blamed  for  the  general  condition  of  the 
navy.      He    had    to    take    it    as    it    was 
turned   over   to   him   by   his    utterly   In- 
competent  predecessor,    George    yon   L. 
Meyer.       He    found    the    establishment 
very  much  run  down  in  men  and  mate- 
rial.     He  has   greatly  strengtehened  It 
In    both    respects.      According    to    Capt. 
J    8.  McKean.  of  the  service,  more  pro- 
gress   has    been    made    in    building    up 
the    navy    in    the    last    two    years    than 
In    anv    previous    period    of    five    years, 
and     there    was    never    a     time     when 
"everybody    in    the   service   was    work- 
ing   aa     hard    with    their    head.s      and 
hands"      "The    navy   today."      said    Mr. 
Daniels,  "is  a  finer,  better  balanced  and 
more    effective     first    arm    of    defense 
than    ever   before    In    Its    history"      m 
the    last    ten    years    of    Republican    ad- 
ministration   the    expenditures    on    ac- 
count of  the  navy  amounted  in  the  ag- 
gregate  to  $1,123,013,802.     This   was   ut 
the    rate    of    $112,301,360    the    year,    and 
when  Mr.  Daniels  succeeded  Mr.  Meyer 
he    found    the    navy    without    men    to 
man    the   ships,    without    ships    to    meet 
the    requirements    of    a    modern    navy, 
without  submarines,  without  torpedoes, 
without  aeroplanes  or  aviators,  without 
wireless     equipment     of     an     adequate 
sort;    a    kind    of    snug    harbor    for    of- 
ficers    of     great     distinction;     a     great 
Institution  possessing  many  of  the  de- 
lightful qualities  of  a  well-ordered  club 
but    lacking    In    like   proportion    as    the 
social    graces   had   been    cultivated,    the 
hardv   elements    of   an  effective    fight- 
ing   machine.      What   did    the   Republi- 
cans  do   with   the   money? 

J.  C.   HEMPHILL. 


•m^i.9' 


- 


FACTS  ON  BAVARIAN  FORESTRY 


By  Gen.  C.  C.  Andrews,  Secretary,  Minnesota  State 

Forestry  Board. 


Bavaria  is  in  the  southwest  part  of 
Germany  In  the  upper  Danube  valley 
and  Includes  some  of  the  territory 
known  in  former  times  as  Swabla. 
whose  people  w^re  noted  for  the  best 
traits  of  German  character.  Many  of 
the  early  settlers  of  our  Steama 
county  were  from  Bavaria  and  were 
my  neighbors  nearly  sixty  years  ago. 
Munich.  Its  capital— a  city  now  of  over 
600,000  population— Is  one  of  the  fa- 
vorite resorts  for  American  travelers 
and  I  had  the  pleasure  of  visiting  it 
myself  in    1876      While   Bavar  a   has   a 

population  of  over  '.009-<>"'^-:i2  .« 
times  that  of  Minnesota— its  area  i^ 
only  29,272  square  ml  es,  or  only  a 
little  more  than  one-third  of  the  area 
of  Minnesota:  yet  it.  can  teach  our 
state  a  lot  of   things   in  foreatry. 

In  reply  to  inquiries  which  I  «ub- 
mSed  f  have  lately  received  from  tl^ 
mlnUterial    director    «'    ^^e  /tate    for 

r*%°'t^s*^r'?egard™t^'th"Jlr'"iSmrn- 
lL?rafro^n^%!id    -efi'ue.      Naturally    the 

SoTn\\in^^^s  ?rn/rs^srt;su3^^^^^ 

nlrrlculture  The  area  of  productive 
=  ?ot«  foreits  is  1,981,258  acres  and 
f\^^  which  is  derived  annually  an 
aeg^eglle  net  revenue  of  $8,246,000! 
Thfnk'^  of*   that,    Minnesota    statesmen 

Sl'ntSes^ot^'^^ird^olS?:  ^^^;''e^a^e^'^IftUn^| 
SI,     U?ger    natural     forest     resources 

%!fer*'e  are  also  In  Bavaria  a  little 
over   4  000,000    acrea    of   municipal    and 

iHyfcVh'e  ad^m^7;^st;^lo^n-oT?^J 

li<';^Sdno^«^•lror.^^^CoTffrou°J 
Trees  cimprtse  most  of  the  state  for- 
ests and  the  average  annual  growth 
ner  acre  la  about  300  board  feet,  in- 
c^7idlng"/nienslon^    over    two    and     a 

r.*^ie»^ie  JlSToflt^ble  llge  for 


cutting.  Selection  cutting  and  clear 
cutting  are  about  equally  practiced. 
A  little  over  21,000  acres  are  arti- 
ficially afforested  annually,  and  most- 
ly by  planting.  The  state  forests  give 
employment  to  74,0<i«  workers,  aver- 
aging'61  working  days  annually.  On 
an  average  a  littU-  over  4,000  acre**, 
called  assessor  district,  are  undei-  the 
charge  of  a  scientifically  educated  for- 
estry official,  who  In  addition  man- 
ages a  portion  of  municipal  forest* 
and  attends  to  the  policing  of  private 
forests.  On  quitting  the  service  the 
forestry  official  receives  a  p-nsloti. 
depending  on  the  years  of  service  anft 
ranging  from  35  to  75  per  cent  of  the 
salary  he  received  before  being  re- 
tired. 

The  forests  of  Bavaria  are  not  only 
a  great  financial  resource  but  they 
beautify  the  country  and  afford  healtl* 
and  pleasure  resorts  for  tourists,  just 
as  ours   can    do   in   Minnesota  ,,  -„^ 

In  the  last  thirty-six  years  10.0-* 
acres  were  burned  by  JorMtftres,  re- 
sulting In  damage  of  >130..'.2.B0— a 
amall  amount  Indeed  cx>nipared  ^tm 
our  experience  here. 


How*s  This? 

We  offer  One  Hundred  Dollars 
Reward  for  any  case  of  Catarrh 
that  cannot  be  cured  by  Hall's 
Catarrh  Cure. 

F.   J.   CIIKNT':!  k  CO.,   Tolf-ao.  0. 
We    the  und^nlmed.  h.Te  known  F    J    C(ku^  fnr  Uhi 
U«t    1'.    ye«r.      and    »*Ue»f    lji«    pfrf*<-tlr    huiioriW--    In 
»"   bfi'siiH-v.    tr»ns«rtioiu    uxl    flnaiMUlIy    »blr    lu    c*ny 
oiit  >nt'  ohluaUoos  made  \is  bis  Srn!. 

Toledo.  •. 
Hair*  C»t«rrh  Cure  h  taken  Internally,   act  114  dta^ 

upon    the    blood    and    "■{J^:!' _f^*  ^    "Ju. ''^ 
WimuniaU  sent  fn*.     Frtee  75  cenU  per  hKUc.     SHC 

\*i  iill  Dnittl^'i. 
Irte  HaU'i  Family  Kll»  for  owstlpaUoo. 


-.m    JKV--*-      tl 


■4f^  III  WJ"I>    I'-J!'- 


I  I  ■■      L  .1       LL  J' 


L 


{ 


jk 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD: 


April  8, 1916. 


Baseball 
Rowing 


NEWS  AND  VIEWS  OF  HE  SPORT  WORLD 


■^     BOWLING 


Wrestling 
Boxing 


ROUNDING  UP  THE  SPORT  DOPE 

FOR  THE  WEEKEND  PARTY 

Archie  Visits  Minneapolis  and  Mingles  With  Some' JJH|{   ||y|{[E|{ 

Well  Known  Characters— Paragraphic  Comment 


NED  TEN  EYCK  MAKING 

PfiOGRESS  WITH  OARSMEN 


1 


of  Divers  Doings  and  Various  Happenings  in  the 
World  of  Sport. 

BY  BRUCE.  ,  ^     . 

l\-\r\rOllS     Minn.,   April   O.-Dcar   Bill:      The   weather   and   the 
INM.A    wi- K>       11       ,      1  english  teacher  or  the  fel- 

?'*'''wh?  ^.du  lu^enKli^l  Arch.^ause  he  is  a  Swede  at  the  uni- 
:;T.ry''orMim;Uot:.  Kot  me  a 'pa^s  and  took  me  through  the 
W  ilkir  art  gallery  where  I  seen  some  fine  pictures.  There  was  a 
.1  r  .h.f  1,  kid  i  lot  like  Rube  W  addell  hut  my  old  teacher  he 
Il^riha;  wa7  <  hnV^;^^.en  he  lirst  cum  to  Minneapolis  While  them  pu. 
^:\:'Z^U  more,  than  the-  P^-r  t^J^^U  I  \^^ Jm'  t -« 'on'  tS 
r;.  u;i:":;>nng"l>.U^;;^;^n  ^'lik^lo'my^ld   English  tether  about  it  he 

'^''^:lA::^:''l^^r^t  ^^etwn  Ritchie  and  he  insisted  on  takin" 
n.c  to  inch  Jaw,  has  changed  a  lot.  The  night  before  .awn  was  to  leave 
H  ckmii  kv  he  c  izens  down  there  presented  him  with  a  swell  alarm 
dock  lawn's  train  left  at  six  o'clock  in  the  mornin'.  Them  southern  people 
is  v.rv  h..s„ital.le.     They  didn't  want  Jawn  to  miss  his  train. 

M.-  am  Frank  Force  went  to  see  the  "Kirth  of  a  Nation  '  with  some  of 
the  ia  1  players  on  the  Minneapolis  team.  Dave  Alt.zer  and  Jim  ^^  ilhams 
Jvas  in  ho  party.  When  it  cum  to  one  of  the  battle  seens  Dave  and  Inn  both 
Tall  tli.t   the  guy  who  took  the  picture  was  nutty  or  else  the  scenario  was 

''"'"•■•It  wasn't  nothin'  like  that  at  all."  said  Dave.  "Me  and  Jim  knows, 
cause  we  w;.s  both  thr-ugh  that  war."  Then  three,  other  members  of  the 
team  spoke  up  and  said  that  the  picture  was  clear  oft.  It  s  funny  how  many 
things  you  can  learn  by  goin'  to  a  big  city  like  Minneapolis.  I  his  town  has 
changed.  Hill.  If  it  wasn't  for  Golightly  Morrill  them  reformers  would  make 
us  roughnecks  feel  blue  and  lonesome 
I    got    some   news   for  you    Bill.      I 


Losno  SOX 

Harvey    Penfold    Informs 

O'Brien  He  Will  Not 

Play  Here. 


Lefty     Davis    Has    Been 

Signed  as  Pilot  of 

Virginia. 


seen  Doc  \\  illiams  on  Hennepin  ave- 
nue and  lie  told  me  something  about 
the  Minnesota  football  schedule  for 
next  year.  They  got  a  great  sciiedule 
for  next  year,  Bill.  Northwestern  and 
South  I)ak<'ta  and  Ames  is  goin'  to  be 
on  it.  They  will  please  the  boys  a 
lot.  I  guess  they  is  goin'  to  take 
^^'iscl«^sin  and  Chicagc>  on  later.  I^ 
asked  Doc  why  he  kep  on  takin' 
cl-.ances  with  a  tough  team  like 
Northwestern  and  he  told  me  he 
owed  them  some  games  cause  back  in 
the  years  when  things  was  broakin' 
tougii  them  Northwestern  fellows  re- 
fused to  take  any  advantage  of  Min- 
nesota. 

I  dr.'pped  in  and  seen  Billy  Hoke 
of  the  Minneapolis  boxin*  club.  "Well, 
I  seen  where  you  got  Dill<»n  and 
Miske  on  vour  next  card."  said  I  to 
Bill.  "Vep."  he  said,  "and  we  had  an 
awful  time  gettin'  Dillon  signed  up.'' 
•'How's  that?"  I  asked  Bill,  Bill. 
"Well,  he  says,  "Dillon  tells  me  him 
and  Miske  belongs  to  the  same  lodge 
and  he  feels  kind  of  mean  and  low 
down  in  fightin  him." 

"Miske  gave  him  the  grippe  in  Su- 
perior."'  savs  I.  which  was  <urc  a  bum 
mot.  Kvery  time  1  think  of  that  joke 
I  laugh.  It  went  over  Hoke's  head, 
but  then  he  has  got  a  lot  of  thinks  on 
his  mind.  He  is  matchmaker,  referee, 
nnnouncer,  secretary  and  treasurer 
and  advertisin'  man  for  the  Minne- 
apolis club.  When  Bill  ain't  doin' 
nothin'  else  he  is  workin'  here  on  a 
paper.  Bill  told  me  chairman  Frank 
Thompson  of  the  boxin'  commission 
was  goin'  t«i  give  Jawn  Ritchie  a  gold 
watch  for  all  the  boostin'  he  done. 

I  went  over  to  the  university-  just 
for  tdd  times  sake.  There  ain't  noth- 
in' like  it  used  to  be.  Bill.  Ain't  it 
funny  how  the  American  colleges  is 
losin'  their  spirit.  They  didn't  have 
no  parade  or  nothin'  on  Bock  beer 
day  this  year  and  most  of  the  fellers 
goes  right  home  after  classes. 

That's  abt.ut  all.  I  seen  where  Su- 
perior went  dry.  They  ought  to  have 
a  great  baseball  team  up  there  this 
season.      I    will    see    you    soon,   your 

levin'  pal.  Archie. 

«      *      • 

The  Evil  Company  You  Keep. 

It   is   said    that    Napoleon    Lajoie   is 

displaving  very  poor  form  this  spring. 

Psychological    students    have    always 

claimed    that    association    is    stronger 

than   Iteredity. 

♦      ♦      ♦ 

The  Greatest  Hitting  Record. 

Some  claim  .Xnson  hung  up  the 
greatest  batting  record,  while  others 
hand  the  palm  to  the  late  Fd  De- 
lehanty.  Still  others  there  are  who 
insist  that  Wagner  and  C Ubb  were  the 
greatest  hitters  of  all  time,  with  Wee 
Willie  Keeler  but  a  shade  in  the  rear. 
But  Eddie  Collins  hit  -MA  while  a 
member  t»f  the  Chicago  White  Sox. 
That's  the  greatest  hitting  feat  in  the 

history  of  the  game. 

»      ♦      ♦ 

A  Mark  of  Respect. 
Pittsburgh    G.   A.    R.   veterans   plan 
to  attend   the   opening  baseball   game 
of  the  season  this  year  and  give  Hans 

Wagner  an  ovation. 

"  *      •      * 

Quite  a  Jump,  Eh. 

Someone  asked  Joe  Hetmanek  why 
he  gave  up  being  postmaster  to  be- 
come  manager  of  Joe   Stecher. 

"Because."  he  replied,  "the  postof- 
fice  was  only  a  fourth  class  one  and 

Toe  is  a  first  class  wrestler." 

'  «      *      • 

Impending  Signs. 
.\  Des  Moines  paper  has  stated  that 
Frank    Ctch    recently    made    applica- 


tion for  a  large  accident  insurance  po- 
licy. If  Gotch  and  Stecher  wrestle,  it 
is  believed  that  the  date  will  fall  on 
Labor  day. 


We  Hadn't  Thought  of  That. 

It  seems  hardly  likely  that  the  an- 
nual meeting  of  the   Northern   league 

will  be  held  in  Superior  next  fall. 

♦      •      • 

There's  Something  in  That. 

,\dvocates  of  the  repressive  school 
of  acting  should  enjoy  immensely  the 
playing  of  the  Cleveland  baseball 
team. 

WASHINGTOlTCREW 
BEATS  STANFORD 

* 

Seventh  Win  in  Ten  Annual 

Contests  of  Coast 

Colleges. 

Seattle.  Wa.>*h..  April  ••— The  Unl- 
▼erslty  of  Washington  varsity  won  its 
annual  race  with  the  Stanford  uni- 
versity boat  erew  late  yesterday  by 
live  lengths.  "Washington  got  the  lead 
bffore  the  first  quarter  and  gradual- 
Iv  drew  farther  ahead.  Offleial  time: 
Washington.    17:06;    Stanford.    17:37. 

The  «)fl'ielal  press  boat  ran  into  an- 
other launeh  at  the  start  and  the 
newspaper  men   saw  none   of  tlie   race. 

The  crews  were  well  matched.  Stan- 
ford being  a  slight  favorite.  Six  of 
the  Stanford  erew  partleipated  in  the 
intercollegiate  race  at  Poughkeepsie 
last  season,  in  which  Stanford  took 
second  place  to  Cornell  in  a  sensa- 
tional   finish. 

Washington  and  Stanford  have  raced 
ten  times,  Watshlngti-n  having  w^n 
seven.     .'Stanford  won  last  year. 


Word  was  rrcelved  yesterday  that 
Harvey  Penfold.  last  year  the  pitehing 
star  for  the  Fort  William  team,  will 
not  report  to  the  White  Sox.  Tenfold 
figurtd  In  a  trade  for  Henry  Clay 
Hlanckp.  He  was  counted  on  to  prove 
a  sensation  this  year.  Th**  news  that 
he  will  not  be  with  the  White  Sox 
during  the  present  season  will  prove  a 
sorry  disappointment  .  to  Manager 
Durby   Olirien.  w    t^    i    ... 

Leftv  Davis  passed  through  Duluth 
yest<  rday  en  route  to  Virginia.  After 
formally  announcing  that  Fred  Rey- 
nolds was  to  manage  the  range  ball 
club  during  the  season.  It  appears  tliat 
A  H  Coates.  owner  and  director  of  the 
Ore  Diggers,  has  suddenly  changed  his 
mind  and  put  the  stamp  of  approval  on 
I.,efty  Davis.  The  decision,  coming  at 
the  eleventh  hour,  does  not  give  Davis 
the  greatest  opportunity  in  the  world 
to  sign  up  ball  players.  It  Is  pointed 
out.  however,  that  the  nucleus  of  a 
strong  team  has  already  been  signed. 

The  signing  of  Davis  as  manager  of 
the  Virginia  club  will  place  three  vet- 
eran managers  in  the  Northern 
league  this  season.  O'Hrlen,  Unglaub 
and  Davis  have  waged  many  a  hard 
fought  contest.  I'nglaub  and  Davis  are 
former  big  league  stars.  Darby  w'as  a 
star  before  the  big  leagues  were  thor- 
oughlv  established.  All  of  these  men 
know  "baseball  Inside  and  outside. 

Playem  to  Report.  „,.  ,. 

It  is  expected  that  the  first  White 
Sox  recruits  to  report  here  will  arrive 
the  latter  part  of  next  wetk.  Some 
work  will  be  done  on  the  diamond  dur- 
ing the  coming  week  and  all  put  in 
readiness  for  spring  pra«llce. 
will  have  a  squad  of  nearly 
players  if  all  his  men   report. 


NO  WEAK  HEARTS  AMONG 
DULUTH  CREW  CANDIDATES 

Thorough  Examination  By  Dr.  Frank  Lynam  Re- 
veals the  Fact  That  Rowing  Develops  Saund 
Hearts  and  Strong  Bodies— Ten  Eyck  Says 
Training  Is  Beneficial. 


NED  TEN  EYCK. 


The  new  coach  of  the  Duluth  Boat  club  Is  rapidly  rounding  the  local  oars- 
»v,,^.,   intn!  fnrm      MVn   I'vck  cauie  here  with  the  reputation  of  being  one  of  the 
gr'eat'JL't^oaehes  in'?h^VounU?   aid  heTs  certalnly^iving  up  to  tbat  reputaUon 
Under  the   eye  of  the   greatest  .sculler  of  his   time,   it  is   expected   that   the  club 
ecullers   will  make  a  great  showing  this  year. 


It  doesn't  appear  as  if  rowing  is  in- 
jurious to  the  heart.  At  least  it  does 
not  appear  that  Duluth  rowing  is.  It 
may  prove  hard  on  the  hearts  of  Du- 
luth's  competitors,  and  there  the  In- 
Jury  ceases. 

For  the  sake  of  putting  a  stop  to 
this  "heart  Injury"  conver^-ation,  Coach 
Ned  Ten  Eyek  has  sent  every  one  of 
his  rowing  men  to  Dr.  Frank  L-ynam 
for  the  purpose  of  having  a  thorough 
examination  made  of  the  condition  of 
his  heart  and  general  internal  organs. 
The  result  of  the  examination  of  more 
than  forty  men  has  been  a  decided 
boost  for  athletics  sanely  and  sensibly 
conducted,   rather  than  a  knock  to  the 

^^Dr^'  Lynam,  himself  a  former  Har- 
vard sweep  man  of  nationa  reno^"".: 
In  no  case  found  an  'athletic  heaii. 
Instead,  he  declares  he  found  about 
the  healthiest  and  most  thoroughly 
normal  set  of  men  it  has  even  been 
his   pleasure   to  examine. 

Set  All  Idle  Uotmlp  A«ld». 
"The    belief,    general    in    some    quar- 
ters,    that     rowing    produces    what     is 
known  as  the  'athletic  heart,    is  a  fal- 
lacy."   said   Coach   Ned  Ten  byck   toda> 
"I    know    this    belief    exists    with    the 
parents    of    some    boys.      Where    a    bo> 
has  a  weak  heart,   it  is  sometimes  un- 
wise   for    him    to    indulge     in    athletic 
competition   of   any    nature.     But   when 
a    youth    has    a    sound     heart     f^d    a. 
strong   body,    there   is   no   fai^e   *n   the 
world    that    will    improve    his    Physical 
qualifications   and    make    him   a   stiong 
and   rugged  man,   more   than  the   sport 

°  "W^  Imve  Instructed  every  rowing 
candidate  to  submit  to  a  tj^^orough  ex- 
amination.     In    no    case    has    it    been 


discovered  that  there  are  unsound 
hearts.  The  result  of  these  examina- 
tions has  been  a  real  boost  to  the 
rowing  game  as  it  is  conducted  here 
Dr.  Lynam  has  discovered  as  a  result 
of  these  examinations  that  the  boys 
who  have  rowed  here  during  a  period 
of  from  two  to  five  years  have  strong 
hearts  and  remarkably  strong  consti- 
tutions. He  has  contrasted  their  gen- 
eral condition  with  men  who  have 
never  rowed  and  found  the  physical 
advantage  to  be  with  the  rowing  men. 
The  result  of  this  examination  is  a 
distinct  boost  to  the  game.  \\  hen 
bovs  are  coached  in  a  proper  manner 
th;re  can  not  be  the  least  objection 
to  their  participation  n  athletics  Tlie 
average  boy  will  develop  into  a  betiei 
man  if  he  Is  permitted  to  be  trained 
along  the  proper  lines." 

Oanmen  to  MIf  <he  Water. 
According  to  schedule,  old  oarsmen 
will  be  out  on  the  water  late  today. 
The  plans  provide  for  a  row  in  the 
lapstfeaks.  If  the  weather  milds  up 
a  bit  and  more  Ice  vanishes  'rom  the 
bay  during  the  coming  week  everv 
member  of  the  squad  will  be  bundled 
in  heavy  woolen  underwear  and  sent 
out  on  the  water  for  the  start  of  the 
heAVV  work  of  the  season. 
•^ Tt  Ts^xp^eted  that  the  new  aWprng 
Quarters  will  be  completed  b>  th« 
?1  rst  of  the  month.  The  men  will 
then  start  bunking  in  the  new  quar- 
ters and  earlv  morning  rowing  will 
be  inlujurated.  Then  the  real  grind 
of   the   season    will   begin. 

Ten  Eyck  may  make  another  cut  In 
♦  he  SQuad  before  all  the  men  are  sent 
out  on  the  w«ter.  It  ««  "ot  believed 
that  many  of  the  men  will  be  dropped. 
The  riuad  men^bers  are  of  a  uniform 
'  high  Oracle.  However.  It  Is  probable 
Uilt  sor^e  will  be  dropped  during  the 
coming   week. 


Darby 
thirty 


ELCORAS  CLOSE 

UP  THE  GAP 

Cigar     Bowlers     Defeat 

Sharkcrafts  and  Tie  Up 

Major  Race. 

Last  evening  the  Elcoras  won  three 
straight  games  from  tlie  Sharkcrafts 
in  the  Major  Bowling  Uague  pennant 
contest,  going  into  a  tic  for  first  place 
with  the  Oak  Halls  and  adding  further 
excitement  to  the  race.  As  there  are 
but  six  remaining  games  on  the  sea- 
son's schedule,  the  outcome  is  expect- 
ed   to   be   the   closest    In    years. 

The  total  score  of  the  Elcoras  was 
2.7{t'.»,  one  of  the  best  total  team  marks 
of  the  season.  Kampman  turned  in  the 
Individual    score    of    the    evening, 


HERD  POSTEN 
IS  SECURED 


-J-r 


Contest  Over  Chief  Johnson. 

Los    Angeles,    Cal.,    April    8.— Avigust 
Herrmann,   president   of   the   Cincinnati 

National  league  club,  wired  Ed  Maler, 
owner  of  the  Vernon  team  yesterday, 
asserting  that  George  ("Chief")  John- 
son, Vernon  pitcher,  remained  the 
property  of  Cincinnati.  Johnson 
jumped  to  the  Federals  last  year  while 
owned  by  the  Reds.  Maler  .said  he 
would   contest   the  claim.    " 


best 
587. 
The  score: 

ElcoraM. 

Ml<hnlek     ..189 

Stauss    182 

Kampman 173 

Schultz 191 

Server    214 


...•     .... 


191 
1S3 

i:i4 

164 
170 


190—  B80 
166—  541 
200—  587 
170—  625 
182—  666 


Totals     !*59      932 

Shark  praftN. 

Foster    200      179 

Taraldson    185 


McFarland 

Wesion 

Otterson 

Totals 


.169 
,  .175 
,.179 


183 
227 
Ml 
181 


908—2799 

197—  B7« 
171—  539 
167—  663 
162—  484 
216—  676 


.908      l»27      892-2727 


Palisade    Pitcher  Will   Be 

Back  With  White  Sox 

Squad. 

Harry  Blume  received  a  wire  this 
morning  that  Herb  Posten  is  due  to 
arrive  in  Duluth  some  time  today.  The 
big  pitcher  has  been  turned  back  by 
Chattanooga  for  further  seasoning. 
The  southern  city  team  manager  has 
asked  that  he  be  allowed  to  hold  a 
string  on  the  Palisade.  Minn.,  youth, 
declaring  Posten  one  of  the  most 
promising  youngsters  he  has  seen  in 
a    long    time. 

As  Posten  has  been  working  out 
with  the  southern  ball  club  for  sev- 
eral weeks  It  is  expected  that  he  will 
start  the  Northern  league  season  In 
grand  shape.  Owner  Blume  declared 
today  that  the  acquisition  of  Posten 
would  compensate  largely  for  the  108« 
of   Penfold. 

STECHER  ADDS  HOKUF 
TO  LIST  OF  HIS  VICTIMS 

Chicago,  April  8. — Joe  Stecher  of 
Dodge  Neb.,  at  the  wrestling  contests 
here  last  night,  defeated  Bill  Hokuf  of 
Omaha  In  straight  falls.  He  accom- 
plished the  first  with  a  body  sci.ssors 
and  wrist  hold  in  8  minutes  21  seconds, 
and    the    second    with    a    body    scissors 


I  and  forearm  hold  In  3  minutes  20  see- 
In  the  preliminary  Cutler  got  his 
match  from  Freiberg,  who  had  Injured 
his  wrist,  by  default.  Paul  Martenson 
defeated  Herman  Koch,  and  Lew  Dal- 
aber  was  disposed  of  by  A\  alter  \A  11- 
loughby.  ^ 

FREDDIE  WELSH  HAS 
SHADE  ON  MITCHELL 

The  Lightweight  Ctiampion 
Forces  Fighting  in  Mil- 
waukee Ring. 

Milwaukee,  Wis..  April  8.— Champion 
Lightweight  Freddie  Welsh,  through 
superior  ring  generalship  and  expe- 
rience, had  a  slight  shade  on  points 
in  a  10-round,  no-declslon  bout  in  Mil- 
waukee   with      Ritchie      Mitchell      last 

"  Welsh  forced  the  milling  throughout 
the  contest,  Mitchell  frequently  meet- 
ing Welsh  with  straight  lefts  to  the  face 

Some  "writers  were  of  the  opinion 
that  Mitchell  deserved  a  shade,  while 
others  thought  a  draw  might  be  the 
better   decision.  .  ,    ^    .  i.    i,* 

Welsh  appeared  entitled  to  a  sllglit 
advantage  because  of  his  forcing  the 
contest  from  start  to  finish.  He  blocked 
numerous  leads  of  the  Milwaukee  boy 
and  left  the  ring  without  a  mark.  The 
first  and  second  rounds  were  devoid  of 
dimage  In  the  third  Welsh  upset 
Mitchell  with  a  left  hook  to  the  jaw 

The  fourth  was  even.  Mitchell  had 
the  honors  in  the  fifth  and  /'^th  In 
the  seventh  Welsh  caused  Mitchell  to 
bleed  freely  from  the  mouth  and  had 
the   Milwaukee   boy   tired.     The   eighth 

^^\Vel3h^htd  a  slight  advantage  in  the 
ninth  and  In  the  tenth  rocked  Mitchell 
twice  with   right  hooks  to  the  jaw 


THEY  HAVE 
WRONG  IDEA 

New  Yorkers  Believe  Du- 
luth Oarsmen  Are  Thriv- 
ing Millionaires. 


James  E.  Ten  Eyck  Breaks 

Forth  Into  Big  Town 

Press. 


Recently  an  Interview  with  James  E. 
Ten  E  ck  was  published  in  the  New 
York  '  'mes.  In  It  Jimmy  took  occa- 
sion to  deny  that  all  the  Duluth  oars- 
men are  millicnalres.  It  seems  that 
down  East  they  have  acquired  the  be- 
lief that  we  have  a  bunch  of  rich  row- 
ing men  up  here.  In  the  old  days  the 
Duluth  crews  were  known  as  the  lum- 
berjack crews. 

Here  Is  the  article  In  question: 
"When  the  national  regatta  was 
awarded  to  Duluth  at  the  meeting  of 
the  executive  board  of  the  N.  A.  A.  O. 
recently,  no  one  was  more  jubilant  than 
•Young  Jim'  Ten  Eyck.  formerly  coach 
of  the  club  from  that  city.  Taking 
into  consideration  the  fact  that  the  Du- 
luth Boat  elub  sent  a  crew  of  thirty- 
four  men  all  the  way  to  Springfield 
last   year,   where,    with   eleven    entries. 


SPORTING  EVENTS  OF  THE  WEEK  AS  SEEN  BY  THE  HERALD  CARTOONIST 


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DULUTH  OARSntN^ARe 
TRA»NIN<&  FOR  **E.LIZA 
CROSSING    THE    JCe"    '^ 

Stunt—  - 


Central   Basketball  TCAt^ 

BbACT^    cathedral  in    C1.05E 


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CJoin  the  Crowd  and 
become  a  member  of 
the    newly    organized 

ZENITH  ATHLETIC 

—AND" 

SOCIAL  CLUB 

209  ami  211  W.  Mkliignu  St. 


5Ht5    IS  TMe    WAX  Joe.  _ 
^TeCHeR   LOOKKP      AFTeP>        _ 
MIS     r-\ATCK     Vv/iTH    BCeuu- 


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This  is  the  T»M^<iP    .  . 

XeAR^WneN    THE.  LiTTL* 
J>AEK  MEN    TE^IPT    iiS 


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they  captured  ten  of  the  twelve  events 
for  which  they  were  eligible.  Ten 
Eyck  expects  them  to  make  a  great 
showing  on  their  home  course. 

"Last  year  the  Duluth  club  had  an 
entry  in  every  event  except  the  inter- 
mediate singles,  where  their  man  was 
scratched  to  keep  him  fresh  for  tho 
four-shell  race,  and  the  championship 
.^ingles  for  which  no  Duluth  man  was 
eligible.  Their  sculler.  Hoover,  was 
the  onlv  Duluth  man  to  be  led  home 
bv  a  rival  oarsman  during  the  regatta, 
Waldo  Smith  of  the  N.  Y.  A.  C  win- 
ning tho  association  senior  singles  m 
[which  Hoover  was  entered.  As  the 
three  races  which  did  not  go  to  the 
Western  club  were  the  singles  events, 
the  blue-shlrted  boys  from  Duluth  cap- 
tured forty-eight  out  of  a  total  of  a 
possible  flfty-one  Individual  prizes  on 
the  regatta  program. 

Came  to  Clean  Up. 

"The  Western  scullers  and  sweep  men 
came  on  to  the  East  fully  prepared  to 
clean  up  the  river.  They  had  a  pleiul* 
ful  supply,  of  shells— eights,  fours, 
doubles  and  singles,  and  Julius  H. 
I^arnes  the  Duluth  grain  merchant, 
who  was  financing  the  trip,  brought 
the  speedy  coaching  launch  Bobby  B. 
from  the  West  In  a  special  car.  Tha 
drinking  water  for  the  whole  outfit 
was  bottled  before  the  crew  left  Du- 
luth and  all  the  men  In  training  drank 
this,  and  nothing  but  this,  until  iho 
regatta  was  over.  Seeing  the  complete 
equipment  of  the  Duluth  crew,  the 
beautiful  coaching  launch,  the  speedy 
shells,  and  having  heard  tales  of  how 
the  Western  boys  who  were  in  training 
for  the  races  were  put  up  for  months 
ahead  of  time  at  the  clubhouse,  many 
of  their  Eastern  competitors  at  the  na- 
tional regatta  expressed  the  opinion 
that  the  Duluth  oarsmen  had  advan- 
tages which  the  others  here  did  not 
posse.ss. 

"When    questioned    on    this   point    re- 
cently  by   a   Times   representative.    Ten 
Eyck     laughed     aloud.       'I     knew.'     ha 
I  said    'that  some  of  the  boys  here  think 
i  our  '  crews     were     composed     of     young 
millionaires  who  had  nothing  to  do  but 
i  buy  shells  and  practice  In  them  all  day 
.  long   while   the   munificent   club   looked 
after  their  material  welfare  on  a  sump- 
tuous   scale;    but    that   Is   far  from    the 
truth — very    far,    indeed.       In    the    first 
place,    our    oarsm<'n    come    from    every 
walk    of    life.      We    have    one    or    two 
chaps    who    are    well    off.    but   the    ma- 
crity  of  our  boys  are  working  hard  In 
the     Duluth    offices,     getting     anything 
but    stupendous    salaries,    and    some    of 
them    are    kept    pretty    hard    at    their 
trades  even   through  all  the  training. 

Have    1,900    Membcra. 

"  'We  have  1,500  members  In  our  club, 
ail  of  them  deeply  Interested  In  the 
crews,  and  it  is  thla  Interest  amonn 
such  a  number  that  enables  us  to  turn 
out  such  a  complete  set  of  crews.  As 
for  the  gorgeous  training  life  thut  our 
beys  are  supposed  to  lead.  It  simply 
does  not  exist.  Here  is  our  arrange- 
ment. All  the  boys  who  are  endeavor- 
ing to  make  seats  In  the  boats  have 
the  privilege  of  sleeping  at  the  club- 
house. But  this  does  not  mean  a  pri- 
vate suite  with  a  luxurious  bath.  The 
boys  all  sleep  in  bunks,  the  kind  you 
find  on  board  ship  or  in  lumber  camps, 
one  on  top  of  the  other  In  lone  rows. 
The  place  where  the  boys  were  housed 
last  year  was  a  sort  of  abandoned 
lumber  attic,  where  they  had  to 
squeeze  past  the  bundles  of  lumber 
to  get  into  the  berths.  However,  they 
had  plenty  of  fresh  air.  even  if  they 
were    a   little   cramped    for   room. 

t"The  training  table  Iq  another  in- 
stance of  how  much  interest  th*-  boys 
themselves  took  in  the  game.  Tin-  elub 
had  practically  n(>thing  to  do  with  it. 
The  boys  themselves  chipped  in  35 
cents  a  day,  and  for  this  sum  it  was 
possible  to  get  up  a  breakfast  and  a 
supper  for  them.  They  bought  tluir 
own  lunches  In  the  city  at  the  noon 
hour,  but  they  were  told  just  what 
sort  of  light  lunch  to  buy  and  "th»-y 
stuck  to  It  rigidly.  The  35  cents  a 
day  supported  their  table,  so  you  see 
that  their  fare  was  anything  but  r<gal. 
They  never  got  porterhouse  or  tender- 
loin; they  got  round  steak,  and  we 
used  to  beat  it  with  a  club  to  soften 
It  up  before  cooking.  Every  oiiier 
article  was  purchased  with  the  same 
Idea  in  mind — strict  economy.  Fancy 
foods  were  banished  and  desserts  were 
unknown. 

"  'As  far  as  the  actual  training  went, 
there  again  the  boys  themselves  took 
the  active  part.  I  told  them  what  to 
do  and  how  to  do  it,  and  they  did  it. 
They  got  out  in  the  morning  on  the 
river  before  they  went  to  work  iind 
after  quitting  work  at  night  they  went 
out  again  In  the  shells.  They  worked 
hard  and  incessantly.  It  was  this  oard 
work  and  enthusiasm  that  attracted 
the  attention  of  men  like  Mr.  Barnes 
but  no  amount  of  financial  aid  will 
make  a  boat  go  faster  than  the  men 
In  it  can  pull  It.  The  Duluth  boya 
worked  their  own  wonders  and  the 
boys  in  the  East  here  can  do  the  same 
thing  If  they  want^to  roll  up  their 
•leeves  and  get  to  It.* " 


T 


■*— '!» 


^  Itlfllll    ■«— HMTll 


i. 


^mf 


Lawb. 


f 


-- — ^  > — J -»- 

■ 


Saturday, 


THE    DULUTH'  HERALD, 


April  S,  1916. 


II 


nmm  I  NEWS  AND  VIEWS  OF  THE  SPORT  WORLD 

Rowing  I  „„  i  iawo«  >  ^  bowliimg  ^ 


Wrestling 
Boxing 


CORBETT  BROTHERS  WERE 

TWO  GREAT  ATHLETES 

Jim  Was  the  Champion  of  the  World  and  One  of  the 

Greatest  Boxers  of  All  Time;  Joe  Was  a  Great 

Baseball  Pitcher  Some  Years  Back. 


DULUTH  PITCHER  MAKINCI 

GOOD  WITH  THE  TIGERS 


Two      brothf-rs— the      Corbt-lt      boys,  j 
wme     athletically     inclined     from     the 
time    tht-y   first    fell   out  of    their   trun- ; 
dU-    b^'ds.     The    manner    In    which    they 
laiivl'Mj     indic.nted     thia.    Out      in     Cull-  1 
fornia.   amid      the      fragrancf      of      the 
oraiig<*    srovea    and    roses    were    these  ] 
two     lads      rf-arfd.     In     their     extreme 
youth    they    gave    every    Indication    of 
beconiinK      preat      athletes,      for      thoy 
were    passionately    fond    of    all    sports  \ 
pertaining   to  »4klll,    nerve  and  strength.  , 
Jim     the    oldf-r    of     the     two.     In     hl«  , 
early  '  youth     was     ambitious    to     ue    a 
ball     player— a     Kr^•at     one.      Joe,     the  i 
youngrer.    had    a     iiuid    dcslro    to    be    ■% 
pugilist— to    shine    as    a     Kreat     boxer.  [ 
Now    .lame.s    sp'-nt    many    hours    trylnjf 
to*    b-^come    protic  Unt    in    th.-    national  ^ 
Kamo.     but    'twas    of    no     purpose,      f'»r  , 
th-    tall    lad    would    never    make    a    fln- 
l^hf-d    bail    playr.     He    could    play    the 
gnn\f    fast    ennuRh    for    amateur    con- 
icars     but   would    nevor   mak.-   a   profes- 
sion.1 1   In   ino  year.s.    That  was  the  ver- 
dl.t  of  his  frit^-nds.    On  the  other  hand. 
tl>.'    dr<ain    of     loe     (Jorbctts     ambition 
VMS  to  bf  a  boxer,  like  Charhy  Mitch- 
ell   .la<k    Demps.  y   or  even   Joe  Choyn- 
Aki     but    the    would-be    pugilist    failed 
to  show   the  ju-essary  Qualities,   failed 
to    impress     his     friend*     by     his     skill 
with    ih<^    mitts,    and    they    handed    out 
the    vt-idlct    that    Joe    would    never    do 
in  the  r«)p»'d  aff-na. 

Were  Athletleally  Sad. 
Tliey  wero  a  sad  pair  of  athletes  — 
that  is,  athhtlcally  sad.  As  time 
wore  on.  .lim  discovered  that  he  pos- 
sessed considerable  skill  as  a  boxer; 
the  mai  n«  r  in  which  he  banged  the 
other  fellow's  jaw  convinced  hid 
friends  that  he  was  there  with  the 
mitt.-!.  I!ut  Jaiaes  never  cared  for  tho 
boxing  name  as  a  younKster,  nothing 
but  baseball  for  him,  but  what  wa.-* 
the  use.  If  he  c<)Uldn't  make  the  se- 
lect class  he  didn't  want  to  Ko  at  all 
Now  brother  Joe  hadn't  much  use  fto- 
the  game  of  baseball  and  only  played 
it  under  ^reat  pressure  and  brother 
Jlni's  coaxins-  '>ne  day  an  old-timer 
mentioned  to  Joseph  that  he  would 
niakt'  :i  Rood  pitcher  from  the  manner 
In  which  he  pcRKed  the  ball  across 
the  diamond;  it  fairly  smoked  In  Its 
ttlsht.  This  suKKestion  awakened  a 
new    idea    In     the     athletic     brain     and 


breast    of    Joe.      The    clever     youngster 
had    come    l<»    the     conclusion     that     lie 
would    never    an:ount     to     much     as    a 
"puK"    so    Rave    up    all    his    spare    tlm'j 
to   rehearsing   the   tricks   of   the   pltch- 
injf    game    and     in     a     short     time     ho 
proved    beyond    ail    doubt    that    he    ha  J 
th'.;    makings    of    a    real    hurler    in    him. 
Turned  A«Hy  From  BaMrball. 
James  Corbett.  althoiiKh  he  was  very 
loath     to     abandon     all      hope     of     ever 
amoutitluff  to  anything  as  a  ball  tossei. 
finally  gave  up  in  despair  of  ever  get- 
ting     any     farther     than     the     sand     lot  I 
brigade,     turned    his    full    attention    to  , 
the    boxing    game    and    soon    learned    to  | 
like    the   sjiort    and    .iijoyed    the    fun    of 
knocking    the   other   fell(»w'»   blo<k   off. 
He  became  so  proficient  with  his  dukes 
that   the  average  local  expert  was  "agy 
for    hlin.     His    skill    attracted    consldej- 
able    attention    and    iji    a    short    time    he 
found     hln\self    as     a    scientific     boxer.  , 
Hi<^   march    to   fame   came    In    leaps   and  I 
bounds,     and     one     day     he     licked     the 
champi'»n   h.avywelght  s.rapper  of   the  | 
world,  displaying  a  new  .-^tyle  of  f  ght- 
ing.   which    was  a    revelation   to   all   ex. 
perts    of    the    old    »c<  hool    and    I    might  I 
add  "  the    new.       And    the    gentlemanly  | 
young    lad    who    despised    the    fighting 
game  at  one  time  and  detested  the  idea 
of  ever  be.  omlng  a  pugilist,  became  the  | 
champion    of    the    world    In    knocking: 
the    block    off   all    aspirants   wht>   dared 
to  meet  him. 

Joe    Make*    Sucee««. 
1       Brother     Joe.     the     would-be     boxer. 

who    despised    baseball    in    his    infantile  1 
I  years,    made    a    success    as    an    amateur 
pitcher,    then    proved    he   could    qualify 
for    faster    <'oinpany,    so    he    got    a    Job 
with    the    Califoinla    State    league.      He 
'proved   such   a   whirlwind    In  hurling  a 
'  baseball    that    he    was    offered    a    trial 
'  with     the     best     baseball     club     in     the 
world,  including  Honolulu.     In  his  very 
first    season    with    the   Baltimore    team, 
when    It    was   the   classiest   aggregation 
ever     bunched     together,       Joe     Crobett 
pitched     and     won     two     games     in     the 
Temple    cup    series    of    1898.    to    decide 
I  which    was    the   best   team   In   baseball. 
That    season    the    Orioles    won    all    four 
I  games.     The  followitig  season  Joe  Cor- 
I  belt    was    the    star    pitcher    of    the    big 
twelve-club     National     league     and     no 
'  one  was  more  proud  of  his  little  broth- 
er  than    was   Champion   James    E.    Cor- 
I  belt    and    you    can    bet    that    little    Joe 
i  was   proud   of  his  big  brother.   Jim. 


HIGH  SCHOOL  ACTIVITIES 

Central  Students  Have  But  One  Week  Before  Easter 
Vacation— Wallace  Cup  Contest  Promises  to  Be 
Keen— Senior  Class  Play  Plans— Shakespearian 
Festival  Will  Be  Held— New  Restroom  Will  Open 
Monday. 


Agnes  Wold,  Marie  Gleason.     Lester   Steurwald.  Raymond  Brenton. 


GEORGE  CUNNINGHAM. 


Thl,   is    the   latest    picture   of   the   former   Duluth    pitcher    who   looks   H^f   a 
pendabies. 


?r^'%r/Vutf,  \ren-r„er-'o?f '£5:  !  "?'r  \'k^u,?li?fe.n. 


Clark      and 


•*:  "*  i 

^  writ  Riui\<;.  uowi\<j  ^i 

*  A\u  CI  hm:v«;  roiiM  A  * 

«  'IRI.M'rV    OF   RK.VL  SI'ORT.   * 

^  \\  lillr  Hon)«'  personH  ^vere  auio-  -9^' 
-)((    niottlllnK    l»Mt    evening    and    vvnilr   ^' 

*  CuHcii  Ten  Eyok  and  His  asso-  ^  | 
^  rlatrn  werr-  Nitting  up  t-umplet-  *  | 
^,  liiK  plans  to  get  the  oantmen  out  ^  , 
■)M  oil  «••«'  waier  today,  nonie  mis-  #  j 
^   ereuntM     of     tlie     Duluth       «'urllug  -^  | 

*  rluh        staged        several         eurllng  * 
■aj^j  games.  ^ 
^        *'!4t«*ve"  J<in<-H   skipped  a   rink  to   ^ 
^  a   ll-lo-lO  victory  over  F.  <i.  <ier-  ■#  < 
■^   man.        Walter     Harris     and     Alex  * 
■9k    .'Hnerae    pliijed    a   tie    game.  ^('.  j 
jj^        iluMter    SahlberK,    J.    KIder    and  ^1 
^    .M.     Huehanan    were      allied      with  *  | 

*  Steve.  »*lille  A.  J.  (iow,  I»on  Me-  * 
^  I.ennun  and  fharles  West  played  * 
^  «vl(h  the  iiiernian  band.  ^ 
•jjf  f.  I'Hrwonn.  .lack  Foreman  and  ^  ' 
^  !».  >laekay  played  with  llarrl"  ^ 
•*  and  Oon  Cameron.  Tliomaa  Mc-  ^ 
W  4;llvray  and  I>.  I».  MeDonald  were  * 
^   on    t"»e    .Ilex    .Macrae    squad.                  *  , 

*  C  urlliig  on  AprtI  7  is  believed  * 
^  to  he  a  record.  ThJi*  Is  the  latest  * 
^  period  ever  known  for  a  curling  # 
^  game  In  these  parts.  The  worst  * 
^  pari  of  It  Is  that  those  who  took  -¥ 
^  part  In  the  Rames  of  last  night  *,  | 
^,  declare  they   will  carl  Just  as  long   ^j 

*  MH  the  present  brand  of  weather  * 
^   holds    oat.  * 

BIG  COLLEGE  MEET,      j 

Three  Big  Events  Being  Pulled  Off  in 
Minnesota  U  Armory. 

Minneapolis.  Minn..  Aprll  8.— Inter- 
est here  today  Is  evenly  divided  be- 
tween the  three  events  to  be  stagt'd 
todav  in  the  Western  Intercollegiate 
wrestling.  gymnastic  and  "[*'"5'.>"K 
meet,  which  is  being  held  in  the  I  nl- 
verslty    of    Mlnnci^ota    armory. 

On  the  showing  made  In  the  wres- 
tling preliminaries  yesterday.  Ne- 
bra.;^ka  is  favored  to  win  the  final 
wrestling  event  with  Minnesota  and 
Illinois    fighting       it     out       for    second 

^'  Wisconsin  is  the  favorite  ,l»».t*^® 
gymnastic  meet,  because  of  their 
showing  over  Illinois  several  weeks 
ago  Chicago  is  considered  the  best 
bet    for    the    fencing   honors. 

Morris  Beats  Up  Gunboat. 

Tulsa.  Okla.,  April  8.— Carl  M..rri3 
of  ;;apulpa.  Okla..  was  given  a  deci- 
sion over  «iunboat  Smith  of  New  York, 
after  ten  rounds  of  fast  boxing  here 
list  night.  At  the  final  gong  botli 
aen    were   smeared    with   blood   coming 


from   Smith's  mouth.     Smith's  eye  was 
praciiinlly   closed    in   the   fourth    round. 


BASEBALL 


Dodgers  Beat  Champions. 

Brooklyn,  .\.  Y..  April  8.  —  The 
r.rooklyn  Nationals  evened  up  the 
series  with  the  IJoston  Americans  by 
beating  the  world's  champions  yester- 
day, 3  .to  2,  in  a  pitchers'  battle. 
Cheney  and  Leonard  held  the  opposing 
learn  runles.s  while  they  occupied  the, 
mound.  Foster  was  greeted  with  three  j 
hits  and  a  run  in  the  sixth  inning. 
Then,  with  Foster  on  second  in  the] 
einhlh  and  Marquard  pitching,  Speak- 
er drove  the  ball  over  the  right  field 
wall  for  the  home  run.  Brooklyn  came 
back  bunching  lhr»-e  hits  and  a  sacrlllce 
for  the  tving  and  winning  runs.  A 
throw  to  the  plate  by  Speaker  and 
catches  by  Hickman,  were  the  fielding 
features.     Score: 

Huston    000  0  000  20—2      8      2 

Brooklyn     0  O  0  0  0  1  0  2  x— 3   12     2 

Batteries  —  Leonard.  Foster  and 
Thomas:  Cheney,  Maiquard  and  Miller, 
Meyers. 

Giants  Win  From  Yankees. 

I  New  York.  April  8.  —  The  New  York 
'  Nationals  yesterday  took  the  opening 
I  game  of  their  spring  series  from  the 
I  New  York  .\mericans  3  to  2.  Merkle 
won  the  game  for  the  Nationals  In  the 
seventh  inning  when  he  drove  In  two 
I  runs  with  a  single.     Score: 

New  York,   Am 0  2  0  0  0  0  0  0  0—2   9  1 

New  York,  Nat 0  10  0  0  0  2  0  x— 3   8   1 

Batteries — Caldwell.  Cullop  and  Nun- 
•  amaker;  Schupp  and   Barlden. 

I  Reds  Shut  Out  Senators. 

Columbus,     nhio,     April     8. — (Jrlflith, 

Louden  and  Clarke  contributed  singles 
I  In  the  seventh  inning  for  the  only  runs 
■  s<  ored  in  yesterday's  game  that  the 
I  Cincinnati      Nationals      won      from      the 

Columbus  American  association  team,  2 
'  to  0.  Kunnlng  catches  by  Crlfflth  and 
I  Williams  carried  IMtcher  Schneider 
I  through    the   second    inning,   the   one   In 

which  he  was  hit  hardest:     Score: 
'  Cincinnati 00000020  0—2      5      1 

Columbus     0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0—0      6      1 

Batteries  —  Schneider     and     Clarke; 

Blodgett,   Brady  and  Coleman,  Pratt. 

Washington  Beats  Phillies. 

Washingion,  April  8.— The  Washing- 
ton Americans  defeated  the  Phila- 
delphia Nationals  3  to  2  In  an  exhibl- 
ti  in  game  here  yesterday.  Dumont 
h.'ld  the  Phillies  runlesa  until  the 
eighth,    when    two    passes   and    Luderus' 


Philadelphia    .'. 000000020  0—2 
Washington     ..000100200  x— 3 
Batteries   —   Demaree.       Mayer 
Burns;   Dumont  and  Henry. 

Braves  Beaten  By  Baltimore. 

Baltimore,    Md..    April    8— The    Ba»tl- ; 
more   Internationals   defeated   th«>   Bos- 
ton   Braves    here   yesterday.      Shortstop 
Fewster  of  Baltimore,  was  hurt  during 
batting     practice     by     a     thrown     hall 

BoXn    301000000-4      8      5( 

Baltimore     0  0  0  H  0  0  0  x— 5      8      -j 

Batteries — Allen.  Barnes  and  Trages- 
ser;  Sherman  and  McAvoy. 

AthleticrilTRaleigh  9. 

Raleigh,  N.  C.  April  8 —The  Phila- 
delphia Americans  defeated  the  Raleigh 
club  of  the  North  Carolina  league  here 
yesterday,  16  to  9.  The  game  was 
played  In  the  rain.  Score: 
Philadelphia   l»   \*     * 

.  »  J.  1  ..  j  jjW%     "     11         o 

Batteries  —  Crowell.  Morrisette  and 
Me>er;    Parnham.    Philllon.    Hooke    and 

Howe. 

■ 

other  Games  Friday. 

At  I>e3  Moines.  Chicago  Americans. 
5,  6.  0;  Des  Moines.  4,  7.  3.  I'.atleries  — 
Eller  Danforth  and  Schalk.  Lynn; 
Thomas.   Kilieen  and  Stohr. 

At  Norfolk— Philadelphia  Americana, 
second  team,  6:   Norfolk,   2. 

LouLsvllle  Ky..  April  8.— Plitsburgh 
Nationals-Louisville  American  associ- 
ation game  called  off  yesterday;  snow. 

JOE  FAUTSCN~ 

THE  BIG  SHOW 


1*0  r ttijns 

e     2        Shot   put— Tanner,  Kelly.  Munch  and 
9     1  '  Patton.  „       . 

and  I      t)ne-half   mUe  run— Sturm.    Stephens. 
Art  Olson  and  t:acobaccl. 


Cora  Berquist.      Dale  Flelschman.    Frederica  Tuteur.  Gretchen  Schmidt. 


O. 


6IRIS  PLAY  flEROlY; 
~  NO  HAIR-PUILING  SEEN 


I  pii 


C   THt  ftOOO  PUDGE  FINDS  HUWIkN  N»TURg  THE  SAWC  tVERyWHgRE.  ) 
N        i -^ \    f ... 


THIS  UTTLC  TEN  CENT 
PIECE  WAS  ALL  THE  MOHCV 
MERE  WAS  IN  THE  WHOLE 
WORLD,  AND  VOU  HAD  IT. 

WHAT  WOULD  you  euy  ? 


[talk  SENSE.MAH 

^  CASey  SELLS  TMC 


HEW  CUT  REAL 
TOBACCO  CHEW 


^ 


WEN  SPENOTMEIR 
KONCy  FOR  WHAT 
QIVES  TMC  MOST 
SATISFACTION. 


TEN  cents*  worth  of  W-B  CUT  Chewing-the  long 
shred   Real  Tobacco  Ctiew— brings  many  •   man 

real  tobacco  comfort.  rw  n 

The  first  quality  test  proves  tnat  a  small  chew  ot  W-^ 
CUT  Chewing  is  plenty,  because  it  s  rich  tobacco.  INo 
chewing  on  a  big  wad  Hke  the  ordinary  kind—and  you 
don't  have  to  spit  so  much.  . .  ,  .  

Get  a  pouch  and  •athly  your  taste  fof  neb  tobaooo. 

"NoUce  how  th«»hl>ruM»  oat  tli«  rich  tob*ccotM»e** 

M>a«  fcy  wryMAN-BRUTON  COMPANY,   SO   UdWo  Square.  Wtw  YeA  City 


Former  Nibbing  Shortstop 

Gets  Trial  With  Chicago 

White  Sox. 

Duluth  fans  may  be  surprised  to 
learn  that  Joe  Fautsch.  who  played 
shortstop  on  the  Winona  team  several 
seasona  ago  and  who  last  year  was 
with  the  HlbblnK.  Minn.,  team,  is  going 
to  be  tried  out  at  shortstop  with  the 
Chicago  White  Sox. 

Terry  has  failed  to  make  the  show- 
ing expected.  On  the  other  hand. 
Fautsch  has  been  showing  up  in  peii- 
satlonal  manner  with  the  second  White 
Sox  team.  So  pood  has  been  the  Im- 
pression made  by  Joe  that  Rowland 
shifted  him  to  shortstop  position  on 
the  first  team,  where  he  is  booked  to 
play  today  and  tomorrow  against  th. 
Minneapolis  American  association  team. 

When    Fautsch    was    In    the   Northern 
league     he     was     looked     upon     as     the  , 
best     fielding    shortstop,     but     a    weak, 
sister    with     the     willow.       Reports     of  1 
his     work     in     Hibbing     >ast     year    at- 
traded     the    attention    of    White     Sox] 
scouts,    who    signed    young    Joe    for    a 
trial     after     giving     him     the     up-and-  | 
down. 

KELLYlVILL  RUN 

IN  TRACK  MEET 

Crack  College  Sprinter  to 

Compete  in  Y.  M.  C.  A.  High 

School  Games. 

It  has  been  decided  to  hold  the  dual 
Indoor  track  meet  between  the  T.  M, 
C.  A.  and  Central  high  school  teams 
next  Wednesday  evening  Instead  of  on 
Friday  evening,  the  original  date.  The 
meet  will  be  h*ld  In  the  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
gymnasium,  and  Is  expected  to  bring 
out  some  classy  competition,  as  some 
crack  athletes  will  be  seen  la  action.      | 

Harold     Kelly,     crack      Tennsylvanla  1 
sprinter  who  recently  won  the  quarter- 1 
mile    dash    Wi    the    St.    Paul    A.    A..  IT.  | 
Bames,   will  be  a  member  of  the  asso- 
ciation team. 

The  fiillowing  entries  have  been 
made  by  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  athletic  offi- 
cials: „   ,,  »    ..    ^ 

Dash  men— Harry  Bailey,  Art  Com- 
ing.   HIgglns.    Friedman,    H.    Anderson 

and  MiU»on.  .  .      ^  •«, 

High     Jump — Howard      Parson,      W. 


The  ^lrls•  basket  ball  team  of  the 
Y.  W.  C.  A.  last  evening  defeated  the 
girls  of  the  Central  high  school  by  a 
score  of  24  to  18.  The  game  was  a 
c(»rker  from  start  to  finish,  the  Cen- 
tral yirls  playing  hard  to  escape  th- 
first  defeat  they  have  met  in  three 
years.  , 

Superior  team  work  won  for  tne 
association  girls.  Despite  the  close- 
ness of  the  score  and  the  spirit  dis- 
played, there  was  no  hair-pulling.  1  ne 
lineup:  .     ...„, 

Y    W.  C.  A.   (24)  Central    (18) 

Anna  Brown f Ua  Whiteside 

i:.    Forester f Harriet    Kugl-r 

Irene   Anderson.  .  .c Marlon  Lutes 

Hetty    FJelln\an...g N'»"a    Morey 

Sara   Walt g...  Beatrice    Henley 

Y.  M."crA.  IS""wiNNER. 

The  Y  M.  C.  A.  Indoor  baseball  team 
last  evening  defeated  the  Trinity  lodge 
team  ot  the  Masonic  league  by  the 
score  of  23  to  18.  ^  The  game  was  a 
t.  rrlflc  hitting  affair  all  the  way 
through,  the  members .  of  both  *«'*'"'» 
tearing  the  cover  off  the  ball.  The 
association  players  clld  the  most  slug- 
ging  and,    therefore,    won. 

As  a  result  of  the  victory  the  Y.  M. 
C.  A.  has  established  ^  clear  title  to 
the   city   championship 


Margaret  Randall.    Oliver  Maggard. 
TWELVE  OF  THIS  YEAR' 


Clarence  Jentoft.     Henry  Jcnswold. 
S  CENTRAL  GRADUATES. 


NORTH  DAKOTA  CAN 
BOAST  MdDERN  NOAH 

Drayt<.n,  N.  D..  iprll  «.— Old  Noah 
did  not  have  anytWfig;  on  .Tohn  Rul-, 
a  farmer  living  ogf  tthe  Red  river, 
south  of  here,  in  the  way  of  prepar- 
ing for  high  water.  'Mr.  Itule  has  Just 
provisioned  a  big  houseboat  for  forty 
days  and  hauled  It  close  to  his  porch, 
oerpured  to  load  his  family  and  some 
more  valuab'-  livestock  therein  If  the 
Red  river  flood  gets  much  worse.  Mr. 
Rule  believes  the  high  water  of  Bibli- 
cal  fame  may  be  equaled  this  spring. 


How 

to  stop  dandn^ 

and  lots  of  hair 

with  Resinol 

Here  is  a  simple,  inexpensive 
treatment  that  will  almost  always 
stup  dandruff  and  scan  itching,  and 
keep  the  hairthick,  lir*  and  lustnxis: 

At  niKht,spread  tliejiair  apart  and 
rub  a  little  Resinol  (iintment  into 
the  scalp  gently,  witlikhe  tip  of  the 
finger.  Repeat  this  t^til  tlie  whole 
scalp  has  been  treated.  Next  morn- 
ing, shampoo  thoroughly  with  Res- 
inol Soap  and  hot  water.  Work  the 
creamy  Resinol  lather  well  into  the 
the  scalp.  Rinsewi^tjyadually  cool- 
er water,  the  last  Watftr  being  cold. 

Kennol  Soip  and  KcfTsol  Ointment  easllr 
h«al  •czcna  and  limil^r  j>lit*  ampcioo*.  Sold 
by  sU  drurgUtfc  'j    " 


Central  high  school  students  have 
but  one  more  week  of  school  before 
their  annual  Easter  vacation,  the  last 
important  rest  of  the  year.  Following 
the  Easter  holiday  the  activities  of 
spring  and  early  summer  will  come 
Into  their  own  and  will  keep  the  stu- 
dents "on  the  Jump"  until  school  closes 
In  June. 

The  school  was  somewhat  quiet  dur- 
ing the  last  week,  the  selection  of  the 
representatives  for  Duluth  Central  in 
the  annual  Wallace  cup  contest  and 
two  big  athletic  events,  the  Central- 
Cathedral  basket  ball  game  and  the  an- 
nual senior-faculty  Indoor  baseball 
contest  being  the  more  Important 
events. 

•  •  • 
Duluth  Central  Is  going  to  make  a 
big  attem[)t  this  year  to  break  the  ex- 
isting tie  between  the  central  schools 
of  the  city  and  Superior  for  possession 
of  the -Wallace  cup,  the  much  prized 
and  coveted  trophy  which  was  put  up 
in  1910  by  Dr.  C.  J.  Wallace  to  encour- 
age work  in  oratory  and  declamation 
among  the  high  scliool  students  of  the 
Head  of  the  Lakes. 

Bv  winning  the  trophy  last  year  the 
local  representatives  evened  things  up 
with  Superior  Central,  as  both  institu- 
tions now  have  won  the  cup  three 
times.  The  school  to  win  It  the  great- 
est number  of  times  In  ten  years  takes 
permanent   possession   of   It. 

During  the  last  week  the  persons  to 
represent  this  school  In  the  big  annual 
even  were  chosen.  Early  this  year 
about  100  candidates  reported  for  the 
initial  tryout.  The  list  has  been  gradu- 
ally cut  down  untU  a  few  weeks  ago 
four  persons  in  each  division  were  se- 
lected. These  four  persons  were 
drilled  for  several  weeks  under  the 
careful  supervision  of  L.  C.  Rasey,  who 
has  complete  charge  of  the  work  this 
year,  and  this  week  the  finals  in  ora- 
torv  and  declamation  were  held. 

Wednesday  morning  the  contest  In 
declamatloi  was  held.  Betty  Kyle, 
with  her  selection.  "The  Boy,"  was 
awarded  first  place  and  will  represent 
Duluth  Central  In  the  division.  Elsa 
Zachow  came  a  close  second  with  "Bob, 
Son  of  Battle."  Doris  Pennell,  speak- 
ing on  "Her  First  Appearance,"  and 
Alice  Hillls,  with  "The  Death  Disc, 
both  did  excellent  work. 

Yesterday  morning  In  chapel  the 
finals  to  choo.se  a  representative  In 
oratory  were  held,  with  the  result  that 
John  Ahlen.  a  Junior  at  Central,  waa 
returned  the  winner.  Ahlen  creditably 
presented  his  selection  entitled  "The 
American  Jingo."  and  thus  repeated  his 
performance  of  doing  the  best  work  In 
the  semi-finals  several  weeks  ago. 

The  two  winners  will  be  drilled  dur- 
ing the  next  few  weeks  by  Coach 
Rasey  so  that  their  selections  will  be 
as  near  perfect  as  possible  on  the  final 
dav.  Because  of  the  excellent  showing 
made  thus  far  this  year  by  the  local 
candidates.  It  is  expected  that  Duluth 
Central  stands  an  excellent  chance  of 
"getting  the  edge"  on  her  opponents  In 
the  contest  In  May  for  permanent  pos- 
session of  the  coveted  trophy. 
•  •  • 
First  appearance  of  the  tickets  for 
"The  Cricket  on  the  Hearth."  the  pro- 
duction to  be  presented  this  year  as 
the  annual  senior  class  play,  was  made 
this  week,  and  the  sale  will  be  rushed 
during  the  remainder  of  the  three 
weeks  before  the  play  is  presented. 

"The  Cricket   on   the   Hearth"   Is   one 
of  the  best  plays  that  could  have  been 
selected  for  the  high  school  actors.     It 
Is    dramatized    from    Charles    Dickens 
story  of  the  same  name. 
Several  persona  who  criticlaed  "She 


Stoops  to  Conquer"  as  the  selection  of 
the  class  play  for  last  year  were  most 
agreeably  surprised.  Excellent  coach- 
ing and  unusually  good  management 
mado  the  play,  financially  as  well  as 
otherwise,  by  far  the  most  successful 
affair  of  Its  kind  ever  attempted  at 
Central.  Big  efforts  are  being  made 
this  year  to  even  exceed  the  remark- 
able record  set  by  the  1915  thespians 
and   managers  in  their  pres^'ntation. 

The  story  revolves  about  the  main 
characters,  Jolm  Perrybingle  and  his 
wife  Dot,  which  parts  will  be  filled  by 
Wlllard  Thorp  and  Allace  Cowan. 

The  Interest  aroused  In  the  story  of 
Caleb  Plummer  and  his  blind  daughter, 
Bortha,  is  almost  as  interesting  a^  the 
development  of  the  main  characters, 
these  parts  to  be  taken  by  Irving  Auld 
and  Betty  Kyle.  Their  connection  with 
Mr.  Tackleton,  a  toy-maker  engaged  to 
marry  May  Fielding,  forms  an  exceed- 
ingly Interesting  plot.  The  two  latter 
roles  are  to  be  played  by  Philip  B«*rg- 
qulst  and  Pearl  Deatherage.  Other 
characters    also    help    to    weave    an    In* 

teresting  story. 

•      •      * 

The  members  of  the  Zenith  board 
have  launched  a  big  campaign  to  sell 
the  book  among  the  business  men  i>t 
the  city  during  the  next  two  weeks. 

The  slogan  of  the  board  Is  to  dis- 
pose   of    1,600    copies    of    the    annual,    a 

feat  never  before  attempted  by  an 
editing  board.  They  have  already  cold 
and  collected  the  money  for  more  than 
1,100  copies  among  the  student.-*  of 
the  school,  a  mark  which  far  sur- 
passes any  previous  sale  at  Central. 

During  the  Easter  vacation  week 
the  members  of  the  board  will  carry 
on  the  big  sale  In  earnest.  The  busi- 
ness offices  of  the  city  will  be  thor- 
oughly canvassed  and  It  is  hoped  to 
dispose  of  at  least  300  copies  in  this 
manner.  During  the  last  week  the 
treasurer  paid  out  more  than  S600  to 
settle  accounts  with  the  makers  of 
cuts,  for  stock  and  several  other  big 
item's.  As  the  money  from  the  senior 
play  has  not  as  yet  been  collected,  the 
treasury  is  somewhat  low  and  a  big 
sale  among  the  business  men  will  help 
materially. 

Editor  (Jaron  reports  that  big  strld-^s 
have  been  made  in  the  printing  of  vhe 


book  during  the  two  weeks  that  It  has 
been  on   the  press. 

•  •      • 

A  Shakespearian  festival  in  com- 
memoration of  the  tercentenary  of  tha 
death  of  the  famous  bard  of  Avoa 
will  be  held  at  Central  some  time  dur- 
ing the  middle  of  May.  This  is  the 
announcement  given  out  by  Miss  Mem- 
mel,  faculty  Instructor  in  English  at 
Central,  and  who  has  been  appointed 
chairman  M  the  committee  in  charge 
of    the   arrangements   for   the    affair. 

Scenes  from  several  of  Shakespeare's 
plays  will  be  presented,  the  affair  to 
be  somewhat  in  the  nature  of  a 
masque.  Some  of  the  West  parts  will 
be  selected  and  the  casts  will  b» 
drilled  on  these.  It  is  announced  that 
the  talent  for  the  celebration  will  be 
drawn  from  both  the  grade  and  high 
schools  of  the  city.  In  addition  to 
the  acting  of  the  selected  parts  thera 
will  be  dancing,  singing  and  possiblT 
some  pantomime   productions. 

•  •      • 

Midyear  election  of  officers  featured 
the  regular  meeting  of  the  members 
of  the  Sophomore  Girls'  Literary  so- 
ciety last  Monday.  The  officers 
chosen  were:  Eleanor  Keyes,  presi- 
dent: Lydla  Olsen,  vice  president; 
Anne  McEwen,  secretary;  Myrna  Ebert, 
treasurer.  Eleanor  Keyes  and  Alica 
Hillls  were  selected  to  represent  th«l 
organization  In  the  intersoclety  coun- 
cil- 

Members    of    the    club    are    planning 

an  active  spring,  both  in  their  regular 
work  as  well  as  socially.  Some  inter- 
esting programs  are  being  planned  for 
the  meetings  and.  among  other  things, 
a  big  party  at  the  English  inn  Ls  be-ng 

arranged.  ,' 

•  •       • 

Members  of  the  Delphian  Lltor.iry 
society  gave  their  second  Shakespear- 
ian program  at  the  regular  meeting 
of  the  club  following  the  close  of 
school    Tuesday. 

At  the  meeting  Tuesday  Cassle  Wlck- 
lander  described  London  in  Shakes- 
peare's time.  Anna  Maloney  character- 
ized the  second  Shakespearian  period, 
Evelvn  Ahlen  presented  an  interesting 
selection  from  th  "Merchant  of  Venic  "• 
and  Elolse  Lawrence  discussed  the 
Shakespearian    heroines. 

The  society  has  been  studying 
Shakespeare  and  his  Influence  for 
some  time  and  the  work  will  be  con- 
tinued at  the  next  regular  meeting. 

•  *      * 

Monday,  April  24,  will  mark  tha 
opening  of  Central's  new  restroom. 
furnishings  for  which  were  bought  by 
the  members  of  the  class  of  1916  fiom 
the  money  which  they  still  had  re- 
maining in  their  treasury  after  they 
had    graduated   last    spring. 

A  restroom  has  been  a  long-felt 
want  at  Central  and  until  the  1915 
graduates,  prompted  by  their  former 
advisor.  Miss  Margaret  Taylor,  took 
definite  action,  It  looked  as  If  nothing 
would  be  accomplished.  Their  action, 
however,  stirred  the  authorities  as  to 
the  real  necessity  of  the  room  and  tho 
work  as  a  result  was  soon  started. 
The  place  will  be  ready  In  a  few 
weeks.  The  room  Is  to  be  used  In 
case  of  sickness,  for  club  and  com- 
mittee meetings  and  as  a  gene»-al  rest- 
room   for   the  girls   and   faculty. 

odanahTearsTloods. 

Residents  of  Indian  Village  Prepared 
.    to  Get  Out  Quick. 

Odanah.  Wis..  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — For  the  past  two  weeks 
this  thriving  Bad  River  Indian  reser- 
vation village  has  been  preparing  for 
the  worst  flood  in  Its  history,  and 
odanah  has  had  plenty  of  experience 
with    floods. 

Situated  on  the  low  land  at  tha 
Junction  of  Bad  and  White  rivers, 
heavy  rains  and  spring  thaws  alwiiya 
bring  high  water,  which  drives  people 
from  their  home.s,  and  sometimes  takes 
out  bridges.  Two  weeks  ago  p<'ople 
who  owned  pianos  and  other  valuable 
furniture  had  them  pa<ked  and  In 
some  cases  moved.  So  far,  while  the 
river  has  been  very  high,  it  has  not 
been  as  high  as  was  expected,  al- 
though there  is  a  vast  amount  of  snow 
1  In  the  forests  yet,  and  a  sudden  rise 
In  temperature,  accompanied  by  rain, 
would  drive  many  of  the  people  of  th« 
village  from  their  homes  to  the  high- 
l.-nds.  ^^^_^^_^^.^^^^__^_^^— 


For  Pimply  Faces 

Try  Cuticora  Soap 

and  Ointment 

Samples 
Free  by  Post 

A  simple,  easy,  speedy 
treatment.  Smear  the 
pimples  lightly 
with  Cuticurai 
Ointment  on  endl 
of  finger  and 
allow  it  to  remain 
about  five  minutes. 
Then  wash  off  wil 
Cuticura  Soap  and 
water  and  continue  bath- 
ing for  some  minutes.  This  treatment 
is  best  upon  rising  and  retiring,  but  is 
usually  effective  at  any  time. 

For  pimples,  redness,  roughness,  itch- 
ing and  irritation,  dandruff,  itching  scalp 
and  falling  hair,  red,  rough  bands  and 
baby  rashes,  itehinga  and  chafings  these 
fragrant  super -creamy  emollients  are 
wonderful.  They  are  also  splendid  for 
nursery  and  toilet  purposes. 

Sample  Each  Free  by  Mail 

with  32-p.  Skin  Book  on  request  Ad- 
dress post-card  **Cuticura,  Drpt.  I7t  Bos* 
*•»"»•     Sold  throughout  the  world- 


ton. 


CERTAINLY 


Ifs  My  Favorite  Smoke 
— THE — 

Jean  Du  Lutii 


A  Great  10  Cent  Cigar 


— .\LL  DEALERS — 


HEAD  OF  THE  LAKES  CIGAR  CO., 

MANUFACTURERS  AND  DISTRIBUTERS 


TT 


■•HMa^v— <  ■«■ 


.a 


(I  I 


I 


■■   T 


* 


IIP 


( 

t 

i 


I         y 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


*^*   J 


GASOLINE  PRICES 

ARE  UNCHANGED 

Greater     Production     Ex- 
pected to  Prevent  Further 
Advances. 

Nfw  YoiK.  April  8.-  The  prlr»-  of 
«a?olin<'  ill  t»u-  East  r«  nutlns  im- 
chan^'fO.  AH  f<njr  «.f  Hh-  principal 
roinpani»s  -Staiulard  Oil.  «'rt\v-Lf  vick. 
«;ulf  HcfinitiK  and  Texas— arc  quoting 
24  a  wti*  in  KuniK'S  in  Nf  w  ^  ovH  and 
23  tent."  in  .N»  w  J«r.s«  y.  rii<<s«  in  i  on- 
nccticut  ar«'  at  Xuf  sani.-  !•  vf I  as  for 
New  York.  Of  the  W.  st.rn  fill"?. 
Minneapolis  f.lonr  h.is  a  liiK»i»'r  price, 
Indt-p<ndent»  ,idv;'n<in(Lr  Iow-k''"'!*" 
BBHolide,  tank  WHK«.n  ha*»in  to  liO'j 
cent.«.  ineiiinin  >'»'z  .  .  iii»  and  »il«l)  -'♦• 
cent.**.  The  Standard  «»ll  prices  In 
Minneapolis  are  1  cent  lower  f'-r  the 
lower  and   intdiuni   prades.  ,  ,    v,    „ 

In  view  of  th.  fact  that  the  h!Kh<  r 
prices  now  prev.iilinK  have  sery.d  t« 
etln.iilato  piodu.'tlon.  «  •nservalivc  oil 
men  arf-  bejiinnlnK  to  <iue.stion  the 
pi«>babilit>  of  further  increase.  It  is 
lf.-iiirall\  conceded  that  the  present 
iiupplv  and  demand  situatloti  justilles 
rnrreiit  price?,  oil  nu.ii.  therefore,  ar- 
Inclined  to  look  askance  at  predictions 
of    40-««nt    fuel. 

The  following  table  ^fiv*  s  prleeF  of 
fuel  at  pr<eent  obtainintr  nnd  those  for 
AuKust.  1&15.  I'rices  for  March,  1915, 
vei.'  at  their  lowest,  which  wa.s  2  to 
S  (eits  below  the  AuRUSt  price. 
Current  August 

F'rif  e,     I'rlce,   Advance 

r.ntn. 

.25.0 

.I'.'J.O 

.18.6 

.23.0 

.22.0 
19.0 

.24.0 

.20.0 

.16.8 

.21.0 


NEW  TOURING  BUREAU  FOR 
MOTORISTS,  GOODRICH  FEATURE 


Bost..n     

Buffalo    

t^hica^o 

Cincinnati    .  .     . 
Denver,    Ool<>.    . 
Detroit.    Mich. 
Hartford,    Conn 
Houalon,    Tex. 
Kansas    City     .. 

LKiuisville.     Ky.. 

Mlnn»apolis    19. G 

New    York    city.  24.0 
Newark.   N.   J    ..  .220 

Phil  idelphia      25.0 

Pltti?burgii,     Pa.  .26.0 

Portland,     Me 26.0 

Ral-i^'h.    X.    C....24.0 

St.    L,ouis,   Mo 17.9 

San    Francisco    .  .18.0 
Seattle,     Wash.  .  .18.6 


(^entH. 
16.0 
12.0 
10.5 
ll'.O 
12.0 
11.0 
14.0 
12.0 
9.8 
12.0 
11.5 
14.0 
11.0 
13.0 
14.0 
16.0 
16.0 
10.9 
11.5 
12.0 


'ents. 
10.0 
11.0 
8.0 
11.0 
10.0 
8.0 
10.0 
8.0 
7.0 
9.0 
8.0 
10.0 

12.0 
11.0 
10.0 
9.0 
7.0 
6.6 
6.6 


will  drive  one  of  them.  Drivers  for 
the    other   two   are    not    yet    picked. 

*  *      • 

New  Y'ork.  April  8.— Ralph  Mulford 
has  entered  a  Peugeot  for  the  150- 
niile  Metropolitan  m»phy  race  at 
Sheepshead    Bay   speedway,    May    23. 

*  •       • 
Birminfrham,       Ala..      April       8.— The 

BliniinKham  Motor  Speedway  company 
today  awarded  a  contract  for  a  two- 
mile  speedway  around  the  lake  of  the 
Birmingham  Motor  and  Country  club. 
The  road  will  cost  $500,000.  August 
Hermann  of  ClncUmati  i.s  president  of 
the  speedway  company. 

*  *       * 

Xew  York.  April  8. — Ralph  Mulford 
hiis  entered  his  Peugeot  in  the  150- 
mile  Metropolitan  trophy  race  to  be 
run  at  the  Shf'AMk^ad  May  speedway 
on  May  23.  Three  Crawford  specials 
have  al.<;o  been  entered.  These  will  be 
campaigned  this  year  by  William 
Chandler. 

*  *       « 
April      8.— The      entry 

for  the  opening  races 
at  the  Phoepshead  Bay 
13,  embrjjjce  a  schedule 
for  which  cash  trophies 
be  awarded. 


N'ew      Y'ork. 
blanks     issued 
of    the    season 
speedway   May 
of  four  events, 
of  $20,000   will 


DEALERS  ST.4GE 

USED^CAR  SHOW 

Ullca,  X.  Y..  April  8.— With  spring 
at  hand  and  a  stock  of  used  cars  on 
hand  at  the  uame  time,  the  l.'tlea 
motor  car  denleLs  found  a  solution  lit 
a  used-car  window  show  and  sale.  It 
was  .«<taeed  under  tbe  mar.igemcnt  of 
Secretary  <ie«>rge  C.  Donahue  of  the 
Liica  Autc-inollh  Trade  association  m 
the   I'tica   automcblh-   building. 

The      doalei.s      entered      seventy-five 


cars*,    each   of   which   was   price-tagged 
and    carried    data     as     to     its     owner, 
name,   year,   power   and   cylinders. 
Prices    rangtd    from    $225    for  a  1912 

I  Thomas   sl>d    to    $1,800    for   a    1916    Hud- 
son six.    There  were  many  cars  below 

1  $600.  

*  ALTOS   Fltil  RE   IN  * 
%                                  MEXICAN  AFFAIR.  * 

I  ^  * 

*1       "When    <he   WMory   of  *he   Mex-  -^ 

*  Iran  revolution  Ih  written,  the  * 
i  ^  American    motor    ear    will    have    a  Jjt 

*.  very  prominent  part  In  Hh  page*.     * 
^   mnyU    II.    N.    DanleU.      "Not    only   in   *. 

*  iiillltur.v  operationit  luii»  the  auto-  ^ 
;  *  mobile  flgarert  oon»pleuously,  but  * 
I  *   It    ha!.    ».ave<l    n«any    Innoeent    non-   ^ 

*  combMtantN     from    O^    murderouM  * 
H  brigandM     preying    upon     th*    land  * 

I  *  iB    that    unhappy    country.  * 

SLIDING  SCALE  FOR 
INSURANCE  RATES 

New    Plan  Announced  for 

Autos  By  New  Jersey 

Company. 

A  New  Jersey  insurance  company  is 
the  flr.st  to  adopt  a  new  method  of 
rating  automobiles  for  liability,  and 
properly    damage    insurance,    according 


to   its 

lows:  ,  „  .    . 

"If  you  own  an  automobile  weigh- 
ing 3,000  pounds  or  le.s.«,  opeiate  it 
yourself,  maintain  It  In  a  private 
garage  and  have  driven  a  car  for  one 
year  without  accident  or  arrest,  the 
premium  Is  $30  for  liability  and  ?8  for 
property    damage. 

"If,  under  the  j^anie  conditions,  you 
have  driven  a  car  three  years  with- 
out accident  or  arrest,  you  will  be 
entitled  to  a  reduction  of  10  per  cent 
from  the  above  rates;  u  for  five  ycarr, 
a    reduction    of    20    per    cent. 

"If  your  car  weighs  more  than  3, "00 
pounds,  the  premium  is  $45  for  liabil- 
ity   and    $12    for    property    damage. 

"The    same    discounts      allowed      fop 
owners   who   have   driven   thrte   or  five 
years    without    accident    or    ary<  bt. 
~  ■    reasonable   charg'-s  will 

more    hazardous    condi- 


MONTHLY  PAYMENT 

PLAN  POPULAR 


and 
for 


"Proper 
be    made 
tions." 

This  shows 
heavy  car  is 
insurance. 


that    the    man    with    the 
taxed     >vilh       addiiional 


COAST  STATES  PROSPEROUS, 


Hupp  Manager  Finds  Conditions  Good 
in  South. 

"Southern  Atlantic  co-'^.-'t  .<=tr.tep  .-ire  | 
enjoying  a  remarkable  period  of 
prosperity."  said  Loe  Anderson,  com- 
mercial man.^ger  of  the  Hupp  Motor 
Car  corporation,  viho  has  just  r-- 
turned  from  a  months  trip  through 
Alabama.  Florida  and  Georgia.  "The 
good  times  which  were  felt  in  the 
north  at  the  earlier  period  have  now 
reached  the  south  at  high  speed  and 
in  every  section  I  visited  I  found  the 
greatest    prosperity    in    years." 


Nineteen    Makes    of  Cars 

Can  Be  Bought 

That  Way. 

The  deferred  payment  plan  recently 
announced  by  the  Guaranty  Securities 
corporation  of  New  York  is  said  to 
be  one  of  the  greatest  steps  ev<  r  taken 
toward  facilltatin.g  the  pur<hase  of 
automobiles.  Under  the  terms  of  this 
new  felling  arrangement,  purchasers 
of  motor  cars  can  buy  any  one  of 
nineteen  different  makes  of  cars  on  a 
monthly   payment   basis. 

The  "guaranty  plan,"  as  it  is  called, 
can  be  applied  in  the  puicha.'se  of  al- 
most any  car  made  in  the  Cniied 
States.  The  list  includes  pr;icti<ally 
all  of  the  well  known  makes  and  is 
made  up  of  the  following:  Ford,  Over- 
land, Buick  Studebaker,  Dod;re.  Max- 
well, Reo,  Chevrolet,  Hupmobile.  Cadil- 
lac, Hudson.  Chalmer.«i,  ChaiuU*  r, 
Paige,  Jeffery.  Kissell,  Oldsmoblle, 
Mitchell    and    Oakland. 

With  this  array  of  cars  to  choose 
from  the  prospective  buyer  can  select 
his  car,  make  his  first  payment  when 
it  is  delivered  and  then  make  up  the 
balance  in  eaual  monthly  payments. 
There  is  no  additional  expense  attached 
lo  the  transaction  other  than  a  small 
charge  for  Insurance  and  incidental* 
and  a  normal  rate  of  6  per  cent  in- 
terest   on     the    deferred    payments. 

According    to    officials    of    the    Guar- 


NEW   GOODRICH  TIRE  BRANCH. 

A  feature  of  th^  new  Goodrich  branch  at  401  Kast  Superior  street  is  the 
touring  bureau  for  the  benefit  of  motori.sts.  who  are  planning  crosg-i  ountry 
trips.  Maps  and  guides  for  all  roads  leading  out  of  Duluth  will  be  at  the 
service  of  luotorlsta  free  of  charge,  according  to  Robert  Ray,  manag-  r. 


%      SOCIKTV    taBL    ««KI.I.S   Al  TOS.      * 


RACING  NEWS  fROM  EVERYWHERE 


.MUm  I. aura  <•.  (•itheiisc.  h  <  hl- 
ratsit  H<»ele<y  girl.  In  fiin<tiiK  the 
luteitt  to  enter  r«»niin«-rclal  rlr- 
elex.  S'lf  In  ilie  dnuRhter  of  Wal- 
ter K.  (•ItlieiiN,  >In;kY\ell  dlHlrib- 
u(er  at  <  hIeiiKo,  urid  hnn  an.Hiiiiieil 
a  poMltioii  wUli  her  father'M  firm, 
MellluK     >laxt\ell     autoinuitUeM. 


♦***-***)Mt********-*-*-*  ****** 

Heavy  Exports  for  Month. 

"\Vo.-liii»Kton.  April  8  -  lanuary  ex- 
ports of  m<'t«)r  truck.s,  1916.  .Hinount>d 
to  1,2611  vehicles,  valued  at  $3,416,818. 
For  the  s^even  months  ending  with 
January  exports  amounted  to  12,391 
trucks,  v.orth  $32.55I>,354.  In  .lanu- 
ary. 1S»15.  936  trucks,  worth  $2,546,627. 
were  exported,  and  in  the  seven 
months'      period      corrcf^ponding      3,972 


tr  ick.o.         worth 
thippfd   abroad. 


$1,0989.442.         were 


.Spokane.      Wash.,      April     8.— Racing 
j  will    be   a    popular  sport    In   the   Paclftc 
'  N'..rthwe.-t    .luring    the    coming    season. 
lAIrea.ly  nuets  have  been  arranged  un- 
der   the    direction    of   Guy    K.    Riegel    of 
Spokane,    and    Robert    A.    Hiller    of   Sc- 
atlh'     for    the    Tacoma    speedway.    May 
30,    s'l.okane-Coeur    dAlene    track.    .Tiily 
4      with      pu:.«eH      agKregating      $2,000. 
July  6    purfes  $1.0oO.  and  Portland.  Or.. 
Aug.    12.    purses    $1,600.      The    Tacoma 
Speedwav  ass.'cintion  will  hold   the  Pa- 
dilc   Northwest   classic   on  Aug.   6.   with 
purses  of   $10,000. 

«       ♦       • 

Minneapolis,     Minn.,     April     8.  — R.     J. 
Young,    superintendent    of    the    Minne- 
sota  &   Ontario   Power   company.    Inter- 
!  national    Falls.    Minn.,    has    been    male 
1  managt  r    of    the    Twin    City    speedway. 
He  announces   four  races   for   Memorial 
day.     of     two     ten-mile     races,     a     tifty- 
'mlle    and    n    100-mile    bru.sh.      The    race 


for  July  4  will  be  300  miles.  When 
the  wea'ther  moderates,  Mr.  Voting  will 
have  the  concrete  track  resurf.iced.  A 
policv  «»f  $100,000  covering  the  grand- 
stands has  been  taken  out.  The  stands 
art  built  of  wood. 

•       •       • 

One  of  the  richest  trophies  ever  of- 
fered for  a  motor  race  which  has  been 
given  by  Spencer  Penrose,  Colorado 
Springs.  Colo.,  sportsman,  ami  for 
which  speed  demons  will  race  over   the 


Draw  a  mental  picture 
of  all  you  would  like  your 
motor  car  to  be  and  all 
the  things  you  would  like 
your  motor  car  to  do. 

We  believe  you  will 
find  that  the  Cadillac 
Eight  will  come  nearer 
to  meeting  your  ideal 
than  any  other  car  in  the 
world. 

— the  steadiness, 
— the  smoothness 
— the  constancy 
— of  the  Cadillac  Eight 
performance,    is   so 
marked  that  you  cannot 
help  contrasting  it  with 
rides  you  have  taken  in 
other  cars. 


THE  PENROSE  TROPHY. 


Northwestern 
Cadillac  Co. 

709  East  Superior  Street, 
DULUTH,  MINN. 


Pike's  Peak  highway,  highest  of  the 
earth's  motor  roads,  to  the  summit  of 
Pike  s  Peak,  Aug.  11  and  12.  The  races 
will  be  the  most  spectacular  In  the 
history  of  motor  car  competition. 

*  «      • 

Pari.«.  April  8. — Around  Brookland.s 
track  it  Is  an  open  secret  that  the 
Sunbeam  company  has  built  a  cotiple 
of  slx-cyllnder  300-cublc-lnch  racing 
cars  specially  designed  for  American 
track  conditions.  The  military  authori- 
ties of  England  have  given  permission 
for  one  of  these  cars  to  be  exported, 
and  arrangements  arc  well  In  hand  for 
Joseph  Christlaens  to  handle  it  in  .>ome 
of  the  leading  American  races. 

*  •       • 
Comlnic    Rarliiflr   EveiKii. 

April   8 — Corona.  Cal.,  boulevard  race. 
May    6 — Sioux    City,    Iowa,    speedway 
race. 

May  13 — New  York,  Sheepshead  Bay 
speedway   race. 

•May  20-  Chicago  speedway  ama- 
teurs' race. 

•May  30 — Indianapolis  speedway  race. 
May     30 — Tacoma.     Wash.,     speedway 
race. 

May  30 — Minneapolis.  Minn.,  speed- 
way  race. 

•June    10 — Chicago   speedway   race. 
June    28 — Des    Moines,     Iowa,    speed- 
way race. 

July   4 — Minneapolis  speedway    race. 
July    4 — Sioux   City   speedway    race. 
July    4 — Track    meet,    Coeur    d'Alene, 
Idaho. 

July  15 — Omaha.  Neb.,  speedway  race. 
July   15 — Track    meet.   North   Yakima, 
Wash. 

Aug.  11-12— Hlllcllmb,  Pike's  Peak. 
Colo. 

Aug.    5 — Tacoma    speedway    race. 
Aug.   18-19 — Elgin   road   race. 
S»'pt.    4 — Indianapolis    speedway    race. 
Sept.   4 — Dcs  Moines,  Iowa,   speedway 
race. 

Sept.  4-5 — Track  meet,  Spokane, 
Wash. 

Sept.  16 — Speedway  race.  Providence, 
R.    I. 

.Sept.   29 — Track   meet.   Trenton.   N.  J. 
Sept.   30 — New   York,  Sheepshead   Ray 
spee<lway    race. 

Oct.  7 — Omaha  speedway  race. 
Oct.   14 — Chicago   speedway    race. 
Oct.    19 — Indianapolis   speedway    race. 
•  Sanctioned  by  A.  A.  A. 

*  •  « 
New  York.  April  8. — The  three 
Delage  cars  which  took  part  In  the 
last  French  grand  prlx  are  now  In 
New  York  and  will  make  their  ap- 
pearance on  the  speedways  very 
shortly.  These  cars  have  been  Im- 
ported bv  Harry  Harkness.  and  will 
be    managed    by     Carl     I..lmberg.     who 


top  class 
bottom  price 


This  car  is  the  result  of  a  definite  purpose  to  supply  a 
definite  need  with  definite  finality. 

It  is  built  for  the  man  whose  purse  cannot  afford  a  big, 
expensive  car — 

For  the  man  whose  pride  cannot  afford  an  unsightly,  little, 
uncomfortable  car — 

And  it  is  a  very  definite  success. 

Beauty  is  not  necessarily  a  matter  of  size. 

Neither  does  size  altogether  control  comfort. 

But  skill,  experience  and  facUities  are  required  to  build  a 
email,  beautiful,  comfortable,  economical  car. 

In  a  word,  it  required  Overland  organization. 

And  here  is  the  small,light  car— complete  to  the  last  detail. 

Its  performance  is  on  a  par  with  its  beauty,  comfort  and 
completeness. 

And  its  price— $615— is  far  below  any  former  price  for  any 
completely  equipped  automobUe— regardless  of  appearance  or 
comfort  considerations. 

A  glance  at  the  car  impresses  you  immediately  with  its 
beauty  and  finish. 

As  you  look  it  over  and  read  its  specifications,  you  realize 
Its  absolute  completeness. 

But  you  must  ride  in  it  to  appreciate  its  comfort. 

You  must  drive  it  to  get  the  thrill  its  performance  will 
give  you. 

You  can  ovm  one  of  these  cars* 

But  act  promptly— for  no  car  was  ever  in  such  demand. 

In  spite  of  record  productions  and  advancing  prices,  there 
Is  a  shortage  of  cars. 

The  demand  naturally  centers  on  top  class  at  bottom 
price— this  small  light  car. 

And  no  other  car  at  anywhere  near  its  price  can  compare 
with  this  one  for  beauty,  performance,  comfort,  complete- 
ness and  economy. 

Get  in  touch  with  us  today — ^now. 

IVIUXUAL    AUXO     C01VIF*AIMY, 

»x.. .-«»« —  302,  304  and  306  West  Superior  St. 


Distributees 

WIIiLYS-OVERLAXD  ( Inc. ) 

(.Minneapolis  Brancli) 

1203  llonnopln  Avo. 


MKRRITT  J.   OSBORX    (Inc.) 
(St.   Paul    liranch    ) 
West  Third  and  follegc  Ave. 


The  Willys-Overland  Company,  Toledo,  Ohio 


'tit^  tn  V.  i.  JL** 


Roadster  *593 


•f 


mk»tm-»\»t 


T- 


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<<uss. 


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. ■^-*wi     ♦  ■  J*-^;  V       *3r 


Saturday, 


THE    DUiLUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


13 


I 


anty  Securities  corporation,  automobile 
dealiTS  throughout  the  country  are  en- 
thUMlfistlc  ovei-  ihts  "guaranty  plan." 
Reports  already  hav«  been  r<'<%lved  by 
thorn  from  numerous  sources,  stating 
that  fnl>*.<<  have-  been  consummated  that 
for    ni.jnths    were    hanKlng    Are.      The 


fact  that  the  automobile  has  passed 
beyond  the  luxury  stage  and  Is  now 
looked  upon  as  an  every  day  neces- 
sity, has  Influenct^  thousands  of  peo- 
ple to  take  advantage  of  this  easy 
payment  plan.  who.  under  ordinary 
conditions,  probably  would  not  buy  for 
another   y«'ar   or   two. 


HERALD'S  WEEKLY  ROADS 

BUREAU  AND  BULLETIN 


%  I'nder  this  heading  The  Daluth  « 
'*>  Herald  1«  ronducting  ■  weekly  4 
4|E  coluata  of  laformatlun  for  auto-  -jji 
"A-  niolille  owNerM  and  driven*.  It  "fl- 
4n  ywu  are  plaaalng  on  taking  a  trip,  -iK 
^  write  to  tke      automobile      depart-  4i 

fluent.  All  the  inforiuatlua  at  our  4 
dlnpoMal  U  yourM  for  the  asking.  ^ 
Muturtst*  outHlde  of  Mluneaota  # 
^  are  eapeeiaily  Invited  tu  make  4 
^  aae  of  tlUa  department.  ^ 

<i.  Itoy  Hill,  sei  rotary  of  the  Minne- 
sota State  Automobile  ussuclation. 
niak<^s  the  foUowliii;  appeal  In  behalf 
of  the  Duluth-Twin  City  highway.  In 
this  month's  Ihsuo  of  'Sparka,"  the  of- 
ficial i>ap<T  of  th'^  orgranlzatlon: 

"AKain.  the  call  to  arms  for  more 
•pop'  on  the  Duluth-Twln  City  high- 
way. Some  day,  you  know,  we  may 
have  a  real  highway  between  the  Ze- 
nith ilty  and  the  Twin."?,  and  this  Is 
prophesying  sumH,  in  view  of  the  diffi- 
culty we  have  had  In  trying  to  get  the 
proper  amount  of  enthusiasm  for  thla 
much-needed  thoioughfare. 

'•We  are  frank  to  confess  that  wa 
have  not  been  able  to  aseertain  Just 
What  ha."*  been  the  matter  with  this 
project.  That  it  l-s  needed  and  needed 
badly,  not  only  for  the  benertt  of  the 
three  cities  moat  Interested,  but  think 
what  It  would  mean  In  aJveitldlng  our 
Btute        Of    course    right    here    we    get 


back  Into  the  same  old  rut:  What  hare 
wo  ever  done  of  consequence  In  the 
way  of  roaJ-bulldlng  to  facilitate 
.•<howlnK  oft  our  'more  beautiful  than 
the  r<  .St'  vacation  country  of  the  North- 
west? We  were  going  to  say  'noth- 
Injf,'  but  that  would  be  rather  severe 
on  us,  so  we  will  only  say  *not  very 
much.' 

•"Nearly  everyone  will  agree  that 
from  a  business  standpoint  this  high- 
way Is  twidly  needed,  but  has  It  ever 
occurred  to  you  that  there  are  any 
number  of  good  roads  out  of  Duluth 
into  the  Iron  country  and  up  among 
virgin  timber  country  to  the  north  of 
Duluth  that  Is  worth  going  hundreds 
of  mllea  to  see  and  they  are  right  here 
in  our  very  dooryard,  and  It  Is  almost 
Impossible  to  reach  them  on  account 
of  a  few  miles  of  poor  r'oad  Interven- 
ing. We  of  Minnesota  dont  half  appre- 
ciate what  a  wonderful  country  we  are 
living  In,  but  we  muat  have  the  mean* 
of  reaching  our  beauty  spots  and  that 
moans  good  roa.la,  and  one  of  the  most 
n-eded    right    now    Is    the    Duluth-Twln 

City  highway." 

•       •      • 

Washington,  April  8.— Forty-three  of 
the  forty-eight  Htates  will  auullfy  for 
federal  aid  In  roads  under  the  bank- 
head  bill,  recently  reportf»d  favorably 
t.i  the  senate  by  Its  contmittee  on  post- 
offl<  es  and  postroada. 

Indiana.  South  Carolina.  Georgia. 
Ml.'^sl.s.slppl  and  Texas  are  the  five 
stales  which  have  yet  to  eauip  them- 
selves with  a  centralised  direction  of 
road.s    improvement.       Indiana    has    an 


active  campaign  In  progress  which 
ought  to  prove  successful,  energised  In 
great  desreo  by  the  Hooster  State  Au- 
tomobile association,  which  is  affiliated 
with  the  Aoierlcan  Automobile  aaaocla- 
tlon.  Indiana  is  a  great  automobile- 
producing  state,  and  a  large  percentage 
of  its  farmers  have  adopted  the  self- 
propelled  vehicle.  * 

South  Carolina  is  giving  the  ques- 
tion of  a  state  highway  department 
serious  consideration.  Georgia  Is  In  an 
equally  hopeful  condition,  while  Mis- 
sissippi in  Its  house  of  reprosentatlves 
recently  voted  against  the  creation  of 
a  state  commission.  The  legislators 
opposed  the  legislation  because  It 
called  for  an  engineer  with  a  salary  of 
J2.600   a   year.      Maine   pays    $5,000    and 


possesses  an   unua^Hy  competent   of- 

flclal.  ;^  '     ^      ^ 

Texas  under  the  -Bankhead  measure 
would  obtain  morf^Ffderal  co-opera- 
llon  than  any  other;ttgte  In  the  Union. 
Its  area  taking  It  J  twto  first  place, 
though    It    falls      bd^ind      many      other 


states  In  populatlo 
It  Is   a  certainty 
vide     a     highway 
three  years. 


nd  road  mileage. 
.  Texas  will  pro. 
partment     within 


Springfield.  111.— 'PWfnty  million  dol- 
lars will  be  available  for  expenditure 
In  Improving  the  roads  of  Illinois  with- 
in eighteen  months  through  bond  Is- 
sues which  are  being  considered  in 
thirty  counties  In  all  sections  of  the 
state,  according  to  r#port  from  Spring- 
field. Bond  Issues . 'for  that  amount 
have    already    been  'favored    by    boards 


of  county  supervisors  and  many  other 
counties  have  taken  first  steps  toward 
Improving  the  highways  under  the 
amendment  to  the  good  roads  law. 
which  allow^s  counties  to  spend  the 
state-aid  allowances  to  pay  off  bond 
Issuea  The  issues  range  In  amounts 
from  WOO.OOO  to  $2.tOO,000.  In  Cook 
county  the  amount  Ift  $3,000,000,  the  I 
bond  Issues  having  been  legalized  at 
the  last  special  session  of  the  state 
legislature. 

•"     ♦  -  • 

Sacramento.  Cal. — The  state  highway 
commission  has  already  expended  $14,- 
361,332  of  the  $18,000,000  highway  bond 
issue  voted  several  years  ago,  accord- 
ing to  figures  given  out  by  State  High- 
way Engineer  A.  B.  Fletchor.  Of  this 
amount  $11,691,188  has  gone  into  actual 
construction,      $604,926      Into     what     Is 


technically  termed  overhead  and  the 
remainder  into  expense  for  inspection, 
surveys  and  other  such  work._^  The 
commission  has  on  hand  $$.647,678,  but 
of  this  amount  only  about  $1,500,000 
Is  available  for  new  construction,  the 
remainder  being  payable  on  contracts 
under  way. 

see 

Enthusiastic  responses  to  the  state- 
wide road-marking  movement  recent- 
ly inaugurated  by  the  Omaha  Automo- 
bile club  are  being  dally  received  at 
the  club  headquarters  In  Omaha,  Neb. 
Already  over  thirty  cities  and  towns 
in  various  sections  of  the  state  have 
been  heard  from,  either  through  the 
local  organizations  or  through  Individ- 
uals who  assume  the  responsibility  of 
forwarding  the  movement  themselves. 
•       *      » 

Three  hundred  road  boosters  n>et  at 


Lawrence.  Kas..  recently  to  plant  ways 
and  means  of  improving  and  macadam* 
liing  the  sixty-five-mile  stretch  of 
road  between  Kansas  City  and  Topeka. 
the  capital  of  Kansas.  They  organized 
under  the  names  of  the  Kaw  Valley 
Improved  Highway  association.  H.  8. 
Putney,  Topeka,  was  elected  president. 
Vice  presidents  were  chosen  to  rep- 
resent  each   city   on    the    route. 

•  •      • 

At  a  meeting  of  the  board  of  gov- 
ernors of  the  Springfield  Automobile 
club,  Springfield.  Ohio,  last  week,  it 
was  decided  to  get  out  several  hun- 
dred metal  road  signs.  These  will 
hAve  a  blue  background  with  white 
lettering,  and  an  arrow  will  point  the 
way    to    Springfield    on    roads    leading 

to  that  city. 

•  «       * 

Fifty    grizzled   veterans    of   the   Civil 


o 

G 
O 
C 
O 

o 

o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
o 
il 


WlUard  and  Exide  Battery 
Service  Station 

Willar.l  and  Exide  batteries  are  being  used  in  about  90 
per  cent  oi  the  cars  owned  and  driven  in  and  about  Du- 
luth. 

They  are  made  bv  the  two  largest  battery  manufac- 
turers in  the  world.  'The  Willard  and  Exide  Companies 
employe  only  experienced  representatives  in  their  service 
stations,  thus  insuring  efficient  service  in  installing  and 
replacing  batteries. 

Wo  advise  you  to  make  sure  of  a  good  season  by 
bringing  your  battery  to  u.s  fir  inspection. 

We  will  plan  your  schedule  and  insure  a  good  aver- 
age for  vour  starting  and  lighting. 

R.  AND  R.  GARAGE, 

:Urt  AXD   .^12   WFST   SFCOXD   STRF.FT. 
WUliurd  &  i:.viilo  Ikittory  StTvloe  Station. 


Tin:    SlANlJAKDIZEn    CAR. 

JOHNSON  MOTOR  CAR  CO. 

Distributer."* 

4ia  EAST   SI  rKRIOIl   STREET, 


OAKLAND-DODGE  BROS. 

MOTOR  CARS 

E.  H.  WHITNEY  MOTOR  CO 

701  Bast  Superior  »tre9t 

Grand  901.   Melrose  6198. 

PAIGE  AND  MAXWELL 

MOTOR  CARS— 

REPUBLIC  TRUCKS 

KNUDSEN  AUTO  CO. 

311  AND  319  CAST  SUPXRIOII  STRKKT 

Both   Phones    485. 

ZENITH  AUTO  CO., 

123  First  Avenue  West 

King,  8  and  4  Cylinder,  Dorl 
car,  Mctz  &  Wilcox  Truck. 

Phiine  Melroseiioo 

Rco     Stutz 

Pleasure  Cars  and    TrucKa 

iVmon:?trHtors  on    Kxhlbitlon   at 
Showrooms. 


Martin  Rosendahl 

Distributer    ■    -     307^  Itt  Superior  St 

HUPMOBILE 

The  car  of  the  American  Family 

THEO.  0.  FVRLUND  AUTO  CO. 

Distributers 
6  and  7  East  First  Street. 


-  r 


■   I  ■  ■»'  I  .   a ' 


**QS9 


^heSt(m<kiM(fValijismiQjwilify 


Once  Again— We  Must  Ask 

You  To  Place  Youi  Order 

Before  It  Is  Too  Late 


Two  weeks  ago,  we  published  an  advertisement  urging  you  to  act  QUICKLY 
in  placing  your  order  for  a  Paige,  seven-passenger  "Six-46." 

At  that  tin*,  we  told  you  of  the  overwhelming  demand  for  this  model.' 

We  told  yo^  that  the  factory  was  literally  flooded  with  orders  and  predicted 
that  there  would  be  a  shortage  in  the  very  near  future. 

Well— all  that  we  said  in  that  advertisement  is  now  DOUBLY  IMPORTANT. 

SINCE  THAT  Tf  ME,  EVERY  SINGLE  PAIGE  DEALER  ON  OUR  BOOKS 
HAS  APPEALED  TO  THE  FACTORY  IN  AN  ATTEMPT  TO  IN- 
CREASE HIS  ALLOTMENT.  This  statement— astounding  though  it 
may  seem — is  the  actual,  literal  truth. 

And  at  the  time  this  advertisement  is  written,  our  March  orders  for  the  Fairfield 
Model  alone  amount  to  ONE  MILLION,  FIVE  HUNDRED  AND 
FIFTY-FOUR  THOUSAND  DOLLARS.     This  represents  1,200  cars. 

These  are  cold,  uncompromising  figures — the  kind  of  evidence  that  no  man 
can  deny. 

So,  now,  it  is  only  a  matter  of  a  short  time  before  Paige  dealers  will  be  com- 
pelled to  refuse  any  orders  for  the  **Fairfield"  which  are  placed  subject  to 
"immediate  delivery." 

We  are  doing  everything  that  is  humanly  possible  to  keep  step  with  the  demand. 
So  far,  our  tremendously  increased  production  has  enabled  us  to  satisfy 
most  of  our  distributors. 

But— with  the  spring  retail  season  almost  at  hand — we  know  that  this  con- 
dition cannot  continue.     Soon  we  shall  be  compelled  to  apportion  our 
production  to  the  best  of  our  ability— and  many  people  will  be  obliged  to 
wait  thirty  or  even  sixty  days  for  their  cars. 
/  ^ 

Such— in  plain  terms— is  the  condition  that  stares  us  in  the  face.  A  SHORT- 
AGE OF  "FAIRFIELDS"  IS  COMING. 

Surely,  after  two  such  explicit  warnings,  the  w^se  man  will  protect  his  own 
interests  and  see  the  Paige  dealer  while  immediate  deliveries  are  still 
possible. 

And  now— after  turning  these  facts  over  in  your  mind— you  will  find  yourself, 
face  to  face,  with  one  inevitable  conclusion. 

The  REASON  for  this  overwhelming  demand  must  be  based  upon  the  consistent 
day-in  and  day-out  performance  of  the  "Fairfield"  in  the  hands  of  thousands 
of  owners.     This  is  the  truest  and  safest  of  all  tests. 

No  other  construction  can  be  placed  upon  such  decided  preference  on  the  part 
of  men  who  know  automobiles.  In  short,  the  *Tairfield"  leads  in  demand 
because  it  leads  in  "value  received." 

The  Paige-Detroit  Motor  Car  Company,  Detroit,  Michigan 


Fairfield  "Six  4r* 

•1293 

f  .  •.  b.  Detroit 


I H.  B.  KNUDSEN  AUTO  CO. 

1  \  311  and  313  East  Superior  St.,  Duluth,  Minn. 

flli%n«in  Hurdwarc  Co.,  Super ku*.  Wis. 
Shtfiiifbn  it  Soils,  ChicdioUu,  Minn. 


•*<i- 


r 


R.  J.  Olson,  Two  Harbors,  Minn. 

H.  B.  Knmlsen  Auto  Co.,  Virjj:ii»la,  Minn. 


FlMtwood  •«Six.SS 

no5o 

f.  o.  b.  Detroit 


tt 


tffiHHi 


!, 


-1^. 


»■   11.1 


^.«^ 


1 1  I.I   ■■•'.■-*-  « 


"I  ■irfMiLJw..:: 


I        I     ■     L.t     >.t 


... 


-t 


i 


14 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


war.  at  a  Lincoln  birthday  celebration 
,ln  Danville,  III.,  protested  against  the 
uxe  of  the  stafs  and  bars  as  an  em- 
blem In  t»i»-  mnrkinK  of  the  l>lxle  Line 
hithway.  A  half  dozen  Hpeerhes  were 
mad*',  each  one  denouncing  the  rcBur- 
re.tion  of  the  flag  of  the  Confederacy 
for  8U<  h  a  purpose. 

•      «       * 
At    the    meeting    of    the    North    Iowa 
Pike    a»HO«iatlon    hold    at    Mason    City. 
U  was  decided  to  extend   the  highway 


from  Flou'-  Falls.  P.  D..  Its  present 
western  terminus,  northwest  to  con- 
nect In  the  northern  part  of  South 
Dakota  with  the  national  parka  high- 
way from  Minneapolis  to  Seattle. 
♦  •  • 
Springfield.  111.— A  state  highway  at 
foot  of  the  Mississippi  river  bluffs  to 
run  between  Kast  St.  Louis,  111-,  and 
Chester,  perhaps  to  reach  In  time  to 
Cairo,  has  been  begun  by  convicts  from 
the   Southern   Illinois   penitentiary. 


PICKED  UP  ON  'HIGH 


fj 


Being  a  Compilation  of  Happenings  the  Last  Week 
Among  Local  Automobile  Dealers  and  Motorists. 


VOTERS  MUST 
DECIDE^ISSUE 

Firemen's  Demand  for  the 

Double  Platoon  System  to 

Be  Submitted. 


*#**jMe********  ************ 


SI-.HVICK  TO  IIKRAI.D  REAWKBS. 


* 

* 
* 


* 

* 

'IK  Anyone  Intereated  In  <he  par-  * 
ilf  rUnue  ot  a  l\H«  natomohile  ran  set  4 
#  tiiftirmatlon  about  the  varloHN 
^<  innehlneu  and  the  loeal  dealer*  by 
ita.  %«rltliiK  to  the  aatoinoblle  depart- 
'i(t  ment  uf  The  Herald.  If  you  are 
^  lutrreated   la      any      maehlne      The 

J  Herald  will  tell  yon  where  to  buy. 
The  Herald  In  the  reeojtnlsed  me-  * 
Uf.  dium  bet%»e«-'i  buyer  and  dealer  In  « 
4(    the    .>orthwe»t.  * 

****^#************* ******* 

Loral  dealers  are  making  prepara- 
li<.iis  for  an  exiepllonally  big  touring 
ttad."    thi.s    year.  ,      .     ^      ,       ., 

Ai<-<irdi(ig  to  several  of  the  leading 
dealer."*,  tbev  are  sKuklng  up  In  prep- 
aration for  a  big  touring  business, 
whi.Ji  tht-y  expect  from  all  parts  of  the 
eouniry. 

i'uvt*  that  have  been  held  in  storage 
by  dealers  for  local  and  outside  own. 
eis  are  now  being  taken  out  and  pre- 
pnr<(l   for  .sunxmer  travel. 

•       •       * 
II.    B.    Knudstn     returned    Thursday 

fr«im    a     ten     days'     trip     In     the     Kast. 

Willie     he     visited     at     several     of    the 

laiKf  automobile  factories. 

•  «       * 

U«rman  .Tolinsun  reports  the  sale  of 
a   Cole    eight    to    the    St.    Louis    county 

school    board. 

•  *      * 

F.  J.  Flllatrnult  returned  Mondny 
from  Minneapolis,  where  he  attended 
a  meeting  of  nil  the  Chalmers  denl- 
ers   in    the- Northwest.     There    were    200 

fires«'tit     at     the    sessions,     which    were 
n   (harge  of   Hugh   <'halmers   and   I'aul 
Smith,   general   sales    manager. 

•  «       « 

I^fonard  McN'nninra  reports  the  ar- 
rival of  nine  Studebakers  this  we.k. 
These  are  being  shipped  to  Tower,  Ely 
and  Two   Harbors. 

•  •       * 

Clifton  Ford,  who  Is  associated  with 
his  father.  John  M.  Ford,  expects  four 
AVintons  ne.xt  Monday  and  one  car- 
U.ad  of  six  Chevrt.Wts  the  following. 
Six    Mitchills   arrived   this  morning,    he 

aaid. 

•  •       • 

J.     B.     Arnold.     Jr..     of    the    "U'hltney 


All  Efforts  to  Compromise 

Fail  at  Friday's 

Conference. 


A.  I.  PHILP, 

General    Sales    Manager,    Dodge 

Brothers. 


DOES  YOUR  FORD  NEED 
NEW  TRIMMINGS? 

WV  luive  at  present  the  finest 
kltul  of  ni'W  ifjuipment  for  Fords — 
tilings  that  will  add  great'y  to  the 
Htipearancfc     and     give    you    greater 

st-rvi"  e. 


Motor  company,  returned  Friday  from 
a  three-day  visit  at  Ashland  and  sur- 
rounding territory. 

*  •       * 

Joseph  Peacha  of  the  Interstate  Auto 
com|>anv  left  this  morning  for  the 
range,    where   he   will   visit  for  several 

days. 

•  •      • 

Martin  Rosendahl  sold  a  Reo  six  this 
week  to  .1.  H.  Mc(tiffert.  superintend- 
ent of  the  Clyde  Iron  works  and  mem- 
ber of  the   school  board. 

^ ■ 

*9|HK***4|t*******-************ 

^  UHIVBS    FOR    mtillWAYS.  *, 

*  •* 

^  Albany.  IV.  Y..  ApHl  S. — The  \fK-  * 
^ialatUe  committee  of  the  -Xew  ^ 
■%  York  State  AMsorlatlou  of  Home-  ^ 
■?tt   men  In  preparing  to  prexent  a  bill  ^ 


* 
* 


ItA  1.120  W«Sr  SUPERIOR  ST.  DULUlK.MINUi 


■^    before   both   honneji   pro»ldln«r  that   * 

*  all  ntHte  hlKhfia.VN  hereafter  built  * 
*■  be    paralled    by    Nix-foot      dirt      or  ^ 

*  Kra\el     drMeN    on    either    tilde    for   W, 

*  hor«e!H.       The     leiclnlatl*  e    commit-     "^ 

*  tee     In     headed     by     Former    State 
^    IHKhway     (ommlMNloiier    .lohn     >'. 
^  CarllMle.      It    U    expected    that    the   # 
-if-  horNemen    mIU    have    the    backlnK  * 

*  of  the  \ew  York  utate  grnnge  and  iif 
-jf-r  poMMibly  of  the  automobile  Inter-  *. 
«  CMtH  and  the  Safety  Flr^t  wociety  * 
^  In  nnklnK  favorable  action  on  ^jt 
^  their  meamure.  * 

|^|tj(t*********  *************** 


w- 


APPERSOM 

No  car  is  expensive  that  meets  your  requirements,  if 
the  price  is  within  reason. 

What   are  your   motor  car   needs? 

Speed?— the  Apperson  Six  will  leave  an  express  train 
behind. 

Flexibility? — stop  an  Apperson  Six  down  slower  than 
a  walk,  then  open  her  wide.  The  pick-up  is  instant— and 
with  no  faltering. 

Power? — hills,  sand  and  mud  to  the  Apperson  Six 
were  made  only  to  add  to  its  fame. 

For  twenty-three  years  Apperson  cars  have  been  pass- 
ing the  most  exacting  tests  engineers  have  been  able  to 
devise  for  them. 

That's  why  we  can  with  confidence  invite  you  to  sub- 
ject the  Apperson  Six  to  any  reasonable  trial  your  fancy 
dictates. 

Seven-Passenger  Touring  Car  and  Four-Passenger 
Chummy   Roadster,  $1,550. 

Apperson  Auto  Agency 

402  and  404  EAST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


Duluth  will  have  an  election  some 
time  before  July  1  on  the  matter^ of 
establishing  a  double  platoon  Fysu  tn 
for  the  firemen   of  the  city. 

As  the  result  of  a  conference  held  by 
the  city  cpmmlsBloners  and  a  dtU  ga- 
llon of  ten  firemen  In  the  council 
chambers  yesterday  afternoon,  It  Is  now- 
considered  certain  that  the  voters  of 
Duluth  will  decide  whether  or  not  the 
members  of  the  fire  department  shall 
work  In  two  shifts  of  twelve  hours 
each  after  Jan.  1  next,  at  an  additional 
cost  of  }30,600  the  first  year.  Leaders 
in  the  fight  for  the  flremt-n  announced 
last  night  that  th.-  initiative  ordinance 
signed  by  8.000  voters,  will  be  filed 
early  next  week,  and  It  is  generally 
admUt«d  at  thu  city  hall  tiiat  the  elec- 
tion or.  the  measure  will  be  held  at 
the  same  time  that  the  voters  of  the 
city  pass  on  the  several  charter  amend- 
ments now  being  prepared  by  the  char- 
ter commission.  This  will  be  some 
time  in  May  or  June  according  to  city 
officials. 

Compromlne  Rfforta  Fail. 
At  the  juct  ting  of  the  commissioners 
and  the  flrenun  all  efforts  to  effi<t  a 
compromise  proved  futile,  offers  made 
by  both  slirs  being  turncJ  down  after 
a  long  dirf'UHslon.  The  commission!  rj 
also  refused  tt)  Indorse  the  Initiative 
petition  as  officials  of  the  city,  claim- 
ing that  the  firemen  must  a.  cept  the 
sole  responsibility  of  introducing  the 
measure. 

All  the  members  of  the  council  de- 
clared themselves  In  favor  of  a  specliil 
election,  claiming  that  the  voters  of 
th.'  city  should  decide  such  an  impor- 
tant change,  which  Involves  an  In- 
creased expenditure  of  J30.000  the  first 
year.  ^,,   ^ 

Two  weeks  ago  the  firemen  filed  a 
petition  for  the  establishment  of  a 
double  platoon  sysH-m  on  .lan.  1.  1917, 
while  at  .a  conference  last  wet-k  the 
coinnil.ssloners  submitted  a  compromise, 
agreeing  to  appropriate  $10,000  fo- 
three  years,  working  up  gradually  to 
the  double  platoon  by  1019.  They  claim 
that  the  city  is  unable  to  appropriate 
$30,000  at  <.nc  time  without  affecting 
all    the    other    cily    departments. 

PropoNc  (iradual  F.NtabllNhment. 
According  to  their  plan.  $10,000 
would  be  appropriate,!  In  1917,  giving 
the  firemen  one  off-day  In  five,  in- 
stead of  six,  as  at  present;  $10.0uO  in 
1918,  giving  them  one  off-day  In  three, 
and  $10,000  more  In  1919,  thus  estab- 
lishing a  complete  double  platoon  sys- 
tem in  three  vears.  It  wt>uld  require 
a  total  of  thirty-four  additional  men. 
according  to  figures  rtcently  pri  pared 
by    Chief    Randall. 

This  offer  was  turned  down  by  the 
firemen,  and  at  the  conft  rence  yes- 
terday they  submitted  a  counter  com- 
promise, agreeing  to  the  establishment 
of  the  double  platoon  system  on  July 
1.  1917.  Instead  of  Jan.  1.  The  com- 
ml.«isloiurs  refused  to  accept  this  plan, 
saving  that  their  first  offer  will  have 
to"  stand,  as. the  city's  financial  condi- 
tion prohibits  the  consideration  oi 
greater  expenditures  next  year.  It  wns 
expl.Tlned  that  the  counter  compromise 
would  Involv.-  nn  expense  of  $15,000  in 
1917  and  $30,000  in  1918,  a  total  of 
$45,000  In  the  next  two  years,  while 
th.'  offer  of  the  commissioners  meant 
a  total  expense  of  but  $:'0,00y  In  the 
same  period. 

ROADllS 
APPORTIONED 


County  Board  Cuts  $104,- 
903    Melon— Twelve 
Highways  Legalized. 


s 


TIRES 

PORTAGE-MILLER 


INTERSTATE  AUTO  CO. 


206  East 

Superior  St. 


Ti€  JVew  La^e  40- SI  090 


HiiimiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii 


From  Generation 
to  Generation 

Since  1842  Case  manufacturing  principles  have  fol- 
lowed the  fi/7compro/n/5//7^  standards  of  excellence  out- 
lined by  the  founder  of  this  company,  Jerome  1.  Case. 

During  these  years  buyers  throughout  the  world  have  been  made 
happy  by  the  excellence  of  Case  products— from  the  simplest  to 
those  which  solve  the  more  difficult  problems  of  power 


From  grandfather  to  father  to 
son  has  passed  the  word  that  the 
honored  name  of  Case  is  a  guaran- 
tee of  satisfaction,  excellence  in  de- 
sign, sincerity  in  manufacture  and 
straightforwardness  in  sales,  which 
have  been  the  foundation  of  Case 
success. 

The  new  Case  40  commands  the 
strict  attention  of  thinking  buyers, 
who  want  thorough  excellence  at  a 
moderate  price.  We  are  firmly 
convinced  that  we  offer  you  unusual 
quality  in  the  new  Case  40.     You 


cannot  duplicate  this  car  at  this 
price.  Remember  this  car  has  120- 
inch  wheelbase — 7-passenger,  all- 
steel  body  with  removable  uphol- 
stery— w^aterproof,  flexible  conduits 
for  all  electrical  wiring,  etc.,  etc. 

Before  deciding  on  which  car  ap- 
peals to  you  most,  it  would  be  a 
good  move  on  your  part  really  to 
know  the  new  Case  40,  not  merely 
b}'  sight,  but  mechanically.  May 
we  show  it  to  you  in  detail?  Or  do 
you  prefer  illustrated  description  by 
mail? 


Wahl-Ktnn  Auto  Company, 


Xorlhwcstorn  Distributers.  2606  WFST  MK'HIGAX  STRKKT.  DULVTH,  MIXX 

I'hones — Lincoln  441  and  301-A;  Melrose  3731  and  7429. 


RANGE  DEALERS 


.  .  ,  .  Tower 

Kly 

,  .  .Mosaba 
.  Chlsholm 


Win.  Soafirhl  . 
IJdw.  Anderson 
C'HrKon  Wall  . 
8wan<;on  Bros 


«••••• 


•  •  •   •   • 


iniiiiiHiiiiiHmiiHiiiHiiiiniiitiiiiitiHiHii 


ft^ 


ir  1  TMi  '■     I  '■ 


Ironton 
.  .  .  .lira inert! 

Carlton 

.Moo<«e  Lake 


for  the  Legal  society  and  corresponds  York.  In  addition  to  their  banklnff 
to  l^hl  Beta  Kappa  in  the  academic  work  they  will  be  instructed  in  for- 
world.  After  the  address,  (Jovernor  eign  lanKnages  and  fundamentals  of 
lUirnquLst,  Fiank  13.  Kellogg-,  candi-  bankinff  at  a  school  conducted  by  tho 
date  for  United  f^tates  senator,  and  bank.  Then  if  they  make  good  they 
three  seniois  will  be  initiated  into  the  will  be  sent  immediately  to  some 
order  at  the  home  of  William  K.  ,  branch  bank.  The  Pophoni<ires  will 
Vance,  dean  of  the   law  school.  spend     their    two     remaining    summers 

•       •       *  !  in    New     York     and    a    pei  iod      of     six 

The     mining     students     are     rapidly  '  months     when    they      have      completed 
nearing    the    en.1    of    their    school    year  ;  ^'it-'r  university  course, 
on  the  campus,  but  will  adjourn  to  the  I       „.       ■,   ,,     .^      ^      *  m     -w^   •,    ^^ 

northern  part  of  the  state,  where  they  !  ^^  ^"^f  ^^  ^^  ^"!;"?o/'S  ^JlM'*]"  T"^^ 
will  engage  In  practical  work  in  an  «^^'a'<i',^.  a  Prize  of  $25  for  third  place 
old    mine    shaft.      Several    members    of    »"  the  PiUsbury  oratorical  contest  Men- 


UNIVERSITY  OF  MINNESOTA 

Concert  By  Michigan  Glee  Club  Is  Event  of  the  Week; 
Strong  Student  Sentiment  inFavor  of  Preparedness; 
Report  Against  Blanket  Tax  to  Cover  All  College 

Activities.  Vhe    Vacuurwiii    aocompan?* Vhe'^stu-  ll-y  "'.i^ht.     Mr    Burns'  oration  was  on 

____ dents  and  direct  them  as  they  explore  "America    and    the    Immigrant.         The 

.    the    shaft    and    conduct    geologic    and  ^^^^   H^«*^V»,"    *V^'   annual    contest    w'as 

oils  as  the  surest   and  truest  sign   of  |  mi„eralogic  tests  for  ore  and  rock  for-  TV""     ^V      fhorolf     Evenson     of     <-'reat 


We  Furnish  the  New  Trimming  for  Many 

Ford  Cars 

(Why?) 

Because  We  Sell  the  Best  at  the  Lowest  Prices 

Johnson  Auto  Supply 

338  EAST  SUPERIOR  STREET 


Appropriations  from  the  county's 
ppe(  lal  road  fund  authorized  by  the 
board  of  county  commisKioners  in  ses- 
sion yesterday  afternoon,  aggregated 
$104. 003.10  and  were  distributed  among 
the  various  districts  as  follows:  First. 
1600;  .S.cond.  $2,642.66;  Fourth,  $10,500; 
Fifth,  $43,060;  Sixth.  $41,863.03  and 
Seventh,  $6,347.42. 

The  commissioners  legalized  twelve 
new  highways  and  the  auditor  was  au- 
thorized to  receive  bids  for  construct- 
ing the  following  work: 

Construction  of  two  bridges  across 
the  two  rivers,  one  on  the  Tower- 
llnsia  road  and  the  other  on  tl»e  Tower 
and  Hinsdale  road.  Concrete  and  steel 
construction  figures  are  both  wanted 
and  bids  will  be  opened  at  the  May 
meeting.  ,      ^    ^ 

Cliange  In  State  Highway  No.  1  from 
the  west  line  of  section  30,  69-17  one- 
half  mile. 

Spruce  road,  through  sections  13  and 
U.  67-18. 

AVillianis    road    along    southerly    line 

of  section   7,   66-15. 

•  •       • 

Charles     K.     Adams,     special     county 
counsel,      advised      the      commissioners 
!  that  while   the  engineering  department 
!  c(f  the  county   might   have  automobiles 
j  purchased  by  the  county,  e<iunty  board 
members,     the     attorney     gen.rul     had 
.  ruled,  must  hire  machines  to  take  thetn 
to  and   from   road   work.     The   law   will 
have    to    be    amend,  d    before    St.    Louis 
county    will    be    permitted    to    innchasc 
cars  for  the  use  of  any  of  the  commis- 
sioners. 

The  request  of  C  E.  Kverett.  Hib- 
blng,   probation   officer   for  a  car,   was 

laid  over. 

•  *       • 

The  county  board  authorized  .Toseph 
C  Helm,  supervisor  of  assessments  in 
unorganized  districts  to  employ  not 
more  than  eight  deputy  assessors  at  $3 
a  day  and  expenses  to  assist  In  mak- 
ing  the  personal   property  assessments 

for  1916. 

•  *      • 

The    contract    for    5^    miles    of    the 
■  Cappa   road  was  awarded  l»y  the  board 
to  John  Saarlskoski  at  $3.20  per  rod,  or 
approximately  $6,600. 

LOWELL  SCHOOL  PUPILS 
VISIT  HERALD  BUILDING 

Seventh  and  eighth  grade  pupils  of 
the  LfOwell  school  visited  The  Herald 
building  yesterday  afternoon,  spend- 
ing more  than  an  hour  in  watching  the 

I  work   of  publishing  a  newspaper. 

I      The      twenty-flve      pupils      were      in 

I  charge    of    Miss    Anna    Peterson,    their 

1  teacl>er,  and  J.  W.  Harter,  principal  of 

I  the   Liowell    school. 

Under  the   direction   of   a   guide,    the 

I  young  visitors  were  taken   through  the 

1  various  departments. 


The  event  of  the  week  at  the  Uni- 
versity of  Minnesota  was  the  visit  of 
the  Michigan  C.lee  club,  which  Rave  a 
Joint  concert  with  the  club  of  the 
University     of     Minnesota.       The     old- 


completion.  The  sophomores  will  hold 
a  quiet  party  around  the  cornerstone 
until    they    feel    certain    that    the    blue 


time  Minnesota-Michigan  spirit  was  ,  p^j^j^.^^  guardian  of  the  law  has  fallen 
revived    and  many  of  the  old  grads  of  I  into  his  nightly  repose;  then  the  clans 

^„.h  .ohoo,,  looked  b.cR  ,Uh  >o"r;n^!wi;>„,f^"'JSS  ''i^^%^T\£i  ^^l:ii^ 
eyes-  to  the  old  days  when  the  two  ^^^^^^  j^  mrn.  routing  out  all  who 
schools  were  rivals  In  all  forms  of  col- 


rhe   second   place,    with   a  prize   "f   $60. 

will    continue    their    work    through   the  i  Tff^n.'I^J'ni'^'    ^""^^    ^^'-    ^^^'^^^'"^    "^ 
c  1 1  rv-i  rv,  <>  ••  I  AiJnnea^/iis. 


apoiis  as  tne  su^e^5l   ana   nucrM.  jmrh   ""^  ;  mineraiog.^    ..^^.v^  iv.,    u.^  .i..»^  !«._«.  *...-     ,,    ,.      ,-,   .,.       .,  „„„.,^^  „  „r.,^  „#  tinn 
spring.     The   festivities  will   start   with    niatlons.       The    miners    will    leave     the    J,?""'  M^l^j-     J^  <^«':r*.*;^  ^  PJ^f*  °'.*ll'?. 
a   solemn   dedication    of   the    Sigma   Chi    mines    at    the    end    of    the    month    and 
fraternity    house,      ^;*i'<^'*\_  '_»  _  ^,^^J^''^*; 

summer. 

*  *      * 

A  count  of  mail  at  the  university 
postoffice  Indicates  that  the  stulents 
have  other  concerns  beside  their 
studies.  In  one  week  over  17.000  pieces 
of  mail  passed  through  the  office,  of 
which  nearly  12,000  were  for  the  stu 
dents. 

*  *      * 


cling  too  closely  to  their  beds;   the  line 
of  march   has  not  yet  been   mapped  out 


lege  activities.     The  Michigan  club  was    __ .  _ 

oulte  up  to  its  usual  standard  of  ox- i  but  usually  continues  down  I>  raternity  The  university  farm  has  been  con- 
cellence  easily  maintaining  its  ancient  ,.ow  imtll  some  tired  citizen  thinks  of  (ducting  a  junior  farmers*  wei-k,  at- 
leputatlon   as   one   of   the   best   college    xha  telephone  and  sends  in  a  riot  call,    tended    by    representatives     of     nearly 

■    ~" '■-    *''"   — ..nf,-L.  .  *       •      *  j  every    county    in    the    state.      It    was    a 

April     3    has    been    set    as    Cap    and  j  meeting  for  the   younger   farmers   who 


SPEAKER  FRESH 
FROM  "DRY"  FRONT 


musical    organla*Lllons    In    the   couiitry. 
The    Minnesota    concert    was    the    first 


ciallv  strong  In  soloists  and  comedians 
and  had  a  quartet  which  the  enthusi- 
astic audlen.e  worked  to  exhaustion. 
After  the  concert  the  Michigan  m<  n 
were  entertained  at  a  dance  In  the 
Minnesota  armory. 

•  •  • 
A  poll  taken  by  the  Minnesota 
branch  of  the  National  Security  league 
thrm.gh  the  Minnesota  Dally  gave 
some  Interesting  figures  on  the  fctu- 
d.>nt  sentiment  regarding  »a<j|'""j 
preparedness.  Out  of  600  blanks  fi  led 
out  there  was  not  one  vote  against 
preparedness,  but  the  figures  showed 
equally  well  the  sentiment  agalnat 
any  strictly  militaristic  movement^,  be- 
1 

of 
the  senate 


Leader  of  Fight  in  Superior 

Will  Speak  Here 

Sunday. 


ng   approximately    400   to   100   In    favor 
.f    the    present    Hayes    bill    now    before 


A  committee  appointed  by  the  All- 
Unlverslty  Student  council  to  inves- 
tigate the  advisability  of  a  blanket 
ax  to  covf>r  all  coMege  activities  has 
reported  that  such  a  tax  would  be 
impracticable  at  Minnesota.  The  plan 
of  the  tax  was  t»  add  a  uniform 
amo^Tnt,  ranging  'rom  $6  to  $7  as  the 
details    should    demand,    to    the    regls- 


C    G.    Wade,    principal    of    the    Blaln« 

-  I  high  school,   Superior,    will  address   tho 

tures     on     these      subjects,      kept      the  ,  ^^^n  ^t  ^^e  Duluth  Young  Mens  Chris- 

youthful   farmers  busy  every  minute,     i^.  ■   *■         *  ^    r 

■'  »      «      ♦  j  tian   association    tomorrow   at    5    p.    m. 

Six   university   students   have   decided    Mr.  "Wade  has  always  been  active  along 

^^^^ ^    ^  to  accept   the   fellowship   offer  of  John    civic    lines.      He    was    untiring    in    the 

ternVtTes  .Mich  "as  Phi  Beta  Kappa,  f  or  |  D.  Rockefeller.  He  wants  young  col-,  light  in  Superior  on  the  wet  and  dry 
the  academic.-*.  sJgma  Xi  for  the  en-  lege  men  to  gain  practical  experience  j  question,  and  probably  had  as  much  to 
gineers  and  Tau  Beta  Pi  for  the  mln-  in  the  National  City  bank  of  New  j  do  with  the  success  of  the  flght  as  any 
ing  engineers  I  York,  after  which  they  will  be  sent  to!  man  in  Superior 


an  ali-universlty  convocation  will  be 
addressed  by  Acting  President  A.  F. 
Woods  in  the  absence  of  President 
Vincent.  At  that  time  there  will  be 
election    to    the    various    honorary    fra- 


*       «       *  I  all    parts    of    the    world    to    carry    the 

Oovernor  J.  A.  A.  Burnquist  will  I  Rockefeller  financial  system.  Three  of 
make  his  first  appearance  before  the  the  chosen  men  are  seniors  and  three 
university  students  on  May   8,   when  he    are   sophomores.      The    seniors    will    be 


win  speak  In  the  Little  theater  under 
the  auspices  of  the  Legal  society.  The 
Order   of  the  Co^f  is   the   official    name 


gin    work    In    June.      They    will    remain 
in   the  bank   one  year,   receiving   $50  a 


Mr.  Wade's  subject  tomorrow  will 
be,  "Our  Fight  in  Superior."  This 
meeting  is  open  to  all  men  of  the  city. 


Ko    matter    what    you    want,    it    will 
save  you   time  and  mf>nry   if   yuu   will 


month  and  expenses  to   and  from  New    use  THE   HERALD'S   WANT.'^. 


P_ 


the  other  Western  universities,  but  the 
board  of  regents  objects,  saying  that 
it  wouW  be  an  Injustice  to  enforce 
the  rule  against  any  person  who  ob- 
jected and  that  the  plan  would  fail 
inless     U     had     universal  _app    cation. 


college   spirit  ,      , 

Soring  will  fte  officially  welcomed 
to  thS  campus  next  Tuesday  night 
whe!i*^'the'\tu'd4ts  ,wlll  sally  J-^^  on 
a  naiama  parage,  led  by  a  ."♦^^*^'^*'»f, 
neousTa'nd^f  drums  fifes  s«-ns  ^"^ 
brass  instruments  if  the  «>androom 
can  be  successfully  raided^  u^taken 
rade  Is  an  annual  affair  ""O  t»/,**^t 
by    the    cUUenaj^aC    Southeast    Mlnne- 


NO  WHITE  TRUCK  HAS  EVER 


WORN  OUT  IN  COMMERCIAL  SERVICE 

ITS  yiFE  \%  \mummmkiv. 

It  pays  to  expend  a  higher  purchase  price  for  a  White  Truck,  which   not   only 
costs  less  for  fuel  and  repairs,  but  also  outlives  two  or  three  trucks  of  cheaper  make. 

EARL  W.  BRADLEY,  Distributer 


Both  Phones  568. 


32  EAST  MICHIGAN  STREET. 


M 


t 


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1 

i 

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1 

I. 

1 

1 

1 

I'^" 

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7<^^'^A^i^^  yy;r!?^'yi^::»l^^^3f^^  ^•y\-^'m^^^!^^!^-'^'*i^^ 


mfm^*^ 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


15 


r- 


Episcopal. 


thtse  BervJce»:  R»-v.  Edward  Evensen, 
N'orweKian-DanlBh  M.  B.  church.  Su- 
perior; lUv.  P.  O.  H  iu»land  of  Oanby, 
Minn.;    Rev.    Klmer   l.und.    First    Swed- 


TriiiKx    C;««hedral — At  Trinity  cathed- 
ral,   Twtiili»-tii    av.nue    f-ant    aii<i    Supe-  ,  ™ .,    ---••-.      ,,         ^,  •        ^    „     w     * 

rlor    sir.el     Hi.     Kev.    J.    D.    Morrison.    iHh  M.   E.   church,  feuperlor;   Rev.   K.  A. 
bUhop.  and  r/v.  T.  W.  MacLoan.  canon. ;  Lundln.  Thi^rd  Swe_dlHhJ|aplJ8l_chur^ch. 


Merrltt    Mrmorlal — At      Merritt      Me- 
morial  M.    i:.    rliurch.    Forty-alxth    ave- 


•wlll    be   jjlvtrn   evnry   day 

Thi!    musical    pn.tfruni    for  tomorrow 
follows: 

MORNMNO.  Tr.,„ikoq    nue    wo»l   and    Superior   street.    J.   Wll- 

Minviftrd     Chriatiiin   '  ibert    I.lllico,     uUniHler.     tlicre     will     be 
onward.    <^^'4«V,'"'  _ithe    regular    Sunday    inoiiilntf    nervices 

■■  Wood w, lid  1  «t  11   o'clock.  Ht  which  time  the  pa»tor    -^^     -  #^ii    .^a 

,     ,.  •••^      F?^s,er|wlll    preach   on   the    theme   "What     the  j  street,  the  aervlce.  will  be  as  followB 

BenedictUA 
Soprano  aul 


Organ     prelude— 'Meditation' 
Pr<>c«>.-«.sii»nal 

SoldiiTS"      ' 

Venit"    and    (Jiorla., 


service;     Mra.    J.     Emmett     Porter    will 
Ming  at   the  €   o'clock   service. 

•  •      * 

rinit  Swedlali — At  the  First  Swedish 
Lutheran  church,  Sixth  avenue  east 
and  Third  street.  Rev.  Carl  O.  Swan, 
pastor,  services  will  begin  Sunday 
morning  at  10  o'clock.  The  Sunday 
school  will  open  at  11:80  and  the  eve- 
ning services  will  begin  at  8.  Rev.  J. 
Teleen,  D.  D..  will  preach.  Special  mu- 
sic will  be  rendered. 

The  Sorosls  society  meets  at  the 
home  of  Mrs.  O.  Swenson.  730  East 
Fourth  street,  next  Wednesday  eve- 
ning. The  Lakeside  ladies'  aid  will 
meet  next  Thursday  afternoon  at  the 
par-4onage.  21»  Sixth  avenue  east. 
There  will  be  midweek  services  on 
Thursday  evening.  The  conflrmation 
class    meets    Saturday    morning    at    9. 

•  •       • 
EIIm— At      Eltm      Lutheran      church. 

Fifty-sixth    avenue    we.Mt      and      Elinor 


Buck  World  Needs      Mo.^t."  The      Sunday  [  Sunday  school  at  10  am.,  and  morning 

■•, •„•.;••:••..••     *^"^'*  -rhool  meets   at    10      a.  m.      Hert      N.    service    at    11.    when    Dr.    J.    A.    Kranti 

I'maPilgrlm-            .  -ehoo  n^J-f»/t^i»,.,*  ^„i     deliver     the     sermon,     and     there 

• jonnson  ••  ■•'■  •     -            «       •       ♦  will     be    special     music    by    the       EUm 


Mr.s.    B.   M.   Ruse 

Hymn — "O  Happy   Day"    ..Duke  Street 

Anthem — "No    Shadows    Yonder" .  .tSaul 

Greek    amen     

Ro<-esHional — "Stand    Up    For    Jesus" 

Webb . 

Organ     postlude — "Fantasia"     ..Stainer 

CHORAL    EVF^NSONG. 
Organ    prelude— "Hvenaong"     ...Steane 
Processional    —    "Onward.    Christian 

S'tldlers" Sullivan 

Hutchlns'   cathedral   choral  service.. 

Ciutlcles — Chanted     

Office      hymn — "Now      the      Day      Is 

Over"      Barnby 

So  >rano    solo — Selected     

til  ace   Erlckflon. 
Anthem — "O    Jesus.     Saviour    of    the 

Ljst"    Wilson 

Oretik    umen    

Reces.-»ional — "Stand    Up    For    Jesus" 

Webb 

Organ    postlude — "Adagio"     ....Stainer 

Leona  CrKser  is  organist  and  choir 
director. 

•      •      • 

St.  Paal'M — .Services.  Sunday,  at  St. 
Paul's  Episcopal  church.  1710  East  Su- 
perior Htreet.  Rev.  A.  W.  Ryan,  rector, 
and  Rev.  W.  F.  Klelnschmidt,  assist- 
ant, will  be  a.s  follows:  8  a.  m..  holy 
communion;  10,  Sunday  school;  11. 
morning  service  and  seimon  on,  "The 
Personality  of  Cod";  3  p.  m..  baptism; 
6,  vespers  and  .sernu>n.  Mr.  Cu.stance 
plays   a    half   hour   before   vespers. 

Contirmatlon  instruction  will  be  hold 
Sunday  at  1L':30  p.  m.,  or  Monday  at 
6   or  8  o'clock. 

Lenten  program:  Monday.  4:16  p.  m.; 
Tuesflay.  8  p.  nu;  Wednesday.  4:15  p. 
m.;  Thursday,  10:30  a.  m.;  Friday.  8  p. 
ni.;  vSaturdny.  4:15  p.  m  ;  f<peclal  In- 
ptructlon  on  the  holy  communion  on 
Thursdays. 

MORNINO. 
Prore.ssional — "We  Sing  the  Praise  of 

Hin>  Who  Died" Calkin 

Canticles    (chanted)     

Benediclte.    In    B    flat Custance 

Litany    hymn — "Sweet   the    Moments" 

Konlg 

Hymn — "When    I    Survey     the     Won- 
drous   Cros.s"     Rockingham 

Solo— "He     Was      Despised"      ("Mes- 
siah")     Handel 

Marv    Syer    Bradshaw. 
Anthem — "There   Is  a   Grcfii    Hill  Far 

Away" Gounod 

Re<<  sslonal— "O      Jesu.       We      Adore 

Thee"     "Aurella" 

VESPERS. 
Proc'saional — "We  Sing  the  Praise  of 

Him  Who  Died"    Calkin 

paalttr    (chanted)    

Canliclea     (chanted)     

Hymn — "In     the    Cross     of    Christ     I 

Glory    Cc»nkey 

Anthem — "Come    Unto   Me"    NlchoU 

Mrs.   Homer  Anderson  and  Choir. 

Orlstm — "Story  of  the  Cross" 

Heatherington 

Recessional — "O      Jesu.       We      Adore 

Tlce"     "Aurella" 

A.    F.    M.    Custance    la    organist    and 

choirmaster. 

•  •      • 

St.  Johu'K— At  St.  John's  P^plscopal 
chuich,  Flfty-ttrst  avenue  east  and  Su- 

gerior  street,  services  tomorrow  will 
e  as  follow.^:  Holy  comm»inlon,  8  a. 
m.;  Sunday  school,  10;  evening  prayer 
and  sermon  by  Rev.  E:.  V.  Weed.  8. 
Mis  ilcorgfc  lA>ckhart  Is  organist  and 
Mrd.  Stanley  Butchart  is  choir  director. 

•  •       * 

St.  Peter** — At  St.  Peter's  Episcopal 
church.  Twenty-  ighth  avenue  west 
and  First  street,  Rev.  W.  K.  Harmann. 
rector,  services  as  follows  will  be  held 
tomorrow:  Enifllfeh  Sunday  school  at 
JO  a.  m.;  Swedish  Sunday  school  at 
18:15    p.    m.;    English    service,    morning 

Iirayer  and  sermon  at  11  a.  ni.;  Swed- 
ah  service  Im  the  evening  at  8.  There 
will  be  an  English  service  Thursday 
at  3  p.  m.  and  a  Swedish  service  that 
evening  at  8.  Sheldon  Johnson  and 
Amy    Armstrong    arc   the    organists. 

•  •       • 

f'lirlnt — At  Christ  Episcopal  church. 
Rev  W.  E.  Harmann.  rector,  services 
as  follows  will  be  held:  Sunday 
•chool  at  11  a.  m..  holy  communion  at 
8:80  a.  m.  and  evensong  and  sermon 
at  4:30  p.  m.  Litany  and  an  address 
will  be  given  Wednesday  at  7:30  p.  m. 
B.   T.Dmas    la    organist. 

^ 

Methodist. 


Flrat      K*rwrgl«B-I>«i»l«li   —  At      the 

First  NorweKlaii-J)ajiiBh  Melho.list 
Episcopal  church.  Second  avenue  west 
and  Third  streot.  H.  A.  Ofstie.  pastor, 
the  Sunday  morning  subject  will  be 
"Bad  Neighbors"  and  that  of  Sunday 
evening,  "I,.ooklng  for  the  Light."  The 
revival  services  will  continue  next 
week  The  Epworth  leagu-  meets 
Sunday  evening  at  7  o'clock. 

•  •      • 

timee— At  Grace  M.  R  church. 
Twenty-second  avenue  west  and 
Third  street,  at  10:30.  the  pastor.  Rej. 
J.  Ennmett  Porter,  will  preach  on  the 
subject,  "Weavers  of  the  W  eb  «r 
Life"  and  at  7:45  p.  m.  on  "Modern 
Cave-dwellers."  Sunday  school  meets 
at  11:50  with  C.  E.  Price,  superin- 
tendent. Epworth  League  meets  at  7 
p  m.  Midwe.-k  service  is  held  Thurs- 
day nlKht  at  7:15.  On  Friday  night  at 
the  church,  will  be  held  the  second 
quarterly  <nnference.  Dr.  Burns  de- 
sires a  full  official  representation. 
The    music    for   the   day    follows: 

MORNING. 
Anthem— "I    Will    Sing    of    Thy    Mer- 
cies"        Adams 

Solo — "More    Lt)ve    to    Thee" Harris 

Miss    <;!««    perry, 
EVENING. 
Anthem— "The   Home   of  the  Soul".. 

Lorenz 

Soprano   solo— "Watch   Ye   and   Pray 

Ye"     Wakefield    Smith 

Mrs.    E.   W.   Lund    with   violin  obllgato 
by  Mr.    Pasche. 

•  «      • 

Flr«t  Germjin — At  the  First  German 
M.  E.  diurch.  Fifth  avenue  east  and 
Sixth  street.  Rev.  W.  A.  Weiss,  pastor, 
the  usual  services  will  be  held  at  10:30 
a.  m.  and  7:30  p.  m.  Sunday  school 
meets   at    11:30   a.     m.      and     Epworth 

league  at  7  p.  ni. 

•  •      * 

Kndlon — At  Endlan  Methodist  Epis- 
copal church.  Hardy  A.  Ingham,  pas- 
tor, Sunday  morning  services  begin  at 
10:30;  subject,  "The  Stewardship  of 
Possessions."  Sunday  school  Is  held  at 
12  m..  J.  A.  Jeffery.  superintendent. 
Intermediate  league  opens  at  S:30  p.  m. 
A  midweek  church  service  Is  held 
Wednesday  evening  at  7:45.  The  mu- 
sical  program   will    be   as   follows: 

Organ    prelude — "Prayer"     Lorst 

Response    Hanscom 

Anthem— "Whoso   Hath  This  Woild's 

Good"    •  •  ••  ,<JV.'! 

Offertory     BattlshiU 

Solo — "Mv   Redeemer  and  My  Lord'  . 

,  ■ Buck 

Miss  Hyland. 
Anthem — "More      Love      to     Thee.      O 

Christ"     Brewer 

Postlude    Bartholomew 


choir       At    7:46    the    program    will    be 

as    follows: 

Pipe    organ    selection    

A.    F.    Lundholm. 

Ilemlandssang    

Congregation. 
Liturgy     

Dr.    J.    A.    Krantz. 
Song   selection    •• 

Aeolian   (juartet. 

Heml'indssang    • 

CongregaU(>n. 
Serm'')n    .....«»«••• 

Dr.    J.    A.    Krantz. 
Pipe   organ   ofTertcry    

A.    F.    Lundholm. 

Hernia ndssang    •• 

Congregation. 
Liturgy     

Dr.    J.    A.    Krantz. 
Pipe   organ   music    «• 

A.  F.  Lundholm. 
Members  of  quartet:  Mrs.  A.  P. 
Ltuiiholm.  soprano:  Miss  Olga  Hal- 
lene.  alto;  A.  F.  Lundholm.  tenor,  and 
Alfred  Anderson,  bass.  A.  F.  Lund- 
holm is  organist  and  choir  director. 


week  meeting   1»  hitd  on  Thursday  at 

The  Duluth  presW^t^ry  will  meet  In 
the  Westminster  CSutch  on  Tuesday 
at  7:80.  * 

The  musical  program  for  tomorrow 
follows: 

Prelude — "Adagio"    ....Charles  J.  May- 
Voluntary — Postlude    ....Ernest   Klver 

EVENING. 
Prelude — "Hymnus"  .....John   E.   West 
Offertory — Prelude    ta  "Lohengrin".. 

* Wagner 

Postlude — Marchs    Potitlflcaie 

Jl J.   Lemmens 

•  •  <  • 
Haaelwood — Services  at  th©  Hazel- 
wood  Presbyterlani  church.  Thirty- 
ninth  avenue  west  fend  Fourth  atreet, 
are  at  10:30  a.  m.  .*ind  8  p.  m.  The 
pastor.  O.  D.  Slater.>wlll  have  for  the 
morning  theme.  "God'e  Promise  to  the 
Righteous."  and  for  the  evening.  "Ren- 
dering Unto  the  Lord  His  Dues."  The 
Sunday  school  hours  is  11:30  a.  m.  N. 
M.  Mclver  Is  the  superintendent.  The 
Christian  Endeavor  meets  at  7:16  p.  m. 
Ethel  LungQulst  Is  the  leader.  The 
conflrmation  class  meets  at  S  p.'m. 

•  •      • 

Second — At  the  Second  Presbyterian 
church.  1615  West  Superior  street,  the 
regular  preaching  scMlces  are  at  10:30 
a.  m.  and  7:46  p.  m.  The  pastor.  John 
Allen  McGaughey.  will  preach  at  both 
of  these  s*rviccs.  The  morning  theme 
will  be  "Willi  Christ  in  Prison"  and 
the  evening  subject  Is  "Hindered."  The 
Kundav  school  meets  at  noon  with 
Harry  A.  O'Brien,  superintendent.  The 
Christian  Endeavor  society  holds  Its 
service  at  7  p.  m.  The  music  is  fur- 
nished bv  a  chorus.  Miss  Elsie  Jones 
is  organist  and  Ralph  Page  Is  chor- 
ister. 


D.  H..  4-8-16. 


Congregational. 


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• 


Baptist. 

Flrat — At  the  First  Baptist  church, 
Ka»t  First  street  and  Ninth  avenue, 
the  minister.  R.  Edward  Sayles.  will 
preach  at  10:30  a.  m.  and  8  p.  m.  His 
aermon  themes  will  be.  Morning.  "In- 
dustrial Justice."  one  in  a  series  on 
"Modern  Expressions  of  Christianity," 
and  evening.  "Jesus  Before  Pilate." 
The  Bible  school  will  meet  at  noon  and 
the  Christian  Endeavor  society,  Cecil 
Hockln.  president,  at  7  p.  ni.  The 
musical  service  for  the  day  follows: 
MORXING. 

Organ     prelude     • 

"Melodle    Rellgleuse" Tours 

"Berceuse"    Idle 

Anthem — •'Praise    Ye   the   Lord" 

Elliot   Button 

Offertory — "NovelletTfe"  ....  Schumann 

Postlude    Wely 

EVENI.VG. 

Organ    prelude    

"Evening   Song"-    Schumann 

"Nocturne"    Mendelssohn 

Anthem — "On    High     the    Stars    Now 

Are     Shining" Rbelnberger 

Offeitory — "Larghetto"    lensen 

Postlude    Menkel 

•       •       • 

SwedUh  Bethel— At  th«  SwedUh 
Bethel  Baptist  church,  Ninth  avenue 
east  and  Third  street,  L.  W.  Under, 
pastor,  services  begin  at  10:30  a.  ra. 
and  7:30  p.  m.  Evangelist  P.  G.  Nelson 
will  preach  at  both.  A  male  chorus 
will  sing  In  the  evening.  Sunday  school 
nwets  at  noon.  E.  J.  Anderson  is  the 
superintendent.  In  the  afternoon  at 
4:30.  a  rally  meeting  will  be  held,  and 
Rev     P.    G.    Nelson    will    address    tha 


Lutheran.  „    ,.  » 

T,   »u   -^«     meeting   In    English. 
Norwegian — At      Bethesda  •*  «       « 


pjrHt — At  the  First  M-'thodist  Epls- 
cop.il  church  tomorrow  Dr.  Samuel  F. 
Kerfoot  of  St.  Paul  will  preach  In  tho 
morning  at  10:30  and  In  the  evening  at 
7:45.  The  Sunday  school  meets  at  noon 
and  Is  well  graded  from  the  kinder- 
garten to  the  adult  department.  The 
Epworth  league  meets  at  6:80  for  a  so- 
clal  half  hour,  after  which  vital  topics 
of  the  day  arc  considered.  The  musical 
programs  for  tomorrow  are: 
MORNING. 

Organ    prelude— "Prelude" Deshayos 

Duet "Arise.    O   Lord   God" Huhn 

Mr.   Koneczny  and  Mr.  Applehagen. 
Offertory  aolo— "A  Song  of  Praise". . 

Hunn 

Mr.   Applehagen. 

Postlude — "Postlude"    Salome 

EVENING. 

Prelude — "Evensong"    Schumann 

t)uet — "Jesus.  Lover  of  My  Soul" 

Nevln 

Mls'a"  Bartholomew   and    Mr.    Koneczny. 

gylo "Be  Thou  FalthfuU".. Mendelssohn 

Mr.    Koneczny. 
Postlude— "Postlude"    Wagner 

Prayer  meeting  will  be  held  Thurs- 
day at  8  p.  m.  The  choir  is  composed 
of     Glady.>*     Reynolds     Froy,     soprano; 

Slen  Marie  Bartholomew,  contralto; 
ohn  Koneczny.  tenor;  Charles  Apple- 
hagen. bas.^,  and  Mrs.  John  Koneczny, 
organist  and  director. 

•  •      • 

Fimt  SwedlnH- At  the  First  Swedish 
M.  E.  church.  Rev,  C.  W.  R.  Wermlne. 
pastor,  services  will  be  held  as  fol- 
lows: Morning  service  at  10:46  a.  m.; 
Sunday  school  at  noon,  with  C.  B.  Pe- 
terson, superintendent;  Epworth  league 
at  6  46  p.  m.,  with  Miss  Clara  Olson  as 
leader;  evening  service  at  7:46  o'clock. 
When   a   musical   program   will    precede 

the  sermon. 

•  *      « 

Bethany      Nor^veglan   -    nanlah   —   At 

Bethany  NxrweKlan-Daiiidh  M.  E. 
church.  SIxty-flfth  avenue  west  and 
p4>lk  street.  Eugene  Nelson.  pastor, 
services  for  Sunday  will  be  as  follows: 
Morning,  at  10:30,  aermon  by  the  pas- 
tor on  the  subject.  "The  Journey's 
Length."  with  music  by  a  chorus 
Choir;  Sunday  school  meets  at  11:46  a. 
m.  instead  of  9:16.  as  formerly;  Miss 
Clara  Thorsen.  superintendent.  The 
adult  Bible  class  Is  taught  by  the  pas- 
tor The  pastor  wants  to  meet  with 
all  the  special  workers  previous  to  a 
home  visitation  by  the  band  of  work- 
ers At  7  p.  m,  the  Epworth  league 
devotional  meeting  la  held.  All  the 
young  folks  of  the  church  and  friends 
of  the  league  are  asked  to  be  present 
at  this  meeting.  The  evening  service 
Is  held  at  7:45  p.  m.  A  aermon  by  the 
pastor  on  the  subject.  "Christ  s  Chal- 
lenge"  will  be  preached.  There  will 
be  miialc  by  the  chorus  choir  and  tho 
Bethany  orchestra.  The  evening  serv- 
ice Is  the  first  of  a  series  of  revival 
meetings  to  be  held  In  the  church 
every  evening  except  Saturday.  The 
following  minister*  will   preach  during 


Bethexdn ,  ^        c    .i. 

Norwegian  Lutheran  church.  Sixth 
avenue  east  and  Fifth  street,  the  pas- 
tor. Rev.  Theo.  J.  Austad  will  conduct 
services  Sunday  forenoon  at  10:46  and 
evening  at  7:45.  both  times  In  Norwe- 
gian. Norwegian  Sunday  school  meets 
at  9:45  a  m.  and  English  Sunday  school 
at   12:16   p.   m. 

The  di.><trict  meeting  (Red  Wing 
Kreds)  will  be  held  at  this  church 
next  Tuesday,  Wednesday  and  Thurs- 
day. Sessions  will  be  held  ever>-  day 
at  10  a.  m..  2  p.  m.  and  8  p.  m.  Every- 
body Is  welcome  to  these  meetings. 
•       •       * 

St.  Paul'i*  German  ETangellral — At 
St  Paul's  German  Evangelical  Luther- 
an church.  Central  avenue  and  Elinor 
street.  Rev.  William  Schmidt,  pastor, 
there  will  be  Sunday  school,  German 
and  English,  at  9:80  a.  m.  Regular 
service  begins  at  10:30  and  a  Lenten 
service  will  be  held  In  the  evening  at 
7:30  o'clock.  The  young  people's  so- 
ciety will  meet  right  after  the  evening 
service.  The  confirmation  class  will 
meet  on  Tuesday  and  Thursday  in  the 
afternoons  and  Saturday  In  the  fore- 
noon  at   10   o'clock. 

•  *      * 

FirMt  TVorweglan — At  the  First  Nor- 
wegian Lutheran  church,  First  avenue 
east  and  Third  street,  the  pastor.  J.  H. 
Stenberg.  will  preach  at  the  morning 
service  on  "Songs  of  Praise  In  Dark 
Dny«."  and  at  the  evening  service  on. 
"The  Dreamer  in  the  Passion  History." 
The  Sunday  school  meets  at  noon.  The 
Morningside  Ladies'  Aid  society  meets 
Thursday  afternooon  with  Mrs.  Jorgen- 
Bon    at    Morningside   Park. 

•  «       • 
St.     Paul'B      RnglUli — At      St.      PauVs 

English  Lutheran  church.  Twentieth 
avenue  west  and  Third  street,  K.  B. 
Vaaler.  pastor,  there  will  be  services 
Sunday  morning  at  10:46.  with  a  aer- 
mon by  the  pastor.  Sunday  school 
meets  at  9:46.  Evening  services  begin 
at  7:45  and  will  he  conducted  by  Rev. 
Norman   Madson   of  Hibblng.     The  sub- 


West  Dulath — At  the  West  Duluth 
Baptist  church.  Grand  avenue  and 
Fifty-ninth  avenue  west.  Herbert  Ford, 
minister  the  subject  of  the  sermon  at 
10:30  Is  "laughter  and  Life."  The 
children's  chorus  will  sing.  At  7:46  the 
subject  Is  "A  Divine  Omission."  Siin- 
day  school  Is  at  11:46  with  classes  for 
old  and  young.     Juniors  meet  at  3. 

•  •      • 

SwedUh  Temple — At  the  Swedish 
Temple.  Twenty-second  avenue  west 
and   Third   street.   Rev.   Swaney  Nelson, 

?astor.  services  begin  at  11  a  m.  and 
:30  p.  m.  The  morning  subject  will 
be  "The  Judgment  of  God"  and  that 
of  the  evening.  "Counting  the  Coat  of 
Service  for  Christ."  Sundav  school 
meets  at  9:46  a.  m..  conducted  by 
William  Hammarstrom,  superintendent. 
Tho  young  people's  meeting  begins  at 
6  p.  m.;  leader.  Clarence  Nelson;  sub- 
ject "The  Fight  Against  the  Liquor 
Traffic."  Olof  Skogg  will  give  a  talk 
on  "Can  the  Sal')on  and  Liyuor  Traffic 
Be  Regulated  by  Law  to  the  Good  of 
the  Commonwealth?"  Otto  Carlson 
will  give  a  talk  on  "United  Efforts  to 
Abolish  the  Llqu  ir  Traffic." 

•  •      • 

Central  —  At  the  Central  Baptist 
church  Twentieth  avenue  west  and 
First  street.  Pastor  Milton  Fish  will 
have  tho  following  meetings:  At  10 
a  m.  a  prayer  m.-eting  will  be  held 
In  the  church  study  and  at  10:30  a.  m. 
the  combination  service  of  Sunday 
school  and  preaching  will  have  for  a 
subject  "Remember  and  Forget."  At 
8  p.  m.  the  Juniors  will  meet  and  at 
6:45  p.  m.  the  B.  Y.  P.  U.  The  sub- 
ject of  the  latter  meeting  will  be 
"What  My  Denomination  Expects 
From  Its  Young  People."  The  eve- 
ning service  at  7:46  will  have  for  Its 
subject  "Thou  Shalt  Not  Covet." 


Pilgrim — Pending  the  erection  of 
their  new  building  at  Twenty-third 
avenue  east.  Pilgrim  Congregational 
church  holds  Sunday  school  at  9:46  in 
the  Masonic  temple,  Lake  avenue  and 
East  Second  street,  followed  at  10:46 
by  the  morning  service.  The  pastor. 
Rev.  Charles  N.  Thorp,  will  preach  on 
"Christians."  At  4:80  p.  m..  In  the 
Unitarian  church.  Eighteenth  avenue 
east  and  First  street,  the  vesper  serv- 
ice will  be  held,  at  which  the  pastor 
will  speak  on  "The  Dinner  at  Bethany," 
in  the  series  on  "The  Life  of  the  Mas- 
ter." At  6:30.  in  the.  vestry,  the  young 
people's  society  will  meet,  led  by  the 
pastor.  The  topic  wtll  be  "What  Our 
Denomination     Expec^    of    Its    Young 

People."  i 

The  music  for    tomorrow   will   be   as 
follows:  J 

morniJ;g. 

Prelude— "Adoration"' Dubois 

Quartet — "Who   so   D^-elleth". .  .Martin 
Quartet — "From     the  .Recesses    of    a 

Lowly  Spirit"    4 Brewer 

Offertoiy — Folksong  Inelody.  . .  .Zlinka 

Postlude — Improvi8at*)n     

VESPEBS. 

Prelude — "Evening    Iirayer" Sheller 

Sentence— "Search    M*.    O   God"..Foote 
Quartet— "The   Nlnetf    and   Nine"..'. 

; Wheeler 

Offertory — "Melody"   %. Jensen 

Postlude — Impruvlsatfon     

The  choir:  Perle  Oeynolds.  soprano: 
Mrs  O.  J.  Larson.  Icontralto;  Bruce 
Brown,  tenor;  Harold  Larsen.  bass: 
Faith  Rogers,  organlBt  and  choir  di- 
rector, f 
-          ■  ■ 

Associated  Bible  Students. 

The  Associated  Bible  students  meet 
In  Foresters'  hall.  Fourth  avenue  west 
and  First  street,  Sunday  at  8  p.  m.  A 
discourse  will  be  given  on  the  subject. 
"Which  Is  the  Church  of  Laodlcea? 
How  Is  She  so  Rich?  Why  Is  She  so 
Poor?"  After  the  discourse  there  will 
be  a  Berean  Bible  «tudy  on  the  sub- 
ject "What  Did  the  Accomplishment 
of  Daniel's  2.300  Days  Witness  in  Re- 
gard to  the  Cleansed  Sanctuary r  All 
Interested  In  Bible  stud/  are  cordially 
Invited  to  attend. 


Bettiel. 

At  the  Bethel,  Sunday  school  will 
meet  at  3  p.  m.  Th.>re  will  be  a  spe- 
cial missionary  pfogj^m  with  an  ad- 
dress by  Miss  Anna  iTtiha-m.  Everyone 
Is  welcome  to  the  Sunday  school.  L.  A. 
Marvin  is  superintendent.  Sunday 
evening  and  every  evening  during  the 
week,  with  the  exception  of  Saturday, 
there  will  be  special  meetings  at  7:80, 
conducted  by  Rev.  H.  E.  Hoare  of  St. 
Paul.  On  Monday  evening  he  will  be 
assisted  by  the  Young  People's  Society 
of  C:irlstlan  Endeavor  of  the  Hazel- 
wood  Presbyterian  church.  Each  morn- 
ing at  8:80  there  will  be  Bible  study, 
conducted  by  Mr.  Hoare,  and  each 
evening  at  7  o'clock  there  will  be  a 
prayer  service. 

Thursday  afternoon  at  2:30  the 
women's  weekly  meeting  will  be  held. 
Mr.  Hoare  will  give  a  second  address 
on  the  subject,  "Eternal  Life." 

•  m 

Christian  Science. 

At  the  First  Church  of  Christ,  Scien- 
tist, Ninth  avenue  east  and  First 
street,  services  will  begin  at  11  a.  m. 
The  subject  is,  "Are  Sin.  Disease,  and 
Death  RealT'  Free  reading  rooms  at 
411  and  412  Alworth  building,  are 
open  daily  except  Sundays,  from  10  a. 
m.  until  6  p.  m. 


315  WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 

Remember  the  number;  be  sure  you  find  our  office.    It's  the  largest  in  Duluth. 


GOLD  CROWNS  ^'"  »  »?V.^.  $3.00 
BRIDGE  WORK  £Hir^3-$3.00 
Silver  Fillings  s.'"j.r.rii.*.'«v7r.""*  50c 
I  Whalebone  Plates  ll^^*^^  $5.00  g 


*We   BpeelalUe   In   Gold   Inlays,  Gold   and   AInmlnnm    Plates. 


UNION  PAINLESS  DENTISTS 

DR.  FRANKLIN  QREER  &  CO.,  OWNERS ' 

315  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET,  DULUTH,  MINN. 

Melrose  1887..  Oi>on  from  8:30  a.  m.  to  6  p.  m.     Sundays,  10  to  1.  Grand  45f. 


Ject  of  his  sermon  will  be.  "Words  of 
War  of  the  Prince  of  Peace."  Choir 
rehearsal  Is  held  Wednesday  evening 
at  8:15.  The  catechumens  meet  Satur- 
day morning  at  10. 

•  *      • 

St.  Matthew's  German — At  St.  Mat- 
thew's German  Evangelical  I.,utheran 
church.  Fourth  street  and  Sixth  ave- 
nue east.  Rev.  J.  George  Appel.  pastor, 
there  will  bo  Sunday  school,  German 
and  English,  at  9:80  a.  m.,  services  at 
10:80  a.  m.  and  7:30  p.  m.;  and  a  meet- 
ing of  the  church  council  Tuesday  ever 
ning  at  8  o'clock.  The  rhoir  practices 
Friday  evening.  The  school  and  con- 
firmation   classes    meet    at     the     usual 

time. 

•  *       • 

At  Stephen**  CJerman-EnglUli — At   St. 

Stephen's  German- Hngllsh  Lutheran 
church.  Fifty-eighth  avenue  west  and 
Nicollet  street,  there  will  be  services 
Sunday  evening  at  8  o'clock,  conducted 
In  the  German  language.  Lenten  serv- 
ices will  be  held  Wednesday  evening. 
Rev.  W.  Slevers  la  the  pastor. 

•  *      • 

St.  Jolui'a  English — At  St.  John's 
English  Lutheran  church.  Lake  avenue 
and  Third  street,  the  pastor.  Rev.  H. 
C  Rex.  will  preach  In  the  morning  at 
10:46  and  In  the  evening  at  8.  The 
subject  of  the  sermon  In  the  morning 
will  be,  "The  Glory  of  Christ's  Pas- 
sion." and  that  of  the  evening  will  be, 
"Reconciled  and  Saved."  The  Sunday 
school  will  meet  at  noon.  The  Luther 
league  will  meet  at  7.  Midweek  serv- 
ice Is  held  Wednesday  evening  at  8. 
On  Easter  evening  at  8  the  choir  will 
give  the  cantata  entitled,  "The  First 
Easter." 

•  •       s 

Trinity  Norwegian — The  Trinity  Nor- 
wegian Lutheran  church  will  hold 
Its  morning  service  at  the  Munger 
school.  Twelfth  avenue  east  and  Eighth 
street.  The  young  people's  society 
will  meet  at  the  pastor's  home.  612 
Fourth  avenue  east,  Tuesday  evening. 
O.   J.    Flagstad   Is   the   pastor. 

•  *       • 

Trinity  (Engllah) — Twenty-seventh 
avenue  west  and  Thlfd  street.  Sunday 
school  meeis  at  9:46  a.  m.;  morning 
service  begins  at  11.  and  evening  serv- 
ices win  be  held  during  Lent  at  6 
o'clock.  Rev.  P.  N.  Sjogren,  field  secre- 
tary of  the  Augustana  synod,  will 
preach  morning  and  evening.  Mrs.  B. 
W.    Lund    will    sing    at     the     morning 


Christian. 

PirNt— At  the  First  Christian  church. 
Twelfth  avenue  east  and  Fourth  street, 
preaching  begins  at  11  o'clock  by  Le 
tJrand  Pace,  secretary  of  th©  Y.  M.  C. 
A.  at  Proctor.  Minn.  Special  music  will 
be  given  by  the  choir,  Mrs.  J.  A.  Davis, 
director.  Sunday  school  meets  at  10 
o'clock,  E.  A.  Rlsdon.  superintendent. 


Evangelical. 


St.  Pant's  German — At  St.  Paul's  Ger- 
man Evangelical  church.  Tenth  avenue 
east  and  Third  street,  Paul  T.   Bratzel. 


pastor,  Sunday  school  begins  at  9:46 
a.  m.,  and  services  at  10:30  a.  m.  At 
2:80  p.  m.,  the  pastor  will  preach  In 
Hermantown.  Evening  services  begin 
at  8  o'clock.  During  the  morning  serv- 
ice a  class  of  ten  children  will  be  ex- 
amined for  conflrmation. 

Spiritualist. 

The  Victoria  Spiritualist  church  holds 
service  every  Sunday  evening  at  221 
West  Superior  street,  third  floor  of  L  O. 
O.  F.  hall,  at  8  o'clock  sharp.  Mrs.  Alf 
Magnusson  is  speaker. 

Unitarian. 

First — At  the  First  Unitarian  church. 
Eighteenth  avenue  east  and  F'/st 
street.  Rev.  G.  R.  Gebauer,  minister. 
Sunday  school  opens  at  9:45  a.  m.  and 
preaching  service  begins  at  11  oclpck. 
The  subject  of  the  sermon  Is  "Prison 
Walls "  The  soloist  is  Mrs.  Edward 
C  Kuehl  and  the  organist  la  Mrs. 
Wayne   E.   Richardson. 

♦ 

Evangelical  Association. 

At  Hope  Evangelical  church.  Fifth 
street  and  Sixth  avenue  east,  the  Sun- 
day school  begins  at  10  o'clock  and 
the  preaching  services  at  11  a.  m.  and 
8  p.  m.  Rw.  C.  B.  Frank,  the  pastor, 
will  preach  at  both  services.  His 
morning  theme  will  be  "The  Most  Be- 
coming Style."  The  evening  sermon 
will  be  the  second  of  a  aeries  of  ^»^r. 
mons  under  the  general  theme,  "Christ 
for  the  Men  of  Today."  The  young 
people's  alliance  meets  at  7:16  p.  m. 
Miss  Margaret  Burton  will  lead  and 
the  topic  will  be  "What  My  Denom- 
ination Expects  of  Its  Young  People. 
Prayer  meeting  will  be  held  on  Thurs- 
day evening  at  8  o'clock. 
• 

Adventist. 

English — At  the  Seventh  Day  Ad- 
ventist church.  Tenth  avenue  east  and 
Sixth  street.  Pastor  Stemple  W  hite  will 
speak  Sunday  evening  at  8  o  clock  on 
the  subject.  "Science  and  the  Bible. 
The  mid-week  cottage  Bible  study  and 
prayer  service  will  be  held  Wednesday 
night  at  the  following  homes:  East 
side,  at  the  Nutting  home,  906  Last 
Eighth  street,  with  Mrs.  Nutting  as 
leader:  West  end  at  the  Barber  home, 
S19  North  Fifty-sixth  avenue  west, 
with  Pastor  White  as  leader;  vV  est 
side  at  the  Waterhouse  home,  124 
Sixth  avenue   west,   with  Roberta  Paa- 


toret  as  leaders  central,  at  the  Malr 
home,  617  North  First  avenue  east, 
with  Mrs.  C.  Peck  as  leader;  and  Park 
Point,  at  the  Curren  home.  2007  Minne- 
sota avenue,  with  May  Jenson  as  lead- 
er. The  young  people's  missionary  so- 
cial service  is  held  at  the  church  every 
Friday  evening.  The  Sunday  school 
begins  promptly  at  1:30  every  Saturday 
afternoon.  Mrs.  T.  R.  Hancock  Is  act- 
ing superintendent.  The  church  treas- 
urer, Mrs.  Walter  Borgen,  receives 
tithes  and  sends  on  same  to  the  state 
conference  treasurer  each  month.  Pub- 
lic preaching  by  the  pastor  each  Sab- 
bath day  at  2:30.  The  public  is  in- 
vited to  attend. 

*      *      * 

Swedish — There  will  be  preaching  In 
Seventh  Day  Adventist  church.  Twenty- 
third  avenue  west  and  Fourth  streot, 
Sunday  evening  at  8  o'clock,  by  Pastor 
John  Hoffman.  His  subject  will  be 
"The  War  In  Heaven." 


CHRISTIAN  ENDEAVOR  NOTES 


The  subject  for  study  this  week  Is 
"What  Our  Denomination  Expects 
From  Its  Young  People." 

The  Duluth  Christian  Endeavor  union 
will  hold  a  special  meeting  next  Tues- 
day night  at  8  o'clock  at  the  First 
Presbyterian  church.  A  large  at- 
tendance is  requested  of  the  old  and 
new  officers,  as  the  business  for  the 
new  year  will  be  planned.  Please  send 
all  notices  for  the  papers  to  the  new 
chairman    of    the    press    committee.    E. 


H.  McAllister,  381  West  Superior  street. 
Please  mall,  do  not  telephone. 

The  following  services  will  be  held 
in   Duluth: 

First    Baptist — The    service    of     this 

society  is  held  at  7  p.  m.  in  the  Chris- 
tian parlors.  Q.  A.  Andresen  will  bo 
the  leader.  The  regular  monthly  busi- 
ness meeting  will  be  held  at  the  home 
of  Gladys  Spearln.  917  East  Seventh 
street.      All    are    urged    to    be    out. 

Morgan  Park — This  society  will  hold 
Its  regular  meeting,  with  Mr.  Avenlngo 
as  leader.  The  regular  offering  will 
be  taken.  Last  Sunday  this  society 
visited  the  Harvey  Webb  society  of 
Smlthville. 

Second  Presbyterian — The  regular 
topic  will  be  used,  with  Charleg  Diers 
as  leader.  Monday.  The  regular 
monthly  business  meeting  will  be  held 
at  that  time.  The  neW  officers  will 
take  charge  of  th©  work  for  the  next 
year. 

Forbes  M.  D.,  Prortor — This  society 
will  meet  at  6:46  p.  m.  Miss  Eliza 
Rembery  will  be  the  leader,  using  the 
regular   topic. 

The  First  Presbyterian  society  will 
have  charge  of  the  poor  farm  services 
Sunday    afternoon. 

The  Harelwood  Presbyterian  society 
will  have  charge  of  the  Bethel  meet- 
ing  on    Monday. 

Westminster  Presbyterian — This  so- 
ciety win  hold  Its  meeting  at  the  reg- 
ular hour.  The  new  officers  will  bo 
Installed    by    the    pastor,      Rev.    M.    L. 

Staubs. 

■• 

No  matter  what  you  want,  it  will 
save  you  tRne  and  money  If  you  will 
use   THE   HERALD'S   WANTS. 


mm  .*—  - 

1 

( 

^. 


S^RV  ICE      F  IjRiSlL 


D.   H.,  4-8-16. 


Presbyterian. 

Flmt — At  the  First  Presbyterian- 
church.  Second  street  and  Third  ave- 
nue east.  Rev.  George  Brewer,  pastor, 
morning  service  begins  at  10:30 
o'clock,  when  the  sermon  will  be 
preached  by  Rev.  W.  P.  Shrlver  of 
New  York  city.  At  the  evening  serv- 
ice, 7:46.  the  sermon  will  be  by  the 
pastor.  Rev.  George  Brewer,  on  The 
Crucifixion."        The     musical     program 

'"""'^^^  MORNING.  _       ^ 

Prelude— "Adagio"    Mendelssohn 

Anthenv— "Jubilate" •  •  •  }J  »»,^^" 

Response— "Let   Not   Your    Heart   Be 

Troubled"    Beach 

Offertory    •    Mendelssohn 

Anthem— "Teach      Me      to      Do      the 

Thing"     

Postlude-"Andante^^.^^. 

Prelude— "Pastorale"    a'  ;  "  '.j.r"**** 

Choir  response— "Accept,  O  Lord    ... 

Offertory— "Salut^  «^^';^°,"'"  ..' ' '  q»^  !^^^ 
Chorus— From     "Crucifixion"  ...Stainer 

*^''."'*^.'T."!'.'"?:  .'.'"!''!"^  ^'^^  Stathsm 

Postiude* ' Elgar 

The  choir.  Miss  Myrtle  Hobbs.  so- 
prano; Mrs.  E.  S.  Buckman  contralto. 
I  R  Batchelor.  tenor;  E.  L.  Hodson. 
bassi  Mrs.  Frank  W.  Splcer.  organist; 
Ruth  Alta  Rogers,  director,  assisted 
by   a  chorus    In    evening. 

I,ake«ld« — At  the  lakeside  Presby- 
terian church.  Rev.  WlllU  O.  «arrea 
pastor,  regular  preaching  services  will 
be  conducted  by  R.  S.  Stevenson  at 
?^  »^°-°'l:    „.,.,   7   n    m      The  theme  of 


Florlo 
Tours 


1 


10:30  a.  m.  and  7  p.  m.     The  theme 
the    morning    sermon    will    be      a    p>ec- 
ond   Time   \^-lthout    Sln.'J      The    evening 


the    mornln 

?hemrTlll^'be"^'"fhe  Motive  and  R.- 
warTfo^  Seeking  the  Kingdom'  The 
Bible  school  will  be  held  at  noon,  in 
charire  of  the  superintendent.  R.  s. 
Manlev  and  the  Christian  Endeavor 
Jo^Tety  will  meet  at  6.  Morris  Thome 
!■   president. 

Glen  Avon— The  Glen  Avon  Presby- 
terian church.  2100  Woodland  avenue, 
meets  at  10:80  a.  m.  and  7:30  p.  m.  Dr. 
TiTwrence  will  conduct  both  services. 
ThT  morning  sermon  Is  by  the  pastor 
on  the  topic,  ''Blessed  I>«n»al  of  Some 
Ambitions."  In  the  evening  Rev  Will- 
iam P.  Shrlver.  author  of  "Immigrant 
Forces."  will  present  the  new  Ideas 
and  methods  of  meeting  the  needs  of 
the  Immigrant.  The  departmental  Bi- 
ble school  meets  at  noon  and  the 
Christian    Endeavor    at    6:45.      A    mld- 


— ■■  r-"— 


Well  Spent  Money 

The  present  high  cost  of  living  em- 
phasizes the  fact  that  "Economy  is 
half  the  baii^*  of  life;  it  is  not  so  hard 
to  earn  money  as  to  spend  it  well." 

In  its  relation  to  proper  spending, 
the  bank  account  and  check  book 
plays  and  important  part  in  one's 
economies. 

If  you  hesitate  over  some  fancied 
desire  long  enough  to  v^rite  a  check, 
•you  may  discover  that  you  are  not 
spending  well. 

This  bank  will  be  pleased  to  have 
vour  account. 


OTYmTIOBLMNK 

CAPIXXLr    #500.000,00 

PLUXUTH.JMINN;    .1 


niiiiiiniiiriiii-tiiiiniiini'""""' 


Kiiitiin: 


BUY 

TESTED 
LAMPS 

Every  Edison  Mazda  Lamp  sold  by  us 
has  been  tested  by  the  Electrical  Test- 
ing Laboratories  of  New  York. 

Our  Edison  Mazda  Lamps  are  no 
higher  in  price  than  those  sold  by  others. 
You  get  this  testing  service  free.  It's 
your  insurance  against  getting  defec- 
tive lamps.  It's  our  insurance  against 
giving  poor  service  and  causing  you  an- 
noyance. 

It's  the  reason  why  you  should  buy 
your  lamps  from  us. 

We  are  the  only  firm  in  Duluth  with 
the  advantage  of  this  service. 


" 


Duluth-Edison 
Electric  Company 

216  West  First  Street. 


SER'V  I^CiEi     FIRST 


Hi 


p'^M  .»i*.M"ii   9  »■      ■" 


\r- 


I 


"  w 


16 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


ON  THE  IRON  RANGES 


WOODBRIDGE  MINE 
NOW  LOADING  ORE 

State  Property  at  Butil  Get- 
ting Ready  for 
Shipping. 

HlbbliiK.  Minn.,  April  8.— ^«?p<clf  1  to 
The  Htrald.)— The  Woi)dbrl(lgo  mine 
•  t  Ruhl  \s  on*  of  the  first  .state  prop- 
frllea  to  start  loadlnir.  preparatory  to 
ahipplriKC    ore. 

Th«  Wanlfss  nnd  Sheris.  »tat«»  owned 
propevtifs  ut  HuIjI,  have  ttlilpp'.-d  ore 
to  th?^  Uulxith  furnnces  all  wlnt«^r  and 
will    Incvtaae    the    output    soon. 

Umuty    cars    i>laced      at    all    .sldirKs 
wllhh'v    ritar     proximity     of     all     rnlnfs 
Is    a    suro    s\si\    that    Hlbblnjf    and    tt' 
r«nKO  towus  look  fur  a  big  bcu.9on  in 
y««r. 

The  cars  were  distributed  diirlnK  the 
wlnlr;r  and  now  only  await  the  load- 
ing   with    tho    iron    ore. 

DEPUTY  EXAMINER 
HAS  LEFT  HIBBING 


HlbblHK.  Minn..  April  8,— (Sp<  <lal  to 
The  Horald.)  — J.  O.  Uavis.  deputy  atate 
examiner.  left  yesterday  for  St.  Paul, 
after  spendlrii?  Hiveral  months  con- 
ducting; ail  exauiiiiatlon 
counting  aysiem  In  Ose 
laKe. 

\Vhttlier  l>avi»  h«.s  ».uinpU't*d  tho 
exaiiilriutlon  cannot  b»-  learned  and  h© 
refu.>*ed  to  .staf-  whether  he  would  re- 
turn. 

Mayor  Power  d(.»»  not  say  whether 
Davis  i.«<  thiouKh  li»r«>  or  not,  but  In 
many  <iuart<  r.s  it  in  taken  for  Kranted 
that  th.  examination  l.s  at  an  end  and 
that  soon  the  re.sult  of  tho  audit  of 
the  village  books  will  be  made  public 
In    St.    I'aul 

The  examlneia  looking  Into  the 
books  of  the  town  of  Stuntz  are  still 
at  work  and  will  be.  It  Is  thought,  for 
several    wetks    at    least. 


IS  AGAIN  PRESIDENT 
Of  COIERAINE  VILUGE 


Into    tho 
In    thlH 


ac- 
vil- 


I  poses  a  referendum  on  the  entire  sa- 
loon question.  This  faction  Is  advo- 
L  eating:  that  a  vote-  be  taken  at  the  same 
I  time  as  the  proposed  vote  In  Duluth. 
Its  leaders  declare  Virginia  would  go 
dry  by  a  large  majority.  Four  hun- 
dred signatuies,  116  more  than  neces- 
sary, have  been  obtained  to  the  peti- 
tions asking  for  a  referendum  on  the 
question    of    reducing    the    saloons. 

BIWABlTSCHOOL 

CONTEST  IS  HELD 


BY  TOWER  SENIORS. 

This  Year's  High  School  Graduating 
Class  Renders  Program. 

Tow.  r.  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  first  of  a  Merles  of 
entertainments  to  be  given  before  the 
close  of  tile  school  term  by  the  senit^r 
•  lass  was  Klv»n  last  evening  in  the 
Iwofgren  &  (Uson  hall.  Tlu-  pro^'ram 
follows:  "Stunt,"  by  llagnhild  Nichol- 
son, Ksthfr  <»st'  rberff.  Alta  Howc  and 
Ethel  Hallock:  class  liistory.  Esther 
Sovde:  lUu.strated  souk,  J'-nnle  Talle 
and  Florence  Elkrem;  poem,  Ida 
Thorp*';  class  prophecy.  Nick  Mutkji 
and  HaKiihild  NicholsoM;  music,  Ethel 
Ha!lo<k:  cla.ss  will,  H^i«  n  Hill:  paper, 
IJlllaii    Murphy. 

Th»'  clo.sinK  number  was  n  Fketch. 
"The  Poo  bah  of  P»  acetown."  cleverly 
put  on  by  Mis.-^cs  Mintie  Kitto  and 
Hazel  Mnrtin  and  Amandu.s  Halvorson 
and   Adolph   Naslund. 

iTeparations  are  w<ll  under  way  for 
the  class  play  to  be  glvt^n  some  time 
next  nionih. 


MAYOR 

«'olcraine.  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Mayor  H.  F.  Downing 
and  all  members  of  the  old  village 
council  who  were  re-elected  agalti  as- 
sunieU  office  this  week.  It  is  said  to 
be  one  of  the  rare  cases  where  a  com- 
plete village  council  Including  the  head 
has  been   re-elected. 


article  Is  written  along  broad  lines. 
hut  states  facts  In  a  fashion  that  has 
arouse, I  both  <ommendallon  and  eritl- 
( Ism.  Pfeiffer  Is  a  close  student  of 
political  economy  and  sociological  con- 
ditions and  Is  rcKarded  as  one  of  the 
first  authorities  on  the  range  on  tub- 
iects  of  the  nature  which  he  treats  In 
"the    current   Survey, 


CALLS  MINISTER  TO  RANGE. 


CHISHOLM  BANK 

CLERK  INDICTED 


Chisholm,  Minn..  April  8— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Late  yesterday  It  de- 
veloped in  district  court  that  Don 
Mahn.  a  youi»g  man  employed  as  clerk 
in  the  First  National  bank  of  Chis- 
holm. had  been  indicted  by  the  late 
grand  Jury  here  for  th«  theft  of  $300 
in  bonds  belonging  to 
charge  being  larceny 
degree,  when  he  was 
fore    Judge    Hughes    to 


Blwablk.  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  first  oratorical  and 
declamatory  contest  of  the  Blwablk 
high  school  was  held  last  evening  in 
the  Washington  school,  the  contestants 
all  doing  exceptionally  well.  The  win- 
ners of  each  division  were — Oratori- 
cal division:  First.  Harold  (Joldthorpe; 
second,  John  Jones:  humorous  division. 
Hazel  Watts,  first;  William  Heddy.  sec- 
ond; dramatic  division,  Mildred  Mandel, 
first;     Helml     HIetala,    se<ond. 

The  Judges  announced  that  the  con- 
test, being  a  very  close  one.  it  took 
the  Judges  some  time  to  figure  up  the 
percentage  as  the  markings  of  each 
were    very    close. 

The  Judges  were:  Supt.  M.  A.  Morse. 
Huhl;  Supt.  J.  P.  Vaughan,  «'hlsholm. 
and   Supt.   N.   A.   Young.    Duluth. 

The  high  school  orchestra  is  doing 
exceptionally  fine  and  Is  to  be  given 
a  great  deal  of  praise. 

The  progVarn  follows:  "The  Golden 
Ciate"  (Nick  lirown).  high  fchool  or- 
chestra; (a)  "The  Ol.l  Oaken  Bucket" 
(Woodworth);  (b)  "Ta  Han  Ta  Ra," 
frc)m  "The  Pirates  of  Penzance."  words 
by  senior  English  class,  boys'  glee  club. 

Oratorical  division — "Patriotism  Vs. 
Hunuinltarlanlsm."  John  Jones;  "Ar- 
bitration. What  It  Means. "  Harold  Gold- 
thorpe;  "Thomas  Edison."  Matt  To- 
metz. 

Humorous  division — "The  Mourning 
Veil"  (J.  L,.  Harbour).  Sena  Orava; 
"The  Hazing  of  Valient'  (J.  L.  Will- 
iams). Hazel  Watts;  "Bill  Thay"  (M.  T. 
Magill),  Earl  (Julniont;  "He  Wanted 
Ivory  Soap"  (C.  Loomls),  William  Red- 
Jy. 

Dramatic  dlvl.»ilon — "A  Voice  From  a 
Far  Country'  (Anonymous),  Helml  HIe- 
tala; "Two  iromecominga"  (A.  H.  Don- 
nell).  Adeline  Thomas;  "ITncle  Alec's 
Bad  Polk.s"  (A.  H.  Uonnell),  Mildred 
Mandel:  "The  Spoken  Word"  ( B.  Cal- 
vin), Blanche  (Jreene;  "My  Heart  at 
Thy  Sweet  Voice"  (Saint  Saens),  Har- 
rie  .Salmon;  "Ebb  and  Flow"  (O.  King), 
girls'  glee  club:  decision  of  the  judge.s; 
overture,  "Th«  Royalist"  (H.  L.  King), 
high  school   orchestra. 


FEEL  FINE!  TAKE 
"CASOARETS" FOR 
UVERJOWELS 

Spend  10  Cents!  Don't  Stay 

Bilious,  Sick,  Headachy, 

Constipated. 


Can't    Harm    You!    Best 

Cathartic  for  Men,  Women 

and  Children. 


the  bank,  the 
in     the     second 

arraigned  be- 
plead      to 


the 


in- 


Biwabik   Congregational  Church 

vitcs  Mill  City  Pastor.  { 

Biwabik.  Minn.,  April  8.-  (Special  to] 
The  Herald.)  —  At  a  meeting  of  its 
members  Tue.'^day  evening  at  the  resi-  ; 
dence  of  Dr.  and  Mrs.  c.  W.  Bray,  the  ' 
Blwablk  Congregational  church  Issued 
a  call  to  Rev.  James  W.  Morehouse  of  I 
Minneapolis.  ; 

Rev.  Morehouse  recently  filled  the  j 
pulpit  here  and  the  local  people  were  ■ 
so  well  please  I  with  him  that  they  ; 
decided  to  extend  him  an  Invitation  to  i 
accept  the  pastorate  of  the  church.  It  | 
is  believed    Rev.   Morehouse   will    accept  ^ 

the   call.  .        ^  w     -  i 

Maurice     Donnellan.     who     has     been 
suffering    from    a    .sprained    ankle,    was  I 
able  to  resume  his  position  at  the  Rud-  i 
uy  mine  on  Monday.  I 

Frank    B.    Morgan,    who   lias    been    at  i 
Virginia    for    some    time    past,    has    re-  ^ 
turned     and     resum<d      his      lutles      as 
brnkeman    on    the    Iron    Range.  | 

James  Brown  of  Elba  spent  Sunday  i 
here  with  Mrs.  Brown  and  little  I 
daughter.  .       ,        »^       ,    I 

Miss  Clara   Robinson,   who   Is  attend-  , 
ing    the    Iron     Ranne    Business    college 
at    Virginia,    spent    the    week-end    here  i 
with  her  parents.  Mi",   and  Mrs.   Joseph  , 
Kohln.<on.  

PUBLIC'eiWABIK 

WEDDINGS  FREE 

Blwablk.  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)  —  H.  J.  MiUbrook,  who  on 
Tuesdav  took  the  office  of  village  Jus- 
tice of  the  peace,  says  that  he  will 
perform  marriage  ceremonies  free  of 
charge  If  the  contracting  parties  will 
consent  to  have  the  service  performed 
In  the  ban<lstand  In  the  village  park". 
Judge  MiUbrook  says  that  his  offer 
of  free  services  Is  not  confined  to  Bl- 
wablk people,  but  will  be  donated  to 
all  comers  who  have  a  license. 

VIRGIN  I  A^TrtTCLE 


charge.  Because  of  the  prior  good 
reputation  «)f  the  accused  and  at  tho 
request  of  Judge  Freeman  of  Chisholm 
and  School  Superintendent  Vaughn, 
also  of  Chlsht)lni.  the  court  decided  to 
give  the  young  man  a  (  hance  and 
placed  hli'n  under  parole.  It  Is  under- 
stood the  securities  were  recovered 
and  the  young  man  is  in  a  very  con- 
trite mood. 

Steve  Czonc.  also  of  Chisholm.  was 
also  arraigned  yesterday  afternoon  on 
an  Indictment  charging  him  with  sell- 
ing liquor  to  minors.  He  was  released 
on  1500  bonds  for  each  of  three 
charges  and  will  be  tried  at  the  Hlb- 
blng  term  in  May.  he  requesting  that 
he   be    tried    there. 

ChnrKvd    With    Forgery. 

Mike  Maturii.  charged  with  forgery 
for  raising  a  check  of  Butler  Bros,  at 
Buhl  from  $6  to  $65.  and  I'eter  Paun. 
charged  with  first  degree  assault  for 
severely  injuring  Nick  Spehar  In  Vir- 
ginia Dec.  26.  were  also  arraigned  yes- 
terday afternoon.  Both  pleaded  not 
guilty.  The  criminal  calendar  will  bo 
started  one  week  from  Monday  and 
Paun   will  be   tried  first. 

In  the  case  of  Frank  Schneider  vs. 
J.  P.  Denyes  a  verdict  of  $91.10  for 
the  plaintiff  was  returned  by  a  jury 
at  6  o'clock  yesterday  afternoon.  The 
plaintiff  claimed  that  he  had  an  agree- 
ment with  the  defendant,  by  whom  he 
was  employed,  to  have  thirty  days'  no- 
tice of  dismissal.  He  was  dismissed 
without  notice  and  claimed  a  month's 
wages. 

A  verdict  of  $50  was  returned  for 
the  plaintiff  In  the  case  of  Frank 
Kllnk  of  Virginia  against  Matt  Hor- 
vak  in  a  civil  action. 


WILL  REPORTJJN  WORK. 

Nibbing    Commercial   Club  to  Have 
Annual  Meeting  Next  Friday. 

Hlbblng,  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Hei-ald.) — The  annual  meeting  of 
the  Commercial  club  will  be  held  next 
Friday. 

The  band,  health  and  good  roads 
^omlnlttee8  will  report  on  the  work 
accomplished. 

Secretary  J.  E.  Lawler  is  expected 
to  be  an  applicant  for  the  secretary- 
ship again,  us  he  declined  tiie  PlQua. 
Ohio,    offer. 

JOB  SEEKERS  MUST 

REGISTER  IN  HIBBING 

Hlbblng.  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Hereafter  all  persons 
seeking  village  Jobs  must  register  and 
show  if  they  are  really  in  need  of  a 
position. 

In  this  way  only  those  who  will  be 
benefited  by  a  village  Job  will  be 
given  one.  The  plan  has  been  worked 
out  successfully  In  «.ther  cities  and 
villages  and  Hlbblng  is  following  In 
the    wake   of   the    plan. 


EXPLANATORY   NOTES. 
Ob.m..:on.  UWc.  »i  «  .  ..V,  .c,  u..y-r.r.n  meriJi...  ..m,.     Air  pr.Mur.  «iu*rd  t.  .«  k....    Iso«*m  (co«.nuou.  Une.)  p,-  U,;o-gh  H.U ^  .,...  .ir  pr^.-«. 
lOk-  ll.roi.sU  poluN  -r  c.|»J  icm,.u.M.iic       Q  «•«"■    ©  «*"''  "*"'''' 


cloudj;   R.  lain,  8  "»««.  M  report  mining.     Arru«»  fly  will,  tlit  wii..! 


WIND  SCALE. 

Miles  Per  Hour 

CtlB   0  to    3 

i.t|ht  tlr 3  to    8 

Light  brew? 8  to  12 

Orntle  t»re*w 12  to  18 

Modtrat*  bre«e. .  .19  to  23 

Fresh  bre*«e 23  to  28 

Strong  bretzc 28  to  34 

Moderate  g*le S4  to  40 

Fresh   gale 40  to  48 

Strong  gale 48  to  50 

Whole  gale &0  to  65 

Storm   So  to  75 

Hurriran« Over  75 

H.  W.  RICHARDSON, 
rtntuitf. 

Itoriitixs  (JoileO  Ubm) 
Kl.adcJ  area»  thuw  pr*ci|>iUlio« 


The  change,  com-  ] 
ing  In  the  face  of  a  ' 
threatened         snow-  I 
storm,    was    one    of  I 
the     most     welcome  I 
stunts  of  the  weath-  ; 
er     that     has     hap-  \ 
pened      In     a      long 
lime.      The    weather 
today    Is   delightful, 
with    melting   again 
lo  the  fore,  the  sun 
resuming  Its  duties 
and     the     air     fine. 
This  kind  of  weath- 
er,      if        continued, 
will    make    navigation      possible      some 
time,  between    now   and    midsummer. 

The  weather  a  yf«r  ago  today  was 
springlike.  Tho  sun  rose  this  morn- 
ing at  6:33  and  will  set  this  evening 
at  6:46.  giving  thirteen  hours  and 
thirteen   minutes  of  sunlight. 

Mr.  Richardson  makes  the  following 
comment   on   weather   conditions: 

"The  temperature  has  falUn  over  tho 
Rocky  mountains,  Eastern  slopes  and 
Southwestern  states  and  is  rising  In 
Alberta.  Freezing  conditions  extend 
southwestward  to  Including  Missouri, 
Kansas.  Oklahoma,  the  Texas  Pan- 
handle. New  Mexico  and  Utah.  Killing 
frost  at  Roswell,  N.  Mex..  and  heavy 
frost  at  Oklahoma  City,  Okla.  The  de- 
pression centered  over  the  Ohio  valley 
has  CMURod  precipitation  (largely  snow) 
over  Colorado,  the  Lower  Missouri,  Mis- 
sissippi and  ^)hio  Valley  states  and 
Southeastern  districts.  Atlantic  and 
Gulf  region  reports  are  missing  on  ac- 
count  of  wire   trouble." 


I     LOCAL  FORECAST     I 


Daluth.  Superior  and  vlelnltTt  * 
inrludlng  the  MrMabn  an4  Ver-  ^ 
mllioii  Iron  rangetti  Fair  weather  W 
tonight  with  lowest  temperature  ^ 
15  to  20  deg.  at  and  near  Duluth-  ^ 
Superior  and  nlung  the  north  ^ 
Mhore  and  10  <o  15  drg.  on  the  ^(t 
Iron  rangen.  Sunday  fair  and  ^ 
warmer.  Moderate  northeast  wind«,  ^ 
becoming  light  and  variable  to-  ^ 
night.  '7 

* 


^jf^^H(f^(^4^^(t■i|f^^(#'^(^''^('¥^(4^^PW¥#l^t¥'^  *'(*** 


night    and    Sunday. 

Lower  Michigan — Overcast  tonight 
an.l  Sunday;  probably  snow  In  south- 
east portion;   strong  northeast   winds. 


Temperature*. 

Following  were  the  highest  temper- 
atures in  the  last  twenty-four  hours 
and  the  lowest  in  the  last  twelve 


end- 


ing at 


m.: 
High  ixiw 


the 
m. 


^  T*  .J*  ^T  Jj\  ^ys  f^  ^  fj\  f%  #p  ^T*  *x»  ^yv  fjs  ^  yj%  if\  f^,  ij\  rfy\  fj\  jj\  ^^^^^^ 


■a 
* 


.    S. 
ON 


fl  STOM 
WHEAT 


.SKALS   BKOKKN' 
C.\K  AT  KANIKR. 


Ilflnier,  Minn..  April  8. —  (Speelal 
to  The  Herald.) — I  nited  Staten 
euMtomx  Mer«lee  tleteetiven  and 
Nleuthat  employed  liy  thr  Cunudlan 
Northern  railway  are  trying  to 
nNeertaIn  who  broke  the  ru.stoni 
NealM  on  n  ear  of  wheat  In  the 
ynrdu  here  n  few  days  ago  and 
Htole  nome  wheat.  It  Im  reported 
an   urieNt   1m  about  to  be   made. 


* 


HIBBING  HIGH  FIVE 

BEATEN  BY  SOLDIERS 

Hibblng,  Minn..  April  8. — .(Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Last  night,  for  the  sec- 
ond time  this  week,  superior  ability 
and  greater  experience  In  the  game 
resulted  In  the  defeat  by  the  basket 
ball  five  of  Coinpany  M  of  the  high 
school   quint,    32   to  23. 

In  spite  of  the  big  lead  the  older 
men  had,  the  game  was  fast  and  rr- 
plete   with   thrills. 


lieueml   ForeeaMtH. 

Chicago,  April  8. — Forecasts  for 
twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  p. 
Sunday: 

Minnesota — Fair  tcmlght  with  warm- 
er In  west  portion;  Sunday  fair  and 
warmer. 

Wisconsin — Generally  fair  tonight 
and  Sunday,  except  unsettled  In  south- 
east portion  tonight;  colder  In  east 
portion  tonight;  warmer  Sunday  In 
west    portion. 

Iowa — Unsettled  tonight  with  colder 
in  southeast  portion;  Sunday  partly 
cloudy  with  slowly  rising  temperature. 

Xorth  Dakota — Fair  tonight  and 
Sunday:  warmer  tonight  and  in  east 
and   central   portions   Sunday. 

South  Dakota — Fair  tonight  and 
Sunday;    rising   temperature. 

Montana — Fair  tonight  and  Sunday; 
warmer  in  east  portion   tonight. 

Upper     Michigan — Probably    fair    to- 


Abllene    60 

Alpena    32 

AmarlUo  

Battleford    . . ; 

Bi!<Diar>.'k   36 

KolsK    66 

BiifCalo   38 

rairo    

Calctry    60 

Charles  (IJy   

Chicago    38 

Coiirordla    

Davenport    

Denver    38 

Des  Moines   42 

I>ewl8  Lake   28 

Dodge   38 

Pubuque    40 

DULUTH    30 

KilDioiiton    56 

Ksctiiaba   36 

Fort  Smith  

(irtnd    Haven 44 

(ireen     Bay 38 

Havre   50 

Helena    58 

Houghton    

Huron 38 

Indianapolis    

Kamloops  60 

Kansas  City 36 

Keokuk  

La  Cros.se  

Larder   

LoiilsAille  42 

Madl'on     38 

.Mar«|Uilt('    32 

Medlflnc  Hit   ....58 

Memphis    44 

MUe-i  City 34 


34 

26 

26 

26 

28 

42 

28 

34 

34 

28 

32 

30 

32 

20 

32 

12 
<>•) 

32 
20 

38 

tote 

26 

28 
24 
16 
38 
16 
20 
30 
34 
32 
32 
30 


High  I>o« 


Milvraukfe    36 

Mlnnedo«a   32 

Modrna    58 

Montreal    38 

M(X)rbeR(i     82 

Nashville    ,. 

.North   Piatt* 36 

(ilvlaboma  48 

Omaha    42 

Parr]-  Sound 34 

Phoenix    78 


Pittsburgh  . . . 
Port  .\rlbur  .. 
Portland,  Or  . 
Prlniv  Albert. 
tlu'Ai)p*llc  ... 
Rapid  City  ., 
Ros4-burg 


.48 

.36 

.74 

..3S 

..30 

..28 

,76 


30 
12 
22 
30 
18 
36 
18 
32 
30 
22 
48 
32 
18 
46 
16 
14 
12 
42 


Roswell  26 


St.   Louis 
St.    Paul 
Salt  Lake 
Ran  Diego 
San  Franelsro 


City, 


...40 

..36 

..54 

..78 

.76 


Marie..  84 
.64 


40 
38 
18 


Sault  Ste. 

Seattle   

Sheridan    

Shreveport    

Sloiu  City 

Spokane   

Springfleld,  111.. 
Sprlngflpld.  Mo. 
Swift  Current... 

Toledo    

Valentine    

Wichita    

WllUstoii   28 

Winnemucca    6S 

Winnipeg  32 

Yellowstone   46 


..40 
..62 
..40 
..64 


.38 


32 
24 
36 
54 
50 
22 

40 

28 


32 
26 
30 
18 
30 
22 
28 
12 
26 


expenses.       A.     R.     Folsoni 
pointed   town  secretary. 


was    reap- 


SENDING  MONEY  AWAY. 

IS  CAUSING  COMMENT  I  Large  Amount  of   Goods   Reach  Vir- 
ginia From  Mail  Order  House. 


Virginia.  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
Tho  Herald.) — Sociological  conditions 
on  the  Mesaba  range  are  treate.l  at 
length  In  an  article  in  the  current 
number  of  the  Survey  magazine,  writ- 
ten by  <'.  W.  Pfeiffer,  member  of  the 
local  hiKh  school  faculty.  The  article 
Is  causing  much  comment.  It  refers  to 
housing  conditions  In  Virginia  as  In 
many  ri  specie  Inadequate  and  declares 
what  the  Mesaba  range  needs  Is  an 
Industrial  democracy  instead  of  indus- 
trial pat.  rnallsm.  The  alien  situation 
Is    treated    at    some    length.      Pfelffer's 


'77" 

Humphreys' So  vent  y-Hc  veil 
For  Grip,  Influenza, 

COLDS 


Virginia.  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— That  a  Chicago  mail 
order  house  Is  shipping  two  carloads 
of  goods  to  Virginia  a  day  and  has 
peifected  a  delivery  system  here  Is  a 
discovery  Just  made  by  the  market 
committee  of  the  Oomnjercial  club  and 
will  be  made  the  basis  »)f  a  vigorous 
purchase-at-home  campaign  to  be  con- 
ducted by  the  club.  A  co-operative 
delivery  for  local  business  houses  will 
be  urged  by  the  Commercial  club  mar- 
ket coniniittee  at  the  next  meeting  of 
the  club  and  a  paper  on  the  co-oper- 
ative delivery  will  he  given  by  Park 
Superintendent  Fhllbrlck,  who  has 
made  an  exhaustive  report  of  the  sub- 
ject. 


best     results,     take 
at  the  first  feeling  of 


To  get  the 
"Seventy-seven" 
catching  cold. 

If  you  wait  until  your  bones  begin 
to  ache,  to  coujgh  and  sneeze,  have 
sore  throat  and  influenza,  it  may  take 
longer.  „  , 

•j.V    an.!   $1  "0.    »t    ;iU   ilriiirgi'Ii   ..r  malle*!. 

TONIC  TABLETS 

after  the  Grip  or  any  long  illness, 
physical  exhaustion,  loss  of  strength 
Dr  appetite.  General  Debility,  take 
Humphreys'  Tonic  Tablets— price, 
$1.00,  at  drug  stores  or  sent  C.  O.  D. 

Huinplir«ya'     lIoM.eo.     MeUKlit*     Co..     1j<I     William 
SUM*.  >«w   York. 


SUCCESSFUL  FARMER 

HAS  FILED  FOR  JOB 

'•<:rand  Raplils,  Minn..  April  8. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)  — Frank  CJrnn.  a 
well  known  farmer  of  the  Trout  Lake 
country,  on  Wednesday  filed  for  the 
nomination  for  county  commissioner  of 
the  Fourth  district  of  Itasca  county, 
now  represented  by  .lames  Passard  of 
<jrand    Haplds. 

Mr.  <;ian.  who  came  to  Itasca  county 
twenty-three   years  ago   with   practical- 
ly   nothing    today    owns    a    large    area 
of  fine  fjirm  land  with  extensive  clear- 
ings   and    splendid    buildings    and    good 
1  stock,    drives    to    town    in    a    fine    auto- 
1  mobile,   and  is  reputed  one  of  the  sub- 
>  stantlal    men  of  the  county    financially. 


FAMILY  DESERTIONS 
CAUSE  DESTITUTION 

Virginia.  Minn..  April  8. — Desertion 
of  families  by  the  bread  winners  can 
be  blamed  for  more  causes  of  destitu- 
tion In  Virginia  than  anything  else, 
according  to  the  March  report  of  Miss 
Helen  HrT)therton,  secretary  of  the  As- 
sociated Charities,  who  reported  to  the 
organization  yesterday  afternoon  that 
sixteen  families  needed  aid  during  last 
month  because  of  dtsertion.  Other 
cases  were:  Widowed  women,  IB;  sick- 
ness, 12;  Intemperance,  8;  uneniploy- 
ment.  B.  as  compared  to  10  In  Feb- 
ruary and  IB  in  January;  Juvenile 
cases.  3;  Immorality.  3;  insanity,  2; 
incompetency.  2;  imprisonment.  2;  ac- 
cident, 1;  permanent  disability,  1; 
shiftlessness,   1. 

ELY  aOdJT  ORDERED. 

Elv.  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — At  the  last  meeting  «)f  the 
old  city  council  Thursday  night.  Mayor 
Harrl  appointed  Aldermen  A.  L.  I.und- 
holm.  A.  E.  Harrl  and  H.  .T.  Merdlck  a 
committee  to  audit  the  books  of  all 
city  officers.  The  council  canvassed 
the  vote  cast  In  the  recent  election 
and  declared  the  persons  mentioned  In 
The  Herald  duly  elected.  All  outstand- 
ing bills  were  ordered  paid.  The  March 
report  of  the  clerk  of  the  municipal 
court  showed  $74.26  collected.  $12.72 
disbursed  and  $61.60  deposited  with  the 
treasurer. 

♦ 

f;reat   Scott  Road   Work. ' 

Buhl,  Minn..  April  8. — The  super- 
visors of  the  town  of  <;reat  Scott  are 
figuring  on  doing  considerable  road 
woi^k  tills  year  and  at  their  first  meet- 
ing discussed  road  work  from  all 
angles.  Thomas  Savor  was  appointed 
overseer  of  roads  at  «  salary  of  $100 
a  month.  He  will  be  allowed  $B0  trav- 
eling expenses.  Aldcn  An-lcrson  was 
chosen  town  constable  at  a  salary  of 
$100    a    month    with    |2B    for    traveling 


GRAND  RAPIDS  CLUB 
ELECTS  ITS  OFFICERS 

'irand  Rapids,  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Many  well-known 
business  men  and  others  interested  in 
the  advancement  of  this  village  at- 
tended the  annual  meeting  of  the  Com- 
mercial club,  when  the  future  of 
Grand  Rapids  was  discussed  and  plans 
outlined  to  do  a  lot  of  boosting.  The 
officers  elected  are:  W.  A.  Rossman. 
president;  E.  A.  Kremer,  vice  presi- 
dent; E.  J.  Farrell,  secretary;  H,  C. 
Jackson,  treasurer;  Ex-Senator  D.  M. 
(Junn.  Henry  Hughe*,  James  Passard. 
George  B.  Alton.  H.  D.  Powers.  W.  C. 
Gilbert,  the  president,  vice  president 
and    treasurer,    execatlve    committee. 


The  Herald.) — Robert  Adair,  Fon  of 
Rev.  and  Mrs.  Adair,  while  playing 
with  other  youngsters  lin  his  home, 
fell    In    a    friendly    scuffle    against    a 


stove     and 
keeping   him 


received      several 
out   of  school. 


burns. 


SALOON  REDUCTION 
REFERENDUM  SOUGHT 

Virginia,  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Petitions  asking  the 
city  council  lo  reduce  the  number  of 
saloon  licenses  from  forty-nine  to 
twenty-flve  will  probably  be  presented 
to  the' next  meeting  of  the  council.  The 
petitions  will  ask  for  the  referendum 
on   the  question. 

A  new  faction  has  arisen  in  the  re- 
form mortment     locally,     which     pro- 


TOO  WEAK 

TO  FIGHT 

The  "Come-back"  man  was  really 
never  down-and-out.  His  weakened 
condition  because  of  over-work,  lack 
(»f  exercise.  Improper  eating  and  living, 
demands  stimulation  to  satisfy  the  cry 
for  a  health-giving  appetite  and  the 
refreshing  sleep  essential  to  strength. 
<JOL.D  MEDAL  Haarlem  Oil  Capsiiles. 
the  National  Remedy  of  Holland,  will 
do  the  work.  They  are  wonderful! 
Three   of  these   capsules  each  day   will 

fut  a  man  on  his  feet  before  he  knows 
t;  whether  his  trouble  comes  from 
uric  acid  poisoning,  the  kidneys,  gravel 
or  stone  In  the  bladder,  stomach  de- 
rangement or  other  ailments  that  be- 
fall the  over-zealous  American.  Don't 
wait  until  you  are  entirely  down-and> 
out.  but  take  them  today.  Your  drug- 
gist will  gladly  refund  yo»r  money  If 
they  do  not  help  you.  26c.  60c  apd  $1.00 
per  box.  Accept  no  substitutes.  Look 
for  the  name  (iOLD  MEDAL  on  every 
box.  They  are  the  pure,  original,  Im- 
ported  Haarlem   Oil   Capsules. 

•—Advertisement. 


HIBBING  PERSONALS. 

Hibblng.  Mirn..  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Joe  Zant  left  Thursday 
for  Duluth   to  remain  for  a   few  days. 

The  Bible  Society  of  the  Finnish 
Lutheran  church  was  entertained  Fri- 
day evening  at  8  o'clock  at  the  home 
of  Mr.   and   Mrs.   Charles   Kuoto. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Walter  McMillan  are 
the  parents  of  a  son  born  Tuesday 
evening  at  thtir  home.  Xo.  405  Gar- 
field   street.  ^  _    .      . 

H.  C.  Nelson  Is  here  from  Duluth 
inspecting  the  Gately  stores  here  and 
in  Virginia. 

Superintendent  and 
West  returned  home 
nlng  from  Excelsior 
where      they      spent 

Charles  Eastman  returned  to  hts 
home  In  Winnipeg.  Wednesday,  after 
passing  a  few  days  here  with  his 
da  ighter.    Mrs.    J.    Salverscn. 

N'els  Jollcouer,  who  has  been  a  resi- 
dent of  Hibblng  for  the  past  several 
yrars,  has  left  here  for  Keewatln, 
where  he  will  open  a  confectionery 
store. 

Mrs.  Jerry  Sullivan  left  Thursday 
for    Nevis,    to    visit    her    mother. 


Mrs.  William  J. 
Thursday  eve- 
Springs.       Mo.. 

the     past     three 


Able  to  I<eave   Hospital. 

Ely,  Minn..  April  8— 'Special  to  The 
Herald.) — tjeorge  Squires  of  Bemldjl, 
who  had  his  head  Injured  at  the  rail- 
road yards  recently.  Is  able  to  leave 
the  hospital.  Jacob  Lampl  Is  111  at 
Shipman  hospital.  Mike  Walsh,  an  em- 
ploye of  the  St.  Croix  Lumber  com- 
pany, is  also  a  patient  at  the  hos- 
pital. 


Ely, 


Dr. 

Minn 


Brarken 

April  8. 


Herald.)— Dr.     H.     M. 


•t  Ely. 

—  (Special 
Bracken, 


to  The 
secre- 


QUIT  MEAT  WHEN 
BACK  HURTS  OR 
KIDNEYS  BOTHER 

* 

Says   Uric  Acid   in   Meat 
Clogs  Kidneys  and  Irri- 
tates Bladder. 


A  Glass  of  Salts  Is  Harmless 

Way  to  Flush  Kidneys, 

Says  Authority. 


BORDER  CITY  NOTES. 

International  Falls.  Minn..  April  8. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Judge  Berg. 
chief  of  the  fire  department,  has  re- 
turned from  the  Mesaba  range,  where 
he  visited  Virginia  and  Hlbblng.  Ills 
mission  was  to  buy  a  whgon  suitable 
for  exercising  the  fire  team  and  he 
secured    one    at    Virginia. 

The  remains  of  William  Frantl.  who 
died  of  apoplexy  at  Erlosburg.  were 
burled  here  by  a  brother  residing  at 
Bovey. 

A  large  number  of  schoolmates  of 
Harry  Klippness.  who  died  at  the  hos- 
pital after  a  day's  Illness,  were  at  the 
depot  Thursday  night  as  a  mark  of 
respect  for  the  deceased,  whose  re- 
mains   were    shipped    lo    Brainerd    for 

t>urlal.  ^     ,  .    ^. 

Sam  Zimmerman,  who  has  spent  the 
winter  In  the  woods  as  a  camp  clerk, 
has  been  transferred  to  the  Big  Fork 
postofflce   district. 

The  two  detectives  who  have  been 
busy  here  securing  blind  pig  evidence 
returned  to  the  Twin  Cities  Thursday 
nlght  They  will  be  here  to  attend 
the  "hearing  next  Tuesday  of  the 
Ranler  people  arr*8t«>d  in  a  raid. 


HlbblHK 

Hlbbin»,  Minn. 


Boy    Burned. 

,  April  8.— (Special 


If  you  must  have  your  meat  every 

day     oat    It,    but    flush    your    kidneys 

with   salts   occasionally,   says   a   noted 

authority    who    tells     us     that     meat 

!  forms    uric    add    which    almost    para- 

I  lyzes   the    kidneys    in    their    efforts   to 

'  expel    it    from    the    blood.      They    be- 

icome  sluggish   and   weaken,   then  you 

I  suffer  with  a  dull  misery  In  the  kidney 

■  region,  sharp  pains  in  the  back  or  sick 

j  headache,     dizziness,      your      stomach 

!  sours,  tongue  is  coated  and  when  the 

i  weather   is   bad   you     have     rheumatic 

twinges.     The  urine  gets  cloudy,    full 

1  of    sediment,    the    channels    often    get 

I  sore  and  irritated,  obliging  you  to  seek 

!  relief   two   or   three   times  during   the 

To  neutralize  these  irritating  acids, 
to  cleanse  the  kidneys  and  flush  off 
the  body's  urinous  waste  get  four 
ounces  of  J  ad  Salts  from  any 
pharmacy  here;  take  a  tablespoonful 
In  a  glass  of  water  before  breakfast 
for  a  few  days  and  your  kidneys  will 
then  act  fine.  This  famous  salts  Is 
made  from  the  acid  of  grapes  and 
lemon  juice,  combined  with  lithia.  and 
has  been  used  for  generations  to  flush 
and  stimulate  sluggish  kidneys,  also 
to  neutralize  the  acids  in  urine,  so  it 
no  longer  irritates,  thus  ending  blad- 
der weakness. 

J  ad  Salts  is  inexpensive;  cannot  In- 
jure,  and   makes   a    delightful      elTer- 
j  vescent  lithia-water  drink— Advertise- 
to  I  ment.  ^ 


tarv  and  executive  officer  of  the  Min- 
nesota state  board  of  health,  was  here 
Friday.  ^.      .  , 

Rev.  Mr.  Kanumakl  of  the  Finnish 
Lutheran  church  Is  spending  a  week 
at  Palo.  Minn..  Instructing  a  class  of 
girls   and   boys   for   confirmation. 

Officials  of  the  Steel  corporation  ar- 
rived Wednesday  night  In  a  private 
car  to  look  over  mines  In  this  district. 
They  returned  to  Duluth  Friday  morn- 
ing.  

GRAND  RAPIDS  BRIEFS. 

Crand  Rapids,  Minn..  April  8. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Miss  Lottie 
Madson  of  Bemldjl  was  a  guest  of 
her  brother.  Elmer  Madson.  the  first 
of  the  week,  along  with  Miss  Eliz»v- 
beth  Erickson,  also  of  Bemldji,  a  stu- 
dent   in    Macalester    college. 

James  Ross  of  Vermilion  reports 
that  the  past  winter  was  not  as  prof- 
itable as  it  might  have  been  for  log- 
gers had  there  not  be<n  so  much  snow 
and    coi:tinuou8    cold    weather. 

The  English  Lutheran  Ladles'  Aid 
society  will  meet  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
Frank  Poephe  on  the  afternoon  of 
Thursday,    next. 

Misses  Luella  Francour  and  Ruth 
McLaughlin  went  to  Hibblng  Tuesday 
for  a  visit   with   friends. 

Will  Nisbett  went  to  Duluth  Tues- 
day on  business. 

Cieorge  Arfecott  and  A.  L.  WelHen 
were  among  the  Gi'and  Rapids  men 
attending  the  wrestling  match  at  Du- 
luth Tuesday  night. 

A.  L.  Pearce  of  West  Cohasset.  one 
of  the  appraisers  on  county  ditch  No. 
7,  came  Tuesday  on  business  and  vis- 
ited at  his  home  while  here. 

Hugh  McKwan  circulated  a  sub- 
scription llst^and  got  |30  to  be  used 
for  tho  purchase  of  clothing  for  Miss 
Eva  D'AnJou.  who  lost  everything  in 
the  fire  which  destroyed  the  store  of 
Mrs.    J.    F.    Metzger. 

M.  Saloskl.  who  conducted  a  cloth- 
ing store  at  Coha.sset.  this  week  moved 
his    stock    to    Grand    Rapids. 

Charles  Point  of  the  Trout  Lake 
country  was  here  Wednesday  to  at- 
tend the  funeral  of  A.  Kulavaara,  one 
of  his  neighbors,  who  died  at  the  hos- 
pital   here. 

S  D  Patrick,  manager  of  the  lana 
dep'artinent  of  the  Itasca  Lumber  com- 
panv,  left  Wednesday  afternoon  for 
Kansas  to  advertise  the  merits  of 
Itasca  county  as  the  homemaker  s 
paradise.  .     ,         ,,, 

D.  A.  Dunn,  president  of  the  village 
council  at  Cohasset.  and  Owen  Skeyy. 
a  member  of  the  council.  Tuesday  con- 
sulted with  the  county  board  In  rela- 
tion to  the  construction  of  a  new 
bridge  acioss  Bass  Brook  at  Cohasset. 

Miss  Mary  .Shoemaker,  recently  of 
Chisholm,  was  a  guest  of  Mrs.  R.  A. 
McOuat  this  week,  while  on  her  way 
to  Everett,  Wash.,  where  she  is  to 
be    married   soon.  _      .      .„.       .       „ 

John  Lundeen  and  P.  A.  Blomberg, 
old  settlei-s  of  the  Marcell  country, 
were    here    this   week. 

Peter  Kanz  of  Walker  was  here 
this   week   on   business   in   the   district 

^°Mls's  Florence  Tholrs.  who  has  been 
at  Duluth,  where  she  had  been  called 
by  illness  in  the  family.  returned 
Tuesday,  and  resumed  her  duties  as  a 
teacher    in    the    Forest    Lake    school. 

W  P  Brown,  who  has  a  fine  farm 
on  Pokegama  lake,  returned  Tuesday 
from  Flint.  Mich.,  where  he  had  been 
spending   the    winter. 

On   I.eglHlatlve   Committee. 

nibbing.  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Chief  C,  E.  Mclllhargey 
of  the  fire  department,  has  been  ap- 
pointed to  act  on  the  special  legis- 
lative committee  which  has  for  Its 
purpose  legislation  which  will  ma- 
terially   benefit    the      firemen     of    the 

state. 

»— . 

Going  to  Trl-S<«tc  Fair. 

Hibblng,  Minn..  April  8.— 'Special  to 
The  HeraU.)— Hlbblng  will  be  well 
represented  at  tho  tri-state  fair  to  be 
held   at   Superior  Sept.   12   to   16. 

Hlbblng    will    send    a    large    delega- 
tion, and  as  Superior  and  Duluth   peo- 
ple have  always  attended 
county   fair   in   force, 
reciprocate. 

Goes  to  Church  Dedication. 

Hibblng,  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Rev.  J.  B.  Idstrom  left 
yesterday  for  Superior  to  be  present 
at   the   dedication   of   the   Zion   church. 

•- 

Prrpnrlne  'or  VIsltOMi. 

Hibblng.  Minn..  April  8. —  tSpecial  to 
The  Herald.) — Secretary  Lawler  of  the 
Commercial  club  is  working  on  plans 
for  the  entertainment  of  the  hundreds 
of  guests  expected  to  the  convention 
to  be  held  in  Hibblng  this  summer, 
and  is  sending  out  notices  asking  the 
hotel  owners  to  send  in  their  list  of 
accommodations    and    prices    of    rooms. 

Hibblng    Mouma    Symonn. 

Hlbblng,  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  *lerald.) — General  regret  was  ex- 
pressed here  when  local  people  read 
In  The  Duluth  Herald  of  the  death  at 
Bemldjl  of  Thomas  Symons.  for  year^ 
here  agent  for  the  Minneapolis  Brew- 
ing   company.  .  .       ,       . 

Symons  was  a  friend  of  everyone 
In  Hibblng  and  liked  by  all  who  knew 
him.  He  was  a  prominent  member  of 
the  Mesaba  Gun  club  and  that  or- 
ganization sent  its  sympathy  yester- 
day to  the  bereaved  family  in  a  tele- 
gram.   

Ely  AVoninn  Dlcn. 

Elv,  Minn..  April  8. —  (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — Mrs.  J.  Tlkkela  died  at  her 
home  Thursday  evening  of  tuberculo- 
sis after  a  long  Illness.  She  is  sur- 
vived by  her  husband  and  seven  young 
children.  The  funeral  arrangements 
have  not  been  completed. 
# 

New  BoTcy  Village  Head. 

Bovey,  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mayor  Johnson,  who 
succeeds  Mayor  Andrews,  who  served 
four  years,  and  the  new  village  coun- 
cil took  hold  of  local  affairs  this 
week.  Gus  Anders  was  reappointed 
on  the  police  force.  Dr.  Seguln  as 
health  officer  and  Gus  Anders  and  J. 
L.  Karvonen  were  appointed  members 


Enjoy  life!  Your  system  is  filled 
with  an  accumulation  of  bile  and  bow- 
el poison  which  keeps  you  bilious, 
headachy,  dizzy,  tongue  coated,  breath 
b.W  and  stomach  sour — "Why  don't  you 
get  a  lO-cent  box  of  Cascarets  at  the 
drug  store  and  feel  bully.  Take  Cas- 
carets tonight  and  enjoy  the  nicest, 
gentlest  liver  and  bowel  cleansing  you 
ever  experienced.  You'll  wake  up 
with  a  clear  head,  clean  tongue,  lively 
step,  rosy  skin  and  looking  and  feeling 
fit.  Mothers  can  give  a  whole  Cas- 
caret  to  a  sick,  cross,  bilious  feverish 
child  any  time — they  are  harmless^ 
never  gripe  or  sicken. — Advertisement. 


of  the  board.  It  was  decided  to  ask 
for  bids  for  scavenger.  Joseph  Shut- 
starlch  w-as  allowed  a  license  to  sell 
cigarettes.  A  communication  was  read 
from  Attorney  A.  M.  Peterson  relative 
to  jiumplng  and  lighting  matter. 


Deer  River  Ca«e  End*. 

Grand  Rapids.  Minn..  April  8.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  case  of 
Charles  Ffolllott  vs.  F.,  F.  Seaman, 
which  has  been  on  trial  since  Thurs- 
day afternoon,  ended  last  night.  Ffol- 
llott claims  title  to  some  Deer  River 
real  estate,  of  which  Seaman  has  pos- 
session. J.  W.  Reynolds  of  Duluth 
represented  Seaman,  while  Ffolllott 
was  represented  by  Taylor  &  Ander- 
son and  ThAving  &  Rossman,  of  Grand 
Rapids. 

SELL  FLAGS 
FOR  RELIEF 


Thla  Is  tag  day  in   Duluth. 

Regents  and  members  of  the  two 
Dulyth  chapters  of  the  D.  A.  R..  the 
Daughters  of  Liberty  and  Greysolon, 
have  14,600  tiny  Belgian  flags  that  they 
are  endeavoring  to  dispose  of  before 
tomorrow  evening.  Today  small  girls 
and  boys  are  gelling  the  fiags,  while 
at  the  Spalding,  St.  Louis,  po.>,toffice 
and   other  central   places,   the  tags  are 

on  Bale.  ,  .     ,  ^  * 

Todav.  April  8.  Is  the  birthday  of 
King  Albert  of  Belgium.  It  Is  esti- 
mated that  3,000.000  of  King  Albert's 
subjects  are  depen.lent  for  sustenance, 
for  the  bare  necessities  of  life,  upon 
the  charity  of  the  American  people. 
Every  cent  that  is  donated  for  a  fiag 
today  and  tomorrow  on  the  streets  of 
this  city  will  go  toward  providing  food 
for    the    Belgians. 

Not  less  than  7  cents  will  be  accept- 
ed for  a  tag.  It  has  been  discovered 
that  a  Belgian  man  or  woman  can  ex- 
ist  not   live — for   one  day   on   7   cents. 

.Therefore  the  minimum  price  has  been 
get  at  this  figure.  Naturally.  Mrs.  A. 
E.  Walker,  regent  of  the  Daughters  of 
Liberty  chapter,  and  Mrs.  W.  D.  Un- 
derhill,  regent  of  the  Greysolon  chap- 
ter, hope  that  many  persons  will  give 
more  than  7  cents  for  each  tag  they 
buv.  Also,  it  might  be  stated,  the  two 
Duluth  regents  hope  that  every  one 
of  the  14.600  tags  will  be  disposed  of 
before  tomorrow  evening,  when  the 
tags — If  there  are  any  remaining,  will 
be  sent  to  the  national  headquarters 
of  the  D.  A.  R. 


CHECKER  TOURNEY 
HEARING  FINALS 


the  St.  Louis 
Is    planned    to 


Much  interest  has  been  aroused  In 
the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  "round  robin"  checker 
U.uin.'iment,  that  has  been  in  progress 
for  the  last  two  or  three  weeks. 

There  were  eight  squads  with  fou» 
men  in  each  squad.  Each  player  met 
every  other  player  In  his  own  squad, 
playing  six  games.  Each  player  thus 
played  eighteen  gamea  In  his  squad, 
and  the  one  winning  the  greatest 
number  of  games  was  the  squad  win- 
ner. The  squad  winners  were  O.  H. 
Lee,  J.  S.  Root.  J.  S.  Rich.  Jack  Har- 
rington. "W.  H.  Stewart,  George  Dray, 
S.    H.    Forgette,   and    A.    L.    Kingman. 

The«»e  eight  players  have  been  di- 
vided into  two  squads  of  four  each 
and  will  again  play  off  in  squad  *;tyle. 
The  two  squad  winners  will  then  meet 
for  the  checker  championship.  Lee, 
Root,  Rich  and  Harrington  are  in  the 
first  squad  and  .Stewart,  Dray,  For- 
gette and  Kingman  In  the  second. 
« 

CrttKby  VllUgc  Officers. 

Crosby.  Minn..  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  new  village  coun- 
cil members  held  their  first  meeting 
Tuesday  night,  and  made  the  follow- 
ing appointments:  Chief  of  police.  C. 
A.  Lewis:  night  police,  Andrew  Burud; 
health  officer.  Dr.  R.  J.  Sewall:  city 
physician.  Dr.  T.  H.  Monahan:  village 
attorney,  C.  L.  Benedict  and  the  Cros- 
by  Courier   the    official   paper. 


RANDRETH 

'%ir    PILL 

An  Effective  L4ucative 
Purely  Vegeuble 

Constipation, 

Indigestion,  Biliousness,  «tc. 


OR 


St  Night 


until  r^Htvtd 
ehoool«t«>Co«t«<i  or  Flain 


i 


1 

^i 


JU  «A -L    t^nwti  #,w  Mgr^  ■! 


>  rr 


Saturday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


Interesting  Program  Arranged 

For  Philathea  Union  Concert 


Will  Appear  as  Soloist 

in  Trinity  Church  Oratorio 


B^Q%t^«^««/t/t/««/««/ft«%»ft«'%«'««« 


^^.^^/^♦♦♦♦♦♦•'♦•♦♦^^•'•'♦•^'•'•^ 


Social  Calendar  for  Coming  Week 


V.   W.  C.  A.  vtsptrs 


Special    meeting 
c!tihro«'m,  2:30  p.  ni. 

.Mcctin>j   of   the 


f»i 


the 


SUNDAY. 

30  )..  ni. 
MONDAY. 
Twentieth    Century   chib    in    the    library 


■ 
I 

■ 
■  ■ 

•  "ii-  •■  1 1 — 


•  Icncc 


citil 


of   Mrs.  S.  J. 


of  CoUojiiatc   Alumnae  at  the 
East   Fifth  street,  3:30  p.  ni. 


resi- 


Association 
Colter,  2521 

TUESDAY. 

Mcetinjj  (.f  the  West  Duluth  study  class  of  the  Twentieth  Century 
I)  iit  the   West  Dulmh  library,  2:30  p.  m. 
Recital   given   by    Walter    Leon,   tenor,    at     tlic     First    Methodist 
church,  8:30  p.  m. 

WEDNESDAY. 

Marriage  of  Miss  Margaret  J'nllcr  Barrows  and  Harmon  F.  Gil- 
bert at  the  residence  of  the  bride's  parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  L.  Bar- 
rows,  12  Xorth  Nineteenth  avenue  east,  night. 

FRIDAY. 

Program  and  social  meeting  given  by  the  Glen- Hunt- Wood  Male 
chorus  at   tilen   Avon   Presbyterian  church.  8  p.   m. 

Annual  concert  of  the  Duluth  Philathea  union  at  the  First  Pres- 
b.vterian  clnirch,  8  p.  m. 

Presentation  of  the  pageant  "Uiawatha,'*  at  the  First  Methodist 

church,  8  p.  m. 

SATURDAY. 

Story  hours  given  by  Adelc  McClaran  Liggett,  under  the  auspices 
of  the  feder.'itcd  clubs  of  Duluth,  at  the  Rex  theater,  10  to  11  a.  ni. 
and  from   11   to   12. 


Home-Made  Crackers 


CITY 
moved 
known 
California 
ten    miles 


woman     who     recently 
into  what  \m  becoming 
as  "the  ctfrua  belt 
writes 
from  a 


of 

"I   am    not 
lemon,  aa  I 


'    -- 


Events  of  Interest. 

Mr.s.  Fittlfri<k  I>.  Hnrlow.  ?701  HaPt 
.Seventh  j»tr<et.  «  nt«  i-i.^Uurt  at  «  Iwiuh- 
«on  of  twtlve  ( ov.  is  yesterdny  noon 
In  honor  of  h»r  8i*»ttr.  Mrf.  Edward 
Mnf  Intvre  of  Hutlaiid,  Vt..  who  Is  hf  r 
Hiiest,  and  for  Miss  Hiilda  Salter  «>f 
Kiitlajid,  Vt.,  who  is  visitiiie  Mih.  David 
J'rutamond,  South  Twenty-first  avenue 
mat.  SpriiiK  flowers  were  used  in 
deeutatinK- 


Mrs.  .7.  Tlurke  and  Mrs.  PorBreaon.  Mrs. 
,'^J^)h^lius    was    pre.scnted    with   a   .set   "f 
;  table   linen.      Tho."e   present   were: 
I  Mesdanu'rt — 

«Uorge    Redlock, 
<feorKe   Hanick, 
Jo.seph  Kanlek. 
William    I'apbi'rer, 
Joseph  I'olaskI, 


Mrs.     David 
this     noon     ut 
for    her    giu-st, 
Kutland.     \'t.. 


.T. 
C. 

P. 


•       «       « 

Itrummond     entertained 

an  informal  luncheon 
-Miss     Hulda    Salter,    of 

and  for  Mrs.  Kdward 
Mft<  Intyrt"  of  Rutland,  Vt..  who  is  the 
jfu»st  of  her  sister,  Mr».  Fred  D.  Har- 
low. 

«       •»       • 

Mrs.  P.  nlsen  of  18  Fourth  avenue 
east  entertained  the  Whist  <  Uib  Inst 
Wednesdav  aftt-moon.  Favors  were 
won  bv  Mrs.  J.  Andersen.  Mrs.  O. 
l-tlersen    and    Mrs.    L.    CJrener.       Those 

^ res*  111    were: 
eKdam*  s — 
A.    Andersen, 
J.    Mattsen, 
F.    Peterst-n, 
Jj.    Hanson, 
r.  Young:. 

At    the    nfxt    nueiinp 
ptn     t.f     -H     .Niniti-eiith 

will    be    hostess. 

•       «       « 

A  dellKhtful  party  was  plvf-n  last 
jSiindav  bv  Mr.  imd  Mrs.  Peter  Pyette 
at  30l"  K.'ist  Fifth  atr<»-t.  In  honor  of 
thfir  son  Aubreys  fifth  birthday.  •Janus 
Wt-re  played  and  ref  rt  shments  served. 
Th<*«e    pr»'sent    bt-ing: 

Mary    Haugartmr     Ralph 
Klnit-r      Hitutrart- 

ner. 
Pa  y  m  o  n  d  Hau- 

trartner, 
Fvelyn     Haugart- 

ner. 
Mr.    and   Mrs.    E 

«       •       • 

H.  V 


Hal.'Hth 
F:.    Miller, 
P.  Hood. 
Missea — 

Clara    TIalseth, 

Alma    llalseth, 

* 

Miss 
avenue 


D.    Sail. 

,T.  Posinski, 

J.    Purke, 

Porjfoson, 

P.    Landoif, 

Kunze, 

CharK-.s     Matt?on. 


Aili    Mattson. 
K.    Miller. 

.<<adle  Calhoun.   303  Thirty-sixth 
east,     entertained     her    8(win^? 


once  rt-ad  of  a  country  wom- 
an belnfr,  but  it  seoms  to  me 
I  am  more  aerlously  placed,  for  I  am  I 
miles  and  miles  from  a  bake-shop.  I  i 
have  learned  to  bake  everything'  my 
fhmily  needs,  this  past  winter,  with 
the  exception  of  crackers,  and  when 
the  children  want  a  'piece,'  I  think  of 
the  w<ll-stocked  cracker  Jar  of  East- 
ern states,  and  I  wish  I  could  make 
these,  too.  However,  I  have  never  seen 
a  recipe  for  plain  butter  crackers  in 
print.     Can  you  favor  me  with  one?" 

Crackers  are  an  alrnost  Indispensable 
article  of  diet,  especially  for  children 
and  for  Invalids,  but  tintil  one  Is  de- 
prived of  llit-m  th»ir  goodness  and 
utility  Is  not  appreciated. 

tJrocors  find  the  package  cracker  a 
paylns  proposition  and  it  Is  no  un- 
common thins  to  havf  a  varbty  of 
thirty  or  forty  kinds  to  <  hoose  from 
In  a  well-stocked  store.  This  Is  Just 
th©  reason  It  will  pay  the  housewife 
to  make  her  own. 

If  one  will  first  make  the  plain  but- 
ter cracker  mentioned  in  the  letter 
quoted,  -all  the  kinks  and  turns  In  the 
cracker  line  will  be  stralRhtened  out 
for  you.  This  recipe  Is  the  base  of 
oftmeal  s^rlsjjs,  bisci'it  thins,  sweet 
wafers  or  chocolate  nibbles.  You 
Klmply  make  the  plain  cracker  and 
choose  how  it  shall  be  spiced,  sweet- 
ened or   flavored. 

Sift  two  and  a  half  cups  of  flour, 
with  a  little  salt  and  two  teaspoons 
of    baking    powder,    Into    a    bowl,    then 


work  In  one-fourtll  »f^  a  cup  of,  butter 
or  other  shortening^  and  a  tablespoon 
of  sttgar.  Arfd  milk  or  water  to  make 
a  soft  dou«h  and  roll  out  less  than 
an  eichth  of  an  ineli  thick  on  a  well- 
floured  bo*»rd.  Stamp  out  with  a 
small  cutter  and  arrange  on  cookie 
shoetfl.      Bake    until   crisp    and    brown. 

Oraham  nieul  Is  used  for  the 
graham  wafers  and  brown  augar  gives 
these  crackers  a  better  flavor  man 
the    white. 

Oatmeal  cHsps  are  wholesome 
crackers;  they  are  made  with  four 
tablespoons  of  melted  butter,  one  cup 
of  cold,  cooked  oatmeal,  four  table- 
spoons of  browned  sugar,  one-half  cup 
of  cold  milk.  Add  flour  to  make  a 
dough  that  will  roll  out  thin,  mark 
It  In  squares  and  bake  In  moderate 
oven. 

Qneatlona    anil    AiiNtven. 

In  rc'ipes  published  In  Efficient 
Housekeeping  I  frequently  »ee  other 
ehortening  agents  than  lard  or  but- 
ter referred  to.  Will  yoti  please  name 
some  reliable  ones?— Mrs.  Dean. 

Rf.plj —When  a  recipe  calls  for 
"lard  or  butter  or  other  shortening," 
vou  may  feel  free  to  use  a  mixture 
of  lard  and  butter  or  beef  dHpplng. 
Olive  oil  Is  often  used,  but  It  is  ex- 
pensive and  not  Uked  by  every  cook. 
So  particular  brards  of  copklng 
materials  are  recommendcli  In  this 
department,  as  all  well-advertised 
Kood.s  have  merit.  The  Utpavtment 
of  agriculture  urg>.s  a  widwr  use  of 
cotton  seed  oil  In  cookery.  This  oil 
gives  splendid  results  In  frying  and 
baking  and  has  no  pronounced  flavor. 
Its  greatest  advantage  la  Its  low 
price. 

(Prot^-UU  by  Adam  ^■»»^p•p«'r  Swtlw. ) 


JOHN  KONECZNY. 

John  Koneczny,  tcn-r.  .""^  v,^'"^^V"« 
Drummond.  baritone  ^'.^},\.^^.,  'I?!l 
soloists      for      "The      ^^rucif^ctir-n  by 

Stalner.  which  will  be  given  Pu'^^day 
afternoon.  April  16.  at  Trimty  cathe- 
dral. There  will  be  a  chorus  cf  forty- 
flve  voices.  The  oigan  prelude  v  iH 
given  at  4:46  o'clock  and  the  ».aniata 
will  begin  at  B  o'clock. 


be 


her  engagement 
this  city. 


to  Willis  Churchill  ot 


—Photo  by  J.  D.  ToIcS 

WALLY  HEYMAR  GEORGE. 


rvihston,  111. 


.lohnson. 
Shursen, 
Dysen, 
Olsen. 

Mrs.    F.    Peter- 
avenue     west 


Wagner, 
Pyron  Wagner. 
Florence  Wagner, 
Dally    Wagner. 
.Tames   Rlackwood 
Emily  Lanigan, 


Kmily     Matthews, 
Mackey, 
I.eona  Toben. 
Catherine        Ken- 
ney. 


F.  Wagner. 

«      « 

John  Eva.  son  of  Mr.   and  Mrs 
Kva    of    Hunters    l*n>k    '^^"s    »'"*^*    ^"    " 
few    of     his    .«;mall     friends 
noon    in    honor    of 
The  afternoon  was 
decorations     being     carried 
Eafttr    rabbits    and    other 

VtTS.  ^  ,.  I 

«         «         >»  I 

Mr«  Fred  Sjoselius  was  pleasantly  j 
•virprised  Tuesday  afternoon  by  n  num-  ; 
ber  of  her  friends.  The  afternoon  was  ! 
spent    with    five    hundred    and    music.  I 


this  nfter- 
his  sixth  birthday, 
spent  In  games,  the 
out     with 

Kaster    fa- 


club  informally,  Thursday  night.  Those 
present  were: 
Misses — 

Mary    Monoghan, 

Mary  Quinn, 

Irene    'Jratto, 

Agnes   Protherton 

Oenevive  McHale. 
«       « 

A  meeting  of  the  ciayety  club  was 
held  Thursday  night  at  the  home  of 
Miss  Alice  Dunn,  629  South  Seventy- 
first  avenue  w^»8t.  Covers  were  laid 
for  twelve  and  the  evening  was  passed 
In  games  and  music.  I'lans  were  made 
for  an  old-fashioned  part.v  which  will 
be  held  atthe  home  of  Miss  Dorothy 
Mackey  in  the  near  future.  Tho."5e 
present  were: 
Misses — 

Dorothy    Mackey, 

Pettle      Chrlsten- 
sen, 

Alice  Dunn, 

Helen   WInness. 

Madeline    Murray, 
*       * 

Rev.  and  Mrs.  W.  KIssin  of  1031  i:ast 
Second  street,  who  will  leave  next 
month  for  St.  Paul  where  they  will 
make  their  home,  were  given  a  fare- 
well surprise  party  Wednesday  night 
at  their  re.*)iclence.  Tliey  were  present- 
ed with  a  chest  of  silverware  from  the 
guests,  who  wtre: 
Messrs.  and  Mesdame." — 

Louis  Cohen.  M.  Shenowskv 

I..oiii«  Shenowsky.     N'at  lian  S.  <Jarber, 
Maurice   Cohen,  M.   Rose, 


JESUS  BEFORE  PILATE 

Sermon  by  R.   Edward  Sayles 
FIRST  BAPTIST  CHI  RCH 

Cor.  E.  First  St.  and  Ninth  Ave. 
Suiulny  NiKlU  at  8. 

A  Cordial  Welcome. 


plr»Jt   and   white 
roses  as  a   cen- 


1  dining   room    being   In 

with  a  basket  of  pink 
I  terplece. 

I  Miss  Nora  Otterson  sang  "O  Promise 
I  Me"  preceding  the  ceremony,  following 
I  with  "I  Love  You  Truly  *  afterward, 
:  while  the  trio  gave  several  selections 
;  during  the  evening,  and  Miss  Edith 
;  Hallgren    and    Arthur    Peawson    gave    a 

group  of  violin  duets.     A  wedding  sup- 


The  following  program  will  be  given 
at  the  annual  concert  of  the  Duluth 
Philathea  union,  which  will  take  place 
at  8  o'clock  next  Friday  night  at  the 
First  Presbyterian  church: 
I'iano  solo — 

(a)  Allegro    (from   sonata   op.   B) . . 

Peethoven 

(b)  Spinning   song    Puigmuller 

Loiiis    Roos    Gonibcrg. 
Group  of   dialect   readings — 

(a)  Swedish   

(b)  Scotch    •• 

(c)  Italian     

(d)  Child    Impersonations    

Agnes   Mae    Johnson    Specht. 

Vc-cal — 

"Der    Wanderer"     Shubert 

"Vergebliches    Stauchen"    Prahms 

Lucille   Rrown    Duxbury. 

Violin —  _   .  ,  ,  , 

(a )  Ronxance    Rehf eld 

(b)  "To    My    Homeland"    (Hungar- 

ian)        Hauser 

Wally  Hey  mar  C.eorge. 
Reading— "The    Man    With    One    Tal- 
ent"   . Richard   Harding   Davis 


East  End. 


Ring    Payne. 
Myrle  Nelson, 
Mary   «;ottwald, 
SIgne  Winberg, 
Ada  Shanks, 
cJrace  Seymour. 


■MaMii 


.lulius  Pel  nstien 

Jamfs    ('harle.s 
Lavick, 

K.   Sanders. 

•Saul  Sanders. 
M«  sdamts — 

A.  Cook. 
Misses — - 

Ksther  Sanders, 
Messrs. — 

C.  Lavick. 

H.  Cassmere. 

* 

The  "B.  T.  W." 
farewell    spread 
i  rooms.  Thursday 


A 

M. 

M 

P. 

L. 


Siixsonoff, 

Caplow, 

Pollnsky, 

<:allop, 

I'olinsky. 


"TT    ~ar 


See  Yourself  As  You  Should  Look 

With  a  clear,  soft,  pearly^ 
white  app€arancC"Thc  Perfect 
Complexion.  It  is  within  your 
immediate  reach.  Do  not  think 
it  is  neccessary  to  have  perfect 
features  to  be  beautiful.  A 
charming  appearance  is 
beauty's  greatest  grace. 

Gouraud't 

Oriental  Cream 

win  rcn(der  this  pleasing 
appearance  to  your  skin.  For 
*  nearly  three-quarters  of  a 
century  ladies  of  society  all 
over  the  world  have  found 
it  to  be  the  supreme  liquid  face 
powder.  Refreshing  and 
healing.  Non-greasy.  Its  use 
cannot  be  ,detected.  Secure 
your  bottle  tO'day. 


Eva  Cohen. 
Ben  Sanders. 

club  entertained  at  a 
at  the  Patrick  dub- 
night  in  honor  of  Miss 
Agnes  Doyle.  The  rooms  were  dec- 
orate<l  with  the  dub  colors.  Covers 
were  laid  for  twelve. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  O.  M.  Johnson.  4721 
Robinsott  street,  entertained  Sunday- 
afternoon  to  celebiate  the  first  birth- 
day anniversary  of  their  twins,  Ada- 
line  and  Kvelyn.  John  Downes  acted 
as  the  official  entertainer  for  the  aft- 
ernoon and  ho  provided  a  program  that 
included  vaudeville,  music  and  other 
amusements.  Twenty  guests  were  In 
attendance. 

*       «       * 

Mrs.  Percy  Anneke's  circle  of  the  R-l 
Cross  will  meet  Monday  at  the  L^ni- 
tarlan    church   at    2:30   as   usual. 

A  large  number  attended  the  Shrine 
partv  that  was  given  last  night  at  the 
Masonic  temple.  A  vaudeville  per- 
formance and  dancing  were  features 
of  the   entertainment. 


at  the  Young  Women's  Christian  asso- 
ciation at  4:30  o'clock  tomorrow  after- 
noon. Dr.  W.  W.  I.,awrence  will  be 
the  speaker  of  the  afternoon.  During 
the  social  hour,  which  will  follow 
vespers,  Miss  Bergman  will  sing  and 
Miss  Lucille  Shook  will  give  some 
readings.  These  meetings  are  for  the 
yt>ung  women  of  the  dty  and  a  spe- 
cial Invitation  to  attend  Is  extended 
to    strangers. 

Weddings  and 

Engagements 

A  pretty  home  wedding  took  place 
Thursday  evening  at  the  residence  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  N.  Nelson,  4729  \\  est 
Sixth  street,  when  their  daughter.  Min- 
nie Amelia  Nelson,  became  the  bride  of 
Carl  A.  Hallgren.  ^   .      .^ 

The  ceremony  was  performed  In  the 
presence  of  fifty  guests  by  Rev.  Swan- 
ey  Nelson,  pastor  of  the  First  Swedish 
Baptist  church. 

The  bride  and  her  attendants.  Miss 
Jennie  Nelson,  Miss  Esther  Nelson  and 
Miss  Mabel  Hallgren.  followed  by  little 
Miss  Pernice  Hallgren.  tJie  flower  girl, 
entered  to  the  strains  of  the  Mendel.s- 
sohn  wedding  march  played  by  a  trio 
composed  of  Erling  Sodahl.  Herbert 
Miska,  violinists,  and  Miss  Adel  Sodahl, 

The  bridegroom's  brother,  Atiihew 
Hallgren.  was  best  man,  Ben  Hallgren 
and  Arthur  Nelson  being  ushers. 

The  bride's  gown  was  of  white  satin 
made  with  a  court  train  hung  from  the 
shoulders,  her  veil  of  tulle  being 
caught  with  a  band  of  pearls.  She  car- 
ried a  shower  bouquet  of  Bride  roses 
and  lilies  of  the  valley.  The  maid  of 
honor.  Miss  Jennie  Nelson,  was  gowned 
in  yellow  taffeta  trimmed  with  Pin«. 
and  carried  pale  pink  roses.  Mlas 
■  Esther  Nelson  and  Miss  Mabel  Hall- 
gren wore  changeable  yellow  and  pink 
taffeta  gowns  and  carried  pale  pink 
roses.  In  the  living  room,  green  and 
white     were     used     In     decorating,     the 


Agnes   Mae    Johnson    Specht. 

Piano    solo — "The    Chase  ".   Rheinberger 

Louis    Roos    "Jomberg. 

"What  the  Chimney  Sang".  .iJriswold 

"Snowflflkcs"    -jLowen 

"Wind  Song  '    Rogers 

"That's   the  World   in  June    ...t-pross 
leucine    Prown    Duxbury. 
Violin— Three  dance.e — 

(a)  Minuet    Ranzato 

(b)  Rondlno     ...     Pec thoven-Krusler 

(c)  Polish   dance    (Obertass)    .. 

Viieniawskl 

iirs.  beVrge.'  now  of  Chicago  was 
prominent  in  musical  circles  during 
I  her  residence  in  Duluth.  She  was 
I  born  In  Warsaw.  Poland,  of  a  natural- 
Iv  musical  family  ""«i  '^^""^  inherited 
talent  was  fostered  under  the  guidance 
of  such  eminent  teachers  as  Lmile 
Sauret   and   Hugo   Herman. 

Lucille  Prown  Duxbury,  soprano,  is 
a  recent  addition  to  Duluth  muslcnl 
circle*.  Agnes  Mae  Johnson  Specht  is 
well  known  as  a  reader.  Master  Louis 
Roos  Oomberg  will  give  the  only  piano 
numbers  on  the  program. 


Mr. 
East 
from 


Bed  Time  Tales 

By  Clara  Ingram  Judson 


Dickey  Bird's  Latest  Prank. 

F  course  you  irnnembcl'  Dic- 
key, the  pretty  little  yellow 
and  black  canary  who  fives 
In  a  cage  by  the  dining-room 
window.^  !What  do  you  sup- 
pose h»  did  the  other  day? 
His  little  mistress,  Mary, 
fixed  ur  his  cage  all  so  nice  and  clean 
and  gave  him  his  fresh  seed  and 
water.  Then,  as  a  special  treat,  »he 
put  a  piece  of  hard-boiled  egg,  mostly 
yellow,    In   the    bottom    of   his  cagp. 

Oh,  but  Dickey  was  happy!  How 
he  did  eat  that  egg! 

He  paid  no  attention  to  his  ^teed. 
he  didn't  even  look  toward  his  wat-r 
— he  Just  age  egg. 

"You  should  see  Dickey  eat  that 
egg."  called  Mary  to  her  mother.  "I 
think  tv  the  time  1  conic  home  from 
school    he   wii:    have    It   all   eaten    up'.'' 

Mother  laughed,  and  Mary  ran  off 
to  school  and  Dickey— went  on  rat- 
ing. 

When  Marv  came  home  that  noon, 
she  went  straight  to  Dickey's  c:ige  to 
see  if  the  egg  was  all  gone.  And  sure 
enough,  it  was!  Not  a- speck  of  egg 
was  to  be  seen! 

"Mother!"  called 
"Dickey  did  eat  all 
every   bit!" 

"Nonh-ense,    Mary!" 
"that    was    nearly    a 
egg!      Dickey    couldn 
In    one    morning    if    he    tried' 
be  over   In  one  corner  of   the 


per    and 
mony. 
Mr. 

home 
April 


reception 

Hallgren 


followed    the    cere- 


wlU    be    at 
First  street,   after 


Mr 
West 


and    Mrs. 
at   2201    West 

16. 

•       •       • 

and    Mrs.    Martin   Wilson 
Third    street    announce 


gageinent     of    their     daxjghter. 
Elvira,   to  Wllliftm  H.  V  endlandt. 


place 


In 


of   1202 

the    en- 

Hattie 

The 

May. 


and  Mrs.  George  A.  French.   .4.5 
First    street,    returned    yesterday 
a   six    weeks'    trip    in    tne    South. 
»      •       « 

Mrs.  Renwlck  B.  Knox  and  d.\ugh- 
tcr  Margaret,  returned  this  morning 
from  I'asadcna,   w  ncrc  they  have  fpent 

the    winter. 

•  *       * 

Mr  and  Mrs  John  F.  McCarihy  and 
family,  1116  i:aft  First  Ptjer^t.  i  e - 
turned  vesterday  from  California, 
where    thVy     have    been    spe'.id:ng    the 

winter. 

•  *       • 

Mr.    and    Mrs.    Henry    Xolte    ari 
pected      h«'me      Wednesday      frc'r.'. 
South  and  East,   wh(r«    tncy  have  been 
for    several    weeks. 

•  ♦      * 

Mr-^.  Edward  Maclntyre  of  Rutland, 
Vt  ts  the  giiesi  of  her  si.ster,  Mrs. 
Frederick    D.    Uailow.    2701    East    Su- 

perior    stre<.t. 

«       *       « 

Miss  Hulda  Salter  of  Rutland,  Vt., 
Is  the  guest  of  Mrs.  David  Druininond, 
South    Twenty -first 


ex- 

iha 


east. 


wedding  will  take 

MM.  John  Miller.  -2121  K«st  Tl»lrd 
street,  has  announced  the  engagement 
of  her  daughter,  Adelaide,  to  T^hn 
Monaghan,  Jr.  The  marriage  will  take 
place  April  24.   ^       ^       ^ 

Mrs.  L.  A.  Cox  of  1713  West  First 
street  has  announced  the  eng^agement 
of  her  daughter.  Sidney  Myrtle  to  Ed- 
win Louis  Hlnchliff  of  Virginia.  The 
wedding  will  take  place  In  May. 
•       •      • 

The  marriage  of  Miss  Lucille 
Slchmldt,  daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  I  .  c. 
Schmidt  4  402  Mcculloch  street,  and 
Julian  Ritchie  took  place  Friday  after- 


noon before  members  of  the  family  and 
a  few  Intimate  friends.  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Ritchie  will  oe  at  home  after  June  1  at 
632  Tenth  avenue  east.* 

*      ♦  '   ♦ 

Mr  and  Mrs  W.  Daneiko  of  721  East 
Third  street  have  made  announcement 
of  the  engagement  of  thetr  daughter. 
Sarah    A.  Damiko.^to  Lyl<;  i:>reck.         r 

'»»♦.. 

Miss  Juar.ita  Rittniari.  Vho  enit  r- 
tained  a  few  friends  last  night  In  the 
clubroom  of  the  Y.  W.  C.  A.,  announced 


avenue 
•       • 

Mrs  Bernard  Silbersteln  and  Miss 
El=1e  Sllbersteln  returned  this  'Viorn- 
Ing  from  Nfw  York,  where  th«  y  hav» 
been  spending  the  winter. 
•  •  • 
Mrs.  Rufus  H.  Draper  and  chiidr»n 
have  left  Lea  Breeze,  Fla.,  and  are 
now    in   Washington.   D.   C. 


Francis  Sullivan, 
street,  i«-turued  thi 
(ghori    trip  lo  Chlcagc 


New  Spring  Millinery 

The  women  of  Duhuh  are  cordially 
invited  to  call  and  see  our  lovely 
assemblage  of  Spring  Millinery. 

MRS.  MELVILLE 

118  WEST  FOl  RTII   STREET. 


t-dwaid 
flay     men) 
trip. 


*Slf<jif  stein 
inf*    from 


1028     East     First 
morning    from    a 

« 

returred    jcFier- 
R    short     Eastern 


Mrs.   George   P.   Ftiliman    of 

Superior    street 'will     l»a\e 

tonight     for     a     ffW 


Women's 


Federated  Clubs 

Will  Meet  in  Border  City 


Y.  W.  C.  A.  Notes. 

The  Philathea  classes  of  the  First 
Methodist  and  the  Baptist  churches 
will   have   charge  of  the   vesper  service 


LET  the  Easter  card 
carry  the  message 
that  lends  the  personal 
touch  of  friendship— 
your  photograph. 


^ 


Mary      excitedly. 
hl»    efeg!     He   ate 

Jaughed    mother: 

whole   yellow    of 

t    eat    that    much 

It    must 

cage." 

Put  it  isn't  mother,"  insisted  Mary. 
"Do  come  and  see!"  So  mother  went 
and  Inspected  the  cage.  Sure  e-nough. 
there  was  not  a  bit  of  egg  to  be  seen 
—not    a    bit!  „  .,.        .      , 

"Well  I  guess  he  has.  mother  had 
to  admi't!  "but  I'm  afraid  he  will  be 
sick    for   his   greediness." 

But  Dickey  wasn't  sick.  He  sang 
happilv  all  afternoon  and  seemed 
perfectly  satisfied  with  life  in  every 
particular.  . 

The  next  morning  Mary  dldn  t  nx 
Dickey's  cage  till  after  she  had  had 
her  own  breakfast.  And  when  she  did. 
sMe  was  eiuite  surprised  to  find  a 
nice  big  piece  of  egg  in  the  center  of 
t  li f^   ca sre 

"Why.  mother.  "  she  called.  "Did  you 
give      Dickey      some      more      egg 
morning?     1   thought    he   had   so 
yesterday  he  had  better  not   have  any 
more    for    a    week." 


of  the  I  among  the  speakers  Mr.<=.  Margaret 
Huntington  Evans,  a  pioneer  in  <  lub 
work  and  the  first  one  to  hold  the  office 
of  president  of  the  Minnesota  Federa- 
tion of  Women's  clubs.  Others  who 
will  be  on  the  program  are  Mrs.  \\  .  T. 
Coe  of  Wayzata,  state  president,  and 
Miss  Elizabeth  Rowe  of  the  University 

of  Minnesota.  . ,      .    ^, 

Mrs     F     O.    Nelson,    president    of 

International    Falls    Civic    league. 

tironnrfltions    and  all  i  appointed    the    following 
preparations,  ana       I  ^rtpp^      committees:        Hospitality      and 

transportation.  Mrs.  C.  B.  Kinney:  in- 
;  formation  and  decoration,  Mrs.  C.  W. 
•Speelman;  mu.-lc,  Mrs.  «.  F.  Mvinner- 
!  ton;  amusements.  Mrs.  Franz  Jevne; 
i  reception.  Mr.<-.  Frank  Carrier;  refresh 
'  ments,  Mrs.  Will  Zleman;  publicity 
i  nrlnting  Mrs.  J.  H.  Brown;  house 
1  correspondence.  Mrs.  Charles  Engbioom 


The  Eighth  district  convention 
Minnesota       Federation       of      Women's 
dubs     which   will   be   held   at    Interna- 
tional Falls  May  2  and  3.  will  'la^tJ^^t 

dlsVinction  of  being  }^"^^  ,^^,l  ^''^'^^S^t 
north  of  anv  convention  of  the  Minne- 
sota federation.  The  delegates  will  be 
taken  abroad.  Into  Canada,  where  they 
will  be  entertained 
The  International 
making  elaborate  . 

delegates    and    visitors    ^"i    ^e    enter 
tnlned  by  the  civic  league  of^that  to\\n. 
Manv     rural     women     of     Koochiching 
ccuintv  are  expected  at  the  convention 
Mr     Swain    of    the    state    'educational 
department,   rural  school  •'O'nn^'s^'^"^' • 
will  speak.     The  district  president,  Mrs 
Peter  Olesen   of  Cloquet.    considers   the 
Eighth   district   very 


Mr.   and 
1713    East 
for     Minneapolis 
days'    visit. 

*  *       * 

Mrs.  Henry  Abraham  and  dauchter 
of  Virginia  have  returned  from  PatKH- 
dena  and  ar*'  tlie  guests  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  L.   J.    Selig.    ISIO   Jefferson   street. 

•  *       * 

Mrs.  Wilfred  Harris  of  MIW.t. ukee, 
who  Is  visiting  iier  sister.  Mrs.  Iheo- 
vlore  'Lnrris  of  Lakeside.  w.U  Iravo 
tomorrow  for  Tftcoma.  Wash.,  where 
she  will  sjund  the  summer  with  her 
sister,    Mrs.    Piclvord   Crosby. 

Harbison     and     Mis* 

South       Ninct'-enth 

Wednsday   f<ir   a    two 

trip.      Mrs.    Harbison 

biennial     meeting     of 

ef     Women's 

May    r.s    the 


Mrs. 
Helen 

Hvenu' 


* 

John     W. 

Harbison. 

east,   left 
months'    Eastern 
will    attend     the 
the     t^eneral     Federation 
dubs     in     New     York     in 


lub. 


for    a 
Falls 


short    time, 
women     are 


the 

has 

chairmen    of 


and 
and 


fortunate  to  have 


this 
much 


Peggy  Peabody's  Observations 

Neigborhood  Friendships 


FREE 


iinil 


to   rorrr  i oft   of   uiul'iini 
wra|)plng. 


Uioroughly  •■\fuia  »1>»  "l*'"  "' 
bH  (liut.  dirt  umi  pol«"">"» 
iB.ii.r.  1<V!»1  In  tb«  trfBt- 
roait     of     all     »Kln     trwhlw. 


Ftrd  T. 


Repkins  &  Soi,  Props. 
New  YorK  City 


I  wonder  if  the  neighborly  feeling 
and  the  neighborly  Interests  are  not 
dying  out  in  a  very  apparent  degree  in 
our  towns  and  villages  where  there  is 
a  chance   for  friendly   intercourse.   Just 

as  It  has  absolute- 
ly disappeared  from 
e>ur  cities,  and  if 
the  residents  in 
town  and  village 
are  not  losing 
something  thereby 
that  made  life 
more  worth  living? 
Observation  and 
personal  eXprrlrnco 
would  ■  seem  to 
prove  that  It  has, 
and  ■  that  although 
there  was  much  to 
be  desired  in  the 
neighborly  Inter- 
course Indulged  In 
by  the  heads  of  families,  "»*'th  all  It? 
disagreeable  features  It  was  preferable 
to  the  Indifference  that  typifies 
titude  of  hundreds  and 
families  In  the  suburbs 
around  and  ab9Ut. 

Probably  thousands  of  parents  have 
wished  for  a  lodge  in  8»>me  vast  wil- 
derness where  they  could  rear  their 
young  unmolested.  Little  people,  when 
I  was  small,  were  continually  getting 
tangled  with  the  children 
across   the   way,    with 


the  at- 
hundreds    of 
and      towns 


next  door  or 
the   result   that 


their  parents  were  Involved  In  a  neigh- 
borly quarrel   In  an  endeavor  to  prove 
that  their  children    were   In    the    right. 
However  these  disputes  and  quarrels 
seldom    amount    to      anything      serious. 
Only  occasionally  does  a  lasting  break 
occur  and  then   either  one  or  both  par- 
'  ties  to  the  trouble  are  of  small  caliber 
1  or    the    affront    Is    one    not    easily    for- 
I  given,  or  also,   for  some   reasoh,  justly 
1  deserved.     Most  of  them  are  forgotten 
before    they    have    time    to    ripen    Into 
lasting    unpleasantness    and    serve,    as 
I  one    woman    who      has     brought   up     a 
'large    family      of      children    laughingly 
i  expressed    it,    to    break    the    monotony 
4>f   existeHce. 

Rut  tf  the  new  order  of  things  in 
neighborhoods  does  put  an  end  to 
quarrels  and  to  fcurlous  pryings  into 
affairs  that  are  not  your  concern.  It" 
also  prohibits  many  nice  neighborly 
attentions  which  are  pleasant  to  offer 
and  receive.  It  gives  one  a  certain 
satisfaction  and  comfort  to  be  inquired 
after  by  one's  neighbors.  When  some 
one  dies  or  a  child  is  born  or  there 
is  even  some  slight"  sickness  in  t*e 
house,  there  Is  a  chance  for  neighbor- 
ly sympathy  or  neighborly  .service  and 
congratulations. 

There  are  many  cheerful  happenings 
that  nelghbers  may  have  a  hand  in  If 
only  they  are_  the  right  kind.  The 
question  Is  do^  the  disagreeable  fea- 
tures of  neighborly  Intercourse  out- 
weigh the  good.  The  decline  in  neigh- 
borhood friendships  would  lead  me  to 
k«lle\«  that  they  did. 


(gr  RUTH 


CANfERON 


"The 
The 


happiness  af- 
a  mind  repose, 


simplest     flowers 

sweet  are  stored 
smallest  thing  may 

ford; 
A  kindly  word  may  give    -    ^     ^  ,    ^ 

Wlhich  harshly  spoken  might  have  led 

to  blows.  ,  , 

Naught    is    so   small    but    it    may    good 

contain,  „ 

Afford   us  pleasure  or  award  us  pain. 


Not  Just  Enough 

with     honied 


seeing    that 
sit    together 
to  exchange 
a  while 
stolidly 


two    people    who    want    to 

are    separated,    will    offer 

seats.      But   only   once    in 

The  average   person   will   sit 

watching     the     person     beside 


he 
as 


nice 
the 
the 
hard. 


But  DIrkry  wann't  alek.  ll«  nang  hay. 
pily  all  Mftrrnoon  and  aeeaaeU  i^erfeet- 
\y  ■atUlted  with  Ufe  in  every  par- 
«t<»lar. ^ 

haven't 
do     you 


"No,"     replied      mother.'      "I 
given    him    anything-     Where 
suppose   he  grot   ttyit   •«&?"         ,     ,. 

And  then  both  Mofker  and  Mary 
6»*t  to  examining,  to  Wnd  out  about 
that  mysterious  .>gg.  And  what  do 
you  suppose  ^Jhcv'^ound? 

Thev  discovered  that  bright  little 
Dickev.  beln*  very  fond  of  egg.  and 
anxious  to  Jiang  onto  every  morsel. 
had  torn  up  thfe.  paper  at  the  edge  of 
his  cage  ard  had  hidden  his  precious 
egg  under  the  paper.  He  evidently 
planned  that  once  It  was  safely  hid- 
den h(  could  take  It  out  and  eat  It  as 
he     pleased!     Wasn't     that     clever     of 

Marv    was    so     pleased,     that     when 
she  cleaned  the  cag«,  «h»  was  careful 
to  put  back  every  speck  ot  egg  under 
the  paper.  Just  a«  she  f»>^nd  It. 
(Copjriclit^CUra  lofren  JtKlmi.) 


"Turn  to  your  left,  and  then  to  your 
right."    said    the    elevator    man    as    he 
brought  his  car  to  a  stop  with   a 
exactness     that     had     a     toiich     of 
artist    In    it,    "6nd   be    sure    to    give 
door  a  shake.     That   knob   turns 

^^'to  this   generous  batch   of  directions 

added  a   courteous  smile  and  1  felt 

If    I    had    received    good    measure, 

pressed  down  and  shaken  together  and 

'^"whaf  a  pleasant  feeling  it  does  give 
to  meet  with  »omeone  who  gives  more 
than  just  enough  to  cover  the  vaw  . 
it  Wan  Hamaii  Klndiliie*"',  ^ot  Bought- 
and-Pald-for    Coor*e»y. 
The    other    day    In    a    shop    I    had    a 
similar    experience.      1    was    trying 
two   gowns.      The    saleswoman 
ly    advised    me    to   buy 
was   less  expensive 
ed 

to    alter 
p£aranj>* 

.       ^^  —    s  a  v 

foirowing    the    policy    Imposed 


on 

strong- 

the   one    which 

and   then   suggest- 

a  simple  and  injr'  nlous  way  for  me 

and   great  v    improve   the   ap- 

of    the   ,r       n.      Of  course    the 

cynic    may    say    th.-it    she    was    8»nipl>: 

Ifmving    th-^    "'>'''"^'    imoosed    on    her 


on 
she   could   to 
1    know    bet- 


by    the   shop    In   dr).ng   all 

Dlease    a    customer.      But 

\lr         There      was      an      unmistakable 

flavor   of   human    kindliness  about    her 

nianner. 

And    as    I    left 

glowed    with    the    .,  „„ 

•*  ••     one    who    gives    more    than 

to  cover   the    law   always 


the    shop    my    heart 
warmth    which    con- 
tact   with 
juat   enough 
imparts  ^^^  Helpful  Coorteay. 

Once    la   a   while    in    a    car    or    train 
one  comes  acroas  the   person   who.   on 


him  exchange  glances  with  someone 
down  the  aisle  and  apparently  never 
think  of  an  exchange.  And  yet  that 
exchange  would  not  cause  him  any  in- 
convenience beside  the  momentary  one 
of    making    It. 

Why    Don't    We    Do    These    Things 
Oftenerf 

How  strange  that  such  courtesies 
are  not  offered  more  frequently,  when 
thev   cost    so    little    and    help    so    much. 

That  is  what  a  friend  of  mine  says: 
"These  little  things  don't  cost  any- 
thing and  they  help  make  the  world 
a  little  brighter.  Might  as  well  do 
them."  So  he  does,  and  the  world 
about  "^im  is  indeed  brighter  for  his 
presence.  ,  , 

To  give  a  little  more  than  just 
enough  to  cover  the  law.  a  little  moro 
courtesy,  a  little  more  service,  a  little 
more  friendliness — Its  not  a  half  bad 
Idea,   Is  it? 

With    -My    Letter    Frienda. 

Question — I  am  a  young  woman.  I 
have  been  compelled  by  my  parents 
to  marrv  an  old  man  whom  I  do  not 
love.  l"am  almost  a  nervous  wreck 
but  I  am  going  to  end  it  all  soon 
am  going  away  off  where  no  one  will 
know  me.  1  am  keeping  it  a  secret. 
I  am  going  on  the  stage  and  sing  In 
concerts.  I  have  been  saving  up  for 
some  time  to  carry  me  through.  That 
is  the  surprise  I  am  going  to  spring 
on  my  people.     Am  I  wrong? — Worried 

Answer — You  are  right  to  refuse  to 
live  as  a  wife  with  a  man  who  Is  so 
distasteful  to  you.  but  wrong  to  leave 
him  in  this  secret  way.  As  to  going 
on  the  stage  and  singing  In  concerts, 
has  It  occurred  to  you  that  such  occu- 
pations require  some  preparation 
that  such  preparation  is  very 
pensive? 

tPtot*ct*<l  by  A«S«BB  Nnrspspsr  8enl«.) 


alternate   of   the   Saturday 

•  •       • 

Miss  Bess  Shannon  of  New  York, 
foimerlv  of  Duluth.  is  the  gu.  st  of 
her  parents.  U' v.  W.  A.  Shannon  and 
Mrs.   Shannon.   o(    Minneapolis.   f<r    two 

weeks. 

«       «       « 

Mrs.  H.  H.  Ayeis  and  son  of  St, 
Paul  are  the  guests  of  Mrs.  Ayers' 
mother.  Mrs.   R.   E.  Moore  of   UH"!    East 

Ninth   street. 

»  »  * 
Miss  Catharine  Combes.  who  is 
teaching  in  the  Fnlversity  high  schoo* 
at  Madison,  will  .".rrlve  Wedn  sday  to 
he  the  guest  of  Mrs.  Theron  D.  Hawkes, 
210   North   .Sixte-  nth   avenue   east. 

•  •       • 

Kenneth  Barrows,  son  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  F.  L.  Barrows.  12  North  Xln#- 
t-enth  avenue  east,  .tnd  Rollin  Hawkes, 
«on  of  Mis  Theron  D.  Hawkes.  will  re- 
turn Wedn  sday  from  Madison.  Wis., 
where  thev  are  attending  the  univ»  i-- 
sitv.    to    spend    thrir   Easter   holidays. 

•  *       • 

Miss   Marie    Elston    will 
nesday    from    Madison, 
her    Easter   vai-ntion 
Mr.    and    Mrs.    C.    W. 

iieiior  street. 

•  * 

Misses  Helen  and 
are  attending  the  Univeisity  of  Michi- 
gan, will  arrive  from  Ann  Aibur  Sun- 
day morning  to  spend  Easter  vacation 
we"ek  with  their  parents.  Mr.  an,l  Mrs. 
Fwd    Baluss,    1931    Cireysolon    ri>e.d. 

•  •       ♦    •  » 
Mr    and   Mrs.   F.   O.   Wallen   and   two 

daughters.  725  East  Superior  street, 
will  leave  for  Chicago  this  evening  to 
visit  friends  and  relatives. 

•  •       • 
Mr     and    Mrs.    J.    R.    Mcliffert 

daughter.     e;ertrude.     2324     East     h 
street,    left    today    for    Lexington, 
later    visiting    different    points    m 

East. 

•  •      • 

.Tames 
Katt 


arrive    Wed- 
Wis..    to    vp»nd 
with    her   p.nents, 
Elston.    East    £u- 


Mary 


P.aluss.    who 


and 

'ifth 

Yr.. 

thd 


Mr.    anel 
daughter. 


Mrs. 
2323 


O.    Yivian    and 
Fourth      street. 


i 


GLASSES! 

A.   R.   BlKftl  1ST. 
Iteglatrred    Optometrlitt. 

EYES    TESTED. 
GLASSES  FITTED. 
Latest  scientific   methods — tw 
years  in   Duluth.    Telephot.e- 
Suite    201-202    Alworlh 


«•*■•" 


«  i«- 


and 
ex- 


LiWERSM 


Sent  everywhere  by 
THE  DULUTN  RORAL  CO. 


i"-^ 


"3     DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


t.1    <  W) 


•M 


F— • 


aT'J 


TH^DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


OCl! 


Iiave  retijrned  from  excelsior  Sprlngr*, 
^heri-    they   have  spent   the   last   three 

•  •      • 

Miss  Lillian  Shedd  of  Chicago,  who 
•vrna  on.-  of  the  bridesmaids  at  the  wed- 
ding of  Miss  Murlt'l  Prlndl"  and  Cor- 
nelius Ayer  Wood,  la  one  of  th«  mem- 
bers of  the  Junior  Leaguers  who  are 
Sorklng  under  the  direction  of  Donald 
acDonald  for  the  vaudeville  show  to 
be   given   April   26   at   the   Auditorium, 

Chicago. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  M.  Peyton,  the 
Misses  Martha  and  Alice  Peyton,  and 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Gilbert  Dlckerman,  are 
apenditiK  the  week  at  Santa  Barbara. 
hftviiit  motored  over  from  I'asadena. 

•  •       • 

Mr.   and   Mrs.    James   E.   CJranger   are 
spending    a    week    at    Hollywood,    Cal. 
»       •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  f'hauncey  E.  Hazen, 
1903  Kast  Superior  street,  are  the 
pajents  of  a  .^on,  Chauncny  E.  Hazen, 
Jr.,    VI  hi)    arrived    Thursday    morning. 

•  •       • 

Mrs.  Stephen  H.  Jones,  F:ast  Second 
iitreet.  left  Thursday  for  Chicago  and 
New  York  for  a  two  weeks'  trip. 

•  «      • 

Ebv  C.rldley,  who  has  been  in  the 
BOiith  fur  Hoviral  weeks,  will  be  an 
uaher  at  the  woddlng  of  Miss  Elolse 
Mabry  of  Tampa,  Fla.,  to  Taver  Bayly 
of  CI- irw-nter,  Fla.,  wlitch  will  take 
place  Saturday  of  this  week  at  Tampa. 

•  •       • 

Mr  and  Mrs.  Robert  Hockln  of 
Mar.iii'tte.  Mich.,  are  pa.=»«lng  the 
week  with  Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  J.  Hockln. 
630    North    Seventeenth    avenue    east. 

•  •       « 

Mis  L.  W.  Kllno,  1931  East  Fifth 
street,  will  spend  the  week-end  In 
Minneapolis. 

•  «       • 

Mr.  and  Mr^.  Albert  Abraham,  1601 
Ea.Mt  Superior  street,  have  returned 
fr.>m    the   East. 

•  «       « 

Mr.-«.  .Tohnson.  dean  of  Macalester 
colleKe.  anrl  Mrs.  Philips,  who  are  the 
Ifue.Hta  of  Mrs.  Frederick  Hates,  spunt 
Thur.s.lny  wlih  Mrs.  Ale.\utider  Milne 
of  the  normal  .school. 

•  «      * 

Mr  ;uul  Mrs.  George  O.  Barnum.  Jr., 
1401  Kast  S«'Cond  street,  returned  to- 
day from  a  short  trip  to  Chicago. 

•  •      • 

J.  L.  Washburn  returned  Thursday 
from  a  short  visit  with  his  family  at 
Tryon.   N.   C. 

•  *      * 

Mr.^.  Miller  MaoDougall  and  two  chil- 
dren. 1007  East  First  street,  left  yester- 
day for  a  visit  with  Mis.  MacDougall'a 
alster  and  brother-in-law,  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Walter  McCarthy  of  Minneapolis,  for- 
merly of  Duluth. 

•  •       * 

Dr.  .ind  Mrs.  J.  R.  Kuth.  422  Twelfth 
avonii'-  east,  are  the  parents  of  a 
daughter  who  arrived  Wednesday  at 
St.  Mnry's  hospital. 

•  «       « 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  William  Harrison  and 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Coryate  S.  Wilson  are 
regi.steied  at  the  Hotel  Tutwiler.  Bir- 
mingham. Ala. 

«       •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  T.  W.  Hoopes  of  2206 
WoodUmd  avenue  returned  Wednesday 
morning  from  a  Southern  trip  whieh  In- 
cluded St.  Augustine  and  New  Orleans. 

•  •      * 

Mids  Helen  Williams.  2601  East  Sec. 
ond  street.  Is  In  Chicago,  the  guest  of 
Mr.   and   Mrs.   Fredrick   W.   Perkins. 

«       •       • 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Cole  and  daughter.  Alice, 
21M)I  FCast  First  street,  returned  Wed- 
nesday morning  from  a  trip  to  Okla- 
homa  and   Missouri. 

•  •      * 

E.  W.  Bohannan  returned  Wednesday 
moriiing   from   a  shott   trip   to   Chicago. 

•  «       « 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  E,  H.  Smith.  2319  First 
alreet,  returned  W'^dnesday  morning 
from  a  visit  of  six  weeks  at  different 
points   In  California. 

•  •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Mlllen  of  Ver- 
milion   road    returned   Wednesday   from 

Niles,    Mich. 

•  •       * 

Miss  Marjorie  Shlpherd.  who  has 
been  in  the  East  the  last  few  weeka 
is    now    visiting    In    St.    Louis,    Mo. 

«       •      « 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Sewell  Ford  of  New 
York  and  Clearwater,  Fla..  entertained 
at    a    tea    last    Friday    at    their    winter 

fiome    in    Clearwater.      Among    the    Du- 
uth  guests  were:  Mrs.  George  D.  Swift, 


Duluth  Musician  Is  Chairman 

of  Department  or  State  Board 


"Miimesota  Tenor"  WiU 
t  program  Here  Tue 

Walter     Leon,     formerly     of     Dxiluth, 
but    notr  of  »MlnneapollB,    will    return 


to  tbts 
Tuesda 
church. 

Mr. 
tenor/' 
with  th 
tinnt. 
Stern    e 
study 
This    w 


to    give    *  '  Bong    recital 
It  lit  the  First  Methodist 


Will  Give  Story  Hours 
For  Endowment  Fund 


f^mrmfrm!!^^- 


Isabel  Pearson  Fuller  has  been  noti- 
fied that  Harry  Phillips  of  Mlnneapolta, 
president  of  the  Minnesota  Music  Teach- 
ers' association  has  appointed  her 
chairman  of  the  department  of  history 
of  music  and  theory  on  the  state  board 
of  examiners  for  1916.  The  other  mem- 
bers of  this  department  are  Emily 
Grace  Kay  and  G.  H.  Thornton,  both 
of  St.   Paul. 

The  examiners  of  the  organ  depart- 
ment are  <>.  A.  Thornton  of  St.  Paal, 
chairman,  and  Stanley  Aver>'  of  Mlnne. 
apolis  and  Mrs.  Fuller.  Gustav  Flaa- 
ten  of  Duluth  la  chairman  of  the  vio- 
lin department;  James  Lang  of  Mlnne. 
apolis,  piano,  and  Agnes  M.  Fryberger 
of  Minneapolis,  voice  and  public  school 
music. 

This  board  of  capable  examiners  l-v 
at  work  on  questions  to  be  given  to 
the  candidates  throughout  the  state. 
Examinations  will  be  held  at  Mlnne- 
anolls.  St.  Paul,  Duluth.  Winona  and 
Albert  I.,ea,  May  24  and  26.  Every  ap- 
plicant will  take  the  same  examina- 
tion in  history  of  music  and  theory, 
together  with  hla  own  speoialty.  voloe, 
piano,  organ,  violin  or  public  school 
music. 

The  1916  convention  of  the  Min- 
nesota Music  Teachers'  association  Will 
be  held  at  Owatonna  June  27.  28  and  £9. 


Miss  Frances  Swift,  Mrs.  W.  D.  Bailey 
and  daughter,  Helen,  Miss  Judith  Hart- 
ley  and    Eby   Grldley. 

•  •      * 

Mrs.  C.  Amundson,  who  has  been  oc- 
cupying the  residence  of  Henry  Abra- 
httmson.  2422  East  Third  street  this 
winter,  will  leave  Monday  for  her  home 
in  St.   Peter,  Minn. 

•  •      * 

Mrs.  Martin  W.  Tepp.  1327   East  Sec- 
ond   street.    Teft    Tuesday    night    for    a 
month's  visit  In  Florida. 
«      •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  W.  Hartman,  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  J.  B.  Cotton,  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
A.  C.  Ilubbell  Mr.  and  Mrs*.  C.  H.  Mun- 
ger,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  M.  Marshall  made 
up  a  party  that  motored  from  Pasa- 
dena  to  Santa   Barbara  recently. 

•  «       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  George  G.  Barnum, 
2211  East  Third  street,  returned  Wed- 
nesday from  Hot  Springs.  Ark.,  where 
they  have  spent  the  last  two  weeks. 
«  •  • 
Dr.  and  Mrs.  C.  E.  Lum.  1103  EaUt 
First  street,  have  returned  from  Cali- 
fornia, where  they  have  spent  the 
last    sl.x    weeks. 

•  *       • 

Whitney  Wall.  Jr..  returned  Wed- 
nesday morning  from  New  Orleans, 
where  he  attended  the  real  estate 
convention. 

«      *      * 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  W.  Hartman,  2400 
East  Superior  street,  are  expected 
home  today  or  tomorrow  from  Cali- 
fornia, where  they  have  spent  the  last 
few  weeks. 

•  •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  O.  O.  Brice  of  Eau 
Claire,  who  have  been  spending  a  few 
days  at  the  home  of  their  brother-ln- 
law,  R.  B.  Knox,  have  returned  to  Eau 
Claire. 

•  •       • 

Mrs.  Olln  W.  Rowo,  2324  Woodland 
avenue,  has  returned  from  a  trip  to 
Los    Angeles,    Cal. 

•  •       • 

Joseph     Henderson     of    Philadelphia, 
who  has  been   the  guest  of  his  cousin, 
Henry     Turrlsh,     the     last     week,    left 
v\  ednesday   night   for  the  West, 
«       •       • 
Mrs.    Fred    H.    Ralaky  and   daughter. 
l.lizabeth.     Last     Superior    atreet,     left 
\v  ednesday    night   for   Columbus.    Ohio. ! 
where     th»y     will     visit     Mrs.     Ralsky's 
sister,   Mrs.    R.   D.    Ewlng,   for  a   month 
or  six  weeks. 

•  ♦      ♦ 

Russell  Rapley.  706  V^  East  Fourth 
street,  left  Monday  night  for  Montana. 

•  »       * 

Mrs.  George  C.  Tyre  will  leave  the 
latter  part  of  the  month  for  Prince 
Rupert,  where  she  will  visit  her  daugh- 
ter.   Mrs.    De   Grey. 

•  •      • 

,.H''t^,'1**  ^'■^-  Sidney  A.  MoPhall. 
1626  Jefferson  street,  have  returned 
from  a  two  weeks'  stay  at  French  Lick 
Springs.   Ind. 

•  •      * 

Miss  Jane  O'.Velll  of  Montreal  will 
spend  this  month  here  visiting  her 
brothers,  J.  O.  O'N'elU,  820  Fourth  ave. 
nue  east,  and  D.  H.  O'Neill.  427 V-  East 
Sixth  street. 

•  *      « 

Mrs  F.  A.  Patrick  and  Miss  Isabelle 
Patrick  are  now  at  Daytona,  Fla..  en 
route    home. 

•  «       « 

Miss  Marion  McClure,  (>ft2  Eleventh 
avenue  east,  left  Monday  night  for  Chi- 
cago,   where   she    will    be   the    guest    of 


ISABEL  PEARSON   FULLER. 


Dr.  O.  J.  Urhelm  and  Mrs.  Urhelm  for  a 

month. 

•  «      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  George  A.  St.  Clair,  1128 
East  Superior  street,  have  returnwd 
from  a  two  months'  Western  trip, 
where  they  visited  their  daughter,  Mrs. 
Frank  G.  Walker  (Rachel  St.  Clair)  at 
Redlands.  Cal..  and  their  son.  Ralph, 
at  Ray.   Ariz. 

«      •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs..  H.  F.  Salyards.  2811 
East  Third  street,  have  returned  from 
a  trip  to  Hot  Springs.  Ark. 

•  •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Mark  Baldwin.  2331 
East  Fifth  street,  are  the  parents  of 
a  daughter,  who  arrived  March  30. 
and  has   been   named   Margaret. 

«      •      • 

Douglas  Walker  returned  Monday 
night  to  Andover,  Mass..  after  spending 
his  Easter  holidays  with  his  parents. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  W.  Walker,  zflt  East 

First  street. 

•  «      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Thomas  A.  Gall,  417 
Twenty-third  avenue  east,  returned 
Monday  from  a  two  weeks'  trip  to 
Ohio. 

•  *      • 

Mrs.  W.  C.  Sargent  has  returned 
from  Minneapolis,  where  she  has  been 
visiting  her  daughter  Roble,  who  Is  at- 
tending the  unlveralty. 

•  •       • 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  Lee,  426  Seventeenth 
avenue  east,  has  as  her  guests,  her 
mother.  Mrs.  Caroline  Sausoe  of  St. 
Paul,  .and  her  sister.  Mrs.  J.  J.  Ripp- 
nerger  of  Saginaw,  Mich. 

•  •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Daniel  Walto  of  -2610 
Ea/t  Superior  street  have  returned 
from  Texas,  where  they  have  been  for 
three  months.  They  were  at  San  An- 
tonio at  the  time  of  the  Mexican  at- 
tack on  Columbus,  and  witnessed  much 
of  the  excitement  caused  bv  that  event. 
Including  the  departure  of  the  United 
States  troops  Into  Mexico. 

Woodland  and 

Hunter's  Park 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Walter  D.  Newcomb, 
621  East  Third  street,  and  son,  Wal- 
ter D.  Newcomb,  Jr.,  of  Virginia,  have 
left  for  New  York  and  other  Eastern 
points  for  a  few  weeks'  visit. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Arthur  Hanford,  2019 
Woodland  avenue,  are  the  parents  of  a 
daughter,  who  arrived  Sunday  morning. 

•  *       • 

Robert  McGonagle  has  returned  to 
his  home,   9  Oxford  street,  from  Gary, 

Ind. 

•  •      • 

Mr  and  Mrs.  S.  E.  Matter  returned 
Thursday  to  their  home,  2132  Wood- 
land avenue,  from  Florida,  where  they 
have  passed  the  winter. 

•  •       • 

Victor  McKenrie  of  Minneapolis  has 
been  visiting  his  mother.  Mrs.  Murdo  S. 
McKenzle.  120  Oxford  street. 

•  «       * 

Mrs.  E.  G.  Bush  has  returned  to  her 


Interviewing  Shoe  Man  in  These 
Days  of  High  "Boots"  Discloses, 
Alas,  But  "Little  in  Common" 


ADELE   McCLARAN   LIGGETT, 

Adele  M<-Claran  Liggett  will  return 
to  Dulutli  to  give  two  story  hours  at 
the  Uex  theater  next  Saturday  morn- 
InR.  under  the  auspices  of  the  Duluth 
organizations  belonging  to  the  Minne- 
sota Federation  of  Women's  clubs.  The 
entertainment  will  be  given  for  the  ei^ 
dowment  fund  of  the  state  federation. 
The  Duluth  clubs  belonging  to  the  state 
federation  are  the  Mother.-^'  club  of 
Bryant  school.  Garden  Flower  society. 
Llnnaea  club,  Saturday  club  Twentieth 
Century  club  and  Woman's  Rotary  club. 

Mr.s.  LigKett  will  give  two  story 
hours,  one  from  10  to  11  o'clock  and 
the  other  from  11  o'clock  to  noon.  The 
programs  will  Include  selections  suited 
to  all  ages,  from  small  children  to 
iprown-ups  and  will  include  Arthurian 
atorles.  Kipling  tales.  Japanese  fairy 
tales    and    other    examples    of    the   best 

J  rose  and  poetry.  Mrs.  Liggett  has 
ad  a  successful  season  In  Chicago  and 
the  Twin  Cities,  where  her  stories  have 
captivated    adults    and    children. 


"OLD  MONK 

OLIVE  OIL 

HORLST  AND  BEST 


The  term  "high  shoes"  has  never 
been  more  truthfully  applied  In  ref- 
erence   to    fashion    than    this    year. 

Rumor  has  it  that  they  are  going  to 
be  even  higher,  but  unless  they^evolve 
Into  the  good  old-fashioned  rubber 
boot  It  Is  rather  hard  to  see  just  how. 
they  can  be  any  higher  without  chok- 
ing their  wearers  to  death  and  vir- 
tually killing  the  chivalry  of  the  poor 
men  who  are  supposed  to  pay  for 
them. 

An  int.rvlew  with  the  shoe  man 
lhe«e  days  Is  a  humiliating  exper- 
ience. You  realize  for  the  first  time, 
perhaps,  that  you  have  absolutely 
nothing  In  common,  and  when  he 
suavely,  almost  nonchalantly,  informs 
you  that  you  can  get  quite  a  nlct? 
pair  of  boots  (they're  called  "boots" 
as  soon  as  they  get  beyond  $10  or 
$15)  for  anywhere  from  |8  to  $20. 
your  Idea  of  laying  In  a  supply  of 
ivory-white,  battleship-gray,  azure- 
blue  or  olil-rose  shoes  fades  Into  In- 
nocuous desuetude,  along  with  your 
hope  of  building  a  house  this  year. 
Dae    Saving;    Claaae. 

One  thing  that  Is  encouraging, 
though.  Is  that  gray  dye  U  scarce, 
therefore  gray  shoes  are  going  to  bo 
hard  to  get.  No  one  knows  Just  how 
hard  they  would  have  been  to  get  Lf 
this  saving  clause  hadn't  been  Invent- 
ed. Now  you  can  safely  go  around 
In  your  shoddy  cracked  boots  all  sum- 
mer' if  needs  must,  with  the  splendid 
excuse  tliat  you  were  unable  to  sret 
any  battleship-gray  shoes  and  "really, 
don't  you  know,  they're  the  only  kind 
one  would  think  of  wearing."  Fash- 
Ion  says  shoes  are  8^  Inches  high. 
Fashion  prevaricates — tnoy  are  much 
higher — we  would  say  way  beyond 
reach    of    the    average    pocketbook. 

There  are  some  snappy  little,  or  big 
. — speaking  for  oneself  Is  embarrassing 
at  times — shoes  In  two-tone  effects 
such  as  two  shades  of  gray,  brown  and 
Ivory,  black  and  white,  yellow  and 
purple,  red  and  pink  or  any  of  those 
combinations  which  good  taste  de- 
mands. They  have  the  advantage  over 
all  comer.s  In  being  patent  colt,  hand 
turned,  french  heeled,  washable  topped, 
porcelain  lined,  reverse  geared  and.  In 
fact,  equipped  with  all  modern  con' 
venl'ences  excepting,  perhaps,  hot  and 
cold     running    water.      These    can    be 


purchased  by  the  wealthier  class  of 
people  at  almost  any  up-to-date  boot 
shop.  •  Others  will  either  have  to  steal 
them    or    go    without.      The    wholesale 

?irlce  of  colored  kids  has  advanced 
rom  21  to  48  cents  (maybe  there  was 
a  misunderstanding  and  It  should  be 
21  to  48  dollars)  per  foot,  and  the 
woman  with  economical  tendencies 
will  probably  find  it  cheaper  to  buy 
two  feet  at  wholesale  and  run  up  a 
pair  of  shoes  at  home  on  her  Ford 
or  whatever  kind  of  a  machine  she 
uses. 

OrlKlnal   Feat«re«. 

One  orlKlnal  feature  of  the  shoes 
this  year  Is  the  fact  that  they  will 
either  button  or  lace,  a  distinct  ad- 
vantage over  the  old  kind  with  side 
straps. 

Sport  shoes  can  be  had  In  white  and 
tan,  or  white  with  tan  trijnmlngs  and 
Ivgry  white  soles  and  heels.  One  might 
Imagine  these  would  be  less  expenst\'>* 
because  there  is  less  ot  them — but 
such  is  not  the  case,  especially  true 
of  one  self-playing  tennis  oxford 
which  comes  equipped  with  red  rub- 
ber soles,  tun  Russia  calf  saddle  and 
back  foxing.  Conslderlnpr  how  high 
saddles  are,  also  Russian  calf,  these 
are  a  bargain  at  |14.  It's  the  foxing 
that,  gets   you,    though. 

Some  very  recherche  riding  boots 
may  be  had  for  $22.  They  seem  to 
have  many  advantages,-  being  adver- 
tised with  "calf  skin  regulation  soft 
leg — right  and  left  calves  and  swag- 
ger out  top."  It  Is  seldom  one  has 
arty  use  for  both  the  rljfht  and  left 
simultaneously,  and  probably  only  an 
omission  of  the  printer  forgot  to  throw 
In  a  horse  with  this  booth. 
Eveniaic    Slippers. 

Evening  slippers  are  quite  encour- 
aging. The  buckles  may  be  had  for 
from  $1  to  $2.50.  Then  there  ar«n«pats — 
or  gaiters,  whichever  yoli  like  best — 
which  may  be  gotten  from  $1.60  up  to 
$3.60  per  pair.  A  suggestion  would 
be  that  with  a  nice  pair  of  white  spats 
at  $1.60  and  the  buckles  for  evening 
slippers  at  $1,  quite  a  reasonable  ana 
Jaunty  appearance  might  be  obtained 
at  a  fairly  moderate   price. 

It  might  also  be  suggested  that  If 
the  shoes  at  $10  and  $12  are  absolutely 
beyond  reach  of  the  average  pocke>t- 
book.  two  families  might  get  a  pair 
between  them,  or  else  just  get  the  one 
shoe  this  year,  hoping  to  get.  its  mate 
next  year'.     Suit  yourselves. 


called     the     **Mlnne8ota 

seven    years     in    study 

•joat  teachers  on  the  Con- 

y»ar8  were  spent  at  the 

atory    in    Berlin    In    the 

.:e.    piano    and    harmony. 

...^_  ^^.lowed    by    two    years    In 

Paris  undsr  5ean  de  Resake  and  his 
assistants.  Oscar  Saagle  and  Alfred 
Baehrena,  during:  which  time  he  was 
soloist  at  the  American  -  English 
church,  one  year  was  spent  In  Italy 
In  the  stady  of  ItalUn  roles  under 
the  well-»nown  teacher,  Sabatlnl. 
While  in  Italy  Mr.  Smith  made  his 
debut  as  "Ernesto"  In  "Don  pasquale." 
He  later  appear^  as  the  duke  In  "Rlg- 
oletto"  anff  as  "IMgardo"  In  "Lucia  de 
I  LaqimermoQr." 

I  Following  his  Italian  season  he 
toured  England  one  year  with  th© 
Moody  Manners  Opera  company,  ap- 
pearing In  the  leading  roles  of  such 
operas  as  "Faust,"  "Bohemlaji  (llrl, 
"Martha"  and  "Carmen."  The  con- 
ditions resulting  from  the  war  pre- 
vented hl«r«»ompletlng  a  three  years' 
contract    with    this    company. 

On  his  return  to  this  country  Mr. 
Leon  settled  In  Minneapolis.  He  has 
been  In  concert  two  seasons  and  has 
done  a  great  deal  of  work  with  the 
Thursday  Muslcale  of  Minneapolis.  He 
will  have  the  leading  role  in  "Romeo 
and  Jiillet."  which  will  be  given  In 
Minneapolis    this    month. 

Mr.  Leon  will  glvo  the  following 
program   Tuesday   night: 

(a)  "Where'er    You    Walk" Handel 

(b)  "I'm    the    Peddler" Gruenhlll 

(c)  "Tarantella    Napoletana" 

[ G.    Rossini 

II. 

(a)  Bergerettes    of    the    Eighteenth 

century    

Arranged  by  Weckerlln.  "Bergere 
Legere,"  "Jeune  Fillette."  "Ma- 
man"   and   "Dites-Mol." 

(b)  "Si  J'etals  Jardlnler".  .Chatnlnade 

(c)  Aria   from   "Romeo   and   Juliet" 
;.... Gounod 

III. 
(a)     "Sypr    Mlg    Hjaeme" Neupe-rt 


home.  2240  Princeton  avenue,  from 
Battle  Creek,  Mich.,  where  she  has  been 
for  two  tnontfts. 

Central  Hillside. 

Mrs.  O.  Rfttmaster.  who  has  been 
traveling  ttiroi^gh  the  south  with  her 
husband,.  Is  the  guest  of  her  mother. 
Mrs.    R.     A.     Kerr,     627     East     Fourth 

street. 

*  «      • 

M.  J.  Leheriz,  11  West  Fourth  street, 
left  Monday  fcight  for  a  three  weeks' 
visit  In  the  southern  part  of  the  state. 

*  •       • 

Miss  ftadle  Glngold.  828  East  Third 
street.  Is  visiting   in   Minneapolis. 

*  «      * 

Mrs.  William  Burdlck  of  Spooner. 
Wis..  Is  spending  a  few  weeks  with 
Mrs.    Frank   Schwelger      of      213      East 

Sixth  street, 

*  •       * 

Mrs.  Joseph  Brlstow  of  Twig.  Minn.. 
Is  speudUig  the  week-end  with  her 
daughter,    Mrs.    F.    Schwelger. 

*  «       « 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  E.  H.  Lower  have  re- 
turned from  Callfprnla  and  will  rem&ln 
at  the  Hdtol  St.  Louis  for  the  summer, 

*  «       * 

Georg;^  Backer.  309  East  Third  street, 
has  left  for  a  month's  visit  with  rela- 
tives ou  the  coast. 

«       •       • 

Mrs.  Alice  Warren.  St.  Regis  apart- 
ments, and  Mrs.  Emily  L.  Warren  of 
Des  Moines,  Iowa,  who  has  been  her 
guest  of  several  weeks,  left  "Sunday 
for  Des  Moines.  Mrs,  Alice  Warren  will 
return  in  about  two  weeks. 
«      *      «      ' 

Mrs.  L.  K.  Daugherty,  8tf'  "East 
Fourth  street,  has  gone  to  Detroit, 
Mich.,  where  she  will  be  the  guest 
of  her  sister,  Mrs.  E.  Jacques,  formerly 
of  this  city,  for  a  month.  ;■  ."■  . 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  C.  Brlghtralt  of 
Milwaukee,  former  resld^nt9  of  Du- 
luth, are  spending  a  week  at  the  Hol- 
land   hotel. 

*  •       * 

Mrs.  C.  Wilson  of  Fruit  Port.  Mich., 
who  has  been  visiting  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
J.  A.  Hampton  of  the  Brunswick 
apartments,  le^t  Wednesday  for  St.  Paul 
and   Rochestev. 

*  •       • 

A.  .T.  Rengel.  Brunswick  apartments. 
Is  passing  a  few  days  In  St.  Paul. 

*  •       * 

Mrs.  Edward  Murphy  and  little  son 
Russell  of  Fairmont.  Minn.,  are  visit- 
ing Mrs.  Murphy's  mother,  Mrs.  Mary 
C.  Smart  of  426  Sixth  avenue  east. 

*  •      * 

Mrs.  William  Splrnltz  of  Mankato, 
Minn.,  is  a  guest  at  the  bonne  of  Mrs. 
Hannah  Spornitz,  319  North  Forty-sec- 
ond avenue  west. 

*  *      * 

Miss  Marian  Wallace,  daughter  of 
Dr.  Jame^  Wallace,  for  several  years 
president  of  Macalester  college;  Miss 
Mildred  Peftbody,  organist  and  singer: 
Miss  Merrlman.  Miss  Dalllngham  and 
Miss  Hanson,  who  are  members  of  the 
Macalester  girls  glee  club  which  gave 
a  concert  h'Te  Tuesday  night,  were 
house  guests  of  Mrs.  u.  A.  Marvin,  123 
"West  TlUrd  street,  from  Tuesday  until 
last  evening,  when  they  left  for  Ham- 
line. 

*  *      • 

Miss  Bazle  Mclntyre,  915  East  Fourth 
street,  has  returned  from  a  three 
weeks'  Eastern  trip. 

*  •      « 

Mrs.  E.  N.  Bazille  of  St.  Paul,  wife 
of  Judge  BazlUe,  is  in  the  city,  a  guest 
at    the    Hotel    Alexandria    of    Mr.    and 


TOIFSE  YOUR 
FUHS  AT 

OliCII^AII'S 

— ^- — ^ — 


WALTER  LEON. 


(b)  "Im  Wunderschonen  Monat 
Mai"    Hammond 

(c)  "Gleb  mlr  deln  Herze".  .Herinann 

(d)  "They    Grey    Wolf" Burllegh 

(e)  "I  Hear  You  Calling  Me"  (by 
request)     Marshall 

(f)  "Daffodils"     LK>iid 

IV. 

(a)  "Would  God  I  "WTere  the  Tender 
Apple  Blossom"  (old  Irish  folk- 
song, arranged  by  Page). 

(b)  "The    Star" Rogers 

(c)  "Thine" Dr.    Rhys    Herbert 

(d)  "Melanle" Coates 

V. 

(a)  Aria  from  "La  Boheme".  .Puccini 

(b)  "Ballatta"      (from     "Rlgoletto") 

"Verdi 


Mrs.   Prank   Gravell.     Mrs.  Bazille  Is  a 
sister  of  Mr.  Gravell. 


West  End. 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Albert  E.  Peterson  of 
St.  Paul,  who  have  been  spending  a 
week  visiting  relatives  In  the  West 
end,  left  for  their  home  Wednesday 
evening. 

*  *      * 

Thomas  Dahlqulst  of  Minneapolis  Is 
spending  a  few  days  visiting  friends  In 
this  end  of  the  cltv.  Mr.  Dahlqulst  is  a 
former  resident  of  the  West  end. 

*  •      * 

Mrs.  E.  J.  Burns,  2015  West  Third 
street,  has  as  her  guests  her  sister, 
Mrs.  George  Haley,  and  niece.  Miss 
Francis  Haley  of  Hlbblng. 

*  *      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Turner  Frost  and 
daughter.  Joyce  Phyllis,  of  2914  West 
Second  street,  are  spending  the  week- 
end  In  Virginia.  Minn. 

«      *      * 

Mrs.  George  Haley  and  daughter. 
Miss   Margaret    Haley   of   HibbinK,    are 

fuests  at  the  home  of  Mrs.  E.  J.  Burns, 
015    West   Third   street. 


West  Duluth. 

Miss  Myrtle  Beaudln,  5916  Grand 
avenue,  and  Miss  Helga  Berglund,  618 
South  Slxt.v-flfth  avenue  west,  re- 
turned Monday  morning  from  a  short 
visit    to   St.    Paul. 

*  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  H.  Keelcr,  902 
North  Central  avenue,  have  returned 
from  Indianapolis,  Ind.,  where  they 
have  been  spending  a  month  visiting 
their  daughter  and  son-in-law,  Mr. 
and    Mrs.    W.    H.    Wright. 

*  *       * 

Miss  Florence  MoUn,  who  Is  teach- 
ing school  at  Gilbert,  was  a  week-end 
guest  at  the  home  of  her  parents.  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  August  Melln.  6711  Cody 
street. 

*  *      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Peter  Kane  of  "Virginia 
are  g^uests  this  week  at  the  home  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Herman  F.  Krlngle,  617 
North  Forty-eighth  avenue  west^ 

*  *       • 

A.  G.  Macaulay,  701  North  Fifty- 
seventh  avenue  west,  left  Tuesday 
evening  for  a  short  visit  In  the  Twin 
Cities. 

*  •      • 

Harry  Bennett  of  Tower.  Minn.,  Is 
visiting  relatives  in  West  Duluth  this 
w^eek. 

*  •      * 

William  Holm.  112  Forty-eighth  ave- 
nue west,  left  Monday  evening  for  a 
month's  visit  at  Battle  Creek,  Mich. 

*  •      * 

A.  G.  Swanstrom  left  Tuesday  eve- 
ning for  a  short  business  trip  to  Chi- 
cago. 

*  •      • 

A.  Fleldman  has  returned  from  a 
week's  business  trip  to  Eastern  mar- 
kets. 

*  •       * 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  H.  Phelps  of  1806 
North  Fifty-seventh  avenue  west  have 
returned  from  a  two  weeks'  trip  to 
New  York,  Washington  and  other  East- 
ern    cities. 

*  •      * 

Mrs.  J.  J.  Murphy.  4115  West  Third 
street,  has  as  her  guest  her  sister. 
Mrs.   O.    Proctor   of   Ironton,   Minn, 

*  •      • 

Roy  St.  Mary,  Fifty-fourth  avenue 
west,  has  gone  to  Detroit,  Mch..  where 
he  has  accepted  a  position. 

*  *       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  H.  Phelps,  1306 
Fifty-seventh  avenue  west,  have  re- 
turned  from    an    Eastern    trip   that    In- 


Better  Be  Safe  Than  Sorry 

No  matter  if  your  furs  are  very  expensive  or 
moderately  priced — what  is  worth  having  is 
worth  caring  for. 

After  a  season's  wear,  no  fi»r  is  in  perfect 
condition.  Dust  and  grime  have  collected  and 
when  warm  weather  arrives  the  oil  in  the  skin 
commences  to  breed  moths. 

The  only  safeguard  is  a  thorough  cleaning 
and  freshening  and  a  suitably  cold  tempera- 
ture. 

Our  Storage  Syste^n  Provides 

not  only  a  moth  preventative  but  also  insures 
your  furs  against  fire  and  theft. 

Furs  repaired  at  one-half  price  during  the 
5pring  and  summer.  No  charges  for  storage  if 
repaired.  Pay  for  them  next  fall  when  called 
for. 


129  IVes/  Superior  Street 


Duluth  Orchestra  Closed  Its 

Season  With  Deficit  of  0,000 


The  Duluth  Concert  orchestra  closed 
Its  season  with  a  deficit  of  a  little  less 
than  $6,000,  m-hlch  was  the  a«nount  of 
the  guaranty  fund. 

The  total  expenses  of  the  tei>  con- 
certs were  $10,860.16  and  the  total  re- 
ceipts   $6,380.76. 

Whether  or  ont  the  orchestra  will 
be  continued  next  year  will  rest  large- 
ly with  the  guarantors.  Each  man 
who  subscribed  to  the  fund  is  asked  to 
state  whether  or  not  he  is  willing  to 
continue  to  support  the  orchestra  for 
another  season.  Many  who  were  not 
guarantors  this  year  have  offered  to 
So  on  the  list  next  season,  and  If  a 
majority  of  this  year's  subscribers 
feel  that  the  orchestra  deserves  their 
support,  the  organization  will  be  con- 

The  prchi^ra  association  officers 
In    their    report    to    subscrlbCTS,    write 

""On  "he  fji**  o^  ^^*  ^^^  *^**  ^^ 
hive  to  taliQ  care  of  this  deficit.  It 
mlKht  appear  discouraging,  but  when 
you  realize  the  great  educational 
benefit  derlvefd  by  our  people  and  the 
pronounced  advancement  in  orchestral 
music  through  our  efforts  this  win- 
ter we  believe  you  will  agree  It  was 
money  well  spent.  At  least  90  per 
cent  of  this  money  has  remained  In 
Duluth.  It  if"*  a  well  known  fact  that 
but  very  fe^  such  organizations  are 
self  supporting.  They  have  to  be 
fostered-  and  financed  for  many  years 
and  are  upheld  by  the  business  men 
of  the  Tommunity,  being  considered 
an  educational  factor  as  well  as  af- 
fording enjoyment  at  a  low  i^rlce  to 
our    own    clt4»en8. 

"Our  original  estimate  called  for  nn 
outlay  of  $l<000  par  concert  or  $10,000 
for  the  series  and  this  has  been  ex- 
ceeded by  very  little.    Our  estimate  of 


attendance,  which  seemed  reasonable 
at  the  popular  prices  charged,  did  not 
materialize,  averaging  about  1,500  per- 
sons per  concert  instead  of  3,000  or 
more. 

"Notwithstanding  all,  the  twilight 
concerts  have  been  a  great  success, 
and  have  given  enjoyment  to  a  total 
of  over  16,000  of  our  own  people.  The 
hard,  persistent  and  careful  work  of 
Conductor  Bradbury  and  his  men  was 
demonstrated  In  the  grreat  improve- 
ment of  the  orchestra  week  by  week, 
as  you  no  doubt  have  observed." 

The  statement  of  disbursements  and 
receipts  follows: 

DISBURSEMENTS. 

Musicians — 

Local     $3,468.89 

Outride     8.500.00 

Director    600.00 

Music,    orchestration 

and    piano    216.78 

Soloists     163.77  $  7,849.44 


Anmoi^'      rental,      $60 

per   week    $    600.00     ' 

Stage,  sound  Ing 
board,  decorations, 
etc 261.88 

Ushers,     ticket     sell- 
ers,   etc    261.80 

M  a  n  a  ger.  stenogra- 
p  h  e  r  s.  stationery, 
tickets,    etc 723.92 

Advertising  and  inci- 
dentals            487.27 

Programs     171.00 

Interest   on  notes  ...         24J6  $  2,610.72 


Total      $10,360.16 

RECEIPTS. 
From   course    ttcket8.$3,490.70 
From       ticket        sales      * 

at    armory     1,727.55 

trom     advertisements 

on    programs    162.50$  5.380.76 


Deficit 


I  4,979.41 


S 


eluded  New  York,  Washington,  Pitts- 
burgh. Chicago  and  other  points.  They 
visited  en  route  home  with  their  son- 
in-law  and  daughter,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  C. 
Bush,  at  Gary,  Ind. 

*  *      * 

A.  O.  MacAuley.  701  North  Fifty- 
seventh  avenue  west.  Is  In  Minneapolis 
and  St.  Paul  on  a  business  trip. 

*  *       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  August  Dahl.  4001  West 
Fifth  street,  will  leave  shortly  for 
Cumberland,  Wis.,  where  they  will 
make  their  home. 

*  *      * 

Mrs.  Lucy  Purdy,  1832  West  Supe- 
rior street,  has  returned  from  Still- 
water, where  she  has  been  assisting 
In  organization  work  for  the  Modern 
Samaritans. 

*  *       * 

Mrs.  Stone  Wiggins  Bice  of  Denver, 
Colo.,  Is  the  guest  of  her  sister,  Mrs. 
George  Bennlson,  908  Garfield  avenue. 

*  <*      « 

Mrs.  R.  G.  Allen.  5934  Grand  avenue, 
has  returned  for  a  visit  with  her  sis- 
ter. Mrs.  Edward  G.  Besan  of  Minne- 
apolis. 

*  *      * 

Mrs.  L.  A.  Slmonson.  2102  West  Supe- 
rior street,  who  has  been  111  for  some 
time,  Is  reported  convalescent. 

*  *      • 

Mrs.  Albert  White  of  Toledo.  Ohio, 
who  was  called  here  on  account  of  the 


illness  of  her  aunt,  Mrs.  P.  L.  Whalcn, 
114  Norfh  Twenty-fifth  avenue  west, 
left  Wedne.'^day  for  her  home. 

«      *      « 

Mrs.  Fred  Robinson  of  Minneapolis  U 
visiting  Mrs.  Thomas  Robinson  of  631 
Gartleld  avenue. 

*  *       • 

Mrs.  L.  J.  Doyle.  8152  Wadena  street, 
who  was  called  to  Fond  du  Lac.  Wis., 
by  the  death  of  her  father.  Feb.  29. 
returned  to  Duluth  Wednesday  morn« 
Ing. 

*  •      * 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Lawrence  E.  Gilley 
(Theresa  Balduc)  have  returned  from 
their  wedding  trip  through  the  West. 
They  visited  the  exposition  at  San 
Diego  and  also  Mexico.  They  are  at 
home  at  2914  West  Third  street. 

*  *      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  Spooner  of  2081 
West  Third  street  returned  Tuesday 
evening  from  a  month's  visit  in  Loa 
Angeles  and  San  Diego.  Cal. 


Morgan  Park. 

Rev.  S.  A.  Blair  of  Duluth  conducted 

the  services  of  tne  Presbyterian  church 
Wednesday  evening  at  the  home  of  Mr, 
and  Mrs.  J.  Murray  of  Second  street. 
•      *      • 
One  of  the  most  enjoyable  affairs  of 
the  year  was  the  "farmer  party"  given 


Woodland  Residents  Delighted 

With  Local  Talent  Production  k- 


Nearly  200  people  attended  the  meet- 
ing of  the  Woodland  Neighborhood 
club    last    night    in    the    E.    R.    Cobb 

school,  and  laughed  almost  continu- 
ously for  more  than  half  an  hour  dur- 
ing the  production  of  W.  f.  Chapman's 
farce,  "April  Fools."  which  concluded 
the  evening's  program.  It  was  an- 
nounced as  the  first  of  a  series  of  fea- 
tures of  this  nature  which  will  be 
given  by  members  of  the  community, 
and  was  received  with  hearty  applause. 

W.  F.  Fitzgerald  as  Peter  Dunn.  E. 
T.  Hughes  as  Joseph  Smith  and  C.  M. 
Busch  aa  James  Smith  were  the  par- 
ticipants In  the  farce,  which  showed 
the  complications  arising  from  a  fa- 
ther's conversation  with  two  men 
wbuona  -he  supposed  to  be  suitors  for 
his  daughter's  hand,  but  of  whom  one 
was  a  horse  fancier  who  believed  he 
was  negotiating  for  the  purchase  of  a 
mare,  and  the  other  an  undertaker  who 
thought  he  had  been  called  to  the 
house  on  «■  professional  errand. 

Previous  to  this  number,  Miss  Eliza- 
beth Eby  played  two  selections  on  the 
piano,  "The  Flatterer"  and  "Air  de 
Ballet";  Mrs.  J.  A.  P.  Neal  gave  a  brief 


talk  on  the  plans  for  the  city  agri- 
cultural and  horticultural  exhibit  whicU 
Is  to  be  given  next  fall,  and  told  somd 
of  the  plans  for  aiding  those  who  sig- 
nify their  desire  to  take  part  in  the  ex- 
hibit; and  Miss  Elizabeth  Richardson 
charmed  the  audience  with  two  vocal 
solos,  "Island  of  Dreams"  and  "Rose  in 
the  Bud."  Miss  Mabel  Fix  accom- 
panied Miss  Riciiardson  on  the  piano. 

A  changre  of  meeting  night  from  tha 
first  to  the  third  Friday  of  each  month 
was  one  of  the  principal  actions  taken 
at  the  business  meeting.  Other  actions 
were  the  announcement  of  the  vear's 
committees  by  President  C.  R.  Magney; 
preparations  for  the  annual  exhibit 
next  fall;  the  directing  of  the  presi- 
dent to  appoint  a  committee  to  Inquire 
Into  the  status  of  the  Woodland  avenue 
paving  proposition,  and  approving  ^ 
plan  for  the  Northeastern  Horticultural  •»  "" 
society  to  give  a  demonstration  In  the  ^ 
school  building  on  the  evening  of  "" 
Tuesday.  April  18,  of  practical  meth- 
ods of  planting  and  of  tree  grafting. 

Dancing  and  the  serving  of  refresh- 
ments concluded  the  evening.  The  next 
meeting  of  the  club  will  T>«  hel4  on 
May  19. 


Sale  of  H^s  for  Belgian  Relief 
Will  G>ntinue  Tocky  and  Sunday 


Although  today,  the  birthday  of  King 
Albert  of  Belgium,  is  the  official  tag 
day  of  the  Daughters  of  the  American 
Revolution  for  the  benefit  of  destitute 
Belgians,  the  members  of  the  two  Du- 
luth chapters  began  the  sale  of  flags 
several  days  ago  and  will  continue 
throughout  tomorrow.  The  flags  are 
on  sale  »t  the  Spalding  and  St.  Louis 
hotels,  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  Y.  W.  C.  A.  and  the 
poKtofiflce  and  by  each  of  the  chapter 
members.  Mrs.  A.  E.  Walker,  chair- 
man of  the  Dauglvters  of  Liberty  chap- 
ter, and  Mrs  W.  D.  Underbill,  chair- 
man of  the  Greysolon  du  Lhut  chapter, 
ask  that  all  tags  that  remain  unsold 
be  returned  to  them  after  tomorrow. 
The  minimum  price  of  a  tag  is  7  cents, 
the  cost  of  food  for  a  Belgian  for  one 
day. 

Mrs.  William  Cumming  Story,  presi- 


dent general  of  the  D.  A.  R..  asked 
that  persons  who  buy  la«s  wear  them 
tomorrow,  as  well  jw  today,  and  urged 
tJ.  A.  R.  members  to  €xert  themselves 
to  have  churches  remember  the  day  in 
^T*^^l:  In  her  letter  to  members  of 
the  D.  A.  R.  chapters,  Mrs.  Story- 
said:  ' 

"I  believe  that  this  is  a  great  op- 
portunlty  to  perform  a  valuable  serv- 
ice to  humanity  and  to  uphold  the 
honor  and  Integrity  of  our  flag,  if 
you  could  make  it  a  personal  matter 
to  see  that  your  own  church  lends  its 
aid,  and  also  that  other  churches 
which  may  not  have  D.  A.  R.  members 
are  srtven  an  opportunity  to  render 
services  as  well,  if  In  no  other  way 
than  in  the  remembrance  of  the  neo- 
ple  In  their  prayers  it  «ro«ld  be  a 
great  help  to  the  cause  which  we  be- 
lieve   so    deserving." 


X. 


I 


I  (tr- 


m         » 


I 


I  *  ,  ■>    ik'm~ 


Saturday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  8»  1916. 


H 


.tT~ ;& 


formal  School  Pupils  Observe  Tercentenary  of 
William  Shakespeare  With  Festival  and  Excerpi 


H.  8.  WENGER 

.    ~  IMPORTERS 


PARTICIPANTS  IN   SHAKESPEARE   FESTIVAL. 


The 
death. 


terrcntenarv  of  Shakespeare's 
April.  1916,  Is  beliiK  celebrated 
by  collejccs.  schools  and  t-ltiba  through- 
out the  country.  The  movement,  dl- 
rectyd  by  I'erclval  Chubb,  la  under 
the  auspices  of  the  Drama  LenRue  of 
America.  At  the  Duluth  normal  .school 
the  celebr.illon  tof.k  the  form  of  a 
Khakcflpeare  festival.  Seventy-five  of 
the  normal  tscliool  stud«-nt.i  dressed  In 
the  costumes  of  1616.  represented  the 
people  of  Stratford-on-Avon.  These 
people  are  supposed  to  be  celebrating 
the  tercentenary  of  their  pod  as  such 
a  fete  day  w»)uld  have  been  celebrated 
800    y<ara    ago. 

The  first  p(  rformance  was  Riven  last 
evening  and  it  will  be  repeated  to- 
night.      The     program. 

I — I'roces.sion  to  the  Green. 


Night's 
of    the 


Hark!     the 


Choral     march,     "Hark! 
Lark'." 

Order    of    procession: 
Trumpi  ters. 
Lord    mayor. 


l.y  the  Young  Girls'  club  Wednesday 
tvenluK.  The  girl.s  and  boys  wore 
farmer  costumes  and  the  games  and 
music  for  the  evening  were  appropriate 
to  the  occa.vlon.  A  farmer  lum  h  was 
•erved  at  10:30.  There  were  twenty- 
five  guests. 

«       *       • 

Ikirs.    M.    S.    Macdonald.    North    Toulo- 
vard.    entertained    the    A.    M.    <lub    yes- 
terday   at    an    Informal    luncheon 
lowed      by      <ards.      Five 
played     at     three     tables, 
were: 
McHdanu'S — 

H.   Tlutter. 

C.    Miller. 

P.  R.  Canny, 

li.  11.  WhetUr, 

i\  Uuof, 

B.  V.   rayne. 

O.  S.  Olson, 

Mrs.    Joe    Amoe 
Ideal    club    Thursday 
Fourth      street.        The 


Mastrr   of   revels. 

Court  ladies   and   gentlemen. 

Villagers. 

Foresters. 

Players     from     "Midsummer 
Dream." 

Players    from    "The    Taming 
Shrew." 

lI__On   the  <^Jreen. 

The  lord  mayor  greets  his  people 
and  aunoiinces  the  occasion  for  the 
fete.  He  bids  th»>  master  of  revels  take 
charge   of   the   day's    j>rogram. 

The  master  of  revels  summons  a 
group  of  Shakespeare's  fairies.  who 
dance    their    queen,    Tltania.    asleep. 

A  group  of  artisans  place,  rehearse 
and  present  the  highly  dramatical  tale 
of  Pyramus  and  Thisbe  fronj  "A  Mid- 
summer   Night's    Dream."  ^      .   . 

As  the  players  retire  a  band  of  for- 
esters,   returning    from    their    practice, 
show      the      villagers      their 
archery. 

The  master  of  revels  announces 


akill     in 


other    scene,    this    time      from    Shake- 
speare's "The   Taming   of  the  Shrew." 

Six  morris  dancers  with  their  fool 
and  hobby-horse  entertain  the  com- 
pany. 

The  bugle  sounds  and  the  mayor  re- 
quests those  who  love  their  poet  will 
honor  him  by  repeating  some  qt  his  Im- 
mortal   words.  ^  .  , 

At  the  close  the  lord  mayor  and  his 
lady   lead   in   a  country  dance. 
Ill — The  Procession   Leaves  tba  Green. 

Choral  march:  "Down  In  a  Leafy 
Dell." 

The    cast    of    characters    follows: 

Trumpeters — Blanche  Frederickson. 
Frances  Shebat.  Elvlna  Wllandcr. 
Kuth   O'Brien,   Alice    Holahan. 

Lord    mayor — Maude    Amberg. 

Mayor's    lady— Agnes    Alguire. 

Master   of    revels — Merle    Ll»n. 

Courtiers — Kathleen  Coffey,  Susan 
Pastoret.    Viola    Sinclair.     Sarah    Mac- 


an-     donald,    Helen   Zuger,    Olive    Scott. 


Morris  dancers — Bowna  Hansen,  M. 
Miller.  H.  Dryer,  M.  Murray,  M.  Scan- 
Ion.    A.    Korst. 

Hobby    horse — Bess    Knowles. 

Jester — Mary    Gulnn. 

Fiddler—  .^„    ,  ^. 

Players  from  "A  Midsummer  Mght  s 
Dream": 

Fairies — Tltania,  Esther  Sletten; 
Puck,  Lester  Robert;  Peasblossom, 
Dolores  Ryan;  Cobweb.  Helen  Herrlck; 
Moth,  Esther  Hoar;  first  fairy,  Lillian 
Mattocks;  second  fairy,  Mary  Brlnce; 
third  fairy,  Elizabeth  Patterson;  fourth 
fairy,    Miriam    Bondy. 

Artisans — Quince  (Prologue).  Alice 
Hill;  Bottom  and  Pyrarous.  Ida  Port- 
han;  Flute  and  Thisbe.  Ruth  Howe; 
Snout  and  Wall.  Hermle  McLellan. 
Snug  and  Lion.  Delia  Barrett;  Starve- 
ling   and    Moonshine     Lorraine    Allard. 

Foresters — Jane  Henderson,  Anna 
Johnson.  Mabel  Erlckson.  Lillian 
Evens,  Margaret  Beatty,  Mamie  Matt- 
son,      Myrtle    Paulson,      Margaret    Mc- 


Photo  by  GaiUgher. 


Kusick,   May  Holt.   Julia  Petereon. 

Players  from  "The  Taming  of  the 
Shr^w": 

Petruchio,  Gertrude  Rlepe;  Kather- 
Ine,  Marguerite  Ryan;  Baptlsta,  Alison 
Brown;  Grumlo,  Mary  Shaughnessy; 
Curtis,  Cora  Forsberg;  Nathaniel,  Elsie 
Howe;  Philip,  Ella  Regedal;  Peter, 
Hazel  Meyer;  Nicholas.  Cora  Trudeau; 
Tailor,  Esther  Dye;  Haberdasher,  Ruth 
Taylor  ^-      ^, 

Villagers — M.     Scheldeker.     N.     Olm- 
Btead,   R.   Dye.   E.   Ness,   A.   Relshus.   M 
Poehler,    R.    Saxlne,      E.    Dahlman, 
Wasley,     A.      Grass,      E.      Enright, 
Graves,     M.     Johnson,     I.     Keown, 
Sachs,     B.     Williams,     A.     Daniels, 
Newbauer,    P.    Older,    L.    Gllbertson, 
Wallen.    E.    Anderson. 

Quotations  were  K'^en  by  Mr. 
Bohannon.  Mr.  Owens.  Mr.  Van  Cleef, 
Miss  Porter,  Miss  Gherlng.  Miss  Ely. 
Miss  Horne.  Pearl  Goodwin,  Louise 
Wasley,  Edna  Wallace,  Martha  Parks, 
Elizabeth    Widell.    Lillian    Lundberg. 


COLD  STORAGE 

For  Safe  Keeping  in  the  Summerlime 

Place  Your  Fnrs  in  Oar  Cold  Storage  Vaults 

• 

Your  furs  will  here  be  preserved, 
protected — even  revivified,  in  an  at- 
mosphere made  identical  with  that 
where  fur-bearing-  animals  thrive  best. 

Cross  Fox  the  leading  summer  fur. 
Natural  blue  fox,  natural  silver  fox, 
tope,  battleship  gray  and  white  foxes 
are  in  vogue. 

New  furs  to  order,  repaired  and  re- 
modeled —  remodeling  according  to 
the  fashions  for  next  season,  at  spe- 
cial summer  rates  and  in  our  own 
workrooms. 

H.S.Wcngcr,Inc. 

7  West  Superior  Street. 
Melrose  1201— Grand  1815-X. 


L. 
A. 

s. 

A. 
C. 


fol 

hundred    was 
The     guests 


C.   Rels, 
P.  McLimans, 
Baer, 

C.  Sampson, 
Thayer, 
Pendry, 
Thompson. 


L. 

J. 

A. 

C. 

C. 

W. 

G. 

■K  • 

was    hostess    to 
at    her 
afternoon 


the 


In  the  War,"  with  a  review  of  historic 
contests  to  possess  this  key  to  com- 
mercial wealth.  Mrs.  W.  H.  Carpenter 
commenced  the  reading  of  Stoddards 
lecture  on  Constantinople.  Refresh- 
ments were  served  by  the  hostess  to 
the  following: 
Mesdames — 

W.  H.  Carpenter, 

C.    Sundby. 

Fred    Hoene, 

J.    W     Harter. 

L.    A."  Pearson, 
Misses — 

Jt)8ephine   Steven 
son. 

•      «       « 

Mr."*.  S.  W.  Richardson,  3023 
sota  avenue,  entertained  at  a 
tea  Monday  evening.  A  color 
of  yellow,  white  and  blue  was 
out  In  the  dining  and  living 
The   vellow   was   emphasized   by 


J.  W.  Marvin. 
J.    E.    fJsborne, 
tJeorge    Walz, 
D.    K.   MoRae, 


Jessie  Maynard, 


Mlnne- 
Lenten 
.scheme 
carried 

rooms. 

vellow 


sh-ided  candles  and  the  white  and  blue 

home    on  ;  In    other    appropriate   decoration.^.      Tea 

was  !  was   poured   by   the    hostess   to   the    fol- 


passed    by    sewing  and    at     4:30 
was  served.     The  guests  were: 
Mesdatnes — 

A.   Solomon,  W.  Mnhane. 

J.  And,  V-  K.  Tyler, 

J.   Kier  O.  MacGowan. 

O*.  Milsbn. 


lunch 


had     as     her 
Clara  Ander- 


C.  H  Durbrow, 
David  J.  Gray. 
William    Shay. 


Miss     Edna     McLimans 
guest  on  Wednesday  Miss 
mon  of  Duluth. 

•  •      • 

Miss  Hildur  Nicholson.  First  street. 
■was  the  guest  on  Monday  of  Miss  Signe 
Wconnberg  of  West  Duluth. 

Park  Point  Notes 

Rev.  L.  H.  Burn  will  occupy  the  pul- 
pit as  usual  Sunday  evening  at  8 
o'clock  at  the  mission  chapel  at  Twen- 
ty-eighth   street. 

«       «       • 

C.  E.  T.  Foster,  3816  Lake  avenue 
soutit,  who  has  been  suffering  for  two 
months  with  an  attack  of  acute  Ijron- 
chitis,    is    now    better. 

•  «      • 

W.  H.  Williams  and  family  have  tak- 
en  a   cottage  at   3529  Minnesota  avenue 

for  the  summer. 

•  «       * 

Mrs.  Emma  E.  Kermott  of  Minne- 
apolis is  a  visitor  at  the  home  of  her 
nleco  and  nephew,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  F. 
Dennis,  3719  Minnesota  avenue,  for  a 
few  weeks. 

«      *      * 


loiving  guests: 
Me."-dames — 

R.    B.    Odell. 

J.  E.  Osborne, 

John  Webb. 

Albert   Hauslaib, 

«       «       * 

Mrs.  Albert  Hauslaib.  2808  Minnesota 
avenue  entertained  Informally  at  din- 
ner Wednesday   evening.      Covers  were 

laid   for   four. 

•  *      * 

Sunday  school  will  be  held  at  9:46 
at  the  rriission  chapel  classroom.  J.  \V . 
Harter  is   the   superintendent. 

♦  •       * 

Mrs.  D.  K.  McRae.  2908  Minnesota 
avenue,  was  hostess  to  the  Park  Point 
Mission  guild  Wednesday.  The  after- 
noon was  spent  socially,  after  which 
luncheon  was  served  to  the  following 
guests: 
Mesdames: 

J.  W.  Marvin. 

S.  W.  Richardson, 

J.  E.  Osborne. 

Herbert  Page, 

J«)hn  Webb, 

M.  T.  Gutelius. 
Misses: 

Helen  Osborne. 

Ruth  Durbrow. 

Virginia  Brown. 
Masters: 

Harvey  Page. 

Dearheart  ^^'lesen, 


Wednesday  afternoon  from  4  to  6 
o'clock.  Her  guests  were:  Frances 
Campbell.  Katherlne  Osborne,  Mary 
Alexander   and    Winona    Hewitt. 

*  *       • 

Mrs.  Alexander  Graham  will  be  the 
soloist  at  the  Sunday  evening  services 
held  at  the  Mission  chapel  at  Twenty- 
eighth  street. 

Thomas    Stcner    of    Borea.    Wis.,    vis- 
ited at  the  home  of  his  uncle.  C.   E.  I. 
Foster,     3816    Lake    avenue    south,    for 
a  few  days   this  week. 
«       *       • 
J,    F.    Dennis,    3719    Minnesota 
Is   confined   to    her    home    with 
8e\*ere    attack    of    lumbago. 

*  «       • 

Mrs  R.  G.  Borland,  who  has  been 
living'  at  2123  East  Fourth  street,  has 
taken  one  of  J.  P.  Burgs  cottages.  2.24 
Minnesota  avenue,   for  a  year. 

*  «       * 

The  Christian  Endeavor  society  will 
meet  at  7  o'clock  Sunday  evening  at 
the  Mission  chapel.  Miss  Mabel  Wing 
will  be  the  leader.  The  topic  will  be 
"What  My  Denomination  Expects  From 
Its    Voung    People." 

*  *  .    * 
Mrs.    C.    N.    Hamilton    and 

Page,    spent    Sunday    at    the 
E.  I    Foster,  3«16  Lake  ave- 


Mrs. 
avenue, 
a    very 


Activities  of  the  Week  in 
Women's  Clubs  and  Musical  Circles 


Woman's  Council  Adopts 
Constitution — Linnaea  Club 
Anniversar  y— Suffrage 
Luncheon— Twentieth  Cen- 
tury Club  Honors  Mrs. 
Crowley. 


Activities  of  the  Week  at 

The  Duluth  Normal  School 


Mrs.  Johnson,  dean  of  Macalester  col- 
lege, and  Mrs.  Phillips,  who  are  the 
guests  of  Mrs.  Bates  of  this  city,  vis- 
ited the  school  on  Thursday.  They  were 
the   guests  of  Mrs.  Milne   for  lunch   at 

"     *  -    Johnson   gave 

The    visitors 


Mrs.  M.  M.  Hanna,  622  Eighth  avenue 
east,  was  liostess  to  the  l\irk  Point 
Study  class  Thursday  afternoon.  The 
president.  Mrs.  J.  W.  Marvin,  opened 
the  meeting  with  a  request,  for  the 
class  motto  repeated  in  unison  by  the 
members.  The  roll  call  was  responded 
to  by  three-minute  talks  on  Constan- 
tinople. Mrs.  Fred  Hoene  gave  a  brief 
and  very  interesting  address  reviewing 
the  war.  Mrs.  J.  W.  Harter  gave  a  very 
good  reading  on  "Constantinople,  the 
World's  Most  Coveted  City  and 
the  Ottoman  Capital  Is  a  Pivotal 


Collin  F.  Brown, 
Fred  Hoene. 
J.  W.  Harter. 
C.  H.  Wieaen. 
a.  H.  Durbrow, 
F.  C.  Ames. 

R.  J.  Holmes. 
Hettie     Marie 
Holmes. 

Richard  Page. 


Smith.  2721 1^  Minnesota 
entertain  the  Park  Point 
auxiliary   next   Thursday 


Mrs.  W.  O 
avenue,  will 
Presbyterian 

afternoon. 

•  •       • 

Harrv  Mllnes.  3835  Minnesota  ave- 
nue, who  has  been  away  for  the  last 
three  weeks  on  a  tour  of  inspection 
of  the  different  tribes  of  red  men  In 
and  around  Rochester,  Minn.,  has  re- 
turned. 

*  *       * 

Miss    Alice    Macfarlane.    2827    Mlnne- 

Why    sota  avenue,   entertained   a   few  of  her 

Point    friends  at  a  social  and  picnic  luncheon 


Pageant  of  "Hiawatha"  Will  Be 
Given  at  First  Methodist  Church 


The 

Slven 
night 


pageant  of  "Hiawatha"  will  be 
at  the  First  M.  E.  church  Friday 
with  a  view  of  preserving  the 
legends  and  traditions  of  the  red  race 
and  keeping  alive  some  of  the  admir- 
able (lualltles  of  the  Indian.  Added 
to  the  interest  of  seeing  this  great 
Indian  story  presented  in  the  part  of 
the  country  in  which  it  was  originally 
enacted  by  Hiawatha,  MinnehahH.  Na- 
koniis  and  the  other  characters  whom 
Longfellow  made  real,  will  be  the 
Ojibway  or  Chii>pewa  melodies  which 
Mrs.  Stella       Prince       Stocker       has 

transcribed.  So  far  as  is  known,  this 
will  be  the  first  presentation  of  "Hia- 
watha" with  melodies  "from  the  land 
of    the    OJlbways." 

As  tlie  scenes.  Including  the  Impres- 
sive wedding  feast,  are  Interpreted  In 
pantomime.  Miss  Mary  Shesgreen  will 
read  Longfellow's  poem.  A  group  of 
Indian  maidens  will  give  the  SQuaw 
dance  and  children  will  give  typical 
Indian  dances  and  songs.  All  the  In- 
dian costumes  and  stage  furnishings 
were  furnished  by  the  Greek  company. 

The    pageant    is   being   arranged   un- 
•der  the  auspices  of  the  missionary  so- 
cieties   of    the    first    M.    E.    church,    as- 
sisted   by    the    members    of    the    Queen 
Esllier    circles,    who    will    sing    l«dian 

melodies.  ,    -     . 

The    committees    In    charge    are: 
Publicity.     Mrs.    L.     A.    Larsen.     Mrs. 

J    E.  Goodman  and  Mrs.  W    G.  Starkey; 

stage    properties.    Miss    Luclle    Bradley 

end  Mrs.  W.  S.   Moore;   tickets.  Mrs.  A. 

D     Jacobs.    Mrs.    Fanny    Worthington 

and  Mrs.  Paul  Thompson;  ushers.  Wen- 

dell   Moore;  lighting,  A.  W.  Lindgren. 
The       patronesses       are:       Mesdames 

George     W.     Martin,     W.     L.     Smithies. 

Chester  A.  Congdon.  A.  C.  Jones,  W.  8. 

Moore.    B.    L.    Bradley.    I.    S.    Moore,    H. 

A.    Dancer,  T.  A.   Reynolds.  Henry  Fee. 

£    a    Farrell.   Joseph    Sellwood,   W.   D. 


Mr.    and 
little   son. 
home  of  C. 

nuu    south. 

m       *       * 

Mrs.  Jqhn  Irvine,  who  has  been  vis- 
iting her  daughter  and  son-in-law.  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  J.  F.  Dennis,  for  the  last 
week,    has    returned    to    her    home. 

•  *       * 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  L.  H.  Cook  and  fam- 
ily, who  have  been  ma.ving  their  home 
In  the  city  during  the  winter  months, 
have  taken  the  Campbell  cottage  at 
3605.    for   the   summer   season. 

•  •       ♦ 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  A.  Simonen  and 
family  of  St  Paul,  have  moved  into 
Mrs.  A.  Ciillman's  cottage  at  3602  Min- 
nesota avenue, 

•  *      * 

Mrs.  J.  W.  Schneider,  1040  I^ke  ave- 
nue south,  has  returned  from  Minne- 
apolis, where  she  visited  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Dale. 

Church  Meetings. 

The  Catholic  Ladles'  CJuiid  of  Wood- 
land will  meet  Thursday  night  at  the 
residence    of    Mrs.    J.    P.    Hammill.    141 

Faribault  street. 

•  •       • 

The  Queen's  Daughters  association 
will  meet  Thursday  night  in  th-i 
Bishop's  clubrocm.  Rt.  Rev.  Jam;-* 
Mc<;olrick  win  explain  the  fourth 
chapter  of  St.  Matthew.  Lectures  on 
Mexico  and  the  Minnesota  minimum 
wage     law    have     been     given    in     the 

sociology  course. 

«       *       • 

The  Philathea  class  of  the  First 
Presbyterian  church  will  hold  its  an- 
nual banquet  at  6:30  o'clock  Tuesday 
night  In  the  Sunday  school  room. 

•  *      * 

The  Trvln  Missionary  Society  of  the 
Lakeside  Presbyterian  church  will 
meet  ot  2  o'clock  Monday  afternoon 
at  the  home  of  Mrs.  W.  B.  Phelps. 
4420  McCuUoch  street,  to  do  Red  Cross 
work.  The  first  chapter  of  the  book. 
••Children  In  Bondage."  will  be  read 
by  one  of  the  members. 

•  •      • 

The  Philathea  class  of  the  First 
M.  K.  church  will  hold  a  businefcs 
meeting  Tuesday  night  at  the  resi- 
dence of  Ml*s  May  Colter,  217  Twelfth 

avenue   east. 

•  •      • 

The  Philathea  Class  of  St.  John's 
English  Lutheran  church  will  meet 
Tuesday  night  at  the  residence  of  Miss 
Johanna  Miller,  102«  West  Fourth 
street. 


ffl 


more 
for  the  I 
of   the 


IIEAVomen's  Council,  that  has 
been     doing    valuable     civic 
work  for  fifteen  years,  yes- 
terday   adopted    a    constJtti- 
tion   and  bylaws.     Although 
the  rules  that  now  govern  the  organ- 
ization do  not  differ  materially  from 
those  which   have  been   followed,   the 
members     thought     something 
than  precedent  was  necessary 
continuance    of    the     dignity 
council. 

Tuesday  afternoon  Mrs.  Josef  Lone 
gren  entertained  the  Linnaea  club  as  a 
memorial  to  her  husband,  who.  with 
her,  organized  the  club  eight  years 
ago  to  assist  persons  afflicted  with 
tuberculosis. 

The  Lester  Park  Literary  club  had 
a  Norwegian  program  at  the  meetmg 
that  was  held  Tuesday  afternoon  at 
the  residence  of  Mrs.  .\ustin  Daven- 
port. The  Bishop's  club  continued  its 
study  of  Japan   at  the   meeting  held 

Tuesday  night.        

The  Aftenro  society  held  its  month- 
ly meeting  Wednesday  afternoon. 
Suffrage  Luncheon. 
Thursday    Mrs.    Gilson    Gardner 
Washington,    D.    C,    spoke 


tlon  of  Collegiate  Alumnae  to  indi- 
cate their  choice  of  the  sixteen  sub- 
jects submitted  by  Mr.  Taffs  secre- 
tary   favored    "The    Monroe    Doctrine. 

The  former  president  was  prevented 
from  giving  his  lecture  In  December 
by  a  snow  storm  that  cut  him  off  from 
Duluth. 

Glcn-Hunt-Wood  Chorus 
Will  Give  Entertainment 

The  Glen-Hunt-Wood  male  chorus 
has  arranged  a  "Soiree  and  Cafe  Do- 
naut,'  whjch  will  be  given  at  8 
o'clock  Friday  night  at  the  Glen  Avon 
Presbyterian  church.  The  affair  is  in- 
tended for  a  "get-together"  meeting 
of  the  three  communities  of  Glen 
I  Avon,  Hunter's  Park  and  Woodland 
1  that  are  noted  as  the  most  sociable 
sections  of  the  city.  The  name  that 
has  been  given  to  this  entertainment 
takes  away  the  possibility  of  any  guess- 
ing in  regard  to  the  refreshments  that 
will  be  served.  The  following  pro- 
gram  will  be  given: 

"Mldshlpmlte"    

Chorus. 

Banjo,  mandolin  and   guitar 

Lewis   MacLeod,   Angus   Frant  and 
D.    E.    G  iff  in. 

"Copper  Moon"    

Chorus. 
Recitation— "Charge     of      the      Light 

Brigade"    (in    dialect)     

Roderic    Macleod. 

"The  Sword  of  Ferrara"    

Chorus. 

"Stars  of  the   Summer   Night"    

C.  T.  Anderson,  D.  C.  Eadie.  G.  L.  Tup- 
per  and  Mac  Thomson, 

Reading    

D.  E.  Giffin. 

Piano    selection     

R.    Buchanan    Morton. 

Vocal    solo    

W.   Forbes, 


concert   here 


vis- 


were 

Thurs- 

Torrance  hall. 


Torrance   hall,   and   Mrs. 
a    talk    to    the    students 
accompanied     the     Macalester     colle^v 
glee   club,   which   gave   a 
Wednesday  night. 

•  •      • 
Miss    Minnie    Flnstad    has    been 

iting  her  sister,  Gina,  for  several  days 

at  Torrance  hall. 

•  *      * 

Slgnlld  Soderberg  and  Tillle  Lycan- 
der  who  have  been  111  with  the  mea- 
sles for  a  couple  of  weeks,  returned 
to  their  studies  this  week. 

•  •      • 

Miss   D«^lia   Skagerberg  of  Cloquet,   a 
former   student,    who    is    now    teaching 
at    Bemidji.     and     Miss    Swenson 
guests    of    Miss    Mabel    Paulson 
day  evening  at  dinner  at 

•  •       • 

Miss  Julia  Abbot,  supervisor  of  the 
kindergarten  in  Minneapolis  and  Caro- 
lyn Barbour,  director  of  kindergarten 
training  in  the  Superior  normal  b  hool, 
were  among  the  visitors  on  Friday. 

•  •      • 

Rose  Bartholdi  was  honor  guest  at  a 
a  birthday  luncheon  Thursday  in  the 
lunchroom  of  the  school.  Covers  wen^ 
laid  for  the  following:  Rose  Bartholdi, 
Catherine  Lleske,  Katherlne  Keyon. 
Frances      Noyes,      Ernestine      Bennett, 


entertain  the  county  convention.  This 
convention  Is  comprised  of  hives 
throughout  Minnesota.  Delegates  to 
the  great  hive  convention,  to  be  held 
at  Grand  Rapids.  Mich..  In  June,  will 
be  elected  at  this  time.  All  Modern 
Maccabees  are  Invited  to  attend. 

•  •      • 

Mrs  C  J.  Refuss  will  be  the  ho.stess 
to  the  Loyal  Mystic  legion.  Kensing- 
ton. Tuesday  afternoon  at  her  resi- 
dence, 812  East  Fifth  street. 

•  •      • 

Ruth  council.  No.  314,  Royal  League, 
entertained  160  guests  at  a  dancing 
party  Thursday  night  in  the  Old  Ma- 
sonic temple.  Mrs.  Bert  Rickard  wsus 
chairman  of  the  party,  the  jnembers  of 
arrangements  committee  being  Mis 


Frances  Carlson,  Louise  Brennan,  Ruth 
Persgard  and  Irene  Willesen. 

•  •       • 

During  chapel  period  on  Monday,  Dr. 
L.  W.  Kline  gave  an  Inspiring  talk  on 
the  dignity  and  high  purpose  of  lh« 
teaching    profession. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  Van  Cleef  conducted  a  party  con- 
sisting of  the  members  of  the  physics 
class  to  Fltgers  brewery  Thursday 
afternoon  for  the  purpose  of  observing 
the  methods  of  brewing  and  cooling. 

•  *      * 

On  Friday  morning  three  of  Dr. 
Kline's  classes  In  theory  of  education 
debated  the  Question:  "Resolved.  That 
women  are  superior  to  men  as  teach- 
ers in  the  elementary  and  secondary 
schools,  provided  that  their  training 
has  been  of  equal  quality."  The  af- 
firmative won  In  the  first  two  classes, 
the  votes  being  16  to  4  and  11  to  4. 
The    negative    won    In    the    third    class. 

In  all  classes  the  entire  class  acted 
as    judges,    casting    ballots. 

•  •      * 
Two  sections  of  the 

gan   observation    work 
department   this    week. 

•  «      • 

Mrs.  L.  W.  Kline  entertained  twelv« 
of  the  young  women  in  her  grammar 
class  at  her  home  last  Saturday  after- 
noon. The  time  was  spent  in  sewing, 
reading  poetry  and  story  telling,  after 
which  a  delightful  luncheon  was 
served. 


cal    post  and   corps.   The   program   fol- 
lows: 
Piano    solo     • 

Miss  George. 

Reading     

Miss  Lucille  Shook. 

Group    of    songs     

Miss    Myrtle    Finkle.    accompanied 

Miss    (Jeorge. 

Address    

Dr.  J.  D.  Budd. 

Address     

Rev.  Hardy  A.  Ingham. 


Junior  class  be- 
in    the   training 


by 


the 


Blckford. 


Mrs 

and    Mrs 
committee 
son.    Miss 


B. 


"Lullaby" 


Chorus. 
Clark  will  be  chairman  of  the 


of 

at     the 
luncheon  given  by  the  Congressional  I 
Union  for  Woman  Suffrage.     She  told ; 
of  the  suffrage  special  that  will  leave  ^ 
Washington    tomorrow    night    for    a| 
thirtv-two  days'  trip  through  the  suf-; 
frage  states  and  of  the  general  condi-|  ^^a^o^^j^^-^^^ 
tions  bearing  upon  the  Susan  B.  An 
thony   amendment. 

The  Cecilian  society  studied 


MISS  MARY  SHESGREEN. 


Underhlll,  Sumner  Covey,  J.  A.  Watter- 
worth,  J  E.  Goodman,  C.  E.  Rowe,  Al- 
fred Merrltt,  J.  H.  Darllnsr.  W.  H. 
Shilling,  A.  W.  Lindgren.  U.  C.  Cul- 
mer.  A  C.  Taylor,  W.  F.  Moore,  S.  M. 
Spurbeck,  J  W.  Hoffman,  M.  P.  Burns, 
A  J.  Frey.  John  Koneczny,  Lewis  H. 
Merrltt  and  J.  T.  Culbertson. 


Planning  Home  for 

Aged  Men  and  Women 

The  Aftenro  society  will  give  an 
entertainment  at  8  o'clock  Friday 
night,  April  14,  at  the  First  Norwe- 
gian Lutheran  church,  for  the  fund 
they  are  raising  to  build  a  home  for 
old  Norwegian  men  and  women.  The 
following    program    will    be    given: 

Address    

Rev.   J.  H.  Stenberg. 

Piano    selection    

Miss   Astrid   Hovde. 

Trio     

Erling  Sodahl.   Herbert   Miska  and 
Edel  Sodahl. 

Vocal  selection   

Mrs.  Signe  Wold  McKenzle. 

Address    

Mrs.  J.  J.  Moe. 

Song     

Normanna    Male    chorus. 

Reading     

Agnes   Mae   Johnson    Specht. 

Vocal   selection    

Mrs.  McKenzle. 


passion  music  at  the  meeting  held 
Thursday  afternoon  at  the  residence 
of  Mrs.  Arthur  N.  Collins  and  Miss 
Julia  Wade  Abbott  spoke  to  the  Du- 
luth-Superior  Kindergarten  club  at 
the   Madison   school. 

Mrs.  A.  L.  Warner  entertained  the 
department  of  education  and  home  of 
the  Twentieth  Century  club  yester- 
day. In  apprecition  of  the  work  of 
Mrs.  J.  H.  Crowley,  who  served  many  I  ^"J^^^J 
years  as  chairman  of  the  department 
and  who  declined  re-election,  the 
members  of  the  department  presented 
her  with  a  book  reproduced  in  colors 
of  noted  paintings  of  children  by  the 
great  artists.  Mrs.  Crowley  spoke  of 
the  department's  appreciation  of  the 
help  Miss  Mary  Shesgreen  has  been. 
Miss  Shesgreen  was  a  special  guest 
at  the  meeting. 


Simon 
evening.  ,  .^, 

The  officers  of  the  chorus  are:  Di- 
rector, R.  Buchanan  Morton.  A.  R.  «\ 
M.,  L.  R.  A.  M.;  president.  G.  L.  Tup- 
per;  secretary,  B.  W.  Forbes;  treas- 
urer. Mac  Thomson;  registrar,  Lewis 
MacLeod;  librarian,  William  Berg; 
committee  on  arrangements,  Mac 
Thomson,  H.  C.  Ash  and  D.  E.  Giffin. 

The    members    of    the      chorus      are: 

First  tenors — C.  T.  Anderson,  M.  M.  Mc- 

C.   Eadie,  A.   J.  Longtin.  Nor- 

X.   P.    H.   Bevls.      Second  ten- 

I  ors — D.    Barnes,    C.    B.    Evans,      H.      L. 

i  Joyce,   William   Berg.   D.    E,    Giffin,   W. 

Rnrli'c    B.    Schaub.      First    basses — H.    C.    Ash, 

oacn  i>\  ^    ^    Tupper.  D.  Stocking,  W.  B.  Dun- 


Drama  Class  Wai  Study 
Hauptmann's  "Hannelc" 

Hauptmann's  "Hannele"  was  chosen 
as  the  next  play  to  be  studied  by  the 
Evening  Drama  class,  that  met  Mon- 
day night  at  the  Holland  hotel.  Miss 
Bessie  Altman  will  be  t.he  leader  and 
the  other  readers  will  be  Miss  Rae 
Zurozsky.  Miss  Esther  Zurozsky,  Miss 
Estelle  Bondy.  Miss  Hannah  Strand 
and  Miss  Catherine  Pet?:. 

The  class  completed  the  study  of 
"The  Crows."  by  Henri  Becque,  at 
Monday  night's  meeting. 


lop.  Dr.  Burd,  E.  Miller.  Second  basses 

B.    W.    Forbes,    Mac    Thomson,    G.    E. 

Owen.  Lewis  MaoUod,  C.  R.  Magney,  A. 
G.  Darling. 

Mrs.  Spiegel  Will  Speak 

To  Virginia  Study  Club 

Mrs.  R.  Spiegel  will  speak  on  *'Rus- 
slan  Literature"  Monday  afternoon  at 
the  closing  meeting  of  the  Virginia 
club,  which  has  made  a  study 
of  Russian  drama  this  season.  Two 
years  ago  "Mrs.  Spiegel  spoke  to  the 
members     of     that     club     on     "Maeter- 

lliuJt." 

—         » 

Association  of 

Collegiate  Alumna^ 


Paul     Graff,     Mrs.      Wallace 
^         George   Carroll,    Mrs.   Fred  Burke 
C    S    Palmer,  while  the  floor 
consisted  of  Miss  Jennie  Ol- 
Llllian    Dlnham,    Miss    Mar- 
garet   Rutherford.    Miss    Marie    Tenny 
and   Miss  Signe  Olson. 

Supper    was    served    during 
ning.  -    Blewetfs     orchestra 
the   music.  »      *      » 

Duluth   Council   No.    3.   Modern   Sam- 
aritans   will   give  Its  monthly  dancing 
jvirty    Monday    night    at    Camels 
The    committee    in    charge 
Mrs.  Anna  Mann.  Miss  Olga 
Miss  Thyra  Peterson.  , 

^Monday  night.  April  17  a  rnuslcal 
T»rnB-ram  will  be  given  under  the  di- 
?ect^on  Of  Miss  Lihda  Anderson  Arthur 
Anderson  and  Edward  Thorstad. 

Zenith  lodge.*No.* 99.* Degree  of  Hon- 
or will  entertain  at  a  five  hundred 
party  at  3  o'clock  Tuesday  afternoon 
at  the  Maccabee  hall. 


the    eve- 
furnished 


hall 
consists    of 
Benson  and 


ENTERTAINS  WITH  'MOVIES. 


»» 


J.  R.  Batchelor  Shows  Films  to  First 
M.  E.  Sunday  School  Pupils. 

of  the  entertainment  given 
and    intermediate 


An  important  meeting  of  the  Associ- 
ation of  Collegiate  Alumnae  will  be 
held  at  3:80  o'clock  Monday  afternoon 
at  the  residence  of  Mrs.  S.  J.  Colter, 
2621  East  Fifth  street.  The  A.  C.  A. 
win  be  reorganized  and  the  articles  of 
incorporation  will  be  read  and  new  by- 
laws voted  on  at  this  meeting.  Other 
business  will  be  the  election  of  officers 
and  the  reading  of  the  annual  reports. 


fol- 


of 


Composes  Anthem. 

Henry  Williams  of  Duluth  has  Just 
finished  an  "Emancipation"  an  them, 
the  theme  of  which  Is  built  on  South- 
ern melodies.  It  will  be  sung  by  a 
quartet  at  the  ante-Easter  musical 
festival  which  will  be  held  at  St. 
Mark's  A.  M.  E.  church  Friday  night, 
AprQ  14. 


Last  Lecture  in 

Collegiate  Course 

The  last  lecture  of  the  Association 
of  Collegiate  Alumnae  course  will  be 
given  at  the  First  Methodist  church 
Monday  night.  April  24.  when  William 
Howard  Taft  will  speak  on  "Ihe  Mon- 
roe Doctrine." 

This  subject  was  chosen  because  a 
majority  of  the  representative  Dulvith 
men   who  were  asked  by  th«  Associa- 


Theosophical  Society. 

The  Duluth  Lodge  of  the  Theosophi- 
cal  society  holds  its  lodge  meeting,  for 
members  only,  at  8  o'clock.  Thursday 
night,  In  the  lodge  room,  304  Temple 
building.     An  advanced  study  class   in 


'Ancient      Wisdom"      meets 
o'clock  Sunday  mornings. 


at      10:46 


tx>dge  Notes. 


Wa-Wa-Lay-Lee  council,  -Xo.  4.  De- 
gree of  Pocahontas,  will  give  a  card 
partv  April  13  In  their  wigwam,  224 
^Ve3"t  First  street. 

«      «      • 

Aerial  hive.  No.  976.  L.  O.  T.  M.  M., 
win  hold  a  regular  meeting  In  Odd 
Fellows'  temple  Friday  night.  There 
win  be  initiation  and  a  social  half  hour 
in  charge  of  Mrs.  Millie  Robinson. 

Tuesday,   April    26.    Aerial    hive    will 


A  featwre 

^faslel  ^^''th^'FYmM.-E.  church  last 
night  w^  a  motion  picture  program 
given  by  J.  R.  Batchelor.  recreational 
director  of  Duluth.  About  200  young 
people  attended.  The  pictures  were 
shown  following  the  supper,  which  wag 
served    at    6:30    o'clock. 

Other   features   of   the   program 

low ' 

"The  Sunday  School  Army"   •  • 

Volunteer    Banner   class,     composed 

third    and    fourth    year   Juniors. 
Dialogue    .'•'', 

Members  of  I.   S.   Moore's   class. 

'^'^"^  CeciVe  and  Ella  McKeVcher. 

Recitation     •  •  •  • 

Esther   Anderson. 

Piano  solo    ,v"  •  \ 

Florence  Hector. 

Recitation     :  •  W."  M*;  " 

Kenneth    Nichols. 

Reading     ••••;•:;,• 

Beryl  Allen. 

Recitation     ••••••• ;""  1 

Clyde   Jones. 

Boy  Scout  exhibition    . .  . . 

By    several    Boy    Scouts. 

^**Thls  afternoon  a' j lib iVee  for  the  ele- 
mentary classes,  composed  of  more 
than  300  pupils,   is  being  held. 

CELEBRAlT  GRANTS  VICTORY. 

Rev.  H.  A.  Ingham  Will  Be  Speaker 
on  Appomattox  Day  Program. 

Rev  Hardy  A.  Ingham  will  give  the 
chief  address  tonight  when  the  menri- 
bers  of  the  G.  A.  R.  will  fejebrate 
Appomattox  day  at  Memorial  hall, 
courthouse.  Members  of  the  J.  B.  cul- 
ver co?pa  No.  69,  W.  R.  C,  will  serve 
&  dinner  at  6:30  o'clock  for  the  corps 
and  post.  The  entertainment  will  be- 
gin   at    8    o'clock. 

Alonzo  Palmer  post  and  corps  have 
been   Invited   to   be   guests   of   the    lo- 


LUTHERANS  WILL 
HOLD  CONFERENCE 


The  annual  convention  of  the  Red 
Wing  district  of  the  Hauge  synod. 
Norwegian  Evangelical  Lutheran  de- 
nomination, will  be  held  at  the  Beth- 
esda  church.  Sixth  avenue  east  and 
Fifth  street,  ou  Tuesd;;y.  Wednesday 
and  Thursday  of  next  week.  Many 
ministers  and  laymeji    are   expected   to 

attend.  «     „    ,     ,..^i    _ 

Rev.  C.  H.  Holter  of  Red  A^  ing 
will  open  the  convention  Tuesday  with 
an  address.  Daring  the  afternoon  there 
will  be  business  sessions  only.  There 
will  be  a  musical  program  In  the  eve- 

Dailv  sessions  will  be  held  from  16 
to  12  o'clock  in  the  forenoon.  2  to  4 
in  the  afternoon  and  from  8  on. 

RANIER  RAID  LANDS 
SEVERAL  ACCUSED  ONES 

International  Falls.  Minn..  April  8 — 
Two  detectives  from  the  Twin  Cities 
have  spent  the  past  few  weeks  In 
Koochiching  county  obtaining  evidence 
of  blindpigging.  As  a  result  warrants 
were  sworn  out  against  the  follow- 
ing parties  at  Ranier:  Thomas  Beaton, 
ex-saloonkeeper,  and  his  bartendeiv 
Hanson;  Ed  Ek.  ex-saloorikeeper,  and 
bartender.  Ruggles:  another  ex-bar- 
tender named  Johnnie  Campbell,  and 
C.  H.  Clapp.  a  porter,  who  was  doing 
a   little   pigging   on    the    side. 

Their  cases  will  be  laid  before  the 
June    grand    Jury. 


/" 


\ 


A  ttractive 
Hair  Goods 


The  Marinello  Shop  is 
prepared  to  meet  every 
demand  of  the  discrim- 
inating woman. 

Specializing  in  a  com- 
plete line  of  the  famous 
Marinello  preparations. 


Marinello 
Hair  Shop 

301  FIDELITY  BUILDING 

Telephone  for  appointment-— 
Melrose   1550;   Grand  lOlS-A. 


•* 


V 


,. 


. 


/ 


.|ia.     gM.TLl  I 


I 


Saturday, 


THE     QULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


.  "WU 


SOCIAL  AND  OTHER 


OF  OUR  NEIGHBORS 


Calumet,  Mich. 

Caliiiii*-t,    Midi.,    April   7 (Special   to 

The  HoiMld.)— Tho  Horns  tortnlchtly 
club  Mivt  at  th«  hoitie  of  Ulr.  «ni  Mrs. 
Octavt;  Cirdn-r.  l-rank  B  Lv.io  read 
it  pappr  on  "Keweenaw  Coiihty 
Bketrhi-H- 

Th«    «Mlumet    and    I^aurium    Tluslnoss 
Men'.H  a.s^'iclatlnn  held  a  regalar  mrot- 
lh»^      R*rd      Jacket      town      hall 
'S'lay     fvninK.       Il'^pres'iit\ili\  \J 
I'et'-rman    talked    on    "Tonnag''? 


Ins  In 
"W^edn. 
A,    E. 

Rev. 
>n«cnb> 
the  Y. 


('arU)s   ir.    HanVs   addrf»9«i«''il  ■th« 
M-.-t    of    the   <;cl-Ti>g«;th»r   club    at 
M.    t;.    A.    Sundav    aflernooii.   on 
**The   H.«vy   Hand  of  Habit."' 

Th**  I.tdios'  Aid  Si>clety  of  th«  Ctsr- 
nan  Uef.tiruod  rluirch  ht'ld  a  rogular 
ineetiiis  \\'t>dn»-sday  afternoon  in  the 
^)arli)r.-(    i>f    the   'hur>'h. 

Miss  M;ihl«:  CJi^iJiipion  entertained  the 
memb.M-.^  of  111.-  ino  on  i:3th«T  circle 
ait    her    Iioni«^    Thur^^day    evening. 

Th«    Ptstors"    Aid      Society      of      tho 
Pre.ibyt    rliM      church      met      Thursday 
arternocn    at    tlio    hoipe   of   Mrs 
Buthfilaiid    of    LauHiini. 

The  <  holr  of  tht>  I.auriuni  M.  E. 
rhur«'h  •.•nt'^rtaln»'fi  with  a  ronerrt  and 
pocial  K.it!;eriiiK  In  lh»«  parlors  of  the 
churfli    M«»t'Jay    pvening. 

The  III- n.h'r.^  of  th.»  I.lly  Ilehrkah 
lodge  of  Hoiiuhlon  and  Ivy  R<beVah 
lodge  or  Lake  IJinlon  wer«^  the  KU<»sls 
r>t  St'-lli  K"b«-kah  lodgo  of  t'alum«t 
Thuesd^v  ev  njnff-  The  d»*greo  team 
Of  Lily  Io<i»?'»  conferred  tho  Rebekah 
flf^gree  on  a  elnsn  of  eardldat*»!l-  Thjs 
VHs  f>:  lowed  by  a  social  giithering 
and  d.in'">^. 

Rev  I'.  A.  II<ilzhau»cn  of  rh»e»fro 
prav"  an  H'idieuM  Si.ioday  aftt-rnoon  in 
th»'  F'r-sbyti nan  clnin  h.  t.'tking  aa  his 
»i :jbj.-<t.    "Americi,    th»    Ideal    ('ountr>'." 

Th"  Prt^sbvterian  I'rotherhood  met 
VodniHday  •  VfTjinnf  at  the  home  of  D. 
M  Kii»a  on  <'.ilMm>t  street.  J.  K.  Fln- 
Jiysoji    WU.-4   the  leader. 

Mts.s  M.I  11.)  H.11  vfv.  daught«*r  of  Mr. 
|»!id  Mrs.  Joseph  H.irvey  of  Calumet, 
«u.d  William  I'aull  wtro  quietly  wed- 
cJ'  d  at  the  par.^onajre  of  th''  First  linp- 
iiit  c!iurch  Sutiizday  evening  by  the 
pastor,  Re\'.  <;fori5"  ^V-  Uroonm.  Hoth 
Are  well -known  ('i>pp<»r  e<)untry  young 
|>'^oi>l.-.  Th'-y  will  make  their  honin  lir 
C'aluniot. 

Mr.  and   Mr.s.   f)le  J.  Olson  were  aur- 

Fr!.-»ed  b:,  a  large  number  of  their 
riend.'i  at  their  home  yuturday  eve- 
ring  the  oeeutflon  being  their  allvf-r 
v-diiinff  anniversary.  Mr.  and  Mr«. 
tvlefof)   tiMolvfd  many  8ilver  gifti*. 

Da  ighte  .«  hav*  be»n  born  to  Mr. 
nnd  Mrs  WlMiams  H.  WlU.-j.  Mr.  and 
Hi-h  H.-niy  Petfniiann.  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
.Tohn  I.uiu.s  and  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John 
Mattrele.  and  sun.s  lo  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
A'"tbiir  Svn:ori.«»,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Edward 
Morriaettf.  Mr.  and  Mra,  John  a.  Mo- 
K««aii  and    Mr.   and   Mrs.  Jo^ieph   C«e»ar. 

Ml.  .'\fid  Mr.s.  ivier  Huppe  have  re- 
t'lrnt'd  fio'ii  a  vialt  to  Arlssona  and 
falifornia    points. 

J.  \V.  Dawson  of  Marquette  Is  visit- 
ing with  hid  daughter,  Mrs.  M.  W. 
young. 

Pr.  f.  W.  Pratt  left  Thursdav  for 
f'hi'a.t;o  and  I»f»troU,  where  he  will  at- 
tend   dfntal    cljni<-s. 

Capt.  Shjuu^I  Rl'harda  and  C.  E.  t. 
Thoma.s  have  r»>turned  from  a  munth'« 
Visit   in  Florida. 

J.  T.  McKinnoj  of  St.  Paul,  travel- 
ing pa>Keiig.>r  ag-MU  for  the  Xorthern 
P.K-iic  railroad,  was  la  towa  "Wednes- 
dav 

.lame.'*  T.  Fisher  I  as  returned  from 
r»ftroit,    where    li<j    liaa    been    on    bu*i- 

Dr.  A.  B.  Slmonson  has  left  for  Wash- 
ln,.rton.  D.  C,  wh«'re  he  will  visit  for 
»i   shcM-t   time. 

H.    J.     Killi*    of  Minnr-apolia,    district 


Saturday  for  a  visit  with  friends  In 
town  while  incidentally  doiijc  eoiu* 
shopping. 

Mr.  and  Mr*.  J.  Peterson,  Jr..  were 
at  Ititernatlonal  Falls  for  a  Yi»lt  with 
Ih^lr  .sftna. 

Dave  Olson  of  Cl«»mcntson  epent  a 
ooupl'^  of  days  In  the  border  towns 
during  tho  early  part  of  the  we«k  clos- 
ing up  accounts  of  the  winter's  log- 
glnir  affairs.  •        ,.  ^       ^ 

Albeit  Berg<*r.  who  Uvea  about 
twelve-  miles  north  of  Williams,  spent 
Saturday   in  town  on  business. 

Attorney  OeorK.*  K.  Frleson  was  at- 
tt'ndiMs:  to  professional  matters  at 
Warrnad  Inat  Monday. 

Mr  and  Mrs.  D.  C  Leaeh.  who  reside 
along  the  route  of  Judicial  pitch  No. 
20,  are  the  parent.i  of  a  daughter,  born 
at  their  home  on  April  -2. 

♦ • • 

Iron  RiveVf  Mick. 


Monday   evening  for  a   few   days' I  their  old  hd^Vlnce  they  left  It  twen- 


Agnea  ,  ^„^^^_ 
Rah 


Iron  River,  Mich..  April 
lo  The  Herald.) — tJeorge 
Monday   evening   for   iron 


h  Mitchel  and  Albert  Smart 
lliLs  week  for  i>etrolt,  where  they 
work. 

The  Five  Hundred  flub  gave  a  party 
at  tho  home  of  Mrs.  I*eebles  Wednes- 
day evening. 

Miss  Ethel  Peterson  gave  a  tea  party 
Tu>'3day  afternoon  for  a  number  trf  her 
friends. 

The  Maccabeeg  gave  a  farewell  for 
Mrs.  Plier  at  8tambaiigh.  Tuesday  ove- 
n»«*g.  The  Plier  family  will  l«irr  for 
Detroit    to    live. 

The  girl.-*  who  were  home  fof  tho 
spring  vaf^ation  frona  Marquette  Nor- 
mal gave  a  number  of  parties  during 
the    week. 

John  floe  left  la.st  week  for  Du- 
luth    to    do    <arpenter    work. 

The  haakot  ball  team  of  Iron  River 
hish  .Mchool  went  to  Wabeno,  MIeh., 
Friday  of  last  week.  They  were  de- 
f.  atfd,    15    to    16. 

The  Hee  Hive  club  met  at  the  Pwed- 
Ish  JJnptifit  church  Wednesday  night 
and    a    large    number   attended. 


luth 
vi-'-lt 

Mrs    Dolliver  of  Northome  is  a  guea 
of  her  parents.  Mr.  and  Mr«.  Easterly 

M.  H.  Montgomery  Is  in  the  city, 
having  came  from  Madison  Lake,  Minn., 
where  he  recently  sold  his  newspaper 
property.  His  fanrtily  la  still  at  the 
latter  place. 

Kev.  C.  H.  Blake  apent  Wednesday 
nljrht   In  LJttlefork. 

Harry  KUppneiis,  a  14-year-old  boy, 
dli-d   at   the   hotipltal    Wednesday. 

It.  F.  C.  litis  returned  Thursday 
morning  frora  Hot  Springa  Ark.,  where 
he    has    been    taking    the    baths. 

Mrs.  Walker,  wife  of  the  M.  *  I. 
agent  at  Hemidjl.  spent  Thursday  in 
town,  having  come  here  to  meet  a 
daugbter,  Mrs.  Erarts  of  Willtanui,  who 
la    going   to   her    parental    honae    for  a 

•^    wtirwt ... . 

Undertaker  Green  returned  Wednea- 
dax  cyeoijag  from  Erlcsburg  with  -tiut 
body  of  William  Franti,  a  young  noaa 
wliu  died  there  of  apoplexy. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Orlando  Wuodard  went 
to  Llttlefork  Wednesday  evening  en 
route  to  their  homestead  tea  miles 
.south  of  there.  Mr.  Woodard  has  puir^ 
chased  a  farm  near  EndysmUh.  Wis., 
to  which  tho  family  will  remove  at  an 
early   date. 

RenJumln  Tuey,  a  former  home- 
steader of  the  Rirchdale  country,  is 
here  en  route  to  his  property  down 
river,  after  an  absence  of  two  years 
spent    at    Kimball.   Minn. 

The  Dan  I'atch  commenced  her  sea- 
son's trips  between  the  county  seat 
and    Lonian    on    Thursday. 

C-  5.  lilnncy  left  AVednosday  er<v|iLc^ 
to  check  over  the  horses  in  the  Inter- 
national Lunilxr  company's  cami>a,  io 
anticipation  of  the  breakup  of  the 
(amps   i^t   an   <<arly  date. 

A  son  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  ^red 
La    Vallev. 

Miss  Walker  has  returned  from 
North    Dakota    after   an    extended   &b- 


Jim 


8.— (Special 

Little     left 

Mountain    to 


left 
will 


tiaB.^.^nff»M-  aj?ont  for  the  Lehinh 
I-aliroad.  wi.s  a  husincsa  visitor 
limei   on    WediK'sdav. 


Valley 
In  Cal- 


Gilbert 


Gilh.^rt.  Minn..  April  I — CSpecial  to 
The  Ht-iald.)-— MN.s  I.s.ihel  Sullivan  was 
an    I'velfih    vi.^ltor    i<undav. 

t'apt.  i:.  C'oombe,  T.  S.  Morrison.  A. 
J.  .\obl.\  i».  J.  HoKan  and  Frank  IJow- 
liian    wt  re    Vlnjlnla    visitors    Sunday. 

Ml.s.H  Alle^  U'Nelll  was  a  Hibbing  vis- 
itor  Sunday. 

r;f>n>r.il  Superint^-ndent  T.  A  Flan- 
rigan  of  ihf  K«'public  Iron  A  Steel 
company   motored   to  VlrRrlnla   Monday. 

•Jcorgt"  ilurn'ti  of  Buhl  was  the 
of  his  brother.  Dr.  Fred  Barrett, 


was   an   Eveleth  vis- 


was 


vi.sltor 


KU»-.>il    of    I 

Thurs<iay. 

Arthur   Hilson 
Itor    Wf'dn>.-sday. 

Ben     H.     Hoyir     of    Virginia 
Clbert    visitor    Tue.sday. 

A1<K    Sharpe    was   a   Biwablk 
Thursday. 

W.  .1.  Rich  of  Eveleth  and  William 
Hinn  of  Hlhbing  were  (.Gilbert  visitors 
Tuosdfiy. 

Richard  Itlce  of  Eveleth  was  a  Gil- 
bert   visit i>r    Sunday. 

Mr.  and  ^Ir.^.  Leo  Darrar  of  Mesaba 
yrt-vti   'Jilbt-rt    visitors    this    week        ^ 

P.  J.  Hoylo  (,f  Eveleth  was  lii  Gil- 
bert   Tiiwsday. 

Frank  Ercbul  and  John  Gulen  were 
McKinl»'y    vl.sitor.s    Monday. 

Mayor  J.  P.  Ahlin  of  McKinley  was 
a    'iilb-rt    vl.Mltor    this    we^k. 

Janu's  t'rane  was  an  Eveleth  visitor 
Bundav. 

W.  H.  Railf-rmacher,  R.  R.  Anderson 
and    o.    <'.     K.>f»?»n    will    receive    their 

first   dfsr<'.'   in   th.-   Knights  of  Pythias 
odg<>    Monday   ev»-ninR 
The    T»Mjr.*dsv     Nl^ht       Iirldg*»       club 
Was    <MU.rtaln.>d     at     th**     resid>^nce    of 
William     Mar-Mahon     this     wenk.       The 
prl7.-8   woro    won    by   Mr.   and   Mrs.    Ed- 


Chisholm 

Chisholm.  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Edward  Carlyon 
and  daughter  visitod  Mrs.  Thomas  II. 
Kneebone  at  the  Deacon  mine,  near 
Kinney,   Monday. 

Mrs.  Joseph  E-  Cummings  and  son 
Emmf'tt  returned  from  DuTulh,  where 
they  visited  Mrs.  Cummings'  sister, 
Mrs.  W.   F.   Murnian. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  A.  Munro  wore  in 
Diiluth   the   early   part   of   the   week. 

Mrs.  RiUph  \v.  Lindvull  of  Barrows 
is  vl-siting  her  parents,  Mr.  and  Mra 
John  Uustafson. 

Georgia,  tho  young  daughter  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Ueorge  L.  Train,  was  taken 
111  with  pneumonia  on  Sunday,  but  her 
condition  has  been  regarded  as  most 
satisfactory   the  last   ftw  days. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Lovahin.  117  West 
Lake  street,  are  the  parents  of  a  son, 
born    April    4. 

Mrs.  F.  M.  Andrews  is  the  guest  of 
frlejids  in  Duluth  and  will  return  the 
tlrst   of  the  wet  k. 

Morris  Peck  left  Monday  on  a  sev- 
eral days'  business  trip  to  Chicago, 
Milwaukee  and  the  Twin  Cities. 

Mrs.  Adam  N.  Schrlmer  la  expected 
home  next  week  from  Independence, 
where  she  was  called  some  time  ago 
by  the  illness  of  her  father.  The  lat- 
ter's  condition  has  Improved  some- 
what. 

Mrs.  Gf»orge  Teroux  and  Mrs.  P. 
Printy  will  entertain  the  Altar  Society 
O'f  St.  Joseph's  church  at  the  Printy 
h«»nne   on   Thursday   afternoon,   April   i. 

Mrs.  A.  Sapero  returned  Tuesday 
nior»>lnR    from    Minneapolis. 

Mias  Il(»se  Markesky,  who  teaches  at 
Britt.  viaited  here  with  MlM  Whitfhed 
Andrews. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ingman 
to  Sebeka  Wednesday 
parents. 

Dugar  and  Mrs.  Joseph 
to  Murdock  on  Saturday 
to  a  telegram  telling  of 
their  grandmother.  Their 
is  also  seriously  iU  and 
his  re- 
covery. Their  parents.  Mr,  and  Mra. 
John  Anderson,  went  to  Murdock  last 
week  on  being  advised  of  t|)«  iUneas 
of  the  lutter's  parents. 


ty-on«  yearns,  s,,^ 
t!  Fred  HiAin)||i  returned  Tuesday 
from  SoutherQ^/itlchlgan,  where  h4 
spent  the  i^lrM^wlth  relatives,  and 
baa  resumw>tls  duties  as  locomotW« 
englne<='r  oi^nh*  p.  ft  I.  It. 

George  JUamjises  of  Houghton,  Miclv* 
was  here  tM|».wi»ek  on  business.  Mr. 
Lamperes  e]^ec%  te  open  a  coj>f«'ction- 
ery  store  here  in  the  near  future. 

John  AnJemon,  who  has  had.  charga 
of  the  branch  store  of  Moulton  and 
Sehrelner.  ha»-  resigned  to  accept  a 
position   with   the   Iron   Range. 

A.  TiL  HollMay,  assistant  superlit- 
tendent  for  tha  Iron  Range  road,  baa 
returned  from'  a  month's  vacation  \m 
the  South.  ~ 

Missive    Carol    Brown,     Ellen    Mahar, 

Esther  Sullivan  and  Kathertne  McDon- 

aM,   Htudenta  at  the    St.    Cloud    normaJ. 

are    apecding   tha   w^ek    visiting    with 

fwaeata  i»era. 

Edward  W.  CooUff  haa  reaigned  as 
amalstant  poatmaater  to  accept  a  ixosi* 
tlou   with   the   Ii'oo   Range. 


Taconite 


scnce. 


Williams 
to    visit 


went 
their 


Mrs.    A.    B. 
Paries    went 
In    response 
the   death   of 


randfather    is    also    seriously    iU 
le    hopes    are    held    out    for    his 


gra 
Utt 


Mcintosh 

Macintosh.  Minn  .  April  «. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Mrs.  Ole  Rude  and  Mrs. 
Anton  Rakken  of  Gonvick  were  Sun- 
day visitors  of  Mr.  and  Mrs  H.  P. 
King. 

Mjt.  and  Mrs.  Barney  Narveson  re- 
turned to  their  home  at  (Jrand  Rapids 
Monday  after  a  few  day.s'  visit  with 
tho  former's  parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  O. 
Narveaon.    of    this   city. 

Communion  services  will  be  hHd  In 
the  Salem  Swedish  Lutheran  church 
Sunday. 

Alvln  Jensen,  the  Trail  lumberman, 
waa  a   visitor   in   our   city   Sunday. 

Everett  Bouthmayd  left  Monday  for 
Chicago  and  other  points. 

Mrs.  I.  C.  Dimmick  of  GraeovtH*. 
Minn.,  returned  home  yesterday  after 
a  brief  visit  with  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Jens 
Jensen. 

A    son    was    born    to    Mr.    and 
Theodore   Rice  last  week. 

C.     J.     Schmalle     of     Belmont, 
was  here  this  week  on  businesa- 

RcT.  C.  J.  Hill  of  (irand  Forka 
waa  a   visitor   In   our  city   Wednesday. 

The  members  of  the  Mcintosh  fire 
department  are  going  to  have  a  oard 
party   and    reception   Tuesday   evening. 

Miss  Marie  Hooverson  of  Crookston 
visited  at  the  home  of  Dr.  and  Mra. 
Onstad   Sunday. 

Anton  Jensen,  local  inlller.  made  a 
buslneas    trip    to    Crookston    Thursday. 

Mrs.  J.  Alrick  of  this  city  died  Tues- 
day morning  at  2  a.  m.  She  was  87 
years  old.  Funeral  services  will  be 
held  Saturday  afternoon  at  the  Synod 
church, 

Miss  Sophia  Johnson  of  Moorh^ad, 
Minn.,  is  visiting  Mr.  at>d  Mrs.  .A-m<»^ 
Jensen  this  week. 

Dr.  and  Mrs.  J.  Ohnstad  were  visi- 
tor* in  Grand  Forks  the  fore  part  of 
the  ttreak. 


Mrs. 
Iowa, 
!«.  D., 


Eveleth 


vard 

llaak-' 

being 


TUitoh**!     and    Mrs.    N.    J. 
I    lunch    wa»    served,    the 
given    as    favors. 


i'olvln. 
baskets 


Spooner 


Spoonfr.  Minn.,  April  8.  —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A.  Fassett  of  North 
Jlranch  rijiurn'^d  from  Wixconaln  aith  a 
carl'iad  of  thorouRhbrfd  Holstoin  cat- 
tlf<  las'  Widnesday  and  thoy  are  going 
fast,  quite  a  number  b<iiig  sold  among 
townspfople. 

C.  B.  Mlnnick  went  to  Bemldjl  on 
Tuesday  on  a  business  trip. 

Mr.>«.  D.  M.  HfWllt  returned  the  lat- 
tfv  part  of  last  week  from  Sliakopee. 
^vhcr'"  thf*  children  have  beon  attend- 
tng  school. 

J.  J.  Ininn  and  Thomas  Lobb  of  Carp 
Ver»<  in  ti»wn  oji  W'dne.sday  securing 
auppli*-H  for  th»lr  huiiiesltiads. 

A.  .1.  Desmarais  was  in  from  his 
honti'.sicad  at  Banklon  on  Monday  to 
aeiurt'   nf'i'd'-d   j«u|)(>l I »».•». 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Carl  MItz,  Who  havo 
been  holding  down  their  hom<^.stead 
near  Cari>.  left  this  wo.>k  for  Drayton. 
N.  D.,  to  resuine  charge  of  th<-ir  vul- 
canizing plant   at  that   place. 

A.  Z.  .Ion»>s  of  Timo.  111.,  was  In  town 
the  oarly  part  of  th»«  week  lookluff  ovt-i 
•ome  of  thf  samples  of  grains  and 
pr«.««se."(    rai.sed    in   this   district. 

Alonzo    Kfgen    is  in    this   district   this 
•we.k   looking  over  the  conntry  Wfth  rf' 
Vl<nv    to   io<:iiing. 

riiarl.s  Thlbed<'HU  of  St*>phen,  who  Is 
©n^"  of  the  well-known  farmers  of  that 
aeotlon  nf  tho  R»>d  Rlvf>r  valley,  was  a 
Visitor  this  wo*,k  at  the  H.  0'N«'ll  horu'>. 

Bert  Lohii«s  It-ft  Tinaday  niu:ht  mr 
the  Bia  Fork  country.  wh»'r*«  Ti»»  will 
spend  the  next  few  weeka  M.-at4ng^  logs 
for  th>»  surveyor  general  of  logs  and 
lumbi-r. 

Charles  V.  Taylor  of  Pitt,  one  of  the 
leadinK  organizers  of  the  Pitt  Farm^'rs' 
ttlephone  line,  was  in  town  on  Tues- 
day. 

Cliff  Montgomery  arrived  last  week 
from  «'ic<  ro.  Ind..  for  a  visit  with  his 
Pfirrnts  at   Frontier. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Fred  Hild«»n  wefg  visit- 
ing with  friends  and  relatives  In  town 
tkls   we<-k. 

John  Nel.^on  left  for  Grantsburg, 
"Wis.,  for  a  visit  wjth  his  mother.  He 
has  hf'f'n  logging  all  winter. 

Mi.ss  Mary  Munroe  was  in  town  on 
Saturday  with  friends  and  relatives. 

F.  O  Seymour  was  here  from  Ciem- 
entson  on  Sunday  on  matters  conneetod 
Vjth  t.he  beginning  of  ditching  opera- 
tions h\  th«»  Rapid  river  country. 

A  datislUir  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
P.  H.  .Si»n«eng  Thursday. 
;  Jira.  Hellc  Clemcutson  was  dowa  on , 


Eveleth.  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special  to 
Th«»  Herald.) — Miss  Mayme  Linnehan 
of  Hitxbinir  was  a  guest  of  Miss  Mar- 
shall Saturday  and  Sunday.  Miss  Lin- 
nehan was  formerly  a  teacher  In  the 
Eveleth   schools. 

Miss  Irene  Campbell,  who  teaches 
school  at  Two  Harbors,  Is  vlaitlng  her 
mother  here. 

Miss  Natalie  Smith  of  Duluth  visited 
Miss  Edna  Schaefer  last  wyek.  Shft 
was  formerly  as.-<islant  librarian  here 
and  siinoe  that  time  has  attended  Co- 
lumbia university. 

Miss  Edna  Spindler  visited  at  her 
home  in   Duluth  Saturday  and   Sundiay. 

Miss  Lynch  of  Two  Harbors  la  visit- 
ing  Miss    Florence    Young    In    this    city. 

Mra.  ().  F".  I^udwlg,  who  was  called 
to  Minneapolis  by  the  illness  of  her 
sister,  returned  Wednesday  evening. 
Her  sister  died   while  she   was   there. 

Frank  Benson  returned  Tuesday  from 
Minneapolis. 

Mrs.  D.  M.  Mouser  of  Gilbert  re- 
turned to  her  home  via  Eveleth,  Tues- 
day, after  spending  several  days  in 
Duluth. 

R.  M.  Maxwell  of  Mountain  Iron  was 
In   the   city   Wednesday. 

J.  S.  Saari  was  in  Duluth  on  business 
Tuesday   and  W«»dnesday. 

Ben  Ash  was  at  Blwabik  on  business 
Tuesday. 

Max  Loeeff,  who  has  been  employed 
in  the  Fair  store,  has  engaged  In  busi- 
ness  for  himself. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Thomas  Trengove  re- 
turned last  week  fram  a  trip  to  C%1^- 
fornia. 


International  Fdtl^ 

International  Falls,  Minn.,  April  8 — 
(Special  to  The  HeraldO — A.  M.  Jensen 
of  Big  Falls,  <jounty  coroner,  spent 
Wednesday  in  town. 

Frank  Keyer  went  to  the  Twin  Cities 
Wednesday  evening  on  a  business  mis- 
sion. 

Osrar  I..lndvall  has  been  rftmoved 
from  the  hospital  to  his  home,  he  be- 
ing on  the  hiKh  road  to  recovery  fol- 
lowing an  operation  for  appendicitis. 

Mra.  Sam  Barlow  departed  Wednes- 
day evening  for  Niagara.  Wis..  wherf> 
th<>  family  will  make  their  future  humd. 

Fred  Harman  of  Baudette  was  here 
the    first    of    the    week. 

Vern  Marsh  of  liappyland  was  In 
town  Monday. 

George  Scarlett  of  Forsyth  spent 
Tuesday  here. 

L.  W.  "Wilson  and  wife  of  Virginia 
were     visitors    here     the     first     of    the 

C.  J^.  McDowell,  deputy  register  of 
deedi<i.  Went  to  Minneapolis  the  first 
of  the   week  for  a   five  days' 

Mli^D    Agda    Martolund    ha« 
from    a    visit    at     Lindford. 

Pat  Lynch  and  daughter, 
Pjneault  have  returned  from 
Grand  Forks.  K.  li. 

John  Heine  of  Rig  Falls  was  a  eeun. 
ty    seat    visitor   the   first   of   the    week. 

Mrs.       Benjamin        Rusenblum       and 
daughter  departed  Monday  evening  for 
a    visit    at    the    home    of    Mra.    Rospn- 
-blum's   parents   In  Wlaconsln. 

Mr.    and    Mrs.    Jake    Burton    dep.arted 
'Saturday  evening  for  St.  Paul  after  an 
extended  stay  In  our  city. 

F.  C.  Seymour  of  Clementson  was 
In    town    the    first    of   the    week. 

I.  M.  Kalness  of  Starbuck  was  among 
our  visitors   this  week. 

Die  Clemenson,  county  commissioner 
of  Beltrami  county,  passed  through 
ihere  this  week  en  route  to  Bemldjl  to 
attend  a  meeting  of  the  county  board 

R.  H.  Doherty  and  family  are  Duluth 
visitors   this  week. 

lilss  Gertrude  Sullivan   went  to  Du- 


vacatfon 
returned 

and   Miss 
a  visit  to 


Two  Harbors 


Two  Harbors.  Minn.,  April  8. — (Sm- 
clal  to  The  Herald.)— Mrs.  Peter  J. 
Bartley  of  Minneapolis  spent  the  week 
visiting  her  sister,  Mrs.  R.  E.  Haat- 
ings. 

Prltz  Klintman  of  Cook  arrived  her© 
Tuesday. 

Mrs.  Hall  of  Dilworth  is  visiting  her 
sister,   Mrs.    A.    W.    Dodge. 

Mrs.  Archie  Boyd  and  daughter  June 
of  West  Duluth.  apent  the  week-end 
visiting  her  daughter,  Mrs.  C.  P.  Mag- 
nuson. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  George  H.  Good  and 
family  left  Wednesday  for  a  week's 
visit  In  Chicago  with  Mrs.  Good's 
brother. 

L.  A.  Larson  of  Minneapolis  spent 
a  few  days  here  this  week  visiting 
with  his  brother,  D.  O.  Larson. 

Richard  Erlckson  returned  home 
Tuesday  from  St.  Paul. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Curtis  Mills  returned 
home  Thursday  after  spending  tha 
winter  at   Hud.son.   Wis. 

Miss  Nelllo  Llnd  of  Castle  Danger. 
Minn.,  is  here  visiting  her  sister,  Mrs. 
A.    Bostrorn. 

Oscar  Hauger  has  gone  te  Black 
River  Falls,  Wis.,  to  attend  the  fu- 
neral  of  his  father. 

Charles  J.  Logan  returned  Tuesday 
f  rom  -  M'aterloo.  N.  Y".,  where  he  spent 
the  winter  with  his   parents. 

Mrs.  Simon  E.  Hanson  l.-ft  Thursday 
for  Black  River  Falls.  Wis.,  to  attend 
tho  funeral  of  a  brother. 

Glen  S.  Locker,  safety  and  welfaf;^ 
Inspector  for  the  Iron  Range  road,  re- 
turned Wednesday  from  Omaha,  Neb., 
where  he  attended  a  meeting  of  the 
Bafet.v   council. 

Miss  Emma  Paulson  has  returned  to 
Mesaba  after  a  week's  visit  here  with 
her  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  P. 
Paulson. 

Misses  Ida  and  Alice  Holbeck  are 
spending  the  week  with  friends  In 
Virginia. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Donald  O.  I^araon  and 
children  left  Tuesday  for  a  week's 
visit  with  Mr.  Larson's  parents  In  Min- 
neapolis. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  George  Anderson  of 
Ely  have  returned  home  after  a  visit 
with   relatives   here. 

Mrs.  H.  O.  Share  and  sons,  Aj'ron  and 
Noel,  have  Kone  to  Adams,  Minn.,  to 
visit   relatives. 

Mra.  Jules  J.  Anderaon  and  children 
are  spending  the  week  visiting  1R-Ith 
relatives  in  Minneapolis  and  St.  Paul. 

Leonard  Stube  left  Tuesday  for  Slay- 
ton,  Minn.,  for  a  few  days'  visit  with 
relatives. 

Mr.  and  Mra.  Gust  Lund  of  Rock 
Creek,  Minn.,  have  moved  to  thi.s  city 
to  make  their  future  home. 

A  son  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  The- 
odore Alstrom  the  first  of  the  week. 

Mrs.  Theodore  Beck  was  operated  on 
at  the  Burns-Chrlstensen  hospital  Fri- 
day for  appendicitis. 

Mrs.  Laner  of  Elk  River,  Minn,  is 
In  the  ctty  vlflltlng  with  her  daughter. 
Mrs.  D.  A.  Burke,  and  her  son.  J.  H. 
Laner. 

Mrs.  A.  Munthe 
Tuesday  for  a  few 
neapolis. 

Hubert  Pronovost  returned  Tuesday 
ffom  HlUyard.  Wash.,  where  he  and 
Mrs.  Pronovost  spent  the  winter.  Mrs. 
Pronovost    will    return   home    later. 

Miss  Alma  Johnson  was  bare  from 
Duluth  this  week,   visiting  relatives. 

John  Schaefer  of  Ely  is  at  the  Burns- 
Chrlstensen  hospital,  suffering  from  an 
injured   eye. 

Miss  Ellen  Anderson  left  Tuesday 
for  a  three  weeks'  visit  with  friends 
in  Minneapolis  and  other  points  in  the 
aouthern  part  of  the  state. 

The  public  schools  have  been  closed 
this  week    for  the   Easter    vacation. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Walter  S.  ilcCracken 
left  Wednesday  for  a  two  weeks'  vaca- 
tion at  polnfs  in  Canada. 

A  son.  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Frethald  Beck  on  Tuesday.  ■« 

Carl  Forsell.  who  has  been  ill  with 
typhoid  fever  at  the  Burns-Chrlstensen 
hospital,  was  able  to  return  home  oa 
•Tuesday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  D.  Anderson  left  on 
Monday  for  Green  Bay,  Wis.,  their  for- 
mer bomcu  for  an  extended  visit.  Thla 
la    the    first    visit    they    have    made    to 


and    daughter    left 
days'   visit  In  Mln- 


Taconite.  Minn.,  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald) — Mesdames  I.  Overland. 
F.  G.  Gilbert,  N.  P.  Phillips,  T.  Cam- 
eron, B.  Hosklng,  D.  R.  C^ashen.  J.  C^ 
Downing,  A.  Nelson,  A.  McCanon  and 
Isabel  McC::arron  were  In  Coleraine 
Wednesday. 

Mias  Flaon  Caahen  spent  Sunday  at 
Marble  ^»  tha  guest  of  Miss  Susie 
O'RIley. 

John  Brown  Is  now  employed  as 
brakeman  on  tb«  D.,  M.  &  N.  passen- 
ger train   between   here   and   Alborn. 

Eva  von  Horn  of  Marble  was  the 
guest    of   Miss   Lillian   Garreil    Sunday. 

Walter  Myers  and  John  Brown  were 
Proctor    callers    Saturday. 

Jack  BomUr  of  Prootor  was  In  town 
Sunday. 

Dewey  Thomas  Is  employed  at  the 
Arcturus  mine  near  Marble. 

Mrs.  H.  'McXXiity  and  children  re- 
turned from  Grand  Rapids  Thursday. 

August  Suudquist  and  family  left  for 
Marble  Monday,  where  they  will  make 
their  future  home.  Mr.  Suivdqulst  is 
employed  as  pit  foreman  there. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  A.  Van  Dyke  were 
guests  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  C.  Clem 
Sunday. 

Mrs.  Charles  Sullivan  and  children 
returned  from  Iron  River.  Wis..  Satur- 
day. 

Miss  August  ot  Coleralne.  instructor 
of  music,  visited  at  the  Taconite  school 
Tuesday. 

Mrs.  Joseph  Dalzel  left  Wednesday 
for  Duluth. 

Mr.  Phillips  of  Effie.  Minn.,  la  the 
guest  of  her  daughter.  Mrs.  I.  Over- 
land. _ 

The  Ladles*  Aid  of  the  M.  E.  church 
met  with  Mrs,  Irving  Barkla  Thursday 
afternoon.   , 

Miss  L<na  Melsner  of  Superior  is  the 
guest  of  her  sister,   Mrs.  John   Hughes. 

Miss  Mary  and  Kathryne  Foley  of 
Bovey    were    In    town    Sunday. 

Bert  Anderson  of  Bovey  was  here 
Thursday. 

■    ■ •- 

Warroad 

Warroad.  Minn.,  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Ole  Swennlngson  was  In 
from  the  Northwest  Angle  the  first  of 
the  week.  ,   .  , 

Miss  Annie  F.loom  baa  been  visiting 
her  uncle  and  family,  Joseph  Bloom, 
this  week,  returned  Wednesday  to 
Oaklee,  where  she- Is  teaching  school. 

(J.  S.  CarlsoJi  of  Fosaton  has  ac- 
cepted a  Job  In  the  Blevins  butcher 
shop.    *  '•  ■ 

Mrs.  J.  Friend  Holmes  has  opened  up 
a  nulllncry  slo^e  In  the  building  oppo- 
site the  Kchoolhoafte.  known  as  Dr.  <iib- 
son's  office.  I."  M.  Kalnes.^,  editor  of 
the  Starburk  Times,  transacted  buai- 
ness  here  TWursday. 

Lee  Mofflt  came  up  from  Baudette, 
Monday  mornuxg,  where  he  sitent  the 
winter,  and  left  Tuesday  foi'  Oak  Isl- 
and to  engaKe  in  the  fishing  business 
for  the  Armstrong  Trading  company. 

The  Armstrong  Trading  company 
sent  out  seven  teams  loaded  with  sup- 
plies for  their  various  fisheries  on  the 
Lake   of   the   Woods. 

The  Clover  Leaf  Farmers'  club  met 
here  In  the  old  schoolhouse  this  after- 
noon at.  2  p.  m.  Land  drainage  was 
discussed.  .  ^.       . 

Miss  Tinie  Johnson  returned  Monday 
from  Roseau,  where  she  underwent  an 
operation    for  appendicitis. 

Raymond  tilddlngs  arrived  Tuesday- 
from  Grand  FoVks,  -where  h«  has  spent 
the  winter.  He  will  visit  with  his 
brother.  Art,  fa#  awhile  and  will  also 
look  up  a  homestead  in  the  No.  %i 
drainage  system. 

Ed  Naff  of  St.  Paul  Is  spending  the 
week    with   Max   Slicel  and  family. 

Mr.  and  Mra.  C.  A.  Anderson  of  Con- 
road  spenlj|L  l&W  days  In  the  city  this 

Claude  aki'^a^'se  Blevins  vlsltiHl  the 
various  t<fiFiM^aA^>ng  the  Canadian 
Northern  iiiiKvay  tta  far  east  as  Bau- 
dette. .        ^ 

Mr.  and  Mrs,  Floyd  Townsend  enter- 
tained a-cVkt  trltnda  at  cards  Wednes- 
day   evening.        ^  ......  ,. 

C  A.  Moodyi  is  spending  the  week 
In   Duluth.  ,        _  ..         w      . 

A  B  Clair  la  transacting  business 
In  St.  Paul  thia^week. 

The  little  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Lee 
Townsend  broke  two  finger.s,  while 
playing  around  a  gasoline  engine  In 
the    back    yard    when    the    engine    fell 

The  contract  for  the  construction  of 
the  state  road  from  the  Bloom  school- 
house  to  the  Bulldog  run  will  be  let 
by  the  county  lioard  on  April  26.  The 
work  must  be  completed  by  Aug.  1. 

Dr  J  W  Ai?drlst  of  Owatonna,  who 
has  been  the  guest  of  T.  F.  Sprelter. 
purchased  240  acres  In  section  4  of 
Moranvllle  and  expects  to  be  here 
again    in    June. 

Andrew  Fritz,  state  public  examiner, 
was   here   Saturday. 

-  m  — 

Iron  River,  Wis» 

Iron  River,  Win..  April  8. — ({Special  to 
The  'Herald.) — H.  H.  Cowan,  state  man- 
ager of  the  Heine  company;  T.  V.  EU- 
zey  of  the  growers"  service  department, 
and  A.  J.  GJenlre,  who  is  to  be  local 
manager  for  the  pickle  concern  during 
the  coming  season,  spent  a  few  days  in 
this  city  sollclttng  contracts  with  the 
cucumber  growera. 

The  Lenox  hotel,  formerly  known  a« 
the  <ielnlpo  hotel,  has  changed  hands. 
On  Tuesday  T.  F.  Mackmlller  sold  the 
property   to  Oeorge   E.    Beams  of   thla 

city. 

The  state  board  of  the  W.  C.  T.  U. 
will  meet  next  Wednesday  and  Thurs- 
day and  th'»  county  convention  next 
Friday    at    the    Congregational    church. 

W.  B.  Clubine  shipped  another  car- 
load of  young  stock  last  weel  to  his 
Twin  Bear  farm  which  brlngr^  the 
herd  up  to  180. 

John    C.    Chappie,   editor   of   the    Ash- 

•  land    Dally    Press,    and    Ralph    Brown, 

I  secretary    of    the    rejuvenated    Ashland 

Commercial  club,  were  here  Wednesday 

morning.  *v '  • 

Mrs.  Ora  8lp»vgler  and  daughter, 
Margaret,  left  Wednesday  for  their  new 
home  in  Rapid  Cfty.  S.  D.  Mrs.  Spang- 
ler's  sister,  Mi8>  Catherine  O'Brlert.  ac- 
companied them-  Her  position  as  day 
operator  In  the  telephone  office  Is 
being  filled  by  Miss  Ceclle  Taylor,  and 
Miss  LU'^lle  Doherty  Is  night  operator. 

Hans  Moxneaa^  foreman  of  the  dry 
lumber  deparim"ent  of  the  Park  Falls 
Lumber   coippany   was   In     town      this 

J  E.  Aniire.  employed  at  the  Bards- 
dale  plant,  vlalfd   his  family  here. 

William  Pierce  returned  Tuesday 
morning  frpm  Chicago,  where  he  has 
been   for  the   past  two  months. 

Ted  Oonla  has  moved  his  household 
effects  to  Ashland  and  his  family  will 
reside  In   tl>at  city. 

Mrs.  E.  A.  Boas  went  to  Superior 
last  Friday. 

Henry  O'Frtaa « returned  from   Stipe- 


rlor  Monday,  where  he  has  been  In  a 
hospital  with  an  attack  of  erysipelaa 

Elnar  Amundson  of  Mason,  formerly 
a  resident  of  thla  city,  stopped  off  here 
Saturday. 

Mrs.  Mabel  Blglow  and  son,  Robert, 
returned  from  Keystone,  Mont.,  last 
Friday   evening. 

Mr.  Brigga  and  family,  new  settlers 
in  the  town  of  Tripp,  have  moved  into 
the  bonve  which  has  Just  been  com- 
pleted on  his  place  on  section  17. 

Mrs.  C.  F.  Morris  and  son,  William, 
were  Iron  River  visitors  Saturday. 

Mrs.  Byron  Penrose  and  daughter. 
Thorell  of  Moose  Lake,  Minn.,  are  vis- 
iting  at   the   home    of   Mrs.    John   Hall. 

Ole  Knutson  and  Clark  Marlon,  who 
are  working  for  the  Odanah  Lumber 
company,   spent   Sunday   here. 

John  B.  McDonald  of  Parle  Falls  was 
here  last   week. 

Mrs.  J.  L.  Hall  and  children  left 
Thursday  morning  for  Moose  Lake, 
Minn.,    to   visit   relatives. 

Misses  Josle  and  Cecele  Taylor.  Rob- 
erta Murphy  and  Merua  Tomllnson 
were  visitors  at  the  Twin  Ports  Wed- 
nesday. 

Leo  Mitchell  of  West  Duluth  was 
here  last  week. 

Senator  A.  P.  Tomklns  of  Ashland 
was  a  business  visitor  In  town  between 
trains   last    Friday    afternoon. 

Mrs.  Clara  Miles,  Mrs.  T.  G.  Johnson 
and  Mra.  Cast^-rline  were  Duluth  vis- 
itor*   Thursday. 

Mrs.  Fames  RHey  was  In  Ashland 
Thursday. 

Byron  Ripley  of  the  Wisconsin  State 
bank  went  to  Ashland  Tuesday. 

Mr.  Barnes  retains  the  chairmanship 
In  the  town  of  Barnes. 

The  daughter  of  Victor  Myytetl  of 
the  tow^n  of  Oulu,  aged  7  years,  died 
at   St.   Anthony's    hospital    last   week. 

Rev.  F.  K.  Dexter  will  preach  at  the 
Congregational  church  next  Sunday  at 
11  a.  m. 

Nell  Diamon  of  Coleralne.  Minn.,  vis- 
ited In  this  city  with  relatives  and  par- 
ents. 

Georgie  Pittenglll  and  Verna  Meneau 
spent  a  few  days  in  Duluth  this  week. 
.  e 

Citss  Lake 

Cass  Lake,  Minn.,  April  8. — (Special 
to  The  Herald  )— Mrs.  F.  E.  McCann 
spent    the    week-end    In    Superior. 

Heber  L.  Hartley  of  Duluth  spent 
Friday  of  last  week   hero  on   business. 

J.  O.  Hermes  of  Remer  was  a  Cass 
Lake    visitor    Monday    evening. 

J.  R.  Fuhrman  of  Farris  left  this 
week  with  his  family  to  locate  in 
Sou t ham,   N    D. 

Margaret  and  Amy  Peterson  of  Be- 
mldil  are  spending  the  week  with 
Doris    and   Monica    Utley. 

F.  L.  Foote  of  Boy  River  was  a  Cass 
Lak-e    visitor   Monday   night. 

Andy  W.  Johnson  spent  the  first  of 
the  week  at  Minneapolis  and  Buffalo. 
Minn. 

Albert  Marshik  of  Virginia  spent 
Sunday  her«  with  his  family,  return- 
ing   to    Virginia    Monday    noon. 

Miss  Ruth  Harding  and  Miss  Laura 
Welch,  teachers  In  the  Bemldjl  schools, 
are  spending  their  vacation  here  at 
the    Harding    home. 

■  George  Scarbo  spent  several  days 
this  week  with   friends  at  Clearbrook. 

Mr.  and  Mra.  William  White  of 
Menahga  are  the  guests  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Carter.  Mrs.  White  Is  Mr.  Car- 
ter".s  sister.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  White  are 
en  route  for  Montana,  where  they  ex- 
pect  to   make   their   future   home. 

Mrs.  Edward  E.  Olson  returned  last 
evening  from  a  two  weeks'  visit  with 
relatives   at  St.    Paul. 

J.  D.  Stelner  was  in  Duluth  last 
week  and  purchased  a  five-passenger 
Dodge    touring    car    for    nls    livery. 

Sheriff  M.  Kenne<^y  and  son,  Ken- 
neth, of  Walker,  spent  Wednesday  and 
Thursday    In   Caas   Lake. 

H.  N.  Harding,  cashier  of  the  First 
National  bank,  and  Mrs.  Harding,  re- 
turned Tuesday  morning  from  a  five 
weeks'  Journey  along  the  gulf  coast 
from    New    Orleans    to    Pensaeola.    Fla. 

George  Lydick  went  to  Minneapolis 
Tuesday   on   a   business   trip. 

Mr.  and  Mrs  F.  A.  King  went  to 
Grand    Rapids   via  Duluth   last  Friday. 

F.  E.  Bateman  spent  «  few  days  the 
first  of  the  week  at  Island  Farm. 
'  '  e 

Wrenshall 

^■"  ^^^— ■■% 

Wrenshall.  Minn..  April  8. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Mrs.  William  Zei- 
barth  and  children  are  visiting  rela- 
tives in  Millner.  N.  D. 

Hans  Frodeson  and  daughter  of 
Barker  apent  Saturday  here. 

Mrs.  Berth  Wolf  visited  her  daugh- 
ter In  Superior  recently. 

Charles  Liberty  spent  Tuesday  in  Su- 
perior. 

Clyde  Peterson  of  Duluth  transacted 
business  here  Saturday. 

Ellen  Latscher  of  Poplar,  W'ls^  spent 
Sunday  at  home. 

Martlia  Schlavln  la  visiting  in  Du- 
luth. 

The  leap  year  basket  supper  held  in 
tho  church  Saturday  evening  was  an 
enjoyable  affair. 

Messrs.  Anderson  and  Blakely  spent 
Saturday  evening  In  Superior. 

The  ladies'  aid  society  met  with  Mrs. 
Bresaler  last  week. 

Mrs.  Victor  Devlloo  entertained  her 
sister    from    Dulutli    Sunday. 


returned  to  his  home  at  BarnesvlUe, 
Minn.,    Monday.  ^  . 

Mr  and  Mra.  Zeph  Lavoie  returned 
Monday  after  spending  the  winter  at 
Frazee,    Minn.  _      . 

Anthony  Koch  was  called  to  Rock 
Island.  111.,  Tuesday,  on  account  of 
the  death  of  his  brother  at     that  place. 

Miss  Vendla  Frold  of  Grantsburg, 
Wis.,  arrived  this  week  and  will  make 
her  home  at  the  state  forestry  sta- 
tion   with    Mrs.    M.    McGillvary. 

Gilbert  Wiggins  returned  Thursday 
from  Minneapolis  and  will  resume  his 
work   at   the   forestry   station. 

Mra  C.  D,  Ohman  went  to  Duluth 
Monday,  where  she  was  called  by  the 
Illness  of  her  mother,  who  underwent 
an  operation  at  St.  Luke's  hospital.  She 
returned   Tuesday   evening. 

Miss  Edith  C&nfleld  was  a  week- 
end visitor  with  her  uncle,  Frank  Can- 
field,    in    Duluth. 


AVbom 


Alborn,  Minn.,  April  8. — John  John- 
son   was    In    Sagrinaw    Saturday. 

Mi'is  Poupard  and  Miss  Anna  John- 
.«on  of  Elmer  visited  Sunday  with  Miss 
Grace  Dinwiddle. 

Miss  Ida  Eoughton  apent  Sunday 
with  Mrs.  Brousseau  at  Burnett. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Victor  Oakes  and  fam- 
ily  visited   Sunday  at  Grand  Lake. 

Pettr  Nordoen,  who  spent  a  few  days 
at  Chicage  and  Detroit,  Mich.,  returnc:i 
here   Saturday. 

John  "Weed  of  Minneapolis  visited 
Miss  Ida  Boughton  and  George  Pond 
last  Sunday  and  Monday. 

Mrs.  Andy  Maloney  spent  Wednes- 
day  In    Duluth. 

At  the  meeting  of  the  school  board 
last  Saturday,  Miss  Dinwiuuie  and  Mi33 
Boughton    served    lunch. 

Last  Sunday  a  number  of  young  peo- 
ple gave  a  surprise  party  for  James 
Poulsen  In   honor  of  his  birthday. 

Mrs.  Patrick  Maloney  visited  her 
daughter,  Mrs.  Harris  of  Duluth.  Tues- 
day and  Wednesday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Tolof  Mykleby  enter- 
tained Miss  Dinwiddle,  Miss  Boughton 
and  George  Pond  and  John  Ruby  last 
Monday  evening. 

The  railway  bridge,  which  has  been 
under  construction  tho  last  couple  of 
months,    was    completed    this    week. 


Ironton 


Cloquet 


Cloquet,  Minn..  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald) — Miss  Delia  Skagerberg. 
who  Is  teaching  at  Beraidjl,  is  spend- 
ing   the   week    at    heme. 

Miss  Harriet  Harris,  who  has  been 
making  an  extended  visit  with  rela- 
tives in  Kingston.  Ont.,  returned  Sat- 
urday. She  also  visited  at  Warren, 
Kan. 

Mrs.  Fred  Tonkin  and  children  left 
Wednesday  for  a  visit  with  friends 
at  Proctor. 

Mrs.  Alexander  Barclay  and  mother, 
Mrs.  C.  B.  Gednev  of  St.  Paul,  visited 
in    Duluth   last   Saturday. 

Mrs.  Joseph  Phellon  visited  her 
daughter,  Helen,  who  Is  attending  the 
Villa    In    Duluth.    Thursday. 

William  Goodnow  was  called  to 
Bemldjl  Sunday  by  the  death  of  bis 
brother. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  George  Ackerman  en- 
tertained the  members  of  the  Meth- 
odist adult  Bible  class  at  their  home 
Wednesday 

Mrs.  F.  1^'.  Welhelmi  returned.  Sat- 
urday from  an  extended  visit  with  her 
sisters,  Frances  and  Nellie-  Epwin,  who 
are  attending  a  school  for  girls  at 
Ossining.    N.    Y. 

Miss  Esther  Brown  returned  to  her 
home  at  Morgan  Park  afttr  an  over- 
Sunday  visit  with  relatives  In  the  city. 

Miss  Sylvia  Fortlne  left  last  Friday 
for  an  extended  visit  with  friends  at 
North    Branch.    Minn. 

Ernest  Carlson,  who  recently  pur- 
chased the  old  Presbyterian  church 
building,  will  commence  wrecking  the 
old  structure  the  first  of  May  and 
win  use  the  lumber  to  build  a  resi- 
dence- In   the  city. 

Miss  Rena  Bratt  returned  "Wednes- 
day from  St.  Luke's  hospital,  Duluth. 
w'hcre    she   underwent    an    operation. 

Albert  Derouches  moved  nls  family 
from  Iverson  last  week  and  witl  make 
his    future    home   in    this   city. 

John  Gorhan,  an  old  Cloqvfet  resident, 
was  renewing  acquaintance  in  the  city 
Wednesday,  en  route  to  his  home  at 
Virginia. 

John  Swanson  returned  Monday  after 
a  two  months'  visit  at  Clear  Lake  and 
other    Wisconsin    points. 

The  Misses  Helen  O'Meara  and  Eva 
Roy  entertained  a  number  of  frifends 
at  the  former's  home  Tuesday  at  a 
miscellaneaus  shower  In  compliment  to 
Miss  Lizzie  Smith,  whose  marriage  to 
Mr.  W.  P.  Sarette  is  announced  to  take 
place    for    next    week. 

Mrs.  J.  Lacombe  and  two  sons  and 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  Chabado  and  Arthur 
LaBrune  left  Tuesday  for  Winnipeg, 
Canada,  where  they  will  take  up  home- 
steads  and   make   their  future   homes. 

F.  T.  Collins,  who  has  been  vUdttng 
his    daughter,    Mrs.    C.    E.    Sandstrotn. 


Ironton,  Minn.,  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Her.'vld.) — E.  A.  Lamb  returned 
Monday  from  a  long  visit  at  Hot 
Springs,  Ark. 

John  Brennan,  a  prominent  lawyer 
of  Superior,  'Wis.,  was  in  town  Monday. 

H.  W.  Christenaon,  president  of  the 
Klondyke  Mining  company,  which  owns 
a  good  deal  of  land  on  the  range  and 
is  exploring  In  several  places,  was  in 
town  Tuesday. 

A  son  was  bom  Sunday  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Dan  Obradovich. 

The  2-year-old  daughter  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Paul  Muhar  died  Sunday  of  spinal 
meningitis  and  was  buried  Tuesday  In 
Klondyke   cemetery. 

M.  B.  Elllngson  and  Ed  Krueger  were 
drawn  on  the  grand  Jury  and  Frank 
Johnson  on  the  petit  Jury. 

An  exhibit  of  the  work  of  the  pupils 
of  the  grammar  school  Is  being  held  at 
tho  schoolhouse. 

The  night  school  closed  this  week 
after  a  very  successful  season. 

I.  W.  Smith  of  Duluth  spent  the  week 
here  looking  after  his  real  estate  Inter- 
ests. 

O.  E.  Skalinan  attended  a  meeting 
of  the  Elks  in  Brainerd  Thursday. 

William  BertagnoU  left  for  Duluth 
Monday.  He  has  bought  a  60-acre 
farm  seven  miles  from  the  city  and  ex- 
pects to  live  there  as  soon  as  he  can 
build  a  house. 

Sherman  Jacobs,  from  Amcry,  Wig., 
has  gone  to  work  for  G.  H.  Storm. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Kd  Lysne  were  In  Taopl, 
Minn.,  from  Wednesday  until  Saturday. 
They  were  called  there  by  the  death 
of  Mrs.  Lysne's  mother,  Mrs.  N.  Nelson. 

John  Adelslch  spent  a  few  days  with 
his  parents  In  Ely. 

Ole  Texet  of  Klmberly  haB  been  visit- 
ing his  father-in-law,  P.  J.  Nygren. 

James  Thomas  has  bought  a  Grant 
automobile  from  G.  A.  Murphy. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  E.  Elllngson  spent 
the  week  in  St.  Paul. 

Mrs.  Fuller  entertained  at  cards  Mon- 
day afternoon.  The  prizes  were  won  by 
Mrs.  Peck  and  Mrs.  Faber. 

Mra  Berg  left  Wednesday  for  a  two 
weeks'  visit  in  Superior. 

Miss  Bordwell  Moe  of  Lake  Park. 
Minn.,  has  returned  with  her  slster-ln- 
law,  Mrs.  Axel  Moe,  and  will  visit  In 
Ironton  for  a  short  time  before  going 
to  Dakota. 

D.  B.  McAlplne,  village  attorney,  left 
for  Duluth  Wednesday,  and  from  there 
will  go  to  Minneapolis  for  a  few  daj's. 

Capt,  Pascoe  has  sold  one  of  his  Sec- 
ond street  houses  to  Mr.  Palmer. 

Mrs.  Gauthier  entertained  a  number 
of  ladles  Thursday  afternoon. 

Miss  Peterson,  who  has  been  nursing 
.1.  E.  Mattson,  returned  to  Duluth  for  a 
few  weeks. 


Baudette 


Baudette,  Minn.,  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mi-ss  Rowe  of  St.  Paul 
closed  a  week's  work  in  health  and  do- 
mestic science  and  has  returned  to  her 
home. 

Mrs.  C.  H.  Dodds  and  son  have  left 
for  a  month's  visit  in  Cincinnati. 

Mrs.  Elmer  Walters  of  International 
Falls  returned  to  her  home  Wednes- 
day after  a  visit  with  Mrs.  John  Morris. 

Miss  McClatchle  of  the  faculty  spent 
a  few  days  this  week  In  Winnipeg. 

Rev.  Father  Bossus  spent  Monday  in 
Warroad  as  a  guest  of  Rev.  Father 
Trudeau. 

John  Morris,  forest  ranger  of  this 
vicinity,  has  received  his  commission 
as   game  wirrden. 

Mrs.  Amed  Soderstrom  and  child  of 
Warroad,  who  were  guests  at  tho  home 
of  Gus  Soderstrom,  returned  to  their 
home  Sunday.  Mrs.  G.  Soderstrom  went 
along  with  her  for  a  visit. 

Messrs.  Leoburg  and  Holm,  who  at- 
tended the  funeral  of  Mrs.  John  Passi 
on  Monday,  have  returned  to  their 
homes  in  Roseau  county.  The  Pasai 
children  went  with   them. 

The  K.  K.  K.  club  met  with  Bernlce 
Henderson  on  Tuesday  evening. 
Luncheon   was   served. 

Mrs.  T.  J.  Williams  entertained  eight 
on  Monday  in  honor  of  the  birthday 
of  Alderman  T.  J.  Williams. 

Mr.  and  Mra.  C.  J.  Olson  returned 
Tuesday  from  a  week's  business  trip 
In  Duluth  and  the  Twin  Cities.  They 
spent  Sunday  with  friends  in  Henning. 

Miss  Mae  Lakln  left  Tuesday  for 
Superior,  where  she  will  Visit  her  sis- 
ter for  a  short  time  before  g^olt\g  to 
her  home  In  Aitkin. 

Oscar  Flatner  returned  Wednesday 
from   a   short   business   trip   to   Duluth. 

H.  F.  Roumaln  of  Duluth.  who  is 
secretary  of  the  Construction  company 
of  Duluth,  Is  spending  a  few  days  In 
town.  His  company  has  the  contract 
for  Ditch  No.  80. 

Mra  Hofferman  of  Saskatchewan, 
who  has  been  a  guest  of  Mrs.  L.  T. 
Monson.  went  to  Williams  Wednesday 
to  visit  her  sister. 

Miss  Claire  Ruane   of  Slayton,  Minn, 
has  been  elected  assistant  principal  of 
the  schools  here  for  the  coming  year. 
'      William    Hoffstad.    reoresenting    The 
Duluth    Herald,    spent   the      week      end 
hera. 

John  Nelson  went  to  Grantsburg 
Wis.,  this  week  for  a  shoK  visit.  He 
expects  to  return  soon  with  a  carload 
of  stock. 

C.  H.  Dodds  went  to  Winnipeg  last 
Wednesday  on  a  short  business  trip 

William  Rullen  has  returned  from  a 
two  months'  business  trip  to  New 
Richland,    Wis.,   and   Minneapolis. 

Miss  Grennler  returned  Thursday- 
from  a  short  visit  with  friends  in  In- 
ternational   Falls. 

Miss  Luclle  Olson  left  Friday  for  a 
visit  with  her  parents  In  Staalea 

Harold    Anderson    left    Monday    for 

'  :'  ii '  .  *  i  . 


Hlbblng  and  from  there  goes  to  Asb- 
land,  Wl«.,  -m-here  he  has  a  position  In 
the  state  farm  school. 

Rev.  Mr.  Merrill  of  Minneapolis  -will 
hold  two  weeks'  service  In  the  Con- 
gregational church  commencing  to- 
inorro-w. 

Deputy  CollfMrtor  of  Customs  J.  A. 
Kennedy  went  to  Duluth  on  bsulnesa 
Wednesday. 

Russell  Frost  and  Miss  Etta  McCul- 
lin,  who  live  on  claims  south  of  this 
place,  were  married  by  Judge  Schmidt 
on  April  1. 

Miss  Lillian  Smith  of  Thief  Rirer 
Falls  has  accepted  a  position  In  Llnd'9 
studio. 

Henry  Gunderson  is  spending  a  few 
days   In    Oslo    visiting    relatives. 

Dr.  Abrahamson  of  Staples  is  visit- 
ing at  the  Robertson  home  and  n^aklng 
preparations  to  open  a  dental  office. 

Ben  Senske,  formerly  of  this  place, 
lost  his  home  by  fire  this  week  at  Park 
Rapids.  ^  ,  ^  - 

Mr.  and  Mra.  C.  J.  Johnson  returned 
Wednesday  from  International  Falls. 

Nashwauk 

Nashwauk.  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special 
to  Tho  Herald.) — A  daughter  was  born 
to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  T.  Relfel  Tuesday 
noon. 

There  are  over  sixty  autos  here,  and. 
1916  will  undoubtedly  add  to  that  num- 
ber. • 

Pasquale  Verra.  formerly  manager  of 
the  Nashwauk  <'ash  Grocery  company, 
is  remodeling  the  Warra  building  on 
Central  avenue  and  will  open  up  .x 
meat  market  and  grocery  department 
about  April   15. 

J.  E.  Cannon  is  improving:  nftor  a 
successful  operation  at  the  Adams  hos- 
pital at  Hibbing. 

Miss  Marie  Clement  of  Proctor  has 
taken  xharge  of  one  of  the  grades  at 
the  high  school  building,  due  to  the 
vacancj'  caused  by  the  resignation  of 
Miss  Ragi.a  Dahle,  who  has  accepted  a 
position  as  missionary  -worker  in  the 
Island  of  Madagascar. 

Mrs.  W.  M.  Ohlea  returned  the  latter 
part  of  the  week  after  a  week's  visit 
at  her  home  In  Duluth. 

William  Marker  arrived  from  Duluth 
and  has  taken  charge  of  the  manual 
training  department  at  the  high  school, 
.succeeding  C.  R.  Bouton.  who  la  en- 
gaged in  the  rotall  business  elsewhere. 

Mra.  H.  T.  Laffitte  waa  a  Duluth 
caller  a  f-.*w  days  the  latter  part  of  the 
week. 

The  Interior  of  the  Ollila  hotel  is  be- 
ing retiiodeled  and  a  new  coat  of  kalso- 
niine  la  being  put  on   throughout. 

Mrs.  Thomas  Wivell  and  aon.  "^'ill- 
iam,  loft  for  Aurora,  where  they  will 
reside  permanently.  Mr.  Wivell  is 
captain  of  the  Meadow  mine  at  Aurora. 

Capt.  and  Mrs.  Thomas  visited  with 
relatives  and  friends  In  Aurora  and 
B'wabik  over  Sunday. 

Postmaster  Johnson  Is  again  able  to 
be  out  after  a  siege  of  sickness  which 
confined  him  to  his  hojne  for  several 
d»ys. 

The  Georg'^  A.  Lindsay  home  on  First 
street,  two  lots  and  a  five-room  cot- 
tage, was  sold  to  Edward  Thomas  this 
week,  the  consideration  being  $1,7^0. 
The  cottage  occupied  by  Edward 
Thomas  and  owned  by  Paul  H.  Tweed 
has  been  sold   to  Arvid  Mattila. 

School  resumed  on  Monday  after  a 
week's   vacatio.n. 

Mrs.  Charles  Tahtlnen  and  son,  John, 
visited  In  Hlbblng  Sunday. 

F.  V.  Wakkinen  and  John  F.  Milan 
v.'ere   Nashwauk    visitors    Monday. 

Several  Nashwauk  citizens  saw  "Pe>? 
o'  My  Heart"  In  Hibbing  Saturday  eve- 
ning. 

Clifford  Phalin  has  moved  his  fam- 
ily from  Keewatin  and  is  residing  in 
the  John  H.  Carlson  cottage,  recently 
vacated   by   Earl   Martin. 

Erik  Johnson  of  Bovey  was  In  town 
the  first  of  the  m-eek.  Mr.  Johnson  la 
making  extensive  repairs  to  his  store 
iiere,  both  interior  and  exterior. 

D.  P.  Mclntyre  of  Virginia  was  In 
town   Saturday  afternoon. 

William  Kennedy  returned  Monday 
from  To-wer,  where  he  was  employed 
In  the  lath  mill. 

R.  N.  Eastman  of  Ray  was  In  town 
Wednesday. 

Attorney  Philip  Stone  of  Keewatin 
was   in   the  village   this   week. 

Abe  Markus  left  Tuesday  for  the 
southern  part  of  the  state  on  business 
Interests. 


Floodwood 


Floodwood.  Minn..  April  8. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles 
Bartz  recently  visited  friends  In  Du- 
luth. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Bush  of  Gowan  were  in 
the  village  with  A  load  of  cream. 

J.  Arnold  has  gone  to  Milton,  X.  D., 
to  w'ork  In  a  garage. 

Warren  Williams  of  Superior  Is  hero 
visiting  his  parents. 

Waldimer  Aho.  will  give  a  series  of 
lectures  on  electricity  lo  the  pupll.»  in 
the  public  schools.  Mr.  Aho  formerly 
held  a  good  position  with  the  Generail 
Electric  company  of  Minneapolis,  but 
had  to  give  It  up,  and  is  now  living  on 
his   faim    In   Halden   to-an.-^liip. 

Leon  F.  Summers  of  Hibbing  has  re- 
placed Fred  W.  Cobb  as  office  man  for 
the  Coons  Construction  company  In  the 
local  office.  Mr.  Cobb  has  been  given 
a  foremanship  of  dredging  operations 
on  County  Ditch  No.  4. 

Mr.  and  Mr^.  Brubaker  ente»tained 
Mark  Thompson,  superintendent  of  the 
Northeast  Experimental  station  near 
Duluth,  during  his  attendance  here  at 
the  farmers  institute.  Mr.  Thompson 
delivered  some  very  good  lecturea  Mr. 
Brubaker  has  between  fifteen  and 
twenty  milk  cows,  and  Is  one  of  the 
heaviest  patrons  of  the  creamery. 

The  new  board  of  Floodwood  town- 
ship held  its-  first  meeting  this  week, 
and  re-elected  W.  A.  Baujie,  chairman, 
and  John  Stenback,  Sr..  assessor.  The 
fire  phone  line  proposition  -was  among 
the  most  important  matters  brought 
up  at   this  meeting:. 

Among  those  who  attended  the  farm- 
ers' Institute  here  was  Supt.  Llndgren 
of  the  schools,  with  a  class  of  boys 
from  the  higrlier  grades.  The  unor- 
ganized township  of  62-19  was  repre- 
sented by  the  largest  delegation  of  set- 
tlers. 


AUkin 


J 


Aitkin.  Minn..  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Helen  M.  Smiths 
local  editor  of  the  Independent  Ajro, 
has  resigned  and  will  leave  soon  for 
Ottawa.  IU.,  wliere  she  will  become 
news  editor  of   a   paper. 

Miss  Emily  Davenport,  who  is  teach- 
ing at  Nashwauk.  was  a  week-end 
guest  of  Mrs.  E.  E.  Erlkson. 

Recent  births  are  a  son  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  J.  H.  Kinshella,  a  son  to  Mr.  and 
Mra  Gus  VlUnow  and  a  daughter  to 
Mr.  and  Mra  Tom  Thorberg  at  Flem- 
ing Lake. 

Matt  Barr  Is  seriously  111  at  the 
Allen  hotel. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Archie  Arbour  hava 
moved  to  Shovel  Lake,  where  Mr.  Ar- 
bour will  take  charge  of  a  lunaber  and 
lath  mill. 

Mrs.  E.  E.  Tompkins,  who  has  spent 
several  weeks  here  with  her  mother, 
the  late  Mra.  W.  a  Harselm.  departed 
Wednesday  for  her  home  In  White. 
S.    D. 

Mrs.AVestman  and  daughter.  Myrtle, 
went    to    Duluth   Wednesday, 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  M.  Hughes  returned 
to  their  home  In  DuUtth  Wednesday, 
having  been  greets  of  Mrs.  Huglies' 
parents.   Mr.   and   Mrs.  T.   R.  Foley. 

Arnold  Jahn  died  Tuesday  at  Tam- 
arack at  the  age  of  4  years. 

Miss  Alice  Carron  has  been  spend- 
ing a  week  with  friends  la  Hlnne- 
apoUa 

Mrs.    Andrew    Nodell    and    dauK-ht«r 
Miss   Mabel   Kodell.    retortied   Tueaday 
from  the  T-wln  Cities,  \, 

E.  J.  Goward  waa  operate^  upon 
Wednesday  moraine  la-  a''  Racbeater 
boapttal.    Mrs.  Oow«c4  teCt.4BMta>Ly  (o» 

•     i*i«iJ     tiTK.  :t     UWvTi  ,. 


I 


•mim 


h-    > 


rgri^i 


i 

1 

• 

m^m 

Ih- 

111 

■   a      h. :— ^  >       ■■  -  "      1 


r*:^  ""■    ■■-■■■ 


-,^ 


-^A 


Saturday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


21 


x^v 


plaoc    to    itmuiij    until 
(Oiidltiou  Nvlll  warrant 


Mr 
her 


<;()W- 
rfturn 


that 
Mrd's 

Mrs.  Williani  Hunt  and  Miss  Rllla 
Fakumr  were  woik-end  Rucsts  of 
Mrs.    Harry   Caswoll   at   Supf-rlor 

Mr  and  Mrs.  l''red  MacDonald  and 
davmhlrr.  Margar.t.  departed  Monday 
niffht   for  North    Dakota   to    reside. 

MLss  Ililnia  Trolin  has  returned  to 
N»  w    Vol  k. 

Mr  and  Mr.".  C.  P.  De  I.alttre  have 
returned  from  the  South,  where  thry 
parsed   .xeveral    month.s. 

MisM  Su.sie  Maddy.  who  has  been 
spendinK  the  winter  here  willi  her  sis- 
ter Mr.s.  Warren  Potter,  a-eonipanled 
her  niece,  Mi.M.s  Esther  Maildy  of  Mr- 
«;reKor,    to    MinneapollH    Monday. 

Mr.  and  Mr.s.  .U.-^ee  Vorce  have  pron- 
to Stampede.  N.  D..  to  remain  during 
the   .Humnier.  ^,.   .  „ 

Carrol  K<  lly  has  pone  to  I- i.sKe. 
Snf-k..  Can.,  to  live  on   Ina  lioni.  »t.  ad. 

v.  H.  ()f*l.  rhout  Went  to  Minneapo- 
lis   Thursday.  t-.,.i„»v%    t»-bo 

H(  V    \V.  K    Harmarn  of  DuUith.  Tiho 

held  xc  rvi.  rs  here  Tuesday  *-VfP'"8- 
WHS  a  K'ue^i  at  the  home  of  his  father- 
in-law.   Charles    Hokan.^on. 

.lohn     Maihrtoii     ami    dauj,'nlci, 
linked   J>uluiri  Monday. 

Loul.s    Woliliu    has    returned 

'mis.    X.    K.    Whitmorc 
MJ!«n.,   atnl   Mrs.   <;.orKe 
ir.  n  of   Havana.   .\.   l>..   were   p"^^"   ^'^ 
Mr».     Frank     Henae     the     first     of     the 

^'itoy   SuKi'ue   has  returned  from   Riv- 

''mIss    i:thel    I.yon.    a    teaeher    In 
1'..  luiilji  sehools.  ha8  been  Hpe.idlnK 
vaeation    here    with    her 
k:    <\    Itorek. 

Frank     Starry     returned 
fiom     Itraintrd.     wliert-     he 
at<d   upon   r.  oently   for  app 

.Mrs     MarpHr»t    Cluff   and 


Elba, 
to  »Du- 


of   Elk    River. 

rifer  and  <  hll 


cousin. 


the 

her 

Mrs. 


AVednesday 
was     oper- 

(••idleltls. 
Mrs.    How- 


son   w<  lit  to  Mln- 


at 


aid  (luff  an<l    infant 
neapolis    Wt  dne.sduy. 

Mrs  J.  V'.  (Jalarneault  is  nov 
relslor  Springs.  Mo..  .'*/"^''^.,^''^ 
been  joined  by  her  si.iter.  Mias 
To;i:i    of    S'Mllh-. 

Mrs.   v.  V.  Wohlin   i.s  rf  <'ov» 
nn     opHi-Htlon     performed 
laft    week.      Mis.i   Anna 
her   nu'lher  "W  ednesday 


Ex- 

ha.s 
Nan 


evenine  and  was  an  over-nicht  caller. 
MIsse.s  Elvina  and  Evdla  Skol.stad 
eame  up  from  St.  Hllai-re  Monday 
morning  to  visit  with  friends  and  do 
some   shopping    between    trains. 

Ulen  Mar'z  returned  to  his  home  at 
St.    Hilaire    MondJ  y    eveninsf. 

Miss  Eleanor  Hclzknerht  and  Ger- 
trude Harden  went  to  St.  Hilaire  Mon- 
day afterno.  n,  where  they  will  visit 
with  friends  during  their  vacation. 
M»s.^  Holzkneeht  will  be  the  guest  of 
1,1  r   eousin,   Miss   Cora   Juet. 

Mit-s  Anna  Hrokke  went  to  Steincr 
Monday  to  visit  with  her  folks  be- 
tween trains  and  to  bring  Mr.  Rrokke's 
little  son  <;ienn  baek,  who  has  been 
visiting   with  his  grandmother. 

Elmer  .lohnson  transaeted  business 
at   Warroad   Monday. 

A.  C.  Blddiek  of  the  Thief  River 
Produee  company  was  a  business  call- 
»r   at    Middle    Illver    Monday. 

Val  V.ager  left  for  Red  Lake  Falls 
Monday  tyvenlng  to  attend  to  business 
matters  over  night. 

Charl-8  Holland  left  for  Ft.rgo  Mon- 
day  evening   to   spend  a   few  days. 

Martin  Kvenson  left  Monday  after- 
noon for  Seobey,  Mont.,  to  spend  the 
next  few  weeks  looking  over  his 
farming    interests  around   that    place. 

Mi.v;.  T.  S.  Rrtikke  returned  from 
Warren  Monday  evening,  where  slie 
has  be.  n  for  the  last  week  undergoing 
an  operation   in    the   h«ispital. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Nlek  Waldorf  and  baby 
returned  from  Euclid,  where  they  have 
been  for  the  last  week  visiting  with 
Mrs.  Waldorf's  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
E.    C.    Murney. 

Mra.  Corilgan  arrived 
ning  from  MInne.Tpolis 
gue.«t  of  her  daughter, 
Heed>.  ■       ,.       ^ 

Frank  Chlttick  rrrlved  Morday  eve- 
ning from  St.  Cloud  to  be  the  guest 
c  f  hi.>*  daughter  and  .stjn.  Hlani  lie  and 
Tom.  for  a  few  days.  Mr.  t'hlttlck  Is 
a  keeper  at  the  reformatory. 
#— 

Cambridge 


funeral    of    h©r    mother,    Mrs. 

Soder.  Sr.  i 

M.  J.  Sherwood  of  Marquette  was 
here  this  week.  I 

Mrs.  Joe  Bonneville  of  Bibon.  Minn., 
arrived  here  Thursday  to  attend  the 
funeral  of  her  mother,  Mrs.  Charles 
Loder,   Pr. 

Mrs.  Hugh  McLaughlin  returned  from 
Houghton   Sunday. 

Charles  O'Hourke,  Jr..  returned  from 
Green  Bay.  Wl^.,  Tuesday. 

Mrs.  J.  J.  Rose  returned  from  Lake 
Linden  Wednesday,  where  she  has  been 
visiting. 

Mrs.  O.  W.  Stannard  and  daughter. 
i'rsHja.  of  Rockland,  are  the  guests  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  It.  J.  Knubone. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Harry  Hartzell  returned 
from  Houghton  Wednesday. 

Normal  scholars  and  teachers  went 
to  (Jreen  Tuesday  on  a  sleigh  ride,  and 
also   to   visit   the    school. 

Mrs.  Margaret  Rossin  from  White 
Pine  has  moved  to  this  village. 

Mrs.  J.  D.  Burns  is  visiting  Mrg.  Jo- 
seph Cane  at  White  Pine. 


A> 


:;^ 


ring  from 

n     Rralnerd 

Wohlin    visited 


Negaunee 


8._(  Special 
ace  H.  Kline 
of    th*- 


Ncpannee.  Mich..  April 
to  The  Herald.)-  Mi.ss  «.r.-  - 
was  appointed  .h:.nnian  of  t»'r,  '»}.',** 
welfare  departm.nt  In  P.""^'  ,  "^  '^  ,"■ 
A  F.  Malt  land,  who  '"es.fined  at  ho 
meetinit  of  the  N.  Rauneo  \\  uman  s  club 
held    Tuesday    afternoon. 

Arra„Kement.s  are  heinft  ">a^V?ch     is 

eompo.scd  of  120  Nesaune.,  J*"''"'  Jf  •7- 
dents,  for  n  pleni<-  and  c.l.bral  on  to 
he    held    .luly    3    at    Cleveland    P-"k. 

Mrs.  John  Scanlon.  a.  P«'Yn'  .'",': 
dent  of  the  <ity.  Is  seriously  ill  Jit  her 
home   at   South    .N'esaunco. 

The  funiral  of  tin-  late  Henry  Krun- 
belg  was  hHd  Wedne..d.-.y  afternoon 
and   was    largely   attended  ,         , 

William  R.  l>avey  moved  A\  .dne.^U.aj 
into  Ceorpe  CurnoWs  resid.-nco  on 
Snow   street    from    Park   street. 

H»nrv  Trovarrow  has  arrived  home 
from  the  Coppei'  eountr.y  to  spend  a  few 
days   visilinj,'   his   V.iw^y.      „,,,,„^„^.,„ 

Theodore  Johnston  left  A\  ednescl..> 
for  Sault  Ste.  Marie  to  spend  a  f.w 
days  on  business  for  the  Cleveland- 
Cllif.'!    Iron   company. 

1)   W.  DriscoU  has  returned  from  Es- 

cnnaba.  where  he  has  l';*""  ,  j^'"'.'  I'ivtr 
for  the  past  two  weeks  fur  the  Uliver 
Mining  company.  „  .  ^  ...  c-,-^ 
The  Ladles'  Aid  Society  of  the  Swed- 
ish Mission  ehur.h.  met  Thursday  aft- 
ernoon at  -  o'clock  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
William    Rellstrom.     409    Pioneer    ave- 

Colan  Kemp,  a  former  Negaunee 
dent.  Is  here  from  his  home  at 
Mi<h..    to    .';p€iid    a    week    here 
relatives   and   friend.s 

Leo     Dodendorf.     who    was    operated 
upon   Tuesday   morning  at   the   Ishpem. 
Ing    hoftpital,     by     TJr. 
purpose    of    removing 
from    his   thigh,   is 
Ing    nicely. 


Monday 

cve- 

end      Is 

the 

Mrs.      T. 

L. 

rosl- 
Holland. 
visiting 


Smith,     for    the 
a    decayed    bone 
reported   to   be   do- 


Ishpeming 


the 

School  of 

fortune  on 

device     for 

Grand   Rap- 


gaunee, 
couple    we 


Ii.hp.ming.    Mi.h.    April    8.— (Special 
to    The     H-M-ald.)  — Elmer    A.     MacDcut- 
.Id     well    known    In    the    Fpper    Penin- 
sula .IS  a  promoter  of  automobile  races. 
who    for    a    couple    of    years    re.«^lded    In 
l.shpeming.    whore    ho    represented 
International  Correspondence 
Scranton.   Pa.,   may   make   a 
a    cleaning    and     priming 
RUtoinobiles,    according   to 

**'Mr*^m.r  Mrs.  Jacob  White,  former 
residents  ar.-  here  from  Pestigo,  \\  i»., 
«.n   a   visit   to   relatives.  „.  ,  ,u^. 

W  C  Pellew  has  received  word  that 
his  .«on  Albert,  who  had  ber  n  confined 
to  a  hospital  in  Detroit  for  some  time 
past,  was  recovering  and  was  now  at 
his   hr.me   in   that  city. 

A  number  of  men  and  teams  were 
at  work  this  week  removing  Ice  and 
snow  from  th«'  business  str.ets  of  the 
city.  Most  of  the  business  men  cleaned 
their    sidewalks. 

The  regular  meeting  of  the  Ish- 
peming lodge  of  Elks  was  held  Thurs- 
day evening  in  the  MiUlon  hal  and 
the    newly    elected    officers    Installed. 

Both  wagons  and  shlghs  are  n«>w  Ui 
u.se  In  Ishpeming.  Wagons  can  bo 
used  to  advantage  in  the  business  dis- 
tricts but  th«ro  Is  so  much  snuw  In 
the  outlying  districts  that  th*'  mer- 
chants are  obliged  to  use  sleighs  in 
making   their  deliveries.  ^-.^ut 

Tin-  Hopefuls  d.-feated  the  Night 
Hawks  by  60  pins,  also  winning  two 
out  of  three  games,  in  the  Business 
Mens  Bowling  league  cont.;st  lufsiia> 
♦  venlng  at  the  Empire  aleys.  The 
Night  Hawks  have  now  finished  theli 
scludule  and  there  are  only  four 
nmt<h'  s    to    be    rolled.  ,      ^,.,, 

Edwar.l  Ollila.  son  of  Jacob  Ollila 
of  Xegauneo.  and  Miss  Slama  Hecko  of 
l.shpeming.  were  married  Tijesday  eve- 
ning at  the  parsonage  of  the  Mitchell 
Methodist  Episcopal  church  In  Ne- 
jkieino.  iB^^    ^^^     j^     j^     Hewson.      The 

•'re  attended  by  Jalmei-  HIU 
and  Miss  <3lga  Hecko.  They  will  make 
their    home    In    Negauti^ee. 

ThieT River  Falls 

Turn.-t    has  left   Voltaire.   N.   D..   where 
she    will   spend   her   vacation. 

Miss  Hazel  Cook  left  for  Devils  Lake 

last    Saturday.  ,    »,   ,-         «. 

The    Ml.«.s<s    Lockhart    and    M(  Kenzio 

visited   (Jrard  Forks   several   uuys   this 

^  Miss  Martha  Bergman  and  Miss 
Borry  went  to  Viking  AN  ednesday 
visit  friends. 

l.-i  C.   Rlchardscn   has  been   called 
Elgin    i-n   account    of    the   death    of      an 

Bert  Barnett,  who  is  now  a  resident 
of  C.reenbush.  was  at  the  K.  Tharald- 
son  home  Monday.  Mr.  Barnett  was 
an  early  settler  in  Thief  River  Falls, 
having  passed  through  bt^re  In 
when  the  town  was  Inhabited 
juHt  a  ftw  Indians  and  a  few 
eettl(  rs.  .  ,  ,  ^    ,,         , 

Art  Teigland,  who  resides  at  C.rygla. 
•was  an  over-night  caller  In  the  city 
M«-ndav.  Mr.  Teigland  will  run  a 
stage   "from   this   city   to  Orygla 

^''b  "if  Elscth  of  Stranqulst  w 
Ine.ss   caller   here   Thursday. 

S.    P.    Sonnson    came    here 
trains  Thursday   from   Oklee   to   attend 
to   business    mattei'S. 

Ml.ss  Mabr  1  N.wborry  left 
Forks  and  Fargo  Monday 
to      spend    the      next 

'^w\4en    Wood,  who  has  purchased   a 
claim    near    Mavie.    was    In       the      city 
Monday  on  his   way  to  Red  Lake 
where  "he   will   attend   to 

Miss  Clara  Lee  left  for  Grand  Forks 
Monday  afternoon,  where  she  will 
spend  next  week  with  her  sister.  Mrs. 
A.    J.    Idlstad,    who   lives    there 

E  J.  Olson,  a  barber  at  Middle  River, 
came   down    from    that    place    Monday 


Cambridge.  Minn..  Api  il  8.— (Special 
to  Th.'  Htrald.)  ^Miss  Josle  Lind  en- 
tertaln.il  th<-  L.  W.  N.  S.  wing  »lub  last 
.^Saturday  afternoon  for  Miss  Amy  An- 
derson, who  was  h.ome  for  a  w  eek  s 
Easter    vacation. 

A.  A.  Blomqulsl,  who  has  purchased 
the  Leo  Becklin  farm  In  North  I'am- 
brUlge,  arrived  here  with  his  family 
from  Cjuvtr.  Minn.,  and  they  are  now 
bona    fid.'     Isanti    c.unty    residents. 

Mrs.  IJ.  NVIstrom  of  North  Cambridge 
went    to    Minneapolis    Monday. 

Miss  Ahna  Laman  of  North  t  am- 
brldge  went  to  Mir'.noapolls  Tuesday 
to    remain    indefinitely. 

MlKs  Hesslo  Erlckson,  who  Is  study- 
ing in  Minneapolis,  spent  Sunday  and 
Mnndi.y   at   her   home   here.^ 

The  .'-nlvallon  Army  brigade  brgan 
revival  me»^tlngs  In  Uraham  Wednes- 
day evening,  and  will  remain  about 
two   w<  eks. 

Brookston 

Brookslon,  Minn..  April  8.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Mrs.  I'ai  rlo  '-J''  .' 
gher  and  Matt  Boiand,  both  residents 
of  Pt>upore,  were  married  at  Duluth 
on  March  U  and  will  continue  to  make 
their  home  at   Poup<.re. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Iran  Fleming  and 
daughter,  who  have  been  visiting  In 
West  Virginia,  stopped  off  In  Brook- 
ston Ibis  week  while  en  rtiute  to  their 
home  at  St.  Maries.  Idaho.  They  w-ere 
accompanied  by  Mr.  Fleming's  brother, 
who  will   also   go   to   Idaho. 

J.  W.  Bohmd  was  in  Duluth  this 
week  on  business  in  connection  with 
the  M.Mahon  &  Boiand  logging  oper- 
ations,   which    are    nearlng    completion. 

William  Carlln  arrived  front  Flood- 
wood  Wednesday  and  Is  employed  at 
the  Donley  &  Chrihtensen  saloon  dur- 
ing   the    absence    of   Mr.    Christensen. 

Miss  Amanda  Bauer,  who  has  be<>n 
cmphn-td  as  operator  at  Foxboro,  Wis., 
and  ("ambridge.  Mint...  for  the  past 
.several  months,  has  returned  to  her 
home  here  and  she  is  now  holding 
down  the  third  "trick"  at  the  local  sta- 
tion. 

Richard  Gray,  who  recently  pur- 
chased the  Cadott  allotment  south  of 
the  village,  shipped  a  carload  of  build- 
ing materials  and  other  necessary 
equipment  to  commence  building  on 
land.      He    will  improve   the    land   to 


Deerwood 


Deerwood.  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Robert  Archi- 
bald Is  confined  to  her  home  with  the 
grip. 

The  concert  by  the  Deerwod  Choral 
club  will  be  April   18. 

The  Augsberg  Young  People's  so- 
ciety will  give  a  tin-can  social  at  the 
ladies'    aid    hall. 

Thirteen  friends  of  Miss  Gertrude 
Sear  Were  present  on  the  occasion  of 
lier  13th  birthday. 

Mrs.  B.  Magoffin,  Jr.,  was  hostess 
at  a  char'ty  silver  tea  on   Friday. 

This  month's  market  day  will  be 
April   22. 

Paul  M.  Hale  was  at  Bralnerd  on 
Monday   and  then   went  to  Minneapolis. 

<lu»-8ts  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Paul  M.  Hale 
are  Mrs,  J.  T.  Halo  and  sons.  Allen 
and  Tom   of  St.   I'aul. 

The  Deerwood  Concert  band  has  been 
engaged  to  play  a  concert  at  c'rosby 
the  middle  of  April  under  the  auspices 
of  th"  Cro.-^by   library   board. 

P.  Jy.  Melberg  will  establish 
store  in  the  8tf)re  room  he 
bought    from    C.   J.    Ralhvon. 

Lt>cal   Odd  Fellows  attended 
triet    «  onvention    In    Aitkin. 

Graham's  barber  shop  was 
Ized  of  razors,  hones,  etc.,  and 
register  stripped. 

Mr.   and  Mrs.  J.  M.   Hilyer  visited 
Bra  I'll  rd. 

Th'-  Methodist  ladles'  aid  society  met 
at   the   home  of  Mrs.   William   Taylor. 

Miss  Ruth  Alberts  spent  the  week- 
eml  with  her  patents.  Slie  Is  attend- 
ing  high   school   In    I>ralncrd. 


Rf.t 


W^^M 


DULUTH  STORES 

Are  now  in  direct  touch 
every  day  with  the  farm  and 
outside  towns  by  Uncle  Sam 


> 


WHY  THIS  PARCEL  POST  DEPARTMENT  PAYS  THE  ADVERTISER 


IkH-ause  It  readies  Iho  kliul  of  people  the  mer<-lmnt  vrants  to  sell. 
Ueiause  U  apt>eals  to  its  readei-s  In  a  way  that  wUl  support  his 

vertishig. 
Because  a  maxhnum  proportion   of   its  clrtulatlon   Is  among  people 

who  buy.  ,     , 

B*'cau^c  its  advoritshig  value  is  so  recognized 


ad- 


that  the  fact  that  an 


arliele  is  advertised  In  lis  tolumns  Influences  their  orders  on  that 
article. 
MR.  MKRCHAXT,  haven't  you  something  to  sell  to  the  thou'^nds 
of  readers  who  look  to  this  department  for  buying  suggestions'.* 

C.\1.L  OR  WRITK  THI.  PAHt  KL  POST  DKPAUTMEXT,  DULUTH 
HERALD,  FOR  DETAIL  INFORMATION. 


.—-.fC- 


■v..  >■]«-*• 


PARCEL  POST  NEWS 

PablUbed  Kvery   Satarday. 


DEPT.  STORE 


DRY  600DS 


COIWaiUMCATIOXS, 

All  communications  should  be  ad- 
dressed to  the  Duluth  Herald  Parcel 
Post  Editor.  . 


■emcthins 


Kooi 


his  new 
lecentiy 

the  dis- 

hurglar- 
the  cash 


in 


'a  consl^derablc   extent  during  the  com- 
i  Ing  summer. 

H.  A.  Martin,  who  has  been  em- 
ployed at  the  local  station  for  some 
lime  past,  has  gone  to  Duluth,  where 
he   has  obtained   other  employment. 

The  Brookston  flre  department  will 
give  an  Easter  ball  on  Monday  eve- 
ning.   April    24.  ^ 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  M.  Novak  and  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  C.  B.  Larson  spent  Sunday  with 
relatives    and    friends    at    Floodwood. 

Lester  West  and  family,  who  have 
visited  with  Brookston  relatives  for 
several  weeks,  departed  Wednesday 
for  the  state  of  Maine,  where  they 
will  Bp*nd  the  summer.  Roy  Hainlng 
accompanied    them    on    the    trip    to    the 

John  Stokke,  who  has  been  Inspect- 
ing ties  for  the  (Ireat  Northern  in  thl.g 
neighborhood  for  the  past  several 
weeks,  was  called  to  AVarroad  on  tim- 
ber  buslne.ss    Monday    evening. 

(Jarfleld  Blackwood  of  Floodwood 
was    a    business    visitor    in    the    village 


Littlefork 


Little  Fork.  Minn..  April  8.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Rev.  Mr.  Huktte, 
who  ccmducted  a  'week's  pei  ica  of 
meetings  here  left  Monday  evening  for 
Minneaprdis.  where  his  family  lives, 
and  from  there  will' go  to  California 
to    take    charge    of    a    church. 

'i'he  new  counsel  met  for  the  first 
time  Tuesday  evening.  It  is  expected 
that  some  changes  A\ill  be  made  In 
the    administration. 

Rev.  Gregg  returned  from  an  ex- 
tended  trip   on   Tuesday   ev.  tiing. 

Several  local  pupils  passed  the  state 
examinations. 

<Jeorge  Howard  of  the  university 
agricultural  college,  visltfd  one  of  the 
associated    scliools    recently. 

Misses  Ha«k,  Erlckson  and  Mr*.  Hil- 
sted  of  Big  Falls  came  here  last  Sun- 
day morning,  returning  In  the  after- 
noon. 

"F'arm  Folks,"  which  was  given  here 
with  success  last  Saturday  evening, 
will  probably  be  taken  to  Big  Falls  in 
the   near    future. 

Mr.  Jamens<m.  who  Is  in  the  south- 
ern part  of  the  state  for  his  health, 
has  grrally  improved,  and  will  soon 
be    back. 

Mr.  McNeil  took  a  prisoner  to  In- 
ternational   Falls    Tuesday    night. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  A.  Miller  left  re- 
cently for  Backu.s.  where  Mr.  Miller 
will    Avork    for   E.    E.    Griffith. 

Paul  Penfleld,  who  is  working  for 
the  Northern  Drainage  company,  spent 
a  few  days   with    his   family. 

Jack  Hale  has  gone  to  Bemidjl  to 
Sfek     employment. 

Jesse  Dade  spent  Sunday  in  town 
looking  after  interests  for  Houldern- 
Polklnghorne    company. 

Mr.  Cjilpitts  is  away  on  official  bu.»ii- 
ness. 


PJkRCEL.  POST  RATES. 

The  weight  limit  Is  now  tO  pounds 
the  local,  first  and  second  zones,  or 
miles    from    the    starting    point,    and    ^U 
pounds  In  all  other  zones. 

The  rates  for  the  Third.  Fourth,  Fifth 
and  Sixth  zones  are  as  follows: 

1   pound,    Third   zone    6c,   ajid   2c 
each  additional  pound  to  20  pounds 

1   pound.   Fourth  zone   7c.  and   4c 
each  additional  pound  to  20  pounds. 

1    pound,    Fifth    zone    Kc     end    6c 
each  additional  pound  to  ^0  pounds 

1    pound.    Sixth    zone    »c.   and    8c 
each  additional  pound  to  20  pounds. 

The  pound  rates  in  tlie  First  and  Sec 
a   distance   from   Duluth 
will    he 


end 

150 


zones, 
miles. 


In 

150 


for 

for 
for 
for 


of 


GEO.  A.  GRAY  CO. 

113-115  117-119  HesI  Superior  St.,  Hnluth. 


"Wbers    Values    Uclgo    Saprcnie." 

STACK  &  CO. 

Dry  Qoodf, 

Cloaks,  Suit*. 

Millinery  and  Shoes, 

21  and  23  Weet  Supsri^r  St.,  Duluth 


SPECIAL   ATTKXTIOX  GIVEN 
MAIL   ORDERS. 


TO 


1  pound 6c 

2  pounds 6'- 

3  pounds <c 

4  pounds.H  ....    8c 
6  pounds 9c 

6  pounds 10c 

7  pounds 11*^ 

8  pounds 12c 

9  pounds. .  '     ■ 

10  pounds.. 

11  pounds.. 

12  pounds. . 

13  pounds.. 

14  pounds.. 
IB  pounds.. 

16  pounds.. 

17  pounds.. 

18  pounds.. 

19  pounds.. 

20  pounds., 

21  pounds.. 

22  pounds.. 

23  pounds.. 

24  pounds.. 
26  pounds.. 

Ordinary 


13 
,...14c 

15c 

160 

17c 

18c 

l»c 

20c 

21c 

22c 

....23c 

.  .24c 

.'.'..25c 

26c 

27c 

28c 

29c 

Postage 


26 

27 

2S 

29 

30 

31 

32 

33 

34 

35 

36 

37 

38 

39 

40 

41 

42 

43 

44 

45 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 


pounds, 
pounds, 
pounds, 
pounds, 
pounds, 
pounds 


..30c 
.  .31c 
,.32c 
..3Sc 
,  .34c 

^ ..35c 

pounds 36c 

pounds 37c 

pounds S8c 

pounds 39c 

pounds 40c 

pounds 41c 

pounds 42c 

pounds 43c 

.44c 
.46c 
.46c 
.47c 
.48c 
.490 
.50c 
51c 


SHEET  MUSIC 


mMnot 


PHOTiD  SUPPUES 


ECLIP  I  PHOTO 
UPPLY  GO. 

•*THE    KAMERA    SHOP." 

17     FOURTH     AVEXUE     W.»2S  T. 
Commrrelal    Club    RIdg. 

Developing  and  prlntlujc  done 
right.  Priees  are  right  and  fiftren 
yearn*  experience  to  back  our  guar- 
Mntee. 

AXSCO     CAMERAS,    CVKO     PAPF.R, 

and    Suppllt'it    for    All    Cam- 

eraM   and   Kodaks. 


^RIHTIMfiK  <S 


Sounds. . 
ounds. . 
pounds. . 
pounds. . 
pounds. . 
pounds., 
pounds. . 
pounds.. 

poimds 62c 

pounds 63c 

pounds 54c 


PIANO  BARGAINS 

$350  Piano  now $175 

$260  Piano  now $85 

$350  Piano  now $100 

These  Are  Real  Bargains. 
CALL  AXD  SEE  THEM. 


J.  J.  LETOURNEAU 
PRINTING  CO., 


221-22:1 

Duluth. 


WEST  FIRST 


STREE'f. 

MlBB. 


on 


A 

for 

and 

and 


Stamps  can  be  used 
valuation   over    »^6 


BOSTON  MUSIC  CO 

18  and  20  Lake  Ave.  North 


Printers,  Lithographers 
Engravers  and  Binders 

The    largest    and    most    con»P^«t« 
printing   establishment   at    th«   Heafl 
oC  the  Lakes. 
•Special  Atlentioo  to  Alt  Mall  Ordcre 


The 


which 
may  have 


Monday   evening:. 


♦- 


into 


on 


J. 
to 

to 


Riverton 


Riv.  rton.  Minn..  April  8.— (SpcciiiV  to 
The  Hornld.) — Miss  Vivian  McFern. 
who  is  atttndlnpr  high  school  in  Ilraln- 
crd.  underwent  an  operation  for  appcn- 
dlcltls.      .^he    Is    doing    nicely. 

Charles  Hillls  and  wife  came  here 
from   <"rosby.  ,  ,. ,  , 

Mrs.  Ed.  Kidder  and  children  are  vis- 
iting   in    Crosby. 

Mrs  William  McCiillery  and  daugh- 
ter, rhyllls,  of  Crosby,  was  In  town 
Wednesday.  ^     ,  . 

Al  <;entrv  and  wife  have  moved 
Brown's  cottage  by  Rabbit  lake. 

I.vdla  Rhlnehart  of  Crosby  called 
A.    T    WlUtams   recently.  ..      ^      j 

Mrs.  iMiandler  Joined  her  husband 
Verc.  He  Is  employed  as  electrician  In 
the    R.    S.    O.    company    nilne.         .,,,,. 

Chailes  Hanson  and  Florence  -TIlllls 
diove    to    Crosby    Sunday    evening. 

Hilda  Hill,  who  has  been  employed 
at  the   Hotel   Webster,  returned  to  Du- 

W'llma  McFern  returned  from  Braln- 
erd Wednesday. 

Mrs.    cieorge    Ridley    has    been    quite 

sick 

Mrs  Rebor  of  Aitkin,  who  has  been 
visiting  at  the  C.eorge  Rudly  homo, 
returned    to    Aitkin. 

Mrs.   Horace  Humphrey  was 
by  rec<'ntly. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Kearney 
Thurs'iny. 


Barrows 


Rarrow.<»,  Minn..  April  8. —  (Special  to 
Tho  Herald.) — A  number  of  Harrows 
people  hiked  to  Crow  Wing  Monday 
evening  to  attend  a  birthday  party  at 
the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  L.  <;uin  in 
honor  of  tholr  laughter,  Miss  Lillian 
<JuIn. 

John  Wahl  of  Duluth  was  here  Mon- 
day. 

Ed  M.  Ooodwln  of  Lincoln  transacted 
business   here  Monday  and   Tuesday. 

Miss  <;eraldlne  Wllklns  returned  last 
week  fro!n  the  hospital  In  Bralnerd. 
where  she  was  operated  on  for  appen- 
dicitis. 

The  wedllng  of  Miss  Ernestine  Bailey 
and  l^arl  Flansburg  was  celebrated  at 
the  Methodist  church  Wedne.cday  after- 
noon at  3  o'clock,  Rev.  F.  W.  Hill  of 
the  Bralnerd  Methodist  church  officiat- 
ing. The  bridegroom  is  a  prominent 
young  man  of  St.  Mathias.  The  bride 
was  dressed  In  white  satin  and  car- 
ried <a  bouquet  of  roses.  The  church 
was  decorated  with  evergreens  an<l 
roses.  After  the  cereinon.v  a  banquet 
was  served  at  the  Ideal  cafe  here. 


5    cents    on   a 
10   cents   en 
up  to  $60. 

C.  O.  D.  SERVICE. 

Bender  of  a  parcel  on 
,ho  postage  l^J-l%r:T^%^  charges 
the  price  "'  ^^®  y^iroin  the  addressee 
thereon  collected  feTof  10  cents  in 
on  Pay'"*',"^  °.  .fflxed  provided  tho 
pctage  «*»^P*iit?ted  does  not  exceed 
^To:""sich''V3el.Mll^-^i-/,t 

n^^^rUrnre\'juli.y|^;V  *"  '""^' 
l"alSe.  but  not  to  ;.«^<;«^%5,'^e"-package  Is 

The  P«"°"M[°n^t  Te  permitted  to 
addressed  will  »°\_"  ,  JT  c;  O.  D.  par- 
examlne  the  contents  of  a  L.u-  ^^^ 

eel  until  It  has  been  ^ece  Pt    ^^^^^  ^,jj 
^l!tte*arctpre'd\lVen^iddres.ed  to 

^^'^"''^'TpEi^AL- DELIVERY. 

The  postofflce  dcpartnient     has 
rd-dft^lJn^a'lVyMVo  fpacVage  will 
"euro  immediate  delivery- 


FURNITURE 


the 


ar- 


What  We  Advertise 
You  Can  Order  by  Mail 


The     same    special    prices     will     be 
given    our   mall-order  patrons. 

WATCH    OUR   ADS   FOR 

Furniture  Bargains 


Dtl^UTt*.  MKMa. 


FURNITURE 


ASK 


RINTING 


of  Quality  and  Prompt 
Service  at  the-  m 

LANE-GOLCZ 
PRINTING  CO. 

130  and  132  WEST  MICHIGAN  ST, 

Melrose    1604 — Qrand    28G9-D. 


JEWELRY 


C«inpli1«  Kiittfornitlieri. 

Alt 

DULUTH.  MINN. 

If  It's  About 
Housef  umishing ! 

Prompt  Attention  Given 


mum 


428  West  Superior  Street. 

Established   28  Years. 

Watches  and  Jewelry  a  I 
Right  Prices 

BEND  US  YOUR  ORDER. 


LIQUORS 


FLORIST 


PRINTING 


9PTIGIAN 


Cuyuna 


Cuvima.  Minn..  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — lohn  Allila  of  Duluth 
was   in   the    village   recently. 

U.  K.  Dlinmick  has  returned  from 
Oraceville.    Duluth    and    Hewitt. 

Max  Grcenberg  has  returned  from 
Duluth. 

})r.  (5.  M.  S'wall  attended  the  clinics 
at  the  Mayo  hospital   In  Rochester. 

Mrs.  (Just  Hacklund.  who  visited  her 
parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  August  Swan- 
son    of   Bralnerd.    has    returned   home. 

Mike  .lohnson.  Charles  Plat.a  and 
P«te  Carlson  vlsUeu  In  Duluth  and 
Supf  rior. 

Henry  rsrew  has  recovered  from  an 
attack    of    rheumatism. 


1876. 
with 

white 


in   tho 


;s  a  bus- 
between 


for  CI  rand 

afternoon 

week      visiting 


Falls, 
business   mat- 


in Cros- 


returned  home 


Ontonagon 

nona.  Mich.,   was  here  ^h  «  Y|«%^^^o,.er. 

Miss  Teresa  Moran  is  slowly   reco\er 
ing  from  typhoid  fever. 

Mrs.   I).  J.   Norton 

Wednesday.  o-     o.,    «m    real 

Mrs.  i'hsrles  I-oder.   Sr..  an  old   resi 
dent     of     this     village,     died 
night,  and  was   buried  from 

church   Friday.  ,.|«itinir 

Leon  «;arv  n.  who  has  been  \l8lting 
his  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Oar- 
?ln    returned  to  Marquette.  Wednesday. 

j'.    1\    Van    Slyck    of    Mass 
here    this    week. 

Harry    Helax     returned 
Bay     Wis..    Tuesday. 

Miss  Irene  Harrington  Is  spending 
this  week   in  Channing,  Mich. 

John  Arenz  spent  Sunday  In  Rock- 
land  with    his    family.  .    .     vi    i 

F  W  Rogers  of  Lansing,  state  hlgn- 
way  commissioner,  arrived  here  on 
Thursday  to  attend  a  meeting  of  the 
county  road  commissioners. 

Calvin    Conrud    returned 
Bay.    Wis..    Tuesday. 

Mrs.      John      Weyel 
Houghton   Sunday.  «   ^    .      .. 

Mrs    Jerry  Bonneville  of  Duluth 
rived    here    Thursday    to    attend 


went  to  Houghton 

old 

Tuesday 
the   M.   C 


City    was 
from    Oreen 


Wanigas  Whiskey 

Rye  or  Bourbon(7  ywrs  ildj.  ptr  |»llin....$4.00 
Panama  Whisky,  per  gallon. .  .|3.0P 
Chetwoode  Whisky,  gallon. . .  .92.b[) 

Write  or  telephone  us  for  prices 
on  assorted  case  lots  wines, 
kics  and  brandiei. 

Send    for    price 
giiarantccd. 

U'hnleMale  Wine  Merchant. 


wh'S- 


list.      All    goods 


,._„_j    otT  Melrosr    14.15 

310   wCisT   SI  PERIOK   STREET, 

Dalnth,    MiimeHutM. 

Shipped  by  express. 


if 


^ 


FUNERAL 
DESIGNS 

I>ow  Prices. 

We  Specialize. 
PROMPT      SERVICE. 
Orders    sent    out 
same  day  received. 

ALPHA,  Florist 

181  West  Superior  St. 

PHONES: 
Melrose   135«. 
Grand    1626. 


h 


Quality  Printing 


If  you  de.<iire  something  novel 
and  unique  for  your  advertis- 
ing, c«ll  us  up  and  we  will 
execute  the  work  to  your  en- 
tire satisfaction. 


from   Green 
returned     from 

ar- 

the 


New  Duluth 

Xew  Duluth,  Minn..  April  8. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— The  Social 
League  of  the  Presbyterian  church  was 
entertained  at  the  home  of  Mrs.  Robert 
McDermott  Tuesday  afternoon.  The 
hostess  served  luncheon  at  the  close 
of  the  meeting.  ! 

Miss  Mary  Tlnkham  of  Morgan  Park 
visited  Miss  Lorretta  Sampson   Sunday. 

Mrs.  J.  Rlccl  of  Cumberland,  Wis..  Is 
visiting   her    daughter.   Mrs.    F.    Abbote. 

Mrs.  Noble  Sampson  and  daughter. 
Lorretta.  visited  friends  in  Duluth 
Friday. 

Joseph  Heraly  of  Sauk  Center.  Minn., 
was  In  town  Thursday  looking  after 
business    Interests. 

tJcorge  Dewey  returned  W^e.lnesday 
from  Bessemer  and  other  points  in 
Michigan. 

William  Napier  of  Tower  was  a 
cuest  at  the  home  of  his  daughter. 
Mrs.  Fred  Bystiom,  from  Wednesday 
until   Monday.  .   , 

Ml.-'s  F:thel  Brand  visited  her  sister. 
Mls.M  Anna  Brand,  who  Is  teaching  at 
Willow    River,    last    Saturday    and    Sun- 

J  D.  McCurdy  arrived  here  Monday 
from  Minneapolis  to  make  his  future 
home,  and  Is  visiting  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Charles    Euerlo. 

I      Mrs    C.   J.   Helm   was  a   guest   of  her 
brother.    Oust   WiJell    of   Superior,    Frl- 

Mesdames   Frank    Widell    and    Frank 
Brand  attended  the  meeting  «>f  the  Lin- 
naea   society    In    Duluth   Tuesday  after- 
Mrs.  Charles  Pearson  attended"  "Peg 


o'  My  Heart"  at  the  Lyceum  this  after- 

""mIsscs    Hulda    Erlckson    and    Louise 
Smith  anl  Fred  Damkroeger  and  W^  A. 
Cable    attended    "Peg    o'     My     Heait 
Thursday    evening   at    the  Lyceum. 

Mrs.  Robert  Bloyer  of  Duluth  is  vls- 
itinir   Mrs.    F.   M.   Hicks.  ,    ,, 

Mn    ami   Mrs.    A.    Kledrlck    and    Mrs. 
Edward  Banker  visited  friends   In  Du- 

'"Mr^flid^Mrs.  V.  C.  Tower  entertained 
Mn    and    Mrs.    I..    R.    Taylor   at   dinner 

Sunday.  .    ^,   ^     ^* 

The    Mothers'    Club     of 
school    met   Thursday   afternoon 
school.      The    afternoon    was 
sewing.      Lunch     was     served 
committee  In  charge. 

Misses    Lolo    Tower     and 
Metcalfe    attended    "Peg    o 
the  Lvceum  W'ednesday    --- 
i"«dftme8   Harry   O.   Olson   «"l»  ,J«^" 
were  Duluth  visitors  \\  ednes- 


evening  at  the 


the 


at 


Stowe 
at  the 
spent    In 
by    the 


Genevieve 
My    Heart" 
afternoon. 


Tennant 
day. 

The  Ml 
tr    will 
services 
Sunday. 


sses  Wlnnlfred  and  Lolo  Tow- 
duet    at    the    morning 
Presbyterian      church 


sing    a 
of    the 


her  va- 


this 
Wis. 
from 


Fond  du  Lac,  Minn.,  April 
clal  to  The  Herald.)— The 
of  Morris  Hogstad,  who  died 
urday  at  his   mother's  home. 


Frazee 

Th^e^^H^l^alJ'l^-Mlsr^cJl.rfsT^Jfa'^Ml^uln^ 

'thl^  week  w'i'^h  relatives  In  Minneapolis. 

I      Miss  Ruth  Barr   is  spending  he 

cation  at  her  home   in  Mankato. 

'Mrs     C     B.    Jones    Is    spending 

week   with   relatives   In   Superior, 

Ed    Chilton    returned    Tuesday 

a    few   weeks*    stay   in   St.    Paul. 

Mrs.  1    L.  Swain  made  a  bdslncss  trip 
to  Hawley  Tuesday. 
William  Espenson  spent  the  fore  part 

"'M\''ln^']Srs.' Or^^eY^A^rnell-  of  Detroit 
have'arrived  here  for  the  sumraer. 

E     A     Boethe    attended    to    business 
matters  In  Moorhead.  S«uk  Center  and 

Mankato.  -   ..       -vF^tv/^  

*is?c\SS^h\*l?mofth\n^Mn^e«  I  (Continued  on  page   22.  first  column.) 


social  Thursday  evening  at  tne  church 

■^^slna^tor  J.  H.  Baldwin  and  son,  Milo, 

'^Xs^^^IrTZr.lfleiurne^  Tues- 

'"^.'s':°Frfn*i.'johnson  returned  Thurs- 

dav   from   Coopertown,   ^-^-.^  f.^^ 

.lames  Barton  returned  Monday  from 

Minneapolis,    where    he    has    been    re- 

^^i;[lrs^Gr^aci  mngham  of  Caledonia  is 

^  S?fev°'A'S'd%%s^o"n^^;e^Un^das  U.m- 
ber    grader   and    left   Saturday   for   his 

*'''5'l'ssDJI!aPa%\°ir!- fifth  grade  teach- 
er   has  resigned.     Miss  Parker  will  be 

*  The'^teache^fs  and  pupils  enjoyed  their 
spring  vacation  this  week.  School  wjU 
be    resumed   Monday.  „«    xr    r, 

Mrs.  Steward  Hoel  of  Millner.  X.  D.. 
I8  a  guest  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  I.  J.  C?l»ns- 

Miss  Sadie  Kohler  returned  Thurs- 
day from  being  with  her  mother  who 
is    in    the    hospital    in    Minneapolis 

Miss  Harriet  Mather  and  Majorie 
Schleher  returned  Tuesday  from  the 
Moorhead  normal.  ^     ^   ,      j,    ^ 

Miss  Harriet  Mather  entertained  a 
number  of  girls  Saturday  evening  at 
her  home  at  a  bundle  shower  for  Miss 
Sadie  Kohler.  who  is  to  be  married  next 
week  to  Ray  Rockwell. 

_ •- 

Fond  du  Lac 


124  West  Second  Street 
Both  Phones  288. 


CLOTHING 


>^      OPTICIAN 

Make  an  appointment  by  letter 
to  have  your 

EYES  TESTED  FREE 

I  use  all  the  latest  appliances.  I 
do  all  kinds  of  repairing.  Work  re- 
turned same  day,  post  paid.  Lenses 
accurately  duplicated  from  broken 
pieces. 

t.  B.  MILLABD,  Opfician 

Over    Miller-AlbenberK    Co. 

Opposite    10c    store. 


PRINTING 


8.— (Spe- 
funeral 
last  Sat- 
was  held 
from    the    First    Norwegian    church    In 
Duluth  Monday  afternoon,  with   Inter- 
ment In  Park  Hill  cemetery.    Mr.  Hog 
stad  leaves  his  mother  and  two 
ers.  Louie  Hogstad  of  Duluth 
ward  Hogstad,  and  three  sisters.  Mrs. 
Gust    Johnson.    Miss    Amanda    Hogstad 
and  Miss  Laura  Hogstad.  who  lives  at 
Fond  du  Lac.  ..     .    ~.  ^      - 

The    Wigwam  Girls   hiked   Saturday 
to    the    power    plant    and    returned 


Orders  for  Hale 


Attire  will  be  properly  and  promptly 
filled  ly  th« 

Colombia  Clothing  Co., 


Ranl(inPrintingCo 

Robt  Rankin.   Manager. 

PRINTING 


Formerly   ' 
Third  Ave.  'W. 


The   Great   Eastern.*" 
A  Sopertor  St.,  Duluth. 


OF  ALL  KINDS 

OUT-Or  TOWN  TRADE  SOLICITED. 
We  make  (    speelalty  of  Union  Label 


m&ke  (    speelaltj 
W«iter  Mark 


of  Union 
Paper. 


SHOES 


SSI  Weet  Superior  6L     Axs  Bldg. 


CARD  ENGRAVING 


broth- 
and  Ed- 


In 


SHOES  for  EVERYBODY 


All  kinds  (hat  ar«  dctt  aad  *ood, 
up  to  f6.00  and  S7.00.  Special  Taluca 
Bt  93.50  and  M.OO. 


HE 


SUFFEL 


103  West  Superior  St. 

DULUTH. 


Engraved  and  Embossed 

allittd 

—by  our  own  artists. 

Card  and  Wedding  Ensraxnns, 

Monogramed  Stationery,  Rubber 

Stamps,  Seals,  Stencils,  Badges.  Etc. 

Consolidated  Stamp 
&  Printing  Co. 

14  Fourih  Avenue  West 


*r 


T 


v^^ 


t-  ^ J*  .  M I  ■ .  iM  ■  ■  m    JK>r'' 


y***IW^I  yp*  Mi^l— M*".^ 


*i  >  mt 


22 


Saturday, 


THE     DULiUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


SOCIAL  AND  OTHER  NEWS  OF  OUR  NEIGHBORS 


FOND  D£LAC 

(Continued   from  page   21.  > 


Rusoliiif    rar.      Dln- 
Ihi-  log  cabin  owned 


the  evening  by  a 
rn*r  WHS  servod  Ht 
bv    I'Ji  bard   Mobi. 

Kov  K.  K.  I'.iown,  who  conducted 
jiervlo'.s  last  Sunday  at  l'>d«^Tttl  Dam. 
will  luild  ««?rvic.-s  al  the  sch'»olh(>Ud« 
here   Sunday    cVf-tiing. 

Miss  Mamie  Rak.>»«kv,  who  spent  a 
few  dJiys  v\lth  Miss  Mab.l  Urazeuu,  re- 
tlirnfd    lf»    ht-r    home    In    VVf.->t    rhiluth. 

Mavor  Frince  of  iMiluth  W.-dne-sday 
lookid  over  the  fire  hall   for  r.-paira. 

Miss  11  lima  Peterson  had  as  her 
gu^>8i  the  wek-end  Mrs.  Thomas  Jaok- 
Kon   of  I'arlton. 

A.  f)  N'iillard.  who  formerly  was  em- 
ployed b>  \y.  I-  Windom  on  hi-*  farm. 
«rrlv.d  Tliurj«dav  from  Rlee  Lake  t'» 
ship  li'-'*  household  furniture,  and  will 
local,  on  a  farm  of  his  own  at 
I.,aki*. 

.John    <;urno   of   Wrenshall.    whi> 
nierly    lived    here,    made    u    visit 

Tuesday.  j    .u« 

Mrs  »■.  <)  l^TffOuist  ent?rtnin>-d  tn* 
foielmi  mission  ladies  Tliursda;  after- 
noon   a  I    her    hom«-. 

Mrs  Harry  TUshop  left  I  ueitday  to 
vlHlt    lier    nioih.  r.    Mrs.      Itrtiinau.      at 

'  '  r'    iv    <;ias.-«    of    Two    Harbors    spent 
■\;^'ed»l•,•.-MlHy   h'-re. 

r,l;i(i<he    HeeUiuan    rame 
Marble.  Ill  Willi  l.>nsilitljf 

Mi.s.  •'.  "•  i^itf<jul.-i  had 
KU.sl.s  Thursday  Mrs.  .Tohn 
Mii.J     Mirt.    <;u.«*t    L.indsirom 

The    Iniproveni-  lit    <lub 


Rioe 

for- 
here 


home    from 


rl»v  .-vinlnK-  at  tht-  town  hall. 
iiieellnK  will   be   h-ld   April    1> 


nn      her 

K(  kholm 

of    Uuluih. 

niot    \V«^dn>*s- 

I'h  •  next 


liieelinK:    

Mrs.  hiKvald  VSesiRuaid 
foi  (>-r  Utile  d  iui?hter'.-4. 
blrthdav  anniversary  Tu.- 
„,.on,        <:.'tnu..s     an.l      "lusi--      w-ie     the 

following:     MarKa'et  and  M.vrtle  U_ask 
Ellen     Ankfrstrom,     Alo;e 
Westw.t.'ird.   K.iby   Ki^ss-U 
»on,    foni^tano.     lohnson,  n\^^ 

*,":  (Jladys  i;.-r«:qulsi.  Cath-rine  Clow. 
Helen    Kauer.    .ludiih      and      ' 
Omtvi'ut   of  Clary. 


nlfi lained 
Ali<'.\    l*>th 
sday     ftfter- 


und  Mab.-l 
.  Muriel  .John- 
Kv..'lVn    John- 


Charlotte 


Big  Falls 


Hi«  Falls.  Minn  .April  8— (Sp.-cial  to 
The  »{.Mald.>  -C.  M.  <iranger  wa*  at  the 

'"sUlZ  Kth'.|'K:^?^'^M«itod  at  the  county 

"■M,.'''l.houx'enl.r.alnea  the  card  club 

I'liMik     William.-*    was    in     town    this 

'^j!*^!   Haddler   was   at   Northome   thU 

^  R.  S    MvAfrie  of  Craig   was  here  Sat- 

'""Mr^and  Mr.s    A.  A.  Miller  Avere  at  tho 
louniy    .seat    Tutsday. 

Martin  Han.s.n  was  here  the  for© 
DHrl    of    the    week.  ^^„» 

A.  M.  .len:ieii  w.i»  at  the  county  «eat 
Wi'tlTi'sday.  ,.,    ,     „„.  « 

Frank  Liroux  wa.i  in  V  akanaha 
\V<-<hiv.'*<lnv. 

Ml-*.  C.  L..  Hillaiead  waa  at  the  count> 

^''sl,,>i.    P.owen    visit.-d    the    Dentaybow 
ti(<ho..l    ih.-  week-eud.  _ 

Mi-s.  .\.  H.  .Iena>-n  entertained  a  few 
(ri'-'niiii  Sunday    evening. 


Crosby 


Crosby,  Minn..  April  8.— (Special  to 
Tb.-  Herabl.) — IfS.s  Pleart,  a  carpenter, 
whll.-  w.)rklnK  on  the  Croaby-Ironton 
hlKl'  school  Wcflmsdiiy  afternoon  fell 
from  a  fift. en-foot  acaffold  ti)  the 
gr.omd.  H.'  was  taken  to  the  Miners' 
hospital,  whrr"  it  was  found  that  he 
ha«l  a  brok"n  ann  and  hia  face  was 
ba<lly   hruia.d.  ....  , 

H.  IntjalU  wnt  to  Duluth  this  week 
to  punliase  ad.lllional  stuck  for  his 
second    hand    furniture   store. 

H  J.  Kruse  returned  Thursday  from 
ft  few  dav.-i'  bu.sifi'-ss  trip  to  OuUith. 

W.  H.  Bamberi;  made  a  busln>^88  trip 
to  Superior  and  Two  Harbors  Tuesday. 

Mr.H.  1).  .T.  Severance  and  daughters. 
Anna  and  Mau«le.  were  Brainerd  visi- 
tors la.st  Saturday. 

Mrs.  A.  J.  Haye..*  l-^ft  ln.*<t  Saturday 
for  a  w<-eU's  visit  with  relatives  in  St. 
l»aul   and    K  iu  t'laii--.  Wi.'» 

Dr.  It.  J.  Sewall  purchased  a  1?16 
fh  e-|»a.>*aenKer    Rfo. 

Mrs.  K.  tl.  In^alls  visited  with  her 
par<ni<*  in   Aitkin   Sunday  and  Monday. 

Hniio  Aiin.iuist  left  for  the  Twin 
Citi.-.s  Wednesday  night  <»n  business. 
e.<pe''iincr   to   return   Saturday. 

.1  R.  Calarneault  and  C.  1'.  De  Lalt- 
tre'  of  Aitkin  visit,  d  the  Fl'.st  State 
hank  of  this  elty  Wednesday,  of  which 
Instil  ut  ion    they   ar<'    officers. 

The  Frldav  Stmly  club  elfde.i  the 
f..llowink;:  Mrs.  \V.  S.  Titt.  piesldent. 
Mr.-*.  H.  ing:all3.  vlye  president:  Mis.  M. 
F.  Ci-o.sby.  secretary,  and  Mr.s.  Albert 
Humble,    tri-asurt-r   and    librarian. 

Reiul  Pcriault  was  awarded  the  ccm- 
tra't  for  redecorating  the  George  H. 
Ciosbv  cottages. 

The  Commercial  club  elected  the  fol- 
lowing  offi.-ers:  F.  A.  Lindbergh,  prea- 
Id.nt;  W.  G.  Young,  vice  president;  S. 
L..  Krunelle.  seeretary;  A.  J.  Hayes. 
tref.  .«urcr,  and  P.  X.  Haughlelia  and 
William    F.    Rutt.   directors. 

K.  F.  Mattson  and  family  moved. 
Thuisday.  into  their  now  home,  which 
was  built  during  the  winter  by  Mr. 
M.itts.n  on  lot  2,  block  1,  Central  ad- 
diti(.n.  ' 

The  interests  of  J.  A.  Johnson  of  the. 
firm  of  Xordblok  &  Johnson,  who  op- 
orate  a  grocery  store  In  Lalte  View, 
was  purchased  by  H.  W.  ?«M>rdblck. 
wlio,  wif.i  th'-  assistance  of  Mrs.  Nord- 
bick,  will  conduct  the  bftsitteaa.  Mr. 
Johnson  expects  to  follow  up  his  for- 
mer   trade   of   blacksmlthlng. 

The  Presbyterian  Ladles'  aid  met 
Thursday  afternoon  In  the  church  par- 
lors. 

J«d.n  William  Peterson  died  Monday 
ftt  a  l<K-al  hospital  .\nd  the  funeral  was 
lield  froui  the  Swedish  Lutheran  church 
under  the  direction  of  the  Crofiby 
liHlee,  No.  71,  S.  H.  &  E.  F.  of  A.  In- 
terment was  made  In  Klyondlke  cem- 
etery. Ho  was  59  years  of  age,  and 
leaves  two  couslna  In  Michigan  and 
mother  in   Sweden. 

The  Catholic  Altar  aoolety  was  en- 
tertained Thurs.lay  afternoon  by  Mr.<?. 
H.  J.   Rrcen  at  the  Spalding  hotel. 


Biwabik 


Riwabik.  Minn..  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Heiald.t — Senator  Campbell  of 
Mli;ntapohy   was   here  on   Friday. 

The  followiiiK  fach^rs  have  re- 
signed and  will  not  return  next  year. 
MiiiSM  Mellnda  La  V'allle,  Fr.inces 
Donahue,  IJllzabi-th  Degnan.  Rmma 
MIckel.si.n.  Alice  Wlltse  and  Myrtle 
Maker,  also  Leon  Smith,  J.  S.  Ruchan- 
an    an.l    Rex    We.>»ton. 

Arthur  (i.  Sanborn  has  taken  the 
po>;itlon  of  road  over.^eer  offered  by 
the    board    of     township    jjupervlsora. 

Mjs.  J.  A.  Stewart  and  children 
apent  Tliuisday  in  Llba,  the  gucsts  of 
Mrs.   F.   F.    Rotaford. 

MIs.s  A»vnes  Cannlcbael  of  Mesaba 
visited    relativeH   here   Thursday. 

Mrs.  .J.  C.  Dorsey.  wiio  spent  the 
week-cn.l  hero  with  friends,  returned 
to  her  home  In  Two  Harbors  on  Mon- 
day. ^  ,    .^ 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Emerson  left 
Frldav   for  Chisholm   to   re.slde. 

Mr.s.  Clarence  Cross  will  be  hostess 
t.>  the  M.  I-.  Ladles'  Aid  Thur.-»day 
afternoon  at  her  home  on  Chicago 
avenue. 

Ld  VerrlU  of  Buhl  spent  the  week- 
en<l  here  with  his  parents,  Mr.  and 
Mr.'*.   Charles  Verrlll. 

Rev.  W.  G.  F'rltz  was  In  Gilbert  this 
week.  „       ,    . 

Floyil  Miller  broke  his  arm  Sunday 
afterno<ui  at  Virginia  while  cranking 
hi^    .lutomohile. 

.Mr  and  Mis.  James  E.  Irwin,  who 
h.ive  been  at  Two  Harbors  for  some 
time  past  visiting  relatives,  returned 
home  Sunday.  ,   , 

E.  F.  Casey  was  a  business  vUltor 
at   Virginia   Tuesday. 

J.  n.  Lunn  and  J.  S.  Buchanan  at- 
tended the  meeting  of  school  super- 
intendents and  physical  directors  at 
Virginia    on    Saturday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Oscar  F.  Strom  and 
children  have  returned  from  a  month's 
visit  with  rtlativt-8  at  St.  Hilalre, 
Minn 

Fred  Salmon  left  Saturday  for  Mln- 
n 'apolis.  where  he  expects  t(t  make 
his  home.  His  mother  and  sister  left 
for  there  some  time  ago. 

Mrs.  E.  W.  tilass,  Charles  RInn  and 
J.  T.  Vlckers  spent  Wednesday  In  Vir- 
ginia  shopping. 

Mrs.  Mattle  Bonham  and  son.  Bald- 
win, left  Saturday  for  Superior  to 
visit  relatives  before  leaving  for  Mar- 
lon, Mich.,  where  they  expect  to  reside. 

Mrs.  J.  S.  Lutes  of  Duluth  Is  In  the 
village. 

Mrs.  F.  S.  Dane  entertaind  on  Thurs- 
day evenlntr  for  Mrs.   Lutes. 

Mrs.  H.  G.  Seeley  entrtalned  the 
Tuejiday  Evening  Bridge  club  at  her 
home  on  Chicago  avenue.  Lunch  was 
»ervr;d   bv   the   hostess. 

Mrs.  Z!  C.  Hlnkley  left  for  Superior 
on  Tuesday  for  a  short  vltlt  with 
relatives. 

Mrs.  Charles  Christian  is  quite  III 
at   her  iiome. 

Trustee  Frank  Guss  left  on  Thurs- 
day for  Xorth  Dakota  points  on  a 
business   trip. 

The  Congregational  Ladles'  Aid  will 
meet  on  Wednt-sday  afternoon  with 
Mrs.  William  Dane  at  her  home  on 
Clilcago   avenue. 

Miss  Gladys  McTver  was  111  on  Mon- 
Jay   and    unable    to    attend    school. 

R.  J.  McGee  of  Virginia  waa  here 
on    Wednesday. 

D.  P.  Cavln,  superintendent  of  the 
Belgrade  mine,  was  a  Virginia  caller 
tht    first   of   the  week. 

A  meeting  of  the  BIwablk  volunteer 
fire  department  will  be  held  on 
VVetlne.tjdav  t'venlng,  when  the  annual 
election   of  officers   will   be  held. 


Moose  Lake 


Moose  Lake,  Minn..  April  8. — CSoeci  \1 
to  The  Herald.) — Eddie  Blahd"  resigned 
lil«  job  with  Mr.  Penrose  Monday  morn- 
ing and  will  be  employed  at  the  City 
nteat  market  for  a  short  time,  when 
he  will  be  sent  to  liarntim  to  take 
charge  of  the  VVcske  Bros.'  shop  there. 

MiKs  Hulda  Johnson,  who  has  been 
«  niployed  at  the  Waters  hospital  lis 
ntii'se,  has  resigned  and  left  fpr  Su- 
perior,   whei-e   .she   Is   enjployed. 

Mrs.  H.  T.  Carlson  and  little  daugh- 
ter departed  Saturday  for  FInlayson 
for  a  short  visit. 

MIPS  Myrtle  I'eterson,  Instructresa  at 
the  local  Schools,  has  gone  to  her  home 
Ht  Mora   for  the    Easter  vacation. 

Jack  (^unningham  and  party  of  ©tur. 
geon  Lake  atitoed  to  Moose  Lake  Sun- 
day afternoon. 

Mlsa  Lulu  Stickney  of  Hinckley  was 
here  In  the  Interest  of  her  music  pupils. 

Supt.  Michaels.  Master  Mechanic  Fos- 
ter and  Roadmaster  Crooks  of  the  Soo 
line  transacted  business  here  Tuesday 
afternoon. 

Kddlu  Peterson  departed  for  Duluth 
P'riday. 

Mrs.  Vern  Pembleton  of  Willow  River 
arrived  Wednesday  noon  to  visit  her 
parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Vaster- 
ling. 

Gle  Swanson,  Jr..  transacted  busine.ss 
In  the  Twin  Cities  Tueaday  and 
Wednesday. 

Miss  .Julia  Nelson,  teacher  at  the  lo- 
cal school,  departed  Tuesday  afternoon 
fur  Minneapolis. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Bert  Oliver  left  Tues- 
day afternoon  for  their  home  in   Wis* 


Bemidji 

Beinidjl,  Minn,.  April  8. —  (Special  t>> 
The  Herald.) — Miss  Florlce  Plummer 
left  S.iturday  for  Blackduck  to  visit 
friends. 

ludge  A.  M.  Crowell,  who  for  the 
past  three  months  has  been  ill  at  St. 
Anthony's  hospital  of  a  complication 
of  diseases,  has  resumed  his  duties  as 
Judge    of    municipal    court. 

Miss  Esther  Campbell  of  Solway 
spent  Monday  In  the  city  as  the  guest 
of  Miss  Elaine  Boyd,  before  returning 
to  St.  Cloud,  where  she  Is  a  teacher 
in    the    public    schools. 

Director  Louis  Burchard  of  the  Be- 
midji band  announces  that  the  first 
open  air  concert  will  probably  be  held 
about  May  1,  or  as  soon  as  the  lake 
open.-  and  the  weather  Is  not  too  chilly 
for  th<-  people  to  attend  on  the  lake 
shore.  The  band  now  has  twenty  mem- 
bers and  several  others  are  coming 
soon,  so  that  by  fall  the  BemldJl  band 
will  again  be  one  of  the  leading  mus- 
ical organiaztions  of  this  part  of  the 
state. 

Rev.  L.  P.  Warford,  pastor  of  the 
Presbyterian  church.  leTt  Monday  eve- 
ning for  Minneapolis,  where  he  was 
called  on  business  matters.  He  re- 
turned Sunday  and  expects  to  move 
hi.^    family   tu   this  city  about  April   24. 


Hurley 


consin  -md  will  return  to  rent   the  Mrs 
Mary   Rayse   farm   north   of   town. 

J.    A.    Willis    of   Autumba    arrived   the  i 
first  of  the  week   to  make  this  plact-  his 
home  and  engage    In   the   land   business 
here. 

Miss  Bessie  Murph.v.  who  la  teaching 
In  the  Skog  district,  .spent  Saturday  at 
her  honn-  at   Rush  City. 

John  Carls«>n.  our  genial  section  fore.  | 
man.     transa«ted     business     at     Duluth 
Saturday. 

MisHca  Ilsther  John.son.  Elsa  Johnson 
and  .Mnia  Strand  of  the  local  school 
faculty  are  spending  their  Easter  va- 
cation at  their  respective  homes  at  Du- 
luth. 

Miss  Adele  Ogllvle  departed  Satur- 
day morning  for  her  home  at  Willow 
Rlv"r.  where  she  will  spend  her  Easter 
v-ication. 

Mrs.  E.  Woodbury  and  Mrs.  H.  <.er- 
lach  and  daughter.  Elsie,  of  Barnum 
came  down  and  spent  Sunday  wUh  the 
Mra.  John   Skelton  family. 

Mrs.  C.  P.  Hart  returned  Sunday  aft- 
einooii  from  a  visit  with  friends  and 
relaiive.n  At   Minneapolis. 

Mr.s.  1!.  Pejirose  and  daughter.  Thoral. 
departed  Saturday  for  Iron  River  to 
spend   a  few   days. 

Miss  Anna  N'ilsen,  who  Is  teaching 
at  WlUniar,  arrived  home  Monday  aft- 
ernoon to  spend   her  Easter  vacation. 

Guy  Matte.son  transacted  business  at 
Duhith   the  first   of  the  week. 

Little  Robert  Weske  departed  for 
Minneapolis  Tuesday  morning  to  spend 
the  Ea.ster  vacation  with  his  uncle. 
Merchant  I'uzzel. 

Mr.s.  McMonagle,  George  McMonagle's 
ujother,  departed  Tuesday  morning  for 
Minneapolis,  where  ahe  will  visit  with 
her  daughter  b.-fore  returning  to  her 
home  at  Vernon  t'enter. 


Hurley.  Wis..  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mr.  and  Mrs.  John 
Thompson  left  this  week  for  St.  Louis 
to  lojti  a  carnival  company  and  take 
the  management  of  one  of  the  shows. 

Mrs.  James  H  Davia  left  Tuesday  on 
an  extended  visit  with  friends  and  rela- 
tives at   Adrian,   Mich. 

Mrs.  Joseph  Secor  and  children  left 
Monday  evening  for  Blsbee,  Ariz., 
where  they  will  remain  for  some  time. 

Joseph  Becker,  an  Instructor  in  the 
college  of  agriculture  at  Madison,  spent 
this  week   at  his  home   here. 

Miss  Ida  Bradley,  who  has  been 
teaching  during  the  past  school  year, 
has  returned   to  her  home  here. 

Mrs.  H.  E.  Loye  of  Eveleth,  Minn..  Is 
visiting  at  Fred  Williams'  home  here. 

Miss  Josle  Damejn  of  St.  Paul,  Is 
visiting  her  sister.  Mrs.  George  Sea- 
mans. 

Miss  Hattle  Reynolds  returned  on 
Tuesday  from  Waupaca,  where  she  has 
spent  six  meeka  vlalting  her  parents. 

Mrs.  George  Porter  and  children  of 
Antigu  are  guests  at  the  Dresselly 
home. 

The  Ladles'  Aid  Society  of  the  Pres- 
byterian church  met  in  the  church 
parlors  Thursday  afternoon  and  re- 
organised with  a  membership  of 
twenty.      The    following    officers    were 


elected:  President.  Mrs.  W.  C.  Trezona: 
vice  president,  Mrs.  A.  R.  McDonald; 
secretary  and  treasurer,  Mrs.  T.  Kohl. 
They  havtj  decided  to  hold  an  open 
meeting  once  a  month.  The  tlrst  meet- 
ing win  be  held  on  Thursday  afternoon 
In    the   church   parlors. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Llndquist  of  Hurley 
spent  the  rtrst  of  the  week   at  Upson. 

Miss  Muriel  White  of  Cpson  came  to 
Hurley  and  took  the  teachers'  exam- 
inations. 

Mrs,    (>le    Anderson       and       daughter 
.\ellie   of   Upson   spent    a    few   days   this' 
week     visiting     relati\e3     and     friends,  i 
hcje,,   . 

m  " 

Brainerd 

Brainerd.  Minn..  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Misses  Ruth  Ack- 
ley  and  Fleurlne  Mueller,  who  have 
been  guests  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  <J. 
Keen  since  Monday,  returned  to  Wa- 
dena   Friday    afternoon. 

Mlsa  Vivian  Mcp-arran,  who  was 
operated  on  Monday  for  appendicitis 
at  a  local  noapital,  is  getting  along 
nicely. 

MLsb  Leona  Hoist  and  Miss  Mar- 
garet Hough  have  returned  from  Pe- 
quol,    where    they    visited    friends. 

H.  (>.  Seaton  and  M.  V.  Baker  of 
MiniH-apolls  have  bought  the  Burg  or 
Spalding  place  from  Henry  Spalding 
of  Brainerd.  situated  on  (Jull  lake, 
embra<-lng  I6-'  acres,  in  section  22. 
with  fine  timbered  grounds  and  a  half 
mile  of  lake  shore,  to  be  platted  into 
lots.  A  hotel  will  be  built  and  boats 
pr«ivlded  with  other  aumnu-r  resort  ac- 
commodations. 

A.  B.  Hostetter  of  Duluth  was  In 
Brainerd    Friday. 

F.  X.  Beaver,  district  agent  of  the 
Prudential,  returned  to  St.  Cloud  on 
Frida.v  afternoon. 

O.  E.  Skalman  of  Ironton  was  a 
Brainerd    business    visitor. 

Miss  Helen  Rardin.  ^  ho  has  been  a 
guest  of  her  sister.  Miss  Winifred 
Reardin,  has  returned  to  her  home  In 
Beardsley. 

J.  C.  Barber,  who  owns  a  fine  coun- 
tri'  home  at  Twin  <^>aks,  was  here 
from  Chicago,  returning  there  on  Fri- 
day. He  contemplatea  building  an 
addition  to  his  horse  barn  and  cattle 
barn. 

County  Commissioners  J.  A.  Erlck- 
son.  John  A.  Oberg  and  District  En- 
gineer Cooley  went  to  Fort  Ripley 
Friday  to  examine  the  bridge  and  to 
see  If  It  will  withstand  expected 
floods. 

Mrs.  H.-rman  Benedict  ha.^  returned 
to  Pillager  after  a  nhort  visit  with 
her  daughter.   Mrs.  Brltton. 

J.  A.  Stetson  of  Deerwood  was  in 
the  city  on   real   estate  business. 

Miss  Ha/.el  Brockway  has  returned 
from   a   visit    In    Aitkin. 

Attorney  D.  L.  Severance  of  Crosby 
was  in  the  city  on  legal  business. 


Slater's    sister,    Mrs. 


rsity    8tu(^nt.|is    ho 
ibation.        1*1 
Clifford   X«w<-I   who 

rd  last  fall,  f\^  mov 
iplJs  again. 


a    Hamline    unl- 
me    for   a    short 


moved  to   Pons- 
ed  back  to   Park 


Bessemer 

Bessemer,  Mieh.,  April  8.  —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Miss  Anna  Ma««nec,  j 
who  spent  a  week  with  her  parents  In  | 
this  vlty.  has  returned  to  St.  Croix' 
Falls,  Wis.,  where  she  is  teaching  In 
the  Polk   county  normal  school. 

tJeorge  Haggerson,  son  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  J.  W.  Haggerson.  died  after  an  | 
lllne.ss  of  over  four  months  of  pneu-j 
monla.  He  was  born  in  Shawano.  Wis.,  | 
Feb.  2,  1876,  and  came  here  with  his  i 
parents  thirty-one  years  ago.  He  la 
survived  by  his  father,  mother,  three  | 
sisters  and  one  brother.  Mrs.  Lizzie 
Merrill  of  Antlgo.  Wis..  Mrs.  !<tella 
Brown  of  Oregon.  Mlsa  Blanche  of 
'this  city  and  Frank  of  Jronwotwi.  The 
funeral  was  hefd  from  the.  home,  the 
ser>'ices  being  conducted  by  Rev.  C. 
M.  Frazer.  interment  was  niado  in 
the  Bessemer  cemetery. 


Bigfork 


Blgfork,  Minn..  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Martin  Johnson 
was  at  home  to  a  number  of  ladies 
Thursday   afternoon. 

Mrs.  Ole  Peterson  entertained  Mrs. 
Martin  Johnson  at  coffee  Friday  aft- 
ernoon, it  being  Mrs.  Peterson's  birth- 
day  anniversary. 

Ole  Arnenson'a  residence  In  Btistl 
town  burned  to  the  ground  Wednesday 
night. 

Ed  Carlson  and  Arnold  I..aiierman 
were  visitors  from  Bustl  town  Thurs- 
day. 

Mrs.  and  Mrs.  Ira  Collins  went  to 
Deer  River  Tuesday  to  consult  a  doctor 
about  Mrs.  Collins"  Illness.  Mr.  Collins* 
hand,  w^hlch  was  injured  last  fall  by 
a  gun  shot.   Is   now  much  better. 

Rev.  and  Mrs.  Martin  Johnson  were 
surprised  bj  a  large  number  of  friends 
on  Friday  evening.  W.  A.  Brown  pre- 
sented the  departing  pastor  and  his 
wife  with  a  gift  of  money,  presented 
bv  those  present. 

Mrs.  E.  F.  BJorge.  Mrs.  A.  R.  OH- 
bert  and  Mrs.  Jack  Steele  entertained 
In  honor  of  Mrs.  Martin  Johnson  Sat- 
urday afternoon  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
BJorge. 

The  Blgfork  Farmers*'  club  held  a 
most  successful  meeting  Saturday. 
April  1.  A  dinner  was  served  by  the 
farniers'  wives.  After  dinner  a  pro- 
gram consisting  of  a  number  of  recita- 
tions, songs  and  musical  numbers  was 
given.  There  was  a  reading  contest 
In  which  several  women  and  girls  took 
part.  Mrs.  David  Nylen  was  awarded 
first  prize  and  Mrs.  B:d.  Hamilton  the 
"booby"  prize  by  the  Judges.  Mrs. 
James    Reid    and    Miss    MUdrea    t  anip- 

bell.  ...» 

Mrs.  C.  C.  Holsman  and  Infant  son 
returned  from  Deer  River  Thursday 
of  last  week. 

Monday  afternoon  Mrs.  C.  C.  Hols- 
man entertained  a  number  of  ladles. 
Mrs.  Martin  Johnson  being  the  guest 
of    honor. 

Rev.  and  Mrs.  Martin  Johnson  and 
two  daughters  left  on  Tuesdays  train 
for  their  new  home  In  Munger.  Minn. 
Tl.ey  will  be  guests  for  some  time  of 
Rev.  and  Mrs.  John  Sorenberger.  after 
which  they  will  build  a  home  on  land 
bought  from  Mr.  Sorenberger.  Rev. 
Johnson  will  preach  in  Mizpah.  Minn., 
for  three  montha.  after  which  his 
movements  are  not  settled.  A  large 
number  of  friends  were  at  the  depot 
to   bid   them    godspeed. 

ParkRapids 

Park  Raphls.  Minn.,  April  8. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Attorney  De 
Lury  of  Walker  was  here  Thursday. 

W.  E.  Roberts  of  this  place  was 
killed  near  Walker  Wednesday  on  the 
M.  A  1.  railroad  by  being  run  over  by 
a  freight  train.  He  was  a  brother  of 
G.   M.    Roberts   of   this   place. 

The  improvement  club  met  with  Mrs. 

E.  V.  Fuller  on  Friday  afternoon,  there 
being   a   very    large   attendance. 

Harry  De  Bill,  who  waa  taken  to 
Minneapolis  some  time  ago  for  an  op- 
eration, died  Thursday.  He  did  not 
rally  from  the  operation. 

Walter  S.  Campbell  has  been  ap- 
pointed mall  carrier  on  the  eastern 
route  out  of  here,  and  will  begin  on 
April   17.- 

Roy  Wllsle.  son  of  County  Treasurer 
Wllsie.  who  has  been  In  Canada  the 
past  winter,  is  visiting  his  parents 
here. 

The  Episcopal  Ladles'  guild  met  with 
Mrs.  M.  M.  Nygard  Thursday  afternoon. 

Mr.  and  Mra.  Frank  Kaufenberg. 
who  have  been  wintering  pa  Flolida, 
have   returned   home. 

Clifford  Fuller  has  resigned  his  Job 
here  and  gone  to  Aberdeen.  S.  D.,  to 
go   into  business  for  himself. 

Joe  Wilson,  who  has  been  working 
In  camp  the  past  winter,  has  returned 
home  to  remain  for   the  summer. 

Mra.  Lizzie  Hawiey,  who  has  been 
quite   sick,   la   reported    much   better. 

A.  N.  Swunson  i.s  now  bookkeeper  In 

F.  O.    Nelson's   store. 

Misses  Violet  Slater  and  Mildred 
Pftffe    spent    Sunday    and    Monday     at 


N'evls    with 
Justin    Hal\l*So... 

Howard     Williams 
versity 
rabat 

C 
ford     _   . 
RaplJs  agal... 

Postmaster  Wilcox,  wife  and  son,  re- 
turned   from   Owatonna    Tuesday. 

Bert  Rodman,  president  of  the  Ake- 
ley  State  banH^  was  a  business  visitor 
Tuesday. 

Mlsa  Vera  Brown,  who  is  attending 
the  state  nonnal  at  St.  Cloud  and  who 
came  home  la.st  week  on  a  vacation, 
returned    Wednesday    morning. 

Byron  Knapp  has  purchased  the 
building  on  Main  street  known  as  the 
deorge  Rlma  store  from  I.  1.  Brown. 

Joe  Revolr  has  purchased  the  Vari- 
ety store  building  on  Main  street  and 
is  making  it  over  into  a  laundry. 

Joe  Schearer,  who  recently».»old  his 
town  property  to  Mr.  Auer.  is  building 
on  his  place  on  Long  lake  and  will 
move  out  there  as  soon  as  his  house 
is  finished.  .    „ 

On  Saturday  evening  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Len  Rice  entertained  for  Miss  Agnes 
Opegard.    a    former    teacher    here. 

The  Modern  Woodmen  gave  a  public 
entertainment  last  Thursday  evening 
at   the   Auditorium. 

Hermantown 

Hermantown.  Minn.,  April  8.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— Mrs.  Ole  Ander- 
son  win  entertain  the  Ladies  Aid  so- 
cletv  of  the  Five  Corners  church  next 
We<inesday   at    2    p.    m.    at    her    home. 

Misses  Heimbach  of  Duluth  spent  a 
few  davs  vUsting  their  aunt  and 
uncle.    Mr.    and    Mrs.    John    Grandy. 

Mrs.  John  Anderson  entertained  at 
dl-.iner  Wedntsday  evening.  Covers 
were    laid    for    seven. 

Miss  Minnie  Hlllmen.  who  was  ill 
f.»r  a  month  with  pneumonia  Is  now 
able  to  resume  her  tea<hing  in  bolway. 

Mrs.  J.  Cearholm  of  Adolph  enter- 
tained the  Adolph  ladles'  aid  society 
at    her   home  Wednesday   afternoon. 

Mrs.  N.  P,  Johnson  and  Mih.  Arthur 
Pearson  transacted  business  In  Duluth 
Monday.  _  ,  . 

Olof  Anderson  with  his  crew  of 
workmen  spent  a  few  days  shoveling 
snow  fro.m  FlTe  Corners  up  the  Pike 
Lake   road. 

.  ■■    ■  '     ♦• 

CoHasset 

Cohasset,  Minn.,  April  8— (Special  to 
The  Hera7d,)-,Mrs.  F.  W.  Stockwell 
entertained  .the  J'^lve  Hundred  club 
Wednesday  '  evening.  A  lunch  was 
served  after  prizes  were  awarded  to 
Ed  Dibblev,  first  men's;  Mrs.  A.  Phalr. 
first  ladies^  and  Mris.  Skocdopole.  con- 
solation. ..... 

Mrs.  Dan  Cockran  entertained  the 
Christian    aid    Thursday. 

Mli?8  Hazel  Cpchran  returned  Monday 
after  a  week's  visit  with  her  sister. 
Mrs.   McLaughlin   of   Grand   Rapidp. 

Mr.  Crawley,  lumber  scaler,  went  to 
Duluth  Thursday. 

Messrs.  Lochner.  Dorholt,  Brown  and 
W.  <}rober  went  to  Duluth  Tuesday 
to  take  In  the  Stecher-Beell  wres- 
tling match. 

Mrs.  John  Cockran  of  Grand  Rapids 
Is   visiting   tft   the    Dan   Cockran   hotne. 

A  number  of  friends  gathered  at  the 
home  of  M.  H.  Jones  In  honor  of  his 
seventy-secornd  birthday.  He  is  a  vet- 
eran   of   the   Civil   war. 

Mrs.  J.  W.  Lane  spent  Monday  In 
Grand  Rapids. 

Mrs.  M.'Macumber  left  Wednesday  to 
visit  her  daughter  fn  Lake  Mills.   Wis. 

Mrs.  Chalmers  of  Spooner  is  visiting 
her   mother.    Mrs.   M.-Macumber. 

Robert  Pratt  of  Grand  Hapids  and 
Holm  of  Grand  Raplda  spent  Sunday 
in    Cohasset. 

Joe  Prue  of  Clark's  Spur  spent  Sun- 
day   here   with   his    family. 

Mrs.  C.  Richler  and  family  left 
Wednesday  for  Margie.  Minn.,  to  make 
their  home.  Mr.  Richler  has  been  em- 
ployed   there. 

Gordon  WItherow  and  Roy  Snyder 
left  Thursday  for  Hlbblng. 

The  Yeoman  lodge  will  meet  April  10. 

The  Parent-Teacher  club  will  hold 
their  next  meeting  April  14.  Rev. 
Schenck  of  Grand  Rapids  will  address 
the  club.  Mrs.  R.  A.  McOuat  of  Grand 
Raplda  will  favor  the  club  with  a  vocal 
solo. 

The  Helping  Hand  Farmers'  club  met 
Tuesday  evening. 

James  HolUngrake  returned  from 
Floodwood  the  first  of  the  week  and 
now   Is   in  Bemidji. 

Mrs.  A.  Phalr  spent  Tuesday  In  Grand 
Rapids. 

RushCity 

Rush  CItyV  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special 
to.  The  Herald.) — Buttermaker  Sho- 
berg'a  family  have  arrived  and  are 
settled  tu  *h»U(|ekeeping  in  the  W.  F. 
Anderson  hwA.  . 

The    ladl^s^^W^tlliary    will    meet 
the    home  .©t  ^4mi.     C.     V.     Foster 
Wednesdaii«Ci>rnfvyi.    April    12. 

Mrs.    O.  T".   Francis   and    Mra.    H. 
Frltzell   of  Minneapolis   surprised   Nels 
J.    Asp    on    his    birthday    and    returned 
home    on    Monday. 

The  Christian  Endeavor  Society  of 
the  Presbytefian  church  will  hold  a 
social  Wednesday  evening,  April  12, 
at  the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A  CL 
Ogren.    Everybody  la  welcome. 

Ethel  and  Henry  Bergstrom,  sister 
and  brother  of  Mrs.  Henry  Baler  a 
bride  of  the  week,  accompanied  the 
newly  wed«  as  far  as  St.  Paul  on  Mon- 
day  on    their  bridal   trip. 

Mrs.    <;ust    Bergstrom    returned    last 
week   from   a  two  months'    visit   to   a 
married   laughter  at   Souix    ^ 
where    a    baby    grandchild 
comed   during  her   visit. 

The    Brickyard     Farmers 
Its    legular    meeting    at    the    Rovcroft 
farm  April  1.    A  largo  attendance  was 
present. 


at 
on 

E. 


City, 
waa 


Iowa, 
wel- 


club     held 


Coleraine 

Peterson  returned  Wednesday  eveninir 
from  Duluth.  Mrs.  Peterson  was  in 
the  southern  part  of  the  state  to  at- 
tend  the   funeral   of   a   friend. 

Wllllani  Anderaon  attended  the  New 
York  Symphony  concert  In  Duluth  last 
week. 

Mrs.  Ell  Rust  visited  friends  at 
Grand^   Rapids    the    firat    of    the    week 

t^neral  Superhuendent  Salsich  spent 
Friday   last   In    HIbbing. 

E  R.  Blair  made  a  business  trip 
to   Calumet    Monday. 

Mlsa  Taylor  of  Nashwauk  spent  Sat- 
urday and  Sunday  as  the  guest  of  Miss 
Hitchcock. 

The  Ionic  club  gave  a  dancing  nartv 
at  the  Fraternity  hall  last  SatiTrday 
evening. 

Mrs.  Durant  Barclay  was  pleasantly 
surprised  by  the  ladies  of  the  Bridge 
club  on  Wednesday  evening,  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Barclay  expect  to  move  to  Marble 
soon,  where  Mr.  Barclay  has  accepted 
a    position    as   pit    foreman. 

The  Presbyterian  Ladles'  Aid  will 
meet  with.  Mjs.  W.  J.  Stock  next 
W  ednesday. 

A  number  of  Coleraine  men  attended 
the  Stechei--B^l  wrestling  match  the 
first  of  th^  vi^H.     In   the  party   were 


A.   M.    Peterfei 
L.   May  and 'A. 

John    JeiLOll 
airlved    hefe    tl 
hon>«  in  thu.dli 
of   J.    E.    J^uli 

Mrs.  W 


W.   L.    O.    Bartett.    C. 
.  Grlmpo. 
of    Negaunee.    Mich., 
6    week    to    make    his 
"et.     He  1«  a  brother 
of  Coleraine. 
unter  enjoyed  a  week 


end  visit  from  her  brother,  L.  V.  Tan- 
ner, and  her  tujphew,  Huntly  Morter. 
both   of   Little   Falls. 

The  board  of  education  of  school 
district  No.  t  wAs  entertained  at  din- 
ner Thursday  evening  by  the  domestic 
science  department  of  the  Olcott  school 
at    Marble., 

Mrs.  Thomas  'Edwards,  who  has  been 
confined  tocher '%ome  for  ieveral  weeks 
is  able  to  ■i>e  qut  again. 

Rev.  J.  P,  Riflhardson,  pastor  of  the 
Lester  Pack  M.  -E.  church  in  Duluth. 
(AYe  the  fourth  of  a  ceries  of  ^entea 


lectures      at      the      Methodist      church 
Thursday    evening. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Earl  Garlnger  enter- 
tained at  their  home  Thursday  eve- 
ning. 

Pine  City 

Pine  City  Minn",  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Mrs  Ira  C.  Holt  and  lit- 
tle daughter  arrived  from  St.  Paul. 
Tuesday,  to  Join  Mr.  Holt  who  has 
leased  the  Ole  Lyseth  place  in 
Meadow  Lawn  and  will  make  their 
home  there. 

H.  Borchers  discovered  his  boathouse 
afloat  on  Snake  river,  Monday,  being 
carried  away  by  the  high  waters.  He 
had  it  pulled  back  to  ahore  again.  Jake 
Kaelble's  boathouse  got  mixed  up  with 
the  ice  in  midstream,  Tuesday,  and  was 
pushed  up  against  the  railway  bridge, 
and  floating  ice  has  damaged  the 
fencing  on  the  (lata  north  of  the  wagon 
bridge. 

Mr.  and  "Mrs.  Bantleon,  who  have 
spent  the  winter  at  the  iiome  of  their 
son,  William,  here,  left  Wednesday 
morning  for  their  home  at  Weyauwega. 
Wis. 

Mrs.  H.  W.  Harte  is  home  from  a  few 
days'  visit  at  Brook  Park.  Mr.  Harte 
is  expected  Saturday  from  Missouri. 

Thomas  Madden,  who  teaches  school 
at  Sturgeon  Lake,  spent  Saturday  and 
Sunday  with  hla  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Frank  Madden  here. 

Misses  Esther  Polln  and  Lillian 
Simon  left  Friday  for  the  Twin  Cities, 
where  they  spent  a  couple  of  days. 

Miss  Emma  Bledcrman  of  St.  Patil 
arrived  last  Tl*irsday  for  a  short  visit 
with  her  parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John 
Biederman  of  this  village. 

Mrs.  Fred  Ubler  went  to  Duluth 
Tuesday  where  she  met  her  husband, 
whence  they  departed  Wednesday  for 
New  Mexico  to  remain  five  or  six 
months. 

Miss  Patience  Knight  of  Hopkins  Is 
spending  the  week  at  the  home  of  her 
grandparents,  Capt.  and  Mrs.  E.  L. 
Seavey. 


patent  for  a  stump   puller  he  Invented. 

Thomas  Gallagher  of  lllinola  arrived 
this  week  to'  look  after  his  Cass  county 
lands.  ' 

Mrs.  Norman  Theiss  came  from  Min- 
neapolis this  week  to  remain  here  for 
the-  summer. 

A  meeting  of  Masons  was  held  Fri- 
day evening  and  it  was  decided  to  or- 
ganize  a    lodge   in    Walker. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Owen  Morlcal  returned 
this  week  from  Virginia  and  Duluth, 
where  thoy  had  been  for  some  tltne. 

The  regular  meeting  of  the  Cass 
County  Consolidated  Farmers'  club 
^•111  be  held  on  April  11  at  Jenkins. 
All  farmers'  clubs  of  the  county  will 
be  represented. 

Oscar  Olson  of  Walker  and  Ella  Lar- 
son of  Pine  Lake  were  married  in  this 
city  Monday  at  the  home  of  Ed  Wright. 
Mr.  Olson  Is  one  of  the  proprietors  of 
the  Pine  Trte   hotel. 


Kelsey 


Kel'cy.  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.)  —  Mrs.  P.  Hagen  and 
daughter,  Edith,  were  in  Iron  Junction 
Saturday  and  Sunday. 

W,  1.  Stevens  waa  in  tlie  Zenith  City 
Saturday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  L.  Channer  returned 
honrtt  from  Duluth  Saturday  evening, 

Services  were  conducted  Sunday 
morning  by  Rev.   Barickman  of  Duluth. 

C.  M.  Stevens  left  Sunday  afternoon 
for  Minneapolis. 

Levi  Stevens  was  here  Sunday  and 
Monday. 

Fred  Mattson  went  to  Duluth  Sun- 
day morning. 

H.  S.  Mathews  was  hero  in  Kelsey 
the  past  week. 

Miaa  Borghlld  Soth  and  Miss  Esther 
Norden  were  -in  Zim  Friday  and  Satur- 
day. 

A  farewell  party  was  given  Thursday 
at  the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John 
Mattson  In  honor  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  S. 
I'arks  who  are  leaving. 

P.  Nordean  was  in  the  Zenith  City 
Wednesday  and  was  accompanied  home 
by  his  son.  Theodore. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Fred  Mattson  returned 
h(  me  Tuesday  evening  from  Duluth. 

Mrs.  M.  A.  Root  and  daughter  left 
Thursday  morning  to  attend  the  fu- 
neral of  husband  and  father  who  died 
Wednesday  morning  at  St.  Mary's  hos- 
pital. Mr.  Root  was  buried  at  Red- 
wood Falls. 


Bamutn 

BarnuaJ,   Minn.,  April   8 (Special   to 

The  Herald.) — Charles  Carlson  arrived 
from  Duluth  Monday  and  Is  making 
some  repairs  to  the  house  on  his  farm 
which  Fred  Eckley  vacated.  Mrs.  Carl- 
son and  family  will  come  from  the 
city   some   time   this   month. 

Communion  services  will  be  held 
next  Sunday  morning  in  the  Presby- 
terian church  at  10:46.  Evening  serv- 
ices at   7:45. 

F.  G.  Spooner  of  Salmon^  Ida.,  spent 
last  week  looking  over  the  old  Murphy 
farm,  in  which  he  owns  an  equity. 
Before  leaving  here  Saturday  he  told 
his  friends  that  he  would  probably 
return  next  month  and  build  on  the 
farm  with  the  intention  of  making  it 
his  home.  He  is  a  son-in-law  of  Mrs. 
Wiley,  who  also  has  an  Interest  In  the 
property. 

Seffer  Rudebeck,  who  arrived  here 
two  weeks  ago  from  a  town  In  South 
Dakota  with  a  carload  of  stock  and 
farm  machinery,  has  purchased  John 
Linds  farm  near  here  and  has  moved 
onto  It.  His  family,  who  have  been 
visiting  while  Mr.  Rudebeck  has  been 
seeking  a  place  to  locate,  are  expected 
here  next  week.  Mr.  Llnd  and  family 
are  making  their  home  temporarily  at 
the  farm  of  A.  Peterson.  Mr.  Llnd  is 
one  of  Barnum's  pioneer  farmers  and 
has  many  friends  here  who  would  be 
sorry  to  hear  if  he  decides  to  move 
away. 

Axel  Hakala.  oldest  son  of  John 
Hakala,  one  of  the  pioneer  farmers 
In  Skelton  township,  this  week  con- 
tracted for  the  purchase  of  eighty 
acres    in     21-47-19. 

Harry  Hoganson  went  to  Two  Har- 
bors, where  he  is  assisting  to  fit  out 
the  tug  on  which  he  will  be  employed 
this   summer. 

Mr,  and  Mrs.  A.  Cornell  and  child 
from  WInton  are  vlalting  here  this 
week  with  Mrs.  Ostlund,  Mrs.  Cornell's 
mother. 

Fred  Eckley  has  started  to  build  a 
temporary  dwelling  oti  his  property  in 
the    village. 


Walker 


Walker.  Minn..  April  8- — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Frank  Reid  returned 
from    his    visit    to    Little    Falls. 

Dr.  Wilcox  has  purchased,  two  new 
Buick  cars,  a  six-cylinder  and  a  road- 
Bter. 

R.  E.  Do  Lury  made  a  business  trip 
to  Pillager  this  week,  while  F.  A.  Dare 
had   business  at  Brainerd. 

Miss  Edna  Spencer  returned  from  St. 
I'aul  this  wc'r-k  after  a  visit  of  sev- 
eral   weeks   there. 

Miss  Connors,  formerly  a  teacher  in 
the  local  school,  has  been  visiting  this 
week  at  the  ti.  H.  Nelson  home. 

The  Pildt  was  made  the  official  pa- 
per of  the  village  at  the  meeting  of 
the  council   this  week. 

Mayor  De  Lury  has  appointed  the 
following  commission  of  five  citizens 
to  make  a  thorough  investigation  of 
the  municipal  light  and  water  plant: 
Odin  Naustvold.  SI  Scrlbner.  A.  J.  Lln- 
dert,  Daniel  De  Lury  and  Guy  Nelson. 

C.  Falk  Is  a  new  settler  In  this  vi- 
cinity, having  purchased  land  at  Kabe- 
kona   bay  In   the   German   settlement. 

The  sawmill  started  up  this  week  for 
the  season.  The  night  crew  will  go 
on  the  last  of  the  week. 

Ben  Grotta  has  been  made  statiopt 
agent  at  Backus,  and  he  and  his  wife 
went   down  this   week   to  find  a  house. 

The  teachers  were  entertained  by 
Mrs.  Gustave  Kulander  one  evening 
this  week  in  honpr  of  Miss  Alice  Light- 
born. 

Walker  is  to  have  a  new  moving 
picture  theater,  and  the  Wright  build- 
ing Is  to  be  fixed  up  for  that  purpose. 
Frank   Klnkele   Is   the  proprietor. 

District  court  will  convene  at  Walker 
next  week  and  a  large  attendance  of 
county  people  is  expected. 

The  library  committee  will  hold  a 
tag  day  next  Tuesday  for  the  purpose 
of  raising  funds  with  which  to  pur- 
chase ohildren's   books  for  the  library. 

A.  Christie,  Dan  De  Lury.  Jr..  and 
Clinton  Coppernol  are  all  numbered 
with  the  sick  this  week. 

The  band  will  go  to  the  state  sana- 
torium on  Sunday  to  give  the  first 
concert  of  the  setison  for  the  patients 
there. 

A  son  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Charles  Warren  on   Wednesday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Otto  Hilberg  returned 
this   week    from    Wisconsin. 

Mike   Stttuner    this    week   received   a 


Arnold 


Arnold,  Minn..  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Services  will  be  con- 
ducted in  the  Presbyterian  church 
Sunday  afternoon  at  3  o'clock  by  Dr. 
Lawrence. 

Mrs.  W.  LIndan,  who  was  taken  to 
St.  Luke's  hospital  the  first  of  the 
week  and  underwent  an  operation,  is 
getting  along  as  well  as  can  be  ex- 
pected. 

Mrs.  J.  Fyfe  Is  in  the  city  visiting 
her  sister,    Mrs.   A.   Alt. 

Miss  Margaret  Anderson  of  the  city 
spent  Thursday  with  Mrs.  J.  T.  Mac- 
Kenzle    of    Arnold. 

Miss  Mabel  Hohnerud  and  Miss 
Maud  Coulter  spent  W'ednesday  in  Du- 
luth. 

Mrs.  Solberg  and  Mrs.  Gust  Carlson 
visited  Mrs.  W.  LIndaw  at  tlie  hospi- 
tal   Thursday. 

J.  T.  MacKenzle  spent  W^ednesday  In 
Duluth. 

E.  Hohnerud  and  J.  Fyfe,  who  were 
appointed  as  a  committee  from  the 
Welfare  club  of  Arnold,  attended  the 
agriculture  lecture  given  In  the  court- 
house   last   Monday. 

Mrs.  J.  T.  MacKenzle  went  to  Lake- 
side  on   Friday   on    a   business    trip. 


was  .swamp,  has  just  received  a  de- 
cision   In    his    favor    from    Washington. 

Mr.  and /Mrs.  C.  H.  Ward  of  North 
Oteneagf. n,  returned  last  week  from  a 
visit  of  a  month  at  Long  Prairie  and 
Minneapolis. 

M.  W.  Llnd,  contractor  and  logger, 
will  soon  file  as  candidate  for  repre- 
sentative in  the  legislature  for  the 
Fifty-second  district.  L.  A.  Ros.smaii 
of  t  J  rand  Rapids  and  E.  L.  Peterson 
of  Coleraine  have  filed.  Mr.  Lind  has 
been  in  the  logging  btiainess  here  for 
nine  years  and  was  formerly  in  busi- 
ness    in     Duluth. 

The  sawmill  of  the  Deer  River  Lum- 
ber company.  employinK  260  men,  will 
start  up  as  soon  as  the  Ice  leaves  th^ 
h»g   pond,   which   will   be   about   May   1. 

J.  P.  Martindale  returned  Wednes- 
da.v  from  a  visit  of  a  few  days  tn  Du- 
luth   and    Superior. 

A  petition  to  divide  the  township 
of  Lake  Jessie  has  been  allowed  by 
the  county  commissioners  and  at  tlm 
next  meeting  of  Uie  board  a  date  will 
be  named  fc)r  the  election  of  officers 
in  the  new  town,  the  name  of  which 
will    be    BowstrinR. 

The  dining  room  of  the  Everton 
hotel  has  been  closed  for  about  a 
month  for  the  remodeling  of  the 
hostelry.  l-'lrst  class  ruoios  will  5^r: 
fitted  up  with  runniiiK  w;iler  in  each 
and  a  number  of  ri>oms  and  suite* 
will    have    bathrooms. 


Aurora 


Aurora,  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Mrs.  F.  O.  Talboys  en- 
tertained the  M.  E.  Ladies'  Aid  society 
Wednesday   afternoon.- 

Mrs.  R.  P.  Pearsail  spent  the  week- 
end at   Virginia. 

Mrs.  Anderson  of  Me.saba  was  in 
town  Friday. 

Mrs.  Charles  Hinckley  of  Mountain 
Iron  was  visiting  in  town  Sunday. 

J.  T.  Richards  visited  at  the  Stevens 
Tuesday. 

Miss  Karen  Lee  visited  at  Tower 
Sunday. 

Miss  Helen  Buccl  of  Eveleth  spent 
Sunday    with    her   brother,   Gus.t   Buccl. 

Mrs.  W.  Mitchell  and  daughters. 
Grace  and  Ruth,  vllsted  with  friend.-? 
at  Buhl    this   week. 

Capt.  J.  J.  Hudson  returned  Thurs- 
day from  a  trip  through  Western  Can- 
ada. 

Albert  Prowae  spent  the  week-end 
at  Gilbert. 

Mrs.  Charles  Olson,  Misses  I.,ewl3 
and  Highland  and  William  Highland 
and  Lawrence  Olson  motored  to  Me- 
saba   Sunday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  B.  J.  MeMahon  enter- 
tained a  number  of  friends  Tuesday 
evening. 

Mrs.  A.  F.  Tlllmans  entertained  the 
Saturday  club  last  Saturday  after- 
noon. 

Mrs.  W.  .1.  Andrews  entertained  a 
number  of  friends  last  Sunday. 

A.  W.  Talboys  spent  several  days 
this   week    at   Dulutn. 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Nicholas  and  daughter, 
Pearl,   spent   Saturday  at  Virginia. 

Mrs.  P.  M.  Johnson  visited  at  Gil- 
bert  this   week. 

Mrs.  F.  O.  Adamson  and  daughter. 
Frances,  visited  In  Virginia  Wednes- 
day. 

Miss  Laura  Nelson  of  Tower  was 
the  week-end  guest  of  her  sister,  Miss 
Marjorle   Nelson. 

SmitiwiUe 

Smithville  Minn.,  April  8.  —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Arthur  Eisenech, 
who  passed  the  week-end  with  rela- 
tives in  Duluth  returned  home  Wednes- 
day. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  .T.  W.  Nelson  of  Duluth 
spent  Thursday  here  at  their  cottage. 

Misses  Celia  and  Mae  Swenson  en- 
tertained the  S.  S.  H.  S.  club  at  their 
home  on  McLeod  street  Monday  night. 

Alex  Steward,  chief  engineer  of  Du- 
luth schools,  visited  the  school  here 
Monday. 

John  Carlson  of  New^  Duluth  waa 
the  guest  of  his  daughter,  Mrs.  Ed 
.lohnson.   Thursday. 


pa 
his 


home   at 


Arthur    Oestreich.     who     passed     the 
winter    here    returned 
Lakeside,  Thur.sday. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  H.  Graff  and  Ar- 
thur Renstrom  attended  the  farmers' 
party  at  Morgan  Park  Wednesday 
night. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  G.  Mead  moved  their 
household  goods  to  Eveleth  Monday, 
where  they  will  make  their  future 
home. 

A.  G.  Renstrom  and  daughter.  Ruth, 
passed  Sunday  In  the  West  end,  the 
giiest  of  his  daughter,  Mrs.  C-  A.  Alm- 
borg. 

Misjs  Agnes  Netibauer,  Miss  Annie 
Neubauer  and  Miss  Agnes  Boyd  spent 
Sunday  with  friends  in  Morgan  Park. 

Street  railway  company's  surveyors 
were  working  here  this  week  laying 
out  and  staking  for  their  track  along 
Grand  avenue  here  to  Morgan  ParJi. 

The  Ladles'  guild  will  meet  at  Mrs. 
V.  A.  Dash's  residence  next  Thursday 
night. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Priley  moved 
from  Spirit  Lake  into  the  Donveto  resi- 
dence here  Saturday. 

Mrs.  James  AIrd  and  daughter, 
Flora,  of  Morgan  Park  visited  here 
Sunday. 

Rev.  J.  W.  Llllico  of  the  Merritt 
Memorial  M.  E.  church  will  hold  serv- 
ices in  the  Methodist  church  Monday 
night. 

Miss  Lillian  Lundquist  passed  the 
first  of  the  week  with  relatives  in  West 
Duluth. 

Mrs.  J.  S.  Johnson  and  daughter, 
Anna  passed  Thursday  in  Duluth. 

Mrs.  W.  L.  Dash  and  son,  Walter,  of 
Morgan  Park  were  the  guests  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  V.  A.  Dash  this  week. 

Roy  Brand  of  New  Duluth  was  here 
Wednesday. 


Deer  River 

Deer  River.  Minn..  April  8. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Local  business  vis- 
itors to  Duluth  the  first  of  the  week 
were  W.  C.  Lacroix.  G.  M.  Biasing,  P. 
J.  Daley.  A.  A.  Lotz.  J.  D.  McDonald, 
Bernle  Brooks,  F.  W.  Sanger  and  Dr. 
D.   Dumas. 

The  Deer  River  creamery  made  600 
pounds  more  butter  in  March  than  in 
the  same  month  a  year  ago.  There 
Is  an  increasing  demand  outside  for 
Deer  River  butter,  but  not  enough 
cream  is  coming  in  to  fill  the  orders, 
notwithstanding  36  cents  per  pound  is 
paid  for  cream.  An  effort  is  to  be 
made  by  the  creamery  management 
and  the  industrial  committee  of  the 
Commercial  club  to  induce  farmers  to 
bring    in    more    cows. 

Miss  Florence  Binder  returned 
Thursday  from  Duluth.  where  she  has 
Wen  visiting  friends  for  two  weeks. 

Log  hauling  on  the  iced  roads  is 
still  going  on  In  the  logging  pineries. 
As  large  loads  arc  now  being  hauled 
as  at  any  time  during  the  winter. 
With  freezing  nights  the  roads  are 
being  made  solid  and  it  Is  probable 
the  hauling  will  continue  for  some 
time.  This  is  the  latest  date  logging 
has  been  going  on  in  this  section  in 
the   history   of   the   country. 

Jakob  Mikelson,  who  settled  on  a 
homestead  abput  five  miles  wifst  of 
here  In  1904,  and  was  contested  by 
the  state  on  the  grounds  that  the  land 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


i 


Zim 


Zlm.  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special  to  Th"* 
Herald.) — .\.  .J .  liawder.  returned  to  hiJi 
home  III  Diilutli  Monday  morning  aft«-:- 
spending  Sund;ty  here  at  the  Leveia 
home. 

Mrs.  John  Peterson  returne>d  here 
Tuesday  mornlni;  from  Duluth,  hav- 
ing been  called  there  by  the  illness 
of    her    mother,    Mrs.    Gradin. 

Mi.ss  Inga  tlunderson  left  for  her 
home  in  HIbbing  Wednesday  morning 
after  a  weeks'  visit  here  at  S.  W. 
Levin's. 

The  ladies*  aid  met  with  Mrs.  Alfred 
Olson  Thuisday  afternoon.  Tlie  next 
meeting     will     be    wlHi     Miss    Osborne. 

Tlie  Swcdi.sh  ladies'  aid  will  give  a 
basket  social  and  auction  tonight  at 
the  church.  Refreshments  will  be 
served. 

Rev.  Mr.  Idslrom  of  Hibbing  at- 
tended the  ladies'  aid  meeting  Thurs- 
day afternoon  at  the  home  of  Alfred 
Olson. 

Richard  Lind  and  Albert  P-^terson 
are   spetiding   the   week-end    In    DuUith. 

Carl  Berg.  Helmer  Gradin  and  Xel.s 
Peterson  were  Eveleth  callers  Wednes- 
day. 

Clair  Kenworthy  returned  from  Du- 
luth Thursday  morning,  having  sepnt 
a    few    days    there    with    friends.  . 

Iron  Mountain 

Iron  Mountain,  Mich.,  April  8. —  (Sp-»- 
cial  to  The  Herald.) — Governor  Fen  1-4 
may  come  to  Iron  Mountain  In  Au- 
gu.st,  at  the  lime  of  the  first  annual 
convention  of  the  Upp«-r  Peninsula 
League    of    Municipalities. 

At  an  adjourned  regular  meeting  of 
the  city  council  held  last  Tuesday  eve. 
nine  Mayor  Cruse  appointed  Anson  F. 
Wright  to  tlie  office  of  city  assessor. 
The  appointment  was  confirmed  by  a 
unanimous  vote  of   the  aldermen. 

The  city  council  consi3ts  of  the  fol- 
lowing; Mayor.  Dr.  S.  Edwin  Cruse; 
First  ward.  Fred  Strand,  John  Gio- 
vanni; Second  ward,  Joseph  H.  San- 
dercock,  Henry  Suino;  Third  war. I, 
Elmer  Bandt,  Peter  Rule;  Fourth 
ward,  William  G.  Monroe,  Joseph  D. 
Esllck;  Fifth  ward,  John  Andrews, 
Jr.,  Henry  La  Fountaine.  The  nevr 
aldermen  are  Fred  Strand  and  Elmer 
Bandt. 

John  Williams,  manager  of  th« 
Gately-Wiggins  store,  left  last  Mon- 
day for  Ishpemlng  to  attend  th^ 
funeral  of  his  mother-in-law,  Mrs. 
Anna  Oien,  who  died  last  Sunday  night. 

Vadls,  the  8-year-old  daughter  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Louis  J.  Will,  was  oper- 
ated upon  for  appendicitis  last  Satur- 
day at  St.  George's  hospital.  She  l.^ 
now  out  of  danger  and  Improving 
rapidly. 

G.  V.  Carpenter  was  In  Crystal  Falls 
last  Tuesflay  and  Wednesday  In  at- 
tendance at  a  meeting  of  the  road 
engineers  of  the  upper  peninsul.a.  Stat-* 
Road  Commissioner  llogers  was  pres- 
ent   and    delivered    an    address. 

Swan  J.  Peterson  was  elected  treas- 
urer of  Breen  township.  He  made  th? 
run  on  slips  against  John  Anderson, 
the  caucus  nominee.  He  received 
seventy-four  votes  to  sixty-six  for  An- 
derson. Seven  of  his  votes  were  re- 
corded  for  clerk. 


■m 


Ashland 


Ashland,  Wis.,  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— MlFs  Helen  Archibald 
took  first  pl-jice  in  the  preliminary  dec- 
lamation contest  at  the  Ashland  higii 
school  Thursday  night,  her  subject  be- 
ing "The  Sign  of  the  Cross."  Miss 
Catherine  Darke  of  Odanah  took  sec- 
ond place  with  the  subject,  "Happy  Is 
My  Lot."  The  two  winners  will  repre. 
sent  Ashland  at  the  division  meeting  at 
Iron  wood  April  14.  The  other  contest- 
ants were  Hazel  Pringle,  Mary  Ellen 
Kerr,  Irene  Gardner  and  Myrtle 
Wooland. 

Rev.  Myron  Taylor  and  his  wife  en- 
tertained nineteen  members  of  the  Ash- 
land Ministerial  association  at  a  6 
o'clo(-k  dinner  last  Monday  evening. 
Dr.  J.  M.  Dodd  and  Attorney  Allan  T. 
Pra.v  were  guests  and  addressed  th^ 
ministers,  showing  how  their  profes- 
sions are  related  to  that  of  the  ipcm- 
bers  of  the  association. 

Twenty-rtve  members  of  the  School- 
masters' club  of  Northern  Wisconsin 
held  the  .second  meeting  since  their  or- 
ganization at  A.shland  Thursd.ay,  clos- 
ing with  a  banquet  In  the  evening. 
J.  P.  O'Connor  of  Superior  was  one  of 
the  principal  speakers  on  "The  Work 
of  the  Univt  rsity  Extension  in  North- 
ern Wisconsin."  W.  H.  Schilling,  as- 
sistant superintendent  of  schools  at 
Duluth,  spoke  On  "Junior  High 
Schools,"  and  County  Supt.  of  Schools 
Walter  P.  Hagnian  of  Mellen  delivered 
an  address  on  rural  school.s. 

A  meeting  of  the  Lake  Superior  Hol- 
steln  Breeders'  as.^^ociation  was  held 
here  on  Thursday.  C.  M.  Knight  i.^ 
president  of  the  association,  D.  W.  10m- 
inerson  secretary,  and  A.  H.  Newall  of 
Butternut  treasurer. 

The  I'nion  club  of  this  city  will  pre- 
sent "Brown  of  Broadway"  immediately 
after  Lent. 

Mrs.  A.  C.  Thines  of  Duluth  visited 
her  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  O.  W.  Will- 
lams  at  Ashland   this  week. 

Miss  .Tean  Mc<Jeehan,  who  is  teach- 
ing at  Rhinelander,  visited  her  mother 
this  week. 

Edith  and  Evelyn  Harrison,  daugh- 
ters of  Dr.  Harrison  of  Mason  visited 
their  grandmother,  widow  of  the  late 
Dr.  G.  W.   Harrison,  here  this  week. 

Martin  Sollie  of  Superior  visited  his 
brother.    Louis,    here    this   week. 

W.  D.  Kuhn  left  this  week  to  visit 
his  brother,  Theodore,,  at  Spokane, 
M'ash. 

Miss  Gertrude  Mellung  of  Seattle  is 
here,  the  guest  of  her  parents. 

Mrs.  Elmer  Holmes  has  returned  to 
her  home  in  Central  Butte,  N.  D,  after 
a  visit  here  with  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  Crosa. 

Miss  Sally  Appleyard  has  resumed 
her  studies  at  Ferry  Hall.  Lake  Forest. 
111.,  after  a  short  visit  at  her  home 
here. 

E.  A.  Gottschalk  of  Superior  was  at 
Ashland  last  Tuesday  on  election  day, 
mailing  his  vote  to  Superior,  under  the 
new  law.  He  is  connected  with  the 
university  extension   work. 

Joe  Kennedy,  former  chief  of  police 
of  Ashland,  now  a  farmer  near  San- 
born, was  in  the  city  this  week. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  George^  Buchanan  ar«» 
visiting  Mr.  Buchanan's  sister,  Mrs 
Charles  Foster,  at  West  Allls. 

Andrew  Magnussen,  for  several  yearj 
sergeant  of  police  of  the  poH«^e  force 
here,  now  holds  the  same  Job  at  the 
d>-namite  plant^at  Barkadale. 

Ed  Vaughn,  Soo  line  en^^aeer  be- 
tween Mellen  and  Bessemer,  was  In  Du- 
luth  this   week   visltlne   his   dauchler. 


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p  -•—      J  ■"          ,—    ..,, 

1     1      1 

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Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


North- 


Mrs     Moo,   whose   husband   l*  a 

em"  Parlrtc  f-MKlneer  ,t„o.. 

The  Misfci'  (JladyB  ThorrHon  and  InK.i 

Bolllo   "art-    visltlns      In      Superior      this 

*  A^  H  Apployard,  prosldent  of  the 
Ashland  IJcrlitlnt?  <  <.ni|).iny.  Is  haf>k 
from    a    niontha    trip    to    the    West   In- 

Alonzo  r.oulin.  rashier  of  the  lofal 
Fwift  racking:  company,  left  for  Duluth 
«.n  W.-dnf  .sdiiy  to  assume  elniilar  duties 
In  llu-  Dulmh  oftlco. 

Mrs.  A.  D.  lUirnctte  has  rfturned  to 
hti  lionif  in  Spooner  after  visiting  Uev. 
and  Mrs.  Taylor.  ,     ,       ,,  ,„  , 

M.iiiaRfr  niRclow  of  tho  Homo  T<'l*^- 
phoii.-  (onipany  and  Fred  Colo,  secre- 
tary of  the  « ompany,  yvere  in  the  Twin 
CltUs  this  \vf«k. 

Itobcrl  TnRll.s  of  the  IJayfldd  cus- 
tom.4  oftlcc  is  In    Florida. 

r.  (>.  iJidHflh  of  Superior,  who  has 
been  vihltinK  here,  has   returned  homo. 

M\KS  AKnes  K.  Hart  of  (Jlldden,  su- 
pervl.sinK  teacher  of  the  public  (coun- 
try)   srhouls    of    Ashland    county 


of    her    parents 


here    this 

Monday 

Mr.    and 


Mex- 

next 


has  I 


been  publl.shnlK  a  .series  of  articles 
M  local  paper  on  the  country  schools 
the  county. 


In 
of 


Ironwood 


toi 


8. —  (Special 

Mr.s.       Albert 

from     «Jalena, 

called    by    the 

-In-law,       Mrs. 


Tronwood,  Mich..  April 
The    Herald.)  -Mr.    and 
Nichols     have     returned 
111.,     where     they     were 
death      of      their        sister 
'l"h(<rna.s     .\ieholn. 

Mr.".   .John    Kendriifan   of  Mercer  was 
here    the    first    of    the    V\eik. 

Mis!*    IJzzie    LatiKhren    has    returned 
from    DeMiiiiK,    \.    Mcx.,    where   she   vis-  i 
lied     her    broth«r.     Senator    Charles    J.  ' 
l^auKhren.      Miss    I..auKhren    also    spent  i 
some    time    in    Southern    California. 

l)r.    II.    K.    Fox.    who    spent    the    past  j 
two  nionlh.s  in   the  South  for  the  bene- 
fit   of    his    health,    has    returned    much  ' 
Imprnved.  ' 

Mi.s.<i    I'.ePKic    Dear,    a    Ftudent    at    the  , 
Kalmazoo     normal     school.     sp<  lit     her 
(jprinu     vacation     here     with     her    par- 
•  iii.s,    Mr.    and    Mrs.    E.    Dear,  I 

Mrs.  Samuel  McKee  of  Connlcut.  | 
fihlo.  who  was  called  to  T'uritan  by 
the  illness  of  her  mother.  Mrs.  Axel 
Anderson,  left  Friday  for  her  home, 
her  motlier's  condition  being  somewhat 
imi  roved.  ,   , 

Miss  Marie  Nichols  has  resumed  her 
.'Jtiidit.s  at  the  Northern  normal  school 
at    .Marciuctte. 

At    the    annual    meeting    of   the    Iron- 
wood    Commercial    club    the    following 
cted:      I'resident,      .1. 
president.    Oscar    E. 
Edward       Stevens; 
E.     Houk;    directors, 
N    Olson,  A.  C.  Huss, 
•.    Lofberg,    Dr.    .1.    H. 
H.    Kearney.    Adolph 


the     guest 
week. 

Oscar      HemstAd      returned 
from    a  visit   to   Minneapolis. 

A    daughter    was    born    to 
Mrs.  C.  Meader  on  April  1. 

Miss  Verlle  Krlckson  Is  spending 
her   vacation    with   relatives    In    Hlnck- 

*^Mli:S  Matle  Mlckelson  Is  spending 
the   AV^ek   with    her   parents   In"  Mlnne- 

Mr.  an,l  Mrs.  M.  Hudson  left  Satur- 
day to  visit  in  AVlsconsln  before  leav- 
ing for  their  future   home  In  New 

The    Dorcas    society    will    meet 
Wednesday  with  Mrs.  O.   H.  InP/nm- 

Dr.  and  Mr«.  R  S.  Hohling  left  Fues- 
day    for    a    few    days'    visit    in    Mlnne- 

"'^T  H  McCormlck  of  Wahkon  visited 
from  Thursday  until  Monday  at  the 
home  of  his  daughter,  Mrs.  tJlenn  l^l- 
Uott. 

Mrs.  N.  MIreault  and 
Delia,  left  Monday  to 
in   While  Hear. 

Dr.    and    Mrs.    H.       P.       Dredge 
daughter.     Miss    Ethel,      journeyed 
Minneapolis   Friday. 

Clemens  Roehl  and  family  departed 
Sunday  for  their  future  home  In  Mln- 
neapidls.  ^     , 

I'erry  Dean  of  Minneapolis  spent  the 
week-end  with  his  parents  here. 

Miss  Ellen  Uelnholdson  of  Eveleth 
1.*;  syiendlng  the  week  with  her  parents. 
Mr.  and   Mrs.   Charh?  Relnholdson. 

Mrs.  John  De  Rosier  arrived  Thurs- 
day from  Hill  City  t<»  Nlslt  her  parents, 
Mr.   and    Mrs.    J.    H.    Samuelson. 

'••eorge  Sherer  returned  to  Hibblng 
Sunday  after  a  brief  visit  at  his  home 
l^ere.  ,,  ,, 

Mrs  .1.  H.  Samuelson,  Mrs.  Hans 
Trotdin  Mrs.  \Villlam  Troolln,  Mrs.  J. 
f>c  Rosiei-  and  Mrs.  Joel  Samuelson 
vlslttd  Mrs.  Larry  Hunyca  In  Hinckley 
Tuesday.  ,,,    , 

The  W.  C.  T  V.  will  m'  et  M  ednes- 
dav,  April  12.  at  2  o'clock  In  the  par- 
lor of  the  lM<sbvterian  church.  A  so- 
cial meeting,  followed  by  luncheon, 
win  be  held. 


White   home   and   will   take   possession 

May  1.  ,    „.  ^       A 

Peter  Schaefer  returned  v\  ednesaa> 
from  a  business  trip  at   Duluth. 

Mesdames  R.  S.  and  T.  E.  Miller  wre 
at  home  Thursday  afternoon  to  a  num- 
ber  of   their   friends   at    a    thimble   bee. 

Miss  Eileen  Quigley  was  hostess  to 
a  party  of  girls  Wednesday  evening,  It 
being    her   birthday. 

Attorney  A.  J.  Thomas  transacted 
business  in  Duluth  the  first  of  the 
W»ek. 


Cook 


daughter.   Miss 
visit    relatives 


and 
to 


with 
for  Cusson  Mon- 
dutles  there  in 
lAkU.e  company's 

spending   a   few 
here,  returned  to 


Cook,  Minn.,  April  8.  — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Bob  Wllklnijon  re- 
turned Monday  and  visited  with 
friends  herp  after  spending  a  few  days 
In  the  detention  house  at  Virginia 
the  smallpox.  He  left 
dav  night  to  resume 
the  Virginia  &  Rainy 
warehouse. 

tJmer    Hoffer,    after 
drtys  with  his  family 
(Jheeii    Tuesday.  ,      ^  ,., 

Peter    McNeff    retiarned      from      \  ir- 
glnla    Tuesday.  ,.i,^, 

A.    S.    Swan    was    a    Virginia    visitor 

Tuesday.  T'i,^»«ia 

Edward     Erlcks,ion     was     a     \  irglnla 

business    visitor    Tuesday. 

H.    Holt    of    Winnipeg   was   in    town 

Thursday.  ,        ,,         .  _  "- 

H.   W.   Rlek  has  opened  a  livery  ana 

feed   stable.  i,„„j 

W    H.    Rlekbell   Is  carrying   his  hana 
In  a"  sling.      He   hurt  it  and  blood  pol- 
i  sonlng  resulted. 

i  The  semi-weekly  t^io'r  rractlre  was 
held  at  Mr.  and  Mr.s.  E.  \\ .  easey  s 
home   this   week.  »„.,„i„ 

The    Moose    will    give    an    entertain- 
ment   Saturday    night. 

J.  U  Pickles  of  the  D., 
neering  department  was  a 
between    trains    Thursday. 

O     R.    Small    and    tJeorge 


NEWS  OF  THE  NORTHWEST 


"p* 


PROTECTION 
FORjARMERS 

Lindbergh  Asked  to  Watch 

Soil  Tillers'  Interests  in 

Upper  Mississippi. 


they    would    Insist    that    Plcklt    be    In-  ' 
eluded   in   any   consideration    shown   to 


Smith. 
The 
prison 
pardon 


effort  to  save  Smith  from  a 
term  Is  centered  on  the  state 
board,  which  is  constituted  of 
the  governor,  attorney  general  and 
chief  justice  of  the  supreme  court. 
Smith  Is  due  to  begin  his  penitentiary 
term  on  Tuesday.  The  pardon  board 
meets  on  Monday.  This  board  has 
power  to  grant  Smith  a  full  pardon 
or  a  conditional  pardon,  which  would 
amount  to  the  same  thing  as  probation. 


Congressman    Interviews 

Maj.   Peek   and   Gives 

Army  Man's  Version. 


PARK  RAPIDS  MAN 
KILLED  DY  TRAIN 


Park 
cial    to 
on    the 
Walker 
single. 


officers  were  eli 
S.  Kennedy;  vice 
Olson;  secretary, 
treasurer,  Calvin 
J  C.  Thiiina.«.  Cus 
Ernest  Dear.  A.  f 
ITrquhart.     Frank 


Skud.   E.   A.  iSamble.   Rev.  J.  A.  Melrose 
and    Paul    Sauter. 

The  following  residents  of  Ctogeblc 
county  have  been  drawn  jurors  for  the 
term  "of  t'lilted  States  court,  which 
» onveiie.s  at  Marquette  on  April  11: 
Ernest  Dear.  (;eorge  N.  Sleight,  (leorge 
A.  I'urrv.  .lohn  Jackson  and  Frank  H. 
Hartlett.    all    of    Ironwood. 

Mrs  Altar  Pinkertnn  of  Waupaca. 
Wis.,  is  vi.siting  her  parents.  Mr.  and 
Mrs     Thomas    .V.    Owen,    Norrle    street. 

A  S  McDougall.  postt)ffice  Inspector 
from  Sault  Ste.  Marie,  was  In  this  ter- 
ritory   during    this    week. 

John  A.  Rupp  has  returned  from 
the  Georgian  Hay  district  of  W.stern 
Ontario,  where  he  was  estimating  tim- 
ber lands.  , 

The  Woman's  Home  Missionary  soci- 
ety of  the  First  M.  E.  church  held  a 
regular  monthly  meeting  at  the  home 
rapt  and  Mrs.  S.  J.  Gribble  on  Thurs- 
dny  afternoon.  Following  the  busi- 
ness meeting  a  short  progratn  was 
rendered,  After  whl«h  refreshments 
were  served.  The  hostesses  were 
dames    tJribble.    Eoey    and    Rowe 

Mr.     and 


Midway 


Mes- 


Mldwav.  Minn..  April  8.  — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Lloyd  <\irrie  of  Duluth 
was    a    caller    here    on    Wednesday. 

Many  of  the  farmer.'*  are  <-oiistruct- 
Ing  new  barns  and  additions  to  fdd 
barns  in  anticipation  of  large  crops 
tills   season. 

Mr  and  Mrs.  Christ  Westman  have 
returned  home  after  spending  the  win- 
ter at  Angora,  where  Mr.  Westmnn 
has  been  operating  a  mining  timber 
camp. 

P.  Martcll  left  Wednesday  for  Kan- 
kakee, 111.,  because  of  the  serious  Ill- 
ness of  his  aged   father. 

JAvB.    John    Farm    entertained 
dies'  aid  society  at   her  home  , 

dav    afternoon    and   the   young    people  n 
society    In    the   evening. 

Paul  Larson,  who  has  been  employed 
by   the   1).,   M.  &   N.    Railway   company, 
has    resigned    to  accept   a  jt)b   with 
Duluth     Street     Railway     company 

motnrman.  „,    ,     ,    w       m 

The  Liberty  Bell  Bird  club  will 
a  Bird  day  program  at  the  Fine 
school  Friday   afternoon,  April   14. 


the   la- 
W^edne"* 


the 

KS 


W.   P.   engl- 
Cook  visitor 

Rowbottom 


were     Angora 
Thursday. 

Dorothy    Anderson 
parents     here     the 
week,     returning 
day. 

Tlie  attendance 
al    Sunday    school 
a    great    increase 
pres.nt,    making 
lish-speaking 


and      CusBon       visitors 


Sunday 


visited    with    her 

fore    part      of      the 

to    Virginia    Thurs- 

at  the  Congregation- 
last   Sunday    showed 
eighty-two      being 
it    the    largest    Eng- 
Bchool  ever  here. 


Marble 


to 
C. 
at 


Bemldji,  Minn.,  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.)  —  In  an  effort  to  utilize 
the  vast  waters  in  the  reservoirs  at 
the  head  of  the  Mississippi  for  manu- 
facturing and  power  purposes  without 
permitting  them  to  overflow  and  dam- 
age many  thousands  of  acres,  J.  J. 
Opsahl  of  this  city,  working  in  har- 
mony with  the  idea  advocated  at  the 
December  meeting  of  the  Northern 
Minnesota  Development  association, 
asked  Congressman  <i.  A.  Lindbergh 
for  a.«isi8tancc  and  information. 
WrHeM    to    Lindbergh. 

"In     the     l>ill    that    you     have 
the  commlttte,"  wrote  Opsahl 
berph,    "regarillng    those 
would  ask  you  to 
for    the    lowering 
tween    the    dams 
one  of  those 


Rapids,  Minn.,  April  8.— (Spe- 
The  Herald.) — While  walking 
M.  &  I.  railroad  tracks  near 
Wednesday,  W.  E.  Roberts, 
aged  33,  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Joshua  Roberts  of  this  place,  was 
struck  by  a  train  and  badly  mangled, 
death    being    instantaneous. 

It  is  said  that  a  coroner's  jury  re- 
turned a  verdict  of  suicide,  but  on 
what  grounds  has  not  developed  here. 
The  body  was  brought  here  by  the 
dead  man's  brother,  (}.  M.  Roberts, 
Thursday  and  the  funeral  was  held 
here.  It  Is  said  that  Roberts,  before 
leaving  here  for  Walker,  cashed  a 
large  check  at  a  local  bank  and  this 
gave  rise  to  a  report  he  had  met  with 
foul  play,  but  it  develops  he  needed 
the  money  In  a  business  transaction 
near  Walker  and  was  going  to  the 
place  on  the  M.  &  1.'  on  foot  to  close 
the   deal   when    struck   and    killed. 


sioner,  and  George  E.  Erlcson  was 
chosen  village  attorney.  The  council 
plans  on  going  on  with  the  work  of 
constructing  sewers  and  other  wor-k 
as  soon  as  weather  conditions  will 
permit. 

CES.4REAN  OPERATION 
IN  JAMESTOWN  HOSPITAL 

Jamestown,  N.  D.,  April  8.— A  suc- 
cessful case  of  cesarean  operation  in 
which  the  lives  of  both  mother  and 
child  are  expected  to  be  saved  was 
performed  at  Parkview  hospital 
W'ednesdav.  The  mother,  Mrs.  otto 
Last,  resides  with  her  husband  about 
three  miles  northwest  of  Windsor,  in 
Stutsman  county,  and  the  baby,  a  girl, 
weighing  7V&  pounds,  is  getting  along 
nicely. 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


give 
Hill 


Totver 


was    a 
day. 
business 

Cass    Lake 
daui 

motored    to 


home     this 
trip    to    the 
Mrs.    Winn 
the    bride's 
bert     NicI 
Mrs.  J. 


Mrs.  John  Winn  arrived 
week  from  their  wedding 
Copper  country.  Mr.  and 
will  make  their  home  with 
parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Al- 
ois. Aurt>ra  location. 
R  Moore  and  granddaughter. 
Miss  Margaret  Moore,  have  gone  to 
New  London,  Wis.,  where  they  will 
visit     relatives    and    friends    for    soma 

*'"^*'  -  singer,    who   has  been 

evangelical  meetings 
E.  church  here,  left 
to    assist     in     similar 


to 
by 
farmer  at 
school,   has 
who  has  al- 
.Stanard  fani 


Edward  Laity, 
nFslstlng  In  the 
at  tlie  First  M. 
Thursday  night 
meetings  at  Trenary,   Mich, 


Carlton 


to 

i.f 

when 


her 
re- 


a 


Carlton.    Minn..    April    8.— (Special 
The    Herald.)— The    first    auto    trips 
the  season  were  enjoyed  Saturday 
five    cars    arrived     from     Cloduet     and 
made    the    rounds    of    the    city    with    a 
Hare    of    trunii>ets.       .  ^       ,  ,      „„„, 

L.  H.  «:ross  t)f  Blackhoof  was  In  Carl- 
ton.   Wednesday. 

Mr.  and  Mr.«*.  J.  B.  Baumann  and  Mrs. 
It.  <;.  Schelb  were  visitors  at  Duluth, 
Tliursday.  .   ^     ,        i 

Mrs    Peter   Pearson    of   Bralnerd   was 

nuest  at  the  homo  of  Mrs.  L.  Ros- 
..ulsi  the  first  of  the  week 

Misses  Esther  and  Ida  Nicholson  re- 
turned from  Kettle  River,  Thursday, 
where  the  former  has  just  closed  a 
successful    term    of    school. 

Mrs  F  A  Watklns  was  hostess  at  a 
dinner  partv  Thursday  evening  at 
which  Mrs.  Ed  Simons  of  Virginia  was 
guest  of  honor.  Covers  were  laid  for 
twelve 

Mrs  Fred  Bates  of  Duluth  was  a  vis- 
itor at  the  F.  A.   Watklns  home  Thurs- 

' Attorneys  J.  A.  Fesenbeck  and  Han- 
naford  Coxe  of  Cloquet  were  here  on 
"Wednesday.  .  „ 

Miss  Ruth  Conkey  of  Superior  was  a 
guest  at  the  home  of  Miss  Ella  McKln- 
non,   Wednesday.      .     .„    ^, 

County  Auditor  A.  R.  Norman  trans- 
acted business  in  Duluth,  Thursday. 

A  marriage  license  was  granted  to 
Fred  Stahl  and  Hllja  Monkola  of  Clo- 
uuet  this  week.  Clerk  of  Court  Thom- 
son reports  this  branch  of  his  business 
exceedingly    poor. 

John  Nelson  of  Cloquet  visited  here 
on  busint  ss,  Thursday. 

Miss  Edith  Frye,  who  has  been  visit- 
ing relatives  in  the  West  for  several 
months,    returned    Wednesday. 

I'ete  Swanson  transacted  business  at 
Duluth,    Thursday. 

Charles  Hansen  has  opened  his  place 
of  business  on  Front  street. 

Max  Scheidermeyor  of  Cloquet  trans- 
«(  ted    business    here    Wednesday. 

Mrs  A  E.  Stromee  and  Mias  Agnes 
Hanson  of  Elbow  Lake  were  guests 
at   the  A.   C.ill«sple  home   Thursday. 

Miss  Ella  McKlnnon  was  hostess  at  a 
delightful  afternoon  affair  Thursday. 

(icrald  McGovern  of  the  power  plant 
visited   Carlton   friends   Thursday. 

Eliner  Ecklund  of  Superior  was  in 
Carlton  Tuc.«day  visiting  his  sister.  Miss 

'•"'•?i;S   o'^n^'^M*^-    of 'the    Women's    Studr 
Clul.   of  Carlton  are:   President,   Mrs.   S. 

'  •  J.  V.  j-iar- 
studylng  Italy.  Civic 
to  establish  public  11- 


Tower,  Minn.,  April  8.  —  (Special 
The   Herald.)— The    vacancy   oaused 
the  transfer  of  C.  H.  Stanard, 
the  Vermilion  Lake   Indian 
been  rtlled  by  F.  N.  Duprls 
ready  taken  charge.     The  ,  „w„ 

lly  have  removed  to  the  Nett  Lake 
reservation  where  Mr.  Stanard  will 
take  charge  of  the  agricultural  de- 
velopment   and    instruction    of    the    in- 

Mr*.  and  Mrs.  L.  L.  Gates  are  parents 
of  a  son  their  first  born.  Mrs.  (.ates 
was  formerly  Miss  Margaret  Wiseman. 

Mrs.  M.  C.  Green  and  daughter  of 
Wlnton  were  guests  at  J.  D.  Murphy  a 
h(.me  Sunday  evening  and  Monday. 
Miss  Allie  Murphy,  who  had  been  home 
from  the  St.  Cloud  normal  for 
spring  vacation,  left  Tuesday  to 
Bume  her  studies.  „„»i,. 

Miss  Mamie  Skala,  who  was  recently 
subjected  to  an  operation  for  appen- 
dicitis, wa.s  removed  from  the  hospital 
to    her    home    Thursday    and    Is    rapidly 

convalescing.  .   „•   j        j    . 

Dr  S  R  Cohen  returned  W  ednesday 
from  a' several  days'  business  visit  in 
V'irglnia.  ,    „   , 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Tlscher  returned  Satur- 
day from  a  two  weeks'  visit  with  Du- 
luth relatives. 

The  Trout  Lake  Lumber  company  s 
lath  mill  has  closed  because  of  lack  of 
material  and  will  remain  closed  until 
lake  conditions  permit  the  towing  of 
tho  winttrs  cut  of  logs  from  up  Lake 
Vermilion.  Repairs  are  being  made  on 
the  mill,  and  the  tug.  City  of  Holland, 
in  being  overhauled  and  th«>roughly  re- 
paired. Weather  conditions  have  been 
such  for  the  past  few  days  that  the  Ice 
has  not  melted  a  particle,  the  ther- 
mometer having  registered  zero  both 
vUnesday  and  Thursday  nights.  The 
work  of  the  crew  here  In  the  interests 
of  the  ttsh  commission  has  also  been 
retarded.  .  ^    ,      , 

Mrs.  J.  G.  Ketcham  of  Duluth  was  a 
guest  at  the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  1.  G. 
Ketcham  the  fore  part  of  the  week. 

S  J.  P.  Lackle  has  returned  from  a 
week's  visit  In  Duluth  and  Superior. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  E.  IMall  returned 
Sundav  from  a  week's  visit  in  Duluth. 

The  Five  Hundred  club  will  meet  this 
evening  In  the  L.  &  t).  hall  for  their 
weekly  party,  the  hostesses  being 
Mesdames  A.  B.  Glbbs  and  E.  J.  Hynes 
and  Misses  DelcU  Peltier  and  Emma  J. 
Williamson. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  A.  W  ahlsten 
were  surprised  at  an  anniversary  party 
at  Kugler  hall  last  Saturday  evening, 
in  celebration  of  their  thlrty-ttfth  wed- 
ding anniversary.  The  guests  of  honor 
were  presented  with  a  silver  service. 

Frank  Landgren  returned  Thursday 
after  visiting  his  mother  at  Spooner, 
Wis. 


Marble.    Minn.,    April    8.— (Special 
The    Herald. )-Mr.   and    Mrs.    George 
Gilbe.t   and  son   spent  the   wr*?!*-*'"^^^ 
the    home    of    Mr.    Gilbert's   sister.    Mr* 
Jack    Bush. 

Miss    Palmer     of     Colera  ne 
guest  of  Miss  Rodaw  over  Saturday. 

Eva    Van    Horn    transacted 
In    Hibblng   Monday. 

Fred    King    and    wife    of 
spent  the  past  week  at  their  daughter, 
home.   Mrs.    Don    Vermllyea. 

Mayor    Larson    and    son 
Hibblng   Sunday.  "    ,,,    . 

Rev     Dr.    Burns  of   Duluth  will    na\e 
charge  of  the  services  Sunday  even»nf 
at  the   Porterrteld  M.  E.  church  at    .46 
and  there  will  be  special  music  by  MlhS 
Violet  R.  Van  Horn. 

Karl    Kutz  of   Virginia  v.»f^ 
end     guest     of    his     sister, 

Dockeray.  ««.♦   week 

Miss   M.   Clark    spent   the   past  weeK 
with  friends  In  Hibblng. 

Leo  Cushen   was   in   town 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  \oung 
Viva  Young  motored  to 
Thursday.  . 

Mrs     C     E.    Dickens    and  -     ,    „ 

went     to  ■  IBbblng     Thursday     morning 

to  spend  the  day. 

George    Wlckmann    went 

Rapids  Wednesday  for  a  few 

A    E    Perrler  left  Thursday 

ester   to    visit    his   wife,    who 

hospital   there.  .v.^y,„ 

A    number   of  the   fathollc 

the    aid    which      met     at    Mis. 
home   at  Calumet. 


Mrs. 


week- 
F.    H. 


Sunday. 

and     Miss 
Coleralne 

daughters 


to    Grand 
days, 
for  Roch- 
Is   in   the 


ladles    at- 


t  en-led 
Smith's 


Keewatin 

8. — fSpeclal 


to^rh^'W^ValJ^l'^En^tl^'^ltty    went    to 
^''i;i^*:.°'Graham'and  Mrs.   Phillips  were 

'%?chYe"M"winufrof   Nashwauk   was 
'^  road   business   Saturday^ 

Wakklnen  and  Mr.  and 
Mrs    Steenstrup  saw    "Peg  o'  My  Heart 
^    VfKKintr    Saturday    evening, 
at    Hibblng    ^f/'^jj^^hwauk    was    here 


here 
Mr 


on 
and 


J.    Milan 
township 


Hibblng 

w'fve    in 
meeting 


E.   Harrison    of 
sdav. 

made  a 
wi 

of  Virginia  was  here 
Hibblng 


G.    Gannon 
Suntlay.  ,        ,      _„_    ., » 

Mrs.    Albert    Lewis    was    at 

Tuesday. 

V     Wakklnen   and 
N'ashw.iuk    for    the 
Monday   evening. 

Guv    Crosley   and    G 
Stevenson    were   here   Tuesday. 

Fr-ink  King  of  Grand  Rapids 
brUf    stop    here    Tuesday    on    his    way 
to  Chlsholm. 

Joseph   Curren 

^'r^SchooP    ""♦"-''    *^      Hibblng      last 

^^iS'!^V«""   '^•le^'-;rc?if^o^d'Fa'2: 
ing.  formerly  occupied  b>   Cllffora  ran 

''"Pij^  SL^^o^t'^^^cl'nhy  at  the  Mean- 
ahan   home   and   destroyed    part   of   the 

uSper  story  and  «\\  »»J,^;  ,f»7ts"'reguHr 
The  new  council  held  Its  regular 
meetTng  Tuesday.  Charles  .  adlnes  wa« 
A^,,nfel  street  corunlssloner,  and 
dT  Sheldon,'  police  at  the  St  Paul 
mine-  Carl  Cusslcco.  fire  ehlef  and 
O     1     RlPP^--   assistant   health   officer 

Flie    In    the    office    of    the    Keewatin 
Plain  Talk  '^ornpl^^ely  destroy*,^  ,.^very- 
ihlng.     Mr.    Phillips 
at  $1,600,  with  ?900 


before 
to  Llnd- 
reservolrs,  I 
be  sure  and  provide 
of  the  channel  hc- 
to  the  lakes  at  each 
eservolrs,  so  that  during 
the  winter  they  can  be  properly  enip- 
tled.  At  the  outlet  of  Leech  lake,  at 
Federal  dam,  at  present  over  a  mile 
is  choked  up  so  that  the  reservoir 
could  not  be  emptied.  I  am  glad  to 
see  the  engineers  admit  the  import- 
ance of  lowering  the  winter  stage  in 
order  to  take  care  of  the  spring  floods. 
What  we  should  atjtempt  to  do  with 
these  natural  and  v|ry  Important  res- 
ervoirs Is  to  provlae  so  that  water 
can  be  used  for  manufacturing  or 
power  purposes  and  navigation  with- 
out waste,  but  it  should  be  borne  in 
mind  that  the  most  Important  Indus- 
trv   Is  agriculture. 

"If  the  war  department  or  any  Fed- 
eral department  takes  steps  that  will 
undermine  agricultural  development 
and  prosperity,  or  in  other  words,  re- 
tard or  ilestroy  the  farmers'  crops, 
neither  navigable  rivers  nor  industrial 
water  power  sites  will  be  of  any  great 
benefit,  for  the  reason  that  in  order 
to  handle  and  manage  either  the  navy 
or  army,  food  Is  the  most  necessary 
product.  An  army  and  navy  Is  needed 
to  protect  a  rich  and  prosperous  agri- 
cultural country,  but  If  nothing  but  a 
desert  or  at)  overflowed  waste  tract 
of  land  that  will  not  raise  crops,  we 
need  no  protection  from  outside  na- 
tions. On  that  account  in  handling  our 
reservoir  systems,  the  Federal  govern- 
ment should  first  consider  the  welfare 
of  the  men  who  provide  our  food  and 
clothing,  and  next,  maintain  navigable 
streams  in  passable  shape,  and  third, 
that  all  waste  or  flood  waters  should 
be  taken  care  of  so  as  not -to  over- 
flow the  farmer." 

Mhat    MaJ.   Peek    Said. 
Congressman    Lindbergh    called    upon 
Maj.    E.    D.    Peek    of   the   United    States 
engineering  corps  at  St.  Paul,  who  re- 
plied: 

•It  is  a  fact  that  the  snowfall  this 
winter  at  the  headwaters  of  the  Mis- 
sissippi has  been  greater  than  for  many 
years  and  In  the  region  of  the  reser- 
voirs   there    was    an    average    depth    of 

2.6   feet. 

"Pokegama,  Sandy  Lake,  Pine  River 
and  <:ull  Lake  reservoirs  have  been 
steadily  drawn  down  all  winter  and 
by  April  1.  practically  empty.  Wlnnl- 
bigoshish  and  Leech  Lake  reservoirs 
should  have  a  combined  storage  ca- 
pacity of  26.000,000,000  cubic  feet, 
which  is  believed  to  be  ample  to  hold 
the  surplus  from  the  winter  and  spring 
precipitation    around    those    reservoirs. 

"The  weather  has  been  favorable  so 
far  for  a  gradual  run  off  of  the  snow- 
fall, comparatively  warm  In  the  day 
time  and  freezing  at  night.  If  this 
continues  for  a  few  weeks,  as  it  usu- 
allv  does,  it  will  reduce  the  flood  pos- 
sibilities materially.  Rapidly  melting 
snow  or  rains  might  mean  a  flood,  but 
It  would  not  be  the  fault  of  the  reser- 
voirs—  In  fact,  they  would  have  a  tend- 
ency to  reduce  the  height  of  any  that 
might  occur." 

apostuIslmTds' 
ice  getting  thin 


WILL  ASK  FRAINE 
TO  QUIT  CONTEST 


Minot,  N.  D.,  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — As  the  result  of  a  con- 
ference just  held  by  a  number  of  the 
state  leaders  of  the  Republican  party, 
it  is  asserted  that  either  Lieutenant 
Governor  J.  H.  Fraine  of  Grafton,  or 
U.  L.  Burdick  of  Wllliston,  will  be 
asked  to  withdraw  from  the  race  for 
the  gubernatorial  nomination,  and  it 
Is  generally  believed  that  Fraine  will 
be  asked  to  lay  aside  his  ambitions 
for   the    time    being. 

Fear  Fraaler**  Eleetlon. 
As  the  situation  Is  with  Fraine,  and 
Burdick  both  in  the  race,  it  la  felt 
there  is  a  strong  possibility  that  Lynn 
J.  J.  Frazler  of  Hoople,  the  candidate 
Indorsed  by  the  Farmers'  Nonpartisan 
league  would  be  able  to  carry  the  pri- 
mary election,  as  Burdick  and  Fraine 
would   split  each   other's  vote. 

Burdick,  who  ran  against  Hanna  two 
years  ago  for  the  nomination  is  re- 
garded as  being  stronger  with  the 
farmers  than  Fraine,  and  it  is  there- 
fore probable  that  he  will  be  the  candi- 
date selected  to  represent  the  "reg- 
ular" section  of  the  party  at  the  pri- 
maries. 


Iron  Mountain— The  Rev.  Joseph  H. 
Beauchene,  pastor  of  Holy  Family 
church  of  Flat  Rock,  near  Escanaba, 
has  been  appointed  to  St.  Joseph's 
church,  to  succeed  the  Rev.  Father  La- 
forest    here. 

Quinnesec — The  town  election  result- 
ed in  these  being  chosen:  Supervisor, 
Andrew  M.  Bryngelson;  clerk,  Robert 
Brown;  treasurer,  Emery  W.  Chrlst- 
nagel;  commissioner  of  highways,  Rob- 
ert Richardson;  .member  board  of  re- 
view, Gus  ToUen,  Sr.;  justice  of  the 
peace,  Jules  J.  Collins;  constables  Mi- 
chael Sullivan.  Victor  Swanson,  John 
Corollo  and  Edward  Harvey. 

Hancock — Painesdale  lodge  will  be 
the  guest  of  Mystic  lodge  of  Hancock 
next  Saturday  evening,  and  the  degree 
team  of  the  visiting  lodge  will  confer 
the   degree    work. 

Baraga — Charles  Bebo,  a  well  known 
resident  of  Rockland,  was  struck  by 
a  passenger  train  on  the  South  Shore 
railroad  near  Baraga  Wednesday  and 
he  died  In  the  hospital  in  Hancock 
Thursday. 

Hancock — Tho  board  of  education  of 
Hancock  this  week  passed  a  resolution 
to  submit  to  the  qualified  voters  of 
the  city  the  question  of  authorizing  the 
issuing  of  bonds  to  the  amount  of 
$160,000  for  the  purpose  of  purchasing 
a  site  and  erecting  a  new  high  school 
building.  „ 

Houghton— Judge  P.  H.  O'Brien  of 
the  circuit  court  Thursday  sentenced 
Kalll  Kikkonen,  who  had  pleaded 
guilty  to  a  larceny  charge,  to  from 
one  to  five  years  at  the  Ionia  reforma- 
tory, with  a  recommendation  that  he 
serve  two  years. 

Calumet — The  committee  In  charge 
of  the  annual  reunion  at  the  Central 
mine  location  will  meet  shortly  in 
Calumet  to  perfect  plans  for  next  sum- 
mer's celebration.  The  committee  Is 
composed  of  the  following:  Edward  J. 
Hall  T  E.  Mitchell,  Alfred  Nicholas. 
Dr.  John  MacRae,  Thomas  Rule  and 
Thomas  Uren. 

Ishpemlng — Peter  Lundquist,  a  pio- 
neer, is  dead,  aged  70.  He  is  survived 
by  his  widow,  a  daughter,  Mrs.  An- 
drew Johnson,  who  lives  at  home;  a 
.son  Ernest,  of  Detroit,  and  a  daughter, 
Mrs    A.  J.  Erlckson  of  Negaunee. 


workers  from  every  county  In  the 
state  will  gather  at  Austin  for  the 
fifty-eighth  annual  convention  of  tho 
association   April   26-30. 

Pine  City — County  Auditor  Hamlin 
has  sent  out  warrants  to  school,  town 
and  village  treasurers  in  the  county 
for  a  total  of  $64,971.73.  of  which  $34.- 
694.95  goes  to  school  treasurers  and 
$20,276.78  to  town  and  village  treas- 
urers. 

Big  Falls— Mr.  Carlln,  at  one  time 
one  of  the  pioneer  cruisers  in  the  north 
woods,  but  who  of  late  years  has  be- 
come a  stock  rancher  in  Western  Can- 
ada, is  here  looking  after  his  large 
land  and  timber  holdings  in  this  and 
other    counties. 

Pine  River — The  new  village  coun- 
cil appointed  the  following  commit- 
tees: Streets,  E.  L.  Forbes  and  .T.  K. 
Ramsey;  cemetery,  B.  F.  Christian  and 
P.  LiUstrom;  health.  Dr.  A.  P.remken. 
B.  F.  Christian  and  E.  R.  Dahl.  It 
was  decided  that  the  poll  tax  for  this 
year  be  made  the  same  as  in  past 
years,  either  $3  payable  In  cash  or 
two  days'  labor  under  the  direction  of 
the  street  commissioner. 

Mankato — A  high  school  cadet  corps 
was  oreranlzed  here  today.  Arrange- 
ments have  been  perfected  by  which 
an  officer  of  the  Minnesota  National 
guard  will  drill  them  and  Instruct  in 
other  departments  of   the  soldier's  art. 

Little  Falls — The  farmers  of  the  vi- 
cinity of  Little  Falls  will  meet  at  the 
courthouse  Saturday  afternoon  to  de- 
cide on  the  location  of  their  creamery 
and  whether  they  will  buy  «  building 
or  put  up  a  new  one.  They  formed  an 
association   two   weeks  ago. 

Crookston  —  Martin  Berg  died 
Wednesday,  aged  74.  Mr.  Berg  leaves 
a  wife,  two  daughters.  Mrs.  Oscar 
Youngreen,  Northcote,  Minn.,  and  Mrs. 
F.  L.  Wilsie  of  Barnesville.  besides 
four  sons,  Harry  C,  Ernest.  William 
A.  and.  J.  A.  Berg,  all  of  CrookstO!i. 
to  mourn   his  loss.  " 


DAKOTA  BRIEFS 


ABOUT  EVENLY  DIVIDED. 

Philipp  and    La  Foilette   Forces  Run 
Close  in  Wisconsin. 

Milwaukee,  Wis.,  April  8.— An  offi- 
cial count  may  be  necessary  to  decide 
definitely  the  status  of  the  Wisconsin 
delegation  to  the  Republican  national 
convention. 

Figures  received  by  Milwaukee  news- 
papers Indicate  that  the  conservatives 
or  Governor  Philipp's  faction  have 
elected  eleven  of  the  district  delegates 
and  the  La  Foilette  wing  nine,  with 
the   Eleventh  district   still   In  doubt. 

The  election  of  Judge  Franz  Esch- 
weller,  Milwaukee,  to  the  supreifte 
bench   is  generally  conceded. 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS 


TO  URGE  SOO  BUILDING. 

Meeting 


to  Be  Held  at  Ashland 
Towns  Interested. 


of 


Ashland,  Wis.,  Apull  8. — A  meeting 
of  representatives  of  fifteen  towns  In- 
terested in  the  construction  of  tho 
40-mile  cutoff  from  Reserve,  Wis.,  to 
Mellen,  will  be  held  here  next  Tues- 
day night  as  the  next  move  to  induce 
President  Edward  Pennington  of  the 
Soo   line   to   build   the   line   at   once. 

The  construction  of  the  line  will 
cost  approximately  $1,000,000.  Aimong 
the  towns  interested  are  Bayfield, 
Washburn,  Mellen,  Glldden  and  But- 
ternut, In  Wisconsin,  and  ■Wakefield, 
Houghton,  Hancock  and  Calumet,  in 
Michigan. 


to 
of 
advice 


estimated 
insurance. 


his   loss 


Williams 


Ely 


Ely,   Minn. 


The 
re- 


William.s.  Minn.,  April  «  — 'SP«;<;lai  to 
The  Herald.)— Arvld  Berggren.  21.  son 
of  H  Berggren  of  Myhre  township, 
died  April  2,  after  several  years  illness 
tuberculosis.       He     was     buried 


of 


AV.    Searls;    secretary.    Mrs.    J     V 


.  „  .         1 

\ 

• 

■ 

*■  * 

1 

_    ..  i 

1 

stow. 

work, 

brary. 


They   are 
an   effort 


Sandstone 


hold   a   busl 
a  social  ses- 
the   home    of 


Sandstone,    Minn.,    April    8. -(Special 
to  The   Herald.)— Tho  Epworth  League 
of    the    M.    B.    ihurch    will 
ness   meeting  followed  by 
plon   Tuesday    evening   at 
Mrs.  (Scorge   Lange. 

Alfred  Haines  and  family  left  Thurs- 
day for  their  fut«re  home  in  New  York 

State 

O.    H.    Ingram    was    a   Duluth    visitor 

Monday.  ,   .,.    ,       .       , 

Supt.  G.  V.  Kinney  visited  schools  at 
North    Branch    Monday. 

R     W.    Wedgewood    went 
Monday    to   att«nd   court. 

Miss   Mary    Moloney 
Duluth,    where   she 

W  liter  and  Melville  Mulholland  of 
Minneapolis  spent  Sunday  at  the  home 
of  tin  Ir  parents   here. 

Miss    Laura    Hasty    is 
week    with   friends  in   .St. 

Miss    .lennle    Sandwick 
Thursday     from     a 
friends   in   Duluth. 

Alvarn    Edstrom    of    Milaca    was 
guest    of    relativ.s    here    Sunday. 

Miss  Elizabeth  Bergvall  Is  spending 
the  week  at  the  A.  W.  Holllday  home 
in    Rush  <'lty,  ,         ^        ,.  . 

C  K  Davis  left  Saturday  for  Mel- 
rose,  where  he  will  be  employed. 

Mlsa   Serena   Blssett   of  Markville    is 


April  8. —  (Special  to 
Herald.)— Mrs.  Charles  Trezona 
turned   Saturday   from   Duluth. 

Miss  Amanda  Donaldson  returned 
Sunday   from  Virginia. 

Mrs.  J.  P.  Buckley  returned  to  Du- 
luth Sundav  ev<  nlng  after  visiting  her 
daughter.  Miss  Rose  Buckley,  of  tho 
Lincoln  school.  Miss  Buckley  enter- 
tained for  her  mother  on  Snturdav 
evening  at  the  home  of  Mrs.  W.  L. 
Englund. 

John.  Handerg,  assistant  forest 
rangir  of  tho  dl.><trict,  and  wife,  of 
Harding,  Minn.,  are  visiting  relatives 
here. 

Miss  Martha  Trezona,  who  has  been 
spending  a  week  visiting  her  parents, 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Trezona,  has 
left  for  St.  Cloud,  where  she  Is  a  do- 
mestic science  instructor  in  the 
schools.  ^    „   , 

J.  M.  Brown  entertained  last  Satur- 
day afternoon.  She  was  assisted  by 
Misses  Alice  Brown  and  Threse  Gude. 
Henry  Chinn  was  a  Duluth  visitor 
this  week.  ,      ,* 

Mr.  Jeflfery,  who  has  recovered  after 
a  severe  operation  at  Shlpman  hos- 
pital, was  able  to  be  taken  to  his 
home  at  Wlnton  this  week 
Mrs.  Jeffery,  has  returned 
in   Duluth. 

Saturday,    at    the    home 
Mrs.       William       Bridson, 
t.eorge   was  surprised   by 
his  friends.  It 
guests    were 


here 
claims 


were 
this 


Dora,  of  De- 


Hls  mother, 
to  her  home 


to    Aitkin 

left   Monday   for 
will   visit   relatives. 


spending    the 
Cloud. 

returned    last 
week's     visit     with 

the 


of  Mr.  and 
their  son 
a  number  of 
being  his  birthday.  The 
Helen  Lawrence,  Grace 
Paulev,  Margaret  Brown,  tMadys  Nut- 
ter Goldle  Desjardin,  Lenore  Sletton, 
Douglas  Nankervls,  Edwin  Tomo.  Will- 
iam Nichols,  Elmer  Llndbeck,  Arthur 
Pauley  and  (leorge  Bridson. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  J.  Fenska  enter- 
tained at  their  home  on  Friday  eve- 
ning.      Five     hundred    was     played    at 

four  tables.  .  ,  .,     .   ^        ..     ..     t^ 

The  Ladles'   Aid  Society   of   the  Pres- 
byttrlan    church    was    entertained      by 
Mesdames  J.   H.  White  and  A 
on   Mondav   afternoon   at   the 
Mrs.  White.  ,    ,„      .    ^ 

Attorney  Howard  W.  Anderson  of 
Grand  Rapids  spent  the  week-end  In 
the  city.  Mr.  Anderson  was  formerly 
of   the   high    schoid    faculty. 

Curtis  Mills  has  arrived  to  make 
his  homo  for  the  summer.  Mrs.  Mills 
win  arrive  about  the  middle  of  the 
month.      They    have    rented    the    J.    H. 


at 
Williams  Thursday,  two  brotliers  and 
one  sister  coming  froni  North  and 
South  Dakota  to  attend  th^,^"".'''%-  ^^ 

Mrs.  Edna  Hall  Brown  of  this  place 
and  Scott  Roscoe  Ritchie  of  Thief 
River  Falls  were  married  here  Api  ll  ft 
by  Rev  W.  B.  Beach.  They  will  re- 
side at  Thief  River  Falls. 

Miss  Alice  Merson  and  Miss  Mueller, 
teachers  In  the  Baudette  public  schools, 
who   have   homesteads   near 
out     looking    after     their 
week.  ^    ,         .  .   _ 

L.  Cornea  and  daughter,  

trolt.    are   here    visiting   among   former 

^*Jack  Greenan.  for  the  past  five  years 
aeent  of  the  Canadian  Northern  at 
put  was  ''checked^  in'  as  the  new 
agent  here  on  April  1.  to  succeed  W  H. 
Ronstadt.  who  has  been  transferred  to 

Jasepr  Park.  Sask.  a„,„r. 

A  bov.  13.  was  arrested  last  Satur- 
dav  on"  a  charge  of  entering  a  nejeh- 
bol's  house  and  abstracting  a  eu"L"f 
money  from  a  bureau  drawer.  The 
most  of  the  money  was  found  in  his 
pos.««e»8ion.  and  he  was  sentenced  to 
the  training  school  by  Justice  Morris, 
but  sentence  was  suspended  during 
good   behavior.        ,     ,    ,  ,^  ,  , 

The  seventh  and  eighth  grades  of 
new   consolidated   school   Is   now   a 
oartment  bv  itself,  under  the  charge  of 
Miss    May    Turner    of    Crookston, 
begun   her  duties  Tuesday 

A  son  arrived  at  the  W 
near  Graceton,  Monday. 

Dave  Cooper  of  Graceton   Is  adding  a 
hakerv  department  to  his  restaurant. 

Among  the  building  Improvements 
that  will  be  made  in  Williams  as  soon 
as  the  weather  will  permit  are  a  public 
earage  by  Ogden  &  Flint,  a  new  build- 
ing for  the  Cross-Dodds  Lumber 
nanv    a   new   depot   by   the  C.   N. 

building  by   the   Williams  Machin- 
and  a  new  cottage  by  J. 


Ashland,  Wis.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— The  John  Schroeder 
Lumber  company  has  discontinued 
sending  teams  over  the  Ice  between 
Its  camps  on  Stockton  island  and  the 
main   shore. 

The  company  has  operated  three 
ramps  with  several  hundred  men  on 
the  Island  this  winter,  but  two  of  the 
camps  have  now  shut  down.  Dog 
teams  still  carry  the  mall  and  light 
freight  to  the  Island,  and  men  travel 
back  and  forth  every  day.  The  Ice  is 
apparently  quite  sound,  but  there  is  a 
strong  current  between  all 
Apostle  Islands,  which  wears 
to  a  dangerous  thinness 
realized.  Stockton  Island 
Madeline  and  Outer 
Pbout     fifteen     miles 


of      the 
the    Ice 
before    it    Is 
is    next     to 
islands    In   size,    is 
from    the     main- 
land   and    Is    covered     with     a     heavy 
growth   of  hemlock,   which   the   Schroe- 
der Lumber   company   Is   logging.     The 
company  has  placed  a  physician  on  the 
island    each   spring   Just   before   the    Ice 
i  breaks  up,  to  take  care  of  the  men  dur- 
ing   the    time   when    floating   Ice    shuts 
off    all    communication    by    boat    with 
the  main  shore. 


APRIL  SNOW  BANKS  ARE 
NUISANCE  TO  FARMERS 

Ashland,  Wis.,  April  8. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — This  Is  the  first  time  In 
years  that  Northern  Wisconsin  farm- 
ers have  complained  of  getting  stucic 
in  snow  drifts  in  April.  The  drifts 
have  been  on  the  ground  since  Janu- 
ary, but  occasioned  little  trouble  until 
they  began  to  thaw.  Farmers  say 
that  the  siiow  is  fully  three  feet  thick 
on  the  roads  and  Is  so  soft  tha^  the 
horses  break  through,  as  do  the  wagon 
wheels,  making  the  roads  practically 
impassable.  Mr.  Hosmer,  who  brings 
milk  from  the  head  of  the  bay  to 
Ashland,  was  obliged  recently  to 
abandon  his  light  wagon  in  such  a 
drift.  Other  farmers  report  that  their 
horses  got  down  in  drifts,  while 
other  farmers  walked  to  the  city  on 
skis,  leaving  their  teams  at  home. 


Milwaukee    —   The      Voters'      league 
spent    $670.06    during    the    recent    elec- 
tion.    Of    the    total    $357.88    was    spent 
In  the  primary.    The   league   claims 
be    exempt    from    the    requirements 
the    corrupt    practices    act,    on 
of  counsel.  ^        ^     ..        t^,^^ 

Madison— The  reports  of  the  three 
state  hotel  inspectors  for  March  sliow  j 
that  In  their  work  of  uncovering  bad  |  to 
sanitary  and  unsafe  conditions  In  ho- 
tels and  restaurants  they  made  4<6 
Inspections.  In  135  cases,  or  nearly 
one-third  of  the  total,  orders  for  im- 
provements  were   Issued. 

Milwaukee— Leo  D.  Bottrell,  bicycle 
repairer,  Milwaukee.  Forest  Home 
avenue,         admitted  Hai>'j>t*SS    .     °^ 

$6,391.12  and  assets  of  $8,392.80  in  a 
bankruptcy    petition    filed     In    t  ederal 

^^^Askeaton- R.  P.  Russell.  79  years 
old,  one  of  the  early  pioneers  of 
Greenleaf.  a  veteran  of  the  Civil  war 
and  an  earnest  worker  in  the  Bapti.«t 
church,   is  dead. 

New  Richmond — Andrew  Anderson, 
one  of  the  oldest  men  In  St.  Croix 
county,  died  at  the  county  hospital 
near  this  city.  He  was  born  1«  Nor- 
way ninety-five  years  ago,  and  for 
many  years  was  a  resident  of  \n  ood- 
vllle,   this  county. 

Neenah — At  the  home  of  the  mother 
of  the  bride,  Mrs.  Janette  Jamison,  in 
Neenah,  Ralph  W.  McCoy,  assistant 
cashier  of  the  Bank  of  New  Rich- 
mond, and  Miss  Ruth  Ja'mison.  until 
recently  instructor  in  music  in  the 
public  schools  of  New  Richmond,  were 

married.  ^^      ,        t      .»,       i,   n 

Milwaukee  —  Charles  L.  Marshall, 
aged  53.  retired  local  business  man, 
who  killed  himself  in  Los  Angeles, 
April  6,  was  the  son  of  the  late  Sam- 
uel Marshall  of  the  Marshall  &  Hsley 
bank.  He  married  Miss  Jessie  Stoner 
of  Columbia,  Pa.  There  have  been  no 
children.  Mrs.  Marshall  was  at  West- 
chester. Pa.,  at  the  time  of  her  hus- 
band's death.  Howard  Greene,  execu- 
tor of  the  Samuel  Marshall  estate  for 
several  years,  notified  her  by  tele- 
graph. 


Johnstown.  N.  D. — The  county  com- 
missioners ordered  the  states  attorney 
to  begin  an  action  against  the  Dakota 
Trust  comp.iny  of  Fargo  to  recover  the 
balance  of  $3,775.22.  for  which  the  Da- 
kota Trust  company  is  liable  under  a 
bond  given  the  county  for  the  deposit 
of  this  sum  in  the  Medina  State  hank. 
Minot,  N.  D. — R.  A.  Nesto.o,  who  has 
been  state's  attorney  of  Ward  county 
for  nearly  two  terms,  has  resigned  that 
position  and  will  devote  all  his  time 
and  attention  to  campaigning  for  the 
Republican  nomination  for  United 
States  senator.  O.  B.  Herigstad,  who 
has  been  assistant  state's  attorney  for 
some  time,  will  be  appointed  by  the 
board  of  county  commissioners  to  fill 
out  the  unexpired  term. 

Jamestown,  N.  D. — William  McDer- 
mald,  who  has  been  roadmaster  on  the 
Northern  Pacific  lines  out  of  Carring- 
I  ton  for  several  years,  has  been  trans- 
ferred to  the  main  line  with  headquar- 
ters at  Jamestown,  and  will  have 
charge  of  the  roadbed  between  here 
and  Bismarck.  He  has  moved  to 
.Jamestown. 

Fargo,  N.  D. — George  Koboll.  aged  26 
years,  died  Wednesday  at  a  local  hospi- 
tal of  heart  trouble,  from  which  he  had 
been  suffering  for  some  time.  Mr.  Ko- 
boll was  a  resident  of  Hannaford.  He 
had  been  brought  to  Fargo  with  the 
hope  of  saving  his  life.  The  shock  of 
the  trip  however,  proved  too  much  and 
he  died  within  an  hour  after  being 
placed  in  the  hospital.  He  is  survived 
by  two  brothers,  one  at  Hannaford  and 
!  one  at  Moose  Jaw,  Can. 
I  Inkster,  N.  D. — The  Pembina  presby- 
'  terv  was  held  here  this  week.  Rev.  F. 
1  W."  Walker  Pugh  of  I.,arlmore  was 
elected  moderator  and  Rev.  S.  L.  Hlb- 
bard  of  Langdon,  clerk.  Joseph  Whaley 
of  Elkmount  and  Rev.  P.  FInlayson  of 
Park  River  were  elected  commi8sloner.<» 
with  Rev.  J.  K.  Mclnnls  of  , Forest 
River  and  Attorney  S.  J.  Radeliffe  of 
Larimorc  as  alternates.  _ 

Grand      Forks,      N.      D.— The      Grand 
Forks    station    of    the    Western    Union 
VlVovv    Telegraph    company   has   been    declared 
'         lead   all   others  In   the    entire   West- 
ern   division    In    matters    of    neatne^ss. 
efficiency   and    cleanliness    by    the    offi- 
cials of  the  company  who  inspected  the 
local  offices  Wednesday.  ^      ^     ,    _  .  „^, 
Bismarck,  N.  D.— The  Central  School 
Supply  company  has  recently   been  or- 
ganized  In    this  city    and   will   soon   be 
ready   to  commence   business.     The  or- 
flcers  of   tlie   concern    are   W.   L.   <;ross, 
president,  and  J.   F.   Pearcy,  secretary- 
treasurer. 


MINNESOTA  BRIEFS 


PIGKIT  WILL  OPPOSE 
LENIENCY  FOR  SMITH 


St.  Paul,  Minn.,  April  8.— A  deter- 
mined effort  Is  being  made  to  save 
Walter  J.  Smith  from  serving  the  peni- 
tentiary sentence  of  not  more  than  five 
years  imposed 


TAKING  NO  CHANCES, 

Du  Pont  Powder  Plant  at  Barksdale 
Scrutinizes  All  Who  Enter. 

Ashland,  Wis.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Employes  of  the  Du 
Pont  Powder  company's  big  plant  at 
Barksdale,  across  the  bay  from  here, 
say  that  the  officials  are  very  strict 
In  demanding  identification  cards  be- 
fore admission  to  the  grounds.  Quite 
a  number  of  the  employes  live  at  Ash- 
land, using  bicycles  in  going  to  and 
from  work.  Leaving  their  identifica- 
tion cards  at  home,  means  7io  admis- 
sion and  the  loss  of  the  day's  work. 
Each  man  is  given  a  number,  which 
Is  placed  on  a  card  with  his  photo- 
graph, and  this  Is  exhibited  to  the 
gatekeeper. 


by   Judge   Dick- 
county     district 


the 
de- 


who 


on   him 
son     In     the     Ramsey 
court  late  Tuesday. 

Friends  of  Robert  C.  Plcklt,  Smith's 
confessed  ai-complice  in  the  theft  of 
the  state  school  funds,  when  they 
learned  of  the  plans  in  behalf  of  Smith 
served     notice     on     the     governor    that 


<;ayner  home, 


com- 
R..  a 


S.  James 
home    of 


new 

ery  company, 

^A  E^'^Russell  and  J.  T.  Fahrenklng  of 
came   the  first  of  the  week  to 
their    summer     residence    on 
homesteads.       There     are     about 
other  Chlcagoans  who   filed   near 
last    fall    and    will    be    coming    in 
with    a    carload    of    baggage    be- 
tween them.  x-      I   it- 
George  Penrod  came  up  from  Eveleth 
the  first  of  the  week  to  get  busy  «n 
his  homestead. 


Chicago 
take     up 
their 
forty 
here 


Cockroaches 

SHOULD  BE  KILLED 

At  the  first  sign  of  tlie  repulsive  cock- 
roach or  waterbug,  get  a  box  of  the 
genuine  Stearns'  Electric  Rat  and 
Roach  Paste  and  use  it  according  to 
directions  and  in  the  momihg  you  can 
sweep  up  a  panful  of  dead  cockroaches, 

Ready  for  use;    no  mixing;   does  not 

blow   into  food  like  powders. 

DirectloDK  In  15  lanr>ase«  In  »7ery  package. 

Two  tlies:   25c  and  $1.00. 

Sold  by  retallera  aTerywhere. 


CROSBY  MAID  FOUND 

DEAD  IN  HER  ROOM 

Crosby.  Minn..  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Miss  Hilda  Enburg, 
aged  21  years,  died  suddenly  Wednes- 
day night  or  Thursday  morning  at  the 
home  of  Bruno  Olson,  where  she  was 
emploved  as  a  maid.  As  she  did  not 
respond  to  a  call  Thursday  morning, 
Mrs.  Olson  went  to  her  room  and  found 
her  lifeless  body.  A  physician  who 
was  summoned  pronounced  the  cause 
of  death  as  heart  failure,  brought  on 
by  asthma,  of  which  she  was  a  suf- 
ferer. She  leaves  her  father,  moth- 
er and  a  slater  living  in  Aitkin. 

SPOONER'S  SALOON 

LICENSE  IS  $1.000 

Spooner,  Minn.,  April  8.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  village  council  this 
week  Increased  the  saloon  license  fee 
from  $750  to  »1.000.  Dr.  J.  E.  Cor- 
rlKan  was  appointed  health  officer  and 
with  John  Kyler  and  Axel  Rod  vUl 
constitute  the  village  health  board  for 
the  year.  Axel  Rod  was  reappointed 
village    marshal    and   street      commis- 


Barnum  —  The  regular  quarterly 
meeting  of  the  Carlton  County  Agri- 
cultural and  Industrial 'association  will 
be  held  here  next  Tuesday  morning. 

Wadena — Ernest  Kicker  was  arrest- 
ed Wednesday  afternoon  on  a  warrant 
sworn  out  by  County  Attorney  Mark 
charging  him  with  running  an  un- 
licensed drinking  place.  The  com- 
plaint was  filed  by  Bertha  Kicker,  his 
niece,  who  alleges  that  the  defendant 
kept  a  supply  of  whiskey,  alcohol  and 
beer   at   his   home   and   retailed   It. 

Blackduck — The  Northern  Cedar  & 
Lumber  company  of  this  village  has 
been  awarded  the  contract  to  gravel 
the  east  road,  which  Is  known  as  No. 
9A.  This  road  extends  from  the  east 
village  limits  to  the  Itasca  county 
line,  a  distance  of  five  and  one-half 
miles. 

Princeton — The  village  board  of 
health  for  the  ensuing  year  will  con- 
sist of  Dr.  Caley,  Mayor  Newbert  and 
Marshal  Wilkes.  S.  P.  Skahen  was 
reappointed  village  attorney  at  a  sal- 
ary of  $160 — an  increase  of  $50  over 
the  previous  year. 

Stillwater — Jacob  Bean,  who,  years 
ago  went  to  California,  where  (he 
acquired  a  piece  of  property  near  Pasa- 
dena at  Alhambra,  which  he  planted 
to  oranges  and  which  has  since  de- 
veloped into  one  of  the  show  places 
of  that  part  of  the  country,  sent  a 
full  carload  of  oranges  to  his  son, 
William  H.  Bean  of  this  city,  with  in- 
structions to  deliver  them  to  his 
friends  and  employes  of  Vf^rf  *^*'-.  „. 
Fergus  Falls— A.  L.  Whiting  has 
bought  out  G.  W  Frankberg's  Inter- 
est in  the  Park  Region  Land  &  Loan 
company.  Mr.  Whiting  has  been  ac- 
tively identified  with  the  company  for 
some  time  past. 

International  Falls— C.  B  Kinney 
has  left  to  check  over  the  horses  in 
the  International  Lumber  company 
camps  in  anticipation  of  the  breakup 
of  the  camps  at  an  early  date. 

Bemidjl— Local  men  formed  the  Be- 
mldji Athletic  association  and  elected 
Attorney  M.  J.  Brown,  president;  H. 
M.  Clark,  treasurer;  F.  S.  Lycan.  sec- 
retary  and  treasurer. 

Thief  River  FallF— The.  quarterly 
meeting  of  the  Red  River  Valley  Med 
leal  society  will  be  held  In 
about  the  middle  of  June, 
counties  bordering  on  the  Red 
are  members  of  the  socu-ty,  and 
60  delegates  are  expected  here  for  the 
meeting.  ,  _      , 

Austin — One  thousand  Sunday 


.   this   city 
All  of  the! 
river 
about 


school 


sr 


'^'  'V>' 


^~— 


-.— ^ 


-• 


■"m* 


i«- 


« 


/ 


1 

24 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH-    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


SHARP  BREAK 
IN  MARKETS 


Wheat   Slumps   With   Good 

Weather  Reports  From 

Over  Northwest. 


year.   382.')00  bu;  shlpintnts,  646.000  bu; 
ladt    yar.   3H.O00    bu. 

Porn — Ilecvtpl».  640.000  bu;  last  year. 
426.000  bu;  ;<hlpmeius.  665. aoO  bu;  lait 
year,   545.00')    bu. 

«»Htt»— Roo.-iptH,  637,000  bu:  last  year. 
661.'»'>u  bu;  s.'iipnuiil*.  7T6.OO0  bu;  last 
year,    769.00'»    bu. 

•       •       * 

Duluth  .  bondfii  uraln  rorflpt*': 
WJu-at,  06  cars;  oats,  7  t-ara;  barle>. 
1   rar;   total.    104   cam. 


Car«  of 


wheat 


Crushers  Bid  for  Flaxseed 

Supplies  and  Quotations 

Show  Advances. 


nuluth     .... 
Mlnn>>apoIi>i 
VVinnlp^s    .  • 
Chicago      .  .  . 
Kan;)a<t    City 


received: 

Yester- 
day. 

2S 

307 

478 

176 

80 


St,   LouLs.  bu 48.000 

•       •       « 

Cars  of  linaeetl  received: 


Tear 

Ago. 

56 

•      107 

220 

28 

21 

35,000 


r»viluth      .  .  .  . 
Mini)>>apoliii 
Winnlp«»is    . . 


Year 
Ago. 

3 
10 

8 


yt-ar, 
la.st 


Duluth  lioard  of  Trade,  April  8  — 
Predictions  of  better  weatht-r  condi- 
tions over  both  the  Northwest  and 
Southwest  led  to  a  break  In  the  wheat 
market  t.)d;»y.  There  was  furlh.  rmoro 
nothing  doing  In  the  way  of  export 
trade  on  this  market  at  leaat,  though 
the  workiiiK  of  Rome  wheat  waa  re- 
ported   at    the    seaboard. 

Some  operator.-^  are  now  bf-ffinning 
to  predict  that  with  favorable  woalh-r 
the  figure.s  of  the  laat  government  re- 
port  may  b.-  nuii^Tlally  Improved  up.m 
and  that  in  the  event  ..f  any  good 
news  r.K.trdinK  progresH  of  .seeding 
and   fUld   work 

influential  }  ^^^    f,^^ 


8;    last    year, 
last  year,  73; 


company 
from     O. 


has 

T. 


tjpen. 
.1.19*4  b 

.1.191.4-^ 

.1.17%-S 

.1.16-^4 


AMERICAN 

May  — 

Duluth    

Minneapolis 
Chicago     .... 
Winnipeg     . . 
July— 

Duluth    1.20\b 

Mlnneaoolls    1.19^-20 

Chicago     1.16-15S 

do  Sept 1.14'.* 

Winnipeg     1.16- ^ 

do   Oct 1.12 


WHEAT 

High. 
1.1^  Tib 
1.19^4 
1.17T. 
1.16% 


MARKETS,  APRit  18,  1916, 


1.20Vi 
1.20 
1.16 
1.1  iVi 

1.16V4 

1.1 


•i>- 


Low. 

i.n\k 

1.17 
1.16 
1.12V& 

1.1.  ;*a 

1.1/% 

1.13 

l.llH 

1.13  »•♦ 

1.10 


Close. 
1  18>«b 
1.17H- 
1.16-H 
1.18^ 

1.18  »*  a 

1.18  V« 

1.14-^ 

1.12Vtb 

1.14Sb 

l.lO'^»a 


.m 


1.17'>%b 


Y'r  ago. 


Open. 

May     1-13 

July    1.14^*a 


DULUTH  DURUM 

High.  Low. 

1.13  ■  U 

1.14  «*a  1.12 


1.13% 
l.l«4ii 
Llli")* 


1.47'»i 
1.66^ 
1.61  T4 

1.44 'in 
1.41% 

1.22* 
1.40 

i.4y^ 


May 
July 


DULUTH 

open.  High. 

.2.09V4  2.10V*b 

.2.10'4  2.1IV«b 


LINSEED 

Low. 

2.09  i'* 
2.10 


MARKET. 

Close.  April'' 7. 

l.ll^a         l.ir 
1.12  Ha         IM '• 

MARKET. 

CloBo.         April 
2.10Via 
211  »4a 


T'r  ago. 
1.67'^ 
1.64^ 


T'r  ago. 
1.93 'A 


be    a 

1.4  b«- 
wheat 


over    the   Noi  Ihwost.   a 
further   ea.stn^   off   In    the   market    may 
b«     brcnight     about.       Some 
trader.s    are.    however,    reported    to    bo 
strongly     -'f    the    opinion     that     in     the 
©v-iit   of  any   sliding  down   from   pres- 
ent    level.-*,     the     nmrktt     would 
good    buy    for   a   long    pull,   as   it 
lleved     that     probable     rodue.-d 
produetionst    in    this    country    and    i  an- 
ads  and  in  th.-   LIuropean  count.l^-s  this 
«ea.son   nnu^t    inevitably  lead   to  anxiety 
later    ren^.r.llng   .supplies    in    the    event 
of  the  *!»"•  drasKlng  on  indefinitely,    it 
Is    also    pointed    tliat    the    development 
of    the    u.sual    flood    of   crop    Kcare»    be- 
and    the   harveiitlng   of   the 
be  reckoned  upon 


tween    ii«»w 

u.'w  cropM   must   also 

*''whI;u"ul^J^Ss  at  DuKith  today 
came  to  only  23  .ars,  <.f  which  ''";  -haj' 
were  durum.  Supplies  of  wheat  in  th 
elevator.-^  h-re  now  stj^nd  at^l.SblOOO 
bu  an  huiv.use  of  514.0')0  bu  in  the  last 
alx  dav.s.  Stocks  of  all  grains  here 
aKgi.-nat.-  26.707,000  bu,  an  In- 
of  105.000  bu  In  six  ilays. 
wluat     opened       unchanged 


now 
crease 
M  a  y 


at 


off 
$1.17 
$1.20 
l''*c 


up 
at 


at    ?1.15»^«    itnd    closeo 
$1.1 8  >,    bid,    after  selling   off 
.filly      f>pened      unchanged 

■"n     slumped    to    $1.18'-h 

off   at    $1.1H^,    asked. 


to 
at 
and   close. 1 
Durum   wa.-* 
equally   a.',  weak  as  spring  wheat      The 
Mav   future  ()pened    unchanged  at   $11/. 
and    clos.d    l«.c    off    at    $1.11';.     -luly 
op.-ne,|     S.e    off    at    H-HV    «»d    ^'^^^^^^l 
la.e    off    at    $1.12<^    asked. 
FlNX)««'e4l   Strong. 
Flaxseed    braced   up  materially   under 
thf   Impetus   of  goo.i   bidding  by   crush- 
ers     ExP'Tts  In   th.1t  market  aver 
Its   und.'rtoiif  Is  strong  after   its 
extiuded 
pressed   in 


oversold,   as 

•  Ir    holdings 

on  the  break. 

on  the  supposl- 

lower  leveli  wouM 

unchanged 


that 
ri'Cent 
slump.      The     opinion     Is     eX- 
soine  qu»''ters  that  the  mar- 
ket  In    the  seed    is   heavily 
lome    op<  rators     threw     th 
over.  rcRurdl'-ss  of  prices 
and  put  out  short  lines 
lion  th>ii  materially 

be  estalillshod.  .,       „♦ 

Mav      flax      opened      unchanged      . "it 
$M»it'»     and    closed    1  »'*  C    Up    at     li.lOVa 
asked.        July      open.-d      unchnngvd      at 
$2.0'J>H.    and   closed    IHc    UD    il    '^1^."»- 
At   Winnlp.g  May   flax  closed    ^*.c  up 

at    $l.>*7»/2. 

At  Uueni>s  Aires  flax 
!►  il.-O'".  and  London 
$2.39%.  ^     ,,  ^ 

Oats    rlosid     '4C    on 
for    on    the    track;     rye 
J»5ViJ»6c.  and  barley 
63    to    71c. 

At     Winnipeg    May 
off    at    42'ic. 

At    St     Louis    May    wb^at 
11.11  »4     and    .luly    at    $110% 

At     Kan.'^as 
at    $107' 


closed 

4  48C 


at     41«»'0)41\c 
unchanged    at 
unchanged  at  from 


oats 


closed 
closed 


city    May 


wheat 
and   July    at    $1.06 T-af' 
PutH    and    Calls. 

Puts     on     Minn. apoll.s     wheat 
at   $1  16    and   calls    at    $1.20Vi. 


1 


No. 
Nu. 
N». 
N.i. 
N». 
N«. 
,   No 

1  ho. 

No 

No 
Na. 
Rtrl-y 
Barlvv 
No.  i 
No  1 
"  N..     1 


Cash    Snle«    Saturday. 

lii.rtlhrii    whcil.    4i)»)   l>u,    to    arrlvf... 

mirtliiTti   tthf at,    I   car 

nortlirrn   wli.at,   1   car 

north.rii   wli.iit.   1   car 

north  rn   wheat.    1  ciir,   bondw 

north  rn  wh-«t.   1  i'»r,   bonded 

iliinim,    1   3T>  cars 

lUinini.    1    car 

diinim.   25  car 

(lunim,   1  car   

(jradf  iliiriiin,   1  c;ir 

3  mlxpit  ilurum,   1  car 

1    car    

1  car  

rye.  1  car,  to  arrlt.* 

flaV,    1   car 

Max.   1  car    


"fresterday 

•> 

•  •••.•••.•••      *• 

23 

18 

•  *       • 
At    I.ivorpool    spot    wheat    closed    un- 

chang'*d  and  com   Vid  up. 

•  *       * 
Duluth    car    insp»*etlon:       Wheat — No. 

1  noith-rn,  1;  No.  4.  1;  durum,  13;  win- 
ter,   1     mixed,    7;    total    wheat.    23;    last 
66;    flHX.    2;    last    year,    3;    rye.    6; 
y<»ar.    none;     barley, 
I  2;   total  of  all  grains,  38; 
I  on    track.    48. 

•  • .     • 
The    McKlndley    <;rain 

received  the  following 
Simons,  operating  an  elevator  at  Bart- 
lett,  -V.  I).,  and  also  quite  an  extensive 
farm,  r,  under  date  of  April  6.  "Our 
.spring  ia  very  backwar.l.  The  ground 
was  thawed  out  about  four  Inches,  but 
th"  last  two  <lay»  it  hag  frozen  solid 
again.  The  snow  on  the  fields  has 
iiboui  all  gone.  I  should  Judge  there 
is  about  60  per  cent  of  the  plowing 
this  part  of  the  state.  Unless 
e  gel  wrtimer  weather  soon,  seeding 
will  be  late,  and  some  acreage  not 
seeded." 

•  *       * 

Australian  offers  of  wheat  are  easy, 
and  ••learames  are  ben<mlng  larger, 
but    mostly    for    government    orders. 

•  •       • 
Ftr'jomhall     cabled     from     IJverpool — 

Th"  mirkei  was  dull  with  some  pres- 
sure as  a  result  of  continued  liberal 
arrivals  and  increase  in  tlu-  amount  on 
pa.ssaK>'.  Aigt-ntlne  wheat  wan  more 
irt-ely  offered  and  Australians  were 
easier.  The  gttural  demand  is  quiet. 
American  government  report  was  bull- 
ish, but  it  is  btdlt'ved  that  lmprovem»'nt 
'  will  be  noted,  and  exporting  c<iuntrles 
have  large  surpluses,  wlili  h  of  neces- 
sity will  he  marketed.  It  Is  expected 
that  world's  shipments  will  this  week 
be  large." 

•  •       « 

A  Chicago  wire  said:  "As  a  result 
of  the  break  the  markets  have  a  fair 
chance  to  <»pen  higher  on  Monday.  The 
bit'uk  was  due  to  claims  of  wheat 
liiipiovt  iiient.  failure  of  I.,lverpool  to 
advance  with  us  In  the  past  ten  days, 
and  f'-ars  of  a  quirk  change  to  warm 
weaih.-r.  In  addition  the  wheat  mar- 
ket mis.<ies  export  demand  news.  Many 
lo4'al  reports  will  be  out  over  the 
Wivk-end.  S«>uthwest  reports  on  Mon- 
day may  show  Improvement.  Central 
West  reports  again  indicate  a  poor 
crop  as   a   whole." 

•  *       * 

Fort  William  and  Port  Arthur  stocks 
of  wh.'^at  are  27. .311. 000  bu,  an  Increase 
of    5'io.uoO    bu    for    the    week. 

•  •       • 

n.  W.  .^iiow  says:  "The  government 
rt'poit  yest«'iday,  wh«n  figured  to  show 
the  indicated  crop  by  states,  in  ac- 
cordance with  the  government  method, 
shows  the  winter  loss  in  the  leading 
wht-at  states  in  a  striking  manner. 
It  ma'tfs  th»*  IndicHt'-d  crop  in  the 
soft  wh.  at  slat.'S,  96.161.000  bu.  against 
a  total  last  year  of  195.250,000  bu.  In 
the  trans-Mlssour!  states  the  loss  is 
al&o  important.  Kansas,  Nebraska  and 
<)klahoma  promising  only  176,682.000 
bu,    against    209,096.000    bu    last    year." 

•  *       « 

RusS'Ml's  News,  Now  York,  said: 
"Charters  reported  last  night  Includ- 
ed only  one  steamer,  30,000  quarters 
from  Atlantic  range  to  Dublin,  at  14s 
9d  May  loading.  The  demand  for  room 
Is  small  for  grain  boats.  A  leading 
br.iker  staled  last  night  that  it  was 
extrt-mely  difficult  to  name  exact  rates. 
Nearly  ever.v  c.»ae  was  a  matter  of  ne- 
gotiation under  the  conditions  exist- 
ing. It  is  understood  Uiat  some  '.ites 
to  I.lverp.)ol  have  been  made  as  low 
as  I3d,  wliil<-  the  vessel  wanted  the 
room,  but  ordinarily  20d  represented 
closed  the  market.  The  export  busitiess  In 
wht-at.  In.  hiding  some  trades  made  the 
previous  day,  amounted  to  about  600,- 
000   bu. 

"Tb'^re  has  been  a  general  advance 
in  war  risks  to  Holland.  The  rate  has 
ris.'n  fr-im  1  '^  per  cent  to  6  per  cent 
within  th.'  last  few  days.  This  has 
been  due  In  pnrt  to  the  heavy  losses  in 
shipping  on  account  of  the  submarine 
a'.'tivlties  and  also  fears  that  Holland 
may    be   Involved    in    the   war." 


No.  1  hard,  $1.20^;  No.  1  jjorthern,  $l.l<*i- 

No    1   northern  to  arrive,   $1.17%;  No.  3   o'» 

hard    to  arrlvo.   $1.1«S;   Montana  No.   2.   on 

July     $1.18%    asked.    Durum — ^On    tracJt: 

No."  1.  $1.11;  May,  $1.11%;  July.  JJ-Ia^ 

to    arrive.    $2.10>4-2.11;    May,    $2.10^1 

'41>4-41«4c:    to    arrive,    4IV4C.    Rye — Un 

track,  96-96c:  to  arrive,  95-»«c.     Barley— On  track    «S-71c        ,      .        „ 

Klevator  receipts  of  domestic  grain— Wheat,  38.206  bu,  last  year 
oats    7,191  bu,  last  year  34,769  bu;  barley,  33.902  bu.  last  year 
bu    last  year  1.024  bu;  flax,  874  bu.  last  year  8.121 
Shipments  of  domestic  grain — Oats.    1.250   bu. 
bu,  last  year  none.  .    ,  .        „.^...    .»  ca~  w..    1-— ^  aba  bu-  oats. 


Duluth  close:  Wheat — (in  track: 
1.20<%;  No.  2  northern,  $1.13»h-1.16  h« ; 
track,   $1.061, -1.11 '«;   Montana  No.   2 
track     $1.16'Si-1.17«%;   May,    $1.18Mi    bid; 
No.  1,  $1.11;  No.  2.  $1.04-1.06.     To  arrive: 
asked.       Linseed— On    track.    $2.10^-2,11; 
asked;    July,    $2.11  »4.       Oat.s — On    track. 


DECUNES 
INJTOCKS 

Standard   Shares   Fall  to 

Lowest  Quotations  of 

the  Week. 


closed   steady; 
October,    12.22; 
uary.    12.43. 


May.  11. »0; 
December, 


July, 
12.38; 


vr.ee; 

Jan- 


TRADE  REVIEW 


23V^34r:   refultr   packed.    «tr» 
firsts,    21V4^22'ic;    gMWjds,    20^ 
wry    wbit«s,    flo«    ta    tutcy, 
IjTOwns,   24*^  25c. 

riiecse — Kinii;     receipts,     875. 
18^:  nirreut   niah'.   KperiaU,    li 
run,    17c;  Wisconsin   twins,    fresh 


flnrts,    tS^l 
'a20->»c;   wnttf 
26c;    neartw    h«nnefj 

Stat,     held     sp*rlaU, 


Recoveries  in  Final  Deal- 
ings on  Rise  of  Zinc 
Issues. 


last 
bu. 
last   year 


93.167  bu; 
rye,  l.»7  7 


Klevator  receipts  of  bonded  grain — Wheat,  88,897  bu.  last  year 
18.124  bu.  last  year  none;  barley.  1.246  bu.  la^t  year  none. 

Shipments   of  bonded    grain — Wheat,   25,361    bu, 
bu    last  year  none;  barley,  1.240  bu,  last  year  none. 


3.520  bu 
none;   barley.  21,583 
1.080 
last  year  none;  oats,   21.766 


tied  weather  failed  to  act  as  an  offset. 
After  opening  virtually  unchanged,  the 
market  underwent  a  aubstanllal  set- 
back all  around.  , 

Subsequently    prices    hardened    a    lit- 
tle   when    wheat    showed    a    partial 


idy 


at 


to 


covery.     The  close  was  sleu 
%c    net    decline. 

Oats  seemed  to  have  lost  all  Inde- 
pendence of  other  grains.  Trade  was 
light  and  the  trend  of  prices  down- 
grade. 

Support  was  lacking  In  provisions. 
Pork    especially   seemed   heavy. 

Wheat— No.  2  red.  $1.20Vi  (ff  1.2lia  : 
No.  3  red.  nominal;  No.  2  hard,  $118; 
No.    3    hard.    $1.14 >4.  .     .^, 

Corn — No.  2  yellow,  nominal;  No.  4 
yellow.    72V«<^73c.  .„,^  ..,, 

Oats— No.  3  white.  43\©44'ic; 
standard,     46(?i  46»3C. 

Hye  No  2  and  No.  3,  nominal;  No.  4, 
87c.  i?arley,  62''a75c.  Timothy,  $4.50«!/ 
8.00;    clover,    $lO.0O'<j  18.50. 


paper,  3^3V*.  Sterling  60-day  bills, 
4.72\;  demand  4.76  7-16;  cables,  l.<7. 
Francs,  demand,  6.01H;  cables,  6.01V4. 
Marks,  demand,  72  3-16;  cables.  72Vi4. 
Kronen,  demand,  12^;  cables,  12".». 
Guilders,  demand.  43;  cables.  43V«.  Lire, 
demand.  6.66;  cables.  6.66.  Rubles,  de- 
mand. 31 1^;  cables,  31  \.  Bar  silver. 
61%;    Mexican    dollais.    A7\.      Govern- 


ment   bonds 
steady. 


steady;       railroad      bonds 


BOSTON  COPPER  STOCKS. 

Repnrtetl  by  FaIm.   WahMt  *  COl 


^aC 
up 


up 

at 


at 


close.l 
1.07. 


...|1.20i»i 
...  1.19 
...  1.14U 
...  1.11% 
....  1.07% 
....  l.«6S» 
....  1.12 
....  1.05^4 
....  l.tM 
....  1.03 
....  1.06*, 
....  1.02'. 

66 

6S 

;»♦■. 

..  2. (>!»*» 
....  2.10V4 


CHICAGO  MARKET. 


MARKET  GOSSIP. 


stocks,  giving  changes 


Duluth  grain 

In   six   dRys:  ,    t    ,    --q  nnA 

Wheat Western   and   winter,    ,.R,"Mt.> 

bu;    increase,   13.000    bu;   spring, 

f>00     bu:     Increase,     18.000     bu; 

6  636.000  bu;  increase.  115.000 

rd     6  3P7.00O    bu;    increase. 

total'    wheat,     21.661.000 

crease.  613.000  bu;  afloat. 

Coarse     praln.s — Oats. 


8.095 
durum, 
bu;  bond- 
367.000  bu; 
bu;  net  In- 
758.000  bu. 
2,172.0oO  bu; 
decrease,  1!>0.000  bu;  rye,  37.000  bu; 
Increase.  6.000  bu:  barley,  1.103.000  bu : 
Increase,  67,000  bu;  flax,  domestic, 
1.659.000  bu;  bonded,  72.000  bu;  total 
flax,  1.731.000  bu;  Increase,  net.  18.000 
bu. 

Total    of    all     grains.     26.707.000    bu; 
net   Increase,    405,000   bu. 
«       «       • 

Clearance    reported.      Wheat.    619,000 

bu;    flour.    19.0O0    bbls;    tt)gether   equal 

to    706.000    bu;    corn,    253,000    bu;    oats. 

none. 

«      •      • 

Primary    markets   report   the    follow- 
ing  receipts   and   fchipments   to«lay. 
Wheat — Receipts.      959,000      bu;      last 


Chicago.  April  8. — Anxiety  as  to  de- 
v-lopnxeiits  in  the  negotiations  of  Ger- 
intny  and  the  I'nited  .States  had  a 
bearl.-<h  effect  today  on  wheat.  Ad- 
vances in  war  risk  insurance  rates  on 
the  Atlantic  owing  to  heavy  losses 
which  submarines  have  Inflicted  on 
shipping  counted  also  against  the  bulls. 
Resides,  favorable  weather  conditions 
In  t!i.-  winter  wheat  belt  and  In  Canada 
/as  well  were  Influential  in  depressing 
pri.-es.  The  opening  which  ranged 
from  ^c  to  *<c  up  with  May  at  $1.17% 
to  $1.17*<i  and  .July  at  $1.15'<b  to  $1.16 
WLis  followed  by  general  declines  of 
Ic   or   m  »!•.•    under   >esterday'8    finish. 

Additional  breaks  ensued,  but  the 
market  later  milled  to  some  extent  be- 
cause of  reports  that  Ueiinany  would 
disavow  the  slnkinu  of  the  Sussex. 
Prices  closed  unsettled.  1%  to  1 -rH  fa 
IVgc  net  lower,  with  May  at  $1.16fti 
1.161,    and    July    at    $1.14'&  1.14«4, 

Corn    w.ak-ned    witli    wheat.      Unset- 


Pork.    $21. 50'&  23.16 
$11.87©  12.26. 
Wlieat—      «Jp«». 


lard,   11.45;    ribs. 


,...$1.1- 


.75^1 
.76»i 

.45 
.43' 3 


.May 

July    ... 

t'om — 
May  ... 
July    ... 

l)ut»— 
May   ... 

Juir  ... 

Pork- 
May  ....2:i.nr> 
July    ....22.75 

Lard- 
May    ....11.47 
July    ....ll.«7 

Biha— 
May    ...12.20 
July    ....12.37 


$1 
1 


lllili. 
17^, 
16 

.75''V» 
.76^ 

.45 
.43% 


2:1.17 
22.  *» 

11.47 
11.70 

12.  r. 

12  40 


Ix)w. 

now. 

$1.16 
1.14 

■M 

.75 

.76% 

.44«,. 

.43t; 

.44% 

23.02 
22.7.-. 

23.17 
22.80 

11.4;'. 
11.65 

11.47 
11.67 

12.20 
12.35 

12.2r> 
12.  r 

STOCKS — 


•  ••••••••9   ' 


Corn  and  Wheat  Bulletin. 


8T.VTI0.NS— 


State  of 
weather 


Temi)er»lar« 
IllCit        Low 


I'Pre- 
icll>l- 
Utlon 


For  the  twenty  four 
.\pm   S: 


hour,  ending  at  8  a.   m..   Saturday, 


.Clou4r: 
1 

.Cloudy! 

.'.'(ileirl 


tL»  fro.t«    rioudy 

Minneaiwlls   l''**'' 

.lleiuiidria      fl''*r 

I'ampMI     Clear 

t  rooliMtim    ClvAT, 

ivtwti      *''*^ 

thuluth      Cl'-'f' 

Montevideo     fl'W 

tMuorlu-ad     t'^^ri 

Nrw    llHI    Pt.  ClMdt 

Park    HaplJi    0'«'" 

Kiirht-ftHr     Cloudy 

tSl.    Pmil    <'l'«' 

Wlnwhiigii    Pt.  l'lao«iy 

Worthtngtwi     tl«», 

l.llitTil.'vn 

tHunin     

Milbank     

tMlt.-hell     

tPlrriv      

PolIo.k      

tlUpliI    City    

R.-.mel.l    

Sinux    KalLs    

tWatcrtiiMn     

tVaiikton     

t.\mi'iiia    

tBitiiiarrk 

tR(>tUnL>au    

Buwhells 

tl»»vlls    Lake    "'*•' 

Itli'kiiison     t""" 

IFrssaMldfll      

t'iruf Ion    .........••••' 

ttiraiiil   Forka 

Jiant^town    ■ 

LaiiKilun    

tl-arlmiwe     } 

l.bhnn    

MiMOt    

t.ViipoiMB    

tPt-ml)lna    

JWHiipi'ton    ! 

tWIllUtim    ^^" 

(ila.Hgow     ••••  LI  ••,;■•• '., 

tHaTre     Pt.  Ckwdyl 

I^wistown    

IMIlrs  llty  

tMlnnrdosa,    .Man    

t\Viiml|)fg      

tBatllffor.l     rt- 

+Prliiie    Albwt    ^ 

ttttiADP^ii.-  -•••w.-vf^T 

tSwirt  (iirrent   Pt.  Cloutlj 

tKdmoiiton.  AUa   ^oudy 


I 

.Cl^arl 
.Ckar' 
,  .Clear 
Cl«nl> 
..Clfir' 


34 

31) 
3X 
36 
32 
30 
32 
32 
34 
32 
■iH 

•.u 

32 

28 

3H 
» 

32 

28 
36 
40 


32 


28 
34 


32 

28 

30 
28 


28 
48 
50 
52 
34 
32 
32 

3rt 

.38 
30 

56 


30 
24 
14 
12 
16 
14 
20 
16 
IK 
24 
18 
24 
24 
22 
18 

20 
18 

32 

i2 

18 


12 
14 


18 
2 

16 
14 


22 

10 
16 
24 
18 
12 
12 
28 
16 
14 
26 
38 


0 
.02 
.10 
.06 

0 
.02 

0 
.36 
.20 
.24 
.06 
.01 
.01 

•».) 

iiij 
.20 
.02 
.12 

.30 

.01 

0 

.06 

.02 

.06 

.06 

6 
.08 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
.04 
0 
0 
0 
0 
02 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


•— Inrl»*  and  humirwtth^.     t— Hlghrtt  ypslfrday 
est   last   Dl«ht       J— Not   inrludrd  In  th»   afirafea. 

NOTK— Th«'  avcragf  lil(jh.^t  aii.I  lowest  t.-nuH-ratun-a 
made  IIP  at  each  ccnUT  from  Ui*  «'t»«l  immlier  of 
ptirfci  reci'lTfrt.  ami  the  aT.Ta«<>  pn>clplUtioiw  from 
numlM'r  of  stations  reijortlug  0.10  i*  morf. 


low- 

ar« 
re- 

tlii> 


CHAS.E. 


GRAIN,  STOCKS,  COnON, 
PROVISIONS 

104  Board  off  TriMlo,  Duluth 


M*Bab«ra  New  York  St*ek  Bxefcaas* 

|f«mb«r«  New  York  Cotton  Elxckaaa* 

And  All  OralB  IfixehaBcea. 


Otflcos  la 


ta  Mlnnenpolls,  St. 
aad    Winnipeg. 


l>aaJ 


A  Good  firm  to  Ship 
Your  Grain  to 

ATWOOD-URSON 
COMPANY,  Inc. 

Special  attontlon  rtvsn  to  caah 
crain*.  W*  viv«  all  shlpmenta  our 
personal  attention. 

Dulutb  —Minneapolis 


— SHIP  TO — 


H.  POEHLER  CO. 

(ETstabllshed  1866) 

*    GRAIN  COMMISSION 

MINNBAPOMS  I>UI,ITTH 


r.eni>ral  mimmary.  r«el»ed  from  Chlnjo:  Prrrlpltstlon 
m-n<Tal  from  the  easUrn  llmll<  of  OhI  1  rind  Kertufky 
wcst««rd  oTPr  Indiana,  Soiith*rn  and  Wfntfrn  IUlnal.<, 
Mis^xirl.  Io<ll.  exirpt  in  eitr*>ine  nortl»<a*t  portion, 
SotiUi  and  Wt'st  .Minnesota,  So(itlira!«t  Xorlh  haknu. 
eaxtiTii  halTi^  of  South  Dakota,  .S.^^Jra^kI  and  Kan'i:ts, 
and  iMilahoma  except  extr.'in'  iwrthwrtt  pcrtl.m.  Pnvlpl- 
tatioii  U  mostly  in  fonn  0^  snow  fxwpt  rain  in  wutli 
fa.stfrn  swtlons.  Tlw  amounta  lifaviwl  nftr  KfuUyYr, 
Southeast  Indiana,  and  Southern  Ml«.*i»ir1,  raniclng  from 
.20  to  1.00  liirli.  Modt-rate  over  Ohio  and  llclit  to 
inodrral*.  fl*wherr. 

Th*  niM  wB»e  «tlll  i»nl»ti  OT»f  i»ntlrf  rcflon  pxcrpt  in 
.Montana  whfra  It  U  warmer.  Kn»>iln«  uvathiT  ri'a.hlne 
to  Miuthern  Umlta  of  Kfotifrky  and  Oklahuma.  an.i 
mlnimnnu  ranj^d  from  2  de«.  tti  IH  deg  ahote  in 
Nortli   lukota.  H.  W.   BK  H.VBUSON, 

Loral   y'arffMter. 


Ala.xka     . .  . 
Adventure 
Ahme»?k 
Allotiex 

Atnerlran    Zinc    

Arcadian      

Arlxona    Commercial 
liutte    &    Rallaklava, 
Butte    &    Superior 
Calumet    &.    Arizona 
c:alum.-t     &     Hecla.., 

Centennial      f . 

Chino     « . 

Copper    llanite     .... 

Daly     West     

Ka.><t    Hutte     

Franklin      

i;oldrteld    Cons     .... 

(iraiiby     

C}ri..fne-Canan«'a 

Hancock   Cons 

Inspiration     

Indiana    •'*• . 

Isle    Koyale    

Keweenaw     

I..ake  Copper    

Ma»H.     Cons 

Mjiyflowor    

Miami  Copper 

MiohiRan      

Mohawk     

Xevada    Cons 

North   L4tk«    

Xlpisslng     

.\orth    Hutte    

Ojibway     

(lid  Colony 

Old     Donilnhm     .... 

f  )sreola     

Quincy     

Ray    Consolidated    . 

Santa    Fe     

Shannon     

."^hatturk     1 

Shoe    Ma'.'hlncrjr 

South     Lake      .  .  . 

Superior   Boston 

.<=iup«rior    Copper 

Tamarack     

Trinity     

Tuolumne     

Inlled    Fruit    

U.    S.    Mining^    

do,    pM.     ....... 

I'^tah    Consolidated 

^'l^:torla     

Wlnon.i     

Wolverine     


•  •  •  ■  I 


•  •   •   •  •   I 


Bid.   I  Asked. 


19  ^/s 

4 
100 
70 
96^ 

8^ 

9 

3% 
94\ 
73^ 
666 
18 

64  Ti 
65 

3\ 
13 

86c 

91 

50 

16 

46% 

5 
28V^ 

7 
18 
14 

4 
38*» 

100  1h 
17 

1». 

7S 
29 

2% 

Sr. 
69 

94  >4 
96 
24  V4 

8 

9H 
8S 
B7«i 

8 

3»i 

im 

8\ 
35c 
148 
72% 
53 
14  Vi 

68  ^. 


19'^ 

3^, 
99 

69V^ 
96 

8 

8T. 

3^ 
94  Vi 
73 
660 
17% 
i*\ 
64^ 

8>4 
12\ 

9 '4 
80c 
90 
49 

16^ 
46^ 

4«4 
27 

6% 
17% 
13Vk 

S% 
38  V4 

3V< 
99  Vi 

1«<'4 

l\a 

28  V^ 
2V* 

3^ 

fiS 

94  li 

94  Vi 
28H 

2-<. 

9 
S4% 
67V4 

7^4 

3H 
16»i 
52 

8V4 

80c 
147 
71  Ti 
52Vi 
14 

4 

4 
58 


New  York,  April  8. — The  foreign 
situation  continued  to  exert  an  unfa- 
vorable Influence  over  today's  market, 
even  thoueh  advices  from  Washington 
and  other  important  points  were  of  a 
more  reassuring  character.  Trading 
was  moderately  active,  but  almost 
wholly  at  the  expense  of  prices,  stan- 
dard stocks  falling  to  lowest  quota- 
tions of  the  week.  United  States  Steel 
occupied  its  former  place  as  leader, 
falling  %  to  83  \.  but  the  nwve  specu- 
lative specialties  were  lower  by  1  to 
2  points,  with  a  3-polnt  decline  in 
Industrial  Alcohol.  Coppers  w*  re  an 
element  of  support  at  the  outset,  but 
yielded  later.  CJeneral  recoveries  were 
made  in  the  final  dealings  on  the  ri.He 
of  zinc  shares.  The  closing  was  Ir- 
regular.     Bonds  were   steady. 


New  YoFk.  April  8. -— Bradstreets 
spys:  Activity  reigns  supreme  in 
whatever  direction  one  may  look, 
whether  to  trade.  Industry,  mining, 
railroading  or  shipping  by  water — and 
a  further  surge  forward  Is  expected 
when  Ice  closed  harbors  open  to  navi- 
gation and  country  roads  improve.  The 
pace  Is  rapid,  at  a  record  rate.  In  fact, 
being  neither  deterred  by  high  prices, 
nor  misgivings  over  International  mat- 
ters, which  latter  at  the  moment  seem 
rather  beclouded.  The  only  existing 
drawbacks  to  final  distrlbutloti.  cold 
weather  and  bad  roads,  are  deemed  to 
be  but  temporary  factors.  Whatever 
lulls  may  be  experienced  are  due  either 
to  inability  to  get  goods  or  to  the  fact 
ti'at  the  producing  units  of  the  country 
are  sold  up,  with  perhaps  some  slight 
casings  In  this  or  that  line  as  the  re- 
sult of  seasonal  changes.  Weekly  bank 
clearings  $4,841  390.000. 


New    York   Banks. 

New  York,  April  8. — The  statement 
of  the  actual  condition,  of  clearinsr 
house  banks  and  trust  companies  for 
the  week  shows  that  they  hold  $99,- 
047,930  reserve  in  excess  of  legal 
requirements.  This  is  a  decrease  of 
124,776,110    from    last    week. 


I'»nd«n    StockN. 

London,  April  8. — American  sectjr- 
ities  today  w^ere  quietly  steady  aroi>nd 
parity.  Money  and  discount  rates  were 
quiet. 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 


lUDorted  by  Cbarica  K   Vtmu  A  Co. 


BTOCK»— 


Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 
Am. 


Midway    Horae    Market. 

Minnitota   Tran^t-r,   St.    Paul,    .Minn.,    April   R.— Bar- 
rett A  Zlmmeinian  rnHirt:     Salf^  of  heavy  draft  horses  to 
and    shipaentt    of    farm    aixl    general 
Owatouna,   Minn. ;  Cokato,   Minn. ;  Rlee 
(hippovra    KalK,    Wl.s..    make    up    the 
IixTcaiitnf  ln<|iili7  for  ujuin.     Kftvipts 
Values  M  follown: 


local     cocitrdctart 
purpow  horn.*  to 
Lake,    WU..    and 
iimy'»  clearanee. 
atiout  fortr  head. 

Drafters,    extra     

Drafters,    r holce    

Orafters.   f<;muion  to  eood 

Farm  bom-i  and  mares,  extra . . 
Farn<  mares  and  hor^ea,  cholir 
Karm  horsei,   common  to  iMd.. 

DriviTs    and    »»ddlcr!t 

IVIIri'ry    horses    

Mules,    arcurdiug  to  slae 


.$160«fi21.- 
.  140(516) 
.  125<&143 
.  l:VWi210 
.  140ft  l.V> 
.  125^140 
.  130^Hl6.-. 
.  U'WTi  190 
.  160(5210 


Real  Estate  Transfers. 


Carnahan    to 
iw».4   of  neV4, 


Karl    Wright. 
k)t  6,   WHtton 


of 
68- 


MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET. 


Minneapolis,  Minn.,  April  8. — Wheat 
— Lower.  The  market  was  unea.oy  and 
after  a  fairly  strong  opening  deve'- 
oped  weakness.  May  closed  I ''a  to 
l^ic  tinder  yesterday's  finish,  while 
July    closed    l'^»c    down. 

In  the  cash  market  corn  and  oats 
were  not  In  strong  demand  and  prices 
were     fractionally     hiwer. 

Wheat  receipts,  307  cars,  compared 
with     107     a    year    ago.       Wh<at:     May 


opened       81.19  "4        to 

$1.19T        

1.18. 
high, 
$1.18  Vi. 


i.    low,    $11'.. 
July     opened 
$1.20;       low, 


$1.19  Vj;        high. 

closed,    $1.17  Ts*"? 

to    $1.20; 

closed. 


$1.19  \ 
$1.17%: 


Earl    C. 
u*V4. 

Rcmy  K.  Bellcperche  rt  ux  to  Charles  Bioc- 
bam,  lot.)  3.  4,  section  1;  loU  3.  uey^  at 
nw«.4,  neVi  of  s»V4.  1"*  1|  wttoo  2;  lot 
2,   <n^\  of  ii.'«,i,   section  3,   65-17 

.\arist  W.  H«Mon  et  iix  V»  William  Wallacf, 
lots  3,  4,  5,  seVi  of  nwV4,  sertlon  6. 
6.".  IS     

Georce  Anderson  et  ux  to  Krank  Wefen,  lots 
1.  2.  neVt  0'  ""Vi.  auction  19,  65-16;  »eVi 
of  «V4,  section  la,   Ki-17 

J.  Q.  .K.  Cro^h)  et  ux  to  Grorge  Brcdt,  lots 
1,   2.  .3.  aecUoti  2.  69-20 

Wallai-e-Kohlnaen  Uimlter  roDi^anjr  to  H.  C. 
Brings,  sV*.  of  seV4.  c^a  <rf  swVi,  nwVi  of 
s»V4.  swv*  of  nwi^,  aeeUim  5;  lot  (J.  seV4 
of  swVi.  »»li  of  **%.  Kt\\fm  6;  nwii  of 
neV4.   aei-tlon  7.   63-6 

t>e«n(e  \\.  .Vortou  et  al  t«  Ernest  J.  8poa- 
heim.  lot  16.  blk.  59,  West  Ouluth.  8iub 
dirlsloii    

Same  t«)  same,  lot  15.  blk.  59.  West  Duluth. 
SlxUi   din^lon    

The  Ooeota  (esietery  a«RO<tttlon  to  Fred  K.  I>iit- 
ton.  t\U.  lot  8,  blk.  3,  awtl.ni  "K,' 
Oneoia  cemet«ry    


Tel.  &  Tel 

Can.,   com.... 

Beet  Sugar.. . 

Hide  &  Leth.. 

Car  Foundry 

Ice  Sec.  Co. . 

Locomotive 

Locomotive,  pfd. 

Lia.,   pfd 

Steel   Foundries. 

Smelting 

Ala.ska  Gold  Mines  Co. 
Allis   Chalmers,   com. 

Am.  Tobacco  Co 

Anaconda   Copper 

Atchison    

Atchison,    pfd. 

Raid.  Loc 

H.  &  O.,  com.  . 

1?.   &  O..   pfd .  •. 

B.  R.  T 

Butte  A  Superior.. 
Cal.  Pet'm.,  com. . . 
Canadian  Pacific  .. 
Central    Leather     ... 

Ches.   &    Ohio 

Chino    Copper    Co... 

C,  Mil.    &    St.    P 

Colo.    Fuel   &    Iron. . 

Con.    lias     

Corn     Fro.    Co ..... . 

Crucible    Steel,    com 

Distillers.     Sec 

Erie     

B.    F.    (Joodr'h  Co.,  com 
tJeneral    Electric     .  . 
(Ireat    Northern    pfd 
Great    Northern    Ore.. 

Gug.     Lxplor.    Co 

Insplr.    C(M>.     Co 

Kenn.     Copper     

I^high   V^alley    

Mont.    Power   &   Light 

Maxwell   Motor    

Maxwell  Motor,  2d  pfd. 

Mex.    Pet'ni   Co 

Miami    Copper    

Marine     

Nor.    Pacific    

Norfolk   &   Western    . . 

North    American    

N.    Y.    Central     

N.  Y..  N.  H.  &  N.  H... 
Ontario  &  Western  . . 
Pennsylvania   R.   R.    .  . 

People's     Gas     

Pressed   S.   C.   Co 

Pullman    

Ray    Copper    

Heading     

Republic    Steel    

Rock    Island    

Sears-Roeburk  Co.    ... 

Southern    Paelffc    

Southern  Railway   .... 

Sti.iebaker,    com 

Shaituck  

Tenn.  Copper  Co 

Texas  Oil  Co 

Union    Pacific    

U.  S.  Rubber 

U.  S.  Ind.s.   Alcohol  Co. 

U.   S.    Steel    

Utah  Copper   

We^tinghouse  Klec.  .. 
Western    Maryland    . .  . 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 

Chicago. 

Chicago.  April  8. — Butter — ^Lower: 
receipts.  7,678  tubs;  .  creamery  extraa. 
36c;  extra  firsts.  34 Vic;  firsts.  33 Va^ 
34c;    seconds,    31<^33c. 

Cheese — Steady;  winter  made,  dal.«iies, 
17'i@17Vic:  twins.  16V4(&16^c;  Amer- 
icas, 16Vi@1634c:  horns.  l«Vi@16V4c; 
fall  made,  daisies.  17V4@17%c;  twins, 
17Vi(&17'?4c;  Americas.  18V^(yi9c; 
horns,    18V^(frl9c. 

Egg.s — Higher;  receipts,  34,129  cases; 
firsts,  20V^'h  2054c;  ordinary  firsts. 
19V4'&'19%c;  at  mark,  cases  included, 
19@20V4c. 

Potatoes — Receipts,  32  cars;  un- 
changed. 

Poultry — Alive,    unchanged. 


Ckleaao  LIveMeck. 

Chicago.  April  8. — Demand  for  hogs 
today  was  only  fair  and  the  supply  lib- 
eral"  on  account  of  4,000  having  been 
left  over  unaold  last  nifrht.  Prices  on 
cattle,  sheep  and  Iambs  were  next  to 
nominal. 

Hogs — Receipts.    11.000; 
yesterday's    average;    bulk, 
light,     $9.30^9.80;     mixed, 
heavy.     $9.25<&9.80;     rough, 
pigs,    $7.60(&  9.10. 

Cattle — Receipts,  200;  steady;  native 
beef  steers  $8.00 (^i  10.00;  western  steers. 
$7.70@8.70;  stockers  and  feeders,  $6.10 
^8.75;  cows  and  heifers,  $4.20 (&  9.10; 
calves,    $6.50 ©9.00. 

Sheep— Receipts.  1,000;  steady;  weth- 
ers.   $8.25'&9.26;    lambs,    $8.76^114©. 


steady  at 
$9.56(&9.70: 
$9.361i  9.80; 
$9.25^9.40: 


Xew   York. 

^Jew    York,    April   8.— Butler— Steady;    reoelpU,    4,715; 
creamenr.     extras.     92     score 
higher    aoorlng,    37''(|!37>--V ;    firsts 
34'}jr3oc. 

Eggs — Firm;    recHptJ.    18,947;   fresh    gathered. 


36V4'a'36W-;     creamery, 
rsts,    35V2'a36f;    seconds, 


extras. 


GOOD  BULGES 

IN  ZING  STOCKS 


The  zinc  stocks  were  heavily  traded 
In  at  Boston  today  on  reported  good 
demand  of  the  metal  from  munitions 
manufacturers.      American    Zinc    closed 

$3.88  up  at  $95,  and  Butte  &  Superior 
scdred  an  advance  of  $1.87  to  $94.26. 
Greene-Cananea  was  also  strong,  clos- 
ing  87   ce^ts   up  at   $49. 

Price  changes  in  the  remainJer  of 
the  list  were  only  fractlonaly.  Calu- 
met   &    Arizona    closed    76    cents    off    at 


62 
94^4 


91  V. 
47^ 
36  V4 
78  Vi 
166Vi 


61% 
64'ii 

94  Vi 


89  Ti 
47% 
36V8 
77 
165  Vi 


120%|120 
43>4|   43 
22      I   2134 
46% I   46 '4 


67Vi 


72% 

110^4 
88  »K 
74V4 

113% 

122 

i03V4 
63% 

67% 


56  Vi 


71% 

109* 

38  V4 

72% 

113% 

12134 

i62% 
62% 

'56% 


23% 
84% 
60  »4 
18% 

97% 


23% 
84 

60% 
17% 

>    •    •   ■    • 

97V4 


141%  1140  Vi 
86      I   34 
62      I   Kl » 


I    61  V2 

I 

132%  1132 


19% 
28^4 

196% 
86% 

103 

101 

106% 
87 

76% 
86% 
9434 
23 

167 
64  V^ 
62 
64*4 
94«l* 
44% 

134 
20% 
91' I 
47^ 
36  Vi 
78 '4 

165  »-j 

120 
43U 
22 

46% 
56% 
77% 
79Vi 
72% 
65% 

110 
38  N 
73  ^ 

113-^4 

12134 
68% 

102 '1 
63% 
27  Vj 
66% 

104 
52 

163 
23% 
84 'i 
60-% 
18 

177 
97Vi 
20% 

141  V4 
34% 
61% 


163% 
84% 
82  >4 
64 


1196 
1132  Vi 

I  51% 

180%  [161  •% 


83% 
81% 
63% 


841 
81% 

31% 


New 


^ew  York 

York.  April   3. 


Coftoa. 

— CottDn: 


Futures 


BARNES-AMES  COMPANY 

GRAIN  COMMISSION  AND  SHIPPING  MERCHANTS 
Room  201,  Board  of  Trade,  Duluth,  Minn. 


Correspondents  of — 

THE  AME8-BARNKS  CO., 
THE  ZENITH  GRAIN  CO. 


NEW  YORK 
LTD.,  WINNIPEO 


STEPHEN  H.  JONES 

RECEIVER,  SHIPPER  AND  COMMISSION 

MERCHANT 

BOARD  OF  TRADE  BUILDING,  DULUTH. 


Llbtral  Advtmces  on  Conalcnmttnts 
Remittances  Promptly  Made 


Send  Un  Samples  of  Your  Grain 
Correspondence  Solicited 


KENKEL-XODD  CO. 


e« 


GRAIN  COMMISSION 

801   BOARD  or  TRADE,  DULUTH. 
CHAMBER  OF  COMMERCE,   ^UNXEAPOIilS. 


ELY,  SALYARDS  &  CO.,  Inc. 

GRAIN  COMMISSION  MERCHANTS 

Receivers  and  Shippers  of  Montana  Varieties  Rod  ami  Wliltc  Wheat  and 
Chevalier  Barley.     Hulless  Barley  and  Oats. 

Bonds  Filled  With  North  Dakota  and  Minnesota. 
Advances  Made  on  Consignments. 


350 

350 

30 


"EXPERIENCE  IS  THE  BEST  TEACHER'' 

GRAIN  COMMISSION  SINCE  11183 

C.  C.  WYMAN  &  CO. 


DULUTH 


MINNEAPOLIS 


Cash:  No.  1  hard.  $1.23%;  ^o.  1 
northern,  |1.19  V2'ii  1.22;  to  nrrlve, 
$1.18V2ii  1  21;  No.  2  northern.  |1.16Vi@ 
1.19%;    No.    3    wheat.    $1,111  «&  1.16%. 

Corn,  No.  .3  yellow,  74^2*<76%c;  No. 
3    oats.    42  0  42%c. 

Flax.    $2.10 '2  (f/ 2.14  Vi. 

Flour — UnchanK»>d.  Bhipments.  66.025 
bbls.  Rarley.  65'&72c;  rye.  94  n  :>6c; 
brail,    $18.26^19. 


liiTeriH»»l    Cimlii. 

Liverpool.  April  8- — Wheat — Pi>ot  No. 
1  Manitoba.  138  8d;  No.  3.  13s  3d;  No.  2 
red  western  winter,  lis  lid;  No.  2  hard 
winter,    gulf,    lis    6d. 

Corn — i'pot  American  mixed.  new, 
10s  6d. 


THE 


McCOMBER 
MINE 


KxtraetM 
tkU  we«k'i 


from   new*   article 
Ely   Mlueri 


In 


Now 
$1.23V^; 


TTew   York    ^'hrat. 

York,     April     8. — Wheat— May. 
July.   $1.16V*. 


ANDALL, 
ELIfiBLE 

MINNEAPOLIS 


GEE  &  UITCHELL  CO. 
RAIN 


DULUTH 


ERCHANTS 

•       WINNIPEG 


Soath   St.    Paul    Livestock. 

South  St.  Paul,  Minn..  April  8.— 
HoKS — Hecelpts,  1.300;  6  to  Iflc  lower; 
range.    $».20@».36;    bulk.    $9.26«9.30. 

Cattle — Receipts.  200:  killers  steady; 
steers.  $5f«9;  cows  and  helfer.s,  $6^ 
7.76;  calves,  steady.  $4 $ 8.25;  stockera 
and    feeders,    steady,    $6^8. 

Sheep — Hecelpt.H.  none;  steady;  lambs, 
$6.60  41  10.60;  wethers.  $6®  8.25;  ewes, 
$S.60&8. 


New 


New    York   Moacy. 

York,      Ayrli       8. — Mercantile 


•■At  tke  300-foot  level  another 
drift  v»ill  be  run  to  the  lead 
Nhown  on  the  upper  levels,  and 
It  Is  ronfldently  expected  that  a 
larKC  depoatit  «vfl|  be  encoun- 
tered. All  Indlcatlonm  point  to  a 
mine  of  considerable  hIxc.  •  •  • 
The  Jasper  and  ii<»apNtone  fnrna- 
tiouN  HO  familiar  on  the  Vermil- 
ion, and  a  Mure  Indication  of  ore, 
arc  Ib  place.  •  •  •  The  MeCooa- 
ker  bMs  fair  to  become  a  Nhlpper 
thiN  Hoaaon.  •  •  •  Mining;  men 
have  e*tlmate4  tkc  ore  on  the 
atock  pile  at  So.  1  shaft  at  from 
4.0HO  to  5,000  tona.  The  McCom- 
l»er  beam  all  the  marka  of  a  Ariit- 
ciaHN  mine.  •  •  •  Many  prontl- 
nen(  aklntnic  aaea  of  this  raaffc 
and  aiao  of  the  Mesaba  have  rta- 
Ited  the  worka  dminK  the  past 
two  ^eeka  nad  one  and  all  ex- 
preMHCd  theawtelven  aa  very  much 
MurprlNcd  ^vith  the  excellent 
aho^lnic    mado." 

Renpectfally     Mubmitted     to 
Siockholtfera. 

THE  MUTUAL  IRON 
MINING  COMPANY 


WE  WILL  BUY 

SOO  Cnyuna-Sultana 

200   Mutual    Iron 

2M  ConMolidatcd   Vermilion 

M  Com.    .Vni.  MuntfancMc   Mfg;  Co. 

30   Pfd.    Anu  ManKaneae    Mfg;.  Co. 
100  Onahnuin    IrOn 
SOO   Mnrwh   MlnlnR 
400  Calumet-Montana    Cona. 

10   Twin   City   Klre 

10  BankerN     &     Merchanta    Fire 
In  a. 

WE  WILL  SELL 

10  American    DruK    Syndicate 

40   Hupp    Motor,   Conunon 
200  GaKle    .MacComber   Motor 

10  Reo   Motor 
100  Savaiee    Factorlca 

10  Coin    Machine   Mfx.   Co. 
200   Section   4   ncvelopment 

5  Dr.   Price   Cereal  Prodncta  Co. 
400  Cnyuna-iinltana 
200  Mutual  Iron 

10   Twin    City   Cord    Tire 
Special    Letter  on    Industrial,    In- 
surance &  Automobile  Securities. 

SEND  FOR  IT 

Your  orJer  to  buy  or  sell  any 
stock  or  bond,  no  matter  where 
located,   will    receive   our   careful 

'  CONROY-WOOD  COMPANY 

STOCKS    AND   BONDS. 
94S   Andraa    Bldir..   MInneapollN. 

NlcoUet   4881— Center   2143. 


.-VLW.WS  AT  YOUR  SERVICE 

WHITE  GRAIN  COMPANY 

COMMISSION   MERCH.\NTS  AND  DISTKIBL'TKRS 

GRAIN   AND   HAY 

208  BOARD  OF  TRADE  BUILDING DULUTH,  MIWM. 


W.S.  MOORE  GRAIN  CO 

GRAIN  SHIPPERS 

305  BOARD  OF  TRADE,  DULUTH 


A.  D.  THOMSON  A  CO. 

ORiilN    RKCBIVBRS,    nfTIFPSR* 
▲ItD   OOMMIfSIOlW    MfitU^HAFTTV. 


40«-4ia 


•f  Trade,  Dalath. 


R.  B.  HARRINGTON  &  CO. 

m-  DEALERS  HI  HIGH  CUSS  INVESTMENT  SECURITIES  -m 


506  LONSDALE  BCILDINO. 


Graad  CSSt  BIcfroae   639. 


FOR 
INFORMATION 

regardinf;  iron  stocks  or  mines 
and  property  of  the  Minnesota 
range,  consult 

DAVE  O'BRIEN 

We  Specialize  in  Iron  Mountain 
and   Great   Northern. 

200  First  National  Bank  Bldff. 


I.  IM.  POWER 

brokb:r 

stocks  and  bonds. 

noom    **B."    Pkaealx    Block. 

Write  for  Reliable  Mining:  Informa- 
tion  on  All   Stocks. 
Melro«a  l^M.  Oraa4   14W. 


DULUTH  CURB  STOCKS  ACTIVE 

Butto  &  Zenith  City  c*r>ntinuo»i  active  and  in  gaoA  demand  at 
$4.25  to  $4.50.  Tills  issue  is  fast  bceonilnpf  i>opular  with  eon>erva- 
live  trailers  owin^  to  the  exl4MislveiieNrs  and  hM-ution  of  its  projHTty 
and  tite  o^-elleiiey  of  its  management.  We  «'xiMH."t  to  see  this  stock 
cro.ss  the  $.'>.00  mark  inside  of  the  next  ten  days. 

Carnegie  Lead  &  Zinc  Ls  another  issue  tliat  is  l>einf;  pii-ked  up 
and  held  for  an  exp«H'te<I  advance  hi  i>Hee.  Reports  from  the  i>rop- 
erty  seem  to  bo  very  satisfactory  to  the  stockholders. 

Calumet  &  Montana — tliis  issue  liaj*  always  enjoyed  an  active 
and  interesting:  market,  and  of  late  has  l>een  living;  up  to  Its  repu- 
tation as  a  live  ti*ader.  A  sreat  many  people  are  predicting  a  sen- 
-Htional  adxance  in  the  stock.  While  we  are  not  familiar  with  their 
property  in  the  Cobalt  district,  there  are  many  fieople  who  are  ^ery 
anthwslaHtic  reg;ardinK  its  future. 

IMUuvh — tills  issue  continues  in  excellent  dem«n<l.  bein^  a  heavy 
trader  in  Duluth,  as  well  as  in  S|»okane  and  New  York.  Tills  com- 
pany owns  a  big  property  in  the  very  richest  part  of  the  Couer 
•I'Alenes  camp.  Many  of  their  older  nelghliors  are  liandsome  divi- 
dend payers.  Marsh  is  prat'tlcally  a  new  mine  and  is  at  a  stanre 
where  bi|f  results  should  be  tJiown  durini;  the  next  few  months. 
Stocks  Bouicht  on  a  Margin — Money  Loaned  on  Stocks. 

.  W.  LEE  &  COMPANY 

Phoenix  Building,  Duluth,  Minn. 


-1 


PAINE,  WEBBER  &  CO. 

MEMBERS  NEW  YORK  AND  BOSTON  STOCK 
CXCUANOES,    CHICAGO    BOAJID    OF   TRADE. 

HIGH-GRADE  INVESTMENTS 

Garr«iapaa^aaa  laTltad. 


■■I'   ■  ^^ 


mm 


$ 


-oJ. 


-t*- 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


lb 


BIG  LEDGE 


OLD  WORKINGS  AT  CARP  LAKE  _ 

ARE  NOW  BEING  UNWATEREDIpyT  BUHE 


of    work    was    done    In    the    R.    C».    VN . 
sround   by   the  original  company. 

The  Chief  Consolidated  company  will 
work  from  the  main  R.  G.  W.  tunuel. 
which  is  in  a  distance  of  about  1,000 
feet. 


This  company  controls  over   l.»OU  acres  oi  gruuuu  u.  .^^  r^"—  7/" 

5  cents  a  share.    Last  week  this  stock  sold  on  the  New 
w     ,         u    ^  <toA  nn  r.^r  ch;,re     We  believe  that  the  BIG  LEDGE  property  has 


This  company  controls  over   1,800  acres  of  ground  in  the  Black  HiU 
xxat.g.  district  of  Arizona.    Remember  this  is  the  sam< 
famous  United  Verde  Extension  mine,  also  remember 

wS  selling  in  1915  at  42  cents  a  share.    Last  week  thissto^k  sold  on  the  New 
York  curb  at  $26.00  per  share, 
the  possibilities  of  duplicating  thi 

shouf]  be  selltn"^  for  much  more  th-thep-sent  market,  and  we  adv.se  Us  im- 
mediate purchase.    Today's  market,  $1.87  to  $2.W. 

CACTUS  CONSOLIDATED 

Having  had  many  inquiries  from  clients  for  correct  i"^^^™^^ f.JJ^^^'^" 
ing  this  prop! rty .  we  publish  the  following  extract  from  the  letter  of  a  -^^^^^ 

Two  feet  of  Antimony  was  brought  in  by  ^^^J  il^j^^p?^^^^^^ 
winze  in  the  new  tunnel  on  Mammoth  No.  1  of  the  CACTUS  CONSOLIUA  lt.u 


Michigan 
Since 


Property,    Idle 
1863,    to    Be 


Thoroughly  Explored. 


Increase  in  Mass  Copper 

at  the  Quincy  Last 

Month. 


cl^^^n^'on  Tndran  creek.    On  being  opened  up  on  the  surf  ace  it  show^^;^^^^^^^^^ 

than  four  feet  depth  it  has  widened  out  to  ^4  inches  tnat  wui  gu  u 
per  cent.  ^  ^^  ^^^^^  ^^^  ^^^  ^^.^  j^^        jg  ^^ 

The  matter  ^^  a^ving  a  tunnci  Goodfriend  of  San  Francisco  and  a 

tain  that  lower  tunnel  will  develop  a  big  mine. 


Hourhton.  Mtch..  April  8.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Carp  L^ke.  in  hose  ex- 
ploration work  was  mostly  done  flfty- 
thr«*  years  ago,  la  now  being  unwa- 
tered  bj'  Jeremiah  Rourke  of  Hancock, 
mlnlnar  engrlneer.  for  local  Interests, 
and  the  old  workings  will  probably  be 
extended  and  the  property  thoroughly 
explor-d.  The  property  in  situated  In 
the  heart  of  the  Porcupine  mountaijis. 
between  C'ary  L^ke  and  LAke  Superior, 
about  one  mile  south  of  the  latter  and 
about    nine    miles    north    of    the    White 


the  shaft  on  the  900   foot   level   south, 
then    about    12    feet    of   leaner   grades, 
and  It  is  now  back  again  in  the  phe- 
nomenal   abundance    of    "shot"    copper. 
A    change    from    the    finer    grades    of 
stamp  copper  to  the  coarser  Is  noticed 
at    the     bottom     level,     the     1260     foot, 
where    the    drills    are    worked    on    one 
aide    and    then    on    the    other    and    the 
average    values    are    now    being    con- 
countered.      At   the   "Hill"    shaft,    1.800 
feet  south   of  the  shaft  where  the  ex- 
ploratory   work    is    being    carried    on. 
through  the  great  resemblance  of  these 
lodes   it  waa  thought  that  the  old  Ar- 
cadian lode  which  la  an  important  link 
In    the    chain    of   data    for   locating    the 
New  Arcadian  would  have  been  reached 
by    this   time    but    the    formations    now 
opened   show    that   over   100    feet   more 
will  have  to  be  traversed  by  the  cross- 
cut before  It  will  be  entered.  The  open- 
Ing.s     at     the     different    levels     of    the 
working  shaft  are  fully  up  to  the  aver- 
age  of    those    made    in    the    mine    up   to 
this  time. 

Mass. 

MasA  ia  making  preparations  to  sink 
soon  shaft  "C,"  which  is  now  down  to 
the  thirteenth  level.  The  ground  that 
Is  now  exposed  on  that  levwl  is  good 
and  givea  every  reason  for  believing  it 
will  continue  with  depth.  The  future 
of  this  mine  Is  looking  very  bright 
and  the  good  area  at  both  shafts  Is 
both  wltli  length  and  depth. 


TRANSFERRED 

Sale  to  Anaconda  to  Net 

Stockholders  About 

$11.50  a  Share. 


WILCOX  NOW 
LOADING  ORE 

Has  About  20,000  Tons  In 
Stockpile  From  Develop- 
ment Work. 


May  Help  Materially  in  the 

Financing  of  the 

Tuolumne. 


Shipping  From  the  Rowley 

Mine    Expected   at 

Early  Date. 


« 


Pine    mine.      The      vein      Is      sandstone  i  persisting   w«^^    '  '   ''^Vr.r   i.    minh 

fonilo    "rate,    which   is   the   name    for-    At    present    the    ni»'^a«^'"«"J    I.    push 
given    to    the    sandstone    beds    of  |  Ing  the  development  as  much  as  t^  can 


the  Nonesuch  and  White  Pine,  and  It 
has  a  width  of  seven  feet.  It  Is  said 
that  when  the  mill  was  burned  down 
in  1863  an  extensive  copper-bearing 
ground  had  been  blocked  out  and  that 
the  copper  averaged  ttfty-slx  pounds  a 
ton  In  addition  to  the  high  coppeT 
contents,  the  vein  carries  good  values 
of  silver.     There  are  two   tunnels  from 

the   surface   and   two   shafts,   one    ha*^"         ,^„,.., .  .., 

Ing    a    depth    of    860    feet.      The    K^eat  |  g^y^i^     ^^at     then     an 
obstacle  here  has  been,  as  at  the  None-     -nothgr    shaft    will 
such  and  White  Pine  previously  to  the 
success    of    th«    Calumet    &    Hecla.    the 
inability    to   save    the   fine   particles   of 


without  interfering  with  hoisting  the 
largest  tonnage  possible  so  as  to  de- 
termine If  the  good  ground  gives  rea- 
son to  believe  that  It  has  a  large  ex- 
tent, as  present  Indications  seem  to 
show,  and  also  to  determine  the  best 
way  of  taking  it  out.^  With  this  ques- 
tion favorably  decided  aa  far  as  It  can 
reasonably  hoped  to  be  and  after  a 
good  surplus  18  accumulated.  It  Is  Pfoo- 

•-  •       -•  -^     -. --^     not    until     then 

be    opened    to    in- 
crease  the   tonnage.      The   new   crusher 
t  the  "B"  shaft  Is  now  going  Into  ac 


Butte,  Mont..  April  I— The  Pilot 
Butte  mine  and  claim,  together  with 
all  the  mining  machinery  anJ  supplies 
of  the  Pilot  Butte  Mining  company, 
were  transferred  to  the  Anaconda  Cop- 
per Mining  company  last  Saturday.  At 
the  same  time  there  was  <i«;POfited  lii 
the  First  National  bank  of  Butte  to 
the  credit  of  the  Pilot  Butte  company 
a  check  for  $1,125,000  In  payment  for 
the  same.  The  Anaconda  company  re- 
ceived a  little  over  ten  acres  of  valu- 
able mining  ground  in  the  sale. 

President  William  P.  John  of  Mil- 
waukee declares  that  the  money  should 
be    In    the    hands    of    th«    Pilot    Butte 


Brainerd.  Mnn.,  April  8. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — On  April  4  the  Wilcox 
mine  of  the  Canadian-Cuyuna  Ore  com- 
pany ordered  ore  cars  to  be  placed  at 
the  head  frame,  and  the  first  ore  of  the 
season  for  shipment  was  loaded.  Addi- 
tional men  wen?  taken  on  the  first  of 
the  week,  and  ther*.  will  be  a  full  crew 
by  May  1,  when  it  is  expected  that 
lake  navigation  will  be  opened. 

The  Wilcox  mine  has  about  20.000 
tons  in  stockpile  which  l."  to  be  shipped 
to  the  Steel  Company  of  Canada.  Frank 
A.  Glass  has  been  made  superintendent, 
with  Dan  Coventry  as  mine  captain. 
The  stockpile  all  came  from  the  devel- 
opment drifl.s.  where  there  is  now 
blocked  out  from  750.000  to  1.000.000 
tons  of  ore. 

At  tike  Rowley. 

The    big    clam    shell    which    is    to   be 

used   In    the   shaft   at   the    Rowley   mine 

of  the  Barrows  Mining  company  is  now 

at  the   mine,   and   work   will   be   started 


■   pi«<«WI 


stockholders,  after  all   <**^Dts  ha>e   neen    ^^  ^  j,^.  ^^^^      ^  j^^^^^  ^^^^  ^f  ^^^  bg^ 


paid,  within  twenty  days  and  the  final 
dissolution   of   the  company   announced 


We  keep  posted,    \yrite  us  at  any 


time  for  reliable  data  on  any  curb  min- 


ing issue  that  you  may  be  interested  in. 

MECSON  INVESTMENT  CO 


Phones— Grand  958 ;  Melrose  625. 


303  Palladio  Bldg.,  Duluth,  Minn. 


at    $28.25. 


lump   sum   settlement   for 

presented    to 

mpanles  and 

The  sottle- 

y      the      full 


and   two   dauKhlers 


copper,    but    now.    of    course,    the    only 
thing  needed   Is   a   profitable  extent   of 
the  bed    or    beds,    which   Is    the    objec- 
tive   point    of    the    present    exploration. 
Qatiiey. 
Qulnry    has    n-ached    with    Its    No.    8 
the   northernmost   shaft   now    In   opera- 
tion, the  alxty-fourth  level,  and  is  cut- 
ting   tlie    usual      loading      station,    and 
will    when    this   Is   finl.shed.   start   sink- 
ing  again.      The   other   two   shafts   are 
also    sinking.    No.    6    being    below    the 
seventy -third    level    and    No.     2    below 
the   aeventy-flfth.      The    lode    flattened 
out     from     about     the    fifty-third     level 
until  about  a  year  and  a  half  ago  and 
has    been    quite    straight    In    Its    down- 
ward   course      ever      since.      When    the 
li)de    becomes    flatter    the    shaft,    if    the 
rhange   Is   pronounced   and   continuous, 
changes    to    conform    and    the    reverse 
liappens    if    the    lode    becomes    steeper. 
There    has    been    for    nearly    two    years 
considerable     increase     in     the     amount 
of    mass    copper    and    last    month    there 
was  about  250  tons.     This  Is  quite  low 
In   cost,   as    it    Is   taken    directly   to   the 
smelter   and    runs    over      90      per      cent 
copper.     The  conductivity  of  mass  cop- 
per   for    electrical    purposes    Is    higher 
than   that  of  the   smelted  product,  and 
that    of    the    Quincy,    which    equals    In 
purltv   any   mine  In   the   peninsula    and 
conaequently    any    on    the    globe,    runs 
as  high  as  1C2  per  cent.     This  Increase 


by  that  time.  t^^^th^^ 

Moneys     in     the      treasury      together 
with  bills  receivable  and  payments  due 
on  ore  shipments  and  metals  In  finsit 
should    bring    the     total     cash     In     the 

.,,...     „ -        -  ,.        .treasury    up    to    $1,800,000.      There    are 

tion  and  with  the  new  set  of  crushing  ^^^   ^>j  ^^^^^   flOO.OOO   to   pay   out   of 
rolls    that    has    been    In    operation    for  ^^j    ^^^    balance     will     net     the 

some  time  the  tonnage,  as  soon  as  the    ^^^.j^holderH   of    the    company  approxl 


gold. 


curb 


Closing     quotatlolts    -^^^  "O"^"^.^^^" 
.trck«|"f-   teportecT  by  Paine.   W^ebbcr 


*uVui'  &    Zenith »    ^-^^ 

Boston  &   Montana '^ 

BlnRham    Mines    **'J 

Butto  &   London •»' 

Big  Ledge J -S 

IJohomla    *•  fii 

Calumet  &  Montana •»» 

Coppermincs ^^2 


•   ••«•••• 


.06 

2.75 

16.60 

1.63 


2.2S 

24.00 

1.87 

".27 
.35 

2.75 
14.50 

2.58 
.40 
.»8 
.70 


.7J 
IS.OO 

.90 
2  00 
300 

.70 
2.12 
1.76 

.07 


HSHING  WILL 
BEGIN  LATE 


represoi 

negotiating  for  a  settlement^ 
Bravo, 


who     shot    down     Mr.     Coney. 


railroad  fully  recovers  from  the  ef- 
fects of  the  storm  period  so  that  it 
can  furnish  regularly  the  desired  nurn- 
ber  of  cars,  will  rise  to  about  1.300 
tons    dally    which    Is    pretty    near    ^s 

maximum. 

Oseeola. 

Osceola  Is  getting  ready  at, the  old 
mine  to  put  In  the  same  system  of 
mechanical  haulage—ropes  with  com- 
pressed air— on  the  forty-fifth  level 
that  has  been  used  for  over  a  V^ar  at 
the  forty-second,  and  also  when  that  is 
completed  to  start  a  subsidiary  shaft 
so  as  in  this  long  stretch  of  good 
ground  south  of  the  shaft  the  rock 
fan  be  brought  up  to  the  forty-fifth 
level  and  trammed  in  mechanicall>  at 
a    low    cost. 

Ahmeek  has  received  in  the  few  last 
days  five  carloads  of  the  two  new 
Jtanips  from  the  Nordberg  Manufactur- 
ing company  of  Milwaukee  and  the  re- 
mainder will  probably  come  by  the  last 
of  the  wTe^k  It  will  take  only  two 
or  three  weeks  to  set  the.se  up.  but  no 
Jla-s  have  yet  been  received  from  the 
io^inany's  shops.  It  la  likely  that  the 
wMh    for   the   last    of   the    two   stamps 

nnot  be  put  Into  position  until  some 
time  after  the  first  Is  ready.   As 


matoly   $11.50   a  share.  three- 

The  Pilot  Butte  shaft  Is  a  three- 
compartment  one  with  a  depth  of  2  650 
feet  in  addition  to  Us  high  copper 
values  It  has  extensive  zinc  depo.sits 
Jhat  will  be  mined  by  thenew  ownera. 
To  Pro«P*ct  OtlM-r  Proprrtiei.. 
It  is  the  intention  of  the  Anaconda 
company    to    use    the    Pilot    shaft     for 


the  purpose  of  prospecting  adiacent 
properties.  The  country  north  of  the 
Pilot  owned  by  the  Anaconda  com- 
pany: is^elleved  to  contain  large  veins 
of  zinc,  and  from  the  P  lo  «»^^/,t  ^% 
crosscut    win    be    driven    "orth.      It    H 


cai 


In   ma!*8    is.    therefore,  a   very   welcome    y^tl^«  ]^^'thT7\sn"eiTrivy.    it    willonly 


also  likely  that  *  ,  <^o""^J'Vh«  «aLer 
niade  with  the  workings  of  the  Badger 
State  mine.  The  acquisition  of  the 
Pi?ot  shaft  Is  a  needful  one  for  the 
A  aconSa  company,  and  »8  itself  worth 
a  good  portion  of  the  price  paid  for 
rv,5Wrnnfirtv  A  curlous  statement  was 
r^ade  at  the -final  meeting  of  the  Pilot 
Butte  company  by  Its  officers  to  the 
eltect     that     the     proper  y     which    was 


been  proved  up,  extending  across  thrt-e 
forties.  Shipping  of  ore  is  looked  for 
at  an  early  date.  There  are  rumors 
that  the  Brainerd  Mining  company, 
fee  owners  of  the  mine  called  the 
Barrows  mine  and  formerly  operated 
by  the  M.  A.  Hanna  company,  may  soon 
resume   operations. 

Iron  BfAMMtain. 
The  Iron  Mountain  mine  on  the  north 
range  l.s  r^^ported  to  have  dosed  a 
contract  for  a  fair  tonnage  of  man- 
ganlferous  ore.  The  Cuyuna-Pultana 
mine  Is  reported  to  have  a  contract  to 
ship  50.000  tons  of  ore  this  season. 
Capt.  William  I'aacoe  has  made  a  rec- 
ord in  shaft  work  at  the  Mangan  mine 
near  Ironton.  Starting  work  in  De- 
cember, the  shaft  is  down  and  drifting 
done  so  that  the  mine  Is  In  shape  to 
ship. 

The  Ferrn  mne  is  putting  up  a  ware- 
house, "dry"  and  head  frame.  It  is  re- 
ported the  Kennedy  mine  of  the  Hogers- 
Brown  Ore  company  at  Cuyuna  may 
work  but  one  shift  after  the  middle  of 
April.  The  Brainerd -Cuyuna  mine,  in 
the  city  of  Brainerd.  is  expected  to 
Start  up  soon.  Much  ore  has  beea 
blocked  out  ready  for  shipment. 

REORGANIZATION 
OF  BUTTE  &  BACORN 


Chief 

Calumet  &  Corbln. 

Cactus   Cons 

Denn 

Davis    Daly    

Hotan   t\)pper   *;;^ 

First    National    »•"" 

Iron    Blossom 

Inters  tate-Callahan 
Jerome    Verdo     .... 

Keating     

Marsh     

Mother    Lodo.... 

New    Baltic 

New    Cornelia. .  . 

()iionda»;a    

Btowart    

Success     

Hlerra     •  •  • ,  ,.„ 

San    Antonio    *■»» 

Tonopah    ^ ^  "^ 

Tonopah    Belmont     *-oO 

Verde    Extension ^11- 

Tonopah  Extension    4.8  i 

Warren   Dev.    • '^•OO  .... 

FORMER  NORTH  DAKOTA 
POLITICIAN  IS  BURIED 


2.00 

2.60 

«.12 

2.S8 

25.00 

2.00 

.85 

.29 

.36 

3.00 

15.00 

2.5U 

.43 

.70 


7.00 

4.75 

24.87 

6.00 


Duluth  fl.sherman  do  not  believe  that 
there   will   be   much   early  fishing   this 
Th«   onening  of   the  trout  i 

The 


the  lime  of  the  mid-sea  tragedy,  be- 
came ill  and  a  short  time  after  her 
husband's  funeral,  she  also  died.  Be- 
fore her  death,  however,  she  began  suit 
against  the  Insurance  companies  to  re- 
cover on  the  policies.  The  cases  never 
came  to  trial  because  of  her  illness. 
After  Mrs.   Coneys  death,  her  attor- 


addltlon. 

Fmnklla. 

Franklin  has  announced  an  increase 
of  10  per  cent  in  the  pay  of  all  Ita 
employes  to  continue  as  long  as  cop- 
per shall  sell  for  high  prices.  The 
mine  can  better  pay  such  a  raise  than 
It  could  some  time  ago.  as  It  is  now 
getting  down  to  a  regular  and  profit- 
able tonnage,  which  It  will  Increase. 
Calumet  A  HrcU. 

Calumet  &  Hecla  Is  sending  about 
10,600  tons  dally  to  the  mill  as  It  did 
for  March.  The  new  leaching  plant 
at  Lake  Linden  will  be  ready  for  do- 
ing some  work  in  about  five  weeks. 
White   Pine  Extension. 

White  Pine  Extension's  shaft  Is  down 
thlrtv-slx   feet   In    the   same   rich    rock 


b7  a    monih's'  t"lrae    before      the      first 
stamp  will  be  In  operation. 
Sooth  l.»ke. 
South    Lake    the    last    of    the    week 
will    be    hoisting    the    waste    rock    that 
will    ""^^      ^_,^    ,„    f^^  ^   bottom   for  '*" 

which    Is 


hai'  to   be  put  in  for  a  bottom  for  its 


rw.u'bf.h  "n  Te.'d;  to  ho,.,  the  rook  h«  ^P^>»J3.  < 


for  the  mill.  

Hancock,  on   the  sixty-ninth  level  Iti 
the    Pewablc-Qulncy    lode. 


has      Juat 


spring.     Tho  opening  of  the  trout  s^a 


son  is  set  for  next  Saturday 
followers  of  Isaac  Walton,  point  out 
that  snow  water  will  remain  In  the 
streams  for  several  weeks  yet  and  that 
the  trout  will  not  bite  in  this  surface 

""  Others   point   out,    however,    that   the 
unuVual  amount  of  snow  Prevented  the 
ice    fn»m    freezing    very    deep,    the    re 
«ult  being  that  there  wi      f«  ■""'«/!*. 
fishing   to   be   had   earlier   than    la   g<-n 

llV      supposed.  ,  j»^„\mrn 

■hose  qualified  to  speak  declare 
t  when  the  trout  ^>«>  ^egln  biting 
t  the  angling  sport  should  be  un- 
ally    good    during    the    Pr*;"*"^    "^*: 


erally    supposed. 

T 
that 
tha 

^r'Thr;i^cki;;g"of -t^ie  streams   has 
been  thoroughly  done 


guardian  of  the  children  and  had  him- 
self substituted  for  Mrs.  (.  oney  as 
plaintiff  in  the  Insurance  cases,  btlp- 
ulatlons  of  dismissal  in  the  cases 
were  filed  today  with  the  clerk  of  the 
district  court. 

OSGAR  FLEER  IS 
CALLED  BY  DEATH 


hoisted  UP  a  mass  ?f.  ^°PP«^  A^lfess'^of 
eleven  feet  long  with  »  t'Jl,'^*'"^^?,^: 
two  feet  in  some  places  and  weigh 
liTg  about  four  to  five  tons  These 
mfsses  are  a  characterstlc  of  the  low- 
levels   of  the  Quincy  and  are   add- 


ne^;  Hugh  J-.^i^h^^^yi^-^^-^  I  5»?»»;r-.e'^*i:fi:io^?^'^  'i^e'llu'A    "g'^^?!<^«^i^  J"   ig    ^'^^^         ""^'^ 


in 


Oscar  Fleer,  well  known  among  the 
embers  of  Duluth's  German-American 
colony  and  for  thirty-four  year.-?  a  res- 
ident of  this  city,  died  at  his  home.  409 
Ea.st  Fourth  street,  last  night  after  a 
long    illness.      He    was   60    years    old.  _ 

Mr  Fleer  waa  closely  Identified  with 
the  early  growth  of  tho  city.  At  the 
time  of  his  retirement  from  active 
business  life,  and  for  many  years  pre- 


for  It  was  first  broken.  The  collar 
is  completed  and  the  pit  filled  In.  The 
head  value  Is  now  being  set  up  and 
Is  practically  finished,  only  the  light 
work,  such  as  the  shlve  wheels,  re- 
maining to  1:^  put  in  position,  and 
It  Is  expected  that  the  two  hoists,  with 
thPlr  large  buckets,  one  In  each  of  the 
three    compartments,    will    be    running 

about   the    15th. 

§mlth-Staoton-Cole. 

The  property  which  lies  between  the 
White  Pine  Extension  and  the  None- 
such, consisting  of  four  s^f^'^ns  »"^ 
three  half  sections  lying  Just  north 
of  the  three  western  of  these  is  run- 
nlng  three  diamond  drills.  It  is  en- 
countering as  good  ^'''PP^''  °"  Hons 
stretch    of    the      Nonesuch      formations 


The  fever  has  at  least  ««^"^<'<^  ,1|)^J?J; 
^oj^ersofthej^portatanunusuan^^^^^^  vfous  lo  { ha i.  he" was  In  the  retail  liq- 

the  

and    often    by    the 

to    reports    of  ^the    ^a.^ou^    store  ^man-  j  -^-^- -j.^-^-^^^  ^^^^^  ^^^^^^  ^^ 


The  snorting  goods  counters  of  I  vious  to  iohi 
locIl^'stZs  ha  ve 'be^  visited  -'•'V  I  "7^,»'"»'^^;»1- 
^.Aen    bv    the    anglers,    according         He    was    a. 


Herman, 


member    of    the    Sons    of 
the    Old    Settlers'    AMSorlatlon 


mine  w'ril  very  "-"u^'^^ncrease'^'lfs 

if    Bomriwhat      slowly.        increase      h-b 

'on'TSr.*  ground    for   ".ore   .top  ng 

!,"„$>«"  iT  thr'S'clty    of'mlne^i 

fe  .''.Hn;v^^n'.errjr?SL'Vourh? 

manuraciurinK    <-»=■•  iirrtrUlnfir  aee. 

who   are   arriving  at  the^worKing   ag^. 

a 

on  the  ou 

Victoria   is  ea^lTlnM'! 2.000  to  $U.000 


and  In  sight  .      „      .       «^ 

Mar    Help    Tuolnniae. 

Many  of  the  heavy  stockholdeis  of 
Pilo?  Butte  are  also  Interested  in  he 
Tuolumne  Mining  company  •jpd  the 
disbursement  of  over  11.000.000  In  pro 
ceeds  from  the  Pilot  Butte  sale  will, 
ft  is  thought,  help  materially  m  the 
financing    of    the    Tuolumne. 

At  the  special  meeting  of  the 
stockholders,  which  l8  set 
)  it  Is  expected  that  defl- 
.,  for  the  future  will  be  »ub- 
,y  a  special  committee  con- 
sisting of  Paul  A.  Gow.  Edward 
mckey  and  J.  Bruce  Kremer.  This 
committee  in  sending  notices  to  the 
stockholders    of    the    special    meeting. 

***"We  desire  to  call  your  attention 
to  the  fact  that  It  is  to  your  Interest 
to  co-operate  with  your  fellow  stock- 
holders to  the  end  that  some  definite 
plan  be  agreed  upon  for  the  future 
operation    of    the    company. 

Booton    ^    Montana. 


nd   t'he   m  neV'have  io  depend   mostly 
S  the  outsiders  even   for  beginners. 

Victoria  is  ea'^'n"g'*''l2.000  to  $14.00C 
above  expenses  monthly,  and  these  r^- 
SendUures  include  the  costs  of  aU  the 


agers. 


The 


-Funeral  lu"ampinK  the  ?trearns_.m  the^  m^st  day 


D05.  Loyal  Order  of  Moose 

In   addition   to   the   widow,    he   leaves 
Arnold,  who  lives  in  Duluth.  and 


In  the  dip  was  a  very  pleasurable  sur- 
prise, afier  having  drilled  where  the 
formktlons  should  have  been  and  "ot 
finding  them,   and   make   this  property 

^7'L.^agrr«rerests.  headed  by  Nathan 
Leopold:  also  have  three  diamond  drills 
In    operation,    but    as    they    ha%e      Just 


of    Chicago.      After    practicing    In     St. 
Mary's,    Quebec    province,    he    went    to 


WE  WANT 

.^00   Mutual  Ir<ui    $ 

1000  Cuyuna  Sultana    

too  C-nnii^iclc •* 

1000   Marsh '^^ 

."iOO   .Suf<'«*>'H "** 

65   Intrrsiato 84.06 

200  llallaklava    S.** 

aOO    Vljcomah     l-2ft 

200  Nnrtli  -Vmertoan '0 

150   MJg   l.t'ilK*^    1-'* 

WE  OFFER 


20  .Viiifrl<-an  ."Vlunff  com 
50  Anicr.  Muiitf.  pfd.  .  . 

,->00  Culiunpt-Montana  . 
55  CariiOKlo 

800  MHr>>h 


•  •••••    • 


•    •••••• 


$  3.50 

8.00 

.72 

4.87 

.3S 

45  imcri^lato   25.00 

155  Coils,   Vermilion    2.2i» 

AMERICAN  SECURITY  &   I 
INVESTMENT  CO.        I 

Both  PhoTu^^  20f»:{.  I 

RroniKl  Floor  l*alla<llo   BuHrtlng.   | 


)| 


SAYS  CHICAGO  SOX 
WILL'  WIN  FUG 


lohn  McC.reevey  returned  today  from 
a  sojourn  In  Mineial  Wells.  Tex.,  with 
Charles  A.  Comlskey  and  tho  member* 
of  the  White  Sox  baseball  squad.  Ac- 
cording to  Mc(;reevy,  the  Chicago 
WhUe^Sox   are    going  to    win    the    pen- 

nant   this  season.  .      . 

••Commy  h.is  one  of  the  B-eatest 
baseball  teams  I  have  ever  looked  at. 
said  Me<;reevey.  "The  boys  are  \n  fine 
condition  and  the  teani  work  is  far 
beyon.l  what  would  be  expeetea  so 
,.Mrly  In  the  season.  Comlskey  is  do 
lighted  with  the  showing  of  his  n»en. 
M.my  of  th»  newspaper  b«)ya  with  the 
teani  are  of  th.-  opinion  that  the  Sox 
will   make  a  great   race  of  It  from  the 

""chaVles'  A.  CmilKk-y.  the  '^noblest 
Roman  of  them  all."  sent  'jordlal  re- 
gards  to  hie  many  Duluth  friends 
Through  McCro.voy.  The  fa"^-'''"  base- 
ball man  is  enjoying  fine  health.  Mr. 
McV;  reeve  y  reported  that  Comiskey 
might  bo  here  later,  as  the  latter  was 
va.e<M-  to  enloy  some  fishing  In 
Northern    part   of   the   slate. 


Funeral  services  will  be  held  Monday  '  obtain    a    com 

afternoon  from  Crawford  &  Son's  chap-  j  mineral    contents    « jv,  "  \,i,,  This 

.1    at   2   o'clo.k,    under   the   a-pices^  of  |  di^f^fere.U  ^  depU^^^ 


plete    knowledge    of    the 

along   the    striKe    at 

the     dip  "*     " 


penaitures  "■^'"'f^."-  '     being    made. 
iTul\^>Tlr,UoyfJor  the  «■ 

'»?..iS#f&.s:Ki 

everything  '«  "^-jlf  ;%^'\,e°g  n  To  in- 
fr'easl'*  Th%re"s  p^enfy  of  good  rock- 
much  more  than'^the  single  two  and 
ioiV  tnn  skip  has  been  able  to 
handle  with  the  constant  development 
ll?"l'  The  development  of  the  good 
TeveVs  and  the  sinking  will  be  also 
started  at  thaj.  ^t.me-^^ 

Adventure    will    not    resume    mining 


..^  Sc    Montaii 

The  Borton"&  Montana  Development 
company  In  its  crosscuttlng  at  tne 
Elkhoin  properties  1«  "t*  V. f'^vlng  the 
crosscuts  from  the  tunnel,  foi  the 
Park  and  Idanaha  veins.  The  west 
crosscut  has  run  a  distance  of  1.030 
flet  from  the  tunnel.  It  was  expected 
fo  reach  the  vein  between  the  900  and 
1  000-foot  points,  but  the  latter  has 
been  passed  without  striking  the  vein. 

Indications  are  splendid,  but  appar- 
ently the  vein  has  straightened  out 
sSme.  and  further  crosscuttlng  is 
neoessarv    to    reach    it. 

In  the  east  crosscut  they  are  In  a 
distance   of  800    fee^  or    more. 

Batte-Daiatk.  ,    *u^ 

Some  of  the  small  creditors  of  the 
Butte-Duluth  Mining  company,  and 
oartlcularly  some  holding  labor  claims. 

K  siuKht  the  ahi  °'  t'*\  ^^^Bride 
their  effort  to  collect.  L.  A.  McBriae 
has  rnade  application  to  Judge  Mc- 
Clern^n  of  the  district  court  to  order 
thSTaie  of  all  the  personal  property 
and  the  payment  of  all  wage  claims 
The  wage  claimants.  It  is  asserted, 
waltfd  for  more  than  ten  months 


New  Company    Is  Named 

Great  Butte  Copper 

Company. 

Butte.  Mont..  April  8. — Plans  are 
rapidly  maturing  for  the  reorganiza- 
tion of  the  Butte  &  Bacorn  company 
and  it  is  believed  by  tiiose  bt-hlnd*  the 
project  that  the  plan  will  shortly  be 
approved  by  the  stockholders  so  that 
active  operations  may  be  started  up  on 
Butte  &   Bacorn  ground. 

It  is  proposed  to  name  the  new  con*- 
pany  the  <ireat  Butte  Copper  company. 
This  company  will  be  organized  with  a 
capital  of  $1,000,000.  the  shares  to  be 
of  par  value  of  $1  each. 

The  <ireat  Butte  Copper  company 
will  take  over  all  of  the  assets  of  the 
Butte  &  Bacorn  Copper  company,  and 
will  assume  all  of  the  obligations  of 
that  companv.  The  con.<'ideratlon  for 
the  tran.sfor  will  be  400.000  nhares  of 
Great  Butte  stock,  which  will  entitle 
each  Butte  &  Bacorn  stockholder  to 
one  share  of  the  new  stock  for  each 
ten  shares  he  now  owns. 

Four  hundred  thousand  shares  of 
Great  Butte  stock  will  be  sold  at  66 
cents  per  share,  to  realize  1264.000. 
Each  Butte  &.  Bacorn  stockholder  will 
have  the  right  to  buy  one  share  of  the 
new  stock  for  each  ten  he  now  owns. 
Payment  for  the  n.-w  stock  may  be 
nvade  in  installments — one-half  down, 
one-eighth  six  months  thereafter,  and 
one-eighth  in  nine,  twelve  and  fifteen 
month.i   aft^-r   the   first  payment. 

NEW  C0MPANT~ 
TO  OPERATE  MINE 


^.. 


The   wage 
have 


with  tlTe  view  of  assisting  the  com- 
Sny  to  adjust  Its  affairs.  The  c^ourt 
h^s    taken    the    petition    under    advlse- 


the    Sons    of    Herman.      Interment 
be    at    Forest    Hill    f.emetory. 


SUPERIOR 


tension 
so 


on 


SUPERIOR  WETS 
TO  BEGIN  CONTEST 


the    next    sections    to    the 
utirwesTand   the  work  Is  being  car- 

He^d    ^n    un"der    the    direction    of    Fred 

Close,    who   developed   the    White    Pine 

Kxtenslon. 

Houghton  Copper  has   32   feet  out  of 

4o"the   wld"th    of   the    SVP-'^^^^^^t'enU 

ly^^^?^;:^^,iro?^w^^^S 

in   the  wlnge   and  this  »t  "■  bot 


ment. 


Ing 
tom 
for   a 
Superlo 


are    certainly  .  ™l«t  _  •'^^.°"^^«^V^ 


profitable  mln|.«lU»tlon  n  the 
or  lode  on  thU  level  and  It  will 
>tedlv    be    given    the    pro_per    .■x- 


op^;^ons^  un^  ^resl^    Tod^^w^^ 

AT  THE  CHIEF 

CONSOLIDATED 

Manganese     Ore     Being 

Mined  on  Its  East  Tintic 

Property. 


Batte  *  «re«t  Falls. 

Following  closely  on  top  of  th^ 
■  roulrement  of  the  Dewey  and  other 
Claims  by  the  Butte  &  Great  Falls 
company,  notice  has  been  sent  out 
th^t  a  special  meeting  of  the  stock- 
holders   will    be    held    on    May    24    for 


Iron  Mountain  Property  Is 

Leased  at  Advanced 

Royalty. 


Salt  Lake  City.  Utah.  April  8.— Man- 
ganese ore  is  now  being  mined  on 
some  of  the  East  Tlntlc  Pi^P^^^; 
which  was  recently  acquired  by  the 
rf^cTals  of  the  Chief  Consolidated 
Mining    fompan2';^_^^    contain    the    big 


vein 
east 


^^^   f^'^VhTs    i^etat  arV    located    Just 

'of  ^he  "^omansvllle      pumping 

The    vein    of    manganese    crops 


the 


^r 


$350,000,000 

CRIPPLE  CREEK 
1916  SSSK  FREE! 

BMkItt    MiiUliil««    taitttntti    e«rtl««<    r«psrU    o»l 
iMMnniei  filed  with  Color**)  Sprlim  EirtMH  4«- 

hi,  J««o.   1911.     !»«<  »*  Colof**?  *"'"••"'•,• 
Inf  St(i:k  nMMiatleA,   34  »••«.     F««t»  •"<  n\»M*\ 
(n'ormation   mry   Inmtw^  ifcojiK   h««  to  k«   pe$titf  1 
Givei  ofodaetloo.  iMUnit  uU  othtr  tocU  o«  Crlpirtj 

itimker.      Minu    H.    A.     RIEOEL,     IMVESTMEMTj 
CO..   133  BMtMi  IMa..  Ocavtr,  Colo. 


ORPHANS  GET 
INSURANCE 


City  Clerk  R.  E.  McKeague  announced  ,  '"•^aV^h-^iwhai  no  support  from  above 
this  morning  that  the  returns  »»  df  ' '^'li^tV^^t  deal  of  heavy  timbering  Is 
clared  officially  would  be  returned  to  and  a  '^.^'"'^^i.^^'^l^Li^re  la  Qulte  slow 
the  city  commission  Monday  morning.  .  required.  The  ^^^J'^  .i^J*  ut  has  to  be 
An  opinion  was  received  today  from  the  as  the  dirt  in  the  «»^"^"\_r_^**  ^^  the 
city  attorney  on  the  subject,  and  he  taken  out  to  the  wlnge.  hoisted  to  ^ne 
announced  that  In  his  opinion  the  <*''>"»    "'''th    level.^  carried  ^to^U^e    "baf^t^an^ 

*^it"a"nteetln.g    held    last    evening  .by  I  a^proUm  before ^the^  .n^JJ^;«^-;^ 

^  and  If  this  is  de- 


managers   of  the   recent   dry   campaign  Whether  or  ..«v  v..,.«  ~  -,•.-,.,,  ,.  fl. 
plans      were      formulated      for      raising    „f  commercial  grade*  and  If  tms  is  ne 

money    In    addition    to    what    the    com-  -  ^^~    -*•"'*    ™"" 

mittee    now    has.    to    combat    any    legal 


f^rh.  .u?f*'ace  and  appears- to  be  get- 
Up  is  t?onge'r'  a.r  its^llevelopment    In- 


Two  orphJined  children  of  Harry  J. 
Coney,  former  Duluth  grain  man.  who 
was  murdered  by  Caesar  Bravo.  Pe- 
ruvian naval  officer,  aboard  the  S.  S. 
Tennyson  while  on  his  way  home  from  j  j,,^:,. 
Argentina  on  July  4  last,  will  not  be 
obliged  to  carry  their  fight  for  Insur- 
ance  money  any  further  In  the  courts. 

Hugh    J     McClearn.    acting    as    their 
attorney    and    guardian,    today    secured 


action  taken  by  the  wets.  A  perma- 
nent drv  organization  was  also  per- 
fected. H  A.  Johnson,  who  was  chair- 
man of  tlie  dry  committee  during  the 
campaign,  was  elected  chairman  of  the 
new   organization. 


Plans  Ready  for  New  Theater. 

Plans     for     the     new     theftei;     to   be 


Hunk     from 
twelfth. 

Kew  Baltic 
N>w  Baltic  h»d  _20.  <eet  of  good  cop^ 


n«.r   from    a2»    to   84»    feet    In    its   third 
SflmonT  drill    hole  to   a   lode    of   »ood. 

e?rte  was  found  Irt  th^  second  hole 
iSofeeT  nearer  the  surfabe  than  In  the 
a    aoll 


soon 
or 

tliVnew'tlieater  win  cost  about  1125.000 
It  Is  being  built  for  Cook  Bros.  & 
Phelps. 


OT    perhaps    a 

lode  Is  the 

satisfactorily 

as    been    ob- 


'""AnTnexpenslve  bucket  tramway  will 
.A"sir..?  bringing  the   o^e     rom^^tho 

KSd'^'ln^'Homansvllle     canyon,     from 

wjilch    p 
>adin„ 

A    short     time 
solldated  ..co'npa'iy 
a 

^"^*\^"a"n''d''duV'ng"n 

?J  T^aile£''el^^"HcltV^^tn^    -cured 


':«l,;i"l""wlii"b«   "haul.d   to   the 
erected     buildings 


The  Iron  Mountain  Mining  company 
has  leased  Its  propertv  on  the  Cuyuna 
range  to  a  group  of  local  investors 
composed  of  W.  A.  McClaran,  Reiner 
Hoch  and  Otto  Wendlandt.  The  Hoch 
Mining  company  has  just  been  organ- 
ized to  operate  the  property,  which, 
in  the  future,  will  be  known  as  the 
Hoch  mine. 

The  officers  of  the  Hoch  Mining' 
company  will  be:  Pnsldent.  Reiner 
Hoch,  Duluth;  vice  president.  Carl 
MLsske.  Marquette:  treasurer.  Walter 
Hoch;  secretary.  W.  A.  McClaran.  and 
general  manager.  Otto  Wendlandt,  of 
Duluth. 

According  to  the  terms  of  the  leaa* 
the  new  ownt^rs  will  pay  the  Iron 
Mountain  Mining  company  60  cents 
a  ton  royalty  on  a  minimum  annual 
production  of  50,000  tons,  whereas  the 
original  it-ase  to  it  calls  for  a  royalty 
of  35  cents,  so  that  a  profit  of  it 
cents  will  accrue  to  It.  The  Jroa 
Mountain  Mining  company  will  also 
receive  a  cash  bonus,  the  amount  of 
which  has  not  been  announced.  It  is 
expected  that  as  a  result  of  the  deal 
a  dividend  will  be  paid  to  shareholders 
of  that   company  shortly. 

A  large  tonnage  of  manganlferoua 
ore  assaying  as  high  as  47  per  cent 
manganese  has  been  proven  up  in  the 
Iron  Mountain  mine  and  It  Is  the  I>ur- 
pose  of  the  nel'  company  owning  It 
to    press    operations    from    now    on. 

The    Hoch    Mining   company   and    the 

Onahman     Iron     company,     the    former 

y^prii    8. The    produc-  j  controlling    and    operat^ng^the       Hoch 


The    reason    for    making 
is  to   provide  the   necessary   tunas   rm; 
Ihe   thorough   development   of  the   new 
nroDerties  and  the  carrying  on  of  mln- 

fnToperatlons  at  a  '""'•f.  J^P'^O 'foot 
The  crosscuttlng  on  the  600-fooi 
l^vel  Is  going  ahead  steadily  and 
wUhln  sixty  days  the  management  ex- 
pecfs  to  reach  the  Genevieve  vein  and 
begin  drifting  on  it.  Additional  ina- 
chh^ery  has  already  been  ordered  and 
a  large  force  of  men  la  at  work  at 
the  property.  ^ 

ANACONDA  OUTPUT 
SHOWS  INCREASE 

Production  in  March  3,300,- 

000   Pounds   Greater 

Than  in  February. 

Hn^"\\f'    JJppei  '^r'JhJ""wa«hoe"Vnd!  mine,    and- the    latter    the    Ferro    mlna. 
orl^t  Falls   smelters  of  the  Anaconda  '  will    enjoy    a    close    business    relatton- 
CoDoer  MlnlnTcompany   f^r  »»>«  '"°"*»'     «bip.      The   personnel    of   the    two   com- 
Sf  March   was^  26,600,000   pounds,   or  an 
Increase    of    3.300.000    pounds    over    the 
nroductlon  for  February.     The  produ 


r^^sTalled-Uro^ne^essary^m^ 

"  taken 'uT^n'^heeas't'^ern'end  of  the 
dfstrlct     and    during    the    past    couplo 

ii5L«ii.  their  olans  have  been  sllght- 
?y  Thinled.    el^lclty    being    secured 
to  take  the  place  of  steam   POWer 
* VomfectionV  have    be^n  ^  made    wl  h 


the 
nrnductlon  for  February,  me  i»n^Juc- 
tlon  by  inonths  for  the  first  quarter 
^ri9ir  was   as   follows:  P-^oo'o'oo 

January     "iooOOO 

February     26  600  000 

March     .zt>.t>uo.»ou 


Con 
and 


the  lines  of   the   l^^\h  J>ower  compa.^y 

ua    .    i.«»w   compressor,    having   a   i-* 

p2?lt?  of  ?)0  cubic  feet  of  free  air  per 

mlrute       has     been     purchased.        The 


New    Arcadian    had    409    feet    of    the 
very  ^.Igh  grade  eopgfc  MO  feet  In  from  t 


muiuie.      ''"^,,,   w     uged  In  the  opera 
b.  carried  on  wm  be  ...>..  I<„«,,,'„ 


panles  Is  -rhuch  the  same.  The  two 
companies  are  expected  to  occupy  an 
Important  sphere  In  the  manganlferous 
operations  of  the  Cuyuna  range. 

W.  A.  McClaran  of  Duluth,  who  ts 
gfneral  manager  and  chairman  of  the 
executive  committee  of  the  Onahman 
Iron  companv,  was  the  leading  spirit 
In  the  deal  which  has  been  successfully 
consummated    for   the    purchase   of    tha 

It    has    served 


Total    for   quarter ^'■^^£•222  >  consur.»..«.^«    —    ^.^ 

It    Is    expected    by    the   jnanagemetix  j  j^.^^^    Mountain    lease 
that  this  will  be   the  smallest  Quarter  emphasize  the  fact  that  manganlfer 


.round     Which  ^ba^^^j-'^^.^^^kl^d    this 
piece   ^of  drifting  .has  ^been^^cont^r^act^ed 


by    the 


to  Walter' rue.;:  Jr     Nearly  2.000  feet 


of  the  year.  During  January  and  Feb 
ruary  operations  were  greatly  ham- 
pered by  the  weather,  and  «n  March 
thei-e  was  some  trouble  at  the  \^  ashoe 
smelter  that  caused  a  little  curtailment 

of   production.  ^         ,  . 

At  the  present  time  the  mines  and 
smelters  are  all  operating  at  normal 
capacity,  and  barring  further  acci- 
dents the  April  production  will  be 
Jlose  to  28,000.000  pounds  of  copper 
The  March  production,  'f  ma'ntataed 
through  the  year.  •«ro"l<>, ,^rlng  the 
yearly  production  tor  1»1»  UP  w 
812.000,000   pounds. 


ous  ores   are   in   demand. 


CHICHESTER  S  PILLS 

^ 


LaAImI  Aok  TMP  Urmmmft  I 
CU-ebes-t«r% BlmmmmtUnu    , 
I'Uls  la  tU4  ud  (}*M  neuUK> 
boies.  ioi«l  with  Btu*   KlkbM. 
Take  ■•  atker.    Bmj  ef  >— r 

»iZh«NI>  IIRAND  rnXa.  for  Ml 


yMi«  k  Du»a  >s  BeU,  Satet.  Al»%-*a4i^S 

$OU)BYDRl)QGISTSEVEKnMQS 


/ 


mfnai 


mmt 


Saturday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


^ 


BUY  GREATER  DULUTH  REALTY  T.  NEW  DULUTH 

i^AND  LET  IT  WORK  FOR  YOU!"^l 

<sno^i«i  Offfprina  of  Onlv  100  of  the  Best  Rcstdcncc  and  Prospective  Business  Lots  In  »*>«  New  Thriving  Steel  Plant 
mstr  ?  at  NeU®  DuffixH  at  Special  Introductory  Prices  and  on  Very  Easy  Terms.  SALE  IS  NOW  ON  and  WILL 
CONTINUE  uJ!^lLA^^^  ARE  SOLD.    CHOOSE  EARLY.    Phone,  Write  or  Call  on  Us  For  One  of  These  Lots. 

'  II  ' '  t  -  <'      ■  ■  ■-..  "vTl'- 


■^ 


-<^*^ 


?i#* 


.  ^V,:S»^•3!^^■■"•W''<>^"' 


•i-A^ 


■-S«}.     »»«►;.  •*. 


♦'«»*^v 


'-  ?^ 


**^is^:^ 


^  ■  ■  ■-.-•■.->«:*■  :,s-;.-\  .■■:■'>■•> 


m^^^m^:^^'^'^ 


<K»fi 


l^. 


fr<t,:-rV 


>M    vl.^ 


■V*;-**?;!!^ 


.'M<J|g^1»*»«   *-^ 


^..  3?». 


n«ft 


..,■  .-iri;  <;.■•■• 


-:-^W''»?^^^.^ 


^^m^:. 


'i--rP&(V^>^-<^ 


\V 


m^M^^mM. 


jcainmu>MiK«i»»y)e-}ge 


"*»o*o**  ■;'»^'>^  '*'*^'-" 


O.*  »»»««<»* 


.2^^  ^.  -^ 


"T^r^^'^^i 


v.,^^^- 


;ri:B^ 


^_^.^     ._   _,  ,_■     .-«^««E-    ^%||V   r%l    ^^eiri    V  It  was  made  from  an  actual  photograph  now  at  our  office  and  which  we  will  gladly  show  to  you  if  you  call. 

LOOK    AT  TH  E   ABOVE   CUT   CLUdEL  Y TWs  cut  is  rather  indistinct,  yet  you  can  easily  see  that  NEW  DULUTH  is  an  tdeal  site  for  a  steel  city  in 

tt  maiTng'^It  is  within  easy  walking  <iistance  of  the  S^^^^^^  SiJrr'tdedSr:rts  '::^::S^S:s'S'S^:^  fnrgS^riTrtT/in'l^iS^^^^^^^^^ 

sThirb^nZgTwtfhrhS  iTomL!^^^^^^^^^  f:^;:::^T?^^lm  lots  are^shownm  the  foreground  of  the  .bove  picture  and  will  be  near  street  car  line  when  built. 

PRICES  RANGE  FROM  $425  TO  $600  PER  LOT 

Just  where  the  best  class  steel  plant  workers  will  want  to  live  and  later  pay  you  advanced  prices  for  these  lots.    If  YOU  work  there,  buy  before  they  advance. 


Why  These  Lots  Are  Good  Buys 

Because  of  location,  character  of  lots,  neighborhood  and  improve- 
ments, accessibility  and  future  value— Because  the  Steel  Plant  is  on 
the  north.  On  the  east  and  south  on  the  river  bottom  are  lands  for 
numerous  factory  sites.  These  lots  are  located  just  right— out  of 
the  smoke  and  dust  and  convenient  for  present  and  all  future  indus- 
tries. Comparison  with  values  of  lots  at  Pittsburg,  Birmingham 
and  Gary,  Ind.  (all  Steel  centers),  clearly  indicate  that  these  lots 
will  sell  at  much  higher  prices  with  the  development  of  the  steel- 
industry  here.    We  do  not  sell  from  the  map. 


We  Are  Frank  to  Say 

When  first  told  about  these  lots  and  asked  to  handle  them  for 
the  owners,  we  were  skeptical,  but  finally  agreed  to  examine 
them.  We  did  so  and  looked  at  all  other  lots  near  the  Steel' 
Plant  and  the  prices  they  were  selling  for,  WE  WERE. 
FORCED  TO  THE  CONCLUSION  that  these  lots  were  the 
best  bargains  that  can  be  bought  near  the  Steel  Plant,  con- 
sidering both  location  and  prices  asked,  and  what  the  future 
will  develop.  We  believe  they  will  advance  in  value  and  so 
accepted  the  selling  agency. 


SATISFY  YOURSELF -GO  SEE  THESE  LOTS! 

Pull  off  the  tag  for  the  lot  you  want  and  bring  or  send  it  in  with 
your  money.  If  you  wish  us  to  reserve  a  good  lot  for  you — you 
may  make  the  first  payment  personally  or  by  mail.  We  will  give 
you  time  to  examine  the  lot.  On  your  return  we  will  exchange  it 
for  any  other  or  give  your  money  back,  AS  YOU  WISH — or  we 
will  show  you  the  lots  any  week  days.  WE  DO  NOT  CONDUCT 
SUNDAY  SALES. 

Terms,  $2.50  cash  and  $2.50  weekly,  or  $10.00  cash,  $10.00 
monthly.  10%  discount  for  cash  payment  of  $25.00  or  more  at 
time  of  sale  or  within  30  days  thereafter.  Interest  6%  included  in 
payments.  NO  PAYMENTS  WHEN  SICK  or  OUT  OF  WORK. 


-1 


West  Duluth  Agents 


Kreidler-Doyle  Co 

OiRMi  KvoiiliiKs.  405  AND   107  CKXTRAL  AVK. 

I'hones— Calumet   410-L. — Cole    100. 


N.  J.  UPHAM  CO. 


GENERAL  CITY  AGENTS 

You  May  Phone  Us  if  You  Wish— Grand  847 ;  Melrose  848. 


714  PROVIDENCE  BUILDING 


Agent  on  the  Ground 

L  R.  TAYLOR 

405    COMMOXWKALTH    AVENUE 

Phones — Douglas   33-M — Cole   68.  Res. — Douglas   58-L.. 


H.'.'rtf-'-W^iW'iift 


MANY  HOUSES 
BEING^BUILT 

This  Feature  of  Construc- 
tion Dominates  Activity 
at  Present. 


Important    and    Extensive 

Improvements  Being  Made 

By  Boat  Club. 


Judging  by  the  record  during  the 
last  few  weeks,  house  building  Is  like- 
ly to  attain  considerable  proportions 
during  the  present  season.  Tliis  week, 
for  example,  forty-three  permits  were 
Issued  at  the  building  inspector's  of- 
fice, and  with  only  a  few  exceptions, 
they  were  for  the  authorization  of 
new  dwellings  or  for  improvements,  to 
be  undertaken  by  owners.  All  parts 
of    the    city    were    represented    in    the 

list. 

The  erection  of  several  expensive 
hou.ses  during  the  season  is  forecast 
In  tlie  restricted  Kastern  le.sldentiul 
district.**.  Plans  for  six  homes  to  cost 
from  $10,000  to  $15,000  each  are  now 
In  preparation  at  architects'  office,  and 
they  are  expected  to  go  out  for  figures 

■hortly.  „      ^   ^,    1. 

lmpro«ein«ntM  at   Boat   CIud. 

An  InleicstinK  feaQirc  was  the  an- 
nouncement that  impn>vements  to  cost 
i  10, 000  are  to  b«»  undertaken  at  the 
>uluth  lU.at  <lub  Quarters.  A  new 
grandstand  will  be  erected  between  the 
present  .stand  and  the  band  pavilion, 
and  aiuithtr  line  of  seats  will  be  put  In 
from  tho  end  of  the  pier  to  the  pres- 
ent stand.  They  will  seat  2,600,  bring. 
Ing  the  seating  capacity  of  the  stands 
up  to  4,300.  A  shell  house,  90  by  150 
f«et  in  size,  will  be  erected  on   the  site 


of  the  present  tennis  courts.  This 
Improvement  was  rendered  necessary 
to  provide  accommodation  for  the  boat 
club's  increasing  fleet  of  racing  shells 
and  to  take  care  of  the  shells  of  tho 
visiting  oarsman  at  the  national  re- 
gatta. Other  improvements  are  to  be 
carried  through  In  the  interior  of  the 
clubhouse,  the  aim  of  the  boat  clubs 
executive  being  to  make  the  plant  one 
of  the  most  complete  of  its  kind  in 
the  countr>-.  The  plans  are  now  In 
preparation  by  A.  W.  Puck,  architect, 
and  they  will  be  ready  to  go  out  to 
contractors  for  figures  shortly. 
One  Hundred  House*  for  tJary. 

A  heavy  building  program  Is  assured 
at  «.}arv-Duluth  this  season,  as  neces- 
sitated through  the  urgent  need  of  ad- 
ditional housing  accommodations  in  the 
steel  plant  district.  ..       .     ,,r 

It  was  Intimated  yesterday  by  A.  W  . 
Kuchnow,  president  of  the  Gary  Land 
company,  that  preparations  are  being 
made  to  build  100  houses  at  (Jary,  to 
cost  from  $800  to  $1,500  each.  S(-%eral 
owners  of  lots  are  combining  with  the 
object  of  undertaking  this  extended 
building  program. 

•  *       • 

A  brick  store  and  threo-apartment 
building  Is  to  be  erected  for  A.  Hor- 
wltz  at  Fifth  street  and  Fourth  avenue 
east.  Plans  are  in  preparation  by  F.  H. 
Fitzgerald  architect,  and  will  be  ready 
to  go  out  ^or  figures  shortly. 

•  •       ♦ 

A  frame  and  stticco  house  Is  being 
built  for  J.  Lewis  MacLeod  on  St.  An- 
drew street.  Woodland.  The  contract 
has  been  let  to  Mork  &  Hanson.  CJlliu- 
son  &  Carson  are  the  architects. 

•  •       * 

Plans  have  gone  out  for  figures  from 
the  office  of  John  H.  dc  Waurd.  archi- 
tect for  a  frame  and  stucco  garage  for 
Mrs!  L.  W.  Ltlthead  on  Dingwall  street 
between  Eighteenth  and  Nineteenth 
avenues   cast.      Its  cost   Is  estimated   at 

$4,000. 

•  •       • 

Plans  will  go  out  next  week  for  fig- 
ures on  a  two-story  frame  clubhouse 
for  the  Longvlew  Tennis  club  at  Fourth 
street  and  Twenty-fifth  avenue  east. 
A    W    Puck  Is  the  architect. 

That  architect  has  also  plans  in 
preparation  for  a  $20,000  home  for  ().  O. 
Brlce  at  Eau  Claire,  Wis. 

•  *       * 

Callan  &  Hopkins  have  obtained  the 
contract  for  the  sheet  metal  work  on 
tlie   residence   of   D.   E.   L'Anile   in  Wa- 

verly  park. 

•  ♦      • 

The  Thomson-Williams  company  has 
obtained  the  contract  for  the  face  brick 
for  the  home  being  built  for  R.  E. 
nurdlck  at  Crescent  View  Park  and 
also  for  the  new  David  Davis  residence 


EAST  END  HOIVIE 

Situated  on  a  beautiful  upper  corner  on  East  First  Street,  sur- 
rounded by  some  of  the  finest  residences  in  the  city.  Lot  50  by  140 
feet  with  well  graded  and  sodded  lawn  and  shade  trees.  The  house 
ha.s  seven  rooms  and  bath,  all  white  enamel  finish  except  the  hall; 
fireplace  hot  water  heating  plant,  electric  light,  ga.s,  laundry  tubs, 
stone  foundation,  maple  floors.  The  view  from  this  locfltlon  is  ex- 
cellent and  the  property  can  be  bought  on  ea.sy  tertna  at  the  very 
low  prlco  of— STOOO  (8216) 

Make  an  appointment  to  go  In  our  automobile  to  see  this  or  any 
other  property  you  wish  to  consider. 

STRYKER,  IVIANLEY  &  BUCK 


on  Twentv-flrst  avenue  east,  for  which 
the  Bowman  Building  company  has  the 
general  contract.  It  Is,  besides,  fur- 
nishing tho  screens  for  the  new  W.  C. 
Agnew  home  In  Congdon  park. 
•  *  • 
Building  permits  Issued  during  the 
week  follow: 

To  Julia  K.  Williams,  dwell- 
ing on  the  east  side  of  Fif- 
ty-eighth avenue  west,  be- 
tween    Klnnear     Place     and 

Elinor  street   $ 

To  the  Morgan  Park  company. 
Installing  gasoline  tank  on 
the  north  side  of  Avenue  A. 
between     Fourth    and    Fifth 

streets    

To  Edward  Dahl,  basement  un- 
der dwelling  on  the  east  side 
of  Twenty-sixth  avenue  west, 
between     First     and     Second 

streets    

To  Benjamin  Wood,  alterations 
to  dwelling  on  the  east  side 
of  Hugo  street,  between  Pal- 
metto and  Myrtle  avenues... 
To  Ike  Anderson,  addition  to 
dwelling  on  the  west  side  of 
Minnesota  avenue,  between 
DuJidee  and  Argyle  streets.- 
To  William  Mallough.  garage 
on  the  west  side  of  Central 
avenue,    between    Huntington 

and  Highland  streets 

To  Anton  Borgen.  addition  to 
building  on  the  north  side  of 
First     street,     between     Lake 

and    First  avenues  west 

To    Mrs.    David    Williams,    re- 
shlngling     dwelling     on     the 
north    side    of    London    road 
between    Twelfth    and    Thir- 
teenth avenues  east......... 

To  (Jeorgo  Fay.  porch  for 
dwelling  on  the  north  side  of 
Fourth  street,  between  Eigh- 
teenth and  Sixteenth  avenues 

To^"  Paul'  ■  Plazck.  reshingilng 
dwelling  on  the  north  side  of 
Seventh  street,  between 
Twenty-third  and  Twenty- 
fourth    avenues    west........ 

To    O     M.     Jorganson.     dwell- 
ing    on     the     west     side     of 
Thirty-flfth      avenue       west 
between     Second    and    Third 
streets     •  •  •  •  •  •  •  • 

To  William  Walton,  dwelling 
on  the  south  side  of  Olney 
street,  between  Fifty-sev- 
enth and  Fifty-ninth  ave- 
nues   west •• 

To  the  Seventh  Day  Adventlst 
church,  addition  to  church 
building  on  the  south  side 
of  Sixth  street,  between 
Ninth  and  Tenth  avenues 
east     •  •  • 

To  A.  L.  Miles,  garage  on  the 
south  side  of  Fourth  street, 
between  Fifteenth  and  Six- 
teenth   avenues    east    

To  C.  H.  Burnett,  basement 
under  dwelling  on  the  west 
side  of  Minnesota  avenue, 
b<tween  Church  und  State 
streets    . 

T«>     S.      J. 
dwelling 
of      Third 
First     and 
oast    • • 

To  Matt  Kainu,  alterations  to 
store  on  the  north  side  of 
Superior  street.  between 
First  and  Second  avenues 
ea.«t    

To  T.  J.  Alnes.  dwelling  on  the 
south  side  of  Calvary  road, 
between  WoodlaKd  and 
Rendle    avenues    

To  Hans  Ervlck.  reshinKling 
dwelling  on  the  east  slae  of 


3,500 


400 


260 


260 


200 


120 


2,000 


450 


250 


60 


1.500 


1.000 


800 


400 


2,600 
2.000 

4,000 
1,600 

200 


200 


Sher,  addition  to 
on  the  north  side 
street,  between 
Second     avenues 


350 


270 


2,500 


First  avenue  east,  between 
Sutphln  street  and  the  N. 
P.    tracks     60 

To  R.  N.  Marble,  alterations 
to  dwelling  on  the  south 
side  of  First  street,  between 
Tenth  and  Eleventh  ave- 
nues   east     60 

To    Frank    Frankowiak.    dwel-        • 
ling    on    the    north    side    of 
Elglith   street,   between  Lake 
and  First  avenues  west 

To  O.  S.  Anderson,  alterations 
to  dwelling  on  the  north  side 
of  Fifth  street.  between 
Twenty-sixth  and  Twenty- 
seventh  avenues  east 

To  the  Duluth  Home  Building 
company,  dwelling  on  the 
north  side  of  Robinson 
street,  between  Forty-first 
and  Forty-second  avenues 
east    

To  Marco  Landln.  store  on  the 
east  side  of  Commonwealth 
avenue,  between  Reis  street 
and   Crestline  court 

To  Christ  Starseth,  basement 
under  dwelling  on  the  south 
side  of  Sixth  street,  between 
Tenth  and   Eleventh  avenues 

To  C.  C.  Brisco,  dwelling  on 
the  east  side  of  Arlington 
avenue  between  GlUlat  street 
and  the  unplatted  lands   .... 

To  Smith  &  Schmidt,  office  on 
the  west  side  of  One  Hun- 
dred and  Third  avenue  west, 
between  House  and  McGon- 
agle  streets   

To  Foster  Byrd.  addition  to 
dwelling  on  the  east  side  of 
Sixth  avenue  east,  between 
Ninth   and   Tenth   streets 

To  the  Dlckerman  Investment 
company,  alterations  to  store 
on  the  north  side  of  Superior 
street,  between  Seventli  and 
Eighth  avenues  west 

To  E.  B.  Patterson,  shed  on 
the  south  side  of  Regent 
street,  between  Forty-fifth 
and  Forty-sixth  avenues 
east     

To  Agnes  Redlock.  reshingllng 
dwelling  on  the  east  side  of 
Seventh  avenue  east.  be- 
twef-n  Second  and  Third 
streets • 

To  William  Harvey.  re- 
shingllng dwelling  on  the 
east  side  of  Sixty-first  ave- 
nue west,  between  Redruth 
and  Raleigh  streets ... 

To  W.  H.  Klichll.  garage  on  lot 
21,  block  4,  Congdon  Park 
division    •  •  •  •;  •• 

To  Caroline  Swenson,  addition 
to  dwelling  on  the  south  side 
of  Fourth  street,  between 
Seventh  and    Eighth   avenues 

To  George  Vuckovlch,  cottage 
on  the  west  side  of  Common- 
wealth avenue,  between  Mc- 
Gonagle  and   Gary  streets...  200 

To  A.  Jannetta.  alterations  to 
dwelling  on  the  south  side  of 
Piedmont  avenue,  between 
Twenty-first  and  Twenty- 
second   avenues  west '6 

To  E.  J.  Wendt.  garage  on  the 
north  side  of  Sixth  street,  on 
the  east  side  of  Fifty-seventh 
avenue  west *0 

To  F.  J.  ONell,  dwelling  on  the 
east  side  of  Belmont  road, 
and  on  the  north  side  of 
Eden    lane    2,600 

To  H.  T.  Lundgren,  dwelling 
on  the  north  side  of  Sixth 
street,     between  Twenty-sec- 


ond and  Twenty-third  ave- 
nues   we.vt    2,000 

To  Matt  Havanlya,  dwelling  on 
the  west  side  of  One  Hun- 
dred and  Fourth  avenue 
west,  between  Dickson  and 
Gary    streets    "^BO 

To  John  Pcvlersen,  alterations 
to  dwelling  on  the  west  side 
of  Central  avenue,  between 
Medlnah   and   Albion   streets.  600 

To  Louis  Ramstad,  addition  to 
store  on  the  west  side  of 
Second  avenue  west,  between 
Superior   and    First    streets..  600 

To  C.  G.  Blomen,  repairs  to 
dwelling  on  the  east  side  of 
Nineteenth  avenue  east,  be- 
tween Jefferson  street  and 
London   road    76 


Cost   of  Improvements. 
Number  of  permits,  43, 


%    37,536 


QUIIS  NEW  YORK 
fOR  DlllUTH 


MUST  BUILD 
NEWJCHOOLS 

Lester    Park    District  Will 

Have  New  Building  in 

1917. 


Five  New  Rooms  Voted  for 
Merritt— Other  Struc- 
tures Planned. 


Lester  Park  wftl  have  a  new  school 
building  in  1917  and  the  Merritt  school 
will  be  Improved  by  the  addition  of 
four  rooms  and  an  assembly  hall  by 
next  fall. 

Directors  of  the  board  of  education 
last  night,  at  fhelr  monthly  meeting, 
approved  resolutions  calling  for  the 
two  Improvements. 

Four  new  buildings  or  additions  are 
now  being  considered  by  the  board  and 
a  fifth  Is  under  way.  The  Morgan 
Park  school  foundation  has  been  in- 
stalled and  general  contractors  soon 
will  begin  work  upon  the  $125,000 
building. 

Supt.  R.  E.  Denfeld  In  his  report 
called  the  board's  attention  to  the  fact 
that  an  administration  building  and  an 
Tlsmt  end  Junior  high  should  be  planned, 
as  well  as  the  Lester  Park  building 
and  the  Merritt  addition. 

"After  lnve.stlgating."      reported     the 


school  committee,  "this  committee  is  of 
the  opinion  that  the  present  wooden 
school  structure  at  Lester  park  will  be 
inadequate  for  the  requirements  of 
that  district  for  more  than  another 
school  year,  and  the  committee  recom- 
mends that  a  new  and  suitable  grade 
school  building  be  erected  in  the  dis- 
trict now  served  by  the  Lester  Park 
school  during  the  year  1917,  and  that 
provisions  be  made  for  it  In  the  next 
tax  levy." 

Anton  O.  Wicklund,  as  chairman  of 
a  committee  from  the  Oneota  and  Ha- 
zelwood  Improvement  club,  called  upon 
the  board  to  redeem  promises  of  an 
addition  to  the  Merritt  school,  which 
now.  is  full,  and  which,  he  said,  would 
not  accommodate  the  pupils  from  the 
district  next  year. 

Director  W.  B.  Getchell,  chairman  of 
the  building  committee,  agreed  that  an 
Improvement  should  be  made  soon,  and 
said  the  committee  had  been  waiting  to 
observe  the  effect  of  the  new  Lincoln 
junior  high  upon  the  Merritt  attend- 
ance. 

Crosley  Park  residents  appeared  be- 
fore the  board  to  urge  that  steps  bo 
taken  to  care  for  children  In  that  dis- 
trict. "There  are  about  200  children 
who  have  to  walk  from  nine  to  eighteen 
blocks."  said  one  speaker. 

Crosley  Park  Is  a  new  and  rapidly 
growing  section,  the  committee  said, 
and  during  the  past  winter  several 
children  have  frozen  their  hands  or 
feet  while  walking  to  the  Lester  Park 
school. 

A  further  report  on  the  situation  will 
be  heard  at  the  next  meeting  of  the 
board. 


"Carmen  Sylva."  the  dowager  queen 
of  Roumania,  who  is  an  accomplished 
poet,  makes  a  hobby  of  typewriting 
niost  of  her  manuscripts  herself. 


FOR  SALE 

Modern  7-Room  House 

All  ImprovementN  tn;  lot  50x100.  »e«^ 
owner,  who  In  leavtiiK  city.  U.  ^'. 
French,   B29   Sixteenth   Avcnac   lC«Mt. 


F.  C.   BOERNER. 

F.  C.  Boerner,  formerly  of  Duluth. 
has  resigned  his  position  in  Xew  York 
citv.  and  with  E.  B.  Croft  of  New  York 
is  opening  up  offices  In  this  city  and  ; 
Minneapolis  as  architects  and  engi- 
neers. ,  ^    .  . 

Mr  Boerner  Is  a  graduate  of  the  \ 
University  of  Minnesota  in  the  civil ; 
engineering  department.  For  the  last  j 
five  years  he  has  been  In  New  York 
city  where  his  work  has  been  In  de-  I 
sign  of  fireproof  buildings.  He  spent  j 
a  few  months  In  the  Duluth  engineer- 
ing office    under   the   city   engineer.         | 

Mr.  Boerner'8  parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Charles  Boerner.  have  made  their  home 
In  Duluth  for  the  last  thirty  years. 


50  or  100  FEET 

on  a  corner  at  Twenty-fourth  avenue  or  Twenty-third 
avenue  on  East  Fourth  street ;  street  paved,  avenue  paved, 
alley  paved;  cement  sidewalks,  water,  gas  and  sewer. 

$50  Per  Front  Foot 

Easy  Terms. 


Richardson,Day&CheadleCo 


(Established  1885) 


EXCHANGE  BUILDIN^. 


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Saturday, 


THE    DULUTJH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


387 


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BIY   A   IIO.MK   OX   KASV    TtRM?. 

No.  1316  Kast  N'tnth  St..  S  rooms, 
haidwood  tloota  and  finish;  city  wa- 
ter,   sewer,   brtth.   gas. 

No.  126  Thlrte«nth  Ave.  East,  and 
Nu.  130S  lOast  Fifth  St.  have  6  rooms 
♦jAch  and  bathroom,  and  are  strictly 

modern.  ,       .         - 

No.     815     E.n.>'t     ElKhth     St.     has     6 

rouma;   hardwood  finish  and  modern 

cunvetJi«'MceE. 

SMAIJ.    FIRST    PAYMRNT; 

HAI.ANTi:   SAMi:    AS    KENT. 

ElBY  Al  gridley 


SOH    PALLAUIO    BLDO. 


MOVING  DAY 
DRAWS  NEAR 

Many  Transactions  in  Res- 
idence Properties  Are 
Recorded. 


OUR  HOME  FOR  SALE 

On  Woodland  Ave.;  buUt  last  May; 
concrvle  foimclatlon.  asphaltuni 
shiiiKle  roof;  large  living  room.  26x 
13;  dining  rooin.  kltchtMi,  pant»-y.  4 
b.' l-'ionib.  bath,  »un  porch  an  sec-. 
orid  tloor;  lar^e  veranda;  attic  over 
all,  '.vith  room  for  two  room^;  hard- 
wo(m1  Jloor.s  and  ttnish  throughout; 
ttr.-place.  <:loth.-s  chult".  electricity, 
^llTi.  hot  water  heatlnw  plnnt;  built 
by  <»Hy  labor;  will  .sell  for  lea.s  than 
..Mil  to  bulKl  now,  and  show  bill.-*  of 
co.sl;  $300  ta.-^h.  balance  on  renson- 
*«hle  monthly  payments;  lot  60x150. 
M.'lrii.sti   3351. 


REAL  ESTATE  LOANS 


RATES-  5,  5Vj  and  6% 

l.lUi-ruI  I'rcpa.vmeiit  I'rUll^se*. 

REAL  ESTATE 

ItoiiKht.    Sold    anil    Managed. 

INSURANCE 

Of    All    Kliidn   IMaecd   In   Strongest 
i'oinpnnlei. 

F.  I  SALTER  CO. 


:iaa-3    i,o.\»l>Al.K   BMXi. 


Three   East   End    Houses 

of  $10,000  Class 

Sold. 


No  2010  West  Fourth  street  froni  M. 
Baumau  to  Jacob  Snider  for  Jl.^OO.  A 
fifty-foot  lot  on  Sixth  atreet  and  tor- 
ty-thlrd  avenue  west  was  also  sold  to 
Louts  Peterson  at  J660. 
«      •      • 

The  Ebert-Walker  company  report- 
ed an  active  week  In  the  sale  of  lands. 
A  tract  of  nearly  1.000  acres  was  sold 
to  the  J.  C.  McLean  Realty  company, 
u  now  land  firm  located  on  the  Me- 
saba  range.  That  company  expecta  to 
subdivide  the  tract  and  sell  It  out  to 
actual  settlers.  One  hundred  and  sixty 
acres  of  land  in  St.  Louis  county  were 
sold  for  C.  E.  Calllhan  to  a  local  In- 
vestor and  a  lot  on  Eighteenth  ave- 
nue- east  and  Fifth  atreet  was  sold 
for  Eliza  Remfry  to  Henry  Rathke  at 
11,000. 

BIG  GROWTH 
IS  REFLECTED 


lulh   In  15*09,    has   iM^njS.loctfd    by    the 
board  of  county  co|ax!i»l'»»e»"»  ^o  ►*"*'■ 
pare    plans    for    a  Tff^  courthouse    at 
HibbinK,    to   be   built   at   a   cost   not    to  ^ 
exceed  f85.000.  .  ,       i 

The  «el»ction     wis     made     yesterdai'  , 
afternoon.      There   were   several    archl-  ■ 
tccts  biddlnr  for  Xb*  Job.    Th»  commit- 
tee,  conalstlner  of  four  of  the  commis- 
sioners, reported  1«  favor^ot  Mr    Wan- 
genstein.     Commissionrr  T.  H.  Little  of  | 
Ihp  Second  district,  who  was  a  mejjBber 
of  the  committee,  dissented.  ,      .    „ 

Mr  Wangrentsein  was  employed  at  a 
6  per  cent  commission.  He  also  agre<^s 
to  furnish  a  superintendent  of  con- 
struction who  will  be  kept  on  the  Job 
until  campleted.  the  nj«La  8electe4  to  be 
approved  by  the  board  and  to  represent 
?he  county  a.s  well  as  the  architect. 
Th«»  architect  and  the  county  will  each 
pay  half  of  his  expenses.  j*„. 

The  county  board  also  employed  Aus- 
tin Terryberry.  another  local  aw^ltect 
to  prepare  plans  and  specllicatlon«  for 
a  caretaker's  residence  to  be  built,  oo 
the  St.  Louis  county  fair  grounds  in 
Hibbing.  The  pla«a  prepared  must  be 
".bject^to  tho  approval  of  the  board^ 
The  commissioners  appropriated  I'^o^^ 
to  cover  the  cost  of  construction.  The 
architect's  commission  will  be  5  per 
cent. 


Steel  Plant  Lots! 


Lat.s  located  adjoining  Morgan 
Parle  and  the  Inited  States  Steel 
foiiipany's  Model  City  are  a  nnto 
ln\<-.stment.  Housw.s  are  In  dermind 
ftiul  we  need  .several  bu.siness 
plinesi.  An  exceptional  location  for 
u  lartfe  boarding  house 

Lois    will    advance     rapidly     thla 
siiinTiier.     It  will  pay  you  to  Investl 
Kiite   RIGHT  NOW. 

Quackenbush  Realty  Co. 

Sniilh\ine.    Minn. 


END 

Wi>  have  the  following  houses  we 
can   utter  on  easy  term3; 

ST.OOO 

Almost  new,  seven  rooni.s,  hot 
water  heat.  fireplace.  laundry, 
hardwood  finish  and  floors,  beamed 
celling  in  dining  room.     Lot  50x140. 

\lley   paved.  

»S,TOO 

Six  rooms,  hot  water  heat,  laun- 
Iry;  hardwood  finish  atid  floors, 
first     rtoor;     white    enamel,    second 

pilLFORD.  HOW  &  COMPANY 


GARY-DULUTH 

The  eomim  Stwl  Mill  Center  tt  th«  H««^  •(  tha 
Lak«  Tli»  Ideal  Homwit*  tot  thi  Meeli«nie»  ib< 
LaSofffj  wofkint  In  th*  blf  Slwpj  and  fiirratei.  H« 
Str«et  Car  Fare  to  pay  and  no  |ettin|  ■»  an  Boar 
earlier  to  «o  tu  work. 

Locate  here  and  reap  the  bentflt  of  a  new  City  In 
the   inaklni.  ^   ^        .  ..     ,, 

Gary,  Ind.,  trow  from  a  land  done  to  «  «'»>„" 
92,000  population   In  •i«ht  yean.      Watch   Gary -Da- 

We  build  and  tell  houtes  on  imall  eaih  paynMnts, 
balance  payable  like  rant. 

lotj  tell   <rom  $100  ap,  ea«y  termi. 

GARY-LAND  COIMPANY 


with  May  moving  day  Just  three 
weeks  off.  more  activity  than  in  some 
time  was  reported  by  real  estate  oper- 
ator.^ during  the  last  week.  A  num- 
ber of  intire^ting  transactions  In  resi- 
dential properlies  were  recorded,  and 
from  present  Indications  It  Is  thought 
that  the  buslnes.s  put  through  during 
tho  monih  will  reach  a  large  aggre- 
gate. 

A  feature  of  the  week  was  the  sale 
of  the  William  W.  Watson  home  at 
No  2727  Eaat  Seventh  street  to  J.  O. 
Lenning  at  a  consideration  of  |12,o00. 
The  tranaactlon  was  effected  through 
the  Little  &  Nolte  company.  That 
office  has  also  received  earnest  money 
on  the  sale  of  another  East  end  home 
at   $10,500.  .        ,      ,.  ^ 

A  third  Important  transaction  In  tne 
West  end  residential  district  was  the 
execution  of  an  agreement  covering 
tlie  sale  of  the  C.  W.  Swanstrom  honv- 
at  Twenty-fir.«<t  avenue  east  ana  Mxin 
street  at  $13,200.  The  purchaser  Is  a 
recent  arrival  in  the  city.  The  sale 
was    effected    through     the    N.    J.    i>P 

liani  company.  ...        ■,     r^^^u. 

That  office  also  sold  for  J.  Jacob- 
Hon  to  John  Marsley  a  house  and  lot 
on  Twenty-fourth  avenue  west  at 
$3,300.  ^       ^      ^ 

Rlchard.'^on.  Day  &  Cheadle  company 
reported  negotiations  In  progress  In 
connection  with  some  hlgh-dass  resi- 
dential properties.  Transactions  closed 
UP  included  the  sale  of  a  *5-f«"^  f;^^;- 
age  on  Second  avenue  west,  /^t^een 
l^venth  and  Eighth  'Greets  fo,-  John 
Jaoobson  to  Julia  Nel-^on;  to  J  lllj^m 
FHher.  a  lot  at  the  corner  of  Klev- 
omh  street  and  Eleventh  avenue  east, 
and  iwo  I'.^M  In  Norton's  Fnlrmount 
Park   addition.  ^       ^ 

Stryker.  Manley  &  Buck  ^oM  to  Mrs 
rharUs  H  Hall  a  house  and  lot  at  the 
southwest  corner  of  V\Uy-^^Si\^\j^^'- 
hue  east  and  Superior  street  at  $3,&00. 
The  HaJrls  Realty  c<.mpany  represent- 
ed  the   purchaser  In   the   sale. 

rharlea  P.  Tralg  &  Co.  sold  two 
market^g:u^enlng  traets  at  Oreysolon 
Firms  and  a  lot  at  Lakeside.  T  be 
purchaser  of  the  latter  proposes  to 
Improve  thid  season.      ^ 

The  lloopes-Kohagen  f,^''"P'^"y  '"f! 
ported  the  sale  of  a  building  lot  at 
Hunter's  Park  and  the  receipt  of 
gmUfylng  inqu-y  for  property  in  the 
Park   drive   division. 

*       *       • 

Sales  of  nine  lots  at  Gary-Duluth 
were  effected  by  the  <!ary  Land  com- 
pany during  the  la.-^t  few  days  The 
buyers  were  Duluth  and  out^'de  in- 
vesiors  and  it  Is  Intimated  that  their 
holdings  will  be  nearly  all  Improved 
during    the   present   season. 

A  four-page  monthly  publication, 
entitled  the  Minnesota  Steel  Plant 
\>Wrt  in  now  being  Issued  by  the 
Ciary'Lanti  company.  It  aims  to  cover 
per.sonal  happenings  and  other  news 
conneet.'d  with  the  steel  plant  district. 
c>       *       * 

The  Benjamin  F.  Sehweiper  company 
sold  for  Florence  D.  Le  May  a  four- 
room  house  and  lot  at  No.  5:;6  l:^ast 
Boulevard  to  Andrew  Trotet  at  a  con- 
sideration of  $2,200. 

It  also  sold  to  Louis  Mlnogue  a 
three-room  h.>uBe  and  lot  at  No.  6117 
Otsego    street     at     a    consideration     of 

$7ft0. 

♦       ♦       * 

The  We<*tern  Realty  company  re- 
ported the  .mle  of  a  property  at  No. 
'*710  West  Fourth  street,  from  W .  t». 
Leonard  to  Joe  Zywlckl  for  $2,800,  and 


Realty  Dealers  Expect  But 

Little  Moving  on 

May  1. 


l.i<:gal  noticbs. 


Many  Houses  Have  Been 

Leased  to  Newcomers 

to  City. 


SUITE  200 


(Incorporated.) 
MANHATTAN  BLDO. 


For  rent— Slimmer  ri'sort  at  Listi-r  park.  coi-.ilUmg  of 
iw  irtMni  parlors,  confe.tlonery  iitore,  restaurant 
ami  tDinh  -ounti'r;  also  ilanr>«  hall  srrt  one  peanut 
and  !)f>p  corn  i,Uw<i  and  liinrh  room.  All  furiiUbeO 
wt'h  tahlM.  Miintfrf,  rlialrs,  «to>t^  an*!  dNInfi. 

»J21  Kast  «r«t  street,  8 -room  hwue.  tHriuctf,  batb 
ami  nan.  $35.  .      , 

"t  .St.  .^iiilrows  street,  Ave  roonu,  hardwowJ  noorj, 
i«.i>  lanj.',  $25. 

ilO  iJi.i  Tliird  sUeet.  nuHlern  7rooin  houic,  yio. 

Gilo   Uudoii   roatl.    9  room   modeni   house   with   hot 

Mjt.T  hi-aiiim  plant,  $2r). 

ll.'i'j!  Tetiili  avenue  east,  6-rooir.  modern  flat,  hea: 
funiUhid.  $23. 

1420  K.ii.st  Superior  street.  12-room  modern  iteam- 
Fi.Mt.'il  huuse,  $.'>0. 

A-ihteidIa  terraci-,   heated  flat,   $.15. 

\*l'!aii.l  ftaU.  4  room  flat,   $13. 

Ill   St'iDiid  avenue  west,  store,  $30. 

14  WeM   Second  street.  7  room  modi'rt   heated  flat, 

HOOPES-KOHAGEN  COMPANY 


6  ROOM  HOUSE 
HUNTER'S  PARK 

«.'t,'i5«t — »600   cawh.     Lot   65x134    feet. 
A.l   modern  except  heat.    A  bargain. 

■INCC  ■•■• 

OPERATORS  IM  ALL  BRAMCMC5 

or  DULUTH  REAL  ESTATE 


SOI-4  5ELLWD00   BUILDING 
eiTHER  PHONE  408 


FOR  HOUSE 
HUNTERS 

11 -room  modern  hjjuse  in  East  end. 
finest  finish  and  decorations,  fire- 
place, billiard  room,  etc.,  $13,000. 

New  double  brick.  hIx  rooms  each. 
East   end;    rents,   $960— $9,000. 

6-room  modern  dwelling  on  corner 
lot.  Eighteenth  avenue  east; 
terms — $.>.900. 

6 -room  modern  house,  on  car  line. 
Hunter's  Park,  with  garage, 
chicken  house,  etc.  Lot  60x180. 
Easy  terms,  $4..'SO0. 
room  modern  house,  just  com- 
pleted, near  Ninth  street  car  line, 
hot  water  heat,  hardwood  finish 
and  floors;  very  easy  terms — 
$4,000. 

Money  on  Hand  to  Loan 
—Any  Amount 

FIELD-FREY  CO. 

204  K.vchnnRo  BuIUHng. 


That  Duluth's  population  Is  coming 
In  for  a  material  Increase  Is  attested 
by  the  records  of  rental  agents  this 
spring.  Numbers  of  houses  have  been 
leased  to  new  arrivals  In  the  city  dur- 
ing the  last  few  weeks,  and  many 
other  leases  entered  Into  by  outsiders 
win  become  effective  at  the  end  of  the 
month. 

It  is  reported  by  the  various  offices 
that  the  number  of  vacating  notices 
have  been  unusually  small  this  season 
and  It  is  estimated  that  the  percentage 
of  vacancies  on  May  1  will  be  the 
lightest  on  record.  That  condition  is 
regarded  as  especially  gratifying  In 
view  of  the  fact  that,  as  the  record 
of  the  building  Inspector's  office 
sliows,  more  than  8o0  houses  were 
built  in  Duluth  during  li»15.  The  sup- 
po.iltion,  therefore.  Is  that  nearly  1,00»« 
heads  of  fandlles  from  outside  polnt.i 
must  have  removed  to  the  city  in  the 
Interval  or  otherwise  vacancies  to  that 
extent   would   have  been  created. 

"The  rental  situation  is  In  a  very 
satisfactory  position  this  spring.  We 
have  fewer  vacancies  on  our  li.st  than 
usual  and  during  the  past  month  a 
number  of  houses  have  been  rented 
to  new  arrivals.  In  some  cases  we 
have  had  numbers  of  applicants  wait- 
ing to  take  out  leases  of  hoxises  that 
it  was  known  would  be  vacant."  said 
L.  B.  Manley,  of  Stryker,  Manley  & 
Buck. 

F.  J.  Pulford  of  the  Pulford-How 
company,  said:  "Taking  the  experience 
In  our  office  for  It,  there  will  be  less 
moving  about  on  May  1  than  usual. 
We  have  received  comparatively  few 
vacating  notices  and  the  great  bulk 
of  our  tenants  In  both  houses  and 
flats  are  renewing  their  leases.  Ten- 
ant.s  geem  to  have  discovered  that  un. 
der  existing  condition.^  this  year,  they 
cannot  do  better  than  remain  where 
they   are." 

An  official  of  the  Hoopes-Kohagen 
company  averred  that  Its  list  of  va- 
cancies is  the  smallest  In  years.  Housea 
were  rented  by  that  office  this  w^ek 
to  three  outsiders  who  have  arranged 
to    niake    their    homes    in    this    city. 

LOCAL  ARCHITECT 
GETS  HIBBING  JOB 

J.  J.  Wangenstein  Selected 
to  Draw  Plans  for  Court- 
house. 

J.  J.  Wangenstein,  local  architect 
and  superintendent  of  construction  for 
the    $1,000,000    courthouse    built    In    Du- 


ORDER  FOR  H EARING  ON  PETITION 
FOR     ADMINISTRATION— 
State    of    Minnesota, 

County  of  St.  Louis. — ss. 
In  Probate  Court.     In  the  Matter  o£  the 
Estate     of     William       Shepherd,     De- 

The  petition  of  Jane  Shepherd  hav- 
ing been  filed  in  this  Court,  represent- 
ing among  other  things,  that  Wllllara 
Shepherd,  then  being,  a  resident  of  the 
County  of  St.  Louis.  Btate  of  Minneso- 
ta died  intestate  Ijrtba  County  of  St. 
Louis.  Stale  of  Mlfcesota.  on  the  4th 
day  of  January.  *i«4  leaving  esUte 
In  the  County  of  fet,  X^ouls.  State  of 
Minnesota,  and  th^t  ntld  petitioner  Is 
^e  widow  of  saldTlPchdent  and  pray- 
ing that  Letters  of  Administration  of 
the  estate  of  said  decedent  be  granted 
to  her.  said  Jane  Shepherd.  It  is  or- 
dered, that  said  petition  be  heard  be- 
fore this  Court.  at>  th»  Probate  Coiirt 
Rooms  in  the  Coui;t  .Mouse  In  Duluth 
In  said  Counti-.  oH' Monday,  the  l.th 
dav  of  April,  1916.  at  ten  o  clock  a.  m.. 
and  all  persons  Interditod  In  said  hear-1 
Ing  and  In  said  matter  are  hereby  cited  ; 
and  required  at  saU^  tli»«  and  place  to 
show  cause.  If  an.vfthc*  »^e-  *'»?>'  «ald 
petition  should  not^e  t^anted.  Ordered 
further,  that  this  order  be  served  by 
publication  In  The  ©uluth  Herald  ac- 
cording to  law,  and  that  a  copy  of  this 
Order  be  served  on  the  County  Treas- 
urer of  St.  Louis  County  not  less  than 
ten  days  prior  to  aajd  fay  of  hearing. 

Dated    at    Duluth/^  Minn.,    March    2B, 

^^^'    By  the  Court.  S.  W.  filLPIN. 

Judae  of  Probate. 
Attest:    A.    R.    MORTON. 

Clerk   of  Probate. 
D.   H.,  March  25.  April   1-lL  mS. 


HOMES! 

95.04M) — Two-flat  brick  building  on 
Fifth  St..  central;  all  conveni- 
ences; rents  for  $60  per  month;  a 
Kood  investment. 

fi6.5<>0 — Twelve-room  house,  on  60- 
foot  lot,  Third  St..  central  loca- 
tion. 

$4,200 — Seven-room  modern^  S5-foot 
lot  near  Lake  avenue;  all  con- 
veniences. 

f4,500 — Modern  seven  room  house. 
In  very  good  location:  East  end. 

97.000  for  a  well  Improved  central 
West  end  property;  rental  value 
$«»0   month. 

fl,200-_Double  corner,  with  a  six- 
room  house,  on  graded  street,  in 
West  Dtiluth;  water,  sewer  and 
gas  In  street;  near  street  car 
line,  and  In  a  good  location,  but 
the  house  needs  repair;  would 
come  In  right  for  party  that  can 
do  his  own  work. 

Several  other  properties,  as  well  as 
farm  lands,  of  which  some  tracts  are 
close   to  our  dity— all  at  low  prices. 

O.  G.  OLSON 

ai4    COLIMBIA     BLD<;. 


^^r 


Attractive  Home 
Sacrificed 

One  of  the  most  complete  homes, 
built  by  day  labor;  situated  at  1911 
Ea.tt  Fourth  St.;  beautiful  lawn;  ac- 
tuallv  worth  $13,600,  as  you  can  as- 
certain by  asking  your  architect  or 
biilller;  can  be  purchased  for 
9l0.0(N)i    $2,600    cash,    balance    terms. 

W.C.  Sherwood  &  Co. 

118    MA.MIATTAIV    BLDG 


SHIPMENTS 

Have  \lready  Commenced  From  the  Iron  Mines 

OF  THE  CUYUNA  RANGE 

Indicating  a  Long  and  Busy  Season. 

CROSBY  THE  METROPOLIS  OF  THE  RANGE 

Will  reap  the  benefit  of  this  unusual  activity.    Now  is  the 

time  to  invest  in 

CROSBY  REAL  ESTATE 

For  prices  and  terms  sec 

GEORGE  H.  CROSBY     or     A.  0.  RANDEAU 

Duluth,  Minn.  Crosby,  Mmn. 


Decide  Now  to  Locate  in  An 
Of f ice  Building  ^U  Service! 

Don't  Take  Our  Word  it-Ask  Any  of  Our  Tenants. 


,1-  — r«-j.-3 


ORDER    OF    HEARING   ON    PETITION 
FOR   PROBATE   OF   WILL— 
State    of   Minnesota. 
County   of  St.   Louis — ss. 
In    Probate    Court.     In    the    Matter    of 
thV  Eatat*   ot     Albert     Wendt,     Dc- 
cedent.  '        ^.    ^  ^ 

A    certain    Instrument    purportmg   to 
be  the  last  will  ^find  te»iament  *^t^A.l-  , 
bert   Wendt    havlhg   been    presented    to 
this  court  and  the  petition  of  Theodor  , 
Rehbein    being    (July    filed    herein,    rep-  , 
resenting,    among     9ther     things,     that 
aald    decedent,    then    l»elli»    a    resident 
of    the    county    of    St.    Louis.    State    of  ■ 
Minnesota,    died    testate  In  the   county 
of    St.    Louis.    State    of    Minnesota    on 
the   11th  day   of  March,   1916,   and  thaM 
said    petitioner    is    named    In    said    will  | 
as    executor   thereof   and   praying    that  | 
said    Instrutiwiht    be    •^i®^;'"*^  '^"^,    ad- 
mitted to  probate  as  the  last  wUl  and 
testaai«nt    of   said    decedent,    ani..thati 
letters  testamentary  be   Issued   to  said  1 
Theodor    Rehbein,.- thereon.     It    Is    er- 
dered,  That  said  petition  be  heard  be-  | 
fore   this  court,   at   the   Probat«  <:ourt  i 
Rooms     In    the    Court    Mouse,     In     Du- 
luth    In    said    County    on    Monday,    the  , 
17th'  day    of   April,    1916,   at   ten   o'clock 
A      M.     and    all     pcr.sons    Interested    In 
sai4    hearing   and   Ir   aald   matter,   ai'o ; 
hereby    cited     and     required     at     said 
time    and    place    to   qhow    cause,    if   any 
there   be.   why  said   petition  should   not  1 
be     granted.      Ordered     further,     That  i 
this  order  be  served  by  publication  In  i 
The   Duluth   Herald,   according   to   law, 
and    that    a     copy     of     this     order     be  j 
served  on  the  Cr>unty  Treasurer  of  St. 
Lojli*  County    not    less    than    ten    day.s , 
prior   to  said   day  of  hearing,   and   that| 
a  copy  of  this  order  be  mailed  to  each  I 
heir,     devisee     and,     legatee     at     least  | 
fourteen  days  Jaefore   the  said   date   of  j 
hearing. 

Dated    at    DuIuth.^Mlnn.,    March    23, 
1916.  "  ,     . 

liy   the    Court. 

S.    W.    CILPIN.    .Tudgo    of   Probate. 
Attest:      A.    R.    MORTO.V. 

Clerk    of'  Probate. 
Seal   Probate  Court,  pt.  Louis  Co..  Minn. 

D.   H..  March   26.  April   1.  8.  1916. 

. — — .  — I     ■>  I 

A  el  ion    No..  8. 
STATE  OF   MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 

St.  Louis — 
Dl.strlct   Court,    Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
Duluth    Banking   Company. 

Plaintiff. 

Sarah  Healy.  Mary  B,  ilcCahill. 
Margaret  M.  Harney  and 
Richard  Harney,  her  husband. 
Harry  How  Moe,  Helen  (fer- 
trude  Mee,  Patrick  Rahilly, 
Margaret  Ann  Ryan  and 
Michael  A.  Ryan,  her  hus- 
band. Jessie  L.  Speyers  and 
Philip  R.  Moale.  trustees  un- 
der the  will  of  Clarence  L. 
Speyers,  deceased,  Rosalie 
<;rant.  State  of  Minnesota,  and 
Marshall  -  Wells  Hardware 
Company.  I 

Defendants.  | 
The  State  of  Minnesota,  to  th»  above 
named  Defendants: 
You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby 
summoned  and  required  to  answer  the 
complaint  of  the  plaintiff  In  the  above 
entitled  action,  which  !■  flied  in  the 
otTlce  of  the  Clerk  of  the  District 
Court  of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  District, 
In  and  for  the  County  of  St.  Louis  and 
State  of  Minnesota,  at  Duluth.  Minne- 
sota, and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your  an- 
swer to  the  said  complaint  on  the  sub- 
scribers at  their  office  In  the  Provi- 
dence Building,  In  tlie  City  of  Duluth, 
in  said  County,  within  twenty  (20) 
days  after  the  service  of  this  sum- 
mons upon  you.  exclusive  of  the  day  of 
such  service;  and.  If  you  fall  to  an- 
swer the  said  complaint  within  the 
time  aforesaid,  the  plaintiff  In  this 
action  will  apply  to  the  court  for  the 
relief  demanded  In  the  complaint. 
Dated    February    9lh,    1916. 

ALFORD   &    HUNT. 
Attorn'^ys    for   Plaintiff, 
721  providence  Bldg., 
Duluth.  Minn. 
D.  H..  April  8,  16.  22.  1916.  

MORTGAGE  FORECLOSURE  SALE — 
Default  having  been  made  In  the 
payment  of  the  sum  of  Two  Thousand. 
Three  Hundred  Seventy-eight  and 
19-100  ($2,378.19)  Dollars,  which  is 
claimed  to  be  due  fcnd  Is  due  at  the 
date  of  this  notice,  apon  a  certain 
Mortgage,  duly  executed  and  delivered 
by  Edward  Finch  wid  Florence  Finch, 
his  wife,  Mortgagors.  to  Fitger 
Brewing  Company,  a  Minnesota  cor- 
poration. Mcwtgagee,  bearing  date  the 
26th  day  of  January.  1915.  and  with 
a  power  of  sale  therein  contained, 
dul>'  recorded  in  the  office  of  the 
Register  of  Deeda  in  and  for  the 
County  of  St.  Louis  an4  State  of  Min- 
nesota on  the  6th  .day  of  February. 
?916  at  11  o'clock  .A.  M.  in  Book  318 
of  Mortgages,  on  Pafe'' ,l*f;,,  „ 

And  Whereas  the  said  Fitger  Brew- 
hiK  Company.  Mortgagee  and  Holder 
of-  said  Mortgage,  ^as  duly  elected 
and  does  hereby  efept  to  declare  the 
Whole    principal    atitn    \>t    aald    Mort- 


. 


•^ 


The  Question  and  the  Answer : 


QUESTION:  Where  is  that  building  located  which,  aside  from  mere  square 
foot  consideration,  offers  location  and  service,  which  is  the  keynote  of  convenience 
and  comfort  without  undue  cost  to  the  tenant? 

ANSWER: 

PROVIDENCE  BUILDING 

Cornor  Fourth  Avenue  West  and  Superior  Street. 

WHITNEY  WALL  COMPANY 


Building  Managers,  300  Torrey  Building. 


gage  due  and  payable,  at  the  date  of 
thl.s  notice,  under  the  terms  and  con- 
ditions of  said  Mortgage,  and  the 
power  of  bale  therein  contained;  ami 
whereas  there  is  Kctually  due  and 
claimed  to  be  due  and  payable  at  the 
date  of  this  notice  the  sum  of  Six 
Thousand  Fifty-one  and  96-100 
($6  051.96)  Dollars,  and  whereas  the 
said  power  of  sale  has  become  oper- 
ative and  no  action  or  proceedings 
having  been  instituted,  at  law  or 
otherwise,  to  recover  the  debt  secured 
by  said  Mortgage,  or  any  part  thereof : 

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 
mile  and  provided,  the  said  Mortgage 
will  be  foreclosed  by  a  sale  of  the 
premises  described  In  and  conveyed 
by   said    Mortgage.    \\z: 

Lot  Thirty-two  (32),  Block  Nine-, 
teen  (19),  Virginia,  according  to  thoj 
recorded  plat  thereof,  on  file  and  of  j 
record  In  the  office  of  the  Register  of 
Deeds  of  St.  Louis  County,  Minnesota,  | 
excepting  minerals.  in  St.  Louis  ; 
County  and  State  of  Minnesota,  with 
the  hereditaments  and  appurtenances, 
which  sale  will  be  made  by  the  Sher- 
iff of  said  St.  Louis  County,  at  his 
office  at  the  Courthouse  in  the  City 
of  Duluth  In  said  County  and  State. 
on  the  21th  day  of  April,  1916,  at  10 
o'clock  A.  M.  of  that  day,  at  public 
vendue,  to  the  highest  bidder  for  cash, 
to  pay  said  debt  of  Six  Thousand 
Fifty-one  and  96-100  ($6,051.96)  Dol- 
lars and  Interest,  and  the.  taxes.  If 
any  on  said  uremises,  and  Seventy- 
five  ($75.00)  Dollars  Attorney's  fees, 
as  stipulated  in  and  by  said  Mortgage, 
in  case  of  foreclosure,  and  the  dls- 
barser.jents  allowid  by  law;  subject  to 
redemption  at  any  time  within  one 
year  from  the  date  of  sale,  as  provided 
by   law. 

Dated   March   10.   A.   D.  1916. 
FITGER    BREWING    COMPANY, 
By    A.    FITGER.    President. 

Mortgagee. 
P.   C.   SCHMIDT, 

Attorney, 
p.   H..   March  11.   18,   25,  April  1,  8,  16, 

1-*16.  

ORDER   OF    HEARING    ON   PETITION 
FOR  PROBATE  OF  WILL — 
State  of  Minnesota, 

County  of  St.  Louis — ss. 
In    Probate    Court.      In    the    matter    of 
the    estate    of    James    F.    Dacey,    De- 
cedent. • 

A  certain  Instrument  puiT>ortlng  to 
be  the  last  will  and  testament  of 
James  F  Dacey  having  been  presented 
to  this  court  and  •  the  petition  of 
Francis  'J.  Dacey  being  duly  filed  here- 
in representing,  among  oth-er  things, 
that  said  decedent,  then  being  a  resi- 
dent of  the  county  of  St.  Louis,  State 
of  Minnesota,  died  testate  In  the  coun- 
ty of  St.  Louis,  State  of  Minnesota,  on 
the  17th  day  of  March,  1916.  and  that 
said  petitioner  Is  named  in  said  will 
as  executor  thereof  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  Isaued  to  said 


Francis  J.  Daoey  thereon.  It  Is  or- 
dered. That  said  petition  be  heard  be- 
fore this  court,  at  the  Probate  Court 
Rooma  In  the  Court  House,  in  Duluth, 
in  said  County  on  Monday  the  17th 
day  of  April.  1916,  at  ten  o'clock  A.  M., 
and  all  persons  Interested  in  said 
hearing  and  In  said  matter,  are  here- 
by 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 
County  not  less  than  ten  days  prior  to 
said  day  of  hearing,  and  that  a  copy 
of  this  order  be  mailed  to  each  heir, 
devisee  and  legatee  at  least  fourteen 
days   before   the  said   date   of  liearing. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  25th. 
1916. 

By  the  Court,  ..„,.. 

S    W.  GILPIN,  Judge  of  Probate. 
Attest:     A.  R.  MORTON. 

Clerk  of  Probate. 
Seal    Probate  Court,  St.  Louis  Co..  Mlna 

D.'  H.,    March    25,   April    1,   8,    1916. 


Action    STo.   ••  __ 

STATE  OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 

St.  Louii* —  ,    ,.    ,    ,    T^i 

District   Court,- Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
Duluth    Banking  Company. 

Plaintiff. 

vs. 
George  C.  Howe.  Mary  E.  Howe, 
and  Jessie  L.  Speyers  and 
Philip  R.  Moale,  trustees  un- 
der the  will  of  Clarence  L. 
Speyers.  deceased. 

Defendants. 
The   State  of  Minnesota,   tu   the  above 

named   Defendants:  

You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby 
summoned  and  required  to  answer  the 
complaint  of  the  plaintiff  i"  the  above 
entitled  action,  which  '3  filed  in  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  the  Diftric* 
Court  of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  District. 
In  and  for  the  County  of  St.  Louis 
and  State  of  Minnesota,  at  Duluth. 
Minnesota,  and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your 
answer  to  the  said  complaint  on  the 
subscribers  at  their  office  m  the  Prov- 
Idence  Building,  in  the  City  of  Duluth 
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  fail  to  answer  the 
said  complaint,  within  the  time  afore- 
said, the  plaintiff  in  this  action  will 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded in  the  complaint. 

Dated  October  H.  1915-      ,„^„ 
'  ALFORD   &   HUNT. 

Attorneys    for    Plaintiff. 
721  Providence  Bldg., 
Duluth.  Minn. 
D.  H..  April  8.  15,  22.  1916.  


Commis.xioner  of  Public  Works  In  and 
for  the  corporation  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth. Minnesota,  at  his  office  in  the 
City  Hall  In  said  city,  at  11  o'clock  A. 
M..  on  the  20th  day  of  April.  A.  D. 
1916.  for  furnishing  and  delivering 
within  the  limits  of  said  City,  as  re- 
quested from  time  to  time  during  the 
season  of  1916,  250,000  feet,  morejor 
less,  of  Norway  pine  or  tamarack,  ac- 
cording to  the  plan.s  and  speclrtcatlons 
on  file  in  the  office  of  said  Ooroial:*- 
sioner. 

A  certified  check  for  ten  per  cent  of 
the  amount  of  the  bid,  payable  to  th« 
order  of  the  Treasurer  of  the  City  of 
Duluth.  must  accompany  each  proposal. 

The  City  reserves  the  right  to  reject 
any  and  all  bids. 

CITY    OF    DTLl'TH.  li 

By   W.    H.   BORGE.V. 
JAMES  A.  FARRELL.  Clerk. 

Commissioner. 
D.  H..   April   8   and  10.   1916.    D  1914. 

CONTRACT    WORK. 
Office    of  Commissioner  of  Public  Works, 

City  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  April  7,  1916. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
Commissioner  of  Public  Works  in  and 
for  the  corporation  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth. Minnesota,  at  his  office  In  tha 
City  Hall  in  said  city,  at  11  o'clock  A. 
M..  on  the  I8th  day  of  April,  A.  D.  1916. 
for  the  construction  of  a  .sanitary  sew- 
er In  Medina  street  In  said  city  from 
Seventh  street  to  west  line  of  Lot  13. 
Block  12,  Sharp's  Addition,  according  to 
the  plans  and  specifications  on  file  ia 
the    office   of   said    Commissioner. 

A  certified  check  for  ten  per  cent  of 
the  amount  of  the  bid,  payable  to  th« 
order  of  the  Treasurer  of  the  City  of 
Duluth.  must  accompany  each  proposal. 

The  City  reserves  the  right  to  reject 
any  and  all  bid.s. 

CITY    OF   DULUTH. 

By   W.    H.    BORGEN. 
JAMES  A.  FARRELL.  Clerk, 

•    Commissioner. 
D.  H..  April  8  and  10.  1916.     D  1913. 


CITY  BfOTICES. 

CONTRACT    W^ORK. 
Office    of  Commissioner  of  Public  work.9. 
City  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  April  8.  1916. 
Sealed   bids  will  b©  received  by   the 


D.  H^  April 


CITY  CLERK'S  OFFICE— 

Duluth,   Minn.,  April  8,  191«. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  applica- 
tions have  been  filed  In  my  office  by 
the  following  named  persons  for 
license  to  sell  intoxicating  liquors  ia 
the    following    named    location,*,    viz: 

Frank  Peters,  at  No.  6217  Uamacy 
street,  being  a  transfer  from  No.  2117 
West    Superior    street;  .,   „    ,   ui- 

Winiam  WicRham.  at  No.  81  Sutphla 

**H.*^  Brown,  at  No.  2803  West  Superior 

*^H**^'J.    White,    at    No.    6701    Raleigh 

"'s^*I.'  Levin,  at  No.  601  West  Sup^erlor 

Said  applications  will  be  considered 
by  the  Council  at  a  regular  meeting 
thereof,  to  be  held  on  Monday.  April 
24.  1916.  at  3  o'clock  p.  m..  in  the 
(Council  Chamber. 
Minnesota. 


Chamber.    City    Hall.    DuluttU 

■W.    H.    bSrgEN.    I 

City  Clerlcl 

•rll  I.  191*.     D.  1816.      ,  ,7^ 


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■  ipnt^'!-;*-  «*\'-..-f*irt>  I        /•'  . 


2b 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  8, 19l6. 


Consult  this  page  before  you  build   The  firms  represented  on  this  page  are  in  a  position  to  furnish 

you  with  the  latest,  best  and  most  up-to-date  material  obtainable. 


Fine  Interior  Finish 

Send  Us  Your  Plans  Jor  Estimales 

lyilii^,  LAT^  mi  SMIDi@LE$ 

srOlfM   SXSII    \M)  STOHM  lH)OHS    ALWAYS  IN  STOrK. 
bto  Our  i:a>y  Chaiitfo  Coniblimllou  .Storm  and  Screen  Door. 


Scott-Graff  Lumber  Co. 

Mtlio>ie  2431 — IMIO-NKS — Lincoln   430. 


DULUTH  ART  GLASS  CO. 

Mnnufj-cturers  of  Ait.  Hivrlrd  aiul  I.on«l«  <1  Wiiulows  for  CliurrlicS 
ItrsiUiiues  ami   Public   liiilUlliiKH. 

\it  Shades,  fanopien,  IMatf  Glass  Drrsser  and  Desk  Tops 
I'Uilu  ami   Window   Glass. 


Grand    1600-X. 


M»;lro«e  1397 


onUv  ami   Fartory — ir>42-l-l  W«*''t  Michigan  .Street. 


£mm\  Walks,  Drives  and  Curbs 

DrI-Wall  Stucco  Paini,  Cabots'  Creosote,  Slilngle  Stains 
XHOIVISOIV-WILLIAIVIS  CO. 

IJiilhlcr-,'   Supplies.  Contractors  In   Tile.   Miirhio  aiul   T.  mont. 

Grand    It* 0  8;    .Mt-lrose    1098. 


200   MAMIAl^lWN    JJL'lliDING. 


rix  lures — Supplies 

Oscar  Hanson 

ELECTRICAL  COIVIR AC  I  OR 

un.->  wj:st  sh'i.hiok  .st. 

IJncoln  383;  Melrose  ibO. 


CORONER  BROS. 

miLDlXG  AND  JOB  WORK 

OtTloc  and  Shop — 
108    FIK.ST  AVENUE   WEST. 

Zenith  Phone  2144-A.  . 


Mjard,  Mim^ota  j^gjgj  yYcathcr  Stfips! 

Wa«-ou  20tli  Century  Steel  l>anie  anil  Economy  WootI  Frame  St-rej-ns — 
Wiil«cr  Speilal  Itc-lili  M<e  A\vnin«>. —  international  Metal  Cusement  Wln- 
,!,,„ , Kernor  Ihillt-ln-tlie-Chlmney   Incinerators. 

CLYDE   H.  FEXTO.V,  lleprcsentallve. 
Dulutli:   lOH  Torrey  Hulltllns:.  Melrose  36."S7;   (^.rand  978 


A  Model  House  at  a  Model  Price 

The  little  building  sho\\n  above  is  one  of  our  most  practical  design-s.  For  a  house  of  Its  size  and  cost, 
it  will  be  hard  to  And  a  superior  arrangement.  The  first  lloor  has  n  large  living  room  with  open  hearth  lire- 
t.lace  a  dining  room  which  opens  on  to  a  glass  enclosed  porch.  Off  from  the  kitchen  is  what  Is  termed  a 
breakfast  room,  provided  with  two  long  bench  .seats  and  a  table.  The  second  floor  has  four  good  sized  bed- 
rooms with  ample  clusei  space.  The  bathroom  Is  shown  to  the  front  of  the  building  but  can  be  placed  facing 
iht'  rear  The  exterior  is  carried  up  in  a  simple  manner — yet  different — than  that  you  generally  see.  The 
building'can  be  erected  in  the  City  of  Duluth  for  13.800  and  we  believe  it  cannot  be  duplicated  for  several 
hundred  dollars  more  than  that  in  any  other  arrangement. 


I 


Dahlstrom  Hollow  Steel  Doors 

No  sluinki.K*-  ..r  .sv,»llini?  and  ev.rlastlng.    Wc  m.'Uch  any  wood  finish  and 
th«n   i-akf  it  on.      ornamnual  Iron  and  brass  of  all   kinds  for  buildings. 

DUNLOP-MOORE  COMPANY. 

liuiltlers'  Supjilks  anil  Fireplaces. 


BURRELL  fie  CO., 

(Succo^ors   fo   Hurrcll  &   Harmon) 

Experts  in  Warm  Air  Heating  and  Ventilating 
Electric  Heat  Regulators 

General   SIkmh    M«'tal   Work.   Cornice   and   Roofing. 
Melrose  1574.  22  EAST  SECOND  STREET.  Grand  542. 


Tile,  Marble,  Terrazzo,  Slate  and 
Fireplace  Furnishings 

LOWRY-SIVIIXH    CO. 

23  East  Michigan  Street,  Duluth,  Minn. 
SEE  US  BEFORE  LETTING  YOUR  TILE  CONTRACT 


TWO  FIRE  RUNS 

Blazes  in  Two  Roofs  Call  Depart- 
meni;  Very  Little  Damage. 

Engine  (^ompany  Xo.  S  of  the 
West  Duluth  station  responded  to 
twi>  fire  alarms  this  forenoon. 
Shortly  before  8  o'clock  an  alarm 
was  turned  in  from  6205  Raleigh 
street.  A  small  fire  had  bc«n  started 
In  the  roof  of  the  building  by  a 
spark  from  the  chimney.  The  dam- 
age was  estimated  at  about   $10. 

At  11:30  o'clock  the  department 
was  given  a  run  to  5613  West  Sixth 
street,  where  another  roof  fire  had 
started.  The  damage  was  only 
nominal. 


Reshlnglc  your  hoqse  with  Reyn- 
olds    Asphalt    Shingles    and    avoid 


fires. 


Duluth  Builders' 
Supply  Co. 

502  AliWORTII  BVILDING. 

Both  Phones  226. 


DOES  YOUR  HOME  NEED  REPAIRS? 

To  foundation,  porches,  roof,  doors,  floors  or  wlndow.s?  If  It  does,  call  us 

up   now.      We  will    put   it   in   flrst-class   shape   r.t   small  expense   and    least 

inconvenience.      Have   new    hardwood  flooring   laid   now  before    the   house- 
cltanini;  bca.son  begins. 

AIMDEZRSOIM     &    GOW, 

CON'TRACTOH.-^.  Jn^t   lu  Mcar  «f  ChrUtle  Blili;.,  on    Fourth  Are.   Wc«t. 


mwi  mm  mmE  io 


y 


^litJirrM    ill    Oratorical    Content. 

Athens,  Ohio,  April  8.— fJarfleld  Cox 
of  Btloit  coUetre,  Wis.;  fJeurge  Stein- 
Iger  of  Hope   college,   Mich.,   and    II.   M. 


Eagles-on  of  Ohio  university  were  an- 
nounced today  as  winners  of  last 
night's  interstate  oratorical  contest. 
Wisconsin,  Indlaii.i,  Missouri,  Illinois, 
Michigan    and    Ohio    schools    were    rep- 


resented   In    the    contcfit.      The    winners; 


Dutch   Steamer   Struck   Mine. 


^I'lrrepVesent^he'Ea^ern  division  of  I  London,  A,.ril  S.-Th-  V^'^^^i'irt" 
rhe  interstate  oratorical  association  at  ,  Hijn  Dljk.  w'.ich  was  yesterdaj  repoU- 
the  final  contest  to  be  held  at  Fair-  ed  damaged  off  '>»«^,,^^;"y  t  ovds' 
held,   Iowa,   May  5.  I  struck     a    mine,    according    to    Uo>ds. 


which  today  reports  her  as  now^  in  har- 
J  bor  with   her  holds  full   of  water.     The 
Hljjn    liljk    was    bound    from    Portland 
for  Hotterdam. 


BEAUTIFUL  BUNGALOW  for  $1,650 


220' 


{\         JIl        J-I  LI— rp  ^co-woo M' 


At  the  price,  I  claim  tlils  to  be  the  finest  little  bungalow  yet  desifcnt^d  **r  built  in  Dulutli.  It  is  a  complete  hou<c  with  full  plumbing  in 
butliroom  and  one-pie<'e  lilgli  l>a<'Ii.  slnl{  «itli  enamelled  drain  board  In  klt<'lu*n:  up-to-date  elet'trhr  fixtures,  all  clo.sets  well  fitted  with  slielves,  hook 
htrips  and  ciotlies  liooks,  storm  windows  ami  screens,  the  exterior  of  the  Ikiusc  |>ainted  two  coats;  all  the  interior  wootlwork.  pla>tered  wails,  etc., 
will  be  beautifuii,\  painted  and  derorat4>d  to  your  own  taste.  If  you  own  tlie  lot,  1  will  build  this  hous4>  for  you  for  the  above  price,  and  you  can 
pay  for  same  tit  the  rate  of  .<illH  per  niontli.  iiu-iuding  interest.  This  Is  not  a  cheap  lious<< — hut  a  home  built  ii>  an  economical  way.  The  hous«^  will 
b4>'huilt  warm,  the  material  is  as  k<mmI  as  that  of  hidrher  priced  homes.     If  jou  want  enc,  see 

FRANK  A.  JOHNSON,  507  Alworth  Bldg.,  Office  Hours  from  1  to  3  p.  m. 


MORE  GROUNDS 
FOR  THE  "KIDS" 


Chlldr.ii  at  Xew  Duluth  and  Oary 
and  on  (Jnrficld  avenue  w'lll  have 
supervised  playgrounds  this  coming 
summer,  according  to  an  announcement 
made  this  morning  hy  J.  R.  Batchelor, 

recreational    director. 

The  new  playgrounds  will  be  lo- 
cated at  the  Stowf  and  Madison  rchools 
and  will  be  equipped  with  playq-round 
apparatus,  while  an  a.«sistant  director 
will  be  in  cliarge  of  eacli  throughout 
the  summer  months.  The  apparatus 
will  be  installed  sometime  befcVe  May 
1,    Director    Jiatcheltir    said. 

With  the  addition  of  these  two 
playgrounds,  there  will  be  a  total  of 
twelve  in  operation  this  year,  as  com- 
pared with  three  during  1915.  Mem- 
bers of  the  board  of  education  yes- 
terday authorii^'d  the  purchase  of  ap- 
paratus for  the  nine  new  grounds  and 
similar  action,  it  is  expected,  will  be 
taken  by  the  city  commissioners  next 
Monday. 

The  playgrounds  at  Chester  and 
Harri.son  parks  will  be  continued  this 
year,  while  the  apparatus  at  the  Fifty- 
second  avenue  west  grounds  will  be 
moved  to  the  Irving  school,  accord- 
ing to  the  plans.  The  grounds  at 
Fifty-second  avenue  will  be  used  as  a 
baseball  diamond.  It  being  Director 
Hatchelor's  plan  to  install  a  large 
back.3top  and  mark  the  field  for  base- 
ball  games. 

The  twelve  playgrounds  to  be  In 
opoatlon  this  year  will  be  located  at 
the  following  points:  Lester  park, 
Washburn,  P'ranklin,  Munger,  Wash- 
ington, Webster.  Madis<jn,  Irving  and 
ytowe  schools.  Harrison  and  <'hester 
parks  and  Ninth  avenue  west  and 
Third    street. 


Xcw  Kacinc  Collcxe  Head. 

Fond  du  Lac.  Wis..  April  8. — Warden 
B.  Talbot  Hogers.  for  the  last  twenty- 
three  years  head  of  O'rafton  hall  here, 
has  been  elected  president  of  Racine 
coileKc,  an  Episcopal  Institution  «t 
Hacine,  Wis.,  as  successor  to  Dr.  W.  F. 
Shcro,  who  will  leave  Racirn  May  1 
to  aci^ept  a  call  to  Christ's  pijurcli, 
Oreensburg,    Pa. 


WEST  DULUTH 

HERALD  BRAXCH  OFFICESi 

Saenccr    Pbarniacy,  402   Central   Avenue.    Advcrtl«ln»    and    »ub*crlpt!on<i. 
A.  JenacB,    l'lft>-«ie*cnth    Avcnu*   ^\  cat   and   Grand   AYcnoc,   DJutrlUutloa. 

Herald's    West   Duluth    reporter    may   be    reached    after 
hour  of  going  to   press  t»t  Calumet  178-M  and  Coic  24;. 


AMENDMENT 
IS  INDORSED 

West  Duluth  Club  Members 
Hear  Talk  on  Revolv- 
ing Fund. 


!  children.  They  are  Mrs.  Klla  Fortler, 
Miss  Phoebe  Krassard,  James.  Lrnest, 
Samuel  and  Jo.«eph  Brassard.  He  also 
is  survived  by  two  broltiers  and  one 
sl?t^r,  Fred  Brassard,  ^SOl*  Oneota 
street,  and  Thomas  Brassard  and  Mrs. 
Kd  cMrard,  who  reside  in  Eastern  Can- 
ada. 

The  funeral  will  be  held  Monday 
jMornlng  at  K  o'clock  from  t)ie  St.  Jean 
'Japtlsto  French  Catholic  r-huroh,  Twt  r.- 
ty-flfth  avenue  west  and  Third  strett. 
Interment  will  be  in  Calvary  cemetery, 

GIVEN  silver"" 

WEDDING  PARTY 


George  D.  McCarthy,  secretary  of  the 
Northern  Minnesota  Development  asso- 
ciation. addres.sed  the  West  Duluth 
Commercial  club  on  Amendment  .No.  1, 
known  as  the  revolving  fund  amend- 
ment to  the  state  constitution  last 
night.  The  amendment,  wlifch  will  bo 
submitted  at  the  November  election, 
provides  for  a  revolving  fund  of  ?1'50,- 
000  for  the  partial  improvement  at 
state  land  before  it  is  put  on  the  mar- 
ket. 

"If  this  amendment  is  adopted  and 
legislation  enactt-d  in  pursuHiice  to  it. 
it  v.'iU  hasten  the  peopling  and  (ulti- 
vatlon  of  2,000,000  acres  of  stat^  land 
and  give  imi>etus  to  tl.f  development 
movement  that  will  carry  it  fas-  for- 
ward toward  tli<-  goal  for  whi<  li  we  are 
striving,  the  complete  development  of 
the  uncultivated  areas  of  Alinntsota," 
said   the  speaker. 

Mr.  McCarthy  briefly  .sketched  the 
progress  of  development  in  North<rn 
Minnesota,  pointed  out  lh«-  diif i<-alties 
met  by  tlie  settler  who  take.*:  J.'ind 
without  any  improvements  being  made, 
outlined  the  aid  llu;  ))ro\i.sion8  <>f  ihe 
amendment  would  be  to  the  settler  atid 
made  a  plea  for  support  for  the  amend- 
ment. 

"We  In  Duluth  should  be  pfuticularly 
interested,"  he  said.  "\V<-  are  bf-<om- 
ing  a  great  industrial  comnniiiity  and 
It  is  elementary  that  any  industrial 
community  to  become  great  .»^liould 
have  at  its  back  <loor,  as  it  were, 
a  parden  in  which  are  grown  the 
food  stuffs  for  its  people.  The  de- 
velopment of  our  nearby  country  is  im- 
portant to  us  from  the  staiulpoint  of 
our  ability  to  compete  witli  f»tli'-r  in- 
dustrial communities,  and  also  as  in- 
volving the  develo))ment  nt  u  nearby 
market  for  the  things  we  manulacti;re 
and  Job." 

At  the  conclusion  of  Mr.  McCartliy's 
talk,  which  included  a  brl^f  explana- 
tion of  the  other  seven  amf^ndments  to 
be  submitted  also,  the  club  adopted  a 
resolution  indorsing  Amen<lment  No.  1 
and  pledging  to  the  cOmmlttfe  prornct- 
Ing  It  the  support  of  the  dub  and  Its 
individual  members. 

governorIiay 
address  club 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  M.  Fredrickson.  2\6 
North  Sixtieth  avenue  west.  w  er.- 
guests  of  honor  at  a  c«'lebratioii  in 
honor  of  their  f^ilver  wedding  anni- 
versary given  by  the.  Danish  Broih«'r- 
h.ood  and  Danisli  Sisterhood  at  the 
Woodman  hall,  Twenty-fir.-^t  avenue 
west  and  First  street,  Wedn<sday  eve- 
ning. An  informal  speaking  and  nm- 
sical  progiam,  a  banquet  and  dancing 
featured   tlie  t ntertair.ment. 

Among  the  speakers  were  Mis.  i'arl 
I'hillips,  president  of  th<'  Dani.^h  Si.«- 
tf-rhood  lodge,  who  presented  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Fredrickson  with  silverware  f^n 
behalf  of  the  organization.  Otiier 
.speakers  were  George  M.  Ji-n.-eii.  Hu- 
dcdph  Hanson  and  Sam  Frsdri»Uf  on. 
The  musical  numbers  includ'd  a  piano 
solo  by  Miss  Katherine  G.irdiur  and 
V(^cal  solo  by  Mrs.  Harry  Libiiiy. 


Birthday  Party. 


Mrs.  Charles  Carlson.  108  S.-uth 
r'»)rty-eighth  avenue  west,  ei>t<'i  lained 
Thursday  evening  at  a  birthday  party 
for  a  nuiriber  of  her  friends,  t James 
atid  music  featured  the  ente;tainin' nt. 
Tlie  guests  were:  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Will- 
iem  Carlson,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles 
Mattson,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Matt  John.^on. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Victor  Joi.nson;  MLsses 
Elna  Johnson,  Agnes  Johnson.  LHJian 
Johnson.  Elfreda  Mattson,  Kl.'ie  Carl- 
son and  Messrs.  Gust  Hanus.  Ivar  Carl- 
son,   Fred    Wick   and    John    Malison. 


Plan  Track  Meet. 

A  track  meet  will  be  held  nfxt  Wed- 
nesday evening  by  the  A.  C  Uii<-hle 
.Sunday  school  class  of  the  West  f>u- 
luih  Baptist  church.  Fifty-ninth  and 
Grand  avenues.  Several  athletic  stunts 
are  scchduled.  The  class  will  organize 
a  baseball  team  which  will  '^nter  in  tiie 
Sunday  school  league  this  summer. 


Lodge  Entertains. 


West  Duluth  lodge  No.  85,  Degree  of 
Honor,  entertained  last  evening  at 
cards  for  members  and  friends  at  Gil- 
ley's  hall,  322  North  Central  avenue. 
Five  hundred  and  pedro  were  played 
at  fifteen  tables.  The  committee  liv 
charge  consisted  of  Mrs.  Yeager 
Brotherton,  Mrs.  J.'  W.  Fremont,  Mr?. 
Ray  Grover,  Mrs.  H.  Defoe,  Mrs.  Kilby 
and  Mrs.  Tenderholm. 


Prominent  Duluthians  Also 
Will  Discuss  West  Du- 
luth Matters. 

Several  good  speakers  will  be  on 
the  program  of  the  banquet  of  the 
West  Duluth  Commercial  club  April 
27,  at  the  Moose  hall,  according  to  a 
report  made  by  the  speakers'  commit- 
tee at  the  meeting  of  the  club  last 
evening.  Among  the  speaki.-rs  will  be 
Governor  J.  A.  A.  Burnquist,  Mayor  W. 
I.  Prince,  J.  M.  Davidson,  manager  of 
the  Minnesota  Steel  company's  town- 
site,  Morgan  Park,  and  John  Owens, 
representing  the  St.  Louis  County  club. 
Majson  M.  Forbes  will  be  toastmasier. 

It  is  expected  that  the  complete  pro- 
gram will  be  ready  within  another  ten 
days.  Emil  J.  Zauft,  president  of  the 
club,  will  give  a  short  talk  in  which 
he  will  speak  on  industries  of  this  end 
of  the  city.  One  table  on  which  will 
be  displayed  products  from  the  vari- 
ous Industries,  will  be  set  aside  with 
a  small  memorandum  explainiuK  each 
article.  Plans  are  being  made  to  en- 
tertain about  850  guests. 

YOUNG  FOLKTRGANIZE. 

Club  Formed    at   Mission  Church  to 
Hold  Social  Affairs. 

At  a  meeting  of  young  people  of  the 
West  Duluth  Swedish  Mission  church, 
held  last  evening  at  the  honje  of  Elmer 
Ol.qon,  618  North  Fifty-sixth  av.  niie 
west,  a  Barara  and  Phllathea  organi- 
zation was  formed.  Tlie  club  li.is 
eiehteen   members. 

The  club  elected  Charles  Dabloitist 
president;  llaymond  Eriikson,  vice 
president;  Ml?s  Esther  Paulson,  secre- 
tary, and  Alex  ^^'est(  rlund,  treasurer. 
Plans  for  an  entertalr.nient  to  be  givfn 
in  the  near  future  were  made.  The 
committee  to  have  cl.arge  consists  of 
Miss  Ada  Swanson,  Miss  Anna  Nelson. 
Raymond  Erlekson  and  Elnic  i-  !?.  Olson. 


Continue  Revival  Meetings. 

I      Revival    meetings    will    be    continued 

next  week  at  Asbury  Methodist  church, 

i  Sixtieth    avenue    and      Raleigh      street. 

!  Tomorrow    the    morning    services    will 

I  be    conducted    by    Rev.    W.    H.     Fariell 

;  and   the  evening  services   by   Hardy   A. 

Ingham.     Large  crowds    have  been   at- 

'  tending    the    meetings    during    the    last 

week. 

Entertaining  Several  Societies. 

The  Women's  Home  and  I'\. reign 
Misslonar.v  Society  of  Asbury  Metiio- 
dlst  church  will  be   entertained   Fi  iday 

'afternoon  at  the  residence  of  Mrs.  W. 
H.   Farrell,   6009    Rnbigh   street.      Mein- 

I  bers  of  the  societies  of  the  West  Du- 
luth   Baptist    church    and    Westminster 

'Presbyterian  church  have  been  invited 
to  attend.  A  special  program  Is  being 
arranged  under  the  direction  of  Mrs. 
H.   A.  Ingham. 


Birthday  Party. 


REVIVALS  WILL  BEGIN. 

Bethany    Norwegian-Danish    M.    E. 
Will  Have  Two-Weeks'  Series. 

A  series  of  revival  services  which 
win  continue  until  Easter  will  begin 
tomorrow  evening  at  Bethany  Norwe- 
gian-Danish M.  E.  church.  Sixty-fifth 
avenue  west  and  Polk  street.  Spe- 
cial music  has  been  planned  for  each 
evening.  Afternoon  meetings  for 
children  will  be  held  in  the  churcli 
on  Tuesdays,  Thursdays  and  Fridays 
at    4:15    p.    m. 

Rev.  Eugene  Nelson,  pastor  of  the 
church,  who  will  be  assisted  by  a 
number  of  outside  pastors,  is  conduct- 
ing the  meetings.  Among  these  will 
be  Rev.  Edward  Evenson  of  Superior, 
Rev.  P.  O;  Haugland  of  Canby.  Minn., 
Rev.  Elmer  Lund  of  Superior  and  Rev. 
K.  A.  Lundln  of  the  Third  Swedish 
Baptist   church   of   West    Duluth. 

IS  fireprooTbuilding. 

Finishing  Room  for  Carbolite  Com- 
pany Is  Nearing  Completion. 

Tlie  finishing  room  for  the  American 
Carbolite  company  Is  rapidly  nearing 
completion.  This  building  will  be  up 
and  ready  for  Installing  the  machinery 
by   the   latter   part    of   next    week. 

The  building  is  being  constructed 
of  steel  with  sheet  Iron  walls  and 
roofing.  It  will  be  absolutely  fire- 
proof. Officials  of  the  company  are 
of  the  opinion  that  the  building  will 
be  completed  and  the  machinery  In- 
stalled so  that  operations  may  resume 
before   May    1. 

DIES  AFTER  LONgIlLNESS. 


Mr-o.  M.  Whalen,  609  North  Fifty- 
seventh    avenue    west,    was    pleasantly 

i  surprised  last  evening  at  her  home   in 

i  honor     of     her     birthday     anniversai  y. 

i  The  guests  were  Mesdaines  O.  Holm.  A. 
Dahl,  A.  Wang,  Nels  Sorenson,  M.  Ness. 
M.    Johnson,    H.     G.    Wollan,     T.    Olson 

I  and  Miss  Gertrude  Wang. 

West  Duluth~Briefs. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  M.  Ashley,  1  S& 
North  Sixtieth  avenue  west,  are  the 
parents  of  a  daughter,  born  this  morn- 
ing. 

Victrolas  and  records  at  Spencer's. 
Easy  payments  if  desired. 

Plans  for  a  celebration  to  be  held  on 
April  1:9  In  honor  of  winning  the  Head 
of  the  Lakes  membersliip  banner,  >vill 
be  made  Wednesday  evening  at  the 
meeting  of  Non-Excelled  Homestead 
No.  4276,  B.  A.  Y..  at  Gilleys  hall. 

A  dancing  party  featured  an  enter- 
tainment given  last  evening  by  Gosta 
lodge.  No.  243,  Vasa  Order,  at  Victor's 
hall,   6628  Grand  avenue. 

R.  L.  Myrlck,  who  has  been  spending 
several  days  visiting  In  West  Duluth. 
left  yesterday  for  his  home  in  Western 
Canada. 

The  Ladles'  Aid  Society  of  the  West 
Duluth  Baptist  church  will  ent<  rlaln 
at  a  supper  to  be  served  In  the  church 
basement  next  Saturday  evening, 
April  16. 

Watch  repalrlntr.  Hurst.  West  Duluth. 

SNOW  FALLS  OVER 
WIDESPREAD  AREA 


Philadelphia,  April  8. — Six  inches  of 
snow  fell  in  many  parts  of  Pennsyl- 
vania and  New  Jersey  today,  the 
weather  bureau  In  this  city  reporting 
the  storm  as  a  record  breaker  for  this 
time  of  year. 


Tivo  Ineheii  of   Snow   at    Columbu*. 

Columbus,   Ohio,   April    8. — More   than 
two  Inches  of  snow  fell  In  some  points 
in    Ohio    during    a    storm    which    bet;an 
last  night  and  Is  continuing  today. 
— — ^ 
AH  Over  Indiana. 
Indianapolis,      Ind.,     April      8. — Snovr 
!  fell  over  practically   all   parts  of   Indi- 
i  ana    today.       The     lowest    temperature 
was  29  deg.  above  zero.     More  snow   is 
;  forecast. 


B.ANK  OVERDRAFT  NOT 
OFFENSE,  SAYS  JUSTICE 

St.  Cloud,  Minn.,  April  8. — That  when 
a  bank  has  allowed  a  customer  to  do 
business  on  an  overdraft  for  any 
length  of  time,  the  customer  does  not 
violate  the  laws  of  the  state  in  is- 
suing checks,  despite  the  fact  that 
he  has  no  money  In  the  bank,  was 
the  decision  of  Justice  J.  1.  Donahue 
in  the  case  against  H.  W.  Witte  of 
Rockville,  who  was  arrested  on  com- 
plaint of  a  patron  of  the  creamery 
ot    which    Wltte  .was    manager. 


Joseph  Brassard  Summoned:  Resided 
Here  Many  Years. 

Joseph    Brassard,    aged    L8,    4920    Wa- 
dena street,  died  at  4  o'clock  this  morn- 
ing at  his  home  following  an  illness  of  J 
several    weeks.     Brassard    had    ben    a  I 
resident  of  West   Duluth   foi'  a   number  j 
of    years.      He    was    a    member    of    the 
Longshoremen's    union    and    West    Du-  i 
luth   tent.   No.   2,   Knights  of  the   Mac- 
cabees. I 

ii-a    Icitves,    besides     his    widow,    six  J 


CAPSULES 

midH 


CATARRH 

OF  THE 

iBLADDER 


Relieved 


Hours 


Beuiart  of  eounterfaiu 
tXo  increase  in  Frice,  ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 


t 


bi-*i 


iT --■...  — ..   — 


r 


-«r 


Saturday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD 


Aprils,  1916. 


^ 


i^^»^iMM%^^^^>i%<M>l>^^' 


^^^i^^^^t^m^tmm^t^*^^'^^^^^  ^ 


i0*m^t0»m 


cr*nn"D  the  cub 

OUUUJr  REPORTER 


Mind 


pyjT  OFF  H^v\^4' 
TersOED  To 

LjON6-  tNUFl 

Me.  FOR  A 
DENTIST! 


When 


•^OOfrHT  TWVT/V'2 


>^ 


All-WESTtRN  TACKLt  WILL  BE  THE 

CHIEf  SPEAKER  AT  BANQUET  fOR  BOYS 


Plans  for  the  boys'  department  T. 
M  C  A's  annual  banquet  have  b'^on 
made  on.l  iho  nienib->ra  are  looKtnK 
forward  with  keen  antlclpatton  to  the 
big   social   event. 

E.  W  P»«ck  of  MlnneapolU  ^•'^^J^" 
present  and  act  as  toasimaster.  The 
inaln  i-peuker  will  be  Howard  (Cub) 
Buck,  Wlsronsln  university »  big  ath- 
lete Burk  was  Inst  flfUBon  »  football 
captain.  l.s  preslrlent  of  tht>  board  of 
ftthletic  control  and  the  all-wesiern 
tackle  for  the  ln«t  three  years.  IJuck  s 
topic    will    be    'I'laylnjf    the    <.ame. 

RuBStl!  Duncan.  president  of^n*" 
cabinet,  will  apeak  on  the  topic.  I-.ai)t 
Year";  John  Ahl-n.  "Next  Year  . 
^Camp  Miller."  Ralph  Wyly;  '  H I ff h 
Bchool  Club,"  Irvln)?  Auld;  "We  I.  ked 
You."  15.  C.  Wade;  "The  Ladl-s. 
'  Irving'    tJrover.  ,  .   ^.  _ 

The  followinff  boys  have  passed  the 
rational  efficiency  teat  for  boy.s  an< 
will  ho.  decorated  with  the  national 
medal  at  the  banquet  Friday  niRht: 
Lloyd  Auxer.  llusaell  Burns  I'l'l"* 
Anderson.  Robert  Carrie.  Clyde  Peter- 
son. Kuuben  Shemick.  ■William  I  pham. 
Eldred  Cundry.  Willlan.  Hadklns 
Harold  I^enson.  Harold  Mitchell 
aid    Mac<;reKor.    Fred    Zollner 

ek.ndrlckaon  and  Arthur  OUon^  These 
OV3  will  form  tlio  cliart-r  efficiency 
inembera  for  Duluth.  They  will  have 
their  picture  tak<^n  and  this  picture 
■will  be.  one  of  the  pictures  that  wUl 
hana  In  the  new  boys'  building.  Twenty 
boys  will  make  the  Hustler  club  and 
they  will  sit  nt  «  table  of  honor  at 
thi-  banoujet  and  will  be  awarded  the 
official  boys'  department  emblem.  To 
make  the  Hustler  club  means 
boy  Is  an  all-around  hustler 
club.      The   boys'    department 


MANY  MmiODS  Or  PffiPARING 
LAND  IN  m.  SPRING  WtlW  BEIT 


■fi- 


I»on- 
I.eonard 


Tn     th«    snrina^    wheat     area,     which  I  Is    the    best    preparation     for      wheat. 

In    the    spring    w  neai     y*"-  i  ^^^en  aprlnff  wheat  is  to  follow  a  crop 

covers    A    largre    portion    of    Minnesota  i  ^^  ^^^^    wheat,  or  barley,  the  seed  bed 

and  the  Dakotan  and  Kmall  portions  of    ig   prepared    in    the    fall. 

Iowa.    Kansaa.   Colorado.   Nebraska  and  I      'When    spring    whoat    follows    pota- 

WvomlBC     A    number    of    practices    are    toes    or    corn,    the    ground    should    be 

>v>onaiMr.   *""•"/;     f  .      .  *o_,  disked  and  harrowed  tboroughly  In  the 

i  followed  m  the  preparation  of  land  ror  |  ^^^^^  ^^  prepare   a  seed   b«»d   for   the 

I  spring  wheat,   says    the   Weekly   News  |  ^.jieat.     Hprlng  wheat   ehould   be  eoi^'n 

i  Letter    Uf<ued     by    the    department    of    early.     On    fall-plowed   land    it  is   u«u- 

I         •      1.    >«  „.  -R-aav^t^^jrin  |ally  Safe  to  sow  whe«t  us  soon  as   the 

'  **^o,"l^I^  t.^,  T™  f .w  m  is  the  neces-  I  land    can    be   put    In   «ood    tilth,    after 
Plowing  In  some  i^'m  l8_tne_ neces ^  ^^^m    ^^^^^    ^^    ^^^^^      wiiere    the    land    Is 


YOU  NEVER  SAW  A  FARMER  IN  A  BREAD  LINE- BUT  YOU  HAVE 

SEEN  MANY  IN  AUTOMOBILES 


J 


FARM  AND  MINERAL  LANDS.   FARM  AND  MINERAL  LANDS. 


er   fairly  humid  districts   of  th^e  plajns 
found    it   best    to  " 
Inches  de 

October.  Tlioaewho  settled  I'n  the  drier 
portions  of  the  plains  found  the  land 
too  dry  in  the  fall  to  backset  the  sod 
and  turn  up  the  eKtra  2  or  3  Inches  of 


»,^ov    w,  "break   the  sod   land   3  ,  the   acre   Is   best 
;op  in  May  und  June  and  back-    of  the  area 
fi  Inches  deep  in  September  or    Uie    soil    he 


conditions,  four  pecks   to 

In   the   eastern  part 

where  rainfall  la  high  and 
eavy.  Clcb.  warm,  and  well 
drained,  tlve  to  six  pocks  give  better 
results.  In  the  drier  soils  of  the  west- 
ern portions,  three  pecks  to  the  acre 
are  sufricient.  Where  durum  wheat  Is 
rule  the  seeding  Is  one  peck 


#  WASHBURN'    COL*N-TT.    WIS      IM-  * 
it  PROVED  FARM  AT  BIG  '$  ' 
^•.                           SACRIFICE.  ♦* 

#  160  acres  located  two  miles  from  § 

#  good,  thriving  town,  where  they  * 
it.  already     have     large     creameries,  ff- 

#  pickle    factory,    good    stores,    etc.;  -^ 

#  60  acres  entirely  cleared  and  un-  ■»- 
H  der    cultivation;    hewed    log.    1%-  * 

#  story.  4-rooni  house;  large  frame  '^ 
•^  barn  holding  «0  tons  of  hay.  ^ 
^  equipped  with  hay  fork;  corn  crib,  * 
ii.  chicken  coop  and  other  buildings.  « 

#  Farm  all  fenced  with  wire.     In  ad-  g 

#  dltlon  to  several  thousand  feet  or  ^ 

#  sawed  lumber  on  the  place,  there  # 

#  is  still  KW.OOO  feet  of  standing  •^- 
if.  timber  on  the  100  acres  not  under  ■» 


«  cultivation;  some  household  fuml-  ■»    -^ 
if.  ture;  farming  Implements  will  go  *].Jf, 


*  * 

*  JOIN  OUR  EXCURSION  TO  *• 
if.             NORTH   DAKOTA  APRIL.  15.  * 

*  * 

if.      Mr.  Farmer,  why  purchase  land  ij- 

*  that  you  have  to  dynamite  before  ^ 
if.  you  caft  work  It.  Our  North  Da«  * 
if.  kota  land    Is   ready    for  the   plow  * 

*  and  -will  not  cost  you  but  one-half  # 
if.  the  cost  of  clearing  cutover  lands.  * 
if.  Here  are  a  few  descriptions  of  * 
if.  farms  that  we  want  to  show  you.  # 

'Jf 

160  acres  Pierce  county,  only  2%  # 
if.  miles  from  good     city;     all     level.  * 

*  rich  loam  soil;  entire  quarter  un-  * 
if.  der  cultivation;  on  main  road.  For  # 
if.  a  small  farm  this  Is  a  dandy  and  a  •* 
^4  bargain.       Price     for    quick     sale,  * 

*  $4,600,  half  cash,  balance  to  suit.       # 


that    a 
In    the 

cir<'hesti'a 


HOWARD  BUCK. 


I.OVO  You";  Wlllurd  Thorp  wHl  play  a 
pultar  solo,  and  Lawrence  I>ub>  w 
Klve  a  eptclalty.  Evans  Phelen  will 
entertain  with  some  feats  of  magic 
The  committee  of  women  who  wIU 
have  charBo  of  the  dinner  will  meet 
Rt  the  boys'  departnicnt  Monday  after- 
noon at  2  o'clock.  Mrs.  V  J.  Mceabe 
U   chairman   of   this   conunlttee. 

startod    out 


The    outing 


*      *      • 
coinmltteo 


on  a  hike  to  the  work  farm  this  aft- 
ernoon. The  members  took  a  car  to 
Duluth  Heights  and  walked  from 
there.  Th«  hike  will  be  ten  miles. 
Superintendent  Ward  entertained  the 
boya    to    dinner.  ,.    ,    i  _^ 

Sunday  the  Knights  of  Sir  f-alahad 
win  meet  at  3  o'clock.  Frank  Hath- 
away will  be  the  sp^^^kvi-.  Morris 
Bywater  and  John  Rich  will  be  the 
soloists.  Each  boy  bringing  two  mem- 
bers tomorrow  will  receive  a  picture 
of  Sir  Galahad.  Watson  S.  Moore  will 
be  the  speaker  at  the  Sun-lay  club, 
and  Hubert  Ralskey  will  be  the  leader 
There  will  be  a  musical  program<and 
luncheon. 


if.  with  the  place;   13.000  cash  la  re-  *• 

*  quired,  balance  on  very  reasonable  y{- 

*  terms.  The  right  man  can  take  *• 
if.  hold  of  this  place  and  get  a  large  it- 
if.  part   of  the    first   payment   out    or  ^- 


if.  part 

if.  the  timber 

i^       Lake     Bhore 


between  if- 


Spring    Work. 

"Disking  and  harrowing  again  In  the 
spring  will  make  a  well  prepared  seed 
bed  for  wheat.  A  firm  seed  bed,  with 
about   3   inches   of  fairly   moist  mulch. 


thlB  purpose. 


to    ihe    young    plant*   thftn    tbe    spiKe- 


tooth   harrow.' 


SPANISH,  AGRICULTURAL  COURSE  FOR 
GIRLS  AND  A  MODEL  FARM  FOR  SCHOOLS 


Co-educational  agricultural  courses 
for  high  school  sophomores,  a  Spanish 
course  in  high  schools  and  a  10-acra 
farm  for  practical  agricultural  work 
•were  recommended  to  the  board  of  ed- 
tication  laht  night  by  Supt.  U    E.  Den- 

^Other  curriculum  change's,  to  be 
rnado  with  a  view  of  broadening  the 
Vork  of  the  schools,  now  are  under 
consideration.  It  was  Intimated,  and 
fefforts  will  be  made  to  have  the  flrst 
throe  iniprovements  made  In  the  neai 
Tuture 

Many  Klrls  want  to  take  agriculture 
In  their  sophomore  year,  according  to 
E  P.  cUbson,  director  of  that  work, 
■.nd  the  present  course  is  Impractical. 
Mr     Gibson    also    want*    the    board    to 


appropriate  $10,000  to  be  used   in   pur- 
cha.slng  a  10-acro  farm   for  the  school. 

The  farm  would  be  fitted  up  with  a 
cottage,  a  small  dairy  barn,  a  poultry 
houiie.  lecture  hall,  creamery  and  lab- 
oratory. .  . 

Spanish  probably  will  become  a  per- 
manent addition  to  the  curriculum,  "in 
view  of  Its  commercial  value."  Classes 
will  be  started  whenever  fifteen  stu- 
dents  want   the   work. 

Mrs.  Ann  Dixon,  head  of  the  music 
department,  asked  the  board's  permis- 
sion to  use  the  schools  after  hours 
for  classes  In  music.  More  than  400 
applications  have  been  made  for  vio- 
lin instruction  and  eighty  want  to 
take  lessons  on  other  Instruments.  The 
Instructors  will  con\e  to  the  schools, 
under  the  present  plan,  and  give  les- 
sons at  reduced  rates. 


IGHTSa-^, 

OF 


iHADOWS 


©OLICE  Court 


TWO  MORE  RAIDS. 

Police  Make  Five  Arrests  in  Alleged 
Disorderly  Resorts. 

The  more  alleged  disorderly  houses, 
one  on  West  Michigan  street,  and  the 
ether  on  Third  avenue  west,  were  raid- 
ed bv  detectives  yesterday  afternoon 
and   last    night.      Five   arrests    resulted. 

At  the  Third  avenue  place  Mrs.  Eliza- 
beth Thompson.  48;  Wlllidm  Stringer. 
4  4,  and  David  Parrlsli,  48.  were  ar- 
rested by  Detectives  Herman  Toewe 
and  J.  L.  Bradley.  The  Thompson, wom- 
an was  sentenced  to  sixty  days  n  Jail 
for  drunkenness,  and  the  men  pleaded 
not  guilty  to  disorderly  conduct 
charges. 

John  Tavlor.  42.  and  Mane  Steven*. 
29.  arrested  by  the  same  officers 
earlier  in  the  day.  when  found  together 

hotel. 


captured  by  Superior  police  yesterday 
and   held   for  Supt.  Fred   Ward. 

Magwood  took  French  leave  on 
March  28  while  working  in  the  brush 
not  far  from  the  farm.  He  was  sent 
there  March  1  to  serve  a  sixty -day 
sentence. 

In  municipal  court  today  he  was 
found  guilty  of  e.Hcaplng  from  the 
work  farm  and  will  serve  the  next 
three   months   at   the   county   Jail. 

Magwood  Is  an  old  offender,  accord- 
ing  to  police. 

LIKED  HER  RING. 


•clous   soon   afterwards   and   dying  be-  I 
fore  a  physician   could   reach   her.    Bha 
was  70   years  old.  ..    ^     •    *«  I 

Mrs.  Nelson  was  the  wife  of  the  .ate 
William  Nelson  and  had  lived  at  the 
fumlly  home  at  208  West  Seventh 
street  for  many  years.  The  family 
came   to   Duluth    In   1886. 

Members  of  the  family  said  they 
were  at  a  loss  to  explain  her  sudden 
death  as  she  had  not  complaln.Ml  of 
feeling  111  until  about  an  hour  before 
her  death.  She  had  enjoyed  the  best 
of  health  recently,  they  said. 

She  leaves  a  son,  Albert  v\  ..  and  a 
daughter,  both  of  whom  live  In  Du- 
luth Funeral  arransenients  have  not 
bean  made,  pending  the  outcome  ot 
the  coroner's  Investigation. 

ON  TOUR  OF 
INSPECTION 

Vice  President  Kerr  of  Steel 

Corporation  and  Others 

on  Ranges. 


steel  corporation  and  Oliver  Iron 
Mining  compauiy  officials  are  touring 
the  ranges  in  a  private  car,  starting 
from  Duluth  early  yesterday; 
Is  possible  that  they  will 
through  with  the  Inspection  of  the 
properties     and     equipment     for     two 

weeks..  ,        j,     x,.,     -m     n 

The  tour  is  occasioned  by  D.  U. 
Kerr,  vice  president  of  the  United 
States  Steel  corporation,  and  ^^J^"" 
vray  Shiras.  oi^e  agent  for  the  Oliver 
Iron  Mining  company,  both  of  New 
York,  making  their  annual  inspection. 
They  were  accompanied  from  Duiuin 
by  officials  resident  here,  these  being 
Vice  President  Pentecost  Mitchell 
the  Oliver  Iron  Mining  company;  J. 
McLean,  general  manager  o'  tnf^  c°"I 


[AST  STAND 
OFTHERY 

Typhoid  Carriers  Too  Often 

Encouraged  on  the 

Farm. 


of 


and    It 
not      be 


of 
H. 


uanv  George  D.  Swift,  assistant  treas- 
ure,.'and    John   Uno   Sebenlus.   mining 

'"on"  uTe  annual  tour  nilnute  inspec- 
tion is  made  of  all  the  properties  so 
the  trip  win  talre  some  time  as  al  of 
\hl  operating  mines  will  be  visited 
and  thoroughly  gone  over.  Mr  Kerr 
is  material   man  for  the  compan>^ 

The  trip  started  on  the  w«»tein  end 
of  the  range,  at  Coleralne,  an<*.>«Vn,a 
day  was  spent  in  Hibblng  ani  \  irglnla. 


a 
Leona     McLean     takes     off    her     rings 
when  she  has  occasion  to  do  some  work 
were  1  that  might  dirty  thenri 
charged    with    dii^orderly    conduct 
forfeited  |25  bail  each  by  non-appear- 


in      a     Michigan      street      note.,      w^e^e  ;  -— ^^-fdayi;  ago  Vhe  took  them  off 


Youth    Appropriates   It  to  "Get  New 
Stone  Put  In." 

Following    a    feminine    custom.    Miss  !  <|h»!-»»H»»»»»»»»»»*»»«»»»*»*J^ 

t 


Are  rural  files  wwwe/han  their  city 
brethren?  ♦.     I 

Prof.  C.  W.  Howard  of  the  entomol- 
ogy department  of  the  state  college 
of  agriculture  says  that  they  are  and 
that  now  la  the  time  to  start  a  flyleas- 
farm   crusade.  ,  .^ 

Prof.  Howard  decliJrcB  that  the  farm 
flies  are  most  pestiferous  because  the 
majority  of  the  breeding  places  for  the 
fly  are  to  be  found  on.  the  farm—the 
outside  toilet  and  manure  pile  and  not 
to  mention  the-  fruit  and  vegetable 
matter  which  Is  left  to  decay  in  the 
gardens,  fields  and  orchards. 

"Only  on  the  far  outskirts  of  the 
city  of  today  may  bo  seen  the  old- 
time  toilet  or  the  barn  with  Its  at- 
tendant manure  pile,"  -says  Pfof.  How- 
ard. "The  city's  systfrns  of  sewerage 
ani  garbage  removal  have  made  an- 
cient history  of  these  health  menaces. 
If  the  countrj-  continue*  to  keep  them. 
Its  reputation  for  healthfulness  will  be 

ruinea,  ^  ^  *        •_  ♦ 

-Not  all  of  the  farm  homes  and  very 
f^V  of  thfc  bacna  are  screened.  The 
fly  finds  invitmg.  open,  unscreened 
windows  everywhere.  It  visits  the 
batn.  the  toilet,  the  milk  crocks  put 
out  'to  sun'  for  purity's  sake,  takes 
a  hin  across  the  batter.' nestles  In  the 
Jeljy  dish  or  rests  on  baby's  Hps  and 
cleans  its  feet.  Even  If  these  feet 
were  not  bacteria  laden  the  thought 
of  the  itinery   Is  not  altogether  pleas- 

VTvphold  results— ".peaceful  o4d  Dob- 
bin "trots  Into  iheHcity  for  medicine 
or  errands  and  'the  friendly  fly  goes 
with  liini.  In  droves.  Typhoid  In  the 
city  and  the  health  detectives  Inves- 
tigate   for   city    causes    In    vain. 

•The  breeding  'place  for  the  fly  must 
go.  Statistics  tell  us  that  every  forty 
seconds  a  child' die*  Trom  diseases 
traced  directly  in  fjy  Infection  and 
th«t  to  fly  Infection  is  aleo  traced  the 
continued  spread  of  tuberculosis.  Isn't 
the    flvlesB    farm    worth    consideration? 

"Screen  all  your  buildings — the  anl- 
I  male  are  no  fonder  of  the  files  than 
vou  are;  sun  your  crocks  on  a 
Bcrfiened-ln  porch;  «pread  the  manure 
on  the  fields  as  it  \i  removed  from  the 
stable — science  h^8  proved   that  thinly 


property 
if.  Duluth  and  Two  Harbors  located  * 
«,  on  the  new  proposed  boulevard  Is  •* 
S  held  very  closely  and  little  of  It  >?■ 
^  offered  at  any  price.  We  can  sell  aj 
if.  you     ten     acres     facing  boulevard  v 

#  and    lake    shore,     fine     hardwood  ^ 

#  land.  2  or  Z  acres  cleared.  Frame  ^ 
^  house,  barn,  a  few  acres  cleared,  « 
*i  small  fruit  trees  and  other  Im-  * 
if.  provementa.  Our  price  will  ap-  # 
if.  peal  to  you.     

%  80  acres  lust  east  of  Brlmson  ^ 
if.  bordering     Cloquet     river,     which  # 

#  must  be  sold  before  May  1.  Can  ^ 
if.  make  very  easy  terms.  Price  one-  * 
if.  third  below  its  value. 

if,  

if.      Adjoining    above     80     acres 

i  land  we  have  89  acres  upon  which 

if.  there  is  a  4-room  log  house,  wood-  * 

#  house,  granary,  log  barn  20x80,  * 
jl,  room  for  6  head  of  stock  and  «  or  * 
£  8  tons  of  hay;  good  hen  house;  16  * 

#  acres  under  plow.  20  acres  more  # 
«  nearly  all  cleared;  well  and  good  * 

#  pump.  Boir  is  heavy  sand  loam  «r 
Z  with  clay  subsoil.  Price  ILfOO,  f 
if.  which  is  />nly  about  what  the  Im-  # 
?  provements  cost.  By  combining  * 
if.  the    two    above    properties    a    160-  * 

* 


160  acres  Pierce  county,  2^4  * 
if.  miles  from  good  city;  130  acrea  * 
if.  under  cultivation;  balance  hay  if. 
if.  land;  all  level,  rich  loam  soil.  -J 
if.  Good  five-room  house,  large  hip 
•^  roof  barn,  granary  and  other  if. 
if.  buildings.  Buildings  surrounded 
•j^  by  largcf  grove  of  trees.  This  farm 

*  is    a    genuine   bargain.      Price    for  # 

#  quick  sale,  |5,BO0.  Will  make  * 
if.  terms  to  suit.  » 
* 


acre  farm  could  be  obtained  that  -^ 
would  be  particularly  adapted  for  •* 
stock  and  dairy  farming. 

EBERT -WALKER  COMPANY, 

Farm  Land  Dealers. 

31B-1«  Torrey  Building, 

Duluth.   Minn. 


■ft- 
* 

I 
I 


820    acres    Rolette    county,    four 

*  mllea  from  good  city.     All  level, 

*  very  rich  black  loam  soil,  with  a 
if.  little  spring  creek  running  through  * 
if.  one  forty;  250  acres  under  cultlva-  if. 
i^  tlon,  balance  pasture;   large   two-  * 

tBtory  house;  two  hip-roof,  cement  # 
and  stone  foundation  barns;  two  * 
if.  large  granaries,  all  buildings  are  * 
if.  new  and  In  first-class  condition.  # 
if.  Buildings    alone    cost    over   $4,600.  » 

*  Excellent     water,     rural     delivery 
if.  and  telephone,  schoolhouse  across 
if.  the  road,  church  on  the  corner  of  ^ 
^  this   land.     This   Is   a   very   hlgh- 

t  class   farm   and   one   of  the  finest 
improved    small    farms    in    North  w 
if.  Dakota.     Price,  f  14,000;  will  make 

*  reasonable  terms.  Adjoining  farm 
if.  sold  only  three  weeks  ago  at  8»5 
if.  per  acre. 
if,  • 
if.  We  have  many  other  farms 
^4  which  we  will  be  glad  to  show  if^ 
if.  you,  but  the  above  are  the  best  ^ 
if.  bargains  being  offered  in  North  # 
if.  Dakota  today.  Make  arrange-  'X. 
if.  mcnts  to  join  our  excursion  leav-  ',¥• 
*,  ing  Duluth  and  Superior  on  the  ^. 
if.  IBth.    For  further  information  call  # 

%  BTCKELL.   KYLLO  A   CO..  * 

if.       205  American  Exchange  Bldg., 
^  Duluth.    Minn. 


]?ARM  AND  MINERAL  LANDS. 

*  * 

#  TO   LEASE * 

#  *. 
if.  120 -acre    farm    fronting    on     city  -AiJ 

#  limits  In  Hermantown  district;  80  yf- 
ii-  acres  cleared  and  fenced;  has  been  # 
ig.  used  for  dairy  farm  for  many  if- 
if.  years;  seven-room  farm  house,  ^i 
^  good  apring  water,  good  road;  rent  if- 
if.  extremely  low.  Inquire  of  C.  F.  # 
it  Graff,  406  Lonsdale  Bldg:.,  Duluth.    ^- 

FOR  SALE— MINNESOTA  LAND. 
40  acres  St.  Louis  county  unimproved 
land;  some  timber;  easily  cleared; 
good  highways;  close  to  school;  2 
miles  from  town  and  only  IT  mllea 
from  Duluth,  Minn.;  a  desirable  par- 
cel of  land;  will  sell  very  reasonable. 
Address  F.  L.  Koempel,  owner,  7T8 
Hague    ave.,    St.    Paul.    Minn. 

FOR  SALE — By  owner.  40  acres  of 
fine  farm  land  situated  S  miles  from 
Pike  Lake  and  1  mile  from  Ric* 
Lake.  Ideal  place  for  hunting  and 
fishing;  $50.00  down  buys  it.  The 
rest  In  five  years.  This  Is  a  snap. 
If  interested,  call  Park  188-Y  after 
6  p.  m. 

FOR  SALE — Nine  acres  of  rich  land, 
cleared  and  fenced,  ready  to  plow; 
live  creek,  good  water  runs  through 
corner  of  land.  Some  buildings,  waljk- 
Ing  distance,  SOth  ave.  e.  Price,  $2.. 00. 
Terms  to  suit.  Greenfield  Realty  Co. 
416    Providence   bldg. 


ACRE  TRACTS. 

FOR^  SALE — By  owner,  finest  cotttige 
at  Exeter  Farms;  three  rooms,  clothes 
closet,  two  large  porches,  extra  well 
built,  over  an  acre  of  ground,  all 
cleared,  half  under  cultivation,  large 
chicken  house  and  yard,  on  main  road, 
good  8-cent  bus  service  to  the  door, 
close  to  car  line;  easy  terms.  Call 
Modem  Plumbing  &  Heating  Co., 
Grand  2288-Y  or  Lakeside  66-L. 

FOR  SALE— Two  acres  cleared  land  be- 
tween Lester  river  and  Exeter  Farms; 
near  to  neighbors  and  good  road;  two 
blocks  east  from  the  bus  line.  Quick 
sale  at  a  bargain.  Call  Park  183-X. 


FOR  SALE — 9  acres  ready  for  the -plow, 
with  creek  through  the  land;  aomp 
buildings;  walking  distance,  "S6th  ave. 
e  •  $2,700,  easy  terma  Greenfield 
Realty  Co..  416  Provldenc*  Wdr. 


if- 
it- 
it- 
it- 


FOR  SALE  OR  EXCHANGE, 
BEAUTIFUL.  LAKE  FRONTAGE. 


jK.  63  acres  on  good  auto  road  within  it 
easy  reach  of  Duluth;  would  ^ 
make  a  fine  summer  home;  price  * 
very  reasonable;  some  improve-  if. 
ments.  Would  take  light  car  as  # 
part  payment,  balance  annually.  * 

»■ 

farm    near    Arnold;    new  if. 


9A*a^rA       

4-room  frame  house,  good  barn;  it 
IS  acres  cleared,  6  acres  plowed;  * 
would  trade  for  house  In  city,  *■' 
preferably  West  Duluth.  Price  * 
$2,400.  Improvements  are  worth  if- 
all  that  is  asked  for  the  place.      # 

ilr 


•*i  120  acres  in  Carlton  county,  Minn,  if- 
Would  trade  for  car  or  city  * 
property.  * 


TIMBER  LANDS. 

TIMBER  and  cut-over  lands  bought; 
mortgage  loans  made.  John  Q.  A. 
Crosby,  806  Palladio  bldg. 

FOR  SALE  —  Several  good  timber 
claims  cheap.  Northern  Realty  Co.. 
627  Manhattan  bldg. 


it- 


JEWELRY    REPAIRED. 

Have    Lange   do    your   repairing   right. 
Cash  for  old  gold.     12  Lake  ave.  n. 


ince. 


FOR  HIS  STOMACH'S  SAKE. 


Hans  Lund  Took  One  Drink  and  Goes 
to  Work  Farm. 

Apricot  brantly  is  fine  for  a  stomach 
ache  but  one  drink  of  It  cost  Hans 
Lund.  41.  his  liberty  for  fifteen  days. 

Probation  Officer  Frank  Hicka  saw 
Lund  On  the  street  and  noticed  that 
he  evidently  was  under  the  infltieiice 
of  liquor.  He  brought  him  into  iruni- 
clpal  court  under  a  Dench  warrat.t. 

Lund  insisted  that  ho  h|id  taken  buT 
one  drink,  and  that  was  because  his 
stomach  was  In  bad  shape.  The  one 
drink  was  enough  to  break  the  parole, 
however.  fM  the  court  ordered  him  to 
be.  commltt!^- 

Fugitive  Is  Captured. 

After  being  at  liberty  for  nearly  two 

Ceeks,-'aaf»«ie   Maswood.   fugitive   from 
i»    St.    l^uis    county    workfarm,    was 


one  evening,  xhcn  she  started  to  wa.sh 
the  dinner  dishes,  and  Robert  Shea.  22. 
a   new   acquaintance,    began    to  admire 

one  of  the  rings.  .    cw        -.#      l!^ 

A  stone  was  missing,  and  Shea  of-  ^ 
fered  to  have  It  repaired.  Against  the  4^ 
girr«»  protest,  he  took  the  ring,  she  j  ^^ 
told   police,  and   that  was  the  last  ahe  j .» 


MELTIXti    ti^oW    REVEALS  ^  ^_    *  i 

BODV   or  PKAU  IXJAXT.  »  ^  "p— ",  fresh  manure  Is  far  better  than 

*  w     .^      «   ^.    A      /«.^  *  '  lh»    decayed    for    fertlliaing      for      the 

#  (irmtion.  ^j.  »..  A»m  »^**^  1 1  spring  rains  wash  IT  Into  the  ground. 
*.  rial  <•  I'fce  "•''•'*•  »r".f  Z!!m!!7l  I  I  r;uUd  a  bathroohi  If  you  can—If  you 
«  la    Wing    held    fcy    ^  ■•*^..  '•^li^  J  '  cannot,    then    screen    the    toilet,    use    a 

■■'  ^  !  large  metal  bucket  tha.t  can  be  emptied 


l.^-A.   i.««e.t  *'?P!?,'i« 
WaUk    99mntr  * 

fant    who**    l»«M»y    *•••    t»mm*    ••  « 
tiM  fcank  of  the  R*d  river  mmwewmi  » 


being    held    ky     WaUk 
offfelalN   iNt*   the    death  •€   mm 


ad- 


8HW     ot    it. 

In    niunlrlpal    court    today    Shea 
mitted  taking  the  ring,  whlv}}  ^'^'i  ^'V' 
ued  at  $10.     He  sold  It  for  50  cents,  he 

Judge  F.  H.  Cutting  sentenced  him 
to  pav  a  fine  of  $82.60,  or  to  serve 
sixty  days  at  the  work  farm. 

INQUEST  ON  AGED 
WOMAN'S  DEATH 


An  Inquest  will  be  held  to  Inquire 
into  the  death  of  Mrs  Edvarda  Nel- 
son pioneer  Duluthlan.  who  com- 
Dlaliied  of  not  feeling  well  about  11 
o'clock  this  morning  peoomtng  uucon- 


nllM  MMith  of  the  village  af  Pitf-  * 

**Ti^  h^y  waa  hrawKt  f  ll«h«  * 
hr  the  ateltliig  *»t  the  ^"•'•»^'T**"  X 
whlPh  M  had  b«^«  eoverrd.  It  had  W 
•ypareatir  I«»<i  hraealh  the  aaow  f 
far  aeveral    monthi*.  J 


DRESSMAKING. 

First-class    dressmaking    aha    crochet- 
by  day  or  home.     Mel.  797i>. 


ing 


»»i|i»»»»M*_»*M»»* 


BRITISH  CAPTURED  400 
MEN  IN  EAST  AFRICA 

fn   East  Africa,   reported  >"terday.     n- 


ihid'ed"the"cal)ture'of    n^e    than    400 
men  with  machine  guns  and  large  .up- 
plles   of   ammunition,    according 
oCficlal  statement     issued 
noon. 


this 


to   an 
after 


rather  than  permit  the  soil  to  become 
germ-permeated,  or  hulld  a  septic 
tank.  The  outlay  is  small  compared 
with  the  resulting  coinfort,  safety  and 
progressive  citizenship.  (Jet  rid  of  the 
files!     Be  a  flyless-fa>m  leader." 

"TAPS^'  FOR  VETERAN, 

Last   Rites  for   BemidjI   Man   Who 
Served  in  New  T^rk'  Regiment. 

Bemldjl.  Minn..  ApHl.-«.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Jamqa  Fuller,  an  old 
soldier,  80  years  old.  died  at  his  home 
on  MU^issiPPl  avenue  Thursday  morn- 
ln»  following  an  Illness  of  several 
moBths.  Mr.  Fuller  hmM  been  a  resl- 
Jertt  of  Beroldjl  fort,  fburteen  years. 
During  the  Civil  war  Mr.  Fuller  served 
three  and  onc-half^jC£ars  as  adjutant 
In  CompaAy  9-ot  t«P*l8th  Ntfw  York 


has  been  active  In  work  of  th#  O.  A. 
R.  local  of  this  city.  Funeral  services 
were  held  at  the  home  today,  the  mem- 
bers of  the  KemldJl  G.  A.  R.  having 
charge  Mr.  Fuller  is  sursirad  by  his 
wife  and  a  daughter,  Mrs.  John  Kelsey 
of  Federal  Dam. 

—  •  — 

Forwev  Mlaneaataa  Klff^d: 

St.  Cloud.  Minn..  April  8.— «^ohn  A. 
Clark,  a  brothA-  of  George  S.  Clark  of 
this  city,  was  killed  In  Los  AttMlvs,  ac- 
cording to  advlcee  received  here.  He 
had  lived  at  Pomona,  Cs*.,-  twenty 
years,  but  was  formerly  station  agent 
at  Madelia.  Minn. 


WEST   Dl-TLUTH  REALTY  CO., 
6407   Ramsey  Street. 


^jyjfrTiitiMt'it^il^i^it'itit-itit^X^it^itit-i^'i^'it-ii^ 

FOR  SALE — On  one  of  the  beautiful 
lakes  near  Deerwood.  Minn..  120  acres 
choice  farm  land;  over  half  mile  lake 
frontage;  $500  worth  of  red  oak  and 
other  timber  on  one  forty;  balance  of 
land  easily  cleared:  good  roads  and 
lake  well  supplied  with  pike  and  bass. 
For  price  and  terms  address  J.  T. 
Dunphy.    430   Manhattan   bldg^ 


FOR  SALE  OR  LEASE— 167  acres  un- 
explored mineral  land  In  Lake  county, 
section  81,  68-11;  lots  8.  9.  10  and  U 
on  White  Iron  lake,  one  mile  south 
of  rich  ore-producing  mlna  Mrs. 
Emma  Pederson,  826  2nd  »t.  N.  side, 
Virginia,   Minn. 

FOR  SALE— 10-acre  truck  or  d^ry 
farm  on  Pike  Lake  road;  ten  minutes 
walk  from  street  car;  all  cleared  and 
fenced;  small  buildings;  price  $3  000, 
for  quick  sale;  terms  to  suit  Bickell- 
ICyllo   &  Co.,   205   Exchange  bldg 

FOR  SALE — 40  acres  at  French  river; 
6  acres  ready  for  see<Ung,  2  acres 
cleared  and  plowed;  5 -room  frame 
house,  log  barn  and  chicken  house. 
Inquire  upstairs  over  Home  laundr>', 
18  20th  gve.  w..  after  6. 

FOR  SALE — Sixty-acre  farm,  8  miles 
northwest  of  Wentworth.  Douglas 
county;  good  farm  buildings;  reasot>- 
able  terms.  A,  J.  Modlne,  Wentworth, 
Wis.- ^_ 

FOR  SALE— Lake  frontage;  if  >;ou 
want  a  piece  of  land  on  nice  lake, 
call  on  us.  We  have  it.  Northern 
Realty    Co.,    627    Manhattan    bldg. 

FOR  SAI^E — Four  forties,  flrst-claas 
farm  land;  lake  frontage;  20  miles 
from  town;  $1,500.  cash  $S00.  Owner, 
110  Pine  St.,  Virginia.  Minn. ^ 

FOR  SALE — 820  acres  fine  agricultural 
land;  ten  miles  southeast  of  Che>^nne 
Wells,  Colo.  Address  Nelson  M.  Ford, 
Cheyenne  Wells.  Colo. 

FOR  SALE— By  owner,  40  acres  min- 
eral land.  sW,;  of  se«4  section  18, 
township  46,  Crow  Wing  county.  Ad- 
dr(#is  C   28,   Herald. 

TO  EXCHANGE  for  small  auto,  40  acres 
good  land  on  Gooseberry  river;  splen- 
did location  for  hunting  lodg:  Box 
706,  Two  Harbors.  Minn. ___. 

BARGAIN- $1,000  cash  buys  80  acres 
in  83-14  close  to  Consolidated  mines. 
Northern  Realty  Co.,  627  Manhattan 
bldg. 

BEAUTIFUL  RIVER  front  farms  at 
Meadowlands  on  easy  terms.  L  n o 
Llnd.strom,  31  E.  Michigan  st.  Duluth. 

FOB  SALE — 40  acres  half  mile  from 
Munger,  on  road;  $860,  easy  tertns.  E. 
E.  Helland,  101  39th  ave.  w..  Dulwth. 

WANTED    TO    RENT    or    buy    a    small' 
farm  In  Wisconsin  or  Southern  Minne- 
sota^  

I  BUY  and  sell  lands  and  timber.  Geo, 
Jtupley.  612  Lyceum  bldg^ 


FOR  SALE— Farm,  70  acraa,  86  cleared 
and  plowed;  ope  mile  east  of  Lake 
Nebagamon^  "T-room  house,  span  of 
mules.  86  chickens,  4  milch  cowa,  1 
heifer.  1  bull,  full  set  of  implements, 
sleds,  wagon,  2-seated  buggy,  mower, 
drags.  8  tons  hay.  etc.;  $6,000,  half 
cash,  balance  to  suit.  Agusta  Bnglund, 
Lak#  Nebagamon, 

80  ACRES  only  $3,006;  30  acres  cleared, 
balance  hardwood  timbered  pasture, 
considerable  maple;  practically  level 
surface;  clay  loam  over  clay  sub-soil; 
fenced  good  buildings,  house,  sum- 
mer kitchen,  barn,  granary,  machine 
shed,  good  roads,  telephone  in  house. 
Te*m8.   C.  A    Melberg.   Lewie.    Wis. 


RAIL^OAD^TIMEJ^^ 

'"'OuiiltfJlron  Range  Rail  Road. 

'     •^Tennlllon    K— te." 


v.   D.  Elevatar  Bi 

Conway.  N.  D..  April  8— The  elevator 

owned    here    by    the    Atlantic    Elevator 

company  of  Minneapolis  was  destroyed 

by    fire    Thursday.      Fifteen    thousand 

bushels   of  grain  were  In  the  elevator. 

The   salvage   will   be   slight.     The  «re 

cause  Is  not  definitely  known.  Th«  loss 

Is  about  $26,000. 

« 

Killed  By  Raaaway  Team. 

Jamestown.  N.  D.,  April  8— Henry 
Hllller,  21.  died  here  yesterday  of  in- 
juries received  at  Buchanan  several 
days  ago.  Attempting  to  stop  runaway 
horses,     he    waa     thrown     under    th.| 


FOR  SALE— FORTY- ACRE  TRACT  OF 
farm  land,  two  miles  from  Brook - 
ston.  on  county  road:  splendid  log 
building  under  construction;  well 
and  numerous  outbuildings;  few 
acres  cleared;  cash  or  terras  to  suit 
purchaser.  Rowe  McCamus,  Brook- 
stpn,  Minn. 

BIG  LAND  SALE — 6.000  acres.  In  sight 
state  capital.  Helena,  Mont.;  fertile 
soil,  big  crops,  best  markets;  80  to  320 
acres;  $16  to  $35;  easy  terms;  liter- 
ature free.  Western  States  Land  & 
Dev.    Co.,    Helena,    Mont.       


DLXLTHr- 

RiUfe 


glw.  rir«  lUrton. 
ttr,  WlBton  tut- 
ror*.  Biwsbtt,  McKlntar 
gptfU,  ETeklk,  GUbert, 
VUttlnJ*. 


U»w.       \      Anrl<t. 
•T30».«.  I  tUJ0s.su 


t  3  15P. 
tllJOp. 


530p.i>. 
SlOlSp.a. 
sl0  46p.a. 


*—i>»iir  i—Utiif  escejjt  Sundajr.  S— MUed  tnda 
leaws  daily  froa  n.'tr-nUi  Avnu?  Ewt  SUUao. 
8— Mixed  ualB  write*  d»ll»  eicfpi  SuDdar  H  Kin«nth 
A»enue    Etrt    StaUoo.      -     * — -    ' -'""    "-"'    «""rf— 


s— Amve*    Vnlon    Pivot    ttuadar 


DULUTH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 


Ofttcvt 


4M  Weat  Ba»c*tar  St., 
Pi 


infantry,  and  during  his  residence  here  I  wagon   and   crushea 


168  ACRES,  3  miles  from  Nevis.  Minn.; 
good  land,  near  lake,  new  buildings; 
80  fenced.  86  acres  plowed.  Will  sell 
or  take  Duluth  residence  property  In 
exchange.  Write  owner.  Charles  Nel- 
»o,n.  Nevis,  Minn.,  Route  a. . 

Parties  desiring  to  clear  lands,  wrtte 
F.  J.  Kupplnger,  Davenport,  Iowa. 


U««e. 


Am«a 


f  llitatkli«.   ChUhola,   VlrclaU, 
it    Mh.   Colrrala*.    ShMun.   tM 
(.       tain   Iron,    apart*. 


Eft-1 

win-    h*  8:t(sa 
Bt<abik.       j 


Uibliius.    Chiibolm,    Sttarao. 
MrglaU.    KwUUi, 
tolM'atiM. 
VlrclnU, 

CbUbola 

HibMi«. 


^•ttJtSB 

J 

1 

l*t84<#" 

J 


»=,  ^ 


-r-aaffl 


•— Oallr. 

wabik. 


t— 0*11/    •«««»»    Sunday.      t— CxctVt    H- 


Cafe   Observation   Car.    Mlssabe    Rang* 

Points.   Solid  VestJbuled   Train. 
-L-li    i 

DULUTH  k  MtTNEM  ■IgMCMTA^fAlMIY.;. 
01>«.  810   LMaMa  BMt.,   Dalalk. 
Tnini  connect   at  Knife   Rlw   dally    texcopt   Sttoday) 

jZiJ  *t  U^taOi  (BadloB*   al  10  15  p.  m.     CoQaart  •! 


; 


^*. 


'• 


I 


z:. 


'."■f" 


witmm 


t^..-.*  ■«!■■   .!■■■  I    «■     •^ 


>  (-*    *  *   »   ^F\  ***%  'JtLJU  "-*>     ^   _ipi    IB  iP  II 


> 

30 


Saturday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  8, 1916. 


FOR    SALE— MISCELLANEOUS. 

#  —ALUMINUM  SPECIALS —  # 

#  ^ 

'!i>  Uf^ro  1«  poir.ethlnK  that  Is  a  roc-  if- 

^  onl-brcHk.  r.     Think  c.f  It!   Thirty-  * 

V^  five  pleoos  of  Rood  aluminum  ware  * 

i^  for  only  |6.a8;  another  s«t  consist-  •Sf 

^  ing  of  Bcvpn   pieces  at   $7.98.  "^ 

^  KNC.EH  &  OLSON.  * 

^  Ninotfcnlh  Avr.   W.  and   Sup.  St.  •Jf 


I 


-A  BIG  SNAP- 


•X- 
a. 


#  If  taken  at  once,   will  sfll  a  u.sed 
a-  hiKh-KTHde    standard    make    piano   .. 
^  for  ?100  on  <Ht>y  ttrm.s;  10  per  cent  if- 
^  discount    for    oaBh. 

#  Addrrss  Piano  Parffaln, 

#  Caru  of  The  Herald. 


if' 


BUSINESS  CHANCES. 

if^if^if^^^f^fifi&if^ 

i(-  i{' 

\  it>                FOR  SALE  OR  RENT.  # 

liir  * 

I  A-  Motion  picture  theaters,  with   full  ■^- 

^  if-  equipment;    one   small    theater    for  if- 

I*.  $236.     rent    only    $25.      Half-price  it> 

\  if-  sale   on    sllKhtly   used    motion   pie-  if- 

:  if-  ture  machines  for  electric  or  cal-  •^- 

if  clum   llsht.      Film    and    son»  'aets.  if- 

!  if  Lverythlntf    used    In    the    buslnea.'i  # 

if-  either    for    theaters     or    truvelinK  if 

^  shows,  bought,  sold  and  exchanged,  if 

i(r  X- 

it-       NATIONAL   EQUIPMENT  CO..  * 

if-       Motion    I'icture    Machines    and  if- 

if.                             Supplies.  'k- 

if.  417  W.  Michigan  St..  Duluth,  Minn,  if 

if.  * 

if^a^if-Pfif-^f^fifif'if^Mf^if'if'iHf^f^ifififi^if- 


14  FOR  RENT  MAY   1.  * 

i(^iy:f^ifi:'if-:fif^ii^^ifii'iy»iHfifi^i^ii^-^^\i('  Three-story    and    basement    brick  * 

-'if  hotel  building  at  440  Lake  ave.  s. ;  if 

\i(-  37  guest  rooms,  lobby,  dining  room,  if 

\if  kitchen    and    good-sized    storv    on  if 

if.  first    ttovir;    steam    heating     plant,  if 

!  if  For   further   particulars   see —  if 

if.       JOHN  A.  .STEPHENSON  &  CO..  * 

if.  Wolvln    Pulldlng.  if 


FOR  RENT— HOUSES.   

"if^ifiiififft^^X^^ 

a.  FOR   RENT.  V* 

if-  1405  East  Superior  street — An  8-  if 
lit'  room  house  In  excellent  condl-  if 
\if.  tlon;  hot  water  heat.  Possession  if- 
,  if-       can    be   given   May   1 — $46.  if 

I  .^  if 

\i(i  1830    Jefferson   street — A    very    at-  if 

i  if-  tractive    homo    of    eight    rooms,  if 

'  if.  on   the  southwest  corner  of  Jef-  if 

[if.  ferson     street     and     Nineteenth  if 

I  if.  avenue  east;   In   excellent  condl-  -^ 

'if.  tlon;   hot   water  heat;   largo,  at-  it- 

\.if  tractive    grounds;    a  "solid   com-  if 

if.  fort"    house — $62.60.     May   1.         * 

I*  f 

\if.  1''.28      East      First     street — Seven-  if 

I  Vf       room  house  with  two  additional  if- 

Amnll    rooms    finished    off    In    the  if- 

attic;  win  bo  decorated  through-   9c- 

out  to  suit  tenant — $40.  if- 

if' 


TALKI.VO    MACHl.NES — Largest    Stock 
In  the  city.  Complete  outflt.s  at  special 

firic »'.«.  He  surf  >ou  get  the  New  Co- 
unibia  "Irafunola;  awarded  three 
grand  jirlzes  and  two  gold  medals  at 
the  worlds  fair;  double-fa<'ed  records 
66  <ent8;  ask  for  catalogues  free;  only 
ex<hi.«i\e  talking  machine  .«>tore  In 
iJuIuth.  largest  stock.  Edraont.  18 
8rd   ave.   w. 


FnM  SALE— Fur.-*,  valuable  set  fltch 
and  ntar-seal.  silk-lined,  latest  stylo. 
«iuite  new.  J50  set  sacrifice  for  $8. 
AI.«o  Kent's  valuable  fur-lined  over- 
ennt.  only  worn  three  times.  English 
Moliun  I  loth.  $96  coat,  sacrifice  for 
|20.  Rrnson  f«ir  selling-,  le.-iving  for 
California  nsidmce.    Call  1:^3  W.  2nd  st. 


FOR  SALE — Entire  stock  of  furniture 
contained  in  salesrooms.  2110-2112 
\\\  Superior  St.,  will  be  sold  for  60 
per  cent  lo.>is  than  retail  price,  to  ca.-'h 
buy<T.«^.  Thousaii'ls  of  pieco.<>,  Just 
what  you  tieed  to  furnish  tho  home 
co.«lly.      Cameron    Furniture    Co. 


FOR  S.\I>: — Very  clieap  to  close  out 
quick,  one  Rond  player  piano,  also 
two  fine  pianos,  walnut  and  oak 
cahes.  If  yf(U  are  planning  to  purchase 
a  piano,  don't  fall  to  see  these.  We 
can  arrange  terms.  R.  R.  Forward  A 
Co..   124    E.   Superior   st. 


IF  YOU  HAVE  the  cash,  you  can  save 
£0  per  cent  on  quality  furniture  for 
the  home  ri^ht  now  at  the  closing  out 
•ale  of  Cameron  Furniture  Co.;  stock 
•alesrooms.   2110-2112   W.   SuperIor_8t. 

FOR  SAL1-: — P'ull-blooded  black  cock- 
er spaniels,  also  brown  water  span- 
Id  puppies:  nmlos.  $10;  females,  $6. 
Gordon  Dale  kennels.  Park  Point. 
Mel.   6101.     Stamp   for  r»ply. 

FOR  S.\LE — 2  safes,  1  adding  machine, 
large;  1  rolltup  desk,  1  dictaphone  out- 
fit   coniplfto.    1    time    clock.    1    stencil 
m.ii-hino,    4    scales,    \arious   siz^B.  Call 
Lakeside   304  after  7    p.    m. 

Fnit    SALE— Clean      sweep      of      every 

piece  of  furniture,  rugs  and  stoves, 
■  11  go  regardless  of  cost,  at  half  and 
many  less.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co.,  122- 
124   E.  Superior  st. 

FOR  SALE — An  assortment  of  fixture^. 
Including  lighting  fixtures,  suitable 
for  furniture  or  other  store,  will  sell 
cheap.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co.,  124  E. 
Sup.    at. 

FOR  S.\LE — Second-hand  woodworking 
machinery,  portable  sawmill,  trans- 
mission apidiances,  pipes  for  steam, 
water  and   furnaces.   Duluth^lach.  Co. 

FOR  SALE— $750  player  piano  for  $285 
and  $375  piano  for  $225.  also  $300 
piano  for  $165,  cash  or  time.  Korby 
X'iano  Co.,   26   Lake  ave.    n. 

FoR~S  ALE— Piano.  $60;  dining  table 
and  6  chairs.  $20;  hat  rack,  $2.50; 
Swiss  music  box.  $20;  electric  dome, 
$3.50.      227    either  phone^ 

DOviS  of  all  breeds  bought  and  sold; 
expert  on  dog  diseases;  dogs  boarded. 
Stamp  for  reply.  (Jordon  Dale  Kennels, 
I'ark    Point.    Mel.    6101. 


FOR    SALE- 


H.     P. 


electric  motor, 
largest  size  Kas  range,  shafting  and 
pulleys;  all  nearly  new;  cheap.  926 
E.    2nd    Bt.    Mel.    5893. 

FOR  SALE — Cheap;  Mehlin  concert 
grand  piano,  on  account  of  not  being 
able  to  ship:  terms  can  be  arranged  to 
f,u\t.    T    47.    Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Used  gas  ranges,  re-enam- 
eled and  p»it  In  good  repair  at  very 
«asy  figures.  Anderson  Furniture 
Co.."  21st  ave.  w. 

FOR  SALE  —  RARGALV.  V4-YARn 
concrete  mixer.  Novo  mgine.  good 
condition.  Rogers  &.  McLean,  Ly- 
ceum building.        

FVjR  S.\LE — Fumed  oak.  Stlckley  dav- 
enport with  leather  cushion;  excellent 
condition;  owner  leaving  city.  1328 
E.    2nd    St. 

FOR  SALE — $8  buys  nearly  new  Ea.st- 
m:in  folding  kfxluk.  po.itcard  size, 
co.-Jt  $22.50.  Apply  Linen  store,  8  E. 
1st    St.  

FOR  SALE — $350  almost  new  piano; 
will  take  $165:  one-half  casli.  balance 
on    time.      Address    A    948,    Herald. 

F<>R  SALE — «;as  range  with  hot  water 
attachment;  In  excellent  condition; 
reasonable.     27    N.    29th    ave.    w. 

FOR  SALE — Rabys  full  size  collapsing 
baby  buggy:  good  condition;  price, 
18.      Call    «;rand   1926-A. 

FOR  SALE — Lady's  driving  horse,  bug- 
by.  cutter  and  outfit.  Inquire  1610  E. 
2nd   St.   Mel.    2928. 

FOR  SALE— Household  fiirnlture.  ex- 
cellent condition;  owner  leaving  city. 
Call  431   E.   2nd  st. 


FOR  SALE— A  Fischer  upright  piano; 
oak  case:  price  $90.  W.  \V.  Watson, 
903    AVolvIn    bldg.  

FOR  SALE — Player  piano,  with  music, 
at  a  bargain;  easy  payments.  Edmont. 
18    3rd    ave.   w. 

For  SALE — New  rag  carpet.  60c  per 
yard.  6729  Tioga  st.  Phone  Lake- 
slde    348-K. 

FOR  SAI.,E— Collie  pups.  Jeanneffe 
Boytr.  219  2nd  ave.  e.  Mel.  1795; 
Grand   1038. 

FOR  SALE— Steel  range  and  heater. 
Win  sell  cheap  If  taken  at  once.  412 
E.    6th   St. 

FOR  SALE — $650  player  piano;  cash  or 
terms  <an  be  arranged,  $245.  Z  867, 
Herald. 

Ft)R  -SALE — I  have  a  dandy  6-month- 
old  female  Airedale;  $6.     Doug.  182-M. 

FOR  SALE— $260  new  piano;  will  take 
$125    cash.      Address    A    941,"  Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Furniture,  odds  and  ends 
at    half    price.      Boston    Music    Co. 

FOR  SAI..E — Show  case  In  good  condi- 
tlon.   Call    503   W.    Michigan    st. 

FOR  SALE— New  collapsible  baby  car- 
riage,  cheap.     Call  Mel.    5767. 

FOR  SALE— Extension  dining  table 
McI.   3691. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES — For  sale — Light 
grocery.  cigar  and  confectionery 
store;  excellent  street  car  corner; 
rent  $30;  two  rooms  can  be  used  for 
living  purposes;  price  $1,200.  part  cash 
and  time,  or  $1,000  cash;  owner  has 
other    business.      Write    Z    66.    Herald. 

EOR  SALP3 — 6  acres  In  center  of  good 
little  country  town  where  there  are 
many  opportunities  for  a  business 
man;  this  lan.l  for  platting  would  be  a 
money-nuiker;  will  be  sold  now  very 
cheap,  as  1  need  the  money.  Writ* 
(i.    Johnson.    4619   Gladstone   st. 

1.000  STOCKHOLDERS  at  $25  will  com- 

f»lete  Ind.  pendent  oil  refinery.  Drlll- 
ng  on  3.000  acres.  Refining  our  own 
oil  will  pay  double  dividends.  Shares 
26  cents,  par  value,   $1.      Not  a  wildcat 

ftropositlon.    Developers    Oil    &    Refln- 
ng   Co.,   Shreveport,   La^ 

WANTED  TO  BUY — «  or  7-room  house, 
6th  St.  or  below;  $1,000  cash,  balance 
monthly;  give  full  particulars  In  1st 
letter;  prefer  to  deal  with  owner; 
m'lst  be  a  bargain  and  not  over 
$3,600.  Write  X  82,  Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHANChJS— Fine  location 
for  lunchroom  In  new  building,  1st 
ave.  w.  above  Superior  st.;  can  be  con- 
nected with  adjoining  poolroom  and 
barber  shop.  If  Jesired.  Inquire  706 
I'rovldence  bldg. 

MANUFACTURING  CO.  wants  state  and 
county  agents  to  open  office  and  man- 
age salesmen;  $60  to  $100  weekly;  new 
guaranteed  starter  for  Ford  cars; 
price  $12.50.  Droford  Starter  Co.,  De- 
troit, Mich. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES — For  sale  gro- 
cery store,  12  blocks  from  end  of 
Woodland  car  line  on  Calvary  road; 
will  consider  renting  building  and 
selling  stock  and  fixtures.  Grand 
2212-D. 

BL'SINMSS  CHANCE — Rare  opportun- 
ity; wanted  party  to  finance  profit- 
able business;  $300  required;  exper- 
ience unnecessary;  curiosity  seekers 
save    stamps.      Address   O    77.    Herald. 

FOR  SALE — By  owner,  small  grocery 
store,  postofflce  In  connection;  located 
near  railroad  shops;  price  reasonable; 
terms  if  desired.  Address  O.  O. 
Woods,     Hopper,     Minn. 


FOR  SALE — At  a  bargain,  old  estab- 
lished tailoring,  cleaning  and  repair 
shop,  doing  first  class  business;  rea- 
s»>n  for  selling,  other  business.  Write 
F   71,    Herald. 


BUSINESS  CHANCER — For  rent,  cheap, 
large  hotel,  modern  and  central;  If 
you  want  a  money  maker,  see  us. 
Northern  Really  Co.,  627  Manhattan 
bldg. 

BT^SI.N'ESS  CHANCES — For  Sale — Mod- 
ern 3-chair  barber  shop;  good  busi- 
ness; a  snap  If  taken  at  once.  Write 
T.    C.    Blewltt,    Bralnerd.    Minn. 


FOR  SALE — Moving  picture  theater. 
Jolng  nice  bvisln<'ss;  owner  In  other 
business;  bear  closest  Investigation. 
Write  owner,  K  964,  Herald. 

FOR  SALIC — Restaurant  and  confec- 
tionery, worth  $400;  sale  price  $260;  or 
willing  to  take  partner.  Apply  Grand 
1613-X. 

FOR  SALE — Centrally  located  proper- 
ty, used  for  rooming  house;  6-year 
lease  to  good  parties.    206  Palladto  bldg. 


BUSINESS  CHANCE.S— For  sale— Sev- 
eral oak  filing  cases,  «heap.  Dunning 
&   Dunning.   500  Alworth   bldg. 


PRIVATE   HOSPITALS. 

PRIVATE  HOME  before  and  during 
confinement;  good  care  by  experienced 
nurse;  Infarts  tared  for.  Mrs.  Flnkle, 
213   W.   3rd  st.   Mel.    2454. 


PRIVATE  HOME  for  women  before  and 
during  confinement;  expert  care;  In- 
fants cared  for.  Ida  Pearson,  M.  D., 
284   Harrison   ave.,  St.   Paul. 

MRS.  K.  THORSTENSON,  nurse  and 
midwife;  private  home.  1602  28th  st., 
Superior,   Wis.     Ogd en   8 5 1-X^ 

MRS.  H.  OLSON.  graduate  midwife; 
private  hospital  and  home.  329  N. 
B8th  ave.  w.  Phones.  Cole  173;  Cal.  270. 

MR.S.  HANS71N,  graduate  midwife;  fe^ 
male  con»plaints.  413  7th  ave.  e.  Zen. 
1225. 


Mrs.  Ekstrom.  graduate  midwife.  1924Vi 
W.    3rd    St.      Lin.    163-D:    Mel.   7458. 


SITUATION  WANTED— MALE. 

SITUATION  WA.NTED — Am  employed, 
but  have  two  to  three  hours'  spare 
time  every  day  after  4  o'clock;  will 
attend  to  correspondence,  clerical 
work,  collecting,  or  anything  that  will 
pay  at  least  $5  weekly.  Address 
C  7204.    HeraU. 


SITUATION  WANTED— Janitor  and 
watchman,  aged  60;  good  habits,  trust- 
worthy and  reliable  In  every  respect 
If  you  want  a  good  man.  Call  A.  P. 
Cook,  courthouse.       ^ 

SITUATIO.V  WANTED  —  Expert  ac- 
countant, experienced  in  office  and 
credit  management,  wants  to  make  a 
change;  highest  references.  Y  68, 
Herald.  

SITUATION  WANTED — As  grocery 
clerk;  five  years'  experience;  sober; 
can  furnish  references.  Write  M  69, 
Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED  as  elevator  boy; 
has  license.    Write   O   43,    Herald. 


LOST  AND  FOUND. 

LOST — Jet  rosary  Friday  morning,  be- 
tween cathedral  and  St.  Mary'a  hos- 
pital. Finder  call  Grand  1051-A.  Re- 
ward. 


FOR  SALE  OR  EXCHANGE. 

want^d'T^o^'ISxc^^ 

on  upper  side  of  London  road,  be- 
tween 26th  and  26th  ave.  e.,  for  160 
acres  land  in  St.  Louis  or  Lake  coun- 
ty, or  for  any  of  the  following  stocks: 
Big  Ledge,  Maria  Mining.  Cactus 
Cons.,  Butte  &  Zenith  or  Onahman 
Iron.  Address  Presto,   Herald. 

WANTED  TO  EXCHAN<;e_80  acres 
near  Babbitt  lake  and  nice  Improved 
farm  In  Aitkin  county  for  standing 
timber.  Northern  Realty  Co.,  627 
Manhattan   bldg. 

WANTED  TO  EXCHANGE— For  min- 
ing stocks;  Big  Ledge  or  Carnegie 
Lead  &  Zinc;  a  fine  lot,  (Jary.  First 
division.   J.    Adcock,   116^    W.    Ist   st. 


LOST— 6-month-old  English    setter  pup; 
owner's    name    on   collar.      Reward    for  t  ^^  ~^^ 

Informatiori     as     to     his    whereabouts.    BOARD    AND     ROOM    OFFERED 
Call  Mel.   11,1. 


IXiST — Cameo  pin  in  Foresters'  hall  on 
1st  St.,  or  between  there  and  4th  st. 
on    4th   ave.     Call    Mel.    3582. 

liO.ST — Long  black  pocketbook  contaln- 
Ing  $8  in  currem  y,  and  book.  Finder 
call  Mel.  7368  for  reward. 

Lost — pair  white  kid  gloves  Friday  on 
8rd  ave.  w.  or  13th  ave.  e.  and  4th  st. 
Call  Mel.  2719. 

LOST — Silver,  greenstone  ring.  Call 
Mel.     4797. 


UPHOLSTERING. 

Furniture,    Automobiles   —   Reasonable 
price.  E.  Ott.  112  1st  ave.  W.  Phones. 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED— 
Strictly  private;  references  must  be 
furnished.      301    E.    4th   st. 

BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED^In 
private  family;  suitable  for  young 
lady.     Call    Mel.    4332. 

PRIVATE  FAMILY,  gentleman  pre- 
ferred.  $6.50  per  week,  27  N.  29th 
ave.    w. 

BOARD  FOR  few  ladles  or  gentlemen 
In   private   home.    832    E.    2nd   st. 

Modern  furnished  room  with  board. 
Mel.  4184.   213   E.   3rd  st. 


ADIEITISE  il  THE 


JOHN  A.    STEPHENSON   &    CO.,      if 
Wolvln    Building.  if- 

X- 
O^if'if^if'if^if^if^ii'if'if^if'if^if^X-it'if^iMt^'if 


if.  FLATS  AND  HOUSES. 

#  

if-  315  East  First  street — Modem  6- 
if'       room  Hat;  hot  water  heat.    Rent 

*  $30. 

^  

if.  431  East  Second  street — Elegant 
■^  8-room  modern  house,  with  hot 
if-  water  heat.  Rent  $60  per  month. 
a-  

if  129     West    Fourth     street — 6-room 
■;1^       modern  house.     Rent   $31. 
if.  

*  816  East  First  street — We  will 
^  have  an  elegant  6-room  heated 
if  apartment  here  after  May  1 — 
if-       $42.60. 

#  

•"it  614     East     First     street,     flat     C — 

■if  Modern     6-room     heated     apart- 

if-  ment.      Rent  $42.60. 

*  

a-  W.   M.   PRINDLE   &  CO.. 

i^  Lonsdale  Bldg. 

#  Grand    239— I'hones — Mel.    2400. 

0- 
if'ifif^^f'if'ifif'if-if^if^X'if^it'it-^f^if'X-^^if'if^ 


—HOUSES— 


J.   D,  Howard   &   Co.,   Providence  Bldg. 

1610%  and  1612  E.  Superior  st.;  mod- 
ern brick  houses,  6  and  8  rooms; 
finely   decorated    to  suit   tenant. $40.00 

1427-1429  E.  Superior  st.:  modern, 
detached  8-room  houses;  hot  water 
heat,  hardwood  floors  throughout; 
decorated   to  suit  tenant $46.00 

6  rooms,  201  Isanti  st,;  furnace 
heat     $26.00 

6  rooms,  4623  Cambridge  St.;  furnace 
heat     $26.00 

9  rooms,  107  8th  ave.  w.;  heat  and 
water    furnished    $46.00 

9  rooms,    6809   London    road $30.00 

10  rooms,  621  W.  2nd  st.;  steam  heat; 
modern     $46.00 

10  roonis,  16  W.  6th  St.;  hot  water 
heat;  hardwood  floors  throughout, 
at $60.00 

—FOR  RENT — 

609  West  Third  street;  beautiful  view; 
11-rcom  house  with  furnace,  two  fire- 
places, bath,  gas  and  electric  light; 
so  arranged  that  It  could  be  used  as 
rooming  house  or  two  flats;  com- 
bination coal  and  gas  range  in  two 
kitchens, 

STRYKER,   MANLPY   &  BUCK, 
Main  Floor,  Torrey   Bldg. 

—FOR  RENr— 

417  2nd  ave.  e.,  7  rooms $2f>.00 

110  W.  2nd  St..  10  rooms 36.00 

430  E.  Superior  St.,  7   rooms 26.00 

1609  E.  3rd  st.,  8  rooms 36.00 

112  S.  16th  ave.  e..  8  rooms 36.00 

429  10th  ave.   e..  8  rooms 42.60 

STRYKER,  MANLFJY  &   BUCK, 
Main  floor,  Torrey  bldg. 

FOR  RENT. 

613  19th  ave.  e..  7  rooms,  $20. 
2906  W.  2nd  St.,   7-room  house. 
2002  W.  2nd  St.,  6-room  flat. 
1731  W.  Su/erlor  st.,  5-room  flat. 
1716  W,   1st  St..  6-room  flat. 

BENJAMIN    F,    SCHWEIGER    CO., 
1933  W.  Superior  st. 

FOR  RENT— Lakeside,  6838  Tioga  St., 
1  block  from  car;  7  rooms,  gas,  elec- 
tricity, laundry,  tubs,  hot  water  heat, 
bath,  vegetable  room,  hardwood  floors, 
shades  and  gas  range;  $30  per  month. 
Call  Mrs.  Franklin  Paine,  Lakeside 
10-K. 

FOR  RE.NT — 7-room  house  at  corner 
of  Fifth  ave.  e.  and  Superior  St.; 
bathroom,  electric  lighting,  gas  con- 
nection for  kitchen  range,  new  paper 
and  paint.  Inquire  of  C.  F.  Graff, 
405    Lonsdale    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  $F!  4-room 
flat,  $12.50;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers.   611   Alworth  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  modern  house. 
.No.  214  V4  E.  2nd  st.;  hot  water  htat- 
Ing  plant;  very  easy  walking  distance; 
$35  per  month.  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  bldg, 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  houses,  central 
West  end  and  West  Duluth,  $8  to  $10, 
city  water;  also  $10  flats,  toilet  and 
electricity.    Phones,  Grand  or  Mel.  631. 

FOR  RE.NT— 6-room  house,  3310  Mln- 
nosota  ave.,  furnished;  water  and  gas; 
open  for  Inspection,  2  to  4  p.  m.  C.  R. 
Pattlnson.  water  and  light  department. 

FOR  RENT— 6-room  house,  310  W.  6th 
at.;  modern  except  heat;  newly  deco- 
rated; Immediate  possession.  Inquire 
rental  dept..  Brldgeman  &   Russell. 

FOR  RENT — Modern  6-room  house, 
practically  new;  hot  water  heat;  $28. 
3  Exeter  st.,  near  29th  ave.  w.  Call 
Grand    1601-Y;    Mrt,    2798. 

FOR  RENT— 1918  E.  8th  St.  to  small 
family  for  summer;  modern  6-room 
house  furnished,  or  4-rom8  unfur- 
nlshed.  Grand  2349. 

FOR  RENT — From  May  until  October, 
nicely  furnished  house,  modern,  near 
12th  ave,  e.;  appointment  by  tele- 
phone.   Mel.    4853. 

FOR  RENT— 1608  B.  6th  bT.  eight 
rooms;  hot  air  heat  and  bath.  $30  net. 
David  Davis,  First  National  Bank 
bldg.     Mel.   8. 

FC)R  RENT — Modern  6-room  house, 
front  porch,  hot  water  heat,  partly 
furnished  or  unfurnished.  Call  Grand 
2,266-X,       • 

FOR  RENT — 9-room  East  end  home;  all 
modern  conveniences;  will  lease  for  6 
years;  references  required.  Call  Mel, 
6406. 

FOR  RENT — Seven-room  brick  house 
near  12th  ave.  e.  on  2nd  st.,  strictly 
moilern.  Phone,  Grand  1632-A;  Mel. 
6148. 

FOR  RENT— 621  W.  2nd  st.;  10  rooms; 
splendid  for  renting  rooms;  $46.  J.  D. 
Howard   &  Co. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  house;  modern 
except  heat;  Park  Point.  Inquire  Ed- 
mont,  18  Third  ave.   w. 

f7)R  rent — House  on  Park  Point; 
modern  except  heat;  6  rooms  and  bath. 
Call  Mel.   3631. ^ 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  house  In 
East  end.  S.  S.  Williamson,  616  Tor- 
rey  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— Furnished  house  on  Park 
Point;  6  rooms  and  bath.  Call  Grand 
1621-D. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  house  in  rear  of 
109  W.  6th  St.  Inquire  617  Lake  ave  n. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  7-room  house 
in  East  end.     Address  R  72,  Herald. 

FOR  RENT — Talk  to  Gllluson  If  you 
want  a  bargain  In  piano  quality. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  house.  No.  6  W. 
5th    St.      Inquire    116    E.    3rd    st. 

FOR  RENT— Nos,  1718  and  1720  E,  Su- 
perlor  st.      E.  P.  Alexander. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  house;  hot  water 
heat.     Call  filSMi  E.  6th  at. 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

FOR  RENT  ftOUSES— (Continued.) 
^f^^^*^^*iHfiHHt^f^if^^ 

*  a- 

*-  FOR  RENT.  *■ 

if-  321  8th  ave.  w. — Nice  7-room  if 
•if  house,  painted  and  papered  In  if- 
if  brown;  stone  foundation,  full  # 
if-  basement,  hardwood  floors.  A  ^- 
if  regular  snap  to  a  good  party;  if- 
if  rents  for  $22.60.  Key  next  door.  * 
if-  L.  A.  LARSEN  CO.,  if- 

if.  214  Providence  Building.  if. 

if^:fif'if'ffif'if'rfif^if^ififif^if^X-i^ififi^7{-if' 

FOR  RENT — A.  very  desirable  8-room 
thoroughly  modem  house  on  E.  Ist  st-, 
near  8th  ave.,  which  has  been  thor- 
oughly redecorated  and  Is  In  excel- 
lent condition;,  hot  water  heating 
plant.  For  rental  and  other  partic- 
ulars calls  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303  Lons- 
dale   bldg. 

FOR  RENT— A  6-room  house.  No.  405 
N.  24th  ave.  w. ;  water,  gas,  electric 
lights,  toilet,  bath  and  hardwood 
floors;  st  )ve  heat;  water  paid;  reason- 
able rental;  vacant  May  1.  F.  I.  Sal- 
ter  Co.,    303   Lonsdale   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 10-room  heated  house  In 
East  End.  Rent  $70,  Includes  heat,  hot 
and  cold  water.  Janitor  service.  See 
N.  J.  Upham  Co..  714  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  RD.NT — 8-room  house,  modern  in 
every  respect;  centrally  located  at  811 
E.  1st  St.;  rent  $35  per  month.  Whit- 
ney  Wall    Co.,    301    Torrey   bldg, 

FOR  RENT — Fine,  light,  modern  house 
at  1420  E.  4th  st.  C.  P.  Johnson,  219 
W.  Superior  st. 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE. 

it-X'ii^i6'i(^y}f'f^it^}f-?f^ifi6^-X-^'-}^ii'ififif^X' 
if-  it- 

*  BARGAINS  : •*- 

*  ic 
if.                                  >^ 

*  * 
if.  Small  house  and  quarter  lot  In  *- 
if.  Virginia.  Minn.,  close  to  Cana-  # 
if.  dlan  Northern  roundhouse;  handy  *• 
if-  for   trainmen.     Price   and   terms  if- 

*  cheap.  a- 

*  f 

*  * 

*  Two  very  desirable  lots  close  to  tf- 
if.  Morgan  Park  at  steel  plant;  if 
if.      must  be  sold  for  $100  or  better,  if- 

*  # 

if.  Fine  farm  close  to  Duluth.  excel-  if 
if.      lent  soil;  can  be  had  very  cheap.  •Jf 

*  * 
if-                               * 

*  * 
if.  We  handle  all  kinds  of  realty,  if 
^  make  loans,  w^rlte  insurance  In  if- 
if.  strong  companies  and  handle  -if 
■if.  bonds  and  stocks  on  the  Mlnne-  if 
if.  sota  Iron  range.  "if 
it-  * 

*  ^ 

i^  "^f" 

it-  For  any  Information  on  Iron  -if 
'if  stocks,  correspond  with  us.  We  -;!^ 
■if^  solicit   your  business.  if- 

if-  ^• 

*  it 

if-  ^ 

if.  DAVE  O'BRIEN.  if 

if.  200  First  National  Bank  Bldg.  if 
if.  i^ 

ifX'i(^itih}t-if^if^iti^}ti('?Hfii^!titi^iti^'ifii' 

—LOTS   FOR    SALE.— 


$800    takes    a    lot    100    by    140    feet    on 
East  hillside.     Ea.sy  terms.      (301) 


$560    takes    a    40    by    80-foot      lot      one 
block  from  9th  st.  car  line. 


$900  takes  a  lot  on  E.  9th  st.    (0560) 

$1,600   takes   a  fine   lot   on   E.   Superior 
St.     Fine   location.    (0627) 


$2,600  takes  a  lot  87  »^  by  150  feet,  lo- 
cated at  Woodland.  1  block  from 
street  car  lino;  one  of  the  finest  loca- 
tions for  a  home  In  that  locality.  Good 
homes  all  around  It.  Let  us  show  you 
this   elegant   home  site. 


WHITNEY    WALL   COMPANY, 

Torrey    Bldg. 

Mel.    1368;    Grand   810. 


■:>ii-ifif^ififif^fii''if'iHfif^fif^if'ififif'}fifififif- 

*.  CONGDON  PARK  DIVISION  LOTS  if 

if.             ARE  THE  BEST *- 

*  if 
if-  .   if- 

*  •S^ 
■}f-  Do  not  wait  too  long  for  your  if 
-ff.  selection,  or  you  will  be  ■v\i 
-,1^  disappointed.  V'- 

*  ii- 
if-  •?? 

'if.  WILLIAM  C.  SARGENT,  h 

if.  Exclusive  Agent.  if 

*  * 
ifif^:fif-:fifii}f^»if-»itififififi{^:tif^ifi{-if-:S'if 

FOR  SALE — Good  cofners  In  West 
Park  division;  60  feet,  Winnipeg  ave. 
and  Vernon  st.,  $1,160;  60  feet.  Res- 
tormel  st.  and  Michigan  ave.,  $1,250; 
76  feet.  Grand  Forks  ave,  and  Chest- 
nut St.,  $1,660;  60  feet.  Restormel  st. 
and  Pacific  ave.,  $1,160;  excellent 
terms  offered.  W.  A.  Mower,  205  Ly- 
ceum bldg. 


FOR  SALE — By  owner,  a  fine  level 
lot,  11th  ave.  e,  and  6th  st.;  Improved 
street,  cement  sidewalk,  water  and 
gas  service  laid  to  curb;  Torrens 
title;  no  encumbrances;  your  own 
terms.     Address  W  70.  Herald. 

F'OR  SALE — West  Duluth,  level  west, 
facing  60  feet  on  60th  avo„  near  the 
center  of  the  first  block  south  of  Red- 
ruth st,;  price.  $600,  $50  down  and  $12 
per  month  on  balance.  W.  A.  Mower, 
205   Lyceum   bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Corner  on  4th  st,  fine  lo- 
cation for  business  block  or  flats;  5 
lots,  $20,000;  for  3  Inside  lots.  $8,800, 
Inquire  J,  R.  McKlnnon,  929  E.  6th  st. 
Mel.    2601. 


FOR  SALE — Corner  lot  B8  by  160.  20th 
ave.  E.  and  Jefferson  St.;  will  sell 
cheap;  am  leaving  city.  H.  B.  Wein- 
steln.   106   W.   Michigan  st. 

FOR  SALE — Lot  204,  Mornlngslde  ad- 
dition. Woodland,  including  half  acre. 
Inquire  Dr.  F.  W.  McHugh.  Ontonagon. 
Mich. 


FOR  SALE— $2,000  cash  will  buy  10 
choice  lots.  FIftyflrst  avenue  west,  C. 
F.  W.   Korth,  6020   Roosevelt  st. 


FOR  SALE3 — City  property,  houses  and 
lots;  farms  and  timber  land.  O.  G. 
Olson,   311   Columbia  bldg. 


FOR  SALE — Lot   at   Waverly  Park;   60 
WJr  176.     Write  B  48,  Herald. 


SUMMER  RESORTS. 

FOR  SALE — Large  camp  sites  on  beau- 
tiful Lake  Vermilion;  sand  bathing 
beaches,  parks,  docks,  wells,  etc.; 
monthly  payments  as  low  as  $2.  with- 
out Interest;  all  sites  sold  on  our 
"money  back"  guarantee.  Gray-Wer- 
tln   Co.,   Alworth    bldg. 

FOR  SALE — .Prettily  locate€  summer 
cottage  on  Pokegama  lake,  five  miles 
from  Grand  Rapids.  Good  auto  road. 
Fine  fishing  and  hunting,  A.  L.  La 
Freniere,  Grand  Rapids,  Minn, 

BEAUTIFUL  woqded  camp  sites  on 
Akley's  Point.  Lake  Vermilion,  1  acre 
in  size.  Map  and  Information  from 
W^akemup  Bay  Uuting  Co..  606  Torrey 
bldg.,  Duluth.  Minn. 

CLUBS 


BOATS  AND  MOTORBOATS. 

FOR  SAI..E — $226  cash;  25-foot  motor 
boat,  11-horse  power,  2  cylinder  Ferro 
engine,  auto  control,  electric  lights, 
magneto,  Maxim  silencer,  speed  10 
miles  per  hoilr;  completely  equipped 
and  In  perfect  running  order.  J.  E. 
Heule.  6830  John  ave..  Superior.  Wis. 
Phone  Broad  i6^-U.  or  Mel,  122. 

FOR  SALE — 36-fnot,  40-horse  power 
motor  boat.  Capitol  engine.  Dingle 
hull.  Call  or  wfl^e  to  300  Alworth 
bldg.,   Duluth.      . 

FOR  SALE — TWO  16- foot  rowboats  an<l 
boathouse.    Call  Cj&nd  996,  C.  Schober.  , 


AGENTS  WANTED. 

MEN^WlTlpFORD^'cARS. 
to  demonstrate  the  only  guaranteed. 
Ford  Starter  on  the  market;  sells  for 
$14;  100  per  cent  profit;  required  no 
mechanic  to  attach;  nothing  to  get 
out  of  order;  spins  motor  over  two 
compressions  past  two  Ignition 
points  never  falls  to  start;  vomen 
operate  It;  positive  automatic  re- 
lease In  case  of  backfire;  our  men 
average  five  a  day.  Write  quick  for 
agency  proposition  and  sample  start- 
er for  30-day  trial.  Auto  Starter  Co., 
629  Alladln  bldg.,  168  N.  Halsted  at.. 
Chicago.    111. 

SELL  WASHCLEAN;  abolishes  rob- 
blng;  steam  bubbles  blow  out  ruin- 
ous fiber-eating  grit;  leads  every- 
thing; won  gold  medal  In  actual 
tests;  only  washing  preparation  us- 
ing bubble  principle;  bigger  profits: 
more  value;  sample  and  particulars 
free.  Washclean  Co.,  206  W.  7th. 
Pittsburgh.    Kan. 

THOUSANDS  MADE  In  mall  order 
field — but  start  right.  If  tired  being 
misled  write  us  about  it  and  get  free 
particulars  how  you  may  clear  thou- 
sands yearly;  others  making  fortunes 
In  this  rich  field;  you  can  duplicate 
easily  but  act  quickly.  J.  A.  Beck- 
strom.    1108    Jessie   St..    St,    Paul. 

BIG  TEXTILE  milla  will  eanploy 
everywhere  reliable  people  to  take 
orders  for  dress  fabrics,  hosiery,  un< 
derwear,  sweaters,  waists  and  skirts 
from  samples;  factory  prices;  many 
making  over  $30  weekly.  Steadfast 
Mills.   Dept.   D   20,   Cohoes.   N.   Y. 

AGENTS  WANTED — To  handle  new 
household  articles;  needed  in  every 
home;  100  per  cent  profit;  house- 
wives delighted,  Minneapolis  Mer- 
chandising company,  120  3rd  ave,  n., 
Minneapolis,   Minn. 

ACT  QUICK!  Automobile  gasoline  go- 
Ing  up.  Sell  Gaso-Tonlc.  Equals  gaso- 
line, at  3c  a  gallon.  Eliminates  car- 
bon. Dollar  an  hour  profit.  Sales 
guaranteed.  White  Mfg.  Co.,  Dept.  10, 
Cincinnati,  Ohio. 

AGENTS— MEN,  WOMEN,  TO  SELL 
our  household  specialties;  great  de- 
mand for  same;  100  per  cent  profit; 
particulars  free.  Write,  Kellogg 
Specialty  company,  Dept.  3,  Minne- 
apolis, Minn, 

AGEN-rS  WANTED — Either  sex;  every 
town  and  city;  absolutely  fastest  sell- 
ing household  combination  with  pre- 
mium on  market;  big  commission. 
Write  Immediately  Groom  Co.,  Cass- 
vllle,  WlB. 

HERE'S   A    NEW    one,    absolutely   sell 
on   sight;    100    per   cent     profits;     live 
agents,      wanted     Immediately;     par- 
ticulars   free.    Barcus    Specialties    Co., 
Dept.  4,  Lyman  blk.  Muskegon,  Mich. 

AGENTS  MAKE  $5  to  $25  dally;  no 
experience;  free  catalogue  and 
samples;  new  goods;  quick  sales; 
big  profits;  world's  beaters.  Cruver 
Co.,    Jackson    &    Campbell.    Chicago. 

HARK  BOYS,  you  can  make  money 
easy;  brand  new  agents  seller;  un- 
limited field;  lepeats  sure;  particu- 
lars free.  J.  W.  Schram,  609  W. 
Grand   Blvd.,   Detroit,   Mich. 

AGENTS  W^ANTED — Everywhere  for 
quick  selling  household  necessities; 
experience  not  necessary;  can  earn 
$20  to  $30  weekly.  Address  O.  E. 
Woodard,   Ionia  Mich. 

AGENTS  WANTED— Earn  $15  dally 
calling  on  automobile  owners;  par- 
ticulars free.  Utility  Sales  Co.  1485 
Cleveland    ave.,    St.    Paul,    Minik 

WANTED — Agents  for  article  which  no 
housewife  can  resist;  sells  at  almost 
every  home.  Write  Swanson,  2643 
Elliott  ave.,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 


PERSONAL. 


^^i^-^'.WIM?**********^^ 


—TALK  TO  GILIUSON— 


CATOHY  NOVELTY — Brand  new-nets 
dealer,  500  per  cent  profit.  Sample 
and  terms,  10c.  Jones,  2326  Van  Buren 
St..  Chicago. 


HORSES.  VEHICLES,  ETC. 

'if^ifii^^if^if^if^^ 

if.  HORSES— GIARA.NTEED —  if 

if  HQRSES.  if- 

^  We  have  everything  In  the  horse  ■^ 
if.  line.  Country  bought,  free  from  A- 
•^  the  diseases  of  the  city  markets,  ■jf- 
if.  Always  glad  to  show  stock;  al-  *- 
•if.  ways  give  a  written  guarantee;  ic- 
■if.  always  give  square  deal.  Part  ^ 
^  time  if  desired.  # 

if  TWl-N  PORTS  HORSE  MARKET,  vg. 
if-  W.   E.    BARKER.    Prop..  if 

if.  18  First  Avenue  W,  * 

ifififififi<^^^if-Xififi('ififi^X-ifif^ifiti^i:-^X'if 

y^*****^^*  Xifif^i!-  if^ifif^'if^-^if'if'if^ii' 

*  DRAFT  AND  DELIVERY  HORSES,  0^ 

#  FARM  MARES,  GENERAL  if 
if  PURPOSE  HORSES.  ,  if 
if.  All  our  horses  are  Minnesota  if 
■^  raised.  .Sales  made  on  time  if  de-  # 
if  sired.  Buy  from  an  established  if 
if  dealer.  Also,  we  guarantee  every  if 
if  horse  to  be  as  represented.  if 
if  ZENITH  SALE  .STABLE,  * 
if  MOSES  tJOLDBERG,  Prop.,  if 
if  524  West  First  Street,  # 
if  Two  blocks  from  union  depot.  if 
it-ifif^if9fifif-if^>^ifififXif-}fXififififififif^^-» 

HORSES  HORSES  HORSES 
If  In  the  market  for  horses  be  sure  and 
see  our  offerings.  We  have  from  200 
to  300  head  constantly  on  hand.  Part 
time  gfven  If  desired.  Barrett  &  Zim- 
merman, Duluth  Horse  Market,  23rd 
ave.  w.  and  Superior  at.  H.  J.  Walt, 
manager, 

AT'CTION — $19,000  livery  outfit,  Supe- 
rior, April  12;  Bowser  Transfer  Co, 
going  out  of  the  horse  livery  business 
and  sells  Its  entire  outfit  to  the  high- 
est bidder,  regardless  of  Its  cost  or 
value.  Auctioneer  Balrd  of  Aberdeen, 
.S,  D.,  sells  it. 


FOR  SALE — Four  driving  and  delivery 
horses;  young  and  sound;  one  aeven- 
elghts  Guernsey  bull,  coming  4  years 
old;  gentle;  weight  1,400  pounds.  Hor- 
gan  &  Scanlon,  Saginaw,  Minn. 


FOR  SALE — Brown  mare,  weighs  be- 
tween 1,060  and  1,100;  city  broke,  not 
afraid  of  automobiles  or  sJLi^'et  cars. 
608  N,  66th  ave,  w.  Call  Cole  301. 


FOR  SALE — 1  gray  mare,  weight  1,400 
lbs.,  wagon   and   harness,    $260;    a  bar- 

raln;     1     gray    mare,     1,100     lbs.,     $60. 
618    W.    3rd   st;   Cole   232-A. 


FOR  SALE — Delivery  horses;  saje  and 
boarding  stables;  first-class  service. 
Western  Sales  Stables,  26-28  E.  1st  at. 
John  Gallop,  proprietor. 


HAR.NESS  WASHED  and  oiled,  repair- 
ing neatly  and  promptly  done;  give 
us  a  trial.  Herian  &  Merlirg,  105  W. 
1st  St.  Mel.   4668. 


FOR  SALE — Heavy  team;  weight  about 
3,200;  also  black  mare;  weight  about 
1,450;  can  be  seen  at  West  End  livery, 
1926  W.  Ist  at. 


FOR  SALE — Bay  mare.  Dimple  Foster, 
2:13  trotting  12  years  old.  sound  ex- 
cept spot  on  left  eye.    Call  Mel.  4348. 

NOTICE  TO  my  friends  and  former 
customers.  I  am  again  In  business  at 
128    E.    Michigan    st.      Frank    Jordan. 


FOR  SALE — 1  young  horse  and  2 
young  cows  and  farm  tools;  In  gooJ 
condition.     R.  D.  No.   2,  Box  67. 


HORSES.  WAGONS  and  harness  for 
sale;  driving  and  draft;  $26  and  up. 
Call  at  once,  218  E.  2nd  st. 


Have  your  harnesses  washed  and  oiled 
at  the  Duluth  Harness  Shop;  reason- 
able  figures.   26   E.   1st,  st. 

FOR  SALE — Black  horse,  weight  1.600; 
%  years  old,  works  single  or  double. 
Call   916    E.   6th  st. 


FOR  SALE — Cheap,  one  good  businesa 
buggy,  rubber  tired;  almoat  new.  Call 
Mel.    4348. 


FOR     SALE — Double    set     of    harness, 
cheap  if  taken  at  once.  417  6th  ave.  e. 


FOR    SALE — Cheap,     team    of    horses. 
Call    Park    21-X. 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  WANTED. 

WANTED — Office  man  desires  room 
and  board  with  private  family,  or 
room  with  board  optional,  or  vice 
versa;  central  downtown  district  pre- 
ferred; state  particulars;  can  furnish 
A-l    references.      Z   90.    Herald. 


WATCHES  REPAIRED. 

Bring  your   watch    to   Garon    Bros.,  to 
have  it  repaired  right.  217  W.  1st  st. 


He  never  advertises  any   of  the 
following: 
if  A   BIG   PIANO   SALE — 

*  GOING  OUT  OF  RUSINLSS— 
if  DISCONTINUED  AGENCIES— 
if  CREDIT  CHECKS — 
if       (W^hlch  are  worthless) 
if  BIG    DISCOUNTS —        ^    ,^        o   ^      .^ 

*  And    other    kinds    of    bait.      Some*' 

if  firms  even  go  the  limit  and  adver-  v 

if  tlse  PIANO  PRICES  SMASHED  TO  *! 


FOR    RENT— STORES,    OFFICER 

9 


FOR    RENT. 


FIDELITY  BUILDING,  14  West 
Superior  street,  a  few  very  de- 
sirable, well-lighted  and  well- 
heated  offices,  at  moderate 
rentals.  Service  unsurpassed. 
Building   FIREPROOF. 


if  PIECES— PIA.NOS  AT  YOUR  OWN 
*  PRICE— PIANOS  SOLD  REGARD- 
if  LESS  OF,  COST.  Who  ever  heard 
if  of  any  honest  firm  selling  good 
if  pianos  below  cost.  We  can  sell 
■if  you  good-looking  pianos,  brand 
*.  new.  for  $96.  but  we  prefer  selling 
if  you  one  of  our  high-grade  pianos 
if  which  we  manufacture  and  sell 
^  direct  to  you  at  an  actual  saving 
if  of  $100.  Beware  of  the  grief  that 
■if  follows  the  purchase  of  a  good- 
■if  looking  cheap  piano;  they  are 
if  generally  featured  by  firms  using 
if  the  above  eye-catchers  in  their  ads. 
if 


THE    RAUDENBUSH   &    SONS 

PIANO  CO.. 

232  West  First  Street. 

S.    E.    GILIUSON.   Mgr. 


ififif'ififif^-if^it^ifififii^i^i^it'^ii^-^ 

MASTER  SERVICE. 
Our    methods    of    French    dry    cleaning 
are  Indorsed  by  the  National  Associa- 
tion   of    Cleaners    and    Dyers.       Every 
garment    received    from    us    will    bear 
an  emblem  tag  which  is  furnished   to 
us    as    a    member    by    the    association. 
By  sending  your  cleaning  and  dyeing 
to    us,    you    have    the    assurance    that 
it  will  be  cleaned  by  the  latest  known 
methods     and     by      master     workmen. 
Phone  2442  and  our  delivery  men  will 
be   promptly   at    your   service. 
YALE    LAUNDRY   CO., 
French    Dry    Cleaning    Department. 

PERSONALS — Wanted  quick  name  and 
address  of  reliable,  honorable  man 
who  would  consider  matrimony  if  he 
could  find  the  right  lady  for  his  wife 
who  might  assist  him  financially. 
More  particulars  for  the  man  who 
writes  quick.  Strictly  confidential.  (No 
general  deliveries.)  Address  "Honor- 
able"  B  612,  Valley.  Neb. 

IF  YOU  LIKE  to  draw,  earn  from  $20 
to  $75  weekly;  large  commercial  de- 
signing house  will  train  a  few  more 
people;  sell  work  while  learning;  only 
spare  lime  required;  state  age.  phone, 
and  where  employed.  Address  Mr. 
Marble.    Herald. 

PERSONAL — Ladlea!  Ask  your  drug- 
gist for  Chichester  Pills,  the  Diamond 
Brand,,  for  25  years  known  as  best, 
safest,  always  reliable.  Take  no  other. 
Chichester  Diamond  Brand  Pills  are 
sold   by  druggists   everywhere. 

PERSONAL— R.  U.  Lonesome?  Send  10 
cents  for  latest  copy  of  best  friend- 
ship magazine  printed;  Just  a  friendly 
correspondence  club;  hundreds  of 
members.  Harding  &  Co..  A2345  Banks 
ave.,    Superior.    Wis. 


* 
if 
if 
* 
if 
if 
if 
if 
if 

if  rent  May  1  at  reasonable  figures:  # 

*.  313     West     Superior     street     (now  * 

if       occupied     by     W.     Stokea     Kirk  * 

if      army  goods).                         ^   ,  * 

*  122-124  East  Superior  street   (now  * 

if      occupied    by    R.    R.    Forward    &  * 

■^       Co,).  * 

■if  234      West     First      street,      corner  ^ 

if       Third    avenue    west    (now    occu-  W 

pied     by     J.     Grueaen     jewelry  * 

store).  w 

1* 

JOHN  A.    STEPHENSON   &    CO.,  *» 

W^olvin   Building.  * 


PERSONAL— Marry  If  lonely.  For  re- 
sults, try  me;  many  wealthy  wish 
early  marriage;  very  successful,  con- 
fidential, strictly  reliable.  "The  Sue- 
cessful  Club."  Mrs.  Purdie,  Box  656, 
Oakland.  Cal. 

WE  RENT  Remington,  Monarch  and 
Smith  Premier  typewriters  at  $2  per 
month  and  upward.  Remington  Type- 
writer Co.,  Inc.,  20  4th  ave.  w.; 
phones:    Mel,    230;    Grand    181. 


ANNOUNCING  the  removal  of  the  Ze- 
nith Dry  Goode  Co..  126  E.  1st  st.,  to 
the  Peerless  Laundry  bldg.,  228  E.  1st 
St.  This  company  will  be  known  here- 
after as  the   Duluth  Linen  Co. 


PER.SONAL — Get  away  from  washing 
troubles  by  sending  your  family  wash 
to  us;  5^c  per  pound.  Lutes'  laundrv. 
808  E.  2nd  at.  Phone  us.  Grand  447, 
Mel.  447. 


PERSONAL — Marry  rich.  Paper  with 
descriptions  wealthy  Californlans 
seeking  marriage;  trial  three  months; 
10c.     Unity,  67  4th  st.,  San  Francisco. 

Violet  Rays  "New  Method"  scalp  treat- 
ment at  Comfort  Beauty  parlors,  109 
Oak  Hall  bldg.  Corns  removed,  25c; 
bunions,   60s;   Inverted  nails,   60c. 

MADE-TO-MEASURE  Shirts,  Under- 
wear.  Raincoats,  Neckties,  Suit  or 
O'coat.  $18;  Ladies'  Suits,  spring  se- 
lections.    C.  N.  Hamilton,  816  E.  Sup.  st. 


PERSONAL— My  wife  having  left  my 
home,  I  will  not  be  responsible  for 
any  debts  contracted  by  her.  Signed, 
W^llllam  Dawson. 

PERSONAL  —  MARRY  RICH;  HUN- 
dreds  anxious  to  marry:  descriptions 
and  photos  free.  Dv.  Unity.  Grand 
Rapids,  Mich. 

PERSONAL — Carpenter  work  or  new 
construction  work  given  prompt  at- 
tention. Prices  reasonable.  A.  S.  Page. 
Lin.   1S6-D.     . 

Personal — Electric  vacuum  cleaners  for 
rent,  $1.50  a  day.  The  Moore  Co..  319 
■V^^    1st    St.;    Mel,    6860,    Grand    2054-X. 

PERSONAL — Dare  you  answer  this: 
Lonely  farmer,  worth  $3,500,  will 
marry.     Care  R.  Hyde,  San  Francisco. 


RAGTIME  positively  taught  In  20  les- 
sons; free  booklet,  J.  L.  Denver,  32  W. 
2nd  St.     Open  7  to  10  p.  m.     Mel.  7720. 


FITS — I  cured  my  daughter  by  simple 
dl.scoveryr  particulars  free.  Z.  Lepso, 
125   Island  ave,,   Milwaukee.  Wis. 


PERSONAL  —  WIDOW.  27.  WORTH 
$40,000,  would  marry.  K,  box  584, 
Messenger,  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 


MASSAGE— Margaret  Nelson.  218  W. 
Superior  st.,  room  8,  3rd  floor.  Also 
appointments   at   your   home. 


PERSONAL— Widow.  30,  worth  $40,000, 
lonely,  would  marry.  K.  Mission 
Unity,  San  Francisco,  Cal. 

WANTED — Lace  curtains  to  do;  called 
for  and  delivered.  Phone  Mel.  6462. 
Work    guaranteed.^ 


Personal — Effective      scalp      treatment. 
Mrs.  Vogt's  Hair  Shop.  105  W.  .Sup.  st. 


Personal — Combings  and  cut  hair  made 
Into  beautiful  switches.   Knauf  Sisters. 


PERSONAI., — Ladles,     have     your     suits 
made    at   Miller   Bros.,   405   E.   Sup.   St. 


PF.RSONAIvS  —  Wanted     lace     curtains. 
25c  pair;  ladles'  washings.     Mel.  7051. 


PERSONAL    —    Widow       would       like 
small   child  to  board.     Call  Mel.   2629. 

Corns,    bunlonp    removed;    electric    foot 
massage   for  tired   feet.  Miss  M.   Kellj'. 


DR.  GULDE.  Eye.   Ear,  Nose  specialist, 
324   Syndicate   bldg.,   Minneapolis. 


PERSONAL— For    sick    people,    flowers, 
Duluth  Floral  Co. 


WANTED  Ta  RENT. 

WANTED  TO  RENT — By  small  fam- 
ily, 4  or  6-room  downstairs  modern 
flat  or  small  house,  walking  distance 
from  West  Duluth  depot;  above 
Grand   ave.   Write   Y   61,   Herald. 


WANTED  TO  RENT— Three  or  four  un- 
furnished rooms;  walking  distance 
from  Central  ave. .  n.  West  Duluth 
Billiard  hall.  218  Central  ave.  n. 

WANTED  TO  RENT — 6  or  7-room  fur- 
nlshed  house  on  Park  Point  from 
June   1.     Write   T  81,   Herald. 

WANTED  TO  RENT — 4-6-room  'cot- 
tage  at  Park  Point  during  June-Octo- 
ber   months.      F    64.    Herald, 


FOR  SALE— COWS. 

FOR  SALE — S.  Goldflne  has  just  ar 
rived  with  carload  of  the  finest  as- 
sortment of  fresh  milch  cows  and 
cold  springers.  Both  phones;  stock 
vards,  1016  N.  6th  ave.  w.  Take  In- 
cline car  to  8th'  at.  walk  two  blocks 
northeast. 

FOR  SALE — Fresh  milch  cows  arriv- 
ing dally.  Will  buy  and  exchange  for 
beef  cattle.  S.  Wlddea.  2218  W.  9th 
at.;  Grand  2294-A,  Mel.  4326. 


FOR     sale: — Freah     milch     cow;     part 
Jeraey.     6  S.  6l8t  ave.  w. 


if 

■» 
if 
if 
if 
if 
if 
if 
if 
if 
if 

■if 

if  IRWIN-SLOAN  BUILDING,  corn 


* 

* 


GLENCOE  BUILDING.  corner 
Third  avenue  west  and  First 
street.  W^e  still  have  several 
offices  for  rent  at  figures  which, 
considering  the  location  and  ex- 
cellent service,  are  a«  low  aa 
any  in   Duluth. 


if^f'if'ififif^f-if-'ifif^ifififif^Hiii^ili'-if^^^;^^ 


■^^(^ifitififif^ib'ififii'if'ii^ifif'ifififii'ii'^i^T^^ 

*  * 

if  WE  HAVE * 

*  * 
if  Two  elegant  offices  in  the  Oak  if 
if  Hall  building  that  we  will  rent  if 
if  very  reasonably.  These  offices  are  i^ 
■if  adapted  for  doctors  or  dentists.         # 

if  EleganT  office  on  the  second  floor  # 
■if       of  Lonsdale  building  for  rent.       # 

if  W 

■-^  Also  one  or  two  single  offices  on  i^ 

if      floors   higher   up. 

if 


■if  Also   several    fine    Superior   atreet 
if       stores  for  rent. 


if 


W,  M.  PRINDLE  &  CO., 

Lonsdale  Building. 

Grand  239 — Phones — Mel.  2400. 


S 
t 


CENTRALLY  LOCATED- 
STORES  FOR  RENT, 


N.  J.  UPHAM  CO., 
714  PROVIDENCE  BUILDING. 


WANTED  TO  BUY. 

if  WANTED   TO  BUY.  -* 

^>'  «J 

*  Modern  homes  at  reasonable  * 
if  prices.  List  yours  with  the  N.  J.  -JJ. 
■if  Upham  company.  They'll  put  no  ^ 
if  signs  on  It  but  will  go  right  after  if 
if  selling  it.  Just  phone  Mel.  848  or  if 
if  Grand  847.  # 

if  if 

ififH-ifififif'if^ifififififififif  ifififif  iOfif-::- » 

Wanted  to  Buy — Furniture,  heaters  ©r 
ranges;  we  pay  liberal  prices,  or  will 
allow  you  to  exchange  for  new  furni- 
ture. East  End  Furniture  Co.,  120  E. 
Superior    st.      Grand    2013-X. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— 600  to  2,000  acres 
of  cut-over  land  from  owner  only? 
give  description  and  full  particulars 
in  first  letter;  price  must  be  satisfac- 
tory.      Write    J    40.    Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— Cheap  cutover 
lands  in  St.  Louis  county  for  cash; 
have  no  objection  to  outstanding  tim- 
ber deeds;  give  description  and  price. 
Address  W  986,  Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— 40  or  160  acres  of 
wild  or  partly  improved  land  from 
the  owner;  give  legal  description  and 
lowest  price  in  first  letter.  Wrlto 
Z    39.    Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— We  still  have  cus- 
tomers anxious  for  medium-priced 
houses  not  too  far  out;  I  solicit  your 
listing.  William  C.  Sargent.  102  Prov- 
Idenoe   bldg. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Before  May  1.  mod- 
ern  house,  east  of  16th  ave.  e.,  be- 
tween Superior  and  6th  st.;  must  be 
at  a  reasonable  figure.  Address  A  942, 
Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — House  for  one  or 
two  families  in  good  condition;  $800 
and  corner  lot  as  flrat  payment.  Writ* 
B  82  Herald. 


WE  PURCHASE  real  estate  contracts, 
mortgages  and  notes.  Northern  Equit- 
lea    Co.,    612    1st    Nat,    Bank    Bldg. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— 5  or  6-room  house 
on  easy  terms.  Lake  ave.  to  10th  ave. 
e.      Mel.    6998,    or   Grand    2356-D. 

Will  buy  partially  improved  farm. 
State  price,  exact  legal  description,  in 
letter.  Address  A  927.  Herald, 

W^e  give  cash  or  new  furniture  for  usei 
furniture  or  stoves.  Joe  Popkin,  lOS 
E.    Superior    st.      Melrose    6498. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Second  hand  reed 
baby  buggy;  must  be  in  good  condi- 
tion.     Call  Mel.   6327. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Setter  pup,  not 
over  3  months,  prospective  pup  con- 
sldered.     Mel.  1149.  

W^ANTED  TO  BUY — Will  pay  best 
price  for  second-hand  clothing.  406 
W.    Michigan    st. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— Large  or  amall 
tract  of  land  for  investment.  Address 
I  69.  Herald. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— Second-hand  type- 
writing desk  of  the  disappearing  type. 
Mel.    2249. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— Fr§^h  milch  cow. 
part  Guernsey  preferred.  Address  K  67, 
Herald. 


WANT  TO  BUY — Small  general  atore 
or  go  in  partnerahlp.  Write  B  88. 
Herald. 


WE    PAY    20c    for    heavy    hens.      Call 
Grand  326;  Mel.  81.  L.  Polinsky  &  Co. 


LITMAN   BUYS   clothing   and    bicycles. 
1811  W.    Superior  at.  Lin.   129-D. 


WANTED     TO     BUY — A      second-hand 
rowboat  motor.     J  67,  Herald. 


H,    Popkin    buys    stoves   and    furniture. 
Grand    2387-A,    Mel,    1J82. 


STOVE  REPAIRS. 

WE  CARRY  in  stock  repairs  for  10,00d 
different  stoves  and  ranges.  C.  F 
Wlggerta  &  Sons,  41*  £.  Superior  at 


if 


er  5 


Twentieth  avenue  west  and  Su-  # 
perlor-street.  Several  offices  for  ^ 
rent  April  1  at  from  $18  to  $26.  * 
including  steam  heat — lots  of  It  ifr 

and   janitor   service.      We   will  it 

lay  new  hardwood  floors  in  ^ 
these  offices  and  decorate  thor-  * 
oughly.  • 

The  following  stores  will  be  for  it' 


if-X-ififififi^'iPifif^ifitit^i^'ii^if^iMfif^iHf 
ifif'if^ififififififififif^iiifif-Xifififififififif' 

if  STOREROOM  AND  FULL  * 

if  BASEMENT,  # 

*•  # 

if  Suitable  for  store,  laundry  or  small  i^ 

*  factory.  126  E.  Ist  st,;  very  rea-  ibi 
if  sonable   rent.  if 

*  RICHARDSON,  DAY  &  CHEADLE  ^ 
if  COMPANY.  i» 
if  Exchange  Building.  -j^ 
if^f^-'ifif^ifififitififififiyif^fif^  -^-^  ^^  »»» 

if^»if^ifitii-i^ii'itififil^^ii':(^:i^iMi'iMfififif^if 

* 

# 
if 
if 
if 

if 

ifit-a-if^if^^if^ififif'ififif'ifififififif'ififif^*      -< 

FOR  RENT  STORES. 
At  318  W^.  1st  St.,  most  central  and 
best  business  location  on  W.  1st  St.; 
fine  storeroom.  26  by  140.  in  strictly 
fireproof  building;  with  lowest  in- 
surance rate  in  city;  will  decorate  to 
suit:  possession  May  1.  Call  Grand 
or    Mel.    225. 

W,   C.    SHERWOOD  *   CO., 
118    Manhattan    Bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Floor  space  suitable  for 
storage  or  small  manufacturing  con- 
cern. Call  Lane-Golcz  Printing  Co., 
132  W.  Michigan  st.;  Mel.  1604.  Grand 
2369-D. 


■ 

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08 


Saturday, 


THE     DULUT^H     HERALD, 


April  8, 1916. 


>io''i 


«r 


FOR  SALE^HOUSES. 

%  A  HOME   OF  TOUR  OWN 

i  SPELLS  A  HAPPY  ZON'E. 


FOR  SALE  HOUSES— (Continued.) 

8TRYKER.    MANLBY    ik   BUCK.     »f 


FOR  SALE  HOUSES— (Continued.) 


EAST  Fourth  street  home. 


ADDITIO 
ON  PASES 


WANTS 
30  AND  32 


-BUY  A  HOME- 


#  Several  were  sold  tho  past  week,  it-  •  i^ 


BEST   INVESTMENT   ON   EARTH.  * 


SO 


ask     about    theBo    early 
and    g^t   your    pick. 


t 


* 

t 


14.750— EAST  END— Nearly  new 
6-room  houae,  thoroughly  mod- 
em, hot  water  heat,  stone  foun- 
dation, full  basement,  lot  85x140 
f»»et.  paved  street,  cement  walk». 
E.  «th  St.  near  18th  ave.  e.;  rea-  *  # 
aonablo  terms.  ^J    # 

^  $4.700— LAKESIDE  —  Nearly  new  ^- 1  ^ 

*  6-room    house,    thoroujfhly   mod-  rj    * 
^  ern.   hot  water  heat,  good  foun-  *|^ 

#  datlon,     full      baaement,     corner  Sf  n»f 

#  lot  50x140  fe«t.  paved  Htreot.  ce-  *  I  * 

*  ment  walks,  only  3  blocks  from  ^    -Jf 
it-  car  line;  easy  terma.                         *   *- 

%  $4.200— LAKESIDE  —  N'^^rlV  n«7  *  i  ^- 
•S       6-room   hu-.i^ie,    thoroughly   mod-  ^- 
<^rn,   hot   wiiter  heat,   good  foun-   * 


WE  HAVE  THEM  TO  SUIT  ALL 

SIZES  OF   FAMILIES 

AND  PURSES. 

t    %  BEAUTIFUL  HUNTER'S  PARK— 
New  houae,  never  occupied. 
In      Kenllworth      Park.      2^ 
blocks    from    car    line.      Con 


VALUE     '«'*0®!5 

PRESENT   PRICE    |«.600.00 

YOUR  PROFIT   11.000.00 


*  I  FOR  SALE  HOUg^S— (Continued.) 


-EAST  END  HOME- 


•jL  dation,    full    basement,    nice    lot   » 

SL  50x140  feet,  cement  walks,  close  -rf. 

j^  to   car  line,    near   Country  club;  ^ 

#  ea^y  terms.  '^ 

%  $3.500— LAKESIDE  —  Nearly  new  # 

•y.  6-room   house,   thoroughly   mod-  #■ 

#  ern,  hot  water  hoat.  good  foun-  v 
*.  dation,  full  basement,  nice  60-  ^ 
■jt  foot  lot,  cement  walks,  handy  to  *. 
^  car  line,  near  B3rd  ave.  e.;  easy  k- 
«  terms.                                                       ^ 

#  J2.6O0— LAKESIDE!— C.ood  house—  v't 
•A-  6  rooms,  good  heater  goes  with  K- 
if.       it    verv  large  living  room,  bath.  H- 

tnlce  lot,  hundy  to  car  line;  easy  *: 
terica.  * 

^^  J3.B00  —  WEST     DULUTH-WEST   » 

*.  t:ND— New      house;      6      rooms,  7t' 

*.  modern,     heat,     hardwood  floors  •;,! 

#  and  finish,  concr^-te  foundition.  ■» 
^  full  basement,  ttne  lot  37»2Xl3i  » 
*,  feet;  elegant  view,  near  43rd  ^ 
}^  ave.  w. ;  easy  terms.                             v 

%  $3,500  —  E.\ST  END  —  Jefferson  ^ 
■fi  strtet;  nice  7-room  house;  hard-  ^ 
%  vvi>od  floors,  bath,  lot  alone  (BOx  ?> 
^  no  feet)  Is  worth  $1,800;  near  ;* 
ii'.  I5th  avu.  e.;  haudy  to  car  line;  -^^ 
-7-       .asy  terms.  ■* 

%  $t  300- CENTRAL— 606    E.    6ih    St.   # 

'•  *  Two-family   home,   5   room-s  and  v> 

•»  bath     In     each;     modtrn     except  >* 

#  heat,    stone    foundation;    reason-  -^ 
[  ^  able  terms                                                * 

f.  $2.700— CE.N'TRAL  EA.^T  END—  ^ 
*.  1105  7th  five,  o.:  7  rooms  h.ird-  ',<■ 
^\  wood  floors,  concrete  foundation,  ?,?. 
•)^       full  baseni'  nt;  rea.sonuble  terms.  ^ 

%,  $2,400—1418  F.  10th  ."t.;  6  room?,  ^ 
*?.  hardwood  flours,  nlc^  rooms,  >* 
i(.       good   location:    easy  terms.  -^ 

IS  $2  300—1301    E.    lUh   at.;    5    rooms.   ^ 

-jk       modern    except    boat.    hurUwood   f 

•^       floors,    concrete    foundation,    full  ??• 

*  ^       basement;  eady  terms.  I* 


^ 
* 


tains  6  rooms,  sun  parlor  and  # 
bath;  stone  foundation,  hot  * 
water  heat,  hardwood  floors  ^ 
and  finish,  fireplace,  laundry,  # 
gas  and  electric  light.  Stucco  * 
exterior,  well  built,  outside  # 
walls  insulated  with  llnofelt;  ^f 
very  warm.  Large  lot,  beau-  # 
tlful  view,  very  desirable  In  # 
every  way.  Price  only  $5,200,  % 
on  easy  terms  If  desired.  # 
Would  consider  a  vacant  lot  * 
as  part  payment.  (8584)   ^ 


^  LAKESIDE— 


-» 


A- 
Ve-' 


Nearly  new  house  on  upper  -AJ 
side  of  Regent  St.,  near  44th  Hr 
ave.;  nice,  full-sized  lot;  6-  ■^ 
room  house,  good  bath  and  •# 
fixtures,  concrete  foundation,  # 
hot  water  hoat.  hardwood  i^ 
floors  throughout,  gas  and  •^ 
electric  light;  double  sheeted.  # 
extra  warm.  $4,000.  on  easy  # 
terms,  or  substantial  reduc-  # 
tlon  for  cash  above  mortgage  ^ 
of  $1,600.  (8610)  * 

CENTRAL—  * 


Six-room  modern  house  on  # 
6th  ave.  e. :  concrete  founda-  ^ 
tlon.  nice  bath  and  fixtures,  # 
hot  water  heat,  gas  and  elec-  * 
trie  light,  laundry,  hardwood  # 
finish  down,  white  enamel  up.  % 
all  hardwood  floors.  Price  ^ 
only  $8,800;  $500  cash  will  * 
handle.  (T662)   ^\ 

iit  WEST   END—  ,,     ,         *2' 

^  1901     W.     3rd     St..     73     feet  % 

frontage;  house  has  9  rooms.  % 
occupied  by  two  families;  city 
water,      toilet      and      electric 


% 
* 

A- 


Located  on  one  of  the 
finest  Improved  lots  on 
the  upper  side  of  E.  4th 
St.  This  lot  Is  60  by  140 
and  Is  well  planted  with 
shrubbery  and  trees. 
Ths  house  Is  in  excellent 
condition.  having  6 
rooms,  hardwood  finish 
downstairs,  upstairs  fin- 
ished in  white  enamel; 
flassed-ln  back  porch. 
uU  stone  basement,  an 
excellent  hot  water 
heating  plant;  rooms 
very  bright  and  large 
»nd  well  laid  out.  This 
Is  an  excellent  oppor- 
tunity to  buy  a  home 
that  would  be  saleable 
at  any  time  at  a  profit. 
See  us  for  full  Informa- 
tion. 


608 


DLT^UTH    REALTY    CO.. 
First    Natlonal^Bank^Bldg^^    ^ 

* 


■* ;  *  A  very  boauttfyily  laid  out  7-  * 
■*'*  room  home   on  lOth  ave.   e.,  in  ex-# 

*  #  ctllent  condltloiwu  WaU  decora-* 
■$ '  -k  tloBS    very   good.     First   floor  fin-  * 

*  *  Ished  In  oak,  has  fireplace,  a  very  * 
*:  #  complete  serving  pantry  and  three  # 
"* '  #  bright    rooms.      Second    floor    has  * 

7^  four     bedrooms,     bath     and     Unen  * 

press    finished  In  white;  front  and  # 

back    stairs.      A   largo   attic   with  •* 

four  windows  could  be  made  Into  * 

#  extra  sleeping  room,  or  aerves  very  » 

«  well    for    drying    room,    owing   to  * 

*  4  excellent  ventilation.  BaJiement  iff 
*■   *  partitioned     off;     has    fruit    room,  '^ 

*  %  complete  laundry  and  boiler  room.  # 

*  ^  Heating  very  economical,  using  % 
■^i*  only  eight  tons  of  coal  this  past  # 
*!#  season.      This    is    an    opportunity,  # 


FOR  SALE  HOUSES— (Continued.) 

%       INVEST  IN  A  HOME f 

*  AND  ACHIEVE   THE   GREATEST  # 

*  OF  ALL  SUCCESSES!  # 

*  —FAMILY  HAPPINESS —  # 
j(,                                # 

^      Ask  to  see  th«  home  which  In-  # 

#  teresU  you,  and  if.  after  Investl^  # 

*  gallon.  It  does  not  Buit  you,  w«  # 
^  win  be  more  than  glad  to  help  # 
^  you  find  the  home  you  want.  # 

■H-  EAST   END.  * 

#  $12,000  —  Nearly     new,     beautiful,  # 

#  large,   stucco     home,    thoroughly  # 

# 

^  $10.000 — Handsome,    large,    stucco 

#  home,    thoroughly    modern;    hot 
water    beat,    4    nice      bedrooms.  * 


EAST  END  HOME  BARGAINS. 


it- 


$2.900- W.  12th  St.:  near  Pied- 
mont car  line  between  22nd  and  -c 
23rd  aves.  w. ;  6-room  bungalow;  A- 
brand  new.  modern  except  heat.  A'- 
hardwood  floors,  concret*'  foun-  -A- 
dation.      full      baiienient;      easy  ^ 


A- 
^- 

f. 
'•li' 

•^  Above  only  samples.  Make  an  'X- 
*.  appointment— both  phones  165.  # 
Ai  Our  automobile  at  your  service 

if- 


light;  new  post  foundation.  -Jf 
newly  papered  Inside  and  # 
painted  on  outside.  To  close  f* 
an  estate  will  sell  for  $2,000;  * 
easily  worth  $3,000:  greatest  * 
bargain  In  the  Wtst  '"nd.  * 

* 


Money  ready  for  any  good  loan. 


stryki:r.  manley  &  buck. 

Torrey  Building. 


it 


if.  422  16th  ave.  e.,  modern  and  In  ex     ^ 
%.       cellent  condition;   6  rooms.  «■ 

if.  Nice,  cozy  bungalow,  630  17th  * 
IV>       ave.  e.  Owner  moving  out  May  I.  * 

#  ^ 

if.  Fine  9-room  home.  16th  ave.  e.  ^ 
^  and  3rd  st;  hot  water  heat,  good  * 
ii.  home;  too  l.irge  for  present  -^ 
^  owner.  Only  $6,600;  very  cheap  ^ 
if.       at  this  price.  * 

-\i  New  7-room  house,  bungalow  type.  if. 
'■f(,       all  modern,  722  18th  ave.  e.;  fine  # 

it- 


4  and  would  like  to  have  you  call  on  if. 


-PRICE  $6,600- 


4  us   for   further   Information. 

if- 
it 
it- 
it' 
it 
# 
it 
it 


it 


modern;  hot  water  heat,  6  nice  * 
bedrooms,  very  large  living  » 
room,  two  fireplaces,  stone  foun-  it 
dation,  full  basement;  elegant  # 
lot  right  In  the  midst  of  a  block 
of  handsome  homes,  on  E.  8rd  st. 
near  26th  ave.  e..  handy  to  the 
best  car  line  service  In  the  city. 
Reasonable  terms;  all-cash  of-  it 
fers  given  special  consideration. 


PROFESSIONAL  ANO  BDSINESS  GOIDE 

Ready  reference  of  the  professional 
men  and  leading  business  firms.  Her- 
ald readers  who  do  not  find  the  line 
of  business  they  are  seeking  will  con- 
fer a  favor  by  requesting  of  us  the 
information  desired, 

CALL  324  FOR  REPRESENTATION  IN  THIS  COLUMN 


it 

a- 


DULUTH  REALTY  CO., 

608  First  National  Bank  Bldg, 
I.  W.  LEE. 

^^^itit')ti(-i!'-<y^^'ii^^(^ftiHf^^ 

*         WHY  DO  YOU  PAY  RENT? 

a- 

it 


ACCOUXTAXTS. 

JAMES  X'mATTESOnTc.   P.    A. 

(Minnesota  and  Wisconsin), 

700-701   Alworth   Buildlnj?. 

Audits.    Estate    and    Commercial 

Accounting   and   Investigations. 

Established    1»09. 

Phones:  Mel.   4700;  Grand  71. 


v\t  Let  a  tenant  help  you  pay  for  this  * 
home— 8-room.  2-famlly,  good  * 
condition,  near  car  line;  con-  * 
venlences.  Price  $1,800;  rents  * 
for    $20    per    month;    $300    cash,  it 


view  of  city. 


terms. 


You  may  phone  us  If  you  wish. 


AUTO   SERVICE. 


N 


it  I*hones: 


J    UPHAM  COMIWNY, 
714  Providence  Bldg. 

Melrose    848;    Grand    847. 


■Jv.' 

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${■ 


LOOK  AT  THF:M  TOMORROW. 


fyK'ytii':i.iti:^i(-it^-}:^:m!-i(^ititiyitititi6^'^ 

t  EVERY  ONE  OF*  THE  FOLLOW-  V.i 
*.  IN'G  HOUSES  ARE  OFFERED  FOR  * 
%  SALE  AT  LESS  THAN  THEIR  f 
REAL  VALUE.  f 

* 

* 
if, 
it 
-  * 
it 

if.  11  S.  64th  ave.  w.  is  a  6-room  # 
i(.  house  built  last  year,  modern  if- 
with  exception  of  heat;  concrete  it 
foundation,  birch  finish  down-  * 
utalrs;  rooms  nicely  laid  out;  it 
37^ -foot  lot.  Owner  has  re-  fii 
duced  the  price  on  this  house  ir 
$300  In  the  last  month.  This  Is  * 
without  que.^itlon  a  big  bargain  it 
at  the  prirc  now  asked — $3,000;  it 
$500  cash  will  handle  it,  balance  ■;(■ 
easy  payments.  it 


All  of  the  above  on  easy  terms 

Don't  pay   rent! 
Buy  and  pay  It  to  yoursclfl 


DULUTH  REALTY  COh 
608  First  National  Bank  Bldg. 


balance  like  rent. 


^'  We  have  three  new  6-room  houses  •^ 
i(.  just  being  completed  at  Forty-  it 
seventh  avenue  west,  one  block-  ?*• 
above  car  line;  full  basement;  ■^ 
oak  finish.  We  invite  your  In-  # 
spectlon.  ThejBC  homes  will  be  it 
aold    on    easy^  payments.      Price  it 


large     living     room,     fireplace 
pretty  lot,  delightful  view,  near  ^ 
21st  ave.  e.     Reasonable  terms.      -9* 

* 

NORMAL  DISTRICT.  it 

$8.760— BEAUTIFUL  HOME  OP  * 
COLONIAL  DESIGN,  thoroughly  * 
modern;  hot  water  heat,  4  bed-  it 
rooms,  large  living  room,  porch,  # 
sleeping  porch,  fireplace;  beauti-  * 
ful  large  lot  with  shrubbery,  it 
trees  and  nice  lawn,  on  21st  ave.  it 
e.     Reasonable  term*.  it 

#  $7.800— New,  attractive.  double  *' 
it  house  near  21st  ave.  e-.  6  rooms  * 
each  side,  thoroughly  modern;  * 
hot  water  heating  plants,  built-  it 
in  buffets,  bookcases  and  kltch-  # 
en  cabinets,  fireplaces:  complete  it 
with  everything  that  the  modern  it 
housewife  plans  for  in  the  house  * 
of  her  dreams;  should  rent  for  # 
$80  per  month  or  $960  per  year,  it 
which  Is  over  12  per  cent  of  # 
price — $7,800;  reasonable  terms.     # 

* 


—JOHN    E.    MACGREGOR— 

Public  Accountant   and  Auditor. 

601    Sellwood    Bldg.      Mel.    570. 


DAVID    QUAIL    &    CO. 

Chartered  Accountants. 

Certified    Public    Accountants. 

401    Torrey    Bldg.,    Duluth. 

Highest    references.      Inquiries   invited. 


it 
it 

it 
it 
it 
it- 
it 
it 


$3,200. 


WEST  DULUTlt  REALTY  CO., 

6407  Ramsey  Street, 

West   Duluth. 


^■^.if.::.if.ititititititil^it^t^titii'i{^ititititi&it 


MODERATE    PRICED    HOMES    ON 
EASY   TERMS. 


if- 
SPLENDID   VALUES.  * 

.  it 

it 

2915  East  First  street — 7  rooms  it 
and  bath,  hot  water  h-at.  two  it 
fireplaces,  laundry  tubs,  living  ifi 
room  finished  In  mahogany,  din-  i^ 
Ing  i-ooni  white  enamel,  upstairs  it 
white  enamle,  hardwood  floors,  ^ 
.-..ment  walks  and  paved  .-(treets.  O^ 
One  of  the  best  designed  houses  ^ 

In  East  end.  *" 

it 


3821  W.  6th  St.,  a  »ood  7-room  it 
house,  <onerete  foundation,  with  il- 
cellar,  water  and  electric  lights:  # 
hardwood  floors  downstairs;  lot  it 
ha.H  nice  shade  trees,  cement  *■ 
sidewalks.  $500  cash  will  * 
handle,  balance  easy  terms:  price  it 
$1,900.  Look  this  house  up  to-  -ji- 
morrow;  you  will  agree  that  It's  it 
cheap  at  this  price.  it 

w 

■^  29    N.    66th    ave.    w..    new    2-room  * 


$2  500  for  a  well-built  new  house  with 
6  rooms  and  bath  on  14th  ave.  e.,  near 
9th  St.;  1  block  from  street  car  line; 
Hewer,  water  and  gas  and  electricity 
in  the  house.  Small  cash  payment  re- 
qtiired;  balance  monthly.  Lot  40  by 
80  feet.  Do  not  delay  Investigating 
this  proposition. 

SS  200  takes  a  7-room  modern  house; 
cement  foundation  and  basement;  hot 
water  heat,  hardwood  floors  and  hard- 
wood finish  downstairs.  Favorable 
terms.     This  Is  a  good  buy.   (889) 

$4  200  takes  a  2-flat  building  on  E.  6th 
St..  near  Portland  square;  always  rent- 
ed;   can   make   favorable    terms.    (697) 

Three  good  propositions  In  the  way  of 
modern  homes;  all  In  good  condition, 
at  Lester  Park;  at  favorable  prices 
and  terms. 

WHITNEY    WALL    COMPANY, 

Torrey    Bldg. 

Mel.    1368;    Grand   810. 


ji^^iMi-i^ititititititii^^'i^iiitititititii-itit-^cit 


AWNINGS,    TEXTS,    PACKSACK9. 

Polrler  Tent  &  Awning  Co.,  413  E.  Sup. 
Both  phones.  Horse  and  wagon  covers. 

AWNINGS— Duluth  Tent  &  Awning  Co., 
1608    W.    Superior   st.     Lin.    S6. 


Fl'NERAIi    DIRECTOR. 

OLSEN^&^i?DPinD?rYANr  2014    W.    Su- 
perlor  st;  Lin.    10;   Mel.    7620. 

"^  HAT   SHOP.  ~ 

A,ny  Panama,  straw  or  soft  hat  cleaned, 

blocker     or     remodeled. 

Special  attention  to  mall 

orders.  New  Grand  Shine 

parlors,  210  W.  Superior/ 

at.     Grand  639. 

THE  CEXTR.A.L  H.\T 
works.  309  W.  Sup.  St. 
Gus  Klntonis,  managor. 
■'ats  cleaned,  rublocked 

"and    repaired.     We    call 

for  and   deliver.   Grand   1597-A. 


ML'SICAIi  INSTRUMENTS. 


^TA 


ASHES,  CINDERS,  ETC.,  REMOVED. 

Ashes,    cinders    and    manure    removed. 
Merrill.    Mel.    1390;    Grand    1488-X. 


A.  Haakonsen.  dealer 
and  expert  repairing, 
at  J.  W.  Nelson's,  6 
E.   Superior  st. 


WAVERLY  PARK. 
i(.  $7,800 — Brand  new  stucco  house,  * 
iii  built  as  a  model  by  the  com-  * 
pany:  8  rooms  and  attic,  thor-  it 
oughly  modern,  hot  water  heat,  it 
fireplace,  sun  parlor,  best  jileep-  it 
Ing   porch    in    town,    artistically  it 


decorated,  best  of  fixtures,  stone  -» 
foundation,    full    basement:    fine  it 


SALE    HOUSES. 

9-room  house  116  W.  «th  St..  bath,  gas 
and  electric  light;  Itit  fronts  on  two 
streets  and  park;  $600  cash,  balance 
$26    per    month. 

1028  E.  10th  St..  large  8-room  house;  2 
bathrooms;  gas  for  cooking  and  elec- 
tric light:  60-foot  corner;  space  for 
store  or  flat  on  corner;  price  $3,000; 
terms 

Five-room  flats;  central,  bath,  gas  and 
electric  light;  corner  lot.  60  by  150 
feet;  $500  cash,  balance  on  easy 
terms. 

$300  cash,  balance  $26  month,  »1X- 
room  modern,  new  house  «xcept 
beat   on   »th  ave;   concrete   basement. 


lot.  100  by  166  feet,  beautiful  •* 
view,  a  very  bright  and  cheerful  * 
new  home  at  a  low  price  and  on  it 
easy  terms.  * 

it 

HUNTER'S  PARK  DISTRICT.  * 
^  $6.700 — New  stucco  house,  7  rooms,  it 
4       thoroughly    modern;    hot    water  it 


ARCHITECTS. 

GILIUSON^&   CARSON.    313-14  Olencoe 
bldg.     Mel.    6622;    Grand    1786-X. 


CARDS! 

BuslnesiTcaTds.   800.  $1;  Calling  Cards. 
100,  39c.   Kask  Printery,  114  E.  Sup,  st 


Gibson  mandolins  and  guitars,  banjos, 
banjo-mandollns,  old  violins,  cellos. 
Ben    B.    Miller,    agent.    Grand    1622-X. 


Pianos,   violins,    vlctrolas,    sheet   music, 
etc.      Boston    Music   Co. 


MEDICAL  BATHS. 

DR.  K.  A.  LEE.  chiropractic  special- 
ist; cure  or  no  pay  for  rheumatism, 
stomach  and  kidney  troubles.  Baths. 
1826    E.    Superior  at.   Mel.    8128 


CAMERAS   AND   KODAKS. 

'^'^'^IaRCADE^CAMERA   SHOP— 
110  W.  Superior  St.  Amateur  finishing, 
kodaks  and    camera   supplies. 


CARPET  CLEANING  WORKS. 


INTERSTATE   CARPET 
1908    W.    Michigan    St. 


Cleaning  Co. 
Both    phones. 


it 
it 
it 
it 
it 
it 
it 
it 
it 
* 
it 
Ad 

it 

it 


heat,  large  living  room,  sun  par-  # 
lor,  good  foundation,  full  base-  it 
ment;  nice  lot,  elegant  view,  it 
near  car  line;  easy  terms.  it 

it 

it 

* 
it 

ic- 


All  we  ask  is  a  chance 
to  show  you. 


You  may  phone  us  If  you  wish. 
Auto  Service, 


WB  RENT  electric  cleaners.  $1  to  $1.60 
per  day.     Anderson  Furniture  Co. 


Snap   in    11-room   house   on   E. 
with    60-foot    lot. 


3rd   St. 


Contracts  bought. 
Money  to  loan. 
Hotel    and    rooming    house    for   sale. 
Houses  to  rent. 


Mel.    26. 


A.  A.  FIBER  CO.. 
;01    First   National    Bank. 

Grand   1833-X. 


N.  J.  UPHAM  CO.. 

714  Providence  Building. 

Phones— Melrose  848;  Grand  847. 


it 

it 
it 


ii^iti^ititititif'ititit^itit^t'ftitit^il^S'it'it^ 

it  * 

if.  FOR  SALE,  # 

it  * 

if.  Exceptional  6-room  brick  veneer  * 
*  house.  Cooke  St.,  near  47th  ave.  e.  it 
if.  Terms  and  price  right.  * 

^  STEWART  O.  COLLINS, 

*.  710  Torrey  Building. 

■f^titr-ititit^t'itit^it^^it'itit^ititit-itiiit'itit 


CHIMNEY     SWEEP. 

ED  McCARTY.  chimney  sweep  and 
furnace  cleaning.   Call   Lake.   46-L. 

KNUDSOX — Chimney  .sweep  and  furnace 
cleaner.  Fire  headquarters,  Mel.  46. 

DANCING   ACADEMY. 

RYAN'S — The  school  that  makes  good 
dancers.  Classes:  Mondays,  Tuesdays 
%nd   Thursday.    Call    Mel.    4618. ^ 

COFFIN'S  ACADEMY— Classes  Monday, 
Tuesday    and    Thursday.  Either  phone. 


OPTOMETRIST  AND  OPTICIAN. 

CONSULT  A.  L.  NORBERG,  optomet- 
rist and  optician,  201 H  W.  Ist  St..  for 
economical  buying  and  correct  fitting 
Of  glasses;  satisfaction  guaranteed. 
We  grind  our  own  lenses.  Established 
In  business  1891.  Registered  by.  ex- 
amlnation    1901. 

PIANOS  REPAIRED  AND  TUNED. 

"drHE^PIANO    SHOP— 
Tuning,  finishing  and  repairing.  Greg- 
ory   &    Krlsteneen,    1805    W.    Superior 
M.   Melrose   6621;   Lin.    295-X. 

DULUTH  PIANO  Repair  factory,  alley 
entran'-e.   312 v;,    W.    Ist   st.    Mel.    464 

PAPERS    AND    MAGAZINES    BOIGHT. 

DON'T  THROW  away  old  raagaaines 
and  newspapers;  we  buy  them.  Du- 
luth Paper  Stock  Co.  Grand  2025.  Mel. 
6339.  


FRENCH    DRY    CLEANERS. 

PHONE^24B  and  our  auto  will  call. 
Prompt  attention  to  out-of-town  or- 
ders.   East    End    Dry    Cleaners^ 


^A'-T;-,Witit'-VJ-*ff>.^^ci>Y.^?^*-Aii^V-?.i^^f.i?.^ 


*L  623  Sixteenth  avenue  east— 6  room.s  it 
<Jt  and  bath.  The  owner  must  sell  * 
#       In  next  ten  days.  it 

it  ■     -   "  '"V 

*!.•  BIS  Fourth  avenue  east — Two  6-  * 
-^'       room  flats  and  two  baths;  snap,     it 

if.  ■* 

i^  1503  Jefferson  street — 7  rooms  and  it 
i(.  maids'  room.  This  Is  an  eape-  yt 
I ially  well-built,  modern  home.  *■ 
pleasantly  located  on  nice  lot;  it 
very  desirable  residence  district,  it 
A  snap.  * 

4513    Cooke    street — 7    rooms    and  it 

bath,  hot  water  heat:  bungalow,  it 

nearly  new.  "^ 

* 

610  East  Seventh  street — Hot  wa-  -^- 
ter  heat,  concrete  foundation,  6  it 
rooms  and  bath,  fine  basement;  li- 
nearly new.  ^ 

*  1024  East  Ninth  street— Hot  water  it 


V* 

it 
it- 
it 


cottage  and  good  barn,  on  50-  it 
foot  corner;  water  and  gas  In  ■>t- 
street.  Price  only  $650;  $300  it 
cash.  The  lots  alone  are  worth  # 
priee  asked  for  entire  property.  *• 
This  house  can  b«  easily  en-  it 
larged  Into  pleasant  little  bun-  it 
galow.     Let   me  explain   how   It  it 


-FOR  SALE  BY  OWNER— 


can  bo  done. 


THOMAS  OLAFSON, 
6417  Ramsey  St.,  West  Duluth. 


if.itit-itititit-'ititititif^ititititititititit^it-itit 


9t 

it 
it 


it 


it 


heat,  full  basement,  6  rooms  and  * 
bath;   solid   brick,  nearly  new.       * 

"Ht 

Himter's  Park  home — 6  rooms  and  it 

bath,  stone  foundation,  hot  wa-  * 
ter  heat,  full  basement,  best  *• 
kind  of  finish.  * 

x- 

1118    Ea!»t    Third    street— 7    rooms  it 

and  bath,  stone  foundation,  full  it 
basement;  centrally  located.  it 

* 

2026    East    Fifth    street— 7    rooms  it 

and  bath,  hot  water  hi-at,  full  * 
basement:  very  attractive.  it 

..  it 

*  4114  Ciladston**  street — 6  rooms  and  it 
^  hath,  hot  water  heat,  full  base-  it 
•^       ment;    bungalow.  * 

it  '  ** 

i^  The  houses  are  all  attractive  and  it 
^       modern.      Rock-bottom   prices.       * 


it 

I 

it- 
it 


BRAND  NEW  STRICTLY  MOD-     » 
ERN  SEVEN-ROOM  HOME,  * 

w 

*  Full  basement,  fine  10  by  16  sun-  it 
if.  room,  bullt-lu  buffet,  fireplace.  # 
if.  hardwood  finish;  lot  100  by  160;  # 
if  one  block  from  Woodland  car.  A  ■* 
if.  bargain  at  $6,300;  one-third  cash.  •» 
i(-  balance    $85    a    month,    which    in-  •* 

#  eludes  Interest  at  6  per  cent.  Write  it 
^.  M  52.  Herald.  * 

ti^itititi^^mitit-ititit-itititititit-itititit-^i'it 


-WEST  END  BARGAINS — 


ii^i.^ifi:-ii-ititi:a^tititititiHtitit-i:-iti:-'t!t<i-f 

it-  * 

if.  I  WOULD  GIVE   $60,000  * 

^  IN  CASH 7^^ 

I  * 

■>i.  If  the  people  of  Duluth  could  be  it 
if.  mad.i  to  realize  that  "West  Duluth  # 
it  Is  Bejit  Duluth."  and  that  I  am  it 
•;&  offering  perhaps  the  greatest  bar-  it 
if.  gains  that  have  ever  been  offered  # 
)l.  In   Duluth  Real  Estate.  * 

•y.  it 

it 

it 
Modern  10-room  house:  Improved  it 
street,  cement  sidewalk:  fine  it 
condition:  renting  for  $28  per  * 
month.  Price  $2,300;  very  easy  * 
terms.  * 

6-room     cottage,     quiet     neighbor-  * 
hood.    Just      the      place     for     a  * 


it 

# 
it 
it 


Exclusive  Sale. 

W.  M.  PRINDLE  &   CO.. 
Main  Floor.  Lonadale  Bldg. 


* 

it 

it 

I 

it 


>:- 
it 

it 
it- 
it- 

*•• 

t 

it 
it 

it  New  6-room  house;  hardwood  it 
*  fioors,  modern  throughout;  on  * 
•X-  3  good  lots.  $2,a00,  terms  like  * 
it       rent.  •* 

^  '"- 

if.  Modern  6-room  cottage,  practically  if. 
$2,100,      120     per     month  ■^ 


$500  cash  and  $25  per  month  for  No.  280 
18th  ave,  w. — 6-room  modem»dwelllng, 
large  heating  plant,  full  stone  foun- 
dation; corner  lot,  cement  walks,  etc. 
Price   $3,600. 

$300  cash  and  $26  per  month  for  double 
fiat  building  of  10  rooms,  and  large 
barn;  conveniences.     Price  only  $2,800. 

$1,000  cash  and  easy  payments  for  new 
6-room  dwelling;  full  basement  and 
conveniences;  paved  street,  good  resi- 
dence  district.      Price    $3,700. 


ATTRACTIVE  HOMES  FOR  SALE. 

/oo.oj)  Here's  a  beautiful,  modern 
bungalow:  located  East  end;  6  rooms; 
hot  water  heat,  fireplace,  oak  finl.sh 
and  hardwood  floors;  new  house;  price 
$6,000.  

(17-16)  Nlco  7-room  house.  West  ond, 
on  8rd  St.;  Rood  basement,  hardwood 
floors,    nice   lot;    price  43.300. 

(27-41)  Fine  home  on  car  line;  7 
rooms;  hardwood  floors,  full  bath, 
large  porch;  fine  view  of  lake;  near 
school;  large  new  chicken  house;  lot 
60x140;  fine  lawn  and  garden;  price 
only  $3,000;   make  your  own  terms. 

LITTLE  &  NOLTE  CO.. 
Exchange   Building. 


FOR  SALE — Fine  new  6-room  house  at 
Lakes!  lo.  two  blocks  from  car  line; 
all  conveniences  except  heat:  well 
built;  will  sacrifice  for  quick  sale; 
Hmall  ca.sh  payment  required.  Call 
6005   Dodge   st. 


FURNITURE  RE-COVERED. 

Let  Forsell   do  your  UPHOLSTERING. 
334    E.    Superior    st.     Both    phones. 


PAINTING  AND  PAPERING. 

WHEN  YOU  want  to  paint  and  paper. 
call  Dudley  for  right  price*.  Mm- 
18;>0-X;    Grand    1488-X. 


PAI'BNTS. 

AlT   about    patents;    consultation    free. 
S.  Geo.  Stevens.  716  Fidelity.  Mel.  3121^ 


PLUMBING. 

THE   SANITARY   Plumbing   Co.,   34    W. 
let    St..    plumbing    and    heating 


FOR  SALE — 5-room  house  near  McCul- 
loch  St.;  modern.  Including  hot  water 
heat;  grounds  70  by  .160  feot;  $2,760, 
easy  t°!rm8.  Greenfield  Realty  Co.. 
416  Providence  bldg.  26 


—LOOK  THIS  UP— 
Good  6-room  house.  S6th  ave,  w.;  ave- 
nue paved,  cement  walks;  has  oak 
finish  on  first  floor:  full  basement; 
warmly  built;  prlct  $2,700;  house  alone 
Is  worth  the  price  asked. 


FOR  SALE — 6-room  house,  modern  ex 
cept    heat;    one    block    from    Lakeside 
cars;    $3.S0<>.     P*8y    terms.     Greenfield 
Realty  Co.,  416  Providence  bldg.         22 

FOR  SALE — Elegant  cottage  near  41st 
ave.  e.;  modem  except  heat;  price 
$2,500,  easy  terms.  Greenfield  Realty 
Co..  416  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — By  owner,  new  O-room 
modern  house  on  Jefferson  st.  Call 
Mel.    1481. 


FLORIST    AND    NURSERYMAN. 

Duluth  Floral  Co..  wholesale,  retail;  cut 
flowers,    funeral    designs.    121  v\ .  Sup. 


WINDOW  CLEANING. 

National  Window  Cleaning  Co..  expert 
in  cleaning  woodwork,  wall  paper, 
marble,  etc.  Our  work  must  prove  sat- 
isfactory,   prices    reasonable.  Mel.    hio. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN. 


AUTOS  AND   MOTORCYCLES. 


il^it.it.-it-ititiyitititicit-^'itit^cii-ititit^iyitit^ 

%  $10  OR  MORE # 

5      LOANED  TO  ANYONE      # 


BENJAMIN  F.  SCHWEIGER  CO., 
1932  West  Superior  Street. 


for 
small   family.      Price   $1,100;   $10  it 
down  and  $10  per  month.  ■* 

it 


—FOR  SALE— 
11  rooms,  fine  East  end  home. .  .$13,000 

6  rooms  and  bath.   East  end $6,900 

Attractive,  modern  home  at  Hunter's 
Park.  6  rooms,  bath,  fireplace,  garage 
and  chicken  house;  lot  60x180,  on 
carllne;    easy    terms $4,600 

Two  new  adinlning  brick  houses  in 
East  end.  with  hot  water  heat;  will 
nay  8  per  cent  net  on  Investment: 
Erlce 19.000 

FIELD-FREY   CO.. 
204    Exchange    Bldg. 


6-xoom  house,  6th  ave.  e.;  full  base- 
ment: tile  fioor  In  bathroom;  extra 
warmly  built;  oak  finish  on  first  floor; 
price  $8,860,  $600  cash.  For  terms  on 
these  see 


DE  CAIGNY  &  PAEPE, 
609  Providence  Bldg. 


ri6-l^i:-iiitit-ititititiiiiitii^t-iy:tititii-i:-^it'^ 
Oil  ^. 

if.  •/  ^• 

^  FOR  SALE.  it 

if.  "^ 

^^L  House.  1130  7th  ave.  e.;  6  rooms  ^- 
if.  and  bath,  all  modern  except  heat,  -it 
if.  Small  cash  payment,  balance  on  it 
if.  terms  to  suit.  Evenings  call  Grand  it 
*   1789-Y;  Mel.  971  «r  Lin.   264.  ^ 

^  t^a.Jt-it-ititit'^it-it-itit-itit'^'itil^i^it'ititit-itit 


FOR  SALE— Talk  to  Oilluson  If  you 
want  a  bargain  in  a  aecond-hand 
piano. 


new; 
takes  it. 


* 

'i-  6  good  lots,  excellent  location;  ce-  it 
v^       ment     sidewalks     around     them; 

$1,060  takes  the  bunch,  very  easy 

terms. 


^iS^it^f^it^titit^it^it^it^'it^it^^f^^*^-^^ 

*  NEW    6-ROOM    MODERN    HOUSE,  it 
-ft  Hot     water     heat,     finely     finished  it\•y,J^.,^^i,^,^,,,M4,M3,.sJ^^.y•^^ 

*  throughout;    half   block    from    car  it  1  »i»W-M-»^v»>v-.r»*;^»v^«y'^-^i^'*^'^  "^  ^ 
-AJ  line  at  Lakeside;  60  by  140  comer  * 
if.  lot;    price    $4,000;    $200    cash    will  O- 


IF  YOU  HAVE  A  HOUSE  FOR 
RENT,  SALE  OR  TRADE. 


"C.   R.  STOW  ELL  ABOUT  IT." 

Real   Estate   Broker. 

Sll  N.  Fifty-fifth  Avenue  W. 

Cole  376-X— Phones— Cal.   120-L. 


WEST   END  HOMES.— 


#  handle,  balance  easy  monthly  pay 

*  ments. 

&  P.  GEO    HANSON  &  SON, 

At  1916  VVost  Superior  St. 

a^Jt-^.Jtitit-ititit^iHtitif'it'i&it^ititit^-it-it'ii 

A  GOOD  house  and  Investment.  $800 
cash  and  $35  per  month  for  No.  606 
E.  6th  St.;  2  5-room  flats  with  atone 
foundation,  hardwood  floor.^  electric 
light,  giis  for  cooking  and  2  separate 
bathrooms:  rental  value  $43  per 
month;  price,  $4,200.  Inquire  owner. 
J.  P.  Z..  at  same  address. 

FOR  SALE— Here  Is  a  real  bargain; 
6-room  house;  water,  sewer,  gas*,  eiec- 
trlc  light;  good  barn,  etc  ;  fine  level 
lot  60  by  140  feet;  near  jird  ave.  e.; 
$2  000  $800  cash,  balance  $12  per 
montli.     Harris  Realty  Co..    Exchange 

bldg. ; 

FOR    SALE — 6-room    plastered    cottage. 

•park  Point;  large  yard;  <  heap  for 
quick  aale.  Will  make  terms.  2610 
Minnesota  avenue.  Call  Grand  1644-D. 
Would  consider  light  car  as  part  pay- 
ment. 


83  000 — Five-room  dwelling.  6th  st.  near 
near  2nd  ave.  w.;  all  modern,  with 
heat  etc.;  82-foot  lot;  paved  street. 
Terms.  $400  cash.  $20  per  month, 

$9  goo Six-room  house.  4th  st.  and  28th 

ave  w.;  36-foot  lot;  all  usual  con- 
veniences; fine  location;  $600  cash  and 
$25  per  month, 

$2  500 — Flvo-room  dwelling  on  W.  Srd 
st  Has  concrete  block  foundation, 
bath  gas.  electric  light,  etc.  Fine 
little  home  at  a  low  price;  easy  terms. 

We  have  a  big  Hat  of  West  end  homes 
at  moderate  prices  and  on  easy  terms. 

WESTERN  REALTY  CO.. 
1922  W.  Superior  st. 


i^'^'if^itit^ititiHtitititiHtiiii^itititititit^ 

t  * 

^  FOR  SALE.  it 

it  ^ 

if.  New  6-room  house  at  1016  10th  it 
if.  ave.  e.;   everything  modern  except  ^- 

#  heat;  small  cash  payment,  balance  * 
if.  easy    terms.      See    owner,    1014    L.  # 

#  6th  »t.  * 

t^it-JHtit^ititititititititie^it'ititil^i^itit 
it^it  it-^it-ititit-ititi^itititititil^-it^it'itititit 

#  t 
%  FOR  SALE.  •* 
if,  it 

#  House,  1130  7th  ave.  c.;  6  rooms  * 
-;^  and  bath,  all  modern  except  heat.  # 
4  Small    cash    payment,    balance    on  it 

#  terms  to  suit.  Call  evenings.  # 
H.  Grand  1789-Y,  Mel.  971.  or  Lin.  264.  it 

%itit'i(^itiMtitititi(-»it-ititititititit-ititit-it-it 

FOR  SALE — New  6-room  house,  $2,600. 
five  blocks  from  courthouse,  two 
blocks  from  carllne;  full  concrete 
foundation;  all  modern  conveniences 
Including  heat:  very  well  built;  * 
real  bargain:  about  $600  cash;  bal- 
ance like  rent.  809  9th  ave.  w.  In- 
quire M.  C.  Lathers.  Mel.  4922. 


—HOUSE  FOR  SALE— 


(20-18)  Five-room  brick  houSe,  very 
close  in;  hot  water  heat;  full  base- 
ment; corner  lot;  here's  a  nice  hom« 
on  any  terms  you  may  wish;  see  it 
quick. 

LITTLE  &  NOLTE  Co.. 
Ehcchange  Building.  


FOR  SALE — West  end  bargain:  don  t 
miss  it;  located  In  business  district  at 
21st  ave.  w.;  adjoins  fine  new  brick 
building;  lot  60x140  feet;  building  on 
lot  with  income  of  $86  per  month; 
one  of  the  best  buys  tn  the  city;  price 
only  $7,000.  Little  &  Nolle  Co..  E*. 
change  bldg.  (17-18) 


REAL  ESTATE  LOANS^^^ 

'^Htii^ti^i^iHtii^^ 

#  8TRYKER,  MANLEY  &  BUCK.      # 

«  Torrey  Building.  First  Floor.  « 
H  Both  phones,  166.  9 

^  Have   the   cash   on   hand   to   make  ^ 

#  any  good  loan  on  Duluth  phoperty  # 
^  at  the  lowest  market  rates,  •  to  *  * 
if.  per    cent,    according    to    security,  it 

#  without  submitting  applications  or  « 

a.  any  delay.  ;,♦,.♦       f[ 

^  Lowest  expense  and  good  treat-  * 
if       ment     On  or  before  privilege.       * 

#  STRYKER.  MANXEY   &  BUCK.      # 


it.  On  furniture,  pianos,  etc..  or  hold-  it 

if.  ing    a    steady    position,    at    rates  * 

*  honest  people  are  willing   to  pay.  j^ 

*  See  ufl  first  and  get  a  square  deal.  *  i 
*■  Money  in  your  harfds  In  few  hour*  it  \ 
-X.  time.     Low  rates.     Easy  paymenU.  * 

*  DULUTH  LOAN  (fo..  * 
Z  307  Columbia  bldg.,  303  W,  Sup.  st.  * 
if.  Hours:  8  a.  m.  to  6  p.  m.;  liVednes-  « 
if.  day  and  Saturday  to  8  p.  m.  * 
I              "^  Mel.  2856;  Grand  1224.  | 

%iiii^ititit-^it-it»^:ititi^it^ 
"  MONEY   TO   LOAN. 

From  One  to  Ten  Monthly  Pannents. 
On  Furniture,  etc.,  at  Lowest  Rates. 
Example  of  Cost  Per  Month: 

116,  if  paid  in  1  month $0.»0 

„      ,,      ..   8  months 0.70 

„      >t      •»   •  months "'Jft 

$26,  if  paid  In  1  month 110 

.,..««  months 0.95 

, J  months 0.80 

$50.  if  paid  in  1  month f -o 

8  months 160 

,       ,.    6  months i'«> 

Charges  on  other  amounts  in  proportion. 
Even  lower  rates  on  Jewelry,  etc. 
DU1.UTH  REMEDIAL  LOAN  ASS  N, 
4i)l  First  National  Bank  bldg.. 


ititit-^^t-!:'it-it^--»it-it^icitititie^-ititititi:-itf 
a,  it 

#         FIRST  MORTGAGE  LOANS.         # 
if.  it 

it  We    advance    funds    as    needed    on  it 
if.       first  mortgage  building  loans. 
Favorable  terms. 


98  PER  CENT  OF  AUTO  BUYERS 
READ  THE  DULUTH  HERALD. 

The  names  In  which  automobile  li- 
censes are  issued  have  been  checked 
with  The  Duluth  Herald's  subscription 
lists,  and  It  was  found  that  98  out  of 
every  100  people  who  buy  cars  read 
The  Duluth  Herald.  If  you  have  a  car 
for  sale  or  trade,  offer  it  In  this  auto- 
mobile column  and  you  will  reach  prac- 
tically every   one  who  will  buy. 

'ii^^itii^itii^i^^ 

%  WE  HAVE # 

it  * 

*  A  fine  Oakland  6-cyllnder  car  that  it 
^  we   can  sell  for  |760;  1914  model.  * 

SHere  you  have  a  chance  to  get  a  it 
big.  easy-riding  car  for  little  * 
if.  money;  It's  a  bargain.  Also  have  *- 
a.  other  bargains  In  used  cars.  It  if- 
it-  will  pay  you  to  come  and  see  ufl 
it 


REO  SALES  COMPANY. 
307  East  Superior  St. 
Old  phone.  6134  Mel. 
New  phone,  828-Y  Grand. 


it- 
it 
it 

it 


if^if^-if^f^t^if^itit^itit-it-ititif^itit-itititit^it 


W.  M.  PRINDLE  &  CO., 
Lonsdale  bldg. 


it 

it 
it 
it 


ii^-)f^}titit-ft^it^itit-^itifi('iti;^-^-itit-it-ititit 

GO  TO  FIELD-FREY  CO..  204  Ex- 
chango  bldg..  with  your  loan  applica- 
tion. If  you  want  lowest  rates  and 
prompt  service;  in  amounts  from 
$600  to   $60,000.  


FOR  SALE— 1601  E.  6th  st.;  8  rooms, 
modern:  hot  water  heat;  cement  walks 
and  steps,  avenue  paved;  nice  lawn, 
trees  and  shrubs.  For  appointment  to 
see  this  house,  call  Douglas  C.  Moore, 
711   Palladlo  bldg.    Mel.  7762. 

FOR    SALE— $1,400    for    a    neat      little 


ST.— Brand  new.  6  rooms,      cottage  and  »>*^=^"tlful  lot.  60  by  140,  on 

.finish,  laundry. 'hot  wate^  [    61st  ave.  e.;  ^«^^P  ''^'l*' .^*"'7^«  .^VuVse 
foundation,    lo.-atlon    none;    Houses    and    lot.    to   suit    eve,  jpi^.se 


1714   E.^  6TH 

mod*)i'n>>"^H 

heal,    stone    

b.»tt.r:  lot  60x160.  Term.s,  $1,000  cash; 
balance  to  suit.  Mel.  S71».  J.  D.  S 


and  preference  as  to  location.  William 
C.  Sargent.  101  Providence  bldv- 


FOR  SALE — By  owner.  8-room  house, 
arranged  for  2  famtlleB;  gas,  bath 
and  full  basement;  cement  sidewalk; 
near  carllne,  West  End.  Call  Mel. 
6536. 

FOR  SALE — Eight-room  house,  ar- 
ranged for  two  families.  In  first-class 
condition;  will  ««;".,*'hi:ap.  as  I  am 
going    farming.      Call    1620    E.   6th    st. 

FOR  SALE — A  snap;  $2,000  buys  nine- 
room  house  for  two  families.  West 
Duluth:  terms  to  suit.  Northern 
Realty  Co..  627  Manhattan  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — By  owner,  modern  2-flat 
brick  building;  6  blocks  from  First 
National  bank;  $6,000.  Addiess  E  940. 
Herald.  _____^_______ 

FOR  SALE — 7-room  house,  arranged 
for  2  families;  al.so  2  nice  lots.  This 
Is  a  bargain.    Apply  619  9th  ave.  e. 


IX)R  SALE — 6-room  house,  central  lo- 
cation. Just  completed,  ready  to  move 
Into;  all  conveniences.  Including  heat; 
concrete  basement;  save  carfare; 
price.  $2,600.00.  if  taken  within  a 
week;  easy  payments;  don't  hesitate; 
phone   for   appointment.     Mel.    7640. 


FOR  SALE— A  snap,  on  easy  terms,  7- 
room  house  with  bath,  at  price  lum- 
ber: corner  lot  60x140.  $2,650;  look  up 
at  once.  4402  Cooke  st.    R.  R.  Forward. 


FOR  SALE — Seven-room  house,  all  mod- 
ern, beautiful  site  overlooking  lake, 
will  be  sold  at  a  bargain  as  owner  Is 
leaving  city.    Call  6130  E.  Superior  st. 

FOR  SALE — House,  modem,  6  rooms 
and  bath;  water,  heat:  lot  66x202;  liv- 
ing room  14x19.  one  of  the  chambers 
10x18.     It  64th  a^e.  e.  Sale  by  owner. 

FOR  SALE — One  "fltie  acre  at  Home- 
croft,  with  good  Io«  house,  partly  fur- 
nished; price  $700;  terms.  Inquire  H. 
H.  Brown.  601  Lyceum  bldg.     

B'OR  SALE — 6-room  house,  gas,  water, 
elecUlc  light,  hatdwood  floors;  large 
room  In  basement;  full  sized  lot.  1120 
W.  6th  St. ■        : . 

FOR  SALE — Modern  home;  if  you  want 
one  of  the  best  ih  East  end  at  right 
figure,  write  me.  Write  U  62.  care 
Herald.  


MONEY  TO  LOAN— Any  amount,  any 
time;  quick  service;  building  loans  a 
specialty,  6.  8Mt  and  6  per  cent.  Cooley 
&  UnderhlU.  209-10-11  Exchange  bldg. 


SALARY  AND  CHATTEL  LOANS. 
Don't  you  need  a  little  money. 
We  have  It  to  loan. 
BORROW  $10.00.  RETURN  $0.40  WEEK  I  pQj^    saLE— Cheap,    for    cash.    1 
BORROW  $20.00,  RETURN       .80  >^  EEK      passenger  Paige  touring  car;  36 
BORROW  $30.00,  RETLRN     1.20  \\  EEK  -      x     ., 

Other  amounts   In  proportion. 
DULUTH  FINANCE  CO., 
801  Palladlo  Bldg. 
Hours:    8  a.  m.  to  6:30  p.  m.;  Wednesday 
and  Saturday  evenings  until  9  o  clock 
Both  phones. 


* 


LOANS     ON     DIAMONDS,     WATCHES, 
etc.     Example  of  cost: 

$10,  paid  back  one  month 60o 

$16,   paid   back  one  month •  •   aS 

$26    paid   back   one   month. ..  .$1.00 
'     •      KEYSTONE  LOAN  CO., 

32  W.  Superior  st. 

WB  LOAN  on  all  kinds  of  personal 
security  at  lowest  rates.  Call  on  us. 
Duluth  Mortgage  Loan  Co.,  W.  Horkan. 
New  1698-D;  Mel.  37.88. 


914    6- 

passenger  faige  lounng  tar;  o»-H.  P.. 
completely  equipped,  electric  lights, 
starter  and  horn,  best  grade  Gordoti 
seat  covers.  4  good  tires,  1  extra  tire 
and  rim,  bumper  and  tire  chains;  run 
11.000  miles;  guaranteed  In  flrst-clasa 
condition;  $650.  cash  only.  R.  A  R. 
garage,    rear    310    W.    2nd    st 


Loans  on  watches,  diamonds,  guns,  etc. 
Keystone  Loan  Co..  22  W.  Superior  st. 


ST  LOUIS  AND  CARLTON  county  farm 
loans;  can  handle  any  good  farm 
loan;  terms  right;  no  delay.  Northern 
Farm  Loan  Co..   102   Providence   bldg. 

CASH  ON  HAND  to  loan  on  city  and 
farm  property:  any  amount,  lowest 
rates,  no  delay.  Northern  Title  Co., 
612   First  National  Bank  bldg. 


IF  YOU  OWN  a  lot,  see  us  about  fi- 
nancing the  building  of  your  home. 
Duluth  Lumber  Co.,  Mel,  112,  Lin.  112. 


Money   at  Lowest   Rates. 

Any   Amount;   No   Delay,. 

Little  &  Nolte  Co.,  Exchange  bldg. 


FOR    SALE — 7-room    house;    hot    water 
heat;  built  last  summer.    $22  11th  ave.  a. 


FOR  SALE — Attrictire  Woodlani  ave. 
house.  $10,600;  bf^  value:  let  me  show 
you.  WUllam  C^arKcnt,  Providence 
bldg.      T   1  ^» 

FOR  SALE — New  fe'''rl>oms:  4505  Cooke 
st  •  complete  and  modern;  $500  cash, 
balance  like  rentj  opion  Sunday  2  to  3. 

FOR  SALB^By  o*.*tier.  modern  6-room 
house;  large  lot.  Inquire  6401  Glcn- 
wood  St.,  Lakeside. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN — ^Loans  made  on 
timber  and  farm  lands.  John  Q.  A. 
Crosby.    306   Palladlo  bldg.  


MORTGAGES— FARMJlND^ITY. 

—MORTGAGES — 

Bank  Trust  and  Insurance  companies 
Invest  their  money  In  our  farm  mort- 
gages because  they  are  safe,  conserva- 

-  tlve,  and  return  them  6  per  cent  on 
their  money.  Why  not  make  your 
money  net  you  6  per  cent.  We  have 
mortgages  In  small  or  large  amounts. 
Titles  guaranteed. 

BICKELL-KYLLO  &  CO., 

206  Exchange  bldg., 

Duluth.  Minn. 


CONTRACTING  FIRM  has  two  or  three 
first  mortgages  on  Duluth  property 
netting  6.  7  and  8  per  cent  to  place. 
From  $1,200  to  $2,600.  No  commis- 
sions paid.     Write  G  42.  Herald. 


ANY  AMOUNT  OF  MONEY  for  loans  on 
improved  farms.  Bickell.  Kyllo  & 
Co..  206  Exchange  bldg  " 


MONEY  ON  HAND  for  real  estate  loans. 
Stewart    G.    Collins.    710    Torrey    bldg. 

For  Farm  Loans  and  Farm  Lands,  see 
Ebert-Walker  Co.,  816-16  Torrey  bldg. 

MONEY    TO    LOAN    on    city    property. 
De    Calgny    &    Paepe.    509    Providence. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN — Any  amount.  Ben. 
jamln   F.   Schwclger,   1932   VV.   Sup,  st. 

CITY    AND    FARM    loans.     William    C. 
Sargent.    Providence    bldg.  


STOCKS  AND  BONDS. 


in    touch    with 


WANTED  TO  BORROW. 
TO    "borrow^ 


on 


WANTED  TO  BORROW — $1,000 
S3  600  Hillside  East  end  property,  7- 
ioom  modern  house;  will  pay  6  per 
cent  3  or  5  years;  no  commission. 
Write  H  44.  Herald. 


WOULD  LIKE  to  get 
anyone  who  has  300  or  less  shares  of 
Butte  &  Zenith  City  Mining  Co.'s  stock 
that  they  might  wish  to  sell.  Call 
Mel.  6803  after  6  p.  m.  


GUARANTEED    tire    repairing    at    low 
©rices;    our   new    tires    will    save   j'ou 
"--.ge.    Duluth  Ai  ■ 
E.  Superior  st. 


FOR  SALE — Auto.  LoEler.  6-cyllnder. 
7 -passenger,  good  running  order;  has 
seat  covers,  tires  in  good  shape,  paint 
in  good  shape;  top  practically  new: 
nice  looking  car;  price  $600;  left  by 
owner  with  us  for  sale.  Mutual  Auto 
Co. — 

OXY-ACETYLENE  welding,  cutting 
and  carbon  burning;  all  work  guaran- 
teed satisfactory  or  no  charge;  99% 
per  cent  pure  oxygen  for  sale.  Duluth 
Gas  &  Welling  Co..  2110-2112  W. 
Michigan  st.    Mel.  7064;  Lin.  643. 

FOR  SALE — Matheson  car  that  won 
the  auto  races  on  the  lake;  complete- 
ly overhauled;  electric  iVghU.  good 
ttres;  originally  $3^600;  come  tn  and 
look  It  over.  R.  &  R.  garage.  816  and 
812  W.  2nd  st. _^— _ 

FOR  SALE  —  7-passenger  Studebaker; 
good  condition,  practically  new  tlre.»; 
splendid  car  for  bus  or  Jitney  busi- 
ness; a  real  snap.  Call  Lakeside  148-Ki 


money  on  mileage.    Duluth  Auto   Tire 
Repair  Co..  813 


FOR  sale: — Motorcycle,  for  quick  sale. 
$90-  Excelsior  twin-cylinder.  1»1S 
model,  fully  equipped.  Johnson  Auto 
Supply  Co.,   388   E.  Superior  St. 


FOR  SALE — 150  shares  stock  Iron 
Mountain  Mining  company.  Submit 
your  highest  cash  offer.  T  64, 
Herald. 

FOR  SALE — 100  shares  Onahman  Iron 
stock.    Best    offer.    Write    E  81.  Herald. 


FOR  RENT— COTTAGES. 

FOR  RENT — To  responsible  party.  4- 
room,  completely  furnished  cottage. 
All  new  Mlssioo  furniture.  Season  or 
year.   1626   Minnesota  ave. 

Vrm  RENT — 6-room  furnished  cottage 
on  Park  Point j  water,  gas  and  nath; 
new  piano  and  furniture.  37?4  Min- 
nesota  ave.;    Mel.   6697. 


■  |Fa««aaq*>-^ 


YOUR  OLD  CASINOS  are  worth  money 
to  you  with  our  system  of  double 
treading;  see  us.  Herian  &■  Merling. 
105   W.   1st  St.     MeL   4668. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Second-hand  au- 
tomobile; must  be  In  first-class  con- 
dition. Address,  with  "full  particulars. 
Z  78,  Herald. , 


FOR  SALE — Ford  demountable  rims; 
crown  fendera  radiator  hoods  and 
shalls,  all  kinds  of  tires.  Johnson 
Auto  Supply.  . 


FOR  SALF. — 6-pa«8enger  car;  motor 
recently  overhauled;  8  tires  practlc- 
ally  new;  $860.     Call  Mel.  4446. 

EASTERN  Auto  Radiator  '^o^ks— Also 
all  auto  metal  work  done.  886  E.  Su- 
perior St.    Phone  Grand  2821. 

YOUR  CAR  repaired  at  Your  giu-^^: 
A-1  mechanics.  Harrison  ft  Son.  Meu 
6642.     2721  Huron  st. 

vi\n  SALE Studebaker  roadster,  $2W; 

^'^paf^nger  Ford.  $825.  Call  M^J- 2601. 

FOR  SALE — 6-passenger  automobile; 
bargain.     4113  W.  Ird  st. 


/ 


! 


I     " 

1 

1"— 

i 

I 

1 

1 
I 

II   I     .     m  -        >  K  f.-  * --.*»g.»n—'.rir*iLU<-- 


y  ■  .!■  1  ■  ■■-II I 


^^^Bi^-^r^^^f 


•  >..  »7T'7  -?■ : 


Saturday, 


THE  DULUlfH  HER4LD   *p^> 


8, 1916. 


-r- 


\ 


i 


WANT  AD  RATES  AND 
INFORMATION 

Ic  a  word  per  day;  $1  per  line 
per  month.  Display  classified, 
72c  per  inch  per  day. 

No  n<i  Inkcii  for  less  tliaii    lor. 


Om»   Ont   a   Word   Earh  InarriloB. 
Xo  Advvrtl««nirnt   Lesa   Than   15  Cents. 

H  EI^  WAI^^D^XL&I(Cont5 

if 


re- 
(lo.sliiK    hour    will    be    In- 
the    hi  adinp.    "Too   Late 


l-H  \K<;H  want  ads  win  not  he  run 
lojiRtT  ihnn  seven  days  wlihoiit  re- 
n«-\\'al    orilfr. 

ALL  t'HAHf:i:  WANT  ADS  are  dup  and 
pavHblo  the  .sam.'  tlay  fii-.«t  ln»«riion 
of  ad  Bpl'-ais.  All  oiit-of-tuwn  want 
adH  aro  c-asli  in  advance.  Mail  orders 
fiivcvi  prompt  attention.  Addre.ss  all 
lettfMs    to    Want    Ad    Department. 

t'Lt)Sl.\'«;  HOI" US — Want  ads  to  be 
elaa^ified  properlv  must  be  In  The 
Honild  (.ffi<e  by  tl:30  a.  m.  on  the 
d.iy  ad  Is  t«>  be  run.  Want  ads 
eelved  sift<^ 
«erte(l  under 
to  na.«j<ify." 

T  E  L  K  r  H  O  N  K  W  ANT  ADS  an 
tharKed  at  the  same  ratf  as  eash  ads 
ar.d  .ollettlon  will  b»-  made  at  your 
liunio  or  offi-e  as  .«oon  as  posfsible 
ther.aftr'r.  Tlua  is  an  at  .ommodation 
servii'e  and  pnym<  nt  nh.-uld  be  nmde 
promptly  when  the  bill  Is  presented 
so  a.s  to  avoid  further  annoyame  and 
to  aid  the  effUieney  of  our  service. 
Alwnvs  ask  that  your  telephone  ad  be 
r»|..  ritofl  ba.:k  to  you  by  the  telephone 
ad  taker  to  make  sure  that  it  has 
been    .orreetly    taken. 

KLl.Vf>  ADS— No  answers  to  blind  ads 
will  he  Kiven  unless  tleket  Is  pre- 
sented at  time  of  request.  Always  save 
ticket  showing  key  nu.nber  when 
placing  blin.!  ad.s.  }!erald  employes 
HP''  not  permitted  to  tell  who  any  ad- 
v.itiser  is.  .An.swers  to  out-of-town 
blind  ads  will  be  forward- d  without 
extrp.    eofit. 

THK  MKltALD  d<sirf  s  to  Jjive  t'ne  be»t 
.•serviee  to  Jf?i  readers  and  a<lvertiser.s. 
Tf  vf.n  deiilr.-  any  .viKKestion  as  to 
the"wordln».r  of  your  ad.  call  the  \v  ant 
Ad     l»   part  in«  nt. 


TIK-LOADING  GANG. 

Ten  experienced  tic-loaders  for  tie 

train   in    Wiscon.sln.      Load   by   the 

piece;  big  wages  made.     Free  fare 

down   and    back,   or   to   St.   Paul   or 

Dakota.     .Ship  Sunday  night.    Open 

Surtday. 

NATIONAL    KMPLOYMENT  CO., 

417   Wfst   Ml.hlfran   Street, 

Duluth,   Minn. 


-A- 


-If 
* 

!  -ii- 

\-^ 

[if- 

i  ^  WANTKD.  Vf 

I* 
I  * 

1^ 


competent  man  for  janitor 
sl:hvice. 

Apply  at  once. 
J.  M.   <;1DD1NG  &  CO. 


HERALD  TELEPHONE 
NUMBERS 

i!isi.\i:s.s  oFFici-: 

324  ^;is^" 

Ask  for  the  Want  Ad  Dept. 
NEWS  dei'artmi:nt 

EITHER 
LINE 


.V. 


^i->if;*;V5\^\iVi-;::W«V.^-l^*^-*TV;)?V^>\-7'{i;¥*--.^ 


>'tt 


WANTED. 


A  man  of  .^uffieient  caliber  to  ap- 
proaeii  and  sell  the  better  class  of 
iin>»tors,  prtf«rred  stock  In  a 
live,  nutney-making:  ct.rporation  in 
th«  liimbi  r  business,  \\rite  J  74, 
Herald. 


WANTED — Salesmen  to  handle  be.'ft 
line  «if  advertising  slRn.s  of  all  kinds 
for  both  Indoor  and  outdoor  use;  al&o 
fine  line  of  adverti.<»itig  novelties,  bus. 
Ines.s  and  deluxe  «  alendars;  fine  op- 
portunit.v  for  hiistlers;  references  and 
expf  ri»  nee  reciuired;  liberal  commis- 
sion; write  now.  Mahon  Novelty  Co., 
Kenton,  Ohio. 

JVAlTTsMEN  WA.NrF:D  —  ExperlTnce 
.iii.ieee.s»ar>-;  (•»  sy  work;  big;  pay; 
write  for  larRe  list  of  oponlnK?*  of- 
feriiiK  oppoi  tunitles  to  earn  from 
$100  to  $f.00  a  mt-nth  while  you 
learn.  Address  nearest  office.  Dept. 
212  .Vaiional  Salesmen's  Training' 
association,  Chicago,  New  York,  San 
Francisco. 


POULTRY.  EGGS 


No 


One    Cent    a    Word    Eaeh    Iimerllon. 
AdvertUenieut   I.eHw  Tliaa   15  trnt*. 


HELP  WANTED— MALE. 


if- 


^;^;;^;f>frvrn^^^i^^^^'^^^^***^| 


communicH- 
who  intends 


-CARPKNTER.S— NOTICE— 
I  intend  to  build  a  new  garagre  an.J 
would    like    to    get    In 
tlon   Willi   a  carpenter 
to  buy  a  piano. 

TALK    TO   GTLirSON, 

at   THE   HAlDENHrSH   &   SONS 

IIANO  CO.. 

232  West   First  Street. 


**>;^;¥«>^;\^^Ai;^^^^>^v^iMf:^f^'fi^ 


•At 


GOVERNMENT     POSITIONS     In 
office        railway       mail       and 
branches    are   Rood.      Prepare 
ams"    under   foinur   I 
secretary-examiner. 
free.      Write    today 


post- 
other 
for   "ex- 
S.   civil    service 
Rooklet      G      80 
Patterson    Civil 


Service   school.    Rochester,  N.   Y. 


WA.VTEIt— Men    with 
Ital     to     travel     with 
shows.;    read    our    ad 
chatices    «>r    ask    for 
new      and 
10t|uipnient 
chines  and 
St.,   Duluth, 


some    cash    cap- 
motion     picture 
under    business 
barKain    lists    of 
used      outfits.  National 

«'o..  motion  idcture  ma- 
supplies,  417  W.  Michigan 
Minn. 


!>!!!  BABY  FOWLS 
ARE  WANTED! 


yUKRE  are  a  large 
*  number  of  people  in 
Duluth  and  vicinity  who 
will  buy  breeding  stock, 
eggs,  baby  fowls  or  chick- 
ens for  laying  this  season. 
Some  one  will  gladly'  pur- 
chase what  you  wish  to 
sell.  Herald  want  ads  are 
the  be.«;t  poultry  salesman 
available. 


^ 

;■  -;; 

^^^B^KuaSg^^'  * 

' 

^^^BG^Mvf  \  i^ 

.  ■■;•:■  ;•    ■ 

■■^^^F 

"^ 

CIRCULATION  GREATEST 
-RATES  LOWEST 


The  Duluth  Herald  has 
newspaper  in  the  world  in 


the  greatest  circulation  of  any 
a  city  the  size  of  Duluth.     Its 


rates  for  classified  advertising  are  less  per  thousand  circu- 
lation than  those  of  any  other  paper  in  Minnesota.  Best 
results  are  gained  from  ads  when  definite  information  is 
given.  When  information  is  lacking  the  presumption  is  that 
desirable  features  are  lacking.  Information  as  to  contract 
rates  and  the  probable  amount  of  space  your  ad  would  take 
gladly  given. 


One   Cent   a   Word   Eaeh  Insertion. 
-No  Advcrtiaement   L.eaa  Than   15  Cents. 

^^R^RENT^^FLATST 

it-  .  •  j^ 

*  FOR  RENT.  # 

*  •      * 

^  We  have  some  desirable  rooms  ■Jg. 
^  for  llgiit  housekeepingr  or  offices  i^ 
a-  at  123  W.  Superior  st.  and  220  W.  # 
^  Superior  st.;  rent  from  $8  to  $15  •^ 
ri-  per   month.  it 

-jf,  ^ 

•»  ZENITH  REALTY  CO.,  # 

■:i'  4   South    First   Avenue   East.  * 

i*'  i& 

— FOR  RENT — 


619    E.    Superior    St.,    5    rooms;    water, 
toilet  and  electiic  light,  $14. 

..$36.00 
,.$20.00 
. .$15.00 
..$18.00 
.  .$14.00 
..$20.00 


1115  E.  Ist  St.;  7  rooms 

219  W.  6th  St.;  5  rooms.... 

1901  W.  3rd  St.;  6  rooms 

125  1st  ave.  w.;  5  rooms, 
114   Park    ave.;    5    rooms... 

2619  W'.  3rd  st.;  5  rooms 


STRYKER,  MANLEY  &  BUCK.. 

Main  Floor,  Torrey  Building. 

Both  Phones  166. 


-FLATS — 


J.  D.    Howard   &   Co.,   Providence    Bldg. 


3  rooms,    230    Pittsburgh   ave.;    water 
paid     $6.00 

4  rooms,    303    S.    61st   ave.   w.;    water 
paid     $12.00 

4  rooms,    303    S.    6l8t   ave.    w.;    water 
paid     $13.00 

5  rooms.   1604  London  road;  heat  and 
water    $20.00 

6  rooms,     229      W.      5th     at.;      water 
paid     $15.00 

7  rooms,  1408 '4   E.  2nd  st.;  hot  water 
heat    $30.00 

FOR  RENT— At  120  \V.  4th  st.,  front  5- 
room  flat  and  bath;  every  room  light, 
airy  and  in  splendid  condition;  all 
conveniences  except  heat;  $23  per 
month,  with  bath.  W.  C.  Sherwood  & 
Co.,    118   Manhattan   bldg. 


FOR  RENT— A  4-room  flat  on  the  sec- 
ond floor  of  No.  2011  W.  Superior  st.; 
water,  electric  lights,  toilet,  hardwood 
floon;  water  paid  by  owner;  stove 
heat;  only  $12.50  per  month.  F.  I. 
Salter  Co.,    303  Lonsdale   bldg. 


One    (.>iit    n    W  nrd    l-:««  h    InNertlon. 
\o   .\d«ertla4-narn(    L.efci«   Than   15  Cents. 

FEMALE  HELK^rCCont)' 


ncy  April  20; 
sell    general 


WANTED — ."^aVsman;  vacanc 
ixperiencfd  any  line  to 
tra<l»'  in  .N'ort  liw  e.-Jt ;  unexcelled  spe- 
<i.ilty  propotUion;  commission  con- 
tract: $36  weekly  expens«s.  Contlnrn- 
tal  Jewelry  Co.,  <.'(intinental  bldg., 
t'l(  veland,   Ohio. 

WA.NTED — Salesman;  capable  np»  clalty 
man  for  Mlnmsota;  staple  line  on  new 
and  exceptional  terms;  vacancy  now; 
attractive  commission  contract;  $36 
weekly  for  expenses.  Miles  F.  Bixler 
Co.,    115-16   Cailin   bldg..   Cleveland,  O. 


'!f^::-;y:^';6i6i^iiii-i{^^i(-ifii:^iy:<ii^»^^^^^^ 


!  •*/;''. 


WANTED. 


YOUNG  .;IRL 
TO  DO 


FOR  STOCK   AND 
ERRANI>S. 


MILLER-ALBENBER'J  CO. 


WA.NTEI> — Salesman;  sphndid  open- 
ing;  capable  .<;aleMman  to  cover  MInne. 
sota  to  sell  staple  line  on  unusually 
liberal  terms:  commission  contract; 
$35  advanced  weekly.  Sales  Manager, 
28  suite,  800  Woodward,   Detroit. 


general      office 

and    bookkeeper. 

salary    required. 

Wa.VTED— Lathniill   and   sawmill  men, 
woodsmen,*  farmhands,      steel      gang,  j  WANTED — Experienced  head  waitress; 


-.If 
it 

WANTED — Competent  girl  for  generai 
housework:  must  be  good,  plain  cook; 
four  In  family;  $20  per  month.  4131 
E.    Superior  st.      Park    185-D. 

WANTED— «:irl       for 
work.     Stenographer 
State    experience   and 
Write  V  76.  Herald. 


eook  for  restaurant,  $76;  new  orders 
dally.  National  Employment  Co.,  417 
W.    Michigan    st. 


WA.NTED — Look    here!    You    can    make 
$15  dail>    easy:  absolutely   new   propf>- 
sitlon;    big    profits,    repeats   sure;   par- 
ticular:)    free.      Ruy    Town,    R.    No.    1,  i 
Bailey,   Mich. 


between  26  and  80  years;  no  phone 
calls  answered;  apply  In  person.  Mars 
&    Pantaze. 


WANTED— Elderly 
like  a  permanent 
housework;  small 
Herald. 


woman  who  would 
home  to  assist  with 
wages.     Write  B  66, 


WNNTED — Young  man.  be  a  barber. 
We  teach  you  cheaply  and  thoroughly 
and  furnish  tools  free.  Write  or  call 
for  free  .  atalogue.  R.  Modern  la  rbcr 
college  20»-.  E.  Superior  st..  Duluth, 
tM-  333    E.    7t'h  St.,   St.   Paul.   Minn. 


WANTED^— Men  In  every  locality,  for 
full  or  spare  time  to  book  orders  for 
reliable,  well-tested,  up-to-date  nur- 
s.-rv  produ.  ts:  weekly  pay:  experience 
unnecessary.  Desk  16,  Western  New 
York    Nurseries,    Rochester,    N.    'i. 


WANTED 
educated 
tives  for 
clopfudia 
Dudd,  Me 
born   St., 


SALESMEN — Two  active 
men  as  special  representa- 
the  new  international  ency- 
in  rniluth  and  vi.-lnity.  Write 
;id  &  •'«'..  Inc.,  440  So.  Dear- 
«'hicago,    III. 


WA.NTED — Man  and  wife  to  run  a 
boarding  hotise;  must  be  reliable  and 
respectable:  reference  will  be  re- 
quired.      Address  H    78,   Herald. 

WANTED— Bushelman  at  once  for 
out-of-town;  food  wages;  steady 
worli.    Inquire   213   W.   Isi   st. 

WA.VTEI> — First -class  painter's  help- 
er. H.  Miscampbell.  306  S.  l3t  ave. 
e.     Grand    264,   M»l.    6357. 


"WANTED- 
work;   no 


Maid      for 
children. 


geni 
412  N. 


eneral 
15th 


house- 
ave.  e. 


WANTED— Oirl      for      general      house- 
work: small   family.      320   25th  ave.   w. 


WANTED— Olrl      for      general 
work.      14   N.   19th  ave.   e.  Mel. 


house- 
5953. 


One    Cent    a    l\'»rd    Kuch    iiiMertlon. 
\o  Advertisement   L.csm   Tlian    IS   Cents. 

~ADbitibiitrwANW 

0limGES2!UQiAND3^ 

FOR  RENT— ROOMS— (Cont.) 

FOR  RENT — NIrcly  furnished  room 
and  bath  In  private  family;  good  lo- 
cation; light  hou.sekteping  If  pre- 
ferred.     706    7th   ave.    e. 

FOR  RENT  —  3  steam-heated  rooms 
and  kitchenette;  all  modern  conveni- 
ences; walking  distance;  for  rent 
May  1.     Call  Mel.  7097. 

FOR  RENT — Steam  heated  rooms,  fur- 
nished or  unfurnished;  light  house- 
keeping permitted.  220  \V.  Superior 
St.    Room   204.  

NOTICE— Save  money  on  buying  linens, 
bedding,  etc..  We  sell  at  wholesale: 
get  our  prices,  J.  C,.  Valentine  Co.,  8 
E.  1st  St. 

FOR  RENT — 2  furnished  rooms:  all 
modern  conveniences;  $1.60  and  $2 
per  week.      706   W\   3rd   st.     Mel.    7046. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms;  all  con- 
veniences, including  furnace  heat;  $7 
per  nmnth.     323  8th  ave.  w. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms  for 
housekeeping;  all  conveniences, 
E.    Isl    St.,    upstairs. 

FOR  RENT — 2  unfurnished  rooms; 
downstairs;  suitable  for  housekeep- 
ing.    "Jrand  829-A. 


light 
228 


WANTF^D- Neat 
with    housework. 


young    girl    to    assist 
Call    1817    E.  2nd  St. 


WANTED— Girl 
work.    1901    E. 


for      general      house- 
6th.    St.   Mel.    3347. 


FOR  RENT — Furnished  room  for 
housekeeping;  hot  water  heat. 
X.   24th  ave.  w. 


light 
420 


WANTED — A  coatmaker  and  a  bushel- 
man.     Dl  Santo  &   Howe. 


W.\NTED — 2  coat  makers, 
ave.      Peter   Chopik. 


130  Central 


WA.NTED  —  Experienced  chambermaid 
and  scrub  girl.     St.   Louis   hotel. 


WANTED — Competent    maid     for 
eral   hous-work.      2521   E.  6th  st. 


gen- 


-WE   HAVE  «;OOD  POSITIONS — 
For  men  In  clerical,  technical  and  com- I 
meiclal     lines.       Strangers     and     non- 
inei'jb»rs  especially   welcome.     Consul- 
tation  free.     Y.   M.  C.   A.    Employment, 
department. | 

"WANTED — Advertising      man,      college  i 
or    university    graduate,    with    depart-  ; 
ment   store   or    newspaper   writing   ex- 
perience,   preferred;    g«>od    salary    and 
opportunity.       Write     full     details     to 
Q   60,   Herald.  

WANTED — Salesman  with  wide  ac- 
quaintance among  merchants  and  oth- 
er business  men  in  own  community; 
splendid  opportunity  to  establish  per- 
manent business.  Doan  Oil  Co..  Cleve- 
land.  Ohio. 

LEAR.N  TELE<JRAPHY  —  Railroad, 
commercial  wireless,  also  touch  t.vpe- 
wrltlng:  earn  board  while  learning; 
write  for  free  catalogue.  American 
Telegraph    College,    Minneapolis. 

GOOD  MONEY  made  at  home  knitting 
ho.«iery;  machines  furnished  on  time; 
we  buy  or  sell  your  goods;  easy  and 
constant  work.  Wheeler  Co.,  (Inc.) 
837    MadiFon.   Chicago. 


HELP  WANTED— FEMALE. 


WANTED — Glrl.«    at    Sonu  rs'    Employ- 
m»nt  office,  13  E.  .Superior  st. 


WANTED— Good 
housework.     318 


girl       for 
10th   ave.   e. 


general 


vY- 

I: 
■:r 


WANTED. 

SEWING  GIRL  FOR  ALTERA- 
TION  DEPAICTME.VT. 

MILLER-ALBENBERG   CO. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework; 
good   home.     821    4th  ave.   e. 


WANTED— Girl 
work.      1206    E. 


for     general     house- 
3rd   St. 


AVANTED— Girl 
work.      1603    E. 


for 
4th 


general 

St. 


house- 


'  FOR     RENT— Nice,       large,       furnished 
{    front    room     for     housekeeping.     Call 
113    2nd    ave.    e. 

!  FOR      RENT — One      furnished        room; 

1     heated,    bath    and    use    of    telephone. 

202    E.     3rd    st. 

I  F<jR  RENT — Two  furnished  front 
rooms;  also  smaller  rooms.  Ill  E. 
.Superior    St. 

FOR  RENT — Nicely  furnished  front 
room  in  private  family;  rent  $8.  331 
W.    3rd    St. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  modern  room; 
gentleman  preferred.  614  1st  ave.  w.; 
Mel.    3886. 


W.\NTED — Solicitors;  good  hustlers 
who  can  produce  the  business;  no  ex- 
perience necessary;  we  will  show  you 
how.  Call  for  Mr.  Kell,  Bellnet  Inst. 
Co.,   202   E.  Superior  st. 

W^ANTED — Salesnien  make  flOO  week- 
ly. Best  selling  article  on  market; 
necessary  to  every  phone  user.  Write 
for  particulars.  Specialty  Sales  Co., 
What   Cheer,    Iowa. 

AY  ANT  ED — Three  niateher  men,  two 
cut-out  sawyers,  one  marling  machine 
n.an;  good  wages.  .Superior  Box  Co., 
61Uh  St.  and  Northern  Pacific  tracks, 
Superior,    Wis. 

WANTI<:D— Man  40  to  65  to  talk  trees, 
shrubs  and. roses.  N»>  previrms  exp<  i- 
lence  required.  Pay  weekly;  perma- 
nent. First  National  Nurseries.  Roch- 
ester.  N.   Y. 

WANTED— 600     hunters     to    know  we 
loan    money    on     rifles,    shotguns,  re-' 
volvers;   will   hold  till   next  season  be- 
fore   sold.    Keystone    Loan    Co.    22  W. 
Superior    St. 

Pl'H'TH — Railway  mail  clerk  exami- 
nations coming.  $76  month.  Sample 
qxiestions  fre*-.  Franklin  Instltut*^, 
Dei.t.    186    N.    Rochester.    N.    Y. 


LEARN  TO  CUT  and  make  your  own 
waists  and  dresses.  You  can  easily  do 
It  after  taking  the  course  In  practical 
Instruction.  Make  clothes  while  learn- 
ing. Miss  '.Iray's  school,  3rd  floor.  Geo. 
A.  <iray  Co.  Also  all  sizes  and  styles 
of  patterns  cut  to  measure. 

WOME.V    WANTED — Full    time;    salary 
$16;    selling     guaranteed     hosiery     to 
wearer;      26c     an      hour     spare     time;  i 
permanent;     experience      unnecessary.) 
Wearproof   Hosiery,    Norrlstown,    Pa.    \ 

WANTED— FIVE    BRKIHT,    CAPABLE  , 

ladies  to  travel,  demonstrate  and  sell  ; 
■^lealers;    $26    to    $60    per    week;    rail- 
road fare  paid.     Goodrich  Drug  com- 
pany,   Dept.    360,    Omaha.    Neb. 

WANTED — Persons  to  color  art  pic- 
tures at  home;  easy  work;  no  ex- 
perience; good  pay;  sample  free. 
Wheeler   Co.,    337    Madison.    Chicago. 


WANTED — c:irl  for  general  house- 
work.     6606    W.    6th   St. 

W'  A  NT  E  D — <  i  irl  for  general  housework. 
6905   K.  Superior  st. 

WANTED— Girl  for  general  house- 
work.     Call    Cal.    148. 


WANTED— < 
1001  E.  2nd 


I  irl 

St. 


for  general  housework. 


I  WANTED— t; Irl  for 
2127   E.   2nd  st. 


general  housework. 


FOR  RENT — 3  nice  rooms,  downstairs, 
water  paid,  $8.  Inquire  after  6.  725 
E.  4th  St. 

FOR  RENT — NlceJy  furnished  room ; 
central  location;  every  convenience. 
Mel.    7677. 

FOR  RENT — 3  flTrnlBhed  rooms  for 
housekeeping;  West  Duluth.  Call  Cole 
17-D. 


FOR    RENT— Cozy 
keeping  privileges, 


room    with    house- 
313  2nd  ave.  w. 


AVANTED  —  Women  as  government 
clerks,  $70  month;  I>uluth  examina- 
tions coming.  Franl^lin  Institute,  Dept. 
645  N..  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

WANTED — A    middle-aged    housekeep- 


er;    2     adults    and     3    small 
mother    convalescing.     Call 
West   Duluth. 


mother 
ave.  s. 


children, 
426     52nd 


EARN  $20  a  week 
and  addre.uses.  No 
mation  for  stamp. 
Rock.    Ark. 


for  writing 
canvassing. 
G.  C.  Smith. 


names 
Infor- 
Llttle 


WANTE 
work  In 
graduat 
Herald. 


Young    man,    16    to    18,    for 
wholesale  house.  High   school 
preft  rred.      Write      U.      46, 


WANTED — First-class  barber  to  take 
half  interest  In  2-ehair  modern  shop. 
AVrite    Box    1073.    Ely    Minn. 

WANTED — First-class  pants  and  vest 
maker;  steady  work.  Morrison's  tai- 
lor shop.   20   5th  ave.  w. 


WANTED— At     once. 
ber.     Finnish.       K.     R 
shop.  Virginia,   Minn. 


first-class     bar- 
Sarrell    barber 


WANTED — I..ady  traveler;  experience 
unneces.sary;  salary,  commission  and 
expense  allowance  to  right  lady.  Mo- 
Brady  &  Co..  Chicago. 

WANTED— Experienced  cook  for  hotel, 
state  wages  expected;  good  steady 
job  for  right  person.  Gladys  hotel. 
Sour  Is.    N.    D. 

W^ANTED  —  Thoroughly  experienced 
and  willing  second  girl,  between  25 
and  36  years  old;  family  of  two.  923 
E.   Superior  st. 

WANTED— <Jlrl  '  for  general  house- 
w«<rk;  small  family;  $26  per  month; 
no  washing;  references.   2319   E.   Ist  st. 

Call  6216 
63rd  ave.  w. 
or  Cal.  92-L. 


FOR  RENT— ROOMS. 

— THE  NEW^  ALEXANDRIA— 
A  few  desirable  rooms  now  vacant  at 
special  rates:  well-heated  and  com- 
fortable apartments.  Private  tele- 
phone In  every  room.  t>ining  room  in 
In    connection.    322    AV.    2nd    st. 

— METROPOLE    HOTEL— 
101-5   Lake   ave.   s»:    hot    and   cold   run- 
ning    water     in     every     room;     steam 
heat   and   other   modern    conveniences 
rates    $2    per    week    and    up. 

— EL<nN  HOTEL— 

Nicely   furnished,    steam-heated   rooms; 

beat  beds  In  the  city;   runnUig   water: 

very     reasonable     winter     rates.       321 

AA'.    Ist   St. 

MELROSE     HOTEL. 
2nd    St.,    Well    heated,    pleasant 
and    board    at    special    winter 
Mel.    4301;    Grand    2166-X. 


FOR  RE.NT — 2  furnished  rooms  for  light 
housekeeping.     No.  1  AV.  Superior  st. 


FOR    RENT — Steam-heated      room 
light   housekeeping.     121   E.  2nd  st 


for 


FOR     RENT— Nicely 
excellent  view.     1213 


furnished     room; 
E.  Superior  st. 


FOR    RE.NT — Three    rooms    dow-nstalrs; 
all   conveniences.    320   E.   8th   st. 


FOR    RENT — Suite   of   rooms 
housekeeping.       412    AV.    3rd 


for 

St. 


light 


■[ 


FOR      RENT — Furnished 
with  kitchenette.    322  AV. 


front 
3rd  at. 


room 


FOR      RENT — Two 
keeping  rooms.   112 


furnished 
E.   1st  St. 


house- 


FOR 
318 


RENT— 2 
E.   5th   St. 


or  3  rooms,  all  modern. 


818  AA'. 
rooms 
rates. 


FOR   RKNT— Furnjfihed 
3rd    St.       


room. 


13   W. 


AA' ANTED— Housekeeper. 
Giand  ave.  w..   or  232  N. 
Phone  Cole  299   or  224 -Y, 


WANTED— Machinists  and  molder.s. 
Apply  I..ake  Shore  Engine  works, 
Marquette.    Mich. 


WANTED  —  First 
Appl.v  .it  once.  A. 
Superior  st. 


•  class     bushelman.' 
Hoekstra,   2429    VV. 


WANTED — Cash     paid 
Watches  repaired.  $1, 


for     diamonds. 
5   .S.  6th  ave.   w. 


WA.NTEJ 
ter.     W 


I — Good    cook 
63.    Herald. 


for  lunch  coun- 


WANTI:D  -I>umber 
W.   Michigan   at. 


grader.  Inquire  608 


AVANTED  —  First-class,  experienced 
stenographer.  Address,  giving  ex- 
perience and  references,  K  60,  Herald. 

AVANTED — Competent  girl  for  general 
housework;  no  laundry  work;  good 
wages.      1906   E.   3rd   at. 

WANTED  AT  ONCE— Reliable,  compe- 
tent  girl  for  housework  and  care  of 
children.      Mel.    §300.     

AA'ANTED — Girl  for  general  housework; 
no  washing.  Apply  L.  D.  Rose,  Two 
Harbors^  Minn. 

AVANTED — c;irl  fbr  general  house- 
work; will  take  newcomer.  630  N. 
18th  ave.  e^ 

AVANTED — Competent  and  experienced 
bookkeeper-stenographer.  Write  S 
66,   Herald. 

WANTED — First  and  Seconal  capable 
maid.      2391    AVoodland   ave.    Mel.   6193. 


WANTED — Competent   girl   for   general 
housework;  3  In  family.  2330  E.  6th  st. 


P'OR  RENT— To  reliable  party,  at 
once,  my  2  rooms  with  ftirniture,  etc., 
complete  for  2  or  3  months.  Am  leav- 
Ing  the  city  for  a  while  and  don't 
want  to  give  up  these  pleasant  rooms 
If  I  can  help  it.  Rent  is  for  the 
rooms  only,  no  extra  charge  for  use 
of  my  furnishings,  which  are  com- 
plete for  light  housekeeping,  located 
on  Superior  st.  and  2nd  ave.  e.  Write 
me  for  appointment  to  see  them  at 
once,  as  I  must  leave  Thursdav.  G  23 
Herald. 

FOR  RE.NT — When  renting  3  nicely 
furnished  rooms,  bedroom,  dining  room 
and  kitchen,  including  choice  of  gas 
or  coal  range,  you  would  have  to  pay 
$26.  to  $35  per  month.  AVhy  not  buy  a 
Kelly  3-room  outfit  Jor  $69  and  fur- 
nish your  own  rooms.  Pay  for  It 
monthly  on  our  dignified  credit  plan 
and  be  money  ahead.  F.  S.  Kelly 
Furniture    Co..    17-19    A^^    Superior   st. 

FOR  RENT— Furnished  front  room 
with  two  large  windows,  hot  water 
heat  and  running  hot  water  In  new 
apartments;  very'  desirable;  small 
private  family.      Mel.    1010. 

FOR  RENT— Pleasant,  sunny  room,  prl- 
vate  family.  Eah^t  end,  walking  dis- 
tance; no  other  roomers;  breakfast  if 
desired:   $10  per  month.    Mel.   7356. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room  v^lth 
board:  also  two  unfurnished  rooms  for 
light  housekeeping;  heat,  light  and 
ga.".    707   AA\   2nJ   st.     Mel.   3991. 

FOR    RENT — Furnished    room;    private 
family;  all  conveniences;   central.     .St 
Marco  Apartments  No.  1,  222 '/j  AV.  3rd 
St.      Mel.    6183. 


SITUATION  WANTED— FEMALE 

SITUATH)N  AVANTED — A\'oman  with 
boy  19,  and  girl  17.  would  like  work 
on  farm  by  year;  understand  poultry 
raising,  also  feeding  and  care  of  stock. 
AVrite  E   46,  Herald. 

SITUATION  AVANTED— By  young  lady 
bookkeeper;  3»i  years'  experience;  at 
present  employed;  reference.  AA'rlte 
U    79,    Herald. 

SITUATION  AA'ANTED  —  Young  lady 
stenographer  wishes  office  work;  ex- 
perienced.    Call  Grand  1638-D. 


SITUATION 
middle-aged 
Call   Melrose 


AVANTED  by  refined, 
woman  as  housekeeper. 
3670  evenings. 


SITUATION 
worker,    by 
etc.     Write 


WANTED — By 
day    or    week 
E  80,  Herald. 


first-clas.s 
;     cooking. 


SITUATlt>N  AA'ANTED — As  housekeep- 
er by  widow  with  one  child.  Ad- 
dress V-68,    Herald. 

SITUATION  WAN  TE  D  —  A\'ashlng. 
cleaning,  etc..  by  day.  Call  Park  183-X. 


SITUATION 
ironing  to 


WA.NTBD- 
take   home. 


-AVashlng    and 
Grand    1626-A. 


AVANTED— Competent 
eral  housework.     3015 


girl     for     gen- 
E.   Superior  st. 


For   RENT— Furnished 
venlences.   125  E.  6th  st. 


room,   all  con- 
Grand  1631-Y. 


AA'ANTED — <5ood.       experienced       cook; 
musjt.turnlsh  reference.  2401  B.  61,^  at. 


FOR  RENT — One  large  nicely  furnished 
front  room;  rent  $12.     121  AV.-4th  st. 


WANTED — Position  by  practical  nurse. 
Best  of  reference-*.  Call  Grand  1746-X. 
AVAMTED— Any 


SITUATION 
work  by  day 


Mel.   8144. 


kind     of 


WALL  PAPER. 


Experienced  and  reliable  paper-hanger 
will  furnish  new  and.^up-to-dute  pat- 
terns and  paper  an  ordinary  sized 
rootn    for    $4.60.     Painting   and    tinting 

•  neittlv  done;  prompt  and  satisfactory 
work"  guaranteed.'  Decorator.  31  AV. 
2nd   St.     Mel.   430?:   Grand  596-X. 


FL0RI8T. 

Duluth  Floral  Co.,  wtoolesale.  retail,  cut 
flowers,    funeral  a»a*SnB.  121  W.  Sup.  8t 


F(JR  RENT— $12.50;  4-room  flat  on  the 
second  floor,  2011  AV.  Superior  st.; 
hardwood  floors,  water,  electric  lights, 
bath  and  toilet;  stove  heat;  very  con- 
venient location.  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  blag. 


FOR  RENT— Finest  7-room  modern  flat 
in  city;  all  outside  rooms  In  Minne- 
sota flats.  118  E.  4th  St.;  only  $46  per 
month,  including  hout  and  janitor 
service.  Chas.  P.  Meyers,  611  Al- 
worth   bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Cozy  2-rooni  flat,  fur- 
nl.«hod  for  housekeeping,  including 
gas  range;  all  modern  conveniences; 
centrally  located;  rent  very  reason- 
able.    1030  W.  1st  St.     Grand  1689-X. 


FOR  RENT— 3-room  flat,  $8:  4-room 
flat,  $12.50;  Iiardwood  floors  through- 
out, sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers,    611    Alworth    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — A  4-room  furnished 
apartment  on  third  floor  of  Munger 
terrace  for  two  months.  References 
required,  $32.50  per  month.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co..    303    Lonsdale    bldg. 


FOR  RENT— 931  E.  6th  St.,  very  desir- 
able upper  6-room  flat;  hot  and  cold 
water;  hot  water  heat;  furnished; 
possession  May  1;  $36  per  month.  Geo. 
Kreager.    931    E.    6th   St. 


FOR  RENT— Desirable  flats,  houses 
and  stores.  If  you  are  considering 
making  a  change  we  Invite  an  op- 
portunity for  serving  you.  F.  1.  Salter 
Co.,  303  Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— Small  heated  apartment 
in  de.slrable  location  In  East  end;  all 
conveniences;  janitor  service;  $40  per 
month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Provi- 
dence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— 7  rooms  and  bath,  electric 
light,  gas,  laundry,  storeroom;  full 
length  mirror  and  all  modern  conven- 
iences; heat  furnished;  moderate  rent. 
323   E.   1st   St. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat,  central  loca- 
tion with  hardwood  floors,  bath,  gas 
and  all  conveniences  but  heat;  $20 
per  month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Pro- 
vidence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— Flat.  303  Oxford  st,  five 
rooms  and  both;  mod'-rn  except  heat; 
fireplace;  garden;  $20  per  month.  See 
AA'iliiam    C.    Sargent,    Providence    bldg. 

—FOR  RENT—  ' 

7-room  flat.  716  A\'.  2nd  st,  heat  and 
water  furnished,  $30.  AA'iliiam  C.  Sar. 
gent.  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Attractive  6-room  apart- 
ment; East  end;  white  enamel  bath- 
room, electric  light,  gas  range,  fur- 
nace, laundry;  $27.    Mel.  1801. 

FOR  RENT— May  1.  No.  706 '/i  E.  4th 
St..  6-room  healed  flat  with  Janitor 
service,  $40.  Mass.  Real  Estate  Co., 
18    Phoenix    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Two  6-room  flats;  one 
furnished;  gas,  bath,  hardwood  floors, 
electric  light,  large  yards,  $16.50,  $18. 
624   2nd  ave.  w. 

FOR  RENT — May  1,  modern  5-room 
flat;  nicely  furnished;  central  loca- 
tion. Call  Mel.  6^63,  mornings  or 
evenings. 

FOR  RENT— Heated  7-room  flat  Tn 
Dacey  apartments  with  water,  heat 
and  janitor  service.  Call  Mel.  or 
Grand    423. 


FOR  RENT — Centrally  located;  fur- 
nished, large  4-room  apartment  in 
first-class  condition;  piano.  Call  Grand 
2211-D. 

FOR  RE.NT — Reasonable,  7-room  mod- 
ern flat:  gas  range;  beautiful  view  of 
lake.      425  E.  1st  st.   Inquire  top  floor. 

FOR  RENT— 5-room  flat,  all  modern 
conveniences;  hot  water  heat;  cen- 
tral;  reasonable  rent.    119   7th  ave.  w. 

FOR  RE.NT — Five  rooms,  newly  dec- 
orated; modern  except  heat;  $22.60, 
water   paid.     1111   E.    2nd   st. 

FOR  RENT — AVell  furnished  7-room 
flat,  center  of  town;  modern;  heat  and 
water   furnished.     Mel.   3196. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  219  E.  6th 
St.;  bath;  $12  per  month.  AA'iliiam  C. 
Sargent,  Providence  bldg. 


FOR  RE.NT — 6-room  flat;  all  modern 
except  heat;  blj?  yard;  $20.  423  E.  5th 
St.    Inquire  318  E.  5th  st. 


FOR  RENT — 3-room  basement,  water, 
gas.  electric  light  and  sewer.  Grand 
1771-D.     818  E.  3rd  st. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  all  conven- 
iences except  heat.  422  N.  27th  aye- 
w.     Lin.   208-X. 


FOR  RENT — Modern  5-room  flat;  re- 
decorated; $18.50.  910  AV.  •4th  st. 
Mel.    3611. 

FOR  RENT — Lpwer  6-room  flat,  mod- 
ern except  heat.  106  S.  27th  ave.  w.; 
Mel.    1845. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  *-room  flat.  Ap- 
ply 902  E.  3rd  st  ,  or  call  362  either 
phone. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat,  all  conveni- 
ences except  heat.  Inquire  608  W. 
2nd   st^ 

FOR  RENT — Modern  4-room  flat;  no 
children;  garage  if  desired.  912  E. 
7th  St. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  hot  water 
furnace  and  all  conveniences.  829  W. 
3rd   St. 

FOR  RENT — Talk  to  GlllUson  If  you 
want  a  bargain  In  piano  quality. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  modern  flat.  S. 
S.   Williamson,    616   Torrey   bldg. 

P'OR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  modern.  204 
E   4th  St.    Call  Grand  1906-A. 

FtDR  RENT — 6-room  flat:  remodeled. 
Grand   1661-X;   731  W.   Ist   st. 

FOR    RENfF— r6-room    flat,    modern    ex-  ^ 
cept  heat.   '27  H   W.  4th  at.  * 


One   Cent   a   Word   Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  L.ess  Than   16  Cents. 

FNOR^SNT^^^^XATS^^^ontintied.) 

FOR  RENT — 4  heated  flats  at  315 
W.  4th  St.  Building  entirely  remod- 
eled and  decorated  throughout.  New- 
floors.  First  floor,  6  rooms  and 
kitchenette.  Every  room  light  and 
sunny.  Large  wardrobes,  2  fireplaces 
and  everything  complete,  including 
gas  ranges.  Rents  for  $35.00  per 
month.  Second  floor,  2  large  rooms  i 
facing  Mesaba  ave.  at  $15.00  per 
month.  Third  floor,  3  rooms  with 
large  closets  and  kitchenette  fitted 
up  with  gas  range  and  everything 
complete;  rent,  $20.00.  Large  attic 
for  storage  purposes.  These  flats 
have  been  fitted  up  regardless  of  ex- 
pense and  are  most  desirable  in  every 
way.  AV.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118  Man- 
hattan  bldg. 


Matteson,  Src 


SECRET  SOCIETIES. 


rAU:STINE    LOI>Gi:   .\0.    79.    A.    F.    *   A, 

M. — Begular  mrrtlngs  first .  uid  tlilrd  Mon- 
day rvciiings  of  Mfh  month  it  7:30  ovioclc. 
Next  meeting,  April  3.  1916.  Work— 
Third  degre*  by  past  niastfrs;  6.30  dinner, 
nempot    ti.    TosiiscDd,    W.    M.;    Jam-s    8. 


i^ 


FOR  RENT. 


* 

* 


#       Two  very   attractive  apartments  -.Y- 

it-  in  the  "Barrlngton."  corner  Eighth  -,'^ 

■^  ave.   east   and  First  .street.   One  of  ve 

•S^  these   apartments     has     three     and  ;^ 

•?(■  the     other     flvc     rooms     and     they  V.- 

-.^  rent  for  $30  and  $42.50,  respective-  -» 

■)^  ly;    excelh^nt    heating    and    janitor  -.if 

X'  service    Included..  ■^ 

;^     JOHN   A.    STEPftENSON   &   CO.,  * 

if.  AVolvin  Building.  id 

-^  if' 
iS^:^'»9t-:f7P^i^i{-^'Mi-7:ii^'»i^iiii^'»ii-'^iy^ 

FOR    RENT. 


6-room  flat,  1113  E.  5th  st.,  will  be  va- 
cant May  1;   rent  $20  per  month. 


7-rootn  flat,  with  heat,  water  and  jani- 
tor service,  at  1121 V^  London  road; 
rent   $42.60   per  month. 


AVHITNEY   WALL  CO., 
301   Torrey  Bldg. 


FOR  RENT— May  1,  at  118-120  AV.  4th 
St.,  2  3-room  flats;  fine  lake  view 
and  large  covered  porch;  large  rooms. 
Will  decorate  to  suit.  $15.00  per 
month.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118 
Manhattan   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  4-room  steam-heated 
flat  near  Garfield  ave.  and  Superior 
St.;  water,  gas,  electric  lights,  toilet 
and  bath;  bargain  at  $15.  F.  I.  Salter 
O.,   303  Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  4-room  flat, 
downstairs  until  October,  $18,  to 
satisfactory  individuals;  fireproof 
garage;  $3  extra.  613  57th  ave.  w. 
Cole   236-X. 

FOR  RENT — Brick  lower  flat,  strictly 
modern;  5  large  rooms;  sunny  and 
pleasant;  best  of  condition;  fire  place, 
hot  water  heat;  no  children.  314  9th 
ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT — Six- room  modern  flatj 
newly  built;  heated;  centrally  lo- 
cated.     631  W.  3rd  st. 

FOR  RENT  —  6-room  brick  corner 
apartment.   East  end,  Mel.   1481. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat;  water,  heat. 
2902    AV.    2nd   st.     Lin.   319-Y, 

FOR  RENT — 6-rooiW  flat,  modern  ex- 
cept  heat.     620   3rd  ave.   e. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat;  all  conven- 
iences.    330   12th  ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  flats;  one  fur- 
nished.    219   E.   6th  St. 

FOR  RENT — New,  modern,  6-room 
flat.      1828    London    road. 

FOR  RENT — Nice,  clean,  6-room  flat. 
608  AV.  3rd  st. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat,  $10.  817  E. 
5th    St. 

FOR  REN'f— 5-room  flat.  519  E.  6th  st. 


lO.MC  LODGE  XO.   186.   A.  F.   ft   A.   M.— 

Regular  meeting  s?rcnd  and  Jotirth  .Mor.dar 
cKiiingj  of  each  month  at  750.  Next 
meeting,  April  1(1.  19T6.  Work— Klrst  oo- 
eree.  William  J.  Works,  W.  .M. ;  Burr 
Porter,   Soc. 

KEYSTO.NE  CHAPTKR  NO.   20.   B.   A.   M.— 

Slated      eoni-oeatlOBS.      second      and      fourth 

Wt-rtii'-sday   (venings  of  each   month   »l    '30 

o'clock.      .Neit    met-tlng.    Apilt    12.    1916. 

Work— r.    M.    and   M.    E.    M.    degirr*    fol- 

lowco    i>y    lunch.      Slaiil?y    I.    .Mack,    H.    P.;    Alfred    U 

Kleheux,    Sec. 

A'  DllATH   COLMir.  NO.   6.    R.    k  8.    M  — 

Stated  convocations,  third  Krlda;  of  eacb 
month  at  7:.'J0  o'clock.  Nest  mecling, 
Ap.-Il  21.  1916.  Work— Royal  and  Silwt  and 
sup  rH<c  iiiiit  degree.  Maynard  W.  Turner.  T.  I.  M.J 
Al(r,.l  Ir  Rl'-hiix.  s-crelary. 

1)1  LLTII    rO.M.MA.\ltKRY   NO.    IS.    K.    T.— 

Stated  ccinvoratioiis  first  Tuesday  of  each 
month  at  i:.¥)  o'.-lo»k.  Next  com  lave, 
April  11.  1915.  Work— Itrill  aitd  lur.cb, 
Charles  U.  Fugle,  Com.;  .Newton  II.  Wilson, 

StdTTI.SH  RITE  —  HEfit  I.AR  .M:.ET]N(73 
ivti-j-  Thiirvlay  p»cnlng  at  8  o'<'c<''t;.  .Vxt 
ni.-eiii,c.  April  13.  1916.  Work  —  Rejulsr 
1,'usliiess  and  balloting.  Burr  I'orti'r.  wc- 
Ktary. 


ZENITH    CHAPTER    NO.     25.     ORDER     OIT 

Eastom    Star — Hcgulnr    nu-etlngs    s-cond    and 
fourth    Friday   evenings   eaih    month.      Next 
meeting,    Krlday.    April    14.    iVl6,    at    7:30 
,  o'clock.      Work— Regular    buiness    and    bal- 

lolUng.     Eva  M.   Dunbar.  W.  M  ;  Ella  F.  (Jearhart.  S?c. 

MIZPAH  SHRINE  NO.  1,  ORDKrHjE  TUB 
White  Shrine  of  Jerusalem— Regular  ffiv-ct- 
iiigs  first  Saturday  evening  cf  each  ir.ontti 
tt  8  o'ckik.  Next  meeting,  repilar.  May  6. 
Initiation  and  halloUng.  (;crirud<:  Bates, 
W.   H.  P.;  ttu  Triviranus.  W.  s. 

riv^      ELCLID    CHAPTER    NO.     W.     ORI>^ER    OF 

Jf^t      the    Eastern    Star— Meets    at    West    Dulutb 

^^fafKi^  .Ma.^nic    temple    the    first    and    third    Tues- 

W         days  of  each   month  at  7:30  o  clotk.     Next 

W  nueilng     AjwU   4,    1916.      Regular   buaineaa. 

Flora  L.   Clark.  W.  M.;  Mildred  M.  Ross,  Sec. 

EVCLllTLODtJE  NO.  198,  A.  F.  &  A.  M^ 
-Meets  at  West  Dululh.  second  and  fourtll 
Wednf-sdays  of  each  month  at  7:30  p.  m. 
Next  meeting.  April  U.  Work  Hrst  *?• 
gree.  H.  W.  L«noen,  W.  II.;  A.  Dun- 
lea  vy,    sei-retao'. 

DlI.l'TH    CIIAITEB    NO.    59.    R.    A.    M  — 

Meets  at  West  Duluth  first  and  third 
Wednesdays  of  cath  month  at  7:30  p.  m. 
.Next  meeling.  April  19,  lillO.  Work— P. 
M.  and  .M.  E.  >1.  degrees.  Roll  call  aiid 
rcfiiMiments.     W.    A.    Pittenger,   H.   P.   Dunlea»^,   Sec. 

I.AKESIDE  LODUE  .NO.  281.  A.  F.  *  A. 
M. — Meets  first  and  third  Mondays  of  each 
month  at  a  o'clock  at  Masonic  l:all,  Fcrty- 
h!th  avenue  east  and  Rolrinson  street.  Next 
m'-Pting,  spirial.  April  10,  l^l'n.  Work- 
Third  degree.  William  A.  Hi. ken,  W.  M.J 
Nelson,   sc'crctary,   4530  Cooke  street  east. 


George  F. 


POULTRY  AND  EGGS. 


THE  DI'LUTH  HERALD  IS  THE  REC- 
OONIZEO    POULTRY    MEDIUM. 

It  Is  the  official  paper  of  the  poultry 
ralseis  of  Duluth  and  Northern  Min- 
nesota. 

CIRCULATION    LARCEST. 
RATES  LOAVEST. 

The  Duluth  Herald  has  the  largest 
ciiculatlon  of  any  newspaper  In  Min- 
nesota (outside  the  Twin  Cities).  Its 
charges  for  classified  advertising  are 
less  per  thousand  circulation  than 
those   of  any  other  paper  in  the  state. 

Hatching  eggs  from  celebrated* "Point 
o'  Pines  Farm,"  largest  and  finest 
modern  poultry  plant  in  N.  \V.  Pure- 
bred egg-laying  strains,  S.*C.  AV.  leg- 
horns, 15  eggs,  $1.50;  100,  $6.  S.  C.  R. 
I.  Reds,  15  eggs,  $1.75;  100.  $6.  AA'^rite 
now.     Reserve,    AVis. 


THINITV  LODGE  NO.  282.  A.  K.  &  A.  M. 
— Meits  first  and  third  Mondays  at  S  o'rlock 
in  Wuodman  hall.  Twenty-fii-st  avt-niH'  west. 
Next  meeting  regular,  ,\prll  17.  1916.  Work 
—.Second  degree.  E.  H.  Plufer,  W.  M., 
1918  West  Third  street;  B.  E.  Whoiler, 
secretary.  20,"}2  West  Sup-Tlor  street. 

A,  0.  U.  W.  " 

FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  106  —  MEETS  AT 
.MactaU-c  hall,  21  Lake  afenue  north,  (very 
Thursday  at  8  p.  m.  Visiting  members  wel- 
cime.  E.  A.  Vogt.  M.  W . ;  J.  A.  lyutmnshy, 
recorder;  0.  J.  .Murrold,  finaccler,  ;;17  Eaist 
Fifth  .stre)t.     Uilenlal  (••'grec  April  27. 

A,  •.  C.  W.— DILITH  LODGE  NO,  30-1 
meets  every  si'cond  and  fourth  Tuesday 
nights  at  Aia  hall.  221  West  Superlo* 
street.  Next  meeting.  April  11.  1916,  at 
8  p.  m.     Marvin   E.   Heller.   M.   W. ;  R.   (}. 

Koote,  recorder;  E.  F.  Heller,  flDamler.  509  Second  *f*- 

nue  east. 

ZENITH  COINCIL  No!  161^  liOYAL 
league,  meets  the  first  and  third  Ttijrs- 
days  Id  the  mouth,  at  8  o'clock,  in  the 
old  Masonic  temple,  Superior  street  and 
Second  avenue  east.  0.  .S.  KemptoQ, 
archon,  Wolvln  building;  U.  A.  Hall,  e«l- 
Ifctor.  18  East  First  street. 


DILITH    LODGE    .NO.    28,    I.    0.    0.    K.— 

Next    meeting.     Friday    evening,     April    14, 
1916,     at     8     odock.     221     West     Superior 
stieet.   third  floor.     Work — First  degree  will   be  i-ODferred 
Charles    F.    Ottlnger.    X.    G,;  J^ 


Odd    Fellows    welcome 
A.   BraCr.   K.c.   Sec. 


K     OF    P 

NORTH  STAR  LODGE  NO.  35,   K.   OF  P.— 

.Meets  every  Tuesday.  7:30  P.  m.,  sixth 
floor.  Temple  building,  Sujierior  tfmt  and 
.Second  avenue  (atrt.  Next  meeUng.  April 
11,  1916.  Work— Knight  rank.  W  H 
Hamilton,  C.  C,  care  <f  Duluth  Ti-lephoiie  company  B 
A.  Rowe.  M.  of  F..  205  First  .National  hank;  r'  A* 
Bl.-bop.   K.   of  R.  and  S.,  505  Palladio  building.        "       ' 

ZENITH  C.\MpTnO.  5.  WOODMEN  08^ 
the  World,  meets  on  first  and  thlid 
Frltlay  nlshts  of  month,  at  Forfsten* 
ball.  Fourth  avenue  uest  ai,d  first 
street.  J.  H.  Larkln.  clerk.  312  Six- 
tieth  avenue   east.     Lakeside   23K 


FOR   SALE — Hatching   eggs    from    Du- 
luth      Poultry      show      prize-winning 

Barred     Plymouth     Rocks,     $1.60     for,.- — 

16;     also     eggs     from     fine     strain     of  '  813  Torrey  building. 
S.    C.    AVhite    Leghorns,    $1.60    for    IB; 
$5.00    for    100.       Marr    &    Son,    918    E. 
7th  St.,    Duluth. 


MAJESTIC  REBEKAH  LODGE  NO.  CO,  I. 
0.  0.  F.— Regular  meetings  first  and  third 
Thursdays  of  each  month,  8  p.  m„  221 
West  Superior  street.  Next  mating  Thurs- 
day evening.  April  6.  Initiation  Regu- 
lar drill.  Mrs.  Henrietta  Shaw.  \  c  : 
Lillian  Johnson,   secretary.   Grand  2ll3-y. 

DlLlTH  HOMESTE.\D  NO.  3i;jl.  BROTil^ 
erbood  of  American  Yeomen,  mou  every 
Wi^dnesday  evening  at  g  o'.lixk  sharp  la 
Maccabee  hall,  21  Lake  avenue  north. 
•^au^   .Herbert   F.    Hanks,    foreman;  J.    i.    Palmer' 

coi...-,i...„.i  ni,  offlrt'  In  his  drug  store.  2132  West  Thiri 

■trcet.     Melrose  3769;  Lincoln  511- Y. 

M.    W.    A. 

IMPERUb    CA.MP,    2206    -    MEETS     \T 
Forester     hall.      Fourth     avenue      «-,^t     and 
First   strwt,   sert.nd   and  fourth   Tin-^davs  ot 
■     >i«s»^,  „''a';h    month.      Wayna   E.    Richardson.  '  con- 
I  sulj^  lioort  R;inl.in,  clerk,  care  Rankin  Printing  company. 

(LAN     Sn:WABT     .NO.     50,     0      8      cH 

Meets  first  and  third  Wednesdaj-i  each 
month,  8  p.  m.,  I'.  O.  F.  hall,'  «,rner 
Fouri!)  awnue   ^est  and  Ftrst   street      Next 

. regular    meeting,    April    15.    ]9]g     '  •,      .* 

Camiron,  chief;  John  Gow.  Sec;  John  Burnett    Fin    Srr 

hiiilHinir  *  •    °^^-t 


FOR  .SALE — Eggs  for  hatching,  S.  C. 
AA'hite  Leghorn.  $1  a  setting  of  $15. 
or  $5  per  hundred;  Bar  Plymouth 
Rock,  $1.60  a  setting;  from  the  best 
of  laving  strain  on  free  range.  Both 
phones.      Mel.    7363,   Grand   1019-A. 

HATCHING  EGGS  from  my  choice 
S.  C.  AVhite  Leghorns:  no  better  lay- 
ing strain;  15  eggs  $1;  100  eggs  $5. 
Mrs.  T.  J.  (>rlfflth,  4309  London  road, 
Du  1  u{h;  Lake.  69-K. 

Park  &  Pollard's  poultry  feeds 
are  the  best.  Scratch  feed,  egg 
mash,  growing  feed,  etc.;  wheat 
corn,  etc.  <Jet  price  list.  Tess- 
inan  Bros.  Co.,   26-40    E.   Mich.  st. 

ioii  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  high- 
class  Barred  Plymouth  Rocks.  AVhite 
AVyandottes,  R.  C.  Black  Mlnorcas, 
White  Leghorns,  Anconas  and  turkeys. 
J.    T.    Mlchaud,    Lake.    298-L;    Park    4. 

FOR  SALE— Hatching  eggs  from  S.  C. 
Rhode  Island  Reds  from  a  prize-win- 
ning pen;  good  layers;  $1.00  for  15 
eggs.     Grand   1030-A.  

FOR  SALE— Eggs  for  hatching;  S.  C. 
AA'hite  Leghorns,  Young  strain,  $1.25 
per  15.  H,  F.  Bjorlin.  2206  AV.  1st  st. 
Both  phones. 

FOR  "srALE — S.  C.  Rhode  Island  Red 
hatching  eggs.  S.  E.  Pattwson,  4528 
Regent  st.     Phone   280-L  Lake. 

FOR  SALE — i916  Maxwell  6-pa8senger 
touring  car.  Call  Theo.  O  Furlund 
Auto    Co.    6-7    E.    1st    St. 

FOR  SALE — 7-pa8senger,  6-40  Thomas 
touring  car;  good  condition;  cheap. 
122    A\'.    2nd    st. 

FOR  .SALE— 50-egg  Phllo  incubator 
and  brooder;  also  Stewart  steel  range. 
Lakeside    303-L. 

FOR  SALE — Houdan  eggs  from  well- 
bred  hens.  $1.60  per  16  eggs.  Phone 
Lin.    186-D. 

FOR  SALE — 1915  5-passenger  Ford; 
good  condition;  $325.  Call  920  E. 
9  th  St. 

FOR  SALE — Choice  R.  I.  Red  eggs  for 
hatching,    75c  per  setting.    Call  Lin.  311. 

FOR  SALE — White  Leghorn  eggs  for 
hatching;    very    reasonable.  Mel.    6368. 

R.  I.  RED  settings,  76c  Jap  Si^kXi^ 
«etflnts.  IS.    H.  I.  Gooch:    Mel.  tS(i. 


MODERN    SAMARITANS  ' 

ALPHA    COINCIL    NO.    l-TAKE    NOTICE: 

Tliat  the  Samaritan  degree  meets  the  first 
and  third  Wednesdays,  and  the  Beiieri.-<nt 
degree  the  stcond  and  fourth   Wednesdays  of 

I-  ..    1''''    !"?ri.''-    "      1-     Kast    Superior    street. 

Empress  theater    building.      W.    B.    Henderson      G     s  • 

John   F.  Davis.    »<Tibe;   F.    A.    Noble.    F     S      '"OrFlrit 

National  Bank  building;  .Mrs.   H.   P.   Lawsonj'lady  G.   8. 

WE-KE  MA  WAIP  TRIBE  NO.  17,  1.   0.  U. 

M.,  meets  tlie  second  aod  fourth  Mondaw 
of  the  month  at  8  p.  m.  sharp,  at  .Mac- 
cabee hall,  21  Lake  avenue  north  Next 
meeting,  April  10.  Degree  work  H  B 
Bartling  sachem;  H.  J.  McGinlev.  chief  of 
lecord.  307  Columbia  bulldliij. 

ORDER    OfIhvlS.    DIXITH    NTST 

No.  120O— -Meetings  are  held  eveit 
Wednesday  evening  at  0«ls'  bail.  418 
West  Superior  street,  second  fltx*. 
Joseph  E.  Kcaks.  gecrrtary,  Str  Eait 
Fifth   street. 


MOD^JRN   BROTHERHOOD    OF    .AMERICA.— 
Duluth   Central   Lodg-   No.   450.   .M.    B    A 
meets     first     and     third    Tueadavs     at     4l4 
West   Superior  street.       Charles   V.    Hanioa 
sL'cretary.    507    West    Fifth   street.        Zeclth 
phone  No.    22UY   Grand. 

.MYSTIC  WORKERS  OF  THE  WORLD.— 
Zenith  Lodge  No.  1015  meets  the  s?coiJd 
;;nd  fourth  .Moudtjs  of  the  month,  at  8 
p.  m.,  at  Rowley  ball,  112  West  Flnt 
iU.ti,  upstairs.  E.  A.  Ruf,  secretary 
and  tfeatuTCT,  1331  East  Seventh  street. 

DtHTH    TEMPLE    NO.    186,    C.\MEli~W 

the   World,   meets  every  Thursday   evenlitg  al 
,S    o'clock    sharp,    at    Camels'    Temple    hall 
12    East    Superior   street.      Buflness   m<'eUii 
Thursday.  April  13.     W.   H.   Konkler.   ruler 

Grand    909-Y.      Martin    Johnson,    sicreiarv' 

phoi.     ,,.aiid    1588;    Melrose.    3979;    temple    hall    oboni' 
Grand  1991^Y^ ' 

THIRD      I.NFANTRY.      M.       n]       5" 

meets  cver>  Thursday  oenlug.  8  p    m  ' 

Armory.   Thirteentli  avenue  east.     .Next 

meeUng.      .\pril      13.        (Jwge      W 

Stiles,    captain;    William    A.     Brown,    first    lleut'^iiant"' 

John    J     Harrison,    second    lieutenant.  ' 

yf  WEST  DILITH  LOlKiE  NO.  1478,  LOYAL 
Order  of  Moose,  meets  every  Wedn  ^•Uy  at 
Moos-:   hall.   Ramsey   street  and  Central  av«- 

iiue.      H.    J.    White,    secretao'.    201    .S'ortB 

Fifty  s  -cond  avenue  wrst. 

BENEVOLENT  ORDER  OP  BEAVERS-^ 
DtiUith     IxKlge     .No.     155.     B.     O      B 

.__ meets  Tliursday.  March  2  and  16    1916* 

at    Wmxlman    hall.    Twenty  first    avenue    west    and    First 
Street.      K.    A.    Franklin,    secretao'.    2006    West    SapeiW 
Uocoln  169-A. 


Co.E 

stiles,    capta 
John    J     Har 

w 


r. 


■treet. 


;W 


DVLITH  LODGE  NO.   60B.   LWAL  «BDEB 
of  Moose,  meett  even'  Toetdiy  at  8  o' clack 
Moow    b«U.    22i   Wei(,\rioit  aUMt.     Cart 
Ikbau,  Kcfvt«i]> 


■       i< 


i#  Ti*i 


■  ■ ■       ^  l«  <       ■  «      ■ 


idfiM* 


J> T» 


"> 


«T1      IHM«-  «i  II  ■■!      I  II 


^ M- 


^ 


THE  DULUTH  HERAL 


VOLUME  XXXIV— NO.  1. 


MONDAY  EVENI^IG,  APRIL  10,  1916. 


GERMANS  THROW  ENORMOUS 
FORCES  AT  FRENCH  LINES  IN 
SAVAGE  AHACK  AT  VERDUN 


PENETRATE 
DISTANCE  OF 
500  YARDS 


Desperate     Attempts     to 

Break  New  Line  West 

of  the  Meuse. 


APPEALS  FOR  PARDONS 
FOR  SMITH  AND  PICKIT 
PRESENTED  TO  BOARD 


SCC\£T^o"cENTS. 


INDICATIONS  OF  AN  AGRE/MENT 
BETWEEN  U.  S.  AND  CARitANZA  TO 
FIX  A  LIMIT  IN  VILLA  PURSUIT 


NEW  SUPKME  COURT  IISTICE 
m  ELECTED  M  WISCONSIN 


Battle    Rages    All    Along 

Thirteen-Mile  Front 

Near  City. 


KEEPING  PEACE  IN  HOLUND 
RESTS  LARGELY  ON  TIHS  MAN 


Two    Hundred    Telegrams 

Asking   for   Clemency 

for  Walter  Smith. 


French  Troops  Withstand 

Assault  Excepting  at 

Dead  Man's  Hill. 


Mft  BKTIIIXtOrRT    ISOI-ATED.  « 

♦  ■  —  -in 

V        nrrllii,  April  10.  vin  I.oiiilon.  4i2K   ^ 
^   p.    m. — The    wur    offlrr    nnnounccd   ^. 

Stotlny     (hat     In     tlif     flvhtinK     near  ^  j 
llf (hliicourl    In    fhr    \>r<lun   rviclon    # 
^   the   (o>^ii   niid    two   fortlfird   polniN   4 
^   or   tlie   tort    to   (ho  MoiithwrMt   wrre   ^ 
*   iNolalod.       The     Fr«*n««h     were     eat   -%  ■ 
i   off.    IumIiii;    71  I    priNoncrn,    2    Kun«   ^  ' 
-4   and    15    marliliie   ruhm.      Thr   luNNen   #.  I 
ik  of      the      French      In        killed        or    ii  i 
-^tF   >«ouii4led   were   eonHlderabte.  ^ 

*  *■! 

London.  April  10. — In  a  defiperatc 
Btrug'Ric  ffr  po-wsf-ssion  f>f  D(Ad  Man's 
hill,  the  French  lines  were  penelratert 
last  night  for  a  dlstancp  of  about  600 
yariKs  In  the  vicinity  of  the  height. 
Parl.s  announoed  this  tf'day  in  report- 
ing a  battle  which  raged  in  the  Ver- 
dun rtgion  along  a  thirteen-mile  front 
north   of  the  stronnhoid. 

Elsewhere  the  French  lines  stood 
the  test  of  the  savage  attacks  of  the 
C;erman.''.  who  are  bringing  notably 
heavy  forces  to  bear  In  an  effort  to 
break  the  new  French  lino  west  of  the 
Meu.'^e,  Jij.«t  sirainhtened  out  by  the 
abandonment  of  the  Bethlncourt  Ba- 
llent. 

I^ast  nlgfht's  baftlefront  ran  from 
hill  No.  304  west  of  the  Meuse  and  on 
across  the  river  to  Fort  Douaumont, 
northeast  of  the  fortress.  The  results 
on  tile  east  bank  of  the  river  were 
favorable  to  the  Fren<h,  F'aris  asserts, 
the  <;ernmns  winning  no  appreciable 
advantage. 


Most  of  Pleas  for  Mercy 

Come  From  the  Mesaba 

Range. 


Mrs.    Smith    Attends    the 
Meeting  to  Make  Per- 
sonal Plea. 


JONKHEER  J.  LOUDON. 


Dr. 


Continue    Attaek«. 

Paris.  April   10.   1:::5  p.   m.— The  Ger. 

(Cuntinued   on  page   11,  fourth  column.) 


AUSTRIANS  PLANNING 
FOR  NEW  OFFENSIVE 


J.  Loudon,  who  was  once  minis- 
ter of  the  Netherlands  at  Washington, 
Is  the  minister  of  foreign  affairs  of 
that  cf)untry  now  and  Intimately  asso- 
ciated with  the  crisis  which  at  present 
threatens    the    safety    of   his    country. 


WILL  CONFER 
WITHLANSING 

Ambassador    Von    Berns- 
torff  Makes  an  Appoint- 
ment With  Secretary. 


St.    Paul.    Minn.,    April    10. —  (Ppecisl 

to    The    Herald.)— The    fate    of    Walter 

J.   Smith   and   Robert   C    Pick  it   passed 

Into  the  hands  of  the  state  prison  par- 

{  don    board    at    its    meeting    this    after- 

1  noon. 

Secretary  C.  M.  Andrist  handed  to  the 

I  board    the    pardon    applications    of   the 

'  two  men,   the  same  being  accompanied 

by    some    260    telegrams    pleading    for 

I  clemency    for    Smith. 

The  telegrams  asking  that  mercy  be 
I  shown  to  Smith  were  mostly  from  the 
i  Mesaba  range  country,  where  Smith 
I  spent  many  years  in  business,  but 
I  there  were  also  many  from  other  parts 
of  the  state.  Sam  Y.  Gordon  of  Browns 
Valley  and  several  ministers  were  num- 
bered among  those  who  pleaded  for 
mercy    for    the    former    treasurer. 

The  pardon  board  members  expressed 
themselves  privately  to  some  who  ap- 
pealed to  them  personally  In  behalf 
of  Smith  as  of  the  opinion  that.  If 
the  court  had  wished  to  save  Smith 
from  the  penitentiary.  It  should  have 
suspended  his  sentence.  Herbert  Keller 
presented  the  Smith  case  to  the  boftrd. 
and  Mrs.  Smith  was  present  to  make 
personal  plea.  The  Smith  and  Plckit 
cases  were  two  of  110  which  came 
before   the   board   today. 


VILLA  BELIEVED  TO  BE 
HEADING  FOR  DURANGO 
TO  JOIN  ARRIETA  FORCES 


Decide    to  Attack    Italian 

Troops  Along  the  Whole 

Front. 

Rome,  via  Paris,  April  10. — The 
Aiistrlans  are  preparing  an  offensive 
on  a  large  scale  aiijng  the  whole 
Italian  front,  accordii>g  to  dispatches 
rectlved  here  which  state  that  this 
action  was  decided  on  at  a  recent 
conference  between  Archduke  Eugene 
and    the    other    Austrian    commanders. 

Strong  bodies  of  troops  have  been 
wlthdiawn  froni  the  Kounianian  bor- 
der and  quantities  of  munitions  are 
being  sent  from  the  interior  of  the 
country.  The  Italian  military  chiefs, 
the   dispatches   further   say,    have   made 

jffen- 
back 


Berlin    to    Hand    Gerard 

Note  on  the  Sussex 

Case. 


all    preparations    l<»    break'  the 
Dive    and    to    force    the    Austrians 
on    the    defensive. 


RIVER  FLOOD 
AT  ITUREST 

Mississippi  Has  Apparently 

Readied  Highest  Point 

at  La  Crosse. 


Washington,  April  10. — Secretary 
Lansing  announced  today  that  Ambas- 
sador Gerard  had  cabled  that  the  tJer- 
man  foreign  office  informed  him  it 
would  hand  him  a. note  on  the  Sussex 
case  probably   today. 

Count  von  Bornstorff,  the  "German 
ambassador,  will  confer  with  Secretary 
Lansing  this  afternoon.  The  ambassa- 
dor-made   the   appointment. 

A    preliminary    statement    handed    to 
Mr.   Gerard  by   the  <«erman   foreign   of- 
fice  is   understood   to  be  on  Its  way   to 
the  state  department  by  cable. 
Other    Information. 

Other  Information  in  the  nature  of 
evidence,  gathered  by  the  American 
embassy  In  Paris,  is  on  the  liner  St. 
Paul,  which  Is  expected  to  dock  In 
New  York  Thursday.  Efforts  will  be 
made  to  have  it  here  for  the  Friday 
meeting   of   the    cabinet. 

The  state  department  today  still  was 
without  official  Information  of  Ger- 
many's   disclaimer    of    responsibility. 

Germany  has  asked  Ambasador 
Gerard  what  Information  regarding 
the  explosion  which  damaged  the  Sus- 
i  sex  is  In  the  possession  of  the  Amer-. 
i  lean  government.  This  inquiry  was 
forwarded  by  Ambassador  Gerard  to 
the  state  department.  Mr.  Gerard  was 
Informed  that  (Jerman  Investigation 
Into  the  case  of  the  Sussex  had  not 
up  to  the  time  of  the  inquiry  dis- 
closed that  any  German  submarine  was 
responsible. 

DR.  WAITE  ENTERS 
PLEA  OF  NOT  GUILH 


ALL  RECORDS 

A6AIN  BROKEN 

U.  S.  steel   Corporation's 

Unfilled  Orders  Total 

9,331,001  Tons. 

New  York.  April  10.— The  monthly 
statement  of  unfilled  orders  of  the 
United  States  Steel  corporation,  issued 
today,  again  broke  ail  records.  The 
orders  stood  on  March  31  at  9.331,001 
tons,  an  increase  of  762,036  tons  over 
Feb.  29,  when  they  were  8,668,966  tons, 
the    previous    high    record. 

— — • 

Iowa   Han   Primary. 

Des  Moines.  Iowa,  Apill  10. — Iowa's 
state-wide  presidential  preference  pri- 
mary is  being  held  today.  Neither  Sen- 
ator Cummins,  the  Republican  candi- 
date for  the  presidency  nor  President 
Wilson,  the  Democratic  presidential 
candidate  is  opposed. 


JUSTICE-ELECT  F.   C.   ESCH- 
WEILLER. 


MORE  BRITISH 
SHIPS^  SUNK 

Loss    of    Four    Unarmed 

Steamships  Reported 

at  London. 


Bandit   Believed   to  Have 

Passed  Parral  With 

200  Men. 


Mexican  Reports  State  He 

Is  Full  Day  Ahead  of 

Americans. 


United  States  Cavalry  Driv- 
ing Farther  and  Farther 
Into  Mexico. 


Most    of    Cr^jws    Saved; 

Few  Reported  as 

Missing. 


London.  April  10.— The  thinking  of 
four  more  British  steamships  tvfts  re- 
ported today.  All  of  them  were  un- 
armed. 

Lloyds  announces  the  sinking^  of  the 

Sllksworth  Hall  and  the  Glenalmond. 
The  captain  and  thirty  men  from  the 
Sllksworth  Hall  htf^e  been  landed. 
Three  men  are  mieslng.  The  crew  of 
the    Glenalmond    wag    saved. 

A  Reuter  dispatch  from  Malata  tells 
!  of  the  sinking  of  the  Yonne.  formerly 
the  Kastalia,  which  W^is  sunk  without 
warning.     The   crew   was   rescued. 

The  British  steamship  Zafra  has 
been  sunk,  according;  to  a  Lloyds  re- 
port. 

Latest  available  shipping  r«<ords  an- 
nounce the  Zafra  as  having  touched  at 
Newport  X'ews  on  March  11  from 
Puerto  Pi|dre,  Cuba,^"for  Queenstown 
She    was    of   i.bli    gr^s    tons,    was    346 


El  Paso,  Tex.,  April'  10.— In  his 
fVght  from  the  American  cavalry 
Francisco  Villa  is  believed  today  to 
have-  passed  Parral  and  with  his  band, 
said  to  number  over  200  men,  is  re- 
ported to  be  heading  for  Durango 
City.  Detachments  of  the  Thirteenth 
cavalry  are  hard  on  the  bandit's  trail, 
but  no  official  word  has  come  from 
the  front  to  indicate  their  position. 
Mexican  reports  stated  today  that 
Villa  has  a  full  day  ahead  of  his  pur- 
fiuers.  If  V'^illa  succeeds  In  reaching 
Durango  City  he  probably  will  be 
Joined  by  the  forces  of  the  Arrleta 
brothers,  who  command  over  1,000 
men. 

Dented   Bt   Garcia. 

A  statement  attributed  to  Mexican 
Consul  Garcia  that  Villa  has  now 
escaped  any  possibility  of  capture  by 
the  Americans,  having  crossed  a  dead- 
line established  by  President  Wilson 
and  Carranza,  beyond  which  It  was 
Hgrreed  that  the  American  troops 
would    not   continue    their   pursuit   for 


(Continued    on 


page   11, 


first   column.) 


(Continued  on  page 


f. 


third  column.) 


SENATE  DEBATING 
FREE  SU6AR  CLAUSE 

Amendment    Measure  Will 

Probably  Be  Voted  on 

Tuesday. 

Washington,  April  10. — The  house 
bill  repealing  the  free  sugar  clause  of 
the  Underwood  tariff  law  was  taken 
up  for  debate  in  the  senate  today  un- 
der an  agreement  to  vote  on  the  meas- 
ure as  amended  by  the  finance  com- 
mittee tomorrow.  The  free  sugar  clause 
would  Ko  into .  effect  May  1  With  a 
consequent  loss  in  governmental  rev- 
enues of  approximately  $42,000,000  un- 
less It   is   repealed  In  the  meantime. 


Many  People  Traveling  to 

and  From  Homes 

in  Boats. 


i*»  11*11   III  ■  M  Mi    J 


La  Crosse,  Wis.,  April  10. — The  MIs- 
Cissippl  river  floud  reached  Its  crest 
at  La  Crosse  -today.  It  stood  at  13.1 
feet  over  low-water  mark,  a  barely 
perc»  ptible  rise  since  Saturday.  Tho 
Weather  bureau  predicted  that  It 
would  go  no  higher,  in  spite  of  the 
breasting  of  a  dam,  whkh  caused  a 
rise  of  six  feet  at  Minneapolis.  Tht) 
irreater  with  of  the  floud  here,  at 
points  almost  five  miles  from  bluff  to 
bluff,  will  enable  it  to  take  care  of 
the  water  from  the  north  without  a 
further  advance.  The  high  water 
from  the  north,  howevtr.  will  keep 
the  Mississippi  here  above  the  flood 
atage    for    the    entire    week. 

I'resent  stage  of  the  water  affords 
a  maKMlfleent  spectacle.  The  numer- 
ous islands  In  the  Mississippi  have 
disappeared,  the  land  separating  the 
Mib.^isMlppI,  the  Black  and  the  I..a 
Croose      rivera      has      been      flooJed, 

(Continued  on  page  11,  third  column.) 


A  Presidential  Political  Bulb  That  Will  Not  Die. 

\-l— 


Counsel  Reserves  Right  to 

Make  Change  Within 

Ten  Days. 

Nov/  York,  April  10. — Dr.  Arthur 
Wnri^n  Walte,  who  has  confessed  to 
poisoning  his  father-in-law,  John  E. 
Peck,  millionaire  drug  manufacturer  of 
Grand  Rapids,  Mich.,  entered  through 
his  counsel  today  a  plea  of  not  guilty, 
when  arraigned  on  the  Indictment 
charging  him  with  murder  In  the  first 
degree.  His  counsel,  however,  reserved 
the  right  to  change  the  plea  within  ten 
days. 

Before  being  arraigned  Dr.  Walte 
was  taken  Into  the  district  attorney's 
office  for  a  conference  with  his  counsel, 
Walter  R.  Deuel,  and  a  prosecutor's  as- 
sistant. 

It  was  explained  after  the  plea  was 
entered  that  the  reservation  of  the 
right  to  change  it  was  a  formality  in- 
asmuch as  under  the  law  the  court 
cannot  accept  a  plea  of  guilty  on  a 
charge  of  first  degree  murder. 

After  Dr.  Walte  had  been  taken  to 
the  Tombs  he  was  placed  In  an  obser- 
vation cell. 


V^^T*^'^^ 


GREEK  MINISTER  Of  fINANCE 
HAS  RESIGNED  HIS  PORTfOllO 


"DEAD  LINE" 
MAY  BE  FIXED 
IN  THE  SOUTH 


American    Troops    Would 

Not  Go  Beyond  This  in 

Chase  of  Bandit. 


Secretaries    Lansing    and 

Baker  Decline  to  Talk 

on  Border  Report. 


Such  an  Agreement  Would 

Come  Under  Protocol 

Nov^  Pending. 


STEPHEN  DRAGOUNIS. 

London.  April  10.— Stephen  Dragou- 
nls,  Greek  minister  of  finance,  has  re- 
signed his  portfolio,  says  a  Beuter  dis- 
patch from  Athens.  He  Is  succeeded 
by  D.  G.  Rhallis,  minister  of  justice  and 
communications,  who  reta'ns  tlie  com- 
munications portfolio.  M.  Hatzakos  be- 
comes  minister  of  justice. 


WASHINGTON 
OPTIMISTIC 

Officials  Believe  Capture  of 

Villa  Will  Soon  Be 

Reported. 


Communication   With    Ad- 
vanced Cavalry  Difficult 
to  Maintain. 


Washington,  April  10. — Optimism  for 
the  early  capture  of  Francisco  Villa 
pervaded  official  circles  today  despite 
the  fact  that  nearly  a  week  has  passed 
since  news  of  the  operations  of  the 
American  troops  in  Mexico  has  come 
to   the    war   department. 

Many  officials  were  of  the  opinion 
that  important  military  developments 
may  have  occurred  and  It  M'as  Impos- 
sible for  the  extreme  advancing  col- 
umns, last  reported  close  on  Villa's 
heels,  near  Satevo,  to  communicate 
with   their  field  base. 

Overnight  dispatches  from  Gen.  Fun- 
ston  to  the  war  department  made  pub- 
lic by  Secretary  Baker  today  were 
summarized  in  the  following  state- 
ment: 

"The  latest  dispatch  from  Gen.  Per- 
shing, dated  April  8,  explains  infre- 
quency  of  communication  by  saying 
that  the  wireless  has  not  been  able  to 
work  and  aeroplane  communication 
has  been  difficult  because  of  lack  of 
suitable    landing    places. 

"The  dispatch  again  confirms  that 
early  report  of  Villa  being  severely 
wounded  in  the  right  knee. 

Satisfactory  Conference. 

"Gen.  Pershing  reports  that  he  has 
had  a  very  satisfactory  conference 
with  Gen.  Herrera  and  expects  today 
to  meet  Gen.  Gutierrez,  to  whom  he 
sent  messages  by  aeroplane  to  Chi- 
huahua and  received  back  replies  of- 
fering full  co-operation.  Gen.  Per- 
shing's comment  is  that  every  indica- 
tion shows  that  desire  of  the  troops 
of  the  de  facto  government  to  aid  to 
the   extent  of  their  ablliT>'. 

"Gen.  Pershing  further  reports  that 
one  aeroplane  was  badly  disabled  in 
landing  April  6,  leaving  only  five  out 
of  the  original  eight  now  in  service- 
able condition,  but  it  Is  evident  that 
the   aeroplanes    In    use    are    performing 

(Continued  on  page  11,  fifth  column.) 


Washington,  April  10.  —  Secretarj* 
Lansing.and  Secretary  Baker,  both  de^ 
clined  to  comment  today  on  border  re- 
port«  that  an  agreement  between 
Washington  and  tlie  Carranza  govern- 
ment had  fixed  a  "dead  line"  beyond 
which  the  American  troops  would  not 
go  in  their  pursuit  of  the  Villa  bandits 

Becrttary  Baker  declared  in  answef 
to  questions  that  euoh  an  agreement 
would  come  under  the  pending  protocol 
and  a  subject  not  under  the  war  de* 
partment's  Jurisdiction. 

Protocol  Under  DlMoasnion. 

The  proposed  protocol  of  which  littl* 
has  become  known  still  is  under  dls« 
cussion  at  Gen.  Carranza's  provi.«ional 
capital,  Queretaro.  Special  Agent 
Rodgers  left  the  provisional  capital  for 
Mexico  City  last  week  but  expetts  to 
return  to  Gen.  Carranza's  headquarter* 
soon  when  the  negotiations  will  be  re- 
sumed. 

At  both  the  state  and  war  depart- 
ments it  was  said  nothing  was  knov^ 
of  reports  of  massing  of  Carranza 
troops  on  Gen.  Pershing's  rear.  Stat« 
deparMnent  dispatches  located  Villa 
heading  toward   Parral. 

Secretary  Baker  plans  to  leave  to^ 
night  for  a  brief  visit  to  his  home  at 
Cleveland.  He  intends  to  return  Wed- 
nesday. 

ASK  FREIGHT  INCREASE 
ON  GRAIN  BE  SET  ASIDE 

Washington,  April  10. — Minneapolis 
milling  companies  today  petitioned  thai 
interstate  commerce  commission  to  set 
aside  an  increase  of  approximately  o 
per  cent,  effective  Nov.  16,  1914,  it^ 
Northwestern  states  to  points  in  th« 
Middle  West. 

The  increase  applied  to  grain  millea 
In  transit  at  Minneapolis  and  was  at-, 
tacked  as  unwarranted. 

Reparation  was  asked  for  alleged  ex« 
cessive   freight   charges   paid. 


INTENTIONS 
AREfSTILE 

Mystery  Surrounds  Depart- 
ure of  Mexican  General  ; 
From  El  Paso.  | 

Salazar  Said  to  Have  Called 
on  Mexicans  to  Protect  , 
Country. 


WlifW^WWWA^  W  ifc"  W  W  W  Tif 

"I'LL  Er:0  IT  ALL,"  ^ 

HE  SHOUTED.  AXD  MH 

JUMPED  TO  DEATH.  * 

#■ 

MinneapollH,  Minn.,  April  10. —  ^ 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — A  proa-  ^ 
perouN  looking  man  about  .30  >eara  ^ 
old  Mtood  weeping  on  a  Mtreet  here  ^ 
today.  When  approached  by  a  po-  ^ 
Ilocnuin  he  suddenly  ithuutedt  "I'll  ^ 
end  It  all!"  and  leaped  Into  the  ^ 
middle  of  the  Ktreet.  ran  for  a  W. 
nearby  bridge,  where,  with  a  ^jf 
^  crowd  at  his  heeU,  be  vaulted  ^ 
#r  over  the  railing  and  disappeared  ^ 
4  in  the  churning  watera  of  the  ^ 
^  MlsNisslppl  river.  ^ 


'   , 


El  Paso,  Tex..  April  10. — There  wa« 
considerable  mystery  today  over  the 
reported  crossing  of  the  border  bjr 
Gen.  Ynez  SalazaK  former  Huerta  gen- 
eral, who  is  said  to  have  gone  Into 
Mexico  with  avowedly  hostile  inten- 
tions toward   the  United   States. 

The  story  of  the  crossing  was  told 
to  the  poljbe  by  a  man  once  closely- 
associated  with  Salazar.  After  inves- 
tigation the  police  said  they  believed 
the  story  true.  A  proclamation  was 
discovered,  purporting  to  be.  signed  by 
Salazar,  In  which  he  called  on  all 
patriotic  Mexicans  to  join  him  in  tho 
protection  of  Mexican  soil. 

Offered    Conunand    By    Carraaxa. 

The  man  who  gave  the  police  th^lr 
information  said  that  some  time  ago 
Salazar  received  a  letter  from  Car- 
ranza offering  him  a  command  in  the 
field.  It  was  the  result  of  this,  letter, 
he  said,  that  Salazar  decided  to  return 
to  Mexico.  Gen.  Salazar  first  i  ame 
into  notice  as  a  Socialist  agitator  ih 
Mexico.  Later  he  Joined  Madero,  but 
deserted  his  cause  to  enlist  under 
Orozco  when  the  latter. revolted.  When 
Huerta  came  Into  power,  Salazar  wa» 
one  of  his  most  successful  field  com- 
manders. He  was,  however,  defeated 
by  Villa  at  Parral  and  later  came  to 
the  United  States. 

Tried    Three    Tinea. 

He  was  arrested  and  tried  threo 
times  on  charges  of  conspiring  apalnst 
American  neutrality,  perjury  and  gun 
running.  He  was  acquitted  each  time. 
AVhen  the  news  of  the  Santa  Ysabcl 
massacre  reached  El  Paso  a  mob  at- 
tempted to  lynch  Salazar  and  he  nar- 
rowly escaped  with  his  life.  These 
experiences  caused  him  to  openly  ex- 
press the  bitterest  feeling  against  the 
United  States. 

Salazar  Is  credited  with  having  * 
considerable  followinir  In  Northera 
Chihuahua, 


■H' 


^^^iflUHUfl^HH^I 

|^^^^^^n^^^Mntr.-\'r. 

1 

* 

~^!l     DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


«  mmm 


.  '<  c 


Monday, 


THE     DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  10, 1916. 


1 


WKATHER— IMitly      cloudy      to- 
night;  aouthweaterly  winds. 


CLOTHES 


WITH  THE 

SPRING  OF 

YOUTH! 

With  th«  advent  of 
Spring,  we  proudly  art- 
nounce  HIGH  ART 
CLOTHES—not  ju3t  be- 
cause they  are  this  sea- 
son's styles  but  for  their 
life  and  snap. 

The  spring  of  youth  19 
embodied  in  every  model 
and  the  fabrics  are  a  joy- 
ous combination  of  col- 
orings in  tune  with  the 
season. 

We  indorse  these  best 
clothes  for  the  service 
they  give  —  for  their  fit 
and  finish  and  for  their 
bigness  of  value. 

IH]D@H  MT 
OLOTME 


"B[YOND  THE  POINT  Of  ROCKS" 

BRA^rOH   MAWAOBRi  HBRMAX    OLtOM.    ISM    WMt    laveHor    SU—t. 

Advertlalnr  Bubicr.ption  Dlatrlbutlon 


!  refreahlns: 


otBors.      Th-^y    eat    the 


BAD  NEIGHBORS 

FOR  CHURCHES 


Rev.  H.  A.  Ofstie  Declares 

Theater  and  Saloon  Are 

Worst. 

"Bad  Neighbors"  wa»  the  subject  of 
a  sermon  last  evonlnff  by  Hev.  H.  A. 
Ofstie,  pastor  of  the  First  Norweglao- 
Danlsh  M.  E.  church.  Twonty-fourth 
avenue  west  and  Third  str.-et,  In  which 
he  enumerated  the  theater  and  the 
saloon  as  telng:  the  worst.  The  lower 
standard  of  plays  grlven  In  theaters 
today,  asflnrtf'd  the  pastor,  is  due  to 
the  demand  of  the  public  for  the  Im- 
moral. Among  the  church's  good  neigh- 
bors wrre  named  the  schoolhouse  and 
hoapitul. 

•The  theater  today  is  a  sad  com- 
mentary on  the  theater  of  tho  past," 
Kald  Mr.  Ofstie.  "LJven  promoters  from 
the  theatrical  field  must  speak  warning 
words  today  against  the  immoral  trend 
of  the  stage.  And  then,  even,  some 
church  folks  will  beg  the  Intellectual 
education  lo  favor  of  the  theater. 
What  they  want  Is  rottenness.  'What 
the  theater  is  today  it  is  by  virtue  of 
the  public  desire,*  says  on»-  producer, 
and  then  goes  on  to  explain  the  vul- 
garity of  the  stage. 

"The  saloon  Is  another  bad  neigh- 
bor. But  Duluth  is  going  to  follow  the 
example  of  her  sister  city,  Superior, 
In  the  near  future  and  vote  the  saloon 
out.  We  don't  want  it  any  longer  as 
a  c-hurch  neighbor.  Even  the  law.  with 
Its  faulty  dffendvrs,  knows  the  evil  of 
the  saloon  and  places  statutes  upon  its 
pages  to  keep  the  saloon  so  many  feet 
away  from  the  doorstep  of  the  church. 
The  Halonn  is  a  bad  neighbor. 

"Electricians    tell     us    that     In    elec- 


tricity they  have  what  is  known  as 
'sneak  currents.'  that  steal  am-ay  the 
power  of  the  plant.  In  the  church  of 
cJod  some  individual  members  ar©  the 
•snt-ak  currents,'  channel  from  the 
world,  crippling  the  work  of  the 
church  by  their  unholy  lives  and 
callttig  the  criticism  of  the  ungrodly 
down  upon  God's  church.  This  Is  a  sad 
condition!  But  the  church  must  guard 
against  all  Its  bad  neighbors,  that  It 
mav  stand  spotless  In  the  community, 
washed  in  the  blood  of  the  Lamb  of 
Ood." 

THIMSS  COVETED 

FAIL  TO  SATISFY 


1 


$ 


Made  by  Strouse  &  Bros., 
lialtlmore,  Md. 

10i25 


r 


Superior  Street,  Corner  of 
Second  Avenae  West. 


YOUR  LAST  YEAR'S 

Spring  Suit 

WILL  DO  THIS 
SPRING  IF  IT 
IS  CLEANED  BY 

ORPHEUM 

DRV  CLEANERS 


Your  Duty  to  the  Children— 


We  give  (he  same 
attention  to  chil- 
dren as  to  grown 
ups. 


Infants'  Shoes  in  novelties  as 
well  as  the  staple  styles- 
priced  at SOc  to  $1,25 

Misses'  Shoes  in  dull  calf, 
kid  and  patent,  with  kid  or 
cloth  tops— at $1  to  $3 

Boys' and  Young  Men*  s  Shoes 
in  wide  and  medium  toes 
and  English  lasts— priced 
at $1,25  to  $3.00 


Shoe 


Mailorders.  Send  for  Style  BookJ 

ST.  PAUL  -  M I N  N  EAPOLff^ULUTM: 


f  I  131  EAST  SI  PLIHlOll  ST- 

■  Melrose  1168 — Grand  976. 


Different    Standards    Set 

on   Values,   Declares 

Rev.  Mr.  Fish. 

The  frultlessness  of  covetousness  w&n 
tho    theme    of    the    sermon    on    "Thou 
:  Shalt    Not    Covet,"     preached    by    Rev. 
;  Milton  Fish,  pastor  of  the  Central  Bap- 
tist church,  yesterday  morning.     Many 
of    tho    things    coveted    in    life    fail    to 
I  Satisfy  when  obtained,  he  declared.     In 
part    he   said: 

"A  non-Chrl«tlan  cannot  understand 
the  self-denials  or  the  spiritual  Joys  of 
the  Christian.  'Time  Is  worse  than 
wasted  in  trying  to  compronil.se  with 
the  standard  of  world's  values,  or  to 
accommodate  the  Christian  life  to 
world's  Idea  of  pleasure.  The  tastes  of 
the  Christian  and  the  non-Christian 
are  Irreconcilable.  The  non-Christian 
will  deem  the  Christian  as  siraight- 
luced.  while  the  Christian  deems  the 
worldly  standards  as  degraded  and  at 
times  depraved. 

View  of  Christian. 

"The  reason  for  thi.s  Ih  the  soul-con- 
verting view  of  Jesus  Christ.  To  the 
Chri:jtlan.  He  has  become  the  Chief 
among  ten  thousand,  the  One  more 
precious  than  father,  mother,  husband, 
wife,  child,  or,  than  life  Itself.  All  thdt 
pl«>aso8  Him  is  good  and  worthy.  All 
that  displeases  Him  is  worthless. 
Paul's  conversion  expressed  In  this 
new  .standard  of  values  is,  'What 
thing.s  were  gain  to  me  these  I  count- 
ed loas  for  Christ.  Yea  doubtless  I 
count  all  things  but  loss  for  the  ex- 
cellency of  the  knowledge  of  Christ 
Ji-sua  my  Lord,  for  whom  I  have  suf- 
fered the  I0S8  of  all  thing."*.'  Concern- 
ing Mo.sea  we  read,  'He  esteemed  the 
approval  of  Christ  greater  riches  than 
all  the  treasures  of  Egypt.' 

"This  love  for  Christ  amply  fulfills 
the  tenth  commandment.  'Thou  shall 
not  covet.'  To  see  Him,  the  Adorable 
Son  of  Ood,  full  of  grace  and  truth  is 
to  lose  an  overmastering  fev»r  for 
things  of  earth.  An  overmastering 
love  and  longing  of  Jesus  Christ  Is  th.- 
godliness  that,  with  contentment,  is 
great  gain.  Such  are  growing  wealthy 
in  spiritual  powers  and  are  laying  up 
treasures  in  heaven.  .  , 

"Christ  Is  the  light  that  dtsclosei 
the  folly  of  covetousness.  We  can  take 
from  the  world  no  more  wealth  than 
we  brought  with  us.  Our  stewardship 
may  terminate  tomorrow.  This  is  not 
our  eternal  home.  Only  in  the  de- 
lirium of  fever  would  we  strive  to 
pos8es.s  what  will  soon  pass  to  others, 
or  else  will  perish  with   tho  using. 

"Much  that  we  covet  In  lust  falls  to 
satisfy.  Achau  could  not  use  the 
llubylonish  garment. 

Choose    Unworthy   Things. 

"The  covetous  seek  the  golden  ves- 
sels rather  than  the  oil,  they  grasp  the 
cup    but    forget    to    offer    tho    water   of 


pompom/ 


24  and  26  West  Superior  St.,  Near  First  Ave.  West 


Offers  large  selection  of  latest  styles 

in  wearing  apparel  for  the 

woman  or  miss. 


aster 


should  be  selected  now.  Choice 
collection  at — 

'19.75,  '22.50 
'25,  '27.50 
and  ^35. 00 

(Othens  up  to   165.00) 


Wise  women  are  choosing  their  eults 
now  while  they  may  do  It  leisurely  and 
are  suro  of  getting  Just  what  is  best 
suited  to  tholr  needs. 


New  Spring 
Headgear 

John  B.  .St<>t(«on  Hats— 

$3.50  and  $4 

Featuring  the.  Pacemaker,   |4. 

"K.  &  A."  Spoclnl  Hats  foe 
Spring — 

$2  and  $3 

Kenney- Anker  Co. 

1<»!)    1111(1    411    Woj^t   Superior   St. 


500  Classy  Skirts 


An  unu.sual  assemblape  of  the  .•'nnpplest 
and  popular  styles  In  separate  sklrt.s,  olYerlng 
fancy  Hllks,  stripe  silks,  plaid  silks,  black 
and  navy  taffetas  bIIUs.  wool  poplins,  wool 
gabardines,  French  .serges,  mannl.sh  checks, 
corduroys     In     colors     specially  priced — 

$6.50,  $8.75, 
$10.00  and 
$13.75 

(Others  up  to  $35.00) 

A   8p%clal    group    of   Wool   and    Taffeta   Skirts, 
92.98  and  9^.00. 


Kusk    of   iuxfi7    alift    reject   the   kern^ 
nny  tot  Kurvlce.     They   ad- 


tTJef 


of  opportun.v,  »„.  n^.^..^^.  ....w,  — 
mire  the  giU  frame  but  are  blind  to 
the  mast«rnt>«e  of  Ood'.-*  love.  They 
fcave  the  scaKold  of  rltea  by  destroying 
the  temple  o\^  Ood's  real  dwelling  pla'^c 
umong  men. 

"In  the  morning  of  the  human  race 
Eve  coveted'  the'forbldden  fruit  and 
entailed  us  _wlth^  dread  inheritance. 
Today  men  onsve^usted  for  gold  and 
coveted  commercial  supremacy.  The 
entail  of  thi*  vr^  maybe  tho  long- 
prophesied  l(m#  A)f  tribulation.  Ood 
forfond    ua    fiom    that   day. 

nes»oMMlAft'  of  PoMKSsloa. 

"The  covetou.<«  <ii,  not  acknowledge 
the  moral  fto.spou^ibllity  that  poss<».'i- 
slon  involves.  iPhey  underrate  th'- 
value  of  the  poor.*^too  often  overriding 
the  rights  of  -the  defenseless.  Thoy 
refuse  to  belleTe  that  riches  d.^oelve. 
nor  do  they  care  if  yrealth  should  with 
Its  care  chflRie'  4lit  the  word  of  (;od, 
or  even  make  entrance  into  God's  king- 
dom  ImpoBsible. 

"While  a  man's  life  conslsteth  not  in 
the  abundance  of  thing."?  v.-hich  he  pos- 
se.ssfth,  we  covet  earne.ntly  the  best  of 
spiritual  gifts.  To  claim  these  does 
not  impoverish  a  lirother  man. 

"Thn  evil  covet ousne.ss  Is  expelled  by 
a  higher  passion.  Concerning  Christ 
we  can  say  'As  the  hart  pantoth  after 
the  watorbrooks'.  so  panieih  my  soul 
after  Thee,  Oh  God.'  " 


ish  Luth#ran  church,  Twenty-third 
avenue  west  and  Third  street,  will  hold 
its  monthly  meeting  In  the  church  to- 
morrow evening.  A  musical  and  lit- 
erary program  is  planned  following 
the  business  meeting. 

Tho  Martha  society  will  meet  in  the 
church   Wednesday   afternoon.     , 

Rev.  C.  A.  Eckstrom  will  conduct 
midweek   services    Wednesday   evening. 

The  men's  club  will  be  entertained 
Thursday  afternoon  at  the  home  of  An, 
drew  Blomaulst.  1921  West  Third 
street. 

Choir  rehearsals  will  be  held  in  the 
church   Friday   evening. 

The  confirmation  class  will  meet 
with  the  pastor  on  Saturday  morning 
at  lU  o'clock. 


last  evening  about  ^  o'clock.     K  man 

whom  she  had  passed  as  he  was  stand- 
ing leaning  over  a  fence  on  the  lower 
side  of  Fourth  street  between  Twen- 
tieth and  Twenty-first  avenues  walked 
up  behind  her  and  grabbed  the  purse. 
Mrs.  Nelson  said  that  the  purse  con- 


tained only  about  on«  dollar  In  mvaaSi 
change,  but  that  several  other  ^'JlcleB 
which  she  prized  were  contained  In  It- 
No  report  was  mad©  to  the  police  last 
night  of  the  affair,  Mrs.  Nelson  was 
unable  to  give  any  description  of  the 
man. 


.r  ■ 


Paris       New  York       Duluth        Cincinnati       Washington,  D.  C 


Will  CONDUa  SERIES 
Of  MISSION  MKTIN6S 


Wett  End  Briefs. 

Mrs.  David  Adams.  2814  West  Sec- 
ond street,  has  returned  from  Port 
Arthur,  Can.,  where  she  was  called  by 
the  death  of  her  brbther,  Richard 
Fox. 

Progress  lodge.  No.  6,  Degree  of 
Honor,  will  entertain  Thursday  eve- 
ning at  cards  at  the  Columbia  hall. 
Twentieth  avenue  west  and  Superior 
street.  Mrs.  T.  H.  McNeill  and  Mrs. 
McGregor    will    be    In    charge. 

Nora  lodge.  No.  4,  Daughters  of 
Norway,  will  entertain  at  a  dancln|r 
party  at  the  Woodman  hall  Thursday 
evening. 

Mrs.  George  Bennlson,  908  Garfield 
;  avenue,  has  as  her  guest  her  sister, 
I  Mrs.    S.    W.    Bice    of    Denver.    Colo. 

Mrs.    Fred    Robinson    of    Minneapolis 

I  is  a  guest  at  the  home  of  Mrs.  Thom- 

I  as    Roblnaon,     638    Garfield    avenue. 

Modern    shoe    repairing    at    Economy 

Shoe  Works,  204  20th  A.  W.  A.  Thoren. 


Rev.  C.  F.  Sandstrom  of  Minneapoll.-i 
will  speak  at  all  of  the  mission  meet- 
ings to  be  held  this  week  at  the  Sw'ed- 
ifah  Mission  church.  Twenty-first  ave- 
nue west  and  Second  street.  The  vi-s- 
Itlng  minister  Will  be  assisted  by  Rev. 
J.  J.  Daniels  and  the  choir  of  the  local 
church. 

This  evening  Mr.  Sandstrom  will 
speak  on  "Confession  and  the  Remi.4- 
slon  of  Sin."  Tomorrow  evening  his 
subject  will  be.  "Suffering  of  Christ:" 
The  topics  for  the  other  evenings   ar.-; 


SUMMER  TRAINING 
SCHOOL  ANNOUNCED 


REV.  C.  F.  SANDSTROM. 

Wednesday,  "Christian  Home.s";  Thurs- 
day. "Worldly  and  Christian  Young 
People";  Friday,  "Our  Boys  and  Glrlls"; 
and  Saturday  evening.  "The  Christian 
Church."  Mr.  Sandstrom  wiU  also  speak 
next  Sunday  at  10:30  a.  t)i.,  4  and  7:30 
p.   m.  '     \ 

No  meetings  will  be  held  at  the  East 
End  mission  I  this  week  on  account  of 
the  series  ot  a^tyi^ea  held  at  the  West 
end   church.  -  > 


See  Duluth' s  Greatest 

98c  Waist 

—at  Leiser's 

25  newest  Spring  .styles;  can't  be 
touched   under   $2.00   elsewhere. 

See  the  Wonderful 
Silk  Blouses  at  $1.9 8  \ 

Others  at  $3.50,  $5.00,  $6.50—  f 

unequaled  selection  and  values. 


EASTER  AT  ST.  PETER'S. 

Preparatioit9' Being  Made  for  Services 
to  Cioee  Lenten  Season. 

At  the  .si>epial  Lenten  services  to  be 
held  Thursday  afternoon  at  St.  Pet-ej-'s 
UpisctpHal'Chvrrh,  Twenty-eighth  avf>- 
nut>  .west  an*  First  street,  St.  Liuke^'s 
guild  of  the  church  will  entertain  fol- 
lowing the  devotional  meeting.  Mj'«i. 
W.  E.  Harmann  and  Mrs.  Thomas  Bark 
will   be   hostesses. 

The  Swedish  services  will  be  held 
Thursday  evening,  following  which  the 
Rebekah  guild  will  entertain.  The 
hoste.ises  at  ther evening  meeting  will 
be  Mrs.  Victor  Juten  and  Mrs.  Peter 
Olson. 

Preparations  fbr  a  special  program 
of  music  to  be  given  at  the  East-er 
nvornlng  serviire  at  tho  churciv  are  be- 
ing made  by  the  choir.  The  program 
win  be  given  by  the  combined  choirs 
of  St.  Peter's  church  and  Chri.st's  Epi.^- 
copal  church  of  Pnjctor.  Miss  Hulda 
Olson  Is  directing  the.  choir, 
I  m 

Missionary  Society  Will  Meet. 

The  Women'*  Home  and  Foreign 
Missionary  8oo|ety  of  the  Second  Pres- 
byterian churohuT  1B15  West  Superior 
street,  wlll-.l>e  entertained  Wednesday 
afternoon  at  the  home  of  Mrs.  Robert 
GlUon,  419  Biglrteenth  avenue  east. 
Th<'  foreign  topUv  will  be  "India,"  with 
Mry.  M.  H.  Pott*  as  leader.  The  horn* 
topic  will  l)e  preHent«'d  by  Mrs.  Henry 
Nelson,  who  wllV  speak  on  "The  Freed- 
man."  Reporjts  will  be  made  by  Mrs. 
Hiram  Olson  and  Mrs.  J.  A.  Ledlngham, 
delegates  to  the  annual  meeting  of  the 
Duluth  presbytery,  which  will  open 
tomorrow  at  the  Westminster  Presby- 
terian   church. 

Observe  King  Albert's  Natal  Day. 

Members  of  St.  Jean  Baptlste  French 
Catholic  church,  Twenty-fifth  avenue 
west  and  Third  street,  observed  the  an- 
niversary oif  the  birthday  of  King  Al- 
bert of  Belgium  last  evening.  Assist- 
ance In  raiding  a  relief  fund  for  Bel- 
glum  by  the  sale  of  tags  was  plannad. 
Miss  Jessie  *E.  Miynard  and  Mrs.  L.  E. 
Baude  will  Bell  tho  tags. 

Central  Baptist  News. 

The  Ladles'  AM  Society  of  the  Cen- 
tral Baptist  church.  Twentieth  avenue 
west  and  First  street,  will  hold  an  all- 
day  meeting  In  the  church  Thursday. 
Luncheon  will  be  served  by  the  com- 
mittee In   charge  at  12:30   o'clock. 

An  Illustrated  lecture  on  "India"  will 
be  given  Friday  evening  at  the  meet- 
ing of  the  Baptist  Young  People's  so- 
ciety. Stereoptlcon  slides  showing , 
scenes  from  the  Far  East  will  be  one 
of  the  features. 

An  elaborate  program  is  being  ar- 
ranged for  Easter  morning  by  the  Sun- 
day school  of  the  church.  A  special 
musical  program  ^viU  altio  be  given  In 
the  evening. 

Swedl9h  M.  E.  Notes. 

The  official  board  of  the  First  Swed- 
ish M.  E.  church.  Twentieth  avenue 
west  and  Third  street,  will  meet  in 
thei  church   this  evening.^ 

The  ladles'  aid  society'  will  meet  In 
the  church  Thursday. afternoon  for  the 
annual  "clean-tip"  of  the  church. 

The  Sunday  school  -board  will  meet 
in  the  church  Thursday  evening.  The 
string  band  of  the  church  will  meet 
also    Thursday    evening    for    rehearsal. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Albert  Broman  will  en- 
tertain for  ,the  members  of  the  Ep- 
worth  league  In  the  church  parlors 
Friday  evening.  ,  , 

.  '  V  *  • 

Bethany  Notes. 

The  Luthe^  teaif  ue  of  Bethany  Swed- 


State    Superintendent    of 

Instruction  Outlines  Plans 

for  Continuation  Work. 

Summer  training  school  plans  have 
Just  been  made  public  by  C.  G.  Schulz, 
state  superintendent  of  public  Instruc- 
tion, and  St.  Louis  county  draws  the 
five  weeks  beginning  July  31,  when  the 
school  will   be  conducted  at  Duluth. 

Special  bulletins  explaining  credits 
obtainable  by  teachers  attending  the 
summer  schools  will  be  mailed  soon  to 
all  schools  by  the  state  superintendent. 
Iniititutional  ««:hool.s  at  the  state  nor- 
mals at  Duluth,  St.  Cloud,  Winona,  Man- 
katQ  and  Moorhead,  and  state  agricul- 
tural schools  at  St.  Anthony  Park, 
Crook.ston,  Morris  and  Bemidjl  will 
open   June   12  and   close  July   21. 

SchooU  are  announced  In  counties  as 
follows: 

St.  Loul.o — Duluth,  -five  weeks,  begin- 
ning July   81. 

Le  .Sueur — Le  Sueur,  four  weeks,  be- 
ginning  June    26. 

Morrison — Little  Falls,  four  weeks, 
beginning  June  26. 

Otter  Tail — Fergus  Falls,  five  weeks, 
beginning  June   19. 

Roseau — Roseau,  five  weeks,  begin- 
ning   June    19. 

Wadena — Wadena,  four  weeks,  be- 
ginning June  26. 

Examinations  for  certificates,  the 
announcement  addw,  will  be  given  un- 
der the  direction  of  each  county  super- 
intendent in  hla  respective  county,  July 
24,   25  and  26.       ^ 


ARRANeE  LABOR 

FORWARD  PUNS 


Committees  Will  Meet  and 

Select  Hails  for  Mass 

Meetings. 

Plans    for    the    mass    meeting    to    be 

held   during    the  Labor  Forward  week 

In  Duluth  from  April  30  to  May  7  will 

be  formulated  tonight  when  the  Union 

Forward  committee  meets  at  8   o'clock 

at   Brown's  hall.      President   E.   G.  Hall 

of   the   Minnesota   State   Federation   of 

Labor  made    tills     announcement      last 
night. 

President  Hall  said  that  fifteen  to 
twenty  halls  would  be  needed  during 
that  pt^rlod.  Many  of  the  most  prom- 
inent labor  men  and  officials  In  the 
East  will  be  here  and  give  addresses 
and  take  part  In  the  Labor  Forward 
work. 

The  union  meetings  for  this  week 
are  cu}  follows:  Painters'  union. 
Brown's  hall,  Tuesday;  carpenters' 
union.  Eagle  hall,  Tuesday;  Federated 
Trades  assembly,  Owls'  hall,  Friday; 
car  men's  union,  Woodman  hall,  Fri- 
day; Allied  Printing  Trades  council, 
Lowell  block,  Monday;  lathers'  union. 
Brown's  hall,   Friday. 

Mr.  Hall  spoke  at  the  team  owners' 
union  meeting  held  yesterday  after- 
noon In  Brown's  hall  on  further  organ- 
ization   plans. 

• 


u 

Ctmot  Dmtfiir  Wmim  '^l"  ani  Oirlt 
Superior  Street  at  First  Ave.  West 

OFFER  TOMORROW 

Unusual  Suit  Values 

at     $35,     $45,     $55 

(Former  Values  $45  to  $69.60.) 

A  revisement  of  our  stocks  is  the  reason  for  these  unusual 
values.  The  sizes  are  broken  and  on  account  of  the  impos- 
sibility of  obtaining  many  imported  materials,  we  will  close 
out  these  suits  at  the  above  prices.     -  

Hs  Smart  Coats 

For  Street,  Motoring,  Outing  and  Afternoon  wear,  In  fine 
Wool  Velours,  Poiret  Twill,  Gabardine,  large  pastel  checks, 
Punjab  Tussor,  Guernsey,  Taffeta,  Poiret  de  Sole,  Callot 
Checks,  Homespuns  and  Tweeds,  developed  in  the  season's 
smartest  styles — 

At$15,  $19,  $25,  $35to$125 
Street  Dresses,  Afternoon  Gowns, 

SERGE  FROCKS — Featuring  many  new  style  features  of 
all  Serge  or  Serge  in  combinations  with  Chiffon  or  Satin. 
AFTERNOON  GOWNS— In  Plain  or  Novelty  Silks,  Taf- 
feta, Georgette  and  combinations  in  black,  navy  and  all 
the  new  shades — 

At  $15,  $19.50.  $25,  $29,  $35  up 


Charming  Blouses 


DAY  IN  GIHIGRESS 


* 
* 


SENATE. 
Debate  was  begun  on  resolatlon  •tfi 

J   to  repeal  free  sugar  clause  of  the  ^ 
tariff.  ^ 

^  Investigation  was  resuined  into  * 
^  alleged  sinal  monopoly  before  ag-  ^ 
^   rionlturnl   MUb-roniiuittee.  ^ 

Hf-  Judiclury  rommlltee  considered  ^, 
^  Hab-committee  report  recomiuend-  •)(( 
•ilh  Ing  confirmation  of  LouU  D.  ^ 
ift  BrandelM   to   the   supreme   court.        MH 

^  Housrc.  % 

^  DiACUKslon  of  rivers  and  har-  ^fi 
^  horn    bill    continued.  4fi 

M  I'nitrd  State*  Attorney  Marshall  ¥fe 
*  appeared  before  a  select  commit-  ^ 
m  tee  to  teMtIfy  regarding  hlH.orltl-  4fi 
'ijf-  cinm  of  a  nutt-romntittee  iiiveaitl-  M^ 
iit  gating         Impeachment         ctaurges  ^ 


^  against  him. 


fAAAAAA^AAAlfclfc 


^^tf 


West  Ind  Undertaking 
jCoQpany 

2118  W^ST  FIKST  STREET. 
NyberK  A  C^rOwfQrd.  Hanagers. 


FOUND  BALANCE  SMALL. 

Claim  and  Counterclaim  Almost  Can- 
cel Each  Other. 

Unable  to  agree  when  It  came  to  an 
accounting  between  them,  Theodore 
Furland  and  Hugh  Mlscampbell 
brought  their  dispute  Into  court.  Fur- 
land  was  employed  by  Mlscampbell  as 
a  shop  foreman  for  nine  months  and 
when  he  quit  he  asserts  that  Mlscamp- 
t>«ll  owed  him  approximately  $750.  But 
Mlscampbell  had  a  counterclaim.  And 
when  the  several  points  in  dispute 
were  balanced  one  against  the  other. 
Judge  Cant  of  the  trial  court  found 
that  Furland  had  just  |1.86  coming. 
He  was  also  given  Judgment  for  the 
costs  In   the  case. 

♦    

Returns  From  the  East. 

Ben  Blumenthal,  manager  of  th© 
Letser  Co.,  returned  yesterday  from 
a  flying  trip  to  Eastern  marts  to 
"complete  his  late  spring  and  early 
summer  purchases.  He  reports  that 
the  market  is  low  on  high-grade 
finished  materials  and  there  is  con- 
tinued advance  on  raw  materials.  The 
enormoais  purchasing  power  of  the 
Lelser  corporation  enables  them  to  se- 
cure concessions  from  the  factories 
that  individual  stores  cannot  possibly 
obtain. 

SNATCHES  PURSE. 

Night    Prowler  Gets    Little   for  His 
Pains  From  Mrs.  Peter  Nelson. 

Mrs.  Peter  Nelson,  residing  at  Eight- 
eenth avenue  west  and  Piedmont  ave- 
nue, had  her  purse  snatched  from  her 
hand  while  walking  home  from  church 


For  Outing,  Office,  Street,  Afternoon  and  Evening  wear — 
in  plain  styles  or  novelty  effects — of  Georgette,  Crepe  de 
Chine,  Taffeta,  Radium  Silk,  Linen,  Madras,  Voile,  Batiste, 
Lace;  Net  and  Chiffon,  in  a  wonderful  variety  of  styles  and 
colorings —  .        - ^ 

At  $2,  $3.50,  $5,  $6.75  up  to  $45 

Smart  Middy  Blouses  $  1  to  $5 

Wonderful  Millinery 

A  display  which  features  the  newest  millinery  notes  from 
the  leading  modistes — original  Model  Hats,  reproductions 
and  adaptations — styles  introduced  by  Talbot,  Lewis, 
Varon,  Hamar,  Lanvin,  Georgette  and  others,  together 
with  models  designed  by  our  own  French  and  American 
artists — featuring  Sailor  Hats,  Mandarin  and  Bonnet  ef- 
fects. Mushroom  styles.  Horsehair  Hats,  Ostrich  Trimmed 
Hats,  Tulle  Hats,  Goura,  Wing,  Flower  and  Ribbon  Trim- 
med Hats  and  Smart  Sport  and  Outing  Hats — 

At$7.50,  $10,  $12,  $15,  $18  upward 
Misses'  and  Girls'  Hats  at  $3.75  to  $12 

Smart  Sports'  Apparel 

Introducing  a  wonderful  collection  of  smart  styles  for  all 
manner  of  outing  wear.  Specialized  types  for  Golfing, 
Fishing,  Hiking,  Tramping,  Tennis,"  Boating,  etc. 

Coats,  Suits,  Skirts,  Hats 

New  Sweater  Coats 

In  Thread  Silk,  Fiber  Silk,  Silk  Jersey,  Wool  Jersey,  An- 
gora and  Combed  Wool,  in  all  the  new  styles  and  colorings. 
Silk  Sweaters,  $19.50  to  $35. 
Angora  Sweaters,  Si 2.50  upwards. 
Fiber  Silk  Sweaters,  $6. 75  to  $19.50, 
Combed  Wool  Sweaters,  $7.50  upwards. 


< 


When 

Eyes 

Need 

Glasses 

We 

Can 

Fit 

Them. 


>   ^    ...    a  V 

—  I   ■    ■    I     ■ 


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Monda3fg 


-I*  ^i- 


The 

College 


>  «    (!—■■•■ 


«W  ■'■.J     ^ 


I  am  a  college  man. 

Nowhere  are  cigarettes 
more  critically  {udged  than  at 
college. 

I  smoke  **Helmar*'  Turkish  ciga- 
rettes. Most  of  the  college  men  1  know 
smoke  *'Hehnar"  Turkish  cigarettes. 

Because  we  find  **Helmar"  the 
'*QuaUty  Superb"  In  cigarettes. 

Tba  mUdmai  tobacco  for  cIgaroHes  la  Turkish,  ^ 
The  best  tobacco  for  cigarettes  Is  Turkish. 

Don't  pay  ten  cents  for  anybody's  cigarette  until 

Jfou  have  tried  **Helmar,"  a  fascinating,  elevat» 
ng,  gentfeman's  smoke. 

Makers  (fthe  l^gisst  (2aKfeTW&S| 
and  Egyptian  Cljarettes  intht  VM4 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


AprU  10, 1916. 


[fFKT  Of  UNDBM'S  ENTRANCE 
TO  mTOIUAl  RACE  IS  QUESTION 


Many  Believe  He  Will  Hurt 
Eberhart  Most;  Only  Real 
Fight  in  State  Politics  Be- 
fore Primary;  "Hughes  or 
Roosevelt"  Is  National 
Subject;  Former's  Attitude 
Discovered. 


mBWSlSSl&lBBBB^^ 


NINE  CANDIDATES 

TO  GET  DEGREES 


Royal  Arch  Masons  Will 

Do  Ritualistic  Work 

Wednesday  Night. 


Nine  candidates  will  receive  the 
past  master  and  most  excellent  master 
degrees  at  the  regular  meeting  of  Key- 
■tone  chapter,  No.  20.  Royal  Arch  Ma- 
•ons,    Wtdnesday    evening   at    the   Ma- 


A  man  once  walked  a  thousand  miles 
"Quite  wonderful,"  you  say, 

And  yet  feet  balhcd  In  Cal-o-clde 
Could  RUN  most  all  the  way. 

. .        for  Aching,  Burning,  and 

^%1  ^^^I#Ia  Sweaty  Ftet' Corna.  Cal- 
I  Ql'O^ClilV  louKt.andSoreBonloni. 
>?     ,       _.Bj.^     It  penetrate*  th«  porei 

Cives  Instant  Rnter     ^nd  rcmovei  the  cau«e. 
Roaulta  positively  guarant«ed.    Get  a  b<»  from 


Bonlc  temple.  Following  the  rltual- 
latlc  work,  a  light  lunch  will  be  aerved. 

Ionic  lodge.  No.  186,  A.  F.  &  A.  M., 
will  confer  the  flrat  degree  following 
its  regular  business  session.  Five  can- 
didates will  receive  the  work.  At  the 
Lukeeide  Masonic  hall.  Lakeside  lodge, 
No.    281,    will    confer    the    third    degree. 

Duluth  Commandery,  No.  18,  will 
drill  tomorrow  evening  at  the  temple. 
The  Knights  Templars  are  making 
plans  for  the  Minneapolis  conclave,  to 
be  held  next  month.  Weekly  drills  are 
being  held. 

On  Thursday  evening,  the  Scottish 
Rite  Masons  will  meet  to  complete 
preparations  for  the  Holy  Week  re- 
union next  week. 

iii^ij|imj|i""™"v  -  -  - 

a,  ^ 

*  DEKR  CrXS  THRO.^T  ON  Ht 
«           wire:  FK^iCK  NEAR  GHEfCN.  ^ 

-*  A  deer  committed  avlelde  or  ■>»«  ik 
$  aeHdental    death  near     Ghren,      a  « 

#  town  In  the  wllda  of  St.  Loala  i^ 
m  povnty.  OB  Saturday,  aeeordlnir  to  if, 
^  word  received  In  St.  Paul  by   Car-  ^ 

#  Ion  Avery,  atate  same  and  flali  * 
^  commlHMlouor.  Mr.  Avery  waa  pn«-  ^ 
^  Bled  when  be  received  the  follow-  « 
^  lUK  telcgirnmt  « 
in       "Deer  eut   throat   on   wire   fence  w 

*  here  today  t  wire  dlspoaltlon  of  if. 
if:  carcaaa."  ^JI 
if  The  eonsBilaaloner  Inatructed  the  # 
if  Innulrcr  to  drewa  the  carcaaa  and  if 
if  aell  It  at  the  brnt  price  obtainable,  if, 
if  but  he  would  like  to  know  wheth-  W 
iff  cr  or  not  that  deer  waa  dcapond-  if 
if  ent.  if. 

in- 


aay 


draggiat  aac.    Remember  the  name. 


Mayville    Boniface    DIea. 

Mayville.  N.  D.,  April  10. — Thomas 
Berg.  68  years  old,  proprietor  of  the 
Northern  hotel  here  and  a  prominent 
Klk.  dropped  dead  while  sitting  in  his 
office  Saturday. 

Ueart  failure  Ig  aaid   to  have   been 


the  cause  of  death.  He  leaves  a  wife, 
but  no  children.  Mr.  Berg  was  very 
well  known  throughout  the  state  and 
the  news  of  his  death  will  be  received 
with  sorrow  by  many. 

•- —— 

Emancipation  Day. 

Members  of  St.  Mark's  M.  E.  church. 
Fifth  avenue  east  and  Sixth-  street, 
will  observe  Emancipation  day  at  an 
Easter  musical  festival  next  Friday 
evening. 

During  the  evening  an  emancipation 
anthem^  composed  by  Henry  Williams 
of  this  city,  will  be  Introduced  by  Rev. 
George  Holt.  Mrs.  Minnie  Adams.  W. 
B.  Richardson  and  John  Morley.  The 
program  also  Includes  orchestral  se- 
lections, recitations.  Instrumental  solos 
and  an  address  by  T.  W.  Hugo. 

* 

Famtera  for  Ledalature. 

Crookston,  Minn..  April  10.— D.  B. 
Ferguson,  a  prominent  farmer  of 
Huntsvllle.  has  filed  for  the  legisla- 
ture on   the  nonpartisan  ticket. 

Mr.  Ferguson  Is  well  known  In 
Crookston  and  has  resided  In  this  sec- 
tion since  early  pioneer  days. 

• 

L.akota,   N.   D.,   Bank    Deal. 

Lakota.  N.  I)..  April  10— (Special  lo 
The  Herald.) — The  stock  of  the  Na- 
tional Bank  of  L<akota  has  been  sold 
to  local  men  who  have  organized  and 
incorporated  a  new  state  bank.  The 
deal  gives  Lakota  two  banks  instead 
of   three,   as   had  been   planned. 


"HOW  IS  YOUR  LIVER?" 


No  question  Is  more  important.  As 
your  liver  is,  so  are  you.    Take  Hood's 

plllB best  for  a  sick,  torpid,  miserable 

liver,  biliousness,  constipation,  bad 
taste'  In  the  mouth,  etc.  Sugar-coated, 
easily  swallowed.  Do  not  gripe.  Price 
2Bc,  of  all  Jrugglsts  or  promptly  by 
mail  of  C.  L  Uood  Co,,  Lowell,  " 


The  real  political  question  in  Minne- 
sota now  is:  Who  will  be  the  next 
United  States  senator?  The  Republican 
party  is  already  involved  in  a  fotr- 
cornered  fight  for  the  nomination  for 
that  office,  and  rumors  are  about 
that  still  more  candidates  will  file. 
However,  this  is  not  generally  be- 
lieved, and  It  is  jprobable  that  the  pri- 
maries of  June  19  will  be  reached  with 
the  four  men  mentioned — and  with  the 
possibility  of  only  three,  for  the  story 
will  not  down  that  Senator  Clapp  may 
stay  out. 

The  senatorial  pond  not  only  rippled, 
but  was  even  stirred  during  the  last 
week  when  Congressman  Charles  A. 
Lindbergh  of  the  Sixth  district  made 
good  his  threat  to  enter  the  senatorial 
race.  He's  in — perhaps  Irrevocably 
this  time,  and  yet,  perhaps  not,  for  he 
has  a  habit  of  running  Into  a  race,  tak- 
ing a  look  around  and  running  right 
out  again.  In  his  announcement,  Mr. 
Lindbergh  states  In  substance  that  he 
Is  entering  somewhat  against  his  will, 
but  purely  for  the  purpose  of  saving 
the  people. 

"When  mighty  elements  are  fusing 
In  the  world's  'melting  pot.'  "  said  he, 
"personal  matters  do  not  Justify  side- 
stepping when  one  feels  the  call  to  bat- 
tle." 

And  more  of  the  same. 

What  Effect  Will  Result. 

The  question  before  the  house  is  not 
what  Mr.  Lindbergh's  actual  motive 
may  be,  but  what  effect  will  his  candi- 
dacy have  on  the  senatorial  situation. 
General  discussion,  curiously  enough, 
seems  to  leave  Senator  Clapp  out  of  it. 
as  though  his  strength  Is  fixed  and  not 
affected  by  others.  Kellogg  and  Eber- 
hart are  the  ones  whom  everybody  re- 
gards as  being  mo»t  affected  by  Lind- 
bergh's plunge,  and  newspaper  opinion 
seems  to  be  that  Eberhart  will  suffer 
most.  The  chief  reason  for  that  belief 
Is  that  the  former  governor  was  ob- 
viously depending  a  lot  on  nationality 
•trenglh.  Lindbergh  will  draw  from 
that  very  source.  Lindbergh  has  al- 
ways been  understood  to  be  in  favor 
of  prohibition  measures,  although  he 
marred  his  'scutcheon  a  short  tlnrie  ago 
by  offering  to  try  to  have  the  Indian 
lid  removed,  hastily  dodging  when  he 
found  that  he  had  stlrrod  things  up. 
and  he  may  be  able  to  count  on  a  large 
vote  from  that  portion  i>t  the  popula- 
tion. Kberhart,  on  the  other  hand,  will 
likely  have  the  support  of  the  ultra 
"wets"  for  he  Is  recognized  as  one  or 
the  adherents  of  the  Ed  Smith  crowd. 
on  which  the  brewer*  and  their  like  de- 
pend for  political  protection.  Kellogg 
will  be  mixed  up-i*%th  neither. 
Calm  in  Other  <luartcr8. 

The  senatorial  situation  will  be  the 
storm  center  at  the  primaries  in  June, 
for  it  is  apparent  that  the  governorship 
trouble  of  the  Republican  party  is 
practically  over,  as  Governor  Burn- 
Qulst  certainly  holds  the  whip  hand 
and  does  not  seem  to  leave  any  open- 
ing for  an  opponent  to  come  through 
up  to  primary  time. 

Other  state  offices  apparently  will 
not  have  much  trouble.  Julius  a. 
Bchmahl  will  be  renominated  for  sec- 
retary of  state,  and  about  the  onlj 
other  thing  to  look  for  la,  a  state 
treasurer.  With  A.  C  Gooding,  the 
appointee  occupant,  , refusing  to  run. 
there  are  plenty  of  candidates,  but 
lllwed  at  this  angle.  It  would  seem 
that  Henry  Rines  of  Mora,  who  filed 
last  Monday,  has  by  all  means,  the 
best  show.  He  Is  the  most  widely 
known,  and  has  shown  himself  to  be 
an  eff  clent  officer  with  more  than 
ordinary  executive  ability  and  with  an 
eye  to  economy  of  the  state'a  funds, 
and  a  knowledge  of  where  to  use  the 
knife.  Besides,  his  name  is  best 
known,  and  that's  an  asset  in  the 
primaries. 

There  is  little  doubt  but  that  Lyn- 
don A.  Smith  will  file  for  renomina- 
tion  for  attorney  general.  Two  men. 
appointed  as  assistants  in  his  office 
recently,  obtained  that  assurance,  for 
they  did  not  feel  like  giving  up  pri- 
vate practice  fpr  a  few  months  as 
aasistant  attorneys  general.  'This 
probably  clears  the  way  for  Justice 
Albert   Schaller   for   re-election   to   the 

supreme    bench. 

•  •      • 

It  Is  announced  that  J.  T.  Johnson 
of  Fergus  Falls,  representative  from 
that  district  to  the  state  legislature, 
will  be  a  candidate  for  speaker  of 
the  house  of  representatives.  Mr.  John- 
son Is  the  first  to  so  announce  him- 
self. He  and  L.  C.  Spooner  of  Morris 
were  the  senior  members  of  the  house 
at  the  last  session,  having  served 
ever  since   the  session    of   1907. 

•  *      a 

This  section  of  the  state  is  again 
without  a  state  officer.  It  furnished  a 
state  treasurer  for  several  terms,  but 
with  the  removal  of  Walter  J.  Smith 
and  the  resignation  of  Assistant  At- 
torney General  Stevenson,  it  is  with- 
out  representation   in   the  state   house. 

Because  of  his  remarkable  showing 
In  the  recent  presidential  primary 
when  he  ran  for  delegate-at-large  to 
the  Democratic  national  convention, 
Cyrus  M.  King  of  Deer  River  is  being 
widely  mentioned  for  tjl>e  governor- 
ship nomination  on  the  Democratic 
ticket.  He  is  also  being  talked 
strongly  for  the  congressional  nomi- 
nation in  the  Eighth  district.  The 
present  incumbent  of  the  latter  of- 
fice seems  far  from  strong  at  this  time 
as  a  result  of  the  succession  of  fool- 
ish moves  he  has  been  making. 
•      «      * 

Anent  the  congressional  situation  fn 
the  Republican  party.  Indicated  in 
the  above.  Republicans  are  "mention- 
ing" many  names  in  the  hope  that 
the  virus  will  take  with  somebody  of 
sufficient  caliber  and  who  would  be 
willing  to  oppose  Mr.  Miller  for  the 
nomination.  It  is  felt  that  they  want 
a  leader,  for  with  the  present  condi- 
tion, made  acute  by  the  recent  vote 
of  the  congressman  on  the  submarine 
question,  the  party  Is  not  only  in 
danger,  but  rather  disgusted  with  It- 
self so  far  as  the  Eighth  district  Is 
concerned.  .   ,   ,, 

Many  friends  and  admirers  of  Julius 
H  Barnes  would  like  to  see  him  rep- 
resent this  district  in  congress,  and 
are  sounding  the  party  leaders.  That 
Mr.  Barnes  would  be  welcomed  as 
such  a  candidate  appears  very  evi- 
dent, but  that  he  Is  hardly  likely  to 
abandon  his  growing  and  already  Im- 
mervse  business  Interests  for  politics 
Is  the  thing  which  makes  his  friends 
feel   dubious. 

John  H.  Norton,  formerly  county  at- 
torney, and  a  life-long  Republican  of 
both  the  old  and  new  school.  Is  said 
to  be  listening  to  the  clarion  call — 
or  for  It.  Mr.  Norton  is  a  cam- 
paigner of  ability  and  the  kind  who 
gets    close    to    the    people.      ,     „      ^ 

C.  A.  Congdon  and  Ray  M.  Hughes 
have  already  been  mentioned  as  can- 
didates. ^  .       ^r.. 

For  those  who  propose  to  enter  this 
race,  it  is  pretty  nearly  time  to  cast 
diffidence  aside  and  get  busy,  for  June 
19  Is  but  little  more  than  two  months 
off,  and  the  filing  date  Is  twenty 
days    sooner. 

The  state  centrah  comrnlttee  of  the 
Democratic  party  la  sending  out  let- 
ters to  leading  Dempcrats  asking  their 
views  as  to  holding  a  state  conference 
to  choose  candidate*  for  state  offices. 
The  question  is  alg^  asked  as  to  the 
advisability  of  choosing  .congressional 
candidates  at  the  same  conference 
I  should  It  be  held,  o«  l«af  ln«  it  to  the 


?iarty  members  in  the  several  districts 
o  choose. 

It  Is  believed  that  a  state  confer- 
ence will  be  called  for  about  the  mid- 
dle of  May.  and  that  It  will  be  decided 
to  choose  congressional  candidates  at 
the  state  conference,  the  delegates 
from  each  district  making  their  own 
choice,    however. 

Such  a  conference  may  be  held  be- 
fore the  middle  of  next  month,  but  It 
would  not  be  necessary,  for  candidates 
have  until  May  31  to  file  for  the  pri- 
maries of  June  19. 

a  •  * 
Rochester  Post  and  Record: 
Cyrus  M,  King  Is  regarded  as  one 
of  the  state's  strongest  Democrats 
at  the  present  time,  and  he  is 
being  boosted  as  the  logical  candi- 
date for  governor.  But  his  friends 
are  rather  loath  to  see  him  run, 
AS  many  regard  the  run  as  merely 
a  sacrifice,  with  little  possibility 
of  defeating  a  Republican  candi- 
date at  the  present  time,  with  the 
state  Democratic  party  so  dis- 
rupted. 

*      •      * 

Chaska  Herald:  Henry  Rlnes  of 
Mora,  ex-speaker  of  the  house  of 
representatives,  has  filed  for  state 
treasurer,  subject  to  the  Repub- 
lican primaries.  Ex-Senator  S.  A. 
Nelson,  formerly  of  Fillmore  coun- 
ty, but  now  a  denizen  of  Minne- 
apolis, has  filed  for  the  same 
position,  also  on  the  Republican 
ticket.  Rlnes  made  the  race  for 
state  auditor  two  years  ago,  but 
was  defeated  for  nomination  by  a 
scant  margin  by  J.  A.  O.  Preus. 
He  is  a  fine  man  and  infinitely  the 
better  man  of  the  two.  Mr.  Rlnes 
is  an  editor  and  Is  In  very  moder- 
ate circumstances,  but  he  has  a 
fine  legislative  record  to  back  him. 

a  a  a 
Nationally,  political  maneuvering  is 
confined  to  the  Republican  party  Just 
now.  One  might  better  call  it  fluc- 
tuating than  maneuvering,  for  the 
members  of  the  party  are  apparently 
in  a  very  nervous  and  uncertain  state 
of  mind.  "Hughes  or  Roosevelt — 
which?"  Is  the  question.  One  day  it's 
the  justice  and  the  next  it's  T.  R.. 
and  so  on.  The  recent  conference  of 
Mr.  Roosevelt  and  Mr.  Root  has  stirred 
up  matters  and  all  kinds  of  rumors 
of  what  was  talked  about,  what  agree- 
ments were  reached,  etc.,  etc.,  are  go- 
ing the  rounds. 

John  Callan  O'Laughlln  in  Sunday's 
Chicago  Herald  undertakes  to  explain 
what  was  said.  Mr.  O'Laughlln  is  a 
close  personal  friend  of  the  former 
president,  and  It  may  be  that  he  Is  on 
the  Inside  and  knows  what  he  Is  talk- 
ing about.  He  declares  that  the  prin- 
cipal topics  brought  up  were  the  for- 
eign policy  of  the  administration  and 
preparedness. 

"It  can  be  state  positively  and  un- 
equivocally," he  asserts,  "that  the  Re- 
publican presidential  situation  waa  not 
referred  to  even  Indirectly." 

He  denies  that  there  was  a  deal  be- 
tween Messrs.  Root  and  Roosevelt  on 
the  presidency,  and  characterizes  re- 
ports contrary  to  this  as  "silly."  He 
says  that  while  they  have  been  es- 
tranged for  the  past -four  years,  each 
warmly  admires  the  other  In  many 
ways,  and  he  adds: 

"It  may  be  expected  that  from  now 
on  there  will  be  a  constant  Interchange 
of  thought  between  the  colonel  and  Mr. 
Root. 

"Nfecessarlly,  this  will  tend  to  solidify 
the  opposition  to  President  Wilson. 

"The  tariff  will  figure  to  some  extent 
In  the  campaign,  but  the  great  subject 
of  forensic  debate  will  be  the  foreign 
policies  of  the  president.  Both  the 
colonel  and  Mr.  Root  will  speak  to- 
gether in  opposition  to  them  in  connec- 
tion with  Mexico  and  the  European 
situation. 

"Thus  It  Is  apparent  that  the  reunion 
of  the  Progressives  and  Republicans  Is 
brought  a  long  step  nearer  as  a  result 
of  the  Roosevelt-Root  meeting. 

"It  is  interesting  to  note  that  the 
meeting  between  the  colonel  and  Mr. 
Root  has  had  an  Important  Influence 
upon  the  possibility  of  the  former's 
candidacy. 

"It  is  realized  that  if  Hughes  does 
not  get  the  nomination,  Roosevelt  will 
do  so.  The  colonel  Is  steadily  grow- 
ing In  strength,  according  to  all  ac- 
counts. Senator  Penrose  of  Pennsyl- 
vania undoubtedly  will  hold  his  dele- 
gation ready  to  swing  to  the  former 
president  under  circumstances.  Sen- 
ator Smoot  of  Utah  feels  the  same  way. 
Again,  Mr.  Hughes  Is  expected  to  have 
strong  support  from  the  lawyers  of  the 
United  States.  But  Mr.  Root  also  has 
great  strength  with  members  of  the 
bar,  and  should  he  use  his  Influence 
with  them    a  great  many  would  be  for 

the  colonel." 

*      •      s 

The  Chicago  Tribune's  political  cor- 
respondent at  Washington.  Arthur 
Sears  Hennlng,  in  yesterday's  Issue, 
undertakes  to  make  clear  Justice 
Hughes'  views  on  public  questions,  a 
thing  which  has  not  heretofore  been 
attempted.  He  says  that  Republicans 
have  been  "busily  gleaning  from 
various  sources  scraps  of  Information 
which  Indicate  where  Hughes  stands," 
and  says  that  the  Justice  has  expressed 
his  opinions  to  his  intimates  from  time 
to  time.  Then  he  proceeds  to  give  what 
has  been  gleaned.  The  source  of  his 
information  may  be  Just  as  he  says, 
but  it  takes  on  the  aspect  of  having 
been  Inspired.  Here  is  what  he  has 
learned  concerning  the  attitude  of  the 
justice: 


u 


1  spring  Hats 


nusua 

The  collection  of  hats  to  be  presented  during  this  ^yeek 
embrace  a  large  but  select  number  of  entirely  new  specially 
prepared  models,  clever  copies  of  Parisian  creations.  -\11 
are  the  embodiment  of  Springtime  beauty  and  charm,  and 
for  style,  individuality,  qualitv  and  workmanship  ofifer  un- 
surpassable value— Sf.bO,  $10.00,  $12.50  and  $15.00. 


Women  s  and  Misses 
Tailored  Suits  ana 
Afternoon  Dresses 

An  attractive  showing  of  distinctive  models  in  all  the  latest 
materials,  colorings  and  combinations,  including  exact  reproduc- 
tions of  foreign  models  in  plain  tailored  and  dressy  effects. 

Afternoon  Dresses 

Exceptionally  effective  mod- 


els In  Taffeta,  Georgette  Crepe 
and  Satin  combinations — 

$22.50,  $25  anJ 

$29.50. 


Smart  Suits 

Many  exclusive  styles  in 
Serge,  Gabardine.  Shepherd 
Check  "Worsted,  Taffeta  and 
Silk  Poplin — 

$22.50,  $25,  $29.50, 
$32.50  and  $35. 


Tke  Sale  of  Wkite  Waist- 
.ings  and  Suitings 

continues  tomorrow  and  Wednesday.     Unusual  values  at  this  time 
of  the  year. 


the  next  president  have  been  an- 
nounced by  the  Nation,  the  weekly 
edition  of  the  New  York  Evening 
Post.  Replies  have  been  received  from 
6.200    inquiries  sent  out.  as   follows: 

Wilson     l.|57 

Hughes     22" 

Roosevelt     "rf 

Root     m 

Taft *5 


Bryan 


Scattering    ^^5 

Total      3,482 

The    Nation    says: 

"The  striking  feature  of  the  poll  is 
the  overwhelming  preponderance  of 
the  Hughes  vote.  This  Is  considerably 
greater  than  the  combined  vote  of  all 
the  other  Republicans,  Including 
Roosevelt."  .     ., 

Prior  to  the   1912   election   a  similar 

f»oll  by  the  Nation  showed  the  follow- 

Wilson     l.«44 

Taft     ««1 

Roosevelt    *03 

Total     2,708  1 

In  the  election  Wilson  polled  46  per 
cent  of  the  popular  vote,  Taft  26  per 
cent  and   Roosevelt  30   per  cent. 

■• 

Calaaiet  Man  Bound  Over. 
Calumet,  Mich.,  April  10. — John  Col- 
lins, charged  with  larceny  from  a 
rooming  house,  was  bound  over  to  cir- 
cuit court  by  Judge  Jackola.  Collins 
is  alleged  to  have  taken   $22  from  his 


roommate,  Clarence  Guilbault,  at  tho 
Central  hotel.  He  was  apprehended 
at  Houghton  by  a  sherlfrs  officer  anq, 
when  brought  before  the  local  Juslico 
waived  examiuatlon. 

UPPER  PENINSULA 

ENGINEERS  MEETING 

Crystal  Falls,  Mich.,  April  10. — 
County  road  engineers  of  the  Upper 
Peninsula  were  In  session  here  last 
week  discussing  the  work  to  be  car- 
ried on  this  year  and  adjourned  to 
meet  next  August  at  Sault  Ste.  Marie. 
The  following  officers  were  chosen: 
President,  L..  A.  Burridge,  Crystal 
Falls;  secretary.  K.  I.  Sa^'yer.  Ish- 
pemlng.  The  matter  of  making  the 
organization  permanent  was  taken  up 
and  a  committee  consisting  of  Messri. 
Carpenter,  Winkler  and  Broad  waj 
appointed  to  draft  a  constitution  and 
bylaws. 

•      

Should    Te««    Seed    Wkeat. 

New  Rockford.  N.  D.,  April  10. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — A  considerable 
Eortion  of  durum  wheat  which  has 
een  tested  here  has  proven  of  low 
germination  and  a  warning  is  Issued 
to  the  farmers  to  test  their  seed  be- 
fore  planting. 


An  End  To  The  Curse 
Of  Wearing  Worthless  Trusses 


He  favors  the  development  of  a 
navy  of  the  strength  and  character 
recommended  by  the  general  board. 

He  favors  doubling  the  size  of 
the  standing  army,  the  development 
of  a  reserve,  and  the  complete 
federalization  of  the  National 
Guard.  ,     ,, 

He  believes  in  upholding  the  Mon- 
roe doctrine  unequivocally,  and  In 
preparing  the  nation  to  defend  It  at 
all  hazards. 

He  believes  that  at  the  outbreak 
of  the  European  war  the  nation 
should  have  been  placed  In  a  state 
of  preparedness  to  defend  Its  citi- 
zens and  commerce  from  aggres- 
sion by  the  belligerents. 

He  does  not  agree  with  Col. 
Roosevelt  that  the  United  States 
ought  to  have  taken  a  hand  In  the 
European  war  over  the  question  of 
the  alleged  violation  of  Belgian 
neutrality  by  Germany. 

He  believes  that  the  Mexican 
question  should  have  been  met  with 
firm  Insistence  upon  the  protection 
of  Americans  and  American  prop- 
erty from  harm,  and  the  employ- 
ment of  force  if  necessary. 

He  is  opposed  to  withdrawal  from 
the  Philippines  until  the  people  of 
the  islands  are  fully  prepared  for 
self-government. 

•  •      • 

That  Mr.  Roosevelt's  hat  is  In  the 
ring  there  Is  no  doubt.  During  the 
past'  week  he  talked  to  a  friend  and 
admitted,  tacitly,  the  soft  Impeach- 
ment but  with  many  "dont  yous"  and 
much  "no  pussyfoot"  stuff.  Napoleon 
went  down  in  history  with  a  side  is- 
sue of  fame  for  "the  studied  negli- 
fence  of  his  dress."  "The  colonel"  will 
oubtless  go  down  with  a  side  Issue 
of  fame  for  the  studied  vehemence 
and  rehearsed  Impetuosity  of  his  re- 
marks. All  of  the  old  familiar  stage 
effects  of  the  past  are  present  in  his 
latest. 

Maybe  his  tacit  admission  that  he 
Is  a  candidate  Is  the  reason  that  the 
Tribune's  correspondent  has  discov- 
ered Justice  Hughes'  attitude  on  pub- 
lic questions. 

•  •      • 

New  York,  April  8. — Results  of  a 
straw  vote   of   readers'   preference   for 


Gray  Hair?  ^jj^: 


•ample  FREE 


w 


•ample  rn 
H.  E.  NicKoU 
Clark  sv.  St.  Lotm 


Walnutta" 


No  More  Rupture  Troubles 

60  Days  Trial 
To  Prove  It 

You  Don't  Have  to  Risk  a  Pennr* 

Here  is  something  absolutely  guar- 
anteed to  keep  your  rupture  from 
coming  out.  .^     .    .     ^ 

And  you  can  try  it  sixty  days — make 
a  thorough  prove-it-to-you  test — with- 
out having  to  risk  a  penny. 

If  it  doesn't  hold— If  it  doesn't  keep 
your  rupture  from  bothering  you  In 
any  way — then  It  won't  cost  you  a  sin- 
gle cent. 

Tbe    Only    Thing    Good    Enougb    to 
Stand  Sueh  a  Test. 

You  know  as  well  as  we  that  you 
can't  tell  anything  about  a  truss  or 
anything  else  for  rupture  merely  by 
trying  it  on.  That's  the  worst  of  going 
to  a  drug  store  or  local  truss  fitter  s. 

A  truss  or  so-called  "appliance  may 
seem  alright  when  you  first  put  it  on, 
and  afterwards  prove  utterly  worthless. 

•The  only  way  in  the  world  you  can 
make  sure  of  exactly  ,^,^tL^7  "l^^^^J 
ting  is  by  a  60  days'  trial— a  thorousrh 
day-after-day  test. 

And  our  guaranteed  rupture  holder — 
the  famous  Cluthe  Automatic  Massag- 
ing -Truss— is  the  only  thing  of  any 
kind  whatever  for  rupture  that  you 
can  get  on  sixty  days'  trial,  the  only 
thing  «<M»*  enough  to  stand  such  a 
long  and  thorough  test. 

Sometklns  Nothing  BUc  Does. 

The  Cluthe  Automatic  Massaging 
Truss  is  so  utterly  different  from  any- 
thing else  for  rupture  that  it  has  re- 
ceived eighteen  separate  patents. 

It  provides  the  only  Ti,ay  ever  dis- 
covered for  overcoming  the  weakness 
which  Is  the  real  ••«»•  of  rupture. 

Just  how  It  does  that— entirely  auto- 
matically-is  all  explained  In  the  free 
book. 

Wni  Save  You  From  Operation. 

Th*  Clutb*  TruM  h*«  so  tJioroughly 


proved  its  merits  that  physicians  In  all 

{larts  of  the  world  and  surgeons  In  the 
J.  S.  Army  and  Navy  now  recommend 
it  Instead  of  advising  operation.  It  has 
brought  complete  recovery  In  hundred* 
of  cases  after  operation  has  proved  a 
failure. 

No  Belt  or   Les   Straps   to   Annoy   You* 

Tbat'i  wby  people  vbo  try  this  tnin  ukf  it  is  m  coq- 
fcfUble  M  Uirir  rloUilng.     It  is  vatn-proof— «-iU  bold  is 
tbe  batb.     Eatll;  liipt  ileui. 
Get   World's   Greatest  Rupture   Book. 

Don't  send  any  moner— ]u»t  write  for  our  free  book  and 
find  out  fTery thing  you  want  to  know. 

rull  of  fact*  never  before  put  in  print.  Cloth  Vmunf^— 
96  ps<e*— 20  teparate  articles  and  23  pbou«raijhir  1!- 
lustratlocB.  Will  mtc  you  from  belnc  fooled  and  mts 
you  from  wasting  money. 

Explains  why  elastic  and  (prlni  trussn  are  a  wlrketf 
crime — why  tbey  ar«  tbe  ruptured  man's  worst  enemy — 
why  tbe  law  sbould  stop  their  sale. 

Exposes  the  humbug  "appliances."  "methods." 
"plasters,"  etc. 

Shows  why  op?ratlon  Is  often  a  nef^dless  gamble  wltb 
death,  and  why,  if  a  man  manigts  to  get  well  from  ttaa 
operation,  he  often  has  to  keep  on  wearing  a  tru?s. 

And  it  tells  all  about  tbe  Clutbe  AutomaUc  >!.•»*•- 
Ing  Truss  and  how  you  ran  try  it  sixty  days  and  bow 
little  it  cosU  if  you  keep  It. 

GlT*s  endorsemente  of  oter  5.000  people. 

Better  write  for  th«  book  today— it  tells  things  yea 
could  nefer  find  out  by  going  to  doctors  or  dnig  ttorvs. 
Blmply  use  tbe  coupon  or  say  in  a  letter  or  poofal  'Sewl 
me  the  book." 

....»■    THIS    BRI?(G§    IT    — ^^ 


Box  814 — CLrTHE  COMPAXV, 
128  East  Mrd  St.,  KEW  YORK  CITY. 

Bend  me  your  Free  B<iok  and  Trial  Offer. 


Num. 


kUnm. 


^ 


'*m 





» 


1 


Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  10, 1916. 


SUNDAY  SERMONS  IN  DULUTH  PULPITS 


APPEAL  TO 

MANHOOD  BEST 

Creed  of  "Gang"  Urged  as 

True  Method  in  Prison 

Reform. 


where     the     sinner    Is     confirmed     and|  r»»fexitexi   In    that   city.      It  Is   the  story 


Places  of  Correction  Called 

"Hypocrites  in  Stone" 

By  Dr.  Gebauer. 


Appt^allng-  to  the  manhood  in  the 
"man  behind  tho  bars"  and  using  the 
cr«<-d  of  "tho  sani?  true  to  a  pal,"  were 
ur^ed  a.s  the  boat  means  of  reform  In 
prisons  by  Dr.  George  R.  Ofibauor  yes- 
terday niornlni?  In  her  sermon  on  "The 
Drotht-r  UehlnJ  the  Bars."  The  speak- 
er denounred  the  so-called  "houses  of 
correction."  and  other  places  with 
names  of  a  similar  nature,  doclartnff 
thoy  wore  but  "hypocrites  in  stone  and 
mortar  '•  He  blames  religion  partly  for 
the  wrong  attitude  of  society  to  the  de- 
linquent. The  trend  of  tho  church, 
how..'ver.  Is  now  toward  real  reform,  he 
«ifclar<-d.     In  part,  he  said: 

"I  want  to  .speak  to  you  about  the 
man  behind  the  bars.  I  will  realize 
that  this  id  not  an  attractive  subject; 
It  is  not  comforting  and  Inspiring  as 
the  phras.!  roch.  And  yet  Its  c^)n.^lder- 
Atlon  m;iy  bring  you  in  luuch  with  that 
liirg.T  life,  which  f.  i-la  the  kinship  of 
the  lowfst  as  w.-ll  an  the  hlphest. 
Above  all,  I  wish  to  add  my  nilte  in 
fnjnliij?  public  opinion  In  regard  to  a 
gfttvo  'liiiy  of  siicltty.  It  will  aeem  to 
ine,  that  if  the  <-hurches  in  our  land 
and  oihf  rs  li.id  given  a»  much  serious 
thought  to  the  brother  in  bonds  as  to 
the  brother  In  supposed  error,  we 
would  have  a  belt.r  humanity  and 
prison  ."Sunday  would  no  longer  be 
ti»'ede.l.  Certainly  the  superficial  In- 
t«rtst  i>eople  take  In  our  penal  insti- 
tutions is  a  grave  indictment  of  our 
moral  character  as  a  nation.  It  plainly 
ehows  that  we  are  lacking  In  that 
•plrlt  of  Chrl-stlan  fellowship,  which 
like  «t<)d's  Kunshlne,  excludes  no  one 
and  finds  Its  way  Into  the  darkest 
place.  We  think  so  little  abovit  the 
man  in  Jail,  because  we  care  not 
enough  for  the  ninn  out  of  jail.  \V  e  are 
vrappi^d  up  In  our  own  self-gratlfylng 
interests.  r?ut  the  Christianity  of  the 
master  consists  above  all  In  a.-^sertlng 
one's  manhood  In  behalf  of  Justice  to 
men.  And  It  Is  no  little  on  account 
of  that  indifferenco  of  society  toward 
the  individual  of  man  for  man.  that  we 
are  cur.sed  with  conditions  which  Will 
foster  criminality.  Of  course  that  doea 
rot  mean  that  a  deeper  Interest  In  our 
f.'Uows  will  bring  about  the  kingdom 
of  <  Jod   in   a  hurry, 

\o  Sound  Social  System. 

"It  requires  no  argument  t-o  prove 
that  an  unjust  and  selfish  system  of 
society  will  naturally  lead  to  lawless- 
ness. And  again  where  there  la  no 
true  regard  for  one's  fellow.  ther«  the 
treatment  of  the  offender  is  very  a,pt 
to  be  considered  mainly  If  not  entirely 
from  the  standpoint  of  A  self -regard- 
ing aoeletv.  The  Muesilon  largely  bo- 
comes  how  to  protect  our  property  anA 
p.r.son  best  against  that  Individual 
aelfi.shnoBS  which  social  selfishness  has 
provoked   to   no   small    degree. 

"And  the  answer  has  taken  concrete 
form  In  a  multitude  of  houses  of  cor- 
rection, of  penltenflarles  and  reforma- 
tories But  alas,  these  noble  sounding 
n-ime.s  only  call  forth  the  scorn  of  the 
thoughtful.  For  where  are  the  houses 
of  correction  that  have  corrected,  eel 
right  the  wrong  doer,  or  the  peniten- 
tiaries In  which  men  became  penitent 
end  soiry  of  heart,  or  the  reforma- 
tories that  have  reformed  rftt^n?  Few, 
Indeed,  is  their  number.  Tht^se  Inatlr 
tutions  with  their  noble  name?  are 
largely  make-believes,  hypocrites  in 
etone  and  mortar.  They  stand  still 
essentially  for  retaliation  for  supres- 
eion  and  repression  for  death  of  soul 
and  mind;  they  are  negative  in  their 
aims.  They  are  the  logical  end  of  a 
iriminal  code  which  clumsily  tries  to 
adjust  the  punlshnient  to  the  crime, 
but  which  Is  little  concerned  how  such 
punishment  fits  the  criminal.  Cer- 
tainly in  the  good  old  days  of  our 
fathers    there    never    came    to    men    the 


,  number  may  be,  he  is  a  man  who  points 

I  the    way   to   something   better,    he   Is  a 

'minute   man*   in  the  war  of  revolution 

I  against    old    and   damnable  systems    of 

I  punishment. 
Cod  ■•  a  Terrible  Judse. 
"Humiliating  as  It  may  be,  our  treat- 
ment of  the  erring  brother  was  not 
little  fostered  by  a  theology,  which 
saw  In  God  the  terrible  Judge  and 
avenging  police  magistrate,  whose 
chief  business  since  He  created  the 
world  has  bet-n  to  Indulge  In  the  much 
admired  policy  of  'watchful  waiting' 
and  to  send  to  hell  the  unwary  »in- 
ner,  who  had  not  bathed  In  the  blood 
of  the  lamb.  How  could  we  expect 
a  reasonable  treatment  of  man  by 
man,  as  long  as  he  believed  in  the 
unreasonable  and  wrathful  treatment 
of  man  by  his  (iod.  The  prison  natural, 
ly  became  the  vestibule  to  an  inferno. 
In  which  there  was  no  hope  for  the 
restitution  of  the  miserable  transgres- 
sor. Oh.  for  the  sins  of  Christendom; 
Is  there  Christianity  enough  in  it  to 
atone  for  them?  Where  the  church 
should  have  mitigated  the  savageness 
of  Justice,  it  rather  intensified  Judi- 
cial cruelty;  It  blessed  the  Instruments 
of  torture,  the  wlndowless  dungeon, 
the  block  and  the  gibbet.  And  only 
when  religion  was  understood,  not  so 
much  as  a  system  of  terror,  which 
should  keep  men  from  doing  evil,  but 
rather  as  a  means  of  grace  by  which 
man  might  be  raised  to  a  higher  moral 
and  spiritual  level,  the  kingdom  of 
God  in  the  soul,  dawned  upon  men.  the 
truth    that    all    punishment    is    wicked 


leans. 

"This  method  we  are  employing  In  a 
coal  mining  region  in  the  Cascade 
mountains,  at  Lackawanna,  the  steel 
center,  and  In  the  American  parish  on 
the  upper  East  side  of  New  York, 
where  there  is  a  community  of  90,000 
Italians. 

"And  this  same  spirit  Is  taking  hold 
of  our  city  churches,  giving  them  a 
new  civic  consciousness,,  expressing 
Itself  In  church  extension  societies 
binding  our  churches  together  In  larger 
programs  of  work  for  the  city." 

TO  MAKE  BUSINESS 
MORE  DEMOCRATIC 


"Sinning    By    Syndicate" 

Scored  By  Rev.  Mr. 

Sayles. 

"Sinning  by  syndicate"  is  made  pos- 
sible by  the  latest  development  of  in- 
dustry. Rev.  Edward  Sayles  told  his 
congregation  at  the  First  Baptist 
church  Sunday  morning.  He  chose  "In- 
dustrial  Justice"    for   his   theme. 

"Industry."    he    declared,     "needs    to 

bte    tJemocratized.       One     hour     of     the 

-        ,     ^  execution   of  Justice   means   more   than 

and   witless   except    It   becom<;s   a   door  ]  seventy  years  of  praver.     The  prosper- 

Into  the  freedom  of  a  better  •manhood.    ity    of    the    nation    depends    upon    Jua- 

Appeal   to  M«Hhu44>''  tice.      The    prosperity   of   the   Christian 

"For  this   nobler   Ideal  stands   today  !  church   depends,   in  some  degree,  upon 

prison  reform,  the  new  method  of  deal-  I  juj»tice    being    done." 

ing  with  the  criminal  Introduced  by  Rev.  Mr.  Sayles  declared  that  child 
Thomas  Mott  Osborne,  a  former  war-  labor  was  an  injustice  and  that  Chris- 
den  In  Sing  Sing.  He  put  to  himself  Ujan  conscience  demanded  that  it  cease, 
tho  question.  'How  may  we  help  the  I  Working  wonxen  also  need  protection, 
brother  in  prl.son  Into  the  freedom  he  paid,  pointing  *out  that  low  wages 
of  a  more  efficient  manhood,  a  truer  i^ad  to  Immorality  and  shame.  The 
moral  life?'  And  his  answer  Is  prac-  |  ^orklngmen  also,  he  declared,  suffer 
tlcally  that  of  No.  1776.  who  declares  fr,,m  occupational  diseases  and  many 
•the  desire  to  reform  must  come  from  ,  are  not  paid  a  decent  living  wage, 
within,  and  the  deerree  of  accomplish-  '  "Control  of  industry."  he  said,  "is  be- 
ment  of  this  deslro  Is  directly  pro-  i  coming  Impersonal.  Managers  are  hired 
portioned  to  the  degree  of  liberty  you  ■  to  "get  results"  and  the  moral  char, 
give  the  criminal  to  live  aright  and  acter  of  the  stockholders  makes  lit- 
to  the  adequacy  of  his  environment  tie  difference  In  the  conduct  of  the  con- 
to  sustain  this  desire.'  That  Is  sen-  cern.  This  oondition  transmits  the 
sible.  A  man  must  reform  himself,  he  I  grimed  to  the  Investor,  but  not  the  con- 
cannot  be  scared  into  It.  nor  whipped  |  science.  It  is  becoming  harder  and 
Into  a  better  manhood  and  greater  ■  harder  for  the  stockholder  to  reach 
efficiency.     There  must  be  freedom  and  I  and     humanize     the     management." 

self-determination,     there     must    be    a  I  •- 

certain  amount  of  trust  In  others  and  ' 
faith  In  self.  So  the  new  Osborne  I 
system  appeals  In  its  reform  not  to 
fear,  but  to  the  manhood  that  after 
all  is  In  every  man  that  is  sane.  He 
established  among  the  prisoners  of 
Sing  Sing  the  'Mutual  Welfare  league,' 

which   niakes  every  prisoner  his  broth-  i  _  .  ,._.        ••    »-•     ■    •  a    i 

er's  keeper  and  from  which  the  world  i  QlinPrinr  *  fjPV  FlfHltPr  Afl- 
outslde  prison  walls  may  learn  some-  I  *^UH^""'  *-"  J  iiyillCI  HU 
thing.  The  league  stands  for  rea- 
sonable freedom,  responsibility  and  die- 
clpllne.  The  creed  of  'the  gang  true  to 
a  pal'  takes  a  new  and  nobler  mean. 
Ing,  challenging  In  man  noblest  loy- 
alty." 


MUST  ORQANIZE  TO 
FIGHT  SALOONS 


URGED  TO  SIGN 

DRY  PETITIONS 


"nebular  hy_ 
•aic   account 
That      slmpi 
seven  tlmea 


years  the  'fl^  With'  theory,  with  Its 
tm-ln  fable,  tnlit  TJfft  sun  moved  around 
the  earth,'  became  the  wild  hobby  of 
many  a  »elf-centerea  philosopher — yet 
all  tho  while  the  I3lble  had  taught  that 
the  earth  is^round,  and  that  'It  la 
turned*  upon|tt«  uua  toward  the  sun. 
Unbelief  coull  noyngrure  out  Just  how 
the   Creator  ^Mm.  uohold    'all    things 

so  thoae 
planet  resting 
eplutnt— XLever 

-hat    the    pachy 

derm   stood-    *        n 

"Carnal  uiM>eH0f  remains  the  aame 
today,  even  though  clothed  In  the  thin 
veneerecl  garments  of  a  new  named 
Twentieth  ceftutf^  phlloaophy.  In  spit^ 
of  how  wldBy  that  ellly  theory,  the 
;sid'  Is  t&ught.  the  mo- 
rreatlon  remains  true. 
^§xpres»lon,  mentioned 
^ta^nesls  1 — It  was  80' — 
Is  so.  and  the  very  week  Itself  which 
then  originated  is  simple  evidence  to 
the  fact.  TH*  Dat-srinlan  theory  is  but 
another  phase  of  spontaneous  genera- 
tion postponed,  yet  ever  working  at 
the  other  end  of  a  supposed  ever-en- 
larging string.  All  experience  teaches 
the  Indisputable  fact  of  certain  deteri- 
oration In  this  sln-cumed  earth.  Even 
the  sower  must  ever  select  for  seed 
the  best  Quality  of  com.  Yet  peopte 
with  gray  matter  are  still  roaming 
around  museums  looking  for  their  an- 
cestors. Orapcs  are  not  gathered  of 
thorns,  nor  figs  of  thistles.  'After  his 
kind'  Is  the  divine  fiat  that  explodes 
that  theory.  The  Bible  account  of 
man's  creation  r.^mains  the  truth. 
CkrtMt  iirfmttmt  Spiv«tiM. 

"The  Divine  Son  of  David  was  the 
peer  of  all  scientists.  He  was  the 
word  made  flesh.  Drawing  lessons 
from  nature,  His  source  of  authority 
was  alwAys.  It  Is  written.'  AH  nature 
served  Him  and  vibrated  at  the  touch 
and  word  of  Its  Creator.  When  He 
died  the  sun  refused  to  shine,  and  this 
sad,  old  sin-cursed  earth  w^ent  Into 
convulsions.  Those  who  truly  build 
upon  the  unerring  word  of  God  may 
some  day  be  graduated  Into  the  school 
of  the  hereafter,  to  be  a  pupil  of  the 
True  Teacher  In  the  eternal  renewed 
earth,  where  sin  and  the  curse  shall  be 
no  more.  Unbelief  can  receive  no  en- 
trance  Into   that  school." 


SAFETY  HRST 
RULES  UUDED 

Originator  of  'Idea"  Gives 
Address  to  Missabe  Rail- 
way Employes. 


President  McGonagle  Urges 

Co-operation  at  Proctor 

Banquet. 


The  Duluth.  Missabe  dt  Northern 
railroad  entertained  450  of  Its  em- 
ployes at  its  sixth  annual  banquet 
Saturday  evening  at  the  Odd  Fellows' 
hall  of  Proctor.  The  gathering  was 
the  largest  of  its  kind  ever  held  by 
the  company. 

Speeches  showing  the  trend  toward 
closer  co-operation  between  employe 
and  emploj«er,  value  of  effort  in  pro- 
moting of  safety  and  fellowship  among 
the  men  were  given  by  the  speakers. 
These  speakers  represented  men  from 
various  departments,  from  W.  A.  Mc- 
Gonagle. president   of  the  road,  and   J. 


Rev.  R.  E.  Miller  Asks  Con- 
gregation to  Help  "Weaker 
Brother." 

■^0  coming  election  In  Dululh  on  the 
liquor  issue  received  a  part  of  the  at- 
tention of  Rev.  R.  E.  Miller  yesterday 
morning  In  his  sermon  at  Woodland 
M.  K.  church.  Mr.  Miller  took  his  text 
from  Matthew  xll.  30 — "He  tliat  is  not 
for  Me  Is  against  Me;  and  he  that  gath- 
ered  not   with   Me.  scattereth." 

"God  gave  man  will  power,"  Mr.  Mil- 
ler said,  "so  that  man  might  choone 
between  alternatives.  God  does  not  di- 
rect our  cho4ee,  but  since  ho  gave  us 
power  to  choose,  he  holds  us  re?»poniil- 
ble  for  the  choice  we  make.  Without 
this  power  we  would  not  be  human 
beings.  At  the  time  Jesus  spoke  the 
words  in  our  text.  He  had  just  healed 
the  dumb  man,  and  the  Pharisees  were 
criticizing  Him  and  saying  He  must  be 
acting  through  evil  power.  He  an- 
swered them  completely  by  His  argu- 
ment about  the  house  divided  agaiust 
itself. 

"In  our  Sunday  school  'decision  day* 
we  shall  face  nothing  more  than  the 
ever-present   necessity   of  deciding   be 


tljought.  that  even  the  worst  of  wrong-  tween  good  and  evil.  We  cannot  be 
doer  is  'a  man  for  a'  that'  and  that  i  neutral.  We  must  be  either  ror  or 
ro  matter  how  he  failed  In  reason  and  i  against  Jesus.  If  we  decide  for  Jesus, 
love,  the  blK  brother  'society'  must  we  must  say  good-by  to  dear  old  Satan 
not    fall    in    it.    but    should    prove   itself  !  forever.      He   will    come   after   us.    later 


the  better  truer  man  to   him.     Rut   In 
ptcMd    of   this   a   cowardly    and   self-ro 
g:irdin«r    soelety    In    the    name    of    Jus- 
tl<e  employed  the  means  of  vindlctlve- 
ress    .Mud    made    the    law-breaker    ten 


on,  but  the  devil  never  stays  long 
where  Jesus  and  a  strong,  righteous 
man   or  woman   Is   to  be  found. 

"Of  course   mere  thinking  about   de- 

_.  ,  f  Idlng  will  not  do.     We  must  act.  too 

times    more    a    child    of    unreason    and  |  Superior  voted  'dry,'  and  It  was  a  great 
wrong,    of   hell.      Much    has   been    writ-     victory     for    Superior.       We    are     verv 


ten  on  this  sad  subject.  The  place 
of  correction,  of  reform  and  penitence 
Is  In  reality  the  place  where  hearts 
are  more  brutalized,  where  the  crooked 
Jn    character  are  atiU    more   deformed. 


Yoa  need 
never  worry 

about  results  in 
baking  if  you  use 


KC 


BAKING 
POWDER 


It  has  been  a  stand- 
by for  a  quarter  of 
a  century.  Guaran- 
teed under  all 
pure     food    laws. 


^^(«« 


Ounces  for 


(More  than  a  pound  aiut 
txmit  tor  »%u»rtctt 


ZSf 


Ifkely  to  face  a  similar  Issue  here  In 
Duluth,  and  when  we  do,  we  should 
vote  for  Jesus  and  against  the  saloon. 
Even  though  the  saloons  do  not  atrect 
us  personally,  we  are  responsible  for 
our  weaker  brothers.  If  wp  allow  the 
saloons  to  remain,  we  say  to  them, 
'Here  Is  a  poor  chap  without  power  to 
resist  the  liquor  craving.  (To  ahead 
and  ruin  him.  if  you  want  to.  We  don't 
care.  Just  so  you  help  ua  pay  our 
taxes.  Ruin  him.  body  and  soul,  if  you 
want  to  and  can — and  vou  probably 
can.  We  don't  care.  Well  stand  by 
and  watch  you  do  it.  and  well  vote 
to    help    you    do    It.'  " 

In  conclusion,  Mr.  Miller  urged  the 
members  of  the  congregation  to  sign 
the  "dry"  petitions  when  these  were 
presented   to   them. 

ISOUTfoTWRONe 
IN  CHURCH  WORK 

Head  of  Presbyterian  Im- 
migrant Work  Tells  of 
Demonstrated  Needs. 

The  days  of  tho  little  mission  church 
and   the    isolated   big  church  are   gone, 
declared  Rev.    William   Shrlver   of  New 
j  York     In     addresses     on      "Immigrant 
I  Needs"      at      the      First      Presbyterian 
I  church    yesterday    morning   and   at    the 
Glen     Avon     Presbyterian     church    last 
evening.      Mr     Shrlver,    who    Is    at    the 
head    of   the    immigrant   and    Industrial 
work      of      the      Presbyterian    board    of 
)  hoTiie  missions,  has  Just   returned  from 
the    Mcsaba    Iron    range,    where    he   es- 
tablished    an     industrial     parish.       He 
plans  to  spend  several  davs  In   Duluth, 
studying   Imraigriuit    conditions   in   this 
city. 

"If  a  new  and  Christian  community 
life  Is  our  goal,  then  we  must  have  a 
new  ordering  of  our  forces."  said  Mr. 
.•thriven  "The  day  of  the  little  mission 
church,  or  even  of  the  isolated  big 
church,  is  gone.  We  cannot  expect  to 
build  into  the  community  life  on  that 
basis. 

•'We  naust  get  our  forces  together 
and  inspire  a  group  of  churches  In  a 
given  city  or  industrial  region  with  a 
larger  vision  and  with  a  common  pur- 
pose. This  Is  the  spirit  of  our  work 
on  the  range,  where  We  have  federated 
the  Interests  of  ten  Presbyterian 
churches,  which  heretofore  while  doing 
a  commendable  work  were  Isolated, 
pastor  and  people  having  no  close  fel- 
lowship with  other  churches 

"A  school  census  has  Just  been  oom. 
plet«d  la  Virginia  on  the  range.  It 
showed  that  thirty-two  races  are  rtp- 


dresses  Meeting  at  Y.  M. 
C.  A.  Sunday. 

Duluth    should    profit    by    the    object 

leeson     of     Superior,       declared     C.     G. 

Wade,    principal    of    the    Blaine    high 

school    of   Superior,    in    an    address   on 

"Our    Fight     in    Superior,"     at    the    Y. 
M.    C.    A.    yesterday    afternoon. 

"Organization  that  disregarded 
abuse  at  the  polls."  said  Mr.  '>Va^e, 
"won  for  the  'drys'  in  Superior.  Or- 
ganization la  the  only  thing  that  can 
successfully  cope  with  the  forces  pit- 
ted against  you  in  such  a  fight,  but 
that  and  the  right  kind  of  enthusiasm 
will   ."Win.      The    majority    of    the    peo- 

fde  w^ant  prohibition  and  will  vote  for 
t  If  you  can  but  show  it  to  tbem  in 
the   right  light. 

"For  months  we  prepared  by  get- 
ting evry  radical  prohibitionist  lined 
up  \t^th  us.  Superl<jr,  the  vice  cento* 
of  the  Northwest,  with  a  saloon  to 
every  800  citizens,  has  never  had  a 
clean  election  when  the  liquor  inter- 
ests had  anything  at  stake  until  this 
year. 

**Biven  this  election  was  nearly  lost. 
Time  and  again  the  challengers  of  the 
opposition  shook  their  fists  in  the 
faces  of  our  men  and  heaped  the 
vilest  abuse  upon  them.  Hut  they 
did  not  flinch.  The  liquor  Interests 
relied  upon  their  power  to  coerce  the 
voters  and  we  fought  that  power  and 
won." 


TRUE  SCIENCE  AND 
THE  BIBLE  AGREE 


Pastor  White  Says  Scrip- 
tures Are  Only  Real  Guide 
to  Nature's  Secrets. 

"True  science  and  the  Bible  are  In 
perfect  harmony.  Holy  Scripture  is 
the  one  Infallible  textbook  of  our  Cre- 
ator, while  nature  is  man's  great  study 
hook.  In  the  words  of  John  Wycliffe. 
'There  Is  no  subtlety  in  grammar, 
neither  In  logic,  nor  In  any  other  sci- 
ence that  can  be  named,  but  that  it  Is 
found  In  a  more  excellent  degree  in 
the  Scriptures.'  Any  and  all  scientific 
theories  out  of  harmony  with  the  Bible 
are  simply  'science  falsely  so-called.'  " 
declared  Pastor  Stemple  White  last 
night  at  the  Seventh  Day  Adventlst 
church  on  Tenth  avenue  east,  where 
ho  spoko  on  "Science  and  the  Bible." 
Heathca    Tkeorlea. 

He   salj    in    part: 

"For  ages.  heathen  philosophers 
taught  the  theory  of  spontaneous  gen- 
eration of  life,  and  pointed  to  tadpoles 
and  their  kind  as  supposed  evidence 
that  life  could  originate  from  the  slimy 
ooze  of  the  River  Nile.  Real  scientific 
Investigation  later  demonstrated  the 
Bible  truth  that  all  life  and  breath 
come  to  us  from  the  Creator  who  Is 
the    only    fountain    of    life.      For    many 


A  RAW,  SORE^  THROAT 

Eases  Quickly  When  You  Apply 
a  Little  Musterole 


And  MUSTEROLE  won't  blister  like 
the  old-faahidned  mustard  plaster.  Just 
spread  It  on  with  your  fingers.  It  pen- 
etrates to  the  sore  spot  with  a  gentle 
tingle,  loosens  the  congestion  and 
draws   out  all  soreness  and  pain. 

MUSTEROLE  is  a  clean,  white  oint- 
ment made  with  oil  of  mustard. 
There'.s  nothing  like  It  for  quick  re- 
lief for  Sore  Throat,  Bronchitis,  Ton- 
sllltls.  Croup.  Stiff  Neck.  Asthma,  Neu- 
ralgia, Headache,  Congestion,  Pleurisy, 
Rheumatism,  Lumbago,  Pains  and 
Aches  of  the  Back  or  Joints,  Sprains, 
Sore  Muscles,  Bruises,  Chilblains, 
Frosted  Feet.  Colds  on  the  Chest  (it 
often  prevents  Pneumonia).  Nothing 
like  MUSTEROLE  for  croupy  chil- 
dren. 

At  your  druggist's,  in  25c  and  60(! 
Jars,  and.  a  special  large  hospital  size 
for  $2.50. 

Be  sure  you  get  the  genuine  MUS- 
TEROLE. Refuse  imitations  —  get 
what  you  ask  for.  The  Musterole 
Company,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 


MAN'S  RISE  NEVER 
ABOVE  COD'S  LEVEL 

Dr.  Ryan  Preaches  on  Story 

oi  Jacob  and  Its 

Lesson. 

That  isan's  ifise  is  confined  to  the 
level  of  the  Oof!  he  worships  was  the 
declaration  made  yesterday  morning 
In  a  «ermon  byJRev.  A.  W.  Ryan,  rec- 
tor of  St.  Paul's  Episcopal  church.  He 
spoke  on  tht  story  of  Jacob,  and  as- 
serted: 

"A  man  nevrtr  rises  above  the  God 
he  worships  any  more  than  water 
rises   above   its   source." 

He  pictured  J^acob's  wrestle  with  the 
angel  and  of  his  determination  to 
know  the  name  of  his  adversary  that 
he  might  know  the  character  of  the 
God  he  was:  galled  upon  to  worship. 

"To  have,  above  all,  a  self-conscious 
and  self-directing  God  who  loves  us 
is  to  make  this  life  a  livable  one,  with 
promises  lni*tlii6  future  that  link  our 
destinies  wldf  ^M  th*  perfection*  of 
God."  he  safo^  ^*Not  that  we  are  to 
arrive  at  the?  X>erfection  of  God,  but 
that  we  have  an  infinite  possible 
growth, J>ofore.. us.  so  that  for  time  and 
for  paritdpsf  and  f6r  etecrlty  we  will 
lUlTin  a~  pdsiible  growth  before  us  that 
ajUires  ua  'and  saUsfles  us  now;  jind 
^^11  <'m  so  forever. 

"The  personality  of  God  guarantees 
our  own.  We  can  nol.  have  a  con- 
scious existence  in  time  to  come,  un- 
less He  has  it  now.  Our  self-direction 
is  nothlrtt  li||lfef58  Ppd^'fl  solf-dlrectlon 
is  a  fact  to  found  «ur  powers  upon. 
Our  sense  of  tlijpjjjarm&ne^ice  and  per- 
fectability  <ff  amr  »per8t>TTallty  must 
rest  on  the  absolute  permanence  and 
perfection  of  the  (ia4  whom  we  wor- 
ship. 

'Tt  makes  all  the  difference  in  what 
sort  of  a  God  we  do  really  worship. 
For  a  mwi  never  rises  above  his  God, 
just  a^t  water  never  rises  'above  its 
source,  except  as  in  the  sap  of  a  tree 
which  is  ^KC''"^'^  ^y  ^  different  but 
no  less  lftere«ting  law."    ♦    - 


JUBILEE  SOCIAL 
AT  SUNDAY  SCHOOL 

First  Methodist  Elementary 

Department^  Members 

Are  Entertained. 

Elementary  department  members  of 
the  First  M.  B.  church  Sunday  school 
were  entertained  at  a  Jubilee  social 
Saturday  afternoon  at  the  church 
parlors,  twenty-two  classes  including 
i?iore  than  250  youngsters  being  pres- 
ent at  the  affatfu 

A  program  of'iongs  and  recitations 
was    given   a»  fo*Jows: 

"America,'*  by  school;  piano  solo, 
Janet  McCkrter.''  recitation,  Clifford 
Johnson:  recitation.  Eleanor  Barnard; 
recitation,  liois  Ketchum;  song,  Will- 
iam Jacobs;  tixdrcise.  by  kindergar- 
ten; recltat1on»  '  Charles  Hutchinson; 
"Mother  Goose'*,  rhyme,  by  member^ 
af  a  class;  recitation,  Marlon  and 
Grace  McP'-T/ddem;  exercise,  by  Miss 
Norrls'  class> ..  recitation,  Gertrude 
Hanson  and  <iraoe  Burke;  recitation, 
Mildred  McIjeoAj  recitation,  Beatrice 
Friek;  song,  Jay  Walste;  recitation, 
Kuth  Shaleen;  music,  Alice  Parsons 
and  Edith  Spearin;  recitation,  Joe 
Weaver;  scmg.  by  Miss  Stevens'  and 
Mis*  Savers'.  cla«ses.;  remarks,  Watson 
S.    Moore,    sopertatendent. 

Ice  creant  and  candy  was  served  the 
children  foilowirtg  the  program.  Next 
Sunday  will  be  "Banner  day"  for  the 
Sunday  ectkool.-^..  The  clas»  showing 
the  most  pfXtntB.  in  attendance  will  be 
presented  with  a  banner. 

BUDERBEGK  UVJES 
UP  TO  REPUTATION 


Shows  "WalHngford"  Lib- 
erality By  Giving  Back 
Office  Furnishings. 

William  Ray  Bllderbeck,  the  young 
"WalUngford"  Who  made  |2,000  or 
12,000  selling  street  car  tickets  to 
Duluthlans  at  "one  cent  per,"  Is  liv- 
ing up  to  the  x:eputatlon  of  his  pro- 
totype. 

Writing  from  Eau  Claire.  Wis.,  he 
has  made  a  present  to  a  local  furni- 
ture house  of  Xbe  office  furnishings 
he  purchased, "ffavlng  made  the  first 
payment  on  them. 

"Take  what  ftr*  left,"  said  the  letter, 
which  wa*  written  several  days  ago. 
The  furniture  i*  elaborate,  consisting 
of  a  large,  flat  topped,  mahogany 
desk,  saveral  chairs  to  match,  a  six- 
tee.n-foot  mission  clock,  two  oil  paint- 
ings and  pome  rilgs. 

Although-  Blhderbeek  was  acquitted 
on  a  charge  Qf»»  advertising  illegally 
Thursday  Ijp  rotyiiolpal  court,  he  has 
not  been  aeeh'  here  or  in  the  vicinity 
of  Duluth  *  In  ce  Tuesday  last,  when  he 
was  arrested.  K4  posted  ^200  ball  and 
left  for  par^  unknown,  leaving  an  at- 
.  tornoy  to  *ot  fo*'  him. 

Police  ha,v;e  other  warrants  for  him, 
it  is  said,  ^riA  tor  his  two  associates. 
They  started  a  similar  game  in  Chi- 
cago, and  wer^  potlfled  to  discontinue 
business  aL  ohc& 

Bllderbeck  cail^  his  firm  a  cut  rate 
carfare  and.  adv^-tising  company.  The 
advertising,' e«d  ;3vas  to  have  come  In 
later,  whei  ^e  Bold  several  thousand 
coupon  boa|^,  ;    — 


\ 


dh*. 


Eiister  Millinery 

Here  you'll  find  a  most  complete  display  of  the 
season's  distim:tive  and  unusual  styles — groups 
of  very  clever  models,  simple  but  charming,  and 
moderately  priced — 

$1.95,  $3,  $4,  $5,  and  up  to  $15 

We  will  trim  your  Easter  Hat  free  according 
to  your  own  ideas  if  you  select  shape  and  trim- 
ming here. 


Your 
.  Credit 
Is  Good 


Open 

an 

Account 


W.  A.  McGONAGLE. 


W.  Kreltter,  tlie  general  superintendent, 
to  conductors,  firemen  and  shop  em- 
ployes. 

Eiapl^yes  CoBia>endrd. 

Supt.  Kreitter  presided.  He  gave  the 
opening  addres«.  in  which  he  com- 
mended the  employes  for  their  splendid 
showing  In  the  operating  department 
for  the  last  two  years^  and  asked  their 
earnest  co-operation  during  the  next 
season,  which  he  said  woald  be  a 
record-bceaker. 

"Not  only  have  we  made  a  good  rec- 
ord in  the  past  in  handling  the  busi- 
ness, but  a  record  In  working  together 
In  a  friendly  and  harmonious  way,  and 
especially  is  this  true  of  the  last  three 


J.  W.  KREITTER. 


years,"  said  Mr.  Kreitter.  "Our  monthly 
meetings  of  the  Missabe  Rail-vfray  club 
and  annual  dinners  have  not  only 
brought  the  officers  and  employes  closer 
together,  but  the  men  of  the  different 
departments.  Our  train  and  engine 
men  get  along  much  better  than  they 
used  to,  and  there  is  very  little  friction 
If  any  on  the  road.  Such  conditions  are 
half  the  battle  to  success." 

Mr.  Kreitter  complimented  the  rail- 
road men  living  In  Proctor  for  assisting 
in  making  it  a  clean  village  to  live  in. 
"You  have  helped  in  this  matter  by 
electing  men  to  office  who  are  In  favor 
of  clean  government.  You  have  voted 
the  village  dry  and  so  have  settled  the 
liquor  business  as  far  as  licensing  it 
is  concerned.  Some  of  you  were  fear- 
ful the  village  would  go  into  bank- 
ruptcy. We  are  still  here.  We  are  in 
better  shape  individually  and  collec- 
tively, and  your  village  officers  have 
made  more  Improvements  in  the  last 
year  than  at  any  time  In  the  past  when 
you  have  had  five  saloons  or  two  sa- 
loons. In  the  year  from  March.  1915,  to 
March.  1916.  you  have  saved  money. 
The  local  bank  shows  an  increase  in 
its  salving  deposits  amounting  to  <28.- 
000.  This  saving  may  not  be  entirely 
due  to  the  saloons  being  closed,  but  I 
believe  that  a  great  deal  of  it  is,  and 
that  as  a  result  our  men  will  be  more 
and  more  prosperous  and  their  families 
happier.     I  hope  the  employes  will  not 


Cut  This  Out-- 
It  Is  Worth  Money 


Cut  out  this  advertisement,  enclose 
B  cents  to  Foley  A  Co.,  28S5  Sheffield 
Ave^  Chicago,  111.,  writing  your  name 
and  address  clearly.  You  will  re- 
ceive in  return  a  trial  package  coa* 
taining: 

(1)  Foley's  Honey  and  Tar  Com* 
pound,  the  standard  family  remedjr 
for  coughs,  colds,  croup,  whooping 
cough,  tightness  and  soreness  li» 
Chest,  rripi>e  and  bronchial  coughs. 

(2)  Folejr  Kidney  Pills,  for  over- 
worked and  disordered  kidneys  and 
bladder  ailments,  pain  in  sides  and 
back  due  to  Kidney  Trouble,  sore 
muscles,  stiff  joints,  backache  an4 
rheumatism. 

(8)  Foley  Cathartic  TableU.  m 
wholesome  and  thoroughly  cleansinc 
catkartlc.  Especially  comforting  to 
stout  persons,  and  a  purgative  needed 
by  ererybodr  with  sluggish  bowels 
and  torpid  lirer.  Tou  can  try  thes« 
ttiree  famll7  remedies  fer  only  (<^ 

Sold  everywher*. 


permit    the    return    of    the    saloons    to 
Proctor." 

Mr.  Kreitter  gave  a  comparison  of  the 
business  of  the  road  during  the  last 
two  years.  In  1914  the  company  ran 
1,905  exclusive  ore  trains,  while  during 
the  1915  season  4.654  ore  trains  were 
operated.  During  the  latter  year  the 
men  made  the  round  trips  in  eighteen 
minutes  less  than  the  year  previous, 
the  average  trip  taking  nine  hours  and 
sixteen   minutes. 

Krw   Doirk  Beevrd   Set. 

The  local  ore  dock,  he  said,  had  made 
the  best  record  on  the  lakes  In  the 
handling  of  ore  in  the  boats,  and  re- 
ceived a  special  mention  at  the  annual 
meeting  of  the  Pittsburgh  Steamship 
company.  The  average  time  for  load- 
ing 1.000  tons  of  ore  into  a  boat  was 
fifty-two  minutes  for  1916  as  compared 
with  one  hour  and  one  minute  in  1914. 

While  accidents  were  more  frequent 
during  1915  and  more  costly,  the  super- 
intendent jMiid  that  the  report  of  the 
general  claim  agent  showed  that  per- 
sonal Injury  had  shown  an  8  per  cent 
decrease.  Trespaissers  furnished  six 
deaths  to  the  total  of  fatal  accidents 
during  the  season. 

President  McGonagle  said  that  the 
company  was  willing  and  ready  to 
spend  any  amount  of  money  to  pre- 
serve the  life  and  prevent  injury  of 
its  employes,  and  asked  earnest  co- 
operatioh  in  making  suggestions  for 
improvements  wiiich  would  tend  to 
reduce  the  number  of  accidents. 

"This  is  the  first  time  that  I  have 
been  able  to  attend  one  of  these  an- 
nual banquets,"  said  Mr.  McGonagle. 
"I  assure  you  that  in  the  future  I  will 
try  to  attend  all  of  them.  This  is  the 
annual  Duluth.  Missabe  &  Northern 
family  get-together  meeting,  and  I 
am  proud  to  attend.  I  know  the  modt 
of  vou  better  when  you  are  in  your 
working  clothes.  Now  you  all  look 
different.  Looking  over  this  sea  of 
faces,  one  would  scawely  notice  any 
•iifference  between  this  gathering  and 
th-e  gathering  of  men  who  meet  to 
make  laws  on  the  floor  of  congress  at 
Washington." 

After  touching  on  accidents  and  the 
willingness  of  the  railroad  to  spend 
money  in  their  prevention,  Mr.  McGon- 
agle paid  tribute  to  the  late  Noble 
Downey,  the  conductor  who  was  killed 
last  winter.  The  loss  of  this  man  was 
a  real  loss  to  the  company  and  deeply 
regretted   by  the   officials,  he   said. 

"It  is  to  prevent  the  loss  of  such 
noble  characters  as  Mr.  Downey  that 
we  wish  the  co-operation  of  all  em- 
ployes. We  consider  your  safety  of 
great  importance.  The  safety  move- 
ment instituted  by  railroad  and  era- 
ploves  is  to  protect  your  families.  Re- 
solve to  look  out  for  your  fellow  man.' 
ProptHwd  Library  Favored. 

Mr  McGonagle  spoke  of  the  pro- 
posed library.  He  said  that  Proctor 
should  have  an  institution  which 
would  cost  $20,000.  This  sum.  he  said, 
he  would  assist  the  village  residents 
in  petting  from  the  Carnegie  fund.  He 
said  that  the  railroad  would  be  pleased 
to  add  books  to  such  an  institution 
from  time  to  time. 

The  principal  address  of  the  evening 
was  given  by  R  C  Richards  of  Ch  - 
cago,  general  claim  agent  for  the  CM 
ca^  &  Northwestern  railroad.  "*'• 
Richards  is  credited  with  be  ng 
originator  of  the  "safety  first"  move- 
ment. This  was  Mr.  Richards'  sub- 
ject. After  his  address  several  stere- 
oDticon  views  were  shown,  showing 
?he  work  under  way  by  the  Northwest- 
em  line.  _  _^  , 
Men   M<Mct   Important. 

"The  most  valuable  asset  of  a  rail- 
road is  not  the  cars  and  engines.  Its 
[racks  real  property,  or  its  officers 
but  Its  men,"  said  Mr.  Richards.  l«e 
nvls  anJ^limbs  of  Its  employes  are  the 
railroad's  most  valuable  property  It 
u  for  the  conservation  of  this  prop- 
erty that  the  safety  first  movement 
was  started  first  by  the  Northwestern 

"The  conservation  of  life  and  Hmb 
means  the  reduction  of  suffering  and 
r^^ow.  destitution,  and  fewer  cr  pples 
widows  and  orphans.  Observation  of 
safety  rules  reduces  accidents  and  In- 
cretses  safety  in  operation,  not  only 
for  the  employe,  but  for  the  PubHc. 

"Eiffhty-three  per  cent  of  the  acci- 
dents on  a  railroad  are  not  the  re- 
sult of  big  accidenU,  but  just  the  re- 
sult of  carelessness  and  thoughtless- 
nesB.  An  obstruction  alongside  of  the 
track,  a  carelessly  thrown  draw  bar. 
a  plank  with  an  upturned  nail  and 
hundreds  of  other  things  that  m'tht 
cause  a  maimed  limb  or  loss  of  life, 
which  would  take  less  Ume  to  re- 
move than  to  make  out  an  accident 
report,  are  the  little  things  which  re- 
sult in  the  large  number  of  accidents 
to    railroad    employes.  ,„,..^^a 

"When  an  employe  is  injured 
through  an  accident,  such  accident 
cripples  the  efficiency  of  the  road. 
Often  such  employe  Is  replaced  by  •" 
inexperienced  man.  This  decreases  Uie 
efficiency  and  creates  the  greater 
hazard    for   the    other   employes. 

"If  smallpox,  scarlet  fever,  diph- 
theria  breaks  out  »",  *^^  .^""''*' h?! 
your  neighbor  you  will  inalst  on  his 
home  being  quarantined.  It  Is  just 
as  Important  for  you  men  to  Qwar^^I 
tine  the  man  who  continually  violates 
safety  first  rules,  the  man  wlio  fails 
to  flag  the  rear  of  his  train,  the  man 
who  runs  by  signals,  or  the  man  who 
leaves  a  string  of  cars  on  a  side- 
track without  being  in  the  clear.  Such 
men  are  a  menace  to  other  employes 
and  the  sooner  you  run  him  out  of 
the  service  the  better  it  is  for  you 
and  your  family.  The  greatest  risk 
vou  run  Is  that  furnished  by  some 
reckless  devil  who  does  not  care 
whether  you  live  or  die.  It  is  bet- 
ter for  you  to  cause  a  delay  than  to 
cause  an   accident.  ..^   ^    ^. 

"The  preachers  teach  us  that  the 
greatest  thing  in  life  i*  the  'saving 
of  souls.'  If  such  is  the  case  then  the 
second  greatest  thing  in  life  i*  the 
con*ervation  of  life  and  limb." 
Otker    Speaker*. 

Rev  W.  E.  Harmann.  rector  of  the 
Bylsot^Mt^l  ckurch.  ffave  the  invocation. 


The  speakers,  besides  those  mentioned 
were  Le  Grand  Pace,  secretary  of  the 
Proctor  Y.  M.  C.  A.;  W.  A.  Clark,  gen- 
eral car  foreman,  who  spoke  on  "Fel- 
lowship"; Rev.  J.  Walsh  of  St.  Rose's 
Catholic  church;  W.  H.  Hoyt,  assist- 
ant ciilef  engineer,  and  F.  E.  Howell, 
representing    the    firemen. 

The  program  included  a  reading  by 
Master  Gregg  Beckett,  selections  by 
the  Scottish  Rite  quartet,  consisting 
of  Don  Cole.  Charles  O.  Applehagen, 
Don  M.  GeaThart  and  A.  R.  Burquist, 
with  Prof.  A.  F.  M.  Custance,  ac- 
companist; and  selections  by  an  or- 
chestra composed  of  Chris  Anderson. 
HermsJi  Fotland.  Misses  Ruby  Ander- 
son  and   Rachel    Gilbert. 

Five  large  tables,  at  each  of  which 
were  seated  seventy  men,  and  the 
head  table  with  seating  arrangements 
for  twenty-five,  were  provided  in  the 
main  hall.  On  the  third  floor  another 
eet  of  tables  were  arranged,  where 
an  overflow  of  about  seventy-five  men 
were  fed.  After  the  supper  part  of 
the  tables  were  removed  from  the 
main  floor  in  order  to  allow  seating 
room    for   the   crowd. 

The  supper  was  served  promptly  at 
«:30  o'clock  by  the  L^adies'  Aid  Society 
of  tlie  Forbes  Methodi.st  church.  Mrs. 
C.  B.  Gilbert  was  chairman  of  the 
committee. 


REPAIRERS 

EXPERTS  EACH  INTHEIR 
RESPECTIVE  LINE 


Mr. 

the 


EXPERT 
REPAIRING 

on  short  notice.  Trunks 
and  leather  goods  placed 
in  first-class  condition 
at   a  small   cost. 


DULUTH  TRUNK  CO., 

St  PURiOK   STREUT — 220   WEST. 


Established 
in 


428  WEST 


Reference — 
City 
National 
Bank. 


jEWELERt 


SIP.   ST. 


COMF  AND 

Sl.riK<'T 

Yorit 

lilC'YCI.K 

Early  while  we  have  a 
food  selection.  Don't 
forget  we  are  repair 
headquarters  (or  gum. 
locks  sad  cafea.     We  alto  make  keys  to  order. 

DI'LITH   GUX   SHOP 

203    We*t    First    Street. 
Malroae,   3969.  Grand.    2288-A 


THE  REPAIR  DIRECTORY 
APPEARS  EACH  MONDAY 


Wanted  50,000 
Farm  Hands 

of  experience  at  once  on  the  farms  of 

Western  Canada 

To  replace  the  young  farm- 
ers who  have  enlisted  for  the 
war.  Good  wages  and  full 
season's  work  assured. 

There  is   no  damgBr    of  possibility 
off  Conscription  in  Canada 

References  required  from  all  ap- 
plicants. For  special  railway  rates 
and  other  information  apply  to 

R.  A.  OARRETT, 

311  Jackson  St.,  St,  Paul,  Minn. 

Authorized  Canadian  Govoinnient 
Agent. 


/>^^S^^N^»^^^^<^>^^>^^^^^^^^^^^».i^ 


6  ROOM  HOUSE 
HUNTER'S  PARK 


SajaO     fStS   caMi.     Lot    55x134    feet. 
All  modern  except  heat.    A  bargain. 


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r^mmmm^ 

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it 


Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  10, 1916. 


CONDITION  IS 
UNPARALLELED 

Freight  Congestion  Await- 
ing Opening  of  Navigation 
Is  Enormous. 


Iron  Ore  and  Grain  Alone 

Aggregate  100,000,- 

000  Tons. 


Cleveland.  Ohio,  April  10. — A  con- 
Kffitlon  of  freight  waiting  to  be  moved 
on  the  (Jreat  l^kes  haa  brought  about 
a  situation  unparalleled  In  Inland 
water  history,  aaya  a  statement  laaued 
today  by  the  Lake  Carriers'  associa- 
tion headquarters  In  this  city.  The 
volume  of  freight  under  contract,  says 
the  statement,  has  now  reached  the 
great  total  of  1,000,000  tons  of  Iron 
ore    and    grain. 

TUe     freight       congestion    has 


been 


March,  1896.     During  the  last  ten  years 
the    March    level    has    averaged    .1  foot  | 
higher   than   the  February  level  and  .6  , 
foot  lower  than  the  April  level. 

Lake  Ontario   Is   .06  foot  higher  than  | 
liist  month.  .19  foot  higher  than  a  yeni- 
ago.    .43  foot   below    the   average   stage 
of  March  of  the  last  ten  years.  2.86  f^t 
below    the    high    stage    of    March.    1886, 
and    1.16    feet   above   the   low    stage    of  i 
March.  1897.     During  the  last  ten  years' 
the    March    level    has    averaged    .2  foot  i 
higher    than    the    February    level    and  | 
.6  foot  lower  than  the  April  level.  I 

NEW  SIGNAL  AT  SAULT.  I 

Arrow  Used  Last  Year  for  Upbound 
Vessels  Is  Removed.  | 

Detroit,  Mich.,  April  8.— The  lake 
fcurvey  office  Is  In  receipt  of  the  follow- 
ing Information  from  Col.  Mason  M. 
I'atrIck,  Detroit.  Mich.,  the  district  en- 
gineer officer  In  charge  of  the  canals 
and  locks  at  Sault  Ste.  Marie,  Mich. 

"To  replace  the  arrow  signal  which 
was  used  last  year  to  designate  the 
lock  to  be  taken  by  upbound  vessels, 
there  has  been  installed  on  the  top  of 
the  watchmen's  shelter  near  the  end  of 
the  east  center  pier,  a  signal  composed 
of  two  Inclined  arms  which  diverge  up- 
ward In  tlie  form  of  a  broad  V.  The 
arms  are  %-lnch  conduit  pipes,  each 
with  four  white  lights  shown  from 
Tungfiten  bulbs,  spaced  In  line  equldls- 
tantly  along  It.  The  lights  are  lighted 
either  on  the  arm  to  the  north  or  on 
the  arm  to  the  south,  as  a  signal  that 
the  lock  on  the  side  so  Indicated  Is  to 
be  taken  by  an  approaching  upbound 
vessel. 

"In     order    that     downbound     vessels 


SHARE  IN  THE  WHITE  GOODS 
ON  THE  BARGAIN  SQUARE. 

Three  lota  of  fresh,  ne,w  White  Goods, 
Very  desirable  kinds — on  sale  special  at 
12 He,  lOc  and  29c  the  yard. 

Qualities  that  everyone  likes  and  that 
everyone  has  use  for.  Voiles,  crepes,  dots, 
stripes  and  fancies.     Come  and  see. 


THE  STORE  FOR  SERVICE. 

113-116-117-119  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET.  DULUTH,  MINN. 


NEWS  OF  NEW  SILK  GLOVES 

That  Are  Very  Reoherche. 

This  will  prove  most  interesting  to  you 
who  favor  Fownes"  gloves. 

This  shipment  came  late  Saturday.  They 
will  be  ready  tomorrow  morning.  Hand- 
some embroidered  novelties  and  plain  styles. 
Two-clasp  lengths,  priced  at  50c,  75c,  $1.00 
and  $1.25. 


n.^ 


l: 


Easter  Will  Be  One  Week  From  Sunday  | 

The  custom  of  wearing  new  things  on  Easter  is  centuries  old.  Dame  Nature  herself  sets  a  good 
example  in  casting  off  the  somberness  of  winter  and  donning  the  coloring  of  Joyous  springtime. 


caused    partlv    because    of    a    great    in-    may  kn.jw  before  coming  within  calling 
(lease    In    the    demand    and    partly    by     distance      of      the      west      center      pier 

-     •       '     'whether    there    is    sufficient    water    for 

them  to  take  the  Poe  lock,  the  draft  in 
the  I'oe  lock  will  be  displayed  at  the 
watch-station  at  the  went  end  of  the 
west  center  pier.  This  information  will 
be  displayed  In  a  manner  similar  to 
that  at  Hru.«»h  Point  and  the  box  will 
be  properly  lighted  so  that  the  draft 
may  be  read  at  night." 

OFFICERSOF  LUMBER 
FLEET  ARE  APPOINTED 

North  Tonawonda,  N.  Y.,  April  10. — 
Capt.  William  D.  Hamilton  of  the  Ham- 
ilton Transportation  company  has  an- 
nounced the  apolntment  of  masters  and 
engineers  of  his  fleet,  excepting  of  two 
boats,  for  the  season  of  1916,  as  fol- 
lows: W.  H.  Sawyer,  Capt.  M.  Canart- 
ney  an.l  Engineer  Daniel  Flint;  Buell, 
Capt.  Mackenzie  and  Engineer  Reuben 
Ellis;  NIko,  Capt.  Ralph  Myers  and  En- 
gineer Valley  Berger;  Tempest,  Capt. 
J.  F.  Higgle  and  Engineer  T.  Chrls- 
topherson;  Pahlow,  Capt.  John  Hyes 
and    Engineer   Walter   Potts. 

The  two  vessels  to  which  no  appoint- 
ments have  been  announced  are  the 
barges  Iiiterlaken  and  Stewart,  both 
of  which  were  acquired  by  the  Ham- 
ilton Transportation  company,  the  for- 
mer from  the.  Hettler  Lumber  company 
of  Chicago  and  the  other  barge  from 
the  North  Tonawanda  lumber  firm  of 
A.  Weston  &  Sons.  The  appointees  on 
the  other  barges  are: 

Ashland,  Capt.  W.  F.  Johnson;  Delta. 
Capt.  Berkland;  Tllden,  Capt.  Oley 
Steffensen;  A.  C.  Tuxbury,  Capt.  Elie 
Jacques;  Redfern,  Capt.  Berney  Cole; 
Alice  B.  Norrls.  Capt.  K.  O.  Roberson; 
Flier,  Capt.  John  Mattlson. 

Capt.  Hamilton  stated  that  the  ap- 
pointments are  practically  the  same 
as  last  ypar,  with  the  crew  of  the 
steamer  Barth,  sold  to  Chicago  Inter- 
ests by  his  company  this  winter,  tak- 
ing charge  of  the  steamer  Buell,  re- 
cently purchased  from  A.  Weston  & 
Son. 


the    delay    in    the   opening    of    the   navi- 
gation   season. 

The    weather    continues    cold    enough 
to   keep   lee    at   upper  lake   ports   Intact 
and    It    probably    will   be   May   1   before 
navigation    is    really    under   way. 
Rvei7    Ship    Used- 

The  delay  in  opening  the  season 
means  that  when  activities  do  begin, 
every  ship  svallable  will  be  pressed 
Into  service  on  the  lake  this  year. 
Even  those  that  have  been  Idle  for 
several  years  are  being  hurriedly  got- 
ten Into  condition  to  enter  trade 
again.  ^        ,     _ 

Thousands    of    sailors    are    returning 
to   work    on    the    lakes,    many    of   whom 
have    been    idle    for    several    years. 
Sailors   Coming    Ruek. 

During  the  whole  of  1914  and  the 
early  part  of  1915  there  were  so  few 
ehlpa  running  full  time  that  sailors 
left  the  lakes  by  hundreds.  They  are 
now  coming  back,  as  steady  employ- 
ment seems  assured  not  only  now  but 
for    years    to    come. 

Wages  AviU  be  the  best  freight  boat 
figures  paid  anywhere  in  the  world. 
Unskilled  .«»eamen  will  bo  paid  »36  a 
month  for  deck  work  and  may  be  ad- 
vanced to  wheel  work  before  the  sea- 
son ends  In  which  case  they  will  re- 
ceive $66  per  month.  First  mates  will 
get  $140  per  month,  second  mates  $100 
and    masters    $200.^ 

ERIE  ORE  DOCKS 

BEING  CLEARED 


I 

Li 


Many  of  you  have  already  made 
your  selection — you  are  to  be  con- 
gratulated and  you,  who  are  about 
to  make  them,  are  wise. 

The  scarcity  of  fabrics,  and  the  scarcity  of  dyes 
must  impress  you  with  the  wisdom  oi  making 
your  selection  from  the  surpassing  opening  as- 
sortments. 


Come  here  tomorrow— in  the  morning  if  you  can. 
Those  who  wait  until  the  last  few  days  before  Easter 
will  have  no  such  choosing,  and  if  any  slight  alterations 
are  necessary,  we  can  make  them  now,  giving  your  ap- 
parel that  made-expressly-for-you  look. 

Not  only  that,  you  will  have  the  good 
of  wearing  your  new  things  on  any 
dress-up  occasions  that  come  along. 


Fashionable  Suits  lor  Social  FnncHons— Smart  Suits  lor  Business  Wear 


For  dress  occasions  there  are  elegant  models 

which  in  fabric  and  styling  are  pre-eminently 

aristocratic. 

Models  which  are  distinctive,  and  in  many 

cases  almost  individual. 

All  of  them  are  desirably  exclusive. 
And  whether  you  wish  a  business  suit  or 
a  dress  suit,  the  opening  has  made  pos- 
sible the  finest  choosing  of  the  season. 
You  know   every   store    does    its    best    at 

"Opening  Time"— so  make  your  selection  now 


Smart  Styles  for  Small 
Women. 

Becoming  Models  for 

Tall  Women. 

Trim  Suits  for  Stout 

Women. 

Special  Models  for  the 

Elderly. 
Jaunty  Suits  for  Misses 


The  business  women  of  Duluth 
are  notably  good  dressers.  They 
want  garments  with  lots  of  style  and 
snap,  yet  free  from  fussiness. 

They  want  styles  that  are  sensible 
as  well  as  fashionable.  And  the 
number  of  business  women  and 
teachers  who  are  patronizing  our 
Second  Floor  these  days  is  just 
about  the  strongest  encouragement 
we  could  wish  for  our  selections. 


Your 

New 

Hat  Is 

Ready 

Come  tomor- 
row and  see 
how  well  it 
suits  you. 


Try  on  Some  of  TheseTomorrow,  See  How  Becoming 

The  Suits  at  $30.00  and  $35.00  Are  Remark- 
able Examples  of  Extra  Styles  Without 
Extra  Price. 


Some  Very  Lovable  Silk  Gowns  at 
$18.50  to  $35.00. 

The  frills  and  flounclngs  and  flares  of  fashion 
are  seen  In  various  developments  altogether 
charming:.  ^^ 

Other  models,   $15.00  to   $50. «0. 

Here  Arc  Very  Swagger  New  Sport 
Coats,  Too! 

The  "high  lights"  of  fashion  show  the  sport  coat 
strong  at  all  the   Southern   resorts  from   Florida 

to  California.  .         *    ,     t,^,.» 

A  limited,  vet  very  select  assortment  is  here 
In  Duvetyne.  Kayser  Silk,  Worumbo  Chinchilla 
and  white  Reps.     Prices  range  $10.00  to  $25.00. 


There  are  many  other  models  In  suits  at  $18.00 
to  $50.00. 

Very  Clever  Arc  the  Coats  at  $12  to  $28.50. 

The  above  named  are  the  most  popular  lines. 
There  are  others  ranging  from  $7.50  to  $60.00. 

Silk  Suits  at  $30  to  $35  Are  Strikingly 
Superior. 

They  have  an  elegance  that  appeals  to  all  dis- 
criminating dressers.  Other  models  $26.00  to 
$50.00. 


Heavy  Shipments  Continue 

and  But  Little  Will 

Remain. 

Cleveland.  Ohio,  April  10.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Lake  Erie  ore  docks 
will  hold  considerable  less   than   4.000,- 

000  tons  of  ore  May  1.  The  shipments 
In  March  exceeded  those  of  March  last 
by  more  than  100  per  cent.  The  ship- 
ments   In    March   last      totaled   1,347,130 

tons  and  was  the  largest  March  move- 
ment from  docks  to  furnaces  in  the  his- 
tory of  lake  Iron  ore  traffic. 

April    shipments    usually   total   about 

1  250,000,  but  ore  receipts  at  Lake 
Krie  docks,  likely  to  be  delayed  until 
May,  the  shipments  this  month  prob- 
ably will  be  the  greatest  ever  moved 
to  the  interior  In  any  month  of  the 
closed  season.  On  the  basis  of  in- 
creased shipping  orders  and  the  per- 
centage of  gain  shown  during  the 
closed  season  this  ore  year,  it  Is  prob- 
able the  shipments  will  Jump  well 
toward  the  2,000. 000-mark.  It  Is  gen- 
erally expected  that  the  May  1  dock 
balance  will  not  exceed  3,500.000  tons. 

The  ore  docks  on  Dec.  1  should  have 
about  10,000,000  tons  of  ore  on  hand. 
This  means  that  close  to  3,000,000  tons 
of  ore  more  than  would  be  necessary 
under  normal  conditions  will  have  to 
be  brought  down  to  maintain  the  usual 
dock  reserve. 

In  1913.  March  shipments  were 
1  048,269  tons,  and  the  April  1  dock 
balance  was  6,728,036  tons.  In  1914 
the  March  shipments  were  ,820.741 
tons,  with  an  April  1  balance  of  6,925,- 
674  tons,  while  in  1916.  the  March 
shipments  totaled  648,848  tons,  and  the 
docks  held  6,861,840  tons  on  April  1. 
This  vear  the  shipments  in  March  were 
1  347  130  tons,  with  a  dock  balance 
Aorll  1  of  4,891,485  tons.  To  reduce 
the  dock  balance  to  3,500,000  tons  May 
1  It  will  be  necessary  to  ship  only 
l'S94  496  tons  from  the  docks  this 
month,  which  Is  only  about  100.000  tons 
more   than   has   been   shipped   In   many 

The  Lake  Superior  shipments  to  low- 
er lake  docks  this  year  will  be  In- 
creased not  only  by  the  demand  from 
furnaces  regularly  dependent  upon 
these  ores,  but  also  by  an  augrnentea 
Eastern  movement.  The  Iron  Trade  Re- 
view  reports  that  almost  3.000.000  tons 
of  lake  ores  have  been  sold  to  Eastern 
furnaces,  and  sellers  believe  that  600,- 
000  tons  additional  will  be  sold. 

MARCH  LAKE  LEVELS. 

Lake  Superior  Higher  Than  Average 
for  Last  Ten  Years. 

The  United  States  lake  survey  re- 
Borts  the  stages  of  the  Great  Lakes  for 
fhl  miSth  o*fVarch,  1916,  as^foUows^:^^ 


BUFFALO  ELEVATORS 
READY  FOR  RECEIPTS 

Vessels     bringing     grain   to  Buffalo 
will  fr*'t  good  dispatch,  according  to_  a 
pror 
Rail 


g»'     _  .  . 

romlnent     elevator     man     of  Buffalo. 

tlon    and    present    indications    are    that 


roads  are  clearing  up  the   conges- 


the  houses  will  be  In  as  good  shape  to 
handle  grain  this  season  as  at  any  time 
in  years. 

Vesselmen  generally  were  surprised 
that  the  elevators  got  the  big  fleet  un- 
loaded on  schedule  time  this  year,  for 
the  fleet  was  the  biggest  of  storage 
grain  ever  assembled,  and  railroad  con- 
ditions during  the  winter  were  nearly 
the  worst  ever. 


AFTER  "DRY" 
SIGNATURES 


Rally  During  Evening  Hours 

to  Make  List  Reach 

5,000. 

That  Number  Will  Be  Ob- 
tained Anyway— Effect 
on  Breweries. 


NEW  ORE  DOCK  FOR 

SOOAT  ASHLAND 

Mlnnoapolls,  Minn.,  April  10.  —  Soo 
line  officials  have  announced  the 
award  of  a  contract  for  a  $1,000,000 
ore  dock  at  Ashland,  Wis.  It  will  be 
completed  Nov.  1  and  put  into  use  next 
spring.  The  dock  will  contain  160  ore 
pockets. 


ATTENTION, 
MOOSE  505 

Installation  of  offloors  and  athletic 
ontortaJnmcnt,  followed  by  lunch, 
Tuesday  evening,  .\prll  11th. 


CANADIANS 
ARE  BEST  PAID 

Manitoba  Pays  Bonus  and 

Wages  for  Enlisted 

Men. 

Care   of   Wounded   Costly; 

Laborers  in  Great 

Demand. 


FIRST  STEP 
TO  GET  BRIDGE 


First  steps  toward  the  construction 
of  a  bridge  over  Chester  creek  and 
the  subsequent  extension  of  the  street 
car  line  along  East  Eighth  street  were 
taken  this  morning,  when  Commission- 


Tonight  the  hardest  rush  after  sig- 
natures for  the  "dry"  petition  will  be 
made,  starting  in  the  various  precincts 
of  th«  city  at  about  6  o'clock  and  end- 
ing at  10.  The  precinct  captains  are 
today  reporting  to  W.  L.  Smithies  at 
his  office  in  the  Providence  building 
and  getting  their  final  Instructions. 
Each  captain  has  ten  men  under  his 
command  and  during  the  rush  hours 
tonight  the  eleven  men  In  each  precinct 
wll  endeavor  to  see  every  man  who 
has  not  yet  been  seen,  and.  If  pos- 
sible, get  his  signature  to  the  peti- 
tion. 

The  statement  that  the  campaign 
for  signatures  would  end  this  eve- 
ning is  erroneous,  Mr.  Smithies  aald 
today. 

"We  are  after  6,000  signatures,"  said 
he,  "and  we  propose  to  get  them.  The 
rush  tonight  Is  a  rally  which  we  hope 
will  land  that  number;  but  If  it  does 
not,  the  work  will  be  continued  until 
we    do    get    the    number   required." 

Mr.  Smithies  said  that  whll©  he  has 
no  detailed  report  as  yet,  he  knows 
that  the  petitions  have  been  well  signed 
and  that  refusals  have  been  fewer 
than  were  looked  for. 

Bffeet  on  Drewrrlea. 
The  Herald  has  been  asked  what  ef- 
fect It  would  have  on  breweries  operat- 
ing In  the  city  should  the  "drys"  win 
in  the  proposed  election.  The  effect 
would  be  the  same  as  In  the  case  of 
the  "drys"  winning  a  county  option 
election,  except  that  this  concerns  the 
city  alone  and  not  the  rest  of  the 
county.  That  would  be  that  breweries 
could  still  operate,  but  could  not  de- 
liver beer  to  customers  within  the  city 
limits,  not  even  to  private  houses,  di- 
rect from  the  brewery.  However,  this 
feature  of  the  law  is  circumvented  by 
the  building  of  warehouses  Just  outside 
of  the  prohibited  limits,  the  beer 
shipped  to  that  point,  and  then  shipped 
In  again,  for  there  Is  nothing  in  the 
law    to    prevent    the    "shipping    In"    «' 


Ontario  *:::....... 246  .46 

Lake  Superior  is  .27  foot  lower  than 


March,  1911.  During  the  last  ten 
years  the  March  level  has  averaged 
:2-foot  lower  than  the  February  level 
and  about  the  same  as  the  April  level. 

Lakes  Michigan-Huron  are  .01  foot 
higher  than  last  month,  .12-foot  lower 
than  a  year  ago,  .67  foot  below  the 
average  stage  of  March  of  the  last  ten 
years  8.47  feet  below  the  high  stage 
of  March.  1886.  and  .87  foot  above  the 
low  stage  of  March,  1916.  During  the 
last  ten  years  the  March  level  has 
averaged  about  the  same  as  the 
February  level,  and  .2  foot  lower  than 
the  April  level.      ,  ^      ^  ,  ^^        ,      . 

Lake  Erie  Is  16  foot  lower  than  last 
month  .43  foot  higher  than  a  year  ago, 
07  foot  above  the  average  stage  of 
March  of  the  last  ten  years,  2^01  feet 
below  the  high  stage  of  March,  1887. 
and    1.01    feet   above   the   low   stage   of 

ASK  FOR  and  GET 

HORLICK'S 

THE  ORIGIHAI, 

MALTED  MILK 

ChMp  stabatttutM  coat  YOU  Mm*  ptlM. 


of 


Lakes Mean  Sea  Level. 

Buperlor lll'\l 

EH^^^*?'T^"!^??/--''''*''*'-'*51^-$*|  er  Farrell,  head  of  the  works  divi- 
sion, ordered  City  Engineer  Ayres  to 
prepare  a  complete  survey  and  esti- 
mate of  the  cost  of  grading  Eighth 
street  to  sub-grade,  from  Chester  creek 
to   Woodland  avenue. 

These  figures  will  be  prepared  im- 
mediately, the  works  head  announced, 
so  that  they  can  be  ready  for  the 
property  owners  when  formal  action  is 
taken  on  the  construction  of  the   pro- 

Sosed  bridge  a  year  from  this  time, 
[embers  of  the  council  recently  prom- 
ised property  owners  on  the  east  side 
of  the  creek  that  a  bridge  would  be 
constructed  at  Eighth  street  some  time 
in  1917,  the  structure  to  cost  ap- 
proximately  $40,000. 

According  to  the  commisioner  s  In- 
structions to  City  Engineer  Ayres,  the 
survey  will  provide  for  the  grading  of 
Eighth  street  to  a  sub-grade,  so  that 
the  street  car  tracks  can  be  laid  with- 
out any  difficulty  or  additional  ex- 
cavating on  the  part  of  the  traction 
company.  The  cost  of  grading  the 
street  to  a  width  of  forty-two  feet 
will  be  assessed  against  the  property 
benefited,  and  after  the  tracks  are  laid, 
plans  can  be  made  for  further  Improv- 
ing the  roadway  with  a'  pavement. 
The  creek  is  ten  blocks  from  Woodland 
avenue,  which  is  paved.  Eventually 
there  will  be  a  paved  roadway  extend- 
ing along  Ninth  street  from  Seventh 
avenue  east  to  Fourteenth,  down  one 
block  to  the  proposed  bridge  and  th«n 
from  the  east  side  of  the  creek  to  the 
Woodland  avenue  pavement.  which 
connects  with  Fourth  streot  near 
Twentieth  *venu«   east 


The  committee  In  charge  of  the  bat- 
tle for  a  dry  Duluth  consists  of  the 
following:  W.  C.  Mitchell,  Watson  8. 
Moore.  Richard  Jones.  William  Town- 
er George  W.  Martin.  Marcus  L.  Fay. 
C'  R.  Magney,  Bishop  James  McGol- 
rick,  Rev.  J.  J.  Daniels,  W.  L.  Smithies. 
Henry  Stevens,  B.  N.  Edes,  Arthur 
Barnes  and  George  Wilson. 

GOVERNOR  DESIGNATES 
MAY  5  AS  CLEANUP  DAY 

St.  Paul,  Minn.,  April  10.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Governor  Burnquist, 
by  official  proclamation,  today  desig- 
nated May  6  as  the  official  cleanup 
day  for  Minnesota.  He  calls  particular 
attention  to  the  necessity  of  removing 
rubbish  which  Is  a  Are  hazard. 

"During  last  year  the  loss  of  prop- 
erty by  flre  In  the  state  of  Minnesota 
was  nearly  $6,000,000."  says  the  proc- 
lamation. "By  proper  activity  along 
lines  which  will  tend  to  do  away  with 
the  carelessness  by  which  this  loss 
was  in  a  large  measure  occasioned, 
the  amount  this  year  undoubtedly  can 
be  materially   reduced." 

'  • 

Ra«li   to   Secare   Papers. 

Sheboygan,  Wis..  April  10.— Follow- 
ing the  "America  first"  policy  recently 
Inaugurated  by  the  Kohler  company, 
of  granting  promotions  only  to  those 
who  are  American  citizens,  and  those 
who  are  seeking  their  citizenship  pa- 
pers, 180  employes  of  the  company 
have  made  apllcatlon  to  the  clerk  of 
the  circuit  court  in  the  last  three  days 
for   their  first  papers. 


"Some  general  estimate  of  the  vast 
amount  of  money  the  European  war 
Is  costing  Canada,  may  be  roughly 
gleaned  when  It  la  stated  that  every 
soldier  entering  service  in  Manitoba 
receives  $1.10  a  day,  $86  as  a  eort  of 
bonus  for  enlisting,  and  in  the  case 
he  is  a  married  man.  $20  more  for 
his  family."  said  Robert  R.  Thomp- 
son, a  manufacturer  of  Winnipeg,  who 
Is    registered    at    the    Spalding    today. 

"The  aoldier  who  enlists  In  a  Can- 
adian regiment  receives  nearly  as 
much  pay  as  the  average  daily  laborer. 
Then  out  of  the  patriotic  fund  he  re- 
ceives a  sort  of  bonus.  If  the  sol- 
dier Is  a  married  man.  he  receives 
$68  a  month  in  addition  to  the  $26 
given  as  an  inducement  to  enlist  and 
fight  for  his  country.  When  It  Is 
stated  that  Winnipeg  has  already  sent 
more  than  24,000  men  to  the  front, 
many  of  them  married  men.  some 
rough  idea  of  what  It  is  costing  the 
Canadian  people  to  carry  on  their  part 
of   the   war.   may  be   gained. 

"More  soldiers  are  being  recruited 
every  day.  We  are  In  this  war  to  the 
finish.  We  are  going  to  see  It 
through.  Not  only  Is  Canada  paying 
its  soldiers  higher  than  the  soldiers 
of  any  other  nation,  but  the  sum  paid 
out  to  wounded  soldiers  has  already 
totaled  thousands  of  dollars.  That  Is 
in  Winnipeg  and  the  province  of 
Manitoba.  I  believe  that  similar  con- 
ditions exist  In  Toronto  and  the  prov- 
ince of  Ontario.  Many  of  the  soldiers 
that  have  returned  from  the  front 
are  so  frightfully  wounded  as  to  be 
wholly  unfit  for  labor.  What  to  do 
with  these  terribly  unfortunate  men 
Is  one  of  the  great  problems  that  Is 
growing  out  of  the  war.  Thousands 
of  dollars  have  already  been  contrib- 
uted to  their  assistance  and  support; 
I  suppose  the  future  will  cause  the 
problem    to    become    more    difficult." 

Mr.  Thompson  declared  that  it  was 
believed  that  some  3.000  soldiers  In 
Winnipeg  alone  would  be  granted  a 
leave  of  absence  to  assist  in  seed- 
ing. It  is  expected  that  Canada  will 
have  the  greatest  grain  crop  in  its 
histoiy,  according  to  Mr.  Thompson, 
end  the  present  problem  confronting 
the   farmers,   is   that  of  securing  men. 

"We  believe  that  a  great  number 
of  American  laborers  will  be  used  in 
Canada  during  the  coming  summer." 
he  said.  "The  demand  for  men  was 
never  so  great.  Wages  are  higher 
and  men  terribly  scarce.  Dominion 
agents  are  endeavoring  to  secure 
American  laborers  at  the  present  time. 
Any  man  desiring  work  can  find  It 
in    Canada." 

Gin  DEPARTMENT 
HEADS  TO  ORBANIZE 


commission    will   be    invited    to   partic- 
ipate In   the  discussions. 

At  the  first  meeting  two  weeks  ago 
the  following  department  heads  were 
present  and  declared  themselves  In  fa- 
vor of  an  organization:  City  Clerk 
Borgen,  City  Engineer  Ayres.  Secretary 
Culver  of  the  works  division.  Building 
Inspector  Klelley.  Chief  of  Police  Mc- 
Kercher.  Auditor  Campbell.  Manager 
Reed  of  the  water  and  light  depart- 
ment. City  Assessor  Scott.  City  Treas- 
urer McLean.  Recreational  Director 
Batchelor,  Park  Manager  Cleveland. 
Secretary  Trux,  Clerk  Thompson  of  the 
municipal  court.  Secretary  Johnson  of 
the  police  department.  Chief  Accoun- 
tant Gross  of  the  water  and  light  de- 
partment, and  Electrical  Inspector 
Schneider.  _ 

LAKE-TORIVER 

CANAL  IS  SHELVED 


The  Lake  Superior-Mississippi  river 
canal  scheme  has  been  shelved  for  the 
present,  as  a  result  of  the  report  of 
the  board  of  army  engineers  which  has 
been  investigating  the  matter;  and  It 
Is  believed  that  It  will  not  come  up 
again  in  a  good  many  years.  The  board 
of  engineers,  of  which  MaJ.  E.  D.  Peck 
was  a  member,  reported  against  the 
project,  on  the  ground  that  it  is  not 
feasible  and  not  commercially  important 
enough.  ,,,    . 

It  is  believed  that  congress  will  be 
more  prone  to  take  the  board's  view 
of  the  matter  under  present  conditions, 
when  preparedness  has  the  floor  and  is 
likely  to  take  up  all  the  available  slack 
In    expenditures. 

MaJ.  Peek,  who  returned  home  this 
morning  from  St.  Paul,  said  that  he  had 
not  been  officially  notified  that  the  re- 
port was  turned  In  by  congress,  but 
admits  that  such  a  report  had  been 
prepared. 

Fighting  Tax  Increase. 

St.  Paul.  Min..  April  10.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — St.  Paul  wholesalers  and 
jobbers  are  fighting  a  6-per-cent  in- 
crease in  the  personal  property  assess- 
ment. The  state  tax  commission  has 
given  fifty-three  St.  Paul  firms  four 
days  to  present  their  objection.  The 
hearing  started  today. 

# 

Talk  New  Armory. 

Madison.  Wis.,  April  10.— War  talk 
has  so  revived  Interest  In  the  Wiscon- 
sin guard  of  Madison  that  a  movement 
is  now  on  foot  to  build  a  new  armory. 
The  idea  Is  to  make  the  building  utili- 
tarian. It  will  be  a  combination  ar- 
mory, convention  hall  and  a  farmers 
garage. 


NO  CHECK  YET  OF 
CASHirS  BOOKS 

Deputy     Scaler     Returns 

But  Is  III  at  His 

Home. 

John  Cashin,  deputy  state  timber 
scaler,  who  was  discharged  by  Frank 
a.  Scribner,  surveyor  general  of  logs 
and  lumber,  when  Irregularities  In 
timber  scaling  were  charged  against 
him  by  Oscar  Arneson.  deputy  state 
auditor,      leturned      to    the    city      this 

morning.  ,  .,,    *   ^      .. 

"Mr.  Cashin  Is  at  home  ill  today, 
said  Mr.  Scribner.  "and  although  he 
turned  over  his  books  to  me  this  morn- 
ing, we  will  not  be  In  a  position  to 
check  them  until  he  can  go  over  them 
with  us.  We  will  probably  get  at 
this    tomorrow."  ^,        ^        ^         ^   ^ 

It  Is  charged  by  the  deputy  state 
auditor  that  the  Rat  Root  Timber  com- 
pany, operating  camps  near  Margie  on 
the  M.  &  I.  railway,  was  permitted 
by  the  scaler  to  remove  large  quan- 
tities of  state  timber  which  was  not 
scaled  and  properly  counted.  Only 
about  one-seventh  of  the  timber 
actually  removed  from  the  land  was 
reported   by  Mr.   Cashin,    It   is   alleged. 

Tho  matter  will  be  considered  at 
the  next  meetlrg  of  the  state  limber 
board.      J.   W.    Burgeson.    a   local    log- 

fing  contractor,  will  also  be  asked 
o  explain  why  logs  sent  out  of  his 
camps  in  this  county  were  not  marked 
according    to   law.     

JUNIOI^HAVE  ENDED 
THEIR  SHORT  COURSE 

Crookston.  Minn..  April  10.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  1916  junior  short 
course  at  the  Northwest  School  of 
Agriculture  here  last  week  came  to  a 
close  with  the  end  of  the  full  weeks 
session.  Climax  sent  the  largest  dele- 
gation, nineteen.  Fertile  and  Halma 
ranked  next  with  eleven  and  seven,  re- 
spectively. Next  to  Polk  county,  Kitt- 
son county  had  the  largest  representa- 
tion. Another  first  honor  went  to  Kitt- 
son county  In  that  Its  District  No.  40, 
Halma.  sent  the  largest  delegation 
from  any  one  school.  The  three  pupils 
from  Bronson  traveled  the  farthest  to 
attend    the   course 


largely  about  boys'  and  girls'  club 
work,  and  such  subjects  as  "The  Pig." 
"The  Calf, '  "Corn."  "Bread"  and  "Sew- 
ing" occupied  prominent  places  on  the 
week's  schedule.  The  evenings  were 
devoted  to  Illustrated  lectures  on  al- 
lied subjects  and  moving  pictures  of 
educational   value. 

Community  singing  was  also  a  fea- 
ture of  the  evening  programs,  and 
splendid  results  were  obtained.  Rec- 
reation, too,  was  afforded  by  super- 
vised games  in  the  large  gymnasium 
and  two  afternoon  excursions  to 
Crookston.  where  Important  Industrie* 
were   visited. 

Coanty  Officials  Meet. 

On  Thursday  special  Interest  wa« 
added  by  the  visit  of  the  county  su- 
perintendents of  schools  of  the  north- 
western counties  of  the  state,  who 
met  In  conference  with  State  Super- 
intendent C.  O.  Schulz  for  conff-renc« 
relative  to  the  summer  training  school, 
which  will  be  held  Jointly  by  the  stata 
department  of  public  Instruction  and 
the  school  of  agriculture.  The  pupils 
of  the  Teachers'  Training  Model  school 
entertained  with  a  short  program,  a 
feature  of  which  was  a  very  fine  tallc 
by    Supt.    Schulz. 

Judging  contests  were  held  on  th* 
last  day. 

HOW  TEAMS  STAND. 

Latest  Scores  Reported  By  Cloquet 
Indoor  Baseball  Teams. 

Cloquet.     Minn.,     April    10.— (Special 

to     The     Herald.) — Following     Is     th« 

standing   of   the    teams   In   the    indoor 

Evcalag  Leagae. 

W. 

Johnson-Wentworth    ....   6 

N.  W.  Paper  Co 8 

City  Team 4 

Cloquet  Lumber   Co S 

Box   Co 3 

High    School     2 

Baslacss  Mck'b  LeagP 
W. 

Moose    16 

Bears     1* 

Badgers    11 

Wolves    10 

Color  Lcagae. 

W. 

Reds    14 

Blues  1* 

Greens     «..•••••••• il 

Whites    10 


L. 

Pet. 

2 

.760 

3 

.72T 

6 

.444 

6 

.378 
.331 

6 

6 

.28e 

e. 

L. 

Pet 

10 

.€1§ 

10 

16 

.407 
.176 

17 

L. 

Pet 

9 

.608 

12 

.620 

12 

.478 

16 

.400 

Two    Hart   at   Green   Bay. 

Green  Bay,  Wis.  April  10. — Miss  Bar- 
bara Tilkens  was  seriously  injured  and 
William  Shnaekel  hurt  today,  when 
their  automobile  was  struck  by  a  heavy 
touring  car  and  hurled  through  the 
The*  work" of  "last     week     centered  'air  into  a  ditch. 


City  department  heads  will  meet  next 
Thursday  afternoon  and  formally  or- 
ganize a  permanent  association. 

This  announcement  was  made  today 
by  City  Clerk  Borgen.  who  was  instru- 
mental in  bringing  the  officials  to- 
gether two  weeks  ago  for  the  first  con- 
ference of  Its  kind  eyer  held  by  city 
department  managers;  The  meeting 
will  be  held  In  the  council  chambers  at 
3  o'clock  Thursday,  when  the  name  of 
the  organization  will  Jae  selected  and 
officers  chosen  for  the  year 

The  aim  of  those  behind  the  organi- 
zation plan  is  to  bring  the  department 
heads  closer  together,  »o  that  they  will 
co-operate  witn  one  another  In  hand- 
ling the  city's  businesA.  Meetings  will 
be  held  regularly  and  members  of  the 


GOOD  FURNITURE  FOR  THE  HOME 

THE  HERCULEAN  TASK  OF 

CLOSING  OUT 


the  entire  stock  of  the  Cameron  Furniture  Co.  is  on  in  real  earnest.  We  will 
vacate  Salesrooms,  2110-2112  West  Superior  on  or  before  May  1st  regardless 
of  the  PRICE  CONCESSIONS  necessary  to  accomplish  this  feat.  MANU- 
FACTURERS* PRICES  AND  LESS  PREVAIL  throughout  our  entire  line 
of  Bedroom,  Living  Room  and  Dining  Room  Furniture.  QUICK  ACTION 
ON  YOUR  PART  is  necessary  if  you  win  some  of  the  bargams  bemg  offered 
by  us  RIGHT  NOW.  * 


CAMERON  FURNITURE  COMPANY 


/ 

r-^ 


■'■-»  i"g""- 


L 


,11   U «ni^-^-J^-»ilt«'W<l  Jt-IIM!3 


i — 


'       ■■ 


f 


Monday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  10, 1916. 


Society  *  Women's  Clubs  *  Music  *  Drama 


II Y  wouldn't  it  be  a  good  plan' 
to  have  a  department  in 
stores  for  vaccillating  wom- 
en? In  such  a  department  it 
would  be  understood  that 
you  could  buy  things  or  not — take 
thcin  home  and  wear  them  or  use 
them  and  try  them  out,  just  as  you  can 
with  rugs,  or  washing  machines,  or 
orphans  for  adoption. 

Iklany  women  never  know  how  thor 


Nation- Wide  Campaign  to 

Raise  Fund  for  Blind  Soldiers 


The  B.  F.  B.  Permanent  Blind  Relief 
War  fund,  one  of  the  moat  elaborate 
nation-wide  campalg^na  ever  made  by 
any  charitable  organlzatlona,  1*  now 
being  conducted  by  Frank  A.  Vander 


oughly  they  can  dislike  a  thing  until  jjp,  August  Belmont.  Ellhu  Root.  Otto 
they  have  it  at  home  (husbands,  for  h.  Kahn.  Vincent  Aator.  George  A. 
instance)  and  it  would  seem  so  much  Kessler  and  many  other  American 
less  binding  and  they  would  be  much  I  bankers,  bu3lne8S  men  and  phllanthro- 
norc  apt  to  want  and  keep  things  if  [  pjats.  More  than  160  financiers,  col- 
there  were  only  the  feeling  that  they ,  i^g©  presidents  and  nationally  proml- 
reallv  didn't  have  to  keep  it  or  them  1  ne^t  ^^^  ^nd  women  have  consented 
or   wluitcvcr  it   might   be.  I  to   act   au   the   vice    president*    of     the 

Some    stores-f..rtnnately    they    are   '"^J„^^     ^^^     practically,     at     present. 

only  two  places  In  all  Great  Britain, 
France  and  Belgium.  In  which  the 
thousands  of  blinded 
diers  can  be  taught  self-supporting 
trades.  These  two  small  Institutions 
ere  so  wholly  Inadequate  to  meet  the 
situation  that  scores  of  Europe's  blind 


few  in  Duluth— give  one  the  sensation 

that     lie  who  enters  here  leaves  hope    .  ., _  .„ 

behind.-   and    few    live    to   escape    the    thousands    of    blinded    European  ^"°1- 


uttcr  scorn  and  displeasure  with  which 
one  siciion  of  nuidern  clerkdom  views 
the  "she  who  hesitates  and  is  lost'' 
person. 


\<j   1  result    vou  find  yourself    ^-d    send    ploas    every    week    to    be    ad- 
.-    -:  .As  .1  result,  you  """  >""'    ^     ,  n,med.  In  vain.     It  Is  this  unusual  tra- 

at    home    with    something    you    nevtri^j^,    situation    of    these    thousands    of 

:_  -  -t-  I..--.  i.o„,«.,    blinded    European    soldiers    whom    Eu- 

rop»»  lacks  In.stltutlons  to  take  care  of, 
which   has  caused  the  American   bank- 
ers  and    business   men   to   organize    the 
i  fund. 

A  personal  letter  of  appeal,  signed 
by  Mrs.  Gforfje  A.  Kessler.  one  of  the 
fund's  honorary  secretaries,  has  been 
addressed  to  160,000  prominent  and 
prosperous    Amerlcens,    describing    the 


More  than  60.000  letters  have  been 
sent  by  Mr.  Vanderllp.  as  the  fund's 
honorary     treasurer     for     America,     to 


dreamed  of  wantinvr  much  less  having 
around  the  house.  Vou  think  of  e\Try 
wav  i^f  disposing  of  it  from  selling  it 
at  iuiblic  auction  to  writing  an  anony- 
mous letter  to  the  misleading  clerk 
who  wished  it  onto  you.  This  state 
of    mi-.ery    makes   you    wish    you   had 

either  married  the  man  who  owns  the      , „ 

store    or  else   that  you   could  develop    pitiful   situation   among   the,  thousands 
t  -^    „«,i    u-^. ,*«,,.■    t.-.    fritiHtr    of    blinded    European    soldiers.      CoUec- 

enough  poise  and  hauteur  to  frankly  ,^j^^  ^^^^^^  ^^^  pWards.  solielting  con- 
return  these  unloved  and  distasteful  i  ^rjbutlons.  are  being  distributed 
arti.  I -s  rather  than  keeping  the  clerk  throughout  New  York  city,  and  soon 
for   yonr   friend   and   slinking   through  |  wlU  be  dj^s^trlbu^ted^in^other  c^^ 

Bide  streets  all  season. 

Some  articles  might  be  excluded 
from  tlie  list  such  as  toothbrushes  or 
gum  or  ,1113  tiling  ^^'th  a  too  personal 
tinK<'.  hut  for  other  reasons  there 
would  be  an  awful  lot  of  satisfaction 
in  feeling  that  should  you  wish  to 
chaiiKe  your  mind  or  your  summer 
suit  some  time  next  fall  when  you  are 
thorouirlily  couvince<l  that  you  just 
can't  like  it.  you  would  meet  with  sym- 
pathy and  understanding  and  a  "quick 
change." 

Of  course  the  merchants  might  have 
cert.-iin  financial  reasons  for  objecting 
to  their  last  breath  to  such  a  depart- 
ment. 

— . — ^ 

Events  of  Interest. 

Tip'  Vi'uri;;  l^>Hehtli>i  .s'  ehib  will  meet 
toiiifjht  with  Elilt^n  and  Basil  Morrla 
of  118  L'lieslnut  street. 

«       *       • 

Mi.s.s   Elol.se  Lawrenen  of  2108  Wood- 
land    n venue    entertained    at    luneheon 
yjiiurdiiy.      Covers    were    laid    for: 
Mf.sj«e.S — 


Wcienf 
useki 


fieninetta  D  Opwuel 


ffi 


Preparedness  for  the  Homemaker 

RIALS  of  ttmper.  with  tempta- 
tion   to   fret   and   nag.   are   In- 
buslnesa     of 


MRS.   GEORGE   A.   KESSLER. 

banks  and  chambers  of  commerce,  In- 
viting their  official*  to  form  commit- 
tees and  otherwise  co-operate.  Presi- 
dents of  many  banks  and  trust  com- 
panies throughout  the  country  have 
accepted  Mr.  Vanderllp's  Invitation  to 
act  as  local   subtreasurers  of  the  fund. 


Breakfast  Food  Magnate's 

Widow  Becomes  a  Bride 

Mrs.  Leila  Y.  Post,  widow  of  Charles  I 
'.     I'oHt,     originator       of     the       Battle  [ 


cessant     lo     the     »»— , 

keeping  house.  The  affair* 
here  are  unlike  those  of  other 
Interests. -tor  there  Is  no  llmlj 
to  the  number  of  untboughtor 
Items  that  may  occur  between  th© 
breakfast  and  dinner  hour. 

Though  she  plan  and  systematize  !n 
the  most  approved  way.  the  home  wom- 
an Is  sure  to  find  things  overlapping 
somewhere  every  day.  One  member  of 
the  family  late  to  a  meal,  one  simUar 
act  of  carelessness  or  forgetfulness. 
and  the  household  schedule  Is  upset. 
Though  it  sounds  odd.  It  Is  neverthe- 
less true  that  the  more  system  and 
order  Is  Introduced  Into  the  household 
machinery  the  more  provoked,  annoyed 
and  tempted  to  be  a  real  "cross  patch 
Is  the  homemaker  when  thla  is  dis- 
arranged. ., 

The  only  solution  Is  to  be  constantly 
prepared  for  the  sure-to-come,  un- 
planned-for  dally  happenings  of  good 
j  housekeeping.  Learn  to  still  \he  con- 
stant Irritation  of  disappointments,  and 
you  win  find  It  more  effectual  than 
the  practised  scoldings  of  modern 
Xantlppes. 

This  week  «oreens  should  be  brought 
out  and  thoroughly  cleaned  and  re- 
hung.  Those  that  have  become  grimy 
with  smoke  and  dust  should  be  well 
brushed  on  both  ald,es  and  rubbed  over 
with  kerosene.  This  removes  the  dirt 
better  than  water  and  prevents  rust- 
ing. Screen  paint  applied  now  will 
greatly  prolong  the  usefulness  of  the 
wire.  It  Is  a  thin  black  paint  that  has 
the  good  quality  of  drying  rapidly. 

When  finishing  up  the  odds  and  ends 


Margaret     Sherk, 
Flo    iMcI^od. 
H<'len    Wharton. 
M  a  r  J  o  r  1  e     Mc- 

Cabe, 
MJldred     Vander- 

glft. 


Hel-n    Thomp.son. 

Katharine  Mat- 
ter. 

Elizabeth     fJray, 

Gertrude    Hall. 

II*  leji   lEryberger. 

Elizub<>th  Mac- 
fai  lane, 

*  «       • 

The  I'.Iks  win  Rlve  a  dancing  party 
Saturday  night  at  their  clubrooma. 
The  affair  will  be  In  charge  of  the 
new  daiieo  committee,  which  consists 
of  Frank  Pierce,  J.  F.  Dennis  and  W. 
L.    Hloedel. 

•  *       « 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Kliasson  of  the 
Buffdlo     apartments      entertained      the 
following    guests    informally    Saturday 
night. 
Me.s.sr.s.   and  Mesdanies — 

otto    tJafvert.  A.    Lofgren. 

Mls>"*"s-  — 

Kdna    Z.     Harris, 
Me.s.srs. — 

hi.    fci.    "Wunder, 

D.   L.  Tllderyulat, 

«       *       • 

Mrs.  Charles  Palm.  420  South  Elght- 
•  tiiili  avf^nue  east,  wa.s  surprised  by 
her  friends  Saturday  night  in  honor 
of  her  birthday.  She  was  presented 
tvltli  a  writing  desk.  The  evening 
Va3  spent  In  music  and  games. 
^        — 

Surprise  for  Daughter. 

Mr.i.  L.  Lucha.  33  We.st  Quince  street, 
entertained  at  a  surprise  party  for  her 
youiiK-at  daughter,  Cirace,  Saturday 
afternoon.  Tht>  rooms  were  decorated 
in  purple  and  red  and  the  afternoon 
was  spent  In  playing  games.  Those 
present  were: 
llltiaet} — 


Malln     Sobenlua. 

Rudolph    Ronge. 
Joe    Janoskl. 


'W       iv.r.1      »..  •    .....».^.        ...      • 

Creek  health  food  Industry,  who  com 
mitted  suicide  at  Lo.s  Angeles  two 
years  ago,  and  L.  J.  Montgomery, 
manager  of  the  Post  Tavern  at  Battle 
Creok,  Mich.,  were  married  In  that 
city  Saturday  by  Rev.  W.  S.  Potter  of 
the  I'resbyterlan  church.  They  will 
mako  their  homo  In  Battle  CreeK,  and 
Mr.  Montgomery  will  continue  in 
charge  of  the  tavern  to  which  he  came 
about    four    years    ago. 

Mrs.  Montgomery  was  a  Battle 
Creek  girl  and  was  married  twelve 
years  ago  to  Mr.  Post,  whose  e.^tate, 
between  $20,000,000  and  (30,000.000.  i 
was  divided  between  his  widow  and 
daughter. 


Bern  Ice  Olson, 

Grace  Mlchalka, 

Ang-line  Mlch- 
alka, 

Graop  Lucha, 

Marvel   Otnen. 

Ros'ia   Evans. 

Kveiyn   Nelson. 

Kalhryn  Keating. 

Kaihryn  Young- 
(jni.<<t. 

Kathryn    Petter- 
tion. 
Mes.tr.^. — 

Kenneth  Camp- 
bell. 

Kenneth  Keating, 
Mesdnmes — 

Mnnhnr, 

Campbell, 


Clara  Nelson, 
Thelma  Hogan, 
Edith  Selgle, 
Vivian  Johnston, 
Ida  Chllds, 
Margaret  John- 
son, 
Frances  Lucha, 
Marlon  Mosher, 
Be.ssie  Sullivan, 
Marian  Mlch- 
alka. 


Teddy  Johnson, 
William   Earl 
Lucha,  Jr. 


Mr.  and  Mrs.  Eacobacct  will  make 
their  home   In   this  city. 

r— • 

Church  Meetings. 

The  Ladles'  Aid  society  of  Woodland 

M.   E.   church   will   meet  at   2:30   o'clock 

tomorrow  afternoon  at  the  residence 
of  Mrs.  D.  D.  Sherman.  436  Faribault 
street. 

•  «      * 

Miss  Johanna  Miller.  1028  West 
Fourth  street,  will  be  hostess  to  the 
Phllathea  class  of  St.  John's  English 
Lutheran   church    tomorrow    night. 

•  *      * 

Miss  May  Colter.  217  Twelfth  ave- 
nue east,  will  be  hostess  to  the  Phlla- 
thea class  of  First  M.  E.  church  to- 
morrow  night   for  a  business  meeting. 

*  *       * 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  McCollum 
Bible  cla.ss  of  the  Lakeside  Presbyte- 
rian church  will  be  held  tomorrow  eve- 
ning 'It  the  residence  of  Mrs.  R.  S. 
Manley.  47C0  London  road. 

*  «       * 

Temple  Emanuel  Aid  society  will 
meet  tomorrow  afternoon  to  celebrate 
the  26l8t  anniversary  of  the  coming  of 
the  Jewish  people  to  this  country.  A 
symposium  on  "Jews  In  America"  will 
bo  grlven.  Mrs.  Mondschtne  will  give  a 
paper  on  the  "Landing  of  the  Jewish 
Pilgrims."  Mrs.  H.  Y.  Josephs  will 
speak  on  "The  Jews  In  America  Up  to 
1865."  and  Mrs.  M.  Hlrschfield  will 
take  the  "Jews  In  America  From  1866 
Up  to  the  Present  Day." 


of  spring  cleaning,  you  will  find  many 
places  where  a  drop  of  oil  will  set 
things  running  more  smoothly.  Squeak- 
ing door  knobs,  hinges  and  hard  turn- 
ing keys  are  nerve  racking;  a  few 
drops  of  oil  remedies  these.  Sometimes 
It  Is  better  to  dip  the  end  of  a  feather 
Into  the  oil  and  apply  It  thus  than  to 
use  the  oil  can. 

The  early  days  of  spring  bring  in- 
creased duties  to  home  women,  there 
are  many  journeys  to  and  fro,  up  and 
down  stairs  and  out  of  doors.  The  best 
way  to  minimize  these  duties  is  to  put 
things  together  that  go  In  the  same 
direction  and  make  as  few  trips  as  pos- 
sible. One  thoughtful  housekeeper 
with  "woman-klUlng"  steep  atalrS 
leading  from  her  kitchen  entry  to  the 
regions  above  bought  two  bowl-shaped, 
strong-handled  baakets.  These  she 
stained  with  dark  walnut  and  one  was 
hung  at  the  foot  and  the  other  at  the 
head  of  the  stairs.  Articles  to  be  taken 
up  or  down  were  placed  In  them  and 
carried  to  their  places  when  she  was 
passing  that  way.  A  child's  doll  buggy 
serves  another  hurried  woman  for  a 
time-saver.  She  finds  It  easier  to 
wheel  It  from  one  room  to  another  with 
its  load  of  brushes,  dusters  and 
polishes  or  odds  and  enda  to  be  put 
away  than  to  carry  them. 

A  large,  heavy  apron,  with  a  pocket 
straight  across  It.  but  divided  into  sec- 
tions and  each  section  full  and  deep, 
worn  during  the  putting  things 
straight  times  Is  helpful. 

(Protected  tiy  Adami  Newspaper  Service.) 


"Nothing  But  Leaves" 

Not  Tea  Leaves  intermixed  witti  Dusf^ 
Dirt  and  Stems  but  all  Virgin  Leaves. 

"SALADA" 

has  the  reputation  of  being  the  cleanest^ 
and  most  perfect  tea  sold.  E147 

JitACK.  GREEN  OB  MIXED.  SgALED  PACteTS  OjfLVa 


Tomorro 


■The  PoMlbliitlea  of  Amerl- 
eaa   Cottons. 


Duluth  Woman  Guest  of  Honor 
at  College  Women's  Luncheon 

"This  Is  Shakesp'eare  day.  There  Is  I  Shakespeare:  "Whereto  I  have  Invited 
no  Bacon  on  \.h»  tinenu  "  was  a  quota-  many  a  guest  such  as  I  loved.  Proml- 
Uon  on  the  mS?M  cards  at  the  annual  nent  Shakespearean  characters  in  wa- 
in nch^on  of  the  CulleKO  Women's  Club  ter  colors  were  on  the  place  cards  of 
of  Minneapolis  ttijt  wis  given  In  the  the  guests  of  honor  and  officers  of  the 
ballroom  of  Trot  ^nn  Saturday.  The  club.  About  150  guests  were  seated  at 
euestfl^f  honor  were  Mrs.  L.  W.  tables  which  were  bright  with  flowers 
^ line  pi4sldX  tjJTfhe  Duluth  branch  mentioned  by  Shakespeare:  violets,  tu- 
of  th4  Assoclatloftlof  Collegiate  Alum-  lips,  narcissi  sweet  peas,  daffodils.  Iris, 
nke-    Mrs     Frink    L     McVey    of    Grand  I  lilies   and   primroses. 

ForUs  N  D  f  *aident  of  the  north- I  To  "A  general  welcome  sautes  ye 
wesrcentralser^^  of  the  Association  i  all"  ("King  Henry  VIII'),  ,flven  by 
^f  Collegiate  Alumnae,  who  spoke  In 'Mrs.  Joseph  Jorgens.  the  president.  Miss 
riiluth  last  fall  at  the  "annual  A.  C.  A.  j  Barbara  Bell,  in  the  costume  of  Dog- 
iTncheqn.  and  Mrs.  W,.,L.  Beebe.   presl-    berry    In    "Much    Ado    About    N^ 


NEAT 

and 

COMFORTABLE 

Fitted  by 

Barley  6/  Co. 

j«wel*rs  and  Opticians 

315  West  Superior  Str««t 


©OLUiieilA 

The  Choice  of  Musicians 

New    No.    6    Reproducer    and 
Violin  Tone  Chamber. 
The  only  instrument  that  will 
reproduce  a  true  tone. 

EOiiOiT ' 

i8  THIRD  AVENUE  WEST 


Many  States  Have  Candidates 

tor  General  Federation  Offices 


dent  of  the  CoMitfn  Women's  Club  of 
St  Paul.  All  talks,  stunts  and  courses 
were  lntroduce4~  by  Quotations  from 
Shakespeare  and  the  guests  of  honor 
were  presented  with  the  quotation  from 


Bed  Time  Tales 

By  Ckkra  Ingram  Judson 


MRS.  LELIA  Y.  POST. 
Soloists  for  "The  Creation." 

Lucille  Brown  Duxbury,  soprano,  and 
RolUn  M.  Pease,  baritone,  of  St.  Paul 
have  been  secured  as  soloists  for  the 
production  of  "The  Creation."  which 
win  be  given  Wednesday.  April  26.  at 
the  First  Methodist  church. 

The  chorus  has  bten  rehearsing 
steadily  under  the  dlrecjtlon  of  R. 
Buchanan  Morton  and  after  the  next 
rehearsal  tomorrow  night  a  social  hour 
will  be  followed  by  supper. 


1 


Qtcl  Mr.  Gater 


Lucha. 


Lodge  Notes. 


Z»nith  lodge.  No.  99.  Degree. of  Honor, 
win  liold  a  business  meeting  tomorrow 
at  2  o'clock  at  Maccabee  hall.  Initia- 
tion of  candidates  will  take  place  fol- 
lowed by  a  card  party. 

^ —      ■' 

Grohman-Eacobacci  Wedding. 

Mis.s  Jcsephlne  A.  Orohman,  daugh- 
ter of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  J.  Orohman  of 
616 'a  l'''fth  avenue  ea.st,  and  Nicholas 
A.  E;i<i>baccl  were  married  At  8:30 
o'clock  Saturday  afternoon  at  the  First 
Mwthodist  church  by  Kev.  Robert  Mil- 
ler. Miss  Sylvia  Walker  and  Phil 
Dendlt-r  were  the  attendants.  A  din- 
ner fi)r  the  bridal  party  followed  at 
the    r«'sldence    of    the    bride's    parents. 


Tiny  Misses  Not  Forgotten 

in  Display  of  Spring  Styles 

*•  '  1  O  /  j  j^njj  bright,  as  It  tnostiy  cia,  ne  awaa- 

The    powerful    Influence    that      Dame  ,  is  full  crepe  ruff  made  with  long  ends     ened  up  from  hla  fcleep  and  crawled  out 
Fashion    exerts    these      bright      spring     that  are  caught  with   bunches  of  small  I  —  ♦»--   w„n»v,fh   «nrf   hrlehtneas. 
,  ^  .      XI       ..  .         purple  flowers,  and  a   small   gray   hat 

days    extends    even    to    the    tiny    miss,     trimmed   with  gray     crepe,   flowers   to 
whose  need  for  coats,   hats  and  frocks     match   those   on   the  ruff  and  a   single 

pink  rose. 

Parasols    strike   the   spring   note 


S 


Is  met.  not  only  In  a  utilitarian  sense, 
but  In  the  style  sense,  as  well.  Clothes 
for  misses  and  Juniors  for  all  occa- 
sions are  shown  In  Duluth  stores  and 
almost  as  much  attention  is  paid  to 
their  make  and  material  as  is  paid  to 
the    garments    for    women. 

One  of  the  daintiest  evening  gowns 
brought  on  for  spring  Is  of  white  taf- 
feta. The  several  ruffles  that  form 
the  eklrt  are  edged  with  net.  a  wide 
crush  girdle  of  the  silk  forms  the 
lower  part  of  the  waist,  which  Is  built 
of  net.  and  a  single  deep  pink  rose 
on   the   girdle   is   the   only   bit   of   color. 

One  of  the  most  striking  evening 
coats  Is  of  deep  pink  with  the  skirt 
and  wide  cape  collar  edged  with 
brown  marabou.  Coats  range  from 
the  sedate  black  taffeta  to  the  rough 
and  ready  sport  coat  cut  on  ample 
lines,  with  the  Intermediate  styles  of 
dark    silk    and    bright    shades    of    silk. 

For  a  atunnlng  afternoon  frock  of 
gray  chiffon  and  Georgette  crepe  there 


light  tan  one  with  a  border  of  bright 
green  Ih  just  the  thing  to  be  carried 
with  a  tan  gown  trimmed  with  green. 

A  large  white  pearl  button  finishes 
each  box  plait  of  the  coat  of  a  navy 
blue  cloth  suit.  The  buttons  form  a 
border  to  the  Jacket  and  are  also  used 
on  the  sleeves  and  skirt. 

The  new  hats  Include  a  natural  color 
leghorn  with  the  wide  brim  cut  into 
four  sections,  each  section  bound  in 
dark  blue.  "The  round  crown  Is  cov- 
ered with  dark  blue  and  the  only  trim- 
ming are  two  yellow  and  two  green 
roses,  arranged  In  pairs.  A  stunning 
hat  of  varnished  black  straw,  trimmed 
with  a  mustard  wing,  would  be  correct 
if  worn  with  a  mustard-colored  blue  or 
black  suit.  The  dress  hats  are  gay 
with  flowers,  those  for  wear  with  suits 
are  stunningly  tailored  and  the  sport 
hats  are  sparingly  trimmed  as  to  mate- 
rial, but  generously  trimmed  as  to 
color. 


WAY  down  South  In  the 
laud  of  sunshine,  in  a  quiet 
little      stream        that      flowed 

fentiy     through     the     cypress 
i>re3LB.     lived     old     Mr.  Gater 
and  his  family. 

For  many  years  he  had 
lived  In^  the  cave  made  by  the  great 
roots  of  a  tree;  so  many  years  that  he 
couldn't  even  remember  ever  living  In 
any  othef  place.  All  he  knew  was  that 
particular  stream  and  that  same  safe, 
comfortable  cave.  For  you  see  old 
Mr.  Gater  was  very  old — very,  very 
old!  Nobody  had  the  faintest  sort  of 
an  Idea  Just  how  old  he  was.  Per- 
haps he  knew,  but  he  certainly  did  not 
tell.  No,  sir!  Mr.  Gater  was  far  too 
clever  for  that!  He  never  told  any- 
thing— not  he!      ,. 

Of  course  If  anybody  had  been  very 
curious  they  might  have  examined  his 
teeth;  but  who  cares  enough  about  an 
alligator's  age  td  poke  their  fingers 
into  his  great,  fierce  Jaws,  or  to  count 
his  great,  sharp  teeth?  Not  I!  In- 
deed, no! 

So  Old  Mr.  Gater  lived  In  his  cave — 
maybe  a  hundred  years,  maybe  two 
hundred: — and  very  well  satisfied  was 
he  with  his  life  and  surroundings. 

When  the  cold  winds  blew  from  the 
sea.  some  distance  away,  he  crawled 
deep  into  the  hole  under  the  spreading 
roots  and  went  to  sleep  In  the  muddy 
water.  And  wbeil,'the  sun  shone  warm 
and  bright,  as  it  tnostiy  did,  he  awak- 

hla  fcleep  and  crawl 
Into  the   warmth   and  brightness. 

But  even  tliough  Mr.  Gater  was  well 
satisfied  wlJR  bis  quarters,  he  had  to 
admit  that  »  ivas  awkward  getting  up 
onto  the  shore.  , Alligators  have  hard 
work  turoln*  a^«und,  you  know.  They 
can  swim  and  erawl  and  float  and 
walk,  but  turning  around  Is  something 
they  never  do  unless  they  have  to — 
and  then  t\iey  Ao  It  awkwardly,  be- 
cause their  nebks  are  not  made  for 
graceful  turning.  And  the  way  his 
cave  was  planned  he  had  to  go  out  Into 
the  water  And  then  turn  around  and 
crawl  back  up  tjie  bank.  .^  ^     ^ 

"How  nlc»  It  vould  be.  said  he  to 
himself  many  a  time.  "If  I  had  a  nice 
log  here  handy t  Then  I  could  back 
out  sideways  froim  my  cave  and  crawl 
right  up  the  bajiK  on  the  log.  I  would 
surely  like  that." 


responded   In    the   true   Dogberry   style 
of  bungling   English. 

The  quotation.  "In  sweet  music  Is 
such  art  killing  care  and  grief  of 
heart."  Introduced  a  song  by  the  Col- 
lego  Women's  Glee  club.  entitled 
"Doris."  A  stunt  on  dlatetlcs  was  in- 
troduced by  "They  are  as  sick  that 
surfeit  with  too  much  as  they  that 
starve  with  nothing."  The  president's 
announcement.  "I  was  born  to  speak 
all  mirth  and  no  matter"  ("Much  Ado 
About  Nothing")  was  the  preface  to 
a  burlesque  on  the  wedding  scene  In 
that  play. 

The  Shakespearean  quotations  for 
the  menus  were  as  follows: 

"Will  It  please  you.  taste  of  what 
Is  here"  ("The  Tempest") — fruit  cock- 
tall. 

"Off  with  his  head"  ("King  Richard 
III") — creamed  chicken. 

"Let  the  sky  rain  potatoes"  ("Merry 
Wives  of  Windsor") — shoestring  po- 
tatoes. 

"Dry  as  a  remainder  biscuit  after 
voyage"    ("As  You  Like   It") — rolls, 

"Trifles  light  as  air"  ("Othello")— 
relishes. 

"My  salad  days  wh-en  I  was  green" 
("Anthony   and   Cleopatra") — salad. 

"Such  stuff  as  dreams  are  made  of" 
("The    Tempest") — cheese    wafers. 

"The  daintiest  last,  to  make  the  end 
more  sweet"  ("King  Richard  HI")— 
dessert. 

Sale  of  Hags  WiU 

Be  Continued 

As  there  was  no  organized  flag  day 
for  the  sale  of  Belgian  flags,  the 
members  of  the  D.  A.  R.  who  have 
flags  on  hand  will  continue  the  sale 
several  days  In  order  to  make  as 
much  as  possible  for  the  relief  of 
destitute  Belgians.  Flags  may  be 
bought  at  the  Spalding  hotel  and  from 
any  member  of  the  two  D.  A.  R.  chap- 
ters of  the  city.  The  minimum  cost 
of  each  flag  is  7  cents,  the  cost  of 
food  for  a  Belgian  for  one  day.  Per- 
sons who  wish  to  make  contributions 
to  the  cause  may  give  money  to  any 
D.  A.  R.  member  or  may  send  checks 
to  Mrs.  A.  E.  Walker,  regent  of  the 
Daughters  of  Liberty  chapter,  or  to 
Mrs.  W.  D.  Underbill,  regent  of  the 
Greysolon  du  Lhut  chapter. 

Mrs.  William  Cummlng  Story,  presi- 
dent general  of  the  D.  A.  R,.  desig- 
nated Saturday,  April  8,  the  birthday 
of  King  Albert  of  Belgium,  as  the  of- 
ficial tag  day.  but  the  Duluth  chap- 
ters received  Instructions  too  late  to 
plan  for  a  regular  tag  day  and  decided 
Instead  to  sell  the  flags  during  a 
period  of  several  days. 


Many  state  federations  are  out  for 
offices  In  the  General  Federation  of 
Women's  Clubs  that  will  hold  Its  bien- 
nial In  New  York  city  In  May.  For  the 
office  of  president,  Ohio  Is  putting 
forward  Mrs.  Samuel  B.  Sneath  of 
Tiffin,  who  Is  now  the  first  vice  presi- 
dent of  the  general  federation,  and 
California  has  as  her  candidate  Mrb. 
Joslah  Evans  Cowles  of  Los  Angeles, 
who  was  vice  president  at  the  time 
the  federation  was  entertalnt-d  'n  San 
Francisco,  but  withdrew  as  candidate 
for  the  office  of  president  because  her 
state  was  hostess. 

Massachusetts  announces  the  candi- 
dacy of  MisB  Georgle  A.  Bacon  of  Wor- 
cester for  first  vice  president.  Miss 
Bacon  Is  the  second  vice  president. 

Mrs.    Eugene    ReUly   of   Charlotte,  N. 
C,   corresponding  secretary   of  the  na- 
tional board  and  president  of  the  North 
Carolina   federation.   Is    put   up   by    her 
Ftate     as     another     candidate     for     the 
office      of      vice      president.      Michigan 
proposes  the  name  of  Mrs.  W^llllam  B. 
Williams    for    correspond<ng    secretary. 
Kentucky  wants   Mrs.   James  A.   Leech 
on   the   board  of  directors,   and  Arkan- 
sas names  as  her  candidate  for  a  place 
on   the  board   of  directors  Mrs.   Joseph 
Prauenthal,   and   Oregon   proposes   Mrs. 
Sarah  A.  Evans  as  a  board  member. 
Minnesota  Ont   of  It. 
As    the    president      must    be    chosen 
from  those  who  have  held  office  In  the 
general    federation,    Minnesota    is    out 
of  the  game  for  that  office,  but  it  has 
proposed   the   name   of  Mrs.  Thomas  F. 
Winter  of  Minneapolis  as  a  member  of 
the  board  of  directors.     She  Is  chairman 
of    the    department    of    literature    and 
library    extension    of   the    general    fed- 
eration. ,  .,,    , 

The  Minnesota  delegation  will  leave 
in  a  body  May  19  for  Chicago,  where 
they  win  be  joined  by  delegations  from 
North  and  South  Dakota  and  other 
states.  The  following  Minnesota  women 
have  made  reservations  for  the  trip  and 
for  accommodations  at  the  state  head- 
quarters, the  Hotel  Astor: 

Minneapolis — Mrs.  WUllam  .  T.  Coe, 
president  of  the  Minnesota  Federation 
of  Woman's  Clubs;  Mrs.  Thonias  O. 
Winter,  chairman  of  the  General  Fed- 
eration of  W^omen's  Club  committee  on 
literature  and  library  extension;  Mrs. 
J  C.  Buchanan,  president  of  the  Fifth 
district  of  the  Minnesota  federation; 
Mrs.  James  Jennlson.  chairman  of  the 
highways  committee  of  the  M.  F.  w. 
C  ■  these  are  state  delegates.  Dele- 
eates  from  clubs  In  the  Fifth  district 
Ire  Mrs.  Casslus  M.  Ferguson,  presi- 
dent of  the  Minneapolis  Woman  s  club; 
Mrs.  A.  Blanchard,  president  of  Brown 
Study  club;  Mrs.  A-  W.  Morse  of  the 
Tuesday  club;  Mrs.  James  »•  S'^^^- 
president   of_  the  Tourist  club:   Mrs^  J 


until  last  year  president  of  the  M.  F. 
W.  C.  Miss  Josephine  Brower.  vice 
chairman  of  the  General  Federation 
of  Women's  Clubs'  committee  on  liter- 
ature and  library  extension. 

Cloquet — Mrs.  Peter  Oleson.  presi- 
dent Eighth  district.  M.  F.  W.  C. 

Mankato — Mrs.   J.   C.   Holman. 

Moorhead — Mrs.  William  Russell, 
president  of  the  Ninth  district  M.  F. 
W.    C. 

Cloquet — Mrs.   F.  D.  Vibert. 

Duluth — Mrs.  J.  B.  Harbison.  Mrs.  P. 
U  De  Volst,  Mrs.  Harriet  Carey,  Mrs. 
J.   L.    Washburn. 

Plalnview — Mrs.   G.   F.    Sylvester. 

Marshall — ^Mrs.  M.  E.  Mathews,  chair- 
man of  the  civic  committee  of  the 
M.  F.  W.  C. 

Fergus  Falls — Mrs.  George  E.  Welch, 
vice  chairman  of  the  General  Federa- 
tion committee  on  public  health. 

Tracy — Mrs.    E.   B.    Korns. 

White  Bear — Mrs.  Anna  Y.   Clarke. 

Faribault — Mrs.  Edgar  H.  Loyhed, 
General  Federation  secretary  of  the  M. 
F.  W.  C;  Mrs.  Robert  Mee.  Mrs.  W.  B. 
Allen. 

Northfleld — Miss  Eleanor  Gladstone. 

International  Falls — Miss  Annie 
Shelland. 

Scandinavian  W.  C.  T.  U. 

Scandinavian  W.  C.  T.  U.  win  meet 
tomorrow  at  2  o'clock  with  Miss  Marie 
Helam.  2217  West  First  street.  The 
subject  for  discussion  will  be  "The  At- 
titude of  the  Public  School  Toward  the 
Bible."     The  leader  will  be  Mrs.  O.  Q. 

Olson. 

» 

Handicraft  Exhibit 

Will  Open  April  20 

An  art  and  handicraft  exhibit  that 
wUl  open  Thursday.  April  20.  and  wlU 
continue  until  Saturday,  April  29,  on 
the  first  floor  of  the  Hartley  build- 
ing, 740  Ea.«it  Superior  street,  will  be 
held  by  artists  and  handicraftsmen  of 
the  city.  This  wUl  be  the  first  ex- 
hibit of  the  kind  for  Duluth  and  near- 
ly forty  prominent  women  have  ao« 
cepted  the  invitation  to  act  as  patron- 
esses. Among  those  who  will  contrib- 
ute to   the  exhibit  are: 

Mrs.  Gordon  Paterson,  mlnlaturesj 
Miss  Vivian  Perry,  china,  Jewelry; 
Miss  Laura  Stark,  water  colors,  pen 
and  Ink.  china;  Clarence  C.  Rosen- 
kranz,  oils;  Mrs.  Frank  E.  Barker, 
Japanese  handicraft;  Miss  Fern  New- 
strand,  embroideries;  Mrs.  H.  F. 
Green,  baskets  and  Jewelry;  Villa 
Scholastlca,  tapestries;  William  Chal- 
mers Agnew.  Jr.,  book  bindings  and 
book  plates;  Miss  Gertrude  L.  Carey, 
;  high  school  work  In  pottery,  JewelrjT 
and   metal   work;   David   Ericson,   ollsj 


)WNE" 


1      KID  FITTING  \J        = 

Silk  GLOVES      | 

Women  acquainted  wilh  g 

_     Fownes  quality  in  ALL  ^ 

^    kinds  of    gloves,   are  ^ 

^    demanding  rowncs  SiLK  ^ 

^    gloves, — with  reason.  ^ 

^    Smartest,  most  satisfactory,   g 
— but  they  cost  no  more.    ^ 

, All   lengths,    sizes    ftnd    = 

^=    shades.  ^= 

Double'tipped  ?  ^= 

—Of  course  I  ^^ 

Ask  your  dealer         ^^ 


I^eggy  Peabody's  Observations 

The  Meanest  Flirt  of  All 


Young  men  easily  fall  a  prey  to  the 
wiles  of  silly,  sentimental.  Idle  married 
women.  Such  women  rarely  have  an 
atom    of    love    for    anyone    but    thcm- 

selves.  Certainly 
they  respect  no  one 
and  least  of  all 
those  whom  they 
fool  and  flatter  In- 
to the  idea  that 
they  are  the  center 
of  their  heart's  In- 
terest. Sometimes 
unhapplness  in  the 
home  circle  causes 
11,  but  It  Is  usually 
the  dissipation  to 
which  a  wicked, 
vain  and  wholly  ir- 
responsible and  un- 
scrupulous woman 
resorts      when      the 


L 


calm  and  quiet  of  hor  home  begins  to 
pall  upon  her. 

A  married  woman  who  courts  admi- 
ration and  attention  from  other  men, 
nn<i  who  deceives  her  husband.  Is  con- 
temptible. But  what  about  the  man 
who  steals  the  affections  of  another 
man's  wife  and  snoaklngly  usurps  the 
position  which  the  husband  thinks  he 
holds  and  which  he  Is  entitled  to  hold 
by  every  law  of  God  and  man?  It  is 
hard  to  understand  what  makes  the 
P'islUon  of  a  man  wh6  will  stoop  to 
making  love  to  another  man's  wife  «n- 


makJng  love  to  an< 
I  Jurable   to  himself 


I  am  Inclined  to  the  belief  that  men 
stand  together,  shoulder  to  shoulder, 
and  that  when  It  comes  to  the  decep- 
tion and  trickery  of  one  another  they 
are  apt  to  call  a  halt.  Yet  a  man 
will  accept  favors  and  flattery  from 
the  wife  of  a  man  he  calls  his  best 
friend,  sit  at  a  table  and  eat  his  bread 
and  under  his  very  eyes,  almost,  rob 
him  of  his  choicest  treasure,  his  wife's 
honor,  nay.  his  very  own,  since  mar- 
riage makes  them  one. 

And  what  affect  does  this  condition 
of  affairs  have  upon  a  man  who  Is  not 
married?  It  fills  blm  with  a  suspicion 
of  all  women.  His  love  for  conquest 
of  this  nature,  his  appetite  for  flattery 
and  his  passion  for  excitement  and 
the  danger  that  he  risks  unconsciously 
directs  him  toward  that  class  of  women 
who  win  pander  to  his  appetites  and 
consequently  make  him  think  less  and 
less  of  woman  as  a  whole.  Some  of 
them  even  make  bold  to  remark  that 
there   are   no   good    women. 

Young  men  should  marry  and  con- 
fine themselves  to  loving  tholr  own 
wives,  which  means  providing  for  their 
own'  families.  When  a  man  has  a  mil- 
lion dollars  or  a  small  portion  of  that 
amount  there  is  no  reason  why  he 
should  not  hnve  a  home  and  a  wife  and 
children  of  his  own.  And  there  are 
good  women  enough  In  the  world  from 
which  a  man  may  make  a  choice  with- 
out having  to  steal  the  affections  of 
another  man's  wife  and  without  ne- 
cessitating that  all  his  Intimate  wom- 
en friends  be  married  women. 


S^'huXs"  president  of  the  Ramblers;    Cowan     &    Zimmerman,    art    furniture 
R-  Hugnes,  Pit^siaeiii.  ui    ii«7  ~,o.a.   McXAtLT  Holansbe.   Miss  Isa- 


Mrs  'f  F.  Kinney  of  the  Columbian 
club;  Mrs.  C.  C.  Crane  of  the  Olympian 
club-  Mrs.  Bella  Armstrong.  Mrs.  IC  E 
Moe.  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Bruer.  Mrs.  Carl 
Thaver  Mrs.  Alice  Morse.  Mrs.  J-,». 
Poonlr  Mrs  K.  L.  Chrlstman;  Mrs. 
Charies  W  Cartwrlght.  chairman 
dramasectlon  of  the  general  federa- 
Uon    committee    on    Uterature    and    11- 

^^ll'^pJil-X  Kltt  Clum.  president 
of  the  Fourth  district.  M.  F.  W;  9:' 
Miss  Agnes  Peterson,  ««««  rs  ^  Ne  e 
Smith.    Mrs.    J.    W.    Smith.    Mrs.    Nelle 

'^''^^Cloud— Mrs.  Clarence  L.  Atwood, 


I  and  rugs;  Reldar  Holansbe.  Miss  Isa- 
belle  Patrick,  book  binding;  Minne- 
apolis   Handicraft    guild.    Jewelry    aJid 

metal  work. 

•   - 

Personal  Mention 

Mrs.  Seth  Marshall.  1914  East  Second 
street,   will  return   Wednesday  from  a 

short  trip  to  Minneapolis. 
»  •  • 
Miss  Mary  Weiss,  Miss  Isabel  Ja- 
cobi;  Miss  Mary  FItzImmons  and  Miss 
Helen  Klrkwood,  who  have  been 
spending  their  Easter  vacation  at 
their  respective  homes  h«re,  will  re- 
turn    tomorrow    to    Faribault,     Minn., 


(gr  RUTH 


m 


Cheating 


Alligators     have     hard     work     turatng 
around,  yoa  know. 

Over  and  over  again  he  wished  for 
that  log;  but  he  never  did  anything  to 
bring  such  a  log  there — not  he!  If  you 
m-ant  to  think  that  old  Mr.  Gater  was 
lazy,  you  will  think  Just   about  right! 

But  Indeed,  If  he  had  wanted  to  work 
and  bring  a  log  there  (which  he  didn't) 
there  was  nothfijg  he  could  have  done; 
for  the  stream  Itself  must  bring  the 
logs. 

And  then  one  day.  Just  when  he 
wanted  It  jnost.  a  great  log  came 
floating  down  right  to  his  cave,  and 
It  stuck  In 'the  Bank  Just  where  Mr. 
Gater  wanted  It  to. 

"Ah.  me,"  said  Mr.  Gater,  as  he 
crawled  out  on  the  log  and  sunned 
himself  contentedly,  "everything  comes 
to  him  who  ^alts^  and  this  log  Is  sure- 
ly worth  waltlnjf;  for!" 

(Copyrf^lit— C^m  Inimra  Jud«on.) 

I  Tomorrow  ^  Tile     Mnple     Seeds    Ride 


HERE  are  certain  quotations 
that  I  find  It  an  excellent 
thing  to  cite  to  myself  about 
once  In  so  often.  One  Is  that 
familiar  line  of  Canon  Farrar. 
which  I  have  so  frequently 
quoted  to  you.  "The  only  real 
failure  possible  is  not  to  have  been 
true  to. the  best  one  know* 

Another  is  the  equally  familiar 
warning  from  Stevenson,  "There  Is  an 
Idea  abroad  among  moral  people  that 
they  should  make  their  neighbors 
good  One  person  I  have  to  make 
good— myself.  But  my  duty  to  my 
neighbor  Is  much  more  nearly  ex- 
pressed by  saying  that  I  have  to  make 
him  happy— *lf  I  may.'" 

And  another,  and  this  Is  the  one 
that  started  me  off  today— Is  Kipling  s. 
"Something  great  and  wise  and  good 
Done  by  nverely  wishing  we  could. 
Coagratulatins  Myself  Wfce«  I  Doa't 
Deserve  It. 
Every  once  In  a  while  I  catch  my- 
self feeling  a  glow  of  satisfaction  and 
achievement,  which,  boiled  down  (I 
don't  suppose  you  can  boll  a  glow 
down,  but  the  purist  will  please  ex- 
cuse the  mixed  nrvetaphor).  amounts  to 
nothing  at  all  but  a  ridiculous  self- 
congratulation  over  things  I  merely 
plan  to  do  or,  even  more  vaguely, 
dream   of   doing. 

I  decide  that  I  will  surely  send 
Easter  cards  to  all  those  dear  old 
friends  from  whom  the  abominable 
busyness  of  modern  life  has  separated 
me  Vague  fragments  of  graceful 
messages  I  will  write  float  through  my 
mind,  and  without  a  card  bought  or 
written,  I  find  myself  in  a  beatific, 
self-approving    state   of   mind. 


Getting    Bark    One's    Self-Respect    By 
Promises. 

A  meeting  with  a  really  energetic, 
efflclant  woman  awakens  me  to  the 
recognition  that  I  am  not  doing  half 
so  much  as  I  ought.  I  am  disgusted 
with  myself.  How  do  1  get  back  my 
self-respect?  By  painfully  exerting 
myself  to  do  a  little  more  that  very 
day?  No,  by  grandly  planning  out  a 
new  schedule  of  work  to  be  entered 
upon  tomorrow  or  the  day  after. 

Again,  I  find  myself  dreaming  of 
what  I  would  do  for  some  needy  pen- 
sioner If  I  could  only  sell  a  certain 
piece  of  work.  A  pleasant  glow  of 
self-approval  follows  this  hypotheti- 
cal charity,  and  my  sense  of  my  obli- 
gation to  help  now,  whether  I  sell  that 
work  or  not.  Is  thereby  diminished. 

I  have  outlined  my  own  state  of 
mind  because  It  Is  the  only  mind  I 
can  see  straight  Into,  but  I  rather  sus- 
pect that  It  Is  not  unique.  Kipling 
couldn't  have  written  those  lines  if 
It  were. 

DoBt    Olve    Tenrself    Tifareetlea. 

Of  course  there  are  some  who  will 
say  that  It  does  not  do  any  harm  to 
get  this  blf  of  Inexpensive  pleasure 
out  of  life,  but  I  think  it  does.  It's 
accepting  the  imitation  for  the  real. 
It's  giving  our  minds  a  narcotlic  and 
lulling  them  to  a  false  content. 

If  we  didn't  have  our  Intended 
achievements,  our  hypothetical  chari- 
ties, to  plume  ourselves  upon,  we 
should  have  to  have  real  ones. 

Take  away  this  screen  of  pretense 
between  you  and  yourself.  See  your- 
self as  you  are.  Refuse  to  be  content 
with 

"Something    great   and   wise   and    good 
Done    by    merely    wishing    we    could." 

I  (Protected  bj  Ad«iM  Newspaper  Serrloe.) 


ADollar-M  eal  For 

Five  CcntSe  The  most 
expensive  foods  are  quite 
often  endrdy  Iflcldng  in  food 
value.  They  do  not  build 
mnBde  or  eoppJy  energy, 
Measuiied  by  the  cost  of 
most  foods,  a  breakfost  or 
luncheon  of  Shredded 
Wheat  with  milk  and  cream 
is  worth  a  dollar — and  the 
oost  is  not  over  five  cents. 
Two  Biscuits  win  supply  all 
the  strength  needed  for  a 


half  day's  woxk  or  play. 


lAade  at  Niagara  Falls,  W.  Y< 


paster  fireetlHfl! 

Be  an  early  bird  and  order  from 

DULUTH  FLORAL  CO. 

121   WEST   SUPERIOR   ST. 


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I 


Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  10, 1916. 


they    are    attending    St.    Mary'a 


I 


■where 

»•"•  .      .       . 

Mrs  W.  A.  McOonasrlc  of  Hunter's 
Park  '  returned  yesterday  from  a 
month*  visit  In  th.-  East  at  her  for- 
mer home  at  Methiien,  Mass.,  and  with 
her  daughter,  Mary,  who  is  altendinff 
Mount  Holyoko  college. 

•  «      • 

MlAS  (Seitrudu  IX)Kan,  6  Dacey 
apartments,  left  today  for  Detroit, 
Mich.,  to  Join  her  mother.  Mra.  George 
I>ogan.  Th^-y  will  visit  for  several 
months  In   Detroit  and   other   Eastern 

points. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  David  Putnam,  Jr.,  and  son  of 
Columbus,  Ohio,  are  the  guests  of  Mrs. 
Putnam's  mother.  Mrs.  Lucius  V. 
Whipple  of  Hunter's  Park.  Frank 
Whipple,  who  has  b^en  In  Montana 
for  9om«  time.  Is  also  visiting  his 
moth«r. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  James  Oray  of  1627  East  Sec- 
ond street  returned  Saturday  from  a 
«lx   months'   Southern   trip. 

•  •       • 
Mrs.    W.    H.     Tlscher    and    rtauphter 

have  returned  to  th*-lr  home  in  Tower 
after  a  week's  visit  with  Mrs.  Tlsch- 
er's  parents.  Mr.  und  Mrs.  R.  G.  Proud- 
lock  of  816^  Third  avenue  east. 
«  e  « 
Mrs.  Rollo  Magnus  and  son  ot  In- 
ternatlonnl  Falls  are  quests  of  Mrs. 
Magnus'  parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  K.  U. 
Proudlock   of  31CVi    Third  avenue  east. 

•  «       • 
Mrs.  J.  J.   Moe  and  daughter,  Agnes, 

2207  West  Third  street,  will  Itave  the 
middle  of  the  month  for  a  trip  to  Nor- 
way, where  they  will  spend  the  sum- 
mer. 

•  *       • 

Mrs.  Whipple  Parrot.  Jr..  of  Minne- 
haha. Minn.,  who  has  been  the  guest 
of  her  parents  here  over  the  week- 
end,  has   returned   to  her  home. 

•  «       • 
Mrs.    J.    W.    Snyder   of    this    city    was 

one  of  the  Ruests  of  honor  at  a  lun>h- 
fon  given  Friday  of  last  week  by  Mrs. 
C.  V.  Fitzalmmons,  2621  Second  ave- 
nue, Minneapolis.  Spring  flowers 
formed  the  decorations. 

•  •       • 
Mrs.    John    Hellier.    1231    Irving   ave- 
nue   north,    will    spend    the    spring    and 
wiinimer   here   as   the   guest   of   her   son, 
H.    W.    Hellier.    Ill    Norton    avenue. 

«  *  * 
Deane  G.  Davis.  1222  East  First 
street,  will  return  Wednesday  from 
Madl.'ton.  where  he  ts  attending  the 
I'niversity  of  WlatHinwln,  to  pa.sa  the 
Eister   \aeution    at    home. 

•  •       • 
Mrs.   Harry    J.    Psker    of    Paker.    Or.. 

will  leave  tonight  for  her  home,  after 
visiting  her  sister.  Mrs.  John  h..  Mac- 
Gregor,    Jefferson    street. 

•  «       « 
Howard    Sukeforth.    a    Junior    at    the 

TTniversity  of  Wisconsin,  Is  expected 
Wednesday  to  pass  a  week  at  th«i 
home  of  his  parents.  Dr  L.  A-  ^"'*<": 
forth    and    Mr.s.    Sukeforth,     1001     tast 

First    street. 

*  •       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  David  H.  Williams. 
6619  London  road,  have  left  for  a  vl.slt 
at     Toledo     with     their    son,     David     H. 

Williams,   Jr. 

*  «       « 

T  Sherk  of  Mankatn  1.9  the  guest 
of  his  Hister.  Mr.*..  H.  L.  Coffin.  1926 
Woodland  avenue. 

*  *       « 

Mrs.  Robert  Teinpleman  of  Edmon- 
ton. Ont..  Is  a  guest  at  the  home  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Robert  Templeman.  1607 
Woodland   avenue. 

•  •       • 
Dr.    E.    H.     Ijower     and     Mrs.     Lower 

have     returned      from      California 

will   be  at   home  at  the  St.  Louis  hotel 

for    the   summer. 

«  *  * 
Jay  Atwood  arrived  Saturday  night 
from'  r;nlahad  school  at  Hudson.  Wis., 
for  a  few  days'  visit  at  the  home  of 
his  parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  J.  At- 
wood.   1941    Waverly   avenue. 

•  •       ♦ 
John    F.     Segog.    1127    London    road. 

has  returned  from  a  trip  to  Wyoming. 

♦  •       • 
Mrs     N.    F.    Hugo,    2407    East     Third 

str.  et.  has  returned  with  her  daugh- 
ter. Mrc.  Robert  Duane  Smith  of  \\  In- 

nipeg. 

•  *       ♦ 

Mrs  Oscar  Rittmaster  (Maude  Kerr) 
is  visiting  at  the  home  of  her  par- 
ents. Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  A.  Kerr,  62/ 
East  Fourth  street.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ritt- 
master have  been  In  the  South  since 
their  marriage  Just  before  Christmas. 
an<l   Mr.   Rittmaster  will  be  in   Indiana 

Indertnttely. 

«       ♦       • 

Mr  and  Mrs.  Robert  McMartln  and 
children.  Ranald  and  Catherine.  6421 
Glenwood  street,  have  returned  from 
a   two   months'    stay   In   California. 

Mrs.  George  P.  Wood.  6726  Oneida 
street  Is  passing  the  week-end  In 
Minneapolis  as  the  guest  of  her  sis- 
ter Mrs.  Harvey  Gardner.  Early  In 
the  week,  she  will  leave  with  her  hus* 
band  and  childrt-n  for  Detroit,  Mich., 
to  make  their  home.  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
George  Ostergren  and  son.  formerly  of 
Crosby,  arc  now  the  guests  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Wood  and  Mrs.  K.  A.  Ostergren, 
nnd    will    accompany    the    Wood    family 


to   Detroit,   where   they  too   will   make 
their  home. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  A.  Pegelow  of 
Eveleth  ar«  the  week-end  guests  of 
Miss  Flora  Postal,  1324  East  Eleventh 
street. 

•  *       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Gcorgo  P.  Baxter  have 
returned  to  Duluth  after  spending  four 
months    In    the    East    and    have    taken 
an   apartment    In    the    Granville. 
«      •      • 

Mrs.  Sarah  Erlckson  and  grandson, 
Joseph,  of  Virginia,  Minn.,  are  visiting 
friends  and  relatives  here.  Before  re- 
turning to  their  home  they  will  visit 
Mrs.  Emll  Johnson  at  Scanlon.  Minn. 
♦ 


AMUSEMENTS 


TONIGHT'S  ATTRACTIONS. 


LYCEUM— Jack     Held     and    his 

ord    Pr«akers."    burlesque. 
NEW    GllAND— Vaudeville    and 
lays. 

"In    "Hoodoo 


plaL 
REX— Mae    Marsh 

photopLiy. 
LYRIC— Robert 


"Rec- 

photo- 

Ann," 

Oene- 
Sacrl- 

Lovely 


Mantell      and 
vleve    Hamper    In    "A    Wife's 
flee,"    photoplay. 
ZELDA— Mary  Miles  Mlnter  in  • 
Mary,"    photoplay. 

BURLESQUE 'at  LYCEUM. 

"Record  Breakers"  Attract  Two  Big 
Audiences;  Comedy  Kept  Clean. 

Jack    Itfid    and    the    "Record    Break- 

I  ers,"    burlesquers,       staged     a    two-act 

melange    of    comedy    and    songs    before 

I  two     well     filled     houses     yesterday     at 

I  the    Lyceum,    In    opening    a    four-days 

engagement   in    Duluth. 

Rtld  is  a  comedian  of  some  ability, 
shining  particularly  in  the  role  of  a 
"snowbird."  His  slelghride  in  the  sec- 
ond act  was  particularly  good.  In 
the  first  act  lie  assumes  the  character 
of  an  Irishman,  who  Indulges  In  a  lit- 
tle fling  at  the  Frisco  fair  without 
the  knowledge  of  his  wife — who  has 
the    same    Idea. 

The  girls  In  the  chorus  are  not  hard 
to  look  at  and  the  costuming  was 
much  better  than  the  average.  The 
comedy  was  clean — perhaps  dlsap- 
pointly  so  to  some  of  those  who  at- 
tended yesterday's  offerings.  The  per- 
formance as  a  whole  was  much  above 
the    average    of    burlesque. 

Theater  Gossip. 

A  new  song  by  Harry  Lauder  has 
become    an     event.       It     Is    announced 

that    he   will   sing   at 

HARRY   I.AI'DER   least    six    new     oneg 

CO>H:v<i  TO  TIIK  during     his      coming 

ORPIIKIM  visit    to   this   city    at 

the  Orpheum-Strand 
Thursday  afternoon  and  evening. 
April  20.  What  has  made  the  Lauder 
songs  so  popular  Is  their  peculiar 
catchy  lilt  and  tlie  simplicity  of  the 
lyrics  which  makes  audi*  nces  take  up 
the  songs  with  Lauder  and  his  audit- 
ors bect>nie  old  friends  on  the  moment. 
Mr.  I^auder.  on  this  occasion,  will 
be  making  his  eighth  annual  tour  of 
America  and  not  only  is  It  the  long- 
est tour  he  has  made,  but  everywhere 
he  has  appeared  he  has  more  than 
equaled  the  favor  with  which  he  was 
formerly  received  and  that  means 
hundreds  have  been  turned  away  at 
every  one  of  lils  performances.  WU- 
?r.i  :11am  Morris,  eager  to  surround  his 
great  star  with  a  suitable  company, 
has  combed  the  vaudeville  markets  of 
Europe  and  America  for  novel  acts. 
In  this  Instance,  the  company  will 
Include  the  Al  Golem  troupe  of  six- 
teen dancers,  acrobats  and  comedians 
who  have  never  appeared  In  this  coun- 
try before;  Mile.  Lxicllle  and  her  talk- 
ing cockatoo;  Selwyn  Driver  and  his 
humorous  and  novel  piano  specialty, 
Dave  Oenero  and  Isabelle  Jason  In  a 
series  of  dances,  and  Albert  Donnelly, 
the    silent    humorist    in    shadowgraphlc 

art. 

*      *      * 

T\'"ho  was  it  said  that  the  romance  of 
today  is  to  be  found  In  the  buslnesa 
world? 

George  M.  Cohan  has  gone  one  bet- 
ter— has  proved  that  the  best  field  for 
farce  Is  that  same  hustling  American 
business   world. 

Having  alreadv  proved  It  in  his  "Get- 
Rich  -  guick  Walllng- 
COHAN  F.^RCE  ford."  he  has  produced 

CO>II><i  TO  another  farce  called 
THB  LVCEl'M.  "It  Pays  to  Advertise." 
which  comes  to  the 
Lyceum  theater  Sunday.  April  16.  for 
four  nights  and  Wednesday  matinee, 
with  the  reputation  of  being  another 
"Walllngford." 

While  the  piece  Is  accredited  to  Rol 
Cooper  Megrue  and  Walter  Hackett. 
there  Is  said  to  be  apparent  throughout 
Its  action  the  skillful  and  individual 
touch   of   Mr.   Cohan.  ,...., 

The  farce  is  said  to  have  all  the  dex- 
terity of  a  game,  and  to  keep  the  audi- 
ence guessing,  and  even  when  the  fun 
is  at   Its  fastest  the  fundamental   com- 


Only  thcQioiccsl  Selected  Olives 

are  usedtoptx)ducetKefedTious 

"OLD  MONK' 

OLIVE  OIL 

TKe  Highest  Standaira  of  QuaJlly. 
Made  ajul  Bottled  i  r\  NICB .  FR  AVCK 
FOR   PEOPLE  WHO   DISCRIMINATE 


mon   sense  back  of  It  all  helps  to  give 
th«   necessary   punch. 

It  all  begins  with  the  plot  of  a 
wealthy  soap  manufacturer  to  get  his 
easy-going  son  Interested  In  buBlness. 
His  stenographer  enters  into  the  con- 
spiracy, and  tho  two  find  their  plot 
works  only  too  well. 

On  money  obtained  from  father  him- 
self the  boy  embarks  as  a  rival  soap 
manufacturer  and  gives  the  old  man  a 
run  for  the  money.  It  Is  see-saw  be- 
tween them,  and  the  ups  and  down* 
make  one  of  the  breeziest  farces  of 
the  season. 

e      •      • 

Representative  acts  of  good  vaude- 
ville make   up   the   bill   at   the   popular 

New     Grand     this 

nKAL  OLD  half  of  the  week. 

80LDIBR9  OX  Real    Civil    war 

\KW  UHAXD  BILL,  veterans    are    the 

Three  Old  Soldier 
Musicians,  who  offer  a  specialty  en- 
titled. "From  Reveille  to  Lights  Out. 
The  cast  Is  composed  of  George  Patter- 
son, bugler  of  Eighth  Pennsylvania 
Cavalry,  Army  of  the  Potomac;  John 
M.  Raymond,  Eleventh  Michigan  In- 
fantry, national  drum  major  C.  W.  M., 
and  George  W.  Wolfe,  Fourteenth  Illi- 
nois Cavalry.  Army  of  the  Cumberland, 
music  that  was  popular  during  the 
Civil  war  times  Is  blended  Into  their 
offering  which  is  brimful  of  humor  and 
pathos  and   is  excellent  entertainment. 

Merle's  Cockatoos  are  another  im- 
portant feature.  A  score  of  these  beau- 
tiful birds  decorate  the  stage,  making 
It  a  bower  of  beauty  while  they  go 
through  a  series  of  stunts  that  are 
truly   remarkable. 

"Breaking  the  Banks"  is  the  comedy 
offering  of  Sullivan  and  Mason,  two 
clever  singing  and  talking  comedians. 
There  is  excellent  harmony  In  their 
songs  and  a  good  hearty  laugh  in 
every  line  of  their  chatter.  The  FolUs 
Sisters  and  Le  Roy  offer  a  series  of 
songs  and  dances  that  are  new  and  re- 
freshing. Mr.  Le  Roy  Is  a  clever 
comedian  and  an  excellent  foil  for  the 
two  girls  who  are  most  versatile  enter- 
tainers. 

A  powerful  psychological  drama  in 
three  acta,  "The  Devil  the  .Servant,  and 
the  Man."  featuring  Guy  Oliver.  Kath- 
lyn  Williams.  Vivian  Reed  and  Jean 
Eraser,  topllne  among  the  photoplays. 
One  of  the  clever  Sis  Hopkins  comedies, 
"Almost  a  Heroine,"  Is  among  the  other 

film  stories. 

*  •      • 

Genevieve   Hamper,    said    by   some   to 
be   "the   woman    with   the  most   beauti- 
ful face  on  earth,'" 
ROBERT  M.WTELL   may    not    impress 

AT  TUE  LVUrC.      all    who    eaw     her 

Sunday  at  the 
Lyric  as  being  entitled  to  the  honor; 
biit  fhe  Is  so  called,  and  she  also  acts, 
and  acts  well.  Miss  Hamper  In  a  strong 
picture  story  and  Robert  Mantell  make 
a  happy  combination.  These  stars  and 
their  company  will  be  seen  today,  to- 
night and  Tuesday  In  "A  Wife  s  Sacri- 
fice." The  story  gives  Mantell  and 
Miss  Hamper  fine  opportunity  for  their 
very    best    work. 

William  Fox  has  the  happy  faculty 
of  choosing  combinations  like  Mantell 
and  his  co-workers  in  "A  Wife's  Sac- 
rifice,' with  a  view  of  balancing  each 
other,  that  each  player  will  make  each 
part  live.  Little  Jane  Lee.  one  of  the 
Fox  Juvenile  actors,  appears  in  this 
play  and  displays  a  fine  bit  of  child- 
like anger,  when  she  expresses  her 
hatred  for  "Peppo."  Peppo  is  Stuart 
Holmes,  but  the  Inside  secret  of  her 
good  showing  of  anger  is.  according  to 
studio  gossip,  that  little  Jane  just  hates 
monkeys,  and  gets  so  mad  because  she 
has  to  give  Peppo's  monkey  a  coin, 
that  she  displays  a  tempest  that  shows 
Itself  as   the   real    thing. 

•  *       « 

Mae  Marsh,  whom  the  Saturday  Eve- 
ning Post  honored   in   Its  last  issue  by 

reproducing       her 

MAE   .MARSH    POP-   picture   at    the    top 

ILAR   AT   IIJ-:X.      of     the     page,    was 

on  hand  bright  and 
early  Sunday  for  her  first  and  very  lat- 
est moving  picture  success — "Hoodoo 
Ann."  at  the  Rex. 

Miss  Marsh  and  her  fiance.  Robert 
Harron,  will  be  seen  today  and  tomor- 
row H.  B.  Warn.  r.  the  English  actor 
famed  for  his  "Alias  Jimmy  Valentine 
on  the  speaking  stage,  with  a  ^Kood 
company,  will  be  seen  in  "The  Raid- 
ers" Dorothv  Dalton  plays  in  this  pic- 
ture also,  and  Is  seen  In  her  daring 
drive  In  a  racing  automobile  down  a 
treacherous  winding  mountain.  This  Is 
not  mentioned  as  being  a  drawing  card 
for  the  play — It  Is  merely  an  Incident. 
Thomas  H.  Ince.  the  producer,  never 
does  things  by  halves.  The  story  is  a 
eood  one  as  well. 

Little  Mary  Miles  Mlnter.  the  "flower 

of   the   screen,"      in   the   stellar   role   of 

"Lovely  Mary,"  a  flve- 

"FLOWER  OF    part      Metro     "wonder- 

SCREE.X"  AT   play."    opened   a    three- 

TllE  /.KLDA.     day  engagement  at  the 

Zelda    yesterday. 

Miss  Mlnter  has  a  strong  supporting 

cast,  including  Thomas  J.  Carrlgan.  her 

new    leading      man;      Ferd.      Tidmarsh. 

Frank      de   Vernon.      Ruseell      Simpson. 

Schuyler  Ladd,  Myra  Brooks  and  Harry 

Ulakemore.  .    .. 

"Lovely  Mary"  Is  a  story  of  the 
Southland,  with  a  beautiful  love  story 
with  a  novel  setting  and  background. 
There  were  many  excellent  phc>to- 
graphs  made  in  the  picturesque  dis- 
tricts of  Florida.  Many  historic  build- 
ings and  scenes  are  shown  In  the  pro- 
duction, besides  the  state  prison  camps 
around  which  the  story  was  written. 

Miss  Mlnter  has  a  strong  role.  It  is 
a  tvpical  Mlnter  part,  and  gives  her  an 
opportunity  to  display  to  the  full  her 
youthful  charms,  together  with  her 
dramatic  ability.     She  was  last  seen  on 

..    .        i«  "Dimples,     '  Em- 

Always  in  the 


REMORSEFUL, 
SEEKS  DEATH 


i^ 


Unable  to  Remain  True  to 
Wife,  Frank^Johnson  At- 
tempts Suicide. 


Drinks  Carbolic  Acid  in  Sa- 
loon; Saved  By  Police 
Surgeon. 


and     then  ^ 


After  brooding  over  his  inflJelity  to 
his  wife,  Frank  W.  Johnson,  former 
employe  of  a  Duluth  brewery,  tried  to 
commit  suicide  In  a  saloon  at  621  West 
Superior  street  Saturday  night  by 
drinking  carbolic  acid.  The  bartender 
knocked  the  vial  from  his  lips,  and 
Police  Surgeon  Harry  Klein  used  a 
stomach  pump  a  few  minutes  later, 
overcoming  the  effects  of  the  poison. 

Borrowing  a  pencil  from  the  bar- 
tender, Johnson  scribbled  a  brief  note 
to  his  wife,  addressing  It  to  her  at 
1616  East  South  street, 
turned   to  drink   the  poison. 

Written  In  Swedish,  the  note  was 
translated  as  follows: 

"Mrs.  F.  W.  Johnson — I  will  now 
let  you  know  where  I  am,  which 
is  In  Duluth,  but  I  think  this  will 
be  my  end.  I  am  seeking  death.  I 
can't  live  to  think  of  all  the  mis- 
ery  I   have   caused   you.     FRANK-" 

Police  said  the  man  was  discouraged 
b«cause  of  his  inability  to  renounce 
his  many  women  friends.  Letters  from 
his  wife  and  from  various  women 
friends,  and  several  photographs  of 
women,  were  found  In  his  pockets. 
Some  of  these  letters  were  from 
Roseau  county  and  were  signed  "Eli- 
vira"   or    "Hilda." 

For  the  last  winter  Johnson  had 
been  employed  at  Erlckson  &  Long's 
camp.  Eveleth.  H*  formerly  was  a 
driver  for  the  JHoose  brewery  and  was 
a  member  of  the  Brewery  Employes' 
union.  He  was  arraigned  In  municipal 
court  today  on  a  charge  of  drunken- 
ness, but  disposition  of  his  case  was 
deferred. 


St.  Paul  Grand  Opera 

Festival 

Easter  Mon.,  Tues.  and  Wed. 

APRIL  24,  25,  26 

The  Boston  Grand  Opera  Company 

in  conjunction  tuith  the 

Pavlowa  Imperial  Ballet  Russe 

MAX  RABINOFF,  Managing  Director 

AT  THE  AUDITORIUM  IN  SAINT  PAUL 

Their  Only  Appearance  in  the  Twin  Cities 


DAY  MAY  BE 
WARMEST  YET 

Indications   Are   for   High 

Temperature;  April  1 

Holds  Record. 


MONDAY  NIGHT: 
VAmore  Dei  Tre  Re 

{The  Love  of  Three  Kings) 
Followed  by  the  Imperial  Ballet  in 

''SNOWFLAKES*' 


The  Repertoire: 

TUESDAY  NIGHT: 

Otello 


1 


WEDNESDAY  MATINEE: 

Madame  Butterfly 

Followed  by  the  Imperial  Ballet  in 
""WALPURGIS  NIGHT" 


Followed  by  the  Imperial  Ballet  in 

''DANSE  DIVERTISSEMENT^ 

WEDNESDAY  NIGHT: 
La  Boheme 

Followed  by  the  Imperial  Ballet  in 
''SPANISH  DANCES'' 


Open  Water  Seen  in  Lake 

Ice  Field;  Harbor  Ice 

Damaged. 


Maggie  Teyle 
Luisa  Villani 
Tamaki  Miura 
Felice  Lyne 


Parquet  $5 


The  Cast  Includes: 

Bianca  Saroya  Giovanni  Zenatello 


Elvira  Leveroni 
Olivet  Marcel 
Maria  Gay 


Riccardo  Martin 
Guiseppe  Gaudenzi 
Victor  Maurel 


Thomae  Chalmers 
Graham  Man* 
Jose  Mardones 
Paola  Ananian 


and  Anna  Pavlowa  and  M.  Volinine 
1st  Bah  $4,  $3.50,  $3       2nd  Bal  $2.50,  $2,  $1.50 

Single  Seat  Sale  on  and  after  April  10th 


i? 


. 


THE  SAINT  PAUL  HOTEL: 

Tlie  above  announcement  of  the  Annual  Grand  Opera  Festival  is  inserted,  with  permission,  by 
the  management  of  The  Saint  Paul  Hotel  where  preparations  are  in  progress  for  an  unusually 
large  attendance  at  these  performances.  Patrons  will  remember  that  this  hotel  is  located  two  short 
blocks  from  the  Auditorium,  thereby  obviating  Auto  and  Taxi  inconveniences.  Early  reser\'a- 
tions  for  rooms  are  strongly  urged.    We  would  be  glad  to  execute  orders  for  seats  for  our  patrons. 


k 


1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

-^^B  ' 

. 

^f 

-    1 

The  Key  to  Your  Home 

Separated  from  home  by  county  or 
continent— standing  on  Broadway  or 
'longside  a  water-tank— close  at  your 
hand  is  the  key  to  your  home. 

WESTERN  UNION 

keys  start  your  Day  Letters  and 
Night  Letters  on  their  way. 

Your  **Airs  Well"  message  reaches 
home  before  the  mail  train  gets  up 
steam.    Low  rates  for  many  words. 

THE  WESTERN  UNION  TELEGRAPH  CO. 


tht  Metro  program  In 
my  of  Stork's  Ne«t.'' 
Wav."  and  "Barbara  Frltchte 

Mr.  Carrigan  also  in  provided  with  a 
strong  role  In  keeping  with  his  talents. 
He  was  seen  with  Miss  Minter  in  "Dim- 
ples" and  proved  such  an  exeellent  foil 
for  her  that  Metro  engaged  him  for 
further  productions.  The  remainder  or 
the  cast  Is  of  the  high  Metro  atanaard. 

GREEKS  SUPPLIED 
SACKS  TO  BULGARIA 

Entente  Powers  Have  En- 
tered Complaint  to  Athens 
Government. 


April  1  was  the  warmest  day  this 
year,  but  today  promises  to  at  least  tie 
It.  according  to  Weather  Forecaster 
Richardson.  The  weather  man  says 
that  the  temperature  will  probably  get 
up  to  around  50  degs.,  for  at  10:30  this 
morning  It  was  42  and  still  going  up, 
with  conditions  very  agreeable  for  a 
much  higher  climb.  It  was  34  degs. 
at  7  a.  m. 

On  April  1.  the  temperature  reached 
49  degs.  and  on  Feb.  17  it  was  46  deg8. 

•'Cynditions  are  beginning  to  swing 
around  t»)  normal  now,"  said  Mr.  Rich- 
ardson this  morning,  "and  I  look  for 
warmer  weather.  Today  Is  just  about 
normal  for  this  time  of  the  year." 

He  reported  that  from  the  hilltop  he 
could  see  lanes  of  open  water  reaching 
into  the  Ice  /ield  about  fifteen  miles 
out,  and  expects  the  breakup  to  come 
very  soon  should  this  brand  of  weather 
continue.  He  also  declared  that  the 
bay  Ice  is  due  to  fade  very  fast  now, 
for  It  Is  In  a  proper  condition  for  dis- 
integration and  the  weather  of  yester- 
day and  today  is  very  damaging  to  It. 

For  some  days  now,  Duluth  has  been 
enjoying  very  good  weather,  while  the 
rest  of  the  country  has  been  getting 
snow  storms  and  cold  spells  and  other 
parts  are  getting  floods  and  Ice  jams, 
which  are  smashing  property.  Vacant 
lots  here  are  holding  enthusiastic  base- 
ball players  these  days,  while  other 
cities  are  still  confined  to  Indoor  sport. 


NEWS  FROM  BIRDLAND 

Killdeer  Join  Duluth  Feathered  Colony— Crows  and 

Owls  Are  Nesting— Time  to  Prepare  Wren  Houses 

—Warblers  and  Scarlet  Tanagers  Due. 


of  Grand  Forks  and  throughout  the 
Northwest.  The  body  was  shipped  to 
Pennsylvania,  where  interment  was 
made. 


LYNCH  FORCES  WIN 
AT  STAn  MEETINe 


ILLINCIS  TO  HOLD 
ELECTION  TUESDAY 


effect 
Entente 
the  Greek 
flour  sacks 
been   handed 


Paris  April  10.— The  Temps  p\ib- 
lishes  a  dispatch  from  Athens  quoting 
the  Patrls  of  that  city  to  the 
that  the  ministers  of  the 
powers  have  complained  to 
government  that  37.000 
belonging  to  Russia  have 
over  bv  Greek  authorities  to  Bu  - 
Kurla.  ■  These  sacks  were  requisi- 
tioned by  the  Greek  commissary  de- 
partment for  the  army,  but  are  said 
to  have  been  transported  clandestinely 
to  Bulgaria.  Details  of  the  trans- 
action are  given  in  the  following 
telegram  from  G.  Passarow.  Bulgarian 
minister  at  Athens,  to  Premier  Rados- 
lavoft    of    Bulgaria: 

"X*dkof  (Bulgarian  consul  at 
Ralonikl)  Informs  me  there  are  can- 
vas sacks  at  Salonlkl.  I  have  talked 
with  Gounarls  (Greek  minister  of  the 
Interior)  about  this  question,  and  he 
telle    me:  ^     ,. 

••'I  wfll  verify  the  matter  and  if 
there  are  really  sacks  at  Salonikl  I 
will  recommend  to  the  ilreek  national 
bank  to  buy  them  and  send  them  to 
the  Bank  of  Bulgaria  on  the  pretext 
that  thev  are  sent  for  (lour.  In  order 
to  avoid"  the  attention  of  British  spies 
at  Salonlkl.  If  your  merchants  bought 
these  sacks  and  the  British  were  In- 
formed of  It  we  would  draw  disagree- 
able     consequences      upon      ourselves. 


Second    Presidential    Pri- 
mary Will  Hold  Boards  in 
Sucker  State. 

Chicago,  April  10. — Illinois  voters 
will  participate  tomorrow  in  the  sec- 
ond presidential  primary  the  state  has 
seen.  The  only  presidential  candidates 
are  President  Woodrow  Wilson.  Demo- 
crat, and  United  States  Senator  Law- 
rence Y.  Sherman.  Republican. 

Interest  in  the  primary  centers  In 
the  selection  of  national  convention 
delegates  and  state  central  committee- 
men. 

The  only  state-wide  contests  are 
ever  the  selection  of  the  delegates-al- 
large.  For  the  eight  Republlcaji  places 
nine  candidates  appear  on  the  ballot. 
Eight  of  them,  known  as  the  slate  can- 
didates, are  pledged  to  Senator  Sher- 
man; the  ninth,  John  Maynard  Harlan 
of  Chicago,  filed  as  unpledged  but  has 
announced  preference  for  Roosevelt  as 
the   Republican  presidential  nominee. 

The  situation  Is  further  complicated 
by  a  contest  over  the  Illinois  national 
committeeman,  who  is  selected  by  the 
convention  delegates.  Roy  O.  West, 
the  present  Republican  national  corn- 
mltteeman.  Is  opposed  by  William  Hale 
Thompson,   mayor  of  Chicago. 

The  participation  of  women  voters  In 
the  primary  tomorrow  will  be  llmltea 
to  expression  of  presidential  prefer- 
ence the  supreme  court  having  ruled 
against  their  voting  for  delegates  to 
the  party  national  conventions. 

EAST  GRAND'fORKS 

JAIL  IS  NOW  EMPTY 


Back    come    the    feathered    travelers. 

Out  near  Woodland  yesterday.  The 
Herald  bird  man  saw  some  killdeer. 
Thej?e  birds  are  frequently  seen  near 
Duluth,  and  get  their  name  from  their 
call.  They  are  a  species  of  plover,  and 
frequent  upland  meadows,  preferably 
near    small    marshes. 

A  white  crow^ned  sparrow  was  also 
seen  with  a  flock  of  juncoes.  It  Is 
early  for  this  little  chap,  and  his  fel- 
lows are  not  expected  for  another  week 
or   two. 

Robins  were  quite  numerous  yester- 
day,  and   several   were   seen. 

Two  or  three  varieties  of  hawks  have 
arrived.  The  red-tailed  hawk  is  one 
of  them.  He  is  the  commonest  of  the 
hawks    In    this    vicinity. 

The  crows  are  nesting  now.  They 
nest  earlier  than  most  birds.  The 
horned  owls,  which  have  been  here  all 
winter  are  also  nesting.  Other  birds 
that  are  common  here  now  are  the 
Juncoes,  the  chickadees,  and  the  Eng- 
lish  sparrows. 

The    first    of    the    warblers    are    due 
very  soon.     There  are  scores  of  species 
of  warblers  to  be  seen 
summer.      The   while   throated   spa 


will  also  arrive  this  week  unless  he  is 
unexpectedly  delayed,  and  If  the  bird 
lover  watches  closely  he  may  see  a 
scarlet  tanager  any   day  now. 

It  is  time  to  repair  the  wren  houses 
and  put  them  In  position,  for  the  noisy, 
saucy  aggressive  little  wrens  are  likely 
to  be  here  house-hunting  almost  any 
day,  if  the  mild  weather  continues.  On 
the  other  hand  they  may  not  arrive  for 
two  or  three  weeks,  but  It  Is  well  to 
practice  preparedness  and  have  a  few 
houses  ready  In  advance. 

The  martens  will  not  arrive  for  sev- 
eral  weeks. 


OLD  DRUMMER  DIES. 

Robert  SftUrlee,  Who  Used  to  'Make' 
Minnesota.  Passes  In  Spokane. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D.,  April  10.— Trav. 
ellngr  men  «11  over  JCorthwestem  Min- 
nesota and  merchants  in  that  locality 
as  well  as  North  Dakota  will  learn 
with  regret  that  Robert  H.  Saterlee,  a 
well  known  traveling  man.  died  re- 
cently in  Spokane,  Wash.,  of  Brlghfs 
disease. 


in"  Duluth  eVery !      Mr.'  Saterlee    was    B7    years    of    ^^e.  ;  day  night  as  he  wi 
iroated   sparrow '  and  for  twenty  years  had  traveled  out!  train  foi   his  home. 


National  Committeeman  In- 
dorsed for  Re-election 
By  the  Delegates. 

Minneapolis,     Minn.,    April    10. — Fred 

B.   Lynch  was   indorsed  for   re-election 

as   national    Democratic   committeeman 

for  Minnesota  by  members  of  the  state 
Democratic  delegates  to  the  national 
convention  In  their  meeting  here  Sat- 
urday. 

By  a  vote  of  14  to  4,  Daniel  W.  Law- 
ler  of  St.  Paul  was  made  permanent 
chairman  and  Fred  Schllpln  of  St. 
Cloud,  secretary.  The  vote  demon- 
strated that  the  Lynch  forces  are  firm- 
ly In  the  saddle,  as  both  men  are  his 
supporters. 

The  Lynch  issue  was  Injected  at  the 
outset.  Fred  B.  Lynch  was  pr^tent, 
although  not  a  member.  Nearly  all  the 
Lynch  delegates  were  on  hand,  while 
only  two  anils  responded  to  the  call 
for"the  meeting. 

»       

War  Veteran  Drops  Dead. 

Rochester,    Minn.,      April    10. — Barret 

House,  70  years  old,  a  pioneer  contrac- 

I  tor  of  the  village  of  Eyota.  and  one  of 

I  the   first   to   answer   Lincoln's   call    for 

I  volunteers,    dropped    dead    here    Satur-* 

was  about  to  board  a 


.J  • 


upon 
I  durini 


After  using  the  sacks  during  the  mili- 
tary operations  the  National  Bank  of 
nulgarla  will  sell  them  to  us  with  flour. 
All  that  will  be  done  to  Justify  the 
shipment    In    the    eyes    of    the    British. 

"The  minister  of  the  Interior 
communicate  to  me  in  a  few  days 
many    sacks    they    will    give    us." 


will 
how 


Editor  of   Fram   Retires. 

Fargo,  N.  D.,  April  10.— Peter  Myr- 
vold.  who  has  been  editor  of  "The 
Fram"  of  this  city  for  the  last 
vears.  and  who  has  been  responsible 
for  the  fact  that  that  publication  has 
become  one  of  the  leading  Norwegian 
newspapers  of  the  Northwest,  has  sev- 
ered his  connection  with  the  paper. 


East  Grand  Forks.  Minn.,  April  10. 
During  the  past  few  weeks  no  ar- 
rests have  been  iiMide  by  the  local 
police  department,  and  the  city  jail 
has  remained  practically  empty  dur- 
ing this  period.  A  few  "sleepers'  have 
been   accommodated. 

Since  the  beginning  of  the  year  the 
arrests  have  decreased  practically  95 
per  cent,  according  to  the  records  of 
the  police  officials.  Not  over  two  have 
been  apprehended  on  any  one  day  for 
the  past  four  months,  while  during 
the  same  period  last  year  the  num- 
ber held  for  intoxication  often  reached 
five  I  twenty-five    or    thirty    each    night. 

Nearly  every  man  arrested  for 
drunkenness  declares  that  the  liquor 
was  obtained  In  some  other  city  which 
leads  the  police  to  believe  that  no 
blind   pigs    now   exist   in    the    city. 


f 


r 
I 


Ttnours 

Clendale 


There's  an  Armour  Oval 
Label  Store  near  you 


OLEOMARGARINE 

18  a  scientifically  correct  combination  of 

highest  grade  butter  £it  and  pure  nutritive  oila. 
It  comes  to  you  packed  in  cartons,  with 

Unde  Sam's  endorsement  of  purity. 
The  Oval  Label  ia  Armour's  goanuitM 
of  quality. 

Qlendale  is  the  delicious,  econom- 
ical »proad  for  bread.    Phone  us  your 
dealer'*  name  if  he  can't  supply  you. 

AirMOUR^COMPANV 

DULUTH,    MIX  IV. 
J.  C  Fisher,   Manager. 

Phones— Mel.   2208;   Grand 


T 


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■ 

■:^    -|*" 


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-^p^"^-"-^^" 


■*■■ 


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8 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

AN   INDCPCNDCNT  NEWSPAPER 

ruMUhed    overy    etcnliiR    rxoept    Sunday    by 
'J'lie     Ilrrald    Ciimpany    at     Uuluth,     Minn. 

Both    Telephones — Cusiness    Office,    324; 
Kditorlal    Rooms,    1126. 

llBtTcI  as  s.-(onU  clMi  mattfr  «t  the  Diiluth  postofnc!  uuder  th« 
art  of  congrrss  of  March  8.   1870. 

OFFICIAL  PAPER,  CITY  OF  DULITH 

Sl'B.si  llll-riOX     HATKS— By     mall,     payable 

In     advante,     on«     month,     35     cents;     thref 

months,    11;    six    months,    |2;    one  year,    $4; 

Satuidny     Herald,     $1     per     year;     Weekly 

Herald,    $1    per   year. 
Daily   by  carrier,    city  and   suburb.s,   10   cents 

■    week,    45   cents   a   month. 

Biibsrrlfrr,  wUl  confer  a  faror  by  making  known  any  complaint 
of  nvl.H.  .     ,   .» 

^Vlirn  <li»ti|ilii2  tho  adilnsn  or  your  paper.  It  U  Importini  w 
glTa  iiutti  old  an<l  new  addri-gsei. 

The  Duluth  Herald  accepts  advertising 
contracts  vlth  the  dL-itlnrt  Ruarantee  that 
It  has  the  largest  circulation  In  Minnesota 
outside  the  Twin  Cities. 


TODAY  IN  HISTORY. 


Lew  Wallace  born,  1827. 
r...rii  in  Itnrokvllle,  Ind.,  (jeneral 
Wallai-e  served  in  the  Mexican  war  and 
praeilsi'd  law  until  the  Civil  war.  In 
whi«li  he  rose  I  rom  colonel  to  brlK- 
Bilier-neneral.  He  was  president  of  th«» 
court  vvhicli  tri.-d  Henry  Wlrz,  com- 
m.indant  of  Aiuler.sonville  prison,  and  n 
member  ut  the  eourt  which  tried  those 
implltai'd  in  LIncfiln's  assassination. 
Whs  Hovernor  of  New  Mexico  1878-1881. 
and  minister  to  Turkey  1881-1885. 
Th'MiKh  his  novel.s  "The  Fair  l!od"  and 
"T)\'-  I'rincc  (»f  India"  were  less  well 
known,  his  "Ben  llur"  was  enormously 
popular. 


I 


KK'.Pi.Nti— .\vdllahle  in  Puluth  public  library— I.fw 
Wallnr",  '  l.rw  WalUit-:  an  Autabluttrapliy"  (vi<liJ  and 
ilruniiitii'  jr->i>unt  uf  tli-  uiUlior'ii  tarly  life  uiiil  tho 
lamiiiilcus  of  tbf  Civil  war  In  wblcb  be  part i('lp.i ted.  i 


FOR  A  SMALLER  LEGISLATURE. 

TIic  Minnesota  state  senate  has  sixty- 
scvtn  ineinbers;  and  the  people  are  paying 
the  .sabries  of  about  thirty  more  senators 
than  the}'  need. 

Tlic  present  house  of  representatives  has 
a  hundred  and  thirty  members;  and  the 
people  are  being  taxed  for  the  salaries  of 
about  sixty  more  representatives  than  they 
couhl  easily  get  along  with. 

N"t  only  would  the  legislature  do  as 
good  work  with  fewer  members  than  with 
its  present  abnormally  large  size,  but  vastly 
better  work. 

There  would  be  fewer  to  pay,  and  it 
\\<juld    be   cheaper. 

There  would  be  fewer  "to  consume  tiiite 
in  uindjamming,  and  fewer  to  clutter  the 
machinery  with  needless  bills;  so  work 
Would  be  done  with  greater  dispatch  and 
greater  exactness. 

M'ireover,  with  fewer  lawmakers  to  elect, 
a  better  selection  wowM  be  made,  and  the 
average  ability  of  the  legislators  would  in- 
evitably increase.  With  all  the  respect  due 
to  the  hf»use,  the  fact  is  that  the  senates, 
on  the  whole,  average  higher  in  al>ility  than 
the  houses  do,  and  that's  because  there  are 
only  half  as  many  senators  to  elect  as  there 
are  representatives.  The  senates,  too,  do 
better  and  more  careful  work  than  the 
houses;  and  that's  due  to  the  same  fact. 

Minnesota,  with  the  largest  senate  in  the 
Unitetl  States  and  a  house  exceeded  only 
by  a  few  states  that  cling  to  the  old  town- 
.ship  representation  plan,  needs  a  smaller 
legislature  in  the  interests  of  "economy  and 
efficiency." 

Indeed,  there  is  where  your  economy  and 
efficiency  work  should  begin — and  if  there 
is  anj'  need  of  proof,  witness  the  clumsy 
way  the  legislature  has  handled  the  whole 
subject  of  efficiency  and  economy,  achiev- 
ing nothing  though  the  need  and  demand 
for  it  are  manifest. 

The  legislature  never  will  reduce  its  mem- 
bership in  any  reapportionment,  because  its 
members  will  never  vote  themselves  out  of 
office;  they  never  have  and  they  never  will. 
The  only  way  to  bring  about  a  smaller  leg- 
islature is  by  putting  a  rigid  limitation  on 
membership    in   the    Constitution. 

Constitutional  amendments  are  difficult 
of  adoption,  and  more  are  needed  ^«e5idcs 
this  one  than  can  readily  be  listed. 

The  shortest  step  to  efficiency  and  econ- 
omy and  to  the  smaller  legislature  that 
sh<juM  be  the  foundation  of  that  reform  is 
by  way  of  a  convention  summoned  to  re- 
vise the   Constitution. 

The  legislature  that  meets  next  January 
should  submit  to  the  people  a  propo.sal  for 
a  constitutional  convention.  It  will  do  that 
only  if  it  is  made  manifest  that  the  people 
of  Minnesota  demand  it. 


In  our  country'  the  man  who  runs  the  best 
does  so  in  order  to  be  Included  among  the 
fleeted;  but  In  Mexico  the  man  who  Is  do- 
InR  the  best  running  is  trying  to  keep  from 
belnK  numbered  among  the  elect. 
•^ • 

THE  MOST  SERIOUS  CHARGE  AGAINST 

BRANDEIS. 

After  his  opponents  had  raked  his  record 
from  childhood  up,  the  only  really  serious 
charge  brought  against  Brandeis  in  the 
fight  to  prevent  his  nomination  as  a  justice 
of  the  supreme  court  of  the  United  States  is 
that  as  counsel  for  the  people  in  the  rail- 
road rate  cases  before  the  interstate  com- 
merce coinmission  he  admitted  that  rail- 
road revenues  probably  were  not  high 
enough. 

This  charge  was  made  by  Railroad  Com- 
missioner Thorne  of  Iowa,  and  later  by 
Senator  Cummins  as  his  excuse  for  voting 
against  confirmation  in  committee. 

This  is  a  queer  misapprehension,  for 
Thorne  probably  is  honest  in  his  opposi- 
tion, whatever  Cummins  is, 

Brandeis  in  that  case  was  counsel  for  the 
interstate  commerce  commission.  He  was 
not  an  attorney  for  the  shippers  who  op- 
posed granting  an  increase  in  rates.  The 
commission  sat  in  a  judicial  capacity,  to 
}iear  both  sides  and  to  judge  between  them. 


Monday, 


Urandeis's  duty  was  to  help  the  commission 
reach  the  right  result.  The  commission's 
function  was  not  to  prevent  rate  increases 
regardless  of  what  was  right  and  just,  but 
to  do  justice  equally  between  railroads  and 
public.  It  had  no  more  right  to  refuse  an 
increase  if  an  increase  was  just  than  it  had 
to  grant  one  if  it  was  not  just.         ^ 

From  that  viewpoint,  and  in  that  entirely 
correct  view  of  his  duty,  Mr.  Brandeis's  con- 
duct was  above  reproach,  and  the  criticism 

of  him  because  of  it  is  entirely  invalid. 

• 

There's  nothing  to  aneer  at  In  the  state- 
ment that  It  was  too  much  preparedness 
that   got   \'llla   Into   trouble. 

« 

THE  NEWS  FROM  EL  PASO. 

Yesterday  Kl  Paso  reported — shrieked, 
rather,  in  great  headlines — with  grief  and 
shame  that  the  United  States  was  about  to 
abandon  the  \'illa  hunt  and  withdraw  its 
troops  from   Mexico. 

Today  Kl  Paso  announces  that  more 
.American  troops  are  being  sent  across  the 
bor<ler. 

.\  report  from  F.l  Paso  these  days  is  the 

last     thing    anybody     should     get     excited 

al)out.     If  you  see  an  El  Paso  date  line  on 

it,   discount   it   approximately    ninety-seven 

per  cent,  and  be  calm. 

♦ 

ThU  Is  the  time  of  year,  musically  ^^^ak- 
Ing,  when  BO  many  people  are  looking  aharp 

for    flats.  "^^ 


THE  IMPOSSIBILITY  OF  THE  SUBMARINE. 

Though  all  the  evidence  seems  to  prove 
that  the  Sussex  was  assailed  by  a  subma- 
rine, Germany,  according  to  reports  from 
lierlin,  will  deny  that  any  submarine  of 
hers  did  it. 

That  makes  it  difiieult.  Though  several 
passengers  saw  the  wake  of  the  approach- 
ing torpedo,  none  of  them  was  an  Ameri- 
can. Though  pieces  of  metal  said  to  have 
been  taken  from  the  hull  of  the  Sussex  are 
offered  in  evidence,  and  though  it  is  be- 
lieved that  they  are  parts  of  a  German  tor- 
l)edo.  evidence  that  these  pieces  actually 
came  from  the  Sussex  seems  to  be  lacking. 

Morally,  there  is  good  reason  to  believe 
that  despite  her  promises  and  her  denial, 
Germany  is  responsible  for  the  sinking, 
without  warning,  of  the  unarmed  passenger 
vessel  Sussex.  Legally,  the  proof  as  yet 
seems  insufficient.  And,  whatever  the 
state  of  public  feeling,  the  government  can- 
not act  on  suspicion,  however  strong. 

Proof  will  always  be  difficult  in  such 
cases,  and  usually  impossible.  If  a  subma- 
rine commander,  having  attacked  an  un- 
armed merchantman,  fails  to  come  back  or. 
coming  l)ack,  professes  ignorance.iihis  gov- 
ernment can  deny;  and  with  actual  proof 
lacking  the  injured  nations  are  impotent. 

Besides,  the  Sussex  is  but  one  of  a  series 
of  unarmed  merchantmen  sunk  without 
warning,  some  belonging  to  the  allies,  some 
neutral.     They  did  not  sink  themselves. 

Whatever  comes  of  this  series  of  cases, 
one  thing  grows  clearer  every  day:  that  the 
first  business  of  civilization,  after  the  war. 
is  to  enact  legislation  prohibiting  the  use  of 
submarines  against  merchantmen  under  any 
circumstances  whatever,  and  sending  to  in 
ternational  Coventry  any  nation  that 
does  it. 


WHY  ROOSEVELT   DISLIKES  CARLYLB. 

Colonel  Roosevelt  doesn't  approve  of 
Carlyle.  He  says  so  in  a  recent  essay  on 
what  he  likes  to  read. 

That's  rather  odd. 

Carlyle  was  a  profound  believer  in  Great 
Men.  "The  history  of  the  world,"  he  said, 
"is  the  biography  of  Great  Men."  This  is  a 
mistake,  we  think;  the  history  of  progress 
is  rather  a  history  of  the  reaction  of  popu- 
lar aspirations  upon  great  leaders.  But 
Carlyle  believed  it,  and  clung  to  his  belief 
firmly.  "They  were  the  leaders  of  men, 
these  great  ones:  the  modelers,  patterns, 
and  in  a  wide  sense  creators,  of  whatever 
the  general  mass  of  men  contrived  to  do  or 
to  attain." 

Odd  indeed  that  Roosevelt  cannot  ap- 
prove the  upholder  of  such  doctrine.  Is  he 
not  hinisclf  the  Great  Man  of  his  time?  Is 
he  not  himself  the  leader,  pattern,  creator 
of  "whatever  the  general  mass  of  men  cfn- 
trive  to  do  or  to  attain?" 

Yet  it  is  not  so  odd,  either,  after  all,  that 
Roosevelt  should  dislike  this  sage  and 
should  intimate  that  it  is  not  so  worth 
while  to  read  him. 

For  did  Carlyle  not  also  vehemently  warn 
against  quackery  and  dupery,  against 
Quack  Leaders  and  Sham  Heroes?  Verily, 
he  did. 

Roosevelt  does  not  like  Carlyle.  Carlyle 
would  not  have  liked  Roosevelt. 


It's  a  positive  tempting  of  the  efficiency 
of  the  pseudonym  "Portunatua"  for  him  to 
get  into  the  senatorship  nomination  cam- 
paign. 

• 

Sanfl4»wer  Phlloaopky. 

Atciilaon.  Kan.,  fJlobe:  Patriotism  rarely 
consists  of  voting  a  straight  ticket. 

There  la  also  the  sort  of  morality  that  Is 
due   to   cold    feet. 

Most  men  are  busy  enough  not  to  want  to 
serve    on    a    Jury. 

When  a  man  says  plain  talk,  he  means  un- 
pleasant   talk. 

A  friend  is  a  useful  institution  If  you  don't 
use   him   too  much. 

Sometimes  a  line  of  hot  air  Is  dignified 
by    calling    it    a    propaganda. 

It  seems  impossible  for  one  to  do  his  duty 
and  keep  off  everybody's  toes. 

Willie  one  Is  paying  Interest  he  shouldn't 
lead  too  many   reform  movements. 

Complications  sometimes  ^•ep^e8ent  that 
part  of  an  Illness  the  doctors  fall  to  under- 
stand. 

It  wasn't  a  lack  of  raw  material  which 
eliminated  the  shell  game  as  a  side  line 
of    the    circus. 

If  equal  rights  obtained,  the  woman  would 
get  the  same  punishment  as  the  man  if 
equally    guilty. 

Those  who  expect  too  much  of  woman's 
refining  Influence  In  politics,  don't  know 
politics    very    well. 

Kvll  as  gossip  Is,  you  may  have  observed 
that  a  gossip  never  has  to  postpone  the  per- 
formance   for    lack   of   an    audience. 

Well-behaved  children  are  admired  more 
than  any  other  kind,  and  the  rare  specimen 
in  other  lines  is  also  apt  to  attract  favorable 
attention. 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


Hoover  a  True  Neutral 


MoUle  Best  In  tb«  .Vnerirao  Magazlnt, 


Herbert  C.  Hoover.  American  Quaker,  di- 
rector of  the  Belgium  relief  commissloi*, 
holder  of  one  of  the  most  difficult  positiona 
In  the  whole  world-war  zone.  Is  one  of  thi^ 
few  neutrals  in  existence,  as  Is  proved  by; 
the  fact  that  the  Ciermans  suspect  htm  oil 
being  entirely  too  pro-English  and  the  Eng« 
lish  of  being  entirely  too  pro-German. 

Mr.  Hoover  was  "raised"  on  an  Iowa  farm,' 
in  a  Quaker  community.  His  ambition  ta 
go  to  a  non-sectarian  university  wa* 
frowned  down  by  pious  friends,  who  re» 
fused  to  allow  him  money  for  an  education 
unless  he  went  to  one  of  their  own  schoola 
Th<»  lad  determined  to  go  to  I.^eland  Stan- 
ford and  finance  the  undertaking  himself. 
He  worked  in  an  office  and  saved  up  his 
money.  At  night  he  high-schooled  himself 
and  prepared  himself  for  the  university. 

When  he  had  the  good  fortune  to  be  ad- 
mitted to  Stanford  with  the  promise  of  a 
cljance  to  work  his  way  through  college,  he 
found  that  there  was  no  university  laun- 
dry. Youn»r  Hoover  soon  supplied  that  lack 
and  earned  enough  to  put  himself  through 
the  university. 

Then,  because  there  Is  an  organizing  wheel 
continually  turning  in  his  head,  he  collected 
all  the  student  activities  Into  one  central 
organization.  To  this  day  the  standard  for 
comparison  at  Stanford  is  "the  way  Hoover 
did    back    in    '96." 

After  the  young  Quaker  got  his  diploma 
from  the  School  of  Mining  and  Engineering, 
he  married  one  of  his  classmates.  Besides 
being  a  mining  engineer.  Mrs.  Hoover  is  a 
woman  of  extraordinary  charm  and  beauty. 
Together  they  have  adventured  Into  the  re- 
motest parts  of  the  world,  and  Mr.  Hoover 
has  achieved  fame  and  fortune  as  a  surcens- 
ful  engineer  In  Europe.  Asia,  Africa  and 
Au.stralla.  Always,  when  Mr.  Hoover  had 
made  a  rough  job  smooth,  he  has  looked 
round  for  a  harder  one.  Therefore,  when 
the  hardest  Job  was  looking  round  for  a 
man,  it  was  natural  that  It  should  come  upon 
Herbert  C.  Hoover.  To  manage  the  Belgian 
situation   is   a  full-sized   man's  Job. 

Under  Mr.  Hoover's  charge,  and  under  his 
responsibility,  the  commission  for  relief  in 
Belgium  R  business  of  more  than  J100,000,- 
000  is  conducted.  He  is  responsible  director 
of  it.  This  money  comes  In  at  the  rate 
of  about  $10,000,000  a  month.  French  bank- 
ers turn  over  to  th-i  commission  $6,000,000  a 
m6nth  in  cash  to  be  used  for  food  and  cloth- 
ing for  the  people  In  Xortheastern  France.' 
behind  the  German  lines.  The  accounts  are, 
kept  to  tho  penny.  When  the  food  is  dis- 
tributed an  account  is  made  of  each  com- 
mune. The  accounts  are  sent  back  to  thp 
Paris  bankers,  and  they  charge  this  com- 
mune with  the  cost  of  the  food. 

Imagine  distributing  $10,000,000  or  $12,- 
000,000  of  food  a  month  to  some  millions 
of  people  through  unofficial  civilian  organ- 
izations, without  power,  with  no  telegraph, 
no  telephone,  and  little  use  of  the  railroads. 
The  main  transportation  Is  by  canal,  lighters 
going  down  the  canals  through  Belgium, 
clear  into   Kortliern   Prance. 

The  rations  are  far  under  the  nominal  ra- 
tions supposed  to  be  necessary  for  sustain- 
ing life,  but  the  commission  has  never  had 
enough  money.  Food  Is  doled  out  to  these 
millions  exactly  as  it  might  be  to  a  ship- 
wrecked crew  on  a  desert  Island  where  there 
were  only  a  duxtn,  and  they  measured  up 
€very  Item  of  food. 

A  few  months  ago,  at  a  London  dinner 
party,  a  member  of  the  foreign  office  opened 
a  leak  In  that  most  watertight  compartment 
of  the  British  eihplre;  In  order  to  keep  in 
good  condition,  tho  foreign  office  had  setlt'a 
long  communication  making  suggestions  pf 
change  In  the  methods  of  the  relief  commis- 
sion. The  stationery  of  her  majesty's  gov- 
ernment used  up  a  lot  of  alphabet  In  making 
the  suggestions  and  all  the  stock  phrases  rtf 
circumlocution  offices.  The  suggestions.  If 
followed,  would  have  postponed  the  war 
meals    of    7.000.000    persons    for   two    days.    ; 

Mr.  Hoover  is  shadowed  by  his  own  pri- 
vate secretary,  and  the  commission  ha«  an 
adequate  clerical  staff,  but  the  letter  re- 
ceived by  her  majesty's  government,  a  letter 
which  has  caused  more  chortles  In  th*  Brit- 
ish foreign  office  than  any  official  communi- 
cation connected  with  the  world  war,  is 
written  In  Mr.  Hoover's  own  hand.  This 
leaves  It  open  to  a  suspicion  of  heat  and 
haste.     It   reads  as   follows: 

Dear  Blank:  It  strikes  me  that  try- 
ing to  feed  the  Belgians  Is  like  trying 
to  feed  a  hungry  little  kitten  by  means 
of  a  forty-foot  bamboo  pole,  said  kit- 
ten confined  In  a  barred  cage  occupied 
by  two  hungry  lions.  Tours  sincerely, 
HERBERT  C.  HOOVER. 


Curious  War  Prophecy 

Cited  By  Maeterlinck 


From  tb«  Kansai  Cltf  Star. 


High    Srhool    Fraternities. 

Christian  Science  Monitor:  San  Francisco 
is  now  having  Its  turn  with  the  high  school 
fraternity  Issue,  and.  as  elsewhere,  the 
school  authorities  are  finding  friends  and  foes 
in  least  expected  places  as  they  attempt  to 
get  rid  of  the  caste  system  In  what  Is  sup- 
posed to  be  a  democratically  constituted 
organization  of  community  life.  Often  be- 
fore school  authorities  act,  the  situation 
practically  comes  to  be  that  of  a  state  with- 
in a  state,  and  a  limited  circle  of  pupils 
practically  dictating  to  administrators  and 
teachers,  and  a  considerable  number  of  par- 
ents approving  the  anomalous  and  absurd 
condition.  Of  course,  when  affairs  have  come 
to  that  state  an  effort  of  the  school  authori- 
ties to  regain  rights  and  to  use  power  must 
cause  much  friction,  communal  and  schol- 
astic. But  when  the  schools  are  run  by  pu- 
pils on  exclusive  social  lines,  what  renialns 
of  the  most  Americanizing  of  social  Institu- 
tions In  the  republic? 

• 

A   Loader    Call. 

Life:  Minister — "I  have  Just  received  a  call 
to  Chicago  which  I  think  1  shall  accept." 

Parishioner — "I  thought  you  had  received 
one   to   Milwaukee?" 

Minister — "Tho  Chicago  call  is  a  trifle — er 
— louder." 


Rippling  Rhymes 

By  Walt  Mason 

The  Poor  Listener. 

I  sit  in  the  grocery  store,  discoursing 
of  current  events,  each  eve,  when  my 
labors  are  o'er,  with  other  industrious 
gents.  We  talk  of  the  scrapping  in 
France,  discuss  the  high  prices  of  hay ; 
and  each  gives  the  others  a  chance  to 
say  wliat  they  suflfer  to  say.  AVheii 
Johnson  unlimbers  his  jaws,  we  listen 
ix>litely  to  him;  when  Jimpson  stands 
up  for  his  cause,  we  cheer  his  remarks 
with  a  vim.  There's  peace  in  that 
grocery  store,  each  orator  feels  at  his 
best,  till  Kickshaw,  the  champion  bore, 
comes  in  ,to  take  part  in  the  fest. 
This  man,  with  his  head  full  of  wheel*, 
too  oft  in  our  presence  has  sinned ;  he 
wants  to  make  all  of  the  spiels,  to  fur- 
nish the  bulk  of  the  wind.  That's  why 
wc  old  fellows  arose,  last  night,  at  the 
grocery  store,  and  lifted  that  chump 
with  our  toes,  and  hoisted  him  clear 
through  the  door.  Free  speech  is  a 
blessing  to  men,  without  it  no  race 
can  advance ;  but  talkers  should  pause 
now  and  then,  and  give  other  fellows 
a  chance. 

(Protected  br  Adaos  Newawter  Scrrin.) 


kaurlcft  Maeterlinck  doubts  human  ability 
to  see  Into  the  future.  In  a  recent  article  in 
the  London  Chronicle  he  tefefs  to  alleged 
prophecies  of  the  present  European  war  by 
M*ne.  de  Thebes,  the  Polish  monk  Korzenickl. 
"brother  Johannes"  and  others,  and  then 
g^es  on  to  say: 

;Xll  these_  on  examination,  leave  but  a 
worthless  residuum;  but  the  Sonrel  prediction 
la  more  curious,  and  worthy  of  a  moment's 
attention. 

On  June  8,  1914 — observe  the  date — Prof. 
Charles  Rlchet  handed  M.  de  Vesme.  from  Dr. 
Amedee  Tardleu,  a  manuscript,  of  which  tho 
following  Is  the  substance: 

On  July  23  or  24,  1869,  Dr.  Tardleu  was 
strolling  m  the  gardens  of  the  Luxemborg 
with  his  friend  Leon  Sonrel.  teacher  of  nat- 
ural philosophy  at  the  Paris  observatory, 
when  the  latter  had  a  kind  of  vision,  in  the 
course  of  which  he  predicted  various  precise 
and  actual  episodes  of  the  war  of  1870,  sucii 
as  the  collection  on  behalf  of  the  wounded 
at  the  moment  of  departure,  and  the  amount 
of  the  sum  collected  in  the  soldiers'  kcpls; 
incidents  of  the  Journey  to  the  frontier;  the 
battle  of  Sedan,  the  rout  of  the  French,  the 
Civil  war.  the  siege  of  Paris,  his  own  death, 
the  birth  of  a  posthumous  child,  the  doctor's 
poWtlcal  career,  and  so  on;  predictions  all  of 
which  were  verified,  as  Is  attested  by  numer- 
ous witnesses  who  are  worthy  of  the  fullest 
credence. 

"I  have  been  waiting  for  two  years,"  Dr. 
Tardleu's  manuscript  continued,  after  setting 
out  the  foregoing  facts,  "for  the  sequel  of 
the  prediction  which  you  are   about  to  read: 

•"O  my  fJod:  My  country  Is  lost;  France 
is  dead!  What  a  disaster!  Ah,  see,  she  Is 
saved!  She  extends  to  the  Rhine!  O  France; 
O  my  beloved  country,  you  are  triumphant; 
you  are  the  queen  of  the  nations!  Your 
genius  shines  forth  over  the  world.  All  the 
earth  wonders  at  yq^i-' " 

These  are  the  words  uttered  by  Leon  Son- 
rel In  1869  contained  in  the  document  written 
on  June  3  and  handed  to  M.  de  Vesme  on 
June  13,  1914,  at  a  moment  when  no  one  was 
thinking  of  the  terrible  war  which  today  is 
ravaging  half  the  world. 

When  Questioned,  after  the  declaration  of 
war,  by  M.  de  Vesme  on  the  subject  of  the 
prophetic  phrase,  "I  have  been  waiting  for 
two  years  for  the  sequel  of  the  prediction 
which  you  are  about  to  read."  Dr.  Tardieu 
replied,   on  Aug.  12: 

"I  have  been  waiting  for  two  years,  and  1 
will  tell  you  why.  My  friend  Leon  did  not 
name  the  year,  but  the  more  general  events 
-are  described  simultaneously  with  the  events 
of  my  own  life.  Now  the  events  which  con- 
cern me  privately  and  which  were  doubtful 
two  years  ago  became  certain  In  April  or 
May  last.  My  friends  know  that  since  May 
last  I  have  been  t.nnouncing  war  as  due  be- 
fore September,  basing  my  prediction  on  co- 
incidences with  events  in  my  private  life,  of 
which  I  do  not  Bpeak." 

This  is,  up  to  the  present,  the  only  prophe- 
cy  kno.vn  to  us  wMch  deserves  any  particu- 
lar attention.  It  Is  timid  and  laconic;  but.  in 
those  regions  where  the  least  gleam  of  light 
assumes  extraordinary  importance,  it  is  not 
to  be  neglected.  I  admit,  for  the  rest,  that 
there  has  ao  far  bten  no  time  to  carry  out  a 
serlou":  inquiry  on  this  point,  but  I  should  be 
greatly  surprised  if  any  such  inquiry  gave 
positive  results  and  if  it  did  not  allow  us  to 
elate  that  the  glg.mtlc  event,  as  a  whole,  aa 
a    general    event,    was    neither    foreseen    nor 

divined. 

« 

The  Reign  of  Law 

Bjr   "The   Innocent   Bystander." 

■    I  JC— O'he   Worid   State. 

How  It  will  come  we  do  not  know.  "Who 
could  have  predicted  in  1783  what  form  the 
more  perfect  union  of  American  states  would 
tak^  In  1789?  Who  could  have  foretold 
precisely  In  1848  the  rise  of  the  German 
empire  in  1870  or  United  Italy  in  1861,  or  the 
new  French  republic  after  the  Commune? 
Who  could  have  traced  during  the  Boer  war 
the   outlines   of  the  British    empire   today? 

Who  could  have  demonstrated  that  when 
the  United  States  deferred  to  the  A-B-C  con- 
ference It  would  accomplish  the  practical 
union  of  the  American  republics  in  all  their 
International    relations? 

Thirty  or  more  bodies,  national  and  inter- 
national, are  working  toward  the  estab- 
lishment of  the  world  state.  They  are  In 
Holland,  Sweden,  Switzerland.  In  the  United 
States.  In  Canada,  Germany,  France,  Eng- 
land. They  propose  world  courts,  arbitration 
by  compulsion,  the  boycott  for  any  govern- 
ment that  will  not  submit  to  the  public  opin- 
ion of  nations,  political  ostracism  for  out- 
lawry. All  sorts  of  movements  from  dis- 
approbation to  physical  force,  from  expres- 
sions of  opinion  to  a  formally  organized 
parliament    of    man. 

We  do  not  know  how  the  world  state  will 
be  established,  nor  if  it  will  take  any  form 
whatever. 

We  do  know  this.  Society  will  not  tol- 
erate anarchy.  Naturally,  society  and  an- 
archy are  contradictory  terms.  Society  will 
stnother  anarchy.  Or  anarchy  will  destroy 
society. 

We  know  there  Is  a  society  of  nations  as 
there  never  was  until  our  time.  We  know 
that  war  la  anarchy,  the  assertion  of  one 
nation's   will   as   final   law   unto  Itself. 

We  know  that  those  forces  which  were 
sufficient  to  establish  the  reign  of  law  in 
the  clan,  In  the  tribe.  In  the  kingdom.  In  the 
nation.  In  the  group  of  states,  are  sufficient 
to  establish  therelgn  of  law  In  the  family 
of   nations. 

We  who  have  seen  violence  displaced  by 
the  will  of  the  people  all  through  history 
dv»  not  doubt  that  the  will  of  the  community 
of  nations  shall  henceforth  put  an  end  to 
the.  rule  of  vlt)lence  among  nations. 
(End  of  the  Series). 


April  10, 1916. 


HotlveM. 

Passing  Show:  British  Foreman  Composi- 
tor— Three  more  of  my  men  have  enlisted 
this  morning. 

Editor — Ah,  a  wave  of  patriotism,  I  sup- 
pose. 

Foreman  Compositor — Well!  Perhaps  that's 
the  way  to  put  it,  but  they  say  they  would 
rather  be  shot  than  to  set  any  more  of  your 

copy.  t 

• 

Mr   Shadow. 

I  have  a  little   shadow  that  goes  In  and  out 

with  me. 
And  what  can  be  the  use  of  him  is  more  than 

I  can  see. 
He  is  very,  very  like  me  from  the  heels  up 

to  the  head; 
And  I  see  him  Jump  before  me  when  I  Jump 

Into  my  bed. 

The  funniest  thing  about  him  is  the  way  he 
likes  to  grow — 

Not  at  all  like  proper  children,  which  Is  al- 
ways very  slow; 

For  he  sometimes  shoots  up  taller,  like  an 
India  rubber  ball. 

And  he  sometimes  gets  so  little  that  there's 
none  of  him  at  all. 

He  hasn't  got  a  notion  of  how  children  ought 

1     to  play; 
And  can   only   make   a   fool   of   me   in   every 

sort  of  way. 
He  stays  so  close  beside  me,  he's  a  coward, 

you  can  see; 
I'd   think    shame   to  stick    to   nursle   as    that 

shadow  sticks  to  me. 

One    morning,     very    early,     before    the    sun 

was  up. 
I   rose   and   found   the  shining  dew  on   every 

•     buttercup; 
flut    my    lazy   little    shadow,    like   an    arrant 

'      sleepy  head, 
^ad  stayed  at  home  behind  me,  and  was  fast 
asleep  In  bed. 

— Robert  Louis  Stevenson. 


Keeping  Up  With 

Minnesota  Editors 


Scattered  Comtnenta  By  and  About  Ncwipapers 
la  the  OoptMr  Bute. 


And  to  Thlak  T.  R.  Wasn't  at  San  Jaan  HUH 

What  Lincoln  said  is  as  true  today  as  it  was 
then — "You  can't  fool  all  the  people  all  the 
time."  More  and  more  widely  you  run  upon 
comments  like  this  from  the  Gully  Advance: 
"  'Ex-President  Taf  t  says  that  he  must  stand 
back  of  the  president.  No  one  has  heard  of 
T.  R.  expressing  himself  In  such  a  patriotic 
manner.* — Marquette  Chronicle.  And  yet 
some  people  call  T.  R.  the  'hero  of  the  bat- 
tle of  San  Juan  hill.'     God  save  the  mark" 


Drastic   Treatment. 

Must  we  enlarge  our  state  capltol?  The 
Baudette  Region  has  another  solution  for  the 
present  difficulty:  "The  state  capitol  at  St. 
Paul  is  too  small  to  accommodate  the  large 
number  of  state  officers.  To  our  mind  the 
best  solution  Is  to  divorce  some  of  the  of- 
ficers from  their  Jobs.  It  Is  a  shame  to 
have  them  slave  for  four  or  five  hours  a  day 
for  two  or  three  thousand  dollars  a  year." 


The  Venoa  de  Mllo  la  the  Only  One  Lacking 

ThcBt. 

Farley  Dare  of  the  Walker  Pilot  has  be- 
gun to  worry  about  what  the  fair  sex  will 
do.  He  says  this:  "If  the  war  is  to  blame 
for  the  way  everything  is  going  up.  then  we 
presume  It  is  responsible  for  the  six-inch 
raise  in  women's  skirts.  About  a  year  long- 
er of  warfare  and  a  woman  will  have  to 
find  a  new  place  to  carry  her  pocketbook." 
But  they  can  always  use  their  hands  to 
carry  things  in,  or  get  a  man  to  tote  the 
stuff. 


Wc  Can  Take  0«r  Choice. 

Of  course  it  is  every  man's  privilege  to  be 
unreasonable  if  he  thinks  it  more  reasonable 
for  him  to  be  that  way.  But  the  Mankato 
Review  gives  a  suggestion  that  ought  to 
strike  a  popular  chord,  thus:  "The  Red  Wing 
Republican  wants  the  'Stars  and  Stripes  re- 
spected and  feared'  throughout  the  world. 
There  are  some  of  us  who  think  it  more  de- 
sirable that  the  Stars  and  Stripes  be  re- 
spected  and   loved." 


Go  to  Iti 


We've  heard  a  lot  in  recent  years  about 
the  use  of  city  schoolhouses  outside  of 
school  hours.  The  Two  Harbors  Journal 
News  shows  evidence  of  the  spread  of  the 
movement  In  a  worth  while  direction:  "It  is 
a  good  thing  to  utilize  the  country  school- 
house  for  the  use  of  farmers'  club  and  for 
other  purposes  designed  to  help  the  social 
and  other  features  of  country  life.  A'here 
the  schoolhouses  have  been  thus  used  excel- 
lent results  have  followed.  One  alleged 
drawback  of  country  life  has  been  the  isola- 
tion of  families,  and  it  is  that  which  has 
helped  to  make  such  a  draft  from  the  coun- 
try to  town.  If  the  sociability  of  the  rural 
districts  can  be  promoted  It  may  do  much 
to  make  the  farmer  and  his  family  con- 
tented  to   remain   on   the   land." 


They  Can  Use  Their  Own  Soals. 

"Now  that  paper  has  become  so  scarce." 
says  the  Albert  Lea  Tribune,  "what  sub- 
stitute are  the  shoe  manufacturers  going 
to  use  for  soles?"  If  they  will  try  their  own 
souls  they'll  strike  about  the  toughest  ma- 
terial  extant. 


PrcvarcdncMM. 

Preparedness  has  many  ramifications. 
For  Instance,  this  from  the  Montgomery 
Messenger:  "That  1916  Fourth  of  July  cele- 
bration: Now   is    the  time  to  whoop  'er  up." 


Have  Yon  Felt  It  Yctf 

If  It  hasn't  begun  to  get  you  yet  you  are 
probably  reasonably  near  being  immune. 
The  Hill  City  News  man  Is  "elected,"  for 
he  says:  "Along  about  this  time  o'  the  year 
wherever  two  or  three  are  gathered  togeth- 
er in  the  name  of  Ike  Walton  things  begin 
to  get  fishy  right  away.  Innocent  bystand- 
ers have  to  step  warily  to  avoid  getting  a 
fish   hook  in  the  ear." 


North  Dakota  Notions 


1 


Varioua  VIewi  Expr«s«l  by  Neir«paper»  of  That  Stat*. 


M 

Justice    W^lll    Sooner    or    Later    Overtake    Vm. 

Fargo  Courier-News:  Maybe  you  don't 
need  a  switch  behind  the  door  at  your  home 
for  your  children;  it  was  needed  where  some 
of  us  were  children;  but  there's  a  rod  <n 
pickle  for  all  grown-ups,  and  whoever  goes 
wrong  and  does  wrong  to  his  fellowmen 
should  not  fool  himself  that  he  can  get  by 
with  It.     He'll  get  his  Just  the  same. 


What  Arc  They  Talking  Ahoatf 

Mlnot  Optic-Reporter:  A  North  Dakota 
politician  says  he  prefers  to  sit  behind  a 
pair  rather  than  ride  In  an  automobile.  That's 
all  right  if  the  other  fellow  does  not  happen 
to  have  three  of  a  kind. 


In  Short.   They  Would  Go   Back. 

Fargo  Democrat:  A  large  number  of  Re- 
publicans would,  if  they  could,  go  back  to  the 
Payne-Aldrlch  tariff  and  have  it  re-enacted. 
They  would  go  back  to  the  system  of  monop- 
ollstlc  control  of  all  that  which  the  masses 
have  to  buy,  and  again  make  of  this  country 
an  aristocratic  and  autocratic  financial 
oligarchy.  This  Is  the  present  attitude  of 
those  Republicans  who  hope  to  control  the 
Chicago  convention. 

Mr.  Root's   nissatlKfactlon. 

Devils  Lake  Journal:  If  there  are  any  flut- 
tering hearts  that  need  treatment  after  read- 
ing Senator  Root's  keynote  speech  In  denun- 
ciation of  the  Democratic  administration.  It 
might  be  communicated  to  them  that  Mr. 
Root  would  not  have  been  any  better  pleased 
had  the  Democratic  administration  done  ex- 
actly the  opposite  of  what  he  objected  to. 

And  Even  That  SccniM  to  Evaporate. 

Valley  City  Times-Record:  About  the  only 
substitute  for  gasoline  we  have  been  able  to 
discover  is  money. 


Moral  t     Sell  Your  Turtle  and  Buy  a  Car. 

Bismarck  Tribune:  A  man  driving  a  mud- 
turtle  down  the  streets  of  Elizabeth,  N.  J., 
was  sent  to  the  workhouse  for  thirty  days. 
If  he  had  been  speeding  in  a  high  power  au- 
tomobile, the  chances  are  that  he  would  have 
escaped  with  a  small  fine  or  a  gentle  repri- 
mand. 


Oftrlal  PcrmlNslonf 

Devils  Lake  Journal:     It  can  snow  In  North 
Dakota  when  it  wants  to. 


Party  Syatcma  Mnat  (ro. 

.  A  writer  In  the  New  Republic  shows  that 
the  technical  victories  of  democracy  in  ad- 
mitting larger  classes  to  the  vote  have 
shown  little  real  benefit  in  representative 
government. 

"It  is  certainly  obvious  that  we  can  no 
longer  leave  the  average  elector  throttled 
in  Jthe  grasp  of  the  party  system.  W^e  bad- 
ly need  minority  representation.  We  can 
only  obtain  it  by  the  abandonment  of  the 
single-member  constituency  about  which, 
after  all,  there  Is  nothing  divinely  ordalne*. 
We  must  also  seek  to  put  some  serious  kind 
of  qualification  to  the  member  we  select. 
There  is  no  reason  In  the  world  why  we 
should  continue  to  leave  congress  to  ..the 
mercy  of  third-rate  lawyers,  and  the  house 
of  commons  to  the  romantic  social  ambitions 
of  retired  millionaires.  The  more  we  survey 
the  problem  of  electioneering,  the  more  it  is 
clear  that  the  emphasis  must  be  not  so 
much  on  the  people  who  choose  as  on  the 
people  chosen.  Our  democracy,  in  fact,  must 
be  an  artistocracy  by  delegation.  How  best 
to  secure  that  end.  Is  the  main  problem  in 
the  technlQuo   of  government." 


"Crushing  Germany" 


Editorial  In  the  AnnalUt. 


Talk  of  early  peace  in  Europe  persist*' 
Talk  also  persi.sts  that  the  allies  will  not 
make  peace  until  Germany  Is  crushed.  The 
two  suggestions  are  incompatible,  and  the 
latter  is  inconsistent  with  the  avowed  pur- 
pose and  intention  of  the  allies.  Lord  Bryce 
recently  said  that  what  England  wanted  waa 
not  to  crush  Germany  but  to  liberate  her. 
And  he  is  reported  to  have  added:  "We  shall 
have  no  difficulty  in  reaching  satisfactory 
terms  of  peace  once  we  can  deal  with  the 
(Serman  people  Instead  of  with  the  German 
government." 

In  sober  minds  crushing  Germany,  if  the 
phrase  has  been  used,  has  never  meant  any- 
thing more  than  crushing  the  military-ridden 
government  of  Germany.  To  crush  her  peo- 
ple would  be  to  emulate  the  crimes  of  that 
same  government  and  to  cry  to  heaven  for 
vengeance.  Nor  Is  it  drawing  a  distinction 
between  the  people  of  Germany  and  the  Ger- 
man government,  any  more  than  It  would  be 
to  draw  a  distinction  between  the  spirit  of 
the  divine  right  of  kings  and  democracy. 

Many  people  in  this  country  whose  sympa- 
thies before  the  war  were  warmer  for  the 
German  people  than  for  the  French  people, 
many  In  whose  veins  German  blood  flows  but 
In  whom  the  spirit  of  democracy  rises  In 
protest  against  the  subservieney  of  a  nation 
to  a  man  or  to  a  class,  have  sided  with  the 
allies  and  against  Germany.  These  have  not 
been  siding  against  the  German  people,  and 
they  would  rise  In  protest  against  any  effort 
to  do  to  the  German  people  what  the  German 
government  has  done  to  Belgium.  No  Amer. 
lean  wants  to  see  Germany  crushed;  no  true 
American  can  fail  to  want  the  present  spirit 
of  the  German  government  destroyed. 

Under  new  conditions  and  circumstances 
we  are  again  witnessing  the  struggle  be- 
tween democracy  and  the  spirit  of  the  Holy 
Alliance.  There  can  be  no  doubt  where  real 
American  sympathy  lies  in  such  a  struggle. 


Just  a  Moment 


Dally  Strength  and  Cheer. 

Compiled  by  John  0.  Qulnius,  tba  Sunsfalne  Mas. 

"Remember  the  words  of  the  Lord  Jesus 
Christ,  how  He  said.  It  is  more  bles.sed  to 
give   than    to   receive." — Acts   xx,    35. 

Give,  looking  for  nothing  again;  that  is, 
without  consideration  of  future  advantages; 
give  to  children,  to  old  men,  to  the  unthank- 
ful, and  the  dying,  and  to  those  you  shall 
never  see  again;  for  else  your  alms  or  cour- 
tesy is  not  charity,  but  traffic  and  mer- 
chandise. And  be  sure  you  omit  not  to  re- 
lieve the  needs  of  your  enemy  and  the  In- 
jurious; for  so,  po.<?.slbly,  you  may  win  him 
to  yourself;  but  do  you  Intend  the  winning 
him   to  God. 

Trust  not  your  alms  to  intermedial,  uncer- 
tain, and  under  dispensers;  by  which  rule  Is 
not  only  intended  the  securing  of  your  alms 
In  the  right  channel,  but  the  humility  of 
your  person,  and  that  which  the  apostle 
calls  "the  labor  of  love."  And  If  you  con- 
verse in  hospitals  and  almshouses,  and  min- 
ister with  your  own  hand  what  your  heart 
hath  first  decreed,  you  will  find  your  heart 
endeared  and  made  familiar  with  the  needs 
and  with  the  persons  of  the  poor,  those  ex- 
cellent   Images   of  Christ. — Jeremy   Taylor. 


If  by  one  man's  offense  death  reigned  by 
one;  much  more  they  which  receive  abund- 
ance of  grace,  and  of  the  gift  of  righteous- 
ness, shall  reign  in  life  by  one,  Jesus 
Christ.— Rom.   v,    17. 

Thou    hast    redeemed    our   souls   from    death. 

Hast    set   the   prisoner   free. 
Hast  made  us  kings  and   priests  to  God, 

And   we  shall   reign  with   Thee. 

Being  then  made  free  from  sin.  ye  became 

the   servants   of   righteotisness. — Rom.   vl,   18. 

Dayton,    Ohio. 

« 

Faded  EnthnalaaoiM. 

Atlantic:  The  enthusiasms  of  the  day  and 
hour  I  suppose  to  be  merely  temperamental. 
Th^  are  signs  of  an  active  mind,  and  we 
aliould  be  grateful  for  them  rather  than  oth- 
erwise, w^hether  swiftly  outgrown  or  not. 
For  they  are  but  surface  eddies  of  the  cur- 
rent, and  have  but  the  slightest  relation  to 
the  depth  below.  Even  If  some  of  them  en- 
dure to  the  point  of  permanence,  they  are 
more  likely  than  not  to  hold  their  proper 
place,  and  do  no  harm.  The  effervescence  of 
youth  is  an  excellent  thing,  and  the  more 
of  it  we  keep  in  middle  age  or  later  life, 
the  better.  Contrariwise,  if,  one  by  one,  our 
Images  totter,  fall  and  break,  no  matter. 
We  can  sit  in  serene  contemplation  of  their 
fragments.  "Through  plot  and  counterplot," 
through  all  time  and  change,  the  "Nightin- 
gale In  the  Study"  will  still  sing  on. 


Twenty  Years  Ago 


_J 


From  The  n<>rald  of  tbis  date,  1896. 


•••The  Eastern  Minnesota  road  has  cut 
the  passenger  fare  between  Duluth  and  St. 
Paul  from  J4.30  to  $3  for  single  trips,  good 
for  continuous  passage  only.  The  roads 
will  meet  the  cut  at  once. 


•♦•At  the  annual  meeting  of  the  Duluth 
Cycle  club,  the  following  officers  were 
elected:  President.  C.  H.  De  Vault;  vice 
president,  W.  N.  Dalcour;  captain,  C.  C. 
Evans;  first  lieutenant,  F.  B.  Taylor;  sec- 
ond lieutenant,  E.  P.  Earl;  secretary  and 
treasurer,  Roy  N.  Hoople.  W.  N.  Dalcour, 
F.  N.  McLaren  and  H.  O.  Swain  were  ap- 
pointed a  committee  to  have  full  charge  of 
the    Memorial    day    road    race. 


••♦The  new  ore  dock  of  the  Duluth,  Mis- 
sabe  &  Northern  railway  Is  nearly  completed 
and  will  be  ready  for  use  by  the  time  navi- 
gation opens.  It  will  have  a  storage  ca- 
pacity of  nearly  36,000   tons. 


•♦•At  the  annual  meeting  of  the  Police 
Relief  association  the  following  officers  for 
the  ensuing  year  were  elected:  C.  H.  Troyer. 
president;  F.  E.  Resche,  secretary;  Walter 
McLaln,   treasurer. 


•••D.  If.  Phllbin,  formerly  general  mana- 
ger of  the  Duluth.  Missabe  &  Northern,  has 
been  appointed  general  Bui>erintendent  of  the 
Duluth  &  Winnipeg  road. 


•••Herman  A.  FrItze  and  Augusta  Lange 
were  married  on  April  8  at  the  residence  of 
the  bride's  brother.  Gust  Lange,  at  421  East 
Ninth  street.  Rev.  C.  L.  Lehnert,  pastor  of 
the  German  M.  E.  church,  performed  the 
ceremony,  assisted  by  Rev.  W.  F.  Fritze, 
presiding  elder  of  the  Minneapolis  district 
of   that   church. 


•••M.  S.  Burrows,  who  has  been  in  the 
East  for  a  month  and  expected  to  go  on  a 
trip  to  Europe,  has  been  called  home  by 
important   business. 


•••Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today, 
34;  maximum  yesterday,  36;  minimum  yes- 
terday, 31.  About  a  quarter  of  an  inch  of 
snow   fell   last  night. 


•••Supt.  Denfeld  and  W.  G.  Crosby,  chair- 
man of  the  school  board  committee  on  teach- 
ers, have  gone  to  Winona  In  quest  of 
teachers  to  fUl  vacancies  In  the  Duluth 
schools. 


•••Mile.  Helen  Beers  has  returned  from 
New  York  and  will  be  with  Mile.  Gagnler 
this    season. 


•••Frank  A.  Greene,  ticket  agent  of  tho 
Wisconsin  Central  road  at  St.  Paul  and  for- 
merly a  resident  of  Duluth.  is  visiting  here. 

•••A.  M.  Stearns,  who  has  been  seriousljr 
ill  at  Chicago  vf or  tho  paat  six  weeks,  is  re- 
covering and  will  return  this  month. 


} 


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..-,.-._: 

Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


THE  OPEN  COURT 


UfjihTH  of  IV  n««lrt  tr*  Inflt-d  to  make  ftft  use  of 
this   rnliimii   to   tipnip    th'lr   ltlr»s    alput   the    topics   of 
irnfrnl  inttrst,   >>ut  ul:>''uuiou  of  s  i-UrUn  rrlielmis  dif-  \ 
fen-ncrs   Is  liarriil.     Letters   must  not  fxcefd  300  words  i 
— the   shorter   thf  txttrr.      Tht-y   must   he   written   on   onr  ' 
ild»  of  the  pap  r  only,  and  th'y  must  lie  aii-ompariled  In 
»TiTy  ras-  ly  the  imm'-  and  addr<'ss  of  tl)e  «rlttpr  though 
th(S'<    ii'Nd   not   bP   imlillshi'd.      A   signed   letttr   is   alvayi  I 
niorr  pffu'tlvc,   honncr.  | 

The  Herald  does  not  publish  original  Tfrse.  fontrlbH- 
tlons  of  this  nati:re  that  arw  Kuhriiltlfd  for  the  editor's 
pfniKjl  must  lie  aioniiianji-d  liy  a  slampod  and  addr'Mud 
»nKl(,i)e.  If  th-lr  return  b  desired.  Oihirwisc  uu  maou- 
KTlfil  will  be  returntd. 


A  SUGGESTION  REGARDING 

THE  TERMINAL  FRANCHISE 


To    the    Editur    of    The    Herald: 

The  ordinance  Introduced  granting 
to  thf^  MVstern  Terminal  railway  a 
fran<iilse  to  construct  and  optrate  a 
terniitial  systtni  encircling  the  city 
■was  rightly  refused  as  originally  of- 
fered. 

The  con.«tructlon  of  such  a  terminal 
would  be  of  great  value  to  the  city; 
btit  the  majority  opinion  condemns 
giving  away  these  valtiable  rights  for 
notljlng.  It  la  probable  that  the  pro- 
moters of  thl.s  railway  Intend  to  rely 
upon  tlifir  right.s  of  etninent  domain 
and    condt-nin    ii    right    of   way. 

In  thi-  case  decided  by  our  supreme 
court  conde'innlng  an  approach  to  the 
Inter.'-tftte  bridge  a4ong  Arthur  ave- 
nue, it  was  laid  down  as  a  principle 
of  law.  tliat  a  railroad  company  can- 
not cnndomn  a  Irngthwise  portion  of 
a  street  fxcept  by  two  considerations; 
namely,  that  the  city  first  grant  by 
ordinance,  allowing  the  railroad  com- 
pany a  rl>.ht  to  condemn,  and  sec- 
ond, that  the  railroad  taking  such 
property  will  compensate  the  city 
therefor. 

The  proposed  right  of  way,  applied 
for  by  the  Western  Terminal  com- 
pany, conu's  within  the  law  as  laid 
down  in  the  Arthur  avenue  case.  This 
rlKht  of  way  condemns  portions  of 
streets  paralleling  the  bay  fronts, 
and  as  the  city  has  a  riglit  to  re- 
quire a  compen.sation  therefor,  the 
city  should  insist  upon  a  recognition 
of  that  right.  The  company  cannot 
acQulie  the  right  to  use  these  streets, 
excepting    that    they   are    granted   such 


AMUSEMENTS. 


The  Box- Office  Bovs  at  the 

LYCEUM  THEATER 

will     lln«e    All    They    Can    Do 
TIiIn    Week. 

"IT  PAYS  TO 
ADVERTISE" 

Puur    \lKlitN    Miul   'I'fvo    ^latliieen. 

STAiiTi.\<;   SI  Ml  A%    afti:hnoo.\. 


Don't    Unit   TOu   Long. 


TOXK^IIT,    TiieMtlM}-.    WeilnoMilny  an«l 
'I'liiirMilii}' — >lMf inec    Dully. 

REFINED 
BURLESQUE 

JACK   ltl-:i:D   WD    HIS   HL:cuitD- 
llllKAKKIiS. 

Xttbt*.   I7>v    to    75c;    Mnls.,   :tRo-.%Oc. 


LYCEUM  i£AYs 

MATINEE  DAILY 
JACK    REID   AND    HIS   OWN    COMPANY 

''THE  RECORD 
BREAKERS" 

The  youngrit,   (Ktltteit  and  most  facinatini  Glrli« 
Choral  In   Burlesque. 

Prices  2Sc  to  7Sc.     Matinee,   lU  to  50c. 


ORPHEUM 

One    MKlit — One    >Iatliire. 
TlirilSDA\,   AIMtIL    20tli. 

HARRY  LAUDER 

Willi    the    (^rentent    Company    of 

\au<irville    SturN    Kter 

AMMembletl. 

Mntinee 50o    to    $l.50 

.\ Ight 50o    to    *2.00 

MAIL   ORDRHS    NOW. 
Sen(M    \ext    Monday. 

NEW 
ALWAYS  ^^  n  a  U  1%  1^    ^'   *"• 
A    GOOD    m^  nil  il  H       I  VTIL 
SHOW         ^MnHIl  U   11    I*-   M. 

EXTIIIK    NKW     SHOW     TO.MGHT. 
Real    \etrrniiN   of   the   Clvlf    War 

OLD  SOLDIER  MUSICIANS 

lOl.l.lS    SISTKRS   A    I,E    ROV. 
SI  I.LIVAX   »V    .>!  \SO.\. 

MERLE'S  COCKATOOS 

Concert  Orchestra — Photoplay!  D«  Luu. 

MATS  lOc.fVNITES  10-20 


rO.VKillT    AM>   TOMOitROW. 

LITTLE  MARY  MILES  MINTER 

The    %ounne.st   Star   In    the    World,   In 

"LOVELY  IVIARY" 

(.Metro     Wonilerplay) 

A   tirlppDiK   niul    Romantic   Story 

of   the    South. 

KXTRA — Mr.   and   Mrn.    Sidney    Drew 

In      a      One-Reel      Comedy,      "THE 

COl  XT    OF    TEN." 


Where    E\er>b«»d>    GoeM, 
A>V     SEAT — lOe. 


Eex 


3^X 


THEATER  BEAUTIFUL  ▼  THEATER  BEAUTIFUL 

Tnaiij^k-    Ti  iinnphs.  • 

TODAY    AND    TONIGHT 
MAE    MARSH    AND    ROOT.    HARRON    IN 

"HOODOO  ANN" 


a 


TOMORROW 
H.    B.    WARNER    IN 

THE  RAIDERS 


f» 


Two  PIctvres  Which  Will   Pleaie  th«  Moit  Partleilar. 
Keystone  Comedy  Each   Day. 


LYRIC  m  LYRIC 

KVIOItYnoDYS    THEATER. 

All  Star  Cait  Appeari  with 
ROBERT      MANTELL 

TODAY   AND   TUESDAY 

AT  THE   LYRIC   IN 

''A  WIFE'S 
SACRIFICE'' 

Do   Not    MIM    It. 


a   right   by   an    ordinance   of   the   city 
coninllsBlonera. 

Aff  a  Conijensatlon  for  auch  a  right 
let  the  city  Kcant  the  franchise 
asl^ed  for,  and  whirl  the  conetruc- 
tion  Is  coniplettd.  the  terminal  coirt* 
pany  ithall  deed  back  to  the  city  that 
portion  of  the  road  extending  from 
Flret  avenue  east  to  Twelfth  avenue 
w«8t.  Tills  would  give  the  city  a 
vested  Interest  and  control  of  the  rail 
and  water  frontiigc.  and  protect  the 
Interest,  not  only  of  this,  but  of  all 
future     venerations. 

C.  L,.  HOOD, 

2223    Forest    avenue,    city. 

EAST  END  SCHOOL  BOY 

REPLIES  TO  COL.  RESCHE 


To    the    Editor    of    The    Herald: 

I  reffr  to  the  article  In  the  Open 
Court  on  April  B,  191«.  by  Col.  F.  E. 
Kesche,  entitled  "Hoodlums  Make 
Trouble  at  the  Duluth  Armory."  I 
am  not  one  of  the  "three  hifrh  school 
boys"  mentioned,  nor  am  I  one  of  the 
boys  who  played  "havoc"  with  the 
armory  and  its  Janitor.  But  1  have 
been  over  to  the  armory  with  some 
boy  friends,  of  an  evening,  to  watch 
the  drilling  and  have  been  "promptly 
ejected"  by  Col.  Resche's  hasty,  curs- 
ing   Janitor. 

Mr.  Resche  says  he  caught  a  boy 
In  the  building  committing  a  nuisance, 
and  that  when  asked  wliat  he  was 
doing  the  boy  rtsponded  in  anti-Sun- 
day iichool  language.  I  was  not  that 
b<iy  and  1  do  not  know  him.  I  know 
this,  however,  that  the  armory's  Jan- 
itor, when  we  ask'd  him  why  he 
kicked  us  out.  responded  in  profane 
lang\iage  and  used  the  toe  of  his 
boots    to    excess    on    me. 

I  wish  to  add  that  we  were  con- 
ducting ourselves  In  a  manly  way 
while  In  the  armory,  and  did  not 
speak  saucily  to  him.  Mr.  Resche 
says  "Visitors — men,  women  and  chil- 
dren, are  always  welcome."  That  ex- 
cludes   the    Janitor. 

Yours   truly. 

A      SCHOt)L,     BOY       LIVING      IN 
THE     EAST    END. 

Duluth,    April    7. 

A  PARAPHRASE  DEAUNG 

WITH  THE  LiOUOR  OUESTION 


(gjAbe^45rilV1B 


Ther   don't    oeem   V 
nee    bel\*een    tl»^  nvei 


these 


^ 


To  the  Editor  of  The   Herald: 

In     Matthew    xll,     43    we    find 
words: 

"When  the  unclean  spirit  is  gone 
out  of  man,  he  walketh  tiirough  dry 
places,  seeking  rest,   and  flndeth   none. 

"Then  saitli  he,  I  will  go  into  my 
house,  from  whence  I  came  out,  and 
lie  gofth  and  flndeth  it  empty,  swept 
and  garnished. 

"Th«'n  goeth  he  and  taketh  with 
hims'lf  st'ven  other  condemned  spir- 
its more  wlck«-d  than  himself  and  they 
enter  in  and  llvt  there,  and  the  last 
state  of  tliat  man  is  worse  than  th'^ 
first.  And  even  so  is  it  with  this 
wi.'kfd    generation." 

Here    Is   a    paraphrase: 

When  the  liquor  traffic  Is  gone  out 
of  Duluth,  the  liquor  traffic  goes  to 
dry  places  seeking  a  foothold,  but 
flndeth    none. 

Then  salth  the  liquor  traffic.  "I 
will  go  back  to  my  hou.se  (Duluth), 
from  wlience  1  went  out."  And  the 
liquor  traffic  goeth  and  flndeth  It 
empty  (free  from  liquor),  swept  and 
garnished    («nllghtened). 

Then  goeth  the  liquor  traffic  and 
taketh  with  Itself  some  otber  unclean 
traffics  more  wicked  than  Itself,  and 
Ihty  enter  Into  Duluth  and  live  there, 
and  the  last  state  of  Duluth  Is  worse 
tiian  tlie  fir.st.  Even  so  Is  it  with  this 
wicked   Duluth. 

Compare  a  boil  on  the  body  to  the 
liquor  traffic  In  Duluth.  You  nat- 
urally smd  for  a  doctor  to  remove 
tiif  boil.  He  sets  to  In  his  accustomed 
Tjiitnner  to  remove  the  boil,  but  under 
his  treatment  the  boil  is  apt  to  appear 
elsewhere  on  the  body.  There  was  a 
cause  for  this  boll  and,  had  the  doctor 
removed  the  cause,  the  boil  would  not 
appear  in   effect. 

When  the  manufacture  of  liquor  is 
prohibited,  then  and  not  until  then 
laji    the  liquor  traffic   be  suppressed. 

"C.ERO.N'IMO." 

Superli>r,    W'l."..    April    6. 


WANTS  PRISONERS  PUT 

TO  WORK  IN  OPEN  AIR 


be  ntueh  differ- 
enee  Deiween  in-  average  layman  an' 
th'  averaKe  drayman  Sthen  It  eumea 
t'  nnderNlandlii'  (ItinKn^  Kunnlns'  fer 
offlee  au  >uu  eait't  not  fee  It  l«  one  of 
th*    latrxt    thing*    In    pulltleai. 

(Prottfted  t)y  Adams  .Newspaper  Serrice. ) 


does  not  specialize  in  grouches  nor 
Indulge  In  sarcasm,  as  do  many  I 
could    mention. 

He  makes  even  the  dullest  subject 
enjoyable,  and  presents  the  text  In 
sufh  an  attractive  manner  that  It  Is 
Interesting  and  eautly  remembered. 
In  class  he  docs  not  make  one  sit  like 
a  soldier  at  attention,  but  his  stu- 
dents learn  something  and  his  order 
cannot   be   criticized. 

Every  lover  of  Justice  Is  right- 
eously indignant  over  the  despicable 
and  certainly  \injust  treatment  Mr. 
Holmes  has  received.  We  know  that 
our  esteemed  teacher  could  never  have 
merited    such    usagp. 

I  fall  to  see  just  why  Supt.  Denfeld 
acted  as  he  did  in  the  first  place,  but 
I  suppose  he  felt  It  his  painful  but 
Christian  duty  to  get  rid  of  Mr. 
Holmes — hence   the   elimination. 

I  am  sure  there  Is  no  need  to  appeal 
to  the  citizens  of  Dxiluth  because  I 
know  they  are  bocoming  Interested  In 
the  matter  and  will  Insist  on  the  truth 
and  fair  play. 

Believing  that  there  are  many  both 
In  school  and  out  who  will  agree  with 
me.  I  am,  yours  truly,  JYP. 

Duluth,    April    7. 

DEFENDS  WEsTdULUTH  BOYS. 


To  the   Editor  of  The  Herald: 

Will  you  kindly  Insert  the  follow- 
ing lettei-  In   the  Open  Court? 

In  regard  to  Mr.  Smith,  our  default- 
ing state  treasurer:  The  fact  that  he 
was  accustomed  to  office  work  Is  no 
reason  why  he  should  be  assigned 
clerical  work  at  the  prison.  Behind 
the  desk  Is  where  he  misused  the  peo- 
ple's confidence.  Every  prisoner  should 
do  outdoor  labor,  principally  farm 
work.  If  he  does  not  know  how  to 
handle  tools  he  will  soon  learn.  For 
the  prisoner's  own  Kood  he  should  be 
required  to  work  iiard  enougi>  to  cause 
perspiration,  will  have  a  good  appe- 
tite for  a  squai'e  meal  and  a  good 
night's  sleep — which,  I  surmise,  he  has 
not    liad   for  a   long   time. 

To  get  out  of  the  system  that  which 
Is  wrong  there  Is  nothing  more  bene- 
ficial than  exercise  In  Clod's  fresh  air 
and  sunshine. 

A   PRKSONER'S   FRIEND. 

Duluth,  April  7. 

BOYS  ANSWER^COL  RESCHE. 


To   the  Editor  of  The   Herald: 

"Why  don't  you  say,  Mr.  Resche,  that 
we  are  the  boys  who  have  been  making 


To    the    Editor    of    The    Herald: 

The    person    who    wrote    the    article 

criticizing  the  boys  and  the  court  of 
West  Duluth,  not  having  the  courago 
of  his  convictions,  signed  as  "In- 
quirer." I  believe  that  I  know  who 
thp  party  Is,  and  I  am  greatly  sur- 
prised that  a  person  whom  I  had  be- 
lieved to  be  one  advanced  In  thought 
and  who  understood  the  underlying 
causes  and  motives  of  criminality, 
should  have  committed  himself  In  the 
dally    press    In    so    childish    a    manner. 

Sir,  you  would  not  permit  the 
abuse  of  horses;  you  would  not  per- 
mit any  animal  or  being  to  suffer 
pain  were  it  in  your  power  to  pre- 
vent it;  you  are  humane  enough  to 
render  assistance  in  all  cases  of  suf- 
fering as  well  as  aiding  all  cases  of 
poverty  whenever  It  Is  in  your  power 
to  do  so.  I  had  considered  you  to  be 
one  of  the  most  humane  persons  In 
West  Duluth,  as  well  as  one  of  the 
best  posted  men  upon  the  question  of 
the  criminal  tendencies  of  the  times, 
and  an  ardent  student  In  the  uplift 
of    humanity. 

Your  criticism  of  our  court  and  the 
Judge  Is  what  appears  to  me  to  be 
an  unpardonable  sin.  You  have  made 
an  awful  mistake  In  attempting 
to  Influence  the  Judge  to  be  more 
severe  and  less  humane  In  his 
dealings  with  the  prisoners  brought 
before  him.  Your  attempt  will  prove 
of  no  avail,  as  It  seems  the  Judge 
has  become  inspired  with  the  thought 
that  more  can  be  accomplished  by 
treating  the  prisoners  as  though 
they  were  brothers  of  the  common 
family,  and  that  all  of  us  are  re- 
sponsible for  the  actions  of  the  chil- 
dren, and  that  nothing  but  harm  can 
come  If  we  revive  the  old  methods 
of    the    rod    and    solitary    confinement. 

You  speak  of  the  boys  who  robbed 
Mr.  Frost,  and  the  West  Duluth  Mer- 
cantile company.  You  are  acqualtUed 
with  the  home  life  of  these  boys; 
vou  know  their  environment;  you 
know  their  status  In  life;  you  have 
no  right  to  criticize  the  boys  or  the 
court  In  this  case,  and  it  would  seem 
proper,  if  you  must  criticize,  that  you 
should  do  so  at  the  root  of  the  evil, 
rather  than  take  a  slam  at  the  ef- 
fect.s.  One  may  think  that  you  would 
be  In  favor  of  reviving  the  old  meth- 
ods of  the  Inquisition,  with  all  its 
details  of  horror,  or  again  one  may- 
think  that  you  would  like  to  see  the 
whipping  post  a  part  of  the  court's 
punishments. 

Can  you  say  that  you  are  not  partly 
to    blame    for    the    last    robbery?      Do 


you  know  that  a  certain  person  In 
life  a  burden  to  you  since  you  moved  j  West  Duluth  tried  his  best  to  find 
into  the  new  armory,  and  be  done  j  work  for  one  of  the  boys  that  was 
with  it?  You  have  certainly  said  the  |  Implicated  In  the  robbery,  but  he  was 
same  words  Indirectly  when  In  your  .  unable  to  find  anyone  who  was  will- 
article  on  Wednesday  evening  you 
.stfited    that    visitors — men,    women   and 


children — are  always  wek-on\e  It  seeni'^ 
that  the  war  in  ICurope  must  have  cer- 
tainly af feet' d  our  dictionaries  a  good 
deal,    for    the    last    time    that    I    lotdted 


Ing  to  have  an  employe  who  had  been 
a  Jailbird,  and  It  is  possible  that  had 
a  job  for  this  young  fellow  been 
found,  the  robbery  would  not  have 
been     pulled    off? 

It    does    not    appear    to    me    Just     to 


up    the   word    "always"    It   meant   at    all  krjticlze     the     boys     of     \\  est       Duluth 

times.     Can  you  please  tell  mo  In  what    P^V    '^^^  V'^V^^      ^^'^^    lawless    and 

other  wnv  I   can   lnt<rpret  those  words    ^T^^t?  ^^^  *"  Hf  found  anywhere,     lou 


of   yours    than    "You   are   the    rowdies?" 

Yt)u  certainly  have  a  pooi  way  of 
locating  the  rowdies.  Colonel.  It  does 
not  seem  to  me,  at  any  rate,  to  be  a 
verv  Rood  policy  to  follow,  that  of 
punishing  befoTe  you  have  the  right 
to  punish.  A  person  never  hears  of  the 
police,  after  some  crime  has  been  com- 
mitted, putting  the  first  persons  they 
miet  on  tho  street  Into  jail.  If  he  has, 
he  Is  a  good  deal  ahead  of  the  times — 
or   behind   them,   I  don't  know   which. 

We  were  the  ones  who  were  talking 
about  practicing  patriotism,  not  the 
rowdies  who  have  troubled  you.  But 
I  forgot — undoubtedly  you  were  refer- 
ring to  us  as  the  rowdies  when  you 
wrote    that    stirring    sentence. 

We  would  be  very  naich  obliged. 
Col.  Rescho.  if  you  could  give  us  any 
proof  whatsoever  that  we  were  the 
above-mentioned   misbehavers. 

Thanking  you  for  the  space  In  your 
paper,    we  are 

FEIJ.ERS  THAT   NEED  A   FRIEND. 

Duluth,   April    7. 

P.  .S. — Thursday  night  was  the  first 
night  that  any  of  us  had  .ever  be^n  In 
the  new  armory,  and  if  everyone  Is 
treated  as  we  were  on  our  first  ap- 
pearance you  will  have  very  few  visi- 
tors   at    any    future   affairs. 

MR.    HOLMESPRAISED. 


should  remember  that  when  a  man 
steals  a  railroad  we  send  htm  to  con- 
gress, but  when  some  of  the  boys  in 
West  Duluth  go  wrong  some  wish 
them     sent    to     the     reform     school. 

P.    G.    PHILLIPS. 
West    Duluth,    April    7. 


QUESTIONS  AND 
ANSWERS 

Tills  Apartment  does  not  pret^nrd  to  be  Infallible.  II 
will  endeavor,  however,  to  answer  tiuestlons  sent  to  it  by 
retders  of  The  Herald  to  the  best  of  Us  ablilty,  resenlng 
the  right  to  Ignore  all  that  are  trifllnx  or  of  eoneern  only 
to  the  questioner,  or  that  auk  (or  advli-e  on  legal  or  mi-d- 
ieal  (luestlons. 

To  receive  attention,  eiery  Inquiry  must  bear  the  name 
and  addrem  of  the  person  tending  It.  This  Is  not  wanted 
for  publication,  but  as  an  evidence  of  good  faith. 


George  Abramenko,  Duluth:  fl) 
What  is  the  population  of  the  United 
States  up  to  1916?  (2)  What  Is  the  pop- 
ulation of  each  state  and  possession? 

Ans.:  (I)  On  July  1,  1916,  the  census 
bureau  estimated  the  population  of  the 
United  States  at  104,000,000;  the  1910 
census  showed  a  population  of  91,972,- 
266.  (2)  Population  by  states  as  shown 
In  1910  (the  latest  authentic  figures) 
follows: 


To   the   Editor   of  The   Herald: 

I  would  like  to  state  my  private 
opinion  concerning  Roy  J.  Holmes  as 
an  English  Instructor  and  bia  dis- 
missal. 

I  am  at  present  a  student  of  the 
Duluth  Central  high  school  and  have 
had  Mr.  Holmes  for  my  teacher  dur- 
ing the  whole  of  this  year  and  1  can 
honestly  say  that  he  is  by  far  the  best 
English    teacher    I    have   ever   had    and 

that    I    have    learned    more    from    bim  ,  ,„^j^„,  2  700 >T6 

than   all   the  others  combined.  i  io»,     ..'.!! !!!!2!224!771 


Alabama    2,138.093 

Alaska     «4.3r>6 


204.3.S4 
.1.574.44!* 
.2.377.:»49 
.  799.024 
.1.114.Tr.6 

202,322 


Ariiona   . . . 

Arkansas 

Callfomla 

Colorado    

Connecticut    . . . , 

Delaware     

Dbt.    of    Colum- 

bla    331.069 

Florida   751.139 

(h-orgla     2.6)9,121 

Hawaii    191.000 

Idaho    325.594 

Illinois   5.638.591 


Mr.  Holmes  firmly  believes  In  the 
honor  system.  Why  not?  I  am  sure 
that  it  would  be  a  success  In  the  Du- 
luth   Central    high    school    if    it    had    a 

ghost  of  a  chance.    We  kn«>w  that   this  I  Maryland    1.2yf),34fi 

system  Is  being  successfully  tried  In  I  Mas.sa<husetts  ..3.366.416 
some  of  the  state  prisons;  and  surely 
it  would  work  In  school  as  the  stu- 
dents cannot  be  so  very  much  worse 
than  convicts.  Just  give  the  honor 
system   a    chance   and    then    watch. 

Mr.  Holmes'  attractive  personality 
has  won  him  the  friendship  of  every 
titudent  In  high  school.  He  trusts  the 
students  and  they  trust  him.  He  is 
their  friend  as  well  as  teacher  and  he 


Kan<*s    1,690.!M9 

Kentucky    2,289.905 

lAuisiuna   1,656.3}<8 

.Maine   742.371 


Michigan    2,810,173 

MlnnesoU    2,075.70K 

Mississippi    1,797.114 


Missouri    3,293.335 

UonUna    376.053 

Nebraska    1,192,214 

Nevada    81.875 

.New   Hampshire..    430.572 

.New   Jersey 2.537. 167 

.New     Mexico. . . .    327.3(H 

New  York 9.113.279 

North  Carolina.. 2,206.287 
North    Dakota. . .    577.056 

Ohio    4.767,121 

Oklahoma     1,657.155 

Oregon     672.765 

Pennsylvania  ...7.665.111 
Rhode  Island...  542.61U 
.South  tarollna.. 1.515, 400 
8outh    Dakota. . .    58.3.888 

Tennessee    2. l.S4.7,S9 

Texas    3.896,542 

l^h    373,351 

Vermont    355,956 

Virginia    2,0f>1.6l2 

WaMiliigton     1,141,1*90 

West    Virginia... 1.221. 119 

WIvxmsin   2.3.13.S60 

Wyoming   145,965 


"A  Reader,"  Barnum,  Minn.:  At  a 
public  auction,  have  the  clerk  or  auc- 
tioneer  the    privilege    of   bidding? 

Ans.:     Not   customarily. 


•H.,"  Proctor,  Minn.:    (1)  Can  a  man 


put  In  his  own  sewer  if  he  wants  to,  or 
must  he  get  a  ilcease  or  a  permit  from 
the  city,  or  both?  (21  Does  the  city 
of  Duluth  tap  theV  main  lying  on  the 
outis^kirts  of  Durtith,  on  Bay  View 
Heights?  ; 

Ans.:  (1)  He  nteds  no  license,  but 
must  get  a  permit  from  the  department 
of  public  works,  and  milst  not  cover  up 
his  work  until  it  has  been  examined 
by  a  city  inspector  to  see  whether  all 
sanitary  precautions  have  been  taken. 
He  can  lay  It  only  to  the  curb;  from 
the  curb  to  the  main  thie  work  must  be 
done  by  the  city.  This  Is  to  protect 
the  main  from  carelesshess.  (2)  There 
is  no  main  on  Bay  View  Heights  prop- 
er, but  connection  can  be  made  be- 
tween the  Duluth  ^nd  Proctor  systems. 


POEMS  ASKED  FOR. 

The       Herald       ackndwledges       with 

thanks   the   receipt  of  the  following: 

"When  We  Were  Two  Little  Boys." 
"Norway"  and  "Down  Where  the  Cot- 
ton Blossoms  <;row,"  from  "E.  M.  C." 
of  Gilbert,  Minn. 

"The  Little  Boy  in  Green.'  from 
"Subscriber"  at  Shovel  Lake.  Minn. 


Requests  have  been  received  for  the 
following: 

"The  Wreck  of  the  Hesperus,"  from 
"E.  M.  C."  of  Gilbert,  Minn,  (This  poem 
Is  too  easily  obtainable  to  justify  pub- 
lication here.  It  can  be  found  in  any 
volume    of   Longfellow's    poems.) 

"Chapultepec  is  taken,  and  on  her 
ruined  walls  a  huge  and  smoky  canopy 
like  a  shroud  of  honor  falls,"  from 
"K.  •    of    Duluth. 


The  MItle  Bojr  la  Green. 

Hear    the    strains    of    music;    see    the 

merry   throng. 
Through  the  crowded   gateway,  people 

press   along. 
All    within    is   splendor,    happiness   and 

gay; 
The  scene  Is  on  a  race  course  on  a  Der- 
by day. 
The  music  ceased  Its  playing,  the  bugle 

echoed  loud. 
To    the    post    the    horses    come,    before 

the  yelling  crowd. 
Mounted  on  a  gelding,  on  a  horse  they 

call    Serene. 
Was    the    people's    favorite,    the    Little 

Boy  In  Green. 

Chorus. 
A  little  boy  In  colors  green,  a  lad  with 

golden  hair, 
A  pair  of  bright  blue  eyes  that  gleam 

from  a  face  so  fair. 
People  cheered   when  he  appeared,   for 

they  had  never  seen 
A  sweeter  face  ride  In  a  race  than  the 

Little   Boy   In   Green. 

Seated  In  a  grandstand  with  the  gay 
and  glad. 

Is  a  widowed  mother  waiting  for  her 
lad. 

Her  only  son  a  Jockey,  but  still  In  ten- 
der years. 

The  thought  he  lived  in  danger  caused 
her  many  tears. 

"The  race  will  soon  be  over,"  she 
whispers  with  a  sigh; 

"Then  I'll  have  a  chance  to  speak  to 
my  darling  boy." 

The  cry,  "They're  off!"  is  shouted,  and 
there  in   front   Is  seen 

The  lad  the  widow  waits  for — the  Lit- 
tle Boy  In  Green. 

See   the   flying  horses!     What  a  pretty 

sight. 
Silken    colors    flashing    In    the    bright 

sunlight. 
Oh,    what    Joy    and    gladness    fills    each 

happy  face; 
Their  hearts  are  free  from  sorrow,  their 

thoughts  are  of  the  race. 
Gracious   God    above    us!      The    leading 

horse  has  fell! 
Others   crushed   beneath  them    the   lad 

they  loved  so  well. 
From  the  crowded  grandstand  is  heard 

a  woman's  scream — 
"God:     Oh.  save  my  only  son,  the  Little 

Boy  m  Green!'* 

Last  Chortis. 
The   mangled,   lifeless,  little   form  was 

carried  through  the  crowd. 
The  mother.  In  her  wild  alarm.  In  an- 
guish called  aloud; 
"Speak    to   me,     my   darling    boy,     your 

mother's  with  you.  Gene," 
But  all  In  vain;  no  answer  came  from 

the  Little  Boy  In   Green. 


In 


Down  Where  <lie  Cotton  Blossoms  Grow. 

1  was  going  home  again. 
And  was  waiting  for  my  train, 
a   quaint    old    railway   station     way 

out  west. 
All  the  world  was  bright  to  me. 
For  I  knew  I  soon  would  see 
Dear  old    mother   and   the   girl   I    loved 

the  best. 
I  could  see  the  rustic  gate 
Where    I    swung    with    sweetheart 

Kate.  ^    ^ 

And  my  old  plantation  home  that  stood 

below. 
May  the  soft  moon  gently  shine 
On  your  dear  face,  mother  mine, 
the    home    down    where    the    cotton 

blossoms   grow. 


In 


Chorus. 

Picture  tonight  a  field  of  snowy  white; 

Hear  the  darkles  singing  soft  and  low. 

I  long   there  to  be,  for  someone  waits 

for  me, 

Down  where  the  cotton  blossoms  grow. 

When  I  reached  the  dear  old  place 
Every  old  familiar  face 
Brought  to  my  heart  a  throb  of  untold 

Joy. 
As  *ach  darkey  took  his  stand. 
Then  I  shook  each  by  the  hand. 
For   I'd   known    them  since   I'd   been  a 

little  boy. 
Then  a  sweet  and  joyous  cry 
Brought  a  tear-drop  to  my  eye. 
And    my   mother   kissed   me   as   In   long 

ago; 
While  a  girlish  form  drew  near, 
'Twas  my  sweetheart.  Kate,  so  dear, 
my    home    down    where    the    cotton 

"blossoms   grow. 


In 


When  We  Were  Tt»o  LUlIe  Boys. 

Two    little    boys    had    two    little    toys; 

each  was  a  wooden  horse. 
Gaily    they'd    play    each    summer's    day, 

warriors  both,  of  course. 
One    little    chap    then    had    a    mishap — 

broke  off  his  horse's  head; 
Wept   for  his  toy.  then  cried  with  joy, 

as  his  young  comrade  said: 

Chorus. 
"Did  vou  think  1  could  see  you  crying. 
When  there's  room  on   my  horse  for 
you? 
Climb  up  here,  Joe,  and  don't  be  sigh- 
ing. 
He  can  go  just  as  fast  with  two. 
When  we  grow  up  we'll  both  be  soldiers 

And  our  horses  will  not  be  toys. 
Then  I  wonder  If  you'll  remember 
When  we  were  two  little  boys." 

Long  vears  had    passed,   the  war  came 

at' last.     Gaily  they  marched  away. 

Cannon    roared    loud.      'Midst    the    mad 


April  10, 1916. 


9 


HAVE  GOLORINYOUR  CHEEKS 

Be  Better  Looking— Take 
Olive  Tablets. 


If  your  skin  Is  yellow — complexion 
pallid — tongue  coated — appetite  poor — 
you  have  a  bad  taste  In  your  mouth — a 
lazy,  no-good  feeling — you  should  take 
Olive  Tablets. 

Dr.  Edwards'  Olive  Tablets — a  sub- 
stitute for  calomel — were  prepared  by 
Dr.  Edwards  after  17  years  of  study 
with   his    patients. 

Dr.  Edwards'  Olive  Tablets  are  a 
purely  vegetable  compound  mixed  with 
olive  oil.  You  will  know  them  by  their 
oMe  color. 

If  you  want  a  cjear.  pink  skin, 
bright  eyes,  no  pimples,  a  feeling  of 
buoyancy  like  childhood  d^ys,  you  must 
get  at  the  cause. 

Dr.  Edwards'  Olive  Tablets  act  on 
the  liver  and  bowels  like,  calomel — yet 
have   no  dangerous   after   effects. 

They  start  the  bile  a,nd  overcome 
constipation.  That's  why  millions  of 
boxes  are  sold  annually  at  10c  and  26c 
per  box.     All  druggists. 

Take  one  or  two  nightly  and  note 
the  pleasing  results.    , 

The  Olive   Tablet  Co.,  Columbus,  O. 


What  is  Castoria. 

^ASTOEIA  Is  a  harmless  substitute  for  Castor  Oil,  Paregoric,  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.  For  more  than  thirty  years  it  has  been  in  constant  use  for  the  relief 
of  Constipation,  Flatulency,  Wind  Colic,  all  Teething  Troubles  and  DiarrhcBa.  It 
regulates  the  Stomach  and  Bowels,  assimilates  the  Food,  giving  healthy  and 
natural  sleep.    The  Children's  Panacea— The  Mother's  Friend. 

The  Kind  You  Have  Always  Bought,  and  which  has  been  in  use  for  over 
30  years,  has  borne  the  signature  of  Chas.  H.  Fletcher,  and  has  been  made  under 
his  personal  supervision  since  its  infancy.  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  InMts  and  Children— Experience  against  Experiment. 

Letters  from  Prominent  Physicians 
retcantentoisTiiudftidi^         dddrossed  to  Chas.  H.  Fletcher. 


;^*^:iv.^. 


S  sfmiSii4lhe«»«i"^BBtftiUi 
^  liintllie  StanadisattiB(Wtlsaj 


"^'•M  Infants  CiiiiDHig 


tion.SourStaiMcbJjB^j 
IossofSmiek 


Dr.  Albert  W.  Kahl,  of  Buffalo,  N.  Y.,  says:  "I  have  used  Castoria  in 
my  practice  for  the  past  26  years.  I  regard  it  as  an  excellent  medicine 
for  children. " 

Dr.  Gustave  A.  Eisengraeber,  ot  Sf.  Paul,  Minn.,  says:  "I  Ha.*  used 
your  Castoria  repeatedly  in  my  practice  with  good  results,  and  can  recom- 
mend It  as  an  excellent,  mild  and  harmless  remedy  for  children." 

Dr.  E.  J.  Dennis,  of  St  Louis,  Mo.,  says:  "I  have  used  and  prescribed 
your  Castoria  In  my  sanitarium  and  outside  practice  for  a  number  of  years 
and  find  it  to  be  an  excellent  remedy  for  children." 

Dr.  S.  A.  Buchanan,  of  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  says:  "I  have  used  your  Cas- 
toria in  the  case  of  my  own  baby  and  find  it  pleasant  to  take,  and  hav. 
obtained  excellent  results  from  Its  use." 

Dr.  J.  E.  Simpson,  of  Chicago,  111.,  says:  "I  hare  tised  your  Castoria  in 
cases  of  colic  in  children  and  have  found  It  the  best  medicine  of  its  kind 
on  the  market." 

Dr.  R.  E.  Eskildson,  of  Omaha,  Neb'.,  says:  "I  find  your  Castoria  to  be  ■ 
standard  family  remedy.  It  is  the  best  thing  for  infants  and  children  I 
have  ever  known  and  I  recommend  It." 

Dr.  L.  R.  Robinson,  of  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  says:  "Tour  Castoria  certainly 
has  merit  Is  not  its  age,  Its  continued  use  by  mothers  through  all  these 
years,  and  the  many  attempts  to  Imitate  it,  sufficient  recommendation t 
[What  can  a  physician  add?     Leave  It  to  the  mothers." 

Dr.  Edwin  F.  Pardee,  of  New  York  City,  says:  "For  several  years  I  hava 
recommended  your  Castoria  and  shall  always  continue  to  do  so,  as  it  has 
Invariably  produced  beneficial  results." 

Dr.  N.  B.  Slzer,  of  Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  says:  "I  object  to  what  are  called, 
patent  medicines,  where  maker  alone  knows  what  ingredients  are  put  in 
them,  but  I  know  the  formula  of  your  Castoria  and  advise  its  use.'* 

genuine'  castoria  always 

fiaan  the  Signatnre  of 


IttB 


^ffc^gjoLCoiaat. 


NEW 


■vobk. 


;<<  '-rr''', 


:'^n^' 


Exact  Copy  of  Wrapper. 


In  Use  For  Over  30  Years 

The  Kind  You  Have  Always  Bought 

THB  CBNTAUN  COMI»ANV,  NKW  YONK  CITY. 


crowd,  wounded    and    dying:,     Jack 

lay. 
Loud    rings    a   cry;    a    horse    dashes  by, 

from  out  the  ranks  of  blue; 
Gallops  aw^ay   to   where  Jack  lay,   as  a 

voice  comes  strong  and  true: 

Chorus. 
"Did  you  think  I  could  leave  you  dying:, 
When   there's  room  on  my  horse   for 
you? 
Climb  up  here,  Jack;  we'll  soon  be  fly- 
ing 
To  the  ranks  of  the  boys  In  blue. 
Did  you  say.  Jack.  I'm  all  a  tremble? 

Well,  perhaps  It's  the  battle's  noise; 
Or  It  may  be  that  I  remember 
When  we  were  two  little  boys." 


"Norway." 

(The  Land  of  the  Midnight  Sun.) 
Norway!    Far  away  from  Norway! 

There  I  found  the  Idol  of  my  heart. 
My  thoughts  all  are  drifting  your  way; 

I  love  you  still,  though  we're  apart. 

Chorus. 
When  I  sailed  away  from  Norway, 

I  could  hardly  say  "good -by." 
For   when    I   saw    you   standing   in   the 
doorway. 
My    heart    just    seemed    to    cry,    "My 
darling! 
Thelma,  Thelma.  how  I  love  you!" 

After  all  is  said  and  done, 
I'll  return  .some  day  to  Norway 

And  the  Land  of  the  Midnight  Sun. 

Night-time,  always  in  the  night-time. 
That  is  when  I  miss  you  most  of  all. 

I  pine  for  your  Northern  light-time; 
I  seem  to  hear  your  distant  call. 


RECALLS  DAYS 
OF  CiyiL  WAR 

Hand  of  Providence  Wiped 

Out  Hatred,  Says  Rev. 

H.  A.  Ingham. 


NEGRO  SOLDIER  KILLED 
IN  RIOTING  IN  TEXAS 

Del  Rio,  Tex..  April  10. — Private  John 
Wade  of  Company  C.  Twenty-fourth 
Infantry,  a  negro  regiment,  was  killed 
here  Saturday  night  when  two  rangers 
and  Sheriff  Almond  attempted  to  ar- 
rest sixteen  negro  soldiers  who  had 
created  disturbances  in  a  house  In  the 
restricted  district.  The  negroes  are 
said  to  have  attacked  the  officers  while 
the  latter  were  taking  them  to  the  jail. 

Wade  Jumped  on  Ranger  Barler,  ac- 
cording to  witnesses,  pressing  him  to 
the  ground  and  clubbing  him  on  the 
head  with  the  butt  of  his  revolver. 
Lying  on  his  back,  Barler  drew  his 
pistol  and  fired  over  his  shoulder. 
Wade  was  killed. 

Protests  against  the  presence  of  and 
requests  for  the  removal  of  the  negro 
soldiers  who  have  been  stationed  here 
for  the  last  three  weeks  were  being 
prepared  to.be  sent  to  the  war  depart- 
ment. A  high  state  of  indignation 
existed  In  Del  Rio  as  a  result  of  the 
affair. 


G.  A.  R.  Celebrates  Appo- 
mattox Day  at  Memorial 
•      Hall. 


"I  am  moved  to  wonder  who  will  be 
the  Lee  and  who  the  Grant  when  the 
present  European  war  ends.  None  now 
appears  in  their  role.s,  for  the  fires  of 
enmity,  hatred  and  jealousy  burn  with- 
in the  breasts  of  the  warring  coun- 
tries. And  this  being  so,  we  cannot 
hope  to  see  an  Appomattox  over  there. 
One  side  may  win,  and  peace  will 
come,  as  It  surely  will.  But  we  won- 
der if  the  peace  that  God  gives  can 
follow,  when  so  much  hatred  Js  found." 

So  declared  Rev.  Hardy  A.  Ingham, 
pastor  of  the  Endlon  church,  who 
delivered  the  principal  address  at  the 
Appomattox  day  celebration  Saturday 
evening  at  Memorial  hall,  courthouse. 
The  affair  was  helj  under  the  auspices 
of  J.  B.  Culver  post,  G.  A.  R.,  and  the 
Women's  Relief  corps.  A  dinner  was 
served  at  6:30  o'clock  attended  by  the 
veterans  and  their  invited  guests.  A 
program  of  patriotic  speeches  and  mu- 
sic  followed. 

Common  memories  of  adventures, 
sorrows,  joys,  sympathies  and  achieve- 
ments shared  by  the  Union  soldiers 
during  the  trying  years  from  1861  to 
1866  were  frequently  recalled  by  the 
twenty-two  white-haired  veterans  who 
sat  at  the  dinner.  Their  mutual  hopes 
and  fears,  hardships  and  dangers,  and 
the  patriotic  devotion  in  those  days, 
have  held  them  together  as  comrades 
for  more  than  a  half  century  since  the 
war.  The  affair  last  evening  was  not 
only  In  celebration  of  the  surrender  of 
Lee  to  Grant  at  Appomattox  on  April 
9,  1866,  but  also  an  observance  of  the 
golden  jubilee  of  the  birth  of  the 
Grand-  Army  of  the  Republic,   the  first 


post    of    which    was    organized    at    De* 
catur,  III.,  on  April  6,  1866. 
"Sot  Lout   Caawe. 

Rev.  Mr.  Ingham,  In  addressing  th* 
veterans  and  their  guests,  declared 
that  the  Civil  war,  which  ended  at 
Appomattox,  was  not  a  lost  cause  for 
either  side.  "There  was  both  tragedy 
and  glory  for  both  sides,"  he  said. 
"Tragedy  for  the  lost  cause  for  the 
South,  tragedy  of  lost  fathers.  hu8- 
I  banvis  and  sons  on  both  sides;  but  to 
both  sides,  as  we  now  see  it,  a  glori- 
ous   achievement. 

"There  came  out  of  that  struggle  a 
type  of  civilization  that  makes  thla 
country  a  leader  among  nations.  With- 
out the  hand  of  providence  as  leader 
during  the  struggle  the  wounds  could 
not  have  been  healed  as  they  have." 

Dr.  J.  D.  Budd,  one  of  the  veterans 
of  the  war  of  the  early  sixties,  told 
of  the  organization  of  the  Grand  Army 
of  the  Republic.  The  first  post,  or- 
ganized at  Decatur,  111.,  had  twelva 
charter  members.  Only  one  of  the 
twelve  is  alive  today.  Post  No.  2  was 
mustered  at  Springfield,  111.  The  first 
national  encampment  was  hold  In  In- 
dianapolis on  Nov.  20,  1866.  The  fif- 
tieth will  be  held  next  fall  at  Kansas 
City. 

Tellit  of  Fimt  Chaptrr. 

Dr.  Budd  declared  that  the  growth; 
of  the  order  was  not  rapid.  Twelva 
vears  passed  and  it  had  only  reached 
the  30.000  mark.  But  during  the  next 
twelve  years  it  grew  in  leaps  an.l 
bounds  and  reached  Its  high-water 
mark  in  1890.  when  it  had  a  member- 
fchip  of  more  than  400,000.  For  the 
last  twenty-five  years  It  has  been 
steadily  decreasing.  The  number  of 
deaths   last   year   was   11,434. 

Chaplain  N.  L.  T'pham  of  Culver  post 
delivered  the  Invocation  at  the  dinner, 
after  which  the  guests  assembled  In 
Memorial  hall,  where  the  program  was* 
given.  Miss  Margaret  Finkle  sang  two 
songs  and  S.  M.  Hanses  gave  three 
readings.  T.  C.  Rice  sang  his  own 
song,  "The  Glory  Land  Train,"  in  re- 
sponse to  a  reques-t  which  was  made 
upon    him. 

The  veterans  who  were  present  were 
as   follows: 

Duluth — J.  A.  Tucker,  J.  H.  Baker, 
N.  J.  Upham.  T.  E.  Rice  S.  C.  McCor- 
mick,  John  Dlmond.  R.  S.  Lerch,  John 
H.  I^  Vaque.  John  R.  Randall,  Austin 
Moody.  T.  Wilson,  W.  H.  Smallwood, 
J.  W.  Morgan,  J.  D.  Budd.  E.  G.  Chap- 
man Asa  Dalley,  C.  M.  Wilson,  S.  M. 
Klelley  and  John   H.  Thomas. 

Superior— J.    W.    Haskell,    I.    B.    HjH 

and  A.  N.  Lent. 

* 

lAtrmey   Teat    Debate. 

Lakota.  N.  D..  April  10. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Devils  Lake  high 
school  won  the  debate  from  Lakota. 
convincing  the  Judges  that  the  liter- 
acy test  should  not  be  included  In  the 
Immigration  act. 


PRESIDENT  TO  MAKE 
SPEECHES  THIS  WEEK 

Washington.     April     10.  —  President 
Wilson    will   deliver   two   speeches   this 
week   which   many  of   his  advisers  ex- 
pect  to  have  an   Important   bearing   on 
the  coming  presidential  campaign.  The 
flr.st  will  be  made  here  Thursday  night 
at  a  Jefferson  day  gathering  of  Demo-  | 
crats  fr<.m  all  parts  of  the  country  and  i 
the    second    will   be   delivered   Saturday  ! 
night  In  New  York  at  a  banquet  of  the 
Young    Men's    Democratic    club. 

Chairmen  of  Democratic  state  com- 
mittees and  members  of  the  Democratic 
national  committee  and  of  the  Demo- 
cratic congressional  committee  will  be 
the  guests  of  the  common  council  club 
composed  of  government  officials  at 
the  banquet  before  which  the  president 
win  speak  Thuisday  night.  It  V|^U  be 
the  first  distinctively  political  gather- 
ing the  president  has  addressed  for 
more  than  a  year. 

♦ 

Manitowoc   Brewery   Fire. 

Manitowoc,  Wis..  April  10.— A  fire 
loss  estimated  at  $10,000  resulted  Sat- 
urday to  a  storage  building  at  the 
plant  of  the  William  Rahr  &  Sons  com- 
pany, maltsters  and  brewers. 


Common  Sense  Will  Stop 

Horrible  Rheumatism 


The  famoofl  Opieu  a  srreat  English 
iMiinter,  was  once  asked  what  he  mixed 
nis  paints  with.    "Brains,"  he  replied. 

Rheumatism  cannot  live  long  in  a 
body  that  is  cared  for  by  a  hrad  fall 
of  brains.  Brains  or  common  sense 
is  an  avowed  enemy  to  rhenmatism. 
The  poisons  with  which  every  x^ea- 
matic  body  is  filled,  arise  in  the  kid- 
neys, or  stomach  or  blood.  TTiis 
poison  goes  into  the  Wood.  It  is 
stronger  than  the  ordinary  force  of 
the  blood.  It  lodges  in  the  ranscles 
and  joints.  It  gathers  arocrd  nerves 
and  presses  upon  them.  It  inflames 
«»«,  flesh.  Pain  comes  and  remains 
ontil  the  cause  of  the  trouble,  the 
•cW?  «nd  poisons,  aro  drhren  out  of 
the  blood. 

Salves  and  rubbine,  lotions  and 
baths,  hot  towels  and  water  bottles' 


will  not  reach  down  to  the  throne  room 
of  the  trouble.  What  nature  wants  is 
more  power  to  the  blood.  Many  forma 
of  rheumatism  are  caused  by  secret 
deplorable  diseases.  Nature  surely 
uses  common  sense  and  tells  the  man 
to  get  rid  of  this  bad  blood.  Here  is  a 
chance  for  you  to  use  your  common 
sense.    How? 

Get  a  bottle  of  8.  S.  t.*  the  greatest! 
blood  purifier  ever  known.  During  60 
years  it  has  cured  thousands  of  cases 
of  rheumatism  and  will  cure  you.  It 
is  purely  vej^etable  and  goes  into  tha 
blood  like  nch  food  goes  into  it.  It 
throws  off  all  impurTties  and  makes 
good,  pure  red  blood. 

If  you  desire  special  medical  ad- 
vice, write  our  Medical  Departmentp 
Room  19,  Swift  Specific  Company, 
Atlanta.  Ga. 


1 

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10 


Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


April  10, 1916. 


'^ 


l^r 


1         I 


<  >  ■»  *t' 


WEST 


HERALD     _ 

A,  Jensen,  57th  Ave,  West  and  Grand-Distribution.  j      i 

Soencer  Pharmacy,  402  Central  Ave. -Advertising  and  Sut^crptions. 


t  irs-MsBd  Col*  S4r. 


4 


KEEP   IT 
NEW 

T^ON'T  make 
■■^the  mistake 
of  wearing  a 
suit  and  having  it 
pressed  until  the 
surface  begins  to 
get  hard  and  shiny. 
It  will  always  look 
new  if  properly 
cleansed  at  regular 
intervals. 

Telephone  us. 

Look  for  tht 
Emblem  Tag: 
it  is  your  guar- 
antet  of  Mas- 
itr  S4rvic0. 


KILLED  BY 
CAR  AND  AUTO 

Edward    Godmere    Struck 

First  By  Machine  While 

Crossing  Street. 

Hurled  Under  Car,  Receiv- 
ing   Injuries   Wiiich 
Prove  Fatal. 


mornlnff  foUonlnr  »  brief  Illness.  The 
funeral  servlcfs  will  be  held  tomor- 
row afternoon  at  :l:SO  oclfxrk  from 
St.  Stephen's  Lutheran  church  Fifty- 
eighth  avenu-  we.st  and  >.lci>lin 
street  Rev.  W.  F.  A.  Lueok  of  Supe- 
rior will  pnach  a  short  sermon  in 
Cerman  and  Rev.  H.  Krieger  of  Mr- 
Rinia  will  apeak  In  EngflUh.  Th9 
body  will  be  taken  to  Milwauke.s  VN  Is., 
the  former  home  of  Rev.  Mr.  Pievera. 
for  burial.  Rev.  and  Mrs.  Sievera  will 
accompany  the  body 


Laundry 
Dry  Cleaning 
Department. 


Edwanl  r;.)clinerv.  aged  1:2,  was  al- 
ni.iHl  In.-tl.inlly  killed  at  about  1  o'clock 
Sunday  mornlnjf  by  bein^  struck  by  an 
automobile  drlv;>n  by  Kdwin  Johnson, 
307  North  fVntr.tl  avenue,  and  dragged 
I  by  an  .aslbound  street  car  for  abt>ut 
100  feot  oil  Oii'Ota  street.  The  acci- 
d»-nt  occurred  at  the  breakup  of  a 
party  at  the  home  of  J.  McKuslck,  4618 
Om-ota  .street. 

<r')dni'^re,  with  several  other  younjr 
men,  had  K'wk*  out  on  the  sidewalk. 
Tliey  lniend''d  cro.ssiiiK  tlie  street,  but 
vviTf  waiting  for  the  street  car  which 
was  but  a  t»hort  di-^tance  away,  to  pu.'^.s. 
(M)dn)  re  .sie()ped  into  (lie  street  and 
Riarted  to  rro.>?B  the  carline  ahead  of 
the  (ar.  lie  failed  to  notice  an  auto- 
inobll'-  on  the  other  side  and  alnios'. 
ran  Into  It. 

The  automobile  struck  hlni  a  terrific 


iT^OliC  i  00. 


f 


Dress 

Goods 

and  Silks 

Specially 

42-inch  Egyptian  Crepe 
Wool  —  Colors,  pink,  light 
blue,  and  all  the  dark  colors; 
75c  \alucs  at — 

59c 

65c  Washable  Tub  Silks— 
111  pretty  colored  stripes  and 
:i2-inrh  (iallilord  Silk  Plaids, 
in  pretty  shades — now   only 

45c 

54-in.  Black  Serge— Reg- 
ular $1.25  value,  on  sale  at, 
per  vard — - 

$1.00 


WILL  BREAK 
ALLtCORDS 

Missabe  Road  Prepared  to 

Haul  20,000,000  Tons 

This  Year. 


evue 


Mod^ 


t 


(Living  Models) 


G.  A.  RAKOWSKY. 


EDWARD  GODMERE. 


NOTED 


blow  and  cast  hitn  up  agHln.m  the 
.street  car,  his  clothes  becomlnn:  eii- 
tanffled  In  the  Journals  of  the  car 
w'hecl.s.  l\>'  was  dr.iKK' d  nearly  three 
car  lengths  before  it  was  brought  to  a 
stop. 

(todmere  wa.s  still  breathing  when 
picked  lip  by  his  friends.  Johnson's 
nutomoblle  was  brought  to  a  slop  with- 
in a  short  distance  of  the  accident  and 
the  young  man  was  taken  In  it  to  the 
Duluth  ho.-<pilal,  where  he  died  shortly 
ifterwards. 

Till'  accident  was  wltne.'^sed  by  sev- 
eral young  tnen,  among  them  being 
Clareni  e  Flynn,  102  Forty-eithth  ave- 
nue; Richard  Hines.  6117  Wadcn.a 
.street;  Joseph  Terry,  6101  Roosevelt 
-street,  and  J-  McXulty.  all  of  whom 
had  been    at   the   party. 

ifOdniere  was  the  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
I.ouls  Uodmere,  606  North  Sixtieth  ave- 
nue west.  He  leaves  besides  his  par- 
ents, one  sister,  Mrs.  Frank  Anstitt, 
two  brother.s,  Kugene  of  Duluth  and 
William   of    Portland,   Or. 

The  funeral  will  he  held  tomorrow 
morning  at  9  o'clock  from  the  SI. 
James  Catholic  church  with  Interment 
In  Calvary  c  metery. 

Dies  After  Short  Illness. 

Frieda,  the  11-months-old  daui?hter 
of  Kev.  and  Mrs.  Walthier  Si. vers, 
5712     N'icollet     atre»<t,     died     yesterday 

■  ■        tu  ■     i-«j^  := 


tlustav  A-  Rakow.sky.  801  ^^rth 
Fifty-eighth  avenue  west,  entered  the 
race  for  the  nomination  of  county 
commissioner  In  the  Fifth  district  by 
filing  Saturday.  Mr.  Rakowsky  Is  a 
nvchanlcal  engineer  employed  by  the 
water  and  light  department  and  was 
identified  with  th-  erection  of  and  the 
operation  of  the  aerial  bridge.  He  has 
resided  in  Duluth  for  the  last  forty- 
six  years  and  la  the  «on  of  the  late 
J.  <;.    Rakowsky.  .       ^    , 

With  the  filing  of  Mr.  Rakowsky  a 
papers  for  the  nomination  there  are 
now  six  active  candiilates  In  the  fl^id 
for  the  nomln.itlon.  The  other  candi- 
dates are  Warren  A.  Pond,  Jam«s  A. 
Webber,  John  L.  Seymour.  Joseph 
Becks  and  Al  Overton.  Charles  Kaup- 
pl.  the  present  commissioner,  will  also 
aeek   re-election. 

WOULD  CiJAJifiE 

POLLING  STATION 

Residents  of  Morgan  Park 
Seek  Better  Location 


for  Booth. 


GREEN,  THE  NOTED 
CACTUS  JUICE  MAN, 
IS  IN  DULUTH,  MINN. 


4— 


Quality,  Durability  and 
Best  Value  in  America. 


BuHh  &  <  >erts,  Lyon  &  Healy.  the  Bald- 
win line,  SchaefTer,  Crown.  Hamilton, 
Ifowartl  and  player  pianos  that  are  all 
but  human;  good  selection  of  above, 
mentioned  Instruments  In  many  styles 
and    wood    finishes. 

.Special  bargains  In  used  pianos  and 
player  pianos  as  follows:  |35,  $46.  $76, 
|125,   1146,    $246 — cash   or  on   payments. 

KORBV     PI.INO    COMPAWY, 

Duluth's    Oldest    Piano    House. 
Ue    Lake   Avenac    North. 


Matting 
Suit  Cases  $1  and  Up 


Quality 


i^<'' 


i\ 


Service 


^il?!ffltLtt4aUL*.Mf 


ESTABLISHED  1868 

Dulutk  Trunk  Co. 

Superior  St.,  220  West 


Read  The 
HeraldWants 


Duluth,  Minn.,  April  8,   1916. 
E.   V.  Green,   the  Cactus  Juice  man, 
is    in    the    city,    at   the    >Ioliand.      Mr. 
Oreen    (•omo.«i    here    from    other    large 
cltleH,     where     he      has      spent      many 
months    meeting    the    public,    and    has 
altractod  widespread  attention  through 
his  views  on  health  and  hygiene.   Mr. 
Groen   is   a   man   of  rare   talent,   mag- 
netic force  and  charm  of  manner;   he 
never  cea-ses  to   surprise  you  with   the 
infinite   variety   of   his   knowledge   and 
absolute     thoroughness     and     correct- 1 
ness.      Mr.    Green    claims   chiefly   that  i 
most  of  the  ill  health  of  today  la  due  \ 
almost    entirely    to    those    having    that 
which     host     distinguishes    the     white  ^ 
man    from    the   savage   of    the   jungle,  j 
He   claims  that   nine  times  out  of  ten 
It  l.s  the  result  more  or  loss  of  a  weak,  | 
dlijordered    stomach    and    nine    times  I 
out  of  ten  these  disorders  are  due   to 
too  much  eating  and  drinking  and  to; 
too    little    outdoor    exercise,    but    it    Is  i 
always  possible,  he  say.s,  to  make  some 
effort  toward  a  healthy  living,  and  in  I 
connection   with   the   expression  of  his  I 
views,    he    is    introducing    his    famous  i 
Cactus    Juice    Compound.      To     prove  j 
his  advanced  thoughts.  Mr.  Green  is  In  ' 
Duluth   for  the   purpose  of  giving  the  i 
people   of  this  city   the  advantage   to  i 
be    derived    from    Mr.    Green's    knowl-  | 
edge  in  ntedlclnal  roots  and  herbs.  He  | 
toils    an     Interesting    story    of    Cactus 
Juice,  which  la  called  the  Master  Med-  I 
Iclne.       He    states     that    it      Is     made' 
mainly    from    juices     of     fruit,     roots, 
barks  and   herbs  gathered   from  most 
remote  parts  of  the  earth.     This  med- 
icine obtains  its  high  efficiency  by  the 
direction    of    E.    Seller,     noted     germ 
cheml.st. 

It  Is  plain  that  Cactus  Juice  quickly 
overcomes  stomach,  liver,  kidney  and 
Intestinal  as  well  as  catarrhal  affec- 
tions and  win  actually  prolong  life  by 
restoring  and  keeping  up  the  vigor 
of  youth.  In  a  number  of  great 
American  cities,  thousands  have  been 
converted  to  Mr.  C. reen's  views  and 
liave  been  benefited  by  Cactus  Juice. 
Mr.  Green  Is  very  philanthropic  to 
the  suffering  puhll(«.  He  will  be 
here  In  one  of  the  prominent 
drug  stores  of  DuTtith  to  direct  the  In- 
troduction of  Cactus  JulcH  so  that  it 
may  do  the  most  good.  The  Duluth 
agency  has  been  about  decided  upoa, 
said  Mr.  Green,  and  the  name  of  the 
druggist  will  soon  be  announced. — Ad- 
vertisement. 


ResidenU  of  M-rgan  Park  will  urge 
the  city  commissioners  to  place  the 
booth  of  the  Forty-first  voting  dis- 
trict In  Morgan  Park.  The  voting 
place  has  been  in  Smlthvllle,  whicli 
up  to  the  last  two  years,  has  been 
the  most  thickly  settled  part  of  the 
district.  .      ,  .     , 

Since  the  building  of  the  steel 
plant's  residence  district  the  heavy 
voting  populalli)n  Is  in  Morgan  "P^r^}^- 
It  is  said  that  there  are  between  200 
and  300  citizens  who  will  wish  to  cast 
their  vote,  but  who  will  be  unable 
to  do  so  If  the  polling  place  is  situated 
a  mile  or  two  away.  The  entire  vot- 
ing strength  of  Sinlthville  and  Spirit 
Lake,  which  formerly  made  up  this 
precinct,  has  averaged  about  thirty 
voters. 

"It  Is  «»nly  fair  that  the  city  com- 
missioners should  m«»ve  the  polling 
place  to  the  center  of  population  of 
tlie  district,"  said  Dr.  Oliver  S.  Olson 
yesterday.  "When  employes  of  the 
plant  come  home  from  work  In  the 
evening  thev  will  not  voto  if  they 
have  to  walk  a  mile  or  two  to  cast 
their  ballot.  There  are  more  than  200 
voters  at  Morgan  Park  now.  and  this 
number    is    steadily    Increasing" 

HAD  SUCCESSFUL  YEAR. 

»■  ■  ■    ^ 

Western  Curling  Club  Will  Hold  Its 
Annual  Meeting. 

The  annual  business  meeting  of  th-; 
Western  Curling  club  will  be  held  to- 
morrow evening  at  the  clubrooms  on 
F'lfty-seventh  avenue  and  Bristtd 
street.  Election  of  officers,  distribu- 
tion of  trophies  and  other  business 
matter.s    will    be    taken    up. 

The  present  officers  of  the  club  are 
Frank  H.  Wade,  president;  Ernest  An- 
derson, vice  president;  1).  0.  Wake- 
man,  secretary,  and  Wk  B.  (ietchell. 
treasurer.  The  club  has  had  one  of  its 
most   successful    years. 


The  greatest  ors  liauling  season  in 
the  iilsiory  of  the  Duluth.  Mls^abe  ft 
Northern  railroad  la  expected  during 
tlie  coming  summer.  A  third  more  ore 
than  ever  ha**  b'-en  haul»-d  before  in 
one  year  will  be  brought  over  this  rail- 
road   to    the    locM    docks    according    to 

'  expectations   of   officials. 

'      The  company  expecl.«»  to  ship  20,000,- 
000    tons   this   year.      The    greatest    l>re- 

j  vlous    record    was    16.000,000    tons. 

I  Preparations  for  this  .-normoua  traf- 
fic are  now  all  complete.  Every  en- 
gine and  car  has  b*en  »iven  a  thorough 
overhauling.  The  machine  shops  of 
Proctor  have  beeii  bua>'  all  winter 
making  necessary  *ripal^  to  the  roll- 
ing stock.  ,  w  « 
The  three  docks  have  also  been 
given  a  thorough  Inspection  and  ma- 
chinery for  operating  the  pockets  and 
loading  the  boats  has  been  tested  and 
found  all  to  be  in  first  class  shape  lor 
starting.  ^  ,  .  . 
"The  opening  of  navigation  Is  what 
we  are  now  waiting  for,"  said  Supt. 
J.  W,  Kreitter.  "We  expect  to  mak* 
this  our  banner  season.  Our  estimate 
of  the  amount  of  ore  we  will  haul  has 
been    placed    at    2«V««0.000    tons " 

C0NCREfE,F6R 

CENTRAL  AVENUE 

■  a.f    .i 

Property    Owners    Select 
Material;  Width  of  Pav- 
ing Decided. 

Central  avenue  proi)erty  owners  at 
their  meeting  Saturday  evening  de- 
cided that  the  thoroughfare  should  be 
paved  with  one-course  concrete.  The 
contract  for  improvement  will  be  1st 
v.lthin  a  short  time  by  the  city  com- 
mission. _  .,^. 

Tlie  street  wtll  be  paved  to  a  width 
of  80  feet  from  Cody  street  to  Sixth 
street.  It  will  be  24  feet  wide  from 
Sixth  street  to  Highland  and  20  feet 
wide  above  Highland  to  the  Duluth. 
Missabe  &  Northern  right-of-way. 

The  meeting  Saturday  evening  was 
attended  by  about  twenty  property 
owners  or  representatives  of  owners 
along  the  street.  The  class  of  material 
used  in  paving  the  thoroughfare  to 
New  Duluth  waa  decided  as  the  best, 
and  agreed  upon.  This  Is  granite  con- 
crete, reinforced. 

Old  Resident  Summoned. 

Mrs.  Beda  Franson,  wife  of  Charles 
Franson.  4113  West  Fourth  street,  died 
Saturday  afternoon  following  an  Ill- 
ness of  several  weeks.  Mrs.  Franson 
had  been  a  resident  of  Duluth  for  the 
last  twenty -seven  years.  She  leaves, 
besides  her  husband,  two  daughters. 
The  funeral  will  be  held  Wednesday 
afternoon  at  2:80  o'clock  from  Filla- 
trault'e  undertaking  rooms,  with  bur- 
ial In  Oneota  cemetery. 

West~Duluth  Briefs. 

Mrs.  Jerome  M.  Knapp  is  reported 
seriously  ill  at  her  home,  17  North 
Sixty-second  avenue  west.  Mrs.  Knapp 
suffered  a  severe  relapse  after  getting 
up  from  a  sick  l>ed  to  attend  the  fu- 
neral of  her  mother.  Mrs.  Thomas 
Thompson,   who  died  early  last  month. 

West  Duluth  lodge  No.  85.  Degree  of 
Honor,  will  hold  a  special  business 
meeting  Thursday  afternoon  at  2:30 
o'clock  at  Gilley's  hall. 

Percy  A.  Perkins  of  St.  Paul  is  a 
guest  at  the  home  of  his  sister,  Mrs. 
T.  F.  Olsen  612  North  Fifty-ninth  ava- 
nue   west. 

A.  G.  Macauley,  701  North  Fifty-sev- 
enth avenue  west,  has  returned  from 
a  short  business  trip  to  the  Twin  Cities. 

Mrs.  C.  H.  Mathews  and  son,  Reg. 
inald,  628  North  Fifty-eighth  avenue 
west,  returned  today  from  Marinette. 
Wis.,  where  they  have  been  visiting 
relatives. 

Mrs.  Hugh  Bell  of  Eau  Claire,  Wis., 
is  a  guest  at  the  home  of  her  son  and 
daughter-in-law,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  J. 
Bell.    426    Nortli    Central    avenue. 

Mrs.  R.  G.  Allen.  5934  Grand  avenue, 
has  returned  from  Minneapolis,  where 
she  bus  been  spending  two  weeks 
visiting     relatives. 

Watch  repairing.  Utirst.  West  Duluth. 


T 


omorrow! 


Morning— 10:30  to  12 
Afternooh  ....  2  to  4 

TKc  S?ml-Annual  FasKlon  Ev€ht  Look?d 
Forward  to  hjf  All  DulutK  Womehl 

Tickets  (free)  still  to  be  had. 


■ii  ■  I  ■ 


NO  BATHROOM, 
NO  UCENSE 


Hotel   Must   Have   Bathing 

Facilities  for  Guests, 

to  Qualify. 

Two  Proprietors  Must  See 
Plumber  Before  Get- 
ting Permits. 


from  Richard  Sheasby;  Peter  Bcschen- 
bossel,  416  East  Fourth  street;  Frank 
Johnson,  1819  West  Superior  streetj 
Theodore  Frerker,  420  West  Superior 
street,  and  J.  H.  Wright.  319  West  Su- 
perioi?  street,  being  a  transfer  from  J. 
K  Van  Dalen. 


PATROLMAN 
KNOCKED  DOWN 

Five  Youths  Assault  Officer 

Magnuson,  Who  Sustains 

Broken  Arm. 


CENTRAL  BUSINESS  COLLEGE 


GROCER  IMPRISONED 

IN  HIS  REFRIGERATOR 


John  J.  Thorpe,  grocer  at  6717  West 
Eighth  street,  went  into  his  store  yes. 
terday  morning  to  get  some  articles 
from  his  refrigerator.  On  stepping  in- 
side he  closed  the  door  behind  him  and 
the  lock  snapped  into  place,  making 
him    a    prisoner. 

After  repeatedly  pounding  on  the  door 
the  noise  In  the  shop  attraced  the  at- 
tention of  Rev.  Herbert  Ford,  who 
lives  in  the  flat  over  the  shop.  He 
went  downstairs  and  entered  the  store, 
releasing   Mr.    Thorpe   from    his    prison. 

Brassard  Funeral. 

The  funeral  of  Joseph  Brassard,  aged 
68.  4920  Wadena  street,  who  died  Sat- 
urday morning,  was  held  this  morning 
at  9  o'clock  from  the  St  Jean  Bap- 
tlste  French  Catholic  church.  Twenty- 
fifth  avenue  arest  and  Third  street.  In- 
terment   was    in    Calvary    cemetery. 

Firing  Revolver  Costly. 

Rade  Kusmanavlc  of  Oary  began 
celebrating  yesterday  morning  by  fir- 
ing a  revolver  in  th*  air  several  times 
at  CJary.  Patrolman  McKenna  took  him 
in  tow  after  the  fusillsde.  He  deposited 
126  bail  money  with  the  polictj  for  his 
appearance  in  court  this  morning,  but 
failed  to  show  up.  Judge  Lanners  de- 
clared  the  ball   forfeited^ 


Infant  Diet. 


.\rthur  T..  Nelson,  aged  11  months 
Fon  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Albert  N.-lson,  424 
North  Fifty-third  avenun  w«»t,  die.l 
yesterday  morning  after  «  short  ill- 
ness. The  funeral  will  bn  held  to- 
morrow afternoon  at  2  o'^'lork  from 
tht-  family  residence,  with  interment 
In  Oneota  cemetery. 


30  Ka.st  Superior  street,  Duluth.  Spring 
term  April  10.  Full  commercial  and 
stenographic  courses;  catalogue  free. 
Parber  &  McPherson. 

GLOQUlfPASTOR 

ON  "ADORATION" 

Rev.  T.  T.  Roan  Speal<s  of 
"Admiration  or  Adora- 
tion." 

CloQuet.  Minn..  April  10. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — "Admiration  or  Adora- 
tion" was  the  subject  Her.  T.  T.  Roan 
used  at  bis  morning  service  in  the 
Norwegian  Lutheran  church   yesterday. 

"There  are  two  classes  of  admirers." 
the  pastor  declared,  "the  first  class, 
those  who  saw  that  Jesus  was  sent 
from  Ood.  He  was  not  a  common  man. 
No  one  could  do  the  things  that  He  did 
unless  Ctod  was  with  them.  They  per- 
ceived that  this  Christ  had  a  greater 
mission  on  this  earth  than  to  relieve 
the  human  suiterings.  namely,  to  take 
away  the  guilt  of  sin  and  renew  the 
image  of  Ood  In  the  heart  of  man.  The 
other  class  arc  those  who  saw  the  pos- 
sibility of  a  great  man  in  Jesus;  one 
who  could  right  the  wrong  In  the  social 
and  political  world,  a  statesman  and  a 
ruler. 

"Vou  have  heard  songs  of  praise  to 
Jesus  that  He  is  merciful  and  kind.  | 
Men  admire  Htm  all  the  year  around,  | 
and  especially  during  Lent  and  the 
pnsslon  week.  •  At  that  time  some  well- 
meaning  soul.s  wlM  refrain  from  doing 
some  certain  things  that  may  be  inter, 
preted  as  dubtoue  or  not  Just  right.  It 
nas  come  to  b«  tomany  an  outward  re- 
ligious whltewa.-^h  at  a  certain  time, 
but  many  men  will  keep  within  the 
bounds  of  pronrlMy  all  their  lives  be- 
cause they  admtiM  Jesus.  The  inner 
llf«  Is  unchanged.     Being  that,  they  are 


When  is  a  hotel  not  a  hotel? 

"When  it  hasn't  a  bath."  is  Commis- 
sioner Silberfiteln's  answer. 

Two  hotels  without  baths  will  be 
denied    hotel    licenses    at    the    council 

meeting  this  afternoon.  ...... 

Commissioner  Sllbersteln,  head  of  the 
safety  division,  said  this  morning  that 
Chief  McKercher  has  made  reports  on 
twenty-four  of  the  applications,  and 
that  twenty-two  of  these  will  be  rec- 
ommended for  licenses  at  the  council 
session  today.  The  other  two  hotels, 
the  North  Star,  at  60{>Vij  West  Michigan 
street,  and  the  lotlging  house  conducted 
by  Charles  Noran  at  625  West  Superior 
street,  will  be  rejected,  the  safety  head 
said,  because  of  the  insanitary  condi- 
tions reported  by  the  police.  Neither 
hotel  has  a  bathroom,  the  reports 
state. 

The  twenty-two  hotels  to  be  recom- 
mended  for  licenses  under  the  new 
hotel  ordinance  follow:  Spalding. 
George  W.  Reynolds;  Adelphl  hotel,  K. 
e.  Bean,  2801  West  Superior  street;  Im- 
perial, R.  O.  Spear;  Leonard  Usher,  101 
East  Superior  street;  Zenith,  Henry 
Parsslnen.  12  First  avenue  east;  Mary 
Peterson.  14  FZast  Superior  street;  Kel- 
log.  M.  Lawrence,  329  West  Superior 
street;  Elgin,  E.  P.  Leflohlc.  321  West 
First  sff^ot;  Grace.  Julius  Flnne,  6?8 
West  Superior  street;  Alexandria,  Oscar 
Wick,  t22  West  Second  street,  and 
Cllft  520  West  Superior  street;  Hall, 
Charles  Hall.  613  East  Superior  street; 
Denver,  Harry  Johnson.  520  V4  West 
First  street:  Liberty,  Lawrence  Peter- 
son 623  West  Superior  street;  New 
York.  Frank  MucclHl.  635  West  Supe- 
rior street;  Rex,  George  Lucore.  2001 
West  Superior  street;  T.  J.  Cote,  713 
West  Superior  street;  Bessie  Hanson, 
219  East  First  street;  M.  J.  Gleason. 
122  Lake  avenue  south,  and  Mrs.  S.  M. 
Smith.   16  Second  avenue  west. 

About    thirty    more   applications    have 

been  made  for  hotel  licenses,  but  these 

[  will   not   come   up   for  action   until   re- 

■  ports    have    been    made    by    Chief    Mc- 

i  Kercher. 

I  The  following  applications  for  na- 
I  loon  license  renewals  will  come  up  for 
I  action  this  afternoon;  Ollte  Lowry.  220 
:  East   Superior   street,   being  a  transfer 


Gang   at   Dance    Hall    Ar- 
rested; Hearing  Set 
for  April  18. 


versity  of  Minnesota  Saturday  by  Gov- 
ernor J.  A.  A.  Burnqulst  in  complianca 
with  demands  of  the  aKricultural  inter- 
ests of  the  state  for  recognition  on  the 
board.  He  succeeds  B.  F.  Nelson  of 
Minneapolis.  Pierce  Butler  of  St.  Paul 
and  Fred  B.  Snyder  of  Minneapolis, 
president  of  the  board,  were  reap- 
pointed. 


outwardlv  good  i^eople;  they  believe 
that  ChrUl  will  *ccept  them  In  the 
kingdom  of  mlory.  They  overlook  the 
msin  requlremenlt  'Except  ye  be  born 
Again.'  " 


MANY  IN  DUIUTI 

TRY  SIMPLE  MIXTURE 

Many  Duluth  people  are  surprised 
at  the  QUICK  action  of  simple  buck- 
thorn bark,  glyq^rine.  etc..  as  mixed 
in  Adler-i-ka,  This  simple  remedy 
acta  on  BOTH  upper  and  lower  bow- 
el, removing  such  surprising  foul  mat- 
ter that  ONE  SPOONFUL  relieves  al- 
most ANY  CASE  ion.«itipation.  sour 
stomach  or  gaa.  A  few  doses  often 
relieve  or  prevent  appendicitis.  A 
short  treatment  helps  chronic  stomach 
trouble.  The  INSTANT,  easy  action 
of  Adler-1-ka  fa  astonishing.  W.  A. 
Abbett,  druggist" 


While  attempting  to  quell  a  disturb- 
ance in  a  dance  hall  at  Twenty-first 
avenue  west  and  First  str.  et  Saturday 
night  Patrolmatl  Nels  R.  Magnu.son 
was  knocked  down,  sustaining  a 
broken  arm  and  severe  lacerations 
about  the  head  and  body. 

Five  alleged  "toughs."  who  attacked 
the  officer  and  after  felling  him. 
Jumped  upon  him  with  their  boots, 
were  held  in  $100  ball  on  a8.<?ault 
charges  today  in  municipal  court.  The 
officer  is  in  St.  Luke's  hospital. 

Emmet  J.  Savage,  24.  and  James  P. 
Green.  24,  two  of  the  alleged  ring  lead- 
ers, were  caught  in  Proctor  Sunday 
evening  by  Detectives  Herman  Toewe 
and  J.  L.  Bradley,  after  a  bit  of  quick 
work  on  the  oart  of  the  officers.  With 
them   was   Driver   Eckard. 

Clarence  B.  Jones.  22.  Frank  Mul- 
cahy,  29.  and  John  Swom.  23,  were  ar- 
rested at  the  dance  hall  by  Sergt. 
Hunter  and  Officer  Magnuson. 

The  dance  hall  proprietor  called  for 
police  when,  it  is  alleged,  Savage 
started  a  fight.  Magnuson  collared 
him  and  started  for  the  door,  fightmg 
his  way  tlirough  a  surging  crowd. 
tJreen  and  the  other  three  Jumped  upon 
tlie  officer  when  he  reached  the  door 
with    his  prisoner,   and   downed   him. 

With  one  arm  useless,  Magnuson 
fought  his  way  to  his  feet  and  drove 
the  toughs  into  the  street  with  h!» 
club,  not  daring  to  .stop  and  draw  his 
gun.  Sergt.  Hunter  arrived  a  minute 
later  and  took  charge,  jailing  the 
three. 

Savage  and  Greet,  escaped  to  Proc- 
tor, but  were  cauifht  In  their  hotel  by 
the  two  detectives.  Both  men  were 
armed    with    automatics,    according    to 

Magnuson  is  married  and  lives  at  111 
Twenty-seventli   avenue   west. 

The  five  men  pleaded  not  guilty  to 
the  assault  charges.  Judge  F.  H.  Cut- 
ting  will   hear  theni   on  April   18. 

To  Get  TeaeMag  Exp«*Henre. 

Manitowoc.  Wis.,  April  10.— With  tha 
sanction      of      the      state      department, 
twenty-two  students  of  the  senior  class 
of   the  country  training  school  left  the 
city  today  for  a  month's   practical   ex- 
perience In  teaching  in  the  rural  schools 
of    the    county.      The      district      school 
I  boards  have   approved   the   plan,    which 
I  State  Supt.  Cary  says  Is  the  first   of  its 
I  kind  attempted  in  Wisconsin. 


"REAL  FARIMER"  NOW 

STATE U  REGENT 

St.  J^aul.  Minn..  April  10.— Charles  W, 
Glotfelter  of  Waterville.  "a  real  farm- 
er," was  appointed  a  regent  of  the  UnU 


<t 


-■- 


M    Mk. 


!, 


i 
i 


Monday, 


THE     DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  10, 1916. 


II 


nFW[HrETR[EFTElylErR[YlB|0]D[Y!    1G|01E|S 


HOME  OF  THF. 


-wn 


AFTER  RUNNING  FIGHT  WITH 
REVOLVERS,  POLICE  CltPTURE 
TWO  MUCH-WANTED  BANDITS 


Sunday  Afternoon  Pleasure 

Seekers  See  Thrilling 

Chase  in  Superior. 


Youth  Brings  Down  One  of 

Fugitives  With  Bullet 

in  Leg. 


Second   Surrenders   When 

Cornered  Under  Grassy 

Point  Bridge. 


TODAY  AND  TOMORROW  ONLY 

Metro  Pictures  Corporation  Presents 

LDTTLE  MkM  HOLES  IDINITER 

World's  Yountrest  and  Most  Gifted  Screen  Star  in 

"LOVELY  MARf 

A  Romantic  and  Thrilling  Story  Laid  in  the  Pictur- 
esque Everglades  and  Historic  Scenes  of  Florida. 

COMING  WEDNESDAY  FOR  THREE  DAYS 

eEJ^tUlTDFIUlL  ^INIDT^  STEWART  i 
IHlAillSOiiE  E^RLE  WSLLD^ilS 

in  a  Big  Four  Feature 

"MY  mn  SUPPER" 

ANY  SEAT  10c 

|rar!t)(aiaiiB[iaHiariBBBSl 


Murder.  attempted  murder,  and 
twelve  chargea  of  highway  robbery 
have  been  lodged  by  police  of  Duluth, 
St.  Paul  and  Superior  against  Brady 
Henry,  24,  and  Frank  Engman,  alias 
Frank  Wentry,  alias  Frank  Olson,  alias 
Frank  Finn,  23,  who  were  captured  In 
a  running  gun  fight  In  Superior  yes- 
terday  afternoon. 

Henry's  left  aim,  amputated  below 
the  elbow,  attracted  the  attention  of 
Clifford  Wright,  clerk  in  a  Billings 
Park  confectionery  store,  and  started 
the  cross-country  chase,  which  ended 
when  Engman  waa  shot  through  the 
leg  and  Henry  threw  up  his  arnui  at 
the    Grassy    Point    bridge. 

Last  night,  in  the  Superior  polio© 
station  Henry  Is  said  to  have  admitted 
that  he  was  the  man  who  killed  Jo- 
seph Young  of  Clevelan*.  Ohio,  April 
1,  In  a  St.  Paul  saloon,  when  Young 
refused  to  throw  up  his  hands.  He 
also  said  that  he  and  Engman  were 
the  ones  who  held  up  various  stores  In 
West  Duluth  and  Superior,  terrorizing 
merchants    for    a    week. 

Both  men  are  ex-convicts  and  have 
long  criminal  records.  Henry's  parents 
resided  at  27  North  Sixty-third  ave- 
nue  west  and  Engman's  parents  live 
at    718    Second    avenue    east. 

The  wild  chase  which  resulted  In 
the  capture  of  the  pair  was  witnessed 
by  nearly  100  persons  who  thronged 
Killings  Park,  and  who  scattered  In 
terror,  dodging  revolver  shots  when 
the  armed  desperadoes  tried  to  outrun 
their  pursuers. 

"We  went  to  Milwaukee."  Henry 
said,  "and  then  to  Chicago,  but  we 
wanted  to  come  back  to  Duluth  and 
see  how  things  looked.  We  got  ba<"k 
day  before  yesterday,  and  were  look- 
ing  around   In  Superior." 

The  pair  walked  Into  the  confection- 
ery store  at  the  end  of  the  Billings 
Park  car  line,  purchased  some  articles, 
and  offered  a  $5  bill  In  payment.  Clif- 
ford Wright,  son  of  the  proprietor, 
thought  he  recognized   them. 

After  some  quick  thinking,  ho  said 
he  couldn't  change  the  bill,  and  the 
men  left.  Wright  telephoned  police 
headQiiarters  and  Police  Capt.  Osborn, 
with  Detective  Mead  and  Sergt.  Miller, 
leaped  into  a  touring  car  and  raced  for 
the  park. 

Offieera  <;iTe  Chase. 

The  suspects  were  sien  some  dis- 
tance away,  crossing  the  country  club 
golf  links,  and  the  officers  gave  chase. 
Finally,  leaving  the  car.  they  scattered 
and  started  surr<,undlng  the  p;ilr. 

Henry  then  started  on  a  dead  run 
toward  the  right,  heading  for  the  (iras- 
sy  Point  bridge  Into  Minnesota,  and 
Engman  turned  to  the  left,  going  bark 
toward  Billings  park.  Mead  followed 
Henry  and  Capt.  Osborn  pursued  Eng- 
man. 

Engman  gained  steadily  and  was  dis- 
tancing the  officer,  when  Clifton  Wes- 
try.  aged  18,  170J  Iowa  avenue,  Supe- 
rior. Joined  In  the  chase.  Wesiry,  who 
Is  said  to  be  an  expert  shot,  had  gone 
home  and  secured  his  revolver  when 
police  called  for  volunteers. 

"Shall    I    shoot?"    he    called    to    Capt. 
Osborn,  as  the  two  ran. 
"Plug  him,"  was  the  reply. 
Khgman    saw     that     he     was     losing 


to  turn  Hill  804.  which  lies  800  yards 
south  and  constitutes  what  Is  charac- 
terized as  the  Gibraltar  In  the  French 
line  In  that  district.  This  attacK  met 
with  more  success  than  the  other,  but 
after  the  Germans  had  succeeded  In 
getting  a  footing  at  some  points  In  the 
first  trenches  the  French  counter-at- 
tacked and  the  net  result  for  the  Ger- 
mans was  an  Increase  in  their  losses 
from  the  French  bayonets.  It  is  stated 
that  at  the  close  of  the  day  the  French 
held  exactly  the  same  position  as  at 
the   beginning   of  the   attack. 

The  German  losses  are  again  said  to 
have  been  on  the  basis  of  &o  per  cent 
of  the  effectives  engaged  and  these 
Include  a  considerable  proportion  of 
the  German  reserves. 


BfllllN  SENDS  FORMER  U.  S. 
AHACflE  ON  SECRET  MISSION 


this  morning  Dr.  Grayson  ordered  that 
he  remain  away  from  his  office.  He 
expected  to  be  well  enough  to  holA 
the    cabinet    meeting    tomorrow. 


BRADY   HENRY. 


Premch  Encovraced. 

Paris,  April  10. — The  failure  of  the 
latest  great  hammer  stroke  of  the  Ger- 
mans at  Verdun  has  already  greatly 
encouraged  the  French  press  and  public 
and  confirms  still  further  the  general 
confidence  felt  In  the  ability  of  the 
high  command.  The  attack  Is  stated 
to  have  been  one  of  the  most  deter- 
mined of  the  great  blows  delivered 
since  the  battle  began  fifty  days  ago 
and  yet  it  yielded  the  least  results  of 
any  of  them,  although  the  crown  prince 
hurled  two  whole  army  corps  against 
the  French  along  a  ten-mile  front. 

As  Bethlncourt  formed  a  dangerous 
salient  its  evacuation  had  been  ex- 
pected for  some  tlnie  and  many  mili- 
tary' observers  long  ago  criticized  its 
retention.  Gen.  Petaln's  unerring  Judg- 
ment In  letting  It  go  at  eaxctly  the 
right  moment  is  now  highly  praised. 
While  of  little  value  to  the  French  It 
Is  of  almost  none  to  the  Germans,  as 
It  is  located  In  a  hollow  commanded  by 
French  guns  on  all  sides,  out  of  which 
it  Is  practically  impossible  for  them  to 
debouch. 

WASHINGTON  OPTIMISTIC 

(Continued   from   page   1.) 


Assorted    fresh    Kisses.    25c 
Minnesota   Candy   Kltcheri. 


box. 


Negr*    Lynehed. 

Lawton,  Okla.,  April  10. — Carl  Dud* 
ley,  a  negro,  was  taken  from  the  Co- 
manche county  jail  here  last  night  bjr 
a  mob  of  200  unmasked  men  and  shot 
to  death  In  the  jail  yard.  Dudley  was 
arrested  late  yesterday  on  a  charge  of 
fatally  wounding  Patrolman  .Iame« 
Hayes  while  resisting  arrest  for  % 
minor  offense.  Hayes  died  yesterday 
morning. 


FRANK  ENGMAN. 


VILLA  BELIEVED  TO  BE 
HEADING  FOR  DURANGO 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


said    he    had    no    Information    on 
ters  of  a  diplomatic  character. 


mat- 


C'rttleal   Stage  >ear  at   Hand. 

Pan  Antonio,  Tex.,  April  10. — Army 
officers  at  'Jen.  Funston's  headquarters 
were  almost  convinced  today  that  by 
the    end   of   th»»   week    tlie    work   of   the 


told  him  to  throw  up  his  hands.  In- 
stead of  complying,  Henry  climbed 
over  the  railing  and  hid  In  a  dark  cor- 
ner beneath  the  bridge. 

Patrolman  Oscar  Peterson  of  Duluth 
fired  at  Henry's  feet,  which  projected, 
and  from  another  angle  another  offi- 
cer tried  a  shot. 

"One  more  try  and  we'll  got  you," 
cautioned  Peterson,  "you'd  better  come 
out." 

Henry's  automatic  came  rolling  down 
the  bank  a  minute  later  and  the  rob- 
ber followed,  with  his  hands  In  the 
air.  _ 

('apt.  A.  O.  Flskett,  Lieut.  F.  A. 
Schulte,  Sergt.  Androe  and  Patrolman 
Charles  Stahl,  all  of  the  Duluth  force, 
were  at  the  Minnesota  end  of  the 
bridge  with  Peterson,  while  Detective 
Mead,  with  Patrolmen  Widness,  Mc- 
Donald and  Hawkins  of  Superior  closed 
in  from  the  Wisconsin  erid. 
Chief  WaM  Nearby. 

Chief  R.  D.  McKercher  was  not  far 
from  the  Grassy  Point  bridge,  search- 
ing for  two  men  alleged  to  have  as- 
saulted Patrolman  Nels  Magnuson  Sat- 
urday night,  wlien  the  alarm  was 
spread.  .A  record  trip  In  his  car  landed 
him  at  the  bridge  approach  almost  as 
soon  as  Cant.  Flskett  and  other  officers 
arrived.  riding  In  Police  Surgeon 
Klein's   ciir. 

The  hold-ups  attributed  to  Engman 
and  Henrv  by  Duluth  police  Include: 

On  March  13,  held  up  and  robbed 
Louis  Paletta.  confectionery  store  pro- 
prietor at  «31  West  Second  street.  Se- 
cured $14. 

On  March  18,  robbed  Italian  store  at 
464  Mesaba  avenue,  taking  $19  from 
proprietor  at   the   point   of  a  gun. 

On  March  31,  secured  $130  from  Dr. 
E.  W.  Boerner.  404  North  Central  ave- 
nue;   $lfi   from  C.   G.   Frost.   6117   Ram- 


Fh^man    saw     that     he     was     losing  I  "ue;    $16   from  C.   G.   Frost.   6117   Ram- 

groStnd  turned  Vellfngrpi-cXl^ry  l'^^^^-  V. /•!"">  •^*>»'«  "^^'.'"^'^'iS 
order  at  Westry  to  turn  back  if  he  North  Fifty-third  avenue  west,  and  $8 
wanted  to  live.  ""om  T.  I.  Thompson,  320  North  Fifty- 


valuable  if  not  Indispensable  service 
and  that  great  reliance  is  placed  upon 
them." 

Secretary  Baker  received  word  to- 
day that  the  railroad  situation  In  Mex- 
ico was  much  Improved  and  that  sup- 
plies In  Increasing  quantities  were  go- 
ing forward  to  the  American  troops  In 
Mexico.  He  informed  the  president 
that  all  reports  from  the  border  Indi- 
cated the  Carranza  forces  were  co- 
operating In  the  pursuit  of  Villa. 
N*  InfomaatlOB  of  MoMllaatloii. 
Secretary  Haker  said  he  had  no  In- 
formation regarding  El  Paso  rumors 
that  Carranza  troops  were  being  mob- 
ilized along  the  American  line  of  com- 
munication. He  also  declared  Gen. 
Funston  had  not  indicated  need  for  ad- 
ditional troops  In  Mexico  or  for  the 
border  patrol,  beyond  the  new  recruits 
recently  authorized  by  congress  to  fill 
the    border    regiments. 

Large  quantities  of  supplies  are  ap- 
parently being  shipped  on  the  Mexico- 
Northwestern  railroad  from  El  Paso 
by  private  shippers  ultimately  destined 
for  Gen.  Pershing,  Secretary  Baker 
stated.  Such  supplies  will  be  bought 
by  Gen.  Pershing's  commlssarj'  depart- 
ment. Another  train  load  of  forage, 
canned  goods  and  other  supplies  Is  re- 
ported to  have  left   Juarez. 

The  first  of  the  eight  new  aeroplanes 
recently  ordered  for  the  troops  in  Mex- 
ico, Secretary  Baker  announced  to- 
day, has  already  been  delivered  at  the 
testing  grounds  at  Newport  News,  Va. 
It  win  be  shipped  to  Gen.  Funston 
early  this  week.  Delivery  of  another 
biplane  to  the  Newport  News  testing 
grounds  this  week  also  has  been  prom, 
ised. 

Mexicans  Vneasy. 
State  department  dispatches  today 
Indicate  that  officials  of  the  Mexican 
de  facto  government  are  viewing  with 
some  anxiety  the  continued  presence 
of  American  troops  In  Mexico.  One 
dispatch  authoritatively  was  described 
todav  as  containing  a  hint  that  certain 
Mexican  officials  believed  the  purpose 
of  the  American  punitive  expedition 
had  been  accomplished.  This  belief 
was  said  to  be  based  upon  the  assump- 
tion that  the  bandits  under  Villa  have 
been  dispersed. 

Consul  General  Rodgers  it  was 
learned  today,  has  advised  the  depart- 
ment that  de  facto  government  officials 
at  Queretaro  had  Intimated  to  him  they 
would  like  to  know  how  long  the 
United  States  Intended  to  keep  the 
troops  In  Mexico.  Administration  offi- 
cials In  a  position  to  be  familiar  with 
the  Mexican  situation  said  the  de  facto 
government  had  not  set  a  date  upon 
which  they  thought  the  American 
troops  should  be  withdrawn.  It  was 
admitted  In  various  quarters,  however, 
that  such  action  by  the  de  facto  gov- 
ernment would  not  be  surprising. 

Dispatches  from  consuls  In  various 
sections  of  Mexico  described  conditions 
generally  as  being  good. 

ST1INTC  TOWNSHIP 
AWARDS  CONTRACTS 


— topyrHht  by  Hurris  &  Ewia<. 

CAPT.  VON  PAPEN. 

London.  April  10. — Capt.  Franz  Von 
Pai>en.  former  military  attache  of  the 
German  embassy  at  Washington,  whose 
recall  was  re(iucsted  by  the  United 
States  government  last  year,  has  been 
sent  from  Berlin  on  a  secret  mission  to 
Holland,  according  to  the  Dally  Chron- 
icle Amsterdam  correspondent. 


win  be  entertained  at  a  banquet  at  the 
Rex    restaurant    this    evening. 

The  team  made  a  splendid  showing 
tills  year  and  under  the  coaching  of 
Dave  Williams  worked  Its  way  Into 
the    first    division. 

tower"considering 
site  for  school 

Tower  Minn.,  April  10. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Plans  for  the  proposed 
new  $80,000  school  building  have  been 
submitted  to  the  school  board  by  Archi- 
tect Bray  of  Duluth,  but  various 
changes  will  be  made  therein  before 
they  can  be  accepted.  The  selection 
of  a  site  Is  now  being  discussed  and  It 
is  likely  the  decision  will  be  by  vote 
of  the  people,  two  sites  being  consid- 
ered and  various  opinions  being  given 
In  favor  of  each;  one  of  the  sites  Is 
north  of  the  Morcom  and  Osterberg 
residences  on  North  Third  street,  while 
the  other  is  south  of  South  Third 
street,  near  the  river.  Both  sites  are 
admirable  situated  and  with  the  va- 
riety of  opinions  dally  expressed,  the 
board  will,  no  doubt,  submit  the  de- 
cision to  a  vote  of  the  people. 

AURORACREAMERY 

IS  NOW  ORGANIZED 

Aurora,  Minn..  April  10.— (Special  te 
The  Herald.) — The  organization  of  the 
Aurora  Co-operative  Creamery  asso- 
ciation was  completed  here  Saturday 
and  an  order  placed  for  machinery  for 
butter  making.  The  association  al- 
ready has  an  ice  house  filled  with  Ice 
and  will  be  ready  to  commence  op- 
eration in  several  weeks'  time.  Will- 
iam Haenke  of  W^olf  was  present  at 
the  organization  meeting  and  gave 
an  Interesting  talk  on  dairying  In 
this  section.  Mr.  Haenke  Is  one  of 
the  leading  farmers  on  the  range  .^nd 
his  talk  was  both  Interesting  an  in- 
structive. 


dean     consul'  punitive  exp-^dition  in  Mexico  will  have 

II     I*      ,  I  r«  ached    a    crliiral    stage.      No    reports 

no    limit    »>t(^,.^,jjj   ^.^j„     Pr-rshiiig   w»re   received   last 


the    bandit,    was   flatly   denied   by   Mr. 
Garcia     tt'day.      The     Mex 
said    as    far    as    he    knew 

the  Amtiican   pursuit   had   been  agreed  I  night    or    early    ttulay    but    those    that 
upon   by   the  two   governments.  |  have     reached     Gen.     Funston     Indicate 

Mexican  officials  here  will  not  dls-  that  he  is  driving  his  cavalry  farther 
cuss  a  report  that  the  de  facto  gov-  ^jui  farther  into  Mexico  without  ques- 
ernment    will    soon    Inform    the   Anierl- ,  j(Qp_   ^^^   spiti>  of  the  Incieasing  danger 


-  -mm 


can  government  that  it  Is  In  position 
to  relieve  the  American  troops  of  th-^ 
task    of    chasing     Villa.      Mr.     Garcia 


^/! 


■  a-        -■»-M 


^ 


^ 


TIME  NOW  YOU 
HAD  THAT  NEW 

SPRING 
HAT! 

Great  assortment  here  of  all 
the  new  shapes  In  all  the  new- 
est colors  at  prices  from — 

$J.50to$5.00 

VViUiAXSON  *- MENDBNHALU 

Spring  Bostonian  Shoes 
$3.50  to  $6.00. 


that  th.-y  soon  may  be  beyond  reach 
of  the  commissary  department  and  out 
of  touch  with  an  adequate  support. 
Only  •  I.lttle  Akead. 
Gen.  Pershing  appealed  convinced 
when  he  .s.-nt  his  last  report  that  Villa 
l«  moving  forward  only  two  or  three 
days  march  ahead  of  th«  American  ad- 
vanced f  c)iumn.q  and  making  good  time, 
notwithstanding  his  reported  wounded 
leg.  Unofficial  reports  that  Caiiuto 
R*?ye3  wa.s  moving  northward  from  the 
region  abo'it  Torreon  instead  of  sur- 
rendering to  tho  de  facto  government 
rr.>at"d  soine  uneasiness  at  headquar- 
ters where  It  was  realized  that  Reyes' 
juncture  with  Villa  would  provide  a 
formidable  front  to  the  little  cavalry 
force  feeling  Its  way  along  the  trails 
In  the  neighborhood   of  Parral. 

ImpoMitible'    to   Rrlnforre   Column. 
To   reinforce   the   head  of  (Jen.   Persh- 
ing's    column     Is     Impossible,     officers 
here    dechir.'d.    unless    more    troops    are 
sent    Into    M-xlco,    or    some    rearrange- 
ment of  the  long,  thin  line  of  communi- 
cations is  authorized.     The  rumors  that 
.  the   de    facto    government    Is    becoming 
t  inpatient    at    the    continuation    of    tht^ 
i  man   hunt  have  reached  here,  but  head- 
j  quarters    officials     profess    not    to    be- 
lieve   them;    on    the    contrary    declaring 
I  that  Carranza  will  give  hts  consent  for 
the  use  of  the  railroads  south  of  Juarez 
to    points   nearer   the    new    field   of  op- 
erations. 

The  present  method  of  handling  sup- 
plies for  the  troops  is  entirely  Inade- 
quate,  it  Is  said. 

Two  more  auto  truck  companies  and 
fifty-six  auto  trucks  were  at  Colum- 
bus today  ready  for  service  along  the 
line.  Their  use.  It  was  admitted,  will 
bo   of  as.sistance   in  stdvlng  the  supply 

problem. 

» 

Mexicanii  C'«-Oi»«'nitlair. 

With  <;en.  Persliing  at  the  front,  be- 
low Namlquipa.  April  9.— By  radio  to 
Columbus.  N.  Mex..  April  10.— Two 
aeroplanes,  which  flew  from  here  to 
Chihuahua  City  returned  today  bring- 
ing to  Gen.  John  J.  Pershing.  ex|)edi- 
tlonary  commander,  -reports  that  the 
Constitutionalist  authorities  In  that 
city  are  co-operating  cordially  with  the 
American  forces  In  tlie  pursuit  of  Villa. 
The  planes  carried  dispatches  to  the 
Constitutionalist  authorities  which 
(Jen.  Pershing  described  as  Important. 
_ * 

SiMAt*  ludUn  In  Chicago. 

Chicago.  April  10. — A  youngster,  val- 
iant In  a  cowboy  suit  and  equipped 
with  a  small  rifle,  rame  upon  a  real 
Indian  yesterday.  He  fired  promptly 
and  til  'H  tan.  The  Indian,  was  Chief 
Seriilenou.  a  Moh;iwk.  A  surgeon  re- 
moved the  bullet  from  his  leg,  and  he 
complained   to  the   police. 


Westry  redoubled  his  speed,  and  a 
minute  later  Engman  shot  twice.  Then 
Westry,  100  yards  away,  fired  and  his 
man  came  down  in  a  heap,  with  a  bul- 
let In  his  leg. 

In  the  meantime,  Henry  was  racing 
for  the  bridge,  but  Duluth  and  Supe- 
rior police  were  closing  In  from  both 
approaches  and  the  fugitive  saw  that 
there   was  little   chance.  .,    ..    ,^ 

First  he  ran  Into  Albert  Stahl,  bridge 
tender,,   and   Stahl,   aiming   a   shotgun. 


MORE  BRITISH 

SHIPS  SUNK 

(Continued    from    page    1.1 


feet  long  and  60  feet  beam  and  was 
owned  by  the  English  and  American 
Shipping    company    of   London. 

The  Silksworth  Hall  was  last  re- 
ported on  her  departure  from  CJlbral- 
tar  on  March  6  while  on  a  voyage  from 
Bombay  for  Hull.  She  was  360  feet 
long,  4,777  tons  gross,  was  built  in 
Sunderland  In  1907  and  owned  In  Lon- 

The  (ilenalmond  arrived  In  Lisbon 
March  13  from  Rangoon.  Burma.  She 
was  324  feet  long.  2.888  tons  gross, 
was  built  In  Sunderland  In  1?02,  and 
owned  m  London. 

The  Yonne,  4,039  tons  gross  and  37 1 
feet  long,  was  built  In  1897  at  Glasgow, 
her  home  port.  The  last  report  of  her 
movements  was  of  her  departure  March 
9  from  Gla.^gow  for  Hampton   Roads. 


third   avenue    west 

Thompson  and  Carlson  were  in 
Frost's  place  of  business  when  the 
robbers  entered.  On  the  same  day  they 
attempted  to  rob  Roach  Brothers' 
livery   barn.   5402    Ramsey   street. 

Superior  noUce  said  today  that  the 
pair  would  be  tried  there  for  highway 
robbery  and  attempted  murder,  al- 
though St.  Paul  reports  said  that 
Henry,  at  least,  would  be  taken  to  that 
city  to  answer  for  Young's  murder. 


crest  of  the  northern  flood  waters  still 
far  north  of  Clinton,  the  stage  of  wa- 
ter In  the  Ml88lsslpi>l  rlv«r  here  early 
today  was  11.8  feet  above  low  water, 
two-tenths  of  a  foot  below  the  pre- 
vious high  water  mark  of  the  year. 
The  rise  since  Saturday  was  1.4  feet. 

germans"throw 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


mans  continued  their  attacks  last  night 
In  the  Verdun  reiflon  east  and  west 
of  the  Meuse.  over  a  front  thirteen 
miles  long  from  HIU  No.  304  to  Fort 
Douaumont.  The  war  office  announce- 
ment today  says  in  the  fighting  west 
of  the  river  for  possession  of  Dead 
Man's  hill  the  Germans  were  repulsed 
except  on  a  front  ftf  600  yards  near 
Hill  No.  296.  East  ,  oC  the  river  the 
German  assaults  gameu  no  appreciable 
results. 


Hibblng,  Minn..  April  10.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Stuntz  township 
board  at  Its  meeting  Saturday  night 
failed  to  make  the  appointments  for 
the  year.  John  Dyson  was  awarded  the 
contract  to  construct  five  concrete 
bridges  in  the  township,  being  the  low- 
est bidder.  ^   ,.    .i. 

John  McKusslck  was  awarded  the 
contract  to  con.struct  the  new  Chls- 
holm-Hibblng  road.  His  bid  for  tarvia 
was  the  lowest  of  the  many  bids 
opened.  The  new  Chlsholm  road  will 
be  constructed  as  soon  as  the  weather 
becomes  favorable.^ 

MURDER  REPORTED 
AT  CALUMET,  MINN. 


Minn. 


April     10.— 


RIVER  FLOOD 

AT  ITS  CREST 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


throwing  the  waters  of  the  three  to- 
ielher.  fnd  from  the  Minnesota  bluffs 
to  the  Wisconsin  bluffs,  with  the  ex- 
ception of  the  higher  ground  occupied 
bv  the  main  part  of  the  city.  Is  one 
great  lake.  From  the  hlUs  thousands 
of  people  looked  down  today  on  the 
flood,  crossed  here  and  there  by  rail- 
ways and  high  roadways  which  are 
now  barely  out  of  water. 

Traeks   L'nder   Water. 

A  half  mile  of  the  Chicago  Milwau- 
kee &  St.  Paul  track  Is  under  water 
still  and  the  street  cars  between  the 
north  and  south  sides  are  running 
through  water.  Occupants  of  prob- 
ably 100  homes  in  different  parts  or 
town  are  traveling  to  and  from  them 
In  boats  and  will  be  compelled  to  con- 
tinue doing  so  for  at  lea.n  a  w^«^; 
In  places  not  so  seriously  flooded  men 
in  high  rubber  boots  tramp  to  their 
work  through  a  foot  of  water  on 
cement   sidewalks. 

Committees      from      the      La     Crosse 
County  Hunters'  club  are  out  rescuing 
the    thousands    of    rabbits    which    ar^- 
threatened    with    drowning    or    starva 
tlon       They    are    found    In    large    nuni 
bers    in    the    branches    of    trees    or    oi 
hummocks    not    covered    by    the    water,  i  of 
but  surrounded  and  cut  off  from  food. 
The   rabbits   are   being    fed   and    moved 
to    higher    ground.      Muskrais,    driven 
out  of  their  shelters  by  the  rise  of  the 
water    are   being   killed    by    the   thou- 
san.l  br  Indian  hunters,  who  are  reap- 
ing a   harvest   from   the   flood. 


RjiOaK  at  Cilntoa. 

Clinton,    Iowa,    April      8.— With 


Attack  In  Ocnnc   MaKMCs. 

Paris.  April  10. -^Abandoning  the  new 
open  formation  and  the  lately  estab- 
lished practice  of  night  attack,  the 
Germans  yesterday  engaged  two  army 
corps  in  dense  masses  against  the 
French  positions  northwest  of  Verdun 
between  Avocourt  and  Cumleres. 
Forces  numbering  at  least  a  division 
and  a  half  charged  the  line  between 
Avocourt  and  Bethlncourt.  They  ap- 
proached within  a  hundred  yards  of 
the  French  trenches  and  seemed  Insen- 
sible to  the  fact  that  hundreds  of  their 
men  were  falling,  but  notwithstanding 
their  courage  and  the  weight  of  their 
masses  they  were  stopped.  There  was 
a  deadline  beyond  which  they  could 
not  pass.  When  the  attacking  col- 
umns were  thinned  out  by  artillery 
and  machine  gun  fire  so  that  a  refor- 
nuitlon  became  necessary,  the  order  to 
retire  was  given.  Twice  were  they 
obliged  to  fill  up  the  gaps  In  their 
ranks  but  none  of  their  three  on- 
slaughts shook  the  French  line,  which 
had  been  considerably  strengthened  in 
the  region  of  Bethlncourt  by  the  with- 
drawal of  forces  from  the  dangerously 
exposed  salient  to  commanding  posi- 
tions   behind    the    village. 

Attack   Dead  Man's  HUL 

Two    fresh    divisions    attacked    Dead 

Man's   hill    while  the  assault     was     in 

progress  on  the  Bethlncourt  line,  othet 

are  i  forces  at  the  same  time  trying  to  slip 

through   the  ravine  near  Cirralere.     To 

aid    the   majieuvers  an   attack   was   sl- 

or    on  :  multaneously    made   on   the   east   bank 

the      Meuse      in      the      region      of 

Charapneuvllle-Vacherauvllle.    The    few 

hundred    men    who    had    succeeded    In 

penetrating    the    ravine    were    left    on 

the   field   after   the  action   proved   un- 

succe^ful. 

A  third  attack  at  ths  same  time  was 
delivered    on    a    position    strongly    or- 
ganized   by    the    French    northeast    of 
Avocourt.    the    object   aeemingly   being 
the     to  drive  in  the  French  line  far  enough 


Grand     Rapids,      ^.        ^     ,^^ 

(Special  to  The  Herald.)— The  sheriff, 
county  attorney  and  other  officials 
went  to  Calumet,  north  of  here  today, 
where  It  Is  reported  a  murder  was 
committed,  but  up  to  1:80  p.  m.  none 
of  the  details  has  been  received  here. 

VIRGINIA  DEFENDANT. 

Case  Involving  $5,000  for  Personal 
Injuries  Being  Tried. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  10.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— District  court  today 
is  consideHng  the  case  of  J.  N.  Torsell 
vs.  The  City  of  Virginia,  an  action  for 
86,000   personal   Injury  damages. 

The  trial  of  the  criminal  calendar 
will  not  be  taken  up  until  next  Mon- 
day. Torsell  sustained  a  broken  leg  In 
a  fall  on  an  icy  sidewalk  last  Decem- 
ber.   

VIRGINIA  CLUB  IN 
LEAGUE  NOW  ASSURED 

Virginia.  Minn..  April  10.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— The  Commercial  club 
committee  has  raised  81,700  of  the 
guarantee  necessary  to  assure  a  North- 
em  league  baseball  team.  The  cam- 
paign closes  this  week.  It  Is  practic- 
ally certain  Virginia  will  liara  a  club. 
"Lefty"  Davis,  the  manager  Is  In  the 
city.  The  players  will  be  summoned 
to  report  as  soon  as  the  guarantee  is 
assured. 

VIRGINIANS  WANT 

VOTE  ON  SCHOOL 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  10. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  circulation  of  peti- 
tions asking  that  the  controversy  over 
the  school  building  facilities  be  re- 
ferred to  the  special  election  was  be- 
gun today.  The  board  has  a  regular 
meeting  tonight  at  which  the  question 
of  an  addition  to  the  Technical  high 
school  or  new  building  to  replace  the 
Roosevelt  grade  school  will  be  further 

considered. 

« 

Banquet   for  Wtaacn. 

Hibblng.  Minn.,  April  l?-— (Speolal 
to  The  Herald.) — The  mllltla  basket 
ball  team,  tied  for  second  place  in 
the  Mesaba  Range  basket  ball  league. 


Aurora   Bond  Election. 

Aurora.  Minn.,  April  10. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  special  election  has 
been  called  for  April  24  by  the  board 
of  education  for  the  purpose  of  vot- 
ing on  the  proposition  of  Issuing 
$125,000  In  bonds  to  the  state  for  the 
purpose  of  building  a  new  school 
building  here.  The  present  buildings 
are  crowded  to  beyond  their  capaclt.v 
and  a  new  building  will  be  needed 
by  the  time 'school  opens  In  Septem- 
ber.   t 

Chlsholm    rndcHlrabies    Leave. 

Chlsholm,  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  Lake  street  re- 
sort was  raided,  which  resulted  In  the 
arrest  of  two  women  and  three  men 
at   night.  ,   , 

A  night  session  of  the  municipal 
court  that  lasted  from  1  until  4 
o'clock  In  the  morning  was  presided 
over  by  Judge  William  A.  Masters. 
All  parties  arrested  pleaded  guilty  to 
disorderly  conduct  and  were  ordered 
to    leave    town    at    once.      They    left. 

♦ 

Invites  Road  Bids. 
Aurora,  Minn.,  April  10.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  town  of  ■\^  hlte  has 
called  for  bids  on  the  Lampa  road 
leading  to  the  Embarrass  farming 
country  and  will  rush  all  work  on 
this  road  as  rapidly  as  possible.  The 
county  Is  expected  to  start  work  on 
Its  portion  of  the  road  as  soon  as  the 
snow  leaves  In  order  that  the  high- 
way win  be  passable  by  the  time  the 
Aurora  creamery  starts. 

REUEF  ARMY  READY 
IN  MESOPOTAMIA 


London,  Aprtl  10.— Preparations  are 
well  under  way  for  the  next  British  at- 
tack In  the  attempt  to  relieve  the  army 
surrounded  by  the  Turks  at  Kut-el- 
Amara  Mesopotamia.  This  attack  Is 
to  be  made,  according  to  the  plans  of 
the  British  staff,  against  Sannayyat  on 
the  Tigris,  a  short  distance  above 
Felahle,  which  recently  was  won  from 
the  Turks. 

The  following  official  statement  on 
these  operations  was  given  out  today: 

"Lleut.-Gen.  Sir  Percy  Lake  (com- 
mander of  the  British  forces  In  Me- 
sopotamia) reporU  that  Lleut.-Gen.  Sir 
George  Gorrlnge's  preparations  for  the 
Sannayvat  position  are  well  advanced, 
though  floods  have  curtailed  the  front- 
age on  which  the  attack  can  be  deliv- 
ered."   

TOLEDO  STREET  CARS 
ARE  AGAIN  RUNNING 

Toledo.  Ohio,  April  10— Toledo's 
street  cars  began  running  today  after 
being  idle  two  weeks,  owing  to  dif- 
ferences between  the  Toledo  Railways 
and  Light  company  and  Its  recently 
organized   employes. 

The  formal  agreement  between  the 
company  and  the  employes  was  ratified 
last  night  at  a  mass  meeting  of  the 
car  men.  The  men  are  denied  the  prlv- 
ilege   of   wearing   union   buttons. 

The  men  receive  an  Immediate  In- 
crease in  wages  of  8  cents  an  hour. 
The  new  maximum  for  experienced 
men  Is  80  cents  an  hour. 

SEVERE  COLD  KEEPS 
PRESIDENT  INDOORS 


Washington,  April  10.— President 
Wilson  canceled  a  number  of  en- 
gagements today  because  of  the  cold 
he  caught  while  down  the  Potomac 
river    on    the    Mayflower    last    Friday 

"  The  president  remained  Indoors  all 
day  yesterday  in  the  hope  «ihat  he 
could    keep    engagements      today,    but 


KVf*^ 


iM>ai>i  m   >■   'ir9 


■■s»n"  'ta 


Devoted  lex  the 

HEALTH.COMFORVBEAUTY 
•••  ^  WOMEN  ••* 

Let*s  get  these  facts  well 
into  our  heads: 

1,  The  Nemo  Wori' 
derlift  IS  a  great 
STYLE  corset 

2.  li  is  a  BETTER 

style  corset  BECAUSE 

of  its   wonderful   and 

exclusive    HYGIENIC 

features. 

In  other  words,  its 
matchless  style  is  largely 
due  to  its  marvelous  hy- 
gienic construction. 


The  Wonderlift  Bandlet 
reduces  your  abdomen  by 
inches  and  pounds,  holds 
your  corset  in  place,  pre- 
serves your  smooth,  fash* 
ionable  lines,  gives  you  a 
better  shape  than  you  ever 
had  before,  brings  you 
supreme  ease  and  comfort. 

it  ALSO  gives  voa  hygietde 
plnneal  support  tkat  prevents, 
rmtves  and  often  cures  many 
of  the  ailments  peculiar  !• 
women.  This  priceless  health" 
service  costs  you  nothing  extnu 

The  Wonderlift  method 
of  construction  trains  the 
figure  into  an  alert,  graceful 
pose  and  creates  that  bodily 
poise  without  which  no  wo- 
man can  be  really  stylish. 

You  must  think  of  th« 
Wonderlift  as  •omething 
distinctly  different  from 
any  other  corset. 


WE  PREDICT 

that  in  dv£  time  nearly 
every  woman  who  weart 
corsets  wiil  wear  a  **  Self- 
Help'*  Wonderlift. 


Viait  «b«  P«rman«nt 

NEMO  EXPOSITION 
NEW  GARDEN  PIER 

AdMrtic  City.  M.  J. 


Not.  B64  and  655  are  for  full 
figurM  from  short  and  stocky  to 
very  uU— $6X>0. 

No.  556  is  for  sloader  to 
■ledhiin  figuros  of  average  height 
-$5.00. 

No.  557  IS  for  very  slim  women 
— who  never  before  bad  a  SUP' 
PORTING  eorsct.  A  distinct 
novelty— $5.00. 

No.  998  it  fb'r  the  largest  kind 
of  wooten ,  who  "can't  get  a  oortet 
big  enoDgh."  Sixes  from  30  to 
44  oaly-$  10.00. 

No.  1000  is  a  oorset  <fe  Inxe  for' 
laetidiout  woaea  of  average  full 
AgHre-$10.CMX 

If  You're  Tired 

of  reading  our  praise  o£ 
Nemo  Wonderlift  Corsets, 
|u9t  make  a  special  study 
of  d»em  as  applied  to  your 
own  case.  Then  you  will  be 
as  enthusiastic  as  we  are. 

Ath  Your  Dmahr 


K 


HrviMrfc-pMhion  Irutitute  N.  Y. 


> 


*^ 

fc-^  —J 

1 

1 

j 

i 

■ 

•—J 

{ 

1 

• 

^1 
1 

THE    DULUTH    HERALU4 


April  10, 1916. 


Baseball  NEWS  AND  VIEWS  OF  THE  SPORT  WORLD 

Rowing 


-•    eowL^iMG  •- 


PARAGRAPHIC  COMMENT 

OF  THE  SPORTING  WORLD 


SPEAKER  EIGURES  IN 

BIG  BASEBALL  DEAL 


base- 
Tris 


BY  BRUCE. 

Tris  Speaker  is  about  to  retire  from 
baseball.  He  has  been  sold  to  the 
Cleveland  team. 

«      «      * 

It's   An   111   Wind   That    Blows,    Etc. 
The  (.libs  did  not  lose  Saturday.     A 
wind     storm     prevmted     ihcin     from 
playing.  *      ,      ♦ 

The  Price  Is  Going  Up. 
It  is  declared  that  Cleveland 
ball    officials    paid    $50.f»oo    for 
Speaker.     This  should  bring  the  value 

of  the  entire  team  up  to  $51,000.03. 

•  «      • 

The  Hopes  That  Bloom  in  the  Spring, 
Tra  La. 

Wisconsin  football  fans  are  very 
optimistic  right  now.  During  the 
spring  ami  summer  months  is  the 
only  tiiuf  the  Wisconsin  football  fans 

have  to  be  optimistic  in. 

♦  *      • 

It's  No  Use  Advocating  It. 
An  Ohio  fighter  declares  that  shin- 
ing shoes  is  a  most  excellent  method 
of   training.      However,   a   method   of 
training  that   involves  any  real  lal)or 

will  never  become  very  popular. 

«      •      • 

Some  Great  Runners  Down  There. 
.An  Austin.  Tex.,  sprinter  is  said  to 
have  run  too  yards  in  Q  and  4-5  sec- 
onds the  other  day.  Right  across  the 
boundary  line,  though,  there  are  also 
some  runners  who  have  been  display- 
ing great  form. 

«      ♦      • 

Two  Methods  of  Punishment. 
Every  once  in  a  while  a  great  man 
is  sent  to  the  penitentiary  and  every 
now  and  then  a  great  baseball  player 


<*(»■< 


I 


is  sentenced  to  the  Cleveland  baseball 

team. 

*  ♦      • 

However,  This   Has  Not   Been  Con- 
firmed. 

It  is  stated  that  if  the  trouble  be- 
tween the  United  States  and  Mexico 
is  adjusted  within  the  next  few 
months,  that  Mexico  will  send  a  team 
(>i  Marathon  runners  to  the  I9'6 
Olympic  games. 

Well,  the  Cause  Is  Just. 

A  headline  says,  "The  News  that 
Speaker  is  coming  to  Cleveland  will 
be  hailed  with  great  joy  by  Cleveland 
baseball  fans."  Speaking  of  Cleveland 
baseball  fans,  it  is  believed  he'll  cele- 
brate over  the  Speaker  matter  by  go- 
ing out  and  becoming  intoxicated. 

*  •      * 

The  Lines  of  Inspiration. 

A  coach  named  Mathew  Mann  de- 
veloped a  swimmer  named  Teddy 
(  ann,  who,  it  is  believed,  is  destined 
to  become  the  next  world's  champion. 
The  youngster,  not  yet  18  years  of 
age.  but  recently  swam  100  yards  in 
55  and  45  seconds.  All  this  suggests 
the  following  lyric  lines: 
Mann.  Mann,  the  gny  who  developed 

Cann! 
Mann.  Mann,  do  you  think  Cann  can? 
Mann,  Mann,  on  hurry  place  a  ban — 
riease,    old    Mann,    do    not    rush    our 

Cann. 

«      *      • 

If  Justice  Was  Meted  Out. 

Judge  —  What  is  the  prisoner 
charged  with,  officer? 

Officer — Vagrancy,  your  honor; 
without  visible  means  of  support. 

Judge — Prisoner,  what   do  you   do? 

Prisoner — I  am  a  member  of  the 
Cincinnati  baseball  team,  may  it 
please  your  honor. 

Jiulge — Sixty  days. 

«      •      • 

Some  Inside  Information. 
Maybe   Raymond   .Smith  knew   Tris 
Speaker  was  going  to  be  sold  to  the 

Cleveland  team. 

*  •      * 

It  Should  Be  a  Great  Year  for  Ty. 

Ty  Cobb  has  said  scarcely  any- 
thing this  spring.  This  leads  to  the 
belief  that  Tyrus  is  in  grand  condi- 
tion. 

*  *      • 

It   Is   Rather  Peculiar. 

Many  men  have  attempted  to  fol- 
low pursuits  they  were  totally  un- 
fitted for.  Napoleon  Bonaparte 
wanted  to  be  able  to  write  great 
poetry.  Tennyson  yearned  to  be- 
come a  political  power.  William 
Bryan  longed  to  become  president. 
Nero  wanted  to  join  the  musicians' 
union   and    Carl    Morris   has   a   great 

hankering  to  become  a  fighter. 

*  •      * 

Commercial    League   Pennant  Stand- 
ing. 

\y.  L.  P.  C. 

Coal    10  o  1. 000 

Hutter    9  I  .999 

Strawberries    8  2  .800 

Gasolene    8  2  .800 

Potatoes    5  5  .500 

Overshoes     o  10  .000 

Winter    Hats o  10  .000 

Snow    Shovels o  il  .000 


WOLD'S  TEAM 
IS  DEFEATED 

Kalkbrenner's  Rifle  Squad 

Wins  Northwestern  Gun 

Club  Shoot. 


Secretary  Herman  Kalkbrenner's 
rifle  team  defeated  the  team  led  by 
Treasurer  John  Wold  yesterday  in  the 
final  fihoot  of  the  eeaBon,  under  the 
auspices  of  the'  Northwestern  Gun 
club.  The  winning  club  had  a  mar- 
gin of  five  points,  winning  by  the 
score    of    362    to    867. 

Members  of  the  defeated  team,  un- 
der the  rules  of  the  competition,  have 
agreed  to  pay  for  a  dinner  for  the 
members    of     the    victorious    team. 

In  addition  to  the  team  shoot,  a 
sweepstake  contest  was  also  held. 
Alex  Schebetzky  won  first  money, 
while  EJdward  Hlbbard  and  Frank 
Husstll  were  tied  for  second  place. 
F.  Berbig  was  third  and  Otto  and 
C.  W.  Evans  tied  for  fourth  place. 
F.    Dryer    was    fifth. 

Following  is  the  score  of  the  club 
rifle  competition  at  200  yard  range, 
out  of  a  possible  60  points,  the  work 
of  the  shooters  being  handicapped  by 
a   heavy    wind: 


TRIS  SPEAKER. 

The  sale  of  Tris  Speaker  of  the  Bos- 
ton ItCvl  Sox  to  the  Cleveland  Amer- 
icans marks  the  biggest  baseball  deal 
of  years.  Speaker  has  been  called  the 
greatest  outfielder  In  baseball.  Critics 
of  the  gatne  have  often  culled  the  Tex- 
«n  a  better  outflolder  than  Ty  Cobb. 
With  Lewis  and  Hooper.  Speaker  com- 
posed the  greatest  outfield  In  baseball. 
The  pa.'^sing  of  Speaker  will  break  up 
an  outfield  combination  that  has  played 
tcgither  for  many  seasons.  If  a  player 
of  the  ultra  ability  of  Speaker  cannot 
command  a  war  time  salary,  it  appears 
certain  that  the  days  of  excessive  sal- 
aries for  ball  players  have  passeJ. 


NEW  INDOOR  MARK 
FOR  POLE  VAULT 


Two  Youths    Make    It  at 

Chicago  Meet;  Hard 

Struggle. 

Chicago,  April  10. — The  new  world's 
indoor  record  In  the  pole  vault,  made 
jointly  by  Tercy  Graham  and  Ed 
Knourek  at  the  Central  A.  A.  U.'s  an- 
nual Indoor  meet,  came  after  a  strug- 
gle between  the  two  for  the  champion- 
ship that  lasted  well  into  Saturday 
morning.  Knourek,  a  working  boy, 
who  wears  the  colors  of  the  Illinois 
Athletic  club,  was  first  to  cross  the  bar 
at  the  new  mark  of  12  feet,  10»4 
Inches,  but  Graham  surmounted  It  on 
his  first  trial. 

Thereafter,  neither  could  raise  his 
vault,  and  In  the  Jump-off  with  the 
bar  lowere-l.  CJraham  won  the  cham- 
pionship. Graham,  now  a  freshman  at 
the  University  of  Chicago.  beKan  his 
pole  vaulting  career  a  few  years  ago, 
when  a  student  at  University  high 
school  here. 

Both  he  and  Knourek  will  be  cred- 
ited with  the  new  mark,  which  beat 
by  more  than  2  inches  the  record  made 
by  Gold  of  Wisconsin  at  Evanston  two 
years  ago. 


SrciTfao''*  Tram — 

H.    Kilklrt-cnnff 29 

0.  Kalklirenner 38 

Vim.    Hesse 24 

0.  Ha«on 84 

Alex   Srhi-lietzky 34 

r.  Hfldman 18 

Ira   Verterfelt 24 

J.   ratrbliowslii SOi 

M.    Monwn Zl 

A.  W.   KehUI 27 

Kd  Hlbbard 35 

John    AniuDdaon 19 

C.  G.   KrtlttlU 28 


Trfisuff t'b  Tfam — 

John  Wold 38 

F.  I^er 23 

Edw.  Kraiise 29 

R.    Jcronimus 31 

John  PeU'rson 36 

r.  W.  K»ani 26 

Ed  Pitrrson 16 

♦".  Busscll 39 

P.    Dzfininftkl 26 

C.  Miller 1" 

F.   Berl.lg    39 

Fxl  Ooodi>n   14 

Wni.    KebU'l 23 

"367 


BASEBALL 


Logan,  Gil  Browne  and  "Dummy" 
Watson  must  all  have  their  little  bit 
of  change.  In  exchange  for  working 
six  days  a  week  trying  to  bring  Har- 
vard down  "right  for  the  big  matches 
with  Cornell,  Princeton  and  Yale. 

SPEAKER  NOt^RTAIN. 

Will  See  Lannin  Before  Agreeing  to 
His  Sale  to  Indians. 

Boston,  Mass.,  April  10. — Tris  Speak- 
er, famous  center  fielder  for  the  Bos- 
ton American  league  team  whose  sale 
to  the  Cleveland  club  was  announced 
yesterday,  said  last  night  that  It  was 
not  yet  a  certainty  that  he  would  go 
to  the  Cleveland  team.  Speaker  came 
here  from  New  York  to  have  a  talk 
with  President  Lannin  of  the  Red  Sox 
about  the  deal. 

"There  Is  no  need  of  my  faying  that 
this  deal  was  a  complete  surprise  to 
me,"  said  Speaker.  "It  nearly  took  me 
off  my  feet.  As  I  understood  It,  Mr. 
Lannin  and  I  had  practically  agreed 
upon  terms.  After  talking  with  him  on 
Friday  I  concluded  that  our  deal  was 
practically  fixed  up  and  that  there  was 
no  longer  anything  between  me  and 
my  continuance  as  a  member  of  the 
Red  Sox  team,  save  the  signing  of  a 
contract. 

"I  realize  the  difference  now.  I  shall 
Fee  Mr.  Lanning  and  look  for  an  ex- 
I)lanntlon.  1  have  not  signed  any  con- 
tract with  the  Cleveland  club  yet,  al- 
though I  believe  that  as  far  as  I  am 
lontei-ned,  the  Boston  club  no  longer 
has  me  on  Its  list.  Whether  I  shall 
go  to  Cleveland  remains  to  be  seen. 
As  I  said,  everything  depends  upon  my 
Interview   with  Mr.    Lannin." 


NORTHERN  LEAGUE  SHOULD 
FURNISH  FAST  BASEBALL 

With  More  Players  on  the  Market  and  the  Salary 
Limit  of  the  Circuit  Increased,  It  Is  Expected 
That  the  Best  Brand  of  Ball  Played  in  Years 
Will  Be  Shown  to  Fans. 


starting  with  the  present  week,  [  he  expected  to  have  a  stronger  pitch- 
baseball  candidates  for  Northern  league  l.';fane"J%|,^ariiu^m'o?>"r;=arl/t\."^LVgS 
teams  will  begin  to  show  their  wares,    during  the  1916  .<=eason. 


The  call  has  been  sent  out  to  the 
men  signed  by  the  managers  of  the 
six  clubs  that  are  to  make  up  the  Bur- 
melster  circuit  during  the  1916  season. 
It  Is  expected  that  the  majority  of 
candidates  will  report  during  the  week, 
while  next  week  should  see  all  o^^J^.^ 
men  working  the  kinks  out  of  their 
systems 


White  Sox  7;  Minneapolis  3. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  April  10.— The 
Chicago  Americans  easily  defeated  the 
Minneapolis  American  association  club, 
7  to  3.  yesterday  In  the  last  of  the 
exhibition  series  here.  The  White  Sox 
left  last  night  to  play  exhibition  games 
at  Davenport  and  Mollne.     Score: 

R.  H.  K. 

Chicago      21  1  01  00  20— 7   11     0 

Minneapolis    001000  00  2 — 3     6     6 

Batteries  —  Clcotte,  Danforth  and 
Schalk;  Hopper,  Engel  and  Owens. 
Umpire — Carney. 

^   ' 

Cards  Defeat  Browns  for  Title. 

St.  Louis,  Mo..  April  10.— The  St. 
Louis  Nationals  won  the  city  cham- 
pionship from  the  St.  Louis  Americans 
by  taking  the  fifth  game  of  the  city 
series  here  yesterday,  8  to  4.  Extra 
I  base  hits  off  Weilmfn  and  Crandall, 
who  gave  a  total  of  fourteen  hits, 
helped  the  Nationals  to  a  big  lead. 
Sallee  relieved  Meadows  in  the  Hghth 
and  checked  a  rally  by  the  Amerlcan.s. 
> 

Topeka  Trims  Tigers. 

Topeka,  Kas.,  April  10.  —  Cold 
weather  chilled  the  fingers  of  fielders 
and  pitchers  yesterday  and  thirty- 
eight  hits  for  a  total  of  thirty-two 
ruris  were  made  In  the  baseball  game 
between  the  second  team  of  the  De- 
troit Americans  and  the  Topeka  West- 
ern league  club.  Topeka  played  bet- 
ter in  the  field  and  at  bat  than  De- 
troit and  twenty  of  the  thirty-two 
runs  were  credited  to  the  home  team. 
Loudermilk    knocked   a    home    run. 


Cleveland, 
dent  James 
baseball 
here  toda 
ton    by   w 

will  come  to  Cleveland.  He  will  get 
into  communication  with  Speaker  by 
long  distance  telephone  and  will  talk 
salary    with    him. 

By  long  distance  telephone  In  Chi- 
cago this  morning  Dunn  said  he  ex- 
pected to  have  no  difficulty  In  satis- 
fying the  demands  of  Speaker  and  the 
same  opinion  prevails  with  Speaker 
who  said  over  the  telephone  from 
Boston  today; 

"Dunne  would  never  have  paid  ?B0.- 
000  for  me  If  he  hadn't  wanted  me 
bad  enough  to  pay  me  the  salary  1 
ask." 

Vice  Pre 
Cleveland 
what    Cle;k' 

Boston  in  the  Speaker  deal  but  it  was 
intimated  bv  others  interested  In  the 
affairs  of  the  club  that  Pitcher  Sam 
Jones  and  either  Infielder  B'll  Wanibs- 
ganss  or  Fred  Thomas  would  be  the 
men  traded. 


Unglaub  has  been  working  industri- 
ously during  the  winter  months,  de- 
spite the  fact  that  his  position  as  man- 
ager of  Fargo  was  not  cinched.  As  a 
result  of  this  activity  and  the  gener- 
osity of  Joe  Cantillon,  tlie  Fargo  team 
will  enter  the  race  with  a  very  formi- 
dable lineup. 

Winnipeg   Lookn   Good. 

Along  with  Fargo  is  It  quite  safe  to 
string    a    bet    on     Winnipeg.      Charley 

the   Peg 


Darby  O'Brien  will  have  about  thirty  [Moll  will  handle  the  reins  at  tl 
men  from  whom  to  select  the  team  and  he  will  have  a  number  of  last 
that  is  to  represent  Duluth  at  the  |  year's  St.  Boniface  players  to  rely  upon, 
start  of  the  season.  The  Dock's  mate-  With  the  scrappy  youngsters  of  the  St. 
r«oi  1b  nhniit  evenlv  divided  between  Boniface  team  and  some  of  the  veterans 
rial    18    aooui    e>c     y  recruits.     Of    of    last    year's    Winnipeg    team    he    has 


hP  il  candidate  for  the  team.  Atiaea  rori  wiiiiam  la  an  uncertainty  and 
to  thiq  list  will  be  a  large  number  of  will  remain  so  until  the  season  gets 
i-ecru  ts  who  havl  been  signed  since  well  under  way.  Lefty  Davis  is  a  ca- 
?hecfose  of  last  season.  Bunny  i  pable  leader  and  should  make  a  good 
^rhrPibPr  a  former  White  Sox  star.  Is  i  showing  with  the  Virginia  team.  Mo.«t 
fne  of  tlie  real  dependables.  Much  is  |  of  the  members  of  last  year's  Virginia 
expected  of  the  former  American  as-  |  team  will  be  on  hand  again  this  year, 
soclatlon  player.      Darbv   is  also  bank-    Davis    was    but    recently    appointed    to 

ing    heavily    on    the  ^    ,,»,,♦     „ 

signed   from   the   Ohio   baseball   belt,   a 
district    that    has    yielded    handsomely 

'"work^wU'l  be  started  on  the  diamond  |  lamps  one  and  knows,  moreover,  where 
urlng  the  welk      The  playing  surface  |  t"  lay    his   hand  on  a  lot  of  good  per- 


Darby   is  also  bank-    Davis    was    but    recei 
the    recruits    he     has    the    pllotshlp    of    the    range    team    and 


has  had  but  little  time  to  line  up  some 
new  men.  However,  the  big  league  vet- 
eran    knows    a    ball     player    when     he 


d 

of    the 


infield    will    be    smoothed    out 


ePident  Robert  McRoy  of  the    and   some  Improvements  J^^^f-.^y^^'^I, 

club   dtclined    today    to    say    Blunie   expects   to   haA'e   the   Infield    in 

,'eland    plavers    would    go    to    much    better    shape    this    year    than    it 


F.4ILS  TO  QUALIFY. 

New  York.  April  10. — Duke  Kahana- 
moku  of  Honolulu  failed  to  qualify 
yesterdav   In  his  trial   heat  of  the  220- 


was    last   season 

Fargo    to    Be    Strong. 

Bob  Ingersoll,  former  big  league 
pitcher,  who  has  been  with  the  Min- 
neapolis team  of  the  American  associa- 
tion, was  yesterday  turned  over  to 
Bob  Unglaub  of  the  Fargo  club.  It  Is 
bel:Ieved  Ingersoll  will  materially 
strengthen  the  pitching  staff  of  the 
champions.  .     ,     ,      -,   .  .      j 

Lester  Smith  and  Jack  Hubbard, 
pitchers  who  have  been  trying  out 
in    the   Miller   camp    at   Hickman.    Ky., 


passed    by    Joseph    Wheatley 
New  York   Athletic  club. 

Perrv  Mc(.;illlvray  of  the  Illinois  A. 
C.  of  Chicago,  and  Tedford  H.  McCann 
of  the  New  York  A.  C,  also  qualified 
for  the  event. 


the  i  Unglaub    to    cease   worrying    regarding 
his    pitching    staff. 

In   addition   to   the   three   hurlera  se-    ers 
cured  from  the  Minneapolis  club,  Ung- 
laub   has   a   number   of   recruits   signed 
up.      Recently    the    Fargo    pilot    stated 


formers. 

Recently  an  ad  was  Inserted  in  sev- 
eral of  Uie  Chicago  newspapers,  re- 
questing that  promising  ball  players 
communicate  with  the  manager  of  the 
Virginia  club.  Some  fast  seml-pio- 
fessionals  may  be  picked  up  around 
dear  old  Chi,  where  there  are  a  multi- 
tude of  capable  players. 

Superior  a  Myntery. 
Fans  at  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  will 
be  able  to  get  a  line  on  the  Superior 
team  before  the  opening  of  the  regu- 
lar Northern  league  season  May  4.  A 
series  of  exhibition  games  has  been 
arranged  between  Duluth  and  the  ball 
team  acros.s  the  bay,  so  that  the  fans 
will  have  the  opportunity  of  forming 
their  own  opinions  as  to  what  to  ex- 
pect from  the  material  Bragtigan  has 
secured. 

Superior  had  a  Joke  team  during  the 
short  time  It  remained  in  the  league 
last  season.  There  Is  little  to  fall 
back  on  in  the  way  of  tried  ball  play- 
The  former  Appleton  leader  Is 
said  to  have  been  very  busy  In  lining 
up  some  promising  recruits.  Fai.| 
across    the   way   believe   that   the    Red 


I  ■  m^i^^ifl 


/' 


r  ^/i 


Pirates  Beat  Hoosiers. 

Indianapolis,  Ind.,  April  10.— The 
Pittsburgh  Nationals  defeated  the  In- 
dianapolis American  association  team, 
2  to  0,  yesterday  afternoon.  Pitts- 
burgh made  both  its  runs  in  the  sixth 
on  a  scratch  hit  by  Barney. 

Cubs  Win  From  Colonels. 

Louisville,  Ky.,  April  10.- The  Chi- 
cago Nationals  hit  Northrop  hard  In 
the  fourth  inning  of  yesterday's  exhi- 
bition game  with  the  local  American 
association  team,  attaining  a  lead  their 
opponents  were  never  able  to  over- 
come,  Chicago   winning,   5   to  3. 

Cold  Weather  Interferes. 

Cincinnati,  Ohio.  April  10.  —  The 
scheduled  exhibition  games  for  yes- 
terday and  today  between  the  Cleve- 
land Americans  and  Cincinnati  Na- 
tionals here  were  called  off  on  ac- 
count of  cold  weather.  The  Cleveland 
team  returned  home  last  night. 
« 

Saints  Whipped  in  South. 

Nashville.  Tenn..  April  10.— Yester- 
day's result:  Nashville  Southerns,  S; 
St.  I'aul,  1. 


7^'^\ 


i) 


\ 


^'?? 


/<^ 


^0 


>%; 


B^ 


HARVARD  COACHING 

SYSTEM  EXPENSIVE 


Football  Supremacy  of  the 
Crimson  School  Achieved 
at  an  Annual  Cost  of  a 
Small  Fortune. 


For 

particulars 

a»..lress 

J.  M.  NEAFUS. 
Traveling  Past.  Agt., 
607  Palladio  Building, 
DULUTH,  MINN. 


THE  REST  WAYANY  DAY 


In  the  reorganization  of  Harvard 
football  next  fall  more  than  J40,000  Is 
expected  to  be  expended  for  the 
coaching  staff.  It  1»  commonly  un- 
derstood that  Harvard  paid  Gridiron 
Coach  Haughton  $6,000  annually  for 
three  years  and  that  a  like  sum  was 
made  up  for  his  benefit  by  interested 
alumni. 

An  Increase  in  salary  is  to  be  ex- 
pected in  Haughton's  case,  the  figures 
of  which — all  told — will  probably  root 
$16,000  for  next  season  as  general  di- 
rector. ,  ,       ,      ^ 

Field  Coach  Leo  Leary,  who  is  to 
have  charge  of  the  development  of  the 
team  until  Haughton's  baseball  duties 
are  over,  will  very  Jikely  draw  down 
16.000.  ,' 

Charley  Brlckley,  wlyo  has  given  up 
his  post  at  Johns.  Hopkins  to  come 
back  here  as  drop  kicTiing  coach  and 
backfield  teacher.  Is  also  expected  to 
count  over  a  bahkroll  of  at  least 
14  000.  In  Leary's  case,  as  in  Brick- 
ley's,  as  well  as  ffegtle  Brown,  the 
strategist,  we.ilthy  alpmnl  will  make 
up  the  difference  between  their  con- 
tract with  the  crlnison  athletic  solons 
and  the  figures  that  they  have  agreed 
to  coach  for  next  winter.  Brown  will 
very  likely  pick  tip  |4.000  for  scout 
duty.  Then,  too,  such  asflstants  as 
Derric  Pnrmenter.  Dick  Wlggleswoth, 
Dick      King,      W'allle     "Trumbull,      Mai 


A  Safe  Hit— "RoU  Your  Own" 

Millions  of  baseball  fans  in  America  are  veteran  "Bull"  Durham 
smokers,  because  fresh  rolled  "Biill"  Durham  cigarettes  afford  them 
the  same  lively  pleasure.  "  pep  "  and  rapid-fire  enjoyment  as  the 
great  national  pastime.     Get  in  the  game  —  "joU  your  own"  with 

OCNUINC 

"Bull  Durham 

SMOKING  TOBACCO 

The  smart,  snappy,  wide-spread  custom  of  "rolling  your  own" 
with  "Buir*  Durham  has  introduced  thousands  of  men  to  genuine 
smoking  satisfaction. 

Get  the  knack— it's  merely  a  matter  of  a  little  practice.     Then 

you  can  enjoy  anywhere  and  any  time 
the  mild,  wholesome,  healthful  smoke  which 
a  fresh-rolled  cigarette  of  "Bull"  Durham 
gives  you. 

"Bull"  Durham  is  unique  in  its  aromatic 
fragrance  and  its  wonderful  mellow-sweet 
flavor. 


A»k  f»r  FREE 
paekug*  of  "jMpmn" 
with    mach    5c   saclu 


V^ 


.»  rJiMNi. 


UimiTAM 

SiimkinvT.  b.K.rn,.  - 

•  -    .   .        ..«-..  -1  «  -^ r 


■  %m  %l^l^  An  Illustrated 
f*  Ww*r.  Beoklet.sh«w. 

*  *^  "*"  ing  correct  way 
to  "Roll  Your  Own"  Gig arettea, 
and  a  package  of  cigarette  pa- 
pers, will  both  be  mailed.  fr^M, 
to  any  addree*  in  U.  S.  on  re- 
quest. Addrass  "Bull"  Durw 
bam.  Durbam,  N.  C 

THE  AMERICAN  TOBACCO  Ca 


r1-  ^ 


^^l  I'^m 


i. 


n 


■JMi— *^   II  —M 


Monday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


r      '       *  ' 

' 

F*** 

■ 

1 

i 

• 

v 


Box   will    start   the   season   with 
fast    baseball    club. 
With    the    opening 


a  very 


of    the    Northern 


leaKue  »eaRon  not  so  very  far  beyond 
two  woeks  away,  fans  are  beglnnlnif 
to  take  a  decided  Interest  In  »pecu- 
latiMK  as  to  the  brand  of  baaeball  that 
Is  to  »)e  played  In  th'-  Uurineiater  cir- 
cuit durinK  the  approachlnK  season. 

It  is  Kenerally  bell'ved  that  a  faster 
artUle  of  ball  will  be  played  durlnir 
the    coming    season    than    was    played 


last  yr'AT.  For  one  thing,  the  salary 
limit  has  been  raised.  Another  reason 
iH  that  then-  ar«  more  players  on  the 
market.  Also.  It  mlpht  be  stated,  there 
are  but  six  clubs  in  the  league  this 
year  and  for  that  reason  it  Is  expected 
that  tl;<3  players  will  represent  thvs 
pick  of  last  year's  survivors  and. 
strenKthenoil  and  rt-habllltated  with 
new  blood,  will  furnish  about  the  beat 
bast-ball  the  fans  of  thei»o  parts  have 
wttncsded  In  years. 


MUCH  INTEREST  BEING  SHOWN 
IN  FIELD  AND  TRACK  MEETS 


BiMyiLUAM  BRADY. 

Septic  Floods  in  Gingivi 


New  York.  April  10.— Intereat  In 
rollego  track  and  field  athletlc«  con- 
tinues to  Increase  among  the  East- 
ern universities  and  tlie  coming  sea- 
son promises  to  surpass  all  previous 
records  both  in  number  of  meets  und 
ftarfl  who  will  cump.te.  While  there 
is  no  unusual  In.entlvo  for  spoctal 
training,  as  would  have  been  the  case 
had    not   the    European   war   •^aus*;^ Jhe 

Hb^.ndonlne    of     the       0'y"'P'«,„  «tv  n^ 
larger  »«iuuds  of  candjdates  are-  trying 

fur    plaees 


the  teams   than   in  many 


ter  ha.'i  d>'layed   the  beginning   of  out- 
door   training       In     some       caae.s,       the 
coache.H  expect  to  overcome  this  handi- 
cap   and     send     their     charges     to    the  i 
mark    in    the    big    meets,    prepared    for  i 
tlie     hardest    kind    of    competition.  I 

That  the  struggle  for  points  and 
priz>*s  will  be  unu^♦uall  keen  this  sea-  | 
»f>n  Ifl  shown  by  the  number  and  class 
of  entries  already  assured  for  the 
principal  meets.  The  University  of 
Penn-sylvanla  relay  games.  which 
really  op.-n  the  Kastern  track  season, 
have  at  traced  a  larger  entry  than 
ever  befoit^;  many  teams  coming  from 
the  South  and  Weat.  More  colleges 
will  compete  In  the  intercollegiate 
championship    meet    at   Cambridge   1 


Persons  who  are  subject  to  so-called 

"Rlgg's  disease"   or  chronic  li;flamma- 

tlon    of    the    guma     and     tooth-sockets 

I  generally    have    poor    health,    and    fre- 

(|uently  suffer  from 
^  y  s  t  emlc  troubles 
lue  to  the  primary 


^^R^norts  from  the  coaches  of  a  num-  f  championship  meet  at  Cambridge  late 
ber  of  the  leading  Eastern  Institutions  r  in  aiay  than  In  any  ye»^  ,«J"i^«c.  *^* 
■  11  aKree  that  the  material,  both  In  i  association  waw  formed  In  1876.  Stan- 
and    quantity,    is    considerably  ,  ford   and   (.'allfornla   will    represent  the 


•juallty 
i>ve 
number 


the     Middle 


or 


VVlLUAMBRALXMa; 


j.h..ve    the    average    standard    and    that  i  Far     WeMt     and     Ml«hiKan 

of     records     are     likely     to  !  West.      Between    the    I'.-nnsylvanIa    re 

'  lay    ujoet    and    the    I. 
dual 


he  broken  during  the  coming  competi- 
.Meason.      While    the    belated    wln- 


tive 


^ 2-^— (  '   '  ' '   ■' 

■ 


'V, 


! 


.mm   ■    I 


i 


IS  YOUR 
STORAGE 
BAHERY 

GIVING  YOU 
GOOD  SERVICE? 

If  not,  bring  it  in  now  to 
be  recharged  or  repaired. 
We  have  an  expert  who  will 
be  glad  to  examine  your  old 
battery  and  tell  you  just 
where  the  trouble  is  and  the 
cost  to  repair  it.  No  obliga- 
tion on  your  part  whatever. 

NEW 

EVEREADY 

BAHERIES 

— the  guaranteed  non-injuri- 
ous sulphating  batteries  are 
here  waiting  for  you.  VVe 
have  a  battery  that  will  ftt 
your  tool  box  and  is  made 
just  for  your  make  and  mod- 
el of  car.  Come  in  and  see 
them.  And  the  prices  are 
right. 

We  will  test  your  battery 
right  in  your  car  every 
month  and  keep  it  filled 
with  distilled  water  free  of 
cliarge.  We  appreciate  the 
value  of  satisfied  customers 
and  will  do  all  we  can  to 
give  you  the  best  of  Service 
at  all  times. 

The  service  you  get  from 
us  on  battery  work  is  unex- 
celled. Our  workshop  is 
newly  equipped  with  the  lat- 
est apparatus  for  the  re- 
charging and  repairing  of  all 
makes  of  storage  batteries. 
At  Your  Service. 

KELLEY  MOTOR  & 
SUPPLY  CO. 

228  East  Superior  Street. 


C.    A.    A.    A.    A- 

championships,    dual      and      triangular 
meets    are   scheduled    for   almost    every 
Saturday,    the    list    of    the      more    Im- 
portant   ev«-nts    being    as    follows: 
Collegiate    Athletic    lHeet«. 

April   2J— l.<"*litim,   M>-..   BttP*  vs.    Bimduin  dii»l. 

April    I'J— BalllJiion'.    .Mil.,    John   Hopkins   m.    Swirtli- 
tniif  (tuml.  ,  _         ,      , 

.\prll   27,   20— FhlU<l.lpUU,   lulvfrslty  oT  PcnnsrUwil* 
r»l,i/   mt?<»t, 

April  -J?— PTO»l<Vnr».   Brown  »s.   Amhent  <kM. 

.%Uy   «— HliiUilflptilii,    l»«rlniouUi   »<.    I'lUtihiircIt  daal. 

>lay  li — ptttHbtirnii,   Syrmus*  »s.    Plttstmrgh   dual. 

M«y   <i— New    Haf-ii.    Y«l*  ts.    Prliio'ton    dual. 

M*>-  H—Briin.wlrk.    M.    I.   T.    v«.    B<.«(l4)in   <hl»I. 

>ljy   rt — N-^    lUf^n.    Y«le   vs.    Prlm-ctjti   *ial. 

\j,y  »;— .\»w   York.   Brown   n.  luliunbU  dual. 

Md>-  rt— Mlddletown,  Loon..   Colgate  v«.  We«lry»n  dual. 

M«y  •! ItbMJ.   N.  v..  Hurwrd  vs.  Corn<-U  dual. 

May  6— Amli«>fit,   Ainherit  m.  WlllUms  dual. 

Miy  ti— ^'inapolls,    l.«rayftte  vs.   N«»y  dual, 

.May    IJ— Ib'uusrtii'k,   .Mf..   .Maine   IuU;rcoIliTiUt«>  cbam- 
;ii.)ii.4hip. 

May  13    rjmhridc*.   Harvard  v«.   Yale  dual. 

.May   t?,— Ann  Aihor.  MMilitan  vs.   Hrraniir  dual. 

May   1.1— Wtlllair.iti)wn.   WlUianu  vs.    Wesleyan  dnal. 

Miy  IS— .New  York,  Middle  SUtea  Intercoll<-(tat«  cham- 
pt-wiihip.  ^    , 

.May  IS— Philadelphia,  Ctniell  w.  Pi-nuxylvanla  Aul. 

May  17— Ka'iton,  Pa.,   Uhlgli  vs.   Lafayt'ttc  dual. 

Mv  17— dwarthmor.'.   New  York  I'liiverslty  v*.   Bwarth- 
more  dual.  ,    , 

M«y  2t>— HaverfVjfd    Swartlimore  vs.   Raverford  dual. 

M*|(   •_••>— New   BniMswKk.   N.   J..   Rutcen  n.   Lafayette 
dual.  ,    , 

Mjy  20— S>Tatusc,  Colgate  w.  Svramse  dual. 

May     19,     a>— Boston,     .New     England     lutercBlleflate 
rhampfcMi'Uiip. 

May   19,    20— Philadelphia,   Middle  SUtet  Janlor   and 
Sentor  rhMipi<>n^ip.  ^    , 

ytm  a*— ««Jirtluni>re,   Lafayette  and  Swarthmor"  dii«l. 

May  •*».   27~Boitun.    IntereolleglaU  rhamploiwhlp. 

MANY  ROYETRED 
FOALS  REPORTED 


.-leptlc    focus     in 
about  the  teeth. 

It  Is  now  pretty 
well  known, 
among  the  laity, 
I  hat  "rheumatism" 
is  usually  a  local 
m  a  n  1  f  estation  of 
.syatemic  poisoning 
from  some  recog- 
nized septic  focus, 
.such  as  a  pus-pock- 
♦'t  at  the  root  of  a 
tooth,  or  a  focus  of 
infection  under  an 
old  filling  which, 
perhaps,  haa  given 
the  patient  no  trouhle  for  years,  yet 
shows  a  septic  atate  when  photo- 
graphed  with  the  X-ray. 

A  fairly  common  Incident  In  the 
course  of  chronic  gingivitis  (gum  In- 
flammattiin)  Is  this:  The  patient  suf- 
fers a  sudden  chill  or  chilly  aensatlon, 
and  Immediately  Jumps  at  the  ccmclu- 
■lon  that  he  or  she  ts  "taJctng  cold." 
Of  course  that  Idea  Is  wholly  Imagi- 
nary. The  "cold"  Is  just  about  as  sen- 
sible as  is  the  "taking  cold"  explana- 
tion of  septic  blood  poisoning  from  a 
wound   or  In   childbed. 

Accompanying  the  chilliness  there  Is 
apt  to  be  mor«  or  less  nausea  or  vom- 
iting, which  is  sometimes  very  severe. 
The  patient  develops  a  splitting  head- 
ache, high  fever,  and  great  prostra- 
tion. The  physician,  unless  familiar 
with  the  unilerlylng  condition.  Is  tem- 
porarily at  a  loss  to  account  for  the  at- 
tack. If  the  Incarcerated  pus  finds 
exit  from  the  gum.  alongside  of  the 
affected  tooth,  the  symptoms  will  pres- 
ently disappear  and  the  patient  will 
regain  her  customary  state  of  frail 
health.  Unfortunately,  there  Is  no  spe- 
cial toothache  or  local  soreness  to  call 
attention  to  the  focus.  Hence  the  doc- 
tor may  overlook  It,  if  he  la  not  given 
to  looking  his  patient  square  in  the 
teeth,  or  If  he  does  suspect  the  true 
source  of  the  septic  flood,  the  patient 
Is  pretty  sure  to  scout  the  Idea,  for  she 


has  had  those  bad  teeth  so  many,  many 

years.  %  '"•  § 

Anyway,  that  lAjfefclcture  of  a  sep- 
tic flood.  It  has  me#if  called  a  "heavy 
cold,"  "fever  and  im^T  "gastric  fever." 
-malaria."  "bilious  attack,"  and  various 
other  fanciful  names  in  scores  of  cases 
where  the  patient  helped  in  making 
the  diagnosis. 

A  single  drop  of  pus  incarcerated  by 
some  accidental  obstruction  to  drain- 
even  !  age  is  capable  of  producing  the  most 
violent  Imaginable  .  symptoms,  though 
unfortunately  pain  Is  not  always  one 
of  the  symptoms  when  soft  tissues  are 
Involved. 


«11't:stioxs  axd  answers. 

Xo   ladulgencrs   for  Members  of  Brea* 
and  Milk  Club. 

I  would  like  to  Join  the  Bread  and 
Milk  club,  but  have  not  the  time  to  eat 
every  two  hours.  Would  It  be  all  right 
to  eat  Just  three  times  a  day?  If  »o, 
how  much  milk  and  bread  each  time? 
asks  a  slim  woman.  And  should  the 
milk  be  warm,  cold  or  boiled?  I  find  It 
Impossible  to  satisfy  my  appetite  with 
1«S8  than  a  large  slice  of  bread  and 
butter  and  a  large  glass  of  milk  every 
two  hours,  writes  a  stout  man.     Is  this 

all  right? 

Xnswer The    slim    woman    may    try 

the  fat  man's  method,  and  he  should 
adopt  her  schedule.  Bread  and  Milk 
club  members  are  denied  Indulgence^ 
Small  glass  of  warm,  cold,  or  boiled 
milk  If  you  prefer,  with  a  cracker  or  a 
mere  mouthful  or  two  of  bread— that 
is  the  order,  and  every  two  hours  from 
rising  to  bedtime.  Monday  Is  the  day, 
and  Excelsior  the  motto.  Only  near- 
Invallds.  bilious,  overfed,  too  well- 
nourished  victims  of  autointoxication, 
liver  complaint  and  geaeral  prosperity 
admitted  to  membership.  Sick  people 
need  not  apply. 

NoB-Snrideal  Treatmeat  of   Go«e». 

Please  tell  me  what  you  mean  by 
non-surgh  al  treatment  of  exophthalmic 
goiter,   and  where  such   treatment  can 

be   had.  ^  » 

Answer — Kon-surglcal  treatment 
means  good  medical  treatment— rest, 
proper  diet,  open-air  life  and  general 
management  much  the  same  as  for  tu- 
berculosis. Medlc««(m  to  meet  the 
conditions  In  each  J^aae.  Such  treat- 
ment is  given  l>yt;«|'*ft  family  phyal- 
clans.  7      _ 


Dr.  Brad,  will  answer  .11  -rvd  lettm  pertain.n,  ^^ ^'^^J,/^ ^r^it  l^tl:::^'fJZrl^u^^ 

'^..^Jr'lWtr^^     ii7    WiUlam   Brady,    care   of   tbH 


answered  through   th<^s>-  rolumnii:  if  not  It  will  he  aas^er 

Dr.   Bradj-  will  not  preicrllx'  for  Individual  cases  or  make  dlsgno**, 

Siinp««er.      Fniteetcd   hf   The  Adams  Newspaper  Serrlee. 


XddrebS,    Ui.    WiUlam   Brady, 


_i-|_|-|_i -«j— is^i    -|    ■"   — ^^^      ^  ■■ 


Kentucky  Horse  Breeders' 

Association  Receives  Nearly 

1,000  Nominations. 

Lexington.  Ky..  April  10. — The  Ken- 
tucky Trotting  Horse  Breeders'  as- 
sociation has  announced  that  the 
Kentucky  futurity  for  foals  of  191« 
ha.^  received  nearly  100  more  nomi- 
nations than  last  year,  viz:  932.  These 
have  been  entered  by  268  Individual 
nominators,  headed  by  the  Patchen 
Wilkes  stock  farm.  Lexington.  Ky.. 
with  an  even  lOO'  mares,  of  which  35 
are  in  foal  to  the  stallion  marvel 
P*«ter  the  Great,  2:07 '4.  who  recently 
•  hanged  owners,  although  22  years  of 
age.  at  $50,000;  Walnut  Hall  farm, 
r>on»>rail.  Ky.,  Is  second  with  90  roy- 
ally bred  matrons.  26  being  In  foal  to 
San  Francisco.  2:07*4.  who  has  to  his 
credit  th»;  sensational  3-year-old  fTlly 
and  winner  of  the  futurity  la.st  year, 
Mary  Putney,  2:05^,  which  Is  inci- 
dentally, the  holder  of  the  world's  3- 
yt-ar-old  filly  record;  18  are  bred  to 
the  popular  young  sire,  Manericho,  a 
futurity  winner  himself,  and  one  of 
the    greatest     colt     trotters     that     evei 

I  lived,  the  balance  being  in  foal  to  the 
pr  »ven   sires   Moko   and   Walnut    Hall. 

'   Mrs.    C.    K.    Cr.     Bluings,     Curies     Neck 

I   farm.     Richmond,     Va..     Is     third     with 

I  thirty-sevt>n,  nearly  all  of  which  are 
bred  to  the  3tnlllon  King;  the  Har- 
vester. 2:01  and  William  Russell  Al- 
len's    Allen      farm,      Plttstleld.      Mass., 

;   <ome    forth    with   31    followed   by   Louis 

j  Tit  IS'  Stony   Ford  farm,   Goshen,  N.  Y., 

'  with    2?,.     Forty-four    nominators    have 

,  entered  ttve  or  more  mares,  or  a  total 

!   of  606. 

I  While  18!>  .stallions  ar^  represented, 
27    are   credited  -with   B45   or  nearly   60 

I  p.^r  cent  of  the  full  U^t.  Peter  the  i 
Great  maintains  the  lead  with  71.  Of! 
the  27,  sixteen  are  in  the  2:10  list,  22' 
havj  records  of  2:16  or  better  and  only 

I  two   are   without   records. 

j  Keniuoky  maintains  her  lead  In 
number   of    entries    by   a   wide   margin 

I  with  333  mares.  New  York  enters  130; 
they    are    followed     by     Mas.sachusetts, 

'  Ohio  and  Illinois,  with  eighty,  sixty- 
four  and  flfty-flve,   respectively. 

j  Thirty-five  states  and  Canada  are 
embraced    In    the    table. 


Pitcher  Phillip  Slatterv  has  been  re- 
leased by  the  Pittsburgh  National 
league  club  to  the  Marshalltown,  lowa, 
club  in   the  Central   a.'4HOciation. 

BURMAN^BODY  GOES 
TO  MICHIGAN  FOR  BURIAL 

Los  Angeles,  Cal..  April  10.— The 
body  of  Bob  Burman,  the  noted  auto- 
mobile driver  who,  with  his  mechani- 
cian. Eric  Schroeder,  and  a  track 
guarJ,  met  death  as  a  result  of  the 
upset  of  Burman'i'  car  Saturday  In  the 
Corona  road  race,  will  be  sent  Tuesday 
to  Imlay  City,  Mich,  fo*'^,  ^"'•  f,\: 
Schroeders  body  was  sent  to  St.  l^^H 
vesterday.  Five  spectators  who  were 
injured  when  the  car  cra.««hed  through 
the   fence,   wero   reported   to   be   recov- 

*^^'^Mf3.  Burman  received,  from  all  parts 


SHOULD  GET 
CERTIFICATES 


-.!>< 


Assistant    Secretary    of 

Commerce  lirges  Seamen 

to  Take  Examfnation. 


Rising  Co^ 

confront  everybo(b^! 

This  is  an  era  of  ascending  costs,  a  period  of  price  advance- 
ment without  parallel.  No  statistical  chart  is  needed  to 
prove  this — ^thc  effect  of  higher  prices  isje/t  by  everyone, 
and  i«  of  real  concerrfU)  all.  It  is  a  time  for  thoroughly 
weighing  values,  a  tl9lc  for  taking  advantage  of  every 
opportunity  that  offers  a  genuine  saving. 

Certain-teed 

Roofing 

lowers  the  cost  of  building 

CERTAIN-TEED  offers  a  substantial  saving  in  roof  construction,  ae 
this  or  any  other  time.  It  costs  less  to  buy,  less  to  lay.  1cm  to  maintain  and 
less  per  year  of  life.  Because  of  tremendous  production  (the  General 
makes  one  third  of  all  the  roll  roofing  made  in  America),  and  because  of 
economies  effected  by  enormous  resources,  modern  machinery  and 
favorably  located  mills,  the  General  is  able  to  make  the  best  roofing  at 
the  lowest  cost. 

CERTAIN-TEED  Roofing  is  the  General's  own  product— from  the  raw 
materials  to  the  finished  rolls,  it  is  made  in  the  General's  huge  mills.  It  is 
made  of  the  best  quality  roofing  felt,  thoroughly  saturated  with  the  General's 
own  blend  of  soft  asphalts  and  coated  with  an  impervious  covering  of 
harder  asphalts.  This  keeps  the  inner  saturation  soft,  and  prevents  the  dry- 
ing out  process  so  destructive  to  ordinary  roofing.  That's  why  CERTAIN- 
TeED  outlasts  other  roofing.  It  is  guaranteed  for  5,  10  or  15  yeart, 
according  to  ply.  Expcri«nc«  proves  that  it  lasts  longer. 
CERTAIN-TEED  is  sold  by  responsible  dealers  everywhere  at  reason- 
able prices.     Investigate  it  before  you  decide  on  any  type  of  roof. 

GENERAL  ROOFING  MANUFACTURING  COMPANY 

WorU't  Lar^—t  Manufmetmrmr*  of  Roofing  mnd  BmiUing  Papon 


Tou  can  Idea- 

tlfr  OERTAIM- 

TEEDRooflniby 

ths  name.  whlcbU 

oonsplcuouBly  dlsplmyed  on  even  roll 

•r  iMUulls.    Look  for  tbli  label. 


SAVE  RAGS— THEY  *RE 
WORTH  BIG  MONEY  NOW! 

Prices  paid  for  rags  •tght  tiin«C 

as  higk  M  •  yoor  ago. 
Rafst  Ragd — got  any  rags?  You're 
lucky  if  you  have  a  lot  of  old  rap* 

around  the  place.becauiethey'llbring 
you  big  money  now;  eight  timet  as 
much  as  you  used  to  get  for  them* 
Last  year  rags  sold  around  hie  it 
pound— now  they  are  bringing  4c  a 
pound,  and  manufacturers  are  glad  to 
get  them  at  that  price. 

Rags  form  ths  basis  of  many  well 
known  products,  such  as  writing 
paper,  roofing  etc.  The  roofing  mills 
alone  used  a  quarter  of  a  millioa 
tons  of  rags  last  year.  At  present 
Driccs,  this  quantity  of  rags  cost 
$12,500,000  more  than  a  year  ago — 
an  increase  in  price  of  |40,000  a  day 
for  roofing. 

a 

Gather  up  all  the  rags  and  "cash  in** 
on  them  at  present  prices. 

Boys  and  girls! — This  is  your  chancs 
to  make  some  money .  Get  busy  an4 
bvmt  up  all  the  rags  you  can  find. 
Sell  them!  They'll  bring  you  good 
money.  If  you  are  not  offered  thsif 
real  value,  writs  our  nearest  offic*. 


NmrYwhair 
Dolrolt 


Sssi/rsMUM^  OaclBBStl  .i  l      _j 

giailla  fn#t — r-*-  AtUats  Rickmoad 

Oo»ytl^iUd  ISIS.  Osnsrnl  Roofing  Msnulaotusinc  Oo 


St.L*aU  •••!•«        .      CU»«Uwl 

NswjOrlMiaa  .  JL*a  An««lM 


Pittabvrsk 
Mtanaapeli* 


I  CJoin  the  Crowd  and 

I  become  a  member  of 

I  the    newly    organized 

I  ZENITH  ATHLETIC 


—AND 


SOCIAL  CLUB 

209  and  211  W.  Mlcliiffiui  St. 


MAHER  IS  CHAMPION. 

Wins  City   Roller  Skating   Title  in 
Fast  Race  In  Auditorium. 

Francis     Maher    of    the     Auditorium 
rink    won    the    two-mile    city    amateur 
champlon.ship    roller    skating     race    at 
th«  Auditorium  la.st  nlf^ht.     C.  Holland, 
former  champion,  was  leadlngr  the  race 
i  for  about  ten  laps,  when  Maher  passt^d 
I  him  and  held   the  lead  until  the  finish. 
I  Tht*    time    was    6:S2Vi,    which    was    the 
I  fastest    time    ever    made   by    any   ama- 
i  teur   at   the  Auditorium  rink.     The  con- 
testants   finished    as    follows:      Maher. 
first;    Edward    Belangrer,    second;    Earl 
.Scott,    third;    C.   Holland,    fourth. 

Francis  Maher  wishes  to  nveet  Ray- 
mond r'KlnR")  Kelley.  champion  of 
the  Twin  Cities.  In  a  series  of  races  to 
be  held  either  In  Daluth  or  St.  Paul. 


Slattery  to  Bushes. 

Pittsburgh.  Pa.,  April  10. — Announce- 
ment   was    made    here    yesterday    that 


of  tfle  country,  telegrams  <>' ,«> '"P*^''^ 
from  friends  and  admirers  of  Burman 
The  woman  who  was  accused  by  the 
Corona  police  of  taklnjc  a  *i»"J"»i^P*.'l 
which  was  removed  ^>o"J.  .  hoJJ.tral 
clothlnr  while  he  was  In  the  hospital 
at  Corona,  was   being   detained   «"   the 

SYRACUSE  OARSMEN 
TAKE  TO  THE  WATER 

Word  received  from  th^Unlverslty 
of  Syracuse  Is  to  the  ^'^^'^^^,^2'**  *^^ 
crew  candidates  are  out  on  the  water 
at  list  Because  of  the  lateness  of  the 
spring,  work  on  the  water  was  post- 
noned  several  weeks  beyond  the  usual 
Uml  The  candidates  for  the  crew  are 
dally  rowing   on  the   barge  canal  near 

The  veteran  coarh,  James  A.  Ten 
Evxk  Ivas  devoted  the  first  few  days 
to  teaching  the  men  the  fundamentals 
of  watermSnshlp.  Palr-oared  gigs  and 
four-oared  barges  have  been  U5.ed  for 
this  work.  Just  as  soon  as  conditions 
warrant' Ten  Kyok  will  have  JfUi  f^;« 
freshman  crew  on  the  water  The  v^J" 
eran  SyrAcuse  roach  reports  that  his 
entTre  squad  Is  slightly  above  the  aver- 

SHOT  wimTwr 

TARGET  PRACTICE 

Arthur   Beck,   Member   of 

Company  A,  Victim  of 

Accident  at  Armory. 

Accidentally  shot  through  the  right 
arm  while  at  practice  on  the  Indoor 
target  ranj?"  In  the  national  guard 
armory  Sunday  morning.  Arthur  Beck 
22  a  member  of  "A"  company.  Third 
re'glme.nt.  M.  N.  G..  is  at  St.  Lukes 
hospital   today.  .       „„       ,,.    _ 

In  indoor  target  work  -"-cal  ber 
short  bullets  are  u.ned.  and  this  bullet, 
penetrating  his  right  arm.  lodged  lu 
his  body  Just  below  the  arm  pit.  A 
rifle  In  the  hands  of  another  com- 
pany   member     was    accidentally    dls- 

Beck    was    taken    by    automobile    to 
the  office  of  Dr.  E.  I*  Tuohy  and  later 
to    the    hospital.      The    young 
employed    by    the    Oliver 
company   and    lives   at 
Rtreet.  


Predicts  Big  Year  on  Lakes; 

Duluthians  Have  High 

Average. 


man    Is 

Iron    Mining 

606    East   Sixth 


BOTH  TCLEl»HONtS 


)  I  ^  ML^r  nnsr  s 


t    n..  4-10-10. 


it^$3AJJl 


BAD  TEETH! 

We  m*k«  k  »p«il«lty  of  flxlng  bad  te«th.  W« 
•tap  tlie  twin  liut«ntly.  A  good  iil«ht'»  rest  to 
wortli  th«  moiierate  cliarae  wo  make.  No  matter 
bow  I>»>1  your  teo»h  are,  we  can  111  then. 

Com*  lu  today  for  fiM  rxamliistKm. 

THkicPmCES  PREVAIL  CVCRY  DAY 


Gold    Crow«« 

Fall  Set  Teeth  as  low  •■ 
Brldaetvorh,  per  tootU- •  ■ 
Wlilte    Crowns 


.$3.00 
.94-00 
.93.00 
.93.00 


Alumlnan    Plates 
<;ulA    FllUiig*    . 
Silver    Plilliig* 
Teeth    Cleaned 


»•«••• 


.  .913jOO 
.75c   ap 

80s 

B0« 


Sore  Throat 
Chest  Pains 

Ti^htoess  ocrofs  the  chest  and 
sore  tkroat  can  at  once  be  relieved 
bj  applying  Sloan's  Liniment.  It 
foes  riKht  to  the  seat  of  ptdtk — 
warming  and  soothing  the  painful 
parts.  The  inflsmmstion subsides 
and  the  pain  it  gone. 

Sloan's 
Liniment 


NEW  YORK  AND  B09TON  DENTAL  CO. 


TelephoM.    MelroM   715«. 


216  WoM   Su»«r|«r  8(. 
Suiitfsyt.    10  a   «.   <•  i   S- 


(Opp«*lt«   Grand   Theater.) 
LaSy    AttmSsat. 


■ILLS  PAIN 

"SLecpa  b«Cik  in  joor  home** 
Be.  Ik.  SUN 


a 
i 

m 
n 

i 

■ 
m 

s 

m 
n 
m 

a 

m 

3 


Uncle  Sam  wants  all  seamen  on  the 
Great  Lakes  during  the  coming  sum- 
mer to  have  certificates  under  the  sea- 
men's act,  and  to  this  end  Edwin  F. 
Sweet,  assistant  secretary  of  com- 
merce, is  making  a  tour  of  the  cities 
on  the  Great  Lakes.  Mr.  Sweet  was  In 
Duluth  Saturday,  after  vtsltlnar  Buf- 
falo, Detroit,  Cleveland,  Chicago  and 
Milwaukee  and  he  returned  to  Wash- 
ington Saturday  evening. 

"Every  seaman  should  have  a  cer- 
tificate," said  Mr.  Sweet.  "Everything 
points  to  this  year  belnff  the  biggest 
the  Great  Lakes  have  ever  known.  It 
Is  expected  that  the  commerce  on  the 
lakes  will  be  30  per  cent  bigger  than 
W.1S  ever  known  before.  Every  ship 
will  be  in  commission,  and  with  such 
a  rush,  and  possibly  some  old  ship? 
that  are  none  too  serviceable  In  com- 
mission, every  vessel  should  have  a 
full  complement  oi  the  hest  men  avail- 
able. The  law  rfequlres  that  40  per 
cent  of  the  deck  crew  shall  be  certifi- 
cated seamen.  That  means  thoy  must 
have  had  eighteen  months'  experience 
on  the  lakes  or  on  salt  water  and 
must  pass  a  physical  examination  for 
sight,  hearing  and  general  condition. 
Applications  may  be  secured  from  the 
local  steamboat  Inspectors  In  the  Fed- 
eral building.  These  applications  may 
be  filled  in  there,  and  the  applicant 
will  be  sent  to  a  surgeon  for  a  physi- 
cal examination. 

Fewer  Rejections  Here. 

"The  percentagai  of- rejections  here 
has  been  lower  thtn  In  other  cities.  I 
don't  know  whethar,  that  Is  due  to  the 
fact  that  the  men/  tup  of  a  better 
grade  physically,  or  whether  the  physi- 
cal Inspection  Is  less  rigid.  It  may  bo 
a  little  of  both.  The  percentage  of  re- 
jections here  Is  11,  while  It  la  IS  In 
liuffalo.    Cleveland   and    Detroit. 

"The  question  of  wages  is,  of  course, 
up  to  the  owners,  but  I  should  think  a 
certificated  man  would  be  worth  more 
than  on^  without  a  certificate.  At 
least  It  should  be  easier  to  get  a  posi- 
tion when  a  man  has  a  certificate. 

"The  seamen's  law  is  not  so  drastic 
as  many  thought  before  they  had 
.•studied  it.  There  are  some  minor  reg- 
ulations that  shotild  be  changed,  in  my 
opinion,  and  they  probably  will  be,  but 
as  a  whole  the  owners  are  becoming 
reconciled  to  It,  I  believe,  and  I  do  not 
expect  there  will  be  much  difficulty 
In    enforcing    It   this   coming  season." 

Mr.  Sweet  was  rather  r<^tlcent  about 
dlxcusslnt;  politics,  saying  that  tho 
only  matter  which  brought  him  here 
w.'ts  the  s»-amen's  law,  but  he  was  in- 
clined to  believe  that  Justice  Hughes 
would  be   the    Republican   nominee. 


GO-OPERATION 
IN  SHIPPING 

Movement  Started  in  Min- 
nesota Spreads  Through 
Middle  West. 


Farmers'  Livestock  Ship- 
ping Associations  Have 
Proved  Success. 


^  SOCIAL    CG^TTRR    ^'ORK  ^ 

^  IS   HAVIXO   RESrLTS.  * 

*  * 

¥f.  Pool  tahles  and^  dane^ii  at  the  ^ 
4>  Wa^hbarn  *eh04tl  are  keeplnir  the  ^ 
4e  born  mt  the  nrli(hb«rhood  away  ^ 
^  froM  downtowm  haliii  and  aoiiiMe-  ^ 
-)!»  ment  plaeea,  aeeerdlHg  to  Mlae  ^ 
^  Fran  Bell,  prluetpal  of  the  Mchonl.  ^ 
It  The  noelal  rente^  proarraua  at  the  ^ 
»«tloB    Is   In    elMrge   ef  J.    R>  -^ 


Washington.  April  10.— Farmers'  live 
stock  shipping  associations  have  proved 
so  successful  that,  although  the  first 
was  not  formed  until  1908,  the  depart- 
ment of  agriculture  now  has  a  list  of 
approximately  600  that  are  shipping 
stock  In  a  co-operative  way.  About 
200  of  these  are  in  Minnesota,  where 
the  movement  started,  and  the  remain- 
der are  chiefly  in  the  Middle  West. 

The  main  purpose  of  these  associa- 
tions Is  to  enable  their  members  to 
ship  m  carload  lots  to  the  central  mar- 
kets ln.steaJ  of  being  more  or  less  at 
the  mercy  of  local  buyers  In  disposing 
of  a  few  animals  from  time  to  time. 
The  tact  that  no  capital  is  required 
for  the  organization  of  such  an  asso- 
ciation, says  a  new  publication  of  the 
department  oC  agriculture.  Farmers' 
Bulletin  718.  which  deals  with  this 
subject,  makes  these  associations  pos- 
sible In  communities  In  which  more 
complicated  forms  of  co-operation 
would  not  succeed.  The  bulletin,  how- 
ever, points  out  that  such  associations 
are  scarcely  practicable  in  regions 
where  there  Is  so  much  live  stock  that 
It  Is  generally  marketed  in  carload  lots 
under  any  circumstances,  or  where 
there  Is  so  little  that  the  association 
has  practically  nothing  with  which  to 

work.  .         „.       , 

Organtaatlfm    Simple. 

To  organize  such  an  association  It  Is 
necessary  only  for  the  farmers  of  the 
community  to  meet  together,  adopt  a 
simple  constitution  and  bylaws,  a  sam- 
ple of  which  Is  given  in  the  bulletin 
already  mentioned,  to  elect  officers, 
and.  In  turn,  for  them  to  appoint  a 
manager.  It  is  recommended,  although 
It  is  not  absolutely  necessary,  that  the 
organization  Incorporate.  This  can  be 
done  at  a  nominal  cost — usually  not 
more  than  $10.  For  this  small  expend- 
iture of  trouble  and  money  the  asso- 
ciation usually  enables  the  farmer  to 
market  his  stock  when  it  Is  ready.  In- 
stead  of  compelling  him  to  wait  until 


«   inatitwtloi 
-M^   Batehetor, 

* 

WW 


reereatt^aai 


dtreetvr.  ^ 

* 

^A^  \Lf  a^  ^  ijri^  a.  g.  il. 


To  Speak  la  Braloerd. 

Bralnerd.    Minn.,    April    10. — (Special 
to    The    Herald.)— C?eorj;e    W,    Lawson,  . 
secretary-treasuref    of    the   State    Fed-  I 
eratlon  of  Labor,  will  flpeak  on  "State  i 
Insurance"     here     Wednesday     at     tho  I 
Chamber    of   Commerce.    Thursday    be- 
fore   the    Trades    and    Labor    assembly 
and    Friday    at    the    Pralnerd    Booster 
club  meeting  In  the  new  city  hall. 


XFORD 

WITH  THIS  OVAL  BUTTON  HOLl 


UNITKb  OHIBT  A  OOLLAH  00..  TKOV.  N.  V. 


the  local  shipper  is  ready  to  buy  It. 
He  obtains  for  himself  tho  beneflts  of 
the  cheaper  carloa.1  transportation, 
and  the  shipments  of  the  a-ssociation 
realize  for  the  owner  the  market  price 
of  his  stock  less  the  actual  cost  of 
marketing.  In  particular,  it  has  been 
found  that  when  thin  stock,  calves,  or 
lambs,  are  sold  In  small  numbers,  the 
local  price  is  usually  very  low.  It  la 
on  this  class  of  stock  that  the  asso- 
ciations have  been  able  to  save  their 
members  the  most  money. 

Marked  at  Sklppiiig  Point. 
In  order  to  avoid  misunderstanding. 
It  Is  Important  that  all  stock  be  marked 
at  the  shipping  point.  This  precaution 
prevents  disputes  in  regard  to  shrink- 
age and  dockage  and  assists  In  making 
adjustments  In  case  of  loss  or  damage 
In  transit.  There  are  three  common 
methods  of  marking.  Numbers  or  other 
characters  may  be  clipped  In  some 
conspicuous  part  of  the  anlma.1.  paint 
may  be  employed,  or  numbered  ear 
tags  used.  The  last  method  is  the 
least  frequent  because  it  Is  somewhat 
dilTlcult  at  the  stockyards  to  get  close 
enough  to  the  animal  to  see  the  num- 
ber on  the  tag.  If  the  second  method 
is  adopted,  ordinary  paint  Is  undesir- 
able, especially  for  hogs,  as  It  does  not 
drv  readily  enough  to  prevent  smear- 
ing. This  difficulty  may  be  overcome 
by  using  paint  containing  about  one- 
fourth  varnish.  In  the  case  of  sheep, 
however,  .painting  Is  objectionable  be- 
cause the  marks  will  not  scour  out  and 
wool  manufacturers  object  to  them, 
and  branding  fluid,  therefore.  Is  pre- 
ferable Whatever  system  of  marking 
Is  adopted,  the  Important  features  are 
that  It  should  be  uniform  for  all  ship-  \%^ 
ments  and  that  the  marks  should  b<^  i  '"^ 
nlain  and  conspicuous.  In  many  cases 
hogs  are  not  marked,  but  are  graded 
by  the  manager  at  the  shipping  point. 
A  record  of  those  subject  to  dockage  Is 
kept  In  such  cases.  Marking  is  advised, 
however,   as  a  precaution  against  mis- 

Capital    Not    Xeeded. 

Since  no  payments  are  made  Jor 
stock  shipped  until  returns  from  the 
central  market  are  obtained  these  co- 
operative associations  may  be  formed 
without  capital.  AH  that  Is  necessary 
Is  for  the  farmers  to  comply  with  their 
engagement  to  furnish  the  stock  to 
the  manager,  when,  where,  and  In  such 
quantities  as  they  say  they  will.  In 
some  associations  a  fixed  sum  of  money 
THxacted  from  a  shipper  for  failure 
to  deliver  stock  to  the  manager  as 
aareed  In  every  case  the  amount  to 
be  exacted  should  be  reasonable  and 
should  fairly  represent  the  actual  loss 
which  It  is  estimated  the  association 
will  suffer  as  the  result  of  nondelivery.  , 
The  provision  for  liquidated  damage  is 
proper,  because  the  manager  must  ar- 
range for  a  certain  amount  of  car 
Bpafe,  and  If  all  of  It  Is  not  used,  the 
expense  to  those  who  do  ship  Is  pro- 
portionately greater. 

Fuller  details  In  regard  to  the  or- 
canlzatlon  and  management  of  such 
associations  are  contained  In  Farmers 
Bulletin   718. 

LIST  DOGtmtTWHO 
WOULD  SERVE  U.  S. 

Recruiting   Officer   Is   In- 
structed to  Find  Those 
Who  Would  Enlist. 

A  nation-wide  movement  to  have 
the  physicians  of  the  country  prepared 
for  army  service  In  the  event  of  war 
has  been  Instituted  by  the  Federal 
government. 

Sergt.  Frank  Buck,  local  recruiting 
officer  for  the  United  States  niarlne, 
has  received  orders  to  obtain  a  list  of 
all  the  physicians  in  the  city  who  arc 
willing  to  give  thelfciAsslstance  on  the 
battlefield  should  this  country  ever  be- 
come embroiled  In  a  war  Sergt.  Buck 
will  be  assisted  by  Dr.  L.  A.  Barney, 
marine  examiner   for  Duluth. 

"I  expect  a  list  of  fifteen  or  twenty 


names."  said  Sergt.  Buck.  "This  or- 
der, coming  In  conjunction  with  the 
orders  to  Increase  the  marine  corps 
as  much  as  possible,  means  only  one 
thing — army  and  navy  headquarters  at 
Wlashington  are  gradually  strengthen- 
ing the  forces  within  the  limits  of  the 
present  recruiting  laws.  Nothing  !• 
being  left  undone  that  can  expand  the 
forces  of  both  army  and   navy. 

"This  order  to  obtain  doctors  who 
are  willing  to  give  their  services  to 
their  country  Is  a  splendid  appeal  to 
the  patriotism  of  the  profession.  I 
know  that  they  will  answer  with  en- 
thusiasm." 

m 
!>rorth  Dakota  Editor's  Troabies. 

Aneta..  N.  D..  April  10.— (-Special  to 
The  Herald.) — With  one  daughter  In  a 
hospital  at  Northwood  following  an 
operation  for  appentJicltls,  three 
stricken  with  measles  and  one  with 
scarlet  fever.  Editor  Gilbert  Telen  and 
wife  are  satlsfted  that  trouble  comes 
In  bunches.  Mrs.  Teien  was  at  North- 
wood  when  the  other  children  were 
stricken. 


**  /  Hope  That  Other 
Mothers  May  Learn 
Its  Value  as  I  Have 


rf^^h^^^ 


-^mfi(ft/ 


b:  grateful 

PRAISE 

FOR 

FATHER 

JOHN'S 

MEDICINE 


Writing  from  Rock  Island.  Illinois, 
a  grateful  mother  says:  "I  miss  Father 
John's  Medicine  when  I  am  out  of  it 
more  than  anything  else  from  ray 
medicine  chest.  I  have  it  on  hand 
summer  and  winter.  I  give  it  to  my 
two  children  whose  pictures  are 
shown.  I  hope  that  other  mothers 
may  learn  to  know  its  value  as  I  have. 
(Signed)  Mrs.  G.  H.  Biehl.  1004  Elcv- 
enth  avenue. 

Thousands  of  mothers  know  from 
experience  the  value  of  Father  John's 
Medicine  as  a  tissue  and  strength 
builder  at  this  time  of  year  It  is  all 
pure  and  wholesome  nourishment 
which  the  system  easily  takes  up  and 
changes  into  fighting  strength  to  ward 
off  disease.  Because  it  docs  not  con- 
tain alcohol  or  dangerous  drugs  Fath- 
er John's  Medicine  is  safe  for  children 
as  well  as  plder  people.  Get  what 
YOU  call  ^r^ 


-I . 


1 

1 

1 

i 

^ 

i 

5 

/ 

t 

y 

J. 

f 

I 


■  I  "JBfcf'-^i- 


jji  ajiu 


^    H  III  ■  ■»■  M 


«J     .'I        II     « 


Monday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  10, 1910. 


t 


NEWS  OF  THE  NORTHWEST 


local 
win 


'^mm'^f^^mm^m 


LESS  LAND 
WASPLOWED 

North  Dakota  Farmers  Too 
Busy  Last  Fall  to  Pre- 
pare Soil. 


to 
to 


May  Mean  More  "Disking 

in"  of  Grain  and  Smaller 

Yield. 


-— r 


I 


n 


Blsmnr.k.  N.  D..  April  10.— (Spr'cial 
to  Th«-  M«raUl.) — Willi  oonditions  more 
favorabU-  during  this  week,  some  prog- 
t*gn  i9  fxp.ct.tl  to  be  made  on  eprlngr 
trork  on  North  Pakota  farms.  The 
ft-ason  Ko  far  has  been  backward,  not 
motp  than  the  average,  but  Jt  Is  felt 
iiore  strioiisly  b«<  ausf  there  was  not 
the  usual  amount  of  fall  plowing  done 
la.st    year. 

The  conrlitions  w»rf  unfavorable  dur- 
ing the  tlireshing  season  and  with  an 
unusually  heavy  crop  many  farmers 
devoted  thtlr  time  rather  to  saving 
what  they  had  raised  than  to  prepar- 
ing for  anoth.r  crop.  This  left  so  much 
land  unplowed  that  an  early  spring 
was  greatly  desired.  Disappointed  In 
this  the  farmers  are  planning  to  make 
the  ijest  of  the  situation. 

"Farm  a  .<-iuaIler  acreage  and  do  It 
right."  is  a  slogan  that  Is  gaining 
»tHt< -wide  I  urrency  In  an  effort  to 
pivv- ot  shiftles.s  methods  of  putting 
the  grain   in  this  spring. 

"DlMklng-ln"    <;raln    Bad. 

It  is  fear.-d  tliiit  because  of  the  small 
amount  of  plowing  done  and  the  late- 
ness of  the  i^eason  inany  farmers  will 
be  inclined  to  disk  their  gialn  In.  At 
best  this  Is  a  most  .«lilftless  and  doubt- 
ful meth<Hl.  It  wins  about  once  In 
every  ten  attempts,  and  the  fact  there 
is  su'h   a  heavy  t-tubble   this  year, 


due 


LOOK  AT  CHILD'S 
TONGUE  IF  SICK, 
GROSSJEVERISH 

Hurry,     Mother!     Remove 
Poisons  From  Little  Stom- 
ach, Liver,  Bowels. 


to  last  year's  big  crop,   makes  the  plan 
extra   hazardous. 

So  many  farmers  are  attempting 
seed  more  than  they  are  prepared 
that  It  is  possible  the  disking  plan 
will  be  resorted  to.  When  the  •'">11  is 
extra  moist  In  tlie  .spring  and  with 
lieavv  precipitation  during  the  season, 
tills  plan  sometimes  wins,  but  In  most 
rases  it  docs  not  get  the  seed  back. 
There  are  just  enough  successej  to 
Induce  people  to  continue  the  attempts. 
For  a  {ismbllng  and  speculative  propo- 
sition it  has  the  purchase  of  lottery 
tickets    beaten    several    miles. 

Two  or  three  counties  report  some 
fleMs  have  been  dragged  preparatory 
to  seeding,  but  this  work  is  extremely 
limited.  There  was  rain  and  a  light 
snowfall  in  the  western  counties  last 
week  and  heavy  snow  with  low  tem- 
perature In  the  eastern  counties, 
which  has  made  spring  work  in  the 
flf  Ids   impossible. 

NONPARTISANS' 
FORCING  HARMONY 

New  Nortli  Dakota  Move- 
ment Scaring  Two  Re- 
publican Factions. 

Bismarck,  N.  D.,  April  10.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Republican  leaders  of 
both  the  Progressive  Republican  and 
the  stalwart  brand  report  progress 
made  during  the  past  week  In  a  get- 
together  movement.  It  Is  asserted  the 
plan  started  with  the  Insurgent  Re- 
publhan  wing  and  was  welcomed  with 
open  arms  by  the  stalwart  bunch  and 
a  love  feast  Is  now  reported  to  bo  In 
the   making.  .       .u      *     * 

This  condition  Is  due  to  the  fact 
that  for  the  last  four  years  the  Re- 
publicans, tired  of  their  bitter  fight  of 
ten  years,  have  been  endeavoring  to 
get  together.  The  organization  of  the 
Nftn-Partlsan  league,  with  the  Social- 
istic backers  foisting  the  organization 
onto  the  Republicans,  have  given  the 
different  factions  the  long-desiied  ex- 
cuse for  precipitating  themselves  Into 
each   other's   arms. 

Instead  of  having  a  disorganizing 
effect  on  the  Republicans,  the  Non- 
partisan league  may  be  tlie  primary 
cause  of  uniting  the  warring  Repub- 
lican factions  together.  If  they  do 
not  get  togetlicr.  It  Is  held,  the 
leaguers  stand  a  show  of  winning  out. 

During  the  past  week  a  number  of 
local  conferences  have  been  held  In 
various  parts  of  the  state  among  the 
Republicans  and  an  insistent  demand 
Is  being  heard  for  party  unity. 


sent     here 
season     in 
who    will 
this    year. 


to    remain     throughout     the 

charge     of     Hans     Hansen. 

have    charge     of    the     yards 

As    the    shipments    increase 

more  engines  will  be  added. 

The  .ludson  people  started  shipments 
from  the  .ludson  mine  today.  They 
will  probably  start  from  their  Amasa- 
Porter  property  later  in  the  week  as 
they  have  a  rush  order  for  some  ore 
from   that  point. 

The  Carpenter  people  expect  to 
start  over  the  St.  Paul  as  soon  as  cars 
will  be  furnished  them.  Irvan  Ring, 
cashier  for  the  M.  A.  Hanna  people  in 
this  district,  went  to  FJscanaba  to  ar- 
range for  shipments  from  the  com- 
pany's   mines    in    this    section    during 

The  Corrigan-McKlnney  people  are 
not  certain  just  when  shipments  will 
start.  They  want  to  send  out  ore  as 
soon  as  they  can  get  cars. 


JANESVILLE,  WIS..  PAIR 
KILLED  IN  COLLISION 

.Tanesville.  Wis..  April  10. — Miss  El.sle 
Fathers  and  Charles  Carr  were  killed 
at  South  .lanesvllle  Sunday  when  the 
automobile  In  which  they  were  driving 
was  struck  by  a  Rockford  &  Janesvllle 
Interurban  car.  The  bodies  were  hor- 
ribly mangled,  and  the  force  with 
which  the  Interurban  struck  the  auto- 
mobile reduced  It  to  scraps. 

Miss  Fathers  was  the  daughter  of 
Mayor  James  A.  Fathers  and  acted  as 
her  father's  private  secretary.  Mr.  Carr 
was  one  of  the  prominent  young  men 
of  the  city. 


Give  "California   Syrup 
Figs''  at  Once  If  Bilious 
or  Constipated. 


of 


BY  CROOKSTON  JUNIORS. 

**What  Happened  to  Jones'"  Presented 
Under  Favorable  Conditions. 

Crookston,  Minn..  April  10. — Under 
the  direction  of  Miss  Edna  Pammel 
of  the  public  speaking  department  of 
the  high  school'  the  juniors  presented 
"What  Happened  to  Jones"  at  the 
(Irand  theater  Friday  evening,  to  a 
large  audience  that  frequently  mani- 
fested approval.  The  cast  was  as  fol- 
lows: Jones,  who  travels  for  a  hymn 
book  house.  Maurice  Marchand;  Ebene- 
zer  <Joodly,  a  professor  of  anatomy. 
Earl  Woolery:  Anthony  Goodly,  D.  D., 
bishop  of  Ballarat,  Victor  Granum; 
Richard  Heatherly.  engaged  to  Mar- 
jorle.  Dean  I^elck;  Thomas  Holder,  a 
policeman.  William  Lunde;  William 
UiKbee.  an  Inmate  of  the  sanatorium, 
Arthur  Thompson:  Henry  Fuller,  super- 
intendent of  the  sanatorium,  Sven 
Vaule:  Mrs.  Goodly,  Ebenezer's  wife, 
Benna  Christ ianson;  (^issy.  Ebenezer's 
ward,  Pauline  Marin;  Marjorle  and 
Minerva,  Ebenezer's  daughters,  Evelyn 
Ander.son,  Esther  Krogg:  Alvina  Star, 
light.  Mrs.  <;oodly's  sister.  (Jladys  Wl- 
gard;  Helma,  Swedish  servant  girl, 
Helen  Larsen. 


GIVES  SHERIFF  SLIP. 

North  Dai<ota  Prisoner  Not  in  Room 
When  Wanted. 

Calvin  N.  D..  April  10. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Earl  Campbell,  arrested 
here  by  Sheriff  Kelland  of  Langdon, 
charged  with  blind  pigging,  promised 
the  official  when  he  went  to  bed  in 
a  Calvin  hotel  that  he  would  not  at- 
tempt to  escape,  being  given  a  sep- 
arate room  while  waiting  to  go  to 
the  county  Jail  at  Langdon.  When  tl»o 
sheriff  called  at  the  bed  chamber  of 
his  prisoner  to  purchase  htm  break- 
fast It  was  discovered  Campbell  had 
left. 

LIQUOR  NOT  LABELED. 

Twin  City  Firm  Facing  Indictment  In 
North  Dakota. 

Devils  Lake,  N.  D..  April  10.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  first  step  in 
a  sweeping  campaign  to  enforce  the 
letter  of  the  Federal  statutes  concern- 
ing the  Interstate  shipment  of  liquor 
was  taken  here  by  Deputy  United 
States  Marshal  Wattles  In  formally 
seizing  shipments  from  St.  Paul  and 
and  Minneapolis  concerns.  The  liquor 
firms  are  charged  with  falling  to  prop- 
erly label  their  shipments.  As  Judge 
Amldon  recently  fined  one  St.  Paul 
firm  $1,000  for  this  offense,  consider- 
able Interest  attaches  to  these  cases, 
which  were  started  by  Special  Officer 
N  A.  W^ay  of  the  Indian  service.  It 
is  understood  the  next  Federal  grand 
I  Jury  will  be  given  the  facts. 

j  NEW  WASHBURN~HOME. 

Bayfield  County  Telephone  Company 
to  Improve  Service. 

Washburn.  Wis..  April  10. — Robert 
McKlnney,  manager  of  the  Bayfield 
Coimty  Telephone  company,  announces 
the  company  will  make  many  modern 
Improvements  in  its  plant  here  during 
the  spring  and  early  summer,  which 
will  place  it  In  the  front  rank  among 
the  telephone  plants.  The  company  has 
purchased    the    Johnson    brick    building 


on   Bayfield   street, 

m»at    market    and    will 

building    up    for    the    use    of    the 

plant.       A     central     energy     board 

be  put   in   and  all   lines  will  be  cabled, 

giving  the  company   to  start   with   over 

one   and   one-half   miles   of   cable.      Mr. 

McKlnney  also  states  the  company  will 

remove    all    poles    from    Bayfield    street 

before    long   and   be    kept   ahead   of   the 

paving. 

BAYFIELD  AGAiN"WET. 

Many  Applications   for   Two  Saloon 
Licenses  Expected. 

Bavfleld,  Wis.,  April  10.— As  Bayfield 
voted    in    saloons   last    Tuesday,    166   to 
121,   It  is  expected  there  will  be  plenty 
ot    applications   for    the   two   saloon   li- 
censes  to   be   granted  July   1.     Any   11- 
I  censes    granted    must    be    issued    under 
the  Baker  law   whl(  h   provides  for   not 
I  to  exceed  one  saloon  for  each  BOO  pop- 
1  ulatlon.  which  will  probably  allow  but 
two   for   the    Harbor  City. 
I      It    is    expected    there    will    be    a   big 
!  demand  also  for  further  Improving  the 
'  road  between  this  city  and  "dry"  Wash- 
burn, although  It  is   ordinarily  m  good 
shape,  as   It   Is  believed  that   it  .^Hl  be 
much   used  by  auto  parties  during  the 
late  summer  and  fall. 

PICKLECONCERN  IS 
"SIGNING  UP"  FARMERS 

Washburn.  Wis.,  April  10.— A.  I. 
f;jemore  of  the  growers'  service  de- 
partment of  the  Heinz  Pickle  company 
has  been  among  the  farmers  of  this 
locality  signing  up  contracts  '"«"  cu- 
cumber acreage,  and  has  met  with  ^er^ 
favorable  success.  It  Is  understood 
that  100  acres  will  be  required  In  order 
to  operate  the  plant  here  next  season 
and  the  farmers  are  urged  to  sign  up 
as  soon  as  possible. 


opposite  Swanson'slship  papers  was  Mrs.  Elizabeth  B.  Sea-  health 
-  ft  this  entire  I  born.  Mrs.  Seaborn  was  born  In  Canada  water 
"  in  1846  and  her  husband  died  before  he' 
became  fully  naturalized.  The  exami- 
nation of  the  applicants  was  conducted 
by  Henry  Bloch,  special  government 
representative. 


DrownN  Xear  Xew  Vim. 

New  Ulm,  Minn.,  April  10— John  Wal- 
ter, a  farmer  living  near  Cambria,  was 
drowned  near  here  late  Saturday. 
Walter  was  driving  home,  and  after 
crossing  a  bridge  over  the  Minnesota, 
drove  his  team  over  an  embankment 
which  had  been  undermined  by  high 
waters.  Searching  parties  recovered 
the  body  late  Sunday.  Both  horses 
were  drowned. 


WISCONSIN  BRffiFS  I! 

>   pi 


Sue*   for  FalMe  ArreKt. 

Marinette,     Wis.,     April     10. — A     suit 
against   W.    E.    Finnegan,   deputy    state 
fire   marshal,   which   charges   malicious 
and  false  imprisonment,  has  been  start- 
ed  by  Mrs.  Ora   Hansen    of   Porterfleld,  i 
I  who  asks  for  $3,000  damages.     The  case 
j  is  the  outgrowth  of  the  arrest  of  Mrs. 
I  Hansen  In  connection  with  a  Are  which 
destroyed    August     Konell's    barn    last 
January.     Mrs.  Hansen  was  held  In  jail 
five    days,    and    upon    the    hearing    was 
discharged. 


Aged   Belolt   Man    Soieldea. 

Beloit,  Wis.,  April  10. — Ira  C.  Enders, 
aged  78,  died  Saturday  from  a  shock 
sustained  Friday  night  when  he  at- 
tempted to  commit  suicide  by  shooting 
himself  In  the  right  temple.  The  bullet 
did  not  enter  the  skull,  but  frac- 
tured it. 


BRAINERD  BRIEFS. 


Bralnerd.    Minn..   April 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


Ontonagon — B.  F.  Shearer,  master 
mechanic  at  the  White  Pine  Extension 
mine,  was  found  dead  in  his  room  re- 
cently by  those  who  roomed  In  the 
same   house   as   Mr.    Shearer.      He   was 


about  62  years  old.     He  came  here 


_  _  10. —  (Special 

to~The  Herald.  )r-Jt)rt  on  Houck,  St. 
Cloitd,  of  the  G.TT  Whitney  utilities 
companies.   Is  here  to  superintend  con- 

latructlon    work    of    the    gas    plant    and 

1  mains  to  be  laid  by  the  <;onipany  whKh 
Mr.  Whitney  and  associates  have  in- 
corporated to  furnish  gas  to  the  Brain- 

^^Ftfund' guilty  on  a  charge  of  keeping 
an  unlicensed  drinking  place,  Arthur 
Boppei  was  sentenced  to  th  rty  da>  fc  In 
Jail  by  Judge  Gustav  Halvorson  A 
cigar  case  and  cash  register,  seized, 
were  ordered  returned.  ^     ,         . 

The  concert  given  by  the  Bralnerd 
city  band,  under  the  direction  of  Ed- 
win Hariis  Bergh,  scored  a  success. 
\mong  soloists  were  William  Graham, 
cornetlst  and  Alderman  Andrew  Ander- 
son, baritone.  _ 

MENAHGA  BANK  HAS 

VERY  FINE  BUILDING 

Menagha.  Minn..  April  10— Th©  nevr 
building  now  occupied  by  tlie  Menahga 

State  bank  Is  Pro'^f""^'^^,  ^^'  V«  Hat«  i  •""-  "-  "-  ^"— 
one  of  the  finest  and  niost  uP-to-a^J«  for  the  use  of  the 
structures  of  the  kind  to  be  founa  in  arrived  here.  an< 
Northern  Minnesota.  ,     ».»  i. 

The  building.  26»^x60»i.  stands  back 
from  the  sidewalk  on  bojh  streets 
elKht  feet.  The  walls  are  of  chocolate 
colored  brick  and  Kettle  river  stone,  a 
Minnesota  production,  and  with  the 
large  windows  of  plate  and  leaded 
glass  gives  the  structure  a  handsome 
Ippearance.  It  la  fireproof  in  every 
wav,  with  concrete  roof  and  floor  bed. 
reinforced  with  steel.  Is  heated 
throughout  with  hot  water  and  elec- 
trically lighted,  has  full  basement  con- 
taining hot  water  heating  plant, 
Crete  and  steel  reinforced  storage 
with  plenty  of  storage  room. 

The    Interior    Is    finished    throughout 
dull   flnl.<5h   golden  oak,   fixtures  and 


from 

1890. 

first 

com- 


con- 
vault 


Calumet,  where  he  lived  since 
when  the  Extension  mine  was 
started  and  has  been  with  the 
pany  since  that  time. 

Hancock — Contractor  Archie  Vervllle 
of  Hancock  has  been  awarded  the  con- 
tract to  erect  the  second  story  of  the 
South    Range-Baltic   Catholic   church. 

Calumet — The  annual  election  of  of- 
ficers of  the  Calumet  Park  &  Play- 
ground association,  which  was  to  have 
taken  place  last  week,  has  been  post- 
poned. 

Lake  Linden — Joseph  Porler,  Jr.,  of 
Lake  Linden  met  his  death  recently 
while  crossing  the  English  channel  on 
a  transport  carrying  troops  to  France, 
according  to  aJvlces  received  in  a  com- 
munication from  Washington  to  Miss 
Mary,  the  postmistress  at  Hubbell. 
Porler  was  38  years  of  age  and  left 
Hubbell   two  years  ago. 

Ishpemlng — The  funeral  of  Peter 
Lundqulst.  who  died  Thursday,  was 
held  Sunday  afternoon,  with  services 
at  the  home  at  2  p.  m.,  conducted  by 
Rev.  F.  Wyman.  pastor  of  the  Swedish 
Lutheran   church. 

Houghton — The  new  forty-foot  solid 
steel  tower  that  is  to  be  erected  on  the 
roof  of  the  Masonic  temple  building, 
weather  bureau,  has 
and  will  be  placed  In 
position  before  the  opening  of  naviga- 
tion on  Portage  lake.  The  contract  for 
its  erection  was  let  some  time  ago. 
The  tower  will  replace  the  present 
twenty-foot  pole  that  has  been  used 
for  the  past  several  years. 

Negaunee— City  Health  Officer  Dr.  C. 
J.  Larson  announces  that  the  Teal 
lake  water  has  been  in  good  condition 
for  the  last  month,  but  that  during 
the  present  month  the  lake  will  con- 
tain more  germs  because  of  the  spring 
break-up,  and  people  are  requested  to 
boll    the    water    before    drinking.      The 


Milwaukee — Alfred  F.  James  was 
elected  president  of  the  Northwestern 
National  Insurance  company  to  succeed 
Wllford  M.  Patton,  who  died  last  week, 
at  a  special  meeting  of  the  board  ot 
directors  of  the  company.  Mr.  James 
is  son  of  the  late  Alfred  James,  who 
was  president  of  the  company  before 
Mr.    Patton's    term. 

Ladysmlth — Fire   badly   damaged    the 

Carnegie  library.     Firemen  prevented  a 

complete    destruction.        Most      of      the 

books  were  saved.     A  defective  furnace 

was    the    cause.  ,      „j 

Racine— Objecting     to    being    placed 

in  the  same  cell  with  a  negro,  Thomas 

Murphy,     arrested     on     a     charge     of 

vagrancy,    set    fire    to    the     mattresses 

In  the  city  hall  lockup  early  Saturday 

in    an    effort    to   cremate    Israel    Moul- 

ton,     colored,     of    Lake     Geneva.     \%  is. 

Police  officials  rescued  the  men. 

Whitewater  —  Whitewater,  which 
was  announced  to  have  voted  'wet  at 
Tuesdav's  election,  is  shown  by  a  re- 
count to  have  voted  "dry"  by  one 
vote  and  the  election  board  has  cer- 
tltteA   the   result   as   "dry." 

Oconomowoc— B.  L.  Smith,  an  em- 
ploye of  the  maintenance  department 
of  the  Chicago  &  Northwestern  rail- 
way, was  injured  at  New  Mapleton 
when  struck  by  a  torpedo  which  had 
been    placed   on    the    tracks    to    stop    a 

Madison— Governor  Phllllpp  on  Fri- 
day appointed  Frank  Lonier  as  coro- 
ner of  Forest  county  to  succeed 
Charles   Osborne.  ^     ,^ 

Milwaukee — John  B.  Abert,  69  years 
old,  former  alderman-at-large  and  re- 
tired manufacturer,  is  dead.  He  for- 
merly was  connected  with  the  old 
Abert  foundry.  Mr.  Abert  was  born  in 
Milwaukee  and  joined  the  Union 
army  in  1863  as  a  drummer  boy.  He 
served  with  the  Forty-fifth  Wisconsin 
Infantry  until  the  close  of  the  war, 
i  when  he  was  honorably  dischaiged. 

Madison— Emil  Steiger  of  Oshkosh. 
La  FoUette  candidate  for  delegate  to 
the  Republican  national  convention, 
filed  a  statement,  declaring  he  spent 
$1,198.43    for  campaign    purposes. 

Grand     Rapids— While     blasting     an 
Ice    jam   at   Little    Blach,    William   Ru- 
dolph nearly  lost  his  life  and  Is  at 
present  time  in   the  hospital  with 
arm   off  and  the  sight  of  one   eyes 
stroyed.     Rudolph    underestimated 
time    before    the    explosion     would 
cur. 


the 
one 
de- 
the 

oc- 


DAKOTA  BRIEFS   | 


GRAIN  BELT  FAIR 

CIRCUIT  ORGANIZED 

Hugbv.    N.    D.    April    10.— (Special    to 
The   Herald.)— The  fJraln   Belt  fair  cir- 
cuit    has    been     formed    here     by    rep- 
,  resentatives     of     the     county     fairs     of 
'  Pembina.     Cavalier.     Bottineau.     Pierce 
I  and    Wells   counties.      S.    H.    Willson    of 
Bottineau     is     president,      and      A.      F. 
Belcher  of  Wells  county,   secretary. 

A  8ched\ile  of  fair  dates  extending 
from  July  12  to  Aug.  13  ha.s  been  drawn 
up  for  the  coming  summer  by  the 
members    of    the    new    association. 


OF 


any 
abso- 
and   so 
i 
to 


Look  at  uic  lungup,  mother:  If 
coaled,  it  is  a  sure  sign  iliat  your 
little  one's  stomach,  liver  and  bowels 
need  a  gentle,  thorough  cleansing  at 
once. 

When  peevish,  cros.«,  listless,  pale, 
doe.-n't  sleep,  doesn't  eat  or  act  natu- 
rally, or  i.'i  feverish,  stomach  sour, 
breath  bad;  ha.s  stomach-ache,  sore 
threat,  diarrhoea,  full  of  cold,  give  a 
tea.>^I>oonful  of  "California  Syrup  of 
Figs,"  and  in  a  few  hours  all  the 
foul,  constipated  waste,  undigested 
food  and  sour  bile  gently  moves  out 
of  the  little  bowels  without  griping, 
and    you    have    a    well,    playful    child 

again. 

You  needn't  coax  sick  children  to 
take  this  harmless  "fruit  laxative;" 
they  love  its  delicious  taste,  and  It  al- 
ways makes  them  feel  splendid. 

Ask  your  druggist  for  a  uO-oent  bot- 
tle of  "California  Syrup  of  Figs," 
which  has  directlon.s  for  babies,  chil- 
dren of  all  ages  and  for  grrown-ups 
plainly  on  the  bottle.  Beware  of  coun- 
terfeits sold  here.  To  be  sure  you 
get  the  genuine,  ask  to  see  that  it  Is 
made  by  "California  Fig  Syrup  Com- 
pany." Refuse  any  other  kind  with 
pgntempt. — Advertisement. 


LA  FOLLETTE  IS  AHEAD. 

Senator's    Faction  Controls    Badger 
Delegation  to  Chicago  Convention. 

MlUvaukee,  Wis..  April  10.— With 
complete  but  unofficial  returns  from 
sixty  of  the  seventy-one  counties  and 
practically  complete  returns  from  the 
remainder,  the  result  of  last  Tue.sday's 
primary  shows  that  La  Follette  will 
be  represnted  by  fourteen  of  the 
twenty-six  delegates  from  Wisconsin 
at  the  Republican  national  convention. 
The  district  delegation  is  split  evenly 
between  the  La  Follette  and  what  Is 
termed  the  regular  Republican  tlcket.s, 
while  Governor  Phlllpp  Is  the  only 
delegate-at-large  elected  by  the  regu- 
lars. 


On  Hands.  Went  Up  Arm  to  Shoul- 
der, Then  on  Face.    Awake 
Nights  Scratching. 

HEALED  BY  CUTICURA 
SOAP  AND  OINTMENT 


CRYSTAL  FALLS  MINES 
.ARE  NOW  SHIPPING  ORE 

Crystal    Falls,    Mich..    April    10.— The 
Bristol   mine  was  the  first   In  this  dls-  ; 
trict    to   ship   ore    this   year,    the    Initial  ; 
shipments    to    the    docks    starting    Sat-  , 
urday.  j 

The   ore   Is   being    sent    out   over    the  J 
Nt)rthwestern    road     and     In     order     to 
handle  the  work  a  switch  engine  was. 


"At  first  T  noticed  little  red  blotche*  oa 

my  bands,  and  they  went  up  my  arm  to  my 

■boulder  and  then  on  my  face.     My  handfl 

were  rough  and  inflamed  and 

the   Kching    was   to   intense 

that  I  had  to  scratch  which 

made    them    bleed.      I    used 

to  be  awake  nights  scratching 

all  the  time.     I  was  not  able 

to  put  my  bands  in  water  nr 

do  my  work  because  It  was 

so  painful.     My  bands  were 

disfigured  ■omething  terrible. 

"I  heard  of  Cutictira  Soap  and  Ointment 

end   I   thought   I    would   try   them.     Two 

boxes  of  Cutlcura  Ointment  and  two  cakes 

of    Cutlcura    Soap    healed    me    entirely.". 

(Signed)    Miaa    Herbertine    Durkfo,    3447 

Auburn  Ave.,  Chicago,  lU.,  July  14,  1916. 

Sample  Each  Free  by  Mail 

with  32-p.  Skin  Book  on  request.     Ad- 
dreM  pos^-card  "Cotlrnra,  D«p<.  T,  B«*> 

tM^**_  (Sold  throughout  Um  world* 


all.  The  main  lobby  has  a  terrazzo  floor, 
the  toilet  a  tile  floor,  and  all  other 
floors  are  covered  with  a  high  grade 
linoleum;  walls  are  finished  in  t\^o 
soft   shades   of   buff. 

The  vault  occupying  the  central  part 
of  the  building  back  of  the  fixtures,  s 
of  steel  reinforced  concrete  with  air 
spaces  and  absolutely  fireproof  in 
every  particular.  Inside  the  vault  is 
a  new  Victor  manganese  steel  screw 
door  burglar  proof  safe,  weighing 
2  BBO  ponnd.'s  and  able  to  withstand 
attempt  at  burglarizing,  being 
lutely  fluid  tight  when  locked 
hardened  as  to  withstand  any  drilling 
with  nothing  more  than  a  scratch 
prove  It.  The  vault  is  also  equipped 
with   deposit   boxes^^ 

murdeFcase  being 
tried  in  houghton 

tlno  Stefanl.  charged  with  the  murder 
of  Eugene  Pinzzl  at  Franklin  receiitly, 
began  In  circuit  court  t«day  before 
Judge  O'Rrlen  and  a  jury.  District  At- 
torney Galbralth  prosecuting  and  Jo- 
seph   F.    Hambltzer    defending. 

There  will  be  no  circuit  court  Tues- 
day morning,  as  the  board  of  super- 
visors will  make  use  of  the  court- 
room for  a  meeting.  The  calendar 
contains  but  fifteen  criminal  cases 
readv  for  trial  and  only  two  or 
I  are  likely  to  take  over  a  day  for 


Grand  Forks.  N.  D.— Robert  Caroth- 
ers.  13,  son  of  Mrs.  R.  M.  Carothers; 
William  W>lls,  12,  son  of  Dean 
George  F.  Wells  of  the  law  school, 
narrowly  escaped  death  by  drowning 
while  playing  on  a  raft  in  the  swol- 
len Rid  river  in  the  rear  of  the 
Trepanler    residence    here. 

Bismarck,  N.  D.— This  city  will 
i  vote  on  a  proposal  to  bond  the  school 
'  district  for  JBO.OOO  at  a  special  elec- 
tion  which  will  be  held  next  W  ednes- 

1      Fargo,   N.   D.— July   17    to   22   are   the 

dates     for     the     annual    North    Dakota 

'  state  fair,  which  will  this  year  be  held 

here,    and     plans    already    have      been 

well    advanced    for    the    big    show. 

I      Mandan,      X.    D.— State      Transporta- 

Itlon     Agent     D.     J.     McGillis     returned 

I  from    St.    Paul,    bringing    back    to    the 

'  reform    school    here.   J.    F.    Singer,   for- 

I  merlv    of    St.    Paul,    but    who    escaped 

from"  the    North    Dakota    slate    reform 

'  school    at    Mandan    last    September.    He 

'  was    captured    In    the    Minnesota    city. 

I  Singer    lead   a   bunch    of    the   wards   of 

1  the     state     from     the     school    and     has 

been     at     large     until     his     capture     by 

the  St.   Paul  authorities. 

Bismarck,  N.  D.— The  board  of 
regents  will  meet  at  the  caplfol 
April  24.  Mr.  Claxton,  T'nlted  States 
commissioner  of  education,  will  be 
present.  It  Is  believed  that  nearly 
all  the  heads  of  the  various  educa- 
tional Institutions  of  the  state  will  be 
present  at  this  meeting,  thus  get- 
ting in  close  relation  with  the  na- 
!  tional   educator.  .„      „ 

I  Langdon,  N.  D— David  B.  Hasset. 
iaged  40,  married,  of  Nekoma.  was  in- 
Istantlv  killed  when  a  passenger  train 
struck  and  completely  demolished  his 
'  sled.  Mr.  Hasset  lived  west  of 
I  Nekoma  and  had  been  out  looking  for 
i  seed      grain.      In      returning      It      was 

.  . necessary    to    cross    the    track.      It    Is 

^,,,       ..m,      1        y.^  1.         'not  known  whether  the  horses  became 

Buffalo,  N.Y.—'    My  daughter,  whose  I  frightened    and     refused    to    move,     or 

■  •    *  '  --      Hasset  did  not  hear  the  train 


and  waived  the  preliminary  examinar 
tion  and  was  bound  over  to  the  dis- 
trict court.  He  furnished  bond  for 
his  appearance  at  the  regular  term 
court  In  October. 
Red  Lake  Falls — The  senior  class 
embers  are  at  work  on  their  class 
play,  which  will  be  given  some  time 
during  the  latter  part  of  April  or 
during  the  first  week  In  May.  They 
have  chosen  "The  Varsity  Coach,"  a 
typical  college  play. 

St.  Cloud — Claiming  that  he  was 
struck  over  the  head  by  a  Great 
Northern  brakeman  as  he  stepped  off 
a  passenger  coach  at  Collegeville. 
James  Koska  has  started  a  suit  here 
for  $6,000  against  the  Great  Northern 
railroad.  *"■ 

Bagley — Dan  Rolland.  formerly  of 
Bagley  and  lately  of  Minneapolis,  has 
once  more  engaged  in  the  lumber 
business,  this  time  In  the  promising 
young  village  of  Oklee,  on  the  Soo 
line.  His  new  business  at  Oklee  will 
be  known  as  the  Oklee  Lumber  com- 
pany. 

Moorhead  —  Erlck  Erickson,  w-ell- 
known  Sabin  farmer,  was  brought  here 
In  a  very  serious  condition.  He  was 
found  on  the  high  grade  about  seven 
miles  south  of  this  city  with  one  of 
his  ears  torn  off.  several  ribs  frac- 
tured and  his  right  shoulder  blade 
broken  as  the  result  of  a  runaway. 

Bemidjl — William  J.  Hutchlns  of 
Turtle  River  was  the  first  to  appear 
before  County  Clerk  of  Court  Rhoda 
to  file  on  vacant  government  lands  to 
loe  opened  soon.  He  filed  on  Lot  6, 
W^i/i.  NE14  25-147-32.  Joseph  Hawk, 
of  Bemidjl  was  second,  filing  on  the 
W14,   NE'/4,   SEU.   NEV4.    36-147-32. 

Princeton — At  the  first  meeting  of 
the  new  village  council  L.  F.  Wilkes 
was  appointed  village  marshal  and  his 
bond  fixed  at  $600.  President  H.  New- 
bert,  George  Ross  and  J.  A.  Smith 
were  appointed  a  committee  on  streets. 
Henry  Nwbert.  George  Ross  and  Dr. 
Caley  were  selected  as  board  of  health 
members. 

Roseau — Herman  Mesenbrink  Is  re- 
moving the  buildings  from  the  site  on 
which  the  Farmers  &  Merchants'  State 
bank  will  erect  a  new  bank  building. 
On  the  corner  opposite  the  Citizens' 
State  bank  will  erect  a  fifty-foot  front 
two-story   brick    building. 

Northome — On  Tuesday.  April  11,  a 
dairy  meeting  will  be  held  at  the  vil- 
lage hall.  Northome.  A.  J.  McGulre, 
formerly  of  the  Grand  Rapids  experi- 
ment station,  but  now  connected  with 
the    Minnesota    state    university,    will 

Crookston — Secretary  J.  M.  Cathcart 
went  to  Stephen  and  attended  a  meet- 
ing of  the  reorganized  Commercial 
club  there.  At  a  banquet  of  the  club 
Mr.  Cathcart  was  chief  speaker  and 
told  of  the  advantage  of  a  commer- 
cial club  to  a  city. 

Roseau — A  chapter  of  the  Eastern 
Star  has  been  instituted  here,  with  the 
following  officers:  W.  M..  Mrs.  Leech; 
W.  P.,  A.  Waag:  A.  M.  F..  Mrs.  Waag; 
C,  Mrs.  Stebbins:  A.  C,  Mrs.  Brosemer; 
secretary,  L.  P.  DahlQuist;  treasurer, 
S.   T.   Holdahl. 


YOUNG  WOMEN 
MAY  AVOID  PAIN 

Need  Only  Trust  to  Lydia  E. 
Pinkham's  Vegetable  Com- 
pound, says  Mrs .  Kurtzweg. 


^f»AiL  >^ 


/%♦ 


three 
trial, 
so    that    the    criminal    work    will    prob- 
ably be  completed  In  from  two  to  three 

weeks'  time. 

. »  

Hotel   Clerfc   Id   Jail. 

Jamestown.  N.  D..  April  10 —Wil- 
liam Tuckey.  the  hotel  clerk  who  dis- 
appeared from  Jamestown  after  the  vice 
Investigation  and  was  apprehended  In 
Fargo  last  Wednesday.  Is  now  an  In- 
mate of  the  Stutsman  county  jail. 
Tuckey  was  fined  |50  as  a  result  of 
the  vice  Investigation  and  when  given 
an  opportunity  to  raise   the   money  he 

left  town. 

•  •  ■      ■    ■  - 

Get   PapeTM  at   Ashland. 

Ashland,  Wis.,  April  10.— Of  the  twen 
ty-one    persons    who    appeared 
Judge    Risjord    In    circuit    court 
day  to  obtain  their  final 
papers,    twenty    were 
the   petition  of  Remo 


before 
Satur- 
naturallzatlon 
successful    while 
Barrocco,   Mellen 


nicture  is  herewith,  was  much  troubled  ;  that  Mr. 

.with    pains    in   her   ^pJ?'"^^^-^ 

back  and  sides  every 
month  and  they 
would  sometimes  be 
so  bad  that  it  would 
seem  like  acute  in- 
flammation of  some 
organ.  She  read 
your  advertisement 
in  the  newspapers 
and  tried  Lydia  B. 
Pinkham's  Vege- 
table Compound. 
She  praises  it  highly  as  she  has  been 
relieved  of  all  these  pains  by  its  use. 
All  mothers  should  know  of  this  remedy, 
and  all  young  girls  who  suffer  should 
try  it."— Mrs.  Matilda  Kurtzweg,  629 
High  St.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

Young  women  who  are  troubled  with 
painful  or  irregular  periods,  backache, 
headache,  dragging-down  sensations, 
fainting  spells  or   indigestion,   should 


Grand  Forks,  N.  D. — Mrs.  Julia 
Wlttelsliofer  of  Los  Angeles,  Cal..  a 
former  resident  and  present  property 
owner,  spent  a  few  days  here  en  route 
to  New  York.  She  finds  the  city  is 
much  improved.  She  Is  owner  of  the 
Wittelshofer  block  and  other  prop- 
erty In  Grand  Forks,  and  while  here 
attended  to  several  important  busi- 
ness   matters    pertaining    to    It. 

Hampden.  N.  D. — An  electric  plant 
has  just  been  completed  here,  and  the 
current  Is  now  being  supplied  to 
light  most  of  the  business  places,  as 
well  as  a  number  of  the  residences  of 
tlie  city.  A  modern  street  lighting 
system  "has    also    been    installed. 


MINNESOTA  BRffiFS 


was   continued   for   the   reason   that   he 

had   not    familiarized   himself   with   the  ^ -      „, 

general  government  of  the  cou^t'y-  The  ■  |j^^  ^j^  StriCtQSt  COnfid«n€«« 
tint  person  to  be  granted  final  citizen- 1  ••'^'■ 


take  Cydfa  E.  Pinkham's  Vegetable 
Compound.  Thousands  have  been  re- 
stored to  health  by  this  root  and  herb 
remedy. 

If  you  know  of  any  yonng  wo- 
man who  is  sick  and  needs  help- 
ful advice,  ask  her  to  write  to  the 
Lydia  E.Pinkham  Medicine  Co., 
Lynn,  Mass.  Only  women  will 
receive  tier  letter,  and  it  will  he 


Pralnerd — Wi    E.    Lively    is    sponsor 
for    a    bicycle    picnic    to    be    held    here 
May     20.     boy     and     girl     riders     to     be  1 
present    and    to   compete    in    races   and  | 
parade.  _ 

Sturgeon    I^ke — H.   T.    Morgan,    who 
has  been  in  Duluth  since  the  holiday.^ 
has  returned  and  went  out  to  the  T.  W.  , 
Johnstone  farm,  where  he  will  do  the  I 
spring  planting.  i 

North  Branch — C.  C.  Swain  of  the  1 
state  department  of  education  will  be  | 
here  this  week  to  talk  on  the  Ques-  i 
Hon    of    school    consolidation. 

Red  Lake  Falls — The  people  or  Red 
Lake  Falls  and  vicinity  will  enjoy  | 
next  winter  a  high-class  Lyceum 
course,  as  B.  M.  Pallansche  ha-s  con- 
tracted for  a  course  of  six  high-class 
numbers. 

Mahnomen — Tom  Sloan  was  arrest- 
ed, charged  with  the  sale  of  intoxicat- 
ing liquor  to  persons  of  Indian  blood.  He 
waa  arralgnei]^  In  Juatlce  Owen's  court 


■  '   'H 


"This  Is  the 
Kind  I  Want!" 

"Mother  tried  all  brands, 
she  knowt  which  is  best — 
know*  how  to  get  good, 
wholesome  bakings  every 
bake-day  —  how  to  savt 
Baking  Powder  money  — 
avoid  bake-day  sorrows. 

"She  likes  the  wonderful 
leavening  strength  —  fine 
raising  qudities — absolute 
purity — great  economy  of 

CALUMET 

BAKING  POWDER 

"Don't  think  the  Baking 
Powder  you  now  use  is  best. 
Try  Calumet  once  —  find 
out  what  r«a/ bakings  are." 

R*c«iT«l  Hickert  Award* 

Nfiv  Cock  Book  free — 
See  Slip  in  Pound  Cam 


■BHMiai 


( 


\ 


i 


ou 


'( 


Monday, 


« 


A-rf*    .^^■-,/^-  **  a*-.  ..r'-^_-n«fc*-i  T-*"  *:.-«sr*- <■«<• 


—u^ 


I 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  10, 1916. 


15 


-r*- 


D.   li.,   4-10-16. 


More  Shirts  arrived 


-i- 


A  fresh  shipment  of 
MANHATTA>f  Shirts 
arrived  in  town  on  Satur- 
day and  will  be  placed  on 
sale  today. 

Among  them  are  extra 
short  and  extra  long 
sleeves. 

This  is  the  joy  spot  for 
shirts  —  the  new  spots, 
new  lines,  new  checks  are 
all  here. 

Another  new  arrival 
are  "Country  Club  Shield 
Bows"  for  the  new  wide 
spaced  collars. 

•  • 

New  Spring  Suits.  $10, 
$14.50  (Columbo),  and  up. 

•  • 

A  fine  light  weight 
overcoat  is  the  one  we  sell 
at  $20. 

Call  us  up  for  "emerg- 
ency orders."  Our  wire  is 
a  live  one  from  8  a.  m.  to 
6  p.  m. 


At  Thlr<3 
Ave,  W. 


STOVE  |NDS 
IN  CALUMET,  MINN.,  KIIIING 


QUARREL  OVER 


Telephones :  Melrose  93, 
Melrose  94  or  Grand  39. 

•  • 

These  fine  blue  skies 
make  things  lively  in  our 
Hat  Section. 

A  rich  assortment  oflfers 
something  suitable  for 
every  head. 

$3— -more  and  less. 

•  • 

Everwear  guaranteed 
hose  for  men,  women  and 

children. 

•  •  --.^ 

Fownes  Gloves. 


Duluth, 

Minn. 


Two  Men  Have  Trouble  in 

Boarding    Camp    That 

Results  in  Murder. 

Slayer    Gives    Himself   Up, 

and  Special  Grand  Jury 

Will  Probe. 


Calumet.  Minn..  AprU  10.— (SpecUl  to 
The  Herald.) — Shot  three  tlmea  with  a 
rifle  In  the  hands  of  Steve  Atanosoff. 
Oeorje    Chrlatoff    w»8    InstanUy    killed 


5ioUMnf  C» 
Foot-Note:  Walk  In  Ilanan  Shoos  (for  men  and  women). 


R|^S|0NLY6  DAYS  MORE] 

pNNOUNCEMENT! 

^         W.  S.  KIRK'S 

AW-  U.S.ARIIIORY  AND  NAVY  GOODS  LEAV-  •*""• 
ING  DULUTH  APRIL  17th! 

and  do  your  buying  now. 


9 


W.  S.  KIRK 

313  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREEf 


-HANK"  LAID  OUT  flRST^COPY  OF  THE 
HERALD  THIRmHREE'mRS  AGO  TODAY 


-fl 


-Set  up  -Vol.  84.  No.  1/  "  -aid  Henry 
Dworsohak.    better   known    a«    "Hank. 
the  foreman  of  The  Herald  composing 
room,  when  he  arrived  at  hia  work  thU 

"'Fo"r"today    began    the    thirty-fourth 

'^"•^la^nk"  Vtopjed'trom  his  dutl.s  lon^ 
enou JH  to  remlnlBCe  for  a  ^om.nt  „ 

Jjuluth- Evening  Herald,  later  changed 
Vn  The  Duluth  Herald.  W«  naa  nve 
men  on  tl^e  force  In  those  days,  and 
the  off  ce  was  down  on  Lake  avenue  In 
1  building  Where  the  Metropole  hotel 
Lw'i  and*8.  I  went  to  work  two  week' 
before  the  first  papor  was  P"bll«ht.d 
and  laid  out  the  first  paper.     It  was  a  I 


four-page  affair,  and  printed  with 
borrowed  type,  for  our  outilt  was  lAte 
in  arriving. 

"In  those  days  we  didn't  know  some- 
times whether  we  were  working  for  the 
sheriff  or  the  owner  of  the  paper.  We 
would  come  to  work  In  the  morning 
for  the  owner,  before  noon  would  be 
working  for  the  sheriff  who  had  taken 
charge,  and  then  out  of  his  hands 
again  before  night.  It  was  touch  and 
go  until  Mr.  Weiss  took  charge,  which 
was  about  twenty-five  years  a.go.  We 
were  never  really  sure  of  being  paid 
until  after  he  took  charge. 

"From  four  pages  then,  and  a  rew 
hundred  readers,  to  our  present  size 
and  about  »2,000  subscrtbers,  Is  grow- 
ing some.  And  now  ifs  volume  thirty- 
four!  Well,  the  trout  season  will  opon 
next  Saturday.     That'll  help  some. 


Simplex. 

The     new     system     of     fll«    J'^<*«*'"«- 
Call  M.  I.  Stewart  company.    Phones  114. 
* 
Brotherhood    M*«4lna.   ,,   .       _ 

Members  of  the  UnUed  Hebrew 
brotherhood  of  Duluth  met  at  thu 
Camels'  hall  last  evening  and  appoint- 
ed a  committee  of  six  to  draw  up  a 
constitution  and  set  of  bylaws  for  the 
new  organization.  The  next  meeting 
of    the    brotherhood    will    be    held    on 

April   30. 

■ 

Initiate    Candidates. 

At  a  meeting  Saturday  evening  fif- 
teen candidatea  were  Initiated  by  the 
United  Commercial  Travelers.  Duluth 
council  No.  40.  Tom  Rankin,  senior 
councilor,  presided  at  the  ceremonies. 
P  E.  Mcbonald.  senior  councilor  from 
St.   Paul,   also   addressed   the   lodge. 

m 

Sales  Managers  Will  M*«t. 

Members  of  the  Duluth  Salesman- 
agers'  association  will  b'^ld  their 
monthly  meeting  at  the  Duluth  Com- 
mercial club  at  12:16  o'clock  Friday. 
H.  a  Mclntyre  of  the  editorial  staff 
of  the  Twin  City  Commercial  Bulletin 
will  speak  on  "Mall  Order  House  Com- 
petition." 

Inellne    Car   Servlee    Impaired. 

Dflays  III  repairs  on  tho  inellnsd 
railway  prevente<l  morning  service 
until  11  o'clock  yesterday.  At  4  p.  m. 
It  was  found  advisable  to  substitute 
half-hour  schedules  In  place  of  quar- 
ter-hour service.  The  d^-lay  yester- 
day was  unusual,  as  repairs  are  gen- 
erally made  early  In  the  morning. 
—  • 

Ilamllne  "Prexy"  Preaehea  Here. 

Dr.  Samuel  J.  Kerfoot.  president  of 
Hamllne  university,  St.  Paul  preache^ 
yesterday  at  the  First  M.  E.  church. 
Third  avenur  west  and  Third  street. 
•*Tho  Cardinal  Doctrine  of  Human 
Uf."  was  his  topic.  Dr.  John  W. 
Hoffman,  pastor  of  the  church,  is  out 
of  the  city.     

Aa  noon  ce  m  e  n  t. 

Hello  boys!  I  opened  for  business 
thU  morning  at  417  West  Supwlor 
street,  and  shall  be  pleased  to  see  you. 
one  and  all.  Hest  of  service  at  all 
times.  Joseph  P.  Remmel  bufTet.  417 
West  Superior    street. 

^ 

Lights  Broken    an    Pnrk    Point. 

Complaint  auainst  breaking  of  elec- 
tric llKhts  on  Park  Point  «»^m^«  ^y 
C  K.  Van  Bergen  of  the  Duluth-Edlson 
company  in  communications  received 
thl.-i  morning  by  Commissioners  Mer- 
rltt  and  Silberateln. 
■ 
A«k   Heeeptacle    for  Paper. 

A    receptacle    for    paper    at    Iwenty- 
fourth  avenue   east   and  Fourth   street.  ! 
the    street    car    transfer    point.    Is    sug-  i 
gcsted     In     a     communication     received, 
thl.s    morning  by   Commissioner   SUber-  | 
strln,    safety  head,    from   a   rosldent  in 
that    end    of    the    city.       Paper    thrown 
about,    he    states,    scatters    on    all    the 
lawns  In   the  vicinity. 


in  a  boarding  catnV'here  about  7  a.  ni. 
today.  The  slayer  gave  himself  up.  A 
coroner's  Jury  returned  a  ▼erdlct 
against  Atanosoff  and  It  is  expected  a 
special  grand  Jiirv  "*illl  b«  called  At 
Grand  Rapids  dufl^gthe  present  term 
of  court  to  con\ae]^  the  case.  The 
sheriff  and  count/ 4«orney  as  well  as 
the  coroner  came  hsrqbefore  noon  ana 
were  at  the  inauest.  *rhe  accnaed  was 
taken  to  the  Grand  Rapids  Jail. 
Troahle  Oft^  a  Stove. 
It  develops  thac  the  trouble  between 
the  two  men  started  Sunday  afternoon 
over  a  cook  stove.  The  men  had  a 
fight  and  an  Oliver  policeman  sep- 
arated them.  Thoy  were  finally  la- 
duced  to  CO  to  bed.  Atanosoff  taking  a 
rifle  to  bed  with  him.  The  Quarrel 
was  renewed  this  morning  and  the  men 
fought  during  which  Atanosoff  Is  said 
to  have  picked  up  the  rifle  and  fired 
three  tlm«i  hitting  Chrtstoff  and  caus- 
ing almost  instant  death. 


1»13  and  was  reappointed  to  the  force 
on  June  1,  1914  during  the  last  year 
be  has  been  stationed  at  headquarters 
with  Jailor  L.  A.  Root.  In  charge  of  the 
laller's   room  and  the  cell  block. 

His  successor  will  b«  decided  upon 
by  Chief  McKercher  late  today,  accord- 
ing to  an  announcement  at  headquar- 
ters this  morning.  The  new  man  will 
be  one  of  the  three  highest  on  the  civil 
service  list  of  candidates 

Honnold  Is  married  and  lives  at  90» 


London  road. 


DULUTH  IS  SECOND 
ONLY  TO  NEW  YORK 


Tonnage    of    Twin    Ports 

Next  to  Metropolis, 

Says  Miller. 

Fran   TM   N«rsl4   WatblSftM    Immm. 

Washington.  April  10.— That  Duluth 
ranks  second  onlv  to  New  York  among 
ports  of  tho  world  to  tha  tonnage  of  Its 
traffic  wfu*  stated  In  the  house  today 
by  Representative  CJ^rence  B.  Miller. 

"Tlie  traffic  of  New  York  harbor  Is 
the  greatest  In  the ,  world, '  said  Mr. 
Miller  "as  shown  by  mei"^*"  from 
that  city.  It  was  more  than  38,000.000 
tons  in  1913.  in  that  year  the  tonnage 
of  Duluth-Superior  harbor  was  more 
than  2».000.000  tons  In  l^J*  »t  was 
83,000,000  tons,  la  th^  year  1912.  how- 
ever. It  was  at  the  blgh  mark  of  42,- 
000.000  tona"  '    '  «  w  ^* 

Answering  criticisms  of  members  or 
the  expenditures  for  the  Improvement 
of  Duluth-Superior  harbor.  Mr.  Miller 
showed  that  the  freight  rate  on  wheat 
before  the  ImproT^tatnt  was  near  10 
cents  per  bushel  and  <hat  now  wheat  Is 
sent  from  Dulut^tp  Buffalo  at  as  low 
a  rate  as  %  cents  a  bashel. 

LINDBERGH  MAILS  HIS 
FILING  TO  SECRETARY 

Frsa  TiM  Htrald  Waihtnttso  Birtai. 
Washington.  April  10.— Congressman 
Charles  A.  Lindbergh  today  mailed 
Hecretary  of  State  Julius  Schmahl  his 
filing  as  a  Republican  candidate  for 
the  United  States  senatorshlp. 

CHIEF  GOiNGlAST 


KERR  nsiTiNa 

BIB  STEEL  PLMT 

Vice  President  of  Steel  Cor- 
poration Closing  His  An- 
nual Inspection. 

Closing  his  visit  to  the  properties 
In  St.  Louis  county  of  the  United 
Stataa  Steal  corporation,  of  which  He 
is  vice  president.  D.  O.  Kerr  of  New 
York  and  a  party  of  ateel  coihpany 
I  officials  visited  the  steel  plant  of  the 
Minnesota  Steel  company  in  Duluth 
this  afternoon.  Th«y  arrived  at  the 
plant  In  a  special  train  about  2  o'clock 
and  spent  the  greater  part  of  the 
afternoon  looking  over  the  equipment 
and  over  Morgan  Park,  the  company  s 
model  city. 

In  the  party  accompanying  Mr.  Kerr 
were  Pentecost  Mitchell,  vice  president 
of  the  Oliver  Iron  Mining  company; 
J.  H.  McLean,  aeneral  manager  of  the 
company;  J.  H.  Hoarding,  assistant 
general  manager;  George  D.  Swift,  as- 
sistant treasurer;  S.  S.  Rumaey,  .;hlef 
mechanical  engineer;  O.  A.  Diehl,  aa- 
alstant  general  chief  engineer;  McGil- 
vray  Shlras,  chief  of  ore  distribution, 
and  W.  A.  McGonagle.  president  Of  the 
Duluth^   MIssabe  &  Northern   road. 

After  finishing  this  visit,  Mr.  Kerr 
and  Mr.  Shlras  will  probably  go  to  the 
Gogebic  range,  where  they  will  look 
over  the  corporation'*  holdings.  This 
is  the  annual  inspection  of  the  vice 
president,  who  has  charge  of  the  ma- 
terials  of  the  corporation. 

En  route  to  Duluth.  Mr.  Kerr  con- 
firmed the  opinions  of  other  officials 
expressed  recently,  that  the  current 
year  wiil  be  the  biggest  In  point  of 
iron  ore  shipments  that  the  ranges 
hare  ever  seen.  He  feels,  evidently, 
that  1916  will  be  the  beginning  of  a 
long  era  of  unusual  shipping  and  gen- 
eral   business   prosperity. 

NO  CONCLUSIONS  ON 
CAUSE  OF  INCREASE 

Federal  Trade  Commission 

Makes  Preliminary  Report 

on  Price  of  Gasoline. 

Washington.  April  10.— The  Federal 
trade  commission  today  presented  to 
congress  a  preliminary  report  on  its 
investigation  of  the  rise  In  the  price  in 
gasoline.  The  report  carries  a  mass 
of  statistics  on  production  and  prices, 
but  draws  no  conclu-slons  as  to  the 
cause  of  the  increase  of  the  latter. 

Speaking  of  alleged  price  discrimina- 
tions which  the  commission  is  charged 
with  investigating  under  a  senate  res- 
olution,  the  report   says: 

"If  prices  are  found  to  have  been 
raised  to  higher  levels  in  some  sec- 
tions than  in  others,  making  due  allow- 
ance for  quality  of  product,  freight 
and  marketing  conditions,  it  may  be 
Inferred  that  an  element  of  artificial 
manipulation  has  entered  into  the  ad- 
vance." 

ORPET  ATTORNEYS 
ASK  GONTINUAIICE 


17  and  19 

East 
Superior  St. 


Qbram's 


Half  Block 

East  of 
Lake  Avenue 


For  Tuesday  We  Offer  the  Following  Specials  on  the  Main 
noor.  Prices  Are  Unequaled  tlsewhere. 

BOYS'  SUITS 

Closing  out  our  entire  stock  of  Boys'  Suits 
regardless  ef  cost  to  us. 

Lot  1 — Assortment  of  materials,  well  made; 
values  up  to  $3.95  will  ri  qC 

go  at  only ^M^.ifff 

Lot  2— $5.00  and  $6.00  values  M  CA 

will  go  at <^^.iAI 

Handsome  wooden  auto  free  with  every  suit. 

WOMEN'S  MUSLIN  GOWNS 

Handsome  trimmed,  $1.50  values  for 79c 

Muslin  Petticoats,  79c  values  for 33c 

Handsome  Lawn  Waists,  $1  values 33c 

Silk  Waists  in  a  large  variety  of  ftl  QO 

materials ;  values  up  to  $5.00 ^l«*rO 

CORSET  SPECIALS 

In  odds  and  ends,  discontinued  lines ;  in  War- 
ner's, Thompson's  and  Madame  d»i  CA 
Grace ;  $2,  $2.50  and  $3  corsets. ^l-iWI 

Do  not  miss  this  rare  bargain. 

Tour   Easter  Suits,  Coats,  Dresses,  Millinery,   etc..   are  ready  at  such 
low  prices  that  you  cannot  duplicate  them  elsewhere  in  this  city. 


=9- 


systelh.  have  been  granted  an  increase 
in  wages  of  1%  cents  per  hour,  ac- 
cording to  announcenvent  today.  The 
states  embraced  In  the  wage  Increase 
are  Wisconsin,  Minnesota.  Iowa,  Illi- 
nois, Misdourl  and  the  Dakotas. 

BRITISHSfEAMSHiP 

EASTERN  CITY  SUNK 

London.  April  10.— The  British  steam- 
ship Eastern  City  of  4.842  tons  gross 
is  reported  to  have  been  sunk.  Accord- 
ing to  information  received  at  Lloyds, 
the  vessel  was  not  armed. 

The  latest  report  published  regarding 
the  movements  of  the  Lastern  City 
record  saUing  of  the  vessel  from  New 
York  Feb.  29  for  St.  Nazalre  The 
steamship  was  393  feet  long.  52  feet 
beam  and  24  feet  deep.  She  was  built 
in  1913  and  owned  by  the  St,  Just 
Steamship  company. 

MlMil<Milppl    !"▼«»•,""*"*"*?*«,, 

Washington.  April  10.— AU  the  Mis- 
sissippi river  Items  lasted  through  the 
debate  of  the  rivers  and  harbors  bill 
In  the  house  today  despite  vigorous  at- 
tacks. 


AFTER 


Cha«ffe«n'    Ea«ii»lu«tloii. 

W  H  Healy.  Duluth  member  of  the 
state  chauffeurs'  examining  board,  an- 
nounced today  an  examination  for 
prospective  chauffeurs,  who  have  not 
Qualified  for  a  license,  would  be  held 
Wednesday,  In  the  assembly  room  at 
police  headquarters.  Elxamlners  wlU 
be  m  the  hall  all  day,  to  test  appU- 
cants. 


>■    >i» 


ROT.  Bernard  W««'"7»«^.ii?' *t^Green 
He  educator  and   priest,  died  at  ureen 

Bay,   Wis,,  April  10- 

time.  ^  . 

Charles  A.  Walker,  38  years  old.  pres- 
*.«!:„»  of  tha  Bank  of  Hancock.  Wis., 
'£tT  April*' 8.  ^f'rom  blood  poison,  re- 
Riiltlne  from  an  ulcerated  tooth.  si\r. 
Walkfr  was  born  In  Wautoma  Wis 
end  began  his  banking  career  In   1893 


."^ 


«^- 


at  the  Bank  of  Hancock,  and  aross  to 
the  presidency  two  years  ago. 

Col.  Fredertek  tmi  Schrader,  U.  8.  A„ 

retired  Is  dead  at  San  Francisco,  after 
a  long  Illness.  Falling  health  caused 
his  retirement  last  year.  At  that  time 
he  was  chief  quartermaster  of  the 
Western  department  in  charge  of  army 
transport  service  on  this  coast.  He  was 
66  years  old. 

Dr.  Harry  C.  Jon^a,  president  of 
physical  chemistry  at  Johns  Hopkins 
university  and  a  recognized  authority 
on  that  subject  in  the  United  States, 
died  at  Baltimore.  April  9.  from  apo- 
plexy. He  was  editor  of  and  contribu- 
tor to  numerous  scientific  Journals  and 
the  Langstroth  Medlclst  of  Franklin 
Institute  in  1913.        

SHEBOYGAN  WOMAN 

KILLED  BY  A  TRAIN 

Sheboygan,  Wis..  April  10.— Mrs. 
Elizabeth  Renielmann,  44.  widow  of 
the  late  Oarney  Kenzelmann  and 
mother  of  the  Renzelmann  brothers, 
well-known  musicians,  was  Instantly 
killed  today  by  a  Chicago  &  North- 
western passenger  train  while  enroute 
to  the  Holy  Name  Catholic  church  to 
attend  early  mass.  Her  six  sons,  the 
eldest  18  years  old,  are  known 
throuKhout  the  Middle  West  as  the 
musical   Rtnzelmanns. 

ONE  MORE  DELEGATE 
ON  LA  FOLLETTE  LIST 

Milwaukee,  Wls.^  April  10.— The  Hat 
of  La  Follette  delegate*  to  the  Repub- 
lican national  convention  was  In- 
creased today  when  the  official  count 
of  the  Second  district  showed  that 
both  La  Follette  delegates  were  elect- 
ed Instead  of  one.  Previous  reports 
Indicated  the  Second  district  was  split. 

The  latest  figures  now  show  that 
La  Follette  will  have  fifteen  delegates 
from  Wisconsin  and  PhiUpp  eleven. 


Ladiea*   Aid   HeetlKg. 

The  Ladles'  Aid  Society  of  the  Wood- 
land M  K.  church  will  meet  at  2:80  p. 
m..  Tuesday,  at  the  home  of  Mrs.  D, 
D.  Sherman.  346  West  Faribault  street. 

'  ^ 

ReeruKlMC  Head  Coming  Her*. 

Lieut  F  J.  Wills  of  Minneapolis, 
head  of  the  naval  recrultng  d»ftrlct 
including  Duluth.  and  Dr.  ~f enJ«^,"?l" 
Iden.  medical  examiner,  will  be  In  this 
cltv  tomorrow  to  pass  upon  a  number 
of  appHcanta  for  enlistment.  Two  will 
be  examined  for  the  naval  reserve 
and  three  for  the  regular  s^^lce  Both 
of  these  officials  arc  in  Virginia  to- 
day on  a  similar  mission. 

Left  f7,000  K«*a*tv  ,   ^ 

Property  valued  at  $7,236  was  left 
by  the  late  Henry  W.  Keau.  who  died 
March  16.  191«.  aged  69.  according  to 
papers  filed  in  probate  court  this  morn- 
ing  by  his  widow.  Mrs.  Ellen  Reau  of 
this  city.  A  will  was  filed  by  the  widow 
this  morning.  The  Instrument  names 
her  aTs^le  heir.  The  e-tate  consists 
of  personal  property  valued  at  $1,600 
and  realty  worth  $6,636. 

Sal>-«tloH    Army   Progrmm. 

At  the  Salvati«in  Army  hall,  5«8  West 
First  street,  a  proBram  will  ^e  given 
br  the  Juniors  and  young  people  of 
the  corps,  tonight.  There  wlU  be  reci- 
tations, dialogues  and  songs,  a  p  ano 
solo  by  Edward  Parkhouse  and  a  piano 
duet  by  Misses  E.  Larson  and  Mildred 
Peterson.       Miss    B,     Kyle    will    give    a 


For  several  weeks  Chief  of  Police  R. 
D.  McKercher  ifas  tfi^n  wearing  a 
broad  smile. 

He  usually  Is  smiling,  but, lately  the 
beaming  countenance  has  been  more  In 
evidence  than  ever,  and  hone  but  his 
closest  associates   know  the  reason. 

Tonight  he  Is  leaving  for  Boston, 
Mass,,  to  be  gone  a  week  or  more,  he 
said  this  morning.  "Official  business- 
was  the  reason  ^Iv^n  for  the  trip. 

That  the  "official  business'  may  de- 
velop into  a  real  "story"  that  gives 
promise  of  being  startling  enough  to 
be  a  "reel"  story,   is  the  intimation  of 

his  friends.  ^   _.    x..         wt..#    -r4ii 

While  In  the  East  the  chief  will 
make  an  effort  to  apprehend  a  forger 
wanted  here,  who  Is  known  to  be  In 
Boston  at  the  present  time. 

HREMEN  WHl 

FILE  PETITION 


Peterson 
reading. 


PERSONALS 


Removal  Said 

HAIR  GOODS 

Beautiful  Switches,  Curls 
and  Transformations  at 
reduced  prices. 

KNAUF  SISTERS, 

24    WEST    SrPEHIOR    STREET. 

Will  be  located  after  May  l.<<t  in  the 
Fidelity    Bldg.,    Second    Floor. 


C     E     Dennis    of    Cloquet      Is    regls- 

**'o^OUon''ln'i'?u'/:ily  of  International 

^T  #^  Vc{^u5l  S' Mrnneapolls.  com- 
merclal  agent  of  the  Wabash  line.  Is 
registered  at  the  Holland, 

Wwren  Biggs  of  Chicago  a  promi- 
nent corporation  attorney  of  that  city, 
is  among  the  guests  of  the  Holland, 

George  Ramsey  of  Winona,  a  whole- 
sale druggist  of  that  city.  Is  registered 

*Vmon  Le^is  of  Duluth  Is  In  St.  Paul 

on  business.  -.      ..  .  n 

Walter  Hailing  of  Dob  Moines,  a  well 
known  manufacturer  of  farm  Imple- 
niAnts  Ifl  at  the  Holland. 
"Herbert  Buxbaum  of  Philadelphia  ar- 
rived Saturday  for  a  two  week.«»  visit 
with  his  uncle  and  aunL  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Al  Abraham.  IMl  East  guperlor  street. 

OFFICER   HONNOLD  RESIGNS. 

Was  One  of  Older  Men  in  Service; 
Appointed  in  1908. 

Tilford  M.  Honnold.  police  patrol- 
man since  1908  and  one  of  the  older 
members  of  the  force,  in  point  of  serv- 
ce  presented  his  resignation  to  Chief 
R  D  McKercher  today.  It  was  ac- 
cepted by  the  chief  and  is  effective  to- 

"^^Honnold  was  appointed  patrolman 
under  Former  Chief  C.  H  -Troyer  on 
June  1.  1908.  He  was  granted  leave  of 
absence  because  of  Illness  on  May  if. 


Duluth  firemen  WlU  this  •'ternoon 
or  tomorrow  mornltig  file  their  Pftitjo" 
calling  for  a  special  election  on  the 
cropofed  plan  lo  establish  a  double 
pfatoon  system  for  all  the  member,  of 
the  city  Are  departnrent. 

The  petition,  according  to  leaders  In 
the  movernent.  Is  signed  by  8.600  voters. 

TWO  DISORDERLIES  ARRESTED. 

A.  K.  Hanson  Pays  Fine  and  Hattie 
Cohan  Forfeits  Her  Bail. 

One  small  hotel  In  the  ^^vrn  to^n 
district  was  visited  by  police  Satur- 
day and  Arthur  K,  Hansen  28.  and 
Mflttle  Cohen  20,  were  arrested. 
"Hansenfuroished  126  ball  and  was 
fined  $10  and  costs  for  disorderly  con- 
duct In  police  court  U^day.  The  Cohen 
girl  furnished  $26  baJl  today  and  for- 
feited It  by  non-appearance.         .    .       „ 

The  girl,  police  said,  figured  In  a 
fight  In  a  large  hotel  cafe  earlier  in 
the  evening,  when  the  house  'letac- 
tive  attrtmpted  to  eject  her  from  the 
place.  She  struck  him  In  the  face  with 
a  small  coin  purse,  cutting  him  slight- 
ly but  later  was  released  on  her 
promise  to   go  to  her   home. 

She     was    arrested     about    an     hour 

later. 

» — 

Poor  Farm  Statistics. 

Relief  and  medical  attendance  were 
given  to  296  persons  at  the  three  in- 
stitutions maintained  by  St,  Louis 
county  at  the  poor  farm  during  the 
month  of  March,  or  an  average  of  263 
daily,  according  to  the  report  which 
I>r.  C.  J.  Woolway,  medical  superin- 
tendent, has  filed  with  A.  P.  Cook, 
clerk   of  the   poor  commission. 

Population  statistics  for  the  month 
follow:  _-...,  ^ 

hwitw.     plUl.  firtlion.     Total 
Tn«*U>«.  M»reh  1,  1918.     M8  » 

AdmllM   4  21 

DLvh«nit'<l 8  26 

Deaths    •     ,2  6 

lonMM.  March  31.  191S    162  57 


Waukegan,  111.,  April  10. — Attorneys 
representing  Will  H.  Orpet,  accused  of 
the  murder  of  Marlon  Lambert.  Lake 
Forest  high  school  girl,  asked  for  a 
continuance  today  on  the  ground  that 
they  were  not  ready  for  trial.  Argu- 
ments were  h*ard  by  Judge  Charles 
H  Donnelly  of  Woostock.  who  with- 
held  his  decision   until   this  afternoon. 

Orpefs  attorneys  said  they  expected 
to  show  that  the  girl  committed  sui- 
cide and  they  would  be  unable  to  get 
data  on  the  case  compiled  before  June 
1  It  was  their  intention,  also,  they 
said,  to  call  many  students  of  the  Uni- 
versity of  Wisconsin,  which  Orpet  at- 
tended, as  witnesses. 

THREE^DROWN 

NEAR  WINONA 


Winona,  Minn..  April  10. — (Ppeclal 
to  The  Herald.)— A  triple  drowning 
took  place  this  afternoon  on  the  Wis- 
consin road  leading  to  the  high 
wagon  bridge  across  the  Mississippi 
river  when  a  man.  woman  and  Uttle 
girl  coming  to  Winona  In  a  small 
automobile  drove  oft  the  side  of  the 
road  whers  the  highway  was  covered 
with  water  to  a  depth  of  several 
Inches.  It  Is  not  known  yet  who  the 
victims  were  but  they  are  believed  to 
have  been  Wisconsin  people.  Police 
and  rescuers  are  at  work  trying  to 
recover    the    bodies. 

The  Mlssleslppi  tivr  la  now  falling 
here  slightly,  having  gone  down  a 
tenth  of  a  foot  since   Saturday, 


TOO  LATE 
TOCLASSIFY 

One  Cent  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertisement  liOss  Than  15  Cents. 

vnvt  saTjE— Giving  up  my  house  neces- 
^sU^tet^^  Bemng'^of  all  household 
furniture,  consisting  of  bedroom.  din- 
In^  room  and  living  room  furniture. 
drfper?e^  etc.  mahogany  library  table, 
oriental  rugs,  davenport,  odd  chairs, 
rurtalns  and  draperies.  Ice  box  ana 
many  other  household  necessities; 
Tvery  article  of  furniture  Is  In  perfect 
condition  and  will  be  sold  cheap  Sale 
tomorrow  8  a.  m.  to  6  p    m     at  2422  E. 

$rd  St.  Mrs.  Henry  Abraham.  

won.  RENT Modem  B-room  flat;  heat; 

$2?  Jer  month,  U  E    4th  st.     Inquire 

Brldgeman-Russell   Co. .     . 

flITUATION       WANTED— Nurse       with 

^Srhospltal    training   wants    cases: 

conflnemenU^  Preterrei;       reasonable 

prices  aad  references.  Mel.  S16£. 

P^R^AlE-Encyclopedla    Britannlca; 

gOvolumes;  cheap.    Call  Lin.  17<8  a. 

WANTED— Bushelman  at  o";^*;  fo^ 
wages;  steady  work.  Inquire  218  W, 
Ist  St, — 

FOR  RENT— 6-room  ^^.^^"^iiA^^^^^ 
flat.  814  2nd  ave  east.  Mel.  4448, 

MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 


West  Third  street  are  the  parents  of 
a  son,  born  April   8, 
PEARSON — The  birth  of  a  daughter,  on 
March    31,    has   been    reported   by   Mr. 
and   Mrs.    John    Pearson    of   ST24    Al- 
lendale avenue. 
STRAND — A    son    was       born       at     St. 
Mary's  hospital  March  29  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.    Ole    F.     Strand    of      930     West 
First    street. 
NELSON — The   birth   of  a   daughter  on 
April    8    has    been    reported    by    Mr. 
and   Mrs.    Swan    Nelson    of   727  Sixth 
av»nue    east. 
ANDRZEJEWSKI    —    Mr.       and       Mr». 
Joseph     Andrzejewskl       of     719     East 
Thirteenth  street,  are  the  parents  of 
a    daughter,    born    April    7. 
VOGEL — A    daughter    was    born    April 
7    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.    John    C.    Vogel 
of    806    East    Thirteenth    street. 
SPIRES — The   birth    of   a   daughter    oil 
April    1     has    been     reported    by    Mr. 
and    Mrs.    George    A.    Spires    of      17 
So  ith    Fifty-second    avenue    west. 
PINNEY — Mr.    and    Mrs.    Jesse    Pinney 
of    128    South    Michigan    avenue,    ar* 
the    parents    of    a    daughter,       bom 
April    7. 
CHISHOLM — A    son    was    born    March 
27  at  St.  Mary's  hospital  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs,    Archie    Cl.isholm    of    4411    On*- 
ota    street. 
KOZIAREK — The    birth    of   a   daughter 
on  April   7   has  been   reported  by  Mr 
and  Mrs.   Ignos   Koziaruk   of  22   Eaat 
Fifth    street. 
PETERSON— Mr.  and  Mrs.   Paul  Peter- 
son   of   811"^    East    Third    street.    ar« 
the   parents   of   a   son.   born   April   1. 


I  Deaths  and  Funerals  I 


POPULAR  CONDUCTOR  DIES. 


Jesse  R.  Hubbard,  Missabe  Employe, 
Is  Summoned. 

Jesse  R.  Hubbard,  well  known  among 
railroad  men  of  Northern  Minnesota, 
died  at  St.  Luke's  hospital  yesterday 
afternoon,  following  an  operation.  He 
was  45  years  old. 

Mr  Hubbard  for  two  years  was  a 
conductor  for  the  Duluth.  Missabe  & 
Northern  railway  and  at  one  time  also 
was  employed  by  the  Canadian  North- 

^^He'^leiZ'^es'  a  wife,  living  at  220  West 
Superior  street,  and  two  brothers.  One 
of  the  brothers  lives  at  Colfax.  Iowa, 
and    the   other   at   Detroit,  Mich. 

Funeral  services  have  not  been  com- 
pleted, pending  the  arrival  of  rela- 
tives. 


£;fXEH^kl^n^d  Christine  Johnson 
Thor  Skantz  of  Ontonagon,  Mich,  and 

witTum   A.''jones    and  Cora    Richards. 
Louis  G.  Wendlandt  and  Helen  Werch- 

E^  j".'  Dunn  and  Ella  B.  Rohef  of  Her- 
let.   Wla ^ .^ . 

wTddlng  Announcements_Eng^aved  or 
orlnted.  Consolidated  stamp  »"" 
?>rlnting  Co..  14  Fourth  avenue  west. 

W     18    AND    22K    SOLID    GOLD    WED- 
"dtii  and  engagement  rings  T^de-nd 

mounted  to  order  at  Henrlcksen  s,  «»a 

West  Superior  street, 

Eneraved  and   printed  birth  announce- 
Sn[l:    Coi^olXted  Stamp  &  Print.  Co, 

BIRTHS. 


NELSON— Mrs.  Edvarda  M.  Nelson,  71. 
died  at  her  home,  208  West  Seventh 
street.  Saturday  of  heart  failure.  Sh« 
leaves  a  son  and  a  daughter.  Funer- 
al services  will  be  held  from  Stew- 
art's chapel  Tuesday  at  2  p.  m..  Rot. 
J.  H.  Stenberg  officiating.  ,  Inter- 
ment win  be  at  Park  Hill  cemetery. 

FLEI-IR — Funeral  services  for  Oscar 
Fleer.  60,  old  settler,  who  died  April 
7  after  a  long  illness,  were  held  this 
afternoon  from  Crawford  &  Son'a 
chapel.  Rev.  J.  G.  Appel  officiated. 
The  services  were  under  the  auspice* 
of  the  Sons  of  Herman,  of  which 
Mr.  Fleer  was  a  member.  The  Fleer 
home  Is  at  409  East  Fourth  street. 

HAIKOLA— Mrs.  Emll  Haikola  died 
Sunday  afternoon  at  a  local  hospi- 
tal after  an  illness  extending  over 
a  period  of  about  two  months.  Th« 
husband,  who  survives,  lives  at  214 
Sixth  avenue  west.  Funeral  ar- 
rangements have  not  been  com- 
pleted. 

WESTLIN — John  Westllnd.  86.  die* 
Sunday  at  St.  Luke's  hospital  fol- 
lowing an  operation.  The  body  will 
be  sent  to  Carlsted,  Minn.,  tomor- 
row morning.  A  sister.  Mrs.  Llxon, 
lives  In  Duluth  and  other  relatives 
live  at  Carlsted,  Roseau  county, 
where   funeral   services   will    be   held. 


MONUMENTS. 

LARGEST  STOCK  OF  HIGH-GRADB 
monuments  In  the  Northwest;  call 
and  Inspect  before  buying  clsewhera. 
P.  N,  Peterson  Granite  Co..  230  E.  Supc 


MONUMENTS  ordered  direct  from  fac- 
tory;  you  save  20  per  cent.  Charle« 
Benson.    2301    W.    2nd    fit.       Lin.    334. 


FUNERAL    FLOWERS    A    SPECIALTt^ 
Duluth  Floral  Co..  121  W.  Superior  St. 

■-■■■■  ^  ■  I  IM     ^ 


38  268 

3  28 

3  37 

1  9 

37  296 

heartfaTlurTfatal 

Coroner  Decides  Upon  Cause  of  Mrs. 
Nelson's  Death. 

Heart  failure  was  the  cause  of  the 
death  of  Mra  Edvarda  Marie  Nelson. 
73  who  died  suddenly  Saturday  noon, 
wfille  preparing  tunch  at  her  home,  208 
West  Seventh  stwf tt,  .Coroner  C.  F.  Mc- 
Comb    made   a  short,   Inquiry    Into   the 

Mrs  Nelson  was  born  In  Trondhjem, 
Norway  and  went  to  Bergen  when  a 
little  girl.  She,Jia4.  lived  in  Duluth 
■  Ince  1882.  She;  leaves  a  son,  Albert, 
and   a   daughter.    Wilhelmlna   M.,    both 

of   Duluth.  1        .;  ,.   ,j    ™ 

Funeral  servlcfs  will  be  held  Tues- 
day afternoon  at-E  ©'clock  from  Stew- 
art's chapel.  Rev,  •^•>tH.  Stenberg  offi- 
ciating. Interment  .will  be  at  Park 
Hill  cemetery,       :  -    t 

O   '.:  if 
Bit   9i 


WETS  TO  HAVE  HEARING. 

Court  Will  Act  on  Injunction  Petition 
During  Afternoon. 

A  hearing  on  the  Injunction  pro- 
ceedings brought  by  the  attorneys  for 
the  wets  of  Superior  to  prevent  the 
city  clerk  from  certifying  to  the  re- 
turns of  the  city  election  of  Ust  Tues- 
day will  be  held  In  the  circuit  court 
this  afternoon.  The  Injunction  pe- 
tition was  granted  Saturday  afternoon 
by  Judge  Frank  A.  Ross  and  directed 
against    the    canvassing    beard. 

The  contention  of  the  wets  is  that 
the  recent  election  on  the  no-Ucense 
issue  was  illegal.  In  view  of  the  fact 
that  the  voting  was  on  machines  in- 
stead of  ballots.  Such  an  Issue,  claim 
the  attorneys,  should  have  been  voted 
on  paper  ballots.  A  strong  array  of 
counsel   wiU   appear   for   both   sides. 

Sportsmen  Will  Dine. 

The  Douglas  County  Game  and  Fish 
Protective  league  will  hold  its  annual 
banquet  tomorrow  evening  at  the  Supe- 
rior hotel.  Plans  are  being  made  to 
entertain  100  guests.  Among  the  speak- 
ers will  be  G.  A.  Cleasby.  Federal  war- 
den and  inspector  for  the  government, 
who  will  speak  on  the  interstate  ship- 
ping of  game.  W.  E.  Barber  of  the 
state  conservation  commission  will  al- 
so   speak. 

Increase  for  C,  M.  A  94.  F.  Men. 

Milwaukee.       April       10.— Carpenters. 

truckmen     and      laborers      aggregating 

9  000    employes    In    states    of    the    Chl- 

I  cago.    Milwaukee    *    St,    Paul    railway 


TTRirsON— The  birth  of  a  daughter,  on 

LH^mln'jcra'o"  Jf  ?3«0  We.t  Sec 

ES«5S-ThVI?rrh  Zt'l-  d."/t.t«   on 
ECKMAXN      x"  reported    by    Mr, 

and  M«.  John  Eckman  of  22«  West 
ca.^*'rKnMARK-Mr     and     Mrs,     Fred 

^^S^^^nSma^S^f  ^^^f^iJenS'S^'a 
avenue  west  are  the  parents  of  a 
daughter,  bom  April  8. 

fWAMAM A  son   was  born  April  1  to 

^  Sh-  and  Mrs,  William  Graham  of 
8729    Magellan   street. 

4?7lV?l?lk^.  T.'itrV.  A^^n  H\°r7? 
hind   of   422   North   Forty-third   ave- 

SOwL^Mr  and  Mrs.  Marshall  Sowl  of 
124  Ea»t  Fifth  street  are  the  parents 
of  a  son,  bom  April  «.  ji„„„»,*«- 

PETERSON-The  birth  of  a  daughter 
at  St,  Luke's  hospital,  on  April  1.  has 
K«.n  renorted  by  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Har- 
Sld  T    Peten^^^^^        2608  West  Second 

wfcHARDSON— A  son  was  born  March 
26  to  Mr  and  Mrs,  Clement  E.  Rich- 
ardson of  726  Lake  avenue  south, 

PO:^Mr.  and  Mrs.  Benjamin  Fox  are 
♦vXTtTarents  of  a  daughter,  bora 
itorch   29    at  St,  Mary's   hospital, 

tJdBN— Th«  birth  of  a  daughter,  on 
Anrll  8  has  been  reported  by  Mr, 
Jfd  Mrs.  Jacob  Laden  of  618  Vi  Sec- 
ond avenue  east, 

i-»T  Qitivx     A  jion  was  bom  Apru  o  to  x»r, 

^^ Vrs.  John  M.  Olson  of  816  South 
Rixtv-thlrd  avenue  west, 

ANDROSKY— Mr.  and  Mrs.  Steve  An- 
drosky  of  South  Sixty-second  avenue 
west  are  the  parents  of  a  son,   born 

JollNSTON— The  birth  of  a  daughter, 
on  March  29.  has  betn  reported  by 
Mr.   and  Mrs.   Alex  Johnston   of   6202 

BAU^TN-A*son  was  born  March  29  to 
Mr     and    Mrs.    Claude    J.    Baudin    of 

Co'Lli!Mr""and"Mr..   Ellis   Coll  of  208 


BUILDING  PERMITS. 

To  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
railroad,  turn  table  and  pit 
on  the  south  side  of  South 
street,  between  Twentieth 
and      Twenty-first      avenues 

east    ■ I 

To  Kreldler-Boyle  company, 
four  dwellings  on  the  east 
side  of  Forty-third  avenue 
west,  between  Sixth  and  Sev- 
enth  streets    

To  E.  L.  Larson,  dwelling  on 
the  north  side  of  Ninth 
street,  between  Twelfth  and 
Thirteenth  avenues  east.... 
To  E,  H.  Hanson,  dwelling  on 
the  north  side  of  Tacony 
street,  between  Sixtieth  and 
Sixty-first  avenues  west  , . . , 
To  W.  M  Prlndle  &  Co,,  alter- 
ations to  store  on  the  south 
side  of  Michigan  street,  be- 
tween Third  and  Fourth  ave- 
nues   east    

To  P.  Andrako,  addition  to 
dwelling  on  the  east  side  of 
Ninety-seventh  avenue  west 
between       McGonagle       and 

House  streets   

To  D.  H.  Lewis,  garage  on  the 
east  side  of  Commonwealth 
avenue,  between  Dickson  and 

and  Gary  streets   

To  the  U.  S.  Display  companr, 
bill  board  on  the  north  side 
of  Washington  avenue,  be- 
tween   Seventh    and    Eighth 

avenues    east    

To  John  Roed.  garage  on  the 
north  side  of  Seventh  street 
between    First    and     Second 

avenues   west   

To  Allen  Mentaer,  garage  on 
the  north  side  of  Fourth 
street  between  Twenty- 
first  and  Twenty-second  ave- 
nues   west     

To  J.  L.  Macleod.  dwelling  on 
the  south  side  of  St.  Andrew 
street,      between      Woodland 

and  Columbus  avenues I 

To  L,  Kusnero.  shed  on  the 
north  Bide  of  Third  street, 
between  Seventh  and  Eighth 
avenues     west 


14.000 

lO.OOS 
2.SfO 

loot 

t,09« 

fH 
Iff 

St 


S.Oft 
Sf 


CHICHESTER  S  PILLS 

W  .«r>^  TUB  IIIAMONB  BKANBi       ▲ 

— **^        L«dle*t  Aafc  yoBr  UrwmafM.  f'  '"^ 

niU  in  B*4  Md  4^14  acialL. 
boxes.  >e«le<i  with  Blue  Kibbon. 
Take  ••  sthcr.  Bi»»  •f  j*mr  '^  _. 
BruHtot.  AskrorCliri.OdEa.TCBW 
I»1AH4»N1>  HRANB  FILLS,  fo*  SM 
ycMS  kaowa  4s  Bnt,  S«<Kt.  Alw»y<  ReMabIS 

SOLDBYDRUGGtSTSEVEiinifMEBt 


X^   i*i  -  -t 


»  •••  - 


II         M  I    ,    .  I  ■    ■■    »  I       I        ■     ■ 

I 

I 


I      J  I  *  h 


..■..■.Ti..        fc    mwiaw— — — >^ 


nfi^^m'^nm  bji-" 


1     I    ■    I    I 


16 


Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERAL13, 


April  10, 1910. 


\ 

» 


r 


OFFICIAL  MAP  OF  THE  WEATHER 


KELLOGG  BOOSTS 

ITASCA  FARMING 


SfRVING  SEVCNTH  YEAR 

ON  MINNfSOIA  BENCH 


Senatorial  Candidate  Tells 

Coleraine  of  Soil's 

Benefits. 

riiUiaine,  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  mineral  and  the 
timber  by  no  means  constitute  all 
tJie    wealth   of    Itasca   county,   Frank    B. 

KflliKK  of  St.  I'Hul.  candidate  for  tho 
Rtpubllian  nuiiiination  fur  Unittd 
Stati'S  .>^tnator.  declfirod  at  a  banquet 
£lv<  11  b.\  the  Commercial  «lub  .Satur- 
day ninht.  H«-  said  he  came  out  here 
to  nut,  but  since  the  club  had  been 
a(v  kind  hh  ti>  invite  liim  to  the  ban- 
qu<  t  and  to  speak  he  M'ould  say 
8o:.HthiiiK  of  the  Krcut  future  in  store 
for     tlil.s     .-section 

"In  the  six  inches  or  more  of 
Cround  n<  arest  thn  surface  tfiere  lies 
mor.-  wcaltli  and  la.-iting  prospi-rlty 
than  ill  tlif  othi  rs  put  loRether,"  de- 
clured  Mr.  l\«lloKK.  "I'.y  that  I  mean 
the  agricultural  possibilities  of  this 
country. 

•Tp  to  thi.x  time  they  have  been 
practically  untouched.  lOvcry  home- 
■tt-adi-r  who  st  ttles  in  Itasca  county  is 
wortli  ilioiisands  of  dollars  to  the 
county.  In  noithtrn  MinnoHOta  1  can 
•eo  wt.iltii  untold.  Instead  of  being 
•  tripped  of  tlmbiT  and  mineral,  the 
countiv  is  just  bt-luK  put  In  shape  to 
enjoy     its     rtal    d»-Herts." 

KelloKK  told  of  his  interests  In 
northern  .MiniKSota  and  of  the  srlf- 
atylttl  "small  part"  lu'  played  in  get- 
tiiiK  th(  fir.'tt  railroad  throuKh  this 
region. 

CUSSPllYWILL 
HAVE  LOCAL  COLOR 


"The  Man  for  the  Place" 

Written  By  Chisholm 

Students. 

Chisholm,  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  Th.  Herald.)  "The  Man  for  the 
Place"  with  the  scenes  laid  on  the  Me- 
•ab.'i  r.nnKe  Is  the  title  of  the  class  play 
to    be   given   thla   year     by     the     local 

senior  class  of  the  high  .school.  It  was 
wrltt.ii  by  the  <ia.ss  members,  aided 
by  f'rliiei[>ii1  dark,  and  Is  said  to  con- 
tain  llo    little    merit. 

The  play  de.il.s  with  the  trials  of  n 
youns  foreign  mining  engirM-er  aspir- 
ing to  a  respiuislble  po.'Jltion  with  one 
of  the  mines  ".vomewhore  on  the  Me- 
Baba  range,"  who  is  oppo-^ed  by  a  man 
about  his  own  age  who  is  held  in  great 
esteem  by  the  supiMintendent. 
The  Ulrl  in    tiie  C'sMe. 

Potlj  beeome  infatuated  with  the  »u- 
pei  liitendenfs  daughter  and  a  bitter 
rivalry  exist.'j.  A  problem  In  mining 
engiiieeriniis,  upon  the  success  of  which 
depi  nds  the  safely  of  a  largo  number 
of  workmen,  is  submitleu  to  both 
voung  men.  The  solution  of  the  prob- 
lem, as  detetniined  by  the  superintend- 
ent's favorite,  in  ai-cepted.  When  put 
to  a  practical  it  .^t  It  falls  and  heavy 
lo^H  of  life  is  the  toll.  It  Is  then  seen 
that  the  solution  of  the  problem  as 
■ubiTiitted  by  the  central  figure  in  the 
cast  wa.s  tlie  logical  one.  He  steps  Into 
favor  and  aequlre.-s  the  position  he  has 
worked   .^o    iiard    to   obtain. 

Open    nil    Milling   Scone. 

The  play  will  be  presented  in  three 
acts,  one  of  which  has  for  Us  setting 
an  open  pit  mining  scene.  On  this  one 
«cene  much  att«  nlion  has  been  given 
and  ihe  pioblem.=!  of  featuring  the 
blasts,  color  effects  of  the  scenery  and 
dlale<ts  of  the  foreign  workmen  Is 
8ai<i   to  have   been  overcome. 

Those  expected  to  comprise  the  grad- 
uating eiaKs  this  year  and  who  will 
takf  part  in  the  play  are:  Albert 
I'apin,  Florence  Krown,  (trace  Gandsey, 
Wilbur  HayeH,  Sinui  Hepola,  Kva  Du- 
mont,  L-la  HIgbee,  farl  .lohnson,  Win- 
nlfred  I..ewiH,  Lincoln  Ktieebone,  Mary 
Sullivan.  Andrew  Talus.  Bessie  Syme, 
John  (Jortnaii  and  Joseph  (Jzelka,  Will- 
iam .N'i.«ula,  Florence  Neally  and  Olive 
Mehtala. 


JUDGE  MARTIN  HUGHES. 

Hibbing,  Minn,  April  10.  — (Sp«<lal  ti-> 
The  Herald.)  — Friday  wag  the  seventh 
anniversary  of  Judge  Hughes  being 
Judge  of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  district. 
He  was  first  appointed  by  Governor 
John  A.  Johnson,  served  under  this  ap- 
polntmejit  for  one  year  and  was  elected 
for  a  six-year  ternt  by  the  people 
without  opposition.  His  friends  have 
alreadv  started  a  campaign  for  his  re- 
election. In  Hlbblng  tlie  Judge  is  well 
liked,  numbering  friends  in  all  walks 
of  life. 

He  was  the  recipient  of  many  con- 
gratulations. 


months   and    for   some    time    it   was   not 
thought   he   could    recover. 

I>r.  Parsotis  has  completed  a  buffet 
In  the  manual  training  department  of 
the  local  school  that  Is  a  beauty  and 
Is  supposed  to  be  worth  about  $76.  He 
has  spent  a  great  deal  of  time  on  it. 
Several  others  are  taking  advantage 
of  this  department,  among  the  num- 
ber being  Thomas  Hanlon,  Mr.  Hamil- 
ton, William  Vassau,  Thillp  Charmolle 
and    Charles    Muck. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Hiat  of  Bcmldjl  have 
been  visiting  for  several  days  with 
Mr.   and   Mrs.  J.   S.   Henderson. 

A    regular    mt-eting    of    the    Commer- 
cial   club    will    be    held    in    the    village 
hall     Tuesday     evening.       At     the     first  , 
regular    meeting    in    May    officers    will  ' 
be   elected. 

Services  were  held  In  the  Catholic 
rhurch  Sunday  nu)rning  and  In  the 
Presbyterian    church    Sunday    evening. 

The  minlstrel  show,  given  In  the 
auditorium  of  the  high  school  building 
Friday  evening,  was  well  attended.  A 
performance  was  given  Friday  after- 
noon for  the  benefit  of  the  school  chil- 
dren. The  play  was  under  the  direc- 
tion of  Prof.  Schmidt  and  the  pro- 
ceeds are  to  be  turned  over  to  the 
senior  class. 

NIBBING^  MAN  IS 

KILLED  BY  UPSET 


URGE  CLEMENCY  IN 
BEHALF  OF  W.  J.  SMITH 

Mesaba  Range  People  Send 

Telegrams  to  State 

Pardon  Board. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  The  tierald.) — Hundreds  of  tele- 
grams left  the  Mesaba  range  last 
night  and  today  addressed  to  the  state 

board  of  pard(ms  recommending  len- 
iency for  Walter  Smith,  former  resi- 
dent of  Eveleth  and  state  treasurer. 
The  telegrams  came  from  people  in 
every  walk  of  life  and  were  In  re- 
sponse to  messages  sent  to  the  lange 
yesterday  by  Mrs.  Walter  Smith.  Mrs. 
I).  F..  Cuppernull  of  Virginia  was 
responsible  for  a  laige  number  of  the 
messages  going  from  Virginia.  De- 
spite all  the  facts  developed  In  the 
case,  Smith's  Mesaba  range  friends 
still  stand  by  him  and  are  exceedingly 
anxious  that  he  be  extended  leniency 
by  the  state  bo>:id  of  pardons. 
* 
Hibbing     SignH    Petitions. 

Hlbblng,  Minn..  Api  il  10. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Hibbing  citizens  are 
asked  today  to  sign  a  petition  which 
win  be  forwarded  to  the  state  pardon- 
ing board  asking  clemency  In  the  case 
of  Walter  Smith.  The  petition  was 
sent  over  from  Virginia  and  Is  being 
signed  by  hundreds  of  Mr.  Smith's 
friends    In    Hibbing. 

■ • 

Rvelethlann   Alao    Petition. 

Eveleth.  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Many  letters  and 
messages  have  been  sent  from  this 
city,  his  former  home,  to  the  stat* 
pardon  boaid  in  behalf  of  Walter  J. 
Smith   for   whom  clemency   is   asked. 

MILL  CW  BOARD 
MAY  VISIT  HIBBING 

Educators  of  Flour  City  to 
Look  Over  Fine  Educa- 


tion System. 


I      RAPIDS  CLUB  MEETING. 

Parent-Teachers'  Body  Favors  Clean- 
ing Up  Village. 

Grand  Rapids.  Minn.  April  10. —  (Spe- 
cial     to      The      Herald.) — A      successful! 

M>>  meeting  of  the  Parent-Teachers'  club 
was  held  at  the  high  school  Satur- 
day. A  vocal  solo  by  Frank  Gumm 
was  first  on  the  program,  followed  by 
a  paper  by  Judge  of  Probate  Clarence 
B.  Webster  on  "The  Delinquent  Child," 
which  contained  much  food  for  thought. 
A  vocal  solo  by  Miss  Muriel  Meyer, 
with  accompaniment  by  Miss  Gladys 
Affleck,  eompleted  the  program.  Dis- 
cussion    followed     on     the     matter     of 

_  cleaning  up,  establishing  a  swimming 
Itole  for  the  boys,  market  place  and 
club  finances.  A  resolution  was  passed 
pledging  the  club's  assistance  in  a 
clean-up  campaign,  and  the  other  mat- 
ters suggested  will  be  helped  along 
by    the   club. 

The  members  of  the  Laprairle  Farm- 
ers' club,  who  took  part  In  the  play, 
"Kindling  the  Hearth  Fire"  at  the  La- 
prairle    schoolhouse    recently,    went    to 

_^         Deer  River  and  put  the  play  on  there. 

RUSH  OTWATERHAS 
HALTED  DUNCAN  WORK 

Chisholm.  Minn..  April  10 — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Blasting  In  an  under- 
ground contract  on  the  north  prop- 
erty line  of  the  Duncan  mine,  holed 
through  to  a  surface  cave  and  let  In 
a  large  amount  of  water  that  flooded  1 
the  main  level  to  a  depth  of  five  feet 
and  caused  temporary  suspension  of  { 
work. 

Mine  officials  state  that  the  inrush 
of  water  carried  but  little  sand  into 
the  drifts  and  no  serious  damage  has 
occurred   to   the  mine. 

The  two  shaft  pumps  were  sub- 
merged under  about  fifteen  feet  of  wa- 
ter. One  pump  on  the  level  is  work- 
ing and  the  skips  are  being  used  in 
balling  water. 

All  miners  were  transferred  to  other 
properties  until  work  can  be  resumed 
some  time  this  week. 

MOUNfAINJRONllOTES. 

Iffountain  Iron.  Minn.,  April  10. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — F.  A.  Wildes 
and  W.  A.  Deichen  of  Hibbing  in- 
apected  state  mining  properties  in  this 
district   a  few  days  ago. 

Mrs.  Oliver  Ormond  of  the  Brunt  lo- 
cation went  to  Duluth  Saturday  to 
meet  her  mother,  Mrs.  Murray,  of  Chi- 
cago, who  will  visit  here  for  some 
time. 

Mrs.  Zacharlason  and  Mrs.  Gilbert' 
aon  returned  to  their  homes  at  Brain- 
erd  after  a  visit  of  several  days   here. 

deorge  Williams,  formerly  a  resi- 
dent of  this  place,  but  now  of  Vir- 
ginia, where  he  conducts  a  garage, 
was  hero  Saturday. 

The  village  council  has  placed  an  or- 
der with  R.  A.  Folsom  of  Buhl  rep- 
resenting the  Jewell  Nursery  of  Lake 
City  for  shrubbery  for  the  library 
i^rounds.  Trees  will  also  be  ordered 
to  replace  the  defectives  on  the  streets 
which  were  planted  last  spring. 

Hrs.  John  Beck  entertained  at  her 
home  Thursday  evening  for  the  Ladies' 
Aid  of  the  Presbyterian  church. 

Rev.  Mr.  McCaslln  returned  .Satur- 
day  after  a  visit  of  several  days  with 
his  family  In  Minneapolis. 

Charles  Walker  Is  steadily  improv- 
Uff.     U%   btA    bo«a   «lck    for  several 


Egisto    Tomasini    Fatally 

Hurt  When  Motor  Truck 

Turns  Turtle. 

Hlbblng.  Minn.,  April  10.— (Special  to 

The    Herald.) — Egisto    Tomasini,    aged 

29,  employed  by  a  mercantile   company 

here,    died    yesterday    morning    at    the 

Rood     hospital     of     injuries     sustained 

when  a  motor   truck   In  which  he  and 

two  others  were  driving  overturned  on 
the  \A'lnBton-I>eer  crossing  between 
here  and  Brooklyn. 

Herman  Antonelll,  another  victim  of 
the  accident,  still  is  in  the  hospital. 
His  chin  was  nearly  sevt-red  by  the 
gla.-'.s  of  the  wind  shield.  He  also  suf- 
fered a  bady  cut  lip. 

One   Man    Oniy    Soratehed. 

Otavio  Antonelll,  the  third  member 
of  the  party,  was  allowed  to  leave  the 
hospital  last  evening  none  the  worse 
for  his  injuries  outside  of  a  few 
scratches. 

Very  few  spectators  witnessed  the 
accident,  but,  according  to  a  woman 
who  was  on  her  way  to  the  village,  it 
appeared  that  the  driver  had  lost  con- 
trol, as  the  wheels  of  the  big  truck 
seemed  to  be  wavering  from  one  side 
of  the  road  to  the   other. 

Tomasini  is  survived  by  his  wife  and 
three  small  children.  He  resides  at 
North  street  and  was  one  of  the  most 
trusted  employes  of  the  Italian  Mer- 
cantile company. 

The  funeral  arrangements  have  not 
been  made  as  yet,  but  will  be  in  charge 
of  the  Moose  lodge  and  the  Marconi 
and   Italian  Political  club  orders. 


PROGRAM  IS  GIVEN 

AT  MOUNTAIN  IRON 

Mountain  Iron,  Minn.,  April  10.— 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — At  the  regu- 
lar victrola  concert  given  In  the  li- 
brary Sunday  afternoon  between  B  and 
6  th©  following  program  was  render: 
"Oh.  That  We  Two  Were  Maying," 
t'luck  and  Homer;  "Romance"  In  E 
flat  (Rubinstein),  Kubellk;  "In  the 
fJarden  of  My  Heart,"  Reed  Miller; 
"Eilenberg's  March"  (Ellenberg),  Vic- 
tor orchestra;  "Louise,  Ever  Since  the 
Day"  (Charpentler),  Melba;  "Handel's 
Largo"  (Handel),  Sousa's  band;  "Some 
Time  We'll  L'nderstand,"  Trinity  choir; 
"Mother  Machree,"  John  McCormack; 
"We'll  Have  a  Jubilee  in  My  Old  Ken- 
tucky Home,"  Peerless  quartet:  sere- 
nade. "Winter,"  ToUefsen  trio;  "I  Hear 
a  Thrush  at  Eve,"  John  McCormack; 
"Forza  del  Destlno.  (Swear  in  This, 
Hour)."  Verdi,  Caruso  and  Scottl;  "Cele- 
brated Air"  (Bach),  Kubellk:  "Aloha 
oe  (Farewell  to  Thee),"  Hawaiian 
quintet;  "Whispering  Hope,"  Oluck  and 
Homer. 

BABY  WELFARE  WEEK 
FOR  MOUNTAIN  IRON 

Mountain  Iron,  Minn.,  April  10. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  details 
are  being  worked  out  for  a  baby  wel- 
fare exhibit  April  18  and  19.  Some  of 
the  features  will  be  a  talk  to  the  moth- 
ers by  a  trained  nurse  on  the  care  and 
feeding  of  babies;  a  talk  to  the  girls 
by  a  trained  nurse:  a  talk  to  the  boys 
by  Probation  Officer  Everett  of  Hlb- 
blng and  a  talk  on  the  homes  by  one 
or  more  men.  Certain  features  will  be 
put  on  by  classes  In  the  schools;  the 
higli  school  orchestra  will  furnish  mu- 
sic. It  Is  likely  too  that  the  village 
band  will  be  called  on  at  some  time 
during  the  program.  Literature  and 
pamphlets  will  be  distributed.  Flags 
win  be  placed  in  every  home  In  which 
there  is  a  baby  less  than  two  years 
old.  Dr.  Parsons  will  be  the  active 
head  of  the  exhibit  although  much  of 
the  preliminary  work  has  been  done  by 
Miss  Stebblns,  librarian.  Mrs.  Parsons. 
Mrs.  Frazer,  Mrs.  Burley.  Mrs.  Cannon, 
Miss  Peltier.  J.  F.  Muench.  A.  W.  Saarl 
and  D.  A.  Mitchell  have  already  been 
assigned  a  certain  part  of  the  arrange- 
ment; others  will  be  called  on  later  for 
assistance. 


Hibbing,  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Lewis  Collins,  a  Min- 
neapolLs  writer,  arrived  this  morning 
to  write  a  series  of  articles  on  the 
Hibbing  school  system.  Acting  at  the 
Invitation  of  the  Commercial  club,  the 
Minneapolis  school  board  and  Mill  City 
educators  came  here  on  a  tour  of  in- 
spection. It  is  the  claim  of  range 
residents  that  the  Hlbblng  schools  sur- 
pass any  In  the  state  and  that  even 
the  Gary  system  has  nothing  on  the 
splendid  schools,  equipment,  efficient 
teachers  and  system  of  the  Hibbing 
grade    and    high    schools. 

CITY  ATTORNEYSHIP 
CONTEST  WAXES  WARM 

Virginia  Council  Will  Have 

Hard  Nut  to  Crack 

Tuesday  Night, 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  10.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Whether  the  city 
council  will  be  able  to  make  the  se- 
lection of  a  city  attorney  tomorrow 
night  continues  an  open  question.  The 
fight  for  the  appointment  has  appar- 
ently settled  down  to  a  three-cornered 
contest  with  Mr.  Montague,  the  pres- 
ent Incumbent,  Carl  Onkaa  and  George 
F.  Shea  as  the  contestants.  The  friends 
of  all  the  candidates  are  working  hard 
to  prevail  on  the  council  members  to 
vote  for  their  appointment  and  all  pro- 
tesa   assurance. 

Mayor  Boylan  will  probably  not  an- 
nounce his  appointments  to  the  park 
board,  police  and  fire  commission  or 
library  boards  tomorrow  night.  It  Is 
expected  the  petition  for  the  referen- 
dum vote  proposing  the  reduction  of 
saloon  licenses  issued  from  49  to  20 
will  be  presented. 

former"resident  of 
skibo  is  buried 

Two  Harbors,  Minn.,  April  10 — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— The  remains  of 
Mrs.  Ida  Holbrook  were  brought  here 
this  morning  from  her  home  In  Dur- 
and,  Mich.,  where  she  died  last  week 
for  burial  beside  her  husband,  who 
died  here  several  years  ago.  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Holbrook  resided  at  Skibo  a  num- 
ber of  years  ago,  where  Mr.  Holbrook 
was  employed  as  foreman  In  the  Sklbo 
mill.  He  was  seriously  Injured  and 
was  In  one  of  the  local  hospitals  for 
several  months  and  finally  died,  about 
two  years  ago. 

The  funeral  was  held  this  morning 
under  the  auspices  of  the  Eastern  Star 
of  which  she  was  a  member.  Inter.! 
ment  was  made  in  the  Two  Harbors 
cemetery. 


ENGINEERS  MAKING 

SURVEY  OF  RAILROAD 

Grand    Rapids,    Minn.,       April      10. 

(Special  to  The  Herald.)— Interest  In 
the  much  talked  of  North  and  South 
rallro'?ld  through  this  section  is 
heightened   by    the   announcement   that 


HANDY  HUSBAND. 

Knew  How  to  Get  Part  of  the  Bi^ak- 
fast. 


"  'I  know  one  dish  I  can  prepare  for 
breakfast  as  well  as  any  cook  on  earth,' 
said  my  husband  one  morning  when 
the  cook  was  111  and  he  had  volunteered 
to  help  get  breakfast.  He  appeared 
with  his  dish  and  I  discovered  it  was 
Grape-Nuts  which,  of  course,  was  easy 
to  prepare  for  It  was  perfectly  cooked 
at  the  factory,  but  It  was  a  good  Illus- 
tration of  the  convenience  of  having 
Grape-Niits  about. 

"We  took  up  Grape-Nuts  immediately 
after  returning  from  a  five  years'  so- 
journ In  a  hot  country.  Our  stomachs 
were  In  bad  condition  and  we  were  In 
poor  health    generally. 

"In  a  day  or  two  we  liked  Grape- 
Nuts  better  than  any  other  kind  of 
food  on  the  table.  We  both  gained 
steadily  In  health  and  strength,  and 
thla  was  caused  by  Grape-Nuta  and 
Postum. 

"A  friend  of  ours  had  a  similar  ex- 
perience. She  was  seriously  111  with 
indigestion  and  could  find  nothing  to 
eat  that  would  not  give  her  heartburn 
and   palpitation,  especially  at  night 

"She  found  that  a  small  dish  of 
Grape-Nuts  with  cream  made  her  a 
satisfactory  supper  and  gave  her  a 
comfortable  night's  rest.  In  a  short 
time  she  gained  several  pounds  In 
weight." 

"There's  a  Reason."  Name  given  by 
Postum  Co.,   Battle  Creek,   Mich. 

Every  read  tlie  above  letter?  A  new 
one  appean  from  time  to  time.  Tkey 
are  KcnnlBe,  true,  and  foJl  of  human 
l«tercst« 


Ob^i«tti<>iii  t.it,iii  t(  8  M.  in.,  «<i«i'!ity-firil 
I'.ita  Ikruii'jh  |>oiiil«  ef  Ci|iial  lci"|'^'.il'iiv 
of  .01  melt  4>r  mi.lv-  ill  \'t^l  'Ji  lioHf. 


criiliaii  tlin*.     Air  Itrtiiu'i.'  niluci-J  lo  ha  Util.     I«»u  mt  (cootlnuou*  lincsi)  pm>s  llituu((li  |>oiiiU  <if  t<|<iiil  Air  iirc^ture.     IsoTiitHMS  {Jolfd  llnci) 
Q  ilcai,    Q  pani;  cUiuJ/;   ^  iluuJy;   R  rjiii,   S  knuw;  <M  (ipoit  mi$!>in^.     .Vrriius  fly  «iiti  (lii  wi.'M      .<lt.idctl  arcM  >hu>v  ptccipimiun 


i^ 


Sunday  and  today 
are  giving  examples 
of  the  finest  kind  of 
spring  weather,  and 
today  feels  almost 
summery.  Much  of 
this  will  put  the  Ice 
and  snow  that  re- 
mains on  the  streets 
..  and  in  sheltered 
I  places  out  of  busl- 
<  ness  before  very 
S  long,  and  the  ice  In 
»  '  the  bay  and  lake 
will  have  a  hard 
-J  time  of  It. 
The  weather  a  year  ago  today  was 
warm.  The  sun  rose  this  morning  at 
6:29  and  will  set  this  evening  at  6:l'J, 
giving  thirteen  hours  and  twenty  min- 
utes of  sunlight. 

Mr.  Richardson  makes  the  following 
comment  on  weatner  conditions: 

"Heavy     to     killing     frosts     occurred 
last  night  In  Tennesse  and  light  frosts 
at  Montgomery,  Ala.     The  temperature 
has     risen     somewhat     throughout     tht> 
upper    lake   region   and   the   Northwest. 
Precipitation    occurred   during   the    last 
twenty-four   to   forty-eight   hours   over 
New  l!:ngland  states.  New  York,  West- 
ern Moniloba,  Washington  and  Oregon. 
» 
General  Forecasts. 
Chicago,  April  10.— Forecasts  for  the 
twenty-four    hours    ending    at    7    p.    m. 
Tuesday: 

Minnesota,  Wisconsin  and  Iowa — 
Partly  cloudy  tonight  and  Tuesday; 
warmer   tonight. 

North  Dakota — Partly  cloudy  tonight 
and  Tuesday;  cooler  Tuesday  and  in 
northwest  portion  tonight;  warmer  in 
southeast  portion   tonight. 

South  Dakota — Generally  fair  tonight 
and  Tuesday;  warmer  In  east  and  cen- 
tral portions  tonight;  cooler  Tuesday. 

Montana — Partly  cloudy  In  east,  rain 
In  west  portion  tonight  and  Tuesday; 
not  much  change  In  temperature. 

Lower  Michigan — Fair  and  rising 
temperature   tonight   and   Tuesday. 

Upper  Michigan — Fair  tonight  and 
probably  Tuesday;  somewhat  warmer 
tonight. 

m  m 

TeaiperatureB. 

Following  were  the  highest  temper- 
atures   in    the    last   twenty-four    hours 


surveyors  are  surveying  the  proposed 
new  road,  which  will  run  from  Gunn 
Junction  here  through  the  SpUtphand 
country,  to  the  Twin  Cities.  G.  F. 
Van  Dusen  of  Spllthand,  who  was  in 
town  recently,  stated  that  Great 
Northern  engineers  had  been  working 
In  that  section  and  that  they  had 
made  headquarters  at  his  place  while 
working  in  that  vicinity.  He  stated 
that  they  said  that  they  were  survey- 
ing a  route   for  a   railroad   from  Gunn 

to   Minneapolis.            ,   ^        ^  ,.u    n... 

This   proposed   road  has  been  "built 
many    times    during    the    past    twenty 
years,    but    the    evidence    this    time    Is 
better  than   ever.       

ARE  MAKING  REPAIRS. 

Unit  of  Big  Virginia  Plant  Has  Been 
Temporarily  Shut  Down. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  10. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — To  admit  of  repairs, 
open  pit  of  the  Virginia  &  Rainy 
Liake  company's  sawmill  plant  here 
was  closed  down  today  for  a  period 
which  win  probably  not  extend  over  a 
week.  The  sawmill  of  the  W.  T. 
Bailey  Lumber  company  may  resume 
next  week.  Last  season  It  resumed  a 
year  ago  today.  There  Is  twelve 
Inches  of  blue  Ice  in  Virginia  lake,  on 
which  the  plant  Is  located. 

Conservative  estimates  place  the 
number  of  men  who  will  go  to  work 
on  the  range  in  the  mining  industry 
with  the  opening  of  the  pit  mines  at 
8  000.  The  Union  mine  is  the  first  In 
this  district  to  begin  loading  ore.  Cars 
were  "spotted"  for  loading  at  this 
shaft  by  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  to- 
day. 


♦  lif  A-^  ^  ^  ^  W  ^  W  ^  ^^  ^*  ^  ^  ^^  ^  ^  ^  ^  ^  *^  »^  ^  ^  .^ 

I     LOCAL  FORECAST     I 

*  •# 

#  Dnlutii,  Superior  and  Tldntty,  ^ 
ilt  Including  the  Menabn  and  Ver-  ^ 
0  mlllon  Iron  rangeii:  Partly  cloudy  ^ 
^  weather     tonight     and       Tuesday.  ^ 

Wanner  tonight.  I.<owcst  tempera-  ^ 
tnre  close  to  32  dcg.  Moderate  to  ^ 
fresh  soathwcstcrly   winds.  ^ 


and  the  lowest 

ing  at  7  a.  m.: 

Hl«h 

Abilene    70 

Alpena  40 

AtDM-lllO 

BttUeford   56 

BUmardi   56 

BoUe    68 

Bocton   38 

Buffalo 42 

Cairo    

ralgary    60 

Charleaton   M 

Cbarles   City 

Chlcaco 38 

Conrordla  

Datcnport  

Denver 64 

Deg  Moine*  &0 

Devils  Lakt 42 

Dodge  66 

Dubuque 48 

DULUTM    4« 

Kdnioriton    68 

KHranaba  40 

Fort  Smith   

Galvcstnn   56 

Grand  Haven 58 

Green  Bay 46 

Havpe  68 

Helena   60 

Houcbton  

Huron  62 

Indlanapolli   

Jarksonvllle   58 

Kamloop*  60 

Kansas  Oty  48 

Keokuk    

KnoxvlIIe  44 

La  Crosse  

Lander    

IxMlsville  46 

Mndliion  44 

Marqiiett*  46 

Medldne   Hat 64 

Memphis 52 

MIlea  City  66 

Milwaukee  42 


In  the  last  twelve.  end- 


Low 

52 
28 
42 
34 
30 
50 
34 
28 
44 
30 
38 
34 
36 
32 
36 
44 
36 
30 
36 
34 
2« 
30 
28 
42 
54 
32 
32 
40 
3« 
26 
32 
34 
42 
40 
40 
38 
30 
36 
38 
36 
30 
30 
.% 
46 
40 
32 


High  Low 

Mlnnv-'dosa .48  30 

Mod.iia    72  36 

Montgomery 54  38 

Montreal    38  30 

Moorbead 48  30 

Nashville  34 

.New  Orleans  58  48 

.New  York 42  34 

Nortii  Platte 68  32 

Oklaboma 54  42 

Omaba   52  34 

Parry  Sound  42  22 

Pboenlx   86  50 

Pierre  64  32 


Plttsburgb 


.38      30 


Port  Artbur 46  26 

Portland,  Or 60  48 

Prince   Albert 50  34 

Qu'Appelle 52  38 

Raleigh    48  34 

Rapid  City 62  44 

Ros?burgh    62  48 

Roswell 50 

8t.  Louis 50  40 

St.  Paul 46  36 

Salt  Lake  City.... 66  50 

San  Diego  64  54 

San  Francisco 62  50 

Sault  8te.  Marie.  .86  26 

SeatUe  52  46 

Sheridan    62  38 

Shreveport   58  43 

Blmix  City  52  34 

Spokane  58  46 

Springfleld.  Ill 34 

Springfield,  Mo 40 

Swift  Current 64  34 

Tampa   60  44 

Toledo  46  28 

Valentine  32 

Washington    46  36 

WlrhlU    38 

WUllston  56  42 

Wlnnemucc*    76  38 

Winnipeg  42  28 

Yellowstone  42 


to  estimate  the  benefits  which  will 
accrue  from  the  construction  of  the 
ditch.  This  ditch  has  been  In  con- 
troversy more  or  less  since  the  first 
petitions  were  presented  to  the  court, 
and  it  is  thought  this  time  that  tho 
ditch  as  now  planned  will  be  allowed 
to    go    through, 

IRON  RANGE  DOCK  6 
IS  RECONSTRUCTED 


Work  of  Placing  Steel  in 

New  Ore  Dock  No.  2 

Starts. 

Two  Harbors,  Minn.,  April  10. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  Amer- 
ican Bridge  company  has  completed 
the  reconstruction  of  Iron  Range  ore 
dock  No.  6.  The  dock  is  now^  one  of 
the  most  up-to-date  structures  of  Its 
kind  In  the  country  and  is  all  ready 
for    the    opening    of    ore    business. 

The  American  Bridge  company  has 
the  contract  for  the  steel  construc- 
tion work  on  the  new  Iron  ore  dock 
No.  2,  and  the  crew  of  steel  workers 
were  put  to  work  this  morning  on 
the  approach.  It  Is  expected  that 
Barnett    &    Record.      the      contractors 


POULTRYMEN  MEET. 

Range  Association    to    Furnish  Set- 
tings of  Eggs  to  Farm  Boys. 

Hlbblng,  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Range  Poultry 
association  lield  an  enthusiastic  meet- 
ing at  the  village  hall  Sunday  after- 
noon. 

Prof.     Otto    A.     Stangel,    director    of 
agriculture      in      the      Virginia      high 
school,    was      the      principal      speaker.  > 
County   Agricultural    Agent   Olson   also  i 
talked    briefly,    as   did    E.    L.    Delestry, 
editor    of    the    Northwest    magazine. 

It  was  decided  to  furnish  settings 
of  eggs  to  the  farm  boys  and  after 
hatchings  the  broods  will  have  to  be 
exhibited  at  the  county   poultry   show. 

Many  new  members  enrolled  from 
Hibbing,  while  a  large  attendance 
was  present  from  all  over  the  Mesaba 
range.  Virginia,  Eveleth  and  Chisholm 
sent    delegations. 

♦ 

Chisholm  Social  Affairs. 

Chisholm,  Minn.,  April  10 — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Gust  Anderson 
entertained  about  forty-five  neighbors 
and  friends  at  her  home  Saturda]^ 
evening  for  her  sister,  Mrs.  Hlnsa. 
Cards  were  the  chief  diversion  of  the 
evening,  the  first  prise  going  to  Mrs. 
Edward  Lee  and  the  second  prize  to 
Mrs.  Gust  Peterson.  Following  cards 
lunch    was    enjoyed. 

A    successful     party     was     given     by 
Mrs.    Louis    Roth   at    her    home   Thurs- 
day  evening   for  Mrs.   Morris   Peck. 
» .— 

Hlbhlng  Wrltcvp. 

Hibbing.  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  series  of  articles  on 
Hlbblng,  the  school  system,  village 
government  and  general  living  condi- 
tions will  appear  in  the  Western  maga- 
zine. 


To    Inrestlarat*   Ditch. 

Grand  Rapids,  Minn.,  April  10. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — J.  S.  Gole,  H. 
B.  Palmer  and  O.  O.  Wllcocks.  ap- 
praisers of  Judicial  Ditch  No.  2,  leave 
this  week  for  th«  Be&r  lake  country 


An  Inside  Bath 

Makes  You  Look 

and  Feel  Fresh 


Says  a   glass   of  hot  water  with 

phosphate  before  breakfast 

keeps   Illness  away. 


This    excellent,    common-sense 

health    measure    being 

adopted  by  millions. 


Physicians  the  world  over  recom- 
mend the  Inside  bath,  claiming  this  is 
of  vastly  more  importance  than  out- 
side cleanliness,  because  the  skin  pores 
do  not  absorb  impurities  into  the 
blood,  causing  111  health,  while  the 
pores  in  the  ten  yards  of  bowels  do. 

Men  and  women  are  urged  to  drink 
each  morning,  before  breakfast,  a  glass 
of  hot  water  with  a  teaspoonful  of 
limestone  phosphate  in  It.  as  a  harm- 
less means  of  helping  to  wash  from 
the  stomach,  liver,  kidneys  and  bowels 
the  previous  day's  indigestible  mate- 
rial, poisons,  sour  bile  and  toxins:  thus 
cleansing,  sweetening  and  purifying 
the  entire  alimentary  canal  before  put- 
ting more  food  Into  the  stomach. 

Just  as  soap  and  hot  water  cleanse 
and  freshen  the  skin,  so  hot  water  and 
limestone  phosphate  act  on  the  elim- 
inative  organs. 

Those  who  wake  up  with  bad  breath, 
coated  tongue,  nasty  taste  or  have  a 
dull,  aching  head,  sallow  complexion, 
acid  stomach;  others  who  are  subject 
to  bilious  attacks  or  constipation, 
should  obtain  a  quarter  pound  of  lime- 
stone phosphate  at  the  drug  store. 
This  will  cost  very  little  but  Is  suffi- 
cient to  demonstrate  the  value  of  In- 
side bathing.  Those  who  continue  It 
each  morning  are  assured  of  pro- 
nounced results,  both  In  regard  to 
health  and  appearance. — ^Advertisement 


who  are  putting  in  the  concrete  work, 
will  be  able  to  keep  far  enough  ahead 
of  the  steel  work  so  as  not  to  hinder 
the  progress  of  the  work.  It  Is  ex- 
pected that  the  dock  will  be  entirely 
completed    late    In    the    fall. 

TWO  hIrdorsIuto 

CLUB  PLANS  BANQUET 

Henry  Orme,  President  of 

State  Association,  Is 

Invited. 

Two  Harbors,  Minn.,  April  10. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Arrangements 
for  the  second  annual  banquet  of  the 
Two  Harbors  Automobile  club  are  pro- 
gressing and  the  officers  and  members 
look  forward  to  the  function  with  keen 
delight.  The  banquet  will  be  held 
Tuesday  evening,  April  25,  In  the  gym- 
nasium of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  and  will  be 
served  by  the  Ladles'  Guild  of  the  First 
Presbyterian  church. 

The  committee  In  charge.  Axel  Lyons, 
Robert  J.  Olsen,  Odric  Le  Clair.  Byron 
E.  Andrews  and  Charles  I.  Pelto,  held 
a  meeting  Friday  evening,  at  which 
time  all  the  details  were  arranged. 
Tickets  have  been  printed  and  are  now 
in  the  hands  of  the  committee  ready 
for  sale.  It  is  expected  that  there 
will  be  several  new  members  taken  In. 
Invite   State  President. 

An  invitation  has  been  sent  to  Henry 
H.  Orme  of  St.  Paul,  president  of  the 
Minnesota  State  Automobile  associa- 
tion, to  be  present,  and  the  committee 
feels  quite  sure  that  he  will  be  here. 

The  club  has  fifty-eight  members,  a 
campaign  will  be  made  for  new  mem- 
bers and  it  Is  expected  that  the  club 
will  number  100  before  the  present 
summer  Is  over.  The  club  Is  composed 
of  boosters  who  have,  since  their  or- 
ganization only  two  years  ago,  done 
much  to  better  the  conditions  for  mo- 
torists   In    Lake   county. 

The  Phalion  orchestra  of  this  city 
will  furnish  the  music  during  the  ban- 
quet. 

MOTORCYCLIST 

NOW  FACES  SUIT 


Collides  With  Rig  Near  Vir- 
ginia and  Horse  Is 
Killed. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  10. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — While  riding  a  motor- 
cycle on  the  Eveleth  road,  one  mile 
from  Virginia  yesterday,  Nick  Korese- 
vltch,  collided  with  a  horse  and  rig 
driven  by  E.  Burnham.  The  animal's 
leg  was  broken  and  It  was  later  shot. 
Koresevltch,  badly  bruised  and  shaken 
up,  was  taken  to  a  hospital.  Burnham 
and  two  young  women  In  the  rig  with 
him  were  thrown  to  the  ground  and  in- 
jured. Burnham  today  Instituted  suit 
for  $460  against  Koresevltch  to  cover 
the  death  of  the  horse  and  Injuries  to 
the  rig. 

CONCERT  a't"VIRGINIA. 

Many   Range   People   Attend    Affair 
Given  in  Socialist  Opera  House. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  10. — The  So- 
cialist opera  house  was  crowded  last 
night,  many  coming  from  other  range 
points,  for  the  concert  given  by  the 
Finnish  ladies'  choir,  "Kottaralset,"  and 
the  male  choir,  "Velkot."  and  the  Vir- 
ginia Concert  orchestra,  directed  by 
I*rof.  O.  R.  Olsen.  Prominent  range 
soloists  also  rendered  selections.  The 
program    follows: 

"War  march  of  the  Prlesto"  (Men- 
delssohn), Virginia  Concert  orchestra: 
"Ballet  Egyptlen  No.  2"  (A  Luiglnl), 
Virginia  Concert  orchestra;  "Marsel- 
jeesi"  and  "Ruusu"  (O.  Merikanto), 
Velkot;  "Slave  Song"  (Taresa  Del 
Rlego),  Miss  Inez  Davey  of  Eveleth; 
"Hardangerin  Haaretkl"  (K.  Kjerulf) 
and  "On  tyynl  nyt"  (H.  Pfell),  Kottar- 
alset; "Quartetto"  (from  Opera  Rlgo- 
letto  by  Verdi),  Inez  Davey,  Myrtle 
King,  George  Jenson  and  O.  E.  Peter- 
son, Emllle  Smith,  accompanist;  "I  Sing 
to  Thee"  (A.  Hartel)  and  "Lypsajan 
Laulu"  (E.  Slvorl),  Velkot;  "Thora" 
(Stephen  Adams),  George  Jenson; 
"Laulajan-Marssl"  (Merikanto)  and 
"Iltamlettelta"  (Von  Willebrand), 
Sekakuoro  choir;  "Laulullnnut"  (Lind- 
bald)  and  "Kyrle  at  Sea"  (John  Durr- 
ner),  Velkot;  Maoksalla  ylimmalla" 
(Llnsen),  Dr.  O.  E.  Peterson;  "Intro- 
duction to  Semiramide"  (Rossini)  and 
"Die  Felsenmuhle  Overture"  (Rels- 
siger),  violin  quartet;  "Somewhere  a 
Voice  Is  Calling"  (A.  F.  Tate),  Walter 
Gomsl;  "Kevat  Yo"  (F.  Schubert)  and 
"Yksln"  (E.  Kupelln),  Kottaralset; 
"Quartette  Serenade"  (F.  Schubert),  Dr. 
O.  B.  Peterson,  A  A.  Pesonen,  C.  A. 
Onkka,  J.  Jyhla;  "Slant  a  Pesth"  (Henri 
Kowalskl),  Virginia  Concert  orchestra; 
"Vuorella"  (F.  Abt)  and  "Laulagan  vol- 
malla"  (E.  Bjorkman). 

NEW  KNIFE  RIVER~ 

COUNCIL'S  MEETING 

Knife  River,  Minn.,  April  10.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  newly  elect- 
ed village  council  members  held  their 
first  meeting  in  the  town  hall  Satur- 
day evening.  They  fixed  the  re- 
corder's salary  at  $8  per  month.  Cal- 
vin Hayward  was  hired  as  janitor  at 
$4  per  month.  The  Jourr.al-News  of 
Two  Harbors  was  designated  as  the 
official  paper.  Two  of  the  council, 
H.  R.  Kimball  and  C.  Reynolds,  re- 
signed, to  take  place  April  16.  M.  A. 
Dimarco  was  appointed  president. 
Mert  Wilcox  and  Matt  Spellum  were 
appointed  to  fill  vacancies  caused  by 
realvnations.       Several     improvements 


RESISTANCE  TO  DISEASE 

Debility  ia  a  loss  of  vitality,  not 
affecting  any  one  part  of  the  body  par- 
ticularly but  the  system  generally.  U 
is  dangerous  because  it  reduces  tno 
body's  resistance  to  disease. 

When  debility  follows  acute  diseases, 
convalescence  is  slow  and  the  strength 
does  not  return  as  it  should.  An  at- 
tack of  the  grip  often  results  in  debility 
that  persists  for  months.  Everybody 
recognizes  that  the  remedy  for  debility 
is  to  build  up  the  blood  because  the 
blood  goes  to  every  part  of  the  body  and 
an  improvement  in  its  condition  is 
quickly  ielt  throughout  the  system. 
The  problem  in  every  case  is  to  find 
something  that  will  enrich  the  blood. 

Dr.  WUliams'  Pink  Pills  suit  most 
people's  need  because  they  are  non-al- 
coholic and  they  really  build  up  th© 
blood  and  strengthen  the  nerves.  Dr. 
Williams'  Pink  Pills  are  useful  for  grow- 
ing  children  and  for  men  and  womea 
whose  nervous  energy  has  been  over- 
drawn. Try  them  whenever  your  blood 
is  thin. 

Your  druggist  sella  Dr.  Williams' 
Pink  Pills  or  they  will  be  sent  by  mail, 
postpaid,  on  receipt  of  price,  50  cents 
per  box,  six  boxes  $2.50  by  the  Dr. 
Williams  Medicine  Co.,  Schenectady, 
N.  Y.  Write  today  for  free  booklets  oa 
the  blood  and  nerves. 

— Advertisement. 


are  contemplated  in  various  parts  of 
the  village,  among  Ihem  being  the  D. 
N.  M.  railroad  crossing  at  the  county 
road. 


TOWER  PREPARING 
FOR  OLD  SETTLERS 


Vermilion  Range  City  Get- 
ting Ready  for  Many 
Visitors. 

Tower,  Minn..  April  10. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Commercial  club 
discussed  the  question  of  having  tho 
meeting  of  the  Old   Settlers  held   hero 

this  summer,  and  decided  in  favor  of 
the  reunion  being  held.  A  similar 
meeting  was  held  at  Ely  last  year,  at 
which  time  Tower  was  selected  as  the 
next  meeting  place,  providing  suitable 
arrangements  could  be  made.  While 
hotel  accommodations  are  somewhat 
restricted,  a  canvass  of  the  town  will 
be  made  td  secure  room.s,  and  ample 
provision  can  be  made  for  meals  for 
the  guests.  Committees  were  appoint- 
ed and  the  work  of  preparing  for  the 
meeting  will  go  forward  without  de- 
lay.    A  date  has  not  yet  been  set. 

Another  Important  event  for  the 
summer  season  which  was  discussed 
was  the  entertainment  of  the  "See 
Minnesota  First"  crowd,  which  will 
spend  their  annual  outing  here  this 
year. 

Points   of  Interest. 

Jasper  peak,  the  municipal  plant  at 
the  wonderful  Pike  River  falls,  tho 
Trout  Lake  Lumber  company's  plant 
here,  as  well  as  the  big  mills  at  Win- 
ton,  and  a  trip  to  Ely's  popular  Lake 
Burntside,  and  the  Indian  village  and 
Vermilion  Lake  Indian  school,  where 
the  natives  will  demonstrate  In  cos- 
tume, and  where  the  Indians'  own 
game  of  lacrosse  will  be  shown  the 
visitors.  . 

Another  question  discussed  was  tho 
proposed  new  fish  hatchery,  which, 
because  of  some  contention  regardlngr 
the  selection  of  a  site,  has  not  been 
built.  It  Is  now  proposed  that  at  tho 
next  legislature,  the  $2,600  appropria- 
tion will  be  made  for  Tower  instead 
of  the  previously  made  description  of 
location,  which  has  Interfered  and  pro- 
hibited the  erection  on  the  sites  chosen 

and   desirable. 

• 

Knife    River    Bridge     Safe. 

Knife  River,  Minn.,  April  10.-— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— The  county  road 
bridge  over  the  Knife  river  is  now  be- 
lieved out  of  danger,  the  Ice  jam 
which  threatened  to  take  It  out,  being 
melted  by  water  running  through  the 
center.  The  stream  further  up  is  re- 
ported free  of  Ice  and  no  more  trouble 
is  expected. 


RECIPE  TO  DARKEN 
YOUR  W  HAIR 

Not  a  Trace  of  Gray  Shows 
After  Applying  to  Hair  and 
Scalp;  No  Dye;  Harmless. 


Apply  like  shampoo  to  your  hair 
and  scalp  Q-Ban  Hair  Color  Restorer. 
Do  this  every  day  for  a  week,  then 
three  times  a  week.  In  a  short  time 
all  your  gray,  faded,  prematurely  gray 
or  gray  streaked  hair  turns  an  even 
beautiful  dark  shade  with  not  even  a 
trace  of  gray  showing.  Q-Ban  makes 
scalp  and  hair  healthy,  leaving  all 
your  hair  fluffy,  soft,  thick,  clean,  free 
from  dandruff,  and  beautifully  dark 
and  lustrous.  Q-Ban  Is  not  a  dye,  Is 
harmless.  Ask  for  Q-Ban  Hair  Color 
Restorer.  It  is  ready  to  use,  needs  no 
mixing.  Only  50c  for  a  big  bottle. 
Orpheum  Pharmacy,  Duluth,  Minn. 
Out-of-town  folks  supplied  by  mail.— 
Advertisement. 


STREET  CAR  DELAYS 

The  Following  Are  the  Causes  of 
Intemmtions  In  Street  Car 
Service  on  Saturday, 
April  8, 1916. 

A  disabled  car  at  Twenty-first 
street  and  Tower  avenue  blocked 
the  Duluth-Superior  line  31  min- 
utes from  3:33  p.  m. 

Sunday,  April  9 

Power  off  in  Superior  delayed 
interstate  cars  40  minutes  from 
6:15  p.  m. 

An  eastbound  West  Duluth  and 
Aerial  bridge  car  was  delayed  13 
minutes  from  10:48  p.  m.  by  a 
pulling-in  car  derailed  at  the 
Twenty-first  avenue  west  switch. 

Complaints   and   suggestions   given 

prompt  and  courteous  attentioo* 

Telephones:    Melrose  260; 

Lincoln  66. 


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Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD 


April  10, 1916. 


17 


WHEAT  TAKES 
GOOUULGE 

Markets  Advance  on  Bullish 

Crop  News  From  Over 

Southwest. 


Flaxseed     Turns     Strong 

With  Crushers'  Buying 

and  Short  Covering. 


rlo«e 


and 
■  nd 


4.  Inst  y^ar,  12;  oats.  1,  last  joar,  9;  ry*. 
1,  iHst  year,  none:  barley.  7.  Ust  y^af, 
1;  total  of  all  ifralna.  47,  la*t  year.  SB; 

on  track,  125. 

«      •       • 
Clearance  r<H>orte«:     Wheat.  1.175.000 
bu;  flour.  32.000  bbU..  together  equal  to 
1.319.000  bu;  corn,  U.OOO  bu;  outB,  864,- 

000  bu. 

*  •       • 

Primary  market*  report  the  follow- 
ing receipts  and  shipment*  today: 

^•heati  Receipts.  1*62.000  bu  iMt 
year  501.000  bu;  shipments.  I«B.000  bu, 
last  V«'ar.   210.000   bu-  ^..,      ^  ,      . 

Corn-Receipts,  1.022.000  ^  ^u  last 
year  820.000  bu;  shipments.  646,000  bu, 
last  'year,   4BB.00O  bu. 

Oats Receipts,   898,000  bu,  last  year, 

64?  000  bu;  shipments,  70«.000  bu,  last 
year.  682,000  bu  ^ 

Duluth  bonded  rrain  receipts: 
113  cars;    oats,    2    cars;    barley, 

tot.il,  119  cars. 

*  •       • 

Cars  of  wheat  recelred:      Yes- 
terday 

THiluth    ,••••  •••••••%••••••  •* 

Mlnnenpoll*    ....• '24 

Winnipeg;    i ••  628 

Chicag'o    ,....••>••••••  170 

Kansas    City    205 


WHEAT 

HiKh. 

1.18  l.MM. 

.  ..1.17Vi-H      1.20  >/♦ 

.l.l«%-16Ti      1.18H 

...1.121*-^      1.15Vf 


AMERICAN 

May —  Open 

r>u1uth    

MIniH-apolls 
Chlcas*     . . 
Winnipeg     . 
July— 

Duluth     1.18V4 

MtaneaT»olU    ....1.17S-% 
Chlcaeo     1.14Va-13>^ 

do  V-pt.    l.lJ-11% 

Winnipeg     llSi^i-H 

do  Oct l.«9^ 


MARKETS,  APRI;L.  10. 

Low.  Close.  April    8. 

lima        l.ltSa 
1.17  l.lt^** 


1.20H 
1.80% 
1.16 
1.18% 


1.1S9S 
l.li^ 

1.17% 

1.17>4 
1.18% 

1.1  l»i 

1.11  Vfc 


1.17  \- 
1.141% 


1.19%a 
l.ig-^ias- 
1.161*-%}! 
l.lS'ia 
l.lfiV^ 


1916. 

Y'r  ago. 
^b         1.62  Tb 
ili-18     1.40^ 


l.lB%a 

<.12V4b 
•  i.M%b 

!    }.t«^a 


Open. 
May    l.llVia 


DULUTH  DURUM  MARKET^ 

Low.  Close. 

l.lOVii  1.12Hb 


High. 
1.13b 


1.14Wh 


1.11<P^ 


Wheat. 
4  cars; 


Tear 

ago. 

63 

148 

336 

26 

69 


July 
July 


at 


at 


Dnlath  Board  of  Trade.  April 
♦The  market  wan  ntrvng  at  <he 
%*l(h    aelUe   biddinnr  la   evidence 

May    **heat    cloned    TuC   up 
Ic    up. 

May    durum    elowed    ic    up 

Oatn  cloned  unoluiusted  at  4l«/i®41%« 
for   un   the   frackj   rye   uneHanged  to  le 
off    at    DSe   and    iMiriey      unckaiiged 
tT^VR.    «."te   to  Tie. 

A I     Wlnntpeg.    May    oata    closed    i 
rkanged   to    VhC   off   at   42*^4  7*  437/»c- 

.\t.    %\.    I-oulw,    May    nvhcat    closed 
91,14    iiHked    and    ealln    at    91.12    asked. 

At  Kaiiwan  City.  May  wlM'Ut  closed  at 
il.osT^  asked  and  calU  at  91.08 '/^ 
|i<>keil. 

I*uti»  o«  Minneapolis  May  wkeat 
elUKcd  at  91.17'/%   and  call»  at  91.20^m. 

Though  the  general  newsj  was  on 
the  bearish  order,  the  wheat  market 
turned  strong  today.  There  were, 
tiowever,  more  reports  of  crop  dam- 
age from  sections  of  the  winter  wheat 
territory,  and  with  advices  of  back- 
"Ward  conditions  over  the  Northwest, 
the  shortji  became  •  nervous  and  cov- 
ere<l  freely.  That  mocvement  was  also 
h-lped  along  by  reports  of  wh.^at  be- 
ing taken  at  the  seaboard  for  the 
Dutfh  government.  There  wtta  noth- 
ing, however,  doing  In  the  way  of 
brivlng  on  English  account  In  vlow  of 
JkL'inltobus  being  offered  at  around 
\\-c  und^r  Am>rloan  prlce.«». 

Aguln.^t  this  bullish  information 
t>lv»-rpool  came  l-ft  Jd  lowr>r  on  expect- 
ed htavler  Arg.-ntine  ahlpments.  and 
the  weather  reporta  from  over  tho 
KorthwfSt  were  more  encouraging.  It 
being  conaldtr^d  that  with  a  tontinu- 
anc'i  of  present  conditions  for  a  few 
days  farmers  would  be  able  to  jrot 
Into  the  fields  through  North  Dakota. 
in  South  Dakota  good  progres.-i  is  be- 
ing made  in  spring  work.  On  the 
^'hole.  however,  through  North  Da- 
kota and  Minnesota  tho  season  la  con- 
sidered to  be  about  ten  day.s  back- 
tviird,  and  exceptionally  good  weather 
■Will  be  required  to  enable  farmers  to 
cati  h  up  with  th<-ir  plowing. 

The  American  visible  wheat  «upply 
showed  a  decrease  of  only  798,000  bu 
in  the  week,  wh^ereaa  a  deorea.^e  of 
anxind  3,000.000   had  been  expected. 

While  receipts  of  wheat  at  Duluth 
were  light,  amounting  to  only  33  cars, 
th<«y  were  goo.l  at  other  points.  Min- 
tieapolla  reported  424  cara,  against  142 
last  year;  Chicago  170  cars,  against 
is  a  year  ago,  and  Winnipeg  62B  cars, 
again.st   355  a  year  ago. 

Arrivals  of  bonded  grain  were  again 
liberal,  amounting  to  119  earn.  i:ast- 
«»rn  shipments  of  bonded  grain  were 
larger  than  the  arrivals,  however, 
ehowlng  that  the  raUroada  are  in  po- 
eition  to  sup'ply  cara  more  freely. 

May  wlw^at  opened  ^ic  off  at  $118, 
d.'clined  Tsc  more  during  the  early 
trading  and  then  braced  up  under 
urgent  bidding  to  $1.19^  at  the  noon 
hour.  July  opened  i/ie  off  at  |1.18Vi. 
■w.-aked  f-j-c  more,  moved  up  to  |1.20y« 
and  later  weakened   %c. 

Durum   was   also  active   and   .strong, 
opened     V»c     off    at 


Duluth  .... 
Minneapolis 
Winnipeg    . 


•  •    •   •   • 

•  •       • 

Cars  of  linseed  received:  Yes- 
terday 

OS 

•  *      • 

At  Liverpool  spot  wheat  closed  l@2d 
lower;    corn,    unchanged. 

•  •       • 

Total  American  visible  supply- 
Wheat.  68.591.000  bu;  last  year,  38.- 
299,000  bu;  decrease,  796,000  bu;  corn, 
26.916.000  bu;  last  year.  89,461.000  bu 
decrease,  781.000  bu;  oats.  16,961 
bu;    last    year,    26.857,000    bu; 

941,000  bu. 

•  •       • 

Caah   wheat    was   In    better     demand 
on    the     DBluth     market      today.     The 
basis   was   unchanged   at    V4c    under 
9<>    over    the    May     price,     (ash    No. 


July 1.12V*a  

DULUTH  LINSEED 

Open.            High.  Low. 

May     l.lOHb         |.14  2.10 

July    2.imb         2.14%  2.11 


1.18% 


April  I. 
^    l-lJVsa 
I.IJ 


MAR 

Close. 
2.18Vt 
2.14>>tb 


\'».l2Sb 

K^T. 

Atrll   «. 
J*  2.10Via 


1.67% 
1.63% 

1.46% 

l.42<-% 

1.24 

1.10  T4 

1.60% 


Y'r  aco. 
1.68% 
1.66% 


T*r  ago. 
l.«S 

1.97% 


Year 

ago. 

12 

10 

20 


.000 
decrease. 


to 
1 


Duluth  close:  WTieat — On  track: 
1.21S;  No.  2  northern.  $1.14=»*-1.17% : 
track.   11.07  •■«, -1.12%:  Montana  No.  2 
track.    11.17%-!. 18%;    May.    $119«» 
track:     No.  1.  $1.12;  No.  2.  H-OS-l-OJ- 
$1.13%.      Linseed — On    track.    $2.18% 
bid;   July, 
track.  96c 


No.  1  hard.  $1.21% 
No.  1  northern  to 


NO.  •'l^northern,  fl. 
arrfve.  $1.18%;  No. 


18%- 

8  on 

hard,  to  arrive.  $1.17%;  Montana  No.  2,  on 

asked      July.    $119%     asked.      Durum— On 

To  arrive:     No.  1.  $1.11;  May.  IV^2%;  JulK. 

-2  14;    to    arrive.    $2.18% -2.14;    May.    $2.U% 

$2  14%    bid.     Oats—On   track,   41%-41%c;   to   arrive,   41%c.     tlye— On 

to  arrive.  96c.     Parley— On  track,  68-71c. 


EARLY  GAINS 
WIPED  OUT 

Stocks  Open  With  Materia] 

Advances  But  Soon 

Have  Drop. 


United  Fruit   

U.  S.   MlninK>>>«>* 

do.  pf  d 

Utah  Consolidated 

Victoria 

Winona    .  .'/• .'..... 
Wolverine    


147% 

72 

M 

14 

«% 

4 

68 

•  •«  •  * 


Elevator  receipts  of  domestic  grain— ^^  heat,  84.8. 7 
oats  16,649  bu.  last  year  41,933  bu;  barley,  18.421  bu. 
3.122  bu,  last  year  none,  flax,  1.760  bu.  laat  y^^ar 

Shipments  of  domestic  grain — Oats,  10.600 
bu    last  year  none. 

Elevator  receipts  of  bonded  grain — w  neat, 

9.739  bu.  last  y*"*!-  none  «.K-.of    -7  kcc 

Shipments  of  bonded  grain— T^  heat     .7.566 
laat  year  none;  barley.  6.142  bu.  last  year  none. 


bu;  la!5t  year  60.646  b«: 
last  year   2.709  bu;   r>e. 
6,873  bu. 
bu,  last  year  876  bu;  barley,  S.oll 


bu. 


36,612  bu,  last  year  644  bu;  oata, 
bu.  last  year  noqt^;  oats,  86,501 


Late  Trading  Is  Devoid  of 

Features  But  Closing 

Is  Firm. 


LilTeryool  Cirata. 

Liverpool.  April  10.— Wheat— Spot 
Manitoba.  No.  1,  ISs  7d;  No.  8,  ISs  2d; 
No.  2  red  western  winter,  11b  lid;  *»o. 
2    hard    winter   gulf,    lis    5d. 

Corn — Spot  American  mixed  new,  188 

«d. 

Flour — ^Winter  patents.  47a. 

Hops — In  London.  Pacific  coast,  £4 
lOsQ'fe   16b. 

Saath  St.  Paal  Wrwrtoek. 

South  St.  Paul.  Minn..  April  10.— Hogs 

Receipts.    14,000;    10c    to    16c    lower; 

range,    $9.00®9.30;    bulk,    $9.15® 9.26. 

Cattle— Receipts,  8,500;  killers.  16c  to 
26c  lower;  isteers.  $5.00®  9.00;  cows  and 
heifer^.  $5.00®^ 7.76;  calves.  25c  higher. 
$4.00  #8.60;  stockers  and  feeders,  ^6c 
higher.    $5-00  @  8.26.  ^       ,       ^ 

Sheep — Receipts.  250;  steady;  lambs, 
$6.50^810.26;  wethers,  $6.00® 8.60;  ewes, 
$3.50(^8.00. 


whites,   Bn«  to   fko?,    2&®26c;  nevtr   benncr;   tvoirni. 
24'&Sr. 

CiM<-«<>— Ftm:    rfcetpU.    1,4K:    stav, 
18%<§18%c;    rnrrfut    makf,    Hporttln. 
»»er«(e  n«,  17c;  WlsconalQ  twins,  frtsh. 


tield 


null  IT  v.  *• 

h,  if^-glTV- 


fiETTIIIG  READY 

FOR  CROP  MOVING 


The 
ready 


Federal 
looking 


Reserve   banks   are  ■!- 
forward     to    the    next 


New 
Tances 
tations 


York, 

over 

were 


It  is  the  aim  of 
ample  additional 
finance  the  mar- 


May. 


Grain  atocks   In 
on   April    8,    1916, 
the    week:      Wheat 
bu;   No.   1   northern 
northern,   1,784,958 


-^ 


as 

in 


6,658, 
bonded. 


and 

74.- 


moro    and    then 
opened     '^c    off 
^itC    more    and 


The     Mav     future 
»l.ll#.    sold    off    h^c 
advanced    2kiC.      July 
•t     $1.12^;,     wtakenod 
then    bulged    3c. 

Bulge  In   Flax. 

After  showing  some  hesitancy  at  the 
ytart,  the  flaxseed  market  turned 
•trong.  the  near  future  being  advanced 
f%c  from  Saturday's  closing  busts. 
♦The  strength  wa-;  attributed  to  buying 
l>y  crushers  and  somo  belated  shorts. 
Advlcs  were  received  to  the  effect 
that  shipment.""  of  Argentine  seed 
fc.tu^rht  recently  by  American  crushers 
Hiighi  be  deferred  owing  to  the  scar- 
city of  ocean  tonnage.  Receipts  of 
teed  continue  light  and  the  require- 
Jiients   of    crushers   are   broadening. 

May       flax       opened       unchanged       at 

$2.10 Vi,   eased  off   V^c   and   closed   3c   up 

at   $2.13^8.     July   opened    unchanged   at 

$2.11  V,..   sold    off    ^c   and   closed    So  up 

♦it    $2.14 «.2.  ,        ^    „ 

At  Winnipeg,  May  flax  closed  %c  up 
at    $1.90a'4. 

At  Buenos  A!rea,  flax  closed  un- 
changed at  $1.29 Vs.  and  London  un- 
changed  at    $2.39 •'S,. 


Xo.  1 
No.  2 
Ni).  2 
Ni..  4 
No.  2 
Ni),    1 


No 
»«. 
No. 
No. 
N.. 
No. 
N... 
No 
No 
No 
No 
No 
No 
No 


Caali    Sales    Monday. 

nortlifni  wheat,   1  car 

iiorflicrn  wheat,   1  car 

luirtliprn  wlieat,  1  oar 

iiorUi-rn  « ln>at.  1  car 

norlhi'rn  whfut.  1  car 

northrrn  wheat.  1  fir,   bonded 

iliinim.  part  ""ar 

diinim,  1  rar,  to  arrlw 

iliinim.  3  ran  

il.inim.   1  car   

durum,  3  car:,  

dimiTD,  1  car 

durum,  1  car 

diiniTn.  1  rar  

iniX''d  iliirum.  1  car 

inixeil  dunim,  2  ('»n 


mixed  dunuD.  1-3  caf. 
2  mlxfd  d»inim.  I  <-\t  . . 

1  mu«l  durum,  1  car.. 

2  mlxiKl  dunim.  1  car  . 

BurlTj-.   1  i*ar   

Itarlrjr,  1  car  

Barif y,    1   car   

Barley.   1  car   

OatH.   1  car.   No.  3  white... 


No 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No, 


ryi'.  part  or 
rye,   1  car. .. 
rye,  900  Iw, 
fUx,  1  car   . 
rUx,  1  ear  . 


to  arrtre.. 


■•«••••••••••• 


...$1.20i,i 
...  l.ll 
...  1.17 
...  1.10 
...  I.IIH 
...  1.124« 
...  l.lOMs 
...  1.12 
...  1.07 
...  1.06*.i 

...  i.oi 

.  • •      .oS 
83 

...  1.0« 

...  1.01 
....  l.ll 

...  1.07 
....  1.10»i 
....  I.O6V2 

...     .67i| 
,  •  •  •     ,fi6 

70 

65 

42^ 

9& 

'  *  *  *     *?? 

2.12U. 
2.12 


MARKET  GOSSIP. 


Pitluth  car  in.^pectlon:  Wheat.  No.  2 
northern.  3;  No.  3  4;  durum.  16;  mixed. 
9;    total   wheat.    33;   last   year,    63;    flax. 


durum  sold  at   *^c  under 

M  •  • 

Duluth   elevators 
showing   qhangp^a     ^ 
No.    1    hard.    174.879 
2,961,59;:    bu;   No.    2 
bu;   No.    3  northern, 
203  107    bu:    No.    4    northern.    95,094    bu; 
no    grade     9,902    bu;    western.    117    bu; 
special  bin.  2,865,664  bu;  durum, 
830     bu;     winter,     778,079     buj       ,    , 
6,354.717  bu;   total   wheat,   20.886.939  bu. 
Afloat,    768.000   bu;   grand   total    wheat, 
21,664,989    bu;    domestic    Increase.    IbV,- 
038    bu;    bonded    Incnase.     884.212    bu; 
total    increase.    493,26«    bu;    total    year 
ago,  18.881.718  bu. 

Coar.se  grains— Oats,  domestic.  690.- 
194  bu;  lncren.'«e,  16.403  bu;  bonded. 
1,459.665  bu.  decrease.  227.065  bu;  total 
oats,  2.149,869  bu.  decrease.  211,662  bu; 
rye.  domestic.  37.936  bu.  Int^rea**^-,*-^^* 
bu;  bonded.  1.068  bu;  total  rye.  39.004 
bu,  increase.  8.069;  barley,  domestic, 
970,780  bu;  Increase,  89.438  bu;  bonded, 
186.917  bu;  Increase.  18.020  bu;  total 
barley.  1,107.699  bu;  increase,  71,418 
bu;  flax^  domestic.  1.660.722  bu;  In- 
crease, 10.877  bu:  bonded,  71.199  bu;  in- 
crease. 8,828  bu;  total  flax,  l.< 31.921 
bu;  Increase.  18,700  bu. 
«      *      • 

Supplies  of  wheat  In  Duluth  and 
Minneapolis  elevators  as  o"„APVl  * 
were  33,273,000  bu,  against  22.151.000 
bu  last  year.  At  Duluth  there  was  21,- 
646,000  bu  against  13,882,000  bu  last 
year,  and  at  Minneapolis,  11,628,000  bu 
against   8,769.000   bu   last   year. 

•  •      • 

Flaxseed     suppl'ea     In      Duhith     and 
Minneapolis    elevators    as    on    April    8 
were    1,859.000    bu    against    1.041.000    bu 
last  year.     At  Duluth  there  was  1.782, 
000  bu  against  967,000  bu  last  year, 
at    Minneapolis    127,000    bu   against 
000  bu  a  year  ago. 

•  •      • 
B.   W.    Snow   of  Chicago    says:      **The 

sun.>4hlne  and  showers  that  mark  April 
weather  always  bring  stories  of  wheat 
crop  improvement,  but  the  cold  record.s 
of  crop  reporting  show  that  such  Im- 
provement Is  not  substantial.  Appar- 
ently ihey  reflect  the  mental  attituao 
of  the  reporters  rather  than  any  tangi- 
ble evidence  of  Increasing  plant  rigor, 
for  substantial  crop  improvement  after 
April  1  has  been  very  slight." 

•  •      ♦ 
World's     shipments:      Wheat,      total. 

14.734.000  bu,  last  year  11.696,000  ba; 
corn  total.  1,686.000  bu.  lust  year  2.- 
686,000  bu;  oaU*,  total,  3.011,000  bu.  last 
year  3.513.000  bu. 

•  •       • 
On     passage:      Wheat.    60,623.000    bu. 

last  year  56.784,000  bu.  Increase  2,936,- 
000  bu:  com,  9,611.000  bu,  last  year  16.- 
737.000  bu,  decrease  251.000  bu. 

•  *      • 
Russell's   New    York    wire    said:      "A 

few  exporters  reported  the  demand  ror 
wheat   quiet   this   morning.     There   was 
no    evidence   of   much   doing    in    futures 
for    foreign    account.      A    leading    cash 
wheat  merchant  says  that  Buffalo  ml  1  s 
are  now  buying  Canadian  wheat.     This 
Kraln   Is  being  brought   into  the   L  nlted 
States     after    a    payment    of    10c    a    bu 
duty,  and  It  Is  understood  that  the  pur 
chases   are   being   made  because 
superior   milling   quality    of    the 
dlan  grain.  This  authority  expects  con- 
tlnuatlon   of  this  class  of  business   for 
the  immediate  future  at  least. 

•  •      • 
C.    E.    L.ewl»   A    Co.,    had   the   follow- 

'"Mim>t?^N.  D.:  "Conditions  within  a 
radius  of  seventy-five  miles  are  about 
the  same.  There  is  plenty  of  snow,  ice 
and  water  towards  the  Canadian  line 
northwest  of  here.  Less  than  S  per 
cent  of   fall   plowing  has   been   done. 

Fargo  N.  D. :  "It  Is  still  frozen  up 
in  North  Dakota.  West  of  Valley  Citv 
very  little  plowing  was  done  last  fall. 
With  the  most  favorable  weather 
farmers  will  be  two  weeks  late  in 
getting  started  and  if  the  weather  is 
not    favorable    it   will    be    rather    aerl- 

ous." 

Orand  Forks.  N.  D.:  "The  snow  is 
mostly  gone  In  this  Immediate  vicin- 
ity. Most  of  the  fall  plowing  was 
completed  around  here,  and  with  fa- 
vorable weather  It  would  take  only 
a  short  time  before  the  farmers 
would   be   In   their   fields." 

•  •       • 
Regarding  linseed,  Broomhall  cabled 

"The  linseed  market  during  the  past 

week  has  been  rather  nervous.  Stocks 
are  light,  yet  there  has  been  some  re- 
selling owing  to  prospective  liberal 
arrivals  and  free  Plate  and  Indian  of- 
fers." 

•  *      • 

At  Minneapolis  the  cash  wheat  mar- 
ket was  firm  compared  with  futures. 
A  good  demand  was  reported  for  all 
grades.     There    was    some    buying    for 


Chicago  cash  houses  and  some  out- 
side mill  demand.  Offerings  were  not 
as  heavy  as  expected.  No.  1  hard  sold 
at  6^c  over  May;  blue  atem  No.  1 
northern  at  8c  to  4\ic  over  and  velvet 
chaff  at  1  to  2c  over.  Moderate  and 
acattcrlng  flour  sales  were  noted. 
Cieneral  market  wan  dull. 

•  •      • 
Rroomhall     cabled      from    Liverpool: 

"Wheat  was  dull  and  under  pressure 
of  lower  American  cables,  liberal 
world's  shipments  to  United  Kingdom, 
and  increasing  stocks.  Spot  was  easy 
Id  to  2d  lower.  Cargo  market  was 
easy  winters  lOVid  and  Manitobas  Is 
lower  and  the  demand  quiet.  Increas- 
ing stocks  and  liberal  floating  Quan- 
tity kci'ps  buyers  conservative.  Not- 
withstanding confirmation  of  damage 
to  winter  Hneat,  America  continues  to 
offer  freely  and  it  is  believed  that 
marketing  of  old  crop  will  continue 
liberal.  Prices  are  attractive  to 
buyers  and  continental  demand  la  In- 
creasing." 

•  •       • 

A  Buenos    Aires    cable 
estimated    production    of 
164,000.000    bu;    estimated 
export  la  only   84.000,000 

•  ♦       • 
stocks 


Buffalo    wheat 
the  week- 
Canadian, 


says    official 
corn    crop    Is 
surplus     for. 
bu. 

decrea-ied    In 
American.   1,012,000   bu;  and 

40,000    bu. 

•       •      * 

C.  E.  Lewis  &  Co..  had  the  following 
from  Chicago:  "Bad  crop  reports  out- 
weighed all  other  influences  today. 
Late  seeding.  Northwest  greenbugs  In 
Oklahoma  and  reiteration  of  damage 
from  soft  winter  states  Induced  lot  of 
local  professional  buying.  On  the  ad- 
vance, there  was  fairly  good  selling  by 
leading  commission  houses  some  of 
whom  bought.  Karlier  news  was  bear- 
ish by  comparison.  Export  demand 
was  Quiet.  A  little  business  wa«  done 
In  Manitoba  and  Gulf  v/heat." 

Corn  and  Wheat  Bulletin. 

houn  rndlnc  at  8  •.   m.«  iiaoAig, 


Prices  closed  steady  at  V««^c  net  ad- 
vance. , 

Oats  were  governed  by  the  action  of 
corn.  Reports  as  to  seeding  told  of 
good  progress. 

Lower  quotations  on  hogs  had  a 
bearish  effect  on  provisions.  Down- 
turns,  however,   were   not   radical. 

Wheat— No.  2  red.  $1.21  <f*  1.28  V4:  No. 
3  red.  $1.19  Va  ®  1-22;  No.  2  hard,  $1.17  <!i« 
©1.20;   No.   3   hard,   $1.14*i  ^1.18. 

Corn — No.  2  yellow,  79® 80c;  No.  4 
yellow.   72»,4©74Vi<;. 

Oats  —  No.  3  white,  43Vi@44'>iC; 
standard,    46V*<3  45\c- 

Hye— rio.  2,  9«@:*7c;  barley.  62©.74c; 
timothy.  $4.60 (&  8.00;  clover.  $10.00 «| 
18.60. 

Pork.  $21. SO-S  23.10;  lard,  $1142; 
ribs.    $11.87®  12.26 


Wheat—      Opeu. 
May   ....$1.15% 
July    ....  1.13% 

Corn — 
Mar  .... 
July  .... 

Oatii— 
Mij    .... 
July    .... 

Ports— 
Mv  ... 
July    ... 

Lard — 
May    ....11.42 
July    ....11.65 

Rifaa— 


'^ 
^ 


.23.15 
.22.75 


Mny 
July 


.12.17 
..12.80 


Hich. 

$l.l|Si 

.75% 

-.44%   , 

12. »•  ■ 

12.8S    ■ 


Low. 

:?§: 

.44>^ 
.43 

28.05 
K2.76 

11.37 
11.60 

12.12 
12.27 


riot». 

$1.17% 
1.15^ 


M 


%.12 
22.87 

11.45 
11.66 

12.20 
12.36 


April  10.— Material  ad- 
last  week's  closing  quo- 
registered  by  specialties 
at  today'«  oj>enintf.  Mercantile  Marines. 
Crucible  Steel.  Industrial  Alcohol  and" 
Mexican  Petroleum  soon  rising  2  points 
over  Saturday,  while  American  Zinc. 
Butte  &  Superior.  Westlnghouse.  Stude- 
baker  and  Goodrich  Improved  a  point 
or  more.  Marine  common  featured  the 
early  dealing*  with  an  Initial  sale  of 
6,000  ahares  at  22^4  to  22^4  against  last 
Saturday's  final  price  of  20%.  The 
preferred  opened  with  3,600  shares  at 
76%  to  76,  a  maximum  gain  of  2%. 
There  was  heavy  trading  also  In  other 
active  specialties. 

The  trading  of  the  first  hda*  wss 
made  up  of  the  usuAl  favorites.  Ma- 
rines leading  the  List  to  an  overwhelm- 
ing degree,  with  extensive  dealings  In 
Crucible,  International  Nickel  and 
Zinc.  The  latter  roae  1%'  to  the  new 
record  of  96 >4.  with  further  gains  In 
the  Motor  group.  Willys-Overland  ad- 
vancing 8  to  238.  United  Stat«0  Steel 
was  active  and  strong,  rising  almost 
a  point,  but  receding  later  with  other 
speculative  issues.  Rails  suffered 
from  the  usual  neglect,  except  Read- 
ing. Norfolk  &  Western  and  Rock  Isl- 
and, which  were  in  moderate  demand. 
Bonds   were  steady. 

Prices  yielded  again  In  the  early 
afternoon  on  a  reduced  volume  of  op- 
erations. Heavy  selling  of  Anglo- 
French  bonds  at  concessions  and 
weakness  of  French  exchange  fea- 
tured   the    trading   of    that   period. 

Except  for  moderate  activity  in  Al- 
cohol, Zinc  and  United  States  Smelt- 
ing, the  two  last  named  at  high  rec- 
ords the  late  trading  was  devoid 
features.     The  closing  was  firm. 


MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET. 


For  thf  twenty-four 
.Mn-il  IR: 


STATIONS— 


flUtDOf: 
weather! 


Trnperature 
High  1    Low 


•Pw- 

clpl- 
UUon 


.Pt. 


••••■•■••• 


•••••••••• 


Cloudy' 

, Clear! 

, Cleari 

dear] 

.Pt.  Cloudy  1 

i''aco-i 

Clear 

.Pt.  Cloudy, 
.Pt.  Cloudy 
.Pt.  Cloiidy 

Clear 

Clear 

Clear 

I'lcar 

Clear 


>••••••«••••* 


■••••••> 


■••«•••« 


.Pt. 


••e**»t«** 


.Ctoud>- 

(^oody 
Cloudy 


•••••••• 


^■•••■•••••* 


of   the 
Cana- 


tl.a  (raise 
Miiiii'-aptilti 
iUexandria 
C«ni|>h«U    . 

IK'Uoit    , 
tDiilutk    . 
Mniitivldeo 
tMoorhcad 
\e»   llm   .., 
Pari:  Rapids 

UOChCNtiT     . . 

tSt.  Paal  . 
trinnelMSO  , 
trorlhlutftan 
J.\lK'rdeen  . 
tHiiron  ... 
Mlll'ank  . . 
»lllrheU  . 
t Pierre 
PolloHt  ... 
Rapid  City 
Redliuld  ... 
Uloux  FalU 
Watertowu 
Yaokuin  . 
Anteula  . . , 
tRlamarrk  . 
Bottiti.'aii    ....................... 

tBowbells    Vi'-il 

tDevllj  Ute  Ooudy 

ItickiDiinn    ... 
jFrs-tnulen    . . 
t<lrafton    .... 
tiiraiid  forks 
JanieiitoWB     . . 
I,anxduii     .... 
JLarimore 
I.Ulion    .. 
Mlnot  .... 
tNspolefln 
irimliln'a 

t\VKhi)eton    

+\vlULsU)a  W.  Cloudy 

tHam     Pt.  Cloudy. 

Li'K  Istown   ' 

tMIIen  CJtr  Pt.  Cloudy 

Wibaux    •• 

tMimieilosa.  Man   Cloudy! 

+Wiiinlj)eg    Pt.  Cloudy 

tnattlfford  Pt.  Cloudyl 

tPrince  Albert   PI.  Cloudy  1 

tUii'Ai>p<-lIe  Pt.  Cloudy! 

tSwift  Cmwat   Pt.Cloudy; 

tKdmonton    Pt.  Cloudyl 


.Pt.  Cloudy 


■••••••••a 


•••••••••••• 


•■••••••••■•I 


t«»a'*e«** 


46 
44 

48 

42 
46 
46 
52 
48 
48 
44 
48 
46 
GO 
42 

62 

«4 

62 
64 
54 


56 


42 
68 


51 
40 

52 
60 


66 
68 
68 
66 
56 
48 
42 
56 
50 
52 
64 
58 


36 
30 
28 
26 
28 
24 
28 
30 
30 
30 
'^4 
30 
9B 
32 
28 

32 
30 

32 

44 
44 
80 


30 


SO 

32 


28 
24 

28 
28 


42 
40 
84 

40 

SO 
28 
34 
34 
38 
34 
80 


0 
0 
0 
0 
0 

3 

04 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 

8 

0 
.01 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
.01 
0 
0 
0 


Minneapolla.  Minn.,  April  10.— Wheat 

Higher:    after    a ;  weak    opening    the 

market  developed  strength.  May  clos- 
ing lV*c  above  Saturdays  finish  and 
July  closing  '«cjaa.  There  was  a  fair 
demand  for  corn  and.  oats. 

Wheat— ReceipU.  i24  cars,  compared 
with  148  a  yean  aeo.  May  opened 
$1.17%®1.17%:  Ji4»h.  $1.20V4:  low. 
$1.17  L  closed.  %l.iMiA.  -Ttily  opened 
il.l7H4@1.17"*;  .Wgb,  $1.20%;  low. 
$117',4-  closed,  $1,19  (91.19  ^.  Cash: 
No     1  'hard^    $l".i4lirP^.    1    ^^orthern^ 

$1.21%®  1.28%:  to  *";?,^t'„«^'i\^',^6?. 
122*<i-  No.  2  northern,  $1.18 ^  ®  1.20 "^  ; 
No,  il  'wheat.  $1.13>,8@1.17%.  Cprn.  No 
8  yellow.  74%^76%c;  oats.  No  8 
white.    42(gf«%c;    flax.    $^13 Vt,®  2.17  V4; 

?our      closed      unchangM;      ehlpmerita, 
8  80S    hhl-    barley.    85^71c;    rye,    93® 
94'c;'bran,   $18.26^19.  -^v'- 

'••  ♦       ,    T'"' 


of 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

Baportad  by  Chartea  B.  hBwn  a  Oo. 


l.<HidoB   BIoneT*  , 

London,  April  10. — Money  was  In 
good  supply  today.  Discount  rates  ] 
were  steady.  American  securities  were 
quiet,  owing  to  the  American-German 
political  tension.  Prices  clo«ed  a  shade 
below  the  best. 

m 

N«w  York  Maaey. 

New  York,  April  10.— Mercantile  paper 
3©8%  per  cent.  Sterling,  60-day  bills, 
4.7214;  demand.  4.78  7-16;  cables,  4.4  7. 
Francs,  demand,  6.0$;  cables,  6.0i. 
Marks,  demand,  72%;  cable*.  72%. 
Kronen,  demand.  12  ^;  cables,  12  T«. 
Gvillders,  demand,  4i\  ;  cables,  43.  Lire, 
demand,  6.67;  cables,  6.5«.  Rubles,  de- 
mand. 81^:  cables.  81%.  Bar  silver, 
62U:  Mexican  dollars,  48 Vi-  Govern- 
ment bonds  steady;  railroad  bonds  ir- 
regular. Time  loans  weaker;  60  days, 
2%@$  P«r  cent;  90  days,  2*4  @8:  six 
moriths;  ■3t3\i.  Call  money  steady; 
hlgh„2  per  cent;  low,  1**;  ruling  rate. 
2;  last  loan.  2;  closing  bid,  1^*;  offered 
at  a» 

(Note— The  custonary  way  of  quotlne  foreign  exchaufe 
b  ac  follows:  Sterling  quoted  at  lO  many  dollar?  to  tb« 
pound;  German  exchange  so  many  centa  to  four  mano; 
ytrnch  and  Italian  exchange  so  many  francs  or  Ure  to 
ttK  dollar,  and  Austrian,  Russian  and  Scandinavian  ex- 
cbame  quoted  so  nany  cents  to  tlw  unit  of  currency.) 

m 

Claleaga   L.lveat»ek. 

Chicago.  April  10. — Unexpectedly 
plentiful  receipts  caused  a  decided  set- 
back today  in  the  price  of  hogs.  Cat- 
tle offerings,  too,  were  overabundant 
Sheep  and  lambs  proved  scarce. 

Hogs — Receipts,  68,000;  slow,  15o 
under  Saturday's  average;  bulk.  $9.40 
@9.55;  light.  $9.20@9.65;  mixed.  $9.25 
@9.65;  heavy.  $9.10Ca'9.65;  rough.  $9.10 
®9.25;    pigs.    $7.40(&9. 

Cattle — Receipts,  20,000;  weak;  na- 
tive beef  steers,  $7.75<S'9.90;  Western 
steers.  $7.60 @  8.66;  stockers  and  feed- 
ers. $5.86® 8.86;  cows  and  heifers.  $4 
®8.90;    calves,    $5.90(^9. 

Sheep — Receipts,  13.000;  firm;  weth- 
ers, $7(9)9.26;  lambs,  $7. 60-^11.56  (quo- 
tations Include  shorn  stock). 


crop  moving  period. 
the  directors  to  have 
currency  available  to 
keting  of  the  crops. 

With  the  spring  planting  at  hand, 
the  Federal  Reserve  bank  of  Minne- 
apolis la  taking  steps  to  provide  small- 
denomination  reserve  notes  in  euf- 
ficient  volume  to  meet  the  demands  of 
crop-moving,  after  harvest  this  fall, 
according  to  the  Minneapolis  Tribune. 
A  total  of  $6,800,000  of  currency  Is  held 
at  present  by  the  bank,  with  the  pos- 
sibility that  it  will  be  kept  Intact  un- 
til fall.  An  additional  $11,000,000  of 
new  and  unissued  bills  Is  held  in 
Washington,  subject  to  call.  Crop  de- 
mands of  last  fall  necessitated  the  Is- 
sue of  approximately  $7,200,000.  part  ot 
which  is  now  coming  back  for  redemp- 
tion and  $6,000,000  more,  previously  Is- 
sued, may  be  depended  upon  to  pro- 
duce additional  redemption. 

The  present  issue  of  Federal  reserva 
currency.  Which  has  continuously  ex- 
panded since  the  founding  of  the  new 
banks,  is  $190,200,000  ,    ^ 

This  is  protected  by  the  very  high 
gold  reserve  of  $179,300,000  and  $11.- 
200,000  of  redlscounted  commercial  an4 
agricultural  paper.  The  reserve  nota 
Issue  represents  no  inflation  because 
the  gold  reserve  against  it  represent* 
withdrawals  from  circulation  for  the 
protection  of  the  outstanding  notee. 
The  possible  inflation  indloated  by  the 
element  of  redlscounted  paper,  is  in 
turn  offset  by  the  gradual  reduction  iQ 
the  volume  of  national  bank  notes  In 
circulation.  This  form  of  currency  IS 
already  being  replaced  to  some  extent 
by  Federal  reserve  notes  and  for  sev- 
eral months  has  shown  a  downward 
tendency. 


8T0CK8- 


I  High.  I  Ii»w.   I  ao 


WkMwt.      ^ 
■M ^Wheat- 


-May, 


GRAIN,  STOCKS,  COTTON, 
PROVISIONS 

204  Board  of  Trado,  Duluth 


Members  New  York  Stork  IZxeliaB«e 

aiember*  New  Vurk  Cotton  fCxclaaace 

▲ad  All  Grata  Bxckaagca. 


0<tle*a  la  Minnenpulla,  St.  Paal 
Wlnal»«s. 


A  Good  Firm  to  Ship 
Your  Grain  to 

ATWOOD- LARSON 
COMPANY,  Inc. 

Special  attention  given  to  caah 
grains.  We  give  all  shipmenta  our 
personal  attention. 

Dulatb— Minneapolis 


*— Inchw  and  hundredllw.  t— Hlgtifst  yp«wrdajr.  low- 
fst  last  nlclit.     t— Not  IncliMled  In  the  afiragfs. 

i^OTK— TlK"  aTPrag*  hlghrst  and  lowest  tempfraturea  are 
made  up  at  each  rciit<T  from  the  actual  number  of  re- 
ports recelred.  and  the  arerage  precipitations  from  the 
number  of  stations  reporting  0.10  cf  more. 

General  wmmary,  reeel»ed  Tmm  Chlraga:  The  foree  of 
the  rold  ware  In  thn  Northwest  was  hrnkt-n  Simday  Iwt 
111  the  mornlnit  temperature  eonslderaWy  he!o»  freeiing  was 
r>!iwrted  to  the  loutbnn  limit  of  Oklaltoma.  the  freeclng 
tempwratiire  line  paaslng  eastward  clone  Id  Routhern  border 
of  Ml.'sourl  and  Kentucky.  By  thla  morning  a  consld- 
erahly  moderation  in  temperature  hac  ocnirred  In  middle 
statas  and  a  marked  ride  In  ihe  West,  gradually  ap- 
proartiing  normal  rondltlniis.  Prerlpltatlon  prartlially 
t'tWle<l  Sunday  morning  exnpt  ter)-  small  amounts  In  Ohio 
a  few  other  Isolated  IneaUom.  amounte.  up  to  Run- 
morning  greatest  In  Ohio,  .12  to  .60  and  .06  to 
inch  In  Kentueky,  rather  small  amounts  In  Eastern 
Southern  Indiana,  Southern  Illinois  and  Sauthem 
Central  MiswMiTi,  unimportant  elsewhere. 

H.  W.   IUCHAJ«I>S0.N.  Loeal  Foreca.ster. 


Ne^  Ta*-U 

New    York.   'Aprils 
$1.25;   July.    $1.16 1>> 

New  l*ark  Ootion. 

New  York.  A1»rll  Ift.-^Oottoij   '"tiire. 

closed  steAdTfi  Ma>qiUs«ft:  JM'/'  }fl®.^ 
October,  12.21;  l>fecetBber,  12.3&;  Janu- 
ary. 12.4$. 

IS  FLAX  DUE 
FOR  ADVANCE? 

Short    Interest  May  Grab 
What  They  Can  at  Pre- 
vailing Prices. 

The  flax  market  suffered  another 
aevere  decline  during  the  past  week, 
due  to  more  holders  of  the  seed  get- 
ting weary  or  apprehensive  and  let- 
ting go  of  their  holdings,  and  also, 
it  is  believed,  due,  largely  to  the  fact 
that  a  good  many  traders  and  specu- 
lators believed  that  the  seed  would 
go  to  $2  or  below  and  sold  short  with 

that    in    view.  ^  .        .  w 

Howevt'r,  th«  j|Hipre«»ion  has  beejt 
created  that  the  market  Is  oversold, 
and  that  a  short  "^  interest  is  already 
forming.  In  that  cose  It  Is  not  un- 
likely that  in  «'  short  time,  perhaps 
after  another  decHn#.  the  market  will 
have  an  advanc*=  fuj}y  as  sensational 
as    its   recession    ha«  %een 

The   closing  pric^»  foi*   the    past   six 
trading  days,  compared  with  the  same 
period   a  year   ag^.  •Were: 
chaelns. 


..    com 

pfd! 
Ore. 


Cash. 


-1916- 


-1915- 


aiid 
day 
.38 
and 
and 


CHICAGO  MARKET. 


Chicago,  April  10. — Wheat  prices 
made  some  show  of  strength  today, 
influenced  by  predictions  of  continued 
demand  from  continental  European 
countries,  where  reserves  were  said  to 
be  light  and  where  hopes  of  prompt 
shipments  from  Argentina  and  Aus- 
tralia have  been  disappointed.  The 
market  was  also  bullishly  affected  by 
statements  that  the  records  of  the 
last  twenty-five  years  indicate  the 
chance  after  April  1  for  a  substantial 
improvement  in  the  winter  cr^op  is  very 
slight.  After  opening 
1,4(6 'kc    up.    with    May 


Mtmdar    . 

Tuesday 

Wednesday 

Thursday 

Kridaj-    .. 

Saturday 


Monday  . . 
Tuesday  .. 
Wednesday 
Thursday  , 
Krliiay  . , 
Saturday 


Airiw 


.$2.18^-19^4  W-}i 


J. 081^.-09 

2.09V" 

2.10^ 


an 


Cash.        ArrlTe. 

i-19%  $1.94H  llM'/2 
1.93       1.93 
1.91        1.91 

1.92V4  1.92Vi 
I.93C  1.93% 
1.9i<Z    1.92^ 

$2.19%    $2.1914 

2.16         2.16 

^yf  ♦•' Vmu.     ^-^^ 

«iJI.'J. .......   S-^Jr 

a^^^ 

_19isi 


Am.  Tel.  &  Tel 

Am.    Can.,    com...... 

Am.  Beet  Sugar  .... 

Am.    Hide  &  leather 

do,  pfd 

Am.  Ice  Sec.  Co 

Am.   Locomotive    . . . 

do.   pfd 

Am.    L>in..    com 

Am.  Lin.,  pfd 

Am.  Steel  Foundries 

Am.    Smelting    

Alaska  Gold  Mines  Co. 
AIII3    Chalmer-s,    com., 
Am.    Tobacco    Co.... 
Am.    Woolen,    com... 
Anaconda    Copper    . . 

Atchison     

BaJd.    Loc 

B.  &  O.,  com • 

B.  &  O.,  pf4 

B.  R.  T 

Bethlehem  Steel,  com 

Butte  &  Supr 

Cal.   Petroleum,   com. 

Ches.  &  Ohio 

Chino  Copper  Co 

Chi.  Grt.  West.,  com. 

Chi..  Mil.  &  St.  P 

Col.  Fuel  &  Iron 

Con.    Gas    

Corn    Prod.    Co 

Crucible    Steel,    com. 

Distillers    Sec 

Elf  IQ      ••■>•••■•••••••« 

B.F.GooJrIch    Co 
General   Electric 
Great   Northern, 
Great    Northern 
Gug.    Explor.    Co 

Illinois  Central  . 

Inspir.  Cop.  Co. 

K.  C.  Southern.. 

Kenn.    Copper     

Lackawanna   Steel   .... 

Mont.    Power  &   Light. 

Maxwell    Motor    

do   let  pfd    

do    2nd    pfd.. 

Mex.  Petroleum 

Miami    Copper    . 

M.    &   St.   L.    Ry. 

Nor.   Pacific,   xd 

National   Lead    . 

Nev.    Copper    Co.... 

Norfolk    &    Western 

N.    Y.    Airbrake    . .  . 

N.    Y.    Central    

N.   Y..  N.   H.   &  N.  H 

Pennsylvania    R.    R. 

People's    Qas    

Pits.     Coal.     pfd.     . . 

Pullman    

Ray    Copper    ....... 

Reading    

Republic    Steel 

Rock   Island    . . . 

Southern  Pacific 

Southern  Railway  .... 

Studebaker.  com 

Shattuck    

Tenn.  Copper  Co 

Texas   Oil  Co 

Union  Pacific 

"U.  S.  Rubber 

U.   S.   Inds.   Alcohol  Co 

U.  S.   Steel    

do  pfd    

Utah   Copper    

W'house   Elc.    Mfg.    Co. 

Wept.  Maryland   . . 

Willys  Motor    


61% 

72% 


78% 


102% 

20% 


87% 
103Mi 
107% 


479% 
97 


60% 
72Vi 


77 


102 
19% 

»■•••♦ 

««% 

103  »4 
106% 


461 

95 'A 


66% 


46% 


98% 

86% 

80 

126% 

43% 


47 
26 

67% 


Co. 


1% 


•  ••••• 


64% 


44 


92% 

36% 

78% 

■    •   •   •   • 

120% 
43  >4 


46% 

26% 
57% 


76% 


111% 
38% 


67% 
18 
122% 


103% 


241; 

86% 

'19% 
98 

•   •    •    a    • 

144 

35 
62% 


78% 


110% 
38% 


67 
17% 
122 


103 


•   •  •   • 


23% 
84% 

'18% 

97% 

142"  ' 
34% 

62% 


133%;i34% 


•    •    •   •  • 

165 

162% 

1  86% 

84% 

[117% 

117% 

!   82% 

8  2 1/4 

1   65 

64% 

1   33 

32% 

1288 

235 

128% 
€1% 
72% 
10 
62% 
28% 
77% 
102% 
24 
4« 
97% 
102% 
2«% 
29% 
197 
€♦ 
t7% 
108 1'j 
107  »A 
87 

76% 
86% 
479% 
97 

23% 
62% 
65 
12% 
94% 
44% 
134 

20% 
92% 

48 

86% 

79% 
167 
120% 

43% 

22% 
102% 

46% 

25% 

67% 

77 

79% 

73% 

86% 

67 
110% 

88% 

7 

112% 

67% 

18 
122 
145 
103 

63 

57 
104 
103 
163 

24%. 

85% 

51% 

19% 
I   98 

20% 
142 

34% 

52% 
199 
183% 

63% 

163% 

86 

117% 
82% 
65 
32% 

285 


GOOD  BULGES 

IN  ZING  STOCKS 


GIVEN  $5,0(10  FOR 
HER  WOUNDED  HEART 


Grand  Rapids,  Minn.,  April  10.— 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — A  district 
court  jury  today  returned  a  verdict  for 
$5,000  in  the  breach  of  promise  case 
of   Theresa    Michelettl    vs.    Santi    Siaf- 

finl. 

» 

Conference    Brief. 

Washington.  April  10. — Secretary 
Lansing's  conference  with  Ambassador 
Bernstorff  was  brief.  He  told  him  he 
had  no  definite  information  on  which 
he  was  prepared  to  discuss  the  case 
at  this  time  so  the  ambassador  will 
come  to  the  state  department  at  a 
later  time. 


75.  North 
Shannon    76 
Osceola  25  cents 


■■•aaaaaaaess****** 


••••••••a 


•  «tf'r%«aaa«« 


2.09' 
2.1 


11% 


%®%c    off 
at     $1.16% 


to 
to 


PAINE,  WEBBER  &  CO. 

MEMBERS   NEW   YORK  AND  BOSTON  STOCK 
EXCHANGES.    CHICAQO    BOARD    OF    TRADa 

HIGH-GRADE  INVESTMENTS 

Corrv«p«Bdcac«   lavttcA 


nEE&  IIITGHELL  00. 


MINNEAPOUS 


URAIN 

DULUTH 


ERCHANTS 

-      WINNIPEG 


$1.16%  and  July  at  $113%  to  $1.14% 
prices  scored  a  moderate  general  ad- 
vsnce. 

Many  bad  crop  reports.  Including 
word  of  the  presence  of  green  bugs  in 
Oklahoma  and  of  hessian  fly  in  Kansas 
tended  later  to  bring  about  decided  up- 
turns In  value.  A  feature  was  the  buy- 
ing of  May  options  here  to  remove 
hedges  against  sales  of  Canadian  wheat 
to  Buffalo  millers.  The  close  was  un- 
settled. %»l%c  net  higher,  with  May 
at  $1.17%®1.17%  and  July  at  $1.16%(3 

Corn  developed  weakness.  The  mar- 
ket lacked  support.  Opening  prices, 
which  ranged  from  %®%  to  %c  lower, 
were  followed  by  further  declines,  but 

then   a   rally.      ,       ,        ^    ^     ^^  v 

The  market  hardened  further  when 
wheat   gave   signs    of   decided   strength. 


I.  M.  POWER 

BROKER 

STOCKS  AND  BONDS. 
Raam    "B,»    PlaAeialx    Bl*ek. 

Write  for  Reliable  Mining  Informa- 
tion  on  All   Stocks. 
Melr«««   14M.  Ormnd   148S. 


May.  iuly. 

Monday    ....»s .-. .f .'i.$1.95Vi  W-W 

Tuesday    1.94  1.97% 

Wednesday .s.  1.92  l.» 

Thursday    1.93%  1.%% 

Friday      1.94%  1.9.% 

Receipts  and  shipments 


Sept. 

$2.00 
1.98% 
1.96 

1.97% 

98% 


97% 


for  the  past 
aix  trading  days,  compared  with  the 
corresponding   period    last    year,    were: 

Daavestlc* 


Berelpt-i. 


■•vaaaaa 


1916. 
772 


••••••asaaaaaaaaaa 


Monday 

Wedne<idair"mili^^iiii^i)*^....  597 

Thursday ••••• 

Friday     / 'Jt? 

Saturday 874 


Totali    ... 
Week  a|0 


9.389 
6,133 


1915. 

8.221 
20.008 
17.401 
18.321 
11,R22 

8,121 

8.3.  S94 
67.642 


Shlp- 

ment4. 

1916. 


BOSTON  COPPER  STOCKS. 

Baportad  t«   Falua.   Wahbar  A   Coi 


STOCKS— 


]     Bid.   I  Asked. 


'  •,•  •  •  •  1 


60 


Boaded. 


— teeelpta.— 


Tueaday    .. 
WaontaMy 
Friday     . . , 
Saturday 


i.............*^.^.  .....^ 

.V........ 

I v<iii;...^.«. 


1916. 
615 

s.ieo 

4.648 


1915. 
l.OOO 

"960 
1.262 


ToUU •»»•••» 'fS? 

Week     SCO 1.264 

Cars     of     flax     reoel\"ed     at    Duluth. 
Minneapolis   and    Winnipeg  during   the 
past    week,    compart    with    the    cor- 
responding weekdaiA  year,  were: 
n  U.  1916 

Pnlnth    ,-..?i..i i* 

MInneapolU    .......... '•.V.  .».....«..>...  12J 

Wlnnlpef  li.^A... 103 

Total!    MCH* -44 

Flax  In  store  and  ^feally  changes 

Dodwitle.' '<'hange.  Bonded.  ClianB 


8.222 
4,393 


1915 

73 

52 

117 

l42 


Mood.7  J'^S2L  

Tuesday    r£?S*.  m'AAA 

Wednetdar    ....!,«« JDJtJ-n.OOO 

Thursday    l,fiBl,0B8      

Friday    l'!S^  !I'2!S 

Saturday    1.6»k004    n.OOO 


*— IncrvaM. 


68.000 
64.000 
67,000 
CT.OOO 
72.000 
72.000 


•4.000 
♦1.000 
•3.000 


iO'l    •i 


........... 


Alaska 

Adventure 

Ahmeek 

Allouez    

American   Zinc    

Arcadian 

Arizona  Commercial 
Butte   &    Ballaklava. 
Butte    &    Superior.  . . 
Calumet  &  Arizona.. 
Calumet     &     Hecla.. 

Centennial     

Chino     

Coj)per    Range    

Daly   West 

East   Butte    

Franklin     

Goldfleld    Cons    , 

Granby     

Greene-Cananea 

Hancock   Con.    . , 

Inspiration   ..    .. 

Indiana    .....    . . 

Isle    Royale 

Keweenaw   . . 

Lake    Copper 

Mas.s.    ('on.    . . 

Mayflower    . . 

Miami  Copper 

Michigan    

Mohawk    

Nevada  Consolidated 

Noi^h    Lake    

Nipissing     

North   Butte 

OJlbway     

Old  Colony 

Old    Dominion    ...... 

O.sceola    • 

Quincy     

Ray  Consolidated  . . . 

Santa    Fe    

Shannon     

South   Lake    

Shattuck     

Shoe   Machinery    .... 

Superior    Boston     . . . 

Superior  Copper    . . . . 

Tamarack     

Trinity     

Tuolumno     •  • 


...... 


20% 
4% 
100 
70 
97% 

8 
;  16-16 

8% 
96% 
78% 
550 
17% 
55 
66% 

8% 
12% 

9 
80c 
89% 
48% 
16% 
46% 

4% 
28 

6% 
17% 
18% 

3% 
88% 

3% 
99% 
17% 

1% 

7% 
29 

2% 

8% 
69 

93% 
94% 
28% 

2% 

9% 

8% 
84% 

",t 

16% 
88 
8% 
S2c 


20% 
4% 
101 
71 

97% 
8% 
9 

8% 
97 
74% 
666 
17% 
66% 
65% 
3% 
13 

9% 
85c 
90 
49% 
16% 
47 
6 
28% 
«% 
18 
14 
4 
38% 
3% 
100% 
18 
1% 
7% 
29% 
2% 
8% 
69% 
94% 
96 
24% 

8 
10 

8% 
86 
67% 

4 
17 
64 

9 
Kc 


Operations  In  mining  stocks  at  Bos- 
ton today  were  confined  to  a  compara- 
tively few  Issues.  The  zinc  stocks  were 
the  features,  absorbing  a  large  propor- 
tion of  the  trading.  Butte  &  Superior 
sold  $2.63  up  at  $96  87  and  American 
Zinc  |2;8.8  up  at  $96.87.  Heavy  copper 
sales  were  reported  during  the  day. 

Calumet    &    Arizona  aold   $1    around 
the.  close   at  t74.  Copper   Range     $1.26 
up'  at   J65.75.   Green^-Cananea   M   cents 
off  at  $48.60,  Lake  25  cents  Up  at  $17.76, 
Keweenaw  k  shade   up  at  $^ 
Butte   60    cenxs   up   at   $29 
cents  up  at  $9.75  and 
up  at  $94.50. 

■^^erd^  '  fextension  wa«  '  strong  and 
active  In  the  Boston  curb  li.st  today, 
selling  up  $2.62  to  $27.12.  New  Cor- 
nelia advanced  $2  to  $16.60. 

•      •       • 

Net  earning."!   of   the   American   Zinc. 

Lead  &  Smelting  company  in  the  first 

quarter    of    1916    made    a    high    record 

for    any    three    months'    period    in    the 

company's     history.       In     the     quarter 

ended   Dec.   30.   last,   net   was    $2,339,619 

aTtd  In  the  three  months  ending  March 

31    Jt    hAS    been    about    $2.60Q,000.      In 

the  first  quarter  of  1915  It  was  $320,- 

251.     It  Is  estimated  that  the  first  six 

months    of    1916    will    show    f6.000,0  0 

net       This    would    be    about    $1,000,000 

more     than     in     the     last    six     months 

of  1916. 

a       a       • 

Paine,  Webber  &  Co.  had  the  follow- 
ing from  New  York:  "The  largest  do- 
mestic buying  of  copper  that  has  ever 
taken  place  in  this  country  was  done 
this  morning.  Sale.s  have  been  made 
running  from  July  to  the  end  of  the 
year  It  is  hard  to  estimate  In  pounds 
just  what  this  amount  Is.  Copper  is 
now  quoted  at  28c  for  any  month  this 
year." 

A  Boston  wire  said:  "We  understand 
another  big  copper  «alf  J^'^^.^^X^^ 
closed  The  amount  Involved  Is  60,000,- 
000  to  100.000.000  pounds.  Several 
large  producers  affiliated  with  Ana- 
conda and  Amertcan  Smelting  &  Refin- 
ing  company   participated. 

•  •      • 

London  metal  markeU:  Spot,  copper. 
up  10s:  futures  up  £1  lOs;  electrolytic 
unchanged:  lead  spot  up  lOs;  futures 
up  10s;  spelter,  spot  up  £3;  futures  up 

£3   for   both. 

•  •      * 

Clo.sing  quotations  of  Boston  curb 
stocks,  as  reported  by  Paine  Webber 
^    (jff  .  Bid.  Asked. 

Butte  '&    Zenith     '   *-2?     *";; 

Boston    &    Montana    .71  •* 

Bingham     Mines     12-75       13.00 

Butte    &    London     90  -^^ 

Big     Ledge     1««  2.00 

Bohemia     2.87  8.00 

Calumet    &    Montana .65  -.0 

Coppermines     ••■••••: 2.00         j.ii 

Carnegie    Lead    &    Zinc.      4.60  4.75 

Chief     1«3  ^'l 

Calumet    &    Corbin    -05%        .06 

Cactas    Cons Aln         

Denn     ?'5, 

Davis     Daly     I" 

Hotan    Copper    2-6" 

First     National     »•«« 

Iron    Blossom     2.-25 

Green     Monster     «1-,X 

Interstate-Callahan       ....   28.60 

Jerome    Verde     2.00 

Keating     ■• 

Marsh     |5 

Mother    Lode     -37 

New     Baltic      2.76 

New     Cornelia     *?  r  ° 


ftydi' 


Real  Estate  Transfers. 

Gtwtaf  Jarobson  et  ux  to  John  \.  Johiison.  lota 
5.  6,  blk.  5.  Spirit  Like  addition 

Ina  FranUl  to  Annie  KranUl.  »<•%  of  ne%. 
geftion  17,  57-18 •■•  •  •••••• 

Joseph  0.  Brink  et  ui  to  tleorge  H.  El)ert. 
midlTlded  V4  Intereat  in  lots  1,  6,  e%  of 
nei^    section  20,   58  12 

Carl  Ruhnke  rt  ui  to  Tiara  W.  Ou.  P»rt  lfl*a 
49  51  blk.  83.  Duluth  Proper.  Third  dl\islon, 
lot  51,  Ka»t  Birth  itreet,  Uululh  Proper.  First 

diTlidon    •.••••■ :;  •.i"i 

John    TruiBble    t«    James    I<     Doraey,    undlrided 

lots  8,  9,  B%  Of  81V4,  Bcrtiou  13,  6:i-14. 

M     Hon  rt  ux  to  Jennie  B    Piiither.   lot 

2.  l>li«.  4.  Woodland  parli.  First  dliision. ... 
Kta  Woolfan  et  al  to  John  l)f;»n«T,   loU  7.  8, 

blk    11,  MUsabe  addition  to  Hlbhint 

And^■w     Btrg<juUt     et     al     to     Peter     MoHoch. 

.southerly    35    ft.    lot    a52,    blk.    'M.    l»uluth 

Praper,   fieeond  dlvlitlon 

N>I«  Almi'iist  et  ux  to  Mary  K.  Harris,  lot  12. 
■  n-irttierly  2  ft.  lot  13.  blk.  132.  West  UuluUi. 

nnu  m-.i»ion  • 

Charles  Anderson  et  ux  Hi  William  Nwrtstrom. 
easterly  >«  lot  330,  blk.  166.  Duluth  Proper, 
Second  division • 

Alljert  .S  Chase  et  ux  to  Ranald  M.  Hunter, 
lot^  In  Oras^y  Pwlnt  a.1dltlon.  Hunter*  OraMy 
Point  addition.  Second  di»ision,  Hunt«fr'» 
Crusy  Point  addition.  Third  division  and 
Cjirlton  Place  addition • . 

Frank  Treder  et  ux  to  Loon  Treder.  sV*  « 
n>^  of  se>^,  s»rti<jn  29,  52-14 

Park  Realty  company  to  Alfred  8.  John;.in. 
part  lot  220.   St.   Louis  avenue,   Vpp-r  Duluth 

W  8  Moore  et  ux  to  James  A.  Went  worth  et 
'«l,'loU  «,  7,   blk.  49,  Oary,  Finrt  *»l.sion.. 

Joseph  OrovB  to  M.  G.  Wis-ted,  lots  31,  32.  blk. 
6    Cijlman*  Tiiird  addition 

Matilda  A  Wif:l*ud  et  mar  to  !..  Sedlarhek  et 
al    lot  17.  blk.  13,  Opsrent  Vn-w  park 

Sterling  I.snd  company  to  Baldwin  Brown  et  ui, 
lot  5.   blk    %.  Highland  park   addition 

Dirkemi'an  Investment  company  to  C.  Chestock. 
lot  7.  west  Vi  lot  6.  bU.  2.  Diekerman'l 
dlTLsl')0    • .•  •  •  V  •  •  •,:  • 

Ernest   U   Crmiiie   to   H.    E.    Palm,    lot  6.    blk. 

11.  Gary,  first  dirlsian 

Head  of  the  Lake.n  Farm  Land  company  10  Conrad 

W     Swanwn.    lots  44.    46.    blk.    17.    Superior 

Vl.w  addiUon.  Second  division 

Curry   &   Whyte  company   to  Nels   Almnulst   lot 

12.  northerly   2   ft.    lot   13.    blk.    132.    West 
Doliith.  Fifth  division 

Victoria  L  Bdthke  et  mar  to  Andrew  Berg.julst 
et  al.  northTly  40  ft.  (southerly  105  ft.  lot 
10.  blk,  101,  Endloii  dlrlslon 

Same  ta  Rame,  west^ly  2  ft.  southerly  65  ft. 
lot  9,  blk.  101,  Eodlon  division 


1 

1 


875 

-     1 

1 

100 

2.900 


900 

1 
200 
600 
1 
1 
1 
1 

1 
1 

125 


1 
1 


2.00 

2.76 

6.12 

2.88 

6.50 

24.60 

2.06 

.85 

.30 

.89 

3.00 

16.50 


Oneco 

Stewart      

Success       • 

Sierra     

San     Antonio     

Tonopah      

Tonopah     Belmont 
Verde   Extension    . . 
Tonopah    Extension 
Warren    Dev      


6.25 

4.50 

27.12 

5.76 


MARSH 

VVe  have  frequently  pointed 
out  that  Marsh  in  Its  p^)>Uion  to- 
day ts  a|>parently  in  the  r.june  po- 
sition that  the  H«»rla  mine  was 
hi  190S.  ju.st  before  the  Heela 
entered  upon  lu^  period  of  pro- 
dnctlou  and  earnings.  Sliu^  this 
time,  the  Het-Ia  has  not  missed 
a  «.liiffle  monthly  tiividend  and 
ha.s  iMild  a  total  of  $3.tt.*  per 
share,  and  It.s  stoek  !.«;  Knlay  s«'ll- 
iiiff  at  $4.50.  It  will  not  Ik*  at  all 
siurprlsing  to  so>e  Marsh  plaeed 
on  a  firm  dividend  basU  in  the 
near  future,  and  It  is  entirely 
pos^iihle  f<»r  the  pro|>eTty  to 
equal  the  reeord  of  the  Ilecla.  to 
which  property  It  has  just  been 
compa-n^d. 

Tl»e>  slofk  Is  in  ffreat  demand 
arownd  its  present  level  of  .tOe 
and  S4c,  and  from  this  piont  we 
expect  to  see  Its  advaiiee  -both 
raitld  and  extensive.  We  recom- 
mend the  immediate  purcl»&.se  of 
this  stock. 

MEGSON  INVESTMENT  CO 

SOS  Pallailio  Rulldlnff.  Duluth. 
Phones — Grand  958;  Mel.  625. 
Correspondence  Invited. 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 

ChicMKO.  ^^      ^ 

Chicago,  April  10.— Butter— Steady; 
receipts.  8.451  tubs;  creameo'  extras 
38c;  extra  firats,  84%c;  firsts,  83 Ms® 
34c;    second.^.    31®  33c.  ... 

Cheese — Steady;  winter  made,  daisies, 
17\4@17%c:  twins,  leVs  @  16  %.c;  Amer- 
ica., 16%®16ii4c;  horns.  16V@16V4c, 
fall  made,  daisies,  17H@l<^c;  twins, 
17%@17?4c;  Americas,  18 Vz®  19c;  horns, 

18%(ffl9c.  

Eggs — Hljfher:  receipt*.  81.118  cases; 
firsts  20 '^^  21c;  ordinary  firsts.  19 V4 
(S/20c:    at  'mark,    cases    Included,    19© 

20He.  .    , 

Potatoes — Higher;  receipts.  16  cars; 
Michigan.  Wisconsin,  Minnesota  and 
Dakota  white.  85®aSc;  Minneeota  and 
Dakota  Ohios,  76  #  83c. 

Poultry — Alive,  steady;  fowls,  19c; 
springs,    19c. 

fit^vw  York.  _ 

New  York.  April  10.— Butter— Firmer;  reeelpU.  *.3b7; 
ereamery  eitraa.  92  awe  S*"^:  ereamery  hi«h^  tieorln*. 
37(&37»^<-;  firsts.  Si'^iSS^V  iw*onds,  Zi^/qSiy^c 

UttR-'Klnn;  rewipU.  35^932:  fresh  «*tj'^  "^f"- 
23'iifi24c:  repiJar  packed,  extra  Ursta.  22%i'S23c:  d« 
ti^T  2V^&22^f;  aerooda.  30^® 21c;  aearhjr  hennery 


WANTED! 

500  MUTUAL  IRON 
-TOP  PRICES. 

FOR  SALE- 1,000  CUYUNA 
SULTANA-A  BARGAIN 

Both  Phones  2098. 
Room  F,  Palladlo  Building. 


rHB     ODD     I>OT     REVIK1B*'— 

newa  and  comment  on  Odd 
f.ots  of  New  York  Stock  Ex- 
change securities.  Issued 
8»reekly.  flOO  a  year.  Send  for 
lample  copies,  ei  Broadway, 
«Jew  York  City. 


/ 


— I- 


Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


April  10, 1916. 


t      HOOPES-KOHAGEN  CO., 


INSL'KANCE    AOENCY. 
Room    209,    PIrMt    !S'atlonnl    Bank    Bids. 


Arcl(Vnt    aod    hftlU) 110.467.06 


Tottlt    $10,467.06 


I  4.996  K) 
14.996.83 


NOHnUlI    IMOX    FIRE   IXSURANCE 
SOCIKTV,   I.TD. 

rrln-lpsl  nffire  In  th»  Inllfd  8t*t?s.  Nfw  York.  Com- 
Wiiml  llll^lness  In  the  I'Diled  .St»t<^  1877.  nm.  nU* 
and  J,  .M.  H«re,  gmtrnl  mmiiigcr  In  the  VnlUd  States. 
Atturney  ic  aritpt  snlre  In  Minnesota:  CommlSbiontT  of 
illiuranrp. 

IiKPOSIT  ( AriT.M,,   $200,000.00. 
INCO.MK   IN   1915. 

frrmtiiins  ot.'iir  than  p?n)«'tuals |    1,900. n00..?2 

Prnta  and   IntpriNti 110,124.93 

BrortviU  from  homH  otflrr 56,283.31 

Groiu   pruilt  on   sair,    maturity   or   adiu<>t- 

BPbt  of  kdjer  liS'ts 968.62 

18 

88 

B.260,552.06 


Trtsl  Inroni*   $    2,076,3i( 

liMlgir    aisils    Itcnnntx-r   31st   of   pruloua 
,?ar   3,184.174 

■ttm  * 

i>isbikskmi;nts  in  I9i5. 

Sft  an-.oiint  puld  for  Iws  ' S  1,065, fjfiO.Ce 

xp-nst-^i  of  adjastmriit  of  losses /C,2(»1.3J 

Cnun-'is.'.luiiii  and   lirokeragc 359.24i.42 

Balartrs.    ff<^ii    and   allowances   of   ofnars, 

agtnis  and  •mployt's 230,418.59 

Taxi-s,  fet-s,  rints.  rral  estate  eipcn*.  Are 

patrol,    etc    ?S?'i!)c 

R<  tiirwd  to  hiinu'  offlpi- 17j.648. 

GfUNs    U»-^   on     all',    maturity   or   adlast- 

im-nt  of  It'dg  r  as.s  !■; 1.490. 

AU  otlitr  Uishtirs.mrnts 101,103. 


8tat«  of  Minnesota,  Department  of  Insuranre. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  SlatenKnt  of  the 
Federal  Casualty  company,  for  the  year  ending  l>e- 
Ktabrr  Zlit,  1915,  of  whl  h  the  abo»e  la  an  abrtrart, 
has  been  reeelvcd  and  filed  In  this  department  and  duly 
approved  by  me.  8.   U.   WOKKH. 

romml&slooer   of  Initurance. 

BAXKRRS'      ACCIDENT      INSURANCE 
COMPANY. 

rrlnrlpal  office:  Uei  Moines.  Iowa.  Organist  In 
1893.  K.  L.  Miner,  president;  J.  A.  Klzrr.  secrrtarj. 
Attorney  to  accept  serrlce  In  Mlni»eiota:  Commlsaloner 
of  Inaurancr. 

CASU   C.\PITAL,   $100,000.00. 
INCOMI^   l.\    1915. 

Prtmlumj  received   (Net)— 

A.-cldent     $360,229.30,       „,„  ^  ,„ 

Total   net  premium  Income |       350.J29.30 

Policy   fees    15.690.00 

From  Interekt  and  rents 8.492.06 

Krom   all   other  sources 128.10 


All    other    llaWlltle* 4,500.00 

Capital  (lock  paid  up 100,000.(K) 

Total  Uabllltlei,  Ivludlng  raplt4] f       228.636  66 

Surplus  orer  all  liabilities 72.128.64 

BlSl.NESS   I.N   MI.N.NESOTA   IN   1915. 

Premiums  BeeelTed. 
Medical   protecUn    |         11,365.00 

Totals    f         ll.26o.00 

State  of  Minnesota,   Departnent  of  InmraDce. 

I  Hereby  tertUy.  That  tbe  Annual  HUtement  of  the 
Medical  Protrctlre  Insurance  company,  for  the  year  end- 
ing December  3Ut,  1915,  of  which  tbe  above  Is  an  ab- 
stract. ba<i  been  received  and  filed  In  this  department 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  B    D.   WOKKS, 

Commlsiiioorr  of  Insurance. 


874,539.46 
233,458.97 


Total    disbnrR wnls    $  2,068,310 

Balalic-     3,192,241 

li;ih;kk  asskts  dkc.  31,  1915. 

Book  vaHic  of  bonds  and  stotks $  2,515,tH8. 

Cash     In     olflie,     tiu^t     cempanK's     and 

banks    301, 309, 

Agents'    balancK.    unpaid    primlums    and 

bills  reTUahlr.  taken  for  premium^,...  3il,or»o, 

All   othr  Irdgir   u«sts 92tV 


Total  ledger  a>^sets    las  per  balani-e) . .  .$  3,192,241.14 
Ntl.N  I.KDGKR   A.SSKTS. 

Interest  and  rfnt<i  due  and  accme*! |  26.307.00 

All  otUr  lion  Mg'r  assi-ts b.OlK.Stt 


Total   Income  $ 

Ledger    aaseta   December  3Ut  of   prertous 

8um     $  607,998.42 

DIKBl  USKMIC.VTS  IN    1915. 

Claims  paid   (Net)—  _ 

A.vident     $80,223,41 

Httllh    53,364.92 

.Net    paid    pollcj  holders $  133.58S.33 

Investigation   and   adjustmeul  of  claims.,  2.427.93 

Policy    fees     15.690.(10 

Commissions • 95,49*). «>1 

Salaries  of  officers,   agmts,   employe!,   ei-  _       j 

amlniTs'   and  InsiHctlon  fees 61,447.42 

Dlvidriids    to    ^oi'kbdldfrs 3,600.00 

All  other  disbursements 26,353.04 


OK.SS  asMts    $    3.224,567,90 

DKKUT   AS.SKTS    NOT    ADMITTED. 
AcentK'    balances   and  Mils   recfivabl.  . . .  .$         12.248.16 
B(.(ih    \aluc    of    leiiger    aswts   ovtr    market 

vuliir    4. J<i,iOj._1 

All  otlur  ass'ts  not  artniUt'd 44,522,31 


Total   dKburM-menU    t  328,51)3,23 

BalaiKt     279.495.19 

LKIKiKK  A8KKT8   DKC.   31.    1915. 

Book  value  of  real  estate $  100.00 

Miirtga*   loans    177.600.00 

BiKik  value  of  bonds  and  sto<ks 12.0t)0.(Ni 

Cash  In  office,  trust  companl-s  and  banki  15.304  40 

Primlums  In  cotirae  of  collections 66.508  M 

All   other  ledger   assets 7.981.95 


Total    a.ss  ts    wit    admitted $  143.K73.68 

Total    admlit-d    a  sets 3.080.694.22 

1.1AI:II.IT1KS  DKC.   31.   1915. 

ITnpanl   lossfs  iiiid  claims $  174.W|4.1fl 

|Ti,(iirn<d   prinilunis    l,764^7ii8.o6 

B*liirks.    e\p4'iws.    taxes,    dhldeiids    and  --,-,,„ 

IrtT'st    dip    56,2i2.P4 

Coiitlnc.iit  iiinimlssUnis   3.<l04.(i0 

iKpoMt   .apltal    200,000.00 

Total  llabllitl.s.  inchidlng  depo-U  capl- 

4,j    9  4;,198,9_y.40 


Ket   surpltt'    ;•••,  .,..?*' •'^'■••S- 

KISKS   AND    PKKMIIMS.    191'.   BISINESS. 
(a)   Kir.'  risks  wrltt-n  duriiiK  tlie  year. .  .$.'«ll.22:i,li».nO 

Pfi  miiims   rec.ived    th'Tioii 3,0it5,46;{.  10 

Maitii'-  and  Inland  riAks  arlttin  during  the 

y,.ar   2,201.8.50.00 

frrrrlums  lec  Ivid  thirion 49,ltJ6.o5 

^et   anioMit   ill   f-r."  at  end  of   the   year 

(Klre    and    mariucl 34.<. i44.JN>.no 

«.— Inil'idiiiu  liiiviiii'ss  other  than  marine  and  Inland. 
KISISKSS  IN  MINNKSOTA  IN    191.5. 

(IncludliiB    rcltis'iraiKo    reiilnd    and    deducting    reln- 
puance  plaivd.  I 

Klre  Risks.     Miirln"  and  Inland. 

Risks    written J5.026.4SO.0O  $10.02.''..(«i 

Fremlinis    rcciMd...        frt^.f.58.00  236.00 

Net  l.-s.'s  paid 4;t.S9,T()0  

Ntt    loss  s    Incurred..         52,137.<I')  

Amoui.t  at  risk 10.116.000.00  10.026.00 


Total   ledger  assets    (as  per  balanre>..$  279,495.19 
NON  LEIMiER   ASSETS. 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued $  2,600.10 

Other    DOD-Iedger    assets 6,400.00 


(irofcs  assets   $       288,496.29 

DElH'tT   A.SHETS    NOT   AD.MITTED. 
Pitmlums    in    course    of    coliet-tlon     (past 

due)     $         38.415.21 

AgHits   balanc'S    7.;«1.95 

All  other  assets  not  admitted 6.400.00 


Total  ass'ts  not  admitted 

Total    admitted    assits 

LIABILITIES. 

Claims — 
In  process  of  adju.stirent  and  reported. 
Im-umd  but  not  reported 


Total     

Net  unpaid  claims  except   llallllty  claims 
Expcnsi's  of  Investigation  and  adjustment. 

t'nrariK'd    premiums    

Ci-nimisNlons    and    brokerage 

All    other    liabilities 

Capital  stu<'k  paid  up . . . 


>•••«••• 


$ 
$ 

r.2.797. 16 
235,698.13 

14,691.00 
450.00 

$ 

15.141  (X) 

15.141.00 

15(.>.00 

90.554..HS 

3.6(KI.(Kt 

6,370.27 

100,000.00 

ToUl    liabilities.    Including   capital....!       215.815.65 

Surplus  o»er  all    liabilities 19,882.48 

BCSINKSS   IN   .MINNESOTA    IN    1915. 

Premiums  Heeelvrd.  Losses  Paid. 

Accident    $4,983.77  $531. !Ki 

Health     48.81 


Totals 


...$4,983.77 


$580.71 


State  of   Mlnn;sota,    Department   of   Insurance. 

I  llireby  CcrtTy.  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Norwich  Inioii  Klre  lii-,miince  .Society,  Lt<l.,  for  the  year 
ending  December  31st.  1915.  of  which  the  aliore  Is  an 
•l»,traet.  has  iHen  n'< ,  lud  and  fllid  In  this  department 
Uid  duly  a|.|irtn(d  by  me.  S.    D.   WORKS. 

Ciimnih' loner   of    Insurance. 


I.XDE.MMTV     WITIAI.     MARINE    AS- 
SIRA.XCK    COMPANY. 

Principal  of'U-e  in  the  liiited  Statts,  New  York.  N.  \. 
Appi'lon  A  lv\,  g.  nral  maiiai!  r  in  the  I'nlted  States. 
AtKiriv.y   to   ace.pt  s-rvlce   In   .Minnesota:     Commlsgloner 

cf  icsuranie.  

DEPOSIT   (.\PITAL.    $200,000,00. 
INKtME   IN    1915. 

Frimlums  other   than   periietuals $       447,411,6.S 

Kents   ami   Inb  rests lK4o;i.,06 

Bicelvid  from  bumf  office 6,9W).15 


Total  Income    9 

Ledger    assts    l>ecember   3Ut    of    previous 
year  


471,831.39 
565,256.46 


E'lm     $  1,037,087.85 

DISBI  K.SKMENT8  IN   1915. 

Net  amount  paid  for  liss  s $  222,771.43 

Evp-asis  of  adjustment  of  losses 4,728.77 

I'omuii^sloii:;    and    bnik>rage 61,535.72 

Salariis,    feis    and    alUmauces   of   olBcers, 

ag.iits   and   iniployes 10,785.86 

Taxes,  fees,  rmts,  real  estate  expense,  fire 

patrol,  etc   22,410.27 

Ifctuin.d   to  home   office 52,660.27 

AU  other  dlsburs  menta 2,256.76 


Stat"  of  Minnesota.  D«partment  of  Insurance. 

I  Hcrtby  Certify,  That  tlie  Annual  Statement  of  tbe 
Bankers'  .iccld"nt  Insurance  company,  for  the  year  end- 
ing Dccpml»er  31sf.  1915.  of  which  the  above  is  an  ab- 
stract, has  been  received  and  filed  In  this  department 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  8.  D.  WOKKS, 

Commissioner  of   Iiu>uranre. 


C.  H.  GORDON  &  CO., 

(•round    Floor.    I>r«tvldrn«e    BIdK- 
Melroite    1578. 


par.>ii:rs'  fire   insurance  com- 
pany. 

Principal  offlrf:     York,   Pa.     W.   IT.  Miller,  president; 

A.    S.    .Metonkey,    secri-tarj-.      Attorney    to    accept    senic; 

in  Aliniiesota:    Commissioner  of  Insurance. 
CASH   ( APITAU-None. 
INl(»ME   IN   1916. 

Premiums  other  than  pcrpetuals $       497.r>86.75 

Rents   and   interests 47.525.70 

Oross   profit   on   sale,    maturity   or   adjust- 
ment of  ledgfr  ass?is 2.242.20 

From   all   other  sources 1,014.69 


ToUl   income    $       648,263.34 

Ledger    aaa.-ts    December   31«t    of    prvvtoua 
year     ,      1,131.32.3.13 


Total    dHmrs-ments $  377.149.0S 

Balauet     659,938.77 

LElUiER  ASSETS   DEC.   31,    1915. 

Book   Tabic  of  bonds  and  storks $  407.7C6.2."> 

Cash  in  office.  tru.st  companies  and  banks.  182,263.33 

Agents'    balaiicrs,    unpaid    premiums    and 

bills  receivable,   taken  for  premiums. . .  67.363.33 

All  olhtr  ledger  assets 2.545.86 


Sura     $  1.679.692.47 

DI8BIB8E.MENTS  IX  1915. 

Net  amount  paid  for  losses $  372.525,23 

Expenses  of  adjustment  of   loss-j 6.803.11 

Commissions  and  brokerage 116,101.41 

Salaries,    fees   and   allowances  of   officers. 

agents   abd    employes 61,681.90 

TaMS,  fets,  rents,  real  estate  txpense,  fire 

patrol,   etc   23.660.61 

All   other   disbursements 28.823.58 


Total  ledger  a.ssets    ^as   per  balance).. $  659,938.77 
NON  LEDliER    ASSETS. 

Interest   and  r"nt.s  due  and  accrued $  3,591.67 

All   other  non  ledger  assets 20,966.96 


Cross  a«.R.tg   $       684,487.40 

DEDICT   ASSETS   NOT    ADMITTED. 

Agents'    balances  and   blHs  receivable $         13,021.89 

Book    value    of    ledger   ass-ts   over    market 

value    23,166.25 


Total  assets  not  admitted $  36,188.14 

Total    admitted   ass.ts 648,299.26 

LIABILITIES  DEC.   31.   1915. 

I'npald  losses  abd  claims $  118.342..<»0 

rneamid   prtmlums    100,790.26 

Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,    dividends    and 

Interest  due    12,000.00 

D«poslt  capital   200.000.00 


Tola!  liabilities.  Including  deposit  capi- 
tal             431.133,06 

Net  iuiplus    217,l6t>.20 

RISKS  AND  PREMM  MS.    1915  BUSINESS. 
Marine    and    Inland    risks    written    during 

the  year   $149,274,443.00 

Fremlums  received  thereon 733,463.49 

Net  aincuiit  In  force  at  end  of  the  year 

(lire    and    marine! 10.479.484.00 

BISINESS    IN   MINNESOTA    IN    191.5. 

(Including   reinsurance   received   and   deducting   reinsur- 
ance  placed.  I  Marine  and  Inland.  I 

Bisks  written $       408.170.00; 

Premiums    received 7,4*>4.00  i 

Net   losses  paid 2,583.00 

Net  losses  Ineurrid 6,352.00 

Amount  at  risk 399,703.00 


Total   disbursements   |  599,585.74 

Balance     1.080,106.73 

LElKiER   ASSETS  DEC.   31.   1916. 

Book  value  of  real  esUte $  44,412.92 

.Mortgage  loans   152.574.68 

Collateral    loans    60.582.58 

Book  value  of  bonds  and  utocks 635,330.59 

Cu.sh     In     office,     trust     companies     and  ■ 

banks    121.926.85 

Agents'    balances,    unpaid    premiums    and 

bills  receivable,   taken  for  premiums...  76,279.11 


NEW      BRUNSWICK      FIRE      INSUR- 
ANCE    COMPANY. 

Principal  office:  New  Brunswick  N.  J.  Organlftd  In 
1826.  Geo.  A.  Vlchmann,  president;  (Tias.  D.  Boas, 
secretary.  Attorney  to  arcept  service  lo  Minocsola: 
Commissioner  of  Insurance. 

CASH  CAPITAL.  $400,000.00. 
INCOME  IN   1915. 

Premiums  other  than  perpvtuals |       7r>8.342.35 

Rents   and   InteresU 69,962.51 

Gross  profits  on  sale,    maturity  or  adjust- 
ment of   ledger  assets 13,451.25 

Total    tncom«    |       831,756.11 

liTdgrr   assets    December   31st    of    previous 
year     1.216.328.55 

Bum     %  2,048,084.65 

D18BI  RSEME.NT8   l.N    1916. 

Net  amount  paid  for  losr-s   $  367.334  33 

Exixnses  of  adjustment  of  looet 10.736.55 

Commissions    and    lirokerage 190,588.51 

Salaries,    fc<'«   and  allowances  of  offlrers, 

agents   and  emplojTS 87.859.50 

Taxes,    fees,    rents,    real    estate    expeni*^ 

fire  patrol,   etc 32.061.67 

Dividends   and    Int -rest 46,557.56 

(iroM   loss   on   sale,    maturity   or   adjust- 
ment  of  ledger   asseti 2.200..'iO 

All  other  disbursements    33.153.50 

Total    disbursements    $       770.491.91 

Balance     $  1,277,592.75 

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC.   81.   1915. 

Rook  value  of  real  estate $  132.362.00 

Mortgage    loens    249.801.00 

Rook  value   of   bunds  and  storks 626.246.93 

Cash     In     office,     tnist     companies     and 

banks    131,654.95 

Agents'    l>a)an«-es,    unpaid    premiums    and 

bllU   recehable.    taken    for   premiums..  137.427.87 

All   other   ledger   assets lOO.OO 

Total  lulger  as.sfts    (as  per  balance »..$    1,277,592.75 

NON  led(;eb  assets. 

Interest    and  rents  due   and   aecnied $  7,034.17 

Market    value    of    real    estate,    bonds    and 

stocks   over   book    value 6fi.270.07 

All   other   non-ledger   asseU 1,725.03 

Gross  assets   t    1,346,622.02 

DEDICT    ASSETS    NOT    ADMITTED. 

AgenU'    baUnees   and   bills   receivable $  2,673.46 

Market    value    of    kpe<'lal    d>'POslts    in    ex- 
cess  of    corresponding   liabilitieR 2,012.S1 

Book   vaiiie   of   ledgtT  assets   over  market 
value     247.00 

Total   assets   not  admitted $  4,933.26 

Total    admitted    as.-rta $  1.341,688.76 

LI.\B1LITIE8   DKC.    31.    1915. 

Inpald  losses  and  claims $  44.9.'X).15 

I'nearwd   premiums    686,658.21 

Salaries,    <ip<'nses,    taxes,    dlTldends   tod 

Interest   due    6.(»42.97 

Contingent    commissions    l,5<K).(Kt 

Capital  stock  paid  up 400,000.00 

Total   llahillties,    including   capital.... $    1.139,151.33 

Net   surplus    $       202,537.43 

RISKS  AN-D  PKKMIC.MS,   1915   BISINESS. 
(a)   Klre  risks  written  during  tlic  year.  .$106,163,794.00 

Piemlums   received  thereon 1,222,180.32 

Net  amount  in  force   at   end  of  the  j-ear 

I  fire  and  marin-l    107.363.558.00 

a      Including  business  other  than  marine  and  inland. 

BISINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN  1916. 
(Including    reinsurance    received    aiid    deducting    rein- 
surance placed.) 

Firr   risks. 

Risks    written    %    1,236.322.00 

Prenilums    received    15,558.00 

Net   losses  paid   10,010.00 

.Net   losses   inrtirrrd 8.750.00 

Amount   at   risk    2,850,401.00 

State  of  Minnesota,   Department  of  Insurance. 

1  Hereby  Certify,  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
New  Brunswick  Klre  Insurance  Comi  any  for  the  yar 
emllng  December  3Ut,  1915,  of  wl.lch  the  above  is  an 
altftract,  has  been  received  and  filed  In  this  department 
and  duly  approved  bj  me.  8.  D.  WORKS. 

Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


Total  ledger  assets   (as  per  balance )...$    1,080,106.73 
NON  LEDGER   ASSETS. 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued $  8,163.21 

Market    value    of   real    estate,    bonds    and 

stocks  over  book  value 13,383.91 


Gtt»ss  assets .$  1,101,653.88 

DEDICT   ASSETS   .NOT   ADMITTCD. 
Agtols'    balances  and   bills  renliable. . .  .$  2,322.66 


Total  a,sset«  not  admitted |  2,322.66 

Total   adudlted   assets 1,099,331.19 

IJABILITIES  DEC.   31.  1915. 

Inpald  losses  and  claims |  79,190.74 

I'liearned  premiums    615.484.25 

Reclalmable  on  perpetual   policies 2,238.00 

Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,    dividends    and 

intenst   due    6,338.71 

All   other   liabilities 100.000.00 


Btate   of  MInn.'sota.    Department  of  Insurance. 

1  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Indeiiiiilty  Mutual  .Marine  A.ssurnnce  cumpany  for  the 
year  ending  December  31st,  1915,  of  which  the  above  is 
■n  ali<-traet.  has  been  received  and  filed  in  this  depart 
Bent  and  duly  approved  by  me.  9.   D.   WORKS, 

Commis.slouer  of  Insurance. 


Total  liabilities,  including  capital $       703.251.70 

Net  surplus    396,079.49 

RISKS  AND  PRE.MIC.MS,    1916  Bl'SI.NESS. 
<a>   Fire  risks  aritten  during  the  ycar...$  €1,954.439.00 

Premiums   received  thereon 657.934.04 

Net  amount  in   force   at  end  of  tbe  year 

(Fire   and   marine) 99,261.125.00 

Perpetual  risks  not  included  above 83.700.00  1 

Deiiosit  premiums  on  same 2.35.5.79' 

a. — Including  business  other  than   marine  and  inland,     i 
BrSIN'i:sS  IN  .MINNE.SOTA  IN  1915.  ! 

(Including    reinsurance    received    and    deducting    rein-  ' 


Fire  Risks. 

1,350,857.00 

18.153.00 

13.102.00 

10.988.00 

Amount  at  risk..- 2,377,060.00 


siirnnce  placed. ) 

Risks    written 

Primlums  received 
Net  losses  paid . . . 
Ntt  losses   Incurred. 


GENERAL      INDEMNITY      CORPORA- 
TION    OF     AMERICA. 

Principal  office:  Ro<hester.  N.  Y.  Organised  In  1914. 
Hiram  R.  Wood,  pnsldent;  Ralph  M.  Barston,  secretary, 
/.ttorney  to  accept  tertire  in  .Minnesota:  Coiuml>bioiiei  of 
Insurance. 

CASH  CAPITAL,  $200,000.00. 
INC^OME   IN   1915. 
Pnnilums  renlvrd   (Del — 
Burglary    and    theft $         71,352.18 

Total  net  premium  income |         71,352.  IS 

From  interest  and  rents 13,410.52 

From   all  other  sources 650.24 

Total    Income    $         85,312.94 

Ledger    asi>ets   December  31st  of   previous 
year     304,126.42 

Sum     i       3*9,439.36 

DISBI  RSEME.NTS    IN   1915. 
Salaries    of    officers,     ageiiU.     employes, 

examiners'   and  inspection   fees $  6,015.13 

All  other   disbursements    4,115.1i5 

Total    disbursements    |  9,181.08 

Balance     $  380,308.28 

l.EKGEK  ASSETS  DEC.   31,   191B. 

Book  value  of  bonds  and  stocks $  341.120.01 

Cash     Id    office,     trust    companies    and 

banks    85.771.98 

Premiums  Id  course  of  collections 3,416.29 

Total  ledger  assets   (as  per  balance)..!       380,308.28 
NUN-LEIKiER  ASSETS. 
Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued %  4,886.80 

Gross    asseU    I  385,195.08 

1>EDI'CT    ASSETS    NOT    ADMITTED. 

Total    admitted   assets    $  385,195.08 

UABIUTIE8. 

Vnearned    premiums    I  67,654.23 

All   other   liabil.'ie;    1,308.71 

Capital  stock  ixi   up , 200,0U0.(i0 

Total  Uabilttt'.!,   including   capital....!       268.962.94 

Surplus  over   all   liabilities %       126,232.14 

BISINESS  IN  MINNESOTA   IN   1915. 

Premiums   received. 
Burglary   and   theft $  2.82().46 

Total i  2,820.46 

State  of  Minnesota,   Department  of   Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify,  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
General  Indemnity  Corporation  of  America  for  the  year 
ending  Decembtr  31st,  1915,  of  which  the  above  is  an 
abstract.  I, as  bi'en  received  and  iiied  in  this  department 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  8.   D.   WORKS, 

Commissioner  of  lusuraiice. 


For  rent — Sumner  resort  ai  Lester  park,  consisting  of 
lee  cream  parlors,  coefectlonery  store,  restaurant 
and  lunch  counter:  also  dance  hall  and  one  peanut 
and  pop  corn  i;taod  andHinch  room.  All  fumisticd 
with  tables,  co':nten>,  c^glrs,  stoves  and  dishes. 

621  East  First  street,  8  room  house,  furnace,  bath 
and  gas,  $35. 

24  St.  Andrews  str<n.  9n  rooms,  hardwood  floors, 
gai  range,  $25. 

610  East  Third  street    modem  7  room  boose,  $36. 

5515    London    road     t)  rvoaa    modern    bouse    with   hot 

water  heating  plant,  $:%. 

116V^  Tenth  avenue  east,  6-rooD  modem  flat,  heat 
furnished,  $23. 

1420  East  Superior  street,  12-room  modern  steam- 
beated  bouse,  $50.  . 

AshUbula  terrace,  heated  flat,  $36. 

Wieland  flaU,  4  room  flatl  $13. 

Ill  Second  avenue  west,  store,  $30. 

14  West  Second  street.  7- room  modern  heated  flat, 
$32.50. 

HOOPES-KOHAGEN  COMPANY 


AU   other   non-ledger  a«seU.„ 64,087.08 

Grtws  asseU  I    6,809,619X1 

DEDl'CT  ASSETS  NOT  ADMITTED. 

Agents'    debit    balances $       203,340.63 

All  other  asseU  not   admitted 86,093.57 

ToUl  asseU  n6t  8dmltt*d $  289,434.20 

Total    admitted    assets 5,620,185.37 

LIABILITIES  DEC.  31.  1915. 

Net  reserve  $  4,076,979.00 

Reserved  for  supplementary  contracts;  lia- 
bility on  cancelled  policies 16,712.63 

Claims  adjusted  and  not  due,   ud  unad- 
justed  and  reported   13.760.00 

Claims  resisted    6,000.00 

I>ivldends   left  with   company  to  Mcumu- 

lafe    2.461.08 

Pn  mlums  paid  in  advance 2,527.38 

lilvldends  due   or   apportioned   policyhold- 
er.       148,160.37 

Accident   and  health  department 49.627.37 

All  other  iiabtlitirs 39,109.61 

Total    llabllltlet   on    polloboldrrs'    ac- 
count    I    4.355.320.34 

Capiui   stock   paid  up 1,000,000.00 

Cnassigned   funds    (surplus) 164,866.03 

EXHIBIT  OK   POLICIES.    1915. 

.No.  Amount. 

Policies  in  force  at  end  of  pre- 
vious year  (Last  column  only)  27,870    $  50,494,401.00 
Policies  in  force   at  close  of  the 
year    32,216       68,693,747.00 

Net  increane  4.346  $    8.099.346.00 

Ic^ued.  revived  and  Increased  dur- 
ing  the   year 9.910  18.411.662.00 

Total  terminated  during  the  year.  6.664  10,312.316.00 

BISINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN  1915.— Ordinary  Business. 

No.  Amount. 

Policies  in  force  Dee.   31,  1914..      152  |       360.493.00 

Dsued  during  the  year 276  468,000.00 

Ceased  to  be  in  force  during  tbe 

year    3  81.419.00 

In  force  December  31st.  1915...      425  647,074.00 

Lome*   and   claims    incurred   dur- 
ing the  year 1    %  3,850.00 

Losses    and    claims    settled    dur- 
ing the  year 1  3.850.00 

BfSINESS  IN  MINNESOTA   IN  1915.— Accident  and 
Health  Department. 

Premiums  Received.  I/wses  Paid. 

Accident    S    1,880.31        $    1,117.01 

Health     1,611.78  

Totals    t    3,492.09       $    1,117.01 

Received  for  premiums $         19,465.48 

State  of  Minnesota,  Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify,  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Reliance  Ufe  Insurance  company  for  tbe  year  ending  De- 
cenilier  31st,  1916.  of  which  the  above  is  an  alistract, 
has  been  received  and  filed  In  this  department  and  duly 
approved  by  me.  8.    D.   WORKS, 

Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


NEW    YORK   LIFE   INSURANCE  COM- 
PANY. 

Principal    office:      New    York,    N.    Y.       (Organised    in 
1841.  t       Damln    P.     King-dey,    president;    Hejmour    M. 
Ballard,    secretary.      Attorney    to   accept  service    in   Min- 
nesota:    Commissioner  of  In^urance. 
INCOME  IN  1915. 

First  year's  premiums $    8,219,166.49 

Dividends  and  surrender  values  applied  to 
purcbai>e  paid-up  Insurance  and  annu- 
ities           1.584,697.01 

Consideration  for  original  annuities  and 
supplementary    cuulracta,    involving   life 

contingencies    598,296.52 

Renewal    pn-mlums    80,666,792.71 

Extra  premiums  for  disability  and  acci- 
dent             263,610.00 


Total   premium   income $  91.332,562.73 

Bents    and    InteresU 36,792,803.90 

Gross  profit   on  sale,    maturity   or  adjust- 
ment  of  ledger   asseU 1.553,858.16 

From  all  other  sources 1,845,789.96 


Total    income    $131,525,014.75 

Ledger   assets  December   3Ut  of  previous 
year     799,838,691.21 


Sum     $931,363,605.96 

DISBl'HSEME.NTS   IN    1915. 
Death,  endowment  and  disability  claims..!  39.796.531.67 

Annuities    1,482,719.36 

Surrender   values  to  policyholders 17.969.326.56 

Dividends   to   policyholders 16,672,582.75 


ToUl  paid  policyholders 75,921,160.24 

Dividends    held     on     deposit    surrendered 

»     during    the  year 63,083.45 

Commissions   and   bonuses  to   agents  first 

years  premiums    3,915,626.16 

Commissions   on    renewals 1,930,370.16 

Commissions    on    renewals    (original    and 

renewal)      9.314.33 

Salaries   and  allowances  for   agencies....  26,202.86 

Agency  supervision  and  branch  office  ex- 
penses      2,122,864.00 

Medical  examiner's  fees  and  inspection  of 

risks    443.836.63 

Salaries  of  officers  and  employes 1,816.881.16 

Legal   expenses    21.457.51 

Gross  loss  on  sale,  maturity  or  adjust- 
ment of  ledger  assets 3,177,985.35 

All    other   disbursements 4,249,591.34 


FEI)F.R.\I.    CASUALTY   COMPANY. 

Principal  office:  Detroit,  Mich.  Organized  in  1906. 
V.  D.  Cliff,  president;  L.  E.  Daly,  b.cretary.  Allorney 
to  accept  service  in  Minnesota:  CommUsloner  of  iutur- 
auce. 

CASH    CAPITAL.    $200,000.00. 
INCOME  IN   1915. 

Premiums  received  (Net) — 

Accident   $336,393.21 

Total   net  premium  Income $      336..'i93,21 

Policy  fees    40,338.001 

From   interest   and   renU 21,917.17  1 

from  all  other  sources 9,161.88 


Total  Income   $       407,810.26 

Ledger    ass.-ts    Dectmber   31st    of    previous 
year  421,674.73 


Sum  % 

DISBIKSEMENTS  IN   1915. 
Claims  paid  (.Net)  — 

Accident     $133,701.66 

Net    paid    policyholders ! 

Policy   fees    

Coiamiskions   

Salaries  of  officers,    agents,   employes,   ex- 
aminers'  and  Inspection  fees 

Dividends    to    sto<'kholders 

Loss  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  assets. 

All    other    disbursements 


t(29,484.99 


133,701.65 
40,328.06 
79.583.83 

58.836.71 

50,000.00 
13,763.33 
30.005.78 


State  of  Minnesota.  Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Farmers'  Fire  Insurance  company  for  tbe  year  ending  De- 
cemlier  31st,  1915.  of  wbich  the  above  is  an  abstract, 
has  been  received  and  filed  lo  this  department  and  duly 
approved  by  me.  8.   D.   WORKS. 

Commissioner  of  Insurance. 
'  •    "■ 

THE     MEDICAL     PROTECTIVE    COM- 
PANY. 

Principal  office:  Fort  Wayne,  Tnd.  Organized  In 
UK)9.  Louis  Foy,  president;  Byron  H.  Somers,  secretary. 
Attorney  to  accept  senice  in  MlnnesoU:  Commissioner  of 
insurance. 

CASH  CAPITAL.   $100,000.00. 
INC0.ME   IN   1915. 

Premiums  received    (.Net) — 

Midleal    prot $       166,665.77 

Total  net  pnmium  iai-oisc $       166,565.77 

From  interest  and  rents 11,861.09 


Total   Income   ! 

Ledger    aasets    December   31st    of    previous 
year 


178,426.86 
253.290.15 


Total  dlsburaemenU   !  406.209.35 

Balance    423,275.64 

LEDtJEIl  ASSETS   DEC.   31.  1916. 

Book  value  of  real  estate $  90.109.98 

Mortgage   loans    16,000.00 

Book   value  of  bonds  and  stocks 303,393.76 

Cash  In  office,  trust  companies  and  backs  4,771.91 


Sum     I  431,717.01 

DlSBl'RSEMENTS  IN  191S. 
Claims  paid   (.Net)— 

Investigation  and  adjustment  of  claims..!  44.704.26 

Cc  mmisslons     42,376.67 

Salaries  of  officers,   agents,   employes,  ex- 
aminers' and  Inspection  fees 15,199.89 

Dividends  to  stockholders 10,000.00 

All  other  disbursements 21,365.49 


Total  ledger  «sseU    (as  per  balance)..!       423,276.64 
NON-LEDGEK   A.SSETS. 
Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued $  6,441.38 


Cross  assets $       429,717.02 

DEDICT   ASSETS   NOT   AD.MITTED. 
Book   value  of   ledger   assets  over  market 
value    14.728.75 


Total  isAets  not  admitted | 

Tiital    Admilltd    a^s^'ts 

14,728.75 
414  988  27 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims— 

ToUl    1 

I'neariud   premiums 

Commissions  and  brokerage 

All  other  liabilities 

CaplUl   stock  paid  up 

20,796.44 

13.617.54 

2.500.00 

9,000.00 

200,000.00 

Total    disbursements !  133,635.81 

Balance     298.081.20 

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC.   31.   1915. 

Mortgage  loans    $  218.288.38 

Cash     in     office,     trust     companies     and 

banks     65.621.35 

Premiums  In  course  of  collections 14,103.97 

All  other  ledger  asseU 67.50 


Total  ledger  assets   (as  per  balance)...!  298,081.20 
NON-LEIKiER   ASSETS. 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued !  3.457.33 

Other  non-ledger   asseU 6.920.39 

Gross  a.ssets  !  307,458.92 

DEDl'er   ASSETS   NOT  ADMITTED. 
Premiums    in    course    of    collection     (past 

duet     !  1.032.00 

All  other  assets  not  admitted 6,631.  T2 


Total  liabilities,  including  capital !       245,913.98 

■unilua  over  ail   liabilities 169.074.29 

1L81NES3   IN  MINNE.SOTA  IN  1915. 

fnaloaw  Bccelved.    Lokm  iBcurrad. 


Total  assets  not  admitted ! 

Total   admitted   asuts 

LIABILITIES. 

Claims— 

ResisU'd ! 

Ineamcd   premiums    

fymmtindnna  gnd  brokerage <.•••••• 

6.693.72 
300,765.20 

40.000.00 

80.863.66 

8.273.00 

RELIANCE  LIFE  INSURANCE  COM- 
PANY. 

Principal    office:      Pittsburgh,     Pa.       (Organizetj     in 

ISOQ. )  Jam(8  H.  Reed,  president;  H.  G.  Sii'tt,  secre- 
tary. Attorney  to  acctpi  Mr^lce  lu  MitiOisola:  Com- 
missioner of  insurance. 

t.\SU   CAPITAL,   $1,000,000.00. 
INC«.ME   IN    1915. 

First  year's   premiums !   533,250.73 

Dividend;-   and  surrender  values  applied  to 

pur<-hase    paid-up    Insurance    and    an- 

nuiUes     5,144.22 

Renewal   premiums    1,278,  <  14.4 1 

Total   premium  Income 1,817.109.42 

Bents  and   Interests 230,735.76 

Gross  profit  on  sale,   maturity  or  adjust* 

ment  of   ledger   assets 927.50 

Accident   and   health   department 76.473.00 

From   all   other   sources 10.028.28 

ToUl    income    !  2,134,273.96 

Ledger   assets   December  31st   of    previous 

year    4,700,740.01 

Sum     ....'. !  6,835,013.97 

DISBl'RSE.MENTS  IN   1915. 

Death,  endowment  and  dlsalJIlty  claims..!  319,421.69 
Annuities    and    premium    notes    voided    by 

lapse    28.29969 

Surnnder   values  to   policyholders 97.846.41 

DiviOeods    to    policyholders 40.122.97 

Total    paid    policyholders !  485.690.76 

Dividends   to   stockholders 60,000.00 

Commissions   and    bonuses    to    agents   first 

year's  premiums    368,603.33 

Commissions   on    renewals 63,741.17 

Agency   supenislon   and   branch  office  ex- 
penses      149,061.85 

Medical  examiner's  fees  and  inspeetloo  Of 

risks     68.044.61 

Salaries  Of  offlccrs  and  employes 61.419.22 

Legal   expens.i^   3,643.81 

Agents'    balances  charged  off 18.603.37 

Gross    loss   on    sale,    maturity    or    adjust- 
ment  of   ledger   as-sets 1.267.20 

Accident  and   health  department 64.830.87 

All    other    disbursements 141.611.98 

ToUl    dlsbiirsemenU !  1.476.22117 

Balance     6,858,792.80 

LEDGER  ASSFrrS  DEC.   31,   1915. 

Value  of  real  esUte  owned !  160.096.40 

Mortgage   loans    912.350  00 

Premium  notes  and  policy  ioaoi 1,017.352.46 

Bonds   and  sto-ks  owned 2,68S.22r...t6 

Cash.  In  office,  banks  and  trust  companies  348.407,80 

RllU  nctivable  and  agents'   balanc.s 214.59K.20 

Outstanding  accident  and  health  premiums  17.768.58 

I^Ul  ledger  assets   (as  per  balance)...!  5.358,792.80 

nonlf.dgi;r  assets. 

Interest  and  r»nts  due  and  aecrwd $  62.975.03 

Iklarket    value    of    real    estate    over    book 

value    84.756.14 

.Ntt  dtftmd  ud  unpaid  premluu 2S9.068.U 


Total  disbursements   !  93,687,273.08 


Balance 


$837,676,332.88 

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC.  31,  1915. 

Value  of  real  estate  owned !  12.171.919.25 

Mortgage    loans    159,520.303.42 

Collateral   loans   150.000.00 

Fremium  notes  and  policy  loans 162.092.360.44 

Bonds  and  stocks  owned 483,479,527.62 

Ca.sh.    in    office,    banks    and    trust    com- 
panies       19.588.827.73 

Bills  receivable   and  agents'    balances 206.546.39 

All  other  ledger  assets.: 466,848.03 


Total  ledger  asseU  (as  per  balance)..  .!837,676,332.88 
NON-LEDGER  ASSETS. 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued !    9.886,609.55 

.Net  deferred  and  unpaid  premiums 9,963,591.00 


Gross  assets   $857,526,533.43 

DEDrCT    ASSETS   NOT    ADMITTED. 
Book   value    of   ledger   asseU  over   market 

value     34,323.507.19 

All  other  amis  not  admitted 285,176.39 


T^UI   assets  not   admitted $34,608,683.58 


Total  admitted   asseti $822,917,849.85 

LIABILITIES   DEC.   31,   1915. 

Net  reserve   $675,731,039.00 

Rvsened   for  supplementary   contracts;   li- 
ability on  canceled  policies 4.2.'W,667.56 

Claims   due   and   unpaid 1,233,431.64 

Reserve  for  death  losses  Ineuntd  but   un- 
reported          1,500.000.00 

Claims  adjusted  and  not  due,   and  unad- 
jusUd   and   nported 4.432.446.91 

Claims   rt^lsted    606,308.12 

Claims   for  disability 18,188.00 

Dividends    left   witii   company   to   acrumu- 
late    832.571.13 

Pivmlums  paid  in  advance 988,652.32 

Dividends   due  or  apportioned   policyhold- 
ers     110.862.204.25 

Vdal  nserves    17,482.796.67 

All    other    liabilities    4.999,543.85 


Total    liabilities   on    policyholders'    ic 
■  EXHIBIT  OF 


i^unt   $822,917,849.85 

POLICIES,  1916. 


No.  Amount. 

Policies    in    force    at   end   of 

previous   year    (last   column 

inly    1142253    $2,347,098,388.00 

Policies   in   force   at   close  of 

the  year   1175321      2,403,800.878.00 

Net     increase 33068 

Issued,    revived    and    increased 

during    the   year 107700 

Total    terminated    during    the 

year    74632 

BISINESS   IN   MINNESOTA 
No. 
Policies     In    force    Dee.     31, 

1914       18879    $     31.524,992.00 

Issued  during  tbe   year 2616  4,431,334.00 

Ceased  to  be  in  force  during 

the  year   1312  2,351.581.00 

In  for«  December  31st.   1915    20082  33,698,745.00 

Lo<au-s    and     claims     incurred 

during  the  year  165  464,863.96 

Losses  and  claims  settled  dur- 
ing t  lie  year  164  453.238.45 

Losses  and  claims  unpaid  De- 
cember 31»t,    1915 13  16,504.41 


!     56,702,490.00 

228,894,191.00 

172,191.701.00 
IN  1915. 

Amount. 


Received  for  premiums !    1,155,698.12 

SUte  Of  Minnesota,  Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereliy  Certify,  That  tlie  Annual  SUtement  of  the 
.New  York  Life  Insuranre  Company  for  ttte  year  ending 
December  3l8t.  1915,  of  which  the  above  Is  an  abstract, 
has  be<-n  received  and  filed  tn  this  department  and  duly 
approved  by  me.  8.    D.  WORKS, 

Commls-sloner  of    Insurance. 


AUTOMOBILES?  Prac- 
tically every  one  in  Duluth 
and  the  Iron  Range  towns 
who  will  buy  one  this  year  is 
a  Herald  reader. 


ADDITIONAL  WAIMTS 

FROIVf  PyVGES  19  and  20. 


HORSES— VEHICLES— ETC. 


#  We  have  everything  in  the  horse  fg. 

#  line.      Country    bought,    free    from  *• 

#  the  diseases  of  the  city  markets,  it 
^  Always  glad  to  show  stock;  al-  'j^ 
i^  ways    give    a    written    guarantee;  i^ 

#  always    give    sauare    deal.       Part  f|^ 

#  time  If  desired.  % 

#  TWIN  PORTS  HORSE  MARKET,  # 
«      W.  E.  BARKER.  Prop.,      # 

#  18  First  Avenue  W.  # 


*  DRAFT  AND  DELIVERY  HORSES,  * 

*  FARM  MARES,  GENERAL.     * 

*  PURPOSE  HORSES.  * 
■^  All  our  horses  are  Minnesota  if^ 
i^  raised.     Sales  made  on  time  If  de-  # 

*  sired.  Buy  from  an  established  ^ 
•jt  dealer.  Also,  we  guarantee  every  # 
T>(-  horse  to  be  as  represented.  * 

*  ZENITH  SALE  STABLE.  * 

*  MOSES   GOLDBERG,   Prop.,  * 

*  B24  West  First  Street,  * 
jt       Two  blocks  from  union  depot.       * 


HORSES  HORSES  HORSES 
If  In  the  market  for  horses  be  sure  and 
see  our  offerings.  We  have  from  200 
to  300  head  constantly  on  hand.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Barrett  &  Zim- 
merman, Duluth  Horse  Market,  23rd 
ave.  w.  and  Superior  at.  H.  J.  Walt, 
manager. 


AUCTION— !19,000  livery  outfit,  Supe- 
rior. April  12:  Bowser  Transfer  Co. 
going  out  of  tne  horse  livery  business 
and  sells  its  entire  outfit  to  the  high- 
est bidder,  regardless  of  its  cost  or 
value.  Auctioneer  Balrd  of  Aberdeen, 
8.  D.,  sells  It. 


FOR  SALE — Four  driving  and  delivery 
hor.ses;  young  and  sound;  one  seven- 
eights  Guernsey  bull,  coming  4  years 
old;  gentle;  weight  1.400  pounds.  Hor- 
gan  &  Scanlon,  Saginaw,  Minn. 


FOR  SALE3 — Brown  mare,  weighs  be- 
tween 1,050  and  1,100;  city  broke,  not 
afraid  of  automobiles  or  stJ'^et  cars. 
608  N.  66th  ave.  w.  Call  Cole  301. 


FOR  SALE — 1  gray  mare,  weight  1,400 
lbs.,  wagon  and  harness,  %2bO;  a  bar- 
gain; 1  gray  mare,  1,100  lbs.,  !60. 
3618   W.   Srd  st.;   Cole  232-A. 


F'OR  SALE — Delivery  horses;  sale  and 
boarding  stables;  flrst-class  service. 
Western  Sales  Stables,  26-28  E.  1st  St. 
John  Gallop,  proprietor. 

HARNESS  WASHED  and  oiled,  repalr- 
Ing  neatly  and  promptly  done;  give 
us  a  trip.l.  Herlan  &  Merling,  105  W, 
1st  St.   Mel.   4668. 

FOR  SALE — Heavy  team;  weight  about 
3,200;  also  black  mare;  weight  about 
1,460;  can  be  seen  at  West  End  livery. 
1926  W.  Ist  St. 


FOR  RENT — Barn  room  at  rear  of  412 
W.  Srd  St.,  suitable  for  small  shop. 
Apply  to  E.  L.  Palmer,  American  Ex- 
change bank. 

NOTICE  TO  my  friends  and  former 
customers,  I  am  again  In  business  at 
128    E.    Michigan    st.      Frank    Jordan. 

HORSES,  WAGONS  and  harness  for 
sale;  driving  and  draft;  !26  and  up. 
Call  at  once.  218  E.  2nd  at. 

Have  your  harnesses  washed  and  oiled 
at  the  Duluth  Harness  Shop;  reason- 
able  figures.    26   E.   1st.   at. 

FOR  SALE— Cheap,  team  of  horses. 
Call    Park    21-X. 

i 


LEUAL    NOTICES. 

SALE  OF  SCHOOL  AND 

OTHER  STATE  LANDS 


State  of  Minnesota. 

State  Auditor's  Office, 
St.  Paul,  Minn.,  March  23.  1916. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given,  Tnat  on 
May  17.  1916.  at  10  o'clock  A.  M..  In 
the  office  of  the  County  Auditor  at  Du- 
luth, St.  Louis  County,  in  the  State  of 
Minnesota,  I  will  offer  for  sale  certain 
unsold  state  lands,  and  also  those  state 
lands  which  have  reverted  to  the  state 
by  reason  of  the  non-payment  of  In- 
terest. 

TERMS  OF  SALE. 

Fifteen  per  cent  of  the  purchase 
price  Is  payable  to  the  County  Treas- 
urer at  the  time  of  sale.  The  unpaid 
balance  is  payable  at  any  time.  In 
whole  or  In  part,  on  or  before  forty 
years  from  the  date  of  sale,  at  an  In- 
terest rate  of  four  per  cent  per  annum, 
due  on  June  first  of  each  year;  pro- 
vided, that  the  interest  can  be  paid  at 
any  time  within  the  Interest  year  with- 
out penalty.  In  effect,  this  means  that 
the  interest  money  may  be  paid  at  any 
time  between  June  first  and  May  thir- 
ty-first without  penalty. 

Appraised  value  of  timber  when  so 
stated,  must  be  paid  for  In  full  at  the 
time  of  sale. 

All  mineral  rights  are  reserved  to  the 
State  by  the  laws  of  the  State. 

All  lands  are  sold  subject  t6  any 
and  all  ditch  taxes  thereon. 

Lands  on  which  the  Interest  has 
become  delinquent  may  be  redeemed  at 
any  time  up  to  the  hour  of  sale,  or  be- 
fore resale,  to  the  actual  purchaser. 
Such  lands  are  listed  under  the  cap- 
tion: "Delinquent  Lands." 

No  person  can  purchase  more  than 
320  acres  of  land,  as  provided  by  the 
General  Laws,  1906;  provided,  however, 
that  State  lands  purchased  previous  to 
1906  is  not  charged  against  such  pur- 

Agents  acting  for  purchasers  must 
furnish  affidavit  of  authority. 

Appraisers'  report  showing  quality 
and  kind  of  soil  are  on  file  In  this 
office. 

Lists     giving     legal     descriptions    of 
lands  to  be  offered  may  be  obtained  of 
the  State   Auditor  or  the   Immigration 
Commissioner  at   St.    Paul,    and   of   the 
County  Auditor  at  above  address. 
J.  A.  O.  PREUS. 
State  Auditor. 
D.  H.,  March  27;  April  3,  10.  17.  1916. 


CITV  NOTICES. 

CONTRACT   WORK. 
Office    of  Commissioner  of  Public  Works, 

City  of  Duluth.  Minn..  April  8,  1916. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
Commissioner  of  Public  Works  In  and 
for  the  corporation  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth. Minnesota,  at  his  office  In  the 
City  Hall  in  said  city,  at  11  o'clock  A. 
M.,  on  the  20th  day  of  April,  A.  D. 
1916.  for  furnishing  and  delivering 
within  the  limits  of  said  City,  as  re- 
quested from  time  to  time  during  the 
season  of  1916.  260.000  feet,  more  or 
less,  of  Norway  pine  or  tamarack,  ac- 
cording to  the  plans  and  specifications 
on  file  In  the  office  of  said  Commis- 
sioner. 

A  certified  check  for  ten  per  cent  of 
the  amount  of  the  bid.  payable  to  the 
order  of  the  Treasurer  of  the  City  of 
Duluth,  must  accompany  each  proposal. 

The  City  reserves  the  right  to  reject 
any  and  all  bids. 

CITY    OF   DULUTH, 

By   W.    H.    BORGEN. 
JAMES  A.  FARRELL.  Clerk. 

Commissioner. 
D.  H..  April  8  and  10.  1916.    D  1914. 

CONTRACT    WORK. 
Office   of  Commissioner  of  Public  Works, 

City  of  Duluth,  Minn..  April  7,  1916. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
Commissioner  of  Public  Works  In  and 
for  the  corporation  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth. Minnesota,  at  his  ofTlce  in  the 
City  Hall  In  said  city,  at  11  o'clock  A. 
M..  on  the  18th  day  of  April.  A.  D.  1916, 
for  the  construction  of  a  sanitary  sew- 
er  in  Medina  street  In  said  city  from 
Seventh  street  to  west  line  of  Lot  IS, 
Block  12.  Sharp's  Addition,  according  to 
the  plans  and  specifications  on  file  in 
the    office   of   said   Commissioner. 

A  certified  check  for  ten  per  cent  of 
the  amount  of  the  bid,  payable  to  the 
order  of  tbe  Treasurer  of  the  City  of 
Duluth.  must  accompany  each  proposal. 

The  City  reserves  the  right  to  reject 
any  and  all  bids. 

CITY    OF   DULUTH. 

By   W.    H.    BORGEN, 
JAMES  A.  FARRELL,  Clerk. 

Commissioner. 
D.  H.,  April  8  and  10,  1916.    D  1913. 


^ERSONAl^ 

MASTER  SERVICE, 
Our    methods    of    French    dry    cleaning 
are  indorsed  by  the  National  Associa- 
tion   of   Cleaners    and    Dyers.      Every 
garment    received    from    us    will    bear 
an  emblem  tag  which  Is  furnished  to 
us   as   a   member   by   the    association. 
By  sending  your  cleaning  and  dyeing 
to    us,    you    have    the    assurance    that 
It  will  be  cleaned  by,  the  latest  known 
methods    and    by     master     workmen. 
Phone  2442  and  our  delivery  men  will 
be   promptly   at   your  service. 
YALE    LAUNDRY    CO., 
French    Dry   Cleaning    Department. 

PERSONAL — Ladles!  Ask  your  drug- 
gist for  Chichester  Pills,  the  Diamond 
Brand,  for  26  years  known  as  best, 
safest,  always  reliable.  Take  no  other. 
Chichester  Diamond  Brand  Pills  are 
sold   by   druggists    everywhere. 


WE  RENT  Remington,  Monarch  and 
Smith  Premier  typewriters  at  !2  per 
month  and  upward.  Rerhington  Type- 
writer Co.,  Inc.,  20  4th  ave.  w.; 
phones:    Mel.    230;    Grand    181. 


ANNOUNCING  the  l^emoval  of  the  Ze- 
nith Dry  Goods  Co.,  126  E.  Ist  St.,  to 
the  Peerless  Laundry  bldg.,  228  E.  1st 
St.  This  company  will  be  known  here- 
after as  the   Duluth  Linen  Co. 


PERSONAL — Get  away  from  washing 
troubles  by  sending  your  family  wash 
to  us;  B^^sC  per  pound.  Lutes'  laundry, 
808  E.  2nd  st.  Phone  us.  Grand  447, 
Mel.  447. 


Violet  Rays  "New  Method"  scalp  treat- 
ment at  Comfort  Beauty  parlors,  109 
Oak  Hall  bldg.  Corns  removed,  26c; 
bunions,   50s;   Inverted   nail.s,   60c, 

MADE-TO-MEASURE  Shirts.  Under- 
wear, Raincoats.  Neckties.  Suit  or 
O'coat,  !18:  Ladles'  Suits,  spring  se- 
lectlons.     C.  N.  Hamilton,  316  E.  Sup,  st. 

PER.SONAL— My  wife  having  left  my 
home,  I  will  not  be  responsible  for 
any  debts  contracted  by  her.  Signed, 
William  Dawson. 

Personal — Electric  vacuum  cleaners  for 
rent,  !1.60  a  day.  The  Moore  Co.,  319 
W.    1st   St.;    Mel.    6860.   Grand    2054-X. 

RAGTIME  positively  taught  ln~2T Tes^ 
sons;  free  booklet.  J.  L.  Denver,  32  W. 
2nd  St.     Open  7  to  10  p.  m.    Mel.  7720. 


MASSAGE— Margaret  Nelson.  218  W. 
Superior  st..  room  8.  Srd  floor.  Also 
appointments  at   your   home. 

PERSONAL — Wanted — Present  address 
or  whereabouts  of  Fritz  Wangcn. 
Address  10  S.  68th  ave.  w. 

PERSONAL — Carpenter  work  neatly 
done,  either  by  day  or  contract.  John. 
son  Bros.,  Grand  2121-Y. 

WANTED — Lace  curtains  to  do;  callod 
for  and  delivered.  Phone  Mel.  6452. 
Work    guaranteed. 

Personal — Effective  scalp  treatment. 
Mrs.  Vogt's  Hair  Shop,  106  W.  Sup.  st. 

Personal — Combings  and  cut  hair  made 
into  beautiful  switches.   Knauf  Sisters. 


PERSONAL — Ladies,     have    your    suits 
made   at  Miller   Bros.,   406   E.   Sup.   St. 

PERSONALS  —  Wanted     lace     curtains, 
25c  pair;  ladles'   washings.     Mel.  7061. 

PERSONAL    —    Widow       would       Tike 
small   child  to  board.     Call  Mel.   2629. 


Corns,    bunions    removed;    electric    foot 
massage  for  tired   feet.  Miss  M.  Kelly. 


PERSONAL — Get    your    rugs    made    at 
the  weaving  shop.    716  V^   E.  8th  st. 

DR.  GULDE,  Eye,  Ear.  Nose  specialist. 
S24   Syndicate  bldg..   Minneapolis. 

PERSONAL — For    sick   people,    flowers. 
Duluth  Floral  Co. 


^SITUATIOinvyi^^ 

SITUATION  WANTED — Woman  with 
boy  19.  and  girl  17.  would  like  work 
on  farm  by  year;  understand  poultry 
raising,  also  feeding  and  care  of  stock. 
Write  E  46,  Herald. 

WANTED — Stenographer  wishes  posi- 
tion; can  take  dictation  rapidly.  Good 
penman,  high  school  and  business 
college    graduate.    Inquire    Lin.  609-A. 

SITUATION  WANTED — By  young  lady 
bookkeeper;  8%   years'  experience;  at 

e  resent     employed;     reference.    Write 
79,   Herald.     

SITUATION  WANTED — Young  widow 
with  2  boys  wishes  housekeeping  on 
farm,  for  widower  or  bachelor.  Write 
J  91.  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED — Washing  and 
Ironing  to  take  home.  Mrs.  Stonewall, 
220   W.  4th   St.,   basement. 

SITUATION  WANTED — By  flrst-class 
worker,  by  day  or  week;  cooking, 
etc.     Write  E  80,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED — As  housekeep- 
er  by  widow  with  one  child.  Ad- 
dress V-68,   Herald. 


SITUATION     WANTED  —  Washing 
cleaning,  etc.,  by  day.  Call  Park  183-X 


SITUATION  WANTED — Washing  and 
ironing  to  take  home.    Grand   1626-A. 

WANTED — Position  by  practical  nurse. 
Best  of  references.  Call  Grand  1746-X. 

SITUATION  WANTED — Any  kind  of 
work  by  day.  Mel.  8144. 


^^SITUATIONJVm 

SITUATION  WANTED — Janitor  and 
watchman,  aged  60;  good  habits,  trust- 
worthy and  reliable  In  every  respect 
If  you  want  a  good  man.  Call  A.  P. 
Cook,  courthouse.  


WANTED — Situation  by  first-class 
barber;  sober  and  reliable;  would 
like  Job  where  I  could  play  on  local 
baseball  team.  Address  Alguire, 
Rapid    River,    Mich. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  Expert  ac- 
countant,  experienced  In  office  and 
credit  management,  wants  to  make  a 
change;  highest  references.  Y  68. 
Herald^ 

WANTED — Position  as  cook,  man  and 
wife;  washer  and  launder.  General 
all-around  repairman.  In  hotel  or  in- 
stitution.   Write    K   84.    Herald. 


SITUATION      WANTED— Position        as 
garden    man    and    houseman.    Can    do 
epalr    work    of    all    kinds.    Write    O 
4,    Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED — As  grocery 
clerk;  five  years'  experience;  sober; 
can  furnish  references.  Write  M  69, 
Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED — ^Man  and  wife, 
respectable  and  reliable,  wish  work 
in  or  out  of  city.    Write  R  89,. Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED — A  colored  man 
Just  from  the  south  wants  a  Job  as 
chauffeur.    Call    Mel.    2709. 


BOATS  AND  MOTORBOATS 

FOR  sale;— S5-foot.  40-horse  power 
motor*  boat.  Capitol  engine.  Dingle 
hull.  Call  or  write  to  300  Alworth 
bldg.,   Duluth.         


FOR  SALE — 6  launches  and  2  hulls;  20 
to  40  feet.  Peterson  Boat  Livery.  Su- 
perior.    Old  phone^ 


FOR  SALE — Two  16-foot  rowboats  and 
boathouse.     Call  Grand  996.  C.  Schobcr. 


WATCHES  REPAIRED 

Bring  your  watch   to  Garon    Bros.,  to 
have  it  repaired  right.  217  W.  1st  st. 


THE  HERALD  IS 

DULUTH'S  GREAT 

WANT  AD  MEDIUM 


$  '  ^ 

#  FIRST   MORTGAGE  LOANS.  # 

* 

#  We    advance    funds    as    needed    on 

#  first  mortgage  building  loans. 
■^  Favorable  terms. 

#  # 

#  W.  M.  PRINDLE  &  CO..  # 

#  Lonsdale  bldg.  # 
-*  ♦ 

MONEY  TO  LOAN— Any  amount,  afiy 
time;  quick  service;  building  loans  a 
specialty,  h.  h\i  and  6  per  cent.  Cooley 
&  Underbill,  209-10-11  Exchange  bldg. 

ST.  LOUIS  AND  CARLTON  county  farm 
loans;  can  handle  any  good  farm, 
loan;  terms  right;  no  delay.  Northern 
Farm   Loan   Co..    102   Providence    bldg. 


CASH  ON  HAND  to  loan  on  city  and 
farm  property;  any  amount,  lowest 
rates,  no  delay.  Northern  Title  Co., 
612   First   National   Bank  bldg. 


IF  YOU  OWN  a  lot.  see  us  about  ^l- 
nanclng  the  building  of  your  honie. 
Duluth  Lumber  Co.,  Mel.  112.  Lin.  112. 


-!10  OR  MORE- 


i^  LOANED  TO  ANYONE 

i^  On  furniture,  pianos,  etc..  or  hold- 

ting  a  steady  position,  at  rates 
honest  people  are  willing  to  pay. 
tSee  us  first  and  get  a  square  deal. 
Money  In  your  hands  In  few  hours' 
time.  Low  rates.  Easy  payments. 
DULUTH  LOAN  CO.. 

t307  Columbia  bldg.,  303  W.  Sup.  st. 
Hours:    8  a.  m.  to  6  p.  m.;  Wednes- 
*         day  and  Saturday  to  8  p.  m. 
ii>  Mel.  2366;  Grand  1224. 

MONEY   TO   LOAN. 

From  One  to  Ten  Monthly  Paymcnte. 

On  Furniture,  etc..  at  Lowest  Rates. 

Example  of  Cost  Per  Month: 

!16,  If  paid  In  1  month !0.20 

„       „       „    8  months O.<0 

„      „      „   6  months 0.44 

!26,  If  paid  In  1  month 1.10 

„      „       „    3  months 0.95 

6  months..... 0.80 

!50.  if  paid  in  1  month 2.25 

.,       „       „    S  months...........    1.60 

„       „       „    6  months 1.26 

Charges  on  other  amounts  In  proportion. 

Even  lower  rates  on  Jewelry,  etc. 

DULUTH  REMEDIAL  LOAN  ASSN, 

401  First  National  Bank  bldg. 


..6Q0 
..76q 
.!1.00 


BICKELL-KYLLO  &  CO.. 

205  Exchange  bldg., 

Duluth.  Minn. 


^H? 


Money    at   Lowest   Rates. 

Any   Amount;    No   Delay. 

Little  &  Nolle  Co.,  Exchange  bldg. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN — Loans  made  on 
timber  and  farm  lands.  John  Q.  A. 
Crosby,    806   Palladio   bldg. 

ANY  AMOUNT  OF  MONEY  for  loans  on 
improved  farms.  Bickell.  Kyllo  « 
Co.,   206   Exchange  bldg  

MONEY  ON  HAND  for  real  estate  loan»^ 
Stewart    G.    Collins,    710    Torrey    blag'. 

For  Farm  Loans  and  Farm  Lands,  see 
Ebert-Walker  Co.,  316-16  Torrey  bldg. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN  on  city  property. 
De    Caigny    &    Paepe,    609    Providence. 

MONEY'tO  loan— A"ny  amount.  Ben- 
Jamin  F.    Schwtiger,    1932   W.   Sup.  et. 

CITY  AND  FARM  loans.  William  C. 
Sargent,    Providence    bldg.  ^ 


SALARY  AND  CHATTEL  LOANa 

Don't  you  need  a  little  money? 

We  have  it  to  loan. 

BORROW  $10  00,  RETURN  !0.40  WEEK 

BORROW  $20.00,  RETURN       .80  WEEK 

BORROW  !30.00,  RETURN     1.20  WEEK 

Other  amounts   In   proportion. 

DULUTH  FINANCE  CO., 

301  Palladio  Bldg. 

Hours:   8  a.  m.  to  6:30  p.  m.;  Wednesday 

and   Saturday   evenings   until   9   o'clock. 

Both  phones. 

LOANS     ON     DIAMONDS.     WATCHES^ 
etc.     Example  of  cost: 
SIO,   paid  back  one  month.... 
|l6,    paid    back   one   month.... 
S26,   paid   back   one   month... 
KEYSTONE  LOAN  CO., 
22  W.  Superior  st. 

WE  LOAN  on  all  kinds  of  personal 
security  at  lowest  rates.  Call  on  Us, 
Duluth  Mortgage  Loan  Co.,  W.  Horkan. 
New  1698-D;  Mel.  3733. 

Loans  on  watches,  diamonds,  guns,  etc* 
Keystone  Loan  Co.,  22   W.  Superior  et. 

MORTGAGES— FARRUiND  CITY 

—MORTGAGES— 


Bank,  Trust  and  Insurance  companies 
Invest  their  money  in  our  farm  mort- 
gages because  they  are  safe,  conserva- 
tive, and  return  them  6  per  cent  on 
their  money.  Why  not  make  your 
money  net  you  6  per  cent.  We  havfi 
mortgages  in  small  or  large  amounts^ 
Titles  guaranteed. 


WOULD  LIKE  to  get  in  touch  wit!* 
anyone  who  has  300  or  less  shares  of 
Butte  &  Zenith  City  Mining  Co.'setocli 
that  they  might  wish  to  sell.  Call 
Mel.  6803  after  6  p.  m. 

■  m,    .^ 

* 

*  STOREROOM  AND  FULL 

*  BASEMENT, 

i^  Suitable  for  store.  laundry  or  small 

*  factory.   126   E.   1st   St.;   very   rea- 

tsonable   rent. 
RICHARDSON.  DAY  &  CHEADLE 

*  COMPANY. 
if.                  Exchange  Building, 


/f 


FOR  RENT  STORES. 
At  818  W.  1st  St.,  most  central  an<| 
best  business  location  on  W.  1st  st.j 
fine  storeroom,  26  by  140,  in  strictly 
fireproof  building;  with  lowest  in- 
aurance  rate  in  city;  will  decorate  to 
suit;  possession  May  1.  Call  Grand 
or   Mel.    226. 

W.  C.   SHERWOOD  &  CO.. 
118    Manhattan    Bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Floor  space  suitable  for 
storage  or  small  manufacturing  con- 
cern. Call  Lane-Golcz  Printing  Co., 
182  W.  Michigan  st.;  Mel.  1604.  Grand 
2869-D. 

FOR    RENT— Storeroom,    26x100,    83  D.       ^ 

Michigan   St.;   suitable   for   garage  or 

wholesale  business-  Inquire  32  £;. 
Superior  st. 

WANTED  TO  RENT 

town,  or  summer  resort  in  good  dis- 
trict. All  or  partly  furnished.  F.  J, 
Satori,  642  Wabasha  St.,  St.  Paull 
Minn. 

WANTED— Desk     room     with     use     o^ 
desk;    state   location   and   price.    Hur- 
ley Subscription  Agency,  Minneapolis^      ^.^ 
Minn.  ^"^ 

WANTED  TO  RENT— 6  or  7-room  fur* 
iiished  house  on  Park  Point  fron^ 
June   1.     Write  T  81,  Herald. 


^^^^WANT^DjrOJORI^^ 

WANTED  TO  BORROW— 8400  for  ^ 
years,  on  2  buildings  valued  at  !l,O0O, 
with  !900  Insurance;  will  pay  10  per 
cent  interest.    Write  G  9J,  Herald. 


ACRE  TRACTS 

FOR  SALE — Two  acres  cleared  land  be* 
tween  Lester  river  and  Exeter  Farms} 
near  to  neighbors  and  good  road:  two 
blocks  east  from  the  bus  line.  Qulcli 
sale  at  a  bargain.  Call  Park  IIS-X. 


Ic 


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1 

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'■    '      •■ 


Monday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD- 


April  10, 1916. 


19 


!')?•'■ 


ABSENT-MINDED  ABNER 


Almost 


By  Walt  McDougall 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES 


FOR  SALE  HOUSES-Continued     !     FOR  SALE  HOUSES -Continued 


* 


% 


SPLENDID   VALUES 

♦  

^   2915     East    First    stroot— 7     rooms   * 

ana  bath,  hul  water  h^-at  two  »• ,  j. 
lJr''plac<s,  lamwiry  tubs,  living  *  * 
room  Unish^d  In  mahogany,  din-   ;¥■ 


EAST  FOLTRTH  STREET  HOME. 


-EAST  END  HOME- 


# 


*• 


-if- 


VAU'R      

PKEriENT    PRICE 


^     YOL'R  PROFIT 


. .  .J«,RO0.OO 
...$5,600.00 

^.$1,000.00 


7- 
ex 


iuK  room  white  enamel,  upstairs  #  * 
whit»*  enainle,  hardwood  floors.  -,f  ■  * 
cement  walks  and  paved  .^streets.  #  * 
One  of  the  best  designed  houses  *•  |  * 

4    * 


623  Sixteenth  avenue  east — 6  rooms  tJt   * 
and   bath.      The  owner   must  sell   *    * 

518    Fourth    avenue    east — Two    6- 


In  East  end 


room  tlais  and  two  baths;  snap. 


rooms 


and  # 


1509  .Tefforson  street — 7  rooms  and 
maids'  room.  This  Is  an  espe- 
ciHllv  well-built,  m-idern  homo, 
pleasantly  loeated  on  nle^  lot; 
very  desirable  residence  district. 
A  snap.  .^     „ 

1021  East  Ninth  street— Hot  water  #  i  A* 
heat,  full  basement,  6  rooms  and  *.  # 
bath;   solid  brick,  nearly  new.       *  |  * 


*-  4613    Pooke    street — 7 

hath,  hot  water  heat;  bunsalow.  ^ 
nearly   new. 


610  East  Seventh  street — Hot  wa- 
ter heat,  concrete  foundation.  6 
rooms  and  bath,  tine  basement; 
nearly  new. 


Located  on  ono  of  th« 
finest  Improved  lots  on 
the  upper  side  of  E.  4th 
St.  This  lot  Is  60  by  140 
and  is  well  planted  with 
shrubb'-ry  and  trees. 
The  house  Is  in  excellent 
condition.  havlnj?  6 
rovjm.s,  hardwood  ttnlsh 
downstairs,  upstairs  fin- 
ished In  whlto  enamel; 
KlHssed-ln  back  porch, 
full  stone  basement,  an 
excellent  hot  water 
heatlns  plant;  rooms 
very  bright  and  large 
and  well  laid  out.  This 
Is  an  excellent  oppor- 
tunity to  buy  a  home 
that  would  be  saleable 
at  any  time  at  a  profit. 
See  us  for  full  informa- 
tion. 


A    very    beautifully    laid    out 
^1*  room   home    on   10th   ave    e.,   m 
•it';  i^  cellent     condition.      Wall     decora- 
'X- 1  *  tlons    very    good.      First   floor   fln- 
j^    -X"  Ishod  m  oak,  has  fireplace,  a  very  * 
')f.\i(.  complete  serving  pantry  and  three  vf 
i^i^t  bright     rooms.      Second 
if.  four     bedrooms,     bath 


a- 


■ii. 

floor    has  #  j  ^. 
and     linen  if^\  ^. 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

''ARW  ANDjyNER_yj-ANDS_ 

JOIN  OUR  EXCURSION  TO  g 

NORTH    DAKOTA  APRIL  16.  * 


Mr.  Farmer,  why  purchase  land  i{- 


FOR  SALE— MISCELLANEOUS 


t  —ALUMINUM  SPECIALS—  * 

*  * 
■i  Here  Is  something  that  is  a  rec-  '^ 
if.  ord-breaker.  Think  of  It!  Thirty-  # 
5^  five  pieces  of  good  aluminum  ware  * 
-#  for  only  16.98;  another  set  consist-  * 
*•  Ing  of  seven  pieces  at  |7.98.  *■ 

#  EN(JER  &  OLSON,  *■ 
Hi     Nineteenth  Ave.  W.  and  Sup.  St.  * 


i(.  pr.ss,  finished  in  white;  front  and  *^ 
^  back    stairs.      A    large    attic    with  f\jf. 


■if.  four  windows  could  be  made  into  ^;^  the 
'X.  extra  sleeping  room,  or  s^'rves  very  *  ^  Hei 
if.  well    for    drying    room,    owing    to  -^    if.  far 


that  you  have  to  dynamite  before  #  TALKING  MACHINES — Largest  stock 
you  can  work  It.  Our  North  Da-  *  in  th©  city.  Complete  outfits  at  special 
kota  land  is  ready  for  the  plow  -» \  prices.  Be  sure  you  get  the  New  Co- 
and  will  not  coat  you  but  one-half  *.  I  lumbla  Grafonola:  awarded  three 
co.st  of  clearing  cutover  lands^  ^  j    grand   prizes   and   two   gold   medals   at 


if.  excellent  ventilation.  Basement  # 
*.  partitioned  off;  has  fruit  room.  * 
if.  complete  laundry  and  boiler  room,  x- 

tif.  Heating  very  economical,  using  if. 
if.  only  eight  tons  of  coal  this  past  # 
if.  season.  This  U  an  opportunity,  f 
if.  and  would  like  to  have  you  call  on  * 


re    are     a    few    descriptions 
rms  that  we  want  to  show  you 


;*l* 


608 


DULUTH    REALTY    CO., 
First    National    Rank    Bldg. 
L  W.   LEE.  Mgr, 


* 


i('  us 
it- 


tor 


further    information. 
PRICE  $6,500- 


t 


DULUTH  REALTY  CO.. 

608  First  National  Bank  BlJg. 

I.  W.  LEE. 


or^ 
* 

if.  160  acres  Pierce  county,  only  2  Mi  * 
if.  miles  from  good  city;  all  level,  # 
if.  rich  loam  soil;  entire  quarter  un-  * 

*  der  cultivation;  Oi\  tnain  road.  For  * 

*  a  small  farm  this  Is  a  dandy  and  a  i;- 

*  b.-xrgaln.       Pric^.  "for     quick     sale. 
if.  $4,600,  half  cash,  l;ialance  to  suit. 

if.  160     acres     Pierce     county,     2»i 

if.  miles    from    good    city;    120    acres 

if.  under     cultivation;     balance     hay 

if.  land;     all     level,    irlch     loam     soil. 


* 


* 


the  world's  fair;  double-faced  records 
65  cents;  ask  for  catalogues  free;  only 
exclusive  talking  machine  store  In 
Duluth.  largest  stock.  Edmont, 
3rd  ave.   w. 


18 


PROFESSIONAL  AND  BUSINESS  GUIDE 


Ready  reference  of  the  professional 
men  and  leading  business  firms.  Her- 
ald readers  who  do  not  find  the  line 
of  business  they  are  seeking  will  con- 
fer a  favor  by  requesting  of  us  the 
information  desired. 


CALL  324  FOR  REPRESENTATION  IN  THIS  COLUMN 


FOR  SALE — Furs,  valuable  set  fltch 
and  near-seal,  silk-lined,  latest  style, 
quite  new,  $60  set  sacrifice  for  $8. 
Also  gcnfa  valuable  fur-Uned  over- 
coat, only  worn  three  times.  English 
Melton  cloth.  $95  coat,  sacrifice  for 
$20.  Reason  for  selling,  leaving  for 
California  residence.    Call  128  W.  2nd  st. 


if.  Good   five-room   house,   large   hip 

if.  roof     barn,      granaey     and     other  * 

if.  buildings.     Buildings     surrounded  * 

Tf.    if.  by  larg^  grove  of  trees.  This  farm  if 

1U^-^^:^^^^^^^»^-»A^-»»»»^*    f  iTuick^Tle?'  $5"6'o*S^'"-Wnr'make  * 
FOR  SALE — Newly  built,  6-room  house;  j  ^  terms  to  suit. 


^Ai.  Hunter's  Park  home 

i^       bath,   stone   foundation,   hot    wa 

tor     heat,     full 

kind   of   finish. 


#- 
*■ 
* 


basement, 


best  * 
* 

1118    East    Third    street— 7    room.s  ^| 
and  bath,  stone   foundatiotiL   full  *] 
<jf.       basement;  centrally  located.  -^ 

?i  2026    East    Fifth    street— 7    rooms  if 
and    bath,    hot    water    heat,    full   -^ ; 
attractive.  * 

1^ 


*;  %.;i.iy3e^.if.:H('X*iiii'if-){-if'^J^^i^t^^i(^'!--X^ 
6  rooms  and  if-        MODERATE    PRICED    HOMES    ON 

EASY   TERMS. 


all  conveniences,  except  heat,  full 
stone  basement,  also  new  barn;  cheap; 
small  cash  payment,  balance  monthly. 
Call    310    N.    62nd    ave.    w.  


basement;   very 


i(.  4114  Gladstone  street — 5  rooms  and  if. 
«       bath,   hot  water  heat,   full  base-  x- 
menl;    bungalow. 


$2  500  for  a  woU-built  new  house  with 
6  rooms  and  bath  on  14th  ave.  e.,  near 
9th  St.;  1  block  from  street  car  lino; 
aewer  water  and  gas  and  electricity 
in  the  house.  Small  cash  payment  re- 
aulrod;  balance  monthly.  Lot  40  by 
80  feet.  Do  not  delay  investigating 
this  proposition. 

$3,200    takes    a    7-room    modern    house; 


* 
^ 


AUTOS  AND  MOTORCYCLES 


The  houses  are  all   attractive  and 
modern.      Rock-bottom   prices. 


Exclusive  Sale. 

W.   M.  PRI.NDLE  &   CO.. 
Main  Floor,  Lonsdale  Bldg. 


98  PER  CENT  OF  AUTO  BUYERS 
READ  THE  DULUTH  HERALD. 

in.v.-a    ..    V.   --.        The    names    In    which    automobile    11- 

cement   foundation   and    basement:  hot  ,  sensed    are_  Issued    have    been^  checKea 
water  heat,  hardwood  floors  and  hard- 


finish      downstairs.      Favorable 
This  Is  a  good  buy.    t889) 


^::.-}^ii.iyi('if^x-'i(-»»i(^'^i^»-^^^^ 


—WEST  END  BARGAINS — 


Price  $3,600. 


«.<{Ort  ea.<»h  and  $25  ner  month  for  double 
llal  building  of  fO  rooms,  a^d"  larKo 
barn;  conveniences.     Price  only  $i,800. 

II  000  ca.^h  and  easy  payments  for  new 
6-room  dwelling;  full  basement  and 
conveniences;  paved  street,  good  resi- 
dence   district.      Price    $3,700. 


wood 
terms. 

$4,200  takes  a  2-flnt  building  on  E.  5th 
St..  near  Portland  square;  always  rent- 
ed;   can    make   faA'orable    terms.    t69i) 

Three   good  propositions  In   the  way  of 
modern    home.-i;    all   in    good   condition.      . 
at   Lester  Park;   at     favorable     prices    « 


with  The  Duluth  HeralVs  subscription 
lists,  and  It  was  found  that  98  out  of 
every  100  people  who  buy  cars  read 
The  Duluth  Herald.  If  you  have  a  car 
for  sale  or  trade,  offer  It  in  this  auto- 
mobile column  and  you  will  reach  prac- 
tically  every   one   who   will    buy. 

##*  ^i^MMf*^  *'*-********^^^'**^''' J 
*  WE  HAVE 


320  acres  Rolette  county,  four  if. 
if.  miles  from  good  city.  All  level,  * 
;C.  very  rich  black  loam  soil,  with  a  tf 
if.  little  spring  creek  running  through  -* 
if.  one  forty;  260  acres  under  culttva-  «- 
if.  tlon.  balance  pasture;  large  two-  * 
if.  story  house;  two  hip-roof,  cement  if 

#  and  stone  foundation  barns;  two  -^ 
*.  largo  granaries,  all  buildings  are  -* 
*.  now  and  in  first-class  condition.  # 
^.  Buildings  »lone  cost  ower  $4,500.  ■*- 
if.  Excellent  water,  riwal  delivery  * 
if.  and  telephone,  schoolhouse  across  # 
i^  the  road,  church  on  the  comer  of  -^- 
if.  this  land.  This  Is  a  very  high-  * 
if.  class  farm  and  one  of  the  finest  * 
if.  Improved  small  farms  in  North  ^ 
^  Dakota.  Price.  $14,000;  will  make  if. 
if.  reasonable  terms.  Adjoining  farm  * 
a,  sold  only  three  Mieeks  ago  at  $66  ■» 
if.  per  acre.  * 
j^  -» ■  ■ — 'i  ■* 
if.       We     have  .  many     other     farms  H. 

#  which  we  will  be  glad  to  show  if 
if.  you     but    the    above   are   the'   best  if 

bargains    beinfe    offered    in    North  if- 


FOR  SALE — Entire  stock  of  furniture 
contained  In  salesrooms.  2110-2112 
W.  Superior  st,  will  be  sold  for  60 
per  cent  less  than  retail  price,  to  cash 
buyers.  Thousands  of  pieces,  Just 
what  you  need  to  furnish  the  home 
cosily.     Cameron  Furniture   Ct>. 

FOR  SALE — Very  cheap  to  close  out 
quick,  one  Bond  player  piano,  also 
two  fine  pianos,  walnut  and  oak 
cases.  If  you  are  planning  to  purchase 
a  piano,  don't  fall  to  see  these.  >N  e 
can  arrange  terms.  R.  R.  Forward  ^ 
Co..   124    E.   Superior   st^ 


ACCOUNTANTS. 

JAMES  S.  MATTESON.  C.  P.  A, 

(Minnesota  and   Wisconsin), 

700-701    Alworth   Building. 

Audits,    Estate   and    Commercial 

Accounting    and    Investigations, 

Established    1909. 

Phones:  Mel.   4700;  Grand  7L 


— JOHN    E.    MACGREGOR— 

Public   Accountant   and   Auditor. 

601    Sellwood    Bldg.      Mel.    670. 


FUNERAL.    DIRECTOR. 

OLSEN'X'HOPPElJYANr^Orr'w. 
perior   St.;   Lin.    10;    Mel.    7630. 


Su- 


FOR  SALE — Clean  sweep  of  evety 
piece  of  furniture,  rugs  and  stoves, 
all  go  regardless  of  cost,  at  half  and 
many  less.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co..  122- 
124   E.  Superior  st. 


DAVID    QUAIL    &    CO. 

Chartered  Accountants. 

Certified    Public    Accountants, 

401     Torrey    Bldg.,     Duluth. 

Highest   references.     Inquiries  invited. 


AWNINGS,    TENTS,    PACK8ACKS. 

Poirler  Tent  &  Awning  Co.,  413  E.  Sup. 
Both  phones.  Horse  and  wagon  covers. 


AWNINGS— Duluth  Tent  &  Awning  Co., 
1608    W.    Superior   »t.     Lin.    »6. 


HAT   SHOP. 

Any  Panama,  straw  or  soft  hat  cleaned, 

blocker     or     remodeled. 

Special  attention  to  mall 

orders.  New  Grand  Shine 

parlors,  210  W.  Superiors 

St.     Grand  639. 


THE      CENTRAL      HAT 

works,    309    W.    Sup.    St. 

Ous   KIntonIs,    manager. 

ats  cleaned,   reblocked 

,  ^—3 and    repaired.     We    call 

for  and   deliver.   Grand    1597-A. 


ASHES,  CINDERS,  ETC.,  REMO'l'BD. 

Ashes,    cinders    and    manure    removed. 
Merrill.   Mel.    1390;    Grand   1488-X. 


and  terms. 


WHITNEY    WALL    COMPANY, 

Torrey    Bldg. 

Mol.    1368;    Grand    810. 


-LOOK  THIS  UP- 


-$2,600- 


BENJAMIN  F.  SCHWEIGER  CO., 
1»32  West  Superior  Street^ 


avo- 
has    oak 
basement; 


—LOOK    THIS    UP— 
Good   6-room   hou.^e,   23rd   ave.   w 
nue    paved,     cement    walks; 
flnl.sh    on    first    Hoor;     full 
warmlv  built;  price  $2,700;  house  alone 
ia   worth   the   price  asked. 

base- 
extra 


6-room    house,    6th    ave.    e.;    full 
mt-nt;     tile    floor    In    bathroom; 
warmly  built;  oak  finish  on  first  floor; 
price   $3,350.    $500   cash 
these  aee 


For   terms  on 


DE  CAIGNY  &  PAEPE. 
500  Providence  Bldg. 

—HOUSE  FOR  SALE— 

house. 


very 
base- 
home 


(20-13)     Five-room    brick 
close    in;    hot    water    heat;    full 
jnent;   corner  lot;    here  a   a   nice 
on    any    terms   you    may    wish;    see    U 
quick. 

LITTLE  &  NOLTB  Co., 

Exchange   Building.  


Here  is  a  cozy  6-room  house,  brand 
new  and  ready  to  move  Into,  at  a  price 
that  It  would  be  well  to  compare. 

House  Is  22  by  28  feet,  has  double- 
sheeted  walls  and  hardwood  floors  and 
all  conveniences,  including  heat,  foun- 
dation, cement  lloor.  laundry  tubs, 
storm  windows  and  screens. 

Lot  is  30  by  100.  situated  on  a  nice 
avenue  few  blocks  from  the  center  of 
town,  saves  car  fare, 

Terms.  $300  cash  and  $30  a  month, 
which  includes  Interest,  etc.  House  lo- 
cated at  307  9th  ave.  w.  Inquire  718 
W.  3rd  St.,  or  phone  Mel.  75  40. 


*- 
* 


Z  A  fine  Oakland  6-cylinder  car  that  ^  i  ^ 
Z  we   can   sell  for   $750;   1914   model.  *   '^ 

#  Here   you   have  a   chance  to  get  a  ^    ^ 

#  big,      easy-riding     car      for     little  if    "^ 
')f.  money;  it's  a  bargain.     Also  have  * 
if.  other    bargains    In    used    cars.      It  X- 

#  will  pay  you   to  come  and  see  us, 


REO  SALES  COMPANY, 
307  East  Superior  St. 
Old  phone,  6134  Mel. 
New  phone,  823-Y  Grand. 


it 


.,-  Dakota  today.  Make  arrange-  ■» 
if.  ments  tb  join  our  excursion,  leav-  -,1^ 
*  Ing  Duluth  and  Superior  on  the  if 
if  ISfh.    For  further  Information  call  # 

BICKELU   KYLLO  &   CO.,  # 

206  American  Exchange  Bldg., 
Duluth,    Minn. 


ATTRACTIVE  HOMES  FOR  SALE. 

(22-21)  Here's  a  beautiful,  modern 
bungalow;  located  East  end;  6  rooms; 
hot  water  heat,  fireplace,  oak  finish 
and  hardwood  floors;  new  house;  price 
$5,000. 

(17-16)  Nice  7-room  house.  West  end 
on  3rd  St.;  good  basement,  hardwood 
floors,    nice    lot;    price    $3,300. 


KOR  SALE — New  6-room  house,  $2,600, 
five  blocks  from  courthouse,  two 
blocks  from  carllne;  full  concrete 
foundation;  all  modern  conveniences 
Including  heat;  very  well  built:  a 
real  bargain;  about  $600  cash;  bal- 
ance like  rent.  309  9th  ave.  w.  In- 
SCl^re  M.   C.   Lathers,   M^l.   4922. 


> 


FOR  SALE — West  end  bargain;  don't 
miss  It:  located  In  business  district  at 
21st  ave  w. ;  adjoins  fine  new  brick 
building;  lot  60x140  feet;  building  on 
lot  with  Income  of  $85  per  month; 
one  of  the  best  buys  in  the  city;  price 
onlv  $7,000.  Little  &  Nolte  Co..  Ex- 
change   bldg.  ^/''^^> 

710  B.»ulevard  w.  7  rooms,  modern, 
half  block  from  incline.  Walking  dis- 
tance from  business  section.  For  ap- 
pointment to  see  this  house  call 
Douglas  C.  Moore.  711  Palladlo  bldg. 
Melrose    7762. 

FOR  SALE — Fine  new  6-room  house  at 
Lakesl  le,  two  blocks  from  car  line; 
all  conveniences  except  heat;  well 
built-  will  sacrifice  for  quick  sale; 
small  cash  payment  required.  Call 
Park    169-Y.  


(2T-41)  Fine  home  on  car  line;  7 
rooms;  hardwood  floors,  full  bath, 
large  porch;  fine  view  of  lake;  near 
school;  large  new  chicken  house;  lot 
60x140;  fine  lawn  and  garden;  pHce 
only   $3,000;    make   your  own   terms. 

LITTLE  &  NOLTE  CO.. 
Exchange   Building. 


FOR  SALE— Cheap,  for  cash.  1914  6- 
passenger  Paige  touring  car;  36-H.  t-.. 
completely  equipped,  electric  J>erhts, 
starter  and  horn,  best  grade  Gordon 
seat  covers.  4  good  tires.  1  extra  tire 
and  rim.  bumper  and  tire  chains;  run 
11.000  miles:  guaranteed  in  first-ciasa 
condition;    $650,   cash    only.      R.   &    R. 

garage,    rear    310    W.    2nd    st. 

OXY-ACETYLENE  welding,  cutting 
and  carbon  burning;  all  werk  guaran- 
teed satisfactory  pr  "«  ^'^V'^ViJ,,^ 
per  cent  pure  oxygen  for  sale  Duluth 
Gas  &  WelJing  Co..  2110-2112  ^V . 
Michigan  st.    Mel.  7064;  Lin.  643. 

New  1916  models, 
t'ome  and  see 
Ih^-m.  Machines 
sold  on  time  p:iym.nts;  also  bargains  In 
used  machines,  on  easy  terms*.  Motor 
Cycle  Repair  shop.  402-404  E.  Sup,  st. 

FOR  S.\LE— 1  1913  model  36.  7-pa88en. 
ger  Studebaker.  run  3,000  miles,  A-1 
condition;  1  1912  a-paasenger  Cadillac, 
Just  overhauled  and  In  good  condition. 
Either  of  above  a  bargain.  W  rite 
J    962,    Herald. 


FOR  SALE — An  assortment  of  fixtures. 
Including  lighting  fixtures,  suitable 
for  furniture  or  other  store,  will  sell 
cheap.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co.,  124  E. 
Sup.    St. 

FOR  SALE-^Second-hand  woodworking 
machinery,  portable  sawmill,  trans- 
mission appliances,  pipes  for  steam, 
water  and  furnaces.   Duluth  Mach.  Co. 

FOR  SALE — Furniture  for  summer  cot- 
tage very  cheap,  also  leather  bed  dav- 
enport, almost  new,  and  mahogany 
settee.      3614   Minnesota   ave.  


HARLEY-DAVIDSON 


WEST   END  HOMES.— 


'J*' 


FOR  SALE — By  «)wner.  8-room  house, 
arranged  for  2  families;  gas.  bath 
and  full  basement;  cement  sidewalk; 
near  carllne.  West  End.  Call  Mel. 
6536. 

FOR  SALfi— Eight-room  house,  ar- 
ranged  for  two  families.   In  flrat-claas 

condition;    will    »r»,/!;'«?P' ,if %1  *"' 
going    farming.      Call    1620    B.    <th    St. 

FOR~SALE— A  snap:  $2,000  buys  nine- 
room  house  for  two  families.  West 
Duluth;  terms  to  suit.  Northern 
Realty  Co  ,  627  Manhattan  bldg. 

Ff)U  SALE— By  owner,  modern  2-flat 
brick  building;  6  blocks  from  First 
National  bank;  $6,000.  Address  E  940, 
Herald.  


•  5_000 — Five-room  dwelling,  6th  st.  near 
near  2nd  ave.  w.;  all  modern,  with 
heat  etc.;  32-foot  lot;  paved  street. 
Ternis,  $400  cash,  $20  per  month. 

$2  800 — Six-room  house.  4th  st.  and  28th 
ave  w.;  3B-foot  lot;  all  usual  con- 
veniences; fine  location;  $600  cash  and 
$25  per  month. 

•  2  600 Five-room   dwelling   on   W.   Srd 

at  Has  concrete  block  foundation, 
bath,  gas.  electric  light,  ftc  Fine 
little  home  at  a  low  price;  easy  terms. 

We  have  a  big  list  of  West  end  homes 
at  moderate  prices  and  on  easy  terms. 

WESTERN  REALTY  CO.. 
1922  W.  Superior  st. 


A    CHANCE    TO    BUY    A   HOME. 

$1,100  buys  a  first  clqss  6-room  cottage 
on  Park  Point:  on  a  lot  40x100  high 
and  dry  lot;  gas,  water  and  electric 
light;  located  on  28th  and  Minnesota 
ave.  to  the  buyer  we  will  make  a 
present  of  another  6-roora  cottage  lo- 
cated  In  rear  of  house.  In  good  first 
class  condition;  can  be  Easily  r«3nted: 
don't    delay.      Call    Grand    236S-Y. 

\ru~K  6TH  ST.— Brand  new.  6  rooms, 
modern,  oak  finish,  laundry,  hot  water 
hea.t  stone  foundation,  location  none 
beft^rriot  60x150.  Terms.  $1.00_0  c_ash; 
balance  to   suit.   Mel.   8716 


<.;UARANTEED  tire  repairing  at  low 
nrlces;  our  new  tires  will  save  you 
money  on  mileage.  Duluth  Auto  Tire 
Repair  Co.,  313  E.  Superior  st. 

YOUR  OLD  CASINGS  are  worth  money 
to  you  with  our  system  of  double 
treading:  see  us.  Herlan  &  Merllng, 
106   W.    1st   St.      Mel.    4668^ 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Second-hand  au- 
tomobile; must  be  In  fiist-cl»is8  con- 
dition. Address,  with  full  particulars, 
Z  73.  Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Ford  demountable  rims; 
crown  fender.1.  radiator  hoods  and 
shdlls.  all  kinds  of  tires.  Johnson 
Auto  Supply. 

FOR  SALE— 1916  Maxwell  S-passenger 
touring  car.  Call  Theo.  O.  Furlund 
Auto   Co.    6-7    E.    1st    St.  ^ 


if^if'if^.if'it'^f^f'if^-^if^^Mf^ii^it^i^f^f'ii^* 

FOR  SALE — A  6-acre  tract.  Just  the 
thing  for  poultry,  etc.;  four  miles 
from  city  limits  of  Superior  and  1 
mile  from  two  railway  stations,  with 
paved  auto  road  to  Duluth  and  Supe- 
rior; dally  mall  service;  truck  grow- 
ers In  this  district  have  made  $500 
per  acre  and  better  on  berries;  land 
can  be  cleared  for  $12.56  per  acre  and 
\fi  level,  and  free  from  rock;  price 
$386.  on  easy  payments;  $26  cash  and 
$6  per  month.  Heimbaugh  &  Spring. 
1103  Tower  ave..  Superior,  Wis.  Both 
phones. 

FOR  sale: — Farm,  TO  acres,  86  cleared 
and  plowed;  one  mile  east  of  Lake 
Nebagamon;  7-rqanv  house,  span  of 
mules,  80  chlcke««,  4  milch  cows.  1 
heifer,  1  bull.  fuU  set  of  Implements, 
sleds,  wagon,  2-sea>ted  buggy,  mower, 
drags.  6  tons  hay.  etc.;  $5,000,  half 
cash,  balance  to  suit.  Agusta  Englund, 

Lake   Nebagamon. 

. .  « ■ 

FOR  SALE — Farm  of  80  acres.  In  sec- 
tion 26.  township  60.  range  19.  25 
acres  under  cultivation,  S6  acres 
clearing:  has  2-rootn  dwelling,  stable, 
barn  and  3  hay  sheds,  good  well,  efc. 
Ten  miles  north  of  Kinney,  Minn., 
along  good  road.  Inquire  of  John 
Ikola,   Box   61.   Kinnoy,   Minn. 

FOR  SALE  OR  LEASE— 167  acres  un- 
explored mineral  land  In  Lake  county, 
section  81,  68-11;  lots  8,  9.  10  and  11 
on  White  Iron  laice,  one  mile  south 
of  rich  ore-producing  mine.  Mrs. 
Emma  Pederson.  826  2nd  st.  N.  side, 
Virginia.    Minn. 


FOR  SALE— $760  player  piano  for  $285 
and  $375  piano  for  $226.  also  $300 
piano  for  $166,  cash  or  time.  Korby 
Piano  Co..   26  Lake  ave.   n. 

FOR  SALE— Piano.  $60;  dining  table 
and  6  chairs.  $20;  hat  rack,  $2.60; 
Swiss  music  box,  $20;  electric  dome, 
$3.50.     227  either  phone. 

DOGS  of  all  breeds  bought  and  sold; 
expert  on  dog  diseases;  dogs  boarded. 
Stamp  for  reply.  Gordon  Dale  Kennels. 
Park    Point.    Mel.    6101. _^__ 

FOR  SALE— Singer  sewing  machine; 
cost  $38,  win  sell  for  $16;  baby  bed, 
nursery  chair  and  cutter,  will  sell  all 
for  $6.     228  E.  1st  st. 


ARCHITECTS. 

GILIUSON  &    CARSON,    313-14    Glencoe 
bldg.      Mel.    6622;    Grand    1786-X. 


CARDS! 

Business  Cards.   800.   $1;  Calling  Cards, 
100,  39c.  Kask  Printery,  114  E.  Sup.  st. 

^m  t  f. 


CAMERAS  AND  KODAKS. 

—ARCADE    CAMERA   SHOP— 
110  W.  Superior  st.  Amateur  finishing, 
kodaks  and   camera  sapplies. 
■■  *  ■  I-  -  ■        -^* 

CARPET  CI.EANINU  WORKS. 


MUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS. 


A.  Haakonsen,  dealer 
and  expert  repairing, 
at  J.  W.  NelBous,  i 
E.  Superior  sL 


Gibson  mandolins  and  guitars,  banios. 
banjo-mandollns,  old  violins,  cellos. 
Ben    B.    Miller,    agent     Grand    1622-X- 


Pianos.   violins,   vlctrolas,    sheet   music, 
etc.      Boston    Music    Co. 


MEDICAL  BATHS. 

DR.  K.  A.  LEE,  chiropractic  special- 
ist; cure  or  no  pay  for  rheumatism, 
stomach  and  kidney  troubles.  Baths. 
1826   E.    Superior   st.    Mel.    8125 


FOR  SALE — Used  gas  ranges  re-enam- 
eled and  put  In  good  repair  at  very 
easy  figures.  Anderson  Furniture 
Co..  2lBt  ave.  w. 

FOR  SALE— Fumed  oak.  Stlckley  dav- 
enport  with  leather  cushion;  excellent 
condition;  owner  leaving  city.  1828 
E.    2nd  St. 

FOR  SALE — $8  buys  nearly  new 
Eastman  folding  kodak,  post  card 
size,  cost  $22.50.  Apply  Linen  store,  8 
E.  1st  St. 

FOR  SALE — $350  almost  new  piano; 
win  take  $166:  one-half  cash,  balance 
on   time.      Address   A   948.    Herald. 


INTERSTATE   CARPET 
1908    W.    Michigan    st. 


Cleaning   Co. 
Both    phones. 


WE  RENT  electric  cleaners.  $1  to  $1.60 
per  day.     Anderson  Furniture  Co. 


OPTOMETRIST  AND  OPTICIAN.       . 

CONSULT  A.  L.  NORBERG,  optomet- 
rist and  optician.  201 V4  W.  1st  St..  for 
economical  buying  and  correct  fitting 
of  glasses;  satisfaction  guaranteed. 
Wo  grind  our  own  lenses.  Established 
in  business  1891.  Registered  by  ex- 
amination   1901. 


CHIMNEY     SWEEP. 

ED  McCARTY,  chimney  sweep  and 
furnace  cleaning.   Call  Lake.   46-L. 

KNUDSON — Chimney  sweep  and  furnace 
cleaner.  Fire  headquarters,  Mel.  46. 

DANCINU   ACADEMY. 

RYAN'S — The  school  that  makes  good 
dancers.  Classes:  Mondays,  Tuesdays 
and   Thursday.    Call   Mel.    4618. 


FOR  SALE — 10-acre  truck  or  dairy 
farm  on  Pike  Lake  "road;  ten  minutes' 
walk  from  street  car;  all  cleared  and 
fenced;  small  buildings;  price  $3,000, 
for  quick  sale;  terms  to  suit.  Blckell- 
Kyllo  &  Co..  205   Exchange  bldg. 

168  ACRES.  8  miles  from  Nevis.  Minn.; 
good  land,  near  lake,  new  buildings; 
80  fenced.  25  acres  plowed.  Will  sell 
or  take  Duluth  residence  property  In 
exchange.  Write  owner.  Charles  Nel- 
son,   Nevis,   Minn.,    Route    2. 


FOR  SALE— Household  furniture,  ex- 
cellent condition;  owner  leaving  city. 
Call   431   B.    2nd  st.  


COFFIN'S  ACADEMY — Classes  Monday, 
Tuesday    and    Thursday.  Either  phone. 


FRENCH   DRY    CLEANERS. 

PHONE  1246  and  our  auto  will  call. 
Prompt  attention  to  out-of-town  or- 
ders.   East    End    Dry    Cleaners. 


PIANOS  REPAIRED  AND  TUNED. 

r"'^'     I^^^^the'^plano^^hoF^^^ 

Tuning,  finishing  and  repairing.  Greg- 
ory &  Krlstensen,  1806  W.  Superior 
St.   Melrose   6621;   Lin.    296-X. 


DULUTH  PIANO  Repair  factory,  alley 
enuance.  312  V»    W.   1st   st.  Mel.    464 


PAPERS    AND   MAGAZINES    BOUGHT. 

DON'T  THROW  aw:ay  old  magazines 
and  newspapers;  we  buy  them.  Du- 
luth Paper  Stock  Co.  Grand  2026,  Mel. 
6339.  

-  '  '  '  "" 

PAINTING  AND  PAPERING. 

WHEN  YOU  want  to  paint  and  paper, 
call  Dudley  for  right  prices.  •  liel. 
1890-X;     Grand     1488-X, 


FURNITURE  RE-COVERED. 

Let   Forsell   do   your   UPHOLSTERING. 
334    E.    Superior    at.     Both    phones. 


FLORIST    AND    NURSERYMAN. 

Duluth  Floral  Co.,  wholesale,  retail;  cut 
flowers,    funeral    designs.    121  V> .  Sup. 


PATENTS. 

All    about    patents;    consultation    free. 
S.  Geo.  Stevens.  716  Fidelity.  Mel.  812L 

~  PLUMBING. 

THE  SANITARY   Plumbing  Co.,   84   W. 
Ist    St..    plumbing   and    heating. 


inriBrDOW   CLEANING. 


National  Window  Cleaning  Co.,  expert 
In  cleaning  woodwork,  wall  paper, 
marble,  etc.  Our  work  must  prove  sat- 
isfactory; prices  reasonable.  Mel.  680. 


FOR  SALE — Player  piano,  with  music, 
at  a  bargain;  easy  payments.  Edmont, 
18   3rd   ave.   w. 

FOR  SALE — Complete  4- room  outfit 
of  nearly  new  furniture.  826  6th  ave. 
e.,    upstairs. 

FOR  SALE^Steel  range  and  heater. 
Will  sell  cheap  if  taken  at  once.  412 
E.   6th  St.  


YOl'R    CAR    repaired    at    your 
A-1    mechanics.     Harrison  & 
6642.     2721  Huron  st. 


garage; 
Son.   Mel. 


J.   D.  S. 


FOR    SALE 7-room    house;    hot    water 

heat ;  built  last  summer.    922  11th  ave.  e. 

FOR  SALE — New  6-room  house.  Wood- 
landrw-toot  lot;  $1,960.  Call  Mel.  S»10. 


FOR  SALE— A  snap,  on  easy  terms.  7- 
room  house  with  bath,  at  price  lum- 
be?  corner  lot  60x140.  $2,650;  look  up 
at  once.  4402  Cooke  st.    R-  R-  Forward. 

FOR  SALE! — Modern  home;  If  you  want 
one  of  the  best  In  East  end  at  right 
figure,  write  me.  W  rite  L  62.  care 
Herald. - 

FOR  SALE— By  owner,  new  9-room 
modern  house  on  Jefferson  at.  Call 
Mel.   1481. 


FOR  SALE  —  6-passenger  Hiidson; 
cheap  for  qu'ck  sale.  Call  after  6  p.  m. 
819  W.  8rd  St. 

FOR  SALE — 7-pa8senger.  6-40  Thomas 
touring  car:  good  condition;  cheap. 
122    W.    2nd    st.  


SALE— 1915      6-pas8enger     .Ford; 
$325.      Call      920      B. 


FOR 

good    condition; 

9th  St. 


FOR  SALE— COWS^ 

iroR    SALE— S.    Ooldflne    has    J 
rived    with    carload    of    the    fii 


FOR  SALE — 40  acres  at  French  river; 
6  acres  ready  for  seeding,  2  acres 
cleared  and  plowed;  6-room  frame 
house,  log  barn  and  chicken  house. 
Inquire  upstairs  over  Home  laundry, 
18  20th  ave.  w..  after  6. 

FOR  SALE— Sixty- 8^cre  farm.  8  miles 
northwest  of  W'entworth.  Douglas 
county:  good  farm  buildings;  reason- 
able terms.  A,  J.  Modlne.  Wentworth. 
Wis. 


-$660  player  piano;  cash  or 
be   arranged,    $246.    Z   867, 


FOR  SALE- 
terms  can 
Herald. , 

FOR  SALE— Household  furniture.  In- 
cluding gas  range,  at  108  N.  2Srd 
ave.   w. 


FOR  SALE— I  have  a  dandy   5-month- 
old  female  Airedale;  $5.     Doug.  182-M. 

FOR  SALE— $260  new  plano;  will  take 

$126   cash.      Address   A   941,    Herald. 
FOR  SALE — Furniture,   odds  and   ends 
half   price.      Boston    Music    Co. 


at 


SALE — Extension 
8691.        


dining     table. 


Juat  ar- 
inest  as- 
sortment of  fresh  milch  cows  and 
cold  springers.  Both  phones;  stock 
iards.  1016  N.  6th  ave  w.  Take  In- 
cllne  car  to  8th  st.  walk  two  blocks 
northeast.  


wrm  S'^LE Fre.<*h  milch  cows  arriv- 
ing da'llv  Will  buy  and  exchange  for 
beef  cattle.  8.  Wlddes.  2218  W.  »th 
Grand  2291-A.  Mel.  4326. 


FOR  SALE — Lake  frontage;  If  you 
want  a  piece  of  land  on  nice  lake, 
call  on  us.  We  have  it.  Northern 
Realty    Co..    627    Manhattan    bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Four  forties,  first-class 
farm  land;  lake  frontage;  20  miles 
from  town;  $1,600.  cash  $300.  Owner, 
110  Pine  St..  Virginia.  Minn. 

BARGAIN— $1,000    cAsh    buys    80    acres 

.   in   63-14.   close   to„C*ifisolldated   mines. 

Northern    Realty  ,iCoh!   627    Manhattan 

BEAUTIFUL  RlVfcft  front  farms  at 
Meadowlands  on-teasy  terms.  Uno 
Undstrom,  31  E.  4tk>>tlgan  st.  Duluth. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITALS 

PRIVATE  HOME  before  and  during 
confinement;  good  care  by  experienced 
nurse;  Infarts  cared  for.  Mrs.  Finkle, 
218  W.   8rd  st.  Mel.   2464^ 

PRIVATE  HOME  for  women  before  and 
during  confinement:  expert  care;  in- 
fants cared  for.  Ida  Pearson,  M.  D., 
284   Harrison  ave.,  St.  Paul. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES^ 

FOR  RENT — 12-room  hotel  In  a  new 
sawmill  town  on  the  Iron  Range,  on 
a  1  or  2-year  lease.  Rent  very  rea- 
sonable.  Also  a  good  stand  for  soft 
drinks  or  pool  hall  in  the  same  build- 
ing A  good  opportunity  here  also 
for'a  barber  shop.  Write  M  86,  Herald- 

BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  sale  gro- 
cery store,  12  blocks  from  end  of 
Woodland  car  line  on  Calvarj'  road; 
win  consider  renting  building  and 
selling  stock  and  fixtures.  Grand 
2212-D.  


FOR  SALE — By  owner,  small  grocery 
store,  postofflce  In  connection;  located 
near  railroad  shops;  price  reasonable; 
terms  if  desired.  Address  O.  O. 
Woods.    Hopper.    Mlnn^ 


St. 


JEWELRY  REPAIRED 


Have    Lange    do    your    repairing    right. 
Cash  for  old  gold.     12  Lake  ave.  n. 


FOR  SALE — 40  *.qr>».  half  mile  from 
Munger.  on  road:  *$86(>.  easy  terms.     E. 

E.  Helland.  101  39th  ave.  w.,  Dulnth. 

WANTED  TO  RE^^T^or  buy  a  small 
farm  In  Wisconsin  ojr, Southern  Minne- 
sota.    Write  a  76.   Herald. 

Parties   desiring   tS  ct^ar   lands,    writ* 

F.  J.  Kupplnger,  ^«,v^port,  Iowa. 

I  BUY  and  sell  lands  and  timber.  Ge-o. 
Rupley,  612  Lyceum  bldg. 


MRS.  K.  THORSTENSON.  nurse  and 
midwife;  private  home.  ^1602  28th  St., 
Superior,   Wis.     Ogden   861-X. 


MRS.  H.  OLSON,  graduate  midwife; 
private  hospital  and  home  329  N. 
68th  ave.  w.  Phones.  Cole  178;  Cal.  270. 


FOR  SALE — At  a  bargain,  old  estab- 
lished tailoring,  cleaning  and  repair 
shop  doing  first  class  business;  rea- 
son for  senlng,  other  business.  Write 
F  71.   Herald. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  rent,  cheap, 
large  hotel,  modern  and  central;  if 
you  want  a  money  maker,  see  us. 
Northern  Realty  Co.,  627  Manha.ttan 
bldg. 

FOR  SALE — ^Moving  picture  theater, 
Jolng  nice  business;  owner  in  other 
business;  bear  closest  investigation. 
Write  owner.  K  964.  Herald. 


FOR  SALE  OR  EXCHANGE 

WANTED  TO  EXCHANGE— Nice  lot 
on  upper  side  of  London  road,  be- 
tween 25th  and  26th  ave.  e.,  for  160 
acres  land  In  St.  Louis  or  Lake  coun- 
ty, or  for  any  of  the  following  stocks: 
Big  Ledge,  Maria  Mining,  Cactu» 
Cons.,  Butte  &  Zenith  or  Onahman 
Iron.  Address  Presto,   Herald. 

WANTED  TO  EXCHANGE — 80  acres 
near  Rabbitt  lake  and  nice  Improved 
farm  in  Aitkin  county  for  standing 
timber.  Northern  Realty  Co.,  627 
Manhattan  bldg. 


Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Rail  Road. 

«VermlU«n    Rewte/* 


DCUTH— 


MRS.  HANSON,  graduate  midwife;  fe- 
male complaints.  413  7th  ave.  e.  Zen. 
1225.  


FOR  SALE— Restaurant  and  confec- 
tionery, worth  $400;  sale  price  $260;  or 
willing  to  take  partner.  Apply  Grand 
161S-X. ■  

FOR  SALE — Centrally  located  proper- 
ty, used  for  rooming  house:  6-year 
lease  to  good  parties. 


Kntfe  Klver,  Two  Hwbtn, 
Tower,  Ely,  Wlnton,  Au- 
rora, Biw«btt,  McKlnl«7 
apwU,  Svckth,  GUbert, 
VlUlnlt. 


te«Te. 


•  730t.iii. 
t  SlSp.m. 
ill  :30p.m. 


Arrtw. 


tUJOB.B. 
*  &30p.a. 
il0  15p.a. 
xl0:45p.a. 


•— Dailr  t— I>»ll»  fxe«lH  8uwl«jr.  t— Mli«l  trmla 
leafes  dally  fro«  fVtiwnUi  Atbom  EMt  SUUcm. 
I— MIxhJ  train  trTl»e«  (tally  except  Sundiy  tt  HftetatH 
ATemw  Eait  Statlm.  s— AnrivH  Lnlon  Depot  Suodiy 
ODly.     •  _^_^ 


DULUTH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 

Offlcei     426  West  Superior  St« 

Pkoaea.  •«•.  . 


E06  Palladlo  bldg. 


Mrs.  Ekstrom,  gra 
W.   8rd   St.     Lin. 


raduate  midwife.  1924  «4 
16S-D;   Mel.   7468. 


TIMBER  LANDS 

TIMBER  and  cut-over  lands  bought; 
mortgage  loans  made.  John  g.  A. 
Crosby.  306  Palladlo  bldg. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  sale— Sev- 
eral oak  filing  cases,  cheap.  Dunning 
&.  Dunning.  600  Alworth  bldg. 


FOR  SALE — Grocery  business;  for  In- 
formation call  Grand  669-D;  Melrose 
8442.  . 


UtTe. 


Anl*^ 


•140UI 
•840»a 


Hlhblni,   Chlsbolm,   Vlrelula.   Ete- 1 


leth.    tolwalae,    Bharoci,    +MouB- 

ta'ln   Iron,    Syvts,    BlwaliU. 

Hibblnc    OilstiolB,    Sturoo. 

VlTilnU,    E»eleth, 

Coleralue. 

VtrglDU. 

ChbbolB 

Blbbloc. 


tMm 


>10:31ui 


FOR  SALE  — Several  good  timber 
claims,  cheap.  Northern  Realty  Co., 
627  Manhattan  bldg. 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  WANTED 

WANTED — Office  man  desires  room 
and  board  with  private  family,  or 
room  with  board  optional,  or  vice 
versa;  central  downtown  district  pre- 
ferred- state  particulars;  can  furnish 
A-1   references.     Z  90,  Herald. 


•—Daily. 
waMk. 


t— Dally    esnpt    Sunday.      $— Kxoept 


Cafe   Observation   Car,    Mlssabe    R«,ng« 
Points,   Solid  Vestlbuled  Train. 


BULHTM  &  HOITNEM  HINNEMTA  NAILWAV. 

•Tralna  eomwct  tt  KnUe   Blffr  dally    (except  ftmter) 
iS;  D    A  I    K.  trains  leaTln*  Duluth  at  7:30  a.   ■., 


With 


IrrWM  »t  mtlttth  (EndlOB)  at  10  15  P 
^nua  wim  tirfcud  MaraU  itafi  w^em  r 


n.    Coooact  at 
ruoalog. 


I 


H    I    I  .  »  IT  .    «  I    I 


-^»r»'*f    ■     ' 


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r 


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^  <A* 


Monday, 


THE  UDIillTHHERAIiD 


April  10, 1916. 


Oae    Ont    ■    Word    Raoh   Iimrrtion. 
3io   Advertlaenent    I^eirn    Than    15   Obta. 

Jt  WANTED. 


COME  TO  TIKIE 
OFFIU^E 

TELEPHONE 

YOUR  WANT  ADS 


v^  Kxperiencfd  Sflila  to  make  niackl- 


-TO  THE- 


DULUTH  HERALD 

Both  Phones 


TEl-EPHONE  WAXT  ADS— Are 
chai  gt  d  at  the  same  rate  as  cas-h  aus, 
and  collections  will  be  made  at  your 
home  or  offlc-  as  foon  as  ?«»«''''« 
thereafter.  This  is  an  accommodation 
Bfrvice.  and  payment  BhouUl  be  made 
promptly  when  the  bill  is  presented 
eo  as  to  avoid  fuith.r  annoyance  and 
to  aid  the  eftlclency  of  our  8t»  Yce. 
Always  a.sk  that  your  telephone  ad  be 
Repeated  back  to  you  by  th«  telephone 
ad  taker,  to  make  »ur©  that  It  has 
been   correctly   taken. 

BMXD  AUS_No  answers  to  blind  ads 
•will  be  given  unl-ss  ticket  Is  preHent- 
ed  at  time  of  request.  Always  save 
ticket  showing  key  number  when 
placlnB  blind  ads.  Herald  employes 
Are  not  permitted  to  tell  who  any  ad- 
vertiser is.  Answers  to  out-of-town 
blind  ads  will  be  forwarded  Avlthout 
extra  cost. 


nuws,  shirts,  pants  and  overalls. 

Apply— 

CHRIRTENSKN-MENDENHALL- 

GRAHAM   CO.. 

616  West   First  Street. 


WANTED  AT  ONCE. 


%     rr>MrETENT  SAI.,p:SI^ADY  FOR 
^  CLOAK  AND  SUIT  DEPARTMENT. 

if.  Apply — 

-^  J.   M.   GIDDING  A  CO. 


EMPLOYED  PEOPLE  Increase  your 
Income  |25  to  $60  per  month  with- 
out Interfering  with  regular  work; 
no  selling,  no  canvassing,  no  money 
or  experience  required;  no  work  but 
fun.  The  Come-Packt  Merchandls* 
Co.,   Toledo,   Ohio. 


LEARN  TO  CUT  and  make  your  own 
waists  and  dresses.  You  can  easily  do 
It  after  taking  the  course  In  practical 
Instruction.  Make  clothes  while  learn- 
ing. Miss  Gray's  school.  3rd  floor,  Geo. 
A.  Gray  Co.  Also  all  sizes  and  styles 
of  patterns  cut  to  measure. 

WANTED — Competent  maid  for  gen- 
eral housework;  one  who  can  do  the 
cooking  and  part  of  washing;  %2i  per 
month.      1921   E.   3rd  st. 


One    Cent    m    Word    Eaoli    I"**'*'*!!;. 
3Vo  AdvertUenient   Le»ii  Than   15  Cents. 

HELP  WANTED— MALE 

WANTED.  ^ 


A  man  of  sufficient  caliber  to  ap 
proach  and  sell  the  better  class  of 
investors,  preferred  stock  in  a 
live,  money-making  corporation  in 
the  lumber  business.  \%  rite  J  .i. 
Herald. 


WANTED    First-class    boHermakcr 


«.nd  shop  foreman,  capable  of  laying 
out  work,  and  thoroughly  familiar 
With  reading  blue  prints.  To  such  a 
man  there  is  an  excellent  opportunity 
for  a  permanent  position  with  ati- 
vancement.  Answering  fully  stating 
age  experience,  whether  marrlea 
single,  and  salary  expected. 
Boiler  &  Manufacturing  t  o. 


WANTED  —  Women  as  government 
clerks,  $70  month:  Duluth  exaniina- 
tions  coming.  Franklin  Institute.  Dept. 
646  N..  Rochester,  N.  Y.       

WANTED— A  middle-aged  housekeep- 
er; 2  adults  and  3  small  chll.lren 
mother  convalescing.  Call  426  62nd 
ave.  ».,  West  Dulutji^ 

WANTED Experienced  cook  for  hotel, 

Btate  wages  expected;  good  steady 
Job  for  right  person.  Gladys  hotel, 
Sourls,    N.    D. 

WANTED^— Young  girl  to  assist  with 
housework;  small  family:  one  who  can 
go  home  nights.  Apply  16  S.  l<tn 
ave.   e. 

WANTED  —  Thoroughly  experienced 
and  willing  second  girl,  between  26 
and  36  years  old;  family  of  two.     Mel. 

4771. 

house- 


Your  Business  Misl  Go 
Forward  or  Baekivard; 
There'sNoStandiqiSHH 


That'.s  why  it  is  important  for  a 
small  business  to  take  advantage 
of  every  means  of  growth.  The 
easiest,  surest  and  nearest  to  hand 
is  the  "Business  Cards"  column  in 
The  Herald's  Want  Ad  pages.  It 
assures  healthy  growth  to  the 
small  businesses  advertised  there. 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

Duluth's  Want  Ad  Directory 
Read  For  Profit— Use  For  Results 


One    Cent    a    Word   Eack  Inaertion. 
No  Advertlaement  Leaa  Than   15  Ceata. 

___?ORJEN^FLATS^___ 

FOR  RENT— 4  heated  flats  at  816 
W.  4th  St.  Building  entirely  remod- 
eled and  decorated  throughout.  New 
floors.  First  floor,  6  rooms  and  j 
kitchenette.  Every  room  light  and 
sunny.  Large  wardrobes,  2  fireplaces 
and  everything  complete,  Including 
gas  ranges.  Rents  for  $36.00  per 
month.  Second  floor,  2  large  rooms 
facing  Me^aba  ave.  at  $16.00  per 
month.      -Third     floor,     3     rooms    with 

.  large  closets  and  kitchenette  fitted 
up  with  gas  range  and  everything 
complete;  rent,  $20.00.  Large  attic 
for  storage  purposes.  These  flats 
have  been  fitted  up  regardless  of  ex- 
pense and  are  most  desirable  in  every 
way.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118  Man- 
hattan   bldg. 

FOR   RENT.  * 

t  »f 

We   have    some   desirable    rooms  * 
for   light    housekeeping    or   offices  Jt^ 


One    Cent    a    Word   Back  Insertion. 
Xo  Advertl«ement  Leiwi  Tlian  15  Centa. 

FOR    RENT — 4-room       flat    and    bath.  ! 
2106  N.  27th  ave.  w.  All  conveniences 
except   heat   at   $12.60    per   month. 

FOR  RENT— One  4.room  and  one  8 
room  flat:  modern  except  heat.  In 
quire  618    E.   2nd  St. 

FOR 

1927 


SECRET  SOCIETIES 


PALtSTl.VE   LODGE   NO.    7*.    A.    F.    A   A. 

M.— ReguUr  iiie«tliits  flrrt  »Dd  tbW  !•«»- 
day  fTpnlngx  of  carh  month  at  7.30  c  cloc*. 
Neit  me€t)n«.  AprU  3,  1916.  Wort— 
Thiitl  (Iferw  by  part  masters;  6^  <!lnB«r. 
Clement    G.    Townsend.    W.    W.;   JtiE^    ■• 


RENT— Five- room     heated 
W.    3rd    St.;    Mel.    3368. 


FOR    RENT — Nice, 
608  W.  Srd  st. 


clean,    5-room 


at  123  W.   Superior  st.  and  220  W.  # 

Superior  st.;    rent   from    $8    to   $15  * 

per  month.  * 

# 


ZENITH  REALTY  CO.. 
4   South   First  Avenue   East. 


FOR   RENT. 


6-room  flat.  1113  E.  6th  st.,  will  b«  va- 
cant May  1;   rent  $20  per  month. 


7-room  flat,  with  heat,  water  and  jani- 
tor service,  at  1121  */2  London  road; 
rent  $42.60   per   month. 


FOR  JtENT^^USES 

FOR  RENT. 


613  19th  ave.  e.,  7  rooms,  ,$20. 
2906  W.  2nd  St.,  7-room  house. 
2002  W.  2nd  St.,  5-room  flat. 
1731  W.  Superior  St.,  6-room  flat. 
1716  W.  1st  St.,  6-room  flat. 


BENJAMIN    F.    SCHWEIGER 
1932  W.  Superior  st. 


CO.. 


FOR  RENT — A  very  desirable  8- room 
thoroughly  modern  house  on  E.  1st  st., 
near  8th  ave.,  which  has  been  thor- 
oughly redecorated  and  Is  in  excel- 
lent condition;  hot  water  heating 
plant.  For  rental  and  other  partic- 
ulars calls  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303  Lons- 
dale   bldg. 


WHITNEY  WALL  CO., 
801   Torrey  Bldg. 


FOR  RENT— At  120  W.  4th  St..  front  5- 
room  flat  and  bath;  every  room  light, 
airy  and  In  splendid  condition;  all 
conveniences  except  heat;  $23  per 
month,  with  bath.  W.  C.  Sherwood  & 
Co..  118  Manhattan  bldg. 


for     general 
work;    small    family;    $25    per    month; 


WANTED — Olrl      for      ge 

....  ::    _     ". ;  $2 

no  washing;  references.  2319  E.  Iflt  st 


WANTED — Woman  clerk  In  grocery 
store,  also  a.ssistant  cashier;  answer 
with    reference. 


Write    F    88,    Herald. 


Call      6216 


WANTED — Housekeeper. 

or  232  N.   63rd  ave.  w. 


Orand  ave.  w.. 
Phone  Cole  299 


or 


eep 
23i 
224-Y.  or  Cal.  92-L. 


St. 


or 
Paul 


WANTED— Duluth  jobber  desires  re- 
liable rniddle-aged  man  with  clean 
record  as  city  .-salesman;  prefer  one 
that  has  had  drygoods  experience: 
«a!arv  and  commiswlon;  give  full  par- 
ticulars as  to  experience  and  refer- 
enc-8.      Write    Y    hh.    Herald. ^ 

WANTED — Young  man.  be  a  barber. 
Wo  teach  you  cheaply  and  thoroughly 
and  furnish  tools  free.  Write  or  c^all 
for  free  catalogue.  R.  Modern  Barber 
college  20  Va  E.  Superior  st.,  Duluth, 
or  833   E.    7th  st..   St.   Paul,  Minn. 


WANTEK— Neat       girl       for 
housework,    family    of    two.    6 
ave.    e.    Phone    Melrose    1228. 


21 


eneral 
24th 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  house- 
work; 2  In  family;  good  wages.  Mel. 
186.    1626    Jefferson    st. 

WANTED — Competent  girl  for  general 
hou.se  work;  no  laundry  work;  good 
wages.      1906   E.   3rd   st. 


WA.XTED— Young  lady  to  assist  In 
dental  office;  no  experience  required. 
Write   V   92.    Herald. 

WANTED — Experienced  girls  to  work 
on  mangle.  Apply  Zenith  Laundry. 
232    E.    Superior   st. 


WANTED — Girl      for      general      house- 
work;    will     take     newcomer.     630    N. 

^TwE  HAVE  GOOD  POSITION.^—        |     18th  ave.  e. 

For  men  In  clerical,  technical  and  com-    WANTED— Competent  and  expjerlenced 
merrlal     lines.       Strangers     and     non- ' 
members  cspeclnlly  welcome.     Consul-  ;    66, 
tation  free.      Y.   M.   C   A.   Employment; 
department.  


bookkeeper-stenographer, 
Herald. 


Write      S 


WANTED — Advertising  man,  college 
or  unlver*>lty  graduate,  with  depart- 
ment store  or  newspaper  writing  ex- 
perl*  ncr,  preferred:  good  salary  and 
opportunity.  Write  full  details  to 
Q  60,  Herald.   

LEAlt.V  TELEGRAPHY  —  Railroad, 
comnurclal  wireless,  al.io  touch  type- 
writing: earn  board  while  learning; 
write  for  free  catalogue.  American 
Telegraph    College,    Minneapolis. 

\VANTED — Three  matcher  men,  two 
cut-out  sawyers,  one  marling  machine 
rrian;  good  wages.  Superior  Box  Co.. 
6«th  Ht.  and  Northern  Paclftc  tracks. 
Super  lor,    Wls^ 

WANTED— BOO  hunters  to  know  we 
loan  money  on  rifles,  shotguns,  re- 
volvers; will  hold  till  next  season  be- 
fore sold.  Keystone  Loan  Co.  22  W. 
Superior    st.  

DL'H'TH — Railway  mall  clerk  exami- 
nations coming.  $76  month.  Samplo 
qutbllons  free.  Franklin  Institute, 
Dey.t.    186    N     Rochester.    N.    Y. 

WANTED— Man  and  wife  to  run  a 
biJirdlng  house:  must  be  reliable  and 
respei  table:  reference  will  be  re- 
quired.      Addre.ss   H   78,   Herald. 

WANTED — Experienced  driver;  one 
who  knows  the  city,  and  can  solicit 
bupiness.  Apply  Zenith  Dye  House, 
232   E.    Superior  .st. 

WANTP:D— Machinists  and  molders. 
No  labor  troubles.  Apply  Lake  Shore 
Endiine   works,   Marquette,   Mich. 

WANTED — Flr.st-cla8.s  barber  to  take 
half  Interest  in  2-chair  modern  shop. 
Write   Box   1073,   Ely  Minn. 


i  WANTED — Competent    maid    for 
eral   housework.     2611  B.  Srd  st. 
rose    2648. 


en- 
lel- 


WANTED — Competent   girl   for   general 
housework;  3  in  family.  2330  E.  6th  st. 


One   Cent   a   Word   Each   Inaertlon. 
IVo  Advertlaement  Leaa  Than   16  Cent*. 


POULTRY  AND  EGGS 


WANTED — Competent     girl     for      gen- 
eral  housework.     3016   E.   Superior  st. 


WANTED — Good,       experienced       cook; 
must  furnish  reference.  2401  E.  6th  st. 


WANTED — Maid     for     general     house- 
work: no  children.     412  N.  16th  ave.  e. 


WANTED — Girl      for      general      house- 
work.     14    N.    19th    ave    e.;    Mel.    6963. 


WANTED — Chambermaid.        Esmond 
hotel,    20th    ave.    w.    and    Michigan    at. 

WANTED — Experienced    waitress.     ~Ai 
City    Restaurant.    608   W.   Superior  st. 

WANTED— Girl      for      general      house- 
work.     14  N,  19th  ave.   e.  Mel.  6953. 


WANTED— Competent    maid     for 
eral  housework.     2621  E.  6th  st. 


gen- 


WANTED — Man  handy  with  tools  and 
garden  work.  Apply  60th  ave.  E.  and 
Superhir  st.   Drug   store. 

WANTED — First-class  painter's  help- 
er. H.  Mlficampbell,  306  S.  Ist  ave. 
e.     Grand  254.  M i\.   6367. ^ 

WANTED — AdvertLsing  novelty  sales- 
man; must  be  a  top  notcher.  220  W. 
Superior  st.;  Room  206. 

W.^NTED — Experienced  grocery  de- 
livery man;  married  man  preferred. 
Write   W    87,   Herald. 


WANTED— Girls    at    Somers*    Employ- 
ment office,  13  E.  Superior  St. 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD  IS  THE  REC- 
OGNIZED   POULTRY    MEDIUM. 
It  Is  the  official  paper  of  the  poultry 
raisers    of    Duluth    and    Northern    Min- 
nesota. 

CIRCUI^ATION  LARGEST. 
RATES  LOW  E.ST. 
The  Duluth  Herald  has  the  largest 
circulation  of  any  newspaper  In  Min- 
nesota (outside  the  Twin  Cities).  Its 
charges  for  classified  advertising  are 
less  per  thousand  circulation  than 
those   of  any  other  paper  in  the  state. 

Hatching  eggs  from  celebrated  "Point 
o'  Pines  Farm,"  largest  and  finest 
modern  poultry  plant  In  N.  W.  Pure- 
bred egg-laying  strains,  S.  C.  W.  Leg- 
horns. 16  eggs,  $1.60;  100,  $6.  S.  C.  R. 
I.  Reds.  16  eggs,  $1.76;  100.  $6.  Write 
now.     Reserve.   Wis. 


FOR  SALE— Hatching  eggs  from  Du- 
luth Poultry  show  prlze-wlnnlng 
Barred  Plymouth  Rocks.  $1.50  for 
16;  also  eggs  from  fine  strain  of 
S.  C.  White  Leghorns.  $1.50  for  16; 
$6.00  for  100.  Marr  &  Son,  918  L. 
7th  St..   Duluth. 


WANTED-— Good 
housework.     318 


girl       for 
10th   ave.  e. 


general 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
1901    E.   6th   St.;   Mel.   3347. 


WANTED — f'oatmakers,  also  trouser 
and  ve.stmaker.  Hultgren  &  Bowden 
Co.,   Wolvln  bldg. 

"wanted — Cash  paid  for  diamonds. 
Watches  repaired,  $1,  6  S.  6th  ave.  w. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework; 
good  home.     821    4th  ave.  e. 

WANTED  —  Good     girl     for     general 
housework.  1028  E.  2nd  st. 

WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
small  family.  1822  E.  3rd  st. 

AVANTED — Girl    to    assist    with    house- 
work.   1424    London    road. 

WANTED — Kitchen   girl  and  chamber- 
maid.     People's    hotel. 


FOR  .SALE— Eggs  for  hatching,  SO. 
White  Leghorn,  $1  a  setting  of  $15, 
or  $5  per  hundred;  Bar  Plymouth 
Rock,    $1.50    a    setting: 


One    Cent    a    Word    Bach   Insertion. 
Xo  Advert  iMemant  f^eaa  Than  15  Centa. 

ON  PAGES  18  MD  19 

^R  REWt— ROOMS 

—THE  NBAV  ALEXANDRIA— 
A  few  desirable  rooms  now  vacant  at 
special  rates;  well-heated  and  com- 
fortable apartments.  Private  tele- 
phone in  every  room.  Dining  room  in 
In    connection.    322    W.    2nd   st. 

'              — METROPOLE    HOTEL— 
101-5   Lake   ave.   s.;    hot   and   cold   run- 
ning    water     in     every     room;     steam 
heat  and  other  modern   conveniences; 
rates    |2    per    week    and    up. 

—ELGIN   HOTELr— 

Nicely   furnished,    steam-heated    rooms; 

best    beds    In    the    city;    hot   and    cold 

running   water.      Rates    $2    and   up   by 

the  week.     821  W.  Ist  st. 

MELROSE     HOTEL. 
318    W.    2nd    st.,    well    heated,    pleasant 
rooms    and    board    at    special    winter 
rates.    Mel.    4801;    Grand    2166-X. 

FOR  RENT^ — Wh«n  renting  3  nicely 
furnished  rooms,  bedroom,  dining  room 
and  kitchen.  Including  choice  of  gas 
or  coal  range,  you  would  have  to  pay 
$25  to  |S5  per  niwith.  M^y  not  buy  a 
Kelly  3-room  outfit  for  $69  and  fur- 
nish your  own  rooms.  Pay  for  It 
monthly  on  our  dignified  credit  plan 
and  be  money  ahead.  F.  S.  Kelly 
Furniture    Co..    17-1'9    W.    Superior   st. 


FOR  RENT— A  4-room  flat  on  the  sec- 
ond floor  of  No.  2011  W.  Superior  st.; 
water,  electric  lights,  toilet,  hardwood 
floorj;  water  paid  by  owner;  stove 
heat;  only  $12.50  per  month.  F.  I. 
Salter  Co.,   303  Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— May  1,  at  118-120  W.  4th 
St.,  2  3-room  flats;  fine  lake  view 
and  large  covered  porch;  large  rooms. 
Will  decorate  to  suit.  $1600  per 
month.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118 
Manhattan   bldg. 


FOR  RENT — House  of  8  rooms  located 
at  Lakeside,  close  to  car  line;  nice, 
large,  bright  rooms,  full  basement, 
bath  and  electric  light,  garage,  fur- 
nace heat;  rent  only  $25  per  month  to 
desirable  party.  Call  Grand  311-A  or 
Park   127-X. 

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  house.  No.  40B 
N.  24th  ave.  w.;  water,  gas,  electric 
lights,  toilet,  bath  and  hardwood 
floors;  dt  )ve  heat;  water  paid;  reason- 
able rental;  vacant  May  l.  F.  I.  Sal- 
ter  Co.,    303   Lonsdale   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  house  at  corner 
of  Fifth  ave.  e.  and  Superior  st.; 
bathroom,  electric  lighting,  gas  con- 
nection for  kitchen  range,  new  paper 
and  paint.  Inquire  of  C.  F.  Graff. 
406    Lonsdale    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat.  $8;  4-room 
flat,  $l2.50t  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Ch^.  P. 
Meyers,  611  Alworth  bldg.  


lO.NIC  LODGE  .NO.  186.  A.  F.  *  A.  M.— 
Kr«ular  mcetioc  swood  and  fourth  Moodar 
rviDiD«s  of  tacb  monUi  at  7:30.  Nnt 
mwtlng,  .\prtl  10,  1916.  Work— TIrKt  de- 
gree. HllllaBi  J.  Works,  W.  M.;  biii» 
Porter,  s«. 

KEySTKSE  CHAPTER  NO.   20.   R.   A.   M.— 

Statt-d     ronvocatlons.      srrond     and     fourUI 

Wednesday  t?(nings  of  each   mouth   at  7:30 

oVloik.      Next    roeftlng,    April     L2.    1816. 

Work— P.    M.    and   M.    fe.    -M.    dp«rws.    fol- 

lowru    uy   luncti.      SUoley    L.    .Mack,    H.    P.;   Alfrrd    1* 

Klrb«ui.   Stc. 


DIXITH   COL'XriL  NO.    6.    R.   A   8.    M.-« 

StatHJ    ronTocation5.    third    Friday    of    eaeb 

r.KHith     at     7;30    o' clock.       Next     met^tloi. 

April  21.  1916.  Work— Boyal  and  6el»ct  ui 

superrxwllent   degrw.      Majnard   W.    Tumtr,   T.    1.    U.j 

Alfred  Le  Bidjeia,  aetrrtary. 


A 


rrcorder. 


DILITH   COMMA.VDEBY  NO.    18.    K.    T.— 

gtat«d  roDfucations  first  Tuirsday  of  rach 
month  at  7;30  oviotk.  Nt-n  cotjflaw, 
Apill  11.  1915.  Work— null  and  luucb. 
CbarlM  H.  fnigle.  Com.;  XMrtcn  H.  Wilsco. 


SrOTTLSH  RITE  —  REGIXAB  MECTIN08 
e^ery  Thursday  evenlnK  at  8  o'clock.  ,N«t 
mwtliig.  April  13,  191C.  Work  —  Rpfultf 
bui-Inpss  and  ballotinc.  Burr  Port«r,  see- 
rttarr.  ' 

ZENITH    (H.\PTER    .NO.     25,     OBDEB    Of 

East°m  Star — Rrcular  meftings  Moocd  and 
fourth  Friday  evenings  each  month.  Next 
ra^ptiog,  Kridiy,  April  14,  1916,  at  7:30 
o'dock.  Work— Rjgular  buslniss  and  b*l- 
Eva  M.  iHinbar,  W.  M  ;  Ella  F.  Gearbart.  B<*. 


FOR  RENT— $12.50;  4-room  flat  on  the 
second  floor,  2011  W.  Superior  st.; 
hardwood  floors,  water,  electric  lights, 
bath  and  toilet;  stove  heat;  very  con- 
venient location.  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  blag. 

FOR  RENT — Finest  7-room  modern  flat 
in  city;  all  outside  rooms  In  Minne- 
sota flats.  118  E.  4th  St.;  only  $45  per 
month,  including  heat  and  janitor 
service.  Chas.  P.  Meyers.  611  Al- 
worth  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— 3-room  flat,  $8;  4-room 
flat,  $12.50;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out, sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers,    611    Alworth    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  4-room  furnished 
apartment  on  third  floor  of  Munger 
terrace  for  two  months.  References 
required.  $32.50  per  month.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co..    303    Lonsdale    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Desirable  flats,  houses 
and  stores.  If  you  are  considering 
making  a  change  we  Invite  an  op- 
portunity for  serving  you.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,  303  Lonsdale  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — To  party  without  chil- 
dren, four  nice,  large,  furnished  rooms, 
hardwood  floors,  heat,  light  and  gas; 
seven  minutes'  walk  to  postofflce.  437 
Mesaba  ave. 


FOR  RK:.\T — Wanted — Young  man  for 
room  and  board  In  private  home; 
splendid  location;  references  ex- 
changed. S  83,  Herald. 


FOR  RENT — Large,  unfurnished,  steam 
heated  room;  suitable  for  light  house- 
keeping; $10  per  month.  220  W.  Supe- 
rior  St.;   Room   204. 


from   the   best 


of  laying  strain    on    free   range.  Roth 
phones.     Mel.   7363,   Grand  1019-A. 

HATCHING  EGGS  from  my  choice 
S.  C.  White  Leghorns;  no  better  lay- 
ing strain:  15  eggs  $1;  100  eggs  $5. 
Mrs.  T.  J.  Griffith,  4309  London  road, 
Duluth;  Lake.  69-K.  


NOTICE — Save  money  on  buying  linens, 
bedding,  etc..  We  sell  at  wholesale; 
get  our  prices.  J.  G.  Valentine  Co.,  8 
E.  Ist  St. 

FOR  RENT — 2  furnished  rooms;  all 
modern  conveniences;  $1.50  and  $2 
per  week.      706  W.  Srd  st.     Mel.   7046. 

I  -     --■ 

FOR  RENT — Nice,  heated,  furnished 
rooms,  with  or  without  light  house- 
keeping.  303    E.   3rd  st.;   Mel.   8051. 


FOR  RENT — A  4-room  steam-heated 
flat  near  Garfield  ave.  and  Superior 
St.;  water,  gas,  electric  lights,  toilet 
and  bath;  bargain  at  $16.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,  803  Lonsdale  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Small  heated  apartment 
In  desirable  location  in  Ea.«!t  end;  all 
conveniences;  janitor  service;  $40  per 
month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Provi- 
dence  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 7  rooms  and  bath,  electric 
light,  gas,  laundry,  storeroom;  full 
length  mirror  and  all  modern  conven- 
iences; heat  furnished;  moderate  rent. 
323   E.   Ist  St. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  central  loca- 
tion with  hardwood  floors,  bath,  gas 
and  all  conveniences  but  heat;  $20 
per  month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Pro- 
vidence  bldg^ 

FOR     RE.NT — Furnished     4-room      flat, 
downstairs      until      October,      $18.      to 
satisfactory        Individuals;         fireproof 
age;     $3    extra.    t>13    57th    ave.    w. 
le   236-X. 


FOR  RENT — A  6-room  modern  house. 
No.  214 '/^  E.  2nd  St.;  hot  water  heat- 
ing plant;  very  easy  walking  distance; 
$36  per  month.  F.  1.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 5-room  houses,  central 
West  end  and  West  Duluth.  $8  to  $10, 
city  water;  also  $10  flats,  toilet  and 
electricity.    Phones.  Grand  or  Mel.  631. 


FOR  RENT-^lO-rooni  heated  house  In 
East  End.  Rent  $70,  includes  heat,  hot 
and  cold  Mater,  janitor  service.  See 
N.  J.  I'pham  Co.,   714  Providence  bldg. 


MTZPAH   SIIHINE   NO.    1,    ORDER  OF  TfflB 

Wiilt*  Shrine  of  Jerusalein- Regular  ine*t- 
iuifi  first  Saturday  evening  of  each  mODtb 
at  8  o"clt,(k.  Neit  meeting,  regular.  May  6, 
Initktion  and  balloting.  Oertnidt  Bat<«. 
W.   H.  P. ;  Etta  Trexlranus.  W.  S. 


Flora  L. 


EL t LID    CHAITKR    NO.    56.     OBDEB    OF 

the  Easttru  gtiir— Meets  at  West  Duluth 
.M«.<*r,lc  temple  the  nrjt  and  third  Xiies- 
days  of  ea<h  month  at  7:30  o'i;o;-k.  Nert 
mceiine.  April  4,  rjl6.  Bt-gulhr  buslDtM. 
Clark.  W.  M. ;  .MilOred  M.  Boss,  Sec. 


FOR  RENT— 6-room  house,  310  W.  6th 
St.;  modern  except  heat;  newly  deco- 
rated; immediate  possession.  Inquire 
rental  dept.,   Bridgeman  &  Russell. 


FOR  RENT — 8-room  house,  modern  In 
every  respect;  centrally  located  at  811 
E.  1st  St.;  rent  $35  per  month.  Whit- 
ney  Wall   Co.,    301    Torrey  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Modern  6-room  house, 
practically  new;  hot  water  heat;  $28. 
3  Exeter  .''t..  near  2Pth  ave.  w.  Call 
Grand    1601-Y;    M*-l.    2798. 


FOR  RENT — 1918  E.  8th  st.  to  small 
family  for  summer;  modern  6-room 
house  furnished,  or  4-rom,'i  unfur- 
nlshed.     Grand   2349-X. 

FOR  RENT — 9-room  East  end  home;  all 
modern  conveniences:  will  lease  for  5 
years;  references  required.  Call  Mel. 
6406. 

FOR  RENT — Seven-room  brick  house 
near  12th  ave.  e.  on  2nd  st..  strictly 
modern.  Phone,  Grand  1632-A;  Mel. 
6143. 


EfCLlD  LODtiE  NO.    198.   A.   F.   4  A.   SI.  , 

— Meets  at  West  Duluth,  srcond  acd  fourth 
Wednesdays  of  esch  month  at  7:30  p.  m. 
Next  meeting,  .\piJl  12.  Work  Flrtt  Oe^ 
gree.      H.    W.    Lanners,    W.    U.;   A.    Dun- 

leavy,    secretary. 

DLLITH    CHAPTER    XO.    59.    B.    A.    M.— 

Meets  at  West  Duluth  first  and  third 
Wtdnesdavs  of  each  month  at  7:30  p.  m. 
Ne.vt  mt-eiing,  April  19,  1916.  Work— P. 
M.  and  M.  E.  M.  degre«^.  Roll  call  and 
refreshmfnis.     W.    A.   Piu^nger,   H.   P.    Dunleav)-,   S;'f. 

'  LAKESIDE    LODGE    SO.    281.    A.    F.    k  A. 

.M. — )leets  first  and  third  Mondays  of  each 
mc.ith  at  a  o'clo'k  at  Masonic  ball,  Fortyi 
fiith  avenue  east  and  Boblnsou  street.  Next 
me<tinB,  fpefial,  April  10,  1916.  Work— 
Third  degree.  William  A.  Hl.-kcn,  W.  M.; 
Nelson,   s»cretary.   4530  Cooke  street  east. 

TRINITY  LODGE  NO.  282,  A.  F.  *  A.  m! 
— Mi-ets  first  and  third  Mondays  at  8  o'clock 
In  Woodman  hsll.  Twenty-first  avenue  wcrt. 
Next  meeting  regular,  April  17,  1916.  Work 
— S»rond  d«iree.  E.  U.  Pfeifer,  W.  M., 
1918  W(st  Third  street;  B.  E.  Wheeler, 
2032  West  Superior  street. 

A.^i  A.  0.  L".  W.  ' 

^^  -~  riDELlTV    LODGE   .NO.    105  —  MEETS   AT 

.Macrabee  hall,  '21  Like  avenue  north,  enrj 
lliursduy  at  8  p.  m.  Viuiing  mi-mbeiK  wel- 
come. E.  A.  Vogt,  M.  W.;  J.  A.  Lubausky, 
rvtwder;  0.  J.  Murrold  financier,  217  Eajt 
Orhntal  degn-e  April  27. 

U.    W.— DILLTH    LODGE   .NO.    10— 

eviry     ss-coud     and     fourth     Tuesday 

at    Ava    hal^    :i21    Weft    Sur..rior 

Next    meeting;   April    11.    15>16,    at 


■ry 


Giorge  E. 


A.    0. 

meets 
lUghts 
t-lntt. 


8  p.  m.  .Manln  E.  Utlhr.  .M.  W.;  B.  H. 
lootf,  ncordtr;  E.  F.  Heller,  flnancicr.  509  Second  ave- 
nue i-ttiit. 

ZENITH     (oimTl     no!     m.     nOVAL 

league,  meets  the  prst  and  third  Thurs- 
days in  Uu'  month,  at  8  o'clo<-k,  in  tb« 
old  .Masonic  fmple,  Superior  Mr^'et  and 
S>cond  avenue  east.  0.  S.  Kcmptqn, 
arclK.n,  Wiihin  building;  U.  A.  Hall,  col- 
lector, 18  East  First  street. 


^ 


DILLTH    LODGE    NO.    28.    I.    0.    0.    F.— 

Next    ni^eling,    Friday    evening,    April    14, 

irnTf      T?rVT      «;-room      hon«e-      modem  '  '^^*'    **    ^    o  ckM-k,    221    Wpst    Sup-rior 

FOR      /^'^^^f— ^   5?    SrtJl       T^',,.,irl   r-^     I  ''"'^'.  third  floor.     Work— First  degree  will  be  eonf-nvd. 

except  heat;  Park  Point.     Inquire  Ed-  i  ,^,d  jHlows  uel-.m-.     Charles  F    ottinger    .\ 

mont,   18   Third  ave.   w. |  a.  Braff,  Bee  Se.-.  '      ' 


G.;  J. 


gari 
Col< 


FOR  RENT — Cozy  room  with  house- 
keeping privileges;  suitable  for  a 
couple  of  ladles.  318   2nd  ave.   w. 

FOR  RENT — 2  unfurnished  rooms; 
downstairs;  suitable  for  housekeep- 
ing.    Grand  829-A. 


WANTED— Girl 
work.      1603    E. 


for 
4th 


general 

St. 


house- 


WANTED— Girl    for      general 
work.      6506    W.    6th   st. 


house- 


WANTED— Maid     for 
work.  2031   E.   1st  st. 


general     house- 


WANTED — <ilrl    for  general  housework. 
5906   E.   Superior  st. 


WANTED— First    class 
I'hone   Mel.    8220. 


paper    hanger. 


WANTED — Girl   for  general   work. 
I..uke's    hospital. 


St. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework 
616  W.   3rd  st. 


Park    &    Pollard's    poultry    feeds 
are    the    best.  Scratch    feed,    egg 
mash,    growing    feed,    etc.;  wheat, 
corn,    etc.     Get    price    list.     Tess-    :;;;;- 
man  Bros.  Co..  26-40   E.  Mich,  st 


FOR  SALE— Hatching  eggs  from  high- 
clasb  Rarred  Plymouth  Rocks.  White 
Wyandottes.  R.  C.  Black  Minorcas, 
White  Leghorns,  Anconas  and  turkeys. 
J.    T.    Mlchaud,    Lake.    298-L;    Park    4. 

For  sale — S.  C.  Rhode  Island  Red 
hatching  eggs.  8.  E.  Patterson.  4628 
Regent  st.     Phone   280-L  Lake. 


FOR  SALE— 60-egg  Philo  Incubator 
and  brooder;  also  Stewart  steel  range. 
Lakeside    803-L. 

R  1.  RED  settings.  76c  Jap  Silkies 
settings.  $3.     H.  I.  Gooch:     Mel.  8361. 


WANTED — Experienced 
ace    restaurant. 


waitress.  Pal- 


LOST  AND  FOUND^ 

LOST — On  the  afternoon  of  Feb.  6,  one 
certificate  of  U.  S.  Steel  corporation 
preferred  stock,  one  share.  No.  81878. 
Finder  please  notify  owner,  John  N. 
Nelson,  box  969,  care  of  Oliver  Iron 
Mining   Co..   Virginia.   Minn. 

LOST — Within  last  3  weeks,  lady's 
nose  pincers  in  case,  inscribed  JuUus 
Lando,  optician,  Milwaukee,  Wis.  Re- 
turn   to    Herald.    Reward. 

LOST — Strayed,  Sunday,  Airedale  pup- 
py, 8  months  old;  name  Jlp;  round 
dark  leather  collar.  Reward.  1131  E. 
4th    st^ 

LOST — Jet  rosary  Friday  morning,  be- 
tween cathedral  and  St.  Mary's  hos- 
pital. Finder  call  Grand  1061-A.  Re- 
ward. 

LOST — 5-month-old  English  setter  pup; 
owner'.**  name  on  collar.  Reward  for 
Information  as  to  his  whereabouts. 
Call  Mel.   1171. 

LOST — Round  brooch  set  with  pearls 
and  brilliant.-'.  Return  to  318  E.  6th 
Bt.,    or    call    (}rand    1845-A.    Reward. 

LOST Long  black  pocketbook  contain- 
ing $8  In  currency,  and  book.  Finder 
call  Mel    7368  for  reward. 


WANTED^GIrl  to  help  In  kitchen.  2681 
W.  Superior  st. 

WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
1001  E.  2nd  St. 

WANTED— Experienced   cook.     1306    E. 
2nd    St. 


LOST — French  poodle.  Reward  for  any 
Information  regarding  same.  Call 
Mel.   1278. 

LOST Ladles'     handbag     In     Sunbeam 

theater;   return   to  La  .Salle  hotel,   for 
reward.  


LOST Pink    cameo    brooch. 

y.   W.  C.  A.  for  reward. 


Return    to 


^UMMERJESORTS^ 

FOR  SAI..B — I..arge  camp  sites  on  beau 
tlful  Lake  Vermilion;  sand  bathing 
beaches,  parks,  docks,  wells,  etc.; 
monthly  payments  as  low  as  $2,  with- 
out interest;  all  sites  sold  on  our 
"money  back"  guarantee.  Gray-Wer- 
tln   Co.,   Alworth   bldg. 

FOR  SALE— Prettily  located  summer 
cottage  on  Pokegama  lake,  five  miles 
from  Grand  Rapids.  Good  auto  road. 
Fine  fishing  and  hunting.  A.  L.  La 
Frenlere,  Grand  Rapids,   Minn. 


FOR  SALE— White  Orpington  eggs.   $1 
a  setting.     C.  Hegg.     Cole  361-Y. 


FOR    SALE— 18    Rhode    Island    Reds,    1 
cockerel.     3921  W.  8th  st. 


FOR^ALE—REAL^  ESTATE 

— LOTS   FOR   SALE.— 


$800    takes    a 
East  hillside. 


lot    100    by    140    feet 
Easy  terms.     (301) 


on 


$660    takes   a   40    by    80-foot 
block  from  9th  st.   car  line. 


BEAI'TIFTJL  wooded  camp  sites  on 
Akley's  Point,  I..ake  Vermilion,  1  acre 
In  size.  Map  and  Information  from 
Wakemup  Bay  Outing  Co.,  605  Torrey 
bldg.,  Duluth,  Minn. 

CLUBS 


jyVALlPAPER^ 

Experienced  and  reliable  paper-hanger 
will  furnish  new  and  up-to-date  pat- 
terns and  paper  an  (»rdlnary  sized 
room  for  $4.50.  Painting  and  tinting 
neatly  done;  prompt  and  satlsfactor 
work  guaranteed.  Decorator.  31 
2nd  St.     Mel.  4303;  Grand  696-X. 

FLORIST 


$900  takes  a  lot  on  £.  9th  st. 

E, 


$1,600   tak^s   a  fine 
St.     Fine  location. 


lot   on 
(0627) 


lot     one 

(0660) 
Superior 


FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms  complete 
for  light  housekeeping.  The  Dakotah, 
119   W.   2nd  St. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room  for  light 
housekeeping;  hot  water  heat.  420 
N.  24th  ave.  w.      

furnished        room; 
use    of    telephone. 


FOR  RENT— Flfit,  303  Oxford  st,  five 
rooms  and  bath;  modern  except  heat; 
fireplace;  garden:  $20  per  month.  See 
William    C.    Sargent,    Providence    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  brick  house.  iy::4 
E.  Superior  St.;  strictly  modern.  H. 
Fee,   phone   Mel.   6143. 

FOR  RENT — Fine,  light,  modern  house 
at  1420  E.  4th  st.  C.  P.  Johnson.  219 
W.  Superior  st. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  house  In 
East  end.  S.  S.  Williamson.  615  Tor- 
rey  bldg^ 

FOR  RENT — Furnlsh'^d  house  on  Park 
Point;  6  rooms  and  bath.  Call  Grand 
1621-D.  

FOR  RENT — Furnished  7-room  house 
in  East  end.     Address  R  72.  Herald. 


Hairillon. 
A.    Rowf, 


K.    OF    P. 
NORTH  STAR   LODGE   NO.  35,  K.   OF  P.— 

.Meets  evi-ry  Tu  sday,  7:30  p.  in.,  Mxth 
floor,  T»mple  building,  Superior  strict  and 
Sffcnd  aviuu.'  ea-rt.  Next  m-<-tiiit  .^p:U 
11,    1S»16.      Work— Knight    runk.      W.    H. 

C.   ('.,  rare  of  Dult:!h  Telephone  'ompan^ :   B. 

M.    of  P.,    205   First    .National   bank;   U.    A. 


Bishop,  K.  of  B.  and  8.,  505  Palladio  building. 


FOR      RENT — One 
heated,     bath    and 
202    E.    3rd    st. 


FOR  RENT — Rooms  for  light  house- 
keeping. All  conveniences.  228  E,  1st 
St.    Upstairs. 


FOR  RENT— Two  furnished  front 
rooms;  also  smaller  rooms.  Ill  E. 
Superior    St. 


FOR  RENT- Nicely  furnished  front 
room  In  private  family;  rent  $8.  331 
W.    3rd   St. 


FOR  RENT— Furnished  room  for  light 
housekeeping.  467  Mesaba  ave.  Use 
of   phone. 


FOR  RENT — 3  nice  rooms,  downstairs, 
water  paid.  $8.  Inquire  after  6.  72S 
E.  4th  St. 


FOR  RENT — S  furnished  rooms  for 
housekeeping;  West  Duluth.  Call  Cole 
17-D. 


FOR   RENT— Furnished    room,   all   con- 
veniences.  126  E.  6th  St.  Grand  1631-Y. 

FOR  RENT — 2  furnished  rooms  for  light 
housekeeping.     No.  1  W.  Superior  st. 


—FOR  RENT— 
7-room    flat,    715    W.    2nd    st,    heat    and 
water  furnished,  $30.    William  C.  Sar. 
gent.  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— May  1.  No.  706%  E.  4th 
St.,  6-room  heated  flat  with  janitor 
service,  $40.  Mass.  Real  Estate  Co.. 
18    Phoenix    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Two  6-room  flat.s;  one 
furnished;  gas,  bath,  hardwood  floors, 
electric  light,  large  yards.  $16.50,  $18. 
624   2nd  ave.   w. 

FOR  ilENT — Heated  7-room  flat  In 
Dacey  apartments  with  water,  heat 
and  janitor  service.  Call  Mel.  or 
Grand    423. 


FOR      RENT — 5-room 

flat,  main   floor;    best 

city.  $30.   Flat   A.   1014 

rose  5643. 


duplex,  brick 
lighted  flat  in 
E.    3rd   St.  Mel- 


FOR    RENT — 6- room    house.    No. 
5th    St.      Inquire    116    E.    3rd    st. 


FOR  RENT — Nos. 
perior  st.      E.  P. 


1718  and  1720  E 
Alexander. 


FOR   RENT — 6-room   house;   hot    water 
heat.     Call  519  Mi   E.  6th  st. 


FOR  RENT — Reasonable.  7-room  mod- 
ern flat;  gas  range;  beautiful  view  of 
lake.     426  E.  1st  st.  Inquire  top  floor. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  all  modern 
conveniences;  hot  water  heat;  cen- 
tral;  reasonable  rent.    119   7th  ave.  w. 

FOR  RENT — 6  and  4-room  flat  April 
16;  very  central;  $26  and  $18.  24  and 
28    4th    ave.    e.    Melrose    6643. 


FOR    RENT— Five 


rooms, 
2n( 


newly    dec- 


orated;    modern    except    heat;     $22.50, 


water  paid.     1111   E.   2nd  st 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  219  E.  6th 
St.;  bath;  $12  per  month.  William  C. 
Sargent,  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  all  modern 
except  heat;  big  yard;  $20.  423  E.  6th 
St.    Inquire  318  E.  5th  st. 


WANTED  TO  BUY^ 

WANTED  TO  BUY — 6  or  7-room  house, 
6th  St.  or  below;  $1,000  cash,  balance 
monthly;  give  full  particulars  in  Ist 
letter;  prefer  to  deal  with  owner; 
mist  be  a  bargain  and  not  over 
$3,600.  Write  X  32,  Herald. 

Wanted  to  Buy — Furniture,  heaters  or 
ranges;  we  pay  liberal  prices,  or  will 
allow  vou  to  exchange  for  new  furni- 
ture. East  End  Furniture  Co..  120  E. 
Superior    st.      Cirand    2013-X. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— 500  to  2,000  acres 
of  cut-over  land  from  owner  only; 
give  description  and  full  particulars 
In  first  letter;  price  must  be  satisfac- 
tory.     Write    J    40,    Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — 40  or  160  acres  of 
wild  or  partly  improved  land,  from 
the  owner;  give  legal  description  and 
lowest  price  In  first  letter.  Write 
Z   39,    Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Before  May  1,  mod- 
ern house,  east  of  15th  ave.  ^.,  be- 
tween Superior  and  6th  ."^t.;  must  be 
at  a  reasonubhb  figure.  Address  A  942, 
Herald. 

WE  PURCHASE  real  estate  contracts, 
mortgages  and  notes.  Northern  Equit- 
ies   Co^^l21^t_J^at^_Jiank_J31^^  

WANTED  TO  BUY — 5  or  6-room  house 
on  easv  terms.  Lake  ave.  to  10th  ave. 
e.      Mel.    6998.    or    Grand    2356-D. 


lEN/TH  C.A.MP  .NO.   5.   WOODMEN   Of 

the  World,  "meets  on  first  and  third 
Friday  nights  of  monlh,  at  Foresters' 
hall.  Fourth  avenue  west  and  first 
btreet.  J.  H.  Larkln,  clerk,  312  SU- 
tieth  av(Du:  cast.     LaLcddt  23-K. 

MAJESTIC    HEBEKAH    LODGE    NO.    60,    £ 

0.  0.  F.— K'gular  mti^ilngs  first  and  third 
Thursdays  of, each  month.  8  p.  m,.  221 
West  Sup-rior  street.  Next  miviiijg  Thurs- 
day eviuing,  April  6.  Initiation.  Krgu- 
lar  drill.  Mrs.  Henrietta  Shaw,  N.  <j  ; 
Lillian  Johnwn,  secretAry,  Grand  2113-Y 


ULLITH  HOMESTEAD  NO.  3131.  BROTH- 
erhood  of  Am'Tiran  Yeomen,  mttf;  every 
Wi(Jws<lay  evtning  at  8  o'clock  sharp,  in 
.Maccabee  hall.  21  Lake  avenue  north. 
Herbert  F.  Ilauks,  foreman;  J.  J.  Painier, 
::t,  office  in  his  drug  store.  :il32  West  Third 
M'.lroie  3769:  Lincoln  511-Y. 

M.    W.    A.  ~ 

I.MPEBIAL    CA.MP.    2206    —    MEETS    AT 
Koiester    hall.     Fourth     avenue     ucst     and 
Urst   street,   second   and  fourth   Tue«!a>-s  of 
^_^        each    monlh.      Wayne    E.    Klchsrdson,    con- 
sulT*Koi«:rt  Rankin,  clerk,  care  Rankin  Prliiling  company. 

CLAN     STEWART     SO.     5o!     0.     s!      c3 

Meets  first  and  third  Wedn-sdays  each 
month,  8  p.  m..  V.  0.  1".  ha!l,  corner 
Fourth  ai'i'nue  west  and  First  str«t.  Next 
regular  met  ting,  April  15,  1916.  D  A 
hlcf;  John  Uow,  S.-c.;  John  Burneu,  Fin.  Secj 


Cani'.ron, 

813  Tomy  building. 


Empress 
John   F. 


MODERN  .SA.MARIT.\.N.S 
AM'HA  lOr.VdL  NO.  1~TAKE  NOTICE: 
That  the  Samaritan  degrt*  meets  th.  first 
and  third  Wednesdays,  and  th?  Bene6c-nt 
degree  the  second  and  fourth  W.dnesdajs  of 
the    month.    81     12     East    Superior   atreet, 

th"stfr    building.      W.    B.    Hend-Tson.    G.    8.; 

Davis,    scribe;   F.    A.    .Noble,    F.    S.,    201   First 


FOR     RENT — Six-room 
newly     built;       heated; 
cated.     631  W.  Srd  st. 


modern     flat; 
centrally    lo- 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  modern  ex- 
cept heat.  1210  E.  6th  st.  Mel.  1496  aft- 
er 11  a.   m. 


$2,500  takes  a  lot  87»>4  by  160  feet,  lo- 
cated at  Woodland,  1  block  from 
street  car  line;  one  of  the  finest  loca- 
tions for  a  home  In  that  locality.  Good 
homes  all  around  it.  Let  us  show  you 
this   elegant   home  site. 


FOR    RENT — Steam-heated      room      for 
light   housekeeping.     121   E.  2nd  st. 

FOR     RENT — Nicely     furnished     room; 
excellent  view.     1213  E.  Superior  st. 

FOR   RENT — Three   rooms   downstairs; 
all  conveniences.    312  E.  8th  st. 


FOR   RENT— Modern 
decorated;     $18.50, 
Mel.    3611. 


6-room    flat;    re- 
910     W.     4th     St. 


7. 


Duluth  Floral  Co.,  wholesale,  retail,  cut 
(lowers,    funeral  designs.  121  W.  Sup.  «t 


WHITNEY    WALL    COMPANY, 

Torrey    Bldg. 

Mel.    1368;    Grand    810. 

FOR  SALE — Corner  lot  68  by  160.  20th 
ave.  E.  and  Jefferson  St.;  will  -sell 
cheap;  am  leaving  city.  H.  B.  Weln- 
stein.  106   W.   Michigan  St. 

FOR  SALE — Lot  204,  Mornlngside  ad- 
dition. Woodland,  Including  half  acre. 
Inquire  Dr.  F.  W.  McHugh.  Ontonagon. 
Mich. 

FOR  €ALE— $2,000  cash  will  buy  10 
choice  lots.  FIftyflrst  avenue  west.  C. 
F.  W.   Korth.  6020  Roosevelt  st. 


FOR  SALE — City  property,  houses  and 
lots;  farms  and  timber  land.  O.  G. 
Olson.  314  Columbia  bldg. 


FOR     RENT— Two     furnished 
keeping  rooms.   112  E.   1st  st. 


house- 


FOR  RENT— Furnished  rooms.     623  W. 
2nd   St.      Mel.    6416. 


FOR  RENT — 2  or  8  rooms,  all  modern. 
318   E.  6th  St. 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED 

BOARD  'and  .  ROOM  OFFERED— 
Strictly  private;  references  must  be 
furnished.     301  Ei  4th  st. 


PRIVATE  FAMILY.  gentleman  pre- 
ferred. $6.60  per  week.  27  N.  29th 
ave.   w. 


BOARD  FOR  few  ladles  or  gentlemen 
In   private   home.  $32   E.   2nd  st. 


JJPHOLSTERIlie^ 

Furniture.    Automobiles  —   Reasonable 
price.  E.  Ott,  112  1st  ave.  W.  Phone* 


Modern    furnished     room 
Mel.  4184.   213  E.   3rd  St. 


with     board. 


FOR  RENT- 
ply  902  E. 
phone. 


-Furnished  4-room  flat.   Ap- 
3rd    St.,   or   call    362   either 


FOR  RENT— 4-room 
ences  except  heat. 
2nd  St. 


flat,   all    convenl- 
Inqulre    608    W. 


FOR  RENT — Modern  4-room  flat;  no 
children;  garage  If  desired.  912  E. 
7th  St. 


DRISSMAKING^ 

First-class    dr««RnwkIng    and    crochet- 
ing by  day  off>home.     Mel.  7979. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  hot  water 
furnace  and  all  conveniences.  829  W. 
Srd   St. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  modern  flat.  S. 
S.   Williamson,   616  Torrey  bldg. 

FOR  RE.VT  —  6-room  brick  corner 
apartment.  East  end.  Mel.   1481. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  modern.  204 
E  4th  St.    Call  Grand  1906-A. 

_ . V 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat:  remodeled. 
Grand   1661-X;    731   W.    1st   St. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  water,  heat. 
2902   W.   2nd   st.     Lin.  319-Y. 


WANTED — To  hear  from  owner  of 
farm  or  unimproved  land  for  sale. 
O.    K.   Hawley.   Baldwin.    Wis. 


Will  buy  partially  improved  farm. 
State  price,  exact  legal  description,  in 
letter.  Address  A  927,   Herald. 


We  give  cash  or  new  furniture  for  used 
furniture  or  stoves.  Joe  Popkin,  108 
E.    Superior   St.      Melrose    6498. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — Will  pay 
price  for  second-hand  clothing. 
W.    Michigan    st.  


best  1 
405 


FOR    RENT — 6-room    flat,    modern    ex- 
cept heat.     620   Srd  ave.  e.  


FOR    RENT — 6-room    flat; 
lences.     330   12th   ave.   e. 


all   conven- 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat.  619  E.  6th  st. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — Second  hand  mo- 
torcycle cheap  on  eftsy  terms.  Call 
Melrose    7004. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Large  or  small 
tract  of  land  for  Investment.  Address 
I  69,  Herald. , 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Second-hand  type- 
writing desk  of  the  disappearing  type. 
Mel.    2249. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — Fresh  milch  cow. 
part  Guernsey  preferred.  Address  K  67, 
Herald. 

general    store 
Write    B    33, 


WANT  TO  BUY — Small 
or  go  in  partnership. 
Herald. 


WE    PAY    20c    for    heavy    hens.       Call 
Grand  325;  Mel.  81.  L.  Polinsky  &  Co. 

LlTMAN    BUYS    clothing    and    bicycles. 
1811   W.    Superior   st.   Ltn.    129-D. 

H    PoDkln    buys   stoves   and   furniture. 
Grand    2387-A.    Mel.    1182.      


STOVE  REPAIRS 

WE  CARRY  in  stock  repairs  for  10,000 
different  stoves  and  ranges.  C.  F. 
Wiggerts   &   Sons,   410   E.   Superior  sL 


National  Bank  building;  Mrs.  H.   P.   Lawson,  lady  G.  8. 

WE  KE. MA  WAIT  TRIBE  NO.  17,  I.  0.  H. 

M..  meet*  the  second  and  fourth  Mondays 
of  Uk'  month,  at  8  p.  m.  sharp,  at  Mac- 
ciibee  hall,  21  Lake  a\enue  noith.  .Next 
r.itlng,  April  10.  Degree  work.  H.  H. 
Bartling,  sachem:  H.  J.  MrGinlej,  chief  o( 
.".■cord,  307  Columbia  building. 

ORDER  OF  OWLS,  DILITH  NEST 
No.  1200 — Meetings  are  held  everj 
Wednes<lay  evening  at  OwU'  hall,  418 
West  Superior  street,  second  floor. 
Joseph  E.  Peaks,  secretary,  302  East 
Fifth   street. 

MODERN  BROTHERHOOD  OF  AMERICA.— 
Duluth  Central  Lodge  No.  450,  M.  B.  A., 
meets  first  and  third  Tiiesdays  at  418 
West  Sup<Tior  street.  Charles  V.  Hanson, 
seerftao',  507  Wei,t  Fifth  street.  ZvniUi 
pbonr  .No.    22H-V   Grand. 

MYSTIC  WORKERS  W  THE  WORLD.— 

Zenith  Lodge  No.  1015  meets  the  svcond 
and  fourth  Jlondays  of  the  month,  it  8 
p.  m..  at  Rowley'  ball,  112  West  First 
street,  upstairs.  E.  A.  Buf,  secrvtary 
and  treasurer,  1331  East  Seventh  street. 

DlLlTH  TEMPLE  NO.  1S6.  (A.MEL8  OP 
the  World,  meets  every  Thursday  evening  at 
8  o'clock  sharp,  at  Camels'  Temple  hall, 
12  E«st  Superior  street.  Basmcss  meeting 
Thursday,  April  13.  W.  H.  Konkler,  ruler. 
Grand  909-y.  Martin  Johnson,  sn-reUry, 
pbo.r  ....iiid   1388;   Melrose.   3979;   temple   hall   phou«. 

Grand  1991  Y. 

THIRD      I.NF.V.NTRY.      M.       N.       0., 

metts  every  Thursday  evening,  g  p.  m.. 

Armory,   Tbirtsfnlli  avtnu^r  east.     Next 

meeting,      April      13.        George      W. 

Stiles      captain;    William     A.     Brown,     first     lleuieaant; 

John  'j.    Harrison,    second   lieutenant. 

WEST  DlLlTIt  LODGE  .NO.  1478,  LO^AL 
Order  of  Moose,  meets  every  Wedn.sdty  at 
,Moos"  hall.  Kamsiy  street  and  Central  ave- 
nue.     H.    J.    White,    secretary,    201    -Voith 

Fifty-second  avenue  west. 

BENEVOLE.NT  ORDER  OF  BEAVKHS— 
Duluth     UKlge     No.     155.     B.     0.     B., 

meets  Thursday,  March  2  and  Ifi,  1916, 

at    Woodman    ball.    Twenty  first    avenue    west    and    First 
itreet.      K.    A.    Franklin,   secretary,    2005   West    Superior 
Lincoln  ie9-A.  


f^f 


Co.E 


w 


L 


1  itreet. 


w 


DIXITH  LODGE  NO.  506,  LOYAL  ORDEB 
of  Moose,  meeU  every  Tuesday  at  8  o'clock. 
Moose  ball,  224  West  First  atreet.  Cail 
bcbau,  aecretaiT. 


It 

! 


.1. 


I 


triifn''— "'^^ 


M     ^-  -^■-     ■"  —     -   ■■  — —    — 


^  r*- 


■"i"*" 


-^f 


■"rri  f 


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.^.,f-  -    t   r^t^.--T- 


LAST  EDITION 


THE  DULUTH  HERALByUL 


PAGES 


VOLUME  XXXIV— NO.  2. 


TUESDAY  EVENING,  APRIL  11,  1916. 


I  ^^S70R;0AI .     TWO  CENTS. 


VILLA 


GERMANS  CONTINUE  SUPREME 
EFFORT  TO  CAPTURE  VERDUN  IN 
GREATEST  OF  ALL  BATTLES 


J I — -; 


iSK. 


DEAD  MAN'S 
HILL  CENTER 
OFJITTACKS 

Few    Sections   of    French 

Trenches  Are  Gained  in 

Niglit  Assault. 


CITY  GATE  OF  VERDUN 


PERSHING  HAS 
MEIiiN  MEXICO 


.'a: 


.1 
1^ 


SIDIERS  ON  BORDER 


^ 


Beaten     Back    at    Other 

PointsWith  Heavy  Losses, 

Says  Paris. 


Result  of  Attack  May  Mark 

Close  of  the  Verdun 

Campaign. 


London,  April  11.— The  Orrman  ns- 
aault  on  the  di.-ffiiB«  s  of  Verdun  still 
Is  cf-nttred  on  the  all-impurtant  key 
poplfion  of  D«nd  Man's  hill,  wost  of 
the  M«  use.  Advancing  from  Coiboaux 
wood,  the  GermanB  last  niKht  suc- 
ceeded in  f^aininfc  a  few  elements  of 
Fr'  n.  h  trenches.  <.)iher\vi3e  the  French 
war  office  announced  they  were 
beaten     back    with    heavy    losBes. 

In  the  tiector  between  Douaumnnt 
and  Vuux  which  lias  relatively  the 
same  strategic  importance  east  of  the 
Meuse.  the  cSermans  also  renewed  the 
attack.  There  the  French  report  says 
they    gained    no    succejj.s. 

Supreme    Kffort. 

Paris  regards  the  present  attack  of 
the  <;ermHn.s  as  their  supreme  effort 
in  tliis  gieate.Ht  of  battles.  Freneli 
comnientaior.'*  say  it  may  mark  the 
close  of  the  Verdun  campaign,  what- 
ever the  outcome.  The  general  of- 
fen.sive  launched  on  Sunday  over  a 
thirt' ♦■n-milf*  fr»>nt  is  represented  as 
one  of  the  heaviest  bUiTvs  struck  by 
the    ilernums    in    the    war. 

According  to  official  French  ad- 
vices the  defenders  of  Verdun  have 
held  firm  except  at  one  point  in  tlie 
region  of  Dead  Man's  hill,  where  the 
(Jernians  gained  500  yards  of  French 
trenche.s.  Jt  is  n«>w  reported  from 
Paris  that  the  main  onslaught  has  ! 
diminished  in  extent,  being  limited  j 
to    a    front    of    about      two    miles    be-  { 

(Continued   on    page   11,    third  column.)  ! 

germanyTurWshes 
switzerland  guns 


Official  Estonates  Are  Made 

Public  By  the  War 

Department. 


Only  4,000  Troops  Remain 

in  United  States  Not 

on  Border. 


No  Word  From  Villa  Chase 

Received  for  Several 

Days. 


PRINCE  IN  NEW  YORK  RESTING 
EROM  WORK  WITH  FRENCH  ARMY 


ENTRANCE  TO  THE   CITY   OF  VERDUN. 

This  city  Kate  is  probably  in  ruins  fur  the  reports  irom  Irench  sotirces 
seem  to  indicate  that,  though  the  forts  around  Verdun  are  holdnig  out,  the 
city  itself  is  a  wreck. 


Factories  Able  to  Meet  More 
Than  Demands  of  Teu- 
ton Armies. 

Berlin,  April  11,  wireless  t«>  SayvlUe. 
—  Th€  first  installment  of  16-centimeter 
howiizers  with  ammunition,  which  ' 
were  ordered  in  Oermany,  will  arrive 
In  Sv.-itzerlar.d  during  the  next  few 
days,  according  to  the  Zurieher  Post, 
Bays  the  ovcrseis  News  agency.  The 
new.«paper  p«>ints  out  that  this  is  the 
bfst  an.'-wer  to  reports  that  cJermany 
Intents  to  inva'le  Switzerland  and 
comment?  on  the  fact  that  German  In- 
dustiy  not  only  Is  able  to  meet  the 
enormous  want;i  of  the  '"lerman  army, 
hut  also  to  supply  neutral  countries. 
The  CrcUHot  (French  works)  were  un- 
able to  supply  the  guns." 

RIVERlAilS 
AT  LACROSSE 

Worst   Flood    in   Thirteen 
Years  Abates  at  Wis- 
consin City. 


DECISION 
RESERVED 

Pardon  Board  Considering 

ttie  Pleas  for  Smith 

and  Pickit. 


DES  MOINES  ATTORNEY 
DIES  FROM  NOSEBLEED 


Washington,  April  11.— Official  esti- 
mates of  the  number  of  troops  in  Mex- 
ico and  on  the  border  ava^\able  for  an 
emergency  were  given  at  the  war  de- 
partment today.  Gen.  Scott,  chief  of 
staff,  announced  that  18,565  troops  now 
constitute  the  border  patrol. 

Gen.  Pershing  has  about  12,000  men 
In  Mexico,  Including  those  holding  his 
line  of  communications. 

How  greatly  the  mobile  army  has 
been  drawn  upon  for  the  Mexican  ex- 
pedition and  border  service,  was  alsd 
disclosed  by  Gen,  Scott.  He  estimated 
that  onlv  4.000  troops  remain  in  the 
United  States  not  engaged  on  the  bor- 
der. 

Xo  Word  for  Seveml  Days. 
Gen  Scott  also  stated  tpday  that  no 
word  of  the  chase  of  Villa  had  been 
received  for  several  days  either  from 
Gen  Pershing  or  tJen.  Funaton.  Dlffl- 
cultV  of  communication,  as  wMl  as  cen- 
sorship extending  to  the  war  depart- 
ment Itself,  Gen.  Scott  declared,  had 
loft  the  department  in  ignorance  of  re- 
cent operations. 

Gen.  Funston  reported  today  that 
Gen.  Per.shing  reported  being  In  touch 
with  American  Consul  t^etcher  and  ex- 
pected to  get  supplies  from  Chihuahua. 
Special  Agent  Rodgers  of  the  state 
department,  assigned  to  Carranza  s 
head.iuarters  at  Queretam,,  telegraphed 
today  ho  was  detalnef^i  Mexico  City 
in  connection  with  comjierclal  ques- 
tion.s  affecting  the  hide  tirade  and  min- 
ing   taxes.  ,,        ^   . 

All  state  department  dispatches  were 
said  to  report  conditions  quiet  through- 
out Mexico.  The  department  was  with- 
out information  regarding  the  reported 
activities    of   Gen.    Salazar. 

ghiropractorHnder 
arrest  for  murder 

Charged     With     Causing 
Woman's  Death  By  Roll- 
ing and  Pounding  Her. 


UMOR  WHICH  IS 
UNCONFIRMED  IS 
GIVEN  CREDENCE 


Reported  Wounded  Condition  of  Bandit 

and  Long  Retreat  Over  Rough  Trails 

Give  Color  to  Reports. 

Sentiment  Among  Carranza  Followers 

for  Withdrawal  of  United  States 

Troops  Is  Growing  Stronger. 

INVESTIGATING  REPORT  OF  VILLA'S  DEATH 


Des  Moines,  Iowa.  April  11.— "Wiley  S. 
Rankin,  aged  35  year.s,  special  counsel 
in  the  office  of  the  attorney  general, 
died  today  at  his  home  here.  Physl- 
<  ians  .«aid  Mr.  Rankin's  death  came  as 
the  re.«*ult  of  hemorrhage  at  the  nose 
which  began  Sunday  and  continued  in- 
termittently until  last  night.  He  for- 
merly  lived  at  Mason  City,   Iowa. 


Sherman.  Tex..  April  10.— Dr.  David 
B  Teem,  who  has  been  conducting  a 
chiropractic  adjustory  here  for  some 
time,  yesterday  was  arrested  and 
placed  in  Jail  on  an  indictment  charg- 
ing the  murder  of  Miss  Aline  Walker. 
Thp  Indictment  says  that  Teem  caused 
her  death  by  "rolling,  pounding,  beat- 
ing and  pressing  her  in  a  grossly  ig- 
norant manner." 


PRINCE  PONIATOWSKI. 

Prince  Poniatowski  Is  in  Mew  York 
for  ten  davs  rest  after  which  he  will 
return  to  his  army  work  In  France. 
At  the  beginning  of  the  war  he  and 
his  sons,  Caslmlr  and  Stanislas,  volun- 
teered for  service. 


GERMANS  REPULSE 
AnACK  BY  BRITISH 

Strong  Hand  Grenade  As- 
sault Made  During  Night 
Near  St.  Eloi. 

Berlin.  April  11,  via  London,  2:64 
p.  m.— British  troops  made  a  strong 
hand  grenade  attack  last  night  after 
Intensified  artillery  preparation  against 
the  German  positions  south  of  St.  Eloi, 
near  Ypres,  but  the  attack  was  re- 
pulsed and  the  position  Is  firmly  held 
by  the  Germans,  according  to  the  of- 
ficial statement  Issued  at  army  head- 
quarters today. 

Fighting  on  both  sides  of  the  river 
Meuse  (Verdun)  was  in  progress  with 
great  vigor  throughout  the  whole  or 
vesterday.  the  statement  says.  The 
number  of  unwounded  prisoners  taken 
in  this  sector  was  Increased  from 
22  officers  and  549  men  to  36  officers 
and  1.231   men.  

Killed  By  Powder  Explof»lon. 

Scranton.  Pa.,  April  11.— The  press 
mill  of  the  Dupont  Powder  works  at 
Mooslc,  near  here,  blew  up  today,  kill- 
ing on^  man.  David  Miller.  Two  other 
mfn,  James  T.  Brown  and  Charles 
Maurer  who  were  getting  ready  to  go 
on  the  day  shift,  suffered  slight  in- 
juries. 


Gen.  Pershing's  Headquarters  at  Front,  April  10, 
via  Mexican  telegraph  to  Juarez,  Mex.,  April  11.— Re- 
newed reports  have  been  received  here  by  Gen.  Persh- 
ing that  Francisco  Villa  is  dead  and  buried.  These 
reports  are  under  investigation.  Meanwhile  the  hunt 
for  the  Villa  bandits  is  proceeding  with  renewed 
vigor  with  the  arrival  at  the  front  of  Gen.  Pershing. 

Washington,  April  11. — Unofficial  and  unconfirmed  reports  that 
Villa  is  dead  reached  the  Carranza  embassy  today  and  were  given) 
some  degree  of  credence  by  officials  here. 

The  reports  were  represented  as  having  come  from  Queretaro, 
Gen.  Carranza's  provisional  capital. 

The  reports  of  Villa's  death  were  unsubstantiated  by  the  latest 
dispatches  to  the  war  and  state  department.  The  circumstantial 
reports  of  Villa's  recent  injury,  however,  and  the  rigors  of  his  long 
and  hurried  flight  in  which  he  has  been  variously  reported  as  being 
carried  on  a  litter  on  the  shoulders  of  his  men  or  in  a  carriage  over 
the  rough  Mexican  trails,  gave  some  color  to  the  possibility  thatj 
the  bandit  chieftain  may  have  been  unable  to  survive  the  hardships 
of  the  flight  in  his  disabled  condition. 


Friends  Regard  Postpone- 
ment of  Decision  in  an 
Optimistic  Light. 


Mississippi    Is    Rising    at 

Clinton,  Gaining  Foot  in 

Twenty-Four  Hours. 


La  Crosse.  Wis.,  April  11.— After 
the  worst  flood  in  thirteen  years,  tac 
Mississippi  river  at  this  point  began 
falling  today.  At  10  o'clock  the  stage 
was  thirteen  feet,  a  decline  of  oAe- 
tenth  of  a  foot  in  twenty-four  hours. 
The  decline.  while  small,  was 
assurance  that  the  change  had  come 
and  It  was  welcome  news  to  lowland 
farmer.'*,  summer  cottage  owners,  city 
park  officials,  railroad  officials,  resi- 
dents of  flooded  districts  of  the  city 
and  others  who  have  suffered  damage 
or  been  caused  anxiety  because  of 
high    w.iters.         ^  .    ^   „  ui 

The  river  will  not  fall  as  rapidly 
as  it  came  up,  according  to  the 
weather  bureau.  There  is  still  con- 
aid  e  r  a  b  I  e    Hnowtoim^lt_|n_^Tior^ 

(Continued  on  pa«e   11,  third  column.) 


St.  Paul.  Minn..  April  11.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Exten.sions  of  stays  of 
commitment  to  the  state  prison  of 
Walter  J.  Smith,  former  state  treas- 
urer, and  R.  C.  Plcklt,  under  sentence 
of  one  to  five  years  each  In  connec- 
tion with  misappropriation  of  state 
school  funds,  were  sought  today  on 
expiration  of  the  present  orders  and 
following  hearings  before  the  state 
pardon  board,  which  last  night  took 
under  advisement  pleas  for  clemency 
in   both    cases. 

Smith  was  declared  to  be  a  sufferer 
with  pulmonary  tuberculosis.  and 
Plcklt  also  was  held  to  be  in  delicate 
physical  condition  by  their  friends  be- 
fore the  board. 

Are  More  Hopeful. 

The  hopes  of  friends  of  Smith  and 
Pickit  went  a  little  higher  with  the 
announcement  by  Chief  Justice  Brown 
today  that  the  board  would  reserve 
its  decision  until  probably  tomorrow. 
Those  Interested  in  the  welfare  of  the 
two    former    state    officials    construed 


UNFATHOMABLE. 


(Continued  on  page  11,  fourth  column.) 

BRITISH  GRUTSER 

OFF  CAPE  HENRY 

Warship  Reported  in  Chase 
of  Tramp  Steamer  Out- 
side Three-Mile  Limit. 

New  York.  April  11.— The  presence 
of  a  British  cruiser  off  Cape  Henry 
was  told  of  by  passengers  on  the 
United  Fruit  company's  steamship  Met- 
apan,  which  arrived  here  today  from 
Colon  and  Havana.  Th«?  warship,  of 
the  Essex  class,  was  observed  yester- 
day in  pursuit  of  a  tramp  steamer.  The 
cruiser  fired  one  shot,  whereupon  the 
freighter,  which  had  been  flying  no 
flag,  ran  up  thi*  Union  Jack  and  the 
war.«hlp  abandoned  the  chase,  the  Met- 
apan's  paitscngcrs  said. 


Sentiment    for   Withdrawal    Stronger. 

San  Antonio,  Tex.,  April  11.— The 
opinion  of  army  officers  here  that  the 
next  few  days  will  bring  Important 
developments  In  the  Villa  situation  was 
strengthened  today  with  sentiment  ap- 
parently growing  stronger  among  fol- 
lowers of  Carranza  for  American  troops 
to  withdraw  from  Mexico. 

Unless  Mexican  railroads  are  made 
available  for  the  transportation  of 
supplies  to  Gen.  Pershing's  command, 
it  is  frankly  admitted  in  military 
circles  that  chances  are  against  the 
success  of  the  campaign. 

It     was    announced     that    two    com- 

(Contlnued  on  page  11.  fourth  column.) 

germaTreply 
givenjerard 

Answer  to  U.  S.  Queries  Re- 
garding Sussex  in  Ambas- 
sador's Hands. 


NO  REPORTS 
FROMJRONT 

American  Cavalry  Now  Far 
Beyond  Lines  of  Com- 
munication. 


President  Wilson  and  Cabi- 
net Have  Not  Yet  Re- 
ceived It. 


Berlin.  April  11,  via  London.— The 
German  government's  reply  to  the 
American  inquiries  regarding  the 
steamship  Sussex  and  four  other  ves- 
sels, which  have  been  sunk  or  dam- 
aged, was  delivered  today  to  the  Amer- 
ican embassy. 

m 

Cabinet   Ha«   Xo   New  Inforniatioa. 

Washington,  April  11.— President 
Wilson  and  the  cabinet  met  today  with- 
out any  new  information  on  which  to 
act  In  the  submarine  issue.     ,      ^        . 

Secretary  Lansing  reported  that  he 
expected  to  receive  soon,  a  dispatch 
from  Ambassador  Gerard,  giving  the 
results  of  Germany's  investigation  in- 
to  the   destruction   of   the   Sussex   and 

other  cases.  ^  ..,.    x  •        i^_. 

Cabinet  members  agreed  that  in  "vif w 
of  Germany's  disclaimer  of  responsibil- 
ity for  the  Sussex  it  may  be  difficult 
to  base  action  on  that  case  alone,  but 
Secretary  Lansing  is  continuing  his 
collection  of  evidence  regarding  an  ac- 
cumulation of  other  cases. 


I     DAY  IN  CONGRESS     ^ 


Believed   First   News   Will 

Be  of  Battle  With 

Bandits. 


% 


X  . ^ 

^  SEXATE.  4 

^       Trannaeted    mlncella  neon*  ^ 
^  routine   buNine««.  ^ 

.)|e       ReMumcd    debate   on    free   MUKar  ^ 
4K  repeal   reMointlon. 


% 


iiousr:: 

Naval  and  military  eommitteea  ^ 
continued  worlt  on  national  de-  #. 
fenMe    meanurcs.  * 

Debate  continued  on  rlvem  and  ^ 
harbon  appropriation  b411.  * 


»»«*»»»»»»»*»******»**»*** 


El  Paso,  Tex.,  April  11. — With  no 
official  advices  for  days  of  the  where- 
abouts of  the  advance  guard  of 
American  cavalry  pursuing  Francisco 
Villa,  officials  of  the  Carranza  gov- 
ernment in  Juarez  today  sought  to 
obtain  information  over  the  Mexican 
land  lines  of  the  position  of  the 
American  troops.  Apparently  the  rush 
of  the  American  cavalry  southward 
has  been  so  rapid  that  it  has  carried 
Col.  Dodd  and  Col.  Brown  with  their 
troopers  far  beyond  all  lines  of  com- 
munication. 

Army  officers  at  Fort  Bliss  believe 
that  when  the  expeditionary  com- 
manders get  In  touch  with  Gen.  Funs- 
ton  they  win  report  that  the  American 
troops  have  engaged  the  Villa  forces 
In  battle.  Reports  that  a  battle  has 
been  fought  with  Villa  bands  south 
of  Satevo  were  current  early  today, 
but  there  was  nothing  to  confirm 
them.  .    ^ 

Scouts  and  refugees  with  knowledge 
of  the  country  south  of  Parral  say 
that  the  American  troops  will  find  it 
peculiarly  difficult  to  operate  in  any 
numbers  against  Villa  in  the  district 
where  he  is  now.  The  Arrieta  brother» 
are  said  to  be  fortifying  the  city  of 
Durango,  but  for  what  purpose  ha* 
not  been  Indicated. 

MARSHTEADS  DUNN 
IN  IOWA  ELECTION 


Des  Moines,  Iowa,  April  11. — Return* 
here    today   from    all   sections     of     the 

state  failed  to  change  the  result  in 
yesterday's  presidential  preferential 
primary.  In  the  principal  contest,  that 
for  election  as  Democratic  national 
committeeman,  W.  AV.  Marsh  of  Water- 
loo, still  was  leading  E.  G.  Dunn  of 
Mason   City,   by   a  wide  margin. 

Senator  Albert  B.  Cummins,  Repub- 
lican candidate  for  president  of  the 
United  States,  was  still  far  ahead  of 
President  Wilson,  the  Democratic  can- 
didate, in  point  of  votes  cast.  In  some 
precincts  the  names  of  Root,  Roose- 
velt Hughes  and  Sherman  had  been 
inserted  in  the  ballot  in  place  of  Cum- 
mins. Hughes  appeared  to  be  the  fa- 
Elmer  J.  Burkett  of  Lincoln.  Xeb., 
was  the  Republican  choice  for  vice 
president  over  William  Grant  Webster 
of  Chicago.  John  T.  Adams  of  Du- 
buque defeated  John  Olson  of  Forest 
City  for  Republican  national  commit- 
teeman. 


i>H    |"» 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


I 


Tuesday, 


THE    DlftUTH    HERALD. 


April  ir,  1916. 


'A 


--< 


AJiTtmO^Ah  SPORTS 


"PLAY  BALL"  IN  THE  MAJOR 

LEAGUES  WEDNESDAY 


I 


Baseball    Season    Among 

Higher   Grade   Teams 

About  to  Open. 


'  rhi.Mt?'..  April  11. — Preparations  for 
the  KP'-ning  tomorrow  of  th*-  IHS  ma- 
jor 1-iiKue  bnseb;ill  »(»a<«on  nt-arfd  rom- 
l>l?ti..ii  today.  I'ainiors,  decoratora. 
Urnniulkfep*^*.  offire  officiula  wre 
ab.'Ui     r.M.Jy     t.>     .stop     w>!  k,     :in.J     the 


\\  i:  VTHr.R — (Moudy;     phowf-r.^l 
lutf  tonight  and  Wednedduy. 


TOPPY 


COATS! 


Tlicre  isn't  a  garment 
in  the  wardrobe  of  such 
i;eneral  utility  as  the  Top 
C.-at.  Yuu've  real  need  oi 
its  comfort  more  m<-'nths 
in  the  year  than  any  other 
cuat.  In  late  summer  and 
early  fall,  in  late  winter 
and  early  spring— oft"  and 
..n,  all  the  time— XC>\V. 

Our  High  Art.  Kuppen- 
heimer  and  Styleplus  Top 
C")ats  are  ideal  in  weight, 
ill  patterns  and  in  style. 
The  prices  are — 


players  anil  fans  were  anxiously  awalt- 
IMK  til'-  groHK  which  will  start  th«  na- 
tional pastime  on  its  way. 

rinse  races  wcrf  expvtled  in  both  th«i 
National  and  Anu-rican  lea«ue.  The 
teams  representing  the  various  clubs 
were  neurinK  horn*-  today  from  their 
training  camps  and  earh  looked  fit 
euouKh  to  Kive  its  opponent  a  hard 
battle. 

In  the  National  league  there  hav» 
been  a  great  many  changes,  several  of 
ih.-  club.s  having  strengthened  through 
th«-  addition  of  players  from  tha  de- 
fun -t  l-'tderal  league.  Also  there  will 
be  new  owners  and  now  munagers. 
Fieldrr  JeneM  Bark. 

In  the  Aiii.ricun  I.mkuo  the  flftt-onth 
annual  opening,  promised  to  bo  a  nieni- 
oiablf  on»-.  Sfveral  biK  deals,  which 
were  the  surprises  tli- of  baseball  Hial- 
t.'.  and  th.-  new  owner.^hip  of  several  of 
th»-  c-Iiibs  and  the  ooniinK  of  the  famous 
Fielder  Jom's  back  into  the  younger 
major  IcnKu.'  w»re  some  of  the  tliioKS 
whieh  i'ronii:*ed  to  keep  the  fans  talk- 
ing. 

15.  IJan  Johnson,  presldeot  of  the 
Ami-riean  Ic-ague.  t^ald  that  with  the 
h.'iseball  war  over  and  all  the  clubs  in 
his  cinuit  strengthened  ai)d  more 
evenlv  balanced  than  in  years,  he  ex- 
pected to  see  one  of  the  best  seasons 
the  game  has  ever  had.  He  said  the 
sale  of  Speaker  to  t'leveland  would 
make  that  club  a  contender,  and  would 
also  even  up  the  league. 

I'resident  Tener  of  the  National 
league  said  that  baseball  would  have 
<»ne  of  its  best  seasons  tliis  year  on 
account  of  the  abolishment  of  the  Fed- 
t-ral  league  and  the  enthusiasm  which 
has  been  shown  by  t)ie  players  during 
their  early  fipring  tralnlnj?. 

Mmny  Ftcht   F«r  r*«i<lonB. 

Theie  are  a  Iarg>»  number  of  .surplus 
jdayeis  in  the  two  leagues  who  will 
have  to  battle  hard  for  positions. 
Voung  blood  appears  oti  the  roster  of 
mo.st  of  the  clubs,  and  some  of  the  vet- 
erans will  have  to  hustle  to  hold  their 
berths. 

The  National  season  opens  with  the 
following  Kami's: 

c'hicago  at  (Mncinn.tti. 

PittsburBh  at  St.  Loui.<«. 

Nt)W  York  at  I'hiladelphia. 

noston  at  Brooklyn. 

The  American   opens  as  follows: 

Detroit  at  Chicago. 

Rl.   Louis   at   Cleveland. 

Washington   at  New   York. 

riiiladelphia    at    Hoston, 

FikRGO-MOORNEAD 
WILL  BE  IN  RACE 


Col.    Unglaub    Has   Three 

NewTwirlersfor  His 

Team. 

Far«o,   X.    D.,  April   11 Col.    Robert 

I'n^latih.  who  expects  to  pilot  the 
Fargo-Moorhead  Northern  league 
team  to  another  pennant  during  the 
coming  season,  has  arrived  here.  He 
was    accompanied     by    Mrs.       Unglaud 

and     daughter    and      took      up    head- 
quarters  at    the    Comstock    hotel. 
Mr.    and    Mrs.    Unglaub    and    daugh- 


>«niM*rlor  strrot  at  S«*c«>iul 
A\fiiuc  West. 


ter  I'-ft  Baltimore  about  a  week  ago, 
coming    direct    to    Minneapolis. 

Col.  Unglaub  journeyed  out  to  the 
baaeball  park  and  looked  the  place 
over.  He  found  the  diamond  and 
grounds  in  poor  condition  and  an- 
nounced upon  his  return  tliat  It  would 
require  a  lot  of  work  to  put  the  plot 
in    shape    for    spring    training. 

Col.  Unglaub  expects  to  atart  spring 
training  In  about  ten  days  and  has 
already  lasued  the  call  to  the  candi- 
dates. The  SQuad  this  year  will  be  a 
large  one.  As  last  year,  the  aquad 
will  make  the  Comstock  the  head- 
quarters   of    spring    training. 

"I  never  felt  better,"  said  the  colonel 
in    talking    to    friend*. 

"Do  you  expect  to  have  a  atrong 
team  this  aeason?"  inquired  one  of  his 
listeners.  ..       ^  a 

•'That  all  depends."  he  answered. 
"At  any  event  you  can  bet  your  bot- 
tom dollar  that  the  other  clubs  will 
know    that    Fargo-Moorhead    Is    In    the 

In  Minneapolis,  Col.  Unglaub  ae- 
cured  the  serNices  of  three  pitcher* 
from  the  Cantlllons,  owners  of  t*i« 
Minneapolis  club.  They  are  Lester 
Smith,    Bob    Hubbard    and    Bob    Inger- 

Sinlth  is  a  product  of  Renville.  Hub- 
bard of  Kelliher  and  Ingersoll  of 
Minneapolis.  All  have  had  league  ex- 
perience and  should  make  good  in 
this    company. 

Will  Enter  W.-l.  League. 

Sheboygan,  A^  is..  April  11.— The 
North  Side  Improvement  association 
voted  last  night  In  favor  of  organiz- 
ing a  club  to  enter  the  proposed  Wia- 
consin-Mlchijfan  Baseball  league.  The 
matter  will  b.-  taken  up  tonight  by 
the  Shebovgan  Businessmen's  associa- 
tion a^nd  Thursday  night  by  the  South 
Side  and  "West  Side  Advancement  as- 
sociations. The  proposed  leag>ie  would 
include  Sheboygan,  Oshkosh,  Appleton. 
Creen  Bav.  Marinette-Menominee  and 
Escanaba."  Robert  Lynch.  Green  Bay, 
la  promoting  the  league. 
—^. 

Yale  Baseball  Season. 

New  Haven,  Conn.,  April  11. — The 
Talc  baseball  team  opens  Its  season  to- 
day, playing  with  the  New  York  Na- 
Uonals   at   Yale  field. 

ASKS  FOR  ^Am 
TO  REMOVE  SHOAL 


ST  DULUTH 


HK&AI^D   BRAarCH  OVFICBSt 

4M  C««tra|  ▲▼«■««,    A«Tert««ta9    aad    8«%«erl941««a. 
A.  Jeaaea,  Flft7-iieTeath  Avenae  West  aad  Uraad  Areaae,  Dlatributloa. 

Hcrald'a   Waat  Duluth  raportar  may  b«  raadiad   after 
bour  af  ffolnff  to  preaa  at  Oalumet  17S-M  and  Colo  247. 


Paris       New  York       Duluth        CincinnaU       Washington,  D.  C 


MEETS  DEATH 
UNDERWHEELS 

John  H.  Markuson  Is  Victim 
of  South  Shore  Passen- 
ger Train. 


widest  in  the  city,  being  100  feet.  It 
is  proposed  to  pave  a  strip  eighteen 
feet  wide  with  concrete  oh  each  side  of 
the  street,  leaving  a  strip  about  forty 
feet  wide  in  the  center  to  be  parked. 
The  Improvement  is  expected  to  cost 
about  $4  a  front  foot. 

Since  the  first  petition  w^as  circu- 
lated, owners  of  property  south  of  the 
bridge  over  Keene's  creek  have  also 
started  a  similar  petition  asking  for  a 
like  improvement  of  the  thoroughfare 
south  of  Polk  street.  Thia  improve- 
ment is  wanted  for  a  distance  of  five 
blocks  and  will  bring  It  almost  to  the 
water  front. 


Was  Crossing  the  Tracks 
at  Twenty-Ninth  Ave- 
nue West. 


Engineer's  Department  Rec- 
ommends  Appropriation 
for  Duluth  Harbor. 

Frsa  TtM  HcraM   WaililnftMi   lirtn. 
Washington,    April    11. — ^In    a    report 
to    congress    today    the    chief    of    engi- 
neers   of    the    war   department    recom- 
mends the  appropriation   of   J24,0O0   for 

the  removal  of  a  shoal  at  the  south- 
erly end  of  east  gate  basin  In  Duluth- 
Superior    harbor. 

Representative  Miller  today  ap- 
peared before  the  engineering  board 
on  rivers  and  harbors  at  the  war  de- 
partment and  urged  a  survey  of  Rainy 
lake,  with  a  view  to  the  construction 
of  a  breakwater  for  the  protection  of 
navigation  at  the  north  end  of  the 
lake. 


SAYS  PEAT  UNDS 
ARE  VERY  FERTILE 


Ask  Your 
Shoe  Man  to 
Explain  Why  the 
Interchangeable 


TeimbacUs 


DOUBLE  -  y^EAH 


Rubber/fee/ 

Gives  Double  Service 


NEW  ARRIVALS 


Women's 

Beautiful  While 

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(Washable) 


Best  Grade— 


*•!. 

V 


LOGAN  CO. 

Corner  10th  Ave,  E.  and  4th  St. 

f"«=^NAVELORANGES 

Per  box.  .$3.00     Half  box.  .$1.60 

PECKa.........50c 

GRAPEFRUIT—  rA^ 

Kiissels.  per  doz •     www 

APPLES-  JA^ 

Cooking,  per  peck ^Uw 

HEAD  LETTUCE—  ^fk^ 

Fancy,  large  heads XUv 

FLOUR-  $1 .55 

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SWIFT'S  CLEANSER—  Or^ 

Regular  5c  can;  8  caus..^9C 

SOAP— White  Laundry      Or^ 
Soap,  8  bars fc«lw 

Per  box,  $3.00 


Thief  River  Falls.  Minn..  April  11. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.)— Gilbert  A. 
Benson  says  that  peat  land  is  Just  as 
good,  If  not  better,  than  the  ordinary 
kind    for    farming,    and    he    ought    to 

know  for  he  lives  at  Malcolm,  BeUraml 
county,  near  (Jrygla,  and  ha.s  cared  for 
a  peat  farm  for  four  years  and  Is  mak- 
ing it  p.ay.  Not  only  (a  Benson's  word 
given  that  It  l.x  all  right,  but  he  has 
the  pictures  to  show  It.  Tho.v  show  rye 
growing  on  forty-two  Inches  of  peat 
that  is  elg:hty-elght  Inches  in  height, 
and  oats  five  feet  tall  on  two  feet  of 
pest. 

Benson  disputes  the  statement  made 
b.v  soil  experts  of  the  slate  agricultural 
college  that  peat  lands  have  to  be 
burned  over  or  fertillted  to  make  thera 
yield.  His  rye  crop  was  raised  on  the 
raw  bog.  nfttr  it  had  been 'drained,  the 
sod  turned  over,  and  pulverized.  Since 
then  Bensr>n  states  he  has  raised  three 
crops,  all  good  ones,  and  that  at  any 
place  on  his  peat  land  he  can  obtain 
excellent  yields  of  hay  from  planting  a 
clover  and   timothy   mixture. 


TQ  CallA  Pm/^BER 


/\mericanHeatinc[omfany 


Boots    Seeing  Is  Believing! 


Other  styles  in  white,  black 
kid.  grays,  at  $3.50  tu  $8.00. 

Children's  Shoes— 

Plain  or  novelty  styles,  white 
i\i>rv  sole  and  white  ettects 
— $1.50  to  $4.00. 

^       222  WEST  FIRST  ST.       ^ 


SALLOW  SKIN 

is  one  of  the  greatest  foes  of 
womanJv  beauty.  It  is  quickly 
cleared  bv  correcting  the  cause 
—sluggish  liver— with  the  aid 
of  the  gently  stimulating,  safe 
and  dependable  remedy — 

BEECHAMS 
PILLS 

Lairr--*t  SaUof  Any  Madiciaa  in  tk«  WoHA 
Sold  •rerywkaas.     In  boaea,  lOc.  2Sc« 


We  Advise  Immediate  Action  on  Your  Part 


For  Wis  C 
^  Week     ^ 

value  for... 


This  great  special  is  a  full  size  Reading 
or  Piano  Lamp,  similar  to  cut,  beautifully 
finished  in  mahogany.  The  shade  is  of  the 
Tudor  design  in  either  Old  Rose,  Old  Gold 
or  Japanese  Floral  design.  Equipped  with 
two  brush  brass  light  sockets,  chain  pull 
switch  and  ample  extension  cord  to  connect 
anywhere  in  your  room.  It  is  a  lamp  such 
as  you  never  dreamt  of  getting  for  even 
twice  this  price.  You  must  hurry,  as  we 
predict  a  speedy  sale  of  the  few  we  were 
able  to  get. 

As  a  Gift — Mere  is  a  chance  to  give  some- 
thing up-to-date,  something  every  young 
wife  or  bride  craves  for.  Just  watch  her 
eyes    shine    in    appreciation    when    she    re- 

— Remember  the  Early  Bird 

•■■1^   Csiplftt  asanlar 


RAVHA&g 

gl//^     22«-i28  W.  SaperlM- SL    ^^^m 


John  H.  Markuson,  a  pioneer  resl 
dent  of  West  Duluth.  was  ground  to 
death  under  the  wheels  of  passenger 
train  No.  (.  of  the  Duluth,  South  Shore 
&  Atlantic  railroad  on  the  Soo  line 
crossing  at  Twenty-ninth  avenue  west 
and  Michigan  atreet  at  about  6  o'clock 
yesterday  afternoon.  He  was  struck 
by  the  engine  and  knocked  under  tha 
wheels  and  the  locomotive  and  two 
cars  passed  over  his  body. 

Mr.  Markuson  had  been  in  Superior 
during  the  early  part  of  tbe  afternoon, 
and  on  his  way  home  had  stopped  at 
Twrnty-nlnth  avenue  for  the  purpose 
of  going  to  the  Clyde  Iron  Works  of- 
fice. It  was  while  headed  for  this  of- 
fice that  h«  was  killed. 

At  this  point  buildings  of  the  Du- 
luth Show  Case  company  shield  the 
view  of  trains  approaching  from  the 
East.  The  accident  had  only  one  wit- 
ness bosl<te«  •  members  of  the  engine 
crew.  This  witness  was  a  small  boy, 
Lawrence  Holmes,  127  South  Tweuty- 
etghth  avenne  ■west.  He  told  Patrol- 
man A.  L.  Noreen  that  he  had  aeen 
Mr.  Markuson  struck  by  the  en«;ine  and 
rtin  over  by  the  train,  but  had  not  no- 
ticed how  be  had  come  to  be  on  the 
tracks. 

The  body  was  taken  to  the  Olson  & 
Hoppenyan  undertaking  rooms,  where 
fimeral  arrangements  will  probably  be 
made  this  afternoon. 

Mr.  Markuson  had  been  a  resident  of 
West  Duluth  since  1890.  He  came 
here  from  Marquette,  Mich.  Shortly 
after  his  arrlv.il,  he  opened  a  grocery 
store  and  meat  market  on  Grand  ave- 
nue and  was  in  this  business  until 
about  twelve  years  ago.  In  recent 
years  Mr.  Markuson  was  interested  in 
IpgKing  and  contracting.  He  resided 
*ith  his  family  at  220  North  Fifty- 
sixth  avenue  west 

He  leaves  besides  his  widow  two 
daughters.  •  Mrs.  J.  H.  Llndberg  and 
Mrs,  tirover  Anderson,  both  of  this  city, 
and  one  brother,  .T.  Markuson,  of  Oraf- 
t»)n.  X.  D.  It  Is  probable  that  the 
brother  will  arrive  here  today  to  attend 
th«  funeral. 

PRESBYTERY  WHl 
BEGIN  MEniNGS 

Many  Ministers  and  Lay- 
men Will  Attend  Two- 
Day's  Session. 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  Duluth 
Presbytery  will  open  this  evening  for 
a  two  days'  session  at  the  Westminster 
Presbyterian  church.  Fifty-eighth  ave- 
stM  west^aand  Ramsey  street.  The 
opening  session  will  begin  at  7:36 
o'clock  with  about  thirty-five  ministers 
and  as  many  laymen  delegates  present. 

Rev.  Albert  H.  Mutchler,  pastor  of 
the  Duluth  Heights  I'resbyterlan 
church,  retljdng  moderator  of  the  pres- 
bytery, wlff  o>re.eiide  and  will  also 
preach  tAe  »t"'fi*''P*'  sermon.  The  serv- 
ices tonight' t^ill  be  taken  part  In  by 
several  fisitjiur  pastors. 

The  business  meetings  will  take  place 
tomorrow  morning  between  *:80  and 
12  o'clock  and  1:J0  and  i  o'clock.  Vari- 
ous reports  and  the  election  of  new 
officers  will  take  up  the  attention  of 
the  delegates. 

At  noon  tomorrow  and  at  6  o'clock 
the  Ladies'  Ajd  Society  of  the  West- 
minster church  will  serve  luncheon 
and  supper  for  the  visiting  pastors  and 
delegates. 

A  special  program  of  music  will  be 
given  this  evening  and  tomorrow  eve- 
ning. The  choir  of  the  local  church 
as  well  aa  tha  ministers'  quartet,  will 
furnish   the  program. 

WORK  RESOiJED 
AT  ROCK  CRUSHER 

■•  ►it. 


WEDDING  ANNOUNCED. 

Georgiana  Ross  and  Norman  Gibson 
Will  Be  mvritd  Wednesday. 

The  wedding  of  Miss  Georgiana  Helen 
Ross,  daugtiter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  B.  J. 
Ross.  624  North  Fifty-sixth  avenue 
west,  to  Norman  Gibson,  will  take 
place  at  8  o'clock  tomorrow  evening  at 
the  home  of  the  bride's  parents.  Rev. 
Herbert  Ford,  pastor  of  the  Weet  Du- 
luth Baptist  church,  will  read  tJie  serv- 
ice. 

The  bride  will  be  attended  by  her 
sister,  Mrs.  Marcus  Skomars  as  matron 
of  honor,  and  Horace  Roas,  the  bride's 
brother,  will  be  groomsman.  A  recep- 
tion mill  follow  the  ceremony.  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Gibson  will  leave  for  a  short 
honej'moon  trip  and  will  be  at  home  in 
Wetst  Duluth  after  May  1. 

LODGES  WIlL  give 

MASQUERADE  DANCE 

A  masquerade  dancing  party  will  be 
g^lven  for  members  of  th©  W'est  Du- 
luth and  Pocahontas  councils  of  the 
Royal  League  this  evening  at  the 
West  Duluth  Comn»ercial  club  rooms. 
Only  members  of  the  organization  will 
be  admitted  at  the  door,  each  being 
required  to  make  his  Identity  known 
to  the   door   keeper. 

There  will  be  dancing  between  8:30 
and  10  o'clock.  Then  a  short  business 
session  will  be  held  by  the  two  socie- 
ties, following  which  dancing  will  he 
continued  until  11:30  o'clock.  The 
committee  in  charge  consists  of  Mrs. 
E.  W.  F.  Boemer,  Mrs.  Louis  Oreck, 
Mrs.  W.  £.  Judaon  and  Miss  Lydia 
Lee. 

Birthday  Party. 

Miss  Eva  Larson  of  West  Duluth 
entertained  In  honor  of  her  birthday 
for  a  number  of  her  friends.  Pink 
and  white  formed  the  color  scheme. 
Games  and  music  featured  the  enter- 
tainment.   There  were   twenty  guests. 


Full  Crew  Will  Be  Employed; 
Busy  Season  Ex- 
pected. 

The  Duluth  Rock  Crusher  plant  at 
the  aummlt  of  Fifty-aeventh  avenue 
west  is  resuming  operations.  About 
thirty  men.  half  of  the  number  usually 
employed,  have  been  put  to  work  and 
this  number  will  be  Increased  so  that 
within  another  two  weeks  the  entire 
crew  win  be  at  work. 

Many  Improvements  have  been  made 
by  the  company  within  the  last  year. 
Last  week  the  company  received  a  new 
hoisting  engine,  wbich  will  be  utilized 
In  hoisting  large  stones  into  the  crush- 
er. The  crusher  is  capable  of  handling 
rocks   weighing    two   tons. 

The  improvements  made  at  the  plant 
last  fall  included  the  installing  of  the 
new  crusher  and  practically  doubling 
the  capacity  of  the  pl.int.  Foimerly 
stones  weighing  from  SOO  to  BOO  pouqds 
were  the  largest  the  crusher  could 
take,  but  with  the  new  machinery 
stones  ten  times  as  large  can  be 
crushed. 

According  to  officials  the  plant  ex- 
pects to  have  a  very  busy  season.  An 
average  of  about  twenty  carloads  of 
stone  will  be  shipped  dally  from  the 
plant. 

PAVING  refmoNS 

COMPLETE 

.->     j-^ 

Fifty-Ninth     Avenue     Im- 
provement Assured,  Say 
Property  Owners. 

Petition*,^,  tor  the  paving  of  Fifty- 
ninth  avenue  will  soon  be  completed 
and  have  .>bRongh  signatures  to  make 
carry  the  Improvement,  according  to 
property  *bwneni  who  are  In  charge 
of  rlrculatjihg'tht  papers.  The  original 
petition  may  "be  filed  within  the  city 
within  th^'nek't   month. 

Tl^e  improvement  asked  for  in  the 
petition,  will  be  between  Main  and 
Highland    streeta.      The    atreet    la    the 


jsiiM^JaJ^ 


II       111  JlMiiMMl'   --      ■ 


Curlers  Will  Meet. 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  Western 
Curling  club  will  be  held  this  evening 
at  8  o'clock  at  the  club  rooms,  Fifty- 
aeventh  avenue  and  Bristol  street. 
Plans  for  next  season  and  improve- 
ments to  be  made  during  the  summer 
to  the  property  will  be  discussed. 
Election    of   officers    will   also   be    held. 


Revival  Services. 

Rer.  P.  O.  Haugland  of  Canby,  Minn., 
w^as  the  speaker  at  the  revival  serv- 
ices held  last  evening  at  the  Bethany 
Norweg-ian-Danish  M.  E.  church.  Sixty- 
fifth  avenue  we.st  and  Polk  street.  His 
subject  was  "The  Calling  Voices."  The 
meetings  will  be  continued  until  Eas- 
ter every  evening,  with  the  exception 
of    Saturday. 

Special  afternoon  services  will  be 
conducted  Tuesdays,  Thursdays  and 
Fridays  at  4:16  o'clock.  Among  the 
speakers  at  the  church  will  be  Rev. 
Edward  Evenson  and  Rev.  Elmer  Lund 
of  Superior,  Rev.  K.  A.  Lundln  of  West 
Duluth  and  Ensign  Benson  of  the 
Scandinavian   Salvation   Army. 

West~Duluth  BHefs. 

Mrs.  A.  E.  Stromme  and  Miss  AgTies 
Hanson  of  Elbow  Lake,  Minn.,  who 
have  been  guests  at  the  homo  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  S.  L.  Osborne,  4430  West 
Thiid  Atreet,  have  left  for  their  home. 

Mrs.  Frank  F.  Dhooge  of  Ashlanl 
has  returned  home  after  spending  a 
few  days  vi:?iting  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
Dan  Burke,   6906  Grand  avenue. 

The  IJuda  of  Promise  Society  of  the 
West  Duluth  Swedish  Mission  church 
will  be  entertained  .*5aturday  after- 
noon at  the  hom«»  of  Mrs.  Joel  Johnson, 
4430    West    Third   street. 

Mr.s.  .1.  .Sauter  of  Morgan  Park  left 
yesterday  for  Chicago,  where  she  will 
spend    a    week    visiting    relatives. 

Zenith  council  No.  6.  Modern  Samar- 
itans, will  initiate  a  class  of  candi- 
dates at  its  meeting  tomorrow  eve- 
ning at  the  Great  Eastern  hall,  210 
North  Central  avenue.  A  social  ses- 
sion will  follow,  the  committee  in 
charge  consisting  of  Fred  Becks,  A. 
S.  Nelson,  Miss  Olga  Hallens  and 
Lester    Erickson. 

Vlctrolas  and  records  at  Spencer's. 
E^asy  payments  if  desalred. 

Daniel  Keefe.  714  North  Fifty- 
eighth  avenue  west,  was  reported  as 
much  improved  today  after  being  con- 
fined to  his  home  for  two  weeks  with 
an  attack  of  the  grip.  Mr.  Keefe  is 
an  employe  of  the  water  and  light 
dep.'irtnient. 

Watch  repairing.  Hurst.  West  Duluth. 


OLI)  MONK 

OLIVE  OIL 

PURE>T  AND  BEST 


ALLEGED  MINISTER 
AND  GIRL  ARRESTED 


Pair    Taken    From    Hotel 
Room  in  Crookston  Un- 
der Mann  Act. 

Crookston.  Minn..  April  11. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Rev.  Nels 
Johannes  Morsted.  claiming  to  be  con- 
nected with  the  Twin  City  Relief  as- 
sociation, residence  Minneapolis,  was 
taken  from  the  Germania  hotel  with 
Anna  Arnestad  of  Minneapolis,  and 
will  be  arraigned  under  the  Mann  act 
this  afternoon.  They  were  registered 
as  man  and  wife  and  Morsted  had  a 
grip  full  of  Bibles,  one  of  which  he 
presented  to  the  police  matron  when 
she  arrested  him.  Morsted  says  he 
Is  married.  He  has  been  traveling 
with  tlie  girl  since  Christmas,  and  hal 


FOR  RNEUMATISM 
AND  BOWEL  TROUBLE 

Twenty-Five  Cents  Worth  Is  Plenty; 

Try  It!  Take  Harmless,  Soothing 

Trex  for  Jost  a  Few  Days. 


Then  no  more  intense  rheumatic 
pains:  goodby  chronic,  miserable  con- 
stipation; no  more  sore,  aching  back. 
Trex  is  wonderful:  Acta  right  oft. 
Trex  induces  natural  drainage  of  the 
entire  system;  promptly  opens  your 
clogged  up  liver  and  bowels;  cleans 
the  stomach  of  fermenting,  gassy 
foods  and  m'oate;  eliminates  Irritating 
rheumatic  poisons;  relieves  feverish- 
ness.  headaches,  dizziness  and  bilious 
misery.  Don't  stay  "knocked  out"  any 
longer.  Get  this  qurtck  relief  todajr. 
34c  at  Mattlx  Drug  stores,  or  direct 
from  H.  B.  Denton  &  Co.,  (Not  Inc.), 
Deardstown,   Illinois. 


MAKE  AN  OFFER 

Eighty-three  feet  front  by  140  fee< 
deep  on  Second  street  at  Eleventh 
avenue  enitt.  Must  be  ftold.  Be»*« 
aiMtrtment  locntlon  In  city.  Fln»t 
r^'Msonahle   offer   will   he  acrepte*. 

MASSACIUISEnS  REAL  ESTATE  CO. 

Mcl.  3.        IS  PUoewlx  Bidg.    (Jraiid  4^. 


a  letter  from  the  judge  of  the  probate 
court  of  BemidjI  vouching  for  his 
character  and  asking  aid  for  the  girl 
with    him,    who    is   not   bright. 

They  spent  a  week  at  (jrand  Forks 
and    came    here    Thursday. 

SUNDAY  school" 

MEETING  IN  CLOQUET 

Cloquet.  Minn..  April  11. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  instructors  and 
teachers  of  the  Sunday  schools  of  the 
Presbyterian,  Episcopal.  Methodist  and 
Lutheran  churches  are  planning  a 
meeting  in  the  First  Presbyterian 
church  next  Saturday  evening.  Talks 
are  being  arranged  for  by  several  of 
the  officers  and  teachers,  and  a  pro- 
gram of  eighteen  numbers  will  be  ren- 
dered. It  is  the  lioi>e  of  the  comniit- 
tee  in  charge  that  not  a  single  teacher 
or  Instructor  will  be  absent  from  this 
meeting  and  in  order  to  stimulate  In- 
terest It  ha.s  been  suggested  that  a 
count  be  taken  to  find  out  which 
school  bring.^  the  larg'est  percejitage  of 
its  instructois.  Refreshments  will  be 
served  after  the  program. 

CLOQUEfmirtO 
ENTERTAIN  VISITORS 

Commercial    Organization 

Plans  for  Coming  of 

Postoffice  Men. 

Cloquet,  Minn.,  April  11. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Commercial  club 
held  a  regular  monthly  meeting  in  the 
city  hall  last  night.  Several  items  of 
Interest  were  di3cus.<<ed,  among  them 
being  extending  a  w^elcome  to  the  post- 
office  clerks  and  carriers  state  conven- 
tion mhlch  will  be  held  here  July  15 
and  1€.  The  eatertainment  committee 
of  the  club  was  instructed  to  aid  the 
local  clerks  and  carriers  In  any  way 
they  could  and  a  resolution  was  passed, 
commending  the  latter  on  securing  tlie 
convention   for   the   city. 

This  convention  will  bring  about  160 
delegates  from  all  parts  of  the  state, 
and  will  be  the  first  joint  convention 
ever  held. 

Oolns  After  Menlieni. 

The  club  also  decided  to  inaugurate  a 
whirlwind  membersljlp  campaign  In 
which  the  membership  committee  was 
asked  to  commence  at  once  the  secur- 
ing of  new  members  with  each  Indi- 
vidual  member  to  act  as  a  committee 


mm 


ARE  YOU 
SAVING 
MONEY? 


That  question  should  bo 
met  squarely  and  answered 
by  every  money  earner. 

Most  every  one  has  an  am- 
bition in  life  which  it  will  re- 
quire a  cash  surplus  to  grati- 

The  safest,  surest  way  to 
acquire  a  cash  capital  is  the 
savings  bank  way.  The 
Northern  National  Bank 
wants  a  savings  account 
with  every  Duluth  money 
earner. 

Northern 
National  Bank 

Al  worth  Biiiltliiu;. 

Capital $250,000.00 

Surplus   $100,000.00 


Conxd  Drt»/</r  Women 

Superior  Street  at  First  Ave,  West 

PRESENT 

All  That  Is  New  in  Fashion 
For  Spring  and  Summer 

Tailored  and  Costume  Suits 

Ultra  Smart  French  Models,  as  well  as  ^'individualized** 
adaptations,  featuring  flare  coats,  long-line  types,  strap 
belts  and  waistcoats,  of  Poiret  Twill,  Pastel  Checks,  Silk 
Taffeta  and  Silk  and  Cloth  Combinations — 

At  $29.50,  $35,  $45,  $55  Upward 

Top  and  Sport  Coats 

Street  and  Afternoon  Coats  of  Velour,  Silk  Bolivia,  Large 
Pastel  Checks,  Smart  Sports  Coats  of  Djersette,  Guernsey; 
and  Punjab  in  plain  and  novelty  effects — 

At$15,$19,$25,$35  Upward 

Gowns  and  Frocks 

Clever  ideas,  developed  in  Serge,  Satin,  Beaded  Georgette 
Crepe,  Crepe  de  Chine,  Printed  Chiffons,  Taffetas,  Net, 
Embroidered  Silks,  Oriental  Brocades,  Tulle,  Silver  and 
Goldcloth—  '4 

At$l9,$25,$35,$45,$55  Upward 

Lovely  Blouses 

Unusual  style  themes  and  motifs — featuring  plain  or 
beaded  Georgette  Blouses,  Crepe  de  Chines,  Hand-made 
Blouses,  plain  and  novelty  silks,  lace  and  embroidered  trim-, 
med  Voiles,  Handkerchief  Linen,  Plain  and  Striped  Mad- 
ras, Striped  Dimities  and  Novelty  Materials  in  white,  color, 
combinations  and  solid  colors —  j 

$2.50,  $3.75,  $5.  $6.75,  $8.50  Up 

Charming  Millinery 

A  display  which  features  the  newest  Millinery  notes  from 
the  leading  modistes — including  Sailor,  Mushroom,  Bon-* 
net,  Tricorn  and  novelty  effects — also  Afternoon  and  Eve^ 
ning  Hats  and  Smart  Sports  and  Outing  Hats — 

At$8.50,$10,  $12,  $15,  $18Up 


^. 


inual  spring  cleanup  question  ^^  • 
?ussed  and  a  committee  ap-  r^^  f 
:o  act  in  ronjunction  M-lth  tha    \ 


of  one  to  act  in  conjunction  with  tliemj 
and  the  slogan  is,  "Make  Our  Member- 
ship   500."' 

The   anni 
was    disci 
pointed  to 

committees  from  the  several  dubs  and 
societies  wlilcli  liave  signified  their  in- 
tention to  take  the  work  up  and  act  In 
conjunction  with  the  city  authorities 
in  carrying  the  work  through.  Credit 
is  being  given  C.  B.  McI>onald,  .<»fcre« 
tary  of  the  club,  in  getting  the  dlff«r« 
ent  societies  and  clubs  together  in  tho 
work. 


Mwanan    Pt1««    For   Jadgrahlp. 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  April  11. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — John  Moonan  of 
Waseca,  former  state  senator,  today 
became  a  candidate  for  the  bench  in 
the  Fifth  judicial  district.  He  seeks 
th€  place  now  held  by  Artuh  B.  Child- 
ress  of  Faribault. 


How's  This? 

We  offer  One  Hundred  Dollars 

Reward  for  any  case  of  Catarrh 

that  cannot  be   cured    by    Hall'^ 

Catarrh  Cure. 

r.  J.  CHKVET  a  c«.,  i^i«at.  «. 

Wf,  the  vm<kn\gntA,  ha»r  ktiown  F.  J.  Cttentf  far  tha 
tan  ].*<  )T«n,  nn4  MWf  lilm  ytrft^ly  lmni«U«  !q 
«U  )Nkiiie'«  traiuainlm.^  ar.'l  llnaiicUIlr  tbit  to  cwiy 
Mt  atv  oblifatlana  ntde  *v  bU  ftnn. 

KiTId.N.tL  BA.\K  OF  COMMLKE, 
Toie^    a 

HaU't  Catarrh  Cwrt  U  taken  laUmanr,   aotioc  iitt^tif 
upon    Uw    blood    and    Bucom    ntrfacat    of    tb^    kV«tan 
TMUaMniais  snK  frre.     Price   To  oeeta  yer  bauto.     «nii 
by  ail  nmtfl^ti.  ^ 

Take  UaU'i  Faarily  mis  for  eocutlpctloa. 


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X-mr  !»>■■    »  II I 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


MAKE  YOUR  HOME  COZY 

We'll  Take  Your  Old  Furniture  for  New 

springtime  is  when  the  housewife  yearns  for  clean,  bright, 
new  things  about  the  house,  and  her  wishes  need  not  remain 
unfulfilled.  We  will  take  the  old,  shabby  pieces  and  call  them 
cash.  Pick  out  new  furniture  or  floor  coverings  and  pay  the 
balance  in  small  weekly  amounts. 

If  you  are  sick  or  out  of  work,  we  will  carry  your  account. 

ELECTRIC  LAMP 

No  72  Is  a  very  handsome  lamp 
with  fumed  oak  frame,  22  Inches  high 
and  18-lnch  art  glass  shade.  ^}red 
and  all  ready  to  attach.  Price,  »i.50, 
payable  25c  a  week. 


HAS  WORKED 
FOR  DULUTH 

McGonagle    Denies    That 
Congressman  Has  Sided 
With  Brennan;  j 


ELECTRIC  LAMP 


ciric  Lamp.  ^^o.  76,  has  17-inch 
pe    roof   art    glass    shade,    fumed 

rame,  pillar  and  base.  A  very 
ctlvp  lamp.  Price,  $«.00,  payable 
25c  a  week. 


LIBRARY  TABLE  I  UPHOLSTERED  ROCKER  $11.00 


l-'unud  oak  finish;  .size  of 
top.  2L'.\33  inch*  s,  with  2-inch 
p(>«t  1«KS.  drawer  and  und^r 
sh.lf.  rrlL-.-,  $7.50,  payable 
25c  a  week. 


liocktr  has  frame  of  oak  in  fumed  finish, 
turned  front  posts,  spring  seat,  upholstered  in 
high-grade  tapestry;  medium  high  back  with 
four  slats  and  sciuare  back  posts,  with  turned 
knobs  on  top.  Price,  $11,  payable  BOc  a  week. 


LIBRARY  TABLE 

Golden  Oak  Library  Table, 
size  26x48  inches,  drawer  18 
by  22  inches,  fitted  with  wood 
knobs.  Price,  $13.50,  payable 
50o  a  week. 


Claims   Steel    Corporation 

Has  Already  Complied 

With  Bridge  Act. 


ORDERS  PUSH 
PRODUCTION 

Copper    Mines    Working 

Feverishly  to  Keep  Pace 

With  Demand. 


Condition    Insures    Large 

Returns  for  Holders  of 

Copper  Stocks. 


4»^.^i^.»^.?!M?♦♦77T♦7??^T?^^T^^44^^l'l  H'i'*4«  1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1  n* 


iiw 


US  TIHIE  TBUE  TO  iOY  UiCHLEyilj 


PRINTED 
LINOLEUMS 


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I 


House  Warming  at  Ihe  Rex  Hotel 

CORNER  TWENTIETH  AVENUE  WEST  AND  SUPERIOR  STREET 

Tlic  Rc.x  Hotel,  under  new  management,  will  reopen  its  Dining  Room 

on  Thursday  next. 

All  Pay  Tomorrow,  April  12tti 

■    tlicrc  will  be  a  "IIOUSK  WAKMIXG,"  to  which  everybody  is  welcome. 

nancing  in  the  Evening  From  8:30  to  12:00  o'Clock. 

Xo  Special  1  mitations  Issued.  GEORGE  LUCORE,  Proprietor. 


Because  of  the  erronoous  Impression 
given  Congressman  MUler's  attitude  to- 
ward Duluth  In  the  controversy  that 
has  existed  in  connection  with  the  In- 
terstate transfer  railway  bridge  mat- 
tor,  in  which  Superior  citizens  have 
been  trying  to  obtain  a  certain  kind 
of  an  approach  on  this  side  of  the  bay, 
W.  A.  McGonagle,  president  of  the  Du- 
luth, Mlssabe  &  Northern  road  has  Is- 
sued a  statement  In  which  he  declares 
that  instead  of  the  congressman  work- 
ing against  Duluth,  he  has  worked 
with  real  and  In  a  most  tireless  manner 
for  this  city.  ^  ^  .    . 

The  erroneous  statement  asserted 
that  the  congressman  accompa\i>ed  a 
delegation  headed  by  Senators  La  Fol- 
lette  and  Husting  of  Wisconsin  to  the 
secretary  of  war  to  "require  the  Steel 
corporation  to  comply  with  an  act  of 
congress  requiring  the  construction  of 
a  public  bridge  across  the  St.  Louis 
river  between   Superior  and  Duluth. 

That  the  Steel  corporation  has  al- 
ready compiled  with  the  act  is  asserted 
and  Its  action  has  been  approved  by 
even  Congressman  Lenroot  of  the  dls- 
fl'^t  In  which  Superior  is  located.  Cer- 
tain Interests  In  Superior  continue  to 
fight,  howevor.  It  being  claimed  that 
there  is  a  certain  coterie  there  who 
.<»eek  to  have  matters  arranged  on  this 
.oldo  so  that  they  can  bring  a  street 
railway  over  the  bridge  and  right  up 
clnpo  to  the  steel  plant  on  this  side 
without  asking  Duluth  for  a  franchise. 
Mr.  MoCionnglc'B  Statement. 
President  McGonagle's  statement  fol- 
lows: 
"To    the    Editor   of   The   Herald: 

"The  article  published  In  the  News 
Tribune  of  April  10  In  reference  to  the 
Interstate  transfer  railway  bridge  Is 
so  unfair  to  Congressman  Miller  that  l 
am  requesting  you  to  state  the  facti. 
which  are  that  Congressman  Miller  has 
worke.l  actively,  InteUlgently  and  ef- 
fectively to  see  that  the  Interstate 
Transfer  Railway  company  and  the  two 
cities  at  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  were 
given    a   square   deal. 


t 

* 

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SS55SS5SS3S^SSS333:5SSSSSSSSSSS 


3SS5SSSSSSS5SSSS3SSS33SS: 


JEWISH  PASSOVER  WILL^  BEGIN  NEXT 
MONDAY  AND  WELL  CONTmUE  EIGHT  DAYS 


i'c;;ach.  or  l-a-s.-ovor.  will  begin  on 
Monday  evening,  April  17.  and  be  ob- 
served for  seven  days  by  reform  and 
eight  davs  bv  orthodox  congregations. 

It  is  the  first  festival  of  «'ni««'«^'P'^; 
tit.ii  in  the  hlftory  of  iiviiii-aticn.  Its 
commomcratlt  n    is   ba.'sed   on 


were 
freedom     by 


ex- 

The 

the 


the   lUbll- 
CHI  narrati\e  whleh  tolls   how  the.   peo- 
ple   of    l.»rael    tn.'^laved    in    l.gypt 
leJ      from      bondage      I 

The     I'assover     festival     speak.'?     for 
the    s.inctity    of    the    home    a.s    well    as 
for  Polf-ivslx^ct  and  liberty,    'he  Jews 
kccor.lingly    assemble    In    tlielr    homes 
on    thi.s   fe.stival.   and   signalize    it   by    a 
«,.!.  iiin    service    in    ^^  hieh    the    st'""^.!    » 
the  ancient   struggle   for   emancipation 
i»    recounted    with    pious    fervor.     This 
Seder,     a.s     it     is     railed.     Is     unique     In 
•  pirit   and   form.    It   is  earnest  and   yet 
hapjiy,    and    its    ritual,    though    archaic, 
evmbolizes    the     facts     of     huniRn 
pVrlenoe    in   all   couditit-ns   of   life, 
roasted       bono       reminiscent       of 
paschal    lamb    of     the     first     rassover; 
the    bittor    herbs    calling    to    mind    the 
hud    labor    of    the    Israelltish    slaves; 
tiie    unleavened    bread,    known    as    the  | 
"bread    of    affliilion."    symbolizing    the 

hastv  departure  ''o'"  ''pyJir' .  ,**^ , 
roasted  cRg.  recalling  the  individual 
sacrmce  which  was  offered  in  the 
temple;  the  mixture  of  grated  apple, 
nuts  and  wine,  .suggesting  the  clay 
from  whicli  bricks  were  made  by  the 
enslaved  people,  and  the  parsley  and 
ealt  water.  symbi>lic  of  growth  and 
th"  ferlilizing  freshness*  of  spring.  In- 
vest the  domestic  ceremony  with  a 
real  and  forceful  meaning. 
The    Open    Dour. 

A  bautiful  and  most  suggestive 
part  of  the  service  is  the  Open  Door, 
th.-ough  which  tlie  messianic  prophet 
Klijah  enters*  every  home  that  night. 
a  splendid  expression  of  the  great 
Ideal  which  the  prophets  of  Israel  an- 
nounced will  becon.e  real  some  day 
when  men  will  cease  to  hate  and  be- 
gin   to   do   justice. 

It  is  customary  to  remove  all  leaven 
out  of  the  household  in  preparation 
for  the  feast.  Leaven  i.s  the  symbol 
of  the  sordid,  and  refers  to  those  who 
are  unemancipated  from  the  common- 
place things.  During  the  feast,  only 
inatzoth  and  not  bread,  are  eaten. 
The  distinctive  spirit  of  the  feast 
flnd»   expression   even    In    the     specific 

The    Haggadah,    the     order     of     the 
read     on     the    night 
gathers    about    the 
rnprises     the    narra- 
tive   of    the    exodus    from     Egypt,     the 
actount    of    the    oppression    which    the 
ancient    Israelites    endured,    and    is   not 
without    its    covert     allusions     to     the 
pathetic    story    of    Israel    in    more     re- 
cent   limes    in    the    midst    of    the    un- 


kind nations.  The  Haggadah  also 
includes  a  special  group  of  I  salms 
(cxill-cxviii)  and  a  number  of  me- 
dieval  poems.  ■  ..  .      »     # 

The  rwssover  is  the  most  ancient  or 
the  Jewish  holiday!*  and  perhaps  the 
most  ancient  of  all  holidays  In  the 
hictory  of  relielon. 

The  favorite  book  for  reading  dur- 
ing the  Passover  week  is  the  "Song  of 
Songs."  It  is  the  most  classical  song 
of  love  in  canonized  literature  and  is 
read  on  this  fistival  because,  accord- 
ing to  the  traditional  view,  it  be- 
speaks   the     love     between     God     and 

Israel. 

• 

Duluth  Inventors  Busy. 

The  following  applications  for  pat- 
«-nts  have  recently  been  allowed  by  the 
U.   S.  patent  office  and   will  soon  issue: 

Charles  Kennedy,  on  razor  blade 
cleaning  device. 

I'.  MciJuire,  form  for  concrete  struc- 
tures; H.  .1.  Ahola,  automatic  water 
trap  for  g.-'.s  mains. 

Arthur  Jutila.  Interchangeable  heels 
for  shoes,  and  G.  W.  Johnson,  decoy 
ducks. 

The  allowances  were  obtained 
through  the  office  of  S.  George  Ste- 
vens. Reg.  i:.  S.  patent  attorney,  716  Fi- 
delity building. 

HIGH  MASONS  WILL 
MEET  IN  MARQUETTE 

Reunion    and    Ceremonial 
Session    of    Consistory 
and  Co-ordinate  Bodies. 


Houghton  degree  team.  Fred  A.  Jeffers, 
3-'nd,  presiding.  The  degree  of  master 
ad  vltim,  the  twentieth  degree,  will  be 
conferred  at  11  o'clock,  John  H. 
O'Mcara,  32nd,  presiding,  with  William 
lUamey,  Ishpomlng,  32nd,  presiding  In 
the  second,  or  dramatic,  section.  At  1 
oclock,  the  thirty-second  degree  will 
be  conferred,  George  Tucker,  33rd,  pre- 
siding. 

The  knight  of  St.  Andrew  degree  will 
be  conftrred  for  the  first  time  In  the 
history  of  Fran*  U  M.  Moore  consistory 
by   one   of   Its   own    teams. 

The  Scottish  Rite  banquet  will  bo 
held  at  6:30  o'clock  Thursday  evening. 
In  Colonial  hall,  Louis  Pendill,  steward. 

MORE  TRAFFIC" 

"COPS"  ON  DUTY 


"Instead  of  working  with  Senators 
La  Fo'.lette  and  Husting,  he  has  workei 
strongly  and  effectively  against  them 
and  against  John  Brennan  of  Superior, 
who  represents  a  private  street  rail- 
way company,  and  who  seeks  to  compel 
the  railway  company  to  build  a  high- 
way on  the  Minnesota  side,  where  It 
will  best  serve  his  personal  Interests, 
while  the  railway  company  has  been 
ready  for  a  long  time  to  build  or  caus<» 
to  be  built  a  highway  connecting  with 
the  approaches  to  the  bridge,  already 
built,  where  It  will  best  serve  the  in- 
terests of  all  the  people,  of  which  we 
have  always  claimed  that  the  people 
on   the   Minnesota  side  are  an   integral 

P*i''t.  .     .      «  . 

"The  ronservatlve  people  in  Superior 
have  agreed  to  our  proposition  and 
Congressman  Lenroot  liaf  signed  a 
.statement  to  the  chief  of  engineers  .ip- 
proving  our  plan.  This  plan  has  als«i 
been  approved  by  Gen.  Black,  chief  of 
engineers  of  the  TTnlted  States  army, 
and  has  been  certified  as  complying 
with  the  law  by  Cren.  Crowdcr,  Judge 
advocate  general.  The  matter  Is  now 
In  the  hands  of  the  secretary  of  war. 
where  It  is  hoped  It  will  be  settled  n 
favor  of  all  the  people  Instead  of  In 
favor  of  a  small  coterie  of  m.-n  who 
are  actuated  by  selfish  personal  In- 
terests." 


All  the  copper  companies  are  work- 
ing  with   feverish    haste   In    the   effort  I 
to   keep   pace    with   the   volume   of   or-  | 
ders  being  placed.    More   men   are   be-  i 
Ing  employed  in  the    Butte,    Northern 
Michigan   and    Arizona    districts    than' 
ever  before   in   the   history   of  the   In- I 
dustry,    and    the    regular   disbursement 
of    heavy    payrolls    has    resulted    in    a 
marked    revival     in     general     business 
over   wide   areas   of   country. 

The  result  of  this  condition  Is  being 
reflected  in  the  market  course  of  min- 
ing stocks  quotations  on  the  Boston 
and  New  York  exchanges.  During  the 
last  few  days,  special  strength  has 
been  shown  by  Butte  &  Superior  and 
the  American  Zinc  &  Lead  Mining 
company's  stocks.  . 

The  attention  of  investors  is  being 
directed  to  Butte  &  Superior  in  the 
belief  that  the  next  quartely  dividend 
will  be  fully  equal  to  the  last  one  of 
76  cents  a  share  and  $10  extra.  The 
company's  earnings  are  said  to  be 
sufficient  to  warrant  that  expecta- 
tion. The  American  Zinc  company's 
earnings  were  the  largest  since  Its 
organization  during  the  last  three 
months,  according  to  Its  report  Issued 
yesterday.  Its  shareholders  are  bank- 
ing upon  the  declaration  of  a  dividend 
sho.-tly. 

Record  Brltinh  Order. 
Interest  in  copper  stocks  was 
heightened  during  the  last  couple  of 
days  by  the  statement  that  the  Brit- 
ish government  had  placed  In  this 
country  the  largest  single  order  for 
copper  ever  received.  The  amount  In- 
volved is  said  to  be  in  excess  of  200,- 
000,000  pounds.  It  is  understood  that 
this  enormous  tonnage  will  be  fur- 
nished by  the  Anaconda  and  the 
American  Smelting  &  Refining  com- 
pany jointly.  Deliveries  will  extend 
over  a  series  of  months  well  up  to  the 
end  of  the  year. 

Within     three      months      more     than 
400.000,000   pounds   of   copper   has   been 
sold   to   England   and   France.    England 
bought     120,000,000     pounds    of     copper 
last     December     for     delivery     during 
1916,    paving    22    cents    a    pound    for    it. 
France   bought   100.000.000    pounds   last 
week    for    which    27    cents    is    under- 
stood    to    have     been     paid,     and    now 
England    bobs    up    with    an    order    for 
200,000,000    pounds    at   the   same   figure. 
Quarter  of   Year*!!   Production. 
These   sales   will   account   for   nearly 
one-fourth     of     the     American      copper 
production     for      1916,      estimated      at 
2.000,000,000       pounds,        and        taking 
American     orders     Into    account     it    is 
figured  out  that  75  per  cent  of  all  the 
metal    the    mines    in    this    country    can 
produce    during    the    present    year    has 
been   already   sold.     Purchases   of   cop- 
per by  domestic   manufacturing   inter- 
ests  continue  at  such  a  record  break- 
ing   rate   that    some   producers    are   al- 
ready   being    forced    to    refuse    export 
business.     Copper,    In    fact.    Is    reported 
to   have    been    sold     as     far     ahead     as 
March,    1917,    by    some    of    the    mining 
companies    to   their    regular   customers 
at   slightly   under   27    cents   a   pound. 

Copper  prices  are  gradually  harden- 
ing as  a  result  of  the  unabated  de- 
mand. All  deliveries  in  the  second 
half  of  the  year  are  now  held  at  27 Ms 
cents.  June  and  July  are  nominally 
quoted   at  27 H    cents,   but  it  is  known 


^Vomen's  ana  Misses 
Suits,  $22.50  up  to  $65 

Suits  that  will  appeal  to  the  woman  and  miss  accustomed 
to  paying  $50  to  $100.  Yes,  a  revelation  of  value  and  beau- 
ty— copies  from  famous  French  ateliers.  Fine  Gabardines, 
large  black  and  white  checks,  Serges,  Tafifetas,  Poplins  and 
Novelty  Weaves. 


Skeer  Crepe  Neckwear 
Lovely  TKis  Spring 


L 


Some  of  the  most  fascinating  little  and  big  collars  and  vestees 
come  in  this  very  pretty  and  very  practical  crepe,  and  there  Is 
no  question  but .  that  women  have  completely  fallen  in  love 
with  thorn.  . 

The  collars  are  In  the  .square  sailor  shape  or  a  newer  forrn, 
slightly  raised  in  the  back  and  with  points;  small  short  back  col- 
lar to  wear  with  coats;  deep  back  collar.s,  and  the  new  cape 
collars  in  almost  all  dimensions.     Prices  from  30c  to  $12.00. 

Vestees  are  daintily  made  with  tiny  tucks,  revers  and  lace 
trimmings.    They  are  $1.50  to  $3. 


: 


Hand  Bags,  Purses 


Our  entire   Spring  stock   in   Silk   and  Leather    Hand     Bags 
Purses    (latest   Paris  creations)    ready  to  be  shown   now. 

Comb 


and 


'G 


TKe     ooyescas 

The  newest  Hair  Ornaments  in  plain  and  brilliant  settings. 
Goyescas  Comb  Is  a  distinct  product  of  Spainlsh  importation,  from 
50c  up  to  $5.75. 

On  the  Main  Floor 

Sliowing  Dainty  New  Spring  Waists 

Fine  Voiles  and  Organdies    Q-|^^i«l     q4-   QRp 
—all  lovely  stocks.  vJpCCldl    ttV    »/crc 


Zl.4M»*4.4Mfr4MMMMi4'4-******-l*->*****<^**'«^**^^'^ 


1  ne     nuKKHUii".     ^ 

■Vk,.       domestic    service.    r< 

>    wh»n    the    family    i 

3K,         /     common     table,     con 


DON'T  LET  A  COLD 
GET  A  GOOD  START 


The  way  to  cheek  a  cold  is  to  fight 
It  from  the  first.  Kven  the  worst  mal- 
adies often  are  ea.sily  conquered  if  at- 
tacked earlv  enough.  Colds  may  lead 
to  asthma,  bronchial  troubles  and  pul- 
monary affections.  In  the  treatment 
of  these  one  of  the  tlrst  neeJs  Is  to 
build  up  body  resistance. 

Eckman's  Alterative  often  has  as- 
sisted In  such  upbuilding.  As  a  treat- 
ment for  the  troubles  named,  it  has 
been  used  for  more  than  twenty  years. 
And  In  many  Instances  it  has  effected 
lasting   relief. 

As  with  any  other  medicine.  It 
•hould  be  regarded  only  as  a  first  aid 
to  rluht  care  and  hygienic  living— and 
a  safe  one.  For  It  contains  no  nar- 
cotics, opiates  or  hablt-formlng  drugs 
of  any  sort. 

At   your  druggist's. 

Eckman    Laboratory,    PlilladrlpW*. 


Marquette,     Mich.,     April     11. — A     re- 
union and  ceremonial  session  of  Fran- 
cis M.  Moore  consistory  and  co-ordinate 
I  bodies  will  be  held  in  this  city  May,  23. 
21  and  25. 

The  lodge  of  perfectl  m  will  be 
opened  nt  2  o'clock  Tuesday.  Imme- 
diately following  the  opening  cere- 
monies the  degree  of  secret  master, 
the  fourth  degree,  will  be  conferred. 
Charles  L.  Bralnerd  preshimg.  and  at  3 
o'clock  and  4:3ft  the  degrees  of  intimate 
secretary,  or  sixth  degree,  and  provost 
and  Juilge,  or  seventh  degree,  will  be 
eonferred  by  the  Munising  degree  team, 
Herman   A.    Holden.    32nd.    presiding. 

The  sublime  degree  of  grand  elect 
mason,  the  fourteenth  degree,  will  be 
conferred  Tuesday  'Hcning  at  7:30. 
Charles  L..  Prainer«l  presiding. 
I.nkc  Superior  Council. 
Lake  Superior  coun-^il,  Trinces  o. 
Jerusalem,  will  open  Wednesday  morn- 
ing at  9.30.  following  which  the  degree 
of  knight  of  the  Kast  or  sword,  or  th.- 
fifteenth  degree,  will  be  conferred, 
one  E.  Brown  presiding.  At  1  o'clock 
the  degree  of  prince  of  Jerusalem,  or 
the  sixteenth  degree,  will  be  conferred, 
closing  the  ceremonies  In  the  historl- 
cnl  an,l  traditional  grades.  Peninsular 
chapter  of  Rose  Croix  will  bo  opened  at 
1:30,  in  the  degrees  of  the  knight  of 
the  East  and  West  and  knight  of  Kose 
Croix.  Or  the  seventeenth  and  eigh- 
teenth degrees,  the  Ishpemlng  dearroe 
team  conducting  the  ceremonies.  Thor 
Orem  presiding.  These  degrees  Include 
the  first  and  second  grades  of  the  phll- 
o.><ophlcal  series. 

We'lnei»day  evening  Francis  M. 
Moore  consistory  will  be  opened,  fol- 
lowing which  the  degree  of  grand  pon- 
tiff, or  the  nineteenth  degree,  will  be 
conferred,  George  Tucker,  33rd,  pre- 
siding. 

Thirty- Second    DcKrcc. 

At  9:30  o'clock  Thursday  morning  the 

degree  of  knight  of  St.  Andrew,  or  the 

patriarch  of  the  crusades,   the  twentv- 

ninth  degree,  will  be  conferred  by  the 


Traffic  "cops"  went  on  duty  at  Lake 
avenue   and   Superior   street  and    Fifth 
avenue   west   and   Superior   street   yes-  | 
terday  during   the  rush  hours.     It  was  1 
the    first    time    this    spring    that    traffic 
men  have  been  assigned  to  any  corner  | 
but    that    at    Third    avenue    west    and  j 
Superioi'  street.  ! 

"Traffic  has  doubled  In   the  last  few  1 
days."    said    George     Wood,      "czar      of 
traffic  at  the  busy  Third   avenue  west 
corner,  "and  it  seems  as  If  every  other  j 
man  In  Duluth  Is  getting  out  his  auto-  j 
mobile    and    driving    up    and    down    the 
street    to    get   as    much    of    the  «pring  1 
ozone  as  posblble."  | 

Patrolman       Victor       Isaacson       was  | 
placed   at   I..ake   avenue   and   Patrolman 
Harr.v  Toewe  probably     will     be     sta- 
tioned at  Fifth  avenue  west  today. 

Auto  speeders  who  attempt  to  show 
what  their  cars  can  do  on  Duluth's 
streets  want  to  watch  out  for  motor- 
<yele  policemen  this  spring,  summer 
and  fail.  .  ^   ^ 

"The  police  department  has  deter- 
mined to  make  it  safe  for  pedestrians 
and  others  on  the  Duluth  streets  by 
putting  a  stop  to  speeding."  said  Capt. 
A.  G.  Fi.skett.  acting  head  of  the  de- 
partment, in  the  absence  of  Chief  R.  D. 
McKereher. 

"This  rule  does  not  apply  to  jitneys 
alone,  but  to  all  drivers  who  attempt 
to  speed.  Motorcycle  police  have  been 
stationed  at  West  Duluth  and  New  Du- 
luth." 


DR.  EDMOND 

KRAUS 

leading  tenor  of  Royal  Opera 
house  in  Berlin  and  Grand 
opera  house  in  Paris,  plans 
on  organizing  a  class  in  voice 
placement  and  interpretation 
one  day  each  week  and  will 
be  at  the  Hotel  Spalding, 
Saturday,  April  15,  to  re- 
ceive applicants.  He  will  also 
give  a  limited  number  of 
private  lessons.  Main  studio, 
Brooks-Evans  buildiug,  HI 
South  Eleventh  sti^'t,  Min- 
neapolis. .^ 


that  27*4  cents  has  been  paid  for 
June  by  a  domestic  consumer,  and 
that  a  large  block  of  June-July  metal 
was  sold  abroad  at  a  price  to  net  ap- 
proximately 28  cents  a  pound.  April 
and  May  command  28 ',i  and  28  U 
cents,  respectively. 


"SOL"  KNOCKS 
OUT  LOGGERS 


|ce  Roads  Are  Breaking  Up 

and  Some  Camps  Change 

Plans. 


This  Beautiful  East  End  Home 
Must  Be  Sold  at  Once! 


on 


Owner  has  decided  to  sacrifice  at  least   20%   of  cost.     Located 
corner  lot  In  fine  district.     Has  every  modern  convenience;  hot  water 
heat,    quarter    sawed    oak    finish    and    fireplace.      Needs   about    $5,000 
cash',  balance  secured  as  a  mortgage. 


(5-2) 


LITTLE  &  NOLTE  CO.,  ^»'='»°8'  ""«• 


KELLOGG  TO  DELIVER 
MEMORIAL  DAY  SPEECH 

Fergus  Falls,  Minn..  April  11. — Frank 
R.  Kellogg  of  St.  Paul  will  make  the 
Memorial  day  address  here.  The  in- 
vitation was  extended  by  Mayor  Cole 
at  the  request  of  the  C.  A.  R.  post. 


TO  END  CATARRHAL  < 
DEAFNESS  AND  HEAD  ; ; 
NOISES 


if  you  have  Catarrhal  Deaf- 
ness or  head  noises  go  to  your 
druggist  and  get  1  ounce  of 
Parmint  (double  strength),  and 
add  to  It  V4  Plnt  of  hot  water 
and  4  ounces  of  granulated  sug- 
ar. Take  1  tablespoonful  four 
times    a    day. 

This  will  often  bring  quick  re- 
lief from  the  distressing  head 
noises.  Clogged  nostrils  should 
open,  breathing  become  easy  and 
the  mucus  stop  «lropplng  Into  the 
throat.  It  Is  easy  to  prepare, 
costs  Uttle  and  Is  pleasant  to 
take.  Any  one  who  has  Catar- 
rhal Deafness  or  head  noises 
should  give  this  prescription  a 
trial. — Advertisement. 


THINKS  PROHIBITION 
WILL  BE  AN  ISSUE 

Martinson  Predicts  It  Will 

Come  Before  Next 

Legislature. 

Magnus  Martinson,  the  man  who 
supervised  the  county  option  campaign 
in  both  house  and  senate.  Is  visiting 
Duluth  today.  Ho  Is  not  here  In  the 
Interests   of   the   option   movement,   he  | 

declared. 

Mr  Martinson  expressed  his  belief 
that  statewide  prohibition  will  be  an 
issue  during  the  next  l«-^K»slativc  ses- 
sion. He  did  not  say  he  'avor.d 
bringing  U  up  at  that  time,  but  said 
that  county  option  was  making  greater 
progress  than  even  Its  warmest  ad- 
herents had  believed  possible  and  that 
it  looked  now  that  when  the  time  was 
ripe  for  the  passing  of  a  statewUle 
prohibition  act  two-thirds  of  the  state 
would  have  been  voted  dry  under  the 
county    option   law.  ...  s 

"At    the    present    time    fifty-four    of 
the    eighty-six    counties    of    the    state 
are    dry." 
certainly 


proving    a    serious    handicap     to    any- 
body who  wishes  to  inspect  the  lands. 
The    lands     to     be     opened      include 


The  warm  weather  of  the  last  few 
days  threatens  to  bring  logging  op- 
erations In  the  woods  almost  to  a 
standstill,  cutting  short  what  prom- 
ised to  be  one  of  the  longest  seasons 
In  the  history  of  the  business.  Ice 
roads,  say  logging  men,  arc  rapidly 
breaking    up    and    from    now    on    the 

logs  must  be  dragged  out  of  the  woods. 
The  breaking  up  of  camps  will  re- 
lease a  number  of  men,  and  tend  to 
relieve  the  labor  stringency  in  the 
cities.  Until  the  last  few  days  men 
have  been  at  a  premium,  and  those 
available  were  setting  their  own  price 
for  labor. 

"The  breaking  up  of  the  camps  will 
not  offer  as  much  relief  as  some  be- 
lieve," said  a  logging  man  today. 
"Preparations  are  now  under  way  for 
the  starting  of  the  great  drives  down 
the  rivers  and  these  preparations  re- 
quire a  large  number  of  men.  Some 
of  the  loggers  who  expect  to  have  a 
heavy  lumber  business  next  summer 
are  arranging  to  'snake'  logs  out  with 
teams,  although  the  Ice  roads  have 
about  broken  up." 

A  branch  of  woods  work  that  Is 
starting  up  now  In  fairly  large  propor- 
tions is  the  cutting  of  railway  ties  and 
"piece  work."  such  as  posts  and  vari- 
ous kinds  of  timbers.  This  line  of 
work  is  usually  done  on  contract  and 
here  the  good  workers  make  good 
wages.  ^ 

NEWlECORD 
FOR  PERMITS 


ized  during  the  last  twenty-four  hours 
is    $410,000.  ^,  X     .      „ 

"This   was   one   of   the   biggest   days  -      ,     .u  j 

In     the     history     of     the     department,"  I  tracts     comprising     several     thousand 
said    Building    Inspector     Kielley 
morning.       "Of    course,     we    have 
larger  permits,  but  the  significant 
is      the      large      number      of      Pf> 

In     addition,     many     of      these 
call    for   dwellings  In    various 


issue, 
permits 

parts    of    the    city.        ^      ^    .        ,,  „ 
With   such   a   big   start   for   the 

davs    of    April,    Inspector    Kielley 


this  1  acres,  a  good  share  of  which  is  cut-* 
had  '  over  territory.  It  is  Included  in  the 
fact  i  districts  of  the  Pigeon  river.  Deer 
rmits  i  Creek,  Bt>is  Fort,  Red  Lake  and 
White  Earth   reservations. 


to  establish  a   record   for 


first 
I'lley 
this 


ten 

expects 

month. 

SNOW  HANDICAP 
TO  NEW  SEniERS 

Applications  have  begun  to  come 
into  the  United  States  land  office  at 
the  Federal  building  in"  Duluth  for 
entry  on  the  government  lands  to  be 
opened  up  April  26  In  Northern  Min- 
nesota.  Less  Interest  has  been  mam- 
fasted  than  usual  before  a  land  open- 
ing due  to  the  heavy  snows  covering 
a    good    share    of     the    lands.      This     is 


WANTS  CITY  TO  PAY  HIM  $100 

FOR  FALL  ON  SIDEWALK 


Olof  Peterson,  West  end  resident, 
wants  the  city  to  pay  him  $100  and 
costs  of  a  municipal  court  action  be- 
cause he  fell  over  a  bad  plank  In  a 
sidewalk  near  Nineteenth  avenue  west 
ani  Second  street,  on  May  10.   last. 

A   jury    was    drawn    in    .Tudge   W.    H. 
Smallwood's   division   of   the   court   to- 
day  to   hear   the   evidence 
Assistant    Attorney    J.    L. 
representing  the  city. 

Peterson  alleges  that  he  stepped  on 
a  plank  and  that  it  flew  up.  trippmff 
him.  He  further  alleges  that  the 
street  lights  were  defective,  and  that 
It  w^as  Impossible  to  see  the  defect  ia 
the  walk. 


In    the    case. 
McHugh    is 


Found  Simple  Remedy 

that  Relieved  Child 


5«|-l"M"M-M'*+«l 


said    Mr.    Martinson, 
augurs    well    for    the 


"That 
future 
progress  ofTounty  optfc*i:-  Some  have 
argued  that  the  next  ifelsUture  will 
not  pass  a  statewide  prohibition  law, 
and  that  the  time  will  not  be  pro- 
pitious for  several  yeara  for  the  pass- 
agl  of  such  a  law.  T>  these  argu- 
ments It  Is  only  necessary  to  state 
that  county  option  Is  dplng,  the  work 
most  satisfactorily.  Wfe  have  found 
no  Infractions  of  the  county  option 
law  nor  do  we  anticipate  ai\y.  My 
work  Just  now  Is  concerned  with  see- 
ing that  there  are  no  Infracjjlons.  Some 
day  the  state  Is  going  to  be  voted 
dry  That  Is  inevitable/  In  'the  mean- 
tlm'e  county  option  baa  Bti«de  over  half 
of  the  state  dry." 

Mr.   Martinson   displayed 
elded     Interest     In     the 
being  made  to  make 
declared    that    this 
no    wise   connected 


a  very  de- 
move  that  is 
Duluth  dry.  He 
movement  was  In 
with   any  work   of 


larger  prohibition   movements. 


Inspector  Authorizes  Build- 
ings to  Cost  $41 0,000 
in  One  Day.  * 


Records  were  broken  In  Building 
Inspector  Kielley's  office  from  1 
o'clock  yesterday  afternoon  until  noon 

today. 

In  the  first  place,  twenty-two  build- 
ing permits  were  Issued  during  that 
period,  one  of  the  permits  calling  for 
the  construction  of  a  concrete  ele- 
vator by  the  Capitol  Elevator  com- 
oany  near  Mill  avenue  and  the  harbor 
line;  The  building  will  cost  approxi- 
mately $390,000.  The  estimated  value 
of   all    the   construction   work    author- 


Mild    Laxative     Compound 

Corrects  Stubborn  Case 

of  Constipation 

An  important  duty  that  devolves  on 
parents  is  the  regulation  of  their  chil- 
dren's bowels.  Health  in  later  life  de- 
pends in  large  measure  on  early  train- 
ing and  a  child  should  be  taught  from 
infancy  to  regtilar  habits. 

When  from  any  cause  the  bowel  be- 
comes congested  with  stomach  waste 
a  mild  laxative  should  be  employed  to 
open  up  the  passage  gently  and  carry 
off  the  congested  mass.  A  most  effec- 
tive remedy  for  this  purpose  is  the 
combination  of  simple  laxative  herbs 
known  as  Dr.  Caldwell's  Syrup  Pep- 
sin. Mrs.  W.  D.  Bulls  of  Reed.  Okla., 
used  Dr.  Caldwell's  Syrup  Pepsin  for 
her  baby  boy,  Harley  Buren  Bulls,  and 
says  "It  did  him  more  good  than  any- 
thing we  have  given  him.  His  bowels 
are  very  stubborn  about  acting,  but 
they  act  easily  every  time  I  give  him 
Dr.  Caldwell's  Syrup  Pepsin." 

Dr.  Caldwell's  Syrup  Pepsin  con- 
tains no  opiate  or  narcotic  drug  and 
is  a  splendid  remedy  for  children  and 
older  people  as  well.  It  has  been  on 
the  market  for  more  than  twenty-five 


HARLEY  BUREN  BULLS. 

years  and  is  the  family  standby  in 
thousands  of  homes.  Druggists  every- 
where sell  it  for  fifty  cents  a  bottle. 
A  trial  bottle,  free  of  charge,  can  be 
obtained  by  writing  to  Dr.  W.  B. 
Caldwell,  454  Washington  St.,  Monti- 
cello,  111. 


: 


u. 

I 

I 


/ 


f 

i 

^^^^^^^^^^^if 

Is 7 

■ 

1 

•                                                                                                                                                      < 
* 

^                    _                             

1 

1 

' 

WJ>»iM»^«  I    ^g    >tl>'  "^"^     '1 


#1- 


y  ■     II     I  ■  ,1  M  IL    Jll      .11  ■     'I 


1  1        *  t 


-t 


•-l-i— 


•* 


I 


Tuesday, 


thhjduluth   herald. 


AprU  11. 1916. 


Most  Charming  Modes  in  New 

Easter  Apparel 


Our  spring  stocks  are  now 
at  their  best.  The  wise  shop- 
per will  choose  now — sure  of 
a  wide  variety  and  the  most 
moderate  prices  possible. 

Spring  Suits 

By  actual  count  there 
were  126  models  in 
women's  and  misses' 
suits  yesterday.  There 
are  styles  of  every  kind, 
and  you'll  surely  tind 
just  what  you  want  at 
a  price  that  will  please 
vou. 

$17.75,  $22.75 
and  $27.75 

Coats,  Dresses,  Skirts, 
Waists  and  Millinery  in 
the  latest  spring  fash- 
ion. 


YOUR 
CREDIT 
IS  GOOD 


BiUiri— MKBIOI— VttaiiU— HJIBIMI 


PETmiMIS 
SUFFICIENT 

Little  Doubt  But  That  Fire- 
men Have  Enough 
Signatures. 


IS  WILL 
HEXRING 


Voters  Will  Decide  Whether 

Double  Platoon  Will  Be 

Established. 


!l 


[>.     W.,     4-11-16. 


^ 


R 


Your 
Confidence 

Through  strict  ad- 
herence lo  s  o  u  n  d 
business  principles, 
this  hank  today  en- 
joys the  fullest  con- 
ti(lence  of  every  one 
in  this  community. 

There  is  every  as- 
surance, under  the 
wise  and  conserva- 
tive policy  of  tnir 
management,  that 
this  bank  will  al- 
ways be  a  strongs 
hank  —  standing  for 
and  protecting  the 
interests  of  the  peo- 
ple. 

Tn  building  for  the 
future  we  know  we 
tn  u  s  t  continue  to 
merit  your  absolute 
confidence  it  our  suc- 
cess is  to  endure. 

American 

Exchange 

National 

Bank 


\ 


^:L 


TEETH 


For  satisfactory  dental 
work  yoii  can't  do  bet- 
ter than  at  the 

Union  Dentists 

Gold  Crowns $3.00 

Full  Set  of  Teeth . .  $5.00 
Fillings   50c 


it 


V 


Union  Dentists 

315  West  Superior  St. 

(Opposite  St.  Louis  Hotel) 


/ 


RANDRETH 


100  Ytara 
Old. 


PILL 

An  Effective  Laxative 
Purely  VegetabU 


JUNIOR  WINNERS 

AT  FARM  SCHOOL 


Boys  and  Girls  Wtio  Cap- 
tured Honors  at  Crooks- 
ton  Institution. 

Crookston.  Minn.,  April  11. —  (Special 
to  Tiio  Herald.) — The  foUowlner  jimiprs 
were  the  winners  in  the  various  con- 
tept.s  ju.<?t  held  at  the  C'rookston  Pohool 
of  Aj?riruUure.  in  connection  with  the 
Junior  short  course,  the  piaco  in  the 
contest  beiner  Riven  first,  name  second, 
then  iige  and   pn.sidff ite: 

Com  .ludKiuK:   Wlnn^ra. 

First — Arthur    K Hudson.    16,    Warren. 

S«Hond — Ali>n   Monson,   13.   f'liinax. 

Third — Amos  Kasberg,  11,  Eldred, 
Route  .\'o.   4. 

I'Vurth— Klvin  Tliompson,  14.  Climax, 


Constipation 

Indigestion,  Biliousness,  etc 
Q  OR   Q>Q)  at  Night 

until  rM^vmd 
Ohvoolata-Ooata^  or  Ptain 


f 


Druggists  Know  Best  Medicine 
For  Kidney  Troubies 


During  the  twonty-five  years  that  I 
have  been  .^llins  Dr.  Kilmer's  Swanip- 
Koot  I  hav,'   nover  heard  a  complaint, 
as  my  customers  always  speak  favor- 
ahb-  rcKiirding  it.     Three  parlies  have 
Informed   me  that  they  ha\e  been  re- 
stored ti>  health  by  the  use  of  Dr.  Kil- 
mer's Swamp- Hoot  after  sufferiniJr  from 
Rheumatism,  Liver  trouble  and  trav- 
el.      It    i.s    a    pleasure    to    me    to    sell 
Swamp-Root  as  I  believe  it  is  tlie  liest 
rriedicine    on    the    market    for   kidney, 
liver  and   bladder   comi>laints. 
Very  truly  yours, 
ED  ROKTHLEIX.  Druggist, 
1104   12th  St.,  Cor.   Monroe. 
Lynchburg,  ^'a. 

Personally  appeared  before  me  thiS' 
1st  day  of  Xovembe^r,  19 To,  Ed  fioeth- 
lein.  who  subscribed  the  above  state- 
ment and  made  oath  that  the  same 
Is  true  in  substance  and  In  fact. 
W.  E.  HAWKS. 

XotaiT  Public. 


lit'ttor   to 
Dr.  Kilmr>r  «  Co., 
Biitfftiamton,  X.  Y. 


Prove  WhatSwamp'RootWiU  Do  for  You 

Send  ten  cents  to  Dr.  Kilmer  &  Co., 
Blngharaton.  N,  Y.,  for  a  sample  size 
bottle.  It  win  convince  anyone.  You 
•will  also  receive  a  booklet  of  valuable 
Information,  telling  about  the  kidneys 
And  bladder.  When  writing,  be  sure 
and  mention  The  Duluth  Herald. 
Regular  ttfty-cent  and  one-doUar  size 
Nottles  for  sale  at  all  drui;  3tore«w 


Route    Xo.    1. 

Fifth — Harold  Strong.  15,  Dejou. 

Sixth — Olaf  For.stad,  16.  Halma. 

Seventh — Oscar  Aanden,  16,  Ueltraral, 
Route  Xo.    1. 

Kighth— Melvin   Xorrs,      18.      Fertile, 
Route  Xo.   2. 

Po«a«o  Ju«lKinir  WlaMrm. 

FJrst — Ingman  Thoreson,   13.  Climax, 
Route  Xo.   1. 

Second — Emil .     Gaare,      15,      Perley. 
Route   Xu.    1. 

Third — CJustave    Arness,    14,     Eldred. 
Route   Xo.    1. 

Fourth— Harry    Xlebeling,    16.      Hal- 
stad.    Route    No.    2. 

Fifth— Franklin    White.    14,      Crook- 
Bton. 

Sixth — Herman   Rwiers.   15.   Bejou. 

Seventh — Albin   Sweuson,    16.   Fertile. 
Route   Xo.    2. 

fiighth — Roy  Gustafson,  16,  Beltrami, 
Route   No.    1. 

Ninth — Chester    Doslund,    17,    Perley, 
Route   No.    1. 

Tenth — Arthur  Knudson.  16,  Warren, 
Route   Xo.    1. 

Bent     Stovk    Jndgeiii. 

First — Herman    Swiers,    15.    Bejoti. 

Second — Robert    London,    16,    Bejou. 

Third— Theodore      Olson.      16,      Ea»t 
Crand     Forks.     Uoute    Xo.     4. 

Fourth — Arthur     Alrick,     15,     Perley. 
RtiUte    No.    1. 

Fifth— Chester    Dosland,    17,    Porlev, 
Route   Xo.    1. 

Sixth — ^Arthur    Knud.son.    16,    Warren, 
Route    No.    1. 

Seventh — Andrew    Anderson,    17.     St. 
Vincent. 

Eighth — Elmer   fSunson,    17,    Bronson. 
Brrn«|     Maklnic    Winners. 

First — Effle    Halveraon,    16,    Climax, 
Route    Xo.    1. 

Second — Turine    Dale,    15.    Climax. 

Thlrd-l^elva    Spokely,    14,    Climax. 

Fourtli — Anna   Olsoit.   13,   East  Grand 
Forks,    Route    Nix    1. 

Fifth— Tlielma     Bruun.     18.       Climax. 
Route    No.    1, 

Sixth — Anna    Letnes*,    15,    Crookston. 
Route    No.    1. 

Seventh    —    Hannah      Arneson,       15, 
Nielsville,    Route    Xo.    1. 

Eighth — Alice   Hogcluud,    1*.    Fertile, 
iroute  No.   2. 

Winners  In  Sewing  ConteMt. 

First — Edith  Short,  14,  Angus,  Route 
No.    1. 

Second — Jo8le    Clen>ent8on,    17.    Fer- 
tile.   Route    No.    4. 

Third — Thelma     Broun,     18,      Climax, 
Route    No.    1. 

Fourth— Hattle    Salle.     16,    Climax. 

Fifth— Clara    Lee.    12,    Halma. 

Sixth— Mabel    Storttroen,    17,    Climax. 
Route   No.    1. 

Seventh    —    Hannah      Arneson.      16. 
Nleisvllle.    Route    No.    1. 

Eighth     —     Annie       Amund.<son,       14. 
XleUviU*.    Route   No.    1. 


I  The  flremen'a  Initiative  ordinance 
i  fll<>d  yesterday  afternoon,  as  predlrted 
in  The  Herald  of  last  evening,  contains 
;  a  sufficient  number  of  signatures,  ac- 
'  cording  to  an  unofficial  opinion  given 
out  this  noon  by  City  Clerk  Borgcn. 
i  This  makes  it  certain  that  DuTuth  will 
ha-ve  an  election  before  July  1  on  the 
esc&bllshlnc  of  a  double-platoon  sya- 
u-m  for  th«  flrem»'n. 

Four  civics  students  from  the  Cen- 
tral high  school  began  checking  the 
names  on  the  105  separate  petitions 
early  this  morning,  and  indications  are. 
according  lo  Mr.  Borgen,  that  at  least 
I  wo -I  birds  of  thu  aignt-rs  are  legal 
voters  of  the  city.  The  average  has 
b*>»*n  ruivn*ng  higher  than  this  on  the 
early  cheeklngs  made   today,   he  said. 

The  initiative  petitions  calling  for 
the  pa»«age  uf  an  ordinance  establish- 
ing a  double  platoon  system  for  the 
llremen  are  signed  by  approximately 
8.il»^  voters,  so  that  the  required  num- 
bt-r  of  l',ti44  will  be  reached  without 
any  ditflcuity.  According  to  the  char- 
ter, an  initiative  mef»»ure  must  bear  20 
per  cent  of  the  total  number  of  votes 
cast  at  the  last  general  municipal  elec- 
tion. A  year  ugu  tUt;  total  vote  cast 
was   13,250. 

Indications  are  that  the  Initiative  or- 
dinance will  be  submitted  to  the  voters 
of  th«'  city  at  the  same  time  that  a  vote 
Is  taken  on  the  chartet  aineivdmenta 
now  beiug  prepared  by  the  charter  coia« 
tnlbslon. 

TIae  Petition. 
The  petition  follows  in  full: 
"We,  the  undersigned,  who  have  each 
stated  opposite  his  signature  appended 
iiereto  his  place  of  residence  and  street 
number,  being  duly  qualified  electors 
ol  the  city  of  Duluth.  hereby  propose 
an  ordlnatxre,  jus  follow*: 

'•  *An  ordinance  to  limit  the  hours  of 
service  at  stations  of  emi»loye.«i  of  the 
fire  department  of  the  city  of  Dnluth. 
'• 'Tlie  city  of  Duluth  doe«  ordain: 
"  'Section  1.  Xo  member  of  the  flr^ 
department  of  the  city  of  Duluth  shall 
b«  ojnip^lled  or  required  to  be  on  duty 
more  than  twelve  hours  in  any  one  day, 
except  days  for  changing  from  the  day 
shift  to  the  nlglit  shift,  and  no  member 
of  said  fire  department  shall  be  subject 
to  call,  or  perform  any  duties  in  said 
department  out  of  his  regular  Itours,  as 
defined  In  this  section. 

Snme  lilxc^iMkMMi. 
"'Provided,  however,  that  th»  direc- 
tor of  public  .safety  may  t^tabllsh  such 
rules  as  may  b»e  necessary  to  call  upon 
ail  members  of  the  fire  department  In 
cas**s  of  great  conflagration,  or  un- 
usual fire  or  fires,  and  in  such  casess 
the  chief  of  the  fire  department  may 
require  each  and  every  member  of  the 
department  to  assi5t  in  the  protection 
of  life  and  property,  notwithstanding 
said  member,  or  fireman,  has  been  re- 
lieved from  duty  under  the  pro^'1.«iions 
of  this  ordinance.  Provided,  further, 
that  none  of  the  provisions  of  this  ordi- 
nance shall  be  constrtied  to  apply  to 
any  vacation  now,  or  hereafter  grante<i 
to  any  fireman  or  firemen  by  the  city 
of  Duluth. 

'* 'Sec.   2.     All   ordinances  or  parts  of 
ordinances    inconsistent    herewith    are 
I  lie  re  by   repealed. 

I  "  'Sec.  3.  Thl.^  ordinance  shall  take 
'  e-ffect  on  and  after  Jan.  1.  1917.'  and  re- 
I  quest  that  .said  ordliutnce  be  submltte<l 
I  to  a  vote  of  the  people  at  a  spoclal 
election  In  accordance  with  the  pro- 
I  visions  of  Sec.  51.  Chapter  7  of  the 
:  oltarter  of  the  city  of   Duluth." 

City  Clerk  Borgen  has  ten  days  In 
I  wliich  to  certify  as  to  the  sufficiency 
j  of  the  petition,  according  to  the  char- 
I  ter.  If  it  l.«4  sufficient,  the  council 
may  pass  the  initiative  ordinance 
within  ten  day?,  or  within  twenty-five 
days  call  a  special  election  to  be  held 
I  not  less  than  forty  nor  more  than 
fifty  days  from  said  call.  The  coun- 
cil has  the  power  to  submit  an  alter- 
native ordinance  at  the  same  time, 
but  whether  this  will  be  done.  Is  not 
known,  although  th*"  commissioners 
have  decLired  that  the  city  Is  unable 
to  finance  a  double  platoon  system 
the  next  year.  They  liave  offered  to 
make  appropriatlon.s  of  $10,009  f«)r 
three  years,  thus  working  up  to  the 
system  by  1919,  but  this  plan  was  re- 
jected by  the  firemen.  A  double 
platoon  system  will  require  thlrtv- 
four  new  men  at  a  cost  of  |30,60U  the 
first  year. 


Twef>ty^    Robberies,     One 

Murder   and   Attempted 

bMurder  Charged. 


Are 


Held  in  $10,000  Bail 
By    Superior 
Judge. 


Brady  Henrr  a-trd  Frank  Engman. 
alias  Prank  Finn,  two  hoys  with  crim- 
inal records  paralleling  the  early  ex- 
ploit* of  the  James  brothers,  were  ar- 
raigned in  Superior  municipal  court 
yesterday  afternoon. 

On  charges  uT  highway  robbery  they 
were  held  in  $10,000  ball  by  Judge 
Parker  and  will  be  given  a  hearing 
Wednesday  morning  at    10   o'clock. 

Twenty  robberies,  a  murder  and  an 
attempted  murder  have  been  laid  at 
the  door  of  these  two  young  men,  ex- 
coBvlcts,  who  were  captured  Sunday  in 
.Superior  after  a  running  gun  fight  in 
which  Engman  was  shot.  He  came 
Into    court    on    cxutches. 

Brady  is  said  to  have  confessed  to 
shooting  Joseph  Young  of  Cleveland, 
Ohio,  In  a  St.  Paul  saloon  recently, 
when  the  two  held  up  the  place  at  the 
point    of    revolvers. 

On  their  o^-n  admissions,  the  pair  are 
respenslble  for  the  Young  mvtrder,  the 
shooting  of  George  Ness,  Superior  shoe 
maker,  for'  five  robberies  In  .Superior 
and    six   In    Dulutb.   since   March  13. 

The  charges  now  against  them  In- 
volve the  shooting  ot  Ness,  and  the 
holdup  of  Waterston's  confectionery 
store,  Blljlhgs  Park,  Superior.  The 
maximum  penalty  Is  thirty  years  in 
prison.  They  prefer  to  "face  the  mu- 
sl<:"  In  Superior,  as  they  put  It,  rather 
than  go  to  St.  Paul  to  face  the  murder 
charge.  Authorities  have  hesitated  to 
bring  othA"  charges,  as  they  believe 
the  pair  will  spend  the  rest  of  their 
lives  In  the  Waupun  penitentiary  as 
It   is. 

George  Xe*s,  the  shoemaker,  paw  the 
pair  at  police  headquarters,  during  the 
da.v. 

"I'm  sort^*  I  had  to  shoot  you."  said 
Engman,  "but  It  was  your  own  fault. 
You  shouldn't  have  raised  that  ham- 
mer." ,- 

BothiMBip-l-  and  Engman  have  homes 
In  Dulfctlfcf  JJoth  have  served  time  at 
St.  Cloud.  4nd  In  the  Minnesota  state 
prison.  Hdht-y  was  released  on  Wash- 
ington's birthday  and  Engman  left 
Sttllwa|er*f'4p'ly  In  February.  Henry  is 
a  cripHe,.fliis  left  hand  having  been 
amputae<fr   \ 

At  t»  t|Me  he  \^-as  released.  Henr>- 
vlalted  the  district  court  Judge  who 
.sentenced  him  in  Duluth.  and  said  he 
wanted  to  "go  straight."  His  state- 
ment was  given  considerable  news- 
paper publicity  at  the  time,  which  was 
but  u  few  weeks  before  he  Jotnd  Eng- 
man. 


LUNCHEON  TO  BE  APRIL  28. 


Will  Stage  Mock  Trial. 

Meml>er3  of  Covenant  lodjce.  In- 
dependent Order  of  B'Nai  B'ritli,  will 
stage  a  mock  trial  as  the  principal 
feature  of  the  regular  monthly  "open 
hou*e"  entertainment  at  the  Temple 
Emanuel    vestry    rooms    this   evening. 

Mr.  Maurice  Lefkovlts  will  act  as 
Judge  of  the  court  and  the  prosecu- 
tion will  be  In  charge  of  A.  B. 
Kapolln  a^d  Charles  Rosenfeld.  Abe 
Feldman  and  Samuel  Weinsteln  will 
handle  the  defense,  while  other  coirrt 
duties  win  be  performed  by  the 
various     members. 

During  tlie  evening  papers  will  be 
read  by  Mrs.  M.  Cook  and  A.  B. 
KappUn.  president  of  the  lodge,  on 
"How  to  Controvert  the  Popular  Er- 
rors   About    the    Jews." 

The  entertainment  will  close  with 
a  bridge  contest  and  a  cabaret  danc- 
ing party  for  the  young  people.  The 
wives  of  the  members  will  serve 
lunch. 


COMMUNITY  PICNIC 

WILL  BE  DISCUSSED 

Bralnerd.  Minn.,  April  11  — Director"* 
and  officers  of  the  County  Federation 
of  Farmers'  Clubs- will  meet  at  the 
Chamber  of  Commerce  Saturday  after- 
noon to  discuss  plans  for  the"  second 
annual  community  picnic.  A  basket 
lunch  will  be  served  by  those  partici- 
pating, the  Chamber  of  Commerce  pro- 
viding coffee. 


Business  Men. Will  Formulate  Plans 
for  May  Festival. 

The  ^^'est  end  business  men  will  have 
their  Uinoheon-on  Friday  evening,  April 
28,  according  to  arrangements  made 
yesterday.  The  date  was  originally  set 
for  Thursday  evenins,  April  27.  but  this 
being  the  evening  fOr  the  West  Duluth 
Commercial  club  banquet,  the  date  was 
change4. 

At  this  meeting  the  business  men 
will  formulate  pdans  for  a  May  festi- 
val to  be  held  the  latter  part  of  next 
month.  This  affair  will  be  In  the  na- 
ture of  a  demonstration  of  Industries 
of  the  West  end  through  the  medium 
of  a  parade  and  other  entertainments. 
The  celebration  will  be  held  during  one 
of  the  evenlntfs. 

The  business  men  will  hold  the 
luncheon  at  the  Rex  hotel.  The  com- 
mittee In  charge  of  the  arrangements 
consists  of  E.  H.  Olson  of  Enger  &  Ol- 
son and  Walter  A.  Swanstrora,  county 
comiuissioner. 


FIND  GOLD  NUGGETS 

IN  HELENA  STREET 

Helena,  Mont..  April  11.  —  From 
ground  washed  up  by  a  bursted  water 
main  in  the  business  district  of  Helena 
yesterday,  two  gold  nuggets,  worth  $25 
apdece.  were  picked  up.  'The  find  cauMd 
much  excitement  ankeac  old-time  pro«r 
pcctors.  who  mined  the  principal  street 
in  Helena  when  it  was  one  of  the  rich- 
eet  piaver  ffulches  in  biatorr. 


LOSS  OF  APPETITE 

Most  Successfully  Treated  By  Taking 
Hood's  Sarsaparilla. 


Loss  of  appetite  Is  accompanied  by- 
loss  of  vitality,  which  is  serious.  I 

It  Is  common  In  the  spring  becaus© 
at  this. time  the  blood  is  Impure  andl 
Impoveslshed  and  fall*  to  give  the  dl-  I 
gestlve  organs  what  Is  absolutely  nee-  ' 
essary  for  the  proper  performance  of  I 
their  functions.  i 

Hood's  Sarsaparilla.  the  old  rellablei 
all -th*-year- round  medicine,  is  espe-  ' 
dally  useful  in  the  spring.  Get  It  from  i 
your  druggist  today.  P.y  purifying  and 
enriching  the  blood  and  giving  vitality, 
vigor  and  tone,  it  Is  wonderfully  suc- 
cessfi*!  m  the  treatment  of  loss  of  ap- 
Ijetlte  and  the  other  ailmeats  prevalent 
at  this  time.  Tt  la  not  simply  a  .spring 
medicine— It  Is  natich  more  than  that 
— but   It   Is  the   best   spring   medlcia*. 

Hood's.  Sarsaparilla  makes   the  rich 
red   bloo*  the  dl»eBttv«  organs  need. 


Infant  Daughter  Dies. 

Thora,  the  8-months-old  daughter  of 
Mr.  and  Mr*?.  John  Erlckson,  1922  West 
Miehll^an  etjoet,  died  yesterday  after- 
noon following  a  brief  illne.s^i  of  pneu- 
monia. The  ■ftineral  will  be  held  tomor- 
row afternoon  at  2  o'clock  from  Olson 
Sc  Hoppij-nyan  undertaking  rooms  with 
interment  in  Park  Hill  cemetery. 

'  Mission  Services. 

Rev.  C.  F.  Sundstrom  of  Minneapolis, 
who  is  conducting  a  series  of  mission 
services  at  the  We.st  End  Swedish  Mis- 
sion church.  Twenty-first  avenue  west 
and  Second  street,  will  speak  this  eve- 
ning on  "Stlfferlng  of  Christ."  Last 
evening  his  tfubject  was  "Confession 
and  RemlssKm  of  Sin."  Special  music 
is  being  furniished  by  the  choir  for  the 
meetings. 

Vftst  End  Briefs. 

The  Women's  Home  and  Foreign 
Missionary  Society  of  the  Second 
Presbyterian  church  will  meet  tomor- 
row afternoon  at  the  home  of  Mrs. 
Robert  Glllon,  419  Eighteenth  avenue 
east. 

An  all-day  meeting  will  be  held 
Thursday  by  the  Ladies'  Aid  Society  of 
the  Central  Baptist  church.  Twentieth 
avenue  west  and  First  street.  A 
luncheon  will  be  served  for  the  >vomen 
In  the  church  at  12:30  o'clock. 

The  Luther  League  of  the  Bethany 
Swedish  Lutheran  church.  Twenty- 
third  avenue  west  aivd  Third  street, 
will  hold  its  monthly  meeting  this  eve- 
ning. A  musical  and  literary  program 
has  been  planned. 

Miss  Florence  Walsh.  1027  West 
First  street,  who  lias  been  ill  at  St. 
Mary's  hospital,  is  reported  to  be  im- 
proving. 

"The  Attitude  of  the  Public  Schools 
Toward  the  Bible"  will  be  the  subject 
dlscusped  this  afternoon  at  the  meeting 
of  the  Duluth  Scandinavian  W.  C.  T.  U. 
at  the  home  of  Miss  Marie  Helam,  2317 
West  First  street.  Mrs.  O.  CJ.  Olson 
will  be  the  leader. 

Modern  shoe  repairing  at  Economy 
Shoe  Works,  204  20th  A.  W.  A.  Tlioren. 

MEDORA  WANTS  COLOIVEL. 


North  Dakota  Town  Invites  Kim  to 
Attend  Bridge  Opening. 

Medora,  N.  D..  April  11. — Col.  Theo- 
dore Roosevelt  and  the  governors  of 
four  states  art*  expected  to  participate 
in  the  dedication  of  the  Red  Trail 
bridge  aeposa'tlie  Little  Missouri  liver 
here.   July  iK<to  25. 

Spectaciilart features  will  be  provided 
by  a  wild  west  show,  in  which  the  eow- 
boys  of  the  etirly  days  In  this  district 
will  partitlpate.  If  Col.  Roosevelt  ac- 
cepts the  tm'ttatloa«  the  occasion  will 
be  a  re-uhloti  of  old-time  cow  men  In 
the  Bad  I^andi.  Roosevelt  spent  a  por- 
tlon  of  his  yo<ith  on  a  ranch  near  here. 
________ 


T" 


''Koaiiaiqr 

siis^wmr  PHiST  strket. 


stops  itching 
and  burning 


-^ 


•  »•• 


•  • 


There  is  immediate  relief  for  skins 
itching,  burning  and  disfigured  by  ec- 
zema, ringfworm,  or  similar  tormenting 
skin-trouble,  in  a  warm  bath  with  Res- 
inol  Soap  and  a  simple  application  of 
Resinol  Ointment.  The  soothing, 
healing  Resinol  medication  usually 
stops  itching  instantly,  and  unless  llie 


trouble  is  due  to  some  serious  internal 
disorder,  soon  clears  away  all  trace 
of  eruption,  even  in  severe  and  stub- 
born cases  where  other  treatments 
have  had  little  or  tk>  effect. 

You  need  never  hesitate- to  use  the 
Resinol  treatment.  It  is  a  doctor's 
prescription  that  has  been  used  by 
other  physicians  for  over  twenty  years 
in  the  care  of  skin  affections.  It  con- 
tains absolutely  nothing  that  could 
injure  the  tenderest  skin. 

Prove  it  at  our  expense 

Resinol  Ointment  and  Retinol  Soap  are  sold  br 
»1I  dni(rg:ists,  but  for  samples  free,  write  to  Dept. 
11-T,  Resinol,  Baltimore,  Md. 


M 
M 
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m 
m 

M 
M 
M' 
H 


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n 

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Decayed  Teeth  Are  Dangerous 

Because  They  Are  a  Menace  to  Health 

Statistics  show  that  a  big  percentage  of  ailments  result  from  defective  teeth 
and  poor  digestion.  Get  into  the  ranks  of  the  healthy,  handsome,  happy  posses- 
sors of  fine  teeth.  The  New  Method  Service  is  the  finest  in  the  entire  West — it  is 
easy,  prompt  and  sanitary — it  saves  you  time  and  money.  Nervous  people  receive 
special  attention.  * 

Look  over  these  prices  and  see  just  how  much  3rou  can  save  by  patronizing  us. 

22  k  Gold  Crown,  our  price $3.00  (  Silver  Fillings  only 50c 

Bridge  Work  that  for  weight,  beauty  and          |   Rubber  Plates,  $15  and  $25  values, 
quality  is  not  excelled — per  tooth $3.00  |       our  price $5,00  and  $8.00 

We  Specialize  in  Plates. 
Genuine  Painless   Dentistry 


New  Method  Dentists 


28  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 
(Over  Bon  Ton  Baker}-.) 


M 

H 
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CONTRACT  TO  [STUDENTS  TO 


HI6HJDDER 

P.  McDonnell  Scores  City 

Council  for  Rejecting 

His  Proposal. 


Failure  to  Submit  Samples 

Costs  Him  East  Superior 

Street  Job. 


PROTm^GAME 

Meeting  Called  for  Wednes- 
day to  Form  Branch  at 
Central  Sctiool. 


"Thi3  is  the  first  time  I've  been 
turned  down  on  a  paving  contract  in 
the  last  thirty  years,  and  in  my  home 
town,  too,"  declared  Patrick  McDon- 
nell, local  contractor,  in  protesting-  to 
th»  city  commissioners  yesterday  aft- 
ernoon against  awarding  the  East  Su- 
perior street  contract  to  the  General 
Contracting  company  of  Minneapolis. 

A    resolution    awarding    the   contract 

was   Introduced   by  Commissioner  Far- 

rell  and  't  will  come  up  for  action  at 
the  council  meeting  next  Monday. 

"By  turning  me  down  in  Duluth," 
continued  Mr.  McDonnell,  "you  are 
hurting  me  in  every  other  city.  If 
these  fellows  die,  what  will  you  do 
then?  Are  you  going  to  create  a 
monopoly  for  them? 

"All  I  ask  is  a  square  deal.  The  Bar- 
ber company  refused  to  give  rae  sam- 
ples and  that's  the  only  reason  why 
they  we-re  not  included  wltli  my  pro- 
l)osal.  My  bid  was  M", 142.75  as  com- 
l>ared  with  147.576.15,  the  offer  sub- 
mitted by  the  General  Contracting 
company.  The  only  re^ason  for  bidding 
on  jobs  is  to  create  a  competition,  but 
where  does  the  competition  conre  in, 
when  you  award  a  contract  to  the 
higher  bidder." 

Commissioner  Farrell.  worics  head, 
explained  that  Mr.  McDonnell'.'*  bid  was 
declared  illegal  by  the  city  legal  de- 
partment, as  he  had  failed  to  submit 
an  affidavit,  .showing  that  he  could  ob- 
tain  the  material  specified,  and  had 
also  failed  to  present  the  works  divi- 
sion with  samples. 

Assistant  City  Attorney  McHugh  ex- 
plained that  the  original  bids  on  pav- 
ing East  Superior  street  were  thrown 
out,  because  the  contractors  had  not 
compiled  with  the  specifications,  and 
that  the  same  ruling  now  affected  Mr. 
M<Donnell's  proposal. 

E.  A.  Dahl,  local  contractor,  and 
Howard  Lacey,  property  ow>ner,  spoke 
to  the  commissioners,  urging  the  coun- 
cil to  favor  the  local  man. 

Aftrer  a  short  discussion.  Mayo-r 
Prince  announced  that  the  resolution 
awarding  the  contract  will  come  up 
for  action  at  the  council  meeting  ne«t 
week. 


F.  B.  Carey  of  State  Asso- 
ciation Leads  Movement 
for  Organization. 


Central  high  school  students,  inter- 
ested in  the  conservation  of  wild  life, 
will  meet  tomorrow  afternoon  at  tho 
local  institution  to  form  a  high  school 
branch  of  the  Minnesota  Game  Protec- 
tive  league. 

The  state  league  has  been  doing" 
excellent  work  towards  the  preserva- 
tion of  all  forms  of  fish,  board  and 
animal  life  whose  existence  within  tho 
state  boundaries  has  been  threatened 
with  extinction  during  the  last  few 
years.  This  year  especially  the  or- 
ganization has  already  entered  upon  a 
most  extensive  campaign  and  the  ef- 
forts thus  far  have  been  very  success- 
ful. 

F.  B,  Carey,  vice  president  of  the 
Duluth  brancli  of  the  state  league 
and  an  instructor  at  Central,  origi- 
nated the  idea  of  forming  a  high 
school  branch  and  he  has  called  the 
meeting  for  tomorrow  afternoon. 

"If  the  sportsmen  of  the  younger 
generation  want  any  hunting  or  fl.sh- 
ing  ten  years  from  now,"  declared  Mr. 
Carey  yesterday,  "they  should  wako 
up  to  a  realization  of  the  deplorable 
conditions  that  are  existing  in  our 
own  state  today.  Furthermore,  if  the 
lovers  of  nature  and  admirers  of  wild 
life  in  all  its  grandeur  want  this  ad- 
miration perpetuated  to  be  enjoyed  by 


the  coming  generations,  they  should 
brace  up  and  lend  their  helping  )i:tnd 
towards  stopping  tlie  careless  methods 
of  the  greedy  game  slaughterer.  It  Is 
a  natter  of  far  greater  importance 
than  most  persons  realize,  and  I  o.-r- 
tainly  believe  that  there  are  enough 
good  young  sportsnren  in  high  schoo* 
now  to  form  a  really  influential  body. 
They  will,  of  course,  be  me^nbers  of 
the  Duluth  branch  and  we  will  wel- 
come them  with  open  arms." 

Now  that  tlie  interest  in  outdoor 
life  as  regards  wild  game,  birds  and 
fish  is  again  awakening  with  tha 
coming  of  summer,  it  i.s  expected  that 
the  project  will  appeal  favorably  to 
the  local  high  school  students  and 
they  should  take  it  up  enthusiastical- 
ly. A  large  attendance,  tlierefore.  Is 
loked  for  at  the  meeting  tomorrow 
afternoon. 


HIGH  SeXOOL  BOARD 
TEST  DATES  SET 

Applications  for  Questions 
Should  Be  Sent  in 
-  Before  May. 

State  high  school  board  examina- 
tions will  be  held  in  St.  Louis  county 
again  during  the  last  week  in  May  and 
the  first  Week  in  June.  Very  few 
rural  schools  in  the  county,  according 
to  Supt.  N.  A.  Young,  will  be  in  session 
at  the  time,  but  in  case  any  of  the 
school  boards  wish  to  have  the  exam- 
inations conducted  in  their  schools, 
they  should  apply  to  the  superintendent 
for  the  auestlon.«». 

Applications  for  questions  should  be 
sent  in  before  May  1,  said  Mr.  Youn». 
These  examinations  will  also  be  con- 
ducted at  the  courthouse  in  Duluth. 

A  summer  school  training  course  for 
teachers    will    be    conducted    in    Duluth 
during  five  weeks  beginning  July  31. 
.    ♦ 

Ten  Xew  Montana  Eleraton. 

Lewistown,  Mont..  April  11. — The 
Montana  Flour  Mills  company  of  tAvf- 
istown  has  let  contracts  for  the  erec- 
tion of  ten  large  elevators  along  the 
Milwaukee  and  Great  Northern  be- 
tween here  and  Great  Falls.  Sites  for 
the  others  have  not  been  deflnitelv  ar- 
ranged for.  The  new  elevators  will 
be  used  chiefly  to  supply  grain  for  the 
big  milling  plant  the  company  is  put- 
ting In  -at  Groat  Falls. 


HEALTH  CAMPAIGN  TO 
BE  STARTED  IN  DULUTH 


THIEF  RIVER  CLUB 

FIXING  UP  QUARTERS 

Thief  River  Falls*.  Minn.,  Aprtl  11^— 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Needed  im- 
provements to  the  quarters  of  the 
Commercial  club  have  been  started 
this  week.  Th»  lobby  of  the  main 
rooms  is  being  entirely  remodeled,  a 
new  room  is  being  installed  for  like 
dire>ctors,  a  receiving  counter  and 
registration  desk  for  guests  and  mem- 
l>ers  being  built,  the  reception  room 
Is  being  partitioned  off  from  the  audi- 
torium, teiephooe  extensions  are  being 
Installed  into  the  members'  clubroom, 
a  cigar  counter  built  and  quarters  fbr 
the  office  force  provided.  The  work 
la  h»iMM  d(MM  by  tb*  Thiei  &ivcr 
Manufacturing  company. 


Now  that  winter  is  over  and  the 
gloriou*  spring  time  is  here,  nature 
puts  forth  every  effort  to  make  this 
life  beautiful,  the  tr^es  put  on  their ! 
summer  coats  of  green  and  the  flowers 
begin  to  bud  and  then  to  bloom  to 
make   life  more  pleasant. 

But  how  can  you  enjoy  or  even  see 
the  beauty  of  these  things  when  your 
body  Is  all  run  down  after  the  rigors 
of  winter?  Now  is  the  time  foar  you 
to  assist  nature;  you  have  not  been 
as  active  during  these  cold  months 
as  you  are  now  and  your  constitution 
is  not  equal  to  your  vigorous  feeling, 
therefore  you  must  do  iromething  to  j 
start  your  blood  to  flowing  fsister 
through  your  veins. 

At  present  it  is  sluggish  from  in- 
activity, and  the  Intestines  cannot 
throw  off  all  the  poison  that  has  se- 
creted itself  In  your  system  during 
these  winter  months. 

Tke  Stoatacli,  Kidaeys,  Liver  and' 
your  thirty  feet  of  bowels  need  sissist- 


ance.  You  must  assist  them;  so  what 
is  the  first  thing  that  you  think  of 
to  assist  NATURE.  I  will  answer 
that  question  for  >-ou.  Assist  NA- 
TURE with  nature's  remedy.  CACTUS 
JUICE  COMPOUND,  which  is  the 
juice  of  the  fruit,  the  minerals  of  the 
earth,  and  roots  and  herbs  of  th» 
ground. 

Ask  anyone  and  they  will  tell  you 
to  go  to  nature's  store  for  physical 
assistance.  It  is  only  common  sense 
to  do  so.  Go  to  yonr  druggist  and  tell 
him  that  you  want  a  bottle  of  that 
MASTER  MEI>ICINE,  CACTUS 
JUICE,  that  has  helped  so  many  peo- 
ple all  over  the  country.  Don't  it 
stand  to  reason  that  as  it  helped  thou- 
sands of  others  it  is  bound  to  help 
you.  You  owe  it  to  yourself  to  help 
yourself  to  better  health,  for  it  \m 
your  greatest  asset  in  life. 

Go  at  once  and  get  this  wonderful 
MASTER  MEDICINE,  CACTUS 
JUICB.  Aak  aojr  drucstot  la  Dniath 
or  Superior. — ^Advertisement. 


jliggggiBI 


I 


m  ■' 


' 


i        ; 
j 

i 

1 

t 

i 

' 

Mm   I  !■ »i»  i»i»i  \JerMmi 

I 


Ill  ■!■     >,  II  — I      ■» 


•« 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


r 


D    H..  4-11 -If'. 


122  and  124  East  Superior  St. 

Our  Grand  Cleanup  Sale 
Is  a  Bi£[  Success ! 


nut,  when 
(ircat  snap* 


I 

, 1     .     ■ 


1 

1 

^ 

• 

» 

, 

-^ 


D()n't 


wo  are  almost  giving  goods  away 
Jlc-rc  arc  a  lew  for  tomorrow: 

Our  Xo.  .'J02  Solid  Oak  ChitTnnicr :  five 
ilrawcrs,  iiu  mirror;  regularly  $7.00  to 
$8.00— Llean-up  sale 


$4.45 


<  )ur  Xti.  ;n8  Oak  Chiff(jnicr— our  Xo. 


U4  Solid  Oak,  with  mirror,      C^^  Q^ 
:lean-up  price ipO.  Zf  kJ 

soli<l  oak 

$5.95 


p  pnc( 

Dressers,  with  mirror  20.\12 
—  worth  ^12.00;  regular 

price  $10.00,  sale  price 

;  )ur    Xo.     424     Oak     Dressers,     heavy 
hcvcl  mirror;  worth  H^IT.OO,  our  former 

»ricc 

-ale  pric 
M\x  70  ( ienuine 

dean- 


Mahogany 


(  lur    A.-.    11»S1    Maho.uany 


$14.60,  clean-up  ^Q   Q^ 

irice  only %PZ7,k/kJ 

Chiffonier, 

.  $]9.75 

(  Like  picture) 
Dresser  and   ChilYonier;   regularly 


ly  $39.50. 

sale  price.  . . 


cgulari\ 


regu- 


$79.00 


40 


$28.50  and  $34.50- cleanup  sale  price.  )t/4    7^ 

your  choice  tomornw ^ 

Our  Xo.  ^A^^1  Soli<l  Mahogany  13resser 
hirly  $160.00   -this  is  a  beauty— sale  price 
Cedar  C  hots  just    when    vou 
need  them,  copjfcr  trimmed 
inches  long — 
sale  i)rice.  . .  . 
Our  4S-inch  Cedar 
t"he<ts  only 

We  have  hundreds  of  articles 
—all  go  at  ridiculously  low 
i)rices. 

Lots     ..f     Kugs     and     Steel  Ranges 
inonev. 


..$11.75 
$17.95 


Come  today  and  save 


<_■ 


i>  II ,  4-1  i-i>; 


Wanted:  2000  Young  Men 


The  earth's  population 
todav  reaches  a  grand  to- 
tal of  about  l.TOO.OUO.OOO 
souls.  C>f  this  number  we 
can  clothe  only  a  few 
thou>an<l  men  and  boys. 


There's 
no    t^.ther 
other  city 
get  better 
money' 


no   other   land. 

stale    and    no 

where  you  can 

values,    better 

worth  than 


right 


here  at  The  I'olumbia. 

•  • 

At  $14.50  we  have  suits 
called  THE  COLUMBO. 
which  is  the  best  answer 
ever  given  to  the  clothes- 
question  of  the  young  be- 
gimier  in  life's  battle  for 
success. 

No  Cut  Price  Sales  on 
Columbo  Suits.  Buy  now 
and  enjoy  wearing  a  new 
Spring  Suit  on  Easter  day. 

*  >» 

If  every  young  man  in 
the  city  knew  and  a])pre- 
cJated  this  year-round  Co- 
lumbo $14.50  Suit  Bar- 
gain, we  would  have  to 
occupy  the  whole  Colum- 


At  Third 
Ave.  W. 


i 

Ihi 

^^M       1     1  k 

aPBCLAL 

Ej 

1 

^tCt 

Ilvw 

'  vilL^^^^I 

K)UNG 

u 

Buildin 


[)ia 

business 

floors. 


to  handle  the 
of    two 


instead 

»     # 


store    IS 

of    any 

store    in 


As  it  is,  our 
double  the  size 
other  clothing 
Duluth.  but  what  we  re- 
fer to  is  the  undisputed 
fact  that  these  same  suits 
sold  in  Minneapolis 
Chicago  for  $18  and 

You  miss  it  if 
to     investigate 


are 
and 
$20. 
fail 


vou 

this 


matter. 


See  the  new  Country 
Club  Shield  Bows  to  be 
worn  with  the  new  wide 
si>aced  collars. 


Duluth, 
Minn. 


CMJuni  Co 
Foot-Note:    Everwar  HuSt^   for  nion,   women   and   children. 


LICENSE  MAY 
BE  REVOKED 


i^HTSAMO 

r^       OF 

1/oLicE  Court 


Saturday  Night  Dances  in 

West  End  Cause  of 

Trouble. 


Six  Arrests  Have  Resulted 

From  Assault   on 

Policeman. 


TWO  MISSING  HEIRS. 

— *-\ 

Police    Looking   for   Edward  De  La 
Mater  and  William  Welch. 

Do    you    know    T^dward   de   La   Mater 
or   William   A.   Welch? 

Police    began   a   check    of   records 
employment     offices     today,     with 
hope 


trace    of 


in 

the 

these 


"have 


spring-,    tra-la-la."    sang   Thomas, 

nothing  to  do  with  this  case."  j 

He  turned  and  struck   at   the  nearest  1 

pedestrian,  sure  that  he  was  the  owner  1 

of  the  boisterous  luugh. 

"Ten   and   costs,"   said  the  judge.  | 

"1      BliouUl       worry,"      said      Thomas. 

"spring,    beautiful   spring,    is   here,    and 

it  comes   but  once   a  year." 


far, 
me 


Six  men  have  been  arrested  so 
and  police  threaten  to  revoke 
dance  hiill  license  of  the  Woodman 
hall.  Twenty-first  avenue  west  and 
Kir.Ht  street,  as  a  result  of  the  as- 
saunt  upon  Patrolman  Nils  R.  Mag- 
nusoii    Saturday    night. 

When  Magnuson  tried  to  arrest 
l<'rank  F.  J«)hn8on,  24,  for  disorderly 
conduct,  a  gang  of  toughs  assaulted 
him.  knoeklng  him  t(»  the  ground, 
breaking  liis  left  arm  and  jumping  on 
his   bodv    with    their   bot>ts. 

Fighting  with  his  club  and  fists,  the 
offlter  cleared  the  hall  of  the  dls- 
turber.H.  and  with  the  help  of  Sergeant 
.John  Hunter,  arrested  Henry  Kltonen, 
('laniice  H.  .lones  and  Frank  Mulcaliy. 
Knimelt  Savage  and  Patrl<k  <:reen 
made  their  r.=!cape,  but  w<ro  caught  at 
I'roclor    the    next    day. 

Last  night  Sergeant  Andree  and  Pa- 
trolman Peterson  of  West  Duluth  ar- 
rested Johnson,  over  whom  the  trou- 
ble started.  When  arraigned  In  court 
today  .Johnson  admitted  that  he  was 
the  one  who  staited  the  trouble,  and 
pleaded  guilty  to  a  disorderly  con- 
duct <harge.  Sentence  was  deferred 
until  April  18,  when  the  other  five 
will  be  tried.  They  arc  out  under  $100 
hail. 

The  injured  patrolman  was  reported 
as  being  improved  today  at  St.  Luke's 
hospital. 

"Xo  stone  will  be  left  unturned  to 
prosecute  these  toughs  to  the  fullest 
extent  of  the  law,"  said  Capt.  A.  O. 
FIskett.  "As  for  the  dance  hall.  1  be- 
lieve the  department  will  recommend 
that  Its  license  be  revoked.  Since  they 
began  giving  Saturday  night  dances 
at  the  place  th<  re  has  s<arcely  been  a 
week  that  we  have  not  had  trouble 
witlj   them." 


of    finding    some 
two   missing    men. 

De  La  Mater  left  his  home  at  «ior- 
don.  Wis.,  seven  years  ago,  according 
to  a  letter  received  from  his  father, 
R.  S.  de  La  Mater  of  402  Seventh  street, 
southeast  Minneapolis. 

"There  is  an  estate  waiting  for  him,  ' 
said  the  letter,  "and  1  think  he  has 
worked  in  the  lumber  camps  of  North- 
ern   Minnesota." 

Wflch  wrote  his  mother.  Mrs.  R.  An- 
derson of  Kansas  t'lty.  from  Superior 
on   last   Christmas   day. 

"He  told  me  then  that  he  was  going 
to  Duluth."  Mrs.  Anderson  said  in  her 
letter.  "I  think  he  has  been  working 
In  the  woods."  A  contest  over  the 
Welch  estate  was  started  when  Mr. 
Welch,  Sr.,  died  on  Dec.  30.  the  mother 
savs,  and  unless  the  son  shows  up  soon 
he"  will  lose  his  share. 


CHAUFFEUR  IN  HURRY. 

Almost    -Got"  Traffic  Officer— Pays 
Fine  for  Reckless  Driving. 

Claus  Larson,  Superior,  Wis.,  chauf- 
feur, was   in  a  hurry  this  morning. 

He  hurried  up  the  hill  from  Michi- 
gan street  to  Superior  street  on  Third 
avenue  west  so  fast  that  he  grazed 
a  street  car  and  almost  hit  Traffic 
Officer  Oeorge   Wood. 

"I  didn't  see  any  signals,"  he  ex- 
plained. 

"A   'hunch'    was   all    that    saved   me, 
the  officer  said,  "because  my  back  was 
turned.      I    had    signaled    for    a    west- 
bound   car    to    come    ahead,    and    when 
I   heard   the  machine,  1  jumped.  ' 

Judge  F.  H.  Cutting  fined  Larson  $10 
and    co.sts    for    reckless    driving. 


SPRING  IN  HIS  BLOOD. 

Thomas    Resents    Rude    Laugh    and 
Draws  $10  Fine. 


"CHIEF"  FISKETT  NOW. 

Captain   in   Charge   During    Chiefs 
Absence— Inspection. 

Xow    it   is  Chief  A.  G.  Fiskett  of  the 


Thomas  Wilson  thrilled  with  the  call    police  department.    ,    ^,  .    .    „ 
of  spring.  '"    ^'**'    absence    of    t  hief    K. 

arly  morn  and  a  chill  was  In 


OBITUARY 


Dr.  Kplllniio  rorlella,  Argentine  min- 
ister  to  the  (julrinnl  since  March,  1911, 
died  at  Rome  April  11.     Senor   Portella 


'Twas  early  morn  and  a  chill  was 
the  air,  but  the  radiant  sun  was  climb- 
ing the  heavens  and  the  gentle  zephyrs 
of  tile  new  season  called  to  the  latent 
Joyou8ne8.«i   within   Thomas'   breast. 

It  seemed  that  he  must  dance  with 
gay  abandon  along  the  atreet.  for 
spring  was  In  his  heart,  to  say  nothing 
of  much  Ijeer  In  other  portions  of  hia 
anatomy.  Thomas  gurgled,  for  It  was 
spring.  He  gurgled  with  the  fullne.^s 
thereof — as  well  as  because  of  the  beer. 

Of  a  sudden  someone  laughed.  It 
was  a  harsh,  grating  laugh  and  It  chased 
the  spring  Jovs  far  from  Thomas,  driv- 
ing In  a  horde  of  little  winter  glooms 
that    he    had    not    yet    forgotten. 

Thomas  was  angry.  He  was  young 
and  strong,  and  it  was  spring,  and 
some  rude  person  had   laughed  at   him. 

"The     flowers     that     bloom     In     the 


THINK  WORK 
ISJINISHED 

"Dry"  Campaigners  Believe 

Petitions    Now    Have 

5,000  Signers. 


D.  Mc- 
Kercher.  Capt.  Ffskett  will  be  the  head 
of  the  bluecoats,  according  to  bulle- 
tins posted  at  headquarters  last  night. 
Sergeant  John  Knglert  was  stationed 
at  headquarters  last  night  to  assist 
the  captain,  so  that  he  will  be  able 
to  care  for  both  positions. 

Patrolman  and  uniformed  officers 
will  line  up  for  the  annual  inspection 
tomoriow  afternoon,  the  bulletin  board 
announced  this  morning.  Kvery  blue- 
coat  will  be  in  line,  with  his  buttons 
newly  polished  and  his  shoes  wearing 
a    fresh    shine. 

P'oUowlng  the  inspection,  the  DviUith 
Police  Relief  association  will  hold  its 
annual  meeting.  Officers  for  the  com- 
ing year  will  be  elected  during  the 
meeting,  (^apt.  Flgkett  now  is  presi- 
dent, and  Lieutenant  Frank  Schulte  is 
secretary. 


RECLAIMING 
LAND  ALSO 

Work  Farm  "Guests"  Arej 

Busy  With  Draining 

Ditch  Projects. 


THE    STORK    FOR    SKRVICE. 

113-115-117-119  West  Superior  Street,  Duluth.  Minn. 

SeetheAnglo-PersianWool  ] 

Exhibit  in  Our  Arcade  Window!  ' 

See  the  jacquard  pattern  cards  which  are  very  much  like 
the  notes  on  the  rolls  for  a  Piano  Player.  These  mils  control 
the  shuttles  which  weave  in  the  various  coI<.^rs. 

There  are  also  the  bobbin,  the  shuttles,  the  swifts  for  the 
winding  machines  and  samples  of  wool  in  various  conditions 
ranging  from  the  fleece  just  as  it  corner  from  the  sheep's  back, 
to  the  spools  showing  the  various  stages  in  the  spinning  of 
worsted  yarns. 

There  is  also  an  "analysis  rug"  showing  the  construc- 
tion of  the  Anglo  Persian  fabric  with  the  wires  which 
make  the  tufts. 
Doubtless  some  of  you  know  that  the  smooth  velvety  pile 
:)f  the  Anglo  Persian 'rug  is  due  to  the  fact  that  it  is  woven 
over  flattened  steel  wires,  the  end  of  which  have  sharp  knives 
which,  when  withdrawn,  cut  the  loops  smoothly  and  evenly 
and  thus  make  a  velvety  smoothness. 

The  Anglo  Persian  Kugs  have  a  greater  number  of  wires  to 
the  inch  than  m<»st  rugs— hence  their  greater  wear. 
Teachers  arc  especially  invited  to  send 
their  pupils  to  see  this  display. 
Pupils  who  come  to  the  Rug  Department  on  the  Third  Floor 
will  be  given  an  instructi\e  booklet  explaining  how  the  best 
of  rugs  are  made. 

This  information  will  prove  especially  interesting  to  those 
who  ha\  e  new  rugs  to  buy.  They  may  then  learn  why  Whit- 
tall  Anglo  Persian  rugs  wear  so  much  better  than  common 
rugs.  Then  come  up  and  see  the  many  handsome  new  patterns 
in  rugs  for  your  floors.         

*Tis  Time  to  Thinlt  of  New  Things 

for  the  Home 

The  good  taste  of  our  selection  appeals  to  those  who  have 
iust  pride  in  their  homes. 


I 


City  Canvass  By  400  Work- 
ers—Reports Being 
Made. 


DR.  EPIFIANO  PORTELLA. 


wa.s 
1911 


minister   at    "Washington    In    1905- 


.f.  W.  Blaekford  pre.««ldent  of  the 
milsboro  bank  and  former  state  rep- 
rfsentatlve  from  Henry  county,  died  at 


"Drys"  will  not  know  the  result  of 
their  house-to-house  ranvaes  for  5,000 
signatures  to  Initiative  petitions  until 
late   this  afternoon. 

Nearly  400  men  who  canvassed  their 
Individual  districts  between  6  and  10 
p.  m.  yesterday  will  make  their  reports 
at  4  o'clock,  according  to  W.  L. 
Smithies,  In  charge  of  the  work  being 
done  by  the  "dry"  ordinance  committee. 

"Wo  believe  the  canvass  was  very 
successful."  said  Mr.  Smithies,  "judging 
from  preliminary  reports.  At  4  o  clock 
yesterday  afternoon,  before  the  real 
campaign  started,  we  had  more  than 
2,000  names  on  our  various  petitions. 

"We  hoped  to  get  3.000  more  last 
night  and  believe  that  our  workers 
secured  nearly  that  many.  In  case  they 
did  not  get  enough  to  bring  the  total 
to    5,000,    we    win    finish    the 


VI- 

the 
at- 


Mt.    Plea.sant, 
ytars. 


Iowa,   April    10,    aged 


44 


ff 


BIRD 


up 


ANNUAL  CONFERENCE.    }     PAVING  BIDS  OPENED. 

Representatives  of  Evangelical  Luth- 
eran Churches  Gather  Here. 


.^ 


The  annual  .onftrence  of 
Wing  district  of  The  Hagu.- 
the  Norwegian  Kvangcllcal 
church    op«ntd    this 


churches 
throughout      the 


the  Red 
synod  of 
Lutheran 
morning  at  10:30 
o'clock  at  the  Bethosda  church.  Sixth 
«vtnu»^  ea.st  and  Fifth  street.  Kepre- 
pentatlves  from  the  various 
of  the  denomination 
district   are   present. 

Riv  V:  C.  Holter  of  Red  Wing,  presi- 
dent of  the  conference,  presided  at  the 
opening  meeting.  Reports  from  the 
different  churches  and  discussions  on 
Darts  of  the  Bible  will  occupy  the  at- 
tention of  the  delegates  during  the 
three  days'  session.  The  conference 
■will   continue   tomorrow   and    Fhursuay. 


D.  H.  Clough  and  Company  Likely  to 
Get  Nineteenth  Avenue  Job. 

Rids  were  opened  this  morning  on 
paving  Nineteenth  avenue  east  from 
Fourth  to  Eighth  street.  Indications 
are  that  D.  H.  Clough  &  Co.  submitted 
the  lowest  proposal,  although  the  fig- 
ures will  not  be  available  until  this 
afternoon.  , 

The  bidders  follow:  .1.  Johnson, 
Cilman  -  Murphy  -  I'atterson  company, 
Kklund  &  Hedberg,  Norqulst  &  Berg, 
E.  A.  Dahl  &  Co.,  Magnus.  Peterson  & 
Co.,  A.  A.  Bodln  &  Son  and  D.  H.  Clough 
&    CO. 

Rids  on  paving  Fifth  avenue  west 
from  Superior  .-street  to  the  courthouse 
pavement  will  be  opened  Friday  morn- 
ing. 


NUT-EATING 

A       A       A        A 

ON  EXHIBITION  HERE 

No  less  a  celebrity  than  the  guacharo. 
Col.  Roosevelt's  famous  "nut-eating" 
bird,  arrived  In  Duluth  several  days 
ago  from  the  African  West  Indies,  and 
Is  In  the  possession  of  Frank  Storey, 
227    East    Superior    street. 

To  his  friends,  Mr.  .Storey  has  been 
showing  the  bird,  which  is  one  of  the 
rare  species  which  the  colonel  claimed 
to  have  discovered  on  his  recent  south- 
ern   trip. 

"It's  not  such  a  wonder  as  birds  go." 
said  Mr.  Storey.     "It's  like  a  good-sized 
woodpecker,   for  size,  and   it's   red  and 
black,  with  a  big  beak." 

The  specimen  was  sent  to  Mr.  Storey 
by  a  friend  now  in  the  West  Indies. 
I  The  guacharo  was  discovered  no  less 
I  than  117  years  ago  by  von  Humboldt, 
unless  ornithologists  are  mistaken,  for 
they  have  taken  exception  to  Col. 
Roosevelt's  statement. 

The  bird  lives  on  fruit  and  nuts  and 
is  known  as  the  "oil  bird"  to  the  na- 
tives. 

AMERICAN  LETTERS 

OPENED  IN  CANADA 

WR.-.hington,  April  11.— Several  pro- 
tests have  been  made  to  the  post- 
office  department  recently  by  postal 
authorities  at  offices  along  the  Can- 
adian border  that  American  letters 
have  been  opened  In  the  Dominion  and 
passed  upon  by  a  censor.  No  action 
has  been  taken  and  It  was  understood 
today  to  be  the  feeling  of  authorities 
here  that  mall  In  Canada  Is  subject  to 
such  regulations  as  the  Canadian  gov- 
ernment  may   make. 


work 
tonight  or  tomorrow,  as  we  want  that 
many  on  the  petitions  to  be  presented 
to  the  council."  ^    ,   *  i  .. 

But  2.666  names  are  needed  to  make 
the  petition  a  legal  one,  but  the     arys 
have    gone    on    record    as    saying    that 
thev  will  double  the  necessary  nutnber. 

The  council  is  asked  by  the  Petition 
to  submit  the  proposed  "dry  ordi- 
nance to  the  voters  at  the  primary  elec- 
tion June  19.  The  measnre  stipulates 
that    Duluth    shall    banish    saloons    by 

^The  '"dry"  ordinance  committee  con- 
sists of  W.  C  Mitchell  .  Watson  S. 
Moore.  Richard  Jorte-s  William  Towner, 
C.eorge  W.  Martin,  Marcus  L. 
R.  Magney.  Bishop  McOolrlck, 
Daniels,  W.  L.  Smithies,   E. 


Fay.   C. 

Rev.   J. 

E.   Edes, 


r-, I r- 

■ 


HOW  HE  QUIT  TOBACCO 

ThU  vetiran.  S.  E. 
Lami'hif.  w»s  addii-tKl 
to  the  exl•t■^sl^e  use  of 
tdbai'ft)  f(ir  many  years. 
He  wantt'd  to  (|U't  l)ut 
needed  something  to  help 
him. 

He  learned  of  a  free 
book  that  telW  about  t«- 
baci-o  habit  and  bow  to 
i-on<|Uer  It  nulikly.  easily 
and  safely.  In  a  rerent 
letter  he  writes:  "1  ha»fe  no  desire  for  tobacco  any  more. 
I  feel  like  a  new  man.  " 

Any  one  desiring  a  copy  of  this  book  on  tobacco  habit, 
smoking  an.l  chewing,  can  get  it  free,  postpaid,  by  writ- 
ing to  Edward  J.  Woods.  8d9-X  fitatlon  h.  New  ^ork 
Oty  Vou  will  be  !«rprlsed  and  pltased.  Ivook  for 
ciuleter  nerren.  sUonger  heart,  better  digestion.  loiproTed 
eyesight.  Increased  tlgor.  longer  llf»  aud  other  advant- 
ages U  Vou  quit  poisonliig  youraelf. 


KILLED  IN  SAME 

MANNER  AS  AUNT 

S?heboygan,  Wis.,  April  11. — <leorge 
Schmldbauer.  18.  was  Instantly  killed 
early  today  when  struck  In  the  head 
by  the  pilot  of  the  engine  pulling 
southbound  train  No.  308  on  the  Chi- 
cago &  Northwestern  tracks,  receiv- 
ing a  fractured  skull  and  a  broken 
neck.  The  body  was  thrown  fifty  feet 
down   an    embankment. 

Schmldbauer,  who  was  a  nephew  of 
Mrs.  Elizabeth  Renselmann.  who  was 
killed  Monday  niom'ng  only  a  few 
blocks  north,  was  enroute  to  work  in 
a  factory  and  was  walking  along  the 
track.  Ten  feet  further  he  would  have 
turned  Into  the  path  down  the  em- 
bankment. 


Nights  of  Sleep  VS. 
Nights  of  Agony 

Verdict  Favors  D.  D.  D. 

It  Is  foolish  to  He  twake  all  the  lonf 
Bight  throunh  with  that  Intolerable  Itchlnjf 
caused  by  Eczema  and  await  the  coming  of 
the  day.  D.  D.  D.  Prescription  is  made 
for  you  if  yoa  are  a  sufferer.  It  will  cool 
that  hot,  inflamed  and  Itrhlnc  skin,  you| 
will  be  able  to  rest  at  nlpht,  awake  in  the 
morning  refreshed  and  life  will  be  worth 
living.  We  know  It  will  do  all  these  things.] 
as  we  have  testlmonlal.s  from  many  auffprj 
ers  right  among  year  nrlghbors.  Try  a  bottlel 
uid  Tou  will  not  regret  it.   Come  In  today. 


Arthur  Barnes  and  <;eorge  Wilson. 

MUD  WEATHER  NOT 

'■B     »5     ^I>     © 

BREAKING  RECORDS 

Today's  weather  is  not  unusual,  ac- 
cording to  Weather  Forecaster  Rich- 
ardson. 

The  maximum  reached  this  noon  was 
56  deg.,  just  1  deg.  lower  than  yester- 
dav  which  was  the  warmest  day  since 
Oct'    31     1915,    when    the    thermometer 

'^Fo'r^'t^hfs*  ?vfning  the  weather  man 
nredlcts  a  drop  in  temperature,  to  be 
followed  by  rain  and  fresh  northeast 
winds  tomorrow.  ,    , 

Following     arc     some     of     the     nign 
marks     reached     by     the     thermometer 
this   month     in     the 


Both  men  and  land  are  undergoing 
a  process  of  reclamation  out  at  the 
St.  Louis  county  work  farm  and 
clnlty. 

Fred    Ward,    superintendent    of 

Institution,   who   is   In    the   city   to 

tend  the  monthly  meeting  of  the  work 

farm  commission  at  the  courthouse 
this  afternoon,  declared  that  by  June  1 
the  contract  for  the  construction  of 
county  ditch  No.  5,  which  is  belni? 
handled  indirectly  by  the  work  farm, 
will  be  completed. 

The  contract  involves  a  $6,000  .iob 
and  has  furnished  steady  employment 
during  the  winter  months  for  the  biK 
crew  of  men  at  the  institution.  The 
work  Is  in  close  proximity  to  the  work 
farm.  The  project  when  completed 
will  drain  approximately  1,000  acrts 
of  land,  some  of  which  is  owned  by 
St.  Eouls  county  as  a  part  of  the  work 
farm  tract.  It  will  also  reclaim  near- 
by privately  owned  tracts.  The  cost 
will  be  assessed  against  the  benefited 
property. 

Another    Ditch    Planned. 

It  is  expected  that  within  the  next 
few  months  farmers  residing  west  of 
the  work  farm  tract  will  institute 
proceedings  before  the  county  board 
for  the  purpose  of  securing  a  drain- 
age ditch  for  another  area  of  land 
which  will  not  be  affected  by  the  pro- 
ject now  nearlng  completion. 

From  January,  1913,  when  the  first 
commitments  were  made  to  the  insti- 
tution up  to  April  1  last,  2,795  men 
have  been  received  at  the  county 
work  farm,  according  to  the  monthly 
report  of  Superintendent  Ward,  which 
was  read  this  afternoon.  The  meet- 
ing was  attended  by  A.  H.  Crasswel- 
ler,  rresiient;  Thomas  Olafson  of 
West  Duluth,  and  A.  P.  Silliman  of 
Hibblng,    who    comprise    the    board. 

During  the  month  of  March  223 
men  were  admitted  to  the  institution. 
The  dally  average  papulation  was 
129.74,  the  lowest  number  of  men  for 
any  one  day  being  90  cents  and  the 
highest  170.  A  total  of  11.336  meals 
was  served  at  a  cost  of  6.85  cents 
per   meal    for    the   food    and   service. 

The  families  of  twenty-four  pris- 
oners were  helped  by  the  work  farm 
commission,  which  distributed  the  sum 
of  J200  for  this  purpose.  Seventy-two 
men  were  given  temporary  employ- 
ment after  they  had  served  their 
sentences  at  the  farm,  the  amount  of 
$241.84  being  paid  them  for  their 
work. 

The  sum  of  $1,007.35  was  turned 
over  to  the  county  treasurer  this 
morning  bv  Superintendent  Ward. 


Here  are  new  rugs  and  draperies         _ 
that  will  lend  an  air  of  luxurious  comfort  to  your  home. 

Whittall  Anglo  Persian  Rugs,  as  you  already  know,  arc  the 
last  word  in  rug  quality.  -Note  the  long  fiber  wool,  the  hne 
yarns  and  the  rich  colorings  that  go  to  make  up  the  artistic 
patterns  and  the  lasting  quality  of  Whittall  Anglo  Persian  rugs. 

See  the  partly  woven  rug  in  the  window,  then  come  to  our 
Third  Floor  Department  and  look  over  this  splendid  collection 
of  new  patterns  and  colorings  for  spring. 

Whether  you  need  a  room  size  or  a  small  rug,  you  11  make 
no  mistake  in  a  Whittall. 

Restful  Draperies  to  Tone  Your  Home 

The  new  drapery  silks  are  in  the  soft  attractive  tones  you 
will  like— of  rich  lustrous  fiber-silk  and  thoroughly  sunfast. 

Let  us  give  you  an  estimate  on  that  new  home  or  those 
rooms  you  are  going  to  have  done  over.  You  will  not  obligate 
vourself  in  any  way. 


will  likely  total  150,000  acres  by  fall.  ; 
Several  of  the  larger  land  owners  near 
here  have  asked  for  refuges*  and  the  ! 
.•sportsmen  are  agitating  the  formation  j 
of  a  game  club  to  obtain  the  neces-  - 
sary  birds  to  Ftock  the  refugee  and 
care   for  ihejr   future   welfare. 

"LOOTFOR 
STREET  CARS 

Commissioners    Interested 

in  Plan  to  Eliminate 

Congestion. 


SPECIAL 


AT  THE- 


ORPHEUM 

Ladies*    Suits   Dry 

Cleaned  and  Pressed, 

Shine  Removed — 


a  downtown  street 
congestion   on    Su- 


durlng 
years: 
April. 
18 

3 

4 

5 

1 
16 
15 
16 
18 


year. 
1911. 
1912. 
1912. 
1912. 
1913. 
1913. 
1914. 
1915. 
1916. 


•  ••••••»■•< 


I  •  •  •  •  •  ' 


last  five 

Deg. 
..  .53 
..  .55 
...65 
...74 
...52 
...79 
..  .67 
...65 
...63 


and  you  will  oot  regret 

D.  D.  D. 


Vr  IS  Yearn 
tke  Staadardj 
SldB  Remedy 

Wm.  A.  Abbett  Drug  Co.,  219  West 
Superior  St..  932  East  Second  St.,  101 
West  Fourth   St. 


Bessette  Will  File. 

Fred  Bessette,  representative  of  the 
Sixtieth  district  to  the  Minnesota 
legislature,  is  a  candidate  for  re-elec- 
tion. ^  , 

Mr.  Bessette  is  In  Duluth  today  and 
will   file  with  the  county  auditor. 

He  has  been  representative  for  two 
years  and  is  a  prominent  /»»•"»«'■,  of 
the  Orr  country.  He  was  elected  last 
year,  receiving  the  highest  vote  of  the 
seven  candidates  running.  No  other 
candidates  for  the  legislature  have 
.announced  themselves  yet.  Samuel 
S^ott  representative  from  Hibblng  Is 
expected  to  announce  hU  candidacy 
within  a  very  few  weeki. 


GAME  PRESERVES 

IN  TWO  COUNTIES 

Thief  River  Falls.  Mlnn.t  April  11. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Huge  game 
refuges  in  Pennington  and  Red  Lake 
counties,  containing  thousands  of 
acres  of  land  that  will  be  free  from 
hunters,  will  be  set  aside  this  summer 
and  fall,  according  to  Game  Warden 
William  Munch  of  Crookston.  In  an 
interview  while  here  he  stated  that 
already  80,060  acres  near  and  sur- 
rounding the  city  of  Crookston  were 
closed  and  that  the  aggregate  of  land 
that  will  be  protected  In   this   vicinity 


Changes  In  ^inklns  Depa 

Paul.    Minn.,    Aprir    n. 


»artment. 

St  Paul.  Minn.,  April  il. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— F.  twWn^e,  assist- 
ant superintendent  oC^^»anl|»  in  the 
state  banking  departnaent,  has  re- 
signed to  become  vice  president  of  the 
Firat  National  bank  of  St.  Cloud.  F. 
A  Nelson  has  been  promoted  to  All 
the  vacancy  and  T.  W.  Moore  of 
Rochester,  named  to  aucceed  Mr.  Nel- 
•on.  _    .. 


SURE  WAY  TO  GET 

RID  OF  BLACKHEADS 

There  is  one  simple,  safe  and  sure 
way  that  never  falls  to  get  rid  of 
blackheads  and  that  is  to  dissolve 
them. 

To  do  this  get  about  two  ounces  of 
plain  powdered  neroxin  from  any 
drug  store — sprinkle  a  little  on  a  hot, 
wet  sponge — rub  over  the  blackheads 
briskly — wash  the  parts  and  you  will 
be  surprised  how  the  blackheads  have 
disappeared.  Big  blackheads,  little 
blackheads,  no  matter  where  they  are, 
simply  dissolve  and  disappear,  leaving 
the  parts  without  any  mark  whatever. 
Blackheads  are  simply  a  mixture  of 
dust  and  dirt  and  secretions  from  the 
body  that  form  In  the  pores  of  the 
skin — pinching  and  squeezing  only 
cause  Irritation,  make  large  pores,  and 
do  not  get  them  out  after  they  become 
hard.  The  powdered  neroxin  and  the 
water  simply  dissolve  the  blackheads 
so  they  wash  right  out,  leaving  the 
pores  free  and  clean  and  in  their  nat- 
ural condition.  Anybody  troubled  with 
these  unsightly  blemishes  should  cer- 
tainly try  this  simple  method. 

— ^Advertisement. 


Does  Duluth  need 
car  loop  to  relieve 
perlor  street?  *    j 

This  question  is   interesting  city  of- 
ficials   as    a    result    of    the    conference  | 
held  last  Satunlay  morning  with  J.  W.  ! 
Robertson  of  Minneapolis,  president  of  j 
the    Duluth    Street    Railway    company, 
and  Herbert  Warren,  local  man.Tger.  It 
was    intimated    by    the    company    offi- 
cials that  an  increase  in  congestion  on 
Superior    street   might      necessitate      a 
downtown  loop  within  a  few  years. 

Commissioner  Farrell,  works  head,  is 
of  the  belief  that  a  downtown  loop  will 
be  necessary  within  a  very  short  time, 
and  that  the  plan  should  be  considered 
bv  the  citizens  In  the  meantime. 

This  morning  he  exhibited  an  inter- 
esting plan  for  a  downtown  loop, 
which  he  believes,  might  be  worked 
out  satisfactorily  by  the  street  car 
company.  According  to  his  plan,  the 
loop  will  extend  from  Mesaba  avenue 
and  Superior  street  up  the  hill  to  First 
street  east  on  First  street  to  Third 
avenue  east  and  then  down  the  hill  to 
Superior   street. 

All  the  eastbound  cars  from  West 
Duluth  and  the  western  end  of  the  city 
would  contiriue  on  Superior  strtet  to 
Third  avenue  east,  or  would  go  up 
Mesaba  avenue  and  come  down  on 
Third  avenue  and  then  continuing 
west  thus  completing  the  loop  from 
either  end.  The  cars  from  the  East 
end  would  go  up  Third  avenue  and 
make  the  loop,  or  would  continue  west 
to  Mesaba  avenue  and  then  make  the 
loop  from  that  end.  This  program 
would  cut  the  number  of  cars  passing 
Third  avenue  west  and  Superior  street 
down  to  one-half.  ,        ,.     . 

The  onlv  question  raised  is  whether 
First  street  property  owners  would 
welcome  a  street  car  line,  according 
to  some  of  the  city  officials.  In  their 
opinion  this  matter  should  be  threshed 
out  by  the  citizens  of  Duluth.  so  that 
it  will  be  understood  thoroughly  when 
official  action  Is  requested  by  the  car 
company  for  permission  to  construct 
its  loop. 


All  work  guaranteed. 

ORPHEUM  DRY 
CLEANERS 

Melrose  1168 
Grand  976 


at  these  prices.  The  almost  prohibi- 
tive cost  of  potash  and  the  steady 
advance  of  all  other  materials  enter- 
ing Into  the  manufacture  of  glasswaro 
was  given  as  the  cause  of  the  lii« 
crea.=e. 


Content    for    Commltterman. 

Oklahoma  City,  Okla.,  April  11. — 
With  the  preliminary  organization  of 
the  Democratic  state  convention  here 
today  practically  settled  upon  before 
the  delegates  gathered,  attention  was 
directed  toward  the  outcome  of  tho 
contest  for  national  committeeman. 
Thomas  Wade  of  Marlow  and  Benja- 
min La  Fayette  of  Checotah  seemed 
to  be  the  leading  candidates. 


Mast    Banish   Politlra. 

Washington.  April  11. — The  United 
States  will  never  assume  its  place  In 
the  family  of  nations  until  politics 
ceases  to  play  an  Important  part  In 
selection  of  American  diplomats  and 
In  the  army  and  navy,  declared  Henry 
White,  former  ambassador  to  France, 
in  an  address  at  today's  session  of 
the  convention  of  the  Navy  League  of 
the  United  States. 


PRICES  ADV.'VNCED  BY 

MAKERS  OF  GLASS 

Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  AprU  11.— The  prin- 
cipal glass  tableware  manufacturers 
today  announced  new  prices,  some 
factories  advancing  certain  lines  10 
and  16  per  cent.  It  was  also  an- 
nounced that  no  business  would  be 
Uk^n  for  delivery  after  June  30,  1916, 


No  Trouble  to  Remove 

Superfluous  Hair 


(Toilet  Tips) 

It  is  an  easy  matter  to  rid  the  skin 
of  objectionable  hair  or  fuzz,  if  you 
proceed  as  follows:  Mix  a  paste  with 
some  water  and  a  little  powdered 
delatone,  apply  to  hairy  surface  and 
in  2  or  3  minutes  rub  off,  wash  the 
skin  and  the  hairs  are  gone.  This 
method  of  banishing  hairy  growths  is 
painless  and  does  not  mar  the  skin, 
but  to  avoid  disappointment,  be  cer- 
tain to  get  real  delatone. — Advertise- 
ment. 


— '-^'rr- 


.-«-3*'.aMM-.«**i^^»-' 


ft- 


w    I  l>  f  MUi     •  i  ■ILSU" 


t 


-'  r- 


{ 


\  .  ^.*  I  £  '-a  J—.  - 


Tuesday, 


THE     DUI-UTH     HERALD, 


AprU  11, 1916. 


Society  ^  Women's  Clubs  «  Music  [fi  Drama 


Popular  in  Society 

of  Exclusive  Suburb 


VOL'     want     to    wear    thei 

sport     suit   and    sport    boots; 

yon    bniiRlu   just   before    the: 

spriiiR  rush,  now  is  the  time.j 

f..r  those  bright,  sunny  days  ^ 
are   iu>t   the  kind   lor  hikinK.  and  the 
knowk-d«e    of   being    becotninRly    an-lj 
suitably   attired    gives,   more    spnn«i-, 
iiess  t.'.  the  step  than  several  pairs  ot 
ruhl)er  heels.  .  .        .   •  i 

\  w.-ll  known  health  advisor,  who 
said  that  hinh  heels  are  beneticial  it 
\vorn  sometimes,  did  not  recommend 
them  lor  hii^'s.  and  an  instructor  in 
proper  walking  disposes  of  tlie  ques- 
tion of  lootKiar  before  giving  the  tol- 
jov.in^   instructions: 

•Mmiv  do  not  know  or  realize  tlie 
importance  of  correct  walkln^,^  In 
taking'  a  step  the  foot  and  toe  should 
be  hea.Ud  directly  in  front  in  the  di- 
rection in  mind  and  not  placed  as  in  so 
nianv  instances  at  an  ane:le. 

"The  result  of  allowing  the  toot  to 
fall  in  an  ansrnlar  position  with  each  | 
stc|>  is  that  thi-  fo(»t  is  g'.t  out  of  Rear j 
vntirely  and  the  person  who  unlks  m 
this  manner  will  be  noted  to  sh-'W  tlie 
reiirlt  as  the  heels  of  the  shoes  ot  the 
person  ulio  walks  improperly  are  al- 
ways hopelessly  run  down  one  way  or 
the  t»ther  in  the  most  outlandish  man-, 

"So  if  one  would  walk  properly  it  is 
neeessarv  to  place  one  foot  directly 
iM  front  of  the  other,  of  course,  gag- 
ing the  space  by  one's  height  and 
what    would    be 

With  this  rule  in  mind  arid  the  prop<;r    ^ 

attention    given    to    holding    the    heacr  j,' ,",;,:  daiishter  of  Mr,  and  Mr».  W 
an.l  chest  in  position,  there  is  no  doubt    Haiel.t. 
that,  however  short   the  hike  may  be. 
the    bfiu-fits    will    be    well    worth    the 
effort." 


The  Possibilities  of  American 
Cottons 


m 


HIS    IS 
choose 
likt?    our 
raiment. 


the    month    when    we 

to    clothe    our    rooma. 

bndifS,       in       cooler 

Kven      the     bric-a- 


DOROTHY  HAIGHT. 

Dorothy    Haisht    is   one   of   the    pret- 
a    comfortable    step,    tiesl    of  the    younger   set  In  Nrw   York 

and   Huburbsin    social   life       She   beloiiKB 
to  the  exclusive   Kidjrewood  colony  and 


rOMi.HT 
AM>   TOMOHKOW. 


* 


^•:vn^Ts  of 


*  I 


the  tiill.H  table  is  a  maKnifyinK  mirror 
that  Ko»*.s  the  truth  one  better  and  ex- 
asfiferat'vs  ojif's*  imperfections  with  the 
»enero!«lty  indulRcd  in  by  the  mem- 
bor.s  of  one's   family. 

Tiie  lower   part   of  the   new  device  Is 
1  -•-       ^pj    even 


The  IMillwlliea  rlan*  •*  t'«e  First  * 
I'rrshylerlaii  ohiirrh  »vlll  hold  It*  * 
annual  l>nii«iuel  mi  «:.'M»  «'el«rk  t»-  .* 
iilKht    In    the    Sunday   «rh«»«l   moM.   -* 

\\all«-r    l.euH     will     «l»e    a     ><«nK* 

rerilMl    at    Hs.'M*    oVIork    tunlslic    at   W 

^   the    FIrwt    .MfllnMlUt    rhurcU.  *, 

^^^^^  +  ****#^^**4|»*^Mf  ******** 

'm   — — 

Events  of  Interest. 

Mrs  H.  A.  Dancer.  -61  t  l^a.st  Su- 
Ij.iior  .street,  will  tsntertain  at  lunch- 
eon Friday  In  honor  of  tlie  Mrs.  Her- 
bert W.  Mrown.  1711  Ka^t  First  street, 
who  expects  to  leave  jioon  to  join  h«»r 
hu.sband  in  Vancouver.  where  they 
will     make    their    home. 

•  •      • 

Mrs  T  J.  Hyd.-  of  If:  \V.  st  Fourth 
slr.et  will  entertain  at  five  hundred 
toiiiKht  for  the  ni'inhera  of  the  ladies* 
auxiliary  to  the  Sons  of  Veteran.'*, 
Camp    No.    5.   and    their   women    friends 

♦  •       • 

Mrs  E  A.  Swan.«on.  105  Me.saba  ave- 
nue, entertained  at  a  birthday  party 
In  honor  of  her  dausfhter.  Matiida'd 
t>nth  birthday,  last  Saturday  after- 
noon. 

i;amr.«:  were  played  and  pnz.^.^  won 
bv  Marjorle  Willis.  Beatrice  Roas. 
Mabeile    Moffat.    Lucille    Bayha. 

othtr  Kuest.'t  were  Helen  Rayha, 
Irma  . Johnson.  Frances  Simpson. 
i:ile^Mi  Morrlssey.  and  Clara  Majfuu- 
pon. 

.Sever.'il  selections  on  the  piano  were 
Riv.-n  by  Misse.s  Clara  MagrnuMon. 
H.-l.rt  I'layha.  Lucille  Bayha  and 
Matilda    Swenaon.  ....... 

The  diniuR  table  w.is  decorated  with 
a  centerpiece  made  of  a  plate  of  ten 
white  candles  which  formed  the  cen- 
t'-r  of  a  star-.<«haped  mat  of  ferns  and 
daffodils,  the  daffodils  extending  from 
the  center  and  making  ■  border  of 
one  flower  at  each  plate.  The  plac? 
cards  represented  Faster  lilies  with 
b^bv  face.-j  for  centers.  The  color 
Bfh/nie  of  green  and  white  was  em- 
phasis'-d  bv  tinv  ."ticks  of  candy 
•wrapped  in' white  and  tied  with  bo^'» 
(•f    sjrciMi    ribbon    as    favors. 

The  hostess  wa.o  .isslBted  by  Mr«. 
Sullivan     and    Mrs.    W.    L.     H.irvey. 

*  •      • 

Mr.^.  T.  A.  Slattery  of  1017  East  Sev- 
enth street  will  entertain  the  W.iman's 
auxiliary  to  the  R.  N.  A.,  at  2:30  o'clock 
tomorrow  afternoon. 

•  •       * 

Mr:».  Harold  CraBSweller  of  2016  East 
Sixth  street  entertained  at  a  luncheon 
of  jiix   covers   yesterday. 

Wedding  at  Cathedral. 

Mr.  and  Mr.s.  Hylve.<(ter  L'>  Roy  R.ich- 
ert  have  issued  Invitations  for  the 
niarrlaee  of  their  daughter  Eleanore 
and  t'harles  F.  Liscomb.  which  wtU 
take  place  Tuesday  night,  April  .::5.  at 
Trinity  cathedral. 


,,'Jui<t    a    plain    looking    glass. 

i'  I  that  can   be  di.scouraging  enough.     The 

*  'top  i.>«  barred  off  with  a  gold   line  and 


Into  this  res'Tved  space  Is  set  an  ex 
agg'-rated  lens  which  enlarges  every 
d^'tall  In  order  that  all  defects  may  be 
S'^en.  and  therefore,  ren)edied.  To  get 
an  Idea  of  the  diabolical  qualities  of 
such  a  glass,  just  recall  the  vanity 
box  mirror  that  concentrates  the  fea- 
tures, especially  the  rvose. 
^ —      - 

Red  Cross  Circle. 

The  Red  Cross  circle  of  the  A.  C.  A. 
will  met't  with  Mrs.  C.  K.  DIckerman. 
630  Twenty -ft^urth  avenue  east,  at  2 
o'clo^.'k    Wednes.iay   afternoon. 

Church  Meetings. 

Lenten  servl.-es  will  be  held  at  8 
o'eloek  tonight  at  St.   Pauls  Episcopal 

church. 

*  m      * 

The     Phllathea    Class     of     the    First 

M.     E.     church     Will     hold     a     business 

meeting    tonight    at    the    re.<»ldence    of 

Miss   May   Colter,   217    Twelfth   avenue 

east. 
•  *      «      • 

The  Phllathea  Class  of  »t.  John's 
English  Lutheran  church  will  meet 
tonight  at  the  residence  of  Mis*4  Jo- 
hanna Miller.  102«  West  Fourth  street. 
«       «       * 

The  Glen  Avon  guild  will  meet  at  2 
o'clock  tomorrow  afternot>n  at  the 
church. 

*  *       • 

The    Woman's    Alliance    of    the    Unl- 

tana.n  church  will  meet  at  2:J0  o'clock 

lonion'ow  afitrnoon  at  the  residence  of 

,  Mrs     George      R.    Gebauer,    120l»      East 

I  Third  street. 

0m* 

"Missionary  Work  in  Latin  America" 

will   be   the   topic   for  discission  at   the 

;  me*-tlng    of   the   Ladles"    Missionary   So- 

ci-ty    of    the     First     Christian     church, 

!  which  will   be   held  In   the  church  Wed- 

i  noiilay  afternoon  at  3  o'clock.     Mrs.  E. 


brae  that  pleased  us  when 
the  outdoors  was  cold  and 
bare  seems  to  take  too  mu<h 
room  now  and  is  packed  away  on  a 
safe,  high  shelf.  The  very  sight  of 
the  open  fireplace,  the  steam  radiator 
or  floor  register  Is  hateful.  \N  e  let 
a  screen  hide  the  one,  push  a  set  of 
shelves  In  front  of  the  other,  and 
cover  the  offending  register  with  a 
table  or  a  rug.  There  Is  no  doubt 
about  It — Spring  Is  here;  there  is  life 
In  the  valleys,  splendor  in  the  sun- 
beams and  health  in  the  air.  This 
Is  the  preparatory  season  when  we 
plan    for    summer    conifort. 

Whene*«r  the  seasons  change,  the 
dining  room  comes  In  for  special  at- 
tention. When  you  take  down  the 
heavy  draperies  and  |)Ut  the  cool-look- 
ing bamboo  hangings  in  their  place 
you  are  all  the  time  planning  cer- 
tain linen  covers  for  the  best  up- 
holstery. Involuntarily  you  think  of 
your  well-sto<<ked  linen  chest  and  de- 
ride vou  will  use  center  squares  and 
doilies  all  you  can  this  summer. 
Linen  Is  scarce  and  terribly  high- 
priced.  There  is  a  good  substitute, 
though,  to  be  had  In  the  mercerized 
cotton.  The  patterns  offered  In  this 
are  tasteful,  the  material  Is  glossy 
and    as    white    as    snow. 

If  vou  venture  on  an  exploring  ex- 
pedition let  It  lead  you  through  the 
art  departments  of  the  large  stores. 
There  you  will  surely  see  the  new 
unbleached,  creamy,  coarse  art  mus- 
lin. It  is  trimmed  with  bands  of 
dark-colored  denim  and  on  this  trim- 
ming, fanciful  birds.  arabesque 
designs    and      never-was      or    could-bs 


A.  Risdon  will  speak  on  the  work  In 
Porto  Rlco.  Rev.  Mr.  Priest  of  Chllli- 
cothe.  Mo.,  and  Mr.  Le  (Jrand  Pace, 
secretary  of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  at  Proctor, 
will  also  speak.  The  special  musical 
numbers  will  be  two  vocal  solos  by 
Miss  Myrtle  Hobbs  and  a  piano  duet  by 
Mrs.  James  A.  Davis  and  Miss  Esther 
Tlscher.  Th<*  hostesses  for  the  after- 
noon will  be  Mrs.  E.  A.  Risdon  and  Mrs. 
Robert  Mace.  ^    . 

At  6-30  a  supper  will  be  served  In 
the  church.  This  will  be  followed  by 
preaching  service,  to  which  all  are  cor- 
dially Invited.  Mr.  Priest  will  speak 
at  this  service. 

Woman  Suffrage  Is  Now 

An  Issue  in  Hungary 

Woman's  Journal:  Hungarian  dep- 
uties have  received  telegrams  from 
their  districts  asking  for  woman  suf- 
frage in  the  name  of  the  Invaluable 
war  services  performed  by  the  women 
of  Hungary.  All  the  political  parties 
have  been  visited  by  deputations  of 
suffragists,  and  members  of  parliament 
have  been  called  upon.  The  pre>ate. 
Dr  Glessweln.  and  Mr.  Juriga,  a  Slavic 
representative  from  Northern  Hungary, 
both  spoke  recently  in  behalf  of  politU 
cal  eoaallty  for  men   and  women. 

The  Press  Bulletin  of  the  N'ew  York 
State  Woman  Suffrage  party  remarks: 
"What  with  Mexico  and  Hungary. 
Japan  end  South  Africa  all  marching 
on  towards  woman  suffrage,  there 
seems  to  be  no  place  where  the  nerves 
of  legislators  may  be  kept  In  perfect 
repose.  Almo.st  the  only  countries 
which   promise  complete  security   from 


dragons  are  stenciled  or  applied  In 
startling  colors.  This  Is  made  Into 
draperies,  table  covers,  luncheon  sets. 
thro,vs  and  all  things  that  linen  has 
ever    been    chosen    for. 

These  American  cottons  have  been 
shrunken  and  the  colors  of  the  sten- 
ciling are  warranted  fast  dye,  so 
there  is  no  question  about  their 
laundering  well,  and  If  you  use  them 
for  your  home  or  summer  cottage 
dining  room  this  summer  you  will 
find  them  cheerful  and  really  hand- 
some. 

MKxu  FOR  Tomoniiow. 

Breakfaat. 

Cream    of    Wheat 

Steamed    Dried     Apricots 

Poached    Eggs    on    Buttered    Toast 

Hot    Rolls  Maple    Syrup  Coffee 

liBnekeon 

Appli»    Dumplings 

N  it  or  Prottose  Roll.  Tomato  Sauce 

Creamed   Rice  Cheese   Wafers 

Fresh    Radishes 

Bro'wn    Brcpd  Tea 

I^lntiVr 

Cream    Soup    with    Egg    Balls 

Broiled    Smoked    Finnan     Haddie    with 

Cream    Sauce 

Pear   Salad    with    Cream    Cheese 

Wafers 

Elderberry   Pie    with    Maple   Syrup 

Coffee 
A  word  about  the  pie — fortunate 
dwellers  ',n  the  country  usually  can 
elde.-berries  for  pies  In  hot  maple 
tyrup.  Townsfolks  think  themselves 
lucky  to  '•pet  the  berries  canned  In 
any  sha{|ji%  VThe  fruit  Juice  may  be 
dralne*  «■  and  the  maple  put  In  the 
pie  In  its  #Lead.  cr  you  may  serve  the 
syrup,  to  be  poured  on  the  pastry, 
at    the-  iable. 

(trrtra«i)  by  Adansi  Newspaper  Senrlce.) 


French  &  Basaett  Go. 


Collegiate  Alumnae  Incorporate 
For  General  Educational  Work 


Canadian  War  Relief 

Makes  $95  on  Sale 

The  Duhith  branch  of  the  Canadian 
War  Uclief  association  realized  |9B 
from  the  home  cooking  sale  that  was 
held  Saturday.  The  organization  Is 
open  to  all  Canadian-born  women  and 
to  others  who  are  In  sympathy  with 
th-  work.  Tiiose  who  wish  to  Join 
may  do  so  by  sending  their  names  to 
Mrs.  J.  H.  Dlght.  2109  East  Superior 
street,  or  m.iy  become  membeis  at  the 
next  r.nular  Work  session,  which  will 
he  held  at  2  o'clock  Friday  afternoon 
at  tlie  residence  of  Mrs.  Milie  Bun- 
nell. i'i)17  East  Superior  str.et.  The 
organization  was  Increased  recently  by 
fifteen   members. 


Bergum-Hagen. 

Miss  I..oul»e  Bergum  and  KIner  A. 
l{au:>'n  were  married  Monday  evening 
at  8  o'clock  by  Rev.  J.  H.  Stenberg  at 
the  parsonage  of  tlie  Norwegian  Luth- 
eran cliurch,  First  avenue  east  and 
Third   street. 

Miss  Esther  Hagen.  sister  of  the 
liiitlegroom,  was  bride.imald.  and  Olaf 
I'.-terson  was  best  man.  A  small  re- 
ception was  held  at  their  apartments. 
-     .     >  - 

New  Mirror  Exaggerates  Faults. 

Mirrors,  like  figures,  are  supposed 
not    lo    lie,    but    the    latest    additloa    to 


Articles  of  Incorporation  were 
adopted  by  the  Duluth  branch  of  the 
Association  of  Collegiate  Alumnae  at 
the  nieetinff  held  yesterday  afternoon 
at  the  residence  of  Mrs.  S.  J.  Colter. 
2521  East  Fifth  street. 

Mrs.  Charles  E.  Adams  served  as 
temporary  president  and  appointed  as 
members  of  the  nominating  commit- 
tee Mrs.  L.  W.  Kline.  Mrs.  W.  C.  Ag- 
new  and  Mrs.  O.  B.  Thayer.  A  presi- 
dent will  be  elected  at  a  special  meet- 
ing. The  following  officers  were 
elected  yesterday:  Vice  president.  Mrs. 
J.  H  Hearding:  secretary.  Miss  Ade- 
laide Kllchll;  associate  secretary.  Miss 
Constance  Mitchell;  treasurer,  Miss 
Juanlta  Williams,  and  councilor.  Mrs. 
L.    W.    Kline. 

The  annual  reports  were  given  and 
attention  was  called  to  the  last  num- 
ber cif  the  A.  C.  A.  lecture  course,  Will- 
iam toward  Taffa  lecture  on  "The 
Monro*.  Doctrine."  Monday  night.  April 
24,    at    the   First   Methodist   church. 

According  to  articles  of  Incorp^ra- 
4lon  that  were  adopted  "The  organiza- 
tion shall  be  known  as  the  Duluth 
bmnch  of  the  A.ssoclatlon  of  Collegiate 
Alumnae 

PurpAMe   ot   Soeletr. 

"The  g.Mieral  purpo.se  of  this  cor- 
poration shall  be  to  unite  the  women 
residing  in  the  counties  of  St.  Louis. 
Lake  and  Carlton  In  the  state  of  Min- 
nesota, who  are  eligible  to  member- 
ship herein,  for  practical  educational 
work,  the  promotion  of  public  Interest 
In  education  and  general  culture,  the 
maintenance  of  standards  of  education, 
the  Improvement  of  methods  of  In- 
struction and  the  promotion  of  so- 
cial Intercourse  among  the  members, 
and  Its  plan  of  operation  shall  be  to 
establish  and  maintain  courses  of  pub- 
lic lectures  and  other  means  of  pop- 
ular  Instruction,    to    establish,    provide 


I 


Fashion's  Choice 

A  softrrefined, 
pearly  *  white 
appearance* 
the  choice  of 
Ladies  of 
Society,  is 
readily  ob- 
tained by  the 
UK  of 

Gouraud's 

Oriental  Cream 

Refreshine  and  healing  to 
the  skin.  The  perfect,  non' 
creasy  liquid  face  crearn. 
In  use  68  years.  Try  it. 

S««4    10*.   lor  trial  sis* 
FERD.  T.  HOPKINS  &  SON 
n  Great  Jooas  Street     New  York  City 


and  maintain  scholarships  in  Institu- 
tions of  learning  for  the  benefit  or 
young  women  residing  In  the  countJes 
aforesaid  endeavoring  to  secure  college 
educations  and  training,  to  elext  or 
appoint  the  beneficiaries  thereof,  and 
to  render  financial  aid  and  assistance 
thereto;  to  establish  and  maintain  a 
club  for  the  furtherance  and  the  en- 
joyment of  the  aforesaid  purposes.  a.nd 
to  provide,  erect,  own.  lease,  furnish 
and  manage  any  building,  hall  or 
apartment  for  the  use  In  whole  or  In 
part  of  the  corporation,  and  other- 
wise to  do  and  perform  all  such  acts 
and  things  as  shall  be  Incidental  to  or 
become  or  be  deemed  necessary  or  ex- 
pedient to  accomplish  the  aforesaid 
purposes." 

TerMM  of  .\d«.l.'>>Nlon. 

The  terms  of  admission  provide  for 
regular  and  a.ssociate  members.  tne 
regular  members  to  be  alumnae  of  the 
Institutions  of  learning  approved  by 
the  board  of  directors,  and  the  asso- 
ciate members  to  be  women  who  have 
taken  the  equivalent  of  at  least  one 
year's  academic  work  In  any  college 
or  university  having  a  four  Vf*" 
course   and   granting   the   degree   A.   B. 

A  president,  vice  president,  secre- 
tary assistant  secretary  and  treasurer 
win  hold  office  one  year  and  a  coun- 
cilor will  hold  office  two  year.s  or 
until  their  respective  successors  are 
elected.  All  shall  he  elected  by  the 
board  of  directors  of  fifteen  members 
from  the  members  of  the  said  board. 

The  following  constitute  the  board 
who  will  serve  until  April.  )^^'-  Mrs. 
L  W.  Kline,  Mrs.  F.  H.  De  Groat  Mrs. 
W  W  Sanford.  Mrs.  Charles  L.  Adams. 
Mrs.  Edward  F.  Chapln.  Jr..  Miss  Ade- 
laide Kllchll.  Miss  Juanlta  Williams. 
Mrs  J.  H.  Hearding.  Mrs.  Chester  A. 
Congdon.  Mr.^.  Henry  S  Mahon  Mrs. 
E  A.  Sllbersteln.  Mr*.  Richard  M.  Sell- 
wood,  Mrs.  W.  C.  Agnew.  Mtf.,0.  B. 
Thayer  and  Miss  Constance  Mitchell. 


Toiu<>r^lv--rAVky    Not    ■    Steel    Table? 


a  votes-for-women  agitation  in  the 
near  futurei  are  Prince  Lultpold  and 
FKiward  VTf  lands.  Only  the  female 
penguins  And  sea  lions  of  the  Antarctic 
circle  are  maintaining  that  complete 
remoteness  from  woman's  political  ad. 
vancement., which  Is  the  true  and  only 
mark  of  '^ishianliness.'  " 
• — 

Organizing  Classes. 

Dr.  Edmund  Kraus,  the  well-known 
tenor  of  Minneapolis,  will  be  at  the 
Spaldirtg  Saturday.  April  16.  for  the 
purpose -of  organizing  classes  In  vocal 
music.  Dr.  Kraus  expects  to  be  In 
Duluth  one  or  two  days  a  week  after 
his  classes  are  formed  and  many  Du- 
luthians  are  expected  to  avail  them- 
selves of  this  opportunity  for  study 
with  one  of  the  best-known  musicians 
of  the  state. 


Bed  Time  Talesi 

By  Clara  Ingram  Judson       ^ 

The  Maple  Seeds  Ride  A  way 

All  Winter  long  the  maple  tree  had 
stood  bare  and  naked   in   the  storms. 

All  winter  long  the  branches  had 
twisted  and  twirled  In  the  winds;  and 
all  winter  long  the  tree  had  mourned 
for   its   passed   glories. 

But  a  tree  cannot  make  leaves  In  a 
snow-storm — dear  me.  no!  Nor  can 
it  bloom  in  a  blizzard — of  course  not: 

So  the  tree,  knowing  that  It  could 
not  do  the  Impossible,  had  waited 
with  what  patience  It  could  muster, 
anJ  had  hoped  and  planned  for  the 
spring. 

And  then  one  day,  quite  suddenly  it 
seemed.  Spring  arrived.  Birds  came  to 
Inspect  the  tree;  soft  winds  whispered 
through  Its  branches  and.  best  of  all, 
the  sun  shone  warmer  and  warmer. 

How  the  buds  at  the  tips  of  the 
branches  did  swell!  And  how  the  tree 
did  drink  In  the  warjni  moisture  and 
the  sunshine!  And  the  buds  grew  and 
grew  and  grew,  till  they  burst  their 
Jackets  and  dainty  green  blooms  hung 
all   over  the  tree. 

You  can  Just  guess  how  happy  the 
patient  *io#ier  tree  was   then! 

And  tlte  »un  kept  on  shining  and  the 
warm  w|n(^  coi>tlnued  to  blow.  So  It 
was  no  tlMe  at  all  till  the  green 
blooms  were  turned  to  seed  pods — 
seed  pods  that  bo.asted  of  two  beauti- 
ful green  *^ijiffs  to  every  pod.  And 
you  can  UArdlv  blame  those  maple 
seeds  for  T  being  proud  of  their 
wings.  ^Qr  jew  seed  pods  are  found 
that  are  made  so  gracefully. 

"Now,"  said  the  seed  pods,  when 
they  looked  themselves  over  one  fine 
warm  mornlog,  "it's  about  time  for 
us   to   try  o^r   wings." 

"I  just  thought  you'd  be  saying  that 
soon,"  saidt  kind  Mrs.  South  Wind,  "so 
I  brought  all  my  baby  breezes  to  help 
you.  Any  time  you  are  ready.  Just  say 
the  wori.  aod  away  you  may  go  on  a 
breeze's   bacVi" 

"How  lovely.  How  thoughtful!  We'll 
be  ready  soon!"  called  some  of  the 
seed  pods  gaily. 

But  dearie  me!  The  patient  mother 
tree  was  not  so  happy. 

"tJolng  to  leave  me?"  she  cried  In 
dismay,  "Just  when  I  was  so  happy! 
Here  I've  been  lonesome  all  the  win- 
ter; and  nom',  just  when  I  am  decked 
with  such  beai.tiful  seed  pods,  you 
talk    of    leaving!" 

"The  seed  pods  looked  at  each  other 
In  dismay,   rnd   the  south  breezes  kept 


LeVs 

Take  a  Walk 

Over  the 

House 

Do  you  know  of  a  home  that  won't  stand  an| 
improvement  of  some  kind  in  the  draperies?  How 
about  your  own?  Upstairs,  downstairs  and  in  my 
lady's  chamber,  no  matter  what  you  need,  we  have 
searched  the  markets  for  artistic  draperies  and  dec- 
orative novelties  to  meet  your  requirements,  fancies 
and  whims.  Won't  you  come  in  and  sec  the  result 
of  our  efforts? 

i^gtg^fg^nrB^C.  ^  stunning  line  that  includes  all  the  popular  delicate  shades  in  pink, 
K^Ma^UMtMiC9  ijiue,  lavender  and  yellow  for  bedrooms  as  well  as  the  darker  colors 
in  verdure  and  tapestry  effects.    Unusual  values  at  25c,  35c,  50c  and  75c  per  yard. 

g^wuSfm^hM^^  ^ttnf^^f^  Even  though  the  dye  situation  is  becoming  very  seri- 
\^MMn\Mik€M  ^UMiM€M^t^  Qug^  y^y^  are  still  able  to  show  you  a  complete  range  of 
shades  in  the  famous  Orinoka  Guaranteed  Sunfast  Draperies  at  $1.25,  $1.50,  $1,65  up  to 
$3.00  per  yard. 

Gurtains  and  Gurtain  Materials  I|';  ^:.^^^'c^'^Z 

are  here  in  both  plain  hemstitched  styles  and  those  edged  with  Cluny,  \  eneiian  and  Eng- 
lish laces.  < 
For  living  rooms  and  reception  halls  we  are  showing  an  exceptionally  strong  line  of 
fine  imported  Point  de  Milan.  Lacet  Arabian,  Brussels  and  Duchesse  Curtains.  Excellent 
values  at  $6.00,  $7.00,  $8.00,  $9.00,  $10.00  up  to  $37.50  per  pair. 

eASH  OR  OUR  NEW  B2iSY  TERMS 


Established  I88U 


GOOD 


First  St.  and  Tiiird  Tlve.  West 


For  the  Housewife's  Eye 

Some  More  or  Less  Valuable  Information  About  the 

Retail  Markets. 


Onion  Hetii,  2  qaartu  for  25e. 
Tomatuen,  :(5c  a    basket. 
Long  radtdkea,  5r  a  baneh. 
Kevr  rarrota,  S«  a  banch. 
Fmieh  aj»paragH«.  lOe   ■  bvneh. 
California     ■•yararnat,     25«     a     iarga 
bnach. 

Spinach.  40e  a   peek. 
C»o<»MH»rea«t,  85c  a   poaa4. 
Calren'  toagaca,  15«   apiece. 
Haiirfoek.  20e  a  pe«nd. 
FrcMh  mackerel,  60c  apiece. 


"Wliy  not  put  in  a  few  onion  sets  this 
spring?  They  are  Inexpensive  and  as 
tiie  season  advances  you'll  find  that 
they  grow  on  you.  There  la  something 
satisfying  about  a  green  onion.  When 
you  have  eaten  it  you  know  it.  It's  not 
like  lettuce  or  spinach  in  that  respect. 

At  first  reading  It  looked  as  if  It 
were  "gooseflesh"  Instead  of  "goose- 
breast"  at  85  cents  a  pound,  and  sev- 
eral different  ways  of  acquiring  the 
former  (had  It  been  the  former)  could 
have  been  suggested.  As  It  stands  (or 
would  It  be  as  It  "sets"  when  pertain- 
ing to  gooses  or  gus  or  whatever  the 
plural  of  him  Is?)  It  seems  a  mean 
fhame  to  destroy  the  whole  symmetry 
and  contour  of  a  goose's  figure  Just  so 
as  to  enjoy  the  delicacy  of  goosebreast 
at  85  cents  a  pound.  Why  not  enjoy 
all    of    them,    Instead    of    limiting    our- 


Wai  Present  Play. 

Mrs.  Charles  Eliasson  is  chairman 
of  the  play  committee  of  the  Llnnaea 
club,  which  decided  yesterday  to  pre- 
sent a  Swedish  play  at  the  Lyceum 
theater  May  11  and  12  and  In  Superior 
May  14  for  the  benefit  of  the  work 
which  the  club  carries  on  at  Nopeming 
sanatorium.  •'Nerkingarne."  by  Axel 
Anrep.  Is  the  play  that  has  been 
chosen,  with  music  by  C.  G.  R.  Lett- 
mark.  Richard  Kipling  will  be  the 
director  and  coach. 


selves    to    the    frontal    sarcophagus    of 
the   poor  fellow  or   lady? 

When  you  realize  that  a  whole  calf 
costs  about  $12,  just  stop  and  think 
how  much  you  save  by  getting  a  calf 
tongue  for  15  cents!  You  save  just 
eleven  dollars  and  eighty-five  cents! 
Surely  a  most  remarkable  economy  and  j 
one  every  housewife  should  take  ad- 
vantage of. 

Haddock,  while  comparatively  new 
(the  one  we  saw  looked  unused,  al- 
though pretty  well  used  up)  didn't 
make  much  of  a  hit  this  morning. 
Probably  on  account  of  Its  extremely 
plain  profile.  There  Is  something  about 
a  fish's  face  that  simply  can't  attract 
you  unless  it  is  relieved  by  at  least  one 
or  two  features,  and  frankly  it  must 
be  admitted  that  as  a  face  the  haddock 
can't  qualify.  The  eye  looked  a  bit 
wistful,  to  be  sure,  but  outside  of  this 
one  Item  there  was  nothing  to  distin- 
guish It  from  anything  else  in  the 
world,  not  even  a  wisp  of  hair  on  Its 
forehead.  Poor  haddock — it  hasn't  much 
to  look  forward  to  and  the  chances  for 
It  to  look  backward  seemed  extremely 
slim.  too.  as  we  left  It  to  Its  own  little 
musings. 

Mackerel,  the  fresh  kind,  but  not  too 
fresh,  cost  60  cents  apiece.  Queer  that 
freshness  is  such  a  desirable  quality  in 
a  fish  and  so  undesirable  in  a  person. 


Mrs.    McConville's    mother.    Mrs.    H.    W. 
Reau.   629   Fourth  avenue  east. 

*  *      » 

Robert  McOonagle  has  returned  from 
Gary,  Ind..  and  Is  visiting  his  parents, 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  A.  McGonagle  of  Hun- 
ter's   Park. 

*  •       « 

Miss  Elsa  Biebermann  and  Miss  Lu- 
cille Biel»trrmann.  Kast  First  street, 
have  returned  from  a  short  trip  to 
Chicago. 

*  *      « 

Mr.s.  D  C.  Irwin  of  Lake  City  Is  at 
tte  .Spalding  hotel  for  a  few   days. 

I  «       •       • 

I       Mr.     and     Mrs.     Jacob    B.     Salter.     11« 
I  Seventh    avenue    east,    will    return    t>>- 
I  morrow  from  a  several  weeks'  visit  io 
the   South   and   East. 


Personal  Mention 

Mrs.  Richard  M.  Sellwood  and  daugh- 
ter,  Frances.  1931  East  Second  street, 
expect  to  leave  Thursday  for  a  short 
trip   to   Boston   and   New   York. 

*  *      It- 
Mrs.    W.    J.    Olcott    Is    registered    at 

the    Blltmore.    New    York. 

*  «      « 

Mrs.  Richard  Bowdeji.  1820  East  First 
street,  will  entertain  Mrs.  Wally  Hey- 
mar  George  during  her  stay  in  the  city. 


Mrs.  (Jeorge  will  arrive  tomorrow,  and 
Friday  evening  will  play  at  the  annual 
concert  given  by  the  Duluth  Phllathea 
union  at  the  First  Presbyterian  church. 

*  •       « 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  A.  Silberstein  of  2328 
East  Third  street  have  returned  from 
a  week's  trip  to  Detroit  and  Chicago. 
«       *      « 

Major  and  Mrs.  Ernest  D.  Peek  will 
return   Thursday   from   a  short  trip   to 

St.    Paul. 

*  •       « 

Mrs.  H.  F.  Salyards.  2311  East  Third 
street,  will  leave  tomorrow  for  New 
York  to  Join  her  daughter.  Myra.  who 
is  attending  Miss  Semple's  school.  They 
will   spend   the   Easter   holidays   In    the 

East. 

*  *      « 

Mrs.  and  Mrs.  R.  J.  McLeod  and  Mrs. 
Thomas  Gibson  and  daughter,  Jean,  of 
Hunter's  Park,  have  returned  from 
Clearwater,  Fla.,  where  they  have  spent 

the  last  few  weeks. 

*  «      * 

Mrs.  E.  A.  McConvllle  and  little  son, 
Billj'.  returned  to  their  home  at  Ake- 
ley,  Minn.,  yesterday,  after  a  visit  with 


Peggy  Peabody's  Observations 

Marriage  for  Reform 


Marriage    for    reform,    ivive    in    rare 
and    ob»curo    <ase8.    has    usually    ended 
dl.sa.strously  for  the  woman  who  fond- 
ly h<>p*s  tliat  her  goodness,  her  beauty 
or       influence       and 
other    womanly    at- 
tributes      will      re- 
deem   a    man    given 
to  dissipations  of  a 


Women      have 
married    men    who, 
!ill        unknown        to 
ihem,    were   addict- 
ed    to     habits     that 
are     bad.     with     the 
result    that    the   en- 
tire   ship    has    gono 
under.     Others  who 
have    been    deceived 
have  weathered  the 
storm      until      they 
could     take    refuge    In    separation    and 
fronj  that   time  on  have  been  wiser,  If 
sadder,   members  of  the  sex. 

The  woman  who  has  been  deceived 
cannot  be  held  so  strictly  to  account. 
Her  Ignorance  of  conditions  render  her 
less  blameworthy.  Yet  there  seems 
little  excuse  for  the  woman  who  al- 
lows herself  to  be  deceived  In  her  estl- 
mate  of  a  man.  It  should  not  be  so 
very  difficult  for  a  girl  to  ascertain 
somethUm  of  the  habits  and  morals 
of  the  man  sh*  Is   to  marry.     If  there 


is    a    mystery    or    any   secrecy    she    had 
best  let  him  go. 

There  are  other  women  who  marry 
men  of  evil  reputation  and  vicious 
habits  with  their  eyes  wid*-  open  The 
inan  to  whom  a  wonwin  is  devot»-d  may 
be  a  gambler,  ever  ready  with  the 
quieting  explanation  that  marriage 
will  change  him  for  the  better,  yet 
never  doing  anything  to  show  that  he 
has  the  remotest  Idea  of  altering  his 
He  argues  that  there 
"e 


more     or     less     vl-     course  of  action.     He  argues  that  tnere 
more     or     'ess     vi       j  great    harm    In    gambling    while 

'■"ir..L**f:*^'K':.„    he  Is  single.     It  Is  quite  probable,   top, 


that  for  a  time  after  his  marriage  his 
conduct  will  be  exemplary.  However, 
time  after  time  the  old  habit  will  get 
the  upper  hand  of  him  shortly  after 
the   honeymoon    Is   over. 

It  Is  thus  with  the  whole  string  of 
evils  that  ilestroy  the  happiness  of 
both  parties  to  a  marriage  contract. 
One  of  the  commonest  Is  the  drink 
habit,  which  women  seem  more  and 
more  to  tolerate  and  look  upon  as  un- 
important. The  utter  annihilation  of 
a  family  through  the  frightful  demon 
of  drink  seems  ip  have  no  terrors  for 
them,  If  one  may  Judge  by  the  calm- 
ness with  which  they  marry  men  who 
make  no  secret  of  drinking  to  excess, 
to  the  detriment  of  their  business  af- 
fairs. 

Though  the  tertn  of  a  future  hus- 
band's probation  may  be  passed  with- 
out difficulty.  It  Is  safer  for  happi- 
ness and  self-respect  to  Ignore  en- 
tirely the  man  who  Is  not  upright  and 
clean  In  his  morals  and  habits. 


Household  Tips. 

Sandpaper  will  remove  spots  of  rust 
from   the   kitchen  range. 

Use  th-^  raveled  threads  of  old  llnenij 
to  darn   tablecloths  and   napkins. 

Keep  tack.s  In  glass  jars  or  glass»»8. 
This  saves  oi>ening  boxes  to  find  a 
particular  kind. 

Mint  \vill  grow  in  water,  like -many 
other  plants,  if  left  in  a  sunny  window 
and    given    plenty   of   air. 

If  curtains  are  allowed  to  dry  thor- 
oughly befoie  being  starched  it  will  b-* 
found  that  they  will  keep  clean  longer. 

Dim,  rusty  curtain  rings  may  be  re- 
newed and  made  usable,  by  soaking  in 
vinegar  over  night.  In  the  morning 
l^ash  In  warm  sud.s  and  polish. 

Boil  a  new  baking  dish  before  usl'^g 
It,  starting  It  in  cold  water  and  ending 
it  in  the  same  way  and  It  will  be  much 
les.s  likely  to  crack. 

Taking  out  fruit  stains  with  boiling 
water  is  an  old  piece  of  knowledge,  but 
the  use  of  an  embroidery  frame  to  sup- 
port the  article  j.s  probably  a  new  sug- 
gestion to  most  housekeepers. 

When  a  velveteen  dress  l.s  done  with. 
the  material  is  still  valuable.  It  makes 
excellent  polishing  cloths  for  mahog- 
any and  othei'  woods  with  a  high  fin- 
ish and  Is  good  for  use  on  silver  and 
plated  ware  also.  When  soiled  the  vel- 
veteen ma>'  be  cleaned  by  washing  In 
soapy  water. 

When  washing  blouses  or  hanker- 
chiefs  put  a  small  lump  of  orris  root  if* 
the  rinsing  water.  It  gives  a  perfume 
of  violets  which  Is  as  lasting  as  a 
sachet  placed  among  the  clothes. 

After  corks  have  been  used  awliil* 
they  sometimes  become  so  compressed 
that  the  contents  of  the  bottle  leak  out 
This  may  be  remedied  by  putting  th>» 
corks  in  boiling  water  and  leaving 
them  there  until  the  water  co(»ls.  They 
will    then    be    as    guod   as    new    and    fit 

just  as  tightly. 

• 

WnilanM    roaaty    Content. 

Willision.  X.  D..  April  11. — A  pur-x 
bred  Poland  China  boar  and  a  number 
of  other  prizes  are  offered  In  the  Will- 
lams  county  corn  contest.  These  are 
in  addition  to  the  state  prizes  for 
which  boys  In  this  section  will  com- 
pete. 


"Joiit    aaj    the    >vord,     and     nwny     jott 
mar  go  an  a  biccac'N  back!** 

very  still.  They  all  understood  about 
the  tree  and  they  felt  sorry  to  leave 
her — but  oh.  bow  they  wanted  to  sail 
away  and  try  their  wings! 

J'jst  then  some  sunbeams  whispered. 
"Never  mind,  mother  tree!  Let  the 
seeds  go  ^as  they  should!  Something 
eUe  will  come  In  their  place.  Some 
thing  else  always  does,  if  one  does 
one's  duty— 4t  always  does!" 

So  the  mothtr  tree  let  the  seed  pods 
go  a-salllng.  .She  said  not  a  word  to 
sp'dl  their  fur.  She  even  waved  them 
a  happy  good-by.  And  then  she  turned 
to  look  herself  over  and  what  do  you 
suppose  yhe  <^found?  She  found  that 
she  was  >-'afl»'covered  over  with  tiny 
new  leaves)  »f«a'ething  else  had  come. 
as  the  sunbeams  promised,  and  she 
had  company  all  summer  long! 
(CopHs^— ClAri  Inram  Judson.) 


Face  Peeling  Habit 

Becoming  Fashionable 


(Br  RUTH 


G4MER0N 


Lies  and  Lies 


Toai«rr«w^7^^rr     Turtle     Flada     the 


"Know    thyself:    presume 
The  proper  study  of  man 

"All  lies  are  wicked,"  someone  said 
to  me  the  other  day. 

"Not  equally  wicked."  I  protested. 

"I  don't  know  about  that,"  he  per- 
sisted. "A  lie  Is  a  lie.  and  the  truth  Is 
the      truth,      and    there's      no       middle 

ground." 

Perhaps  he's  right,  there.  I'm  not 
sure.  But  even  If  there  Is  no  middle 
ground  between  a  lie  and  the  truth,  I 
am  sure  that  there  are  a  great  many 
varieties  of  lies,  and  that  they  are  not 
all  equally  wicked,  any  more  than  all 
murders  are  equally  wicked  or  a  I  gifts 
of  money  to  charity  equally  noble.  The 
motive  and  the  circumstances  behind 
the  murder  or  the  gift  must  be  taken 
into  account.  Indeed.  I  am  inclined  to 
think  they  will  weigh  more  heavily 
than  we  have  any  Idea  of  In  those  won- 
derful seales  of  St.  Peter  which  can 
measure  absolute  good  and  evil  with 
the  same  accuracy  as  we  measure  ma- 
terial things. 

The    I.le    Cowardly    Ii»    the    Mc    I 
Hate  Moat. 

There  is  one  kind  of  a  He  that  per- 
sonally 1  particularly  object  to;  It  is 
the  kind  of  lie  we  tell  to  get  out  of  a 
Icraoe  It  is  the  He  cowardly,  the 
mearil^  U  violates  that  spirit  of 
gamenesB  which  Is  one  of  the  qualities 
I  admire  most. 

Can  you  believe  that  St.  Peter  will 
nftt  make  any  distinction  between  the 
He  cowardly  and  the  He  kindly,  that  Is, 
the  hind  we  tell  to  keep  from  hurting 
someone's  feelings? 

Once  In  school  I  told  a  He  cowardly 
and  the  memory  of  It  stUl  makes  me 
Siailke  myself.  I  would  rather  have  a 
hundred  of%he  kindly  lies  to  my  dis- 
credit thaa  that  one  lie  cowardly. 


not  God  to  scan, 
kind    is   Man." — Pope. 

Moat 


Lie  Scatl- 


«f    Us    Tell    the 

The  semi-conscious  Ho  is  another  va- 
riety. An  example  of  It  is  the  kind  we 
tell  about  our  motives.  We  put  off 
writing  a  letter  to  a  friend  because  we 
are  just  naturally  procrastinating  by 
temperament.  We  are  accused  of  pro- 
crastination and  we  explain  that  we 
were  waiting  to  get  a  certain  piece  of 
information  to  send  her.  As  we  utter 
the  He  we  find  that  it  sounds  convinc- 
ing and  we  begin  to  believe  It.  Or 
perhaps  we  are  so  ill  acquainted  with 
ourselves  that  we  believe  it  from  the 
beginning.  1  think  some  people  are 
that  way. 

The  Lie  PretcatloaM  Is  One  ot  the 
CoanaoncMt. 

The  He  pretentious  Is  a  variety  of  lie 
that  I  particularly  hate.  I  mean  the 
kind  of  He  people  tell  to  bolster  up 
their  pretensions  to  more  worldly 
wealth  or  Importance  than  they  actu- 
ally possess.  The  man  who  says  his 
salary  Is  twice  what  It  really  is  be- 
longs in  this  class  of  liar.  An  example 
of  the  He  pretentious  Is  the  woman 
who  casually  mentions  well-known 
people  in  a  way  which  gives  the  Im- 
pression that  they  are  her  intimate 
friends,  when  in  reality  she  is  but 
slightly  acquainted  with  them.  An- 
other excellent  example  is  the  case  of 
the  woman  who  told  me  she  received 
$10  a  night  for  reading.  The  truth  of 
the  matter  was  that  once,  some  years 
ago,  she  had  received  $10  a  night.  Nev- 
er again  had  she  received  more  than  $5 
and   sometimes   less. 

You  may  have  wondered  wherein  lies 
the  pertinence  of  the  quotation  at  the 
head  of  this  talk.  It  Is  this,  absolute 
truthfulness  Is  a  more  difficult  virtue 
to  acquire  than  we  realize.  It  rests  on 
a  foundation  of  several  other  virtues, 
and  self-knowledge  Is  one  of  these. 
(Protected  br  Adam  New^per  Serrtea.) 


Women  of  fashion  and  refinement  in 
this  country  as  In  Europe  seem  to  have 
been  acquiring  the  mercolized  wax 
habit,  depending  less  and  less  upon 
cosmetics  for  their  complexion  diffi- 
culties. It  Joes  seem  a  lot  saner  to 
just  peel  off  the  worn-out  skin  when 
It  loses  Its  youthful  color  and  appear- 
ance— now  that  this  can  be  done  so 
easily,  safely,  painlessly  and  econom- 
ically. There's  no  trouble  getting  mer- 
colized wax  at  any  drug  store  (an 
ounce  will  do),  since  its  virtues  have 
become  generally  known  here,  and 
there's  no  trouble  using  It — just  as 
you  use  cold  cream,  applying  at  night, 
washing  it  off  next  morning.  The  %ax 
takes  off  the  old  scarf  skin,  in  tiny 
flakes,  a  little  each  day.  The  new  UB- 
der-skin.  which  gradually  appears.  Is 
velvety  soft  and  beautifally  white,  ra- 
diant with  girlish  loveliness.  Any  sur- 
face trouble  like  pimples,  red  or  yel- 
low patches,  freckles,  etc.,  vanishes,  of 
course,  with  the  discarded  cuticle. 

R  bax  tUo  tierome  the  ftshioa,  vben  wrtnklfii  begia  to 
appvHr.  to  hatlie  tite  Tw  on(v  »  day  far  a  »hll«  in  a 
barnil^.^  solution  nado  by  di^snlTlcg  an  oumv  of  pov- 
deret]  »*zoIIte  in  a  half  pint  of  trltft  haat\.  ViU  i»  n- 
martably  effertive  In  eraslnc  the  hateful  liufs. 

— .\dvi»rtl'i«»Bjent. 


fasur  ftreefmgt 

Be    an    early   bird    and    order    from 

DULUTH  FLORAL  CO. 

121    W'EST    SUPERIOR    ST. 


Chfldren's  Coughs 

are  quickly  checked  by  Brown's  Broacfalal 
Troches,  which  are  clean  tasting,  and  do  Dot 
npeet  the  stomach.  Cootain  no  opiates — 
harmless,  bat  very  beneficial  ftircoacbs.  hoarse- 
aess  and  t>roBchial  troables.  The  mmw  lOe 
Trial  Sise  Bex  flU  the  pocket.  Regular  ilse* 
sttscNcaadli.  SoldhralKtraggiato 


J 


4r 


aB 


IPSS 


'^mm^m^ 


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1 


I 


■  ^r<*  gi.:  ^T'->if\^ 


Tuesday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


AprU  11, 1916. 


AMUSEMENTS 


TONIGHFS  ATTRACTIONS. 

I^Yf'nt'M^-.Iack    Jtecl   and    his   "Record 

Hi  (  ukf  in.  ",  biirW'Squf. 
Ni:W    OHANIJ — Vau<levine    and    photo- 

TJKX^H.   B.   Wnrnfr  In   "The   Raiders,' 

photdplay. 
l.YKIC-  Robert      B.      MHUt»ll       in       "A 

Wif.-'s    Su<  rlflre."    photoplay. 
Z!:i.I>A--MHiy    Mil*."    Miiiter   In    "I.ove- 

ly    Mary."    jihotoplay. 

OVATION  GrVEiTVETERANS. 


Famous  Fife  and  Drum  Corps  of  Civil 
War  at  Grand. 

Oeorgre    T'att.rson.      buRler      of      the 
EiKhth   rennsylvaiiia  cavulry,   Army  of 
the    Potomac,    during    the      Oivil      war. 
s<.unded   "taps"  at  tht-   N.  \v  'Jrand  the- 
ater ytsterday  on  the  same  bugle   that 
he   plaved   ov.r  the   graves  of  'Jenerals 
<;raiit."M((M.llan.    Kilpalri.k   and    niore 
than    200    not«d    -oldi»-rs    of    Die    rnbel- 
llon.       He,    with    two    other    I'lvll    war 
vt^t*  rans.    .John    M.    Rayniond.    Eleventh 
MichiKan      infantry.        national     ^nrufn 
major,  «'.  W.   M..  and  CeorKe  W  .   \\  olfe 
Fourteenth     lUitioLs     cavHlry.     both     of 
th.>    Arniv    of    th»'    Cumberland,    head- 
llind     the    n<  w    ."^how    and    were    given 
an     ovation     by     capa<iiy     houses     last 
nlK'n  wh.n  they  app<-ared  In  a  mu.slcal 
revue  entttUd  "From  Reveille  to  Lights 
Out"      Thev    played    many    of    the    fa- 
movis  calls   of   the   I'nlon  army   In  <"'lvll 
war  times   from  the  thrilling  sound   of 
the   long   roll    to   the   somber   strains   of 
a    re(|ui.m.      "Yankee    Doodle."    "Dlxl." 
and    nianv    other    "tunes"    as    played    In 
the  .<^outhlnnd  were  repeated,  and  some 
of    the    old    songs,    as    "Just    Refore    the* 
Battle.     Mother."     w«re     sung     by     the 
^now-haired      veterans.      bringing      up 
nuniories   of  a   generation   of   men   fast  i 
disapfiearing.      It    Is    safe    to    say    that  i 
this    act    will   have   no   competition    for  i 
popular    honors    on    the    present    DJIl. 

The  Follls  Sisters  and  I.e  Roy  are  a  j 
clever  trio  of  dancers,  and  have  a 
llv.lv  line  of  chatter.  The  sisters  are 
two  attractive  young  misses  with  so 
manv  original  new  dance  steps  that 
their  program  .«e.nis  endle:  s.  and  their 
oostunu's  would  do  credit  to  a  /^legffld 
"Follies"  show.  Le  Roy  Is  a  good 
danr.T  with  a  lot  of  clever  chatter 
t»)   his  credit. 

The  act  of  Sullivan  and  Mason  was 
.somewhat  Impaired  because  of  the  lll- 
n.ss  of  Mr  Sullivan,  who  was  unable 
t..  appear  because  of  laryngitis.  Mr. 
Masi.n.  a  good  story  teller  and  .xc.-l- 
lent  tenor  singer,  filled  in  during  the 
allotted  period  for  the  two.  and  he  was 
encored  repcatedlv.  The  audience  ap- 
peared well  satisfied  with  the  act  sin- 
gle.     Mr.    .Sullivan    expects    to    appear 

^Merle's  Tockatooo.  comprlsln"-  many 
beautiful  and  highly  trained  birds,  of- 
fer a  pood  novelty.  A  pretty  miss  of 
about  20  .-summers  directs  the  feathered 
thespians.  and  they  do  many  stunts 
that    seem    incredible    for    birds 

"The  Devil,  the  Servant  and  the 
Man,"  featuring  Kathlyn  Williams, 
Cuv  Oliver.  Vivian  Reed  and  .Jean 
Fraser,  Is  the  star  photoplay  attrac- 
tion. A  Sis  Hopkins  comedy,  "Almost 
a  Heroine,"  and  other  short  films  make 
up   the   remainder  of   the    program. 


present    Bonie    specialty    and    the    audl- 
I  ence  will  be  the  Judge  of  the  winner. 

•  *       • 

The  value  of  advertising  Is  well  ex- 
emplified in  the  farce  In  three  acts,  en- 
titled   "It   Pays    to 
SHOWiX  V.\LIK  OF  Advertise,"    which 

AUVKRTISI.XO.  will  come  to  the 
Lyceum  theater 
Sundav.  April  1«.  for  four  nights  and 
Wedn«sday  matinee,  under  th.?  per- 
sonal direction  of  Cohrn  and  Harris.  U 
Is  replete  with  advertising  wisdom, 
wlttv  dialogue  and  humorous  situa- 
tions, and  the  frankness  ^w»th  uuH 
big  advertising  firms  are  dealt  with  is 
entertaining.  The  well-known  names 
of  prominent  advertisers  are  used  free- 
ly without  any  attempt  at  flimsy  dis- 
guise, and  what  are  supposed  to  be 
trade  srcrets  are  hurled  over  the  foot- 
lights in  a  manner  most  amazing.  1  hat 
Is  what  makes  "Jt  I'ays  to  Adyertlse" 
the  best  advertised  play  In  the  country. 

•  •       • 
Harry  Lauder,   the  Scottish  comedian 

and  generally  acknowledged  Inimitable 
artist  In  his  line,  will 
«'I,ASSV  win     be     seen     at     tho 

V  Vl  I>HV1I.I.E  «>rph<  um-Strand  ma- 
AtTS  <'t)>II%<i  tln»e  and  night.  Aurll 
MITII  l-A»  l>KK  20.  during  his  eighth 
TO  ORPlltil  .>l.  annual  tour  of  the 
country  under  the  di- 
rection of  William  Morris.  Mr.  Lau- 
der like  old  wine.  Is  said  to  improve 
with  age.  and  his  opening  In  New  \  ork 
this  vear  w.ns  the  large.vt  week  s  bu-si- 
ness  that  he  has  ever  played  to  In  the 
I  metropolis. 

Mr.  Morris  has  seen  to  It  that  Mr. 
Lauder  should  have  a  company  thl.s 
year  that  is  in  every  way  worthy  or 
the  great  artist  who  heads  it.  borne  or 
the  acts  of  ihe  big  vaudeville  program 
,  have  never  been  seen  In  America  be- 
fore  and  are  specially  Imported  for  this 
tour.  They  Include  the  Al  ^olem 
troupe,  a  company  of  sixteen  daring 
performers:  Dave  Oenaro  and  Isabelle 
Jason,  m  a  series  of  dance  spec  altles, 
Selwvn  Driver,  who  performs  his  spe- 
cialty at  the  piano  In  a  h"'"or""»  'V'*; 
novel  vein;  Albert  Donnelly,  the  silent 
humorist  in  shadowgraphy.  and  Mile 
Lucille  and  her  "marvelous  talking 
cuckatoo.  ^    ,      ,,„,i..,i 

Mr.    Laudrr's    engagement    Is    limiteU 

to   one  day  and  night. 

♦       •       • 


r^AV-^^"^'"^  I   MARINE    II 


ice  driveh^ 
outbyIind 

If  Wind  Continues  Harbor 
Entrance  Will  Soon  Be 


Cleared. 


Some  folks  are  \o%i  slilftleKN  t'  col- 
lect ther  own  thoughts.  I.cmmlc  I'e- 
trrH,  who  graduated  with  Much  high 
hoiiorM  last  June,  offers  his  nervlees 
an  ■  carpet  bcntcr  an'  Molieita  ■  share 
o'   th'   pubilc   patronaKC. 

(ProlcctMl  by  Adams  .\essp»p;r  Senlif.) 


Theater  Gossip. 


A  fc.nture  of  the  closing  performance 
of  "The  Record  Breakers."  at  the  Ly- 
ceum Thursday  night,  will  be  a  fom- 
pctitlon  for  chorus  girls.  Each  girl  In 
the  chorus  will  have  an  opportunity  to 


Robert    B.    Mantell,    almost    the    dean 
of    the  American    stage,    did    not   disap- 
point a  single  old 
:»f  iNTKI.Ii  COM-        admirer  or  a  sln- 
r\\\    I'i*  TO  gle  new  spectator 

j        ST.\M>AKD  OF         Sunday    and    yes- 
I.F:AU1:R  ATLVIIIC.  terday     when     he 

appeared     at     the 

I  Lyric    In     "A    Wife's    Sacrifice."       It    Is 

■truly  an  all-star   cast.     Miss  <;enevleve 

;  Hamper  and  others  as.°oclated  with  her 

I  rise   to    the   lead    of   Mr.    Mantell.     T  he 

I  picture  may  be   seen  today  and   tonight. 

i       Coming    tomorrow    for    two    days    is 

t  Constance     Collier     In      "The     Code      of 

iMarcIa  <;ray."     There  are   many  forms 

I  of  moral   honor,  and   every  woman   has 

1  her    ow  n    Individual    code    of    ethics    to 

I  govern  situations.  The  code  that  Marcia 

Icrav    adopts,      as      so      beautifully    and 

stronglv  developed  by  Miss  Collier,  w    1 

!  win   real   svmpathy.      Many  women   will 

'  find  In  the  great  crisis  In  Marcia  Uray  s 

life   an    exact   duplication   of   what   they 

would  have  to  do,  should  they  meet  tho 

same  problem. 

*       *       • 
The    man    or    woman    who    has    never 
seen    a    stock    exchange    always    seems 

to   enjoy   a  well- 

STOCK   KXC'H\X<;E     constructed    love 

FILM  AT  HEX.         story     like     "The 

Raiders"  when 
th.^  I>lot  hinges  on  stock  market  trans- 
actions. In  this  picture,  that  appears 
at  the  Rex  today,  tomorrow  and 
Thursday,  with  H.  B.  Warner.  Doro- 
thy Dalton  and  a  goodly  company  of 
fine  players,  Triangle  people  even 
!  took  some  of  the  scenes  In  the  New 
York   stock  exchange  to  make  It  real- 


lllllllik  Big  Tins,  25  cents 

The  Hog  Slanders  the  Hen 


Eggs  fried  in  hog-fat  are  hard  to 
digest.  The  action  of  the  fat  on 
the  albumin  of  the  egg  gives 
it  the  character  and  texture  of 
rubber,  and  a  greasy  varnish 
over  the  whole. 

The  fault  is  laid  to  the  hen 
instead  of  the  hog. 


Istlc.  Five  hundred  persons  are  used 
In   one   scene. 

Warner  Is  not  so  well  known  to  the 
motion  picture  world  aa  he  was  In 
"Alias  Jimmy  Valentine,"  which  had 
a  long  run  on  the  speaking  stage. 
New  York  newspapers,  speaking  of  his 
debut  in  "The  Raiders"  at  the  Knick- 
erbocker theater  there,  declare  that  he 
Is  better  than  ever  he  was  In  "Jimmy 
Valentine  " 

It  Is  all  for  love  of  the  girl  In  the 
case  that  Warner,  as  Scott  Wells,  does 
many  things,  which  he  accomplishes 
against    the    old    hands    at    the    stock 

market   game. 

*       *      * 

"Lovely  Mary."  a  llve-part  Metro 
photoplay,    with    charming    Mary    Miles 

Mlnter  In  the  stellar 

tiOODCASTIN      role,    will    show    for 

"L0VI:LY  MARV"  the  last  t«me  tonight 

ATTIiK'AELUA.    attheZelda.    Thomas 

J.  Carrlgan  heads  an 
unusually  strong  supporting  cast.  Mr. 
Carrigan  recently  Joined  Metro  and 
was  selected  as  Miss  Mlnter's  leading 
man,  as  he  Is  an  excellent  foil  for  this 

young  star.  .  .      ..     ^  « 

Mr.  Carrlgan  made  his  first  profes- 
sional appearance  as  a  clown  for  the 
Rlngllng  Rros.'  circus.  Later  he  playert 
In  stock,  then  <n  "Rrown  of  Harvard, 
and  with  James  O'Kell  In  "Monte 
Crlsto."  Then  he  joined  the  Belasco 
forces  and  appeared  In  prominent  roles 
In  "Sweet  Kitty  Bellalrs,"  "The  «lrl  of 
the  Golden  West"  and  other  notable 
stage  productions.  He  was  one  of  the 
first  well-established  actors  to  realize 
the  possibilities  and  wonderful  future 
of  motion  pictures,  and  many  of  his 
friends  declared  he  was  ruining  a  good 
career  In  renouncing  the  spoken  stage. 
He  was  the  first  actor  to  appear  in  a 
three-reel  feature  and  was  featured   In 

"The   Two   Orphans. Fen   N'lghts   In   a 

Bariooin"  and  other  early  features. 

Mr.  Carrlgan  has  been  a  leading  man 
for  several  years,  and  for  a  time  was  a 
director.  He  was  especially  engaged  to 
play  m  "Cinderella,"  produced  by  the 
Lubln  company.  W^hlle  playing  tho 
part  of  Prince  Charming  In  that  pro- 
duction, he  met  Mabel  Taliaferro,  now 
also  a  Metro  star,  who  was  playing  the 
title  role.  They  carried  their  love- 
making  to  private  life,  and  now  Miss 
Taliaferro  Is  Mrs.  Thomas  J.  Carrigan. 

BUY  WESflHF 

BUSINESS  SITE 


Brick   Block   on   Superior 
Street  Is  Sold  for 


The  breakup  of  the  ice  has  begun, 
and  It  Is  believed  that  If  the  present 
weather  conditions  continue,  with  the 
wind  remaining  as  It  is,  it  Is  a  matter 
of  hours  untU  this  end  of  the  lake  will 
he  clear  of  the  Ice  that  has  been  hold- 
ing it  locked.  .  ^i  u 
The  wind  from  the  northwest,  whlcn 
continued  all  of  last  night  and  this 
morning,  started  the  Ice  In  the  lake, 
and  by  noon  today  there  was  a  largo 
space  between  the  ice  field  and  the 
north  shore  clear  down  as  far  as  Two 
•  Harbors.  It  was  being  driven  slowly 
toward  the  south  shore,  and  wide  wa- 
ter spaces  In  the  center  of  the  field 
indicated  that  the  ice  was  breaking  up 
rapidly.  Open  spaces  along  Minnesota 
point  also   indicated   the   effect   of   the 

wind.  .     ,     .  J 

The  bay  Ice  was  going  fast  also,  and 
the  tug  office  reported  that  it  was  rot- 
ting rapidly.  It  Is  believed  that  If  the 
threatened  showers  promised  for  to- 
night should  come  and  the  warm 
weather  continue,  there  will  be  a  good 
deal  of  damage  done  to  the  field. 

No  definite  orders  have  been  re- 
ceived bv  the  Union  Towing  company 
AS  to  starting  tugs  to  break  up  the  ice, 
but  is  is  expected  that  they  will  be 
ordered   out   tomorrow   or   next  day. 


DOCKS  READY 
FOROPENING 

Three  Roads  Expect  to  Ship 

47,000,000    Tons 

This  Year. 


$15,000. 


TAV 


%\% 


J  Pure  Butter-oi-Nuts 

M1Baking,Shorteiuiig.¥^i7mg6  Candy-Making 

— gives  you  the  opportunity  to 
distinguishyre^Aeggs.  S  AWT  AY 
does  not  rob  them  of  their  deli- 
cate, fresh  taste  and  flavor. 

You  will  find  your  eggs  readily 
digested,  wholly  assimilated  and 
unvarnished  if  they  be  fried 
in  "SAWTAY. 

And  after  the  frying,  strain  the 
SAWTAY  through  cheese-cloth 
and  use  over  and  over — it  does 
not  give  nor  take  a  flavor  or  odor. 

Send  for  "Sawtay  Kandy  Kids,"  a  Picture 
Book   of  Recipes    for  Children's  Parties. 

SAUT^  PRODUCTS  CORP. 

Woolworth  Tower,  New  York 


A  large  transaction  In  West  end 
business  property  wa»  put  through 
yesterday  In  the  purchase  by  the  E. 
S  Farrell  company  from  Miss  Laura 
Peters  of  the  one-story  brick  building 
at  No.  2117  West  Superior  street.  The 
coMsldVratlon  was  $15,000.  The  .sale 
wa»  effected  by  the  F.  I.  Salter  com- 
pany.  

MORE  RECEPTACLES 
FOR  MAIL  URGED 


The  placing  of  mall  receptacles  in  a 
convenient  place  at  all  residences  of 
the  city  is  being  urged  by  Postmaster 
William  B.  McEwen  as  one  of  the  most 
economic  features  possible  In  the  serv- 
ice. Each  letter  carrier  In  the  city 
could  save  fully  a  half  hour's  time  a 
day  with  the  recommendation  carried 
out  at  all  residences  in  the  city  where 
mall  is  delivered,  he  says. 

"Under  the  present  conditions,  says 
Mr.  McEwen.  "carriers  often  find  no  re- 
ceptacle for  letters  or  parcels  and  have 
to  ring  the  door  bell  and  wait  for  some- 
body to  come  to  the  door  and  take  the 
mall  or  else  carry  It  back  to  tho  office. 
In  all  such  cases  it  is  necessary  for  the 
carrier  to  ring  the  bell  and  wait  at 
least  a  minute  for  somebody  to  come  to 
the  door.  One  minute  Is  not  much 
time,  but  when  this  is  kept  up  all  day 
by  a'  carrier  with  a  big  load  of  mall,  It 
soon  develops  that  a  half  hour  or  more 
Is  consumed. 

"With  the  government  trying  to  pro- 
mote greater  efficiency  and  keeping 
down  the  expenses  of  the  postal  de- 
partment. It  is  especially  desirous  at 
this  time  that  residents  comply  with 
the  request  to  provide  the  proper  mail 
receptacles  and  co-operate  with  the 
government."  ^ 

FEDERAL  POSlflONS'OPEN. 


So  far  as  the  ore  docks  are  con- 
cerned, those  on  this  side  of  the  bay 
are  all  ready  for  the  opening  of  navi- 
gation, and  it  is  said  that  the  same 
condition  prevails  at  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Range  docks  at  Two  Harbors  and  at 
the  Great  Northern  docks  at  Allouez. 

Concerning  the  docks  of  the  Duluth, 
Missabe  &  Northern.  President  W.  A. 
M((;onagle  said  today  thai  could  ves- 
sels be  brought  up  alongside  today  and 
shifted,  ore  could  be  furnished  them 
about  as  soon  as  they  could  be  brought 

along.  ,       ..     X    »»-    t 

"However,  In  view  of  the.  fact  that 
we  do  not  expect  to  begin  loading  very 
soon,"  said  Mr.  McGonagle,  "we  will 
not  begin  loading  cars  until  about  the 
end  of  this  week.  These  loadcil  cars 
will  be  then  brought  dowTi  as  far  as 
the  Proctor  yards,  and  held  there  until 
the  ore  is  required  In  the  pockets  of 
the  docks.  It  la  much  better  In  the 
cars  until  It  Is  necessary  In  the  pock- 
0  ts 

"But  there  will  be  no  dock,  mine  or 
rail  delay,  so  far  as  the  shipping  Is 
concerned.     It    is    wholly      up      to      tho 

boats."  .         i.     X 

Mr.  McGonagle  declared  today  that 
the  Duluth,  Missabe  &  Northern  road 
Is  figuring  on  shipping  Just  about  21,- 
000.000   tons   of  ore  this  year. 

This  means  that  a  tremendous 
amount  of  ore  will  be  shipped  from 
the  Head  of  the  Lakes  during  tho  com- 
ing season,  for  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Range  and  the  Great  Northern  are  ex- 
pecting to  ship  a  very  Preat  deal. 
Here  are  the  expectations  of  shipment 
during  the  coming  season: 

Tons. 
Duluth.  Missabe  A  Northern.  .21.000.000 

Duluth  &  Iron   Range   H'SSftnArt 

Great    Northern    15.000.000 

Total     47,000.000 

nolinTto 


CLEVELAND 

Port    Huron-Duluth    Com- 
pany  Unable  to   Get 
Canadian  Boats. 


XW  that  your 
dlpcer  can  tfive 

younHLrumbres 

the  question  of  t  he 
morning  ceieal  is  about 
thi^  tiiTies  ei^  to  save. 

Look    for   this   signature- 


' 


w  "I 


-  » 


^V 


Morgfii 


;:rj- 


l^.     [h: 


■i^'^ 


Krumbles 


h 


■re  us  rr.TOrf 


AH  Wheat 
Ready  to  Eai 


Smm^  f ' 


i^-M 


SAWTAYi 


i'.)i),  J' 


k!*\":;."".V.'.v.v-"'." 

'^'" ■ -Sal 


i.'iit;» 


Examinations    Offered    for    Filling 
Many  Desirable  Places. 

An  unusually  large  number  of  de- 
sirable positions  In  the  government  de- 
partments are  announced  by  the  civil 
service  commission  for  May.  The  de- 
tails may  be  learned  from  E.  M.  Barker, 
superintendent  of  tho  registry  section, 
Duluth    postofflce.      The    list    of    tests 

Mav  2— Associate  englneor-physlclst. 
$2.000-13.000 ;  mechanical  superintend- 
ent, »2,600.  ,,,,   ^     , 

May  8 — Laboratorlan  (qualified  In 
electrical  science)    |3.60  a  day. 

May  3  and  4 — Grazing  a.sslstant, 
$1,200;  laboratory  aid  in  chemistry  and 
physics.   $600   to  $900. 

May  9 — Valuation  analyst,  Interstate 
commerce  commission.  $3,600  to  $6,000. 
May  16 — Assistant  petroleum  chemist, 
$1,800;  assistant  pathologist  In  citrus 
fruit  investigations,  $1,800;  expert  In 
scientific  and  practical  agriculture, 
$3,500. 

May  17— Assistant  in  office  of  Infor- 
mation.  $1.600   to   $2  000. 

PAUPER  CUTS  THRO.^T 
AND  POUNDS  HIS  HEAD 

Ashland,  Wis..  April  11.— John  John- 
son aged  68,  Inmate  of  the  county  poor 
farm,  a  Bayfield  county  charge,  is  in 
a  hospital  here  recovering  from  two 
attempts  at  self-destruction.  With  a 
razor  he  slashed  his  throat  slightly  a 
few  tlme^  then  changed  his  mind  and 
pounded  his  head  with  a  rock,  but  was 
discovered  before  he  killed  himself  and 
hurried  to  the  hospital,  where  it  is  said 
he  will  live. 


Duluth  will  have  no  lake  package 
freight  line  to  Cleveland  as  was  ex- 
pected after  the  announcement  made 
at  the  first  of  the  year  by  the  Port 
Huron    &    Duluth    Steamship    company 

officials. 

That  announcement  was  made  when 
the  officials  expected  to  acquire  the 
vessels  of  the  Canadian  Atlantic 
Transportation  company,  thus  adding 
to  the  fleet  of  package  frclgh^  car- 
riers which  the  Port  Huron-Duluth 
company  has  been  operating  for  sev- 
eral years.  . 

With  the  additional  tonnage  expect- 
ed the  Port  Huron-Duluth  people  ex- 
pected to  run  not  only  to  Port  Huron, 
connecting  as  usual  with  the  (.rand 
Trunk  road  there  for  Eastern  points, 
but  to  go  to  Cleveland  and  connect 
with    roads    there    for    C.    F.    A.    terrl- 

*^'nie  hopes  of  the  Port  Huron-Duluth 
people  have  been  dashed  by  the  un- 
expected decision  of  the  Interstate 
commerce  commission  vacating  its  or- 
der of  May  17,  1916.  divorcing  the 
Grand  Trunk  from  its  lake  line,  which 


HOW  TO  BE  SLIM 

If  you  are  too  fat  and  want  to 
reduce  your  weight  IB  or  20 
pounds,  don't  starve  and  weaken 
your  system,  or  think  you  must 
always  b^  laughed  at  on  account 
of  your  fat,  but  go  to  Boyce 
Drug  store,  331  West  Superior 
St .  or  any  good  druggist,  and 
get  a  box  of  Oil  of  Koreln  cap- 
sules take  one  after  each  meal 
and  one  before  retiring  at  night. 

Weigh  yourself  once  a  week 
and  note  what  a  pleasant  and 
reliable  method  this  is  for  re- 
moving superfluous  tat  from  any 
part   of  the  body.      •'  '  ^ 

It  costs  little,  is  'absolutely 
harmless  and  a  .week's  trial 
should  convince  a-nyone  that  It 
is  unnecessary  to  be  .burdened 
with  even  a  single  pound  of 
unsightly    fat.— Advertisement. 


is  the  Canadian  Atlantic  company.  The 
Grand  Trunk  has  persistently  fought 
the  order,  as  has  the  Lehigh  Valley 
company.  The  latter  now  has  the 
matter  In  the  courts,  but  the  Grand 
Trunk   seems   to  have  won   out. 

The  Canadian  Atlantic  line  operate* 
between  Depot  Harbor,  Ont.,  and  Chi- 
cago and  Milwaukee. 

FOLEYS  WILL  START 
ASHLAND  DOCK  WORK 

Ashland,  Wis.,  April  11— Foley 
brothers  of  St.  Paul,  who  have  been 
awarded  the  contract  to  build  the  Soo 
line  dock  here  at  a  cost  of  about 
il.000,000,  are  expected  to  begin  worK 
at  once  A  representative  of  the  com- 
pany is  here  making  preliminary  ar- 
rangements for  the  commencement  of 
the  work  of  construction. 

The  greater  part  of  the  material  to 
be  used  in  the  dock  construction  has 
arrived  here  and  work  on  the  new 
structure  will  bo  commenced  as  soon 
as  navigation  opens  at  AiS^jl^nf.  The 
approach  to  the  dock  will  be  built  by 
the  Soo  line.  The  contract  calls  for 
the    dock's   completion    the    early    part 

"  Tho  new  dock  will  be  a  concrete 
construction' reinforced  with  steel  and 
will  be  strictly  modern  in  every  re- 
spect It  will  have  a  storage  capacity 
of  60.000  tons.  There  will  be  seventy- 
five  pockets  on  each  side  -A.  new  fea- 
ture which  will  greatly  facilitate  tbe 
handling  of  ore  from  the  /ock  will 
be  the  Introduction  of  electric  Power 
In  the  raising  and  lowering  of  the 
pockets. 

THANKS  DULUTHIANS. 

German    Consul    Acknowledges  Re- 
ceipt of  Red  Cross  Fund.  - 

M  Binheim,  president  of  the  Ger- 
man-Austro-Hungarlan  Relief  associa- 
tion and  manager  of  the  Red  Cross 
fai*  and  bazar,  which  was  held  at  the 
AudHorium  last  month,  received  the 
following  letter  this  morning  ''om  the 
(mnerlal  German  consulate  at  bt.  raui. 

•^Mv  dear  Mr.  Blnhelnv-It  gives  me 
great  pleasure,  indeed,  to  thank  you 
for  your  esteemed  favor  of  the  6th 
Inst.,  and  for  the  remittance  of  $2  600 
being  half  of  the  net  proceeds  of  your 
bazar.  I  shall  comply  with  your  wishes 
and  forward  $1,260  to  the  German  Red 
C?oss  society  and  $1,250  to  the  relief 
fund  for  orphans  and  widows.  . 

"On  this  occasion  I  wish  to  thank 
you  and  all  those  who  have  co-operated 
with  you  so  faithfully  in  order  to  make 
the  event  such  a  splendid  success  The 
people  of  the  Old  country  will  appre- 
ciate your  efforts  to  the  full  extent. 

"Permit  me  to  say  at  this  time  that 
I  was  more  than  delighted  to  have  been 
present  at  the  opening  ceremonies,  and 
1  was  more  than  pleased  to  see  the  en- 
thusiasm which  prevailed  among  the 
members  of  your  committee  and  among 

"""^feU'^'hank  ,11  the  committee 
members  and  all  the  participants  on 
my  behalf.  Respectfully  vou^.^j^^ 

Imperial   Consul." 
An  official  receipt  signed  by  the  sec- 
retary   of    the    Imperial    German    con- 


sulate,   Mr.    Lorenz,    accompanied    the 

^*The  other  $2,600  was  sent  to  the 
Austro-Hungarlan  consul  at  St.  J'akii 
for  the  Auslro-Hungarian  Red  Cross 
and  the  Austro-Hungarlan  Relief  fund 
for  widows  and  orphans. 

FUNERAL  AT  AITKIN. 

Last   Rites  for   Young  Woman  Who 
Died  Suddenly  at  Crosby. 

Aitkin.  Minn.,   April   H— :<Spe'i«J,  *^ 
The     Herald.) — The    funeral      of     Miss 


Hulda  Enberg.  who  died  suddenly 
laet  week  in  Crosby,  was  held  this 
afternoon.  She  was  21  ytars  of  age 
and  Is  survived  by  her  parents.  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  A.  H.  Cnberg,  five  brothers. 
Ben,  John,  Albert,  Axel  and  Elmer 
Enberg  and  three  sisters  Mrs.  John 
Lldstrom  of  Crosby  and  Misses  Selma 
and    Esther    Enberg   of   this    place. 

Miss  Enberg  was  subject  to  heart 
trouble,  but  her  condition  w-as  not 
considered  serious.  The  body  was 
brought  to  Aitkin  Friday  and  taken  to 
the  family  home  south  of  town.  This 
was  the  third  sudden  death  which  has 
taken  place  in  the  Enberg  family 
within   a   few   years. 


Teach  Your  Child  Head-Cleanliness 

It  will  become  the  best  of  habits.  A  shampoo  with 

JAP  ROSE 

The  wonderful  **Sunday  Morning  Bath" 

SOAP 

removes  excess  hair  oil  Contains  nothing  that  can 
injure  the  finest  hair,  makes  the  shampoo  a  pleas- 
ure by  removing  much  of  the  labor.  Unexcelled, 
also  for  bath  and  general  toilet  use.  Sold  by 
leading  Grocers  and  Druggists. 
Jap  Rose  lathers  instantly  in  any  water 

PorPite  Sample  Write  Janet  S.  Kirk  A  Comi»»ny.Dept  351.  ChtcXOb  U.S.  A. 


^MIpHi 

■k 

J 

• 

■ 

I 

/ 

I 

(  ■■fcyt'  •n  ir^ii!  -■  ft-ji" 


I  I  I..    .1       I  ■   n 


•^"wr*"'^^"^" 


H — 


( 


8 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

AN   INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER 

PabllNlied    rvrry    evrnlnfc    rxerrt    Sunday     l»y 

Thr    Herald    Cwmpanjr    at    Diilutli,    Minn. 

Uoth    TelephoDi-s— r.usiness    Office,    3:i4; 
Editorial    Koonis,    1126. 

Eatmd  ai  Mcond-cU^s  niatttr  tt  the  Duluth  poftofflce  under  the 
tot  of  ronicri'^1  of  March  3,   1^70. 


OFFICIAL  PAPER.  CITY  OF  DILITH 

SlBstilllTIOX     RATES — By     inall,     payable 

In     advance,     one     month,     35     cents;     three 

months,    Jl;    six    months,    $2;    one  year.    $4; 

Saturday    Herald,     %l     per     year;     Weekly 

Horald,    $1    per   year. 
Dally   by  carrier,   city  and   suburbs,   10  cents 

a  week,   45  cents  a  month. 

Siilwrrlbers  will  oonffr  &  fa»or  by  making  known  any  complaint 
ef  kTvi-f. 

Wht-n  chanting  the  a-Wres*  of  your  pajx?r.  It  U  Imiwrtant  to 
glfe  both  old  and  nt-w   addrrssea. 

The  Duluth  Herald  accept-i  advertising 
contracts  with  the  distinct  guarantt-e  that 
It  has  the  larpost  circulation  In  Minnesota 
outside  the  Twin  ritle«. 


The  Herald  will  be  rlad  to  have  Ita  at- 
tention railed  to  any  mloleadlns  or  vn- 
true  MtuteMeiit  «\hleh  may  appear  In  Ita 
iievvM,    pdltorltil    or    advcrtlMliiK    eolumnN. 


TODAY  IN  HISTORY. 


Charles  Reade  died,  1884. 

Born  in  <  txfordshlre,  England,  June 
8,  1814,  he  wart  a  graduate  of  Oxford 
and  dean  of  arts  at  MaR<la!en  college, 
oxford.  Admltt.-d  to  the  bar.  Never 
married.  lU-Kan  uh  a  playwright,  and 
In  1853  he  turned  Tom  Taylor's  play 
".Masks  and  Fa<es"  Into  the  novel  "P»»g 
Wi.fflnKton,"  and  his  novel.s  followed  in 
r;ipld  succes.sion.  Hl.s  masterpiece  and 
chief  clalTH  to  permanent  fame,  "The 
Cloister  an.l  the  Ht-arth."  appeared  In 
1861.  when  he  was  47.  Ha  was  not  a 
jjreat  novelist,  but  a  grroat  story-teller.  ^ 
KEAM.NG— .\vallabl*  In  Imliith  imhll.-  lUiriiry— f.  L.  9' 
R'»d»  and  Coiiifon.  "Chnrlfj  HfAiif.  a  .Mi-niolr"  (pre-  ^ 
viiMiily  uiipiil)li^h"d  raanmcrlpt.  fragmt-nti  of  cormpood-  ^ 
eiir-'  and  e^lrB'•t^  from  diaries);  .\.  ('.  S*iiit>nrne,  ^ 
"Mliocllanio.V'  4Uiv-rlmluatluii  crliivUm  of  Rrade's  Ul«r-  ® 
ar}-  ablUty).  9 


HOW  WOT  TO  COMDUCT  A  "WET"  AND 
"DRY"  FIGHT. 

Enough  aigncr.s  liaving  been  secured  to 
the  petitions  therefor,  Duluth  is  going  to 
have  an  election  on  the  question  whether 
or  not  it  sliall  stop  licensing  saloons — in 
other,  words,  a  local  prohibition  campaign. 

The  proceeding,  regardless  of  the  merits 
of  the  question,  is  perfectly  proper  and  un- 
objectionable. Thoug:h  it  is  taken  under 
the  initiative  provision  of  Duluth's  home 
rule  charter,  to  all  intents  and  purposes  it 
is  a  local  option  election,  such  as  the  laws 
of  the  state  have  long  provided  for  town- 
ships and  villages,  and  lately  for  smaller 
cities.  Any  home  rule  charter  city  can 
raise  the  issue  any  time  it  plea.ses,  and  any 
city  can  have  a  home  rule  charter.  The 
local  option  system  is  the  right  system,  and 
Tiie  Herrild  thoroughly  approves  it  as  the 
most  logical  and  most  effective  system, 
without  regard  to  whether  it  favors  voting 
"wet"  or  voting  "dry." 

Preceding  the  election,  th'ere  will  be  a 
campaign,  and  if  precedent  is  followed,  it 
will  be  a  fearsome  thing  in  which  a  lot  of 
people  will  get  greatly  excited  and  use 
many  poor  arguments — the  poorest  of 
which  will  be  mudslinging  and  the  calling 
of  names. 

Not  with  an}'  great  hope  that  it  will  do 
any  good,  but  because  it  believes  that  the 
results  will  be  just  as  sure  and  just  as  sound 
if  it  is  adopted,  The  Herald  is  going  to  vol- 
unteer a  little  advice  to  both  sides: 

To  the  "wets" — Don't  get  it  into  j'our 
head  that  all  of  your  opponents  are  nar- 
row, bigoted,  vindictive  folks  who  for  un- 
worthy motives  are  striving  to  overcome 
you.  Most  of  them  are  thoroughly  sincere 
:nid  conscientious.  What  they  advocate 
they  advocate  for  the  g'lod  of  the  com- 
munity and  for  the  good  of  humanity — 
this,  whether  they  are  right  or  wrong. 
There  is  much  to  be  said  against  liquor, 
and  they  will  say  it;  though  manj-  who 
agree  with  all  the  hard  things  they  say 
about  liquor  will  not  agree  with  them  about 
prohibition.  There  is  much  to  be  said 
against  the  saloon  as  it  is  conducted  now- 
adays, though  nowhere  near  so  much  to  be 
said  agaiuNt  it  in  Duluth  as  there  was  be- 
fore the  city  adopted  a  consistent  system 
of  rigid  regulation  of  saloons.  This  regu- 
latioti,  which  many  liquor  dealers  were  dis- 
posed to  resent,  will  now  prove  to  be  an 
asset  to  them,  because  it  will  deprive  their 
opponents  of  many  of  their  arguments. 
Your  opponents  may  be  misguided,  Mr. 
Wet  Man;  they  may  be  mistaken,  over- 
zealous;  they  may  be  as  intemperate  in 
their  talk,  some  of  them,  as  any  victim  of 
the  liquor  habit:  but  the  great  majority  of 
them  are  earnest,  sincere  and  firm  in  the 
belief  that  what  they  advocate  will  be  for 
the  good  of  the  city  and  its  people. 

To  the  "drys" — Don't  get  it  into  your 
head  that  all  who  oppose  your  program  of 
attempting  to  enforce  abstinence  and  so- 
briety by  law  are  lowbrowed  agents  of  the 
Demon  Rum.  Many  of  them  are  just  as 
conscientious  and  sincere  as  you  are.  Many 
of  them  are  themselves  teetotallers;  many 
of  them  are  as  strongly  opposed  to  the  use 
of  liquor  as  you  are;  many  of  them  would 
be  as  glad  as  you  would  be  to  see  the  last 
drop  of  liquor  banished  from  the  face  of 
the  globe;  but  despite  all  that  they  cannot 
see  the  virtue  of  your  remedy,  so  they  are 
not  prohibitionists. 

If  you  find  business  men  using  economic 
arguments  against  your  program,  Mr.  Dry 
Man,  remember  that  you  attempt  to  use 
economic  arguments  yourself,  and  that 
this,  above  all  argttment,  is  fair  argument. 
If  you  find  the  saloon  keepers,  the  brewery 
proprietors,  their  employes,  those  who  have 
business  dealings  with  them,  those  who 
benefit  by  their  patronage,  opposed  to  a 
dry  Duluth,  don't  be  surprised  or  indig- 
nant; likely  it's  what  you  would  do  if  you 
were  in  their  places. 

Hoth  sides  would  be  saner,  if  not  strong- 
er, if  they  could  realize  that  the  argument 
is  not  all  on  one  side,  nor  all  the  virtue  and 
sincerity  and  public  spirit.     The  nian  who, 


despising  liquor  but  believing  that  to  vote 
prohibition  is  to  vote  out  the  licensed  and 
regulated  saloon  and  to  vote  in  the  unli- 
censed and  unregulated  and  lawless  blind 
pig  and  bootlegger,  is  just  as  much  en- 
titled to  his  opinion  as  anybody,  and  quite 
as  likely  to  be  sincere  in  it.  The  man  who, 
opposing  "hard"  liquors  but  seeing  no 
harm  in  the  moderate  use  of  beer  and  light 
wines,  opposes  prohibition  because  he  sees 
these  beverages  replaced  in  prohibition  ter- 
ritory by  cheap  and  nasty  whisky,  presents 
a  real  argument  that  deserves  considera- 
tion. 

Both  sides  should  remember  these  things: 
that  heat  in  debate  does  not  give  light; 
that  abuse  is  not  argument;  that  calling 
names  harms  the  man  who  does  it  more 
than  the  one  to  whom  the  names  are  ap- 
plied; that  intemperance  in  discussion  is  no 
more  respectable  than  the  intemperate  use 
of  liquor;  and  that  the  subject  is  so  import- 
ant that  the  discussion  ought  not  to  be  al- 
lowed to  sink  to  the  gutter  level  of  per- 
sonalities and  abuse. 

The  issue  is  up  to  the  voters  of  Duluth, 
and  they  will  decide  it  as  they  think  wisest 
and  best.  The  discussion  preceding  the 
election  should  take  a  form  that  will  help, 
not  hinder,  an  intelligent  determination  of 
the  question.  What,  on  the  whole,  is  best 
for  the  city  of  Duluth  and  all  of  its  pen- 
pie?  That  is  the  question  on  which  this 
issue  should  be  decided;  and  the  more 
calmness,  sanity  and  common  sense  there 
i-i  in  the  debate,  and  the  less  excitement, 
anger  and  vituperation,  the  clearer  and 
Sounder  will  be  the  result. 


Remember   the  aprlngr   bitters   that  mother 
ua^d   to  make? 


ROOSEVELT'S  PLAIN  ENGLISH. 

Theodore  Roosevelt  is  abusing  the  presi- 
dent because  he  did  not  officially  protest 
against  the  German  invasion  of  Belgium 
neutrality. 

September  23,  1914,  Theodore  Roosevelt 
had  a  piece  in  the  Outlook  in  which  he  said 
and  reiterated  that  no  official  protest 
should  be  made,  and  gave  reasons  why  it 
ought  not  to  be  made. 

The  Xews  Tribune,  crying  "liar"  and 
"forger"  in  a  somewhat  colorless  imitation 
of  Roosevelt  himself,  declares  that  part  of 
what  Roosevelt  said  was  omitted,  and  un- 
dertakes to  .supply  the  omissions.  Not  a 
word  of  the  language  it  interpolates  changes 
the  plain  meaning  (^f  the  Roosevelt  pro- 
nouncement. Anybody  who  can  read  can 
see  what  he  meant,  and  that  he  meant  pre- 
cisely what  The  Herald  said  he  meant. 

If  there  i^  any  doubt  about  it,  here  is  an- 
other sentence  which  was  omitted,  and 
which  the  News  Tribune  did  NOT  supply: 

Of  eonrae.  It  v%OHld  be  folly  to  Jaaiv 
Into  the  KOif  oarNelvea  to  no  icood  pur- 
pose, and  VRRV  PIIOB.^BLY  NOTII- 
ITHi  WK  rOl  LD  IIAVK  DONE:  WOULD 
HAYB     UELPBD    BBliGIVM. 

Roosevelt  u.^ually  talks  plain  English.  He 

talked   plain    English   in   this   case,   and   no 

amount  of  denial  or  mudslinging  can  change 

the  record.     Roosevelt  today  condemns  the 

policy  of  non-intervention  which  he  advised 

and   emphatically   approved    September   23, 

1914.     But  then  he  was  not  a  candidate  for 

president,  and  now  he  i.s. 

♦ 

Almost  time  to  work  out  the  formula  for 
changing:  estimates  from  snow-shovel  power 
to   lawn-mower   power. 


MR.  BARNES   IS   PREJUDICED. 

"Mr.  Roosevelt  is  not  responHlble 
for  any  natural  phenomenon,  nor  has 
he  a  patent  on  the  obvious." — Mr. 
Barnes   of   New   York. 

Mr.  Barnes  lets  his  prejudices  control 
his  judgment.    He  is  not  fair. 

In  point  of  fact,  is  not  Theodore  Roose- 
velt responsible  for  ALL  natural  pheno- 
mena? Vou  can  prove  it  by  his  utterances. 
And  he  not  only  ^las  a  patent  on  the  obvi- 
ous, but  a  monopoly  of  it.  Two  plus  two 
equals  four — is  not  Roosevelt  the  discov- 
erer of  that  great  truth,  which  he  has  hand- 
ed down  in  convincing  thunder?  That  black 
is  black  and  white,  white — who  but  Roose- 
velt demonstrated  that? 

Shame  on  you,  Mr.  Barnes  of  New  York, 
to  let  your  prejudices  blind  you  so! 


We  have  yet  to  hear  of  anybody  bottling' 
up  the  last  of  the  snow  so  he  won't  have  to 

part    with    It. 

* 

THE  VOTE  AT  THE  PRESIDENTIAL 
PRIMARY. 

The  strangest  complaint  of  all,  still  com- 
ing from  the  enemies  of  the  primary  sys- 
tem, is  that  there  was  a  ridiculously  light 
vote  at  the  recent  presidential  primary. 

In  point  of  fact,  considering  the  lack  of 
a  real  contest  between  real  presidential 
candidates,  the  vote  was  huge.  It  was  near- 
ly 200,000  out  of  a  possible  350,000,  and 
that's  big. 

These  critics  of  the  primary  system  are 
pining  for  a  return  to  the  old  caucus  and 
convention  system. 

Do  they  suppose  there  were  often  cap- 
cuses  under  the  convention  system  in  this 
state  that  brought  out  a  quarter  as  many 
voters  as  the  presidential  primary  brought 
out*  last  month?  Not  even  the  red-hot 
Dunn-Collins  fight  of  1904  brought  out 
anywhere  near  so  many  voters.  Why? 
Because  to  the  ordinary  voter  the  caucus 
was  a  game  that  he  did  not  understand,  was 
not  supposed  to  understand,  was  not  want- 
ed to  tindcrstand. 

• 

There  Isn't  half  the  excitement  over  a 
m<>etlng  In  Paris  of  the  Entente  leaders  that 
there  would  be  over  a  meeting  of  the  Cen- 
tral  powers'   leaders  In   the  same   place. 

• 

They   Were   F^lkay. 

liuMton  CJlobe:  The  people  who  live  In  the 
hearts  of  men  are  the  human  beings  of  his- 
tory—the Lincolns,  the  Mark  Twalng  and  the 
Walt  Whitmans  of  life  who  lounged  through 
the  world  in  ehirt  sleeves.  They  never  took 
the  trouble  to  put  on  airs  because  they  knew 
that  If  thoy  did  they  would  miss  the  whole 
show.  The  price  of  admission  to  that  human 
show — the  greatest  show  on  earth — Ig  to 
leave  sellishness  and  pride  at  home.  That 
done,  you  walk  in  past  the  doorkeeper  with- 
out giving  him  anything  but  a  wink. 


The  Game  of  Draw  Poker 


Eipnt  OplnlOB  from  th<>  LaulsTllle  Courier-Journal. 


Thomas  Jones  Pence 


By  Safoyard. 


At  length   "bridge"   has   made  "poker*   re 
spectable.     Time  was  when  a  man  had  to  ll*. 
to   his   wife — to   perfect   himself  In   the   arts 
of  lying — sometimes  even  to  divide  his  f^Hiift) 
ing"    with    her    in    order    to    keep    the    ^pk<W 
at  home.     But  those  good  old  times  are,  4V^' 
the    "sick    friend"    and    the    "belated    t 
alas,  no  morel     The  women  come  to  the;»*i 
cue  of  the   men.     They  have   made   It  "iff/i 
the   thing"  to  gamble. 

Yet,  stay;  here  we  have  an  Eastern  Jorl^l 
to  declare  that  "poker"  Is  not  "gambling,* 
From  the  New  York  Sun  we  quote  the  Jfo 
lowing:  H 

"  'Poker,'  rules  Magistrate  Lavy,  'can-' 
not  Justly  be  considered  gambling.'  He 
supports  the  contention  frequently  put 
forward  by  Old  Man  Greenlaw,  and  sus- 
tained by  the  record  of  the  proceedings 
In  the  back  room  of  that  philanthrop- 
ist's Arkansas  City  establishment. 
Poker  is  an  art.  a  science,  a  profes- 
sion, an  industry.  From  It  the  stu- 
dent derives  a  liberal  education;  hence 
Its  popularity-  at  nunwrous  Institu- 
tions of  learning.  It  compels  atten- 
tion, requires  analysis,  inculcates  cau- 
tion. No  practitioner  of  poker  will  be 
deceived  by  outward  appearances;  he 
has  learned  that  a  disconsolate  face 
may  sit  behind  a  full  hand." 

Our  esteemed  contemporary  goes  on  to 
point  out  that  the  dictionary  sustains  the 
magistrate.  "A  game  of  cards  in  which  the 
players  bet  on  the  value  of  their  hands,  and 
he  whose  hand  contains  the  highest  group 
of  cards  wins  the  pool  or  entire  sum  wagered, 
provided  he  has  carried  the  betting  through," 
is  the  lexicographer's  gawky  way  of  saying 
that  the  best  hand  wins  if  its  holder  Isn't 
bluffing,  but  "though  originally  always 
played  simply  for  amusement,  the  player 
who  has  most  counters  or  chips  at  the  end 
of  a  specified  time  being  accounted  the 
winner." 

O,  learned  Pundit!  A  Daniel  come  to  judg- 
ment: But  let  the  Sun  continue.  We  quote 
again: 

"So  poker  has  Judicial  and  dictionary 
vindication   from   the   charge   that   it   is 
gambling;   yet  we  have   been  told  that 
gamblers    adapt    It    to    their    nefarious 
purposes.     Their    depravity    transform#       f; 
this     Innocent     and     highly     Intricate       ♦ 
pastime  Into  an  agency  for  the  extracs. 
tlon   of   good    money   from   the   pocketii 
of  some   for   the   edification  of  otherrf; 
and  this  abuse  of  the  national  recrea^^ 
tlon   rather  than   any  inherent   wickec^ 
ness  of  the  game  Itself,   we  take  to  bH 
responsible  for  the  fact  that  the  nam©      'i 
of    poker    is    associated    with    frightful      « 
objects,    and    In    the    form    Old    Poker  . 
designates  specifically  that  foe  of  man*- 
kind    whose    commoner    appellation    im     «-' 
the  devil." 

.V" 

Clearly  the  writer  In  the  Sun  knows  what 
he  Is  writing  about.  He  can,  we  dare  awear^^v 
tell  "fust  off"  what  a  "keltur"  Is  and  what  a 
"blaze" — distinguish  between  "a  big  dog,  a 
little  dog  and  a  middle  dog" — maybe  has 
"played  the  deuces  wild."  Old  Man  Ureonlaw 
must  be  personally  known  to  him.  Perhaps 
he  has  had  a  look  Into  the  "little  back 
room"  of  the  saloon  on  the  bluff  In  Arkan- 
sas City  upon  Blalsdell  and  Pearson  andJir, 
Owen  Pepper.  Judge,  however,  of  the  dis- 
may, the  humiliation  of  the  Courier-Journal 
'When,  having  perused  the  foregoing  In  the 
Sun,   It   read  the  following  in  the  World: 

"Reform  In  the  Flowery  Kingdom 
must  be  bending  over  backward  when 
It  Includes  the  prohibition  of  poker  as 
'likely  to  upset  the  morals  of  the 
Chinese.'  Shades  of  Ah  Sin.'  And  all 
this  notwithstanding  Magistrate  Levy'a 
recent  ruling  that  'poker  Is  not  gam- 
bling.' but  a  gentleman's  game  ot 
chance. 

"Possibly  the  motive  behind  Its  sup- 
pression is  to  be  found  in  the  fact  that 
poker  is  'fast  superseding  other  forma 
of  gambling  In  China.'  As  an  inven- 
tion of  the  foreign  devils  it  naturally 
provokes  the  opposition  of  devotees  of 
fan-tan.  It  is  not  long  since  moralists 
discovered  a  corresponding  'menace'  to 
China  in  the  American  cigarette  fol- 
lowing the  ban  on  opium. 

"But  as  respects  the  corrupting  In- 
fluences of  poker.  It  has  never  serious- 
ly Impaired  the  morals  of  the  counti'y 
In  which  It  originated.  Why,  then, 
should  It  undermine  the  morals  of  the 
rare  which  has  the  greatest  genlns  for 
the  game?  Has  the  heathen  Chinee 
lost  any  of  his  cunning  at  cards  since 
the  time  of  Bret  Hart?' 

Lord  I  the  Ignorance  of  some  people,  as  the 
Good  Book  says.  Ah  Sin  played  "euchre," 
not  "poker."  The  cards  that  he  dealt  "unto 
William  and  me"  were  not  "atralghts"  and 
"flushes"  and  "fulls,"  but  "aces"  and  "bow- 
ers." 

What  Is  the  matter  with  the  Bully  Boys 
of  the  Golden  I>ome?  They  need  to  go  to 
school — to  night  school! — all-night  school! 
Or,  If  they  will  send  a  delegation  out  to 
Kentucky  the  Courier-Journal  will  engage  to 
•ee  to  It  that  they  are  sent  back  "instructed." 


Rooaerelt-Made   Trovblea. 

Springfield  Republican:  Gen.  Sibert  pro- 
poses a  considerable  addition  to  Uncle  Sam'a, 
duties  when  he  says  that  "This  country  will 
have  to  operate  railroads  through  Mexico 
and  the  Central  American  republics  for  mili- 
tary purposes  so  that  we  can  transport  sup- 
plies and  men  to  the  canal  zone."  First  we 
build  the  canal  to  ^uble  the  strength  i  of 
the  navy,  then  we  ptit  forts  to  protect  the 
canal,  and  nn  army  to  protect  the  fofts, 
while  the  net  result,  we  are  now  told,  la 
that  the  navy  must  be  doubled  quite  as  if 
there  were  no  canal,  and  railroads,  of  course 
with  a  great  army  to  guard  them,  estab- 
lished In  foreign  countries  to  supply  the 
army  that  defends  the  forts  that  guard  the 
canal  that  does  not  strengthen  the  na>f^y. 
When  he  "took  It"  the  colonel  took  trouble 
along    with    It,    and     the    outlook    does    not 

grow  more  cheerful  as  time  passes. 

• 

Pmsale. 

Life:  She — "I  want  you  to  forget  that  I 
told  you  I  didn't  mean  what  I  said  about 
not  taking  back  my  refusal  to  change  my 
mind.  I've  been  thinking  it  over  and  I've 
decided  that  I  was  mistaken  In  the  first 
place." 

"Do    you    really    mean    that,    Isabel?" 


Rippling  Rhymes 

By  Walt  Mason 

The  Yellow  Leaf. 

My  step  is  feeble  now  and  slow,  that 
was  once  so  bold ;  my  hair,  once  dark, 
is  like  the  snow,  and  my  feet  are  cold ; 
my  legs  are  thin,  my  wai.st  is  fat,  I 
have  an  ache  in  every  sKt,  I  cannot 
run  or  skin  the  cat,  I  am  waxing  old. 
I  look  around  with  gloomy  eyes,  at  the 
growing  lads  ;  I  like  to  sit  and  moralize, 
with  the  ancient  dads,  and  tell  how 
boys  of  other  days  were  better  than  the 
modern  jays,  of  higher  aims  and  nobler 
ways,  .shunning  foolish  fads.  "VV^ith 
such  a  bunch  of  skates  on  deck,"  sacHy 
I  lament,  "this  poor  old  world  will  ro 
to  wreck,  I  will  stake  a  cent ;"  the  g 
beards  all  agree  I'm  right,  and  say  tbe 
country's  in  a  plight,  with  all  the^e 
giddy  youths  in  sight,  on  amusemeiits 
bent.  There  is,  alas,  no  surer  sign,  th^t 
I'm  out  of  date,  than  are  these  mo 
ful  words  of  mine,  which  I  here  rela 
for  when  a  man  talks  bunk  at  last,  coii- 
pares  the  present  with  the  past,  aiid 
finds  degeneration  vast,  he  should  pull 
his  freight. 

(ProtMtad  by  Tho  Adaiu  Xowapapw  Berrlca) 


Washington,  April  11. — (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — Few  private  citizens  ever  died  in 
this  town  whose  passing  caused  so  great 
sorrow  to  the  residents  of  the  national  cap- 
ital as  was  occasioned  "when  Tom  Pence  bid 
this  life  farewell,  March  27,  the  day  be- 
fore he  would  have  been  43  years  of  age. 
From  the  president  In  the  White  House  to 
the  gamin  In  the  avenue,  from  the  cabinet 
minister  In  his  office  to  the  waiter  In  the 
public  dining  room,  from  the  senator  in  the 
historic  chamber  on  Capitol  hill  to  the  page 
boy  who  attended  his  call — all.  all  were 
shocked  by  the  end  that  was  as  unexpected 
•a  It  was  deplorable.  It  Is  not  exaggeration 
to  say  that,  personally,  Tom  Pence  was  the 
nest  popular  Individual  in  Washington.  In 
rarest  degree  he  had  the  capacity  for  mak- 
ing: friends.  And  what  a  lovable  man  he 
was! 

There  was  just  one  thing,  and  only  one 
thing,  that  Tom  Pence  hated,  and  that  a 
meanness.  For  a  weakness  he  had  the  broad- 
est and  most  catholic  charity,  and  for  all 
suffering  he  had  not  only  the  mi  st  abound- 
ing sympathy,  but  it  excited  In  his  bosom 
the  swiftest  and  most  plenteous  benevolence. 
It  was  an  open  hand,  servant  of  the  most 
tender  heart.  His  presence  was  good  cheer. 
His  smile  was  a  delight  forever.  His  voice 
was  assurance  of  sincerity.  His  handshake 
was  a  bond  of  friendship.  I  never  parted 
with  him  that  I  did  not  recall  the  Injunc- 
tion, 

"Those    friends    thou    hast,    and    their 

adoption  tried. 
Grapple  them  to  thy  soul  with  hooks  of 

steel." 

Though  a  man  of  affairs,  an  admirable 
executive,  a  writer  of  good,  strong,  plain 
emphatic  English,  Tom  Pence  was  yet  a  boy, 
with  boyish  ways,  and  he  never  outgrew  that 
engaging    youth 

"When  thought  was  speech,  and  speech 
was  truth." 

•  •       • 

It  is  easy  to  believe  that  Tom  Pence  was 
the  pride  of  his  class  at  Wake  Forest  in  the 
Old   North  state.      There   is   a  tradition   that 

.he  was  manager  of  a  baseball  team  in  a 
JMral    league   and    that    his   club    gained    the 

j>ennant.  We  can  easily  believe  it,  for  cer- 
tainly he  commanded  the  devoted  love  of 
bis  every  companion,  and  each  and  all  gave 
him  the  best  of  which  they  were  capable. 

Josephus  Daniels,  himself  a  most  lovable 
man,  discovered  Tom  Pence,  and  all  of  us 
of  the  cloth  must  be  forever  grateful  to 
the  secretary  of  the  navy  for  giving  to  our 
noble  profession  Tom  Pence.  He  was  city 
editor   of   Daniels'    paper  and   when    I   spent 

^ome  days  In  Raleigh  a  few  years  ago,  a 
total  stranger,  I  made  my  way  delightfully 
by  letting  it  be  known  that  I  knew  Tom 
Fence.  That  was  sufficient  In  that  grand 
old  town  to  work  your  way  Into  the  good 
graces    of    all    you    met. 

•  •       • 

Tom  Pence  came  to  Washington  in  1901 
and  very  soon  thereafter  he  was  a  con- 
spicuous member  of  the  press  gallery.  His 
reading  w^as  not  extensive,  but  he  made  up 
for  It  by  conference  with  public  men.  His 
was  a  bright  mind  and  his  perception  was 
keen.  High-minded  to  a  degree,  he  instant- 
ly gained  the  confidence  of  all  with  whom 
he  came  In  contact  and  his  admission  to  the 
inner  circle  swiftly  followed.  Besides  repre- 
senting the  Raleigh  News  and  Observer,  he 
was  connected  with  the  Washington  bureaus 
of  more  than  one  metropolitan  newspaper 
and  his  work  was  Invariably  a  credit  to  him. 

In  1912  he  had  charge  of  a  bureau  estab- 
lished at  the  national  capital  to  promote  the 
nomination  of  Woodrow  Wilson  for  presi- 
dent by  the  Baltimore  convention.  For  such 
work  he  discovered  admirable  adaptability. 
I  was  a  dally  visitor  to  the  quarters  and 
he  was  good  enough  to  give  me  his  con- 
fidence. More  than  once  I  was  etrucic  by 
his  sound  Judgment  and  lofty  principles.  He 
was  a  powerful  factor  in  the  convention, 
and  the  suggestions  he  made  to  the  leaders 
of  tlie  Wilson  forces  were  invariably  acted 
upon  and  frequently  proved  Invaluable. 

•  «       • 

After  the  victory  he  might  have  secured 
high  place  in  the  public  service,  for  he  was 
altogether  capable  and  a  born  executive. 
So  great  was  the  service  he  rendered  in  the 
campaign  after  the  nomination  the  Demo- 
cratic leaders  insisted  that  he  should  remain 
at  the  head  of  the  "publicity  bureau"  of 
the  party,  and  that  there  is  a  Democratic 
majority  in  both  houses  of  the  Sixty-fourth 
congress  is  In  material  measure  due  to  his 
sound  Judgment  and  loyal  efforts.  Only  a 
few  weeks  ago  he  was  chosen  secretary  of 
the  national  committee,  but  ere  he  had  dis- 
charged any  of  the  duties  of  the  place  he 
was  stricken  with  the  malady  that  proved 
fatal  when  he  was  in  the  prime  of  mag- 
nificent   manhood. 

It  is  notable  that  the  most  Intimate  chum 
Tom  Pence  had  In  the  press  gallery  was 
the  late  Jesse  Carmlchael.  They  were  de- 
voted to  each  other,  though  not  at  all  In 
harmony  In  political  faith.  They  toured  Eu- 
rope together,  and  upon  their  return  Car- 
mlchael was  stricken  with  pneumonia,  and 
after  a  long  battle  with  the  disease  he,  too, 
succumbed,  as  his  friend  did  to  the  same  dis- 
ease  three   years   later. 

•  •       • 

Tom  Pence  was  an  exceptionally  handsome 
man,  tall  and  symmetrical,  neatly  ana  taste- 
fully dressed,  had  a  striking  presence  and 
commanded  attention  in  every  company.  He 
was  the  favorite  of  older  men;  but  to  see 
Tom  Pence  as  he  was.  you  had  to  find  him 
1  with  a  company  of  youths,  in  the  baseball 
aeaHon,  with  bats  In  hand  on  the  way    to    play. 

"HI,  there!"  he'd  cheerily  greet  them, 
"which  of  this  squad  Is  Ty  Cobb?  I  under- 
stand he's  among  you.  Show  htm  to  me.  I 
must  meet  him." 

In  a  moment  he  would  have  every  fellow 
delighted   with   him. 

And  why  not?  Tom  Pence  was  born  to 
make  his  fellows  happy.  It  was  his  voca- 
tion, and  diligently  and  thoroughly  did  he 
cultivate  the  field  nature  made  him  hus- 
bandman over.  I  could  not  bear  to  view  his 
remains.  I  wanted  to  have  in  my  memory 
only   the  living  Tom  Pence. 

The   void  he  left   will   never  be  filled. 
» 

The  Miller  of  the  Dee. 

There  dwelt  a  miller,  hale  and  bold. 

Beside  the  River  Dee; 
He  wrought  and  sang,  from  mom  till  night. 

No  lark  more  blithe  than  he; 
"I  envy  no  man.  no,  not  I, 

And  no  man  envies  me!" 

"Thou'rt   wrong,    my   friend!"    said   old   King 
Hal. 
■  "As  wrong  as  wrong  can  be; 
For  could  my  heart  be  light  as  thine, 

I'd  gladly  change  with  thee. 
And  tell  me  now  what  makes  thee  sing 

With  voice  so  loud  and  free. 
While  I  am  sad  though  I  am  king. 
Beside  the  River  Dee?" 

The  miller  smiled  and  doffed  his  cap: 

"I  earn  my  bread,"  quoted  he; 
"I  love  my  wife,  I  love  my  friend, 

I  love  my  children  three. 
I   owe   no   one   I   cannot  pay, 

I  thank  the  River  Dee. 
That  turns  the  mill  that  grinds  the  corn 

To  feed  my  babes  and  me." 

"Good     friend,"     aald     Hal,     and     sighed     the 
while. 
"Farewell,  and  happy  be; 
But  say  no  more,  if  thoud'st  be  true. 

That  no  one  envies  thee. 
Jhy  mealy  cap  Is  worth  my  crown, 

Thy  mill  a  kingdom's  fee! 
Such  men  as  thou  art  England's  boast, 
O  miller  of  the  Dee!" 

— Charles  Mackay. 

» ■ 

Aad  Didn't  Know  It. 
Judge:  She — "Before  we  were  married  you 
told  me  you  were  well  off." 
It_"Well,  I  w*«." 


Political  Straws  in 

the  Minnesota  Breezes 


Cuipaicn  8ub]«ctj  DtscusKd  by  Minnesota  Editors. 

Oh,  for  More  of  This! 

How  sweet  this  life  would  be,  even  In 
presidential  years,  if  we  could  only  see  more 
of  the  sort  of  spirit  shown  by  the  Le  Sueur 
News  in  the  following:  "Republicans  must 
not  forget  In  moment  of  political  excite- 
ment that  President  Taft,  Republican,  turned 
the  Mexican  squabble  over  to  President  Wil- 
son, Democrat,  In  an  unsettled  state,  and 
without  intervention.  L<et  us  at  least  play 
fair  with  our  neighbors." 


Writing  a  Platform  Daily 


EditorUl  Id  the  .New  York  World. 


And   Now   It's   CoBie. 

It  was  only  a  question  of  who'd  say  it 
first,  and  the  Waverly  Star  and  Tribune 
seems  to  have  won  the  race  with  this:  "If 
Congressman  Lindbergh  only  knew  what  he 
wanted  and  could  wait  long  enough  to  really 
get  in  the  race,  the  people  of  the  state  might 
then  have  an  opportunity  to  let  him  know 
whether  they  wanted  him  as  governor,  as 
senator,  or  if  they  desired  to  give  him  any 
of  the  numerous  other  jobs  that  he  thinks 
he  ought  to  have.  One  can  generally  figure 
that  If  he  files  one  week  for  any  office 
(other  than  congress)  the  very  next  week  he 
will  withdraw." 


Whatever  It  Meaaa. 

If  you're  especially  fond  of  puzzles,  this 
from  the  Luverne  Herald  will  keep  you  busy 
for  awhile:  "The  announcement  that  ex-Gov- 
ernor Van  Sant  probably  will  be  a  candidate 
for  United  States  senator  is  but  further 
proof  of  the  vicious  and  pernicious  influ- 
ences and  effects  of  the  primary  law." 


Maklngr  the  Blir  !^olse  Again. 

Any  who  may  have  been  alarmed  or  dis- 
heartened are  given  this  asurance  by  the 
Fairmont  Sentinel:  "Roosevelt  led  In  the 
Minneapolis  Journal  presidential  poll,  as  was 
to  be  expected.  Why?  Because  his  follow- 
ers are  of  the  rough  rider  clasjs  who  are 
'on  the  Job'  all  the  time,  while  friends  of 
other  possible  candidates  are  conservative 
and  afe  satisfied  to  vote  for  their  choice  at 
election  time."  And  Frank  knows  these  lit- 
tle   details    of    the    game. 


"All   MTe  Want." 

There  couldn't  be  a  better  statement  than 
this  from  the  Mankato  Free  Press  of  the  real 
basis  of  the  opposition  to  Wilson's  re-elec- 
tion: "Champ  Clark  says  Wilson  'has  the 
world  by  the  tall.'  Well,  he  Is  welcome  to 
that  end.  All  we  want  is  a  Republican  at 
the  head  of  the  nation."  Given  that,  some 
people  don't  care  what  happens  to  anybody 
or  anything. 


Don't  W^hlaper  It  In  Waahlnarton. 

There's  a  great  day  coming;  which  same  is 
forecast  in  the  Faribault  Pilot's  accurate 
summing  up  of  the  expressions  of  opinion 
throughout  the  state  generally:  "Judging 
from  the  editorial  expression  of  our  Minnesota 
exchanges,  the  voters  of  this  state  are  be- 
ginning to  harbor  the  opinion  that  It  will 
be  for  the  welfare  and  best  Interests  of  the 
state  to  depose  and  retire  next  November 
every  congressmen  from  this  state.  The  vot- 
ers believe  our  congressmen  are  a  weak  and 
vacillating  lot  with  neither  -the  ability  or 
the  energy  to  do  aught  for  the  state." 


Sueh  Marreloma   Simillarityl 

Is  somebody  supplying  the  Republican 
press  with  ready-to-print  opinions  these 
days?  Read  the  paragraph  a  little  above 
this,  from  the  Mankato  Free  Press,  and  then 
read  this  from  the  BemldJi  Pioneer:  "Champ 
Clark  says  that  President  Wilson  'has  the 
world  by  the  tail.'  Well,  he  is  welcome  to 
that  end.  All  we  want  Is  a  Republican  at 
the  head  of  the  nation."  Two  souls  'w^lth  but 
a  single — source  of  dope. 


"Anything  to  Beat   Ifl'^llMoa." 

There's  nothing  In  the  world  but  simple 
fact  In  this  from  the  St.  Cloud  Times:  "Theo- 
dore Roosevelt  Is  hot-headed  and  erratic 
upon  all  public  questions;  he  is  Intemperate 
in  speech;  he  is  impetuous  in  action;  he  is 
faulty  in  Judgment  and  'would  be  an  unsafe 
man  In  office  In  official  times  such  as  at 
present.  And,  yet,  strange  to  say.  there  are 
many  people  who  urge  him  for  president. 
His  election  now  would  be  akin  to  a  national 
disaster." 


The  Middle  West 

and  Foreign  Policy 

The  New  Republic:  We  cannot  have  a  vig- 
orous foreign  policy  until  we  devise  one 
that  can  command  the  interest  of  the  Middle 
West.  And  to  command  such  Interest  our 
policy  must  be  characteristically  American. 
The  countries  of  Europe  have  tried  out  the 
foreign  policy  of  power.  There  Is  noth- 
ing in  ttie  result  to  excite  a  desire  for  emula- 
tion in  the  prosperous  Middle  West.  Euro- 
pean nations  have  also  tried  out  th.e  foreign 
policy  of  imperialistic  exploitation.  Our 
Middle  West  is  not  attracted  by  such  a  pol- 
icy. It  does  not  love  absentee  landlordism 
at  home;  why  did  we  fight  to  establish  It 
In  Cuba?  The  Middle  West  sees  no  rea- 
son why  It  should  concern  Itself  over  the 
Interests  of  the  Standard  Oil  company  In 
Manchuria,  after  striving  vainly  for  decades 
to  kill  that  company.  It  is  not  disposed  to 
back  up  franchise  monopolies  in  Latin 
America  and  the  Orient,  since  it  has  Its  en- 
ergies sufficiently  occupied  with  franchise 
monopolies  of   its   own. 

Suppose  that  in  place  of  a  policy  of  pow- 
er our  statesmen  proposed  to  follow  a  pol- 
icy of  world  peace,  even  through  'war  If 
necessary.  Would  such  a  policy  receive  sup- 
port in  the  Middle  West?  At  least  as  earnest 
support  as  in  the  East.  Suppose  that  In 
place  of  a  policy  of  commercial  exploita- 
tion, designed  to  secure  preferential  treat- 
ment and  valuable  concessions  for  our  citi- 
zens, our  statesmen  offered  a  policy  for 
the  real  development  of  backward  regions 
through  closely  regulated  American  enter- 
prise. Would  the  Middle  West  regard  such 
a  policy  with  aversion  or  even  Indifference? 
Certainly  it  would  not.  The  Middle  West 
prides  Itself  especially  on  its  missionary 
zeal.  The  extension  of  its  own  system  of 
peace,  democracy  and  diffused  prosperity 
It  would  regard  as  worthy  of  extreme  sac- 
rifices. The  cost  of  adequate  armaments 
would  be  viewed  In  another  light  If  such 
armaments  might  be  regarded  as  Instru- 
ments of  a  foreign  policy  making  not  for 
national  or  class  aggrandizement  but  for  the 
good  of  the  world. 

Easay  on   Snnrlae. 

Louisville  Times:  Sunrise  is  what  people 
are  always  sentenced  to  be  shot  at. 

In  some  cases  this  Is  the  first  time  the 
victim  has  ever  either  seen  the  sun  rise  or 
been  shot  at. 

If  he  has  been  half  shot  the  night  before 
he  doesn't  see  the  sun  rise. 

Being  shot  at  sunrise  isn't  such  an  awful 
fate  for  some  folks. 

Many  people  would  Just  as  Uef  be  shot  as 
to  «et  up  In  time  to  see  the  sun  rise. 

Those  who  have  seen  the  sun  rise  speak 
very  highly  of  It. 

But  we  do  not  let  them  tool  us. 

Associating  with  the  sunrise  Is  poetically 
presumed  to  make  men  better. 

But  look  St  the  milk  man! 

Getting  up  with  the  sun  is  a  much  over- 
estimated stunt. 

To  begin  with,  the  sun  is  neither  benefited 
nor  impressed  with  our  efrorts. 

It  doesn't  help  him  get  up  to  have  us  rise 
at  the  same  time,  and  he  goes  right  off  and 
leaves  us,  anyway. 

For  our  own  part,  we  think  it  is  excru- 
ciatingly bad  taste  to  stand  and  rubber  while 
anybody  gets  up. 

The  orb  of  the  day  has  little  enough  chance 
for  privacy,  as  It  Is,   with  everybody  gawp- 
ing 'While  he  goes  to  bed. 
^      What  akovt  tks  rolden  rule  business? 


It  may  be  that  the  almost  unanimous  op- 
position of  Republicans  in  the  United  States 
senate  to  the  confirmation  of  Mr.  Brandeis 
as  a  Justice  of  the  supreme  court  rests  to 
some  extent  upon  prejudices  of  birth  and 
faith,  but  a  stronger  reason  is  to  be  found 
in    the   needs   of   the   party    Itself. 

The  objections  to  Mr.  Brandeis'  elevation  to 
the  bench  have  been  such  as  to  appeal  strong- 
ly to  Republicans  of  every  shade  of  opinion. 
So  far  as  'we  know,  not  a  word  has  been 
said  publicly  against  his  race  or  his  religion. 
What  has  filled  Republicans  everywhere  with 
dismay  is  the  charge  boldly  presented  bjr 
representatives  of  invested,  speculative  and 
predatory  wealth  that  in  bis  political  and 
legal  views  he  is  too  advanced  to  be  safe  and 
dependable   as  a  Judge. 

It  Is  this  sort  of  thing  that  is  doing  more 
than  all  else  to  reunite  the  Republican  party. 
The  theory  that  the  rich  and  well-favored 
have  a  prescriptive  right  to  enact  laws  and 
Interpret  laws  in  their  own  interests  has 
become  a  fundamental  of  latter-day  Re- 
publicanism, When  that  cry  is  raised,  past 
differences  are  forgotten  and  factions  once 
hostile    embrace    as    brothers. 

Privilege  and  plunder  are  wonderful  har- 
monlzers.  With  subsidy  in  view,  they  are 
working  at  Washington  to  defeat  the  plan 
by  ship  purchase  and  construction  to  provide 
a  nucleus  for  a  sorely  needed  merchant  ma- 
rine. To  safeguard  monopolies  of  long  stand- 
ing, they  are  fighting  the  establishment  of 
national  armor  plate  and  nitrate  plants.  In 
behalf  of  exploiters  possessing  lands,  mines 
and  concessions  in  Mexico,  they  are  shriek- 
ing for  war  and  conquest. 

With  this  spirit  everywhere  visible  and 
protective  tariff  associations  and  home  mar- 
ket clubs  making  ready  for  their  quadren- 
nial fat-frying,  why  should  not  Messrs. 
Roosevelt.  Root  and  Lodge  put  aside  the  bit- 
ter memories  of  1912  and  break  bread  to. 
gether?  And  how  can  the  financial  districts 
of  Boston  and  New  York  exhibit  their  friend- 
liness  more  charmingly  than  by  mobilizing 
their  corporation  attorneys  at  the  capital  to 
cry  down  a  lawyer  whose  lack  of  respect 
for   vested    wrongs   Is   notorious? 

Mr.  Brandeis  is  to  owe  his  confirmation  to 
a  partisan  vote  not  because  he  does  not  de- 
serve more  generous  treatment  but  because 
by  such  attacks  as  that  made  upon  him  Re- 
publican unity  Is  to  be  promoted  and  pluto- 
cratic check  books  placed  under  contribu- 
tion. In  this  fashion  the  Republican  get- 
together  platform  Is  being  written  every- 
day, and  the  more  pronounced  It  becomes  In 
Its  resistance  to  popular  rights  and  In  tt» 
hostility  to  men  efficient  in  public  service 
the  better  is  the  prospect  of  the  reunion 
which   the  bosses   all   seek. 

There  never  would  have  been  any  split  in 
the  party  If  both  wings.  In  the  heat  of  a 
personal  quarrel,  had  not  momentarily  for- 
gotten that  for  a  quarter  of  a  century  there 
ha3  been  no  Republican  cohesion  except  up- 
on Bchenves  involving  legalized  greed  and 
graft. 


Just  a  Moment 


Dally  Strength  and  Cheer. 

Complied  by  John  G.  Qulnlua.  the  Sunshloe  Maa. 

The  duty  of  every  day  required. — Ezra 
ill,    4. 

One  sound  always  comes  to  the  ear  that  is 
open;  it  is  the  steady  drumbeat  of  Duty. 
No  music  in  it,  perhaps — only  a  dry  rub-a- 
dub.  Ah,  but  that  steady  beat  marks  the 
time  for  the  whole  orchestra  of  earth  and 
heaven!  It  says  to  you:  "Do  your  work — 
do  the  duty  nearest  you!"  Keep  step  to  that 
drum-beat,  and  the  dullest  march  is  taking 
you   home. — George   S.   Merrlam. 


Two  texts  of  Scripture  there  are,  which, 
put  together,  I  think  are  the  most  wonder- 
ful In  the  Bible.  They  do  suggest  a  child 
lying  in  the  crade,  and  a  loving  face  bent 
over  It,  and  a  sweet  voice  murmuring  above 
its  head.  But  I  marvel  with  inexpressible 
surprise  and  adoration  when  I  find  who  the 
Singer  is,  and  who  Is  the  child.  This  is  the 
first  verse:  "As  one  whom  his  mother  conn- 
forteth,  so  will  I  comfort  you."  The  other 
verse  I  find  In  Zephaniah  ill,  17;  "The  Lord 
thy  God  In  the  midst  of  thee  Is  mighty;  He 
'Will  save,  He  will  rejoice  over  thee  with 
joy:  He  will  rest  in  His  love.  He  will  Joy 
over  thee  with  singing."  Oh.  I  have  thought, 
again  and  again  in  my  history,  of  this  pic- 
ture; and  I  am  not  too  proud  to  say  my 
eyes  have  filled  with  tears  of  emotion  as  I 
have  tried  to  comprehend  how  the  eternal 
Jehovah  seems  to  sing  beside  one  who  loves 
Him,  as  I  remember  my  mother  used  to  sing 
restful  songs  of  comfort  beside  our  bed  on 
the  old  Sabbath  nights!— Charles  S.  Robin- 
son,  D.   D. 

Dayton,   Ohio. 


Twenty^  Years  Ago 

From  The  Herald  of  this  date.  1S96. 


••*The  steamer  Dixon  of  the  A.  Booth  Una 
will  leave  tomorrow  on  her  first  trip  of  the 
season.  She  will  go  around  Isle  Royale,  but 
probably  will  land  her  passengers  on  the  ice 
opposite  Port  Arthur,  as  she  has  done  in  pre- 
vious springs.  Thunder  bay  Is  full  of  veo' 
solid  ice  yet.  and  boats  cannot  force  a 
passage,  but  Isle  Royale  ports  are  clear. 

•••The  bill  to  grant  a  franchise  for  an 
electric  railway  through  Yellowstone  park 
was  considered  by  the  senate  committee  on 
territories  yesterday.  By  a  vote  of  five  to 
three   an   adverse   report   was   ordered. 


•••J.  A.  Ferguson  and  W.  S.  Conklln,  the 
committee  appointed  by  the  Duluth  Jobbers' 
union  to  consider  the  Duluth-Superlor  bridge 
bin  amendments,  has  prepared  a  report  fa- 
vorable to  their  passage.  It  believes  that 
free  foot  passage  is  of  minor  Importance  and 
that  to  Insist  on  this  change  would  cause 
further  delay  and  might  entirely  prevent  the 
building   of   the    bridge. 


••♦Lake  Superior  lodge  of  the  Order  of  the 
World  has  been  instituted  at  the  West  end 
with  thirty  charter  members.  Following  are 
the  officers:  President,  C.  M.  Thomas;  past 
president,  Mrs.  I.  C.  Stoddard;  vice  president. 
A.  M.  Reppe;  chaplain,  C.  C.  Nellls;  guard. 
R.  E.  Nelson;  sentinel.  I.  Seasted;  trustees, 
Mrs.  Thomas.  Dr.  Bakke,  E.  O.  Reppe;  secre- 
tary, O.  R.  Stai;  treasurer,  Ira  C.  Stoddard: 
marshal.  W.  Vlllett. 


•••Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today,  SS; 
maximum  yesterday,  46;  minimum  yester- 
day,   3  4. 


•••On  April  15,  Miss  Mary  E.  Hartley,  sis- 
ter of  G.  O.  Hartley  and  Heber  Hartley  of 
this  city,  and  Rev.  Lewis  G.  Rogers  of  Buf- 
falo, N.  Y.,  will  be  married  at  the  residence 
of  Mr,  and  Mrs.  G.  G.  Hartley.  The  cere- 
mony will  be  performed  by  Dr.  Cleland  of  the 
First  Presbyterian  church.  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Rogers  will  reside  at  Buffalo. 


•••Miss  Caroline  Pender,  daughter  of  John 
Pender  of  Detroit,  and  John  Gilbert  of  Du- 
luth will  be  married  on  April  IK  at  St. 
Clements'  church.  Miss  Loretua  Gilbert  will 
attend  the  bride,  and  F.  L.  Ryan  will  b« 
best  man.  Mr.  Gilbert  la  freight  agent  of 
the  Eastern  Minnesota  railway. 


•••Michael  Moran  of  West  Duluth  haa 
gone  to  the  Red  Lake  reservation  to  take  up 
a  claim. 


•••Frank  Connors  has  returned  to  West 
Duluth  from  Saginaw,  Mich.,  where  he  spent 
the  winter. 


•••E.    Krefting.   an    old    resident   of   Weat 
Duluth.  haa  gone  to  Marshall.  Minn.,  to  en* 
I  snr«  In  farmlniT- 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE     B 


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Tuesday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


9 


THE  OPEN  COURT 


Hiadfrs  of  Tiie  Florald  •n-  liivltcd  to  make  fre*  use  of 
tbls  luliimn   lo  fxpri>s   tbtlr   Wli-as   about   the   toplcg  of  i 

rmral  tntt-nst,  hut  disnisslon  of  rrtarlan  religious  dlf-  i 
rcnns  U  tarred.  l,»-itrrs  must  ruit  ncf*d  300  wordi  i 
—  lhi>  shorter  the  Nttr.  They  miist  be  wrltlfn  on  one 
itdf  of  the  pap«r  only,  and  tbfj"  must  be  accompanied  In 
tvery  i  j»j  by  the  ni>!iii>  and  address  of  the  virltt'-r  thoil|h 
||)ps'.-  Q''<-(|  not  be  pnbM^hvd.  A  signed  letter  Is  always 
more  cfftcll*!',  howvitT. 

Tlie  Htrald  do»s  not  publish  original  Tfrae.  rontrlbq- 
tloHR  of  this  nature  that  are  submitted  for  the  edltor'l 
p^nisnl  must  be  B'-rompanicd  by  a  stamped  and  addrevr-d 
tu\<lope.  If  tbelr  rtturn  Is  desired.  Otherwise  120  manu- 
icript  will  Ik'  rt'turn>d. 


MR. 


PHILLIPS  ASKS  SOME 

QUESTIONS  OF  HIS  CRITIC 


To    the    Eilltor   .)f   The    U»rald: 

To  Mn   Dfnfeld'a  admirer: 

Your  jirtlrh'  was  vci  y  wl-U  written, 
your  Iaiij4uagt'  was  Idful,  but  Iho 
thuad  was  not  interwoven  in  the  Bub- 
Jrct  at  hand.  I  do  not  care  how  murh 
yoii  may  know  of  So(lali«in,  nor  do  I 
care  how  much  you  may  think  of  Karl 
Marx.  Th«?  fact  that  you  may  think 
that  h*'  wa.s  a  Krand  old  man  and 
tliat  .vou  had  bt«omo  converted  in  your 
belief  that  the  philosophy  propounded 
by  him  wa.s  tiu?  beat  for  the  liunian 
rare  is  not  at  all  InterestlnK  to  mo 
at    this    time. 

Nor  can  I  understand  why  you  try 
to  impiesH  upon  me  the  fact  that  you 
«re  a  Socialist.  Vou  may  be;  there  la 
room  for  both  of  us,  Duluth  Is  large, 
and  neither  of  us  can  have  a  mon- 
opoly of  thought  of  the  city.  You 
nniat  have  mixed  your  learning  a  littlo 
when  you  stated  a  part  of  the 
anarchist  teachings  as  Socialism.  You 
should  be  more  careful;  there  nro 
other  people  with  big  heads  In  tho 
city. 

Now  for  business.  Do  you  uphold 
Mr.  Denfeld  In  his  attitude  towards 
the  public  upon  the  questions' that  the 
public  Is  Interested  In?  Do  you  believe 
that  he  has  the  right  to  play  the  part 
of  a  boss  while  ho  Is  In  the  employ  of 
the  city?  Do  you  believe  tliat  the 
reQueet  tliat  he  make  a  frank  state- 
ment of  why  Mr.  Holmts  was  dls- 
cliarRcd  Is  unfair,  and  that  he  has  the 
right  to  refuse  to  give  out  sut^h  In- 
formation? Do  you  think  that  I  ex- 
ceeded my  right  in  requesting  that  he 
give  the  reasim  or  be  ousted  for  not 
doing  so?  l)o  you  think  that  the 
public  is  not  interested  in  the  schools, 
which  are  the  bulwarks  of  our  well- 
being?  If  yon  were  in  Mr.  Denfeld's 
po.«ltlon  would  you  adopt  the  same 
attitude? 

What  did  you  mean  when  you  spoke 
of  a  "mismanaged  school  system?"  Do 
you  admit  that  our  sihools  are  mis- 
managed? You  also  speak  of  his  be- 
ing led  Into  errors,  and  that  he  Is 
conscious  of  doing  so  at  tiie  time.  Do 
you  know  this  to  be  a  fact?  If  so, 
do  you  not  think  that  it  is  a  duty 
that  the  publl<'  would  expect  of  .«<o 
great  a  li)Ver  of  iustice  as  you  wotild 
lead  them  to  belhve  you  are,  to  ex- 
pose the  cause  of  the  wrongs  so  they 
may  be   righted? 

As  for  myself.  T  care  little  what 
you  may  say.  I  do  not  always  claim 
that  I  am  right,  but  upon  the  ques- 
tion now  before  the  house  I  believe 
that   I   am   absolutely   right,   and  I  can 


AMUSEMENTS. 


LYCEUM  THEATER 

Tonight.    Wediiradny    and    Thursday. 
Mntlner    Daily. 

REFINED 
BURLESQUE 

JACK    HKED    AND    HIS    RECORD- 
BREAKCnS. 

MghlN,  25c  (o  76ei   Matit,  2Sc.  00c. 


Wt    Havt   AfrMd   With    COHAN    &    HARRIS   To   Sail 
3,IS7  Seati  By  Saturdayl 

"IT  PAYS  TO 
ADVERTISE" 

We  hava  already  lold  2,1S4,  and  by  th«  way  thlnn 
are  ooing.  It  louki  ai  thoufh  m«  would  reach  the 
5.000  mark  by  SATURDAY  NOON. 

FOUR   DAYS  STARTING   SUNDAY;   MATINEES  SUN- 
DAY AND  WEDNESDAY. 


ORPHEUM 

Ooc    Xlght — One    Mntlner. 
THUKSDAY,  AlUtlL   ttiUlu 

HARRY  LAUDER 

with    the    fircatciit    Company    of 
A'audevlllc  Star*  Kvcr  AsHcniblcd. 

Ma<lncc OOe    to    fl.SO 

.\  Ight 50c    to    92.00 

MAIL  ORDERS   NOW. 
SeatN   Xext   Monday. 


l-AST    Tl.MK    TOMUHT. 

LITTLE  MARY  MILES  MINTER 

TIm'    VoungCMt   Star  In   the   World,  1« 

*'LOVELY  IS/IARY" 

(.Metro    WondorplHy) 

A   (•ripping  and    itoniantic  Story 

of   the    South. 

K.\TRA — Mr.   and   Mrn.    Sidney   Drew 

hi      m      One-Heel      Comedy,      "THE 

COl  .\T   OF    TEN." 


Where   Everybody   «oe«. 
V>V    SKAT — lOe. 


NEW 


ALWAYS 
A  CiOOD 
SHOW 


GRAND 


11    A.   M. 

INTll. 

11   P.  M. 


Real   A'eteran*  of  the  Clvlf  War 

OLD  SOLDIER  MUSICIANS 

FOl.l'IS    SISTERS   »«:   I-K   ROY. 
Sri.MVAX   *   MASON. 

MERLE'S  COCKATOOS 

Concert  Oreheitra— Photoplays  De  Luxe. 

MATS  lOcs^l'iNITES  10-20 


Eex  W  Ilex 

THEATER  BEAUTIFUL  V  THEATER  BEAUTIFUL 

EXCEPTIONAI.I.V    FINE. 

"THE  RAIDERS" 

A    atlrrtng   play    of   great    merit. 

H.  B.  WARNER 

AND   CAST. 
Tl'ESDAY.    WEDNESDAY    AND 

rm  Rsi»vv. 


LYRIC  ^  LYRIC 

EVERYBODY'S    THEATER. 

TODAY    AND    TONIGHT. 

ROBERT    B.    MANTELli 
and    All-Star    Caat    In 

'A  WIFE'S  SACRIFICE' 

Made    a    decided    hit    In    Dnlath, 
Sunday. 

TOMORROW 
CONSTANCE   COIXIER  In 

'7HE  CODE  OF  MARCIA  GRAY" 

Clever  Paramount  Picture. 


find  nothing  In  your  article  that  would 
cause  me  to  change  my  mind. 

Now,  when  you  write  again  please 
sign  your  name,  for  It  la  said  that 
"God  hates  a  coward."  and  "G.  S." 
may  stand  for  Great  Spirit,  Great 
Scott,  Great  Samaritan  or  anything — 
or  nothing.     Your  unoftondcd  friend, 

P.   y.  PHILLIPS. 

"West   Duluth,   April   8. 

QUESTIONS  AND 
ANSWERS 

This  (Ifpartiflfnt  does  not  preti^ned  to  be  Infallible,  It 
ttUl  fndcavor,  however,  to  ansiwor  (lUMtlons  sent  to  (t  liy 
reiders  of  The  Herald  to  the  bist  of  Its  ahlllty.  reserrlni 
the  right  to  Ignore  all  that  are  trifling  or  of  ronecrn  only 
to  the  fiuestlon^r,  or  that  ask  for  adrlce  on  legal  or  med- 
Iral   i|ii<'.stlons. 

To  rt-reive  attention,  ercry  In(|uJry  must  bear  the  name 
and  address  of  the  pen>on  acndlng  It.  This  Is  not  wanted 
for  puhllration.  but  a.s  ati  evidence  of  cood  faith. 


"A  Policy  Holder,"  Duluth:  Will  you, 
or  some  one  of  your  readers  who  is 
posted  on  laws,  be  so  kind  as  to  inform 
me  through  the  Open  Court  on  the  fol- 
lowing question:  Is  an  Insurance  com- 
pany, old  line,  compelled  by  law  to 
pay  the  Insurance  on  a  policy  which 
WHS  only  throe  months  or  two  yoars 
old,  and  policy  was  lapsed  by  the  com- 
pany for  non-payment  of  the  premium? 
When  the  time  was  up,  tho  Insured 
could  not  pay  his  premium  because  he 
was  quarantined  in  his  house  or  In  the 
pesthouse  with  a  contagious  disease, 
and  no  one  could  come  In  contact  with 
him  or  he  with  others. 

Ann.:  Questions  Involving  legal 
points  cannot  be  answered  in  this 
column.  They  should  be  presented  to 
an  attorney. 


POEMS  ASKED  FOR. 

The  Ilorald  acknowledges  with 
thanks  the  receipt  of  the  following: 

"A  Boy'8  Rest  Friend  Is  His  Mother," 
from  Earl  Strong  of  Duluth. 

"Correct  Version  of  'The  Shanty 
Boy."  "  from  Mabel  A.  Johnson  of  Du- 
luth. 


A  Boy'M  Beat  Friend  Is  Ills  Mother. 

I've  been  thinking  today  of  the  friends 
that  i)as.««(i  away. 
Of   friends    that    would   stand   by    my 
side; 
Of  my  dear  old  mother's  knee  at  which 
1  used  to  be; 
I    kissed    her    sweet    face    when    she 
died. 
Oh,  how  1  loved  her  none  can  tell, 
Like  her  I'll  never  gain  another. 
For  a  friend  In  need  is  a  friend  Indeed, 
And  a  boy's  best  friend  is  his  mother. 

Chorus. 
Treat  her  kindly  while  she's  here. 

For   when    she's   gone   you'll   gain   no 
other; 
For  a  friend  In  need  Is  a  friend  Indeed, 
And  a  boy's  best  friend  is  his  mother. 

Now    you    always    want    to    treat    your 
mother  with  respect. 
For  she  is  tho  only  one  that  cares  for 
you. 
And  never  hereafter  her  dear  old  word 
neglect — 
A  mother  so  tried  and  so  true. 
Now,  when  she  Is  laid  In  her  cold,  cold 
grave. 
Like  her  you'll  never  gain  another. 
For  a  friend  In  need  is  a  friend  Indeed, 
And  a  boy's  best  friend  is  his  mother. 

The  Shnnty  Boy. 

Come    fill    you    Jolly    lumbermen    and 

listen   to   my   song. 
(It    is    only   a    few    verses   and   I'll   not 

detain   you   long). 
Concerning  a  young  damsel,  or  a  lady 

young  and   fair, 
Wlio   dearly   loved   a  shanty  boy   upon 

the  big  Eau  Claire. 

This  young  and   heartless  damsel  was 

of  a  high  degree. 
Her   mother    kept    a    millinery   shop   In 

tho  town  of  Mosinee, 
Sold    waterfalls   and    ribbons   and   bon- 

nefs   trimmed    In   lace 
To  all  the  nice  young  ladles  that  lived 

around  the  place. 

The    milliner   swore   a   shanty   boy   her 

daughter  ne'er  should   wed, 
Bvit  Sally  did  not  care  a  darn  for  what 
her  mother  said, 
packed     up     her    millineries    and 
sold   them  off  In  sacks 
went    and    set    up    another    shop 
way  down  In   P'ond  du  Lac. 


and 


She 
And 


Now     Sally     was     broken-hearted 

almost  tired  of  life. 
She   dearly    lov«  d    her  shanty   boy   and 

longed   to   be   his  wife; 
But  when  brown  autumn  came  around 

and  riponod  all  the  crops 
She    went    way    down    to    Baraboo   and 

went  to  picking  hops. 

Wile  in   this  occupation  she  found  but 

little  Joy, 
And  curious  thoughta  ran  through  her 

mind  about  her  shanty  boy. 
She    took    the    scarlet    fever    and    was 

sU-k  a  week  or  two. 
A-lyIng   In    the   peathouse   In   the    town 

of   Baraboo. 

While    in    this   awful    raging   she   tore 

her  auburn  hair 
And  talked  about  her  shanty  boy  upon 

the  big  Ebu  Claire. 
The  doctors  tried,  but  all  In  vain;  hor 

life  could  not  be  saved. 
And     now     ten     thousand     young     hop 

leaves      are      dancing      o'er      her 

grave. 

The   shanty  boy  wa.<<   handsome:   there 

was  none  so  fair  as  he. 
In    the    summertime    he    tall-sawed    In 

the    mill   of  Mosinee, 
But    when    stern    winter    came    around 

with  its  cold  and  chilly  br'^eze 
He    worked    upon    the    big    Eau    Claire 

a-felllng  down  pine   trees. 

He   wore  a   handsome   black   mustache 

and  a  head  of  curly  hair; 
A   handsomer   man   could   not   be   found 

upon   the  big   Eau  Claire. 
He   loved   the   milliner's   daughter,   and 

he  loved    her  long  and  well. 
But   circumstances   being    so.   the    truth 

to  you  I  tell. 

I 

When    the   shanty   boy   heard    this   sad 

news  he  became  a  lunatic. 
He  acted  just  like  other  men  do  when 

they  become  love-sick. 
He    hid    his    saw    In    a    hollow   log   and 

traded  off  l»ls  ax. 
And  hired  out  as  a  sucker  on  the  fleet 

of  Sailor  Jack. 

He     sometimes     wi.shed     that     he     was 

dead   and   an    end   to  all   his   llf*^. 
Old  Orimdad  took  him  at  his  word  and 

came   to   his   relief. 
As    he    fell    off    the    raft    post    In    the 

mill    of    Mosinee; 
There  put  an  «»nd   to  all  his  grief  and 

his  sad  mlgery. 

The    milliner,    she    Is    bankrupt    now; 
her   stock   has  gone   to   rack; 


Dandruff  Soon 

Ruins  The  Hair 


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ONE  OF  THE  DISPLAYS.   SHOWING  STATUE   OF   MINER. 


The  complete  exhibit  of  the  United 
States  Steel  corporation,  which  was  on 
display  at  the  San  Francisco  exposi- 
tion all  of  last  year,  will  be  shown 
permanently  In  Duluth,  according  to 
an  announcement  made  today  by  Wal- 
ter W,  J.  Crose  of  the  Oliver  Iron 
Mining  company,  who  arranged  the 
display    for   shipment    to   the   fair   and 

its    recent    return    to    this    city. 

"Room  201  In  the  Wolvln  building," 
said  Mr.  Croze,  "has  been  set  aside 
and  fitted  out  as  the  permanent  home 
for  the  exhibit,  and  It  is  open  for  the 
public  every  day.  The  exhibit  should 
prove  as  popular  here  as  at  the  ex- 
position." 

The  exhibit  Includes  models,  relief 
maps,  photographs,  ore  samples  from 
all  the  ranges  on  Lake  Superior,  min- 
ing villages  In  miniature  and  other 
features  of  considerable  Interest.  In 
the  center  of  the  room  Is  a  life-size 
statue  of  a  miner  made  by  the  Fisher 
&    Glrouch   Art   company   of  Cleveland. 

An  exceptionally  interesting  feature, 
especially  to  Duluthlans,  is  that  all 
the  work  was  done  in  this  city.  Mr. 
Croze  had  charge  of  Its  preparation 
and  shipment  to  San  Francisco  last 
year,  while  the  detail  work  was  done 
by  S.  George  Stevens,  who  accompanied 
the  display  to  the  fair;  Wallace  Wel- 
banks,  architect  and  artist;  Louis  Galla. 
gher,  photographer,  and  employes  of 
the      Oliver      Iron      Mining     company's 


She  talked  some  fine  day  of  moving 
away  from  Fond  du  Lac. 

Perhaps  she's  haunted  by  the  ghost  of 
her  daughter  young  and  fair. 

Or  perhaps  It's  by  the  shanty  boy  upon 
the  big  Eau  Claire. 

The     shanty     boys     are     rowdies,     as 

everybody   knows. 
In     the     wintertime     they're     working 

down  where  the  pine  tree  grows. 
A-steallng   ties   and   shingle   bolts   and 

telling  horrid   lies, 
A-playlng    cards    and    swearing    is   all 

their  exercise. 

Now,  If  you  want  to  get  married,  for 
comfort   or   for  joy, 

I'd  advise  you  for  to  marry  some  hon- 
est farmer  boy. 

Come  all  you  young  damsels  or  ladles 
young  and   fair. 

Don't  fall  in  love  with  a  shanty  boy 
upon  the  big  nowhere. 

MORE  CLAliJSTOR 
ALLEGED  DAMAGES 


drafting  department.  Mr.  Stevens 
built  the  miniature  ore  dock  and  the 
lake  vessel. 

All  the  photographs  of  mines,  loca- 
tions, cities,  office  buildings  and  fac- 
tories were  taken  by  Mr.  Gallagher 
under  the  direction  of  Mr.  Croze,  while 
the  special  coloring  and  painting  of 
the  prints  was  done  by  Mr.  Welbanks. 

The  largest  exhibit  Is  the  model  of 
the  Alpena  mine  near  Virginia.  It  Is 
twelve  feet  square  and  shows  the  open 
pit,  the  machinery,  rails,  trains  and 
underground  workings;  the  small  com- 
pany village  nearby  and  the  buildings 
occupied  by  the  office  employes.  The 
ore  dock  and  boat  models  are  one- 
forty-eighth  the  natural  size  of  Du- 
luth's  new  concrete  ore  dock  and  the 
William  J.  Olcott  freighter. 

In  a  large  cabinet  under  glass  are 
shown  ore  samples,  rock  and  maps 
of  the  entire  Lake  Superior  mining 
district.  Including  the  Vermilion.  Mesa- 
ba,  Menominee.  Gogebic  and  Marquette 
ranges.  Nearby  is  a  large  relief  map 
of  the  Lake  Superior  district,  shown 
in   a   glass   case. 

Two  interesting  photographs  shown 
are  those  of  the  first  ore  dock  on 
Lake  Superior,  as  It  looked  at  Mar- 
quette, Mich.,  in  1870,  and  the  repro- 
duction of  a  bill  of  lading  of  the  first 
shipment  of  ore  from  this  lake  on 
July  7,  1852.  In  a  frame  adjoining  is 
shown  the  medal  of  honor  presented 
to  the  United  States  Steel  corporation 
by  the  official  judges  at  the  exposi- 
tion  last   summer. 


without   being  licensed   or  under  con- 
trol of  the  police. 

"We  photographers  can  take  care  of 
ourselves,"  said  Louis  Dworshak, 
spokesman  for  the  delegation,  "but  we 
want  the  public  protected.  These  trav- 
eling photographers  and  agents  offer 
to  enlarge  pictures  at  ridiculously  low 
prices,  but  they  charge  exorbitantly 
for  the  frames,  which  they  compel  the 
purchaser  to  buy.  That's  where  they 
make  their  money. 

"In  addition,  they  take  old  family 
portraits  for  enlargement  and  after 
making  advance  collections  are  never 
seen  again.  As  a  result  the  family 
loses  the  only  print  of  a  very  valuable 
picture.  Very  often  these  men  take 
pictures,  declaring  that  no  charge  will 
be  made,  but  later  send  bills  for  the 
work.  These  men  do  not  live  here, 
pay  no  taxes  and  should  be  licensed 
in  some  manner." 

Members    of    the    comihlsslon    agreed 


Recapture  the  Old  Joy 

Of  Living 

HAS  life  lost  its  zest?    Do  you  suffer  pretty   constantly 
from  nervous  depression— "the  blues?" 
Very  often  this  state  of  things  is  brought  on  by  poor  elimin- 
ation. .  Constipation  is  the  underlying  cause  of  many  a  case 
of  "nerves"  as  any  doctor  will  tell  you. 
Once  get  rid  of  constipation  permanently  and  you  will  be 
amazed  at  the  transformation  in  your  health  and  spirits. 
Laxatives  and  cathartics  won't  cure  you  of  constipation.  They 
give  only  temporary  relief  and  tend  to  form  a  habit  which  is 
exceedingly  dangerous. 

But  you  will  find  in  Nuiol  a  rational  means  of  restoring  normal, 
healthful  bowel  activity.  Nujol  is  a  pure  white  mineral  oil  conform- 
ing to  all  the  requirements  of  the  Lane  treatment  for  constipation,  which 
physicians  everywhere  are  now  prescribing  as  the  safest  and  most  effect- 
ive means  of  restoring  normal  bowel  activity. 

It  is  not  a  laxative  but  a  lubricant.  Being  entirely  mechanical  in  ita 
action  it  may  be  taken  in  any  quantity  without  harm. 

Nujol  is  colorless,  odorless,  and  tasteless. 

Write  for  booklet,  "The  Rational  Treatment  of  Constipation."  If 
your  druggist  hasn't  it,  we  will  send  a  pint  bottle  of  Nujol  prepaid  -to 
any  point  in  the  United  States  on  receipt  of  75c — money  order  or  stamps. 


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THE  PURE  WHITE  MINERAL  OIL 

STANDARD  OIL  COMPANY 

(New  Jersey) 

Bayonne  New  Jersey 

ApproTod  by  I 

Harvov  W.  Wiley.  Director  Good 
Housekeeping  Bureau  of  Foods, 
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On  Sale  at  All  Duluth  Drug  Stores. 


that  legislation  should  be  enacted  cov- 
ering this  business  and  Commissioner 
Silbersteln,  safety  head,  announced 
that  he  would  take  the  matter  up  with 
the  city  legal  department.  Ordinances 
from  other  cities  will  be  obtained  in 
preparing  the  local  measur?. 

The  petition  for  an  ordinance  li- 
censing traveling  photographers  and 
agents  selling  pictures  was  signed  by 
the  following  local  photographers:  L. 
P.  Gallagher,  Louis  Dworshak,  O.  Ol- 
son, H.  McKenzle,  R.  D.  Handy.  Cook 
Ely,  John  Chrlstensen,  Henrietta 
Mathleson,  J.  R.  Zwelfel,  W.  L.  Smith, 
Thomas  Furniss  and  the  Johnson  Stu- 
dio   company. 

denies"execution 
of  spies  in  canada 

Chicago,  April  11. — Official  denial  has 
been  made  by  J.  W.  White,  Inspector 
of  Immigration  agencies  of  the  Cana- 
dian government,  that  William  and 
Louis  Schroeder  of  Iowa  had  been  exe- 
cuted or  condemned  as  spies  at  Clavet, 
Sask.,  on  March  24.  Mr.  White  said 
that  the  story  was  not  only  untrue,  but 
that  such  an  execution  or  sentence 
would  be  impossible,  as  persons  were 
not  being  shot  In  Canada  for  treason 
or  any  other  reason. 

J.  Bruce  Walker,  Canadian  govern- 
ment Immigration  commissioner,  act- 
ing in  behalf  of  the  Canadian  depart- 
ment of  the  interior,  Mr.  White  said. 
Investigated  the  report  to  discover  Its 
source    and    reported    that    there    could 


not  have  been  any  grounds  for  It. 
"Canada  has  not  had  any  fault  to  find 
with  German  immigrants,  or  those  of 
German  extraction,  and  they  live  in 
Canada  on  even  terms  with  all  ethers," 
said  Mr.  White. 


ANOTHER  OLSEN  ON  FORCE. 


Successor  to  Officer  Honnold  Makes 
Third  in  McKercher's  Department. 

Ju.st   before    leaving   on    an    Eastern 


trip  last  night.  Chief  R.  D.  McKercher 
appointed  John  B.  Olsen,  3807  West 
Fourth  street,  patrolman  to  succeed 
Tllford  M.  Honnold,  who  resigned  early 
yesterday. 

Olsen  was  one  of  the  three  high  men 
on  the  civil  service  list  of  eligible  can- 
didates. He  went  on  duty  last  night, 
beginning  at  8  o'clock,  and  was  as- 
signed to  an  East  end  beat.  He  is  the' 
third  Olsen  or  Olson   on  the  force. 

Patrolman  Fred  A.  Harling  will  be 
assigned  to  headquarters  as  extra  man, 
replacing    Patrolman    Honnold. 


SERVICE      FIRST 


Girls — If  you  want  plenty  of  thick, 
beautiful,  glossy,  silky  hair,  do  by  all 
means  get  rid  of  dandruff,  for  It  will 
starve  your  hair  and  ruin  it  If  you 
don't. 

It  doesn't  do  much  good  to  try  to 
brush  or  wash  It  out.  The  only  sure 
way  to  get  rid  of  dandruff  Is  to  dis- 
solve It,  then  you  destroy  it  entirely. 
To  do  this,  get  about  four  ounces  of 
ordinary  liquid  arvon;  apply  It  at 
night  when  retiring;  use  enough  to 
moisten  the  scalp  and  rub  It  in  gently 
with  the  finger  tips. 

By  morning,  most  If  not  all,  of  your 
dandruff  will  be  gone,  and  three  or 
four  more  applications  will  completely 
dissolve  and  entirely  destroy  every  sin- 
gle sign  and  trace  of  it. 

You  will  find,  too,  that  all  Itching 
and  digging  of  the  scalp  will  atop,  and 
your  hair  will  look  and  feel  a  hun- 
dred times  better.  You  can  get  liquid 
arvon  at  any  drug  store.  It  is  Inex- 
pensive and  four  ounces  Is  all  you 
will  need,  no  matter  how  much  dan- 
druff you  have.  This  simple  remedy 
never  falls. — Advertisement. 


Two  Sidewalk  Victims  File 

Demands  for  $6,500 

for  Injuries. 

Claims  for  alleged  damages  as  the 
result  of  falls  on  icy  sidewalks  are 
still    coming    in. 

Yesterday  two  claims  were  filed  for 
damages  totaling  (6,600  and  these 
were  ordered  turned  over  to  the  city 
legal  department  for  investigation. 

Katherlne  Hampton  asks  for  9t>,UUO 
as  the  result  of  an  alleged  fall  on 
Fourth  street,  between  Sixth  and  Sev- 
enth avenues  west,  on  the  evening  of 
March  13.  She  claims  that  her  spine 
was  wrenched  and  sprained  as  a  re- 
sult of  the  alleged  accident.  Courtney 
&  Courtney  are  her  attorneys. 

Charles  Olson  asks  for  $1,600  dam- 
ages, claiming  that  he  fell  on  an  ley 
sidewalk  at  Third  avenut*  west  and 
Michigan   street   on    March    8. 

TO  BARltiNERANT 
PICTURE  PEDDLERS 


Council  Will  Act  According 

to  Request  of  Resident 

Photographers. 

Duluth  will  be  protected  rrom 
Itinerant  photographers  and  solicitors 
for  photographic  enlargements  In  the 
future. 

This  assurance  was  given  by  the  city 
commissioners  yesterday  afternoon, 
when  a  delegation  of  photographers 
appeared  before  the  council  and  pro- 
tested against  the  appearance  in  Du- 
luth   of    these    traveling    picture    men 


LM.TREDWAY 


D.  II.,  4-11-16. 


SPECIALLY 
TESTED 
LAMPS! 

There  is  only  one  store  in  town  where 
one  can  buy 

TESTED  MAZDA  LAMPS 

All  Edison,  Mazda  Lamps  sold  by  the 
Duluth  Edison  Electric  company  have 
been  tested  by  the  Electrical  Testing 
Laboratories  of  New  York,  which  keeps 
special  men  at  the  lamp  factories  to  test 
the  lamps  as  they  are  made.  All  lamps 
sold  by  us  are  drawn  from  this  tested 
stock.  The  Electrical  Testing  Labora- 
tories company  is  an  independent  firm — 
their  work  is  unprejudiced. 

The  next  time  you  buy  lamps — buy 
tested  lamps. 


Duluth-Edison 
Electric  Company 

216  West  First  Street. 


SERVICE      FIRST 


im«n«ri^ 


^   11 


10 


Tuesday, 


Children  Cry  for  Fletcher's 


The  Kind  Yon  Have  Always  Bought,  and  which  hat  beea 
In  nse  for  OTor  80  yean*  has  borne  the  signature  of 

and  has  been  made  under  his  per« 

T^y*  /^-^  Bonal  supervision  since  Its  Infancy* 

^'U'lcJU^    Allow  no  one  to  deceive  yon  in  this« 

All  Counterfeits,  Imitations  and  '<  Jnst-os-good  "  are  but 

Experiments  that  trifle  with  and  endanger  the  health  of 

Infants  and  Children->£^>erlence  against  Hxperlmeot* 

What  is  CASTORIA 


Castoria  is  a  harmless  substitute  for  Castor  OU, 
poric.  Drops  an<^.  Soothing  Syrups.  It  is  pleasant.  Ifl 
contains  neither  Opium,  Morpliine  nor  other  Narootia 
irabstance.  Its  age  is  its  guarantee.  It  destroys  Worma 
.  end  allays  Feyerishness.  For  more  than  thir^  years  ill 
has  been  in  constant  use  for  the  relief  of  Constipation* 
Flatulency,  Wind  Colic,  all  Teething  Troubles  and 
Diarrhcea.  It  regulates  the  Stomach  and  Bowels* 
Assimilates  the  Food,  giving  healthy  and  natural  sleeps 
f£\xQ  Children's  Panacea— The  Mother's  Friend* 

GENUINE   CASTORIA  ALWAYS 


Bears  the  Signature  of 


■•—  ■ 


In  Use  For  Over  30  Years 

The  Kind  You  Have  Always  Bought 


TMK  eCMTAUR  COM^ANV.   NKW  rOMK  CriT. 


FOR  PRINTING.  LITHOGRAPHING,  ENGRAVING,  BINDING! 

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Sai    WEST  FIRST   STREET. 


MARSHALL  TO 
STAND  FIRM 

Will  Not  Withdraw  Charges 

or  Apologize  to 

House. 


■*r 


■«> 


\ 


Committee  Will  Take  Action 

in  Attorney's  Case  on 

Friday. 


■Washhififton,  April  11. — United  States 
Attorney  Murshall  of  New  York  in- 
formed a  house  s-^lect  committee  yes- 
terday that  lie  dill  not  withdraw  and 
had  no  apology  to  make  for  his  recent 
crlticlsma  of  tlie  Judiciary  subcommit- 
tee, which  investigated  Representa- 
tive I'uchanan'sj  Impeachment  charges 
4  against  him. 

The  select  committee,  of  which  Rep- 

»re««  nt;itive  Moon  of  Tennes.nee  is 
otiairmau,  was  appointed  to  consider 
whether  Mr.  Marshall  should  be  haled 
before  th'»  house  for  contempt  because 
of  his  attack.  Members  of  the  sub- 
committeo  were  heard  last  week,  auil 
the  letter  of  criticism  from  Mr.  Mar- 
— shall  to  Its  chairman.  Representative 
Carlln  of  Vtrgliita,  read.  Th'n  Mr. 
Marsliall  was  Invitod  to  appear  yes- 
terday to  make  any  statement  he 
might   care   to   present. 

A  report  to  the  house  will  bo  madn" 
by  the  .select  committee  next  Friday. 
None  of  Its  members  would  intimate 
what  its  rt'commendations  would  be. 
The  Judiriary  subcommltteemen  are 
Bald  to  be  very  earnest  in  their  de- 
'mand  that  tlie  district  attorney  be 
penalized.  On  the  other  hand,  Mr. 
Marshall  h.is  strong  support  in  and 
out  of  congress.  His  refusal  to  sub- 
mit grand  jury  records  to  the  subcom- 
mittee,   which    btarted    the    trouble,     is 


fully   approved    by    the    department    of 
Justice. 

Writtrn   In   \ew    York. 

Mr.  Mar.4hali's  letter  to  Uepresenta- 
tive  Carlln  was  written  while  tlie  sub- 
committee was  in  .\fw  York  Inquiring 
Into  the  conduct  of  the  district  attor- 
ney's office,  particularly  as  to  his 
fiiand  Jury  examinations.  The  com- 
niltU',>  had  »<ought  th<  arrest  of  L.  E. 
Holme,  a  New  York  reporter,  for  writ- 
ing a  news  story  saying  the  district 
attorney  questioned  the  motives  of  the 
committeemen,  and  when  Holme  re- 
fused to  reveal  the  source  of  his  Infor- 
mation. Mr.  Marshall  wrote  his  letter 
assuming  full  responsibility  for  the 
article. 

"I  said  that  your  expedition  to  this 
town  was  not  an  Investigation  con- 
ducted in  good  faith,"  he  said,  "but  was 
a  deliberate  effort  to  intimidate  any 
district  attorney  who  had  the  temerity 
to  present  charges  against  one  of  your 
honorable  body." 

Representative  Buchanan'  was  the 
member  to  whom  Mr.  Marshall  referred. 
He  now  Is  under  Indictment  In  New 
York  for  his  activities  In  connection 
with  Labor's  National  Peace  council, 
which  Is  alleged  to  have  been  supported 
by  CJerman  funds. 

Denounced    Committeemen. 

In  his  statement  yesterday  the  at- 
torney particularly  denounced  the  sub- 
commltteemen for  investigating  grand 
jury  proceedings.  Resulting  revcla- 
tion.i.  he  maintained,  would  place  In- 
valuable material  in  the  hands  of  in- 
dicted persons.  He  was  heard  In  ex- 
ecutive ses.^ion,  and  every  effort  was 
made  to  prevent  his  statement  from  be- 
coming known.  It  Is  understood  he 
will  tile  a  supplemental  brief  In  a  few 
da  ys. 

While  Mr.  Marshall  declined  to  com- 
mit himself,  It  was  ."aid  he  would  re- 
sist any  attempt  to  arrest  him  in  New 
York  and  bring  !»lm  to  Washington  on 
a  charge  of  contempt.  He  could  appeal 
his  case  to  the  United  States  supremo 
court.  Contempt  of  congress  Is  pun- 
ishable by  a  fine,  a  reprimand  or  Im- 
prisonment. 


Mr«.  J.  R.  KnwHrd  F<ndM  Life. 

Omaha,  Neb.,  April  11. — Mrs.  Joseph 
E.  Howraid.  daughter  of  Michael  Kll- 
gullen.  millionaire  steel  magnate  of 
Chioago.  and  wife  of  Joseph  P].  How- 
ard, actor  and  writer  of  popular  songs, 
committed  suicide  by  shooting  at  a 
locil  hotel  last  night.  An  aeiress  ac- 
quaintance, who  was  with  her  at  the 
time,  suld  Mrs.  Howard  was  tempor- 
arily demented. 

• _ 

BuniM   to  Death  Wltk  Jail. 

i  Ottawa.  Iowa,  April  10.— The  Jail  at 
Fremont,  near  here,  wa.>«  destroyed  by 
fire  early  today  and  Waiter  Mcklnney, 
the  lone  oceupant,  was  burned  to  death. 


THE    DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


PUPILS  URGED 
TO  CONTINUE 

County    Superintendent's 

Office  Fostering  High 

School  Attendance. 


Has    Good    Response    to 

Inquiries  Sent  Out  to 

Former  Pupils. 


Sixty  per  cent  of  the  children  who 
graduate  from  the  schools  of  the  coun- 
try districts  never  continue  their  edu- 
cation, according  to  H.  B.  Hursh,  as- 
sistant superintendent  of  St.  Louis 
county  schools. 

"We  believe  that  one  of  the  reasons 
why  more  of  these  pupils  have  not  at- 
tended high  school  is  that  they  have 
not  understood  what  educational  ad- 
vantages are  within  their  reach,"  said 
Mr.  Hursh.  "No  doubt  a  great  many 
of  them  have  felt  that  they  are  not 
wanted  in  the  high  schools,  when  as  a 
matter  of  fact  school  authorities,  gen- 
erally speaking,  are  not  only  glad  but 
anxious  to  have  pupils  from  rural 
schools  enroll  In  their  high  schools. 
They  are  willing  to  help  pupils  from 
the  rural  schools  In  any  way  within 
their  power." 

Mr.  Hursh  during  February  sent  out 
223  letters  to  representative  boys  and 
girls  who  have  been  granted  eighth 
grade  county  diplomas  during  the  last 
four  years,  asking  for  Information  and 
data  as  to  age,  nationality  and  school- 
ing. 

Former  PnplU  Reply. 

"Seven  letters  came  back  to  us  un- 
claimed and  we  received  150  replies." 
said  Mr.  Hursh.  "The  average  age  of 
these  160  boys  and  girls  was  16.4'» 
year.s,  the  oldest  one  being  23  and  the 
youngest  13.  The  average  age  at 
which  these  pupils  were  graduated  Is 
11.37  years,  the  oldest  being  21  and  thj 
youngest   12. 

"Eighty-nine  pupils  reported  that 
they  have  not  attended  school  since 
gr.-iduation.  Twenty  of  the  remaining 
sixty-one  have  attended  school  only  a 
short  time  since  they  were  graduated. 
Of  the  sixty-one  who  started  to  attend 
school  after  completing  the  eighth 
grade,  thirty-eight  enrolled  In  high 
schools,  eight  in  normal  schools  five 
In  business  colleges,  four  In  ninth 
grade  of  rural  schools,  tliree  in  pri- 
vate schools,  two  in  night  schools  and 
one   In   an   agricultural  college. 

"In  answer  to  a  query  as  to  whether 
they  would  like  to  attend  high  school 
next  season,  fifty-two  expressed  a  de- 
sire to  enroll.  Forty-two  of  these  have 
not  attended  scliool  since  graduation. 
Oeeapatlon    SInee    <>r«duM<loa. 

"'What  have  you  been  doing  since 
graduation?*  Ic  another  question 
which  was  asked  eacli  pupil.  The  re- 
plies were  listed  under  three  separate 
headings,  as  follows:  Those  who  had 
remained  on  the  farm,  those  who  had 
gone  to  town  to  work  and  those  who 
had  been  attending  school.  Ninety- 
two  have  remained  on  the  farm, 
twenty-two  have  gone  to  town  to 
work  and  forty-two  have  been  at- 
tending school.  There  are  a  few  who 
have  attended  school  or  worked  in 
town  for  a  short  time  and  then  have 
gone  Lack  to  th''  farm.  This  accounts 
for  the  apparent  discrepancy  In  the 
total. 

"The  most  interesting  and  vital 
facts  that  we  found  in  looking  over 
these  replies  are  that  over  59  per  cent 
of  these  pupils  have  not  attended 
school  at  all  since  graduation,  that 
34  per  cent  of  all  pupils  replying  wish 
to  attend  high  school  next  year,  and 
80  per  cent  of  the  pupils  who  wish 
to  attend  high  school  have  not  at- 
tended any  school  since  graduation. 
I  rglng    Continuation. 

"In  order  that  pupils  who  wish  to 
secure  a  higher  education  may  learn 
of  the  exceptional  educational  ad- 
vantages which  present  themselves  in 
this  section  of  the  state,  we  are  writ- 
ing letters  to  all  pupils  who  wisli  to 
go  to  high  school,  telling  them  of 
the  various  towns  and  cities  that  have 
schools  In  which  the  course  of  study 
exte  ids  beyond  the  eighth  grade.  In 
tills  letter,  we  esk  them  where  they 
wish  to  attend,  and  whether  or  not 
it  will  be  necessary  for  them  to  work 
for  board  and  room.  After  receiving 
replies  to  these  letters  we  shall  put 
the  boys  and  girls  in  communication 
with  the  superintendents  of  school 
systems  they  wish  to  attend.  No 
doubt  the  number  of  children  from 
the  country  schools  wlio  enroll  for 
high  school  work  next  fall  will  be 
considerably  larger  than  It  ever  has 
been   In    the   past." 

M  *.  Hursh  has  ri^celved  assurances 
from  the  various  school  superintend- 
ents of  the  county  that  they  will  co- 
operate with  the  county  school  super- 
intendent's office  in  the  matter  of 
helpbig  graduates  from  the  rural 
schools    to    obtain    a    higher    education. 


PAVIN8  MEASURE 
WITH  NO  PROTEST 


Eighth  Street  Contract  May 

Actually  Go  Through 

Without  Kick. 

City  commissioners  experienced  a 
novelty  yesterday  afternoon. 

For  the  first  time  this  year  no  pro- 
test was  raised  when  a  resjplutlon 
awarding  a  paving  contract  was  intro- 
duced by  Commissioner  Farrell,  head  of 
the  works  division. 

"Doesn't  seem  real,"  said  one  of  the 
commissioners. 

The  resolution  awarded  the  contract 
for  paving  Eighth  street,  from  Twenty- 
second  to  Twenty-fifth  avenue  west, 
and  Twenty-second  avenue  west,  from 
riedmont  to  Eighth  street,  to  E.  A. 
Dahl  on  his  bid  of  $12,€01.86.  The 
measure  will  come  up  for  action  at  the 
meeting  next  week.  The  streets  will 
be  paved  with  class  C  macadam. 

Two  paving  contracts  have  been  be- 
fore the  commissioners  and  on  each  oc- 
casion protests  were  made,  resulting  in 
controversies  that  have  lasted  several 
weeks. 

MUST  QUIT  ONE 
TO  ENTER  ANOTHER 

Lindbergh    Has    Not    Yet 
Withdrawn  From  Gover- 
norship Contest. 

St.  Paul,  Minn..  April  11 — Secretary 
of  State  .lullus  Schmahl  said  yester- 
day that  if  Representative  C.  A.  Lind< 
bergh  wants  to  get  his  name  on  the 
Republican  primary  ballot  as  a  can- 
didate for  United  States  senator,  he 
must  withdraw  his  filing  for  the  gov- 
ernorship. 

He  cannot,  under  the  law,  transfer 
his  filing  from  the  governorship  to 
the  United  States  senatorship  without 
paying  another  fee.  amounting  to 
$100.  The  fee  paid  for  the  first  filing 
cajinot  be  returned,  according  to  Mr. 
Schmahl. 


TO  CONTINUE 
AFTER  WAR 

Steel  Trade  Not  Believed 

to  Be  Dependent  on 

Munitions. 


May   Result   in   Enlarging 

Some  Departments  of 

Local  Plant. 


That  buying  of  all  steel  products  Is 
almost  certain  to  be  brisk  for  a  con- 
siderable period  after  the  conclusion 
of  the  war  is  thought  in  well  informed 
circles  to  warrant  expectations  of  the 
Minnesota  Steel  company's  plant  being 
still  further  enlarged  in  some  depart- 
ments to  meet  the  increasing  require- 
ments of  consumers  over  the  North- 
west. The  tonnage  of  steel  products 
sold  In  Minnesota,  the  Dakotas  and 
Montana  is  said  by  experts  to  be  ex- 
panding faster  than  is  the  rule  in  any 
other  part  of  the  country  and  with 
equitable  freight  rates,  it  is  conceded 
that  Western  orders  taken  by  the 
United  States  Steel  corporation  can  be 
more  economically  supplied  from  its 
plant  at  this  point. 

Conditions  In  the  iron  and  steel  trade 
are  conceded  to  be  growing  more  con- 
gested than  ever.  As  a  rule  the  steel 
companies  are  literally  swamped  with 
business  so  that  manufacturers  are 
concentrating  all  their  efforts  on  de- 
liveries rather  than  in  seeking  new 
business. 

Enomioiiw  Steel  Demand. 

The  operating  head  of  a  large  West- 
ern steel  company  la  quoted  as  saying 
that  if  his  concern  had  6,000,000  tons 
of  steel  for  delivery  this  year,  the  en- 
tire tonnage  could  be  disposed  of  in 
twenty-four  hours  at  fancy  premiums 
over  current  quotations.  It  Is  regard- 
ed as  Interesting  that  the  railroads  are 
eager  to  buy  steel,  but  are  not  able  to 
t>btaln  nearly  enough  to  satisfy  their 
requirements  for  cars,  rails  and  bridge 
material.  According  to  figures  now 
available,  the  railroads  bought  38,169 
cars  during  the  first  three  months  of 
this  year  as  against  8,94S  during  the 
same  period  last  year,  and  1,137  loco- 
motives, compared  with  only  181  a  year 
ago.  During  the  last  week  of  March 
purchases  by  the  railroads  are  esti- 
mated to  have  mounted  up  to  |14,560,- 
000  in  value,  a  record  figure  for  six 
days'  business. 

American  manufacturers  are  count- 
ing upon  booking  an  enormous  export 
trade  from  now,  owing  to  the  Inability 
of  the  British  and  French  mills  to  ac- 
cept any  of  that  business  under  war 
conditions.  Prance  is  reported  to  have 
recently  purchased  125.000  tons  of  rails. 
Russian  agents  in  this  country  are  en- 
deavoring to  contract  for  300,000  tons 
of  rails,  and  Italy  Is  Inquiring  for  30,- 
000  t<ms.  Over  12.000  tons  of  rails 
have  just  been  bought  for  shipment  to 
Egypt  and-  10,000  tons  to  go  to  Aus- 
tralia. That  export  trade  in  that  line 
Is  profitable  at  present  is  shown  In  the 
statement  that  the  French  government 
is  said  to  have  paid  a  premium 
of  $10  a  ton  on  one  lot  of  rails  for 
prompt  delivery.  Up  to  the  present  do- 
mestic order  for  steel  rails  have  been 
booked  at  $28  a  ton  for  bessemer  or 
$30  for  open-hearth,  but  the  United 
States  Steel  corporation  has  servfd  no- 
tice that  it  will  accept  no  more  orders 
at  that  figure  for  delivery  by  April  1, 
19  IT. 

Belling  for   1*17. 

As  regards  other  steel  products, 
many  of  the  largest  mills  are  said  to  be 
out  of  the  market  for  delivery  dur- 
ing the  present  year,  and  they  are 
making  bookings  for  1917  in  some 
lines.  Manufacturers  say  that  they  can 
obtain  almost  any  price  they  like  to 
ask  f«)r  steel,  but  they  are  against 
pushing  quotations  up  much  beyr.nd 
their  present  levels,  as  it  is  considered 
tliat  nn  unhealthy  situation  would  bo 
created. 

As  an  example  of  the  prosperity  ex- 
isting In  the  steel  trade.  It  Is  estimated 
that  earnings  of  the  Bethlehem  Steel 
corporation  f  >r  March  were  between 
$6,000,000  and  $6,000,000.  This  means 
that  In  a  single  month  that  concern 
earned  considerably  more  than  the  an- 
nual dividend  of  $30  a  share  on  Its 
common  stock   which  calls   for   $4,500,- 

000. 

-    .  ■  ♦ 

Assorted  fresh  Kisses.  25c  a  box. 
Minnesota   Candy   Kitchen. 

BARNESTAKESSLAP 
AT  COL.  ROOSEVELT 

New  york,  April  11.— William 
Barnes,  fotiwerly  chairman  of  the  Re- 
publican st%t%  committee  in  a  state- 
ment here  i^facked  Former  President 
Roosevelt  and  denied  a  published  re- 
port that  he  would  not  oppose  the 
nomination  by  the  Republican  party 
of  Mr.   Roosevelt  for  the  presidency. 

"This  year,"  he  asserted,  "the  peri- 
odica] candidacy  of  Mr.  Roosevelt  for 
president  of  the  United  States  is 
based     upon     Americanism,     and     such 

sporadic  support  as  he  is  receiving, 
comes  fron»  nls  declaration  in  behalf 
of  proper   national   defense. 

"Mr.  Roosevelt  Is  not  responsible 
for  any  natural  phenomenon  nor  has 
he  a  patent  on  the  obvious.  That  this 
country  should  be  properly  defended 
is  not  open  to  debate." 


STOMACH  AGONIES 

DUE  TO  POISON 

One  Dose  of  Remedy  Sweeps  Pain  Away 
Hundreds  of  Thonsands  Restored 


Mayr's  Wonderful  Remedy  is  un- 
like any  other.  It  sweeps  the  Bile 
and  Poisonous  Catarrhal  Accretions 
from  the  System.  Soothes  and  allays 
inflammation  JA  the  Intestinal  Tract 
— the  cause  of  eerious  and  fatal  ail- 
ments, such  as , Gall  Stones,  Appendi- 
citis, Acute  indigestion,  Cancer  and 
Ulcers  of  the  Stomach  and  intestines. 
Yellow  Jaundice,  Constipation,  Gas- 
tritis, Auto  Intoxication,  etc.,  etc.  In 
every  locality  there  are  grateful  peo- 
ple who  owe  tlHir  complete  recovery 
to  Mayr's  Weniperful  Remedy.  Thou- 
sands say  it  hat  saved  them  from  the 
knife.  The  most  thorough  system- 
cleanser  kno^'n.  Contains  no  alcohol 
or  hablt-formi^  drugs.  FREE  book- 
let on  StofiWMk  Ailments.  Address 
Geo.  H.  Maff^  Mfg.  Chemist,  Chicago. 
Better  yet,  |»bt*in  a  bottle  of  Mayr's 
Wonderful  Remedy  from  any  reliable 
druggist,  who  will  refund  your  money 
if  it  fulls. 


NEW  CAR  FOR 
THE  POLICE 

Auto  Will  Be  Used  to  Trans- 
port   Prisoners    to 
Work  Farm. 


Will  Be  Big  Saving  Factor; 

Ventilation  Contract 

Awarded. 


Purchasing-  of  a  Cadillac  automobile 
to  be  used  by  the  police  department  in 
transferring  prisoners  from  the  Jail  to 
the  work  farm  will  be  authorized  by 
the  city  commissioners  at  the  council 
meeting  next  Monday. 

At  the  meeting  yesterday  Commis- 
sioner Silbersteln.  safety  head,  intro- 
duced an  ordinance  appropriating 
12,250  for  the  purchase  of  an  automo- 
bile and  also  a  resolution  awarding 
the  contract  to  the  Northwestern  Cadil- 
lac company  of  this  city.  As  the  con- 
tract involves  more  than  11,000,  the 
measure  will  have  to  go  over  until 
next  Monday  for  action.  Commissioner 
Silbersteln  explained  that  the  prison- 
ers are  now  transferred  by  the  sheriff 
at  a  heavy  expense  to  the  city  and 
that  a  great  saving  will  be  made  by 
having  the  city  do  the  work.  At  pres- 
ent the  city  pays  approximately  11.40 
to  the  sheriff  for  every  prisoner  taken 
to  the   work   farm. 

W.  G.  Joerns  was  awarded  the  con- 
tract to  install  a  ventilating  system  in 
the  basement  of  the  city  hall  on  his 
bid  of  $605,  and  the  'Hill  Standard 
Manufacturing  company  was  awarded 
the  contract  to  furnish  the  city  with 
playground  apparatus  on  its  bid  of 
1364.60.  This  is  for  half  the  cost  of 
the  apparatus,  as  the  board  of  educa- 
tion  will   pay  for  the  remainder. 

The  council  passed  the  ordinances 
appropriating  $2,500  as  salary  for 
Francis  Sullivan,  special  counsel  In 
the  street  car  paving  case;  $250  as 
salary  for  Frank  Crassweller,  ap- 
pointed as  counsel  in  making  the 
armory  referendum  appeal  to  the  su- 
preme court,  $385  for  the  purchase  of 
a  street  sweeper,  $400  for  changing 
the  partitions  in  the  water  and  light 
offices  and  $1,100  for  the  purchase  of 
an  electrically  operated  centrifugal 
pump  to  be  used  at  the  New  Duluth 
pumping  station. 

Second  reading  was  given  the  ordi- 
nances appropriating  $800  for  parking 
the  grounds  adjoining  the  punnping 
stations  and  reservoirs  and  $176  for 
the  purchase  of  36-lnch  specials  to  be 
used  in  laying  the  new  main  across 
Tlscher's  creek,  while  first  reading 
was  given  the  measures  appropriating 
$160  for  the  purchase  of  an  Indian 
motocycle  for  the  water  and  light  de- 
partment, $605  for  the  installation  of 
a  ventilating  system  in  the  city  hall 
basement  and  $364  for  the  purchase  of 
a  playground  apparatus. 

YOUfiiSARE 
GIVEN  FLOOR 


Munger  Improvement  Club 

Hears  Boys  Attack  School 

Superintendent. 


Holmes  Matter  Brought  Up 

and  Discussed;  Bridge 

Is  Promised. 


Reviving  the  controversy  over  Roy  J. 
Holmes,  English  instructor,  who  was 
not  re-engaged  by  the  board  of  educa- 
tion recently,  Munger  Improvement 
club  members  discussed  the  case  at 
length  during  a  meeting  last   night. 

Staunchly  upholding  Mr.  Holmes  and 
ridiculing  Supt.  R.  E.  Denfeld.  two  Cen- 
tral high  school  students  were  per- 
mitted to  address  the  fifty  club  mem- 
bers. One  of  the  boys  admitted  be- 
ing one  of  four  who  started  the  peti- 
tion   in    Mr.    Holmes'    favor. 

"Denfeld  told  Holmes  he  wouldn't 
trust  his  own  sons  under  similar  cir- 
cumstances," said  one  boy,  referring  to 
the  honor  sy.steni.  "Well,  theVre  prob- 
ably  chips    off    the   old    block." 

Much  laughter  and  applause  greeted 
this  sally  of  the  youth  against  his 
school  superintendent. 

"When  Denfeld  was  reappointed  for 
three  years,"  said  one  speaker,  "his 
salary  was  raised  from  $3,600  to  $5,000 
annually.  It  is  my  personal  opinion 
that  they  could  have  cut  his  salary 
by  $1,500.  not  once,  but  twice,  and  he 
still  would  have  been  getting  too 
much." 

The   remark   was  applauded,   accord- 
ing to  those  attending  the  meeting 
DenleN  Attributed  Aiwertlon. 

Edward  Wagner,  secretary  of  the 
club,  gave  a  short  address,  telling  of 
the  marking  system  as  relating  to  his 
own  son.  He  denied  today  that  the 
statement  about  Supt.  Denfeld's  salary 
which  had  been  attributed  to  him,  was 
made  by  him,  and  "said  that  "someone 
else  said  that." 

"It  is  time  to  find  out  whether  the 
school  board  is  running  Denfeld  or 
whether  he  is  running  the  school 
board,"  said  C.  G.  Flroved.  president  of 
the  club.  "If  there  is  any  sufficient 
reason  why  Mr.  Holmes  should  be  'let 
out'  all  very  well  and  good,  but  the 
public  is  at  least  entitled  to  an  ex. 
planation." 

"I  don't  want  you  to  understand  that 
I  am  attacking  Mr.  Denfeld,"  Mr. 
Firoved  said  this  morning.  "On  the 
contrary,  I  have  the  highest  regard  for 
him  and  for  his  ability." 

The  matter  will  be  brought  up  again 
at  the  next  meeting  of  the  club  in 
May,  when  the  Mr.nger  Mothers'  club 
will    be    Invited  attend    and    voice 

their  opinion  of  controversy. 

Chester  creek  .  be  bridged  by  the 
summer  of  1917  and  trolley  service  will 
be  In  operation  as  soon  thereafter  as 
tracks  can  be  installed,  according  to 
a  statement  made  by  Charles  S.  Mitch- 
ell to  the  club.  Mr.  Mitchell,  who  was 
a  member  of  a  special  committee  on  his 
project,  conveyed  to  the  club  the  aa- 
sui-ances  of  Works  Commissioner  Far- 
rell, he  said. 

WILL  RETURN  AND 
FACE  REGINA  CHARGE 

Former  Manager  of  Sas- 
katchewan Bank  Is  Ar- 
rested in  St.  Paul. 

St.  Paul,  Minn.,  April  11. — Ernest  L. 
Smith,  former  manager  of  the  Broad 
street  branch  of  the  Bank  of  Reglna, 
Sask..  wanted  by  the  Canadian  police 
for  cashing  bogus  checks  for  more 
than   $100,000.   is   held  here   by  the  po- 


■dta 


s^^^^j^ 


Elevator  Service 

Tiiroagh  tlie  Kelley 

Hardware  Co. 


Over   118'  120 

West   Superior 

Street,  Duluth 


SAMPLE  CLOAK 
AND  SUIT  SHOP 

A  Grand  Selection  of  New        ^, 

OTYLISH 


PRING^ 

UITS 


Coats, 

Dresses  and 

Skirts 

to  select  from  and 

Easter  only  two 

weeks  off. 

Wc  Save 
You . 


$ 


10  '^  *20 


D.  ym  ^AALEi 


Increase  Your  Personal 
Efficiency 


by  saving.  Freed  from  any  pressing  prob- 
lem of  bread  and  butter,  you  will  be  in 
better  shape  to  tackle  hard  jobs,  and  to 
grasp  good  opportunities  when  they  come 
your  way. 

Cut  out  fear  and  worry  and  build  up  your 
resources  through  a  First  Xational  Bank 
savings  account,   kept  up  steadily. 


FIRST  NATIONAL  BANE 

Duluth,  Minn. 


mm 


Spend  a  Dime!    Liven 

Your  Liver  and  Bowels 

and  Feel  Fine. 


Enjoy  life!  Your  sy«tem  Is  filled 
with  an  accumulation  of  bile  and  bow- 
el   poison    which    keeps     you     bilious. 


headachy,  di^zy,  tongue  coated,  breath 
bad  and  stomach  sour — Why  don't  you 
get  a  10-cent  box  of  Cascarets  at  the 
drug  store  and  feel  bully.  Take  Cab- 
carets  tonight  and  enjoy  the  nicest, 
gentlest  liver  and  bowel  cleansing  you 
ever  experienced.  You'll  wake  up 
with  a  clear  head,  Mean  tongue,  lively 
step,  rosy  skin  and  looking  and  feeling 
fit.  Mothers  can  give  a  whole  Cas- 
caret  to  a  sick,  cross,  bilious  feverish 
child  any  time — they  are  harmless — ■ 
never  gripe  or  sicken. — Advertisement. 


lice  for  the  C'ln.'xdian  authorities. 

The  arrest  of  Smith,  according  to 
Captain  of  Detectives  George  Wells, 
completes  the  cupture  of  a  trio  impli- 
cated in  highway  scandals  at  Regina. 
Joseph  Brown,  chief  clerk  of  the  high- 
way department  of  the  Saskatchewan 
government,  for  whom  Smith  is  al- 
leged to  have  cashed  the  worthies.? 
checks,  was  arrested  at  San  Antonio, 
Tex.,  three  weeks  ago. 

E.  II.  Devline,  a  member  of  the  leg- 
islature, implicated  in  the  illegal  trans- 
actions, was  arrested  at  Seattle  ten 
days  ago.  • 

Smith  told  the  local  police  that  he 
would  return  to  face  the  charges 
against  him  at  Regina  without  extra- 
dition. 

WISCONSIN  WILLGET 
BIG  INHERITANCE  TAX 

Washington,  April  10.— The  right  of 
the  state  of  Wisconsin  to  collect  an 
Inheritance  tax  of  >20,000  on  the  ?1,000.- 
000  estate  left  by  George  Bullen,  who 
died  near  Oconomowoc,  Wis.,  in  1908, 
was  sustained  today  by  the  supreme 
court.  None  of  the  property,  which 
consisted    of    stocks    and    bonds,     ever 


was  In  Wisconsin. 

The  supreme  court  today  dismissK^d 
the  appeal  of  the  St.  Louis  Street  rail- 
way lines  from  the  decision  of  the 
Missouri  courts  which  upheld  the  ordi- 
nance by  which  the  city  of  St.  Louis 
collects  a  tax  of  one  mill  on  each 
street  railway  passenger.  ~  The  c  ity 
will  realize  about  (3,000.000  in  back 
taxes. 


PROFESSOR  ENDED 

LIFE  WITH  POISON 

Baltimore,  Md..  April  11. — Coroner 
Savage  stated  last  night  after  an  In- 
vestigation that  the  death  of  Harry  C. 
Jones,  professor  of  physical  chemistry 
at  Johns  Hopkins  university,  was  du<i 
to  poison  which  he  had  evidenily 
taken  when  alone  in  his  room  .Sun- 
day.   Death   had   been   instantaneous. 

The  cheir-lst  who  was  the  pioneer  in 

Physical  laboratory  work  in  the  Unit.»d 
tales,  took  his  life,  he  said,  because 
he  felt  that  he  had  not  long  to  11  vo 
with  the  nervous  trouble  with  which 
he  was  suffering.  The  death  and 
cause  of  death  of  Dr.  Jones  was  -i 
shock  to  the  entire  faculty  of  the 
unlver.=;ity.  members  of  which  were 
his  pall  bearers. 


w-'"  * 


To  Wives  of  Drinking  Men 

ORRINE  is  the  standard  remedy  and  is  everywhere  recognized  as  the  suc- 
cessful and  reliable  home  treatment  for  the  "Drink  Habit."  It  is  highly 
praised  by  thousands  of  women,  because  it  has  restored  their  loved  onea 
to  lives  of  sobriety  and  usefulness,  and  the  weekly  wages  which  at  one  lir.ie 
were  spent  for  "Drink"  are  now  used  to  purchase  the  necessaries  and  many 
comforts  for  home.  Any  wife  or  mother  who  wants  to  save  her  husb.ind  or 
son  from  "Drink"  will  be  glad  to  know  that  she  can  purchase  ORRINE  at  our 
store,  and  if  no  benefit  is  obtained  after  a  trial  the  money  will  be  refunded. 
Can  be  given  secretly. 

ORRINE  is  prepared  in  two  forms:  No.  1,  a  powder,  tasteless  and  colorless 
can  be  given  secretly  in  food  or  drink;   ORRINE  No.  2,  in  pill  form,  is  for 
those  who  wish  to  cure  themselves.     ORRINE  costs  only  $1.00  a  box.     Ask 
us  for  free  booklet. 

W.  A.  Abbett,  219  West  Superior  street,   9S2  East  Second  street  and   101 
West  Fourth  street 


jr. 


m 


H  I  T  "  T  •  1      in  If  I  f   111  ' 


ik9« 


II 


Tuesday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


11 


^ 


n  KT* 


If  You're  Quick  to  See 
You'll  Grasp  This 
Opportunity— 

A  great  big,  roomy,  comfortable, 
pood  looking,  substantial  rocker  that 
you  can  use  on  your  porch  without 
fear  of  sun  or  rain  hurting  it.  ^fade 
to  defy  the  elements :  of  white  mu- 
ple  and  reed.    For  Only — 

$2A9 

You  can't  afford  to 
be  without  one,  as  you 
knock  more  than  that 
much  out  of  your  other 
chairs  moving  them  in 
and  out. 

NoPhoneorC.O,D. 
Orders  A  ccepted. 

Remember 
the  Early  Bird 

Vi^  ounEnM)! 


liniiiiiiMi) 


iiiifiiiiiii/ 

lilllllllllii 


MINNfiSOTA 


* »" 


WALK-OVER 


rna  mm  niv  u  i  ^ai  orf 


SHOES 


lum  <uk««JTkifl 


FOR  EASTER 

COMPLETES  YOUR  COSTUME 

\(  )\T  SPOIL  the  eflfect  of  that  new  spring  gown 
by  wearing  with  it  a  pair  uf  shabby  shoes. 
Ciood  looking  shoes,  well  fitted,  are  as  essential 
to  your  appearance  as  the  hat  you  wear,  and 
ywu  would  never  consider  wearing  an  old  hat  with  new 
clothes. 

The  very  latest  styles  for  men  and  women  are  here 
for  you  to  select  from — one  glance  at  our  windows  will 
tell  you  why  we  lead.  We  invite  you  to  call  and  make 
your  Easter  selection  of  footwear  before  sizes  be- 
come broken. 

WALK-OVER 
BOOT  SHOP 

106  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


J 


^  ILLINOISANS  VOTING 
IN  PRIMARY  ELECTION 


Campaign  Has  Been  Heated 

One,  Especially  in 

Chicago. 

rhicago,  April  11. — Illinois  voters  are 
today  participating  in  the  second  presi- 
dential primary  election  held  in  the 
state  The  campaign,  which  closed 
last  night,  was  a  heated  one,  partic- 
ularly   in    Chicago. 

Delegates  at  large,  district  delegates 
to  the  national  convention  and  state 
central  committeemen  are  to  be  elected. 
In  Ciiicago.  ward  and  precinct  com- 
mitteemen   also    are    to    be    chosen. 

Women  throiiRiiout  the  state  can 
vote  today  only  on  the  presidential 
"preference."  and  there  is  but  one  can- 
didate on  each  ticket — President  Wil- 
son on  the  Democratic,  and  Senator 
Lawrence  Y.  Sherman,  on  the  liepub- 
llcan.  Women  have  shown  Interest  In 
the    campaiKn. 

The  fight  in  Chicago  centered  prin- 
cipally around  the  choice  of  ward 
Committeemen.  The  fight  in  the  Re- 
publican r.-ink.q  is  between  the  ad- 
herents of  Mayor  William  Hale  Thomp- 
son and  anti-administration  forces.  The 
contest  in  the  Democratic  party  Is  be- 
tween followers  of  Roger  Sullivan  and 
the  forces  of  Carter  Harrison  and 
Governor   Dunne. 

Choice  of  delegates  at  large  to  the 
national  conventions  has  not  caused 
much  show  of  Interest  about  the  state 
but  the  struggle  within  the  Repub- 
lican party  as  to  the  choice  of  Will- 
iam Hale  Thompson  or  Roy  O.  West, 
present  national  committeeman,  to  head 
the  Republican  delegates  at  the  con, 
vention  has  createa  a  more  heated 
struggle. 

In  view  of  the  fight  within  the 
partie.<t   within   Chicago,   leaders  expect 

7s 


a   large  vote   today,   but   a  small   vote 
in    probable    In    down    state    precincts. 

MEXICAN  PLOT  AT 
BORDER  UNEARTHED 


•  El  Paso,  Tex..  April  11.— A  plot  of 
wide  dimensions,  hatched  in  El  Paso 
and  baclved  by  the  same  people  who 
are  financing  Felix  Diaz,  Is  believed  by 
the  police  to  have  been  unearthed,  fol- 
lowing the  arrest  last  night  of  fifteen 
Mexicans  arcused  of  being  lmpltcate<l 
in  the  flight  across  the  border  of  Gen. 
Ynez  Salazar. 

Agents  of  the  department  of  justice 
aided  the  police  in  making  the  arrests, 
most  important  of  which  were  Gen. 
Marcelo  Caraveo  and  tJen.  Ignacio 
Morelos  Zaragoza,  who.  like  Salazar, 
w«re  among  the  best  known  and  trust- 
ed of  the  late  Viclorianu  Huerta's  lieu- 
tenants. 

Salazar  is  opposed  to  both  Carranza 
and  Villa,  and  la  expected  to  help  rally 
the  Mexicans  on  a  platform  of  uncom- 
promising opposition  to  this  country, 
with  a  demand  for  the  immediate 
withdrawal  of  the  American  troops 
under  penalty  of  war  with  Mexico. 


FREIGHT  RATE  ON  PAPER 
IS  ORDERED  REDUCED 

Washington,  April  11. — Reductions 
of  1^  Cf-nts  to  2  cents  a  100  pounds 
l!)  freight  rates  on  writing,  printing, 
book,  tissue  and  wrapping  paper  from 
mills  in  Michigan  to  Oklahoma  City, 
New  Orleans.  Shreveport  and  Nash- 
ville were  ordered  today  by  the  Inter- 
state commeree  commission  In  order 
to  place  Michigan  and  Wisconsin 
paper  mills  on  the  same  basis. 

Readjustment  of  freight  rates  from 
the  Michigan  mills  to  Chicago  and  to 
other  points  in  Central,  Western  and 
Soutliern  territory  was  denied  on  the 
ground  that  unjust  discrimination  had 
not   been   proved. 


DULUTH  NOT 

nrDDrCrMTtn  beTa'*qulte°lVireat.^Th«°fl8 
If  r  l^lff  P  Xpni  I  Pll  I  ed  all  afternoon  -ffeth  alt 
111  I  llLtJL.lv  I  |_|J  I  vnnres  and  recoil,  ffie  llttl 
■■^"      ■■^^^■■■W    ■    IB^^      h.^th    uliloa     h.>lniF     nfTflot     hw 


Has  No  Delegates  on  Com- 
mittee to  Interview 
President. 


Shippers  Will  Ask  Support 

for  Bill  of  Lading 

Bill. 


The  Duluth  board  of  trade  and  the 
Duluth  Commercial  club  will  have  no 
representatives  tomorrow  on  the  dele- 
gation which  win  see  President  Wilson 
in  support  of  the  Pomerene  bill  of  lad. 
log  bin,   now  before  congress. 

A  few  days  ago,  the  chairman  of  the 
American  Bar  association's  committee 
on  legislation,  wired  an  Invitation  here 
to  have  the  Duluth  bodies  represented 
as  largely  as  possible.  The  delega- 
tion, which  will  gather  at  the  Wllliard 
hotel  In  Washington  tomorrow,  will 
have  an  audience  with  President  Wil- 
son   at    11    o'clock. 

The  Pomerene  bill,  which  is  in  the 
house  of  representatives  and  has  been 
referred  to  the  committee  on  Inter- 
state and  foreign  commerce.  Is  of  the 
greatest  interest  to  shippers  through- 
out   the   country. 

In  brief  it  seeks  to  make  transporta- 
tion companies  responsible  for  their 
bills  of  lading.  This  bill  supplements 
the  provision  of  the  Hepburn  act  as 
amended  by  the  Carmack  and  Cummins 
amendments.  It  removes  certain  pro- 
visions heretofore  carried  In  bills  of 
lading,  that  are  exceedingly  prejudicial 
to  shippers,  and  settles  the  disputed 
question  of  the  liability  of  the  carrier 
or  the  acts  of  its  agents  In  Issuing  bills 
of  lading. 

For  mar.y  years  the  carriers  were  is- 
suing bills  of  lading  covering  packages 
of  goods,  or  package  freight,  and  in- 
sisted upon  Inserting  In  the  bills  of 
lading  a  statement  to  the  effect  that 
the  goods  had  been  received  "shippers" 
weight,  load  and  count."  The  result 
of  this  has  been  that  in  case  of  loss 
in  transit  the  statement  in  the  bill  of 
lading  as  to  the  nuniber  of  packages  or 
their  weight  has  not  been  binding  upon 
the  carrier  and  in  an  effort  to  hold 
the  carrier  re.Hponsible  for  the  lofs  of 
these  goods  the  carrier  has  sought  to 
place  the  burden  of  proof  upon  the 
shipper  to  show  the  exact  numb«*r  of 
pa<kage8,  boxes  or  cases  of  good.-<  re- 
ceived. When  the  shipper  has  presented 
the  bill  of  lading  containing  a  state- 
ment of  the  number  of  boxes  or  pack- 
ages delivered  to  the  carrier,  the  car- 
rier has  defended  on  the  ground  that 
the  bill  of  lading  expressly  stipulated 
that  this  was  "shippers'  weight,  load 
and   count." 

Fp  to  Carrier. 

Section  20  of  the  bill  referred  to 
makes  It  the  duty  of  the  carrier  to 
count  the  packages  and  renders  illegal 
and  inoperative  the  obnoxious  words 
"shippers'  weight,  load  and  count." 
This  provision  requires  the  cfirrier  to 
ascertain  the  number  of  boxes,  pack- 
ages or  quantity  of  freight  delivered 
to  it  before  Issuing  Its  bill  of  lading 
and  deprives  the  carrier  of  the  right 
to  issue  a  bill  of  lading  describing  a 
certain  number  of  packages,  boxes  or 
quantity  of  freight  and  then  thereafter 
deny  that  it  actually  received  them. 

RIVER  FALLS 

AT  LA  CROSSE 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


Wisconsin     and     Minnesota,     and     the 
spring    rains    are    yet    to    come. 
Below    Flood    Stage    Soon. 

It  is  believed,  however,  that  it  will 
be  below  the  flood  stage  of  twelve 
feet  by  the  «nd  of  this  week  and  that 
in  another  week  it  will  be  down  to 
ten  feet  above  low  water  mark.  At 
ten  feet  farmers  in  lowland  districts, 
who  have  been  marooned  In  their 
homes  for  a  week,  will  be  able  to 
drive  over  the  roads  now  submerged 
and  to  get  their  groceries  and  mail 
without     traveling     in     boats. 

Damage  has  been  done  to  the  sum- 
mer cottages  at  Riverside,  Sunset 
point  and  Shore  acres,  where  almost 
every  cottage  Is  under  water  and 
furniture,  including  valuable  pianos, 
soaked.  It  will  be  a  wi'ek  or  two  be- 
fore the  river  has  fallen  sufficiently 
to  permit  an  Inspection  of  these 
buildings  to  permit  an  appraisal  of 
the    loss. 

Rising    at    Clinton. 

Clinton,  Iowa.  April  11. — With  the 
stage  of  water  In  the  Mississippi  river 
steadily  rising,  it  had  reached  12.8 
feet  above  low  water  mark  today,  a 
rise  of  a  foot  In  twenty-four  hours, 
and  establishing  a  new  high  water 
mark  for  the  present  8eas«'n.  The 
previous   record   was   twelve   feet. 

GERMANS  CONTINUE 
SUPREME  EFFORT  TO 
CAPTURE  VERDUN 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


tween  Comleres  and  Hill  No.  304,  west 
ot    the    Meuse. 

Berlin    Confident. 

Berlin  views  the  Verdun  operations 
confidently,  pointing  to  the  ground 
gained  In  a  difficult  region  and  the 
losses  inflicted  on  tlie  French.  The 
statement  is  made  by  the  Overseas 
News  agency  of  Berlin  that  since  the 
beginning  of  the  battle  more  than 
36.000  French  have  been  captured.  It 
also  Is  said  about  twenty-five  square 
kilometers  of  ground  has  been  occu- 
pied  west   of    the    Meuse. 

With  the  exception  of  the  Verdun 
sector  no  military  operations  of  par- 
ticular significance  are  reported  from 
any  of  the  battlcfronts.  The  change 
of  seasons  is  interfering  witli  move- 
ments on  the  Russian,  Italian  and 
Mesopotamian  fronts,  although  on 
each  of  these  lines  there  are  signs  of 
Increasing  activity,  wlilch  is  expected 
to  become  more  pronounced  as  the 
spring    advances. 

Obtain    Footing. 

Paris.  April  11.  2:12  p.  m.— On  the 
west  bank  of  the  Meuse.  the  t;erman8 
made  an  attack  last  night  on  Dead 
Man's  Hill,  advancing  from  Corbeaux 
wood.  They  obtained  a  footing  In  a 
few  small  eler.ients  of  trenches,  the 
war  office  announced  this  afternoon, 
but    otherwise    were    repulsed. 

East  of  the  Meuse  the  Germans  at- 
tacked trenches  south  of  Douaumont 
village,  but  were  beaten  back  with 
consiJeraole  losses.  There  was  violent 
bombardment  of  Dououamunt  and 
Vaux. 


Front    Being    Rentrleted. 

Paris.  April  11. — The  German  gen- 
eral offensive  against  the  French 
fortress  of  Verdun  began  Sunday  over 
a  thirteen-mile  front  is  being  re- 
stricted In  tlie  latent  fighting  to  a 
two-mile  front  on  the  west  side  of 
the  river  Meuse.  Along  these  3,500 
yards  of  trenches  the  French  thus  far 
not  only  have  succeeded  in  barring 
a  further  advance  of  the  Teutons  on 
the  west  bank  of  the  river,  but  also 
in  screening  their  artillery  which  is 
raking  every  German  advance  on  the 
east    of    the    river. 

Dead    Man'*    Hill    Objeetlve. 

T.'ie  object  of  tiie  present  operations 
Is  the  now  historical  Morlhomme,  or 
Dead  Man's  hill,  which  bars  the  way 
of  the  Germans  to  a  further  advance 
west  of  th*»  river.  The  operations 
began  yeste»"day  when  two  German 
divisions  were  launch  >d  from  Bethln- 
court   and    Haucourt    against    Hill    304 


on  the  left  of  D««4  ilan's  hill,  while 
two  divisions  attacked  at  the  same 
time  In  the  directl<|^of  Hill  296,  be- 
tween  Dead   Man's   mil    and   Cumieres. 

The  Germans  advanced  In  serried 
ranks  as  on  Sunday*  and  their  propor- 
tionate    losses     ar^    reported   to   have 

fighting  last- 
ernate  ad- 
e  gains  of 
both  sides  being  offset  by  equivalent 
losses,  and  at  the  end  of  the  day  the 
positions  were  on  th»  whole  the  same 
as  before  the  attaclT. 

Poar   Stinginfc  Fire   at   Knemy. 

The  Germans  are  i»t  the  foot  of  Hill 
296,  while  the  Frenbb  hold  the  slope 
and  the  summit  which  are  solidly  for- 
tified. F'rom  these  positions  the 
French  poured  a  stinging  fire  into  the 
dense  ranks  of  the  Germans  advancing 
over  ground  where  In  spots  they  were 
fully  exposed  to  both  machine  gun  fire 
and  the  fire  of  three-Inch  guns. 

The  repeated  attacks  there  were 
thrown  back  before  they  succeeded  In 
reaching  the  barbed  wire  defenses  and 
there  was  the  same  result  generally  in 
the   attacks   against    Hill   304. 

The  German  regiment  that  succeeded 
in  penetrating  600  yards  of  FrencH 
tren«^hes  on  the  northeastern  slope  of 
Dead  Man's  hill,  several  times  was 
driven  back  to  cover  when  attempting 
to  debouch  to  attack  the  positions 
higher  up. 

No  sooner  would  a  company  of  men 
leap  from  their  trench  than  the  three- 
Inch  pieces  and  the  machine  guns  be- 
gan to  bring  down  the  attackers.  They 
never  got  more  than  100  yards  from 
their  trench  and  they  lost  heavily  dur- 
ing the  day. 

DECISION  RESERVED 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


this  as  a  hopeful  sign.  It  was  their 
opinion  that.  If  the  pardon  board  was 
determined  to  refuse  absolutely  the 
pleas  made  for  Smith  and  Plckit.  the 
board  would  have  announced  Its  de- 
cision this  morning.  The  fact  that 
the  board  desired  more  time  to  con- 
sider was  regarded  in  an  optimistic 
light. 

Keirro  Wants  Liberty. 

The  board  today  heard  an  applica- 
tion for  liberty  of  the  oldest  convict 
in  point  of  service  now  confined  In 
Stillwater.  He  is  R.  L.  Underbill,  and 
thirty-three  years  ago  entered  the 
penitentiary  to  serve  a  life  sentence. 
irnderhlU,  colored,  was  arrested  In 
1883  for  killing  a  »t.  Paul  policeman. 
No  attorney  represented  him  at  his 
trial.  He  pleaded  guilty,  but  people 
who  have  interested  themselves  in  his 
case  say  he  entered  a  guilty  plea  to 
save  himself  from  a  mob. 

Mrs.  A.  C.  McKenna  of  Minneapolis 
asked  a  pardon  for  her  husband,  sent 
to  Stillwater  last  October  on  complaint 
of  a  minor  girl.  Mrs.  McKenna  told 
the  board  that  her  husband  is  52  years 
old  and  that  he  has  alwJiys  been  prom- 
inent   in    Sunday    rchool    work. 

villa"reported  dead 

(Continued    from    page    1.)     


panies  of  the  Twenty-fourth  Infantry 
at  Del  Rio  would  start  for  Columbus 
shortly  for  duty  along  the  line  of 
communication. 

An  overnUht  dispatch  from  Consul 
Letcher  at  Chihuahua  said  people  of 
Torreon  are  In  a  starving  condition. 

Headquarters  was  unadvised  of  the 
location  of  the  advanced  columns  of 
American   troops. 

InereaMed  Preeaatlons. 

Columbus.  N.  M..  April  10.— Tn- 
creased  precautions  to  guard  the  mili- 
tary base  at  Columbus  and  the  Amer- 
ican line  of  communication,  the  ar- 
rival of  a  number  of  strangers  In 
town  and  what  seemed  to  be  an  air 
of  suppressed  excitement  about  mili- 
tary headquarters  all  contributed 
yesterday  to  what  the  authorities  here 
believe  will  lead  to  important  devel- 
opments   In    the    campaign    in    Mexico. 

Because  of  the  delay  in  communica- 
tion due  to  the  work  of  extending  the 
range  of  the  wireless  field  station  to 
a  point  In  the  vicinity  of  Satevo, 
closer  to  tpe  camp  of  General  Persh- 
ing, no  reports  concerning  the  prog- 
ress of  t»ie  advf.nced  American  de- 
tachments were  received  today.  It  was 
expected,  however,  that  communica- 
tion would  be  re-established  during 
the    night. 

Xame«   of    \%'onnded. 

San  Antonio.  Tex..  April  11. — A  re- 
port received  at  headquarters  toda/ 
from  Gen.  Pershing  gave  the  names  of 
the  soltliers  wounded  in  the  fight  at 
Guerrero,  March  29,  as  follows: 

Private  T.  C.  Brow!i,  Farrier  V.  P. 
Mandevllle.  Private  Joe  Garbell,  Pri- 
vate J.  G.  Bennett  and  Private  Walter 
.•^.  Gardner.  All  are  members  of  Troop 
C,  Seventh  cavalry. 

Dias    Leadern    Rxeeuted. 

El  Paso.  April  11 The  three  lead- 
ers of  the  Diaz  plot  to  seize  Juarez  an.l 
overthrow  the  Carranza  garrison  there 
last  Sunday  were  executed  by  the  fir- 
ing squad  in  Juarez  early  today.  The 
three  leaders  were  Nicholas  Chavazar- 
ila,  Jose  Int'Z  Domel  anu  Florenclo 
Hernandez.  The  condemned  men  con- 
fessed the  plot  before  they  were  exe- 
cuted. Other  Mexicans  were  Implicated. 


FOUR  MORE  SHIPS 
SENT  TO  BOnOM 


Two  British,  One  Dutch  and 

One  Spanish  in  the 

List. 

London.  April  11.— rLloyds  reports  th« 
British  steamship  Entt<«ton  is  missing 
and  presumably  has  been  sunk.  All 
hands  have  been  picked  up.  The  El- 
laston  was  unarmed. 

The  Dutch  steamship  Rljndljk.  which 
struck  a  mine  off  the  Scilly  Islands  last 


w  ^.^■W>':_MHHaMi 


ENTIRE  STOCK 


OF  CAMERON  FURNITURE  CO.  WIU  BE  SOLD 
BEFORE  MAY  FIRST  REGARDLESS  OF  THE 

MANUFACTURERS'  COST! 

The  building,  2110-2112  West  Superior  St.  must  be  completely  emptied 
without  fail.  Lease  expires  April  30.  This  means  cash  buyers  can  furnish  their 
living  room,  dining  room  and  bedrooms  at 

V2  PRICE  AND  LESS 

All  Brass  Beds,  Steel  Beds,  Springs,  Mattresses,  Pillows,  Blankets, 
Ranges,  etc.,  will  be  sold  at  a  mere  fraction  of  their  real  value. 


*j!,W'-**^r*;.iaii„^pg.5i& 


*.;».«.^*;.,^^^^,gg^-^ 


SoUd  Mahogany 
Dining  Table 


We  have  26  pieces  of  Solid 
Mahogany  Dining  Room  Fur- 
niture built  by  Berkey  of 
Grand  Rapids,  ^Iich.,  that  must 
be  sold  regardless  of  factory 
cost. 

Our  closing  out  price  is  $35 — easily 
worth  double;  has  54-inch  top,  8  foot 
extension ;  finished  English  brown. 
Entire  suite  to  match  at  likewise  re- 
duction. 


week,  has  been  beached.  Her  cargo  is 
danxaged  by  water. 

The  Spanish  steamer  Santanderlno  Is 
reported  to  have  been  sunk  by  a  tor- 
pedo, according  to  an  announcement 
made  by  Lloyds. 

The  same  agency  says  that  the  Brit- 
ish steamer  Murgam  Abbey  has  been 
sxink  and  that  her  crew  is  aboard  a 
steam  trawler,  which  passed  the  Lizard 
bound  for  Falmouth.  No  report  has 
been  received  concerning  the  crew  of 
the  Santanderlno. 


The  .Santanderlno.  a  vessel  of  2,543 
tons,  was  last  reported  to  have  sailed 
for  Newport  News  Feb.  16  for  Liver- 
pool, where  she  arrived  March  4.  and 
was  due  to  return  from  that  port  to 
CJalveston. 

The  Margam  Abbey  was  a  steamer  of 
4.441  tons  and  was  last  reported  sail- 
ing from  Taconia  and  Seattle  for  Bor- 
deaux, where  she  arrived  March  27. 

The  Ellaston  3,796  tons  gross  and 
346  feet  long,  was  built  In  1906  and 
owned  In  Glasgow.  The  last  report  of 
l,^  .1  iM^vements  was  her  departure  on 
Feb.  I-Wha*-  J'hjladelphla  for  Queens- 
town.  "^    then  the  , 

GAPTUREir3b,00b 
FRENCH  AT  VERDUN 

That  Number  of  Prisoners 

Taken  Since  Feb.  21,  Says 

Berlin  Dispatch. 

Berlin,  April  11,  wireless  to  Say- 
ville. — Since  Feb,  21  the  Germans  have 
captured  more  than  Sfi.OOO  French  in 
the  fighting  about  Verdun,  the  Over- 
seas News   agency  announced   today. 

"West  of  the  Meuse  about  twenty- 
five  square  kilometers  of  ground  has 
been      occupied,"      the      announcement 

says. 

"German  newspapers  point  out  that 
the  French  now  say  Bethlncourt  was 
evacuated  in  accordance  with  plans 
previously  made.  Nevertehless  it  haij 
been  ascertained  that  an  order  was 
issued  stating:  'This  Important  place 
must  be  held  In  all  circumstances.' 
The  fact  that  more  than  700  un- 
wounded  French  prisoners  were  ia«en 
and  that  the  French  losses  in  killed 
or  wimnded  were  far  greater  is  proof 
that  the  French  plan  of  evacuation 
could   not   be   carried   out  as   intended. 

"According  to  the  French  reports 
the  new  line  runs  from  the  southern 
corner  of  Avocourt  wood  along  the 
first  slopes  of  Hill  No.  304.  thence 
along  the  southern  bank  of  Forges 
brook,  passing  to  the  northeast  of 
Haucourt;  turning  eastward,  crosses 
the  Bethlncourt-Esnes  road  at  a  point 
south  of  the  junction  of  that  road 
with  the  highway  to  Chattancouri  ana 
reaches  the  Meuse  Just  north  of 
Cumieres.  The  fortlflcations  of  the  vil- 
lage of  Avocourt,  which  is  south  of 
Avocourt  wood,  were  destroyed  by  the 
German  advance  of  April  9,  as  re- 
ported." 


SPRINKLING 
ANDCLEANUP 

City  Council  Lets  Contracts 

for  Work  in  Nine 

Districts. 


Twenty   Hotels  Given    Li- 
cense; Wider  Paving  for 
Minnesota  Avenue. 


SHOTS  FROM  CRUISER 
FAIL  TO  HALT  SHIP 


"Wind  Jammer's"  Captain 
Prefers  Balls  to  Collision 
With  Mine. " 

New  York,  April  11. — The  Brabloch. 
a  Norwegian  sailing  vessel,  which  ar- 
rived from  Kolding.  Denmark,  reported 
escaping  from  a  choice  of  destruction 
between  floating  mines  and  guns  of  a 
cruiser,  when  she  was  beating  through 
the  passage  between  the  Orkney 
Islands  and  Scotland. 

When  off  the  coast  of  Scotland,  the 
Brabloch  encountered  winds  so  heavy 
that  she  was  driven  into  the  Orkney 
passages,  which,  unknown  to  her  cap- 
tain, are  mined  and  closed  to  all  but 
naval  vessels. 

When  half  way  through,  a  British 
cruiser  ordered  the  ship  to  lay  to.  Be- 
ing at  the  helm  of  a  "wind  jammer" 
and  a  gale  blowing,  the  captain  de- 
clined to  maneuver  In  the  dangerous 
waters.  Four  shots  from  the  cruiser 
still  failed  to  convince  him  that  he 
was  In  more  danger  from  the  cannon 
than  from  the  mines  and  reefs,  and  he 
kept  on.  It  was  not  until  he  reached 
open  waters  that  he  hove  to  and  re- 
ceived a  boat  from  the  pursuing  crui- 
ser. 

The  naval  officer  threatened  t^  take 
the  Brabloch  into  a  prize  court,  but 
when  the  captain  convinced  him  that 
the  ship  was  in  ballast  and  bound  for 
New  York  for  a  munitions  cargo  for 
England  he  allowed  her  to  proceed. 


Contracts  for  cleaning  and  sprink- 
ling Duluth  streets  during  1916  were 
awarded  at  the  council  meeting  yes- 
terday afternoon. 

According  to  the  rules  of  the  works 
division,  the  successful  bidder  must 
pay  for  the  use  of  the  sprinkler,  which 
Is  owned  by  the  city,  and  for  all  the 
water  used,  while  he  must  furnish  the 
horses.  The  contracts  were  awarded 
for  the  following  nine  out  of  the  thir- 
teen sprinkling  districts:  District  No. 
1.  Dominick  Scandin,  $159.07;  No.  2. 
Dominlck  Scandin,  $14  4.38;  No.  5.  Louis 
Nordl.  $154;  No.  7,  Joseph  Cavallero, 
$1-^6;  No.  8.  Tony  Gerraro,  $130  82;  No. 
9.  Frank  Mlcheleggl,  $138.70;  No.  10, 
Dominick  Scandin,  $166.39;  No.  11,  Jo- 
seph Cavallero,  $128.  and  No.  12,  Frank 
Fox,  $139.20.  District  No.  1.  Including 
Superior  street,  is  sprinkled  by  the 
city.*while  the  bids  on  the  other  tiiree 
districts  were  rejected,  becaus*-  they 
are  too  high.  New  bids  will  be  adver- 
tised for.  Commissioner  Farrell  an- 
nounced. 

Twenty  licenses  to  operate  hotels  un- 
der the  new  hotel  ordinance  were 
granted  as  listed  in  The  Herald  of 
last  evening,  while  two  applications 
were  rejected  because  the  hotels  In 
question   have  no  bathrooms. 

The  width  of  the  Minnesota  avenue 
pavement  was  changed  yesterday,  so 
that  the  roadway  will  be  twenty-one 
feet  wide  Instead  of  fifteen,  as  origin- 
ally planned.  The  tracks  will  be  laid  ' 
in  the  center  of  the  pavement. 

Fifty-sixth  alley  west  was  ordered 
paved  with  concrete  and  Tenth  street, 
from  Eighth  to  Ninth  avenue  east,  was 
ordered  graded.  Sewers  were  ordered 
across  Nineteenth  avenue  east,  at  Sev- 
enth .alley.  Seventh  street  and  Eighth 
alley. 

The  Duluth  Street  Railway  company 
was  given  permission  to  erect  a  wait- 
ing station  at  Wallace  avenue  and 
Hawthorne  street. 

Commissioner  Fllberstein  was  au- 
thorized to  advertise  for  bids  on  the 
sale  of  the  old  Fond  du  Lac  Jail  build- 
ing. Only  the  structure  will  be  sold 
by  the  city. 

Two  water  hydrants  were  ordered  at 
Second  avenue  west  and  Fourth  street 
and  Lake  avenue  and  Fourth  street. 

Saloon  license  renewals  were  grant- 
ed to  Ollle  Lowry.  220  East  Superior 
street,  being  a  transfer  from  Richard 
Sheasby;  J.  H.  W'right,  319  West  Supe- 
rior street,  being  a  transfer  from  J.  P. 
Van  Dalen;  Peter  Beschenbossel,  415 
East  Fourth  street;  Frank  Johnson. 
1819  West  Superior  street,  and  Theo- 
dore Frerker.  420  West  Superior 
street.  Lovrence  Kovach  was  granted 
a  saloon  license  at  1%  West  Superior 
street. 

Other  licenses  granted  yesterday 
follow:  Cigarettes.  S.  M.  Sobczyk.  6701 
Grand  avenue;  auctioneer's  license,  Bar- 
rett &  Zimmerman.  2302  West  Superior  I 


WORTH  KNOWING 


Women  are  liable  to  ailments  which 
cause  constant  ill-health  and  on  which 
they  may  consult  doctors  without 
much  relief.  It  is  well  worth  knowing 
that  they  can  get  at  the  nearest  drug- 
store a  simple  medicine,  made  of  roots 
and  herbs,  which  is  just  what  they 
need  to  recover  health.  That  medicine 
is  Lydia  E.  Pinkham's  Vegetable 
Compound. 


street;  house  mover's  license,, H.  E. 
Reau.  62i  Fourth  avenue  east;  plumb- 
er's license,  L.  A.  Wick  Plumbing  and 
Heating  company,  117  East  Michiean 
street;  pool  and  billiard  table  licenses, 
Brooks  &  Kastner,  eight  pool  tables 
at  30  East  Superior  street,  and  W.  F. 
Hatley,  eight  pool  tables  at  301  West 
Superior  street. 

returnWom 
inspection 

Steel    Corporation    Heads 

Pleased  With  Conditions 

on  Range. 

D.  a.  Kerr  and  McGilvray  Shiras,  of 
New  York,  respectively  vice  president 
and  ore  distributer  of  the  United  States 
Steel  corporation,  wlio  have  been  In- 
specting the  Minnesota  properties  of 
the  corporation,  passed  through  Duluth 
lest  evening,  going  from  here  to  the 
Ironwood.  Mich.,  to  Inspect  the  ore 
properties  of  the  corporation  In  Michi- 
gan and  Wisconsin.  They  have  been 
on  the  Vermilion  and  Mesaba  ranges 
for  several  days,  and  Inspected  the 
steel  plant  of  the  Minnesota  Steel  com- 
pany yesterday  afternoon,  reaching  Du 
luth  last  evening  shortly  after  6 
o'clock.  They  left  In  a  private  car  over 
the  Duluth.  South  Shore  &  Atlantic 
road,  and  after  inspecting  the  Michi- 
gan and  Wisconsin  properties  will 
leave  for  New  York,  reaching  there  by 
about  the  end  of  this  week. 

Mr.  Kerr  was  very  much  pleased  at 
the  conditions  he  found  at  all  parts  of 
the  corporation's  property,  and  i^as 
particularly  pleased  at  the  complete 
preparations  made  to  handle  ore  ship- 
ments during  the  coming  season,  which 
all  officers  of  the  company  recognize  as 
destined  to  be  the  greatest  In  history. 

POLICEMEN  BEATEN 

BY  CLEVELAND  MOB 

Cleveland,  Ohio,  April  11. — Two  po- 
licemen were  badly  beaten  here  today 
by  a  mob  of  300  strikers  and  strike 
sympathizers  at  the  Corrlgan.  Mc  Kin- 
ney &  Co.,  steel  plant.  Police  reservea 
Were  called  to  disperse  the  mob  and 
rescue    the    beaten    officers. 

The  policemen  were  attacked  when 
they  tried  to  clear  a  path  through  the 
mob  to   the  factory  entrance. 

The  strikers  left  work  yesterday  be- 
cause of  dissatisfaction  over  working 
conditions. 


The  Sauca  of  a  ThouHtncI  Use* 

At  home  and  in  the  restaurant,  in  the 
kitchea  and  on  the  table  most 
dishes  are  improred  by  the  use  of 


^AUCE 


TWmI7< 


Wsffcestsrslnre  Sai 


aes 


Send  postal  for  free  kitcben  haoger  cuntaiaing 
100  new  recipes 
LEA  &  PERKINS,  Hubert  Street,  New  Tork  City 


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Tuesday, 


THE    DULUT«    HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


Basetaii  I  NEWS  AND  VIEWS  OF  THE  SPORT  WORLD ,  „  . 

Rowing  I  ^ ^ .   ..^.,„.^.^  , — .^T^^T^^^^r^^rrr  I    Boxing 


-•     BOWLjINJG    •- 


ROME  WAS  DESTROYED;  SO 
WAS  THE  BOSTON  OUTFIELD 

All  Great  Institutions  Must  Come  to  an  End,  and 
It  Looks  as  If  the  Best  Garden  Trio  in  Years 
Has  Passed— Why  Do  They  Say  Gotch  Will  De- 
feat Joe  Stecher? 


BY  BRUCE. 

LL.  they  went  and  pulled 
Rome  down,  and  you  may 
liuve  been  told  that  Rome  in 
its  day  and  generation  was 
quite  an  institution,  a  rcgu- 
leaK'uer,    in     fact.      Llarkson 


and  Kelly  were  taken  from  the  old 
Chicago  White  Stockings,  and  he^. 
also  were  quite  an  institution  m  their 
da>°  Also,  the  sale  of  the  "Big  Four 
of  baseball,  broke  up  another  baseball 
team  that  in  its  time  was  some  pump- 
kins (  oming  down  the  steps  ot 
time,  it  will  be  more  readily  remem- 
bered that  the  Cubs,  one  of  the  great 

baseball  machines  "^  »"  t»"^  .Yf.'k 
gradually  dismembered.  Connie  Mack 
also  busted  his  world  famous  Ath- 
letics wide  open.  So  it  has  always 
been.  The  sale  of  Tris  Speaker  also 
changes  about  quite  a  bit  ^vhat  has 
been  considered  the  greatest  outfield 
of  modern  times. 

The  fans  will  gasp— as  they  have— 
and  exclaim,  declaim,  as  tans  are  in 
the  habit  of  doing,  and  shed  tears  of 
anguish,    and    then— forget. 

Speaker.  Lewis  and  Hooper,  as  an 
outfield,  will  be  speedily  forgotten. 
Right  now,  on  the  red  and  radiant 
impulse  of  the  glowing  moment,  it 
does  seem  a  crime  to  break  up  that 
combination.  Why  every  one  of  those 
boys  could  throw  strikes  from  the  out- 
field, as  one  baseball  follower  declared. 
There  was  hardly  a  weakness  in  that 
trio  of  garden  tenders.  They  could 
all  hit,  run,  field,  and  how  they  could 
peg  from  the  outer  precincts!  But, 
like  Rome,  which  fell  before  the  Huns 
and  several  other  rude  emotional 
waves,  the  Boston  American  outfield 
had  to  give  way  to  time  or  the  con- 
ventions, and  we  now  beh.^ld.  on  the 
very  threshold  of  the  1916  season,  the 
disintegration  of  what  critics  have 
called  the  de  luxe  edition  of  outfield 
works. 

As  we  say.  it  does  seem  a  shame; 
but  then,  what  will  you?  John  L. 
Sullivan  was  finally  defeated  and 
Harry  Thaw  finally  got  out  of  the 
bughouse.  Tomorrow  people  will 
forget.  But  right  now,  I5ill,  it  does 
seem  sort  of  t<nigh  that  Speaker,  the 
king  pin  in  a  great  and  excessively 
glowing  outfield  should  be  sent  away 
— especially,  when  he  is  being  trans- 
planted to  the  hard  and  barren  soil  of 
the  Cleveland  club.  lUit,  then,  all 
things  must  come  to  pass.  Some  day 
a  i)erfectly  original  man  will  rise  up 
and  fervently  admire  his  wife's  ex- 
pensive new  spring  hat. 
«      «      » 

Gotch  and  Stecher. 

Going  back  a  few  years,  groping 
about  a  bit  in  the  mists  of  sporting 
time,  you  will  perhaps  remember  that 
the  wise  men  of  sportive  affairs  ve- 
hemently declared  that  John  L.  Sul- 
livan would  lick  young  Jim  Corbett, 
the  ex-San  Francisco  bank  clerk, 
much  in  the  same  nonchalant  manner 
as  a  man.  would  subjugate  an  unruly 
child  in  the  rear  apartment  during 
the  third  dog  watch. 

What  the  young  and  not  very  se- 
riously considered  Mister  Corbett  did 
to  the  veteran  and  battle-scarred  Mr. 
Sullivan,  has  been  extensively  woven 
into  the  woof  of  pugilistic  history. 

Again  there  came  a  time  when  a 
lank  and  exceedingly  awkward  Mr. 
Fitzsimmons  went  forth  to  battle  the 
now  ring  sophisticated  Mr.  Corbett. 
The  orthodox  followers  of  affairs 
pugilistic  professed  to  believe,  enforc- 
mg  their  opinions  with  loud  shouts 
and    coin   of  the   realm,   that   Corbett 


would  annihilate  the  red-headed  .\us- 
tralian. 

What  the  lanky,  barn-shouldered 
pugilistic  freak  did  to  Corbett,  has 
been  a  very  red-letter  chapter  of  ring 
history. 

When  poor  old  Jim  Jeffries  was 
lured  from  the  lounging  place  of  his 
Los  Angeles  buffet  to  fight  Jack 
Johnson,  veteran  followers  of  the 
game  of  fisticuffs  professed  to  believe 
that  it  was  a  mortal  cinch  that  the 
white  man  would  overcome  the  negro. 
The  result  is  too  recent  and  too  sad 
to  dwell  lingcringly  over. 

Now  comes  this  talk  of  what  Frank 
Gotch  will  do  to  Joe  Stecher.  Why 
all  tiic  Gotch  talk?  Stecher  has  done 
things  at  his  barely  attained  twenty- 
three  years  that  Gotch  did  not  do  in 
his  career  of  nearly  twenty  years  on 
the  mat.  This  is  no  disparagement 
of  the  ability  of  Gotch.  who  has  been 
one  of  the  greatest  wrestlers  of  all 
time;  but,  and  the  but  is  exceedingly 
ominous.  Gotch  never  beat  men  with 
the  consummate  ease  that  this  Stech- 
er boy  has  displayed  in  beating  the 
toughest  that  can  be  brought  before 
him. 

But  one  man,  since  the  youthful 
Nebraska  boy  has  really  gotten  good, 
has  made  a  siiowing  against  him.  Ed 
(Stranglcr)  Lewis  did  remain  two 
hours  on  the  mat  with  Stecher.  It  is 
claimed  that  Lewis  simply  made  a 
runaway  match  of  it  and  refused  to 
wrestle.  Be  that  as  it  may,  granting 
that  Lewis  made  a  great  showing,  the 
record  of  Stecher  is  so  startling,  so 
sensational  in  the  extreme,  as  to 
cause  a  reasoning  man  to  wonder  why 
sonie  followers  of  athletics  refuse  to 
give  Stecher  a  chance  against  Gotch. 

If  Gotch  and  Stecher  ever  wrestle, 
here  is  one  sport  follower  who  will 
string  along  with  Stecher.  The  Ne- 
braskan  is  a  marvel — and  let  there  be 
no  mistake  there.  He  is  greater  than 
he  looks — simply  because  he  does 
things  so  easily.  It  has  been  the  same 
way  with  Napoleon  La  Joie's  baseball 
playing.  Few  could  conceive  how 
great  the  big  Frenchman  was.  because 
lie  executed  every  play  as  if  it  were 
nothing. 

In  his  prime.  Gotch  would,  we  be- 
lieve, have  made  a  great  match  of  it. 
Now.  at  the  sallow  athletic  age  of 
near  forty  years,  it  seems  absurd  to 
believe  that  Gotch  can  defeat  Stecher. 

But  then,  we  shall  see.  It  will  draw 
one  of  the  greatest  crowds  of  all  time 
— and  it  will  be  a  match  between  two 
.\merican  born  athletes.  We  have  the 
best  over  here,  you  know,  and  w^ho- 
ever  wins,  the  title  will  remain  right 
here  on  this  side  of  the  water. 

OLYMnTGAMES^ 
FOUR  YEARS  HENCE 


International    Committee 

Says  Four  Cities  Want 

Big  Meet. 

raiL",  April  11. — Baron  Pit-rrc  de 
Coubertln,  prosJdent  of  the  Interna- 
tional Olympic  games  committee,  said 
yesterday  to  the  Associated  Tress  that 
no  Olympic  games  would  be  held  dur- 
ing the  present  year  or  while  the  war 
lasted.  He  also  supplemented  the  an- 
nouncement with  some  Interesting  de- 
tails. 

"Though    there    will    be    no   Olympic 

eranies  in  1916  or  during  the  war,"  said 
the  baron,  "preparations  for  the  games 
In  1920  are  being  made  so  far  as  pos- 
sible.     Four    cities    already    have    ex- 


SHORT-TIME  FURNITURE  STORAGE 

Possibly  your  lease  expires  April  1st.  and  you  can't  get  into 
your  new  place  until  May.  Then  store  your  goods  here  during  the 
montii.  Many  of  our  patrons  use  our  storage  facilities  one  or  two 
months  at  a  lime.  Clean,  dry,  sanitary,  storage  rooms.  And  very 
moderate  charges. 

DULUTH  VAN  &  STORAGE  COMPANY 

18  FOLllTH   AVENUE   WEST. 


"DUIUTH  KIDS"  BEGIN  FORMATION 
Of  BASIBAU  TEAMS  TOR  SEASON 


—riioU)  b)'  Uallieber. 


EMERSON   SCHOOL   BASEBALL  TEAM. 

With  the  coming  of  spring  every  school  boy  with  natural  tendencies  be- 
comes Interested  In  outdoor  sports,  and  the  "popular  pastime."  baseball.  Is  Just 
now  absorbing  the  attention  of  the  school  boys  of  Duluth.  It  will  not  be  long 
before  every  back    lot  and  fence  corner  will  be  the  scene  of  a  spirited  contest. 

One  of  the  earliest  teams  to  be  formed  this  spring  is  that  of  the  Emerson 
school.     There  the  boya  aro  already  organized,  and  out  for  practice. 


pressed  a  wish  to  have  the  1920  Olym- 
pic games  held  within  their  precincts 
— namely,  Antwerp,  Lyone,  Amster- 
dam and  Havana. 

"In  the  last  named  capital  the  ap- 
plication is  about  to  be  made  or  has 
been  made  to  the  Cuban  congress  for 
6,000.000  franca  on  account  of  the  pre- 
liminary expenses  alone.  Antwerp 
already  had  signified  a  desire  to  have 
the  games  held  there  before  the  war. 
.«?lnce  the  outbreak  of  the  war  the  city 
has  repeated  the  request  and  the  bur- 
gomaster has  received  a  letter  from 
King  Albert  of  Belgium  congratulat- 
ing  It   on   the   fact. 

"There  will  be  no  meeting  of  the 
International  committee  until  the  war 
Is   over." 

Asked  If  he  thought  It  likely  that 
the  sportsmen  of  the  entente  allied 
countries  would  be  willing  to  compete 
with  Germans  and  Austro-Hungarians 
in    1920,    Baron   de   Coubertln   said: 

"It  Is  Impossible  to  say  what  the 
state  of  International  feeling  will  be 
four  years  hence.  It  Is  possible  that 
Germans  and  Austrians  may  not  be 
Invited  to  participate." 

MILWAUKEE  "may  GET 
WELSH-H.AMMER  BOUT 

Milwaukee,  Wis.,  April  11. — A  local 
boxing  club  Is  negotiating  for  the 
Freddie  Welsh-Ever  Hammer  bout, 
which  had  been  originally  planned  for 
Racine,  April  17,  and  which  cannot  »^» 


carried   out   because   of   the   expiration 
of  the  Racine  club's  license. 

The  case  of  Howard  Carr,  known  as 
"Kid"  Howard,  who  was  charged  with 
assaulting  Boxing  Inspector  William 
Buelow  at  Racine  recently,  was  taken 
under  advisement  by  the  commission. 
0 

Baseball  Trades  and  Deals. 

Clilcago,  April  11. — Pete  Allison,  out- 
fielder, has  been  sold  to  New  Orleans 
in  the  Southern  association  by  the  Chi- 
cago Nationals,  says  a  dispatch  from 
Louisville.  The  Cub  squad  now  num- 
bers twenty-six  players,  nine  of  whom 
are  pitchers. 

Denver  Colo.,  April  11. — H.  L».  .Tones, 
owner  of  the  Denver  Western  league 
club,  announces  that  he  has  given  Jack 
Coffey,  former  manager,  permission  to 
negotiate  for  a  place  with  the  San 
Franoi>'co  club  of  the  Pacific  Coast 
league. 

♦ 

College  Baseball. 

Athens.  Ga..  April  11. — The  Univer- 
sity of  Georgia  baseball  team  defeated 
the  University  of  Michigan  yesterday 
by  the  followlngr  score:  R.  H.  E. 

Michigan 0     2     2 

Georgia    4     7     2 

Batteries — Miller,  Robins  and  Dunne; 
Fox  and  Rawson. 

Charlottesville,  Va.,  April  11.— The 
r'nlvorslty  of  Georgia  beat  Cornell  1  to 
2  yesterday.     Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Cornell   0000  1000  0—1     2     1 

Virginia     00100010  x— 2     6     4 

Batteries — Russell  and  Clark;  GiUo- 
■vay  and  Gwathmey. 


FORI.'  :.i  COLLEGIAN  TO 

BE  CLOSELY  WATCHED 


HERCULEAN  TASK  IS  SET 
FOR  THE  SENIOR  OARSMEN 

With  But  13  Old  Men,  Counting  the  Senior  Four 
in,  the  Dope  Figures  How  This  Small  Band  May 
Succeed  in  Winning  Ten  Races  in  the  National 
— Crew  Candidates  to  Hit  Water. 


BY  BRUCE. 

Would  it  seen.  Impossible  for  thir- 
teen senior  oarsmen  to  win  ten  races 
In    the   national    regatta? 

It  Is  now  generally  believed  that 
the  members  of  the  Duluth  senior  four 
will  row  during  the  coming  season. 
A  semi-official  announcement  to  that 
effect  was  mad©  yesterday.  If  the 
members  of  the  famous  four  come  out, 
Ned  Ten  Eyck  will  have  just  thir- 
teen seniors — Kent,  Emmons.  Arons, 
Hall.  Grant.  Forestal,  Harney  and 
Morrison  in  the  eight;  Hoover  in  the 
sculling  events,  and  the  members  of 
the    senior   four. 

Let's  trail  along  with  the  dppe  for 
a  brief  distance. 

It  is  believed  Dave  Horak  will  stand 
an  excellent  chance  of  winning  the 
intermediate  single  In  the  national. 
There  is  reason  to  believe  that  the 
Moore  brothers  will  also  liave  a  very 
good  opportunity  of  winning  the  in- 
termcciatJ  double.  The  sen'or  four 
will  row  as  a  senior  quadruple  and 
should  win  that  event.  Walter  Hoover 
stands  a  very  good  chance  of  win- 
ning three  single  races  this  season — 
the  quarter  mile  dash,  association  sin- 
gles of  a  mile  and  a  quarter  and  the 
championship  event  over  the  same  dis- 
tance. Thtn  there  are  the  two  events, 
the  national  and  International  four, 
that  the  senior  four  will  be  entered 
in.  Count  that  up  and  add  the  senior 
eight  race  to  it  and  the  senior  dou- 
ble, which  Kent  and  Hoover  will  com- 
pete In,  and  you  have  ten  races  that 
may    be    won    by    thirteen   men. 

There  are  Just  thirteen  senior  oars- 
men out  at  the  present  time,  and  It 
doesn't  appear  as  If  there  will  be  any 
additions  to  this  squad.  Frank  Wil- 
liams and  Charley  Whiteside  will  not 
be  back  this  year.  It  Is  rather  certain. 
Therefore  some  great  work  will  fall 
on  the  broad  and  capable  shoulders 
of  what  seniors  remain  In  the  squad. 
A  New  SeiUor  Eight. 

If  the  members  of  the  senior  four 
come  out  this  season  they  will  not 
row  in  the  eight.  This  year  will  be  the 
first  time  since  1913  that  Horak,  the 
two  Moores,  and  Rheinberger  have  not 
sat  at  the  sweeps  of  a  Duluth  eight. 

In  1913  Horak  stroked  the  famous 
eight  that  won  both  the  intermediate 
and  senior  eight  events  In  the  nation- 
al. In  1914  the  senior  four  rowed  in 
the  senior  eight  and  again  last  year. 
This  year  it  is  the  Intention  of  Ned 
Ten  Eyck  to  row  the  four  boys  In  the 


TRACK  MEET 
WEDNESDAY 

Central  and  "Y"  Athletes 

Will  Hold  Annual 

Competition. 


two  four  events,  the  squad,  and  row 
Horak  in  the  intermediate  single  and 
the  Moores  in  the  intermediate  double. 

Also,  It  might  be  stated,  that  Max 
Rheinberger  will  very  likely  be  started 
In  the  Intermediate  single  in  the  North, 
western    regatta. 

It  will  be  going  some,  should  thir- 
teen men  win  ten  events,  but  then 
Duluth  and  the  country  at  large  have 
become  rather  accustomed  to  witness- 
ing the  performance  of  prodigious  row- 
ing feats  upon  the  part  of  the  mem- 
bers of  the  Duluth  Boat  club  rowing 
squad. 

May  Hit  the  Water. 

Ten  Eyck  may  get  his  men  out  on 
the  water  sometime  today.  The  briny 
debut  has  been  postpor^ed  because  of 
the  ice  in  the  baj'.  One  day  the  wind 
blows  the  Ice  out  and  the  next  day 
a  contrary  wind  blows  the  ice  in  again. 
If  the  sun  continues  to  labor,  there 
will  be  little  left  to  hold  up  the  water 
work. 

The  two  Moores,  Phil  and  Dug,  and 
Dave  Horak  are  working  on  the  ma- 
chines. It  Is  expected  that  Rhein- 
berger will  be  out  in  the  near  future. 
A  definite  announcement  to  the  effect 
that  the  members  of  this  famous  four 
are  to  row,  will  surely  lift  a  load 
of  worry  from  the  shoulders  of  Coach 
Ten  Eyck  and  the  loyal  followers  of 
the   club. 


Star  Men  Will   Be   Pitted 

Against  Each  Other 

for  Honors. 


VOLLMER  WINS  AND 

MAKES  NEW  RECORD 

New  York,  April  11.— Herbert  Voll- 
mer  of  the  New  York  Athletic  club 
made  a  now  world's  record  In  winning 
the  220-yard  national  A.  A.  U.  swim- 
ming championship  here  last  night. 
The  time  was  2  minutes  and  23  2-5  sec- 
onds. Vollnier  finished  about  eight 
yards  ahead  of  Perry  McGilllvray  of 
the  Illinois  A.  C.  Tedford  Cann  of 
the  New  York  A.  C.  was  third. 

Arthur  McAleenan  of  the  New  York 
A.  C,  retained  his  title  at  fancy  diving 
with  144  points.  Frank  Mullen  and  B. 
Lawrence  of  the  same  club  finished 
second  and  third  with  137.25  and  131.8 
points,  respectively. 

In  a  special  100-yard  race.  Duke  Ka- 
hanamoku  won  In  51  3-5  seconds. 

Fight  Fifteen-Round  Draw. 

Denver,  Colo..  April  11. — Benny 
Chavez  of  Trinidad,  Colo.,  and  "Chick- 
Hayes  of  Indianapolis  fought  a  15- 
round  draw  here  last  night.  They  are 
featherweights. 


One  of  the  best  track  meets  that 
has  ever  been  held  In  this  city  Is 
carded  for  tomorrow  evening  at  the 
"Y"  gymnasium,  when  the  athletes  of 
Central  high  school  and  the  local  Y.  M. 
C.  A.  clash  In  their  annual  dual  affair. 

Last  year  the  meet  attracted  a  lot 
of  attention  and  some  excellent  recor'l.i 
were  made.  The  affair  resulted  In  a 
tie.  and  there  was  little  to  choose  be- 
tween the  showing  of  the  younger  and 
the  older  men. 

So  great  was  the  success  made  la.et 
year  that  it  was  determined  to  con- 
tinue the  event  this  year.  It  had  or- 
iginally been  set  for  next  Friday  eve- 
ning, but  recently  it  was  changed  to 
Wednesday  nlgh^t,  tomorrow,  and  the 
representative  teams  of  both  places  are 
in  fine  fettle  for  even  a  harder  fight 
than  last  year's  affair.  The  older  ath- 
letes of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  are  considerably 
more  experienced,  but  their  young  op- 
ponents from  Central  hope  to  offset  this 
by  their  hard  practice  and  fine  physical 
trim. 

One  of  the  features  of  the  meet  will 
be  the  appearance  on  the  "Y"  team  of 
Harold  Kelley.  former  University  of 
Pennsylvania  star,  and  a  shining  light 
in  several  A.  A.  U.  meets  throughout 
the  country.  Central  is  grooming  sev- 
eral men  to  pit  against  this  star,  young 
McKay  being  one  of  the  best  of  them. 

The  work  of  Skull  Hrutflord.  noted 
Central  athlete  and  one  of  the  best  hlgH 
school  dash  men  In  the  state,  will  also 
be  watched  with  considerable  intere.«!t 
by  local  enthusiasts.  Hrutflord  wasj 
the  shining  individual  star  of  the  bl^ 
Northwestern  Interscholastlc  meet  held 
here  last  June,  starred  in  all  Ontral 
Indoor  and  outdoor  meets  held  last 
year,  and  then  wound  up  a  great  sea- 
son by  journeying  down  to  the  state 
meet  and  coming  back  with  two  big 
cups  for  first  places  and  a  medal  for  a 
second  place,  tielng  with  Hutchinson 
of  Faribault  for  the  highest  Individual 
honors  of  the  state. 

The  event  tomorrow  night  has  at- 
tracted a  lot  of  attention  around  these 
parts,  and  it  Is  expected  that  there 
will    be    a    big    turnout    by    local    en- 


When  youVe  cleane<} 
out  your  ^^  at  the 

noon  hour  fill  your  oU 
e^ifK  PEERLESS 

tobacco  or^inkyour 
into  o  chewofthij 


«■■■ 


tiia« 


man  site  Lpn^  Qjt  and 
^t  some  ^(^;  into  yow 
system  PEERLESS 
always  hits  the  ^^^ 

for  satisfaction. 


PEERLESS  is  Pure  Southern 
Kentucky  leaf,  made  rich  and 
sweet,  with  plenty  of  "body,"  by 
three  to  five  years'  ageing. 

You  get  all  this  richness  in 
your  pipe  or  chew  when  you  use 
PEERLESS. 


GEORC^  SISLER. 


/< 


There  is  no  player  In  the  American  league  who  will  be  watched  closer  than 
George  Sisler  of  the  St.  Louis  Browns.  This  youngster  went  from  the  University 
of  Mithigan  team  to  the  big  league  and  made  one  of  the  roost  sensational 
records  of  any  young  player  breaking  into  the  league.  Sisler  played  nearly 
every  position  on  the  St.  Louis  team — and  played  It  well.  Originally  a  pitcher, 
his  hitting  ability  caused  Branch  Rickey  to  play  him  In  the  In  and  outfields. 
Sisler  Is  expected  to  prove  a  sensation  this  season. 


PEERLESS  has  been  the  same 
fine  old  satisfying  tobacco  for  50 
years.  It  gives  you  the  limit  of 
tobacco  enjoyment 

All  PEERLESS  wants  is  a 
chance  to  make  good — try  it  today. 
Sold  everywhere  in  5c  packages. 

Other  sizes:  10c,  20c  and  40c  Packages  and  45c  Tin  Pails. 
THE  AMERICAN  TOBACCO  COMPANY 


.^X^"  t  -^y^^  _^^^^ 


F.F.ADAIIIIS&Ca 


n.  «1«ill»«  TokMC  C,  Mmtf 


mm^ 


''•'PL; 
;.(pnhr 


i 


PEERLESS 


■^ 


■^ 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE     I 


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s 


Tuesday, 


THE    DULUTHi  HERALD. 


Apni  11, 1916. 


13 


thusiasts.  Both  a  clo»e  and  exciting 
meet  and  some  record  events  are  ex- 
pected  to  be  held. 

EMERAlF 
WIN  PENNANT 


Grand  Bowling  League  Sea- 
son Is  Brought  to  a 
Close. 


The  Emerald  team  of  the  Grand 
Bowling  league  last  evening  won  the 
pennant  by  taking  three  straight 
games  from  tho  Schneiders.  It  was 
only  nert-Bsary  for  the  Emeralds  to 
win  the  first  game  of  the  series  to 
clinch  their  claim  to  the  flag. 

Lia.st  t-vonlnK's  games  finished  the 
league  season.  Th»!  season  has  been 
one  of  the  most  successful  In  tho  his- 
tory   of    local    bowling. 

Tony  I.<eonp  was  high-score  man 
with  a  mark  of  258.  Some  of  the  best 
rolling   of   the   year   wa*   shown. 

The  scores   In   detail: 

Pinal   iftandlnK    Leaders. 

Played.   Won.   Lo.st. 

Emeralds     76  65  20 

Kchnelders    76  49  26 


Emeralds. 

McDonald     212     192  172- 

Camp     200     186  224- 

Huyck     188     207  153- 

Mack      218     167  198- 

Leone    268     176  185- 


676 
610 
648 
578 
619 


Totals      1071  928 

SrKnelders. 

Plerlng     170  196 

HanKon     166  158 

Randall     190  123 

Schneider     194  156 

Kemp     216  192 

Total*     934 

I^arkJe*. 

Peterson     t40 

Hanriu.i     171 

Wltchall     169 

Cox     112 

I.ACkle     177 


932 — 2.931 


170- 
234- 
H4- 
209- 
172- 


63>> 
567 
467 
659 
679 


826      929—2,688 


128 
140 
147 
137 
168 


Totals      769     720 

Prortor    D.,    M.    * 


Averson      154 

Relnke    172 

C'hrlstensen     156 

Neumann      212 

Murray      211 

Ti)tal9     904 

Stami. 

Sundby      183 

Kohnen     178 

T?urke     200 

liaker    167 

Nelson     196 


160 
146 
177 
160 
216 


868     934— 2.6f>6 


186 
144 
202 
151 
174 


Totals  92S  866 


166- 

146- 

170- 

135 

168- 

785- 


6.1  < 
468 
672 
453 
637 

.564 


GREAT  CONTEST  ON  IN 
.  MAJOR  BOWLING  LEAGUE 

Oak  Halls  and  Elcoras  Tied  for  First  Place;  Fritz 
Stiegler  and  Bob  Berini  in  Close  Tilt  for  In- 
dividual Honors — Finah  Games  Scheduled  for 
Next  Week. 


Boreniens. 

Baehr  149  148  158—  467 

Ed  Fisher  179  199  144—  622 

A.  .Tohn.ion  149  148  162—  4S9 

Art    Klsher    166     144  140—  449 

G.    Wallin    HI      174  154—  469 


Totals     77S     818     766—2.842 


HOUGHTON  WILL  AGAIN 
COACH  HARVARD  TEAM 

Cambridge.  Mass..  April  11. — Percy 
P.  Haughton  has  been  re-engaged  for 
another  term  of  years  to  coach  the 
Harvard  football  team,  the  athletic 
committee   annoTinoed   last   nlpfht. 

Ijeo  Leary.  who  has  been  for  some 
time  one  of  Haughton's  chii-f  assist- 
ants, also  has  been  engagod  as  field 
roach.  The  announcement  was  made  at 
the  conclusion  of  a  long  motting  and 
contained  no  particulars  as  to  the 
terms  of  the  contracts. 

Haufrhton's  previous  contract  expired 
last  fall,  after  Caot.  Mahan's  eleven 
had  overwlxlmed  Yale,  41  to  0.  Since 
then  Haughton  had  become  president  of 
the  Boston  National  League  Ruseball 
club  and  If  was  feared  his  new  activi- 
ties would  Interfere  with  his  gridiron 
work. 


DncKelor'M   Trial    Set. 

0.«.hkosh.  Wi.s..  April  11. — The  trial 
of  A.  A.  llftchelor,  former  steward  at 
the  Northern  hospital  for  the  Insane, 
who  is  charged  with  embezzlement 
and  larceny  by  tho  bailee,  was  sot  for 
May   15. 


OPENING  OF 

ZENITH  ATHLETIC 
&  SOCIAL  CLUB 

209  and  21 1  WEST  MICHIGAN  ST. 
WetliM'^tiay   Kv<'nin|C,  April   12. 

BOXING, 
WRESTLING,   ETC. 

Admission,  25c. 


One  week  from  today  will  bring 
about  the  close  of  the  Major  Bowlln>; 
league  season.  The  present  season  is 
by  far  tho  most  successful  in  the  his- 
tory of  the  game.  The  quality  of  play 
has  been  higher,  the  competition 
closer  and  the  Interest  the  greatest 
ever    manifested. 

By  winning  three  games  In  a  row 
from  the  Sharkcrafts.  the  Elcora  team 
wont  into  a  tie  with  the  Oak  Halls. 
These  teams  will  fight  it  out  for  first 
place.  The  team  score  of  the  Klcoras 
Is  ;»28  for  sixty-nine  games,  while  that 
of  the  Oak  Halls  is  920.  Figuring  the 
dope  along  this  line,  together  with  the 
.yensatlonal  finishing  powers  that  are 
b»lpg  displayed  by  the  cigar  men,  it 
looks  an  if  the  members  of  the  Oak 
Hall  squad   have  a  lot  to  fear. 

The  Sharkerafts  are  three  games 
b"^hlnd  the  leaders  and  the  Rig  Du- 
lutha  are  two  games  behind  the 
Sharks. 

lieiini  of  tl>«  Oak  Halls  dropped 
back  Into  second  place  in  the  indi- 
vidual averages  after  loading  the  race 
during  the  greater  part  of  tne  season. 
Herlni  has  an  average  of  194  and  a 
fraction  for  his  season's  work  to  date, 
with  Fritz  Stiegler  leading  the  Indi- 
vidual average  procession  with  a  mark 
of   195  and  a  frHotlon  points. 

Tho  big  battle  of  tonight  will  be 
between  the  Oak  Halls  and  Shark- 
crafts.  The  Elcoras  will  make  a  lusty 
attempt  to  defeat  the  Kmpress  team 
and  th<>  Big  Duluths  will  fight  It  out 
with  the  Fitzgerald  &  Winchester 
team. 

Following  are  the  complete  scores 
and  standings   to  date: 

Team     iitau«llng. 

Won.  Lost.  Pet. 

Elnra      42       27       .609 

Oak     Halls     42        27        .609 

Sharkoraft     39        80       .666 

Big     Duluth     37        32        .136 

Fitzgerald- Wlncl'ester      .27       42       .392 

Empress    Coffee    20       49       .290 

Pin  Average. 

(ianios.    H.  S.    Ave. 

Elcor.a     69     1068       928 

Big    Diilu'li     69      1026        926 

Oak    Halls    69     1026        920 


NEW  PLAYERS 
FOR  NORTHERN 

Some    Stars    Are    Being 

Signed  for  the  Burmeis- 

ter  Circuit. 


907 
902 
868 


Sharkcraft    «»     1083 

Fltxj^rald-Winchester     .69     1029 

Empress    Coffee    69        977 

1915-19    Leagwe    Record*. 
High     team     score,     three      games. 

Oak     Hall     2.962 

High    team    score,    one    game.    El- 
cora       1.058 

High       Individual        score.        three 

games.    Stiegler,    Big    Duluth...     692 
High    Individual   score,   one    game. 

Stiegler.     Big     Duluth     276 

1914-15    League    Records. 
High    team     score.       three    games. 

Park     Hotel     i.970 

High    team    score,    one    game.    Big 

Duluth    and    Sharkcraft,    tie 1.066 

High       Individual       score,        three 

games.     Firestrne.     v'olumbia. .  .     670 
High    Individual    score,    one    game. 

Weston,     .'^harkotafi      268 

ludlvldHal  ATeragea^ 
Games 

Stiegler      66 

Berini      63 

Deller     68 

Whitney     66 

Otterson     69 

Meyers     69 

Schultz     66 

Sturm     6 

Stauss     69 

Olsen     67 

Wad-;     68 

Root 69 

Neumann     66 

Bummers      60 

Foster 61 

Server     34 

Murphy       69 

Kainpmann     66 

Johnacjn     64 

McFarlane     81 

Da;igherty     21 

Ptac»k       47 

Michalek     39 

Speir     36 

Taraldson      61 

i  Weston     61 

Randall    60 

Jenswold      64 

Hilber     66 

TrevIlUon      69 

McKenna     68 

Brown 39 

Wendell      16 

Michael    43 

I  Berkley      30 

I  Beth  jne     86 


•ot.  Pins 

Ave. 

12.916 

196.46 

12.284 

194.62 

13.049 

191.61 

12.626 

189.62 

12.992 

188.20 

12.960 

187.67 

12.S46 

187.4 

1.124 

187.2 

12,904 

187.1 

12.616 

186.63 

10.806 

186.18 

12.788 

185.21 

12.230 

18620 

11,066 

184.25 

11.246 

184.21 

6.262 

184.6 

12.692 

182.34 

12,040 

182.28 

11.637 

181.53 

6.625 

181.14 

3.812 

181.11 

8.458 

179.45 

6,999 

179.18 

6.469 

179.15 

10.918 

178.55 

9,124 

178.46 

8.941 

178.41 

9.621 

178.9 

11,700 

177.18 

10.366 

177. 

10,266 

177. 

6.868 

176.4 

2,612 

X74.2 

7,464 

178.15 

6.208 

178.13 

6,178 

171.22 

'Mjn 


WRUAM  BRADY. 


Medical  Versus  Surgical  Treaiment  of  Goiter 

kki  f  ta 


John  Burmelster^  president  of  the 
Northorn  it^ague.  has  completed  all 
preparatory  arrangements  for  the 
opening  of  the  minor  baseball  organ- 
ization and  actual  practice  will  be 
begun  In  several  of  the  cities  within 
the    uoxt    week. 

Although  there  are  only  six  clubs 
comprising  the  Northern  league.  Presi- 
dent Burmelster  predicts  more  speed 
and  class  than  the  average  organiza- 
tion of  the  same  classification.  At 
Superior,  Manager  Bratlgan  has 
rounded  up  a  galaxy  of  players  In 
which  a  few  minor  league  stars  ap- 
pear. Smith,  who  was  the  leading 
twirler  of  the  Wisconsin-Illinois 
league  In  1914,  will  pitch  for  the  Wis- 
consin city  club.  His  pitching  aver- 
age In  1914  was  .850.  seventeen  out  of 
twenty-nine  games  resulting  In  vic- 
tories for  his  club.  Donaldson,  for- 
merly of  the  Madison  club.  Is  another 
pitcher  who  is  expected  to  show  steam 
In  the  Burmelster  league,  while  Mor- 
rison, who  was  a  member  of  the  Ap- 
pleton  club  two  years.  nrMi.y  sign.  Al 
Walm.  Tony  Burgwald.  Ted  Burgwald. 
Bailies  and  Mueller  are  other  players 
signed  by  Superior. 

Charles  Moll,  formerly  president  of 
the  Wisconsin-Illinois  league,  Is  man- 
aging the  Winnipeg  club  In  the  North- 
ern circuit  this  year.  Moll  has  not 
announcod  the  personnel  of  his  club 
aa   yet. 

E.  C.  Berger.  a  catcher,  whose  work 
during  the  last  two  years  has  excited 
a     great     deal     of     interest,     has     been 


LOOSE  LEAF 
DEVICES 


F.If.IiiUf»4S9PtU^^ 


n/\  oi 


PRIIMTI  NO 


408  WEST  FIRSl  SIREfcl 


THE  UNION  STAMP 


IS  THE  PEACEFUL,  UP- 
LIFTING, EDUCATIONAL 
ECONOMIC  EMBLEM  OF 
THE  ORGANIZED  SHOE  WORKERS! 

It  aims  to  secure  bigger,  better  and  happier  working  and 
living  conditions  for  Union  Shoe  Workers  by  progressive 
means ;  never  by  destructive  measures. 


\m  UNION  STAMP  SHOES 


BOOT  AND  SHOE  WORKERS'  UNION 

246  SUMMER  STREET,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Write  for  list  of  union  shoe  factories. 
Affiliated  With  American  Federation  of  Labor. 


grabbed  by  the  Milwaukee  club.  Moll 
eatpected  to  sign  up  Berger.  but  the 
association  club's  offer  proved  the 
prize  Incentive  for  the  yoimgster.  The 
Winnipeg  squad  will  train  at  White 
Water,   Wis.,    this  spring. 


At  intervals  we  hii^«  itated  that,  of 
the  three  types  of  potter,  the  simple 
goiter  of  young  girls  is  curable  Ly 
good    general    medlcl)^    treatment    pK'S 

pintenc«;  the  cystic 
goiter,    the    largest 
goiter,    Is    incurable 
bjr    any    known 
method   except  sur- 
gical   excision;    and 
the      exophthalmic 
gqlter.  which  is  «->  • 
ly  part  of  a  srrlous 
systemic    dli*turu- 
aqce    showp    by 
m  a,'r  k  e  d   nervous- 
n  e«  s,      paipttatlcn, 
rapid    heart,   promi- 
nent  or    b  u  1  g  1  n  < 
ejj^jg.   tremor  and 
u     '^'^WLU^EEXiA      general      weakness, 
r '"  '  ^f  Jm      fc^eJ  Is  curable  In  three- 
mJJAM  BI2ACV  MI>  fourths  of  the  cases 
■^"  by    careful    medical 
treatment    plus    complete    rest,    and    In 
about  one-fourth  of  the  cases  the  dis • 
ease  Is  so  severe,  the  general  strength 
and  life   Itself  is  bo  much  endangered, 
that  operation   must   be  resorted  to  as 
a  heroic  measure. 

Still  a  great  many  people  wrlt«  to 
aFk  If  we  will  "kindly  recommend  a 
cure  for  goiter."  As  well  ask  a  d  -ctor 
to  suggest  a  good  remedy  for  geae.^al 
weakness   or   that   tli'ed   feeling. 

Sometime.'*  even  simple  goiter,  which 
causes  no  symptoms  other  than  the  an- 
noyance  of  the  large  neck.  Is  operated 
upon  when  it  fails  to  respond  to  simple 
trcatniont,  rather  to  4niprovo  the  pa- 
tient's appearance  thap  for  any  othsr 
reason.  ^• 

In  the  average  surtreon's  hand.')  vhe 
operation*  usually  performed  for  ex- 
ophthalmic goiter  are  fairly  successful, 
though  by  no  means  a  radical  cure, 
such  as  you  would  expect  In  an  opera- 
tion for  hernia  or  weeping  sinew.  Thus, 
of  121  patients  operated  upon  for  ex- 
ophthalmic goiter  in  one  of  our  best 
cli.ilcs  and  traced  afterward.  65  were 
reported  cured;  22  patients  continued  at 
times  to  have  mild  relapses  under  the 
effects  of  nervous  strain,  though  pretty 
well  most  of  the  time;  7  were  improved, 
but  had  still  some  evidence  of  the  old 
trouble;  6  were  slightly  Improved:  8 
failed  to  derive  benefit  from  the  opera- 
tion; 9  were  operated  upon  a  second 
time;  21  died.  7  of  th«m  soon  after 
operation.  Thus  the  operation  for 
exophthalmic  goiter  i«  to  be  considered 
a  fairly  successful,  but'  not  a  radical 
or  surely  curative   treatment. 


The  best  outlook  for  a  patient  with 
exophthalmic  goiter  Is  an  early  course 
of  medical  treatment,  aided  by  pro- 
longed rest — an  open-air  rest  cure.  If 
possible,  such  as  that  commonly  em- 
ployed for  incipient  or  early  tubercu- 
losis. This  method  of  treatment  gives 
76  per  cent  of  cures,  a  better  record 
than  the  best  surgery  can  show — 
though  of  course  surgery  is  the  resort 
of  the  worst  clises.  The  damaging  ele- 
ment in  exophthalmic  goiter  is  the  ex- 
cessive secretion  of  the  thyroid  gland, 
which  produces  all  the  alarming  symp- 
toms. The  enlargement  of  the  neck 
may  be  so  slight  as  to  escape  c>'en  a 
physician's  notice,  yet  the  pat'ent  suf- 
fers the  nervous  and  circulatory  symp- 
toms in  a  marked  dei^ree.  And  the 
disease  Is  seen  in  men  and  women,  and 
from  the  age  of  3  years  to  the  age 
of  60. 


How  Nuxated  Iron  Helped  Me 
To  Whip  Frank  Moran 

Jess  Willard  Tells  Secret  of  His  Easy  Victory— Also 

Reveals  Hitherto  Untold  Secret  of  His  Great 

Triumph  Over  Jack  Johnson;  Says 

IRON   IS   GREATEST  OF 
ALL  STRENGTH  BUILDERS 


BASEBALL 


Harvard  Defeats  Red  Sox. 

Boston,  Mass.,  April  11. — The  world's 
champion  Boston  Americans  were  de- 
feated by  the  Harvard  university  nine 
yesterday  1  to  0.  Fielding  form  de- 
cided the  game,  the  Red  Sox  erring  fre- 
quently, while  the  Crimson  fielded 
without  a  flaw.  Batting  honors  were 
about  even.  Walker,  who  played  cen- 
ter field  for  the  Red  Sox  In  place  ol^ 
Speaker,  made  one  single  In  his  four 
times  at  bat.  The  Crimson  run  was 
due  to  Gardner's  error,  Harte's  hit  and 
Knowles'  infield  rap,  which  was  safe 
because     of     the     slow     fielding.  Score: 

R.  H.  E. 

Harvard    000  100000 — 1     4     0 

Boston     000000     0  0 — 0     5     4 

Batteries — Mahan.  Garrett  and  Harte; 
Gregg,  McHale   and  Agncw. 


Tigers  Take  Deciding  Game. 

Kansas  City,  Mo.,  April  11. — Veach's 
homo  run  in  the  sixth  inning  broke  tho 
tie  in  yesterday's  gan»e  between  the 
Detroit  Americans  and  the  Kansas 
City  American  association  team,  De- 
troit winning  2  to  1.  Cunningham  and 
Dubuc  pitched  well,  letting  down  the 
locals  with  four  hits.     Score;       R.H.  ll. 

Detroit     2     8     1 

Kansas    City    I     4     2 

Batteries — Cunningham,  Dubuc  and 
Stanagc,  Baker;  Crutchcr,  Sanders,  Re- 
gan and  Berry. 

Browns  Defeat  Cardinals. 

St.  Louis,  Mo.,  April  11. — Four  sin- 
gles, a  base  on  balls  and  two  sacrifice 
files  netted  the  St.  Louis  Americans 
three  runs,  enough  to  win  the  final 
game  of  tlie  city  series  from  the  St. 
Louis  Nationals  here  yesterday  S  to  1. 
Score;  R.  H.  E. 

Amelrcans    S     6     0 

Nationals    1     4     1 

Batteries — Parks,  McCabe  and  dem- 
ons; Doak,  Ames,  Jasper,  Williams  and 
Snyder,  Gonzales. 


aUESTIOXS     AND     ANSWERS. 

Cause  of  Apoplexy  or  Stroke  of 
Paralysis. 

What  causes  cerebral  hemorrhage  in 
a  person  with  hard  arteries?  Is  it  a 
usual  occurrence  in  persons  so  af- 
flicted?    Is   it  usually  fatal? 

Answer — Too  hearty  eating,  alcoholic 
indulgence,  constipation,  anger,  excite- 
ment, excessive  exertion  of  any  kind 
might  cause  the  fragile  sclerosed  ar- 
tery in  tho  brain  to  rupture  and  bleed 
— that  is  a  stroke  of  paralysis,  or  apo- 
plexy, or  cerebral  hemorrhage.  It  is 
not  a  usual  occurrence,  but  Just  a  pos- 
sibility in  a  case  of  pronounced  ar- 
terial disease.  It  is  fatal  in  about  a 
third   of  the  cases. 

Aspirin   Depresses  the   Heart. 

Please  advise  me  if  aspirin  Is  a  hab- 
it-forming drug,  and  if  It  weakens  the 
heart. 

Answer — It  Isn't,  but  some  people  do 
form  the  aspirin  habit.  Like  all  coal- 
tar  derivatives,  it  is  depressing  to  the 
heart.  It  is  certainly  not  a  drug  to  l>a 
taken  without  medical  supervision.* 

Baby  Has  Head   Sweats. 

My  baby,  8  months  old,  has  been 
raised  on  diluted  cow's  milk  and  lime- 
water.  What  makes  him  sweat  so  at 
night,    particularly   about    the    head? 

Answer — Probably  insufficient  nour- 
ishment. At  8  months  the  baby  shoulj 
be  taking  nearly  or  quite  undiluted 
milk.  Also  some  clear  beef  or  mutton 
broth,  fresh  fruit  Juices,  and.  In  some 
Instances,  fresh  cream  added  to  t^-e 
milk.  Head  sweats  suggest  a  tendency 
to  rickets — which  is  due  to  faulty  nu- 
trition. 


Dr.  Brady  will  answ.-r  ftll  signed  letUrs  pertaining  to  hetUh.  If  your  (jriMtion  Is  of  general  interest  it  will  b« 
tnnr«>r«<l  through  these  roluirau:  If  not  It  will  be  an^iwered  personally  If  stamped,  addressed  envelope  is  enolostd. 
I>r.  Brady  irill  not  pretrrtbe  for  Indlridual  rases  or  in:ike  diagnoseit.  Address,  Dr.  William  Bridj-,  care  of  tUa 
newspaper.     I^rotected  by  The  Adams  NVwipaper  Sonrlce. 


CITY  TEAMS 
PREPARING 

Twilight  and  Intermediate 

Baseball  Leagues  Plan 

an  Early  Start. 


Piiiliies  Win  From  Senators. 

Washington.  April  11. — The  Phlladel- 
phia  Nationals  yesterday  won,  2  to  1, 
the  last  of  their  exhibition  games  her« 
with  the  Washington  Americans.  In 
the  eighth,  with  the  score  a  tie  and 
the  bases  filled  by  a  scratch  hit  and 
two  passt's.  Gallia  forced  over  the  win- 
ning run   by  walking  Bancroft.     Score: 

T>      IJ      1^ 

Philadelphia    0  0  010  0  0  10—2'    4     1 

Washington    00000010  0—1     6     2 

l^atterl-^s  --  Alexander.  JlcQulllen, 
Mayer  and  Fish;  Johnson,  Harper,  Gal- 
lia and  Williams,  Henry. 

Cubs  1 1 ;  Colonels  5. 

Louisville.  Ky.,  April  11.— The  Chi- 
cago Nationals  easily  defeated  the 
L<oulsvlllo  American  association  club 
here  yesterday.     Score-  R.  H.  E. 

Chicago    1114     8 

Louisville    6     5     4 

Batteries  —  Vaughn.  Packard  and 
.\rcher,  Fisher:  Mlddleton,  Ring  and 
Williams,  De  Long. 

Lexington  Defeats  Brewers. 

Lexington,  Ky..  April  11. — The  Lex- 
ington team  of  the  Ohio  State  league 
defeated  tho  Milwaukee  American  as- 
sociation here  yesterday  by  the  follow, 
in  score:  R.  H.  E. 

Lexington 8     F     2 

MUwaukeo     • 0     6     0 

Uatterles — Thomas.  GonnaKe.  Pl<»rcy 
a»-.d  Keed;  Slapnlcka.  Hutchinson  and 
Allen.   Farrell. 


Roy  S.  Hague  of  the  Big  Dulutha, 
was  last  night  elected  president  of 
the  Twilight  Ba.seball  league,  at  a 
meeting  of  enthusiasts  held  In  the 
Kelley  Hardware  company  store.  Har- 
vey Smith  was  named  as  secretary, 
and  Da>-e  Larson  of  the  Northern 
Hardware  company  was  made  treas- 
urer. 

Last  year  the  Oak  Halls,  Colum- 
blas.  B'g  Dulutlis  and  Kelley  Hard- 
ware company  teams  were  In  the 
league.  Two  new  teams  will  be  in 
the  league  during  the  present  sea- 
son, the  Glass  Block  store  and  North- 
ern Hardware  company  teams  agree- 
ing   to    coma    in. 

W.  N.  Hart  of  the  Kelley  company, 
A.  K.  Squires  of  the  Columbia,  and 
R.  D.  Annls  of  the  Northern  Hardware 
company  were  named  as  members  of 
the    arbitration    committee. 

Carl  Llngwall  will  manage  tire  Big 
Duluth  team.  Lawrence  Nelson  will 
have  charge  of  the  Oak  Halls,  C.  H. 
Deppe  will  have  charge  of  the  Glass 
Block  plavers.  Vice  C^o  will  pilot 
the  Columbia  players,  NT  J.  Smith  the 
Kelltys.  and  Dave  Lawon  the  North- 
erns. /  ,  .     .   ^ 

Russ  Barkell  was/esterday  elected 
captain  of  the   Kellap  Hardware   team. 

The  games  of  nie  league  will  be 
called  at  6:30  p.  OJ.  There  will  be  a 
meeting  of  the  lerfgue  executives  held 
next  Monday  evening,  when  It  will  be 
decided  where  the  grames  will  be 
played. 

Intermediate  League  Formed. 

At  a  meeting  held  last  evening  In  the 


THREE  PERFECT  SCORES. 

Michigan,  Washington  and  Norwich 
Schools  Star  in  National  Rifle  Shoot. 

Washington.  April  11. — Teams  repre- 
senting Michigan  agricultural  college, 
Washington  state  college  and  Norwich 
university,  again  made  perfect  scores 
of  1,000  In  the  final  week  of  the  Na- 
tional Rifle  association's  intercollegiate 
rifle  matches  which  ended  last  Sat- 
urday. Aggregate  scores  for  the  thir- 
teen weeks  the  matches  were  In  prog- 
ress have  not  yet  been  compiled.  Teams 
ranking  next  to  the  leaders  In  the 
scores  for  last  week  were: 

West  Virginia.  »»9;  Cornell.  998; 
State  University  of  Iowa.  9»7:  Massa- 
chusetts agricultural  and  Kotre  Dame. 
995  each;  Nebraska  and  Columbia,  991 
each;  Johns  Hopkins  989;  Vermont, 
Maine  and  Princeton,  M6  each. 


"TIZ"  FOR  TIRED 
PUFFENP  FEET 

Instant    Relief    for    Sore, 

Aching,  Tender,  Calloused 

Feet  and  Corns. 


«<Pbll,Jolum7.  PuUl' 


Fenton-Duby  store,  the  Duluth  Inter- 
mediate Baseball  league  was  organized. 
The  league  is  for  teams  made  up  of 
players  between  the  ages  of  16  and  19 
years.  It  Is  believed  that  the  league 
will  prove  one  of  the  banner  baseball 
organizations  of  the  city,  as  in  the  past 
a  vast  amount  of  Interest  has  been  ex- 
hibited In  all  games  played  between 
the  younger  teams. 

There  will  be  a  meeting  of  the 
league  held  within  the  next  two  week.s. 
when  It  is  planned  to  make  a  rough 
draft  of  the  schedule,  elect  managers 
of  the  various  teams  and  prepare  for 
the  season.  If  the  enthusiasm  dis- 
played by  the  team  representatives  In 
last  evening's  meeting  Is  an  indication 
of  what  may  be  expected  during  the 
season,  then  the  success  of  the  orgaiil. 
zation  is  assure**        ..  y, 

■^-«*v.oM*     .,  -n  last  year, 

K{  ivo^"  ^^„.^  itl-ed  through- 

out the  oeasOu  •t  ^  -  <Jpd  some  real 
baseball.  With  a  .Ir.  *Teague  behind 
the  teams  and  ai\  age  classification  to 
govern  the  playing,  there  is  every  rea- 
son to  helleve  the  league  will  prov 
eminently  successful. 

Following  were  the  teams  and  their 
representatives  that  attended  the  meet- 
ing: 

Park  Points — Charles  Trwln.  George 
Swanstrom,   Ward   Anderson. 

Colunibias — Earl  Shaw.  Many  Rosen- 
berg. 

Gordons — H.  Garvish,  O.  Cohen,  M. 
Carsner. 

American  Meats — Tom  Brackett,  Phil 
Itfanilla. 

Fairmonts — D.  Bijould.  D.  Moberg, 
W.   Nvstrom. 

Garflelds— W.   H.   Murphy. 

Zeniths — Dewey  Scanlon. 

Age  limit  was  fixed  at  19   years. 


Ordinary  Nuxated  Iron  Will  Often  Increase  the  Strength 

and  Endurance  of  Delicate,  Nervous  Folks  200 

per  cent  in  Two  Weeks  Time. 

fight  with  Frank  Moran.  I  regularly 
took  nuxated  iron,  and  1  am  certain 
that  it  was  a  most  Important  factor  in 
my  winning  the  fight  so  easily."  Con- 
tinuing Dr.  Sauer  said.  "Mr.  WlUard's 
case  Is  only  one  of  hundreds  which  I 
could  cite  from  my  own  personal  ex- 
perience which  proves  conclusively  the 
astonishing  power  of  nuxated  iron  to 
restore  strength  and  vitality  even  In 
most  complicated  chronic  conditions." 

Not  long  ago  a  man  came  to  me  who 
was     nearly     half    a  century     old    and 
asked  me  to  give  him  a  preliminary  ex- 
amination   for    life    Insurance.      I     was 
astonished  to  find  him  with  the    blood 
pressure  of  a  boy  of  20  and  as  full  of 
vigor,  vim  and  vitality  as  a  young  man; 
in  fact  a  young  man  he  really  was,  not- 
withstanding  his  age.     The    secret    he 
sa'd  was  taking  iron — nuxated  Iron  had 
filled  him  with  renewed  life.     At  30  h« 
was  In  bad  health;  at  46  care-worn  and 
nearly  all  In.   'Now  at  BO  a  miracle  of 
vitality  and  his  face  beaming  with  the 
buoyancy  of  youth.     As  I   have  said  a 
hundred  times  over,  iron  Is  the  greatest 
of     all     strength     builders.     If     people 
would  only  throw   away    patent    medi- 
cines    and     nauseous    concoctions     and 
take  simple   nuxated   iron,     I  am  con- 
vinced   that    the    lives   of    thousands    of 
persons   might   be    saved,   who   now    die 
every     year  from     pneumonia,     grippe, 
consumption,    kidney,    liver   and    heart 
trouble,  etc.     Tho  real  and  true  cause 
which  started  their  diseases  was  noth- 
ing   more    nor    less    than    a    weakened 
condition  brought  on  by  lack  of  iron  in 
the  blood.     Iron  is  absolutely  necessary 
to   enable   your   blood    to   change   food 
into  living  tissue.     Without  it,  no  mat- 
ter  how    much    or   what   you    esft,    your 
food  merely  passes  through  you  with- 
out doing  you  any  good.    You  don't  get 
the  strength  out  of  it  and  as  a  conse- 
quence    you    become     weak,     pale    and 
sickly  looking  Just  like  a  plant  trying 
to  grow  In  a  soil  deficient  in  iron.     If 
you  are  not  strong  or  vi'ell  you  owe  it 
to  yourself  to  make  the  following  test: 
See  how  long  you  can  work  or  how  far 
you  can  walk  without  becoming  tired. 
Next  take  two  five-grain  tablets  of  or- 
dinary   nuxated    iron    three    times    per 
day  after  meals  for  two  weeks.     Then 
test    your  strength   again   and   see    for 
yourself  how  much  you  have  gained.    I 
have  seen  dozens  of  nervous  run-down 
people   who   were  ailing  all  the   while, 
double    their      strength   and    endurance 
and  entirely  get  rid  of  all  symptoms  of 
dyspepsia,   liver  and   other  troubles  in 
from  ten  to  fourteen  days'  time  simply 
by  taking  Iron  in  the  proper  form.  And 
this  after  they  had  in  some  cases  been 
doctoring  for   months   without   obtaln- 
t  consider  that  plenty    of    iron    in    mj  Ing  any  benefit.    But  don't  take  the  old 
blood  is  the  seoret  of  my  ^reat  »tren<th,  'prms  of  reduced  Iron.^lron  acetate  or 
J       J         '  •  ■     '  tincture  of  iron  simply  to  save  a  few 


FORMER  DULUTHIAN 

^         £^         A         A 

POPULAR  IN  DETROIT 

Rev.  M.  S.  Rice,  formerly-  pastor  of 
the  First  Methodist  church  of  this 
city,  and  now  in  charge  of  the  Wood- 
ward Avenue  Mt-thodlst  church  of  De- 
troit, Mich.,  is  conducting  a  series  of 
noon-day  Lenten  lectures  at  the  De- 
troit opera  house.  Of  Dr.  Rice  and 
his  work  one  of  the  Detroit  news- 
papers   has    the    following    to    say; 

"Each  day  the  place  is  crowded 
from  the  pit  to  the  topmost  gallery, 
not  with  habitual  churchgoers,  but 
with  the  man  uv.d  woman  of  street 
and  shop.  It  would  seem  to  indicate 
that  the  man  of  the  street  wants  his 
religion  100  proof,  not  a  diluted  mod- 
ern ethical  culture.  The  preacher  this 
week  is  Dr.  M.  S.  Rice,  pastor  of  the 
Woodward  Avenue  Methodist  church 
and  prominently  mentioned  for  epis- 
copal honors  at  the  approaching 
quadrennial  general  conference.  He  is 
admitted  to  be  one  of  the  most  elo- 
quent exponents  of  the  undiluted  old 
Wesleyan  gospel  of  'free  grace'  In 
America   today." 


You're  footslck!  ^t&iSteet  feel  tired, 
puffed  up,  chafed,  dffUAg,  sweaty,  and 
they  need  "Tiz."         * ,  ; 

"TIz"  makes  feet  feitlarkably  fresh 
and  aore-proof.  "Tlif- takes  the  paid 
and  burn  right  out  ^  librns.  callouses 
and  bunions.  "Tiz"  Js  the  grandest 
foot-gladdener  the  ^^»|fd  has  ever 
known. 

Get  a  25-cent  box  of  "Tiz"  at  any 
drug  store  and  end  foo*  torture  for  a 
whole  year.  Never  havt  tired,  aching, 
Bweaty,  smelly  feet;  yotir  shoes  will  fit 
fine  and  you'll  only  W\^  you  had  tried 
"TIz"  sooner.  Accept  no  substitute. 
—Advertisement. 


*f 


ROAD  ISSUES  BOOK 

A        ^        A        A 

ON  -SAFETY  HRST 

Remarkable  progress  was  made 
along  the  lines  of  accident  preven- 
tion by  employes  of  the  Duluth.  Mls- 
sabe  &  Northern  Railway  company 
during  the  year  1916.  according  to  W. 
A.  McGonagle.  president  of  the  road, 
who  declares  that  notwithstanding  the 
Increase  of  business  of  160  per  cent, 
the  number  of  accidents  decreased  8.7 
per  cent. 

In  a  booklet  which  has  been  Issued 
from  the  office  of  E.  H.  Windora,  gen- 
eral claim  agent  for  the  road,  ther* 
appears  a  letter  from  President  Mc- 
Gonagle to  the  employes,  in  which  he 
commends  the  efforts  which  have  been 
mado    towards    preventing   accidents, 

"It  is  true  that  the  number  of  fatal- 
ities increased  as  compared  with  1914, 
but  this  was  wholly  due  to  tres- 
passers and  la  net  chargeable  in  any 
way  to  the  negligence  of  our  em- 
ployes, but  is  very  largely  attributable 
to  the  curse  of  strong  drink  which 
deprives  men  of  their  senses  and  leads 
them  to  expose  themselves  to  danger* 
that  would  not  be  possible  if  they 
remained    In    their    sober    senses. 

"Nstwlthstandlng  our  splendid  rec- 
ord In  1916,  there  Is  much  to  do  to 
still  further  decrease  accidents  to  our 
employes.  A  cartful  study  of  the  rec- 
ord shows  many  accidents  that  could 
have  easily  been  prevented  If  our  em- 
ployes   had    been    alive    to    their    own 


power  and  endurance. 


cents.  You  must  take  iron  in  a  form 
that  can  be  easily  absorbed  and  assim- 
ilated like  nuxated  Iron  if  you  want  It 
to  do  you  any  good,  otherwise  it  may 
prove  worse  than  useless. 

Many  an  athlete  or  prize-fighter  has 
won  the  day  simply  because  he  knew 
the  secret  of  great  strength  and  en- 
durance and  filled  his  blood  with  Iron 
before  he  went  into  the  affray,  while 
many  another  has  gone  to  Inglorious 
"  e  lack  of  Iron. — B. 


SPECIAL  .NOTE— l>r.   E.  Sau«.  a  well  known  physlrtan 
who  has  studied  wlddy  In  both  this  country  and  Europe, 

had  been  specially  employed  to  make  a  thoroush  Inyestl-  „,.u,^x„.i    ..„„ 

«aUon  into  the  real  secret  of  the  great  stivogU.,   power  "''^''^.   slmDlv  for  th 

Lid  endurance  of  Jess  Willard.  and  U»e  marTc-lous  value  of  g^reat  simpjy    ror  in 
nuxated  Iron  as  a  strength  builder.  WE-Nwated' Iron.  reroTDmended  abore  br  Pr.  Sauer 

NEW       YORK. — Upon       being       inter-  jg    ^,    ,    patent    medl.Ine    nor    S'VTPt    remedy,    but    on« 

viewed  at  fi's  apartmeert  la  the  Colonial  wjjirh  \»  well  known  to  druggl.'its  and  whose  Iron  con»tlt- 

hotel    Mr.  Willard  said:     "Yes,  I  have  a  u«nts  are  widely  pres<-rit>ed  by  eminent  physicians  e»er>-- 

chem'lst  with  me  to  study  the  value  of  where.     Inlike  the  older  inorganic  iron  product*,   it   Is 

different  foods  and  products  as  to  their  e^lly  asslmUated.  does  not  injure  the  teeth,  make  them 

DOWer    to   produce    great    strength    and  black,   nor  upset  the  st/)mach;  on  Uie  «ntraiT.   It  b  • 

^«]!.rJ^».;/ro    hnth  nt  which  are  so  neces-  most  potent  remedy.  In  nearly  all  forms  of  indlgestlou.  as 

endurance    both  Of  wmcli  are  SO  nece^  well    m  for   nerrous.    nu.  down   eondlUons.     The   manu- 

**'"^.,^'}i^^^T^hiv?.   nft^n   taken   nuxated  ''^turer*  hare  si.ch  great  confidence  in  Nuiated  Iron  that 

mendatlon  I  have  often  taken  nuxatea  ^^^  ^^^  ^^  ^^^^j^  %\^m  to  anj-  charitable  institution 

Iron  and  I  have  particularly  advocatea  j^  ^^^^^  ^^^^^^  ^^^  ,„y  ,^^  ^  ^^^^^  „„d^  ^  ^^o 

the   free  use   of   iron   by  all   those  who  j^^.^,  j,^  ,„j  increase  thMr  strength  200  per  cent  or 

wish  to  obtain  great  physical  and  men-  „,„  j^  f^^  weeks'  time,  prorldpd  they  have  no  serious 

tal  power.     Without  it  I  am  sure  that  I  organic  trouble.     They  also  offer  to  refund  your  money  If 

should    never    have    been    able    to    whip  it  does  not  at  least  double  your  strength  and  end>iranc« 

Tack  Johnson  so  completely  and  easily  in    ten    days'    time.      It   Is   dispensed    In   thia    dty   by 

as    I    did     and    while    training    for    my  Boyce  Dnig  store  and  all  other  drugglsU. 


welfare  and  the  welfare  of  their  fel- 
low employes.  ii_,»„ 
"The  management  of  the  railway 
stands  ready  to  make  any  rwisonable 
expenditure  to  obviate  accidents  and 
welcomes  suggestions  from  the  em- 
ployes that  will  safeguard  the  lives 
of   their   fellow    workers." 

"PACKSACKTRAILS." 

New     Booklet     Advertises     Canoe 
Country  of  the  North. 

"Nature  made  Northern  Minnesota 
on  purpose  for  the  outdoor  nian," 
writes  C.  L..  Oilman  in  "Pack  Sack 
Trails,^'  an  illustrated  booklet  which 
has  just  been  Issued  by  the  passenger 
department  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Ranse  Railroad  company.  The  book 
is  filled  with  pictures  and  descrip- 
tive matter  of  the  lake  and  wood 
country  In  and  around  Tower,  Winton 
and  Ely.  ^     ,        ^    . 

"Through  a  wilderness  designed  to 
harbor  deer,  moose  and  small  game," 
Mr.  Oilman  has  written,  "nature  has 
arranged  a  net-work  of  lakes  and 
rivers  penetrating  its  Inmost  recesses, 
stocked  them  with  fish  and  planted 
them  with  wild  rice  to  attract  the 
duck  In  its  season.  At  strategic 
points,  she  deposited  rich  beds  of 
iron  ore.  To  carry  out  this  mineral 
wealth  and  to  freight  In  supplies  and 
machinery  for  those  who  mine  it,  man 
was   obliged   to   building   railroads.   As 


a  result  the  seeker  after  the  life  of 
the  wilderness  may  journey  by  com- 
fortable trains,  run  at  frequent  and 
convenient  intervals,  to  anyone  of  the 
three  thriving  towns,  launch  his 
canoe  after  a  short  portage  from  the 
station,  paddle  for  fifteen  minutes  and 
find  himself  amid  surroundings  as 
primitive  as  when  the  Indian  and  the 
fur  trader  held  sole  dominion  over 
the   land." 

NEW  INFORMATION  IS 
FILED  IN  HYDE  CASE 

Kansas  City,  Mo.,  April  11.— A  new 
information  charging  Dr.  B.  Clarke 
Hyde  of  Kansas  City,  with  poisoning 
Col.  Thomas  H.  Swope,  millionaire 
philanthropist,  by  strychnine  and 
cyanide  of  potassium,  was  filed  by  the 
prosecuting    attorney    yesterday. 

The  new  Information  was  made 
necessary  by  the  action  of  the  attor- 
neys for  the  defense  who  sought  to 
qiash  further  prosecution  under  the 
statute  limiting  the  state  to  four  con- 
tinuances. 


Fund*   for   Angosta    Saffererw. 

Reno.  Nev..  April  11. — J.  Putnam 
Stevens,  Imperial  potentate  of  the 
Ancient  Order  of  the  Mystic  Shrine, 
announces  that  he  has  ordered  $6,000 
taken  from  the  relief  fund  of  the  or- 
der and  donated  to  the  sufferers  from 
the  recent  disaster  at  Augusta,  Ga. 


C   THE  ftooo  aupGE  nNDS  HUW<kN  NATURE  THE  SAME  rVERYWWCWE.  J 


IP  THIS  LITTLE  TEM  CENT 
PIECE  WAS  ALL  THE  nOMEy 
'  THCftE  W^  IN  THE  WHOLE 
WORLD,  AND  VOU  HAD  IT. 

I  WHAT  WOULD  >©«  euy } 


TALK  SENSE.WAH. 
KaSEV  SELLS  THE  I 
NEW  CUT  REAL 
TOBACCO  CHEW. 


WEN  SPEND  THEIR 
KONCy  FOR  WHAT 
QIVESTHCMOST 
SATISFACTION. 


[in 

? 


TEN  cents'  worth  of  W-B  CUT  Chewing— the  long 
akred  Real  Tobscco  Chew— brings  many  a   man 
real  tobacco  comfort. 

The  first  quality  test  proves  tnat  a  small  chew  of  W-B 
CUT  Chewing  is  plenty,  because  it's  rich  tobacco.  No 
chewing  on  a  bif  wad  like  tLe  ordinary  kind — and  you 
don't  have  to  spit  so  much. 

Get  a  poudi  and  tatisfy  yonr  taste  for  rieh  tobaeeo. 

**N«lfe«  Imw  Hm  sdt  Waei  eel  Ike  rick  tttUeee  tasksr 
Maia  bf  WETHAN-UtUTON  COMPANT.  SO  Urfw  S<m>%  Ibw  TeA  Oly 


r 


•-• 


r^ 


"H     DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


'1 


f— 


■f" 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULAJTH     HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


NEWS  OF  THE  NORTHWEST 


HOT  CONTEST 
IS  EXPECTED 

Campaign    for  Member  of 

Legislature  in  Polk  to 

Be  Warm. 


Plenty  of  Candidates  With 

Prospects  of  Some 

Vote  Surprises. 


ARE  TO  nGURE  PROMINENTLY  IN 
DEVILS  LAKE,  N.  D.,  MASONIC  EVENT 


Crookston.  Minn..  April  11.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— The  legislative 
fight  in  Polk  county  this  year  prom- 
ises   to    be    the    hottest    in    years. 

John  Boyd  and  T.  T.  Murken. 
elected  two  years  ago.  were  both  can- 
dltUitos  for  re-election  but  Morken 
has  dropped  out.  and  in  addition,  C.. 
O.  HiiK>\  for  years  secretary  of  tho 
County  Option  leaKue  of  Polk  county, 
has  fil.d.  aa  has  D.  H.  Ferguson  of 
Mallory.  western  Polk,  and  James 
Cuniming  of  the  game  place;  Thomas 
Vollum  of  Krsklne,  Albert  O.  (Jullick- 
son  of  Fertile,  and  rumor  says  that 
B.  c;.  E-klund,  former  county  com- 
missioner, of  Fosston,  anc:  Joseph  Ball 
of    Crookston    will    soon    file. 

The  county  option  organization 
aonie  tinu*  ago  indorsed  T.  T.  Morken 
and  Albert  Solatad  of  w.  stern  Polk. 
Morken,  it  is  said,  did  not  like  this, 
aa  he  tliought  it  necessary  to  Indorse 
an  eastern  Polk  man  to  win.  Morken 
also   won    over   C    O.    liage   by    a    bare     _  _^    ^_ 

majority     as     the     man       to     run     from  j  monies.       Grand    Secretary 
Crookston.       Solstad     refused       to     run    gtopj^^^-eii    of    Fargo     will 
because  of  the   ill   h«alth   of  his  father,  |  dedicatory     oration,     while 
and    tlie    optionists    met    again    and    In-' 
dor.std      <;ullick.son      of      Fertile,      and 
Cumming.s    of   Mallory.      In    the    mean- 
time   (jiibert    Huge    filed,    and    Morken, 
It    is    rumored,    thereupon    decided    not 
to   run. 

Say    Th*T    Will     Split    Vote. 

With  CummTngs  and  Ferguson,  both 
Scotchmen,  coming  from  the  same  sec- 
tion of  western  Polk,  both  pioneers 
and  popular,  it  Is  expected  they  will 
split  th>-  support  from  that  section. 
as  both  will  have  to  hitch  up  with 
a  Croikston  or  eastern  Polk  man  to 
»et  anywhere,  Cummings  pairing  off 
with  «;ullickson  and  getting  the 
countv  option  support  In  a  large 
measure    at    least. 

The  county  option  issue  having  been 
aettled  already,  some  of  the  wise  ones 
«ay  the  cot  nty  optlonist  vote  will  be 
dlvldfd. 


GRAND  MASTER  HARRY  LORD  GRAND  SECRETARY  WALTER 
GKANU  ^^^^ggo"^  u         STOCKWELL  OF  FARGO.  N.  D. 

Devils  Lake.  N.  D.,  April  ll.--(Spe- 
clal  to  The  Herald.)— Masons  all  over 
North  Dakota  and  many  living  In 
Western  Minne.'^ota  and  Eastern  Mon- 
tana are  evincing  interest  hi  the  big 
Masonic  event  to  be  pulled  off  here 
Mav  18,  when  the  Masons  will  dedicate 
their  new  $50,000  Devils  Lake  temple. 
Clrand  Master  Harry  Lord  of  Cando 
will    preside    at    the    Impressive    cere- 

■-        Walter     L. 

deliver  the 
AVorshlpful 
Master  E.  M.  Lewis  of  Mlnnewaukan 
lodge  of  Devils  Lake,  "nd*"*"  „,^^*^<>f,^ 
auspices  the  fine  home  was  built,  will 
figure   prominently    in    the   ceremonies. 


will  He  against  violators,  and  I  will 
leave  no  stone  unturned  to  prosecute 
vigorously." 

A  prosecution  for  the  sale  of  "near 
beer"  resulted  In  a  conviction  in 
Clearwater  county  recently,  and  when 
appealed  the  verdict  was  affirmed  in 
the  district  court.  Because  of  the 
large  number  of  soft  drink  places 
which  followed  in  the  wake  of  the 
saloons.  the  announcement  caused 
consternation  in  the  ranks  of  those 
who  had  concluded  that  "near  beer" 
would  bring  in  a  great  business  dur- 
ing the  warm  months. 


creased,"  was  won  by  the  Lldgerwood 
debaters,  who  upheld  the  affirmative. 
The  speakers  for  the  affirmative  were 
Clarence  M.  Movious,  Arnold  Oss  and 
James  Sloby.  Cooperstown  was  repre- 
sented by  Hans  Almsby,  Thomas  Alms- 
by  and  Verner  Johnson. 


Lldgrr>vo«a  Debaters  Win. 

Lidg»MWood,  N.  D.,  April  11.— The 
Interscliolastlc  dibate  held  here  be- 
tween the  Cooperstown  high  school 
and  the  local  school  upon  the  ques- 
tion, "Uesolved,  That  the  United  States 
navy      should      be      substantially      in- 


KEEPS  KIDNEYS 
ACTIVE  WITH  A 
GLASS_OF  SALTS 

Must  flush  your  Kidneys  oc- 
casionally if  you  eat 
meat  regularly. 

Noted  authority  tells  what 

causes  Backache  and 

Bladder  weakness. 


*  copiw:r  sk\t  by  exprkss 

^      TO    MEET    l'Ui:S.Sl>G    DEMAND. 

*  Calamet,  Mich.,  April  11.— Ow- 
^  liiK  to  the  nnprecedented  demand 
^  for  copii*r  and  ottrrn  of  a  pre- 
^  mluni  for  Immedlnte  delivery,  the 
^  Cnluntf^t  *   lleeln  >lliiliia  oompauy 


*  Im   Hhipping  RO.WM)  poundM  fa»t    hj  ^, 
^  exvrenM.     Thin  U  the  flrnt  5»P^*J"  ^j* 


WORSHIPFUL     MASTER     E.     M. 

LEWIS  OF  DEVILS  LAKE, 

Head    of    Minnewaukan   Lodge   That 

Built  New  Home. 


Ko  man  or  woman  who  cats  meat 
regularly  can  make  a  mistake  by 
flushing  the  kidneys  occasionally,  says 
a  well-known  authority.  Meat  forms 
uric  acid  which  clogs  the  kidney  pores 
ID  they  sluggishly  filter  or  strain  only 
part  of  the  wa.ste  and  poisons  from 
the  blood,  then  you  get  sick.  Nearly 
all  rheumati.s:  i.  headaches,  liver  trou- 
ble, nervousness,  constipation,  dizzi- 
ness, sleeplessness,  bladdi-r  disorders 
come  from  .sluggish  kidneys. 

The  moment  you  feel  a  dull  ache  In 
the  kidneys  or  your  back  hurts,  or  If 
the  urine  Is  cloudy,  offensive,  full  of 
•edlment,  Irregular  of  passage  or  at- 
tended by  a  sensation  of  scalding,  get 
about  four  ounces  of  Jad  Salts  from 
any  reliable  pharmacy  and  take  a  ta- 
blespoonful  in  a  glass  of  water  before 
breakfast  for  a  few  days  and  your 
kidneys  will  then  act  fine.  This  fa- 
mous salts  is  made  from  the  acid  of 
Ifrapes  and  lemon  Juice,  combined  with 
Ilthia,  and  has  been  used  for  genera- 
tions to  flush  clogged  kidneys  and 
stimulate  them  to  activity,  also  to 
neutralize  the  acids  In  urine  so  It  no 
longer  causes  irritation,  thus  ending 
bladder  disorders. 

Jad  Salts  Is  inexpensive  and  can- 
not Injure;  makes  a  delightful  effer- 
vescent llthla-water  drink  which  all 
regular  meat  eaters  should  take  now 
and  then  to  keep  the  kidneys  clean 
and  the  blood  pure,  thereby  avoiding 
■erlous  kidney  complications. — ^Adver- 
tisement. 


^  Nhlpmf^nt  of  any  nUe  ever 
4e  from  the  dIMrlct.  The  pHce  re-  * 
*  eelved  wan  above  28  cent*  per  * 
^   pound.  * 

WAMT  HENS'  AID 

IN  DRY  CAMPAIGN 

South  Dakota  Prohibition- 
ists Ask  Week's  Laying 
for  Cause. 

Watertown.  8.  D.,  April  11.— The 
state  prohibition  committee  expected 
to  send  broadcast  throughout  the 
state  today  an  appeal  to  every  woman 
raising  chickens  to  give  "for  the 
cause"  every  egg  her  hens  lay  during 
the  week  of  May  26  to  31. 

The  movement  to  have  hens  work 
for  prohibition  In  South  Dakota  was 
begun  several  days  ago  when  a  com- 
mittee started  organizing  local  "egg 
week"  clubs  In  towns,  cities  ana  rural 
communities. 

Leading  members  of  the  Anti-saloon 
league  at  Mitchell  have  pointed  out 
that  30,000.000  dozen  eggs  were  pro- 
duced In  the  slate  last  year.  Faithful 
work  for  one  week  by  the  hens  would 
produce  600,000  dozen  eggs,  they  de- 
clare. The  crates  of  eggs  will  be 
shipped  to  a  central  point  and  thence 
to  a   commission   house. 

"Egg  week,"  declare  those  behind 
the  movement,  has  already  met  with 
hearty  response  in  all  parts  of  the 
state. 

"NEAR  BEER"  GFVEN 
POLK^OUNTY  JOLT 

County  Attorney  to  Pros- 
ecute All  Sellers  After 
April  20. 

Crookston.  Minn.,  April  11. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — County  Attorney  G. 
A.  Youngqutst  believes  that  Monday 
afternoon  he  sounded  the  death  knell 
to  the  sale  of  "near  beer"  or  malt 
llQUors  of  any  kind,  whether  intoxi- 
cating or  not.  In  Polk  county  by  mail- 
ing official  notifications  to  Mayot 
Kellihsr  of   East  Uraad   Forks.   Mayor 


Mlsner  of  Crookston  and  the  mayors 
or  executive  officers  of  all  tillages  In 
Polk  county  that  prosecutions  would 
be  started  against  all  proprletois  of 
soft  drink  parlors  who  sold  malt 
products.  ,      .         ^      ., 

In  order  to  permit  dealers  to  dispose 
of  the  stock  now  on  hand,  dealers  are 
given  until  April  20  to  comply  with 
the  law.  after  which  all  violators  will 
be  prosecuted  under  Chapter  131,  Ses- 
sion Laws  of  1911,  which  reads  "the 
keeping  for  sale,  selling,  giving  away 
or  disposing  of  malt  liquors,  whether 
intoxicating  or  not.  In  any  other 
place  than  a  licensed  saloon  is  hereby 
prohibited." 

Why    He    Took    Aetlon. 

"I  am  taking  this  action  because 
some  of  the  near  beer  products  and 
malt  liquors  contain  too  high  a  per- 
centage of  alcohol  and  because  they 
are  being  used  as  a  cloak  for  the  sale 
of  real  beer  and  whisky."  said  County 
Attorney  Youngquist.  "I  have  looked 
up  the  law  carefully  and  prosecutions 


*  t 

*  DEFKATKD   1\   KI.KCTIOX.  ^ 

^         bai)(;£:k  co>iMiT*!i  suicide.  ^ 

ik  ^ 

^       Arenda,  WU..  April  11. — Funeral  ^ 

f«rrvtre>»  for  Arthur  Bnthlas,  who  * 
eommltted  «nlelde  after  being  de-  « 
feated  for  re-election  for  village  itt 
^  elerk,  were  held  Monday.  After  *, 
^  he  had  checked  Robert  Bnlow  Into  %t 
^  the  office.  BathlaH  fired  a  bullet  ^ 
^  into  hi*  lirnln.  He  left  a  note  * 
^  reading t  "There  Is  nothing  In  life  ^ 

*  for   me   now."  * 
$                                                                               * 

GASOLINElJNriS 
OTTER  TAIL  SCHEME 

Being  Considered  in  Con- 
nection With  Huron,  Du- 
luth  &  Southwestern. 

Fergus  Falls.  Minn..  April  11. — The 
Commercial  club  has  decided  to  Investi- 
gate the  feasibility  of  a  gasoline  or 
electric  railway  from  Sisseton  to  Per- 
ham  bv  way  of  this  city  bt^fore  taking 
up  the  work  of  raising  $150,000  along 
the  route  in  consideration  of  the  pro- 
po.sed  Huron,  Duluth  &  Southwestern 
coming  this  way.  It  has  been  decided 
to  send  for  a  railway  engineer  and 
builder  to  look  over  the  situation  and 
give  figures  o.^  the  cost  of  such  a  line. 

CAN  LEAVE  to  TESTIFY. 

Wisconsin  U  Students  Can  Give  Testi- 
mony in  Orpet  Trial. 

Madison.  Wis.,  April  11.— The  Uni- 
versity of  AVlsconsln  closes  June  21, 
but  students  desiring  to  testify  in  the 
case  of  William  Or;jet  who  Is  charged 
with  the  murder  of  Marlon  Lambert, 
which  was  set  yesterday  at  Wauke- 
gan.  111.,  for  May  16.  may  secure  a 
leave  of  absence,  it  Is  said  at  the  uni- 
versity. ,   ^^   ^ 

Although  It  has  been  rumored  that 
the  students  whom  the  prosecution 
was  relying  upon  as  Important  wit- 
nesses would  not  leave  their  studies 
to  attrnd  the  trial,  no  admission  of 
this  could  be  obtained  here. 

RIVERTOiTcmfEST. 

Court  Fixes   Date  for   Inspectors  to 
Examine  Ballots. 

Bralnerd,  Minn..  April  11.— (Special 
to  The  1» erald.)— Judge  W.  S.  McClen- 
ahan  of  the  district  court  set  11  a.  m. 
Thursday  as  the  day  for  the  Inspec- 
tion of  the  ballots  cast  at  Rlverton. 
The  election  held  here  March  14  has 
been  contested  by  Earl  Kenney  and 
Ray  Wiggins,  their  petition  being  di- 
rected against  William  Barron,  clerk, 
and  Christ  Cling  and  L..  P.  Sparks, 
trustees. 

The  contesteef  refused  to  select  an 
inspector  anfl  IP  Judge  McClenahan 
appointed  1.  3f  Zlegan  of  Rlverton. 
The  contestaots  selected  Edward 
Mlnges  of  RJHrlon.  The  two  Inspec- 
tors then  selected  William  M.  Keown 
of  Rlverton  to  act  with   them. 


transferred  by  the  United  States  de- 
partment of  agriculture  to  the  Hawa- 
iian islands,  where  he  will  be  an  as- 
sistant weather  observer.  ^    ,,      m 

Eau  Claire  —  William  Kimball  of 
Black  River  Falls  was  arrested  In  Al- 
toona  Sunday  on  a  charge  of  disorderly 
conduct.  He  was  brought  to  this  city 
In  charge  of  Under  Sheriff  ISeorge  Gar- 
man  and  was  given  six  days  in  the 
county  Jail. 

Grand  Rapids— Chester  P.  Gross,  who 
has  been  connected  with  the  Wiscon- 
sin rate  commission,  has  been  appoint- 
ed superintendent  of  the  Grand  Rapida 
Electric  company,  the  plant  being  a 
municipal  one. 

La  Crosse — A  movement  for  the  ap- 
pointment of  a  city  veterinarian  to 
administer  the  tuberculin  test  to  herds 
supplying  milk  to  La  Crosse  niay^  grow 
out  of  the  slaughter  of  seventeen  val- 
uable dairy  cows  belonging  to  Chris 
Seller,  R  F.  D  No.  1,  which  took  place 
Saturday  at  the  Farmers'  Co-operative 
plant. 

Eau  Claire— About  1.400  people  at- 
tended the  dedication  of  the  new  Grace 
Lutheran  church  here  Sunday.  It  cost 
$126,000.  The  dedication  sermon  was 
delivered  by  Rev.  J.  C.  Roseland  of 
Sllverton,  Or.,  secretary  of  the  United 
Lutheran  church,  and  father  of  the 
pastor  of  the  local  church,  the  Rev.  A. 

B.  Roseland,  who  also  officiated,  as- 
sisted by  Rev.  Prof.  C.  M.  Weswlg  of 
the  United  Church  seminary.  St.  Paul; 
Rev.   Gustav  Stearns.   Milwaukee;    Rev. 

C.  E.  Sybilrud  of  St.  Paul;  Rev.  L.  M. 
Roseland  of  Vlroqua. 

La  Crosse — William  Blackley,  one  of 
the  oldest  residents  of  the  city,  who 
camr  to  La  Crosse  in  the  early  forties, 
died  at  the  La  Crosse  hospital  at  the 
age  of  80  years.  Infirmities  of  old  age 
caused  death.  Mr.  Blackley  was  born 
In  County  Antrim.  Ireland.  He  came  to 
this  country  when  a  boy,  settling  at 
once  In  La  Crosse.  He  is  survived  by 
three  nephews,  Harry,  William  and 
Robert  Spence,  and  one  niece.  Mrs. 
Mary  Plant.  San  Francisco.  H>s  wife 
died  a  number  of  years  ago. 

Grand  Rapids— While  riding  the  rods 
to  answer  an  appeal  of  his  mother  In 
Minneapolis.  Fred  Mauth  was  killed 
early  Monday.  He  was  Identified  by 
his  mother's  letters  in  his  pocket,  ask- 
ing him  to  come  to  her. 

Madison— War  talk  has  so  revived  In 
the  Wisconsin  guard  of  Madison  that 
a  movement  is  now  on  foot  to  build  a 
new  armory.  The  idea  is  to  make  the 
building  utilitarian.  It  will  be  a  com- 
bination armory,  convention  hall  ana 
farmers'   garage. 


Mr.  Brown  was  recently  appointed  to 
the  state  board  and  has  been  arranging 
his  affairs  that  he  might  give  all  of  his 
time  to  the  office. 

Enderlin,  N.  D.  —  R.  A.  Nestos  of 
Mlnot  and  Usher  L.  Burdick  of  Willis- 
ton  will  be  the  speakers  hf-re  May  1<. 

Sherwood,  N.  D. — Nell  LIttlejohn.  ele- 
vator agent,  used  gasoline  to  start  a 
fire  with  the  result  an  explosion  fol- 
lowed, injuring  him. 

Fargo,  N.  D. — Miss  Mary  Jorgenson, 
for  seven  years  past  the  bookkeeper 
and  later  cashier  of  the  Courier-Xews, 
left  Monday  afternoon  over  the  Great 
Northern  for  Glentana,  Mont.,  where 
she  has  taken  a  claim  upon  govern- 
ment land  which  she  expects  to  develop 
Into  a  farm  and  home. 


PENINSULA  BRffiFSJ 


DAKOTA  BRffiFS    | 


Towner.  N.  D. —  If  the  village  council 
passes  an  ordinance  before  It,  Towner 
will  have  an  electric  light  plant.  C.  13. 
Aasness  and  J.  E.  G  alehouse  of  Car- 
rington  have  the  contract. 

Starkweather.  N.  D.— Cash  prizes  of 
f50  are  offend  by  the  village  of  Stark- 
weather for  gopher  tails.  Over  15,000 
gophers  were  killed  last  year  In  this 
competition.  In  June  a  big  "gopher 
day"  celebration  Is  held  when  the 
prizes  are  awarded.  , 

Glen  UlUn,  N.  D.— Voting  to  meet 
next  year  in  Dickinson  the  Missouri 
Slope  Educational  association  in  ses- 
sion here  elected:  P.  S.  Berg,  Dickinson, 
president;  H.  K.  Jensen,  Mandan.    vice 

president:  C.  E.  Ward,  I?|cl«^«l?80"-  »f  u 
retary  and  treasurer.  Miss  Lois  Viall 
of  Manning  was  elected  a  member  of 
the  executive  committee  for  two  years. 
Bismarck,  N.  D.— James  A.  Brown, 
who  for  the  last  ten  years  has  been 
county  auditor  of  Rollette  county,  has 
taken  up  his  work  on  the  board  of  con- 
trol, to  succeed  the  late  Fred  Brewster. 


rhe  Coming  Baby! 
Hooray!  Hooray! 

Notliing  else  can  so  completely  endear 
US  to  the  present  and  the  future  as  the 

expected   arrival  of  • 
baby.  But  in  the  mean- 
lime    the    comfort    of 
the  mother  Is  of  vast 
Importance.    There  Is  a 
•plendid  external  rem- 
edy  known   as  "Moth- 
er's Friend"  which  ex- 
erts a  wonderful  influ- 
ence upon  the  expand. 
Ing  muscles.     They  be- 
come   more   pliant, 
stretch  without  tindua 
pain,  make  the  period 
one  of  pleasant  antic- 
ipation Instead  of  ap- 
prehension.    In  a  series  of  splendid  letters 
from  all  over  the  country  mothers  tell  of  tha 
peat  help   "Mother's   Friend"  was  to  them. 
Even  grandmothers  tell  the  wonderful  story 
to   their  own   dauphters   about  to   enter  the 
state  of  motherhood.     Get  a  bottle  of  "Moth- 
er's Friend"  today,  of  your  nearest  druggist. 
Tie  this  splendid  help  Mith  your  ovin  hand 
guided  by  your  own  mind.     For  a  free  book 
of    interest    and    importance   to    all    mothers 
write  to  Brad  field  Regulator  Co.,  400  Lamar 
Bldg.,   Atlanta,   Ga.     It  relates  the  per«)nal 
experiences  of  many  happy  mothers,  it  tells 
many   things   that    all    women   should   be   fa- 
miliar with;    it  la   at  once  a  guta^  fuu)  $]) 
pispiraUoa.    Wrlt«  for  tliis  book* 


GREAT  WILD  GEESE 

FLOCK  GOES  NORTH 

Eau  Claire.  Wis..  April  11.— The 
greatest  flock  of  wild  geese  that  hns 
flown  over  this  section  In  years  passed 
over  this  city  Saturday  evening,  en- 
route  to  Northern  climes. 

Attention  was  first  called  to  them 
by  their  loud  "honk,  honk"  as  thoy 
flew  northward  over  the  city.  Only 
on«f  string  could  be  seen,  and  that 
stretched  as  far  as  the  eye  could 
reach.  However,  loud  sounds  could 
be  plainly  heard  from  the  south,  giv- 
ing evidence  that  the  other  side  of  the 
V  was  far  away.  It  was  Impossible 
to  estimate  the  number  in  the  flock, 
but  it  is  said  that  this  was  the  larg- 
est passage  seen  In  this  vicinity  for 
a  good  many  years^ 

NORTH  DAKOTANTO 
GOPHER  PENITENTIARY 


GIRLS!  MOISTEN  A 
CLOTH  AND  DRAW 
IT  THROUGH  HAIR 

It  Becomes  Beautifully  Soft, 

Wavy,  Abundant  and 

Glossy  at  Once. 

Save  Your  Hair!  All  Dan- 
druff Goes  andHair  Stops 
Coming  Out. 


Marquette — The  body  of  Mrs.  A.  C. 
Culver,  aged  83,  a  former  resident  who 
died  In  Cinclnnatus,  N.  Y.  April  6,  will 
be  burled  here  Wednesday.  Mrs.  Cul- 
ver lived  In  Marquette  for  fifteen  years 
previous  to  her  departure  to  New  York 
about  a  year  ago.  Two  daughters  and 
two  sons  survive:  Mrs.  A.  Daily  and 
Mrs.  Grace  Peterson,  of  Cinclnnatus 
and  E.  A.  Culver  of  Trenary,  and  Rush 
Culver  of  Monroe,  La. 

Ishpeming — Edward  Constance,  a 
passenger  brakeman  on  the  Northwest- 
ern railway,  running  between  Green 
Bay  and  Ishpeming,  was  taken  serious- 
ly 111  here  and  he  was  removed  to  a 
hospital  at  Green  Bay.  It  Is  probable 
that    an    operation    will    be    necessary. 

Negaunee — The  election  of  Capt.  Ed- 
win Corey  as  supervisor  in  the  Third 
ward,  was  challenged  when  members 
of  the  People's  party  contended  that 
Capt.  Cory  Is  not  a  resident  of  the 
ward.  But  when  the  ward  lines  were 
run  out  It  was  shown  that  Mr.  Cory's 
residence  was  over  fifty  feet  inside  the 
line. 

Marquette  —  Simon  R.  Anderson, 
county  commissioner  of  schools,  an- 
nounces that  an  examination  for  teach- 
ers will  be  held  at  the  Northern  State 
normal  here  on  Thursday,  Friday  and 
Saturday,   April  27,   28   and   29. 

Escanaba — C.  G.  Swan  has  been  ap- 
pointed as  assessor  here  for  the  com- 
ing year  to  succeed  Matt  Flllion,  whose 
term  of  office  has  expired. 

Newbury — William  Harner,  .<enlor 
member  of  the  firm  operating  hard- 
wood flooring  factories  here  and  at 
Reed  City,  announces  that  his  com- 
pany Is  contemplating  enlarging  the 
Newberry  plant  and  operating  both  a 
day  and  night  crew. 

Escanaba — Joseph  E.  Relnger,  aged 
8.8,  formerly  one  of  the  best  known 
men  of  Escanaba.  who  established  the 
Escanaba  Lumber  company,  died  at 
Ann  Arbor  after  a  long  illness. 

Sault  Ste.  Marie — The  project  of 
erecting  a  Y.  M.  C.  A.  building  In  this 
city  was  formally  launched  at  a  well 
attended  meeting.  The  meeting  was 
called  for  the  express  purpose  of  choos- 
ing five  directors  for  the  ensuing  three 
years,  but  incidentally  thi.s  point  was 
brought  up  and  as  a  result  much  en- 
thusiasm is  being  expressed  by  mem- 
bers of  the  association. 

Ishpeming — There  will  h*^  a  rigid  en- 
forcement of  the  garbage  lav.'s  In  the 
future.  William  Welander.  superin- 
tendent of  the  board  of  puMlc  work-^, 
has  issued  a  warning  to  citizens  an  1 
says  that  prosecution  will  follow  un- 
less tho  requirements  of  the  p.cvlslon 
are  complied  with. 

Negauno-e — The  young  men's  cluo  of 
the  Mitchell  M.  E.  church  has  electfl: 
President,  Howard  Johns;  vice  pr 'sl- 
dent.  Leslie  Bowden;  secretary,  N  r- 
man  Stanaway;  assistant  -.seeretai  \ 
Garfield  Jeffery;  treasurer.  William 
Tresslder;  sergeant-at-arm?,  Wilfred 
Manning;  advertising  manager,  Leslie 
Bowden. 

Marquttte — The    fish    tug    Theora    of 
the    Parker    Fish    company    has     been  ; 
Inspected  bv  U.  S.  Steamboat  Inspectors  i 
York    and    Gooding    of    this    city.     The 
Theora  Is  now  ready  to  begin   tho  sea- 
son and  will  leave  the  harbor  to  set  the  ■ 
first   nets   as   soon   as   It   Is   possible    to  | 
break    through    the    Ice. 

Hancock — The    body    of     Miss     Mary  ' 
Mehrman,  formerly  of  Ripley,  who  died  ; 
In    Detroit,    aged    24,    was    brought    here 
for    burial    Monday.     During    the    past  ^ 
three    years    she    lived    In    Detroit.     Be-  ' 
sides    her    father,    she    is    survived    by  j 
five  brothers,  John.  Jr.,  Charles  of  Du-  j 
hith.     Thomas     of    Chicago,     Fred     and 
Richard  at  home,  and  one  sister,  Eliza, 
at  home. 

Calumet — The  funeral  of  Mrs.  Maml*»  | 
Daniel  was  held  from  the  family  resl-  j 
dence  on  East  Pine  street  on  Monday  1 
morning.  Following  services  at  the  I 
Sacred  Heart  church  at  9  a.  m..  Inter-  j 
m*>nt  was  made  in  Lake  View  ceme- 
tery. I 


previously  she  gave  birth  to  a  baby 
girl,  and  recovered  nicely.  She  leaves 
besides  this  little  girl  her  hu.«band 
and  one  little  boy,  Charley,  who  was 
born    m    Mahnomen. 

Plammer — W.  A.  Wilson,  butter- 
maker  at  the  Co-operative  creamery 
at  Lake  Benton,  Minn.,  came  here  and 
purchased  the  John  Peak  farm  of 
eighty    acres. 

Bemldjl — Ole  Lee  was  arrested  on  ft 
blindplgglng  charge.  In  the  municipal 
court  before  Judge  A.  M.  Crowell,  Lee 
entered  a  plea  of  guilty  and  was 
fined  $50  or  fiftv  days  in  the  county 
Jail.     He   paid   the   fine. 

Stillwater — County  Agent  H.  R. 
Leonard  returned  from  Wisconsin, 
where  he  purchased  for  11.200  from 
the  Helendale  stock  farm  at  Athens, 
Wis.,  a  carload  of  Guernseys,  five 
thoroughbreds  and  five  registered,  the 
former  for  R.  F.  Erickson  of  Marine 
Mills,  and  the  latter  for  Richard 
Loren  of  Forest  Lake.  The  latter  also 
purchased  a  registered  sire  for  hia 
herd. 

M>orheid — The  dedication  of  the 
new  organ  In  the  Swedish  Lutheran 
church  will  be  celebrated  on  Wednes- 
day evening,  April  26.  at  8  o'clock, 
and  Professor  Melln,  organist  In  the 
ZIon  church,  Mlnrcapolls,  will  render 
an    appropriate    program. 

Little  Falls — Louis  Hoff  was  held 
to  the  grand  jury  by  Municipal  Judge 
F.  W.  Lyon  after  a  hearing  on  a 
charge  of  arson  in  the  second  degree, 
made  by  Robert  J.  Martin,  deputy 
state  fire  marshal,  after  an  investi- 
gation of  the  burning  of  the  residence 
of  Peter  Hoff,  Second  street  southeast, 
for  the  second  time  on  the  morning 
of  March  24.  He  was  admitted  to 
$1,000  ball 

Grygla — Sandberg  Bros,  have  com- 
menced the  erection  of  their  large 
store  building  between  the  State  bank 
and  the  Llovd  confectionery  store.  The 
building    win    be    24x40. 

Ea.'-t  Grand  Forks — Chris  Gllbertson, 
who  for  several  years  has  been  con- 
nected with  the  First  National  bank 
of  East  Grand  Forks,  left  Saturday 
for  Great  Falls,  Mont.,  where  he  will 
enter  the  real  estate  and  insurance 
business. 


mat  one  ripie 


MINNESOTA  BRffiFS 


Moorhead,  Minn.,  April  11.— Frederick 
E.    Johnson,     confe.es*  d     bigamist,     has 

been  taken  to  Stillwater  by  Sheriff  Mc- 

Donald.  He  pleaded  guilty  before  Judge  |  excessive  oil— in 
Nye,  and  was  sentenctd  to  an  indeter- 
minate period.  Johnson  Is  a  furniture 
dealer  from  New  tingland.  N.  D.,  and 
has  one  wife  In  that  city  and  one  in 
Little  Falls,  Minn.  He  says  he  spent 
four  years  at  Harvard. 


Crookston — Funeral  services  will  be 
held  Tuesday  afternoon  for  Miss 
Selnia       Larson,       who       died       Friday, 

,  *  .,  "r»on/iArin«  TTfltr  Cl<iiTi<3*>"  ^S^d  24.  She  leaves  three  sisters. 
Surely  try  a  I^andenne  Ilalr  Cleanse  ji^s.  William  Gustafson,  Mrs.  Peter 
If  you  wish  to  Immediately  double  the  ^iseth  and  Mrs.  Rudolph  Carlson,  to- 
beauty  of  your  hair.  Just  moisten  a  |  gether  with  one  brother,  Edward,  who 
cloth  with  Danderlne  and  draw  it  reside  in  Crookston. 
carefully  through  your  hair,  taking  Long  Prairie— Mrs.  A.  E.  Roese, 
small  strand  at  a  time,  this  will  I  wife  of  the  editor  of  the  Todd  County 
the   hair  of   dust,   dirt   or  any    ^'"^us.  .  underwent     an     operation     at 


COL  STONE  COMING 

TO  TAKE  NEW  JOB 

St.  Paul.  Mii»ii..  April  11.— Cal  E. 
Stone.  passepEcawtraffic  manager  of  the 
Great  Northefnlallroad,  is  expected  in 
St.  Paul  this  V 
duties. 
Saturday    night. 

L.  W.  Hlll.i^resldent  (Jreat  Northern 
railroad,  is  $^}f^  expected  home  this 
week. 


one 

I  cleanse 

a   few    minutes    you 

will  be  amazed.  Your  hair  will  bo 
wavy,  fluffy  and  abundant  and  possess 
an  incomparable  softness,  lustre  and 
luxuriance. 

Besides  beautifying  the  hair,  one 
application  of  Danderlne  dissolves 
every  particle  of  dandruff;  invigorates 
the  scalp,  stopping  itching  and  fall- 
ing hair. 

Danderlne  Is  to  the  hair  what  fresh 
showers  of  rain  and  sunshine  are  to 
vegetation.  It  goes  right  to  the  roots, 
invigorates  and  strengthens  them.  Its 
exhilarating,     stimulating      and      life 


this  Vi^k  to  take  up  his  new  ;  „ro(jucmg  properties  cause  the  hair  to 
Mr.    Stone    left    San    Francisco    ^j.^^  long,   strong  and  beautiful. 

surely    have    pretty.    Foft, 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS 


4- 


-r^ 


grow 

You  can  surely  have 
lustrous  hair,  and  lots  of  It,  if  you 
will  just  get  a  25  cent  oottle  of 
Knowlton's  Danderlne  from  any  drug 
.-^tore  or  toilet  counter  and  try  it  as 
directed. 


Rochester  for  removal  of  a  cancer. 
This  is  the  fourth  operation  she  has 
undergone  since  1907.  It  Is  said  she 
Is    recovering. 

St.  Cloud — Secretary  F.  W.  Dewey  of 
the  Benton  county  fair  says  a  con- 
tract is  being  closed  with  the  Nat 
Rice  Carnival  company  of  Chicago  to 
put  on  a  big  attraction  here  during 
tlie  fair.  This  company  has  twelve 
paid  attractions,  three  riding  devices 
and  a  large  Italian  band,  and  will  put 
on  sensational  free  acts  on  each  aft- 
ernoon   and    evening    of    the    fair. 

Bagley — Dr.  Hambruer  of  Edeii  Val- 
ley has  shipped  in  a  pure  bred  Hol- 
stein  bull  calf  8  months  old.  His  farm 
l.s    four   miles    west    of   here. 

Bemldjl — Funeral  services  were  held 
Monday  for  Mrs.  T.  Dougas,  who  died 
Saturday,  aged  41.  Besides  her  hus- 
band. T.  Dougas.  of  this  city,  two 
sisters  survive.  Mrs.  M.  Johnson  of 
London.  Canada,  and  Mrs.  I.  Hubbln 
of    Fond    du    Lac,    Wis. 

Mahnomen — Mrs.  Ray  Gadway.  for- 
merly  of  this   place  died   last  week  at 


La  Crosse-fGarl   Reichgolt,   graduate 
of  the  La  CroSetThlgh  school,  has  been 


Save  your  hair!  Keep  It  looking  her  home  at  Hill  City,  Minn.,  where 
charming  and  beautiful.  You  will  say ';  Mr.  Gadway  Is  manager  of  the  Dower 
this  was  the  best  25  cents  you  ever  I  Lumber  company  yards.  Death  was 
spent.— Advertisement.  I  caused  by  heart  faUure.     Two  weeks 


Lost  Health 

And  Strength  Restored 

Men  who  are  afflicted  with  some 
ohronic  ailment  or  special  disease 
of  the  claps  or  dencrlptlon  thai  we 
treat,  find  In  wasting  health  and 
strength  a  most  important  reason 
for  seeking  out  speclalleta  in  such 
diseases. 

Every  day  patients  come  to  us 
privately  who  have  let  tfo  such 
troubles  until  they  are  in  a  seri- 
ous condition,  who  are  nervous,  Ir-* 
rltable  and  "not  themselves,"  some- 
times despondent  and  even  hope- 
less. They  lack  energy  and  vitality, 
have  poor  aopetites,  have  lost  con- 
fidence In  themselves  and  often  the 
derangement  has  affected  the  whole 
tystem  and  made  them  most  miser- 
able. 

Our  combined  methods  of  treat- 
ment are  sure  to  check  the  trouble, 
build  up  the  system,  restore  the  vl- 
tallty  and  strength  and  health  Is 
regained 

What  we  have  done  for  others 
we  can  do  for  you;  you  get  the 
best  for  the  least  expense.  Consul- 
tation free.  Office  hours.  9  to  «; 
Wednesday  and  Saturday,  9  to  8. 
and  holidays.  10  to  1. 

Progressive  Medical 
Dodorst  Inc 

t     WEST    SUPERIOR    STREfrr. 
DulBth.   Mlna. 


Prevent  More  Bi) 
Usina  Oilicura 

Soap  constantly  and  the  Ointment 
occasionally.  The  Soap  cleanses  the 
clogged,  irritated  pores,  the  Ointment 
soothes  and  heals. 

Sample  Each  Free  by  Mall        '*^. 

with  32-p.  book  on  the  skin.    Adflreaa  po«t-c*r«: 
•XJutlcura.  D«pt.  27G.  Bo«toa."  BolAtrtrjwbn*. 


m 


I 


■■ti«  tjt-r»-t  ■ 


w 


X 


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■*  n 


-mfrir 


-^V. 


ij,.— ii 


\ 


fei 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULjlLTH     HERALD, 


April  11, 1916. 


J5 


ALGER-SMITH  COMPANY  MUST 
EXPLAIN  UNMARKED  LOGS 


John  Millen  Ordered  to  Ap- 
pear Before  State  Tim- 
ber Board. 


Arneson  Pays  Visit  to  Com- 
pany's Knife  River 
Yards. 


Auditor's    Office    Not    In- 
terested   in    Criminal 
Phase  of  Matter. 


As  a  result  of  the  Investigations  by 
f»ai  ar  Arneson.  manager  of  the  atata 
l»niJ  dt'partment,  actlnjf  for  State  Au- 
diior  I'i«us.  John  Millen,  general  man- 
afr  for  the  Alger-Smith  company,  will 
be  r.a'iirt'd  to  apptar  at  11  o'clock 
Thursday  murnint;  before  the  stato 
timber  board  at  St.  Paul  to  makt»  some 
provision  to  prevent  seizure  of  a  large 
ituinb<<r  «)f  loKs  at  Knife  River  and  at 
the  Duluth  mill  yards  of  the  company. 

Lnniarked  logs  in  large  numbers 
were  found  yesteiday  afternoon  at 
Knife  River  by  Mr.  Arneson.  and  he 
got  track  of  a  lot  more.  This  afttr- 
Moon  he  is  examining  the  log;?  dumped 
In  the  mill  ponds  of  tlie  company's  mill 
at  Ulce'9  Point,  and  he  expects  to  find 
most    of    these    in    the    same    condition. 

Current  investigations  show  tJiat 
laxity  of  markInK  and  of  any  sem- 
blance of  protcctlntr  the  state  insofar 
as  Its  logging  Interests  nre  concerned 
1-4  spread  over  a  wide  territory  and  has 
been  going  on  for  years — nobody  can 
tell  just   how  long. 

Kot    Pru.tei'iitlnK    C'rimliinlly. 

Mr.  Ariu-sori  want.s  it  distiri(tly  un- 
d^r.sluod  thut  the  state  auditor's  of- 
f i.  ..  id  not  lr)oklnK  after  the  criminal 
phast^  of  the  mattt  r. 

"That,"  said  he.  "Is  wholly  up  to  the 
tinibT  board.  We  are  seeking  to  pro- 
tect tlie  state  in  a  pecuniary  way  and 
to  obtain  finincial  restitution  for  the 
abuses  of  the  past  and  present.  After 
we  are  tluough.  the  state  timber  board 
may  use  the  evidence  we  collect  as  its 
membtrs  see  fit.  The  only  criminal 
jiioctcdings  which  we  coatempla.te  an' 
In  thf  matter  of  trespass  and  we  ex- 
pect to  line  up  a  lot  of  concerns  for 
this.  We  will  treat  trespass  on  state 
lands  as  a  felony  and  will  play  no  fa- 
vorites in  the  matter.  Mr.  Preus  is 
d.  terniin.d  t«>  stamp  out  these  evils  if 
active  prosection  can  do  It,  and  I  fancy 
tluit  a  good  many  heads  of  concerns 
are  not  feeling  very  comfortable  Just 
at    i>resent." 

Alger-Smitli    Operations. 

Mr.  Arneson  said  today  that  the 
Alger-Smith  i-ompany  is  operating  t)n 
state    lands    at     present    in    5'J-6,     60-6 

'i"'l    «l''-  ..     ■-  ...      ..r 

"Yesterday    afternoon,       he    said,       I 

found     twenty-nine    cars    of    unmarked 

titnber    and     I    was     informed     by      my 

men    that    fifty   more   are   on    their  way 

down    from    the    wo«ids.     That    we    will 

find    still    more    is   certain." 

A;'  an  instance  of  the  procedure  of 
t!\e  lumber  comranles  on  state  lands, 
Mr.    Arupson   said   today: 

"We  have  had  bids  for  the  timber 
nn  state  lands  by  some  of  these  com- 
panies of  as  high  as  |24  a  thousand 
f.-et,  when  they  cannot  sell  It  for 
belter  than  %\\.  which  Is  the  high 
price  now,  even  In  these  times  of  In- 
flated values.  On  top  of  the  price 
which  they  pay  the  state,  there  is  a 
cutting  charge  of  $7  a  thousand,  a 
h.'iulaue  of  $2  and  an  overhead  charge 
of  $1',  making  a  total  cost  of  $35  a 
thou.^tand  feet.  How  do  they  get  thelp 
profit?  Very  simply  Indeed.  The 
stare  is  credited  up  with  about  on*' 
eighth    of    the    actual    measurement    of 


Why  Suffer 
From  Migraine  or 
Sick  Headache? 

Dr.  J.  J.  Caldwell  says  that  this  exceedtnglT 
dUtresBlug  disease  does  not  shorten  life, 
but  doe.s  not  appear  to  be  curable.  Buffer- 
ers  from  this  affliction  are  condemned  to 
tmdergo  t\ya  periodical  attacks  every  few 
weeks  until  they  are  forty  years  of  age,  aft«r 
which  the  attacts  are  less  frequent,  and 
nuttlly  disappear  entirely.  Palltadve  meas- 
ure.4  during  the  attack  are  all  that  It  Is 
possible  to  suggest,  while  care  la  the  diet  Is 
ttie  best  preventive  measure.  An  attack 
may  often  be  prevented  by  taking  two 
antt-kamnla  tablets  when  the  first  symp- 
toms appear,  and  one  antl-kamnla  tablet 
every  two  hours  during  the  attack  shortens 
It,  eases  the  pain  and  brings  rest  and  quiet. 

Antl-kamnla  tablets  may  be  obtained  at 
all  druggists.  Ask  for  A-K  Tabletd,  They 
quickly  relieve  all  Pain. 


the      timber      cut.     The     other     seven 
eighths    is    the   profit." 

Serrrt   Servlee    I'sed. 

Mr.  Arneson  has  six  men  engaged 
in  s^ret  work  of  obtaining  the  evl- 
den<e  in  the  ciXM-n  being  followed  up. 
Tiiey  travel  in  pairs.  One  works  on 
the  loading  at  the  camp,  and  when  a 
cur  is  shipped  he  wires  or  telephone* 
ti>  his  confederate  at  the  other  end 
of  the  line,  where  the  state  inspec- 
tor.^,  having  received  the  number  of 
th^  car,  proceed  to  Inspect  it. 

"I  have  no  objection  to  telling  of 
our  secret  service,"  said  Mr.  Arneson, 
"for  the  lumber  companies  must  know 
by  this  time  that  we  have  the  evi- 
dence down  pretty  pat  by  the  way 
we  are  putting  the  matter  up  to 
them." 

Tbe    Caiihin    Can*. 

I'ntil  the  books  of  .John  Cashln,  dep- 
uty state  scaler,  who  has  been  charged 
by  Mr.  Arneson  with  irregularities  in 
the  scaling  of  state  timber  which  was 
beltig  cut  n«ar  Margie,  Koochiching 
county,  by  the  Rat  Root  Timber  com- 
pany, can  be  thoroughly  examined 
and  checked  against  other  records, 
Frank  CJ.  Scribnei.  surveyor  general 
of  logs  and  lumber,  declares  that  he 
will  not  be  in  a  position  to  determine 
what  loss  has  been  sustained  by  the 
state^  This  will  probably  require  two 
or    three    days. 

Charxei*     AgalaNt    Cashia. 

Mr.  Arneso'n  ha.i  charged  that  Mr. 
Oashin  permitted  the  timber  company 
to  remove  large  quantities  of  state 
timber  from  two  sections  to  the  rail- 
road landing  at  Margie  before  they 
were  scaled  and  stamped.  The  dif- 
ferences between  the  figures  which 
Mr.  Arneson  has  submitted  to  tho 
state  timber  board  and  those  on  the 
books  and-  reports  of  Mr.  Cashln  will 
represent     the    lf>ss. 

Mr.  Scribn^r  yesterday  afternoon  re- 
ceived a  request  from  Covernor  J. 
A.  A.  Burnquist  to  appear  before  the 
state  timber  board  at  its  meeting 
iThursdav  and  place  before  the  board 
such  information  as  he  has  at  his 
command  with  reference  to  the 
Koo<hl(  hing  <ounty  affair  In  which 
Mr.  t'tshin.  his  appointee,  is  Involved. 
Mr.  Cashln.  who  has  been  dismissed 
by  Mr.  Scrlbner.  returned  from  the 
woods  yesterday  and  turned  In  his 
books  and  repot-t.q  this  morning  to  his 
chief.  These  will  be  thoroughly 
checked  over  by  Mr.  Scrlbner  before 
he  goes  to  St.  Paul  and  the  timber 
board  will  be  given  the  benefit  of 
what  the  examination  of  the  deputy 
scaler's    books    disclose. 

Mr.  Scrlbner  this  morning  declined 
to  make  any  statement  with  reference 
to  Mr.  Casliln'a  figures  except  that 
"things  were  not  looking  as  bad  as 
they  had  been  pictured."  He  ex- 
plained that  it  was  necessary  to  first 
mak<-  a  complete  check  of  his  books. 
Sawnlll   ilelaed. 

Mr.  Arneson  .-"aiu  that  six  warrants 
have  been  issued  against  Individuals 
and  firms  in  Beltrami  and  Koochiching 
c<»untles  for  timber  frauds,  an<l  that  the 
sawmill  of  Miller  Bros,  at  Kelllher  has 
been  selz.  d.  The  timber  In  the  mill 
yard  was  also  seized.  Mr.  Arneson  said 
thnt  prosecutions  of  those  concerned 
in  defrauding  the  state  would  be  pushed 
vlgojously.  It  Is  claimed  that  the  state 
auditor's  department  has  conclusive 
evidence  of  grafting  by  scalers  through 
collusion  with  logginji  tlrtn.s.  Several 
have  been  dlsml.-'.sfd. 

Ta  t>«ard    .tgalMitt   FraadN. 

State  Auditor  Preus  ha.s  adopted  new- 
scaling  rules  to  guard  against  further 
frauds.  In  future  every  log  taken  fron» 
a  state  timber  tiact  must  not  only  have 
the  mark  (m  the  eml  of  a  log  showing 
It  was  taken  fron»  state  land,  but  must 
have  the  bark  mark.  The  bark  mark 
amounts  to  practically  a  logger's  trade- 
mark, each  indlvUlual  or  firm  neces- 
sfirlly  having  a  different  design.  Tho 
state,  through  the  slate  auditor,  wiil 
hereafter  hold  that  wherever  even  so 
much  as  a  single  log  without  a  bark 
mark  is  found  in  a  boom  or  among 
booms,  the  entire  amount  of  timber 
will  be  selze<l  by  the  state.  The  pres- 
ence of  a  log  failing  to  have  such  bark 
mark  will  be  considered  presumptive 
evidence*  of  a  desire  to  perpetrate  a 
fraud  upon  the  state. 

Hereafter,  whenever  there  is  tres 
pass  up«m  state  timber  land  the  tim- 
ber bureau  of  the  auditor's  office  will 
cliarge  lr»lcntlonal  trespass  an<l  any 
plea  of  unintentional  trespass  will  not 
be  accenteit  until  proven  In  court  by 
the  logging  inte'-ests.  The  state  audi- 
tor int.'uds  to  bring  about  vlgorou.^ 
prose^-utlon  of  all  Instances  of  ftespass. 
This  determination  on  his  part  is  pred- 
icated upon  the  discovery  of  grafting 
and  fraud  by  scaleis  and  stealing  and 
fraud  and  collusion  by  logging  com- 
panies. 


POURED  OIL 
ONJS  WIFE 

Gary  Baker  Denies  Allega- 
tions of  Cruelty  and  Makes 
Counter  Charges. 


bis  own  aaaistants.- naming  one  In  each 
of  the  several  districts  mapped  out  by 
the  committee.  He  will  have  charge  of 
the  fostering  of  plagftinf  the  proper 
vegetables  and  flow^^  for  exhibition 
at  the  fall  show,  and  of  the  placing  of 
the  exhibits.  The  ■tafcten.  of  Incorpor- 
ating   the    committee    under    the    name 


given    was   left   In 
Crasaweller. 


We^  Are  !«•«£ 

the    high    grade    f 
12    West    Superior 
Ing    must    be    em, 
gardlcss     of    sacrlFi- 
niture    Co. 


iptii  d 


utiit 
rfe- 


Y 


^ands   of   A.    H. 


tombardlng 

litiiTv    Stock.    2110- 
Wt.   Kntire   build- 
by    April    30    re- 
Cameron     Fur- 


When  a  »ea  of  trouble  raged  with 
fury  In  the  household  ot  Peter  Cejo- 
vlch,  Gary  bak»>r.  Cejovlch  poured  aonie 
oil  on  Sofia  Cejovlch,  his  wife.  But  It 
did  not  have  the  same  effect  as  that  of 
pouring  oil  on  troubled  waters. 

The  Cejovlch  house  has  long  been  di- 
vided against  Itself.  This  was  appar- 
ent from  the  stories  which  were  told 
this  morning  In  Judge  Dancer's  divi- 
sion of  the  district  court,  where  a  con- 
tested divorce  suit  Is  In  progress.  The 
case  was  started  several  months  ago 
and   has  been   pending  ever  since. 

Mrs.  Cejovlch  wants  freedom  from 
her  matrimonial  alliance  with  Cejovlch 
on  the  grounds  of  cruelty.  Numerous 
InstanccH  of  cruel  treatment  are 
charged.  He  as.saulted  her  many  times, 
she  testified,  and  on  more  than  one  oc- 
casion he  has  threatened  to  kill  her. 

But  Cejovlch  concedes  nothing.  He 
Is  strenuously  opposing  his  wife's  at- 
tempt to  divorce  him,  declaring  In  a 
cross  bill  that  she  Is  merely  trying  to 
get  rid  of  him  in  order  to  marry  an- 
other man.  He  declares  thut  she  la  In- 
fatuated with  one  Emll  Mlchich  and  he 
is  named  as   the   co-respondent. 

Cejovlch  also  alleges  that  his  wife 
has  neglected  her  household  duties  and 
claims  that  she  has  called  him  vile 
names  and  otherwise  abused  him.  This 
constitutes  cruelty  on  her  part  to  his 
notion  and  he  sets  It  up  as  a  reason 
why  he,  and  not  she,  should  be  granted 
the   decree. 

K.  J.  Kenny  Is  appearing  as  attor- 
ney for  Mrs.  Cejovlch  and  John  H.  Nor- 
ton  Is   representing  Cejovlch. 

In  Judge  Knslgn's  division  of  the  dis- 
trict court  the  contested  suit  for  di- 
vorce brought  by  Mrs.  Hannah  Elfreda 
Youngren  against  her  husband,  Kred  M. 
Youngren,  is  being  heard  this  after- 
noon. Mrs.  Youngren  asks  for  a  de- 
cree on  the  grounds  of  cruelty.  They 
were  married  at  Two  Harbors  on  Jan. 
20,  1899,  and  are  parents  of  two  chil- 
dren The  case  will  be  submitted  to 
Judge  Ensign  for  a  decision  late  to- 
day. 


TO  SEAJKH  FOR 
BODYJF  VIUA 

kfexican  War  Department 

Believes  Villa  Has  Been 

Killed. 


trai  point  for  the  handlins   of  the  com- 
pany's  business. 

■  ■  ♦ 
Bxpcetrd    to    I  u  done    f^spont. 

Dover.  DeL.  April  11. — The  Repub- 
lican state  convention,  which  met  here 
today,  is  expected  to  indorse  Gen.  T. 
Coleman  Dupont  as  Delaware's  choice 
for  the  RepuWIcan  presidential  nom- 
ination. The  convention  will  name  six 
delegates  and  a  like  number  of  alter- 
nates to  the  Republican  national  con- 
vention. 


U.  S.  Aviators  Bring  Word 

of  Death  By  Blood 

Poisoning. 


CENTRAL  BUSINESS  COllEGE 


30  IOa.st  Superior  street,  Dtiluth.  Spring 
term  April  10.  Full  commercial  and 
stenographic  courses;  catalogue  free. 
Barber  &  McPherson. 


Personals 


"Wilson  rnidley  of  Deerwood.  for- 
merly of  Duluth,  a  well  known  mining 
man  of  the  Cuyuna  range.  Is  registered 
at   the  Spalding. 

Henry  .lohnson  of  Kansas  City,  a 
well  known  land  man  of  that  city.  Is 
spending  the  day  In  Duluth,  being  reg- 
istered at  the   Holland. 

Charles  Craig  of  Chicago,  formerly 
an  editor  of  North  Dakota,  is  visiting 
friends   here   today. 

Magnus  Martinson  of  Minneapolis  Is 
registered    at   the   Spalding. 

H.  O.  .lohnson  of  Virginia,  a  w<»n 
known  mining  man  of  Virginia,  is  reg- 
istered at    the   St.   Louis. 


Queretaro,  Mex.,  April  11. — The  war 
department  announced  today  It  had  rea- 
son to  believe  Francisco  Villa  had  been 
killed  In  action  and  that  searching 
parties  had  been  sent  out  to  find  his 
body. 

Avla4«««   BrlsMir    W«fl<4. 

Coluinbu.x,  .V.  Mex.,  April  11. — Lieut. 
H.  A.  Dargue  and  Lieut.  E.  S.  Correll 
of  the  aero  corps,  returning  here  to- 
day in  a  long  distance  flight  from 
San  Antonio,  330  nxUes  so'Uth  of  the 
border,  said  that  reports  were  cur- 
rent among  the  natives  in  the  vicinity 
of  Santa  Ana.  seventy  miles  south- 
west of  Chihuahua- C*ty,  that  Villa  was 
dead  of  blc<  d  poisoning,  caused  by  h*s 
wounds.  Other  reports  indicate  that 
Villa  was  In  flight  closely  followed 
by  American  troops  south  of  Parral 
and    near    the    Duraucro    border. 

Military  authorities  recognize  that 
reports  of  the  ban«Uit:  chieftain's  death 
may  be  another  iiuee  to  throw  the 
Americans  off  what.iian  been  termed  a 
"hot  trail"  but  nevertheiesa  the  filers 
said  no  tendency  la/.inanifested  to  be- 
little  the   report.       •»»> 

No  Oovbt  He  Watt  Wmiadrrf. 

"There  seems  no  doubt  that  Villa 
was  wounded."  said  Lieut.  Dargue, 
"conversations  wltlriratives  and  with 
physicians  having  c<.>nvinced  me  that 
he  was  shot  through^Wbth  legs,  one  of 
them  being  brokca  ^\a  bullet,  while 
another  shot  lodged  in  hit*  stomach.  A 
man  In  that  condlttKn  fttrlthout  medical 
attention  could  scarcely  live  long." 

The  aero  corps  planned  to  send  an 
nviat'^r  toda>-  to  scout  over  the  region 
in  which  the  natives  have  reported 
Villa  was  burled  in  an  attempt  to  find 
the  grave,   the  fliers  said. 

Information  brought  by  Dargue  and 
'lorrell  Indicate  that  American  cavalry 
have  entirely  surrounded  the  detach- 
ment which  Is  reported  to  have  been 
carrying  Villa  on  a  littei-.  The  ad- 
vanced cavalry  detaclrments.  they  said, 
are  about  400  miles  south  of  the  bor- 
der, below  Parral  and  near  the  Dur- 
ango  border  while  several  columns  are 
ofjcrating  south  of  Satevo  where  Gen. 
Pershing  today  was  establishing  his 
new   headquarter*. 


TMe«  JUve*  Clnte  Meeting. 

Thief  River  Falls.  April  11. — (Special 
to  The  Herald".) — For  the  purpose  of 
organizing  to  further  good  roads  work 
In  the  county.  Thief  River  Falls  aruto- 
moblle  men  and  owners  will  meet  at 
the  Commercial  club  rooms  thl»  eve- 
ning. Whether  they  will  form  a  sep- 
arate <lub  this  year  or  act  as  they 
have  in  the  past  as  a  branch  of  the 
Commercial  club  will  depend  to  a  great 
extent  on  the  result  of  thle  meeting. 


TOO  LATE 
TO  CLASSIFY 


One  CcHv  a  Word  Kacii  In»>enlon. 
No  .Vdvertitoemcnt  IjCss  Than  15  Cents. 

WANTED — Good  clief  for  Duluth-Port 
Arthur  passenger  boat.  Write  T  108. 
Herald. 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 

Esadore  Rosen   and  Ira  Garden. 
Louis  Brown  and  Rose  Whipperfurth. 
both    of    Ashland.    Wis. 


WEDDING   PICTURES  are  a  specialty 
wit  11   Chrlstenaen.    25    W.    Superior   st. 


Wedding  Announcements — Engraved  or 
printed.  Consolidated  Stamp  and 
Printing  Co..  14  Fourth  avenue  west. 


14,  18  AND  22 K  SOLID  GOLD  WED- 
dlng  and  engagement  rings  made  and 
mounted  to  order  at  Henrlck«en'St  332 
West  Superior  street. 


Hats 
Shirts 
Cravats 
Gloves 


for  Easier 


The  new  styles,  attractive  colors 
and  designs  and  present  prices  en- 
able ua  to  offer  you  the  best  ob- 
tainable  at   the   lowest   cost. 


Siewerfs  wXSasA.™  304  west  superior  street 


Engraved  and   printed  birth  annotince- 
inents.    Consolidated  Stamp  St  Print.  Ca 


BIRTHS. 


LAXgUST— Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  A.  Lan- 
qulst  of  613  .N'inth  avenue  east  are 
the  parents  oif  a  daughter  born  on 
March  30  at  .St.  Mary's  hospital,  Su- 
perior. 

PEARSOX— The  birth  of  a  son  on  April 
3  has  been  reported  by  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Edward  C.  Pearson  of  2129  Water 
street. 

BYER — A  daughter  was  born  April  5 
to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frederick  Byer  of 
1520  West  Superior  street. 

PAGE — Mr.  and  Mrs.  Arnold  J.  Page  of 
317  Michigan  avenue  are  tlie  parents 
of  a  son  born  April  8. 

PERSON — The  birth  of  a  daughter  on 
April  9  has  been  reported  by  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  William  Person  of  120  North 
Sixty-fourth  avenue  west. 

PRILEY — .\.  son  was  born  April  6  to 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Jolin  Priley  of  Smlth- 
vllle. 


City  Briefs 


simplex. 

The     new     system     of     file     Indexing. 
Call  M.  I.  Stewart  company.    Phones  114. 


Vkf*y>*n  tm   (inuid    Ra|»MM. 

S.  L.  .Sather,  who  for  seve^ral  years 
has  b«-en  connected  with  a  local  jewel- 
ry company,  has  resigned  his  position 
and  will  leave  today  for  c;rand  Rapids. 
Minn.,  where  he  has  purchased  a 
Jewelry  store.  Mr.  Sather  has  been  re- 
siding at  728  East  Fifth  street.  His 
family  will  move  to  Grand  Rapiils  next 
month. 


FertlMae   Yoar  fiavden. 

Order  bag  of  Swift's  fertiliz-r:  makes 
productive  garden  an*!  beautiful  lawn. 
Costs  but  little.     Both  phones  618. 


CITY    NOTICES. 

CONTRACT    WORK— 

Office      of      Commissioner      of      Public 

Works.    City    of   Duluth,    Minn.,    April 

7.    I'Jie. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
Commissioner  of  Public  Works  in  and 
for  the  corporating  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth. Minnesota,  at  his  office  In  the 
City  Hall  in  said  city,  at  11  o'clock  A. 
M..  on  the  21st  day  of  April,  A.  D.. 
l'.>16.  for  the  cleaning  and  sprinkling, 
•with  water,  the  streets  included  In 
Districts  Four  (4),  Six  (S)  and  Thirteen 
(13),  in  said  city,  according  to  the 
plans  and  specifications  on  file  In  the 
office     of     said    Commissioner. 

A  certified  check  for  10  per  cent  of 
the  amount  of  the  bid,  payable  to  the 
order  of  the  Treasurer  of  the  City  of 
Duluth,  must  accompany  each  proposal. 

The  City^  reserves  the  right  to  re- 
ject   any    and    all    bids. 

CITY   OF   DL'LUTH, 

By    W.    H.    BORGEN. 
JAMES  A.  FARRELL.  Clerk. 

Commissioner. 
D.   H..  April  11   and   12,   1916.   D  1917. 


RETURNS  CERTIFIED. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  city  commission 
this  morning  the  returns  of  the  spring 
election  were  ct  riifli-d  to  by  the  can- 
vassing board.  The  board  found  that 
the  "drys"  hat!  won  by  a  majority  of 
26    votes. 

At  the  hearing  Instituted  by  the 
"wets"  yesterday  afterno<»n  Judge 
Frank  A.  Ros^i  ordered  the  Injunction 
dissolved.  According  to  attorneys  for 
the  saloon  element  this  step  Is  but  the 
first  of  a  series  of  court  hearings  In 
conte.«ting  the  election.  Attorneys  for 
the  "Wets"  gave  notice  of  appeal  to  the 
supreme    court   of   the   st.'\te. 

For  Selling  on  Sunday. 

.Tames  Morrison,  proprietor  of  the 
Schweitzer  hotel,  was  arrested  yester- 
day on  a  warrant  charging  him  with 
selling  liquor  i>n  Sunday.  In  police 
court  yesterday  afternoon  he  pleaded 
not  guiltv.  and  hearing  was  set  for 
April   17. 


ASSAULT  CASE 

GIVEN  TO  JURY 

Grand  Uapld.s.  Minn.,  Apt  11  11. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Th«  caa*  of 
the  state  vs.  Sam  Hlckel  and  '*Kid" 
Ll<»yd,  Indicted  on  an  assault  charge 
In  the  alleged  beating  of  a  man  In  a 
cabin  in  .Section  58-22.  near  Hlbbing. 
Nov.  28.  last,  during  a  row  over  pos- 
.sesslon  of  a  deer  carcass,  which  be- 
gan in  district  court  yesterday  after- 
noon, went  to  the  jury  shortly  after 
2  p.   m.  today. 


lONLYSDAYSMOREj 

W.  S.  KIRK'S  SALE 


Will   Bxamlne    TVaval    Recruit*. 

Lieut.  F.  J.  Wills  and  Dr.  Benjamin 
Iden  of  the  naval  recruiting  station 
at  Minneapolis,  will  arrive  in  Duluth 
this  afternoon  and  examine  several 
applicants  for  the  naval  reserve  and 
the  regular  service.  They  are  on  the 
range  today  where  they  have  been 
doing  similar  work.  Lieut.  Wills  Is 
In  charge  itt  the  whole  district  In 
which  Duluth  and  Minneapolis  are 
situated  and  which  comprises  a  large 
part  of  three  states,  Minhesota,  Wis- 
consin  and  North   Dakota. 


la   DrafftlNg   OnHaaner. 

Commissioner  Sllbi-rstein,  safety 
head,  this  morning  started  drafting 
the  proposed  ordinance  licensing 
itinerant  photographers  and  agents 
fur  picture  companies.  One  of  the 
provisions  will  compel  each  agent  to 
file  a  bond  with  the  city  clerk.  The 
measure  will  be  ready  for  presenta- 
tion to  the  council  next  Monday,  he 
said. 


Iwwpeet  MvnU'lpnl  Itvlidlag. 

Commissioners  Silberateln  and  Voss 
and  F.  G.  German,  architect.  ma<|e  a 
fhorough  Inspection  of  the  new  W*^t 
Duluth  mnnidpal  building  this  morn- 
ing. Should  the  present  weather  con- 
tinue. Commissioner  Sllbersiein  be- 
lieves that  th^  building  will  be  finished 
and  ready  for  occupiincy  within  a 
month. 


Paator    Return*    From    ''Cities." 

Pastor  Stemple  White,  920  East 
Sixth  street,  returned  this  morning 
from  Minneepolis,  w^here  he  had  been 
called  to  attend  a  special  n.eetlng  of 
the  executive  committee  of  the  Min- 
nesota conference  of  Seventh  Day 
Advontists. 


-OF 


U.S.  ARMY  AND 
NAVY  GOODS 

LEAVING  DULUTH  FOR  GaOP  APRIL  17 


Your  last  chance  to  buy  Uncle  Sam's  Goods  at 

Bargain  Prices. 

W.  S.  KIRK 

313  WEST  SUPEMOft  STREET 


Leetnre   mi  "The  Crusadea.- 

The  Dulutii  city  tryining  school  for 
Sunday  school  workers  will  meet  at 
7:3tO  ''clock  tonight  for  a  special  lec- 
ture on  "The  Crusades,"  by  Prof.  W. 
H.  ScbllUng.  at  the  Y.  W.  C.  A.  All 
Sunday    school    workers    are    invited. 

N'orBMin   Pvei   Here. 

Norman  Peel,  well  known  in  Duluth 
as  manager  of  "In  Old  Kentucky"  that 
visited  thia  city  regularly  for  more 
than  twenty  years  la  renewing  ac- 
quaintances here  today.  Mr.  Peel  Is 
now  with  Selwyn  &  Co..  and  stopped 
off  here  for  a  day  on  his  way  East 
from   the   Pacific  coast. 

m 

YeM«el   M»Mter«   .Arrive. 

Capt.  Williamson  of  the  steamer  CKy 
of  Bangor,  and  Capt.  Leonard  of  the 
steamer  Pope,  both  wintering  In  this 
harbor,  have  arrived  to  prepare  their 
boats  for  the  opening  of  navigation, 
and  tf>  complete  loading  as  soon  as  the 
Ue  conditions  In  the   bay  will  permit. 


ANNUAL  MEETING 
OF  GOMMERCtAL  CLUB 


The  annual  meetings  of  the  public 
affairs  committee  of  the  Duluth  Com- 
mercial club  and  following  that,  of  the 
club  Itself,  win  be  held  tomori^w  eve- 
ning. The  annual  club  election  will 
be  held  during  the  day,  beginning  at 
11:30  In  the  morning  and  ending  at 
6:30   in  the  evening. 

Five  directors  are  to  be  elected  to 
succeed  J.  B.  Crane,  D.  B.  McDonald.  J. 
R,  Mctilffert.  J.  A.  Stepht-nson  and 
David  Williams,  whose  terms  will  ex- 
pire tomorrow.  The  nominations  to 
date  are:  George  D.  Swift.  H.  M.  Sell- 
wood.  C.  P.  Craig.  K.  T.  Hugo  and 
Harry    Strong. 

The  directors  who  ',hold  over  for  an- 
other year  are:  J.  B.' Cotton,  H.  J.  At- 
wood.  W.  H.  Sirachao.  W.  N.  Hart  and 
Dr.    E.    L.    Tuohy. 

The  meetings  t<MW>«row  night  will 
follow  a  dinner  which  will  be  served 
beginning  at  %  o'clocTc.  The  meeting  of 
the  public  affairs  cvimmlttee  will  bo 
held  first,  at  whicH'  all  of  the  sub- 
committees are  to  report.  These  sub. 
committees  are  at  i*»»k  today  and  to- 
morrow getting  their  cj»parts  ready  for 
the   meeting  tomorrow  night. 

Following  the  public  affairs  commit- 
tee meeting,  the  anpual  meeting  of  the 
club  will  be  held,  when  the  returns  of 
the  election,  held  duftng  the  day,  will 
be  anno«inc«d  and  the  ^nual  report  of 
the  public  affairs  committee  will  be 
made  to  the  club.  The  election  of  of- 
ficers will  be  In  the  hands  of  the  di- 
rectors and  will  taR6  place  later. 

SPELLMG  GbNTEST 
IN  AmtMGOURTY 


I  D^Btlm  and  Funerals  I 


ERI.:'KSON — Thora.  aged  8  months, 
daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John 
Erickson,  1922  West  Michigan 
street,  died  April  10.  The  fUncral 
will  be  held  at  2  p.  m..  April  12, 
from  Olson  &  Hoppenyan's  under- 
taking rooms,  with  burlarl  In  Park 
Hill    cemetery. 


MtmUMENTS. 


LARGEST  STOCK  OF  HIGH-GRADE 
monuments  in  the  Northwest:  call 
and  Inspect  before  buying  elsewhere. 
P.  X.  Peterson  Granite  Co.,  230  E.  Sup. 


Mf>NL'MENTS  to  order  direct  from  fac- 
tories. You  save  20  per  cent.  Charles 
Benson,  office  2301  W.  2nd  st.    Lin.  334. 


Allkln.  Minn.,  April  11.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — In  the  spelling  contest 
hold  during  the  Aitkin  county  teacher.s' 
Institute.  Miss  Elizabeth  Rogers  of 
Aitkin  won  ftrst  place  in  oral  spelling, 

and  Miss  Alice  Nelson,  district  53,  near 
Tamarack,  won  flrat  in  written  spell- 
ing. Second  place  in  written  work 
was  won  by  William  Boyer,  district  66, 
Hassman,  and  third  by  Mls«  Allie 
Leppa,  district  63.  near  Arthyde.  Elach 
girl  winning  first  plBice  will  be  given 
a  free  trip  to  the  state  fair,  while  the 
other  two  winners  will  be  first  and  sec- 
ond alternates. 

A  county  teachers'  association  or- 
ganised by  electing  R.  L.  Mason,  presi- 
dent; Miss  Calla  Hronesh,  vice  presi- 
dent; Miss  Anna  Osterman.  secretary. 

HEADQUARTERS  FOR 

DULUTH  CONCERN 

Thief  River  Falli.  Minn..  April  11. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  Increas- 
ing Importance  of  this  city  as  the  com- 
mercial center  of  Northwestern  Minne- 
sota Is  accented  by  the  establishment 
here  Tue8<lay  of  a  district  branch  of- 
fice of  the  Duluth  Casualty  association 
after  N.  Nlssen  of  Duluth,  president  of 
the  company,  made  the  city  his  first 
visit.  For  some  time  past  the  terri- 
tory *»ut  •'f  here  has  been  covered  by 
Robert  Marsh,  deputy  field  manager, 
but  In  the  future- "Marsh  will  have 
charge  of  eight  counties:  Kittson,  Ro- 
seau, Marshall,  Poli,  Red  Lake.  Nor- 
man. Pennington  and  Mahnomen,  work- 
ing out  of  here  ancHbtp  being  the  cen- 


D«»«gla»N  Open*  Offlee.  I 

The  We.'Jtern  Transit  ,  lines  h.ave 
opened  offices  In  the  Fargus.-ton  build- 
ing. G.  L.  Douglass  Is  the  accent  here. 
This  concern  will  take  care  of  the  lake 
freight  business  of  the  New  York  Cen- 
tral lines. 


Mather   ^S'aaied   S«p4'rin(e»4ent. 

At   a   meeting    of  the    Duluth    Kxp(>.«ii- 

tlon  c<»mmlttee,  held  at  the  Commercial 

;  club  this  noon.  O.  L.  Mather  was  elect- 

I  ed  president.     Mr.  Mather  will  appoint 


CONSni^TION 

Md  West  Baden  SpnidelWater  cannot 
exist  in  the  same'i^ody  one  horn:. 
At  your  druggist-^ttn^  bottles;  15«s 
Ivge  botdeSt  3Sc  . 


FUNERAL    FLOWERS    A    SPECIALTY. 
Duluth  Floral  Co.,  121  W.  Superior  St. 

B«IILDING  PERMITS. 


To  the  Capitol  Elevator  com- 
pany, concrete  elevator  on 
the  west  side  of  the  harbor 
line,  between  Slip  No.  I  and 
Mill   a  venue    %  39O,0tf0 

To  Nels  Almquist,  two  dwell- 
ings on  the  south  side  of 
Fourth  street,  between  Thir- 
ty-ninth and  Fortieth  ave- 
nues west    3,000 

To  Kreidler-Doyle  company, 
dwelling  on  the  west  side  of 
Fifty-ninth  avenue  west,  be- 
tween Kaleigh  and  Polk 
streets    2,500 

To  the  Otis  Elevator  company, 
installing  passenger  elevator 
in  building  on  the  south  side 
of  Flr.st  street,  between 
Fourth  and  Fifth  avenues 
west    2,000 

To  the  Otis  Elevato*'  company, 
installing  passenger  elevator 
in  b<uilding  on  the  south  sid** 
of  Michigan  street,  between 
Third  and  Fourth  avenues 
n est    .......................        x.ovO 

To  the  Otis  Elevator  company, 
installing  freight  elevator  In 
building  at  Morgan  Park....         1,000 

To  the  (3tis  Elevator  company, 
installing  freight  elevator  In 
building  on  the  north  side  of 
Forty-ninth  avenue  west,  be- 
tween Magellan  and  Hallt^x 
streets    1.000 

To  Nels  Almciuist,  dwelling  on 
the  west  side  of  .Sixty-third 
avenue  west,  between  Bristol 
and  Green  streets 1,500 

To  the  Radfoa-d-Wrlght  com-  i 
pany.  Installing  freight  ele- 
vator in  building  on  the  east 
side  of  Forty-sixth  avenue 
west,  between  Rene  and 
Traverse  streets 1,100 

To  EL  Decheur,  garage  on  the 
north  side  of  Third  street, 
between  Twenty-sixth  and 
Twenty  -  seventh  avenues 
west    750 

To  Mrs.  J.  Closhe,  repairs  to 
dwelling  on  the  west  side  of 
Lake  avenue,  between  Ninth 
and  Tenth  streets 600 

To  the  Otis  EleVator  company. 
Installing  freight  elevator  In 
building  on  the  south  side  of 
First  street,  betw^eeo  Sixth 
and  Seventh  avenues  east...  600 

To  M.  G.  Wisted,  dwelling  on 
the  south  side  of  B^aribault 
street,  between  Kolstad  and 
Ewlttg  »venues 300 

to,  O.  M.  Hay,  addition  to 
dwelling  on  the  south  side  of 
Tenth  street,  •  between 
Twelfth  and  Thirteenth  ave- 
nues  east    600 

To  Frank  Boj-lch.  barn  on  the 
west  side  of  One  Hundred 
and  First  avenue  west,  be- 
tween Dickson  and  Gary 
streets    260 

To  P.  G.  Hanson,  garage  on  the 
north  side  of  Third  street, 
between  Twenty-second  and 
Twenty-third   avenues  west.  200 

To  the  <)tis  Elevator  company. 
Installing  freight  elevator  In 
building  on  the  east  side  of 
Twenty-first  avenue  west, 
between  Superior  and  First 
streets    200 

To  the  Otis  Elevator  company. 
Installing  freight  elevator  in 
building  on  the  west  side  of 
Twenty-first  avenue  west, 
between  Superior  and  First 
streets    200 

To  Larson  Bros.,  smoke  house 
on  the  south  side  of  Third 
street,  between  Twenty-sev- 
enth and  Twenty-eighth  ave- 
nues   west    "6 

To  John  Wadtke,  alterations  to 
dwelling  on  the  .south  8l<le  of 
Tenth  street,  between 
Twelfth  and  Thirteenth  ave- 
nues  east    '.'•••;•  '" 

To  G.  G.  Hartley,  repairs  to 
dwelling  on  the  north  side  of 
Superior  street,  between 
Twelfth  and  Thirteenth  ave- 
nues east •v 


RED  RIVER  DOCTORS 

TO  MEET  IM  JUNE 

Thief  River  Falls,  April  11.— (.^Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  quarterly  meet- 
ing of  the  Red  River  Valley  Medical 
society  will  be  held  here  about  the 
middle  of  June.  All  <ounties  bordering 
on  the  Red  River  are  members  of  the 
society  and  about  sixty  delegates  are 
expected  for  the  meeting.  Dr.  W.  S. 
Anderson  of  Warren  is  the  present 
president  and  J.  M.  Dryden  of  Crooks- 
ton  the  secretary.  There  will  be  no 
election  of  officers  at  this  session. 
«i 

Attempts  Suicide. 

An  unknown  labo.rer  attempted  sui- 
cide bv  cutting  his  throat  with  a 
pocket'knife  at  the  union  station  this 
afternoon.  He  was  taken  to  St.  Luke  s 
hospital.  His  recovery  Is  doubtful. 
• 

Working  on  Code. 

All  the"  chairmen  of  the  sub-com- 
mittees preparing  the  proposed  com- 
bined building,  plumbing  and  elec- 
trical code  will  meet  In  the  organiza- 
tion's headquarters  at  the  Palladlo 
building  at  4:30  o'clock  tomorrow  aft- 
ernoon. .  ,    .. 

William  H.  Hoyt,  chairman  of  the 
general  committee,  will  preside.  Emll 
J.  Zauft,  vice  chairman,  and  Edward 
Semple.  secretary,  will  be  present  at 
the    meeting.  ^,  , 

The  chairmen  will  discuss  the  work. 
don»  by  their  respective  committees 
up  to  the  present  time. 

• — • 

Fifteen   Yeari»   For  Shooting. 

Milwaukee.  Wis.,  April  11.— Fred 
Opperman  was  sentenced  Monday  to 
fifteen  vears  in  state's  prison  after 
pleading  guilty  to  a  charge  of  haying 
shot  and  seriously  wounded  Miss  Edna 
Dunham  of  Wauwatosa,  a  suburb  of 
Milwaukee,  several  months  ago,  while 
In  a  Jealous  frenzy.  , 
• ' 

Verdirt   Agalnxtt   PhyNlclan   Reversed. 

Madison,  Wi.s..  April  11. — A  verdict 
of  $80  awarded  by  a  lower  court 
against  a  physician.  Dr.  C.  A.  Faber,  on 
a  claim  that  he  did  not  properly  diag- 
nose a  case  of  diphtheria  was  today 
reversed  by  the  supreme  court. 

.  a. 

ThUf  River  Fail*  Fire. 
Thief  River  Falls,  Aprtl  11. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  hundred  dollars 
damage  wa$  done  to  the  Andy  Ander- 
son residence  at  606  Main  street  north 
by  fire  Sundav  noon.  Practically  all 
of  the  Injury  was  from  water  and 
smoke.  The  fire  started  from  an  over- 
heated flue  which  ignited  a  partition. 

•   

Attkiu  Man  Burled. 
Aitkin,  Minn.,  April  11.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Matt  Barr.  who  for 
many  years  had  been  a  resident  of 
Aitkin,  died  April  6  of  cancer  at  the 
Allen  hotel  at  the  age  of  68  years.  He 
was  a  native  of  Canada  and  at  one 
time  owned  and  operated  a  blacksmith 
shop  here.  Burial  took  place  Saturday. 


Suits  and 

Spring 

Coats 

Dry  Cleaned  and 
Pressed 

Best  work  in  city. 

Both  Phones 
2442 


Laundry 
Dry  Cleaning 
Department 


Capital  stock  paid  up. 


20e,0tiS.0t 


Total   liabilities,   includinf  capital $        24.'i,i<l;i.!»« 

Surplus  over  all   UaliiliUes 1©  074  28 

Bl'SIXESS   I.N    MIXXKS()T.V   IN   191;".. 

Premiums  Ui'i-eiteil.     Los»e>  Im-urred. 
Accident    aad    health flO.467.06  $  4.!«>6.S3 


Totals 


.$10,467.06 


J4.i»%.83 


State  of  .Mlnne«iOta.  PejiartraPiit  of  Insurance. 

1  Herehy  (Vftify,  That  Uu-  Aunual  Stalemeiit  of  ttw 
Federal  Casualty  coiiipaiiy,  for  the  year  endins  1>»- 
rcmber  31st,  1*»15,  of  which  the  above  Is  an  abstracC, 
has  been  recelted  aad  filed  iu  this  depanmeut  and  dulr 
approved  b>-  me.  S.   1>.   WOKKtS. 

rommls>.loner  of  Insiiranee. 


UF.\E:RAL      l.\DKMMTr      CORPORA- 
TIOX     OF      A^IERICA. 

Principal  office:  Rochester,  X.  Y.  Orjanlzod  In  1911. 
Uiram  K.  Wood,  proildent;  Kalyh  .M.  Barston,  becrdaiy 
Auoni»y  to  accept  sTvicj  in  Minnesota:    Commi'.bioucr  ui 

CASH  CAPIT.U.,  $200,000.06. 
IXtdMK   IN  1913. 
PremluBS  recehed   init-  •n  tr.o  ^a 

Burglary    and    theft ♦  (i,ja-.iB 

Total  net  premium  income %         Ji'^rt''? 

From  interest  and  rents 13,410.i>2 

From  all  other  sources oaO._4 

Tital    Income    \ 

Ledger    assets   Dec<mber   31st   of    previous 
year     


85,312.94 
3(M.136.12 


Sun,                           $  389,43'J.36 

lJlSBLR.SBMKVrS    IN   1915. 

balarl'^s     of     oftlrers,     aeents,     employes,  _„,-,, 

ejumiiner*    and  luspecUon   fees $  j'?T-'Ji 

All  oUkt  disbursements   4,ll9.»5 

Total    dli*urscracBl»    %  l»,131.08 

BalMca    %^    380,308.28 

LKUtiEH  .\S8KTS  DKC.  31,   191a. 

Book  ralue  of  bonds  and  stocks 5       341,L:»J.yi 

Ca»h     lu    office,     tnist     companies     and 

banks    ^'"VilS 

Premiums  in  course  of  colleiUon.s 3,416.29 

Total  ledeer  asricts   (a  per  balance).. $       380,308,28 

NOS  LKUGER  ASShTW.  .  ^^  ^ 

Interest  and  r«iits  due  and  accrued %  4,886.80 

Crnqj    asseU  %       385,195.08 

^""^    '^UIX-TA«SET8    .NOT    ADMiAeD. 
Total    admitted   •-ts^^^.^-j-^Y^- •  • I       38o,Wd.08 

Vnearned    premlumi     I         ^J'^=? 

All    other   liabllltie.    onn'rtttftft 

Capital   itock   paid    up 2W,0*JW.W 

Total  liabilities,    including  capital $       258,962.94 

Surplus   o\er  all   lUbilltles $126,232.14 

^  Bl'SINESS  1.N   MlXXJCaOti  l.N   1915.  .     , 

Premiums    received. 

Burslnry   and   theft $  ^820.46 


XEW    YORK    Llt'E    I\Sl  RAXCE   COM- 
PAX  V. 

Principal    offlc*:     .New    York,    X.    Y.      (Orjani/A'd   ia 
1*11.  (       Dantin    P.     Klnsslcy,    president;    Seymour    M. 
Ballard,    siecretarj:.      Attorney    to   a<-<vpt    service    iu    .\lia- 
ne>ola:     Coi'imi.>-ili>n>»r  of  ln.<-uram-e. 
IXC'O.VIE  IX  1915. 

Flr'^t  rear's  premiums $ 

Dividends  and  sum'nder  values  applieil  to 

purchase   paid-up    insurance    and   aunu- 

itled     

Consideration    for   oriftlual    annuities    and 

supidementarr    contracts,    invohiiig    life 

contlncende^    

Renewal   ppemiums    80,666,792.71 

Extra   prrDiiums   for   dlNahlllty   and   acri- 

deut    26;5,«W.0» 


8,219,W6.-a 

l,5ii4, 697.01 

59R.'29«..-.2 


Total    premium   Income $91,332,562.73 

Bents    and    interests 36,792,*XJ.9'J 

Unws  prottt  on   sale,    maturity   or  adjust- 
ment of  ledger  a.swts l,5.'i3,S.">S.W 

From  all  other  sources 1.845,71*9.96 


Total    Income    $131.52.'>,014.75 

Ledger   aaaets   December    31st   of   previous 

799,838,591.21 


year 
Sum 


$931,363,6«15.96 

DLSBIK.SE.MEXTS   IX    1915. 
Death,  cndoumeot  and  dLsahilit}-  daims..$  39, 796, 531.. '<7 

AnuiilUcs    1,482, 7]9.3« 

Surrender   vatue-,  to   policyholders 17,969,32ii.i>6 

Dividends   to    policyholders l«,672,5S:i.-5 


Total 


2,820.46 


8tat«  of  Minnesota,   Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Uerebv  Certify,  That  the  Annu*l  Stat«^>ment  of  the 
Genera]  Iridemnlty  Corporation  of  .\merica  for  the  year 
ending  December  31>t.  1915.  of  which  the  above  ia  aii 
atKtr^'t,  l.a»  been  received  aad  filed  in  this  deparUncut 
und  duly  awrored  by  me.  S.  D    WORKS, 

CommlsdoBer  of  Insurance. 


FBOERAE.   CASUALTY   COMFAXY. 

Principal   o»w:     Detroit,   Mich.     Organlaed  te   1906 
V    D    Cllir.  president;  L.   E.   Daly,   aecretiry. 
to  accept  service  iu  Mlimcsot*;     Commisslona 

*'"*■  C.\8II   CiPlT.VL.    1260.000.00. 

INCOME  IX  ma. 
Premiums  «*»»«»  0«tl- 

.Vcfidtjnt  $S»,3S8..a. 

Total  net  premtuai  Incooe 9 

Policy  fe«s    

From    Interest    and    rent* 

From  ^  other  Hpureca. 


...«••... 


Attorney 
of  insur- 


336..193-21 

40,3S».00 

21.917.17 

a.161.88 


Totel  locoaw   * 

U^tff   asseti*   DecNBber   31st  of   prcvkMis 

I«if   


407,810.26 
421.474.73 


gum  I       829.484.99 


DlflSniefSMENTS  l.'^  1913. 

CliOiM  P«W  (Nrt)- 

AccWent     flS.7W.6o 

Xet    p«ld    poUeyholdefs • 

Policy  few    

CommlKfiomi    • 

SaUrt«s  Of  oMcws,  •«ent«.  emploj-es,  ex- 

vninefs'  and  Insjiection  fees 

I)ivld«wl»  to   stockholders.   ...^^....... 

Lo«  on  sale  or  maturity  of  Isdtw  ••«». 
All   Other    disbursements 


Total  disburseaanta w 

MHlutee       ,,.••............••» 

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC.  31.  1915, 

Book  value  of  real  estate $ 

Mortgaae   loans    \\-\: 

Book  value  of  bonds  and  stocks......... 

Cash  ia  ofUce.  trust  companies  and  banks 


133.701.65 
40.328.05 
79.3».83 

38.838.71 
50,000.00 
13.753.33 
30.005.78 


Total   paid  policyholders 75,921,160.24 

Dividends    held     on    deposit    surrendered 

during    the   year 53,083.43 

Comifisslons    and    bonuses   to   agents   first 

year's  premiums    3.915,526.1£ 

CominlsNlons   on   rcneaaU l,930,o70.1S 

CummiNsloiii    on    renewals    (original    and 

renewal )      9,314..33 

.Salaries   and   allouances  for    agencies. . . .  25,202.M> 

•Uenc}'  supervision  and  branch  office  ex- 
penses      2.122,864.00 

Medical  examiner's  fees  and  inspection  of 

risks    44n,s:J6.53 

Salaries  of  offlrers  and  emplo)-e» 1,816,881.15 

Legal   expenses    21,457.51 

Gross  loss  on  sale,  maturity  or  adjust- 
ment  of  ledger   a.s.setg 3,li  i,985.vJ5 

KM    othi-r    disbursements 4.249,59l..'!4 


Total  disbursements 
Balance 


$  93,687,273. W 


$837.676,332.W 

1.EDGKK   ASSETS   DEC.   31,    1915. 

Value  of  real   estat4s  owned $  12,171,919.2» 

MortgaRo    loans    15i»,520,.'»3.42 

Collateral   loans   15<).<K>1.(«> 

Iremlum  nob>s  and  poliry  loans Ifi2,<)92.36u.44 

Bonds  and  stocks  owned 483,479.527.62 

Ca.sh,    iu   offlc'',    banks    and    trust    cuin- 

panies    19,588.827.73 

Bills  receivable   and  agents'    balances 206,546.r,i) 

.\1I  other  ledger  assets 466.848.0S 


IVital  ledger  assets  (ai  per  balance* ..  .$8.37,676..^2.!«8 
XOX-LEDGEH  ASSETS. 

Intorest  aii'l  rpnt<  due   and  accrued $    9.SS6.609..'>j 

Xet   deferred   and   unpaid  ijrcmiums 9,96;;..)91.t»4 


Gross  assets   $857,526,533.43 

DEDl  tT    .\SSETS   .NOT    AU.MITTEU. 
Book  value   of  lodger  assets  over   market 

value     34,323.>»7.U 

All  other  atiseU  not  adoitu-d 285,l76.3i 


Total   assets  not   admitted.... 


.$  34.60S.683.5g 


406.200.35 
423,2^.64 

9».V».98 

16.000.00 

303.388.75 

4.77L91 


Total  ledger  assets    (as  per  balance).. $       423.275.64 
*                        NOX-LEDGKR   .\S»:T8. 
Interest  and  renU  du«  and  accraed $  6,441.38 


G,«s  asseto   i       429,717.02 

PEDCCT   ASSETS   XOT   .ADMITTED. 
Book  value  of   ledger  asseu  over  market 
value    


14.728.75 


Total  a&sets  not  admitted $ 

Total   admitted   assets 

*  U.VB1UT1B8. 

Claims —  _ 

Tot»l   ' 

Vneanied  preBluBS    • 

Commissions  and  brokorast.. ••••••• 

All  other  UAblllUM .* 


14.728.75 
414,9«8.27 


20,796.44 

13,617.54 

2,500^00 

9.000.00 


Total  admlltcd  assets $822,917,W9.86 

LIABILITIES   DEC.   31,    1915. 

Xet  irserve   *>75,731,039.')d 

Reserved    lor   suiipl<?Dieiitar)-   contracts:   li- 
ability on  canceled  policie* 4,23ft.667.S« 

Claims   due   and   uiipnid 1,23;{,431.64 

Reserve  for  death  losses  Incwred  but  un- 
reported            l.uOil.OUO.Ut 

Claims  adjusted  and  not  due,   and  unad- 
jiLstid  and   reported- 4.432,446.»1 

Claims   resisted   606.308.12 

Claims  for  dlsabUity l.S,18S.0# 

Divldrads  left  with  company  to  accumu- 
late           .832.571.58 

Premiums  paid  In  advance 988,<i52.3S 

Dividends   due   or   apportioned    policyfaold- 
ers    lW,fW2.204,2l 

gpe<'Ul  reserves   17.48X79t>.67 

All   ottev    lUbUHlM    4,999.543.85 

ToUl   liabUttle»  on    po!lryh(rfde«'  te- 

count  S822,917.849.8i 

EXHIBIT  OF  POLICIES,  1915. 

No.  Amount, 
follcles    In   force   at   end   of 
previous   year    (last  column 

w\s 1142253  $2,347,098,388.0t 

Policies   In   force   at   doM   of 

the  yea*  11^^321  2,4O3,8O0.s:8.«t 

Net    tamase 33068  $     5«.702.4tW.0t 

Issued,    revived   and   increased 

durini   the   >-ear 107700  228,8J^,191.0• 

Total    termliuted    during    the 

74632  172,191. 701.00 

Bl'STX'ESS  IN  MLNXESW.i  IN  1915. 


year 


.No. 


Policies    In    fWee    Dec.    31, 

1914  V^ 

Issued  during  tha  year 2aL> 

Ceased  to   be  in   force   Airing 

the  year    131- 

In  force  December  31st.  1915    30082 
Los.se«    and    claims     incurred 

during  the  year  165 

Losses  and  claims  setUed  dur- 

ing  the  year 164 

Losses  and  claims  unpaid  De- 
cember 31it,    1915 '13        

Becelved  for  premiums I    1,155,698.11 

State  of  Minnesota.  IVpartment  tX  Insurance. 

I  Hen-by  Certify,  Tbat  the  Annual  Statement  of  tha 
Sew  York  Life  ItjstiniDfe  (ompany  for  the  year  ending 
becembtr  31st,  1915,  of  which  the  above  Js  an  abalraet, 
has  been  received  and  filed  in  this  det>artment  and  duly 
approved  by  ■».  .  ^        ,       »    l»-  WORKS. 

CuauBkslunei  oT  loiu.'aaai^ 


Amount. 

31,5L>4.9»2.0t 
4.431.334.0i 

2,351,5.S1  Oi 
33,598.745.0i 

454.863.9« 

453.238.4 

16,504  41 


WtHtti 


*  r^>^»'"*«fi*<*<w**B5*.^**^^^" 


, 


laa    '"H 


» 


I 


r" 


\ 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


ON  THE  IRON  RANGES 


MAYOR  BOYLAN  IN 

REPLY  TO  BOARD 


Takes    Issue  With    Police 
Commission  as  to  Attend- 
ing Meetings. 

ViiKii'i.i,  Muin..  April  1 1.-  (Special 
to  Tli<  H.rxld.)— Thf  resolution  passf-d 
by  th«*  police  and  fire  commission 
ciitiriziiit?  thi  report  of  the  grnnil 
Jury  rtliitivM  lo  th*-  alU  f;«  d  violations 
of  ii(|uor  Ifiws  hen-  ami  *spt«ially  tho 
commission's  charwc  Hint  the  mayor 
does  Mot  rii-opi-ratc  with  llic  commip- 
slon  .iiid  dors  not  alttiid  Its  nuttings, 
has  dr:i\\n  a  rcjoind*  r  fiom  Mayor 
ijo>laii.  in  ^vhi^■^l  ho  dialli  i>Kcs  tli»- 
commissi. )n  to  rfi-ommcml  to  tlu-  cli;ir- 
tor  i(mimission  a  chance  for  the  people 
to  vole  ••n  nnitiidinn  the  «  linrler  to 
determine  wlnilier  the  police  commls- 
bIoii  or  the  mayoi'  should  control  th  ■ 
police.  In  rej-ard  lo  the  charge  he  did 
not  attend  the  met  liiiKS  Mayor  Hoylan 
says: 

"I  did  attend  several  meethiBS  until 
the.  time,  "i  year  apo  last  Fourth  of 
July,  when  the  eounril  granted  to  the 
Fourth  of  Inly  committee  the  ri^lits 
to  n<  t  permits  for  the  use  of  stands 
and  .•ntcrtainment  for  tiie  Fourth, 
when  I'atiick  foffey,  ehaitman  of  the 
police  eornmlssion,  ami  ♦'hief  of  I'o- 
llce  Cately  ignored  the  coumil  per- 
mits and  ordere<l  several  stands  to 
vacate  the  streets.  I  Willi  to  thejii  at 
that  time  an<l  piote.sed  against  such 
arhitrary  aetlon,  told  Mr.  t'off»y  that 
he  did  m.i  represent  the  people  of  the 
city  and  he  told  me  that  if  1  said  one 
more  Word  he  would  |>uiirh  my  face. 
<lueM(lon<«   Thrlr    lt«>-l<:iection. 

"V'ictoi-  Teti  r.son,  eluiirfnati  of  tho 
Fourth  of  .l\ily  committee,  and  Alder- 
man K.  K.  Murray  were  with  me  at 
the  time.  After  su<h  actions  as  that 
I  did  not  .s.  (•  where  it  would  be  of  any 
ust-  for  im-  to  attend  their  mectin««. 
J  will  say  that  Mr.  I'oiriei-  and  Mr. 
i'offej  (annot  be  elet  led  if  it  is  left  to 
a  vol.  of  111.'  people.  The  commis- 
Bioni  rs  weie  put  there  by  Kx-Mayor 
M.  A  Murphy  lo  have  contrcd  over 
the  police  departmenl  for  at  least  fo.ir 
years.  I  am  personally  w  illInK  to 
abide    by   any    deeision   of   the    people. 

"They  speak  of  the  .ontlngent  fund 
of  $1,500  per  year.  P<»lice  Chief  late- 
ly asUcI  me  for  $100  from  the  con- 
tinRent  fund  to  Bet  i\ldence  against 
the  blind  pijis.  I  Rave  Chief  Calely 
a  check  for  the  money.  He  took  the 
che<  k  to  Mr.  Toirier.  who  is  now 
chairman  of  tiie  commission,  and  he 
t«>ld  Calely  that  It  was  not  their  busi- 
ness lo  Ret  such  »vidence.  but  that  it 
w.'i.s  the  loisineFs  of  the  city  attorney. 
I  fipured  that  if  1  could  not  have  the 
ro-operat  l(»ii  of  the  pidice  department 
and  the  commission  that  It  was  miKhty 
little   Rood    we    could    do. 

"The  poUie  department  has  about 
$3o,0fMt  p.  r  yi-ar  and  they  expect  m.' 
to  d.>  more  witii  $1,500  than  they  do 
■with  $30,000.  .Vine  of  ten  of  the  bliml 
piKSers  prosecuted  have  been  arrest- 
ed on  evidence  seeured  by  tlic  u.sc  (>f 
my    fund." 

VIRGINTA"wiLL~ 

VOTE  ON  SCHOOL 


tIER  PASSING  IS  MOURNED 
BY  MANY  BOVEY  PEOPIE 


i 


^ 


v»^\ 


;m. 


MRS.   MARTIN   CHRISTIANSON. 

lUivev.  Minn..  April  11. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  re<ent  death  of  Mr» 
Martin  Chrlstlanson  of  thU  village, 
who  liv»-r  liere  many  years,  n  forniei' 
resident  of  <;rand  Kapids.  haa  eaused 
Keneral  sorrow  as  her  many  line  woin- 
anlv  traits  end<ared  her  to  many  peo- 
ple." Shi'  will  be  sadly  missed  in  .hurch 
and  .•'o<  ial  circles.  Mrs.  Cliristlanton 
was  It;,  a  native  of  Norway,  and  be- 
sides her  hustiand  Is  .survived  by  sev- 
eral  cousins  and  aunts. 


live,    the    club    agricultural    committee 

twill    furnish    puie    seeds    to   farmers    in 

I  the    townships    of    Tike     Hiver.    Corbin. 

1  Forbes,  Kelsev,  and  in  the  Wolfe  and 
Little       Fork       valley       distrlcls.       The 

'native    Rrasses    will    be    depended    upon 

j  in    making    up    the    exhibit. 

During:    the     aKTicultutal     and      live- 

:  stock   show   it   is   proposed,    if   possible. 

'  to    iiave    a    reunion    of    range    pioneers. 

i  Among    lhf.se    who    will    be    Invited    to 

!  be  the  guests  of  the  city  will  be  Lon 
Mfrritt,     <;.     <;.     Hartley.     Archie     Thl.*- 

I  holm,  all  of  Duluth.  and  others  promi- 
nent In  the  mining  industry,  besides 
(Jovernor  Burnquist  and  other  state 
<*fficers,  and  James  J.  and  Louis  W. 
Hill. 


EVELETH  GIRLS 

WERE  INJURED 

Quite    Badly    Hurt    When 

Their  Rig  Collides  With 

Motorcyclist. 

Eveleth.  Minn,.  April  11. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — It  develops  that 
Misses  .*5arah  and  Fannie  Kuner.  of 
this  cll>-.  who  were  driving  with  Alex 
Hellnian,   employtd   by   William    Kaner, 

on  the  Gilbert  road  last  Sunday  after- 
noon, when  their  horse  and  buggy 
collided  with  a  motorcycle  ilddcn  by 
John  Mobich  of  Old  Mesaba,  were 
quite  badly  hurt,  although  first  re- 
ports were  they  were  only  slightly 
injured.  The  occupants  of  the  buggy 
claim  Boblch  was  coming  towards 
them  at  a  rapid  rate.  Htllman  says  ho 
put  his  hand  up  as  a  signal  for  the 
motorcyclist  to  stop,  as  he  knew  the 
horse  would  be  frightened,  but  the 
caution  was  not  heeded.  As  Hoblch 
drew  nearer,  the  horse  became  fright- 
ened and  shied  to  one  side  of  the  road, 
the  result  being  that  there  was  a 
collision. 

Horoir    In   Hurt. 

One  of  the  f..re  It-ns  <.f  the  horse 
was  broken,  but  in  spile  of  Its  In- 
.luries,  the  frightened  animal  dragged 
Hellman  seveial  ttft  b.v  the  reins  be- 
fore it  could  be  stopped.  The  buggy 
was  upset  and  the  girls  were  injured 
quite  badl.v.  although  the  (xtent  of 
the  injuries  rcctived  were  not  known 
at   that    time. 

Th»»  horse,  owned  by  Morrln  Kaner, 
was  ..shot  soon  afterwards.  Bobich  was 
thrown  from  the  mfitorcyde  when  the 
horse  was  struck,  and  was  made  un- 
conscious by  the  blow.  He  was  taken 
to  a  Virginia  hospital.  His  Injuries 
are    not    considered    serious. 


Virginia,  Minn.,  April  11. —  (Special  to 
Tho  Herald.) — Whether  the  present 
Roos«  Vclt  school  will  be  dismantled 
and  on  its  site  a  new  schof)l  building 
ccn.str;iete<l.  whieh  it  is  estimated  will 
cost  approximately  1106,000  and  will 
contain  an  audilorlum  capable  of  seal- 
ing 2,000  i.eopl.\  Avill  be  submitted  to 
the  voler.s  of  the  indeprndent  school 
district  of  Virginia  at  a  sp«  clal  election 
one  v.-eeU  from  Saturday.  The  petition 
for  the  special  eleetion  was  received  by 
the  board  last  night  and  the  date  of 
election  llxed. 

Teachers  for  the  coming  year  were 
lilred.  rrnetieuUy  all  of  the  presciil 
teaching  staff  will   rftuin. 

Arddo    \ot    llollslird 

Tlio  name  of  C.  W.  rfeifiVr 
In  the  list.  PfelfT.  r  Is  being 
grill,  d  for  the  authomhip  of  an  article 
In  the  current  number  of  the  Survey 
magazine  criticizing  housing  londition.s 
In  the  Scanlon  location  and  for  the 
ttaiement  that  industrial  democracy, 
rot  industrial  paternalism,  is  needed 
on  the  Mesfiba  range,  and  Is  the  center 
of  a  ?»d-hot  row   at  the  present  time. 

FAl'iM  EXHIBITS  AT 
VIRGINIA  IN  FALL 


MAYOR  BOYLAN  TO 

FILL  POSITIONS 


was  not 
severely 


■Virginia,  Minn.,  April  11.—  (Special 
to  Tiie  Herald.) — The  (.'(unmerclal 
club     will     sponsor     the     first     eastern 

Mesaba  range  agricultural  and  live- 
stock show  to  be  held  here  Sept.  14, 
16  and  16.  The  dates  for  the  show 
were  set  and  preliminary  arrange- 
menls  started  yesterday  afternoon  at 
a  meeting  of  the  agricultural  com- 
niittec. 

The  dates  will  not  conflict  with  the 
annual  county  fair  at  Hlbbing  or  the 
state  fair.  Secretary  Otto  A.  Stangel 
and  F.  W.  Torvlnen  were  appointed 
a  c<»mmlttee  on  program.  It  is  pro- 
posed to  have  the  national  d«partment 
of  agriculture  send  a  speaker  and  to 
have  other  prominent  northwestern 
agri'iiltural     authorities     present. 

Virginia  has  espceially  fine  facil- 
ities for  an  agricultural  exhibit  and 
livestock  show  In  i*.»  public  market 
nml  curling  rink  building  and 
barn.  The  livestock  show  will 
most  elaborate  ever  attempted 
range. 

To    Furnlxh     Pure     Seed, 

In    order    that     the     Virginia 


Virginia.  Minn.,  April  11.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Mayor  Boylan  will 
announce  his  appointments  to  the  po- 
lice and  fire  commission,  the  library 
board  and  the  park  board  at  the  regu- 
lar meeting  of  the  council  tonight.  He 
does  not  indicate  who  they  will  be, 
other  than  that  he  will  appoint  John 
Ketola   a  member  of  tlic  library  board. 

The  city  attorneyship  fight  may  not 
be  settled  this  evening.  It  Is  between 
Montague,  Shea  and  Onkaa,  with  all 
the  aspirants  apparently  holding  their 
support. 

On   Police  ComnilMNlon. 

There  is  much  spe.  ulailon  as  to  tho 
appointment  on  the  police  and  fire 
commission.  L.  F.  Burns  and  former 
Alderman  A.  1>.  H»iitage  are  believed 
to  be  the  two  ntost  likely  to  be  chosen 
by  the  mayor.  Only  «»ne  member  of 
the  commission  is  to  be  chosen.  J.  E. 
Hanson,  employed  at  tlie  offices  of  tho 
Virginia  &  Rainy  Luke  company,  is 
tho  retiring  member  of  the  commis- 
sion. 


POLICE  COMMISSION 
ISSUES  STATEMENT 


Virginia.  Minn..  April  11  — tSpoclal  to 
The  Herald.) — Tlie  police  and  fire  com- 
mission defends  Itself  in  a  statement 
issued  against  tiie  accusation  that  it 
has  failed  to  hei  d  the  recommendations 
of  the  mayor  concerning  the  policing  of 
the  cite,  as  alleged  in  a  resolution 
adopted  l>y  the  last  grand  .1ury.  The 
commission  points  out  that  the  mayor 
has  a  perfe<  t  right  lo  i>arilclpate  In  Its 
deliberations,  but  that  he  has  failed  to 
attend  Its  meetings.  It  expresses  a  de- 
sire to  co-operate  with  the  council  In 
maintaining  proper  police  dl.«.(  Ipllne  In 
the  city  and  In  securing  adequate  law- 
enforcement. 

The  grand  Jury's  action  is  criticised 
by  the  friends  of  the  commihsion.  It 
Is  declared  that  seven  members  of  tho 
grand  jury  voted  against  tho  adoption 
of  the  resolution  arraigning  the  com- 
mission and  declaring  that  inasmuch  as 
the  mayor  Is  held  responsible  he  should 
have  full  charge  of  the  police  of  the 
<ity.  Friends  of  the  commission  de- 
clare the  move  Is  part  of  a  svstematlc 
campaign  to  have  the  police  and  fire 
commission  abolished. 
HAXGK    


market 
be  the 
on   the 


exhibit 


at    the    state    fair    may    be    repreaenta- 


HIBBING  IS  HEALTHY. 

Health  Officer  Morsman  Says  Village 
is  Quite  Free  of  Disease. 

Hlbbing.  Minn..  April  11.— (Special  to 
The   Herald.)— Hibhing  is  (lulte  free  of 

disease,  according  to  Health  Officer  Dr. 
Morsman  despite  it  has  just  pa.«sed 
through  a  severe  winter.  During  the 
worst  of  the  winter  there  was  some 
smallpox,  five  cases  being  treated  at 
the  detention  hospital,  but  all  were 
mild.  There  is  some  measles  hut  noth- 
ing serious.  The  council  will  appoint 
a  l)ealth  officer  tomorrow  and  It  Is 
predicted  Ur.  Morsman  will  be  re- 
appointed. 

■  ■♦ 

IllbliinR-    Quint    Bniiqaet. 

Hlbbintr.  Mirm.,  April  11. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— The  militia  basket  ball 
team  had  a  banquet  at  the  Hex  res- 
taurant last  evening.  Coach  Duvld 
Willianis   was   toastmaster. 


VIRGINIA  LOSES  CASE. 

J.  N.  Thoresell    Gets   $2,500  Dam- 
ages in  Suit  for  $10,000. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  11.— (Special 
to  The  H«rald.>— J.  X.  Thoresell  was 
awarded  a  verdict  for  $2,500  by  a  jury 
In  district  court  this  morning  in  his 
personal  in.lury  suit  against  the  city 
of  Virginia  to  recover  lit', 000  damages 
for  an  injury  he  received  in  a  fall  on 
an   icy  .sidewalk  last    December. 

The  damag.^  suit  of  Chauncev  and 
Leonora  Keith  against  Virginia  for 
$7,0fi0  for  injuries  alleged  to  have  been 
sustained  In  a  fall  on  a  sidewalk  dur- 
ing January  is  now  on  trial,  a  jury  be- 
ing drawn   this  morning. 


EVEl[TH  GIRL  WHO 

TEATURED  PROGRAM 


RANGE  SPORTSMEN 

PLAN  ASSOCIATION 

Hlbbing.  Minn..  April  11. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — An  association,  taking 
in  Hibbing.  Chisholm  and  Uuhl  sports- 
men is  being  planned  by  local  people 
who  have  already  started  preliminary 
plans  to  that  end.  The  organl/allon 
will  have  for  Its  purpose  the  promoting 
of  fishing,  hunting  and  other  kindred 
sports. 

It  is  proposed  to  build  a  clubhouse 
on  land.s  cast  <;>t  the  Dupont  plant, 
where  ihe  members  of  the  association 
might   gather  in   entertainment. 

Twenty-five  dollars  nill  be  charged 
for  the  initiation  fee.  while  $15  will  be 
the  regular  yearly  duej». 


Valuable  Item 
for  Men 

Health  ami  strength  hitherto 
unknown  will  be  felt  surging  in 
rich,  red  blood  through  the  ar- 
teries and  veins  and  life's  great- 
est ambitions  may  be  realized  as 
never  before  if  the  following 
special  treatment  is  followed  by 
those  men.  and  women,  too,  who 
are  stricken  with  that  most 
dreaded  of  all  afflictions,  nerv- 
ous exhaustion,  accompanied 
with  such  symptoms  as  extreme 
nervousness,  insomnia,  cold  ex- 
tremities, melancholia.  head- 
aehcs.  constipation  and  dyspep- 
sia, kidney  trouble.  dreadful 
dreams  of  direful  disasters,  tim- 
idity In  venturing  and  a  general 
Inability  to  act  naturally  at  all 
times  as  other  people  do.  Lack 
of  poise  and  etnilUbrhim  In  men 
Is  a  consant  source  of  embar- 
rassmenl  even  when  the  public 
least  suspects  it.  For  the  bene- 
fit of  those  who  want  a  restora- 
tion to  full,  bounding  health  and 
ail  the  happiness  accompanying 
It.  the  following  home  treat- 
ment Is  given.  It  contains  no 
oi)late8  or  hVblt  forming  drugs 
whatever. 

The  treatment  consists  of  (3) 
three-grain  cadomene  tablets, 
pack«'d  In  sealed  tubes,  and 
widely  prescribed  and  dispensed 
by  physlc'ans  and  well  stocked 
pharmacists.  Full  directions  for 
self-admlnlstratlon  now  accom- 
pany each  tube.  It  Is  claimed 
that  these  tablets  possess  tj:\e 
most  wonderful  tonlc-lnvlgorat- 
Ing  powers  which  can  soon  be 
experienced  after  taking  them. — 
Advertisement. 


STATE  SAND  PIT 

RIGHTS  AWARDED 

Hlbbing,  Minn.,  April  11. —  (.Special  to 
The  H»rald.) — The  successful  bidders 
for  sand  pit  rights  are  announced  by 
the  department  of  squatters  In  the 
state  mining  office  heie. 

E.  W.  Coons  get.s  the'  sand  pit  near 
the  Alice  location,  known  as  pit  Xo.  7. 

The  village  park  board  gets  sand  pit 
No.  11. 

Lyle  Moody  conducted  the  leasing  of 
the  pits. 


VIRGINIA  ELKS  ARE 

AFTER  STATE  MEET 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  11. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Virginia  lodge  of  Elks 
I  win  endeavor  to  have  this  city  desig- 
nated as  the  meeting  place  of  the  state 
convention  in  1917.  The  lodge  will  go 
to  the  Duluth  convention  in  June  in  .a 
special  train  headed  by  a  band,  will  open 


POSLAM'S  HELP 
WHAT  YOU  NEED 


With  Poslam  Soap  Affords  Successful 
Treatment  for  Ailing  Skin. 


MISS  ELEANOR  SHEA. 

Eveleth,  Minn..  April  11. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — One  of  the  features  of 
the  school  gym  performance  repeated 
at  the  auditorium  last  Saturday  after- 
noon was  the  dancing  of  Miss  Eleanor 
Bhea,  Whose  Creek  solo  Interpretative 
dancea   woa   her   much   applau««. 


When  you  obtain  a  box  of  Poslam 
you  possess  yourself  of  Just  that  much 
concentrated  healing  power.  You  can 
put  this  power  to  woik  for  you  when- 
ever the  skin  Is  diseased  or  disordered 
in  any  form.  Depend  upon  Its  healing 
help  when  eczema  causes  Intense  Irri- 
tation, when  acne  or  herpes  manifest 
themselves,  when  Pimples  are  present, 
when  the  nose,  complexion  or  hands 
are  unduly  red,  when  rashes  annoy,  or 
when  abrasions,  wounds,  burns,  scalds, 
etc.,  demand  soothing,  antiseptic  treat- 
ment. 

Poslam  Soap,  medicated  with  Pos- 
lam. should  be.  used  If  skin  Is  tender 
and   sensitive. 

For  sample,  send  4c  stamps  to  Emer- 
gency I^aboratorles.  32  West  26th  St.. 
New  York  City.    Sold  by  all  druggists. 


OFFICIAL  MAP  OF  THE  WEATHER 


K^^^'m 


^    LflS'Deftaitment  of  Agriculture.  Weather  Bure? 

^.9/sO   r--,.^       •  \  ft^  y>^L.3,'\  *"•,         Charles  E.  Marvm.Chief  ,X.       6  \" 


M    'Op: 


Ob<c  I  >  > 

a  .01 


lli'iil  l.iV>ii  il  b  a 
liroii;;li   |>o<nl^  nt 

UK  It   ir    hn'tt     IM    I 


III.,  kCtt'liI)' 

c«r>*ii  i('i<)|K 

■a- 1  J(  lioiM 


WIND  SCALE. 

.MilfrS  Per  Hour 

ralm   0  to    3 

Light   air 3  to    8 

Light  ljr«-»^ S  to  1£ 

Ih-ntk'  brcfze 12  to  18 

Moderitc  hrt'ezc. .  .19  to  23 

Krt-sh  brt>f»' 23  to  28 

Strong  briM-ZP 28  to  34 

llodtrate  gale 34  to  40 

Kresh   gale 40  to  48 

Strong  eile 48  to  50 

Whole  gale 30  to  (^ 

Storm    6)  to  7.') 

Hurricane (her   75 

H,  W.  IICHARDSON, 
rtrtcattir. 

Ismui.s  (<oniifiuoii5  linrt)  past  lliruugli  |i<riiil>  «f  c<|uiil  aii  |irr>>uie.     1-otiili;u<  (•l(j||r<l  li 
Litiirt       Qil.ai;    Q  (•.iilly  clc<uHr;    ^iluudt;    R  lain;    S  mo",    M  fiIH>it  itti!i>"5-     Aiiuns  lly  iiilli  (lie  tiiii.l.      ,<lindcil  .'iitai  i>lio"  jii<>.i| 


fifili  iiic'i'li:!"  litii*.     Alt  frf««iitc  rejuciJ  to  tea  linl 


EXPLANATORY   NOTES. 


ncs) 


I        The 
meltint 
holdint, 
just     n 
lake     I 


even 
the     bay 
for    there 
.spu(!es    of 
ler  lo   be 


best    kind    of  I  J(Hjf*d(H|HK*^NH|HM^9MH|t*-**^****-*** 
g    w«  alher   is    jj^. 
g      the       fort  '  )|( 

ow     and     the  |  ^. 

ce     shows     it  ;  ^ 

better      than    ^ 


LOCAL  FORECAST 


ice     does,  j  iff; 
are   wide  |  ^ 
blue   wa- 
seen.  The 


^  n V'^^y'l    snow     and     Ice     on 

7  ^"WHB^^-^  the  streets  of  Du 
lulh  are  practically 
gone,  and  the  tein- 
pcrature  today  is 
summery.  With  the 
sunshine  mild  temperature  and  balmy 
air,  many  are  falling  for  the  tempta- 
tion to  go  without  wraps. 

A  year  ago  today  was  cloudy  and 
cool.  The  sun  rose  this  morning  at 
6:27  and  will  set  this  evening  at  6:51, 
giving  thirteen  hours  and  iwcnty-four 
minutes  of  sunlight. 

Mr.  Richardson  makes  the  following 
comment  on   weather  conditions: 

"During  the  last  twenty-four  hour.s 
light  rain  fell  over  Tennessee.  Illinois. 
Eastern  Missouri.  Michigan,  Ontario. 
Eastern  .«;outh  Dakota.  Montana.  Idaho, 
Washington  and  Oregon.  The  tempera- 
lure  has  risen  In  nearly  all  districts, 
the  principal  exception  being  somewhat 
cooler  In  Washington.  Oregon.  Idaho, 
Saskatchewan  and  Western  Manitoba. 
The  greatest  rise  in  temperature  oc- 
curred over  Eastern  South  Dakota,  Ne- 
braska. Iowa.  Wisconsin.  Illinois,  Mis- 
souri, Kansas,  Oklahoma  and  Tennes- 
see." 

General  Foreea«t«. 

Chicago,  April  11.— Forecasts  for  the 
twenty-four    hours    ending    at    7    p.    m. 

Wednesday: 

-  Increasing  cloudiness 
late  tonight  and  Wednes- 
In  northwest  portion 


* 
^ 
* 
*• 
* 
« 


Duluth.  Superior  and  vicinity. 
Including  the  MeMabn  anA  Ver- 
milion Iron  rnngeMt  Cloudy  Meafli- 
rr  ^vlth  Nho^verM  late  tonlgi>t  and 
during  ^edncMday.  Slight  rhangeN 
In  temperature.  Moderate  west- 
erly ivIndM.  Nhlfting  to  eatiterly 
and    becoming    frenh   ^  ednenday. 


* 


i)(^|H|t  ********  ******  *^MhK'***-** 

Wednesday. 

Upper   Michigan — Fair     tonight      and 
Wednesday;   slightly   cooler  tonight. 
, —        ^ 
TemperatareN. 
Following  were  the  highest  temper- 
atures   in    the    last    twenty-four    hours 
and  the  lowest  in  the  last  twelve,  end- 


to- 


Minnesota  • 

with  showers 
day;   warmer 

"  wVsconsln — Partly      cloudy      tonight 
and    Wedneeday;    somewhat    cooler    to- 

lowa — Partly  cloudy  tonight  and 
Wednesday,  probably  unsettled  In  north 
portion;   not   much  change  in   tempera- 

Xorth  Dakota— Rain  tonight  and 
Wednesdav;  warmer  In  east  portion  to- 
night;  cooler  In  west  portion  ^^  edncs- 

"south  Dakota— Unsettled  weather 
tonight  and  Wednesday  with  showers; 
cooler  in  west  portion  Wednesday. 

Montana — Probably  rain  tonight  and 
Wednesday:  colder  tonight. 

Lower    Michigan— Fair    tonight 


ing  at   I    a. 

.\bilene  

AliM'na    

Aiimrlllo 

Battleford  

Bismarck    

Boise 

Button 

BulTalo  

Cairo  

Calgary    

Charles  City  .. 
Charleston 
Chicago    . . 
Com-ordia 


in.: 
High  Lon 


.84 
..M 

...66 
...76 
..52 


....60 

;',!!56 

,...56 


60 
38 
48 
30 
38 
46 
38 
32 
48 
32 
42 
48 
44 


DareniKM-t  48 

Denter 74  48 

Pes  Moines  68  50 

DeOls  Lake 54  32 

l>odge  76  46 

piiUique    r>8  48 

DULUTH    U  38 

Kilmontun    54  28 

Ksranaba  44  34 

Fort  Smith 52 

tialvfston  70  64 

Orand  Haven 38  22 

(Jn-en  Bay  52.  42 

Haue  64  46 

Helena    58  40 

Houghton  40 

"  44 

50 
42 
.^.6 
48 
40 
46 
42 
46 
42 
42 
52 
40 
44 


Huron 
ludlanapulis  . 
,)ai  ksonviUe  . . 
Kamloops  .... 
Kansas  City  .. 

Keoknk   

Kiioxrille   .... 
I.a  ( 'ros.se  . . . . 

I^uisville 

Madison  

Maniuette  . . . . 
Modiiinc  Hat. 

MempliU    

Mll.s  CU.V 


,...«0 

...60 

....68 

;!;54 

...54 
....'iS 
...60 
...64 
70 


Minnrdosa  . . 
Modena  . . . . 
Montreal  ... 
.Moorhead  . . . 
Nashville  . . . 
.New  York  . . , 
North  Platte. 
Oklahoma  . . . 

Omaha   

Parry  Sound. 
Phoenix    . . . . 

Pierre   

Pittsburgh   .. 
Port  Arthur  . 
Portland.  Or 
Prinee  Albert 
Qu'.\ppelle 


High  I/>w 


,.50 

70 

48 

66 

'■.■."48 

76 

70 

70 

46 

86 

70 

50 

48 

M 

....54 
50 

Raleigh   ■,■.'.■.'.56 

Hapid  City  6S 

Rosehiirg    54 

Roswell   ...J 

St.  IX)uls 60 

St.    Paul    58 

Salt  Lake  City 78 

Ran  Plego 60 

San  Krancisoo 60 

Sault  Ste.  Marie.. 50 

Seattle  56 

Sheridan 70 

Shrereport   72 

Sioux  City  72 

Spokane   54 

Siiringfleld.  Ill 

SprinEfleld,  Mo 

Swift  Current  ....58 

Tampa  70 

Toledo  54 

Valentine  

Washington  54 

Wlehita 


and  1  Milwaukee    54 


fflllLston 
Winnemufct 
Winnipeg  . . 
Yellowstone 


•••••••«• 


..58 
..76 
..40 
..58 


24 
52 
36 
34 
42 
38 
44 
54 
48 
34 
66 
46 
40 
34 
46 
24 
30 
42 
38 
42 
44 
50 
40 
60 
58 
fa 
36 
40 
38 
54 
50 
44 
42 
52 
40 
52 
38 
.tO 
32 
60 
40 
44 
30 
38 


headquarters  at  the  St.  Louis  hotel  and 
win  be  uniformed  in  miners'  working 
togs.  A  vigorous  campaign  to  land 
the  convention  has  been  started.  The 
committee  in  charge  were  Puesis  of 
Exalted  Ruler  Adolph  Braa  at  liincheon 
last  night  to  prepare  plans  for  the  cam- 

LAMBERTOi^RE 

BEING  STRIPPED 


Hibbing,  Minn.,  April  11.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— John  Hutler,  who 
has  bc.n  In  charge  of  stripping  opera- 
tions at  Buhl,  has  been  placed 
charge  of  the  stripping 
ton  properties  nenr 

a 
It  is 


In 

of  the  L«''.inber- 

Stephenson  and  has 

crew  of  men  at  work.  ,,,  »„i.„ 

thought  that  the  work  will  take 


>f 


The  mine  Is  an  open  pit  one  and  con 
sidel-ed    one    of    th*    rich    properties 
the  Mesaba  range  district. 

hibbing^cIjrLers 

elect  officers 


W.    J. 
Black- 


the   busl- 


Hlbblng.  Minn.,  April  11— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  Hlbbing  t^urling 
c?ub    last    night    elected    the    following 

°'w^'j*'West.  president;  F.  W.  Bullcn, 
vice' president;    F.   L.    Coventry,    secre- 
tary:   «U8t    \Vellner,    treasurer; 
West    M    P.  Flannagan,  Dr.  h.  ts. 
lock. 'directors  for  three  years. 

At    the   banQuet    following 
ness    nu.etlng.    R.    W.     Hitchcock,     the 
toastmaster,  called  upon  various  stane 
throwers    for    reminiscences    and    talks. 

Dr  Wilbur  Wring  and  Clarence 
Wrin'E-  entertained  with  vocal  selec- 
Uons^and  Prof.  John  Smith  of  Duluth 
and  a  dancing  pupil.  Dougla.«  Mc- 
Eachln  of  Hlbbing.  gave  a  series  of 
Scot    dances    that   drew    rounds    of    ap- 

''^More    than    IBO    guests    were    sealed 
around  the  banauet  tables. 

HIBBING^SPEEDERS  TO 
GET  JAIL  SENTENCES 

Hlbbing,  Minn..  April  11.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Frank  Dehaven.  mo- 
torcycle officer,  has  been  given  orders 
to  arrest  automobile  drivers,  JHncy 
drivers  or  private  citizens  who  fall 
to  heed  the  speed  regulations  as  out- 
lined by  Chief  Dwyer  of  the  police 
department.  ^         , 

Judge  Brady  promises  to  place  no 
fine  on  the  first  speed  offender,  but 
Instead  will  send  the  violator  to  the 
county  Jail  for  a  period  of  thirty  days. 

RAILROAD  MEN  ARE 

SEEING  AIRSHIPS 

Virginia,  Minn..  April  11.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — ^all^oad  men  running 
between  VlrgloVa  and  Fort  Frances 
Ont.  are  seeing  airships  of  the  sort 
that  caused  a  stir.at  Duluth  and  Ash- 
land a  short  time  ago.  Conductor 
Thomas  Coughlan  and  Conductor  Bert 
Crummcy  claim  they  saw  an  airship 
sinday  night,  and  that  It  followed  the 
trains  on  which  they  were  running  for 
more  than  forty  niiles  this  side  of  the 
Canadian  border.  It  displayed  red. 
white  and  ffreen  li«hts  and  passengers 


on   their   trains  and   other  members   of 
the   crew    verify   their   stories. 


ATANOSOFF'S  TRIAL 

MAY  BE  RIGHT  OFF 

Orand  Rapids.  Minn..  April  11. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — If  the  special 
grand  .iury  desired  by  County  Attorney 
Stone  to  look  Into  the  killing  of  Cleorge 
Christoff  by  Steve  Atanosoff  at  Marble 
yesterday  is  called  by  Judge  Wright 
now  holding  court  here  and  returns  an 
indictment  against  the  accused  as  ex- 
pected he  will  be  tried  at  this  term  of 
court.  As  stated  In  Mc  day's  Herald 
he  was  brought  to  the  county  jail  here 
after  tlie  coroner's  jury  called  by 
Coroner  Blair  held  him  responsible 
for  killing  Christoff.  Duncan  Canchaff 
and  David  Yerchoff  who  roomed  with 
the  slain  man  and  the  slayer  testified 
at  the  in'juest  that  they  witnessed  the 
killing  in  their  room  over  a  saloon  near 
the  Mlssabe  station. 


Kly  Quint  Entertained. 

Ely,  Minn..  April  11.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — The  Ely  high  school  basket 
ball  team  members  were  entertained 
at  a  dinner  at  the  home  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Samuel  Rapson.  The  guests  wrere 
Owney  Hegman,  Walter  Carlson, 
Dewev  Knutson.  Douglas  Nankervis. 
Elmer  Makl.  Matt  Helkklla.  Clinton 
Rapson  and  Coach  T.  J.  Murn.  The 
hostess  was  assisted  by  Miss  Ruth  Lln- 
dell   and  Miss   Edith  Trezona. 


Odd   FelloivM   to   Church. 

Eveleth.  Minn..  April  11.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Odd  Fellows  will 
attend  church  In  a  body  Sunday  eve- 
ning   at    the    Presbyterian    church.      A 


S  RHEUMATISM  S 

'        Remedied  at  Home       & 


1 


i 


•*6088"  (Sixty-Eiffhty-Eieht)  acts 
like  the  waters  of  Hot  Sprines  and 
other  famous  Rheumatism  and 
Chronic  Skin  Erxiption  resorts  and 
•anatorlums.  It  el tm mates  the  ctiuses. 

No  Coatly  Sanatorium  Trips  Noodod 

Don't  do  yourself  the  injustice  of 
suffering  from  Khenmatlsm— andrun 
the  risk  of  the  deformities  Rheuma- 
tism often  causes.  Go  to  your  drug' 
gist  and  tret 

Sixty-  Eighty  Eight 


i 


m  GUARANTEED 

B      It  «iu*t  rcU«T«  your  BheumatiBm— It  mpit 
fl   Drove  beneficial  in  cases  of    Chronic  bkin 
W   liuptloni,  BiHou»ne«i  or  lodiKMUon, 
Q    or  your  money  will  be  re- 
funded ftt  once  by  your  ••m  i.    •  » j-i,, 

taken  according  to  dircc-  ea  UeaaaUia 

FREE 

MdkaiAkvion 

RulNATKMg 


I 

i 


tions.  is  absolutely  harm- 
less. Ontains  DO  babit- 
forming  drugs. 

Write  for  vslnabla  book, 
"Medical  Advice  on  Rheu- 
matittD."  whether  you  as« 
•OSa  or  not.  It  enable* 
you  to  detect,  treat  and 
r  e  I  i  e  y  •  Inflammatory. 
Chronie  Articular  and 
Muscular  Kbeumatlsm. 

MATT.  J.  JOHNSON  CO. 

)nt.  8t.Pui.l 


I^UmOVMkM 


.special      address      will 
"What     the    Bible     Has 
World."     The  orchestra 
eral  selections. 


be  given  on 
Done  for  the 
will   play   sev- 


Kveleth   Curlers   Rlret. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  April  11. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Curling  club  has 
elected  these  officers:  F.  It.  Camp- 
bell, president:  ti.  H.  Murray,  vice 
president;  W.  J.  Davey,  secretary;  C. 
B.    Hoel.     treasurer. 

The  club  thanked  the  members  of 
the  council  who  worked  for  a  munici- 
pal rink,  which  will  provide  quarters 
for  the  Curling  club.  Other  matter,-? 
of  business  pertaining  lo  the  financli.g 
of   the    club    were    attended    to. 

Ely   Woman   Burled. 

Ely,  Minn.,  April  11. — (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — The  funeral  of  Mrs.  J.  Tik- 
kala  was  held  Sunday  afternoon  from 
the  Finnish  Lutheran  church.  Rev.  Mr. 
Hlrvl  officiating.  Interment  was  In 
the    Ely    cemetery. 

•    ■ 
To  Appoint  Cherrne. 

Virginia.  Minn..  April  11. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.)  —  Mayor  Boylan  an- 
nounced this  afternoon  that  he  would 
appoint  J.  S.  Cherrne  on  the  park  board 
tonight,  but  did  not  disclose  any  other 
appointments  to  be  made  to  the  council 

tonight. 

»— 

BtfyH  Chlaholm  Store. 

Hibbing,  Minn..  April  11. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— W.  L.  Galloway,  for 
years  a  prominent  Hibhing  merchant, 
has  purchased  a  controlling  interest  in 
the  Sartol  store  in  Chisholm  and  will 
open  up  a  modern  dry  goods  store. 


Card  of  Thanks. 


WE    WISH 
every   one 
who     did 
burden    of 


TO    THANK 

of   the  many 

so    much     to 

sorrow    and 


EACH  AND 
kind  friends 
lighten  our 
grief   during 


the  Illness  and  death  of  our  beloved 
wife,  daughter  and  sister,  Bessie  Cox 
Coron;  also  for  the  many  beautiful 
lloral   oCferlngs. 

.1.  P.  COROX. 

MRS.    E.   D.   W^HITMORE. 

MRS.  L.  H.   CHAPMAN. 


HARBOR  BILL  LIKELY 
TO  BE  PASSED  SOON 


Washington,  April  11. — The  annual 
fight  In  the  house  over  the  rivers  and 
harbors  appropriation  bill  was  draw- 
ing to  a  close  when  work  was  re- 
sumed on  the  measure  today.  Pros- 
pects were  that  the  bill  would  be 
passed   during    the    day. 

All  the  items  have  been  approved 
practically  as  framed  in  committee 
and  only  some  minor  points  involv- 
ing methods  of  survey  and  contract 
details    remain    to    be    threshed    out. 

Most  of  yesterday  was  occupied  with 
discussion  of  the  Mississippi  river  ap- 
propriations which  amount  to  $8,000,- 
000  and  those  for  the  Missouri,  aggre- 
gating  $1,750,000. 

Various  unsuccessful  efforts  were 
made  to  cut  down  the  total,  Repub- 
licans charging  the  majority  with 
"pork  barrel"  method.s,  and  Chairman 
Sparkman  of  the  rivers  and  harbors 
committee  defending  the  measure.  The 
bill  carries  a  total  of  about  $40,000,000. 


ASKS  REPORT  OF 


INVESTIGATIONS 


Don't 

Suffer 

From  Piles 

8«nd  For  Free  Trial  Treatment 

No  matter  how  long  or  howled  — goto 
your  druggist  ttxlay  and  get  a  ."■><•  cent 
box    of     Pyramid    Pile   Treatment.      It 


The  Pyramid  Smile  From  a  Single  Trial. 


win  give  relief,  and  a  single  box  ©den 
cures.  Atrlalpackagemnlh  dfreeln  plain 
wrapper  If  you  send  us  coupon  bt  low. 


FREE  SAMPLE  COUPON 

PYHAMin  DRra COMPANY, 

688  Pyramid  Ridt'..  Marshall.  Mich. 

Kindly    f^end    mo    n    Free   sample   cf 

Pyramid  Pile  Treatment,  in  plain  wrapper. 

*^  cllriQ       •••••••••••■a«*«a«aa*aea*e«*    *' 


Street 
City.  . 


.=;tate. 


REMOVAL  OF 
SNOWCOSTLY 

Works    Fund    Is    Tempo- 
rarily Overdrawn  By 
$1,596.78. 


Because  of  the  heavy  expense  In  re- 
moving the  Ice  and  enow  during  the 
first  three  months  of  this  year,  the 
works  division  has  spent  $1,696.78  more 
than  the  revenues  of  the  department, 
according  to  the  monthly  report  of 
Commissioner   Farrell. 

The  city  spent  $13,891.50  in  remov- 
ing the  ice  and  snow,  sanding  the  side- 
walks and  cleaning  business  sireeis 
when  warm  weather  set  in.  the  re- 
port states.  This  brought  the  total  ex- 
penditur°s  since  March  1  up  lo  54i'.- 
912.45.  The  revenues  amounted  to 
$39,315.67. 

The  following  explanation  accom- 
panies   the    commissioner's    report: 

"The  balance  sheet  ^t\\\  discloses  .1 
deficit  of  $1,596.78,  an  increase  of 
$949.76  over  tliat  of  a  month  ago. 
This  deficit  can  be  explained,  how- 
ever,   in    the    following   manner: 

"No  credit  has  been  taken  for  the 
wheelage  tax  In  the  revenue  and  ex- 
pense statement.  The  revenue  de- 
rived from  this  tax  last  year  was 
$20,498.16,  or  an  average  of  $1,708.18  a 
month. 

"Assuming  that  the  wheelage  tax 
this  year  will  equal  that  of  last  year 
the  amount  accrued  for  the  three 
months  just  past  would  be  $5,124.54. 
If  this  accrued  revenue  had  been 
recognized  in  the  revenue  and  expense 
statement  the  deficit  of  $1,596.78  would 
be  changed  to  a  surplus  of  over  $3. 600.* 


Washington.  April  11. — Without  de- 
bate the  senate  today  adopted  a  lesolu- 
tlon  by  Senator  Kenyon,  Republican, 
directing  the  attorney  general,  if  not 
incompatible  with  public  Interest,  to 
submit  to  the  senate  all  reports  of  in- 
vestigations made  by  tho  departrnent 
into  the  Standard  Oil  company  since 
the  supreme  court  decree  of  dissolution 
against  that  company  and  particularly 
any    investigation    into   gasoline   prices. 

Senator  Kenyon  had  read  to  the  sen- 
ate resolutions  adopted  by  the  Western 
Oil  Jobbers'  association  at  St.  Louis, 
petitioning  congress  to  supplement  the 
Sherman  law  to  make  effective  the  de- 
cree of  dissolution  against  the  Stan- 
dard on  company  and  declaring  It  to 
be  the  sense  of  the  association  that  the 
dissolution  decree  was  a  failure. 

A  letter  to  Senator  Kenyon  from  R. 
S.  Welsh,  counsel  for  the  association 
declared  independent  Jobbers  of  the 
Middle  West  would  be  driven  out  of 
business  and  face  financial  ruin  unless 
an  end  was  brought  to  discriminatory 
prices  of  gasoline  dictated  by  the 
Standard  Oil  company. 

TO  ENFORCE  DRY  LAWS. 

N.  D.  Enforcement  League  Promises 
Action  Against  Clubs. 

Fargo.  N.  D.,  April  11. — That  the 
North  Dakota  Enforcement  league  Is 
going  to  Insist  that  the  state  law,  pro- 
hibiting the  dispensing  of  liquor  by 
clubs,  be  enforced,  was  the  statement 
made  by  F.  L.  Watklns  to  the  Fargo- 
Moorhead  Ministerial  association  In 
session  here.  The  statement  came  in 
response  to  a  query  as  to  the  right  of 
the  clubs   to  keep   liquor  for  members. 

"The  state  law  Is  very  clear  on  that 
point,  and  the  law  Is  broad  enough  to 
cover  it  thoroughly,"  said  Mr.  Watklns. 
"It  Is  not  lawful  for  clubs  to  dispense 
liquor  in  any  manner  and  I  have  taken 
this  matter  up  with  the  state's  attor- 
neys of  all  the  counties  of  the  state  in 
which  large  cities  are  located. 

"In  many  places  these  clubs  are  so 
strong,  and  have  such  Inlluential  mem- 
bers that  they  do  not  dare  touch  them." 

The  meeting  was  attended  by  city 
and  county  officials.  Including  Police 
Commissioner  Dahl,  Chief  Troyor, 
Sheriff  John  Ross,  State's  Attorney 
Fowler  and  City  Attorney  Shuro,  and 
local  conditions  were  discussed  very 
frankly  and  quite  openly. 


WILL  ELECTRIFY 

GOGEBIC  MINES 


Ironwood,  Mich..  April  11. — All  of  the 
mines  of  the  Oliver  Iron  Mining  com- 
pany on  the  Gogebic  iron  range  will  be 
equipped  for  electric  light  and  power, 
according  to  an  announcement. 

Work  on   ihls  new  improvement  will 

he  commenced  as  soon  as  the   material 

can  be  placed  on  the  ground,  which  it 
is  expected  will  be  but  a  .short  time. 

All  the  power  for  the  pumps,  hoi.«ts, 
etc.,  at  the  Pabst.  Norrie.  East  Norrle 
and  Aurora  mines  is  to  be  supplied 
froi7i  a  central  steam  turbine  plant 
which  is  to  be  located  at  the  Pabst 
mine,  and  this  will  be  the  only  steam 
plant  in  connection  with  the  mines  ac 
Ironwood. 

Economy  In  T.onit:  Ron. 

While  the  Installation  of  this  enor- 
mous electrical  equipment  will  cost  a 
large  amount  of  money,  It  will  prove 
an  economy  In  the  long  run,  be.sides 
greatly  facilitating  the  work  at  the 
mines. 

Another  Important  piece  f  f  work 
which  is  to  be  commenced  within  a 
short  time  at  the  Oliver  Iron  Mining 
company  mines  Is  the  sinking  of  a  new 
shaft  on  the  Pabst  property.  This  new- 
shaft  will  be  perpendicular,  and  be 
located  about  200  feet  west  of  the  line 
between  the  Newport  and  Pabst  mines 
and  will  be  known  as  "H"  shaft. 


ANNUAL  CLAMBAKE 

AT  MADELINE  ISLAND 

Ashland,  Wis.,  April  11. — The  Badger 

Clam   Bake   club    Is    getting    ready    for 

the  big  annual  event,  the  annual   clam 

bake  at  Madeline   Island    in   September. 

Each  year  hundreds  of  clam  bakers 
gather  at  Madeline  Island  as  the  guests 
of  this  club.  The  officers  have  not 
been  changed  and  remain  the  same  as 
last  year:  J.  M.  Dodd,  president;  Will 
Garnlch,  vice  president;  A.  A.  Miller, 
secretary;   Thomas  Culver,   treasurer. 


Thin  People  Gained 
Weight  Quickly 

By  Following  This  Simple  Snggeslion       V 

Thin  men  and  women  who  would  like 
to  Increase  their  weight  with  10  or  16 
pounds  of  healthy  "stay  there'  fat 
should  try  eating  a  little  Sargol  with 
their  meals  for  a  while  and  note  re- 
sults. Here  is  a  good  test  worth  try- 
ing. First  weigh  yourself  and  measure 
yourself.  Then  take  Sargol — one  tab- 
let with  every  meal — for  two  weeks. 
Then  weigh  and  measure  again.  It 
Isn't  a  question  of  how  you  look  or 
feel  or  what  your  friends  say  and 
think.  The  scales  and  the  tape  meas- 
ure will  tell  their  own  "story,  and 
many  thin  men  and  women,  we  believe, 
can  easily  add  froni  five  to  eight 
pounds  in  the  first  fourteen  days  by- 
following  this  simple  direction.  And 
best  of  all,  the  new  flesh  stays  put. 

Sargol  does  not  of  Itself  make  fat, 
but  mixing  with  your  food,  it  aims  to 
turn  the  fats,  sugars  and  starches  of 
what  you  have  eaten,  into  rich,  ripe, 
fat-producing  nourishment  for  the  tis- 
sues and  blood — prepare  It  In  an  easily 
assimilated  form  which  the  blood  can 
readily  accept.  Much  of  this  nourish- 
ment now  passes  from  your  body  a» 
waste.  But  Sargol  works  to  stop  th© 
waste  and  do  It  quickly  and  to  make 
the  fat-producing  contents  of  the  very 
same  meals  you  are  eating  now  develop 
pounds  and  pounds  of  h*allhy  rtesh  between  jour  gkln  and 
bones  Sargol  is  safe,  pleasant,  efficient  and  Inerpen- 
glTf,  Boyce  Drug  store  and  otlier  leading  dniggLKts  in  this 
Tlt-lnlty  sell  It  In  large  Iwies— forty  tablets  to  a  jjatkage 
—00  a  guarantee  of  weight  increase  or  monej-  back  as 
foond  Id  each  Urie  bu.  — AdvertlaciBeBt. 


»< 


I 


^«* 


uH«<  ritniMii  a— Ui<uiM 


^W 


(■■»— 

■  - 

I 

■'^^-tr 


I  t  ■«> 


» 


i 


\ 


I 


1. 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULfrTH     HERALD 


April  11, 1916. 


17 


MARKET  HAS 
FAIR  BULGE 


Wheat  Sells  Higher  With  Bid- 
ding on  Crop  Damage 
Reports. 

Flaxseed   Again   Exhibits 
Strength  With  Good  Buy- 
ing By  Crushers. 


held 


innp" 


Dulnth  Board  of  Trade,  ApHI  ll.—TW 
^nrki-t  yynn  i»lronK  arouad  the  cloa« 
nltli    n    trrmU    httrmt    ot    kuylaic. 

Mn>  »»heat  rl*m-d  %c  up  and  J«ly 
li^c   ap. 

May  darum  eioacd  %e  flip  and  July 
T<iP    np. 

OaiM  oloitrd  uacfcaagrd  at  41V«9-il%C 
fur  oM  the  li-a«-k;  rjre  «aclianft»d  at  VSe 
and  barley  unchanxed  at  frtna  6oe  t« 
71  c. 


Al   WtnnlpeK.  May  oata  rlaaed  ^4@'>e 
■IP  lit    4:1  Vie  bid.  ! 

At    St.    LouK,    Mar    >Tl»ea(    rlo>ted    at  ] 
9lAi^*.    bid,  and  July   at  fl.lStt   l»>d.         | 

At  Kanaaa  t'lty.  Hay  wHeat  ela»ed  at 
$l.in>M   hid.  aad  July  at  91.10  bM. 

I'ut«i      on      Mlaneap«»lli»      Way      wheat  | 
Cloned  at  (LlV'/t   aiul  call*  at  (1.23^. 


eU'vator 
switched 
July. 

cara  of 
here    tu- 


With  the  Chicago  market  closed, 
trading  In  whtat  was  qul<»t  on  the 
L)uliitli  board  today.  Aft.r  op^ninnj 
«asi.r  ill  lino  with  lowc-r  cables,  the 
market  became  fairly  strong,  ad- 
vancintf  over  Ic,  but  It  eased  off  lat»»f 
to  ar»)und  yest»-id;iy'3  closinif  figure. 
The  hhiiw  of  strt-ngth  waa  imparted 
by  btiying  on  more  d'-teriuration  re- 
port .s  from  Ml!<i>ourl  and  Nebraska, 
and  the  backward  aeedfng  conditions 
over  ihe  NortJiwest.  On  the  other 
hand  there  were  pridlotlona  of  a  rec- 
ord wheal  crop  In  Kansas.  itj»  condi- 
tion being  reported  as  having  Im- 
proved during  the  last  ten  days.  After 
the  first  two  hi.urs  trading  senti- 
rienl  bt<  anie  somewhat  mixed,  traders 
taking  into  con.-^ideration  that  the 
murk<  t  is  several  cents  oat  of  lln« 
for  export  business,  with  every  prob- 
abilitv  th:it  Canadian  wheat  will  have 
tbe  call  in  the  way  of  foreign  trad* 
for    some    time. 

Taking  a  .'<urvey  of  the  situation  a 
local  operator  expressed  th**  opinion 
todav  that  a  aliading  In  wheat  quo- 
tations from  their  pre.ient  levels  li 
likely  in  view  of  the  alrg-  stocks  be- 
ing  carried  in  thia  country  and  the 
heavy  tonnage  still  to  bo  marketed. 
A  comparatively  .<«mall  proportion  of 
the  wheat  being  carried  In  elevators 
at  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  id  figured 
put  as  having  beeu  sold  <>«>  far.  la 
Vlow  of  the  conditions,  one 
concern  is  advised  to  have 
Its    Miy    contracts    over    Into 

There  were  only  sixteen 
(Train  all  told,  on  the  tracks 
day.  .so  that  cash  operations  wer« 
larg*  ly  nominal.  Cash  No.  1  north- 
cm  wheat  sold  at  from  Vjc  under  to 
2c  over  the  May  price  and  No.  1 
durum  at  Vic  under  May.  At  Minne- 
apolis inspections  dropped  off  tfMlay 
to  1^9  cars,  but  Chicago  had  3S7  cars 
against  287  a  year  ago.  Th--  move- 
ment Is  becoming  heavy  In  the  Can- 
adian west,  Winnipeg  reporting  847 
cars  of  wheat  today  against  only  6fi 
a  year  ago.  Today  88  cars  of  bonded 
grains  were  received  here,  of  which 
8a     cars     were    wheat. 

May  wheat  opened  **c  off  at  $1.19, 
and  after  easing  fractionally  from 
thai,  it  advanced  to  $1.-'0*h.  but  de- 
clined -'sc  from  the  high  point  at  the 
noon-hour.  July  opened  '»c  off  at 
|1.19^>    and    mov«-d    up    to    $1.2»)'4. 

Business  In  durum  was  also  draggy 
and  its  market  narrow.  May  durum 
opened  unchanged  at  $1.12'.;;.  sold  up 
%c  and  then  eased  slightly.  July 
opened  unchanged  at  $1.13  >§  and 
g;aiiied    V-rC. 

Bulge  In  Flazaeed. 

Flaxseed  show^-d  marked  strength 
again  in  consequi-nce  of  active  biddiug 
by  both  crushers  and  the  trading  ele- 
ment. Strength  at  Liverpool,  where 
quotations  wert-  advanced  over  3c.  was 
a  factor  on  the  market  here.  Offer- 
ings were  light.  The  close  was  easy 
on   the  absorption  of  realizing  sales. 

At  nucno.s  Aires  flax  closed  Ic  up  at 
$1.:H>'*    and  London    "bC   off  at   $2.38'.2. 

Mav  flax  opened  unchanged  at  12. IX*^ 
and  closed  1M:C  up  at  $2.15  a>tked.  July 
opened  unchanged  at  $2,15  4  and 
closed    l^ic    up   al    $2.16    asked. 


fear^-d   that   weekly   clearances  will   be 
light. 

•  •      • 

Stocks  In  the  south  of  Russia  are 
l.irge,  a.s  the  haivest  was  liberal.  Fa- 
ctltttes  for  moving  the  crop  are  poor 
and  even  wheat  desired  at  the  large 
center.*  for  local  consumption  Is  hard 
to  obtain  and  prices  have  risen  sharply. 
.Stocks  at  Black  sea  ports  are  veiy 
light.  The  Ice  Is  breaking  in  the 
north,  but  very   little     «raln     la 

there. 

•  *      • 

Charles  E.  Lewis  wired  from  M 
a  polls:  "Our  wh«-at  market  shows  a 
strong  un-lt?rtone  in  face  of  weakness 
ill  Winnipeg.  3Iodern  Miller  has  a 
very  bullish  editorial  on  the  wheat  sit- 
uation in  the  United  States  and  pre- 
dict.* only  an  average  carry-over  when 
we  go  Into  the  new  crop." 

•  *       • 

Regarding    linseed.  Broomhall  cabled: 
'■.Maikei   was   yulet   with    Indian   offers 
liberal,    but   Argentine    freights   strong 
at   H»*  or  an   advance  of  &s  since   FrI 
day.    Hull    market   was   firm,    with   oil 

demsnd  improved." 

•  *       * 

Uradstreet's  world's  visible  supply: 
Wheat  Increased  1,477,000  bu;  la.«»t 
year  It  decreased  •78,«00  bu;  corn  de- 
creased 831.000  bu;  last  year  It  de- 
crease<l  2,492.000  bu;  oats  decreased 
839.000  bu;  last  year  It  decreased  41H),- 
00«  bu. 

Total  stocks:  Wheat.  239.283. 0«0  bu; 
least  year.  14MOU.090  bu:  com.  29.- 
60U.000  bu:  last  year.  32,156.000  bu; 
oats,    3«,982,0»0    tu;    lust    year.    35.47$,- 

000    bu. 

«       *       * 

Rroomhall  cabled  from  Liverpool: 
Wheat  f>pened  in  sympathy  with  Chi- 
cago but  later  eased  with  liberal  ar- 
rivals. Hpot  was  unchanged  to  Id 
lower.  Cargo  market  opened  44d 
higher,  but  eased  to  unchanged  from 
yesterday  for  both  winters  and  Manl- 
tobaii.  Local  as  well  a»  foreign  arrlv- 
al.-t  are  liberal  and  buyers  are  nervous 
as  American  »:id  Canadian  stocks  are 
hf*avy  and  United  Kingdom  stocks  are 
in:reaslng.  Argentine  and  Australia 
are  offering  moderately  and  Argentine 
freights  are  strong.  6s  higher  at  115s. 

•  «       « 

Weather   forecast: 

Illinois,  Missouri.  Wisconsin  and 
Kansas — C;enerally  fair  to  part  cloudy, 
cooler. 

Mlnne.«ota  and  Dakotas — Unsettled 
with  rain  tonight  and  tomorrow. 
Cook  r. 

I^w.'*   and   Nebraska — Part  cloudy   to 

nn'settltd. 

•  •      • 

At  Minneapolli^ — A  stronger  tend- 
ency was  shown  In  the  top  grades 
and  g»«>d  demand  Is  reported.  Chicago 
biiy'^rs  look  No.  1  northern  more 
freely  and  some  No.  1  hard  was  sold 
at  Sc  over  May.  Blue  stem  No.  1 
northern  sold  at  2c  to  4^0  over,  and 
velvet  chaff  at  2c  to  2V»c  over.  Some 
choice  No,  2  northern  sold  at  2c  over. 
FMur  trade  was  reported  dull  by  all 
but  one  miller. 

•  *      « 

Puluth  grain  stocks,  giving  changes 
in  two  days: 

Wheat — Western  and  winter.  778.000 
bu:  spring.  8.095,000  bu:  durum.  6,816.- 
OiiO  bu.  Increase,  27.000  bu;  bond 
5.375.000  bu.  Increase.  20.000  bu;  tot 
wheat,  21.672.000  bu.  net  Increase.  27,- 
OOO    bu;    afloat.    768.000    bu. 

Coarse  grains— Oats,  2,131.000  bu.  de- 
crease. 19.000  bu;  rye.  41.000  bu.  in- 
crea.'^e,  l',000  bu;  barley,  1.115.000  bu. 
Increa.se.  7,000  bu:  flax,  domestic,  1.663. 
f»00  bu  bu.  bonded.  78.000  bu;  total 
flax.  1.736.000  bu.  Increase,  net.  4.000 
bu. 

T.-tal  of  all  grains.  26,695,000  bu; 
net    Increase,    21.000    bu. 

•  •       • 

Duluth  bonded  grain  receipts:  Wheat. 
85   cars;    barley.    3    cars;    total,   88   cars. 

m        »        * 

Cars  of  wheat  received: 

Yesterday 


AMERICAN  WHEAT  MARKETS.  APRini,  1916 


May— 

Duluth    

Mlnneapolla 
Chicago    .  .  . . 
Winnipeg     , 

July— 
Duluth    .... 
Minneapolis 
Chicago   . .  .  . 

do  Sept.    . 
Winnipeg     . 

do    Oct.    . 


Open.  High.  Low. 

...L19  1.20  >,i  1.18% 

...1.18«i-19     1.20^8  LIS"?* 

No  session. 

...1.14^  l.l«V4-%  1.14^4 


,  .1.19\  1.20"',b 

.1.18^-19',fc    1.20«4-S 
No  session. 


1.19»ii 
1.18% 


Ha 


..1 


16S-14Ti 
.1.11^ 


1.17 
1.1214 


1.14% 
111% 


Close. 
1.20  Hb 
L2«% 

1.20'iib 
1.20%-^i 


l.l«%b 

1.12S 


^19%a 
l.l»-^a 

i.im-^ 

1.13  >4  a 
l.l£» 


May 

July 


May 
July 


Open. 
.1.12Via 


DULUTH  DURUM  MARKET. 

Low.  Close.  Apni  10. 

1.12  l.lS-Sb  1.12Hb 


High. 
LIS", 


LIS^ 


1.14V«b 


l.l$Sb 


1.14%b         Ll$% 


DULUTH  LINSEED  MARKEt, 

Open.  High.  Low.  t-'lo,'*-  ^^.f'olP- 

^l3V-b  2.16  2.1 3  V4  2.18a  2.13  V4 


T'r  ago. 
1.63  •^ 
1.49Vb 
L6«^ 

1.47% 
1.42-*!. 
1.28% 
1.109k 
1.53-H 
1.60  •» 


Y'r  ago. 
1  63»u 
1.89b 


Y'r  ago. 

i.ys'U 
1.98^ 


Duluth  close:     Wheat — On  track:      No.  1  hard.   $1. 
1.22'/,;  No.   2  northern.  $1.18\5-118% ;  No.  1  northern 
track     $1.03>"-1.13%;  Montana  No.  2   hard,  to  arrive, 
track.  $1.19-f.l»«*:  May.  $1.20%   bid;  July, 
1.  $1.12-,:  .No.  2.  $10&'s-107%.     To  arrive: 
$1.14%    bid.      Unseed — On   track.   $2.16-2.15%; 
asked;  July,  $2.16  asked.     Oats — On  track. 


22;   No.    1   northern.   $1.20- 

to   arrive,   $1.20;   No.    3    on 

$1.19;  Montana  No.  2.  on 

$1  ''O'i   bid.     Durum — On  track:     No. 

No.  1.  $1.12%:  May.  $1.13%  bid;  July, 

to  arrive.    $3.15-2.15%;  May.   $2.16 

4lVi-41^c;  to  arrive.  41V*c.     Rye — On 

track.  96c;  to  arrive.  95c.     Barley— Ofi  track,  63-71c.  cc  ^-i 

Elevator  receipts  of  domestic  graln-W'heat.  32.7C2  bu.  last  year  65.-..1 

oats.  6.773  bu.  last  year  1.328  bu;  barley.  15.001  bu,  last  year  2  bu;  rye.  2,326 

last  vear  none;  flax.  1.966  bu,  last  year  36  bu.  w-,i..«. 

Shipments  of  domestic  grain— Oats.   4,600  bu.   last  year  none;   barley. 

•    Klevrttor  i^^celpts   of   bonded    grain— Wheat,   66,684   bu     last   year 
20.473  bu,  last  year  none;  barley.  1.196  bu.  last  year  none;  flax.  2.163  bu.  last  year 

"°^  Shipments  of  bondtd  grain— Wheat.   36,83$  bu.  last  year 
bn,  last  year  none. 


bu; 
bu. 


»,167 


none;  oats. 


none;  oats,   42,169 


day's   close,   and  July  finished  1*bC   to 

IVi''  up. 

Corn  and  oats  were  steady. 

"Wheat  receipts  199  cars,  compared 
with  45  a  year  ago  May  opened  $1.18J»i 
to  $1.19;  high,  $1.20%;  'o.^'.  $,VJ'^  = 
closed.    $1.20%.      July   opened   $1189*    to 


$L19«^,; 


le.L 

jtal 


high.       $1.20V»!ii  1.20^;       low. 
$1.18\.:    closed.    $1.20%4*1.20H.     ^^        , 

Cash:  No.  1  hard.  $1.26%;  No.  1 
northern.  $1  22%®  1.24%;  to  arrive. 
$1  21%  Iff  1.23%;  No.  2  northern.  |1.20ai 
4il.22%;  No.  3  wheat.  $1.14  %  ft  119%. 

Com— No.   3   yellow.   74%^7l%c. 

Oats.  No.  3  white,  42®42%c:  flax. 
$2,161/2.19. 

Flour — Unchanged.    Shipments.    61.896 
hbls.      Barley.      64®72c;     rye,     93094c; 
brau,   $18.26«^  19.00. 
♦ 
New   York   Wheat. 

New  York.  April  11.— Wheat— May. 
$1.27;   July,   $L20.  

Hverpasl     (>rala. 

Llfwpnnl.  April  11.— Whrat^K|»t.  »•.  1  M»lilt*S, 
ISii  Vi;  S:  3.  M»  rtwk;  >•.  2  rr.l  nfstem  »lrrt«r.  Us 
>!;  No.  2  tmri.  utiiier  fM.  \U  Z*. 

CoTtt— iiyo^  .\aKTicaa  uixnl.  ut».  lui  &1. 

Corn  and  Wheat  Bulletin. 

twMtf-fQur  bwn  nxllDt  st  8  s.  m,.  Tnnday, 


•••••••■ 


L»nr.   R'tl   BlW«n.   dot 

Fannr.   White  KiMmn.  <Im 

InirtamMl   tVl'-O'.    Cultfomli,    crate. 

wASHcH)  \tr.y.r\mMi— 

ViMnttei  Panolitt,    ptr  tk<ia 

Wa.slK'd   fttfU,    par   kukt 

OMON  8KTS— Swd  Stock. 
FttiifT   Yellow,    ba ..••.....•.....• 

Piin<7   Whtt'^ .    hu    ...••....•.••....■..••• 

SKKU    IIATOKS— 

Tmcy  K»rl>   Unm.  tm 

Famv  Varlftk*.  ta 

Kfd  KiTpr  bio.  BurlMiik.  Btatrti,  Carmen, 

VEUKTABLKS— 

rarruts,   Minn.,   rwt 

BtYtx.    Mtnn.,    rst 

Rafa^,   Minn.,   rvt 

Lima   Bi'nn^.   Callfomls.    lb .  ( . . .' 


.r. 

.40 
.50 

10 
20 

50 

75 


DECLINES 
INJTOCKS 

New     Haven     Falls     on 

Rumors  of  Disappointing 

March  Earnings. 


Disturbing    Advices    From 

Washington  Cause  Drop 

in  Final  Hour. 


Carllf.  It).. 
IhirsrrailMi. 
linrti-radlsh. 
Horseradish, 
HnrwT8«flsh. 
Navy  Btaat. 
rannliw.  rwt 
ONIONS— 


■\u{ 


bU. 


K«.  Key.,  lb.. 
lb..  lOr;  bhl. 
g  m.  bottir.  prr  «n. . . . 

>.,  pil.  Jam,  fsrb: 

riarf.  H.  P.,  Ifdiican. 


ba. 


8.25 

1.15 

1.25 

Bural,  king. 


2.00 
2.00 
1.00 

.06% 

.1.'. 
8.00 
6.50 

.90 

M 
4.26 
1.85 


For  tbf 
A«rll  11 


STATTOXi— 


liUt«of' 
wmthPf! 


j  Duluth . . 

Minneapolis    

M'Innipeg     

Chicago    

Kansas  City,   bu 

St.   Loui.s,    bu 


33 
199 
847 
387 

.85.000 
.49.000 


Cars  of  linseed 


received: 

Yesterday. 


Year 

Ago. 

112 

48 

287 

66 

22.900 

25.OU0 

Year 
Ago. 

20 


23 
26 


11 


.r%.  floodj 

duo*- 

ITogdjI 

ClouJitI 

t'too*! 

Clgy*i 

tle*r| 

Cloudy; 
..CUaMlyl 
..Oauiyl 
. .  .ClHtrl 
.  .Cliidilj'I 

,.a«Mb: 

.iToislyl 

•CtowJrl 


.rt. 


.Clog4> 


.Pt.  Oou#|    70 


.Pt.  ChsKly: 


»•••••• 


■••••••• 


.1 


LIverpord 
Id    lower; 


At    Winnipeg, 
up  at   $1.93. 


May    flax    closed    2%c 


Cash   Sales  Taesday. 

Ko.   1  northprn  uh«at,  yi  bu,   to  arrive... 

No.  3  r,>rrh^rn  wheat.   1  cm 

No.  3  northcru  wtieat,  2  fit^  bond.'d 

No.  1  durum,  1  cv  

No.    1   iliimm,   1   rar   

8ami>U'  t;r.i(lf  mlxid  durum,   1  cor 

Ho.  3  BiiK-d  duram.  1  rar 

No.  1   mix(*d  durum.   1  car 

Miirley.    I   rur    

No.  2  rw.   1  car 

No.  2  nif.  1  rar.  to  arrir^ . . . . , 
No.  2  n-'.  1,50«>  ba,  to  arrlw., 


.$1 
.  1 


■•••••••«••• 


••••••••< 


19U 

07% 
l.OKi.. 
1.12 
1.12 

.96 
1.02 
l.llVi 

.«,H 

.95*4 

.95 

.95 


.  \ 


MARKET  GOSSIP. 

Walter  Newcombe  of  tli*^  Clobe  Ele- 
vator company  Is  away  uprm  a  thre^ 
•weeks'  vacation  trip  to  New  York  and 
other  Eastern  points. 

*  *  * 
With  only  16  cars  of  all  grains  on 
the  tracks,  business  In  cash  wheat  was 
limited  on  the  Duluth  market  today. 
The  differencts  were  unchanged.  Ca.««h 
No  1  northern  sold  at  from  ^ic  under 
to  2c  over  the  May  price,  and  cash  No. 
1  durum  at    %c  under  May. 

«       «       • 

An  Indian  ofllclal  report  places  th" 
■wheat  yield  at  96  per  cent  of  normal, 
with  quality  fslr.  Shipping  facilitle.s 
are  bad  and  therefore  busines.s  Is  .slow 
with    few    offers    of    new    wheat.      U    i-J 


Dtiluth    

M  in neupolis    

Winni]>eg    

*  «       (I 

Foreign      rlo.«lng     cables: 
.«pot    wheat,     unchanged    to 
''orn.  unchanged  to   '-d  lower.     Buenos 
-Aires — Wheat,     unchanged;     corn,     un- 
changed to    'ic  lower. 

*  •       • 

Duluth  car  Inspection:  Wheat — No.  1 
northern.  6;  No.  2  northern.  2:  No.  3.  2; 
No.  4.  1;  durum.  11;  winter.  2;  mixed. 
10;  total  wheat.  33.  last  y<^ar.  112  flax, 
3.  Last  year.  20;  oats.  2.  last  year,  30; 
rye,  6.  last  year,  none;  barley.  9,  last 
year.  4:  total  of  all  grains,  63.  last  year. 
166;  on  track,  16. 

*  *       * 

Fort  William,  Ont.,  April  11 —Grain 
In  store  in  the  terminal  elevators  at 
th"  Head  of  the  Lakes  hss  reached  the 
enormous  total  at  39.662,118  bu  of  all 
grains,  ot  92  per  cent  of  the  total  ca- 
pacity of  all  the  elevators  here.  As 
compared  xvlth  a  year  ago  there  Is 
22.365.272  bu  more  In  storage  today. 
Shipments  east  by  rail  are  ver.v  heavy. 
mor<-  than  1,482,365  bu  having  gone  out 
last  Week.  Car  after  car  was  unloaded 
from  the  west  last  week,  total  receipts 
exceeding  2.296.362  hu. 

The  storage  grain  afloat  In  vessels 
wintering  here  i«  8.421,697  bu,  as  com- 
pared with  308.712  a  year  ago.  Of  tho 
total  In  storage  now,  37.314.942  bu  Is 
wheat,  the  highest  since  1913. 

*  *       m 

♦"Jraln  In  store  at  Chicago  as  on  April 
10:  Wheat.  4.606,000  bu:  Increase.  168,- 
000  bu;  last  vear.  1.130.000  bu.  Corn. 
10.984.000  bu.  decrease.  147.000  bu:  last 
year,  15,227.000  bu.  Oats.  6,154,000  bu: 
decrease.  593.000  bu;  last  year,  12,878,- 
000  bu. 

*  *       ♦ 

A  Chicago  wire  said:  "Topeka,  Kan., 
claims  wh«at  is  greening  up  and  It 
looks  like  a  ver>-  large  wheat  yield 
for  all  K.inaas.  There  is  plenty  of 
moisture.  Farmers  are  talking  of  a 
near  record  yield.  On  the  other  hand. 
Nebraska  reports  claim  a  decided  low- 
ering of  previous  wheat  estimates  on 
condition   In   many  sections. 

MINNEAPoTTslHARKET. 


tLa  (nav   ., 
MiBftupolk 
Al<rxatMlrt»     . 
Cja>ptrU 
Owa^vio    . . 

Drtrutt    

timluili    

Muntioliiro  ., 
tMtwrtkMt  . 
.V*  rim  ... 
Park  iUpids 
■urhesi^T  . . . 
i».  Paul  .. 
Winai'Mco 
Wurthlngtim 

Abrrd  t 

ttluron  .... 
MUlmnk  . . . 
tMltchfU    ... 

tl'i>Tr^    

Pollock  .... 
Raiild  CUr  . 
RnlAHd  ... 
Siiiux  KalU  , 
tWatprtinm 
tVankttm  . . 
f  Amtiila  . . . 
rlilsinarck    . , 

SottlnWtn  . 
mliFlU  .. 
fllr*1U  UM 
Irtrkln'Wl    , . 

tlir jftiii    . . . 
I'Jrand  Fork< 
Jamrstimn 
Liiit(it<m     . . . 
II.artmor«   . . 

Lisbon    

MlBUt    

f\jpotpon   .. 
IVmhtna 
tWahp**l*>il    ..••.•.......•.■••••••! 

tWillistrw    flg^l 

tllarn- Clssarl 

t.yiie.  citr  «"i<iTl 

tMiimpilfxt     t'l**''! 

tWImiipuS    -.^-.u"^! 

ilMiilWrtrtl.    Ha*   Pt.  Cloirfjr! 

tPrlmv  .Ubm  Pi.  noutfr! 

tQir  App;'lle     Cloadyl 

tKdnHmtmi     rirsri 


Teapcrsture 
High  i    Low 

4A~ 

38 
34 
34 

32 
26 
36 
36 
M 
34 

38 
40 
36 
32 


{•Pre- 

Itatlon 


58 
■  62 
M 
64 
68 
66 
66 
66 
« 
64 
60 
58 
&t 
54 


70 
68 


68 
70 
70 


.CloMlr!    66 


.OmOf: 


i«»*«S«a 


■•••••••••••••• 


64 

64 


68 

42 

76 
68 


68 
64 
79 
50 
40 
66 
50 
50 
54 


44 

30 

46 

38 
34 
34 


S8 


32 


S2 
26 

32 
52 


40 
46 

40 
24 
3U 
30 
30 
40 
28 


0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 

.01 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 

M 
0 
0 

u 

0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
.04 
0 
0 

e 

.01 

.01 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


$2i7&;  YrUow,  cwt. 

i^'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.''.'.'.'.'.'. 
tralr 


Oait>o%,  KIlBD..  Red.  rwt. 
Spsftiiih   Onion*,    mt*    . 
Itntofn.   Wbltf,    rnmrnrr  crti 
Onlona,   Yellow   Truu,   New, 

CABSAGK— 
Minn..   Cahbagr,    B«lk,   rwt 

N>«  rahii««r.  l.a.,   ixr  er«Ht..;T 

Nw  CaMxiK".  CalifomU,  crtlt 

PtTAT«:H— 

F»nr-y    I'otatm-s,    Burbank.    \m 

Swrrt  PotJttora.   hampir 

nrt  PuUtact.  bsMfwr.  $3.7S;  bikt. . . . 

nntESK— 

Blork  Swist.  lb   ....•..•..*«..«..... 

Bri>-k.  half  raar.  lb 

Tal&k.   Wlat'oiuin.    lb .f..,^..... 

TwtiiH,    New   York  Statr.  llk.^..^ 


.24 


H^e  •  < 


3.00 
5.25 
3.00 
2.0U 

1.75 
3.00 
2.60 

.95 
1.75 
2.25 

.26 
.20 
.20 
.21 
.21 


■••••••••• 


»  •   •   ^  •   •  •   I 


•••••••• 


13 

12 

11 

09 

13 

14 

17 

,...12% 
....11% 


■••••«•• 


•#••••• 


»■•«#••• 


•— Isrhrt  and  hundrtdUw.  t— Hi«b(lt  fittrrdar,  lot- 
cst   last  iil«bt.     t— Nit  Inclndrd  In   thr  avrrafrt. 

StnK—The  awraae  liishntt  and  lo««st  trmiieratuna  an 
■ad*  up  at  rarh  vt-aVa  tmrn  Uv:  a<  tual  aualier  of  n- 
IMti  n'c^lwil.  and  fh«  awar  jirtrl|)lt«tloe»  from  tht 
mimtXT  o(  ataUom  rrswrtlinc  OlO  it   awre. 


YoiiiiK  AmiTlraa, 

BLTTKIU- 

Jsn,  lb  -. ... 

PrlnU.  lb   

^h,   lb  ••••...< 

Kirst  rrrainery,  lb 

Propesi,  lb 

Dalrr.  !)> 

MKATS— 
9rr1,   native  tUtn,   lb. . 
Bref.    wmtrm   itfcn,    lb 

Cowt,    bMtukcn,.  lb 

Camp  ctws.   per  lb 

MuUtui,    pt-r    ll> 

Pork   loins,   p>T  Hi   

Liuab,  pT  lb  

Pork  sriouIdiM,  per  in.. 
Veal,   per  lb   

LIVF.  POIXTBT— . 

SprtiiKs.   lb   ..., 

KuwU.  beav)-,   lb   

Fowls,  light.  \%..^ 

ttn'iif.  lb  

Vurki,    lb    

^     I»KK.S8[:D  POILTBV— 

ySprlBg 

Fowls.  Ilgbt   

Fowls,  beary 

Turkeys,  lb ,.... 

Durka.  lb 

Oe>s?,  lb 

KHOIKN  POULnV— 

Brullers    ;. .' 

« rir^B  ............... .w 

Boaatcn   ■ 

Fowb.  light  

Kowlf ,  mi'<thnn  

Kowli,  brary 

Durka   t 

vMvaa    ........ tp ....... 

TiirltfT*    

KiiOS— 
Frrata  rg| 

IlAY— 

Choke  Unothy.  per  toa  $14.00 

No.  1  timothy,  per  ton $14.. '.0^  15.00 

2  timothy.   p»r  too 13.00^14.00 

8  thnothy.   prr  ton S.OO'irll.W 

mf^i-d  timothy,  jm  tiw 13.0O^'il4  Ul 

miitnl  tImoUty,  pn  vm 10.(J0''a  ll.Oi) 

mlxpd  tioMtby.  prr  too 9.00^1000 


t  •  •  •  t.f  ••*•••  a 


■v^v. 


•  «  •  •  •  • 


•^  •  •  •  •  a 


•••••t««*«a 


»•••••••• 


GRAIN,  STOCKS,  COTTON, 
PROVISIONS 

204  Board  of  Trade,  Dukith 


Members  New  York  St*ek  Kr«clMia«e 
Member*  New  York  Cottnn  tlxrkaage 
All  (irala  Uxckaiiges. 


Offtoca  l»  MlMteapi.lla,  •«. 
and    WIaat*«C 


Paal 


fimeral  nmaary.  lerilard  ttnm  ChlrM»:  Balo-'all  as  » 
rul«  ttulmporlant.  LUUl  and  scmtt  rrd  showen  In  Soutb- 
wi^rrn  atiJ  (Vfctral  Kinturkj.  rifrpm*  Southern  lUlnoli 
and  SoutiifdiU'ru  Missouri.  great->t  .15  Inch  at  .New 
Burn  Jde  HI  .  aI>o  lUht  but  «t11  dl^trlbutnl  prirlpUaUsn 
in  .Mlihigin  and  Montana.  A  few  MiimporUat 
lu  DakotM.  .a*  at  LewWtown.  Mont.,  no  more 
clspwtirrr  In  the  Nurthwrst. 

Trmt>rT*tBr^     rfrtitlniie     ti'xVrati'     and     n>aalnp     this 
morning    ar-    ahow    thr    wiwnahU    narmal    rwopt    la 
south' astrru  siftl.ini  and  B'<l  Klvr  i.f  tti-  North  falb-y. 
H.  tr.  RUHIMUSW.S.  Local  Forersftrr. 

THE  PRODUCE^MARKETS. 


Khowvn 
tbaa  .04 


■••*•*•••••••• 


I  •  ••••». as  •••  • 


I  •••••••••••••■•••• 


.38 
.87 
.36 
.34 
.30 
.25 

.13U 

.io(i 

.14 

.IfiVa 
.18 
.13 
.14 

.20 
.20 
.15 
.16 

.16 

.21 
.17 
.21 
.25 
.IS 
.18 

.z; 

.20 
.20 
.18 
.19 
.20 
.IS 
.18 
.24 


.21(3    -23 


New  York,  April  11. — The  only  ex- 
ception to  the  general  firmness  of  to- 
day's opening  was  New  Haven,  which 
declined  a  point.  Most  other  issues, 
active  and  otherwise,  were  fractional- 
ly higher,  while  Crucible  Steel  led  the 
war  group  with  an  advance  of  IVi. 
United  States  Steel  opened  with  a 
sale  of  1.600  shares  at  a  slight  gain 
over  yesterday's  close.  Coppers  and 
metal  Issues  us  a  whole  aeemed  dis- 
posed to  make  favorable  response  to 
remarkable  trade  conditions  but  Ma- 
rines were  relatively  quiet.  Trading 
became  light  and  tentative  after  the 
Initial  offerings,  prices  showing  more 
Irregularity. 

New  Haven  continued  to  decline, 
falling  2S  to  60%  on  active  dealings 
and  unsettling  prices  elsewhere  In  the 
stock  market  today.  The  stock's 
heaviness  was  accompanied  by  rumors 
of  disappointing  March  earnings.  There 
were  recessions  of  1  to  3  points  In 
Marln-s.  Goodrich,  Petroleums  and  In- 
dustrial Alcohol  common  and  pre- 
ferred. New  York,  Chicago  &  St.  Louis 
second  preferred  broke  6%  to  60. 
These  were  partly  counterbalanced  by 
the  strength  of  Crucible,  Cuban- 
American  Sugar  and  United  States 
Smelting,  the  latter  making  a  new 
record  at  75  Ta.  Trading  dwindled 
later,  the  market  coming  to  a  stand- 
still at  noon.  Bonds  wero  Irregular, 
Canadians  displaying  strength,  with 
furtlier  pressure  against  Anglo- 
French    6s. 

Trading  became  more  lethargic  in 
the  afternoon,  leading  stocks  tending 
toward  lower  levels,  while  some  ob- 
scure issues  advanced.  Ingersoll-Ptasd 
waa  conspicuously  In  the  latter  class, 
rising  25  to  the  new  record  of  300. 

Prices  yielded  again  In  the  final 
hour,  the  decline  being  simultaneous 
with  disturbing  advices  from  Wash- 
ington.     The    closing    was    irregular. 

NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

lt«>ortc4  by  Cbarioa  E.   Lwwu  4t  Oo. 


Superior    Copper 

Tamarack 

Trinity    

Tuolumne    

United  Fruit 

U.  S.  Mining 

U.  S.  Mining,   pfd. . 
Utah  Crmsolidated 

Victoria    

Winona    

Wolverine    


Chicago   Livestock. 

Chicago.  Aprtl  11.— Hog  prices  derrloprd  mor« 
strength  today  owlr.g  to  the  fact  that  reorlpta  were  not 
as  plentiful  ai  expiw'ted.  Cattle  aetnn.d  to  b<;  in  de- 
mand but  the  offerings  larked  qualKy.  Tbe  supply  af 
sli>n'P  and  Iambi  »as  considered  hta>-j  for  iJsmMUaie  re- 
quirements. 

Hog»— Recelpt.s.  12.000:  strong,  ff  abore  yesterday's 
average:  bulk.  l«.50<&9.6o:  light.  $9.20ifi9.7o;  nlxi"d. 
$9.301ia.70;  heavy,  $9.3ft&9.70;  rough,  59.20<&9.3:; 
pigs.  $7.40'a9.10. 

CatUe— Keieipu,  4,000:  steadj-;  natiTe 
$7,805/9.9'.;  western  rtoef*.  7.60fri,S.60; 
feeders,  $.'>.8.'>(2i8.M;  <oks^  and  helfen, 
ealTM,   $6.5erti  ;«.50. 

Sheep— Recpipts,   15,000;  steady;  wethers,  $7.00Q^.3o 
Iambs.  $7.50(g  11.70. 


eOOD  TRADING 

IN  THE  COPPERS 


Heavy  Realizing    Sales 
Zinc    Stocks— Old 
Dominion  Strong. 


in 


be»^  steers, 
st«(ji«r9  and 
$4.00(i29.00; 


Real  Estate 


Transfers. 

8.    Wleland. 
"sXi' '  if 


L.     SedUrhek    Pt    al    to    Matilda 

lot  7,  blk.  22,  Loudon  addition 

Jacob    Piiro   et   ni    to    Muna    klattson, 

uw^,  swVi  "f  n*>4.  sertloB  5,  59-15.. 
Wallace  George  L-Rmrd  rt  ui  to  Joseph  Zyw|i-kl. 

•ast    >^    lot    438,    blk.    116,    Dtrtuth    Pr-jper, 

Second  dhtst<m    

Frank   8.    Beebe    %  us    to   Petrt-   McHard>-,    14 

arm  in  nwl4  of  bw^4,  sertton  32,  56-21.... 
Henry    B.    Brown    et    lu    to   Louis   Sked-ly,    iMs 

11,  12,  blk.  1,  Shank's  addition  to  Biwablk.. 
Row   Brown    et   mar   to   Louts   Sbedely.    lots   3, 

4.  blk.   1 ,  same . . ! 

Watwn  8.    Moore  et   ux  to  John   Blaxall.   loU 

96,  27,  28.  blk.  33,  liary,   KirM  division.... 
Sidney    U.    Burrtoln   to   Laura   L.    McCollim,    lot 

2,  blk.  4,  Flrrt  addition  to  Pnxtorknott 

Oeontr   \V.    Norton,    exerutor,   to   C.    B.    Carroll, 

8e^4  of  ne^,  secUon  29,  52-13 


1 
425 

2.800 

210 

425 

75 

1.423 
400 
600 


A    sharp    reaction     appeared 
zinc    stocks    at    Boston     today, 
heavy  realizing  after  yesterday's 
American   Zinc   sold    off   $1.$7    to 


in 


th« 
Wtth 

bulge, 
$95.76 


Midway    florae    Market. 

Minneaota  Transfer,  St.  Paul.  Mitin..  April  16. — 
Baffett  t  Zinimermau  r:port:  Good  demand  for  big 
boraes.  farm  mare*  and  Builes,  and  scattering  local  or- 
der* for  dellrery  horif^.  Shipments  to  Goodmi!i.  Wi>. ; 
Boberts.  Wi.s. ;  tVabasha,  Minn.,  and  Elk  KWer.  .Mluu.. 
and  deliveries  to  local  contractors  and  breweries  make  u,)  j 
the  day's  clearance.  Sam  Zimmerman.  G.  M.  Uughe«. 
John  Montgomery.  XV.  K.  W^atson  and  R 
have  carload  coa»igtimeat8  on  tbe  market, 
■a  follows: 

Drafters,  extra  

Drifters,  choice 

Drafters,  common  to  good 

Farm  marcs  and  horses,   extra , 

Farm  aaares  aud  hon<?<i,  choice , 

Farm  horses,  cumnHm  to  good ^ 

Privers  and  sjd.llers I30wl«5 

DeliveiT  boraes   

Uules,   according  to  size 


H.    Farwm 
Values  hold 

..$160^2fS 

..  140(9160 

...  12.^  Ui 

,..  1556210 

...  140^1.)5 

125iQ140 


around  the  close.  Butte  &  Superior 
closed  off  25  cents  to  $96.25.  Old  Do- 
minion was  the  day's  feature,  advan- 
cing  $2   to  $71. 

Calumet  &  Arizona  was  strong  In  an 
otherwise  quiet  market  selling  up  87 
cents  to  $7  4.6:i.  Cupper  Range  sold 
near  the  close  25  cents  off  at  $66.26. 
Clreene-Cananea  75  cents  off  at  $19.86; 
Keweenaw  ::5  cents  off  at  $6.37;  L.ake 
unchanged  at  $17.50:  North  Butte  un- 
changed at  $29,  and  Osceola  $1  up  at 
$94.50. 

*  •       • 

Iron  Blossom  Mining  company  bat 
declared  a  monthly  dividend  of  10 
cents   a  share. 

*  *       * 

The  I>ake  Supei-ior  C.ipper  camp  pro- 
duced upwards  of  24.000,000  pounds  of 
copper    during    March. 

Miami  Copper  for  the  year  ended 
Dec.  31  last,  showed  a  net  income  of 
$3,589,681  against  $1,362,830  in  tbe 
previous  year. 

*  *      * 

Paine,  Webber  &  Co.  had  the  fol- 
lowing from  Boston:  "Experts  who 
have  recently  examined  United  States 
Smelting  Mexican  sliver  discoveries 
where  $12,000:000  of  silver  values 
have  already  been  proved  up,  state 
that  these  ores  will  run  an  average  of 
not  far  from  $50  per  ton  In  silver, 
and  that  they  will  permit  of  a  mini- 
mum profit  of  835  per  ton  based  on 
prices  for  silver  10  per  cent  to  16 
per  cent   below   the  current  level." 

*  •      • 

Closing  quotations  of  Boston  curb 
stocks,  as  reported  by  Paine.  Webber 
&    Co.:  p.id.  Asked. 


13S@190    Butte 
165(3215 


London  3Ioney. 

London,  April  11. — Money  was  in 
moderate  demand  and  discount  rates 
were  quiet  today.  The  stock  market 
maintained  a  good  tone.  Iron,  Steel 
and  Oil  shares  were  firm.  American 
securities  were  neglected  and  the  other 
sections    dull. 


Butte  &  Zenith   . . . 

Boston    &   Mont  tna _ 

Bingham     Mines     12.75 

Sc  London 88 

Big     Ledge     1.63 

Bohemia     2.87 

Calumet    &    Montana 65 

Coppermines     2.00 

Carnegie    Lead    &    Zinc.      4.50 
Chief     1.63 


New  York   Cotton. 

New     York,     April     11. — Cotton 
turcs   closed   steady;    May.    11.89; 
12.06;    October,    12.21;    December, 
January,  12.46. 


— Fu- 
.TuIy, 
1^.39; 


BTOCKI 


I  High,  i  U>w.    I  QoM, 


No. 
Xo. 
No. 
?(o. 
No. 
No 

.No. 
!*«. 
No. 


prairie,   per  ton . . 

pratrle.   per  ton . . 

pralri>>,   per  too . . 

tildlaail,  per  ton. 

midland,  per  ton. 
Packing    liay,    p^r    toa.. 

Uy<-    ktraw.    per   ton 

Oat  jitraw.  per  ton 


••■••••■•••a 


U.OO'fi  14.00 
12.00(x 13.00 
S.UfKfi  'J. 00 
9.00^10.00 
eOOii  7.00 
5.50<§  6.00 

b.bO&  6.00 


Ke« 

New    York.    Aprtl   11. 
«»wuBfg  (Straii.  SJ2  irYe. 


Minneapolis.  Minn..  April  11. — Wheat 
higher;  repiirts  of  crop  damage  In  the 
Southwest  helped  to  strengthen  the 
market  after  a  weak  opening.  May 
finished   at   $1.20  •«.    l^c   above   yester- 


A  Good  Flmi  to  Ship 
Yoar  Grain  to 

ATWOOD- LARSON 
COMPANY,  Inc. 

Spoclal  attention  given  to  ciMh 
grains.  We  give  all  sblpmants  our 
personal  attention. 

IHiIalli— Minneapolis 


''EXPERIENCE  IS  THE  BEST  TEACHER 

CILAIN  COMMlSSiON  SMCK  1663 


Pf 


C.  C.  WYMAN  &  CO. 


DULUTH 


MINNEAFOUft 


ANDALL, 
EUABLE 

MINNEAPOLIS 


GEE&  MITCHELL  CO. 
RAIN  nflERCHANTS 

DULUTH      -      WINNIPEG 


CnAPE  FRllT— 

Fq-     Grape                  46          64          64 

80  96  126 

mil    $3.23    $3.60    $4.25 

U.J5 

.... 

Cuban    3.J5      3.50      4.00 

3.85 

3.50 

MUSCKLlJ4.\«»l'S  rtlTT— 

Straw b»rrUs.    LiJuLslana,   24   pint,    cralet 

.  3.50 

PtniarTpIrs,    36i,    crite 

.  6.00 

l'RA>BKRRIK.H_ 

Crant* Tries,    Jer*7s,    per   bof 

.  4.00 

traalxrrteb,  Kvaixirat.Hl,  L'6  iM<..  carton 

.  2.75 

Ex.    Fey.    »h        9»)  1«J»)        128         LJO 

176  200  250 

.Ssfeli     $3.25    $3.50    $3.75    $3.75 

$4.00 

$1.25 

Ex.  Ch. 

N^reU    .  2.75      2.75      3.25      3.r,0 

3.75 

4.00 

Florldas    3.50     3.50     3.60 

3.50 

3.50 

Ei.   Fry.   Woo* 

.  3.75 

L'ss  .10  is  5  and  10  box  lots. 

LK.MONSI—                                           270s    3009 

:£!• 

Ex.   Key.   (alifornU.  hot 

$4.75 

$4.75 

r.x.   I'h.   Calirurula,   box $4.26 

4.50 

4.50 

Llfni.«.    Fanrv    box 

.  1.25 

B.4NAN.\S— 

Bananas,  Fani7  Linen,  lb. 

'rul 

de  •"*'• 

BOX  APPLES—                                 El.  Fancy. 

Faner. 

JomUms   

.$2.25 

•  •  •  ■ 

Koman    Drauty 

.  1.95 

$1.80 

IK'lii'lOUa 

.  2.50 
.  2.3S 

SpBambwf   

.  •  •  • 

.  2. a 
Fancy 

2.00 

Clrrlt  T 

Choice 

BAKBKL  APPLES—                  Brand. 

Grade. 

O'ade. 

N     \.    Baldwin 

$3.75 

$3.25 

Mo.    Beu    l»«wls $a.65 

3.-.:5 

2.75 

Mo.    B.n    Paris    Ut    1-t.    M»l 

.  .  •  • 

2.25 

G1U;K.\    VKGilTABLti*— 

.^aptkr-igrw.    Section,    crate 

.  2.25 

Knn*.   Urees,   lb..   2>k 

.  5.00 

Bau-s.   Chi.,   Wax,   lb..  aOc;  h*ffl(ier.... 

.  6.00 

B«<t-i.    Bbl.    SKock.   d(« 

.     .75 

CaWiasr,    Bed.   H>   

.     .05 

Carrots  Barrvl   Stock,   dta 

.     .70 

CaoiMloweT.      CallfemU,      Pony,      erate 

.      16-18 

ngit         

.  2.15 

(miJllhiwer,    Orr.   ir»t»    

.  3.20 

Cuouabtrs,   HoUmmmf,   Extra  Fane)-,   *■. 

.  1.90 

Celeiy,    Ruot,    duz    

.     .70 

tl»l«<'a,    bM    

.     .75 

Eiiillv     hamper     libl 

.  4.50 

l4£   Plairt.    cnale    

.  5.00 

Lrtnav   Iraf.   Chlcsoi  Case,   40r;  8  4m. 

bos... 

.  1.26 

»inm  Onloni.   dw.,   2r>c;  bin 

.  2.00 

Head   l.rtttire.    L*..   crate.   $aL26;  kn... 

.  2.00 

.Mint.    d«»n    

.     .50 

Mashroon'i,    lb    

.     .66 

Ofater  Plant,  doe   

.     .80 

r«r^l<7,   Hutbame,  doc,  40r;  Buutbem, 
l-eppen, .  na.,    h*t.,   *»p;  ertte 

dM.... 

.     .'35 



.  2.00 

IMtalM.   Hothouse,    doz    

.     .75 

B»4iMm,    l*«Bipfr   . .  « 

.  l.TO 

IliiibArr)    r*'lf>orslA    feM.  S2.50:  li.... 

.     .OR 

SbsUiitrt     d-f    

.     .50 

.Spinarh     t-kt    

.  2.50 

Tiiipatoes     KLa  .   6  hakt..   cnrtt. ........ 

.  3.00 

TiMMtaes      Hothonte      Ih 

.« 

Wat'tr   Cresi     \kw                               ......                   iS 

Turnips     dH                  .,,....,..,.... 

.    .« 

CEUCKT— 

Juailw,  BTiw  Ubtoff.  dM 

.  1.00 

#rk. 

Finn;  recetpU,   10.2S3: 
rreanery.   higher  war- 
ing.   TJf(f21\'^;    nrsts,   'ti^l^6<^;    seconds,    84>>..y/ 
36«V.  "  ^] 

ICttt—VUm;  ncelpt*.  39,906;  fresh  gathered  extra*, 
2:i\<'a2W:  rerdar  pwrki'd  exlms,  flrrt*.  22%^(i23c;  do 
nrsts.  21':.'&22»>c;  s.wmls,  20',^(ii21c;  nearby  h'imery 
uhiti's  doc  to  fancy.  ;^u26c;  nearto'  hennery  browui, 
24*r'J5c. 

thec<u«— Irregular:  r«re<pti,  2,276;  state,  hdd,  specials. 
IK^'UlS^c.    cuTTtMit    make,'    aprdala,    17c:    do    awage 
nin,   16«.,j'?{16%c;  Wlsconala  twins,  held,  W^i"??  18»,l;e. 
-  • 

ciyehxo. 

CWcago,  April  11.— B«t«er— Steady;  recHpU.  9.636 
hrta;  cr.amery  exlrai^  ,15c;  extras,  flrstj,  34*^;  flrsti, 
33Vt4l34c;  aeronds,  ji(&33c. 

Clierse— Steady;    wtntex    jnarte,     daisies,     17^4'Vil7»-j 
twins,   WV-f^wlW^r;  Amerlets,    Ift'^'^r ir»'v,r:  honn, 
(filP^.    Vail  made,  ditlales,  IT^UtM^iC  mini, 
^17%c;  AmerliM.  MM^iSc;  horns.  lH>*4jl9c. 

Kns — Km^pu.  48,452  caaev;  iinrhangi-d. 

I'oUtneii — Hoceipts,   35   rare;  unchanged. 

Poultry — Alive,  uacbaiiged. 


i 


17^; 


HIDES,  PELTS,  WOOL,  ETC. 


— SHir  TO-— 


H.  POEHLER  CO. 

(B»Ubll«ho4  1866) 

GRAIN  COMMISSION 


MnVBTBAFOLU 


BVLITTB 


!<o.    1    greffi   lalted    cows    snd    ateen, 

all   weights 

No.  1  green  .salted  bulb 

Green  salted  snd  branded  hides,  flat..,. 

No.   1  grai'n  suited   r'tiU  calf 

No.    1  green   salted  long  haired  kips,   8 

to  25  lb*  

?«•.  1  green  aalte<>  hip,  15  ts  26  lb>... 

G««en  Mited  di-arons,   eack 

Or<->ti  salted  bom  bldcf,  each 1.69 

l>ry  lltdcn— 

Tetritoa  butcbert.   ovci    16  lbs 

Murrain  and  fallan,  over  15  lbs 

Calf.  o»er  6  lis 

Dry  salted  hides,  all  wvtgMs 

Horse  and  male  hides 

Tallow  and  Urease'— 

No.  1  unow 07 

Ko.  2  tallow 06 

rnwaslicd.   >4  blood 28 

liiwashnl,  m-dlBm,   %  blotd 2* 

Citwarhffd.   iaium\   U   blond 28 

I'nwaahid.   low.   '^  blood 30 

UUtn-jMta.  Dakota.  Wlsctsufn  sod  Iowa. 


:iF 

.20 

.16",4 

.18 
1.13 
4.00 

.28 
.20 
.28 
.W 
6.00 

.08 
.07 
.10 
.28 
.25 
.25 


Am.  Tel.  &  Tel 

Am.    t^an.,    coin 

Am.  Beet  Sugar 

Am.   Hide   &  Lea.   pfd. 

Am.  Car  Foundry 

Am.  Locomotive 

Am.  Locomotive,  pfd.. 
Am.  Linseed,   com 

do  pfd   

Am.   Steel   Foundries. . 

Am.   Smelting    

Alaska  Gold  Mines  Co. 
AUis  Chalmers,  com... 

Am.  .Sugar   

Am.  Woolen,  com 

Anaconda  Copper    .... 

Atchison    

l>ald.   Loc 

B.   &    O..   com 

do.    pfd     

Butte  &  Superior 

Cinti'ui  Leather 

Ches.     &    Ohio 

Chlno  Copper  Co 

Chi.  Grt.  Wosln.  pfd.. 
Chicago,   Mil  &  St.    P.. 

Col.  Fuel  &  Iron 

Corn   Pro.   Co 

Crucible  Steel,    com... 
Cuban-Am.    Sugar    ... 

Distillers    Sec 

Krie      

Erie,     1st     pfd 

B.  F.  (i'rlch  Co.,  com. 
General  Electric  . . . . 
Generals  Motors,  pfd. 
Great  Northern,  pfd 
tireat  Northern  Ore. 
CJug.     Explor.    Co. . . . 

Inspir.    Cop.   Co 

K.   C.    {Southern 
Kenn  Copper 
Lehigh   Valley 
Mont.  Power  &  Light.. 
Maxwell   Motor    

do  1st  pfd 

do  2nd  pfd 

Mex.  Pte'm  Co 

Missouri  Pacific 

Miami  Copper 

Northern    Pacific 

National    Lead    

Nev.  Copper  Co 

Norfolk   &  Western    . . 

North    American    

N.  Y.  Air  Brake 

N.  T.  Central 

N.  Y..  N.  H.  &  N.  H.  . . 

Pennsylvania     

Pitts.  Coal,  com , 

ITessed  S.  C.  Co , 

Ray    Copper    

Reading    

Republic    Stt-el 

Rock     Island 

Ry.    Steel    Springs..., 
Southern     Pacific... 
Southern    Railway... 
Southern     Ry.,     pfd... 
Studebaker,     com.... 

Shattuck     

Tenn.    Copper   Co..... 

Texas    Oil    Co 

Union     Pacific 

U.    S.    Rubber    

U.  S.  Inds.  Alcohol  Co 

U.   8.   Steel    

U.    S.    Steel,    pfd 

Utah  Copper  

Western   Union    

West.   Hse  Elc.  Mfg... 

Willys    Motor     

Woolworth    


61% 


68% 

77% 


102  »;4 

20% 

iioVi 

*87% 

103  >4 
107% 


64 

62 
66% 


46 

94'^ 
48% 


80 


60% 


68 

77% 


101^ 
19% 

ii6% 

'86% 
103  Vs 
105% 


96% 
63% 
61% 
66 


44% 

92% 
47% 


78% 


74% 


111% 

38% 
112% 

I   67% 

I  •    ■   •   •   • 

1122% 


I103H 
62% 


RAW  FURS. 


mik 


•••••••••• 


Large. 

.$16.00 

•     l'^ 
.  10.00 

.    2.50 

.       .40 

.  26.00 

.600.00 


-I:* 


Urn 

Bi-a*er    . . . 
Badg?r  ... 

(Iret    «at 
KishBT     ... 

Fox.  illwr 

Fob,  eroas  .. 

Fox,   gray   Z.H 

Fox.   red    ........... ...iM.*..  9.00 

l.ynx    ...'.....  12.60 

Mtnk,  dark  ,<..,^,.  4.00 

Mink,   lifowi   ...M~.~  $.S 

Mhik.   pale   .Jl.r.  2.^ 

(Kter.  dark  -»»•«•  12. 00 

Otter,  brown  nUl-  lOOO 

Raccoon ....T*'!'.  4.00 

Sl^unk.  brack    At-'t'.  <-W 

Mnak.   dMrt  tMpt*..,..llZl,  iS 

Skunir  striped   >...w  2.60 

Uinknats— Wlananhi   aml^tMlUr:     Largp 

large  winter.  42c;  larje  fall;  *Jr;  Mlnnc<»;ta 


Mfvllam. 
$12. 00 
6.00 
6.50 
l.Ti 
.30 
20.00 
350.00 
20.00 
1.75 
7.M 
9.00 
3.00 
2.90 
2.00 
9.00 

If. 


71 


109% 

'88% 
112 
66% 

122% 


102% 
60% 


24  5/* 

61% 

19% 


142% 

84■'^ 

62% 


24 

84% 

61 

18% 


128% 
60% 
72% 
61^ 
68 
77% 

102% 
24 
46 

62% 

101% 
80 
28  %i 

110^4 
49  ^H 
86% 

103V* 

105% 
87 
76% 
96 

53% 
61% 
66% 
ih% 
94% 
44% 
20% 
92% 

221 

47% 

36% 

61% 

78% 

167% 

116 

120 
43% 
21% 
46% 
25-"5* 
67 

77% 
78% 
73 
86 
66% 

109% 

4% 

38% 

112  »4 

66% 

17% 
122% 

67% 
144 
102% 

61% 

67 

26  «g 

52 

24 


132% 
63% 

166% 
86 

83% 

89% 
66% 


141% 
34% 
62% 


61 

18% 
39 

97  ■■i 
20% 
68 
14iat 
34% 
62% 

1197 

132%|l32% 

52% I   62% 

160%|160% 

Si%\  85 


82% 
89% 
64% 


117% 
I  82% 
I  89% 
64% 
233 
126 


BOSTON  COPPER  STOCKS. 

Repoftad  by  Psluaw  WMfeer  *  C*. 


STOCKS— 


Bid.  I  Asked. 


large   wlnlrr,   Xe;  U 
kits  at  proportionate 


falli'aSc; 
raiiw.is 

'^■.''  ' 


Rnall. 
$10.00 
6.00' 

zm\ 

1.25 

.25 

15.08 

200.00 

15.00 

1.26 

6.00 

6.50 

2.26 

1.75 

1.60 

7.00 

6.00 

1.75 

3.00 

...  8.25 
1.7.-> 

.45         .25 

spring.    .tOc; 

ami  lUmllar, 


snail,   daaafled   aM 


•••th  St.  Fa%i'l.lTe*t*ek. 

flnrth  Rt.  Paul,  .\nnfi:; .  A^il  11.— Hof>— Rerelpfs. 
8,600:  steady   to  k   blgivh-  tfogf,   $9.10i&9.35;   balk, 

CfUle— Keeelpt*.  4.000rWlm.  stMdy;  stMn.  |6.00^ 
9.00;  cows  aad  lieKert,  $5-:8Pf/"7.75;  calfe^  50c  bUpitr, 
|4.60ru<*.nO:  stockan  and  Maria,  ttnif,  $5.00^8.3. 

8iwetK-«eciipts.  400;  tiH;  lunfaa,  $5.5(^10.75; 
wethers,  $8.(X)«ff8.25;  ewei.  $3.50tS'8.00. 


Alaska   

^!!^ 

20% 

Adventure   

4% 

Ahmeek    

100 

101 

AUouez    

70% 

71 

Ameriran    Zinc    

$6% 

98 

Arcadian > 

7% 

8% 

Arizona  Commercial   ... 

'A 

8% 

Butte   &    Ballaklava. ,  .  . 

3% 

Butte   &   Superior 

»8 

96% 

Calumet  &  Arizona 

74% 

74% 

Calumet  A  Hocla 

662 

665 

Centennial    

17 

17% 

Chlno    

66 

66% 

Copper    Range    

86% 

85% 

Daly    West 

8% 

8% 

East    P.utte    

12% 

13 

Franklin    

8% 

9 

Goidfield    Consolidated. 

80c 

86c 

Granby     

89% 

80 

Greene-Cananea    

49% 

60 

Hancock    Consolidated.. 

16% 

16 

Inspiration    

46% 

47 

Indiana    

4 

4% 

Isle    Rovale    

27% 

28% 

Keweenaw     

6% 

8 

La.ke    Conner 

17% 
18% 

17% 

Mass.    Consolidated    .... 

14% 

Mayflower    

3% 

4 

Miami    Copper     

38% 

38% 

Michigan     

3% 

3% 

Mohawk     

99% 

17% 

100 

Nevada   Consolidated    .. 

17% 

North     Lake     

1 

1% 

NlDiaslnc      

7 

7% 

North    Butte    

29 

29% 

Ojlbwav 

2% 

2% 

Old    Colony    

2% 

3 

Old  Dominion   

7«% 
94 

'/1% 

Osceola 

94% 

Quincy    

94 

98 

Rav    Con 

84 

24H 

Santa  Fe 

2% 

3 

Shannon    

9% 

9% 

South    Lake    

8 

8«4 

34  ^i 

Shattuck   

84% 

ilk 

Shoe  Machinery 

M 

Superior  Boston 

3% 

4 

New  York   Money. 

New  York,  April  11. — Mercantile  pa- 
per. 36  3%.  Sterling  60  days,  4.72%; 
demand.  4.76  7-16;  cables.  4.77.  Francs, 
demand  603%:  cables.  6.02%.  Marks, 
demand!  72%;  cables.  72%.  Kronen,  de- 
mand. 12%;  cables.  12%.  Guildt-rs,  de- 
mand, 42%;  cables,  42%.  Lire,  de- 
mand. 655;  cables,  664.  Rubles,  de- 
mand. 31%;  cables.  31%.  Bar  silver. 
62%;  Mexican  dollars,  48%.  Qovern- 
ment  bonds  steady:  railroad  bonds  ir- 
regular. Time  loans  firmer;  60  days. 
2%;  90  days,  2%;  six  months,  3.  Call 
money  firm;  high.  2:  low,  2;  ruling 
rate.  2;  last  loan,  2;  closing  bid.  2;  of- 
fered at  2; 

(Note— The  custonarr  w«j  of  aaotlng  foreign  exchaafi 
Is  as  follows:  Sterling  (juoted  at  so  many  dollars  to  tht 
pound;  German  exchange  so  many  cents  to  four  maita; 
French  and  Italian  exchange  ko  many  francs  or  lire  t« 
the  dollar,  and  Aiitrtan,  Russian  and  Scamliuarian  ei- 
ehaoge  quoted  so  many  cents  to  the  unit  of  currency.) 

BULL  MARKET  IN 
STOCKS  LOOKED  FOR 

Strong  Situation  Develop- 
ing and  Traders  Are 
Optimistic. 

A  stronger  situation  has  developed 
In  the  ."itock  markets  during  the  last 
few  days.  Many  experts  are  of  the 
opinion  that  a  bull  market  Is  at  hand 
In  which  the  trading  will  ba  heavy, 
due  to  the  growing  interest  of  the 
public  In  speculative  and  Investment 
directions. 

The  basis  for  hoping  for  a  higher 
range  of  values  Is  not  only  the  pres- 
ent earnings  of  railroads  and  indus- 
trials, but  the  excellent  prospects  for 
the  future.  Buying  of  such  stocks 
as  United  States  Steel.  Pennsylvania 
and  Reading  Is  said  to  be  on  a  broad 
scale. 

Commenting  upon  the  situation, 
Renakorf,  Lyon  &  Co.,  New  York 
brokers,    say    In    their   weekly    review: 

•"The  Industrial  specialties  are  at 
present  the  features  and  many  of  these 
Issues  are  very  attractive  at  prevail- 
ing prices.  American  Linseed  pre- 
ferred is  a  stock  that  is  rapidly  com- 
ing to  the  front  as  an  active  trading 
issue.  We  understand  that  the  in- 
side interests  have  been  steadily  buy- 
ing United  States  Rubber  commoti, 
and  that  the  time  Is  not  far  distant 
when  we  will  see  a  considerable  ap- 
preciation in  the  shares  of  this  cor- 
poration. American  Beet  Sugar  Is 
another  stock  which  has  just  been 
placed  on  a  6  per  cent  dividend  basis. 
This  Issue  is  earning  at  the  present 
time  over  four  times  the  dividend 
that  they  are  paying  now  and  from 
the  condition  of  the  sugar  trade  will 
continue  to  earn  probably  more  than 
that  amount  for  a  long  period.  Mex- 
ican Petrol.um  and  American  Smelt- 
ing &  Refining  are  the  specialties  we 
favored   In   our   letter  of  last   week. 

"There  has  been  heavy  buying  of 
the  standard  railroads  by  the  bank- 
ing interests  of  late,  which  is  very 
impressive.  The  large  operators  are 
taking  an  optimistic  view  of  the  labor 
situation  and  believe  that  this  per- 
plexing problem  will  be  adjusted  with- 
out any  strike.  That  concessions  will 
be  granted  bv  both  capital  and  labor 
is  likely  and  this  will  prevent"  any 
rupture,  when  the  matter  comes  up 
for  the  final  settlement.  The  buying 
of  stocks  of  this  class  Is  an  encour- 
aging factor,  as  it  shows  conclusively 
the  attitude  of  the  public,  who  have 
an  abundance  of  idle  money  to  In- 
vest. The  public  have  been  studying 
the  statements  of  the  great  railroads 
of  our  country  and  are  fast  becom- 
ing convinced  that  from  an  Investor's 
viewpoint  these  issues  are  selling 
relatively  low.  They  see  a  chance  for 
a.  considerable  appreciation  In  them 
before    the    end    of    the    year    1916." 


Calumet    &    Corbln 

Cactus   Cons 

Denn     

Davis     Daly     

Hotan    Copper     .... 

First  National 

Iron    Blossom     

InteiMtat.' -Callahan 

Jerome    Verde     

Keating     

Marsh     

Mother  Lode    

New     Baltic      

New     Cornelia     . . . . 

Oneco 

Stewart      

Success 

Sierra      

San     Antonio     

Tonopah       

Tonopah    Belmont    . 
Tonopah   Extension 
Verde    Extension    . . 
Warren    Dev.     


$   4  00     $  4.60 
.74 
13.00 
.90 
2.00 
8.00 
.70 
2.12 
4.76 
1.76 
.05%        .06 

2.60 

16.50 
1.63 
2.75 
6.25 
2.26 
23.60 
2.00 

"29% 

.38 

2.75 

16.26 

1.25 

.40 

.79 

.70 
8.00 
6.00 
4.50 
6.12 
26.60 
8.00 


2.00 

3.00 

6.31 

2.38 

24.60 

2.06 

85 

.30  >A 

.39 

3.00 

16.60 

1.60 

.43 

.81 


8.25 

4.63 

6.26 

26.75 


CANADIAN  ROADS 
HIT  HARD  BY  WAR 


MUTUAL  IRON 

W*  hart  or4en  for  several  handred  tharas  of  tWs 
stack.  If  yos  deiire  tt  sell  csmmsnUate  with  it  tt 
once. 

big  i^edge 
ca.ctijs  coivs 
jeroivie:  verde: 

IVfARSH    MINING 

Write  It  for  late  gata  on  theu  Itsatt. 
Orgen  exttstad  la  all  marksti. 

MEGSON  INVESTMENT  CO. 

PhMM,   Grand,  SSI:  Mdrose,   625. 
303  PaHidif  Blg|.,   Dalsth. 


Want  option  on  iron  ore 
tonnage  from  Duluth  to 
Lake  Erie  Ports ;  also  want 
to  hear  from  coal  com- 
panies in  Duluth  and  vicin- 
ity who  wish  coal  brought 
from  Lake  Erie  ports.  Re- 
liable shippers  only  need 
apply. 

BREiniNC  &  CO.a  Ltd. 

11  Plue  Street,  Xcw  York. 


"A  REAL  MINE" 

UV  strongly  advi<4o  tbe  purfhuM'  of  Caotiis  Consolldatetl  at  pro-^- 
eiit  amrkrt  |>ri<-c>  ami  nuggvut  that  you  degnand  lokBiediate  dHlvcry 
of  tlic  stot'k,  as  we  have  reason  to  bdlove  there  U  a  Wk  short  in- 
terest who  are  trjliig  hard  to  rovw.  The  Mock  Is  eloM-ly  held  and 
rcry  lltUc  floalltig.  Market  to<lay,  $2.75  to  $3.00.  Buy  it  where* 
erer  you  can.    We  solicit  yottp  business. 

R.  B.  HARRINGTON  &  CO. 

50«  Lonsdale  Building,  Duluth,  Minn. 


PAINE,  WEBBER  &  CO. 

MB1fBER$  NEW  TOllK  AND  BOSTON  STOCK 
■XCHANQBlfl^    CUICAOO    BOARD   OF   TRAD£. 

HIGH-GRADE  INVESTMENTS 

teTi««4. 


■»    ■■     ■    ■' 


■^  0 


War  conditions  are  falling  heavily 
upon  Canadian  railroads  apart  from 
the  Canadian  Pacific,  which  was 
strongly  entrenched  with  branch  lines 
and  ample  cash  reserves  before  the 
European    struggle    began. 

The  Canadian  Northern  and  Orand 
Trunk  Pacific  have  again  come  to  the 
government  for  assistance,  according 
to  reports  from  Ottawa.  Both  are 
said  to  be  In  an  embarrap.«ing  finan- 
cial position,  being  new  lines  and 
loaded  down  with  heavy  bonded  in- 
debtedness. Their  earnings  have  been 
so  severely  affected  as  a  result  of  the 
war  that  despite  generou.s  assistance 
given  them  in  the  past,  they  are  find- 
ing it   diflflcult  to  make   ends   meet. 

While  earnings  of  both  roads  dur- 
ing the  last  few  months  have  shown 
material  Increases  over  last  year, 
their  revenues  are  reported  to  be  In- 
sufficient to  leave  enough  mMTgln 
over  operating  expenses  to  cover  their 
fixf^d    charges. 

In  view  of  the  he.ivy  assistance  that 
has  been  given  to  these  roads  in  the 
way  of  bond  gaurantees,  subsidies  and 
land  grants,  government  ownership, 
especially  of  the  Grand  Trunk  Pacific, 
Is  being  strongly  urged.  It  Is  thought, 
however,  that  after  taking  action  to 
tide  the  roads  over  their  difficulties, 
nothing  in  the  way  of  state  ownership 
will  be  undertaken  at  the  present 
session    of    parliament. 


/ 


ni'iaa' 


I 


J 


f 


"• 


I 


18 


Tuesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


Don't  Pay  Rent 


TLIRMS. 

5   rooms, 
llnlsh;  city  wa- 


nV\   A    llO.>IK   0.\    KASV 

No.   1315    i:ast   Ninth   St., 
lianlwood  Iloors  and 
tor.    e«'\vor.    bath,   g:a.<?.  „      ^  . 

No    4  26  Thirteenth   Ave.  East,   and 
No    1308  Kast  Fifth  St.  have  6  rooms 
ea<  h  and  bathroom,  and  are 
niodi'i  II.  „ 

No.     815     Kast     KlRhth     St. 
room.'';   hardwood   linish  and 
convciji*  iK-'tr. 

S.M.MJ^    FIRST    PAYMENT: 

iiAr.A.\«-i:  sAMi:  as  rent. 
EBY  &  gridi-.e:y 

508    PALLAMIO    BLDG. 


strictly 

has    6 

modern 


aut.   191G   

RecflTcd  for  prfmiums., 


6.000.00 


, .1       172.678.49 


St«t*  of  Minnesota.  nep«rtmcnt  of  In«)r»n(^. 

I  Hereh>-  Cfrtlfy.  That  tlie  .Annual  Statement  of  tn« 
Security  .Mutual  I.lfe  Insurance  company  for  the  year  end- 
ing th-tL'mbcr  3lNt.  1'J15,  of  wbl'h  the  abote  Is  an  ab- 
stract, luf  been  rrcelted  and  flled  In  thl»  dipartment 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  ^    ^    WORKS 

Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


All    Other    llabUitles 

Capital  stoi'k  paid  up 

Total  Uabnitle«.   Including  eapltal \ 

Surplus  OTcr  all  liabilities 

BISIXKSS   IN   MIN.NEisOTA 


4.500.00 
100.000.00 


REAL  ESTATE  LOANS 

RATES-5,  5'/2  and  6% 

Liberal  Prepajnurnt  PrlvlleneM. 

REAL  ESTATE 

lioueht.    Sold    and    Manaisrd. 

INSURANCE 

Of   AH   KlmlH    I*la««"«l   In    StronB*«t 
(  omiiaiilfNt 

F.  L  SALTER  CO. 

',wz-:i  i.o>xi>Ai.K  ni.i»<;. 


BA.XKKKS*      ACCIIJKXT      INSIRAXCE 
COMPANY. 

Principal    ofnce:      I»«    .Motmt,    Iowa. 
185)3.      K.    L.    .Miner,    pre>l«Kiit; 
Attorney    to    accept    service    in 
Of  lu,uraBc-e.  ^^^^^  ^,^^^^^^     ,,00.000.00, 
INCOMt   l.N    191i>. 

Premiums  received    (Net)- 

Accident     J3oO,2J9.30 

Total  net  premium  Income • 

Folli-y  f^^   

yrvm  Inti-rest  and  rents 

From   ail  other  sources.... 


Organlzi'd    in 
J.    A.    Klzer.    ixcrctury. 
.Minnesota:     tomml»i«ner 


300,229.30 

15.690.00 

8.41>2.Cio 

128.10 


Medical   proteotlTe 
Totals    


••••••••*•• 


...1       22«,636.«6 
72,128.54 
IN  1915. 

Premiums  Received. 
...%         ll,26o.00 


,...$         11,260.00 


State  of  Minnesota.  Department  of  Instirance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Htalement  of  the 
Medical  Protective  Insurance  company,  for  the  year  end- 
ing Itccemlrr  31st.  19ir>.  of  which  the  above  Is  an  ab- 
stract, has  l)een  rectlve<k  tud  flled  In  this  department 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  S.   D.   WORKS, 

Commlisloner  of  Insurance. 


,•••... 


Total   ln<ome   

Ledijer    assets    Oectmber 
year     

Sum     . 


31st   of   previous 


l.N 


$ 

1915. 


DISBl  KSt-Mt-NTS 
Vcl^'fnT  '"''  *'':''.7. J  80.223.41 

iVe.'uh  .::::::::::: '53,364.92 

.Net    paid    poll-y holders 

linesligatlon   and   adjustment  of  claims.. 

Policy    fees     

( ommlsslons     • 

Salaries  of  offlcers,   agents,   employes,   ex- 
aminers'  and  Inspection   fees 

I>i\idends    to    stockholders 

All  other  disbursements. 


)■■••••*••••• 


374,539.45 
233,458.97 
607,998.42 


133.588.33 

2.427.93 

li.fiW.OO 

95,496.51 

51.447.42 

3.500.00 

26.353.04 


;iM] 


EAST   E 

Wf  have  the  fulUiwinf,'  houses  we 
can  ulTtr  on  ra.^y  terms: 
S7,000 

Almost  new,  .seven  room.<«,  hot 
water  heat.  fireplace,  laundry, 
hardwood  fnu.sh  and  floors,  beamed 
ceilitij;  In  dinlne  room.  Lot  50x140. 
Alley  paved. 

SS,TOO 

Six  room.*;,  hot  water  heat,  laun- 
dry; hardwood  finish  and  lloorH, 
Srst    floor;     white    enamel,    second 

PULFORD,  HOW  &  COMPANY 

609   AUurth   Building. 


Total  disbursements   

Balance     • ;  • 

LKlMiKK  AS8KTS   MX.  31, 

Book  value  of  real  e%tate 

.Mortcajk   loans    

Bo«)k  >alue  of  bonds  and  sto«ks 

Cash  in  ofBw,  trust  companies  and  banks 

Pr.  mlums  In  cotirse  of  collections 

All  other  ledger   assets 

Total   ledger  as.sfts    'as  per  balance)..; 
NONLKIKiKU   ASSKTS. 

Infere-t  and  rents  due  and  accrued 

Other    uon  ledger    assets 


1915. 
I 


328,ri03.23 
279,495.19 

100.00 

177.600.00 

12,000.00 

15,304.40 

66..VW.S4 

7.981.95 


79.495.19 

2,600.10 
6.400.00 


Gross 


GARY-DULUTH 

The  coming  Steel  Mill  Center  of  the  Head  of  the 
Lakes  The  ideal  Homnite  for  the  Mechanics  and 
Latorirs  working  in  the  bif  Shops  and  Furnacei.  No 
Street  Car  Fare  to  pay  and  no  letting  ap  an  hour 
earlier  to  go  to  work.        .      ,      .,     .  ,,»„  ,„ 

Locile  here  and  reap  the  benefit  of  a  new  City  in 
the    makinij, 

Gary.  Ind  ,  crew  from  a  sand  dune  to  a  city  ot 
52,000  population  in  eight  years.  Watch  Gary-0«- 
lath  grow. 

We  build  and  sell  housci  on  small  cash  payments, 
balance  payable  like  rent. 

Lots  sell   from  $tOO  *P.  easy  terms. 

GARY-LAND  COMPANY 

I  Incorporated. ) 
SUITE   200  MANHATTAN  BLDG. 


assets  f  288.495.29 

l»Kl»rCT   ASSKTS   .NOT   ADMITTED. 

Premiums    la    course    of    collection     (past  „  ,,-  o, 

<lue)      ♦  "^'ui'l'Q- 

Acent-i   balamvs «'i^Vn!i 

All  other  assets   not  admitted t),WU.OU 

Total  ass  ts  not  admitted $  .,5J='Zouio 

Total    admitted    ass-ts ..Jo.WS.U 

LIABILITIES. 

Ill  prwcss  of  adjustment  and  reported. ...$  14,691.00 

lucurred   but   tiot  rejiorted *M.W 

Total     »  15.141.00 

Net  mipiil.l  claims  except   liability  claims  ^•'•J^AISI 

Exprns. s  of  Investlgiitlon  and  adjustment,  i^,'I^ 

I  ncarned    premiums    oi'J-i'd** 

j  ComnilssloiiH    anil    brokerage aljl- !' - 

.Ml    other    liabilities irJ^llu^HA 

Capital    bto^k    paid   up lOO.OOO.UO 

Total    liabilities.    Including   capital....}  J!15,81.').65 

Sui|4us  over  all    liahiUties 19,881.48 

BlSl.NESS   l.N    MINNESOTA   IN   191o. 

Premiums  Received.  Losses  Paid 


NKW       BRUXSWICK       FIHE       INSUR- 
ANCE    COMPAM'. 

Prlnclp.\l  office:  New  Brunswick,  .V.  J.  Organized  In 
1R26.  Oeo.  A.  VIchmann,  picsldent;  Chas.  D.  Boss, 
.seeretary.  Attorney  to  accept  service  in  Minnesota: 
Commissioner  of  Insurance. 

CASH  (  AP1T.\L.  $400,000.00. 
INCO.ME   IN   1915. 

Premiums  other  than  perpctuals | 

Rents   and    Interests 

Gross  profits  on  sale,   maturity  or  adjust- 
ment of   ledger  asai-ts 


758,342.35 
59,962.51 

13,451.25  ■ 


SITUATION  WANTED-MALE 


.SITUATION  WANTED — Sober  young 
man  wants  work,  Janitor,  elevator 
operator,  bell  .boy,  bus  boy,  porter  or 
kitchen  helper;  also  can  work  in  print- 
ing office,  store  glerk;  can  get  good 
reference.     Address  X  107,  Herald. 


PERSONAL^ 


SITUATION  WANTED— Bright,  ener- 
getic young  majn^age  19,  wishes  posi- 
tion as  mechanical  draftsman  or  «oine 
other  position  with  chance  for  ad- 
vancement: good  habits;  references. 
Write  H  95,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED— Janitor  and 
watchman,  aged  60:  good  habits,  trust- 
worthy and  reliable  In  every  respect 
if  you  want  a  good  man.  Call  A.  P. 
Cook,  courthouse. 

WANTED — Situation  by  first-class 
barber:  sober  and  reliable;  would 
like  job  where  I  could  play  on  local 
baseball  team.  Address  Algulre, 
Rapid    River,    Mich.  ^ 


Total    income    $       831,756.11 

Ledger   assets    December   31st    of    previous 
year     1,216,328.K 


Sum     I  2,048.084.65 

ItlSBIRSEMENTS   l.N   1915. 

Net  amount  paid  for  loss.'S   |  367,334.33 

Kxpensi's  of   adjustment  of  losses l(»,736.o5 

Commissions   and    brokerate 190,588.51 

Salaries,    fees   and    allowances   of  o.'flcers, 

acents   and  employes 87,859.50 

Taxes,    fe<s,    rents,    real   estate   expense, 

tire  patrol,   etc 32.061.67 

imidends   and    interest 46,55i..>u 

Gross   loss  on   sale,    maturity   or   adjust-  « onn  -:n 

menl  of  ledger   assets 2,200..>0 

All  otbir  disbursements    33,l«>3.jO 

I  770,491791 


Total    disbursements 

Balance     .  $    1.277,592.75 

I.KWJER  ASSETS  DEC.   31.   1915. 

Book  value  of  nal  estate $ 

MortgaKC    loans    

Book   value   of   bonds  and  stocks 

Cash     in     office,     trust     companies    and 

banks     

Agents'    balances,    unpaid    premiums    and 

bills   rrcclvalile,    taken    for   premiums.. 
\\\  other  ledser  assets 

Total  ledger  assets   (as  p?r  balance)..} 
NON- LEDGER   ASSETS. 

Interest   and  rents  due   and   accrued $ 

Market   value    of    real    estate,    bonds    and 

stocks   over   book   value 

All  other  non-Kdger   assets 


132,362.(K) 
249.801.IN1 
626,246.93 

131,654.95 

137,427.87 
100.00 


1.277.592.75 

7,034.17 

60.270.07 
1,725.03 


WANTED — Position  as  cook,  man  and 
wife;  washer  and  launder.  General 
all-around  repairman,  in  hotel  or  in- 
Btitutlon.    Write    K   84,    Herald. 

as 

do 

O 


SITUATION      WANTED — Position 
garden    man    and    houseman.    Can 
repair    work    of    all    kinds.    Write 
94.    Herald.  


SITUATION  WANTED— As  grocery 
clerk:  five  years'  experience;  sober; 
can  furnish  references.  Write  M  69, 
Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED — Man  and  wife, 
respectable  and"  reliable,  wish  work 
in  or  out  of  city.    Write  R  69,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED— A  colored  man 
just  from  the  south  wants  a  job  as 
chauffeur.    Call    Mel.    2709. 


—LOTS  FOR   SALE.— 
140 


}800    takes    a 
East  hillside 


lot    100    by 
Easy  terms. 


feet 
(301) 


on 


a- 

a- 

* 

a- 

■X- 


—TALK  TO  GILIUSON— 

IF  YOU  WANT  TO  BUT  ANY 
GRADE  PIANO— PIANO  DIRECT 
FROM  THE  MANUFACTURER, 
AT  AN  ACTUAL  SAVING  OF  }100. 


DON'T  BE  ATTRACTED  by 
spacious,  misleading  advertise- 
ments offering  pianos  at  your  own 
price,  and  even  below  cost. 

INVESTIGATE  FIRST,  and  the 
results  will  surely  reimburse  you 
for  the  time  you  spend.  Call  and 
let  us  refer  you  to  customers  who 
have  purchased  Raudenbush 

pianos    from    us    within    the    past 
week. 

— THEY   INVESTIGATED — 


THE 


RAUDENBUSH   &    SONS 
PIANO  CO., 
S.  E.  GILIUSON,  Mgr., 
232  West  First  Street. 


* 
* 

* 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

AufosTNFwiofoRcm 


FOR^ENT^-STXiRE^^ 


;¥**^.?^¥;\^A?*>?«';^^filf*;'^*-?^-^i*^>^-^^ 


$560    takes   a   40 
block  from  9th 


by    80-foot 
St.  car  line. 


$900  takes  a  lot  on  E.  9th  st. 


$1,500   takes   a  fine  lot   on 
St.     Fine   location.    (0627) 


E. 


lot     one 

(0660) 
Superior 


Cross 


assets   S  1.346,622.02 

nriircT  assets  not  .\umitted. 

Agents'    balances  and   bills  receivable $  2,673.45 

.Market   value    of    special    deposits   in    ei-  ■.,„., 

cess  of   corresponding  Uabllltlts 2,0L:.81 

Book    value   of   ledger   a.ssets   over   market 

VaIUS          •••••■••* •,■.•••••••••  ^4 1  .vU 


EAST  END  HOME 

.•-^ilu.it' d  on  a  beautiful  upper 
corner  on  East  Flr.>it  street,  sur- 
rounded bv  some  of  the  f'ne.«»t  resi- 
denet'S  in  the  city.  Lot  50  by  140 
fo»'t  with  well  graded  and  sod.l<d 
lawn  and  .-sliiide  trt.es.  The  house 
has  seven  rooms  and  bath,  all  white 
enamel  finisli  except  the  hall;  fire- 
place, hot  water  heating  plant, 
eleetrie  lipht,  Rf.s,  laundry  tubs, 
stone  foundation,  maple  floor.*!.  The 
view  from  this  location  Is  ext-ellent 
and  tli<'  property  can  be  boui^'ht  on 
<.i:-v  t.'iins  at  the  very  low  price 
of-l»7.000.  <8216) 

Mul:e  .III  appointment  to  ro  la  our  automobile  to 
to  sw.  il,K  i.r  auv  (.ihT  imip.rty  jou  «i-h  to  consld-T. 

STRYKER,  MANLEY  &  BUCK 


SEtl  UITV    5irTI  Al.   I.IFK  IXSt  R- 
A\<  I-:    tO.MPA.W. 

Principal  ofllce:  Blngbampton.  N.  V.  (Organlzd  In 
18,S6  •  D  S.  DIcken-oii,  p!-<.sident;  Charles  A.  La  Due, 
ieetttarv  Attorney  to  accept  service  in  .Miiuiisota: 
Ci»mml-slon'r  of  Insurance.  K.  A.  Dickey,  manager  N. 
W    Utpt      T"J>  to  7;i2  Urst  National,  Sou  Line  building. 

■  ■'  INCOME    IN   1915. 

first  year's  premiums $       186,6i4.S3 

Plvideuila  and  surrender   \alu<s  applied  to 

purcU4:.e    paid-up     insurance    and    an- 

BUitUs     W. 109.96 

Beneual   pa^miums    l,450,t>02.14 


Acddint 
Health     , 


..$4,983.77 


Totals    $4,983.77 


$531.90 
48.81 

$580.71 


Statv  of  Minnesota,  Department  of  Insiirance. 

I  Hen-by  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Bankers'  Accident  Insurance  company,  for  the  year  end- 
ing DecemtxT  31sf,  1915,  of  wbl.h  the  aliove  Is  an  ab- 
strait,  lias  Ikm  n  received  and  flled  In  this  department 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  S.  D.  WORKS. 

Commissioner  of   lusurani-e. 


G.  H.  GORDON  &  GO., 

<:ruiiiid    Floor,    Pro^iileiice    Uhlg. 
MelrOMc    1578. 


FAR.>IERS' 


FIRK    I\StRA.\CE    COM- 
PAXV. 

Principal   office:     York.   Pa.     W.   H.   Miller,   president; 

A.    S.    .M.Conkey.    secretao'.      Attorney    to    aci-ept   service 

in  .Minnesota:    Commis.sloncr  of  Insurance. 
CASH    CAPITAI,— None. 
INCOME   IN   1915. 

Premiums  other  than  i)erpetuais % 

Rents   and    Interests 

Oross   pniilt   on   sale,    maturity  or  adjust- 
ment of  ledger  assets 

From  all  other  sources 


497,586.75 
47.5-25.70 

2.242.20 
1.014.69 


Total  assets   not  admitted 

Total    admitted    assets 

LIABILITIES   DEC,    31, 

Vnpald  losses  and  claims $ 

Inearned  pn mlums    

Salaries,    expenses,    taxi-s,    dividends    and 

InU'rest   due    

Contingent    commissions    

Capital  stock  paid  up 


4,933.26 


...$    1,341,688.76 
1915. 

...$         44,950.15 
686.658.21 

«,(M2.97 

1.5(H).  00 
400,000.00 


Total  liabilities.    Including  capIUl.,,.$    1,139.151.33 


Net 


surplus   $       202,537.43 

RISKS  AND  PREMIUMS.  1915  BISIN-ESS. 
(a)    Fire  risks  »rlttcn  during  the  year.  .$106,163,794.00 

Premiums   received   thereon 1,222,180.32 

Net  amount   in   force   at   end  of  the  year 

(fire   anil   marine)    ]0(,3»>3.rwS.(X) 

•      Including  business   other   than   marine  and   inland. 

Bl  SI.NES8  IN  MINNESOTA  IN  1915. 
(Including    reinsurance    received    and    (kducllng    rein- 
surance placed. )  _.        ,  . 

Fire  risks. 

$  1,236.,322.00 

15.558.00 

10.010.00 

8.750.00 

2.850,401.00 


WHITNEY  WALL   COMPANY, 

Torrey    Bldg. 

Mel.    1368:    Grand    810. 


FOR  SALE— Garden  tract,  150  by  140 
fot  t,  with  water,  gas  and  sewer;  only 
b  blocks  from  Lakeside  school;  $16 
monthly,  no  Interest;  price  $950. 
Greenfield  Realty  Co.,  416  Providence 
bldg. 


Risks    written    .... 
Premiums   received 
Net  losses  )iald   . . . 
Net  losses  Ini'urred. 
Amount   at  risk    . . 


State  of  Minnesota.   Department  of  Insurance. 

1  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
New  Brunswick  Fire  Insurance  Company  for  the  year 
ending  Ihcember  31st,  1915,  of  which  the  above  is  an 
abstract,  lias  been  retTlved  and  Wed  In  this  department 
and  duly  approved  by  mc.  R.   D.   WORKS, 

Comml.s.-.loner  of   Insurance. 


Total  Income   

Ledger    assits    iKcenilier 
year 

Sum     . 


$ 

31st   of   previous 


648.C69.34 
1,131,323.13 


*  •  •  •  I 

IN 


1915. 


)»ISBrR.SE.Mt.NTS 

Net  amount  paid  for  losses } 

Evpcnsis  of   adjustment  of   losses 

( 'ommlsslons  and   brokerage 

Salaries,    feis   and    allowances  of   offlcers, 

agiiils   and   employes 

Taxes,  fees,  rents,  real  estate  expense,  lira 

patrol,    etc    

All   other   disbursements 


.$    1,679,692.47 


372,.'25.23 

6,8tt'l.ll 

116,101.41 

61,681.90 

23,650.51 
28,823.58 


Total    premium    income $  1,670,386.93 

■ents    and    Interests 346,1103.22 

Uross   profit   on   sale,    maturity   or   adjust- 
ment  of    ledger   assvts 2,412.9i) 

From  all  other  sources 6,265.82 


1915. 


$    2,025,098.92 

31st   of    previous 
7,016,206.89 


Total   In 'Ome   

Iredger   a. sits   December 
year     

Sum     $  9,041,305.81 

DISBIKSEMENTS    IN    1915. 

Death,   emlowmnt   and   disability   claims.}  639,601.30 
Annuities    und    premium    notes    voldtd    by 

lapse    ''j'^^-^S 

SurrendiT  liilucs  in  polleyboldeis 336,^05.47 

PlviUciids    to   policyholders 110,327.72 

Total   paid   policyholders }  1,162,130.68 

Dividends  held  on  deposit  surrendered  dur- 
ing thi'  year  5,086.31 

Commission.-,    and    bonuses   to    agents   first 

year's  premiums   84.486.(1 

Commissions  on  renewals 93,386.96 

Asi'ncv  supers Isiiin  and  branch  offlc;  ex- 
pens  s 116,971.34 

Medical  examiner's  fees  and  inspection  of 

risks  31,570.44 

8»larics  of  oltlceis  and  employes 93,9.">5.r>4 

Legal  expi'uses   5.58a.35 

Oross  io>s  on  .sale,  maturity  or  adjustment 

of   l.gcr  a.ssets 3.019.99 

All  other  dLsburaem.nls 166.056.45 


Total  disbursements   

Balance     

LKlMiKK   ASSETS  DEC.   31 

B(W)k  value  of  real  estate 

.Mortgage   loans    

Cillateral    loans    

Book  \alue  of  Iwnds  and  stocks 

Cash     in     olflce.     trust     companies     and 

banks    • 

Agents'    balames,    unpaid    premiums    and 

bills  receivable,   taken  for  premiums... 

Total  ledger  assets    (as  i>er  balance)...} 
NON  LElMiER   ASSETS. 

Iiitenst  and  rents  due  and  accrued } 

.Market    valic    of    real    estate,    bonds    and 

slwLs  over  book  value 


599,585.74 
1,080,106.73 


44,412.92 
l.'.2.574.68 

50..-)82.5S 
635,330.59 

121,926.85 

75,279.11 

1,080,106.73 

8,163.21 

13,383.91 


RKLIAXCii:  LIFE  IXSURAXCE  COM 
PAXY. 

Principal     office:       Pittsburgh,     P«.        (Orginlwd 
19«.>3.)      James   II.    Bwd,   president;  H.    0.   Scott, 
tary.      Attorney    to    accept   service   iQ    .Miuuesota: 
mbsloner  of  Insurance. 

C.\SU   CAPITAL,   $1,000,000.00. 
1NC0.ME    IN    1915. 

First   year's    pn'miunis 

Dividends  and  surrender  values  applied  to 
purchase  paid  up  insurance  and  an- 
nuities      

Renewal   premiums    


in 

secre- 
Com- 


.}   533,250.73 


5.144.22 
1,27X,(H.4< 


FOR  SALE — Big  lots,  improved,  with 
gas  and  sewer  near  Lakeside  school; 
$350  each,  }10  cash,  }6  monthly. 
Greenfield  Realty  Co..  416  Providence 
bldg. 

FOR  SALE— Lots  60x140  feet,  good 
garden  tracts,  $275  each,  $6  monthly: 
right  where  people  live,  Greenfield 
Realty  Co.,    416   Providence  bldg. 


PERSONAL — Everybody  can  furnish 
their  home  right  now  at  one-half  price 
and  lees,  from  the  Cameron  Furniture 
Co.  stock,  which  is  being  closed  out 
at  tremendous  sacrifices.  May  1  we 
close  our  doors;  lease  expires;  you 
must  hurry  or  miss  this  opportunity. 
Salesrooms,    2110-2112   W.  Superior  st. 

PERSONAL— If  you  want  a  cabin  built 
or  your  acre  tracts  cleared,  any  road 
building  or  any  other  kind  of  con- 
tracting, for  prompt  work  see  Axel 
Hagstrom,  at  811  N.  Lake  ave.,  or  call 
Mel.  4286. 

PERSONAL— Ladies!  Ask  your  drug- 
gist for  Chichester  Pills,  the  Diamond 
Brand,  for  25  years  known  as  best, 
safest,  always  reliable.  Take  no  other, 
Chichester  Diamond  Brand  Pills  are 
sold   by  druggists   everywhere. 

PERSONAL — Hotels,  hospitals,  cafes 
and  rooming  houses;  buy  your  linens, 
etc.,  of  us  at  lower  prices  than  linen 
houses  in  Chicago  or  New  York.  Du- 
luth  Linen  Co.,  228  E.  1st  st.  Let  us 
prove  it. 


98  PER  CENT  OF  AUTO  BUYERS 
READ  THE  DULUTH  HERALD. 

The  names  in  which  automobile  li- 
censes are  Issued  have  been  checked 
with  The  Duluth  Herald's  subscription 
lists,  and  It  was  found  that  98  out  or 
every  100  people  who  buy  cars  read 
The  Duluth  Herald.  If  you  have  a  car 
for  sale  or  trade,  offer  it  in  this  auto- 
mobile column  and  you  will  reach  prac- 
tically every   one  who  will   buy. 


STOREROOM   AND   FULL 
BASEMENT, 

Suitable  for  store,  laundry  or  small 
factory.  126  E.  1st  St.;  very  rea- 
sonable   rent. 

RICHARDSON.  DAY  &  CHEADLE 

COMPANY. 

Exchange  Building. 


WE  RENT  Remington,  Monarch  and 
Smith  Premier  typewriters  at  $2  per 
month  and  upward.  Remington  Type- 
writer Co..  Inc.,  20  4th  ave.  w.; 
phones:    Mel,    230;    Grand    181. 


* 

a- 

a- 
* 


-WE  HAVE- 


A  fine  Oakland  6-cylinder  car  that 
we  can  sell  for  $750;  1914  model. 
Here  you  have  a  chance  to  get  a 
big,  easy-rldlng  car  for  little 
money;  it's  a  bargain.  Also  have 
other  bargains  in  used  cars, 
will  pay  you   to  come  and  see 


It 

us. 


REO  SALES  COMPANY, 
307  East  Superior  St. 
Old  phone,  6134  Mel. 
New  phone,  823-Y  Grand. 


•at 

* 

a- 
* 


HAVE  THREE   NICELY 
ARRANGED  ROOMS. 

Suitable    for    doctor    and     denti.^t 

office;  good  location;  Scandinavian 

or  Polish  preferred.     Apply — 

ANDER.SON'S  DRUG  STORE, 

290  4  West  Third  Street. 


if- 


a- 
-;fi 


FOR  SALE— Cheap,  for  cash,  1914  6- 
passenger  Paige  touring  car;  36-H.  i'., 
completely  equipped,  electric  lights, 
starter  and  horn,  best  grade  Gordon 
seat  covers,  4  good  tires.  1  extra  tire 
and  rim.  bumper  and  tire  chains;  run 
11,000  miles;  guaranteed  In  flrst-clasa 
condition;  $660.  cash  only.  K.  & 
garage,    rear    310    W.    2nd    st. 


R. 


I'ERSONAL — Middle-aged  gentleman 
with  good  position  and  some  means 
wishes  to  meet  Scandinavian  lady  of 
middle  age;  object  matrimony.  Write 
P  99.   Herald. 


FOR  SALE — Corner  lot  68  by  150. 
ave.    E.    and    Jefferson    St.;    will 
cheap;   am   leaving  city.    H.   B. 
stein,   106    W.   Michigan  St. 


20th 

sell 

Weln- 


rOR  SALE — Lot  204,  Mornlngsldc  ad- 
dition. Woodland,  including  half  acre. 
Inquire  Dr.  F.  W.  McHugh,  Ontonagon, 
Mich. 


FOR  SALE — $2,000  cash  will  buy  10 
choice  lots,  Fiftyflrst  avenue  west.  C 
F.  W.   Korth.  6020  Roosevelt  st. 


FOR  SALE — City  property,  houses  and 
lots;  farms  nd  timber  land.  O.  G. 
Olson,  314  Columbia  bldg. 


PERSONAL — Get  away  from  washing 
troubles  by  sending  your  family  wash 
to  us;  6'/2C  per  pound.  Lutes'  laundry. 
808  E.  2nd  st.  Phone  us,  Grand  447, 
Mel.   447. 


Violet  Rays  "New  Method"  scalp  treat- 
ment at  Comfort  Beauty  parlors,  109 
Oak  Hall  bldg.  Corns  removed,  26c; 
bunions,   60s;   inverted  nails,   60c. 


MADE-TO-MEA.SURE  Shirts,  Under- 
wear, Raincoats,  Neckties,  Suit  or 
O'coat.  $18;  Ladles'  Suits,  spring  se- 
lections.    C.  N.  Hamilton.  315  E.  Sup,  st. 

PERSONAL  —  All  around  carpenter 
work,  by  day  or  contract:  reasonable 
prices;  also  upholstering.  26 >i  Mesaba 
ave.;    Grand    2361-A. 


Personal — Ekctrlc  vacuum  cleaners  for 
rent  $1.60  a  day.  The  Moore  Co..  319 
W.    1st    St.;    Mel,    6860,    Grand    2064-X. 


RAGTIME  positively  taught  in  20  les- 
sons; free  booklet.  J.  L.  Denver,  32  W. 
2nd  St.     Open  7  to  10  p.  m. 


Mel.  7720. 


FOR  SALE— 1915  Ford  touring  car, 
run  only  2,900  miles;  engine  perfect 
condition,  demountable  rims,  extra 
tire  shock  absorbers,  spring  oilers, 
Hunter  self-starter,  Aske  voltage  reg- 
ulator, speedometer,  Klaxon  horn;  best 
equipped  Ford  in  Duluth.  Can  be 
seen  at  Ford's  garage. 

OXY-ACETYLENE  welding.  cutting 
and  carbon  burning;  all  work  guaran- 
teed satisfactory  or  no  charge;  99% 
per  cent  pure  oxygen  for  sale.  Duluth 
Gas  &  WeUing  Co.,  2110-2112  W . 
Michigan  st.    Mel.  7064;  Lin.  643. 

New  1916  models, 
Come  and  see 
them.  Machines 
sold  on  time  payments;  also  bargains  In 
used  machines,  on  easy  terms.  Motor 
Cycle  Repair  shop,  402-404  E.  Sup,  st. 


a.  FOR   RENT   MAY   1. 

i^  Three-story     and    basement    brick 

-;,t  hotel  building  at  440  Lake  ave.  s.; 

7^  37  guest  rooms,  lobby,  dining  room. 

^  kitchen    and    good-sized    store    on 

^  first  floor;  hardwood  floors,  steam- 

'X-  heating    plant.      For   further   par- 

i(-  tlculars  see — 

^       JOHN  A.  STEPHENSON  &  CO.. 

^  Wolvln    Building.  * 

FOR    RENT    STORES. 

At  318  W.  1st  St.,  most  central  and 
best  business  location  on  W.  1st  St.; 
fine  storeroom,  25  by  140.  in  strictly 
fireproof  building;  with  lowest  in- 
surance rate  In  city;  will  decorate  to 
suit;  possession  May  1.  Call  Grand 
or    Mel.    226. 

W.  C.   SHERWOOD  &   CO., 

118    Manhattan    Bldg. 

FOR  RENT — New  store  building,  2908 
W.  3rd  St.;  30  by  70,  suitable  for  dry 
goods  and  millinery;  furniture  or 
general  merchandise;  steam  heat; 
ready  May  1.  Apply  Anderson's  Drug 
Store,   2904   W.   3rd  st. 

FOR  RENT — Floor  space  suitable  for 
storage  or  small  manufacturing  con- 
cern. Call  Lane-Golcz  Printing  Co.. 
132  W.  Michigan  st.;  Mel.  1604.  Grand 
2369-D. 

FOR    RENT— Storeroom,    26x100,    33  E." 

Michigan    St.;    suitable    for   garage  or 

wholesale      business.      Inquire      32  E. 
Superior  st. 


HARIEY-DAVIDSDN 


FOR  SALE — 1  1913  model  36.  7-passen- 
ger  Studebaker.  run  3,000  miles,  A-1 
condition;  1  1912  6-passenger  Cadillac, 
just  overhauled  and  in  good  condition. 
Either  of  above  a  bargain.  >N  nte 
J   962,    Herald. 

FOR  SALE  OR  TRADE — 40  acres  of 
timber  land  16  miles  south  of  Supe- 
rior; win  take  1915  6-passenger  auto 
for  part  payment.  Overland  preferred. 
Write  U  101,  Herald.  


GUARANTEED    tire    repairing    at    low 
prices:    our   new    tires   will    save     you 
money  on   mileage.    Duluth 
Repair  Co.,  313  E.  Superior 


Auto 

St. 


Tire 


^EAUESTM^qm 


a- 
a- 


FIRST  MORTGAGE  LOANS. 

We    advance    funds    as    needed    on 

first  mortgage  building  loans. 

Favorable  terms. 

W.  M.  PRINDLE  &  CO., 
Lonsdale  bldg. 


■if- 

-.If 


MASSAGE — Margaret  Nelson.  218  W. 
Superior  St.,  room  8,  3rd  floor.  Also 
appointments   at   your   home. 


Total   premium  Income 

Rents   and  interests 

(iross  profit  on  sale,   maturity  or  tdjust- 

nunt  of   ledger  assets 

Accident    and    health    department 

From  all  other  sources 


1,817,109.42 
230,735.76 

927.50, 
75.473.00 
10.028.28 


31st   of    previous 


2.134,273.96 
4,700,740.01 


Cross 


assets   

DEDICT 


ASSETS   NOT 


$  1,101,653.83 

ADMITTED. 


Agents'    balances   and   bills  receivable. 

Total  assets  not  admitted 

Total   admitted   assets 

LIABILITIES  DEC.  31. 

t'npnld  loss's  and  claims 

Inearned   prembinis    

Reclalraable  oil  p<'rpetual   policies 

Salaries,    expenses,    taxes,    dividend* 

Interest   due    

All  other  lUbllltles 


2.322.66 


191.-), 
...} 


and 


2.3'J2.66 
1,099,331.19 

79.190.74 

515.4S4.*.'5 

2.238.00 

6.3;!S.71 
lOO.OOO.OO 


.} 


1,762,249.77 

7,279,056.»>1 

1915. 


Total   disbursements    

Balance  

LEIMiKU  ASSKTS  DEC.   31. 

Vtlue  of  real  estate  owned \ 

MurtKHge   loans    

Collal'Tal   loans   

Preniliini  notes  and  tioUcy  loans 

Bonds  .mil  stocks  ow ncd 

Cash,  in  iifllc,  liaiil\s  and  trust  companies 

Bills  rec  ivuble  and  agents'   balances 

Buapi'us,.'    a<'cuuiit    

Tutal  ledger  assets   las  per  bal.ince) . . .}    7,279,056.0-1 
NON-LKDGER   ASSETS. 

Interest  and  rents  duo  and  accrued } 

Market  laliic  of  real  c-tate  over  book  lalue 
Net  diferr^d  and  unpaid  premiums 


738,644. S5 

l,890.2.'i7.r.O 

40.000.00 

l,549,9:n.;J0 

2.744, 3.VJ.»S 

287..".S2.:{9 

2:{..ViO.'.H) 

4,736.45 


Total  liabilities,  including  capital.. 

.Net   surplus    

RISKS  AND  PRKMIIM8,   1915 
la)  Fire  risks  written  during  the  year 

Premiums   received   thereon 

Net   amount   In  force   at  end  of  the 

(Fire    and    marine » 

Perpetual   risks  not  Included  above.. 
Deposit  pn'mlnms  on  same 

a. — ludiiillng  business  other  than 


..}       703,2.'.1.70 

396.079.49 

BISINESS. 

..}  61.95^!.4.'?9.00 

657,934.04 

year 

....     99,251,125.00 
83,700.00 
2.3.V..79 
marine  and  Inland, 


BISINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN   1915. 
(Including    reinsurance    received    aud    deducting 


rein- 


surance placed.) 

RLsks   written 

Premiums   received    . 

Net   los.ses  paid 

Net   losses   Incurred.. 
Amount  at  risk..-.. 


...} 


Fire  RKks. 

1,350,S.".00 
IS.l.'hi.OO 
13.102.00 
10,9SS.OO 

2,377,060.00 


Total    income    

Ledger    assets    December 
year    

Sum     }  6.835,013.97 

DISBI  RSEMENTS  IN   1915. 

Death    endowment  and  disability  claims..}  319,421.69 
Annuities   and   premium    notes    voided    ty 

lapse •*  .28, ^.'9  6J 

Surrender   values   to   policyholders 97,846.41 

Dividends    to    policyholders 40,122.97 

Total    paid    policyholders \ 

Dividends   to   stockholders 

Commissions   and    bonust.'»    to   agents   Crst 

year's   premiums    

Commls-sions   on    renewals 

Agency  supmlsloD  and   branch  offlo*  ei- 

pi'nses    • 

Medical  examiner's  fees  and  Inspectiou  of 

risks     

Salaries  of  officers  and  employes 

I.egal   expc-iisos    • 

Agents'    balances  charged  off 

Uross   loss  on   sale,    maturity   or   adjast- 

ment  of   ledger   assets 

Accident  and  health  department 

All    other    disbursements. 

Total    disbursements . . . 

Balance     

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC.  31,   191.>. 

Value  of  real  estate  owned } 

Mortgage   loans    

Premium  notes  and  policy  loans 

Bonds   and  stocks  owned 

Cash.  In  offlcc.  banks  and  trust  companlci 

Bills'  receivable  and  agents'   balances 

Outstanding  accident  and  health  premiums 

Total  ledger  assets   (as  per  balance)...} 
NON-LEDGER   .VSSETS. 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued } 

Market    value    of    real    estate    over    book 

value    

Net  deferred  and  unpaid  premiums 

AH   other   uon  ledger  asseta... 


.} 


4S5.61tO.76 
60.000.00 

368,503.33 
53.741.17 

149,061.85 

68,044.61 

61,419.22 

3,r)43.8I 

18,603.37 

1.267.20 

64,H30.87 

141,511.98 

1,476,221.17 

6,358.792.80 

160,096.40 

912,3ri0.00 

1,017,352.46 

2.688,225.;i6 

348,407.80 

214,592.20 

17,768.58 


105.234.."..1 
r-'3.355.15 
207,089.16 


Cross  as.sets   

DEDI  ( T    ASSKTS 

Acnts'  dedit  bulancis 

B«ok   laluo  of   ledger   assets 

value    

All  other  assets  not  admitted 


NOT 


over 


$    7,714,734.88 

AD.MirrED. 

$        23,050.90 

market 

25,'1,.T'>9.10 

11,199.77 


State  of  Minnesota, 
I   Hereby   Certify, 


Department  of  Insurance. 

That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Farmers'  Fire  Insurance  company  for  the  year  ending  !►<■- 
ceinber  31st.  1915.  of  which  the  above  Is  an  abstract, 
has  been  rerelted  and  filed  In  this  department  and  duly 
approved  by  me.  8.   1».  WORKS, 

Comml.ssloner  of  Insurance. 


= 


Total  assets  not  admitted } 

Total  ailmitt'il  assets 

LIABILITIES  DEC.  31,   VJl^. 

m   reserve    } 

Braerved  tor  supplementary  contracts;  lia- 
bility  on   cancelled   policies 

BrsetM-    for   death    lobsts   Incurred   but  un- 
n-poi ted  

Claims  adjusted   and  not  due,   and  unad- 
justed and  reiwrted 

Claims  resisted    

Dividends   left  with  company   to  accumu- 


late 
rreniium> 
Dlvlil<'nds 
All  utber 


paid  in  advance 

due  or  aiiportioned  iwlicyholders 
liabilities   


287.609.77 
7,427.1-25.11 

6,864,985.00 

46,596,00 

4,698.00 

37,000.00 
21,590.00 

19.117.70  1 
6.530.87  I 
21t5.0»».94 
88,768.90 


THE     MEDICAL     PROTECTIVE    COM- 
PAXY. 

Principal  office :  Fort  Wayne,  Ind.  Organized  In 
1909.  Louis  Foy,  president;  Byron  II.  Somen,  sccr«'tary. 
Attorney  tu  accept  senlce  in  Minnesota:  Commissioner  of 
insurance. 

CASH  CAPITAL,   }100,000.00. 
INCOME   IN   1915. 

Premiums  received    (.Net! — 

Medical    prot }       166,565.77 

Total  net  premium  Income } 

From  Interest  aud  rents 


5,358,792.80 

62,975.03 

34.7.-i6.14 

289,058.52 

64,037.08 


Gross 


assets  }    5,809,619.51 

DEDVCT  ASSETS  NOT  ADMITTED. 


203.340.61 
86,093.57 


Total  income   

Ledger    a».sets    DeccmUr 
year   

Sum 


31st    of    previous 


1915. 


506,212.00 


Total    liabilities   on    policyholders'    ac- 
count    '....}    7,384,.^-.0.4l 

IJBasslgued   funds    (surpliwl 42,774.70 

EXHIBIT  OK  POLICIES.  1915. 

>'o.  Amount. 

MIcles  in  force  at  end  of  pre- 
vious year   ^Ust  column  only)30,460    }  48,410,726.00 
PoUclts  In  force  at  close  of  Ih? 

gtu   31,427       48.916,938.00 

«  -^^—^^    ^^^^-^^-^^-^— ^— 

Net  Increase   i*67 

ijBued.  revived  and  Increased  dur- 

Ing  the  year   4,964 

IWal  terinliialed  during  the  year.  3,997 
BlSl.NESS  IN  MINESOTA  l.N 
No. 
fWlcles  In  force  Dec.  31,  1914..  3,410 

Issued  during  the  year 1,427 

Ceased  to  be  in  force  during  the 

lyar    '44 

In  force  December  31st,  1915...  4,093 

IMWS  and  claims  Incurred  during 

tbe  year   

toggles  and  claims  settled  during 

the  year    

ud  (JsiBS  uop&ld  UectBbsr 


DISBIRSEME.NTS  IN 
Claims  paid   (Neti—         .     ,     ,  ,         , 

Investigation  and  adjustment  of  claims..} 

Commissions     • 

Salaries  of  officers,    agents,   employes,  ex- 
aminers'  ami  Inspectiou  fees 

Dividends  to  stockholders 

All  other  dlsburse-meuts 


166,565.77 
11,861.09 

T78.426.86 

253,290.15 

T31,717Toi 

44,704.26 
42,376.67 

15,199.39 

lO.OOO.(K) 
21,355.49 


Agents'    de»)lt    balances 

All   other  assets  not   admitted. 

Total  assets  not  admitted |  289,434.20 

Total   admitted   a.Hs  ts 5,520, 185.37 

LI.\B1LIT1ES  DEC.  31,   1915. 

Net  reserre   }  4,076,979.00 

Reserved  for  supplementary  contracts;  lia- 
bility on  cancelled  policies 16,712.53 

Claims  adjusted  and  not  due,   and  unad- 
justed  and  reported    13. 750.00 

Claims  rcslsUd    6,000.00 

Dividends   left   with    company   to  aci-umu- 

Ute    2.461.08 

Pnmlums  paid  In  advance 2,527.38 

Dividends  due   or   apportioned   pollohold- 

tn     148.150.37 

Accident  and  health  department 49,627..17 

All  other  liabilities 39,109.61 

Total    liabilities   on    policyholders'    sc- 

eount   I    4.355.320.34 

Capital    stock   paid   up 1,000.000.00 

L'aa.sslgned   funds    (surplus) 164,865.03 

EXHIBIT   OK   POLICIES,    1915. 

.No,  Amount. 

Policies  In  force  st  end  of  pre- 
vious year  (Last  column  only)  27,870    }  50,494,401.00 
Policies   In  force   at   close   of   the 
year    32,216       58,593.747.00 


}    7,713.860.00 
7,207,648.00 

1915. 

Amount. 

}    4,613,564.00 
2,085,866.00 

1,102.839.00 
6,596,589.00 


20 

Ifi 


28,500.00 
23.600.00 


Total    disbursements }  133,635.81 

Balance     298.081.20 

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC.  31.   1915. 

Mortgage  loans    }  218,288.38 

Cash     In     office,     tnist    companies     and  

)»nkB     65,621.35 

Premiums  in  course  of  collections 14,103.97 

All  other   ledger  *.sseU 67.50 


.} 
■} 


298.081.20 

3,457.3.1 
6,920.39 


Total  ledger  assets  (as  per  balance)., 
NON -LEDGER   ASSETS, 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued 

Other   non-ledger   assvts 

Gross  asseU  }       307,458.92 

DEDtCT   ASSETS   NOT  ADMITTED, 

Premiums    in    course    of    collection     (past 

due)     ; *  1.032.00 

All  other  ssaeU  not  admitted 5,6'J1.72 

Total  assets  not  admitted 

Total  admitted  assets 

loltl   aunii  LIABILITIES. 

Oalms— 

Resisted 

rneamed   premiums 
CoDmisalons  sad 


•  •••■«•••••••• 


6,693.72 
300,765.20 


40.000.00 

80,863.66 

3.273.00 


Net  Increase  4,346    }    8,099.346.00 

Inued    n-viveil  and  Increased  dur- 
ing  the   year 9,910        18,411,662.00 

Total  terminated  during  the  year.  5,564        10,312,316.00 

BISINESS  IN  .MINNESOTA  IN  1915.— Ordinary  Business. 

.No.  Amount. 

Policies  In  force  Dec.  31,  1914..      152    }       260,493.00 

Issued  during  the  year 276  468.000.00 

Ceased  to  be  in  force  during  the 
year    

In  force  December  31st, 


1915,.. 
Incurred  >  dur- 


3 
425 


81,419.00 
617,074.00 


LEGAL    KOTICCS. 

ORDER    TO     EXAMINE     FINAL     AC- 
COUNT— 

State   of  Minnesota,  ^ 

County  of  St.  Louis — ss. 
In  Probate  Court.  In  the  Matter  of  the 

Estate  of  Lizzie  A.  Green,  Decedent. 
The  petition  of  Alice  Reamer  as  rep- 
resentative* of  the  above  named  de- 
cedent, together  with  her  final  account 
of  administration  of  said  estate,  hav- 
ing been  filed  In  this  court,  repre- 
senting, among  other  things  that  she 
has  fully  administered  said  estate, 
and  praying  that  said  final  account  of 
said  administration  be  exairilned,  ad- 
lusted  and  allowed  by  the  Court,  and 
that  the  Court  make  and  enter  its 
final  decree  of  distribution  of  the  resi- 
due of  the  estate  of  said  decedent  to 
the  persons  entitled  thereto,  and  for 
the  discharge  of  the  representative 
and  the  sureties  on  her  bond.  It  is  or- 
dered. That  said  petition  be  heard,  and 
said  final  account  examined,  adjusted, 
and  If  correct,  allowed  by  the  Court, 
at  the  Piobate  Court  Rooms  In  the 
Court  House,  in  the  City  of  Duluth  in 
said  County,  on  Monday  the  8th  day 
of  May.  1916.  at  ten  o'clock  A.  M..  and 
all  persona  interested  in  said  hearing 
and  in  said  matter  are  hereby  cited 
and  required  at  said  time  and  place  to 
snow  cause,  If  any  there  be.  why  said 
petition  should  not  be  granted.  Or- 
dered further,  That  this  order  be 
served  by  publication  in  The  Duluth 
Herald,  according  to  law. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minn.,  April  10th, 
1916. 

By  the  Court.  „   „     .     ^ 

S    W.   GILPIN.   Judge   of  Probate. 
Attest:     A.   R.  MORT()N. 

Clerk   of   Probate. 
Sell    Probate    Court.  St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn. 
D.  H.,  April  11,   18.   25,  1916. 

MORTGAGE   FORECLOSURE   SALE— 

Default  having  been  made  In  the  pay- 
ment of  the  sum  of  $393.21,  which  «s 
claimed  to  be  due  and  Is  due  at  the 
date  of  this  notice  upon  a  certain 
mortgage  duly  executed  and  delivered 
by  Rudolf  Erickson  and  Jennie  Erlck- 
son,  his  wife.  Mortgagors,  to  Amy 
Taylor,  Mortgagee,  bearing  date  the 
19th  day  of  Augu.st,  1912,  and  with 
power  of  sale  therein  contained,  which 
said  mortgage  was  duly  recorded  in 
the  office  of  the  Register  of  Deeds  in 
and  for  the  County  of  St.  Louis  and 
State  of  Minnesota,  on  the  12th  day  of 
September.  1912.  at  3:30  o'clock  P.  M., 
in  Book  308  of  Mortgages,  on  page  97, 
and  no  action  or  proceeding  having 
been  Instituted  at  law  or  otherwise  to 
recover  the  debt  secured  by  said  mort- 
gage, or  any  part  thereof; 

Now  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given, 
That  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale 
contained  in  said  mortgage,  and  pur- 
suant to  the  statute  In  such  case  made 
and  provided,  the  said  mortgage  will 
be  foreclosed  by  sale  of  the  premises 
described  in  and  conveyed  bysaldmort- 
gage  viz.:  Lot  No.  Six  (6),  Block  No. 
Eighty-six  (86),  Second  Addition  to 
Virginia  In  St.  Louis  County,  Minne- 
sota with  the  hereditaments  and  ap- 
purtenances thereunto  belonging,  which 
sale  will  be  made  by  the  Sheriff  of  said 
St  Louis  County,  in  his  office  in  the 
courthouse  in  the  City  of  Duluth,  coun- 
tv  and  state  aforesaid,  on  Saturday, 
the  29th  day  of  April,  1916,  at  ten 
o'clock  A.  M.  of  said  day,  at  public 
vendue,  to  the  highest  bidder  for  cash, 
to  pay  said  debt  of  }393.21,  and  in- 
terest and  taxes.  If  any,  on  said  prem- 

.     '  --  gtlp- 

case 
of  foreclosure,  and  the  disbursements 
allowed  by  law,  subject  to  redemption 
at  any  time  within  one  year  from  the 
date  of  sale,  as  provided  by  law. 
Dated  March  6,  1916. 
^  AMY  TAYLOR, 

Mortgagee. 
O.  S.  ANDRESEN, 

Attorney   for  Mortgagee 

604  First  National  Bank  Bldg., 
Duluth,  Minnesota. 
H..  March  14.  21,  28.  April  4,  11.  18, 


PERSONAL — Carpenter  work  neatly 
done,  either  by  day  or  contract.  John- 
son Bros..  Grand  2121-Y. 


WANTED — Lace  curtains  to 
for  and  delivered.  Phone 
Work   guaranteed. 


do;   called 
Mel.    6462. 


Personal — Effective      scalp      treatment. 
Mrs.  Vogt's  Hair  Shop,  105  W.  Sup.  st. 


Personal — Combings  and  cut  hair  made 
into  beautiful   switches.   Knauf  Sisters. 

PERSONAL — Ladles,     have 
made   at  Miller  Bros..   405 


vour    suits 
E.   Sup.   St. 


PERSONATES  —  Wanted     lace     curtains, 
26c  pair:   ladles'   wa.shtngs.     Mel.   7061. 


Corns,    bunions    removed;    electric    foot 
massage  for  tired  feet.  Miss  M.  Kelly. 


PERSONAL — Get    your    rugs 
the  weaving  shop.    715 ',i   E. 


made 
8th  St. 


at 


DR.  <^;UT/DE.  Eye,   Ear,  Nose  specialist, 
324   Syndicate   bldg.,   Minneapolis. 

WANTED — Piano  for  storage  In  home; 
phone    dining   hours.      Mel.    1685. 


YOUR  OLD  CASINGS  are  worth  money 
to  Vou  with  our  system  of  dovible 
treading:  see  us.  Herlan  &  Merling, 
105   W.   1st  St.     Mel.    4658. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — Second-hand  au- 
tomobile: must  be  in  flrst-class  con- 
dition. Address,  with  full  particulars, 
Z  73,  Herald.  ^ 


FOR  SALE — Ford  .lemountable  rims; 
crown  fenders,  radiator  hoods  and 
shells,  all  kinds  of  tires.  Johnson 
Auto  Supply.  


FOR  SALE— 1915  Maxwell 
touring  car.  Call  Theo. 
Auto   Co.   6-7   E,   1st   St. 


5-passenper 
O.    Furlund 


YOUR  CAR  repaired  at  your  garage; 
A-1  mechanics.  Harrison  &.  Son,  Mel. 
6642.     2721  Huron  st. 


FOR      SALE  —    5-passenger      Hudson; 

cheao  for  qu'ck  sale.  Call  after  5  p.  m. 

819  W.  3rd  st. . 

FOR   SALE — 7-passenger,    6-40   Thomas 

touring    car;    good    condition;    cheap. 

122    W.    2nd    st.  


MONEY  TO  LOAN — Any  amount,  any 
time;  quick  service;  building  loans  a 
specialty,  6,  6%  and  6  per  cent.  Cooley 
&  Underbill,  209-10-11  Exchange  bldg. 

ST.- LOUIS  AND  CARLTON  county  farm 
loans;  can  handle  any  good  farm 
loan;  terms  right;  no  delay.  Northern 
Farm  Loan  Co.,   102   Providence   bldg. 

REAL  ESTATE  LOANS— Easy  terins; 
repay  loan  monthly  or  yearly  or  before 
five  years.  Northern  Securities  &  Loan 
association,  Comipercial  bldg. 


CASH  ON  HAND  to  loan  on  city  an«I 
farm  prop?rty;  any  amount,  low«st 
rates,  no  delay.  Northern  Title  Co., 
612   First  National  Bank  bldg. 


IF  YOU  OWN  a  lot.  see  us  about  fi- 
nancing the  building  of  your  home. 
Duluth  Lumber  Co.,  Mel.  112.  Lin.   112. 


PERSONAL — For    sick 
Duluth  Floral  Co. 


people,    flowers. 


SITUATION  WANTED — Woman  with 
boy  19,  and  girl  17,  would  like  work 
on  farm  by  year;  understand  poultry 
raising,  also  feeding  and  care  of  stock. 
Write  E  46.  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED^Refined  mid- 
dle-aged woman  would  like  position 
as  housekeeper  where  maid  Is  kept. 
Phone  mornings  or  evenings,  Mel. 
8670. 

WANTED — Stenographer  wishes  posi- 
tion; can  take  dictation  rapidly.  Good 
penman,  high  school  and  business 
college    graduate.    Inquire    Lin.  609-A. 

SITUATION  WANTED — Nurse  with 
some  hospital  training  wants  cases; 
confinements  preferred;  reasonable 
prices  and  references.  Mel.  8132. 

SITUATION  WANTED — By  young  lady 
bookkeeper;  3i^  years'  experience;  at 
present  employed;  reference.  Write 
U   79,    Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED— Young  widow 
with  2  boys  wishes  housekeeping  on 
farm,  for  widower  or  bachelor.  Write 
J   91,  Herald. 


FOR    SALE— 1915 
good    condition; 
9th  St. 


5-passenger     Ford; 
}325.      Call      920      E. 


HORSES--VEmCLES— E^ 

i*"  H(3r^s-guaranteed—       f 


HORSES. 
We  have  everything  In  the  horse 
line.  Country  bought,  free  from 
the  diseases  of  the  city  markets. 
Always  glad  to  show  stock;  al- 
ways give  a  written  guarantee; 
always    give    square    deal.      Part 

'twin  POrIs  HORSE  MARKET. 

W.  E.   BARKER.   Prop., 

18  First  Avenue  W. 


^•>t-;j^^^.^;^>-^^>'^«^^^^^^^''^^^^^''^^ 


rD^^?^0^4*vivH,,RSES, 


vii 


SITUATION  WANTED  ^-  Young  lady 
wishes  position  as  office  girl;  very 
good  penman.     Write  G  100.  Herald. 

SITUATION  ~AVANTED-^^'ashlng  and 
Ironing  to  take  home.  Mrs.  Stonewall, 
220   W.   4th  St..   basement. 


SITUATION  WANTED — By  flrst-class 
worker,  by  day  or  week;  cooking, 
etc.     Write  E  80,  Herald. 


SITUATION        WANTED 
nurse      wishes      position. 
Mrs.    Aleda    Halverson. 


—    Practical 
Mel,      7046 


SITUATION  WANTED— As  housekeep- 
er by  widow  with  one  child.  Ad- 
dress V-58.    Herald. 


settled    dur- 


1    } 


liOsses   and   claims 

Ing  the  year 

Losses    and    claims  -  „,,»  .^ 

Ing  the  year ^  ^  1  3,8u0.00 

BISINESS  IN  MINNESOTA   IN  1915.— .Occident  and 
Health  I»epartmetit. 

Premiums  Received 

Accident    I    I'^'H 

Health     1,611.78  

ToUls    I    3.492.09       }    1.117.01 


3,850.00 


liOsses  Paid. 
}    1,117.01 


ises    and  $26.00  attorney's  fees,  as 
ulaVed  In  and  by  said  mortgage  In 


D. 


1916. 


EXAMINE     FINAL     AC- 


19,465.48 
/ 


Received  for  premiums | 

State  of  Jllnnesota.  Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify,  That  tbe  Annual  SUtement  of  the 
Reliance  life  Inaurance  company  for  the  year  ending  De- 
cember 31st,  1915,  of  which  the  abote  Is  an  abstract, 
has  been  received  and  flled  in  this  department  and  duly 
approved  U»   me.  ^        .    .  ^-   "    "OHKS, 

CowBlssioner  of  iDsunaee. 


ORDER     TO 

COUNT — 
State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

Tn~~Probate  Court.  In  the  Matter  of 
the  Estate  of  William  White,  de- 
cedent. 

The  petition  of  A-  <^-  Gillette,  as  rep- 
resentative of  the  above  named  de- 
cedent together  tvith  his  final  account 
of  adtnlnlstratibn  of  said  estate,  hav- 
ing been  filed  In  this  court,  represent 
ing,  among  other  things, 
fuUv   administered 


SITl^ATION     WANTED  —  Washing, 
cleaning;  etc.,  by  day.  Call  Park  183-X. 


FARM  MARES,  GENERAL 
PURPOSE  HORSES. 
All  our  horses  are  Minnesota 
raised.  Sales  made  on  tlme^if  de- 
sired. Buy  from  an  established 
dealer.  Also,  we  guarantee  every 
horse  to  be  as  represented. 

ZENITH  SALE  STABLE, 
MOSES  GOLDBERG,  Prop., 
524  West  First  Street, 
».  Two  blocks  from  union  depot. 
g^IW»»«j^f.f^^^^^^^^"^'^^ 
'  HORSES  HORSES  HORSES 
If  in  the  market  for  horses  be  sure  and 
see  our  offerings.  We  have  from  200 
to  300  head  constantly  on  handL  Pai^t 
time  given  if  desired.  Barrett  &  Zim- 
mermln,  Duluth  Horse  Market,  23rd 
ave,  w.  and  Superior  st.  H.  J.  ^Valt, 
manager. . 


Money   at  Lowest   Rates. 

Any  Amount;   No   Delay. 

Little  &  Nolte  Co.,  Exchange  bldg. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN — Loans  made  oil 
timber  and  farm  lands.  John  Q.  A. 
Crosby.   305   Palladlo  bldg. 

ANY  AMOUNT  OF  MONEY  for  loans  on 
Improved  farms.  Blckell,  Kyllo  & 
Co..   205   Exchange  bldg 

MONEY  ON  HAND  for  real  estate  loans! 
Stewart   G.    Collins,    710    Torrey   bldg. 

For  Farm  Loans  and  Farm  Lands,  see 
Ebert-Walker  Co..  315-16  Torrey  bldg. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN  on  city  property. 
De    Calgny    &    Paepe,    609    Providence. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN— Any  amount.  Ben- 
Jamin  F.   Sehwciger,    1932   W.   Sup.   st. 

CITY  AND  FARM  loans.  William  C. 
Sargent,    Providence    bldg. 


__MONEYJ[0^  LOAN^ 


$10    OR    MORE 

LOANED  TO  ANYONE 
On  furniture,  pianos,  etc.,  or  hold- 
ing a  steady  position,  at  rates 
honest  people  are  willing  to  pay. 
See  us  first  and  get  a  square  deal. 
Money  in  your  hands  in  few  hour.s' 
time.     Low  rates.     Easy  payments. 

DULUTH  LOAN  CO., 
307  Columbia  bldg..  303  W.  Sup.  st. 
Hours:   8  a.  m.  to  6  p.  m. ;  Wednes- 
day and  Saturday  to  8  p.  m. 
Mel.  2365:  Grand  1224. 


vk4;?^'i?^^Y-?Mi4f^^^^k^-Sf-'i^^iJ*^^-'^i'^^Vf.i<->V 


a- 

a- 

'^ 

it- 

■:i- 
■-if- 


AI'CTION $19,000  livery  outfit,  Supe- 
rior April  12;  Bowser  Transfer  Co, 
going  out  of  the  horse  Hv^^ry  business 
and  sells  its  entire  outfit  to  the  high- 
est bidder  regardless  of  its  cost  or 
value.  Auctioneer  Balrd  of  Aberdeen, 
S.  D.,  sells  it.  


MONEY  TO   LOAN. 

From  One  to  Ten  Monthly  Payments. 

On  Furniture,  etc.,  at  Lowest  Rates. 

Example  of  Cost  Per  Month 


month 
months, 
months, 
month. . 
months, 
months, 
month. . 
months, 
months. 

Charges  on  other  amounts  In  proportion 

Even  lower  rates  on  jewelry,  etc. 

DULUTH  REMEDIAL  LOAN  ASSN. 

401  First  National  Bank  bldg. 


$15,  if  paid  in 


$25,  if  paid  in 


$60,  If  paid  In 


•  •  •  •  •   I 


I  •  «    >  • 


$0.00 
0.70 
0.44 
1.10 
O.i-S 
0.80 
2.25 
1.60 
1.26 


FOR  SALE — Four  driving  and  delivery 
horses;  young  and  sound;  one  seven- 
eights  Guernsey  bull,  coming  4  years 
old;  gentle;  weight  1,400  pounds.  Hor- 
gan  &  Scanlon,  Saginaw.  Minn. 


<<ITUATION    WANTED — Washing    and 
"^ironing  to  take  home.    Grand   1626-A. 

WANTED— Position  by  practical  nurse. 
Best  of  references.  Call  Grand  1746-X. 


Best 

iHUI^ION     WANTED-Any 
work  by  day.  Mel.   8144. 


kind     of 


said 


that    he 
estate. 


has 
and 


oraylng  that  said  final  account  of  said 
administration  be  examined,  adjusted 
Rnd  allowed  by  the  Court,  and  that  the 
Court  make  and  enter  it«  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;  said  account  including 
certain  claims  against  the  decedent 
not  presented  to  the  court  but  paid 
by  administrator  m  good  faith.  It 
is  ordered.  That  said  petition  be  heard, 
and  said  final  account  examined,  ad- 
lusted  and.  If  correct,  allowed  by  the 
Omirt  at  the  Probate  Court  Rooms  In 
fheCouft  House.  In  the  City  of  Du- 
luth In  said  County,  on  Monday,  the 
ist  day  of  May,  1916,  at  ten  o'clock 
A  M  and  all  persons  interested  In 
said  hearing  and  in  said  matter  are 
hereby  ciCed  and  required  at  said  time 
and  place  to  show  cause.  If  any  there 
he  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 

1916. 

Bv    the    Court. 

S    W    (JILPIN.  Judge  of  Probate. 

Attest:    A.  R.  MORTON. 
Aiiesi.        ^^^^^  ^^  Probate. 

(RcttX  Probate  Ct..  St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn.) 
iD    H.   April  4-11-18, 


3rd, 


1916. 


FOR  SALE — Brown  mare,  weighs  be- 
tween 1,060  and  1.100;  city  broke,  not 
afraid  of  automobiles  or  sta^et  cars. 
608  N.  66th  ave.  w.  Call  Cole  301. 

FOR  SALE — Delivery  horses;  sale  and 
boarding  stables;  flrst-class  service. 
Western  Sales  Stables.  26-28  E.  1st  fit. 
John  Gallop,  proprietor.    

HARNESS  WASHED  and  oiled,  repair- 
ing neatly  and  promptly  done;  give 
us  a  trial.  Herlan  &  Merling,  105  W. 
1st  St.  Mel.  4668. 

FOR  SALE — Heavy  team;  weight  about 
3  200;  also  black  mare;  weight  about 
1.450;  can  be  seen  at  West  End  livery. 
1926  W.  Ist  St. 

FOR  RENT — Barn  room  at  rear  of  412 
W.  3rd  St.,  suitable  for  small  shop. 
Apply  to  E.  L.  Palmer,  American  Ex- 
change  bank. 

NOTICE  TO  my  friends  and  former 
customers,  I  am  again  in  business  at 
128    E     Michigan    st.      Frank    Jordan. 


Have  your  harness  washed,  oiled  and 
repaired  at  the  Duluth  Harness  shop; 
reasonable  figures.     26  E.  1st  St. 


HORSES,  WAGONS  and  harness  for 
sale;  driving  and  draft;  $25  and  up. 
Call  at  once.  218  E.  2nd  st. 


FOR 
Call 


SALE— Cheap, 
Park    21-X. 


team    of    horses. 


Have   Lange    do    your   repairing 
Cash  for  old  gold,     13  Lake  ave. 


right, 
n. 


AI1EITISE  II  TIE  lEMlB 


SALARY  AND  CHATTEL  LOANS. 

Don't  you  need  a  little  money? 

We  have  it  to  loan. 

BORROW  $10.00,  RETURN  $0.40  WEEK 

BORROW  $20.00,  RETURN       .80  WEEK 

BORROW  }30.00,  RETURN     1.20  WEEK 

Other   amounts   in   proportion. 

DULUTH  FINANCE  CO, 

301  Palladlo  Bldg. 

Hours:    8  a.  m.  to  6:30  p.  m.;  Wednesday 

and  Saturday  evenings  until  9  o'clock. 

Both  phones. 

LOANS     ON     DIAMONDS,     WATCHEa^ 
etc.     Example  of  cost: 

paid  back  one  month 60c 

paid  back  one  month 76c 

paid   back   one  month. ..  .$1.00 
KEYST(3NE  LOAN  CO., 
22  W.  Superior  st. 


}10, 
}15. 
*26, 


WE  LOAN  on  all  kinds  of  per.«onal 
security  at  lowest  rates.  Call  on  us. 
Duluth  Mortgage  Loan  Co.,  W.  Horkan. 
New  1698-D;  Mel.  3733. 

Loans  on  watches,  diamonds,  guns.  etc. 
Keystone  Loan  Co.,  22  W.  Superior  st. 


WORTGAGES-JARRMiND  CITY 

—MORTGAGES — 


BICKELL-KYLLO  &  CO., 

206  Exchange  bldg., 

Duluth.  Minn. 


>mf 


I 


Bank,  Trust  and  Insurance  compaiiiea 
Invest  their  money  In  our  farm  mort- 
gages because  they  are  safe,  conserva- 
tive, and  return  them  6  per  cent  on 
their  money.  Why  not  make  your 
money  net  you  6  per  cent.  We  hav« 
mortgages  in  small  or  large  amounts. 
Titles  guaranteed. 


STOCKS  AND  BONDS 

FOR  SALE — 100  shares  Cuyuna  Iron  Se 
Manganese;  give  cash  offer.  Write 
X  97,  Herald.        


STOVE  REPAIRS 

■WE  CARRY  in  stock  repairs  for  10,000 
different  stoves  and  ranges.  C.  p. 
WlgK^rts  &   Sons,  410  E.  Superior  at. 


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Tuesday, 


THE    DUiLUTH    HERALD. 


April  11, 1916. 


19 


ABSENT-MINDED  ABNER— You  Bet  He  Had  the  ;Caniion~-and  a  Theory-Handy 


By  Walt  McDougall 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES 


£  SrLEN'DID  VALUES.  'k- 

£  '<^ 

#  ^ 

#•-  2;>15     r-^sit     First    stri^Pt — 7     rooms  •?} 

#5.  and    bath,    hot    water    hcui.    two  V.i 

fit-  flr»'pl.irt»9,    laundry    tubs,    living  A- 

#c  room  rtnlshfd  In  mahogany,  din-  -'i- 

#  Insr  room  whito  rnam**!.  upstairs  *- 
Hi  whiu»  fiianilf.  hardwood  floors,  -A** 
$f  coni.nt  walks  an<l  paved  .slrcot.<».  ;t' 

#  On*'  of  the  boat  dealyned  houses  ^ 
^  In  Ea.st  end.  Vc' 


^'-  6^3  Slxt«»enth  avonue  oast — 6  room.s  f.* 
cV-  and  bnlh.  Tht»  (>wn«r  must  sell  j^ 
<*".       In  next  ton  days.  'A' 

ff-  '^' 

9C-  513  Fourth  avonue  oast — Two  6-  ■?:■ 
if.       ro'.Mi  tlai.s  and  two  balha;  snap.     -A- 

^  'Ai 

^.  1501»  .T'^fforson  stroet — 7  rooms  and  V.4 
^.  maids'  room.  This  Is  an  espe-  ^V- 
^  ciallv  wpll-built,  modern  honiP,  H- 
^  pleasantly  loeatfd  on  nl<-f  lot;  i:- 
verv  desirable  realdenco  district.  ^ 


e 
* 
# 


A  snap. 


^- 


i(.  4613  rooko  strppt— 7  rooms  and  -^.i 
?V-  bath.  Iiot  water  iieat;  bungalow,  i(- 
■^       n«arly   new.  ^' 


610   Fast   Seventh  street — Hot  wn-  -,V- 

ter    h'^at,    ran<Tete   foundation.    6   -A,- 

roonis   and  bath,   flne   basement;  V;- 

n.arly  new.  ^- 

if- 

1024  East  Ninth  street — Hot  water  •A- 
h-ai,  full  basement.  6  rooms  and  A* 
bath;   solid  brick,  nearly  new.       *- 

*• 

fr-  Hunter's  Park  home — 6  rooms  and  i{- 

^  bath,   .stone   foundation,    hot   wa-  ■#* 

^  ter     heat,     full     basement,     best  if- 

cRi  kind   of    finish.                                           i^- 

^.  * 

^  U18    Fast    Third    street — 7    rooms  ^• 

iR'.  and    bath,   stone    foundation,   full  * 

if'  baaoment;  centrally  located.            if- 

K-  "^ 

*  2026  East  Fifth  street — 7  rooms  it 
^  and  bath,  hot  water  heat,  full  i!- 
41^  basement;  very  attractive.  A- 
if.                               * 

*  4114  Glad.otone  street — 6  rooms  and  ■^ 
flit  bath,  hot  water  heat,  full  base-  * 
^  ment;  bungalow.  O- 
ju  __^__^  i^ 

<J^■.  Tho   houses  are  all   attractive  and  •?:• 

*  mod'-rn.      Rook-bottom    prices.        H- 

a- 

* 
it- 
if- 
if- 
« 
it^ 
* 


FOR  SALE  HOUSES— Continued     I     FOR  SALE  HOUSES— Continued 


ii>  ^ 

if,        —TWO  HOUSE  BARGAINS—        # 

t  t 

•;<.  5100    rash    and    balance    on    small  ^ 


Hi 

a- 

if- 
•Mr 

if- 

i:- 
a- 

it- 


monthly  payments  takes  2-fam-  H- 
lly  house.  914  N.  66th  ave.  w.  ^ 
This  place  must  be  sold  before  -.V 
May  1.  Move  In  now,  rent  one  •# 
flat  and  let  the  tenant  help  you  if- 
pay  for  the  property.  This  Is  ■^ 
an  excellent  opportunity  to  get  '^ 
a    homo  cheap.  'A* 


A  beautrful  10-room  modern  house  if- 
east  of  18th  ave.  e.,  In  the  very  ^ 
best  residential  section  of  the  -/^ 
city.  This  place  was  built  of  7'^- 
the  very  best  material;  large,  •?'.* 
beautiful  lot.  On  account  of  the  H- 
owner  leaving  city,  the  place  -;^ 
will  be  sold  at  a  sacrifice.  Can  H- 
make,  any  reasonable  terms  to  a  •^ 
reliable  party.  Don't  delay  If  # 
you  want  this  place.     |1,600  cash  if- 

it- 

i:- 


FOR  SAL,F: — Newly  built.  6-room  house; 
alt  conveniences,  except  heat,  full 
stone  basement,  also  new  barn;  cheap: 
small  casli  payment,  balance  monthly, 
fall    310    N.    62nd    ave.    w. 

FOR  SALF — By  owner,  modern  2-flat 
brick  building;  6  blocks  from  First 
National  bank;  |6,000.  Address  E  i»40. 
Herald. 

FOR  SALE— Modern  home;  If  you  want 
one  of  the  best  in  East  end  at  right 
figure,  write  me.  Write  U  62.  care 
Herald.        

FOR  SALE — Ry  owner.  new  9-room 
modern  house  on  Jefferson  «t.  Call 
Mel.    1481. 


will   handle  It. 


KBFRT-WALKER  COMrANT. 

316-16  Torrey  RuUdlng, 

Duluth.  Minn. 


# 


"attractive  homes  for  sale. 


(23-2l>  Here's  a  beautiful,  modern 
bungalow:  located  East  end;  6  rooms; 
hot  water  heat,  fireplace,  oak  finish 
and  hardwood  floors;  new  house;  price 
15.000.  

(17-16)  Nice  7-room  house.  West  end. 
on  3rd  st.;  good  basement,  hardwood 
floors,    nice    lot;    price    $3,300. 


(27-41)  Fine  home  on  car  line;  7 
rooms:  hardwood  floor.«».  full  bath, 
large  porch;  fine  view  of  lake;  near 
sehiKil;  large  new  chicken  house;  lot 
60x140;  fine  lawn  and  garden;  price 
only   $3,000;   make  your  own   terms. 

LITTLE  &  NOLTF  CO., 

Exchange   Building^ 

—WEST  END  HOMES.— 


Exclusive  Sale. 

W.   M.  PRIN'DLE  &   CO.. 

Main  Floor.  Li>nsdale  Bldg. 


'  Z-\VEST   ENdIiAROA  I  S3— 


|50ft  ea.'^h  and  $25  per  month  for  No.  230 
J8th  av.'.  w. — 6-room  niodern  dwelling, 
larife  heating  plant,  full  stont-  foun- 
dation; corner  lot,  cement  walks,  etc. 
Price  $3,500. 

|30ft  cisli  and  $25  per  month  for  double 
ilat  building  of  10  rooms,  and  large 
barn;  conveniences.     Price  only  $2,800. 

11.000  ea.Mh  and  easy  payments  for  new 
6-rooni  dwelling;  full  basement  and 
conv.'ni»-ni;es:  paved  str»-et.  good  resl- 
denc-   district.      Price    $3,700. 


13,000 — Five-room  dwelling,  «th  st.  near 
near  2nd  ave.  w.;  all  modern,  with 
heat  etc.;  32-foot  lot;  paved  street. 
Terms,  $400  cash,  $20  per  month. 

$2.800 — Six-room  house,  4th  st.  and  28th 
ave.  w.;  36-foot  lot;  all  usual  con- 
veniences; tine  location;  $500  cash  and 
$25  per  month. 

$2.500 — Five-room  dwelling  on  W.  3rd 
St.  Has  concrete  block  foundation, 
bath.  gas.  electric  light,  etc.  Fine 
little  home  at  a  low  price;  ea.«?y  terms. 


ben.tamin  f.  schweiger  Co., 

1932  West  Superior  Street. 


—LOOK  THIS  UP— 
Good  6-room  house.  23rd  ave.  w.;  ave- 
nue pfived.  cement  walks;  has  oak 
finish  on  tiist  lloor;  full  basement; 
■waimly  built;  price  $2.70it;  house  alone 
Is    Worth    the   price   asked. 


S-room  house.  6th  ave.  e.;  full  base- 
ment tile  floor  In  bathroom;  extra 
warmly  built;  oak  finish  on  first  lloor; 
pri<e  I3.35U.  1600  cash.  For  terms  on 
these  see 


DE  CAI<;NY   &   PAEPE. 
509   Providence  Bld^;. 


FOR  SALE.  if- 

ft  House.    1130    7th    ave.    e.;    «    rooms  it- 

^  and   bath,   all   modern   except   heat,  if- 

^.  Small    cash    payment,    balance    on  it 

Sf.  t^-rms      to      suit.        «'all      evenings.  •^ 

#  Grand  178»-Y,  Mel,  971,  or  Lin.  264.  if. 

%:y::-:y:y:,'^i,^y!^-:^::it--f-iti!'if^^y»^^ 

FOR  S.\LE — Giving  up  my  house  necos- 
«itai''S  quick  selling  of  all  household 
furniture,  consisting  of  bedroom,  dln- 
tii«-  room  and  living  room  furniture, 
draperies,  etc..  mahogany  library  table, 
oriental  rugs,  davenport,  odd  chairs, 
curtains  and  draperies.  Ice  box  and 
m  mv  other  household  necessities; 
everv  «rti«le  of  furniture  Is  in  perfect 
condition  and  will  be  sold  cheap.  Sale 
opens  .It  8  a.  m.  and  continues  in  the 
evening,  at  2422  E.  3rd  St.  Mrs.  Hefiry 
Abraham^ 

"  —HOUSE  FOR  SALE — 


We  have  a  big  list  of  West  end  homes 
at  moderate  prices  and  on  easy  terms. 

WESTERN  REALTY  CO.. 
1922  W.  Superior  st. 


—LOOK   THIS  OVER— 
—SMALL  PAYMENT  HANDLES  IT — 


$2,500  for  a  well-built  new  house  with 
6  rooms  and  bath  on  14th  ave.  e..  near 
9th  St.;  1  block  from  street  car  line; 
sewer,  water  and  gas  and  electricity 
In  the  house.  Small  cash  payment  re- 
quired; balance  monthly.  I.iot  40  by 
80  feet.  Do  not  delay  Investigating 
this  proposition. 

WHITNEY    WALL   COMPANY, 
Torrey    Bldg. 
Mel.    1368;    Grand    810. 

A    CHANCE    TO    BUY    A    HOME. 


FOR  SALE — 6-room  house  and  lot,  60x 
100;  cheap  for  quick  sale.  Call  at  3732 
W.  8th  St. 

FOR  SALE — 7-room  house;  hot  water 
heat;  built  last  summer.    922  11th  ave.  e. 


BUSjNESSJHANCES^ 


if" 
—LOOK  THIS  UP  QUICK—         if- 

if- 

FOR  SALE.  it- 

ESTABLISHED  FISH  COMPANY,    i^ 


it 
i,' 
it- 
it 
it 

■^  With  full  fishing  equipment,  first-  -".t 
it  class  steam  tug  with  steam  net-  it 
it  hauler,  gasolliu*  launch  and  a  it 
it  number  of  skiffs,  full  equipment  if 
it  of      nets,     fish    house      at      Grand  it 

#  Marals  and  isle  Royale.  Will  sac-  i:- 
•it  rlrtce  price  for  quick  acceptance,  it 
^.  Other  business  to  attend  to  Is  rea-  iir 

#  son  for  selling.  Equipment  In  good  it 
iji  condition   to  start  operations  soon  it  \ 

#  as    lake    opens.      A   good    man    can  it ; 
it  easily  clear  60  per  cent  of   his  In-   ;"  | 
it  vestment   In   one    season.      Address  i- 
■)t  V   96,  Herald.  it 

k^tiH6^Hl^t^ii^ie^it^i^i{^^l-^f^*^f^^i^'t^ 

FOR  RENT — 12-room  luitel  In  a  new 
sawmill  town  on  the  Iron  Range,  on 
a  1  or  2-year  lease;  furnished  com- 
pletely; rent  very  reasonable.  Also  a 
good  opportunity  hero  for  a  barber 
shop.     Write  M  86,  Herald. 


(20-13)  Five-room  brick  house,  very 
close  in;  hot  water  heat;  full  base- 
ment; corner  lot;  here's  a  nice  home 
on    any    ternis    you    may    wish;    see    it 

quick. 

LITTLE   &   NOLTE  Co.. 
Exchange   Building. 

FOR  SALE — We  have  some  fine  lots 
at  43rd  ave.  w.  and  4th  st.  Also  some 
at  60th  ave.  e.,  only  1  block  from 
car  line.  Will  build  you  a  house  on 
j»ny  of  them  after  your  own  plan. 
Will  take  some  cash  t^d  balance  on 
easy  terms.  Call  evenings.  Cole  271-Y. 
Mel.     7203.     Erickson    &    Olson. 


FOR  SALE — New  6-room  house,  $2,600, 
five  blocks  from  courthi)UMe,  two 
bloi-ks  frotn  carllne;  full  concrete 
foundation;  all  modern  conveniences 
including  heat;  very  well  built;  a 
real  bargain;  about  $600  cash;  bal- 
ance like  rent.  309  9th  ave.  w.  In- 
quire M.   C.    Lathers,    Mel.   4922. 


FOR  SALE — West  end  bargain;  don't 
miss  it;  located  In  business  district  at 
2l3t  ave.  w.;  adjoins  fine  new  brick 
bnilding;  lot  60x140  feet;  building  on 
l«)t  with  Income  of  $85  per  month; 
one  of  the  best  buys  in  the  city;  prl«?e 
only  »7.O00.  Little  A  Nolte  Co.,  Ex- 
change  bldg. (17-18) 


FOR  SALE — New  6-room  house.  Wood- 
land; BO-foot  lot;  n.WO.  Call  Mel.  3'JIO. 


$1,100  buys  a  first  class.  6-room  cottage 
on  Park  Point;  on  a  lot  40x100;  high 
and  dry  lot;  gas.  water  and  electric 
light:  located  on  28th  and  Minnesota 
ave.;  to  the  buyer  we  will  make  a 
present  of  another  5-room  cottage,  lo- 
cated in  rear  of  house.  In  good  first 
class  condition;  can  be  easily  rented; 
dont    delay.      Call    <^;rand    2366-Y. 

FOR  SALE — Lakeside,  bungalow  of 
4  finished  rooms,  room  in  attic  un- 
finished; concrete  foundation,  hot  Wn- 
ter  heat,  oak  finish,  beamed  ceilings: 
tile  floor  In  kitchen;  large  lot,  fine 
garage;  price  $2,600,  easy  terms. 
Greenfield  Realty  Co.,  416  Providence 
bldg.  

FOR  SAI..E — 6-room  modern  home  Just 
completed;  extra  well  built,  very  com- 
plete; splendid  location,  with  view 
over  lake;  will  make  good  proposi- 
tion to  right  party.  Greenfield  Realty 
Co.,   416   Providence  bldg. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  sale  gro- 
cery store,  12  blocks  from  end  of 
Woodland  car  line  on  Calvary  road; 
will  consider  r»'nting  building  and 
selling  stock  and  flxturt-s.  Grand 
2212-D. 

FOR  SALE — By  owner,  small  grocery 
•tore,  postoffice  In  connection;  located 
near  railroad  shops;  price  reasonable; 
terms  If  desired.  Address  O,  O. 
Woods.    Hopper,    Minn. 

FOR  SALE — At  a  bargain,  old  estab- 
lished tailoring,  cleaning  and  repair 
shop,  doing  first  class  business;  rea- 
son for  selling,  other  businuss.  Write 
F    71.    Herald. 

Bl'SINESS  CHA.VCES — For  r»-nt.  cheap, 
large  hotel,  modern  and  central;  If 
you  want  a  money  maker,  see  us. 
Northern  Realty  Co.,  527  Manhattan 
bldg.  

FOR  SALE — Moving  picture  theater, 
Jolng  nice  business;  owner  In  other 
business;  bear  closest  Investigation. 
Write  owner,  K  964,   Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Restaurant  and  confec- 
tionery, worth  $400;  sale  price  $260;  or 
willing  to  take  partner.  Apply  Grand 
1613-X. 

FOR  SALE — Centrally  located  proper- 
ty, used  for  rooming  house;  6-year 
lease  to  good  parties.    205  Palladio  bldg. 


ADDmONAL  WANTS 

itiy^i-^ititif^-itrft^it'itititit^^tiHfii^itititit^ 

it  * 

it  JOIN  Ol'R  EXCURSION  TO                 it 

it  NORTH   DAKOTA  APRIL  15.  it 

if.  it 

it  Mr.  Farmer,  why  purchase  land  it 

it  that  vou  havti  to  dynamite  before  it 

#  you  can   work   It.     Our  North   Da-  # 

it  kota   land    Is    ready    for   the    plow  it 

it  and  will  not  cost  you  but  one-half  it 

it  the  cost  of  clearing  cutover  lands.  V'- 

it  Here    are    a    f-ew    descriptions    of  # 

it  farms  that  we  want  to  show  you.  it 

j»  -j^ 

it  160  acres  Pierce  county,  only  2%  it 

it  miles  from  good     city;     all     level,  it 

it  rich  loam  soil;   entire  quarter  un-  it 

■it  der  cultivation;  on  main  road.  For  it 

it  a  small  farm  this  Is  a  dandy  and  a  it 

it  bargain.       Price     for    quick     sale,  it 

it  $4,560,  half  cash,  balance  to  suit.       it 

it  — '■ *■ 

it  160  acres  Pierce  county,  2Vi  it 
^'.  miles  from  gdod  city;  120  acres  it 
it  under  cultivation;  balance  hav  -ft 
it  land;  all  lerel,.'  rich  loam  soil.  -Ji 
it  Good  flve-room  house,  large  hip-  it 
it  roof  barn,  granary  and  other  it 
it  buildings.  Buildings  surrounded  it 
it  by  large  grove  of  trees.  This  farm  ?t 
-,¥■  is  a  genuine  bargain.  Price  for  -it 
it  quick  sale,  $5,500.  Will  tnako  #. 
it  tcrn.s  to  suit.  it 

it  it 

it  820  acres  Rolette  county,  four  it 
it  miles  from  good  city.  All  level,  it 
it  ver>'  rich  black  loam  soil,  with  a  it 
it  little  tiprlng  creek  running  through  •# 
it  one  forty;  250  acres  under  cultlva-  it 
Ai  tlon,  balance  pasture;  large  two-  it 
■^  story  hou»e;  two  hip-roof,  cement  it 
•Y-  and  "stone  foundation  bnrns;  two  it 
it  large  granaries,  all  bnlldlngs  are  it 
■^  new  and  in  first-class  condition,  it 
it  Buildings  aUme  cost  over  $4,500.  it 
it  Excellent  water,  rural  delivery  * 
it  and  telephone,  schooihouse  across  ■^• 
it  the  road,  church  on  the  corner  of  ;" 
it  this  land.  This  is  a  very  high-  ^■ 
it  cla.<*3  farm  and  one  of  the  finest  it 
-:t  Improved  snvill  farms  In  North  vc- 
it  Dakota.  Price.  $14,000;  will  make  it 
it  reasonable  tertns.  Adjoining  farm  i-t 
it  sold  only  three  weeks  ago  at  $55  it- 
it  per  acre.  it 

it  it 

it  We  have  many  other  farms  it 
it  which  we  will  be  glad  to  show  it 
it  you,  but  the  above  are  the  best  it 
it  bargains  b»'ing  offered  In  North  ^4 
^  Dakota  today.  Make  arrange-  }t 
it  ni(  nts  to  Join  our  excursion  leav-  -^ 
it  Ing  Duluth  and  Superior  on  the  ^ 
it  16th.    For  further  information  call  ^ 


FOR  SALE— MISCELLANEOUS 


it  —TALK  TO  OILIUSON— 

it  IF   IT'S  A 

it  SECOND-HAND  PIANO  YOU  ARE 
*•  LOOKING  FOR. 

*  

it  Right  now  he  has  eight  excep- 
it  tlonal  bargains.  Prices  from  $56 
it  to  $195,  cash  or  easy  terms. 


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E.  GILIUSON.  Man.ig'-r  of 
THE    RAUDENBUSH   &    SONS 
PIANO  CO., 
232  West  First  Street. 


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—ALUMINUM  SPECIALS— 


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PROFESSIONAL  AND  BUSINESS  GUIDE 


Ready  reference  of  the  professional 
men  and  leading  business  firms.  Her- 
ald readers  who  do  not  find  the  line 
of  business  they  are  seeking  will  con- 
fer a  favor  by  requesting  of  us  the 
information  desired. 


CALL  324  FOR  REPRESENTATION  IN  THIS  COLUMN 


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BICKELU    KYLLO  &   CO., 

206  American  Exchange  Bldg.. 

Duluth.    Minn. 


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GET  READY  ¥OH  SPRING. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES — For  sale — Sev- 
eral oak  filing  cases,  cheap.  Dunning 
&.  Dunning.  600  Alworth  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Grocery  business;  for  in- 
formation call  Grand  659-D;  Melrose 
3442. 


FOR  SALE — 7-room  house  1  block 
from  car  line.  Newly  remodeled.  60 
foot  lot  on  Improved  street.  Small 
cash  payment  and  balance  like  rent. 
Will  pay  you  to  look  this  up.  Call 
1622    N.    60th    ave.    e. 


710  Boulevard  w.  7  rooms,  modem, 
half  block  from  Incline.  Walking  dis- 
tance from  business  section.  For  ap- 
pointment to  see  this  house  call 
Douglas  C  Moore,  711  Palladio  bldg. 
Melrose    7752. 


FOR  SALE] — Fine  new  6-room  house  at 
Lakeslle,  two  blocks  from  car  line; 
all  conveniences  except  heat;  well 
built;  will  sacrifice  for  quick  sale; 
small  cash  payment  required.  Call 
PHrk   169-Y. 


1714  E.  6TH  ST. — Brand  new,  6  rooms, 
modern,  oak  finish,  laundry,  hot  water 
heat,  stone  foundation,  location  none 
better;  lot  60x160.  Terms.  $1,000  cash; 
balance  to  suit.   Mel.  3716.  J.   D.  3. 

F(JR  SALE — By  owner.  8-room  house, 
arranged  for  2  families;  gas,  bath 
and  full  basement;  cement  sidewalk; 
near  carllne,  West  End.  Call  Mel. 
6636. 

FOR  SALE — Eight-room  house,  ar- 
ranged for  two  families.  In  first-class 
condition;  will  sell  cheap,  as  1  ikm 
go;ng    farming.      Call    1620    E.    tth    St. 

FOR  SALE— A  »nap,  on  easy  terms,  7- 
room  house  with  bath,  at  price  lum- 
ber; corner  k>t  60x140,  $2,660;  look  up 
at  once.  440~Cooke  st.    R.  R.  Forward. 


FOR  SALE — A  snap:  $2,000  buys  nine- 
ro<»m  house  for  two  families.  West 
Duluth;  terms  to  suit.  Northern 
Realty  Co..  627  Manhattan  bldg 


FOR  SALE — By  owner.  7-room  house 
at  1026  B.  3rd  st.,  and  8-room  house 
at  1207  E.  9th  St.;  might  take  vacant 
lot  in  exchanire.     Mel.  53«7. 


VfANT^DjrOjm 

Wanted  to  Buy — Furniture,  heaters  or 
ranges;  we  pay  liberal  prices,  or  will 
allow  vou  to  exchange  for  new  furni- 
ture. East  End  Furniture  Co.,  120  E. 
Superior    at.      Grand    3013-X. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — 600  to  2,000  acres 
of  cui-over  land  from  owner  only; 
give  description  and  full  particulars 
In  first  letter;  price  must  be  satlsfac- 
tory.      Write    J    40.    Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — 40  or  160  acres  of 
wild  or  partly  improved  land  from 
the  owner;  giv>  legal  description  and 
lowest  price  In  first  letter.  Write 
Z    39,    Herald. 


5f 
«■ 

i'-  I. 

* 

it  100-acre  inrptoved  farm  In  Carl 
it  ton  county,  4  miles  from  Carlton,  it 
it  3  miles  from  Wri-nshall,  1  mile  a- 
-Ai  from  school;  In  a  well-settled  it 
it  community;  60  acres  ready  for  the  -/t 
it  plow;  part  of  It  plowed  last  fall;  •^- 
it  16  acres  all  nice  oak  and  maple  it 
it  timber,  balance  In  pasture;  2-siory  it 
k  frame  6-room  house;  frame  stable  it 
it  for  6  head  of  atock;  frame  gran-  it 
it  ary  16  by  36;  gflod  well  and  pump;  i(: 
it  lumber  and  timber  on  hand  for  a  it 
it  large  barn.  There  is  an  assort-  it 
•,;i  nunt  of  currant,  gooseberry,  black-  •# 
it  berry  and  ra.'»pberrj-  bushes,  all  it 
it  bearing,  a  nice  strawberr>'  patch  -^ 
it  bearing,  and  a  good  variety  of  it 
-,';-  Compass  cherries  and  apple  trees,  i^- 
it  Several  other  small  buildings;  it 
#  partly  fenie*!^-  This  Is  an  Ideal  ^ 
it  one-man  farm,  ^nd  located  con-  it 
it  venlent  to  town  and  markets,  ■^ 
it  telephone  lines  and  rural  mall  it 
it  routes.  Price  $4,500;  about  $1,500  it 
it  will  handle  it.  it 

« 
it 
# 

I* 


it  Here  Is  something  that  is  a  rec 
it  ord-breaker.  Think  of  It!  Thirty-  it\ 
it  five  pieces  of  good  aluminum  ware  it] 
it  for  only  $6.i»8;  another  set  consist-  it^ 
i(>  Inif  of  seven  pieces  at  $7.98.  *- i 

it  ENGER  &  OL.SON,  *| 

*•     Nineteenth  Avf.   W.  and  Sup.  St.     ^i  I 
iHt^f'ftitititit^ft^itititi^itititit'itii'it'itiiit 

FOR  SALE — Furniture  stock  to  be  tor- 
pedoed quickly.  We  will  positively 
vacate  ealesrootna  before  May  1  re-  | 
gardless  of  the  sacrifice;  everything  > 
must  be  sold,  even  though  the  price 
concession  is  more  than  one-half,  this 
means  you  can  practically  furnish  the 
bedroom,  living  room  and  dining  room 
at  your  own  price;  act  promptly  If 
you  wish  to  participate  in  these  real 
bargains.  Cameron  Furniture  Co., 
2110-2112   W.    Superior    st. 

TALKING  M.VCHINES — Largest  stock 
In  the  city.  Complete  outfits  at  special 

f>rlces.  Be  sure  you  get  the  New  Co- 
umbia  Grafonola;  awarded  three 
grand  prizes  and  two  gold  medals  at 
the  world's  fair;  double-faced  records 
66  cents;  ask  for  catalogues  free;  only 
exclusive  talking  machine  store  In 
Duluth.  largest  stock.  Edmont,  18 
Ird  ave.  w. 

FOR  SALE — Dining  room  set,  ma- 
hogany dresser,  library  table,  rock- 
er, sanitary  couch,  book  case.  Domes- 
tic machine,  mattress,  two  large 
rugs  and  dishes.  432  E.  2nd  St.  ,  18 
tJranville  apartment.  Call  mornings 
or   evenings   after  7  p.    m.   Mel.   6917. 

FOR  SALE— Entire  stock  of  furniture 
contained  In  salesrooms,  2110-2112 
W.  Superior  St..  will  be  sold  for  50 
per  cent  less  than  retail  price,  to  cash 
buyers.  Thou-iands  of  pieces,  just  | 
what  you  need  to  furnish  the  home 
cosily.      Cameron   Furniture   Co. 

FOR  SALE — Very  cheap  to  close  out  , 
quick,  one  Bond  player  piano,  also  ; 
two  fine  piano.s.  walnut  and  oak 
canes.  If  you  are  planning  to  purchase 
a  piano,  don't  fall  to  see  these.  We 
can  arrange  terms.  R.  R.  Forward  <ic 
Co..   124    E.   Superior   at. 

FOR  SALE  CHEAP— Office  furniture; 
1  roll-top  desk.  1  roll-top  typewriter 
desk.  1  quartered  oak  long  table.  2 
revolving  desk  chairs.  1  counter  parti- 
tion with  plate  glass.  206  Lonsdale 
bldg.;   Mel.    l'04. 

FOR  SALE — Clean  sweep  of  every 
piece  of  furniture,  rugs  and  stoves, 
all  go  regardless  of  cost,  at  half  and 
manv  less.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co..  122- 
124   E.  Superior  st. 

FOR  S.\LE — An  assortment  of  fixtures. 
Including  lighting  fixtures,  suitable 
for  furniture  or  other  store,  will  sell 
cheap.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co.,  124  E. 
.Sup.    St.     

F<3R  SALE — Sfcond-hand  woodworking 
machinery,  portable  sawmill,  trans- 
mission appliances,  pipes  fior  steam, 
water  and  fumacf-s.  Duluth  Mach.  Co. 


ACCOUNTANTS. 

JAMES ^TliDCTTESONrC.    P-    A. 

(Minnesota  and   Wisconsin). 

700-701    Alworth    Building. 

Audits,    Estate   and    Commercial 

Accounting    and    Investigations. 

Established    1909. 

Phones:  Mel.  4700;  Grand  71. 


— JOHN    E.    MACGREGOR— 

Public   Accountant   and   Auditor. 

601    Sellwood    Bldg.      Mel.    670. 

DAVID    QUAIL    &    CO. 

Chartered  Accountants. 

Certified    Public    Acco\mtant3, 

401    Torrey    Bldg..     Duluth. 

Highest    references.      Inquiries    Invited. 


AW!VINGS.    TE2fTS,    PACKSACK9. 

Poirler  Tent  &  Awning  Co.,  413  E.  Sup. 
Both  phones.  Horse  and  wagon  covers. 

AWNINOa— Duluth  Tent  A  Awning  Co.. 
1608    W.    Supertor   st.     Lin.    36. 


ASHES,  CIXDEinS,  BTC,  REMOVED. 

Ashes,    cinders    and    ntanure    removed. 
Merrill.    Mel.    1390;    Grand    1488-X. 


ARCHITECTS. 

GILIUSON  &"cARSONril3-14   Glencoe 
bldg.      Mel.    5622;    Grand    1785-X. 


C-UIDSI 

Business  Cards.   300,   $1;  Calling-  Cards, 


100,  39c.  Kask  Prlntery.  114 


Ing  C; 

iTsu 


p.  St. 


CAMERAS   .IXD   KODAKS. 

—ARCADE    CAMERA   SHOP— 
110  W.   Superior  st.  Amateur  finishing, 
kodaks  and    camera  supplies. 


FUXERAI.    DIRECTOR, 

OLSEN    &    HOPPENYAN,    2014    W.    Su- 
perlor   st  ;   Lin.    10;   Mel.    7620. 


HAT   SHOP. 

Any  Panama,  straw  or  soft  hat  cleaned. 

blocker     or     remodeled 

Special  attention  to  mall 

orders.  New  Grand  Shine 

parlors.  210  W.  Superior, 

at.     Grand  639. 

THE      CENTRAL      HAT 

works,    309   W.    Sup.    St. 

•^us   KIntonls.   manager. 

riats  cleaned,  rebldcked 
*„  '  .  Jand     repulred       \\'«    f^ii 

for  t^m^  deliver.   ^ir^,J  t^^-Ia  ^^  ^    *=*" 


Wl'SICAL   INSTRUMENTS. 


|A.  Haakonsen,  dealer 
«nd  expert  repairing 
'hi  J.  W.  Nelson's.  6 
E.    Superior  st. 


^h«n{!J  .1"*",?"m  "*  *"'^  guitars,  banjos, 
banjo- mandolins,  old  violins,  cellos. 
ison    U.    Miller,    agent.    Grand    1622-X. 

Pianos,   violins,   vlctrolas.   sheet   music 
etc.      Boston    Mnsic    Co.  music. 


—      ' 


CARPET  CLEANING  WORKS. 

TntER^TATE^CARPET      ciean?niPca 
1908    W.    Michigan    st.      Both    phones. 

WE  RENT  electric  cleaners,  $1  to  $1.60  , 
per  day.     Anderson  Furniture  Co.  j 


MEDICAL  BATHS. 

DR.    K.    A.    LEE,    chiropractic    special- 

!.»^'.^^"r®  **'*..  ",".'**y  '^'"  rheumatism, 
?l?.2"V''»  *"<»  .l<«dney  troubles.  Baths. 
18J6    E.   Superior   st.    Mel.    8125. 

OPTOMETRIST  AND~OPTICIAN^ 

CONSULT  A.  L.  NORBERG.  optomet- 
rist and  optician.  201 4  W  Ist  st.  for 
economical  buying  and  correct  fitting 
of  glasses;  satisfaction  guaranteed. 
\\e  grind  our  own  lenses.  Established 
In  business  1891.  Registered  by  ex- 
amlnitlon    1901 


FOR  SALE — Furniture  for  summer  cot- 
(  tage  verj'  cheap,  also  leather  bed  dav- 
I  enport,  almost  new,  and  mahogany 
j    settee.      3514    Minnesota    ave. 

I  FOR  SALE— $750  player  piano  for  $285 
and  1379  piano  for  $225,  also  $300 
piano  for  $166.  cash  or  time.  Korby 
Piano  Co..  28  Lake  ave.   n. 


PIANOS  REPAIRED  AND   TUNED. 

—THE     PIANO    SHOP— 
Tuning,  finishing  and  reDalrtng.  Greg- 
ory   &    Krlstenson,    1806    W     Superior 
St.    Melrose   6621;   Lin.    296-X. 

DL'LUTH   PIANO  Repair  factory,   alley 

entrance,   812'^    W.    1st    st.    Mel.    464. 

ED    McCARTY,      chimney      sweep    and     —  ■  —  -  -——  — j; 

furnace  cleaning.   Call   Lake.   46-L.         1  P-4^PER9   AND   MAGAZINES   BOIGHT. 

DON'T  THROW  away  old  magazine* 
and  newspapers;  we  buy  them.  Du- 
luth Paper  Stock  Co.  Grand  2025,  Mel. 
6339. 


CHIMNEY     SWEEP. 


KNUDSON — Chimney  sweep  and  furnace 
cleaner.  Fire  he.adquarters.  Mel.  46. 


DANCING   ACADEMY. 

RYAN'S — The  school  that  makes  good 
dancers.  Classes:  Mondays.  Tu^-sdays 
and    Thursday.    Call    Mel.    4618. 

COFFIN'S  ACADEMY — Classes  Monday, 
Tuesday    and    Thursday.  Either  phone. 


FRENCH   DRV    CLEANERS. 

PHONE  1246  and  our  auto  will  call. 
Prompt  attention  to  out-of-town  or- 
ders.   East    End    Dry    Cleaners. 


FURNITURE  RE-COVERED. 

Let   Forsell  do  your  UPHOLSTERING. 
334    E.    Superior    st.     Both    phones. 


FLORIST    AND    NURSERYMAN. 

Duluth  Floral  Co..  wholesale,  retail;  cut 
flowers,    funeral    designs.    121  W.  Sup. 


P-IINTING  AND  PAPERING. 

WHEN  YOU  want  to  paint  and  paper, 
call  Dudley  for  right  prices.  Mel. 
1390-X;    <;rand    1488-X. 


PATENTS. 

All    about    patents;    consultation    free. 
S.  Geo.  Stfvens.  716  Fidelity.  Mel.  3121. 


PLUMBING. 

THE  SANITARY^pTumbing  Co..  $4  W. 
l3t    St..    plumbing    and    heating. 

WINDOW   CLEANING. 

National  Window  Cleaning  Co.,  expert 
in  cleaning  woodwork,  wall  paper. 
marble,  etc.  Our  work  must  prove  sat- 
isfactory;  prices  reasonable.   Mel.   680. 


EBERT- WALKER  COMPANY, 

Farm  Land   Dealers. 

316-16   Torrey   Building, 

Duluth.   Minn. 


WE  PURCHASE  real  estate  contracts, 
mortgages  and  notes.  Northern  Equit- 
ies   Co.,    612    1st    Nat.    Bank    Bldg. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— Will  pay  best 
prices  for  second  hand  clothing.  405 
West    Michigan    St.    (Jrand    2361-A. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — 5  or  6-room  house 
on  easy  terms.  Lake  ave.  to  lOtli  ave. 
e.      Mel.    6998,    or   Grand    2S86-D. 


Will  buy  partially  improved  farm. 
State  price,  exact  legal  description.  In 
letter.  Address  A   927.   Herald. 


We  give  cash  or  new  furniture  for  used 
furniture  or  stoves.  Joe  Popkin,  108 
E.    Superior    St.       Melrose    6498. 


it 

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WANTED  TO  BUY — Second  hand  mo- 
torcycle cheap  on  easy  terms.  Call 
Melrose    7004. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — Large  '  or  small 
tract  of  land  for  Investment.  Address 
I    69.    Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Fresh  mllch  cow, 
part  Guernsey  preferred.  Address  K  ^7, 
Herald. 


WANT  TO  BITY — Small  general  store 
or  go  in  partnership.  Write  B  88, 
Herald. 


WE    PAY    20c    for    heavy    hens.      Call 
Grand  325:  Mel.  81.  L.  PoUnsky  &  Co. 

LITMAN    BUYS   clothing   and    bicycles. 
1811   W,    Superior   st.   Lin.    129-D. 


H     Pookln    buy*   stoves   and    furniture. 
Grand    2337-A.    Mel.    1»«2. 


THIIBERJJUiOS^ 

TIMBER  and  cut-over  lands  bought; 
mortgage  l«>an8  made.  John  Q.  A. 
Crosby.  305   Palladio  bldg. 


FOR  SALE  —  Several  good  timber 
claims,  cheap.  Northern  Realty  Co.. 
627  Manhattan  bldg. 


fi^iljtitii^tit^ititititititit^if^il^^itif^^it 

FOR  SALE — Farm  of  80  acres,  in  sec- 
tion 26.  township  60,  range  19.  25 
acres  under  cultivation.  36  acres 
clearing;  has  2-room  dwelling,  stable, 
barn  and  3  hay  sheds,  good  well.  etc. 
Ten  miles  north  of  Kinney.  Minn., 
along  good  road.  Inquire  of  John 
Ikola.   Box   61.    Kinney,   Minn. 

FOR  SALE— 10-acre  truck  or  dairy 
farm  on  Pike  Lake  road;  ten  minutes' 
walk  from  street  car;  all  cleared  atid 
fenced;  small  buildings;  price  $3,000, 
for  quick  sale;  terms  to  suit.  Bickell- 
Kyllo   &  Co..   205    Exchange   bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Nine  acres  of  fertile  land, 
cleared,  fenced,  in  timothy  and  clover; 
walking  distance  36th  ave.  e.;  some 
buildings,  nice  creek,  good  water; 
f2.700*on  easy  terms.  Greenfield  Real- 
ty Co..  416  Providence  bldg. 


FOR    SALE — Piano,     $60;    dining    table 
and     6     chairs.     $20;     hat    rack,     $2.60;  1 
Swiss    music   box.   $20;    electric    dome,  I 
$3.60.      227   either  phone. 

DO<;S  of  all  breeds  bought  and  sold; 
expert  on  dorf  diseases;  dogs  boarded. 
Stamp  for  reply.  Gordon  Dale  Kennels, 
Park    Point.    Mel.    6101. 


FOR  SALE— MISCELLANEOUS 

(Continued.) 


FOR  SALE — Sixty-acre  farm,  3  miles 
northwest  of  Wentworth,  Douglas 
county;  good  farm  buildings;  rea.^^on- 
ahle  terms.  A.  J.  Modine.  Wentworth, 
Wis. 


FOR  SALE — Lake  frontage;  If  you 
want  a  piece  of  land  on  nice  lake, 
call  on  us.  We  have  it.  Northern 
Realty    Co..    627   Manhattan    bldg. 


FOR  SALE — Foflr  forties,  first-class 
farm  land;  lake  frontage;  20  miles 
from  town;  $1,800,  cash  $300.  Owner, 
110  Pine  St.,  Virginia.  Minn. 


BARGAIN — $1,000  cash  buys  80  acres 
In  68-14.  close  ;to  Consolidated  mines. 
Northern  Realty  Co.,  527  Manhattan 
bldg. 


BEAUriFUL  RlV^R  front  farms  at 
Meadowlands  on,  easy  terms.  Uno 
Llndstrom,  81   iB.MIchlgan  st.  Duluth. 


FOH  SALE — 40,'^ijes  half  mile  from 
Munger,  on  ro«(,d;,  i860,  easy  terms.  E: 
E.  Helland,  lOL  ,39th  ave.  w..  Dulath. 


WANTED  TO  REiJT  or  buy  a  small 
firm  In  Wisconsin  or  Southern  Minne- 
sota.    Write   a  r,«*   Herald. 


Parties  desiring  fo  clear  lands,  write 
F.  J.   Kupplnger;  Davenport.  Iowa. 

r  Birr  and  sell  iktids  and  timber.  Goo. 
Rupley,  112  Lyceum  bldff. 


FOR  SALE — Singer  sewing  machine; 
cost  $38,  will  sell  for  $15;  baby  bed. 
nursei-y  chair  and  cutter,  will  sell  all 
for  $g.     g28  E.  1st  St. 

FOR  SALE — Used  gas  ranges,  re-enam- 
eled and  put  In  good  repair  at  very 
easy  figures.  Anderson  Furniture 
Co.,  2l8t  ave.  w. 

For  sale — $360  almost  new  piano; 
will  take  $165;  one-half  cash,  balance 
on    time.      Address   A   948.    Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Indian  rug,  Segar  refrig- 
erator, 4-plece  leather  furniture;  a 
snap,   $170.   Mel.  811S. 


FOR  SALE. 

FINE  USED  KNABE  PIANO, 

Mahogany  case.     $140.  on  easy 
terms.     Address  A  950,  Herald. 


itititie^iti:-iy:y»-^^if^ii^^i^i^f'^i^^^-ii^^ 


FOR   SALE — Encyclopedia    Drltannlca; 
30  volumes;  cheap.     Call  Lin.  176-X. 

FOR  SALE — Furniture,   odds  and   ends 
at   half   price.      Boston    Music    Co. 


FOR  SALE — Two  second-hand  pianos 
In  flrst-class  order.  The  Piano  Shop, 
1805  W.  Superior  St. 


FOR    SALE — Two    8 -foot   counters    and 
cash    register.     Call  Lin.   140-D^ 


FOR   SALE   CHEAP— Large   rug.     1811 
E.  3rd  St. 


FOR  sale: — Household  furniture,  ex- 
cellent condition;  owner  leaving  city. 
Call  431  E.   2nd  st. 


FOR   SALE — New   cedar   rowboats   and 

launches.  Patterson  Boat  Co.,  •th  ave. 

^    w.  and  Riailroad  st, 

FOR  SALE — Player  piano,  with  music, 
at  a  bargain;  etihy  payment*.  Edmont. 
18    3rd   ave.   w. 

FOR  SALE — Complete  4-room  outfit 
of  nearly  new  furniture.  820  ^th  ave. 
e.,    upstairs^ 

FOR  SALE — Steel  range  and  heater. 
Will  sell  cheap  if  taken  at  once.  412 
E.  6th  St. 

FOR  SALE— -$660  player  piano;  cash  or 
terms  cAn  be  arranged.  $245.  Z  867, 
Herald.  

FOR  SALE — Household  furniture.  In- 
cluding gas  range,  at  103  N.  23rd 
ave.    w. 


"BOARD  AND  ROOli  WANTED 

WANTED — Office  man  desires  room 
and  board  with  private  family,  or 
room  with  board  optional,  or  vice 
versa;  central  downtown  district  pre- 
ferred; state  particulars;  can  furnish 
A-1    references.      Z    90.    Herald. 


FOR  SALE — r  have  a  dandy  6-month, 
old  female  Airedale;  $5.     Doug.  182-M. 


FOR     SALE — Bolltop     oak     desk     and 
chair;    fine  condition.   413  Fidelity  bldg. 

FOR  SALE— 1266  new  piano;  will  take 
H2t  cmvh.     Addrpw  A  Ml,  Herald. 


WANTED  TO  BORROW — $400  for  3 
years,  on  2  build! nga  valued  at  $1,000. 
with  $900  insurance;  will  pay  10  per 
cent  Interest.    Write  G  93.   Herald. 


DNESSMAKINO 

WANTED — Plain       sev/lng.       Children's 
clothes    a    specialty.    Phone    MeL    8>70. 


First-class    dressmaking    and    crochet- 
ing by  day  or  home.     Mel.  7979. 


Bring   your   watch    to   Garon     Bros.,  to 
have  it  repaired   right.   217  W.   1st  sL 


UPHOLSTERINO 

Furniture,    Automobiles  —  Reasonable 
price.  E.  Ott,  118  lat  •ve.  W.  Phones. 


FOR  SALE  OR  EXCHAWGE 

Vt^XNTEo'^To'^XCHAN*^^  lot 

on  upper  side  of  London  road,  be- 
tween 25th  and  26th  ave.  e.,  for  160 
acres  land  In  St.  Louis  or  Lake  coun- 
ty, or  for  any  of  the  following  stocks: 
Blg  Ledge.  Maria  Mining.  Cactu» 
Cons..  Butte  &  Zenith  or  Onahmau 
Iron.   Address   Presto,   Herald. 

WANTED  TO  EXCHANGE— 80  acres 
near  Rabbitt  lake  and  nice  Improved 
farm  In  Aitkin  county  for  standing 
timber.  Northern  Realty  Co.,  627 
Manhattan   bldg. 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

Duluth  d  Iron  Range  Rail  Road. 

"Vermilion    Roat*." 


DULITH— 


I 


Lcsfc. 


ArilM. 


Knlf*  River,  Two  Htftian, 
Tomwr,  Ely,  Wintofi,  Au- 
rOTk,  BlwabU,  McKinUjr 
SpuU,  EveleUk.  GUbert, 
VifflnU. 


•  74to.ai.  '  tUJOs,*. 


tU  .30p.m. 


ilO  lu».i 
UO^Sv.a. 


*— Datlr.  t— DXly  tf^Vi  Suodair.  $— Mixed  tfkla 
lesTTs  dftllr  fron  nrtKOth  Atreoue  F.Mt  StttlOM. 
I— Mlied  train  arrlTn  daily  eicnrt  Sundar  at  Flflerath 
ATcnua  East  8t«Usa.  z— Arrtrn  Union  Utiwt  bunday 
only. 


DOLUTH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 


Ofnc*t     4M 


Weot  S«»c*tor  »U 


Us«c. 


▲trlM. 


r  BtbUoc.   ChliilMlB,    VlrflnU,   Ero- 1 

n-Mtm  {    Uth.   Colcrainr,    Sbaro^   tMovn-  \  •  tiUm 

(.       talo    Iron,    8|Nula,    Btwablk.  1 

f       UlbMnc    Chlsiioim,    Sharoa,  1 

VtrtlnU,    Kvcletb.  ^•1l4lssi 

Cotirala*.  j 

VlTftBU,  1 

Ctilshola  fnt 

IUtbU«.  J 


•—Dally,      t— D*!']'    fsceft    SaiHlsr.      t— I^juxpt    •!• 

yabili. 

Cafe  Observation   Car,   Mlaaabe   Ran^ 
Points,   Solid  Vestibuled  Train. 


••LBtH  «  MRTWCn  aimESITA  M1LWAT. 

MM,  ne  lmnm*  imi.,  •uttk. 

Trtim  awoeet  at  Katft  Kfer  dally  (exrraf  Sn-i«v) 
■ttk  D.  *  I.  B.  tralm  iMflnc  fMaCb  at  7  JO  a.  ■.. 
mtntm  kt  IMstt  iKmam)  at  10:16  r  ■  ComoM  st 
Cnmer  •»  " 


i 


^'T*  I  in  »i  ^.n'l  K'.r*§jM}jt 


^  P  ^^JPT  ■H^M>iWWi|i*y-'y* 


-  r 


Tuesday, 


THE  mJLUTHJIEllALD      ap"  n  me 


mME  Ti  TOE 
OFHSE 


TELEPHONE 

YOUR  WANT  ADS 


On*    Cent    ■    Word    Kaoh    In»er«lon. 
Xo  Advertlaemrnt   I^fMM   Than    IS  Onta. 

>y.  WANTED. 


Expprlencptl  girls  to  make  mackl- 
naws,  flhlrts,  pants  and  overalls. 

Apply — 
CHRLSTEXSK.V-MENDENHALL- 

«;raham  CO.. 
616  West  First  Street. 


■^1 


71» 


-TO  THE 


t 


WANTED  AT  OXCE. 

COMPETENT  SALESLADY  FOR 
CLOAK  AND  SUIT  DEPARTMENT. 


DULUTH  HERALD 

Both  Phones  324 


T  E  I.  K  !•  II  «  >  »^  WANT  ADS— Are 
chaiKtd  at  th«-  same  rate  as  cash  ads, 
and  cullJctions  «ill  be  made  at  your 
home  or  offUe  us  .•»oon  as 
thereafltr.    This   is 

Bervico.    and   paynunt   . 

promptly  wh,n  the  bill  is  P'-^»^"tedi 
so  as  to  avoi.l  furlh.r  «""">""^«  *"^ 
t^  aid  ih-  effltien.y  of  our  service 
Alwav.s  ask  that  your  telephone  ad  be 
•  d  back  to  you  by  the  telephone 
tak.i-,  to  make  sure  that  It  naa 
II    <urit<.ily    takt-n. 

answers  to  blind  ads 

clven   unl.s.s  tlckot  Is  prescnt- 

uf    request.      Always    save 


repeat' 
ad 
to. 
BI.IM)    AUS— No 

■will  b 

ed    at    lime 


possible 
an  accommodation 
should   be  made 


tl<k't 

pla<  iiiK 
are  not 
vertlst-r 


showing'     key      number     ^vhen 
blind    ads.     Herald    employes 
rmitttd  to  tell  who  any  ad- 
Answers    to    out-of-town 


J.  M. 


Apply — 
GIDDLVC! 


&  CO. 


LEARN  TO  CUT  and  make  your  own 
waists  and  dresses.  You  can  easily  do 
It  after  taking  the  course  In  practical 
instruction.  Make  elothes  while  learn- 
ing. Miss  <;ray'H  school.  3rd  floor.  Ueo. 
A.  CJray  Co.  Also  all  sizes  and  styles 
of  patterns  cut  to  measure. 


general 

to  learn 

clean-cut 


WANTED — Boy  over  16  In  a 
capacity,  one  that  would  like 
the  linen  business;  must  be 
and  willing;  wages  $4  weekly  to  start; 
answer  In  own  handwriting  with  par- 
ticulars.     Write  Y  98,   Herald.    


WA.NTKD--<'a«hler  and  assistant  book 
keeper;    prefer    one    who    has    had    ex 
ptM-knce    in    handling    Installment 
counts    and    collections.     Ask    for 
Osborn,    H<-llnet    Installment    Co., 
E.    Superior   st. 


ac- 
Mr. 
202 


WA.VTED  —  Woman  who  thoroughly 
understands  demon.strating  coffee;  no 
others  nee«i  apply.  See  H.  L.  Caldwell, 
Jr.,  care  Rust-I'arkor  Co. 


P' 

is 


blind 
extra 


ads 
cost. 


will    be    forwarded    without 


One    Cent    R    Word    Kaoh    In*/'**""*. 
^o   Ad»er<Uement    I.e»«    *  "j""  J^J:^^' 

HeTpWANTED— MALE 

i{- 

a  ■^- 


W  ANT  ED. 

A  man   of  snfflci-nt  caliber  to  ap- 
m,,a<  h  and  sell   th.    better  class  of 
iuM.stor.-^.     pr.  furred     stock     In 
Itv.-.  mon.y-maklnk'  corporation  in 
the   lumber   business 
Herald. 


Write  J    74, 


'it' 

^     ^ 

WANTED  —  First-class 
and  siiop  foreman,  capable  of  laying 
out  wt.rk.  and  thoroughly  famiUa 
with  reading  blue  print.^.  To  such  a 
man  there  is  an  .xcllent  opportunUy 
for  a  permanent  pi>3ltion  with  na- 
vanc.mVnt.  An-swering  fully  stating 
age  experience,  whether  married 
alngl'-.  and  salary  expected 
IJiilcr  A:   Manufacturing 


bollermaker 


St. 


or 
Paul 


Co. 


WAN  ri:i>— Duluth    jobber 
liable     niiddle-ased     man 
record    as    city    salesman; 
that    has     had     drygoods 
aalary   and  commission; 
ticulars    as    to 
enccs.      Write 


desires    re- 

with     clean 

prefer   one 

experience; 

give  full  par- 

txperit-nce    and    refer- 

Y    85.    Herald. 


WANTED- 
We  t-eaoh 

ar.^    '    '• 
t.  ■ 

Ci 


zj:.  i:. 


il-r 


-Young    man.    be    a    barber. 

vou  cheaply  and  thoroughly 

■>-    •      Is   free.    Write   or   call 

-  .e.     R.  Modern  IJarber 

...    Supi-rii-r   st..    Duluth, 

Tt'h  st  .   St.   Paul.  Minn. 

~~^'  ;.»OD  POSITIONS — 

al.  technical  and  com- 
i.  Strang.'rs  and  non- 
-  oiallv  welcome.     Consul- 

^      Y    M".  C.  a.   Employment 


WANTED — Competent  maid  for  gen- 
eral housework;  one  who  can  do  the 
cooking  and  part  of  washing;  »26  per 
month.      1921    E.   3rd   st. 

WANTED  —  Women  as  government 
clerks.  $70  month;  Duluth  exanilna- 
tlons  coming.  Franklin  Institute,  Dept. 
64G  N..  Rochester,  N.  Y. 

WANTED— Willing  girl  for  general 
housework;  three  In  family;  good 
home  to  right  party.  Cole  14-D.  630 
N.  E?th   ave.   w. 


Your  Business  Must  Co 
Forward  or  Backward; 
There'sNoSlandlngStlU 


One    Cent    ■ 
>'o  AdrertUci 


Word   Sarh   Insertion, 
lent  L.eu  Than  16  Cents. 


FORWENT— FLATS 

—FLATS — 


WANTED — Chorus  girls  for  perma- 
nent organization.  (Jive  phone,  exper- 
ience and  address.  Address  Y  105, 
Herald.  


W  A  NT  1-:  D — Yo»i  n  g 
housework;  small 
go  home  nights, 
ave.    e. 


girl    to    assist    with 

family;  one  who  can 

Apply    15    S.    17th 


WANTED^<;irl  for 
work;  small  family 
no  washing; 


general      house- 

$25    per    month; 

references.  2319  E.  Ist  st. 


WANTED— At  once:  girl,  16  to  18  years 
idd.  to  care  for  children  and  help  with 
housework.      Apply   1018    E.    3rd    st^ 

WANTED — .S<hool  girl  to  mind  chil- 
dren after  school  hours  and  Satur- 
days.   Mel.    6720.    119    Mesaba    ave. 


WANTER— Neat  girl  for 
housework,  faniilv  of  two. 
ave.    e.    I'hone    Melrose    1228 


general 
621    24th 


WANTED — Young  lady  between  18 
and  20  years  to  clerk  in  confection- 
erv    store.    432    E.    4th    st. 


WANTED — r.lrl      for      general      house- 
work;   2   In    family;    good   wages.   Mel. 
I    185.    1625    Jefferson    st. 

i  WANTED — Competent  girl  for  general 
housework;  no  laundry  work;  good 
wages.      1906    E.    3rd   St. 


That's  why  it  is  important  for  a 
small  business  to  take  advantage 
of  every  means  of  growth.  The 
easiest,  surest  and  nearest  to  hand 
is  the  "Business  Cards"  column  in 
The  Herald's  Want  Ad  pages.  It 
assures  healthy  growth  to  the 
small  businesses  advertised  there. 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

Duluth's  Want  Ad  Directory 
Read  For  Profit— Use  For  Results 


J.  D.   Howard   &  Co..   Providence  Bldg. 

3  rooms,   230   Pittsburgh  ave.;   water 
paid     $600 

4  rooms,   303   S.    61st  ave.  w.;   water 
paid    J12.00 

4  rooms,    303   S.   6l8t  ave.   w.;   water 
paid n3.oo 

5  rooms,  1504  London  road;  heat  and 
water    »20.00 

6  rooms,    229     W.     6th     at.;     water 
paid     $16.00 

7  rooms,  1408%   E.  2nd  St.;  hot  water 
heat    ■ $30.00 

■it.  ^ 

a.                         FOR  RENT.  f 

^                               %' 

•}&       We   have   some   desirable  rooms  * 

*  for   light    housekeeping    or  offices  * 

*  at  123  W.  Superior  st.  and  220  W.  * 

*  Superior  st.;   rent  from   $8  to   $16  * 
•S-  per  month.  * 

.^  W" 

f^  ZENITH  REALTY  CO..  # 

*  4  South  First  Avenue  East,         * 


One    Cent    a   'Word   Each   Insertion. 
No  AdTertlsement  Lcaa  Than  IS  Cents. 

FOR  RENT — 1  3-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building;  1  4-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building.  Apply  Anderson  Drug  Store, 
2904  W-  3rd  st. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat  and  bath, 
all  hardwood  floors  and  finishing. 
106  N.  27th  ave.  w.  All  conveniences 
except    heat    at    $12.50    per    month. 


Qg,    Cent    a    Word    Faeh    InHertion.  One    Cent    a    Word    Each    In«ertlon. 

No  Advertiaement  L.e«M  Than   IS  Cent*. '  >'o  Advertisement  L.rs«  Than   IS  Cents. 


POULTRY  AND  EGGS 


^'■iHT.Tr.*-r.x.. 


WANTED — Competent  girl  for  general 
housework:  small  family.  Apply  1616 
Jefferson   st. 

WANTED — Experienced  lady  presser. 
Apply  Zenith  Dye  House,  232  E.  Supe. 
rior   St. 

WANTED — «ilrl  for  general  housework. 
No  cooking.  Apply  at  once,  1315  E. 
6th  St. 


■N 


WANTED — lUitton's  Ilusiness  college, 
Mooih>ad,  Minn.,  guarantees  a  posi- 
tion after  three  months  at  $60  to  $100 
per  month;  pay  tuition  out  of  your 
salary:  we  pay  railroad  fare. 

WANTED — Young  man.  17  or  18  years 
of  age  for  office  work;  must  be  ac- 
curate at  fifiures  and  willing  to  work; 
aplpndid  chance  f«ir  advancement. 
Write   V   104.   Herald. 


VANTED — One  harnessmaker  for  rc- 
paiiing  harness  for  lumber  company. 
AVork  for  the  season.  Apply  to  Du- 
luth Employment  Co.  403  West  Mich- 
igan   St.,    Duluth.  


WANTED— 500  hunters  to  know  we 
loan  monev  on  rifles,  shotguns,  re- 
volvers: will  hold  till  next  season  be- 
fore sold.  Keystone  Loan  Co.  22  W. 
Superior    St. 


WANTED— <Jlrl  for  general  house, 
work;  house  cleaning  done.  1906  E. 
6th   St. 


WANTED— At    once; 
farm.     Address    Box 
Minn. 


housekeeper    on 
7,     Deer    River, 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 
^^^J^Jl^  19 

£0RJENT-^0qM^ 

—THE  NEW  ALEXANDRIA— 
A  few  desirable  rooms  nuw  vacant  at 
special  rates;  wejl-beated  and  com- 
fortable apartments.  Private  tele- 
phone in  every  room.  Dining  room  in 
In    connection.    322    W.    2nd    st. 


FOR    RENT. 


6-room  flat.  1113  E.  6th  st.,  will  be  va- 
cant May  1;  rent  $20  per  month. 

7-room  flat,  with  heat,  water  and  jani- 
tor service,  at  1121 V4  London  road; 
rent   $42.60    per   month. 

WHITNEY  WALL  CO.. 

301  Torrey  Bldg.  


FOR  RENT— Attractive  5-room  apart- 
ment; East  end;  white  enamel  bath- 
room, electric  light,  gas  range,  fur- 
nace, laundry;  $27.     Mel.  1801. 


SECRET  SOCIETIES 


Matteson,  See. 


PALMTINE    LODGE   NO.    73,    A.    F.    *   A. 

M.— Bejular  meeUncs  Hrst  and  third  Mon- 
day eTentngs  of  «ach  month  at  7:30  of  lock. 
Next  meeUni.  April  3,  1916.  Work- 
Third  degree  by  past  masters;  6:30  dinner. 
Clement    G.    Towusend.    W.    M.;   Janw    8. 


lO.MC  LODGE  XO.  186,  A.  F.  k  A.  M.— 
Regular  meeting  second  and  foiirth  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month  at  730  Neit 
meeting,  April  24,  1916.  Work— Second  de- 
gree. William  J.  Works.  W.  M.;  Burr 
Porter,  Sec. 


FOR  RENT — 5-room  furnished  flat; 
central  West  end;  modern  In  every 
respect.     Call  Lin.  465-A. 


FOR    RENT — Talk    to    Gllluson    If    you 
want  to  rent  or  buy  a  good   piano. 


FOR    RENT — Five- room     heated 
1927    W.    3rd    st.;    Mel.    3358. 


flat. 


FOR    RENT- 
lences.     330 


-6-room   flat;   all   conven- 
12th   ave.   e. 


FOR   RENT— 4-room   flat,    $10.     817    E. 
6th  St. 

FOR   RENT— HOUSES 

— HOUSES — 
J.   D.  Howard   &  Co.,   Providence  Bldg. 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTEB  SO.   20.   B.  A.   M.— 

8taU"d     conTocations,     second     and     fourth 

Wednesday  ereningg  of  each  month   at   730 

^dock.       Next    meeting.    April    12,    1916. 

Work— P.    M.   and   M.    E.    M.    d«crt«    fol- 

lowrtl   ay   lunch.      SUnley   L.    Mack.    H.    P. ;   Alfred    La 

Bitbeux,   Sec. 


X 

i 

I 

i 


A 


DIXITH   COr.VCIL  .NO.    6,    R.   t  8.    M.— 

Stated    convocations,    third    Friday   of   eack 

month     at    730    o'clock.       Next    meetSM. 

April  21.  1916.  Work— Boyal  and  Select  and 

sup.rcxcellent   degree.      .Ma)'uard    W.    Turner,    T.    1.    M.; 

Alfred  Le  Bicheux.  secretary. 

DCLITH  COMMANDEBY  NO.  18.  K.  T.— 
Stated  convocations  flrst  Tuesday  of  each 
month  at  730  o'clo<k.  Next  conclave 
April  11,  1915.  Work— Drill  and  lunch. 
Charles  H.  J'ugle.  Com.;  Ne«ton  H.  Wilson, 
recorder. 


FOR  RENT— At  316  W.  4th  St.,  6 
rooms,  bath,  kitchenette  and  large 
wardrobes.  Will  rent  to  one  party  or 
divide  and  rent  to  two.  Building  en- 
tirely remodeled,  as  good  as  new; 
redecorated  throughout;  large,  light 
airy  rooms;  2  fireplaces.  All  con- 
veniences. Including  heat.  W.  C.  Sher- 
wood   &    Co.    118    Manhattan    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — At  120  W.  4th  St.,  front  6- 
room  flat  and  bath;  every  rooin  light, 
airy  and  In  splendid  condition;  all 
conveniences  except  heat;  $23  per 
month,  with  bath.  W.  C.  Sherwood  & 
Co.,  118  Manhattan   bldg. 


FOR  RENT — A  4-room  flat  on  the  sec- 
ond floor  of  No.  2011  W.  Superior  st.; 
water,  electric  lights,  toilet,  hardwood 
floorj;  water  paid  by  owner;  stove 
heat;  only  $12.60  per  month.  F.  I. 
Salter  Co.,   303  Lonsdale  bidg. 


— METROPOLE    HOTE: 
101-6   I^ake  ave.  a.;    hot   and   cold   run- 
ning    water     In     every     room;     steam 
heat  and  other  modern   conveniences; 
rates    $2    per    week    and    up. 

— ELCIN  HOTEL — 
Nicely  furnished,   steam-heated    rooms; 
best    beds    in    the    city;    hot    and    cold 
running   water.     Rates   $2   and   up   by 
the  week.     321  W.  1st  St. 


MELROSE    HOTEL. 

318    W. 

2nd 

St.,    well    heated. 

pleasant 

rooms 

and 

board    at    special 

I    winter 

rates. 

Mel. 

4301;    Grand    2166 

-X. 

WANTED — Competent    girl   for   general 
housework;  3  In  family.  2330  E.  5th  st. 


WANTED— Competent 
eral   housework.     3016 


girl     for      gen- 
E.  Superior  st. 


WANTED — Cood,       experienced       cook; 
must  furnish  reference.  2401   E.   6th  st. 

WANTED — Maid     for     general     house- 
work;   no  children.     412  N.  15th  ave.  e. 


WANTED— Good       girl 
housewt)rk;   3  In  family. 


for      general 
1028  E.  2nd  St. 


r,'A.\TED — Customers  who  cannot  af- 
'/rd  to  pay  the  large  retail  price  on 
ihelr  piano.  Talk  tt)  <:iliuson  and  get 
•your  piano  direct  from  the  manufac- 
turer.       

Wanted — Experienced  solicitors;  we 
need  a  few  more  gofid  men  for  Duluth 
and  Superior.  Call  for  Mr.  Kell,  Bell- 
net  Installment  Co..  202  E.  Superior  st. 


PULI'TH — Railway  mall  clerk  exuml- 
nations  coming.  $75  month.  Samplo 
questions  free.  Franklin  Institute, 
Dei)t.    186    N.    Rochester,    N.    Y. 


WANTED — Man  and  wife  to  run  a 
boarding  house:  must  be  reliable  and 
respectable;  reference  will  be  re. 
quired.     Address  H   78.   Herald. 


WANTED— Neat      girl      for        general 
housework;   three  adults.      Lin.   256-D. 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD  IS  THE  REC- 
OGNIZED   POULTRY    MEDIUM. 
It  is  the  official  paper  of  the  poultry 
raisers    of    Duluth    and    Northern    Min- 
nesota. 

CIRCULATION  LARGEST. 
RATES  LOWEST. 
The  Duluth  Herald  has  the  largest 
circulation  of  any  newspaper  in  Min- 
nesota (outside  the  Twin  Cities).  Its 
charges  for  classified  advertising  are 
less  per  thousand  circulation  than 
those   of  any  other  paper  In   the  state. 

Hatching  eggs  from  celebrated  "Point 
o'  I'lnes  Farm,"  larg'^et  and  finest 
modern  poultry  plant  In  N.  AV.  Pure- 
bred egg-laying  strains.  .S.  C.  W.  Leg- 
horns. 15  eggs.  $1.60;  100.  $5.  S.  C.  R. 
I.  Reds.  16  eggs.  $1.76;  100,  $6.  A\  rite 
now.     Reserve,   Wis. 

FOR  .SALE— Eggs  for  hatching.  S  C. 
White  Leghorn.  $1  a  setting  of  $16. 
or  $6  per  hundred.  Barred  I'lymouth 
of  laying  strains  on  free  range.  Both 
phones,  Mel.  7363.  Grand  1019-A.  St. 
James"    Orphanage. 


FOR  RENT — When  renting  3  nicely 
furnished  rooms,  bedroom,  dining  room 
and  kitchen,  including  choice  of  gas 
or  coal  range,  you  would  have  to  pay 
$26  to  $35  per  month.  Why  not  buy  a 
Kelly  3-roojn  outfit  for  $69  and  fur- 
nish your  ^wn  rooms.  Pay  for  It 
monthly  on  our  dignified  credit  plan 
and  be  money  ahead.  F.  S.  Kelly 
Furniture    Co..    17-19    W.    Superior   st. 

FOR  RENT — To  party  without  chll- 
dren.  four  nice,  large,  furnished  rooms, 
hardwoo.l  floors,  heat,  light  and  gas; 
seven  minutes'  walk  to  postoffice.  437 
Mesaba  ave. 


FOR  RENT— May  1,  at  118-120  W.  4th 
St.,  2  3-room  flats;  fine  lake  view 
and  large  covered  porch;  large  rooms. 
Win  decorate  to  suit.  $16.00  per 
month.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118 
Manhattan   bldg. 


1610%  and  1612  E.  Superior  st.;  mod- 
ern brick  houses,  6  and  8  rooms; 
finely   decorated    to   suit   tenant.  $40.00 


1427-1429  E.  Superior  St.;  modern, 
detached  8-room  houses;  hot  water 
heat,  hardwood  floors  throughout; 
decorated  to  suit  tenant $45.00 


6  rooms,  201  Isanti  St.;  furnace 
heat     126.00 

6  rooms,  4523  Cambridge  St.;  furnace 
heat     $25.00 

9  rooms,  107  8th  ave.  w.;  heat  and 
water    furnished    $46.00 

9  rooms,    5809   London    road $30.00 

10  rooms,  621  W.  2nd  St.;  steam  heat; 
modern     $46.00 

10  rooms,  16  W.  5th  St.;  hot  water 
heat;  hardwood  floors  throughout, 
at    $50.00 


FOR  RENT. 


613  19th  ave.  e.,  7  rooms,  $20. 
2906  W.  2nd  St.,  7-room  house. 
2002  W.  2nd  St.,  6-room  flat. 
1731  W.  Superior  st.,  6-room  flat. 
1715  W.  Ist  St.,  6-room  flat. 


SCOTTISH  BITE  —  BEGIXAR  MEETINOfl 
every  Thursday  evening  at  8  o'clock.  Next 
meeting.  April  13,  1916.  Work  —  Beguiar 
business  and  balloting.  Burr  Porter,  sec- 
retary. 


lotting.     Eva 


ZENITH    CHAPTER    NO.    25.    ORDER    OF 

Eastern  Star — Beguiar  meetings  second  and 
fourth  Friday  evenings  each  month.  Next 
mi-eting,  Friday,  April  14,  1916.  at  7-30 
o'clock.  Work— Beguiar  business  and  bal- 
Eva  M.  Dunbar,  W.  M  ;  Ella  F.  Gearbart.  Sec. 


social.     Flors 


.MIZPAU  SHBINE  NO.  1.  OBDKU  OF  THE 
White  Shrine  of  Jerusalem — Be^nilar  meet- 
ings first  Saturday  evening  of  each  nionyi 
at  8  o'clock.  Next  m(rtiiig,  regular.  May  6. 
Initiation  and  balloting,  (^ertride  Bates, 
W.  H.  P.;  Etta  Tnwlranus.  W.  S. 

EUCLID  CHAPTEB  NO.  56,  OBDEB  Or 

the  Eastern  Star — Meets  at  West  Dulutb 
Masonic  temple  the  first  and  third  Ta-s- 
days  of  each  month  at  730  o'il<M-k.  .Next 
meeting,  April  18,  1916.  Ballotting  and 
Flora  L.  Clark,  W.  .M.;  Mildred  M.   Boss.  Sec. 


FOR  RENT— $12.50;  4-room  flat  on  the 
second  floor,  2011  W.  Superior  st.; 
hardwood  floors,  water,  electric  lights, 
bath  and  toilet;  stove  heat;  very  con- 
venient location.  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  blag. 


FOR  RENT — Finest  7-room  modern  flat 
In  city;  all  outside  rooms  in  Minne- 
sota flats.  118  E.  4th  st.;  only  $45  per 
month,  including  heat  and  janitor 
service.  Chas.  P.  Meyers,  611  Al- 
worth  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— 3-roum  flat,  $8;  4-room 
flat,  $12.60;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out, sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers,    611   Alworth   bldg.  

FOR  RF:NT — A  4-room  furnished 
apartment  on  third  floor  of  Munger 
terrace  for  two  raonth.s.  References 
required,  $32.60  per  month.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,    303    Lonsdale    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Desirable  flats,  houses 
and  stores.  If  you  are  considering 
making  a  change  wo  Invite  an  op- 
portunity for  serving  you.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co..  303  Lonsdale  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — A  4-room  steam-heated 
flat  near  Garfield  ave.  and  Superior 
St.;  water,  gas,  electric  lights,  toilet 
and  bath;  bargain  at  $16.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co..   303  Lonsdale  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Wanted — Young  man  for 
room  and  board  In  private  home; 
splendid  location;  references  ex- 
changed. S  83,  Herald. 

FOR  RENT — Large  4-room  furnished 
heated  apartment  in  first  class  condi- 
tion and  very  central.  Grand  221 1-D, 
or    Mel.    3932. 


(NOTICE — Save  money  on  buying  linens, 
bedding,  etc..  We  sell  at  wholesale; 
get  <.ur  prices.  J.  G.  Valentine  Co.,  8 
E.  1st  St. 


WANTED— Experienced    waitress.      At 
City   Restaurant,    608    W.    Superior   st. 


WANTED— «;irl      for      general      house- 
work.     14  N.   19th  ave.   e.  Mel.   6963. 

W A N TED— Experienced    salesladies   for 
various  departments.      Frelmuth's. 

WANTED— Girl    for    office      w^ork      at 
Garber  Bros.,  1806  W.  Superior  st. 

WANTED — Competent   maid     for     gen- 
eral  housework.     2521   E.  6th  st. 


WANTED — <;iri  for  general  housework 
616  W.  3rd  st.     Frank  Mucllla. 

WANTED— (Mrls    at    Somers'    Employ- 
ment  office,  13  E.  Superior  st. 


WANTED— Lady 
dllng.      1806   W. 


solicitors; 
Superior  st. 


no     ped- 


WANTED — Experienced  shipping  clerk 
and  checker  for  night  work.  Must 
furn'sh  best  of  references.  Apply  P. 
O.    drawer    445.    city. 

WANTED — Young,  experienced  shoe 
ehinf  r,  stead.v  job  for  right  party. 
Apply   Cilass    Block,    shoe    department. 

WANTED — Machinists  and  molders. 
No  lab(jr  troubles.  Apply  Lake  Shore 
Engine  works,  Marquette,  Mich. 

WANTED— First-class  ' 

er.      H.    Mlscampbell. 


WANTED— Good 
housework.     318 


girl       for 
10th   ave.  e. 


general 


e.     Grand   254.   Mel.   6357. 


painter's    help- 
306    S.    Ist   ave. 


WANTED — Porter,  middle-aged  man 
preferred;  apply  in  person.  Hotel 
Cody.   West    Duluth. 


WANTED — Experienced  wringer  boy 
for  laundry.  Apply  Zenith  Laundry, 
232    E.  Superior  st. 


WANTED— Coatmakers,  also  trouser 
and  vest  maker.  Hultgren  &  Bowdon 
Co.,   Wolvin   bldg. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
1901    E.    6th    St.:    Mel.    3347. 

WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework, 
small  family.  1822  E.  3id  st. 

WANTED — Millinery    makers    and    ap- 
prentlces.     National    store. 


FOR  SALE— Hammerbeek'.?  hardy,  dis- 
ease-resisting, winter-laying,  exhibi- 
tion White  Leghorns;  winners  wher- i  ruR 
ever  shown;  eggs  and  chi<  ks.  Send  for 
price  list.  H.  J.  Hammtrbeck,  Supe- 
rior, Wis.  


FOR  RENT— 2  furnished  rooms;  all 
modern  conveniences;  $1.60  and  $2 
per  week.      705  W.  3rd  st.     Mel.   7045. 


FOR  RENT — Small  heated  apartment 
In  desirable  location  in  East  end;  all 
conveniences;  janitor  service;  $40  per 
month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Provi- 
dence  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  central  loca- 
tion with  hardwood  floors,  bath,  gas 
and  all  conveniences  but  heat;  $20 
per  month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Pro- 
vidence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— Flat,  303  Oxford  st,  five 
rooms  and  bath;  modern  except  heat; 
fireplace;  garden;  $20  per  month.  See 
Wllilam   C.   Sargent,    Providence   bldg. 

■  HfOR  RENT— 

7-room    flat,    716    W.    2nd    st,    heat   and 

water  furnished,  $30.    William  C.  Sar. 

gent.  Providence  bldg. 


BENJAMIN    F.    SCHWEIGER    CO.. 
1932  W.  Superior  st. 


FOR  RENT — A  very  desirable  8-room 
thoroughly  modern  house  on  E.  1st  st., 
near  8th  ave.,  which  has  been  thor- 
oughly redecorated  and  Is  In  excel- 
lent condition;  hot  water  heating 
plant.  For  rental  and  other  partic- 
ulars calls  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303  Lons- 
dale   bldg. 


FOR  RENT — House  of  8  rooms  located 
at  Lakeside,  close  to  car  line;  nice, 
large,  bright  rooms,  full  basement, 
bath  and  electric  light,  garage,  fur- 
nace heat;  rent  only  $26  per  month  to 
desirable  party.  Call  Grand  311- A  or 
Park    127-X. 

FOR  RENT — A  5-room  house.  No.  405 
N.  24th  ave.  w.;  water,  ga.s,  electric 
lights,    toilet,      bath      and      hardwood 

■floirs;  st  )ve  heat;  water  paid;  reason- 
able rental;  vacant  May  1.  F.  I.  Sal- 
ter  Co..    303    Lonsdale    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  house  at  corner 
of  Fifth  ave.  e.  and  Superior  st.; 
bathroom,  electric  lighting,  gas  con- 
nection for  kitchen  range,  new  paper 
and  paint.  Inquire  of  C.  F.  Graff, 
405    Lonsdale    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  $8;  4-room 
flat,  $12.60;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers,   611  Alworth  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  modern  house. 
No.  214  Ms  E.  2nd  st. ;  hot  water  heat- 
ing plant;  very  easy  walking  distance; 
$35  per  month.  F.  L  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 10-room  heated  house  in 
East  End.  Rent  $70,  includes  heat,  hot 
and  cold  Mater,  janitor  service.  See 
N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Providence  bldg. 


refrisuuii-uts 


EUCLID  LODGE  NO.  198.  A.  F.  k  A.  M. 
—Sleets  at  West  Duluth,  si-cond  and  fourth 
Wednesda}-s  of  each  month  at  730  p.  m. 
Next  meeting,  April  12.  Work  Fir'.t  (k^ 
gree.  H.  W.  Lanncrs.  W.  M.;  A.  Dun- 
leavy,   secretary. 

DULITU    CU.\PTEB    NO.    59,    B.    A.    M.— 

.Meets  at  West  Duluth  first  and  third 
Wednesdays  of  each  month  at  730  p.  m. 
Next  meeting,  April  19.  1916.  Work— P. 
M.  and  .M.  E.  M.  degrees.  Boll  call  and 
W.   A.   PltUnger.   H.   P.   Dunlea^.   Sec. 

L.\KE8IDE  LODGE  NO.  281,  A.  F.  k  A. 
M. — Meets  first  and  third  Mondays  of  each 
month  at  8  o'clock  at  Masonic  hall.  Forty- 
fltth  avenue  east  and  Boblnson  street.  Next 
mnting,  special,  April  10,  1916.  Work- 
Third  dcgn-e.  William  A.  Hlcken.  W.  M.; 
.Nelson,  secretary,   4.">30  Cooke  (street  ea.sl. 

TRINITY  LOIKJE  NO.  282.  A.  F.  k  A.  U. 
— M't'ts  first  and  third  Mondays  at  8  o'clock 
In  WiHKlman  hall.  Twi-nty-flrst  avi-nue  west. 
N.xl  nutting  regular.  April  17,  1916.  Work 
— S>'cond  degree.  E.  H.  Pfeifer,  W.  M., 
1918  West  Third  street;  B.  E.  Wheeler, 
secrcfaiy,  2032  Wi'>t  Superior  street. 

A.  0.   V.  W.  ' 

FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  105  —  MIT.TS  AT 
Maccabee  hall,  21  Lake  avenue  north,  e^ery 
Thursday  at  8  p.  m.  Visiting  member?  wel- 
come. E.  A.  Vogt.  M.  W. ;  J.  A.  Lubansky. 
recorder;  0.  J.  Murrold  financier,  217  East 
Oriental  degree  April  27. 


George  F. 


Fifth  street. 


A.    0.    U.    W.— DULUTH    LODGE   NO.    10— 

nieeis  enry  second  and  fourth  Tuesday 
nights  at  Axa  hall.  221  We%t  ^iip-rlor 
street.      Next   meeting,    April    11,    1916.    at 

8  p.  ra.     Manln  E.   Heller.   SI.   W.;  B.   0. 

Foote,  recorder;  E.   F.   Heller,  financier.  509  Se.-ond  ave- 
nue east. 

ZENITH  COUNCIL  No!  l^K  BOVAL 
league.  n:eels  the  first  acd  third  Than- 
days  in  the  month,  at  8  o'rlo.-k.  In  ttaf 
old  MjsohIc  temple.  Sup  rior  strert  ud 
Second  avenue  east.  0.  S.  Kcsiilw, 
archon,  Wolvin  building;  H.  A.  Hall,  col- 
Ifctor.  IS  East  First  street. 

DULITU   LODGE    NO.    2S.    I.    0.    0.    F.— 

.Next    niL'etlng,     Friday    eveiUug.     Ar.ril    14. 

1916,  at  8  o'clock,  221  We^t  .Sup^.'lor 
stieet.  third  floor.  Work— First  degree  «iU  be  conferred. 
Odd  Fellows  welcome.  Charles  F.  Ottinger.  N  C  •  J 
A.   Braff,   Bee.   Sec. 


Hamilton, 
I  A.    Howe. 


WANTED— <llrl      for      general 
work.      1603    E.    4th    St. 


house- 


WANTED — <^;lrl    for      general      house- 
work.     6605    W.    6th    St. 


WANTED— Maid     for 
work.  2031  E.  1st  st. 


general     house- 


WANTED — fJirl    for  general  housework. 
6906   E.  Superior  st. 


WANTED—*  Hrl  for  general 
1115  E.  3rd  St. 


hotisework. 


WANTED— First-class  tailor.    Apply  at 
once.    A.  Hoekstra,  2429  W.  Superior  st. 

'wanted — Cash     paid     for     diamonds. 
Watches   repaired.   $1,  5   S.  5th  ave.  w. 


WANTED— First    class 
Phone    Mel.    8220. 


paper    hanger. 


^UMME^JESORTS^ 

FOR  SALE — I..a-ge  camp  sites  on  b^u- 
tlful  Lake  Vermilion;  sand  bathing 
beaches,  parks,  docks,  wells,  etc.; 
monthly  payments  as  low  as  $2,  with- 
out interest:  all  sites  sold  on  our 
"money  back"  guarantee.  Gray-Wer- 
tln    Co.,    Alworth    bldg. 

POR  SALF] — Prettily  located  summer 
cottage  (in  Pokegama  lake,  five  miles 
from  <;rand  Rapids.  Good  auto  road. 
Fine  fishing  and  hunting.  A.  L.  La 
Frenlere,  Grand  Rapids,  Minn. 

BEAUTIFUL  wooded  camp  sites  on 
Akley's  I'olnt.  Lake  Vermilion,  1  acre 
In  size.  Map  and  Information  from 
Wakemup  Bay  Outing  Co.,  606  Torrey 
bldg..    Duluth,   Minn. 

CLUBS 

ACRE  TRACTS ^ 

FOR  SALE — Two  acres  cleared  land  be- 
tween Lester  river  and  Exeter  Farms; 
near  to  neighbors  and  good  road;  two 
blocks  east  from  the  bus  line.  Quick 
Mkle  at  a  bargain.  Call  Park  183-X. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  work.     St. 
Luke's    hospital. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
130  6th  ave,  w. 


FOR  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  this 
year's  winning  R.  C.  R.  I.  Reds;  Vlc- 
laiiil  strain;  year-round  layers;  $1.60 
for  15,  $4.60  for  50:  order  earlv.  I.  W. 
•jillcland,  607  S-  71st  ave.  w.  *7ole  H6-A. 

HATCHING  EGC.S  from  my  choice 
S.  C.  White  Leghorns;  no  better  lay- 
ing strain;  16  eggs  $1;  100  eggs  $6. 
Mrs.  T.  J.  Griffith,  4309  London  road, 
Duluth;  Lake.  69-K. 

Park  &  Pollard's  poultry  feeds 
are  the  best.  Scratch  feed,  egg 
mash,  growing  feed,  etc.;  wheat 
corn,  etc.  <Jet  price  list.  Tess- 
man  Bros.  Co..  26-40   E.   Mich,  st. 

FOR  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  high- 
class  Barred  Plymouth  Rocks.  White 
Wyandottes,  R.  C.  Black  Mlnorcas. 
White  Leghorns.  Anconas  anl  turkeys. 
J.    T.    Mlchaud,    Lake.    298-L:    Park    4. 


FOR  SALFi- White  Rock  eggs,  Fishel 
famous  strain.  No.  1  pen,  $1.60.  16; 
No.  2  pen,  $2,  16.  Herbert  J.  Prout, 
Ironwood,    Mich^ 

FOR  S.'^LE— S.  C.  Rhode  Island  Red 
hatching  eggs.  S.  E.  Patterson,  4628 
Regent  St.     Phone  280-L  Lake. 

FOR  SALE — Eggs  for  hatching  from 
choice  Buff  Leghorns.  $1  '^er  16.  Dr. 
Zaun,    South    Range,   Wis. 

W.  r  RED  settings,  76c  Jap  Silki»B 
settings,  $3.     H.  I.  Gooch:     Mel.  8361. 

FOR  SALE — White  Orpington  eggs,  fl 
a  setting.     C.  Hegg.     Cole  361-Y. 


RENT— Nice,  heated,  furnished 
room,  with  or  without  light  house- 
keeping.    303  E.  8rd  St.;  Mel.  8061. 

F<>R  RENT — 2  unfurnished  rooms; 
downstairs;  suitable  for  housekeep- 
Ing.     Grand  829-A.   ^ 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms  complete 
for  light  housekeepinir.  The  Dakotah, 
119   W.   2nd  St. 

F<3R  RENT — Furnished  room  for  light 
housekeeping;  hot  water  heat.  420 
N.  24th  ave.  w. 

FOR  RENT — Rooms  for  light  house- 
keeping. All  conveniences.  228  E.  1st 
St.    Upstairs. 

FOR  RENT— Nicely  furnished  front 
room  in  private  family;  rent  $8.  331 
W.    3rd   St. 

FOR  RENT— Furnished  rooms  for  light 
housekeeping;  all  conveniences.  228 
E.  1st  St. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room,  all  con- 
venlences.   125  E.  5th  st.  Grand  1531-Y. 

FOR  RENT — 2  furnished  rooms  for  light 
housekleeplng.     No.  1  W.  Superior  St. 


FOR   RENT — Steam-heated     room     for 
light  housekeeping.     121  E.  2nd  st. 


FOR     RENT — Two     furnished 
keeping  rooms.   112   E.   1st  st. 


house. 


FOR     RENT — Two     furnished     rooms; 
modern.     210  3rd  ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT — Four   rooms;   all   conven- 
iences.    424  E.  7th  St. 


WANTED — <;irl  to  help  In  kitchen.  2631 
W.  Superior  st. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
1001  E.  2nd  St. 


WANTED — Experienced   cook.     1306    E. 
2nd    St. 


WANTED — Chambermaid.  Hotel  McKay. 
WANTED — Maid  at  1815  E.  2nd  st. 


^RIVAJIJJOSHTALS^ 

PRIVATE  HOME  before  and  during 
conflnement;  good  core  by  experienced 
nurse;  infarts  «ared  for.  Mrs.  Finklc, 
213   W.   3rd  st.   Mel.    2454. 

PRIVATE  HOME  for  women  before  and 
during  confinement;  expert  care;  in- 
fants cared  for.  Ida  Peaison,  M.  D., 
284   Harrison   ave..   St.    Paul. 


MRS.  K.  THORSTENSON,  nurse  and 
midwife;  private  home.  1602  28th  at.. 
Superior,    Wis.      Ogden    851-X. 


MRS.  H.  OLSON,  graduate  midwife; 
private  hospital  and  home.  329  N. 
B8th  ave.  w.  Phones,  Cole  178;  Cal.  270. 

MRS.  HANSON,  graduate  midwife;  fe- 
male  complaints.  413  7th  ave.  e.  Zen. 
1225.    

Mrs.  Ekstrom,  graduate  midwife.  1924  V4 
W.  3rd  St.     Lin.  163-D;  MaL  7468. 


LOST — On  the  afternoon  of  Feb.  5.  one 
certificate  of  U.  S.  Steel  corporation 
preferred  stock,  one  share.  No.  81878. 
Finder  please  notify  owner,  John  N. 
Nelson,  box  959,  care  of  Oliver  Iron 
Mining  Co.,  Virginia,   Minn. 

LOST — Will  party  who  found  box  con- 
taining silver  spoon  at  26th  ave.  w. 
and  2nd  st.  please  return  to  2426  W. 
2nd  St..  as  this  wedding  gift  is  valued 
very   hlghl.v. 


FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms.     623  W. 
2nd    St.      Mel.    5485. 


3     weeks,     lady's 
inscribed  Julius 
Re- 


LOST — Within     last 
nose   pincers   in   case 
Lando.  optician,  Milwaukee,  Wis 
turn    to    Herald.    Reward. 

LOST — $5    bill    and    small    change  on 

Piedmont    ave..    between    4th    and  6th 

St.      Return    1931    Piedmont    ave.;  re- 
ward. 


LOST — Round  brooch  set  with  pearls 
and  brilliants.  Return  to  318  E.  6th 
St..    or    call    «irand    1846-A.    Reward. 


LOST — French  poodle.  Reward  for  any 
Information  regarding  same.  Call 
Mel.    1278. 


LOST — Ladles'  handbag  in  Sunbeam 
theater;  return  to  La  Salle  hotel,  for 
reward.  


WANTEDJO^ENT^ 

WANTED  TO  RENT — Furnished  room 
with  board  by  gentleman;  must  be  be- 
tween 2nd  and  6th  aves.  w,  bejow  4th 
St.  State  terms.  Address  H  109,  Her- 
ald. 


FOR  RENT— May  1,  No.  706 »^  E.  4th 
St.,  6-room  heated  flat  with  janitor 
service,  $40.  Mass.  Real  Estate  Co., 
18    Phoenix    bldg. 


K.    OF   P. 
NORTH  STAB  LODGE   NO.  35,   K.   OF  P.— 

.M.^ets  every  Tu-sday,  7:30  p.  m,.  sixth 
floor.  Temple  building,  Superior  street  and 
Second  avenue  east.  Next  meeting,  jlprll 
11.  1916.  Work— Knight  rank.  W.  H. 
C.  C,  care  of  Duluth  Telephone  r<<mpany  B 
M.    of   F.j    205   First    National    bank,    K.    A. 


FOR   RENT 6-room  house,   310  W.   6th  |  Bishop.  K.  of  B.  and  8.,  505  Palladio  building 

modern   except  heat;   newly  deco 


st .  .  ^        . 

rated;    Immediate    possession.      Inquire 
rental  dept.,   Brldgeman  &  Russell. 


FOR  RENT — Two  6-room  flats:  one 
furnished;  gas.  bath,  hardwood  floors, 
electric  light,  large  yards.  $16.50,  $18. 
624   2nd  ave.   w. 


FOR  RENT — Heated  7-room  flat  In 
Dacey  apartments  with  water,  heat 
and  Janitor  service.  Call  Mel.  or 
(;rand    423. 


FOR  RENT — 6-rooin  duplex,  brick 
flat,  main  floor;  best  lighted  flat  in 
city.  $30.  Flat  A.  1014  E.  3rd  st.  Mel- 
rose 5643. 


FOR  RENT — Reasonable,  7-room  mod- 
ern flat;  gas  range;  beautiful  view  of 
lake.     426  E.  1st  st.  Inquire  top  floor. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  all  modern 
conveniences;  hot  water  heat;  cen- 
tral; reasonable  rent.    119  7th  ave.  w. 

FOR  RENT — 6  and  4-room  flat  April 
16;  very  central;  $26  and  $18.  24  and 
28    4th    ave.    e.    Melrose    6643. 

FOR  RENT — Five  rooms,  newly  dec- 
orated; modern  except  heat;  $22.60, 
water  paid.     1111   E.   2nd  st. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  219  E.  6th 
St.;  bath;  $12  per  month.  William  C. 
Sargent.  Providence  bldg^ 


FOR  RENT — Modern  6-room  flat;  heat; 
$25  per  month.  13  E.  4th  st.  Inquire 
Bridgeman-Russell    Co. 

FOR  RENT — Six-room  modern  flat; 
newly      built;       heated;     centrally    lo- 


cated.    631  W.  3rd  st. 


WANTED  TO  RENT — By    young 

private    family; 


man. 


y    younj 
well   furnished   room;    private 
East     end:     private     bath     preferred. 
Write  R  102,  Herald. 


WANTED  T<^  RE.NT — A  7-room  house, 
furnished.  East  end,  will  take  posses- 
sion May  1  for  six  months  or  year. 
P  106,  Herald. 

WANTED — Desk  room  with  use  of 
desk;  state  location  and  price.  Hur- 
ley Subscription  Agency,  Minneapolis, 
Minn. 

WANTED  TO  RENT^A  6-room  house, 
with  yard  and  building  that  can  be 
used  as  shop.     Call  Mel.  6642. 


LOST — Pink    cameo    brooch. 
Y.   W.   C.   A.   for  reward. 


Return    to 


n^omsT^ 

Duluth  Floral  Co.,  wholesale,  retail,  cTit 
flowers,    funeral  designs.  121  W.  Sup.  at 


JFORJALE— COWS^ 

FOR  SALE — S.  Goldflne  has  just  ar- 
rived with  carload  Of  the  finest  as- 
sortment of  fresh  rallch  cows  and 
cold  sprlng'^rs.  Both  phones;  stock 
vards.  1016  N.  6th  ave.  w.  Take  In- 
cline car  to  8th  at,  'walk  two  blocks 
northeast. 


FOR  SALE — Fresh  milch  cows  arriv- 
ing dally.  Will  buy  and  exchange  for 
beef  cattle.  8.  Wid4es.  2218  W.  »th 
at.;  Grand  2294-A,  UU.  4326. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  modern  ex- 
cept heat.  1210  E.  5th  St.  Mel.  1496  aft- 
er 11  a.   m. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  brick  flat. 
607  E.  6th  St.  Call  702  7th  ave.  e,  or 
Grand   1706-Y. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  4-room  flat.  Ap- 
ply 902  B.  3rd  st ,  or  call  362  either 
phone^^. 

FOR  RENT — Strictly  modern,  heated 
flat,  4  rooms  and  alcove.  227  11th 
ave.  e. 


FOR    RENT — Modern    4-room    flat;    no 
children;    garage    if    desired.      912    E. 

7th  st. 

hot    water 
829  W. 


FOR     RENT — 6-room     flat; 
furnace  and  all  conveniences. 
3rd    St. 


FOR  RENT — Modern  6-room  flat,  hot 
air  heat;  newly  decorated,  617 hi  E. 
6th  St.  

FOR  RENT — 4-room  modern  flat.  S. 
S.   Williamson.   515   Torrey  bldg^ 


FOR    RENT  —  6-room      brick      corner 
apartment.   East  end,  Mel.   1481. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern,  heated 
flat.   314   2nd  ave  east.  Mel.   4448. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat,  modern.  204 
E  4th  St.    Call  Grand  1906-A. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  remodeled. 
Grand  1661-X;   731   W.   1st   st. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat;  water,  heat. 
2902    W.    2nd   st.      Lin.   319-Y. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  modern  ex- 
cept heat.     620  3rd  ave.  e. ^ 


FOR  RENT — 7-room  house,  rear  of  109 
W.  6th  St.;  rooms  large  and  well  light- 
ed; can  be  arranged  for  two  fatnilles 
If  desired.     Call  617  Lake  ave.  n. 

FOR  RENT — 8-room  house,  modern  in 
every  respect;  centrally  located  at  811 
E.  1st  St.;  rent  $35  per  month.  Whit- 
ney Wall   Co.,    301   Torrey  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Modern  6^room  house, 
practically  new;  hot  water  heat;  $28. 
3  Exeter  St.,  near  29th  ave.  w.  Call 
Grand    1601-Y;    Mel.    2798.  ^ 


FOR  RENT— 1918  E.  8th  st.  to  .«mall 
family  for  summer;  modern  5-room 
house  furnished,  or  4-roms  unfur- 
nished.    Grand   2349-X. 


ZENITH  CAMP  NO.  5,  WOODMEN  OP 
the  World,  meets  on  first  and  third 
Friday  nights  of  month,  at  Foresten* 
hall.  Fourth  avenue  west  and  first 
street.  J.  H.  Larkln,  clerk,  312  Six- 
tieth avenue  cast.     Lakeside  23  K. 


.M.OESTIC    BEBEKAH    LODGE    NO.    60,    I. 

0.  0.  F.— Beguiar  meetings  first  and  third 
Thursdays  of  each  month.  8  p.  ra..  221 
West  Superior  street.  Next  meeting  Thurs- 
day evening,  April  6.  Initiation.  Begu- 
iar drill.  .Mrs.  Henrietta  Shaw,  N  G  • 
Lillian  Johnson,  secretary.  Grand  2113-Y     ' 


DULUTH  HOMESTEAD  NO.  3131.  BROTH- 
erliood  of  American  Yeomen,  meets  ivery 
Wednesday  evening  at  8  o'clock  sharp,  in 
.Maccabee  hall.  21  Lake  avenue  north. 
Herb  It  F.  Hanks,  foreman;  J.  J.  Palmurl 
lit,   office   in  his  drug  store,   2132   West   Third 


• -. II    ;  eoi.     ,y — .  Ill,    uiurc    iii    iii?    uimt    siv 

FOR  RENT — 9-room  East  end  home;  all    g^^^^i     Melrose  3769;  Llacoln  511-Y 
modern  conveniences;  will  lease  for  5 


vears;   references  required. 
6406. 


Call   Mel. 


M.    W.    .K. 

IMPEBUL  CAMP,  2206  —  MEETS  AT 
Forester  hall.  Fourth  avenue  west  and 
First  street,  second  and  fourth  Tuesdays  of 
each    month.      Wayne    E.    Richardson     con- 


FOR  RENT — Seven-room  house,  125  7th 

ave    w;  bath,  closet,  coal  range,  elec-        _ ^ 

trie   lights;    $22   per   month.     Mel.    3854.  !  sul;  Itooert  Rankin,  clerk,  care  Rankin  Printing  .-onipany. 

FOR   RENT— 1301%    E.   2nd   st.,   6-room  |  «H  «r  f'LAN    STEWABT    NO     50,    0.    s.     c._ 

modern  house.     Inquire  Henry  Nesbitt  Jj^yiV,  ^'7,'    ^^\  "^    ^^"^^  ^^;'''";Hr    •*"" 

jL  rn     R14  Sellwood  bldg-  Mel    1685.  UFt^V  ?"",,■    "   ^-    "••    *^-    ^-    *•    b»'l.    'orner 

&  CO.,  814   toenwooa   piub..   J"*^'.  JHS33d  Fourth  avinue  west  and   First   ktrect      .Next 

If'BEJ'g    reg\iUr    meeting,    April    19,    1916       D     A. 
CamiroM,  chief;  John  Gow,  Sec;  John  Buruell    flu    ser 
313  Tom-y  building.  '  °^'- 


FOR  RENT — May  1,  large  modern  de- 
tached h/ouse;  best  part  of  East  end; 
rent  reasonable.     Grand  720. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  house;  modern 
except  heat;  Park  Point.  Inquire  Ed- 
mont.  18  Third  ave. 


w. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  brick  house,  1924 
E.  Superior  St.;  strictly  modern.  H. 
Fee,  phone  Mel.   6143. 


FOR  RENT — Fine,  light,  modern  house 
at  1420  E.  4th  st.  C.  P.  Johnson,  219 
W.  Superior  st.  


FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  house  in 
East  end.  S.  S.  Williamson,  616  Tor- 
rey   bldg. ^ 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  7-room  house 
In  East  end.     Address  R  72.  Herald. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  house.  No.  6  W. 
6th    St.      Inquire   116    E.    3rd    st. 


FOR  RENT — Nos.  1718  and  1720  E. 
perior  st.     E.  P.  Alexander. 


Su- 


FOR   RENT — 6-room   house;   hot   water 
heat.     Call  619  Vi   E.  6th  st. 


FOR     RENT — 6-room      modern      house. 
1130  E.   3rd   st.     Price  $30. 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED 

BOARD  AND~1rOOM  OFFERED^ 
Strictly  private;  references  must  be 
furnished.      301   E.   4th  st. 

PRIVATE  FAMILY,  gentleman  pre- 
ferred.  $5.60  per  week.  27  N.  29th 
ave.   w. 

Modern  furnished  room  with  board. 
Mel.   4184.   213   E.   3rd  st. 


BOATS  AJIDJJOTORBOATS^^ 

FOR  SALE — 35-foot.  40-horse  power 
motor  boat.  Capitol  engine.  Dingle 
hull  Call  or  write  to  300  Alworth 
bldg.,   Duluth. 

FOR  SALE — 6  launches  and  2  hulls;  20 
to  40  feet.  Peterson  Boat  Livery,  Su- 
perior.    (31dphone^ 

FOR  SALE — Two  16-foot  rowboats  and 
boathouse.     Call  Grand  996.  C.  Schobcr. 


FOR   RENT— 4-room  flat,   $10. 
(tb  St. 


817   E. 


WAU^PAPER^ 

Experienced  and  reliable  paper-hanger 
will  furnish  new  and  up-to-date  pat- 
terns and  paper  an  ordinary  sized 
room  for  $4.50.  Painting  and  tinting 
neatly  done;  prompt  and  satisfactory- 
work  guaranteed.  Decorator,  31  W. 
ted  St.     Mel.  4303;  Grand  696-X. 


MODEBN  SAMABIT.VVS 
ALPHA  COUNCIL  NO.  1--T.\Ke'  NOTICE: 
That  the  Samaritan  degree  meets  lb"  first 
and  third  Wednesdays,  and  the  Beii;-flcent 
degree  the  second  and  fourth  Wednesdays  of 
the  month,  at  12  East  Superior  street 
Empress  theater  building.  W.  B.  Henderson,  G  8  ; 
John  F.  Davis,  scribe;  F.  A.  .Noble,  F.  8.,  201  First 
National  Bank  building;  Mrs.  11.  P.  Lawson,  lady  G.  8. 

WE-KE-MA-WAUP  TBI  BE  NO.  17.  I.   0.  B~ 

M.,  meets  the  second  and  fourth  Mondays 
of  the  month  at  8  p.  m.  sharp,  at  Ma«- 
cabee  hall,  21  Lake  avenue  north.  Next 
meeting,  April  10.  Degree  wwrk.  H.  H. 
Bartllng  sachem;  H.  J.  McGlnle}-,  chief  of 
record,  307  Columbia  building. 

WIDEB  OF  OWLS,  DULITU  NEST 
No.  1200— Meetings  are  held  every 
Wednesday  evening  at  Ovils'  hall.  418 
West  Superior  street.  s?cond  floor. 
Joseph  E.  Feaks,  secretarj-.  302  East 
Fifth   street. 

MOD-^rBN  BKOTUEBUOOD  OF  AMEBICA.— 
Duluth  Central  Lodge  .No.  450.  M.  B.  A., 
meets  Crst  and  third  Tuesdays  at  ilg 
West  Superior  street.  Charles  V.  Uanion. 
s.-cretary,  507  West  Fifth  street.  Zenith 
phone   No.    221 1-Y   Grand. 

MYSTIC  WOBKEBS  OF  THE  WOBLD.— 

Zenith  Lodge  No.  1015  meets  the  second 
and  fourth  Mondays  of  the  month,  at  8 
p.  m.,  at  Bowley  hall.  112  West  Flrrt 
Street,  upsUirs.  E.  A.  Kuf,  scc.-ettjy 
rod  treaaurer.  1331  East  Seventh  -treet. 


Co.E 


DULUTH  TEMPLE  NO.  186,  CAMEL.S  OT 
the  World,  meets  every  Thursday  evening  ig 
8  o'clock  sharp,  at  Camels'  Temple  hall. 
12  East  Superior  street.  BusincN^  meetiof 
Thursday,  April  13.  W.  H.  Koukler,  ruler, 
___  Grand  909-Y.  Martin  Johnson,  secretary, 
plK.  and   1588;   Melrose,    3979;   temple    ball   i)boiie. 

Grand  1991  Y. 

THIBD      INFANTBY,      M.      N.    IT, 

meets  every  Thursday  evening,  h  p.  m.. 

Armory,  ThirteenlU  avenue  east.     .Next 

meeting,      April      13.        George      W. 

Stiles,     captain;    William    A.     Brown,    Hrst    lleut  aant; 

John    J     Harrison,    second   lieutenant. ^^ 

WEST  DULUTH  LODGE  .NO.  1478,  LOUL 
Order  of  Moose,  meets  every  Wedn  sdiy  it 
Moose  haii,   Bamsey  street  and  Central  ave- 

nue.      H.    J.    White,    secretary.    201    North 

Fifty  s  "ond  avenue  west. _ 

BENEVOLE.NT   OBDEB   OF   BE.\\EBS— 
Duluth     Lodge     No.     155.     B.     0.     B., 
meets  Thursday,  March  2  and  16,  1916. 
at    Woodman    hall,    Twenty-flrsl    avenue    »est    and    First 
street.      K.    A.    Franklin,    gecreUry,    2006   West    Superior 
Lincoln  169  A; ^ 

DLLITH  LODGE  NO.  505.  LOYAL  OBDEi 
of  Mooce,  meets  every  Tuesday  at  8  o'cloek, 
Mooce  ball.  224  West  Flrtt  street.  Cart 
Sehm,  secntuj. 


w 


L 


Street.     Line 


V 


■iiiMiM  UP-reT  ■« 


•n — a 


•  r»- 


H 


^ 


tfa*. 


•-M^ 


LAST  EDITION 


|U 


THE  DULUTIH 


'Vtso^   PAGES 


VOLUME  XXXIV— NO.  3. 


WEDNESDAY  EVENING,  APRIL  12,  1916. 


i  w  ^  .i  f  7^      TWO  CENTS. 


VILLA  MASKS  TRAIL  AS  HE  FLEES  FROM  AMERIIN  TRMPS 


PARDONS  ARE  REFUSED 
SMITH  AND  PICKIT; 
MUST  SERVE  SENTENCE 


wrJ 


Clemency  Denied  to  For- 
mer State  Treasurer  By 
Pardon  Board. 


1 


WIU  PROBABIY  Bf  APPOINTED 
ASSISTANT  SfCRfTARY  Of  WAR 


y 


f 

i 

I 

1 

- 

iPickit  Also  Fails  to  Escape 

Going   to   State 

Prison. 


Joseph  Goldstein.  Who  Was 

Sentenced  From  St.  Louis 

County,  Pardoned. 


Rt.  Paul.  Minn..  April  12.— •  Sp#»<ial  to 
The  Htrald.) — Th«'  hopf^s  of  Walter  J. 
Smith,  f<.nn«  r  state  treasurer.  an.l 
Rob.  rt  1-'.  rUkit  of  r>>«aplng  prison 
t.rins  vanished  this  Hft'inoon  wh.  n 
the  Plate  pardon  h.-ard  refused  to  grant 
fuith.  r  ,  Umemy  t<»  elth<r  man.  Thi  y 
imiPt  h'crin  lh«li  prison  ^»nt' nc<s  im- 
im  diately. 

The  pardon  boaiM  arrived  at  Its  de- 
cl.«lon  ill  tlu  fate  of  hundvds  of  ttjle- 
uran\s  urpiiiK  elttuency  for  the  men. 
It  was  bellrv.  d  the  fact  that  Judsi 
l)l<k.<!on  of  the  Ramsey  di.'^trUt  couit. 
who  sent' n<  •  d  the  two.  had  the  op- 
p«»rtiinitv  ti>  SUSP"  nd  sentente  had  he 
ao  <le.s|red.  tnilitat'd  strongly  against 
Smith   and    I'lekit. 

M<  iiib.  rs  of  th'  pardon  board  were  of 
the  oidnlon  i  int  they  wer<  b'  iiiK  Hsk«d 
to  do  soiiM  thinK  which  the  ftlal  jud^e 
refused    to  do. 

'riirt'o  rnrilonM  (>rantr«l. 
The  bo'M'l  Kii''!"'!  thret-  pardons  aii>l 
t<  n  loiiinuitaiiops  if  sent<  nc'  and  took 
Fonie  ruses  nnd.  r  advisennnt.  All  th" 
r.  main.'.er  of  the  110  cases  were  elth*  r 
c'Ulliuud    or    denit  d. 

The  bortrd  d<  ni«  d  Stella  Brf^nn.in  a 
r.'irdon.  Sh»'  Is  the  Minneapolis  wonian 
who  kill'd  h»  r  sit  pchildren. 
■Phe  followinf;  w<  re  pardoned: 
Joseph  «'iold.«<teln,  sentennd  from  Pt. 
Loiil.s  co\inl.v  In  IJtll  to  an  apRrepate 
term  of  thirt>-t\vo  years  for  ^rand 
laneuy.  escaping  from  an  officer  and 
two    charges    of    assault.       He    l.s    par- 

rT'Tintlnu.d   on    pHRe   8.  second  column.) 

TWO  CMENTJONS 
OF  GEORGIA  G.  0.  P. 

Two  Separate  Delegations 

Will  Be  Sent  to  National 

Convention. 

Atlanta.  Ua..  April  12.— That  Georgia 
R. publicans  will  send  two  separate 
delejrations  to  the  national  convention 
in  ♦:'hlcaKo  wa.s  made  virtually  certain 
todav  by  tlie  pratlurlnfc  in  Macon  and 
Atlaiita  of  delt-Rates  to  separate  Re- 
publican conventions,  each  claiming  to 
represent  the  Republican  party  In  this 
stitte. 

Tlie  faction  meeting  at  Macon  is 
he«d<d  by  Walter  H.  Johnson,  chair- 
man of  the  Republican  state  commit- 
tee while  that  met-tlnf;  here  is  led  by 
Henry  S.  Jackson.  Republban  national 
committeeman    from    (ioorgia. 

l>eclslon  to  hold  separate  conventions 
ratne  after  a  meeting  last  mf>nth  at 
Macon.  Avhith  broke  up  In  disorder. 
I.,ocal  isi^ues  are  responsible  for  the 
differences. 

VIOLENT^MBARDING 


GERMANS  RENEW  DRIVE 
\  VERDUN  IN  MORNING; 
REPULSED.  SAY  FRENCH 


lH)j 


Troops  Advance  on  Cau- 

rettes    Woods,    Using 

Flame  Projectors. 


fRENCH  CfWMANDfl)  iMX  AT 
rRO»  ATTBt  BONG  WOUNDED 


Only   Artillery    Firing    Re- 
ported in  Douaumont- 
Vaux  Sector. 


CARRANZISTAS  DP  J\T 
DANDITS  IN  A  FIV^HOUR 
ENGAGEMENT  AT  PASAJE 


Germans   Claim   to    Have 

Gained    Ground    in 

Caillette  Woods. 


Paris,  April  12.  11:46  a.  m.— The  Ger- 
man assault  on  the  Verdun  front  west 
of  the  Meuse  was  renewed  this  morn- 
ing. Troops  advanced  on  Caurettes 
wood,  south  of  Cumleres,  the  war  office 
announced,  using  flame  projector^  but 
were   repulsed. 

East  of  the  Meuse  In  the  Douaumont- 
Vaux    sector    there    was    only    artillery 

fighting. 

The  war  office  says  It  has  been  con- 
firmed that  the  German  losses  yester- 
day  were  very  heavy. 


Contreras   and   Ceniceros 

Forces  Attack  Garrison 

Stationed  There. 


Outlaws  Flee  to  the  Hills, 

Leaving  Seventy  Dead 

Behind. 


WEU  KNOWN  AUTHOR  FOUND 

DEAD  AT  HIS  TELEPHONE 


PEONS  SPREAD 
RUMORS  THAT 
CHIEF  IS  DEAD 


Mexican    Military   Officers 
Believe  He  Is  Hiding  in 
Mountains.       ^ 


r. — Zt^mi 


Gen.  Reyes,  Supposed  to 

Have  Been  Implicated, 

Not  There. 


MEREDITH  NICHOLSON. 

Washington.      April      12.  —  Meredith 
Nichol.von    of    Indianapolis,     an    author,    j^g^inst  Verdun  yesterday 
practically    has    been    agreed    upon    by  -     ■- 

President  Wilson  and  Se<  retary  Raker 
for  appointment  as  assistant  secretary 
of  war.  Mr.  N'lcholson  Is  a  close  per- 
gonal friend  of  Mr.  Baker  and  Is  under- 
Mlood  to  have  the  support  of  Mce 
President    Marshall. 


DUTCH  SHIPS 
TORPEDOED 

Special  Report  on  Sinking 

of  Steamships  Palembang 

and  Tubantia. 


Germaaii   <>aiii    Vroand. 

Berlin,  April  12,  via  London.  3:38 
p.  m. — German  troops  In  the  operations 
against  Verdun  yesterday  gained  some 
ground  In  Caillette  woods,  southeast  of 
Fort  Douaumont,  according  to  the  of- 
ficial statement  Issued  today  by  the 
German  army  headquarters. 


Trying  to  Reeover  Lout  Groand. 

Paris,  April  12. — While  bringing  up 
reinforcements  to  resume  their  attack 
on  L.e  Mort  Homme,  the  hill  of  the 
Dead  Man.  the  Germans  are  trying  to 
recover  the  ground  regained  by  the 
French  In  Caillette  woods  and  to  the 
north  between  Douaumont  and  Vaux. 

The  French  positions  there  describe 
an  arc  from  a  point  south  of  Douau- 
mont fort  to  the  center  of  the  village 
of  Vaux.  and  the  front  Is  a  little  less 
than  two  njlles  In  length. 

For  three  days  the  only  actions  on 
the  east  hank  of  th"  Meuse  have  been 
c«nteiid  ther<>  with  the  habitual  prep- 
aration In  heavily  concentrated  artil- 
lery fire,  with  a  finishing  touch  in  the 
form    of    a 


GEN.  DE  VILLARET. 

It  is  reported  that  Gen  de  Villa  ret, 
a  corps  commander  fn  the  French  army, 
is  back  at  the  front  after  suffering  * 
severe  wound  while  Ip  the  trenches. 


HOLLAND  NEEDS  MUOH 
GRAIN  FBOIf  AMERICA 

Large    Importations    Pro- 
posed If  England  Will  Give 
Her  Ce»3ent. 


Torreon,  Mex.,  April  11.  via  El  Paso 
Junction,  April  12.— Details  of  a  five- 
hour  battle  between  the  Carranza  gar- 
rison at  Pasaje,  Durango,  and  an  at- 
tacking   force    composed     of     Contreras 

i  and    Ceniceros    bandits     were     brought 

'  here  today.  The  outlaws  fled  in  dis- 
order into  the  hills  of  the  Nazas  dis- 
trict after  losing  seventy  killed.  It  is 
reported.       The     de     facto     troops     had 

1  four  dead.  .  ..      . 

The  battle  took  place  on  Sunday. 
First  reports   were   that   the   attacking 

I  force   was  commanded  by  Gen.  Canuto 

ReyeN   Not   Impllratrd. 

As  negotiations  have  been  under  way 
for  the  surrender  of  <ien.  Reyes  under 
an  amnesty  grant,  bitter  disappoint- 
ment was  expresstid  by  Carranza  offi- 
cials. The  latest  details,  however,  seem 
to  show  that  Reyes  was  not  Implicated. 

A  doctor  who  treated  men  wounded 
in  the  battle  said  that  the  Contreras 
and  Ceniceros  attackers  were  subpected 
to  withering  fire  from  the  garrison. 
They  fled  in  disorder.  He  arrived  in 
time  to  count  the  bodies  of  seventy  of 
the  outlaws  scattered  over  the  battle 
grounds.  Among  the  dead  were  a 
colonel  and  a  captain. 

After  the  battle,   word  was  brought 


Spreading  of  Death  Stories 

Favorite  Trick  of  the 

Bandit  Leader. 


Gen.  Pershing  Has  Estab- 
lished New  Army  Base 
at  Satevo. 


3 


Says  Pieces  of  Metal  on 
Latter    Came    From    a 
Schwartzkopf  Torpedo. 


Amsterdam,  via  London,  April  12. — 
The  Dutch  shipping  council,  which  was 
entrusted  by  the  government  with  the 
official  Investigation  Into  the  sinking 
of  the  Dutch  steamships  Palembang 
and  Tubantia,  has  Issued  the  report  of 
its    findings. 

With  regard  to  the  Palembang  the 
report  says: 

"Three  exploslotis  took  place.  The 
first  was  caused  by  the  explosion  at 
some  distance,  by  a  drifting  mine,  fired 
upon  by  a  Hrltlsh  destioyer.  After 
tho  explosion  the  Palembang  remained 
undamaged-  The  second  explosion  w.as 
caused  bv  a  torpedo,  fired  at  short 
range,  which  hit  the  Palembang.  It 
could  not  have  been  fired  by  the  Brit- 
ish'   destroyer,      because     the      torpedo 


(Continued  on  page  8,  second  column.) 

BRITISiTREPUi^ED 
BY  TURK  FORCES 

Sanguinary  Battle  Occurs 

in  Mesopotamia,  Is 

Ottoman  Report. 

Pt-rlln.  April  12,  by  wirele.ss  to  Pay- 
vllle. — A  British  Mesopotamia  force, 
!  composed  of  troops  transferred  from 
i  the  Dardanelles,  were  repuls«  d  by 
Turkish  troops  In  a  sanguinary  battle 
lasting  six  hours  near  Felable  on 
April  9.  according  to  a  Turkish  head- 
quarter's  report  dated  April  11.  The 
statement  adds  that  more  than  3.000 
dead  British  were  counted  after  the 
battle. 


The    Hague,      April    11.    via    London, 

April    12.— According   to   figures   given 

the  Associated  I'ress  by  the  Dutch  gov- 

,  ernment.   the,  grain   bureau   of  Holland 

couple    of    hours    of    heavy  1  intends    to    Import    from    America    this 

year  1.180,000  tons  of  maize,  with  a 
value  of  $46,900,000.  and  140.000  tons  of 
rye  valued  at  $7,600,000,  provided 
Great  Britain  consents  to  increase  the 
present  insufficient  Import  supply  of 
76  000  t.ns  monthly  to  110.000.  Nego- 
tiations on  that  subject  are  still  pend- 
ing. Since  January  no  private  buying 
of  maize  or  rye  has  been  permitted, 
government  monopoly  having  been  es- 
tablished. „   .     ,  ,   *    I      ,i„. 

Should  Great  Britain  persist  in  lim- 
iting the  supply  to  75,000  tons  a  month 
the  Dutch  government  will  purchase 
805.000   tons   of   maize   and   95.000   tons 

°  As^^for  wheat  and  flour  the  govern- 
ment win  import  from  America  at 
least  as  much  as  last  year,  which  was 
about  tJOO.OOO  tons  of  wheat  value^d  at 
$36  700.000  and  278.000  tons  of  flour 
valued  at   $6,900,000. 

— . ♦         

Harbor*  Bill  In  Senate. 

Washington.  April  12.— The  rivers 
and  harbors  appropriation  bill  carry- 
ing $40,000,000,  passeOi  by  the  house 
late  yesterday  by  a  vote  of  210  to  133. 
went  to  the  senate,  today,  where  It  is 
expected  to  meet  wjth,  further  opposi- 
tion. "  • 


(Continued    on    page    8,    first   column.) 

POWDER  PUNT  IS 
BLOWN  TO  PIECES 

Three  Persons  Killed  When 

Dupont  Works  in  West 

Virginia  Explode. 

Bluefleld.  W.  Va..  April  12.— Three 
persons  were  killed,  one  perhaps  fa- 
tally Injured  and  two  others  less  seri- 
ously hurt  at  the  Nemours  plant  of  the 
Dupont  Powder  compan>%  eight  miles 
from  here  early  today,  when  4.000  kegs 
of  black  powder  exploded.  The  plant 
was  almost  completely  destroyed  with 
a  loss  of  about  $100,000. 

The  force  of  the  explosions  was  such 
that  houses  In  the  little  village  were 
wrecked  and  the  sound  could  be  plainly 

heard  here.  ,  , 

The  principal  damage  was  done  by 
the  first  explosion,  v.hlch  Is  said  to 
have  completely  destroyed  the  build  ng 
In  which  it  occurred.  The  sjicceeding 
explosions  were  believed  to  have  been 
caused    by    flying    embers    and    were    of 

^*^  Nemours' Is'located  in  a  wild  country 
and  all  wires  leadlngr  to  the  town  were 
?oin  down.  The  plant  has  been  work- 
ing day  and  night  on  war  orders. 


FOUND  DEAD 
INJJBRARY 

Richard  Harding  Davis  Dies 

Suddenly  at  Mount 

Kisco,  N.  Y. 


El  Paso,  Tex..  April  12. — Masking  h! 
trail  with  the  deluding  fiction  sprea 
broadcast  by  Mexican  peons  that  he  i^ 
dead  of  his  wounds,  Francisco  Villa  in 
thought  by  Mexican  military  officer^ 
in  Juarez  to  be  safely  hidden  in  the 
Sierra  Madre  mountains.  while  thd 
American  cavalry  are  pursuing  a  rear 
guard  band  of  Villa  bandits,  ..'hose 
strategy  it  is  to  beguile  Villa's  pur- 
suers away  from  the  hiding  place  tf 
their  chief. 

Mexican  foUr.wer.->i  of  Villa  in  other 
campaigns  say  it  was  a  favorite  triclc 
of  Villa  when  the  chase  became  hot 
for  the  bandit  to  have  the  story  spreail 
that  he  was  dead,  that  the  ardor  of 
pursuers  might  be  dampened. 

Brla-.-Gen.  Pershing  has  estnblishel 
n  new  base  at  Satevo,  according  to  in- 
formation   here. 

There  is  nothing  official  here  or  at 
army  headquarters  at  Columbus  to 
confirm  a  report  that  Troops  K  and  M. 
Seventh  cavalry,  killed  a  niimber  of 
Villa  bandits  and  captured  thirty-fU'e 
others    last    Saturday    south    of    Satevo. 


One  of    Most  Popular    of 

American  Authors  and 

Playwrights. 


THE  FIRST  DAY  OUT. 


ON  GREEK  FRONTIER  I  '^^^  TVs"  V.'S.''\i^t  '^L 


Paris.  April  12.— Resumption  of  vio- 
lent cnnncmading  along  the  (Jreek 
frontier  In  the  vicinity  f-f  r;i,  vgell  and 
Dolran,  Is  reported  In  a  dlspati  h  from 
SaloniUl  to  the  Journal.  It  Is  said  tlie 
French   artillery    had    the    advantage. 

It  Is  ;ilso  r.ported  that  the  (Jermanlc 
allies  captured  the  fortified  position  at 
Dfcve  'i"(  pt,  but.  this  has  not  been  con- 
firmed. 

CONTENDS  SErZURE 

OF  MEN  JUSTIFIED 

Washington.  April  12.— Great  Brit- 
ain's note  replying  to  the  American 
protests  against  the  .seizure  of  thirty- 
eight  Ausiritin.«.  c.crmiins  and  Turks 
from  the  American  nleamer  China  near 
Shanghai  was  mude  public  today  by  the 
state  department.  It  contends  the 
seizure  is  justified  on  the  ground  that 
the  prisoners  had  been  engaged  in 
plots  against  Pritain  In  th»-  Far  Kast 
and  were  atl«  mptlng  to  return  home  to 
take  up  arni.s. 


torpedo    was    meant    for    the    destroyer, 
but,    njlsslng    it.    hit    the   Palembang. 
Third    KxpIoMlon    Torpedo. 
"The  third  explosion  al.<o   was  a  tor- 
pedo.     The    first    mate    of    the    steam, 
ship   clearlv   saw    its   track.      This   tor- 
pedo was  aimed  at  the  Palembang.  The 
Palembang   at    the    time   of   the   second 
and    third    explosions    was    motionless 
and  there  w^as  therefore  no  possibility 
of  a   collision  with  an  anchored  mine." 
With  regard  to  the  Tubantia  the  re- 
port   says: 

"The  ship  was  preparing  to  cast 
anchor  when  she  was  hit  and  a  severe 
explosion  took  place  In  the  coal  bunk- 
ers on  the  starboard  side  Witnesses 
obseived  a  streiik  on  the  water  ap- 
proaching the  Tubantia  at  great  speed, 
j  directed  at  th*-  point  where  the  ex- 
:  plosion  occuried. 

1  "From  investigations  made  by  ex- 
1  perts  It  Is  clearly  shown  that  the 
j  pieces  of  metal  in  the  Tubantla's  boats 
I  come  from  a  .Schwartzkopf  torpedo." 

Urbate  on  AsrlcuHural  Bill. 

\Vashingt<m.  April  12. — Debate  on 
the  agricultural  appropriation  bill 
carrying  $21,600,000.  was  continued  in 
the   house  today. 


SUMMARY  OF  THE  WAR  NEWS 

In   CaureMri.    ^vood,   JiiHt    went    of   th.-  After    a    winter    of    Inaetlvlly    nlouK 

Meukf  rlv«T,  ain»lhrr  attempt  to  break  n,^  (ireek  frontier.  Iiea\y  flgbtinK  I" 
the   rreneh   lln.-  defeiiilInK  Verdun   w^*     ^^^^^.  „„j^,  ,^„y,  althoagh  apparently  It 

:r;?:i'''„rV::;.r:  o^nm•:.«\^*«.I^M^fr«nrra^  ..  -tm  connne,.  pr.....|,,«..,  «o  art.Hery 
•iH>H  «l«e  altwek  »vaH  reiuiUeil.  Kant  ol  I  aotlonN.  An  unconfirmed  report  froaa 
the  river  there  wvkx  no  Infantry  fight-  '•  Snlonlkl  telK  of  the  capture  of  a  fortl- 
Ing  »lMrln>;-  the  iiluht.  nlthoiiKh  '''e  ar-  i  fi,.,!  itonltlon  by  the  ticrmanlo  allieM, 
tlllerx   kept   »P  •<«  Inees^ant  fire.  '  but    no    far    an    In    Indicated     no    large 

—   .    .  ^  *   «*   ««.i..«     fr»ni  I  bodlcM   of   Infantry   have   been   engnsed. 

The      official      report   of   toilny     iron*  i 
Berlin  K«y»  <ierman  troopw  ixnlned  wome  j       qpi,^    destruction    of    nritUh    Mhlpplnv. 
icrouiid    In   <  nlllctic   wood.  miuthciiHt   0(^,1,1,.^    t^    cnuMlng    concern    In    Kiiglnnd, 
Douuuniuut  Mild  that  xcvcral  French  at-  I  ..ontlnucn. .    The    Senator,   a   new    IlritUh 
lackM  broke  down   »\Uh  hcM«  >    loxnen.       ,  ;i.50«»-toii    MtcamNkIp    bai*    been    nent    to 

lb.    official    French    Mtatcment    nay-  '  J»"    bottom.      The    crew    U    believed    to 

1li«-    oiiiciai     ^  "\      ,.„_,„_.■„ -,.^  fiuht-  ,  ha»e  been  rcMPued. 
the  (iernian  losnen  In  >e»ter«la>  n  figbt-  1 

lug  were   very  hca^  y.      Prenn  dlMpatchcn  Official    Invcntlgntlon    of    the    xlnklng 

from    l»nrlH    give    praise    to    the   ticrmnn     „|   ,|,^   Dutch  NtcaiUMhlpN   Tobantla   nnd 


MoldlcrH  who  after  nearly  two  nioUthM 
of  the  flcrcent  fighting  keep  up  the 
■truitulc  with  no  vUlblc  dlinunltlon  of 
courage  and  ardor..  The  I  rench.  too. 
•untuln  the  nhock  of  buttle  wKh  no 
evtdenecH    of    fatigue    and    the    Mtrugglc 


Palentl;uiig    han    rcKulted    In    u    finding 
that   both   were   torpedoed. 

«ipatn  Ik  awtiltliig  further  liirorma- 
tlon  before  deciding  Itn  eournr  In  re- 
■pect     to    the     Minkltig     of    the     •ipanlNh 


ending.  I**'  '••'  "***• 


Mount  KIsco,  N.  T.,  April  12.— Rich- 
ard Harding  Davis,  author  and  war 
correspondent,  died  at  his  horne  here 
late  last  night  from  heart  trouble.  His 
body  was  found  early  this  morning 
and  he  had  apparently  been  stricken 
while  at  his  telephone. 

He  had  gone  into  his  library  to  dic- 
tate a  telegram  to  "a  friend  in  New 
York  city.  His  wife  assumed,  when  he 
did  not  return,  that  he  had  seated  him- 
self to  read  and  did  not  visit  the  li- 
brary until  after  midnight. 

Mr.  Davis  had  been  in  failing  health 
for  some  time  and  had  sought  quiet 
at  his  country  place.  Cross  Roads 
farms,  under  the  care  of  his  wife,  who 
was  Bessie  McCoy,  the  actress. 
Popular  Author. 

Richard  Harding  Davis,  one  of  the 
most  popular  of  American  writers,  a 
playwright  also  and  a  veteran  corre- 
spondent of  five  wars,  including  the 
present,  was  born  in  Philadelphia  in 
18C4.  the  son  of  L.  Clarke  Davis  and 
Rebecca  Harding  Davis,  also  a  writer. 

After  being  educated  at  Lehigh  and 
John  Hopkins  universities,  Mr.  Davis 
entered  Journalism,  starting  with  the 
Philadelphia  Press  and  after  serving 
on  the  New  York  Evening  Sun.  He 
was  corre.spondent  during  the  Turco- 
Greek,  Spanish-American.  South  Africa 
and  Russo-Japanese  wars  for  the  Lon- 
don Times  and  the.  New  York  Herald 
and  during  the  present  war  wrote  dis- 
patches  for   a   syndicate.   • 

His  earliest  and  most  widely  read 
book.  "Soldiery  of  ForUine."  was  pub- 
lished in  1899.  and  in  succeeding  years 
he  wrote  more  than  thirty  volumes  of 
fiction  and  w'ar  experiences,  together 
with  a  number  of  plays  and  numerous 
short    stories. 

In  1899  Mr.  Davis  married  Cecil 
Clark,  daughter  of  J.  M.  Clark  of  Chi- 
cago, and  was  divorced  by  her  in  1912. 
A  few  days  later  Mr.  Davis  married 
Miss  McCoy,  who  was  the  famous 
Yama  Yamk  girl  In  a  popular  musical 
comedy.     A  daughter.  Hope  Davis,  was 

born. 

..    .    ♦ 

Xlraragua   RatlflcM   Treaty. 

Washington,  April  12. — Ratification 
by  the  Nlcaraguan  congress  of  the 
treaty  by  which  United  States  acquires 
for  $3,000,000  canal  route  rights  and  a 
coaling  station  on  Fonseca  bay.  was 
announced  in  a  dispatch  received  here 
late  yesterday  from  Managua  by  Gen. 
Chamorro.  the  Nlcaraguan  minister. 
The  treaty  already  has  been  ratified  by 
the  United  States  senate. 


♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦^♦♦♦♦♦♦■I4'»H 


Battle    Xot    Mentioned. 

Washington.    April    12. — Reports   of  ^ 
battle     between     troop*  rs     of    the     Sey- 

< Continued    on   page   8.   third   column^ 

TEMPfJmON 
FOR  HUGHES 


Senator  Works  Denounces 

Politicians  Who  Are  Trying 

to  Bait  Justice. 


Says  Use  of  Name  as  Can- 
didate Is  an  Offense  to 
the  Country. 


Washington,  April  12.  —  Senate* 
Works,  Rt  publican,  today  coupled  arX 
attack  on  the  army  bill  with  a  denun-* 
elation  of  politicians  who,  he  declared^ 
were  trying  to  tempt  Justice  Hughe^^ 
with  a  presidential  nomination. 

"Partisan  politics,"  declared  the  Call* 
fornia  senator.  "Is  ruthless  In  its  de;« 
mands  and  invades  the  most  sacreOl 
precincts  of  the  national  gov*  rnmc  nf. 
It  is  seeking  place  and  pelf  and  powei»-( 
wherever  and  whenever  it  can  find  «.n«  " 
trance. 

"Just  now  it  Is  attempting  to  Invade 
the  supreme  court  of  the  United  States* 
It  is  presenting  to  a  member  of  that 
body  the  greatest  temptation  that  coul<t 
be  offered  to  an  American  <  itizen — to 
surrender  his  place  on  the  bench  an4 
become  a  candidate  for  political  ofJIee, 
This  attempt  to  bring  the  highest  ju^ 
dtclal  tribunal  of  the  country,  or  any 
members  of  it  into  politics  should  h§. 
resented  not  only  by  the  member  td  , 
whom  the  tempting  offer  is  made  bu.t  : 
by  the  whole  country. 

Should  Be    AbMolutrly   Separated. 

"To  my  mind  it  is  of  the  gravest  im- 
portance that  the  great  tribunal  shoula 
be  separated  absolutely  and  forever 
from  politics,  candidacy  for  office  or, 
[any  Interest  In  elections  beyond  that; 
I  of  the  disinterested  and  patriotic  pri- 
vate citizen.  ,  _. 

"If  any  member  of  the  supreme  court 
Is  tempted  by  an  offer  of  a  nominatloa, 
as    a    candidate    for    the    presidency    of  i  ■ 
the  United  States,  and  refuses  the  offer; 
because   he  is  a  justice  of  the  supreme 
court  and    for   that   reason   cannot   con-  , 
scientiously    accept    a    nomination    to    .%  j 
political  office  or  engage  in  politics,  he 
will  have  rendered  liis  «  ountry  a  great 
and    lasting    service.      If    he    docs    that 
one  act  of  unselfish  patriotism  and  der 
votion      to      the      best      Interests    of    h}»  , 
country    that    has   so    signally    honored 
him    it  win   keep  his   memory  green    In 
the  minds  of  his  countrymen  long  after 
the    politicians    who    thus    lempred    hlnj 
are  forgotten.     The  use  of  his  name  a* 
a   candidate  is  an  offenbe  to  him  and  to 
the  country.'.*  ; 


^"  ^/y^^ 


.|Hi>4.»»4-4i»'iMi.4.»»»».H.«H»«H"M"|Mfr4 

% 


BASEBALL  SEASON  OPENS  | 

Begxnmng  Tonight 

THE  HERALD  BASEBALL  EXTRA 

Will  Give  the  Results 
of  Each  Day's  Games, 


%i^^i^^r*^^**^^******^****<r*********  <  ****** ****  1 1 1 11  n  1 1  m 


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1     DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


•"  r 


Wednesday, 


THE  .DULUTH     HERALD. 


FORMER  GILBERT  BOY  IS 
GIVEN  MEDAL  FOR  BRAVERY 


April  12, 1916. 


than    fifty   days   from   tho   date   of   tlu-  I  tween  poiiUa  In   lOiin 
call.      In  that   event,   the  election   must     Dakuta.  |      T 

he     called     sometime     before     tiie     last  Rtparatlon-'ls    Alko 


esota  and  North 


T 


First  American  to  Be  Dec- 
orated   By    King 
George. 


r^— <»•  pi 


Single-Handed,    He    Held 
Trench    Against    Ger- 
man Forces. 


Visits  Dulutti  Friends  After 
Ovation  From  Winni- 
peg Citizens. 


em- 


L«»ster  L.  SpaMin^.  formerly 
p!  >ye-l  at  <;ilb<'rt.  Minn.,  as  cashier  by 
th-  Republic  Iron  &.  Steel  company, 
anJ  who  is  the  only  American  who 
♦>..'  iiM'i-lv.d  Die  coveted  Dj#tlnKulshed 
<  Ml  iulI  mud.il  for  braveiy  on  the  bat- 
tlffleld  by  the  personal  deslKuatlon  of 
King  tJeorue  V  of  Cnglund,  was  In 
iJuJtith    yesterday. 

Vouiifif    Spal'Jins    enlisted     with      the 
Ninetieth     Winnipeg    lUlle.-i    In    August, 
1:'I  I.      'llie   j'otinK    jaan    wt-nt    from    Du- 
lu   II    to  the    VVei»lern   Canadian   nuirop- 
»>li  .    and    was    eii^-.iged    In    the    real    es- 
tate   buslni?s3    when    war    was   declared. 
Last    April,    the    Xlnetiith    Winnipeg 
Itlil'-s.     known    as    the      "Little     iilack 
iWils."    went    into    action    In    the    first 
Jiae  of  treni-hei  at   St.   Julien,   which   Is 
Just    outsidi-    VprfS.      For    two   days    the 
attaekintr     Clermans     rained     a     terrillc 
fire    of    slu-lls    on    lli>>    e.\post*il    trenches 
vh'Mi'      the      Canadian      soldieis      lay. 
Shrapnel    was    literally    rained    on    the 
l>o.-iition'?.       Suddenly    Spalding    dlscov- i 
ered    that   th«-   niembfr-s  of   his   machine 
gun    crew,    whicli    was    on    tiie    extreme 
l.ft    of    th-j    line,    had    been    killed.      In- 
Bte.id    of   n  treating   or  Joining   another 
coinpi  ny.     the     young      Amorican      boy 
etood    by    his    gun    and,    single-handed, 
Worked    it    against    the    charging    lines 
of     <;ermans.       Alone      he      discharged 
2l,t)0'J  rounds,  mowing  down  the  charg- 
ing  lines   of  soldieis  as   grain   falls    be- 
fore   the    riap.-r. 

Rrjteued  By  Brltlnh. 
■VVoumU-d  in  bjih  legs,  his  arm  hang- 
ing hclplesa  by  his  side,  suffering  from 
th<'  poisonous  gas  fumes,  and  lying 
under  his  overturned  machine  gun, 
the  Minnesota  fighting  ?iian  was  dis- 
covered by  a  liritish  captain,  his  face 
ecarred  with  powd-r,  his  trousers 
Bt  lined  with  the  crimson  of  his  blood. 
It  w.is  the  Hiitish  captain  who  men- 


LESTER  L.  SPALDING. 

in  hl.s  dispiitches  from  the  front.  The 
distinguished  service  of  the  young 
man  was  brought  to  the  attention 
of  King  George  V.  and  last  Saturday 
evening  in  Winnipeg,  before  8,000  sol- 
diers and  citizens  of  that  citv,  he  was 
adorned  with  the  Distinguished  Con- 
duct medal  by  Gen.  Hughes,  Inspector 
of  Western  Canadian  troops. 

Kept   on   FlKhilnff. 

"I  would  rather  talk  about  the  gren- 
eral  a.«!pect  of  the  war,  than  the  act 
for  which  I  received  the  medal."  said 
the  young  man  here  yesterday,  when 
he  was  requested  to  give  some  detailed 
Information  of  his  now  famous  ex- 
ploit. "I  guess  I  Just  kept  on  fight- 
ing, as  any  soldier  is  expected  to  do. 
I  kept  worltlng  the  machine  gun  and 
the  charging  (Jermans  kept  falling  be- 
fore the  rain  of  fire.  Finally  I  lost 
consciousne».s  and  when  I  awoke  It 
was  to  find  my.self  in  u  troop  hosrpl- 
tal. 

"England  and  the  allies  will  witi 
the  war,  I  thoroughly-  believe.  Ger- 
n'any  has  made  her  greatest  effort  and 
ha.s  lost.  Kngland  and  France  are 
better  prepared  than  ever  before.  I 
am  firmly  convinced  that  the  long 
expected  offensive  movement  of  the 
allies  will  be  inaugurated  in  the  verv 
rear  future.  In  my  opinion  It  will 
be  a  great  combined  offensive  drive 
on  the  part  of  the  Russians,  French 
and  Engli.sh  troops.  As  for  arms", 
ammunition  and  men,  the  allies  have 
never  been  so  well  prepared  as  at   the 


timed   the   remaikable   feat  of  bravery     Pi»*sent    time." 

Young   Spalding   Is    wearing 


i 


WEATHER— Rain     or     snow     to- 
nii;hl;    lowest    about    32    degrees. 


RAIN 

COATS 


1146  Mtxlels,  Showing  the 
Xew 

SLDF-OI 


Loo.se  Topcoat.s  and 

the  newest. 

'TInch   Back'"  or  Tight 

Fittine:  Overcoat — 

$4^30 

.Superior  Street  at  Second 
Aveinie  We?t. 


..  „    a   piece 

of  steel  In  his  scarf  pin.  The  piece 
of  steel  was  taken  from  part  of  a 
shell  that  was  Imbedded  In  the  voung 
American's  arm.  This  was  only  one 
of  the  wounds  the  boy  received  while 
standing  alone  by  his  m.ichlne  gun. 
\m  C;iven  ProiHotiuii. 
For  his  bravery  Spalding  has  been 
promoted  from  the  rank  of  private 
to  that  of  lieutenant.  Spalding  Is  now 
on  a  furlough.  His  condition  Is  so 
bad  as  the  result  of  wounds  and  the 
terrible  ordeal  he  suffered  from  the 
poisonous  gases.  Canadian  friends  are 
planning  to  send  him  to  Ranff  to  r.>- 
cuperate.  After  he  recovers  It  Is  bt - 
ll'Ved  Spalding  will  be  engaged  In 
recruiting    work. 

"Life  in  the  trenches  was  at  time* 
relieved  by  real  touches  of  comrade- 
ship between  the  contending  soldiers." 
said  Spalding.  "The  Saxons,  for  In- 
stance, seemed  le.is  Inclined  to  sav- 
agery tlian  the  Prussians  and  Ba- 
varians. There  were  nights  when  the 
Canadian  and  Saxon  troops  declared  a 
truce  and  hoisted  peace  signals.  We 
even  came  out  of  the  tnnches  and 
mingled  with  one  another,  exchanging 
stories  and  repairing  the  trenches. 
When  the  German  staff  officers  dis- 
covered this  they  speedily  put  a  stop 
to  it.  *^ 

"Sniping      Is     one     of      the      favorite 
sports.        One      German      shooter      had 
thirty-seven    notches    on    his    rifle.      It 
seems  hideous  even  to  think  about,  this  , 
gloating    over    murder,    but    it    Is    true    I 
nevertheless.      Some    of      the      trenches 
are    named    after    the    London    streets 
When       soldiers       are       quartered       In 
trenches  for  any  great  length   of  time 
they  And  a  way  of  fixing   them   up  like 
city    abodes.      We    had    sidewalks    and 
street    signs      where      we      were      last 
spring. 

Voung  Spalding  left  Duluth  last  eve- 
n  ng  for  Aitkin,  Minn.,  the  home  of 
his  parents.  He  will  remain  there  for 
several  weeks,  then  return  to  Duluth. 
The  young  man  had  several  serious 
hemorrhages  of  the  lungs,  the  result 
of  inhaling  poison  gas,  and  will  most 
likely  go  to  the  Canadian  mountains 
to   recuperate. 

Whlle^not  employed  in  Duluth,  Spald- 
ing made  frequent  business  trips  here 
and    spent   considerable    time      In      this 

VJy-   .^'^  'l*  ""J"  *''"^  »'i«d  out  for  the 
v\  innipeg  baseball  team. 


©OLyniOA 

The  Choice  oj  Musicians 

New     No.     6    Reproducer    and 
Violin  Tone  Chamber. 
The  only  instrument  that  will 
reproduce  a  true  tone. 

lEDIllDiT 

i3  THIRD  AVENUE  WEST 


ELECTIONS 
NUMEROUS 

Special  Questions  May  Be 

Considered  With  June 

Primaries. 


Six  or  Seven  Election  and 

Registration    Days 

This  Year. 


Matting 
Suit  Cases  $1  and  Up 


Quality      .^^^^C^-^V       Service 

Dulutk  Trunk  Co. 

Superior  St.,  220  West 


Duluth  win  have  six  and  Possibly 
seven  election  or  registration  days 
this  year. 

According  to  City  Clerk  Borgen.  Du- 
luth voters  will  register  on  .June  6  for 
the  general  election,  while  the  second 
registration  day  Is  scheduled  for  June 
12.  The  primary  election  will  be  held 
on  June  19  and  on  Nov.  4  the  last  reg- 
istration win  be  held.  The  regular 
election  will  take  place  on  Nov.   14. 

In  addition  to  these  dates  already 
scheduled  for  this  year.  It  Is  virtually 
certain  that  the  voters  of  Duluth  will 
have  an  opportunity  of  voting  on  sev- 
eral charter  amendments,  tlie  firemen's 
ordinance  establishing  a  double  pla- 
toon system  for  tlie  members  of  the 
department  and  the  question  of  a  wet 
or  dry  l>uluth. 

It    is    planned    to    hold    these.    If    pos. 
sible  on  June  19,   primary  election  day 
doing   away    with    muth    additional    ex- 
pense. 

Just   when    theae   elections   will   take 
place,    is    not    known    of    course.      It    is 
understood  that  City  Clerk   Uorgen   will 
report     at     the     council     meeting     next 
Monday  on' the  sufficiency  of  the  peti- 
tion  filed   by   tlie   firemen   last   Monday 
The    council    then    lias    tw»nty    days    in' 
wliich    to   pass    the   proposed   ordinance  ; 
or  twenty-five  days  in  which  to  call  r-  ' 
I  special  election.     This  election  must  be  i 
I  held    not    earlier   than   forty   nor   later  I 


week  In  June 

Cli«r4rr  AmendniriifM. 

In  case  the  members  of  the  charter 
eommlsslon  complete  the  amendments 
on  wliich  they  are  working,  the.se  will 
be  submitted  to  the  Duluth  voters  at 
the  same  time  that  the  firemen's  or- 
dinance is  voted  on.  Otherwise,  an 
additional  election  will  have  to  be  held. 

Workers  for  a  dry  Duluth  are  circu- 
lating petitions  and  it  Is  generally  ad- 
mitted that  the  measure  will  have  a 
sufficient  number  of  signatures.  In 
that  event,  an  election  will  be  called 
by  t-he  commissioners  so  that  the  voters 
of  the  city  can  decide  whether  or  not 
they  want  the  170  saloons  thrown  out. 
It  Is  also  planned  to  hold  this  election 
on   primary  day.   June   19. 

There  will  also  be  the  school  election 
In   July. 

LOG  COMPANY 

ASKS  LOWER  RATES 

Ttiree    Railways   Are   De- 
fendants in  Hearing  Be- 
fore I.  C.  C.  Examiner. 

An  action  brought  by  the  Duluth 
Log  company  against  the  Soo,  North- 
ern Pacific  and  Northwestern  railways 
to  reduce  the  freight  rates  on  pulp- 
wood,  paper,  posts,  poles  and  other 
timber  commodities  was  heard  by  W. 
J.  Wood,  examiner  for  the  interstate 
commerce  commission,  at  the  Federal 
building  this  afternoon.  The  action 
Involved  four  parts,  and  some  of  these 
were  sub-divided  into  many  more 
parts.      The    actions    affect    traffic    be- 


— :ed  in  several  of 
the  cases,  and  thirty-two  items  are 
contained  ipiione  docket.  The  cases 
Involve  BhipfcWnts  for  several  years 
back,  and  thii|matter  has  been  in  dis- 
pute  for   a    long   period. 


"EXAM'!  IS 


rSJICKER" 

Applicants  for  Chauffeur's 

License  Are  Given 

Rigid  Test. 


Truck  operators,  drivers  of  jitneys 
and  chauffeurs  who  aspire  to  limou- 
sines and  touring  cars  rubbed  shoul- 
ders (and  scratched  their  heads)  at  po- 
lice  headquarters  today. 

It  was  the  day  for  the  monthly  ex- 
amination of  prospective  chauffeurs, 
under    the    direction    of    W.    H.    Healy,  i  ^'*'"*    ^^'•^'"^   ^'"^^   ^''^'^   ^'^^   Clerk   Bor- 


Mr.  Healy,  "and  It  is  going  to  be  much 
harder  to  'get  by'  now  than  it  used  to 
be." 

The  fifty  men  who  tried  to  answer 
the  ten  questions  and  who  gave  their 
automobile  history  to  Mr.  Healy.  were 
Inclined  to  agree  with  him.  Some  men 
gave  their  address  at  some  small  coun- 
try town,  because  in  the  past  the  coun- 
try men  were  let  off  easier  than  their 
city  brothers. 

Their  ruse  didn't  work  this  time, 
however,  because  no  distinctions  are  to 
be  made  from  now  on.  After  testing 
the  eyesight  and  examining  Into  the 
physical  qualifications  of  the  appli- 
cant, Mr.  Healy  gave  them  ten  ques- 
tions, to  be  answered  in  writing. 

Twelve  questions,  four  on  the  state 
laws,  four  on  the  mechanical  parts, 
and  four  on  the  care  and  operation  of 
a  car,  were  prepared  and  ten  are  se- 
lected from  the  twelve.  The  first  four 
must  be  answered. 

If  the  candidate's  grade  on  the  writ- 
ten examination  is  not  satisfactory,  or 
Is  "on  the  edge"  he  is  given  a  prac- 
tical driving  test,  under  the  personal 
supervision  of  the  examining  officer. 
This  test  is  a  difficult  one,  and  Is  be- 
ing given  for  the  first  time  this  year. 

IVIORE  APPLICATToNS 
FOR  HOTEL  LICENSES 

Applications  for  hotel  licenses  are 
still    coming    In. 

This     morning    eight     more    applica- 


Paris       New  York       Duluth        Cincinnati       Washington,  D.  C 


member  of  the  vtate  chauffeurs'  ex- 
amining board,  and  the  questions  were 
"stickers." 

In  previous  years  the  examination 
given  before  a  chauffeur  received  a  11. 
cense  was  called  a  "cinch."  and  few 
had  difficulty  in  passing,  but  now,  ac- 
cording to  Mr.  Healy,  the  "old  order 
changeth." 

"The  examining  board  decided  re- 
cently that  the  requirements  had  not 
been    strict   enough    in   the   past,"   said 


gen   and   turned    over    to   Commissioner 
Silberstein   for  Investigation. 

About  forty  applicants  are  now  be- 
ing investigated  and  It  Is  expected  that 
these  will  come  before  the  council 
next  week.  Twenty  licenses  were 
granted  by  the  commissioners  last 
Monday  afternoon. 


Herald  wants  ads  will  find  a  buyer 
for  your  used  car.  They  reach  98  per 
cent  of  the  automobile  buyers. 


^.^w^Sii^ 


Onyx  and  Gotham  Siik 

Hosiery,  Plain  and 
Novelty  Colors,  at  $1.00 


iQmppan^ 


24  and  26  West  Superior  St.— Near  First  Ave.  West 


Si  Lingerie  and  Silk  Blouses  '."XS. 
$2.98  $3.75  M$5.00  $6.50 


$6.50 


Women's  Easter  Blouses  $1.98  2^,^^^^^^'%/$:^"  '"^2'''"' 

ae  Chines,  Pussy  Willow  Taffetas,  Candy  Stripe  Silks,  fine 
Dainty  Voiles,  Linens,  Organdies,  also  in  Silk  Middies, 
shown  in  wanted  colorings  and  all  white;  worth  to  $3.30. 


In  white  and  popular  color.'? 
— your  choice  of  these  11.50 
and  $2.00  blouses  at 


98c 


300  Easter  Suits  in  a  Sale  at 
$19.75,  $22.50  and  $25.00 

We  have  prepared  the  nio.st  comprehensive  showing  of 
suits  we  have  f/er  offered  for  women  and  misses.  Sur- 
prising values. 

An  Array  of  Exclusive  Suits 

in  Silks,  Novelty  Cloths,  Wool  Gabardines  and  fVench 
Serge.^,  whicli  greet  you  in  this  suit  store,  styles  unlimited 
at  the  prices — 


$32.50, 
$37.50, 
$45.00 

Your  Easier  Coat  is  Here 

100  stylish  Coats 
at  $15. 00 

Coverts,  Gabardines,  Sefges,  Taffeta  Silks.^Sport  Coats, 
Cape  Coats,  belted   eft'ects.     Most    wonderful    variety    of 
snappy  girlish  and  women's  styles  ever  oft'ered.     See  them. 
,  NEW  GOLFINE  COATS  AT  $6.50. 

S;  Novelty  &  Utility  Coats 
$19.75,  $22.50,  $25  74? 

Rich  Silks.  Novelty  Cloths,  Coverts, 
Gabardines,  black  and  colors. 


200  Exquisite 

Dresses 

El.aborato  Showing  of 

Novelties  for  every 

purpose  at — 

$12.50,$16.50, 
$19.75,  $25  to  $75 

Pretty  Silk  and  Serge 
OreHses    at    M.SO    to    910.00. 

New  Middy  and  Sailor 
Wash     Dre.«ses,     92.9H     and 


Separate  Skirls 


too,  arc  attractne.  The  separate  skirt  fol- 
lows the  general  tendency  of  becoming 
.«ityles  with  new  models  in'  fancy  or  plain 
silk.>,  serges,  i»>plins  checks,  golhnes,  ac 

$6.50,  $8.75.  $10.00 
and  $13.75 


;U)0  Skirts 711  Serges  and  TatTetas,  $2.18  and  $5,00. 


^^-^^^^^"^^^^^^^"^^Af^^-- 


Corrtct  Dr«»fi}r  Womtn  <^ir^  and  Giris 

Superior  Street  at  First  Ave.  West 

PRESENT 

Alt  That  Is  New  in  Fasfiion 
For  Spring  and  Summer 

Tailored  and  Costume  Suits 

Ultra  Smart  French  Models,  as  well  as  "individualized" 
adaptations,  featuring  flare  coats,  long-line  types,  strap 
belts  and  waistcoats,  of  Poiret  Twill,  Pastel  Checks,  Silk 
Taffeta  and  Silk  and  Cloth  Combinations — 

At  $29.50,  $35,  $45,  $55  Upward 
Smart  Coats 

For  Street,  Motoring,  Outing  and  Afternoon  wear,  in  fine 
Wool  Velours,  Poiret  Twill,  Gabardine,  large  pastel  checks, 
Punjab  Tussor,  Guernsey,  Taffeta,  Poiret  de  Sole,  Callot 
Checks,  Homespuns  and  Tweeds,  developed  in  the  season's 
smartest  styles — 

At$I5,  $19,  $25,  $35  to$125 
Street  Dresses,  Afternoon  Gowns, 

SERGE  FROCKS — Introducing  many  new  style  features 
of  all  Serge  or  Serge  in  combinations  with  Chiffon  or  Satin. 
AFTERNOON  GOWNS— In  Plain  or  Novelty  Silks,  Taf- 
feta, Georgette  and  combinations  in  black,  navy  and  all  the 
new  shades — 

At$15.  $19.50,  $25.  $29.  $35up 
Charming  Blouses 

jFor  Outing,  Office,  Street,  Afternoon  and  Evening  wear— » 
in  plain  styles  or  novelty  effects — of  Georgette,  Crepe  de 
Chine,  Taffeta,  Radium  Silk,  Linen,  Madras,  Voile,  Batiste, 
Lace,  Net  and  Chiffon,  in  a  wonderful  variety  of  styles  and 
colorings —  _^ 

At  $2,  $3.50.  $5.  $6.75  up  to  $45 

Smart  Middy  Blouses  $  1  to  $5 

Wonderful  Millinery 

A  display  which  features  the  newest  millinery  notes  from 
the  leading  modistes — original  Model  Hats,  reproductions 
and  adaptations — styles  introduced  by  Talbot,  Lewis, 
Varon,  Hamar,  Lanvin,  Georgette  and  others,  together 
with  models  designed  by  our  own  French  and  American 
artists — featuring  Sailor  Hats,  Mandarin  and  Bonnet  ef- 
fects. Mushroom  styles,  Horsehair  Hats,  Ostrich  Trimmed 
Hats,  Tulle  Hats,  Goura,  Wing,  Flower  and  Ribbon  Trim- 
med Hats  and  Smart  Sport  and  Outing  Hats —  j 

At  $7.50,  $  1 0,  $  1 2,  $  1  5,  $  1 8  upward 
Misses'  and  Girls'  Hats  at  $3.75  to  $12 

Smart  Sports^  Apparel 

Introducing  a  wonderful  collection  of  smart  styles  for  all 
manner  of  outing  wear.  Specialized  types  for  Golfing, 
Fishing,  Hiking,  Tramping,  Tennis,  Boating,  etc. 

Coats,  Suits,  Skirts^  Hats 

Nevy^  Sweater  Coats 

In  Thread  Silk,  Fiber  Silk,  Silk  Jersey,  Wool  Jersey,  An- 
gora and  Combed  Wool,  in  all  the  new  styles  and  colorings. 
Silk  Sweaters,  $19.50  to  $35, 
A  ngora  Sweaters,  $12.50  up  wards. 
Fiber  Silk  Sweaters,  $6. 75  to  $19.50. 
Combed  Wool  Sweaters,  $7.50  upwards. 


-SRECI ALIZIIVG-  \> 


We  Don't  Dabble! 

OUR  high  standard 
ofefjiciency  is  at- 
tained and  quality  is 
maintained  by  specializing 

HOE  DEPAIRING 


SIR 


DONE  RIGHT! 

That's  All— 

Maxlmun  Service— Minimun  Charge 


Shoe 
Repair  Co, 


FACTORY  "  *"**  ^^*'-  w. 

■  '^^^  ■  ^^l*  ■    opDoslit-   Kex  Theater. 


SHOPS  '**  ^**  ^^«-  ^' 

^"^"^^  12  4«h  Are.  W. 




i 


Ufillit   111  — I  I  II 1 


Wednesday, 


X  «• 


■-ir«5*« 


-31.; 1 


ffbe  {amou.  Sextette  from  Lucia-by  Sembrich.  Caruw.  Scotti   Journet.  Se»eriii«.  ; 
and  Daddi  ( Victor  Record  96200.     rwelveinch.  $7). 

By  Caruio^TetrazrinJ.  Amato.  Joumet.  Jacoby.  and  Bad* 
(Victor  Record  96201.    Twelve-inch.  $7). 

B»  Victor  Opera  Scjitette  (Victor  Record  70036.   Twelve-inch.  tlJS).  ' 

The  Victrola  brings  the  opera 
(right  into  your  home  ^ 

You  don't  have  to  go  to  Milan,  London,  Paris?^ 
Berlin  or  New  York  to  hear  the  masterpieces  of  i 
'opera  sung  by  the  world's  most  famous  artists. 

They  are  all  combined  in  the  Victrola,  whlchj 
brings  their  magnificent  voices  right  into  yourj 
home  for  you  to  enjoy  at  your  pleasure. 

Any  Victor  dealer  will  gladly  show  yon  the  complete  line  of 
iVictors  and  Victrolas— $10  to  $400— and  play  the  music  you  knowi 
and  like  best,  which  is  the  only  way  for  you  to  personally  judgOy 
,  its  capabilities  of  satisfying  your  musical  longings. 

f 

Victor  Talking  Machine  Co.,  Camder,  N.  JJ     ' 

N«w  Victor  Records  demoBaUated  «t  aU  dMlers  on  tko  2atb  ol  ••€!!  aoafb 

Victrola 

.the  instrument -of  the  vrorld's  greatest  artiste 


Important  warning'. 

Victor  Records  can  b« 
aafely  and  satisfactorily 
played  only  with  Victor 
PI»mdU»  or  Tung»-tonm 
Stytua  on  Victors  or 
Victrotaa.  Victor  Rec- 
orda  cannot  be  aafely 
played  on  machine* 
with  jeweled  or  other 
(cproduung  poiota. 


WERRENRADl 

I 


• 

1 

THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


AprU  12, 1916. 


'3 


UNOAIMB)  ESTATES  RANGE  IN 
VALUE  FROM  $1.85  TO  NEARLY  $4,000 


County  Treasuref  Has  More 
Than  $5,000  Which  He  Is 
Holding  for'  Missing  Heirs 
to  Claim— Many  of  Them 
May  Never  Be  Found. 


On  deposit  with  County  Treasurer 
Oeorge  H.  Vivian  Is  a  sum.  probably 
more  than  $6,000.  the  property  of  fifty 
or  more  persons  whose  Identity  or  ad- 
dress or  both  is  unknown.  They  are 
scattered  over  the  world  and  reside 
from  Saskatcliewan  to  Ithaca  and  from 
Berlin  to  strange  corners  of  the  globe. 
The  money  Is  a  part  of  the  county  rev- 
enue fund  and  Is  held  In  trust  for  the 
unknown  heirs  of  those  who  have  died 
Jn  St.  Louis  county  and  left  behind 
them  legacies  ranging  from  |1  to  $1,000 
and   more. 

It  is  a  strange  list  with  odd  figures, 
such  as  $1.85  and  $11.66  and  the  like. 
In  come  cases  dead  men  have  been 
found  with  money  on  their  persons. 
Who  they  were  or  where  they  come 
from,  is  a  mysterv  yet  unsolved.  The 
coroner  finds  $17.67  on  the  body.  There 
Is  no  one  to  claim  It.  He  turns  It  over 
to  the  county  treasurer.  It  becomes 
the  property  of  the  state  until  sucli  f^ 
time  as  an  heir  can  establish  his  claim. 
In  the  meantime,  the  county  must  as- 
sume a  careful  guardianship  for  years 
and  years. 

(Jraves  seldom  give  up  their  secrets 
and  ofttimes  It  Is  only  by  some  strange 
trick  of  fate  that  heirs  show  up.  Some- 
times they  are  imposters.  It  Is  within 
the  province  of  the  probate  court,  how- 
ever, to  say  whether  heirs  claiming 
money  turned  over  to  this  account  are 
genuine.  If  the  claims  are  bona  fida 
and  the  heirship  is  established,  an  or- 
der of  the  court  is  made  and  the  money 
paid  out. 

In  many  cases  heirs  have  been  traced 
as  far  as  the  name  Is  concerned,  but 
tlie  whereabouts  is  unknown.  John 
Doe  dies.  It  Is  understood  that  he  had 
a    brother    residing    in    far   away    Eng- 


FRANK  R.  GREEN. 


Thev  were  residents  of  Wilton,  111. 
Carfoll  married  Miss  Mary  TuUy  on 
Jan.  26,  1888.  and  deserted  her  and 
their  two  children  while  residing  in 
Chicago  ten  years  later.  P^roll  was 
in  the  saloon  business  at  the  time. 
The  last  she  heard  from  him  was  from 
Knife  River.  The  administrator  of  his 
estate  knew  nothing  of  his  family 
and  considered   him   a  single  rnan. 

It  took  John  B.  Odette  of  Little 
Falls  several  months  to  establish  his 
heirship  claim  to  money  left  by  one 
John  Polssant.  who  died  on  March  23, 
1911,  and  after  considerable  red  tape, 
Odette  secured  $9.31  Polssant  was 
only  an  uncle  and  there  '■ere  many 
other  heirs.  He  was  one  of  the  five 
Uvlng  children  of  a  sister  of  the  dead 
man.  according  to  his  claim.  Others 
resided  at  Saskatchewan,  Montreal, 
Winnipeg  and  in  Mapsachusetts. 
Estate  o*  fLSOO  ITnolalmed. 
If  Frank  Johnson,  who  committed 
suicide  at  the  McKay  hote,  Turkish 
bathrooms  on  Oct.  1,  1913,  has  any 
relatWes  or  heirs  living,  they  are  un- 
known Efforts  have  been  made  to 
?ind  some  trace  of  an  he^r    but  no  one 

has  yet  put  In  thejr  «l%'"^;„n  whfch 
tflte  consists  of  about  $1,500.  wnjcn 
will  be  turned  over  to  the  state  wlth- 
Tn  a  short  time  if  "o  heir  shows  up 

Little  was  known  «/  J^^Vl^?",^ J"'^ 
history.  The  cause  of  his  ^elf-destruc 
Uon  wks  Just  as  much  of  a  mystery 
as  his  past  life.  A  few  months  be- 
fore committing  suicide  he  came  to 
Duluth    and    engaged    in    the    real    es 

l\1  a'^frd^%oorfo^'?ho\rwh'o'\n^e^ 
him  here  Victor  Sundqulst,  a  cred- 
llor  and  former  business  associate  or 
the  dead  t^an.  Is  administrator  of  the 

^^Thlre  are  other  cases  and  each  Is  a 
story   In   Itself. 


WEST  EHO 


MRS.  LIZZIE  GREEN. 


bULUTH'S  FIRE  LOSS  SMALL  DURING  1915 
COMPRISED  $58,140  OF  $4,722,925  IN  STATE 


\ 

■■  ll«i"i   ■ 

r 

N 


File  loss  In  Minnesota  during  191B 
amounted  to  $4,722,925,  according  to 
the  animal  report  of  Statt-  Fire  Mar- 
shal Uobert  W.  Hargadine  and  $68,- 
140  was  DuUith's  share  of  the  total. 
Minneapolis'   loss   was   $750,000. 

Deftctlve  Hues  cause  firemen  more 
troubh-  than  any  other  known  apemy, 
the  report  shows,  for  146  blazes 
started  In  this  way.  Nearly  one- 
fourth  of  the  fires  reported  were  of 
unknown  origin,  for  640  were  classi- 
fied   in    this    way    out    of    the    total    of 

2  695.  .  .   , 

Adtoiiiing  fires.  electric  wiring, 
carelessness  with  matches,  sparks 
from  a  chimney,  and  woodwork  near 
Btoves,  were  some  of  the  more  com- 
mon causfs.  One  hundred  and  nine- 
teen were  suspicious.  Careless  smok- 
ers, spontaneous  combustion,  gasoline 
explosion,  lightning,  overheated  stoves 
and  kerosene  lamps  or  lanters,  all 
were    responsible   for   many    blazes. 

S»>venty-seven  different  causes  are 
enumerated  by  Marshal  Hargadine.  in 
telling  how  the  2.695  fires  were  start- 
ed Automobile  back  fire,  Chrlstm.qs 
tret-fl      fireworks,     fiat     irons,     friction. 


fumigating.  Incubator  lamps,  over- 
heated salamanders,  thawing  water 
pil.es  iind  tramps  were  some  of  the 
less  common  causes. 

The  following  table,  showing  the 
total  fire  loss  for  the  three  largest 
cities  of  the  state,  and  the  insurance, 
is  presented: 

-Rutldlnir^ 


Nn.  UrM. 


St.    Vaiil... 
MlnncBiMiiU 

Puliith  

Oiitslde 
CItIrs   ... 

Tul»l    ... 


4!C 
6^t6 
215 


Value. 

$  H.3M.410 

6,767.325 

1,430.114 


307.iy.') 

462.337 

71,345 


Tot.  Ins. 

$2.2S7.497 

4.18;'.059 

»1D,520 


Stearns'  Electric 
Rat  and  Roach  Paste 

The  Guaranteed  Exterminator 

Ready  for  use.       Better  than  traps. 

Directions   In   15  iRtunj^RP"   In  package. 

Two  slws:  2.%c  ami  $1.00. 

Bold  t>/  retailers  eTer>-wUei«. 


St.    Pmil 

Minneapolis    . . . 

Duluth    

Outjiide    Cttlei., 

Total     


.1.190       3.(M2,177      1.304.649  1.834.451 

.2J95    $14,623,026    $2.14.1.826  $9,226,527 

Contenti 

lyoss.  Tot.  In». 

(    67X.2«K)  $1,937,070 

7r)2.S19  3.274.108 

5K.140  627.9rKl 

1.087,850  1,269.952 


Vuliie. 

.$  3.201;,  290 

.     4.12«.136 

873.720 

.     2,212.868 


$10,415,014    $2,577,099    $7,109,080 

• 

Herald  wants  ads  will  find  a  buyer 
for  your  used  car.  They  reach  98  per 
cent  of  the  automobile  buyers. 

HOTELlLERK 

PURSUES  ''BEATS" 

Designs  of  Trio  at  Spalding 

Partly  Thwarted  By 

Roy  Quigley. 

A  chase  to  recapture  the  baggage 
of  two  young  men  who  had  left  the 
hotel  without  settling  their  bill,  was 
staged  by  Clerk  Roy  Quigley  at  the 
Spalding  last  night,  and  he  did  not  re- 
turn empty  handed. 

It  was  a  novel  and  daring  attempt  to 
"beat"  the  hotel,  and  the  two  young 
men.  who  are  well  app*>arlng  and  well 
dressed,    almost    cucceeded.    thanks    to 


the     co-operation     of     MIps     Genevieve 
Franks,  the  third  member  ol  the  party. 

Miss  Franks,  with  the  men.  Atkinson 
and  Ohlen.  registered  last  Thursday. 
At  7:30  o'clock  last  night  Miss  Franks 
paid  her  bill  and  announctd  her  Inten- 
tion of  checking  out.  She  .«aid  she  was 
leaving  on  the  11:10  p.  m.  Soo  tra  n 
for  Minneapolis,  and  tliat  ."he  would 
■ .    to  iier  berth  at  ^  o'clock. 

Mr.  Quigley  saw  her  walk  through 
the  iubby  a  moment  later  with  two 
"grips."  the  same  ones*  the  men  had 
carried  when  the  party  registered  at 
the  hotel.  Suspicious,  he  ran  up  to  the 
men's  room  and  discovered  the  girl's 
satchel,   loaded   down   with    old    maga- 

He  then  ran  to  the  Soo  station,  only 
to  learn  that  the  girl  had  dalnied  her 
baggage  and  left  the  station.  Quigley 
did  some  quick  thinking  and  boarded  a 
Duluth  and  Superior  car  at  Sixth  ave- 
'UK-  w».«t.  Two  blocks  further  on  Miss 
Franks  and  the  two  men  boarded  the 
car.   the  men  carrying  the  grips. 

Quigley  was  powerless  to  arrest  the 
pair,  but  he  snatched  the  "grips"  and 
left  the  car.  Police  telephoned  to  the 
watchman  at  the  Interstate  bridge,  but 
[there  was  no  trace  of  the  party  when 
I  the  car  reached  the  state  line.  Police 
are  looking  for  them. 

ST.  CLOUOGIRLiS 
SEEKING  HER  MOTHER 

Fargo.  N.  D.,  April  12 —Mrs.  Fred 
Flatt,  20  years  old.  of  St.  Cloud,  Minn., 
has  not  seen  her  mother.  Mrs.  Frances 
White,  since  an  Infant.  The  mother 
formerly  was  of  East  Grand  Forks, 
and  her  daughter  has  asked  the  aid 
of   Fargo  authorities.   * 

Mrs.  Flatt  says  she  has  just  discov- 
ered the  woman  who  raised  her  was 
not   her   mother. 


constipation:  poisons 

the  blood.  Perfect  elimination  Is  in- 
dispensable to  health.  Stimulate  the 
liver,  open  the  bowels,  and  get  the  sys- 
tem Into  a  good  habit  by  taking  Hood's 
Pills,  the  old  reliable  family  cathartic. 
Do  not  Irritate  nor  gripe.  Price,  26c, 
of  all  druggists  or  promptly  by  mail 
of  C.  1.  Uood  Co.,  Lowell,  Mass. 


land.  He  la  sought  there,  but  It  is  dis- 
covered that  he  joined  tlie  army  and  Is 
reported  among  the  missing  on  the 
fighting  line  In  France.  The  trail  ends 
there  and  the  $21.47  must  wait  In  tlie 
countv  treasury  year  after  year  until 
the  missing  brother  shows  up,  which 
he  probably  never  will  do. 

Left  $4,000  Estate. 
Mrs.  Lizzie  A.  Green  left  an  estate 
valued  close  to  $4,000  when  she  died  In 
Duluth  on  Dec.  7,  1914,  aged  60.  She 
resided  at  313  South  Fifty-second  ave- 
nue west  and  owned  her  home.  She 
also  owned  a  five-acre  tract  near  Col- 
bvvllle  and  some  real  estate  In  Itasca 
county.  But  no  one  has  yet  shown  up 
to  claim  a  penny  and  unless  something 
happens  between  now  and  May  1  when 
the  final  hearing  will  be  held  before 
Judge  <;ilpin,  the  entire  amount  will 
revert  to  the  state  and  will  be  turned 
over  to  the  county  treasurer. 

Mrs.  Green  was  the  widow  of  Frank 
R.  (ireen.  who  died  at  Colbyville,  near 
this  city  on  July  17.  1909.  She  lived  in 
Duluth  for  nearly  a  quarter  of  a 
century  and  had  many  friends  here. 
Alice  Reamer,  one  of  them,  petitioned 
the  court  for  letters  of  administration. 
An  endeavor  was  made  to  locate  rela- 
tives or  heirs,  but  no  one  could  be 
found  to  whom  Mrs.  Green  had  men- 
tioned her  family  connections.  It  Is 
understood  that  she  came  to  Duluth 
from  Ithaca.  N.  Y.  Wharton  &  Whar- 
ton, attorneys  for  the  administrator, 
made  a  diligent  search  In  and  around 
Ithaca  for  heirs  but  found  no  trace  of 
anyone  who  can  assert  a  claim  to  the 
estate.  ,    ^       „  , 

Long  Seiirch  for  Helm. 

John  Five   died   in  November  of  1907, 
but  It  was  not  until  last  week  that  the 
affairs    of    his    estate    were    finally    set- 
tled.    From  1913  until  recently.  County 
Treasurer     Vivian     held     the     sum     of 
$1  082.20      for      unknown      relatives      of 
three    of    Five's    heirs.      Five    came    to 
Duluth    a    number    of    years    ago    from 
Fergus    Falls    and    was    employed    hero 
by   a  local    real   estate   dealer.     During 
the    fall    of    1907    his    health    failed    and 
he  went  to  Colorado.     He  was  there  but 
a  few  days  when  he  died.     As  heirs  he 
left  six  brothers  and  sisters  and  three 
nephews   and    nieces.      A   will    prov  ded 
that  each  of  the  former  should  be  given 
one-seventh  and  each  of  the  latter  one- 
Iwenty-flrst    of    his    estate.       Since    his 
death,    two    brothers    known    as    Benja- 
min Olson  and  Jacob  t^lson  died.  Their 
shares   were    $463.80    each.      A    nephew, 
Peter    Erlckson,    also    died.      His    share 
was  to  have  been  $164.60.     The  problem 
which  then  presented   Itself  was  to  find 
the   relatives  of  the   heirs.     They  were 
located  recently     In     Norway     and     the 
money   was  paid  over. 

Ciuie  of  ■  Hermit. 
In  Mav  of  1910.  August  Hoffinan. 
supposedly  unmarried  and  a  hermit, 
was  found  dead  in  his  shack  at  West 
Duluth.  Besides  the  shack  In  which 
he  lived  he  was  the  owner  of  two 
other  lots  and  a  small  amount  of  per- 
sonal property.  Little  was  known  of 
his  past.  He  was  a  man  of  few  friends 
and  was  of  a  quiet  disposition.  M.  J. 
Fillatrault,  West  Duluth  undertaker, 
brought  the  estate  to  the  attention  of 
the  probate  court  and  had  himself  ap- 
pointed administrator. 

Somewhere  In  Germany  it  was  sup- 
posed that  Hoffman  h.id  a  brother  liv- 
ing. But  efforts  to  locate  him  or  any 
other  heir  failed.  At  Ishpemlng,  Mich 
a  woman  turned  up  with  a  claim  that 
fhe  was  Hoffman's  divorced  wife  She 
Kave  her  name  as  Mrs.  Harry  Walter 
Cole.  She  says  that  she  married  him 
under  the  name  of  Cole,  and  that  thre^ 
years  after  the  marriage  he  confes.sed 
that  his  name  was  Hoffman.  She  also 
claims  that  he  deserted  the  family  In 
]8«»3  But  Mrs.  Cole  failed  to  establish 
the  required  proof  and  there  is  still 
$483.81  awaiting  the  right  heir  In  the 
county   treasury. 

Deserted  Wl«e  Ap^earn. 
Then  there  Is  the  case  of  James  Car- 
roll, who  died  In  this  city  on  Dec.  11. 
1910  leaving  no  known  heirs.  His  es- 
tate' Inventoried  $407.51  after  all  bills 
had  been  paid.  This  amount  was  paid 
over  to  the  county  treasurer,  who  kept 
it  until  January  of  1912.  when  a 
widow  and  two  daughters  appeared  to 
claim  the  inheritance.  *rhe  mystery 
of    CarroU'a    past    wa»     then     »olved. 


ASK  WARNINGS 
FOR  CROSSING 


Fatal    Accident    on    Soo 

Tracks  Stirs  Residents 

to  Activity. 


Clubs  Will  Discuss  Means 

of  Securing  Protection 

for  Public. 


Mr 


An  Impressive  Skowmg  of 

S  mTI  Distinctive  Suits 

$22.50,  $25,  $27.50,  $29.50,  $32.50 

Presenting  an  infinite  variety  of  the  season's  best  styles. 
Splendid  workmanship  and  the  newest  materials.  Copies 
of  imported  suits  and  exclusive  with  the  S.  &  B.  Co. 

Inexpensive  Hats  ior  Easter 

$5.00,  $7.50  ana  $10.00 

They  have  dash  and  style  and  are  exact  copies  of  the  latest 
Paris  models.  You  would  have  to  pay  a  good  deal  more 
for  any  one  of  them  elsewhere.  Many  ribbon  and  flower 
trimmed,  in  small  and  large  hats. 

We  Are  Featuring  Special 
Xavo  Groups  or  Corsets 

Beautiful   Brocade   Corsets  in   flesh  color,  medium  low 
bust  and  skirt  length  for  the  moderate  figure,  requiring  con- 
trol of  flesh  over  the  hips  and  thighs.    Actual  value  $7.50— 
very  special  at  $5.95. 
Two  of  our  mo.st  popular  brand  corsets — S.  &  B.  and  War- 
-t's,  in  coutil  and  batiste— pink  or  white ;  models  for  slen- 


»»»— ^1 


ner 


der,  average  and  full  figures— special  at  $1.00. 


Every  woman  don't  want  a  silk  waist,  and  for  those  [ 
who  have  a  silk  waist  and  want  a  decided  change— we  ' 
are  showing 

New  Tailored  Linen  Blouses 

In  Stripes  and  Plain  Colon 

Thev  are  exceedingly  smart.    Come  in  light  blue,  rose, 
Nile,  lavender  and  white^-$3.50,  $3.75  and  $3.95. 


Tut  Silk. 


ARE  MUCH  IN  DEMAND. 

The  practical  and  dressy  effect  of  these  are  making 
them  more  popular  each  season  for  men's  shirts,  waists, 
women's  and  children's  dresses.  We  are  showing  a  splen- 
did assortment  of  these.  32  to  40  inches  wide  and  priced 
from  89c  to  $2.00  the  yard. 


The  accident  Monday  afternoon  at 
Twenty-ninth  avenue  we8t,  which  re- 
sulted In  the  death  of  John  E.  Marku- 
son  of  West  Duluth  by  the  South  Shore 
passenKer  train  No.  5  at  the  Soo  Line 
crossing:,  will  bring  about  an  extra 
effort  on  the  part  of  residents  of  that 
district  to  have  the  railroad  put  up 
warnings  on  this  and  other  grade 
crossings.  The  subject  will  be  taken 
up  Friday  evening  at  the  meeting  of 
the  French  Naturalization  club  and  on 
Thur.sday  evening  of  next  week  at  the 
meeting  of   the   West   End   Commercial 

*^  The  crossings  at  Twenty-eighth 
avenue  and  Twenty-ninth  avenue  are 
said  to  be  especially  dangerous.  Trains 
moving  east  on  the  former  crossing 
are  shielded  from  view  on  both  the 
UDPer  and  lower  sides  and  the  same  is 
said  to  be  true  of  the  Twenty-ninth 
avenue  cro'sslng  In  the  matter  of  trains 
from   the  east.  .       .       ,     i,. 

On  the  upper  side  of  the  track  the 
.factory  buildings  of  the  Duluth  Show 
Case  company  obstruct  the  view  of  the 
road  the  company's  high  fence  and 
buildings  extending  almost  to  the 
railroad  tracks.  On  the  lower  side 
the  danger  is  not  quite  so  great,  say 
residents,  owing  to  the  width  of  Mich- 
igan street  having  to  be  crossed  before 
the   tracks    are    reached. 

"There  are  about  seventy-five  chil- 
dren belonging  to  families  living  be- 
low Michigan  street  who  use  these 
crossings  four  times  a  day  In  going 
to  and  from  school,"  said  a  member 
of  the  Frtnch  Naturalization  club  last 
night.  "We  have  asked  for  warning 
bells  or  some  other  safety  arrange- 
ment at  these  two  crossings,  but  our 
committee  has  so  far  been  unable  to 
convince  the  railroad  that  they  are 
necessary.  Trains  will  be  moving  oft- 
ener  over  these  crossings  this  summer 
than  they  have  In  the  past  and  will 
Increase  the  danger  of  persons  using 
the   crossings."         _ 

WILL  RESUME  SHOOTS. 

West  End  Gun  Club  Will  Begin  Sea- 
son's Activities  May  1 . 

The  West  End  Gun  club  will  resume 
Its  season's  activities  on  Sunday.  May 
7.  This  action  was  taken  last  eve- 
ning at  the  meeting  of  the  club  and 
notices  are  being  sent  out  to  members 
to   be   present   at   the   first  m<et. 

The  club  will  hold  a  regular  mer- 
chandise shoot  each  month,  according 
to  announcement  made  at  the  meeting. 
Several  handsome  prizes  have  been  of- 
fered by  local  merchants  for  the 
monthly  contests.  Among  the  mer- 
chants who  have  offered  prizes  for 
these        competitions        are      Oustafson 


The  Incubator 
Is  a  Good  Hen 

Keep  the  temperature  right  and  turn  the  eggs  every 

day.  Then  you  can  hatch  one  hundred  eggs  as  easily 

as  thirteen.    But  you  must  have  fertile  eggs.    >fany 

poultry    breeders   advertise   "guaranteed   eggs"    in 

The  Herald  Poultry"  column. 

You'll  find  it  in  the  Want  Ad  pages.    It  s  a  directory 

of  poultry  wanis  and  poultry  supplies. 

If  you  have  anything  to  offer— a  setting  of  eggs,  a 

new  strain  of  chickens,  an  incubator,  a  brooder,  a 

patent  feeder,  drinking  pans,  prepared  feed  or  any 

of  the  various  devices   now   in    demand — tell    Ihc 

Herald's  big  family  about  it. 

You  can  bring,  send  or  mail  your  ad  to 

The  Duluth  Herald 
Duluth's  Want  Ad  Directory 


Hardware  company.  Lutes  laun^i^y- ."^X: 
S  Kearns,  Franklin  Fares  Clothing 
company.  Acme  Laundry  company. 
Capt  Charles  Jacobson,  Peterson 
Candy  company,  John  Molr  ^^roc^ry 
company.  Johnson  Clothing  company 
and  Hanson  Hardware  company. 

The  season's  prizes,  which  were  an- 
nounced, will  Include  a  cup  offered  b> 
the  National  Sportsman,  a  cup  offered 
bv  O.  F.  Wennerlund,  a  pair  of  rub- 
ber hip  boots  by  the  Beacon  FaUs  Shoe 
company  of  Chicago,  a  pair  of  boots 
by  the  J.  O.  Shoe  works  of  the  W  est 
end  and  a  Llewellyn  setter  pup  offered 
by  J.  F.  McNaughton.  secretary  of  the 

*^^The  officers  of  the  club  are:  Dr.  C. 
B  Green  president:  Arne  Olson,  vice 
Dfesldent;  J.  F.  McNaughton.  /ecre- 
Kry;  John  Cullen,  treasurer,  and  John 
Olson,  field  captaln^^ 

WILL  SPEAK  AT  CONFERENCE. 

Rev.    Swaney    Nelson    Will    Attend 
State  Bible  Conference  at  St.  Paul. 

Rev.  Swaney  Nelson,  pastor  of  the 
First  Swedish  Baptist  church.  Twentj'*- 
second  avenue  west  and  Third  street, 
win  leave  tomorrow  for  St.  Paul,  where 
he  will  take  part  in  the  state  Bible 
conference  of  the  Baptist  church.  Mr. 
Nelson  wUl  be  one  of  the  speakers. 

The  services  at  the  local  church  win 
be  conducted  Sunday  by  Rev  M.  Sa^  - 
age  of  the  Children's  home  of  St.  Paul. 
A  special  song  service  has  been 
planned    for  the   evening   meeting. 


that  he  wishes  all  to  consider  themx 
selves    welcome.  .„     ,.       , 

This  evening  music  will  be  fur* 
nished  by  an  orchestra  and  daiiolngt 
will  take  place  in  the  dining  hall  be- 
tween 8:30  and  12  o'clock. 

The  new  dining  hall  will  be  openea 
tomorrow.  This  part  of  the  nosieiry, 
has  been  closed  for  nearly  a  month. 

R.  M.  Initiation  Friday. 

Initiation  of  a  class  of  new  members 

to  be  followed  by  a  banquet  will   fea< 

ture   the    meeting    of    Greysolon    campv 

I  Royal    Neighbors,    at     Woodman     hall. 

Twenty-first    avenue    west    and     tirf't 

I  street,    Friday    evening.      The    class   to 

'  be  initiated  has  been  procured  througi| 

a    recent   membership   contest   and    the 

banquet   will   feature   the  close   of  th« 

contest. 

''Christian  Homes"  Subject. 

"Christian  Homes"  will  be  the  sub^ 
ject  of  the  revival  sermon  to  be  dellv^ 
ered  this  evening  by  Rev.  C.  F.  Sund- 
strom  of  Minneapolis  at  the  Swedish 
Mission  church.  Twenty-first  avenue 
west  and  Second  street.  The  pastor 
spoke  last  evening  on  "The  Sufterin^ 
of  Christ.  The  revival  meetings  have 
been  attracting  large  crowds.  Special 
music  Is  being  furnished  each  evening 
by  the  choir. 


Johnson-Erickson. 


West  End  Undertaking 
Company 

2118  WEST  FIRST  STREET. 
Nyberc  *  Crawford,  Manasers. 


Miss   Christine   Johnson   of   the  West 
end    and    Erlck    EHckson    of    Comfort 
Minn      were    married  at      8.30     o  ciock 
ms"    evrmng   at   the   home   of   Mr    and 
Mrs.  C.  Halvorson.  2112  ^'50'"°"^  ave 
nue.      The    service    was    read    by    Rev 
Swaney    Nelson,    pastor    of    the    First 
Swedish   Baptist   church. 

The  bridesmaid  was  Miss  Agnes  Gus- 
to/nnn  and  the  groomsman  was  Oust 
E  E?ickson.  a  brother  of  the  bride- 
groom Following  the  ceremony  a 
UmclTeon  was  served  by  Mrs.  ^ustaf- 
8on  for  about  twenty  guests.  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Erlckson  will  leave  tomorrow  for 
Comfort,  where  they  wUl  make  their 
home.  

Open  House  and  Dance  at  Hotel. 

An  "open  house"  all  day  an^f  Jf" 
cept"on  and  dancing  party  tonight  wUl 
fealure  the  reopening  of  the  dining 
rSom  of  the  Rex  hotel.  Twentieth  ave- 
nue west  and  Superior  street,  under 
its  new    management.         ...        ,1    ^^ 

An  Invitation  Is  extended  to  all  to 
attend  the  celebration.  Oeorge  Lu- 
Sore"  the    new    proprietor,    announced 


West  End  Briefs. 

The  Ladles'  Aid  Society  of  the  Trln4' 
Ity  English  Lutheran  church.  Twenty^ 
seventh  avenue  west  and  Third  street, 
will  meet  tomorrow  afternoon  at  2:30 
o'clock    in   the  church    parlors. 

Mrs.  Robert  Gillon,  419  NortN 
Eighteenth  avenue  east,  entertained 
this  afternoon  for  the  Women's  Home 
and  Foreign  Missionary  Society  of  the 
Second   Presbyterian   church. 

Modern  shoe  repairing  at  Economy 
Shoe  Works.   204.^0th  A.  W.  A.  Tlioren^ 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  A.  P.  Anderson  of  Mln* 
neapolis  have  returned  home  aftel* 
spending  a  few  days  visiting  relative* 
In  this  end  of  the  city. 

Olson  &  Hoppenyan.  undertaker*, 
2014  West  Superior  street.     Both  phone* 

Miss  Esther  W^ndland  of  St.  Paul 
left  for  her  home  yesterday  after 
spending  a  week  visiting  relatives  in 
the  West  end. 


ASK  FOR  and  GET 

HCIILICK'S 

THE  ORIGINAI. 

MALTED  MILK 

Cheap  •ttbstitntes  cort  YOU  —me  pncAgft 


' 


-■"J"'    - 


!>■    ■I»l»i 


.».-•.,»  ■%«^»\.-.".t"*r:-sr 


- 


4 

I 


4 


Wednesday, 


THE    DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


FOURTH  TRIAL 
FOR  ^.  HYDE 

Kansas     City     Physician 
Again  Arraigned  for  Mur- 
der of  Col.  Swope. 


Released  in  $10,000  Bond 

and  Hearing  Set  for 

April  21. 


Kansas  Tity.  Mo.,  Api  II  12— Dr.  B. 
Clark.'  Hyd*>  was  arraigned  late  yester- 
day on  a  new  Inforniallon  filed  yestt-r- 
duy,  rharf^lnsr  him  with  the  murder  of 
Crtl.  Th'Miias  n.  Swope,  millionaire  phll- 
aiitropl.st.  Dr.  Hyde  waived  readlnK 
of  th.'  warrant  and  his  preliminary 
hearing  was  set  for  April  21.  He  was 
releafittl  on  bond  of  $10,000. 

The  ii reused  phy.slolan  appeared  vol- 
untarily In  Ju.nlce  Clark's  court,  the 
same  eourt  in  whieh  the  new  warrant 
was  filed  earlier  in  the  day  by  Floyd 
Jacobs,  prosecuting  attorney  of  Jack- 
son coimty.  It  charRe.-*  Dr.  Hyde  with 
haviMiC  caused  the  death  of  Col.  Swope 
by  111.-  u!ie  of  strychnine  and  cyanide  of 
pota.-isium. 

Th-  pr»^vionH  Information  on  whlcn 
he  had  been  tried  thrt.)  times,  charffed 
the  use  of  stiychnlno  and  other  un- 
known poisons. 

Ilintory  of  €H%f. 

Col.  Thomas  H.  Swop.'.  for  whose 
allfKed  murder  Dr.  U.  t'larke  Hyde  was 
Indlct.d.  di'-il  O't.  3,  I'JOS,  under  mys- 
terious clrcTimstancea.  He  was  a  ba<h- 
.•li»r.     »>n    Dec.    3.      two    months    later. 


The  Dangers  of  Arch  Props 

Ready-made  arch  supporters  of  vari- 1  soon  the  old  trouble  was  as  bad  or 
„„,  .,„<.,  .re  „r.M  upon  customer.  ».  J-VU\'',''„^','"rhe  muSc."/."  Jd"  ."S: 
unscrupulous  shoe  dealers,  not  oet^a"** )  ments,  when  worn  for  several  months, 
the  dealers  have  the  necessary  skill  to ,  and    the    orlgrlnal    weakness    was    only 

advise  treatment  for  |  exagrsrerated.  so  that  the  victim  became 
foot  troubles,  butja  steady  customer,  a  slave  to  the  prop, 
because  the  traffic  |  in  the  srreat  majority  of  cases  of 
is  0o  very  profit-  actual  arch  weakness  or  flat  foot  or 
able.  One  would  not  pronated  foot  (the  earliest  stage  of 
permit  a  clothing  1  fiat  foot),  arch  supports  are  unnece.'^- 
merchant  to  advise  sary  and  Injurious.  The  patient  re- 
one  to  wear  a  spl-  '  quires  general  treatment,  and  sclen- 
iial  brace,  yet  the'tlflc  advice  about  the  toning  up  and 
lallor  knows  fully '  development  of  the  weakened  muscles 
as  much  about  the  and  ligaments.  Massage,  certain  exer- 
treatment  of  spinal  dses,  and  above  all  the  adoption  of 
troubles  as  the  shoe  '  proper  shoes,  will  give  permanent  re- 
deuler  knows  about  ■  Uef  if  anything  can.  In  pronounced 
the  treatment  of .  cases  nothing  less  than  surgery  can 
foot  troubles.  In  one  i  effect  a  cure, 
aggressive  store  an  I      To   wear  an   arch   prop,   of   any   kind 


"orthopractlc"     spe- 


mWBRw  Mji  :r 'V/:  z^lZe^ 


annuunce.-j  that  the  young  gentleman 
In  a  "graduate."  The  young  gentleman 
recently  showed  us  his  "diploma."  He 
also  showed  us  his  "course  of  study" — 
which  consisted  of  six  "lessons,"  or 
rather  six  lectures,  all  of  whjch  could 
be    read    In,    say.    an    hour 


or  material  whatever,  for  a  prolonged 
period.  Is  as  wrong  as  It  would  be  to 
bind  a  weak  arm  In  splints  for  an 
Indefinite  time — and  aa  disastrous. 


ai'ESTlOXS    A-\D    AXS%%'ERS. 


Proper    Diet    for    Tj-phold    Fever. 

Please  tell  me  whether  It  Is  safe  for 
De  reaa  m,  say.  an  nour.  'Think"of  |  a  typhoid  fever  patient,  temperature 
that  for  u  while  before  you  sut.mlt  to!  102.G  deg..  to  have  other  food  than  milk, 
shoe-store  "treatment"  for  your  arch  I  Answer— Yes,  by  all  m^ans.  Here 
trouble  are  the  articles  allowed  In  the  Massa- 

Allurlng  statements  relative  to  "pain-  chusetts  General  hospital:  Soft  toast, 
ful  feet."  "weak  ankles."  "broken  soft-boiled  eggs,  any  form  of  soup  or 
arches,"  "fallen  arches,"  etc.,  are  placed    broth,    finely   chopped   or  scrapped   beef 


before  the  public  to  attract  cu-stomera 
for  these  expensive  appliances.  Cus- 
tomers In  some  .shoe  stores  are  graph- 
ically told  of  the  marvelous  cures  ef- 
f f<  ted  by  the  particular  prop  or  ap- 
pliance the  dealer  wishes  to  sell,  and 
pi-rhap.s  warned  of  the  disastrous  ef- 
fects of  neglect  of  an  imaginary  falling 
of  the  arch.  But  perhap.s  we  speak 
with  bad  grace  of  this  kind  of  fraud. 
Some  phv.«lcian.s  when  consulted  by  pa- 
tient.s  Buffering  with  foot  troubles 
confes.s  lh.>mselvf'.s  lncomi)etent  by  say- 
ing:    "Ciet  a  pair  of  arch  supporters." 

Patients  are  constantly  applying  for 
treatment  who  have  worn  arch  props 
for  years,  trying  all  the  modlfloatlona 
the  shoe  clerk  could  think  of,  and  suf- 
fering all  the  time.  The  reason  they 
have  been  so  long  deceived  Is  that  the 
prop  or  support  seemed  to  offer  con- 
siderable relief  when  first  applied.  But 
this   relief   was  always   temporary,  and 


or  chicken,  or  mutton,  the  aoft  part  of 
a  baked  apple,  ice  cream,  custard, 
blanc  mange,  and  various  other  foods 
which  require  little  mastication  and 
yet  are  fairly  easily  digested.  Patients 
are  fed  six  times  a  day.  The  milk  and 
"slops"  diet  U  a  generation  behind  the 
times,  and  does  almost  aa  much  harm 
In  some  cases  as  the  fever  Itself. 
FlMtvla. 

I  have  had  for  the  past  year  a  rectal 
fistula.  Can  It  be  cured  without  opera- 
tion? Is  the  disease  dangerous  If  al- 
lowed to  go  on?  Is  the  operation  dan- 
gerous? What  will  remove  the  lump 
where  the   fistula  opens? 

An.-^wer — It  Is  rarely  possible  to  heal 
a  rectal  fistula  without  surgical  treat- 
ment. The  disease  Is  dangerous  If 
neglected — favors  tuberculosis.  The 
operation  Is  simple  and  absolutely  safe, 
and  It  Is  the  only  treatment  which  will 
remove  the  lump. 


Dr  Brady  will  answer  all  signed  letfcn  prtttlnln«  to  health.  If  jroiir  quMtlon  U  of  jeneral  Intermit  It  «}'! Jjf 
an.<were'.l  through  Ihase  coluinns;  if  iiot  it  will  I*  aMwere-d  th-MOiially  If  stamM.  aJdrri^pd  en?eIot)^  Is  cndavfl. 
Dr.  Briilv  will  not  presfrlhe  for  Inillviiliial  ras-'u  or  make  ill4«uo»cs.  AdJn'.-s,  Dr.  William  Braa>,  care  or  ihii 
r.j*jpiiK>r.     Proti'itia   by  The   .\Jain.<  .Nowipap«r  Sorrlrt. 


Chrlsman  t>wope.  a  nephew,  and  one 
of  the  heirs  to  Col.  Swope's  $3,000,000 
estat.',  bicame  ill  with  typhoid  fever. 
In  quick  succsslon  five  members  of 
the  Swope  household  w^n-e  stricken 
with  the  disease.  Chrlsman  died  on 
Dec.  6  The  others  recovere<l.  Dr. 
Hyde  was  an  attending  physician  at 
the  Swopp  home. 

Dr.  Hyde's  wife,  b.fore  her  mar- 
riage, was  Miss  Frances  riwope,  daugh- 
ter «>f  Mi-s.  Logun  O.  Swope.  Mrs. 
Swope  was  a  sister-in-law  of  Col. 
Swope.  I'nder  the  will,  Mrs.  Hyde  and 
nine  other  nlfce.s  and  neph-'ws  werf> 
m.ul'^  ht  irs.  At  the  death  of  any  one 
of  the  hnirs.  th'^  bequests  under  the 
will,  rt^v.rted  to  the  residuary  part  of 
the  estate  and  the  surviving  relatives 
shared    equally   in   It. 

Nurses  employed  In  the  Svvape  home 
duritiLV  the  illness  of  ("ol.  Swope  ttml 
his  mphew  were  responsible  for  the 
first  rumors  regarding  the  deaths  of 
tli-'  t.wo  nur-!.     Th-y  oonimuiilcated  ob- 


servations made  during  the  Illness  of 
the  ag'-d  philantroplst  to  other  mem- 
bers of  th.*  Swope  family  and  an  Inveij- 
tigation  was  b.'gun.  ,  On  Jan.  3,  1916, 
thc»  body  of  Chrl.sman  was  exhumed 
and  an  autopsv  was  held.  A  few  days 
later  that  of  Col.  Swope  was  disin- 
terred. Chomlsts  Were  summoned  and 
the  viseeras  were  taken  to  Chicago  for 
analysis. 

Potwon    Found. 

At  a  coroner's  Inquest,  Feb.  7,  the 
ehemists  testified  to  finding  enough 
poison  In  Col.  Swope's  liver  to  cause 
death.  On  Feb.  17,  the  coroner's  jury 
returned  a  verdict  that  Col.  Swope'a 
death  was  due  to  poisoning. 

"We  believe."  said  the  jury's  signed 
verdict,  "said  strychnine  was  admlnis- 
terred  In  a  capsule  at  8:30  a.  m.  of  the 
day  he  (Col.  Swope)  died,  by  direction 
of  Dr  B.  C.  Hyde,  whether  with  felon- 
ious Intent,  we  the  jury,  are  unable  to 
decide."  .      .  ^     .^ 

Following  the  coroners  Inquest,  Dr. 
Hyde  was  arrested  under  a  warrant 
charplng  first  degree  murder  in  the 
death  of  Col.  Swope.  He  was  released 
on  $50,000  bond.  On  March  6,  1910, 
eleven  Indictments  against  Dr.  Hyde 
were  returned  by  the  county  grand 
jury.  These  charged:  First  degree 
murder  for  the  death  of  Col.  Swope 
an<l  for  the  death  of  Chrlsman  Swopo 
and  maiislauEfhter  for  negligently  kill- 
ing Col.  Moss  Hunton.  a  cousin  of  Col. 
Swope.  and  one  of  the  executors  of 
the    est!it'^,    by    bleeding   him    to    death. 


Residence 
Telephone 


Hunton     died     two     days     before     Col. 
Swope's  death. 

The  remaining  Indictments  charged 
poisoning  other  members  of  the  Swop^ 
household    with    typhoid    germs. 

Dr.    Hyde    was   placed    on    trial    April 

11,       The      most      Important      witnesses 

against  him  were  Miss  Pearl   Kellar.   a 

;  nurso     iti     the     Swope     home,     who     de- 

I  scribed  the  giving  of  a  capsule  to  Col. 

j  Swoim;    and    the    convulsion    which    fol- 

1  lowed    on    the    day    of    the    phllanthro- 

I  pist's  death,  and   Dr.  Hugo  Brecklein.  a 

I  druggist.      Dr.    Brecklein    testified    that 

I  h<'  had  Hold  Dr.  Hyde  cyanide  In  a  cap- 

1  sule  form  three  times.     He  said  he  had 

I  never  before  filled  such  an    order.      He 

also    told    of    Dr.    Hyde    purchasing    200 

I  media  cultures. 

ISotlred  Odor  of  Cyanide. 
Thomas  H.  Swope,  Jr.,  a  nephew  of 
Col.  Swope.  declared  he  saw  Dr.  Hyde 
tramp  cyanide  capsules  In  snow  In 
front  of  the  Swope  home.  He  said  he 
picked  them  up  and  noted  the  peculiar 
odor   of  cyanide. 

Dr.  Hyde,  testifying  In  his  own  be- 
half, explained  he  procured  typhoid 
germs  to  start  a  laboratory.  He  said 
he  bought  cyanide  capsules  to  kill 
roaches.  He  denied  giving  poison  to 
Col.  Swope  and  Chilsman  Swope  and 
d»-nled  bleeding  Moss  Hunton  to  death. 
He  said  the  capsule  given  Col.  Swope 
was  a  digestive  capsule. 

Mrs.  Hyde  testified  for  her  htisband. 
She  said  Thomas  Swope.  Jr.,  could  not 
have  found  a  cyanide  capsule  because 
he  did  not  leave  the  house  the  evening 
In  question.  The  jury  found  Dr.  Hyde 
wruilty  of  murder  In  the  first  degree 
and  he  was  sentenced  to  life  Imprison- 
ment. The  Missouri  supreme  court 
granted  Dr.  Hyde  a  new  trial  on  a 
technical  error. 

The  physician  again  was  placed  on 
trial  In  the  fall  of  1911.  After  hearing 
testimony  for  a  month,  one  of  the 
jurors,  weary  of  long  confinement, 
climbed  through  a  transom  and  es- 
caped from  the  jury  room.  A  mistrial 
was   declared. 

The  third  trial.  In  191S.  resulted  In 
a  disagreement.  Since  the  last  hearing, 
the  state  has  sought  many  continu- 
ances because  of  lack  of  funds  to  pros- 
ecute and  Inability  to  get  witnesses 
together.  Since  the 
witnesses 
Twyman. 
and    Miss 


1 


$«i  34  Per 
Month 


Individual-Line  Service  $2.00  a  Month 


Important 
Dr.  O.  T. 
physician, 
a  nurse. 

During 
himself    a 


original  trial,   two 

died.      They    were 

the    Swope    family 

Lou   E.   Van  Xoys, 


his  life.  Col.  Swope  proved 
grt'at  benefactor  to  Kansas 
City,  where  he  had  amassed  his  for- 
tune. His  most  conspicuous  gift  was 
the  beautiful  1.354-acre  Swope  park. 
He  also  established  the  Swope  settle- 
ment. 


JUDGMENT  AGAINST 
FORMER  EMPLOYER 


One  Time  Maid  in  Ctiicago- 

an's  Home  Wins  Big 

Damages. 

Milwaukee.    Wis..    April    12. — A    Jury 

In  circuit  court  late  yesterday  award- 
ed a  verdict  of  $15,000  to  Elizabeth 
Slran  In  her  suit  against  Fred  H. 
Schroeder  of  Chicago,  for  150.000  for 
alleged  breach  of   promise. 

Miss  Slran.  a  maid  employed  In 
Schroeder's  home  in  1913.  testified  that 
Schroeder.  a  medical  student  at  the 
College  of  Physicians  and  Surgeons, 
had    promised    to   marry    her. 

A  year  ago  Miss  Slran  brought  suit 
in  civil  court  here  against  Schroeder 
for  the  support  of  her  child  and  she 
was  granted  $15  a  month. 

Schroeder  did  not  appear  in  court  to 
contest   the  breach  of   promise  suit. 

house'passes  free 
sugar  repeal  bill 

Washington,  April  12. — The  senate 
late  yesterday  passed  Its  substitute  for 
the  house  free  sugar  repeal  resolution, 
exten<llng  the  present  duty  of  Ic  a 
pound  on  sugar  until  May,  1920.  The 
vote  was  40  to  32. 

F'our  Democrats.  Senators  Broussard. 
Ransdell.  Newlands  and  Lane,  Joined 
the  Republicans  In  voting  against  the 
substitute.      They    favor   the    flat   repeal 


CASTORIA 

For  Infants  and  Children 

In  Use  For  Over  30  Years 

Alwajrs  bears    ^ijff  ^m,mmm^^^ 

Signature  of    C/Ha/ZST^McMC 


aft  1 


the  fiti  Section 


We  aft  giving  free  expert  instructions 
in  I.Amp  Shade  Making.  Come  down  any 
day  betTt^een  1ft  a.  m.  and  4:30  p.  m.  Buy 
yoar  material^  here  and  get  the  benefit  of 
these  free  expert  Instructions. 


!CO€ 


Saleslady  Wanted 


We  have  a  permanent  position  for  a 
competent,  experienced  saleslady  in  our 
Ready-to-Wear  Department.  Apply  to 
Mr.    Kaltenback. 


.^^ 


1         •  r 


^WE  6IVE 
^  REDEEM 

SKURITY  VOUCHERS 


Here  and  There 
in  the  Store 

— Easter  Greeting  Cards — a  com- 
plete showing  of  stamped  and 
engraved  Easter  Greeting  Cards, 
with  appropriate  Easter  verses,  at 
2c,  3c,  5c  and  10c.  -.Mun  fimt, 

— Playing  Cards  —  Gold  edged, 
cushion  finish  Playing  Cards  with 
fancy  colored  blue  and  red  backs. 
A  special  value  in  a  neat  telescope 

box,   at  25c.  .Main  flMT. 

— Hand  Purses  for  women ;  of 
fine  kid,  Chet,  pin  seal,  crepe  seal 
and  walrus,  with  top  and  back 
strap  handles.    Priced,  $1  to  $5. 

—Male  Floor. 

— Colorite  —  a  fast  color  straw 
hat  dye;  will  make  your  last 
year's  hat  look  like  new.  All 
colors ;  bottle,  25c. 

— Drii  Section,  Mala  Floor. 

— Bathing  Caps  of  pure  rubber. 
A  new  shipment  for  spring.  All 
styles  from,  plain  divers  to  the 
fancy  trimmed  variety,  at  25c  to 

$1.50.         ■        "'  ^aln  Floor. 

— Ribbons  for  Easter — Beautiful 
all  silk  plaids,  fancy  light  colored 
Dresdens  and  plain  Taft'etas,  with 
satin  ba«is.i:Ji>^  to  53^-in.  widths, 
35c  a  yaffd:*'-  »   —Main  rioor,  j 


New  Arrivals  in  the  ^^Ready-tO'Wear*' 
Section— Great  Values  in  Easter  Suits 

With  every  new  day  there  are  arrivals  of  Handsome  Spring  Apparel  for  Women,  Misses 
and  Children.  New  Silk  Suits — Silk  and  wool  combinations  and  smartly  tailored  Wool  Suits 
— and  every  one  are  designs  of  the  foremost  makers.  Do  not  delay.  Make  your  selections  early. 


Second 
Floor 


Wool  Suits  at  $19.50,  $25.00  and  $29.50 

A  large  variety  of  the  smartest  new  models  in  blues, 
checks,  tans,  greens,  blacks  and  other  Spring  color- 
ings. A  most  discriminating  choice,  $19.50,  $25,  $29.50. 

Rich,  Smart  Tailored  Suits  at  $32.50 

Silk  Suits,  Wool  Suits  and  Silk  and  Serge  combina- 
tions in  blues,  checks,  mixtures  and  blacks ;  belted  and 
flare  models.     We  feature  a  great  variety  at  $32.50. 

Fine  Spring  Coats  at  $15  to  $59.50 

An  almost  endless  variety  of  Balmacaan.^  and  Sport 
Coats  in  blue,  tan,  black,  rose,  yellow,  checks  and  fan- 
cies.   Priced  from  $15  to  $59.50. 

New  Rain  and  Motor  Coats  at  $10 

Just  received  50  of  the  best  models  in  Mohair.  Bro- 
cades, Shimmery  Silks  and  smart  mixed  materials  in 
blue,  tan,  gray  and  black — guarantee^  lor  three  years 
not  to  harden,  at  $10. 

Handsome  Silk  Dresses  at  $19.50 

Nol)by  Silk  Dresses,  combined  with  Georgette 
Crepes  and  Crepes  de  Chine.  Dre.ssy  and  plain  tai- 
lored styles  in  rose,  tan,  navy  blue,  Hague  green  and 
black.    The  very  smartest  styles  at  $19.50. 

Crepe  de  Chine 
Blouses 


And  Tub  Silk  Blouses  in  a 
variety  of  fancy  stripes  and 
plain  colors;  excellent  values 
at  $2.50  and  $3.95. 


$1.50  Petticoats  $1.25 

On  the  Bargain  Square  Main 
Floor — Black  Twill  Halycon 
Petticoat.s,  with  black  and 
white  stripe  flounce;  full 
flare;  a  11.50  value.  O  f  O  eZ 
special  at .«/'  i  .^O 


y 


Nemo —the  Corset  of  Fashion 
the  Chic  ^Military  Shape' 

Nemo  makers  are  always  in  the  forefront  of 
Fashion.  The  moment  a  new  fashion  is  estab- 
lished, there's  a  Nemo  to  produce  the  new  fash- 
ion in  its  perfection. 

All  this  season's  Nemo  models  give  the  "mil- 
itary shape" — a  higher  bust,  fuller  back,  a  real 
waist  line. 

Nemo  Kop  Service  Corsets $5  and  $7.50 

Nemo  Self-Reducing  Corsets $3  up 

,^  ...jJNcmo  Fashion  Service  Corsets $3  up 

"■  •  ""'  We  shall  render  you  a  real  service  if  you  let 
us  fit  you  in  a  Nemo  designed  for  your  figure. 

—Second  Floor. 

Ask  to  See  the  Clever  Little 
^'Betty's  Garden  Sets'* 
For  Small  Girls 

They  are  the  cutest  little  "Play  Sets"  you  have  seen  in  a 
long  timefconsisting  of  a  neat  little  overall  apron,  a  dainty 
little  Colonial  bonnet  and  a  little  fiower  basket.  Each  piece 
is  made  of  Dutch  blue  chambray,  with  neat  floral  pattern 
facings.  Don't  fail  to  see  them  even  if  there  isn't  any  little 
girl  in  your  home.    Ages.  3  to  6,  at  $2. 

Brand  New  Baby's  Wear — Just  received  a  large  showing 
of  Bootees,  Saques,  Bonnets,  Coat.s,  Dresses  and  a  bevy  of 
other  new  things  for  baby's  Spring  wear. 

Throw-Away-Diapers — Made  of  Ly-Ka-Kloth  paper.  No 
disagreeable  laundry  work  and  they  are  very  comfortable 
for  baby.  Ask  to  see  them,  as  they  save  mothers  much  work 
and  worry  and  are  very  inexpensive.  25  Throw-Away- 
Diapers  for  25c. 

— Baby  Dept. — Second  Floor. 


The  Call  Is  For 

Striped 
**Modette'' 

Everywhere  the  call  is  for 
"Modettes."  It  is  a  dainty 
non-shrinkable  cloth  for  the 
Russian  smock  tunic.  We 
are  showing  it  in  all  widths 
of  blazer  stripes,  at  29c  yard. 

The  New  Irish  Handker- 
chief Linens  for  shirt  waists, 
in  white  grounds  with  blazer 
stripes  of  Belgian  blue,  bal- 
sam green,  French  rose  and 
helio.  These'  are  of  all  pure 
Irish  linen  and  are  very  new 
and  extremely  scarce.  40-in., 
at  $1  a  yard. 

—Main  Floor. 


You'll  Surely  Like  the 

''Golfette 
Cords'' 

An  extremely  popular  new 
fabric  for  sports  coats.  We 
would  advise  you  to  select 
early  as  our  supply  of  the 
wanted  shades  is  now  com- 
plete and  includes  ivory, 
army  blue,  fern  green,  Bel- 
gian and  the  new  Dubany 
rose  shades,  in  the  36-inch 
width,  at  $1.50  a  yard. 

New  Striped  Taffetas  in 
the  wanted  mannisii  stripes, 
also  checks ;  for  suitings  it 
is  very  modish,  36  inches,  at 
$1.25  a  yard. 

— Main   Floor. 


Wear  a  Pair  of  High  Top  Boots 
With  Your  New  Easter  Suit 


They  are  just  the  prop- 
er finishing  touch  for  your 
new  Easter  suit  and  hat. 
Your  wardrobe  will  be 
complete  with  a  pair  of 
our  dainty,  stylish  8-inch 
top  boots. 

Select  a  pair  tomorrow 
from  our  Easter  showing 
of  the  most  popular  lasts. 
In  champagne,  ivory  and 
black  leathers.  Also  in 
White  Cairo  cloth.  All 
sizes,  widths  and  lasts — 


pair  $3,50  and  $4 


-Annex — Main  Floor. 


r 


Rare  Individuality  in  Tfiese 

Smart  Easter  Hats 

Indeed  they  are  a  rare  collection  of  smart 
individual  shapes;  hardly  two  alike.  In  the  lot 
you  will  find  close-fitting  Turbans,  large  wide 

brim    Sailors,    smart     English 
Walking    Hats    and    a    wide 
range    of    shapes    for    dressy 
wear.    They  are  mostly  hemps, 
a  few  Lisere  and  hemp,  with  trimmings 
of  flowers,  fancy  feathers,  quills,  wings, 
Lisere  ribbons,  etc.    In  all  the  prevail- 
ing spring  shades  in  a  really  exception- 
al showing  for  your  selection — 


Plenty  of  Fine 

Georgette  CvepeS 

Are  Here  for  Your 

Choosing  at 
$1.50  to  $2  a  Yard 

All  the  very  newest  spring 
shades  in  dainty  new  Georg- 
ette Crepes,  including  Rus- 
sian green,  Belgian  blue, 
Nile  green,  Copenhagen, 
navy,  sky,  flesh,  coral,  pink, 
maize  and  many  others. 

A  sheer  quality  for  dainty 
waists,  dresses,  underwear 
and  many  other  useful  pur- 
poses for  which  women  want 
it.  Also  silk  nets  included  in 
this  lot;  Uoth  in  40  and  42- 
inch  widths,  at  $1.50  to  $2  a 
yard. 

Chiffon  Cloths— a  full  line 
of  all  the  newest  colorings; 
42  inches  wide,  at  $1  a  yard. 
— Main   Floor. 


Women's  Black 
Lisle  Hosiery 

At  39c  a  Pair 
or  3  Pairs  for  $1 

An  exceptionally  fine  qual- 
ity and  finish  in  black  lisle 
Hosiery  for  women's  spring 
wear.  They  are  thoroughly 
well  made  with  six  thread 
heel  and  toe,  four  thread 
sole,  garter  tops.  A  very 
special  value  at  39c  a  pair, 
or  3  pairs  for  $1. 

Women 's  Fiber  Silk 
Hosiery  at  29c  a  Pair 

Pure  Fiber  Silk  Boot 
Hose;  made  with  reinforced 
lisle  toes,  heels  and  garter 
tops.  In  most  all  of  the  new 
spring  shades;  black  and 
white  included.  A  very  good 
value  at  29c  a  pair. 

— Main  Floor. 


Daased  by  the  house.  A  sharp  contro- 
verfy  in  conference  between  the  two 
houses  is  predicted.  Anticipating  that 
the  house  would  Insist  upon  Its  resolu- 
tion. Senators  Simmons,  Stone  and 
l.odKe  were  uairwd  as  the  senate  con- 
ferees. ,^ 

WORKS  TO  FILE 

IFOK  GOVERNOR 

Insurance    Commissioner 

Says  He  Will  Enter 

thej^ace. 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  April  12. — Samuel  D. 
'V^orka,    state    insurance   commissioner, 


has  announced  that  he  will  be  .1  can- 
didate for  governor  on  the  Democratic 
ticket  and  will  file  within  a  few  days. 

It  is  understood  in  Democratic  circles 
also,  that  Daniel  W.  Lawler  will  file 
soon  as  Democratic  candidate  for  the 
United  States  senate. 

The  question  of  calling  a  conference 
of  Democratic  Uaders  to  determine 
upon  candidates  for  congressmen  and 
state  offices  has  brought  from  both  Mr. 
Works  and  Mr.  Lawler  statements  that 
th<^y  do  not  favor  such  conferences. 
They  express  the  opinion  that  confer- 
ences. Instead  of  cementing,  disinteg- 
rate parties. 

KAISER  HAS  CLOSE  CALL 
FROM  EXPLODING  SHELL 

London.  April  12. — The  German  em- 
peror Is  at  Potsdam,  recovering  from 
nervous  shock  as  the  result  of  the  ex- 


plosion of  a  shell  at  Verdun  which  de- 
stroyed the  imperial  motor  car  and 
killed  several  officials,  says  a  Rome 
dispatch  to  the  Daily  Telegraph,  quot- 
ing  Swiss    reports. 

Emperor  William  was  unhurt,  the 
dispatch  adds. 

WOMAN  DELEGATE  ON 
KANSAS  DELEGATION 

Hutchinson.     Kas..    April    12. — W.    E. 

Sapp    of    Galena    defeated    J.    W.    Orr 

of  Atchison  in  the  contest  for  national 
committeeman  at  the  Democratic  state 
convention  here  yesterday.  Mrs.  W.  A. 
Harris  of  Lawrence  was  chosen  one 
of  the  four  delegates-at-large.  and 
United  States  Senator  Thompson  of 
Kansas    City    was    another. 

The  resolutions  adopted  praised 
President  Wilson  and  lauded  the  work 
of  the  party  in  fulfilling   the  pledges 


J^lnn!^*?  ^l^^-  Gi-eetings  were  ex- 
tended to  Former  Secretary  of  Slate 
Bryan  as  follows: 

ril'i^l®  send  greetings  to  that  peerless 
Democrat  W.  J.  Bryan,  and  express 
the  confident  hope  that  he  will  again 
be  a  delegate  at  the  next  national 
Democratic  convention." 

The  resolutions  committee  blocked  an 
attempt  to  indorse  Governor  Major 
of  Missouri  for  the  vice  presidential 
nomination. 


Smitton  Succeeds  Jackson. 

G.  H.  Smitton  has  been  appointed 
assistant  traffic  manager  of  the  Great 
Northern  railroad,  with  headquarters 
at  St.  Paul,  relieving  H.  A.  Jackson, 
now  general  traffic  manager  of  the 
Great  North<^rn  Pacific  Steamship  com- 
pany, with  headquarters  at  San  Fran- 
cisco. 

Mr.  Smitton  was  formerly  assistant 
general  freight  Agent  of  the  Great 
Northern  with  offices  at  Portland    Otv 


■ 


i 


n  T~fT»i 


=*— .F 


P 


Wednesday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


•  r«- 


■ 


■■ 

-t 


-\. 


»   »     *h'        *  h 


^  French  &  Bassett  Go. 


Special  Sale 

of  GMIdren's 

Vehicles! 


Take  The 
Baby 
Out! 


These  arc  the  days  to  take  the  little  tots  out  in  the 
sunshine,  it  will  give  them  rosy  cheeks  and  they'll  grow 
like  weeds.  In  Duluth  a  sulky  is  a  necessity  on  account 
of  the  hills  and  the  length  of  the  city;  you  will  find  our 
stock  complete,  as  usual. 


SULKY 


With 
Hood 

only 
'21 


2 


This  collapsible  sulky,  with  black  enamel  frame,  good 
size  rubber  tired  wheels  and  extra  safety  wheel  in  rear, 
can  be  completely  folded  and  carried  with  one  hand  with 
one  movement — special,  $1.95. 

A  durable  article  that  can  be  completely  folded  and 
taken  on  street  car,  black  enamel  frame,  rubber  tired 
wheels  and  adjustable  hood.  A  very  rigid  and  durable 
cart,  special,  $2.95. 

Qash  or  Our  New  Easy  Terms 


GOOD 

Estab/ished  ISSU. 


First  St.  and  Third Tlve.  West 


—All  Kinds  of— 

BURPEE'S  SEEDS 

Our   prices  in   Duluth  are  the 
same  as  Burpee's  in  Philadelphia 

THE  ALPHA  FLORIST 

131  West  Superior  Street. 


MARINE 


totnl  when  navigation  opens  to  r^'afh 
4  500.  Mr.  Sweet  aald  it  was  impossible 
to  determine  at  this  time  how  many 
vessels  will  be  In  commission  and  Just 
how  many  certified  seamen  will  be  re- 
quired, therefore  he  could  make  no  pre- 
diction as  to  whether  the  vessels  to  be  i 
put  into  commission  on  the  oreat 
Lakes  could  be   operated.  j 

Eichtv-t-lght  per  cent  of  the  men  who 
applied  received  certificates  and  many  | 
of  the  remaining:  twelve  per  cent  were  i 
rejected  conditionally  and  advised  to ; 
procure  Rlasses  or  take  necessary ■ 
I  treatment  and  try  again.  .v.    .  ' 

!  Mr  Sweet  aaid  the  prospect  Is  that  i 
this  will  be  a  record-breaking  season  , 
!  on  the  Great  Lakes.  He  said  many  i 
vess.ls  that  had  been  out  of  commis- 
sion for  tv.o  or  three  years  have  been  , 
i  fitted  for  service  this  year  and  the 
business  In  ore,  coal  and  grain  Is  likely 
to   aggregate    107.000.000    tons. 

ICE  stillIocks 

UP  SAULT  RIVER 

Pault  .Ste.  Marie.  Mich..  April  12.— 
Ire  conditions  In  this  stctlon  have  not 
(hanged  appreciably  during  the  last 
wf<  k.  The  op'-ratlon  of  the  ferry  b»- 
tween  the  .Saults  has  broken  away  a 
consid.rable  portion  of  the  ke  in  the 
harbor.  :»nd  open  water  exists  as  far 
down  as  .Six  Mil.'  point  In  Hay  lake. 

Driving  by  teams  Is  still  In  progr-ss 
across  Hay  lake,  although  here  and 
there  airholes  are  showing  up.  Th<- 
ic*-  has  gone  out  of  the  mouth  of  the 
river  Into  Lake  Huron,  and  crossing 
bftween  Detour  and  Drunimond  island 
has  bef-n  dlscontlnutd. 

At  Whltefish  point  from  fourteen  to 
nineteen  Inches  of  solid  ice  exists  in 
tho  bay.  Fishing  is  still  conducted 
through  the  ice  all  the  way  down  to 
I'i.quols  point.  Above  Whiteflsh  pomt 
the  big  field  is  being  blown  back  and 
forth  by  the  wind.  The  weather  turned 
colder  tonight,  with  a  northwest  wind. 
All  steam  craft  in  the  harbor  are  being 
put  In  readiness  for  work  as  soon  as 
they   will   be   required. 

FINDS  OUTLOOK  FOR 

BUSINESS  UNUSUAL 

Washington.  April  12.  —  Assistant 
Secretary  Sweet  of  the  department  of 
cf.mnierce,  back  today  from  a  tour  of 
'.Jreat  Lakes  ports,  declared  that  the 
.<«hlpplng  season  soon  to  open  would 
brc.-xk    all    r<>cords    for    goods    carried. 

'•Vessels  out  of  commission  fox  th< 
last  two  or  three  yt-ars  r.ave  been  fitted 
up  for  service,"  he  said.  "Many  vcs- 
.sels  are  loaded  now  ready   to  start." 

First  Boat  to  North  Shore. 

The  little  fishing  steamer  Goldish  of 
the  reddish  Fish  company  of  Duluth 
Is  due  to  leave  Two  Harbors  today  for 
tJrand  Marals  and  Intermediate  points. 
She  wintered  in  Two  Harbors  and  to- 
day is  carrying  freight  and  passen- 
gers as  well  as  her  fishing  crew.  It 
is  expected  that  she  will  have  quite  a 
number  of  passengers  on  the  trip 
back,  as  she  Is  the  first  boat  to  go  up 
the   shore   this   year. 

TOTAL  NOT 
YETJINOWN 

"Drys"  Believe  They  Have 

More  Than  4,000  Names 

on  Petitions. 


HOLDUPS  HAVE 

BEEN  NUMEROUS 

More  holdups  were  staged  in  Duluth 
during  March  than  for  any  one  montn 
in  recout  years,  according  to  the  report 
of  Police  LKut.   Terry  today. 

Nine  wore  reported,  of  which  four 
were  attributed  to  lirady  Henry  and 
Frank  Kngnian,  ex-convicts,  now  In  a 
Superior  Jail  facing  several  charges 
of  highway  robb.ry,  murder  and  at- 
tenjpt..d  murder,  after  a  sensational 
career  of  crime. 

Lieut.  Terry,  in  his  report  as  Inspect- 
or of  pawnshops,  states  that  property 
valued  at  $2,633.30  was'  lost  or  stolen 
during  the  month,  and  that  police  re- 
covered l»2  per  '-ent  of  the  amount. 
This  recovery,  although  higher  than 
that  for  February,  is  considerably  be- 
low the  average.  The  value  of  miss  ng 
property  is  le.s.s  than  usual,  comparing 
with    13.988    In    February. 

Activities  of  crooks  who  assembled 
In  Duluth  early  In  the  month,  prepar- 
ing for  the  gath".-lng  of  lumberjacks 
and  lake  vessel  men,  are  reflected  in 
the  report.  There  were  thirtv-nlne 
ca.^es  of  petit  larceny,  thirteen  of 
grand  larceny,  two  of  larceny  from  the 
person,  nine  of  holdup  and  seven  of 
burglary. 


FIRST  SIGNS 
OFMTIVITY 

Tug  Breaks   Ice   and  Re- 
leases the  Steamer 
Briton. 


First    Ore    Dropped    Into 
Pockets  at  Great  North- 
ern Docks. 


^  Our  New— 


f    High  Boots 

1  are  very  popular.    Our  stores  are 


The  first  moving  of  a  tug  about  the 
harbor  occurred  yesterday  afternoon 
when  the  Minnesota  of  the  Union 
Towing  company  cut  into  two  slips, 
coaled  and  released  one  steamer. 

The  first  move  of  the  tug  was  to  go 
into  the  slip  at  the  No.  7  Pittsburgh 
coal  dock  and  take  on  a  supply  of 
coal,  releasing  the  Ice  at  the  face  of 
the  dock.  The  tug  then  proceeded  to 
the  Soo  dock  on  this  side  of  the  bay, 
breaking  the  ice  along  side  the  steam- 
er Briton  as  far  up  as  the  bow.  re- 
leasing the  steamer.  No  further  ice- 
breaking  has  yet  been  ordered,  but  it 
is  expected  at  any  time.  The  Minne- 
sota found  the  ice  fairly  soft  yester- 
day and  experienced  no  difficulty 
whatever  in  making  her  way  through 
it.  The  sun  of  the  last  few  days  soft- 
ened it  considerably  and  the  rain  of 
today  is  working  further  havoc. 

The  steamer  Briton,  which  belongs 
to  the  Massey  Steamship  company,  will 
leave  the  harbor  probably  Friday  or 
Saturday    for    Port    Arthur.      She    will 

ffo  up  liglU  and  will  there  load  screen- 
ngs  or  wheat,  most  probably  the  for- 
mer. The  Briton  was  the  last  steamer 
to  arrive  last  fall,  making  several 
trips  to  Port  Arthur  for  screenings 
long  after  the  insurance  rates  had 
been   off. 

The  first  ore  to  arrive  at  the  Great 
Northern  ore  docks  this  year  was 
dropped  Into  the  pockets  today.  Ship-  , 
ments  will  continue  to  arrive  daily 
\intll  fall.  Ore  dock  officials  believe 
that  16,000.000  tons  of  ore  will  be 
shipped  by  the  Great  Northern  this 
season,  eclipsing  the  previous  record  of 
1912.  The  Soo  and  Northern  Pacific 
roads  also  are  preparing  for  an  active 
ore  season.  The  two  roads  will  bring 
about  3,000,000  tons  from  the  new  Guy- 
ana   range   to   their  docks  at   Superior. 

The  lake  ice,  which  started  out  yes- 
terday, blown  by  favorable  winds,  Is 
back  again  today,  for  the  northeast  i 
wind  that  is  blowing  sent  it  in  more 
rapidly  than  the  offshore  wind  had 
drifted  it  out.  The  field  is  badly 
broken  up,  however,  and  there  is  a 
great  deal  of  open  water  In   sight. 

MANY  SAILORS 

RATED  AS  SEAMEN 


"Drys"  will  not  know  how  many 
Duluthisns  have  signed  their  Initia- 
tive petitions  asking  for  a  wet  and 
dry  election  until  tomorrow  morning, 
when   the   names   will   be   checked. 

Monday  night.  in  a  four-hour, 
house-to-house  canvass,  the  dry  work- 
ers believe  they  secured  nearly  3.000 
names  on  their  petitions,  but  the  time 
limit  was  extended  until  tomorrow 
morning,  as  captains  of  the  various 
districts    wanted    more    time. 

Although  2,646  names  of  voters  are 
all  that  are  needed  to  make  the  peti- 
tion sufficient,  the  "dry"  workers  de- 
termined early  In  the  campaign  to 
obtain    5.000    names. 

Up  to  last  night,  with  several  dis- 
trict captains  yet  to  report.  W.  L. 
Smithies,  chairman  of  the  Dry  Ordi- 
nance committee,  said  that  more  than 
4,000   names   had   been   obtained. 

"Many  men  came  to  our  headquar- 
ters during  the  day,"  Mr.  Smithies  said, 
"complaining  that  they  were  not  can- 
vassed Monday  night,  and  that  they 
had  no  opportunity  to  sign  a  petition. 
That  is  why  the  time  was  extended. 
The  lists  will  be  closed  at  10  o'clock 
tomorrow  morning,  however,  and  all 
of  the  captains  must  have  their  peti- 
tions  In    by   that   time." 

The  petitions  probably  will  go  to 
rity  Clerk  Walter  Borgen  Thursday 
noon,  or  afternoon.  They  ask  that  the 
council  provide  for  a  vote  on  the  liquor 
license  question  at  the  coming  spring 
election,  and  that  saloons  be  abolished 
by  July  1.  1917. 


NOT  AUTHORIZED 
TO  SOLICIT  FUNDS 


Michigan  street  merchants  were  vis- 
Ited  by  a  solicitor  today,  who  suc- 
ceeded in  obtaining  donations  to  the 
Children's  home  In  one  or  two  places, 
before  authorities  at  the  Institution 
heard  of  it.  ^^     .      , 

They  denied  that  he  was  authorized 
to  represent  the  institution  and  Issued 
a  statement  asking  that  merchants 
honor  no  requests  until  they  had  verl- 
fled  the  credentials  of  the  solicitor. 


are  very  popular.  Our  stores  are 
crowded  to  capacity  daily.  In  all 
the  newest  colors-$3.00  to  $5.00. 

rensen 

hoe  Stores 

i  Mail  Orders.  Send  for  Style  Book  | 
ff.  PAUL^  M I N  N EAPOLIS  -OULUTM. 

123- W«trfup«rtcr  Arttf 


Weather 
Wear- 
ables 


"are  the  call  of  the 
day."  Better  call  in  to- 
morrow   and    protect 

Assistant  ^^cretary     ofl   y^"^^^^^   ^^^"^   ^^''^ 


Commerce  Says  Rec- 
ord Is  Large. 

From  Th«  Hcraltf  Wathlniton  Bireii. 
Washington.  April  12.  —  Assistant 
I  Secretary  of  Commerce  Edwin  F.  Sweet, 
upon  his  return  to  Washington  from  a 
tour  of  the  (Jreat  Lakes  ports  today 
stated  that  the  number  of  sailors  on 
the  Great  Lakes  who  have  received  cer- 
tificates under  the  seaman's  law  Is 
about    3,800    and    that    he    expects    the 


showers. 


CLffJHfXf.     fn 


405-407    West   Superior   St. 


Glass  Block 

Easier  Favors  and 
Easter  Cards— 
{Main  Floor) 


Block 


Fur  Repairing,  Fur 

Storage— (Ask  on 

the  2nd  Floor) 


ass 


Are  You  Following  the  Sun-Dial  of  Fashion? 


NecKwear 

"Rufflings  are  the  rage." 
Every  day  brings  stronger 
confirmation  of  this,  from 
New  York!  And  it's  prov- 
ing so,  too.  right  here  in 
Duluth  I  Which  is  one 
reason  why  we've  taken 
pains  to  have  on  hand 
Buch  a  large  and  beautiful 
assortment  of  rufflings  just 
before  Easter!  You'll  be 
astonished  at  the  range 
and  variety  of  the  display! 
Some  beautiful  new  effects 
ji  the  popular  "cape"  coL 
Lars  are  here,  in  Georgette 
and  organdy!  In  colors 
as  well  as  plain  white! 
(Neckwear  Dept— Main 
Floor.) 


FI\'E  HUNDRED  women  sat  on  our  Second  Floor,  yes- 
terdav  afternoon,  and  saw  the  gay  parade  of  Easter 
styles!  Counting  the  other  performances,  over  two  thou- 
sand women  saw  this  stunning,  inspiring,  helpful  display! 
Perhaps  circumstances  kep  you  from  being  so  fortunate! 
But  there's  still  time  to  see  these  delightful  creations— it 
you'll  come  early  tomorrow,  before  another  day's  sellii%g 
sees  the  best  models  gone!  You've  already  seen  the  sur- 
pri^.ing  style  and  beauty  of  the  lower-priced  suits  and  frocks  shown. 
More  than  in  any  previous  year,  this  Spring's  Style  Revue  has 
demonstrated  the  wisdom  of  the  Glass  Block's  aim  and  policy— 
to  specialize,  not  on  high-priced,  "eccentric"  apparel,  but  on  the 
newest,  moderate-priced  apparel,  of  the  type  Duluth  women  appre- 
ciate and  desire! 
You'll  wish  to  see  these  new  styles  at  your  leisure.  (.Second  Floor) 


^Ol 


Graceful  Flower  Pans, 
Bowls,  Birds  and  But- 
terflies for  Table  Dec- 
oration I 

Many  in  the  stunning 
black  "Etruscan"  ware! 
Flower  holders  at  50c  and 
98c.  14-inch  bowls  at 
$2.98.  Little  china  butter- 
flies and  birds  at  48c. 
Waxed  water  lilies  at  35c. 
Canaries,  (to  set  on  the 
edge  of  a  flower  bowl), 
25c.  (Basement.) 


Smart  New  Hats  at 


For  Easter! 

Lovely  Little 

Crepe  Jc  Chine 

Handkerchiefs 

25c  and  35c 

Just  arrived  from  New 
York!  Very  new,  and  a 
very  rich  quality  of  Crepe 
de  Chine.  Plain  colors  at 
25c.  Others,  with  em- 
broidered corners,  at  35c. 
(White,  purple,  lavender, 
peach,  old  rose,  etc.) 
(Hdkf.  Dept.— Main  floor) 


Shinnihg  Spring  MillineryYou'Il  WisK  to  Sss 

We're  showing  a  gorgeous  display  of  new  Spring  styles  in  millinery 
—trimmed  hats  at  $5,  for  instance,  that  look  like  regular  $10  and 
$15  models!  New  sport  hats  are  here  in  the  latest  "knitted  striped 
silks."  All  sorts  of  attractive  misses'  and  children's  hats,  too— and 
all  moderately  priced. 


4r 


Look  for 
Tkese  New- 
Spring 
Millinery 
Conceits  on  tne 
Xliird  Floor 


Ask  to  See 

OurBeautiful 

Models  in 

Trimmed 

Hats  at 

$5.00 


Boys! 


Here  they  are!  Boys' 
Norfolk  suits — blue  serge 
or  mixtures  —  mighty 
smart,  and  durable,  too! 
(Two  pairs  of  pants!) 
Priced  at  $3.95.  $4.95,  $5.95, 
$6.50,  $7.50  and  up. 
For  little  fellows,  (3  to  8), 
all-wool  serge  suits,  at 
$3.95  and  $4.95.  (Cunning 
short  Russian  jackets  with 
wide  belt.)  Ask  to  see 
them.        (Second  floor.) 


Sale  of  Marquisette  and  Scrim  Curtainings 


Artists' 
Materials 

Perhaps  you  didn't  know 
that  the  Glass  Block  has 
the  largest  stock  of  artists' 
materials— for  china  deco- 
rating — in  Duluth  today? 
Tracing  papers,  oils,  "me- 
diums," brushes,  palette 
knives,  burnishers,  bur- 
nishing sand,  tracing  pen- 
cils,  china  pencils,  lusters^ 
enamels,   "kiln"  sundries,' 

If  you  arc  interested  in 
china  painting,  you'll  be 
glad  to  know  that  we 
carry  Muller  &  Kenny's 
Royal  Dresden  China  col- 
ors. Fry's  vitrifiable  col- 
ors', Campana's  Mineral 
Powder  Paints,  as  well  as 
Hasburg's  (new)  China 
Colors.  . 


The  popular  Marquisette  and  Scrim  Curtainings— the  kind  that 
"everybody  uses"— some  plain  hemstitched,  others  lace  edged),  at 
the  following  special  prices: 

Our  regular  $1.25  grade,  per  pair.  89c. 

Our  regular  $1.35  grade,  per  pair.  98c. 

Our  regular  $1.50  grade,  per  pair,  $1.19. 

Our  regular  $1.75  grade,  per  pair,  $1.39. 

Our  regular  $2.00  grade,  per  pair,  $1.49. 

Our  regular  $2.25  grade,  per  pair,  $1.69. 

Our  regular  $2.50  grade,  per  pair,  $1.79. 
Two   other   unusual   ofTerings— Colonial   and   filet   figured   curtain 
nets,  white  and  ecru,  46-inch  widths  (our  regular  30c  quality),  spe- 
'.«oi  of  24c 

io-inch  Voiles  and  Marquisettes  (white  and  ecru),  our  regular  30c 
grade,  special  at  21c.  (Fourth  Floor) 


Have  You  Seen  Tkese  New  Books?— Just  Out! 

"Nan  of  Music  Mountain,"  by  Frank  H.  Spearman,  author  of 
"Whispering  Smith."  "Life  and  Gabriella,"  by  Ellen  Glas- 
gow. "Just  David,"  by  Eleanor  Porter.  "Instead  of  the 
Thorn."  by  Clara  Louise  Burnham.  "Seventeen,"  by  Booth 
Tarkington.  (  Book  Shop— Main  Floor.) 


Hudriixt's 

Face  Creams 

Marvelous 50c 

Cucumber    75c 

Violet  Sec 50c 

Cerate   Cream 50c 

Toilet  Waters 

Violet  Sec 75c 

Lily  of  the  Valley 75c 

Rose    75c 

Face  Powders 

Violet  Sec 50c 

Violet  Superba $1.00 


Attractive  Offering's  in  Exclusive  New  vSilKs 


! 


SomctKihg  New  1 

A  Combination  P  a  t- 
Leather  and  White 
Calf  Shoe  for  Girls,  $8. 

Very  rich— very  new!     A 
black  patent  leather  shoe, 
made    with    a    white    calf 
top,  white  ivory  sole,  and 
white    ivory  French    heel, 
(quite  low).  Fashioned  on 
the  new  English  last!  ($8). 
George  W.  Baker  models, 
lace  or  button,  with  9-inch 
white  calfskin  tops,  white 
sole     and     French    heels, 
gray  button  style*,  also  $S. 
A   new    shade    of    "cham- 
pagne"     (S'/a-iUch      tops, 
French  heels)   $8. 
The    famous    George    W. 
Baker     button  '   or     late 
styles,  in  black  or  tan,  at 
$5  and  $6. 

U- 


Consisting  of  satin  taffeta,  stripes  and  plaids,  c'"ff?".'''"l''^adium  taffetas 
in  stunning  and  fashionable  designs  and  colornigs.     Price  $1.50,  $1.75,  !>^.UU. 

Special  $1.25—40  pieces  chiffon  taffetas  in  every  conceivable  color;  com- 
prising beautiful  stripes,  glace  changeable  effects,  monotone  and  satm 
stripes,  hairline  and  shadow  stripes;  36  inches  and  sterhng  qualities. 
Soft  washable  corduroys  for  coats  and  skirts— the  better  qualities  that  are 
now  used  so  extensively  for  sport  coats  and  skirts;  .}6  inches  wide  in 
medium  and  wide  wale;  soft,  silky  finish,  in  old  rose,  pink,  green  orange, 
lemon,  Copenhagen,  pistache,  old  blue,  tan;  $1.00,  $1.25,  $1.50  yard. 
French  serges,  poplins,  tussah  cloths,  suitings  and  coatings  in  a  vast  asort- 
mcnt  of  colors  and  styles.     Special  per  yard,  $1.25. 

Materials  thoroughly  adapted  for  spring  suits,  skirts  and  dresses;  fine  qual- 
ities, nicely  finished;  selection  includes  the  newest  types  and  colors  olfere<l 
in  navy  blue,  also  black,  44  to  50  inches  wide,  $1.25. 

54-inch  stylish  shepherd  checks,  $1.25— fine  grade,  so  much  in  demand  for 
present  wear  in  suits  and  skirts.  Serviceable  and  shown  in  all  popular 
size  check  combinations. 

Special  44-inch  Shepherd  Checks,  50c— Large,  small  and  in  two  sizes  of 
medium  checks;  strong,  durable  and  washable,  for  suits,  skirts,  etc.,  per 
yard,  50c. 

Remarkable   taffeia   silk    at   $1.35   and   $1.50-36-inch   dress   taffeta;   colors 
Tcirce  everywhere  here  in  almost  endless  variety-plam   and   novelty  taf- 
eia  in  profi^ion    glace  taffeta,  black  chiffon,  Persian  black  suitmg  taf  etas 
soft.    sUkv.    durable,    non-crushable.    fine    dye    and    French    finished    black 
taffetas;   per  yard,  $1.35   and  $1.50. 


^% 


ass 


ore 


Our  Second 

Century  Progressive  Club 
is  now  forming. 

/%  ^  First 

ZtOC  Payment 

Secures   delivery  of  the 

FLORENCE  ROTARY 
SEWING   MACHINE. 

We  have  secured  another 
shipment  of  these  wonder- 
ful machines  and  are  thus 
able  to  hold  the  second 
club  of  this  kind  this  year. 
There  were  not  enough  to 
go  around  last  time,  so 
you  had  better  come  in 
and  join  now. 
Memberships  are  going 
fast.  Come  in  and  let  us 
explain  this  easy  payment 
plan.  (Basement.) 


ST 


mtiCt 


,M   .nil   .»■■■    I 


^«>r-' 


'  ti*' 


y  ■■f^<i«^w><wi"^i»w^.^  '    "'^ ' 


<   I       ■  ■  ^       ■     .1    '        L 


"  r 


/ 


f 


-  r 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


Society  *  Women's  Clubs  *  Mftsic  ^  Drama 


ll£  niarriaj^e  of  Miss  Mar- 
craret  Fuller  Barrows  and 
i  Uarnu.n  V.  Gilbert  will  take 
place  at  8:30  o'clook  tonight 
at  the  residence  of  ^  the 
hriile  -  parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  L. 
fcarrovv-j.  IJ  X..rth  Nineteenth  ave- 
nue i:ast.  Rev.  Hardy  A.  Ingham  of 
the  ImkIIop  M.  K.  church  will  perform 
the  crrtMHuny.  Mrs.  Calvin  F.  How. 
Jr..  c  -iisin  of  the  bride,  will  be  the 
tiiatr  -n  >)t  honor.  Miss  Lydia  \\  ood- 
bridi^o  will  be  the  bridesmaid  and  the 
brich'sroom  will  have  as  his  attendant 
ins    br. -tlicr,    John    Gilbert,    of    Farii^o. 

N     I) 

Mr.  Gilliert  and  his  bride  will  make 
their  Ii>nie  in  the  Endi'jn  aitartinents. 

Wives  Had  to  Indentify 

I  Headless  Husbands 

Do  vou  think  you  could  plrk  your 
husband,  if  you  hnppt-n  to  have  one. 
oftt  '(  a  crowd  of  ni.-n  all  dresaed  in 
8tir<otvp.-d  evtninK  iloth.'s,  if  he  had 
lost  his  li'-ad  ttMnporarily  by  having 
ii  en.  is.d  in  a  pap.-r  huts' 

Thai  wa-i  thv  ftsk  .-^el  for  the  wom^n 
who  iU.-ndeJ  tlio  Oii'^nlal  .suoscrlption 
dan.-^  thai  was  uivn  in  ri.tveland 
Ohio,  li.Ht  we,  k.  At  th^  *iid  of  one  of 
th»  d.iii.-.-s  all  hu.-biind.s  w.  re  ordered 
rthev  wre  probably  u.'ed  u>  being  or- 
d.re.l)  to  a  little  room  off  the  ballroom. 
wh»re  th'lr  h.  ads  w-re  In.serte.l  into 
haKs  on  ih.  ir  rHiurn  to  the  ballroom 
they  were  liiud  up  and  claimed  by 
their  .''pouses.  who  realized  that  there 
Is  ofi^>n  a.s  niuih  individuality  of  form 
ad  of  face. 

Grayson's  Romance  Began 
In  Taft  Administration 

Dr     Carey    Oravson.    whose    position 
a-i    physieian    to    President    Wilson    and  ■ 
oiie  of  his  alde.s.   ha.^  made  him  a  tar-  | 
g^t     f'T    maiehniakers    who    have    had 
him  entratred  to  first  one  and  then  an- 
other, preferably  .some  one  of  the  presi. 
denf^    family   or   friends,    is   quoted   as  , 
havliK  .said   that   he  and   Mi.^s  tiertrudo 
t;.jrdi>n    will    be    married    late    in    May  : 
or   early    in    June.  I 

It    wa.-»    while   doini?   escort    duty    to  ! 
Presi'J'Mit     Taff3     daughter     that     Dr.  i 
Clraysi.n    met    her   friend.    Miss   (Gordon.  I 
who   i.s   a    pretty    Virginia   heiress.     The 
affair  oontinued  in  the  Wilson   regime 
and    th.'    result    was    the    engagement 
that   •i^:!.^   announced   recently. 

It    is    said    that    President    and    Mrs. 

•Wilson  would  like  to  make  the  wed- 
ding a  AVhite  Hou.se  affair,  but  tliat 
the  bride  and  bridegroom-elect  prefer 
les3  coniipi<uou6  .surroundings  and  vrlU 
probably    be    married    In   Mids   (iordon's 

•house,  which  has  been  rented  this  win. 

.ter.  but  which  will  be  occupied  next 
8ea.'*'>n   by   its   owner. 

!      As    a    rule    when    a    president's    aides 

"many  they  soon  cease  to  be  aides,  as 
bachelors    are    preferred,     but    as*    Dr. 

-Grayson  is  also  the  president's  physi- 
cian the  rule  mu.v  not  hold  good  in  his 
case,  for  there  i.s  no  custom  that  de- 
mands that  the  president's  physieian 
shall    be    unmarried. 

"Jews  in  America" 

;  Subject  of  Meeting 

':      The    Temple    Emanu-d      Aid      society 

'celebrated  the  :i6lst  anniversary  of  the 

coming    of    Jews    to      America      by      a 

symposium  on  ".lews  In  America"  that 

was    held    yesterday    afternoon    at    the 

'temple      Mrs.    Fannie    Mondshlne    gaVe 

a    paper    on    "Landing    of    tho    Jewish  I 

Pilgrims,"    Mrs.    M.   Cook   read  a    paper 

•on  "The  Jews  in  America  Up  to  18C5." 

iwhloii    was    written    by    Mrs.    H.    Y.    Jo- 

'sephs,    who   was    unable    to    be   present 

{because  of  illness,  and  Mrs.  M.  Hlrsch- 

'  field   c ompl.ted  the  subject   by  a  paper 

'on  "Jews  in  America  From  1865  Up  to 

ithe   Present    Day." 

The  following  were  appointed  mem- 
bers of  the  nominating  conunlttee: 
Mrs.  M.  Levy,  Mrs.  D.  Frelnuith,  Mrs. 
I.  Cohen  of  Superior,  Mrs.  S.  I.  Levin 
sand  Miss  Elsl.-  .^llberstein.  The  elec- 
■tton  of  officers  will  take  place  at  the 
June   meeting. 

Mary  Antln.  author  of  "The  Prom- 
ised Land"  and  "Tliey  Who  Knock  at 
Our  (Jates,"  will  give  a  lecture  h«pe 
next     njonth. 

;      Following     the    talks     there     was    a 

•pocial    meeting  in   charge  of   Mrs.   Max 

'V'etzl'^r,    Mrs.    L.    Tlirsch.    Mrs.     Jacob 

Zien    and    Mrs.    I.    Zimmerman. 

— ^ 

Officers  Are  Elected 

By  Bible  Class 

Th*»  following  officers  w.re  elected 
St  th'>  meeting  of  tho  McCuUum  Bible 
Class  of  the  Lakeside  Presbyterian 
churih,  which  was  held  last  nltjht  at 
the  resilience  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  S. 
Manley,  4760  London  road:  President, 
ileorge  Stevensr)n;  "vice  pr^sider*^,  F.  C. 
Stoddard;  secretary.  Mrs.  L.  D.  Roberl- 
."^on;  treasurer.  .Mrs.  C.  F.  Prosser,  and 
teacher,   A.   L.   McDermll. 

The  Phllathea  class  of  the  church 
was  in  charge  of  the  social  meeting 
which  foUowd.  Daffodils  were  us.^d 
in  the  dining  room  and  roses  In  the 
living  room.     Sl.tty  persons  attended. 

m 

Rev.  G.  R.  Gebauer  Gives 

Lecture  on  '^Parsifal" 

Rev.  Oeorge  R.  Gebauer.  the  leader 
of  the  Ladies'  Literature  class,  gave 
an  interesting  lecture  of  "I'arslfal" 
yesterday  afternoon  at  the  meeting,  for 
which  Mrs.  David  Davis  was  hostess,  at 
the  re.sldence  of  Mrs.  T.  J.  Davis,  2104 
East  First  street.  Thirty-six  members 
attended. 

The  annual  meeting  of  the  class  will 
be  held  Tuesday  afternoon.  April  25. 
at  the  residence  of  the  president.  Mrs. 
Richard  M.  yellwoud.  1931  lilast  Second 
street. 


Beautiful  Boston 

Girl  Engaged 


.PHYLLIS  SEARS. 

Many  cities  will  be  Interested  In  the 
news  of  the  engagenient  of  Miss  I'hyi- 
lis  Sears,  the  beautiful  daught<r  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Herbert  Sears  of  Boston,  for 
.she  has  a  wide  social  a'nualntani'e.  It 
Is  Just  announced  that  she  Is  to  marry 
Bayard   Tuckernian. 


SUMMER 

FURS 

White  Fox,  Cinnamon  Fox.  Bat- 
tleship Gray,  Cro.s.s  Fox.  Red  Fox 
are  going  to  he  worn  all  spring  and 
summer.  We  have  a  complete  line 
of  them   at  summer  prices. 

BECKMAN  f"«  ""ORY 

129  Wot  Superior  Street. 


served,    followed    by    services   at    which 
Rev.    Mr.    Priest    will    speak. 

♦         — 

Events  of  Interest. 

The  Tuesday   Dinner-Bridg.'  club   had 
dinner,    followed    by    cards,    last    night 
at    the   Commercial   club.     Covers   were 
laid   for: 
Messrs.    and    Mesdames — 

J.    r.  Melvln.  CJeorge  Olmstead, 

A.  J5.  MessfT,  Julius  Sobotta. 

Brown.  Arnold. 

»       •       • 

Each  member  of  Mrs.  Charles  S. 
Mitchell's  Current  Events  class  that 
meets  at  10:30  o'clock  every  Wednes- 
day morning  at  St.  Paul's  Episcopal 
church,  mav  Invite  a  guest  to  next 
week's    meeting. 

•  *       * 

Mrs.  T.  J.  Hyde  of  112  West  Fourth 
street,  was  hostess  last  night  to  the 
members  of  the  Ladles'  auxiliary  to 
the  Sons  of  Veterans  and  their  women 
friends.  Cards  were  played  at  five 
tables  and  favors  wtre  won  by  Mrs.  3r 
A.  Scott  and  Miss  Mildred  Grochow- 
sky. 

•  •       • 

Miss  May  Hansen  was  hostess  last 
night  at  the  residence  of  Dr.  and  Mrs. 
Paul  von  der  Schoeppe,  1509  East  Su- 
perior street.  The  evening  was  iipent 
In  music  and  games.  Prizes  were  won 
bv  Miss  Mvrtle  Miller  and  Miss  Mari*- 
dberg.  Covers  for  fifteen  were  laid 
at  a  pink  and  white  decorated  table. 
The   guests   were: 


H  Jnpietta  D  <="paiiel 

!f  .it(WAy  Not  a  Steel  Table? 


Marie     Oberg, 
Frida    Hoterud, 
Lillian     Tborsdal. 
Mary    Peck, 
Mable    Smith. 
Alma     Wold. 


Misses 

Mable    Thorstad. 
Ruth     Stenberg. 
Rose    Morrls»au, 
Blanche     Mor- 

rlseau. 
Myrtle    Miller, 
Hattic     Hansen, 

•       •       « 

Miss  El.sa  Dlebermann  will  be  hostess 
at  luncheon  Saturday  In  honor  of  Miss 
Adelaide  Miller  whose  marriage  to 
John  Monaghan,  Jr.,  will  take  place 
April  24. 


Lodge  Notes. 


INCE  SO  MUCH  Is  said  about 
sanitation  ftftd  convenience, 
tlie  old  rickety,  wobble-leg- 
ged woode©  table  that'  has 
stood   in   the  kitchen,   lo   these 

many    yeara.    feels     decidedly 

out  of  place.  Poor  old  thing. 
It  has  surely  earned  a  long  rest  In 
the  dark,  quiet  basement,  where  there 
Is  no  more  scrubbing  or  scalding.  In 
lis  place  put  ore  of  the  new  ones 
you  saw  at  the  style  show.  Yes,  that 
Is  what  I  called  it,  the  fltyle  show, 
where  new  styles  of  kitchen  furni- 
ture were  show  i  as  well  as  the  latest 
craze    In    kitchen    cabinets. 

As  you  say  you  thought  it  was  a 
"home"  show  and  a  prosy  affair  and 
didn't  go.  I  will  have  to  make  you 
envl  :)U.«  by  telling  you  about  the  new 
steel  tables.  Steel  furniture  Is  hot 
new.  for  we  have  had  steel  bedroom 
sets,  lacquered  until  they  can  only 
be  dlstingaished  from  a  fine  wood  by 
touching  them.  So  we  are  prepared. 
In  a  way,  fur  a  steel  table.  The  one 
displayed  was  thirty-eight  Inches 
high;  which  Is  a  little  higher  than 
the  ordinary  kitchen  table  and  does 
awav  with  stooping.  The  top  was 
tweii'y-eight  by  forty-one  Inches.  The 
entire  table  was  welded  together:  no 
shrinking,  warping  or  shaking  here. 
The  top  was  finished  with  dull  nickel 
plating,  too  hard  to  scratch  with  or- 
dinar>'  care.  Some  of  the  table  tops 
were  hinged  and  wlien  turned  back 
showed  considerable  space  on  either 
side  of  the  drawer  for  cooking  spoons, 
knives  and   the  like. 

If  you  have  one  of  the  beautiful 
while  enameled  finish  ranges  that  are 
so  popular,  you  will  like  the  table 
with  the  white  porcelain  top  better 
than    the   nickel    finished   ore.  There  Is 

the   price,   which   U 


Maple  Sugar  Here; 

Some  Popular  Recipes 


be  the  speaker  at  the  women's  meet- 
ing that  will  be  held  at  2:30  o'clock 
tomorrow  afternoon  at  the  Bethel.  A 
tiocial  half-hour  will  follow.  All  wom« 
en    are     Invited. 


Missionary  Work 

In  Latin  America 

"Missionary  Work  In  Latin  America" 
was  discussed  at  tho  meeting  which 
the  Ladies'  Missionary  Society  of  the 
First  Christian  church  held  this  after- 
noon at  the  church.  Mrs.  E.  A.  Risdon 
spoke  on  the  work  in  Porto  Rico  and 
talks  were  given  by  Rev.  Priest  of 
ChiUlcothe  and  Le  Grand  Pace,  secre- 
tary of  the  Proctor  Y.  M.  C.  A.  Miss 
Myrtle  Hohbs  gave  two  vocal  numbers 
uiid  MM.  James  \.  Davis  and  Miss  Es- 
Ih'T  Tlscher  played  a  piano  dtiet.  Mrs. 
Robert  Mace  and  Mrs.  Risdon  were 
the    hostesses. 

At   6:30   o'clock    a     supper     will      bo 


Aerial  hive.  No.  075,  will  hold  a  spe- 
cial meeting  tomorrow  night  at  the 
residence  of  Mrs.  Je.ssle  Burnett.  Cas- 
cade street,  to  present  oards  for  mem- 
bership. 

da/  afternoon  at  Maccabee    hall.     Tho 

members    of    the    committee    In    charge 

are    Mrs.    Mattle    Krebs,    Mrs.    Amanda    .^^^^.r,    ^^n    nil«,e{l  ..turn    back    Into    the 

Gelineau   and   Mrs.    Hattie   Gladman.         |  boiler    and    cocAi     Until       the       mixture 

■* I  coats    the   side  i)£    the    spoon.      Stir   all 

tlie  time,  occa.'dofially  lifting  the  boll- 
••r  up  from  thei  wrfter  to  keep  It  from 
cooking  too  quickly.  As  soon  aa  thick- 
ened take  from  tho  fire,  add  the  stiffly 
beaten  whites  of  the  fggs  and  con- 
tinue beating  untl}  cold.  When  ready 
to  freeze,  add  a'  pint  of  rich  cream 
.  I  whipped  stiff,  turn.,  into  the  freezer. 
The   maple   sugar   season   has  opened  ;  p^^j^    ^ith    ice ^3aitd'' salt    In    the    same 

and    the    small    cakes    of    It    that      are    p,.^,portion   you  'woilld    for   creams   and 

shown    in    groceries,    drug    stores    and    ^yj.n   alowlv   unlU,  stiff. 

even    department    stores    suggest   many  ,  Maptt  IrV  Cream. 

puddings.    Ice    creams    and    confections        jj^jj   ^   p,„^    ,,f    ^jm^    j,,    the      double 

that    can    be    made    with    maple   syrup ,  bolfer.      Mix    three    beaten    egg    yolks 

that  the  housewife  may  be  sure  of  hav-  ,  ^j^^  ^^  ^^p  ^f  nillk.   then  stir   into  the 

ing  pure  If  she  has  It  made  in  her  own  ,.,       . 

kitchen  from  the  maple  sugar  and  wa-  -^ 

ter.  , 

Some   recipes  call   for  the  maple   su-  | 

gar    bulled    In    cream    or   rich   milk    in- 
stead  of   the    syrup    which    Is    prepared 

with  water.     Among  French  Canadians 

a    popular    cake    Icing       Is       made       of 

boiling     maple     sugar     and     crearri.       A 

pleasing   variation    of    this    Is    made   by 

adding    butternuts    to    the    fHUng     and  ; 

frosting   tho   top    layer   with    the   sucre  , 

a   la  creme,   which   la  made   by   boiling  j 

the    grated    sugar    and    half    a    cup    of 

rich     cre:im     until     the    syrup    forms    a 

soft  ball  when   rolled  In  a  saucer  with 

a  spoon.  .  ,  __^ 

The    following    maple      recipes      are 

from   the   Washington   Star: 
Maple    Parfalt. 
Scald  one  quart  of  milk  in  the  double 

boiler.      Beat    the    yolks    ot     b\x   jegt^ 
add  a  cup  and  a  half  of 


how  long  It  mast  last.  Can  you  re- 
member Just  when  the  old  one  you 
have  been  using  was  bought?  An- 
tiques are  Interesting  in  their  place, 
but  this  Is  not  In  the  kitchen.  Some 
new  style  fixings  here  will  do  you  a 
lot  of  good  and  help  you  to  put  some 
punch  In  the  dally  round  of  the  same 
old    duties. 

QueittloiM    and    Answers. 

Can  you  tell  me  how  to  soften  and 
brighten  a  pair  of  tan  pumps  that  I 
wore  last  summer? — Ima. 

Re;ily — Take  the  pumps  to  a  pro- 
fessional shoe  polisher,  for  they  have 
special    preparations    for    this. 

•  •      « 

Kindly  publish  formula  for  a  good 
cleaning  fluid  to  use  on  dark,  soiled 
furniture.  I  do  not  mean  a  polish. — 
Desire. 

Rf>ply — Mix  the  following  In  two- 
quart  Jar  and  keep  It  sealed  when 
not  In  use:  Four  tablespoons  of  am- 
monia, one  tablespoon  of  glycerine, 
one  tablespoon  of  white  soap,  shaved 
fine,  three  pints  of  hot  water,  one 
tablespoon  of  alcohol.  Shake  before 
using  and  apply  It  with  a  sponge  or 
a  soft  cloth.  It  will  not  harm  the 
finest  wood:  It  may  even  be  used  on 
silk  or  satin.  After  cleaning  furni- 
ture  with    this   polish   as   usual. 

•  •      • 

Do  you  consider  seated  chairs  as 
durable  as  leather  and  are  they  still 
In    good    taste? — Undecided. 

R?ply — Cane  Is  In  style  again;  It 
Is  used  In  all  sorts  of  unexpected 
places,  like  the  head  and  foot  boards 
of  beds,  table  tops  and  lamp  shades. 
It  wears  splendidly  and  Is  easily 
cleaned. 

(Protertfd  by  .Vdams  Newspaper  6«vlce.) 


A  Daily  Treat 

Always  Acceptable  and  DeliciottSf 

"SALADA" 


The  Tea  of  all  Teas. 


Black,  Green 
er  Mixed 


} 


Get  a  package  and  enjoy 

a  cup  o!  Tea  "In  Perfection'V 


'W' 


Tomorro^v- 


•Tllla-noua"      Cooking 
Villa's    LJind. 


of 


until   creamy 

maple    syrup    and    me    iimeiii.    t-';"-"    "t 

salt!     Pour  the  hot  milk  Into  this,  and 


and    the    tiniest    pinch    of 


Flowers,  Rabbits  and  Chickens 

In  Easter  Decoration  Schemes 


up 


Women's  Meeting  at  Bethel. 

Rev.  II.  Ci.  Hoare,  who  is  conducting 
special     meetings    at    the    Pxthel,    will 


■aer. 


"National  Prepar- 
edness'* It  does  not 
come  from  guns  and  dread- 
naughts  alone,  but  from 
men  who  are  fit  for  the  day's 
work.  The  making  of  men 
b  a  question  of  food  and 
rational  exercise.  You  can't 
build  stalwart  men  out  of 
unbalanced  foods.  Shredded 
Wheat  Biscuit  contains 
all  the  material  needed  for 
building  the  perfect  human 
body.  It  is  the  ^vhole  wheat 
grain  madQ  digestible  by 
•team -cooking,  shredding 
and  baking.  One  or  more 
Shredded  Wheat  Biscuits 
for  breakfast  with  milk  or 
cream  makes  a  man  fit  for 
work  or  play.  It  is  ready- 
cooked  and  ready-to-serve. 
Made  at  Niagara  Palls»  N.Y. 


A  stunning  Easter  hat  for  25  cents, 
that  Includes  a  white  enameled  stand 
to  keep  It  on.  surely  Is  sufficient  in- 
ducement to  change  the  views  of  any 
wary  bachelor  who  has  steered  clear 
of  double  harness  because  he  feared 
such  trilling  expenses  of  feminine  at- 
tire added  to  rent,  coal,  groceries  and 
a  few  other  prosaic  features  of  exist- 
ence. 

For  25  cents  you  can  buy  a  blue  cre- 
ation, or  confection,  trimmed  with  a 
white  feather  and  a  pink  rose,  or  an 
equally  charming  model  In  other  col- 
ors that  will  maKe  the  most  attractive 
favor  imaginable  for  an  Easter  lunch- 
eon, however  unserviceable  It  may  bo 
for  street  wear.  Other  hats  of  crepe 
paper  have  crowns  that  are  large 
enough  to  hold  several  bon-bons  or 
nuts. 

Hat  boxes  covered  with  crepe  paper 
and  decorated  with  pictures  make  ap- 
propriate receptacles  for  candles  or 
small   favors. 

Habbit    Lunrheon. 

If  you  want  a  rabbit  luncheon  or 
dinner  you  may  provide  each  of  your 
quests  with  a  rabbit  cap  that  consists 
of  a  white  skull  cap  ending  In  Ion;? 
ears  lined  with  a  delicate  shade  of 
pink,  not  quite  strong  enough  so  thar 
you  may  lift  your  guests  up  by  them, 
but  true  enouerh  to  nature  for  all 
practical   purposes. 

A  version  of  the  game  that  calls  for 
tails  to  be  pinned  on  the  donkey.  Is 
the  rabbit  game.  A  large  rabbit, 
dressed  In  bright  clothes.  Is  painted 
on  a  large  white  cardboard.  Each 
player  Is  provided  with  a  papej-  carrot, 
painted  in  the  natural  colors  and 
sporting  a  tasjsel  of  green  tissue  paper. 
The  object  Is  to  pin  the  carrot  over 
the  painted  one  that  the  bunny  holds 
in  his  fore  feet. 

Paper  rabbit  candy  holders  are 
shown,  and  if  a  whole  menagerie  is 
wished   for   the  table  the   animals  may 


in     something     like 


5lrl?[r'k*n'own"ln-the  ark.   where  "th 
animaL  went   in,  two_by,.two,  the  eh 


the 

■the 

le. 

phant  and  the  kangaroo."    Camels  and 

Shriners    may    have    <^arael8.    i.  ks    may 

have  elks  and  so  on  down  the  list,    ir 

he  animal  candy  holders  are  used  for 

a    children's    party,    the    Idea    may 


be 


further  carried  out  by  animal  crack- 
ers  that  never  fall  to  please. 

Cotton  rabbits.  In  colors  as  bril- 
liant as  any  ever  seen  on  land  or  sea. 
a?e    suitable    for    favor,    at    children's 

»*^'^**^''  S..pplnR    I>olI.. 

Snapping    dolls,    either    In     the     form 
of   clowns   or  daintily   dressed   women 
conceal    caps*.    Japanese     parasols     and 
many    other    amusing    and    artistic    fa- 

''*'a"  pretty  device  Is  a  Paper  doll 
dressed  In  pink  crepe,  made  with  a 
flaring     skirt     that     conceals     the     Ice 

*^*A^  paper  flower,  such  as  a  rose  or 
a  flear  de  lis.  growing  sturdily  out 
of  a  paper  flower  pot  makes  an  at- 
tractive favor  and  helps  decorate  thj 
table.  Metal  fern  dishes,  one  Inch 
long  In  which  daisies,  violets  and 
rosea,  one  in  each,  flourish,  would 
make  an  attractive  decoration  If  used 
in  sufficient  quantities,  and  with  them 
might  be  used  three  branched  candel- 
ab-as  se\eral  Inches  high,  that  niay 
be  supplied  with  candles  of  uny  de- 
sired  color.  .  . 

Flowers  and  rabbits  share  honors 
with  the  chickens  that  are  Just  as 
closely  associated  with  Easter  decor- 
ations. A  table  novelty  Is  a  lavender 
airship  in  which  one  small  chick  rides, 
while  a  more  daring  chick  la  perched 
on    the   dirigible   part. 

Spring  brides  have  not  been  for- 
gotten by  the  originators  of  table 
dtcoratUns  and  favors,  for  paper  rose 
petals  mav  be  b.>ught  In  tulle  bag»  of 
delicate  shades.  Birthday  sets,  con- 
sisting of  Ting,  thimble,  button,  heart 
and  wishbone,  may  be  used  In  the 
wedding  cuke. 


Bed  Time  Tales 

By  Clara  Ingram  Jadson 

Terry  Ttirtle  Finds  the  Log 

FTER  the  great  log  had  floated 
down  the  stream  and  fastened 
Itself  in  the  bank  Just  In  front 
of  Mr.  eater's  cave,  many 
more  logs  floated  down  that 
way.  toc^.for  lumbermen  were 
hard  at  work  in  the  forests 
stream.  But  Instead  of  loosening 
the  log.  as  you  might  fear,  they  only 
rammed  It  deA'per  and  deeper  Into  the 
muddy  bank.  So  that  when  the  lumber- 
men themselves  passed  that  way.  some 
weeks  later,  they  could  not  loosen  It  to 
take  It  on  with  them.  They  had  to 
leave  It  there  in  Mr.  CJatei's  undisputed 
possession. 

Of  course,  such  an  event  as  that  made 
quite  a  stir  in  the  river. 

A  great  gar  fish,  with  dozens  of 
little  gar  fish  swimming  a  safe  dis- 
tance, so  as  to  safely  hear  all  that 
might  be  said,  swam  up  and  eyed  the 
log  and  the  alligator  who  dozed  upon 
It.  And  when,  after  a  long  sunning, 
the  alligator  slipped  back  into  the 
water,  the  gar  fish,  keeping  a  very 
safe  distance  from  those  great  jaws, 
of  course,  remarked,  "That's  a  very 
nice  log  you  have,  Mr.  CSater;  Just  such 
a  log  as  >-ou  have  been  wanting." 

Mr.  Gater  blinked  knowingly  and 
agreed,  "A  very  nice  log.  Just  what 
I've  been  wanting.  Very  true."  For, 
he  thought.  It  does  no  harm  to  agree 
with  a  gar  flsh.  and  perhaps  then  he 
will  swim  a  little  closer  next  time. 
But  fortunately  the  gar  fish  didn't 
swim  closer,  he  was  far  too  wise  and 
too    old    for   such    foolishness!      Indeed, 

yes  I  .  .*. 

Day  after  day;  h%  Mr.  Gater  cra.wled 
out  of  his  caye'  adii  onto  the  log,  and 
there  he  lay  4s  stjlll  as — as  still  as  the 
log  Itself!  And  all  the  creatures,  big 
and  little,  got  so  used  to  seeing  him  lie 
there  dozing  that  they  thought  no  more 
about  him-^W.blch  was  exactly  what 
Mr.  CJuter  wanted  to  happen.  Oh,  he  is 
a  wise  old  fellow,  there  Is  no  doubt  of 
that! 

And  then  one  day,  when  Mr.  Gater 
had  become  q.ulte  used  to  his  log.  and 
his  sunning  on  It.  another  creature 
cllmb("d  onto"  the  log  and  started  .sun- 
ning himself,  too — the  very  Idea!  And 
that  bold  an4  reckless  other  creature 
was  none  other  than  Terry  Turtle,  so 
named  because  hw  was  the  most  good- 
natured  of  all  the  terrapin  turtle  fam- 
ily. 

Now,  Terry  Turtle  was  afraid  of  no- 
body. Not  eyen  of  Mr.  Gater.  Part  of 
that  was  natural  bravery,  but  most  of 


hot  milk.  Melt  a  cup  and  a  half  of 
maple  sugar,  or  take  the  syrup  and 
add  to  the  thickened  milk,  and  take 
from  the  flre.  Add  a  pint  of  rich  cream 
and,  when  cooled,  freeze. 

Maple   Mou*»c. 

Beat  the  yolks  of  five  eggs  until 
creamy,  then  add  to  them  one-half  cup 
of  maple  syrup.  Place  over  a  slow  flre 
and  stir  constantly  until  thickened 
enough  to  coat  tl  e  spoon.  Pour  Into 
a  bo'vl  and  beat  until  cold,  when  It  will 
be  very  light.  Add  a  pint  of  cream 
whipped  to  a  dry  froth  and  pack  In 
Ice  and  salt.  It  will  be  a  finer  grain 
If  not  stirred,  even  with  a  spoon,  dur- 
ing  the   freezing. 

Maple   Fvdge. 

Break  a  pound  of  maple  sugar  Into 
small  pieces.  Fill  a  cup  three-quarters 
full  of  cream,  then  till  to  the  brim 
with  boiling  water.  Pour  over  the 
sugar  and  cook  until  a  little  dropped 
in  cold  water  can  be  rolled  Into  a  soft 
ball.  This  requires  a  little  longer  boil- 
ing than  for  the  usual  thread  stage. 

Do  not  stir  while  cooking.  Take 
from  th©  flre.  beat  until  creamy,  pour 
Into  a  butttred  pan  and  when  nearly 
cold  n  urk   Into  squares. 


f  OLD  STORAGE 

For  safe  keeping  in  the  summer  time  place 
your  Furs  in  our  Cold  Storage  Vaults— 
Your  inspection  invited ._ 

Your  furs  will  here  be  preserved,  pro- 
tected— even  revivified,  in  an  atmosphere 
made  identical  with  that  where  fur-bearing 
animals  thrive  best.  ^ 

Cross  Fox,  the  leading  summer  fur.  Nat- 
ural Blue  Fox,  Taupe,  Battleship  Gray  and 
White  Foxes  arc  in  vogue. 

New  furs  made  to  order.  Furs  repaired 
and  remodeled — remodeling  according  to  the 
fashions  for  next  season,  at  special  summer 
rates  and  in  our  own  workrooms. 


H.  S.  Wenger,  Inc. 

NO  7  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 
Melrose  1201.  Grand  1815-X. 


Walter  Leon  Is  Greeted  By  Big 

Audience  of  Duluth  Admirers 


Personal  Mention 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Chester  A.  Congdon, 
Miss  Marjorie  and  Miss  Elizabeth 
Congdon  left  this  nxornlng  for  a  sev- 
eral weeks'  stay  at  their  residence  at 
North  Yakima.   Wash. 

»       *      • 

Mrs.  Carl  Luster,  1717  East  First 
street.  Is  expected  home  tomorrow 
ai'ter  a  several  weeks'  trip  In  the  West 
and  more  recently  In  the  South  where 
she  has  been  visiting  her  sons  who  are 
attending  school  at  Fort  Defiance,  Va. 

*  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Coryate  Wilson,  East 
Second    street,    have    returned    from    a 

Southern  trip. 

*  •      • 

Mrs.  William  Harrison  Is  now  visit- 
ing at  her  former  home  In  Fulton.  Mo. 
Slie  Is  expected  home  In  a  couple  of 
weeks. 

*  •       * 

Mrs.  A.  M.  Chlsholm  has  had  as  her 
guest  her  sister.  Mrs.  Bronsky,  and 
daughter  of  Chippewa  Falls,  Wis.  To- 
morrow Mrs.  Chisholm  and  daughter. 
Eulalie,  and  Miss  Bronsky  leave  for  a 
ten  days'  trip  to  New  York. 
«       •      • 

Mrs.  Edward  Maclntyre  of  Rutland, 
Vt..  wlio  has  been  the  guest  of  her  sis- 
ter. Mrs.  Fredrick  D.  Harlow.  2701  East 

Fifth  street,  has  returned  to  her  home. 

<*      •      • 

Mrs.  Stacy  H.  Hill  and  daughters. 
Helen  Jane  and  Ruth  Elizabeth.  5829 
London  road,  will  leave  today  for  Cle- 
burne, Tex.,  where  they  will  visit  un- 
til June,  accompanied  by  Mrs.  S.  M. 
Hill,  who  has  been  the  guest  of  her 
son  and  daughtcr-ln-law  for  the  win- 
ter. 

*  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Levi  M.  "Wlllcuts  of 
2128  East  Fourth  street  are  at  the  Bilt- 
more.  New  York.  They  will  go  to 
Boston.  Washington  and  other  Eastern 
cities  before   returning  home. 


Former  friends  of  Walter  Leon,  who 
have  not  had  the  pleasure  of  hearing 
him  since  he  went  to  Europe  to  study, 
and  more  recently  made  his  home  In 
Minneapolis,  were  out  In  large  num- 
bers last  night  to  greet  him  upon  his 
appearance  In  a  song  recital  at  the 
First   Methodist  church. 

Mr.  Leon  gave  an  Interestingly  di- 
versified program  ranging  from  some 
unusual  "Bergerettes"  of  the  ^  Eigh- 
teenth century  arranged  by  W  ecker- 
lin  a  group  of  German  "lleedr,  the 
spirited  "Tarantella  Napoletana"  of 
Rossini  and  some  attractive  English 
songs  among  which  perhaps  the  most 
interesting  was  the  old  Irish  "Would 
God  I  Were  a  Tender  Apple  Blosson, 
the  melody  of  which  Percy  Grainger 
used  as  his  "Irish  Tune  From  County 
D'^rry." 

Mr.  Leon  has  the  Invaluable  adjunct 
of  distinct  enunciation  which  gave 
added  pleasure  to  the  comprehensive 
skill  with  which  he  uses  an  Interest- 
ingly colorful  and  dramatically  adap- 
table  voice.  ..,,,,, 

Mr.  Leon's   program  in  full   follows: 

(a)  "Where'er    You    Walk" Handel 

(b)  "I'm    the    Peddler" Gruenhlll 

(c)  "Tarantella     Napoletana" 

G.    Rossini 

II. 

(a)  Bergerette*   of     the     Eighteenth 

century     • 

Arranged  by  Weckerlln.  "Bergero 
Legere,"  "Jeune  Flllette,"  "Ma- 
man"    and   "Dltes   Mol." 

(b)  "SI    J'etais    Jardlnier".  .Chamlnade 

(c)  Aria    from   "Romeo     and    Juliet" 
Oounod 

III. 

(a)  "Syng    Mlg    Hjaeme" Neupert 

(b)  "Im  Wunderschonen  Monat  Mai" 
Hammond 

(c)  ^'Gleb   Mir    Dein    Herze".  .Hermann 

(d)  "The    Grey    Wolf Burleigh 

(e)  "I    Hear    You    Calling     Me"      (by 
request)     Marshall 


Peggy  Peabody's  Observations 

Love  More  Than  Once? 


Can  a  man  or  woman  love  more 
than  once?  It  Is  denied  by  some  that 
either  can  feel  the  same  deep  senti- 
ment more  than  once  In  a  lifetime, 
while  others  contend  it  is  all  fool- 
ishness to  clalnrt 
that  man  and  wo- 
man cannot  be 
stirred  twice  or 
even  several  times 
l>y  the  little  god, 
"Love."  Right  here 
I  may  as  well  say 
that  I  believe  that 
a  second  or  third 
affair  of  the  heart 
Invariably  lacks 
something.  I  have 
no  words  In  which 
to  make  this  In- 
telligible to  you. 
It  might  be  called 
Inspiration.  fresh- 
ness or  the  dew  of 
love.  Whatever  It  Is  every  woman 
cherishes  somewhere  In  her  heart  the 
memory  of  her  first  real  love  affair. 
Independent  of  the  object  of  her  af- 
fections, and  I  deem  it  likely  that 
men    do.    too. 

This  does  not  mean  that  tney  think 
less  of  the  lover  or  sweetheart  who 
comes  Into  their  heart  later  on  to  fill 
It  completely.  Usually  they  think 
more  of  the  second  by  comparison 
with  the  first,  who.  as  It  often  hap- 
pens,   proved    unworthy    of    triut    and 


affection,  or  who,  as  they  developed, 
"shot  wide  of  the  standards  of  their 
Ideals.  Then  again.  In  but  rarest  In- 
stan-^es  does  the  sweetheart  of  the 
youth  of  18  or  20  appeal  to  the  man 
of  26  or  28.  unless  the  minds  of  both 
have  developed  and  progressed  pro- 
portionately   and    vice    versa. 

Some  will  claim  that  one  has  not 
really  loved  where  requirements  and 
Ideals  vaiT  **  one  advances  In  life,  i 
But  I  think  that  the  sentiment  that 
a  girl  feels  for  a  young  man  two  or  i 
three  year*  her  senior  may  safely  be 
call"d  by  that  name.  There  Is  the 
same  mental  a-id  physical  attraction 
in  evidence  that  Is  a  power  In  draw- 
ing men  and  women  of  whatever  age 
together.  The  girl  of  18.  usually  Ig- 
norant of  the  really  desirable  qual- 
ities In  either  men  or  woman,  loves 
In  a  man  those  things  that  appeal 
to  her  at  h»-r  age  as  being  worth 
while.  They  are.  In  almost  every  case 
the  very  laFt  things  that  one  would 
believe  "conducive  of  lasting  comfort 
and    happiness. 

But  tliere  are  those  who  are  posi- 
tive In  their  belief  that  a  person  can 
love  but  once.  This  Is  due  to  their 
viewpoint  and  experience.  Usually 
after  a  disappointment  In  love  they 
shut  themselves  away  from  the  af- 
fairs of  men  and  things  and  steel 
their  hearts  against  other  men  and 
women.  These  people  brood  constant- 
ly over  the  fate  that  deprived  -  them 
of  happiness  and  they  have  a  real  feel- 
ing of  dislike  and  di»trust  fur  the 
opposite    sex. 


B^ 


(^  RUTH  %^^GE  C4MER0N 

Why  She  Wasn't  Loved 


.\iiofher  rrratMre   ellinbrd   onto   tke   log 
and  ntarteii   MunuitiK  hlMtirlf,  too. 


It  came  from  his  knowledge  of  his 
strong,  hard  back.  Where  was  there  a 
creature  who  could  swallow  a  mouthful 
of  such  shell  as  Terry  Turtle  carried  on 
his  back?  Where.  Indeed!  And  then, 
too,  Terry  knew  that  he  was  swift  In 
escaping  danger.  An  unexpected  sound, 
a  motion  of .  the  "jshrubbery.  sent  him 
down  into  the  water  'kplunk  like  a 
stone,  and  he  hadyet  to  And  a  creature 
who  could  e«mpe;hlm.  So  he  fearlessly 
climbed  up  by  Mr.  Gater. 

"Nice  log  you  have,"  remarked  Terry 
pleasantly;  "l  tbl«k  I  am  going  to  like 
If.  <-> 

And  Mr.  Oaterj  knowing  very  well 
the  reasons  Terry  had  for  feeling  safe, 
answered  no*  a  »word.  He  pretended 
not  to  hear — that  was  the  way  he  had 
when  he  dldH't  'W«int  to  answer. 
(CorerUfiit-Tt^fi^t  Inimita  Judaon.) 


TomorroTT — Tiff  8lior<-Ste 


cd 


HE  other  day  a  group  of  us 
were  discussing  a  piece  of 
good  fortune  which  had  be- 
fallen a  woman  we  all  used 
know   In   our  schooldays. 

She  has  inherited  a  sizeable 

sum    of   money   from   a   distant 

relative,    and    the    poverty    with    which 

she   has   always   had   to  struggle   is   at 

an  end. 

We  all  said  what  a  good  girl  she 
had  always  be^n  and  how  glad  we 
were  fur  her,  and  then  suddenly  one. 
franker  than  the  rest,  spoke  out:  "It's 
a  queer  thing — but  I'm  going  to  con- 
fess it.  I  never  liked  Amy.  I  always 
felt   I    ought    to,   but    I   didn't." 

We  looked  at  her  with  startled  eyes 
and  then  we  looked  at  each  other, 
and   then   from   each   of  us   it   came — 

**Yru  don't  mean  it!  Why,  that's 
just  the  way  I'v.>  always  felt.  Only 
I   never  dared   say  so  before." 

"My  dear.  It's  simply  uncanny!  I've 
been  so  ashamed  of  myself  because  I 
couldn't   like    her." 

"Isn't    It   the   queerest   thing?      I   ad- 
mire   her    for   being    so    good,    but   she 
alway.s   ex5.sperated    me." 
Waft  It   Because  Sh«  Wnm  mo  <iood  8lie 
Shamed   OtkerMf 

"What  do  you  think  the  reason  !b?" 
said  th^  analytical  one  of  the  group. 
"Is  It  because  she's  so  good  that  she 
makes  us  ashamed  because  we  aren't 
better,   and   so  we  don't  like  her?" 

"No,"  said  another  woman.  "Don't 
you  know  how  we  all  loved  Florence, 
and  she  was  Just  as  good?" 

"It's  a  different  kind  of  goodness. 
Isn't    it?"    said   someone. 

"Yes,  it's  a  self-conscious  goodness 
— Anvy's.    I   mean,"   aald    the  analytical 

one    thoughtfully.      "She    did    make    a  _  .  .        „    . 

big   fight    to   put    herself   through    col-     It    can    remove    mountains    of    evil    by 


lege  and  to  help  her  younger  sister 
through,  but  she  was  always  manag- 
ing to  refer  to  it,  to  drag  it  into  the 
conversation  in  some  way.  If  she 
couldn't  go  anywhere  she  told  you  it 
was    because    she    was    too    poor,    and 


smiled    that   saintly  smile   of  hers." 

"Don't  you  think  she  thought  the 
rest  of  us  were  selfish?" 

She  Kaew  That  She  'Wnm  Good. 

•"No,"  said  the  analytical  one  again; 
"I  wouldn't  go  so  far  as  to  be  sure  of 
that.  But  she  did  think  she  was  good. 
It  was  just  that,  that  she  was  self- 
consciously good,  and  I  don't  believe 
that  kind  of  goodness  ever  made  peo- 
ple loved." 

So  we  left  it. 

And  so,  I  believe.  It  is.  We  often 
wonder  why  someone  who  Is  very  good 
Isn't  more  generally  loved.  And  we 
talk  about  other  people's  selfishness 
and  Ingratitude.  May  It  not  be  partly 
due  to  the  quality  of  the  goodness? 
N»hod7  L.ove«  8oir~CoB«cloa« 
Cioodneaa. 

Pious  people,  in  the  invidious  sense 
of  the  word,  are  people  who  are  self- 
consciously  good. 

"To  live  with  the  saints  In  Heaven 

Is  untold  bliss  and  glory; 
But  to  live  with  the  saints  on  earth 

Is  quite  another  story." 

So  wrote  a  clever  rhymester  with 
more  truth  than  poetry.  And  the  dif- 
ference Is  that  the  salnta  in  Heaven 
are  those  who  got  there  by  beluK 
unself-conscliously  good  on  earth, 
while  the  "saints  on  earth"  refers  to 
the  people  who  wear  their  saintllness 
In  much  the  same  spirit  as  they  would 
wear  a  gown  that  was  richer  and  finer 
than   their  neighbor's  gown. 

There  is  a  snobbery  of  saintllness, 
you  know,  just  as  there  is  a  snoobery 
of  Intellect  or  wealth  or  family. 

Simple,  unconscious  goodness  Is  one 
of    the    greatest    powers    In    the    world. 


(f)   "Daffodils"     ix)ud 

IV. 

(a)  "Would  God  1  Were  a  Tender 
Apple  Blosson"  (old  Irish  folk- 
song,  arranged  by  Page). 

(b)  "The    Star"     Rogers 

(c)  "Thine"    Dr.    Rhys   Herbert 

(d)  "Melanle"    Coatea 


(a)  Aria   from 

(b)  "Ballatta" 


"La  Boheme".  .  .Puccini 

(from      "Rlgoletto") 
Verdi 


Church  Meetings. 

The  Phllathea  class  of  First  Nor- 
wegian-Lutheran church  win  have  a 
business  meeting  tonight  at  the  resi- 
dence of  Miss  Mathilda  Landfeld,  1017 
East  Fifth  street. 

*      •      * 

Lenten  services  will  be  held  at  10:30 
o'clock     tomorrow      morning      at      St. 
Paul's  Episcopal  church. 
• 

Varied  Activities  of  Women. 

Chicago  Tribune:  Mrs.  Harriet 
Reynolds  ha»  a  goose  ranch  in  Cali- 
fornia from  which  she  earns  $2,600  a 
year. 

Mme.  Patti.  who  recently  celebrated 
her  seventy-third  birthday,  attributes 
her  good  health  to  the  fact  that  since 
she  was  40  she  has  lived  on  a  strict 
diet.  Since  that  time  she  has  eaten 
no  red  meat  and  drunk  only  whlto 
wine    and   soda. 

Mrs.  Ceany  Jones  of  Grady  county, 
Georgia,  who  has  just  celebrated  her 
one  hundred  and  sixth  birthday,  saya 
she  can  remember  running  away 
fro.Ti  the  Indians  with  her  parents  in 
1814. 

Chinese  students  at  Oberlln  college 
shortly  will  siag«  a  play  written  by 
Miss  Yuet  Ha  Tang,  a  native  of  Hong- 
kong. 

Mrs.  Mary  Parsons  of  Portland, 
Or.,  who  now  is  past  87  years  of  age, 
i»  known  throughout  the  West  as  an 
expert  in  tree  grafting.  She  also  holds 
the  state  prize  for  fine  embroidery  and 
lace. 

An  effort  to  popularize  the  raising 
of  herbs  as  a  branch  of  w^omen's  w^ork 
has  recently  been  undertaken  in  Hud- 
dersfleld.  England,  and  plans  for  the 
operation  of  a  central  drug  farm  are 
being  considered,  with  the  intention 
of  growing  there  some  of  the  most 
common  herbs   in   large  quantities. 

Women  are  exempt  from  paying  a 
fishers'   license   In   New   York. 

The    University     of     Nebraska     has 


PwneS 

1.     KID  FITTING    K^ 

SlIK  GLOVES 

Women  acquainted  with 
Fownes  quality  in  ALL  kinds  of 
gloves,  are  demainding  Fownes 
silk  gloves, — with  reason. 

Smartest,  most  satisfactory,— 
but  they  cost  no  more. 

All  lengths,  sizes  and  shades. 

Double 'tipped? 

Of  coursel  M0^ 

Ask  your  *"*       ''^^ 

dealer 


the    mere    beautiful    fact    of    its    exist 
ence.   while   self-conscious  goodness    is 
utterly  futile  and   Impotent,   so  far  a« 
Influencing    or    helping    others.      It    Is 
more  apt  to  antagonize  and  Irritate. 
(Protected  tv  Adsms  Ncwqttper  Serrlee.) 


pasur  flrcetiiig! 

Be  an   early  bird   and   order  from 

DULUTH  FLORAL  CO. 

121    WEST   SUPERIOR    ST. 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE     If 


:*j>j; 


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»        ,         .         .  I         .1      ■  I         ■■  I  I' II  I  »  '  I  »  ■  -■!     »«■■*■■       ■ 

1 


Wednesday^ 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD 


April  12, 1916. 


1 


flfty-8<  v.n    wcn-.fn    Instructors. 

Japanese  drama  was  founded  by  a 
womiin.  a  priestess  of  the  temple  of 
Ktizuka. 

A  lHrg<='  auto  truck  concern  employs 
a  womim  to  run  their  demonstrating: 
truck,  which  has  a  capacity  of  five 
tons.  .  ,   . 

Ml«.s  rjortrude  Macauley.  a  society 
ifirl  of  Montreal,  <'anada,  who  has 
been    making:    on     an    average     of     700 

fuddingr.s    a    week    for    the    Holdlers    in 
he   ho.Hpital   In    England,   has   returned 
to  Canada  broken  In  health. 


AMUSEMENTS 


TONIGHT'S  ATTRACTIONS. 

L.yrr:TM— Jack    rieed  and  his  "Record 

Hreaker.","     burlesque. 
NKW    eiUAND — Vaudeville   and   photo- 

plav. 
KKX— H.   B.  Warner   in  "The  Raiders," 

photoplav. 
I.YHIC— Con.stance      Tolller      In      "The 

Code  of  Mar<ia  iJray."  photoplay. 
ZKLDA— Anita       Stewart      and       Karle 

■\Villiam.s    in    "My      Lady's      Slipper." 

photoplay. 

m 

Theater  Gossip. 

Rol  fofipei-  MeKrue  Is  a  firm  believer 
In  the  .stiiuineut  lliat  It  pays  to  adver- 
tise,     not    because 
PI.A^  U  UK.IIT       he  wrote  the  play, 
BKI  IF.M^.H  I\    AD-  "It  rays  to  Adver- 
iKKTlSI.Vt'.  tisc,"  which  comes 

t  o       tlie       Lyceum 


parts,    the    bigr    theme    of   the   «lory    Is 
constantly  kept  in  evidence. 

On  these  two  dates.  Burton  Hoimes, 
noted  traveler,  takes  his  audience  to 
the   San  Diego  exposition  In  his  travel 

pictures. 

•      •      • 

A  large  audience  at  fhe  "Rex  yester- 
day and  last   night  gave   'requent  ap- 
plause   to       1  ne 
n.F.VER  STORY  OF  Raider  »."      a 
STOCK   EXCHAXOK    strong     Triangle 
AT  RKX.  Fine     Arts     mo- 

tion picture, 
telling  a  story  of  the  stock  exchange. 
It  is  a  modern  and  pleasing  .story. 
With  a  fortune  to  be  wrested  from 
the  fickle  goddess  of  the  'change,  and 
with  no  money  on  which  to  begin. 
Scott  Wells  (H.  B.  Warner),  ably  as- 
sisted by  Dorothy  Dalton  and  oth- 
ers has  added  new  laurels  to  nis 
fame.  He  was  best  known  In  the  play 
of    "Alias     Jimmy    Valentine." 

This  Is  his  new  picture,  rather  his 
initial  one,  and  Mr.  Warner  comes 
quite  up  to  what  Is  expected  of  him. 
Triangle  studios  have  a  way  of  pro- 
ducing real  thrills  in  their  pictures. 
There  are  many  exciting  moments  in 
"The  liaiders,"  and  they  hold  one  s 
interest  because  they  have  a  logical 
place  in  the  story.  The  picture  is  to 
be  seen  at  the  Rex  today  and  tomor- 
row. 

•      •      • 

Elaborate    costumes    and    settings   of 

unusual   beauty  are   to   be   seen   in   the 

latest  Vltawraph   Blue 

"M%'   I,  \D%'S     Ribbon     release,     "My 

SI.IPPKIl"   AT    I.ady'.s  Slipper,"  which 

THK  ZKI.DA.    opens    a    three      days 

stay      at      the      Zelda 

theater,  beginning  today.     Anita  Stew 


lAbeMarti 


r 


You'll  Do  Better  at  Kelly's- 


EACH  .OTHER 

»  >     ■ 

Brutal  "Jok^r"  Hangs  Two 

Cats  Ovi^r  Limb  of 

Tree. 


Funday,   April    16,    for   four   nights   and  l^ift  and  Earle  Williams"  have  the  Uad- 

Wediiesday    matinee,    but    Just    because     Ing    roles.  »  .w„  t  «,,««  VVT  nf>rlod 

be   knows   that   it  does  pay.      The  other  The  «»"' ^  '«  °' ^^^.^^l^^'^.^^  J  ^^^n 

nlt,'lu   h.  twten  acts  at  another  play,   he     and  was  written  b>    Rev.  C.srus    i  own 


vas  st:(n(1ing  out  In  front  of  the  the 
aier  talking  to  .»<on»e  newsp.tper  friends 
w  !»en  an  enterprising  young  street 
nierchiint  with  a  tray  full  of  chewing 
gum  to  sell  came  along  and  offered  his 
wares  with  a  patter  that  made  Mr. 
Me«iue  watch  him  respectfully. 

"I  tell  you  what  I'll  do,"  Bald  Mr. 
Me;;rue.  "Ml  buy  two  packages  of 
gum  from  you  instead  of  one  If  you'll 
Ko  jir.)und  while  you  are  selling  that 
etuff  and  start  your  spiel  with  'It  pays 
to    advertise.'  " 

"Cimme  the  dime,"  said  the  street 
vender. 

He  g»»t  It  and  a  moment  later  he 
■was  offering  his  gum  to  everyone  else 
on  the  .sidewalk  in  this  sort  of  fashion: 

"It  pays  to  advertise!  Chewing  gum, 
inl.«!ter?  Made  In  America,  pure  as  gold! 
It   pavH   to  advertise!  (July   five   cents!" 

"That's      the    stuff."      said       Megrue, 

? Tinning.       So    did    the    other    sidewalk 
oiks,    for   they    gue.vsed    w  Imt    was    up. 
So  did  the  broker,  for  he  sold  out. 

•  «       • 

Harry  Lauder  will  be  seen  at  the 
Orpheum-Strand    on    April    20,    matinee 

and  night.  It 
liAI'ORR    WII.I.   SI\<i   can  be  stated  in 

SIX  .\FW  SO\<;s  addition  that 
AT  ORI'lIEr!*!.  Harry    will    sing 

at  least  six  new 
aonga.  of  which  he  is  both  the  author 
and  composer,  as  well  as  some  of  the 
old  favorites,  which  the  audiences  will 
no  doubt  demand  He  has  also  brought 
together  from  i^urope  and  America 
some  of  the  best  vaudeville  acts,  the 
majority  of  which  have  never  been 
Been  before  in  this  country,  and  all  this 
■will  mean  that  Lauder's  engagement 
will  be  an  event  In  this  city  long  to 
be  remembered. 

*  •      • 

Oliver  Morosco  In  presenting  at  the 
Lyric    one   of   the    Paramount   program 

pictures  today 
STROXC;   FFMININR  and       tomorrow. 

Cll  ^ltA<"rr.K   IN'       Constance      Col- 

t.-vviXC  I'lCTCRK.  Her  In  the  lead- 
ing role  of  "The 
Code  of  Marcla  Gray,"  with  a  support 
that  keeps  the  picture  moving  along 
without  any  dull  scenes,  is  credited 
In  this  plav  with  truly  artistic  suc- 
cess. It  is  a  drama  of  modern  fash- 
ionable  life.  _ 

While  Miss  Collier,  the  European 
star,  plays  an  Impressive  Marcla  In 
this  picture,  the  individual  talents  of 
the  entli-e  company  make  this  Moros- 
co picture  live  with  the  excellence  of 
their  portrayal.  It  is  a  strange  and 
fascinating  story  of  a  weak  husband, 
fa<ing  loss  of  fortune  and  reputation, 
and  of  his  brave  wife,  who  has  a 
"code"    of    her   own. 

Marcla  Oray  has  a  big  part  and  Miss 
Collier  handles  it  In  a  big  way. 
Through  her  work  and  the  good  work 
of  her  company,  who  also  have  strong 


end  Brady,  who  declares  this  to  be 
his  best  play.  The  Vltagraph  com- 
pany has  spared  no  expense  In  jriaK- 
ing  this  a  screen  masterpiece  and  has 
such  well  known  players  as  Joseph 
Kllgour.  Harry  Nnrtlirup,  William 
Shea.  Julia  Swayno  fJordon,  Oeorge 
O'Donnell  and  others  in  the  suPPO"  t 
of  the  two  stars.  The  scenes  of  My 
Lady's  Slipper"  are  laid  in  and  near 
I'aris  In  the  time  of  Marie  Antoinette. 
The  story  tells  of  how  an  American 
officer  escapes  from  a  British  convict 
ship  to  make  his  way  to  Paris  to  see 
Benjamin  Franklin,  the  United  States 
minister.  ,  ,        ^^  _    , 

While  walking  outside  the  city  s 
limits  he  rescues  a  bi-autlful  girl  fio"} 
highwavmen  and  falls  In  love  with 
her,  without  knowing  that  she  Is  the 
beautiful  Countess  de  Vlllars.  How 
he  finally  wins  the  heart  and  hand 
of  the  covintess.  although  it  nearly 
costs  him  his  life  on  several  occasions. 

foes  to  make  an  interesting  and  thrill- 
ng     play.       Ralph     Ince     directed     the 

MANY  TOlffEHD 
MOVIE  CONVENTION 

Northwestern    Association 

Will  Hold  Annual  Meeting 

in  Minneapolis. 

Several  Duluth  theatrical  managers 
are  expecting  to  attend  the  first  annual 
convention  and  exposition  of  the  Mo- 
tion Picture  Exhibitors'  Association  of 
the  Northwest,  which  will  be  held  at 
the  National  Guard  armory  In  Minne- 
apolis on  May  2,  3.  4  and  6. 

The  Northwest  Is  fast  becoming  a 
prominent  center  for  nim  manufactur- 
ing, and  the  enterprises  established 
have  grown  by  leaps  and  bounds  dur- 
ing the  last  few  years.  The  program 
committee  for  this  year's  convention 
has  arranged  many  Interesting  fea- 
tures, some  of  which  are  expected  to 
be  both  startling  and  surprising.  The 
president  of  the  association  is  James 
(Jllosky;  secretary,  D.  W.  Chamber- 
lain, and  treasurer,  C.  E.  Van  Duzee. 

»  — 

Menominee    L.lvery    BurnM. 

Menominee,  Mich..  April  12.— The 
livery  stable  here  of  Peter  L'Hote  & 
Co ,  with  sixteen  horses,  automobile 
trucks  and  big  stock  of  vehicles,  to- 
gether with  a  residence  and  ware- 
house adjoining,  was  destroyed  by  fire 
Tuesday.  The  loss  Is  estimated  at 
$10,000 


Of  all  <h*  campn.gn  IIe«,  "I'll  be 
home  ever-  night  alter  th'  eiretlon, 
dear,"  In  th*  «or«t.  A  warnln'  in  all 
th*  BTerage  Amerloan  ncrd»  t*  make 
h»at    take   a   ohanee. 

(Prntwtfii  by   Adams  Newspaper  8«Tvlcf.) 


PRIZES  FOR 
BIRDJOUSES 

Humane  Society  Would  In- 
terest Pupils  in  Feathered 
Visitors.   . 


Claw  Each  Other  All  Night; 
Police  Swear  Ven- 
geance. 


Specials  In  Real  Home  Comforts 

You  have  no  idea  how  many  beautiful  pieces  of  furniture  are  here  waiting 

for  you  and  how  inexpensive  they  are.  You  can  have  a  well  furnished  home  if 

ou  will  just  look  over  the  Kelly  ads  and  visit  the  store.    You'll  be  well  satis- 

led  with  our  prices.    Next  to  quality,  price  is  our  big  talking  pomt. 


I 


You  Don't  NeeJ  Ci 


A  Tki, 


Exhibits   Will    Be    Judged 

From  Viewpoint  of 

the  Bird. 


Eighty  odd  policemen  and  detectives, 
comprising  the  Duluth  force,  made  a 
promise  to  avenge  the  death  of  two 
cats  today,  when  Jailer  L.  A.  Root  re- 
ported after  an  investigating  trip  to 
Munger  terrace  early  this  morning. 

A  "practical  Joker,"  evidently  not  a 
lover  of  dumb  animals,  is  the  man  for 
whom  the  guardians  of  the  law  are 
searching,  and  they  have  promised  that 
it  will  go  hard  with  him  If  he  is 
caught.  .  .    .. 

Here   is  the   "joke': 

Two  cats  were  caught,  their  tails 
were  tied  together  with  a  piece  of 
rope,  and  they  were  tossed  over  the 
limb  of  a  tree  In  a  little  park  near 
Munger  terrace. 

Frightened  by  their  predicament, 
they  fought  with  each  other  through- 
out the  night,  and  this  morning  a  jan- 
itor in  a  nearby  building  saw  them 
and  cut  them  down.  .....*     ^ 

Their  claws  were  gone  and  the  two 
animals  were  little  more  than  a  mass 
of  raw  flesh.  One  of  the  two  man- 
aged to  crawl  away  Into  some  bushes, 
to  die.  when  released,  and  the  other 
wa.s  shot  by  Jailer  Root  when  he  an- 
Hwered   the   janitor's   call. 

-« 

Herald  wants  ads  will  find  a  buyer 
for  your  used  car.  They  reach  98  per 
cent  of  the  automobile  buyers. 


_  OU  JL^ont  JNeed  L^ash JK.eaa   inis 

Are  you  going  to  move  or  build?  It  takes  money  to  do  either  and  there'll 
be  new  rugs,  curtains  and  a  few  pieces  of  furniture  to  buy  —  here's  where  our 
Deferred  Payment  Plan  comes  in.  You  don't  need  cash.  Select  what  you  want 
and  terms  will  be  arranged  to  suit— there's  no  red  tape. 


Extra  Special! 


EXTENSION 


It's  always  ready  for  you  at  the 
druggist's.  Don't  wait  until 
the  family  is  entirely  out  of 

Dr.lyon*s 

PERFECT 

Dental  Creiun 

A  Standard  Ethical  Dentifrica 

Iaend  2c  ttamp  today  for  •  een«'0"»  trial  package  of 
either  Dr.  Lyon's  Periect  Dental  Cream  or  Tooth  Powder. 

I.  W.  Lyon  &  Soni.  Inc.,  683  W.  27th  St..  N.  Y.  Gty 


Not  only  Pure ,  buL 
Superior  ia  Quodity 

"OLD  MONK" 

OLIVE  OIL 


School  children  of  Duluth  are  being 
encouraged  by  the  Duluth  Humane  so- 
ciety  to  become  bird  lover.o. 

To  stimulate  interest  In  the  care  and 
protection  of  bird  life  among  the 
young  boys  and  girls  of  the  city,  the 
society  has  launched  a  bird  house  com- 
petition which  will  be  open  to  any 
child  attending  school  In  the  city.  The 
contest  will  be  open  until  April  29,  and 
the  houses  must  be  submitted  to  the 
humane    society    before    that    date. 

The  contest  will  be  similar  to  the 
one  held  la.st  year  under  the  auspices 
of  the  humane  society.  The  children 
are  asked  to  submit  bird  houses  of 
their  own  manufacture.  Prizes  will 
be  awarded  for  the  three  best  offer- 
i  ntrs* 

Contestants  are  not  limited  to  build- 
ing homes  for  any  particular  kind  of 
a  bird.  Neither  are  there  any  rules  to 
be  followed  as  to  the  size  of  the  speci- 
men  to  be  submitted. 

The  only  suggestion  which  ha.«<  been 
given  Is  that  the  house  be  an  attrac- 
tive one  from  the  standpoint  of  the 
bird  which  is  supposed  to  occupy  It. 
First  of  all,  it  must  be  practical.  L  du- 
ally a  house  of  simple  construction 
free  from  high  coloring  is  more  prac- 
tical than  an  abode  of  more  elaborate 
and   ornamental   construction. 

Judges  of  the  contest  will  take  Into 
consideration  first  the  usefulness  of 
the  specimen  and  then  It  will  be  con- 
sidered from  a  standpoint  of  beauty. 
What  la  desired  most  Is  a  box  that  a 
bird  will  enter.  If  a  house  Is  painted 
with  bright  colors,  or  has  too  much 
ornamental  work.  It  Is  usually  shunned 
by  birds.  Is  not  practical  in  any  sense. 
Such  houses  will  have  a  poor  chance 
to  win  a  prize.  ,  ^  .,  ♦v^ 
The  prizes  to  be  awarded  and  the 
Judges  of  the  competition  will  be  an- 
nounced later.  

WOUNDEDMEXICANS 
BROUGHT  TO  COLUMBUS 

rolumbus,  N.  Mex.,  April  12 --J^^e 
Maritela  one  of  the  six  wounded  Mexi- 
cans brought  here  from  the  front  last 
night  to  be  tried  in  connection  with 
the  raid  on  Columbus,  today  waj  iden- 
tified as  having  been  in  and  about 
town    prior    to   the^rald. 

Another.  Jose  Rodriguez  It  was 
learntd,  was  a  Carranza  soldier  who 
had  been  arrested  by  Villa  on  a  charge 
of  espionage  and  who  was  being  held 
for  execution,  when  Villa  was  obliged 
to  abandon  him  at  El  Valle. 

The  men  denied  all  knowledge  of 
Villa's   whereabouts^ 

FISHING  HAZARDOUS 
AT  SEASON'S  OPENING 

St  Paul,  Minn.,  April  12.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  brook  trout  finhlng 
season  opens  next  Saturday.  Carlos 
Avery  state  game  and  fish  commis- 
sioner' said  today  that  fishing  should 
be  good  In  the  southern  portion  of  the 
state  but  gave  warning  that  there  is 
still  much  snow  in  the  northern  part 
of    the    state   and    that    fishing   will    be 

hazardous.  ,       ^,.        ,     ,  « 

Saturday   also   marks   the   closing   of 

the   season  for  trapping  muskrats  and 

mink. 

«. 

Gnardlng  Agalnut  Tn»»»o»«*' 

Appleton,  Wis.,  April  12.— In  the 
campaign  being  waged  throughout  the 
Wisconsin  National  <luard  to  vaccinate 
troops  against  typhoid  fever,  sixty- 
four  local  militiamen  have  taken  their 
first  inoculation  and  thirty  more  will 
be  vaccinated  next  week.  Off li  ers 
who  were  vaccinated  four  years  ago 
are  taking  their  second  Inoculation 
as  the  preventive  Is  considered  as  be- 
ing in  too  much  of  an  experimental 
stage  to  know  how  long  a  person  is 
immune. 


ISJOUGHT 

Residents  of  Crosley  Park 

Ask  for  Street  Car 

Service. 


TkisSoliclOakCliair$1.65 


Large  Cedar  Chest 

$11.85 

You'll  never  get  another  opportunity 
to  buy  a  chest  of  selected  red  cedar 
at  such  a  price.  Exactly  like  illustra- 
tion, Colonial  design,  massive  scroll 
ends,  two  wide  copper  bands,  splendid 
lock.  Interior  has  reinforced  corners; 
44  inches  long,  18  inches  wide  and 
\7y2  inches  high.  Cannot  be  dupli- 
cated for  less  than  <I»1  "I  OlC 
$16.00— Kelly's  price %PXL.OU 


You'll  find  here  a  big  line  of 
Dining  Chairs  in  all  woods  and 
finishes.  The  new  Period  de- 
signs, Charles  II,  William  and 
Mary,  Adam  and  Colonial. 

SPECIAL 

A  Solid  Oak  Dining  Chair,  full 
size,  made  of  selected  stock  in 
a  rich  golden  finish.    This  is  a 
full  box  seat  diner  with  a 
padded  seat,  covered  with 
black     imitation     leather. 
Full  panel  back  in  chair. 
A  wonderful  value  at  Kel- 
ly's price — 

$1.65 

(Limit  6  to  a  Customer) 


Electric 


Proposed  Line  Would  Con- 
nect With  the  Lakeside 
Route. 


Petitions  for  a  street  car  extension  to 
Crosley  park  and  the  surrounding  ter- 
ritory were  filed  with  City  Clerk  Bor- 
gen   this   morning. 

On  each  petition,  and  there  are  ap- 
proximately 400  of  them,  are  the  sig- 
natures of  the  man  and  wife  and  the 
older  members  of  virtually  every  fam- 
ily in  that  district  of  the  city.  The 
circulation  and  collection  of  the  peti- 
tions  required   several    ^'^«»i8-  .  ^^^    . 

According  to  the  plan  of  those  be- 
hind the  movement,  the  extension 
would  connect  with  the  Lakeside  car 
Une.  branching  off  at  Sixtieth  avenue 
east  and  continuing  up  that  roadway 
to  Crosley  park,  which  lies  northwest 
of  Lester  Park.  This  Is  a  newly  settled 
district,  and  the  residents  In  that  part 
of  the  city,  say  those  behind  the  peti- 
tion, are  compelled  to  walk  from  six 
to  eighteen  blocks  in  order  to  reach 
the  Lakeside  street  car.  ♦^„^w 

The  street  car  extension  wlU  touch 
the  upper  end  of  Lester  Park,  go 
through  the  London.  Crowley  Park  and 
Loeb  additions  lying  north  and,  north- 
east The  line  would  make  a  circle  In 
the  Crosley  Park  addition.  It  has  been 
suggested  that  the  loop  continue 
Iround  to  Forty-fifth  or  Fiftieth  aye 
nue  east,  the  upper  end  of  the  line 
connecting  with  the  proposed  extenslotj 
of  the  East  Fourth  street  line  back  of 
the  Crescent  View  addition  and  the  golf 

^'^The^petitlons  will  be  presented  to  the 
city  commissioners  at  the  council  meet- 
ing next  Monday. 

NEWlECORDS 
INTRAFFIC 

Increases   Are   Shown   in 
All  Commodities  Ex- 
cept CoaL 


Guaranteed 

How  you  do  wear  your 

rugs  with  the  broom  I 

How  different  with  the  Thor 

— just  the  smooth  running  of  the 

noiseless  little  wheels.  No  wear  at  all. 

Save  your  rugs— save  your   strength— with 


the  Thor  5.    It's  all  so  easy.    Just  attach  the  plug  <?e^ 

to  a  lamp  socket  and  the  Thor  is  ready  to  do  your 


Vacuum  Cleaner  $19,75 

cleaning.  Then  a  turn  of  the  switch 
at  the  end  of  the  handle  starts 
the  motor  or  stops  it  as  you 
wish.  Push  the  ma- 
chine over  the  floor 
and  your  work  is 
done — all  do^e. 


uiZ'  Pullman  Davenports 

Guaranteed  a  Perfect  Bed 

You'll  find  it  just  as  comfortable  as  your  bed. 
Day  and  night  the  Pullman  plays  its  important  part 
in  the  luxurious  residence  as  in  the  most  humble 
home.  Tapestry,  velour  and  leather.  All  woods 
and  finishes.  See  the  forty  different  styles  we  are 
showing.  ,  ^    ' 

Special  For  Tkis  Week 

SPECIAL— Genuine  Pullman  Bed  Daven- 
port with  massive  frame  of  fumed  oak.  Plain 
design.  Seat  and  back  upholstered  in  bro\yn 
Spanish  moroccoline.  A  guaranteed  fabric. 
Complete  with  felt  mattress—      ^'^O  7< 

$41.50  value,  Kelly's  price ^O^-  ^  ^ 

(Sold  on  Easy  Payments) 


So  Simple  a  Child 
Can  Operate  It. 


I 


In  March  were  reported  at  $6,200,254, 
L"n  increase  of  $1,462,286  oyer  last  year 
For  the  nine   months  ^.ridmgJ^aiTch  31 


'Lo?al  officials  of  the  Northern  Pa- 
cific are  equally  optimistic.  The  vol- 
ume of  freight  offering  has  been  suf- 
ficient, they  averred,  to  keep  all  the 
road's  rolling  stock  In  continuous 
service  and  at  times  it  has  been  found 
difficult  to  avoid  congestion  Thanks 
fo  co-operation  on  the  part  of  con- 
signees in  unloading  cars  Promptly 
and  to  favorable  operating  conditions 
freicht  has  been  kept  moving  up  to 
schedules  and  few  complaints  have 
been   made    on   the   score   of   delays. 

The  Northern  Pacific  reported  gross 
earnings  of  $6,910,000  during  March, 
an  incfease  of  $1,139,000  over  the  cor- 
respond in  gmonthlast^year. 

A«lilan«1    School    Head. 

Ashland.      Wis..      April      12.  — Frank 


Shannon,  the  present  superintendent  of 
the  public  schools  of  the  city,  who  was 
selected  to  fill  the  place  left  vacant  by 
the  resignation  of  V.  T.  Thayer,  has 
been  chosen  to  the  office  for  th*;  term 
commencing  in  September.  J.  E. 
Thompson,  who  is  now  principal,  was 
elected  to  the  same  position  for  the 
next  term. 

♦    » 

Herald  wants  ads  will  find  a  buyer 
for  your  used  car.  They  reach  98  per 
cent  of  the  automobile  buyers. 

FIREMEN  HURT  WHILE 

SAVING  CHILDREN 

St.  Paul,  Minn.,  April  12.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Badly  burned  and  seri- 
ously Injured  while  risking  their  lives 
to  carry  little  Children  from  a  burning 
home,  two  firemen  were  rushed  to  the 
city    hospital    today.     The    Injured:  Jo- 


seph Foley.  Engine  Company  11;  Nicli^ 
olas  Savage,  Squad  1. 

The  children,  protected  by  thft-, 
scorched  arms  of  the  firemen,  escape<|3 
without  injury. 

. —————— 

Brewery  to  Recover  Taxea. 
Madison,     Wis..    April     12.— That    thflfj 
Pabst    Brewing    company.    Milwaukee 
will   be  able   to  recover  excess   on  ua-* 
lawful  taxes  was  held  by  the  suprem* 
court   Tuesday.     The  brewing  company 
Inadvertently,     through    a    mistake    ot 
the    assessor,    paid    taxes    on    the    sam^ 
property    twice    in    1913.    and    brought 
action     against      the     city      controllenj 
More   than    $8,000    was    Involved, 
• 

Near  St.  Cloud  School  Fire. 
St.  Cloud.  Minn..  April  12.— Serioul 
damage,  as  the  result  of  a  fire  in  thQ 
roof  of  the  Jefferson  school  was  aveiM 
ed  by  the  discovery  of  the  blaze,  whil^ 
the  students  were  at  recess.  Spark* 
from  the  chimney  gettled  on  the  shin* 
gles  and  ate  their  way  into  the  at* 
tic      The  damage  was  slight. 


Established   1885 


Exclusive  WcJaing 
Gifts 


A  large  collection  of  new  and 
exclusive  articles,  assembled 
especially  for  those  desiring 
wedding  gifts  of  distinctive 
design  and  the  finest  quality. 


Careless  Use  of 

Soap  Spoils  the  Hair 


Bagley  fe?  Co. 

315  ^A7c9t  Superior  St. 


Soap  should  be  used  very  carefully. 
If  you  want  to  keep  your  hair  looking 
Its  best.  Most  soaps  and  prepared 
shampoos  contain  too  much  alkali. 
This  dries  the  scalp,  makes  the  hair 
brittle,  and  ruins  It. 

The  best  thing  for  steady  use  is  just 
ordinary  mulsified  cocoanut  oil  (which 
is  pure  and  greaseless),  and  is  better 
than  the  most  expensive  soap  or  any- 
thing else  you  can  use. 

One  or  two  teaspoonsf  ul  will  cleanse 
the  hair  and  scalp  thoroughly.  Simply 
moisten  the  hair  with  water  and  rub  It 
in.  It  makes  an  abundance  of  rich, 
creamy  lather,  which  rinses  out  easily, 
removing  every  particle  of  dust,  dirt, 
dandruff  and  excessive  oil.  The  hair 
dries  quickly  and  evenly,  and  it  leaves 
the  scalp  soft,  and  the  hair  fine  and 
silky,  bright,  lustrous,  fluffy  and  easy 
to  manage. 

You  can  get  mulsified  cocoanut  oil 
at  any  pharmacy,  it's  very  cheap,  and 
a  few  ounces  will  supply  every  mem- 
ber of  the  family  for  months. — Adver- 
tisement« 


New  high  records  for  the  season  are 
being  set  In  the  volume  of  freight  be- 
ing moved  by  the  raIlroa<|«  to  and  from 
Duluth.    according    to    traffic    officials 
of  the  roads  operating  from  here. 

Increases  over  last  year  at  this  time 
are  being  shown  in  all  classes  of  com- 
modities,   apart    froni    coal,     and     the 
indications    are    thought    to    point    to 
the  handling  of  a  heavy  business  dur- 
ing the  next  two  months. 

The  movement  of  forest  products  has 
become  heavy  of  late,  with  the  break- 
ing up  of  the  camps,  as  operators  are 
rushing  logs  and  timber  out  from  load- 
ing points  as  rapidly  as  possible.    The 
aggregate    tonnage    of    grain    handled 
by   the   roads  to  the   terminals  here   is 
expected    to    increase    materially    after 
the  opening  of  navigation.     Shipments 
have  been  checked  down  to  a  minimum 
during    the    last    month    owing    to    the 
congested   conditions  at  the   elevators. 
From  Information  received  from  agents 
at    Interior    points,    railroad    men    esti- 
mate that  between   15  and  20  per  cent 
of   last   year's   Northwest   crop    Is  still 
In      country     elevators     and      farmers' 
hands    to    be    moved.      The    marketing 
of  that   will  assure   considerable  busi- 
ness   for    the    railroads    and    elevators 
for    some    time    yet.      In    view    of    the 
near  approach   of  lake  navigation,  rail 
shipments  of  various  staples  have  been 
cut  down    during   the   last  two   weeks, 
but    on    account    of    the    small    stocks 
carried    in    many    lines,    merchants   are 
bringing  In  a  heavier  tonnage  of  goods 
than  a  year  ago  in  that  way  In  order 
to  meet  their  current  trading  require- 
ments. ^       .....      . 

An  official  of  the  Great  Northern 
railroad  expressed  rratiflcation  today 
over  the  amount  of  freight  being  han- 
dled by  it  from  this  point.  "Shipments 
of  every  commodity  are  heavier  than 
a  year  ago."  he  saW.  A  satisfactory 
feature,  as  he  viewed  it,  comes  in  the 
larger  shipments  b^ing  made  by  Du- 
luth wholesalers  and  manufacturers 
over  the  West  with  the  Dakotas  and 
Montana  figuring  up^  perhaps  the  most 
favorably  in  that  respect. 
The  Great  Northern's  gross  •arnlngs 


9 


TRAOC.MARK 

Package  Foods 

*}Mttd  Luncheon  Beef,  Veal  Loaf, 

Potted  Ham,  Tomato  Ketchup,  Salmon. 
What  else,  Madam?" 

The  practical  housekeeper  knows  that 
a  supply  of  kfMtd/  Meats  and  Specialities  not 
oidy  reduces  kitchen  work  but  provides  dain- 
ties for  the  unexpected  guest,  hu^ud  Package 

Foods  always  rcadj  at  hand  ar«  more  delicate  and  aat- 
Isfkctory  than  th«  same  food  pr*pttr*d  at  home. 

4eS6SB^ Boned  Chicken— To  serve  cold,  in  salad  or 

with  cream  sauce. 
^KSGS3B^Ox  Tonfoe  —  An  entire  tongue,  all  waste 

trimmed  away,  ready  to  serve  cold,  or  hot,  with 

tomato  saace. 
./KSaSST' Sandwidi  Daintiee — DeUdoas  and  satisfyinf. 
yjfSgSXf  Pork  and  Beans — Nourishing,  appetizing  and 

economtral. 

AA  Yaw  Daatar  for  Mt/AJ/  Food  RrodueU 

ARMOUB^COMPANV 


J.  C.  FISHER,  Manager. 

Phones:    Melrose   2206;   Grand 


2(1. 


^^^^^J 

■».'..-. 

1 

/ 

! 

j 

» 

•— »" 


^  .»■-»:  ■,T<g»wiii  i._,  n.  1.   ' 


V- 


w^^f>im*wwm*m..  -'>'" 


8 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD, 


April  12, 1916. 


i 


-4 


LARGE  VOTE 
FORWILSON 

lllin'oisans  Express  Prefer- 
ence for  Sherman  and 
the  President. 


Thompson    Captures    Six- 
teen Out  of  Thirty-Five 
Wards  in  Chicago. 


rhioairo.  April  12.— Voters  In  the 
Illinois  pr»-sl<lentlal  pri-fennce  pri- 
mary yostorduy  d«<larod  In  favor  of 
President  Wilson  on  the  Democratic 
ticket  and  Senator  L.  Y.  Phernian  of 
Illinois  on  the  Kepublican.  theirs  being 
the  only  names  on  the  ballots.  The 
names  of  Rooscvtlt.  Huphi^s,  Root  and 
May«»r  William  HaK-  Th-.mp.son  were 
writton  In  on  c(»iiiparativ>'ly  few  Re- 
publlcin  ballots  and  that  of  Champ 
Clark  on  8e\-enty-Hve  Democratic,  but 
that  of  Col.  Roosevelt  was  tlie  only 
iine  to  secure  a  material  number  of 
signal urt's.  Sht-ruian's  total  vote  In 
Chicago  was  63,823;  Roosevelt.  11.620; 
Hughes,  950;  Root.  198.  and  Thompson, 
2.      I'r-  sident   Wilson    polled    7;>.398. 

In  th«^  Democratic  fight  the  forces 
headtd  by  Roper  C.  Sullivan  won  eas- 
ily, erivlng  him  control  of  the  Cook 
coinity  committee,  the  state  central 
committee  and  the  votes  which  will 
control    the    state    convention. 

A  total  of  7,765  women  expressed 
their  pref»'renee  for  president,  of 
whioh  Roosevelt  received  about  one- 
fuurth. 

*inliiviin   Retainn   Control. 

RotST'-r  C.  Sullivan  retairnd  control  of 
the  Dcmocrali'j  political  machinery  in 
the  state  and  wrested  control  of  the 
Cook  county  < Chicago)  committee  from 
the  i'ahath-f liiirisoii  faction. 

Former  (Jovernor  Demeii  Hpp.irontly 
retained  his  streUKth  down  state,  but 
Mavor  Thompson  captured  16  and  De- 
neen  14  of  the  city's  35  wards.  Five 
wards  returned  neutrals  to  the  Repub- 
li<-an  county  committee. 

Fair  weather  jirevailed.  bringing:  out 
An  unexpi  ctedly  large  vote  in  Chicago, 
but  it  kept  the  farmers  In  their  tlelds 
down  state. 


over  the  Mexico-N'orthwestern  railroad 
for  distribution  to  the  expeditionary 
force  as  rapidly  as  the  limited  use  of 
the  line  will  permit. 

This  coupled  with  den.  Persliingr's 
action  In  moving  his  headquarters  to 
Satevo,  forty  miles  south  of  Chihuahua, 
on  the  same  day  that  the  report  of 
Villa's  death  was  grlven  wide  circula- 
tion, was  taken  as  an  indication  that 
army  officials  do  not  place  credence 
in   tho  report. 


GERMANS  RENEW  DRIVE 
ON  VERDUN  IN  MORNING: 
REPULSED.  SAY  FRENCH 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


i  I 


shelling  with  suffocating  and  tcar-pro- 
voklng  gas  projectile*. 

Attack  on   Ttvo  Flanka. 

Aftor  a  bombardment  with  high  ex- 
plosives lasting  eight  hours  and  the 
use  of  gas  for  another  hour  or  two, 
th.j  (Jormans  would  attack  simulta- 
neously on  two  flanks.  There  was  no 
visible  diminution  in  their  courage  and 
ardor;  neither  did  the  French  show  th  ; 
slightest  fatigue,  and  the  consequence 
Is  that  the  unprecedented  carnage  of 
th*^  battl"  of  Verdun  goes    >n. 

Yesterday  the  whole  front,  beaten  by 
ga.<i  projectiles,  was  overhung  by  a 
yellowish  cloud  of  chloride  vapor 
which  seemed  to  be  suspended  from  the 
sky.  When  the  cloud  lifted  the  Ger- 
i;ins    bounded    forward    seemingly    In- 


CARRANZISTAS  DEFEAT 
BANDITS  IN  A  FIVE-HOUR 
ENGAGEMENT  AT  PASAJE 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


In  that  Juan  Lamadrid,  a  noted  bandit, 
was   killed    in    a   dispute  over   the   divi-  | 
aion   ot   loot   by    the   Contreras   bandits. 

Llent.  Myefm  Rlile.  I 

Perslilng's  (.'amp  at  the  Front  In  | 
Mexico.  April  5. — (Ry  aeroplane  and. 
motor  couriers  to  Coltimbus,  N.  Mex.,  ' 
A|)rll  12.) — The  ride  of  LleUt.  Myer  of; 
the  Seventh  cavalry,  at  the  Guerrero; 
fight,  when  Col.  George  A.  Dodd  caught ' 
Villa  forces  for  the  first  time,  was  de-  i 
8<  ribed  hero  today  by  an  officer  from 
I)oUU's    column. 

During  the  fight.  Col.  Dodd  had  a 
po.sition  on  a  hill  near  fllierrero.  A 
mile  at>d  a  half  from  this  hill  Col. 
l>odd  saw  seviMfil  hundred  Villistas  fil- 
ing stealtlilly  through  a  ravine.  Mov- 
ing In  their  direction  but  In  such  a 
position  that  they  might  not  s«'e  the 
Villistas,  was  Maj  Tompkins'  .«!riuadron 
of  the  Seventh  Cavalry.  There  seemed 
a  chance  for  these  Villistas  to  tak<»  the 
effuadion  on  the  flank  and  Col.  Dodd 
ordered  Lieut.  Myer  to  carry,  word  to 
MaJ.  Tomr>kins  of  the  Villista  move- 
m-'nt.  Myer  rode  a  conspicuous  white 
horse.  Between  him  and  Maj.  Tomp- 
kins lay  a  mile  of  open  field,  swept  by 
the  fire  of  Villista  snipers.  Lieut.  Myer 
made  the  dtstani'e  at  a  run.  Jumping 
ditches,  dodging  boulders  and  leaping 
fences,  and  reached  the  American 
squadron  In  time  to  warn  them  of  the 
Villistas"    position. 

m 

RupplleM  <>olng  In  Fait. 

San  Antonio.  Tex..  April  12. — Supplies 
are    being    shipped    to    Casas    (Jrandes 


(:ifferent  to  the  thick  death-dealing 
•  urtaln  of  fire  from  the  French  artil- 
lery. Some  of  them  got  through  it, 
but  only  to  find  that  the  French  had 
abandoned  the  first  line  trenches  to 
allow  the  gas  cloud   to  dissipate. 

German  reinforcements  were  sent  up 
to  fortify  the  trenches,  but  before  they 
i  had  reached  the  line  the  French  came 
'  back  with  an  irresistible  counter-at- 
tack and  in  a  few  minutes  drove  out 
the  Germans  from  the  few  points  wher* 
they   had   penetrated    the  trenches. 

pardonsIirTFefuseo 
smith  and  pickit 

doned  on  condition  that  he  go  to 
M«ssaehu.''etts. 

Steve  Oreskovlch.  sentenced  from 
Carver  county  in  1909  for  manslaugh- 
ter.    He  Is  In  Ill-health. 

Claud  May  of  South  St.  Paul,  sen- 
tenced In  1916  for  stealing  a  barrel  of 
grease. 

Sentence*    Commuted. 

The  following  sentences  were  com- 
muted to  make  the  persons  benefited 
eligible  for  parole  immediateli'  or  in 
the  near  future: 

Fred  Harton,  sentenced  from  Red- 
wood county  In  1911  to  Indeterminate 
term  for  assault,  commuted  to  two  years 
and  three  months;  .lames  Riley.  s<»n- 
teneed  from  Hennepin  for  grand  lar- 
ceny, not  more  than  ten  years,  com- 
muted to  five  years;  John  Wilson,  alias 
tSeorge  Wilson,  senti  need  from  Henne- 
pin in  1911.  for  thirty-five  years  for 
i-obbery.  commuted  to  twenty-five 
years;  Edward  Harris,  sentenced  from 
Hennepin.  1914,  to  not  less  than  ten 
years,  to  an  Inditermlnatc  term,  com- 
mtited  to  ten  years;  John  Buyrs.  sen- 
tenced from  Mahnomen  county,  to  not 
more  than  five  years  for  burglary, 
commuted  to  two  years;  Russell  White, 
who  held  up  a  hotel  In  Minneapolis, 
sentenced  In  1914,  to  not  more  than 
seven  and  one-half  ye.ars,  commuted  to 
three  years;  Kdward  L.  Kruttenbaeher. 
sentenced  from  Ramsey  county  In  1914. 
to  not  more  than  five  years  for  burg- 
lary,, commuted  to  a  year  and  a  half; 
Kben  Sailor,  sentenced  from  Martin 
county.  1913.  Indeterminate,  grand  lar- 
ceny, commuted  to  three  years;  Paul 
Oreskovlch.  St.  Louis  county,  1913,  not 
more  than  thirty  years,  commuted  to 
four  years;  Florence  Ferry.  St.  Louis 
county  girl  burglar,  sentenced  to  not 
more  than  five  years  In  1914,  com- 
muted to   two   years. 

Herald  wants  ads  will  find  a  buyer 
for  your  used  car.  They  reffch  98  per 
cent  of  the  automobile  buyer.t. 

flood  WARNINGS 

AT  CLINTON.  IOWA 

Clinton.  Iowa.  April  12. — Warnings 
were  received  today  predicting  that 
tho  flood  stage  of  sixteen  feet  will  be 
reached  by  the  Mississippi  river  here 
by  Saturday  and  that  the  highest  stage 
of  16.5  feet  will  be  reached  Sunday. 
This  morning  the  stage  had  reached 
13.8  feet,  a  rise  of  one  foot  in  the  last 
twenty-four  hours.  Owners  of  low- 
lands are  removing  livestock  and  tak- 
ing  steps   to   protect    their   property. 


D.  H.,  4-12-16. 


The  Rain  raineth 


April  came  and  the  ice 
and  snow  assumed  a  sick- 
ly hue.  Everybody  felt 
better  and  bought  a  new 
bonnet  and  other  things 
in  pretty  colors  to  enliven 
the  dreary  looks  of  the 
town. 

And   then   it   rained. 

•  • 

"Good  thing,"  said  he, 
and  dug  his  old  umbrella 
from  the  darkest  recess  of 
his  clothes  closet.  But  it- 
refused  to  unfurl  and  pro- 
tect his  girl.  My — how 
this  wet  man  talked  when 
the  cranky  thing  balked! 
And  she  said  unto  him: 
"Put  up  or  shut  up." 

#  • 

Thereupon  they  re- 
paired to  the  Columbia 
Clothes  Shop  and  inter- 
viewed the  red-nosed  Wet 
Goods  Man,  who  spoke 
the  following  piece  in  a 
dry  tone  of  voice: 

^p,  •Tx'c  nave  rainproof  Slip- 
ons  and  Coats  for  women 
at  $5,  $7.50,  .$8.50  and  $10. 

For  men  we  have  good 
Slip-ons  at  $3.95,  $5,  $7.50, 
$8.50,  $10,  $15,  $20  and 
$25.  Surely  something 
for  everybody. 

Here    are    the     famous 


At  Third 
Ave.  W. 


Cravenetted  Kenyon  Top 
Coats  at  $14.50,  $17  and 
$20. 

Rubber  Coats  at  $3.50 
and  $5.  Also  Oilskins 
from  $1  up. 

•  * 

For  Children,  Slip-on 
Coats  with  hats  to  match, 
at  $2.95  and  $3.50. 

Boys*  Rubber  Coat.s, 
$2.50  and  $3.00.  Rain 
Hats,  25c;  Oilskins,  $2. 
and  Rubber  Boots,  $1.50, 
$1.75,  $2  and  $2.50. 

Umbrellas  at  $1,  $1.50, 
$1.75,  $2,  $2.50,  $3,  $3.50. 
$4,  $5  and  more. 

•  • 

"Let  the  rain  rain," 
quoth  she,  and  he  wept  for 
joy  when  he  paid  the  bill. 


Duluth, 
Minn. 


CioUtng  C» 
Foot-Note:  Rubber  Shoea  for  men,  women  and  children. 


USES  KNIFE  TO 
ENDJROUBLE 

Laborer  Attempts  Suicide 

Because  of  High  Cost 

of  Living. 


Stabs   Self   Three   Times 

and  Slashes  Throat 

Twice. 


"Don't  tell  my  wife!"  said  .Joseph 
H^'nkel,  85.  a  laborer,  as  he  drew  a 
poclt-t  knife  yesterday  afternoon  In 
the  Union  depot  ante  room,  stabbed 
himself  three  times  around  the  heart 
and  then  slashed  himself  twice  In  the 
throat. 

When  Patrolman  Connors  reached 
the  scene  a  minute  later.  Henkel  was 
sitting  on  the  floor  in  a  pool  of 
blood,  still  conscious.  He  was  taken 
to  St.  Luke's  hospital,  and  Police 
Surgeon  Harry  Klein  today  said  that 
he    would    rcco\er. 

Worry  over  his  inability  to  provide 
for  his  wife,  living  In  Baudette.  be- 
cause of  the  high  cost  of  living,  evi- 
dently prompted  H»»nkel  In  his  at- 
tempt   at    self    destruction. 

One  letter,  from  his  wife,  which 
was  found  on  his  person,  read: 

•'At  last  I  have  solved  the  high  cost 
of  living,  which  we  have  talked  about 
so  much  and  which  we  both  have 
tried  so  hard  to  solve.  I  only  wish 
that  you   too  could   have  succeeded." 

The  letter  was  soiled  and  maiked 
by  constant  handling  and  showed 
evidences  of  having  been  read  and  re- 
read many  times.  Several  letters  dis- 
cussed the  high  cost  of  living,  and 
one  told  of  the  lllne8»  of  Henkel's 
mother  and  sister,  who  live  at  Hrain- 
fTd.  A  letter  from  a  South  Dakota 
farmer  offered  Henkel  a  Job  and  asked 
when   he   could   come. 

Hvnkel  stabbed  himself  three  tlme» 
in  the  brea.st,  up  to  the  hilt  of  the 
knife,  which  has  a  two  and  >>n»-half 
inoh  blade.  Then  he  slashed  hid  throat 
on  each  side. 


O. 


V;...V  I 


VILLA  M.(\SKS  TRAIL 


(Continued    from    page    1.) 


enth  cavalry  and  Villa  bandits  south  of 
Namiquipa  were  not  mentioned  In  tho 
war  'Upartment's  early  dispatches  to  ■ 
d:»y  and  there  was  no  further  mention 
of  the  report.id  death  of  Villa. 

Maj. -(Jen.  Funston  reported  the  prog- 
ress of  a  new  plan  for  sending  sup- 
pli'^s  forward  to  Brig.-tjcn.  Pershing's 
columns.  A  trial  shipment  of  forage 
has  been  sent  over  the  Mexican  Cen- 
tral lino,  which  has  a  niore  direct  route 
to  Chihuahua  than  the  Mexico-North- 
western, which  heretofore  h.is  carried 
tfo.ne  shipments.  Nine  cars  of  hay  and 
o-its  for  the  cavalry  compose  the  ship- 
ments which  probably  will  be  trans- 
ferred to  the  Mexican  Northwestern  at 
•  ^hihuahua    and    sent    on    south. 

"If  this  shipment  Is  successful," 
(Jen.  Funston  reported,  "othor  large 
ones  will  follow.  It  Is  hoped  the  ship- 
ment will  reach  Oon.  P«'rshing  through 
the   American    consul   at   Ciilhuahua." 

Maj. -Gen.  .«;cott  said  today  thit  di- 
rect use  of  the  Mexican  Central  in  that 
way  instead  of  shipping  through  min- 
ing companies  or  brokers  would  pr.Ht- 
ly  simplify  supplying  the  troops  in  the 
field. 

A  dispatch  today  from  the  supply 
ship  cJlucli^r  off  Mazatlan  said  there 
was  a  ft'cllng  of  hostility  developing 
against  Carranza  officials  there  which 
might  precipitate  trouble. 
■ 
ChaiiKe  to  De  Made. 

San  Antonio,  Tex..  April  12. — Gen. 
Funston  announced  today  that  a  change 
would  be  made  soon  that  would  affect 
the  long  line  of  communications  be- 
tween Columbus.  N.  Mex..  and  (Jen. 
Pershing's  advanced  forces.  He  de- 
clined to  state  what  that  change  would 
be.  but  barring  the  free  use  of  the  rail- 
roads It  was  assumed  by  most  army  of- 
ticers  that  It  had  been  decided  either 
to  reinforce  the  line  materially  or  shift 
It  to  a  shorter  route. 


I 


Z5iili 


That's  it  I 

That's  the  cigarette  you're  going  to 
cuddle  to  and  like  for  keeps  if  you'll' 
only  once  TRY  IT  I 

Favorites  have  such  a  ''go-good" 
taste  that  they  can  not  be  described 
in  mere  words.  JUST  BECAUSE 
THEY'RE  S-O  G-O-O-DI 


Plane  Flie«  Toward   Parral. 

TorrtHin.  Mex.,  April  12. — An  aero- 
plane passed  over  Santa  Rosalia  today 
bound  In  the  direction  of  Parral.  where 
American  troops  have  been  reported  to 
be  operating.  The  aeroplane  is  be- 
lieved to  have  followed  the  wagon  trail 
from  Gen.  Pershing's  Satevo  base  to  the 
Mexican  National  railway  line  and  then 
to  have  followed   the  railway. 


Villa   Donlilea   Bark. 

Presidio,  Tex.,  April  12.— Reports  that 
Villa  has  doubled  buck  from  the  region 
-south  of  Parral  and  Is  on  his  way 
northeast  toward  Ojlnaga  were  circu- 
lated along  this  portion  of  the  border 
today,  but  were  not  given  much  cre- 
dence. 

The  reports  were  based  on  Informa- 
tion said  to  have  been  received  by  Col. 
Klojas,  commander  of  the  Ujinaga  gar- 
rison. 

m 

Amerlraas   Beyond    Parral 

El  Paso,  Tex.,  April  12. — That  the 
American  expeditionary  force  has 
penetrated  far  beyond  Parral  and  Is 
near,  if  not  actually  at  the  Chihuahua- 
Durango  border  line,  is  indicated  In 
code  dispatches  received  here  this  aft- 
ernoon by  private  concerns  with  in- 
terests  in   the   Parral   district. 

These  dispatches  said  that  the 
American  advanced  columns  now  had  a 
temporary  base  near  Parral  and  that 
toward  the  end  of  last  week  two  com- 
panies of  the  motor  truck  train  had 
delivered  supplies  at  this  base.  This 
Is  the  first  authentic  information  that 
has  come  from  the  flying  columns  of 
Col.  Dodd  and  Col.  Brown  for  several 
days. 

In  Mountain  Faxtneases. 

It  seems  certain  now  that  Villa,  If 
he  still  lives,  has  passed  Into  the  moun- 
tain fastnesses  of  Durango  and  that  he 
is  in  a  po.sition  to  get  In  touch  with 
the  scattered  bandit  forces  of  that  dis- 
trict. 

There  are  twenty-seven  trucks  In 
each  motor  company.  The  delivery  of 
fifty-four  trucks  indicates  that  the  ad- 
vanced cavalry  has  sufficient  supplies 
to  enable  it  to  make  long  forays  south. 

It  is  not  believed,  however,  that  the 
forces  of  (Tol.  Dodd  or  Col.  Brown  have 
passed  the  Durango  line.  To  do  so 
would  lengthen  the  line  of  communi- 
cation too  dangerously.  It  Is  more 
likely  they  have  remained  In  touch 
with  their  supplies  at  Parral.  This 
would  account  for  the  lack  of  informa- 
tion from  the  front  the  past  week. 

Simultaneously  with  the  news  that 
supplies  had  been  sent  as  far  south  as 
tho  neighborhood  of  Parral,  came  the 
Information  today  that  local  concerns 
had  presented  a  trainload  of  supplies 
to  the  Mexican  Central  railroad  for 
shipment  to  Chihuahua  City,  there  to 
be  sold  to  Gen.  Pershlng'a  troops. 


BOXFOBD 

THINCW  STYLIIN 


Favorites  are  made  of  a  par- 
ticularly choica  growth  of 
tobacco.  It  to  this  all-pure, 
natural  tobacco  that  gives 
PavoHtea  their  unusual^ly 

flavor. 


rrn 


^HIJ^V  mellow  and  mild  flav 

Favorite 


10  for  5c  Also  packed  20  for  10c. 


CIGARLETTES 


WRfTf  FOR  rtOOKLCT  OF  16  STYLEf 
UNITCO  aHpT  4  DOLLAR  CO  .  TMOV .  N  V 


OCEAN  RATES 
SAVEFLEETS 

Bankruptcy    and    Disinte- 
gration Avoided  for  Trans- 
portation Companies. 


Enormous     Increase     in 

Carrying  Rates;  Are 

Still  Soaring. 


As  a  result  of  the  enormous  in- 
creases In  deean  freight  rates,  the  ves- 
sel Interests  are  earning  unprecedent- 
ed profits,  and  the  values  of  all  types 
of  steamers  have  been  steadily  marked 

up. 

The  International  Mercantile  Marine 
company,  which  before  the  outbreak  of 
the  war,  experienced  difficulty  in 
meeting  Its  fixed  charges,  leading  to 
the  entering  of  a  petition  for  reorgan- 
ization. Is  now  showing'  such  large 
profits  that  It  Is  estimated  Its  man- 
agement will  be  in  position  to  liqui- 
date all  its  bonded  indebtedness  by 
next  December,  leaving  no  liabilities 
ahead  of  the  comnxon  and  preferred 
stockholders.  Another  concern,  the 
Pacific  Mall  Steamship  company,  which 
had  arranged  to  sell  Its  boats  and  go 
out  of  business  on  the  Pacific  coast, 
has  reconsidered  Its  action  and  will 
remain  in   the  trade. 

Not   Cnovch   Tonnase. 

As  a  result  of  the  losses  sustained 
through  German  submarine  depreda- 
tions, the  requisitioning  of  shipping 
by  the  British  government  for  trans- 
port purposes  and  the  enormous  ship- 
ments of  munitions  and  war  supplies, 
there  is  an  insufficiency  of  tonnage  for 
commercial  requirements,  so  that  the 
transportation  companies  are  able  to 
obtain  almost  any  scale  of  freight 
rates  they   may   desire  to  set. 

The  extent  of  the  bulges  in  freight 
rates  since  the  war  began  la  Illustrat- 
ed In  a  report  Just  prepared  by  the  de- 
partment  of  commerce  at   Washington. 

To  begin  with,  it  "hows  that  the 
freight  rate  on  grain  from  New  York 
to  Liverpool  has  been  Increased  900 
per  cent,  fiour  500  per  cent,  and  pro- 
visions 400  per  cent.    . 

In  January,  1914,  the  rate  on  grain 
from  there  to  Liverpool  was  4.1  cents 
per  bushel,  and  one  year  later  18.3 
cents.  In  January,  1916,  the  rate  had 
risen  to  40.6  cents,  about  ten  times  as 
high  as  the  rate  of  two  years  before. 
Rates  from  Boston  Jumped  from  4.1 
cents  per  bushel  to  36.5  cents  fn  the 
same  time,  being  about  nine  times  as 
much  as  two  years  ago.  The  higher 
rate  In  New  York  is  due  to  congestion. 
Eaoraioua  Increaaea. 

At  both  New  York  and  New  Orleans 
the  rate  on  cotton  has  Increased  about 
900  per  c«nt  !*  the  last  two  years, 
with  a  low«r  rate  at  present  obtain- 
able at  Nefir  York.  On  Jan.  1,  1916, 
the  rate  per  100  pounds  from  New 
York  was  fS.tB  and  from  New  Orleans, 
IS.  •■'        " 

Rates  on  tother  commodities  are  con- 
plderably  JAi£^ej  jfcjt  i^S\  ^rJ^i^  than 
at   New   York.      Wheat,   from   New   <^r- 

teans    to    Glas^o^    was    64.8    cents    pef 
lushel  on  Jan.  1. 

There  was  a  greater  Increase  in  flour 
from  New  •  York  to  Liverpool  than 
from  Seattle  to  Hongkong.  The  rate 
on  sack  floUr  from  New  York  to  Liver- 
pool increased  >ln  two  years  from  16 
5ii       ■'> 


cents  to  90  cents  per  hundred  pounds; 
and  from  Seattle  to  Hongkong,  26  to 
75   cents. 

The  transpacific  rates  on  other  com- 
modities, such  as  wheat,  lard  and  meat 
products,  showed  comparatively  little 
Increase  in  the  two  years.  In  certain 
other  commodities  the  transpacific 
rates  from  Seattle  have  increased  in  a 
remarkable  degree.  The  rate  on  agri- 
cultural machinery  has  tripled;  cop- 
per doubled,  sewing  machines  two  and 
a  half  limes  the  former  rate,  leather 
five  times,  canned  salmon  twice  the 
former  rate,  and  steel  products  rates 
have  jumped  from  $3.50  per  short  ton 
to  Honkkong  to  >80.  There  has  been 
an  increase  of  $14  per  short  ton  since 
Oct.    1,    1916. 


PREDICTS  HEAVY 
IRON  QBE  TRAFFIC 

James  J.  Hill  Urges  Caution 

in  Consideration  of 

Future  Business. 

James  J.  Hill  looks  forward  to  a 
big  iron  ore  traffic  from  the  Lake 
Superior  district  this  year,  and  he 
feels  optimistic  regarding  the  pros- 
pects for  railroad  traffic  generally 

He  Is  quoted  as  follows  In  the  course 
of  a  recent  Interview  at  New  York  In 
the    Wall    Street    Journal:     "The     rail- 


WOMEN  SHOULD 
GET  THIS  HABIT 
AS  WELL  AS  MEN 

Don't  Eat  Bite  of  Breakfast 

Until  You  Drink  Glass  of 

Hot  Water. 


Happy,  bright,  alert — vigorous  and 
vivacious— a  good  clear  »kln;  a  nat- 
ural, rosy  complexion  and  freedom 
from  Illness  are  assured  only  by  clean 
healthy  blood.  If  only  every  woman 
and  likewise  every  man  could  realize 
the  wonders  of  the  morning  Inside 
bath,  what  a  gratifying  change  would 
take  place. 

Instead  of  the  thousands  of  sickly 
anaemic-looking  men.  women  and  girls 
with  pasty  or  muddy  complexions;  in- 
stead of  the  multitudes  of  "nerve 
wrecks,"  "rundowns,"  "brain  fags" 
and  pessimists  we  should  see  a  virile 
optimistic  throng  of  rosy-cheeked  peo- 
ple  everywhere. 

An  Inside  bath  Is  had  by  drinking 
each  morning  before  breakfast,  a  glass 
of  real  hot  water  with  a  teaspoonful 
of  limestone  phosphate  In  It  to  wash 
from  the  stomach,  liver,  kidneys  and 
ten  yards  of  bowels  the  previous  day's 
Indigestible  waste,  sour  fermentations 
and  poisons,  thus  cleansing,  sweeten- 
ing and  freshening  the  entire  alimen- 
tary canal  before  putting  more  food  in- 
to the  stomach. 

Those  subject  to  sick  headache,  bil- 
iousness, nasty  breath,  rheumatism* 
colds;  and  particularly  those  who  have 
a  pallid,  sallow  complexion  and  who 
are  constipated  very  often,  are  urged 
to  obtain  a  quarter  pound  of  lime- 
stone phosphate  at  the  drug  store 
which  will  cost  but  a  trifle  but  Is 
sufficient  to  demonistr&te  the  quick 
and  remarkable  change  in  both  health 
and  appearance  awaiting  those  who 
nractf<5&  Internal  sanitation.  We  must 
remenlber  that  Inside  cleanliness  Is 
more  Importftivt  than  outside,  because 
the  skin  does  not  absorb  impurities  to 
contaminate  the  blood,  while  the  pores 
in   the  thirty  feet  of  bowels  do. 

— Advertisement. 


roads  of  the  country  should  continue 
to  have  good  business,  at  least, 
through  the  summer.  Their  traffic  is 
now  on  a  war  basis,  and  caution 
should  be  uppermost  In  any  consider- 
ation of  the  future. 

"Great  Northern's  gross  business  for 
the  firscal  year  ending  June  30  next 
should  reach  $80,000,000,  and  there 
will  probably  be  a  surplus  of  at  least 
$25,000,000  after  charges."  Mr.  Hill's 
estimate  means  that  the  road  will  earn 
10  per  cent  or  more  upon  its  $249,500,- 
000  outstanding  stock,  and  have  a 
surplus  after  dividends  of  something 
like  $7,600,000. 

"There  will  be  a  large  Iron  ore 
movement  this  year,"  added  Mr.  Hill, 
"and  Great  Northern  will  carry  prob- 
ably 15,000,000  tons  from  the  Mesaba 
range  mines  to  the  upper  Lake  Supe- 
rior ports.  The  grain  crop  In  the 
Northwest  may  not  be  as  large  as  last 
year,  but  there  will  be  a  good  aver- 
age yield.  Planting  In  the  land  areas 
opened  up  in  the  new  sections  will 
offset  what  decrease  there  may  be  in 
tho  old  areas,  on  account  of  putting 
land   under   grass." 

Commenting  upon  the  necessity  of 
the  railroads  moving  cautiously,  Mr. 
Hill  said:  "It  is  not  safe  to  rely  upon 
the  assumption  that  Europe  will  be 
forced  after  peace  Is  declared  to  pur- 
chase our  grain,  no  matter  what  the 
international  financial  and  credit  situ- 
ation  may  be. 

"Ten  years  ago  no  one  would  have 
thought  that  Canada  would  enter  the 
field  as  an  exporter  of  wheat.  Today 
the  dominion  is  able  to  export  275  - 
000.000  bushels  Two  other  of  Eng- 
land's colonies,  India  and  Australia, 
have  175.000.000  bushels  to  sell,  with 
Argentina  able  to  export  150,000.000 
bushels.  This  total  of  600.000.000  bush- 
els Is  more  than  enough  to  take  care 
of  all  of  Europe's  Import  needs  which 
are  normally  about  500.000.000  bushels 

"When  peace  is  declared  Europe 
must  economize,  and  it  is  possible  that 
her  wheat  Imports  can  be  cut  to  460  - 
000.000  bushels  or  less.  England 
which  now  taKes  about  250.000,000 
bushels,  may  naturally  be  expected  to 
favor  her  colonies,  and  cannot  be  ex- 
pected to  buy  from  us  unless  she  can 
find  a  market  here  for  her  merchan- 
dise, w'ltch  will  be  her  onlv  means  of 
paying  for  what  she  buys  in  the  In- 
ternatioral    markets." 


mans,  as  the  result  of  the  closing  of 
his  bank  by  the  state  banking  board, 
was  to   have   been  discussed. 


TO  INTEREST  PEOPLE 

IN  OUTDOOR  LIFE 

St.  Paul.  Minn.,  April  12.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Minnesota  Forestry 
association  will  meet  in  Minneapolis 
April  27  to  launch  a  campaign  to  In- 
terest people  of  Minnesota  in  outdoor 
life.  It  was  announced  today.  The 
occasion  is  the  fortieth  anniversary  of 
the  association.  The  officials  believe 
that  If  the  people  of  Minnesota  real- 
ized the  beauties  of  the  state  they 
would  live  much  of  the  time  out  of 
doors. 


RUNAWAY  HORSE  KILLS 
MINNEAPOLIS  IVIINISTER 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  April  12. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)  —  Rev.  David 
Holmgren,  70  years  eld,  pastor  of  the 
First  Scandinavian  Unitarian  church, 
and  at  one  time  a  member  of  the 
Swedish  riksdag,  is  dead  from  injuries 
sustained  yesterday  when  trampled  by 
a  runaway  horse.  He  took  an  active 
part  in  socialistic  reforms  in  Sweden 
for  a  score  of  years.  He  came  to  this 
country  in  1903. 

PROTEST  MEETING  IS 
NOT  HELD  AT  MINOT 

Mlnot,  N.  D.  April  12 — (Special  to 
The  Iierald) — ^Threats  of  the  city  au- 
thorities to  revoke  the  license  of  any 
hall  used  for  the  purpose,  prevented 
local  Socialists  from  holding  a  meet- 
ing at  which  the  action  of  Judge  W.  J. 
Kneeshaw,  in  directing  a  verdict  In 
favor  of  Governor  L.  B.  Hanna  and  the 
other  defendants  In  the  $225,000  dam- 
age  suit   Instituted  by  Grant   L.   To«« 


Ironvrood    Band    Coneerf. 

Ironwood,  Mich.,  April  12. — The  New* 
port  band  will  give  the  following  pro- 
gram at  the  Pierce  theater  next  Fri- 
day evening:  Selection,  band;  selection. 
Mandolin  club;  vocal  solo.  Prof.  J.  O. 
Watson;  pianofort  duet.  Prof.  J.  P. 
Nlcholls  and  student;  selection,  band; 
cornet  solo.  Director  R.  Goldsworthy; 
vocal  solo.  Prof.  E.  T.  Duffleld;  read- 
ing, Miss  J.  Bond;  selection.  high 
school  glee  club.  Prof.  J.  C.  Watson, 
director;  selection,  band;  selection, 
Mandolin  club;  vocal  solo,  J.  Rollings: 
piano  solo.  Prof.  J.  P.  NichoUs;  vocal 
solo,  Mr.  Kitchen;  horn  solo,  C.  Snellj 
selection,   band. 

»__ 

La  Follette  Gets  Most  Votes. 

Madison,  Wis.,  April  12. — Judged 
from  the  official  returns  received  at 
the  office  of  the  secretary  of  state,  the 
returns  for  President  Woodrow  Wilson 
will  fall  a  few  thousand  short  of  the 
La  Follette  vote.  With  the  returns 
from  forty-two  counties  official,  and 
with  the  reports  from  nineteen  coun- 
ties unofficial.  Senator  La  Follette  has 
a  lead  over  President  Wilson  of  2,600. 
The  La  Follette  leaders  here  claim  thnt 
the  senator  will  have  a  vote  of  107.000 
and  that  President  Wilson's  vote  will 
be  about  104,000. 


Ilary   Mill   City   Proofreader. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  April  12. — Pu* 
nerai  services  for  Herbert  C.  Smith,  a 
proofreader  on  the  Tribune,  who  died 
Sunday  night,  were,  held  at  2  p.  m. 
Tuesday  under  the  'direction  of  Min- 
neapolis Typographical  union.  No.  42, 
of  which  he  was  a  member.  Interment 
was  In  the  family  plot  at  Lakewood. 

• 

To   Meet  at  "Fork*.'* 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D.,  April  12. — Grand 
Forks  has  b"en  selected  as  the  next 
annual  meeting  place  for  the  conven- 
tion of  the  North  Dakota  Federation 
of  Labor,  which  will  be  held  here  be- 
ginning June  4. 


GRIPSTILL  HANGING 
ON  SOME  PEOPLE 

Does  your  back  ache?  Is  your 
stomach  sensitive?  Do  you  cough  a 
little?  Do  you  feel  tired  and  all  run 
down?  All  of  these  feelings  coma 
from  the  after-effects  of  the  grippe—* 
it  is  a  catarrhal  disease. 

You  can  never  be  well  as  long  aa 
catarrh  remainfis  In  your  system,  weak- 
ening your  whole  body  with  stagnant 
blood  and  unhealthy  secretions. 

YOU  NEED 
CACTUS  JUICE 

It  Is  the  one  tonic  for  the  after- 
effects of  the  grippe;  because  it  is  a 
catarrhal  treatment  of  proven  excel- 
lence. 

Take  it  to  clear  away  all  effects  of 
the  grippe,  to  tone  up  the  digestion, 
clear  up  the  inflamed  membranes, 
regulate  the  bowels  and  give  nature 
that  assistance  that  it  needs,  and  in 
a  very  short  while  your  whole  sys- 
tem will  know  and  feel  that  healthy 
feeling:    that    every    one    should    have. 

Many  thousands  of  people,  perhaps 
friends  of  yours,  have  taken  that 
wonderful  medicine  and  can  tell  you 
how  it  benefited  them,  in  fact  made 
them  feel  like  a  new  person  whexl 
they  felt  as  though  life  was  not  worth 
the  living.  So  It  behooves  you  to  go 
to  your  druggist  and  tell  him  that 
you  want  a  bottle  of  that  Master  Medi- 
cine, CACTUS  JUICE.  Ask  any  druflr- 
^t  in  Duluth  or  Superior. — ^Adver- 
tisement. 


**"— "^p* 


I 


asa 


<*     ■>!. 


.m.^ 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD/ 


April  12, 1916. 


9 


*  rf 


y 


MEN'S  RAINCOATS 


Good  looking-  dressy  coats  that 
are  guaranteed  waterproof  and 
satisfactory  in  every  respect- 
priced  at — 


"•«  «»■ 


— ^r 


$7.50     $ 


9, 


to 


SAYS  CHARGE 
ISjINJUST 

John  Millen  of  Alger-Smith 

Company   Answers 

State  Official. 


WAS 
SETTLER  HERE 

Mrs.  Ellen    Nettleton  Dies 

at  Her  Home  in 

Spokane. 


EASTER  TOGS 

It's  an  old  custom  to  wear  your 
best  and  look  your  best  on  Easter 
Sunday.  •  You'll  need  some  new 
things'  Here  you'll  tind  them  in 
Suits,  Coats,  Hats,  Shoes  and  Fur- 
nishings. 


'iwr 


Dress  Well ; 
Never  Miss 
the  Money. 


QMELYS 

MJUmiTtUPI^iOB-VUiOMU-HUatNO 


We   Invite 

Your  Charge 

Account. 


Declares    Arneson    Found 

Fault  With  Lack  of 

Bark  Marks. 


Husband     Filed    on     160 
Acres  of  Land  on  Minne- 
sota Point. 


IW" 


•^'    ■  I  - 


17  and  19 

East 
Superior  St. 


Qbmm's 


Half  Block 

East  Lake 

A  venue 


^7- 


Duluth's  Newest  Store 

is  ready  for  your  Easter  Coats,  Suits,  Dresses,  Millinery,  etc. 
Hundreds  of  new  garments  fresh  from  the  maker  arc  arriv- 
ing daily  and  at  a  saving  in  price  not  easily  duplicated. 

SUITS 

Bhepherd  checks;  all  silk  lined;  many  Btyles 
to  select  from.  You  would  pay  tlsewhere 
»22.60.      Our  price    for  S9.95 

Thursday vtr-vw 

A  wonderful  assortment  of  poplin,  gabardine, 
taffeta  and  combination;  up-to-the-minute 
fltvles;    ranging  in   price    from  $15*50 


945.00   down   to 


DRESSES 


Forty-five  taffeta,  crepe  de  chine,  silk  poplin 
and  others;  all  of  the  newest  models.  These 
are   all   samples;    |24.60    values  $13*50 

^^  Otlier  dresses  from  V3V.66  down  to  |14.B0. 


COATS 


We  have  a  thousand  coats  In  stock  for  your 
selection,  In  most  any  kind  of  material 
wanted.  The  selection  in  prices  are  un- 
eiiualed  elsewhere.  Come  and  see  our  big 
R.ssortmpnt.      Prices    ranging  S3.98 

from  »25.00  down  to  vw*«rv 


SKIRTS 


Hundreds  of  sample  dress  skirts.  A  wonder- 
ful bargain  for  you.  Kvery  one  Is  a  $10.00 
value  In  taffetas,  poplins,  gabardines^ 
.«li«pherd  checks  and  other  novel-  84.95 
ties    They  will  all  go  Thursday  at. . .  ■^^••'•' 

SILK  BLOUSES 

In  taffeta,  crepe  de  chine,  tub  silk.  etc.  This 
cannot  »)e  duplicated  elsewhere  at  less  than 
15.00.      For   this   sale   will   all  $1,98 

go  at    ^ 

MILLINERY 

our   millinery  department  prices  cannot  be  '1"P»'^^^^J,,^'J>7»"^^V<    OS 
city.     Hats  for  women,  misses,  and  childien.     Prices  ranging  ^1,95 

irom    $15.00    down    to • •"- 

rhildreu'H  Hb<(«  from  »3.50  down  to  88c. 

Most  complete   line  of  children's  eoata   and  graduation  dresses  now 

ready  for   your  Inspection. 


r 


ODD  FELLOWS 

WILL  CELEBRATE 

Dulutfi   Lodges   Will   Hold 

Services   in  Honor  of 

Order's  Beginning. 

Puluth  Odd  Fellows  will  celebrate 
the  ninety-seventh  anniversary  of  the 
founding  of  the  order  In  the  United 
States  on  Wednesday  evening,  April 
26,  at  the  lodge  hall  in  the  Axa  build- 
ing 221  West  Superior  street.  Duluth 
lodge.  No.  28,  will  l>e  »"  <;^*\rKe  and 
other  Odd  Fellow  and  Rebekah  lodges 
In  the  city  will  participate. 

John  Norton  will  give  the  principal 
address,  speaking  on  "Fraternallsm. 
P    J.  Borgstrom  of  West  Duluth  lodge. 


No.    168,    will    speak    on    "Odd    Fellow- 

Kefreshments  will  be  served  by  the 
women  of  Majestic  Rebokah  lodge.  No. 
60.  The  committee  In  charge  of  the 
services  consists  of  Charles  Ottlnger, 
John  Glllls  and  J.  A.  Draff. 

CROW  WING  TEACHERS 

TO  HOLD  MEETING 

Bralnerd,  Minn.,  April  13— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  Crow  Wing 
County  Tcacliers'  association  will  meet 
here  Friday  and  Saturday.  The  meet- 
ing Friday  afternoon  will  be  held  at 
the  Chamber  of  Commerce  rooms  and 
later  an  adjournment  will  be  taken  to 
the  high  school  auditorium  where 
State  Superintendent  of  Public  Instruc- 
tion Schulz  win  speak.  Saturday  morn- 
ing a  meeting  will  be  held  at  the  high 
school  and  at  10  o'clock  the  spelling 
match  between  representatives  of  the 
different  rural  schools  will  be  com- 
menced. 


1 


Announcement 


Christie  LIttiograpli  &  Printtng  Co. 

Announces  that  it  has  taken  the  sales  agency  for 

Steel  Office  Furniture 

realizing  the   growing  demand  for  steel,  and  in  line  with   its 
policy  of  securing  for  its  customers  the  best  merchandise  the 

market  affords.  . 

The  Art  Metal  Construction  Company  is  not  only  the 
largest  and  oldest  manufacturer  of  Metal  Office  Equipment  but 
it  is  the  leader  in  its  field. 

You  can*t  aflFord  to  put  another  piece  of  furniture  or  filing  equipment 
into  your  office  until  you  know  what  Art  Metal  will  do  for  you.     Let  us 

'°  CHRISTIE  LITHOGRAPH  &  PRINTING  CO. 

CliilN<le   Buildliig,    naluUt,   Minn. 


Declaring  that  the  only  objection 
which  Oscar  Arneson,  manager  of  the 
land  department  In  the  state  auditor's 
office,  had  raised  to  the  marking  of 
timber,  cut  by  his  company,  was  In  re- 
gard to  the  bark  marks  and  not  to  the 
•tate  marks,  John  Millen,  general 
manager  of  the  Alger-Smith  Lumber 
company,  said  this  morning  that  he 
considers  that  Mr.  Arneson  misrepre- 
sented the  company  In  his  statements 
♦nade  to  The  Herald  yesterday. 

"If  Mr.  Arneson  was  quoted  correct- 
ly," said  Mr.  Millen.  "his  statements 
iiiudo  to  The  Herald  were  much  at  vari- 
ance with  what  ho  said  to  me,  both 
over  the  telephone  from  Knife  River, 
and  over  the  telephone  while  In  the 
city  yesterday,  and  In  a  personal  visit 
to  this  office  yesterday  afternoon.  He 
did  not  In  any  way  accuse  us  of  not 
having  logs  taken  from  state  lands 
properly  marked  so  far  as  the  'Minn, 
on  each  end  of  the  logs  Is  concerned, 
but  said  that  the  bark  marks  were 
missing. 

"We  talkod  the  bark  marks  over, 
and  I  told  him  that  while  I  know  that 
the  law  requires  auch  markings  on 
logs.  It  has  not  been  used  In  five  or 
six  years,  owing  to  the  difficulty  of 
applying  marks,  particularly  on  small 
logs;  and  that  I  regarded  the  bark 
mark?   as   useless   anyway. 

Woald  Recommend  Aboilnhinent. 

"In  this  particular,  Mr.  Arneson  de- 
clared that  he  agreed  with  me  that  the 
bark  marks  are  superfluous  and  said 
that  he  would  lecommend  to  the  state 
timber  board  that  they  be  abolished.  I 
might  add  that  it  Is  the  duty  of  the 
surveyor  general  or  his  deputy  to  see 
that  the  bark  marks  are  on  If  they  are 

insisted  upon."  ,,       *« 

To  The  Herald  yesterday,  Mr.  Arne- 
son who  Is  conducting  a  series  of  In- 
vestigations regarding  alleged  timber 
frauds  on  state  lands,  declared  that  at 
Knife  River  on  Monday  he  had  found 
twenty-nine  cars  of  timber  taken  from 
state  lands  in  69-6.  60-6  and  61-6. 
which  were  not  properly  marked,  and 
that  he  was  Informed  that  about  fifty 
more  cars  In  a  similar  condition  as  to 
marking  were  about  to  come  aovrn. 
and  he  had  his  men  watching  for  them. 
He  also  said  that  he  would  inspect  the 
logs  in  the  mill  pond  of  the  company 
at  the  Rice's  Point  mill,  and  expected 
to  find  a  good  many  logs  there  not 
properly  marked.  Ho  added  to  The 
Herald  that  he  would  cite  Mr.  Millen 
to  appear  before  the  timber  board  In 
St  Paul  at  11  o'cjock  Thursday  morn- 
ing to  explain  matters  and  make  some 
arrangements  to  keep  the  logs  from 
being  seized  by  the  state. 

Citation  Not  Mentioned. 
In  regard  to  this  phase  of  the  mat- 
ter. Mr  Millen  said  this  moaning  that 
Mr  Arneson  made  no  mention  of  citing 
him  or  anybody  else  to  appear,  but 
asked  him  if  he  would  have  any  ob- 
Son  to  do  so.  Mr.  Millen  replied 
that  he  i»  not. familiar  with  every  de- 
laU  of  ga6.bHslnV:9S,  but  would  be  glad 
to  haveTls  representative  T.^^.  Wells 
tco  to  St.  Paul  to  appear  before  the 
board  as  Mr.  Wells  Is  more  familiar 
w^Ui  the  details  In  such  matters.  Mr. 
Arneson   said  that  that  would  be  very 

'^Thls'moTnlng.  while  Mr.  Millen  waa 
making  his  statement  to  The  Herald, 
he  wal  called  on  long  distance  te  e- 
Dhone  from  the  state  auditor's  office 
and  Tnfoimed  that  the  proposed  mcet- 
Tng  i?tC  timber  board  had  been  put 
over  from  tomorrow  to  April  1». 
""^Concerning  the  cutting  of  the  tim- 
ber   In    Question.    Mr.    MUlcn    said     that 

fn  the  townships  '"^"t'»"^%l'y„tate 
Arneson  lands  owned  by  the  staie 
are  mnglod  pretty  freely  with  lands 
owne^  by  the  company  and  that  after 
tlTo  Idaling  is  done,  the  logs  are  mixed 
for  transportation  as  happens  to  be 
convenient.  ^^^^^^   on   State   I-«nd.  ^ 

"According    to    the    rcQuirements    ot 
the    state    auditor's    department."    said 
Ml      Mlilen     ''the    logs    on    state    lands 
fre    skidded    there    and    scaled    on    the 
state     ground     before     renu)val.      The 
staler    nmkes    his     report     accordingly 
Ind    so    far    as    the    transportation    of 
the  logs   is    concerned,    the    state    nas 
nothing  to  do  and  no   rules  to   govern 
U     Thf  duty  of  its  »cale"  «"^A^'i5 
the    scaling   on     the     ground     and     the 
purchasers   of   the   timber   take   It   out 
a»   It    happens   to   be    convenient.     The 
fwenty-nlne    cars    which     Mr     Arneson 
talks    about    undoubtedly    had    logs    on 
them    that    were    not    marked    by    the 
customary    'Minn.'    for    they    were    not 
from    sUte    lands,    but    from   our    own 
moperty.    That   Is  why   he   would   dis- 
cover  such    logs.     We   do   not   guaran- 
tee  nor   does   the    law     require    us     to 
guarantee    that    the    »tate    logs    shall 
be  brought  down  separate  and  distinct 
from  those  which  .we  cut  on  our  own 

^*"'*'  A.   to   Collusion. 

"The  only  way  that  we  could  be 
charged  with  beating  the  state  would 
be  to  accuse  us  of  collusion  with  the 
scaler  and  In  his  Interview  In  The 
Herald  last  evening,  Mr.  Arneson. 
while  not  naming  our  company  a»  an 
example,  does  so  accuse  collusion  In 
making  the  scale.  Obviously  we  deny 
any    such    accusation    as     applying     to 

"^"It  seems  to  me  to  be  unjust  for 
Mr  Arneson  to  make  such  ac-cusatlons 
and  insinuations  when  he  had  nothing 
to  say  to  me  In  my  office  but  left  me 
with  the  Imprefslon  that  everything 
was  agreeable  on  all  points  save  that 
of  nutting  on  the  bark  mark.  And. 
as  I  have  said  before,  he  volunteered 
the  remark  that  he  would  recommend 
that  the  bark  mark  be  abolished. 

Mr  Millen  said  that  so  far  aa  the 
prlcps  paid  for  state  timber  are  con- 
cerned, the  state  land  department 
should  know  well  enough  that  when  a 
concern  paid  an  exorbitant  price  for 
It  there  was  something  not  exactly 
right  In  that  concern's  intentions  In 
getting  the  timber  out. 

"So  far  as  our  company  Is  con- 
cerned," said  he,  "in  only  one  or  two 
instances  have  we  bid  more  than  the 
appraised  price,  and  then  only  5  or  10 
per  cent  more." 

ASHLAND^TREET 

FIGHT  IS  LIVELY 

Ashland.  Wis..  Apr*  12.— A  lively 
street  fight  here  yesterday  following  a 
saloon  quarrel  between  some  Wash- 
burn and  local  men  added  a  tinge  or 
the  wild  West  to  this  city  yesterday 
and  landed  Jake  Woodhead  of  Ashland 
in  jail  along  with  a  couple  of  Wash- 
burnltes  named  Mlchaelson  and  Cusson. 
The  row  started  In  Joe  Foeller's  saloon, 
was  continued  on  the  street  and  re- 
sumed after  fe»lng  once  quelled.  All 
arrested  by  iwliee  and  citizens  were 
fined  $10  and  costs  excepting  Wood- 
head,  who  demanded  a  trial,  which  he 

will  get  today. 

■♦ 

MlaalBK  Utrl  Found. 

Little  Falls,  Minn.,  April  12.— After 
being  absent  from  her  home  here  since 
Wednesday,  with  nothing  to  eat  and  a 
strawstack  for  her  only  shelter  Miss 
Elanche  Lewis.  20.  a  Western  I  nlon 
messenger  girl,  who  disappeared  mys- 
teriously, was  found  wandering  along 
a  road  Tuesday  afterno«p  by  a  farnier, 
seven  miles  northeast  ot  «ie  city.  She 
Rave  no  account  of  her  actions,  al- 
though she  appeared  perfectly  sane. 


Mrs.  Ellen  Nettleton,  widow  of  Will- 
iam Nettleton,  died  at  Spokane  April  10. 

William  Nettleton  and  his  brother, 
George,  were  probably  the  first  set- 
tlers In  Duluth,  George  Nettleton  hav- 
ing established  a  trading  post  at  Du- 
luth in  1854,  being  Joined  two  or  three 
years  later  by  his  brother,  William. 
Together  they  entered  land— -160  acres 
each — on  Minnesota  point  and  on  the 
main  land  above  the  base  of  the  point, 
which  made  them  permanent  settlers 
of   Duluth. 

William  Nettleton.  after  two  or  three 
years  of  bachelorhood  here,  returned  to 
Ashtabula,  Ohio,  and  was  mpriied  to 
Miss  Ellen  Rcoville.  They  re8ld<;d  here 
until  1873,  when  they  removed  to  St. 
Paul  where  In  1878  Mr.  Nettleton  pur- 
chased a  farm,  and  with  their  two 
daughters  and  a  son  resided  there  un- 
til the  marriage  of  their  three  chil- 
dren. .  ,     . 

Mr.  Nettleton  meantime  had  pur- 
chased a  large  tract  of  land  across  the 
river  from  Spokane,  and  after  a  few 
vears  the  family  moved  there,  to  make 
their  permanent  home.  Mr.  Nettleton 
died  there  at  an  advanced  age.  Mrs. 
Nettleton  continued  to  reside  there 
with  her  children  up  to  the  time  of  her 
death.  .    -  ,. 

Mrs.  Nettleton  was  a  great  favorite 
with  the  early  settlers  of  Duluth, 
among  whom  at  that  time  were  the 
families  of  Luke  Marvin,  J.  B.  Culver, 
Sidney  Luce  and  James  B.  Ray,  who 
had  settled  here  and  at  Oneota.  Being 
entirely  dependent  upon  themselves  for 
association  and  amusement,  they  were 
almost  like  one  family— their  frlend- 
shlD  for  each  other  existing  as  long  as 
they  lived.  Mrs.  Nettleton  was  re- 
garded as  the  brightest  and  cheeriest, 
always  ready  to  meet  any  hardship  of 
the  early  days  with  unfailing  good 
spirit.  A  large  circle  of  friends  will 
reeret  to  hear  of  her  death. 

While  a  resident  of  St.  Paul  she  vis- 
ited In  Duluth  very  often,  and  after 
her  removal  to  Spokane  tried  to  come 
back  to  her  old  home  every  summer  If 
possible. 


TABLE  D'HOTE 

MEALS  ON  TRAINS 

Three  Roads  Entering  Du- 
luth Adopt  Popular-Price 
Service  in  Diners. 

Popular  prices  a«d  table  d'hote 
service  In  dining  cars  have  been  es- 
tablished by  thre*  railway  companies 
with  lines  enterffVer  Ihiluth.  The  Soo, 
Great  Northern  and  Northwestern 
lines  make  announcenient  to  that  ef- 
fect. The  price  of  76  ce^ts  for  lunch- 
eon has  be«m  set  by  the  Great  North- 
ern. Breakfast  and  dinner  menus 
have  been  prepared.  .,,    *„^    «« 

The  service  has  been  Instituted  on 
the  Soo  to  provide  a  good  meal  to  the 
traveler  of  average  means  at  a  rea- 
sonable price,  according  to  Jay  Smal- 
ley  passenger  agent  of  the  Soo  at  Du- 
luth. Mr.  Smalley  believes  more  per- 
sons win  now  patronize  the  train  diner 
and  Increase  the  receipts  of  the  cor- 
poration, despite  the  lowering  of 
prices.      Service    a    la   carte,    also,    will 

be  maintained.  ,  ^   vi.„i.„^ 

The  Northwestern  has  established 
the  practice  of  serving  table  d  hote 
meals  on  its  train  to  Chicago  and  may 
do  the  same  thing  on   all   Its   trains. 

SAY  LOVE  AFFAIR 

CAUSED  SUICIDE 


Former  Employe  of  Grand 

Rapids  Experiment  Farm 

Kills  Self. 

Bralnerd,  Minn.,  April  12.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Brooding  over  a  love 
affair,  Herbert  Hoffman,  aged  about 
28,  single,  committed  suicide  by  tak- 
ing strychnine.  He  had  returned  fror.i 
a  visit  at  Minneapolis,  and  walking  out 
to  the  farm,  where  he  was  employed, 
went  to  bod  with  another  employe,  Carl 
Marohn.  The  latter  was  awakened  by 
Hoffman's  convulsions,  who  soon  ex- 
pired. Near  the  dying  man  lay  his  re- 
volvcr. 

Hoffman  was  employed  as  foreman 
on  the  farm  of  Fred  H.  Gruenhagen,  a 
mile  south  of  Rralnei-d.  He  was  a 
graduate   of   an   agricultural   school    In 


29  and  31  West 
Superior  St. 


G.  i4.  ORECK  &  SONS  CO.,  Sole  Proprietors. 


29  and  31  West 
Superior  St. 


iEdieiNMi  TOilOilROW"AN  uifiysyAL 


APRIL  SALE  OF  SUITS 

AT  GREATLY  REDUCED  PRICES! 


RIEgULAR 
AND 


$ 


VALUES  FOR 


24.75 


All  sizes  for  women  and  misses.    Materials  are  Silks.  Conibination  Silk  and  Serge, 
Gabardines,  Poplins,  Serges,  Checks,  Duvetynes  and  Chuddah  Cloth. 


FOR  WOMEN'S  AND  MISSES' 

EASTER  SUITS 

Worth  One-third  to  One-half  More. 

They'll  stand  the  test  of  compari- 
son—that proves  the  value.  Plain  and 
fancy  style— Norfolks,  flaring  peplums, 
loose  back  models.  Gabardines,  Pop- 
lins, Checks,  Serges,  Velours  and  all 
the  good  weaves— in  black  and  the 
wantable  Easter  colors.  Unusual  from 
every  value  viewpoint — that's  why 
they'll  go  in  a  hurry.  Be  ready  tomor- 
row! 


EASTER  WAISTS  $2, 

$2.50  AND  $3  VALUES 

FOR  $1.95 

Fully  25  different  styles.  Crepe 
de  chine,  Jap  silk,  tub  silk,  striped 
taffeta,  striped  Jap,  and  many 
others.  All  the  best  colors— rnany 
unusual  trimming  featui'es — and  all 
sizes  from  34  to  46. 


FIBER  SILK  HOSE 

Special— 35c  Fiber  Silk  OfiC 

Hose;  all  colors.. *" 


$15.00  TAFFETA  AND 

CREPE  DE  CHINE 

DRESSES  AT  $7.75 

Our  stock  Is  most  complete  in 
Silk  Dresses.  All  shades  and  de- 
sirable styles,  at  extremely  low 
price.  In  misses'  and  all  women's 
sizes. 


GLOVES 


Gloves   for   Easter,   all 
colors,  95c,  75c  and... 


50g 


— EAsreR— 

MILLINERY  STYLES 

We  call  particular  atten- 
tion to  a  special  group  of 
Milan  hemp,  Milan,  Llsere 
braid  and  fancy  braid 
hats,  handsome  lacy  effects 
— many  with  ribbon 
streamers,  large  flaring 
and  rolled  brim  effects, 
and  many  others  equally 
as  pretty,  black  and  all 
colors,  worth  CC  AC 

to  no,  at ^i9-9^ 

Women's  and  Misses'  Hats 
— black  and  the  popular 
.shades,  trimmed  with 
flowers  and  ribbons  in 
many  hues,  small  and  me- 
dium shapes,  altl»ough 
some  of  the  larger  ones 
are   included,  CO  T^i 

values  to  |6.00.  .  .'*^-"  •' 
Milan  Hemp  Sailors  with 
wide  flange,  black  and 
colors,  worth  $2 
everywhere,  at. 
Large  Wings,  Mercury 
Wings,  Quills,  curly  and 
straight,  black  and  colors; 
values  to  75c,  at  25C 


■  b 


$1.43 


I  55c  down  to. 


A  WONDERFUL  ARRAY 
OF  NEW  SPRING 


COATS 


For 

Tomor- 
row's Sel- 
ling at 


$5-$6.50-$10 


In  This  Lot 
Are  Coat 
Values  up 
to  $15.00 


\ 


For  street  motoring  and  sport.  These  come  in  a  very  fine  quality 
nf  white  and  shadow  plaid  chinchilla,  in  checks  of  all  sizes;  plenty  of 
?an^  navy  and  black"^ whipcords,  poplins  and  coverts.  AH  specially 
priced  for  tomorrow  at  $5.  $6.50  and   $10.00. 


^>. 


\;J^Ztl^ii*^^St^^ 


rorinanv  and  had  seen  military  service 

h,  the  old  country.  Before  coming  to 
iRralnerd  he  had  been  employed  at  the 
'  ?tate  experimental  farm  at  Grand  Hap- 

ids,    Minn.     A   long    letter    told    of    his 

troubles. 


NOTICE! 

EFFECTIVE    APRIL   17,   1»1«. 
Train  No.  01,  leavlngr  Endlon  Sta- 
tion   at    11«30    p.    «..«»»   ""^J^;^ 
paM»enKer«    north    of    Two   Harbom. 
THE  DULUTH  &  IRON   RANGE 
BAIL   ROAD   COMPANY, 

H.  JohnMon,  C.  P.  A. 


BUSTERS  BURNED 


Would  Itch.    Formed  Scales  Which 

Caused  Unsightly  Appearance, 

Child  Very  Cross  and  Fretful. 

HEALED  BY  CUTICURA 
SOAP  AND  OINTMENT 


"My  Uttle  girl's  acalp  was  affected  with 
something  like  blister*  and  a  thickening  of 
the  skin.     At  first  it  was  a  place  about  as 
large  as  a  common  pea  and 
it  would  itch  and  bum  and 
when  scratched  would  run 
a  watery  fluid  and  from  that 
would    form    scales    which 
caused  an  imslghtly  appear- 
ance  on   her   scalp.      Her 
hair  pever  grew  any.     She 
was  rery  cross  and  fretful. 
"Then  I  sent  for  ft  sample  of  Cuticura 
Boap  and  Ointment  and  the  second  appUca- 
Uon  relieved  the  itching  and  burning  so  I 
purchased  one  box.  Of  Cutlcura  Soap  and 
one  box  of  Ointment  and  ^y  healed  her." 
(Signed)  Mrs.  Charles  Culnan.  118  College 
St..  Poplar  Bluff.  Mo.„  Aug.  18,  1915. 

Sample  Each  Free  by  Mall 

with  32-p.  Skin  Book  qn  request.  Ad- 
dress post-card  "Cut|«or«,  D«p*.  T,  Bos- 
tan**'    Sold  itaroughout  the  world. 


FOUND  WITH 
BROKMULL 

Sawmill  Worker  Dies  From 

Injuries  Believed  Due 

to  Fall. 


ine  to  trap  the  beaver  where  damage 
was  made  by  these  animals  and  ship 
them  to  the  state  game  farm  at  Trout 
Lake.  When  they  arrived  at  the  places 
where  they  expected  to  work  they 
found  that  the  conditions  existing  were 
not  satisfactory  for  removing  the 
beavers  at  the  present  time.  So  tney 
will  wait  until  the  snow  leaves  the 
ground.  There  Is  considerable  snow  in 
the  woods  even  though  the  streets  here 
are   practically    free    from   It. 

PAIR  ARRESTED  IN 
CROOKSTON  PUNISHED 

Crookston,  Minn..  April  12.— "Rev." 
Nels  Johannes  Morsted,  who  asserted 
he  was  connected  with  the  Twin  City 
Relief  association,  was  fined  f60  py 
Judge  Gossman  here  yesterday  after- 
noon under  a  disorderly  charge.  He 
was  arrested  earlier  In  the  day  along 
with  Anna  Arnestad  of  MlnneaRolls  at 
a  local  hotel,  where  It  was  stated  they 
occupied  the  same  room.  Morsted 
claimed  to  be  selling  Bibles  and  de- 
nied there  was  anything  ^^vropfj'^ 
his  relations  with  the  woman.  Unless 
he  pays  the  fine  he  will  spend  forty 
days  in  jail.  The  woman  was  sen- 
fenced  to  fifteen  days  on  a  similar 
charge. 


ticipate  in  intercompanies  matches,  ♦ha 
winners  of  the  three  regimental 
matches  to  meet  later  at  the  troop 
armory,  Milwaukee:  First  Infantry, 
G,  Madison;  B,  Fort  Atkinson;  I,  Nee- 
nah;  Second  Infantry.  L.  Rhinelander; 
F,  Oshkosh;  M,  Oconto;  Third  Infantry, 
A,  Neillsville;  L.  Sparta;  I,  Superior, 
The  Second  Infantry  match  will  prob- 
ably be  held  in  Green  Bay.  April  23. 


Albert  Young,  aged  74,  2406  West 
First  street,  was  picked  up  in  an  un- 
conscious condition  near  the  burner  of 
the  Scott-Graff  Lumber  company's 
sawmill  at  4  o'clock  yesterday  after- 
noon. At  St.  Mary's  hospital  It  was 
found  he  had  a  fracture  of  the  skull  at 
the  base  of  the  brain  from  which  he 
died  at  9   o'clock  last  night. 

Mr.  Young  had  been  employed  in 
cleaning  up  about  the  burner.  Offl- 
oials  of  the  plant  believe  that  he  suf- 
fered a  coflapse  and  fell  which  prob- 
Ibly  resulted  In  the  injury  His  duties 
they  say  did  not  require  him  to  climb 
into  any  wagon  or  upon  anything  from 
wh?chL  could  fall.  He  had  been 
working  at  the  place  for  about  a  week. 

Mr  Young  Is  survived  by  hls^w.dow 
and  Several  children.  The  body  was 
frken  to  Plllatrault's  undertaking 
rooms      -The  funeral  will   be  held  Frl- 

day  morning  at  9  o;?»°<^\  '«';?!"thoHe 
^t  Jean  Baptlste  French  Catholic 
rhurch  Twenty-fifth  avenue  west  and 
Third  street  interment  will  be  in  Cal- 
vary cemetery.         ^ , 

SNOW  PREVENTING 

TRAPPING  BEAVER 

Ashland.  Wis..  April  12.--Arthur 
Childs.  conservation  warden,  declares 
that  the  high  snow  In  the  woods  has 
rnade  It  Impossible  to  trap  the  beaver 
In  the  vicinities  where  they  are  doing 

***Clufd^8  and  W.  W.  Wlsmer  of  Drum- 
moud  left  last  week  for  Delta  expect- 


NEILLSVILLE  MEN  WIN 

PRACTICE  TROPHY 

Appleton.  Wis..  April  12--The  gal- 
lery practice  trophy  offered  by  the  of- 
ficers association  of  the  Wisconsin  Na- 
t  onal  guard  has  been  won  by  Company 
A  -Thlfd  Infantry,  Nelllsvme.  with  a 
fi'gure  of  merit  of  133.64.  Company  G, 
First  Infantry.  Madison,  is  second  with 
130.69.  and  Company  L.  Second  Infan- 
try.  Rhinelander,   third  with  12»-25. 

The    following    companies    will    par- 


Herald  wants  ads  will  find  a  buyetf 
for  your  used  car.  They  reach  98  peif 
cent  of  the  automobile  buyers. 

WAS  NOT  TRESPASSER.  ^ 

Milwaukee    Woman     Can     Recover 
Damages  for  Husband's  Death. 

Madison,  Wis.,  April  12.— The  eu^ 
preme  court  Tuesday  held  in  revers- 
ing the  order  of  the  lower  court,  that 
Mrs.  Catherine  Trojanowskl.  Milwau- 
kee, will  be  able  to  recover  damages 
for  the  death  of  her  husband,  who  was 
struck  by  a  Chicago  i  Northwestern 
train  outside  of  Milwaukee  and  died 
of  his  Injuries.  The  court  held  that 
Trojanowskl  was  not  a  trespasser,  in 
view  of  the  fact  that  there  were  nO 
fences  as   required  by  law. 

— I • 

Big  Revenue  From  Matches. 
London.  April  12.— Difficulties  in 
connection  with  the  imposition  of  Ih© 
match  tax  have  been  overcome  and 
the  manufacturers  have  withdrawn 
their  opposition  to  the  measure.  UndeiS 
the  proposed  new  taxation  v\Rn 
matches  are  taxed  4d  per  1.000.  which 
Is  estimated  to  produce  about  |10.000.- 

000   revenue. 

«- 

Striker*  Rctuni  to  Work. 

Bayonne,  N.  J.,  April  12.— Nearly  all 
of  the  200  Tidewater  Oil  company  em- 
ployes who  struck  yesterday  returned 
to  work  today.  Minor  differences  have 
been  settled. 


Dependable  Umbrellas 


Extra  Quality- 
Special  for  Men 
and  Women— 


$1 


to 


SiewerVs 

Hatters,     Haberdashers 

304  West  SopeHor  St. 


•*  1 1«  ■  jiLJiJtii   I II  '■aed 


10 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

AN   INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPCR 

rubliMhrd    every    evrnins    excen*    Snnday    by 

Tli#    Herald    Company    at    Duluth,    Minn. 

Doth    TelephoneB — Business    Office,    324; 
Editorial    Rooms.    1126. 

entered  u  Kconrt-eliuis  matter  at  the  Duluth  pMtofflc*  under  tb* 
•ft  of  eongrfss  of  March  3,   1870. 

OFFICIAL  PAPER.  CITY  OF  PUIUTH 

SUBM^IlIPTIOIf  RATRS — By  mall,  payable 
In  advance,  one  month,  35  cents;  three 
month.^,  $1;  six  months,  J2;  one  year,  $4; 
Baturday  Herald,  $1  per  year;  Weekly 
Herald,   $1   per  year. 

Daily   by  carrier,   city  and   suburbs,  10  cents 
a   wofk.    45   centa   a   month. 
SiiliscrliHTi  will  confer  a  fa»or  by  mttklnc  known  any  complaint 

of  s<r»lM.  _,     .   » 

Wlifn  .limiRlnf  the  ad<lrt>ss  of  yoar  paper.  It  H  Important  lo 
(ife  iHjtb  ul(i  and  new   addrrss<^. 

The  Duluih  Hviald  accept."!  advertising 
contracts  with  thi-  di.^ttlnct  jruarantee  that 
It  h;is  the  large.st  circulation  in  Minnesota 
oulsid<"  the  Twin  Cities. 


TODAY  IN  HISTORY. 


Henry  Clay  born,  1777. 

Born  In  Virginia.  Had  almost  no 
,s<  hnullriK-.  Aft»'r  only  a  y<ar'.^  study, 
wji.s  admitted  to  the  bar  at  20.  Moved 
to  K'Mtufky,  whfTC  he  became  a  lead- 
luK  jury- lawyer.  Advocated  the  grad- 
ual :ilu)lltl(in  of  slavery  during  the  revi- 
sion of  the  Kentufky  Constitution  In 
1790  Klectod  to  state  legrlshiture  1803. 
ai>p<>i!iti>d  United  Stales  senator  1806. 
Hi  turn  I  Off  to  Kentucky,  became  speak- 
er of  tlie  house.  Elected  to  consres.-< 
1811,  bp<ame  «ipeaker.  and  virtually 
forced  the  war  with  EnKland.  Was 
lHr^•  ly  instrunit-ntal  in  bring:lnK  about 
the  Mi.ssourl  compromise  of  1820.  Un- 
succi'.s.stul  .andidate  for  president.  1824. 
Secretary  of  state  under  John  Quincy 
Adams,  the  suet  cssful  candidate,  to 
whom  he  threw  hi.s  strenKlh  In  the 
huM.^f.  the  arranereinent  Klving  rise  to 
the  MoUtlcal  cry  of  "barKatii  and  cor- 
ruption" which,  thoURli  baaele.^s,  there- 
after kept  Cla>  from  the  presidency,  his 
lifeloMK  goal.  Shared  the  honors  of 
the  .senate  in  it.s  day  of  Kreatness  with 
Webater.  Calhoiin  and  Benton.  Author 
of  the  Compromise  of  1850.  which  de- 
layed the  Civil  war.  Died  In  Washing- 
ton June  29.  1852.  Brilliant,  loved,  but 
baffled  alway:^  In  his  ambition  to  be 
president. 

RE.MUNtJ— Arallable  In  Pnlulh  piiMIe  Illirarr— Carl 
Si'hiirz.  "Life  of  Henry  May"  <ha;i  Ilt'-rary  as  well  as 
liki;;rii|ihle  faliie,  and  shows  full  n'rogiiitlon  of  the 
siKiiini'.iiji'e  of  popular  muvi.-m«nt8  which  rrei|U<>iitly  upset 
th>-  Iwl.mie  of  polltliluiis I ;  f.  H.  Peek,  "The  Jarlwon- 
laii  KiMuii"  <  plainly  ti<ld  ind  InterestltiK  aorount  of 
Anierlian  polities,  with  ^etrh>-i  of  tbr  notable  figures  of 
tbe  time). 


^/^9i9%9/9/9^9'9/%^9^^^9^®>'^/^9^^9/%'9%^®,%1S.'^M 


■i 


CIVIC  DISHONESTY. 

The  time  has  come  in  this  country — came 
long  ag<»,  in  facts  hut  is  just  getting  recog- 
nition— when  tficre  should  be  an  accurate 
estimate  of  that  type  of  public  discussion 
v\hich  aims  only  at  the  welfare  of  a  party 
and  only  scconilarily,  if  at  all,  at  national 
welfare. 

What  honesty  is  there  in  the  attitude  of 
1  partisan  who  admits  no  good  whatever  in 
-:he  other  party  or  in  any  member  or  act  of 
hat  party,  and  who  is  willing  to  see  a  good 
aw  defeated  rather  than  let  that  other 
)arty  get  credit  for  enacting  it? 

What  honesty  is  there  in  the  attitude  of 
Roosevelt  and  Root,  who  find  nothing  but 
laws  and  faults  in  the  Wilson  administra- 
ion.  and  who  therefore  cannot  even  men- 
ion  such  things  as  the  redemption  of  the 
iati">nal  honor  in  the  matter  of  Panama 
anal  tolls  and  the  enactment  of  the  bank- 
ng  and  currency  law  which  has  been  the* 
;ation*s  bulwark  against  disaster  in  a  time 
f  universal  wreck  and  ruin? 
And,  for  a  very  minor,  exceedingly  minor, 

i.vample,  there   is  our  neighbor,  the   News 
'ribune,  discussing  the  administration  tar- 
*f  commission  bill,  and  summing  it  up  as 
at   best   a   half-way   measure."     It   points 
ut  no  faults  in  it.     It  does  not  say  what, 
this  is  half  way,  the  whole  way  should  be. 
—because  it  comes  from  Democratic  sources, 
condemns  it.    That'»  an  example  of  play- 
ig  peanut  politics  with  a  matter  of  vital 
iiportance. 

In  the  drafting  of  this  tariff  commission 

ill   the   administration  is   meeting  what  is 

lanifestly    a    virtually    universal    demand, 

"*td   it   is   meeting  it   sincerely  and   in   full 

easure.      There    is   plenty   of   evidence   of 

lat.     For  instance,  the  Chamber  of  Com- 

erce  of  the   United   States,   a   thoroughly 

ipartisan   association   of  business   men,  is 

orking  hard  for  the  passage  of  the  admin- 

tration's  tariff  commission  bill.     It  advo- 

—  tcs  its  enactment  just  as  it  stands.     Evi- 

•ntly    this    organization    of   business   men 

ho  are  not  politicians  sees  nothing  "half 

ay"  about  the  bill. 

Again,  there  is  before  us  a  circular  letter 
om  H.  H.  Gross,  president  of  the  tariff 
Dmmission  League,  which  is  also  a  non- 
-|— -  rtlsan  organization,  though  doubtless  a 
ajority  of  its  members  are  Republicans  or 
ogressives.  Mr.  Gross  not  only  indorses 
e  bill  earnestly  and  whole-heartedly,  but 
ves   some   interesting  evidence: 

"The  members  (of  the  ways  and 
means  committee  of  the  house)  were 
very  courteous,  and  invited  the  writer 
,  to  discuss  the  various  features  of  the 
flr.st  draft  with  them.  The  members 
showed  a  .sincere  de.sire  to  produce  a 
bill  that  should  be  fair  to  all  parties 
and  in  full  accord  with  the  widespread 
demand  for  a  strictly  non-i)olitlcal  per- 
manent tariff  commission." 

The   only   criticism   Mr.    Gross    makes   is 

it  the  salary  of  the  members  should  not 

.ve  been  reduced  from  twelve  thousand 
liars  to  ten  thousand;  and  considering 
•  importance  of  the  work  these  men  will 
called  upon  to  do,  probably  the  criticism 
|Valid,  though  the  point  is  not  vital. 
'There  are,"  says.  Mr,  Gioss,  "some  un- 
tal   features  in  the  revision  of  this   bill, 

.  ich  we  urged  successfully.  One  is  six 
mbers,  not  more  than  three  of  whom 
ill  belong  to  the  same  political  party, 
e  first  draft  was  for  five.  THUS 
lERE  WILL  BE  NO  PARTY  CON 
OL.  Another  is  the  section  eliminating 
possible    membership    of    anyone    who 

,     served    in    either   branch    of   congress, 
r    think    this    very   important — it   elimin 
»  'lame  ducks.'    And,  finally,  <ine  of  the 


i 


most  important  features  is  the  last  section 
that  provides  for  a  permanent  appropria- 
tion, one  that  cannot  be  changed  except  by 
an  act  of  congress.  Do  not  fail  to  write 
your  congressman  and  senators  to  pass  the 
Rainey  bill." 

The  two  most  powerful  agencies  behind 
this  bill  are  the  Chamber  of  Commerce  of 
the  United  States  and  the  Tariff  Commis 
sion  league.  Evidently  THEY  have'  no 
scruples  about  accepting  it  from  a  Demo- 
cratic administration,  and>do  not  feel  tinder 
compulsion    to    attack    it    solely    on    that 

ground. 

• 

How  does  the  first  real  spring  rain  find 
your  coal  bin? 

• 

LINCOLN  AND  THB  SCARED  RICH  MEN. 

In  Francis  Fisher  Brown's  "Everyday 
Life  of  Lincoln,"  we  are  reminded  by  a 
correspondent  irj  the  Nation,  is  a  story  of 
Lincoln  that  seems  singularly  apropos  in 
this  time  when  a  certain  element  in  the 
population,  tisually  well  supplied  with  this 
world's  goods,  is  vastly  alarmed  about  the 
peril  of  a  foreign  invasion,  and  frantically 
fearful  that  congress  will  not  provide  an 
armament   huge   enough   to    reassure   them. 

It  was  in  1S62.  A  delegation  of  fright- 
ened New  York  millionaires  journeyed 
down  to  Washington,  after  the  appearance 
of  the  Merrimac,  and  waited  upon  the  presi- 
dent. 

"We  are  very  uneasy,"  they  said  to  Lin- 
coln, "about  the  unprotected  situation  of 
our  city.  It  is  likely  to  be  attacked  and 
bombarded  by  rebel  rams,  and  we  wish  you 
would  detail  a  gunboat  to  defend  us." 

There  were  fifty  of  these  scared  gentle- 
men, very  prosperous  and  dignified.  They 
said  they  represented  in  their  own  rrght  a 
hundred  millions  of  wealth. 

Lincoln  listened  with  close  attention.  He 
seemed  to  be  much  impressed  by  their 
presence  and  their  statements.  When  they 
had  finished  he   replied,  very  deliberately: 

"Gentlemen,  I  am  by  the  Constitution 
commander-in-chief  of  the  army  and  navy 
of  the  United  States,  and  as  a  matter  of  law 
can  order  anything  done  that  it  is  practical 
to  do.  But  as  a  matter  of  fact,  I  am  not  in 
command  of  the  gunboats  or  ships  of  war* 
as  a  matter  of  fact,  I  do  not  know  exactly 
where  they  are,  but  presume  they  are  ac- 
tively engaged.  It  is  impossible  for  me,  in 
the  present  condition  of  things,  to  furnish 
you  a  gunboat.  The  credit  of  the  govern- 
ment is  at  a  very  low  ebb;  greenbacks  are 
not  worth  more  than  forty  or  fiftj'  cents 
on  tfie  dollar;  and  in  this  c<mdition  of 
things,  if  I  were  worth  half  as  much  as  you, 
gentlemen,  and  as  badly  scared  as  you 
seem  to  be.  I  WOULD  BUILD  A  GUN- 
BOAT AND  GIVE  IT  TO  THE  GOV- 
ERNMENT." 


If  It's  not  true  that  Villa  is  dead,  ho  missed 
a  corking  good  chance  to  make  himself  pop- 
ular when  he  refused  to  let  the  rumor  be 
true. 


AN  HOUR  MORE  OF  DAYLIGHT. 

Some  time  ago,  when  the  world  was  less 
embarrassingly  endowed  with  things  to  talk 
about,  there  was  agitation  for  a  plan  of 
gaining  an  hour  of  daylight  by  setting  all 
clocks  ahead  an  hour  during  the  summer 
months. 

It  is  intcresffng  to  note  the  reappearance 
of  this  plan  as  a  by-product  of  war.  The 
federal  council  of  Germany  has  directed 
that  after  May  i  all  clocks  in  Germany  are 
to  be  set  ahead  one  hour.  Of  course  the 
purpose  is  to  get  people  into  bed  an  hour 
earlier  so  as  to  save  the  cost  of  one  hour's 
artificial  lighting.  They  must  save  every- 
thing in  Germany,  and  this  is  the  latest 
economy.  "" 

Though  it  never  came  to  anything  but 
talk,  much  of  it  rather  silly,  especially  the 
discussion  about  the  effect  of  the  change, 
when  it  was  broached  in  this  country,  there 
really  is  merit  in  the  plan.  During  the 
months  when  the  sun  is  abroad  for  many 
hours  of  the  day,  the  change  would  work 
out  beautifully.  After  a  day  or  two  nobody 
would  notice  the  difference,  but  the  fact 
would  be  that  everybody  would  rise  an 
hour  earlier  and  retire  an  hour  earlier, 
thereby  adding  to  every  day  one  hour  of 
daylight. 

Having  been   adopted   in   Germany   as   a 
war  measure,   it  would   not  be  at  all   sur- 
prising to  see  it  stick  and,  later,  spread. 
.« 

Can't  some  enterprising  geniuses  get  up  a 
submarine  race  as  a  feature  of  the  regatta 
ne.\t  August? 


EXPLAINING  PECULIAR  THINGS. 

Dr.  Eliot,  noting  what  he  believes  to  be 
a  rather  notable  habit  of  inaccurate  thought, 
very  properly  blames  education  for  it. 

To  the  conditions  he  points  out  he 
ascribes  the  fact  that  the  American's 
senses  "are  not  trained  to  act  with  preci- 
sion, that  his  habits  of  thought  permit 
vagueness,  obscurity  and  inaccuracy,  and 
that  his  spoken  or  written  statement  lacks 
that  measured,  cautious,  candid,  simple 
quality  which  the  scientific  spirit  fosters 
and  inculcates." 

This  message  has  a  peculiar  effect  upon 
the  Chicago  Tribune,  our  leading  little  mili- 
tarist. There  is  nothing  in  the  whole  range 
of  human  thought  that  to  the  Tribune  will 
not  suggest  something  about  war-making 
or  universal  military  service  or  the  like. 
And  this  message  from  a  great  educator  is 
no  exception. 

"Dr.  Eliot's  analysis,"  it  says,  "accounts 
for  our  preference  for  pleasant  theories  to 
unpleasant  facts.  It  may  be  the  reason 
why  Americans  are  a  nation  of  philoso- 
phers, but  bad  ones,  who  build  towering 
structures  of  theory  on  assumptions  .not 
founded  in  fact."  That  is  to  say,  of  course, 
that  the  Americans  are  bad  philosophers 
because  they  do  not  philosophize  the  way 
the  Tribune  does.  Their  towering  struc- 
tures cf  theory  are  fragile  because  they  are 
not  founded  on  facts  furnished  by  the  Trib- 


une.       That's      humaa      nature— especially 
Tribune  nature. 

"It  explains,"  the  Tribune  continues  to 
its  climax,  "why  we  cannot  see  the  poten- 
tial hostility  of  Japan;  it  explains  Ford,  and 
Bryan,  and  Jenkiii  Lloyd  Jones,  and  watch- 
ful waiting." 

It  explains  much  more  than  that,  O 
Tribune!  The  Tribune  itself  gives  a  splen- 
did example  of  what  Dr.  Eliot  is  seeking  to 
establish  when  it  completely  fails  to  see 
that  this  also  accounts  for  itself  and  its  ri- 
diculous militaristic  excesses;  for  the  absurd 
alarms  of  those  who  see  an  enemy  behind 
every  bush;  for  the  queer  mental  twist  of 
those  who,  having  watched  overdoing  of 
preparedness  plunge  Europe  into  an  atroci- 
ous war,  want  US  to  overdo  preparedness; 
for  the  queer  strabismus  of  those  who  can- 
nf>t  see  that  the  whole  shocking  debacle  in 
Europe  is  proof  of  the  impotence  of  force 
and  the  instability  of  all  that  is  founded 
upon  force;  for  the  cowardice  of  those  who 
distrust  America's  ability  to  express  her- 
self to  her  sister  nations  otherwise  than  by 
force  of  arms. 

Half-thinking;  thinking  twisted  by  such 
obsessions  of  bias  as  less  powerful  intel- 
lects are  subject  to;  thinking  which,  In- 
stead of  probing  for  truth,  twists  all  dis- 
coverable facts  to  fit  preconceived  theories 
of  militarism  or  pacifism  or  what  not — 
such  thinking  is,  as  Dr.  Eliot  says,  the  fruit 
of  ineffective  education.  Its  victims  are  to 
be  pitied,  not  blamed. 


Talks  on  Thrift 


Ttsaed  by  tb«  American  Bankers'  Aasoelatlon. 


Von    and    Your   Baak    Ae«o«at. 

When  the  banker  accepts  your  account, 
and  gives  you  a  pass  book  and  a  ctieck 
book  he  has  the  right  to  expect  certain 
things  from  you,  as  you  have  the  right,  le- 
gally and  morally,  to  expect  certain  things 
from  him. 

In  the  first  place,  he  ha«  the  right  to 
expect  a  profit  from  your  account.  Bank- 
ing Is  an  expensive  business.  It  costs 
a  certain  amount  to  handle  every  check 
that  passes  through  the  bank,  and  every 
account  should  contribute  a  portion  to  the 
expenses  of  the  bank,  however  small.  When 
your  banker  asks  you  to  keep  a  certain 
balance,  he  is  merely  asking  his  right  to  a 
profit  from  your  account.  It  is  easily  to 
be  seen  that  If  you  keep  a  small  balance, 
say  $10.  and  the  banker  furnish'^s  you  with 
statlonerj-,  does  the  necessary  bookkeeping 
on  the  account  (for  your  benefit  as  well  as 
his),  the  earning  power  of  that  $10,  even 
If  It  were  all  Invested  at  6  per  cent,  would 
be  insufficient  to  compensate  him  for  the 
cost  attending  that  account.  Therefore  be 
generous  and  give  him  a  chance  to  make  a 
profit;  for  as  every  sal£  of  merchandise 
should  show  a  profit,  so  every  bank  account 
should  at  least  pay  its  way.  Oive  him  as 
large  a  balance  as  you  can  possibly  keep — 
It  will  help  you  very  much  In  his  estima- 
tion, help  your  credit,  and  add  to  your  self- 
respect. 

Second.  Never  overdraw.  In  national 
banks  overdrafts  are  now  forbidden,  but 
whether  they  were  or  not,  you  have  no 
right  to  ask  it.  It  hurts  your  credit  with 
the  banker.  It  is  a  forced  loan  without  se- 
curity,  and   is  a  poor   business   practice. 

Sometimes  an  overdraft  Is  allowed  as  a 
matter  of  accommodation,  and  sometimes 
in  order  that  the  credit  of  the  drawer  with 
the  holder  of  the  check  may  not  be  im- 
paired; but  It  Is  bad  practice,  gets  you  In 
wrong  all  over  and  should  neither  be  asked 
nor  expected. 

Third.  Do  not  draw  against  "uncollected 
funds."  By  uncollected  funds  is  meant 
checks  that  have  not  been  collected.  For 
instance,  if  you  have  a  balance  of  $100  and 
deposit  a  $100  check  and  draw  your  o-wn 
check  for  $160.  you  have  taken  all  the  orig- 
inal deposit  and  half  of  the  amount  repre- 
sented by  the  check  Just  deposited.  The 
banker  must  send  that  check,  let  u»  say  to 
New  York,  and  wait  for  advice  that  it  is  paid 
before  knowing  that  it  has  been  paid,  which 
may  take  three  or  four  days.  You  are  ask- 
ing him  to  pay  out  his  money  three  days  in 
advance  of  its  receipt,  a  practice  which  good 
banks  frown  upon  and  will  not  allow.  Last- 
ly, draw  your  checks  properly,  as  outlined 
In  the  next  talk,  and  have  your  pass  book 
balanced  once  a  month.  Doing  these  things 
consistently,  your  banker  will  be  a  good 
friend  and  you  will  be  a  good  customer,  in 
favor  with  one  who  can  do  you  many  favors. 


Fools  Needed. 

The  New  Republic:  The  present  is  a  ra- 
tional age,  and  the  rationalist  serves  neither 
man  nor  God  for  naught.  An  old  writer  tells 
us  of  a  land  peopled  exclusively  with  the 
wise.  A  happy  land?  By  no  means;  its 
statesmen  were  desperately  revolving  plans 
for  the  extensive  Importation  of  fools.  In  a 
country  adequately  provided  with  "fools'* 
there  are  men  to  undertake  onerous  public 
services  —  magistrates,  ambassadorships  —  at 
their  own  expense.  A  ribbon,  a  title,  will 
serve  as  sufficient  reward.  There  are  men  to 
accept  the  toils  and  agonies  of  war  in  ex- 
change for  a  glorious  grave.  In  a  country 
Inhabited  exclusively  by  rational  men,  such 
services  would  have  to  be  paid  for  In  hard 
cash,  to  the  immense  prejudice  of  the  public 
treasury. 


r 


Rippling  Rhymes 


By  Walt  Mason 


The  Great  Boon. 

The  bcx5n  of  peace  is  slick  as  grease, 
and  we  should  guard  and  prize  it,  and 
love  it  well;  for  war  is  hell — no  dele- 
gate denies  it.  On  Europe's  strand, 
where  peace  is  canned,  and  all  the 
kings  are  scrappy,  the  people  know  the 
depths  of  woe,  and  not  a  soul  is  happy. 
But  here,  where  peace  fulfills  its  lea.sc, 
with  industry,  its  neighbor,  remote 
from  fear  we  walk  and  hear  the  sounds 
of  honest  labor.  The  mill  wheels  hum, 
the  plumbers  plumb,  the  farmers  go 
a-seeding,  and  you  can  walk  a  city 
block  and  see  no  fellow  bleeding.  The 
spinner  spins,  the  tinner  tins,  the  bank- 
er banks  the  boodle — oh,  happy  land, 
wherein  the  band  is  playing  Yankee 
Doodle!  Such  peace  as  this  is  surely 
bliss,  the  timbrel  sounds  our  gladness, 
the  psalter  psalts,  the  waiter  waits —  f 
to  whoop  for  war  is  madness!  By 
Europe's  streams  the  moonlight  gleams 
on  pale  and  ghastly  corpses,  and  heaven 
frowns  .on  blackened  towns  and  shat- 
tered guns  and  horses.  But  on  this 
.shore  no  wave  of  gore  against  the 
homesteads  w  as  h  e  s ;  the  sunlight 
shines  on  pumpkin  vines,  and  large  and 
luscious  squashes. 

(Prowcteit  by  TIM  Adana  N«inpa»«r  Serrlre.) 


Taken  By  Surprise 


EdltorUl  in  tbe  .New  York  Times. 


"Ypu  know,  colonel,"  said  the  visitor  at 
Oyster  Bay,  a  gentleman  who  expects  to  be 
A  delegate   to  the   national  Republican   con- 

CiDttt>n,  "I  may  make  up  my  mind  that  we 
ill  nave  to  nominate  you." 
It  was  the  first  time  the  thought  of  the 
presidency  had  entered  the  colonel's  head, 
^ut .  Theodore  Roosevelt  is  a  ready  man. 
"Like  a  flash  the  colonel  turned  to  his  visl- 
tor.'^ay  the  newspaper  reports,  and  then  he 
^ellffred  that  brief,  thrilling,  quite  ex- 
temCoraneous  address  which  all  tlie  newspa- 
per* printed  yesterday  morning.  It  was  as 
epoi|taneous  as  a  performance  of  "Hanftlet" 
after  a  run  of  a  hundred  nights.  Yet  the 
scene  was  so  Impressive  that  the  newspaper 
reports  agree  even  as  to  the  details  of  the 
stage  "business."  And  let  those  who  rail  at 
the  Inaccuracy  of  the  press  now  forever  hold 
their  peace,  for  the  reports  of  the  colonel's 
utterance  are  textually  identical,  for  all  the 
world  as  if  they  had  been  written  out  m 
advance   and   handed   to  the  reporters. 

Out  it  was  most  unfair  to  Col.  Roosevelt, 
for  in  that  unstudied  moment  he  was  be- 
trayed into  saying  things  that  will  prejudice 
his  chances  at  Chicago.  "Get  it  perfectly 
clear  in  your  head,"  said  the  colonel  to  the 
expectant  Republican  delegate,  "that  if  j'ou 
will  nominate  me  it  must  not  be  because  you 
think  it  is  in  my  interest,  but  because  you 
think  It  is  in  your  interest  and  the  interest 
of  ♦the  Republican  party."  That  was  fair 
spoken,  but  at  once  the  colonel  proceeded: 
"And  more  than  that,  don't  you  do  it  if  you 
expect  me  to  pussyfoot  on  any  single  issue  I 
have  raised." 

T^e  colonel  has  "raised"  millions  of  Issues, 
he-  has  forgotten  none.  They  are  stored, 
classified  and  labeled  in  the  vast  chambers 
of  "".his  memory,  and,  difficult  as  the  task 
may  be,  lie  will  be  faithful  to  every  cause 
he  Jhas  preached,  he  will  redeem  every  prom- 
ise, he  will  make  vital  every  one  of  his  Is- 
sues. He  says  so — "don't  you  do  It  If  you 
expect  me  to  pussyfoot  on  any  single  issue  I 
haye   raised." 

It  is  too  bad,  for  the  Gary  dinner  had 
heartened  the  colonel's  followers,  it  had  in- 
spired them  with  the  belief  that  big  busi- 
ness was  flocking  to  his  support,  and  Mr. 
Bacon's  luncheon  was  big  with  the  promise 
of  Republican  reconciliation.  Yet  In  his 
great  speech  to  the  Progressive  convention 
that  nominated  him  at  Chicago  In  1912  he 
said:  "Our  aim  is  to  promote  prosperity  and' 
then  see  to  its  proper  division."  He  told 
his  audience  that  there  should  be  created  a 
national  industrial  commission  with  "com- 
plete power  to  regulate  and  control  all  the 
great  industrial  concerns  engaged  in  In- 
terstate business — which  practically  means 
all  of  them  in  this  country."  He  said  that 
experience  had  shown  the  "preposterous  fail- 
ure" of  Judicial  Interference  in  these  mat- 
ters, "that  only  damage  comes  from  the  ef- 
fort to  substitute  Judicial  for  administrative 
control  of  the  great  corporations."  Away 
with  courts!  He  insisted  that  when  the 
Judges  and  the  legislators  differ  about  the 
meaning  of  the  Constitution,  the  people 
themselves  must  authoritatively  determine 
"what  interpretation  it  Is  that  their  repre- 
sentatives shall  thereafter  adopt  as  bind- 
ing"— that  is.  Judicial  decisions  must  t>e  sub- 
ject to  review  at  the  polls. 

The  soft  feline  footf.all  of  Theodore  Roose- 
velt as  he  backtracks  from  these  Issues  will 
not  be  detected  by  the  sharpest  ear.  He  will 
stand  by  them,  every  one  of  them — he  said 
so  at  Oyster  Bay.  Yet,  hoping  for  the  sup-* 
port  of  men  of  great  fortunes  and  great 
business  andortakings,  it  was  politically 
most  inexpedient  for  him  to  say  so.  It  is 
not  in  his  own  interast  that  he  seeks  the 
nomination,  it  is  the  interest  of  the  Repub- 
licans of  the  country.  It  was  therefore  an 
act  of  despicable  meanness  to  betray  him 
into  any  rash,  unconsidered  utterance  that 
might  stand  in  the  way  of  his  securing  the 
nomination. 

The  men  who  presided  over  the  Bal- 
timore and  the  Chicago  conventions, 
the  great  bosses  who  controlled  the 
two  conventions,  Mr.  Root  and  Mr. 
Parker,  Mr.  Barnes  and  Mr.  Murphy, 
Mr.  Penrose  and  Mr.  Taggart.  Mr.  Gug- 
genheim and  Mr.  Sullivan,  differ  from 
one  another,  of  course,  on  certain 
points.  •  •  ♦  They  come  together 
at  once  as  against  a  common  enemy 
when  the  dominion  of  both  Is  threat- 
ened by  the  supremacy  of  the  people  of 
the  United   States. 

These  bosses  at  Chicago  are  the  men  who 
"stole"  the  nomination  from  him.  It  was 
theft,  the  Colonel  has  often  said  so.  ThlH  is 
an  issue  he  has  raised,  most  vociferously 
raised,  the  Issue  against  the  corrupt  bosses 
of  the  Republican  party,  against  the  Repub- 
lican party  Itself,  which  he  sought  to  destroy 
in  1912,  and  now  through  the  malignant  cun- 
ning of  this  unnamed  Republican  who  is  to 
be  a  delegate  of  that  party  to  the  convention 
this  year  the  Colonel,  taken  unawares,  is 
made  to  assert  with  all  the  emphasis  of  his 
picturesque  vocabulary  that  he  will  not 
pussy-foot  on  this  Issue  against  Mr.  Root, 
Mr  Penrose,  Mr.  Barnes,  President  Butler 
and  the  Republican  party.  The  Republican 
delegate-to-be  who,  with  malice  in  his  heart, 
started  the  Colonel  upon  this  line  of  talk 
must  know  that  the  newspaper  reports  of 
what  the  Colonel  said  will  not  be  likely  to 
stir  old-line  Republicans  and  men  of  large 
affairfl  to  a  fury  of  enthusiasm  for  his  nom- 
ination. 

The  Colonel  did  not  pussy-foot  on  Mexico, 
although  a  few  days  ago  that  was  the  chief 
theme  of  his  discourse.  He  is  merely  await- 
ing events  which  may  remove  that  issue  al- 
together. He  cudgeled  the  hyphen,  he  irT- 
sisted  on  America-first,  and  that  reads  like 
an  indorsement  of  the  Wilson  administration. 
In  his  annual  address  last  December  Presi- 
dent Wilson  said  all  that  the  Colonel  says 
and  much  more — some  will  think  that  the 
president  said  It  better.  Still,  the  Colonel 
will  stand  by  the  Issue,  though  Mr.  Wilson 
long  ago  made  It  his  own.  Probably,  if  Mr. 
Roosevelt  had  had  time  for  an  instant's 
thought,  he  would  have  put  forth  some  issue 
as  to  which  he  would  claim  prior  discovery 
and  use.  But  that  is  only  one  count  in  the 
arraignment  of  the  Republican  visitor  at. 
Sagamore  Hill  who  abused  his  host's  hospl 
tality  by  a  base  betrayal. 


Wlay  "We  Like  the  MoTles. 

Richmond  Times.- Dispatch:  Otto  Wells  of 
Norfolk  says  the  reason  that  all  classes  like 
motion  picture  plays  is  that  each  person 
puts  Ijito  the  mouths  of  the  silent  actors  the 
exclamations,  words  and  lines  that  he  him- 
self would  use  under  like  circumstances. 

Incidents  and  situations  are  flashed  on  the 
screen,  but  the  spectator  tells  the  unspoken 
story  to  himself,  and  there  is  no  possibility 
of  artificial,  strained  or  incomprehensible 
dialogue.  What  the  spectator  imagines  is  the 
thing  that  is  natural  to  him.  To  one  who 
watches  Hamlet  with  Yorlck's  skull,  the 
words  of  the  play  may  come  "Imperious 
Caesar,  dead  and  turn'd  to  cftiy,  might  stop 
a  liole  to  keep  the  wind  away."  To  anoth- 
er's imagination.  Hamlet  says:  "Well,  we  all 
gotta  come  to   It." 

Could  explanation  be  simpler,  yet  more 
profoundly  true? 


Keeping;  Up  With 

Minnesota  Editors 

Scattered  ComiKnts  By  aod  About  News^apen 
Ib  tbe  Gopber  SUte. 


HeMTen    Knows    We're    Spent   Enough. 

All  the  talk  we  hear  about  the  poorness  of 
our  army  and  navy  fits  In  poorly  with  the 
tremendous  sums  we  have  spent  on  them. 
What  the  Glenwood  Herald  «alls  "a  sus- 
picion" really  belongs  under  a  much  stronger 
name.  The  Herald  says:  "There  Is  a  su.s- 
plcion  lurking  In  the  minds  of  many  that  the 
money  appropriated  during  past  years  by 
congress  for  the  protection  of  our  country 
has  not  been  used  to  the  best  of  advantage 
and  that  the  result  is  a  less  efficient  army 
and  navy  thaA  the  people  should  have  a  right 
to  expect  Antiquated  pork  barrel  methods 
of  distributing  money  and  peanut  politics 
are  said  to  be  chiefly  responsible  for  inef- 
ficiency both  in  our  navy  and  army." 

A  Care  for  a  Lot  of  Thlnga. 

A  good  many  people  would  find  themselves 
a  whole  heap  better  off  if  they'd  take  this 
advice  from  the  Montgomery  Messenger: 
"Let  the  young  man  about  town  out  of  a  Job 
try  a  year  on  the  farm.  Plowing  will  give 
htm  a  new  constitution,  take  the  kinks  out  of 
his  head,  the  frog  out  of  his  throat,  the  gas 
off  his  stomach,  the  weariness  out  of  his  legs, 
the  corns  off  his  toes  and  give  him  a  good 
appetite,  and  honest  living  and  a  sight  of 
heaven." 


Not  ••  Yea  Could  Notice  It. 

Just  remember  thjs  from  the  Fairmont 
Sentinel  next  time  you  g^t  into  a  prepared- 
ness argument:  "Preparedness  has  not  ac- 
complished very  much  for  peace  in  war- 
ridden  Europe." 


This  Also  Applies  to  luterTentlon. 

Maybe  you  never  noticed  this  fact  to  which 
the  Winona  Independent  calls  attention: 
"Profound  disapproval  of  modern  American 
youth  who  don't  enlist  In  the  army  is  evi- 
denced by  many  editors  sitting  in  their  com. 
fortable  swivel  chairs  In  pleasant  working 
quarters." 


The  Moral  Is  Clear. 

,"The  distinction  between  the  sexes,"  says 
the  Sauk  Center  Herald,  "is  Illustrated  by 
the  fact  that  when  a  little  boy  Is  whipped 
he  doesn't  want  anyone  to  know  it,  but  when 
a  little  girl  Is  spanked  she  tells  everybody 
about  it."  And  Inasmuch  as  the  little  girl 
gets  spanked  much  less  often.  It  evidently 
pays  to  advertise. 


All  Minnesota. 

Red  Wing  Republican:  When  some'-poil- 
tictan  wants  a  slice  of  official  pie  so  badly 
that  ho  Is  desperate  and  cannot  land  It,  his 
last  resort  Is  to  start  a  clamor  for  state  divl- 
sion.  and  begin  to  talk  about  the  rights  of 
Northern  Minnesota.  No  sane  and  loyal  citi- 
zen of  this  grand  state  wants  It  divided. 
Northern  Minnesota  as  a  whole  would  oppose 
anything  of  that  kind  as  hotly  as  any  sec- 
tion of  the  splendid  commonwealth.  True, 
there  are  sectional  problems,  but  the  only 
problem  that  ever  suggested  state  division 
was  the  problem  of  making  the  pie  go 
around.  To  such  hungry  ones  the  multipli- 
cation of  the  state  offices  by  two  looks  alto- 
gether desirable.  Instead  of  division,  a 
closer  union  is  what  all  should  desire.  Our 
interests  are  one  and  the  diversity  of  the  re- 
sources of  ^he  state  is  our  great  strongJiold. 
Were  a  rising  vote  to  be  taken  there  would 
be  a  universal  standing  up  of  the  citizenship 
of  the  North  Star  state.  Minnesota  Is  one 
state,  has  one  people  and  one  future.  Let's 
forget  Northern  Minnesota  and  Southern 
Minnesota   and  simply   remember   Minnesota. 


Michigan  Musings 


Paracraphs  From  tbe  Wolverine  State  Press. 


Thoee  Mexican   Names. 

Marquette  Chronicle:  People  should  not 
try  to  pronounce  the  names  of  those  Mex- 
ican towns.     Just  take  them  for  granted. 


He'd  Have  Used  It  Twice. 

Saginaw  News:  The  short  and  ugly  word 
was  used  to  Bryan  in  his  own  home  town  re- 
cently, but  the  dispatches  do  not  record  that 
the  colonel  resented  it.  Wonder  w^hat  would 
have  happened  with  T.  R.  ^>laeed  under  sim- 
ilar   circumstances? 


Explaining  That  Ford  Vote. 

Marquette  Mining  Journal:  In  the  presi- 
dential primary  in  the  dear  old  state  enthu- 
siasm for  Mr.  Ford  of  Detroit  was  synony- 
mous for  comprehensive  dislike  for  William 
Alden   of  Grand   Rapids. 


A  Badger  State  Gantc. 

Grand  Rapids  News:  All  the  barbarians 
are  not  in  Europe.  A  Wisconsin  man  stole  a 
Gideon  Bible  out  of  a  hotel  and  tried  to  swap 
It  for  a  drink  of  whisky. 


Tlila   Has   Company* 

Saginaw  News:  Villa,  It  is  said,  regards 
himself  as  a  second  Napoleon.  History  re- 
cords   others    similarly   afflicted. 


The  Primary. 

Marquette  Mining  Journal:  But  Just  a.s  the 
primary  would  have  been  of  real  significance 
In  1912,  there  is  reason  to  expect  that  it  may 
be  of  great  value  in  the  future.  The  De- 
troit Free  Press'  demand  that  It  be  cast 
aside  is  premature.  In  the  light  of  the  evi- 
dence of  1912  as  to  the  manner  In  which 
the  old  system  could  be  subverted,  the  pri- 
mary surely  appears  to  be  worth  further 
trial. 


Disrupting  the  Jury  System. 

Kalamazoo  Telegraph-Press:  A  Kalamazoo 
attorney  yesterday  admitted  that  there  Is 
such  a  thing  as  having  a  man  of  too  high 
order  of  intelligence  on  the  Jury.  The  real 
gink  among  twelve  men  is  sometimes  wiser 
than  the  lawyer  who  presents  his  case. 


A  Forehanded   Indiana  Man. 

Fort  Wayne  Journal-Gazette:  Mr.  Jantz  of 
Wanatah,  Ind.,  who  Is  104  years  old  and  In 
fine  condition,  purcliased  a  nice  monument 
foA^Jilmself  of  our  salesman,  W.  E.  Moudy,  a 
few^days  ago. 

• 

Something   Anyway. 
Louisville   Courier-Journal:    "So   you    think 
a   college    education    is   a    good   thing    for   a 
boy?" 

"Ves,  I  think  It's  a  pretty  good  thing.  Fits 
him  for  something  in  life.  If  he  can't  catch 
on  with  a  baseball  team,  he  can  often  land  a 
Jol»..a8  a   professor." 

• 

Ticketed. 
Louisville     Courier- Journal:     There     is     no 
difl^iculty   about   classifying   Mr,   Bryan.     He 
is  a  Bryanite. 


■Whnt  la  Home? 

Home's  not  made  of  palace  walls 

Tho*  with  pictures  hung  and  gilded. 
Home  is  where  affection  calls — 

Filled  with  shrines  the  heart  hath  builded; 
Home  to  which  the  faithful  dove 

Sails  beneath  the  heaven  above  us. 
Home  is  where  there's  one  to  love — 

Home  la  where  there's  one  to  love  us. 

Home's  not  merely  roof  and  room 

Home  needs  something  to  endear  it. 
Home  is  where  the  heart  can  bloom. 

Where  there's  some  kind  lip  to  cheer  It; 
What  Is  home  with  none  to  meet 

None  to  welcome,  none  to  greet  us? 
Home  is  sweet — and  only  sweet — 

Where  there's  one  we  love  to  meet  u.o. 

— An  old  favoplte. 
♦ 

The  Real  "David  Graysou.'* 

Kansas-  City  Star:  Those  of  us  who  re- 
meml>er  Ray  Stannard  Baker  as  one  of  the 
three  original  "muckrakers"  of  the  old  Mc- 
Clure's  magazine,  will  be  surprised  at  the  dis- 
closure that  he  also  is  "David  Grayson,"  that 
delightful  stroller  with  the  tin  whistle;  for 
in  all  his  muckraking  stories  there  was  noth- 
ing to  suggest  the  same  authorship  for  Gray- 
son's charming  pastorals. 

Many  thousands  who  have  been  fascinated 
by  the  "Adventures  in  Contentment"  and  "The 
Friendly  Road,"  have  wondered  about  David 
Grayson,  whether  that  was  his  real  name, 
whether  he  had  a  sister  named  Harriet,  and 
whether  he  really  carried  In  his  knapsack  a 
tin  whistle  to  play  In  harmony  with  the 
singing  of  the  brooks  and  the  droning  of  the 
wind  in  the  treetops. 

And  now  we  know  that  all  the  adventures 
of  David  Grayson  were  creations  of  the  imag- 
ination. Illusions,  but  none  the  less  real. 
For  the  "Adventures  in  Contentment"  are 
true,  whether  they  ever  happened  or  not, 
and  so  are  the  experiences  of  "The  Frienily 
Road."  - " 


The  Democrats  and  Roosevelt 


Edltotlal  lo  the  Waifaington  Star   (Bep.) 


The  Democrats  continue  to  boom  Mr. 
Roosevelt  for  the  Chicago  nomination.  They 
boomed  him  before  Justice  Hughes  wa» 
brought  into  the  equation,  but  are  boomlnff 
him  vociferously  now  that  they  are  told,  and. 
many  believe,  that  the  contest  at  Chicago 
will  be  between  those  two  men. 

There  are  many  reasons  why  the  Demo- 
cratic managers  should  prefer  Mr.  Roosevelt 
to  Justice  Hughes  or  anybody  else  for  lead' 
er  of  the  opposition.  He  is  far  and  away 
their  best  bet.  He  would  be  as  valuable 
to  them  this  year  as  In  1912.  Then  he  di- 
vided the  Republican  party  by  bolting,  and 
gave  the  election  to  the  Democratic  party, 
which  was  stronger  than  either  of  the  two 
Republican  factions.  This  year  as  the  Chi- 
cago nominee  against  the  Judgment  of  some 
of  the  strongest  Republicans  in  the  country 
he  would  chill  so  many  old  line  Republicana 
the  Democrats  would  be  expected  to  win 
again. 

This  attitude  of  the  Democrats  is  cleverly 
taken.  They  do  not  concede,  of  course,  that 
Mr.  Roosevelt  could  defeat  Mr.  Wilson,  but 
say  that  such  a  race  would  be  a  race,  and 
that  they  want  to  see  a  race.  As  against 
any  other  man.  even  Jtistlce  Hughes,  they 
declare  that  Mr.  Wilson  will  have  a  walk- 
away. 

These  men  have  Mr.  Roosevelt's  record 
"down  fine."  They  have  it  itemized,  and 
every  item  annotated.  All  he  ftas  ever  said 
or  done  since  achieving  national  fame  and 
Influence  could  be  made  available  for  cam- 
paign purposes.  And  that  portion  beginning 
In  1912  and  coming  down  to  a  very  recent 
day  Is  rich  in  material  for  Democratic  uses. 
Mr.  Roosevelt's  denunciations  of  Republic- 
ans by  name — men  he  formerly  trained  with 
and  was  served  by — and  of  the  party  as  a 
whole,  delivered  since  he  became  a  Bull 
Mooser,  quoted  by  Democratic  stumpers  and 
Democratic  newspapers,  would  put  the  Re- 
publicans  almost    hors    de   combat. 

But  in  the  game  of  politics — played  these 
days  by  the  sophisticated  on  both  sides — 
bluffing  Is  difficult.  The  Democratic  desire 
for  Mr.  Roosevelt's  nomination  is  too  keen 
to  be  persuasive.  It  has  put  the  Republicans 
on  their   guard. 

♦ 

Just  a  Moment 


Dally  Strength  and  Cheer. 

Complied  by  John  G.  Quinlus.  tbe  Sunshine  Man. 

"Take  heed  and  beware  of  covetousncss." — 
Luke  xil,   16. 

Covetousness  is  an  enemy  to  alms,  though 
not  to  all  the  effects  of  mercifulness;  but 
this  Is  to  be  cured  by  proper  motives  to 
charity,  and  by  the  proper  rules  of  Justice, 
which  being  secured,  the  arts  of  getting 
money  are  not  easily  made  criminal.  To 
which   also   we  may   add: 

Covetousness  makes  a  man  miserable,  be- 
cause riches  are  not  means  to  make  a  man 
happy;  and  unless  felicity  were  to  be  bought 
with  money,  he  is  a  vain  person  who  admires 
heaps  of  gold  and  ricl#possesslons.  For  what 
Hippomachus  said  to  some  persons,  who  com- 
mended a  tall  man  as  fit  to  be  a  champion 
in  the  Olympic  games — "It  is  true,"  said  he, 
"if  the  crown  hang  so  high  that  the  long- 
est arm  could  reach  It" — the  same  we  may 
say  concerning  riches;  they  were  excellent 
things,  if  the  richest  man  were  certainly  the 
wisest  and  the  best.  But  as  they  are.  they 
are  nothing  to  be  wondered  at,  because  they 
contribute  nothing  towards  felicity;  which 
appears,  because  some  men  choose  to  be  mis- 
erable that  they  may  be  rich,  rather  than 
be  happy  with  the  expense  of  money  and 
doing  noble  fhlngs. — Jeremy   Taylor. 


I  can  hear  these  violets  chortis 
To  the  sky's  benediction  above; 

And  we  all  are  together  lying 
On  the  bosom  of  Infinite  Love. 

I — I  am  a  part  of  the  poem. 

Of  its  very  sight  and  sound. 
For  my  heart  beats  Inward  rliymlngs 

To   the   Sabbath  that   lies  around. 

Oh,  the  peace  at  the  heart  of  Nature! 

Oh,  the  light  that  is  not  of  day! 
Why  seek  It  afar  for  ever. 

When  It  cannot  be  lifted  away? 

W.    C.   Gannet.      — 
May  21,  187  L 
Dayton,   Ohio. 


Twenty  Years  Ago 


From  The  Herald  of  this  date, 


\gO  j 

,  1896..  I 


••♦Central  church  of  Minneapolis  ha.s  ex- 
tended a  call  to  Rev.  W.  W.  Dawley  of  the 
First  Baptist  church  of  Duluth  to  become  its 
pastor  at  a  salary  of  $2,000  a  year.  The  Cen- 
tral church   has  675   members. 


••♦F  .B.  Doran  was  nominated  for  mayor 
of  St.  Paul  yesterday  by  the  Republican  con- 
vention, and  J.  J.  McCarty  was  nominated 
for  comptroller.  Doran  was  the  candidate 
two  years  ago  and  was  defeated  by  Mayor 
Smith. 


•♦•It  is  expected  that  12.000,000  tons  of 
Iron  ore  will  be  shipped  from  the  Lake  Su- 
perior ranges  this  season.  The  freight  rate 
from  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  probably  will 
be  $L  a  ton. 


•••Joseph  Watson,  one  of  the  founders  of 
the  late  firm  of  Panton  &  Watson,  and  who 
for  nine  ye^rs  has  been  a  resident  of  Du- 
luth, left  yesterday  afternoon  for  Europe,  ac- 
companied by  his  family,  and  will  make  a 
long  stay  there. 


••♦The  people  of  New  Duluth  have  peti- 
tioned Mayor  Truelsen  asking  that  Marshal 
Frank  Provinski  be  retained  there.  The 
petition   is   signed   by   131   taxpayers. 


•••Cards  have  been  received  here  an- 
nouncing that  Miss  Jane  Randolph  Spencer, 
daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  James  Spencer,  and 
Haliey  Sidney  Rickard  will  be  married  on 
April  22  at  Whitehall,  N.  Y.  Miss  Spencer 
resided  In  Dultith  for  a  long  time,  but  for 
several  months  past  she  and  Mrs.  Spencer 
have  been  in  Whitehall. 


-^  •••The  tug  Bennett,  owned  by  William 
Jeffery  and  lying  In  the  Northern  Pacific 
slip,  was  damaged  yesterday  by  fire  in  the 
engine  room. 


•♦•Mrs.    Weber,    mother    of   L.    R.    Weber, 
left  yesterday  for  Los  Angeles,  Cal. 


•••W.  A.  Miller,  for  nine  years  bookkeeper 
for  Panton  &  Watson,  left  yesterday  for  a 
four  montl)s'  tour  through  Europe. 


••♦D.  G.  Morrison  of  Superior  is  about  to 
bring  suit  to  set  aside  tax  titles  secured  two 
decades  ago  on  ten  quarter  sections  of  land 
in  Northern  Minnesota  which  he  bought  in 
1865  from  the  original  pre-emptors.  Some 
of  the  land  Is  said  to  be  very  valuable  now 
on  account  of  large  iron  deposits.. 


••♦H.  M.  Backus  and  family  have  returned 
from   a   Southern   trip   of  several   weeks. 


♦♦•C.  J.  Tufte  has  left  for  Norway.  He 
wfll  visit  with  relatives  and  friends  until 
next  fall. 


•••The  members  of  Prof.  R.  E.  Collins* 
dancing  class  will  give  another  dancing 
party  at  the  Masonic  Temple  hall  tomor- 
row evening.  The  reception  committee  con- 
sists of  C.  H.  Tkylor.  E.  H.  Bochner,  D.  a. 
Penny.  Edwin  Mooers,  Dr.  Carson  and  J.  H. 
Ginder.  • 


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-* 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


11 


^       THE  OPEN  COURT 

iwir»l  InTr-it,  but  dl..n.s,loc  of  tn-UrUn  r;Mg^^ jMJ" 
SStTi,,"  1^  '.sr^rt.  I>^trr.  in«st  not  exc-od  3«0  iw* 
_-lhe  ■hort.^  the  »wtt*r.  Tiny  iriist  be  written  on  <m» 
ikte  of  thi-  papt-r  only.  »iid  th^y  murt  b«  acrompanled  In 
Jjfry  r^L"  hy  Ui..  lun...  au.l  fclUrw.  of  the  *rttW  tho«th 
^  mT.!  wt  be  jmWUhcd.  A  signed  l*tt«r  U  ^\mm 
more  i-fficUw,  bowen-r. 
The  Herald  doM  not  publish  orlgloal  wrse.  Contnw- 
of   this   nature  that   au-   submlttrd   for   th'  t'Htor  • 

^1  must  »»  a4-«)nipant»d  by  a  stampnt  and  addrwifHl 

enwlope,   If  their  nturu  is  dculrcd.     Otherwise  iiu  ni»uu- 
•o^  win  be  retumtd. 

WHO  NAMED  DULUTH 


To   the    Editor   of  The    Herald: 

Shortly  after  I  was  eU-cted  »err«»- 
tary  of  the  Old  Settlers'  association, 
th*'  thoiiBht  came  to  mo  one  day,  "*^ho 
named  Duluth?".  and  I  started  to  find 
out.  If  possible.  I  thought  J.  D.  fc-n- 
slgn  n\lKht  know  something'  about  It, 
so   calU'd    at   his    office. 

Shortly  after  my  arrWal,  he  saw. 
"Walter,  you  remember  Mary  C.  I  osi 
(Mrs.  J.  L.  Smith)  of  the  early  days. 
I  have  Just  received  from  Ohio  an  oia 
Hcrap  book   of  hers."  - 

I  turned  to  the  book,  nnd  the  nrst 
Hem  I  noticed  on  opening  It  wa»: 
"Who  named  Duluth.-  and,  of  '"»"«• 
was  Interested,  us  that  was  what  I 
was  Hftor.  and  tho  long  hunt  I  ex- 
nect'vl    was    unexpectedly    soIveU. 

The  article  went  on  to  state  that  the 
N'ettK'ton  broth-rs.  William  and  Ueorse 
K..  announced  that  there  would  be^  a 
i.lcnlc  on  Minnesota  point,  and  that 
.  ach  u'u.'.>tt  must  brlnjf  a  name  for  the 
Tiew  cltv  which  they  foresaw  must  b« 
built  at  the  head  of  the  lake,  in  the 
state    of    MiniieiK)ta.  .»,„,i„ 

••The  dav  arrived  and.  accordlnffiy. 
on  a  brluli't  summer  day  In  1856,  boats 
convevf-d  the  party  from  Superior  to 
Mlnn>sota  point.  Arrived,  a  ffra.ssy 
knoll  wa^  selected  for  spreadinK  the 
cloth,  on  which  were  placed  the  tooth- 
some contents  of  many  a  napkin-cov- 
tied  basket,  and  the  champafrne  was 
set   out    In    readiness   for   tho   great   de- 

'  *'Mnny  an  appellation  was  suKgo.sted, 
discussed,  and  sentenced  to  death—  too 
lonff'     too   short.'    'too    hard,      too    sort. 


GHOREN  WE  WORRY  ABOUT 

Goae  confinement  in  bc1k)o1  during 
the  paat  winter,  overstudy  perbape,  an 
attack  of  the  ^p  6r  tonsilitis,  aomo 
one  of  these  thmpj  ia  doubtless  respon- 
Bible  for  the  coiidition  of  tlie  child  who 
Bhows  a  decline  in  health  now. 

Wliat  are  the  syniptoma?  Pallor  and 
languor,  a  fickle  appetite,  dark  rings 
tinder  Uie  eyes,  bronchial  colds.  Very 
often  the  best  cabrts  of  the  family 
physician  fail  in  such  cases  and  the 
condition  of  the  child  causea  the  most 
intense  anxiety.  Cod-liver  oil,  so  often 
prescribed,  generally  fails  because  the 
weak  stomach  is  unable  to  digest  fats. 

Try  this  treatment.      Before  break- 
fast each  morning  Kive  the  child   the 
juice  of  half  an  orange.     Aft*T  thenoon 
weal  give  one  of  Dr.   Williams'  Pink 
Tills.    Keep  this  up  for  a  few  days  and 
then  give  one  of  the  pills  after  tJie 
evening  meal  also.       Weigh   the  child 
f.efore  beginning   the   treatment   and 
again  after  two  weeks.    An  increase  in 
weight  of  froiji  two  to  five  pounds  will 
show  you  that  you   are  on  tho  right 
track  at  last.      Care  is  necessary  in  the 
diet  of  the  patient  and  it  will  be  well 
to  send  to  the  Dr.  Williams  Medicine 
Co.,    Schenectady,  N.    Y.,   for  a  diet 
book  and  the  pamphlet,  "Building  Up 
tlie  Blood."     Botli  are  free.     Yourowa 
druggist  sells  Dr.  WilUama'  Piuk  Fills. 


DULUTH'S  PUBLIC  SCHOOL  SYSTEM 

Being  a  Review  of  Some  Facts  About  the  Community's  Host  Important 

Business— No.  tO— The  Agricuhural  Courses  in  the  High  School 

— Study  Course,  Creamery,  Garden  and  Club, 


-Advertisement. 





AMUSEMENTS. 


3  DAYS,  COMMENCING  TODAY 
ANITA   >TEWART 

-AND- 

EARLE  WILLIAMS 

"MY  LADY'S 
SLIPPER" 

A  5-|.«rt  Bla  4  feature,  wrlllen 
by  He^.  Vyrum  Towuwend  Brady 
uiMl  produced  l»>  the  ITaiMOUH  d»- 
reotur.    HmIv>»    Inee. 

ThU  U  »  iM.»verruI  "tory  ««  »»»f 
I.oniM  VVI  period  and  In  wkieh 
the  fanMJUM  miurn  are  !■  their 
be««*.  \«>  expense  wo«  Hpared  to 
make  thia  eowtunie  play  «  vert- 
taltle    Mtreen    luawterpleee. 

ZELDA 

The   Home  of  Metro  Wonderpluyn 

und    BlK   4    Features. 

Any   Seat,  10c. 


•too  commonplace.'  "too  fanciful, —un- 
til at  last  the  wH  and  Kenlua  of  the 
party.  Hev.  Janie*  O.  Wllnon  of  Pltta- 
huTK^  Pa.,  aro*e  and  read  from  a  sup 
of  paper.  Duluth.'  The  name  waa  re- 
ceived with  aci  lamation.  and  after  a 
short  hlxtory  of  Dani.-l  Grf-yaolon  Enj 
Luth,  there  was  a  popplnK  ot  corUs  and 
conffralulatlonn  of  the  hero  of  the 
happy  thoutfht;  *nd  then,  standiner  »n 
the  Klow  of  the  »ettln»r  »un.  we  drunk 
to  the  future  city.  Boon  to  be  acknowl- 
edKed  the  Queen  of  the  West,'  and  the 
namlnK  was  over."  . 

Amonif  thoae  present  at  the  narnlngf 
were  (SeofK^  E.  Nettleton,  William 
Nettleton  and  wife,  Julia:  Rev  John 
M.  Harnett  and  wife,  Judge  John  K. 
Carey,  Orator  K.   Hall  and  wife.  Laura; 

'  Mary    (-.    Post,    Thompson    Hllcbie    and 

\}W\.    .lames   S.    Wilson. 

ThinklMK  that  probably  very  few  of 
the  present  cltlzena  of  the  city,  except 

1  a     few    of     the     earlier    aettlera,     know 
where    or    how     the    city    came     to     be 
named  Duluth.  1  send  you  this  for  pub- 
lication    If    you    desire    to    do    so. 
ncaiion,  i  ^,     ^^^    BUL'NT. 

Duluth,  April   10. 

SCHOOL  AUTHORITIES 

AND  COL.  RESCHE  DEFENDED 


style  Distinction 

and  Excellent  Values 

Are  the  Features  of  the  New  Arrivals 


Women's  and 
Misses'  Suits 

$19.50,  $22.50, 

$25  up  to 

$135 

We  announce  many  beau- 
tiful new  models.  Each  suit 
is  not  only  attractive  to  the 
eye,  but  is  positively  author- 
itative in  every  detail. 


CREAMERY  AT  CENTRAL  HIGH  SCHOOL. 


I 


LYCEUM  THEATER 

TONKillT    AMI    THURSDAY 
Matinee    Dally. 

REFINED 
BURLESQUE 

JA<K   IIIOKD  A\n    lll§   IIFXORD- 

BnF.\KKK«l. 

ChwruM    <ilri    Stunt    Mjsht    Thurwday. 

NtKhts.   25e   to    75ei    Illatn..   25e-50c. 


NKW 


ALWAA'S 

A    GOOD 
SHOW 


GRAND 


11   A.   M. 
UNTIL 

11  P.  n. 


Real   Veterann  of  the  CIyI|  War 

OLD  SOLDIER  MUSICIANS 

FOI.MS    8I*<TKRS   A    I.C    ROY. 
MIJM.IVA\  &  MASON. 

MERLE'S  COCKATOOS 

C»ne«rt  OrchMtra — Plwttvlayi  0«  Lixt. 

MATS  lOcsBaVNITES  10-20 


I 


Eex  W  Eex 

THEATEN  BEAUTIFUL  ▼  THEATER  lEAUTIFUL 

KeMllMtIo    Huu    ThrilllnK    Im 

"THE  RAIDERS" 

TOUAi     AXi>    TOMORROW. 
rrlaiiKle    Fine    Artu    baa    never    pre- 
Heuted    M    mure  enlov^Me  itlcture  play 

H.  B.  WARNER 

(AllaM    Jimmy    Valentine) 


LYRIC  ^  LYRIC 

EVKllYHOUVS    THEATER. 
Modem    faNlklonahie   life  portrayed  In 

"THE  CODE  OF 
MARCIA  GRAY" 

— With— 

CONSTANCE    COLLIER 

TODAV     AND    TOMORROW. 
Burton     IlolmeM.    famooit    traveler, 
takew    the    andieneen    on     tiieNe    two 
tlayn   to   the   San  IlleRo  Kjtpowltlon. 


To   the   Editor   of   Th©    Herald: 

HavlnK  been  a  subsfriber  <>f  The  Uu- 
luth  Herald  for  the  last  seven  yeara. 
and  a  constant  reader  of  the  Open 
Court  slnee  Us  beginning,  permit  me 
to  say  a  few  words  regfarding  the  two 
main  topics  that  have  been  under  con- 
sideration   of    lute.  

Flrai:  For  the  last  month  or  rnore 
we  have  had  from  three  to  six  artloles 
dallv  In  the  Open  Court  regardinB  the 
Holme.s  case.  Now.  1  do  not  know  Mr. 
Holni.3  personally,  but  I  do  know 
every  member  of  the  school  board,  and 
In  mv  mind  I  am  thoroughly  satisfied 
that  "overy  one  of  them  Is  capable  or 
doing,  and  would  do,  the  right  thing 
for  every  one  e<mcerned.  Are  we  go- 
ing to  elect  a  school  board,  or  asK  tne 
children  whom  thoy  want  or  don  t  want 
for  instructors?  If  so.  let  us  do  away 
with  the  board  entirely,  and  place  11 
In  the  hands  of  the  children.  To  any 
one  who  knows  the  members  of  the 
school  board.  It  Is  thoroughly  dU- 
gustlns  to  hear  or  read  a  direct  Insult 
to  their  Judgment.  ^  . 

^Secondly:  For  the  last  f«"wday8 
there  have  been  a  number  of  articles 
regarding  the  boys  and  the  new  ai - 
mtVry.  Col  Rcsche  answered  one  of 
these  articles  very  fa'rly.  through  the 
Open  Court,  stating  why  the  boys  had 
been  put  out  of  the  armory.  Being  a 
member  of  one  of  the  local  militia 
companies,  I  have  been  and  am  In  a 
pos  Uon  to  know  Col  Resche,  and  what 
he  said  to  be  absolutely  true.  Things 
have  Hurely  come  to  a  P'-''"y  P»««  ^*^,;" 
we  allow  these  boys  to  criticize  and  In- 
sult a  man  like  Col.  Rescho.  for  to 
know  him  is  to  know  that  he  has  the 
good  of  the  armory  and  the  good  of 
every    one    that    has    to    go    there    at 

^l  arn  at  the  armory  at  least  one  night 
out  of  every  week,  and  I  venlure  to 
say  there  has  not  been  one  time  that  i 
have  been  there  but  what  there  have 
been  bovs  ar..und  that  should  have 
been  honie  with  their  P*"!^"!*:  a"^ J 
often  wondered  why  the  colonel  did  not 
order  them  out  before. 

The  armory  was  not  built  'or  boys  to 
Dlay  tag  and  hide-and-go-seek  In  until 
ai?  hours  of  the  night.  Just  the  other 
day  a  gentleman  who  lives  within  a 
Kk  o?  the  armory,  asked  me  whom 
he  could  see  and  what  could  bo  done 
rJa-ardlntr  the  bovs  who  loafed  around 
[hrafnufry  untiri2  at  night.  He  said 
he  could  hear  them  hollering  and  us- 
ing profane  language  every  night,  and 
that  It  was  getting  to  be  a  poor  locali- 
ty In  which  to  live.  Also  he  had  for- 
bidden his  boys  to  go  down  to  watch 
the  militia  drill,  because  h', did  not 
want  them  to  become  acquainted  with 
those   rowdies  that  make  a  practice  of 

^"^o^.  l!l*'conclu8lon,  let  me  say  that 
Col.  Resche,  as  well  as  the  school 
board,  are  above  reproach,  and  that 
they  are  absolutely  capable  of  hand- 
llnir  their  respective  positions  to  the 
best  interest  of  every  on«  .^o^fe"""®?' 
without  asking  advice  of  children.  So 
^t  lis  be  confident  that  no  In  ustlce 
will  be  done  In  either  case  nifntloned 
and  that  we  will  again  have  the  Open 
Court  free  from  these  articles  slander- 
ing and  criticizing  those  who  are  de- 
v"  ting  every  minute  of  their  time  and 
every  ounce  of  their  energy  for  the 
welfare  of  the  community  at  large. 
bV  children  who  In  all  fairness  should 
be   homo  when  the  curfew  rings.     Sln- 

A  BKlTeVER  in   MATrRE     AND    IN- 
TEIaIiOENT  .lUDGMENT. 
Duluth.   April    10- 

QUESTIONS  AND 
ANSWERS 

ThU  di-partwnt  (lo*»  not  pirU-w*!  to  he  Infalllbl*  It 
will  fndMWr,  liowptiT.  to  uiivmrr  um-slions  arnt  to  it  W 
WfcdcM  or  ThV  U.f «1.1  to  the  h.-irt  of  Its  ability.  resertUjg 
the  rUht  to  Ignore  «ll  that  arc  trtmiig  or  of  concfrn  only 
to  the  qm-stloner.  or  that  asli  for  advice  on  legal  or  m«l- 
I— i>i  fuu>«ti  ifiii4 

TO  ffroiTe  attention,  ewry  ln«|ulnr  must  hear  th*  najie 
and  addrvsa  of  the  person  wmllng  It  ThU  U  not  wanUd 
for  publication,  but  u  an  rvldence  of  «oo<J  faith. 


Northern  Minnesota  .  mean*  Iron 
mines  or  lumber  camps  to  the  average 
.Vorthwest  citizen,  but'  Duluth  school- 
boys, acores  of  thenti.  want  to  know 
something   about    agriculture. 

For  that  reason  the  board  of  edu- 
cation started  an  agrtcultural  course 
in  Central  high  school  three  years  ago. 
LTnder  the  direction  of  E.  P.  Gibson, 
special  Instructor,  the  course  has  been 
conducted  slace  the  fall  of  191J.  and 
with  such  anccess  that  now  the  board 
has  been  asked  to  broaden  the  work 
so   that   girls   may   take    It   as   well  as 

The  school  now  has  a  two-year 
course,  and  many  of  those  being  grad- 
uated from  the  course  are  enrolling  In 
agricultural  colleges  or  In  agricultural 
departments  of  state  universities.  The 
school  district  receives  11.000  annu- 
ally from  the  state  for  conducting  th© 

^""ii  ^1914-1916  the  agricultural  stu- 
dents cost  the  taxpayers  an  avejage 
of  27  cents,  according  to  Mr.  Gibson  s 
(.stlmates.  for  materials,  and  this  year 
he  hopes  to  make  the  department  self- 
supporting,  as  far  as  materials  are 
concerned.  wh^ 

In  1918  there  were  forty-two  who 
enrolled  In  the  course  The  next  year 
this  was  doubled,  but  this  last  fall  the 
enrollm'-nt  dropped  off  until  the  class 


now  la  about  aa  large  a«  the  original 
class.  This  la  not  taken  as  discourag- 
ing, however,  aa  the  present  PUP"» 
•wan       bualness."       as      Mr.       Gibson 

puta  it.  ,         ,„  J     *^ 

Although  the  cotirae  is  aimed  to 
arouse  an  Interest  In  farming.  It  Is 
not  designed  primarily  as  preparatory 
for  a  college  course.  Educators  say 
that  It  teaches  practical  principles  that 
can  be  applied  about  the  average 
home  and  broadens  the  viewpoint  of 
the    future    business    man. 

Working  on  the  assumption  that 
Northern  Minnesota  will  some  day  be- 
come a  dairying  community^  the 
courses  have  been  designed  to  fit  this 
part  of  the  Northwest. 

In  the  first  year's  course,  anirnal 
husbandry,  a  great  deal  of  attention 
is  given  to  dairying.  Vegetable  gar- 
dening comes  In  for  a  large  share  of 
attention  during  the  second  year, 
when  the  course  Is  on  crops  and  soils. 

Short  courses  at  the  Northeastern 
experiment  farm,  outalde  the  city  lim- 
its, were  arranged  and  boys  visit  the 
farm     on     four     successive     Saturdays 

during  the  year.  .,      »    *k^ 

Instructors  were  80  pleased  at  the 
results  of  the  ao-caUed  "short 
courses."  during  which  the  boys 
played  "farmer"  for  a  day.  that  th 
have  asked  the  board   of  education 


farm  to  be  operated  by  the  achool. 

The  Central  high  school  creamery, 
made  possible  through  the  activity  of 
the  Agricultural  club,  a  achool  organ- 
iaation.  has  been  a  success  from  the 
start  The  boys  buy  the  rxvaterlals 
themselves,  do  all  the  work  by  hand 
power  and  take  home  the  finished 
product.  .  , „. 

Crops  of  tomatoes,  cucumbers,  beans, 
lettuce,  radishes,  cauliflower,  peppers 
and  muskmelons  have  been  raised  suc- 
cessfully In  tho  greenhouse  built  for 
the  agricultural  cLaases  "^  the  Central 
high  school  »lte.  A  total  of  »72.34  was 
realized  Ust  year  from  '^/K^ta^^^^ 
raised   In   the   greenhouse   and  sola   oy 

***Fr^'Aug.  1.   1916.   to   ;Cprll   1,   1916 
enough   was   realized    from    the  sale   of 
greenhouse   vegetables   to   pay    current 
expenditures,    leaving    a   small   balance 

in  the  treasury.  -      .,     v   -     Kr-an 

A  small  sinking  fund  haa  been 
started  for  the  creamery.  *"*  2  cents 
is  set  aside  for  each  pound  ff  butter 
churned,  to  be  used  In  Pi-ovldlng  for 
the     upkeep     and     replacing     or     ma- 

*  Tlfe'^^^agricultural  classes  probably 
entail  leas  expense  to  the  taxpayer 
than  any  other  courae  »n  the  ^^^^"If' 
and    educators    say    that    it    Is    of  _un- 


Easter 
Coats 

$12.50,  $15.00, 

$17.50,  $19.50, 

up  to  $75.00 


, 


played    "farmer"    for  a   day    that    they     »""    "X««H''viiTue"to  a  boy,  whether  or 
have  asked  the  board   of  education   to     2"f»^*°"^?ends  to  become  a  farmer, 
appropriate  $10,000,   to  be  used  In  buy-     not  he  intends  to  oecora     ^    ^    ^^^ 
Ing    a    site    and    Laying    out    a    model  1 


modern    explanation    o^   *»»*    f  \»*"t^J 

the    handwriting    on    the    ^a"    '"     the 

pilace    of   BelshazzHT,   the   W'nK;      .,    . 

ArTs  ■    We   have   been    unable   to   find 

Bible. 

"A    Reader."     Duluth:     If^a     couple, 
l^e.?ts    boih.from    Duluth.    went    to 


res 


Two"  Harbors.  Minn.,  to  be  married  by 
ihL  \nCt\oe  of  that  place  and  the 
I  mni  lady  In  question  told  the  jua- 
ticefhe  was  from  Superior.  Wis.,  or 
iaUter  a  Tesident  of  that  place,  would 
the  marriage  be  legal? 
Ans.:      Yes. 

Russell  Scott.  Wrenshall,  Minn.:  (1) 
Is  a  registered  <-'Uernsey.  Jersey  or 
woiateln  COW  a  thoroughbred?  (£) 
What  is  the  difference  between  a 
•■niirebred"  and  a  "thoroughbred  f  (3) 
WMch  does  a  horse  pull  with  the  most, 

'^"Ans''    (iS'l^l/TaV Applied  to  cattle 
there    is    no    difference;    "Purebred      is 

(3)  His  hind  legs. 

"S.."  Duluth: 
the     expression, 

^^aVs"  :    Perhaps  some  reader  can  tell. 

.'T  ••  Miss  City.  Mich.:    Can  you  glv« 
me'^anyYnfo'rmat'Ion  about  the  Louisiana 

'°An7"Thl8   was   a   lottery    conducted 


What   Is  the  origin  of 
"get    down    to    brasa 


'*"'""^oiv  In  that  stateT  besides  agree- 
r;ig"tosupJor  certain  charltle^s  in  New 
Orceins  It  became  the  best  known  of 
^tran/.huttdreds_of    lotteries    that 


•Inquirer,"     Duluth:     What 


the 


All  lUy  Ion-  yesltrtlay  the  Hue  never  broke  at  the  box  office  of  the 


IT  PAYS  TO 


N»«  thtrt  li  M  «M*- 
tun  kit  that  "it  payt 
ta  aimtiM."  Will  4» 
tiM  kasMT  katlOMi  of 
all  tlat. 


COHAN  4k  n.\RRI8  UO 
SifT  n.AlM  IT  IH  TIIK 
BKST  K.VKriCAI.  COJIKDY 
IS  THK  WOKLl)  —  THKY 
AD.MIT  IT. 


ADVERTISE 


We  start  Suiitlay  aftomo«»n.  anil  we  play  Sunday  night  and 
Monday  nlglit  and  Tuesday  nl«lit  and  WcdiH>sday  afternoon  and 
for  the  laf*t  time  on  Wednewday  idght. 


$40,000    for    the    privilege^  of ^a_  lottery 

m( 
Ini 
Or 

nSmeJear    congress    passed    stringent 

?I  i«T»»rv  laws  that   ultimately  com- 

;yne'd^Tcom"any  to\ransfer  it.  op|r^ 

atlons  to  Honduras,  where  it  is  aald 
stin  to  be  operating.     Long  before  thi. 

one  time  t'ie  'Louisiana  lottery  offered 
?o  Day  the  whole  debt  of  North  Dakota 
Ind  a  bonurbesldes  if  allowed  to  oper- 
J?e^  fn  that  state.  Taking  the  state- 
ments of  the  company  at  their  face 
^alue  the  amounts  paid  or  Promised  to 
be  paid  in  prizes  were  less  than  half 
?he  amount  of  the  subscrtptlons,  and 
LelldeT  this,  all  unsold  ticket,  belonged 
?o  the  company  and  were  drawn  for  the 
company',  benefit. 

POEMS  ASKED  FOR. 

Requests    hve    been    received    for   tha 

'""The"Burlal   of   Dan   McGrew."    from 
"S.,"  Duluth. 

Tiae  Desi»o««    e«  B«rope. 
Tn.  the   Editor  of  The  Herald: 

Thil   Doem    was    taken    from    an    old 

as  near  as  I  could  tell,  was  l»0»  ana  ii 
was    entitled    the    Boston     Pilot.      The 

think  well  of  printing  it.  p.   "• 

Duluth,  April  10. 

It  was  an  evening  that  Florence  might 

The  sky  was  as  pure  and  as  fair 
As  the  brightest  of  Italy',  heavens^ 

Like   halm   the   .oft   evening   air. 
On  a  baVque  o'er  the  mighty  St.  Law- 

We  /llde    toward,   the   clOM   of   the 

And  the^sun   on   the   hilltop  was  shed- 

Ita  la'stf  parting,  mild,  mellow  ray. 

The   moon   In   the   East   was   ascending; 
No    sound    .ave    the    splaah    on     the 

Or  the^angelic  notes   from   the   hamlet 
As  they  ring  cut  their  evening  vow. 

It   would  seem   as   If   the  Almighty 
eye r    the     vastnes.     of     heaven     had 

With    an"  orb    in   each  hand,    wide    ex- 
tended, !...„♦ 

A.  near  to  the  .Inner  He  leant. 

One  object  I  gazed  on  a  moinent 
Was  a  tree  that  for  centuries  stood 

Erect  by  the  banks  of  that  river. 
A  monarch  of  highland  and  wood. 


Tall,  stately,  majestic,  that  inonarch 
Spread   its  branches  abroad  o  er  the 

And   the   plumes   of   lU   limb,   had   for 
agea 
Swayed  over  the  lone  Indian  grave. 

The    birds    of    the    evening    were   alng- 
Ing 

High  up  in  its  loftiest  limbs. 
Waking  echoes  of  forest  prlineval 

By    the    sound    of  their   soul-stirring 

hymns.  .*,...         * 

I  gazed  on  that  tree  in  it.  beauty. 
Its     strength.      It.     perfection     and 

When  T  glanced  at  lU  root,  they  were 

withered,  ,,    . .    „ 

Bleak,    bare;    they    were     glistening 
and   white. 

The  streahi  that  for  ages  was  rolling 

At  the  foot  of  this  monarch  of  eld. 
Each  springtide  successively  passing 

Swept  the  earth  which  the  oak  tree 
upheld. 
Another  might  come  on  the   morrow. 

And  bear  that  last  remnant  away. 
The  tree   then   must  fall   from  its   sta- 
tion, ,.      .     , 

Un.ipported   by  foothold  of  clay. 

Its  branches  then  broken  and  tangled. 

The  bird,   in  a  moment   shall   flee. 
And    from    shoal   unto   shoal   'twill    be 
hurled  ,,  ^      ^ 

Till  lost  in  a  far  distant  aea. 
Some   traveler  perchance  in  the  future 

Might  sail  on  St.  Lawrences  tide. 
But   where   will     be    the     monarch     of 

Tl^^the  tempests  of  age.  defied?' 

It  1.  thus  with  the  despots  of  Europe 
From  the  ruler  that  crushes  his  slave 
To    the   emperor   that   crushes    the    na- 
tion 
By   the   fringe  of  the  western   wave. 
Tall,    stately   and   proud    is  the  desoot. 
Their     branches     are     glorious     *nd 
strong.  ».      i        . 

But   the  chanters   of  sycophants  sing- 
ing— 
Its  foliage  wake,  not  to  their  aong. 

For    ages    they    stood    by    the    stream 


CLEAN  BILL 
FROMJIOURT 

W.  C.  Sherwood  Exonerated 

From  Charge  Brougtit  By 

Former  Client. 


Styles  ot  Fascinating  Smartness 

Handsome  Gowns  and  Dresses 
$15,  $18.75,  $22.50,  $25  up  to  $125 

Fashionable  Waists  and  Blouses 
95c,  $1.25,  $1.50,  $1.95  up  to  $35 

Smart  Separate  Skirts 
$4.95,  $6.50,  $7.50,  $8.75  up  to  $25 


. 


ssssssssssss: 


Judge  Holds  He  Secured 

Fair  Price  for  Woman's 

Lots. 


will    be    ass 


Isted    by    thirty-five    high 


b*"^"\y,.„  ,„ni  h«  i,et  for  the  board  of 


clal  tables  will  be  -ft  f or  th 

directors  of  the  T.  M.  ,^-  "^A  ""Her" club: 
hnva  who  have  made  the  Husiier  ^»""' 
also  for  the  boys  who  are  to  be  deco- 
rat^  with  the  national  medal  for  hav- 
fna^^alsed  the  efficiency  test. 

E  W  Peck,  state  secretary  of  the 
V  i*  C  i^  win  be  toastmaster.  and 
Jie'folFowtiiV  program  will  follow  the 

dinner: 
"Last  Year" 


Russell  Duncan. 


•Next  Tear" 


John  Ahlea. 


•  •••••• 


^fi 


anks. 


But 


With   majesty  towering  on  high; 
jt   their   roots   are  as   bleak 
relics; 


as  dead 


The  day  of  destruction  ts  nigh. 
The  strong    .tream    of    truth    is    .till 
rolling 
Its  waters  deep  fathoms  below. 
But   the   breath,   of   democracy .   free- 
dom ...  . 
Through  the  limb,  of  the  monarchs 
do  blow. 

Tiie  earth  that  upheld  them  1.  falling 

In   flake,  from   its  pedestal   now; 
To   the  breath  of  the  people  united 

The   despots   of   age.    must   bow. 
This  tlie  may  sweep  the  last  remnant, 

And  then,  like  the  king  of  the  wood. 
The  tyrant  must  fall,  and  forever 

Till     eized  by  the  faat-rushlng  flood. 

Their      branches,      then      broken      and 
tangled. 
Their   finery    tangled   and    torn. 
And    from    shoal    unto    shoal,    like    the 
oak   log. 
To  oblivion's  .ea  they  are  borne. 
Or.iot.    heaven    that    such    be    the    end- 

That  freedom  may  tread  on  the  sod. 
And  the  angel  of  liberty,   rising. 
Will    chant    a   Te   Deum    to   God. 

UPPER  PENINSULA 

AUTO  SHOW  OPENS 


W.  C.  Sherwood,  local  real  estate 
dealer,  ha.  been  given  a  clean  bill  by 
District   Judge   Dancer. 

Mr.  Sherwood  waa  charged  with  hav- 
ing taken  advantage  of  Mrs.  Ellen  B. 
Montgomery  in  a  deal  for  the  .ale  of 
forty  lots  at  Carnegie,  near  Superior, 
when  he  sold  them  for  her  for  $2,500, 
but  the  court.  In  a  decision  handed 
down  yesterday  afternoon,  finds  the 
charge  without  any  foundation  what- 
over 

Mrs.  Montgomery  claimed  that  the 
lots  were  worth  $8,000.  but  the  court 
held  that  Mr.  Sherwood  had  obtained 
more  than  a  fair  price  and  held  that 
Mrs  Montgomery  must  abide  by  her 
contract  and  pay  all   the  costs  of  the 

case.  w     1  i 

Mr.  Sherwood  explained  that  the  lots, 
being  subdivided,  did  not  have  the 
same  value  that  they  have  had  in  acre- 
age and  testified  that  he  was  unable 
at  first  to  find  a  purchaser  or  get  any 
reasonable  offer  for  them.  The  lots 
were  shown  to  be  many  mile,  from  a 
c&r   line 

Real  estate  men  testified  that  the 
price  was  at  least  double  what  the 
lots  were  worth,  and  the  court  a  find- 
ings exonerate  Mr.  Sherwood  from  any 
.usplclon  of  fraud  or  wrong  doing  iii 
the  matter.  One  witness  testified  that 
he  had  bought  lot.  in  the  vicinity  for 
a  few  cents  apiece  at  a  tax  sale.  Mrs. 
Montgomery  secured  a  divorce  from 
her  husband  two  years  ago  and  the 
transaction  occurred  while  the  divorce 
suit  was  pending.  In  her  affidavit,  it 
was  stated,  that  Mr.  Sherwood  had 
advised  her  to  get  a  divorce,  but  dur- 
ing the  trial  It  was  shown  that  she 
had  begun  the  divorce  proceeding,  sev- 
eral    weeks   before  she   met   Mr.    Sher- 

H.  J.  Granni.  appeared  in  the  action 
a.  attorney  for  Mr.  Sherwood  and  M<:- 
Coy  &  Hanson  represented  Mrs.  Mont- 
gomery. 

BOYS  READY  FOR 
ANNUAL  BANQUET 


••••••• 


..camp    Miller^'^^.^.^.  .^^^^ 

Presentation   Hustler  awards 
Presentation    efficiency    medals 

"The  High  School  Club 

Irving  Auld. 
"Playing  the  Game"  ................. 

*^^  "Howard   (Cub)   Buck. 

"We  Liked   You"..^..- 

B.  C.  Wade. 


"The  Ladies' 


Jacob  Garon. 


Music 


Solo 


Boys'  Department  Orchestra. 


Violin  aolo 
Guitar   solo 
Specialty   .. 
Magic    


George  Ward. 
Herbert  Mlska. 
Wiilard  "Thorp. 
Lrfiurence  Duby. 


Evans  Phelam. 
Camp  Miller  songs. 

ROCKVILLE  POSTOFFICE 
LOOTED  BY  YEGGS 


St.  Cloud.  Minn..  April  12.— The  post- 
office  safe  at  RockvlUe  was  blown 
early  Monday  and  $40  in  cash  and  $1<56 
in- .tamps   taken.  .       ,,         ,         , 

A  terrific  charge  of  nitro-glycerln 
was  used,  the  door  of  the  safe  being 
blown  out  through  the  plate  glass  win- 


dow into  the  street.  Though  the  hotel 
proprietor  and  the  occupants  of  the 
flat  above  the  store  were  up  and  heara 
the  explosion  It  was  imposaible  to  see 
the  yeggman  when  they  left  through 
the  rear  of  the  store.  It  is  not  known 
whether  a  rig  was  used  In  making  the 
escape  or  whether  the  men  are  now 
in    the    vicinity    of    Kockville. 

A  track  made  by  a  light  buggy  was 
followed  into  St.  Cloud,  where  the  po- 
lice combed  all  of  the  railroad  yard., 
but   without   success^ 

CLOQUET  GLUB  IS 
GBOWINfi  RAPIDLY 

LaFayetteClub  Encourages 

Foreign-Born  to  Be 

Citizens. 

Cloquet  Minn..  April  H. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  La  Fayette  club 
elected  the  following  officers:  Presi- 
dent. August  Boyer;  first  vice  presi- 
dent, Armond  Patry;  second  vice  presi- 
dent, Peter  Sarrette;  recording  secre- 
tary. Albert  MIchaud:  financial  secre- 
tary, John  Holmes;  corresponding  sec- 
retary, Joseph  Lioisel;  directors,  James 
LongtIn,  Wilfrid  Laniel,  Alphonse  Le- 
vasseur.  Eugene  Cable  and  Phil  Le- 
brasseur;  committee  of  amusem^'nts. 
Roy  Boyer,  Joseph  Stone,  Sam  Dou- 
cette,  Dan  Desforges,  and  Edmund  and 
Henry    Brland.  _  ^        ,    ^    . 

The  aim  of  the  La  Fayette  club  la 
to  encourage  loyal  citizenship  in  all 
its  members.  The  club  will  make  it 
a  special  point  to  induce  all  who  are 
"not  yet  American  citizens  to  become 
such.  The  club  will  also  interest  it- 
self in  political  affairs  and  also  in 
I  ewtertainments. 

Tho  club  starts  with  a  membership 
of  126  and  many  more  have  manifested 
their  intention  to  Join. 


•H 


Calumet,  Mich.,  April  12.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  .econd  annual 
Upper  Peninsula  Automobile  .how, 
with  sixty  models  of  forty  makes  of 
cars.  Insured  for  $160,000,  on  exhibition 
opens  here  today  with  the  largest  and 
most  costly  gathering  of  cars  ever 
shown    in    Northern    Michigan. 


Relieve 

TKat  Disagreeable 

Dangerous  Catarrh  With  S.S.S. 


For  fifty  ye»rs  S.S.S.  hat  be«n  th«  standard  remedy 
for  incipient  a*  well  as  chronic  catarrh.    Thousands  have 
found   relief-regained   normal   health   wd   renewed   their. 
itreagtk  and  vigor  vyith  the  help  ot 


WHY  HAIR  FALLS  Ouf^ 


Dandruff  causes  a  feverish  irrita- 
tion of  the  scalp,  the  hair  roots 
shrink,  loosen  and  then  the  hair 
comes  out  fast.  To  trtop  falling  hair 
at  once  and  rid  the  scalp  of  every 
Pi^rtlole  of  dandruff,  get  a  25-cent 
bottle  of  Danderine  at  any  drug  store, 
Dour  a  little'  in  your  hand  and  rub 
well  into  the  scalp.     After  a  few  ap- 


Biggest    Event    of   Junior 

Y.  M.  C.  A.  Department  on 

Friday  Evening. 

Final  plan,  for  the  annual  banquet 
of  the  boy.'  department.  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  to 
be  held  in  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  gymnasium 
Friday  evening,  have  been  made,  and 
the  members  of  the  club  are  now  look- 
ing forward  to  the  biggest  social  event 
that  the  club  features  during  the  year. 
The  following  committee  of  women  is 
in  charge:  Mr..  W.  A.  McGonagle.  Mrs. 
W.  J.  McCabe.  Mrs.  G.  A.  Hegardt.  Mrs. 
J  D.  Haynes,  Mrs.  George  St.  Clair. 
Mr.  A  C  Le  Rlcheux.  Mrs.  J.  Heardlng, 
Mrs  T  H.  Hawkes,  Mrs.  J.  A.  Currie. 
Mr.:  N.  J.  Upham.  Mrs.  M.  D.  Tufty, 
Mrs  C  A.  Duncan.  Mrs.  K.  C.  Hoxie, 
Mrs"  M.  S.  Mead.  Mrs.  B.  C.  Wade,  Mrs. 
"  Mrs.    F.    L.    Cowcn, 


A  Ai>reW  v««etable  remedy,  scientifically  prepared  by  ft  tiaff  o*  e«d- 

n?^  oLslJians,  from  healing  roots,  herbs  and  bark,  possessing 

woncferfu    tonfc  and  curative  properties.     S.S.S.  cleanses   and 

p«rifie.  th.  blood-thus  relieving  the  caua  j  of  catarrh 

-take  a  treatment  of  S.S.S.  today— see  how  qmckly  it  will 

iike  these  hTadache.  disappear,  stop  the  jratherlng  bi  yow 

tbroftt  and  heal  the  nostrils^ ^^^^^^^ 

INSIST  ON  THE  GENUINE  S.  S.  S. 
Your  corner  druggist  carries  S.S.S.    Ask  for  .«t  by 

.atie  and  insist  on  getting  it.    Accept  no  substitute. 


Plications  all  dandruff  disappears  and  I  Frank    CTassweller.    Mrs.    F.   L.   t.owcn 
fie  hair  atop,  coming  out-Advertise-    Mrs.  Jt.^ E^  ^-'^itJ^^Th^.  ?^t^Utet 
ment.  I 


If  jom  want  fr—  MMrt  ■•««»al   •t^t. 
ap«cUl  or  loBg  aUnaiag  caa*.,  writ*  f 


Swift  Specific  Co. 

Atlanta,  Ga. 


•ii«!jWi«wi^*«^i*"Hr" 


i 


I  iWJP«i<i  iifcaM^"«**«"^^ 


Wednesday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD< 


April  12, 1916. 


t 


t 


Baseball 
Rowing 


NEWS  AND  VIEWS  OF  THE  SPORT  WORLD 


-•     BOWI_IIVG    •- 


ARCHIE  SAYS  PUYERS  ARE 
NOT  PAID  ENOUGH  COIN 


In  a  Letter  to  Bill  the  Fol- 
lower of  Sport  for  Sport's 
Sake  Declares  That  Tris 
Speaker  and  Other  Stars 
Are  Treated  in  a  Shame- 
ful Manner. 


BY  BRUCE. 

k  9\\V  (  LAIRK,  Wis..  April   ti. 

I  WPi  —  [  see  wlure  another  big 
I  jHfl  loaijue  season  is  about  to 
I  ^^    open.  Mill.     This  gives  prom- 

isc  of  bein'  a  ^rcixi  year  for 

thg    iiiagiiaies    but    a    poor    year    for 
them  players.     Business  men  will  git 
you  in  the  end,*  Hill.     The  first  year 
I    was   Roin'   to   the   university    I    sold 
my  pearl  stick  pin  to  a  fellow  goin'  to 
business  college  U>r  $-'.6;.     Ever  since 
that     time     business     men     has     been 
stickin'  it  into  nic.   There  is  that  poor 
Tris    Si)eaker.      Maybe    lie    has    got   a 
family    to    support.      A    lot    of    them 
shrewd    and    designin'    business    men 
what  is  in  baseball  gits  together  and 
plots    to    take    st>mc    of    the    earnin' 
powers    away    from    this    big    simple 
minded  fellow  who  never  has  the  ad- 
vantages of  the  business  trainin'   one 
receives   in    playin'   poker    in   college.. 
Well,    liill.   Speaker   he   got  $i8,ooo  a 
year  last   season  an<l   maybe   the  sea- 
son before  that  and  then  the  business 
nun    in    the    two    major    leagues    and 
that  federal  league  they  gits  together' 
and    amalamates    and    then    takes    all 
the     money    away    from     them    poor 
players.     This  year,  1   read   in  a  pa- 
per, Speaker  is  only  goin'  to  git  $i-,- 
ooo   a   year.      Bill    that   kind    of   work 
just  naturally  burns  up  guys  like  me 
and  you. 

When  Rube  WaddcU  was  putt  in' 
out  fires  and  fishin'  and  occasionally 
playin"  a  little  baseball  on  the  side  for 
(onnie  Mack,  why  Connie  he  used  to 
hand  Kubo  a  dollar  after  every  game. 
Well.  I'.ill  that  tickled  rube  so  much 
that  he  used  to  forgit  to  ask  for  his 
salary.  Them  business  men  is  al- 
ways takin'  advantage  of  them  poor 
ball   players. 

When  them  business  men  lose  their 
money.  Bill,  they  start  to  yell  and  say 
the  public  is  givin'  them  the  worst  of 
it.  Several  brewers,  a  couple  of  busi- 
ness guys,  a  fellow  who  owned  a 
flock  of  oil  wells  and  some  other  fel- 
lows who  had  read  about  money  in 
Dunns  and  Bradshaws.  got  into  the 
game  and  started  the  Federal  league. 
They  didn't  have  no  more  chance 
than  the  .\orthwcstern  team  but  they 
kecped  right  on  goin'  and  losin'  mon- 
ey. Then,  Bill,  how  they  did  yell. 
They  said  the  i)layers  was  gittin'  all 
llie  money  and  that  yegg  men  and 
second  >t<.)ry  men  was  good  honest 
citizens  compared  to  them  modern 
ball  players.  Honest,  Bill,  I  felt 
sorry  lor  them  ball  players.  1 
knowed  Cobb  was  gittin'  $15,000  and 
this  here  Speaker  was  gittin'  $iS.ooo 
iiul  J«»e  Tinker  was  gittin'  $iJ,ooo 
and  several  small  banks  for  signin', 
but  all  the  time  I  knowed  that  one  of 
these  days  them  lousiness  men  that 
was  in  bast-ball  l)eft)re  thtin  rubes 
busted  in  would  shuffle  the  pack  and 
git  control  of  things.  I  was  right, 
.  Bill,  for  now  some  of  them  poor  and 
downtrodden  ball  players  is  workin" 
for  as  lc)w  as  ?3.<X)0  a  year  and  they 
lias  to  play  out  in  the  hot  sun  all 
summer   long. 

But  then  I  suppose.  Bill,  that  them 
ball  players  have  got  themselves  to 
blame  for  this.  Take  a  fellow  like 
^Tris  Speaker  and  he  could  git  a  swell 
job  at  diggin'  ditches  and  maybe  if  he 
was  lucky  he  would  discover  a  gold 
mine  and  wouldn't  have  to  take  noth- 
in'  from  them  unfeelin"  business  men. 
That's  the  trouble.  Bill,  them  fellows 
rush  into  baseball  without  ever 
thinkin'  that  them  contracts  is  a 
snare  and  delushin'  and  that  some 
rtime  they  is  goin'  to  wake  up  to  the 
fact  that  they  is  gittin'  the  worst  of 
it.  Look  at  that  Tris  Speaker,  he  has 
give  his  best  days  to  the  great  game 
he  has  helped  to  make  popular  with 
all  the  felli)ws  who  sticks  around  the 
tickers  all  over  the  country  and  now 
kvhen    be    is    gittin'    old    and    gray    he 


TONIGHT! 

-OBENING  OF— 

ZENITH  ATHLETIC 
AND  SOCIAL  CLUB 

209  and  2ii  West  Mlchlean  St. 

BOXING,  WRESTLING,  ETC. 

ADMISSION  2Sc 


finds  that  he  is  reduced  and  is  forced 
to  live  on  a  mere  stipend.  It  makes 
a  real  sport's  blood  curdle,  Bill,  to 
hear  01  them  outrages  that  is  per- 
petrated. 

This  year  it  looks  like  the  business 
men   has   got   things   there   own    way 
again.     When  the  money  is  comin'  in 
the  gate  and  the  big  crowds  that  used 
to   git    into   baseball   for   a   dime   and 
then  wonder  why  they  paid  that  much 
to    see    them    feds    try    to    act    when 
they    could    have    went    to   a    movin' 
picture  show  or  stood  by  a  ticker  and 
got  the  score  of  a  real  ball  game,   is 
j)ayin'  two  bits  and  one  dollar  for  a 
ticket,   why   then   you  will  hear   them 
heartless  business  men  say  the  game 
has   come   back   and    that    it    is   on   a 
sound  basis  once  more,  Bill.     But  us 
fellows    who    has    worked    our    way 
through    college    by    playin'    football 
and    tellin'    lies    about    doin'    janitor 
work,   knows   it   is    the   poor   baseball 
players  who  is  gittin'  the  worst  of  it. 
Think  of  that  Tris  Speaker  out  there 
every  day  and  playin'  his  head  off  for 
only  $12,000  a  year  and  them  goggle- 
eyed    business    men    a    laughin'    how 
they  took  his  money  away  from  him 
and  reduced  a  once  haughty  perform- 
er   to   a   poor  and    broken    man.      It 
ain't  funny,  Bill,  and  it  goes  to  show 
that  all  the  sport  is  taken  out  of  base- 
ball.     Why   on   some   of   the    salaries 
some  of  them  players   is  gittin'  even 
the  faculty  of  the  University  of  Min- 
nesota   would    hesitate    before    callin' 
them  professionals. 

Course  my  heart  is  in  the  game  and 
I  want  to  see  it  go  on  and  prosper  in 
a  way,  but  it  makes  me  boil  alovcr  to 
think  of  them  business  men  schemin' 
nights  while  they  is  drinkin'  wine 
how  to  get  more  money  and  reduce 
them  players  to  object  slavery. 

Every  once  in  a  while  a  business 
baseball  player  comes  along  and 
tries  to  make  his  mates  understand 
that  they  is  bein'  robbed  and  mis- 
treated and  then  them  business  guys 
who  is  runnin'  the  game  either  fires 
this  fellow  out  of  the  league  or  they 
give  him  a  job  scoutin'. 

Some  people  say  them  business 
men  is  good  hearted.  Sure  they  is. 
Why  when  Old  Man  Anson  was 
broke  they  gave  him  a  testimonial 
and  say  he  was  the  gratest  baseball 
player  of  his  time.  But  business  is 
business,  Bill,  and  the  only  way  them 
ball  players  can  beat  that  robbin' 
game  is  to  quit  baseball  an  git  some 
good  jobs.  I  hope  Tris  Speaker  gits 
mad  «nd  refuses  to  play  for  that  $12,- 

000  a  year.  But  I  suppose  he's  too 
old  now.  Bill.  They  kept  in  baseball 
until  he  was  an  old  man  and  then 
they  said  they  would  make  him  live 
on  a  pension. 

I  got  to  close.     1  will  see  you  later. 

1  suppose  I  will  go  to  some  games 
thi.s  summer,  but  it  makes  me  mad. 

Your  lovin'  pal,  Archie. 


JIM  RICE  STARTS  WORK  ,• 

WITH  COtUMBIA  OARSMEN 


ANNUAL  BATTLE  FOR  MAJOR 
LEAGUE  PENNANTS  BEGINS 


JIM  RICE. 

Jim  Rice,  the  coach  of  Columbia,  took  hln  crewa  on  the  Hud.«'on  for  the 
first  time  this  season  on  Monday.  This  picture  of  him  was  made  when  he  was 
out  coaching  them. 


BASEBALL 


Amorirans  completed  tholr  exhibition 
sthedule  yesterday,  the  Superbas  win- 
ning: easily.  7  to  2.  They  batted  Pier- 
cey.  a  Pacific  coast  recruit,  freely  In 
the  first,  third  and  fifth  innings.  Two 
errors  on  one  play  In  the  fifth  inning, 
by  Gllhooley.  gave  the  Superbas  two 
runs.  Coombs  and  Dell  held  the  Yan- 
kees «afe,  especially  with  men  on 
bases.  Score:  R.  H.  B. 

New  York  Am.  ..00011000  0 — 3  9  4 
Brooklyn  Nalt.  .3  0  3  0  1  0  0  0  x— 7  8  0 
Batteries — Plercey,  Mogrldge  and 
Alexander,  Nunamaker;  CoomDs,  Dell 
and  Meyers. 

Braves  Defeat  Fordham. 

Now  York,  April  12.— The  Boston 
Nationals  closed  their  exhibition  sea- 
son here  yesterday  by  defeating  Ford- 
ham  university.  7  to  2.  McQuade  of 
the  college  team  pitched  fine  ball 
against  the  Braves,  holding  them  to 
seven  singles.  Six  of  these  hits,  how- 
ever, were  bunched  with  errors  In  the 
two  Innings  In  which  the  big  leaguers 
scored.     Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Boston     00403000  0—7     7     1 

Fordham     0  0  0  0  2  0  0  0  0—2     6     4 

Batteries — Knetzer.  Barnes  and  Gow- 
dy;  MoQuade  and  JicGinn. 

Saint  Player  Stars. 

Nashville.  Tenn..  April  12.— Substi- 
tute Leftflelder  Nllea  of  the  St.  Paul 
American  association  team  got  four 
hits  in  four  times  up,  drove  In  three 
runs,  and  scored  twice  himself  in  the 
game  here  yesterday  with  the  Nash- 
ville team  of  the  Southern  association. 
Score:  ^-  M-  ^• 

Nashville     0  0001000  0—1     i     0 

St.    Paul     00  8  3000  20—1114     0 

Batt<ries  —  Taylor.  Herbert  and 
street;    Finneran   and   Land. 


Easy  for  Red  Sox. 

Boston,  Mass.,  April  12. — The  Boston 
Anvericans  e.'islly  won  from  the  Bos- 
ton collfge  team  yesterday,  9  to  1.  The 
student  pltrhers  were  batted  freely, 
while  Boston's  second  string  twlrlers 
kipt  hits  scattered.  The  collegians' 
only  run  was  the  result  of  an  unusual 
incident,  a  bail,  thrown  to  Hoblltzcl, 
being  lost  when  he  tried  to  tag  a  run- 
ner. The  umpire  allowed  a  player  to 
score   from  second   on   the   play. 

Si'ore'  R   TT   F 

Boston   Am 0  0  0  0  4  1  4  0  x— 913'    3 

Boston    College    00010000  0 — 1      6      4 

Butterle.s — Pennock.  Bador  and  Cady. 
Thomas;    Gill.    Kalloran    and    Deere. 


Giants  Shut  Out  Yale. 

New  Haven,  Conn.,  April  12. — The 
New  York  Nationals  easily  defeated 
Yale  in  the  opening  game  of  the  sea- 
son here  yesterday,  7  to  0.  The  Giants 
hit  opportunely  and  took  advantage  of 
the  collegians'  loose  Infield  work.  Yale 
had  men  on  third  several  times,  but 
hits  were  not  forthcoming  when  need- 
ed.     Score:  R.  H.  K. 

New    York    20011003  0 — 7     7     2 

Yale     00000000  0 — 0     7      6 

Butteries — Hitter,  Palmero  and  Wen- 
dell; Gartleld,  Walsh,  Grant  and  Mun- 
son. 


Cubs  Beat  Colonels. 

Louisville,  Ky.,  April  12.— The  Chi- 
cago Nationals  gathered  sixteen  hits 
off  three  Louisville  pitchers  and  de- 
feated the  local  American  association 
club  9  to  3  here  yesterday.  The  Cubs 
left  Inst  night  for  Cincinnati,  where 
they  open   the  season   today. 

Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Chicago     121005000 — 9   18      2 

Louisville    0  0  0  0  0  0  0  12—3     8     2 

Batteries — Seaton,  Brown  and  Fisch- 
er; Perdue,  James,  Lear  and  Williams. 
— — . — ♦ 

A.  A.  Senators  Score  Heavily. 

Dayton,  Ohio,  April  12.— The  Colum- 
bus American  association  team  pound- 
ed Dayton  Central  league  club's  pitch- 
er yesterday  for  two  dozen  hits,  win- 
ning 19  to  1.     Score:  R.  h.  E 

Columbus     117  1  CI  01  2 — 19   24     2 

Dayton    00000  I  00  0 —  I     3     4 

Batteries— Davis.  O'Toole.  LInke  and 
Pratt;  Mullin,  Groff,  Bond  and  Ulrich, 
Lelbroclt. 

Dodgers?;  Yankees  2. 

Brooklyn.  N.  Y.,  April  12.— The 
Brooklyn    .Vationals     and     New     York 


Eleven-Inning  Tie. 

Springfield,  Ohio.  April  12.— Th«  To- 
ledo American  association  team  played 
eleven  Innings  to  a  2-to-2  tie  with  the 
Springfield  Central  league  team  here 
yesterday.  The  Toledo  team  tied  the 
score   in   the   ninth   inning.     Score: 

"D      TT      V% 

Toledo     0  0  0  I  0  0  0  0  1  00— 2'    7     7 

Springfield     ..10010000000—2     8     6 
Batteries— Mains.    Bailey    and    Swee- 
ney,   Bresnahan;    McCluskey    and    Hun- 
gellng. 

Pirates  Swamp  Terre  Haute. 

Terre  Haute.  Tnd..  April  12. — The 
Pittsburgh  Nationals  defeated  the 
Terre  Haute  Central  league  team,  9  to 
1,  here  yesterday.  Outfielder  Max  Carey 
got  four  hits  In  five  times  at  bat. 
Score:  R-  H.  E. 

Pittsburgh     00  0  2  2  00  23—9  10     1 

Terre    Haute     ...000000010—1     6     1 

Batteries — Mammaux  and  Wilson; 
Waldbaner,  Glesnor,  Schatzman,  War- 
mouth,  Burham  and  Brenegan,  Har- 
grave,    Eggleston. 

* 

Goes  Ten  Innings. 

Columbia.  Mo.,  April  12— The  new 
baseball  field  of  the  University  of  Mis- 
souri was  dedicated  by  a  10-lnnlng 
game  In  which  the  Tigers  defeated 
WeBtminster  college.  Br>ant  of  the 
Tigers   allowed   only   four   hits.      Score: 

R.  H.  E. 

Missouri    2     8     B 

Westminster     l      4     3 

Batteries — Bryant  and  Baumgartner; 
Christian  and  Mueller. 

Kaws  Defeat  Topel<a. 

Kansas  City,  Mo.,  April  12.— The 
Kansas  City  American  association  team 
defeated  the  Topeka  Western  league 
club  yesterday  In  an  exhibition  game. 
Score:  R-  H.  E. 

Topeka «*  .,2      . 

Kansas  City    11  19     4 

Batteries  —  Dushner,  Graver  and 
Snow.  Smith;  Lathrop,  Iron  and  Crisp. 
Hargrave. 

Bloomlngton,  Ind..  April  12.— Yester- 
day's score:  R-  H-  E. 
Indianapolis  American  Assn. ..13  16  2 
Indiana   university    3  11     4 

Batteries — Carter  and  Scliang;  Smith, 
Kunkle  and   Swayne,   Bower*. 
« . 

College  Baseball. 

Princeton,  N.  J..  April  12.— A  well- 
placed  single  just  over  first  base  In 
the  ninth  inning  gave  Priuceio  i  a  vic- 
tory over  Williams  here  yesterday. 
The  game  had  been  scoreless  up  to 
tnis  point.  In  the  ninth,  Doufe'lass 
walked  for  Princeton  and  Scully  was 
safe  when  Douglass  was  rotlrod  at  sec- 
ond, then  Shea  singled,  Scully  scorlrg. 
Score:  P.  H.  E. 

Princeton     00000000  1 — 1     6     2 

Williams    00000  00  00 — 0     2     0 

Batteries — Link  and  Douglass;  Young 
and  Powell. 


Athens,  Ga.,  April  12. — Georgia  uni- 
versity defeated  the  University  of 
Michigan  again  yesterday  7  to  6  in  a 
game  In  which  batting  honors  were 
about  even.     Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Michigan    6     7     5 

Georgia    7     8     6 

Batteries— Andres^  Robins,  Miller 
and    Dunne;    Phllpot   and    Rawson. 


Charlottesville.  Va.,  April  12.— Fast 
fielding  and  Rlx.>y's  steadinesai  at  crit- 
ic.'il  moments  enabled  the  University  of 
v'lrginla  to  make  It  two  atrulght  from 
Cornell   yesterday   3    to   2. 


Here  i«  the  SwinJ 

Ariov 

COLLAR 

Sts^'-TMb  will  ihow  the /?oat 
APRIL  I4tt»i 

Iht^vohe^hto 

Afihhy2i/n  Lexicon9^rn 

CLUETT.  PEABODr&CO..^ic  1k>yN.Y 


New  York.  April  12.— Columbia  uni- 
versity defeated  Dartmouth  collepe 
here  yesterday  at  baseball  by  a  score 
of  11  to  6.  Shortstop  Buonoguro  of  the 
local  team  made  a  triple,  double  and 
two  singles. 


DOG  RAC^IS  ON. 

All-Alaska  Sweepstakes  Begins  With 
Five  Team  Entrants. 

Nome.  Alaska.  April  12. — Five  dog 
teams  started  during  a  snow  storm 
yesterdaj"  In  the  ninth  annual  all- 
Alaska  sweepstakes  race  over  the 
snow  trail  from  Nome  to  Candle  and 
return,  a  distance  of  412  miles.  Fred 
Ayer,  driving  fourteen  fox  hounds, 
was  the  first  to  start.  He  was  fol- 
lowed   at    oue-minute      Antervals      by 


Leonard  Sappala,  with  a  team  of  sev- 
enteen Siberian  wolf  dogs;  Fay  Del- 
zene,  driving  fourteen  malamutes;  Rob- 
ert, Brown,  who  took  out  fourteen 
dogs,  and  Paul  K.legstad.  driving  four- 
teen" bird  dogs.  All  Nome  turned  out 
to  give  the  racers  a  rousing  sendoff. 

Two  hours  and  nine  minutes  after 
the  race  began,  the  first  four  teams 
to  start  arrived  at  Safety  roadhouse, 
Ayer,  BrOwn,  Delzene  and  Sappala 
having  driven  the  first  sixteen  miles 
of  the  race  bunched  together.  Kjeg- 
stad    arrived    several    minutes    later. 


Many  Backing  Two  Boston 

Teams  at  Outset  as 

Winners. 


Acquisition  of  the  Federal 

League  Stars  Mixes 

the  Dope. 


Opening  Games. 

NATIOXAIi. 

BoMton  at  Brooklyn!  fair. 
"Srw    \ork.    at    PlUladelitliia  t    fair. 
Chiraao  at   CInclniinfli   clear. 
PlttMburgh  at  St.   Loula;  clear. 


EASY  FOR  CHAMPION. 

Kid  Williams  Makes  Chopping  Block 
of  Battling  Lahn  at  Baltimore. 

Baltimore.  Md.,  April  12.— Kid  Will- 
iams, bantamweight  champion,  had 
things  all  his  own  way  in  a  ten-round 
bout   with   Battling   Lahn  of  Brooklyn 

here  last  night.  Williams  made  a 
chopping  block  of  his  opponent 
throftghout. 

Lahn  was  groggy  from  the  fifth  un- 
til the  end.  In  the  sixth  he  was 
knocked  down  twice.  He  was  saved 
by  the  bell,  which  found  him  lying 
on.  hlB  back.  I^ahn  had  to  be  carried 
to  his  corner,  but  he  was  able  to  come 
back  in  the  seventh.  He  managed  to 
hold  on  to  the  end,  although  in  bad 
shape. 

Evers  Sells  Club  Interest. 

Troy,  N.  Y.,  April  12.— John  J.  Evers, 
captain  and  second  baseman  of  the 
Boston  Nationals,  yesterday  disposed 
of  his  Interests  in  the  Troy  state 
league  team.  Evers  Is  said  to  have 
made  this  move  at  the  auggestion  of 
the  management  and  owners  of  the 
Braves,  who  expressed  a  desire  to  have 
his  services  and  Interest  and  did  not 
want  him  to  be  hampered  in  any  way 
by  the  worries  attendant  upon  another 
ban  club. 


AMERICAN. 

Detroit   at   Cbieagoi  clear. 
Piilladclphia    at    BoHtoni    rain. 
'WaNtilngton   at   Ke^v    Yorki  clear. 
(^    St.   Louis   at  Cleveland  I  clear. 

'®/®/®/©,'®,'S,'©/©/®'®'®©/®/®/®/®/'®/©/®'®/©'®/®''®/®'¥ 
New  York,  April  12. — The  major 
league  baseball  ieason  of  1916  will  be 
inaugurated  in  eight  of  the  leading 
cities  of  the  East  and  Middle  West 
this  afternoon,  provided  the  favor  of 
the  weather  man  for  the  momentous 
event  has  been  won  by  the  magnates. 
Eight   umpires  in  as   many  parks  will 

five  the  home  plate  Its  first  official 
usting,  send  forth  once  more  the  old 
familiar  battle  cry  "Play  ball!"  and 
sixteen  clubs  will  begin  the  year's  two 
great  pennant  struggles,  which  will 
not  terminate  until  the  first  week  in 
October. 

In  the  National  league,  which  be- 
gins Us  fortv-first  season,  the  initial 
contests  will  bring  together  Boston 
at  Brooklyn;  New  York  at  Philadel- 
phia; Chicago  at  Cincinnati  and  Pitts- 
burgh at  St.  Louis. 

The  opening  games  in  the'  American 
league — its  seventeenth  season — will 
see  Washington  playing  at  New 
York;  Philadelphia  at  Boston;  St. 
Louis  at  Cleveland  and  Detroit  at  Chi- 
cago. 

Many  of  these  clubs  have  been 
strengthened  during  the  past  winter 
and  every  indication  points  to  close 
races  for  the  pennants.  The  defunct 
Federal  league  and  the  minor  circuits 
have  been  flnecombed  for  diamond 
talent.  In  some  cases,  famous  stars 
will  be  seen  in  strange  uniforms,  but 
once  the  players  and  fans  have  ac- 
customed themtelves  to  the  new  com- 
binations, the  general  prediction  of  a 
"banner  year"  In  baseball  seems  like- 
ly to  be  realized. 

Boston  Teams  Favorites. 

While   there   Is   a  vast  difference    of 


opinion  among  close  followers  of  the 
game  regarding  the  order  in  which 
the  teams  will  finish  the  season,  the 
two  Boston  clubs  appear  to  have  the 
greatest  number  of  backers,  although 
the  eleventh  hour  sale  of  Tris  Speaker 
has  not  improved  the  chances  of  the 
Boston  Americans.  In  the  National 
league,  Boston,  Philadelphia,  Brook- 
lyn and  New  York  are  generally 
picked  to  finish  In  the  first  division, 
while  In  the  American  league  Boston. 
Chicago,  Detroit  and  New  York  are 
picked  to  fill  first  division  positions. 
In  the  senior  league,  the  Philadel- 
phia club,  which  won  last  season's 
pennant,  starts  the  1916  campaign 
with  almost  the  same  lineup  as  a  year 
ago.  Manager  Moran  believes  that  the 
Phillies  will  repeat  their  winning  per- 
formance but  many  critics  disagree 
with  him.  The  Philadelphia  clan  is 
fully  as  strong  as  last  season  but  the 
general  strengthening  of  the  other 
clubs  will  make  the  going  harder  for 
the  Quakers  this  summer. 

Braveii   Looked  on  as  Class. 

The  Boston  Braves,  runners  up  to  the 
Pliillles  last  season,  are  considered  by 
many  experts  to  be  the  class  of  the 
National  league  this  year.  The  team 
has  been  strengthened  with  the  addi- 
tion of  several  former  Federal  league 
players.  Including  Ed  Konetchy,  Frank 
Allen  and  Elmer  Knetzer.  George  Stal- 
llngs  again  will  appear  in  the  man. 
agerlal  role,  while  Percy  Haughton, 
the  famous  Harvard  football  coach, 
now  is  president  of  the  club,  which 
changed  ownership  during  the  winter. 
The  Infield  and  pitching  departments 
are  unusually  strong  with  a  fair  out- 
field and  catching  corps. 

Brooklyn,  which  wound  up  the  1915 
race  in  third  place,  appears  to  be  fully 
as  efficient  as  a  year  ago.  Manager 
Robinson  predicts  that  the  club  will 
be  a  pennant  factor  this  year  from 
the  very  start.  The  Infield  and  pitch- 
ing corps  are  the  strongest  features 
of  the  Superba  combination.  The 
catching  department,  due  to  the  ac- 
quisition of  Chief  Meyers,  Is  stronger 
than  last  year.  The  outfield,  with 
Johnston  in  the  lineup  should  be  fair- 
ly  effective. 

The  winning  ability  of  the  Chicago 
club,  which  finished  fourth  a  year  ago. 
Is  certain.  Joe  Tinker  has  been  valiant- 
ly trying  to  produce  a  winning  com- 
bination from  the  amalgamated  Cubs 
and  Chicago  Federals,  but  has  found 
some  of  his  veterans  lacking  in  the 
speed  he  desires.  Team  play  has  suf- 
fered somewhat  from  the  fact  that  the 
players  are  not  entirely  accustomed 
to  each  other,  while  unexpected  weak- 
ness Jn  the  infield  and  poor  hitting 
have  developed.  Nevertheless,  critics 
in  Chicago  believe  the  team  will  soon 
round  into  formidable  shape. 

Callahan'*    Aggregation. 

Pittsburgh  is  another  club  which 
starts  the  season  with  a  new  manager 
at  the  helm.  Jimmy  Callahan,  the  1916 
leader,  expects  his  team  to  finish  in 
the  first  division.  The  Pirates  have 
a  number  of  new  players  and  it  prob- 
ably will  take  the  best  part  of  the 
season  to  weld  the  old  and  the  new 
material  Into  effective  combination. 

Miller  Hugglns,  manager  of  St.  Louis 
Nationals,  holders  of  sixth  place  last 
year,    predicts    a    good    season    for    his 


team  If  his  infield  will  stand  the  strain. 
He  will  not  send  his  own  name  in  b.9 
a  player.  Betzel  will  take  the  vet- 
eran's place  at  second  base,  while  Beck 
will  play  his  old  position  at  third. 
The  gap  at  shortstop  will  be  filled  by- 
Roy  Corhan,  who  made  a  good  record 
in  the  Pacific   Coast  league. 

Cincinnati  is  picked  by  many  to 
make  the  best  showing  of  any  of  the 
Western  clubs.  The  Reds  have  ob- 
tained a  number  of  former  Federals 
since  last  season,  when  the  team  fin- 
ished in  seventh  place,  including  Hal 
Chase,  who,  while  a  member  of  th9 
New  York  Americans,  played  first  base 
In  a  manner  that  made  him  one  of  tlio 
stars  of  the  Junior  league.  If  Chas© 
puts  his  heart  and  head  into  his  play 
lie  will  be  a  great  assistance  to  Man- 
ager Herzog.  who  has  an  excellent 
pitching  staff,  good  outfield,  fair  ia-. 
field  and  catching  corps. 

Giants    'Ave    'Opes. 

From  last  place  a  year  ago  to  a' 
first  division  berth  is  the  prediction 
made  by  the  supporters  of  tlie  XewT 
York  club.  The  Giants  undoubtedly 
have  been  strengthened  since  last  sea- 
son, but  it  appears  unlikely  that  Man* 
ager  McQraw's  clan  can  come  back 
and  make  a  successful  fight  for  the 
pennant  this  year.  The  addition  of 
Kauff,  Rousch  and  Rarlden  from  tho 
Federal  ranks  will  help  materially. 
The  outfield  Is  the  best  that  tht^ 
Giants  have  had  in  many  seasuns  iit 
batting  fielding  and  throwing.  The 
Infield  Is  unbalanced  and  an  uncertaia 
quantity. 

In  the  American  league  there  have 
been  fewer  changes  in  the  personnel 
of  the  teams.  Boston,  Detroit,  Chi- 
cago, Washington  and  Philadelphia 
took  few  if  any  of  the  Federal  league 
talent,  although  it  will  try  out  youn« 
players.  New  York,  Cleveland  and  St. 
Louis  have  strengthened  their  coni'* 
binatlons  from  various  sources  and  tha 
race  should  prove  unusually  close. 
Will  Champs  Repeat? 

Just  what  effect  the  absence  of  Trla 
Speaker  from  the  world's  champions 
will  have  on  the  season's  play  is  prob'* 
lematical.  The  management  of  the  Red 
Sox  seems  to  be  well  satisfied  that 
Clarence  Walker  will  fill  the  outflel<f 
vacancy  satisfactory.  With  tliese 
two  changes  and  the  addition  of  San» 
Agnew  to  the  staff  of  catchers  the 
playing  strength  of  the  club  Is  as  for- 
midable as  it  was  a  year  ago,  and  ita 
chances  to  repeat  as  a  pennant  win- 
ner are  seemingly  more  than  promis- 
ing. Manager  Carrigan  feels  confident 
that  the  team  has  not  been  weakened 
In  any  department  and  that  perhapa 
physically  his  men  are  In  better  shapd 
than   they  were  a  year  ago. 

Detroit  and  Chicago,  which  finished 
second  and  third,  respectively.  last 
year,  will  enter  the  present  campaigrt 
with  veteran  teams,  although  botlj 
have  several  promising  young  players 
in  reserve.  The  only  regular  on  the 
Detroit  club  whose  place  is  not  con- 
sidered secure  is  First  Baseman 
Burns.  He  has  not  hit  well  thus  far 
this  spring.  The  pitching  staff  prob- 
ably will  be  Covaleskle.  James.  Dauss 
and  Boland,  all  veterans,  as  regulaf 
performers. 

Chances  of  White  Sox. 

The  most  Important  change  in  the 
lineup  of  the  White  Sox  is  the  shift  of 
George  Weaver  to  third  base,  this  be- 
ing made  possible  by  the  ability  in 
Manager  Rowland's  opinion,  of  'Zf  ij 
Terry,  the  Los  Angeles  recruit,  to  taka 
Weaver's  place  at  shortstop.  Byrd 
Lynn  has  fulfilled  expectations  and, 
with  Jack  Lapp,  will  battle  for  the 
honor  of  understudying  Catcher  Schalk.. 

Clark  Griffith,  one  of  the  keenest  of 
managers,  is  satisfied  that  the  membersi 
of  his  team,  the  Washington  Amer^ 
leans,    win    this    year    not    be    troubled 


This, 
to  you» 


LBERT 

the  national  joy  smoke 

hits    the    smoke -appetite- spot 
without  a  miss  I    Yes,  sir ;  P.  A.  t 
cuts  out  all  argument,  all  ques-' 
tion  as  to  how  m^uch  pleasure 
you  can  get  out  of  a  pipe  or 
rolled  cigarette.     The  patented 
process  fixes  that — and  re- 
moves  bite  and  petrch  !    You. 
simply  need  an    introduction 
via  a  toppy  red  bag  or  tidy  red 
tin,   then  you'll  absorb   some 
first-hand  facts  that  certainly 
will     make-you-sit-up-and*, 
take-notice  1 

Gentlemen,   tobacco   satisfac- 
tion is  one  of  those  little  things 
in  life  that's  coming  to  you  if 
you'll  Just  stay-put-a-spelU 
and"  embrace' it.     Prince 
Albert  will  supply  that  satis- 
faction just  as  sure  as  you're 
a  foot  high !    We  tell  you  P.  A.  will  exceed  the  liveliest  imaginations  of 
tobacco  joy  you  can  hatch.     We  tell  you  that  its  quality,  its  flavor,  aroma 
and  coolness  just  beat  all  reckoning.     And  just  add  the  little  old  fact 
that  it  can't  bite,  can't  parch i 

Figure  out  how  a  smoke  like  this  will  "set"  on  your 
palate,  sun-up-to-tum-in-time  I  You  go  to  Prince  Albert 
like  it  alwa}^  was  your  pal — and  don't  worry  about 
your  smoke-pas^  /  Let  P.  A.  take  care  of  the  future  I 

R.  h  REYNOLDS  TOBACCO  COMPANY,  Wiii»taa-S«leB«  N.  C. 


Prinem  Albmrt  it  toU  everywhere  in 
toppy  redhage,  5c;  titty  red  tine,  lOe; 
handeome  pound  and  htdf-p^tnd  tim 
hunudore — and  that  clasey  pound 
eryetal-glaee  humidor  with  thm 
eponge-moiMtener  top  that  keep*  thm 
tobacco  in  tA«  fin^gt  kind  of  trim^ 


'\in     ^-%'^'^'^-     '■■•-' 


J    I       11       ■!  _l 


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MW^WiiV^ 


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I  ^•f  #— — ^^^ 


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ift  >.m 


^hMriUBaM^ 


.,— . 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


13 


with  dlFSonslon  and  are  propnrpd  to 
tiiipport  Walt'T  Johnson  find  the  othta- 
int-mbers  of  the  twirling  staff.  Th'" 
new  <ir«t  basoaian,  Joe  Judge,  from  the 
International  leaRUC.  Is  expected  by  his 
teammates  to  outplay  any  other  man  In 
that  position  on  any  American  league 
club  this  season  and  the  pitching  and 
catchliiK    departments   are   vtry   strong. 

The  New  York  club,  which  won  llfth 
place  In  last  year'8  chase,  has  been 
grr<atly  improved  with  the  purchase  of 
Lee  Mageo,  Cullop  and  Gedelon,  from 
the  Federals;  Home  Run  Baker  from 
the  Athletics  and  a  number  of  prom- 
ising recruits  from  the  minors.  Every 
department  appears  to  be  strong  in 
both  fielding  and  batting,  while  the 
pitching  and  catching  staff  i«  much  su- 
perior to  the  old  combinations. 
Outlook    for   Othrm. 

Through  tlio  acQulsitlon  of  several 
Federal  leaguf  stars,  the  St.  Louis 
Americans,  sixth  last  year,  are  also 
considered  much  stronger.  Piank,  a 
former  pitcher  for  the  Phlladelprila 
Athletics  and  last  year  with  the  fat. 
Louis  Federals,  is  on  the  hurling  staff 
together  with  Davenport.  (J room  and 
Crandall,  a  force  of  Federal  h-iigue 
l>itcher.M.  Armando  Marsans  will  be  in 
the  outfield.  ,        ... 

The  Cleveland  American  team  s  chief 
strength  lie.s  In  the  acquisition  of 
Speaker  and  Arnold  (Jandil  from  VVa.'^h- 
Ington.  Speaker's  ail-around  ability  is 
a  known  a.'?.s.t.  C.andll  l.s  a  strong 
batsman,  a  good  fielder  and  fa.^t  on  the 
ba.ses.  T»rry  Turner,  who  served  as  a 
utility  infielder  much  of  last  season, 
■will  play  at  third.  Tom  Daley,  catch- 
er, and  Larry  Chappelle.  outfielder,  are 
two  new  faces  that  will  be  seen  with 
the  Indians,  each  at  present  slated  for 
extra   duty. 

Connie  Mack,  manager  of  the  once 
famous  Athletics,  is  making  no  pre- 
dictloni*.  The  Philadelphia  Americans 
etart  the  season  with  a  mixture  of  vet- 
erans and  minor  league  recruits,  and 
Mack  has  stated  repeatedly  that  he  Is 
building   for   1»17. 

Pre.<<ident  Tener  has  announced  the 
following  assignm»'nt8  of  umpires  for 
the  opening  games  of  the  National 
league:  At  Brooklyn.  William  J.  Klem 
and  Robert  D.  Emsile;  at  Philadelphia, 
C'harle.s  Rlgler  and  Peter  Harrison;  at 
Cincinnati,  William  Byron  and  Ernest 
Quiglev:  at  St.  Louis.  Henry  O'Day  and 
Mai   Ka.^on;   substitute.   A.  L.  Orth. 

TRYINGTOlVADE 

FIGHT  FILM  LAW 


M.  D.  McOulre,  president  of  the  New- 
York  Real  Estate  Dealers*  exchange, 
and  J.  J    Orknay  of  Canada. 

The  accused  are  charged  with  hav- 
ing set  up  machines  on  the  Canadian 
border  at  Rouses  Point  for  the  purpose 
of  transferring  from  the  Canadian  side 
films  of  the  fight  pictures  onto  Amer- 
ican films  for  exhibition  into  the  Unit- 
ed   States.  .      _  .  , 

A  motion  picture  projecting  machine 
containing  the  original  film  of  the 
fight  was  set  up  on  the  Canadian  side 
of  the  line,  and  on  the  American,  with- 
in twelve  Inches  of  the  other  machine, 
a  motion  picture  camera  was  set  up. 
Powerful  electric  lights  were  used  to 
tran.sfer  the  pictures  from  the  project- 
ing machines  to  the  sensitized  film  In 
th-'  camera.  In  this  manner  the  film- 
makers. It  Is  charged,  hoped  to  evade 
the  law. 

MEETING  SET 
FOR  AMATEURS 

City   Baseball   League   of 
1915  Will  Be  Re- 
organized. 


GREAT  SEASON  PREDICTED 

DY  JOHN  BURMIISTER 


11 


President  of  Northern  League  Expects""6^reatest 
Race  in  the  Circuit's  History — Darby  t'Brien 
Believes  He  Has  Some  Real  Ball  Pla}er|— Su- 
perior Has  a  Squad  of  Sure  Enough  Baseball 
Material. 


Arrests  Due  for  Attempt  to 

Import  Willard-Johnson 

Pictures. 

Pyrncuse.  N.  Y..  AT>ril  12. — Indict- 
ments against  six  prominent  New 
Yorkers  and  one  Canadian  charging 
them  wUh  conspiring  to  violate  the 
law  prohibiting  the  importation  of  mo- 
tion pictures  of  the  Willard-Johnson 
fiKlit,  and  with  bringing  into  tlie  United 
St.ite.s  pictorial  representations  of  the 
fight  in  violation  of  the  law  returned 
by  the  Federal  grand  Jury,  have  been 
pent  to  the  United  States  district  at- 
torney at  New  York,  an<l  the  arrest 
of   five  of  the  men   is  exi)ected   today. 

The  men  are  Harold  T.  Edwards  of 
the  law  firm  of  (llney  &  Comatock; 
Isaac  C  V.  Ulman.  manager  of  the 
Duplex  company;  Harry  A  .Flshbcck, 
ext»ert  cinematograph  operator;  W.  V. 
Brymer.  James  J.  Johnston,  manager 
of    MadiFon    Square    Garden;    Lawrence 


A  meeting  of  the  Duluth  Amateur 
Baseball  league  has  been  set  for  Fri- 
day evening.  The  place  of  meeting 
la  the  Fenton-Duby  store  and  the  time 
8    o'clock. 

It  Is  expected  that  representatives 
of  the  Board  of  Trade,  Patrick,  North- 
ern Drug,  Edlsons,  Wolvins  and  Du- 
luth Street  Railway  ball  clubs  will  be 
on  hand  to  assist  In  starting  the  1916 
playing  season  of  the  league. 

Also.  It  is  announced  that  repre- 
sentatives of  any  other  baseball  teams 
of  the  city  are  cordially  invited  to  be 
present. 

The  election  of  officers,  selection  of 
gr(.und8,  and  other  matters  will  come 
up    for    ccjnalderatlon. 

Next  Monday  evening  there  will  be  a 
meeting  of  the  captains  and  managers 
of  the  Intermediate  league.  This  meet- 
ing  will  be  held  In  the  Fenton-Duby 
store  and  will  be  called  at  8  o'clock. 
All  managers  and  captains  arc  asked 
to   be   present. 

newzenith'club 
enters  the  field 

The    grand     opening     of     the     Zenith 

Social    and    Athletic    dub,    209-U    VV«;st 

Michigan     street,     will     be     celebrated 

!  this    evening.       Steamboat      Bill     Scott 

,  and    an     Indian     heavyweight     pugilist 

,  sailing     along     smoothly      under      the 

name   of  Chief  Watson,   are    to   don   the 

gloves   and    mingle    for   a    few    rounds. 

!    Kid     Billings    of    Superior    Is    also    on 

;  the   card.     In    addition    to    these    con- 

I  tests,   a   number   of  other  features   are 

promised. 
j  According  to  the  announcem»*nf  of 
Its  officers,  the  new  club  enters  the 
1  local  athletic  field  with  a  large  list  of 
I  members.  It  Is  expected  that  the  new 
organization  will  actively  enter  all 
1  branches   of  athletics. 


Duluth  baseball  players  are  to  re- 
port here  next  Saturday.  The  players 
of  the  Superior  team  are  also  scheduled 
to  begin  the  preliminary  practice  sea- 
son the  last  part  of  the  present  week. 
Lefty  Davis  has  sent  out  the  call  for 
his  men  to  report  In  the  range  city 
early  the  coming  week.  Col.  Bob  Un- 
glaub  of  the  Fargo  team  will  start  the 
preliminary  work  the  first  of  next 
week.  Charley  Moll  of  Winnipeg  has 
also    notified    his    men    to    be    on    hand  ! 


lines  up  on  the  field  as  formidable  as 
It  appears  on  paper,  the  Red  Sox  will 
bear  watching  from  the  rise  of  the 
barrier. 

Close   Raee    Expected. 

In  a  letter  received  from  President 
John  Burmeister,  the  league  executive 
declares  that  he  Is  sure  that  the  qual- 
ity of  baseball  played  in  the  Northern 
during  the  coming  season  will  be  the 
fastest   In  years. 

"Only  the  very  best  of  last  year's 
players  will  be  retained,"  says 
Burmeister.  "The  six-club  circuit 
inea.is  a  survival  of  the  fit- 
test.   Insofar    as    the    playing  material 


iiiau     iiunnci*     Mto     w..^..     .-     —     —     lesi,     inBoiar     a.n     iiie     piajring    maieriai 

the  first  part  of  the  coming  week.  Fort  |  la  concerned.     A  number  of  promising 
..      _..ii    _„„...^Ki«.   <i.,tinir    new    men    have      been      signed.      Every 


team    In    the    league,    we    believe,      has 
been    strengthened.       Baseball     players 


William    recruits   will   assemble   during 
the   coming   week. 

With  the  opening  of  the  Northern  -p-'pleAVifu^^VhiV  yearrrc^TplayeTs^rt 
league  «»-*«o»  «f,\  '"^  be/inning  to  sit  !  that,  and  the  Northern  league  has 
around  the  V'r^"^J;  ''■^^^^^^X^  fnterest  taken  advantage  of  this  situation  to 
up  and   manifest  an  Increasing  interest    ,  ,        otrenirth       THp    r«l«ln«^    of 


Increase  Its  strength.  The  raising  of 
the  salary  limit  will  Insure  a  higher 
class  of  baseball.  The  approaching 
season  should  prove  one  of  the  great- 
est in   the  entire  history  of  the  North- 


■mmkhmmmmmmxmhmmmhmmmmhib 
m  M 

S       Rheumatism !       ! 

M        How  is  rheumatism  recognized?    Some  have  said—       M 


In  learning  what  Is  In  store  for  them 
during  the  coming  season. 

Until  the  material  signed  by  the  vari- 
ous managers  Is  given  a  tryout.  It  will 
prove    rather    difficult   to   secure    a   line    ^^^    league" 

on  the  strength  of  the  «»*  ^7'  *^''i^?  I  With  such  experienced  baseball  men 
that  are  to  make  tile  race  for  tlieiji.,,^^  O'Brien.  Brautigan.  Moll.  Lefty 
gonfalon.  On  paper,  ""'i  »f f "'i*4"^,,J  J  Davis  and  Col.  Bo-b  Unglaub  In  charge 
the  dope  In  the  ca.se.  the  league  snouiu  ,  ^^  ^^^  playing  end  of  the  game  a 
be  faster  than  last  year.  "'°.V">  great  rac;  should  mark  the  1916  sea- 
lleved    every    team    In    the    *^Vk?^  l^^ar  1  "on   of   the   Burmeister   circuit. 

circuit   will    face    the   barrier   this  year  | ^_ 

stronger    than   a    year    ago 

Duluth  got  away  wretchedly  last 
season.  It*'was  expected  that  the  team 
would  rally  and  show  a  w  nn  ng 
J^reak.    but    the    long    awaited    winning 

form  never  'n«t«''«"^^'i.H,?,^  sJox  weJe 
die  of  the  sea.son  the  White  Sox  wert, 
virtiinllv  counted  out  of  me  rat-e. 
.VUnagei^  DaVby  o;Brien  and  Owner 
Hnnv  A  IJlume  believe  that  there  wm 
b.".rdc^cld'cdly  dififerent  condition  dur- 
ing  the  season  that  is  but  a  little  over 
two    weeks   away. 

teams    he    has    ever    handled. 

If  the  intleld  candidates  come  up  to 
rxD.ctation  the  glaring  weakness 
dli^iaVciTA  th.  first  defense  last  year 
will    be    supplnnted      by      a      fast     and 

''"OTVafsilort  is  a  tried  and  proved 
nullity  W.bb  who  Is  expected  to  bo 
Ssed  a^'  second  b,tse.  was  good  enough 
to  be  signed  for  a  trial  with  the  In- 
d?anapoli»  t.am  of  the  American  as- 
sociation. The  breaking  up  o'  the 
K.'d-ral  league  crowded  a  lot  or  triea 
^layers  on  fhe  market  and  it  was  de. 
?lded  to  let  Webb  have  another  sea- 
son  in   minor  league  companjr. 

If   this   kiddo  Lausche.   the  Cleveland 
b 
Da 


Rheumatism  is  a  dull  pain. 
Rheumatism  is  a  sharp  pain. 
Rheumatism  is  sore  muscles. 
Rheumatism  is  stiff  joints. 
Rheumatism  is  a  shifting  pain. 
All  have  declared — Rheumatism  is  Pain* 

Sloan's  Liniment  applied  :— 

The  blood  begins  to  flow  freely—the  body's 
warmth  is  renewed— the  congestion  disap* 
pears — the  pain  is  gone. 

Sloan^s 
Liniment 

KILLS  PAIN     (GUARANTEED) 

Rheumatism  and  allied  pains  yield  to  the  penetrat- 
ing qualities  of  this  warming  liniment. 


■ 

M 
M 
M 
M 
M 
M 
M 
■ 
M 
M 
M 
■ 
■ 
M 
H 
M 
M 
M 


PIN  RECORD 
IS  BROKEN 

«i  ■;  V 

Elcora     Bowling     Team 
Makes  Five-Man  Mark 

of  3,098. 

^1 

Cigar  Men  Pass  Oak  Halls 

in  Major  League  Flag 

Race. 


For 
particulara 
address 
J.  M.  NEAFUS, 

Traveling  Pass.  AgL, 
607  PaUadio  Building, 
DULUTH,  MINN. 


THE  BEST  WAYANY  QAY 


The    greatest    total    pin    record    ever 

made  In   Duluth  was  hung  up  last  eve- 

If   this   kiddo  l^uscne.   .nr  .  ..,..«..^  ,  «'"«    by    the    members    of    the    Elcora 

.oy    proves  the  find  at   third   base  that  j  team    In   their  contest   against   the  Em- 

■>arby    Is   confident    ho    will,    and    FauU    p^p^g    ^^^^^    ^f   ^^^^    Major   league.     The 

«i"';'t   "»?„^'l„*-'^;l'I*^,^"I  "Jlnoo  "Touehe?"    Elcoras  hung  up  a  new  record  of 


rXd  will  be  the  be^i  since  "Toughey 
"re'n.  King  Kohl.  O'lJrlen  and  Merry 
McCronc  formed  about  the  be^t  n- 
fl.lJ  thit  evtr  worked  on  a  Dulutn 
ball  club. 


Elcoras  hung  up  a  new  record  of  3.098. 
winning  three  straight  games  from  the 
Empress  five,  and  going  Irtto  the  lead 
In  the  closely-contested  race  for  the 
iilum^e  and  O'Brien  ceased  worrying  Major  league  bowling  pennant  of  1916 
monu^.rHink'schrieb?r  sen!"h/;is  As  the  result  of  the  tbr^e  wins  of 
^-ned  contract.  in  addition  to  I  last  evening  the  Elcorts  have  broken 
qchrieber  there  are  Altman.  Srhro.  def,    the  league  tie  and  are  leading  the  Oak 

McC.raw.    VIgerust    and    several    others.     "-"-     -  »•"    »- -•    —  ^' «      • 

It  Is  not  dertnltf  ly  known  at  this  time 
whether  Chief  Williams  will  report 
for   pr.Tctlce. 

IMtrhera  Look  Pro«sUI"if. 
While  the  Dook  was  exc-eedlng  loath 
to  lose  the  service  of  Penfold.  from 
whom  DHrby  expected  mvch.  the 
pitching  material  Is  plentiful  and 
looks  good.  There  are  about  nine  slab- 
bers on  the  string  and  out  of  this  ma- 
terial the  Irish  pilot  expects  to  secure 
a    real    twirling   staff.       .  .,,     ,      . 

Rivalry  Is  the  staff  of  life  In  base- 
ba'l  Just  as  competition  insures  keen- 
ness In  trade.  Superior  went  hay  wire 
last    year,    presenting   a    motley    coUec- 


collec-  i-«»'t»  uT^euii  n»  iipKn  tnfir  eyes  wn 
tToA  'of^baff  players  and  one  of  the  the  Elcora  bunch  hit  the  wood  for 
nuFi    .11    .^         f.     .       ..  _    ueradedM'0o4    score    in    their    first    game.     T 


v..^-      .vu.t.iva<^       K*^     milt     Mrt  V       IVClUAril(      Wi 

Halls,  who  ltd  thcffleague  durla^f  the 
greater  part  of  tne  season,  by  two 
games. 

While  the  Elcoras  were  climbing  at 
the  expense  of  the  Empress  five,  the 
Oak  Halls  were  being  driven  back  by 
the  Sharkcrafis.  the  tailor  crew  takin?; 
two  out  of  three  games  from  the 
clothiers.     With  but  three. more  games 

hed- 
the 

by 

— .    "...-."    garrison  finish  has 

been  decidedly  the  feature  of  the 
league  race. 

Fans  began  to  open  their  eyes  when 

The 


Boston.  Speaker  tried  to  arrange  this 
wltli  Lannln.  but  failed. 

Last  night  Dunn  attempted  to  reach 
Lannln  by  wire  and  effect  a  settle- 
ment, but  could  not  get  In  touch  with 
the  Boston  man.  It  Is  believed  that 
Dunn  and  Speaker  will  reach  a  satis- 
factory settlement  today  In  case  Lan- 
nln   should    persist    In    his    refusal. 

Neither  Speaker  nor  Dunn  would 
make  any  statement.  Both  said  that 
whether  Speaker  dons  a  Cleveland 
uniform  depends  upon  the  conference 
today.  It  was  intimated  that  the  sal- 
ary offered  Speaker  Is  well  In  excess 
of  the  19.000  -Which  had  been  offered 
the   latter  by  the   Boston  club. 

FINALS  SCHEDULED  IN 
VOLLEY  BALL  LEAGUE 

Final  games  In  the  Duluth  Business 
Men's  Volley  Ball  league  are  sched- 
uled for  today.  Dunning's  team  will 
take  on  the  aggregation  captained  by 
Hart.  A  very  close  game  is  looked  for. 
The  standing  of  the  teams: 
•p.        W.       L. 

5 4  A         0 

1 3  2 

2 4  2 

4 4  1 

3 8         0 


0NLY4  DAYS  MORE 

OF 


W.  S.  KIRK'S  SALE 


-OF- 


wi)r<»t    teams     mat    ever    inaHMuernurv*    -•--- ...    »•■«'••    1 

under   the   guLse    of   professional    base-  1  "econd  game  yielded  a  1.023  count  and 
bill     During  the   coming  season    there  I  the  final  game  score  was  l.Oil, 
promises    to    be    an    entirely    different  I       The    Big     Duluths    won     two    out    of 
CO  nplexlon     to      the      baseball      affairs  1  three    games     from    the     FlUgcrald     & 
aToss    the    bay.     A    manager    with    the  j  Winchester   five; 

reputation   of  being  a  real   leader,   has  ;       Some    great    Individual    scores    were 

'      baseball  ]  hung   up.     Michalek    got   61fi   points   fo 


No. 
No, 
No. 
No. 

No. 


1 
2 
3 
3 


Pet. 
1.000 
.666 
.600 
.250 
.000 


U.S.  ARMY  AND 
NAVY  GOODS 

LEAVING  DULUTH  FOR  GOOD  APRIL  17 

Your  last  chance  to  buy  Uncle  Sam's  Goods  at 

Bargain  Prices. 

W.  S.  KIRK 

313  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET} 


Harvard's  First  Trial  Race. 


Low  Fares  to 

"Zone  of  Plenty"  States 

From  Duluth  and  Supior 


1 


1 

ir 

s 


32.50 


One  Way  Colonist 
Fare  to 

Spokane 

Seattle 

Taccima 

I'urtland 

Vancouver 

and 

North  Pacific 

Coaijt  Points 


On  Sale  March  25 
to  April  1 1  iucl. 


< 


27.50 


One  Way  Colonist 
Fare  to 

Great  Falls 

Helena 

Dutte 

Kaiispcll 

and  many 

other 

Western 

Montana 

Points 

On  Sale  March  25 
to  April  li  incl. 


i 


16.50 


One  Way  Settlers 
Fare  to 

Havre 
Great  Falls 
Lewislown 
Billings 
and  many 
(»ther 
Eastern 
Montana 
Points 

On  Sale  Tuesdays 

March  14  to 

April  2S  incL 


in  connection  with  the  ball  club  across 
the  bay.  It  looks  eminently  solid  and 
thoroughly  substantial. 

Smith,  a  pitcher  who  led  the  Three-1 
le;igue  In  1914;  Burden,  Bayless  and 
Donaldson,  the  latter  with  Madison 
last  year,  the  same  man  Darby  O'Brien 
tried  to  get.  make  It  nearly  certain 
that  the  Red  Sox  will  have  a  strong 
and    reliable    flinging    staff. 

Tifney.  a  .300  hitter,  a  former  W.-I. 
star.  Is  out  for  the  Initial  sack.  Tony 
Burgwald  will  be  back.  Brautigan  will 
hold  down  third  base.  He  was  a  star 
In    the   W.-I.,    being  a  .300   clouter. 

Wllkenson,  a  former  W.-I.  outfielder, 
with  the  reputation  of  being  a  fence 
buster:  Carl  Miller,  another  W.-I. 
patch-tender,  and  Mueller,  last  year 
with  St.  Boniface.  along  with  Al 
Swalm,  are  outtteld  candidates.  These 
boys  are  expected  to  make  about  the 
niftiest  garden  tenders  In  the  league. 
Schultz  has  been  signed  as  a  backstop. 

This  team  looks  awfully  good.     If  It 


EmpreMM^ 


Daugherty     178 

Hilber    175 

Jenswold    178 

Trevllllon     144 

Ptacek     177 

Totals     S64 

Eleara. 

Michalek     201 

Stausa      159 

Kampman     266 

Schultz     216 

Server    222 


ISl 

19 

no 

tSt 

222 
181 
182 
223 
2i^ 


185_  544 

168—  631 

174—  622 

166—  498 

163—  602 


856— 2J597 

193—  €16 

194—  634 
235—  683 
166 —  605 

'223—    660 


Totals 1064   IflS^I  toil— 3.098 

Oaii   Ball*. 


In  addition  Low  Round  Trip  Homeseekers  Fares  will  be  in 
effect  first  and  third  Tuesdays,  April  to  November,  to  above 
points. 

Send  for  free  36 -page  illustrated  booklets  with  maps  in 
colors  describing  opportunities  in  the  Zone  of  Plenty  States: 
Minnesota,  North  Dakota,  Montana,  Idaho,  Washington  and 

Oregon.    A  postal  brings  them. 


A.  E.  HATHAWAY,  Dial.  Pass.  Agent 
W.  C.  WOOD,  City  Pass,  and  Ticket  Agent 

43a  West  Supc-Hor  Street 
DtllXTH,  MINN. 


Berlnl 173 

Johnson      207 

Brown 166 

Olsen ..169 

Root    184 


Totals 


2d«  -  179—    660 
i«l  ?:i34—    494 


199 
18« 

lao 


898  t38 

Siiarl&rraft. 

Foster     193  160     l»i 

Tnrnldson     167  171     174 

McFarlane     188  1»»     149 

Wendell      194  162 

Otterson 192  183 


171—  636 
182—  639 
202 —    676 

868—2,704 


647 

602 

636 

170—    626 

206—    681 


Totals     924  875  893—2.692 

BIk    DvlMth. 

Whitney     202  177  181—  661 

Berkley     160  225  212—  697 

Neumann      170  193  195 —  tS8 

Murphy    167  178  158 —  493 

Stlegler    167  213  194—  674 


A  "Cascaret  Tonight  Will 

Make  You  Bright,  Rosy 

and  Cheerful. 


Totals     867  986  940—2.783 

Fitrnffcrald   A    'WlnehMt<'r. 

Spear     191-  18»  165—  641 

Hughes     171  183  158—  612 

Summer*     171  15«  185 —  611 

Wade     167  171  190—  528 

Meyers    181  203  221—  606 


Enjoy  life — feel  bully!  Don't  stay 
sick,  bilious,  headachy,  conatlpated. 
Remove  the  liver  and  bowel  poison 
which  is  keeping  your  head  dizzy,  your 
tongue  coated,  your  breath  offensive 
and  atonnach  sour.  Why  don't  you  get 
a  10  or  25-cent  box  of  Cascarets  at 
the  drug  atore  and  enjoy  the  nicest, 
irentle.st  liver  and  bowel  cleansing  you 
ever  experienced.  Cascarets  work 
while  you  sleep.  You  will  wake  up 
feeling  fit  and  fine.  Children  need 
this  candy  cathartic,  too. — Advertise- 
ment. 


Totals     881     897     »19— 2,697 

speakeFwantTdivvy. 

Insists  Lannin   Shall   Pay  Him  Part 


Cambridge,  Mass..  AprU  12.— "The 
Harvard  varsity  crew  had  its  first 
trial  race  of  the  season  today,  defeat- 
ing crews  B  and  C  over  a  two-mile 
course  by  a  length  of  open  water.  No 
time   was   announced. 

HOUSE  PASSES 

HARBORS  BILL 

Annual  Appropriation  Meas- 
ure Goes  Through  as  Sub- 
mitted By  Committee. 

Washington,  April  12.— The  annual 
rivers  and  harbors  appropriation  bill, 
carrying  $40,000,000.  passed  the  house 
yesterday  by  a  vote  of  210  to  133,  with 
every  Item  as  agreed  upon  In  com- 
mittee unchanged. 

Scores  of  amendments  to  cut  down 
Items  urged  by  representatives  who 
charged  that  the  bill  was  a  "pork 
barrel"  measure  were  rejected  during 
the  two  weeks'  debate.  Just  before  the 
final  vote  an  effort  led  by  Republican 
Leader  Mann  to  reduce  the  total  to 
$20,000,000  failed,  200  to  14». 

The  entire  appropriation,  except  for 
a  $700,000  item  to  deepen  the  ap- 
proaches to  the  Brooklyn  navy  yard, 
is  for  continuing  work  on  improve- 
ment projects  already  authorized  and 
under  way.  The  single  new  project 
was  urged  by  President  Wilson  and 
Secretary  Daniels  as  part  of  the  pre- 
paredness program.  The  bill  now  goes 
to  the  senate,  where  last  year's  meas- 
ure was  killed  by  a  filibuster,  and  a 
lump  appropriation  of  $30,000,000  sub- 
stituted to  be  apportioned  among  ex- 
isting projects   by     the     secretary     of 

Among     the     larger     appropriations 

Mississippi  river.  $8,000,000;  New 
York  harbor,  $2,356,000;  Upper  Hudson 
river  $1,250,000;  Delaware  river. 
$2  766.000;  Inland  waterway.  Norfolk 
to  Beaufort,  $1,750,000;  Columbia  river, 
$1  560,000;  Tennessee  river,  $944,000; 
St'  Mary's  river.  Michigan.  $800,000, 
and   Chicago   harbor,    $714,300. 

WOMAN  IS  MAYOR 

OF  SAWTELLE,  CAL 

Sawtelle,  Cal.,  April  12.— Mrs.  Ellen 
French  Aldrich,  club  woman,  formerly 
of  Dayton,  Ohio,  will  be  the  first 
woman  "mayor"  of  Sawtelle,  an  official 
count  showing  she  received  the  larg- 
est  vote  polled   by   any  candidate   for 


OKLAHOMA  DEMOCRATS 
INDORSE  PRESIDENT 

Oklahoma  City,  Okla.  April  12.— 
Without  a  roll  call  and  without  a  con- 
test that  was  not  settled  outside  the 
hall,  Oklahoma  Democrats.  In  conven- 
tion here  yesterday,  elected  delegate* 
to  the  coming  Democratic  national 
convention,  instructed  to  vote  for  the 
renominatlon  of  President  Wilson, 
chose  Thomas  L.  Wade  of  Marlow,  aa 
national    committeeman,    namt^l    Okla- 

maianaooiis    x.iu     ^i..*.    x... v,,.,.«       homa's    quota    of    presidential    electors. 

tlon^rrauestrAeSe'nrtor  Thomas  Tag-     and     adopted    a     platform     supporting, 

iart      ^pointed  by    Governor  Ralston    without  reserve,  the  national  and  state 

?r,  fill  thp  varancv  caused  bv  the  death     administrations.  „       . 

of    Senator    Slmin    F     S^hivelev       to  I       In    addition     to    commending    Pros!- 

allow  bis  name  to  go  before  the  Dem-  !  dent  JVN'ilson's     International.     Mexican 


places  on  the  board  of  trustees.  Ac- 
cording to  custom  the  candidate  with 
the  largest  vote  has  been  elected  presi- 
dent of  the  board  with  the  honorary 
title  of  "mayor." 

Mrs.  Aldrich  was  president  of  the 
Emerson  club  at  Dayton,  and  partici- 
pated in  the  campaign  to  establish 
there  the  "city  manager"  plan  of  gov- 
ernment.  ^ 

WANT  TAGGART  TO  BE 
CANDIDATE  FOR  SENATE 

Indianapolis,  Ind.,  April   12. — Resolu- 


ocratic  state  convention  April  26  as 
a  candidate  for  senator  were  adopted 
at  a  meetii  g  of  the  Democratic  state 
committee    here   yesterday. 


and  Pan-American  policies,  the  con- 
vention indorsed  United  Stato?  Sena- 
tor Robert  L.  Owen,  for  any  office  la 
the  gift   of  the  nation. 

J 


^ 


SSSS3SSS353SS3SS:: 


:ss!^:s>^.!>:awsSSs\\s^^^! 


Watchful  Waiting' 


Will  never  offer  an  opportunity 
to  get  a  better  hat  for  $3. 00 


Patterson  Hat 

— at  your  dealer* s 


I 


BAD  TEETH! 


of  Purchase  Monejy 


Cleveland.      Ohio.        A^ 


Speaker,  star  outfl^de 
Americans,  recently  p_. 
Cleveland  American  le 
rived  here  yesterday  to 
arrangements  for  biis  1 
fused  to  sign  a  cont 
tions  continued  today, 
owner  of  the  Clevelan 
to  find  a  way  out  of  th 

While  Speaker  and  D^. 
ficulty    in    agreeing-   on^ .. 
ure.    Speaker    insisted    tj^l 

nln,   president  of  the  BMt9^ ,    ^„ 

him    $6,000    of    the    pur<pwue=^' price    re 
celved  from  Cleveland.   J^ttirt  leavjnff 


2— Tris 

Boston 

by    the 

club,    ar- 

the  final 

r,  but  re- 

Negotla- 

C.  Dunn, 

expects 

Ity 


NUXATED  IRON 

Increases  strength  of 
delicate,  nervous,  run- 
down people  200  per 
cent  in  ten  days  in 
many  instances.  $100 
forfeit  if  it  falls  as 
)er  full  explanation  in 
.arge  article  soon  to 
appear  in  this  paper. 
Ask     your     doctor     or 

druggist    about    it.      Boyce    Drug    store 

always  carries  It  in  stock. 


'#*#«»' i) 


Gold    CrowBs    W-O® 

Fall   fSet  Teet*  aa  low  mm    .  -M.©© 

Biidacworfc,    per   tooth •3.00 

WbUe   C»owns    fSUW 


We  make  a  tpeclalty  of  flxln*   b«d  teeth.     We 
ttOD  Uie   p»ln   ItataijUy.      A   gwd   uUhii    nm.    » 
wurth  the  moUerat*  ctiaree  we  make.     No  maUar 
how  bad  your  t<«th  are.  we  can  flx  then. 
^^^^.^^^^  Come  in  today  for  free  examiuation. 

THESE  PRICES  PREVAIL  EVERY  DAY 


AlnmlBUH   Plates    .........  flS.OO 

Gold   PUIt»K«    79t!  vp 

Silver    FUUbks    BOc 

Teeth    Cleanrd    90e 


NEW  YORK  AND  BOSTON  DENTAL  CO. 

TelephoM,    Melro..   7«».  2I«  Wert  Snij^tr  »-  (OwotJti  Grand   Th«ter.) 

Open   Dally.  7  to  8   Evealnt*:   8uad«y«.    10  a.   w.  t»  t   p.    w.  Lady    Atteadant. 


T 


I 


BEX  ISN'T  JAKE  ORDINARY  BEERS— 
KINGLY  IN  WHOLESOMENESS,  SPARKLE  AND  FLAVOR. 

REX  BEER 

ALWAYS  SATISFIES   MEN  WHO  KNOW   GOOD   BEER. 

WI^Have  a  Case  Sent  HomQ'^l^ 

BREWED  TnU  BOTTLED  BY  BREWERS  OF  A  BETTER  BEER. 

DULUTH  BREWING  &  MALTING  CO. 

DUIiUTH,  MINW. 


■*»■ 


'  ^^■^wTiii^.iii-ww.fr^— ^^y 


«-.-> 


14 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD, 


April  12, 1916. 


Cr*An"D     THE  CUB 
OVV/Ulr   REPORTER 


It's  Back  to  the  Good  Old  Days  for  Scoop 


By  "HOP" 


INITIATIVE 
ACTjUTILE 

North  Dakotan,  Who  Helped 

Frame  Act,  Claims  It  Is 

Inoperative. 

Capital  Removal  and  Re- 
submission Agitation  Are 
Believed  in  Vain. 


■* 


I 


FaiBo.  N"-  I^-.  April  12.-  Efforts  to 
remove  tho  state  capital  from  Bis- 
marck to  Now  Hockford  and  to  aKaln 
Hiibniit  to  the  voters  the  question  of 
prohibition,  tiinnot  ho  carried  out  in 
this  state  under  the  inlllative  and  ref- 
erendum law  until  the  legislature 
mak»'.s  ohannes  in  that  act,  according 
to  City  Commissioner  Uoboit  Black- 
more  of  this  city,  former  member  of 
the  loK'"^lat>iro,  who  has  made  a  Jtudy 
of  initiative  and  rofertjndum.  He  con- 
tends no  con.stitutional  amendments 
can  bo  initiatiil  by  potitions  under  the 
Initiative  proposition  voted  Into  the 
constitution  at  the  last  election,  and 
says  that  the  failure  of  the  last  state 
IcKlslaturo  to  provide  machinery  for 
the  operation  of  the  initiative  power  as 
applifd  to  the  con.stitution,  is  respon- 
sible for  the  fact  that  the  constitution 
Is  IniiTiunt-  from  aniotidmont  at  this 
time,  so  far  as  movements  Initiated  by 
the   people  are  concerned. 

\Vh<»4    lllarkniorc   C<>ii<en«lN. 

Mr.  i:i;.<km..i..  ni;ikes  the  following 
points    to    bear   out    his   contention    that 


no    initiatory    movement    can     be    pre- !  Masonic    lodge    and    of    the    Maryuette 
sented    to    the    people    at    this    time.  I  lodge    of    Klks.  .         ,    .v.       „„„„ 

Th-.t  the  leiilslature  Intended,  when  I  Capt.  Cleary  first  entered  the  serv- 
It  /mVsed  the  two  separate  Initiative  ice  when  he  was  19  years  old  as  a  surf- 
11    pas.s<u    ine    i«  j  applicable    man    at      the    station    at      Point      Aux 

applicable  I  Barks.  Mich.      From  this  station  he^a.s 


-md  referendum  acts — one 
to  slatute.s  and  the  other  .  _ 
to  the  constitution— that  the  legisla- 
ture .should  provide  machinery  to  gov- 
ern an  initiative  movement,  is  clearly 
indicated  by  a  comparison  of  the  two 
measu!  es. 

The  inlllative  and  referendum  as  ap- 
plied to  statutes  carry  the  following 
pi-ovlsion: 

"This  amendment  shall  be  self-exe- 
cutinK,  but  legislation  may  be  enacted 
to    facilitate    its    opeiation." 

No  such  provision  is  made  In  the 
amendment  to  the  constitution  gov- 
einlnK  the  initiative  of  future  amend- 
ments  to   the  constitution. 

Not  only  does  the  constitutional 
Initiative  amendment  fall  to  provide 
for  the  self-operative  feature — but  It 
expressly  provides  that  the  legislature 
shall  provide  the  machinery  to  make 
it   operative. 

Such  provision  Is  made  in  the  sec- 
ond article  of  section  1.'02,  of  the  con- 
stitution,   as    amended,    as    follows: 

"When  such  petition  has  been  prop- 
erly filed  the  proposed  amendment  or 
amendments  shall  be  published  as  the 
loKislalure    may    provide." 

The  1916  legislature  made  no  provi- 
sion   for   such    i)ubllcatloii. 

Intention   of    I.egiMlature. 

The  fact  that  the  Initiative  and  ref- 
erendum, as  applied  to  statutes,  is  ex- 
pressly made  operative — and  that  no 
such  provision  is  made  In  connection 
with  the  initiation  of  an  amendment 
of  the  constitution.  Is  held  by  those  to 
whose  attention  the  matter  has  been 
called,  as  conclusive  evidence  that  the 
legislature  Intended  only  to  open  the 
way  for  the  initiation  of  constitutional 
amendment.^ — the  whole  machinery  to 
be    provided   by    the   legislature. 

They  draw  compailson  between  the 
Initiation  of  constitutional  amend- 
ments measure,  to  the  terminal  eleva- 
tor clause  In  the  constitution.  The  lat- 
ter authorizes  the  legislature  to  estab- 
lish such  terminals — but  it  is  not  self- 
operative. 

ashlanOeeting 
appeals  to  soo 

Federated   Clubs   of  Two 

States  Asks  Railroad 

to  Build. 

Ashland.  "Wis.,  April  12.— The  Com- 
mercial clubs  of  the  Upper  Peninsula 
and  of  Northern  Wisconsin  formed  a 
federation  here  yesterday  afternoon 
and  last  night  adopted  resolutions  call- 
ing upon  President  Pennington  and 
the    directors    of    the    Soo    railroad    to 

Mellen 


transferred  to  the  station  at  East 
Tawas.  Mich.,  and  from  there  to  the 
Deer  Park  station.  From  Deer  Park 
he  came  to  Marquette.  He  had  been  a 
captain  of  the  service  for  thirty-one 
years  and  had  been  in  charge  of  the 
Marquette  station  for  the  last  twenty- 
flve   years. 

Capt.  Cleary's  efficiency  as  a  com- 
mander of  life-saving  crews  won  for 
him  the  honor  of  being  chosen  captain 
of  the  picked  crews  of  life  savers  who 
gave  exhibition  drills  at  the  world's 
fairs  in  Omaha,  Buffalo,  St.  Louis  and 
Seattle.  At  these  expositions  Capt. 
Cleary  wis  placed  at  the  head  of 
crews  which  were  picked  from  all  the 
stations   In    the  United   States. 


GLEASON  COMPANY 
WINS  MINE  CASE 


CLAIM  LANDS  UNDER 
RIPARIAN  RIGHTS 

Unusual  Case  to  Be  Heard 
By  North  Dakota  Su- 
preme Court. 

Bismarck,  N.  D.,  April  12.— A  case 
Involving  riparian  rights,  the  first  of 
the  kind  ever  arising  In  North  Da- 
kota, will  soin  come  before  the  state 
supreme  court  for  adjudication. 

The  case  comes  from  the  district 
court  of  Cavalier  county  and  involves 
the  rights  of  ownership  to  land  which 
oneo  was  known  to  underlie  Hush 
lake,  but  which  on  the  drying  up  of 
the  lake,  emerged  from  the  waters  and 
became  splendid,  rich  farm  lands.  A 
man  who  had  land  adjoining  the  lake 
claimed  by  several  acts  and  practices 
that  the  lands  belonged  to  him  under 
riparian    rights. 

The  matter  was  taken  Into  -court 
and  District  .Judge  Cooley  stated  that 
the  adjoining  property  owner  should 
have  advantage  by  the  accretions.  The 
other  litigant,  stating  that  the  land  be- 
longed to  the  United  States,  appealed 
the  case,  t^ver  five  sections  of  land 
are  Involved  in  the  suit. 


MARQUETTE  U.  S.  COURT. 

Judge    Sessions   Opens    Court    With 
Twelve  Cases  on  the  Docket. 

Marquette,  Mich.,  April  12. — With 
twelve  cases  on  the  docket,  two  of 
which  have  been  settled  and  were  dis- 
missed Judge  C.  W.  Sessions  opened  a 
term  of  United  States  district  court 
here  vesterday.  Among  court  officials 
here,  "besides  the  judge,  are  Myron  H. 
Walker  of  Grand  Rapids,  United  States 
Marshal    Herman    O'Connor     of      Grand 


Iron  County,  Mich.,  Mining 

Litigation  Decided  By 

Supreme  Court. 

Crystal  Falls,  Mich..  April  12.— The 
Glcason  Exploration  &  Mining  com- 
pany, of  which  Michael  Gleason  and  his 
sons,  formerly  of  Republic,  were  the 
organizers  and  are  the  principal  share- 
holders, has  won  its  suit  against  W. 
Anzetlm  Mlnarczyk,  who  disputed  the 
Gleason  title  to  mining  property  on 
this    range. 

The  supreme  court  of  Michigan  has 
confirmed  the  decision  of  Judge  Flan- 
nlgan  in  the  case  of  W.  Anzetlm 
Muiarczyk  against  the  Gleason  Explo- 
ration &  Mining  company  of  Gladstone. 
Mtnarezyk  had  sued  to  have  set  aside 
a  quit  claim  deed  to  some  valuable 
mining  property  In  Iron  county. 

The  decision  of  the  supreme  court 
gives  the  Gleason  Exploration  &  Min- 
ing company  clear  and  undisputed  title 
to  tho  property.  It  also  means  the 
lifting  of  an  Injunction  against  divi- 
dends declared  for  the  last  three  years. 
These  dividends  will  now  be  distrib- 
uted among  the  fee  holders.  The 
amount  tied  up  by  Injunction  is  ap- 
proximately   $30,000. 

Started   Snit  Three  Yrars  Aro. 

The  suit  was  started  In  May.  1913,  by 
Mtnarezyk.  who  many  years  previous 
to  this  time  had  sold  some  property  for 
one  Constanty  Zyskowskl  and  retained 
the  possession  of  the  mineral  rights, 
but  later  on  gave  a  quit  claim  deed  to 
Zyskowskl  for  same  rights.  Mtnarezyk 
claimed  fraud  In  this  latter  deed.  It 
was  at  thig  time  that  tiie  Gleason  Ex- 
ploration &  Mining  company  took  an 
option  on  the  land,  securing  the  option 
from  Zyskowskl.  The  company  pro- 
ceeded to  explore  the  property  and 
soon  rich  veins  of  ore  were  located. 
After  the  development  of  the  property 
had  progressed  for  some  time,  Mtnarc- 
.yK  brought  suit  to  have  the  quit  claim 
deed  set  aside  on  the  grounds  that  It 
was  secured  through  misrepresenta- 
tion. In  December.  1914.  Judge  Flannl- 
gan  at  Iron  Mountain  handed  down  his 
decision  in  favor  of  the  Gleason  Ex- 
ploration &  Mining  company.  The  case 
was  appealed  to  the  supreme  court 
with  tlie  result  stated. 

STATE  NURSESl/IEET. 

Annual  Gathering    of    North  Dakota 
Organization  at  Minot. 

Minot.  N.  D.,  April  12. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  North  Dakota  State 
Nurses'  association  opened  its  fifth  an- 
nual meeting  here  today  with  a  good 
attendance  of  nurses  from  all  parts  of 
the  state  present,  at  the  public  library 


one  son  and  three  daughters  survive. 

"KID"  SCULLY  GETS 

PENITENTIARY  TERM 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  April  12.— "Kid" 
Scully,  whose  true  name.  Henry  Tipp, 
he  disclosed  to  the  court  yesterday, 
was  sentenced  by  District  Judge  W.  C. 
Leary  to  Stillwater  penitentiary  for  a 
term  of  from  one  to  seven  years  for 
an  offense  against  the  young  girl 
whose  story  started  the  vice  Investiga- 
tion. 


Houghton — The  Houghton  Rod  and 
Gun  club  officers  for  the  coming  year 
are:  President.  Ed.  Romn;  vice  pres- 
ident, C.  M.  Killmar;  treasurer.  I.  A. 
Hart;    secretary.   H.   G.    Grams. 


DAKOTA  BRffiFS 


to  be  superficial  and  his  condition  is 
not  serious.  Mr.  Van  Campen  was  on 
his  way  home  from  California  when 
injured. 

Brainerd — Senator  Judd  La  Moure 
of  North  Dakota  returned  from  Flor- 
ida Sunday,  where  he  has  been  spend- 
ing the  winter,  and  went  to  his  sum- 
mer home  at  Portage  lake,  near 
Backus. 

Bemidjl — C.  O.  Moon,  register  of 
deeds,  has  received  the  deed  of  the 
new  Federal  building  in  Bemidjl  to  be 
placed  on  record.  The  site  is  trans- 
ferred from  the  Bemidjl  Townsite  & 
Improvement    company    to    the    ITnlted 


Cooperstown,   N.   D. — There    were   flf-    States   of   America,    and   the  considera 


Glldlen,  Ashland,  Mason,  Port  Wing, 
Drumniond.  Bayfield.  Washburn  and 
also    St.    Paul    and    Minneapolis. 

A.  H.  Wilkinson,  president  of  the 
First  National  bank  of  Bayfield,  was 
temporary  president  and  Ralph  E. 
Brown,  secretary  of  the  Ashland  Com- 
mercial club,  temporary  secretary.  A 
permanent  organization  will  be  per-  | 
footed  later  and  It  is  expected  Col.  J. 
P.  Peterman  of  Calumet  will  be  made 
president.  The  following  were  named 
on  a  committee  to  urge  on  Mr.  Pen- 
nington and  other  Soo  ftfficlals  the 
need  for  the  construction  of  the  cutoff 
this  year:  Col.  J.  P.  Peterman,  Calu- 
met; Robert  A.  Douglas.  Ironwood; 
George  E.  Foster,  MeUen;  A.  H.  Wllk- 
erson,  Bayfield,  and  C.  N.  Cramer.  Ash- 
land. 


certificate  of  citizenship;  C.  C.  Rltze, 
trustee  of  the  estate  of  Joseph  J.  Drey, 
bankrupt,  vs.  Sam  Rusky,  assumpsit; 
C.  C.  Rltze  vs.  First  National  bank  of 
Iron  River;  C.  C.  Rltze  vs.  Commercial 


HAS  LEFT  CANADA. 

Former  Stearns  County  Man  Objects 
to  Sons  Fighting  in  War. 

St.  (Moud,  Minn.,  April  12. — John 
Gledeman,  for  years  a  resident  of 
Roekville  and  for  the  last  ten  years 
living  In  Canada,  where  he  owned  a 
splendid  farm,  has  sold  all  of  his  do- 
minion holdings  and  has  moved  back 
to    the    good    old    Unittd    States. 

"I  didn't  raise  my  boys  to  be  sol- 
diers," was  the  explanation  offered  by 
Mr.  Gledeman  for  moving  back  to  the 
United  States,  "at  least  not  soldiers  for 
the    allies." 

The  former  Stearns  county  resident 
said  that  he  was  doing  well  with  his 
Canadian  lands  when  the  war  broke 
out  and  that  even  then  they  did  not 
depricate  In  value,  but  the  treatment 
that  was  accorded  his  two  sons,  one 
19  and  the  other  17  years  of  age,  was 
such  that  he  could  no  longer  stay  in 
Canada.  Every  effort  was  made  to 
make  the  boys  enlist  and  when  their 
father  refused  to  allow  them  to  join 
the  army  they  were  badly  treated  by 
neighbors  and   former  friends. 

Mr.  Gledeman  plans  to  buy  land  in 
Stearrs  county  as  soon  as  he  can 
make   suitable   arrangements. 

life'saver  passes. 

Funeral  at    Marquette   of   Old  Time 
Member  of  Coast  Guards. 

Marquette,  Mich.,  April  12. — Funeral 
services  were  held  yesterday  afternoon 
from  the  M.  E.  church  for  Capt.  Henry 
J.  Cleary  of  the  local  ITnlted  States 
coast  guard  station,  for  thirty-five 
years  In  the  service,  who  died  early 
Monday,  aged  54.  The  body  was  taken 
to   Port   Hope,   Mich.,   for   burial. 

Capt.  Cleary  is  survived  by  his 
widow  and  one  son,  Charles  Cleary; 
two  brothers,  Capt.  George  Cleary  of 
Bols  Blanc  Island  coast  guard  station, 
James  Cleary  of  Seattle,  Wash.,  and 
two  sisters.    He  was  a  member  of  the 


Thursday  night. 


LOOK  AT  CHILD'S 
TONGUE  IF  SICK, 
CROSSJEVERISH 

Hurry,     Mother!     Remove 
Poisons  From  Little  Stom- 
ach, Liver,  Bowels. 

Give  "California  Syrup  of 

Figs"  at  Once  If  Bilious 

or  Constipated. 


Look  at  the  tongue,  mother!  If 
coated,  it  is  a  sure  sign  that  your 
little  one's  stomaeh,  liver  and  bowels 
need  a  gentle,  thorough  cleansing  at 
once. 

When  peevish,  cross,  listless,  pale, 
doesn't  sleep,  doesn't  eat  or  act  natu- 
rally, or  Is  feverish,  stomach  sour, 
breath  bad;  has  stomach-ache,  sore 
throat,  diarrhoea,  full  of  cold,  give  a 
teaspoonful  of  "California  Syrup  of 
Figs,"  and  in  a  few  hours  all  the 
foul,  constipated  waste,  undigested 
food  and  sour  bile  gently  moves  out 
of  the  little  bowels  without  griping, 
and  you  have  a  well,  playful  child 
again. 

You  needn't  coax  sick  children  to 
take  this  harmless  "fruit  laxative;" 
they  love  Us  delicious  taste,  and  it  al- 
ways makes  them  feel  splendid. 

Ask  your  druggist  for  a  50-cent  bot- 
tle of  "California  Syrup  of  Figs," 
which  has  directions  for  babies,  chil- 
dren of  all  ages  and  for  grow^n-ups 
plainly  on  the  bottle.  Beware  of  coun- 
terfeits a»ld  here.  To  be  sure  you 
get  the  genuine,  ask  to  see  that  It  Is 
mado  by  "California  Fig  Syrup  Com- 
pare" Refuse  any  other  kind  with 
contempt. — Advertisement. 


Madison — The  legislative  act  that 
created  Milwaukee  county's  board  of 
administration  of  five  members  which 
controls  practically  all  of  the  county 
institutions  was  upheld  Tuesday  by 
the  supreme  court. 

New  Richmond — Capt.  Andrew  A. 
Kelly,  former  sheriff  of  St.  Croix  coun- 
ty, and  member  of  Company  F,  Thir- 
ty-eighth Wisconsin  Volunteer  infan- 
try, died  at  the  home  of  his  son,  Wil- 
liam F.  Kelly,  In  Minneapolis.  He  set- 
tled in  Polk  county  In  1856.  Capt. 
Kelly  was  one  of  the  organizers  of 
Bryant  Post  quartet,  which  won  fame 
at  the  national  encampment  of  the 
Grand   Army. 

Milwaukee — Emll  Rlesen,  68  years 
old,  a  retired  contractor,  died  Monday 
morning  in  his  home  at  891  First  street. 

Madison — The  ambition  of  Miss  Vio- 
la M  Kiekhoefer  of  Fond  du  Lac,  a 
senior  at  the  University  of  Wisconsin, 
who  died  a  few  weeks  ago  of  pneu- 
monia, to  earn  a  Phi  Beta  Kappa  elec- 
tion, has  been  rewarded.  The  honor 
was  conferred  upon  the  dead  girl  in 
this  week's  elections. 

Madison — The  supreme  court  has  af- 
firmed the  judgment  of  the  lower 
court  in  Its  ruling  that  the  grandchil- 
dren of  the  late  Edward  P.  Allls  did 
not   share    in   his   estate. 

Ashland— Prof.  E.  J.  Delwiche  of  the 
branch  experimental  station  at  Ash- 
land Junction  arrived  in  the  city  from 
(Jreen  Bay,  where  he  spent  the  win- 
ter. Mr.  Delwiche  Is  here  again  to 
take  charge  of  the   farm. 

Oshkosh— Fire  Chief  Robert  A. 
Brauer  of  this  city  on  Monday  cele- 
brated his  28th  anniversary  In  the  Osh- 
kosh   department. 

Stevens  Point — A  new  concrete 
bridge  to  cost  about  $6,000  may  re- 
place the  old  Rocky  Run  bridge  that 
has  been  swept  out  by  tho  water  and 
Ice  of  the  spring  breakup. 

Manitowoc— Lieut.  O.  G.  Pitz  of  this 
city,  son  of  City  Engineer  and  Mrs.  L. 
K.  Pltz,  a  member  of  the  Seventh  Unit- 
ed States  cavalry  in  Mexico,  in  pur- 
suit of  Villa,  found  time  to  wed  in  LI 
Paso.  Tex.,  last  Wednesday,  accord- 
ing to  a  message  received  here.  The 
announcement  came  as  a  complete  sur- 
prise to   relatives. 


teen  bids  for  the  contiact  for  building 
the  new  Masonic  temple  here.  The 
Read-McDonald-Brewster  company  of 
Minneapolis  was  the  lowest  bidder  for 
the  general  contract  at  $21,867,  while 
Champlln  &  Nanson  of  Fargo  got  the 
heating,  ventilating,  plumbing  and 
wiring  contract  for  the  sum  of  $3,915. 

Jamestown,  N.  D.— William  Landis, 
North  Dakota's  representative  in  the 
western  division  of  the  Interstate  Ora- 
torical association,  won  a  place  In  the 
finals  by  his  work  at  Salina,  Kan., 
where  the  division  oratorical  contest 
was  held.  Mr.  Landis  will  represent  this 
state  in  the  final  oratorical  event  at 
Fairfield,  Iowa,  on  May  5,  when  the  trio 
of  orators  of  the  Eastern  division  meet 
the  Western  men. 

Minot,  N.  D. — North  Dakota  graduate 
nurses  will  hold  their  annual  meeting 
in  this  city  Wednesday  and  Thursday. 
This  is  the  first  meeting  since  the  state 
nurses'"  registration  board  was  estab- 
lished. 

Fargo,    N.    D. — Architect    William    F. 


tion    is   $6,000. 

Walker — Judge  W.  C.  McClenahan  Is 
holding  a  term  of  the  district  court  at 
Walker,    beginning   Tuesday. 

Brainerd — Judge  C.  W.  Stanton  will 
hold  a  term  of  the  district  court  here, 
beginning    May    2. 

Bemidjl — A  kindergarten  class  has 
been  started  by  the  Bemidjl  schools  at 
the  public  library,  with  Miss  Gladys 
Stanton  as  instructor.  The  cla.ss  will 
continue  for  three  months.  There  were 
twenty-four  children  enrolled  the  first 
day. 

Moorhead — The  distribution  of  Clay- 
county  taxes  is  detailed  in  a  state- 
ment Issued  by  the  county  auditor, 
covering  operations  for  the  last  year. 
The  county  handled  $122,846.41  in  slate, 
county  and  city  taxes.  Of  that  sum, 
$21,047.21  reverted  to  the  city  of  Moor- 
head. 

St.  Cloud — The  Greenwald  Co-opera- 
tive Creamery  association  has  filed  ar- 
ticles of  incorporation  with  the  reg- 
ister   of    deeds.      The    capital    stock    is 


Kurke    has    completed    the    draw'ng    of  ]  $5,000.     The  oii^icers  are:    President,   M. 


plans  and  specifications  for  a  fine  new 
parochial  school  to  be  built  at  Sheldon 
this  summer.  The  school  will  be  erect- 
ed by  the  Catholics  of  Sheldon  at  a  coat 
of  approximately  $20,000.  The  building 
will  be  of  semi-fireproof  construction, 
and  will  provide  classrooms  and  dor- 
mitories for  the  accommodation  of  125 
students. 

Bismarck,  N.  D. — At  the  meeting  of 
the  County  Sunday  School  association 
In  the  Evangelical  church,  officers  for 
the  year  were  elected.  They  are:  Presi- 
dent, Ernest  C.  Wright;  vice-president, 
Ernest  Stelber;  secretary,  Miss  Grace 
Myers;  assistant  secretary.  Miss  May 
Swift;  treasurer,  P.  A.  Wessel,  all  of 
Bismarck.  ,     ,     . 

Devils  Lake,  N.  D. — The  Devils  Lake 
council,  U.  C.  T..  observed  memorial 
services  Sunday  evening  by  attending 
the  Church  of  the  Advent  in  a  body. 
An  excellent  address  was  delivered  by 
Rev.  F.  H.  Oehler. 


MINNESOTA  BRIEFS 


BRAINERD  LIQUOR 

SEIZED  IN  GRANARY 

Bralnenl,  Minn.,  April  12.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— A  raid  at  the  farm 
home  of  Joseph  Brusseau  in  South 
Long  Lake  township  three  miles  from 
Brainerd,  on  notice  from  the  farmer, 
resulted  in  the  seizing  of  forty-eight 
gallons  of  whisky  In  a  granary.  Brus- 
seau, the  authorities  report,  said  that 
It  was  deposited  there  by  Brainerd  men. 

In  municipal  court  was  heard  the 
case  against  Edward  Boppel,  charged 
with  aiding  and  abetting  the  keeping 
of  an  unlicensed  drinking  place.  Judge 
Hnlvorson  took  it  under  advisement. 
Police  claim  to  have  found  whisky  at 
the  home  of  Mr.  Boppel. 

masonicevenT"" 

at  grand  forks 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D.,  April  12.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Masons  from  all 
parts  of  North  Dakota  and  Western 
Minnesota  will  gather  here  Wednesday, 
April  19  for  a  special  exemplification 
of  the  third  degree  In  the  new  Ma- 
sonic   temple.  ,        .,,   .  ^  . 

The  degree  work  will  be  put  on  by 
twelve  past  masters  of  the  local  lodge. 
A  banquet  will  be  held  following  the 
degree   work. 

LIVES  SIX  DAYS 

WITH  BROKEN  NECK 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D.,  April  12.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — After  living  for 
six  days  with  a  broken  neck  John 
McGrath.  aged  54.  a  farmer  of  Em- 
erado,  N.  D.,  died  at  a  local  hospital 
and  his  funeral  was  held  here  today. 

McGrath  fractured  his  neck  last 
week  when  the  wagon  in  which  he  was 
riding  fell  off  a  bridge  to  the  frozen 
surface  of  a  small  stream.  He  was 
rushed  here  and  efforts  made  to  save 
his  life.  He  lingered  for  six  days  to- 
tally paralyzed  from  the  neck  down- 
ward,   until    death    came    to    his    relief. 

MANKATO  PIONEER 

IS  CALLED  AT  84 

Mankato.  Minn.,  April  12.— Capt.  John 
R  Beatty  Civil  war  veteran  and  pio- 
neer who  shipped  the  first  carload  of 
lime'  here,  starting  the  first  lime  kiln 
snd  opened  up  the  Mankato  cement 
stone  quarry.  Is  dead,  aged  84.  He 
was  bori^«  •onnsylvania  and  came  to 
Mlnne80«  lia867.  At  the  outbreak  of 
the  ClvlM<»«M  he  enlisted  In  Company 
H    Second  Minnesota  infantry,  and  was 


Marquette — The  local  commandry. 
Knights  Templars,  elected  the  follow- 
ing officers:  Eminent  commander,  G. 
A.  Carlson;  generalissimo,  James  H. 
Kaye;  captain  general,  P.  S.  Wilson; 
senior  warden,  C.  L.  Brainerd;  junior 
warden.  O.  H.  Olson;  prelate,  F.  J. 
Schultheis;  treasurer,  W.  J.  Ellison; 
recorcjer,  W.  A.  Urich;  standard  bearer, 
A.  P  Meads;  sword  bearer.  Albert  Tre- 
bilco'ck;  warder,  William  Richards,  Jr.; 
sentinel,   L.  O.  Mohrman, 

Negaunee — A  large  force  of  men  has 
been  scraping  the  ice  and  mud  from 
the  principal  streets  and  Tuesday  the 
streets  were  washed  by  city  employes. 

Rexton — Unable  to  discern  the  train 
In  the  dark,  as  it  backed  toward  him, 
Peter  Chrlstenson,  49  years  old,  for- 
merly a  resident  of  Escanaba,  was  fa- 
tally Injured  when  he  was  struck  by  a 
Soo  line  freight  train,  and  died  a  few 
hours  later.  Chrlstenson  was  hit  by 
the  rear  end  of  the  train,  two  miles 
from  here  at  a  place  known  as  Hen- 
rlck's   quarry   branch.  „     „     ^      » 

Calumet — The  Calumet  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
has  opened  its  campaign  to  lift  the 
$18  000  debt  on  the  institution.  Nine 
committees,  under  the  general  chair- 
manship of  Albert  E.  Petermann,  have 
charge  of  the  work.  ttik«- 

Ishpeming— Upper  Peninsula  Hiber- 
nians hope  to  organize  a  delegation  of 
200  members  to  attend  the  annual 
state  convention  in  Detroit  next  Au- 
gust The  railroads  will  be  asked  to 
inaugurate  reduced  rates  for  the  Upper 
Peninsula  delegates  and  it  Is  not  un- 
likely that  a  special  train  will  be  char- 
tered  for   the   trip. 

Negaunee — Mrs.  A.  Amminson  of  Du- 
luth,  who  was  called  here  last  week 
by  the  death  of  V.  Johnson,  left  Mon- 
day morning  for  Crystal  Falls  to  spend 
a  few  days  visiting  with  friends  be- 
fore returning  to  her  home. 

Calumet— Calumet  lodge.  Order  of 
B'nai  Brith,  will  raise  funds  for  tne 
war  sufferers  in  Europe.  A  committee 
consisting  cf  Hugo  M.  Field,  secre- 
tary and  treasurer;  Ben  Arne,  Han- 
cock- J.  Gottllcbson  and  H.  Pimstein 
Houghton;  Julius  Seieenfeldt,  South 
Range,  was  appointed  to  solicit  con- 
tributions. ,  - 

Negaunee — Telegraph  operators  or 
the  entire  Upper  Peninsula  of  the 
South  Shore  railway  held  a  meeting 
here  Sunday,  commencing  at  10  o  clock 
a.  m.  and  lasting  until  4  p.  m.  The 
meeting  was  a  "get-together'  of  all 
the  operators.  C  W.  Danlelson  of 
Chassell  was  chairman  and  was  as- 
sisted by  P.  M.  Stillman  of  Seney. 
Harry  C.  Wubbena  of  Bruce's  Cross- 
ing was  one  of  the  principal  speakers. 

Hancock — Troop  A,  Copper  country 
cavalry,  placed  an  order  through  a 
Hancock  merchant  for  a  complete 
equipment  of  sabers,  belts,  saddle 
blankets,  etc.,  and  the  outfit  is  expect- 
ed  here   In   time   to   be   used   Memorial 

^^Calumct  —  Eva,  the  17-year-old 
daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Oscar  Erick- 
son  of  Laurium,  died  Monday  mornmg 
of  pneumonia.  The  f jneral  was  held 
this  afternoon  at  2  o'clock  from  the 
residence.  Rev.  A.  L.Heldeman  offi- 
ciating, and  interment  was  made  at 
Lakeview   cf'metery. 

Hancock— The  convention  of  the 
Finnish  America-i  Musical  association 
will  be  held  in  this  city  the  first  few 
days   of   August   next.      An     executive 


St.  Cloud — Murray  Nelson,  a  work- 
man at  the  Granite  City  iron  works, 
had  his  arm  broken  Monday  when  he 
was  caught  under  a  belt  while  trying 
to  place  the  belt  on  the  pulley  with 
the  machinery   in  action. 

Rochester — Charles  Van  Campen  of 
Rochester,  formerly  general  agent  here 
for  the  Northwestern,  was  seriously 
injured  about  the  head  and  body  in  St. 
Paul  Saturday  night,  when  the  hack 
in  which  he  was  riding  was  struck  by 
a  police  motor  patrol.  He  was  uncon- 
scious for  several  hours.  A  later  ex- 
amination of  Mr.  Van  Campen's  con- 
dition  showed   the  wounds  on   the  head 


J.  Kulzer;  vice  president,  Peter  Sand; 
secretary,  Charles  Winning;  treasurer, 
Andrew  Thuil;  directors,  John  Thull, 
Joseph   Winter   and   Frank   Osendorf. 

Grand  Marais — The  work  on  the 
Alger-Smith  railroad  is  progressing,  a 
very  large  number  of  men  being  em- 
ployed  at   the   present  time. 

International  Falls — Glen  Seville  and 
George  Elliott  were  arrested  on  thd 
charge  of  selling  liquor  without  a  li- 
cense, on  evidence  furnished  by  the 
two  detectives.  They  will  have  their 
hearing  in  municipal  court  next  Fri- 
day. 

Northome — A  dairy  meeting  held 
here  Tuesday  had  A.  J.  McGuire  of  the 
state  university  for  the  principal 
speaker. 

Moorhead — H.  H.  Hansen  has  gone  to 
Chicago  to  attend  a  special  meeting  of 
the  supreme  council  of  the  Royal 
League.  The  meeting  is  an  important 
one  and  will  occupy  several  days.  Mr. 
Hansen  will  represent  the  state  of 
Minnesota. 

Mankato — Word  was  received  by 
relatives  here  of  the  death  of  Mrs.  EJ- 
ward  Williams,  a  daughter  of  Mrs. 
Mary  Goodrich  of  this  city,  at  Colma, 
Cal.,  April  7.  She  was  born  in  this 
city  forty  years  ago.  She  is  survived 
by  her  husband  and  five  children,  her 
mother,  Mrs.  Mary  Goodrich  of  this 
city,  and  three  brothers  and  two  sis- 
ters. 

Bemidjl — The  Socialist  party  will 
have  candidates  for  all  Beltrami  coun- 
ty offices  at  the  next  election,  accord- 
ing to  reports.  Vic  Lindholm  of 
Spooner  Is  out  for  county  commis- 
sioner of  the  Second  district  on  the 
Socialist  ticket.  It  is  reported  that 
Joseph  Harris,  a  Socialist,  will  oppose 
Judge  M.  A.  Clark  for  the  office  of 
i  judge   of   probate   court. ^^^^^^ 


10^ 


Good  for 
Growing-ups 


Romping  youngsters  need  plenty  of  good,  substantial  food.    Give 
them  lots  of  rich  milk  and  those  nourishing  Sunshine  Krispy  Crackers.  I 

Krispy  Crackers  and  milk  make  a  well-balanced  dish  for  old  and^ 
young.    They're  one  of  the 


Biscuits 


—  made  in  the  thousand -window  bakeries  where  the  sun  has  a 
chance  to  shine.  Buy  the  ten-cent  package,  or  the  family  tin  which 
keeps  the  household  supplied  with  fresh  Krispy  Crackers. 

In  each  packatre  of  Takhoma  Biscuit  is  a  paper  doll  in  colors.    Other  packages  «| 
Sunshine  Biscuits  contain  pretty  dresses  for  her.    See  list  in  Takhoma  package. 

JopSE -Wiles  Qiscurr  (ompany 

Bakers  of  Sunshine  Biscuits 


ENVELOPES 

"Rush  Orders  a  Pleasure" 


The  kind  you  want.    Every  grade  and 
size.    We  have  the  stock. 

MERRITT  t  HECTOR 

Printers  and  Binders 
112  WIST  FIRST  ST. 


.*< 


^ 


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Wednesday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


IS 


You  7/  Need  One  Now- 

Creat  Showing 
— of— 

Raincoats 


at  $3.95,  $4.95, 

$5.95,  $7.45, 

$7.95  and  up 

to  $15 


■ 

- 

.        . 

} 

r 
i 

• 

1 

■   ■*>.l- 

Umbrellas 

Rubbers 
Oil  Clothing 

WILUAMSON  ^  MENDCNHAU*. 


WEST 


HBRAI.D  BRAWOH  OFFICBit 


ic,    A#T*rtlstas 
ira»a  Ur«B«  A 


H«rald'«   W«»t  Duluth   reporUr  »W,,*>t» '-WlS^S^' 
hour  of  Koln»  to  pr«»«  at  Calumet  178-M  afl^Tola  147. 


Dlatrlbtitloa. 


m 

M      10  Dozen 
M     Hand  Bags 

MAli  worth  from  $1.00 
to      $1.25,      in      fine 
||^     leathers,  neatly  trim- 
'  ^     med,  special  for— 


provide  accomnwidatlonB  for  a  chapel 
and  rest  room  tor  the  public.  Andrew 
Myles.  president  ol!  the  association, 
aald  today  that  Uve  fbuildingr  will  flU  a 
lonff-requlred  need  <or  the  cemetery. 


ELECTION  IN    ^^^^ 

COURT'S  HANDS     mdress  n  am 


75c 


«« 


'WflMt  VALUKS  MlttN  •VPMIir' 


ai  aad  as  WIST  SUPimOII  STRUT. 


75  Cent  M 

Bed  Sheets  M 

in  a  full   76x90-lnch  )|| 

size,     linen    finished.  ^ 

on  special  sale  at —  W 

59c  s 


-(fc 


DRY 
CLEANING 

IS  NOT  A  LUXURY; 
IT  IS  AN  ECONOMY 


We  can  help  you  econo- 
mize by  making  your  la>t 
year's  c'luthes  look  like  new. 

Let  us  serve  you. 


son  during    the  late   hunting   season. 
May   €all   C«rand   Jary. 

There    are    no    n-^w    d>v»-loi>ments    In 

the  case  ot  Steve  Atanosoff  now  In  the 

county  Jail  charRed  with  killing:  'Jj'OTge 

iChrl.stoff    during    a    fight    near    Murbl*' 

lu.st    Monday,    iilthough    it    Is    possible 

,  that   late  today  Oounty   Attorney  Stone 

will  asic  Judge  Wright  to  call  a  special 

'  srand     Jury     that     tho     ease     may     be 

I  promptly  handled  at  this  term  of  court. 

'  If   the  case   is   taken   directly   bt-fore   a 

'  grand  Jury   It  will   not   be   necessary   to 

take    Atanoaoff    back    to    Marble    for   a 

picllmiTiJiiy  hfurlng. 


Action  to  Restrain  Proctor 

School  Board  May  Be 

Dismissed. 


Ballot  on  Directors  Depends 

Upon  Decision  of  Judge 

Fesler. 


ORPHEUM 

DRY  CLEANERS 

131    K.V.ST   hlPlIllOK    .ST. 

Melrose  ll»fi;   Grand  976. 


^S 


SUPERIOR 


HENRY  AND  ENGMAN 
ARE  BOUND  OVER 


I.    I  ]  I  ■.»-  1-  ■■i.-.jg 


GET  THE  NEW 

NITROGEN  AUTO 

HEADLIGHT  LAMP 

All  sizes  and  voltaged  at   the 


UNIVERSAL  ELECTRICAL 
APPLIANCE  CO. 

I.lghtliiK    KlxturrN    tiiifl    Supplie.H. 

112   KAST   SVPKKIOR   ST. 

M«'IroJ«e   7057.  <;r«iid    102S-V. 


■tt. 


1 

1 

i 

1 

SEEKING  DAMAGES 
FOR  FALSE  ARREST 


Grand  Rapids.  Minn..  April  12.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald. )-'-The  damage  suit 
of  George  Stein  vs.  T.  H.  Martin  to  re- 
cover $5,000  for  false  arrest  Is  on  trial 
In  di.strict  court  here  today.  It  is 
claimed  by  the  plaintiff  Martin  had 
him  arrested  charged  with  the  theft 
uf  a  stove  which  Stein  claims  belonged 
to  him  and  F.  S.  Seaman,  but  Stein  was 
promptly  acquitted,  and  he  demands 
$5.00U  for  false  arrest. 

The  Jury  late  yesterday  returned  a 
verdict  of  not  guilty  In  the  case 
against  Sam  HIckel  and  "Kid"  Lloyd 
Indicted  on  a  charge  of  beating  up  a 
Finn  in  a  shack  In  the  vicinity  of  Hlb- 
bing  during  a  dispute  over  some  veni- 


Police  Believe  Latter  Has 

Decided  to  Feign 

Insanity. 

Brady  Henry  and  Frank  Engman. 
the  two  young  bandits  who  have  been 
terrorizing  merchants  at  the  Head  of 
the  Lakes  for  some  time,  and  who  were 
arrested  Sunday  afternoon  after  a  run- 
ning fight  with  police  and  citizens, 
were  arraigned  In  police  court  thl.s 
moinlng.  Both  WHlved  examination  In 
the  municipal  court  and  they  were 
bound    over   to   the   superior   court. 

The  police  believe  that  Engman  Is 
feigning  Insanity.  ThI-s  morning  when 
Judge  Parker  asked  him  whether  he 
liit.nded  to  plead  guilty  or  not  guilty 
he  answered,  "I'll  let  you  know  when 
I  hear  from  the  general  In  Russia." 

Sportsmen  at  Banquet. 

More  than  100  guests  attended  the 
annual  banquet  of  tho  Douglas  County 
FiHh  and  Game  Trotective  as.soclatlon 
held  last  night  at  the  Superior  hotel. 
Lvman  T.  Powell  was  elected  president; 
W.  E  Pltkerlng.  vice  president;  A.  B. 
iVnderberg,  secretary,  and  Morris  Beg- 
Hnger  treasurer.  Addre.<«ses  were  given 
by  G.  A.  Cleasby.  Federal  game  warden, 
and  W.  E.  Barber,  state  game  commis- 
sioner. 

TALKS  WITH  WIDOW 
OF  VILLA'S  VICTIM 


Francis  J.  Webb,  general  manager 
here  of  the  Republic  Iron  &  Steel  com- 
pany, has  written  to  a  friend  In  Du- 
luth from  Sliver  City.  N.  Mex.,  that  he 
met  and  enjoyed  a  long  talk  with  Mrs. 
Maud  Hawkes  Wright,  widow  of  the 
man  who  was  murdered  by  the  Villa 
bandits.  Mrs.  Wright  was  hold  a  pris- 
oner for  nine  days  with  the  Villa 
forces.  She  was  with  them  up  to  the 
time  of  the  attack  on  Columbus,  N. 
Mox. 

Mrs.  Wright  related  details  of  the 
attack  to  Mr.  Webb,  and  also  gave 
some  vivid  descriptions  of  life  with  the 
Villa  army.  Mr.  Webb  expects  to  visit 
Columbus  before  returning  to  Duluth. 


Proctor  school  electors  will  probably 
have  an  opportunity  to  vote  Saturday 
for  the  first  set  of  school  directors  un- 
der the  Independent  district   plan. 

Whether  or  not  the  election  will  take 
place  as  scheduled  depends  upon  the 
order  which  District  Judge  Fesler  will 
file. 

Judge  Fesler  strongly  Indicated  at 
the  conclusion  of  a  hearing  held  before 
him  today  that  he  would  dismiss  the 
injunction  proceedings  which  had  been 
brought  to  restrain  the  school  board 
from  holding  the  election.  However, 
he  f^ald  that  he  would  not  tile  an  order 
in  the  matter  until  tomorrow  and 
would  give  counsel  for  the  opposition 
an  opportunity  to  submit  further  au- 
thorities on  the  law  In  the  case. 

W.  H.  Smith  and  five  other  voters 
and  freeholders  instituted  a  suit  to  re- 
.straln  the  election.  It  was  brought  by 
!■:.  J.  Kenny,  a  local  attorney.  J.  H. 
Code.  H.  J.  Barncard  and  William  Mc- 
Murtrle.  members  of  the  present  school 
i  l)o;ird.  were  named  as  defendants. 
I  On  March  30  last,  an  election  was 
I  held  at  Proctor  for  the  purpose  of  de- 
termlnlng  whether  the  common  school 
district  should  not  be  changed  to  an 
independent  school  district.  The  vote 
indorsed  the  change  by  a  margin  of 
nine.  It  is  now  claimed  that  there 
were  illegal  votes  and  a  recount  is 
asked. 

George  SJoselius.  who  appeared  as 
attorney  for  the  school  board,  which 
Is  attempting  to  carry  out  the  reor- 
ganization plan,  argued  this  morning 
that  the  proper  method  of  determining 
the  validity  of  the  election  was  to  al- 
low It  to  proceed  and  then  question 
the  right  of  the  Incumbents  by  quo 
warranto  proceedings. 

In  Proctor,  sentiment  Is  divided  on 
tho  question.  There  are  opponents  to 
the    present    plan    of    managing   school 

fffalrs  through  a  common  school  dls- 
rlct  board  of  three  members.  The 
reorganization  plan  also  meets  with 
opposition.  It  being  claimed  that  a 
change  to  the  Independent  district 
would  encourage  extravagant  taxation. 
L'nder  an  Independent  district  the 
school   board   con.^^lats    of  six   directors. 

heads"boys^club. 

Frank    Martin    Elected    President — 
Minstrel  Show  Was  Profitable. 

Frank  Martin  was  elected  president 
of  the  Boys'  club  of  the  Denfeld  high 
school  at  the  annual  meeting  held  last 
night  at  the  school  building.  Reports 
of  officers  showed  that  the  club  has 
taken  an  active  part  In  the  social  life 
of  the  school,  and  plans  were  made  for 
the  spring  and  summer. 

The  other  officers  elected  are:  Leon- 
ard Hedman.  vice  president;  Hugh 
Myles,  secretary,  and  Ralph  Nichols, 
treasurer.  Plans  for  a  banquet  to  be 
held  in  honor  of  the  Girls'  High  School 
club  on  April  26  were  made. 

WUmar  Fo.sberg  was  awarded  the 
prize  for  selling  the  greatest  number 
of  tickets  to  the  recent  minstrel  show, 
and  will  be  given  a  trip  to  Camp  Miller 
with  all  expenses  paid.  The  reports  of 
the  minstrel  show  given  by  the  com- 
mittee showed  that  the  club  had  made 
$130  on  the  entertainment.  Of  this 
sum.  $50  was  voted  to  be  paid  towards 
the  cost  of  the  oil  painting  of  Supt.  R. 
E.  Denfeld.  which  recently  was  pre- 
sented to  the  school. 


Governor,     Mayor     and 
Ottiers  Engaged  for  Ban- 
quet on  April  27. 

Congressman  Clarence  B.  Miller  will 
be  one  of  the  principal  speakers  at 
the  annual  banquet  of  the  West  Du- 
luth Commercial  club  to  be  held  at  the 
Moose  hall.  Central  avenue  and  Ram- 
sey street.  April  27.  A  communica- 
tion to  that  effect  has  been  received 
by  L.  A.  Barnes,  chairman  of  the 
speakers'  committee. 

Mr.  Miller  said  In  his  communication 
that  he  thought  he  would  be  able  to 
come  for  this  occasion  unless  some 
unforeseen  events  occur.  Mr.  Miller 
is  a  member  of  the  foreign  affairs 
committee,  which  Is  holding  meetings 
almost   every    day. 

The  speakers'  com/nlttee  is  rapidly 
completing  the  program.  Among  the 
speakers  thus  far  assured  are  Gov- 
ernor J.  A.  A.  Bumqulst.  Mayor  W.  I. 
Prince.  J.  M.  David.>ion  and  John 
Owens.  M.  M.  Forbes  will  be  toast- 
master.  ' '  ^ 

W.  F.  M.  SOCJETY  PROGRAM. 

Asbury  Women  Will   Entertain   Mis- 
sionary Societies  of  Other  Churches. 

The  Women's  Foreign  Missionary  so- 
ciety  of  Asbury  ilethodlst  church  will 


u 

u  

S  Ready 'to-  Wear  Offerings  In  A  ttr active 
i  Values  Arranged  For  Thurs- 
5  day's  Selling! 

H  NEW  SPRING  SUITS— Charmingly  fresh  and  different,  in  checks,  com- 

H  bination  silk  and  wool  materials,  Men's  Wear  Serge,  Poplins  and  Gabar- 

M  dines — an  unlimited  range  ;  all  sizes,  special  featured  for        C^l  iZ  f%f% 

*  Thursday— $22.50,  $19.50,  $17.60  and ^X^«  W 

B  NEW  SPRING  DRESSES — A  magnificent  range  of  lovely  new  models, 

5  in  Silk  Poplins,  Crepes,  Taffetas,  Serges  and  new  checks,  featuring  great 

m  values  for  Thursday's  selling  at  $15.00,  $10.50,  ^  —    -^ 

H  $7.50  and. 

M 

m 

m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 


m 
m 
m 
m 


$5.95 


be  entertained  P?^d»y  afternoon  at  the 
home  of  Mrs.  W,  H.  Farrell,  6009  Ra- 
leigh street.-  A  program  Is  being  ar- 
ranged for  the  af|,»rnoon. 

An  Invitation  has  been  extended  to 
members  of  the  Women's  Foreign  Mis- 
sionary Societies  of  Westminster  Pres- 
byterian and  West  Duluth  Baptist 
churches  to  attend.,  The  program  will 
Include  piano  selections  by  Miss  Jlello, 
a  piano  solo  by  Mrs.  E.  J.  Zauft  and 
vocal  selections  by  Mrs.  J.  Emmett 
Porter.  Mrs.  Hardy  A.  Ingham.  Mrs. 
M.  M.  Turner  and  .Mrs.  Cronk  will  also 
take  part. 

CLOSING  LEAGUE  CAMPAIGN. 


NEW  SPRING  COATS— Hundreds  to  select  from,  in  light  spring  colors, 
also  many  black  and  Belgian — four  great  values  for      ^'f /I  /^/l 

Thursday— $17.50,  $15.00,  $12.50  and » ^A  V.  W 

NEW  SPRING  SKIRTS— Just  received  very  latest  models  in  Silk 
Taffeta,  Wool  Poplin,  Wool  Serge  and  new  checks —        ^S  9S 

a  swell  range  of  styles,  all  at  one  price,  choice ^^m^^ 

OUR  $1  GUARANTEED  PETTICOATS— now  on  sale  in  an  im- 
mense assortment  of  lovely  spring  colors  and  black.  It  is  modeled 
after  the  best  $5.00  Silk  Petticoat  in  use ;  has  as  much  style  and  will 
wear  better.  We  honestly  recommend  them  as  wonderful  values  and 
as  the  best  Petticoats  every  brought  out  for  the  ^^   OO 

low  price  of  only. *f9Am\^%^ 


pm^mm 


S  A  Tremendous  Sale  of  Trimmed  and 

Untrimmed 


Smart  Suits  for  Boys 


"^. 


r 


Here  are  some  seasonable  specials  in 
new  Spring  wearing  apparel  for  boys; 

"K.&A."  Boys' 
Norfolk  Suits 

with  two   pairs  of  knickers,    both    blue 
serges  and  fancy  patterns  ■  mnij  iiw 

$4.95 

Suits  that  look  well  and  wear  better. 
Other  Boys'  Suits  to  $10. 

Our  Boys'  Elk  Sole  School 

Shoes  SS";  At  $2.50 

Bring  your  boys  to  our  store  to  get  fitted  out.  The  new 
Spring  stocks— Suits,  Hats,  Caps,  Furnishings — everything 
a  boy  wears — are  ready  for  your  inspection. 


WADE  RE-ELECTED. 

Again  Chosen  President  of  the  West- 
ern Curling  Club. 

The  Western  Curling  club  has  had 
one  of  the  most  successful  years  in  Its 
history,  according  to  reports  of  officers 
given  at  the  annual  meeting  held  last 
evening.  Frank  H.  Wade,  president  of 
the  club,  was  re-elected  Its  chief  ex- 
ecutive. 

The  other  officers  elected  are:  Walter 
M.  Evered.  vice  president;  Alex  Donald, 
second  vice  president;  Dallas  C.  Wake- 
man,  secretary,  and  W.  B.  Getchcll, 
treasurer. 

Reports  showed  that  the  flnanc'al 
condition  of  the  club  was  better  this 
year  than  it  had  been  since  It  was 
organized.  During  the  last  year  It  had 
nearly  100  members.  A  total  of  twelve 
trophies  was  played  for  by  the  mem- 
bers. In  addition  to  special  events. 

CEMETERY  WILL  HAVE 
CHAPEL  AND  RESTROOM 

The  new  residence  for  thp  sexton  of 
the  Oneota  cemetery,  which  Is  being 
built  by  the  Oneota  Cemetery  associa- 
tion at  a  cost  of  $4,000,  will  be  com- 
pleted about  May  1.     The  building  will 


Asbury  Methodist  Society  Will  Have 
Banquet  and  Program  April  21. 

The  Epworth  l^eague  of  Asbury 
Methodist  church.  Sixtieth  avenue  west 
and  Raleigh  street,  will  close  a  mem- 
bership campalgrn  between  the  "Rus- 
tlers" and  "Hustlers,"  two  divisions  of 
the  society,  with  a  banquet  to  be  held 
on  Friday  evening.  April  21.  The  so- 
ciety has  been  conducting  an  active 
campaign  and  has  added  a  large  num- 
ber of  new  uvembers. 

A  program  pf  short  addresses,  mu- 
sical and  literary  numbers  Is  being 
planned.  It  Is  expected  to  entertain 
fibout  fifty  guests.  The  banquet  will 
be  served  in  the. church  clubrooms. 

Reviva^Draw  Well. 

The  revival  nieetlngs  being  held  at 
Asbury  Methodist  church.  Sixtieth  ave- 
nue  west  and  Raleigh  street,  are  at- 
tracting big  audiences.  Last  evening 
the  sermon  was  preached  by  Rev.  Will- 
iam R.  Farrell,  pastor  of  the  church. 
The  meetings  will  be  continued  until 
Easter.  The  pastor  Is  being  assisted 
by  other  Methodist  ministers  of  the 
city. 

9 

Fire  In  Trestle. 

A  fire  In  timbers  In  the  Canadian 
Northern  railroad  trestle  near  Fifty- 
third"  avenue  west,  gave  the  West  Du- 
luth fire  department  a  run  at  4  o'clock 
yesterday  afternoon.  Several  of  the 
heavy  timbers  were  badly  damaged  as 
well  as  the  ties.  The  fire  is  believed 
to  have  started  from  sparks  from  a 
locomotive. 

• 

Franzen  Funeral. 

The  funeral  service  for  Mrs.  Hannah 
Franzen.  aged  36.  wife  of  Charles 
Franzen.  4112  West  Third  street,  who 
died  Saturday,  was  held  this  afternoon 
at  2  o'clock  from  Flllatrault's  under- 
taking rooms.  Interment  was  in  Park 
Hill  cemetery. 

Markuson  Funeral. 

The  funeral  services  for  John  H. 
Markuson.  220  North  Fifty-sixth  ave- 
nue west,  who  was  killed  by  a  South 
Shore  passenger  tfaln  at  the  Soo  Line 
crossing  at  Twenty-hlnth  avenue  west, 
will  be  held  toptb^row  afternoon  at  2 
o'clock  from  0»»P-  Savior's  Norwegian 
Lutheran  church.  Fifty-seventh  ave- 
nue west  and  Wadena  street.  Inter- 
ment will  be  In  Oneota  cemetery. 
Rev.  B.  L.  Opdahl  will  have  charge  of 
the  service.  Mr.  Markuson  was  a 
member  of  Old  Hickory  camp,  No.  1555, 
Modern  Woodmen. 


m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 

M 

m 

m 
m 
m 
m 


Hats 


Where  Can  You 
Find  Their  Equal? 

These  Unmatchable 

Values  Speak  for 

Themselves 


S  One  Hundred  Trimmed 
m  Hats  at 


m 
m 

m 
m 
m 


$5 


fff 


m 
m 
m 
m 


IMarvelously  different  hats,  beautiful 
and  distinctive  beyond  description,  yet 
they're  only — 

$5,00 


and 


Two  Hundred  Un- 
trimmed Shapes  at 

$|,98 

A'alues  to  $2.50.  Values  to  $4.00. 

These  shapes  require  but  very  little  trim- 
ming to  make  them  appear  like  $6  and  $10  hats, 
yet  they're  only — 

98c  and  $1,98 


98c 


No  Woman  Will  Miss  This  Opportunity  to  Get  Her  Easter  Hat 
at  a  Mere  Fraction  of  Its  Real  Worth. 


M 

m 
m 

M 

m 
m 
m 

M 

m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 

M 

m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 


MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM 


Charles  Wallace  Dies. 

Charles  G.  Wallace,  aged  64,  4032 
West  Third  street,  died  at  11:30  o'clock 
laat  night  following  an  Illness  of  about 
a  month.  He  leaves  a  widow  and  six 
children.  Mr.  Wallace  had  been  a  resi- 
dent of  this  end  of  the  city  for  about 
twenty  years  and  w^as  a  member  of 
Old  Hickory  camp.  No.  1666,  Modern 
Woodmen. 

The  funeral  services  will  be  held  to- 
mor.-ow  morning  at  9  o'clock  from  the 
St.  Jean  Baptlste  French  Catholic 
church.  Twenty-fifth   avenue  west   and 


Kenney-Anker  Co. 

409  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


OUR  BIG  EASTER  SALE 

BEGINS  TOMORROW,  THURSDAY 
MORWNG,  APRIL  13,  AT  9  A-  M- 


BOSTON  STORE 

318  and  320  CENTRAL  AVENUE,  WEST  DULUTH 


OTA 

Let  nothing  keep  you  away,  positively  the 
biggest  sale  of  the  season  begins  tomorrow.  Did 
you  get  on^  of  our  circulars  ?  !«V«  o 


'     Hi 


Third  street.  Interment  will  be  In 
Calvary  cemetery. 

West  Duluth  Briefs. 

Non-excelled  Homestead  No  4276  ? 
A.  Y.,  will  meet  this  evening  at  GlUey  s 
hall  Plans  for  a  celebration  to  be  held 
on  April  26  in  honor  of  the  presenta- 
tion of  a  membership  campaign  banner 

^A  masquerade  dancing  Pa/ty  featured 
an  entertainment  by  the  West  Duliith 
and  Pocahontas  councils.  Royal  League^ 
at  the  West  Duluth  Commercial  club 
rooms  last  evening.  Prizes  for  the  best 
costumes  were  won  by  T.  F.  Olsen.  Mrs. 
Louis  Oreck,  Miss  Clara  Winness  and  G. 

■^pi  son 

Zenith  Council  No.  6.  Modem  Samar- 
itans, win  entertain  at  a  social  session 
following  initiation  of  a  class  of  new 
members  this  evening  at  the  Great 
Eastern  hall.  210  North  Central  avenue 

The  Sewing  Society  of  Morning  Star 
Lodge  No  177  L  O.  G.  T..  will  be  enter, 
talned  tomorrow  evening  at  the  home 
of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Andrew  SJodeen,  615 
North  Sixtieth  aveniie  west. 

The  revival  meetings  which  have 
been  held  during  the  last  ten  days  at 
the  Asbury  Methodist  church  closed 
last  evening.  The  meetings  have  been 
attracting  good  crowds. 

The  West  Duluth  Commercial  club 
will  entertain  Friday  evening  at  an- 
other of  its  "ladles'  nights."  The  com- 
mittee In  charge  consists  of  Thomas 
nivl^  Axel  Wick.  J.  A.  Webber.  Adolph 
Anderson  H  J?  Bell,  David  Harris.  H. 
F     Nelson.    F.    M.    Watson    and    H.    C. 

^  wT"ch  repairing.  Hurst.  West  Duluth. 

LOOKS  GOOD  TO 
SAFETY  HEAD 

Will  Ask  Council  to  Consider 

New  Method  of  Garbage 

Disposal. 


Commissioner  Sllbersteln.  head  of 
the  safety  division,  is  considering  a 
pew  solution  for  the  disposition  of 
the  city's  garbage. 

A  corporation  In  Kansas  City  has 
offered  to  construct  a  patent  incinera- 
tor plant  In  Duluth  at  no  cost  to  the 
city,  the  only  obligation  being  Im- 
posed Is  that  the  municipality  must 
send  all  the  garbage  to  the  plant  and 
nay  just  one-fourth  of  the  cost  of 
operating  the  local  plant  at  the  pres- 
ent time.  The  companv  has  a  patent 
fuel  system,  which  makes  fuel  out  of 
the  garbage  and  for  this  reason  is 
willing  to  erect  the  structure  and 
make  such  a  low  charge  to  the  city. 

If  at  the  end  of  live  years,  the 
city  is  satisfied  with  the  plant,  the 
company  Is  willing  to  sell  the  struc- 
ture to   the  municipality. 

"The  plan  sounds  very  good,  said 
Commissioner  Sllbersteln  this  morn- 
Ine  "but  I  am  looking  Into  the  mat- 
ter    thoroughly     before     making     any 


recommendations  to  the  council.  If 
the  city  can  save  three-fourths  of  the  , 
expense  and  at  the  same  time  have 
the  garbage  disposed  of  In  a  better 
and  more  sanitary  manner  than  at 
present,  I  am  inclined  to  favor  such  a 
proposition.  ^    ^   *i. 

"No  franchise  would  be  granted  the 
company,  just  permission  to  erect  a 
plant  at  Its  own  cost.  If  the  system 
turns  out  favorably,  we  reserve  the 
right  to  buy  the  plant  in  five  years." 

A  representative  of  the  company 
called  on  the  safety  head  the  other 
day  and  this  morning  Commissioner 
Sllbersteln  wrote  to  the  officers  of 
the  concern  for  further  Information 
on  the  proposition. 

LACKED  LIGHTToUCH. 

Sixty  days  at  the  work  farm  and  a 
badly  swollen  jaw  were  the  net  re- 
sults of  Gust  Huovlla's  debut  as  a 
pickpocket. 

Huovila.  a  lumberjack,  had  read  of 
pickpockets  and  their  methods.  It 
sounded  easy,  but  he  didn't  stop  to 
think  that  he  was  cursed  with  a  pair 
of  "hams"  instead  of  hands. 

He  tiptoed  Into  the  room  of  Emll 
Laurlla  at  117  South  First  avenue  east 
last  night  and  carefully  slid  his  hand 
Into  Laurlla's  trousers  pocket. 

At    that   moment    the   sleeper    turned 


;k^^^y^^kA^k^,^^«^t^%^iM^^>^^s^^^^^^k^^^^^ 


ATTENTION 

When  in  need  of  Building 
Material,  Paints,  Oils  or  Auto 
Tires  and  Supplies,  get  our 
prices  before  you  buy. 

"Our    prices    cannot    be   beat." 

Prompt   deliveries    to    all    parts    of 

tht3  city. 

SIEGEL  HARDWARE  CO. 

103  EAST  SUPKRIOR  STREF:T 

Grand  159 — Phone  Us — Melrose  890 


over  and  Huovila  became  panic  strlck-" 
en.     He   turned   to   run     and     Laurlla, 
awakening    suddenly,    hurled    a    cuspi- 
dor at   the   would-be    thief. 

The    cuspidor    struck    Huovlla's    jaw 
and    the    flight    ended.      Then    Laurila. 
aided  by  Victor  Axelson.  proprietor  of 
the  place,  sat  on  the   pickpocket  until 
Chief  of   Detectives   Lahtl   arrived. 
,      He    was    sentenced    to   sixty    days    at_ 
'the  work   farm   for   trespass   by   Judged 
F.  H.  Cutting  today. 


rtvO" 


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210-212  W.  IstSt. 


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16 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD, 


April  12, 1916. 


ON  THE  IRON  RANGES 


THIS  THM  WON  fIVE  OUT  Of  HGHT  GAMES  PLAYEB 


nand    Johnson,    junior,    93;      grade      S, 
Olive    Holm,    junior,    92    3-5. 

IRON  COMPAJirS 

STOCK  IS  SOLU 


Left 


ELY  HIGH  SCHOOL  BASKET  BALL  QUINT, 
to   Right:    Back    Row— Clinton    Rapson,   substitute  guard;    Douglas   Nankervis.   left  guard;   Dewey   Knutson, 
center;  Elmer  Maki,  right  guard;  T.  J.  Murn,  coach.    Front  Row— Matt  Heikkila,  substitute  forward;  Owney 
Hegman,  captain,  left  forward;   Walter  Carlson,  right  forward. 


SAYS  APPOINTEE 


IS  NOT  CITIZEN  i^"'- 


Fannie  Leskinen;  I^llly,  Tina  Aho; 
Martha  (tfirl  in  waiting),  i:sih«r  Has- 
Ky;  Aniif.  Kninia  Lt-wklntn;  Helma, 
Kleiniolu;     Sylvia,     Lola     Wln- 


Mayor  Boylan  to  Veto  Ap- 
pointment of  IVIellis  as 
Auditor. 

VirKiniit.  Minn.,  Ai>ril  12.  —  (.Special 
to  Thr  lUrald.)— The  city  rounc  11 
failfil  l;i.«t  niyht  to  agrt-e  on  a  candi- 
date for  vUe  piesiUeiit  and  the  ap- 
pointin«nt  went  over  for  a  week.  S.  S. 
Diihl  wn.*^  eledf-d  city  attorney,  being 
uii>inim»)usly  «  «iniirnied  after  one  bal- 
lot wlii<h  re>;ulttd:  Dahl.  6;  Montague, 
2;  onkka.  1'.  T.  C.  M.lli.s  wa.s  nanie.l 
auditor,  but  Mayor  Hoylan  announced 
later  that  h»-  would  vi  to  Mellis"  ap- 
pointment because  Mellis  Im  not  a  cit- 
izen of  til.'  I'nited  Stat.-.v,  and  for  that 
reason    ineligible. 

Wh<n  thi'  refjolutlons  eonflrminp  th* 
appoldtiiient.s  made  at  ttie  la.st  ( <>un<  il 
nieeiiii^  came  up.  o)>i>ositlon  devel- 
oped to  the  appoinliiient  of  City  Kn- 
Srineer  Johnson,  Health  Officer  Crowe 
and  Street  i'ominls.^iomi*  I'iuistopher- 
»on.  .Johnson  wan  confirmed,  6  to  3, 
but  both  Crowe  and  Chri.stopherson 
were  defeated.    6   to   4. 

U  hy    ll«'   OppuNed   Crowe. 
Aldfrm.tn     Hai\«y,     chairman    of    the 
health   i  ommlitee,    voted   aKalnst  Crowe 
becau.se,    he    said,    Crowe    while    health 
officer  f.illed   to   rcf(iiire  nanitary  sewer 
connections   made    to   the   Scanlon    loca- 
tion    of    the     ViiKiniii     A:     Rainy     Lake 
company.    Harvey    arraigrned    conditions 
in   the   location  and  declared   the  health  I 
officer    had    been    derelict    in    not    com-  ' 
pellinpr    the     necessary     Hewer     connec- 
tions   made.      The    appointments    of    the 
health    oiTlcer  and   street   commissioner 
will    probably  be   taken   up  at   the  next 
meeting'. 

The  mayor  appointed  J.  S.  Cherne  to 
the  park  board  and  William  Fitzger- 
ald court  oftMcer.  but  Avithheld  the  ap- 
pointments of  two  members  of  the  li- 
brary board  and  one  member  of  the 
police    and   fire    commission. 

The  annual  rejiort  of  the  city's  finan- 
cial comlltion  showed  expenditures 
during  the  past  year  of  >735,231.17. 
The  cliy  has  assets  of  $505,553.61.  Its 
lndebtcdne.«--s  is  $301,704.89  and  its  a.s- 
Bet.s    above    Indebt*  dness,    $2l'3,848.76. 

WILL  GIVfSKETCH. 

Daughters  of  Martha  Sewing  Club  of 
Chisholm  Rehearsing. 

Chleholm.    Minn..    Apiil    12. — (55pecial 
to    The    H.rald.) — Heliearpals    are    well 
under     way     for     the     comedy      .sketch, 
Siiffrage,"    to    be    staged    at 

30, 


VILLAGE  EMPLOYES 
WANT  WAGE  INCREASE 


Electrical  Employes  of  Nib- 
bing Ask  for  More 
Money. 

nibbing,  Minn..  April  12. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  water  and  light 
board  last  evening  listened  to  a  re- 
quest of  village  electrical  workers  for 
a   $10   a   month    raise. 

The  board  memberB  stated  that  they 
would  be  pleased  to  hear  the  men's 
grievances  as  soon  as  they  communi- 
cated with  Secretary  Lawson  of  the 
.State  Federation  of  Labor  and  the 
state  labor  department  to  obtain  data 
on   the  subject. 

The  board  granted  the  request  of 
.Second  avenue  residents  asking  for 
more  light  on  that  thoroughfare  and 
added  that  all  streets  where  there 
were  business  places  should  all  have 
the  clusters  on  the  white  way  system 
placed  In  operation  during  the  summer 
months. 

G.  L.  Thouin  sat  with  the  board  last 
evening  for  the  first  time,  succeeding 
Chairman    Hyder    whose   term    expired. 

Commissioner  Smith  is  now  chairman 
of  the  board. 


EVELETH  PRIEST  NOW 
LOCATED  AT  GILBERT 

Eveleth,  Minn..  April  12. —  (Special  to 
JThe  Herald.)— licv.  Father  Kilban  was 
tran.sferred  Tuesday  from  the  Holy 
Family  church  here  to  the  charge  at 
Giloert.  Rev.  Mi.  Bllban  has  been  in 
charge  of  the  local  church  for  twenty 
years,  coming  here  from  Virginia,  and 
has  been  a  resident  of  Eveleth  for  the 
last  thirteen  years.  Father  Kastinger 
of  Gilbert  has  taken  charge  of  the 
local  church. 

fathersTnd'sons 
to  have  banquet 


NIBBING  CHIEFS 

REPORT  ON  FIRES 

Tells  of  Work  of  Depart- 
ment First  Three  Months 
of  1916. 

Hlbbing.  Minn..  April  12.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Fire  Chief  Mc- 
Illhargey's  report  for  three  months  of 
1916  shows  that  there  were  twenty- 
seven  alarms  turned  In;  that  the  fire 
loss  was  $611;  damage  by  smoke, 
$2,000;  Insurance  on  property  dam- 
aged, $16,700;  valuation  of  property 
damaged,    $49,500. 

The  biggest  damage  was  In  the  Ma- 
sonic Templo  fire,  principally  bv 
smoke. 

The-  following  firemen  have  re- 
signed: Nello  Tedisco,  Del.  Saint 
.Julian,  Alex  Munter,  Laurence  Adams, 
and  the  following  added  to  the  depart- 
ment: William  Sullivan,  Rosswell  Bar- 
rett,   Edward    Mobile,    Bert    Roseveare. 

Ch'ef  Mclllhargey  recommended  that 
one  of  the  fire  horses,  who  has  seen 
eight  years  in  service  and  Is  16  rears 
old,  be  sold,  also  that  a  heavy  "dray 
be  purchased  for  fire  runs  and  for 
carrying   hose   in   cases  of  necessity. 

SUPERIORl/VOMAiir 

IS  NOT  RE-ELECTED 

Buhl,  Minn.,  April  12. — It  develops 
that  the  local  board  of  education  has 
not  re-elected  Mies  Nina  Leader  of  Su- 
perior. Wis.,  as  a  teacher  In  the  local 
scliool,  because  Supt.  M.  A.  Morse  asked 
for  her  resignation  when  she  failed  to 
attend  the  recent  educators'  meeting  in 
Duluth.  Miss  Leader  contends  she  was 
too  ill  to  attend  the  Duluth  meeting 
and  showed  a  doctor's  certificate  to 
that  end.  Considerable  feeling  has  been 
engendered  over  the  matter  and  some 
of  the  patrons  of  the  school  petitioned 
the  board  not  to  demand  her  resigna- 
tion. She  will  continue  to  teach  till 
the  end  of  the  term. 


SHOWERS 


] 


Hlbbing,     Minn.,     April     12.— 
to   The   Herald.) — Addressing    t 
ior     Commercial     club,     C.     E. 
range  probation  officer,   stated 
duty    of    Juvenile    officers    was 
work    against    erring    youths, 
the  other  hand,   to  be 
I  and    encourage    them 
lives. 

It    was    decided     to 


a    friend 
to      lead 


(Special 
he  Jun- 
Everett, 
that  the 
not  to 
but  on 
to  them 
belter 


SUPERFLUOUS  HAIR 
MUST  BE  ATTACKED 
UNDER  THE  SKIN 

It  has  been  proven  by  the  world's 
greatest  authorities  that  hair  is  bound 
to  grow  out  coar.«er  and  stlffer  after 
each  removal  unless  it  is  devitalized. 
It  is  impo.vsible  to  devitalize  hair  with 
pasten  and  rub-on  preparations,  be- 
cause they  only  remove  hair  from  the 
Burfaoe    of    the    skin. 

DeMlracle,  the  original  liquid  de- 
pilatory, levllalizes  hair  by  attacking 
it  under  the  skin  as  well  as  on  the 
Bkin.  Imitations  of  DeMlracle  are  as 
worthless  as  pastes  and  rub-on  pre- 
parations, because  they  lack  certain 
Ingredients  that  DeMlracle  alone  con- 
tains, which  give  it  the  power  to  rob 
hair  of  its  vitality — its  life-sustaining 
force.  DeMlracle  works  equally  well 
for  removing  hair  from  face,  neck, 
arms  and  under  arms  or  from  limbs 
to  prevent  it  from  showing  through 
Btockliigs. 

Buy  a  bottle  of  the  genuine  DeMlr- 
acle today  and  you  will  get  the  orig- 
inal liquid  hair  remover.  Others  are 
worthless  imitations — refuse  them. 
Remember,  you  are  not  asked  to  buy 
DeMlracle  on  a  mere  promise  of  your 
money  being  refunded.  DeMlracle  is 
the  only  depilatory  that  has  a  binding 
guarantee  in  each  package  which  en- 
titles you  to  the  refund  of  your  money 
If   it    falls. 

DeMlracle  Is  sold  In  $1.00  and  $2.00 
bottles.  The  larger  size  Is  the  most 
economical  for  dermatologists  and 
large  users  to  buy.  If  your  dealer  will 
not  supply  you  buy  a  bottle  from  I. 
Frelmuth  or  order  direct  from  us.  The 
truth  about  the  treament  of  super- 
fluous hair  mailed  in  plain  sealed  en- 
'velope  on  request.  DeMlracle  Chem- 
ical company,  Dept.  11-F,  Park  Ave. 
and  129th  St.,   New  York. 


and    sons'    banquet   soon. 


hold    a    fathers' 


RANGE  WOMAN'S  BODY 
TAKEN  TO  MILWAUKEE 

Chl.«»holm.    Minn.,    April    12. —  (Special 
to     The     Herald.)— Mrs.     M.     Taitelman 
died   Tuesday    at    her   home    here   after 
an   Illness  of  almost  a  month. 
I      She    had    made    her    home    here     for 
I  about   two   and   one-half   years,   coming 
I  here    from    Gilbert,    where    the    family 
I  resided     for    some    time.       .She    was    27 
I  years    of    age    and    Is    survived    by    her 
;  husband,  a  little  daughter  and  son,  the 
i  latter    but    3    weeks    old;    her    mother,  \ 
I  Mrs.     Clara    Newald,     and     sister,    Mrs. 
I  S.   D.   Abrahams   of  Milwaukee,   and   an 
aunt,  Mrs.  Max  Lewis  ot  Virginia. 

Short  services  were  held  at  the  home 
this  morning,  after  which  the  remain.s 
were  taken  to  Milwaukee,  where  Inter- 
ment was  made. 


NEW  M.E.  CHURCH 

NEEDED  IN  HIBBING 

Hibbing.  Minn.,  April  12.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — At  a  meeting  of  the  of- 
fleers  of  the  M.  E.  church  this  eve- 
ning, plans  will  be  discussed  for  build- 
ing a  new  church.  Rev.  Burns,  district 
superintendent    will    be    present. 

The  present  church,  the  oldest  in  the 
village,  if  not  on  the  range.  Is  a  frame 
structure  much  too  small  to  accom- 
modate  the  congregation. 

Three  sit(  s  have  been  picked. 

MUNICI'PAT  COURT 

RECEIPTS  SMALL 

Hibbing,  Minn..  April  12.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Applications  of  W  H 
Day  and  T.  J.  Bowden  for  permits  to 
make    alterations     to     their     buildings 


are  still  continu- 
ing. They  would  be 
still  more  welcome 
If  they  would  turn 
into  d  o  w  n  p  o  u  rs 
that  would  wash  off 
the  streets,  but 
they  are  fine  as 
they  are,  for  they 
have  laid  the  dust 
which  was  causing 
more  or  less  ail- 
ment and  disagree- 
ableness. 

A  year  ago  tpday  was  sunny  and 
cool.  The  sun  rose  this  morning  at 
6:26  and  will  set  this  evening  at  6:62, 
giving  thirteen  hours  and  twenty-six 
minutes  of  sunlight. 

Mr.  Richardson  makes  the  following 
comment   on  weather  conditions: 

"Cooler  weather  prevails  In  Utah, 
Nevada,  Idaho,  Oregon,  Washington 
and  the  Lake  Superior  region,  and 
warmer  In  most  states  east  of  the 
Rocky  mountains.  Mild  weather  is  the 
rule  in  Central  states.  During  the  last 
twenty-four  hours  rain  or  snow  fell 
throughout  the  Northwest  and  far 
West,  the  lake  region  and  Eastern 
states.  The  disturbance  centered  over 
Eastern  South  Dakota  favors  north- 
east gale  conditions  at  the  Head  of 
the  Lakes  today  and   tonight.'' 

General  Foreca«tM. 

Chicago,  April  12. — Forecasts  for  the 
twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  p.  m. 
Thursday: 

.Minnesota — Rain  tonight;  colder  In 
west  and  south  portions;  Thursday 
partly  cloudy  with. colder  in  southeast 
portion;    shifting    gale. 

Wisconsin — Rain  this  afternoon  and 
tonight;  warmer  In  east  portion; 
Thursday  partly  cloudy  with  rain  or 
snow  in  northeast  and  cooler  In  south- 
west portions;  southerly  to  westerly 
gale. 

Iowa — Generally  fair  and  cooler  to- 
night and  Thursday;  strong  southwest 
to   west   winds   tonight. 

North  Dakota — Unsettled  and  colder 
tonight;  rain  or  snow;  Thursday  fair 
with  warmer  In  west  portion. 

South  Dakota — Generally  fair  to- 
night and  Thursday;  cooler  tonight  and 
In  east  portion   Thursday. 

Montana — Fair  tonight  and  Thurs- 
day; cooler  In  east  portion  tonight; 
rising  temperature  Thursday. 

Lower  Michigan — Probably  showers 
tonight  and   Thursday. 

Upper  Michigan— Probably     rain   to- 


were  referred  by  the  village  council 
yesterday  to  the  fire  committee. 

A  petition  from  village  employes  for 
more  wages  was  held  for  further  con- 
sideration. 

Secretary  GIffin  of  the  St.  Louis 
county  fair  asked  for  a  village  ap- 
propriation for  fair  purposes,  and  his 
request    was    deferred. 

The  report  of  the  clerk  of  the  mu- 
nicipal court  for  the  week  ending 
April  8,  showed  a  receipt  of  $4.76. 

The  council  adjourned  till  Thurs- 
day evening,  when  It  Is  expected  the 
appointments  will  be  made. 


how«'rs    came    and  I  ^^  i 

I     LOCAL  FORECAST     | 

^        Duluth,   Superior     and     Tielnlty,  1^ 
^  iiiciudinK     the     MeMsba     and     Ver-  ^ 


»aiieral  will  be  held  from  the  Swedish 
Lutheran  church  Friday  afternoon. 
Rev.  Hugo  Thorene  will  officiate  and 
interment  will  be  made  in  Greenwood 
cemetery. 


^  mtllon  iron  rangeHi  Rain  or  iino^v  ^ 
^  tonight  with  lonent  temperature  ^ 
^  about  32  defc.  Thursday  partly  -* 
^  cloudy  weather.  Northeast  gale,  ■*. 
^  dintliil.HhInir  Thurdday  morning  id 
^  and     Mhirtlng     to     weitterly.  ^ 

*  * 

night  and  Thursday;  rising  tempera- 
ture. 


Temprratores. 

Following  were  the  highest  temper- 
atures in  the  last  twenty-four  hours 
and  the  lowest  in  the  last  twelve,  end- 
ing at  7  a.  m.: 

HlRb  liPw  ,  High  Low 


Abllfnf    88  M 

Amartllo W 

Btttleford   68  34 

Bismarck   64  40 

Boise    46  32 

Boston    62  42 

Bu!r«lo   48  34 

Cairo   68 

Calgarj    60  30 

Ciiarles  (?lty  50 

Ciilcago    70  44 

Concordia 60 

Danvenport    62 

Donrcr    76  44 

IK'K  Molnei 74  56 

IK-TIU  Lake 60  38 

Uodgo  86  48 

inibUQue 66  52 

DULUTH    M  34 

Eilmwiton    62  36 

Lttranaba  54  34 

Fort  Smith  62 

Orand    Haven 62  42 

tirern  Bay   60  40 

Helena  4d  36 

Houghton   28 

Huron 66  52 

Indtanapolli   64 

Jai-ksornlUe  70  68 

Komloups r>6  28 

Kansas  City  80  64 

Keokuk     66 

KnoiTllle  68  62 

La  Crosse   60 

Lander  40 

Loulsrille  68  68 

Madison  62  44 

Marquette    62  34 

.Medicine  Hat 60  36 

.Memphis  72  60 

MHea  City  70  48 

Milwaukee   66  40 

.Mlnnedosa  62  34 


Modcna    68  34 

Montgomery 72  62 

Montreal    56  40 

Moorhead  56  44 

.N'ashvllle   36 

New  Orleans   74  58 

.\ew  York  58  44 

.North  I'latte  86  50 

Oklahoma    78  60 

Omaha   86  64 

Pany  Sound   44  32 

Phoenix   80  50 

Pierre  72  44 

Pittsburgh   60  42 

Port  Arthur 54  28 

Portland.     Or 56  38 

Prince  Albert 56  34 

Qu'Appelle   44  32 

Raleigh    66  52 

Rapid  City 70  52 

Roseburg    54  .12 

Boswell  rA 

St.  LouU 80  60 

St.   Paul    56  48 

Salt  Lake  City.... 62  36 

San  Diego  62  52 

San  Francisco 60  52 

Sault  8t*.  .Marl*.  .40  32 

Seattle   52  40 

Sheridan    66  44 

Shreveport   76 

Sioux  City 80  62 

Spokane  52  34 

Springfleld,  111 54 

Sprlngfleld.    .Mo 58 

Swift  Current  ....60  36 

Toledo 66  44 

Valentine   46 

Washington  64  50 

Wichita    €0 


D.  &  N.  M.  RY.  SECTION 
HANDS  FED  VENISON 


Section    Boss    Palm    Ar- 
rested and  Fined  $50 
and  Costs. 

Two  Harbors,  Minn.,  April  12. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Gunnard  Palm 
was  arrested  yesterday  at  his  home  In 
Finland,  a  small  station  on  the  Alger 
line,  by  Game  Wardens  August  Tabor 
of  this  city  and  Kreager  of  Duluth, 
charged  with  'having  venieon  unlaw- 
fully in  his  possession.  Before  Justice 
E.  P.  Kroberger,  Palm  pleaded  guilty 
to  the  charge  in  Justice  court  this 
morning  and  was  fined  |60  and  costs, 
which   he   paid. 

Palm  is  a  section  foreman  on  the 
Duluth  &  Northern  Mlnesota  railway, 
and,  according  to  Game  Warden  Ta- 
bor, has  been  feeding  the  venison  to 
his  men  for  some  time. 

Find  Much  Game  3Ieat. 

The  wardens  found  an  Icehouse  some 
distance  from  the  section  house  and, 
upon  examining  the  contents  of  it, 
found  several  hundred  pounds  of  deer 
and  moose  meat.  Some  of  it  was  fresh 
while  much  of  the  deer  meat  and  all 
the  moose  meat  was  spoiled.  No  one 
in  the  vicinity  claimed  ownership  of 
the  icehouse,  but  Palm  said  that  every 
one  in  that  vicinity  used  it. 

The    game    wardens    claim    that    they 
have    found    a    nest    of    game    law    vio 
58  I  lators  and   are   going   back   to  that   lo- 


Youngstown  Interests  Ac- 
quire Blast  Furnaces,  Coal 
and  Iron  Lands. 

Youngstown,  Ohio.  April  12. — An  In» 
terest  in  ore  rights  in  the  Mahoningr 
mine  on  the  Mesaba  range  in  Minne- 
sota, where  there  Is  an  estimated  de- 
posit of  100,000,000  tons  of  iron  ore, 
was  transferred  in  an  important  deal 
announced   here   today. 

President  James  A.  Campbell  of  the 
Youngstown  Sheet  &  Tube  company 
announced  that  his  company  has 
bought  outright  the  capital  stock  o( 
the  Andrews  &  Hitchcock  Iron  com- 
pany at  a  cost  of  $2,500,000.  Included, 
In  the  deal  was  the  transfer  of  an  In- 
terest in  ore  rights  in  the  Mahoningr 
mine. 

The  Andrews  &  Hitchcock  concern 
has  two  400-ton  blast  furnaces  at  Hub- 
bard, near  here.  Extensive  coal  lands 
in  Pennsylvania  and  Ohio  are  also  In- 
cluded in  the  deal.  The  sale  also  car- 
ries an  Interest  In  steamship  companies 
In  the  lake-carrying  trade.  The  esti- 
mated value  of  all  property  Involved 
in  the  transaction  is  $7,000,000. 


Williston   60 

Wlnncmucca 46 

Winnipeg    54 

Yellowstone  56 


callty     to     endeavor 
guilty  parties. 


to      arrest     other 


38 
26 
34 
32 


EVELETH  BARBERS  IH 
FIRST  RANGE  UNION 


MANY  ODD  FELLOWS 

ARE  GOING  TO  BUHL 

Buhl.  Minn..  April  12.— This  village 
will  be  host  to  a  notable  gathering  of 
.St.  I..ouls  county  Odd  Fellows  Sunday, 
April  30,  when  the  ninety-seventh  an- 
niversary of  the  order  will  be  cele- 
brated. 

Canton  North  Star  No.  14  of  Duluth, 
the  military  branch  of  the  C^dd  Fel- 
lows, will  leave  Sunday  morning,  April 
30  for  Virginia,  where  It  will  Join  the 
Virginia  canton  and  accompany  it  to 
Buhl  in  full  uniform. 


lilbblnR-CltlNlioIiii    iimmtm, 

Hlbbing,  Minn..  April  12. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Manager  Brown  of 
the  Chisholm  baseball  team  and  Man- 
ager Thomas  Brady  of  Hibbing  yester- 
day fixed  the  dates  for  games  between 
Hlbbing  and  Chisholm  as  follows:  Hlb- 
bing at  Chisholm,  May  28,  June  13.  14 
16,  July  2,  30;  Chisholm  at  Hibbing' 
May  3.  June  11,  July  16.  Hlbbing  will 
play  Chisholm  three  other  games 
probably  during  the  state  ftderatlori 
of  labor  meeting. 


EASY  TO  DARKEN 

YOUR  CRAY  HAIR 

You  Can  Bring  Back  Color 

and  Luster  With  Sage  Tea 

and  Sulphur. 

When    you    darken    your    hair    with 
Sage  Tea  and  Sulphur,  no  one  can  tell 
because    It's,  done     so     naturally      so 
evenly.         Preparing       this       mixture, 
though,   at   home   i.<?   mu.ssy   and   trou- 
ble.some.     For  50  cents  you  can  buy  at 
any  drug  store  the  ready-to-use  prep- 
aration,  Improved   by   the   addition   of  i 
other  ingredients,  called  "Wyeth's  Sagei 
and    Sulphur    Compound."      You    just  I 
dampen  a  sponge  or  soft  brush  with ' 
it  and   draw    this  through   your   hair 
taking  one  small  strand  at  a  time    By 
morning  all  gray  hair  disappears,  and 
after  another  application  or  two,'  your 
hair    becomes     beautifully     darkened 
glossy  and  luxuriant.  ' 

Gray,  faded  hair,  though  no  dis- 
grace, is  a  sign  of  old  age,  and  as  we 
all  desire  a  youthful  and  attractive  ap- 
pearance, get  busy  at  once  with 
Wyeth's  Sage  and  Sulphur  Compound 
and  look  years  younger.  This  ready- 
to-use  preparation  is  a  delightful  toi- 
let retjulslte  and  not  a  medicine.  It 
Is  not  Intended  for  the  cure,  mitigation 
or  prevention  of  disease. 

— Advertisement. 


Sunday    Shaving    to    Be 

Taboo  in  Tfiat  City 

Hereafter. 

Eveleth,  Minn..  April  12. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Walter  Dunlap.  secre- 
tary of  the  Minnesota  state  board  of 
barber  examiners  and  secretary  of  the 
Barbers'  union  of  Duluth,  was  here 
Monday  and  every  barber  was  seen  In 
regard  to  forming  a  barbers'  union 
here.  They  decided  to  co-operate  on 
union  rules,  which  are  in  force  in  the 
shops.  The  closing  hour  is  now  8 
o'clock  in  the  evening  and  no  Sunday 
work  whatever,  will  be  done. 

I'reviously  there  was  no  regular  clos- 
ing hour  and  on  several  occasions  bar- 
ber shops  were  open  for  business  on 
Sunday. 

Eveleth  shops  are  the  first  on  the 
range  to  organize  a  union,  all  others 
still  being  on  the  same  scale  as  they 
were  before. 

A  convention  of  barbers  will  be  held 
at  Duluth  In  July,  as  there  is  every 
year,  and  Eveleth  will  be  represented 
this  year  for  the  first  time  in  its  his- 
tory. 

Mr.  Dunlap  states  that  he  is  also  de- 
sirous of  forming  other  unions  on  the 
range.  From  this  city  he  went  to  Vlr- 
glilla.  where  he  will  try  to  unionize 
the  shops. 

NEW  BUILDINGS 

FOR  COUNTY  FAIR 

Hlbbing.  Minn.,  April  12.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Bids  for  building  new 
residences  at  the  county  fair  grounds 
and  a  cattle  barn  will  be  let  this  week 
by    the   St.   Louis  County  Fair  assocla- 

Secretary  Giflfin  of  the  fair  gets 
many  letters  from  various  entertainers 
desirous   of  coming  here. 

It  Is  not  certain  yet  whether  an  avi- 
ator  will  be   engiiged. 

:— » 

Tirglnia  Curler*  Elect. 

Virginia,  Minn,,  April  12.— ('Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Virginia  Curling 
club  held  its  annual  election  of  officers 
latk  night.  E.  D.  McNeil  was  chosen 
president:  A.  C  Stevens,  first  vice 
president;  Dr.  Mill^.ttecond  vice  presi- 
dent, and  Ford  Rhire.  secretary.  D. 
W.   Stebblns   waff'  ejeieted  treasurer. 

*-•— 

Chlaholm   HeHtal. 

Chisholm,  Minn..  April  12.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) -^Mlsf  Eva  E.  Ketchum 
of  Duluth  will  ajJpeaf  in  recital  at  the 
M.   E.   church  on    Wednesday   evening. 


April    19,    under    the    auspices    of    the 
Nietsche  club.  Vocal  solos  by  Miss  Sldna 

g°  en  *   ^"^^   Whltmore   will    be 


Tirglnla    Ciean-Up    PlaiiR. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  12. — The  meet- 
ing of  the  committee  appointed  to  take 
charge  of  the  work  of  "clean-up  and 
palntup  week"  was  to  have  been  held 
at  the  city  hall  Monday  evening,  but 
because  of  a  number  of  other  meetings 
conflicting  .t  was  decided  to  postpone 
it  until  Tomorrow  evening. 


ELY  MOTHERS'  CLUB 

WILL  GIVE  PROGRAM 

^^llnH^Jt'i"^'^'  meeting  in  the  Wash- 

nnf,„  ..''l",''.'''''^'",'''*,"  ""  f'fWiy  after- 
noon  at  3:15  o  clock. 

^„T'^®TDf°"°^'*n^  program  will  be  giv- 
fvho.^'.^"?  «olo,  "Fifth  Nocturne"  (T. 
Lybach)     Lucia    Brownell;    "Home     the 


on     "The 
located    in 


Little    Wanderer's    Home,       .^.aieu     11 

WANT  CLOSER  TRAIN 
CONNECTION  TO  DULUTH 

Gilbert.    Minn..    April    12.— The    Com- 
T,t™    clubs   of   Gilbert.    Blwablk  and 
Aurora    and    business    men    of    McKln- 
To;»  !  f^K"^  other  Mesaba  range  sta- 
tions of  the  Irong  Range  railway  will 

"^^A^  k"  fl^^J"^^^  *o  »^8ve  connections 
V^^^  V/u  \^*^  •■^^'^  ''•o"^  Allen  Junc- 
tion  with   the    new   passenger   train. 

««Ai"^''i"'**  then  be  possible  for  range 
people  to  arrive  In  Duluth  In  the  after- 
noon  transact  buslnegs,  attend  a  show 
and   leave   Duluth   the   same   night. 

— — • 

,.,.    ,\''"«'"*"  Typiioid  Victim. 

Virginia  Minn.,  April  12.— After  an 
Illness  of  five  months.  John  Omer,  the 
18-year-old  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Aaron 
Olson  of  t^e  Norton  hotel,  died  yester- 
day at  his  home  of  typhoid  fever.  He 
was  taken  ill  at  Tower  last  December 
and  was  brought  here  in  February   His 


KEEP  LOOKING  YOUNG 

It's    Easy  —  If  You    Know    Dr. 
Edwards*  Olive  Tablets. 

The  secret  of  keeping  young  is  to 
feel  young — to  do  this  you  must  watch 
your  liver  and  bowels— there's  no  need 

of   having    a   sallow   complexion dark 

rings  under  your  eyes— pimples— a  bil- 
ious look  in  your  face — dull  eyes  with 
no  sparkle. 

Your  doctor  will  tell  you  ninety  per 
cent  of  all  sickness  comes  from  inac- 
tive bowels  and  liver. 

Dr.  Edwards,  a  well-known  physi- 
cian in  Ohio,  perfected  a  vegetable 
compound  mixed  with  olive  oil  to  act 
on  the  liver  and  bowels,  which  he  gave 
to   his    patients   for   years. 

Dr.  Edwards'  Olive  Tablets,  the  sub- 
stitute for  calomel,  are  gentle  In  their 
action,    yet   always  effective. 

They  bring  about  that  exuberance 
of  spirit,  that  natural  buoyancy  which 
should  be  enjoyed  by  everyone,  by  ton- 
ing up  the  liver  and  clearing  the  sys- 
tem of  impurities. 

You  will  know  Dr.  Edwards'  Olive 
Tablets  by  their  olive  color.  lOc  and 
-^£,.  *'*'i^..*'°''v„  ;^,''    drugglst.s.  Thelma    Olson,    freshman, '94:' gfideT 

The  Olive  Tablet  Co.,  Columbus,  O.     [  Hazel  Berglund,  freahman.  and  Ferdi 


Xevr  Virginia  Clnb  Leader. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  12.— J.  N. 
Laaksonen  has  been  chosen  a  director 
of  the  Socialist  Dramatic  club  in  place 
of  Laurl  Lemberg,  who  recently  re- 
signed to  take  a  position  in  Duluth. 
Mr.  Laaksonen  has  long  been  a  mem- 
ber of  the  club.  Next  Sunday  the  club 
will  present   "The  Seven  Brothers." 

Virginia   A.   O.   V.  MT.   Meeting. 

Virginia.  Minn..  April  12. — Grand 
Master  Workman  W.  M.  Barber  of 
Long  Prairie,  Past  Grand  Master 
Workman  J.  A.  Schumacher  of  Duluth, 
Grand  Record  C.  E.  Larson  of  St.  Paul 
and  Grand  Deputy  M.  Taylor  of  St. 
Paul  attended  a  special  meeting  of 
the  Ancient  Order  of  United  Workmen, 
held  at  the  Lyric  hall  Monday  evening. 
Mr.  Taylor  is  conducting  a  member- 
ship campaign  in  Virginia  and  other 
range  towns. 

♦ 

Auto  Club  to  Elect. 

Hibbing,  Minn.,  April  12. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Hibbing  Automobile 
club  will  meet  this  evening  and  of- 
ficers will  be  elected,  and  plans  made 
for  several   road   trips. 

John  Redfern  is  president,  while  Dr. 
Philip    Thomas    Is    secretary. 
♦     — 

To    Give    ForbcM    Concert. 

Eveleth.  Minn.,  April  12. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Forbes  Cornet  band 
will  make  its  first  public  appearance 
April  30  at  the  Forbes  schoolhouse.  A 
concert  will  be  given.  The  orchestra 
is  directed  by  T.  A.  Clark.  In  addi- 
tion to  orchestra  pieces,  cornet,  bass 
and  vocal  solos  will  be  given. 

Eveleth  Band  Concert. 

Eveleth,  Minn.,  April  12. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  masquerade  ball  will 
b^  given  Saturday  at  the  Walon 
I^hde  hall  by  the  Eveleth  City  band, 
an  organization  formed  a  few  months 
ago,  formerly  known  as  the  Eveleth 
Star  band. 

• 

Want  All  White  Lights. 

Hlbbing,  Minn.,  April  12. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Residents  of  Second 
avenue  and  Center  streets  have  peti- 
tioned the  water  and  light  commission 
to  put  all  white  lights  on  these  streets. 
At  the  present  time  only  the  top  light 
of  the  White  Way  system  has  been  In 
use  and  it  Is  the  contention  of  the 
petitioners  that  the  streets  do  not  pre- 
sent the  well  lighted  appearance  they 
did  before  the  new  system  was  put  In 
vogue. 

MARCH  HON()R  ROLL 

IN  CLOQUET  HIGH 

Cloquet.  Minn.,  April  12. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Prof.  H.  E.  Wllkins,  of 
the  Lincoln  high  school  announces  the 
following  students  were  placed  on  the 
honor  roll  for  March:  Class  A,  jun- 
iors— Ferdinand  Johnson.  93;  Olive 
Holm,  92  3-5;  Mable  Johnson,  91  3-B; 
Mildred  Johnson,  90.  Freshmen — Thel- 
ma Olson,  94;  Margaret  Nelson,  92  2-6- 
Belle  Stapleton,  92  1-4.  Class  B 
seniors — Selma  Elm,  90%;  Sadie  Huse- 
by,  901.4;  Hannah  Johnson.  89  4-5- 
Mariou  Andrews,  88%;  Alamanda 
Huard,  88%;  Harold  Johnson,  88. 
Juniors — Frances  Beaupre,  90.  Sopho- 
mores— Gerda  Nelson,  94;  Mamie  Lu- 
mola,  90%;  Delia  Lundell,  89  2-5 
Freshmen — Hazel  Berglund,  93;  Lillian 
La  Savage,  90%;  Raymond  Andrews 
90^4;  Helml  Peterson.  91;  Clara  Kol- 
seth,  89%:  Clarence  Anderson,  88  4-6- 
Ruth  Engdahl.  87%. 

The  highest  individual  average  was 
secured  by  the  following  students: 
Grade  1,  Gerda  Nelson,  sophomore,  and 


W.  C.  Agnew  of  the  M.ahonlng  Ore 
&  Steel  company  said  today  that  ihiS 
Is  the  first  intimation  of  such  a  deal 
that   he   has   had. 

"The  Andrews  &  Hitchcock  company 
held  12  per  cent  of  the  stock  of  thd 
company."  said  Mr.  Agnew.  "I  have 
no  idea  of  what  portion  of  the  amount 
paid  represents  the  value  of  the  com- 
pany's Interest  in  the  Mahoning.  It 
will  make  no  difference  to  our  com* 
pany  so  far  as  I  can  see." 

CLOQUET  HOME  WEDDING 

Miss  Lizzie  Smith  Becomes  Bride  of 
William  Sarette. 

Cloquet,  Minn.,  April  12. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  very  pretty  homo 
wedding  was  solemnized  today  at  tho 
home    of   the   bride's   parents,   Mr.   andt 

Mr.s.  McKean  Smith,  when  Miss  Lizzio 
Smith  was  married  to  William  Sar- 
ette. Both  young  people  are  well 
k*own  in  the  city,  Mr.  Sarette  havinff 
spent  his  early  boyhood  here,  going  to 
school  in  the  public  schools  and  about 
four  years  ago  entered  in  the  grocery 
business,  "rhe  bride  Is  the  daughter 
of  one  of  Cloquet's  early  citizens  and 
has   lived   here   nearly   all  her  life. 

Among  the  out-of-town  guests  wer^ 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  H.  Blake  of  Interna-* 
tional  Falls,  Mrs.  Gobler  of  Minneapo* 
lis  and  several  other  relatives  an^ 
friends    from    nearby    towns. 

The  couple  left  on  an  afternooa 
train  for  the  Twin  Cities,  where  they 
win  spend  a  short  wedding  trip  an4 
upon  their  return  will  make  their 
home  with  Mrs.  Sarette's  father,  Mc* 
Kean  Smith,  on  Third  street. 

TWO  NEW  CORPORATIONS 

Will  Manufacture  Water  Meters  and 
Deal  In  Real  Estate. 

Two  new  firms,   organized  to  engage 
in   business    with    headquarters   In    Du- 
luth,   filed    incorporation   articles  toda^ 
with     Charles     Calligan,      register 
deeds. 

The  Anderson  Meter  company  will 
manufacture  and  sell  automatic  watep 
meters.  Its  capital  stock  is  $100,000. 
and  the  incorporators  are  A.  G.  Mc* 
Knight,  L.  U.  Young  and  S.  H.  Nelson, 

Daniel  A.  Fitzpatrick,  John  R.  Mein- 
Ing,  Edward  Dormedy,  John  A.  Eklund 
and  Abner  Brotherton  are  Incorpora^ 
tors  of  the  Red  Sand  Lake  company^ 
which  will  engage  in  buying  and  sell* 
ing  real  estate,  bonds,  stocks  and 
mortgages.  The  capital  stock  is  $50,000^ 


lay 


MANY  FEATURES  DAILY 
FOR'T'EASTER  PROGRAM 


Duluth  boys  will  have  plenty  of 
amusement  of  the  best  kind  offered 
by  the  boys'  department  of  the  Y.  M, 
C.  A.,  for  the  entire  Easter  vacation 
period.  Athletic,  social  and  recreation- 
al stunts  will  be  staged  almost  daily, 
and  there  will  be  many  instructive 
features  combined  with  the  entertain,^ 
ment. 

For  the  boy  who  cannot  swim,  there 
will  be  swimming  lessons  every  morn-* 
Ing  from  9  to  10  o'clock.  A  diplomat 
will  be  given  to  every  boy  who  learn^ 
to  swim  the  full  length  of  the  tank. 
The  program  will  be  from  April  17  td 
April  21.  Following  is  the  programj 
Monday,  April  17. 

10-11 — Swimming   lessons. 

10-12 — Baseball    and    swim. 

2:00 — Observation  trip  to  PatrlcK 
woolen  mills. 

7-8 — Gymnasium. 

8-9 — Group   games,    clubroom. 
Tueiiday,   April    18. 
-     9-10 — Swimming   lessons. 

10-11 — Basket  ball   and  swim. 

4:00 — Regular   class    work. 

7:30 — Stunt  night;  refreshments  t^ 
every  boy  taking  part. 

Wedneddny,    April    19. 

9-10 — Swimming   kssons. 

10-11 — Volley  ball,   games  and  .swlrtlj 

2:00 — Cabin  party;  bring  seats. 

7:30 — Game    tournament. 

Thnrxday.    April    20. 

9-10 — Swimming    lessons. 

10-11 — Athletics   and   swim. 

2:00 — Observation  trip  to  match  fac« 
tory. 

7:30 — Easter  social;  admission,  hard 
boiled  egg,  colored. 

Friday,  April  21. 

8:30— Good  Friday  breakfast;  ho| 
cross  buns  and  eggs. 

9-10 — Swimming   lessons. 

10-11 — (james   in   gym   and   swim. 

1:30— Hike  to  Proctor  Y.  M.  C.  A.l 
basket  ball  game. 

6:00 — Building   closed. 

Saturday,   April   22. 

Regular  class   work  in  the  morning; 

2:00 — Trip  to  Northern   Cold  Storage 
company  and  Universal  flour  mill. 
Sunday,    April    23. 

Special   services  at   both  meetings. 

WATCHING  STATETIMBER 

Oscar  Arneson  Says  Rangers  Are  on 
Lookout  for  Pilferers. 

International  Falls,  Minn.,  April  12. 
— Oscar  Arneson  of  St.  Paul,  in  charge 
of  the  timber  and  land  department 
under  State  Auditor  Prous,  conducted 
the  regular  monthly  sale  of  state  land 
which  was  held  here  Monday.  Mr^ 
Arneson  is  active  In  the  work  o"f  open- 
ing up  the  irregular  operations  which 
have  been  carried  on  In  the  cutting 
of  state  timber  this  winter.  He  states 
that  the  state  has  been  hiring  rangerd 
to   protect   its   timber   holdings. 


Gaaranteed  for  Rhenmatisiii 


,, »'•  (Sixty-Eighty-EJKht)  mast  re- 
neve  your  Kbeumatism— muat  prove  benefl- 
CTai  in  casea  of  Chronic  Skin  Eruption«, 
ttilioouiest  or  Indigestion,  or  your  money 
reiundedb/jroarown  dmsKist.  Take 


'^iFllijlir*: 


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SIXTV>KMNTV.nttNT 

Meorfflac  to  diiwetioM,  It  is  H>niu< 
Contains  no  hablt-formins  mk*  ••  ■ 
drufs.  Writ*  for  thia  vif  .■?^**** 
oabto  book  FREE. 


MAn.  J.  JOHNSON  CO. 
DM.F        Sl.Pad.lliM. 


Adric*  OB 
Rhawsaalkm'' 


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Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


17 


SEVEN  lEADING  STATE  OfEICERS 
HEARTIY  INDORSE  AMENDMENT  NO.  1 


We  "believe  that  Constitutional 
Amendment  #1.  to  be  voted  upon  at  the 
Hoveober  general  election,  will  be  a 
great  benefit  to  the  entjire  State  of 
Minnesota  and  we  give  it  our  hearty 
endorfiement* 


SMiTH&JOHNSON 


28  and  30  East  Superior  St. 

MANUFACTURERS    AND    JOBBERS 

MEN'S,  BOYS'  AND  CHILDREN'S 
HEAD  WEAR 


D 


ULUTH  PAPER  p. 
>»  STATIONERY  V"' 

(WHOLESALE' 

Pap2r,  Stationery,  Office 

and  School  Supplies, 
Notions,  Buiiding  Paper, 
Roofing  and  Wall-board. 


Catalog  Sent  on  Request 


1 8  and  20  WEST  MICNI8AN  ST. 

Both  phones  74.     DULUTH,  MINN, 


Luxury 
Bread 


Famous 

for 

Its 
Flavor 


BAKED  BY 


CRESCENT  BAKERY 

118  and  120  EmI  First  St. 

Mail  Orders  Given  Prompt  Attention. 


Marshall-Wells 

•r«  CMxyintf  the  name  of  th«  Zenitk 
City  mnd  the  £«me  of  Zenith  Top- 
of'the'world 

HARDWARE 

from  the  Iowa  Line  to  the  ArcHc 
Circle,— from  Southern  California 
to  Alaska  and  the  Hawaiian  Islanda. 


Paper  Towels  & 
Toilet  Paper 


— to— 


Martin  Fe  Falk 
Paper  Co. 

Duluth,  Minneapolis, 
St.  Paul,  Superior 


SfrpETntTTfNl 


EDUCAIIO». 


Zf-nlth    phone 
Grand   1723-D. 

23    Y*»ars'    Business 
In    Dululh. 

ZENITH 

ArtlticlalllmbCo 


IMMIGRATION. 


The    document    which    is    ropioducrd 

herewith,  tells  its  own  m'''*'""-.  .^"  Jl" 
conne.tlon  with  it  Is  the  fact  that  s.^- 
rtntn  If  ever  havo  the  slarnatui  es  of 
?h"'.ov,n  loading  officers  of  the  slate 
been  suhs.  ribed  to  on.-  doeunu  nt.  F.ach 
of  th.-  seven  .sl^nutures  figure.s  proini- 
n.-ntlv  in  the  business  transactions  of 
the  ^tate.  and  one  or  more  appear  on 
Virtually  every  state  doeum.  nt  of  im- 
J"riZee  and  on  financial  PJP^^j;*.  In- 
volving' at  times,  millions  of  'V>llais. 
But  thi.^  is  the  first  time  that  they 
have  appeared  on   the  same  sheet. 

The  state  officers,  like  almost  every- 
body else  who  knows  the  facts,  are 
In    favor   of   Amendment    No.    1.    which 


the  N'..rthern  Minne<«ota  Development 
tssoeialion  Is  pushing  for  pu-ssage  al 
the  next  election.  Should  It  pass  a  re- 
vo  Vint?  fund  of  $250,000  would  be  es- 
tablished to  be  used  to  develop  and  Inrt- 
nrove  state  achool  lands  atid  would 
greatly  help  In  deveU.plnK  the  uiiset- 
fled  portloAs  of  the  slute.  especia  y 
the  n.rthern  parts.  The  plan  not  only 
will  make  possible  development  of 
^te  lands,  but  will  benefit  »etllers 
and    schools,    all    without    cost    to    the 

'•'Geo.^ge^D.'^MrCarthy  of  Duluth.  sec- 
retary of  the  Northern  Minnesota  De- 
velopment association,  obtained  the  In- 
dorsenient  of  the  seven  state  officers. 


Inventor  and  manufac- 
turer of  the  F  a  c  t  1  s 
Cushion  Socket  I-imbs 
With  Ball  Hearing  Knee 
Joint".  Trusses  and 
Shoulder  Braces,  Elas- 
tic   Hosiery. 

30  Iiak«i"  Avenue  >ortli, 
Duluth,    Minn. 


BJORUN'S  BAKERY 


THE  HOME  OF 


Bread 


undtr     my     perwnal     .up.rvluon.       D»li»»red 
•vtrywiitrt.        2205    WE^T    FIRST    STREET. 


Jii^ 


MARIUS  HENRICKSEN 
MANUFACTURING  CO. 

WHOLESALE 

Hamns^aietiiiiirllinig 
Jew@B©ir§ 

MAKERS  OF  GOLD  RINGS 

Distributers  of  Quality  Gotnls. 
103   Sherman   Building,   Duluth. 


KEUfYHOVTHOHSflHii 

HOMEQ^THE 

HICKORTBRAND 

HARDWARE. 


SIBERIA  PREFERRED  TO  A  COURT  CIGAR 

g,     .y     «,     ©  AT  LODOE  MOCK  TRIAL  ©     ®     ©     '^ 

STING  OF  "LAW'  FELT  BY  MANY  VICTIMS 


PAINE  &  NIXON  CO. 

—JOBBERS— 

PAINTS,  VARNISHEMjBUSHES 

- GLASS - 

PLATE,  WINDOW,  MIRRORS 


310  aocl  3ia 
WEST  MICHIGAN  ST. 

LOXO   DISTANCK   PH^i^^S 
Grand  803.  Melroee  ai«6.  il67. 


Northwestern  Oil 
Cmipany 


Where  Rail  and  Water  Meet 


Northwestern  Iron& 
Metal  Co. 

We  handle  a 
full  line  of 

BURLAP 

BAGS 

For  all  purpotes;  alto 
In  th«  «nark»t  for 

Scraplron 
and  Metals 

Offlea  a«<  WarahwiM 

871   South    Flr»t  A»«no«   Eart. 


HOME   OF  THE 

ComplanterLubricating&OilCo 


Bernard  Sllberstein.  commissioner  of 
public   safety,  was  found  sullty  of  at- 
tempting to  burn  the  Temple  Emanuel; 
H    Y.   Josephs   was  convicted   of  being 
a    Russian    fugitive    from    Justice    and 
an  illegal  resident  of  the  United  States; 
Bamuel  cJittelson.  accused  of  smuggling 
Chinese    Into    this   country    so    that    he 
could  rent  the  second  floor  of  his  new 
building  for  a  Chinese  chop  suey  house, 
was  found  guilty;  the  case  against  Dr. 
M.  ,R.    Zack.    charged    with    practicing 
dentl.stry    in    Minnesota    without    a    11- 
cen.se,    was   dismissed,   and    Charles   D. 
iQreckovsky,    who    was   accused    of   at- 
tending   temple    every    Friday   evening. 
ya»    acquitted    on    entering   a    plea   of 

i^Tn'this  happened  at  the  mock  court 
staged  by  Covenant  lodge.  Independent 
order  of'^Bnal  Brith.  as  the  principal 
feature  of  Its  monthly  "open  house 
entertainment  in  the  T^i^Ple.^"?* ""  i 
vestry  rooms  last  evening.  About  100 
rnembers  of  the  lodge  and  their  friends 
yrere   present.  

Dr.  Maurice  LefkovU-s  rabbi  of  the 
temple,  acted  as  the  judge  of  the 
court,  while  the  prosecution  was  in 
bharge  of  A.  B.  KappHn  and  Charles 
Rosenfeld.  and  the  defense  conducted 
br  Al>e  Feldman  and  Samuel  \\  elnsteln. 
I>r  Samuel  Cro.^s.  In  a  uniform  of  an 
officer,  aeted  as  the  bailiff  of  th?  court. 
Dr.  Zack  was  the  first  prisoner  ai-- 
ralgned  before  -Judge"  L'^'koylts  He 
was  accused  of  practie  ng  dentistry  in 
Minnesota  without  a  license,  but  his 
attorneys  proved  that  he  Is  in  West 
Duluth.  where,  the  court  decided.  a 
license  Is  not  necessary  and  beside-s. 
"West  Duluth  Isn't  In  Minnesota,  any- 
wav  "     The  court  dismissed  the  ca.se. 

The  evidence  against  Mr.  L.lttelson. 
charged  with  smuggling  Chinese,  was 
conclusive,  and  the  court  found,  him 
guilty  and  sentenced  him  to  buy  a 
*hop  suey  dinner  next  Saturday  for 
the  judge,  the  prosecuting  attorneja 
and  the  counsel  for  the  defen.se.  Sev- 
eral "Chinese"  from  San  Francisco  ap- 
peared during  the   trial. 

Sllber«teln  Convicted. 
Commissioner   Silberstein    was      gu"- 
tv"  before  the  trial  began,  so  said  the 
judge,   "but  go  on  with  the   trial,  any- 
way"     It   was    proved    that    Sllberstein 
&     Dondy    wrapping    paper,     saturated 
with   kerosene,   was   found  in   the  base- 
ment of  the  temple  by  the  janitor,  who 
testified  in  the  court.     An  order  to  the 
firemen    of    the    city,    giving    them    a 
hoi  Ida  v   on    Feb    22.    was   read    to   prove 
that     Mr.    Sllberstein    had    planned    to 
prevent    them    from    fighting    the    fire. 
\Vhile    Mr.    Kapplin    was    summing    up 
for    the    prosecution.    Jay    Schrader    of 
Superior    caused    a    sensation    by    de. 
Glaring    that    he    was    guilty    and    that 
♦  ho  safety  head  was  Innocent.     On  the 
I  and     ho     testified    that     he     put    the 
wrannlng    paper    In    the    building    and 
that   ho   had   written    the   order   to   the 
firemen.      The    court    ruled    that    Mr. 
Schrader.  being  from  Superior,  was  In- 
competent and  he  sentenced  Mr    Sllber- 
stein   to    pay    J1,000    to   a    fund    for   a 

After  witnesses  had  testified  that  Mr. 
Oreckovsky  was  present  at  every  F  r - 
day  evening  service  In  the  temple,  his 
uttornevs  entered  a  plea  of  lnsanlt> 
and    brought    alienists    to    prove    their 

^''"iTut  send  the  prisoner  to  Fergus 
Fall."',  or  he  will  keep  on  fohig  to  the 
temple,-;  urged  Mr.  Rosenfeld  for  the 
Drosecution.  .  _       ,i,   »., 

"If  I  send  him  down  there.  IwUl  be 
the   only    one    left    in   the    temple."    de- 


clared the  court,  and  the  case  was  dl» 

missed.  .  . 

Severe  Scntenee  Impoweil. 

H  Y  Josephs  was  not  permitted  to 
testify'  himself.  An  interpreter  was 
appointed  to  speak  for  him  and  the 
^vPdence  Went  In  just  as  the  Pr^feu- 
tlon  desired.  The  defense  had  no 
chance  for  even  the  court  was  preju- 
dU^ed  So  when  the  trial  va.s  ovr. 
"Judge"  Lefkovits  found  him  KuiHy  ^' 
being  a  fugitive  from  Russia  and  an 
Illegal  r-sldent  of  tl.e  l-'n'^ed  States 
having  failed  to  pas.s  a  sP-^elaJ  lit- 
eracy" test,  and  sentenced  him  to 
smoke  one  of  the  court's  clgar.s    ^^ 

"1  would  rather  go  to  blberla.  saui 
the  prisoner.  ,    „,i.i. 

The  entertainment  waa  opened  vUh 
two  papers  read  by  A.  IV  Kappllri. 
president  of  the  lodge,  and  ^I"^■  **.■ 
Cook  on  "How  to  Controvert  the  1  op- 
ular  Errors  About  the  Jews. 

Alter  the  mock  court,  a  bridge  con- 
test wai  played  and  refreshments  were 
served  by  the  wives  of  the  members^ 
The  younger  people  enjoyed  dancing 
for  the  remainder  of  the  evening.  Dr. 
.Samuel  Gross,  chairman  of  the  social 
committee,  was  In  charge  of  arrange- 
ments. 


BRIDGEMAN-RUSSEU 
I         COMPANY 


Wholesale  Dairy  Products 

CULUTH,  MiNN, 


llSiu|«: 


USE  UNION  MATCH  CO/S 
MATCHES. 

jt  DULUTH  PRODUCT. 


WEIDLAIDT  BROS.  &  CO., 

-Blank  Book  Mfs*..  P"P«r.  Ruioro. 


TWdHY-EIMON 

MERCANTILE  CO. 


F.  A.  PATRICK  &  CO. 

WhoUtalo    Dry    Goodt   aad    Manufacturtn. 

Makers   of   Uio   famoua   Patrlck-Duluib   ^o^Ul•f■ 

Wool  FroducU. 


LUMBER 

Long  Fir  and  Oak  Timber 

Interior  Finish  of  All  Kinds— Send 
your  plans  to  us  Jor  Jigures. 

DULUTH  LUMBER  CO. 

Both  Phonos  112    364  Carflold  Avo. 


...J^ 


^^f^^ 


TALK  OF  PHILIPP 

FOR  THE  SENATE 

Friends  Say  His  Large  Vote 
Entitles  Him  to  Con- 
sideration. 

Madison.  Wis.,  April  12.— Because  of 
the  unusually  large  vote  given  Gover- 
nor  Philipp  In  the  recent  presidential 
primary  talk  of  his  becoming  a  Repub- 
lican candidate  for  the  United  States 
aenatorshlp.  has  been  revived.  The 
Conservative  convention  of  110  to  se- 
lect a  candidate,  probably  will  meet 
hare  on  April  26.  Conservative  lead- 
ers he^c  point  to  the  availability  of  the 
governor,  saying  that  while  Senator  La 
Follette  was  unopposed,  Uovernor  Phil- 
ipp was.  For  that  reason,  they  de- 
clare the  senator's  vote  should  be 
nearly  \  twice    as    large      aa    Governor 

^' with  \he   retirement   of   Kreutzer   of 
Wausau   as  a   candidate    only   two  an- 
nounced candidates  are  In  the  fleld—M 
G    Jeffrls  and  John  M.  Whitehead    both 
of    Janesville.       There    is    a    fentlnient 
here    favoring    the    retirement    of    both 
These    men   and    the    s'^ection    of    some 
third    man    to    oppose    .Senator   La    l?oi- 
litte  at  the  September  primaries.  Aside 
from  the  governor  the  "a-^e  most  fi  e- 
quently    mentioned    is    that    of    Former 
State    Senator    George    B.    Hudnall    of 
Superior       Mr.    Hudnall    was    chairman 
of   the   recent   Conservative   convention 

^'^Before  leaving  for  Waj^hlngton  last 
week  Senat6f  La  Follette  announced 
That  he  would  be  back  In  W'sconsln  on 
the  stump  within  one  month.  He  Ba.>  s 
that  he  U  going  to  cover  every  hamlet 
iSn  Wisconsin  before  the  September 
primaries. 


L 
Home  f)f  the 
DULUTH  FLUMBIMC  SUPPLIES. 


DULUTH 
BOILER  WORKS 

BOILER  MAKERS 
and  MACHINISTS 

BEST   EQUIPPED    OXY-ACTY 

WELDING  AND  CUTTING 

PLANT  IN  DULUTH 

PORTABLE  PLANT  FOR  OUT- 
SIDE WORK 

NIGHT   AND  SUNDAY  WORK 
A  SPECIALTY 


NEW  HOME 


JOHN  WAHL 
CANDY  CO. 


2606  io  2612  WEST 
MICHIGM  STREET 


irr 


^..*>i 


Home  of  the 

DULUTH  JMPERIAL  FLOUR 

DULUTH-SUPERIOR 
MILLING  CO. 


WIfE  AND  6ABI[S 

NKD  AUSTIN  LAW 


MARINE  IRON 

&  SHIPBUILDING 

WORKS 

Marine  Supplies 
.     of  All  Kinds. 


GLOBE  IRON  WORKS 


M 


ACHINISTS, 
FOUNDRYMEN, 
BUCKSMITHS 


Diamond  Calk  Horseshoe  Co. 

4630  Grand  Ave.  West,  Dalnth,  Minn 


Brass.   Steel.  Gray  Iron   Castings 
and   all    kinds    of    Forgings.      Au- 
tomobile parts  made  on  short  no- 
tice,    thus     avoiding     trouble    ol 
sending    to    factory.      Special    at- 
tention    given     job     and     repair 
work  of  all  kinds. 
All    WorUmanBlilp    Gnaranteed. 
435  LAKE   AVEME    SOLTH, 
DULUTH,   MIKX. 


Home  of  the 


NATIONAL  IRON  CO. 


DE  WITT-SEIXZ  CO., 

ItANtlFACTUHEHS  OF   THl,  bANO.MAUh,  MAT- 
TRKSS  AND  WHOLKaAiJ;  ruRMTums. 


NORTHERN 
SHOE 
Jf  J  COMPANY 

"  J^  Home 
of  the 
Gitche 

fl   Gamee 
J!    Shoes 


TBE  "COME-BACK" 

The    "Come-back"     man     was     really 
never     down-and-out.       His     weakened 
condition    because    of    over-work,    lack 
of    exercise.    Improper    eating    and    llv- 
insr    demands  stimulation  to  satisfy  the 
cry  for  a  health-giving  appetite  and  the 
refreshing    sleep    essential    to    strength. 
rOLD    MEDAL    Haarlem    OH    Capsules, 
{'he    National    Remedy    of   Holland,    will 
d?)     the     work.      They    are     wonderfu 
Three   of   these   capsules   each   day   will 
put  a  man  on  his  feet  before  he  knows 
It-  whether  his  trouble  comes  from  uric 
acid    poisoning,    the   kidneys,   gravel    or 
atone  in  the  bladder,  stomach  derange- 
nl^nt  or  other  ailments  that  befall  the 
ove-z*'aloU8  American.     Don't  wait  un- 
m  you   are  entirely  down-and-out.  but 
take    them    today.      Your   druggist    will 
lladly    r^und  your   money   If   they  do 
«it  help  you.  25c.  60c  and  $1.00  per  box. 
Accept    no    substitutes.      Look    for    the 
name  CiOLD  MKDAL  on  every  box.  They 
««  the  pure    original.   Imported  Haar- 
lem Oil  Capsules.— Advertisement. 


HOME  OF  TUB 


A  «irp  and  two  babies  are  looking 
*  ^  J^Hf.QhAnd  who  has  been  missing 
^V.l  i»»t  Julv  when  he  left  his  home 
an"d  went*  to"the  woo"ds.  saying  that  he 
^"as  gSlng  to  cook  In  a^t-a^P-  „,„„ 
"^Mrr  Austin  Law  of  E^^-'^^t^'  *lV„"d 
who   is   the  wife,   wrote   to   The   Herald 

'■VXn!so'"i^rbr;;;^''.ske4  to  loo. 
for  the  missing  husband. 

BUYS  INTEREST  IN 

BANKATBRAINERD 

.o^^T^r'SerJ^l'd-y-F^'^H.  ^llmpTf  ^^of 
Knolvnie  lota,  has  bought  the  Inter- 
est of  the  widow  of  M.  T.  I^unn  in  the 
CHlxens"  State  bank.  Mr.  Simpson  is  a 
banker  having  been  In  the  business 
the  past  seventeen  years  In  Iowa  and 
«Jouth  Dakota.  For  the  past  year  he 
has  been  in  Minneapolis.  He  Is  a  broth- 
el of  J     C     Simpson,   secretary    of    the    

Minnesota   State   Fair  association.  \ 


Zenith  Furnace  Co. 

Duluth,  Minn. 


ZENITH 
BROOM  FACTORY 

MANUFACTURER 
OF  ALL  KINDS  OF 

BROOMS  and  WHISKS 

CURLING  BROOMS 
A  SPECIALTY 

WM.  F.  SCHNUCKLC,  Prop, 
a  12    GILBERT    STREET. 

Phonea:  Zenith  456-X:  Mel..   821». 


CUTIER- 
MAGNER  CO. 

Wholesale 

Salt,  lime.  Plaster 
and  Cement 


Hardware  Storekeepers, 

PITRCHASERS   OF  MIXB 
AND      MILL      SUPrHES. 


It  will  be  <o  onr  BiataRl  adrant- 
■Je  it  ▼oo  will  communicate 
with 


yoo 


NATIONAL  HARDWARE 
&  SUPPLY  COMPANY 

Wholesale    Heavy    Hardware, 

Mime  and  Mill  SNppUes. 

DULUTH.   MlXSr. 


SNO  WHITE  ""^^ 


HOME  OF 

FIITGliER'S  BEER 


HOME  OF 

REX  BOTTUD  BEER 

DULUTH  BREWI90  a,  MALTtNQ  CO. 


TT-rr 


Made  in  Duluth. 

ASK    YOUR 
GROCER  FOR  IT. 

One  trial   and  you 

will  want  no  other 

kind. 

SNO  WHITE 

BAKING  POWDER 

CO. 

18th    Ave.    W.   and 
Superior   St. 


KlearflaY 

LINEN  RUCS 

Ma<le  From  American 
Crown  Flax  by 

WESTERN  RUG 
COMPANY 

DULUTH,  MINN. 


MERCHANTS 
MERCANTILE  CO. 

Manufacturers  and  Jobbers  of 

PEARL  POWDER 

Sutton's  Flavoring  Extracts 
Commercial  Club  Maple  Syrup 

108  West  First  Street,  Duluth. 


„... . 

rr^ 

<fc^  -^ 

■SB 

Mgpt  -_- 

«       *• 

,. , 1 

1 — 

1 

-•— 

1 

1 

1 

• 

t 

, 

1 

1 

i 

1 

t 

» 

^ 

. 

to  m  iw 


1 


,  — 

»■!■      II  ■     »      — » 


I 


lataMtfl 


4 


18 


Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


DAVID  HARUM  CASE. 

T>avijl  Haiiini,  ilcan  of  horp*-  traders, 
■»vould  liavc  t-njoyed  hlmscrlf  In  mu- 
nicipfil  court  t<«lay,  whin  a  Jury  heard 
the  imrtuulars  of  :i  horso  trade  bt - 
tw<«n  Fmnk  W.  Peterson  of  Superior 
and  H»rinHn  I'tterson,  r)uluth. 

A  v.-ar  ajjo  in  .January  Frank  Peter- 
son sold  the  horse  tf>  Herman  P»-tfr8on, 
and  th<-  letter  sljfmd  a  note  for  $175. 
Four  day.s  aft<'r  the  deal  was  ron.'»u- 
niated,  the  horse  In  question  compli- 
cated  matter's  by  dyinp. 

Xiituraily.  the  Duluth  Peterson  re- 
fi  sed  to  ?'ay  the  $175  when  the  nott» 
rjinu-  due,  savinpr  tiiat  the  Siiptrlor 
man  h.-ul  iruarant<ed  the  animal  to  be 
fiound. 

■|'h<-  jury  npreed  ■with   the  Duluthlan, 


who  was   represented   by  Attorney  An- 
dr«w  Nel.jon,  for  after  twenty  minutes   , 
deliberation   they  returned  a  verdict   In  , 
his    favor,    refusing:    to    allow    the    col-  ; 
lection   of  the  note. 


CONSULAR  AGENT  AT 
CALUMET,  MICH.,  DIES 

Calumet.  Mich..  April  12.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Jame.<5  H.sa,  aged  71.  f^r 
many  years  royal  Italian  consular 
ag«-nt  for  Northern  MichiKan  and  thi' 
A'orthwest,  a  self-made,  successful 
business  man  and  the  most  prominent 
Italian  in  the  Upper  Peninsula,  died 
here  last  night. 


NEW  LINE  IS 
INDEPENDENT 


Not  in  Business  to  Foster 

Any  Port,  Says 

Evans. 


Till-:    ST<  tUi:    FMfi    SFI{\  ICK. 
113-1 15.117-119  WEST  SUPKHIOit  STK£:ET.  DULUTU.  MINN. 


'Tis  April— Here  Are  Rain  Coats, 
Umbrellas  and  Rubbers  For  Those  { 
Who  Want  Good  Looks  As  Well 


As  Good  Service 


i 


Tnday'.s  rain  was  certain- 
ly 111.. St  welofdiie — such  days 
Imrrv  alotij;  the  cuniine:  oi 
.SI.^!l^^ 

Kainy  days  are  iiH*j.,dity 
jjn.  .(i  (hiys  to  sht)p.  We  can 
Ki\e  ymi  tiu.rc  indivichial  at- 
tention than  is  possible  on 
bri.i.,dit  sunny  days  when 
*'everyl)ody"  is  out  atul  the 
"^tore  is  crowded. 

Conie  down  tomorrow — • 
the  street  car  service  is 
good,  t>r  your  own  mot«)r 
will  hrinp:  you  safe  and  dry 
— direct  to  our  doors.  With- 
in, the  whole  store  is  breathing  the  spirit  of  glad  Springtime. 

Cdmc  and  enjoy  yourself. 

And  for  Your  Comfort  There  Are  Good  Looking 
Rain  Coats  Which  Will  Give  You  Ample  Protection 

Xew  models,  smart  styles — dressy  as  well  as  practical. 
Manv  of  them  in  silk,  silk  mixtures  and  mercerized  cloths. 

Pr'ices  range  .$6.r)0.  $8.50,  $10.00,  $12.50,  $16.50.  $18.50  and 
$20.00.     The  silks  at  $16.50  to  $20.00  are  certainly  elegant. 

Neat  Simple  Models  in  Good  Rubberized  Fabrics — 
$3.98,  $5.98  and  $6.50. 

Many  of  them  have  exceedingly  full  flared  skirts.  Some  are 
belted,  some  are  semi-belted.  All  arc  distinctly  down-to-the- 
minutc  in  style. 

Some  Very  Good  Looking  Mercerized  Reps  Are 
Here  at  $6.50  and  $8.50 

Shepherd  checks  are  here  in  wool  etiects  at  $12.00 — and  in 
silk  at  $18.00.  Very  good,  mannish  mixtures  in  sturdy  Scotch 
effects  at  $8.50  and  $10.00. 

A  refined  white  hairline  stripe  black  rain  coat  is  $12.00. 

Girls*  School  Out- 
fits $3.50  &$  3.98 

(jirls'  school  outfits  are  offered  in  plain 
tan  at  $3.50.  In  black  and  white  shepherd 
checks  at  $3.98,  for  a  rain  coat,  a  school 
bag  and  a  rain  hat  to  match.  These  are  in 
sizes  10,  12  and  14  years.  Get  them  big 
?nough  so  the  girl  may  grow  and  get  the 
henetit  of  them  next  year. 

Gray's  Special— ••Clits"  Umbrellas  $3.50— While 

the  Lot  Lasts 

(llorir.us  silk  top  umbrellas  with  carved,  plain,  mission  and 
ebony  handles,  finished  with  rich  silk  cords.  A  good  looking 
umbrella  that  will  give  the  service  you  want.  Special  at  $3.50. 

Colored  Silk  Taffeta  Umbrellas  at  $4.00  and  $5.00 

Choose  from  the  modish  shades  of  pur- 
ple, navy,  green  and  gray  to  match  or 
contrast  with  your  suit,  or  raincoat.  Long 
or  short  handles.  Silk  cords  to  match 
tops. 


Good 
Umbrellas  $1 

Ricli  In  €-vfry  wny 
except    the    price. 


Rubbers  Are  Essential  to  Comfort,  Looks,  Health 

Wonien'.s  first  (luality  Mack  riil^bors,  storm  or  low  cut  styles',  75c. 

Wonun's  \vhite   foot-hold   rubbers,  75c. 

Wtimcn's  black   foot-huUl  rubbers,   60c. 

Misses'  first  grade  storin  rubbers,  65c. 

Children's  flr.^t  grade  storm  rubbers,    60c. 

Children's  white  storm  ruVjbers,  85c. 

Tomorrow  Will  Be  a  Mighty  Good 

Time  to  Select  Your  New  Hat, 

Your  New  Gown,  Your  New  Suit 

or  Your  New  Coat 

Don't  1  e  t  April 
weather  keep  you  at 
home.  Showers, 
'inows  and  blows  will 
be  followed  by  days 
of  glorious  sunshine 
and  south  winds 
when  you  might  just 
as  well  be  wearing 
the  new  things  you 
may  select  here  to- 
morrow. Half  the 
enjoyment  in  new 
clothes  is  in  wearing 
them  when  the  styles 
are  new. 

$25.00,  $30.00  to 
$35.00  are  prices 
made  popular  by  the 
fascinating  fashions 
offered  at  Gray's. 

We  have  specialized 
In  garments  to  sell  at 
these  figures.  We  have 
crowded  In  a  bit  more 
style,  a  bit  more  value 
and  a  bit  more  quality 
at  each  price.  You, 
yourself,  will  be  Im- 
pressed by  the  general 
superiority  which  grows  on  you  the  rlc-sir  you  look  and  the  longer  you 
wear  the  garments.  You  are  sure  of  the  admiring  approval  of  your 
friends  if  you  choose  here.  Come  In  tomorrow — try  on — select  the 
most   bfcoming.  ...   .      -^ 

Kfinenibor — One  week   from   Sunday  will  be   Easter.      There   is  no 
time  to  loose;  there  Is  every  reason  for  buying  now. 


Head  of  New  Lake  Line  Pays 
First  Visit  to  Du- 
luth. 


be  given  by  the  Duluth  Pales  Managers' 
association  at  the  Coramerclal  club  Fri- 
day at  12:16  o'clock.  His  talk  will  be 
on  "Mail   Order  House  Competition." 

Plrc   Sale. 

My  entire  stock  of  dry  goods  which 
w.-re  slightly  damnged  bv  smoke  and 
water  by  a  blaze  at  my  store  at  412 
East  P'ourtii  street,  will  be  placed  on 
sale  at  a  big  saorlftce  Friday  the  14th. 
Mrs.  A.  E.  Herzberg,  412  East  Fourth 
street. 


SiaiVlcx. 

The     new     system     of     file     Indexing. 
Call  M.  I.  Stewart  company.    Phones  114. 


J.  C.  Evans  of  Buffalo,  president  of 
the  newly  organized  Great  Lakes  Tran- 
^it  company,  the  concern  which  has 
taken  over  the  package  freight  busi- 
neH.s  of  the  lakes  in  place  of  the  rail- 
road-controlled lines,  divorced  by  or- 
der of  the  interstate  commerce  com- 
mission last  fall,  is  in  the  city  today 
conferring  with  representatives  of 
shippers  and  transportation  men. 

He    lb    the    guest    of   (J.   A.   Tomllnsoii 

while  in  the  city.  This  is  his  first  visit 
since  the  organization  of  the  new  com- 
pany, and  he  is  much  pleased,  he  says, 
with  the  cordial  manner  in  which  the 
advent  of  liis  company  has  been  re- 
ceived here  and  at  other  points  in- 
volved. 

At  the  Commercial  elub  this  after- 
noon, Mr.  Evans  met  with  O.  Hoy  Hall, 
traffic  commissioner  of  the  club  and 
with  other  traffic  men  of  the  city,  and 
di.'scu.wsed  the  policy  of  ihe  company 
and  the  piospecta  for  service.  He*  as- 
sured ihenj  that  every  effort  to  give 
Lake  Superior  ports  and  particularly 
the  Head  of  the  Lakes  a  better  service 
than  has  ever  before  been  enjoyed 
would   i)e   made. 

To  The  Herald,  Mr.  Evans  said  that 
he  believes  that  shippers  and  receivers 
(if  freiglit  via  tiie  (Jreat  Lakes  will  be 
more  than  satisfied  at  tiie  service 
which  the  new  company  will  render 
them,    and    added: 

"1  wisli  to  emphasize  the  fact  that 
the  Great  Lakes  Transit  company  is 
un  independent  line,  unattached  and 
uninfluenced  by  any  railroad  attacli- 
ment  or  by  any  outside  corporation. 
We  projiose  to  run  our  boats  for  a 
profit  and  for  that  reason  alone.  We 
will  favor  no  point  by  cut  rates  to  the 
discrimination  of  any  other  point  and 
every  line  must  pay  its  way  and  a  di- 
vidend on  top  of  that.  We  are  not  in 
the  business  of  fostering  anything  but 
the  welfare  of  our  stockholders;  and 
that  verv  fact  will  cause  us  to  give  the 
best  po.ssitle  service  to  the  points  that 
give  us  the  best  possible  returns.  Du- 
luth   is   primarily    in    this   class."* 

Coincident  with  Mr.  Evans"  arrival 
in  tlie  city  came  a  telegram  to  the  traf- 
fic department  of  the  Commercial  club 
from  H.  S.  Noble,  second  vice  presi- 
dent of  he  (Jreat  Lake.s  Transit  coni- 
I'any.  announcing  that  the  port-to-poil 
rates  of  the  new  concern  will  go  inti) 
effect  on  April  14.  Mr.  Xoble  also  an- 
nounced in  his  telegram  that  he  Is  con- 
ferring with  the  representatives  of  the 
various  rail  lines  effected,  and  expects 
that  the  rall-and-lake  rates  will  be  an- 
nounced  before   long. 


PAID  POLITICAL 
ADVERTISEMENT 

Invrtwl  Ijy  and  on  lK>iiair  of  the  Ordinance 
CnmmutM.     Amount  to  be  paid,   $7.50. 

SIGNATURES 

TO  DRY  PETITION 

ARE  COMING 

FAST 

At  the  tvijucst  of  many  »orlim,  time  has  bftn 
fxtendfd. 

Mr.  Vot*r,  if  worker  has  not  reacb'-d  you,  yoti 
may  sign  petition  at  hfadciuarUrs  of  PKY  ORPl- 
NAXCK  tO.M.MnTKK;  or  tcliphone  your  name 
and  addriss  to  of  Are,  614  Pro>ldrnc«  Bldg. 
Telephones.  Melrose  6600;  Grand  6 WO. 

Canvasser! — Turn  In  yoiir  petitions  not  later 
tbdn  Tliursday,  April   13  at  10  a.  n>. 

.Notary  I'ublic  in  office. 


Speaker  signed  his  contract  with  the 
Cleveland  American  league  club  at 
noon  today  and  will  appear  In  the  line- 
up this  afternoon  in  the  opening  game. 
Details  of  the  contract  were  not  di- 
vulged. 


Breaks  Skating  Record. 

Chicago,  April  12.— A.  R.  Egllngton 
of  Norfolk.  Eng..  broke  his  own  rec- 
ord last  night  In  the  half-mile  roller 
skating  race,  the  first  event  of  the 
six-day  world's  championship  meeting 
now  being  held  here,  it  was  an- 
nounced today.  Eglington's  time  was 
1:11  3-6,  beating  his  former  record  of 
1:12.  The  meet  will  be  continued  to- 
night. 


Crown,  Rust-Ptirker  and  Stone-Ordcan- 
Wells  companies. 

*— 

Seven   FlMherftien   Arrented. 

Green  Bay,  Wis.,  April  12. — Six  dep- 
uty wardens  arrested  seven  Depere 
fishermen  at  the  government  dam  at 
Depere  early  this  morning  and  confis- 
cated five  nets  containing  200  pounds 
of   pike   caught    in   closed   season. 


CENTRAL  BUSINESS  COLLEGE 


30  East  Superior  street,  Duluth.  Spring 
term  April  10.  Full  commercial  and 
stenographic  courses;  catalogue  free. 
Harber  &  McPherson. 


Personals 


J.  J.  Colburn  of  Cloquet  is  registered 
at  the  McKay. 

Frank  L.  Redfleld  of  Cloquet  is  at  the 
McKay. 

Mrs.  F.  Anderson  of  Ely  is  among 
the  guests  at   the  McKay. 

Thomas  Owens  of  Two  Harbors  Is  In 
Duluth  today,  being  registered  at  the 
Spalding. 

C.  C.  Atwood  of  St.  Cloud  is  regis- 
tered aft  i7ie  Spalding. 

H.  V.  PMlck  of  Minneapolis,  well 
known  in  business  circles  here,  is  in 
the  city  today. 


City  Briefs 


The    Mammoth    Ta«k 

of  emptying  the  three  large  salesfloors, 
2110-2112  West  Superior  street,  of  high 
grade  furniture  by  April  30  means  tre- 
mendous sacrifices.  Your  living  room, 
bedroom  and  dining  room  can  be  fur- 
nished here  for  half  and  less.  Cam- 
eron  Furniture  company. 

Rolary  DlreeforM   Meet. 

The  board  of  directors  of  the  Duluth 
Rotary  club  held  a  meeting  this  noon 
at  the  Commercial  club.  Reports  of 
the  board  will  be  given  at  the  meet- 
ing of  the  Rotary  club  to  be  held  to- 
morrow noon  at  the  Spalding  hotel. 
The  club  will  take  up  the  matter  of 
amending  its  by-laws. 


XaTal    Recruits    Are    Aecrptrd. 

Two  recruits  for  the  United  States 
navy  were  examined  and  passed  upon 
by  Lieutenant  F.  J.  Wille,  head  of  the 
Minneapolis  recruiting  district,  and  Dr. 
Renjamin  Iden,  medical  examiner,  who 
were  in  Duluth  yesterday  afternoon 
and  this  forenoon.  The  two  officials 
have  Just  returned  from  a  trip  on  the 
range,  where  several  applicants  were 
passed  upon. 

•    

City   Attorney    Iletarnlng. 

City  Attorney  Samuel.son  is  expected 
buck  from  Washington  this  afternoon, 
after  spending  a  week  at  the  national 
capital  attending  the  hearings  of  the 
International  Joint  commission  with 
regard  to  the  boundary  disputes  near 
the  Lake  of  the  Woods.  Fornier  Con- 
gressman Tawney  is  chairman  of  the 
commlission. 


nniUilng   ManagerM  Meet. 

The  Ruilding  Owners'  &  Managers' 
association  held  a  brief  meeting  at  the 
«:omn)ercial  club  today,  following 
luncheon.  Credits  were  discussed,  but 
nothing  of  a  definite  nature  was  done. 
■         >         ■ 

Settlen   Salt  Oat  of  Court. 

When  19-year-old  Carl  clrenner 
crawled  under  an  engine  at  the  North- 
ern Pacific  roundhouse  to  inspect  It 
on  March  2  last,  his  left  shoulder 
struck  a  cylinder  cock  rod,  causing  a 
valve  to  open  and  discharge  scalding 
water  on  him.  He  was  badly  burned. 
Today  in  district  court,  Lena  Orenner. 
his  mother  and  guardian,  filed  notice 
of  a  settlement  with  the  company  for 
$55  on  behalf  of  her  son.  She  started 
.suit  for  $100  but  compromised. 


ASSESSORS  TO 
GATHER  HERE 


Assessors  from  every  corner  of  St. 
Louis  county  will  assemble  in  Duluth 
next   Tuesday. 

There  are  seventy-five  of  them  and 
every  city,  village  and  township  will 
be   represented. 

At  the  office  of  County  Auditor  Odin 
Ilalden  in  the  courthouse,  they  will 
meet  J.  G.  Armson,  Samuel  Lord  and 
.lames   G.    Hale,    members    of    the    state 

tax  commission,  who  will  give  them 
instructions  as  to  the  proper  method 
of  listing  and  assessing  the  different 
kinds  and  classes  of  property  In  ac- 
cordance  with   law. 

Although  the  law  governing  the  as- 
sessment of  both  real  and  personal 
property  was  changed  in  1913,  there 
are  many  assessors  who  are  not  fa- 
miliar with  some  of  the  radical  de- 
partures which  were  made  at  thai 
time,  and  it  Is  the  purpose  of  the  tax 
commission  to  help  the  assessors  in 
every  way  possible  and  to  explain  the 
workings  of  the  law.  Without  a  thor- 
ough knowledge  of  all  of  its  provi- 
sions, it  would  be  a  very  difficult  task 
for  an  assessor  to  make  a  legal  as- 
sessment. 

The  meeting  will  not  be  confined  to 
an  explanation  of  the  so-called  classi- 
fied assessment  law.  Any  question  re- 
lating to  the  duties  of  an  assessor 
which  is  presented  at  the  meeting 
will  be  fully  explained.  It  Is  expected 
that  all  of  the  assessors  will  be  pres- 
ent. Blanks  and  books  for  their  use 
this  spring  have  been  arranged  and 
there  will  be  no  delay  in  the  distribu- 
tion. 

Assessment  books  are  made  up  in 
the  office  of  the  county  auditor  every 
year.  Descriptions  of  all  taxable 
property  within  every  taxing  district 
is  listed  and  it  Is  the  duty  of  the  as- 
sessor to  fill  out  the  valuations  in  his 
respective  district  and  return  the 
books  to  the  auditor  not  later  than 
the  first  Monday  In  .Tune.  The  valu- 
ations  are    determined    as   of  May    1. 

By  the  terms  of  Chapter  668.  Laws 
of  1913,  assessors  will  be  entitled  to 
6  cents  a  mile  for  each  mile  neces- 
sarily traveled  in  going  to  and  re- 
turning from  the  meeting  and  to  S3 
additional  for  one  day's  attendance. 

BEGiNWORK 
IN  TEN  DAYS 


Officials  of  the  Duluth  Street  Rail- 
way  company  are  making  preparations 
to  begin  on  the  Morgan  Park  street 
car  extension  within  the  next  ten 
days,  according  to  word  received  this 
morning  at  the  city  hall. 

This  move  follows  out  the  assur- 
ances given  the  city  commissioners 
last  Saturday  morning  by  J,  W.  Rob- 
ertson of  Minneapolis,  president  of  the 
Duluth    Street    Railway    company,    and 

Herbert  Warren,  vice  president  and 
manager,  that  work,  on  the  extension 
would  be  rushed  to  completion  this 
summer  without  any  delay.  The  con- 
ference last  Saturday  was  a  friendly 
one,  the  officials  of  the  traction  line 
promising  co-operation  with  the  mu- 
nicipality  at  all  times. 

The  warm  weather  of  the  last  ten 
days  and  the  rain  of  today  have  taken 
most  of  tiie  frost  out  of  the  ground 
and  It  Is  believed  that  the  roadway 
will  be  In  good  shape  for  track  laying 
by  April  22.  The  fills  made  by  the 
city  for  the  Commonwealth  avenue 
pavement  have  settled  during  the  win- 
ter and  are  now  in  fine  condition  for 
track  laying,  according  to  Commis- 
sioner   Farrcll,    works    head. 

"Everything  is  ready  for  the  tracks," 
the  works  head  said,  "and  the  com- 
pany can  start  at  any  time." 

By  starting  on  the  extension  within 
ten  days,  city  hall  officials  are  of  the 
opinion  that  the  tracks  to  Morgan 
Park  can  be  completed  by  June  1  and 
that  street  cars  can  begin  running 
over  the  new  line  at  the  same  time. 

Last  fall  the  company  extended  its 
Grand  avenue  line  to  Eighty-first  ave- 
nue west,  ending  at  the  fill  Just  com- 
pleted at  that  time.  From  this  point 
to  the  end  of  the  extension  in  Morgan 
Park  the  tiacks  will  run  alongside  tlie 
new  concrete  pavement  laid  last  sum- 
mer. It  Is  about  two  miles  between 
the  two  points. 


ALL  LEGALLY 
TORPEDOED 

German    Note    Says    Five 
Ships  Attacked  Accord- 
ing to  Law. 


Berlin,  April  12,  by  wireless  to  Say- 
ville. — The  German  reply  to  the  Amer- 
ican note  concerning  the  damaging  or 
sinking  of  five  steamships,  contains 
the  statement  that  the  steamers  Eng- 
lishman, Eagle  Point,  Manchester,  En- 
gineer and  Berwlndvale  were  destroyed 
by  German  submarines.  Evidence  Is 
presented  to  show  that  these  vessels 
were  torpedoed  legally  In  accordance 
wltJi  the   rules  of  war. 

The  note  states  that  a  German  sub- 
marine torpedoed  a  steamship  In  the 
vicinity  of  the  place  at  which  the 
cross-channel  steamship  Sussex  was 
damaged  by  an  explosion,  but  that  evi- 
dence at  hand  indicates  that  the  vessel 
torpedoed  by  the  submarine  was  not 
the  Sussex. 


DISCUSS  REFRIGERATION. 

Railroad  Men  and  Wholesale  House 
Representatives  Hold  Conference. 

Refrigerator  men,  representatives  of 
various  railroads  entering  Duluth  and 
traffic  managers  for  Duluth  wholesale 
houses  held  a  conference  this  noon  at 
the  salesrooms  of  the  Stone-Ordean- 
Wells  company.  Refrigeration  on  the 
various  roads  was  discussed. 

Representatives  were  present  from 
the  Omaha,  Northern  Pacific,  Soo  and 
Great  Northern  railroads.  The  traffic 
managers  represented  Gowan-Lenning- 


HOMES! 

$5.000 — Two-flat  brick  building  on 
Fifth  St.,  central:  all  conveni- 
ences; rents  for  $50  per  month;  a 
good    investment. 

$6.500 — Twelve-room  house,  on  50- 
foot  lot.  Third  St.,  central  loca- 
tion. 

$4,200 — Seven-room  modern,  35-foot 
lot  near  Lake  avenue;  all  con- 
veniences. 

$4.500 — Modern  seven  room  house, 
in   very  goo.l  location;  East  end. 

$7,000  for  a  well  improved  central 
West  end  property;  rental  value 
$90    month. 

$1,200 — Double  corner,  with  a  six- 
room  house,  on  graded  street,  in 
West  Duluth;  water,  sewer  and 
gas  in  street;  near  street  car 
line,  and  in  a  good  location,  but 
the  house  needs  repair;  would 
come  in  right  for  party  that  can 
do  his  own  work. 

Several  other  properties,  as  well  as 
farm  lands,  of  which  some  tracts  are 
close   to   our  city — all  at   low   prices. 

O.  G.  OLSON 

314     COLUMBIA     BLDG. 


record  April  11,  1916.  at  8:30  A.  M..  and 
was  duly  recorded  in  Book  18  or  Misc.* 
page  245.  ^^^^    CALLIGAN.  ^ 

Register  of  Deeds. 
By  C.  L.  LOFGREN. 

Deputj'. 

D.  H.,  April  12,  13,  1916.         , 

CERTIFICATE  OF  INCORPORATIOM 
— OF— 

ANDERSON  METER 
COMPANY. 


Fcr  rent — Sumnn-r  report  at  LestT  park,  consisting  of 
lee  cream  parlor*,  i-oiifertloni'ry  store,  rfnlaurant 
and  lunch  "ountpr;  al<<n  dance  liall  and  one  peanut 
and  pop  corn  .stand  and  lunch  room.  .\11  furnished 
with  tables,  coi:nt"rti,   chairs,  stoves  .ind  dishes. 

621  Kast  First  street,  8-ruom  house,  furnace,  bath 
and  ea^^.  ^>. 

24  8t.  .\ndre»s  street,  fl»e  rooms,  hardwood  floors, 
Ras  range,  $20. 

510  iCast  Third  street,  modern  7-rooin  house,  $35. 

Kil.'i   London   road.    9-roora    modern   house   with   hot 

water  heating  plant,  $25. 

II51-I.  Tenth  avenue  east,  6-room  modem  fiat,  heat 
furnished,  $23. 

1420  Kast  Superior  street,  12room  modern  sleara- 
lieated  house,  $oO. 

Ashtabula  terrace,  heated  flat,  $.35. 

Wleland  flats,  4-room  flat,   $13. 

Ill  Second  avenue  west,  store,  $30. 

14  West  Second  street.  7 -room  modern  heated  fiat, 
$32.50. 

HOOPES-KOHAGEN  COMPANY 


rOO  LATE 
TO  CLASSIFY 


One  Ceni  a  Word  Each  Insertion. 
No  Advertliseinent  Less  Than  15  C^nts. 

WANTED — First-class  pants  and  vest 
maker;  steady  work.  Morrison's  tailor 
shop,  20  6th  ave.  w. 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 

Norman  Gibson  and  Georgiana  H. 
Ross. 

Harman  Franklin  Gilbert  and  Mar- 
garet Fuller  Barrows. 

WEDDING    PICTURES  are   a   specialty 
with    Christensen.    25    W.    Superior   st. 

Wedding  Announcements — Engraved  or 
printed.  Consolidated  Stamp  and 
Printing  Co.,  14  Fourth  avenue  west. 

14,  18  AND  22K  SOLID  GOLD  WED- 
dlng  and  engagement  rings  made  and 
mounted  to  order  at  Henrlcksen's,  332 
West  Superior  street. 


LKUAl.    »iOTlC12S. 


ARTICLES  OF  INCORPORATION 
— OF— 

RED  SAND  LAKE 
COMPANY. 


Engraved  and   printed  birth  announce- 
ments.   Consolidated  Stamp  &  Print.  Co. 


BIRTHS. 


GOSOVICH— A  son  was  born  April  9 
to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Peter  Gosovich  of 
328   South   Fifty-eighth  avenue   west. 

ASHLEY — The  birth  of  a  daughter  on 
April  8  has  been  reported  by  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Frank  M.  Ashley  of  135  North 
Sixtieth    avenue    west. 

SCANDIN— Mr.  and  Mrs.  William 
Scandin  of  126  Eleventh  avenue  west 
are  the  parents  of  a  son,  born 
April  6. 


Deaths  and  Funerals 


AVALLACE — Charles  G.  Wallace,  aged 
64.  died  at  hia  home,  4032  West  Third 
street,  April  11.  The  funeral  will  be 
held  from  the  French  church  April 
13  at  9  a.  m.  Burial  will  be  in  Cal- 
vary cemetery. 

YOUNG— Albert  Young,  aged  74.  2604 
West  First  street,  died  April  11  at 
St.  Mary's  hospital  from  a  fracture 
of  the  skull.  The  funeral  will  be 
held  April  14  at  9  a.  m.  from  the 
French  Catholic  church  with  burial 
in  Calvary  cemetery. 


In  Memoriam. 

SCOTT — In  loving  remembrance  of  my 
devoted  husband,  William  H.  Scott, 
who  departed  this  life  three  years 
ago  today,  April  12,  1913. 

Over  my  heart  in  the  years  that  have 

flown. 
No    love    like   yours    has   ever    been 

shown; 
No  other  worship  abides  and  endures. 
Faithful,    unselfish   and   patient   like 

yours. 

BY  HIS  DEVOTED  WIFE. 


MONUMENTS. 


r 


Uoea   to  Detroit,   MIrh. 

Stanley  Lamb,  who  for  the  last 
thirteen  ytars  has  been  one  of  the 
leaders  in  the  boys'  department  activi- 
ties of  the  Duluth  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  will 
ledVe  this  elty  for  Detroit.  Mich., 
where  he  will  enter  a  new  field  of 
work. 


MliiNtrfl   .Show   \r^tM  ProfltM. 

The  final  r<port8  for  th«-  Y.  M.  C.  A. 
minstrel  show  show  that  the  bo>8'  de- 
partment netted  $350  with  receipts  of 
more  than  $500.  With  this  mon«y  and 
that  acquired  from  the*  Lyric  benefit 
the  boys  will  have  ample  funds  to  buy 
a  pl.ino  as  they  had  planntd. 
»  — — — 
1%'II|   Addrena  Saleii  MuniiKem. 

H.  S.  Mdntyre  of  the  iditorial  staff 
of  the  Twin  City  Commercial  Bulletin, 
will  be  the  upeaker  at  the  luncheon  lo 


ADDITIONAL 
SPORTS 


LARGEST  STOCK  OF  HIGH-GRADE 
monuments  In  the  Northwest;  call 
and  Inspect  before  buying  elsewhere. 
P.  N.  Peterson  Granite  Co.,  230  E.  Sup. 

MONUMENTS  to  order  direct  from  fac^ 
tories.  You  save  20  per  cent.  Charles 
Benson,  office  2301  W.  2nd  st.   Lin.  334. 

FUNERAL  FLOWERS  A  SPECIALTY. 
Duluth  Floral  Co.,  121  W.  Superior  St. 

BUILDING  PERMITS. 


To  Amanda  Boden,  dwelling  on 
the  south  side  of  Tioga 
street,  between  Forty-sev- 
enth and  Forty-eighth  ave- 
nues   east    $         600 

To  Steve  Osonovlch,  basement 
under  dwelling  on  the  north 
side  of  Glenview  court,  be- 
tween Commonwealth  ave- 
nue   and    Crestline    court....  400 


GOLF  INSTRUCTOR 
BACK  FROM  FLORIDA 


"Dic-k"     Clarkson,     profe.ssional     golf  ; 
instructor    of    the    Noi  thland      Country  i 
club,    has    returned    from    Florida.      Mr.  ; 
Clark.son      has    been      playing      in      the  j 
Southland  and  looks  fit  for  a  busy  sea-  | 
son    on    the    Northland    links.      He    was 
with   many   Duluthians   who   have  been  j 
plaving      on    the    Florida       links.      Mr.  , 
Clarkson    will    immtdlately    begin    the 
task    of    getting    things    in    shape     for 
the  Northland  golf  season. 

Speaker  Signs. 

Cleveland,   Ohio,     April  i2.— Tristara 


6  ROOM  HOUSE 
HUNTER'S  PARK 

«»,2S0 — 9000  cash.  Lot  55x134  feet. 
All  modern  except  heat.  A  bargain. 
■  INCC  ■•■• 
OPERATORS  IN  ALL  BRANCHES 
or  DULUTH  REAL  ESTATE 


501-4  SELLWDOD   BUILDING 
CITHER  PHONE  408 


KNOW  ALL  MEN  BY  THESE  PRES- 
ENTS, That  we,  the  undersigned,  do 
hereby  associate  ourselves  together  for 
the  purpose  of  forming  a  corporation 
under  the  provisions  of  chapter  fifty- 
eight  (58)  of  the  general  statutes  of 
Minnesota  of  1913,  and  acts  amendatory 
thereof,  and  do  hereby  agree  upon, 
adopt  and  sign  the  following  articles  of 
incorporation: 

ARTICLE  I. 
The  name  of  this  corporation  shall  he 
RED  SAND  LAKE  COMPANY,  and  its 
principal  place  of  business  and  it.s 
principal  office  shall  be  in  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota. 

The  general  nature  of  the  business  of 
this  corporation  shall  be  the  buying, 
owning,  selling,  leasing,  mortgaging 
and  dealing  generally  in  all  species  of 
real,  per.|)nar  and  mixed  estate,  bonds, 
notes,  mortgages,  .stocks  and  all  species 
of  financial  securities. 

ARTICLE  IL 
The    time    of    commencement    of    this 
corporation    shall    be    April    15th,    Iftlfi, 
and  the  period  of  its  continuance  shall 
be  thirty  (30)  years. 

ARTICLE  in. 
The    names    and    places    of    residence 
of    the    persons    forming    this    corpora- 
tion are  as  follows: 

Daniel  A.  Fitzpatrick,  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota. 

John   R.  Meining,   Duluth,  Minnesota. 
Edward  Dormedy,  Duluth,  Minnesota. 
John  A.   Eklund,   Duluth,   Minnesota. 
Abner     Brotherton,     Duluth,     Minne- 
sota. 

ARTICLE  IV. 
The  management  of  the  business  and 
affairs  of  this  corporation  shall  be 
vested  in  a  board  of  five  (5)  directors, 
who  shall  be  elected  annually  by  the 
stockholders  at  their  annual  meeting  to 
be  held  on  the  second  Tuesday  of  Feb- 
ruary In  each  and  every  year  during 
the  life  of  this  corporation. 

Until  the  first  annual  meeting,  the 
board  of  directors  shall  be:  Daniel  A. 
Fitzpatrick,  John  R.  Meining,  Edward 
Dormedy,  John  A.  Eklund  and  Abner 
j  Brotherton,  all  of  Duluth,  Minnesota. 
I  The  officers  of  the  corporation  shall 
i  be  a  president,  vice  president,  secretary 
and  treasurer,  and  shall  be  elected  by 
the  board  of  directors  and  shall  hold 
office  as  may  be  provided  for  in  the 
by-laws  which  may  be  adopted  by  the 
board  of  directors.  Two  or  more 
offices  above  specified,  other  than  the 
board  of  directors,  may  be  held  by  one 
and  the  same  person  except  the  offices 
of  president  and  vice  president. 

Until    the    first    annual    meeting    and 
the    election    of    their    successors,    the 
officers  of  this  corporation  shall  be: 
Daniel  A.  Fitzpatrick,  President. 
John  A.  Eklund,  Vice  President. 
Edward      Dormedy,      Secretary      and 
Treasurer. 

ARTICLE.  V. 
The  amount  of  the  capital  stock  of 
this  corporation  shall  be  fifty  thou- 
sand dollars  ($50,000.00),  divided  Into 
fifty  thousand  (50.000)  shares  of  the 
par  value  of  one  dollar  ($1.00)  each, 
payable  In  ca.sh  or  In  property,  or 
both,  as  required  by  the  board  of  direc- 
tors. 

ARTICLE  VL 
The   highest   amount   of   Indebtedness 
or    liability    to    which    this    corporation 
shall    at    any    one    time    be    subject    is 
fifty  thousand  dollars   ($50,000.00). 

IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF,  We  have 
hereunto  set  our  hands  and  seals  this 
7th  day  of  April,  1916. 

DANIEL  A.   FITZPATRICK 
JOHN  R.  MEINING. 
EDWARD  DORMEDY. 
JOHN  A.  EKLUND. 
ABNER   BROTHERTON. 
Signed,  Sealed  and  Delivered 

In  Presence  of: 
S.  J.   COLTER, 
As   to   Fitzpatrick,   Dormedy,   Eklund 
and  Brotherton. 
V.  A.   DASH, 

As  to  Meining. 
JOHN  T.  KENNY. 
As  to  all. 


!  We,  the  undersigned,  associate  our- 
'  selves  for  the  purpose  of  forming  & 
i  corporation  pursuant  to  the  I..aws  of 
\  Minnesota,  and  to  that  end  do  subscribe 
and  acknowledge  the  following  Cer- 
'  tificate  of  Incorporation: 
ARTICLE    I. 

The  name  of  this  corporation  sh.-ill  b« 
ANDERSON  METER  COMPANY:  tho 
general  nature  of  Its  business  shall  bo 
to  manufacture  and  sell  automatic 
water  meters  and  any  Improvements 
or  attachments  to  said  automatio 
j  water  meters;  to  buy,  own,  sell,  hold 
!  or  otherwise  deal  in  Letters  Patent  for 
!  such  meters,  or  to  license  the  manufac- 
ture and  sale  of  said  meters  under  .said 
Letters  Patent;  to  buy.  own,  sell  pat- 
ents and  patent  rights  that  are  in  any 
way  connected  with,  incidental  to  and 
relating  to  said  meters;  to  purchase, 
own,  hold,  sell,  option,  lease,  mortgage 
and  otherwise  deal  In  any  and  all  kinds 
of  property,  real,  personal  or  mixed, 
and  to  do  all  other  such  acts  and  to 
transact  all  other  such  business  as  may 
be  properly  Incident  to  and  necessarily 
connt-cted  with  any  of  the  lines  of  busi- 
ness above  mentioned;  the  principal 
place  of  transacting  Its  business  shall 
be  Duluth,  Minnesota. 

ARTICLE   II. 

The    period    of   duration    of   this   cor- 
poration shall  be  thirty  (30)  years  from 
and  after  April   Iftth,  1916. 
ARTICLE  III. 

The    names    of    the    Incorporators    of 
this    corporation    are    A.    G.    McKnlght, 
L.    U.   Young    and    S.    H.   Nelson,    all    of 
whom  reside  at  Duluth,   Minnesota. 
ARTICLE  IV. 

The  management  of  this  corporation 
shall  be  vested  in  a  Board  of  Directors 
consisting  of  not  less  than  five  (5)  nor 
more  than  seven  (7)  of  its  stockholders, 
who  shall  be  elected  each  year  at  the 
annual  meeting  of  the  stockholders, 
which  shall  be  held  at  the  Company's 
office  at  Duluth,  Minnesota,  on  the  sec- 
ond Tuesday  In  May  of  each  year  at 
four  o'clock  P.  M.  The  first  meeting 
of  the  stockholders  shall  be  held  May 
9,  1916.  at  317  Providence  Building, 
Duluth,  Minnesota,  at  4  o'clock  V.  M., 
and  no  notice  need  be  given  of  this 
meeting. 

There  shall  be  elected  at  the  first 
meeting  of  the  Board  of  Directors  to 
be  held  at  317  Providence  Building,  Du- 
luth, Minnesota,  Thursday,  April  20th, 
1916,  at  4  o'clock  P.  M.,  a  President, 
Vice  President,  Secretary  and  Treas- 
urer, all  of  whom,  except  the  Secretary, 
must  be  members  of  the  Board  of  Di- 
rectors. 

Until  the  first  annual  meeting  the 
Board  of  Directors  shall  consist  of  the 
three  (3)  incorporators,  to-wit:  A.  G. 
McKnlght,  L.  U.  Young  and  S.  H.  Nel- 
son. 

The  number  of  directors  may  be  In- 
creased to  five  (5)  or  seven  (7)  at  any 
regular  or  special  meeting  of  the  cor- 
poration by  resolution  adopted  by  a 
majority  of  all  the  stock  then  Issued. 

Vacancies  in  the  Board  of  Directors 
or  in  any  of  the  offices  shall  be  filled 
by  the  Board  of  Directors  until  the  next 
annual  meeting. 

ARTICLE  V. 

The  amotint  of  the  Capital  Stock  of 
this  corporation  shall  be  One  Hundred 
Thou.sand  Dollars  ($100,000.00)  divided 
into  100.000  shares  of  the  par  value  of 
One  Dollar  ($1.00)  each,  which  shall  be 
paid  in  money  or  property  as  the  Di- 
rectors  may    determine. 

ARTICLE  VL 

The  highest  amount  of  Ind'-btedneps 
or  liability  to  which  this  corporation 
shall  at  any  time  be  subject  shall  be 
One  Hundred  Thousand  Dollars  ($100.- 
000.00). 

IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF,  We  have 
hereunto  set  our  hands  at  Duluth.  Min- 
nesota, this  8th  day  of  April,  1916. 

A.    G.    McKNIGHT. 
L.  U.  YOUNG. 
S.  H.  NELSON. 
In    Presence    of: 

A.  C.   WICK. 

B.  N.  WHEELER. 


State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

On  this  8th  day  of  April,  1916,  be- 
fore me,  a  Notary  Public  within  anel 
for  said  county,  personally  appeared 
A.  G.  McKnlght,  L.  U.  Young  and  S.  H. 
Nelson,  to  me  known  to  be  the  persons 
described  In  and  who  executed  the 
foregoing  instrument,  and  acknowl- 
edged that  they  ejcecuted  the  same  as 
their  free  act  and  deed. 

BERT  N.  WHEELER. 

Notary  Public, 
St.  Louis  County,  Minn. 
My  commission  expires  March  1,  1S17. 
(Notarial  Seal,  St.   Louis  Co..  Minn.) 


Minnesota,     Department 
certify    thPt   the   within 


of 


State     of 

State. 

I  hereby  certify  thPt  the  within  in- 
.«trument  was  filed  for  record  In  this 
office  on  the  10th  day  of  April,  A.  D. 
1916,  at  9  o'clock  A.  M.,  and  was  duly 
recorded  In  Book  B-4  of  Incorporations, 
on   page   608. 

JTjLIUS  a.  SCHMAHL,     E. 

Secretary  of  State. 


(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 
(Seal) 


State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 

On  this  7th  day  of  April.  1916,  before 
me,  a  notary  public  In  and  for  said 
county,  personally  appeared  Daniel  A. 
Fitzpatrick,  John  R.  Meining,  Edward 
Dormedy,  John  A.  Eklund  and  Abner 
Brotherton,  to  me  known  to  be  the 
persons  described  in  and  who  exectited 
the  foregoing  Instrument,  and  they 
acknowledged  that  they  executed  the 
same  as  their  free  act  and  deed. 
JOHN  T.   KENNY, 

Notary  Public, 
St.  Louis  County,  Minnesota. 

My  commission  expires  Aug.  10,  1918. 
(Notarial  Seal,  St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn.) 


State     of     Minnesota,    Department     of 

State.- 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument was  filed  for  record  in  this 
office  on  the  10th  day  of  April,  A.  D. 
1916,  at  9  o'clock  A.  M.,  and  was  duly 
recorded  in  Book  B-4  of  Incorporations, 
on  page   609. 

JULIUS  A.  SCHMAHL, 

Secretary  of  State. 


245740. 
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 


245748. 
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  11,  1916,  at  9:30  A.  M.. 
and  was  duly  recorded  in  Book  18  of 
Misc.,  page  248. 

CHAS.   CALLIGAN. 

Register  of  Deeds. 
By  C,  L.  LOFGREN. 

Deputy. 
D.  H.,  April  12,  13,  1916. 

"J 

CITY   NOTICES. 

OFFICE    r,¥   THE  COMMISSIONER    OP 

PUBLIC  UTILITIES— 

City  of  Duluth,  Minn., 

April  12,   1916. 

Sealed  proposals  will  be  received  at 
the  office  of  the  Manager  of  the  Water 
nnd  Light  Department  until  11:00  A.  M. 
Saturday,  the  22nd  day  of  April,  1916, 
for  laying  of  gas  and  water  mains  in 
the  various  streets  and  alleys  in  the 
city  of  Duluth.  A  certified  check  for 
10  per  cent  of  the  amount  bid,  made 
payable  to  the  order  of  the  treasurer 
of  the  City  of  Duluth,  must  accompany 
eacli  proposal.  Proposals  must  be 
addressed  to  the  Manager  of  the  Water 
and  Light  Department,  City  of  Duluth, 
and  Indorsed  "Bid  for  laying  Water  and 
Gas  Mains."  Successful  bidder  must 
furnish  surety  bond  for  the  amount  of 
the  contract.  The  city  reserves  th« 
right  to  reject  any  or  all  bids. 

Specifications      and      bidding      blanks 
may    be   obtained   at   the    Office   of   the 
Water  and  Light  Department. 
CITY  OF  DULUTH. 

W.  H.  BORGEN. 

Clerk. 
LEONIDAS  MERRITT, 

Commissioner. 
D.  H.,  April  12,  13,  1916.     D  1918. 

CONTRACT    WORK—  * 

Office      of      Commissioner      of      Publio 

Works,   City   of  Duluth,  Minn.,   April 

7,    1916. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  bv  the 
Commissioner  of  Public  Works  in  and 
for  the  corporating  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth, Minnesota,  at  his  office  In  the 
City  Hall  In  said  city,  at  11  o'clock  A. 
M.,  on  the  2l8t  day  of  April,  A.  D., 
1916,  for  the  cleaning  and  sprinkling, 
with  water,  the  streets  Included  in 
Districts  Four  (4),  Six  (6)  and  Thirteen 
(13),  in  said  city,  according  to  the 
plans  and  specifications  on  file  in  the 
office    of    said    Commissioner. 

A  certified  check  for  10  per  cent  of 
the  amount  of  the  bid,  payable  to  the 
order  of  the  Treasurer  of  the  City  of 
Duluth,  must  accompany  each  proposal. 

The  City  reserves  the  right  lo  re* 
Ject   any    and    all    bids. 

CITY    OF   DULUTH, 

By    W.    H.    BORGEN. 
JAMES  A.  FARRELL,  Clerk. 

Commissioner. 
D.  H.,  April  11   and  12,   1916.   D  1917, 


▼^W 


r  i' 


kauaaSB^MM 


r 


Wednesday, 


• 

THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  12, 1916. 


19 


-r 


•^r 


M 


»    •  ^ — —  i ^ 

, , 


r 


BULLS  STILL 

IN  mm. 

Market  Advances  With  Bid- 
ding on  Fresh  Crop  Dam- 
age Reports. 

Flaxseed   Sells    Higher   on 

Support  From  Crushers; 

Offerings  Light. 


UMluth    Boiird    of    Tra.li^.     ApHI    12.—  ; 
The   niarkcl    ^^UH  ea»y  «rou...l   tli*  cl««e. 
au«t»tlon»     Kol..«     off     irrou.     the     hifth 
|,..Jnts   tourlird    .l.irl..«   the   ^enHlon.  1 

ytny    wheat    elo^ert     If    up    and    July 

1     i   1'hO     up.  .      .     1       ' 

May   .luruiu    .IohcI    1'hO   up    nii.l   July, 

0.l"'elo»e.l  'hC  off  at  ll«^@41>»r  for 
un    the    track!    rye    uiuhaiiKed    at    Mr. 

ani«    »M.rIey    uiirhanKeil    at    '«^'».^'*  ®  T**"' 

VI  \\lniil|>FK.  >»«y  •«»>•  closed  V*  @  H.C 
■III  at    4;s'»c  ai»ke«l.  . 

\t  St.  I.ouU.  >lay  wheat  cloned  at 
yi.lB  i.l«l.  und  .luly  at   l.I  *  l>l«t.  , 

\j  KanxaM  t  Ky.  >lMy  wh.-at  elo»ed  at 
«l.lo   linked.  «i.d  July  at  »1.1«  »»«• 

i»Mts  OH  MhMunpoll*  May  wheat  closed 
at  «1.3«».  and  calli*  at  II1.24U.  I 

Th-     bulls     w.re     rle/.i     ""^'\'; ,,,/'*!  : 

Impetus    was    fuinushed      n.    mo>-    baa  , 
crop    „.«w^      fr..,n    m,m.'      ''';'".^1,  ti.,  ,  U 
^.  wii  t  •>•    wheat    t»Tnt..ry    ari.l    ^J^d*^.'}'^  "'>'  , 

bulU.sh  ..ports  'r^'"';'i'V^^  'r.'V^;,  seed^ 
.onditloii  ovf^r  the   N<»rlhw<  at  for  seea 

,"c!al  y  disqui.-ilng.  It  b.lng  reported 
hat  labor  and  h-rses  are  so  «;;ar<>.^  |at 
II  is  considered  a  pny.nlral  »>''S»'bii  ly 
for  f  uu.ers  to  ^.e.-d  anywh.-re  n»-«a.  last 
'".son',  acr.-a^'.-  unh-sH  ^J<>^r}^^^'^ 
proportion  of  th-  s.->ed  Is  P"^.  "  ""  ^'[^ 
«i  ibhl-  Th.»  ground  ov^r  wid«'  are  i& 
r,V  Manitoba  is  s„ll   froz.n  and  cov.rod 

"'•j^  Thar-  ?:;;,.•"  ."•u^''\-i^'  f^ir 

ir!:trt^f  consul.rln«    the    ahurtag.    of 

'^"'rhlcaffo      reported      .'«om-    oxport    Ui- 
-     Quiry  f^T  wh^al  today,  but  "P-J'tt'-rs  at 

A  tii.»ri  ,■••«  II  mark 'ts   today.  • 

'^  Ai    LH    uth    today   only   ^^i**^);  ,^„^'-.^,,'i 
wh.ar     w.re        inspected,    as    oomp.u.a 

276    oars    compared    w.th    5'    »*«t    >"^^^ 
and      Chlca;?o      rt-ported      38.    card. 

'^^Jr^^pC:ii*f.ald'^'  ?;^n'-  th.  bui«e. 

■  '"  rC^:r'th,'V>^1^a;''be.^f  %.  ' 
spot  W  ncai  11"  '«  J...  Ti,,i  rf-tar-l- 
.handed  fr..m  > '-"t^'^^"*  •  n.T  {ations  •  f 
ini?  i'iriu»-ne«>  cam-  In  exp'^<  laii"".-'  '•■ 
hHavi'.M  ArBentine  shlp.n  nts  and  bet- 
ter off   rinCi*  of  M'inlt.,ba.< 

nT..^    wht-at  .•p-oiea    '-tc  nrr  ai   *i.- '   »> 

•/T'Vl      Ltfvo      and    ns      markot    wa.^ 
^'^^lJ:\r     *Mav    durmn    op-ned    ^c   up    at 

Flaxseed    SliKhiiy    *  P*  .     . ,     „, 

Trv.xMf'fd      a^'ai^     mad.-      a     .=»how     of 

KI'^"Fin.T^;o:;ation^  wl^e    >ic     oft 

^^^hl '^  !i^;rL  ";]e;;^r''D^.n^  Aires 
.lo'^inl.^'up"  "o  a"'il!30%  and  London 
7^r  off  at  $2S.-'«.  .     S-'lSVi 

and  V!o..ed  =^.0  "P  *»^^5-sVi^...''-  and 
July-     open-'d     *-'',,"P.  Ht     s-.iu   . 

closed    ^iC  up    It   ;-^V„-     ^io-«d    »;r  UP 
^  At   Wlnnlp.  i<.  May  flax  clo.-,ed    -ht  ui 

at  $1.'.'". 


No. 

N'l. 


r«Hh   -Hale*  Wednesday. 

1  r.->rtli>-ni  tthral.    I  ''^ 

1  aorlhi'm  vi\\-ti,  1  car 


^,).  1  il'initn,  1  oAr. .. 
No.  1  ri'irim,  1  fu... 
^,1.  ;l  iliinim.  1  car... 
No.  ;{  <iiiPini,  I  i'»r... 
Nj.  :}  .liirum,  1  car. .. 
No  r;  .liinim,  1  car. .. 
N,)'  3  laiii'l  'I'lfini.  I 
No.    1  inlsHl  durum,  1 

Barliy.  1  'ir  

BarW,   1  '■*••   

No    1  fUi,  1  <•»»• 

No.  1  fl.ix.  1  c*''   •  ••  ■ 


.  .«• 


vu . . 
(*iir. 


f-r  Thursday,  slronK  southeast  to  west 

"^  ML^aourl.  Iowa.  South  I>'^,>t"',\',  J^*"; 
■as  and  Nebraaka— Oenerally  fair  and 
cooler  tonlKht  »"<*. Thursday.  „„.,    _ 

North    Dakota— Unsettled    and   colder 
toniuht.    Thursday    fair   and   warmer. 
'"^"n  i.^-onsin-Ua»n   thi«    afternoon   and 
t<mlKht.  warmer  in  east  portion   Ihurs 

'*''Minn-sota-Raln  tonlKht.  colder  In 
west  und  south  Thursday. 

be    used."  »       «       ♦ 

\t  iiiipnoa  Aires  wheat  was  easy 
wui  llberararflvals  and  fine  weatlier 
ArLent  Ine  frelKhts  tend  to  restrict 
buflnes."  Indian  wheat  offers  at  Lon- 
don were  dearer  today^ 

Ru.sseir8  news.  New  York  aald: 
"There  were  some  inquiries  for  wheat 
for  nearby  .shipment  which  exporters 
were  disinclined  to  figure  on.  No 
ov«rniKht  acceptances  of  oats  were 
claimed."  «      «       • 

Foreign   crop  summary: 

Itu.ssla — Weather  has  been  ver>  tiy- 
ing  on  new  crops,  and  spring  seeding 
ia    backward.  , 

Uoumanla  —  Some  complaints  are 
heard  aa   to   lack   of   rain  and   njo»«\"y;: 

Argentina— Offers  of  '^;."e»^*^«/^" 
small    and    very   dear,   and   freights   aio 

again    advancing.  *„ii«n 

Au.slralia-Cood     raln.H     have     fallen 

and    Ih.    Kovernment  Is  urging   'a'^^e 
to    sow     the    largest    poHsible    aci  eage. 
Ufferinss    are    small    and    charters    are 
slow.  ^       ^       ^ 

A  Chicago  wire  .said:      "The   weather 

,„ap   show!  unsettled   conditions   in   the 

Northwest,  with  .some  precipitation,     it 

Is    K-nerally    mild    and    clear    over    the 

1  wi.fler    wheat    belt.      Kulllsh    sentiment 

H    growYng    with    the    continuation    of 

'  unfavomble    reports    on    winter    wheat 

1  and    the    laten-ss   of   the   season    In    the 

Northwest.      We   b'>'-ve    the    market   Is 

headed  toward  a  hl«her  level  of  values. 

'  bu?  one  mu.st  be  careful   not  to  become 

;  too   entliuslaatlc    on^the    bulges. 

'  Rroomhall  cabled  from  LW'-rpool : 
"Market  opened  steady,  as  »-"*^J;J^^,  °J. 
Winnipeg    but    later    It    eased    off    w'  th 

i  free    arrivals.       Spot    market    was    dull 

laud    unchanged.      Torn    was    dull    with 

'the  demand  quiet."  ^       ^ 

Duluth   grain  'stocks,    giving   changes 

'"v^'j.'-^^t-Western  and  winter.  T 7 8  000 
bu  spring,  8,066.000  bu.  deorea.  2»,0<>0 
b";  durum  6,685.000  bu.  increase  26,000 
bu-  bonded.  6,300,000  bu,  decrease  45.000 
bu^    tCtal    wheat,    21,597,000    bu,   net  de- 

''or-.'r''-indns--(»ats.  2,093.000  bu.  de- 
crees "co^OObu;  ry.-.  30  000  bu  de- 
creas<-  9.000  bu:  barley,  1,066,000  Du, 
.leeie'is.-  4'000  bu;  llax.  domestic,  1.- 
eell.Oofrbu  i^M.ded  V5.OOO  »»..  [-tal  flax. 
1  7X8  000  bu    net  Increase,  b.ooo  du. 

'Tolal  of  all  grains,   26.5:^1.000  bu;  net 
decrease  150,000  bu. 

Clearance  reported:  *  Wheat,  862  000 
bu  rtoui  TO.OOO  bbl:  toRClher  '^Qual  to 
1,177,000  bu;  corn.  H.OOO  bu;  oats.  .B.- 
OOO bu.  «       •       • 

Primary  markets  report  the  follow- 
inir  receipts  and  jahipments  todaj  . 

year    785.000     bu;     .shipm-nL.s,     1,143.000 

year    1261,000    \,u;    shipments.    1.123,000 
bu.  last  year  1.577.000  bu. 

Duluih  bondejgrain  rec  n'^.lf "  J^'cars^ 
!■>•»  curs-  oats.  8  cars;  barley,  i  cars, 
rtax.  1  car.     Total,  1^33  can*. 

Car.s  of  wheat  rec-l^^.^.-  ,.,,,y. 

••••;:::    27I 

I81  . 

387 

::::^:::::7o,o5S 

Cars  of  linseed  recelv;Ml_^^^^^      ^^^_ 

Duluth    -?  3 

Minn-apolls *] 

Ulnnipeg .^...^.'* 

At   Liverpool    spot    wh-at    closed    un- 
chnnwed;   corn,   unehanged.  . 

Duluth    car    «n\P*^«=t';'"-,.  ^.^.^f/',      ?: 
2     northern,     1;     No.     8      2       ^oruj".  ^: 
mix.d.   2:  total  wheat.  8:  «"^\  >;.'^';'./^';- 
flax.   2;    last  year.   5;   rye    3     |af   >/^[; 
1'    bailey,    2;    last    year.    1;    total   of  hU 
grains     15:    last    year.    50:    on   track.    35. 
cViaHes   E    Lewis   &  Co.    had   the  fol- 
lowing    closing    wire      from      CMc.^: 
"Wheat    was    strong,    no    attention    oc- 
Ing    paid    to    easy    cabl.s    or    large    re- 
c.  lots       Cnfavorable  crop  reports  were 
overshadowing    influences.       The    con- 
KesUon   i      Mav   was  rather  pronounced 
and    unless   It  Is  relieved   the^  premium 
on    the    May    will    be    les.sened.      Action 
?r  strong      and      the      market      lo<.ks 
higher.' 


AMERICAN  WHEAT  MARKETS..^ APRIL_ll  1916, 

1  *'  I  ^  a         W^  ^  b 
1.'22-^  *«*»'^ 


May—  Open^ 

Duluth    V^oA^* 

Minneapolis     --i-Vu    ibu 

Chicago     ^•^,*,^r^*2* 

Winnipeg     l.lSVh-^ 

Dul u"t h^*"."". ^  20  %  b 

Minneapolis     ....1.20S-^| 
Chicago    Vl^.i^    u 

do   Sept 1.14V«-^ 

Winnipeg     1.17*»-% 

do  Oct l.*» 


High. 

1.^2Sb 

1.22Vi 

1.20^ 

1.17  \4 


Low. 

1.20Sa 
1.20\ 
1.18>4 
LIS 


1.19^-20 
1.16".a 


1.22%b 
1.2:iV4 
1.18 '» 
1.16Ti 
1.18=^ 


1.20',b         1.2l>-22a 


1.20'^ 

l.U 

l.l4Vi 

l.lSTs 

LIS 


1.21'i« 
1.17^b 

1.17?; 

L13^»a 


n    :  > 
L20%b 


LlSWb 

liU-ia 

1        I 
■J.    .  1 


T'r  ago. 
1.68  "i 
1.62H 
l.fiOVt 
1.56VB 

1.62 

Ll'i^i 

1.29>4 

1.16 

1.63';i 


l.lSVKb 
1.14  Vib 


1  I5b 
1.16  »,4b 


May    i'ttxZw         1  IfiV 

July    1.14Hb         i.it*-** 


DULUTH  LINSEED  MARKET    ; 

Open.  H'?A,  K         i'^B'^b  2.l5=**a  -^ISa 

rjlj  :::::::::::i:li5S    "V^    J^    -'""^     "" 


T'r  ago. 

1.75 

1.6»a 


Y'r  ago. 

1    UfiS. 


STOCKS  ARE 
DEPRESSED 

Lowest  Prices  of  Session 

Scored  in  the  Final 

Hour. 


2.00 


Large  Offerings  of  United 

States  Steel  and  Oil 

Shares. 


17.942    bu.   last    year   none.    «—-.,. , 

Jear  none.  „rain_Wheat.    U1.886    bu.    last    >«•»    2.445    bu.    oat.. 

Shipments    of    bonded    grain  ^^  ^^^^  ^^^^  ^^ne. 

65.926  bu.  last  year  4, .86  bu.  oanej.  ^ 


result 

grain. 

kind. 

lifted 

and 


er  the  market  receded  a  l»\tle. 

Kalrlyl.berali    stocks    and^t^^ll^-^^^y 

r:ran^^f"incfrpr/es       The    close 
was    steady    at    a    shade    to     .*^ 
Monday  s   rtnlsh.      ,.„_.,»     the 

Oats  developed  .'"^^'V;^*' ,i"r 
mainly  of  the  action  "f  "ther 
Selling   was  only  of  a  ft.itlerea 

Hiifher     quotations     on     nogs 
proif8^ons.^On    the    bulge    packers 
longs   unloaded.  ti24»l''5*k;    No. 

Wheat— N"o.  2  red.  »l"^^-,Y?^ia' w 
3  red.  nominal;  No  ^  bard  ll.^i  4  J 
\'i>u.-  No    3   hard,   Jll*** 'S  J--^-'^-  .       , 

Co?n--No    2   yellow,   79ti79-Uc;  No.  4 

yellow,    73Vj'ii74xc.      ..,    a  iia,.c-  atika- 
'   Oats— No.  :j  white.  44V4®44**c,  siau 

dard.    46Vi(iJ  46^ac._ 

llye — No.     2,     9.c: 
timothy.     $4.50 -vj  8.00; 

^^il'Jrk,   $21. 60^c  23.17; 
$12. 00 'u  12.46. 

-       Opru.  Hl»»». 

,$l.l8'i4  11    •-•0->4  t\ 

1.16  l.lSMi         1 


barley, 
clover. 


62 # 76c; 

$10.00 'a; 


Wti 
Ma)    ... 

JulT    ... 
Corn — 

M»r  ... 

juir  ... 

0«ts— 
MkT    ... 

my 


lard.  $11.62;  ribs. 


no**. 

$1.19% 


Low. 
.16 


.75Vi 
.43'« 


IVrk— 
>U)    ....23.17 
July    ....23.00 

Urd— 
M«y    ....11.50 
July    ....11.70 

Klb»— 
Mav    ....12.30 
July    ....12.45 


.Viik 

.45^4 
.40-^4 

23.35 
23.20 

11.65 
11.87 

12.42 
12.60 


.75 

.44<^; 

.43W 

23.17 
33.<J0 

11.  W 
11.70 

12.30 
12.43 


.75% 
.Wt 

.44% 

.43V* 

23.17 
23.10 

11  .«2 

11.82 

12.37 
12.52 


Corn  ana  Wheat  Buiieiin. 


For  Ibe  iwiuty-tour  boum  endim  »t  8  •. 
Aiiiil  12: 


I.,  »e(lm'«lay. 


STATIONS— 


State  oV    T»niper»ture 
w.-«ther,  lli<h  !     I** 


I  dpi 

luUoa 


''c4fue"RS>t'sl2.O0(»'nrm:  native 
beefsVeer8':$7.9Wl0.O0:  western  steers 

$7.«5'&8.«6:  stockers  and  'ee^^-^Vjl^.^ 
6865  cows  and  heifers.  $4. 10^910. 
calve.s.    $7.25«?ld.00.  -teadv 

Sheep— Recelpt.s,         14  ^00  Veaay. 

wethers.      $7.00®  9.40:      lambs,      $...6® 

11.90.  . 

• 

New    York    Money. 

New  York.  April  12,— Mercantile  pa- 
per 3  J  3Vi.  SterMner.  ,  60-day  bllU. 
4  72% :    demand.    4.7«  f -1«:    cables     4.7. 

Francs,    demand     ^Sfi. -'bibles       72%. 
Marks,      demand       72^       gables.      .^^ 
Kronen,     dfmand      1-|-.    ^^ables,     if  *■ 

Guilders,    demand.    **;^»,:    «a*l^:^^'r>,,ble8' 
Lire,  demand.  6.53^  c^les    « |-^I^,",fi:«; 

^oS:*"Mox^c^n  donahs.  48%.  Govern. 
5n"e^t  bonds:  steady:  railroad  bonds.  Ir- 
ri^ular  Time  loans.  Irregular,  60- 
days  2'4fiS;  90  days.  8:  six  months 
l^^sii  Call  money,  steady;  high.  2. 
h?w.V%:  ruling  rate.  2;  last  loan.  2: 
closing   bid.    1%"^:    offered    at    2 

uMHMl-  li.rm»n  eich»ii«e  w  mani'  m\U  to  four  marM. 
S^^  .ml  Italian  exrlian»  w  many  franrs  or  lire  to 
Jhl^lla?  and  Austria  1  X«lan  and  Srandinartan  ex- 
ct'aag  St^  ao  miS  ce'nu^  to  the  unit  ol  curreucy.) 

THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 

Chicago.  - 

recelpU.     7,44* 

34i.y:;  1f*^«  33 

p;V;  Ooi^-UT  -Ulsa-..  17%!/ 17^:  Uins,  1.%^^!.%^. 
•^TS'-::J^^:'?Xu^5t'll'^Ss'rnrn,   2«20%c; 

^^toM— Bo«lpt'.  33  ran;  uncUawd. 
Pouitr)— AlUe.   uiyl>ain!ort. 


New  York.  Aprtl  12.— The  delicate 
status  of  International  affairs  was 
again  reflected  in  today's  early  deal- 
ings, special  stocks  declining  1  to  3 
points  after  an  Irregular  opening. 
Standard  shares  were  heavy  also,  but 
recessions    in    that    quarter    were    less 

pronounced.  There  was  ^'^t^'js*/®  »f",- 
Ing  of  such  favorites  as  Crucible  Steel 
the  marines.  United  Fruit  Industrla 
Alcohol  and  Metals,  especially  the  Zinc 
Shares.  United  States  Steel  was  low- 
er by  a  point,  and  Bethlehem  Steel  fell 
14'4to465.  Among  the  rallrf  losses 
we/e  limited  to  fractions  The  course 
of  the  market  suggested  liquidation 
from   out  of   town   sources  ^„,,,„, 

Supporting  orders  resulted  in   rallle.s 
of  1  to  over*2  points  before  the  end  of 
the  first  hour  of  the  stock  market  to- 
day    and     the     short     mte'e"'.     >^hU.h 
helped    to    bring    about    the    ea^ly    ^^J" 
back,    felt    Impelled    to    cover   contracts 
because     of    the     seeming    scarcity     or 
stocks.     On  the  rebound  the  market  re- 
lapsed   into    Its    stagnant    state    of    tne 
previous  day.  traders  hold  ng  off  pend- 
Inir    receipt    of    more    definite    advices 
t^m    Berlin.      Interest    In    the    foreign 
situation    was    heightened   by   the   con- 
tinued   weakness    of   French    and    Kus- 
"lan  exchange,  the   Paris  check   faUlng 
to    a    new    low    record,     Bonds     were 

*^  Moderate  gains  in  hides  and  leather 
preferred,  and  Wool  worths,  whose  d- 
rectors  decided  on  an  increased  divi- 
dend, furnished  the  diversion  of  the 
listless  midday  session.  Changes  else- 
where were  insignificant. 

Lowest  prices  were  scored  In  thf 
final  hour  when  large  offerings  or 
""ilted  States  Steel  and  oils  depressed 
the  entire  list.     The  closing  was  heavj. 


,,.„.,„      12.— Buli'T— J^it: 

tubs;  rrtamerr  exuas.   35c;  txtr;*  Ifrsts. 


Oit-aio.     April 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

R«[>ort«d  by  aiatH»  E.   Ltru   *  Oo- 


~ 


I)uliith    

Minneapolis    . 
Winnipeg    ... 

Chicago    

Kan.sas  City   . 
•St,   Louis,   bu 


Year 

ago. 
40 
67 

61 

26 
132.0U0 

Year 


..$1.4T«. 
..  l.2:5-« 

...  l.m 
...  i.r.s 

...  1.01% 
...  1.01% 

...  i.o:i'e 

...  1.04% 
...  1.04% 
...  l.Ol 
...     .69 
..     .6'' 
...  2.Ws 
...  2.16 


MARKET  GOSSIP. 


MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET. 


tl.a    1  ros*    

XiiilH  »pulU     ....• 

Alt  ^aiiarU     

CtmptHll    

l'riH)k>loii     

Uvtroit    

ilmlutit   

Monti  vidt^     

tlliH>rb<'ud    

.Nctt    t'lm    

I'ark   Kaplds    .... 

i:ixh. sur    

T8t.   I'aul 

Wlnu'lmtf"   

W  (>rtliiii«t  J"    . . . . 

tiVljcrUwn    

viluioa    

.MHIiauk     

t.Mll»ti''ll    

Tl'i.-rre    

TKapid    City    ... 

KHBtrld     

Sioux   FalU    .... 
JW  atrrlovru     . . . . 

tYaidklon     

l.\nifiila    

lBi>niarck    

iHtiiUnrau    

XHtmljrlU    

Tl>'»IU  Luke   ... 

Itli-kinsua     

iKfivtoudi'n    . . . . 

tCraflou     

tCrand    KorUa    . 

I.^nttdou    

^Larlmore    

Li>lioa   

Minot    

{Na|>oleoo    

jl'tinhliia    

jWahiwlou    . . . . 

twill  Lsion    

tHa.re    

-,MUi*  City  ... 

tMlnii«h>.a  ... 
t\Mnniprj  .... 
tBaUlflord  ... 
tlTliK^'  Alliert 
tUuAppclle  .. 
tSwlfl  Currenl 
+K.diiionton 


tkwdyi 

Cloudy  1 

Cloud), 

. ....t'oudy, 

Cloudy 

','.  ...tlnudy 

KaUiiug 

Cloudy 

Cloudy 

Cluud) 

Cloud) 

Cloud)  I 

, Cloud), 

ClomJy; 

Cloudy. 

*.'.Pt.  lloutb'i 
I 

t'lwi 

Clearj 

I 

1 


..C'luudyi 

•  ••.....' 
.  .Cloud) , 


56 
56 


40 
36 


56  1  32 

52  I  46 

56  1  30 

58  I  34 


56 
56 
56 
58 
62 
d8 
62 
54 


40 

i  44 

I  42 

.  32 

I  42 

I  48 

I  44 

I  40 


0 
0 
0 

i.02 
I  0 
1.10 
1.14 
1  0 
I     0 

1.24 
I    0 


ee  I  52 

58    1    40 

«l 

70  I 
68  I 
64     I 


44 

52 
44 

42 


Ml 


40 


50    1    38 
6.)     1    34 


46    I    30 

60    I    42 
58    I    34 


.1 


Clou'ly 

Cloiiil) 

Cloudy 

Kalniim 

Cloudy      54 

Uaiiilog      58 

Kalnln«      56 

Suowiiut      44 

Cloud)' 

■ Cloudy 


38 
i    40 


«iO 

56  . 

70  I    48 

52  I     34 


4S 
52 


34 
34 
34 
32 
36 
36 


U 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 
.01 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 
.06 

IS 

1.01 

t 

0 

0 

,04 

1 .06 
I  0 
!.01 

I.W 
I  0 
1.80 
I  0 
(.02 
1.16 
1.34 
1.20 
0 


New  York.  ^ 

Ne«    York     April    12.— Butl»-r— firm;    rpclpta,    f.lW. 

sToriT*    |sY,.38V.^;  nrsU,  36%'fip87c;  iecooOa.  S^36c 
»r;^     ntrn-'ir-    nwilar    parked,    e>:tra   fnU.    -2-^42.' 

^rio^^tr&4'!I^2y:  s«-;J*:^^^»S=  ";^ 

Mmery   «hltfs.   floe   to   fanrj',    MiXe.   Ufartjy   betinery 

^'^C,;;:;',.^^^lar;  nc-lUtH,  31*0:  tut-  ItaU  fpedah. 
18'S^!*%"  'ournul  make  spe. jals  l^:  ^o,"^»«-  ">"• 
16V8l»;-'t>;  Wl-CT^I"  twins  tielJ.   1HU'?»18',/-. 

HIDES,  REITS,  WOOL,  ETC. 


STOCKS— 


1  Hl«h.  1  Lew.   I  Cloas. 


No.    1    «rpen    salUd    rows    an<l    »te«ri, 

all   welgliU ..;• •••• 

No    1  iri«n  kalted  Iwlls V  V" 

GriVn  salted  aud  branded  hide*.  Hat.... 

No    1  itrwn  salted  v«*l  oai/,... ....... 

No.   I  green   saltod  lon«  b»l''^  "l»».   ■ 

to  25  It'*  i  •  •  *  V."  '.v.'  ■  ■  ■ 

No    1  green  salUd  kip.  la  to  2a  UM... 

«ri'«J  saltt^l  dea<-oas,  earh... 

Ureen  »alt*d  horse  md*f,  c«a» 

Dry  Hides- 
Territory  Uitcher^.   o*er  la  lh« 

Murrain  and  fallen,  ow  15  Hw 

Calf,  ovt-r  fi  llw 

;  Pd-  sali.d  hide*,  all  wrtfiUa 

Horse  and  mule  hides 

Tallow  and  Grease —  , 

fio.  1  t»llow 

No.  2  tallow 

Innaihed.   %  blood........ 

liiaashed.  medium.  %  blocd, 


iii«a.siied'.  rnarse.  '%7)l.>od. 
tn»ashi-d.  low.  %  blood., 


1.50 

.24 
.16 
.2* 
.17 
1.50 

.07 
.06 
.28 
.25 
.22 
.20 


Minnesota.  Dakota.  «UcoM>n  and  Iowa. 

RAW  Fims. 


;ll!l 

.14 
.20 

.16% 

.18 
1.15 
4.00 

.28 
.20 
.26 
.20 
6.00 

.08 
.07 
•SO 
.28 
.25 
.25 


v<- 


.Mrntmi^ 


i 

I 

• — ■ I 


N 


An  Argentine  cable  said  that  this 
we. "-..wheat  .^xports  will  aggregate 
3.750,000    bu.        ,       ,       ^ 

All-rail  shipments  of  b.iided  grain 
fr.V^n  the  *-!.  vators  here  yesierd^.y  to- 
taled 240.212  bu.  of  which  IJ'l.S^S  bu 
«.iV wheat  55. '.♦25  bu  oat:?,  and  22.402 
bu  bSey  Receipts  of  bonded  grain 
were  120.026  bu. 

♦  '  * 

Operation."*  In  cash  grain  ^n  tho  Du- 
luth niark.t  W'Mv  limited  ^yith  Inspe.  - 
tloi.s  ..f  every  kind  of  .grain  amount- 
ine  to  onlv  15  cara  for  the  d.i>  i^asn 
N.f  1  m/rt'hern  wheat  sold  at  ^c  un- 
der to  2c  over  the  Miy  priee  and  cash 
No.  1  durum  at    %c  under  May. 

PrlcA   Current      says:      "The   weather 
«ince  the  government   report  on  wheat 
wasmade   up,    has  been   without  much 
Unprovement'^     Unseasonable    cold    pre- 
vails over  the  b.lt.  and  more  snow  fell 
during  last   week.     So  far  as   molstur.j 
Ta    n^neerned       the    prospect      over    the 
Lreater  part  of  the  wheat  belt  Is  above 
norma        In  the  far  western  and  south- 
wes^•rn  .,.-ctlon«,  the  deficiency  is  very 
^14't  and  w-ithout  rain  shortly  further 
1  ^...       in«v    be      expected.      Trie      spring 
wheat   seeding   Is  ^elay.-d   but  thus  far 
u  about   the   same  as   last   year.      It     s 
loo   early    to   estimate    the   acreage,    al- 
though   conditions    seem    favorable    for 
ih,.  so..ding  of  a  large  area. 

W.ather  forecast:  Ulinoi.^  — cv^'tT^ 
elJudy  tonight  and  Thui^dfiy.  Show- 
ers and  warmer  In  ^^'tbeast.  Cooler 
Tn  extreme  w.  st  portions  tonight.  Coo.l- 


Minneapolis.  Minn..  April  12.— Wheat 
higher:  reports  on  crop  conditions  and 
Kuroi  .an  cables  had  a  bullish  eftect  on 

he  market.  Corn  and  oats  strength- 
ened with  wheat.  Wheat  receipts  2.6 
;ar.s  compared  with  57  a  y^«r^ago  May 
opened  $1.20%:  bigh.  »l-2^%  <»  1--J|  • 
low  $120^4;  cosed.  >l-22««  I  22Vj.  Juij 
'op^ene'd  $1.26%/a  L120  V,  :  .high,  $L22%  : 
low.   n. 20%:  closed  $1.21  VH. 

pooh No.    1       hard,     $1.2.'>»,       i^o.     i 

northern      $1.24'.  ra  1  26'-h  :        to     arHve, 

$l22'«('f|1.25'H:   No-    2    n^'»;tbc';"-    *J21■• 
^ii"4>-•  No.  3  wheat.   $1.16 'k'>i  1.21  Vs. 

*  <v..n      No    3   yellow.   75 ''a  76:   oats.   No. 

3UVt.r^-^^42^V.c: %ax    $2.17%«42  20:j 
F-i.^iir    unchanged:     shipments.    6  ..404 

bb^    Barley  64 /72c:  rye.  92^»4c:  bran. 

$l8.25'5i  19.00. 


CHICAGO  MARKET. 


r'Ki,.uo-n      Anrll      12— Higher      prices 
for  whelit  resuitcd    today   from  a   gen- 
eral   ru7h    to   buy.     The    Incentives     ay 
n    continued    adverse     reports    of    the 
domestic   Winter   crop    and     In     bullish 
?2ble   dispatches   about    European    con- 
trnental   requirements    not    being    ade- 
quat'ely    'supplied     by     Argentine     and 
Australian      shipments.       Hull      leaaers 
h"i"  were    predieting    a     renewal     this 
>-ear    of    the*^  early    war    time    P«nch    In 
wheat   supplies.    «^P^n'"e  prices    which 
ranged      ""om      "S.  (ff  fa  c      to      to    tflSl 
higher,    with    May   at   »1  18%    to   $119  V4 
and    .1  illy     at     $1.16(9 1.16 'i:     were     fol- 
lowed   by   decided    further    gains. 

Drv  weather  complaints  from  Ne- 
braska were  decidedly  on  the  In- 
crease. The  market  closed  unsettled. 
I«i«t2%c  net  higher  with  May  at 
$1.19%fjl.20    and    July    at    $1.17%. 

Corn'  hardened  with  wheat.  Up- 
turns however,  were  relativ(ly  small. 
After  opening  A  shade  to   y.n^.c  high- 


Zn\JZ  su'llona  reporUn,  0.10  or  more 

Oeu^ral    -"-n-O.   rreuru." NSa.t'^telau'S; 
terc-d    bhow.rs.    wxurrid    in     xlrem.    J-"'^"  ,   ^^-.^^ 

.  h..,    Ti^n    over    all    seotlon*    excvpt    the    Great 

"".  "*^  'j.  ^  ...thrr   and   crop  rondlllOM   to   the   roru 

Jf  1  . .,  fh»fi  the  a»era«e.  Some  daina«e  by  frukt  In 
;';^ti;em  U  r  O^l  v..dh!g  U  rnerally  j-ro*''-!"* ,*;" 
,n^  thT  proD  b  sh««ln«  >atbfa.tor)  troalh  exapt  dam- 
•"  i  .1^  ...allKr  iu  Texas.  Meadows  and  rani",  are 
Ut    b»    dry   wealhcr   in    iea«.         ^^     k1(  HAUUSON. 

gtartlnil  «eU.  •  j^,_jj  |.oreca»Ur. 


B-ar   

B<'ar,   eull   

Bt-aTpr    

Badtfer    •••< 

Civrt    eat    •••. 

Ki-^her    

Kox.   sliver    •< 

Fox.  eroM ■ 

Fox,  Cray    ■ 

Fox.  red    

I.)  nx    

Mink,  dark   

Mink,    brown    

Wink,  pale   

mter.  dark   

Otter,  brown 

Raci-ooo   

KMiiik.  black    

Rkuiik.    *ort    striped. 

Skunk.  strii)ed   

Wi'aiel 


•MV 


Larg?    M'Miura.     Small. 

...rtie.oo  $12.00  $10.00 

..T  7.50       6.00       5.00 
^  10.00       6.50       3.50 

■    2^^       ^I^       ^-.^ 
,       .40  .30  .25 

25.00      20.00      15.00 

;500.00  350.00  200.00 

25.00   20.00   15.00 

1.75 

7.50 

9.00 

3.00 

2..'iO 

2.00 

9.00 

7.50 

2.75 


2.25 

9.00 

12. tO 

4.00 

3.23 

2.75 

12.00 

10.00 

4.00 

4.00 

3.25 

2.50 

.75 


■.i> 


1.25 
6.00 
6.50 
2.25 
1.75 
1.50 
7.00 
6.00 
1.73 
3.00 
2.25 
1.75 
2S 


Munkrats— Wisconsin   and   slmiUr:     I.a>r   spring.    50c; 
large  winter.  42c:  large  fall.  30e:_  Minnesota  and  ^Imllar 
larV-'   'rtnt^.   Xi.-;  lar*'  fall,  25c;  sBa:i,   damar-d  and 
kit:,  at  prjiwrtlonate  falue. 

COPPER  STOCKS 

HOLD  STEADY 


CH^S.E. 


GRAIN,  STOCKS,  COTTON, 
PROVISIONS 

204  Board  of  Trado,  Duluth 

<WAmb«r«  New  York  »t«.  k  KxchaBge 
Me"l^"  Ne«  York  Uj,,tto.i  lixck-uue 


Ige 
•  ge    I 


A  Good  Firm  to  Ship 
Yoor  Grain  to 

ATWOOD-tARSON 
COMPANY,  Inc. 

Soeclal  attention  given  to  caah 
era^ns.  We  give  all  shipments  our 
personal  attention. 

Duluth  -Minneapolis 


Xew    York    Wlte«<-  „ 

New    York.    April    12.-Wheat-May. 
$1.28;    July.    >121. 

,      *    f,''TT"*dJs;.T"*N'"      1    Manitoba. 

•'c,;;!i.-SM.";m^c.n  n.l^.  ne-^10>  6d. 

I,,ondon    Stocks. 

Xj^Aim     Anrll    r'    —  The   stock    markel    wa.'^  genrral  y 

«5^:?trrrsr'i^L^f?c 

LU  7.m...l    StatTsieel.      Money    was    U.   incr.a^ed   de- 
mand and  disciunl  raU-s  were  steady. 

I  «ioM«k  St.   Paal   lilveatork. 

I       SciU.     Bt""1^l.  *Mln,..     Apn.     12 -Hoj.>-Ke<>.^U. 
6.7IH);    steady    to   5c    higher;    rangp.    $9.10^fl».4O,   tiuia, 

i  *^VlKe.-elpU.  2.»10:kiner,..strong    steers. J5.00rq 

MOO     .•««»    and    lielfrrx.    $1.  tJO^<i  ..  .j:   eal»i-«.    slrwig    "»  , 
I  sriilR^rl^  |4.5»&9.50;  stockers  and  feedern.  25c  lo-f.  . 

'  ^^allt'i.'*- Bee-lpf,    5«t:    "t^a.ly:    lamM.    $5.50«;10  75; 

weei'    ..•TTTX.i       „^    $3.5<K-rtH.OO. 


Quotations  In  mining  stocks  wero 
fairly  steady  at  Boston  today  in  spite 
of  weakness  on  Wall,  Street  and  fears 
of  foreign  complications.  Pi  Ice 
changes  In  the  general  list  were  mod- 
erate    but   the   Zinc   stocks   were   weak. 

American  Zinc  sold  76  cents  off  to 
$94.75.  and  Kutte  &  Superior  $1  off  to 
$95.60  around  the  close.  Franklin 
was    a      strong      feature,      selling      up 

*^Caliimet^&  Arizona  sold  50  cents  up 
in  the  late  tradhiK  at  $94.50;  Copper 
Range  26  cents  off  at  $65;  Keweenaw 
50  cents  up  at  $6;  Lake  25  cents  pff  at 
$17:  Mohawk  60  cents  off  at  $99. 
North  Butte  60  cents  off  at  »28.B0 
Old  Dominion  50  cents  up  at  $.1.  and 
Quincy    $1    up    at    96. 

The  dividend  of  10  cents  a  share  on 
Iron  Blossom  stocks  report»»d  yester- 
day is  said  to  have  been  10  cents  for 
the  quarter  instead  of  10  cents  for  the 
month  as  wired. 

•      ♦       • 

Closing    quotations     of     Boston     curb 

sto.ks.    as    reported    l»y   Pa*"**.'^  ^/'iP!,'" 
^  Qfy  .  Bid.  Asked. 

Butte  &  Zenith f   4.00     $   4.25 

Boston    &    Montana ,»'iS 

Bingham    Mines    ,...    I*f0 


Am.  Tel.  &  Tel 

Am.  Can.,  com 

Am.  Beet  Sugar 

Am.   Hide  &  Leather.  . 

do    pfd 

Am.  Car  Foundry 

Am.  Ice  Sec.  Co 

Am.    Locomotive    

Am.    Lin.,    com.    

Am.   Lin.,    pfd 

Am.    Smelting    

Alaska  Gold  Mines  Co 
Allls  Chalmers,  com. . . 
Allls  Chalmers,  pfd.. 
Am.  Tobacco  Co.  .  . . 
Anaconda  Copper    .... 

Atchison     • 

Bald.    Loc 

B.    &   O..   common    . .  . 

d«i,    pfd 

Bethlehem  Steel,  com 
Butte  &  Superior  ..  . 
Cal  Petroleum,  com. 
Caiiadlan    Pacific     . .  • 

Central  Leather   

Chlno  Copp-r  Co.  .. 
Chi.  <Jrt.  Westn.  pfd. 
Chicago.  Mil.  &  St.  P. 

Col.    Fuel    &    Iron 

Con.    <ja8    

Corn    Pro.    Co 

Crucible  Steel,  com.. 
Cuban    Am.    Sugar... 

Distillers   Sec.    

Erie     •  • 

do,    1st,    pfd 

B.  F.  Goodrich   Co.,  com 

do  pfd    

General  Klectrlc  ••••• 
General  Motors  pfd... 
Great  Northern  pfd... 
(Jreat    Northern    Ore.. 

Gug.    Explor.    Co 

Illinois   Central    

Inspir.    Cop.    Co 

K.    C.    Southern 

Lackawanna   Steel    . . . 

L.    &    N 

Maxwell    Motor 

do    1st   pfd. . . • 

do    2nd    pfd . . . 

Mex.    Petroleum 

Missouri    Pacific 

Miami    Copper     

Northern  Pacific  .  • 
National  Lead  •  • .  • 
Nev.  Copper  Co  .  . . 
Norfolk  &  Western 
N.  Y.  Air  Brake   .  .  . 

V    Y.   Central    

N.  Y..  N.  H.  &  X.  H. 
Pennsylvania  K.  R. 

People's   Gas    

Pitts.  Coal  com  . . .  > 

do    pfd     

Pressed  S.  C.  Co.   . . 

Pullman     ■ 

Ray  (^>ppe^ ■ 

Reading    

Republic   Steel    ... 

Rock  Island 

Ry.    Steel    Springs 
Southern    Pacific 
Southern     Railway 

do    pfd    

Studebaker,    com. 

do     pfd     

Shattuck     ••• 

Tenn.    Copper    Co. 
Texas    OH   ^o.    .  •  • 
Union    Pacific    . .  • 
t'.    g.    Rubber 
U.   8.    Inds.    Al. 

U.   S.   Steel    

do    pfd    

Utah     Copper     

Western  Union  . . . 
West.  Elc.  Mfg  Co. 
Western    Maryland 

Willys  Motor 

Woolworth 


60% 
72% 
10% 
62% 
67% 


60 

72 

»% 
61% 

67% 


128% 
60% 
72 
10 

52% 
67% 
27  ?4 
76% 


ORICINAL  SMBSCMPTIOH  OFFER  300.000  SHARES 

BUHE-DETROIT  COPPER  AND 

ZINC  MINING  COMPANY 

70  CENTS  A  SHARE 

--Par  Value  $1.00— 

TWs  company  has  ««l«t-l -"trol  oyhe  Op^^^^^ 
In  the  heart  of  Butte  l",«hi.-h  "  i;J»^*"|'S»»fT^  now  doVi.   L065  f<^t. 
ore  bodies  %vlU  be  opened  up  «  ^^fP^Sine  <4iaal.^  Lme  of  the  Htrouge«t 

Engineer  Creden  sayn  the  ^P'""^  ""'f  ,??"„  ti,..  world%  largest  pro- 
of the  vel.«  that  h*>^  ™»1«  S;;hS"S  li^th?  ^me  i^HpUer^oni  adi 
dueer  of  copper  and  tliat  the  Opiur  l«»  m  ust-  an.        i 

the  Butte  &  Sui>erlor  mine. 

OFFICERS   AND    DIRFXTORt,  PRESIDENT 

'•    "Ma1;l|??.''ingersoil-Gaukler    Co/.^D^t^^^^^^ 

''   ^ P^h*on**&   Co.'. ■  Banker^;  Bosion!   Mass.' '  " '  SECRETARY 

"-^^i*  m^nl"orP^>^Ua^Cemem  ^^^^^^  Canada. 

HOX.   SIR    f'REDERICK^.^BORDETS^^.^^^^^   ^^    DIRECTORS 

Ottawa,  Canada.  MlNMilXO    DIRECTOR 

WM.    L.   CREDBX.. t;  " ;;; 'i,' Sunei^ror  Copper  Mining  Co. 

Consulting  Engineer  I^"'t«&  Superior  ^opm       ^jntng   co.. 

Butte.  Mont.;  Manager  o/,,P«'i'™^ini°fJ^  co.     B 
Butte.    Mont.;    Manager   Utah-Apex    Mining   y.^., 

COLONEL    SIR    HENRY    M.    PBLL.4.TT DIRECTOR 

^^'^J.lfau  &  Pellatt.  Bankers.  Toronto.  Can.  oiRECOR 

^"'^'^^ w^ardTwtiJht.  Last-  Manufacturer^;  Brockton^  Ma^ss.^^ 
^"\?haJr  ;::'wfl?o^x  &  CO..-  Merchants:   Bos'to;.;  Ma.ss. 

MINE  MANAGEMENT 

Wm.  L.  Crede«.  K  ^-^-"-^-^^^l^^^Lrlx^^,  '^rT^'tuTk'V^ic 
charge  of  the  ™»"«J,^^ri"»^r?,osslWe  A  f und  of  S?00  000  will  Ik-  pro- 
2.000-foot  level  as  ™l'*l">   «^, /"'^^^^^^^  This  stun  i-  larger  tha« 

vided  for  the  deep  *»i:^V'*l*  »^.h^  *ia ft  aTudkU  tonal  1.000  feet, 
the  estimated  cost  of  sinking  the  '*'*""  ""."^s  mine  Innause  of  Its  mar- 

We  reoonunend  the  Purclmse  «f  ^^^^^.^'^'^^Z  S^Hcnos  that  .vith 
ISrVTetZmenn?  iiu  ^^^^^^o^lo^'orZ  Hchest  in  the  Butt.  Ca^P- 

Attorneys— WaUace  &  Brown.  Heleim.  Montana. 
K  S^ra^State  Street  Trust  O...   «"^t«n,   Ma^^. 
Tracer  Agents-Federal  Trust  Company.  Boston.  Mii-ss. 

DESCRIPTIVE  CIRCULAR  ON  REQUEST 

Appl."^.    ".".^^^^  Butte-Oetroit  .toe.  on  the  New 

York    Boston  and  Detroit  market-s. 

tlons  should  bo  «-™."''»"  '■?J"„,''  ■;       iHr^'a.U- i^^^^^^  l«  anioaul. 

subscrllK^  tor  and  ""'^''T^  i..^t  In  nan  "r  In  fall  any  subsortptloia. 

Mai?..7^r...^cor'S:UbV".raUv.i..«b.-r.,.uon. 

Meason  Investment  Co. 


77         76% 
,   23%l    23%i    23V2 
I   -16     I   45%  I   46 

'ioi^iioi%;iOi^ 

i    20%  I   20         20 
28%;    28%     28% 

I   76% 

|196%il94     1194 

86%'  85%!  86'* 
1103%;103  1103  Vh 
,1105  Vi|104%. 104^* 
,    86%1  86%1  86% 


Co. 


Shannon     

South    Lake    

Shattuck     

Shoe  Machinery  . . . 
Superior  Boston  .. 
Superior    Copper     .  • 

Tamarack     •  •  • 

Trinity     

Tuolumne    

United   Fruit    

U.   S.   Mining 

do.  pfd  •••••••••' 

Utah     Cons.:)lldated. 

Victoria   

Winona    

Wolverine     


14% 
4% 

4% 
58% 


New 


Xew  York  Cottoa. 

Yo?k       Aoril      12  -Cotton 


fu- 


12.28;    January.    12.34. 


LEDGE 

Samf    time    aco    we     adver- 
tlHed    we    would    get  and    pub- 


li>.h  the 


TRUTH 


|l09%  1108%  1109% 
...  .1458 
38% 


-38'.* 

IIIV. 

66% 

17% 

142  |141%!141Vi 
'102%il02%|102% 
.1  61%l  60%|  6114 
56%     56^/, 

1103% 

....I   26% 

103 

51  %1   61% 

1162 

23  %i   23% 


38% 


i7%     17% 


67 


62 


.1 


24      1 

"66%i 
18% 

I 

98 


50%1 

17%! 


97  »i 
14l"    li39i%!140% 


84% 
50% 
17% 
38  ^H 
97% 
20% 
69  V* 


34%l 
f 


34% 


64  %i  62 


112% 
34% 
61% 

194 

132% 
54>« 


DANIELS'  REFUSAL 
ANGERS JIAVY  LEAGUE' 

Secretary  Declined  to  Per- 
mit Admiral  Fiske  to 
Read  Paper. 

Washington.  April  12.-Secr*.tary 
Daniels'  refusal  to  permit  Rear  Admiral 
Fiske  to  read  a  paper  before  the  Navy- 
League  convention  here  tf^day  stirred 
UP  a  wave  of  denunciation  of  the  secre- 
tary   m    the    meeting    and    drew    hisses 

Krrp\;eVS>r^/vi:rui.irpuhi;'sKd"?n 

mm  Mathe"  Lewis' of  Lake  Forest.  HI... 
Ivhlle   the   meeting   cheered  roundly-^ 

col  Robert  M.  Thompson,  president 
nf  the  leagu"  read  a  letter  from  Secre- 
tirv-  Daniels'  denying  a  request  that 
the'  admhal    read    the    paper    and    de- 

""'^'i^dUlre  to  express  my  sorrow  that 
the  navy  department  should  take  this 
narrow  view,  so  strongly  in  conflict 
with    that    taken    by    the    war   depart- 

HKht'to  say  that  two  and  two  makes 

'°Coi"  Thompson's  mention  of  Secretary 
r>aniels"  name  brought  hisses  from  a 
part  of  the  house. 


on  thin  propowltloB.  Our  per- 
NOiial  reprcweutative  ban  been 
at  the  property  and  our  mar- 
ket letter,  with  full  Informa- 
tion on  Big  Ledge  and  all 
©tlMT  Duluth  »tork«.  will  he 
ItiihllHhrd  and  mailed  free  on 
April  1511a.  Write  for  one  If 
you  are  not  on  our  malUnii; 
lint. 

WE  .SELL  SER\^CE 

American  Security 
&  investment  Co. 

E.    DOW  ME,    President. 
C  .   E.   LEE,   Secretary. 
Roth    FboneM,    20W3. 
Ground    Floor,    Pniiadio    Bldff. 


.^. 


bu.s.iness  will  be   taken   up.  .   ^.^^ 

The    club's    officers    will    be    elected 
later  by  the  board  of  directors. 

Real  Estate  Transfers. 

Uk--   Vermlllun   Sumwr   »'"""   '^"P»">..  !liu.« 
l)iinatt«..    lot«    47,    4S,    Ulk.    W.    \-rmlli.« 

Same  coiiipan>-   to   FUhulna   Dlmattw.   loU  47. 

48.  blk.  'Jo.  same :'.'"c'*c* 

Sam*   cOTipaoy    to   Alfml    UUnalteo.    loU   6,   b. 

blk.  45.   "^amc ■,■; ' 'i-'^ii' 

Same  company  u>  John  Ulmatt*.).   loU  4d.  «). 

tnole    KlU    et    al    tu    Calhrini    Poniponiu.    lot 

31    blk.  4,  Kitzville :•■••/•■ 

Fmest    W      Eiicksuu    to    Os.ar    A.     Amtmdson, 
'  lot    14,    blk.    1.    rearrangement    L.'nnwt  a   aa- 

dliinn  ti>  Ironton   ........... ■,•:;''{' 

Klchard   MeCiv"    tn   G.    L.    Archer,    b%   of   ii*% 


Co.'!!  160%|158V«1168i, 


84%  I 
83' 

64 

32% 


83 

82% 

63% 
31% 


•/»,   84',. 


1117 '> 
82% 
89% 
63=^ 
31% 

230 

125% 


CLUB  HOLDINe  ITS 
ANNUAL  ELECTION 


BOSTON  COPPER  STOCKS. 

ReportM  by  fall.*.   W«>»b«i  *  Co. 


} 


wrUwrs.   $6.00(il8.2 

—  ^ —  ■ 

Chleairo    Llve««oek. 

Chicago.  April  12.— Hogs  receipts  to- 
day even  with  n  liberal  left-over  sup- 
Dlv  did  not  prove  abundant  enough  to 
Srevent  sharp  competition  between  lo- 
cal and  out-of-town  buyers.  Offerings 
of    cattle,    sheep   and    lambs  were   only 

"'^foKH-Recelpts.    18.000:  strong.   5c   to  j 
10c    above    yesterday's    average;    bulk,  i 
19  55"*9.76:     light.     $9.20'5/9.80;     mixed. 
I^Im's.SO      heavy.     $9.16®  9.80:     rough. 


ANDALL,  pEE& 
.  .EUABLE  URAiN 

MINNEAPOLIS       .       DULUTH       -       WINNIPEG 


I.lM.F»OWER 


BROKfc-R 

STOCKS   AND    BONDS. 
Room    "B."    Phoenix    Bloek. 

Write   for  Reliable   Mining  Informa- 
tion   on    All    Stocks. 
Melros«    14M.  Grnnd    1485. 


Butte   &   London 
BIk  Ledge 

r.oTiemla    ^ 

Calumet   &    Montana..* 

CflppermlneH    

Carnegie  Lead  &  Zinc; 

Chief    

Calumet  &  Corblii : 

Cactus    Cons 

Demi     

Davis  Daly    

Hotan   Copper    .... 
First    National    .... 

Irim    Blossom    

Interstate-t'allahan 

Jerome  Verde    

Keating    

Marsh    

Mother  L«:)de 
New  Baltic  . 
New  Cornelia 

Oneco    

Stewart     . . .  • 

Success    

I  Sierra     ."*"T      «  aa 

I  San    Ant.inlo    ^.*.:i-      J  J* 

{Tonopah     ... yy'y      i"c 

Tonopah  Belmont  ..l..-...^9.  4.-5 
Tonopah  Extension  ..••••  ^••»- 
Verde  Extension  ..y.^..-  -6.-& 
Warren   Dev 600 


I   ■  •   • 

X 


J     »- 
•  •  ••  s»»  t  • 

•••••■•• 

3        '  ■ 

••i;-">?- 
•"cy,r 

-  ri  ;. 

••f  •;:•-/• 


■a 

. . .  < 


H 


.88 
1.63 
2.87 

.60 
2.00 
4.60 
1.75 

.06% 

16.50 

1.63 

2.75 

6.00 

2.50 
23.50 

2.00 
.80 
.31 
.36 

2.75 
16.25 

1.50 
.40 
.77 
.70 


.74 
12.75 

.90 
1.87 
3  00 

.70 
2.12 
4.76 
1.87 

.06 
2.50 

2.00 
3.00 
6.12 
2.76 
24.50 
2.06 

".32 
.37 

3.00 
16.50 

1.75 
.43 
.79 


6.25 

5.00 

6.25 

26.60 


Alaska 

Adventure    

Ahmeek    

Allouez 

American  Zinc 

Arcadian    •  •••  • 

.Arizona    Commercial... 

Butte  &  Ballaklava 

Butte  &  Superior 

Calumet  &  Arizona 

Calumet  &  Hecla 

Centennial     

Chlno    

Copper  Range 

Daly   W<»3t    

East   Butte    

Franklin    

C.oldfteld   Cons 

Cranby    

Creene  Cananea 

Hancock   Cons 

Inspiration 

Indiana    

Isle    Royale    

Keweenaw    

Lake   Copper    

Mass.    Cons 

Mav  flower      

Miami    Copper     

Michigan     

Mohawk    .•.-•'.'V 

Nevada    Consolidated 

i  North    I>ake     

I   .N'lplssing     

North     Butte      

OJibway    

Old    Colony    

Old    Dominion     

Osceola     

Quincy     

Ray   Cons    

SuJita    Fe    


The  annual  election,  preparatory  to 
the  annual  meeting  of  the  Commercial 
club  to  be  held  this  evening,  is  tak- 
ing place  at  the  clubrooms  today.  The 
polls  opened  at  11:30  this  morning  and 
will  close  at  6:30  this  evening.  Five 
directors  are  to  be  elected,  and  as  only 
five  names  have  been  placed  In  nom- 
ination, the  result  is  a  'o^^f ""«  *^"": 
elusion  The  names  are  those  or 
George  D.  Swift.  R.  M.  Sellwood,  C. 
P.    Ci-alg.     R.    T.     Hugo      and      Harry 

^^^t"*6  » o'clock  this  evening  dinner 
will  be  served,  and  following  that  the 
public  affairs  committee  will  be  called 
to  order  and  will  hold  its  annual  meet- 
ing, hearing  reports  of  sub-commit- 
tees. When  the  business  of  the  pub- 
lic affairs  committee  Is  flnLshed.  the 
annual  meeting  of  the  club  proper  will 
be  held.  The  result  of  the  election 
•win  be  announced  and  the  annual  re- 
port of  the  public  affairs  committee 
will    be    made,    after    which    the   usual 


of  -V*,      section  19.  58-13 ••■•,•..• 

G    W    *.    Russ  rt  ux  to  Ocorgp^  H.   Lbert,   un- 

dirided  %  U»t«Test  In  loU  1.  6.  e%  of  ne%. 

s.-.llaii  2ij.  .'.H-12   ■■■.:•■•  Lu'-rL^ 

Adolpli  (i.   Peterson  et   us   to  (.eori*  H.    bwrt. 

kjf  5,   wctlon  20,  58-12 ■  • • 

W     n     SUllwell   et   ux    to    Murkkinen  lUutsnid 

wmpany,  lots  3,  4.  blk.  4.  *;i.-»*7'X''';. ■  ■, •  •  ,•,• 
Franklin   A.    ArnoM   a   ux  tu   W.    II.    SUllwell. 

lots  3    4    blk.  4,  Kloodwood 

CliarKH.'MasiniUs  et  ux  to  Chrtstiau  Mlchc!- 

wn.   s»V4  of   Sf%,   s.-%  of  5v>%.   section   32. 

ru.tQ  

Ellii.4  .Solem'et  "ux  ti  John  B.  Graiidy  awl 
ChrUtlan  C.  Ptter»on,  westerly  %  lot  S, 
bl.  39,  Lake  Vle»  dlvUlon ••••,:••,••• 

Carrie  PUtii's  and  Manda  IHpies  to  (He  P.  Ltr- 
MD,  unilivided  %  of  w%  ofse%,  ne%  flf 
iit%,  (K-ctlnu  23,  o8-19 ii"\' 

Michael  Oulgley  to  <  hrintine  M.  and  Minn^ 
E  QtilKley,  lots  26,  27,  28,  29.  blk.  13. 
HuntHr  X  Markells  Ura-ss>   Point  addition 

FrancU  E  House  et  ux  to  Francps  B.  Mahler. 
■southerly  30  ft.  lot  8.  »aull..rly  30  ft  of 
easterly  30  ft.  lot  7.  blk.  7.  fUest*T  Park 
divliiion    «■■»■■,■■ 

Walt»r  K.  Trurtlner  et  al  to  Louisa  B,  Bain, 
lot  5.  iOuUierlj-  9  ft.  lot  6.  blk.  3,  West 
Knd  addition   .V  •  ".MLIV 

The  Kenil»«nh  company  to  Jaroet  M.  Wrlfjit, 
lot!    4,    5.    blk.    2.    Maple    Grore    Park    ad- 

i      diUon  to  Proctorknott .••LV 

I  The  Volk   company  to  A.   \V.    Kuehno».    lot  Z4. 

I      blk.  16.  Car}-,  Klr^  di»isioo ..... 

The  Knnch  JH*tr  Miriu«  lompaw  to  J.  F. 
Mct'arthy.  part  .;»%  of  d»%.  section  1., 
51-12 


1 
1 
1 

1 
250 

30 
1 

1 
1 

122 
122 

10 

LOOO 

i 

t 

426 

3,609 

1 
1 

r.00 


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*•  •■--.•  »-^a    L'-l'i'SliMTJ.! 


I  m  II  ii'ii».~^* 


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Wednesday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


I.EOAI.    NOTICES. 

Action    .\'o.    1. 

BTATK   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 

St.   Louis — 
District    Court.    Eleventh   Judicial    DIh- 

trlft. 
Duluth    Banking    Company, 

rialntiff. 
vs. 
Otorge  M.  Hurr  and  Isabel  D. 
Burr.  hlH  wife,  Thomas  G. 
M.a.l,  .Fohn  H.  Mead.  Ella  V. 
M<e,  Walton  M.  Mee,  (Jeorge 
■\Vilfr<«|  Slvf.  Harry  ijow  Mee, 
Helen  Oertrtxde  Mee,  Annie 
Nelson,  Adelbert  L.  Nelson, 
Jtssie  L.  Speyers  and  Philip 
R.  Moiile,  Iriistfes  under  the 
•will  of  Clarence  L.  Speyers, 
deceased,  Defendanti). 

The    State    of   Minnesota,    to    the   above 
nami'd    Defendants: 

You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby 
Bummoncd  nn,l  required  to  answer  the 
complaint  of  the  plaintiff  In  the  above 
entitled  action,  which  Is  (lied  In  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  the  District  Court 
of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  District.  In 
and  for  the  County  of  St.  Louis  and 
State  of  Minnesota,  at  Duluth,  Minne- 
sota, and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your  an- 
swer to  the  said  complaint  on  the 
subscribers  at  their  office  in  the  Prov- 
ident.- HulldlnK.  In  the  City  of  Duluth, 
in  siild  County,  within  twenty  (UO) 
days  afu-r  thf  sei  vice  of  this  summons 
upon  you,  exclusive  of  the  Jay  of  such 
service;  anu.  if  you  fail  to  answer  the 
said  complaint  within  the  time  afore- 
said, th?^  plaintiff  In  this  a«tlon  will 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
mand, d  In  the  complaint. 
Dultd,    October    U'th.    1916. 

ALFOHD   &    HCNT. 
Attorneys    for    Plaintiff, 
721   Providrnce   HUlg 
pulutii,  Minn. 
P.  TI.   April    5-12-19.   1916. 


R.  Moale,  trustees  under  the 
will  of  Clarence  L.  Speyers, 
deceased,  Henry  H.  Wells, 
Robert  Whitesides  and  Sophia 
Whifesldes.  his  wife,  and 
Duluth.  Mlssube  &  Northern 
Itailway   Company, 

Defendants. 
The  State  of  Minnesota,  to  the  above 
named  Defendants: 
You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby 
summoned  and  required  to  answer  the 
complaint  of  the  plaintiff  In  the  above 
entitled  action,  which  Is  filed  In  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  the  District  Court 
of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  District,  In 
and  for  the  County  of  St.  Louis  anJ 
State  of  Minnesota,  at  Duluth.  Minne- 
sota, and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your  an- 
swer to  the  said  complaint  on  the  sub- 
scribers at  their  office  In  the  Provi- 
dence RuildiiiR,  In  the  City  of  Duluth, 
In  said  C«)unty,  within  twenty  (20) 
day.s  after  the  service  of  this  summons 
upon  you,  exclusive  of  the  day  of  such 
service;  and.  If  you  fall  to  answer  the 
said  complaint  within  the  time  afore- 
said, the  plaintiff  In  this  action  will 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manJed  In  the  complaint. 
Dated    October    26th,    1916. 

ALFORD   &    HUNT, 
Attorneys    for    Plaintiff, 
721  Provldei'ce  Bldg., 
Duluth,   Minn. 
D.   H.,  Ap.ll   6-12-19,   1916. 


at  ten  o'clock  A.  M.; 

And  a  certain  Instrument  dated  Octo- 
ber  23rd.  1909.  purporting  to  be  the 
last  will  and  testament  of  Cuthbert  J. 
Petre.  deceased,  having  been  presented 
to  this  Court,  and  the  petition  of 
(Jwenlth  Jean  Rogers  Cunningham 
having  been  duly  filed  herein  on  March 
13th.  1916.  representing,  among  other 
things,  that  said  deceased  died  testate 
and    resident 


April  12, 1916. 


JOIN  OUR  EXeURjION  TO 

NORTH   DAKOTA  APRIL 


16. 


Mr.  Farmer,  why  purchase  land 

that  you  have  to  dynamite  before 

,  .  .  ,  ,.   you  can   work   It.     Our  North   Da- 

9<itH     iQi«     or,5    .K  ?     *"J!.*^    on    January  t  ■Jf  kota    land    la    neady    for   the    plow 

29th.    1916.   and    that  said   petitioner    Is  ,  ^  and  will  not  coat  you  but  one-half 

beneficiary    under    said    will,    ^^i^  the  cost  of  clearing  cutover  lands. 

th*-  claim  of  said  Emma  Petre  ^  Here    are    a    few    descriptions    of 

is  the  widow  of  said  deceased  |  ^  farms  that  we  want  to  show 


ill 


the  sole 
and  that 
that  she 

Is  not  true,  and  praying  that  said  In 
strument  dated  October  23rd.  1909.  be 
allowed  and  admitted  to  probate  as  ttie 
last  will  and  testament  of  said  de- 
ceased, and  that  letters  executory  Issue 
to  said    petitioner  thereon; 

And  Reginald  Petre,  Hubert  Petre. 
Agnes  Petre  and  Gertrude  Petre.  named 
In  said  petition  lastly  above  described 
as  all  of  the  heirs  of  said  deceased, 
having  duly  appeared  herein  by  Fry- 
berger.  Fulton  &  Spear,  their  attor- 1  ^ 
neys.  and  filed  objections  to  the  allow-  I  » 


you. 


* 
* 


,  160  acres  Pierce  county,  only  2>4 
miles  from  good  city;  all  level, 
rich  loam  soil;  entire  quarter  un- 
der cultivation;*©!!  main  road.  For 
a  small  farm  this  is  a  dandy  and  a 
bargain.  Price  for  quick  sale. 
$4,600.  half  cash    balance  to  suit. 


STATE   OF 
St.   Louis— 

District    Court, 
trict. 

Duluth    Banking 


Ar«ion    No.    7-A. 

MINNESOTA,   COUNTY 


Eleventh   Judicial 


OF 
Dls- 


Artlon    No.  2. 

MINNESOTA.    COUNTY   OF 


Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 


STATE   «»F 
St.    Louis 
District    Court 

trict. 
Duluth    Banking    Company. 

I'lalntlff. 
vs. 
Georpe  M.  Burr.  Isabel  P.  Burr. 
his  wife;  Thomas  C.  Mead, 
John  H.  Mead.  Ella  V. 
M«<-.  George  Wilfred  Mee. 
Harry  How  Mee,  Helen 
tJertrudc  Mee,  M;,rtin  M.  Nel- 
son. Michiul  A.  Hvan,  Margar- 
et A.  Uyan,  .lessle  L.  Speyers 
and  riiillp  R.  Moale,  trus- 
tees under  the  will  of  Clar- 
ence L.  Spe>ers,  deceased. 
State  of  MIniH  sota,  and  M:ir- 
jshiU- Well.-s  Hardware  Com- 
pany, 

Defendants. 
The    State    of    Minnesota,    to    the    above 
named    defendants: 

You  and  eaih  at  yf>u  are  hereby 
suniii;iMnd  i.iid  retjuired  to  answer  the 
coriu'liii'l  of  the  |>laiMtlff  In  the  above 
entitled  .ictlon.  wliicii  is  tiled  In  the 
office  of  the  »"leik  of  the  District 
Court  of  the  i:ieveiuh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict, in  and  for  the  County  of  St. 
Louis  and  State  of  .Minnesota,  at  Du- 
luth. .MlniH.^ota,  an<l  to  serve  a  copy 
of  .vo.ir  answer  lo  Hie  said  complaint 
on  tl:e  subscrib«  rs  at  their  office  in 
the  i'rovidence  Building.  In  the  City 
of  iHiluth,  In  said  .  »\)unty,  within 
twenty  (2ft)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  .<uuiitien8  uprui  y<  u.  exiluslve  of 
the  day  of  such  service;  and,  if  you 
fall  to  answer  the  said  complaint 
within  the  time  aforc.-^aid,  the  plaintiff 
in  this  action  will  apply  to  the  court 
for  the  relief  demanded  In  the  com- 
plaint. 

Dated  Februarv   9th,    1916. 

ALFOKD    &    HCNT. 
Attorneys    for    Plaintiff. 
721   Providence   Bldg., 
Duluth,   Minn. 
D.   H.,   April    5-12-19.    1916. 


Company, 
I'laintiff. 
vs. 
Florence    A.    Coffin,      Henry     J. 
Cirannls    and    Laura    H.    <}ran- 
nls,    his    wife,    Mary    E.    Eck- 
lund.    formerly    Mary    E.    Lar- 
son,  the   widow   of   I'eter  Lar- 
son,   deceased.    S.    B.    Ecklund. 
her    husband.    George    Arlliur 
Ecklund.       also        known       as 
(.•eor»;e  Arthur  Larson,  Arnold 
Ecklund,    also    known    as    Ar- 
nold    Larson,     Lapeer    Invest- 
ment  Company,    Kate   McLeoJ, 
.lessle    L.    Speyers    and    Philip 
It.    Moale,    trustees    under    the 
will     of    Clarence    L.    Speyers, 
deceast'd,    Joseph    Toben,  Mary 
Thayer,    Henry    H.    Wells,    Da- 
vid  J.    ErUkson.    M.   C.    Emln- 
uelson,    and    Duluth,  Mlssabe  & 
Northern   Railway    Company. 
Defendants. 
The   State   of  Minnesota,    to    the   above 
nanu-d    Defendants: 
You    and    each    of    you     are     hereby 
.summoned   and   required   to  answer  the 
complaint   of   the   plaintiff   In   the   above 
entitled    action,    which    Is    flle.l    in    the 
offi«-e  of  the  Clerk   of  the  District  Court 
of    the    Eleventh    Judicial    District,    In 
and    for    the    County    of    .»<t.    Louis    and 
State   of   Minnesota,   at    Duluth,   Minne- 
sota,  and    to   serve   a   copy    of  your  an- 
swer to  the  said  complaint  on  the  sub- 
scribers   at    their    office    In    the    Provi- 
dence  Building,   in   the  City   of   Duluth, 
'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 
sal.l    complaint    within    the   time   afore- 
said,   the    plaintiff    In    this    action    will 
api)ly    to    the    court    for    the    relief    de- 
manded  In   the  complaint. 
Dated   November   8th,    1916. 

ALFOllD   &    HUNT, 
Attorneys    for    I'lalntlff. 
721   Providence  Bldg.. 
Duluth,  Minn. 
D    H.   April   8-12-19,  1916. 


I 


Action    No.    8. 

STATE  OP  MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 


STATE   OF' 
St.    L«>uls- 

Distilct    Court 
trict. 

Duluth 


.lotion    No.    3. 

Ml.NNESOTA,   COU.VTY   OF 


Eleventh   Judicial    Dls- 


Banking    Company, 

Plaintiff, 
vs. 
Charles  K.  Adams,  trustee  In 
bankruptcy  of  Patrick  Mc- 
I>oniiell,  Arciulius  L.  Agatin, 
Mari«-  Agatln.  his  wife.  M.  E. 
Brown,  H.  A.  Courtney.  Hen- 
ry J.  t;ranni.«»,  Laura  H.  Gran- 
nls,  his  wlf«'.  Louis  J.  Hop- 
kins, Mary  E.  Hopkins,  his 
wife,  Joseph  D.  Lloyd,  H.  J. 
Mct'learn,  Patrick  McDouuell, 
Joseph  Patrick  McD»>nnell. 
Helen  B.  Mahon,  Helen  E.  Ma- 
hon,  Winifred  Mahon,  Fannie 
Mondsohlne,  National  Iron 
Compan.v,  Maiy  .\orris.  Public 
Steel  Company.  Martha  .Segog, 
Mary  S.  Scjulres.  Jessie  L. 
Speyers  an.l  Philip  R.  Moale. 
trustees  under  the  will  of 
Clarence  L.  Speyers.  <leceased. 
and   George    C.    Swallow,  I 

Defendants.      | 
The   State   of   Minnesota,   to    the  above 
named    Defendants: 

You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby 
summoned  aiul  required  to  answer  the 
complaint  of  the  plaintiff  in  the  above 
entitled  action,  which  Is  filed  In  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  the  District  Court 
of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  District.  In 
and  for  the  County  of  St.  Louis  and 
State  of  Minnesota,  at  Duluth,  Minne- 
sota, and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your  an- 
swer to  the  said  complaint  on  the 
subscribers  at  their  office  In  the  Prov- 
idence Buildlns".  in  the  City  of  Duluth. 
In  said  County,  within  twenty  (20) 
days  after  the  service  of  this  suinmons 
npon  you,  exclusive  of  the  day  of  such 
service;  and.  if  you  fall  to  answer  the 
said  complaint  within  the  time  afore- 
said, the  plaintiff  In  this  action  will 
apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
mande.l  In  the  complaint. 
Dated   January   28th.   1916. 

ALFOIlD   &    HUNT. 
Attorneys    for    Plaintiff, 
721   Providence  Bldg. 
_  Duluth,  Minn. 

D.   IT.,   April    6-12-19.   1916. 


St.   Louis— 
District    Court. 

trict. 
Duluth    Banking 


Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 


Companv, 
Plaintiff. 
vs. 
Mary    E.   McCahlll.      George     M. 
Burr.  Isabel         D.  Burr, 

his  wife,  Henry  J.  (Jran- 
nl.s,  Laura  H.  Grannis,  his 
wife.  Thomas  G.  Mead,  John 
H.  Mead,  Alexander  Sang, 
Jane  Sang,  his  wife,  and  Jes- 
sie L.  Speyers  and  I'hilip  R. 
Moale,  trustees  under  the  will 
of  Clarence  L.  Speyers.  de- 
ceased. 

Defendants. 
The  State  of  Minnesota,  to  the  above 
named  Defendants: 
You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby 
suTumoned  and  required  to  answer  the 
complaint  of  the  plaintiff  in  the  above 
entitled  action,  which  is  filed  In  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  the  District 
Court  of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict, In  and  for  the  County  of  St. 
Louis  and  State  of  Minnesota,  at  Du- 
luth, Minnesota,  and  to  serve  a  copy 
of  your  answer  to  the  said  complaint 
on  the  subscribers  at  their  office  in 
the  Providence  Building,  in  the  City 
of  Duluth,  In  said  County,  within 
twenty  (20)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  yt)u.  exclusive  of 
the  day  of  such  service;  and,  if  you 
fall  to  answer  the  said  complaint  with- 
in the  time  aforesaid,  the  plaintiff  in 
this  action  will  apply  to  the  court  for 
the  relief  demanded  in  the  complaint. 
Dated   October   14th.   1916. 

ALFORD   &    in^NT, 
Attorneys    for   Plaintiff. 
721  Providence  Bldg 
Duluth,  Minn. 
H.,   April    6-12-19.   1916. 


ance  of  the  will  of  October  28th.  1914, 
above  referred  to;  and  said  Gwenlth 
Jean  Rogers  Cunningham  having  ap- 
peared herein  by  Baldwin.  Baldwin  & 
Holmes,  her  attorneys,  an^  having  on 
March  16th.  1916.  filed  objections  to  the 
allowance  of  said  will  of  October  28th. 
1914.  and  having  duly  moved  the  Court 
for  leave  to  file  the  same; 

And  this  matter  having  duly  come 
on  to  be  heard  pursuant  to  the  order 
ab«)ve  referred  to.  and  to  adjournment 
thereof,  at  the  regular  term  of  this 
Court  on  Monday,  the  27th  day  of 
March.  1916.  at  ten  o'clock  A.  M.,  said 
Emma  Petre  appearing  by  John  H. 
Norton,  her  attorney,  said  heirs  appear- 
ing by  Fryborger.  Fulton  &  Spear, 
their  attorneys,  and  said  Gwenlth  Jean 
Rogers  Cunningham  appearing  by 
Baldwin.  -Baldwin  &  Holme.s,  her  at- 
torneys; 

And  it  appearing  desirable  that  all  of 
the  matters  herein  involved  be  heard 
and  determined  at  one  lime,  now,  there- 
fore, on  motion  of  all  of  said  parties, 
it   Is   ordered; 

1.  That  the  hearing  on  the  petition 
of  Emma  Petre  for  the  admission  to 
probate  of  said  will  of  October  28th, 
1914,  be  and  It  hereby  Is  adjourned  to, 
and  set  for,  the  24th  day  of  April,  1916. 
nt  two  o'clock  P.  M..  at  the  Probate 
•  'ourt  Rooms  In  the  County  Court 
House  In  the  City  of  Duluth.  St.  Louis 
County.  Minnesota,  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. 

2.  That    the    objections    of    Gwenlth 
Jean     Rogers    Cunningham    to    the    al- 
lowance  of   said    will    of   October   28th„ 
1914,    be   and    they    hereby    are    allowed   41 
to    be    filed,    and    that    said    objections,    S 
together    with    the    objections    of    said    ^ 
heirs    heretofore    filed    herein    be    heard 
at  the  time  and  place  aforesaid. 

8.  That  the  said  petition  of  Gwenlth 
Jean  Rogers  Cunningham  for  the  al- 
lowance of  said  will  of  October  23rd, 
1909.  be  heard  before  this  Court  at  the 
time  and  place  aforesaid,  and  all  per- 
sons Interested  in  said  matter  and  in 
said  hearing  are  hereby  cited  and  re- 
quired then  and  there  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  County, 
and  upon  the  above  named  attorneys 
for  said  Emma  Pc;tre.  for  said  heirs, 
and  for  said  Gwenlth  Jean  Rogers 
Cunningham,  not  less  than  fourteen 
days  prior  to  said  day  of  hearing. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minnesota,  March 
27th.    1916. 

By   the   Court. 

S.  W.  tJlLPIN.  Judge  of  Probate. 
Attest:     A.   R.  MORTON. 

Clerk  of  Probate. 
Seal.  Probate  Court,  St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn. 
D.   H..  March  29.  April  6,  12,  1916. 


a- 


160 
miles 
under 
land; 
Good 
roof 


acres     Pierce     county,     2% 
from    good    city;    120    acres 
cultivation;     balance     hay 
all     level,     rich     loam     soil, 
five-room    house,    large    hip- 
barn,      granary     and     other 


FIRST   MORTGAGE  LOANS. 

We    advance    funds    as    needed 
first  mortgage  building  loans, 
Favorable  terms, 

W.  M.  PRINDLE  &  CO., 
Lonsdale  bldg. 


on 


* 


buildings.  Buildings  surrounded 
by  large  grove  of  trees.  This  farm 
Is  a  genuine  bargain.  Price  for 
quick  sale,  |5.600.  Will  make 
terms  to  suit. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN—Any  amount,  any 
time;  quick  service;  building  loans  a 
specialty  6,  6H  and  6  per  cent.  Cooley 
A  Underhill.  209-10-11  Exchange  bldg 


ST.  LOUIS  AND  CARLTON  county  farm 
loans;  can  handle  any  good  farm 
loan;  terms  right;  no  delay.  Northern 
Farm   Loan   Co..    102    Providence    bldg. 

REAL  ESTATE  LOANS— Easy  terms; 
repay  loan  monthly  or  yearly  or  before 
five  years.  Northern  Securities  &  Loan 
association.  Commercial  bldg. 

CASH  ON  HAND  to  loan  on  city  and 
farm  property;  any  amount,  lowest 
rates,  no  delay.  Northern  Title  Co.. 
612   First   National   Bank   bldg. 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

AUTOS  AND  MOTORCYCLES 


-* 
•* 


320  acres  Rolette  county,  four 
miles  from  good  city.  All  level, 
very  rich  black  loam  soil,  with  a 
little  spring  creek  running  through 
one  forty;  260  acres  under  cultiva- 
tion, balance  pasture;  large  two- 
story  house;  two  hip-roof,  cement 
and  stone  foundation  barns;  two 
large  granaries,  all  buildings  are 
new  and  In  first-class  condition. 
Buildings  alone  cost  over  S4,600. 
Excellent     water,     rural     dellv 


I 

a- 

i 

a- 


ery  >ft 

and   telephone,  schoolhouse  across  # 


the  road,  church  on  the  corner  of 
this  land.  This  Is  a  very  high- 
class  farm  and  one  of  the  finest 
Improved  small  farms  in  North 
Dakota.  Price,  J14,000;  will  make 
reasonable  terms.  Adjoining  farm 
sold  only  three  weeks  ago  at  $65 
per  acre. 


We  have  many  other  farms 
which  we  will  be  glad  to  show 
you.  but  the  above  are  the  best 
bargains  being  offered  in  North 
Dakota  today.  Make  arrange- 
ments to  join  our  excursion  leav- 
ing Duluth  and  Superior  on  the 
16th.    For  further  Information  call 


if- 


BICKELL.    KYLLO  &   CO.. 

205  American  Exchange  Bldg., 

Duluth,    Minn. 


I 


IF  YOU  OWN  a  lot.  see  us  about  fi- 
nancing the  building  of  your  home. 
Duluth  Lumber  Co..  Mel.  112,  Lin.  112. 

Money   at  Lowest  Rates. 

Any  Amount;   No   Delay. 

Little  &   Nolte  Co..   Exchange   bldg. 


98  PER  CENT  OF  AUTO  BUYERS 
READ  THE  DULUTH  HERALD. 

The    names    in    which   automobile    11-  | 
censes    are    issued    have    been    checked 
with   The   Duluth   Herald's  subscription 
lists,   and   it   was   found   that   98   out  of 
every    100    people    who    buy    care    read 
The  Duluth  Herald.     If  you  have  a  car  | 
for  sale  or  trade,  offer  it  in   this  auto-  1 
mobile  column  and  you  will  reach  prac- 
tlcally  every  one  who  will   buy. 


STOREROOM    AND   FULL 
BASEMENT, 

Suitable  for  store,  laundry  or  small 
factory,  126  E.  Ist  st.;  very  rea- 
sonable  rent. 

RICHARDSON,   DAY   &  CHEADLE 

COMPANY. 

Exchange  Building. 


it- 


HAVE  THREE   NICCLY 
ARRANGED  ROOMS, 

Suitable    for    doctor    and     dentist 

office;  good  location;  Scandinavian 

or  Polish  preferred.     Apply — 

ANDERSON'S   DRUG   STORE, 

2904  West  Third  Street. 


a- 


MONEY 
timber 
Crosby, 


TO 

and 
306 


LOAN — Loans     made     on 
farm     lands.   John    Q.     A. 
Palladlo   bldg. 


ANY  AMOUNT  OF  MONEY  for  loans  on 
Improved  farms.  Blckell,  Kyllo  & 
Co.,  206   Exchange  bldg 

MONEY  ON  HAND  for  real  estate  loans. 
Stewart    G.    Collins.    710    Torrey    bldg. 


* 

I* 


WE  HAVE 

A  fine  Oakland  6-cyllnder  car  that 
we  can  sell  for  $760;  1914  model. 
Here  you  have  a  chance  to  get  a 
big.  easy-rldlng  car  for  little 
money;  it's  a  bargain.  Also  have 
other  bargains  in  used  cars.  It 
will  pay  you   to  come  and  see  us. 


CENTRALLY  LOCATED 

STORES  FOR  RENT. 

N.  J.  UPHAM  CO., 

714  PROVIDENCE  BUILDING. 


I 

s 


***'S,^^^<^i^##******?^*##^^-;wi'*?* 


REO  SALES  COMPANY, 
307  East  Superior  St. 
Old  phone.  6134  Mel. 
New  phone,  823-Y  Grand. 


For  Farm  Loans  and  Farm  Lands,  see 
Ebert-Walker  Co.,  315-16  Torrey  bldg. 

MONEY    TO    LOAN    on    cltv    property. 
De    Calgny    &    Paepe.    609    Providence. 


MONEY   TO   LOAN—Any  amount.  Ben- 
jamin  F.    Schwelger.    1932    W.   Sup.   st. 


ilf*i(f-;?-;;^Y-#*iJ^^M^^'«**^V*f##-;Wf<^^ 


GET   READY  FOR  SPRING, 


D 


STATE   OF 

St.   Louis. 
District    Court. 

trict. 
Dululh    Banking 


Action    No.    •, 

MINNESOTA. 


COU-NTY   OF 
Eleventh   Judicial    Dls- 


Actlon    No.   4. 

STATE   OF   MINNESOTA.   COUNTY  OF 
St,    Louis — 

District    Court,    Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
Duluth    Banking    Company, 

I'laintiff. 
vs. 
Charles  d'Autr*  niont.  Jr..  Hattie 
d'Autreniont,    his    wife,    Thom- 
as   <;.     Mead,    John     H.    Mead, 
(teorge    M.    Burr.      Isabel      D, 
Burr,    his    wife.    Ella    V.    Mee 
Walton    M.    Mee,    C.eorge    AVll- 
fred    Mee.    Harry      How      Mee, 
Helen    CJertrude      Mee,       Mary 
Seanlan.    John      Scanlan.      her 
husband,    and    Jessie   L.    Spey- 
ers and  Phillj)  R.  Moale.  trus- 
tees   under    the    will    of    Clar- 
ence  L.   Speyers.    deceased. 
Defendants. 
The    State    of   Minnesota,    to    the   above 
named    Defendants: 
Tr)u    and    each    of    you      are      hereby 
summoned   and    required   to  answer   the 
complaint  of   the   plaintiff  in    the  above 
entitled    action,    which    is    filed    In    the 
■  office    of    the    Clerk    of      the       District 
Court     of     the     Eleventh     Judicial     Dis- 
trict,   in    and    for    the    County      of      St. 
Louis   and    State   of   Minnesota,   at    Du- 
luth.   Minnesota,    and    to    serve    a    copy 
of   your   answer    to    the    said    complaint 
on    the    subscribers    at    their    office    In 
the    I'rovidence    Building,    in    the    City 
of    Duluth.    In      said      Countv.      within 
twenty    (20)    days   after   the   service   of 
this    summons    upon    you.    exclusive    of 
.the    day    of    su«h    service;    and,    if    you 
fail  to  answer  the  said  complaint  with- 
in   the    time    aforesaid     the    plaintiff    in 
this  action    win   apply   to   the   court   for 
the   relief  demanded    'n   the  complaint 
Dated  October   I5th,   1916. 

ALFORD   &    HUNT 
Attorneys    for    Plaintiff 
721  Providence  Bldg 
Duluth,   Minn     ' 
T>    H,   April    6-12-19.   1916. 


Company, 
I'laintiff, 
vs. 
A.  Abraham,  also  known  as  Al- 
bert     Abraham;      R.    K.    Abra- 
ham,    Duluth     &     Iron     Range 
Railroad   Company,    George    C. 
Howe,    Mary      E.      Howe,      his 
wife.   Warren    W.    Potter.    Jes- 
sie   L.    Speyers    and    Philip    R. 
Moale,  trustees  under  the  will 
of   Clarence   L.      Speyers,      de- 
ceased, 

Defendants. 
The  State  of  Minnesota,  to  the  above 
named  Defendants: 
You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby 
summoned  and  required  to  answer  the 
complaint  of  the  plaintiff  In  the  above 
entitled  action,  which  Is  filed  In  the 
office  of  the  Clerk  of  the  District 
Court  of  the  Eleventh  Judicial  District, 
in  and  for  the  County  of  St.  Louis  and 
State  of  Minnesota,  at  Duluth.  Min- 
nesota, and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your 
answer  to  the  said  complaint  on  the 
subscribers  at  their  office  In  the  Prov- 
idence Building.  In  the  City  of  Duluth, 
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  complaint  within  the  time  afore- 
said, the  plaintiff  In  this  action  will 
apply  lo  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded In  the  complaint. 
Dalt  d  Februarv  21st.   1916. 

ALFORD   &    HUNT. 
Attorneys    for    Plaintiff, 
721  Providence  Bldg., 
Duluth,   Minn. 
D.   H..   April   6-12-19,   1916. 


STATE   OF 

St.   I.,ouls — 
District    Court.    Eleventh 

trict. 
Duluth 


Action-  No.    7. 

MINNESOTA,    COUNTY   OF 


Judicial    Dis- 


Walter 


Banking    Company. 

Plaintiff. 
vs. 
W.  J.  Croze.  Calvin  L. 
Brown.  Ole  C.  Hanson.  Ella  V. 
Mee.  Walton  M.  Mee,  (Jeorge 
Wilfred  Mee,  Harry  How  Mee, 
Helen  Gertrude  Mee.  A.  E. 
McManus  and  Ada  McManus, 
H.  H.  Phelps  and 
Phelps,  his  wife, 
fpeyers    and    Philip 


wife, 


Sis     w 
ennie     I. 
J«S6ic    L. 


ORDER  FOR  HEARING— 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

88. 

In  Probate  Court. 
In  the  Matter  of  the  Estate  of  Cuth- 
bert J.  Petre.  Deceased. 
A  certain  Instrument  purporting  to 
be  the  last  will  and  testament  of  Cuth- 
bert J.  Petre.  dated  October  28th.  1914, 
having  been  presented  to  this  Court[ 
and  the  petition  of  Emma  Petre  having 
been  duly  filed  herein  on  February  3rd, 
1916,  representing,  among  other  things,' 
that  said  decedent,  then  being  a  resi- 
dent of  the  County  of  St.  Louis  and 
State  of  Minnesota,  dle^  testate  In  said 
County  on  the  29th  day  of  January, 
1916,  and  that  said  Emma  Petre  Is  the 
widow  of  sa'd  deceased  and  Is  the  sole 
devisee  and  legatee  under  said  will  and 
the  person  appointed  executrix  thereby 
and  praying  that  said  Instrument  bo 
allowed  and  admitted  to 
last  will  and  testament 
dent,  .ind  that  h-tters 
issued  to  her  thereon; 

And  the  Court  having  duly  made  Its 
order  whereby  it  was  ordered  that  said 
petition  be  heard  before  this  Court  at 
the  Probate  Court  Rooms 
said  County,  on  Monday, 
of  February,  1916,  at  ten 
and  due  notice  of  the 
having  been  given  as 


ORDER  LIMITING  TIME  TO  FILE 
i'LAlM.S  AND  F(JR  HEARING 
THEREON— 

State    of    Minnesota, 

County  of  St.   Louis — ss. 
In     Probate    Court.      In     the    Matter    of 
the    Estate    of   Millie    A.    Baker,    De- 
cedent. 

Letters  of  administration  having 
be«n  granted  to  Mary  Anne  Baker  of 
Duluth,  Minn.,  on  the  28th  day  of  June, 
1915;  it  Is  ordered.  That  the  time  with- 
in which  all  creditors  of  the  above 
namea  decedent  may  present  claims 
against  her  estate  In  this  court  be. 
and  the  same  hereby  Is,  limited  to  six 
months  from  and  after  the  date  here- 
of; and  that  the  3rd  day  of  October, 
1916,  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 
allowance  of  such  claims  as  shall  be 
presented  within  the  time  aforesaid. 
Let  notice  hereof  be  given  by  the  pub- 
Iteation  of  this  order  In  The  Duluth 
Herald,  as  provided  by  law. 

Dated.   Duluth.  Minn..  March  28.  1916. 
S.   W.   GILPIN.   Judge  of  Probate. 
Seal,    Probate   Ct.,   St.   Louis   Co..    Minn. 
D.   H..   March   29.   April   6  and   12.   1916. 

XOUiiTEM, 

BRANCH  MANAGER. 

F.  L  HULL,  CASHIER. 

202    Andrus   Bldg., 
Minneapolis. 

CANADA  LIFE  INSIRANCE   CO.M- 
PANV. 

Prlndptl  oftlw:  Toronto,  t  anad«.  ^Organized  in 
1M7. )  H.  C.  Case,  pn-iideiit ;  Charles  H.  Acrrs,  ».or»- 
tarj'.*  Attoriify  to  aa-t-pt  s«'r>U-e  iti  .Mlnnrwta:  Cum- 
miik^^ioDcr  of  Insurancr. 

CASH   CAPIT.M..   $1,000,000.00. 
I.MO.MK    I.N    1H15. 

First  year's  premiunu |       554,906.87 

l>t\ldeiids  and   surrruder  valurk  applied   lo 
purrhase    paid-up    ln.suraDre    and     an- 

,.  '="'•''■*  .  •  •  • ; 1.248.784.91 

(onsideratlon    for   original    annuities,    and 

siipplimiitary    ronlrarts.    Involving    life 

rontingem  les    257.152.68 

Benenal    premium:!    [  4,31>7|220  (>"' 

Extra  prrmlums  for  dbabillty  ud  arildent  '     2i^!55 

Total  premium  inrome 

Renta   and    liilerests 

Gross  profit   on   sale,    maturity   or  adjast 

inent  of  Icdg-r  assets 

From  all  other  souices 


# 

if- 

it- 


100-acre  Improved  farm  In  Carl- 
ton county,  4  milts  from  Carlton. 
3  miles  from  Wrenshall.  1  mile 
from  school;  In  a  well-settled 
comtnunifj';  60  acres  ready  for  the 
plow;  part  of  it  plowed  last  fall; 
16  acres  all  nice  oak  and  maple 
timber,  balance  in  pasture;  2-8tory 
frame  6-room  house;  frame  stable 
for  6  head  of  stock;  frame  gran- 
ary 16  by  36;  good  well  and  pump; 
lumber  and  timber  on  hand  for  a 
large  barn.  There  is  an  assort- 
m<'nt  of  currant,  gooseberry,  black- 
berry and  raspberry  bushes,  all 
bearing,  a  nice  strawberry  patch 
bearing,  and  a  good  variety  of 
Compass  cherries  and  apple  trees. 
Several  other  small  buildings; 
partly  fenced.  This  is  an  ideal 
one-man  farm,  and  located  con- 
venient to  town  and  markets, 
telephone  lines  and  rural  mall 
routes.  Price  |4,600;  about  $1,600 
will  handle  It. 


# 


EBERT-WALKER  COMPANY, 

Faim  Land    Dealer.". 

816-16  Torrey   Building, 

Duluth,    Minn. 


if- 
^- 

* 


CITY    AND    FARM    loans.     William    C. 
Sargent.     Providence     bldg. 

•I  I  .1  ». 

WANTED  TO  BORROW 


—WANTED— LOAN — 


FOR  SALE— Cheap,  for  cash,  1914  5- 
passenger  Paige  touring  car;  36-H.  P., 
completely  equipped,  electric  lights, 
starter  and  horn,  best  grade  Gordon 
seat  covers,  4  good  tires,  1  extra  tire 
and  rim.  bumper  and  tire  chains;  run 
11,000  miles;  guaranteed  in  firel-clasa 
condition;  $650,  cash  only.  R.  &  R. 
garage,    rear    310    W.    2nd    st. 


* 


-WILL  RENT- 


Portlon  of  office  In  office  building 
at  Superior  et.  and  3rd  ave.  w.; 
very  desirable  and  cheap.  Write 
Y  112.  Herald. 


OXY-ACETYLENE  welding,  cutting 
and  carbon  burning;  all  work  guaran- 
teed satisfactory  or  no  charge;  99 Vi 
per  cent  pure  oxygen  for  sale.  Duluth 
Gas  &  Welding  Co.,  2110-2112  W. 
Michigan  st.    Mel.  7064;  Lin.  643. 


Would  like  to  hear  from  party 
who  has  money  to  loan  on  first 
mortgage  on  high-class  real  es- 
tate security.  Will  pay  good  in- 
terest. Address  A  944,  care  of 
Duluth  Herald. 


WANTED  TO  BORROW- $1,600  on 
dwelling  house  and  store  building 
and  two  lots;  good  location  in  Vir- 
ginia, Minn.,  will  pay  8  per  cent.  5 
years.  Write  T  116.   Herald. 


WANTED  TO  BORROW— $2,000  at  6 
per  cent,  first  mortgage  security  on 
modern  new  house.  602  Providence 
bldg.     Phone   Mel.    414    Grand    2367-A. 


HARlEr-DAVIDSON 


Sold  on  time 
used    machines, 
Cycle  Repair  shop. 


New    1916    models. 

Come       and        see 

them.         Machines 

payments;  also  bargains  In 

on    easy   terms.      Motor 

402-404  E.  Sup.  st. 


WANTED  TO  BORROW — $400  for  3 
years,  on  2  buildings  valued  at  $1,000, 
with  $900  insurance;  will  pay  10  per 
cent  interest.    Write  G  93,   Herald 


FOR^ALE— REAL^TATE 

^^^^l^AJTS^W^^ALE^ 


$800    takes    a 
East  hillside. 


lot    100    by    140    feet 
Easy  terms.      (301) 


on 


FOR  SALE— 1  1913  model  36.  7-pas.sen. 
ger  Studebaker.  run  3,000  miles,  A-1 
condition;  1  1912  6-passenger  Cadillac. 
Just  overhauled  and  In  good  condition. 
Either  of  above  a  bargain.  Write 
J   962.    Herald. 

FOR  SALE  OR  TRADE— 40  acres  of 
timber  land  16  miles  south  of  Supe- 
rior; will  lake  1915  6-passenger  auto 
for  part  payment.  Overland  preferred. 
Write  U  101.  Herald. 

GUARANTEED  tire  repairing  at  low 
prices;  our  new  tires  will  save  you 
nooney  on  mileage.  Duluth  Auto  Tire 
Repair  Co..   313  E.   Superior  st. 

YOUR  OLD  CASINGS  are  worth  money 
to  you  with  our  system  of  double 
treading;  see  us.  Herlan  &  Merling, 
105   W.    1st   St.     Mel.    4658. 


$660    takes    a    40 
block  from   9th 


by    80-foot 
St.   car  line. 


$900  takes  a  lot  on  E. 


* 


*'^^t7V-«iivt;f5it-,^***-»;^-,i!*jY*';¥-Aj*«-^.t*-* 


^Af;!W^'^>'lf'!;f^Y-^;^M&*-;!^-*;t-*-;^TK'^^ 


-80  ACRES- 


Adjolnlng  city  limits;  $40  per  acre; 
only    2   miles   from   end    of   Duluth 
Heights   car   line,    on    Swan    Lake 
road;   suitable    for  subdividing. 
A.   W.  TAUSSIG  &  CO., 
407  Providence  Bldg. 


80  ACRES  only  $3,000;  30  acres  cleared, 
balance  hardwood  timbered  pafeture, 
considerable  maple;  practically  level 
surface;  clay  loam  over  clay  sub-soil; 
fenced,  good  buildings,  house,  sum- 
mer kitchen,  barn,  granary,  machine 
shed,  good  roads,  telephone  in  house. 
Terms.   C.   A.   Melberg,   Lewis,    Wis. 


FOR  SALE— 10-acre  truck  or  dairy 
farm  on  Pike  Lake  road;  ten  minutes' 
walk  from  street  car;  all  cleared  and 
fenced;  small  buildings;  price  $3,000, 
for  quick  sale;  terms  to  suit.  Bickell. 
Kyllo  &  Co.,  206   Exchange  bldg. 


$1,500    takes   a  fine   lot   on 
St.     Fine    location.    (0527) 


9th  St. 
E. 


lot     one 

(0560) 
Superior 


WHITNEY    WALL    COMPANY. 

Torrey    Bldg. 

Mel.    1368;    Grand   810. 


FOR  SALE— Snap;  $2,600  cash  will  buy 
a  double  lot,  60x140  feet,  on  Com- 
monwealth ave..  New  Duluth  business 
section;  all  improvements;  adjoining 
60  feet  held  at  $3,600.  Axel  Friedman. 
200  Manhattan   bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Garden  tract.  166  by  140 
feet,  with  water,  gas  and  sewer;  only 
5  blocks  from  Lakeside  school;  $50 
cash,  $16  monthly,  no  Interest;  price 
$950.  Greenfield  Realty  Co.,  416  Pro- 
vidence bldg. 


FOR  SALE— Big  lots,  improved,  with 
water,  gas  and  sewer,  near  Lakeside 
school;  $360  each,  $10  cash.  $6  monthly. 
Greenfield  Realty  Co..  416  Providence 
bldg. 


FOR  SALE — Ford  demountable  rims; 
crown  fenders,  radiator  hoods  and 
shells,  all  kinds  of  tires.  Johnson 
Auto  Supply. 

FOR  SALE— Twin  Indian  motocycles 
cheap,  in  good  running  order.  See 
Strom,  drapery  department.  Glass 
Block  store. 

FOR  SALE— 1915  Maxwell  6-pa9senger 
touring  car.  Call  Theo.  O  Furlund 
Auto   Co.    6-7    E.    1st    St. 

YOUR  CAR  repaired  at  your  garage; 
A-1  mechanics.  Harrison  &  Son,  Mel. 
6642.     2721  Huron  .st. 

FOR  SALE  —  5-passenger  Hudson; 
cheap  for  qu'ck  sale.  Call  after  5  p.  m. 
819  W.  3rd  st. 

FOR  SALE — 7-passenger.   6-40  Thomas 
touring    car;     good    condition;    cheap 
122    W.    2nd    St. 


FOR    RENT    STORES. 

At  318  W.  Ist  St..  most  central  and 
best  business  location  on  W  1st  st  • 
fine  storeroom.  26  by  140,  lii  strictly 
fireproof  building;  with  lowest  in- 
surance rate  in  city;  will  decorate  to 
suit;  possession  May  1.  Call  Grand 
or    Mel.    226. 

W.  C.    SHERWOOD  &  CO. 

118    Manhattan    Bldg.     ' 

FOR  RENT — New  store  building,  2908 
W.  3rd  St.;  30  by  70.  suitable  for  dry 
goods  and  millinery;  furniture  or 
general  merchandise;  steam  heat; 
ready  May  1.  Apply  Anderson's  Drug 
Store.   2904  W.   3rd  st. 


FOR  RENT — One  store;  could  be  need 
for  restaurant;  three  living  room*; 
full  basement  and  icebox;  rent  cheap 
If  taken  at  once.  Write  or  call  Mrs. 
Hanna    Carlson.    Iron    Junction.    Minn. 

FOR  RENT — Floor  space  suitable  ivir 
storage  or  email  manufacturing  con- 
cern. Call  Lane-Goicz  Printing  Co.. 
182  W.  Michigan  st.;  Mel.  1604,  Grand 
2369-D. 


FOR    RENT— Storeroom.    26x100,    33  E. 

Michigan    St.;    suitable    for    gaiage  or 

wholesale      business.      Inquire      82  E. 
Superior  st. 


#  $10    OR    MORE 

^.  LOANED    TO   ANYONE 

*  On  furniture,  pianos,  etc.,  or  hold- 

#  Ing  a  steady  position,  at  rates 
^  honest  people  are  willing  to  pay. 
^  See  us  first  and  get  a  square  deal. 
i^  Money  In  your  hands  In  few  hours' 
■S^  time.  Low  rales.  Easy  payments. 
i^  DULUTH  L(JAN  CO., 
i^  307  Columbia  bldg..  303  W.  Sup.  st. 
i('  Hours:  8  a.  m.  to  6  p.  m.;  Wednes- 
a        day  and  Saturday  to  8  p.  m. 

*  Mel.  2355;  Grand  1224. 


it 


^r->'^;^f5f-;\';SiiT^-««*'^f?'>;i?.tiY-#j'f*-.^?.«'X-; 


MONEY  TO   LOAN. 

From  One  to  Ten  Monthly  Paymfnts. 

On  Furniture,  etc.,  at  Lowest  Rales. 


$16. 


Example 
if  paid  in 


of  Cost  Per  Month: 


^^ITUATIO  5MVm  ED— f^^ 

SITUATION  WANTED— Sober  young 
man  wants  work,  janitor,  elevator 
operator,  bell  boy,  bus  boy.  porter  or 
kitchen  helper;  also  can  work  in  print- 
ing office,  store  clerk;  can  get  good 
reference.     Address  X  107,  Herald. 


FOR  SALE — Nine  acres  of  fertile  land, 
cleared,  fenced,  in  timothy  and  clover- 
walking  distance  36th  ave.  e. ;  some 
buildings,  nice  creek,  good  water; 
$2,700  on  easy  terms.  Greenfield  Real- 
ty Co..  416  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Sixty-acre  farm.  3  miles 
northwest  of  Wentworth.  Douglas 
county;  good  farm  buildings;  reason- 
able terms.  A.  J.  Modlne,  Wentworth. 
Wis. 


FOR  SALE — Lake  frontage;  if  you 
want  a  piece  of  land  on  nice  lake, 
call  on  us.  We  have  It.  Northern 
Realty    Co.,    627    Manhattan    bldg. 


P'oR  SALE — House  and  10  acres  on 
Vermilion  road.  2*-2  miles  from  end  of 
Woodland  car  line;  6  acres  cleared. 
Write   O   999.    Herald. 


FOR  SALE- Lots  60x140  feet,  good 
garden  tracts,  $276  each.  $6  monthlyi 
right  where  people  live.  Oreenfield 
Realty  Co.,    416    Providence  bldg. 

FOR  SALE— Corner  lot  68  by  160,  20th 
ave.  E.  and  Jefferson  St.;  will  sell 
cheap;  am  leaving  city.  H.  B.  Wein- 
steln.   106   W.   Michigan  st. 

FOR  SALE— $2,000  cash  will  buy  10 
choice  lots,  Fiftyfirst  avenue  west  C 
F.   W.    Korth.  6020   Roosevelt  st. 


FOR  SALE — City  property,  houses  and 
lots;  farms  and  timber  land.  O  G. 
Olson,   314   Columbia  bldg. 


WANTED  TO  RENT 

WANTED  TO  RENT— Furnished  room 
with  board  by  gentleman;  must  be  be- 
tween 2nd  and  6th  aves.  w.  below  4th 
St.  State  terms.  Address  H  109.  Her- 
ald. 


SITUATION  WANTED^Brlght,  ener- 
getic young  man,  age  19,  wishes  posi- 
tion as  mechanical  draftsman  or  some 
other  position  with  chance  for  ad- 
vancement; good  habits;  references. 
Write  H  96,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED— Young  married 
man  with  ability  as  salesman  or  col- 
lector wishes  engagement  after  April 
20;  first  class  references  and  bonds 
furnished.     Write  113.  Herald. 


1   month $0.90 

3   months 0.70 

6  months 0.44 

1   month 1.16 

3   months 0.96 

6  months 0.80 

1   month 2.26 

3   months 1.60 

..       „       ..    6  months 1.26 

Charges  on  other  amounts  in  proportion. 

Even  lower  rates  on  Jewelry,  etc. 

DULUTH  REMEDIAL  LOAN  A.SSN, 

401  First  National  Bank  bldg. 


$26,  if  paid  In 


$60,  if  paid  in 


SITUATION  WANTED— Janitor  and 
watchman,  aged  50;  good  habits,  trust- 
worthy and  reliable  in  every  respect 
if  you  want  a  good  man.  Call  A.  P. 
Cook,  courthouse. 


WANTED— Situation 
barber;     sober    and 
like   Job   where   I   could   play 
baseball       team.         Address 
Rapid    River,    Mich. 


by       first-class 

reliable;       would 

on   local 

Alguire, 


WANTED — Position  as  cook,  man  and 
wife;  washer  and  launder.  General 
all-around  repairman,  in  hotel  or  In- 
stitution.   Write    K    84,    Herald. 


BARGAIN— $1,000  cash  buys  80  acres 
in  03-14,  close  to  Consolidated  mines. 
Northern  Realty  Co.,  627  Manhattan 
bldg. 


$ 


6.460.292.03 
2,921,96109 

73,547.39 
71.3;i»*.92 


Total   Inrome    

UKlger    as!i«ts    Urrvmber 
year    


31st   of   preTtous 


$    9.527.140.43 

.$  53.^9,027.04 

63,366.167.47 

3.399,014.16 


Sum    I 

IH8BI  RSE.MK.NTS  IN  isilS. 
Death,  endowment  and  disability  rlalms.  .$ 
Anniiltirri    and    premium    not<'S    tolded    tiy 

'•n*    273.45.1.32 

Hurrender  value<(  to  pollo'holden 1.542,736  83 

iUvldends   lo   polliybuldors 2.6041368  03 

Total   paid   poUryholders | 

Plvhlends  held  on  deposit  surrendered  dur- 
ing th"  year   

DUId'-nds   to   stoekholdi-rs 

Commissions  and  bonuses  to  agents  flr&t 
year's  pn-miums  

fommlislons  on  renewals 

Commlisions  on  annuities  (original  and  re- 
newal »     

Salaries  and  allowances  for  agenrtn 

Agency  supenrUion  and  branch  offlre  tx- 
penars    

Mrdleal  rianliKr's  fees  and  inspecUoD  of 
risks    

Salaries  of  officers  and  employes ] 

Ix-gal  expenses   

Agenti'  balances  charged  off 

(iross  loss  on  sale,  maturity  or  adjustment 
of   ledf er  assets 

All   other  disbursemenls ' 


BEAUTIFUL  RIVER  front  farms  at 
Meadowlands  on  easy  terms.  Uno 
Lindstrom.  31   E.  Michigan  st.  Duluth. 


FUR    SALE — 40    acres    half    mile    from 
Munger,  on  road;  $850.  easy  terms.     E. 

E.  Helland.  101   39th  ave.  w..  Duluth. 
Parties   desiring   to   clear   lands,    write 

F.  J.  Kupplnger.  Davenport,  Iowa. 


I   BUY  and  sell  lands  and  timber. 
Rupley,  612  Lyceum  bldg. 


Geo. 


7.819.572.34 

1R3.10 
200.000.00 

241.309.(« 
187,195.84 

2.874.Ji7 
40,387.65 

177.227.73 

42.306.09 

277.640.63 

10.889.64 

30.869.39 

75.793.64 
542.735.86 


probate  as  the 
of  said  dece- 
executory     be 


Total   disbursement*    }    9.618.985  81 

Bal«iic»   63.7l7,18i;66 

I.Kpr.KR  A8HKT8  DEC.   31.   1915. 

Value  of  n-al  estat"  owned %    3,694. (f'S  29 

Mortgage  loans    20.76f».'86«  24 

Collalral  loans   18o..'.20.no 

Pnmlum  notes  and  iiollry  loans 8.9.')7,080  80 

Bonds   and  stn<-lis  owned 19,75li728l.% 

Catih.    ill    olflee.    banks    and    trust    rom- 
P»"lM   367.955.78 


reported    23.599.71 

Claims   adjusted   artd   not   due   and   unad- 

Juited  and  report,  d 240,945.81 

Dtvid'>nds    left    with   company    to   anum- 

iilate    9,551.00 

Premiums  paid  In  advance 7,744.15 

DlTldends   due   or    apporilooed   polio'hold- 

ers    .' 4,643.227.02 

Sprclal   resenres    523,186.36 

Special  fund  to  bring  rrsene  lo  ronpany's 

valuation   basis    1,823,008.31 

All  other  liabllltle*   128,182.71 


WANTED  TO  RENT— By  two  young 
people,  four  furnished  or  three  unfur- 
nished rooms  for  light  housekeeping; 
best  of  references.  Address  X  114, 
Herald. 

WANTED  TO  RENT— By  young  man, 
well  furnished  room;  private  family; 
East  end;  private  bath  preferred. 
Write  R  102,  Herald.  • 

WANTED  TO  RENT— 8 -room  house, 
lake  shore,  Lester  Park.  Lakeside  or 
on  Park  Point.  William  C.  Sargent. 
Providence   bldg. 

-A  7 -room  house, 
will  take  posses- 
months   or  year. 


SITUATION 
garden    man 
repair    work 
94,    Herald. 


WANTED— Position        as 

"and    houseman.    Can    do 

of    all    kinds.    Write    O 


WANTED  TO  RENT- 
furnlshed.  East  end, 
slon   May   1    for   six 

P  106,  Herald. 


ToUl    llablUitlet   on    policyholders'    ac- 
count   $  644M.604.56 

Capital  sto<-k  paid  up l.(KXl,000.00 

Unaasigned   funds    (surplus) 887,010.52 

EXHIBIT  OK   POLICIES,    1915, 

No.  Amount, 

Policies   In   force   at   end   of  pre- 

Tlous  yt>ar    <U.st  column  only  (69.880    $156,453,183.00 
Pol  Ides  in  fore*  at  close  of  the 
year    71.232      159.320.937.00 

Net  Increase   1.352  $    2,f67,754.00 

Issued.  reTlffd  and  Increased  dur- 
ing the  year 6,696  15.946.197.00 

Tot*l  terminated  during  the  year.  6.344  13.078.443.00 
B18INE88  IN  .MINNESOTA  FN  1915. 

No.  Amount. 

Policies  in  force  Dec.  31.  1914..      599  $    1.622.066.00 

Issued   during   the   yt«r 43  236.500.00 

Ceased  to  be  In  force  during  the 

year    '»7  126,473.00 

la  forw  December  31»t.  1915.,..      585  1.732,093.00 


WANTED — Desk  room  with  use  of 
desk:  state  location  and  price.  Hur- 
ley Subscription  Agency,  Minneapolis. 
Minn. 

WANTED  TO  RENT- 3  unfurnished 
rooms  for  light  housekeeping,  central. 
Broad  620-R,  evenings  only. 

WANTED  TO  RENT— A  6-room  house, 
with  yard  and  building  that  can  be 
used  as. shop.     Call  Mel.  6642. 


DRESSMAKING 


WANTED — Plain      sev/lng.      Children's 
clothes   a   specialty.    Phone    Mel.    3670. 

First-class    dressmaking    and    crochet- 
ing by  day  or  home.     Mel.  7979. 


'Bring   your    watch    to    C;aron     Bros.,   to 
have   It  repaired   right.   217  W.   1st  st. 


SITUATION  WANTED— Man  and  wife, 
respectable  and  reliable,  wish  work 
in  or  out  of  city.    Write  R  89.  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED— A  «^Iored~mai^ 
just  from  the  south  wants  a  job  as 
chauffeur.    Call     Mel.     2709. 

_SITUAT10NJWA        D— F  EMALE_ 

SITUATION  WANTED— refined  mid- 
dle-aged woman  would  like  position 
as  housekeeper  where  maid  is  kept. 
Phone  mornings  or  evenings.  Mel. 
8670. 

SITUATION  WANTED— Practical  nurse 
with    hospital    training    wants    cases; 
confinement       preferred;       reasonable 
prices;    best   of   references.      Call    Mel 
8132. 

WANTED — Stenographer  wishes  posi- 
tion; can  take  dictation  rapidly.  Good 
penman,  high  school  and  business 
college    graduate.     Inquire    Lin.  609-A. 

SITUATION  WANTED— Young  widow 
with  2  boys  wishes  housekeeping  on 
fatm,  for  widower  or  bachelor.  Write 
J    91.   Herald. 


SALARY  AND  CHATTEL  LOANS. 

Don't  you  need  a  little  money"? 

We  have  It  to  loan. 

BORROW  $10.00.  RETURN  $0.40  WEEK 

BORROW  $20.00.  RETURN   .80  ^^  EEK 

BORROW  $30.00,  RETURN  1.20  WEEK 

Other  amounts   in   proportion. 

DULUTH  FINANCE  CO., 

301   Palladio   Bljlg. 

Hours:    8  a.  m.  to  6:30  p.  m. ;  Wednesday 

and   Saturday  evenings   until   9   o'clock. 

Both  phones. 

LOANS     ON     diamonds!      WATCHES, 
etc.     Example  of  cost: 

$10,   paid   back   one   month 60c 

$16.    paid    back   one   month 76c 

$26,   paid   back    one   month. ..  .$1.00 

KEYSTONE   LOAN  CO., 

22  W.  Superior  st. 

WE  LOAN  on  all  kinds  of  per.'Jonal 
security  at  lowest  rates.  Call  on  us. 
Dululh  Mortgage  Lo.^in  Co..  W.  Horkan. 
New  1698-D;   Mel.   3733. 


Loans  on  watches,  diamonds,  guns.  etc. 
Keystone  Loan  Co.,   22  W.  Superior  st. 


^I[ANTED   TO  BUY 

Wanted  to  Buy — Furniture,  heaters  or 
ranges;  we  pay  liberal  prices,  or  will 
allow  you  to  exchange  for  new  furni- 
ture. East  End  Furniture  Co.,  120  E. 
Superior    st.      Grand    2013-X. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  Young  lady 
wishes  position  as  office  girl;  very 
good  penman.     Write  G  100.  Herald. 

S1TUAT10N~^'ANTED— Washing     and 
Ironing  to  take  home.     Mrs.  Stonewall 
220   W.   4th   St..   basement. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— 600  to  2,000  acres 
of  cut-over  land  from  owner  only; 
give  description  and  full  particulars 
in  first  letter;  price  must  be  satisfac- 
tory.      Write    J    40.    Herald. 

W  A  NT  ED  TO  BUY— 40  or  160  acres  of 
wild  or  partly  improved  land  from 
the  owner;  give  legal  description  and 
lowest  price  in  first  letter.  Write 
Z    39,    Herald. 


WE  PURCHASE  real  estate  contracts, 
mortgages  and  notes.  Northern  Equit- 
ies   Co.,    612    1st    Nat,    Bank    Bldg. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— Will  pay  best 
prices  for  second  hand  clothing.  406 
West    Michigan    st.    Grand    2361-A. 


Will  buy  partially  improved  farm. 
State  price,  exact  legal  description,  in 
letter.  Address  A  927,  Herald. 


We  give  cash  or  new  furniture  for  used 
furniture  or  stoves.  Joe  Popkin,  108 
E.    Superior    st.      Melrose    6498. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— Light  1- horse 
farm  or  lumber  wagon;  must  be  In 
good   shape.    Cole   232-A. 


SITUATION        WANTED    —     Practical 
nurse      wishes      position.      Mel.      7046 
Mrs.    Aleda    Halverson. 


Total  ledger  as.spts   (as  per  balancel . .  .$  53.717.181  68  1 
N0N-I,E1»(;KH    AS.SKTS 
Interest   and  ^  nls  due  and  accruid.,,. 

Net  d'-ferrtd  and   unpaid  premiums 

All  other  non- ledger  assets 


.$    I..'i74,67ri 


>  (4,675. 40 

782.113.43 

7.644..'->9 


and    the    same    having    been 
from  time  to  time  to  March 


at  Duluth,  in 
the  I'Sth  day 
o'clock  A.  M., 
said  hearing 
required  by  law; 


c<mtlnued 
27th,  1916, 


Cross  ameU   $  56,081.615,08 

...$  56.081,615,08 
1915. 

•  •$  46,144.370.00 
11a- 

1R1.18S.00 

169,601.49 
ua- 


Total  admitted  assls   , 

LIABILITIES  DEC.   31. 

Net   r»sf rre    

R('s:'rvd  for  supplementary  contracts; 

billty  on  i-aiicell"d  policies , 

Claims  due  and  unpaid 

Reserrc  for  death  losses  Incurred  but 


Losses  and  claims  Incurred  during 
the  year   

Losses  and  claims  settled  thirlng 
the   year    ••• 

LosM-s  and  claims  unpaid  Vf- 
nmber  3ht,    1915 

Becelted  for  pfemlums 


13,480.00 
7,480.00 
6.000.00 


_^TOy(SJllimjONDS^ 

FOR  sale: — 100  shares  Cuyuna  Iron  & 
Manganese;  give  cash  offer.  Write 
X  97.  Herald. 


63.208,74 


State  of  Minnesota.  Departmeot  of  Insuranc*. 

I    Herelw   Certify.    That    tl»*   Annual    Statement   of   the 
Canada    Life    Assurance    company    for    the    year    ending 
December  31st.   1915.  of  which  the  above  Is  an  abstract, 
has  b»en  recehed  and  (llid  Id   this  department   and  duly  { 
apprcTed  bf  me,  S.  D.  WORKS. 

ODDBlbSioner  of  Iiuurance.      1 


We  Invite  an  Inspection 

of  our  list  of  high-class  residence 
profiertles  —  improved  and  unim- 
proved. 

WM.  C.  SARGENT 

102   Providence    Building. 


SITUATION  WANTED— Work  by  the 
day;  store  and  office  cleaning  a  spe- 
cialty.    Call   Lin.   607-Y. 


SITUATION  WANTED— As  housekeep- 
er  by  widow  with  one  child.  Ad- 
dress V-58.    Herald. 


Advertise  io  Tbe  Herald 


SUMMER  RESORTS 

FOR  SALE — La-ge  camp  sites  on  beau- 
tiful Lake  Vermilion;  sand  bathing' 
beaches,  parks,  docks,  wells,  etc  • 
monthly  payments  as  low  as  $2  with- 
out interest:  all  sites  sold  on  our 
"money  back"  guarantee.  Grav-UVr 
tin  Co.,   Alworth  bldg.,  Duluth. 

FOR    SALE— Prettily    located    summer 
cottage  on  Pokegama  lake,   five  miles 
from   Grand   Rapids.     (;ood  auto  road 
Fine    fishing    and    hunting.      A     L.    Ln 
Frenlere.  Grand  Rapids. 'Minn.  ' 

BEAUTIFUL  wooded  camp  ^Ttei  Zn 
Aklev's  Point.  Lake  Vermilion,  l  acre 
in  size.  Map  and  information  from 
Wakemup  Bay  Outing  Co..  605  Torr*v 
bldg..  Duluth.  Minn.  ' 


WANTED    TO    BUY- 
torcycle    cheap    on 
Melrose    7004. 


-Second   hand 
easy    terms. 


mo- 
Call 


WANTED  TO 
tract  of  land 
I  69,  Herald. 


BUY — Large    or     email 
for  Investment.  Address 


WANT    TO 
or    go    in 
Herald. 


BUY— Small 
partnership. 


general 
Write 


store 
B    33. 


WE    PAY    20c    for    heavy    hens.      Call 
Grand  326;  Mel.  81.  L.  Pollnsky  &  Co. 

LITMAN 
1811  W. 


BUYS    clothing    and    bicycles. 
Superior  st.   Lin.   129-D. 


H.   Popkin   buys   stoves   and   furniture. 
Grand    2837-A.    Mel,    1182. 


UPHOLSTERING 


Furniture,    Automobiles   —   Reasonable 
price.   E.  Ott.  112  1st  ave.   W.   Phones. 


roflJALE— COWS 

FOR  sale:— S.  Goldfine  will  arrtv* 
with  a  carload  of  the  finest  assort- 
ment of  fresh  milch  cows  Thursday 
April  13.  Both  phones;  1016  N.  6th 
ave,  w.  Take  Incline  car  to  8th  st., 
walk   2   blocks  northeast. 

FOR    sale: — Cows,    some    fresh     soine 
win   be   In.   In   a   few   days;     also   i<0. 
months-old    bull.       Klossner,    Carlton 
Minn. 


*         -• 


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Wednesday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  12. 1916. 


21 


ABSENT-MINDED  ABNER— When  Money  Talks  It  jSays  ''Good  Bye!^^ 


By  Walt  McDottgall 


FORJALE— HOUSES ^  I 

SrLi:Nl>ID   VALUKS. 


FOR  SALE  HOUSES-Continued     |     FOR  SALE JIOl^ES-Xontin^ 


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O015  East  First  8tro<»t — 7  rooms 
jind  bath,  hot  wiUer  »»t'at.  two 
liifplHcd.  laundry  tubs,  llviUK 
room  tlnish'd  In  mahoBany.  d»n- 
inu  room  whllu  enamel,  upatalra 
whllo  rnamle.  hardwood  rtoors, 
cenient  walks  and  pave.l  streets. 
One  of  tlie  bibt  designed  houacd 
In  East  end. 


623  Sixteenth  av.nue  ea.-^t— 6  rooms 
and  bath.  Th.^  owner  must  aell 
In  next   ten  days. 


avenuo    east — Two    6- 
und  two  baths;  anap. 


518    Fourth 
room  Uat.- 

1609  Jefferson  street— 7  rooms  and 
maids'  room.  This  is  an  espe- 
chilly  well-built,  modem  homo, 
pleasantly  located  on  nice  lot; 
very  d.sirable  residence  district. 
A  snap. 


* 

* 
* 

-A!- 


•A- 

i:- 


^         —TWO  HOUSE  BARGAIN'S— 


''4 

if- 


4513     Cooke     street— 7     moms     and  '^^ 
bath,  hot  water  heat;  bungalow.  *.- 


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# 


1100  cash  and  b.ilanc«  on  small 
monthly  payments  takes  J-fam- 
lly  house.  yi4  N.  G6th  ave.  w. 
Thl.<«  place  must  bo  sold  before 
May  1.  Move  In  now.  rent  one 
llai  and  let  the  tenant  help  you 
pay  for  the  property.  This  Is 
un  exc.llent  opportunity  to  get 
a    home   cheap. 

A  beautiful  10-room  modern  house 
east  of  18lh  ave.  e..  In  the  very 
be.-^t  residential  section  of  the 
city.  This  place  was  built  of 
th'-  very  best  material:  lartce. 
beautiful  lot.  On  account  of  the 
owner  leaving  city,  the  place 
will  be  sold  at  a  .sacrltice.  Can 
make  any  reasonable  terms  to  a 
reliable  party.  Don't  delay  If 
you  want  this  place.  $1,600  cash 
will  handle  It. 


-* 


I  FOR   SALE.  * 

'■f.         60  by  140-foot  lot;  stone  foun-  -^ 

ii.  datlon,  hardwood  floors,  hot  water  ^ 

V^  h.  at.    cement    walks,    shade    trees.  ■» 

\i(.  garage  and  7  apple  trees  and  gar-  * 

\l  den.     Can  you  beat  It?  ,  No-     Now  ^ 

a-  don't    pass    it    up.        Price    $3,500.  *- 

'  *  easy    terms.      House    alone    would  -h 

j  i^  cost  to  build  $4,000.  » 

!  t      WILLIAM  M.  tJUAVATT  &  CO..      ii- 

]•)(.  205  Lonsdale  Building. 

H^  Grand  466.  Melrose  142 


*i 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 
ON  PAGESJOAND  22 

PERSONAL  

t  —TALK  TO  GILIUSON—  H 

%  IF     YOU     WANT     TO     BUY     ANY  * 

*  «R\DE    PIANO— PIANO    DIRECT  «- 

*  FROM      THE      MANUFACTURER.  * 
^  AT  AN  ACTUAL  SAVING  OF  $100.  * 

*  DON'T      BE  "attracted      by  * 
.»  ,  a.  spacious,      misleading      advertise-  -^- 

."■;'^<>^.t^.t»Atf^^-?^^-^-J?^»»*»^»^>^^^^-^^  j  *  ments  offering  pianos  at  your  own  -^ 
— ■ 4;  price,  and  even  below  cost.  * 

*  INVESTIGATE    FIRST,    and    the  *- 
^  results   will   surely   reimburse  you  * 

*  for  the  time  you  spend.     Call  and  '^ 
*.  let  us  refer  you  to  customers  who  ■jj^ 

*  have         purchased         Raudenbush  ^ 
•)i.  pianos    from    us    within    the    past  ^ 

tweek  '"' 

—THEY   IN\^ESTIGATED—  ^ 


* 


nearly    new, 


610  East  Seventh  street  — Hot  wa- 
ter heat,  concrete  foundation,  b 
rooms  and  bath,  fine  basement; 
nearly  new. 


1024  East  Ninth  street— Hot  water 
heat,  full  basement.  6  rooms  and 
bath;   solid   brick,   nearly   new. 

Hunter's  Park  home— 6  rooms  and 
bath,  stone  foundation,  hot  wa- 
ter heat,  full  basement,  best 
kind   of    llnlsh. 


<■::■ 


« 


ni8  East  Third  fltreet_7  rooms 
and  bath,  stone  f.)undalion.  full 
basement;   centrally   located. 

"O^C  East  Fifth  street— 7  rooms 
and  baih.  hot  water  heat,  full 
basement;   very  attractive. 


4114  Gladstone  street— 5  rooms  and 
buth.  hot  water  heat,  full  base- 
ment;   bungalow. 

The  houses  are  all  attractlvo  and 
modern.      Uock-botiom   prices. 


Exclusive  Sale. 

W.   M.  PRINDLE  & 
Main  Floor,  Lonsdale 


CO., 
Bldg. 


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r.        EBKRT-WALKER  COMPANY. 
■k  315-16  Torrey  lUiUdlng, 

.^.  Duluth,  Minn. 


%  FOR  SALE.  1 

*  


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One  of  the  most  modern  rcsl- 
d'^nce  properties  in  choice  hillside 
district  of  West  Duluth. 

This  home  has  7  largo  rooms, 
bath,  two  lavatories,  hot  water 
heat  and  a  good  garage. 

Lot  Is  90  by  125  and  has  a  good 
elevation    above   the   street. 

Can  sell  this  for  $1,000  cash  and 
balance  monthly  payments.  I'rlce 
$5,200. 

E.    8th    St.; 

full     base- 

$1,500,    half 


Nice    new    home    on 
modern     except     heat; 
ni'iit,    7    good    rooms, 
cash,   takes   this. 


i-- 


For  a  few  days  can  offer  a  good 
njodern  7 -room  house  on  58th  ave., 
on  single  lot,  for  $2,400.  on  very 
good  terms. 


t  $1,850    SPECIAL ■  *i 

ii.       Owner  will  sell  his  6-room  house  -fc- 1 
ic-  In    most    delightful    neighborhood,  ^\ 
it.  on  60  bv  140-foot  lot,  with  all  Im-  ^ 
}(.  provements.     Easy  terms  to  a  re-  ^] 
:\t  sponsible   party.  ,..„„,    ^/-»         vi 

4      WILLIAM  M.  GRAVATT  &  CO..      * 
Z  206  Lonsdale  Building.      _„    * 

*,  Grand   466  Melrose  142.  *| 

%  $1,050  BUYS 

JUL  ""^  I 

it.  A   <l«ndy    2-room   house    near   golf    " 

■k.  grounds     on     50     by     140-foot     lot. 

•*i  Very   convenient   to  car  line. 

%      WILLIAM  M.  GRAVATT  &  CO.. 

-vt  205  Lonsdale  Building. 

%.  Grand  46C.  Melrose  142.  g 

i  FOR  SALE— Newly  built.  6-room  house; 

'  all  conveniences,  except  heat,  full 
stone  basement,  also  new  barn;  cheap: 
small  cash  payment,  balance  monthly. 

Call    310    N.    62nd   ave.    w. 

FOR  SALE— ny  owner,  modern  2-fIat 
brick  building;  5  »>lock3  from  First 
National   bank;   $5,000.    Address   E   940, 

Herald. . 

FOR  SALE — Modern  home;  If  you  want 
one  of  the  best  In  East  end  at  right 
figure,    write    me.      \N  rite    U    6-,   care 

Herald. ^ 

FOR  SALE-By  owner,  new  9-room 
modern  house  on  Jefferson  St.  Call 
Mel.    1481. 


THE   RAUDENBUSH   &   SONS 

PIANO  CO., 

S.  E.  GILIUSON,  Mgr., 

232  West  First  Street. 


tiff 

'Ai 


PERSONAL — Everybody  can  furnish 
their  home  right  now  at  one-half  price 
and  less,  from  the  Cameron  Furniture 
Co  stock,  which  Is  being  closed  out 
at  tremendous  sacrifices.  May  1  we 
close  our  doors;  lease  expires;  you 
must  hurry  or  miss  this  opportunity. 
Salesrooms,    2110-2112    W.   Superior   st. 

PERSONAL — If  you  w;int  a  cabin  built 
or  your  acre  tracts  cleared,  any  road 
building  or  any  other  kind  of  con- 
tracting, for  prompt  work  see  Axel 
Hagstrom,  at  811  N.  Lake  ave.,  or  call 
Mel.  4285.  . 


R.  C.  WEDDELL. 
308  Central  Avenue. 
Open   evenings. 


FOR  SALE— 5-room  house  and  »«t.  SOx 
100;  cheap  for  quick  sale.  Call  at  Ziii 
W.  8th  St. 

FOR  SALE — 7-room  house;  hot  water 
heat,  built  last  summer.    922  11th  ave.  e. 


^  -1^.  ....^....^^-.^...-s—. ,  FURNITURE   for    quick    sale;    will    sell 

f-:\i>y^j^^''-^>y-^-:^-^'^-'^^^^'»»^-^^^:^^  I  A^j^^^.^#-A!-^c^-;^-^^^-^'»-'^"^^»^^^-^^--'^  -^r^::::::;^:^;:^:^^^:^^^^  ^^^eap:  e-room  f"'-"*^"'-?;,.^""^'^^^^^^?'* 

. rr.TT. ........ .i.j^.."a>,yjt  I .         ^ — rFA-<k-'tc?t-tr?>  f't-'v  «i  f»  "  •»  '  .j^      jjy    ^j,,^    piece.      Apply    liuo    ti<.    ora    si., 

or  call   Mel.   7663.      Call   mornings   be- 
fore noon,   or  after  6 


i:^;i^i:^-K'it'iL^'nit'ii-ii-iC-it'iir»ii'^-^^^^^  \      ATTRACTIVE  HOMES  FOR  SALE 


^- 

I 


WHY   DO  YOU  PAY   RENT? 


Let  a  tenant  help  you  Pav/or  this 
home— 8 -room,      2 -family,      good 
condition,     near    car    line; 
veniences.       Price     $1.8»»;. 
for    $20    per    month;    $oOO 
balance  like  rent. 


con- 
rents 
cash, 


We  have  three  new  6-room  houses 
Just  being  completed  at  l'«J«'ty; 
seventh  avenue  west,  one  block 
above  car  line;  full  ba.sement, 
oak  nnlsh.  We  Invite  your  In- 
spection. These  homes  will  be 
sold  on  easy  payments.  i  rice 
$3,200. 


WE.^T  DULUTH  REALTY  CO., 

6407    Ramsey   Street. 

West    Duluth. 


* , 

A*' 

A- 1 

a- 

* 

t 

a- 


(''2-21)  Here's  a  beautiful,  modern 
bungalow;  located  East  end;  6  rooms; 
hot  water  heut,  fireplace,  oak  finish 
and  hardwood  floors;  new  house;  price 

$5,000.  

(17-16)  Nice  7-room  house.  West  end. 
on  3rd  st.;  good  basement,  hardwood 
floors,    nice    lot;    price    $3,300. 

'27-41)  Fine  home  on  car  line;  7 
rooms;  hardwood  floors.  full  bath, 
large  porch;  fine  view  of  lake;  near 
school;  large  new  chicken  hou.se;  lot 
60x140;  fine  lawn  and  garden;  price 
only    $3,000;    make   your  own   terms. 

LITTLE  &   NOLTE  CO., 
Exchange   Building. 


PBRSON.\L — Ladles!  Ask  your  drug- 
gist for  Chichester  Pills,  the  Diamond 
Brand,  for  25  years  4cnown  as  best, 
safest,  always  reliable.  Take  no  other. 
Chichester  Diamond  Brand  Pills  are 
aold   by  druggists   everywhere. 


FOR  SALE— RySCEUJU^IE^ 

I  —TALK  TO  GILIUSON—  * 

S  IF  IT'S  A  * 

^  SECOND-HAND  PIANO  YOU  ARE  * 
*.  LOOKING  FOR.  * 

if.  Right  now  he  has  eight  excep-- * 
^  tlonal  bargains.  Prices  from  $56  * 
a.  to  $196,  cash  or  easy  terms.  * 

ji,  w 

#  S.  E.  GILIUSON,  Manager  of  ^,^  * 

Z       THE    RAUDENBUSH   &    SONS  * 

*,  PIANO  CO.,  % 

if.  232  West  First  Street.  * 

\%^i^i^^^i{j^i^?^^(^^ 

%  —ALUMINUM  SPECIALS—  * 

if.  Here  la  something  that  Is  a  rec-  -f^ 
^  ord-breaker.  Think  of  It!  Thirty-  ^4 
if.  five  pieces  of  good  aluminum  ware  •* 
if.  for  only  $5.98;  another  set  consist-  * 
*'  Ing  of  seven  pieces  at  $7.98.  "* 

a.  ENGER  &  OLSON,  * 

*     Nineteenth  Ave.  W.  and  Sup.  St.     * 

FOR  SALE — Furniture  stock  to  be  tor- 
pedoed quickly.  We  will  positively 
vacate  .salesrooms  before  May  1  re- 
gardless of  the  sacrifice;  everything 
must  be  sold,  even  though  the  price 
concession  Is  more  than  one-half,  this 
means  you  can  practically  furnish  the 
bedroom,  living  room  and  dining  room 
at  your  own  price;  act  promptly  if 
you  wish  to  participate  In  these  real 
bargains.  Cameron  Furniture  Co.. 
2110-2112    W.    Superior    st. 

TALKING  MACHINES — Largest  stock 
in  the  city.  Complete  outfits  at  special 
prices.  Be  sure  you  get  the  New  Co- 
lumbia Grafonola;  awarded  three 
grand  prizes  and  two  gold  medals  at 
the  world's  fair;  double-faced  records 
65  cents;  ask  for  catalogues  free;  only 
exclusive  talking  machine  store  In 
Duluth.  largest  stock.  Edmont,  18 
3rd  ave.   w. 


PROFESSIONAL  ANO  BUSINESS  GUIOE 


Ready  reference  of  the  professional 
men  and  leading  business  firms.  Her- 
ald readers  who  do  not  find  the  line 
of  business  they  are  seeking  will  con- 
fer a  favor  by  requesting  of  us  the 
information  desired. 


CALL  324  FOR  REPRESENTATION  IN  THIS  COLUMN 


ACCOUNTANTS. 


JAMES    S.    MATTESON,   C.   P.    A, 

(Minnesota   and    Wisconsin), 

700-701    Alworth    Building. 

Audits,    Estate    and    Commercial 

Accounting    and    Investigations. 

Established    1909. 

Phones:  Mel.   4700;  Grand  71. 


HAT  SHOP. 


—JOHN  E.  MACGREGOR— 

Public    Accountant    and   Auditor. 

601   Sellwood    Bldg.     Mel.   670. 


DAVID    QUAIL    &    CO. 

Chartered  Accountants. 

Certified    Public    Accountants. 

401    Torrey    Bldg.,    Duluth. 

Highest    references.      Inquiries   invited, 


Any  Panama,  straw  or  soft  hat  cleaned, 

blocker     or     remodeled.  

Special  attention  to  mall 
orders.  New  Grand  Shine 
parlors.  210  W.  Superior i 
St.     Grand  639. 


Polrler  Tent  &  Awning  Co.,  413  E.  Sup. 
Both  phones.  Horse  and  wagon  covers. 

AWNINGS — Duluth  Tent  &  Awning  Co., 
1608    W.    Superior    st.     Lin.    36.  


BUSINESS  CHANCES 


PERSONAL — Hotels,  hospitals,  cafes 
and  rooming  Vou^es;  buy  your  linens, 
etc.,  of  us  at  lower  prices  than  linen 
houses  in  Chicago  or  New  York.  Du- 
luth Linen  Co.,  228  E.  1st  at.  Let  us 
prove   It. 

WE  RENT  Remington.  Monarch  and 
Smith  Premier  typewriters  at  $2  per 
month  and  upward.  Remington  Type- 
writer Co..  Inc..  20  4th  ave.  w.; 
phones;    Mel.    280;    Grand    181^ 


ASHES,  CI\'I>ERS,  ETC.,  HKMOVED. 

Af^hes     cinders    and    manure    removed. 
Merrill.    Mel.    1390;    Grand    1488-X. 


THE      CENTRAL      HAT 

works.    309    W.    Sup.    St. 

Gus   Kintonls,    manager. 

"jHats  cleaned,  reblocked 

—^•^mmmmmm^^&nd    repaired.      We    call 

for  and  deliver.  Grand  1597-A. 

MUSICAL    IXSTRUMEXTS. 


A.  Haakonsen.  dealer 

and  expert  repairing, 

at   J.    W.   Nelson's,   6 

E.   Superior  st. 

Gibson  mandolins  and  guitars,  banjos, 
banjo-mandolins,  old  violins,  cellos. 
Ben    B.    Miller,    agent.    Grand    1622-X. 

Pianos,  violins,  victrolas,  sheet  musio, 
etc.      Boston    Music   Co. 


HOTIOX  PICTUIIE  EUUIPMEXT. 


—LOOK  THIS  UP  QUICK- 


FOB  SALE.  ,,„ 

ESTABLISHED  FISH  COMPANY. 


—LOOK  THIS  OVER— 
—SMALL  PAYMENT  HANDLES  IT— 


# 


FOR  SALE. 


6   rooms   and 


55,000— 16th    ave.    e 
,-t        right  up  to  date. 

M.  $5  750— Lester     Park     house     of     6 

t  roomB.  completely  modern.  Own- 

%  er   leaving   city   and   house   must 

21  be  sold.     Let  mo  show  it  to  you. 


•  1  400—6032     (Jlenwood     St.;     good 
value  and  easy   terms. 


* 

->•-• ! 

*»    I 
-!•    ' 

Vf  ■ 

^! 

{  WILLIAM  C.  SARGENT.  || 

^  102  Providence  Bldg.  -^ 

-  —HOUSE  FOR  SALE— 

49n  IS)  Five-room  brick  house,  very 
close  m-  hot  water  heat:  full  base- 
ment; cJrner  lot;  here's  a  nice  home 
on  any  terms  you  may  wish;  see  it 
quick. 

LITTLE   &  NOLTE  Co.. 

r:xchange   Building^ 


$•>  500  for  a  well-built  new  house  with 
6"  rooms  and  bath  on  14th  ave.  e..  near 
9th  St.;  1  block  from  street  car  line; 
.sewer  water  and  g;i!<  and  electricity 
in  the  house.  Small  cash  payment  re- 
auired-  balance  monthly.  1.^)1  40  by 
80  feet.  Do  not  delay  Investigating 
'    this  proposition. 

WHITNEY    WALL    COMPANY, 
1  Torrey    Bldg. 

Mel.    1368;    Ctrand    810. 


VOK    SALE— We    have    some    fine    lota  | 
«     43rd  ave.  w.  and  4th  st.     Also  some  , 
a      60th    ave.    e.,    only    1    block    from, 
car    line.      Will    build   you    a    house   on 
any     of    them    after     yi  ur    own     plan. 
Will    take    some    cash    and    bnlance    on 
^."v  terms.   Call   evenings  Cole  271-Y. 

Mel.-  7203.     Erickson    &     Olson. 

voR  SALE — West  end  bargain;  don't 
nil^s  It;  located  in  bu.-^iness  district  at 
•>l^t  ave  w.;  adjoins  fine  new  brick 
il.iildinir'  lot  60x140  feet;  building  on 
w  w ith  income  of  $85  per  month: 
one  of  the  best  buys  In  the  city;  price 
on^y    $7,000.      Little    &    Nolte   Co      Ex 

change  bldg. iLLllL 

TTtn    SALE 724     10th    ave.    e..    6-room 

hous;:    absolutely    '"<e.t:'"ji..f"39r7*''' 
heat;    m\it   cash.     Phone   Mel.   3927. 

Fofr"s\LE— 6-room  house;   gas,  water, 
iiiiht    Jarge   room   In   basement;    hard-' 
wood  floors.  1120  W.  5th  St. | 

»vTh~SALE Cheap,    by    owner,    3-room 

*^5ousJ;    26-foot    lot.      Call    2211    Water 

St.;   Grand    1863-A. .. 

ir7;r"^TLE New  6-room  house.  Wood- 
land f  60-foot  lot;  $1,960.  Call  Mel.  8910. 

FOR  SALE— A  snap;  $2,000  buys  nine- 
room  house  for  two  families.  West 
Duluth;  terms  to  suit.  Northern 
Ficuiiy  Co..  627  Manhattan  bldg. 


?  NEW  6-ROOM  MODERN  HOUSE.  '4 
5i  Hot  water  heat,  finely  finished  ;¥ 
■y.  throughout;  half  block  from  car  ^- 
if.  line  at  Lakeside;  50  by  140  corner  f 
if.  lot;  price  $4,000;  $200  cash  will  ■>(■ 
i(.  handle,  balance  easy  monthly  pay-  ^ 

Z  p.  GEO.  HANSON  &  SON,  * 

5-  1915  West  Superior  St.  * 

FOR  SALF — Lakeside,  bungalow  of 
I  4  finished  rooms,  room  In  attic  un- 
finished; concrete  foundation,  hot  wa- 
ter heat,  oak  finish,  beamed  ceilings: 
tile  floor  In  kitchen;  large  lot,  fine 
garage;  price  $2,600,  easy  terms. 
(Jreenfleld  Realty  Co.,  416  Providence 
bldg. 

FOR  SALE — 6-room  modern  home  Just 
completed;  extra  well  built,  v.-ry  com- 
plete- splendid  location,  with  view 
over  lake;  will  make  good  proposi- 
tion to  right  party.  Gnenfleld  R-alty 
Co..   416  Providence  bldg. 

^^Tm  SALE— 7-room  house  1  bloclc 
from  car  line.  Newly  remodeled.  60 
foot  lot  on  Improved  street.  Small 
cash  payment  and  balance  like  rent. 
Will  pay  you  to  look  this  up.  Call 
1722  N.   60th  ave.  e. 

710  Boulevard  w.  7  rooms,  modern, 
half  block  from  Incline.  Walking  dis- 
tance from  business  section.  For  ap- 
nolniment  to  see  this  house  call 
Douglas  C.  Moore,  711  Palladlo  bldg. 
Mtirose    7762.  


Z  with  full  fishing  equipment,  first-  ^ 
%  class  steam  tug  with  »t'-^n»^  "«^-  f. 
Z  hauler,  gasollm"  launch  and  a  ^- 
l  number  of  skiffs,  full  equipment  ^ 
*■  of  nets  fish  house  at  Grand  ^ 
t  Mara"s  and  Lsle  Royale.  Will  sac  i^ 
%  r  tlce  price  for  quick  acceptance.  ^ 
t  Other  business  to  attend  to  Is  rea-  ^ 
I  son  for  selling.  Equipment  in  good  * 
H  condition  to  start  operations  soon  A- 
t  as  lake  opens.  A  K'>od  man  can  |^ 
$1  easily  clear  60  per  cent  of  his  In-  ■» 
$i  v.-8tm.-nt  m  one  season.  Address  ^ 
if.  V    96,   Herald.  3x 

van  RENT — 16-room  hotel  In  a  new 
sawmill  town  on  the  Iron  Range,  on 
a  T  or  2 -year  lease:  furnished  com- 
Dletelv  rent  very  reasonable.  Also  a 
good  opportunity  here  for  a  barber 
shop.     Write  M  86.  Herald. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  sale  gro- 
cery store.  12  blocks  from  end  of 
Woftdlaud  car  line  on  ^'iJ»r*;y_'-«f,?.i 
will  consider  renting  building  and 
Tel  I  in«      stock      and    fixtures.      Grand 

2212-D. 

FOR     SALE— Hotel.     32     rooms,     doing 

good    business;    fine    chance    for    some 

one;    Superior    street    depot    location 

$700     will     handle;     hurry;    deal    with 

owner.      Write   U   110.    Herald. 

!fOR  SALE-By  owner,  small  Kro<^«»">' 
store:  Postoffice  In  connection;  locatejl 
near  railroad  shops;  price  reasonable, 
terms  If  desired.  Address  O.  O. 
Woods.    Hopper,    Minn 


PERSONAL — Middle-aged  gentleman 
with  good  position  and  some  means 
wishes  to  meet  Scandinavian  ladj'  of 
middle  age;  object  matrimony.  Write 
P  99.    Herald. 

PER.SONAL — Get  away  from  washing 
troubles  by  sending  your  family  wash 
to  us;  6')ac  per  pound.  Lutes'  laundry, 
808  E.  2nd  st.  Phone  Grand  447,  Mel. 
447.   for  our  wagon. 

Violet  Rays  "New  Method"  scalp  treat- 
ment at  Comfort  Beauty  parlors,  109 
Oak  Hall  bldg.  Corns  removed.  25c; 
bunions,   60s;    Inverted  nails,  60c. 


FOR  SALE — Dining  room  set,  ma^ 
hogany  dresser,  library  table,  rocK- 
er,  sani'tary  couch,  book  case.  Domes- 
tic machine,  mattress,  two  large 
rugs  and  dishes.  432  E.  2nd  st.  ,  18 
Granville  apartment.  Call  mornmgs 
or  evenings   after  7   p.    m.   Mel.    6917. 

FOR  SALE — Entire  stock  of  furniture 
contained  in  salesrooms,  2110-2112 
W.  Superior  St.,  will  be  sold  for  60 
per  cent  less  than  retail  price,  to  cash 
buyers.  Thousands  of  pieces.  Just 
what  you  need  to  furnish  the  home 
cosily.      Cameron    Furniture   Co. 

FOR  SALE — Verj'  cheap  to  close  out 
quick,  one  Bond  player  piano,  also 
two  fine  pianos,  walnut  and  oak 
cases.  If  you  are  planning  to  purchase 
a  piano,  don't  fall  to  see  theso.  We 
can  arrange  terms.  R.  R.  Forward  /k 
Co.,    124    E.   Superior   St. 

FOR  .SALE  CHEAP — Office  furniture; 
1  roll-top  desk.  1  roll-top  typewriter 
desk,  1  quartered  oak  long  table,  2 
revolving  desk  chairs,  1  counter  parti- 
tion with  plate  glass.  206  Lonsdale 
bldg.;   Mel.    204. 


ARCHITECTS. 

GILIUSON   &    CARSON.    313-14    Glencoe 
bldg.      Mel.    5622:    Grand    1785-X. 


CARDS! 

Business  Cards,   300.   $1;  Calling  Cards. 
100,  39c.  Kask  Prlntery,  114  E.  Sup,  st. 


MOTION  PICTURE 
outfits  bought,  sold 
and  exchang'.'d.  Bar- 
gnln  list  free.  Na- 
tional Equipment  Co., 
Motion  Picture  Ma- 
chines and  Supplies. 
417  W.  Michigan  at., 
Duluth. 


CA1«ER.\S  AND   KODAKS. 


—ARCADE    CAMERA   SHOP— 
110  W.   Superior  st.  Amateur  finishing, 
kodaks  and   camera  supplies. 
■  .  ■■'* 

CARPET  CLEANIXO   WORKS. 

INTERSTATE    CARPET      Cleaning   Co. 
1908    W.-   Michigan    st.      Both    phones. 


MADE-TO-MEASURE  Shirts,  ITnder- 
wear,  Raincoats,  Neckties,  Suit  or 
O'coat.  $18;  Ladles'  Suits,  spring  so- 
le c  t  i  ons^ON^Hamllton^Jl^E^^^ 

All-around  carpenter  work,  by  day  or 
contract;  reasonable  terms;  also  uphol- 
stering.   25  Vi  Mesaba  ave.  Or'd   2361-A. 

PERSONAL — 100  good  envelopes  print- 
ed to  order,  postpaid.  40c:  samples 
for  stamp.  Henry  Norman,  R.  F.  D 
No.   6,   Duluth,  Minn.  


FOR  SALE — Two  tubular  boilers,  78- 
inch  diameter.  12  feet  long,  allowed 
110  pounds  steam  pressure;  boilers 
are  In  first  class  condition.  Apply 
Duluth-Suporior  Dredging  Co.,  46th 
ave.   w.    

FOR  SALE — Clean  sweep  of  every 
piece  of  furniture,  rugs  and  stoves, 
all  go  regardless  'of  cost,  at  half  and 
manv  less.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co.,  122- 
124   "E.  Superior  st. 


WE  RENT  electric  cleaners,  $1  to  $1.60 
per  day.     Anderson  Furniture  Co. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  rent  cheap, 
larxe  hotel,  modern  and  central;  If 
l^uf  want  a  money  maker,  see  us. 
KtlTern    Realty    Co.,    627    Manhattan 

bldg. — - 

FOR  SALE— Moving  picture  theater 
lolnir  nice  busln-ss;  owner  in  other 
i'i's'}?es"V^ear     closest     in^vestigatlon. 

Write  owner,   K  964,   Htiaia. 

F?^  «ALE-Cenually  located  proper- 
ty used  for  rooming  '»o"*^'.,*V,%„ 
L^,"tA  good  parties.    206  Palladlo  bldg^ 


Personal— Electric  vacuum  cleaners  for 
r*^nt  $1.50  a  day.  The  Moore  Co.,  319 
W.    1st    St.;    Mel.    6860,    Grand    2054-X. 


RAGTIME  positively  taught  In  20  les- 
sons; free  booklet.  J.  L.  Denver,  82  \V . 
2nd  St.     Open  7  to  10  p.  m.     Mel.  7720. 

MASSAGE — Margaret  Nelson.  218  W. 
SuT>erlor  St.,  room  5,  3rd  floor.  Also 
apnolntments   at   your   home^ 


PERSONAL — Carpenter  work  neatly 
done,  either  by  day  or  contract.  John, 
son  Bros.,  Grand  2121-T.    


Personal— Effective      scalp      treatment. 
Mrs.  Vogt's  Hair  Shop.  105  W.  Sup,  st. 


well 

sale; 

Call 


FOR  SALE — Fine  new  6-room  house  at 
LakesiJe.    two    blocks    from    car    line; 
all     conveniences    except     heat; 
built;     will    sacrifice     for     quick 
small     cash    payment    required. 
Pnrk   16'J-Y. 

1714  E  6TH  ST. — Brand  new,  6  rooms, 
modern,  oak  finish,  laundry,  hot  water 
heat  stone  foundatii>n.  location  none 
better:  lot  60x160.  Terms,  $1,000  caah; 
briaju^_to_gult.  Mel.  8716.  J.   D.  S^ 

FOR  S.\L1': — Eight-room  house,  ar- 
ranged for  two  familie.s.  in  first-class 
condition;  will  "j", /l?'^J?'  .«^«  I  nm 
going    farming.      Call    1620    .E.    6th    st. 

FOR  SALE— A  snap,  on  easy  terms.  7- 
roora  house  with  bath,  at  price  lum- 
ber corner  lot  60x140,  $2,650;  look  up 
at  omJ6    4402  Cook*  St.    R.  R.  Forward. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES-For  sale-sev- 
eral oak  filing  cases,  V'h*^*P:„^"""'"* 
I  Dunning.  500  Alworth  bldg. 

i,.  .u    a  AT  V     Grocery    business;    for   In- 
j  ^f oSnafto.^Ta'il    oV/nd    669-D;    Melrose 

j     3412. 

"^MORTGAGES^^ARM^^^ 

"^      '^'^      "HMORTt;A(;ES — 

Bank  Trust  and  Insurance  companies 
invekt  their  money  In  our  farm  mort- 
gages because  they  are  safe,  conserva- 
five  and  return  them  6  per  cent  on 
th\.?r  money.  Why  not  make  your 
money  ne"  you  6  per  cent.  We  have 
mortgages  In  small  or  Urge  amounts. 
Titles  jfuaranteed. 

BICKELL-KYLLO  &  CO., 

205  Exchange  bldg., 

Duluth,   Minn. 


Personal — Combings  and  cut  hair  made 
Into  beautiful  switches.   Knauf  Sisters. 

PERSONAL — Ladles,     have     your     suits 
made   at  Miller  Bros.,   406   E.   Sup.   St. 

PERSONALS  —  Wanted     lace     curtains. 
25c  pair;  ladles'   washings.     Mel.  7061. 

Corns,    bunions    removed;    electric    foot 
massage   for  tired   feet.  Miss  M.  Kelly. 

PERSONAL — Get    your    rugs    made    at 
the  weaving  shop.    716  %   E.  8th  st. 

DR    GULDE.  Eye,   Ear.  Nose  specialist, 
324  Syndicate  bldg..  Minneapolis. 

WANTED — piano  fot  storage  in  home; 
phone    dining   hours.      Mel.    1685. 


FOR  SALE — Automobile  garage;  port- 
able; slzo  14  by  20;  price  $76;  corru- 
gated iron;  can  be  used  for  any  stor- 
age purpose.  Call  at  112  W.  1st  st. 
Phone   Mel.    641.        

FOR  SALE — An  assortment  of  fixtures. 
Including  lighting  fixtures,  suitable 
for  furniture  or  other  store,  will  sell 
cheap.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co.,  124  E. 
8up.    St. 

FOR  SALE — Second-hand  woodworking 
machinery,  portable  sawmill,  trans- 
mission appliances,  pipes  for  steam, 
water  and  furnaces.  Duluth  Mach.  Co. 


CUI.nNEY     SWEEP. 

ED  McCARTY,  chimney  sweep  and 
furnace  cleaning.   Call   Lake.   46-L. 

KNX'DSON — Chimney  sweep  and  furnace 
cleaner.  Fire  headquarters,  Mel.  46. 

DANClXCi  ACADEMY. 

RYAN'S — The  school  that  makes  good 
dancers.  Classes:  Mondays,  Tuesdays 
and   Thursday.    Call    Mel.    4618. 

COFFIN'S  ACADEMY — Classes  Monday, 
•Tuesday    and    Thursday.  Either  phone. 


MEDICAL  BATUS. 

DR.  K.  A.  LEE,  chiropractic  special- 
ist; cure  or  no  pay  for  rheumatism, 
stomach  and  kidney  troubles.  Baths. 
1826    E.    Superior   st.   Mel.    8125. 

Om'OMETRIST  AAD   OPTICIAN. 

CONSULT  A.  L.  NORBERG.  optomet- 
rist and  optician,  201  »4  W.  1st  st.,  for 
economical  buying  and  correct  fitting 
of  glasses;  satisfaction  guaranteed. 
We  grind  our  own  lenses.  Established 
in  business  1891.  Registered  by  ex- 
amlnatlon    1901. 

PIAiVOS  REPAIRED  AKD   TUNED. 


—THE     PIANO     SHOP— 
Tuning,  finishing  and  repairing.  Greg- 
ory   &    Kristensen,    1805    W.    Superior 
at.   Melrose   6621;   Lin.    296-^:. 

DULUTH  PIANO  Repair  factory,  alley 
entrance.   312 '/jt    W.    1st    st.   Mel.    464. 

PAPERS    AND    MAGAZINES    BOUGHT. 

DON'T  THROW  away  old  magazines 
and  newspapers;  we  buy  them.  Du- 
luth Paper  Stock  Co.  Grand  2026.  MeL 
6339. 


PAINTING  AND  PAPERING. 


PHONE  1245  and  our  auto  will  call. 
Prompt  attention  to  out-of-town  or- 
ders.   East    End    Dry    Cleaners. 


FURNITURE  RE-COVERED. 

Let  Forsell   do   your   UPHOLSTERING. 
334    E.    Superior    st.     Both    phones. 


FOR  SALE — $750  player  piano  for  $285 
and  $375  piano  for  $225.  also  $300 
piano  for  $165.  cash  or  time.  Korby 
Piano   Co..    26   Lake   ave.   n. 

DOGS  of  all  breeds  bought  and  sold; 
expert  on  dog  diseases;  dogs  boarded. 
Stamp  for  reply.  Gordon  Dale  Kennels, 
Park    Point.    Mel.    6101.       


FLORIST    AND    NURSERYMAN. 


Duluth  Floral  Co.,  wholesale,  retail;  cut 
flowers,    funeral    designs.    121  W.  Sup. 


FUNERAL    DIRECTOR. 


OLSEN    &    HOPPENYAN.    2014    W.    Su- 
perior St.;  Lin.   10;   Mel.   7620. 


WHEN  YOU  want  to  paint  and  paper, 
call  Dudley  for  right  prices.  Mel. 
1390-X;    Grand    1488-X 


PATENTS. 

All  about  patents;  consultation  free. 
S  Geo  Stevens.  716  Fidelity.  Mel.  3121. 
L^—^a — *  * 


PLUMBING. 

THE   SANITARY    Plumbing   Co.,    34    W. 
Ist    St..    plumbing    and    healing. 


WINDOW  CLEANING. 


National  Window  Cleaning  Co.,  expert 
In  cleaning  woodwork,  wall  paper, 
marble,  etc.  Our  work  must  prove  sat- 
isfactory;  prices   reasonable.   Mel.   680. 


PERSONAL — For    side    people,    flowers. 
Duluth  Floral  Co.  


FOR  SALE — Used  gas  ranges,  re-enam- 
eled and  put  In  good  repair  at  very 
easy  figures.  Anderson  Furniture 
Co..   21st  ave.  w. 

FOR  SALE — Two  velvet  store  window 
drapery  and  window  floor  covering; 
will  sell  cheap.  123  Ist  ave.  w.  Mel. 
1366.  ___^__ 


FOR  SALE — New  $35  cabinet  gas 
range  never  been  used,  price  rea- 
sonable.   Mel.    7483.    1809    Jefferson   at. 


FOR  SALE — $350  almost  new  piano; 
will  take  $165;  one-half  cash,  balance 
on    time.      Address    A   948,    Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Cheap,  or  exchange,  gold- 
en oak  sideboard  and  Idaho  heater, 
nearly  new.     724  E.  5th  st. 

FOR  SALE — Two  second-hand  pianos 
in  first-class  order.  The  Piano  Shop, 
1805  W.   Superior  st.    


FOR  SALE— MISCELLANEOUS 

(Contlnaed.) 

^^^it^i^i^i^i^iii^mif^^^ 

*  I 

*  FOR  SALE.  4 

*  FINE  USED  KNABE  PIANO.        * 

it.       Mahogany  case.     $140,  on  easy       •^ 
^       terms.     Address  A  950,  Herald.       * 

*  I 

FOR  SALE — Bedroom,  dining  and  liv- 
ing room  furniture,  draperies.  Orien- 
tal rugs,  odd  chairs,  davenport,  cur- 
tains, library  table.  Ice  box,  etc.;  all 
to  be  sold  very  cheap.  Come  now  or 
tomorrow  morning,  afternoon  or  eve- 
ning. Mrs.  Henry  Abraham,  2422  E. 
3rd  St. . 

FOR  SALE  —  Fine  oak  combination 
sideboard  and  china  closet;  cost  over 
$50;  will  sell  for  $20.  Call  at  2106 
E.    6th  St.  


__FOR^A]£ORJX^^ 

WANTED  TO  EXCHANGE — 80  acres 
near  Rabbitt  lake  and  nice  Improved 
farm  In  Aitkin  county  for  standing 
timber.  Northern  Realty  Co.,  527 
Manhattan   bldg.  


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

,     ,,    III     -11 ,  -,.  ■i'»ii_i  i>^    *.  !■-*    -.^i-i  —111  — ^  ^1     ^1  '*■  "i^n 

Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Rail  Road. 

♦♦VcnMllioM    Roate." 


DIXITU— 


ACRE  TRACTS 


JEWELRY  REPAmED^___ 

Have  Lange  do  your  repairing  right. 
Ca/h  tnrnld  kmI     13  Lakj^  ave>.  n. 

"board  ANO  R5JM^^^^5_ 

^J^XrD^^ANeT"  ROOM  OFFERED— 
rstrlctly  private:  references  must  be 
furnished.      301   E.   4th  at. 

Mod-rn    furnished     r.tom     w.ih     board.' 
Mel.  4184.  21$  B.  8rd  st.  • 


FOR  SALE — A  6-acfe  tract.  Just  the 
thing  for  poultry,  etc.;  four  miles 
from  city  limits  of  Superior  and  1 
mile  from  two  railway  stations,  with 
paved  auto  road  to  Duluth  and  Supe- 
rior; dally  mall  service;  truck  grow- 
ers Irt  this  district  have  made  $600 
per  acre  and  better  on  berries;  land 
can  be  cleared  for  $12.60  per  acre  and 
is  level,  and  free  from  rock;  price 
$385.  on  easy  pay|««nts;  $26  cash  and 
$6  per  month.  Helmbaugh  &  Spring, 
1103  Tower  ave.,  guperlor.  Wis.  Both 
phones. 

FOR^ALE— Acre  tracts  one  mile  from 
street  railway;  $125.  $10  down.  $6 
monthly.  Wahl-Mease^,  Lonsdale  Mdg. 


FOR  SALE — Household  furniture,  ex- 
cellent condition;  owner  leaving  city. 
Call  431   E.   2nd  st. 

FOR  SALE — New  cedar  rowboats  and 
launches.  Patterson  Boat  Co.,  6th  ave. 
w.  and  Railroad  st.  


FOR  SALE — Player  piano,  with  music, 
at  a  bargain;  easy  payments.  Edmont, 
18   3rd   ave.   w. ^ 

FOR  sale: — Complete  4-room  outfit 
of  nearly  new  furniture.  826  6th  ave. 
e.,    upstairs.        ■        

FOR  SALE — Steel  range  and  heater. 
Will  sell  cheap  If  taken  at  once.  412 
E.  6th  St.  


FOR  SALE — One  new  metal  shoe  shin- 
ing stand,  at  a  bargain.  Gopher  Shoe 
Repalp   Co.,    17    2nd   ave.   w. 

FOR  SALE— RoUtop  oak  desk  and 
chair;    fine  condition.  413  Fidelity  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — One  set  of  single  harness, 
cheap  if  taken  at  once.    418  6th  ave.  e. 


Knife  RlTer,  Two  HtrtMn, 
Tower,  Ely,  Wluton,  Au- 
rora, Bl«»bik,  McKlnley 
SparU,  LTcletb.  UUbert, 
Vlrttnl*. 


LesTc. 


Am?*. 


•  7 .304.111. 

t  3:15p.m. 
tU-30p.B. 


tll:30».a. 

SlOiloOB. 

sl0  46i>.a. 


• ^Ually.      t— l^'llf    txnpt   aauiv.     t — Mixed    trato 

lM«v«     daily     (roa     Fiftecntii     AveiuM     East     SUUoo. 

« Mlxrd  train   arrlfn  daily  eirept  Sunday   at  Fifteeotk 

AffQua    East   SUtlon.      x— ArrlTes    LfOoo    Depot    Sunday 
only. 


DULUTH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 

Offlcci     426  Went  Superior  8U 
Pl»«>«e«,    »«8. 


Lctfe. 


Anln^ 


FOR  SALE— Cabi»  and  acre,  4  blocks 
fr  .m  English  Inn;  cheap  for  cash  If 
taken   at  once.   \yrtt»  Z   111,   Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Half  acre  near  power  sta- 
tion Bay  Vl-^w  Heights.  Charles  Lar- 
•en,'  1601  W.  Superior  st 


FOR  SALE — $660  player  piano;  cash  or 
terms  can  bo  arranged.  $246.  Z  867, 
Herald 

FOR  SALE— Household  furniture.  In- 
cluding gas  range,  at  103  N.  2Sid 
ave.   w^ 

FOR  SALE— I  have  a  dandy  6-month, 
old  female  Airedale;  $5.     Doug.  182-M- 


FOR  SALE— $250  new  piano;  will  take 
$125    cash.      Address    A    941,    Herald. 

FOR  SALE— Encyclopedia  Brltannlca; 
30  volumes;  cheap.     Call  Lin.  1<6-X. 

FOR  SALE — Furniture,  odds  and  ends 
at   half   price.      Boston    Music    Co. 

FOR  SALE— Two  8-foot  counters  and 
cash    register.     Call  Un.   140-0. 

FOR'SALE — Collapsible  baby  go-cart, 
good    condition.    704    E.    4th.    st. 

FOlT'SALE — Golden  oak  dining  room 
table.     1815   E.   2nd  st. 

FOR    SALE    CHEAP— Large    rug.     IBII 

E.  3rd  St. 

FOR     SALE— Piano,    cheap.     Call    Mel. 

'     405. 


f  Hlbblni,  Chlsholm,   Virginia,  Ere- 1 

\\    Utti,   Coleralue.    Bbarou.   tMoun-  l*  S:2lMi 

i       tain   Iron,    Sparta,    Bi»»')ik.  J 

f       Eibbins,    Cbisbolm,    btiaruo,  ] 

•$JO»a{  VlrtinU,    RTeletU.  )'*tOJl«a 

^Coleralae.  j 

VlrdnU.  I 

riHUNi^  Cblsbolm  ^*tC4i»a 

'^"^^ HibMm.  J 

•—Dally.      f_Dall/    except    Sunday!      |— Except  "5 

wablH. . 

Cafe   Observation    Car.    Missabe    Rang* 
Points.  Solid  Vestlbuled  Train. 


OULUTH  k  NORTMERN  MINNEStTA  GAIwWAY. 

OftM,  110  LonriaU  BI4|.,   Om.-tti. 

Trains   cwaiect  at   Knife    Kiver   dniiy    (txnpt   Sunday) 

viUi  D     A   1     K-    tf^nii   l<'avln<   Dulutb   at  7:30  a.    ■.. 

ZrrlTlnf'  at  UtiUith  (Kndlon)   »t  10  15  p.  m.     CooMct  ai 

Cramer  with  Grand  Maral*  SUfe  wb»a  ninniBt. 


tOBSCBUE  FBB  TBE  HEBAU 


OMtt 


/ 


.mm     ......J 


IH- 


( 


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I 


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«P!Hlri 


Wednesday, 


THE  DULU.TILHEBAIiD 


April  12, 1916. 


YOUJI  CIlMiiT 

COUE  TO  TIHIE 

OFFOCE 


TELEPHONE 

YOUR  WANT  ADS 

-  TO  THE- 

DULUTH  HERALD 

Both  Phones  324 

T  F.  I.  K  r  II  O  \  t:  WAXT  ADS— Ai  e 
cbHiK"  d  at  ih<-  same  rate  an  oash  ads, 
and  ot>nt«tii«iis  will  bfc  made  at  your 
home  or  office  as  soon  as  p<i«»ible 
theieaftei.  'I'hln  is  an  accommodation 
ti«Tvke,  and  paj  rnent  Hhoiild  be  made 
promptly  when  the  bill  is  presented, 
f>(^  as  to  avoi.l  further  annoyance  and 
to  aid  the  effitlen<y  of  our  service. 
Alway.s  ask  that  your  telephone  ad  be 
rept-nted  ba<k  to  you  by  the  telephone 
Hd  taker,  to  make  sure  that  It  has 
b«  « II    correctly    taken. 

BI.IM)  AIJS — N'o  nnswers  to  blind  ads 
will  be  Klven  unl.ss  ticket  is  present- 
ed at  time  of  iet|uest.  Always  save 
tick"  t  showing  *<'y  number  when 
placing  blind  ads.  Herald  employes 
are  not  permittetl  to  tell  who  any  ad- 
vertiser is.  Answers  to  out-of-town 
Mind  ads  will  be  forwarded  without 
frxtra  cost. 


One    Tent    a    Word    Each    Innertion. 
^u  AiltrrllNeinent    l.mN   TIimii    15   C>n(«. 

WAXTKl)  —  First-class  bollermaker 
and  shop  f»'reman.  capable  of  laylnR 
out  work,  and  thorouRhly  familiar 
with  rtailing  blue  prints.  To  .such  a 
man  there  is  an  excellent  opportunity 
for  a  permanent  pos^ltion,  with  ad- 
vanct  ment.  AnswerlnR  fully  statinjf 
Bjare,  experience,  whether  married  or 
dlnKle,  antl  salary  expected.  St.  Paul 
Boiler  ^^i   Manufacturing  Co. 


W'AXTKD — Duluth  Jobber  desires  re- 
liable middle-aged  man  with  clean 
record  as  city  salesman;  prefer  one 
that  has  had  drywoods  experience; 
«alary  and  commis.-^lon;  gfive  full  par- 
ticuhirs  us  to  experience  and  refer- 
ences.     Write    Y    86,    Herald. 

W'AXTKD — Young    man.    be    a    barber. 
We  teach  you  cheaply  and  thoroughly 
and    furnish    fools    free.    Write   or   call 
for  free  catalogue.     U.  Modern  Harber  I 
college.    20  >2     K-    Superior    St..    Duluth,  I 
or  333   E.    7th  st,   St.   Paul,   Minn.  | 

"^'A.N'TIOD— Hoy  over  16  In  a  general 
capacity,  one  that  would  like  to  learn 
the  li!ien  business;  must 'be  clean-cut 
and  nilling:  wages  $4  weekly  to  .start; 
answer  in  own  handwriting  with  par- 
ticulars.    Write  Y  itg.  Herald. 

WANTED— Hoy.  over  16.  In  a  general 
lopacity,  one  that  would  like  to  learn 
tile  linen  business;  must  be  clean  cut 
and  willing;  wages  $4  weekly  to  start; 
answer  in  own  handwriting  •with  par- 
ticulars.      U    117.    Herald. 

VAXTED — Men  with  some  cash  capi- 
tal to  travel  with  moving  picture 
shows;  get  our  bargain  lists.  Xational 
Equipment  <'o.,  motion  picture  ma- 
chines and  supplies,  417  W.  Michigan 
St..   Duluth,  Minn. 


On*    Cent    ■    Word    Rach    In«er<loii. 
Xo  AdvertiMeairnt   Lea*  Than   15  C>b(n. 

i^  ^ 

^  WANTED.  # 

it  # 

■}$  Experienced  girls  to  make  mackl-  H^ 

'Hf  naws,  shirts,  pants  and  overalls.  ^ 

i('  Apply —  ;■ 

%  rHRI.STE.XSEX-MEXDENHALL-  -.V- 

•*  <}RAHAM   CO..  # 

i(f  616  West   First  Street.  * 

*  ;Y- 

-.>£i  WANTED  AT  ONCE.  -."^ 

*  -r¥ 

*  COMPETENT  SAI.E.^EADV   FOR     ^ 
i^  i'LOAK  AND  SUIT  DEPARTMENT.    .V- 

*  -x^ 

vf-  Apply —  -,V 

•X-  .1.   M.   GIDDING   &  CO.  X- 

LEAFtN  TO  CUT  and  make  your  own 
waists  and  dresses.  You  can  easily  do 
It  after  taking  the  course  In  practical 
Instruction.  Make  clothes  while  learn- 
Irvg.  Miss  Cray's  school,  3rd  floor,  Geo. 
A.  Cray  Co.  Also  all  sizes  and  styles 
of  patterns  cut  to  measure. 

WANTED — Cashier  and  assistant  book 
keep»r;  prefer  fie  who  has  had  ex- 
perience In  handling  Installment  ac- 
counts and  collections.  A.sk  for  Mr. 
Osborn,  Rellnet  Installment  Co.,  202 
E.    Superior  st. 

WANTED — Experienced  trimmer  for 
our  millinery  department;  also  ex- 
perienced saleslady  for  cloak  depart- 
ment; one  who  can  speak  Finnish 
preferred.  Apply  Lt.  Abram.  17  E. 
Superior   st. 


itM^e^L^^^rir^r^ZeArrt^t^trt^t^  tUZtfjUArjfi 


V« 


WANTED — I.«idy  and  men  agent.s  to 
sell  magazine  giving  a  valuable  pre- 
mium free;  can  earn  $3  to  $6  a  day 
for  6  to  8  hours'  work.  Apply  306 
Board   of   Trade    bldg.,   Superior,   Wla. 


WJIXTED — Competent  maid  for  gen- 
eral housework;  one  who  can  do  the 
cooking  and  part  of  washing;  $26  per 
month.      1&21    E.    3rd   st^ 

WANTED  —  Women  as  government 
clerks,  J70  month;  Duluth  examina- 
tions coming.  Franklin  Institute,  Dept. 

t46  N..  Rochester,  N.   Y. 


WANTED— 600  shiny  suits  at  once.  We 
specialize  In  taking  the  sliine  out. 
Orpheum  Dry  Cleaners,  131  E.  Supe- 
rior   St.      Mel.    1168. 


W'ANTED — Willing  girl  for  general 
housework;  three  In  family;  good 
home  to  right  party.  Cole  14-D,  630 
N.  6J»th  ave.  w. 


WANTED — Young  girl  to  assist  with 
housework;  small  family;  one  who  can 
go  home  nights.  Apply  15  S.  17th 
ave.    e. 


About 
Want  Ad 

Phone  Orders 


The  Herald  is  glad  to  accommodate  pa- 
trons by  taking  ads  over  the  phone — it  makes 
it  so  easy  and  convenient. 

If  reasonable  care  is  exercised  there  is  no 
occasion  for  errors.  Patrons  should  be  care- 
ful to  have  their  ads  read  back  and  see  that 
they  are  correct.  Should  an.  error  occur,  we 
should  be  notified  at  once,  for  we  cannot  be 
responsible  for  more  than  one  wrong  inser- 
tion. 

One  of  the  considerations  on  which  we 
take  phone  orders  is  that  bills  be  paid  on 
presentation.  Our  collectors  should  not  be 
expected  to  call  more  than  once  for  these 
small  amounts. 

Phone  Your  Want  Ad  to 

THE  HERALD 

Both  Phones  324 


0«e    Cent    ■    Word   Each   Inxertion. 
yo  Advertlaement  I^aa  Than   15  Cents. 

?0SjEST^FLm^ 

■?&  FOR  RENT.  * 


One    Cent    a    Word    Each   Insertion. 
Xo  Advertlaement  Lesa  Than  15  Cent*. 

a.  FOR  RENT.  ■»[ 


SECRET  SOCIETIES 


Matt«soc,  S"C 


PALESTINK  LOWJE  .NO.    79.   A.   F.    *  1. 

M.— Regular  mertlnts  flret  and  thlnl  Mon- 
day *»enlngs  of  each  nooth  at  7:30  c  cloek. 
N«-rt  DtM-Um,  April  3.  1916.  Wort— 
Ttlrd  degree  by  past  marten;  6:30  dJniMT. 
Clement    Q.    Tovtuaai,    W.    M.;   Jam's    S. 


*    *  and  lake.     Rent  |22.60.     Apply—        vf 

*|*  L,  A.  LARSEN  COMPANY.  * 

-^;^^^2^**#';!i-;ii**^i!«^;¥«^'f***^  i  t  Either  phone  1920.  | 


ZENITH  REALTY  CO.. 
4   South   First   Avenue   East. 


lO.MC  LODGE  NO.  186,  A.  F.  *  A.  M.— 
Regular  meetlnc  second  and  fourtt  Monday 
e»enJf:cs  of  each  month  at  7:30.  Neit 
meeting.  April  24.  iyi6.  Work— Seoord  dtr 
tw.  WUUam  J.  Works,  W.  M.;  Bmr^ 
PorUT.  See.  •• 


FOR  RENT— At  316  W.  4th  St..  6  i 
rooms,  bath,  kitchenette  and  large 
wardrobes.  Will  rent  to  one  party  or 
divide  and  rent  to  two.  Building  en- 
tirely remodeled,  as  good  as  new; 
redecorated  throughout;  large,  light 
airy  rooms;  2  fireplaces.  All  con- 
veniences, including  heat.  W.  C.  Sher- 
wood   &    Co.    118    Manhattan    bldg. 


i-AJ«-3?T¥iif^.*j&**iP'»^-;^-;j*-;^;f-^;^Af'iifi!^^Vp 


FOR  RENT— At  120  W.  4th  St.,  front  6- 
room  Hat  and  bath;  every  room  light, 
airy  and  in  splendid  condition;  all 
conveniences  except  heat;  $23  per 
month,  with  bath.  W.  C.  Sherwood  & 
Co.,   118   Manhattan   bldg. 


FOR  RENT— May  1,  at  118-120  W.  4th 
St.,  2  S-room  flats;  fine  lake  view 
and  large  covered  porch;  large  rooms. 
Will  decorate  to  suit.  $15.00  p«.  r 
month.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118 
Manhattan   bldg. 

FOR  RENT— $12.60;  4-room  flat  on  the 
second  floor,  2011  W.  Superior  st. ; 
hardwood  floors,  water,  electric  lights, 
bath  and  toilet;  stove  heat;  very  con- 
venient location.  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  blag. 


—WE  HAVE  <;<)<>n  POSITIONS — 
For  nun  in  clerlf-al,  technical  and  com- 
nurclal  lines.  Strangers  and  non- 
members  especially  welcome.  Consul- 
tation free.  Y.  M.  C.  A.  Employment 
department. 

LEAHN  TELECUAl'HY  —  Railroad, 
cotnnuroial  wlrelifs,  also  touch  type- 
writing; earn  boaril  while  learning; 
write  fnr  free  catalogue.  American 
Telegraph    College,    Minneapolis. 

WANTED — Button's  Business  college, 
Mo<ii  lu-ad,  Minn.,  guarantees  a  posi- 
tion after  three  monlhs  at  $60  to  $100 
per  month;  pay  ttiitlon  out  of  your 
salary;  we  pay  railroad  fare. 

WANTED — Young  man.  17  or  18  years 
of  age  for  office  work;  must  be  ac- 
curate at  figures  and  willing  to  work; 
epiendid  chance  for  advancement. 
Write   V    104.    Herald. 

W.\NTED — Man  and  wife  for  big  farm: 
woman  to  cook,  and  man,  general 
work;  $50;  no  children  wanted.  Na- 
tional Employment  Co.,  417  W.  Michi- 
gan   St. 

W  A  S  T 1 :  D  —500  hunters  to  know  wo 
loan  money  on  rlfl«  e,  .shotguns,  re- 
volvers; will  hold  till  next  season  be- 
fore sold.  Key8t<jne  Loan  Co.  22  W. 
Suptrlor   St. 

WANTED — Cu.'itomers  who  cannot  af- 
ford to  pay  the  largf  r«-tall  price  on 
their  piano.  Talk  to  tJillu.^on  and  get 
your  piano  direct  from  the  manufac- 
turer. 


young      men. 


'•--*'    ■    •  '  ■^' »^'  ■     .  ■-    »   <I  *  ^  V'  It  11^  III  t'll,  .It.    - 

qualnted  with  city,  for  distributing 
clrciilar.s;  eive  telephone  number.  Ad- 
dr.  .ss    II    llG.    Hoiftld. 


WANTED— Machinists  and  molders. 
Ko  labf.r  troubl»^s.  Apply  Lake  Shore 
Engine   works,  Marquette.  Mich. 


WANTED— <;cod  reliable  barn  man; 
must  furnish  good  reference.  Inquire 
Bridgt-nmn-Itussfll    Co. 


Wanted — Coatmakers,  also  trouser 
and  vestmaker.  Hultgren  &  Bowden 
Co..    Wolvin    bldg. 


WANTED— Pants    and    vest    maker    at 
once.      David    Redeen,      tailor.      Buhl 
Minn. 

ivANTi;i) — Oood  tlief  for  Duluih-Port 
Arthur  passenger  boat.  Write  T  108 
Herald. 


WA.NTED— First-<  lass   tailor.    Apply  at 
once.    A.  Hoekstra.  2429  W.  Superior  st. 

"WANTED — rash     paid     for     diamonds 
Watchts  repaired,  $1,  5  S.  5th  ave.  w. 

WANTi:i) — At    once,     two    coatmakers. 
T)i  Santo  &   Howe,   410  W.  1st  St. 

WANTED^  ~ 


Boys.     Mars    &     Pantaze- 


_Jjm  ANDJOUI^ 

t,<».^T — On  the  afternoon  of  Feb.  5  one 
certificate  of  U.  S.  Steel  corporation 
preferred  stock,  one  share.  No.  81878. 
Finder  please  notify  owner,  John  N 
Nelson,  box  95'J,  care  of  Oliver  Iron 
Miiuiig   Co.,   Virginia,   Minn. 

LOST — Will  parfy  who  found  par.  el 
containing  I  dozen  spoons  near  25th 
ave.  w.  and  2nd  st.  return  them  to 
2426  W.  2nd  st.  and  receive  reward. 

LO.ST — $5  bill  and  small  change  on 
Piedmont  ave.,  between  4th  and  6th 
Bt.  Return  1931  Piedmont  ave.;  re- 
ward^  

Lf>ST — Round  brooch  set  with  pearls 
»nd  brilliants.  Return  to  318  E.  6th 
Bt..    or    call    t;rand    184S-A.    Reward. 

Loi^T — French  poodle.  Reward  for  any 
information  regarding  same.  Call 
Mel.    1278. 


FOL'ND — Oold  ring  on  Park  Point. 
Loser  call  1505  Lake  ave.  s.  Pay 
charges. ^^^ 

liOST — Ladies'  handbag  in  Sunbeam 
theater;  return  to  La  Salle  hotel,  for 
reward. 


tiOST — Pink    rameo    brooch. 
y.   W.   C  A.   for   reward. 


R»*tum    to 


WANTl'U — t;irl      for      re 
work;    small    family;    $25    per    month; 
no  washing;  references.  2319  E.  1st  st. 

WANTED — Elderly  woman  who  would 
like  a  permanent  home,  to  assist  with 
housework;  small  wages.    Write  B  66. 

WANTED — Competent   girl    for   general 
housework,  where  second  girl  Is  kept 
Mr.s.    E.   A.  Sllborsteln,   2328   E.   3rd   st. 

WA.NTEI^ — (;irl  for  general  house- 
work; small  family;  $25  per  month; 
no  washing;  references.  2319  E.  Ist  st. 

WANTED — At  once;  girl,  16  to  18  years 
old,  to  care  for  children  and  help  with 
housework.     Apply   1018   E.   3rd   st. 

WANTED— School  girl  to  mind  chil- 
dren  after  school  hours  and  Satur- 
days.   Mel.    6726.    119    Mesaba    ave. 

WANTER — Neat  girl  for  general 
housework,  family  of  two.  621  24th 
ave.    e.    Phone    Melrose    1228. 

WANTED — Olrl  to  assist  In  waiting  on 
trade;  experienced  preferred.  Gopher 
Shoe  Repair,   17  2nd  ave.   w. 

WANTED — Girl  for  general  house  - 
wt)rk:  2  In  family;  good  wages.  Mel. 
185.    1526    Jefferson    st. 

WANTED— Competent  girl  for  general 
housework;  no  laundry  work;  good 
wages.      1906   E,   3rd  st. 

WANTED— 600  shiny  suits  at  once.  We 
specialize  In  taking  the  shine  out. 
Orpheum  Dry  Cleaners,  131  E.  Supe- 
rior   St.      Mel.    1168. 


!iES22S?SEEEE5EBEEBBI! 


One    Cent    n    Word    Ea««h    Inoertlon.       [       One    Cent    a    Word    E««'h    Inaertlon. 
Ko  Advertlaement   I..011M   Thau   J5   CentN.  .  Xo  Advertlaement  L.r»m   Than   IS  Cents. 


POULTRY  AND  EGGS 


WANTED — Experienced  clerk  for  con- 
fectionery store.  Appl.v  Charles  Stra- 
tlg,    307    W.   Superior  st. 

WANTED — rjirl  for  general  house- 
work. 623  E.  2nd  st.  If  not  home, 
call    Grand    202. 


WANTED — At  once,  dishwasher,  one 
who  can  go  home  nights.  Nora  hotel, 
1916   W.    1st  St. 


WANTED— Girl  who  understands  bu.««h- 
el  work.  Apply  East  End  Cleaners, 
926    E.   Superior   st. 


WANTED — (;irl  for  general  house- 
work. 909  E.  4th  St.  Call  mornings 
or    evenings. 


WANTED — Competent  girl  for'  general 
housework;  small  family.  Apply  1616 
Jefferson  st. 

WANTED— (Jlrl  for  general  house- 
work;  family  of  two.  Apply  1601  E. 
Superior  st. 

WANTED — C.Iri  for  general  house- 
work;  no  cooking.  Apply  at  once,  1316 
K    6th   St. 

WANTED — Competent  girl  for  general 
housework;  no  washing.  1614  E.  .Su- 
perior  St. 

AVANTED — Girl  for  general  house- 
work;  house  cleaning  done.  1906  E. 
5th    St. 

WANTED — At  once;  housekeeper  on 
farm.  Address  Box  7,  Deer  River, 
Minn. 

WANTED — Competent  gill  for  general 
housework;   3  In  family.  2330  E.  5th  st. 

WANTED— Good,  experienced  cook; 
must  furnish  reference.  2401  E.  6th  st. 

WANTED— Good  girl  fW  general 
housework;   3  In   family.  1028  B.  2nd  st. 

WANTED— Neat  girl  for  general 
housework;   three  adults.     Lin.  256-D. 

WANTED— Experienced  waitress.  At 
City   Restaurant,    608   W.    Superior   st. 

WANTED— Girl  tor  general  house- 
work.      14   N.    19th   ave.    e.   Mel.    6953. 


WANTED— Girl      for     general     house- 
work.   1901    E.   6th   St.   Mel.    3347. 


WANTED— Competent    maid     for     gen- 
eral  housework.     2621   E.  6th  st. 

WANTED — Gin  for  general  housework 
616  W.  3rd  st.     Frank  Mucllla. 


WANTED— Girls    at    Somers'     Employ- 
ment office.  13  E.  Superior  st. 


WANTED — Lady      solicitors;      no     ped- 
dling.     1806    W.    Superior   st. 


WANTED— Good       girl       for       general 
housework.     318    10th    ave.    e. 

WANTED — (Jirl  for  general  housework 
small  family.  1822  E.  3rd  st. 

WA.NJTED — Maker   and   apprentice   girl 
114    W.    4th   St.    Millinery. ^^ 

WANTED— Girl      for      general    house- 
work.      1206   E.   3rd  st. 

WANTED— Girl      for      general      housed 
work.      1603    E.    4th    St. 


WANTED— Maid     for     general     house- 
work.  2031    E.    1st  St. 

WANTED— Girl  for  general    housework. 
1116  E.  3rd  St. 


WANTED— Girl   for  general   work.     St 
liUke'a    hospital. 

WA.NTED— Girl  for  general  housework. 
130  6th  ave,  w. 


WANTED— Girl  to  help  In  kitchen.  2631 
W.  .Superior  st. 


WANTED — Experienced   cook.     1306    E 
2nd    St. 


WANTED— Maid  at  1816  E.  2nd  st. 


ADIERTISE  il  THE  HEIAIQ 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD  IS  THE  REC- 
OGNIZED   POULTRY     MEDIUM. 
It  Is  the  official  paper  of  the  poultry 
raisers    of    Duluth    and    Northern    Min- 
nesota. 

CIRCULATION  LARGEST. 
RATES  LOAVEST. 
The  Duluth  Herald  has  the  largest 
oil  dilation  of  any  newspaper  in  Min- 
nesota (outside  the  Twin  Cities).  Its 
charges  for  classified  advertising  are 
less  per  thousand  circulation  than 
those   of  any  other  paper  In  the  state. 

Hatching  eggs  from  celebrated  "Point 
o'  Pines  Farm."  largest  and  finest 
modern  poultry  plant  In  N.  W.  Pure- 
bred egg-laying  strains.  S.  C.  W.  Leg- 
horns. 15  eggs.  $1.60;  100.  $5.  S.  C.  R. 
I.  Reds,  15  eggs.  $1.75;  100.  $6.  Write 
now.     Reserve,   Wis. 

FOR  SALE— Eggs  for  hatching.  S.  C. 
White  Leghorn.  $1  a.  setting  of  $16, 
or  $5  per  hundred.  Barred  Plymouth 
of  laying  strains  on  free  range.  Both 
phones,  Mel.  7363.  Grand  1019-A.  St. 
James'   Orphanage. 

FOR  SALE — Hammerbeck's  ikardy.  dis- 
ease-resisting, winter-laying,  exhibi- 
tion White  Leghorns;  winners  wher- 
ever thown;  egg.^  anel  chKks.  Send  for 
price  list.  H.  J.  Hammtrbeck,  Supe- 
rior, Wis. 

FOR  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  this 
year's  winning  H.  C.  R.  I.  Reds:  Vlc- 
land  strain;  year-round  layers;  fl.60 
for  15.  $4.50  for  60:  order  early.  I.  W. 
GUleland.  607  S-  71st  ave.  w.  Cole  146-A. 

HATCHING  EGGS  from  iny  choice 
S.  C.  White  Leghorns;  no  better  lay- 
ing strain;  16  eggs  $1;  100  eggs  $5. 
Mrs.  T.  J.  Griffith,  4309  London  road, 
Duluth;  Lake.  69-K. 

Park  .&  Pollard's  poultry  feeds 
are  the  best.  Scratch  feed,  egg 
mash,  growing  feed,  etc.;  wheat 
lorn.  etc.  Get  price  list.  Tess- 
man  Bros.  Co.,   26-40   E.   Mich.  st. 

FOR  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  high- 
class  Barred  Plymouth  Rocks.  White 
Wyandottes.  R.  C.  Black  Mlnoreas, 
White  Leghorns.  Anconas  an..l  turkeys. 
J.    T.    Mlchaud.    Lake.    298-L;    Park    4. 

FOR  SALE— White  Rock  eggs.  Fishel 
fanuais  strain.  No.  1  pen,  $1.60.  16; 
No.  2  pe-n.  $2,  16.  Herbert  J.  Prout. 
Ironwood,    Mich. 

FOR  SALE— S.  C.  Rhode  Island  Red 
hatehlng  eggs.  S.  E.  Patte-rson.  4628 
Regent  st.     Phone   280-L  Lake. 

FOR  SALE — Eggs  for  hatching  from 
choice  Buff  Leghorns,  $1  •^er  16.  Dr. 
Zaun,    South    Range,    Wis. 

R.  1.  RED  settings,  76c  Jap  Silkies 
settings,  $3.     H.  I.  Gooch:     Mel.  3361. 

FOR  SALE— White  Orpington  eggs.^ifi 
a  setting.     C.  Hegg.     e^ole  361-Y. 


ADDinONIL  WANTS 
ON  PAGES  20  AND  21 

—THE  NEW  ALirXANDRIA— 
A  few  desirable  rooms  now  vacant  nt 
special  rates;  well-heated  and  com- 
fortable apartments.  Private  tele- 
phone In  every  room.  Dining  room  in 
In    connection.    322    W.    2nd   st 


FOR  RENT — Finest  7-room  modern  flat 
in  city;  all  outside  rooms  in  Minne- 
sota flats.  118  E.  4th  St.;  only  $46  per 
month,  including  heat  and  janitor 
service.  Chas.  P.  Meyers,  611  Al- 
worth   bldg. 

FOR  RENT— 1  3-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building;  1  4-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building.  Apply  Anderson  Drug  Store. 
2904  W.  3rd  St. 

FOR  RENT— 3-room  flat.  $8;  4-room 
flat,  $12.60;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out, sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers.   611   Alworth   bldg. 

FOR  RENT— A  4-room  furnished 
apartment  on  third  floor  of  Munger 
terrace  for  two  months.  References 
required.  $32.60  per  riionth.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co..    303    Lonsdale    bldg. 


KEySTO.\E  CHAPTEB  .\0.   20.   R.   A.    M.— 

Stated  convocations,  second  and  fourth 
Wednisday  efe-ninjs  of  each  month  at  7:3J 
o>;o.k.      .Nfit    meeting.    April    12,    1916^ 

Woric— P.    M.    and   M.    K.    M.    d-grws     fol- 

lonta   uy    lunob.      Stanley    L.    >Uck,    U.    P.;   .Alfred    ht 

FOR   RENT—A   very   desirable    8-room  j  ^^*^''  »■•• 

thoroughly  modern  house  on  E.  Ist  st.,  a        DIXITH  COL'.NCIL,  .\0.  6,  R.  i  a.  M.— 

near  8th  ave.,  which  has  been  tbor-  |  x<\  "Uted  convocations,  third  Friday  of  eae* 
oughly  redecorated  and  is  in  excel-  I  yi  \  luonth  at  7u30  oVlocit.  NVxt  mteiing, 
lent  condition;  hot  water  heating'  fci^^  April  21,  1916.  Woric— Royal  and  Select  an* 
plant.       For    rental    and    other    partlc-  '  MH>-rei«nfnt   d;-gre».     .Maynard   W.    Turner,   T.    1.    M.| 


ulars  calls  F. 
dale    bldg. 


I.  Salter  Co.,  303  Lons- 


Alfred  I^e  Kichtui,  secretary. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  house,  all  modern 
except  heat,  $20  per  month.  420  S. 
18th  ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  house,  all  modern 
except  heat,  $20  per  month.  521  S. 
22nd  ave.   e.  Call  Grand  1196.  Mel.  80S6. 

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  house.  No.  405 
N.  24th  ave.  w^. ;  water,  gas,  electric 
lights,  toilet,  bath  and  hardwood 
floors;  st  >ve  heat;  water  paid;  reason- 
able rental;  vacant  May  1.  F.  I.  Sal- 
ter  Co.,   303   Lonsdale   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  house  at  corner 
of  Fifth  ave.  e.  and  Superior  st.; 
bathroom,  electric  lighting,  gas  con- 
nection for  kitchen  range,  new  paper 
and  paint.  Inquire  of  C.  F.  Graff, 
405    Lonsdale    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat.  $8;  4-room 
flat.  $12.50;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; sewer,  gas.  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers.   611  Alworth   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  modern  house. 
No.  2141^8  E.  2nd  St.;  hot  water  heat- 
Ine  plant;  very  easy  walking  distance; 
$35  per  month.  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 10-room  heated  house  in  j 
East  End.  Rent  $70,  includes  heat,  hot  | 
and  cold  w^ter,  janitor  service.  See  ' 
N.  J.  Upham  Co.,   714  Providence  bldg.  i 

FOR  RENT— 6-room  house,  310  W.  6th 
St.:  modern  except  heat;  newly  deco- 
rated; Immediate  possession.  Inetuire 
rental  dept.,   Bridgeman  &  Russell. 


DlXlTH  rO.\LMA\DEBY  NO.  18,  K.  T.— 
iitated  couTOcailotis  rinit  Tuesday  of  each 
nocth  at  7:.'!o  u\ioclf.  Xext  i-oiirlaw, 
April  11.  ll;i.'j.  Work— Drill  and  lurch. 
Charles  U.  Fujle.  Com.;  .Newton  H.  Wilson, 


lofting. 


S-'KMfiC^  .Masoui 


FOR  RENT— Desirable  flats,  houses 
and  stores.  If  you  are  considering 
making  a  change  we  invite  an  op- 
portunity for  serving  you.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,  303  Lonsdale  bldg. 


steani-heated 
and    Superior 


— metropolp:  hotel— 

101-6  Lake  ave.  «.;  hot  and  cold  run- 
ning water  in  every  room;  steam 
heat  and  oth*r  nicKtern  conveniences; 
rates    $2    per    week    and    up. 


—ELGIN.  HOTEL— 
Nicely   furnished,   steam-heated    rooms; 
best,  beds    In    the'. city;    hot    and    cold 
running   water.     Ratea   $2   and   up   by 
the  week.     321  W.  1st  st. 


MELROSE     HOTEL. 
818    W.    2nd    st.,    well    heated,    pleasant 
rooms    and    board    at    epeclal    winter 
rates.    Mel.    4301;    Grand    2166-X. 


FOR  RENT— AVhen  renting  3  nicely 
furnished  rooms,  bedroom,  dining  room 
and  kitchen.  Including  choice  of  gas 
or  coal  range,  you  would  have  to  pay 
$26  to  $36  per  month.  Why  not  buy  a 
Kelly  3-room  outfit  for  $69  and  fur- 
nish your  own  rooms.  Pay  for  It 
monthly  on  our  dignified  credit  plan 
and  be  money  aliead.  F.  S.  Kelly 
P'urniture   Co.,    17-19   W.    Superior  st. 


FOR  RENT— To  party  without  chil- 
dren, four  nice,  large,  furnished  rooms, 
hardwood  floors,  heat,  light  and  gas; 
seven  minutes'  walk  to  postofflce.  437 
Mesaba  ave. 


FOR  RENT— Furnished  room  In  mod- 
ern flat;  private  family;  rent  rea- 
sonable to  responsible  lady;  central. 
Call  Mel.  6686.  or  Grand  2409-A. 


FOR  RENT— Wanted— Young  man  for 
room  and  board  in  private  home; 
splendid  location;  references  ex- 
cliange-d.  S  83,  Herald. 


FOR  RENT— Large  4-room  furnished 
heated  apartment  In  first  class  condi- 
tion and  very  central.  Grand  2211-D. 
or    Mel.    3932. 


NOTICE — Save  money  on  buying  linens, 
bedding,  etc..  We  sell  at  wholesale; 
get  our  prices.  J.  G.  Valentine  Co.,  8 
E.  Ist  St. 


FOR  RENT— 2  unfurnished  rooms; 
downstairs;  suitable  for  housekeep- 
Ing.     Grand  829-A. 

FOR  RENT— Nice,  heated,  furnished 
room,  with  or  without  light  house- 
keeplng.   303   3rd  St.;   Mel.  8061. 

FOR  RENT— Furnished  rooms  complete 
for  light  housekeeping.  The  Dakotah. 
119    W.    2nd  St. 


FOR  RENT— Furnished  room  for  light 
housekeeping;  hot  water  heat.  420 
N.   24th  ave.  w. 

I  JFOR  RENT— Furnished  rooms  for  light 
I  housekeeping:  all  conveniences.  228 
1     E.   1st  St. 


FOR   RENT— Pleasant   furnished   front! 
room;     gentleman     preferred.     709     E 
Ist    St. 


FOR   RENT— A     4-room 
flat    near    Garfield    ave, 
St.;    water,    gas,    electric    lights,    toilet 
and  bath;  bargain  at  $16.     F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,  303  Lonsdale  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Small  heated  apartment 
in  desirable  location  In  East  end;  all 
conveniences;  Janitor  service;  $40  per 
month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Provl- 
de'nce   bldg. 


FOR  RENT— 6-room  flat,  central  loca- 
tion with  hardwood  floors,  bath,  gas 
and  all  conveniences  but  heat;  $20 
per  month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Pro- 
vidence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT— Flat,  303  Oxford  st,  five 
rooms  and  bath;  modern  except  heat; 
fireplace;  garden;  $20  per  month.  See 
William   C.   Sargent,    Providence   bldg. 

FOR  RENT— May  1,  6-room  heated  flat, 
newly  decDrated  throughout;  fine  lake 
view;  all  light  rooms;  $46.  Mel.  2C95; 
814  E.   1st  St. 


—FOR  RENT— 
7-room    flat,    716    W.    2nd    st.    heat   and 
water  furnished.  $30.    William  C.  Sar- 
gent.  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 6  rooms  and  large  alcove] 
hot  water  heat;  all  modern  conveni- 
ences. 6  W.  4th  St.  Call  Louis  Greek. 
416  W.  Superior  it. 

FOR  RENT— May  1,  No.  706 ',i  E.  4th 
St..  6-room  heated  flat  with  janitor 
service,  $40.  Mass.  Real  Estate  Co., 
18    Phoenix   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Two  6-room  flats;  one 
furnished;  gas,  bath,  hardwood  floors,  1^ 


FOR  RENT — 7-room  house,  rear  of  109 
W.  5th  St.;  rooms  large  and  v.eil  liglit. 
ed;  can  be  arranged  for  two  families 
if  desired.     Call  617  Lake  ave.  n. 


r\   DfLLTH    CHAPTER    .NO.    59.    H.    A. 
^/  Mets    at    Wts:     Iiuluth    Jlrst     hnH 


FOR  RENT— 1918  E.  8th  st.  to  .small! 
family  for  summer;  modern  6-room 
house  furnished,  or-  4-roms  unfur- 
nished.     Grand   2349-X. 


LAKKPIDE  LODGT  .NO.  2R1,  A.  F.  A  A. 
M.— .Meets  first  and  third  Mondays  of  each 
month  at  8  o'clock  at  Me.<»nJ?  hall,  Forty- 
ft!tli  avrnue  cast  and  Rohlaton  street.  Next 
niniiiig,  April  17.  1916.  Regular  business. 
Work— first  degn-e.  William  A.  Hlckcn,  W. 
I  M.;  (5eorsi*  E.  Nelson,  secretary,  4530  I'ooke  stm-t  east. 


FOR  RENT — 9-room  East  end  home;  all 
modern  conveniences;  will  lease  for  5 
years;  references  required.  Call  Mel. 
6406. . 

FOR  RENT — Seven-room  house,  126  7lh  ! 
ave.  w;  bath,  closet,  coal  range,  elec-  \ 
trie  lights;   $22  per  month.    Mel.   3851. 

FOR  RENT— 1301  If.  E.  2n(n t..  6-room 
modern  house.  Inquire  Henry  Nesbitt 
&  Co.,  814  Sellwood  bldg.;  Mel.  16S5. 


FOR  RENT — May  1,  large  me)d»-rn  de- 
tached house;  best  part  of  East  end; 
rent  reasonable.     CJvand  720. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  hou.«e;  modern  • 
except  heat;  Park  Point.  Inquire  Ed-  I 
mont,   18  Third  ave.  w. 

FOR  RENT— 6-room  brick  house.  i»24 
E.  Superior  st.;  strictly  modern.  H. 
Fee.   phone   Mel.   6143.  i 


FOR  RENT — Fine,  light,  modern  house  !  ^f'cf.  IS  l^a^t  First  street. 
at   1420  E.  4th  st.     C.  P.  Johnson,  219  i 
W.  Superior  st.  ' 


A.    0.    U.    W.— DCH'TH    LODGE   XO.    10— 

HKvis     every     s  coiid     and     fourth     Tuesday 

nifi.fs     at    Aia    hull.     221     Weft     SuprriOT 

jtree'.      Si-xX   nieetine,    April    U,    I9l6,    at 

8  P.   m.     Marvin  E.   Heller,  M.   W.;  R.   C. 

Fexjie,  ncordcr;  E.  F.  ikller,  financier,  509  Second  aw- 

hue  east. 

ZENITH  COINCIL  SO.  161^  ROYAL 
hapie,  meet.s  the  frst  and  third  Thurs- 
days ui  the  month,  at  8  oclcck.  In  the 
e!d  >ra9on!e  temple,  Superior  stree*  and 
Second  avenue  ea^t.  0.  8  K'Bptoo 
ardifin,    Wolvin   buUdiu«;  U.   A.    Ha]l,    col- 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  house  in 
East  end.  .S.  S.  Williamson,  615  Tor- 
rey  bldg. 


niLl'TH    LODGE    NO.    28.    I.    0.    0.    K.— 
Xi'Xt    meeting,     Friday    evening,    Afril    ]4. 

.     .      ■     ,  }^^^'   „**    *    °'"'«"'''-     221    Wert    Sup  rioJ 
iUifi,   third  floor.     Work— First  degrre   »i;i  be  e-onfi-rrtd 
(Md    Fe!lo»s   welcome.      Chaiies    F     Otfinger     X     G      J 
A.    B.-«ff,    Hec.    Sec.  


FOR  RENT— Nos.  1718  and  1720  E.  Su- 
perior St.      E.   P.   Alexander. 


FOR      RENT — 6-room      me>dern      house. 
1130  E.   3rd  Bt.     Price  $30. 


K.  OF  P. 
NORTH  ST.\R  LODGE  NO.  ST).  K.  OF  P.— 
Meits  every  Tu:>sday,  7:30  p.  m.,  Milh 
door.  Temple  building.  Superior  street  and 
S«(oud  avenue  east.  Sv\x  mc-etiiig,  April 
11,    1916.      Work— Knight    rank.      W     H 


HORSES VEHICLES ETC  '  r'"*''''"-   {-,  ^'i  <:«■«■  of^lWlnth  Telephone  company.   B. 

nunoi^O        Vtni«/l.t^       tl«/.  i  a.    Ke>we.    M.    of   F..    205   hirst    .VaUona!    I^nli-    H     A 


i^^i^^^ii^^^^iiii^iiii^^^^;;;;;;;    Bl^op^of_H^  S^,  SOSPaUadlo  buHdmg.-  ' 

w.  t-H^R«I.-:« — fJTTAR  ANTF.Kn —  Oi  i?VKk  ZENITH    fA.MP    NO.    5,    WOOI'.MEN    OF 


* 


electric  light,  large  yards,  $16.50,  $18. 
624   2nd  ave.  w. 


HORSES— GUARANTEED— 
HORSES. 


^  We  have  everything  in  the  horse  ic 
•$  line.  Country  bought,  free  from  -.Y- 
'}^  the  diseases  of  the  city  markets.  ^ 
ii-  Always  glad  to  show  stock;  al-  ■^- 
^  ways  give  a  written  guarantee;  ■ft. 
fY  always  give  square  deal.  Part  ir 
if.  time  If  desired.  # 

*  TWIN  PORTS  HORSE  MARKET,  .'^ 
if.  W.   E.   BARKER.   Prop.,  # 

if.  18   First  Avenue  W.  -Af 

FOR  RENT— Heated  7-room  flat  In  -»;!^Ai*-*>';i>'!^Ai^y^-:^*rVr^-?.^-:^^Y-V->^^;i-^^Y-'?.-^ , 
Dacey  apartments  with  water,  heat  ■!('  DRAFT  AND  DELIVERY  HORSES,  H^  . 
and     janitor       service.       Call     Mel.     or    #  FARM  MARES,  GENIi:RAL  # 

Grand    423.  |#  PURPOSE  HORSES.  -,Y- 

„^p    p^,,.- — TT— '#       All     our     horses     are    Minnesota  ^f 

FOR    RENT— 5-room    flat,    all    modern  ^^  raised.     Sales  made  on  time  If  de^  ;^ 


FOR  RENT— 4-room  flat  and  bath, 
all  hardwood  floors  and  finishing. 
106  N.  27th  ave.  w.  All  conveniences 
except    heat    at    $12.50    per    month. 

FOR  RENT— Attractive  E-room  apart- 
ment;  East  end;  white  enamel  bath- 
room, electric  llgl»t,  gas  range,  fur- 
nace, laundry;  $27.     Mel.  1801. 


conveniences;     hot 
tral;   reasonable  ren 


FOR  RENT— Five  rooms,  newly  dec- 
orated; modern  except  he^at;  $22.50, 
water  paid.      1111    E.    2nd   st. 


FOR  RENT— 3-room  flat, 
St.;  bath;  $12  per  month 
Sargent,  Providence  bldg. 


?'*^,Vn   l?f.?*'    ^«'""  I  ?g  shed.      Buy    from 

it.    119    <th  ave.  w.  |  ^  dealer.     Also,  we  guarantee  every  I'f 

if-  horse  to  be  as  represented.  i<- 

a.  ZENITH  SALE  STABLE,  * 

7^  MOSES   GOLDBERG,    Prop.,  * 

ii.  524  West  First  Street,  * 

#  Two  blocks  from  union  depot.  if- 


the  World,  meets  on  first  and  third 
Friday  nights  of  mouth,  at  Fore*t/'ii* 
hall.  Fourth  avenue  neat  and  first 
street.  J.  H.  Larkln,  deik,  312  Six- 
tieth  avenue   east.      Lakeside   23-K. 


■  .MAJESTIC  REBEKAH  LODGE  NO.  60,  I, 
0.  0.  F.— Regular  merti'ss  fi.-st  6i,d  third 
Thursdays  of  eaeh  month,  8  p.  m.,  221 
West  Superior  ftreet.  Next  meeting  Thuis- 
'!a.v  evening,  April  6.  Initiation.  iJepj- 
lar  drill.  .Mr?.  Henri-tta  Shaw.  X  0  • 
Lillian  Johnson,  secretary,   Giand  '2113-Y.    ' 


DILITH    HOMESTEAD   XO.    3131,    BROTH- 

erhocd    of    American    Yeomen,    meets    enry 

V,<^lnesday    evening    at   8   oclocit    sharp     in 

Maccabee     hall,     21     Lake     avenue     ne'itb 

.    iiiTbert  F.    Hanks,    foreman;  J.    J.    Pa' user 

M.   Oiflc?   in  his  drug   store.   2132   W»*t   'jhird 

Melrose  3769;  Lifli-olu  511-Y. 


219    E.    6th 
William    C. 


FOR  RENT— 5-room  furnished  fiat; 
central  West  end;  modern  in  every 
respect.     Call  Lin.  466-A. 


FOR  RENT— Modern  6-room  flat;  heat; 
$35  per  month;  13  E.  4th  st.  Itjquire 
Bridgeman-Russell    Co. 


FOR  RE.NT — Flve-room  flat;  down 
stairs;  modern  except  heat;  nice  and 
clean.     2321  W.  3rd  st. 


FOR  RENT — Six-room  modern  flat; 
newly  built;  heated;  centrally  lo- 
cated.    631  W.  3rd  st. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat:  modern  ex- 
cept heat.  1210  E.  6th  St.  Mel.  1496  aft- 
er 11   a.   m. 


FOR   RENT— Furnished   room,   all  con- 
veniences.  126  E.  6th  St.  Grand  1631-Y. 


1  FOR  RENT— 2  furnished  rooms  for  light 
i    housekeeping.     No.  1  W.  Suiierior  st. 


FOR   RENT— Steam-heated     room     for 
light  housekeeping.     121  E.  2nd  st. 

FOR     RENT— Two     furnished 
keeping  rooms.     112  E.  Ist  «t. 


house- 


FOR  SALE — Boat  and  boathouse-;  e.ne 
24-foot  gasoline  boat  with  20-horse 
power  engine;  fully  e-quli>pe-tl:  all  in 
good  condition;  speed,  16  miles;  for 
sale  cheap.  $326  takes  It  or  trade  for 
automobile.  Call  Cal.  319-L  between 
6  and  7  p.  m. 

FOR  SALE— 23  foot.  6  foeit  beam  mo- 
torboat,  4  cylinder.  12-horse  power 
Kermath  engine  new  in  1914,  run 
V  -ry  little'  siiice  then,  now  at  Duluth 
Boat  club,  might  assume  on  small 
piece  of  land;  prefer  cash.  C.  D.  Bed- 
ford.  Rushme)re,    Minn. 

FOR  SALE — 36-foot.  40-hor8e  power 
motor  boat.  Capitol  engine.  Dingle 
hull.  Call  or  write  to  300  Alworth 
bldg..    Duluth. 

FOR  SALE — 6  launches  and  2  hulls;  20 
to  40  feet.  Peterson  Beiat  Livery.  Su- 
perior.    Old  phone. 

FOR  SALE — Two  16-foot  rowboats  and 
boathouse.     Call  Grand  996.  C.  Schober. 


FOR  RE.NT— Two  furnished  rooms; 
modern.     210  3rd  ave.   e. . 

FOR  RE.NT— Four  rooms;  all  conven- 
lences.     424  E.  7th  st. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms.  623  wT 
2nd   St.      Mel.    6486. 

FOR  RENT— Large  furnished  front 
room.     727  E.  2nd  st. 

PRIVATE  HOME  before  and  during 
confinement;  good  care  by  experienced 
ntirse;  Infarts  eared  for.  Mrs.  Flnkle. 
213  W.   3rd  st.  Mel.   2464. 

PRIVATE  HOME  for  women  before  and 
during  conflnenfent;  expert  care;  in- 
fants cared  for.  Ida  Pearson.  M.  D., 
284   Harrison   ave,   St.   Paul. 

MR.«5.  K.  THORSTEN.SON,  nurse  and 
midwife;  private  home.  1602  28th  st.. 
Superior.    Wis.      Ogden    861 -X. 

,  MR.S.  H.  OLSON,  graduate  midwife; 
private  hospital  and  home.  329  N. 
68th  ave.  w.  Phones,  Cole  173;  Cal.  270. 

MRS.  HANSON,  graduate  midwife- ;  fc- 
male  complaints.  418  7th  ave.  e.  Zen. 
122:.. 

Mrs.  Ekstrom,  graduate  midwife.  1924»/i" 
W.   3rd   sL LIB.    U3-D:    Mel.    7468. 


R^omsT 

Duluth  Fle>ral  Co.,  wholesale,  retail~cut 
flowfcrt.    funeral  designs.  121  W.  Sup.  at 


vrovEjEPAms^ 

WE  CARRY  in  stool*  repairs  for  10^000 
different  stov«8  and  ranges.  C.  F 
Wlggerts   &   Sons.  419  E.  Superior  mC 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  brick  flat. 
607  E.  6th  St.  Call  702  7th  ave.  e,  or 
c;rand    1706-Y. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat,  all  convenl- 
ences  except  heat.  Inquire  608  W. 
2nd    St. 

FOR  RE.NT — Furnished  4-room  flat.  Ap- 
ply 902  E.  Srd  st .  or  call  362  either 
phone. 

FOR  RENT — Strictly  modern,  heated 
flat.  4  rooms  and  alcove.  227  11th 
ave.  e. 


FOR  RENT — Modern  5-room  flat,  hot 
air  heat;  newly  decorated.  611  Mi  E. 
5th  Bt. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  furnished  flat; 
all    conveniences.      Call    916   E.    5th   st. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  modern  flat.  S. 
S.    Williamson,    515   Torrey   bldg. 

FOR  RENT  —  6-room  brick  corner 
apartment.   East  end,  Mel.   1481. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  modern,  heated 
flat.   314   2nd  ave  east.  Mel.    4448. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  modern.  204 
E  4th  St.    Call  Grand  1905-A. 

FOR  RENT— 5-room  flat;  remodeled. 
Grand   1661-X;   731   W.   1st   st. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat;  water,  heat. 
2902   W.    2nd   st.     Lin.  319-Y. 

FOR  RENT — Elegant  B-room  flat; 
very  central.    608   W.   3rd  st. 

FOR  RE.N'T- 5-room  flat,  all  conven- 
iences;  $17.     817  E.  6th  st. 


FOR    RENT- 
E.   7th   St. 


-Modern,   4-room   flat.   912 


FOR    RENT— Talk    to    Giliuson    if    you 
want   to   rent  or  buy  a  good   piano. 

FOR    RENT — Five-room      heated     flat. 
1927    W.    3rd    St.;    Mel.    3368. 

FOR    RENT— 6-room    flat;    all   conven- 
lences.      330    12th   ave.   e. 


FOR    RENT — 4-room    flat,    $10. 
6th  at. 


817   E. 


HORSES  HORSES  HORSES 
If  In  the  market  for  horses  be  sure  and 
see  our  offerings.  We  have  from  200 
to  300  head  constantly  on  hand.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Barrett  &  Zim- 
merman, Duluth  Horse  Market,  23rd 
ave.  w.  and  Superior  st.  H.  J.  Walt, 
manager. 

FOR  SALE — Four  driving  and  delivery 
horses;  young  and  sound;  e>ne  seven- 
eights  Guernsey  bull,  coming  4  years 
old;  gentle;  weight  1,400  pounds.  IIo*- 
gan  &  Scanlon,  Saginaw,  Minn. 

FOR  SALE  —  Single  spring  wagon, 
good  condition,  removable  canvas 
top,  suitable  for  light  delivery;  i*ea- 
sonable  price.  Peyton  Paper  Co.  Both 
phones   118. 

FOR  SALE — Brown  mare,  weighs  be- 
tween 1,060  and  1,100;  city  broke,  not 
afraid  of  automobiles  or  sti^et  cars. 
608  N.  66th  ave.  w.  Call  Cole  301. 

FOR  SALE — Delivery  horses;  sale  and 
boarding  stables;  flrst-cla.«s  service. 
Western  Sales  Stables,  26-28  E.  1st  st. 
John  (Jallop,  proprietor. 

HARNESS  WASHED  and  oiled,  repalr- 
ing   neatly    and   promptly    done;    give    'j 
us   a   trial.    Herlan   &   Merling,    106    W.  ' 
Ist  St.   Mel.   4658.  i 

FOR  RENT — Barn  room  at  rear  of  412 
W.  Srd  St.,  suitable  for  small  shop. 
Apply  to  E.  L.  Palmer,  American  Ex- 
change bank. 

NOTICE  TO  my  friends  and  former 
customers,  I  am  again  in  business  at 
128    E.    Michigan    st.      Frank    Jordan. 

Have  your  harness  washed,  oiled  and 
repaired  at  the  Duluth  Harness  shop; 
reasonable  figures.     26  E.  1st  st. 

HORSES,~WAg6nS^  and  harness  f^ 
sale;  driving  and  draft;  $25  and  up. 
Call  at  once.  218  E.  2nd  st. 


M.   w.   A. 


IMPERIAL  CA-MP,  2206  -  MELTS  KJ 
Jorerter  hali.  Fourth  avenue  west  and 
hirst  street,  second  and  founli  Tuesday*  of 
'«^h  monUi.  Wavne  E.  Rl.hardson.  roc- 
tul.  noiKft  Hankin,  clerit,  care  Kanl;!n  Printing  cocipany. 

CLAN     STEWART 
Meeis     first     and 


NO.     50,     0.     8.     C_ 

„^„,u     c  '*'."■''     Weda;-sday8     each 

"•onth,    8    p.    m.,    r.    0.    V.    hali.    corner 
lourth  a>vnue   »est   and  First  etreet       W 
ngilar    meeting,    April    IS*     l<ei6       n"    a 
Cain  rt,.:.  dilef;  John  Gow,  Sec;  John  Burnett    Fin    sJ^' 
313  Torrey  builiiing.  '•  ''"•  '**-i 


MODEKX    S.\.\lAitlT.\\S      ' 

Ali-ILA    COrxciL    .NO.    l_TAK£-   NOTICE: 

H    .I'^'V.Py"*"   *«"^   ^■'^"^   t^"-   first 

and    third    Wednesdays,    and    the    Btneficent 

degree  the  see-ond  and  fourth  Wedneselay^  of 

the    month,    at     12     East    Superior    street 

Empress    thrat^r    biiiidlng.      W.    B     Henderson     Gfi* 

John   F.    Dans,    seribv;   F.    A     NVlile     F     fi       'Oi  >er;i 

.Natior,alJ»ankJxaMlng^^^ 

WERE  MA-WAIP  TKIBE  NO.  17.  I.  0    B 

.M.,  meets  the  second  and  fourth  Mondays 
of  the  month  at  8  p.  m.  sharp,  at  Mac- 
cabee  hall,  21  Uke  avenui:  north  Next 
meeting.  April  24.  Dance.  H  H  Bart- 
ling,  sarljem;  H.  J.  McKialey,  ckefof  i*c- 
ord.  307  CoJumbla  building. 

ORDER  OF  OWLS,  DILITH  NTST 
No.  1200— .Meetings  are  beW  ev*ry 
Wednesday  evening  at  Owls'  hall.  418 
West  Superior  Llrttt.  .second  flocr 
Joseph  E.  Feaks.  secretary,  302  East 
Filth   street. 


FOR      SALE — Cheap,      small      delivery 
horse.     Duluth  Van  &  Storage  Co. 


MODEBX   BROTHERHOOD   OF   AMERICA  — 

Duluth   Central   Lodg«   No    45«)    MBA 
iii?ets     first     and    third     Tuesdays  '  at'  J ifi 
West   Superior  street.        Charles   V     Hanson 
s  cretarj,    507   West   Fifth   street.       z«.,uh 
itiemo   No.    2211-Y   Grand. 


MYSTIC  WORKERS  Of'  THE  WORLD.— 
Zenith  Lodge  No.  1016  mceU  the  second 
and  fourth  Mondajs  of  the  month,  at  g 
p.  m.,  at  Ron  ley  hall.  112  Wett  First 
itreet,  upstairs.  E.  A.  Ruf,  aec.-^tary 
and  treasurer.  1231  Eact  Seventh  street. 


FOR     SALE— Cheap, 
Call    Park    21-X. 


team     of    horses. 


TIMBER  LANDS 


P.i;''J7'^.'''^*"'"'    ^^     1S«.    IAMEI.S    Off 
the  World,   meets  every  Thursday  evening  «£ 
8    odoek    sharp,    «t    Camejk'    Temple    hall 
12  Last    Superior  street.     Business  metiini 
Thursday.  April  13.     W.   H.   Konliier    ruJti 

.^ .     tifwid   909-Y.      .Martin    Johnson     se'cretarv' 

piioi..^    ....ind   1588;    Melroae.    3979;    temple    hall    pbone,' 

>r  T-*    THIRD      INFANTRY,      JS        ^C (T 

-^      l_,      meets  c»en-  Thiuiiday  evening,  5»  p    m' 


TIMBER    and    cut-over    lands    bought •' iin'.    u-"=    """"i;    *•    Kro» 
mortgage    loans    made.       John     Q.    a!     ^   i.  "'■^"«>°.   ^^^<^  lieutenant 


Armoo,  Tliirtcenia  avenue  east      N\*t 

met  ting,      April      13.        George      W 

William     A.     Brown,     first    lleufiiant  • 

ipilti^tiant  ' 


Crosby.  306  Palladlo  bldg. 


FOR      SALE  — Several      good      timber 
claims,    cheap.      Northern    Realty    Co 
627  Manhattan  bldg. 


w 


JWAUL^APER^ 

Experienced  and  reliable  paper-hanger 
will  furnish   new  and  up-to-date  pat- 
terns  and     paper     an     ordinarv    sized  1 
room   for   $4.60.     Painting  and'tinting 
neatly  done;    prompt  and  satisfactory  I 
work    guaranteed.      Decorator,    31    w  I 
2nd  St.    Mel.  4303;  Grand  &96-X.  1 


WEST  DlLlTH  LODtiE  .NO.  147^,  LOV'aL 
Order  of  Slews.?,  mi'ets  every  Wtdn  sday  at 
Moose  hall.  Bams'y  stn-et  end  Central  ave- 
nue.     H.    J.    White,    tecreiary.    201    .Nortlj 

Fifty-s.rond   avenue  west. 

BENICVOLENT    ORDER   OF    BEAVKRjC 
Duluth    IxKlge    Nc.     155,     BOB 

meets  Thursday,  March  2  and  16    ISlfl' 

•t    Woodman    hall.    Twenty-first    arenue    we^t    anj    Fi«{ 

•r*i-     h-    ^    K'JS^}^""-    ««"^'»^-.    2005   West    Bupe^ 
•treet.     Lincoln  169  A.  "v^'tw 


V. 


w 


DIXCTH   LODGE   NO.    505,    LOYAL  OSOEI 
of  Moose,  meets  cTery  Tuesday  at  8  o'clock 
Mooae   h&ll.    224   West   Fint  itnei.     Uti 


.SCOmSH    BITE  —  REGIXAB    MEETINOa 

every  Thursday  evening  at  8  o'rlocle.  Stt% 
meeting,  .\pril  13.  1916.  Work  —  Bepilaf 
business   and    baUotlng.      Burr    Porter,    sec- 

retar}-. 

ZENITH    CHAPTEB    NO.    25,     OBDEB    W 

Ea,stern  Star — Regular  meetings  second  and 
fourth  Friday  ennings  each  mf>nth.  Neit 
meeting,  Friday.  April  14,  1916.  at  730 
orkK'k.  Work— Ui'gular  busincM  and  b»i- 
Eva  M.  Dunbar.  W.  M  ;  EU»  F.  C*arb«rt,  Sm>. 

MiZPAH   SHRI.NE   NO.    1.    ORDKB   OF   THE 

Whit.'  Shrine  of  Jerusalem— Regular  meet- 
ings first  Sat'irday  rvtnlng  of  each  mootb 
at  8  orloe-k.  Next  meeting,  regular.  May  6. 
Irltiatlcn  and  balioting.  Gertrude  BaUg. 
W.  H.  P. ;  EtU  Tri  viranus.  W.  S. 


.ID    CHAPTER    NO.     56.     ORDER    Of 
;a.st*rn    Star— Metta    at    W(rt    Duluth 
.Masonic   tempio    th;   f.rgt   and    !!ii:d    Tu«- 
W         days  of  each   moMtU  at  7:30  o  r:„,n      Kext 
¥  meetitig,    April    1ft.    1916.      B.:!lc;:iiig    and 

foclal.     riora  L.  Clark,  W.  M.;  .Mildred  M.  iJo'^s,  See'. 

EI'CLIP  "lodge  "NOr  193.  A.  F.  A  A.  U. 
— Mteti  at  West  Duluth.  second  tnd  fourth 
Wednesdays  of  tar:.  luonth  al  7:30  p.  m. 
Ntxt  wetting.  .\p:li  ]:;.  Work  First  d8«. 
gTw.  H.  W.  Lfiuuers.  W.  M.;  A.  I'un- 
leavy,    scrr(tar>-. 


M.— 

ibirel 

Wednesdays   of   each   month   at   7:30    p     m 

Next    meeting,    April    U).    1916.     Work— P. 

M.    and  .M.   E.    SI.   degrees.     Roll   call   and 

W.    A.   Plttenger,   H.    P.   Dunleavj.   Sac 


TBINITY  LODGE  NO.  282,  A.  F.  *  A.  H. 

—Meets  first  and  third  Mondays  at  8  o'clock 
In  WutKlDian  ball.  Twrnty-flrst  avenue  wert. 
Next  meitlos  regular,  April  17,  I9l6.  Work 
— Sefond  dcgr.-c.  E.  H.  Pfrffrr,  «.  M  , 
1918  West  Tlilrd  street;  B.  E.  Wheeler. 
tfrrA&ry.  2032  West  Superior  street. 

A.  0.  V.  W. 
FIDELITY  LODGK  NO.  105  —  MEETS  At 
.Maocaljee  hall,  21  Lake  avenue  north,  f^iy 
Thurvday  at  8  p.  m.  Vlrillng  mrmbers  wel- 
come. E.  A.  Vogt,  .M.  W. ;  J.  A.  Lubfinsky, 
recorder;  0.  J.  Murvold,  financier,  217  Lait 
Fifth  nr-et.     OiienUl  degrw  April  27. 


II  T  -tlUl  Ji  '*t 


•  (  »■  ■   «>* 


r 


III,  i<r'«'"«ii  I 


-f- 


•Mk^Wk 


LAST  EDITION 


THE  DULUTH 


VOLUME  XXXIV— NO.  4. 


THURSDAY  EVENTING,  APRIL  13, 1916. 


--^  PAGES 


Sr/MFTY 


TWO  CENTS. 


CARRANZA  ASKS  WITHDRAWAL  OF  U.S.T400PS 
FROM  MEXICO: REQUEST  WILL  NOT  BEiRANTED 


SUBMARINE  SITUATION  IS 


CRISIS 


POSITIVE  EVIDENCE 
OF  GERMANrS  GOOD 
FAITH  IS  NECESSART 

Only  Thing  That  Can  Now  Prevent 
Breaking  Off  of  Diplomatic  Rela- 
tions By  United  States. 

Officials  Believe  That  German  Admis- 
sions Leave  No  Doubt  as  to  Tor- 
pedoing of  Steamer  Sussex. 

*        FRANCE  HAS  EVIDENCE        s 


CREATED  FAMOUS  "75"  GUN  USED 
SO  EfFECTIVElY  BY  ERENCII  ARMY 


ATTACK  BY  GERMANS  ON 
VERDUN  F8RTRESSES  HAS 
SUBSIDED  FOR  MOMENT 


No    Engagements   of  Any 
Importance  Occur  Dur- 
ing the  Night. 

Preparations  fbr  Attacl<  on 

Hill  304  Frustrated 

By  French. 


CAVALRY  COMMANDER  WHO  IS  IN 
PURSUIT  Of  VILLA  AND  BANDITS 


COL.  DEPORT. 


Paris,  April  13,  4:55  p.  m.— Semi-official  announce- 
ment was  made  here  today  that  the  French  govern- 
^    ment  has  documentary  evidence  that  the  Sussex  was 
I    attacked  by  a  submarine.  | 


i 


WaEhlnRton.  April  13.— The  German 
note  on  the  Sussex  and  other  subma- 
rine rnses  has  been  received  at  the 
•Ute  dtpartment  and  was  being  de- 
coded today.  It  probably  will  be  laid 
before  President  AVilson  and  Secretary 
Ltansing  before  night. 

The  affiduvlts  from  Pari.s  and  Lon- 
don.  expected  today  on  the  liner  St. 
Puul,  will  be  considered  in  connection 
wltli  the  Cerman  note  and  the  "in- 
formation" regarding  attacks  on  mer- 
chant vessels  since  the  Lusltanla  dis- 
aater.  Is  expected  to  be  completed  in 
time    to    go    to   Berlin    within    the    next 

Somr    Positive    A««iurance    deeded. 

W  hilf  the  entire  plans  of  the  admin. 
iBtrations  are  not  being  discussed,  it 
Is  understood  that  nothing  less  than 
•ome    po.«itive    evidence    of    Germany's 

food  faith  to  fulfill  the  assurances  she 
as  given  the  United  States,  such  ns 
possibly  substantial  punishment  of  the 
•ubmnrine  commander  who  destroyed 
the  Sussex  can  prevent  the  situation 
between  the  two  countries  from  com- 
ing to  the  pass  which  diplomats  have 
•truggled  for  the  last  year  to  avoid. 

The  use  of  the  word  ultimatum  in 
connection  with  the  document  to  be 
forwarded  to  lUrlln  Is  discouraged  by 
officials,  still  it  whs  .said  the  effect  of 
the  communication  would  be  to  call 
for  prompt  action.  In  view  of  the 
conclusive  nature  of  the  information 
on  the  ."Sussex,  already  before  the  state 
department,    officials    cannot    see    how 


PUT  BOMBS 
ONJESSELS 

Four  Germans  Are  Under 

Arrest  in  New  York 

City. 


One  of  the  men  to  whom  France 
thinks  a  great  debt  is  due  In  this  crisis 
Is  Col.  Deport.  It  was  he  who  created 
the  famous  "76"  gun  with  which  the 
French  have  kept  the  Germans  at  bay. 


BIG  FORGE  GF  YAQUI 
INBIANS  BEFEATEB 

De  Facto  Mexican  Forces 
to  Drive  Them  Out  of 


Officials  Looking    for   the 

Man  Who  Supplied 

Funds. 


1 

1 

. 

New  York,  April  IS.— Detectives  who 
jresttrday  arrested  four  Germans 
charged  with  plating  bombs  on  ships 
carrying  war  munitions  to  the  Entente 
Allies,  today  sought  evidence  Involving 
a  "well-known  German"  who  Is  alleged 
to  have  supplied  a  $10,000  fund  to  fi- 
nance the  flrc-bomb  conspiracy.  They 
•ought  also  the  arrest  of  the  chenjlst 
who  did  the  chemical  work  in  the 
manufacture  of  the  bombs.  The  name 
of  neither  of  these  men  has  yet  been 
revealed   by  the  police. 

Four  employes  of  the  Hamburg- 
American  line  and  North  German  Lloyd 
ateamshlp  companies  here  are  under 
arrest  charged  with  attempted  arson 
cither  in  making  bombs  or  taking  part 
In  the  conspiracy.  They  are  Kmost 
Becker  Capt.  Charles  von  Klelat,  Capt. 
Otto  Wolpert  and  Capt.  Enno  Hode. 
Placed  Bomb*  In  Sugar  BagN. 

Preparations  were  made  to  arraign 
them  in  a  Brooklyn  court  today  to 
answer  the  speelrto  charge  of  placing 
bombs  in  sugar  bags  on  board  the 
ateamer  Kirk  Oswald  on  May  2.  1915. 
The  steamer  caught  Are  from  bomb  ex- 

(CoDtlnued  on  pa»e  16,  sixth  column.) 


Germany  can  continue  to  deny  respon 
Bibility   for  the  destruction  of  the  slilp. 
\o    Arbitration    PoMalble. 

The  suggestion  of  arbitration  In  the 
(ierntan  note  was  met  with  the  state- 
ment that  th(?  American  government 
would  not  arbitrate  a  question  involv- 
ing American  lives.  The  same  state- 
ment was  made  during  the  Lusitania 
negotiations. 

Careful  examination  of  the  German 
note  led  officials  to  conclude  that  the 
case  of  the  United  States  had  been 
materially  strengthened.  The  similarity 
between  the  circumstances  surrounding 
the  attack  on  a  steamer  in  the  Eng- 
lish channel  admitted  in  the  German 
note  and  those  surrounding  the  Sus- 
sex case  caused  officials  to  feel  there 
no  longer  Is  any  doubt  that  the  ves- 
sel   was   the    Sussex. 

Senators  and  representatives  who 
called  at  the  White  House  went  away 
with  the  impression  that  action  was 
imminent,  but  that  another  communi- 
cation wotild  be  sent  to  Berlin  before 
more    drastic    steps    were    taken. 

Believe    Snaaex   Torpedoed. 

While  Germany  denies  the  Sussex 
was  attacked  by  one  of  her  subnda- 
rlnes  and  explains  that  a  sketch  made 
by  a  submarine  commander  of  a  snip 
he  tt>rpedoed  did  not  tally  with  the 
description  of  the  Sussex,  officials 
sav  that  Germany's  admission  that  a 
submarine  was  in  the  vicinity,  coupled 
with  the  array  of  evidence  at  hand, 
points  to  the  conclusion  that  the  Sus- 
sex  was  torpedoed. 

Admission  by  tJermany  that  her  sub- 

(Contlnued    on    page    8,    third    column.) 


SAYS  EXPLANATION  OF 
CERMANS  CHILDISH 

London   Paper   Does   Not 

Believe  It  Will  Go  With 

Americans. 

London,  April  13. — Although  all  the 
London  evening  newspapers  print  the 
German  reply  to  the  United  States  on 
submarine  warfare  under  such  heads 
as  "Vain  Endeavor  to  Gull  American 
Public,"  "Amazing  American  Note," 
"Berlin  Eats  Its  Own  Words,"  the 
Westmlfister  (^iazette  is  the  only  one 
to   comment   on   the   note.      It   says: 

"Wo  don't  know  whether  the  Ger- 
mans believe  that  hard-headed  Ameri- 
cana will  take  seriously  explanations 
so  childish.  If  so  we  fancy  they  have 
done  less  than  Justice  to  the  American 
nation." 

OEMANOS  PRESENTEO 
FGR  NEW  WAGE  SGALE 

Pittsburgh  Street  Railway 

Employes  Demand  Higher 

Wages. 

Pittsburgh,    Pa.,    April    13. — Commit- 
tees   representing   the    employes   of   the 
Pittsburgh    Railways  company  and  the 
Interurban    trolley   lines   which    it   con- 
i  trols   have   presented   their  demands   to 
i  the    company     for    the    wage    scale     to 
take    the    ulace    of    tlie    two-year    scale 
'  which    will    expire    May    1.      According 
i  to   the  company   the   men   want  an   ad- 
vance  of   from    20    to    40    per   cent    over 
the    rates   now   paid,   and    will   arbitrate 
the    <iu«-stlon    of    a    further    advance    If 
tho      original      demands      are      granted. 
Meetings    ar^    beiht,    held,    and    it    was 
stated    today    that    an    agreement    had 
been   reached   looking  to  the  change   of 
working  conditions  for  which  the  men 
asked.     About  6,000  employes  Are  con- 
cerned. 


the  Valley. 


Douglas,  Ariz.,  April  13. — A  large 
force  of  Yaqui  Indians  was  decisively 
'  defeated  Tuesday  by  de  facto  Mexican 
government  troops  under  Gen,  Rafael 
Estrada,  according  to  a  message  re- 
ceived by  Gen.  Calles.  governor  of 
Sonora,  and  Gen.  Estrada.  The  mes- 
sage said  the  fight  occurred  at  Agua 
Callentes,  twelve  milea  east  of  the 
Tonlchl  branch  of  the  Southern  Pacific 
railway  of  Mexico,  and  lasted  several 
hours.  .  ^  , 

Gen.  Estrada's  plan  of  campaign,  as 
stated  by  Gen.  Calles,  is  to  drive  the 
Yaquls  eastward  out  of  the  Yaqul 
river  valley.  Agua  Callentes  was  for- 
tified by  the  Indians  and  la  reported 
to  have  been  amply  provisioned  to 
withstand  a  siege.  It  Is  said  by  Amer- 
icans, well  acquainted  with  that  sec- 
tion of  Sonora.  to  be  the  last  strong- 
hold of  the  tribe. 

_ »         

SympoMlum    on    International    T,a>T. 

I'hiladelphia,  April  13. — A  sympo.slum 
on  International  law  will  be  a  feature 
of  tlie  annual  meeting  of  the  American 
Philosophical  society  which  opened  a 
three   days'    session   here   today. 


While  Some  Trenches  Have 

Been  Taken  Paris  Is 

Satisfied. 


London.  April  13.— The  attack  on 
Verdun  has  subsided  for  the  moment, 
after  several  days  of  particularly  se- 
vere fighting.  There  were  no  envage- 
ments  of  Importance  in  that  region 
last  night,  the  official  French  state- 
ment of  this  afternoon  says.  Prep- 
arations were  made  by  the  Germans 
for  an  attack  on  Hill  304,  an  Im- 
portant strategic  point  commanding  a 
large  section  of  the  territory  west  of 
the  Meuse.  but  the  Paris  communica- 
tion says  the  French  i>revented'  tho 
execution  of  this  plan. 

Attempt  to  Force  Passage. 

The  principal  German  effort  since 
the  general  Verdun  offensive  was  be- 
gun Sunday  has  been  the  attempt  to 
force  a  passage  between  Dtad  Man's 
hill  and  Cumleres  for  the  purpose  of 
enveloping  the  hill.  Some  French 
trenches  In  this  vicinity  were  carried, 
but  the  main  positions  of  the  defend- 
ers were  held  and  Paris  regards  the 
operations  of  the  week  as  having  re- 
sulted decidedly  to  the  advantage  of 
the  French.  Following  the  evacuation 
of  the  Bethlncourt  salient  the  Germans 
were  compelled  to  make  frontal  at- 
tacks except  at  Dead  Man's  hill,  where 
they  attempted  to  advance  through  the 

ravines. 

•  m       — 

Calm  PreTolls. 

Paris,  April  13,  11:63-  a.  m.--Calm 
prevailed  In  the  whole  Region  of  Ver- 
dun  last  night,  this  morning  s  official 
communication  says.  Preparation  was 
made,  by  the  Germans  for  an  attack 
on  Hill  304.  but  the  »ttack  was  pre- 
vented by  the  French  from  being  car- 
ried Into  effect.  No  other  Important 
developments  were  reported  at  the 
front. 


PURSUIT  OF  VILLA 
WILL  BE  CONTINUED 
WITH  MORE  VIGOR 

Head  of  De  Facto  Government  of  Mex- 
ico Declares  Americans  Are  in  His 
Country  Without  Permission. 

Says  Most  of  Villa  s  Bandits  Have  Been 

Destroyed  and  Mexican  Troops  Can 

Take  Care  of  the  Remainder. 


COL.  J.  C.  ERWIN. 

Col.  J.  C.  Erwin  In  command  of  the 
Seventh  cavalry  is  in  Mexico  with  Per- 
shing and  has  been  mentioned  In  the 
news  stories  for  especial  bravery  In  the 
pursuit  of  Villa. 


PRODUCTION  OF  COKE 
GROWING  ENORMOUS 


Connellsvllle,  Pa.,  April  13— Figures 
compiled  here  from  official  sources 
show  that  the  production  and  shipment 
of  coke  in  the  Connellsvllle  region  dur- 
ing the  first  quarter  of  1916  amounted 
to  6,600,000  tons,  or  at  the  rate  of  22,- 
600,000  tons  a  year.  This  will  exceed 
by  2,500,000  tons  the  record  of  1913.  If 
production  Is  maintained.  Even  greater 
oroduction  Is  expected  the  latter  part 
of  the  vear,  as  the  United  States  Steel 
corporation  has  now  under  construction 
««  Clalrton  Pa.,  600  ovens  In  a  by- 
nioduct  coke  plant  which  will  be  n- 
?reased  to  1.600  within  the  next  twelve 
months. 


Washington,  April  13.— Gen.  Car- 
ranza,  in  a  note  which  arrived  at  his 
embassy  here  early  today  for  presen- 
tation to  Secretary  Lansing,  asks  for 
the  withdrawal  of  American  troops 
from  Mexico.  Ellseo  Arredondo,  Gen. 
Carranza's  ambassador.  expects  to 
present  the  note  at  the  state  depart- 
ment some   time  during   the   day. 

It  raises  a  new  issue  In  a  situation 
already  much  complicated,  the  out- 
come of  which  officials  are  reticent 
to  predict  until  they  have  gone  over 
the  communication  carefully  and  con- 
sidered what  reply  the  United  States 
'  win   make. 

Will  Not  Be  WKhdrawn. 
In  official  quarters  it  was  statf-d  that 
the  American  troops  will  not  ^e  with- 
drawn, at  this  time  at  least,  and  that 
while  the  qpestion  is  being  discussed 
with  Gen.  Carranza.  the  pursuit  of  the 
Villa  bandits  will  bo  rushed  with  re- 
newed vigor. 

Secretary  Baker  of  the  war  depart- 
ment said  he  was  unable  to  comment 
upon  Gen.  Carranza's  note  because  it 
raised  questions  of  administration  pol- 
icy entirely  within  the  Jurisdiction  of 
the  president  and  the  state  depart- 
ment. 

Raines  Side  Isaaes. 
Although  Gen.  Carranza  raised  side 
issues,  administration  officials  at  their 
first  view  of  the  communication  re- 
garded the  principal  contention  as  be- 
ing that  the  object  of  the  punitive 
expedition  has  been  accomplished  so 
far  as  it  can  be  and  that  the  Mlla 
bands    have    been    dispersed. 

War  department  officials  take  the 
view  that  they  have  no  evidence  that 
the  Villa  bands  have  been  dispersed, 
because  they  never  had  definite  Inior- 
mation  of  their  number  and  that  the 
very  nature  of  the  situation  gives  no 
evidence  that  the  raiders  have  been 
exterminated. 

Some  state  department  officials  con- 


fessed   that  Gen.   Carranza's  note  waf 
not   a    surprise. 

Counselor  Polk  confirmed  the  state* 
ment  in  the  note  that  when  he  asked 
for  use  of  the  Mexican  railways  tlie 
reply  was  "satisfactory,"  but  was  cou- 
pled with  an  expression  of  f^urprisa 
that  the  United  States  had  not  awaited 
final  approval  of  the  pending  protocol 
before  sending  troops  across  the  bor* 
der. 

No   Formal   Protest. 

It  wa.s  declared,  officially,  however, 
that  no  formal  protest  &gainst  the  en- 
try  of  Gen.  Pershing's  columns  had 
b«  en  previously  made  by  Gen.  Car^* 
ranza.  When  the  advance  troops 
crossed  at  Columbus,  it  was  officially 
stated,  a  Carranza  general  met  thcnt 
at  the  border  and  made  no  prote«t 
either  personally  or  on  behalf  of  hlA 
government. 

State  department  officials  took  the 
view  that  Gen.  Carranza's  note  was  not 
a  demand  for  Immediate  withdrawal  or 

^ _ — — . m 

j  (Continued   on    page    8,    first   column.) 

villaWto 
be  at  urbinas 


Reported    Heading    Down 

Nazas  River  to  Join 

other  Bandits. 


PUTTING  UP  HIS  POLITICAL  BIRD  HOUSE. 


NO  RAID  ON  AMERICANS 
REPORTED  BY  ADMIRAL 

Washington.  April  13.  —  Dispatches 
received  early  today  at  the  navy  de- 
partment from  Admiral  Wlnslow  com- 
manding the  Pacific  fleet,  made  no 
mention  of  a  reported  bandit  raid  upon 
Americans  near  Guaymas.  Admiral 
Wlnslow  reported  arrival  of  the 
cruiser  Denver  at  La  Paz.  Mex..  en 
route  to  San  Diego.  He  did  not  men- 
tion ordering  the  Denver  to  Guaymas 
to  Investigate  the  alleged  attack  iipon 
the  Americans  and  no  orders  have  been 
sent  from  the  navy  department  to  that 

Admiral  Wlnslow  stated  that  the 
supply  ship  Glacier  was  bringing  a 
number    of    Americans    from    Mazatlan. 

FURTHER  REPRIEVE 
TO  SMITH  AND  PICKIT 

St  Paul,  Minn.,  April  13.— ^Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Further  reprieve  un- 
til  tomorrow  before  being  sent  to  Still- 
water  prison  was  granted  today  to 
Former  State  Treasurer  Walter  J. 
Smith  and  Robert  Picklt,  who  recently 
pleaded  guilty  to  a  charge  of  misuse  of 
the  state's  school  funds.  No  reason 
for  the  delay  was  given.     ,^  ,    ^.     ^      , 

It  was  said  at  the  capltol  that  ef- 
forts to  secure  the  immediate  pardon 
of  the  two  have  ceased. 


Band  of  Villistas  Said  to 

Have  Sacked  Sierra 

Mojada. 


Torreon.  Mex.,  April  13,  via  El  Pa«o 
Junction. — Francisco  Villa  is  believ-d 
here  to  be  near  or  at  the  Urblnas  ranch 
at  Las  Nievas,  south  of  Rosarlo,  in  th« 
state  of  Durango.  It  is  reported  that 
he  is  headed  down  the  Xazas  river  iw 
the  direction  of  the  Contrtras  and 
Ceniceros  bandits. 

Town   Sacked  By  YllIlMtaa. 

El  Paso,  Tex.,  April  13. — A  band  of 
Villistas  numbering  several  hundred, 
and  possibly  1,000,  has  sacked  Sierra 
Mojada,  five  miles  across  the  Coahuila 
line  and  eighty  miles  east  of  Jlmin«-z. 
destroying  many  thousands  of  dollara* 
worth  of  American  property  and  loot- 
ing the  town  of  everything  of  valu*-. 

This  news,  which  may  prove  to  be  of 
the  highest  importance,  as  it  is  belleve<l 
possible  Villa  himself  was  among  the 
raiders,  was  received  here  by  the  rep- 
resentative of  one  of  the  largest  Amer- 
ican mining  concerns  in  Mexico,  and  is 
accepted  by  him  as  adequately  authen- 
tic. The  bandits  made  their  attack  on 
the  town  on  April  6.  They  came  from 
Escalon,  a  Junction  point  on  the  Mecl- 
can  National  railroad,  sixty  miles 
southeast  of  Jimlnez  and  about  an 
equal     distance     southwest     of       Sierra 

(Continued  on  page  16.  sixth  column.) 


^y^^^Ciff(^. 


UNITED  STATES  TROOPS  CLASH 
WITH  GARRISON  AT  PARRAL 

Commander  of  Carranza  Forces  Says  People  Were 

Alarmed  By  Americans' Approach,  Became 

Excited  and  Fired  on  Them. 


San  Antonio.  Tex..  April  13.— Advices 

received    at    department     headquarters, 

Fort    Sam    Houston,    today    state    that 

American  forces  have  had  an  encounter 

with  either  Mexican  military  forces  or 

the   civilian   population   of  Parral.     No 

details   are   available. 

The  report  came  to  Gen.  Funston 
from  American  Consul  Letcher.  It 
stated  that  Maj.  Gutierrez,  commander 
at  Parral,  said  there  was  a  clash, 
which  he  termed  unimportant,  between 


I  American  forces  and  the  troops  of  the 
I  garrison  or  residents  of  Parral.  The 
Americans  entered  the  town  with  the 
Intention  of  marching  through,  en 
route  southward.  An  exchange  of  shots 
followed. 

The  Inference  is  that  the  Americans 
continued  to  march  through  the  town. 
They  probably  were  the  troops  of  Maj, 
Tompkins. 

Gutierrez  minimized  the  affair,  ray- 
ing the  Americans  appeared  suddenly, 
unheralded  and  the  Mexicans  wer« 
alarmed. 


T 


iHHi 


•i  >*• 


.  L. 


»_.  .^-.^ni  .—■  I  »i  <ri  •-.*-«  tf*"" 


J  I'll 'if  g. 


y   ,  Hll»H*-il  I 


=^ 


■«i^ 


-"^ 


Thursday, 


THE     IJUtLUTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


I 


WEIGHT  ON  SAFETY 
VALVE  CAUSED  WRECK 

Boilers  of  River  Boat  Blew 

Up  From  Excessive 

Pressure. 

CnllipoUa.  Ohio.  April  IS.— Federal 
Bt.  iin»jr»at  ln.sp»*ctor«  In  thlfl  district 
today  rt-portcd  that  the  result  of  their 
ln\ .  siinatlon  of  the  cause  of  th«  ezplo- 
eI'Mi  on  board  the  Ohio  rlvor  boat  Sam 
Brown  at  Huntington,  W.  Va.,  «everal 
woks  ago,  in  which  floven  nT^n  1  )gt 
th'lr  liv.'s,  Hhowed  that  th'-  ateamer'H 
BAf»>tv  valve  \v«9  weighted  down,  caua- 
intf  ex<  osslvo  sionni  pressur-^  to  biirat 
flv.'  boilers.  'Jho  fjoat  sank  and  bodies 
cf  9o»)i<'  of  the  vlctlnia  have  never  been 
recover,  d. 


MORE  THAN     MAY  5  TO  BE 
5,000  NAMES  CLEAN-UP  DAY 


Marine  news 


Committee    Counts    5,250 

Signatures    to    the 

"Dry"  Petition. 


Governor   Prepares   Proc- 
lamation  Urging  Whole 
State  to  Co-operate. 


Still  Some  to  Be  Checked—  Mayor    Prince  Will    Issue 


Double    Number 
Needed. 


At  noon  whon  the  steering  commit- 
tee in  charge  of  the  "dry"  petition 
quit  counting  names  for  the  lunch 
hour,  they  had  checked  up  6,250,  and 
about  twelve  petitions  were  still  to 
be  reckoned  with  or  brought  In.  W.  I* 
Smllhi'S,  who  has  been  in  charge  of 
th.'  'Mry"  headquarters  In  the  Provl- 
d-  nee  buildlui?  ever  since  the  campaign 
for  *ilgnalur«.-8  bepan  last  week,  said 
that  he  believes  the  total  number  of 
siff natures  will  be  somewhere  between 
6,3i)0  and  5.400. 

"I  hav>  been  astonished,"  said  Mr. 
i^mlthi*'**  this  afternoon,  "at  th.-  ea^er- 
ness  displayed  to  sign  the  petition  and 
at  the  small  numb«r  of  refu.-^als  which 
the  men  circulating  tll^  petitions  have 
nit-t  with.  Today.  It  having  become 
known  that  the  campaisjn  for  slgna- 
tur<  s  Is  cloning,  we  have  bot-n  swamped 
with  telf phone  calls  from  people  wh> 
d  (lare  that  they  have  not  been  seen 
and  who  want  to  sign.  There  was  no 
difficulty  In  obtaining  all  of  the  signa- 
tures w.?  wanted;  but  we  .set  out  to  get 
only  B.OOO.  which  Is  more  than  double 
the  number  needed,  and  with  these  ob- 
tained, we  are  quitting." 

Mr.  Smithies  said  that  an  effort  will 
he  made  to  have  all  the  petitions  In  so 
that  they  can  be  pr».'8enteil  to  the  city 
ci»mmlasioner8  before  ti>day  Is  over. 
Should  that  not  be  possible,  they  will 
he  preseutfd  tom.orrow  morning. 


Similar  Appeal  Within 
Few  Days. 


this  spring  have  the 
happy  faculty  of  em- 
hodying  big  city  snap 
in  their  models  for  men 
and  young  men  which 
ijivcs  tlicni  unsurpassed 
•  listinciiuii. 

That  tiiey  look  well 
wiien  y-'U  buy  tiiem, 
you  will  be  convinced 
and  that  they  w  ill  serve 
vou  well  when  you 
wear  them  is  attested 
to  by  V)Oth  our  warran- 
ty and  that  of  Strouse 
1.*^  Brothers  in  Balti- 
more. 

They  fit — they  become 
—they  wear  and  are  big 
values. 

mm  mi 

iDLOTiHIES 

Made  by  Strous«  A  Bros., 
Baltiniora,  Md. 


$ 


20  '^35 


.Superior   .Street   at   .Socaiid 
Avenue  West. 


LIQUOR  HABIT 
QUICKLY  CURED 


STATE  LOG  SCALERS' 
JOBS  ARE  IN  DANGER 

Many  Living  With  Lumber 

Companies  and  Charging 

Expense  to  State. 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  April  13.— (Special  to 
Th©  Herald.) — Jobs  of  many  of  the 
state  log  .scalers  v.ere  placed  In  jeop- 
ardy today  when  Oscar  Arneson  re- 
turned from  Northern  Minnesota  and 
reported  to  the  state  auditor's  office 
that  he  had  learned  that  many  of  the 
scalers  have  been  living  at  the  expense 
of  the  lumber  companies  and  charging 
the  state  with  their  living  expenses. 

Lumber  companies  In  an  apparent 
attempt  gained  the  good  will  of  tiio 
state  scalers  and  have  boarded  them 
free  in  the  lumber  camp  where  tl»e 
soalerd  were  working,  says  Mr.  Arne- 
son. 

This  gave  the  scalers  free  board  but 
thev  charged  the  state  with  as  high  as 
Jl.60  a  day  for  their  meals.  Several 
of  them  have  offered  to  make  restitu- 
tion to   the   state,   says   Mr.   Arneson. 

MAIL  TIKENTROM 
DANISH  STEAMER 

Frederik  VIII  Arrives  in  New 

York  597  Sacks 

Short. 

Kew     York,     April     13, — The     Danish 
steamer    Frederik    VIII     arrived     hero 
today  without  697   sacks   of   mall   with 
which    she    started    from    Copenhagen. 
Chrlsiianla    and    Chrlstlansand.        The 
!  mall   was   removed   by   the   British   au- 
I  thorlties   when   the   steamer  stopped  at 
'  Kirkwall  for  the  customary  inspection. 
I      Passengers  said  that  while  the  Fred- 
j  .Mik    VllI    was    in    Ulrkwall    they    were 
told    the    British    were    anticipating    a 
1  combined  aerial  and  naval  attack  along 
!  the    Scottish    coast    and    were    making 
preparations    for    it.      For    that    reason 
the     ship's     departure      was     hastened, 
while   all    lights   on   the    ship    were   ex- 
tinguished. 

While  in  the  North  sea.  passengers 
said,  a  fleet  of  ten  British  warships 
was  sighted  about  two  miles  distant 
moving  In  a  northerly  direction. 

Among  the  passengers  was  Charles 
Rigga,  a  missionary  attached  to  the 
staff  of  the  American  board  of  foreign 
missions  at  Constantinople.  Mr.  Rlggs 
left  the  Turkish  capital  two  weeks  ago, 
going  by  rail  to  Berlin  and  making  the 
trip  In  twenty-four  hours.  He  said 
that  reports  of  rioting  among  the 
Turks  were  exaggerated,  and  that 
while  food  was  scarce,  there  was  no 
extensive  itufferlng  among  the  people. 


May  5  will  be  "clean-up"  day  in 
Minnesota. 

Word  has  been  received  from  Robert 
W.  Hargadlne.  state  fire  marshal,  that 
Governor  Bumqulst  Is  preparing  a  pro- 
clamation setting  May  6  aside  as 
"clean-up"  day  for  this  year,  with  a 
general  appeal  to  the  people,  urging 
them  to  co-operate  with  the  officials 
of  the  state  and  municipalities  In  re- 
moving rubbish  and  dirt  collected  dur- 
ing   the    winter    months. 

Mayor  Prince  said  this  morning  that 
he  would  Issue  a  similar  proclamation 
within  a  few  days. 

City  officials  have  been  taking  ad- 
vantage of  the  warm  weather  during 
the  last  ten  days  and  exerting  their 
efforts  toward  cleaning  up  the  streets, 
alleys,  gutters  and  cateh  basins. 
Ilargadlnr'M    Appeal. 

Fire  Marshal  Hargadlne's  appeal  to 
the  people  of  Minnesota  follows: 

"Reports  received  from  deputies 
throughout  Minnesota  show  that  there 
is  special  need  this  year  for  extra 
efforts  to  eliminate  rubbish  piles.  This 
is  due  to  the  unusually  heavy  snow 
of  the  past  season.  In  many  places, 
especially  in  the  larger  towns  and 
cities,  the  refuse  piles  have  been  al- 
lowed to  accumulate  close  to  wooden 
structures,  because  of  the  inability  of 
most   folks   to   go  far   from   the   house. 

"Waste  paper,  pasteboard  boxes,  oily 
clothes,  empty  oil  cans  and  other  re- 
fuse combine  to  make  a  dangerous  heap 
of  rubbish.  It  is  suggested  that  every 
citizen  of  Minnesota  lend  a  hand  and 
spend  at  least  an  hour  on  May  6  to 
clean  up  their  premises. 

"Work  together.  Reduce  the  fire 
hazard  and  make  Minnesota  fireproof, 
is  the  only  request  made  by  the  state 
fire  marshal's  department.  The  co- 
operation of  the  newspapers  through- 
out Minnesota  in  this  can\palgn  is  ap- 
preciated by  this  department  and  the 
aid  is  especially  asked  this  year  be- 
cause of  the  unusual  need  of  'team 
work'  on  the  part  of  everybody." 


DULUtH  BAY 
OPIMS  WIDER 


Tugs    Break    Their    Way 

Through  Ice  to  Mouth 

of  Rh/er. 


Paris       New  York 


Duluth        Cincinnati       Washington,  O.  d   -  ^ 


Steamers  Released;  Maida 

Will  Be  One  of  First 

Ore  Boats. 


ship  can  be  used  when  another  attempt 
to  get  her  Is  made,  or  whether  it  wlil 
be  taken  down  and  rebuilt. 

As  soon  as  Ice  breaks  up  Capt.  Cun- 
ning will  try  to  get  the  steamer 
Charle«  S.  Price,  upside  down  a  few 
miles  north  of  Port  Huron,  This  con- 
tract calls  for  $98,600  when  the  ship 
haa  been  raised  and  delivered  at  a  port 
of  repair. 

READYlOR 
NAVIGATION 

Ashland  Docks  All  Prepared 

to  Begin  Season's 

Business. 


^ 


^<!fo* 


Corr€0t  Dr0»M-  Womm  ^^  4imd  Gnk 
Superior  Street  at  First  Ave.  West 

wis'Wecms 


ELKS 

DANCIIVG  PARTY 

SATURDAY  EVENING. 
APRIL  ISIh. 


I  Ruarantee  to  remove  all  desire  for 
liquor  iti  two  weeks'  time  and  make 
very  reasonable  charges  for  my  serv- 
ices. Call  and  read  for  yourself  the  inn  WOT  I^NOW  II  Q 
hun.lmls  of  testimonials  from  Du- i  ^^^  .'^yJ.^"!"  V..^'-?' 
luthians  and  others  showing  cures 
effected  by  my  treatment  for  appen- 
dicitis, kidney  trouble,  dyspepsia, 
rheumatism,  dropsy  and  other  dis- 
eases. 

Will  be  glad  to  explain  my  treat- 
ment and  show  you  now  uther  suf- 
ferers   have   been   cured. 


PROF.  J.  B.  FISEHE 

1706  West  Superior  Street, 


TROOPS  HAVE  CROSSED 

F.l  Paso,  Tex.,  April  13. — The  great 
majority  of  Mexicans  do  not  yet  know 
that  American  soldiers  have  cro.ssed 
the  International  line,  according  to  an 
American  who  arrived  here  today 
from  Mexico  City.  This  man  said  that 
i  In  th©  capital  there  was  the  most 
profound  Ignorance  In  regard  to  the 
situation  in  Chihuahua  and  that  even 
among  the  educated  classes  the  most 
contradictory  reports  already  are 
prevalent. 


REFUSES  TO  HX 

AN  EARUER  DATE 


Trial  of  Officers  of  Riggs 

Bank  Will  Come  Up 

May  8. 

Washington.  April  IS. — A  district 
court  today  refused  an  earlier  date' 
than  May  8  for  trial  of  three  officers 
of  the  Rlggs  National  bank  Indicted 
for  perjury  In  connection  with  the 
bank's  suit  against  Secretary  McAdoo 
and  John  Skelton  Williams,  comptroller 
of  the  currency  In  which  the  latter  of- 
ficials were  charged  with  having  con- 
spired  to  wreck   ttie  bank. 

A  further  bill  of  particulars  show- 
ing basis  for  the  indictments  was  re- 
fused. The  bank  officers  in  asking  an 
earlier  trial  alleged  that  Comptroller 
Williams  Intended  to  refuse  a  renewal 
of  Its  charter  expiring  July  1  because 
of  the  indictments. 

TRUSTEE'S  SALE 

I  will  sell  for  cash  to  the  highest     ,  ,  .^     «.     ^       .u  k 

.,,.  e-* i»..     A^,:i    ic     «*   in.ftA    vision.      On    Monday   th  ■    ice    began      to 

bidder  on  Saturday,  April  15,  at  10:00  ^^reak  up'  and  move  down  the  river  at 
a.  m.,  all  of  the  wood,  amounting  in  i  Kuffaio.  in  Ontario  the  tlelds  have 
all   to   about    100   cords,   belonging    to   disappeared   over  all   sections,   but    the 

extreme  e-astand  the  harbors  are  open- 
ing rapidly. 


The  bay  was  opened  this  morning  as 
far  as  West  Duluth.  when  the  tug 
Minnesota  broke  her  way  up  St.  Louis 
bay  to  the  mouth  of  the  river,  where 
the  docks  of  the  Zenith  Furnace 
company  are  located,  and  released  one 
of  the  barges  of  the  Pittsburgh 
Steamship  company  lying  there.  The 
steamer  Bell  was  also  released,  but 
the  barge,  Malda,  which  has  been 
carrying  coal  In  her  hold  all  winter 
was  to  De  unloaded  and  shifted  to  the 
ore  docks  for  loading  at  as  early  a 
date  as  possible.  These  are  the  sec- 
ond and  third  vessels  released  In  the 
harbor  so  far.  the  first  being  the 
Briton  on  Tuesday.  As  soon  as  Ice 
conditions  In  the  lake  warrant,  the 
Briton  will  }eave  for  Fort  William 
for  acreenlnfiffli 

^Maldil   One   of   First. 

The  Mulda>  #111  probably  be  one  of 
the  flr.st  boats  to  load  ore.  The  Mls- 
sabe  road  is  hauling  small  amounts 
of  ore  from  the  mines,  but  the  cars 
are  held  lu  the  yards  at  Proctor  and 
will  not  be  dumped  In  the  ore  dock 
pockets  nntll  come  time  next  week — i 
not  until  there  is  some  indication  of 
navigation  opening  and  boats  being 
able    to    move. 

All  depends  on  the  Ice  conditions. 
Capt.  G.  H.  Vrooman  of  the  Union 
Towing  company  said  today  that  the 
bay  Ice  Is  going  fast  and  that  the 
Minnesota  had  no  difficulty  plowing 
her  way  up  to  tlie  Zenith  furnace  this 
morning-  Tha  lake  Ice  Is  pretty  well 
broken  UpJ  bit  the  wind  Is  holding 
It   In   at  thft  ehd   of  the   lake. 

Accordjug^  lo  the  latest  government 
report  onilca  tlmdltion.  just  Issued,  the 
harbor  1<*  n»*rp  Is  33  Inches  thick,  but 
with  open  water  at  the  east  end  of 
the  bay.  The  Sault  harbor  Ice  Is  20 
Inches  thick  uud  there  Is  open  water 
from  ab«>\'«  the  rapids  along  the  Ca- 
nadian shore  to  below  Little  Rapids 
cut,  while  tftc  lee  on  the  American  side 
remains  firm,  but  is  decreasing  In 
thickness.  :T1»«>  ferry  has  begun  run- 
ning. ' .' ' 

Icr    IJttle    Changed. 

The  govertiment's  conmient  on  gen- 
eral   Ice  coDdUlons   follows: 

"The  reports  from  the  regular  and 
djsplay  stations  of  the  weather  bureau 
and  the  meteorological  service  of  Can- 
ada lhdlca.te  that  the  uold  weather  of 
the  last  week  has  hardened  the  Ice 
over  the  upper  lakes  so  that  there 
have  been  ,no  Important  clianges.  The 
fields  over  Superior  are  extensive,  but 
have  bogqh.to  move  In  and  out  with 
the  winds,  over  the  western  portion. 
Over  the  centra^  portion  the  fields  ar-i 
beginning  to  breaV  up  som 
Marquette  east  to  White 
fields  extend  beyond  vision.  The  ice  is 
heavily  wlndrowed  over  the  extreme 
eastern  portion.  In  Whlteflsh  bay  the 
Ice  continues  19  inches  and  firm.  There 
have  been  no  material  changes  In  St. 
Mary's  river;  the  ice  Is  decreasing  in 
thickness  and  some  open  water  appear- 
ing along  the  Canadian  shore  from  the 
Rapids  to  Little  Rapids  cut.  At  De- 
tour the  Ice  Is  18  inches  and  firm. 
There  have  been  no  Important  changes 
over  Green  bay  except  that  more  water 
Is  aiipearlng  over  the  extreme  south- 
eCMportlon.  The  fleld.^  are  rapidly  dis- 
appearing oter  Michigan  and  appear  to 
be  confined  to  the  extreme  northeast 
portion  from  the  islands  north  to  the 
straits,  where  the  Ice  continues  15 
Indies  in  thickness  and  firm.  In  Huron 
there  is  more  open  water  over  the 
northern  portion  and  the  large  fields 
have  dlsappeated;  over  the  southern 
portion  from  V^'^derlch  to  Port  Huron 
the  fields  are  extensive;  the  northeast 
winds  having  broken  the  bridge  at  the 
mouth  of  the  lake  and  the  Ice  lias  been 
running  freely  Into  St.  Clair  river.  The 
Ice  has  wlndrowed  over  the  extreme 
southern  portion  of  Huron.  The  Ice 
has  run  out>  of  Lake  St.  Clair  during 
the  week,  and  It  is  open  from  the  ^ 
flats  to  ^ake  Erie.  In  Erie  the  fields 
are  reported  "along  the  south  shore 
from  HutOn  east  to  Buffalo,  although 
the  fields  are  ■  now  moving  with  the 
winds;  nb  fleldls  reported  on  the  north 
side  of  th«  lake.  Strong  southerly 
winds    would    move    the    fields    beyond 


Ashland,  "Wis..  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — It  la  announced  that 
the  CIark.ion  coal  dock  here  will  be 
widened  ninety  feet  this  summer,  near- 
ly doubling  the  capacity  of  the  dock. 
As  soon  as  the  ice  disappears,  pile  driv- 
ing operations  will  begin.  The  addi- 
tion will  be  on  the  east  side.  The  ad- 
dition will  not  be  completed  In  time  to 
add  more  than  16.000  tons    capacity  to 

the  dock  this  ye^if,  but  It  will  greatly 
enlarge  the  capacity  for  1917,  and  may 
be  finished  in  time  to  add  60,000  tons 
or  more  for  next  winter's  storage. 

The  first  trainload  of  ore  arrived 
here  Wednesday  morning  from  the  Go- 
jebic  iron  range,  for  the  Northwe»t<*rn 
ore  docks.  The  date  for  beginning  the 
dumping  of  ore  into  the  ore  pockets  on 
the  docks  will  df^pend  on  the  weather 
conditions,  but  the  ore  Is  ready  for 
cumping  at  a  moment's  notice. 

Nortkweatern    Dorks   l:.nlarged. 

The  extension  work  on  the  North- 
western ore  docks  here  will  be  finished 
by  May  1.  As  completed,  the  tw  > 
N'orthwestern  docks  will  be  able  to 
liandle  10,000,000  tons  of  ore  during 
the  season,  provided  boats  can  be  on 
hand  to  take  the  ore  away,  and  pro- 
vided further  that  the  ore  can  be 
brought  from  the  range  In  quantities 
sufficient  to  supply  the  demand.  Here 
tofore.  the  Northwestern  railroad  has 
been  hampered  by  limited  yard  room, 
which  had  a  capacity  of  giving  track 
room  to  611  ore  cars.  This  did  not 
give  room  to  store  enough  loaded  cara 
to  take  care  of  the  rush  season  on  the 
two  docks.  Last  winter  the  company 
added  yard  room  for  500  more  cars, 
giving  a  total  yard  room  for  1.110  load- 
ed ore  cars. 

It  Is  announced  that  the  Northwest- 
ern proposes  to  haul  7,000.000  tons  Into 
Ashland  this  summer  from  the  Goge- 
bic range,  and  in  addition  the  Soo 
dock  should  be  able  to  handle  1.500.000 
tona.  makin»;  the  probable  «hlpment.s 
from  Ashland  this  season  over  8.000.000 
tons,  as  compared  with  6,146,773  tons 
l.'^st  season. 

Xe«v  Dork  Arranged  For. 

The  Northwestern  has  jxist  completed 
soundings,  covering  a  period  of  sev- 
eral months,  for  a  third  ore  dock,  to 
the  east  of  the  present  docks.  Every 
preparation  has  been  made,  and  all  the 
preliminaries  disposed  of,  to  begin 
work  on  this  third  dock.  When  the 
work  will  actually  begin  will  depend 
on  business  conditions,  the  urgency  of 
.     ..  ,  ,  the  demand  for  Iron  ore  and  the  cost  of 

>me.  but  from    j^^^^  ^^^  ^^e  price-  of  material, 
_      fi  °    .-  ^1  It  Is   no  secret  that  discoveries  have 

been  made  on  the  Gogebic  range  during 
the  last  thrr»e  years  of  more  ore  than 
was  then  being  mined,  and  that  there 
Is  much  more  ore  In  sight  than  was 
the  case  twenty-five  years  aero,  when 
the  period  of  discovery  was  then 
thought   to   be  complete. 

The  material  la  now  being  assembled 
for  the  construction  of  what  is  called 
the  "million-dollar  ore  dock."  just  west 
of  the  present  Soo  ore  dock.  It  will  be 
a  solid  «te-»l  and  concrete  dock  and 
will  not  be  completed  inside  of  a  year. 
The  preliminary  work  Is  well  under 
way.  The  railroad  company  bought 
real  estate  for  more  than  a  block,  cov. 
rred  with  old  buildings,  which  the 
company  has  dismantled  or  sold,  to 
make  room  for  the  new  dock,  w^hlch 
will  be  one  of  the  largest  and  finest  on 

the  lakes. 

, • — 

t,  u#  g,  ij#  Of  il»  iL-  O/  ^l..  li^  Of  <# 


Charming  Suits 

In  plain  or  novelty  effects— for  Street,  Travel,  Outing  and 
Dressy  Wear— of  fine  Imported  Wool  Velours,  Silk  and 
Wool  Jersey,  Velour  Checks,  Poiret  Twill,  Taffeta,  Gros 
de  Londres,  Taffeta,  Serge,  Gabardine  and  Novelty  Ma-    -* 
terials —  -^ 

At  $29.50,  $35,  $39,  $45  Upward 
Lovely  Gowns  and  Dresses 

Smart  Cloth  Dresses  in  plain  or  combination  styles  for 
Street  or  Office  Wear— Charming  Afternoon  Dresses  of 
plain  or  novelty  Silks,  Georgette  and  Taffeta,  Crepe  de 
Chine  and  other  materials — Evening  Gowns  in  a  wonder- 
ful array  of  beautiful  materials  and  exquisite  colorings—  ^  ^ 

At  $19,  $25,  $29,  $35  Upward 
Street,  Afternoon  and  Sports  Coats 

A  comprehensive  collection  of  smart  models  in  Serge,  Ga- 
bardine, Poiret  Twill,  Wool  Poplin,  Wool  Velour,  Tweeds, 
Checks,  Mixtures  and  Silk — 

At  $15,  $19,  $25,  $35,  $45  Upward 
Spring  Blouses 

Never  before  has  the  collection  of  Gidding  Blouses  been  so 
wonderful— in  materials,  styles  and  colorings — featuring 
many  new  and  smart  models  in  Crepe  de  Chine,  Georgette  , 
Crepe,  Marquisette,  plain  and  novelty  Silks,  Pussy  Willow 
Taffeta,  Radium  Silk,  handsome  Net  and  Lace  Blouses, 
fine  Voiles,  Handkerchief  Linen  and  Madras — 

At  $2,  $3,  $5,  $6.75,  $7,50  Upward 


DAY  IN  CONGRESS 


the  bankrupt  estate  of 

J,  D.  O'CONNELL, 

doing  business  as 

CITY   WOOD  YARD. 

Sale  will  take  place  at  the  yard  on 
second  alley  between  Second  and 
Third  avenue  west. 

Sale  subject  to  confirmation  by  the 
court.  W.  O.  DERBY,  Trustee. 


MORGANTHAU  HAS 


"In  comparison  with  the  ten-year 
average  the  loe  Is  25  Inches  thicker  at 
Duluth.  ^  laches  at  Sault  Sle.  Marie. 
10  inches  at  Mackinaw  and  6  inches  at 
Escanaba, 

"There  is  more  ice  In  all  lakes  than 
same  period  last  season." 

ABANDOlTWORK  ON 
THE  WESTERN  STAR 


MADE  NO  DECISION  Cofferdam  Collapses   and 

Wreclcing  Goes  Over  to 
Next  Winter. 


STOP! 


WATCH  THIS 
SPACE 

TOMORROW 
NIGHT 


WATCH  THIS 

SPACE 

TOMORROW 

NIGHT 


Washington.  April  13. — Henry  Mor- 
genthau,  American  ambassador  to 
Turkey,  said  after  a  conference  with 
President  Wilson  that  he  was  consid- 
ering resigning  his  post,  but  that  he 
had  not  had  opportunity  to  discuss  the 
question  with  the  prtfsldent  and 
therefore  was  not  certain  whether  he 
would    return    to   Constantinople. 

—^ 

Crrw«    Aft^r    Pike    Spawn. 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  April  13. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Carlos  Avery,  game 
and  fish  commissioner,  today  sent  six 
crews  to  the  Northern  Minnesota  coun- 
try In  QUfst  of  spawn  of  wall-eyed 
pike.  The  snow  In  the  north  Is  so 
deep  and  the  rivers  so  high  and  swift 
that  Mr.  Avery  fears  that  the  crews 
will  have  the  greatest  difficulty  In  ob- 
taining the  pike  spawn, 

. • — 

rinlm    Rate    In    KxresHfre. 

Washington.  April  13. — Wisconsin 
paper  manufacturers  today  petitioned 
the  Interstate  commerce  commission 
to  set  aside  the  American  Kxpress 
company's  rate  of  $3.05  per  100  pounds 
on  news  print  paper  in  carloads  from 
Wisconsin  mills  to  New  York  as  un- 
Just  and  grossly  excessive. 


tq  c^a  pumin 


A_ 


Capt.  Alexander  Cunning  has  report- 
ed from  the  steamer  Western  Star. 
ashore  on  Robprtson's  Island,  tieorgian 
bay,  that  work  had  been  abandoned  un- 
til ncict  winter,  owing  to  the  collapse 
of  the  cofferdtHu. 

The  details  of  the  accident  were  not 
reported,  but  the  message  stated  that 
the  water  was  down  when  the  coffer- 
dam abreast  of  the  boiler  house  gave 
way.  Owiiig  to  the  necessity  of  smooth 
water,  woric  cannot  be  resumed  now  as 
the  ice  Is  likely  to  go  out  any  time  and 
without  ice  the  water  would  not  be 
caJm  enough  to  permit  the  work  to 
go  on. 

Capt.  Cunning  took  the  Job  late  last 
fall  and  assembled  all  the  equipment 
required  to  build  a  cofferdam  and 
pump  out  the  ship.  The  timbers  he 
transported  from  Detroit  did  not  ap- 
pear strong  enough  and  a  great  part  of 
the  winter  was  spent  cutting  down 
trees  and  putting  in  heavy  tree  trunks 
to  brace  Ih^  sides  of  the  cofferdam. 
Several  times  he  decided  tlie  braces 
were  Insufffclent  and  brought  more 
tree  trunks  out  of  the  woods. 

The  gl"eat  pressure  on  the  sides  of 
the  wooden  wall  was  carefully  calcu- 
lated and  It  seemed  to  those  In  charge 
of  the  work  as  if  more  than  enough 
braces    had    been    set.      Pumping    wag 


SEXATE. 
Sisal   laqtUry  eontlnHed. 
^        Postof fire  roMmlttre.  werked  on  -4^ 
^  appropriation  bill.  ^. 

^  Debate  renuaaed  on  nl4ra<e  plant  41 
^  feature  of  arnsy  reorgMnisatlMi  4^ 
-%  bill.  ^ 

*  * 

4t  HOrSf£.  « 

$       Hearing*   on   the   Alexander  bill  ^ 
defining    the    po««er«    of    (lie    pro-  ^ 
^  posed    Mhlpplng   board   begun.  ^ 

*  ^^^^^^^^^^^  ■* 

LACK  OF  NAVAL  STAFF 
SAID  TO  BE  TROUBLE 

Washington.  April  13. — To  the  lack 
of  a  -general  naval  staff  was  attrib- 
uted the  unpreparedness  of  the  Amer- 
ican navy  and  its  want  of  battle 
efficiency  by  E,  K.  Roden  of  Scran- 
ton,  Pa.,  In  an  address  at  today's  ses- 
sion of  the  Navy  League  of  the 
United  St~«es, 

Mr,  Ro  .n  declared  that  with  an 
appropriation  no  greater  than  that  ex- 
pended by  the  United  Stales.  Germany 
has  built  up  a  navy  30  per  cent  great- 
er in  combined  units,  but  as  a  whole 
more  modern  in  construction,  and  this 
he  attributed  to  the  fact  that  the 
tJerman  navy  is  headed  "by  a  tried- 
out,  efficient  general   staff." 

A  paper  by  Lieut.  Commander  H.  C 
Mustin  on  the  naval  aeroplane  was 
read  by  another  because  the  com- 
mander had  neglected  to  secure  the 
consent  of  the  navy  department  to 
appear  at  the  meeting. 

DATES  "for  INFANTRY 
MATCHES  ANNOUNCED 


French  Millinery 


Featuring  many  new  and  novel  effects — introducing  the 
Mandarin  and  Bonnet  effects,  new  Mushroom  styles,  large 
Sailors,  Turbans,  Afternoon  and  Dinner  Hats  and  Smart 
Travel  and  Sport  Hats — 

At  $8,  $10.  $12,  $15,  $18  Upward 


You  Can  Be  Generous 

without  spendin^^  all  your  money.  Save  some  as  you  go 
along  and  the  time  will  come  when  you  can  afford  to 
be  truly  generous.  Think  of  the  future  of  your  family. 
Save  in  a  strong  bank — the  strongest  you  can  find. 

3%  PAID  ON  SAVINGS.  j 


T=  Northern  National  Rank 


Alworth  Building. 


ONLY  3  DAYS  MORE 

OF 


W.  S.  KIRK'S  SALE 


—OF- 


U.S.  ARMY  AND 
NAVY  GOODS 

LEAVING  DULUTH  FOR  GOOD  APRIL  17 

Your  last  chance  to  buy  Uncle  Sam's  Goods  at 

Bargain  Prices. 

W.  S.  KIRK 

313  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREETl 


Appleton.  Wis..  April  13— Orders 
were  issued  from  the  headquarters  of 
the  Second  infantry.  Wisconsin  Na- 
tional Guard,  today,  designating  the 
supply   company's   armory,    dreen   Bay 

as    the   place    for   holding     the     second  |  

Infantry     Intercompany     match     April  ^ -._  "— ..-*k-»i  n^iairN 

30    whe*n  Company^L    Rhlnelander;   M.    \A/|LL  CLOSE   RECRU   T  NG 
Oconto     and    F.     Oshkosh.     will     meet.  |  ■•  i«-^  ^'^-V*'*-   •"""______ 

The    following    officers    have    been   de 
tailed  for  duty: 


Bay  company  have  been  detailed  to 
act  as  scorers  and  take  charge  of  the 
targets. 

The  third  Infantry  Intercompany 
rifle  competition  will  be  held  In  Hud- 
son April  16  at  which  time  Neills- 
vllle.  Sparta  and  Superior  companies 
will  compete. 


tact"  during  maneuvers.     Both  are  pro» 
ceeding  under  their  own  steam. 


Executive  officer.  Capt.  G.  A.  Hunt- 
Bicker  Inspector  of  small  arms  prac- 
tice-   target    officer.    Capt.    T.    D.    Bev- 


STATION  AT  LA  CROSSE 


La  Crosse,  Wis..  April  13.— Five  ap- 
plications and  one  acceptance  Is  the 
erldge;  statistical  officer.  Second  record  of  the  United  States  recruiting 
Lieut.  Harvey  Smith;  statistical  clerk,  station  established  here  March  25.  As 
Sergt.-MaJ.  John  M.  West.  The  match  ^  result  of  this  showing,  army  officials 
will  commence  at  2:15  in  the  after- ,  j^j  charge  are  dissatisfied  and  orders 
noon.  Two  noncommissioned  officers  i  i^^^yg  been  issued  to  close  the  station 
and    twelve    privates    from    the     CJreen  |  ^^^t  Saturday.     It  will  move  from  here 

to  Grand  Forks.  N.  D. 


She  Grows  Nervous  at  Nightfall. 

More  dreaded   than   an  alarm  of  Are 


AAM!CANHEATINC[OMPANr 


then  begun. 

The  loss  of  the  steamer  Western  Star 
occurred  lat^  last  fall      Hej  bow  Is  o"t  |  —gjit  is  the  hoarse.  bra.ssy  cough  of 
?J  V^rori^m.^'l'^^e  si.  \^reerrh?p    c/ou/ro  the  nervous  mothe^^wj^o^^^^^^^^^ 
440  feet  ilong.SO  feet  beam  and  29  feet 
deep,  and  w£(»  worth  $226,000  when  lost. 

The  t^re^t- Lakes  Towing  company 
took  the  contract  on  a  no-cure-no-pay 
basis  for  $39,000.  The  expenses  so  far 
been   tft   least     as   much   as    the 


have      ~ 

amount  In  the  contract.  Until  further 
Information '  *»as  been  received  from 
Capt  Cwpniwg  It  will  not  be  known 
whether 'tb»  (offerd^m  placed  ou    tba 


this  terror  of   childhood.      Why   worry, 
when    a    few    timely    doses    of    Foley's 


U.  S.  BATTLESHIPS 

HAVE  COLLISION 

Washington.     April     13. — A    collision 


Honey  and  Tar  will  ward  oft  croup  yesterday  afternoon  between  the  bat- 
and  clear  the  throat  of  choking  phlegm,  ti^ships  Michigan  and  South  Carolina 
It  will  give  you  confidence  to  facejn  which  neither  ship  was  seriously 
nightfall  without  fear  of  croup.  Mrs. '  damaged  and  no  one  hurt,  was  reported 
Ben     Meyerlnk.    Clymer.     N.    Y.,     says:    today  by  Admiral  Fletcher 


BritUh    Steamer    T«ri»ed*e4. 

London.  April  13. — The  torpedoing 
of  the  British  steamship  Robert 
Adamson  is  reported  in  a  dispatch  to 
Lloyd's,  filed  on  Tuesday  at  Harwich. 
The  twenty-nine  men  of  the  crew  were 
landed.  The  steamship  is  believed  to 
have  gone  down.  The  Robert  Adam- 
son.  2.978  tons  gross  and  $26  feet 
long,  was  built  In  1895  and  owned  In 
Sunderland. 


Safe  Home  Treatment 
for  Objectionable  Hairs 


Our  little  girl  would  surely  have-  had 
croup,  but  Foley's  Honey  and  Tar 
•topped  U  at  once."     Sold  everywhere. 


While  the  fleet  was  steaming  north 
from  Guantanamo.  Admiral  Fletcher 
eald  the  two  battleships  "came  In  con- 


(Boudoir  Secrets) 

The  electric  needle  is  not  required 
for  the  removal  of  hair  or  fuzz,  for 
with  the  use  of  plain  delatone  the  most 
stubborn  growth  can  be  quickly  ban- 
ished. A  paste  is  made  with  water 
and  a  little  of  the  powder,  then 
spread  over  the  hairy  surface.  In 
about  2  minutes  it  is  rubbed  off  and 
the  skin  washed.  This  simple  treat- 
ment not  only  removes  the  hair,  but 
leaves  the  skin  free  from  blemish.  Be 
sure  you  sot  genuine  delatoos. — A4- 
Yertisemeat. 


^kmt 


- 


Thursday, 


I  »«^ 


1 


m 


V 


I  h 


1.5? 


V^^JM 


Rw*' 


Si«i 


\otc 


^ 


■4- 


You  won^t  "sit  it  out' 

you  CANT! 

NOT  if  you  are  human,  not  if  you  are  a/ivcj  not 
if  you  have  any  red  blood  in  your  veins — not 
when  Columbia  Dance  Records  are  playing! 

Columbia  Records  for  the  dance  are  the  spirit  of  youth  in 
music— they'll  get  you  up  on  your  toes  and  Jandng,  almost  m 
spite  of  yourself. 

They  have  the  swing,  the  dash,  the  rhythm— the  fire,  the 
life,  the  perfect  time  of  the  very  best  music  you  ever  danced  to, 
the  music  that  sings  in  your  memory  yet. 

DANCE  RECORDS: 


5786] 
5772  { 
5788 


Art-  Vou  From  in^ie?"     One  Step. 
•'Here  Comes  TooTsie."     One  Step.. 
Prince's  Band. 

•The  Hesitating  Blues."     Fox  Trot. 

"St.  Louis  lilues."'     Fox  Trot 

Prince's   Band. 

"Alone  at  Last,"    Waltz 

"The  Bobolink  and  the  Wren"' 

Princes  Orchestra. 


Start  any  of  these  Columbia  dance-records 
playing,  and  it  fairly  swings  you  out  on  the 
fioor  with  its  sparkling  brilliance,  resistless  lilt 
and  joyous,  gay  invitation. 

At  your  next  informal  affair — let  the  music 
be  Columbia  Records.    See  your  dealer  to-day, 

ITew  Columbia  Records  on  sale  the  soth  of  tvery  month, 
Columbia  Records  in  all  Foreign  Languages, 

This  advtrtuemtnt  umu  dutattd  to  tin  Dut»fhon*. 


»     • 


Columbia  Grafonola  150 
Pric«  $150 


r 


COLUMBIA 

GRAFONOLAS  and  DOUBLE-DISC 

RECORDS 


For  Sale  by  W.  M.  EDMONT,  18  Third  Ave.  West 


I 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


IVEST  E.HD 


HONORSsFDR 
DULOlil;MANIsAYMiCE 


W.  N.  Ryersonfis  Made  Di- 
rector of  Naval  Board 
for  State. 


William  N.  Ryerson,  general  mana- 
grer  of  the  Great  Northern  Power  com- 
pany, is  one  of  five  Minnesotans  ap- 
pointed director  of  the  Minnesota 
auxiliary  of  the  naval  board  by  Jo- 
sephus  Daniels,  secretary  of  the  navy. 
He  was  notified  yesterday  of  his  ap- 
pointment. 

The  other  four  men  on  the  board 
of  directors  are  William  L.  Darliner. 
St.  Paul,  chief  engineer  of  the  North- 
ern Pacific  railway;  H.  V.  Winchell. 
Mlnneapoli.<<,  mining  engineer;  J.  J. 
Flather.  Minneapolis,  urofessor  of 
mechanical  engineering  at  the  Univer- 
f>ity  of  Minnesota,  and  G.  B.  Frank- 
forter,  dean  of  the  college  of  chemistry 
at    the    state   university. 

Under  the  new  plans  for  the  naval 
board,  the  five  men,  all  engineers  in 
different  lines,  will  make  a  survey  of 
the  state,  with  a  view  of  determining 
the  possiblltles  of  the  state's  indus- 
tries In  time  of  war.  Every  manu- 
facturer who  can  make  anything  nec- 
essary In  war  will  be  asked  if  he 
would  like  an  annual  government  con- 
tract. 

"Figures  show  that  If  the  United 
States  was  to  pwt  1,000,000  men  in  the 
fitld."  said  Mr.  Ryerson,  "three  times 
that  number  would  be  necd^«1  to  keep 
them  equipped  with  ammunition,  cloth- 
ing and  other  necessities. 

"Actual  work  on  the  survey  will  be 
begun  next  month.  I  don't  know  now 
long  it  win  take,  but  when  the  work 
Is  finished,  the  industrial  possibilities 
of  the  country  will  be  known  to  the 
government  and  In  time  of  need  It 
would  know  where  the  different  arti- 
cles should  be  made.  Steel  mills, 
weavers,  shoe  manufacturing  concerns, 
small  arms  companies  and  canneries 
probably  will  be  the  first  to  be  In- 
spected. 

"If  a  manufacturer  will  install  equip- 
ment necessary  to  make  the  required 
articles,  he  will  be  guaranteed  a  con- 
tract  annually." 


AREJUNFAIR 

Directors  of  Woodman  Hall 

Defend  Dances  as  Being 

Orderly. 


* 
* 

i 

m 


Declare  Fight  in  Which  Offi- 
cer Was   Injured   Oc- 
curred on  Sidewalk. 


BUMESCinFOR 
DEATH  OF  DAUGHTER 


Mrs.  Gibeau  Says  Proper 

Vehicle  Was  Not 

Provided. 


\ 

\       '— 

1 

\ 

1 

1 

PETERSON  BECOMES 
U.  C.  T.  COUNCILOR 

Will  Take    Place    of  Late 
F.  F.  Murphy  Until  Elec- 
tion Is  Held. 

As  a  result  <if  the  death  y^-sterday  of 
F.  F.  Murphy  of  Stillwater,  senior 
grand  councilor  of  the  Minnesota  and 
North  Dakota  districts  of  the  Order  of 
United  Commercial  Travelers,  Senator 
George  M.   Peterson  of  this  city,  grand 


junior  councilor,  will  succeed  to  the 
po.«»itlon  of  senior  councilor  until  an 
election   is   held. 

Within  the  ne.vt  wook  a  m.^etlng  will 
be  held  by  tlic  'executive  com.'inttee  to 
express  condolences  and  take  whatever 
action  is  deemed  advisable  with  refer- 
ence to  the  vacant  office.  Senator  Pe- 
terson is  the  next  min  In  line  for  the 
office.  t 

Mr.  Murphy  was  a  knight  of  the  grip 
for  twnty  years  and  was  well  known 
throughout  the  state.  He  was  taken  ill 
at  Spooner,  Wis.,  Monday  from  pto- 
n-alnc   poisoning. 


DuUith 


at    last    )ilght'.s      meeting      c 
homestead,    No.    3131. 

Upon  re(iuest  of  P.  F.  Harouff.  «iis- 
trlct  manager  the  field  workers  of  the 
state,  at  their  Fergus  Falls  meeting 
March  21,  voted  to  accept  Duluth's  In- 
I  vitatlon  to  attend  the  next  meeting  In 
this  city. 

IMans  for  a  lake  trip  and  rlghtseelng 
tours  about  the  city,  rvhlle  the  visitors 
are  here,  already  are  being  made. 

sugarTdvance  checked. 


Claiming  that  carelessness  on  the 
part  of  the  city  health  department  re- 
sulted In  the  death  of  her  daughter, 
Georgiana  Gibeau,  the  mother,  Mrs. 
Bridget  Gibeau.  yesterday  afternoon 
filed  suit  for  $6,000  damage*  against 
the  city. 

Mrs.  Gibeau  alleges  that  the  city  was 
negligent  in  providing  a  proper  vehicle 
for  transporting  her  daughter  to  the 
contagious  hospital  on  March  14.  An 
ordinary  cab  was  used,  the  claim  states, 
despite  the  fact  that  relatives  of  the 
young   woman   protested. 

Oomniissioner  Sllbersteln,  "  safety 
head,  .said  last  evening  that  the  cab 
was  provided  on  Instructions  from  the 
young  woman's  physician.  Dr.  A.  A. 
Giroux.  These  instructions,  he  said, 
wore  followed  explicitly  by  Contagious 
Inspector  Larson. 

The  daughter  died  on  March  20. 

sixty-fivTat 
y.  m  .0,  a.  dinner 

Leading   Association   Men 

Give   Addresses   at 

Dormitory  Spread. 

SIxty-flvo    young    vi\i^x\    attended    ihe 
annual    dinner    given    last    cvfr:lng    at 
the   Y.   M.  C.  A.  by  thu  .lonv.ltory  rrcn. 
The  affair  was  Informal  and  \.'as  gr  ;.it 
ly  enjoyed  by  those  present. 

Harvey  Hoshour  presldeJ  as  tosst- 
master,  and  the  speakers  were  Walson 
S.  Moore,  president,  and  B.  C.  Wa^'.e, 
secretary  of  the  ass«'eiati'>n.  Frliz 
Campbell  played  the  violin  .xnd  I.  R. 
Batchelor  sang. 

Secretary  Wade  declared  that  'he  as- 
sociation had-  never  had  :>  finer  lot  of 
young  men  rooming  in  the  building. 

Among  the  guests  of  honor  were  W. 
G.  Wright,  secretary  of  lnc«  Superior 
association,  and  his  assistant,  W.  Lud- 
wig.  ^ 

Duiuth  Realty  Guide. 

The  men  who  are  anxious  to  dispose 
of  their  real  estate  are  the  sort  who 
are  willing  to  meet  you  half  way  as 
to  price,  terms,  etc.  Many  such  men 
are  advertising  In  today's  Herald 
Want   Ad   columns. 


Directors  of  the  Woodman  hall, 
Twentieth  avenue  west  and  First 
street,  are  of  the  opinion  that  the  po- 
lice department  i.s  attempting  to  give 
the  hall  an  unjust  reputation  as  be- 
ing a  disorderly  place  on  account  of 
the  Saturday  evening  dances.  The 
disturbances,  say  the  directors,  have 
occurred  outside  of  the  building  and 
not   inside   as   alleged   by   the   police. 

"We  have  not  been  getting  a  square 
deal  in  this  matter,"  said  George  M. 
Jensen,  chairman  of  the  board  of  trus- 
tees for  Duiuth  lodge  No.  2341.  M.  W. 
A.,  which  has  direct  charge  of  the 
building.  "The  fight  Saturday  eve- 
ning took  place  on  the  sidewalk  and 
resulted  from  an  attempt,  by  a  drunken 
man.    to   get    Inside. 

"We,  as  well  as  the  police  depart- 
ment, have  made  a  thorough  Investiga- 
tion of  the  matter.  Patrolman  Nels 
Magnuson  was  paid  by  the  manager 
of  the  dance  to  be  at  the  door  to  pre- 
vent any  such  disturbances  as  might 
possibly  arise,  and  it  was  while  carry- 
ing out  the  orders  and  in  his  line  of 
duty,  that  he  was  Injured  by  the 
rowdies. 

"Such  disturbances  as  occurred  Sat- 
urday evening  In  front  of  the  Wood- 
man hall  are  likely  to  occur  at  any 
place  where  a  dance  is  being  held, 
when  a  drunken  man,  with  several 
half-drunken  friends  tries  to  get  in. 
When  this  drunken  man  was  being 
led  away  from  the  door,  his  friends 
Interfered  and  Jumped  upon  the  of- 
ficer. It  was  the  fall  to  the  side- 
walk, sustained  by  the  officer  and  the 
subsequent  jumping  on  him  by  sev- 
eral of  these  young  men,  that  broke 
his  arm. 

Gaeata  In  Ignoraner. 
"The  guests  inside  of  the  dance 
hall  did  not  know  anything  about  the 
disturbance  until  it  was  all  over.  Pa- 
trolman Victor  Isaacson,  who  was  off 
duty  that  evening,  attended  the  dance 
as  one  of  the  guests  and  told  me  that 
neither  he  nor  others  had  noticed  any- 
thing out  of  the  way  or  heard  of  any 
disturbance  until  it  was  all  over  and 
quiet  reigned  outside.  The  man  in 
charge  of  the  dances  has  had  a  spe- 
cial officer  stationed  in  the  hallway 
each  evening  that  these  dances  have 
been  given.  There  have  been  no  un- 
usual disturbances  at  the  hall  any  Sat- 
urday evening  as  charged  by  the  po- 
lice. The  disturbers  have  been  taken 
care  of  very  well  by  the  special  of- 
ficer, who  up  to  last  Saturday  eve- 
ning, had  been  able  to  handle  anything 
that   came   up. 

"The  unsavory  reputation  that  the 
police  have  been  giving  the  hall,  is 
unjust  to  us.  Neither  the  hall,  the 
Woodman  lodge,  nor  the  manager  of 
the  dances  can  be  blamed  for  acts 
committed  on  the  street  by  drunken 
men  and  their  friends,  even  if  such 
acts  take  place  In  front  of  the  Wood- 
man   building." 

The  other  directors  of  the  hall  for 
the  lodge  are  William  L.  Bernard  and 
J.  C.  Anderson.  The  directors  pro- 
pose to  place  their  side  of  the  case 
before  the  city  commissioners  when 
any  question  regarding  the  dance  li- 
cense of  the  hall  Is  brought  up  for 
consideration. 

Policeman  Recovering. 
Meanwhile  Patrolman  Nils  R.  Mag- 
nuson of  the  West  end  force  Is  re- 
covering slowly  at  St.  Luke's  hospital 
from  the  effects  of  the  beating  he  re- 
ceived, and  police  are  continuing  their 
search  for  a  seventh  alleged  assailant. 
Six  men  have  been  arrested.  They 
are:  Emmet  J.  Savage,  James  P.  Green, 
Clarence  B.  Jones.  Frank  Mulcahy, 
John  Strom  and  Frank  F.  Johnson.  The 
first  two  were  caught  at  Proctor  Sun- 
day, three  were  arrested  at  the  dance 
hall,  and  Johnson  was  brought  in 
Monday.  He  pleaded  guilty  to  dis- 
orderly   conduct. 

First  reports,  to  the  effect  that  Sav- 
age and  Green  were  armed  with  au- 
tomatics when  found  In  a  Proctor 
hotel,  were  without  foundation,  police 
said  today.  All  but  Johnson  pleaded 
not  guilty  to  assault  and  were  held  In 
$100    bail    for    a    hearing    April    18. 

Prosecution  to  the  full  extent  of  the 
law^  has  been  promised,  if  police  are 
able  to  learn  the  Identity  of  the  man 
who    broke    Magnuson's   arm. 


YEOMEN  TO  MEET  HERE. 

One  hundred  and  fifty  Minnesota 
field  workers  of  the  Brotherhood  of 
America:!  Yeomen  will  meet  In  Duiuth 
In  June,  according  to  plans  formulated 


Only 


True  Tonic  for  Liver 
and  Bowels  Costs 
10  Cents  a  Box. 


Cascarets  are  a  treat!  They  liven 
your  liver,  clean  your  thirty  feet  of 
bowels  and  sweeten  your  stomacb. 
Tou  eat  one  or  two  Cascarets  like  can- 


dy before  going  to  bea  nna  in  the 
morning  your  head  is  clear,  tongue  is 
clean,  stomach  sweet,  breath  right, 
and  cold  gone  and  you  feel  grand. 

Get  a  10  or  25-cent  bo.v  at  any 
drug  stt  re  and  enjoy  the  nicest,  gen- 
tlest liver  and  bowel  cleansing  you 
ever  experienced.  Stop  sick  headaches, 
biliou.s  spells,  indigestion,  furred 
tongue,  offensive  breath  ahd  consti- 
pation. Mothers  should  give  cross, 
peevish,  feverish,  bilious  children  a 
whole  Cascaret  any  time. — Advertise- 
ment. 


Greater   Production   in  Cuba  Offsets 
Export  Demand. 

Tlie  sugar  market  is  still  strong,  but 
dealers  are  now  hopeful  that  the  era 
of  price  advances  is  over  for  a  time  at 
least. 

The  New  York  jobbers'  quotations  In 
fine  granulated  sugar  is  7  cents  a 
pound,  tlie  same  as  a  week  ago.  Last 
year  at  this  time  the  same  grade  of 
sugar  sold  at  6.90  cents. 

England  Is  said  to  have  bought  16,- 
000  tons  of  granulated  sugar  lately, 
and  dealers  there  are  still  further  for- 
tifying themselves  In  placing  contracts 
for  raw  sugars  in  Cuba. 

In  England  the  tax  on  sugar  is  now 
3  cents  a  pound.  Tlie  government  con- 
trols the  distribution  and  the  price, 
and  consumers  are  paying  the  equiva- 
lent of  10  cents  a  pound  In  American 
money. 

In  the  neutral  countries  of  Europe, 
sugar  is  very  I'lgh.  It  is  cheaper  In 
Holland  tlian  elsewhere,  where  the 
wliolesale  price  fixed  by  the  govern- 
ment Is  now  9.30  cents  per  pound. 

The  high  prices  abroad  encourage 
the  American  sugar  bulls,  but  Cuba's 
production  thus  far  this  season  has 
been  1.825,297  tons  compared  with 
1.342,715  tons  for  the  same  period  last 
season,  so  there  Is  considered  to  be  no 
reason    for    any    scarcity    of    sugar    In 

tl»is  country. 

• 

"Chicken   Joe"   Granted   Reprieve. 

Springfield,  11!.,  April  13. — Joseph 
"<'hlcken  Joe"  Campbell,  sentenced  to 
hang  at  Jollet  penitentiary  April  21. 
for  the  murder  of  Mrs.  Odette  Allen, 
wife  of  former  Warden  Allen  of  the 
state  prison,  was  yesterday  granted 
a  reprieve  by  Governor  Dunne  until 
June  30.  in  order  that  Campbell  may 
appeal  his  case  to  the  Illinois  supreme 
court. 


WEATHER  HALTS  FARMERS. 


Belated  Season  Causes  Worry  Among 
Railway  Men. 

Bad  weather  and  the  resultant  inac- 
tivity among  the  farmers  are  worry- 
ing the  railroads,  according  to  J.  L. 
Burnham,  general  freight  agent  for 
the  Northern  Pacific  Railway  company 
with  headquarters  in  St.  Paul,  who 
was   a   Duiuth   visitor  yesterday. 

Mr.  Burnham  declared  that  this  time 
a  year  ago,  spring  plowing  was  well 
under  way,  while  today  the  farmers 
are   at  a  standstill. 

George  R.  Merritt,  general  refriger- 
ator agent  for  the  same  road,  who  ac- 
companied Mr.  Burnham.  is  sanguine 
with  reference  to  the  Eastern  freight 
situation.  He  declared  that  conditions 
are  Improving  and  that  foreign  lines 
are  beginning  to  send  back  empties. 


YOUNG  FOLK  TO  ENTERTAIN. 


WHEN  RUN  DOWN 

Hood's    Sarsaparilla,   the    Reliable 
Tonic  Medicine,  Builds  Up. 


Steropticon  Lecture  on  "South  India" 
Will  Be  Featured. 

The  Baptist  Young  People's  Union  of 
the  Central  Baptist  church.  TwentietH 
avenue  west  and  First  street,  will  en- 
tertain tomorrow  evening  at  a  mu- 
sical and  literary  program  in  thu 
church.  The  program  will  include  a 
stereoptlcon    lecture    on    "South    India." 

The  musical  numbers  will  Include  se- 
lections on  a  vlctrola,  a  tenor  solo  by 
Walter  Paulson,  violin  obligato  by 
Miss  Ruby  Lowe,  violin  duet  by  Miss 
Lowe  and  Miss  Mildred  Huey  with 
Miss    Barbara    Campbell,    accompanist. 

Surprised  By  Friends. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  N.  M.  Selseth.  2413 
West  Seventh  street,  were  pleasantly 
surprised  by  a  number  of  their  friends 
Monday  evening  in  honor  of  the  birth- 
day of  Mr.  Selseth.  Mr.  Selseth  was 
presented  with  a  handsome  lounging 
chair  by  his  friends.  The  guests  were: 
Messrs.  and  Mesdames  A.  Dahl,  S. 
Wick,  C.  Vangen.  O.  Rude.  S.  Ramstad, 
L.  Pederson.  H.  Spjolvold,  H.  Wannebo, 
Xels  Sorum.  N.  Sorenson,  Thomas  Ol- 
son, John  Powell,  John  Hanson,  C. 
Wick.  Wahlen,  Alex  McGillivar.v.  Otto 
Anderson;  Mrs.  Wang.  Mrs.  Lavorson: 
Misses  Nora  Otterson,  Virgil  McGilli- 
vary,    Mabel   Anderson. 

NEW  HOtELMNAGER 
HOST  TO  HUNDREDS 


A  crowd  which  packed  the  lobby  and 
dining  hall  of  the  Rex  hotel  took  part 
In  the  opening  festivities  at  the  hotel 
last  evening.  The  celebration  was  in 
honor  of  the  opening  of  the  dining 
room  and  hotel  under  the  management 
of  George  Lucore. 

Dancing  was  enjoyed  by  the  guests 
until   midnight.      During   the   afternoon 


The  reason  why  you  feel  so  tired 
all  the  time  at  this  season  is  that  your 
blood  is  impure  and  impoverished.  It 
lacks  vitality.  It  Is  not  the  rich  red 
blood    that    gives    life    to    the    whole 

body,    perfects    digestion    and    enables ,       ^  ,-^       ,^       ,,.^       ,.u 

all  the  organs  to  perform   their  func-    »"<!  evening  hundreds  of  friends  of  the 

Uons  as  they  should.  •  H^^telrv'^o' lite         '"'''''^ 

Get    Hood's    Sarsaparilla   from    any  | '^''^**^"^^    ***  *i^ 

druggist.    It  will  make  3iPu  feel  bet- 1  Former  Pastor  Here 

ter,  look  better,  eat  and  sleep  tetter.  rormer  Fdsiur  nere. 

It    is   the   old   reliable    tried   and    true  i      Rev.  Albert  Johanson  of  Wasau.  Neb 

all-the-year-round   blood   purifier  and    former  pastor 


into       the 
good    wishes 


I     We  Are  Helping  Dulutk 
Women  to  Get   Ready  tor 
Spring  and  Easter 

Women  s  and  Misses 
Suits  Galore! 


I 


Hundreds  upon  hundreds  of  smart  styles,  like  regiments  of 
soldiers  on  full  dress  parade,  side  by  side,  in  our  women's  wear 
section.  The  finest  of  materials  and  fint-ly  tailored;  all  the  new 
colors  represented;  also  featuring  Sport  Suits  and  Piquant  Silk 
Novelty  Suits  newly  in.     Suits  from  $22,50  up  to  $65.00. 


« 

« 

« 
« 

« 

« 

« 

t 

« 
« 

« 

« 


»^  ^-^  -'«- 


■    ■      M 


New  Trimmed  Hats 

Specially    prepared    for    Easter,    arrived    this    morning    and    an 
unusually  full  and  interesting  line — $5,  $6,  $7.50,  $10  and  $12,50. 


Have   I  ou 
He  am  ox 

^'Modette 


^^ 


The  new  wash  fabric  for  sum- 
mer frocks?  It  is  a  sheer,  dainty 
cloth;  very  wide  stripes;  some 
combined  with  small  flowers. 
They  also  make  smart  tailored 
waists.  All  the  new  spring  col- 
ors represented.  36  inches  wide, 
non-shrinkable,  per  yard,  29c. 

The  New  Serpentine  Crepe 
for  spring  are  here  now.  Beauti- 
ful patterns  to  select  from. 


Silberstein  s 


-for- 


Fine  Li 


mens 

In  spite  of  war  conditions  we 
have  been  receiving  shipments 
from  abroad.  Early  buying  en- 
abled US  to  keep  our  prices  at 
the   same   low   level. 

Fine   table   sets. 

Damask,  by  the  yard. 

Fine   buck  towels. 

Something  new — round  Dam- 
ask table  cloths;  perfectly  plain 
hemmed,  and  napkins  to  match. 

Many,  many  things  of  interest 
to  by  seen  here.  May  we  have 
the  pleasure  of  showing  you 
through  our  department. 


Mta..* 


This  Beautiful  East  End  Home 
Must  Be  Sold  at  Once! 

Owner  has  decided  to  sacrifice  at  least  20%  of  cost.  Located  on 
corner  lot  in  fine  district.  Has  every  modern  convenience;  hot  water 
heat,  quarter  sawed  oak  finish  and  fireplace.  Needs  about  $5,000 
cash,  balance  secured  as  a  mortgage.  (.5-2) 

LITTLE  &  NOLTE  CO.,  Exchange  Bldg. 


on  "Worldly  and  Christian  Youns  Peo- 
ple." The  sermon  will  be  addressed  to 
the  young  people   In  particular. 

West  End  Briefs. 

Mrs.  Thomas  Bark  and  Mrs.  W.  E. 
Harmann  were  hostesses  this  afternoon 
at  a  L.enten  tea  served  by  the  St.  Luke's 
Guild  of  St.  Peter's  Episcopal  church. 
Twenty-eighth  avenue  west  and  First 
strtei  This  evening  members  of  the 
Kebekah  guild  will  serve  follovimg 
Swedish  services  in  the  church. 

Rev  Milton  Fish,  pastor  of  the  Cen- 
tral Baptist  church,  returned  last  eve  • 
nlng  from  Minneapolis,  where  he  at- 
tended a  meeting  of  the  state  board 
of    the    English    Baptist    church. 

Miss  Ellen  Burnquist  of  Crookston 
has  returned  home  after  spending  a 
week    visiting    relatives    in    the    West 

fnd.  ,   ,  /-^,  m 

'^)scar  TrelfuR  and  John  Olfon  of 
Moorhead  are  spending  a  few  days  vis- 
iting friends  in  this  end  of  the  city. 

Modern    shoe    repairing    at    Economy 
Shoe  Works.  204  20th  A.  \\\  A.  Thoren. 
— •- 

Xorth    Dakoinn    Dro'wned. 

Shafer,  N.  D.,  April  13.— J.  B.  Mc- 
Lucas,  prominent  rancher,  was  drowned 
In  the  Cherry  creek,  near  his  home. 
He  attempted  to  ford  the  stream  when 
his  wagon  was  overturned  and  he  was 
thrown  into  the  creek.  The  body  was 
found   thirty    feet   down   the   stream. 


West  End  Undertaking 
Company 

2118  WEST  FIRST  STREET. 
XyberflT  &  Crawford,  Managers. 


firSV  Hdlr^  byamggists 
"■  *■#    ■■•■■■    ■    everywhere 

Clark  av.'sL^LouisW  3 1 11  Ulla 

Subscribe  for  The  Herall 


/ 


D.    H..    4-13-16. 


^ 


SWAMP-ROOT  STOPS 

SERIOUS  BACKACHE 


enricher,  tonic  and  appetizer.  It  re- 
vitalizes the  blood,  and  is  especially 
useful  in  building  up  the  debilitated 
and  run-down.  , 

Hood's  Sarsaparilla  is  helping  thou- 
sands at  this  time  of  yej»r.  Let  it  help 
you.  Get  a  bottle  today  and  begin 
taking  it  at  once.  B«  sure  to  get 
Hood's.    Nothing  €lse  acts  like  it. 


of  the  Swedish  Mission 
church,  Twenty-fifth  avenue  west  .-ind 
I'irst  street,  is  hero  looking  over  some 
property  north  of  the  city  and  vfill  be 
at  the  local  church  tomorrow  evening. 
Tbe  pastor  will  speak  during  the  serv- 
ices now  bting  conducted  at  ino 
church. 

This  evening  Rev.  C.  F.  Sandstrom  of 
Minneapolis,  who  is  conducting  the  re- 
vival  meetings   this   week,   will   speak 


When  your  back  aches,  and  your 
bladder  and  kidneys  seem  to  be  dis- 
ordered, remember  it  Is  needless  to 
suffer — go  to  your  nearest  drug  store 
and  get  a  bottle  of  Dr.  Kilmer's 
Swamp-Root.  It  is  a  physician's  pre- 
scription for  diseases  of  the  kidneys 
and  bladder. 

It  has  stood  the  test  of  years  and 
has  a  reputation  for  quickly  and  ef- 
fectively giving  results  in  thousands 
of  cases. 

This  prescription  was  used  by  Dr. 
Kilmer  in  his  private  practice  and  was 
so  very  effective  that  it  has  been 
placed  on  sale  everywhere.  Get  a  bot- 
tle, 50c  and  $1.00,  at  your  nearest 
druggist. 

However,  if  you  wish  first  to  test 
this  great  preparation  send  ten  cents 
to  Dr.  Kilmer  &  Co.,  Binghamton, 
N  Y.,  for  a  sample  bottle.  When  writ- 
ing be  sure  and  mention  The  Duiuth 
Herald. 


TEETH 

For  satisfactory  dental 
work  you  can't  do  bet- 
ter than  at  the 

Union  Dentists 

Gold  Crowns $3.00 

Full  Set  of  Teeth . .  $5.00 
Fillings   50c 


Union  Dentists 

315  West  Superior  St. 

(Opposite  St.  Louis  Hotel) 


I 


•■^y^-^MW^v 


y  ,  1 1   I  ■  ■»  II 


Thursday, 


THE     D  U  L  U  TIR     H  E  R  A  X-  O 


April  13, 1916. 


It  Is  No  Satisfaction 
to  Us  to  Make  Just 
One  Suit  For  You! 


1 


'^  u: 


■M  h 


m 


■H 


We  want  to  be  consid- 
ered your  tailor  without 
doubtorhesitation  on  your 
part;  without  any  thiniting 
being  required  before  stat- 
ing just  who  is  your  tailor. 

We  want  the  opportun- 
ity to  save  you  money  on 
correctly  styled  and  tai- 
lored garments. 

We  want  to  make  such 
an  excellent  suit  for  you 
each  time  that  you  come 
that  you  will  be  satisfied 
that  you  cannot  do  better 
elsewhere  at  any  price— 
and  we  can  do  it. 


MESSAGE  IS 
INSPIRING 

President    of    Commercial 

Club  Sends  Optimistic 

Annual  Report. 


\imm\Hi,    REVIEWS  WORK 


Urges    Co-operative  Work 

for  General  Weal 

of  City. 


FEW'CHOSEN 

Industrial  Committee  Has 

Troubles  Setecting  Worthy 

Business  Projects. 


Some    Excellent    Proposi- 
tions Requiring  Capital 
Now  Before  It. 


J; 

Suit  or  Top  Coat 
to  Ord«r 

$30  to  $50 


Our  complete  spring 
stock  of  Woolens  is  now 
on  display.  It  includes 
a  remarkable  collect' 
tion  of  exclusive  pat- 
terns. An  early  call 
should  he  mutually  ad- 
vantageous. 


dmm^i^-w^ 


CORRECT  TAILORS 

TO  GENTLEMEN 

329  Wut  Superior  Street,  Duluth. 


^ 


NEED  TROLLEYS 
FOR  jARMERS 

The  Agricultural  Committee 
Points  Out  Means  of  De- 
veloping Country. 


The  r^Tort  of  John  G.  WiUlams, 
chairman  of  the  agricultural  commit- 
tee of  the  Commercial  club,  was  read 
Ht  the  annual  meeting  of  the  public 
affairs  committee  last  night  by  Will- 
iam C.  Sargent  It  shows  that  the 
affricultiiral  committee  was  one  of  the 
most  aciivf  In  the  roster  of  the  club. 
and    has   accomplished   many    thlnRs. 

Suburban  trolley  lines  for  further 
development  of  the  surrounding  coun- 
try    wer<«    urged,    and    other    valuable 


WIHIOL 


FRUIT  and  PRODUCE 
FIRMS  OF  DULUTH 


HTZSIMMONS  PALMER  CO. 


OlOESr  COMMISSION 
FIRM  IN  OULUTH 


suggestions    were    made.      The    report 
follows    In    part: 

"While  the  United  States  govern- 
ment, the  state  university  extension 
department,  the  county  and  other 
agencies  have  taken  over  much  of  the 
work  that  Torinerly  was  performed  di- 
rectly under  the  supervision  of  this 
committee,  the  committee  has  con- 
tinued to  mark  with  Interest  the  prog- 
ress In  all  directions  and  to  take  such 
part  as  it  could  In  the  promotion  of 
that    progress. 

"There  has  been  substantial  develop- 
ment.      More     farmers    are    coming     in 
every  year,  more  land  Is  being  cleared, 
more    products    are    being    raised    and 
marketed.     But  the  city  of  EKiluth  may 
as  well  understand  now  that  the  com- 
plete   development    of    the     Immediate 
agricultural      territory      cannot      come 
about     until     adequate     transportation 
facilities   are  provided.     We   need   sub- 
urban trolley  lines.     We  need  them  as 
development  agencies,  not  to  take  care 
of    traffic    already    there.      Accordingly 
the  men  of  Duluth  who  have  a  real  In- 
terest  In   the  development   of   the  sur- 
rounding country  must  buUd  such  lines 
and    prepare    to    wait    for    returns    on 
their     Investment.       Team     haulage     of 
farm    products    distances    over    a    few 
miles   is   not   economical    and    much    of 
our    farming    territory    is    beyond    the 
zone   of   economical    team    haulage   and 
not  served   by   steam   rallroad.s. 
Agrioultnral    EixpoMltlon. 
"The    Inability    of    the    general    com- 
mlttet*    representing    different    organi- 
zations   to    Arrange    an    Industrial    ex- 
hibit   and    the    unfavorable    conditions 
for    agricultural    exhibits    last    autumn 
resulted     in     the    abandonment    of    the 
plan    to    hold    an    agricultural    exposi- 
tion.     This    year,    however,    a    commit- 
tee   has    been    orjfanlzed    and    is    pre- 
paring   for    a    dairy    and    agricultural 
exposition   In   September.     The  commlt- 
t<  6    should    have     the    hearty    support 
of    the    agricultural    committee    In    Its 
effort.s    to    arrange   an    exposition    that 
will   fairly  display  the  results  of  agri- 
cultural  efforts   In   this   territory. 
Public  Market. 
"The  pending  sale  of  the  old  armory 
has     caurted     confusion     In     the     public 
market   situation.     The   committee   has 
been   assured    by   the   city   commission- 
ers, however,  that  some  provision  will 
be    made    for   a    rentral    market.      Pre- 
sumably  If   the  armory   Is   retained   the 
market  will  be  there,  and  If  It  Is  sold 
another   site    will    be   obtained." 


STACY-MERRILL 
FRUIT  CO. 

WIIOI.EP.VLE 

Fi^yiiTan</Pi^oiiy)©iE 

210  and  212  West  Michigan  Street 


Haneoek    Man    at    Biamnrrk. 

Bismarck,  N.  D.  April  13. — Xorman 
J.  CJtll.sple  of  Hancock.  Mich.,  has  ar- 
rived In  Bismarck.  Mr.  (Mllespie  is  a 
newspaper  man  and  expects  to  locate 
in  Bismarck  permanently.  He  has 
taken  a  poritlon  m*  n.^sLslant  to  Secre- 
tary Price  «)f  the  Bismarck  Commer- 
cial club  and  has  already  commenced 
hi.s  new  dutiis. 


Joseph  B.  Cotton,  president  of  the 
Duluth  Commercial  club,  was  unable 
to  be  present  at  the  annual  meeting 
last  night,  having  been  out  of  the  city 
for  some  time;  but  he  sent  a  stirring 
message  in  his  final  report.  He  urged 
that  every  member  forego  selfishness 
and  join  In  a  general  movement  for 
the  furtherance  of  the  city's  inter- 
ests, and  declared  that  Duluth  may 
become  a  second  Pittsburgh  or  a  sec- 
ond Chicago  If  she  but  "will'  and 
work  to  'do."  He  complimented  the 
members  of  the  club  for  their  work  of 
the  past  year  and  thanked  them  for 
their  assistance.  Said  he  in  the  re- 
port, which  was  read  by  R.  B.  Knox. 
"1  regret  exceedingly  that  unavoid- 
able absence  from  the  cliy  prevents 
my  attendance  at  this  annual  meet- 
ing and  reviewing  In  person  with  you 
the  splendid  work  of  the  club  and  its 
various  committees  during  tlie  past 
year.  This  work  has  been  done  by 
the  earnest,  conscientious  and  unself- 
ish efforts  of  members,  the  secretary 
iind  other  operating  officers  and  their 
•  issl.stants.  who  have  all  given  freely 
of  their  time  and  talents  in  the  pub- 
lic's behalf.  We  beg  to  record  hero 
our  deep  sense  of  obligation  to  them 
and  to  express  to  them  the  grateful 
thanks  of  the  directors  and  the  mem- 
bership   In   general. 

"The  membership  of  the  club  Is  now 
greater  than  ever  before.  The  mem- 
bership committee  m:ide  a  splendid 
record  in  the  campaign  last  year,  and 
the  membership  as  a  whole  has  stood 
loyally  by  the  organization  during  the 
year.  The  financial  condition  of  the 
club  Is  also  better  than  it  was  a  year 
ago.  The  response  to  the  appeal  for 
public  affairs  funds  wa.-j  very  grati- 
fying. A  similar  appeal  must  be 
made  for  the  coming  year,  and  your 
generous  subscriptions  are  earnestly 
requested  and  should  be  made 
promptly.  In  carrying  on  the  import- 
ant work  of  the  public  affairs  com- 
mittee, which,  after  all,  Is  your  work 
and  for  the  benefit  of  all,  adequate 
funds  must  be  available.  Really, 
these  subscriptions  are  investments  in 
and  for  the  public  welfare  and  are 
brlnginif  and  returning  to  Duluth  in 
Innumerable  ways  a  real  and  lasting 
profit   of   many-fold. 

Reailslns  DreauM. 
"The  completion  and  opening  of 
the  steel  plant  has  brought  to  Duluth 
the  day  when  the  city  may  look  for- 
ward to  the  early  realization  of 
dreams  of  many  years,  that  we  are 
surely  to  become  an  Important  factor 
In  diversified  manufacturing.  The 
development  of  our  surrounding  coun- 
try agriculturally  Is  making  Duluth 
more  attractive  as  a  distributing  cen- 
ter, and  we  may  expect  to  see  ample 
capital  coming  shortly  to  participate 
In  the  Ind^Ostrial  harvest  that  must 
result  to  the  city  by  reason  of  its 
admirable  location  for  the  mainte- 
nance of  trade  relations  with  the  pop- 
ulous and  prosperous  Northwest 
Truly,  our  future  never  looked  bright- 
er or  more  assured  than  It  does  today. 
"Duluth  can  attain  Its  greatest 
growth  and  prosperity  only  by  all 
working  together.  We  must  forget 
sectionalism  In  the  city.  The  West 
end  and  the  East  end.  New  Duluth 
and  West  Duluth.  Woodland  and 
Lakeside,  the  downtown  business  sec- 
tion and  the  Hillside  are  all  parts  of 
Duluth  and  must  work  In  harmony  If 
all  are  to  profit.  They  can  work  best 
through  a  great  central  organization, 
whieh  this  club  aims  to  be.  and  the 
most  cordial  relations  must  be  main* 
talned  between  this  club  and  the 
various  neighborhood,  commercial  and 
Improvement  clubs,  and  they  with 
one   another. 

Some    Duluth    Need*. 
"Let    us    suggest.    In    a    word,    a    few 
things      which      deserve      our      earnest 
consideration     and     effort.       We     need 
trolley    lines    out    into    the    country    to 
develop   our   surroundine   areas   and    to 
make    our    market    available    to    those 
who    locate    on    them.      We    need    more 
manufacturing       plants,       to       furnish 
steady    employment    the    year    around. 
We   need  a  well    thought-out  city   plan 
which     will     permit     the     most     to    .be 
made    of    our    terminal    fncllltles,    and 
which    win    make    available    Indu.strlal 
sites    for    all    who    come    to    us.      We 
need      better       streets — a      street      Im- 
provement plan  that  will   result  In  the 
Improvement  first  of  the   streets  need- 
ing     Improvement      most.        We      need 
harbor   facilities    whUh    will    enable   us 
to    use    to   the    full   extent    the    splendid 
natural    resources   of   our    harbor.      We 
nef'd    to    bo    cautious    that    we    do    not 
enter    upon    a    dlsa.'^troiis    boom    which 
will    raise    land    values    or    rentals    be- 
yond   the    bounds    of    reason,    but    we 
need   also  that  brand   of  civic  enthusi- 
asm  which   will   not   suffer  us   to   dep- 
recate    the    Importance    and    possibili- 
ties of  our  city. 

Need  for  Continued  Effort. 
"All  of  these  things,  and  many 
more,  we  can  get  only  by  continued 
effort.  We  must  have  no  factions, 
no  sectionalism,  no  suspicion  of  each 
other.  Jobber  and  manufacturer  and 
retailer  and  professional  man  and 
transportation  man  and  clerk  must 
forget  their  Individual  differences  or 
have  no  real  ones  and  combine  their 
efforts  for  the  city  and  the  good  of 
all.  All  will  profit  by  it.  There  is 
no  room  In  community  work  for  In- 
dividual Jealousy.  Each  must  be 
willing  that  his  neighbor  profit  as 
well  as  himself.  There  Is  no  place  In 
community  work  for  suggested  caste 
of  wealth   or  position." 


OF  LAST  YEAR 

Chairman  of  Public  Affairs 

Committee   Tells    of 

Accomplishments. 


Problems    Numerous    But 

Satisfactorily  Handled; 

City's  Progress. 


Ask  Far 
Security 
Vouchers 


Ask  For 
1 1  urity 

Vouchers 


That  the  Industrial  committee  of  the 
Commercial  club  has  its  troubles  waa 
indicated  In  ths  report  made  last  night 
by  T.  B.  Hawkes.  chalrtnan  of  that 
committee,  to  tHiT  p\^)llo  affairs  com- 
mittee, in  annual  session.  Plenty  of 
grist  comes  to  the  committee's  mill, 
but  most  of  It  to  of  the  grade  that 
has  to  bo  rejected  because  of  its 
visionary-  condition,  or  the  impossibil- 
ity of  financing  wltfiout  having  more 
data.  Hom'evcr,  many  worthy  things 
come  and  some  are  before  the  commit- 
tee at  this  tlmsi- according  to  the  re- 
port,   which    was  a«    follows: 

"Tour  commutes  is  not  able  to  re- 
port that  It  baa  been  the  direct  means 
of  locating  any  Industry  here  during 
the  past  yeaTi  twit  has  glyen  advice 
and  help  to  8o|b«^  of  those  already 
located,  which  lHi«  been  of  material 
assistance    to    them. 

"Apparently  one  of  the  most  diffi- 
cult problemji  that  a  community  has 
to  solve  is  the  best  method  of  locat- 
ing new  Industries.  We  have  for  sev- 
eral years  followed  along  lines  of  sim- 
ilar organizations.  We  have  tried  out 
new  plans  and  new  schemes  proposed, 
but  without  any  great  material  effect. 
There  Is  no  dearth  of  inquiries.  They 
come  almost  In  a  continuous  stream, 
but  it  is  only  occasionally  we  find 
one   with   merit. 

Many  WItk  Mt^tii. 

"It  Is  true.  ©(T^aslonally  some  prop- 
osition with  merit  Is  presented  to  us, 
but  the  essentlal'thlng  lacking  is  cap- 
ital, and,  aft^r  all.  you  cannot  ex- 
pect an  Investor  to  put  his  money  into 
an  enterprise  ag'afnst  the  other  man's 
experience,  for  the  Investor  has  all 
at  stake.  n-till«  the  promoter  has 
probably   very  Ht^e. 

"The  industrial  "-committee  has  a 
place  In  the  orgaTilzatlon  and  we  think 
It  would  be  inconvenient  without  such 
committee.  Nevertheless  we  feel  that 
a  great  deal  should  not  be  expected 
of  them,  other  ttian  this  same  sifting 
process  which  has  been  carried  on  In 
the    peist. 

"Industries  must  come  here  on  ac- 
count of  our  natural  location,  our 
manv  natural  advantages,  nearness  to 
the  "raw  material  and  the  market  and 
efficient  climate.  We  must  of  course 
be  on  the  alert  at  all  times  for  the 
promotion  of  new  industries  which 
can^manufacture  lyere  advantageously; 
to  Assi.'it  those  already  here  and  help 
thflfh  Increase  their  market  and  their 
facilities,  but  the  Industrial  commit- 
tee* cair  do  n«  more  thao  act  in  an 
advi.sory  ca«aflty  in  any  ewnt.  Some 
people  come  to  us  under  the  Impres- 
."lon  that  the  club  should  directly  fi- 
nance new  enterprises.  Of  course  the 
club  cannot  df  that.  AH  It  can  do  Is 
investigate  jJril»'>sltl*na  needing  addi- 
tional capital  and  recommend  them  to 
th<)  investing  public.  We  can  give 
valuable  service  In  furnishing  Infor- 
mation and  assisting  Industries  In  lo- 
cating, but  our  activities  In  the  mat- 
ter of  financing  Is  naturally  limited 
to  Investigation  and  recommendations. 
ProBOSitloMM  on    Hand. 

"I  might  say  In  closing  that  we  have 
on  hand  at  the  present  time  a  prop- 
osition to  manufacture  an  article  that 
caiu  be  manufactured  here  advan- 
taAously  and  has  been  so  proven,  but 
it  will  be  necessary  for  some  person 
or  persons  to  purchase  $15,000  worth 
of  preferred  or  common  stock  In  or- 
det.  to    give    It    enough    working    cap- 

Itav 

"We  also  have  another  proposition 
which  requires  $12,500  capital,  another 
that  requires  $25,000.  another  that 
would  require  from  $200,000  to  $300.- 
000,  and  another  that  will  require 
$2,600.  In  addltiyvn  to  these  there  are 
several  promising  Inquiries  and  also 
a  very  fair  prospect  of  a  large  con- 
cern locating  In  our  midst  on  account 
of  the  operation  of  the  steel  plant, 
which  will,  if  they  so  decide,  bring 
all  of  their  own  capital.  If  there  Is 
anyone  Interested  in  the  propositions 
submitted  above,  this  committee  will 
be  glad  to  take  the  matter  up  with 
them." 


DULUTH  P  lATHEA  UNION 

Wally  Heymnr  O.  u.oiinitt:  Leaii  Rwm  Gombcri, 
Piatiiit:  Aines  »»■■  Joi  nwa  Spcckt,  Rrader:  L«cill« 
Brown  Oixbury,  So^oUt;  Ryth  AlU  Roftri,  Aecoffl- 
pinijt.  FIRST  PBESBYTERIAN  CHURCH,  FRIDAY 
EVENING,  APRIL  14.  St  I  R.  m.     TieUts  25c. 


EXPLODES  CHARGE  PUT 
IN  SAFE  BY  BURGLARS 


eHJILiEI^TSii 


WHOLESALE 

FRUITS 


"The  House  With  a  Shipping 
Organization." 

120  and   128  West  »Oclilsan  St. 


Health  Depends  on  Kidneys 

Whole  System  Saffer«  If  They  Ar« 
Deranged. 

Health  is  an  ab.solute  impossibility 
when  the  kidneys  are  out  of  order. 
Tlie  explanation  Is  simple.  Life  can- 
not be  lived  without  waste.  The  blood 
sweeps  through  arteries  and  veins, 
supplying  vitality  to  every  organ  and 
part,  gathers  up  the  waste  matter  and 
carrie-s  it  to  the  kidneys.  The  kidneys 
are  a  filter  and  It  is  their  oftlce  to 
strain  from  the  blood  all  the  poison- 
ous deposits  and  to  pass  them  on  to 
the  bladder  for  expulsion.  When  any 
part  of  the  kidneys  Is  inflamed,  the 
purifying  is  less  perfectly  done.  The 
kidneys  and  veins  are  clogged  with 
poisonous  matter.  If  you  are  trou- 
bled with  pains  in  the  back,  dizziness, 
aching  joints,  nausea,  or  other  symp- 
toms of  kidney  disease,  you  should 
lose  no  time  in  testing  Warner's  Safe 
Kidney  and  Liver  Remedy.  It  is  con- 
sidered to  be  an  excellent  remedy  in 
the  treatment  of  diseases  of  the  kid- 
neys, liver  and  blood.  It  assists  na- 
ture in  repairing  the  tissues  so  that 
in  time  the  organs,  if  not  too  far 
gone,  will  be  restored  to  healthy  ac- 
tivity.     It    Is   made     from     medicinal 


CITY  Will  SAVE  MONEY 
IN  BUYING  NEW  CAR 


City  commissioners  will  save  money 
In  buying  a  new  automobile  for  the 
police' department. 

Last  Monday  a  resolution  was  intro- 
duced by  Commissioner  Sllberstein 
awarding  the  Northwestern  Cadillac 
company  a  contract  to  furnish  the  po- 
lice department  with  a  Cadillac  car 
on  Its  bid  of  $2,220.  Action  was  de- 
ferred  until   next   week. 

Yesterday  Commissioner  Farrell  of- 
fered to  donate  an  old  Studebaker  car 
used  by  the  department  of  public 
works  if  the  safety  head  could  ex- 
change it  in  buying  a  new  machine. 
The  offer  was  accepted  and  Commis- 
sioner Sllberstein  immedlat.ly  ar- 
ranged to  purchased  a  new  Studebaker 
ear  by  turning  in  the  old  one  and  pay- 
in  $5«6  in  adaltlon.  The  machine  will 
be  used  in  transporting  prisoners  to 
the  work  farm.  The  city  will  save 
abotU  $1,609   by  the   transaction. 

The  resolution  introduced  last  Mon- 
Iny  will  be  tabled  and  all  bids  re- 
jected. 


Springfield.  111.,  ApHl  18.— Safe- 
blowers  who  attempted  to  rob  the  safe 
In  the  general  store  of  O.  W.  Deacon 
at  Loaml.  near  here,  early  Tuesday, 
were  frightened  before  they  could  ac- 
complish their  purpose.  Deacon's  ef- 
forts to  open  the  safe  were  fruitless, 
as  the  locks  had  been  battered  off.  He 
sent  for  a  blacksmith  who  worked  all 
day  without  success.  Yesterday  Deacon, 
becoming  impatient  at  the  interruption 
to  his  business.  due  to  books  and 
money  being  locked  up,  picked  up  a  big 
sledge  hammer  and  dealt  the  door  of 
the  safe  a  mighty  blow.  When  the 
smoke  and  dust  cleared  away.  Deacon 
and  several  onlookers  were  revealed  to 
each  other  lying  Injured  on  all  sides  of 
the  safe,  the  door  of  which  had  been 
blown  open  by  a  charge  of  nltro-glyc- 
erln  poured  Into  the  mechanism  of  the 
safe  by  the  robbers. 


Owing  to  the  lateness  of  the  hour, 
the  report  of  Henry  Nolte,  chairman 
of  the  public  affairs  committee  of  the 
Duluth  Commercial  club,  was  not  read 
at  the  annual  meeting  held  last  nigKt. 
but  the  members  of  the  club  were  In- 
formed that  they  could  read  It  In 
print.  Mr.  Nolte  was  not  present,  be- 
ing out  of  the  city  on  business  for 
some    time.       His    report    follows: 

"No  member  of  the  club  can  look 
back  over  the  year  without  a  feeling 
of  satisfaction.  Our  problems  have 
not  been  numero^us,  but  we  have  dis- 
patched the  business  before  us  read- 
ily and  with  what  I  believe  to  have 
b<  e;r  the  best  interests  of  the  city 
always  In  mind.  Duluth  has  made 
substantial  progress  In  many  direc- 
tions; business  Is  on  the  increase;  our 
industrial  situation  Is  most  encour- 
aging. 

"From  the  members  of  the  public 
affairs  committee  we  have  had  the 
same  loyal,  unselfish  service  Jthat  has 
always  characterized  the  membership 
of  the  committee.  All  of  the  sub-com- 
mittees have  not  been  active,  but  their 
Inactivity  has  been  due  to  no  desire 
on  their  part  to  shirk  responsblUty  or 
their  share  In  the  upbuilding  of  the 
committee.  It  just  happened  that  there 
was  no  important  business  connected 
witji  the  subjects  assigned  to  them. 

"The  detailed  activities  of  the  vari- 
ous sub-commltteea  will  be  reported 
upon  in  the  reports  to  be  submitted 
this  evening.  I  shall  not  attempt  to 
repeat  them  in  this  report.  However. 
some  special  committees  were  ap- 
pointed and  some  special  matters  came 
before  the  public  affairs  committee 
as  a  whole  and  not  before  sub-com- 
mittees and  I  wish  to  refer  brleny  to 
them. 

Western  Terminal  Company  Franchise. 
"Under  tlie  terms  of  a  resolution 
adopted  by  the  public  affairs  commit- 
tee, a  special  committee  was  appointed 
on  the  franchise  submitted  by  the 
Western  Terminal  company  to  the  city 
council.  The  chairman  of  the  pub- 
lic affairs  committee  was  by  the  terms 
of  the  resolution  made  chairman  of 
the  special  committee  and  the  other 
members  appointed  are  T.  T.  Hudson, 
W.  B.  Getchell.  A.  M.  McDougall  and 
S  H.  Jones.  Only  a  few  meetings  of 
the  committee  were  beld,  after  which 
the  original  franchise  was  withdrawn 
and  the  matter  ceased  to  be  a  uve 
Issue  so  far  as  that  ordinance  Is  con- 
cerned. However,  the  question  of  rail- 
road terminals  remains  a  question  of 
great  importance  to  the  city  of  Du- 
luth. The  Western  Terminal  company 
is  expected  to  submit  a  new  franchise 
ordinance  and  pending  a  definite  out- 
come to  the  negotiations  bet,ween  that 
company  and  the  city  council,  the  com- 
mittee will    be  continued. 

]Vatlonal  Chaniher  of  ComMrrce. 
"Close  affiliation  between  the  club 
and  the  chamber  of  commerce  of  the 
United  States  has  been  maintained,  and 
we  believe  it  has  been  very  beneficial. 
Local  conditions  are  Influenced  so 
greatly  by  national  conditions  that  In 
order  properly  to  promote  the  devel- 
opment of  our  own  city,  we  must  take 
an  active  Interest  In  shaping  the  de- 
velopment of  the  nation.  Four  refer- 
enda of  the  chamber  of  commerce  of 
the  United  States  were  acted  upon 
during  the  year  and  It  Is  notable  that 
with  the  exception  of  one  referendum, 
our  vote  was  with  the  majority  of  the 
organizations    of   the   country. 

"On  request  of  the  chamber,  a  spe- 
cial committee  on  a  permanent  tariff 
commission  was  appointed  during  the 
year.  It  consists  of  R.  B.  Knox,  F. 
A.  Patrick,  C.  A.  Luster,  A.  M,  Mar- 
shall   and    A.    L.    Ordean. 

"The  chairman,  the  secretary,  and 
some  other  members  of  the  club  at- 
tended the  annual  meeting  of  the 
chamber  at  Washington  In  February 
and  received  a  very  valuable  impres- 
sion  of    national   affairs. 

Nanicipai   Legislation. 
"Following    the    report    of    the    mu- 
nicipal   committee     on    the    proposed 
electrical  and  plumbing  ordinances,  the 
citv  commission  invited  all  civic  bodies 
to  appoint  special  committees  to  form 
a    general    committee    for    the    draft- 
ing   of   a    new    housing    code.      It    was 
thought     best.       since     the     committee 
would    be    engaged    in    the    work    for 
some   time,    to   appoint   a   special   com- 
mittee equipped  for  that  kind  of  work. 
Accordingly    W.    H.    Hoyt.    F.    H.    Fitz- 
gerald   and    C.    A.    Marshall    were    ap- 
pointed.     They    are    devoting    a    great 
deal  of  time  and  thought  to  the  work 
of   the   general    committee   and   I   think 
the    club     is     very     fortunate     in     the 
character   of   Its    representation. 
Coaclnslon. 
"I    believe    that    the    city    of    Duluth 
Is    entering  upon   a   period   of   unusual 
development   and   that  the   club   has   a 
wonderful     opportunity     to     assist     In 
making   the   city  greater  along  indus- 
trial,   commercial    and  civic    lines.    The 
plan   whereby   certain   members  of  the 
club  are  detailed  to  community  devel- 
opment work  on  the  public  affairs  com- 
mittee has   stood  the   test  of  time.    If 
the   lessons   of   experience   are   heeded; 
if    our    members    show    the    same    en- 
thusiasm and  willingness  to  work  that 
thev   have   in   the   past,   the   public   af- 
fairs   committee    must    continue    to    be 
a    very    important    |>ower    for   good    in 
the  community." 


■  Come  to  Oar  Annual 

Before  Easter  Candy  Sale  1 

Tomorrow  and  Saturday 

This  is  your  opportunity  to  secure  fine  fresh  Easter 
Candies  at  very  Hberal  savings.  All  of  our  very  best  brands 
of  bulk  chocolates  are  included  in  this  sale.  Put  up  m  neat 
boxes  without  any  additional  charge.  As  this  sale  is  only 
for  two  days,  tomorrow  and  Saturday,  we  would  advise  you 
to  order  early. 


ar 


The  Easiest  Way 

To  End  Dandruff 


Fom>    Hlirbway   AMSoelntton. 

Bemldji,      Minn..      April      13.— Kepre- 
wentatives      of      Beltrami,      Polk.      Red 
Lake,     Clearwater.     Pennington,     Mar- 
herbs  and  ofher  healthful  ingredients,     shall    and    Kittson    counties     met     here 


A  standard  remedy  for  40  years, 
all  druggist  in  50c  and  $1.00  sizes.     A 
free    sample    If    you    write,    W^arner's 
Safe   Remedies  Co.,   Dept.   376,   Roch- 
ester, N.  Y. 


At  and  formed  the  Northern  Minnesota 
Jefferson  Highway  association.  Daniel 
Shaw  of  Thief  River  Falls  was  elected 
president;  E.  M.  Sathre  of  BemldJl. 
secretary;  M.  Jenson.  Clear  Brook, 
treasurer. 


There  Is  one  sure  way  that  never 
falls  to  remove  dandruff  completely 
and  that  Is  to  dissolve  it.  This  de- 
stroys It  entirely.  To  do  this,  just  get 
about  four  ounces  of  plain,  ordinary 
liquid  arvow;  apply  It  at  night  when 
retiring:  use  enough  to  moisten  the 
scalp  and  rub  it  in  gently  with  the 
finger  tlija.  . . 

By  morning,  tnont  if  not  all,  of  your 
dandruff  w|ll  kt  gone,  and  three  or 
four  more  Jbpliiktlons  will  completely 
dissolve  aift  «*ltirely  destroy  every 
single  sign  «k§id-<raoo  of  it,  no  matter 
how  ni^ch  "afandruflf  you  may  have. 

You  will  find,  too,  that  all  itching 
and  digging  of  the  scalp  will  stop  in- 
stantly, and  your  hair  will  be  fluffy, 
lustrous.  gl^o^X,  silky  and  soft,  and 
look  and  feel  a  hundred  times  bet- 
ter. 

You  can  get-  liquid  arvon  at  any 
drug  Htore,  It  pt  Inexpensive,  and  four 
ounces  Is  till  you  will  need.  This 
simple  remedy  has  never  been  known 
to  fall. — ^AdVertlaement. 


CITY  IS  WELL 

ADVERTISED 

Report  of  Publicity  Com- 
mittee of  Commercial  Club 
Shows  Activity. 


At  the  close  of  the  reading  of  the 
report  of  the  publicity  committee  of 
the  Commercial  club,  at  the  annual 
meeting  of  the  public  affairs  commtt- 
tee  last  night  H.  W.  Zlnsmaster. 
chairman,  was  given  a  round  of  ap- 
plause, for  the  report  confirmed  the 
belief  of  the  members  of  the  club 
that  the  publicity  committee  members 
had  been  far  from  Idle;  but  a  laugh 
was  created  when  Mr.  Zlnsmaster  said 
that  "Thu  Climate  of  Duluth."  refer- 
ring to  a  pamphlet  by  that  name,  was 
nearly  exhausted,  and  suggesting  a 
reissue  at  an  early  date.  His  report 
said:  ,  . 

"The  club  has  had  in  print  the  fol- 
lowing publications:  'A  Guide  to  Du- 
luth,' 'Year  Book  1914-15,'  The  Climate 
of  Duluth.'  'Cows  In  Clover.'  'Oppor- 
tunity In  St  Louis  County."  'The  Min- 
nesota Iron  Ranges,'  'Statistical  Leaf- 
let and  Proctor  Knott's  Speech.'  The 
supply  of  'The  Minnesota  Iron  Ranges' 
has   been   exhausted  and   'The   Climate 


I 


50c  &  40c  Chocolates  33c 

Fine  Chocolate  Covered 
Creams  In  all  flavors;  nut  tops, 
nut  centers,  etc.  Regular  50c 
and  40c  Chocolates  at  33c  a 
pound. 

80c Choc.  Almonds  50c 

Extra  fine  delicious  Chocolate 
Almonds,  fresh  for  this  sale^ — 
regularly  80c  a  pound,  special 
at  &0c  a  pound. 

5c  Chocolate  Bars,  3- 1  Oc 

The  Royal  Chocolate  Bars — 
pure  and  fresh  for  this  sale — 
regularly  5c  a  bar,  special,  8 
bars  for  10  c. 


30c  Cream  Wafers  18c 

Cream  Wafers  In  peppermint, 
maple  and  wlntergreen  flavors. 
Regularly  30c  a  pound,  tomor- 
row and  Saturday,  ISo  a  pound. 

30c  Jelly  Strings  23c 

Spice  Jelly  Strings  In  all 
flavors.  Fresh  and  delicioua; 
regularly  SOc  a  pound,  tomorrow 
and  Saturday,  SSc  a  pound. 

Maple  Sugar  Cakes  5c 

Made  of  the  best  quality  pure 
maple  syrup.  A  very  wholesome 
sweet  at  5c  a  cake. 

— Candles — ^Maln  Floor 


J 


Friday  Specials! 

A  39c  Sale  of  Fine  Quality  Gray  Graniteware 

Tomorrow  you  can  secure  many  use- 
ful Cooking  Utensils  of  fine  quality 
serviceable  gray  Graniteware  at  sav- 
ings well  worth  your  investigation. 

76c  8-qt.  Berlin  Kettles 
59c  3-qt.  Coffee  Pots 
-75c  17-qt.  Dish  Pans 
75c  3-pt.  Rice  Boilers 
76c  12-qt.  Water  Pails 


At 


39<^ 


$1.30  Kitchen  Sets  for 
Only  98c 

Combination 
White  Enamel 
Kitchen  Sets,  con- 
sisting of  bread 
box,  flower  can, 
sugar  can,  coffee 
can  and  tea  can ;  a 
regular  CkQg% 
$1.30  val.  2^0V 


Wizard  Oil  and  Duster 

A  Regular  $1.00 
Value  at  48c 

With  every  50c 
bottle  of  Wizard 
furniture  or  floor 
polish  we  will  give 
free  a  50c  duster 
— a  $1  value,  to- 
morrow AJig* 
only  at. . . ^*^*' 


Cups  and  Saucers 

White  and 
gold  Cups 
and  Sau- 
cers ;  a 
good 
grade  of 
porcelain. 
Also  Dinner  Plates         J  Q^ 
to  match,  at J.  vr^ 

Easter  Baskets 

500  Easter  Baskets  in  many 
different  shapes,  sizes  and  col- 
ors. Up  to  50c  values  at  10c, 
15c  and  25c.  On  the  Fourth 
Floor. 


Water  Tumblers 

Regularly  60c  doz 
— special  6  for  23c 

Colonial  Glass' 
Water  Tumblers, 
fine  quality,  reg- 
ularly' 60c  a  dozen, 
special,  6  for  23c. 

The  ^Wonder"  Mop 

The  yWonder"  Ced- 
ar Oil  Mop  for  pol- 
ishing floors  and 
woodwork ;  complete 


with  long 
handle,  at. 


25c 


$2.25  Wash  BoUers  $1.95 

An   extra   heavy   high-grade  Wash  Boiler  witti  copper  bottom. 


of  Duluth-  nearly  so.  }^e  would  rec- 
ommend the  reissue  of  'The  Climate 
of  Duluth"  at  an  early  date.  A  new 
statistical  leaflet  covering  the  prog- 
ress of  the  city  In  1915  has  been  is- 
sued and  Is  available  for  distribution. 
An  Illustrated  booklet,  more  elaborate 
than  any  formerly  Issued  by  the  club, 
Is  now  practically  ready  for  the  press 
and  will  be  available  for  distribution 
before  June  1.  It  will  cover  In  a 
comprehensive  way  the  progress  of 
the  city  in  all  lines  and  will  be  val- 
uable   publicity    work. 

iMffonnation  B«o«k. 
"The  information  booth  was  oper- 
ated at  the  corner  of  Fifth  avenue 
west  and  Superior  street  from  June 
12  to  Sept.  16.  During  that  time  a 
total  of  18.679  inquirers  was  regis- 
tered. The  committee  feels  that  the 
Information  booth  is  one  of  the  most 
valuable  means  the  club  has  for  serv- 
ing our  summer  visitors.  That  the 
service  is  appreciated  Is  made  evi- 
dent by  the  letters  received  from  vis- 
itors and  by  the  wide  publicity  given 
the  work.  An  article  published  last 
autumn  in  'Town  Development'  was 
followed  by  other  articles  in  the 
Washington  Times.  In  the  Countryside 
magazine  and  in  other  publications. 
We  believe  the  service  should  be  con- 
tinued. 

Free    Pablicity. 

"The  club  has  furnished  articles  to 
a  large  number  of  magazines  and 
newspapers  on  Duluth  subjects,  photo- 
graphs to  magazine  writers.  lantern 
slides  to  lecturers.  literature  to 
libraries  and  commercial  statistics  to 
schools,      colleges      and      investigators. 


Direct  results  cannot  be  traced  In  all 
of  this  work,  but  we  know  It  Is  val- 
uable, and  It  costs  nothing.  Almost 
every  magazine  article  published  about 
Duluth  in  the  last  year  has  been 
copied  or  commented  upon  by  other 
publications,  and  very  likely  many 
such  comnaeats  do  not  come  to  the 
attention  of  the  committee. 
Noti»B  Ptetmrea. 
"Duluth  is  very  well  represented  In 
motion  pictures  being  shown  now^  in 
different  parts  of  the  country.  Three 
responsible     and     well     known     com- 

ftanles  had  camera  men  here  In  the 
ast  year  taking  scenes  to  be  shown 
In  theaters.  The  club  gave  them  all 
the    assistance    possible. 

KatlMial  AdTertlBlBS. 
"The  committee  has  considered 
carefully  the  subject  of  national  ad- 
%'ertlslnK.  I^  funds  were  available  for 
a  campaign  of  adequate  proportions 
to  be  sustained  through  a  period  of 
at  least  three  yea.r«,  the  committee 
would  make  a  recommendation  that 
such  a  campaign  be  undertaken.  Du- 
luth Is  at  a  stage  of  development 
which  has  attracted  wide  attention  to 
the  city.  We  have  definite  conditions 
to  advertise — conditions  that  offer  an 
opportunity  for  capital  and  for  men. 
However,  the  funds  are  not  available 
for  a  campaign  of  that  kind  and  a 
recommendation  could  not  be  acted 
upoQ.  In  the  meantime  the  club  can 
continue  Its  publicity  work  without 
cost.  Duluth  has  so  many  attractive 
physical  and  civic  features  that  there 
Is  no  difficulty  about  obtaining 
magaeine  notice  of  them.  And  such 
publicity  Ls  most  effective,  for  it 
comes  from  a  real  interest  In  the  city  " 


.^ 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE     | 


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M 

. 

Thursday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


ANNOUNCEMENT  OF 

CACTUS  JUICE  AGENCY 

CREATES  COMMENT 


Nothing  in  rocent  years  \n  Duluth 
hns  rrtatod  quite  as  much  comment 
of  the  kind  as  the  announcement  that 
Cactus  Juice,  the  MASTKR  MKDI- 
CMNK,  that  i.s  beluf?  Introduced  per- 
B«)nally  by  Mr.  Green,  the  CACTI'S 
.Il'ICF  MAX,  as  he  i.s  called  by  the 
public,  will  be  distributed  here. 

Duluth  is  indeed  very  fortunate  to 
secure  an  exchisive  ajfency  for  Cactus 
Juice,  as  it  will  b*-  the  first  Minnesota 
city  to  derive  the  advantage  from  this 
remarkalile  preparation. 

Mr.  Green  will  »)e  located  dally  at 
the  Lyceum  I'harmacy  at  431  West 
Superior  street,  bi-glnning  Saturday 
morning,  to  meet  the  public  and  ex- 
plain Cactus  Juice.  The  Cactus  Juice 
Man  spent  some  busy  moments  yes- 
terday mc'ting  many  citizens  who 
personally  knew  Mr.  (Jreen  or  were 
familiar  with  his  personal  reputation 
and   m«dicine  over  the  country. 

J'rominent  residents  of  l^iiluth,  said 
the  Cactus  Juice  Man.  rt  (|uested  us  to 
Klve  the  people  of  your  city  the  same 
advantages  of  our  medicine  as  we  gave 
the  people  in  larger  cities  where  Cac- 
tus Juicf  has  for  many  months  been 
assisting  thousands  of  suffering  peo- 
jiU-    in    those   great    sections. 

We  finally  yielded  to  the  solieita-  i 
tlons  of  these  Duluth  citizens,  many 
of  whom  are  Imsiness  men.  and  while 
here  I  will  prove  to  every  one  how 
easy  it  is  to  guard  against  inroads  of 
111  health  as  carefully  as  you  do  some 
otlier    features   of   your   dally    life. 

Catarrhal  affections  of  the  head, 
thrt)at,  nose  and  stomach,  finally  pro- 
duce a  stuffed- up  condition  of  the  vi- 
tal organs  and  nine  times  out  of  ten. 
this  tremble  is  responsible  for  most  of 
the  ill  health  of  the  present  day 
Americans,  nur  fautly  methods  of  liv- 
ing are  back  of  it  all.  but  it  is  never 
too   late  to  correct  our   faults. 

(Rictus  Juice,  the  MASLTKU  MEDT- 
riNK.  we  are  introducing  to  combat 
thl.s  «listressing  and  sadly  prevalent 
condition,  we  believe  it  to  be  the  best 
remedy  of  its  kind  on  the  American 
market  today.  This  fact  has  been 
proven  in  many  larger  cities  and  will 
unquestioiuibly    be    proven    here. 

Thousands  now  testify  to  the  mar- 
velous merits  of  Cactus  Juice  and  ex- 
press an  abiding  faith  in  its  powers, 
as  a  superk»r  preparation. 

The  Cactus  Juice  Man  will  meet  the 
people  of  Duluth.  beginning  Saturday 
at  the  Lyceum  I'harmacy,  431  West 
Superior   street.      Ask.  any   druggist. 


DULUTH'S  PUBLIC  SCHOOL  SYSTEM 

Being  a  Review  of  Some  Facts  About  the  Community's  Most  Impoi^nt 
Business— No.  1 1— Sewing  and  Cooking  in  the  Grades  _ 

and  the  High  Schools.  ^ 


GRADE  SCHOOL  SEWING  CLASS. 


ROTARIANS  HAND 
FARRELL  BOUQUET 

Praise  for  Works  Depart- 
ment—Want   Jitneys 
Strictly  Regulated. 

The  public  works  department  of  the 
city  was  given  wnrm  praise  by  a 
committee  of  the  Duluth  Rotary  club 
which  has  been  Investigating  the  de- 
partnunt's  affairs,  according  to  a  re- 
port given  by  E.  Y.  lUirg  at  the  noon 
meeting  of  the  Rotary  club,  held  to- 
diiv    at    the    Spalding    hotel. 

The  club  also  took  action  on  a  plan 
to  have  the  city  regulate  the  Jitney 
service. 

The  report  submitted  by  Mr.  Rurg 
was  to  the  effect  that  the  committee 
had  found  that  tht<  department  of 
public  worlds  is  being  operated  in  an 
economical  and  efficient  manner  and 
on  a  sound  business  basis.  Tlie  sys- 
tem now  iJi  vogue,  said  Mr.  Ruig.  was 
different  from  that  formerly  used,  and 
he  eomplinitiited  Comml.xsioner  J.  A. 
Farrell  in  tlie  manner  in  which  llie 
buslnes.s    was    taken    care    of. 

C.  E.  I,um  presented  a  motion  to 
have  tlie  club  favor  a  stringent  regu- 
lation of  the  jitney  bus  service.  This 
njatter  Is  to  be  taken  up  by  a  com- 
mittee of  the  club  with  the  city  com- 
missioners. 

J  H  Murrav  of  the  Northern  Shoe 
•  onipanv.  mid'  David  l^un«an  of  the 
Amoricftn  (\ubolite  company,  were  in- 
troduced as  new  members.  IM  Kel- 
ley  also  gave  a  short  tiilk  to  the  mem- 
bers. Hairy  U  Armstrong,  president 
of    the    club,    presided. 

.* ■ 

Duluth  Realty  Guide. 

The  men  who  are  anxious  to  dispose 
of  tli'ir  rtal  estate  are  the  sort  wlio 
are  willing  to  meet  you  half  way  as 
ti>  price,  terms,  etc.  Many  >*"■  h  men 
Sill-  a.lverti.«ing  In  today's  Herald 
Want   Ad   colunms. 

PRESIDENf  ABANDONS 
HIS  NEW  YORK  TRIP 

Washlngtmi.  April  13.— In  view  of 
the  pressing  nature  of  the  situations 
■with  Oermany  and  Mexico,  President 
\Vllson  todav  abandoned  his  plans  to 
no  to  New  York  tomorrow  night  and 
<  anceled  his  engagement  to  speak 
before  the  Young  Men's  Democratic 
. )nb   there   Saturday. 


Shortly  after  manual  training  courses 
for  boys  were  established,  the  school 
board  Inaugurated  domestic  science 
classes  for  girls,  and  began  the  work 
of  teaching  the  rudiments  of  sewing 
and    cooking. 

The  ola.^ses  have  been  popular  with 
the  studenLs.  as  well  as  with  par. 
ents.  and  have  grown  until  the  de- 
partment now  Includes  eight  kitchens 
and  eleven  sewing  rooms.  There  were 
6S8  taking  cooking  last  year  and  746 
i  who  were  learning  to  use  a  needle, 
or    a   sewing    machine. 

The  school  buildings  which  are 
equipped  with  kitchens  are.  the  Rryant, 
Salter.  I.,akeside.  I'obb.  Irving  Junior 
high,  the  Denfeld  high  and  the  Indus- 
trial school,  or  Washington.  Those 
which  h.'ive  sewing  rof>ms  are  the  Lin- 
eoln.  Lakeside,  VVnshbuin.  Lowell. 
Madistm,  Jackson,  Kndion.  Irving  jun- 
ior high,  Denfeld  high  and  Manual 
Training   high. 

The  cour.ses  were  not  established 
with  the  idea  of  making  expert  cooks 
or  seamstresses,  but  they  have  been 
successful,  teachers  say,  in  advan- 
cing  the    general    work    of   the  school. 


Teaching  a  child  to  use  his  hands, 
and  Incidentally,  his  head,  proves  of 
value  in  an  arithmetic  class,  as  well 
as   in   a  sewing   class. 

Many  grade  school  girls,  entering 
school  life  after  helping  their  mothers 
around  the  home,  confess  that  they 
have  managed  to  do  housework  with- 
out learning  vt-ry  much  about  either 
sewing  or  cooking.  This  Is  particularly 
true  of  sewing,  and  as  has  been  proved, 
many  of  them,  even  in  the  upper 
grades,  must  begin  at  the  very  bot- 
lorn  when  they  enter  a  sewing  class. 

Practically  the  only  book  that  a 
girl  Is  required  to  buy  In  a  public 
school  today,  aside  from  note  books. 
Is  the  cook  book.  Ownership  has  an 
Influence,  the  teachers  say,  "when  a 
girl  owns  her  cook  book,  she  will 
turn  to  It  with  renewed  interest  after 
she    leaves    school." 

Sewlni;   Work. 

In  the  sewing  class  the  girl  not  only 
becomes  familiar  with  the  simpler 
stitches,  and  learns  to  make  sewing 
aprons,  fancy  bags,  crochet  work.  etc. 
Lectures  are  given  on  the  selection  of 
materials,  the  combination  of  colors 
and  the  care  of  their  clothes.  That 
is    In    the    grades. 

In  the  high  school  or  Industrial 
school  they  are  initiated  into  the  mys. 
teriea    of    darning    and    patching,    and 


then  go  on  with  more  complicated 
garments.  All  of  the  girls  make  slm. 
pie  waists  and  dresses,  and  several 
classes  have  made  their  own  gradua- 
tion gowns. 

Cooking  class  work  is  made  as  prac- 
tical as  possible.  Sinipl  r  dishes  are 
made  In  the  grades,  with  a  study  of 
menus   that   might   be    followed    In    the 

homes.  ...      ^     ,^ 

S  A.  Foster,  principal  of  the  R.  E. 
Denfeld  high  school,  says  of  the  cook- 
ing classes:  "Attention  is  given  in 
the  fall  to  canning  products  of  home 
gardens,  with  the  purpose  of  teaching 
the  pupils,  and  through  them  the  par- 
ents, that  they  can  live  better  and 
cheaper  and  be  happier  by  having  a 
home  garden  and  by  preserving  the 
surplus  of  the  garden  for  use  during 
the  winter.  They  are  taught  to  can 
beans,  peas,  beets,  tomatoes,  and  in 
fact  all  the  vegetables  and  fruits 
raised  in  the  garden.  They  alBO  have 
been    taught    to    can    meats. 

"Pupils  have  been  taught  that  they 
can  have  better  vegetables  and  fruits 
In  this  way  than  they  can  buy  at  the 
store,  and  at  very  little  cost.  Besides, 
they  have  been  paid  for  their  work 
and  trouble  in  health  and  greater  in- 
terest in  life.  In  fact,  we  are  carry- 
ing cut  the  homecroft  Idea  In  the 
cooking  department." — R.  D.  McC. 


FOSTER  CHILD 
LOSESJESTATE 

Brother    and     Sister    of 

Jas.  F.  Murptiy  Awarded 

His  Property. 


MARRIED  THIRTEEN  ^CHILDREN  WITH 

400  POUND  wife-Vow  Wks  QUIET 


Judge  Cant  Reverses  Pro- 
bate Court  in  Interest- 
ing Will  Case. 


"And  the  second  time,  Yer  Honor,  I 
married  thirteen  children,"  said  Henry 

I  La    Page,    soldier    of    fortune. 

'  La  Page  Is  78  years  old.  His  bat- 
tles have  been  losing  ones,  for  the 
enemy  has  outflanked  him  and  driven 
him  back  at  every  trench.  He  was 
explaining  things  to  the  judge  this 
morning. 

"Yup."  he  said,  "there  were  thijteen 
children.  And  my  second  wife,  the 
one  that  came  with  the  thirteen  chll- 
ilren — she  weighed  three  hun'erd  and 
eighty    poun's. 

"Yup,  yer  honor — practically  four 
hun'erd  poun's  that  woman  weighed. 
Relieve  me,  jedge,  she  was  some  child. 
"Ever  since  them  thirteen  kids  came 
I've  been  unlucky.  The  wife,  she  got 
sick  finally,  and  she  faded  right  away. 
Right  down    to   a    sha<low   she     faded — • 


A  long  lost  brother  ai'd  an  almost 
forgotten  sister  of  the  late  James  F. 
Murphy  of  this  city,  who  appeared  to 
dispute  the  claims  of  a  foster  child  to 
the  estate,  have  won  their  point  in 
the   courts. 

And  Mrs.  Edna  "Whiteside  Snyder, 
wife  of  a  Minneapolis  banker,  who,  in 
her  girlhood  days,  spent  in  Duluth,  was 
known   as    Edna   Murphy,   Is   the   loser,  i  tionally. 

Years  ago,  when  she  was  «   mere  child  1  ^%,^f/«,„';,  ^«   /"i^i;' With    questions 
of  B,  she  claimed,  she  was  adopted  into  [  ^^  j„^   which  are  not   easy   of  solution 


I  Roth    brother.s,    she    said,    had    drift-  d 
\  away    many    years    ago.      Frank,    how- 
ever,   turned    up   in   Ashland    while   the 
I  trial     was     in     progress    and     came    to 
I  Duluth    and    put    In    his    appearance. 
I       .ludge    Cant,    in    his    decision,    holds 
i   that    the    evidence    as    adduced    at     the 
trial    did    not    establish    that    the    Mur- 
phys   had    ever   adopted    Edna    uncondt- 
The   courts    memorandum   in 


the  home  of  the  Murphys,  who  agreed 
with  her  father.  Ceorge  Whiteside,  that 
thev  would   make   her   their  heir. 

lint  when  Murphy  died  in  this  city 
In  September  of  1913,  It  was  found 
that  he  had  left  her  only  $100.  The 
balance    of    an    estate    worth    approxl- 

Tr''K^Lf.\!'\fs\Ll\I^xu^^^^^  "At    the    basis    of    the    case,    however. 

hi«    J"ter-   AniaMurphv,    supposed      o     l-<'    the    alleged    agreement    upon    which 
hia    sisiei,    -ft""g«      CnthVrine     Tan        If  I  she  relies.     If  there  was  no  such  agree- 
ment, the  case  fails 


If  the  case  rested  upon  any  of  several 
of  such  questions,  much  uncertainty 
might  be  felt  with  respect  to  any  solu- 
tion which  should  be  reached.  My 
opinion  is  that  they  may  all  be  settled 
in  favor  of  the  claimant. 

Conditions  of  Adoption. 


^ 


HarigingOm 


Back  aches?  Stomach  sen- 
sitive? A  little  cough?  No 
strength?  Tire  easily?  All 
after  effects  of  tliis  dread  mal- 
ady. Yes,  they  are  catarrhal. 
Grip  is  a  catarrhal  disease. 
You  can  never  be  well  as  long 
as  catarrh  remains  in  your  sys- 
tem, weakening  your  whole 
body  with  stagnant  blood  and 
unhealthy  secretions. 

You  Need 

PERUNA 

It  s  the  one  tonic  for  the  after 
effects  of  grip,  because  it  is  a 
catarrhal  treatment  of  proved 
excellence.  Take  it  to  clear 
away  ail  the  effects  of  grip,  to 
tone  the  digestion,  clear  up  the 
inilammed  membranes,  regulate  the 
bowels,  and  set  you  on  the  highway 
to  complete  recovery. 

Perhaps  one  or  more  of  ytrar 
friends  have  found  it  valuable. 
Thousands  of  people  in  every  state 
have,  and  have  told  us  of  it.  Many 
thousands  more  have  been  helped 
at  critical  times  by  this  reliable 
family  medicine. 

Pr«»ftrc4  alM  ia  l4U«t  bna  f*r  r*«r  coBmiicaet. 
Th*  P«nuMk  Companr,      Columbua,  Ohio 


be    living    at 
i  they  could   not  be   found.  It   was  to   go 
I  to    a    brother-in-law.    Edward    French, 
I  of    .Springfield.    III.  _        ^    ^, 

Mrs.  Snyder,  who  is  the  wife  of  G. 
Harvey  Snyder  of  Minneapolis,  insti- 
tuted a  contest  in  the  probate  court 
against  the  will,  which  Frank  Horgan, 
executor     of     the     Murphy     estate,     of 


fered    for    probate.       She    suc<-ee 


The  courts  care 
fully  scrutinize  evidence  offered  in  sup- 
port of  such  claims.  In  this  case,  as- 
suming the  evidence  adduced  on  behalf 
of  the  petitioner  and  claimant  is  all 
true.  It  seems  that  the  Murphys  were 
desirous  of  adopting  the  child  Edna. 
As  an   Inducement   th<  r«  to  they  offered 


from   nearly   four  hun'erd  poun's." 
"What   do   you   want    to   do?     asked 

the   court    at    this   Juncture. 

"Well      jedge.     ver     honor,       said    La 

Page,   "I   would   like  to   get  a   Job   on   a 

little   farm,   with   cows   and   chickens. 
"I  kin  tend  to  the  garden,  and  cook 

say   Jedge,   niv    middle   name   is   cook. 

I    had    to    feed    them    thirteen    kids,   yu 

know.  .  .  , 

"An"  when  I  say  cook,  yer  honor,  I 
mean  cook.  Swell  stuff — you  know — 
real  eats — that's  what  I  mean.  And 
keep  house— why  jedge,  honest,  there 
ain't  no  woman  that  ever  lived  who 
can  beat  me  at  keepln'  house.  I  can 
give  "em  all  cards  and  spadep  and  win 
In  a  walk — hands  down.  Nothin'  to  it." 
"I'm  glad  you  like  the  farm  idea," 
said  the  court,  "|10  and  costs  or  ten 
davs  at   the  work    farm." 

L.%  Page  was  arrested  on  Park 
Point  last  night,  when  a  woman  tele- 
phoned that  some  one  was  trying  to 
break   into   her   home. 


the  r< liability  of  such  a  reference,  after  , 
a  lapse  of  years,  even  from  the  mouths  , 
of    honest     witnesses.     Is    not    entirely  . 

satisfactory." 

A  stay  is  granted  and   it  Is  probable 
t\at  the  case  may  be  appealed. 

Hefore    taking    the    case    under    ad- 
visement,   last    May,    .Tudge    Cant    ad- 
vised   the    attorneys    to    effect    a    com-  I 
promise,   stating  at   the  time  thjat  jus-  , 
tic*>   would    be   best   si^bserved   by    such  ' 
a   disposition   of   the   case.     Otlyerwlse, 
he    said,    it   would    mean    that    one    side  ; 
would    get    everything    and    the    other  ( 
side    would    be    put    up    to    a    heavy    ex- 
pense    for    the    litigation.  | 

The  costs  in  the  case  were  taxed  • 
against  the  loser,  Mrs.  Snyder.  Her  | 
attorney     is     Andrew     Nelson.       A.     T.  \ 

I  Pock    and    John    Erown    appeared    as  ] 

1  attorneys     for     the     heirs     under      the  j 

;  will. 

Murphy  was  formerly  the  proprietor  | 
of  a  boarding  and  rooming  house  on  I 
West  First  street.  ' 


Tomorrow's    special,    chicken    bones, 
29o  a  pound,  Minnesota  Candy  Kitchen. 


d«d    in     to   make   her  their  heir.     The  offer  was 


having  the  will  set  aside  and  the  prop- 
ertv  awarded  to  her  by  virtue  of  a 
contract  which  Is  alleged  to  have  been 
entered  into  between  the  Murphys  and 
her  father,  George  Whiteside,  twenty- 
six  years  ago,  when  she  was  a  child 
of  5. 

Wan  to  Be   Holr. 

I  Whiteside,  the  father,  claimed  on  the 
trial  of  the  case  that  he  allowed  Edna 
to  remain  with  the  Murphys  as  their 
daughter  and  that  they,  In  return, 
agreed    to    leave    her   all    the   property. 

,  Mrs.  Murphy  died  in  1911,  and  when 
her  husband  died  two  years  later,  Mrs. 
Snyder  expected  to  come  into  her  in- 
heritance,  but   found  that   the  will  had  i 

1  made    other    disposition    of    the     prop-  i 

erty.  ' 

Judge   Cant    of   the   district    court,    to  j 
whom   an    appeal    from   the    decision   of  ; 
Juilge  Gilpin   of  the   probate  court   was  , 
i  taken,    today    handed    down    a    decision  | 
reversing   the   findings   of    the   probate  i 
I  court     and     ordering     that     the     estate 
'  be   tllstrlbutcd    in    accordance    with    the 
i  provisions    of    the    will. 
I       At    the    trial    of   the   case    in    district 
court.     Wliiteside,     the     father     of     the 
'  I'laimant,       the       long       lost       brother, 
'  Frank,  who  turned  up  In  Ashland,  and 
i  the  missing  sister,   now  Mrs.  Anna  De.s 
Coleau    of    Detroit,    Mich.,    who   claimed 
to   be   the   Anna   Mtuphy    who   formerly 
resided    at    St.    Catharines,    Ont..    were 
'  all    present. 

WaH    "Vnelr    <ieorKe." 
'       Whiteside  claimed   that   he   had  lived 
up  to  his  agreement  in  fact  to  such  an 
i  extent    that   when    the   Murphys   moved 
'  from    their     former     home     in     Spring- 
field   to    DuhUh    he    saw    his    daughter 
but   once  in  nineteen  years.  He  claimed 
tliat    he     had     relinquished     all    claims 
to  her  as  a  daughter  in  order  that   she 
'  might    be    received     Into    a     home    and 
receive     a      mother's     care,      her     own 
I  mother     having    died    In     1888.       Since 
that   time,   he   said,   she   had  never  hon- 
ored   him    with    the    name   of    "daddy," 
but    alwavs    referred    to    him    and    ad- 
dressed   him    as    "I'ncle    George." 
I       Mrs.  Des  Coteau,   tlie  sister,   testified 
'  tliat   she   had   not   seen   nor   heard  from 
'  her    brother.    James,    for    nearly    thirty 
years,    and    that    she    knew    nothing    of 
1  "the  whorpabouts  of  ber  brother  Frank. 


not  accepted,  and  no  unqualllled  adop- 
tion was  ever  had.  So  far  as  the  evi- 
dence discloses,  the  Murphys  made  no 
offer  except  on  the  basis  that  they 
were  to  adopt  the  child.  The  father, 
George  Whiteside,  was  unwilling  to  re- 
linquish his  control  of  the  child.  He 
did  however,  allow  her  to  remain  with 
the'  Murphys,  but  und^-r  just  what 
agreement  or  understanding  is  not  en- 
tirely clear. 

"In  later  years  the  Murphys  on 
various  occasions  said  Edna  was  their 
heir.  This  sentiment  might  be  refer- 
able to  an  early  agreement  to  that 
effect,  if  one  had  been  made,  or  »t 
might  refer  to  a  plan  on  the  part  of 
the  Murphys  which  originated  with 
themselves  In  the  course  of  long  asso- 
ciation with  the  child  and  a  growing 
voung  woman.  In  some  cases  the  re- 
mark seems  to  have  referred  back  to 
an  agreement  with  Mr.   Whiteside,  but 


SEASON  WILL 

OPEN  SATURDAY 


WHY  SPRIN6  GOLDS 

ARE  DANGEROUS 

If  Neglected  They   Lead    to 

Serious,  Perhaps  Fatal 

Results 


Let  Miss  Dean  plan 
your  party  for  you! 
(She'll  make  up  in- 
dividual favors,  etc.) 


TKeGl 


ass 


Block 


For  a  Delicious, 
Savory  Luncheon, 
The  Tea  Rooms. 


f 


House  Cleaning  Specials* 


Carpet  Beaters — "Justright" ;  now 

at 

Floor  Brush — l2-inch,  with  handle; 
sells  regular  at  89c ;  P'riday 

Parlor  Brooms — Good  green  corn ;  sell 
regular  at  6oc ;  Friday 

Carpet  Sweepers — The  Bissell's;  none 
better ;  Friday  at 

Feather  Dusters — A  feather  duster; 
medium  size;  sell  at  $1.43;       QQ^ 


9c 
63c 

59c 

$2.48 


21c 


Friday ,  . . . . 

Whisk  Brooms — New  stock  just  re 
ceived  ;  large  size  35c  ; 
Friday. 

Liquid  Veneer — 25c 
size  ;  Friday. 

Howard's   Dust  Cloths— 
"The  Best";  Fri-         2*?C 


18c 


Step  Ladders 
—6-foot  with 

shelf ;      Fri- 
day, at 


Sapolio — Fo^  clean 
ing;  Friday,  cake. 

Lighthouse  Clean- 
ser— Friday,  7  for. 


$1.39 
8c 
25c 

Coffee  Mills 

By  grinding  your  own  cof- 
fee you  save  half  the 
strength.  This  mill  holds  one 
pound;  grind  as  you  use; 
sells  regular  at  69c,  gT^* 
Friday *^  f  V 


Handle     Dust     Brush 

cleaning  stairs,  etc. : 

at  35c  ;  Friday 

Soap — White  Flyer;  sells  at 

5c ;   Friday,  7  for 

Shelf  Paper — Plain  white: 
5c  per  package ;  Friday, 
3  packages  for 

Pride    of    the    Bar — Cleans 
and   polishes   copper,   brass, 


zinc,  nickel,  etc.; 
the  25c  size,  Friday. 


18c 


Sami  Flush — For 
closet  bowls ;     quick, 
and  sanitary ;  Fri- 
day  


cleaning 


easy 

23c 


Dust  Pans — Black 
yapaned  ;  Friday .  . . 


5c 


Oatmeal  Cooker 

Blue  emameled,  on  heavy 
steel  base  ;  white  lined  ;  holds 
2  quarts ;  .sell  at  ftO^ 

$1.15,   Friday     OiJC 


Wash  Tubs 

Galvanized  iron  wash  tubs; 
the  large  size ;  this  tub  will 
not  rust,  for  Fri- 
day. 


Curtain  Stretchers — you  can 
stretch  any  size  curtain; 
non-rust  pins;  Fri- 
day  


69c 


Visit  the  basement  store 
for  house  cleaning  specials. 
We   can   save  you   money. 


$1.10 


•  •   •  •  • 


Egg  Poachers 

The  best  poacher  made, 
poaches  one  to  five  eggs  at 
a  time,  Friday  2 1  C 


at 


Nursery  Chair 

Willow  Nursery  Chair — just 
like  cut ;  sells  reg-  ^i  •%  £\ 
ularly  at  $1.39.  . .  .M>1«  iVf 


Brings  the  "FLORENCE''  Rotary  Sewing 
Machine  Into  Your  Home! 

THE  "FLORENCE"  ROTARY  SEWING 
IS  GUARANTEED  FOR  LIFE 

You  Can  Be  Sure  of  Quality 
Backed  By  Reputation 


iiLVSTMima  WHAr 

25^WILL  DO  FOR  YOU 

It  makes  it  possible 
for  you  to  use  your 
machine  wtiile  you 
are  paying  for  it. 
The  sctiedule  of  pay- 
ments are  so 
easy  that  you*ll 
never  miss  the 
maney. 


Fishermen  Will  Find  Poor 
Conditions  in  the         I 
Woods.  I 

The    trout    season    will    open    Satur-  j 
day. 

Although  the  flshlngr  season  will 
open  officially  the  day  after  tomor- 
row,   It    probably    will    be    a    week    or 

two  before  lovers  of  the  sport  can  get  i 
out    to    enjoy    It.      The    woods    are    still 
full     of     snow     and     there    Is     a     large 
amount    of    lee    In    the    streams.      Very 
few,    If    any.    of    the    streama    are    free  i 
from   lee.   according  to   reports  of   men  , 
who     have     made     trips     through     the 
country.         Roads       leading      Into      the 
country  are  also  in  bad  shape  for  au- 
tomobile travel. 

Many  of  the  streams  which  have 
been  stocked  during  the  last  five  or  |  by  Sergt 
six  years  will  furnish  good  fishing;  ton. 
this  season.  Among  thene  are  Lester 
river,  Chester  river,  Rocky  run,  Mid- 
way, Knife  river.  Mission  oreek.  Mil- 
ler's creek  and  other  streams  farther 
from   the  city.  ••■ 


WeAdvise 

You  to 
Join  Early 

A  Number  of 

Different  Models  to 

Ctioose  from 

In  Many  Different 
Finishes 

Join  Today 


New  Easy  Terms  of  Payment 

Xo  matter  what  else  you  do,  be  sure  and  V.uy  your- 
.qclf  an  active  membership  in  our  Century  Progressive 
Club.  On  an  initial  payment  of  only  T\\  E.\T\-F1\  h 
CEXTS  you  get  the  benefit  of  the  greatest  easy  pay- 
ment plan  that  was  ever  offered.  A  plan  so  simple,  so 
scientific  but  yet  so  liberal  as  to  permit  distributing 
its  benefits  to  only  One  Hundred  Members. 

Tills  Maciiine  Delivered  for  Only  25c 


The    "Florence"    Rotary     Is 

everywhere  recognizdl  as 
America's  finest  sewing 
machine.  The  new  Central 
NTfcdle  and  S1T.«?TRATE 
Jesign  a.s  well  as  the  Indl- 


JUST  ONE  HUNDRED  MEMBERS -100  MACHINES 

The 
Table  of 

Easy 
Payments 


10c 


is  saved  b  y 
you  on  every 
final  payment 
you  make  in  advance  of 
Its  due  date.  Make  all 
payments  in  advance 
and  save  $3.60. 


:|RST  MVMCtffi: 


vidua!  Lockstitch,  Chain- 
itltch  and  Hemstitch  fea- 
•ures.  This  elegant  slx- 
irawer  model  priced  in  this 
^lub  for  only 

$37.60 

A.gents'  Listed  Price,  $66.00. 


First 
Pay- 
ment 

25c 


nth  H'crk 

75c 


ISib  week 

$1  00 


2ad   «.cek 

25c 


Sth  week 

50c 


iMh    week 

50c 


12ih  week 

75c 


16th  week 

$1.00 


3ld     week 

25c 


Ub  week 

50c 


9lb    week 

75c 


19th  week 

$1.10 


2Jrd  week 

$1.20 


27tb  week 

$1,30 


Sl«t  week 

$1.40 


34th  week 

$1.50 


2Clh  week 

$1.10 

24lh  we«k 

$1.20 

38th  week 

$1.30 

S2nd  week 

$1.40 

3Sth  week 

$1.50 


17lb  week 

$1.10 

21tt  week 

$1.20 


4tlt  wc«k 

25c 

7th«e«k 

50c 


lOlbweek 

75c 


14th  week 

$1.00 


18tb  week 

$1.10 


25th  wrrk 

$130 

29;h  week 

$1.40 

SJrd  w.-*ic 

$1.S0 

a^tb  week 

$1.50 


22nd  «e<k 

$1.20 


26ib  week 

$130 


30th  week 

$1.40 


LMt 

Payaicnt 

51.601 


Jmm   mr-.  --*r-^ 


Miller    and    Patrolman    Boa- 


Premiums  for  Cattle. 


If  you  get  cold  at  this  time  of  year 
and  try  to  'lot  It  wear  off,"  It  fre- 
quently develops  into  a  stubborn 
throat  trouble,  which  may  In  turn  be- 
come chronic  asthma,  bronchitis  or 
worse.  It  is  Import.int  to  remember 
that  Father  John's  Medicine  relieves 
colds  because  of  Its  nouri-shlng  body- 
building elements,  which  give  strength 


SUPERIOR 


of  the  -ecurlties  intercepted  by  the;  chairman  of  the  township  of  Elau 
British  authorities  in  the  letter  post  Pleine.  Wis.,  died  April  11  from  in- 
between      Holland      and      the      United  |  juries     sustained     while     operating     a 


Holdup  Men  Sentenced. 


Slg   Anderson    was    sentenced   to   six 

year.s    and    Charles    Hanson    one    year 

and  nine  months  at  the  Waupun   penl- 

uuiiuiuH  ci^...v..io.   .......  c-.-  ""I-J^.,'"r;  i  tentlary   by  Judge   Smith  of  the   Supe- 

to  the  system  and  enable  each  organ  j;"^;'*:^^^,"^  ^.^^^^..^^^  afternoon  after 
to  resume  its  normal  functions.  Father  I  ^^^y^  ^p„  ^ad  pU  aded  guilty  to  high- 
John's  Medicine  Is  not  a  patent  medl-^^y  robbery.  The  men  attempted  to 
cine  contains  no  Injurious  drugs,  but  hold  up  and  rob  Gideon  Matron  on 
la    a    pure    food    medicine,     for    those  |  lower    Tower    avenue    early    ywaterday 


who  are  weak  and  run-down. 


i  morning   and   were   caught   In   l^e   act 


Premiums  amounting  to  5100  w»ll  be 
awarded  for  Guernsey  and  Holstein 
cattle  exhibited  at  the  annual  Doug- 
las county  fair  next  fall,  according  to 
action  taken  by  the  Superior  Rotary 
club  at  Its  meeting  last  night.  This, 
sum  was  set  aside  in  order  to  induce 
exhibitors  to  bring  thflr  cattle  to  the 
show.  This  sum  will  be  In  addition  to  , 
prizes  offered   by   the   fair  association. 

britishThave  seized 

OVER  £2,000,000 

London.  April  13— Sir  Edward  Grey, 
the  British  foreign  secretary,  reply- 
ing to  a  question  in  the  house  of  com- 
mons today,  confirmed  the  statement 
published    last    month    that    the    value 


States  was  £2,000,000 
tests,  he  added,  had 
neutral  countries  and 
them  was  proceeding, 
were    seized,    he    said, 


sterling.  Pro- 
been  made  by 
discussion  with 
The  securities 
on    the    ground 


wond  sawing  machine. 


that    they   were   of    German    origin. 


OBITUARY 


Rd^^ard  Anthony  Berk,  mar-t^-r  of 
Trinitv  liall,  Cambridge  England,  tlnce 
1'j02,  "died  April  12.  He  was  born  in 
1848. 


Mark  Lyonm,  who  for  many  years 
was  one  of  the  most  prominent  cigar 
manufacturers  at  Appleton.  Wis.,  died 
April  13  at  an  advanced  age. 

8.  Jerome  Vkl,  Sr.,  a  widely  known 
artist,  died  at  Cincinnati.  Ohio.  April 
12. 


David    Ij,   llonter,    63,    newly    elected     tlon. 


Hubert    (George    l>e    Parirli     Canalni;:, 

i  second   niarQuis  of   Clanricardt,   di' d   in 

i  London    April    12. 

I  « 

Filed   for    I.rEriolatare. 

St.  y^aul,  Minn.  April  13. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Albert  L.  Thompson 
of  Mahnomen  today  filed  at  the  state 
capitol  as  a  legislative  candidate  from 
the  Sixty-fourth  di.«trlct.  Edward  In- 
drehus  of  Foley,  filed  as  a  candidate 
from  the  Thlrty-fiflh  district.  Both 
Thompson  and  Indrehus.  at  the  last 
legislature,  represented  the  distriots  in 
which   they   now   arc  Eteking   re-elec- 


> 


■k.. 


'•I  'H  tewn<  .".Li«""Ba«?! 


"* 


h 


-  r 


6 


Thursday, 


THE    DUtUTtH    HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


Society  ^  Women's  Clubs  ^  Music  ^^  iprama 


■*^^^"^>^ 


\-  i:XCKPTION'ALLY  pretty 
weddiiif?  took  place  last 
nii;ht  at  the  residence  of  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  F.  L.  Bnrrows,  12 
North  Nineteenth  avenue 
east,  when  their  daughter  Margaret 
became  the  bride  of  Harmon  1-.  Oil- 
Easter  lilies  tied  with  tulle  hows, 
and  tall  cathedral  candles  were  used 
about  the  rooms  while  during  the 
ceremony  the  bridal  party  stood  be- 
fore a  bank  of  palms  and  potted 
Easter  lilies  lighted  by  cathedral 
candles  arranged  to  form  an  aisl<'. 
The  bridal  couple  knelt  upon  whtte 
satin    pillows. 

Before  the  service  which  was  read 
by  Rev.  Hardy  A.  Ingham  of  Endion 
Metho(li/T  church,  Mrs.  Woodward 
Kirkpatrick  of  Superior,  a  sister  of 
the  bridegroom  sang  "Du  Bist  \V»e 
Eine  Blume"  and  during  the  prayer 
the  'i'.erceuse"  from  Jocelyn.  Mrs. 
Harry  Strong  accompanied  her  at  the 
piano. 

The   Weddlnar    Tarty. 

Mrs  CVlvin  F.  How.  Jr..  couBin  of 
the  b'ridf.  was  the  matron  of  hotior; 
Miss  Lyita  Woodbrldjfe  was  the  brld.;9- 
niaJd  aiid^ohn  C.llbert  of  Fargo.  N-  D.. 
brother  of  the  brld.'Krooin.  was  the 
best  man.  Lynuin  Harrows,  brothfr  of 
the  brid..  and  Wlllard  Matter  stretched 
the  rll.b.lns  whioh  were  held  by  Miss 
Edith    DlKht  and   Misa   Caroline   Moore. 

Th^  bride  was  fe'lven  In  marrlaRe  by 
her  father.  Her  Rown  of  white  silk 
voile  over  tafft  ta.  trimmed  with  pearls, 
was  nuide  with  a  cape  formed  of  point 
laee  that  was  on  her  mother's  wedding 
gown.  Her  veil  was  eauRht  In  cap  ef- 
fort with  orange  blossoms  from  /  a"" 
fornla  and  hunK  to  the  edge  of  hor 
train  She  carried  a  formal  bouquet  of 
lilies  of  thf  valley,  myrtle  and  br  de 
TK^fA.  i>ho  wore  the  bridegrooms  girt, 
an  oval  hrooeh  of  pearls. 

Mrs  How  wore  a  gown  of  blue  sUK 
net  and  silver.  The  bodice  was  formed 
of  the  two  materials  and  streamers  of 
silvfi-  wt-re  used  on  the  short  skirt. 
Her  .slippers  were  of  silver  eloth.  Miss 
Woodbridge  wore  white  embroidered 
net  over  pink  chiffon  with  a  pale  green 
girdle.      Woth    carried   pink    roses. 

Mi3.  Harrows,  niother  of  the  bride, 
was  gowned  In  white  lace,  and  Mrs. 
Gilbert,  mother  of  the  bridegroom,  in 
black  laee. 

Assi.^tlnr  In  the  rooms  were:  Mm. 
B  W.  Matter.  Mrs.  H.  W.  Gilbert,  Mrs. 
Franklin  J.  Pulford.  .... 

The  dining  room  was  appointed  In 
pink  with  a  great  bouquet  of  Ophelia 
roses  tied  with  |)lnk  satin  and  silver 
ribbon  and  tulle  laid  diagonally  acroaa 
th.«  table.  IMuk  candles  and  rosea 
banked  the  buffet.  ABsistlng  here  were 
Mrs.  J.  H.  McLean,  Mrs.  S.  E.  Matter. 
Mrs.  Leon  Allen  Perl  and  Mrs.  Harry  C. 
Strong.  ,^  . 

The  bride'."  going-away  suit  was  of 
pnnd  color  cloth  with  a  green  cast. 
With  this-  was  worn  a  green  leather  and 
cornl  hat.  ,  .       . 

Mr.  and  Mr.".  Gilbert  left  for  a  short 
trip.  They  %vill  be  at  home  after  June 
1  In  the  Endion  apartments. 

^  F.VEXTS    OF    TOMORROW.  * 

^  * 

^  Thr  Itonril  of  th^  ChUdren'*  * 
^  hniuc  ^vlll  hold  lt«  monthly  meet-  * 
iljh  lag    at      Oi45      o'clock      tomorrow  * 

S  morning   nt    the    home.  ^ 

(  entrnl  W.  O.  T.  IT.  will  meet  * 
^  at  'Ji-.'W  o'clock  tomorro»v  after-  M^ 
*  noon  nt  the   %'.  W.  C.  A.  * 

^JE'  The  Molhern*  clab  of  the  Mer-  ^ 
^  rllt  Mchool  «lll  meei  at  3  o'clock  ^. 
i  touiormw  iiftcrnoon  at  the  Nchool.  rt! 

Events  of  Interest. 

Mr.  Mrid  Mr.s.  Albert  Hroman  of  1918 
West  Tliird  rftrct  will  celebrate  their 
silver  wedding  anniversary  tomorrow 
night  by  entertaining  the  Epworth 
LcagU''  of  the  Swedish  M,  E.  chuich. 
•  •  • 
Mrs.  John  Sinclair's  circle  of  the 
Red  froBs  will  meet  tomorrow  after- 
noon with   Mrs.   W.   P.    Abbott. 


Superior  Soloist 

WiU  Be  Heard  Here 


rcY      HenriettQ  D  "C*t»aurf 

"Villa-nous'*  Cooking  of  Villa's 

Land 


I  I 


SIGNE   WOLD    McKENZIE. 

Signe  Wold  McKenzle  of  Superior 
will  givf  two  vocal  numbers  at  the  en- 
tertainment which  the  Aftenro  society 
will  give  at  8  o'clock  tomorrow  night 
at  the  First  Norwegian  Lutheran 
church  for  the  fund  It  Is  ralsinff  to 
build  a  homo  for  old  Norwegian  mou 
and  women. 


will  be  the  same  and  will  include  the 
following   stories: 

"The  Great  Stone   Face."   Hawthorne. 

"Ricky    Tlcky   Tavvy."    Kipling. 

"Haggylug,"  Ernest  Seton  Thomp- 
son. 

"Why    the   Morning   Glory  Climbs." 

"The  Rat  Princess"  (a  Japanese 
story). 

"The  Fire  Brlnger"  (an  Indian  leg-' 
end). 

"Why    the    Rose    Bush    Has    Thorns." 

"The    Pled   Piper   of   Hamlin." 

King    Arthur    stories. 

Robin   Hood  stories. 

"Hobyah.H." 

"Sleepy   Town    Express." 

Miss  Mary  Wllon  of  St.  Paul  will 
accompany  Mrs.  Liggett  and  jv^Ul  be 
the  guest  of  Mrs.  LIggett's  mother. 
Dr.  Surah  McClaran  of  601  Woodland 
avenue. 


Central  W.  C.  T.  U. 

Centr.Tl  W.  C.  T.  U.  will  meet  at 
5:30  o'tlock  tomorrow  afternoon  at  thn 
Y.  W.  C.  A.  Miss  L.  Louise  Shepard 
•win  8pf^:ik  on  the  work  of  the  Y.  W. 
C.  A.  All  women  who  are  interested 
are  Invltvd. 


Will  Give  Two  Story 

Hours  for  Children 

Adele  McClaran  Liggett  will  arrive 
tomorrow  night  from  St.  Paul  to  give 
two  story  hours  for  children  at  the 
Rex  theattr  Saturday  morning.  The 
affair  Is  under  the  aUsplces  of  the 
Duluth  organizations  belonging  to  the 
Mlrinesotn  Federation  of  Women's 
Clubs,  wlileh  is  working  for  a  $10,000 
cndowraent  fund  that  will  put  the 
clubs  of  the  slate  on  a  business  basis. 

The  women  of  the  Duluth  organ- 
Izatlona  have  worked  hard  to  make 
this  story  hour  a  success.  Mrs.  Lig- 
gett has  given  similar  entertainments 
for  clubs,  of  other  districts  with  much 
success  during  the  last  month.  Du- 
luth purposes  to  establish  the  record 
mark  for  utt<>ndance  at  the  programs, 
for  which  I'.OOO  tickets  are  being  sold. 
The  project  has  the  lndor.--ement  of 
the  educators  and  soda]  welfare 
workers  of  the  city  and  the  children 
of  all  schools  are  being  urged  to  at- 
tend. 

It  is  some  time  since  Mrs.  Liggett 
has  glvt>n  a  prograrp  In  Duluth.  her 
home  city,  and  It  will  not  be  the  fault 
of  the  women  of  the  clubs  If  she  Is 
not  given  a  hearty  welcome  when  she 
arrives.  Several  social  affairs  are 
being    planned    In   her    honor. 

The  first  program  will  be  given  at 
10  a.  in.  and  the  second  at  11  a.  ra. 
Box  parties  have  been  planned  for 
both      performances.        The      programs 


Merritt  Mothers' 

Club  Will  Meet 

Mrs.    Orlando    Olson    and    Mrs.    Jesse 
Smalley   have  arranged  a  program   for 
the  meeting  of  the  Mothers'  club  of  the 
Merritt  school  which  will  be  held  at  8 
o'clock    tomorrow    afternoon.      Mrs.    W. 
A.  Nlcols  will  be  in  charge  of  the  social 
hour  that   will   conclude  the  afternoon. 
The  program  will  be: 
Demonstration    of    the    work    of    the 
pupils  of  the  third  grade,  under  the 
direction        of       Miss       Wellington, 
teaclier. 

Vocal    duet — "Mother    M.iehree" 

Misses  Ethel   and   Nina  Gibson. 

Reading    

Miss    Anna    Gallagher. 

Piano   solo — "Humoresnue"    

Ray  Nlcols. 

"Federation   of  Women's   Clubs" 

Mrs.  A.    H.   Brooklehurst. 

Vocal    solo — ".'shadows"    

Miss    Hulda    Olson. 
Accomi>anist.    Miss    Myrtle   Olson. 

Talk     

G.  M.  Paul  us. 
All  who  are  Interested  are  invited. 


Lodge  Notes. 


Nora  Lodge  No.  4.  Daughters  of  Nor- 
way, win  entertain  at  a  calico  ball  to- 
night at  Woodman  hall.  Favors  will 
be    awarded. 


Annual  Concert 

of  Philathea  Union  I 

The  annual  concert  of  the  Duluth  i 
Philathea  union,  which  will  be  given  at; 
8  o'clock  tomorrow  night  at  tne  First  i 
I're.sbyterlan  church,  will  consist  of. 
violin      numbers      by      Wally      Heymar ' 


S-OME  of  our  soldier  boys  in 
I  Mexico,  writing  home,  men- 
I  tlon  the  broth  that  la  kept 
lilmmering  ready  for  travel- 
ers in  every  inn  they  pass. 
This  fiery,  spicy,  too-hot  dish 
Is  made  in  the  same  manner 
as  when  Don  Quixote  and  Sancho 
Panza  wandered  through  Spain — for 
the  cooking  methods  of  Spain  and  of 
Mexico  are  one.  The  foods  of  Mexico 
are  noted  for  their  hot  and  peppery 
character,  and  their  individuality  is  as 
different  from  the«  spicy  dishes  of  our 
kitchens  as  natures  of  Mexicans  are 
different    from    ours. 

Warm  food  is  wholesom'>  and  plen- 
tiful seasoning  Is  agreeable  and  com- 
forting, but  when  one  considers  the 
bloody  rioting,  the  constant  dissen- 
sions and  fighting  that  have  ruined 
this  wonderful  and  naturally  fair  land, 
the  relation  of  the  hot  food  and  the 
hot  tempers  presents  a  problem.  Does 
too  hot  food  lead  to  Intemperance  of 
action?  Those  who  know,  say  It  does. 
Villa  might  not  have  been  "villa- 
nous"  had  he  been  differently  nour- 
ished. When  peppery,  heavlly-splced 
food  reaches  the  stomach  the  mus- 
cles distend,  the  nerves  tingle,  and 
there  is  a  sudden  rush  of  the  gastric 
juices  that  depletes  the  supply  of 
digestive  fluid  for  some  time.  The 
heart  la  stimulated  and  the  blood 
floods  the  arteries.  As  blood  never 
runs  back,  the  veins  distend.  the 
lungs  expand  from  the  added  pres- 
sure and  we  term  this  stimulation. 
Healthful  stimulation  that  comes  from 
exercise  or  pleading  experiences  is 
beneficial.  That  caused  by  Improper 
food  and   drink   Is   not. 

Our  boys  say  th^  eat  "frljoles" 
three  times  a  day  mkA  wish  they  had 
some  of  the  Boston  article.  The 
Mexican  frijole  Is  a  t)lack  bean,  cooked 
in  peppered  olive  oil  and  flavored  with 

farllc.     No  wonder  Mexico  teems  with 
andits. 
It    is    not    enough    to    choose    nour- 


George  of  Chicago,  formerly  of  Duluth; 
vocal  selections  by  Lucille  Brown 
Duxbury,  piano  numbers  by  Louis  Roos 
Gomberg  and  readings  by  Agnes  Mae 
Johnson  Specht.  Miss  Ruth  Aita  Rog- 
ers will  be  the  accompanist. 

Correct  Coffee  Brewing. 

The  true  strength  and  flavor  of 
roasted  coffee  Is  ground  out,  not 
boiled  out.  says  the  Springfield  Re- 
publican. The  finer  coffee  la  ground, 
the  more  thoroughly  the  cells  are 
opened  and  the  aromatic  oils  liber- 
ated. Coarse  ground  coffee  Is  un- 
opened coffee — coffee  thrown  away. 
The  finer  the  grind,  the  better  and 
greater  the  yield.  The  roasted  coffee 
berry  is  a  nia.E>s  of  fibrous  tissue 
formed  Into  thin  cells  In  which  are 
stored  the  aromatic  oils  which  a.  ?  the 
whole  value  of  the  coffee.  Until  these 
cells  are  broken  open  the  oils  cannot 
escape  and  ju»t  as  cutting  open  an 
orant^e  opens  Its  cells,  the  grinding 
of  coffee  breaks  down  the  tissues  and 
pulp  of  the  berry  and  releases  the 
oils  within.  The  fibrous  tissue  Itself 
Is  waste  material  and  yields  when 
boiled  or  percolated  too  long  a  coffee- 
colored  liquid,  strong  in  taste,  but 
without  aroma..  In  pulverized  coffee, 
that  is.  coffee  ground  aa  fine  as  corn 
meal,  the  fully  released  aromatic  oils 
are  Instantaneously  soluble  in  boiling 
water.  In  ground  coffee  the  aromatic 
oils  are  standing  in  open  packages, 
escaping  into  the  air  and  absorbing 
moisture.  That  Is  why  coffee  ■o<in 
becomes  stale  and  unfit  for  use. 
Ground  coffee  must  be  kept  In  an 
air-tight  and  moisture-proof  package. 
It  is  never  well  to  buy  large  quanti- 
ties of  coffee  at  'a  time  unless  one  Ivas 
a  suitable  means  of  keeping  It  where 
it  will   not  deteriorate. 

Correct  coffee  brewing  is  not  "cook- 
ing." It  is  a  process  which  extracts 
the  already  cooked  aromatic  oils  from 
the  surrounding  fibrous  tissue,  which 
has  no  drinkable  value.  Boiling  or 
stewing  extracts  the  fiber  which 
should  bo  wholly  discarded  and  pro- 
duces an  Infusion  of  tannin  which 
damages  beyond  repair  the  flavor  and 
purity   of  the   coffee.     It   is   not  possl- 


Easter  Lilies  Are  Decorations 

For  West  Duluth  Wedding 


Purify  the 
Complexion 

Do  not  be 
troubled  with 
complexion  ills. 
Keep  thctncon' 
cealed  while 
you  are  treating 
them.  You  can  do 
this    Instantly  with 

=*   Gouraud's         " 

Oriental  Cream 

It  wi'l  also  assist  you  to  overcome"  those 
ills"  at  the  same  time  if  they  do  not  ori- 
ginate internally.  Renders  to  tlie  skin  a 
soft,  pearly^white  appearance. 
Sand  1 0c.  for  trial  size 
FERD.  T.  HOPKINS  &  .SON 
37  C;reat  Jones  St.,       New  York  City 


East<^r  lilies  were  ujed  in  the  house 
decorations  and  the  ring  was  carried 
in  a  lily  at  the  marriage  of  Miss 
Georgina  Helen  Ro.s3  to  Norman  Gib- 
son, that  took  place  at  8  o'clock  last 
night  at  the  resldencu  of  the  bride's 
parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  B.  J.  Ross,  624 
North  Fifty-sixth  avenue  west.  Rev. 
Herbert  Ford,  pastor  of  West  Duluth 
Baptist  church,  performed  the  cere- 
mony In  the  presence  of  sixty  guests, 
the  bridal  party  standing  before  a 
bank  of  palms  and  lilies  in  the  livinff 
room. 

Before  the  ceremony  Mrs.  J.  A. 
Palkl  and  Miss  Mabel  Wallace,  with 
Miss  Hildegard  'N\''ohiln  as  accompan- 
ist, sang  "I  Love  You  Truly."  Fol- 
lowing the  ceremony  they  sang  "The 
Beautiful  Isle  of  the  Sea."  Mrs. 
George  V.  Ross,  sister-in-law  of  the 
bride,  played  Mendelssohn's  wedding 
march. 

Bride'a   Gowm. 

The  bride,  who  was  given  In  mar- 
riaKe  by  her  father,  wore  a  white 
satin  and  CJeoigette  crepe  gown, 
trimmed  with  silver  lace  and  pearl 
bands.  Her  veil  was  fastened  to  her 
hair  with  a  velvet  bandeau  and  lilies 
of  the  valley,  and  sprays  of  the  same 


flowers  caught  the  veil  to  hor  gown. 
She  carried  a  shower  bouquet  of  Bride 
ro.sos    and    lilies    of    the    valley. 

Mrs.  Marcus  Skomars,  sister  of  the 
bride,  was  the  matron  of  honor.  She 
wore  a  g<jwn  of  pink  crepe  de  chine, 
fashioned  with  a  bodice  of  blue  taf- 
feta, and  carried  an  arm  bouquet  of 
pink  Klllarney  roses.  Miss  Katherine 
Keyes  and  Miss  Ursula  Briggs 
stretched  the  white  ribbons  that 
formed  tlie  aisle  for  the  bridal  party. 
Little  Drewett  George  Ross  nephew 
of  the  bride,  wearing  a  white  suit, 
was    the    ring    bearer. 

Receiving  with  the  bridal  party  and 
parents  were  Mr.  and  Mrs.  George 
V'.  Ross.  The  brlde'a  mother  was 
gowned  In  blue  silk  trimmed  with 
lace,  Mrs.  George  V.  Ross  wore  white 
corded  silk  combined  with  white  crepe 
de    chine. 

Miss  Leona  Briggs  presided  in  the 
dining  room  where  yellow  lonqnlls 
were  the  decorations.  Assisting  her 
were  Miss  AgTies  Winness,  Miss  Clara 
Wlnness  and  Miss  Helen  Winness. 
Mlsa  Ethlyn  Aman  and  Miss  Helen 
Winness  dispensed  boxes  of  wedding 
cake. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Gibson,  who  left  for 
a  trip,  will  be  at  home  in  West  Du- 
luth   after   May    15. 


Peggy  Peabody's  Observations 


paster  ftrcctiwgi 

Be   an    early   bird   and   order   from 

DULUTH  FLORAL  CO. 

121    WEST  SUPERIOR   ST. 


Grand  Opera  Bluffs 

I  recently  heard  two  cultured  gentle- 
men discussing  the  opera  in  their  pre- 
cise and  at  the  same  time  highly  intel- 
ligent fashion.     What  they  had  to  say 

was     quite     In    line 

with  my  own  prl- 
vate  opinions. 
Their  voices  were 
high  pitched,  so  I 
need  not  plead 
guilty  to  the  charge 
of   eavesdropping. 

The  more  aesthe- 
tic of  the  two  was 
rather  doubtful  of 
the  musical  tastes 
of  the  audiences 
which  gather  at 
the  grand  opera 
performances  i  n 
our  larger  cities. 
He  was  inclined  to 
believe  for  one  reason  or  another,  that 
many  of  them  attended  for  the  sole 
purpose  of  being  seen  and  because  they 
considered  It  as  necessary  to  their  social 
standing  as  the  wearing  of  modish 
clothes  or  the  ownership  of  a  high- 
powered  automobile  of  this  year's 
niodel. 

I  agree  with  this  man  fully.  I  know 
that  many  people  attend  the  opera  to 
be  seen,  go  because  It  gives  one  a  sort 
of    prestige    to    be    obserred       nightly 


ishing.  pur*  fo«>d  for  our  families — 
we  must  go  further  and  explain  to 
the  youngsters  how  w^rong  diet  in- 
jures the  health  and  mind  of  thought- 
less ones.  That  diet  does  affect  health 
greatly  is  emphasized  by  a  statement 
recently  made  by  a  physician  who 
■aid  he  would  take  his  vacation  Just 
at  the  end  of  Lent.  "Far."  said  he. 
"there  is  less  illness  then  than  at  any 
other  season,  because  of  the  restricted 
diet  practiced  by  so  many  as  a  re- 
ligions duty." 

Qnestloaa  and  Aaswrra. 

Can  you  tell  me  what  will  set  the 
delicate  lavender  and  light  blues  and 
greens    of    fine    lawnsT — Alice. 

Reply — Dissolve  one  ounce  of  sugar 
of  lead  (poison)  In  two  and  a  half 
gallons  of  hot  water.  Stir  with  a 
wooden  stick  until  it  is  cool,  then 
immerse  the  articles  In  this  and  let 
them  remain  for  an  hour  or  longer. 
Hang  up  to  drip  dry.  This  sets  all 
colors  firmly  except  pink:  for  this 
add  half  a  cup  of  vinegar  to  the  above 
and   proceed   in   the  same   way. 

•  •      • 

Kindly  give  directions  for  oven  heat 
In  pastry   baking. 

Reply — Have  the  oven  Intensely  hot 
at  flrat.  If  you  use  a  baking  ther- 
mometA".  it  should  register  300  deg. 
After  ten  minutes  reduce  the  heat  and 
finish  the  baking  more  slowly. 

•  •      * 

Where  can  I  secure  the  rush-braided 
porch  mats  and  what  is  the  prooaoie 
price  of  them? — Kansan. 

Reply — ^The  majority  of  the  braided 
rush  and  grass  rugs  and  mats  seem 
to  come  from  Massachusetts.  I  can- 
not tell  you  the  prices,  but  know  they 
are  Inexpensive.  Some  of  them  are 
dyed,  others  are  in  the  soft,  natural 
green  tint.  They  withstand  all  weath- 
er without  showing  wear  and  last 
many    seasons. 


down  somewhere  near  the  front  ar- 
rayed In  stunning  costumes,  ostensi- 
bly enjoying  the  music.  Not  one,  but 
dozens,  even  hundreds  of  them.  literal- 
ly begrudge  the  price  they  pay  for 
tickets,  and  would  If  you  could  Induce 
them  to  speak  the  truth,  tell  you  that 
they  have  no  real  appreciation  of  grand 
opera  music. 

They  would  obtain  far  greater  en- 
joyment out  of  a  comic  opera  with  Its 
catchy  music,  brilliant  scenery,  pretty 
girls,  up-to-date  costumes,  sung  In 
their  mother  tongue,  but  own  to  the 
weakness?  I  should  say  not.  The 
rank  and  file  would  not  have  you  take 
them  for  Ignoramuses,  and  that,  to 
their  way  of  thinking.  Is  what  anyone 
is  who  has  courage  «nough  to  aay  that 
grand  opera  does  not  appeal  to  them. 

It  is  quite  the  fashion  to  rave  over 
grand  opera  singers,  and  so  every  per- 
son who  would  bo  thought  to  be  thor- 
oughly up-to-date,  a  keen  appreclator 
of  true  art  in  any  and  all  forms,  rushes 
to  the  opera  and  sits  through  the  eve- 
ning, or  stands  as  fate  ordains,  the 
while  a  very  good  many  of  them  are 
alive  to  everything  but  the  beauty  of 
music  and  the  merit  of  the  artists. 

Though  I  do  not  believe  the  general- 
ly accepted  theory  that  the  gallery 
gods  are  all  true  lovers  of  grand  opera, 
or  that  the  people  who  stand  in  line 
for  hours  are  music  enthusiasts  al- 
ways, I  do  think  that  the  higher  up  you 
go,  the  more  numerous  they  be«ome. 


T*at*rr«w-4iLet   Ca   G*  t*  Bfarket. 

(fntbe^ttt  tf  .VdsBt  Nnnpaper  Serflce.) 


ble  to  make  good  coffee  with  water 
which  Is  not. Boiling;  a  weak.  Insipid 
coffee  aJwajfK  results  when  the  water 
is  not  boUlng  hot.  Trying  to  correct 
weak  flavor  by  a  longer  contact  of 
coffee  and  water  or  by  continued  per- 
colation does  not  extract  the  aromatic 
oils,  but  does  draw  out  the  undesir- 
able elements  of  the  coffee,  such  as 
tannin,  which  Is  soluble  at  low  tem- 
perature. 


fBedTimcTaies] 

^         By  Clara  Ingram  Judson         jA 

The  Short-Stemmed  Johnny- 
Jump  Up 

"Good  tnorning  to  you  all!"  said  a 
cheerful  little  voice  In  the  middle  of 
the  forest. 

No  answer. 

Not  a  sound  waa  to  be  heard,  except 
the  murmur  of  the  winds  In  the  trees. 

"I  said,  'Good  morning  to  you  all!*" 
repeated  the   cheerful   voice. 

"I  say.  everybody!  Good  morning 
to  you  all!"  repeated  the  voice,  as 
though  determined  to  be  heard  and 
ansin-ered. 

"What's  that?"  asked  Jack  Frost, 
who  had  been  napping  under  a  big 
pine    tree. 

"Who's  there?"  demanded  Mr.  East 
Wind,  who  was  taking  a  lUtle  walk 
through    the    woods. 

"What  did  you  say?"  asked  a  spar- 
row in  the  tree  overhead.  "What  say? 
What   sayr* 

"I  say,  'Good  morning  to  you  all!'" 
said  the  same  cheerful  voice;  "that's 
ivhat   I  say%' 

"But  who  are  youT'  asked  Jack 
Frost. 

"And  where  are  you?"  demanded  the 
wind    coldly. 

"And  what  are  you  doing?"  chirped 
the  sparrow. 

How    the    cheerful    voice    did    laugh  1 

"I've  heard  about  folks  who  couldn't 
see  under  their  noses,  but  I  never  saw 
any  before!  I'm  a  Johnny-jump-up, 
and  I  live  right  under  th-e  oak  tree. 
See?" 

Jack  Frost  and  the  east  wind  and 
the  sparrow  looked  under  the  nearest 
oak  tree,  but  not  a  sign  of  a  Johnny- 
jump-up  did  they  see.  Not  a  thing 
was  there  but  a  lot  of  dead  leaves, 
and  of  course  those  are  not  interest- 
ing— anybody  can  see  dead  leaves  In 
the  wood*  In  early  springtime!  There 
Isn't   much   else   to  see! 

"You're  Joking,"  said  Jack  Frost, 
sternly. 

"Don't  try  to  fool  me,"  asdd  the 
east   wind,    "or   I'll  blow  up  a  storm!" 

"We're  too  sharp  for  you."  twittered 
the  sparrow.  "Better  tell  ua  wtvere 
you   are   hiding!" 

"I'm  not  hiding."  lausrhed  the 
Johnny-jump-up.  "I'm  living  right 
here   under  the  edge  of  the   leaves." 

Then  how  those  three  folks  did 
look.  And  sure  enough!  Snug  down 
under  the  dead  brown  leaves  they 
spied  a"  tiny  little  violet  bloom — so 
short-stemmed  and  modest  that  they 
coiHd  hardly  find  It;  but  so  blue  and 
cheerful-looking  that  they  wondered 
that   they   missed   it. 


^»    atermly. 


ack    t'rtit. 


"Why  don't  you  have  a  longer 
stem?"    asked    the    sparrow    curiously. 

"And  why, do  you  bloom  so  early?" 
questioned  the  east  wind.  "Aren't  you 
afraid   of  the  cold?" 

"Why  stay^  under  the  leaves?"  asked 
Jack  Fr«»t.  '  "I  cannot  even  see  you 
to  freeze  you  when  you're  way  under 
there!" 

Then  How  that  little  Johnny-jump- 
up  did  laug-h!  "That's  just  why  I 
hide  under  the  leaves;  and  make  only 
short  st*im«f  I  like  to  bloom  early; 
I  like  to  be  the  first  to  say  "Spring's 
coming!  But  I  don't  want  to  be 
frozen!"  And  the  little  flower  snug- 
gled down  under  the  sheltering  leaves. 

And  if  ever  you  spy  a  violet  hiding 
down  under  some  leaves  you  will  know 
just  why  it's  hiding  and  why  it  has 
such   a  short  atem. 

(Cortrlghl— CUr*  Ingram   Judjon.) 


Toasorrow — Tomaty  Tlttle-Movae 
Waats  t«   Mot*. 


FRBNQH  A  BaSSBTT  GO. 


Household  Necessities  TItat 

Put  the  "Glean"  in  Housecleanin^ 


Qarpet 

Beater 

Spec.  Se 


Good  Quality 
eorn  Broom 
Special  39c 


Special  Wire  Wrine 
Mops.  coinple«e  QCl^ 
with  handle. . . .  «**^*' 


Tour  choice  of  all  sdzed 
S  ply  Veneer  Qo 

Chair  Seats •^*' 


Rcfrular  ISc  Scrub 
Bru<^ic4.  used  all  over 
the  home,  S^C 

special  at \y\^ 


CadiUac  Mops  Special  89c 

Cadillac  Mops  are   the  kind   that   can   bo  removed 
from  tlao  steel  taap  frame  holder  in  a  S9C 

"jiffy"  and  are  waslutble,  special ^J*^^^ 

O-Cedar  Furniture  Polish 

4  oz.  size  ot  0*Cedar  P<^ish gSc 

12  o«.  siae  of  O'Cedar  Polish 50o 

1  qnart  rfae  of  O'Cedar  Poll.sh. $1.00 

%  gallon  of  O'Cedar  Polish »1.S0 

i  gallon  of  OX'edar  Polish $8.50 

Holland  Mops  Special  95c 

Holland  Mops  are  different  from  any  other  mop  on 
the  market.     Let  us  demonstrate  to  you  Q'^C 

Ite  superiority,  special c^a^w 

HoUand  and  Oil  Polish 

To  be  used  for  mops  and  in  poli«>tiing  furniture. 

t  oz.  bottle,  special  at J^c 

12  oi.  bottle,  special  at..... **c 


FREE — With  erery  25o 
bottle  of  OU  of  Glad- 
Besa  a  furniture  du.st 
cloth — with  a  .">0c  lx>Hlo 
you  get  a  nice  wood 
handle  duster  FKEl::. 


CombinaHon  Step  L<ad- 
der-stool;  a  well  built 
little  article  that  is  use- 
ful tn  every  ^  f  90 
homo ^X.^JF 


Wool 

Wall 

Duster 

on.  Handle 


Special 
only 


€>^iSfedar Polish  Mops 
75e  and  $1. 25  Sizes 

Gurtain  Stretchers 

68c 


I'll!      jinMiiiiiiiiiniiiif 


n.n»iii:uiunni      ,un 


Jill'         UlllllllirullUlll. 


uuuiiuiiHitunir 


uai  is 

&ash  or  Our  New  Easy  Terms 


GOOD 

Bstabllshed  ISSU 


First  and  Third  Ave.  West 


•PWa 


Priest  Discusses  Three 


Impediments  to  Marriage 


Continuing  the  subject  of  matrimony, 
various  phases  of  which  have  been 
treated  at  the  Sunday  and  Wednesday 
night  Lenten  servicea  at  the  Sacred 
Heart  cathedral.  Rev.  Patrick  Lydon 
last  night  spoke  on  the  Impediments  to 
marriage,  which  he  divided  into  three 
classes:  Those  depending  on  common 
sense,  those  made  by  civil  law  and 
those  made  by  the  church.  The  im- 
pediments which  he  enumerated  are: 

Error,  force,  fear,  previous  mar- 
riage, physical  consanguinity,  ^Irltual 
affinity,  legal  affinity,  illegitimate  af- 
finity, disparity  of  worship,  marriage 
for  crime,  clandestinlty. 

As  Father  Lydon  explained,  there  Is 
no  mari-lage  when  one  of  the  contract- 
ing parties  is  not  the  person  the  other 
party  intends  to  marry;  such  an  error 
might  happen  in  a  marriage  by  proxy. 
Fear,  force  and  abduction  are  also  Im- 

f>ediments  as  there  cannot  be  free  will 
n  such  a  contract. 

Relatives  and  relatives  by  marriage, 
to  a  certain  degree  of  kindred,  and  rel- 
atives by  Illegitimacy,  may  not  become 
man  and  wife,  said  the  speaker,  who 
also  said  that  marriage  may  not  take 
place  between  two  parties  who  have 
been  guilty  of  the  murder  of  the  spouse 
of  one  of  them. 

Bars  to  Matrimony. 

Bars  to  matrimony  include  legal  af- 
finity, which  exists  between  an  adopt- 
ed person  and  the  members  of  the  fam- 
ily of  the  person  who  adopts  the  child, 
and  spiritual  affinity,  which  exists  be- 
tween the  sponsor  In  baptism  and  his 
god-child. 

Divorcees,  continued  the  speaker,  un- 
less the  partner  of  the  first  union  be 
dead,  may  not  be  married  in  the  Cath- 
olic church.  Mere  hearsay  Is  not  taken 
as  proof  of  death.  Death  certificates 
must  be  obtained  whenever  possible. 
The  case  of  Enoch  Arden,  Father  Lyd- 
on said,  could  hardly  have  occurred  un- 
der the  laws  of  the  Catholic  church. 
Keolesiatitleal  Impediments. 

Solemn  vows,  such  aa  those  made  by 
Bub-deaeons,  deacons,  priests  and  the 
members  of  some  orders  of  nuns  are 
among  the  ecclesiastical  Impediments. 

Clandestlnltv,  which  will  be  taken  on 
up  at  greater  length  In  another  ser- 
mon, was  touched  on  last  night.  As 
the  speaker  reminded  his  audience,  a 
marriage  In  which  one  or  both  of  the 
contracting  parties  Is  a  Catholic,  roust 
be  performed  by  a  priest  and  must  take 


place  In  the  presence  of  two  witnesses. 
Any  marriage,  taking  place  since  April 
11  1908.  in  which  these  conditions  were 
not  fulfilled,  is  Invalid. 

Church  Meetings. 

Trinity    Guild    of    Trinity    cathedral  . 
will    hold    a    sale    of   fancy    and    useful 
articles     and     home     cooking     all     day 
Saturday    at    7    East    Superior    street. 

•  •      « 

The  Guild  of  St.  James  will  meet  at 
2:30  o'clock  tomorrow  afternoon  In 
the  Bishop's  clubroom. 

•  •      •  .    ,.• 
The    Queen's    Daughters'    association 

will  meet  in  the  Bishop's  club  room  to- 
night. 

•  *      • 

Glen  Haley  of  424  East  Superior 
street  will  entertain  the  Roger  Will- 
iams Club  of  the  First  Baptist  church 
tomorrow  night. 

Personal  Mention 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  James  E.  Granger,  1S24 
East  First  street,  have  returned  from 
a  several  weeks'  trip  to  Pasadena  and 
other    California    points. 
«      •      • 

Mrs.  James  Carson  Agnew  and  two 
children,  who  have  been  spending  the 
winter  with  Mrs.  Agnew's  parents. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Edwards  at  Santa  Bar- 
bara, Cal.,  have  returned  and  are 
g-uests  of  Mr.  and  Mra.  W.  C.  Agnew. 
They  will  return  to  their  home  at 
Hibbing    tomorrow. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  John  Sinclair,  2510 
East  Sixth  street,  have  returned  from 
a   month's    trip   to    California. 

•  •      « 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Mllle  Bunnell,  East 
Superior  street,  will  return  today  from 
a  trip  to  Old  Point  Comfort,  Kew  York 
and    Washington. 

•  *      • 

Mrs.  W.  D.  Bailey  and  children.  2S03 
East  Fifth  street,  and  Mrs.  Baileys 
brother,  Eby  Grldley.  are  expected 
home  tomorrow  from  a  several  weeks' 
trip   to  different   points  In  Florida. 

•  *      • 

Mrs.  Margaret  Gordon-Jeffery.  South 
Twenty-first  avenue  east,  will  arrive 
today  from  an  eight  months*  stay  In 
Pittsburgh.      Her  daughter.   Miss  Vera 


Jeffery,  who  Is  attending  Miss  Cowle'a 
school  at  Hollidaysburg.  Pa.,  will  re- 
turn   In   June. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  A.  W.  Withrow  and  little  son. 
East  Second  street,  have  returned 
from  a  three  months'  stay  in  Florida. 

•  *      • 

Miss  Jeanette  Smith  of  Youngstown, 
Ohio,  is  the  guest  of  Mrs.  Arthur  D. 
Traphagen,    Jefferson    street. 

•  *      • 

Mrs.    C.     D.     Traphagen.     1931     East 


(gr  RUTH 


CAMERON 


Good  Carriage 


-How  well  dressed  that   girl   looks, 
I  thought  to  myself  the  other  day  as  I 
watched  one  of  the  clerks  In  a  depart- 
ment  rtore      while    I    waited      for    my 

*^**0?*perhap3  I  should  say  I  felt  It  In 
the  sub-conscious,  unanalytlcal  way  in 
which  we  first  register  such  Impres- 
Tlons  Afterward  I  analyzed  my  Im- 
pression, and  what  do  you  suppose  I 
found  the  well-dressed  girl  had  on?  A 
black  silk  coat  sweater,  a  simple  white 
business  blouse,  a  plain  tailored  black 
skirt  and  trim  black  shoes— surely  a 
very  simple  costume.  .      „        „ 

Her  Good  Carriage  Made  Her  Seem 
Smartly  Dressed. 
Whence  then  my  impression .  I  asked 
myself  that  question  and  the  answer 
was  that  she  carried  herself  so  well, 
with  such  a  buoyant  graceful  erect- 
nesB.  that  she  gave  the  effect  of  style 
and  smartness  to  that  very  simple  cos- 

^"jtfst  as  one  Is  deceived  by  the  stun- 
ning figure,  charming  face  and  grace- 
ful attitude  of  the  prettv  lady  In  the 
fashion  plates  into  thinking  one  ad- 
mires the  gown  she  has  on,  so  I  nao 
been  deceived  by  her  unusual  grace  of 
carriage  into  thinking  It  was  this  girl  s 
dress  that  I  admired. 

What  a  big  difference  carriage  does 
make  In  the  appearance  of  both  men 
and  women! 

We   were  comparing  the  appearance 
of  two  men  the  other  day  and  someone 
cald    "Of  course  John  has  the  great  ad- 
vantage of  being  the  taller." 
vanias    ^,^^  Kvery  Inefc  Telia. 

"But  he  isn't,"  someone  elae  objected. 
"Ralph  la  alx  *««t.     Tre  heard  him  tay 


so,  and  I  know  John  isn't,  because  I 
remember  how  disappointed  he  was 
when  he  stopped  growing  without 
reaching  the  six-foot  mark.  He  never 
could  get  above  5  feet  10 \." 

The  rest  of  us  were  Incredulous,  but 
she  subsequently  proved  she  was  right. 
And  yet  John  had  seemed  to  all  of  us 
the  taller  because  he  carried  himself  so 
well  that  every  inch  of  that  6  feet  10% 
told.  Whereas  Ralph  had  a  loose-knit, 
alovenly  carriage. 

A  slouch  is  first  cousin  to  a  deform- 
ity. It  spoils  the  effect  of  the  hand- 
somest face,  the  best-built  figure,  the 
most  expensive  clothes. 

How  Sbe  Spoiled  •  Ifeiv  G«Mni. 

At  a  function  the  other  night  a 
friend  of  mine  appeared  In  a  smart, 
new  gown.  "Didn't  she  look  pretty?" 
I  said  to  the  Cynic. 

"Yes,  at  first."  he  said;  "but  toward 
the  end  of  the  evening  she  slumped 
down  In  her  chair  so  that  the  dress 
looked  as  If  It  came  out  of  a  rag  bag." 

A  business  man  who  hires  the  sales- 
men for  his  firm  once  told  me  that  a 
good  carriage  carried  more  weight 
with  him  than  good  looks. 

The  foundations  of  a  good  carriage 
are  laid  In  youth;  It  Is  easy  then  to 
acquire  the  habit  of  standing  grace- 
fully erect  (chest  out  and  stomach  in, 
style  to  the  contrary)  and  the  mother 
who  "keeps  at"  her  children  to  stand 
well  will  win  their  ultimate  gratitude 
even  though  they  may  be  impatient  at 
the  time.  Good  looks  and  good  clothes 
are  advantages  wliich  we  cannot  all 
give  our  children,  but  a  good  carriage 
we  can  fflve — If  they  will  only  help  us. 
CPretaeted  by  Ad4au  NewpMer  (krrlet.) 


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"Goodies!" 


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m-e-I-t  in  your  moudi 
— flight,  fluffy,  tender 
cakes,  bitcaiti  and 
doughnuts  that  just 
keep  you  hanging 
'round  the  pantry — all 
made  with  Calumet — 
the  safest,  purast,  most 
economical  Baking  Pow- 
der. Try  It — drive  away  \ 
bake-day  failuret." 


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Thursday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


Bupfrlnr  istrpct,  has  returned  from 
Florida  whf-re  she  and  hf-r  parents, 
Mr  and  Mis.  Faddook  of  Milwaukee, 
"XVls     have  been   the  last  few  weeks. 

*  ♦       • 

Mrs.     W.     John     McCabp,      2125     Ab- 
botsford    avenue,    and    Mrs.    Milton    M. 
Mof'abe,   2328    Koslyn   avenue,   left  last 
jilglit   for   a   trip   to   Chicago. 
«       •       * 

Mrs.  William  H.  Cole  and  dauRhter, 
AlUe,  Ea.st  First  street,  will  leave  to- 
morrow for  a  two  months'  trip  to 
California. 

*  «      • 

Mr.s.  TN'.  W.  Lawrence  of  Glen  Avon 
has  returned  from  the  South,  where 
•he    has    spent    the    last    three   months. 

*  «      * 

Ml.««  Bernlre  Crowloj-.  606  West 
Borond  street,  left  la.st  night  for  <:hl- 
cago  to  Join  her  aunt,  Mrs.  A.  M. 
Miller,  who  Is  en  route  home  from 
New  York,  where  »lKi  has  been  for 
•everal    weeks. 

*  *       • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Morgan  M.  Pattlson, 
1837  Woodland  avenue,  havo  returned 
from  a  few  days'  vIkU  In  Minneapolis. 
«       •       • 

Mr.  and  Mr.s.  Daniel  Haley.  1618  Jef- 
fcrsfin  street,  are  expected  home  from 
Florida    about    April    20. 

*  *      « 

Harold  Tufty  returned  ye.'^terday 
morning'  from  tho  rnlvirsity  of  Wis- 
consin to  pa.sa  the  Ea.stpr  vacation 
with  hi.s  parents.  Dr.  J.  M.  O.  Tufty 
and     Mr.s.      Tufty,      425      East      Second 

•treet. 

*  •       * 

Mrs.  .<5.  "L-f  Mere  of  Hancock,  Mich.. 
Is  the  gurst  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles 
Huebsch.    616    East    First    street. 

*  «       • 

Mrs.  T.,.  G.  rtunnell  left  last  night 
for  Chippewa  Falls.  Wis.,  where  she 
wa.s  called  by  the  serious  Illness  of 
her    mother. 

«       *       • 

Mrn.  Roy  Hridgeman  (Anna  Joroni- 
mus)  It  ft  yesterday  to  Join  her  hus- 
band at  Grand  Forks,  N.  D.,  whire 
they   will   make    tlieir   future   home. 

*  *       * 

M1.SS  Ethel  Marsh  of  26^5  West  Helm 
■treet  will  return  tomorrow  from  a 
•hort    visit    In    St.    Paul. 

*  •       * 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  August  J.  Frey  of  1519 
East  Second  street  havt-  returned  from 
R    three    week.s'    trip    to    New    Orleans 

«nd  Cincinnati. 

*  *       * 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Frank  Phelp.i,  1727 
Jefferson  street,  h.nve  returned  from  a 
trip    to    Minneapolis. 

Minnesota  Day  at 

Pasadena  Art  Exhibit 

The  old  Throop  building  in  Pasadena 
ts  the  scene  of  a  most  Interesting  ex- 
hibition of  paintings  this  week,  loaned 
by  the  I'hllndelphia  Water  Color  club 
•nd  tho  I'Hsadeiiii  Music  and  Art  as- 
BOclatlon.  Different  states  are  being 
featured  with  different  days  and  "Min- 
nesota day"  was  most  successful  In 
bringing  together  a  large  number  from 
this  state,  anu>ng  whom  were  Mrs. 
Wllllaid  Ponaldson.  Mrs.  F.  E.  House, 
Mrs.  A.  M  Marshall,  Mrs.  Howard  Ab- 
bott, Mrs.  J.  W,  Raymond,  Mrs.  Henry 
Halo,  with  her  niece.  Miss  Hale  of 
Elizabethtown,  N.  Y.;  H.  A.  Ware,  Mrs. 
r.  A.  Chamberlain,  Mrs.  W.  M.  Prindle, 
l>r.  and  Mrs.  George  Martin.  Mrs.  H. 
A.  Fuller,  Miss  Julia  Eastman,  Mrs. 
W.  J.  Hettinger,  Mrs.  Fox,  Mrs.  J.  C 
Flynn,  Mrs.  D.  C.  Rodd  and  the  three 
young  women  assisting  with  the 
serving  of  the  refreshments.  Miss 
Dorothy  House.  Miss  Katherlne  Ab- 
bott   and   Miss   Josephine   Cotton. 

Mrs.  F.  E.  House.  Mrs.  A.  M.  Mar- 
•hall  and  Mrs.  Howard  Abbott  were 
the    hostesses. 


wins   the   hearty   love  and  applause  of 
her    audiences. 

"This  Is  the  first  time  I  have  ever 
really  had  my  foot  on  the  Broadway 
ladder."  she  says.  "I  have  played 
good  parts  in  several  near  successes 
and  small  parts  In  some  big  successes, 
but  I  never  felt  that  I  had  secured  a 
positive  footing  before.  It  Is  a  desir- 
able feeling,  but  not  one  with  which 
to  remain  satisfied,  and  I  try  at  each 
new  performance  to  do  a  little  better 
than  I  did  at  the  last." 

Miss  Rolland  prefers  to  talk  about 
her  managers  rather  than  herself.  I 
think  every  member  of  the  company 
has  the  same  desire  to  please  Mr.  Co- 
han, Mr.  Harris  and  Mr.  Forrest  that  1 
have,  for  they  appreciate  any  effort 
we  make." 

"I  have  been  wondering."  said  the 
Interviewer  to  Miss  Rolland,  "how 
Messrs.  Cohan  and  Harris  manage  to 
pick  out  so  many  winners.  Theyi 
never  seem  to  have  a  failure.  How  do 
you    account    for    It?" 

"It  Is  not  so  much  a  matter  of  pick- 
ing winners."  says  the  charming 
young  actress,  "as  It  is  In  knowing 
what  tho  public  wants  and  training 
the  actors  to  pass  It  over  the  foot- 
lights In  acceptable  form.  Mr.  Cohan 
never  Judges  a  play  from  his  own 
standpoint  nor  the  eye  of  an  actor,  but 
from  a  seat  In  the  theater.  'Now  If 
I  were  out  there  paying  $2  to  see  this 
show,  would  this  suit  me?'  in  his  at- 
titude of  mind  In  selecting  a  play.  And 
then  when  It  comes  to  rehearsal  we 
are  told  by  Mr.  Forrest  In  a  pleasant 
voice  what  we  are  expected  to  do,  and 
as  a  result  we  are  only  too  willing 
to  do  It.  It  makes  all  thft  difference 
In  the  world  how  you  are  told  to  do  a 
thing  whether  you  will  do  It  right  or 
not. 

"Tn  rehearsing  this  play  we  never 
did  the  same  thing  twice  or  said  the 
same  lines  twice  until  two  nights  be- 
fore tho  play  opened.  It  was  constant 
changing  of  situations  and  lines  until 
none  of  us  knew  just  where  we  were 
until  time  to  put  the  production  on, 
but  everybody  was  patient  and  things 
came   out  right. 

"And  Just  remember  one  thing,  when 
you  hear  of  a  Cohan  and  Harris  suc- 
cess, don't  give  too  much  credit  to 
the  actors,  for  the  large  portion  of 
It  1b  due  to  the  consideration  of  the 
management  In  conducting  rehear- 
sals." 


MR.  GARDENER,  HERE  AR|^ 
SOME  BOOKS  FOR  GUIBANCE 


Theater  Gossip. 


AMUSEMENTS 


TONIGHT'S  ATTRACTIONS. 

LYCEl'M— Jack  Reed  and  his  "Record 
Breakers,"  burlesque. 

NEW  GRAND— Vaudeville  and  photo- 
plays. 

REX-  TI.  R.  Warner  In  "The  Raiders," 
photoplay. 

LYRIC— Consfancft  Collier  In  "The 
Code  of  Marcia  Cray,"  phot^oplay. 

ZEI.DA— Anita  Stewart  and  Earle  Wil- 
liams In  "My  Lady's  Slipper,"  photo- 
play. ^ 

APPEALS  TO  AUDIENCES. 

Actress    Discusses  "It   Pays   to  Ad- 
vertise'' Coming  to  Lyceum. 

Played  by  an  actress  of  less  sim- 
plicity and  charm,  the  role  of  Mary 
Grayson,  assumed  by  Adelo  Rolland  in 
"It  Pays  to  AdverUse,"  which  Messrs. 
Cohan  and  Harris  will  bring  to  the 
Lyceum  theater  Sunday,  April  16,  for 
four  nights  and  Wednesday  matinee, 
•would  smack  of  the  adventuress,  but 
done  by  Miss  Rolland,  the  scheming 
Btenographer  wh4.  plots  with  the  old 
•oap  king  to  "make  a  man  of  his  son," 


Variety    is    the    keynote    of    the    show 
that     holds    the   boards  at     the   always 
popular     New    Grand 
NKW   .SHOW   AT   this      week-end.      and 
TIIK  tiHA.XU.     the    bill    Is    well    bal- 
anced   throughout. 

Full  of  jest,  eccentric  dancing  and 
ludicrous  attempts  at  singing,  the 
"Mudiown  Minstrels."  as  offered  by 
Crcightf.n,  Belmont  and  Crelghton,  reg- 
ister the  big  laughing  hit  of  the  bill. 
This  clever  trio  Impersonates  three  ru- 
ral Yankees  as  they  would  appear  In 
a  minstrel  show.  The  types  are  those 
one  may  see  any  day  In  the  villages  and 
small  towns  of  New  England. 

For  "speed"  the  banjo  act  of  the  Bol- 
ger  brothers  Is  In  a  class  by  Itself- 
Both  are  accomplished  musicians  and 
get  excellent  music  out  of  their  chosen 
Instruments.  Their  selections  rang'e 
from  the  classics  to  the  late  popular 
melodies   of  the   day. 

Le  Claire  and  Sampson  are  burlesque 
athletes  featuring  a  strong  man.  The 
act  Is  brimming  over  with  comedy  and 
fun  that  is  dean  and  wholesome.  Rwati 
and  Swan  are  dancing  Jugglers.  Skill 
and  talent  are  combined  In   the   offer- 

"Allas  Jlmmle  Barton,"  a  two-reel 
film,  featuring  Jack  Mulhall  and  Gret- 
ehen  Hartman.  heads  the  film  dramas. 
"Anvils  and  Actors,"  a  comedy;  the 
Canlmated  Nooz  Pictorial,  a  cartoon 
comedy,  and  the  Sellg-Trlbune  News, 
containing  some  Interesting  views  from 
the  Mexican  frontier,  make  up  the  re- 
mainder of  an  enjoyable  entertainment. 
♦  ♦  • 
Constance  Collier,  who  has  never 
failed  to  draw  well,  aeems  to  be  quite 

as     popular     In 

CONST  WCF:  rOM.IRR   "The     Code      of 

l»I-KASl'.s  l.YltIC         Marcia      Gray." 

PATHO>"9.  eeen  for  the  last 

time   today   and 

tonight  at  tho  Lyric,   as  In  any  of  her 

other    many    successes.       The    two-day 

engagement      might      well      have      been 

lengthened  Into  three  or  four,  from  the 

apparent     approval     of     the     somewhat 

critical     and     appreciative     patrons     of 

the  Lyric  who  saw  the  picture  yester- 

day. 

"Little  Mary"  comes  tomorrow  and 
win  be  seen  both  Friday  and  Saturday 
in  "The  Foundling,"  a  return  engage- 
ment of  this  picture. 

When  "The  Foundling"  was  here  be- 
fore, hundreds  failed  to  get  seats  and 
see  the  picture.  There  Is  no  change 
In  price  upon  this  return  engagement, 
and  the  winsome  star  will  make  her 
bow  tomorrow  to  new  admirers.  There 
Is  a  superb  blending  of  the  pathet'e 
and  the  comic  throughout  the  play — a 
dual  role  that  "Little  Mary"  fits  Into 
as  few  actresses  could. 
«      «      * 

H.   B.  Warner   will   close   the   motion 
picture    engagement    in    "The    Raiders' 
tonight    at    the    Rex. 
If.  n.  "WAnXER     It     Is     a     play     that 
CLOSES  AT  REX.  teams    with     exciting 
moments   of  real   ad- 
venture,   based    on    a    stock    exchange 


Duluth  homecrofters  and  amateur 
gardeners  have  access  to  many  new 
books  on  the  subject  of  horticulture 
and  gardening  at  the  public  library. 
The  books  have  been  classified  by  Miss 
Frances  Earhart,  llbrairlan,  and  should 
prove  attractive  to  Duluthlans  who  are 
Interested  In  the  culture  of  fruits 
flowers  and  even  the  humble  vegetable 
garden. 

Here  Is  the  list: 

The  Garden   BeantlfaL 

Arnott,    "Book    of   Bulbs,'    lyOl.^  „ 

Barnes,   "Suburban     Garden     Guide, 
1913. 

Egan,   "Making  a   Garden   of   Peren- 
nials,"   1912,  ^  ^      .,       .. 

Ely.      "Practical      Flower        Garden.^ 
1911;     "A     Woman's     Hardy     Garden, 
1903 

Frothlngham.  "Success  In  Gardening: 
Work   In  the  Garden  Week  by  Week, 
1913 

Hemsley,    "Book    of    Fern    Culture." 

1908 

Holmes.  "Gardens  of  England."  1907; 
"Commercial  Rose  Culture,'.'  1911. 

"How    to    Make    a    Flower    Garden, 
1903.  .      .„ 

Hunn  and  Bailey,  "Amateur's  Prac- 
tical  Garden   Book." 

Jekvll  and  Weaver.  "Gardens  for 
Small   Country   Houses."    1912. 

McCollom,  "Vines  and  How  to  Grow 
Them."   1911.  .       .     .,  ,r.        ^ 

Miller,  "What  England  Can  Teach 
Us   About   (Jardenlng."    1913. 

Oliver,    "Plant    Culture."  _     ^    .. 

Rexford,  "Amateur  Garden  Craft," 
1912.  ^      ^ 

Robinson,  "English  Flower  Garden 
and  Home  rjrounds."  1907. 

Tabor,  "Garden   I'rlmer." 

Thomas,  "Rose  Book,  a  Complete 
Gtilde  for  Amateur  Rose  Growers," 
1913 

Thougpr,  "Book  of  the  Cottage  Gar- 
den."  1909. 

Williams,  "Gardening."  1913. 
The    Garden    PraetleaL 

1.     General.      Periodicals: 

Country    Gentleman. 

Country  Life   In  America. 

House   and   Garden. 

Bailey.  "Cyclopedia  of  American  Ag- 
riculture." 1907;  "Garden  Making. 
Suggestions  for  the  Utilizing  of  Home 
<;rounds,  '  1913;  "Manual  of  Gardening." 
1911;  "Standard  Cylclopedla  of  Horti- 
culture." v.   1-4.  1914.  _      .^ 

Long,  "Common  Weeds  of  the  Farm 
and    Garden,"   1910. 

Meier,  "School  and  Home  Garden.?." 
1913. 

O'Kane,    "Injurious    Insects,    How    to 


Recognize  and  Control  Them,"  1912. 
Thomas,    "Garden   TKork,  for      Every 

Day,"   1913.         _  ...  .    ^     ^      , 

Gardening. 

1913 


Aquat 
and'etables  on   the  Frtn 

Bailey.    "The     For 
"Nursery    Book, 
the     Multiplication      of 
"Plant   Breeding,"    1895: 
Fruit    Growing,"    1P02; 


'rtn^  Sy«t 
Forilgf  li 
a    tlpElUfct 


em."  1913. 
Book,"  1897; 
lete  Guide  to 
Plants,"  1911; 
"Principles  of 
Principles      of 


Krumbles 


sr 


'IK'IIIH'ICI* 


Vegetable    Gardening."    1901;    "Pruning 
Book."   1914. 

Biggie,  "Berry  Book:  Small  Fruit 
Facts  From  Bud  to  Box;"  "Garden 
Book."    1912, 

Castle.  "Book  of  Market  Gardening," 
1906. 

Corbett.   "Garden   Farming,"    1913. 

French,  "Book  of  Vegetables  and 
Garden    Herbs."    1907. 

FuUerton.  "How  to  Make  a  Vege- 
table   Garden."    1905. 

Ilott.    "Book    of   Asparagus,"    1901. 

Miller,  "Making  a  Garden  With  Hot- 
bed  and    Coldframe,"    1912. 

Powell,  "Orchard  and  Fruit  Garden, 
1905. 

Rockwell,   "Home  Vegetable  Garden- 

Silngerland.  "Manual  of  Fruit  In- 
sects," 1914. 

Turner,  "Fruits  and  Vegetables  Un- 
der Glass,  Asparagus,  Beets,  Carrots, 
Chicory.  Cauliflowers,  Cucumbers,  Let- 
tuce. Mushrooms.  Radishes,  Rhubarb. 
Sea  Kale  and  Tomatoes,"    1912. 

Watts     "Vegetable   Gardening."    1913. 

Whthes.  "The  Book  of  Vegetables," 
1902. 

3.     Landscape  Gardening: 

Barron,  "Lawns  and  How  to  Make 
Them."  „,    .. 

Butterfield,  "Making  Fences,  Walls 
and  Hedges."  1914. 

Earle.    "Garden    Colors,"    190B. 

Harrison.  "The  Gold  Mine  In  the 
Front  Yard  and  How  to  Work  It,"  1905. 

Hooper,  "Reclaiming  the  Old  House," 

1918. 

Hutchinson,  "Our  Country  Home, 
How  We  Transformed  a  Wisconsin 
Woodland,"  1908.  .  ^   .   „   ^ 

Kellaway,  "How  to  l-^y  Out  Subur- 
ban  Home   Grounds,"    1901. 

Miller,  "Making  Paths  and  Drive- 
ways,"  1912.  ,  ^      ^  „ 

Rose,  "Lawns  and  Gardens.  How  to 
(Plant    and    Beautify    the    Home    Lot," 

11897. 
Tabor     "The      Lfindscape      Gardening 
Book,"  1911;  "Suburban  Gardens,"  1913. 


The  New  Whole  Wheat 
food  with  i\i9  J)p//e/ous 
Flavor  origmatGd  by  the 
KeQoggToasied  Com  FlakeG). 


«♦! 


ll!ll!!E'.l«'' 


story.     Pauline  Frederick  will  be  here  ' 
In   "Audrey"   tomorrow, 

"Audrey"  is  well  remembered  by 
readers  as  one  of  Mary  Johnston's 
m<ist  entertaining  novels.  Adapted  Into 
dramatic  form  by  Harriet  Ford  and  E. 
F.  Boddlngton,  the  play  rather  adds 
than  takes  from  the  charm  of  the 
novel.  Put  on  by  the  Famous  I'layers 
Film  company,  with  Pauline  Frederick 
in  the  title  role  as  star,  and  an  excel- 
lent company,  the  picture  la  most  en- 
tertaining. 

Found  as  the  sole  survivor  of  an 
Indian  raid,  Audrey  Is  adopted  by  Mar- 
maduke  Howard,  a  young  Englishman, 
who  places  her  in  charge  of  a  minister 
while  he  returns  to  England  to  look 
after  his  inheritance.  A  half-breed 
trapper  falls  In  love  with  the  girl  when 
she  reaches  maturity,  and  out  of  this 
situation  many  others  multiply.  The 
picture  could  not  be  complete  unless 
the  scenes  were  taken  in  the  South, 
and  Florida  was  chosen  for  the 
pose. 

The  natural  beauty  of  the  settings 
In  senil-troplcal  Florida  add  Immensely 
to  the  effectiveness  of  the  photoplay. 


ALTERNATIVE 
ORDINANCE 

Council  May  Put  Its  Offer 

to  Firemen  Up  to 

Voters. 


[ZS^ 


J&'^Jf^ 


Krumbles?' 


city    commissioners 


ii 


MY  LADY^S  slipper;^ 

Photoplay  By  Cyrus  Townsend  Brady 
Opens  at  Zelda. 

"My  I^dv's  Slipper."  a  five-part 
Vitagraph  Blue  Ribbon  feature,  with 
the  famous  co-stars.  Anita  Stewart 
and  Earl  Williams.  In  the  title  roles, 
made  Its  Initial  appearance  yesterday 
at  the  Zelda.  and  Is  conceded  by  those 
who  viewed  It  to  be  one  of  the  great- 
est costume  photoplays  yet  seen   here. 

"My  Lady's  Slipper"  was  written  by 
the  well  known  novelist.  Cyrus  Town- 
send  Brady,  and  was  produced  under 
the  direction  of  Ralph  W.  Ince.  one 
of  the  greatest  of  all   screen  directors. 

The  supporting  cast  Includes  players 


|«^«< 


! 


LIKE  THE 
FRENCH  HAT 


KAYSER  Silk  Gloves — smart; 
original,  inimitable  —  in  the 
mind   of  the  fastidiously 
dressed  woman,  occupy  a 
place  entirely  their  own. 

Ask  at  the  stores  for  the  new 
Kayser  Silk  Gloves  for  1916.  Sec 
them  today.     coi>vnfl*<.^«'»>" '•»•«'*  Co. 


Nut 


is  simply  delicious  when  made  with 

KG  Baking  PbwDER 

Pure— Healthful— Economical 


The  highest  grade  of  baking  powder  pos- 
sible to  buy  and  your  money  refunded 
if  it  fails  to  satisfy.      Ask  your  dealer. 

Jaques  Mfg.  Co.,  Chicago 


.^OUNCEifj^ 


such  as  Joseph  Kllgour,  William  Shea, 
Julia  Swayne  Gordon.  George  Stevens 
and    others    of   note. 

This  story  Is  one  of  the  most  In- 
teresting of  the  many  successful 
novels  from  Mr.  Brady's  pen.  The 
scenes  are  laid  in  and  near  Paris  dur- 
ing the   time   of  Louis   XVI. 

"My  Lady's  Slipper"  will  show  for 
the  last  times  tonight  and  tomorrow. 
Mabel  Taliaferro,  who  was  seen  In 
Duluth  a  short  time  ago  In  "The  New 
Henrietta."  will  feature  the  Sunday 
program  In  her  greatest  screen  suc- 
cess,   "Her    Great    Price." 

ROADS  WANT  RATES 

ON  COAL  INCREASED 

Bt.  Paul.  Minn..  April  IS.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Railroads  operating 
between  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  and  in 
Southern  Minnesota  today  made  a  plea 
before  the  state  railroad  and  ware- 
house commission  for  permission  to 
add  10  cents  a  ton  to  coal  rates  from 
the  Head  of  the  Lakes  to  Southern 
Minnesota    points. 

The  interstate  commerce  commission 
recently  fixed  rates  from  Illinois  to 
Southern  Minnesota  at  10  cents  a  ton 
more  than  l.«»  allowed  the  roads  operat- 
ing from  the  Head  of  the  Lakes.  The 
Head  of  the  Lake  roads  would  have 
their  rates  made  equal  to  those  per- 
mitted  roads   running   in   from  Illinois. 

CANNOT  MAKE  RESULTS 
OF  OIL  PROBE  PUBLIC 

Washington.  April  13. — Attorney  Gerj- 
I  eral  (Jregory  responding  to  Kenyon's 
I  resolution  calling  for  the  results  of 
the  department  of  justice  investigation 
into  the  workings  of  the  Standard  Oil 
dissolution  told  the  senate  today  that 
It  would  be  incompatible  with  public 
interest  to  disclose  the  information  at 
this   time. 

The  attorney  general  s  refu.'sal  was 
regarded  as  forecasting  some  develop- 
ment In  connection  with  the  recent 
rise   In   the   price  of  gasoline. 


may    submit    an 
pur-    alternative    ordinance    relative    to    the 
proposed    double    platoon    system    for 
the   firemen. 

Although    nothing    definite    is    being 
planned    by    members    of    the    council, 
they    admitted    this    morning    that    the 
matter    has    been    given    some    consid- 
eration  during    the    last   few   days.     In 
Ivlew  of  the  fact  that  the   firemen  have 
refused    their    offer    of    a   compromUe. 
I  the    commissioners    are    of    the    opinion 
that     the     voters      themselves      should 
'  settle    the    question    of    establlphlng    a 
'  double     platoon     system,     which     will 
'cost  >30,600   the   first  year.     The   city's 
!  of f er   may  be  Included  in   the  proposed 
alternative    ordinance. 

City    Clerk    Borgen    said    this    morn- 
Infc  that  the   petition   has   enough  sig- 
natures already   and   that   he   will   cer- 
tify as    to   Its  sufficiency   at   the  coun- 
cil      meeting       next       Monday.         The 
commissioners    will    then    have    twenty 
days    in    which    to    pa.ss    the    Initiative 
I  ordinance      or      twenty-five      days      in 
which   to  call   an   election.     They  have 
'the  right  to  submit  an  alternative  or- 
dinance    to     the     people    at    the     same 
I  time,    according    to    charter, 
1      If    an    alternative    ordinance    is    sub- 
'  mitted    to    the    voters    it    will    Include 
i  the    original    offer    made    by    the    com- 
\  mlssloner.s.      It    follows:       "An    appro- 
priation  of  JIO.OOO   for  1917.   giving   the 
firemen  one  off-day   in  five  instead  of 
six    as    at    present;    flO.OOO    additional 
I  in    1918,    giving    the    firemen    one    off- 
I  dav     in     three,     and     $10,000     more     in 
I  1919.      thus      establl.«hlng      the      double 
I  platoon    on    a    gradual    scale    In    three 
I  years." 

I        POWER  RESIGNS. 

P.  B.  Beidelman  Becomes  Assistant 
General  Freight  Agent  of  G.  N. 

W.  J.  Power,  formerly  local  gen- 
eral freight  agent  of  the  Great  North- 
ern, has  resigned  from  the  position 
of  assistant  general  freight  agent  of 
the  Great  Northern  railroad.  P.  B. 
Beidelman  has  been  appointed  to  the 
place  made  vacant  by  the  resignation 
of  Mr.  Power,  The  change  will  be- 
come effective  April  16. 

Mr.  Beidelman  was  in  Duluth  yes- 
terday afternoon,  but  had  little  to  say 
regarding  the  change. 

W.       D.      Burr.       assistant      general 


All  Wheat 
Ready  io  Eat 


[he 


?^^.^Md 


iCN/OVRi 


M*  M.»  ••-  *«  ^ ^  J 


,HE  dainty  little 
miss  of  the  house- 
hold knows  how 
good  KRUMBLES 
is — the  new  all-wheat  food 
with  the  delicious  flavor. 

Krumbles  is  the  whole  of 
the  Wheat,  cooked,  ''krum- 
bled,"  and  delicately  toasted 
— and  as  everyone  knows, 
there  is  nothing  more  nour- 
ishing and  wholesome  than 
whole  wheat,  especially 
when  the  Krumbles  meth- 
od makes  it  a  joy  to  eat 

In  the  WAXTITE  package— lOc 
Look  for  this  signature. 


freight  agent  of  the  Omaha,  was  here 
yesterday,  Mr,  Burr  declared  the 
freight  business  of  the  Western  rail- 
roads was  very  good  and  that,  owing 
to  congestion,  the  traffic  officials  of 
every  Western  railroad  were  exper- 
iencing grave  difficulties  In  securing 
cars. 


ENDION  CHURCH 

Corner  19th  Ave.  East  and  First  St, 
COXtiREGATIOXAL,    DINNER 
Sened  by  the  Women'n  <iulld. 
«i:iO  Friday   evening,  April   14. 

60c  per  plate.  All  members  of  the 
congregation  and  their  friends  are 
most  cordially  invited  and  urged  to 
be    present. 


yesterdav  sold  1.001.46  acres  of  state 
land  in  Beltrami  county  at  an  average 
price  of  $5.66  per  acre.  The  price  per 
acre  ranged   from    $5   to   $7.50. 

The  following  lands  were  sold: 
47.17  acres  to  E.  A.  Johnson  of  St. 
Paul,  47.70  acres  to  J.  Fanspets  of  St. 
Paul.  84.76  acres  to  T.  P.  McGulre  of 
St.  Paul.  80  acres  to  Blaine  Neal  of 
Rochester,  160  acres  to  Bertha  O.  Per- 
tey  of  Rochester.  80  acres  to  G.  Zelsler 
of  Rochester.  72.59  acres  to  (J.  Voltz 
of  Bemldjl.  40  acres  to  A.  M.  Tittle  of 
BarnesvUle.  200  acres  to  Ray  Phelps 
of  Cass  Lake.  66.26  acres  to  G.  Voltz 
of  Bemldjl.  40  acres  to  Charles  Bloom- 
quest  of  Bemldjl.  26  acres  to  William 
Blackburn. 


"Well,  I  Should  Say 
'Gets-It'  DOES  Work" 


"Look  a'  There,  If  You  Don't  Think 
K's  Just  Wonderful  for  Corns!" 

"Bless  my  stars,  look  at  it!  Land  of 
the  livin'!  Why.  just  look  at  It!  That 
corn  came  right  off.  Jyst  like  peeling 
bananas.     Put   your   finger   on    my    toe. 


Most   everybody   knows  Duluth 
aid  Want  Ads  bring  re«ults. 


Her- 


«Did    Yoa    Ever    See   the   Like?      IfO 

Wonder  Kietm-lV    In    the    BlKgeat 

SelUoff  Corn  Cure  in  the  World  I'* 

right    there — don't    be    afraid — that's    It 

feel    how   smooth   the   skin    is?     Well, 

that's  where  the  corn  was.  Well,  that 
beats  all!"  That's  the  way  "Gets-lt" 
works  on  all  corns,  every  corn,  every 
time.  Its  the  new.  simple  way  of  cur- 
ing corns.  You'll  say  goodbye  to  all 
foolish  contraptions  like  bundling  ban- 
dages, sticky  tape,  plasters,  toe-eating 
salves,  and  grave-diggers  such  as 
knives,  razors  and  scissors.  "Gets-It" 
stops  pain.  Applied  in  2  seconds.  Never 
falls.  Nothing  to  stick  to,  hurt  or 
press  on  the  corn. 

"Gets-It"  is  sold  everywhere.  25c  a 
bottle,  or  sent  direct  by  JE-  Lawrence 
A  Co.,  Chicago,  IlL 


CLOQUET  TALENT 

READY  FOR  PUY 

"Alice  in  Wonderland"  to 

Be    Given    Twice    in 

Sawmill  City. 

Cloquet.  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — "Alice  in  Wonderland." 
which  will  be  presented  by  150  of  Clo- 
quefs  local  talent,  under  the  auspices 
of  the  Ladles  of  the  Modern  Maccabees, 
at  the  Grand  theater  this  evening  and 
tomorrow  evening  with  Saturday  ma- 
tinee. Is  attracting  considerable  at- 
tention, , 

The  curtain  rises  on  a  very  pic- 
turesque scene.  In  which  the  Fairy 
Queen  (Miss  Lillian  Kelly),  is  discov- 
ered, and  is  joined  by  forty-eight  lit- 
tle fairies,  whose  white  dresses  are 
covered  with  sparkling  dew.  The  col- 
ored light  effects  in  this  scene  are 
beautiful.  The  chorus  work  of  the 
fairies  and  elves  will  be  much  to  be 
enjoved  and  a  great  deal  of  pride 
should  be  taken  In  the  performance 
of   all    these   little   folks. 

The  first  act  pictures  Alice  in  the 
garden  with  the  white  rabbit.  The 
mouse's  story  will  be  told  by  Edwin 
Erickson.  Then  comes  the  race  by 
Alice  and  the  animal  friends  of  the 
mouse.  Alice  converses  with  the  cater- 
pillar and  learns  that  she  really  has 
forgotten  all  the  shymes  she  knew  and 
finds  that  she  la  In  a  very  strange 
land.  The  fish  and  frog  act  as  foot- 
man. .         .,«   . 

Act  II,  Scene  2,  is  a  very  beautiful 
woodland  scene,  which  includes  the 
garland  bearers,  the  Jolly  sailors  and 
the  hornpipe;  the  elves,  little  Jap  girls. 
Mother  Goose  and  a  medley  by  the  lit- 
tle wax  dolls,  the  fairies'  flower  drill, 
the  march  of  nations.  Columbia  and 
Uncle  Sam.  Uncle  Sam  sings  "When 
the  Band  Plays  Yankee  Doodle." 
Mad  Tea   Party. 

Then  comes  the  kitchen  scene  and 
the  "mad  tea  party."  Little  Mary  Ole. 
sen  as  Alice,  sings.  "Am  I  Dreaming." 
and  wonders  if  she  really  la  awake. 
The  tea  party  is  full  of  surprises.  Next 
is  the  Japanese  garden,  a  beautifully 
set  scene,  with  the  Jap  doll  and  the 
cherry  girls.  The  Two,  Five  and  Seven 
of  Spades  show  us  how  to  paint  white 
roses  red  in  the  next  scene,  and  the 
Quef-n  of  Hearts  has  her  croquet  party. 
An  Indian  scene  follows  thl.s.  the  dou- 
ble sextet  will  sing  with  beautiful  light 
effects  and  specialties. 

The  last  scene  Is  the  courtroom 
scene.  The  Knave  of  Hearts  is  on 
trial  for  stealing  the  tarts — the  fatal 
letter  is  read,  and  the  cook  gives  her 
evidence,  which  Is  seasoned  with  much 
pepper;  then  comes  the  verdict,  and 
Alice  declares  they  are  nothing  but 
a  pack   of  cards. 

The  grand  finale  is  a  medley  of  six 
very  catchy  songs. 


CONVENTION  Of 

FINNISH  MINISTERS 


Finnish      Methodist      ministers      will 
hold   a    convention    in    this    city    tomor 
row,    Saturday   and    Sunday.     The    Fin- 


ni.sh   chapel   at   350   Lake   avenue   suutl 
win  be   dedicated   tomorrow    night. 

As  the  Finns  in  the  United  Statej 
are  for  the  most  part  In  the  northert 
parts  of  Minnesota.  Michigan  ant 
Wisconsin,  the  convention  is  vlrluallj 
a  national   one. 


NOT  AFRAID  OF  TWINE 
SHORTAGE  IN  STATE 

St.  Paul.  Minn.,  April  13.— (Specla/ 
to  The  Herald.)— Members  of  th< 
state  board  of  control  said  todaj 
that  they  were  not  afraid  of  the  twin* 
shortage  predicted  by  the  United 
States  senate  committee  which  is  ln« 
vestlgatlng  charges  that  the  Interna< 
tional  Harvester  company  is  controll" 
ing  the  output  of  sisal   from  Yucatan. 

Warden  Reed  of  Stillwater  penitent 
tlary  advised  the  board  of  control 
members  today  that  though  the  stat< 
has  disposed  of  18.000.000  pounds  ol 
twine  during  the  last  year.  It  hai 
enough  on  hand  to  supply  MinnesotI 
for  months  to  come. 


The  questions  answered  below  are 
general  in  character,  the  symptoms  of 
diseases  are  given  and  the  answers  will 
apply  In  any  case  of  similar  nature. 

Those  wishing  further  advice,  free, 
may  address  Dr.  Lewis  Baker.  College 
Bldg..  Collf  ge-EUwood  Sts.,  Dayton,  O., 
enclosing  self-addrepsed  stamped  en* 
velope  for  reply.  Full  name  and  ad- 
dress must  be  given,  but  only  initials 
or  fictitious  name  will  be  u.'ied  In,  mjr 
answers.  The  prescriptions  can  be 
filled  at  any  well-stocked  drug  store. 
Any  druggist  can  order  of  wholesalerw 


BELTRAMI  LAND  SALE. 

1,000   Acres  Sold   at    Average   of 
$5.65  Per  Acre. 

Bemldjl.    Minn.,    April    12. — Oscar  Ar- 
neson    of    the    atate    land    department 


Miss  Adele  writes:  "My  hair  is 
combing  out,  my  scalp  itches  and  dan- 
druff is  very  annoying,  and  I  want 
something  to  cure  these  conditions." 

Answer:  For  hair  and  scalp  troubles 
I  have  never  found  anything  to  equal 
the  beneficial  results  of  a  thorough 
treatment  of  plain  yellow  minyol.  It 
is  cooling,  cleansing  and  invigorating, 
and  thousands  now  use  It  regularly  as 
a  hair  and  scalp  tonic. 
•      *      * 

Henry  J.  C.  writes:  "Something 
seems  to  be  wrong  with  my  system  and 
I  don't  know  what  it  is.  I  have  .huge 
puffs  under  my  eyes,  and  my  eyes  are 
bloodshot  in  morning  and  my  feet  and 
ankles  are  swollen.  Sometimes  I  have 
chills  and  feel  weak  and  tired  most  of 
the  time." 

Answer:  Your  eliminating  organs, 
such  as  liver  and  kidneys,  are  In  need 
of  treatment.  Begin  taking  balmwort 
tablets  at  once.  Get  them  In  sealed 
tubes  with  full  directions  of  any  well- 
stocked  druggist. 

C  M.  C.  asks:  "Please  r^U'^ve  me  of 
a  coated  tongue,  foul  breath,  headache, 
constipation  and  general  ill  health. ' 

Answer:  If  habitually  constipated, 
you  should  take  three-grain  eulpherb 
tablets  (not  sulphur)  and  arouse  the 
organs  which  eliminate  waste  material 
from  your  body.  These  tablets  purify 
the  blood  and  Improve  the  health  by 
acting  on  the  liver,  kidneys  and  bowels. 
Obtain  In  sealed  tubes  with  full  direc- 
tions. ^      ^      ^ 

"Sarah"  says:  "Can  anything  be  done 
for  one  who  Is  bothered  with  rheuma- 
tism.    If  so,  please  reply." 

Answer:  You  can  be  relieved  of 
your  rheumatism   if  you   take  the  fol- 


lowing: Mix  by  shaking  well  and  take 
a  leaspoonful  at  meal  times  and  at  bed 
time  and  you  will  soon  be  relitved. 
Comp.  essence  cardlol.  1  oz.;  comp. 
iluld  balmwort.  1  oz.;  syrup  sarsaparll- 
la  comp..  6  ozs.;  wine  of  colchlcum. 
one-half  oz.;  sodium  salicylate.  4 
drams;   iodide  of  potassium,  2  drams. 

•  •       * 

Miss  Bertie  L.  asks:  "What  remedy 
can  you  recommend  to  reduce  obesity 
safely?  I  want  to  reduce  about  thirty 
pounds." 

Answer:  I  rely  on  five-grain  arbo- 
lone  tablets  as  being  the  most  effec« 
tlve  and  convenient  treatment  to  re- 
duce abnormal  fat.  Druggists  supply 
this  in  sealed  tubes  with  complete  di- 
rections. After  the  first  few  days  a 
pound  a  day  is  not  too  much  reduction* 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  M.  D  D.  asks:  "Do  yon  think  It 
Is  impossible  for  me  to  Increase  xny 
weight  from  97  pounds  to  about  128 
pounds?" 

Answer:  Yes,  T  believe  that  the  regu- 
lar use  of  a  special  tonic  tablet  will  do 
this  for  you  as  it  has  for  thousands  of 
others.  Ask  your  druggist  for  tliree- 
graln  hypo-nuclane  tablets  in  sealed 
package  with  full  directions.  Take 
them    for    several    months    to    get    lh« 

full  benefit. 

•  •      • 

John  C.  L.  writes:  "I  find  my  natural 
strength  and  nervous  system  falling 
me.  I  do  not  recuperate  as  of  yore.  My 
food  and  rest  seem  not  to  benefit  ae 
they  should  Am  weak,  despondent  ana 
unable  to  perform  the  duties  whirh 
were  assumed  earlier  in  life,  while  n.y 
ambition  for  work  and  pleasure  1« 
slowly  going." 

Answer:  I  think  a  powerful,  harm- 
less tonic  and  nervine  medicine  will 
rejuvenate  and  restore  the  function* 
of  digestion,  assimilation  and  elimina- 
tion by  invigorating  the  nervous  sys- 
tem. Obtain  three-grain  radomene  tab- 
lets, packed  In  sealed  tubes,  and  take 
as  per  direction*  accompanying. — Ad* 
vertisement. 


.i 


<  I  .■«■ 


!■■»'>  1  I      * 


*•>•     Ji|  •■■H     .J   'JLJU— '. 


,11       L    -t    '   t    . 


iN^ 


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I 

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i 


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8 


Thursday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


i 


.._tM 


( 


FIRE  PROOF 
ZONEJ>LANNED 

New  Code  Will  Provide  for 

Greater  Security  From 

Fires. 


an     asrreement 


conditions     relative     to 
mere   definfil. 

To  MiMprNd  XesetlatlsMK. 

The  note  declares  ihert.-fore  that  in 
conat^qutjnce  of  no  final  a»fieen»ent  hav- 
ing been  reached  ua  to  the  terms  of 
the  treaty  to  regulate  the  reciprocal 
paii8aK«^  of  troops  over  the  dividing 
lln.-,  "the  Mexican  government  Judge* 
It  convmlenl  to  suspend  for  the  pres- 
ent all  discussion  or  nesotlatlons  in 
this  particular  or  founded  on  the  clr- 
cunistauces  that  the  exp<ditlon  s«nt  by 
the  L'nlted  Slates  government  to  pur- 
sue Villa  Is  without  fouiidulion  lu  vir- 
tue of  the  non-exlstenre  of  a  previous 
R^rre.-ment  formal  an<l  definite." 

What    was    Intended    by    the    note    pf 


Cal.,  have  been  kept  conttantly  on  the 

There  are  reported  to  be  8,000  troopt 
stationed  at  Fort  llllsa.  Juarez,  fac- 
ing i'A  Paso  from  the  Rio  Grande,  has 
a  Carranxa  garrison,  the  exact  size  of 
which  is  not  known.  It  ha«  a  number 
of  machine  guns  and  some  cannon.  It 
is  known  here  that  preparations  have 
been  made  to  meet  any  Aituation  that 
may  arise   In  Juarez. 

All  the  lesser  towns  of  the  border 
also  have  taken  precautions  for  de- 
fense. ,        .     , 

Army  officers  declared  that.  In  their 
opinion,  Cien.  Carranza  could  not  have 
presented  his  note  to  Washington 
without  having  made  military  prepara 


Would  Extend  From  Fifth 

Avenue  West  to  Lake 

Avenue. 


Columbus." 

The  note  adds,  however: 

"From  the  beginning  the  Mexican 
government  Judged  that  by  rea.-^on  of 
the  lime  which' had  transpired  and  for 
the  purpose  "f  treat  Ins  a  case  ali'eady 
pa38ed  the  said  Incident  could  not  con- 
tinue as  a   proposal   for  the    reciprocal 


miMth    will    have    a    fireproof    build-     I' ^■^^''^^'/.'/Jr'r^cny'lut 


iHK    zone    under    the    provislona    of   the 
n.w   building  code. 

This    w!ia    decided    upon    at    a    meet 


erpreted. 

The  fiiet  that  the  L'nlted  Slates  had 
Ineorr-etly  Interpreted  the  note  of 
March  10  wa.s  called  to  the  attention  of 


SUBMARINE  SITUATION 

IS  N EARING  CRISIS 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


marines  recently  attacked  three  mer- 
chant ships  carrying  Artierlcan  citi- 
zens anil  that  one  of  them  torpedoed  a 
vessel    in    the    vicinity     of     the     point 


WlUui.   thi.s  zone  1  more    detnll.s    of    an    asreement     which 

In     -uldltion.     the    chairmen     at    the  ,  "'   '   ^oiisldered  d*'finlte  and  ended, 
m-  eti!i«    yesterday    agreed    on    a    plan         ^^  .     ,        »,    „„  „,„j  .  u.-  xii-    Polk 

to  c).a^,«e  the  various  fire  zone.^  in  T^*^'^?^  **'^'^''''%V  .r,l^  on  M^rch  '3  to 
the  city,  extending  some  and  redu-Mng  were  later  ^-'V  ™./nt  niv^  bv  Secre^ 
other.s.  No  change.^  have  been  made  by  the  M^xt«^,«n  '  :J^^**t?^;\^ '' ;.,.,'^f  that  he 
th-  eiiy  in  .several  years  and  a  »;eneral  tary  Lansing.  ^^  ^o  stat.M  "  «"  |.J*^^^^ 
revision  of  the  zone.s  will  be  made  be.  ,  was  forry  ^^t  ha^lng  JntM|.ei.a 
fore    the    cod*-    is    finished.  :  wrongly   the   ^^'^^ents   of   J*'*'  f'^'^Jg"^^,, 

In    addre.s..ing    the    chairmen    ye.ster-  1  in  res,M.c_t  to  the  pa^.sa^K^e  of^t^.oo^^^^^ 

day,     Mr.    Hoyt    lUKod    them    to    com- 


J>l-te  tlieir  work,  .to  thii  the  various 
Ir.ifts  can  b,.  Muhmitte.i  by  the  sub- 
coniiniitees  and  action  by  the  general 
body  sometime  this  sprinif. 


CARRANZA  ASKS 
WITHDRAWAL  OF 

U.  S.  TROOPS 


the  south  of  the  place  where  they  then 
were." 

Reference  to  PreMilent's  Xote. 

Reference    nl.so    Is    made    in    the    note 


completed  the  collection  of  facts  re- 
lating to  all  attack.^  on  merchant 
ship:*  since  the  Lu.sltanla.  Further 
evidence  In  the  caso  ^^t  the  Sus.<»ex, 
forwarded  by  the  American  embassies 
at  L.<indon  and  Paris,  is  to  arrive  on 
the  liner  St.  I'aul  Friday.  It  Is  under 
stood  that  Insiructlon.s  to  Ambassador 
Gerard  accompanied  by  the  Informa- 
tion gathered  by  the  department,  will 
go  forward   soon   thereafter. 

Amriiraim  Comitantljr  In  Danirer. 
Oftleial.-?   made  it  dear  that  whatever 
might    be   the   form    of    the    Instructions 
to   Amba.ssador   Gerard,    the   purpose   of 


(Continued    from    page    1.) 


hav.;    Invaded    territory    of    the    tnlted 

I  States,     and     on     no     pretext     whatever 

would  we  older  an  lnva.'«lon  of  that  re- 

public  or  a  violation  of  its  soverelgntj-. 

the  forces,  but  an  invitation  to  be-  "That  idea."  ct)ntinue3  the  note.  "P"  , 
S:iii  n-goilatlons  to  limit  their  stay.  '  Ush>'d  by  his  excellency.  President  \N  U- 
Vounselor  Polk  i-onferred  with  MaJ-  .  <,on.  was  rectified  on  March  Jl  by  a 
Gen.  S«  ott,  chief  of  staff,  and  an-  nies.-»aKe  sent  to  our  confldenlial  agent 
nounced  that  the  negotlatjon.s  would  j,,  Wa.shinKton,  in  which  he  was  In- 
be  handled  exhaustively  by  Secretary  »tructed  to  call  your  attention  to  the 
Lansing.  )  \,\,.fi  Indicated.  Binc.>   the   note   of  March 

Tlio  dl.-patch   of   the  punitive   expedl-     lo  referred  to  the  reciprocal  passage  or 

troop.s   only    In   case    that   Incldants  like 


turing    the    bandit    Villa,    ^vhose  ^^o^J^^    assurances   and    pledges    given    by    tJer- 


those      which     i)crurreJ     at 


tioii    before    nesoliii  tii  ns    of    the    proto 
col    wa.s   eharai  terized   by   .>)t,»t'>   depart- 

jn.rit    offidal.s    as    "p-rfeotly    Justified"    should   be   repeated." 
b.v    the    corre.spon'leJice    between    Secre-  ]       in     concluding,     the 

tai  V  Lan.-*ing  and  the  Carranxa  govern-    signed    by    Candido    Aguilar,    secretary 

for   for.lgn   affairs,   points   out   that 


note 


Columbus 
which     is 


tneilt. 


Ao  CoNimrnt  by  Lodire. 


the    American    expedition 


a« 

has    fulfllled 


Of 
ca 

to  tlTe  Mexican  situation''  H.-deVlined  ^[wni  niVm'bers  pursuing  them,  and  more 
to  comment  upon  tlie  Carranza  note  I  forces  are  being  sent  to  exterminate 
*nd  would  not  forecast  the  attitude  of  the  rest  of  tho  beaten  party,  the  nr«it 
the   senite    Kepublican.s.  chief    of      the     Constitutionalist    army. 

"The  administration  is  charged  with  charged  with  the  executive  power  or 
our   foreign   affairs."   said   he.  the  nation,  considers  that  It  Is  alreadj 

Chairman  Stone  refu.^-d  to  comment,  time  to  treat  with  the  L  nlted  ?'t«trs 
S'  nator    CallinKer.     Kepubliean     leader.  I  goveriiment  for  the  withdrawal  of  tHeir 


many,  peaceful  merchant  ships  carry- 
ing American  citizens  or  which  might 
h.ive  some  aboard,  continue  to  be  the 
victims  of  illegal  attacks. 

The  possibility  of  a  break  In  diplo- 
matic relations  with  tiermany.  coupled 
with  an  exposition  of  the  situation  by 
the  president,  to  congress,  is  constantly 
in  thi'  background,  but  the  president 
was  reprfsented  as  beijig  earnestly  de- 
sirous of  avoiding  such  a  step  if  pos- 
sible, and  determined  not  to  act  ha.stily. 

The  United  States  In  Its  investigation 
of  the  cases  of  the  Sussex  and  the  four 
merchant  ships  about  which  Clermany 
was  asked— has  been  proceeding  on  the 
assumption  that  two  elements  remained 
to  be  proved  before  action  could  be 
taken.  The  llrst  had  to  do  with  estab- 
vessela  actually  were 
Ith  the  legality 


Sen.Ttor    Lodge,    ranking    Uepubllcan  its  object  Insofar  as   it  will  be  able  to  ll.shlng   that   the   vessels   ) 

f     the     foreign     relations     committee,  do  «o.  a.-'  the  party  headed  by  MUa  has  torpedoed;  the  second  wit 

ailed    81    the    navv    department    today  already  been  disperse.! ;  and  finally,  be-  or  Illegality    of    the   acts 

ut  said   his   visit   was  not    In    reference  cause  there  are  Mexican  troops  In  suffl-  In  Contraveittlon  of 


said  lie  reKard»*d  the  Mexican  situa- 
tion In  such  condition  that  congress 
Should  be  consulted  on  the  future 
Cour.se. 

Secretary  Lansing  took  the  view  that 
there  was  absolutely  nothing  for  him 
to  discuss.  He  said  he  had  as  yet  re- 
ceived no  note  or  communication  from 
Gen.  l-'arranzH  and  therefore  had  noth- 
ing to  comment  uj'on.  What  he  would 
do  after  seeing  (.Jen.  Carrunza's  am- 
bu.^.iador  Inti-r  today  Mr.  Lansing  de- 
clin^•.l   to  indlcat''. 

After  a  confi  ronce  with  S<^cretary 
Lansing.  Chairman  Flood  of  the  house 
It.reign  aff  lirs  committee  said  he  saw 
tio  n'eo.<4sity  for  congressional  action 
fes  the  situation   now   stood. 

Senator  Horah,  Kepubliean.  who  has 
been  a  foremost  advocate  of  forceful 
action  in  Mexico  counseled  prudence 
Of  speech  In  cnngre-^.s  in  dlscuoslng  the 
late  developments.  "It  would  be  un- 
wise for  congress  to  fan  any  flame  un- 
til some  definite  course  Is  determined," 
•aid  he. 

May  Increase  Delleney. 

Administratlun  officials,  however, 
tna.lo  no  effort  to  conceal  their  feeling 
that  Carranza's  action  might  increase 
the  delicacy  of  the  circumstances  un- 
der which  the  pursuit  uf  Villa  ha.*  been 
conducted. 

The  outstanding  features  of  the  sit- 
uation gav.'  evidenc.-s  that  th--  expe- 
dition   had    been    carried    on    with    full 


forces  from  our  territory. 

Oirictals  Xot   SnrpHsed, 

El  Paso,  Tox..  April  13.— Mexican 
officials  here  evinced  no  surprise  over 
the  news  today  that  Provisional  Prf*]- 
dent  Carratiza  had  asked  that  the  Lnit- 
ed  States  withdraw  the  American 
troops  in   Mexico. 

Andres  Garcia.  Mexican   consul  in   t.! 


RlKhta. 

Germany  has  admitted  sinking  threft 
of  the  ships,  and  evidence  In  the  pos- 
session of  the  state  department  strong- 
ly Indicates  that  in  at  least  two  of  the 
cases  the  acts  were  In  contravention  of 
American  rights. 

It  has  appeared  to  officials  from  the 
unofficial  version  of  the  note  that  the 
German  government  had  denied  torpe- 
doing the  Su.ssex  solely  on  the  ground 
that  the  commander's  sketch  differed 
from  a  photograph  of  the  channel 
steamer  which  appeared  In  a  news- 
paper. 

The  note  says  the  explosion  of  the 
torpedo  sent  agnlnst  the  unidentified 
ve*s.<el  "caused  the  entire  forward  part 
of  the  ship  to  be  torn  away  to  the 
bridge."      The    entire    forward    part    of 


Paso    and    chief    representative    of    Ih^  j  the  Sussex  was  torn  away, 
de  fActo  government  on  the  border,  said  j       j^   gpite    of  the   fact    that    the   Sussex 
«x-^__    1-»    1^  ^^^  eblef  case  now   being  considered. 


he  felt  that  the  United  States  would 
receive  the  note  In  the  same  fair  and 
frlf  ndly  spirit  in  which  It  was  sent. 

Mr    tlarcla  pointed  out  that  under  the 
orders    to    <Jen.    Funston    the    American 
troo))s  would   retire  fr.^m  Mexico  when 
the  Villa  bands  were  dispersed,  or  when 
the   forces  of  the  de  facto  government 
were  In  position   to  take  over  the   pur- 
suit of  Villa.     The  Mexican  consul  said 
that   the  Villa  bands   were   now   spread 
broadcast,       and       that      the      Carranza 
troops,   heavily  reinforced,   could  easily 
effect    their    further    destruction.      Mr. 
Garcia    added    that    he    did    not    believe 
that   Villa   was   dead,   but    he    was  con- 
vinced    that     the     bandit's    power    was 
broken  and  could  never  be  restored. 
Next   Word   From   Wn.<«hlngton. 
El    Paso    and    Juarez   took    the   news 
of   Carranza's    request    calmly,    but    ex- 
pectantly, realizing  that  the  next  word 
from    Washington.      Army 


mu.'^t    come    _ 

..       .  ^  .  .  -     officers    did    not    care    to    discuss    the 

realization   that  objections  might  arise,  ;  «ituailon    but  Indicated  that  the  chase 


that    po.<^.slblIltle9   have  been  consideved  '  ^f    Villa    would    continue    until    orders 
and     proi>ably     a     decision     has     been     ^^d    been    received    from    Washington 


rcach-d  «3  to  what  steps  would  be 
taken. 

Thtie  was  apparent  agreement  anion::: 
officials  that  th.-  troops  woulj  remain 
for  the   present. 

It  was  also  Increasingly  <»vldcnt  to- 
day that  the  war  department  has  en- 
deavored to  provld>  against  possihill- 
tle.s,  although  strictest  sei-recy  has  bet  n 
obst-rved.  It  Is  understoi>d  that  in 
Cv'ery  movement  of  troops  beyond  the 
border  an.l  along  the  international  line 
the  possibility  of  an  attempt  to  lUt  off 
the  expedition  has  been  considered  atid 
the  war  deparlni.nt  is  prepared  to  back 
up  the  forces  should  need  arise. 

CroNNed     Without     PeriHiMslon. 

Mexico  City.  Mex.,  April  IS. — The 
Mexican  government  has  sent  to  Its 
ambas.sador  in  Washington  a  note  to 
be  deliver«il  at  10  a.  m.  today  to  Sec-  | 
retary  Lansing  asking  that  the  Amer- 
ican Iroop.'S  be  withdrawn  from  Mex- 
ico territory  atiJ  that  the  pursuit  of 
Villa  be  left  to  the  Mexican  Consti- 
tutionalist   army. 

The  Mexican  note  contaln.s  about 
5,000  words.  In  it  the  do  facto  gov- 
ernment of  Mexico  contends  tliat  as 
the  American  trooiis  crossed  into 
Mexico  without  p'-rmission.  they 
should  be  withdrawn  until  a  proper 
formal     compact     can     b 


calling   It  to   a   halt  „    .     ,»    , 

Should  the  troops  be  recalled.  It  Is 
thought  that  It  will  require  from  three 
to  four  weeks  to  bring  the  last  Amer- 
ican soldiers  to  this  side  of  the  bor- 
der. Consul  Garcia  intimated  that  the 
de  fncto  government  would  consent 
to  the  use  of  the  Mexican  railways 
for  the  withdrawal  of  troo*)s.  If  the 
railways  were  used,  the  troops  could 
be   taken    out  In  about   a  week. 

c.en.  Bell  has  repeatedly  given  as- 
surances that  should  any  excitement 
or  trouble  arise  over  the  development 
of  the  diplomatic  phases  between  the 
l'nlted  States  and  Mexico,  the  army 
Is  ami>ly  prepared  to  meet  the  situa- 
tion  along   the   border 

•     m         — 

N«  Orders  By  Fnnnt»n. 

San  Antonio.  Tex.,  April  13.— Carran- 

I  za's    re<iuest    for    the      withdrawal      of 

1  American     troops    caused    no    surprise 

here     either    at    military    headquarters 

or   among   the   many   Mexican   political 

refugees    living    here.      Consul    Beltran 

said    he    had    been    expecting    It. 

'       In    the   absence   of  Instructions  from 

!  Washington     Gen.    Funston    issued    no 

'  oider*^    to    Gen.    Pershing    altering    the 

'  conduct     of    the    campaign    in    Mexico 

I  nor    had    word    of      Carranza's      action 

i  been    communicated    to    the    leader    of 


officials  made  It  plain  that  the  next 
step  of  the  United  States  would  rest 
on  the  accumulation  of  evidence  that 
American  lives  were  constantly  being 
placed  In  Jeopardy  in  violation  of  their 
rights. 

!>•  Xo<  .Mrree  With  Evidence. 

The  contentions  of  the  German  gov- 
ernment, In  regard  to  the  attack  on 
the  Berwlndvale  do  not  ag-ce  with  the 
evidence  received  by  the  state  depart- 
mnt.  It  is  known  that  at  least  one  of 
tho  survivors  made  the  statement  that 
the  Vessel  was  torpedo^'d  without  warn- 
ing. 

It  is  understood  there  also  is  a  con- 
flict between  th'>  evidi-nce  here  and  the 
German  version  in  the  cise  of  the  '•;:iig- 
Ushman.  Germany  contends  'nat  tl^. 
ship  was  sunk  "after  the  German  com- 
mandant had  convinced  himself  that 
the  crew  had  taken  to  tho  boats  and 
had    rowed   from    the   ship."     The   statj 


e     entered     into  .   .         * 

between    the    two    Rovernments.      It    Is     the    punitive    force. 

In.xistently  affirmed  that  the  previous';  I«i  !'>«  llK*^f  "'  developments  at 
notes  of  the  Mexican  government  es-  Q"«'«"^taro,  military  men  here  regard 
peciaHv  empha.-ized  the  fact  that  per-  '  recent  activity  of  Carranza  troops  on 
mission  for  reciprocal  crossing  of  the'  the  border  and  along  the  Sonora-t  ni- 
frontler  would  be  granted  only  in  the  huahua  state  line  as  explained.  »t  now 
event  of  the  repetition  of  a  raid  siml-  ,  Is  assumed  that  the  troops  of  tne  de 
lar  to  that  made  by  Villa  at  Colum-  facto  government  are  quietly  being 
bus    N.   Mex.  I  placed    In    t>osltlon    where    they    might 

"»♦    Kndlng     Keicotlatlona.-  be    most    effective    In    case    of   an    open 

The    note    was    sent    to    Eliseo    Arre-     break    with    the    American    forces, 
dondo.    the    Carranza    representative    in 
WH.-5htngton,    with    Instructions    for    its 
delivery     to     Secretary     Lansing,      "so 


Knmtrrr  AnxU»umly  Awaited. 

El   Paso,   Tex..   April  13.— The  border 

today 


ending     negotiations    for     a     reciprocal  ,  ,        ,..  ♦.„„,. 

passing   of   troops   and    asking    for   dls- j  ft'««'ft'te<l    '^""    expectancy  ^ 

occupation     of     the     territory     occupied  '  answer  of  the  American  government  to    j^j,^  year,  officials  said  that 


department  has  allowed  it  to  become 
known  that  evidence  In  Its  possession 
indicates  that  the  ship  had  not  come  to 
a  stop  when  the  death  blow  was  in- 
flicted. 

ticrmany's  statements  In  regard  to 
the  Manchester  Engineer  are  not  con- 
clusive. Reports  to  the  state  depart- 
ment say  the  vessel  was  torpedoed 
without  warning. 

Reports  to  the  department  reganling 
the  Eagle  Point  are  to  the  effect  that 
the  vcFSel  "received  ample  warning" 
before  being  sunk.  However,  Joseph 
(Jleason  of  Boston,  a  survivor,  made  a 
deposition  to  the  American  consul  at 
Queenstown  to  the  effect  that  he  and 
twenty-one  other  members  of  the  crew 
were  set  adrift  in  a  water-logged  life- 
boat and  drifted  for  seven  hours  In 
heavy  seas  that  threatened  to  send 
their  boat  to  the  bottom  at  any  mo- 
ment. Furtherniore.  the  evidence  in- 
dicates that  at  the  time  the  persons 
aboard  the  ship  were  forced  to  aban- 
don the  ship  she  was  more  than  loO 
miles  from  shore. 

AiKrced    With    l'nlted    States. 

Germany  agreed  with  the  United 
States  In  correspondence  relating  to 
the  filnking  of  the  American  ship  Will- 
iam P.  Frye  that  opportunity  to  reach 
a  place  of  safety  should  be  given  the 
members  of  the  crew  and  passengers 
aboard  ships  about  to  be  sunk,  and 
that  the  distance  from  land  and  con- 
dition of  th?  weather  were  to  be  taken 
Into  consideration. 

Germany's  declaration  of  readiness  to 
have  the  facts  of  the  Sussex  case  es- 
tablished through  ft  mixed  commission, 
"in  the  event  of  differences  of  opinion." 
was  commented  upon  by  a  high  official 
as  being  very  "Interesting."  He  de- 
clined, at  this  time,  to  discuss  the  pro 
posal  further  In  the  absence  of  the  of- 
ficial text  of  the  note.  However,  the 
United  States  has  since  the  beginning 
of  the  war  In  Europe  declined  sugges- 
tions to  arbitrate  such  matters. 
,hrt  i  When  the  possibility  of  arbitration  of 
I  tlie  Lusitenla  case  was  being  discussed 

question 


by   American   trooi)s   In  view   of  Villa's  ,  (Jen.    Carranza's    proposal    to   treat    re-  ,  "involving    American    lives"    could    not 
party    having    been    destr()yed."  I  gardlng   the   withdrawal    of   the   Amer- i  |j^  arbitrated. 

Throughout  the  note  emphasis  l.i  '  lean  expeditionary  force  Into  Mexico, 
laid  on  the  fact  that  the  American  j  It  was  pointed  out  the  situation  is 
expeditl(»n  was  undertaken  under  a  fraught  with  many  possibilities  all 
misunderstanding.  Although  acting  along  the  international  boundary. 
In  good  faith,  the  declaration  is  made  i  If  the  government  responds  favor- 
that  the  United  States  had  interpret-  ably  to  the  proposal  of  the  de  facto 
ed  the  first  note  of  the  de  facto  gov-  i  government  the  brief  but  exciting 
»rnment  as   effecting  a  definite  agiee-    epoch  of  the  last  few  weeks  will  have 


You'll  Do  Better  at  Kelt/ s 


-u:^, 


Gold  Medal  Sale 
Starts  Tomorrow, 


Winner 


V.-l',*- 


:^  ^:-;fe^ .. 


rm^'^^: 


ClubTermsl 

$lNow 
$1  Weekly! 


Hoosier,s  unrivaled  convenience  won  the  Gold  Medal  at 
the  Panama-Pacific  Exposition,  San  Francisco,  and  this  sale 
is  to  celebrate  its  leadership  and  let  the  public  see  the  many 
ways  that  Hoosier  excels. 

People  all  over  America  will  attend  this  great  event  at  the 
Hoosier  stores  and  we  have  had  to  prepare  weeks  ahead  to  get 
a  special  allotment  of  Hoosiers  from  the  factory  for  our  own 
home  folks.  The  sale  starts  tomorrow  and  will  last  all  week 
if  our  supply  of  cabinets  lasts.  Those  who  come  first  are  sure 
of  being  supplied  at  once.  If  you  don't  want  to  wait  for  your 
cabinet,  then  please  don't  put  off  your  visit  to  our  store. 

Remember  there  are  Hoosiers  for  farms,  camps,  apartments,  big  and 
little  kitchens,  for  window  spaces  and  the  center  of  big  kitchens.  No 
further  need  for  old-fashion,  built-in,  uncleanable  cupboards. 

See  the  Demonstration  of  Hoosier's 
40  Labor-saving  Features 

Every  woman  who  wants  to  be  up-to-date  in  household 
affairs  will  want  to  see  this  demonstration.     You  will 

want   to   see   what   expert   men   and   women    have 

achieved  in  cutting  your  kitchen  work  in  two.    How 

a  Hoosier  lets  you  sit  down  with    400    articles    all 

handily  arranged  at  your  fingers'  ends.  How  it  ends 

incessant  walking  back  and  forth  to  gather  supplies 

and  put  them  away  each  meal. 

We  want  you  to  see  the  many  patented  features 
that  have  won  a  million  women. 


-^S 


$1  on  Delivery 

$1  Weekly 

No  Extra  Fees 

Money-Back 

Guarantee 


^  t  '  Domestic  Science  Experts 

•have  designed  and  located  every  Hoosier  convenience  ex- 
«ictly  at  your  fingers'  ends.  Skilled  mechanics  and  inventors 
have  perfected  the  many  working  features. 

Nothing  Has  Been  Overlooked 

that  could  improve  its  convenience  or  add  to  your  com- 
fort. That's  why  a  million  women  use  and  praise  the 
Hoosier  Kitchen  Cabinet  for  the  hours  of  time  and  miles 
of  steps  it  save  them.  You  can  easily  roll  the  Hoosier 
about  on  its  ball  bearing  casters,  and  the  metal  sockets 
can't  break.  These,  and  other  Hoosier  Gold  Medal  fea- 
tures, will  be  demonstrated  to  all  the  folks  who  call  tomor- 
row. Those  who  are  not  ready  to  buy  won't  be  expected 
tp.  We  will  scarcely  have  enough  cabinets  to  last  the  week 
out  anyway. 

But  we  wan^  you  to  come  and  learn  the  inside  facts 
about  kitchen  cabinets.  If  you  missed  this  demonstration 
at  the  San  Francisco  Fair,  this  is  your  chance  to  see  what 
uiterested  thousands  of  people. 

Come  tomorrow  and  bring  your  friends. 


Hoosier 's  Full  View  Roll  Doors  don't 
slide  Into  pockets  or  f-nclosures 
where  dirt  and  vermin  collect  In  tho 
averag-e  cabinet.  Come,  soe  how  you 
can  lift  out  these  doors  for  cleaning. 


=mN 


"WEST  SUPtr 


?W 


t* 


Hoosier  Beauty 


ft 


in 
Ih 
m 
b 


Berlin.  April  13.  via  Ixindon. — The 
folluwlnK  I*  the  t#?xt  of  the  Cr«rnian 
note   on  the  Sussex,  datrd  April  10: 

"The    undersig^ncd    has    the    honor    to 

Inform      your    excellency.    Ambassador 

Cferard.   In  response  to  communications 

'    SOth    ultimo    and    the 

K  the   steamers  Sus- 

Engrtneer.  Ehig^lisbman, 

Eagle  Point,  that  the 


COLDS 


are 
Dangerous 

• '  Tukeo    in    time.    Brown's    Broac4iial 

Troches,  relieve  coughs,  throat  irhtatioa 

and  hoarseness,  and  keep  them  from 

ewniag  chronic.    10c  proves  it.    Ask  you: 

drug||i8tfortheBewl0eTrialSac*BoxorseDd  I  soidVers    scain3rr.u    «.v,..s      ^..^      ■i:;'"'^*    -  ~      ..    „k»    «r,M/vMi     th«    aiihm.Win* 

4irecttoJoIuiLBrow»*S«».Birt««.M.u.lfrom  BruwnavlUe.  Tex.,  to  San  Dlejfo,    •oon    aa    ahe    noticed    the    .ubmartn^ 


which  was  running  unsubmerged, 
turned  and  steamed  away.  She  was  or- 
dered to  halt  by  a  warning  shot.  She 
paid  no  attention.  The  vessel  was  then 
flrcd  upon  until  halted,  and  without 
further  orders  lowered  several  boats. 
After  the  crew  entered  tho  boats  and 
received  enough  time  to  row  away, 
the  ship  was  sunk. 

Idmtlty  Assumed. 

"The   name   of  this  stoanior  wa.^   not 
established;    It    cannot    be    stated    with 
assurance,    even    with    the    help    of    the  j 
details    which    were    furnished    by    the 
American   embassy,   that  the  above  de- 1 
scribed    incident    concerns    the   steamer 
nerwindvale.         Since,       however,       the ' 
steamer  sunk  was  a  tank  steamer  like 
the    Berwlndvale,    the    identity    of    the 
ship  may  be  assumed. 

"Second — The  IJritish  steamer  Engr- 
lishman.  This  ateamer  on  March  24 
was  called  upon  to  halt  by  a  German 
submarine  through  two  warning  shots 
about  twenty  sea  miles  west  of  Islay 
(Hebrides).  The  vessel  proceeded, 
however,  without  heeding  the  warning, 
and  was  therefore  forced  by  the  sub- 
marine ftrtillery  fire  to  halt  after  an 
extended  chase,  whereupon  she  lowered 
boats  withopt  further  orders. 

"After  the  'Gern»an  commandant  had 
convinced  hlto^self  that  the  crew  had 
taken  to  "the  boats  and  rowed  from  the 
ship    he  sAnk  the  steamer. 

"Third— The  British  steamer  Man- 
chester Bngtheer.  It  is  impossible  to 
establish 'thi-Migh  the  Investigation  up 
to  the  present  whether  the  attack  on 
this  ste^iTler'is  attributable  to  a  Ger- 
man subniarfne.  The  statement  regard- 
ing the  tt^ne  and  place  of  the  Incident 
gives  no  feuWClent  basis  for  investiga- 

Clakle  Point   Sunk. 

"Fourth— T^e  British  steamer  Eagle 
Point  This  wteamer.  In  the  forenoon 
of  March*  W,  wa«  called  upon  to  halt 
by  a  Gerrt^n  submarine  through  signal 
and  shot  abqut  100,  not  130.  sea  miles 
from  the  poMthwest  coast  of  Ireland, 
but  proceeded-  She  was  thereupon 
flrcd  upcm  tlTittl  halted,  and  without 
further  ofTderB  lowered  two  boats,  in 
Which  thd'pr^  took  their  places.  After 


the  commandant  convinced  himself 
llmt  the  boats,  which  had  hoisted  sails, 
had  gotten  clear  of  the  steamer,  he 
sank  tho  ste.amer. 

"Fifth — The    French    steamer   Sussex. 
Ascertainment   of  the  fact  whether  the 
channel    steamer    Sussex   was   damaged 
by  a  tiernian   submarine   was   rendered 
extremely    difficult    because    no    exact 
details    of    time,    place    and    attendant 
circumstances     of     the     sinking     were 
known,    and   also    it    was   impossible   to 
obtain    a    picture    of    the    ship    before 
April    6.       In    the    general     region     be- 
tween     Folke.Htore     and      Dieppe:      On 
Marcli  24  a  long  black  craft  without  a 
flag,  having  a  gray  funnel,  small  gray 
forward    works    and    two    high    masts 
was    encountered   about    the   middle    of  | 
the  English  channel  by  a  German  sub-  | 
marine.      The    commander    reached    the  | 
definite   conclusion   that   It   was    a  war 
vessel,  and  indeed  a  mine  layer  of  the  ' 
recently  built  English  Arabls  class. 
Attacked  VeNsel. 

"Consequently  he  attacked  the  ves- 
sel at  8:55  in  the  afternoon,  middle  Eu- 
ropean time,  one  and  one-half  sea 
miles  east  of  Bull  Rock  bank,  the  sub- 
marine being  submerged.     Tlie  torpedo 


DOUGINUTS  SiaULD 

NOT  BE  EATEN 

Doughnuts  are  hard  to  digest  and 
may  cause  appendicitis.  Duluth  peo- 
ple should  know  that  simple  buck- 
thorn bark,  glycerine,  etc.,  as  mixed 
in  Adler-i-ka,  often  relieves  or  pre- 
vents appendicitis.  This  simple  rem- 
edy acts  on  BOTH  upper  and  lower 
bowel,  removing  such  surprising  foul 
matter  that  ONE  SPOONFUL  relieves 
almost  ANY  CASE  constipation,  sour 
stomach  or  gas.  A  short  treatment 
helps  chronic  stomach  trouble.  The 
INSTANT,  easy  action  of  Adler-i-ka  is 
astonlshiac-     W.  A.  Ab1»ett,  druggist. 


struck  and  caused  such  a  violent  ex- 
plosion in  the  forward  part  of  the  ship 
that  the  entire  forward  part  was  torn 
away   to  the   bridge. 

"The  particularly  violent  explosion 
warrants  the  conclusion  that  a  great 
amount  of  ammunition   was  aboard. 

"The  German  comnvander  made  a 
sketch  of  the  vessel  attacked  by  him, 
two  drawings  of  which  are  Inclosed. 
The  picture  of  the  steamer  Sussex,  two 
copies  of  which  are  also  inclosed,  is 
reproduced  photographically  from  the 
English  paper  The  Daily  Graphic  of 
the   27th   ultimo. 

"A  comparison  of  the  sketch  and  the 
picture  shows  that  the  craft  attacked 
is  not  identical  with  the  Sussex;  the 
difference  in  the  position  of  the  stack 
and  shape  of  the  stem  is  particularly 
striking. 

"No  other  attacks  whatever  by  Ger- 
man submarines  at  the  time  in  ques- 
tion for  the  Sussex  upon  tho  route  be- 
tween Folkestone  and  Dieppe  occurred. 
The  German  government  .must,  there- 
fore, assume  that  the  injury  to  the 
Sussex  is  attributable  to  another  cause 
than  an  attack  by  a  German  subma- 
rine. 

"The  undersigned,  while  reqtjestfng 
that  you  communicate  the  above  to  the 
government  of  the  United  States,  takes 
occasion  to  renew^  the  assurance  of  his 
distinguished  esteem.  "JAGOW." 

AUSTRIAN  IMYALTY 
TO  PRAY  FOR  PEACE 


Archduchess  Maria  Theresa,  wife  of 
Archduke  Karl  Stephen,  and  Arch- 
duchess Leopold  Salvator,  with  seven 
sons,  took  part  in  a  pilgrimage,  headed 
by  Cardinal  FifTl.  archbishop  of  Vienna, 
to  the  sanctuary  of  the  Madonna  of 
Zell,  to  implore  peace,  according  to  * 
dispatch  from  Rome. 

KIANG  SI  GOVERNOR 

DESERTS  PRESIDENT 

Shanghai,  April  13.— The  governor  of 
Kiang-Si  province  today  officially  de- 
clared his  independence  of  the  admin- 
istration  of  President  Yuan   Shi    Kal. 

Kiang-Si  Is  one  of  the  southern 
provinces  of  China.  It  has  an  area 
of  about  72,000  square  miles  and  a 
population  of  about  20.000,000.  The 
capital  is  Nan  Chang. 


Hov»«r«    t«   Attend    F«B«nil. 

f5maha.  Neb.,  April  18. — Joseph  E. 
Howard,  whose  wife  shot  and  killed 
herself  at  a  hotel  Monday  night,  left 
Omaha  ia»t  night  for  Chicago,  where 
be  expecU  to  attend  the  funeral  serv- 
ices of  his  w^fe.  Howard  had  pre- 
viously announced  that  he  would  be 
unable  to  go  to  Chicago  for  the  fu- 
neral because  he  had  to  continue  to 
fulfill  his  engagement  at  a  local  the- 
ater the  remainder  of  the  week. 


Sixteen   Members  of  Im- 
perial Family  on  Pilgrim- 
age to  Shrine. 

Paris.  April  13. — Sixteen  members  of 
the  Austrian  imperial  family,  including 
Archdachess  Zita.  wife  of  Archduke 
Charles    Francis,    heir    to    the    throne; 


His  Age  Is  Against  Him. 

"1  am  52  years  old  and  I  have  been 
troubled  with  kidneys  and  bladder  for 
a  good  many  years,"  writes  Arthur 
Jones,  Allen,  Kan.  "My  age  Is  against 
me  to  ever  get  cured,  but  Foley  Kidney 
Pills  do  roe  more  good  than  anything 
I  ever  tried."  Many  people  suffer  from 
kidney  trouble  who  need  not  suffer 
when  they  can  get  Foley  Kidney  Pills. 
Mr.  Jones  in  a  later  letter  says  if  it 
was  not  for  them-  he  would  never  be 
able  to  work  In  the  hay  field.  Rheu- 
matism, aching  back,  shooting  pains, 
stiff  joints,  all  have  been  relieved.  Sold 
everywhere. 


.«*■ 


i^Mea 


•  p*" 


■i-^ 


^k 


■nn   »»—w^MM 


s 


ITiursday, 


THE    DULlWP4i    HERALD, 


April  13, 1916 


CLUB  WOULD  PRESERVE  PLAN 
TO  GROUP  PUBLIC  BUILDINGS 


I 


May  Send   Committee 
Washington  to  Back 
Up  Miller. 


to 


i\ 


Win  Demand  New  Federal 

Building  and  Oppose 

Remodeling. 


McGonagle  Scores  Lassi- 
tude Which  Exists  in 
Public  Affairs. 


The  ifport  of  thf  municipal  commlt- 
t«  e.  niadf  at  the  annual  m»  eting  ot  the 
public  affairs  committee  of  the  Dulutli 
Commercial  dub  last  evtning.  stirred 
up  interest  and  brisk  action.  Tlie 
phase  of  the  report  wlilch  thus  appeal- 
ed to  the  club  members  present  was 
that  concerning  a  new  Federal  build- 
ing'. 

The  net  result  was  that  a  motion 
made  bv  R.  B.  Knox  to  have  a  speclhl 
committ»'e  appointed,  to  go  to  Wash- 
ington if  necessary  and  as.sist  Con- 
gitssman  Miller  In  headinfe'  f-ff  the 
proposed  plan  of  constructing  a  sepa- 
rate buildliiK  for  a  postoffice  and  re- 
modeling tlie  pre.«ent  building  for  otli- 
♦r  purposes  instead  of  erecting  a  new 
building  to  •  mbrace  all  Federal  needs 
here,  was  adopted,  and  a  committee 
^111  be  named  later.  Such  action  was 
suggt  .<^t*  d     in     the     committee's     report 


which  was  i.repared  by  the  chairman.  I  Jtreet  signs  and  street  iigntin 
^e'^^g.  W  >iorUn  a£r.  a  b,  ueorge  '--i,^»^«\,/- /-J,"-  ^^X'  ' 
1).     M.(  arthy.     a.sslslant     secrttaiy     of     ,„^,.^,„j^    ^,^j    lighting    situation 


t 


the  club. 

The  motion  was  passed  unanimously, 
following  an  a<ldress  by  W.  A.  MctJo- 
nagle.  In  which  Congressman  Miller 
was  given  strong  Indorsement. 

In  his  address.  Mr.  Mctionagle  said 
that  (.■«>ngr.-.visman  Miller  is  doing 
everything  he  can  In  the  matter,  but 
unless  the  citizens  of  the  city  show 
that  they  want  what  the  congressman 
Is  demanding,  the  treasury  department 
Is  not  likely  to  be  convinced  that  the 
need    exists. 

.MiiNt    Impre«M    OffielaU. 

"We  should  not  sit  idly  by."  said 
Mr.  McrJonagle.  "We  should  have  a 
committee  appointed  in  this  matter 
Which  will  make  It  a  hobby.  Congress- 
man Miller  Is  doing  everything  he  can, 
ar.d  .'Senator  Nelson,  the  peer  of  any 
man  In  the  public  life  of  Washington, 
Is  with  us  too.  We  must  arouse  the 
city  to  Its  nc<cl3  In  such  matters.  We 
must  nut  have  our  grouping  plan  de- 
stroyed by  Federal  officials  simply  be- 
cause we  fall  to  Impress  them  with 
our   needs." 

Mr.  McGonagle  referred  to  a  state- 
mtnt  recentl.v  printed  in  which  Con- 
Ifressman  Miller  was  represented  as 
working  against  Dulutli.  and  denied  It 
emphatically.  It  was  In  connection 
With  the  matter  of  the  Interstate 
bridge  at  the  steel  plant,  and  the 
Speaker  referred  to  his  signed,  denial, 
printed  recently  in  The  Herald. 

During     tlie    course     of    his     address, 
Mr.    Mc<Tonagle   took   occasion   to   decry 
the   lassitude  which   he  evidently   feels 
xlsts    In    public    matters    here.      Said 
e: 

"Must  Aroode  Cliy. 

"We  must  awake  and  do  something 
for  our  city.  This  cannot  be  done  by 
knocking  the  city  and  this  club.  Let 
us    cast    aside    meannesses.      We    must 

![o  back  to  the  spirit  that  existed  when 
his  club  was  formed  fourteen  years 
ago.  Unfortunately,  there  has  devel- 
oped In  riilulh  a,  grovip  of  knockers, 
ftien  wno  are  so  selfish  that  they  cannot 
aee  what  is  good  for  the  city  as  a 
whole.  We  must  expose  this  kind  of 
ckizen,  hold  him  up  to  public  ridicule 
and  scorn,  and  purge  the  city  of  his 
breed.  I  feel  strongly  in  this  matter. 
I  was  active  in  this  club  when  It  was 
organized,  and  we  then  possessed  the 
spirit  which  has  put  the  city  ahead. 
Knocking  will  hold  It  back,  and  we 
must  return  to  the  old  days  and  resur- 
rect the  feeling  of  loyalty  and  en- 
thusiasm that  existed  then.  We  must 
?;et  together,  regardless  of  selfish  In- 
erests,  and  remember  that  what  Is 
good  for  the  city  and  county  as  a 
whole  is  good  for  each  one  of  us." 

The  report  of  the  municipal  commit- 
tee  follows: 

"The  first  work  of  the  committee 
was  the  consideration  of  the  proposed 
electrical  and  plumbing  ordinances. 
These  ordinances  were  carefully  studied 
by  the  committee  and  its  sub-commit- 
tee at  several  meetings  diirlng  the 
spring  and  early  summer  of  last  year. 
The  public  affairs  committee  adopted 
the  recommendation  that  the  proposed 
ordinances  should  be  dropped  and  a 
complete  revision  of  the  building  or- 
dinance undertaken,  to  Include  ade- 
quate legislation  as  to  plumbing  and 
electrical    work.      Such    a    revision    Is 


now    In    progress    by    a    committee    of 

representatives    of    various    commercial 

bodies,  Including  the  Commercial  club. 

Action  on  Federal  Bnlldlnar< 

"Your  committee  took  action  favor- 
ing a  new  Federal  building  for  the 
city,  and  Its  report  was  adopted  by  the 
public  affairs  committee  and  copies 
forwarded  to  senators  and  representa- 
tives. We  understand  that  the  United 
States  treasury  department  Is  now 
working  on  a  plan  for  a  separate  build- 
ing for  postoffice  purposes  only,  the 
present  Federal  building  to  be  re- 
modeled for  other  uses.  Such  a  plan. 
If  adopted  by  the  government,  would 
make  Itnposslble  the  proposed  grouping 
of  public  buildings.  The  Commercial 
club  should  keep  In  close  touch  with 
the  situation  and  endeavor  to  prevent 
such  a  result. 

"Your  committee  reported  on  the 
matter  of  duplication  of  street  names 
that  considerable  confusion  was 
caused  by  existing  duplication  anl 
submitted  a  list  of  such  duplications 
with  recommendations,  recommending 
among  other  things  that  the  matter 
be  presented  to  the  city  council  for 
action.  The  recommendation  was 
favorably  acted  upon  by  the  public 
affairs    committee. 

"The  chairman  of  the  committee 
acted  as  a  member  of  a  committee  to 
consider  the  question  of  unemploy- 
ment In  Duluth.  composed  of  the  rep- 
resentatives of  a  number  of  civic  or- 
ganizations. Although  fortunately  the 
(luestion  has  not  been  a  pressing  one 
during  the  past  year,  and  probably 
will  not  be  for  some  time  to  come,  a 
permanent  committee  was  formed  to 
study  the  situation  and  deal  with  the 
question  as  it  might  arise  from  time 
to  time  in  the  future.  This  commit- 
tee, of  which  Fred  Ward,  superin- 
tendent of  the  county  work  farm.  Is 
chairman,  has  had  several  meetlngb 
and  the  municipal  committee  should, 
we  believe,  continue  to  keep  In  touch 
with  It  and  the  club  should  continue 
to    co-f)perate    with    It. 

Street    Sisn*    a^d    Liightinsr.       . 

"The  committee  also  considered 
among  other  things  the  question  of 
street    signs    and    street    lighting.      It 

no  Im- 
street 
could 
bo  hoped  for,  and  was  unable  to  make 
ajiy  report  or  recommendations  In  re- 
gard to  the  matter.  The  city  author- 
ities are  doing  everything  In  their 
power  to  work  out  some  method  of 
bettering  the  situation  but  are 
hampered  by  lack  of  funds  and  In 
other  ways.  The  condition  Is  admit- 
tedly very  unsatisfactory  and  we 
trust  will  be  given  continued  atten- 
tion  by  the   committee. 

"In  the  matter  of  overhanging 
street  advertising  signs  the  committee 
has  done  work  of  Investigation  as  to 
ordinances  In  other  cities  and  their 
enforcement,  and  trust  that  this  work 
will  be  carried  on.  The  city  author- 
ities desire  to  Improve  the  situation 
here  and  a  small  beginning  has  been 
made  in  the  way  of  legislation,  but 
more  drastic  steps  should  be  taken 
In  the  opinion  of  the  committee  to 
do  away  with  the  condition  now  ex- 
isting. It  has  become  a  nuisance  and 
has  made  o\ir  principal  streets  un- 
sightly. It  has  been  carried  to  an 
extent  where  such  devices  defeat  their 
own   purpose   of  advertising. 

Tax    Rate    High    KnouKh. 

"The  city  revenue  Is  at  present  In- 
adequate to  defray  the  expense  of 
frovernment,  and  the  city's  share  of 
mprovements  on  the  present  basis. 
There  Ig  some  talk  of  submitting  a 
charter  amendment  authorizing  a 
higher  tax  rate.  Our  tax  rate  Is  al- 
ready very  high  and  to  increase  it 
would  be  unfortunate.  We  recom- 
mend that  the  municipal  committee 
should  study  the  question  of  city 
finance  and  In  every  way  possible  co- 
operate with  the  city  commissioners 
In  trying  to  work  out  a  plan  which 
win  solve  the  question  without  In- 
creasing  the   tax   rate. 

"The  committee  considered  a  large 
number  of  other  questions  of  minor 
importance." 

Duluth  Realty  Guide. 

The  nun  who  are  anxious  to  dispose 
of  their  real  estate  are  the  sort  who 
are  willing  to  meet  you  half  way  as 
to  price,  terms,  etc.  Many  ouch  men 
are  advertising  in  today's  Herald 
Want  Ad  columns. 


COMMERCIAL  CLUB  HOLIR 
STIRRING  ANNUAL  MPING 


("■lAbeMaHiwB 


^      '              ! 

: 

1 

1 

■ 

^^^^^^^^^^^ 

L 

a 

9 

1 

Passes     Resolutions 
Threatened  Railroad 
Strike. 


on 


Will  Investigate  City  Boards 

System  and  Platoon 

Matter. 


POSTOFFICE  BLOWN 
ATBARNESVILLE,MINN. 

Barnesville,  Minn.,  April  13. — Four 
hundred  dollars  In  cash  and  $60  In 
stamps  and  a  quantity  of  money  order 
blanks  were  obtained  by  yeggs,  who 
dynamited  the  safe  In  the  Barnesville 
postoffice   Tuesday  night. 

P.  H.  Klefer,  postmaster,  discovered 
the  robbery  Wednesdav  morning  when 
he  found  the  door  of  the  safe  wide 
open.  The  robbers  had  entered  through 
a  side  door,  which  was  smashed  open. 

The  robbers  are  believed  to  have 
made  their  way  to  Barnesville  from 
Sabln.  Minn.,  a  gasoline  speeder,  stolen 
at    Sabln,    being    found    near    here. 

Most  everybody  knows  Duluth  Her- 
ald Want  Ads  bring  results. 


Borne  of  the  most  Important  matters 
that  have  come  up  before  any  public 
body  in  Duluth  for  a  long  time,  were 
dealt  with  last  night  at  the  annual 
meeting  of  the  Duluth  Commercial 
club  and  of  the  public  affairs  commit- 
tee. The  attendance  was  large,  and  on 
a  number  of  matters  discussed,  the 
greatest  enthusiasm  was  aroused. 

Notable  among  the  actions  taken  was 
the  arrangement  for  a  special  commit- 
tee to  go  to  Washington  If  necessary 
and  assist  Congressman  Miller  In  fight- 
ing the  proposed  plan  of  the  treasury 
department  to  build  a  postoffice  build- 
ing here,  remodeling  the  present  Fed- 
eral building  for  other  purposes.  In- 
stead of  constructing  a  new  Federal 
building  for  all  purposes  on  the  prop- 
erty belonging  to  the  government  on 
West  First  street,  between  Fifth  and 
Sixth  avenues.  The  government's  pro- 
posal would  destroy  the  grouping  plan 
mapped  out  for  the  courthouse.  Fed- 
eral building  and  city  building  In  the 
two  blocks  on  West  First  street,  be- 
tween Fourth  and  Sixth  avenues  west, 
and  Congressman  Miller  wants  help. 
The  motion,  made  by  R.  B.  Knox,  was 
unanimously  adopted  and  vigorously 
discussed. 

Inspiring  Chalrninn. 

The  meeting  had  an  inspiring  chair- 
man. In  the  absence  of  the  regular 
officers  of  both  the  public  affairs  conv- 
mlttee  and  of  the  club — all  of  these 
being  out  of  the  city  for  long  periods 
on  business — W.  A.  McGonagle,  presi- 
dent of  the  Duluth,  Missabe  &  Northern 
road,  a  former  president  of  the  club 
and  a  former  chairman  of  the  public 
affairs  committee,  was  unanimously 
chosen  to  preside.  In  his  Incidental  re- 
marks and  In  a  short  address  which  he 
gave,  he  Injected  a  vim  to  the  work  of 
the  evening  and  an  enthusiasm  for 
public  splritedness  which  caught  the 
other  members  prest-nt.  He  urged  a 
casting  off  of  lassitude  and  a  unity  of 
action  for  the  good  of  the  city.  He 
urged  that  the  "knockers"  be  exposed 
to  scorn  and  that  that  breed  of  citizen 
be  stamped  out.  ,  ,     ^ 

Reports  were  received  and  read  from 
every  subcommittee  of  the  public  af- 
fairs committee,  which  met  first;  and 
these  are  dealt  with  elsewhere  in  this 

issue.  ,     _..^^ 

Railroad  TronbleM  Dealt  19V  ith. 

One  of  the  chief  matters  that  came 
up  for  discussion  was  the  matter  of 
the  Impending  railroad  strike.  A  com- 
munication from  the  Chicago  Associa- 
tion of  Commerce.  Inclosing  a  copy  of 
a  resolution  adopted  by  that  organiza- 
tion, was  received.  In  which  action  was 
urged  by  the  Duluth  club  In  the  way 
of  a  resolution  similar  to  that  adopted 
in  Chicago  to  Insist  that  the  eight- 
hour  day  matter,  which  Is  the  question 
In   dispute    between    the    railroads   and 

their  employes,  be  arbitrated  and  the 
uslness  o^  the  country  not  tied  up  by 
a  strike.  G.  Roy  Hall,  traffic  com- 
missioner, urged  that  a  similar  resolu- 
tion be  adopted  and  copies  sent  to  the 
proper  parties.  R.  B.  Knox  was  against 
It  unless  the  time  was  so  short  as  to 
be  urgent.  Mr.  McGonagle  said  that 
the  railroad  companies  are  expected  to 
reply  to  the  eight-hour  demand  by 
April  29.  Mr.  Hall  then  made  a  mo- 
tion to  adopt  such  a  resolution  and  It 
carried,  Mr.  Knox  being  the  only  one 
to  vote  against  It.  The  resolution 
reads  as  follows: 

"Whereas,  certain  grave  differences 
are  impending  between  the  railroads 
of  the  United  States  and  their  train 
service  employes  which.  If  not  ad- 
Justed,  threaten  to  result  in  a  serious 
Interruption  of  railroad  transportation; 
and 

"Whereas,  arbitrary  action  on  the 
part  of  either  side,  without  the  dis- 
puted questions  arising  from  the  de- 
mands of  both  sides  being  submitted 
to  a  careful  and  Impartial  Investiga- 
tion, would  be  Inimical  to  the  public; 
and 

"Whereas,  a  railroad  strike,  even 
temporarily  Interfering  with  traffic 
operations  throughout  the  country, 
would  be  a  national  calamity,  entailing 
a  loss  upon  the  public  far  greater  than 
the  loss  to  the  parties  to  the  contro- 
versv;  be  It  therefore 

"Resolved,  that  It  Is  the  sense  of  the 
Duluth  Commercial  club.  If  the  parties 
to  the  controversy  do  not  reach  an 
agreement  through  direct  negotiations, 
that  both  parties  to  the  controversy 
should  submit  their  differences  to  an 
Impartial  board  of  arbitrators  for  the 
readjustment   of   all    causes    of   differ- 


ences between  them(*wl*h  due  regard 
to  the  Interests  of  tltt  f»iblic." 
Public  Boar^  Syatem. 
Bishop  McGolrick, -ir^  making  a  re- 
port for  the  park  o««r>lhlttee,  declared 
that  he  believes  that-  better  work  can 
be  done  by  the  city  in  the  matter  or 
parks  and  the  library  through  boards 
of  Interested  and  cotopetent  citizens, 
such  as  were  formerly  In  exl*tence, 
than  by  single  individuals.  He  com- 
mended the  work  of  Director  Batch- 
elor  of  the  playgrounds  department  of 
the  city,  but  believes  that  he  should 
have    assistance. 

This  brought  up  the  mooted  ques- 
tion of  establishing  boards,  and  H. 
W.  •Cheadle  moved  that  It  be  referred 
to  the  municipal  committee  to  be  re- 
ported on  at  the  next  meeting  of  the 
public  affairs  committee.  C.  F.  Mac- 
donald.  a  member  of  M»e  charter  com- 
mission, said  that  it  has  been  under 
consideration  by  the  commission  and 
that  a  committee  had  been  appointed 
to  confer  with  the  city  commissioners, 
but  that  no  report,  had  been  made 
yet.     Mr.  Cheadle's  motion  was  passed. 

Dr.  E.  L».  Tuohy  reported  for  the 
public  health  committee  and  spoke  at 
length  on  hospitals,  giving  many  fig- 
ures from  other  cities  as  to  munic- 
ipally owned  hospitals,  showing  a 
good  deal  of  research  in  the  matter. 
He  declared  that  while  the  cost  of 
keeping  and  taking  care  of  patients 
has  advanced  greatly,  the  county  of 
St.  L,ouls  Is  paying  the  same  for  Its 
patients  as  It  did  ten  years  ago,  and 
that  the  pay  is  not  adequate.  He  rec- 
ommended that  the  poor  board  be  con- 
ferred with  and  an  effort  be  made 
to  have  more  of  an  appropriation 
made  to  reimburse  the  hospitals  tak- 
ing care  of  county  patients  and  others 
who  do  not  pay  their  bills.  This  rec- 
ommendation   was    adopted. 

Invite   Health   Survey. 

The  doctor  recommended  further 
that  the  committee  on  public  health 
be  empowered  to  coMar  with  the  city 
health  commlsslonef^fiid  urge  the  lat- 
ter to  Invite  the  United  States  health 
authorities  to  make  a  health  survey 
of  the  city,  as  they  evidently  wish 
to   do.      This   also   was   adopted. 

G.  Roy  Hall,  traffic  commissioner, 
made  an  exhaustive  ..report  of  the 
work  done  in  his  <Wi>artment  during 
the  last  year  and  ot  the  rate  ad- 
vantages gained.'  Ha.^Nis  enthusiastic- 
ally applauded  as  he  sat   down. 

Several  referenda  from  the  Cham- 
ber of  Commerce  of  Ibe  United  States 
were  offered,  and  a  motion  to  refer 
them  to  different  committees,  which, 
in  turn  will  report  10  the  executive 
committee,  and  the  ej^cutlve  commit- 
tee to  take  action  »  be  reported  to 
the  public  affairs  committee,  was  car- 
ried. 

N.  J.  Upham  brougrht  up  the  matter 
of  a  double  platoon  ^Jj^stem  for  fire- 
men, now  before  thedoity  commission. 
A  motion  to  have  the.»tnunlclpal  com- 
mittee investigate  the  matter  and  re- 
port back  to  the  public  affairs  com- 
mittee  was   adopted. 

The  report  of  Secretary  H.  V.  Eva 
showed  that  In  the  last  year  the 
membership  of  the  club  has  increased 
from  1,174  to  1,203.  the  largest  mem- 
bership   In    the    club's    hjstory. 

The  return  of  the  tellers  of  the 
election  held  yesterday,  showed  that 
George  D.  Swift.  B.,^  T.  Hugo.  Harry 
Strong,  R.  M.  Sellwood  and  C.  P. 
Craig  were  elected  directors  for  two 
years.  This  was  a  foregone  conclusion 
as  there  wa»  no  opposition.    ■ 

The  proposed  bylaw  amendments 
were    adopted    without    debate. 

COMMJTTEES 
MAKE  REPORTS 


Two  General  Tag  Day?for 

All  Local  Charities 

Suggested. 


More   General   Interest 
School  Board  Elections 
Is  Urged. 


in 


HOW  CADOMENE  TABLETS 

(3  GRAIN) 

CHANGED  ONE  NAN'S  ENTIRE 


LIFE 


Burton  was  Acrvuus,  at  Work,  at  Recreation, 

at  Home. 

He  couldn't  sleep  at  night  without  the  most 
hideous  dreams,  he  suffered  with  melancholy,  and 
didn't  seem  able  to  go  ahead.  He  was  constantly 
cross  and  irritable,  suffered  v^ith  dizziness,  trem- 
bling of  the  limbs,  cold  hands  and  feet,  insomnia, 
fear  without  cause  and  a  general  inability  to  act 
naturally  at  all  times. 


Physically  and  Mentally  Burton  was  a  nerv- 
ous wreck,  his  muscles  became  flabby,  the  en- 
tire body  became  weakened  and  devitalized, 
his  memory  was  poor,  he  lacked  ambition;  in 
fact,  business  and  social  duties  bored  him  and, 
furthermore  Burton  was  alarmed.  He  had 
reached  the  stage  where  he  didn't  believe  his 
condition  could  be  remedied.  He  had  almost 
lost  hope,  but  "upon  a  friend's  advice  he  tried 
Cadomene  Tablets." 

Cadomene  Tablets  Restored  Vitality 

Now  Burton  will  tell  you  he  is  a  Well  Man. 
Hale  and  Hearty,  enjoys  his  work,  his  pleas- 
ures. Life  looks  better  to  him,  his  family 
means  more  to  him,  his  business  is  better  and 
he's  glad  he  learned  of  Cadomene  Tablets  and 
experienced  their  wonderful  revitalizing  and 
strengthening  influence  on  his  whole  system. 

If  you  suffer  as  Burton  did,  the  burden  of 
proof  of  the  power  and  effectiveness  of  Cado- 
mene Tablets  rests  with  us.  We  guarantee 
Cadomene  Tablets  to  give  perfect  satisfaction, 
and  if  they  do  not  prove  highly  beneficial  in 
your  case  we  do  not  want  your  money,  and 
every  cent  you  pay  for  them  will  be  refunded 
to  you. 

Cadomene  Tablets  build  up  artd  nourish  the 
entire  system.  They  are  unexcelled  as  a  aerve 
invigorator  and  lasting  tonic  in  restoring  to 
the  various  organisms  natural  vim,  vitality  and 
normal  vigor. 

For  sale  by  all  first-class  druggists. 


Among  the  committee  reports  made 
to  the  public  affairs  committee  of  the 
Commercial  club  last  night  were  th^ 
following: 

Retail  committee,  Bentley  P.  Neff. 
chairman;  charitable  organizations.  B. 
C.  "Wade,  chairman;  trade  extension, 
Frank  X.  Gravel,  chairman;  good  roads, 
A.  M.  McDougal,  chalripan;  education, 
H.  C.  Strong,  chairman;  street  Im- 
provement, T.  A  Merrltt,  vice  chair- 
man, and  city  planning,  F.  W.  BulU- 
van,  chairman. 

Tne  retail  committee  reported  excel- 
lent co-operation  all  year  between  the 
committee  and  the  Retail  Merchants' 
association  and  told  of  activities  In 
connection  with  fraudulent  advertis- 
ing, vocational  training,  Insurance 
rates,  co-operative  delivery  and  pub- 
lic markets.  As  to  the  last  matter, 
Mr.  Neff  said,  the  mayor  had  given 
assurance  that  a  central  market  place 
would  be  furnished.  The  committee 
acknowledged  appreciation  of  "the 
splendid  manner  in  which  public 
thoroughfares  have  been  kept  open 
this  winter  and  for  the  early  and  very 
effective  way  in  which  the  main 
streets  have  been  cleared  of  ice  and 
snow.  •  •  •  a  very  Important  factor, 
not  only  in  enabling  people  to  get 
down  town  more  easily,  but  in  making 
prompt  deliveries." 

Sifting  Out  Ihe  Worttar* 

The  charitable  organizations  com- 
mittee, which  has  had  In  hand  the 
Investigation  of  concerns  which  sought 
to  solicit  aid   from  charitably   inclined 

rieople  In  the  city,  reported  that  dur- 
ng  the  last  year  it  had  issued  per- 
mission cards  to  the  following:  Asso- 
ciated Charities.  Duluth  Humane  so- 
ciety. Children's  Home  of  Duluth,  St. 
James'  orphanage.  Y.  W.  C.  A,  the 
Llnnaea  club,  Duluth  Gospel  mission, 
Y.  M.  C.  A..  St.  Mary's  hospital,  St. 
Luke's  hospital,  Scandinavian  branch 
of  the  Salvation  Army  and  King's 
Daughters.  Among  those  whose  so- 
licitation was  checked  were:  A  chil- 
dren's orphanage  in  Wisconsin,  a  col- 
ored school  In  Virginia,  a  boys'  school 
In  Michigan  and  a  publication  claimed 
to  be  sold  in  the  interests  of  chil- 
dren which  Investigation  showed  was 
sold  purely  for  profit  and  not  a  cent 
given    to    the    support    of   children. 

This  committee  suggested  that  an 
ordinance  be  drafted  for  presentation 
to  the  city  commissioners  prohibiting 
the  solicitation  of  funds  by  individuals, 
church  societies  or  other  organizations 
without  first  receiving  the  sanction 
of  some  branch  of  the  city  government 
and  then  only  after  diligent  Investiga- 
tion. The  committee  also  suggested 
that  Instead  of  Innumerable  "tag  days," 
as  at  present,  two  general  tag  days 
be  established  to  raise  a  fund  that 
would  be  allowed  pro  i^ata  to  all  char- 
itable organizations,  and  thus  stop 
overlapping  and  inefficient  spending. 
Mnrh  Boonter  Work. 

The  trade  extension  con^mlttee  told 
of  the  booster  trips  of  last  fall,  during 
which  twenty  towns  and  649  men  were 
visited  in  thirteen  days.  Mr.  Gravel  said 
that  It  Is  estimated  that  Duluth  was 
heralded  and  boosted  to  40.000  citizens 
of  the  state  during  these  trips.  He  said 
also  that  the  committee  is  contemplat- 
Ing  two  booster  trips  early  this  sum- 


Special  Coat  Sale 


Yon  neTer  sec  any  film*  o'  th'  Bllent  1 1 
aetora'    MUariew.     OlTe    moat    anybiiddy 
enough  rop«  an*  the'y'II  rope  yon  in. 

iProtKttd  by  Ad4m.i  Newspaper  8em«.) 


mcr — one  to  the  Copper  country,  occu- 
pying six  days,  and  another  a  five-day  I 
trip  through  Western  Minnesota.  i 

The  report  of  the  good  roads  com-  I 
mittee  reviewed  the  road  Improvements  ; 
made  during  the  last  year,  commend- 
ing the  work  of  County  Commissioner 
Kauppl  on  the  Saginaw  road,  who,  the 
report  said,  "agreed  to  do  a  certain 
amount  of  work  on  the  road,  and  has 
kept  his  promlfies  to  the  letter,  to  the 
complete  satisfaction  of  the  Cloquet 
people  and  the  settlers  in  the  territory 
affected." 

In  its  report,  the  education  commit- 
tee urged  more  interest  in  school  elec- 
tions, declaring  that  "the  high  charac- 
ter of  the  school  board  during  the  past 
fourteen  years  has  been  due  to  the  in- 
terest and  energies  of  a  comparatively 
few  public-spirited  citizens." 
Commend*  Farreli. 

The  etreet  Improvement  committee 
reported  that  during  the  last  year  It 
had  acted  in  an  advisory  capacity  and 
that  Commissioner  Farreli,  head  of  the 
public  works  department,  has  adopted 
a  number  of  Its  suggestions,  has  co- 
operated most  cordially,  had  attended 
meetings  of  the  committee,  had  con- 
sulted It  freely  In  regard  to  street  work 
and  evidently  appreciated  that  the  pur- 
pose of  the  committee  Is  to  assist  him. 
The  committee  reported  that  It  be- 
lieved that  the  commissioner  was  con- 
scientiously endeavoring  to  work  out 
the  problem  of  street  improvement  In 
the  city  and  that  street  improvement 
work  had  been  carried  out  In  the  last 
year  on  a  sound  business  basis. 

The  city  planning  committee  report- 
ed on  the  achievements  of  the  last 
year,  such  as  the  successful  closing  up 
of  the  Jay  Cooke  park  plan,  the 
changes  In  the  exterior  of  the  new 
armory,  and  expressed  the  belief  that 
the  lime  had  come  for  making  a  broad 
plan  for  the  future  needs  of  Duluth  by 
the  formation  of  a  general  committee 
of  citizens  Interested  in  different 
phases  of  the  work,  such  as  parks, 
railroad  terminals,  docks,  highways, 
street  car  service  and  industrial  ,sites. 

appearTo'  uke 
holpinb  office 

All  North  Dakota  State  Offi- 
cers Except  Two  Seek 
Re-election. 

Bismarck,  N.  D.,  April  13.— Holding 
state  office  In  North  Dakota  Is  evi- 
dently quite  popular,  judging  by  the 
unanimity  with  which  present  office 
holders    are    seeking    re-election. 

Every  state  office  holder  and  every 
member  of  the  state's  delegation  In 
congress  is  a  candidate  for  re-elec- 
tion, with  the  exception  of  Gov.  L.  B. 
Hanna.  who  wants  to  be  United  States 
senator,  and  John  H.  Fralne,  who 
wants  to  be  governor,  and  E.»  J.  Tay- 
lor, superintendent  of  public  Instruc- 
tion. 

Formal  announcements  made  this 
week  place  all  present  state,  congres- 
sional and  Judicial  officials,  w^ose 
terms  close,  in  the  field  as  candidates 
for    re-election. 

Congreasionai  Candidates. 
-  Of  the  congressional  delegation. 
George  M.  Young  of  Valley  City,  rep- 
resenting the  Second  district,  is  the 
latest  to  announce  himself  a  candi- 
date for  re-election.  He  is  so  far 
without  opposition.  John  H.  "Wlshck, 
who  was  a  candidate  for  governor 
last  year,  was  looked  upon  for  a  time, 
aa  a  likely  candidate  for  the  state 
legislature.  Instead. 

H.  T.  G.  Helgesen.  in  the  First  dis- 
trict. Is  opposed  by  F.  T.  Cuthbert, 
and  P.  D.  Norton  in  the  Third  district 
is   opposed   by  1*   A.   Simpson. 

None  of  the  present  state  officers 
Is  without  opposition  for  renomlna- 
tion  In  his  own  party  except  John 
Steen.  There  is  no  announced  rival 
for  the  state  treasurership  nomination 
except    Steen. 

All   Seek   Re-elcetion. 

Thomas  Hall,  secretary  of  state,  is 
opposed  by  J.  L.  Hjort;  Walter  C.  Tay- 
lor, Insurance  commissioner;  Robert 
F.  Flint,  commissioner  of  immigra- 
tion and  labor;  Henry  J.  LInde  at- 
torney general;  W.  H.  Mann,  W.  H. 
Stutsman  and  O.  P.  N.  Anderson,  rail- 
road commissioners;  Carl  Jorgenson, 
state  auditor,  and  Justices  C.  J.  Flsk. 
E.  B.  Goes  and  E.  T.  Burke  are  all 
candidates  for  re-election,  and  each 
is  opposed  by  the  indorsed  candidates 
of    the    Farmers'    Nonpartisan    league. 

Mr.  Taylor,  superintendent  of  pub- 
lic Instruction.  Is  not  in  politics  this 
year,  retiring  from  the  position  at  the 
conclusion  of  three  terms.  N.  C.  Mac- 
donald  and  W.  B.  Hoover  are,  how- 
ever, in  the  field  for  the  position,  and 
the    fight    is    a    right    merry    one. 

CLOQUET  PREPARES 
FOR  BIG  OATHERINC 

Will     Entertain     Carlton 
Sunday  School  Associa- 
tion Saturday. 

Cloquet.  Minn..  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  committees  In 
charge  are  making  great  preparations 
for  the  Carlton  County  Sunday  School 
association  meeting  to  be  held  In  the 
Presbyterian  church  Saturday  evening. 
This  meeting  will  call  together  all  of 
the  Sunday  school  teachers  and  officers 
of  the  different  churches  of  the  city 
who  belong  to  the  association.  Several 
people  are  expected  to  attend  from 
Carlton.  Barnum  and  Moose  Lake.  The 
committee  announces  the  following 
program: 

Vocal  solo.  Rev.  W.  E.  Williams; 
"Keeping  the  Boys  in  the  Sunday 
School,"  Albert  Cox;  "The  Educational 
Standard  of  Sunday  School  Instruc- 
tion," George  Nichols;  "Mission  Study 
In  the  Sunday  School,"  Miss  Margaret 
Oldenburg;  "A  Plan  for  Increasing  the 
Efficiency  of  Our  Teachers,"  Rev.  James 
G  "Ward:  "How  Can  We  Establish  Ef- 
fective Home  Departments."  C.  E.  Den- 
nis- "How  the  Cradle  Roll  Builds  the 
Sunday  School,"  Mrs.  W.  P.  Campbell; 
"What  the  State  Organization  Is  Do- 
ing," Rev.  W.  H.  Parish;  duet.  Misses 
Mamie  Carlson  and  Emilia  Olson;  "Sun 


All-wool  white  chinchillas, 
three-quarter  lengths,  belted 
effects  wfth  deep  cuffs,  trim- 
med with  military  braid  and 
buttons;  values  from  $14.75 
to  $19.75,  special  at— 

$1075 

Rainproof  Coats 

Serviceable  and  smart 
styles,  guaranteed  rainproof ; 
for  women  and  misses — $8 
and  $10. 


We  Invite 

Your 

Charge 

Account 


No  Charge 
1        for 
'Tlf^f^^^^fKl^^^     Alterations 

lltLUTI-tOPEltOI-lliaillA-liilllU 


SERVICE      FIRST 


D.  H.,   4-13-16.  _^^ 

The  Best  Guarantee  of  An 
Electric  Lamp  Is  the  Serv- 
ice Behind  Its  Manufacture 

We  buy  the  best  lamp 
that  is  made  today: 

The  Edison 

Mazda  Lamp 

In  addition  to  this,  every  lamp  we  re- 
ceive comes  from  a  private  tested  stock 
at  the  factory.  Every  lanvp  in  this 
stock  has  been  tested  by  representatives 
of  the  Electric  Testing  Laboratories  of 
New  York,  who  keep  men  at  the  fac- 
tories. These  lamps  are  tested  for  length 
of  life,  candle  power  and  efficiency.  We 
are  the  only  firm  in  Duluth  with  this 
service.  Our  lamps  are  no  higher  in 
price  than  others. 

Where  should  you  buy  your  lamps?. 


fmmm^ 


^* 


Duluth-Edison 
Electric  Company 

216  West  First  Street. 


.^i 


SERVICE      FIRST 


Can  Do  for  the  School."  Omrl  Skager- 
berg;  "Preparing  the  Lesson,"  Raynoid 
Newman;  "Creating  Interest  in  the 
Class,"  Miss  Louise  Swenson;  "Sunday 
School  Evangelism,"  H.  W.  Mlxsell. 

After  the  program  there  will  be  a 
general  discussion  of  problem*  led  by 
Rev.  W.  E.  Williams. 

Miss  May  W^hlte  will  have  charge  of 
the  serving  of  refreshments  which  will 
be  served  Immediately  after  the  meet- 
ing. ^ ^__ 

Duluth  Realty  Guide. 

The  men  who  are  anxious  to  dlepope 
of  their  real  estate  are  the  sort  who 
are  willing  to  meet  you  half  way  as 
to  price,  terms,  etc.  Many  such  men 
are  advertising  In  today's  Herald 
Want  Ad  colunms.   

THIRD  SAWMILL  AT 
CLOQUET  HAS  STARTED 

Cloquet,  Minn.,  ^pril  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  first  of  the  Cloquet 
Lumber  company's  sawmills  resumed 
operations  for  the  season  this  morning. 

This  is  the  third  mill  to  start  since 
the  first  of  the  year  and  will  give  em- 
ployment to  a  large  number  of  men 
who  have  returned  from  the  woods  and 


those   who  have   been  waiting  for   the 
spring  breakup. 

The  lumber  market  has  been  unusu- 
ally brisk  this  winter  and  the  stock 
piles  have  been  considerably  reduced 
since  the  shutdown  last  fall.  The  rest 
of  the  mills  will  probably  start  soma 
time  next  week. 


CUYUNA  ROADS  MEETING, 

Officers  Are  Elected  and  Road  Work 
Is  Discussed. 

Crosby,  Minn.,  April  13. — ^Besides  dis- 
cussing various  road  matters  at  H 
meeting  held  here  the  Cuyuna  Range 
Good  Roads  association  elected  offi- 
cers as  follows: 

President.  A.  O.  Rabldeau;  vice  pres- 
ident, B.  B.  Gaylord;  secretary,  A.  H. 
Proctor;  treasurer,  J.  B.  Haskell.  Di- 
rectors— J.  P.  Long,  Ironton;  C.  G. 
Travis,  Manganese;  H.  Hunter,  Wol- 
ford:  J.  B.  Herbst,  Riverton;  Dr.  G.  M. 
Sewall.  Cuyuna;  A.  J.  Hayes,  Crosby; 
T.  Watson,  Klondyke;  Con  Popple,  MiSf 
felon;   William   Andrews.    Emily. 

The  question  of  completing  the  road 
north  to  the  Mississippi  river  was  dis- 
cussed. Only  three-quarters  of  a  mil© 
Is  left  unfinished  and  ways  and  means 
of  making  a  fine  highway  of  it  will 
be  devised. 


■ 

■ 


for  Infants  and  Children, 

The  Kind  Toa  Have  Always  Boagrht  haa  borne  the  sigrna- 
ture  of  Chas.  H,  Fletcher,  and  has  been  made  under  his 
personal  supervision  for  over  30  years.  Allow  no  one 
to  deceive  you  in  this.  Counterfeits,  Imitations  and 
«<  Just-as-good"  are  but  Experiments,  and  endangrer  the 
health  of  Children— Experience  against  Experiment. 

The  Kind  You  Have^'Always  Bought 

Bears  the  Signature  of 


^^-^ 


■M 


.^m 


*-H    -  .    I 


.WWMPM.«<?'9— **^' 


fm         1  .11  ■■   ■ 


10 


Thursday, 


THE     DUB^TH    HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


.^— r 


i 


i 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

AN   INDIPENDKNT  NCWSPAPCR 

roblUked    ♦■very    cv<'n>nK    excrpt    Sunday    bj 

Tke    Herald    Company    at    Dalath.    Mian. 

Koth    Telephonea — Business    Office,    82  4; 
Editorial    Rooms,    1126. 

Catend  m  »e<-o.«l  dwa  witter  at  the  Dtiluth  pojlofflct  and*  Um 
•  •t  of  ronjpe*  of  March  3,   1870. 


OFFICIAL  PAPER,  CITY  OF  DILUTH 


14; 
Weekly 


BUBSCKIPT10.\     KATES— By     matl.     payable 
In     advance,     one    month,     86    cents;    three 
months,    fl;    six    months.    $2;    one  year, 
Baturday     Herald.     |l     per     year; 
Herald,    $1    per   year. 

Dally   by  carrier,   city  and   suburbs,   10    cents 
a  week.   46  cents  a  month. 
8ii'>»frt»>«»  will  confer  •  faw  by  m«ldn«  known  any  complaint 

When  ehaniiri  th»  a<1.1t*s.<  of  rour  paper.  It  li  Importaat  to 
|l<c  both  old  and  m-w   adlreaaes. 

The  Duluth  Herald  accepts  advertising 
contracts  wltji  the  distinct  Ruarantt-e  that 
It  haa  the  lamest  circulation  In  Minnesota 
outside  the  Twin  Citle*. 


The  Herald  will  be  ftlad  to  ha»e  Ita  •*- 
tenUon  eaiied  to  any  naljilradlnK  or  an- 
trae  Mtateaaeut  whieli  may  appear  in  Ita 
newM,   editorlnl    or   advertlHlng    coIuimuh. 


I  TODAY  IN  HISTORY. 


Thomas  Jefferson  born,  1743. 
Th-?  gr»*Hl  lortd-r  of  the  d»>mocratlc 
iPipulsH  111  America  and  author  of  the 
Decl:ir-4ti')n  of  Independence  was  ad- 
nilttt.l  to  the  bar  at  24.  Sorved  a  term 
In  the  Vlrjflni.i  house  of  burgesses  In 
17S9.  The  hou.-ie  was  dissolved  by  the 
Kovernor  for  Us  Independent  utter- 
ances, and  when  It  convened  again  In 
1773  j^-ffernon  and  others  undei-ti>ok  to 
fL>rm  a  comnilttee  of  correspondence 
between  the  colonies,  resulting  In  an- 
other dissolution,  repeated  In  1774. 
t:iected  to  Continental  Congress,  1776. 
His  Declaration  was  adopted  .luly  4. 
1776.  Jefferson  returned  to  the  Vir- 
ginia le^Ltilature  to  revise  the  Virginia 
code.  replaiMng  It  with  a  democratic 
ay.stem.  Elected  governor,  1779,  and 
narrowly  ejcap.-d  capture  by  Tarleton. 
Eloct.'d  to  congress,  1788.  Minister  to 
France,  1785.  Seer»'tary  of  st.Ue  under 
Wci.'4hln«:ton,  1789,  and  thenceforth  led 
the  lU-nuJcratic  forces  In  the  forming  of 
tho  nation.  Retired  In  1793.  Vice  pres- 
ident. 1797.  Elected  president  In  1800. 
larifly  through  the  influence  of  his 
rhlef  opponent  Hamilton,  who  hated 
Burr  worse.  Made  Louisiana  Purchase. 
Re-^lvte.l  ISOI.  Retired  to  Montlcello 
1809.    and    dhM    July    4,    1828. 

KK.VHIN*;— UralUblf     In     Duluth     public     llb.-ary)  — 
J«iti''4  .S.t\.i!il>-r,    '  TliomiiH  Ji'ffprs.Mi"    (<iiow»  a  Just  JihI«- 
mfiit   of    J'tftfrson's   fiiults    and    Tlrtii<>»);   J.    T.    Mirv, 
"Thonids  Jetttiraoa"  (ttflrf  popular  biography). 


DULUTH'S  MOST  USEFUL   INSTITUTION. 

The  Duhith  Commercial  club  and  its  ptib- 

lic  affairs  committee  held  the  annual  meet- 
ing last  ni«:l'.t.  and  it  was,  as  usual,  the  an- 
nual reminder  that  this  is  still  a  live  and 
growing  and  vital  factor  in  the  life  of  the 
community,  and  tliat  it  has  just  closed  an- 
other year  of  useful  activities,  always  in 
the  ascending  scale  of  vigor  and  efficiency. 

The  Commercial  club  touches  the  com- 
munity life  and  participates  in  it  at  many 
points,  all  useful,  -all  constructive,  all  for- 
ward-looking and  progressive.  It  is,  indeed, 
an  efficient  and  readily  responsive  mechan- 
ism whereby  public  spirit  can  work  its 
constructive  will.  But  it  is  more  than  a 
mere  agency  for  the  expression  of  public 
spirit  and  community  enterprise — it  also  is 
an  agency  for  evoking  and  increasing  public 
spirit.  It  i?,  in  other  words,  at  once  a 
dynamo  that  generates  civic  power,  and  a 
£K)wer  plant  that  uses  it. 

It  could  be  more  useful,  but  only  by 
having  more  members  and  by  putting  be- 
hind it  a  still  more  vigorous  community 
spirit.  But  its  membership  is  large  and 
representative,  and  the  coinmunity  spirit 
behind  it  Is  alert  and  vigorous  and  pro- 
gressive. So  it  is  an  abundantl}'  successful 
institution  that  is  doing  good  work  for  the 
whole  community  along  many  lines,  and 
that  deserves  and  should  have  the  fullest 
possible  support  and  co-operation  of  every 
citizen. 


The    se;i3on    seems    to    have    opened    quite 
effectually  even   without  the  Federal  league. 


pie  handle  their  own  election  machinery. 
The  direct  primary  is  the  latter  way,  and 
The  Herald  is  for  it.  The  convention  is  the 
former  way,  and  the  Journal  is  for  that. 

The  people  make  mistakes  in  nominating 
candidates,  but  they  are  honest  mistakes. 
The  conventions  made  at  least  as  many  mis- 
takes, but  they  were  not  always  honest  mis- 
takes. Mistakes  are  inevitable.  We'd  vast- 
ly rather  have  the  people  make  their  own 
honest  mistakes,  and  by  the  experience  thus 
gained  learn  to  do  better  another  time,  than 
to  have  the  mistakes  made  by  ring-con- 
trolled, boss-directed  conventions. 

The  principle  of  the  primary  is  everlast- 
ingly right.  The  present  primary  law  is 
not  perfect,  and  The  Herald  has  pointed 
out  one  way  it  could  be  improved — by  pro- 
viding for  initiating  candidacies  by  petition. 
The  Journal  opposes  this  proposal,  because 
it  does  not  want  the  primary  improved.  It 
wants  it  killed  and  the  convention  system 
restored.  It  will  not  see  that  happen,  and 
it  might  better  join  hands  in  striving  to 
perfect  the  machinery  of  direct  nomina- 
tions, because  direct  nominations  are  here 
to  stay. 

The  convention  is  government  of  the 
people  by  the  politicians  for  the  special  in- 
terests whose  agents  pull  the  strings  from 
a  back  room  in  a  Minneapolis  hotel. 
•  The  primary  is  government  of  the  peo- 
ple, by  the  people,  for  the  people. 

Minnesota  has  chosen  government  by 
people,  rejecting  government  by  politicians. 
It  is  not  likely  to  alter  that  judgment. 

• 

The  Canadians  are  giving  evidence  that 
they  would  be  able  to  handle  a  very  pretty 
little  war  on  their  own  account. 


mission  with  power  to  revise  the  tax-Iawb 
at  will  have  built  their  dream  out  of  Jjncf- 
rancc.  ^     | 

Of    course    congress    will     adjourn 
with  so   many   fences   in   hopeless   condi 


l3 


THOSE  WHO  WANT  THE  CONVENTION 
SYSTEM. 

The  direct  primary  falls,  not  because 
•*tho  people  are  too  Ignorant  and  Inert"' 
— to  use  The  Herald's  Ironic  phrase — 
but  because  It  does  not  furnish  nia- 
clilnery  whereby  the  people  may  attain 
the  best  self-government  for  them- 
selve?. — Minneapolis   Journal. 

But  the  convention  system  does,  we  take 
It.  Though  the  Journal  does  not  say  so, 
presumably  that  is  what  it  means. 

Perhaps  if  it  says  this  half  a  generation 
later,  when  people  have  forgotten  what  the 
convention  system  was,  the  Journal  can 
^et  people  to  believe  it.  It  can  hardly  hope 
ko  get  them  to  believe  it  now,  when  the 
convention  system  is  fresh  In  the  memories 
of  most  men. 

The  Journal's  phraseology  betrays  its 
bias.  "The  direct  primary  fails  because  it 
does  not  furnish  the  machinery  whereby 
the  people  may  attain  the  best  self-govern- 
jnent  for  themselves."  What  the  Journal 
Is  after  is  machinery  whereby  the  people 
biay  turn  their  self-government  over  to 
Others  to  handle  for  them — representative 
government,  it  calls  it — but  of  course  that 
isn't  self-government  at  all.  The  trouble 
with  the  Journal,  like  others  who  hold 
similar  ideas,  is  that  it  is  always  looking 
for  some  superior  class  to  do  the  people's 
governing  for  them,  and  there  is  n^  such 
class  and  never  will  be.  The  direct  primary 
does  not  attempt  to  furnish  machinery 
ivhereby  the  people  can  ATTAIN  the  best 
self-government — it  IS  a  part  of  the  ma- 
chinery by  which  the  people  govern  them- 
selves. 

If  the  people  are  fit  to  elect  public  of- 
ficials, they  are  fit  to  nominate  candidates 
for  public  office — ^and  this  the  direct  pri- 
mary gives  them  powef"  to  do.  If  they  are 
not  fit  to  nominate  candidates,  and  the 
convention  system  must  be  restored  to 
take  that  power  away  from  them,  then  they 
are  not  fit  to  elect  public  officials,  and  the 
ballot  should  be  taken  from  them,  too. 

There  are  but  two  ways:  to  have  the 
people's  election  machinery  han41ed  for 
them  by  somebody  else,  or  to  have  the  peo- 


ri 


Hughey  Dougherty,  Endman  f 


Editorial  is  tte  KaoMi  Cltr  Star. 


Very  Embarrassing 


THE  CASE    OF  THE  FIREMEN. 

The  attempt  at  a  compromise  between 
the  firemen  and  the  city  government  having 
failed,  the  firemen  in  their  attempt  to  get 
the  double  platoon  system  have  resorted  to 
the  initiative,  and  the  people  will  vote  upon 
it  presently. 

In  common  with  the  rest  of  the  commu- 
nity, The  Herald  has  much  sympathy  with 
the  firemen,  and  believes  that  they  should 
have  this  improvement  in  their  working 
conditions  as  soon  as  possible.  However, 
The  Herald  is  also  much  impressed  with 
the  statement  of  the  commissioners  that  to 
adopt  the  plan  at  once  and  as  a  whole  is 
financially  impracticable;  and  it  is  inclined 
to  fear  that  the  firemen  have  gone  too  far. 

If  the  ordinance  they  have  initiated 
should  be  rejected,  probably  it  will  be  a 
long  time  before  they  can  get  a  city  gov- 
ernment as  eager  to  meet  them  half  way 
as  the  present  city  government  seems  to  be. 

In  order  that  they  may  not,  if  they  lose 
this  ordinance,  lose  all,  The  Herald  believes 
that  so  far  as  it  can  be  put  into  an  ordi- 
nance, the  city  comtnission  should  embody 
its  compromise  plan  in  an  alternative 
proposition,  so  that  the  voters  can  take 
their  choice.  If  this  is  practicable,  it  will 
put  the  whole  matter  before  the  voters, 
and  since  a  great  many  citizens  manifestly 
feel  that  the  compromise  offered  by  the 
city  should  have  been  accepted,  this  should 
be  done  if  It  is  possible. 

It  would  be  a  fine  thing  for  tho  firemen 
to  have  the  double  platoon  system,  and  we 
believe  most  people  want  them  to  have  it 
as  soon  as  it  Is  practicable.  But  the  city 
cannot  have  all  the  things  it  wants  at  once, 
and  the  city  commission  is  positive  that 
the  only  practicable  way  to  get  the  double 
platoon  system  is  in  installments,  as  the 
compromise  plan  provides,  which  would  in- 
stall the  whole  system  within  three  years. 

The  firemen  need  have  no  fear  that  if 
the  commission  makes  this  arrangement  it 
will  not  be  carried  out.  The  understanding 
before  the  community  will  be  complete  and 
clear,  and  no  commissioner  will  be  elected 
who  will  go  back  on  it. 

Proposing  the  alternative  will  not  be 
working  against  the  interests  of  the  fire- 
men. It  will  insure  them  the  platoon  sys- 
tem anyway,  and  the  issue  put  up  to  the 
voters  will  simply  be  whether  it  is  to  come 
all  at  once,  in  a  form  financially  embarras- 
sing to  the  city,  or  by  degrees  so  it  can  be 

comfortably  handled. 

• 

It's  tio  such  Idle  curse,  when  speaking  of 
Villa,  to  say  "Dodd  blast  him." 

• 

A  PRIMARY  LESSON  IN  GOVERNMENT. 

"We  said  It  (the  tariff  commission  bill) 
was  Insufficient  because  the  commission 
is  only  given  power  to  investigate  and 
report  to  congress.  This  makes  Impos- 
sible any  emergency  changes  or  any  ac- 
tion tin  congress  meets  and  chooses  to 
act.  An  industry  might  be  ruined  In  the 
meanwhile." — The  morning  paper. 


Hughey  Dougherty,  helpless  as  a  child' and 
almost  blind,  is  nearing  the  end  In  St.  Ajrnas 
hospital  In  Philadelphia. 

Just  a  stray  Item  of  a  few  lines  froril  th» 
news  that  came  In  over  the  telegraph  wires. 
Of  thoae  who  happened  to  see  It  stuck  away 
in  the  comer  of  a  newspaper  column,  how 
many  knew  or  cared? 

Hughey  Dougherty!  Some  few  there  are  to 
remember,  whose  hair  Is  turning  white  upon 
the  temples. 

"Prince  of  endmen,  king  of  laughter.  wfaos« 
genial,  lovable  smile  encircled  the  country 
for  fifty  years,"  the  news  Item  said. 

Yes.  You  can  close  your  eyes,  and  there 
he  Is  before  you.  Just  as  he  was  forty,  aye, 
fifty  years  ago,  and  you  see  the  smtle  behind 
his  burnt  cork,  and  hear  again  his  drawl: 

"Well,  Brother  Bones,  what's  makln'  you 
so  sad  today?"  And,  listen  to  him  sing.  My. 
oh,  my:  It  has  been  years  and  years  since 
you  even  thought  of  those  old  songs:  "I 
Really  Shall  Expire,"  "The  Yellow  Oal  That 
Winked  at  Me,"  "Sally,  Come  Up."  "Shoo,  Fly, 
Don't  Bother  Me."  "Love  Among  the  Roses," 
"Oh.  Susanna,  Don't  You  Cry  for  Me."  with  a 
plaintive  tune  like  the  wind  soughing  In  the 
canebrake,  maybe  the  same  old  song  that 
Thackeray  wrote  about,  for  Thackeray  must 
have  heard  Hughey  Dougherty  when  he  was 
In  his  prime. 

"I  heard  a  humorous  balladlst  not  long 
ago,"  wrote  Thackeray,  "a  minstrel  with 
wool  on  his  head  and  an  ultra  Ethiopian 
complexion,  who  performed  a  negro  ballad 
that  1  confess  moistened  these  spectacles  In 
a  most  unexpected  manner.  I  have  gated  at 
thousands  of  tragedy  Queens  dying  on  the 
stage  and  expiring  In  appropriate  blank 
verse,  and  I  never  wanted  to  wipe  them. 
They  have  looked  up,  be  It  said,  at  ma^y 
scores  of  clergymen  without  being  dimmed, 
and  behold!  a  vagabond  with  a  corked  face 
and  a  banjo  sings  a  little  song,  strikes  a 
wild  note,  which  sets  the  heart  thrilling  with 
happy  pity." 

Another  favorite  with  Hughey  was  the  old- 
timer,  so  old  that  the  younger  generation 
never  even  heard  of  It,  much  less  heard  It 
sung.  But  how  Hughey  Dougherty  could 
sing  It:  "I  Peel  Just  as  Happy  as  a  Big  Sun. 
flower." 

Well,  it's  good  to  learn  that  poor  old 
Hughey's  sunny  nature  Is  sustaining  him  yet. 
"You  can't  laugh  for  fifty  years,  and  have 
the  world  laugh  with  you.  You  can't  slug 
and  play  and  entertain  and  be  entertained  by 
everything  that  happens,  and  suddenly  loce 
faith  In  the  power  of  life  to  be  kind  to  yo«." 
says  Hughey  from  his  cot  In  the  hospital.  It 
Is  good  to  know  that  life  Is  kind  to  him  yet. 
and  that  many  visitors  go  to  see  him  since 
the  newspapers  quoted  him:  "Tell  the  boys 
to  come  and  see  me.  Tell  them  not  to  forget 
me.  The  dally  companionship  of  my  friends  Is 
my  life.     I  want  them  to  come." 

"Oh,  I'm  all  right."  he  says,  cheerily.  "I 
like  It  here  pretty  well,  except  that  the  lights 
are  bad." 

Yes.  the  lights  are  bad,  and  In  a  few  days 
will  have  gone  out.  and  Hughey  Dougherty 
will  be  one  with  Eph  Horn,  Milt  Barlow, 
Billy  Birch.  Billy  Emerson,  Lew  Benedict, 
Cal  Wagner  and  the  rest  of  the  old-time 
minstrels  who  have  gone  and  left  behind  only 
a  genial  memory. 

« 

Wilson's  Treaty  Position 

Moorfleld  Storey  In  an  estimate  of  th» 
Wilson  administration  In  the  April  Yale  Re- 
vlefw:  Mr.  Wilson  had  hardly  taken  office 
when  "dollar  diplomacy"  was  abandoned: 
and  China  from  whom,  as  Mr.  Oliver  says, 
"humiliating  concession"  had  been  wrung, 
and  upon  whom  "favors  even  more  onerous. 
In  the  shape  of  loans"  had  been  forced,  was 
advised  that  the  new  administration  would 
not  support  any  syndicate  of  bankers  In  the 
attempt  to  force  such  favors  upon  her.  The 
air  was  cleared  at  once,  and  this  single  act 
did  very  much  to  Improve  our  foreign  rela- 
tions*. 

Rising    to  a   higher   plane   than   his   party 
had    reached   In    Its   platform,    the   president 
exerted  his  personal  influence  to  the  utmost 
at  very  serious  political  risk  In  order  to  se> 
cure   a  repeal  of   that   provision  In  the  Pan- 
ama canal  legislation  which  exempted  Amer- 
ican ships  from   the  payment  of  tolls.     This 
exemption.  In  the  Judgment  of  many  among 
our   best    men   In   every   walk   of  life,    was  a 
distinct    violation    of   the    treaty   with    Great 
Britain    by    which   we    secured    the   right   to 
build    the    canal    without    her    participation, 
and  the  president  In  his  address  to  congress, 
while    stating    that    he    shared    this   opinion, 
appealed  to  his  countrymen  In  words  which 
every   American   cltlsen   will   remember  with 
pride,  when  he  said:  "Whatever  may  be  our 
own   differences   of   opinion  concerning  this 
much-debated    measure     (the      treaty      with 
Groat    Britain),    Its    meaning   Is    not    debated 
outside  the  United  States.     Everywhere  else 
the  language  of  the  treaty  Is  given  but  one 
interpretation,   and    that   interpretation   pre- 
cludes the  exemption  I  am  asking  you  to  re- 
peal.     We   consented   to   the  treaty;  lt»  lan- 
guage we  accepted,   if  we  did  not  originsite 
it;  and  we  are  too  big,  too  powerful,  too  Self- 
respecting   a  nation   to   Interpret     with     too 
strained   or  refined   a   reading  of  words   Our 
own   promises   Just   because   we   have   power 
enough  to  give  us  leave  to  read  them  as  we 
please.      The   large    thing   to   do   is    the   only 
thing  we  can  afford  to  do,  a  voluntary  with- 
drawal   from    a    position    everywhere    ques- 
tioned and  misunderstood.     We  ought  to  re- 
serve  our    action    without    raising   the   ques- 
tion whether  we   were   right   or  wrong,  and 
so  once  more  deserve  our  reputation  for  gen- 
erosity and  the  redemption  of  every  obliga- 
tion   without    quibble    or    hesitation."      This 
is   an   admirable    statement   of   what    should 
always  be  the  policy  of  the  United  States." 


Br  gavoraiC 


Washington.  April  18 — (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — ^How  about  the  German  vote?  That 
Is  a  matter  that  causes  more  or  less  agita- 
tion on  both  sides  of  the  political  hedge — 
more  on  the  Republican  side  and  less  on  the 
Democratic  side.  Your  German  voter,  too, 
has  his  share  of  tribulation,  aa  evidences  the 
following  by  Morgan  Blake  of  the  Nashville 
Banner: 

"Said  the  hyphenated  fellow,  who  lived 

once  in  Berlin, 
•If  Teddy  leads  the  Q.  O.  P.,  Just  where 

do  I  come  In? 
I  have  no  use  for  Woodrow,  and  tnueh 

less  for  Theodore, 
The  one   Insults  me  deeply  and  T.   R. 

would  spin  my  gore; 
If  such   a   raw   alternative  as  this  be- 
comes my  fate, 
ril  have  to  vote  for  the  damn  prohlbU 

tlon    candidate. 
Of   course  -'twould    be   contrary  to   my 

principles,'   said  Fritz. 
As  with  a  shrug  he  eyed  his  mug  and 

blew  froth  from  off  his  Schlltz." 

It  used  to  be  said  that  Carl  Schunt  carried 
the  German  vote  in  his  vest  pocket,  but  that 
was  exploded  and  shown  to  be  a  rank  exag- 
geration In  1872  when  Schurz  was  on  the 
stump  and  addressed  hundreds  of  thousands 
of  his  fellow-Germans  In  the  German  tongue. 
That  was  the  year  the  Greeley  Democratic 
contingent  predicted  the  "tidal  wave,"  and 
when  It  came  Mr.  Jeemes  Giles  of  Kentucky 
was  disgusted,  and  asseverated  that  "It  would 
not  shake  a  minnow."  Next  to  Alexander 
Hamilton,  Carl  Schurz  was  America's  fore- 
most foreign-born  citizen;  but  he  was  not 
big  enough  to  dominate  the  German  vote,  a 
rather  pig-headed  contingent  that  thinks  and 
acts  for  itself. 

*  *       • 

It  would  be  unfortunate  if  the  German 
vote,  or  the  Irish  vote,  or  the  Italian  vote,  or 
the  Polish  vote,  or  any  other  vote,  should 
organize  Itself  on  racial  lines.  Inevitably  It 
would  excite  racial  antagonisms  and  create 
bad  feelings  that  would  result  In  harm  to  the 
particular  vote  and  to  the  general  public 
It  is  natural  for  your  German,  or  your  Eng- 
lishman, or  your  Italian,  or  your  Russian, 
naturalized  American,  to  give  his  active  sym- 
pathy to  the  country  of  his  birth  In  that  tre- 
mendous struggle  In  Europe  that  staggers 
humanity;  but  any  one  of  these  classes  that 
strives  to  force  the  American  government  to 
take  part  In  the  quarrel  in  behalf  of  its  par- 
ticular race  will  be  sorely  disappointed  in  the 
result. 

Nearly  all  of  the.  Germans  in  the  United 
States  are  at  the  North  and  a  big  majority 
of  them  are  Protestants  In  religion.  These 
are  Republican  In  their  political  sentiments. 
The  Influx  of  Germans  to  our  shores  in  con- 
siderable numbers  began  when  African 
slavery  was  yet  a  political  Issue.  They  were 
anti-slavery  to  a  man  and  naturally  Joined 
the  Republican  party.  There  was  no  harm 
in  that,  fur  they  did  not  take  part  in  politics 
as  a  race  of  people,  but  as  American  citizens. 

*  •       * 

And  hence  it  Is  that  the  German  vote  gives 
the  Republicans  more  concern  than  It  gives 
the  Democrats.  Moreover,  the  question  of 
neutrality  Is  a  thing  to  give  the  Republicans 
poignant  solicitude.  There  Is  Massachusetts, 
a  state  the  Republicans  are  bound  to  carry  If 
they  would  make  any  showing  at  all  in  the 
electoral  college.  There  are  few  Germans  In 
that  state  and  the  overwhelming  sentiment 
of  Massachusetts  Is  anti-German.  Indeed, 
Dr.  Eliot,  so  long  the  head  of  Harvard  uni- 
versity, strongly  Insists  on  an  alliance,  of- 
fensive and  defensive,  between  the  United 
States  and  Great  Britain,  her  colonies,  and 
France,  and  If  that  scheme  was  put  to  a  vot-s 
It  would  sweep  Massachusetts  and  prevail  In 
every  other  New  England  state.  Perhaps 
New  York  would  not  agree  to  the  alliance, 
but  the  sentiment  of  the  Empire  state  Is 
overwhelmingly  pro-ally. 

Now  here  are  Ellhu  Root.  Henry  Cabot 
Lodge,  Augustus  P.  Gardner,  Joseph  H. 
Choate  and  others,  to  say  nothing  of  Theodore 
Roosevelt,  who  would  enthusiastically  hall  a 
declaration  of  war  against  Germany  by  the 
American  congress.  These  men  are  repre- 
sentative of  a  large  faction  of  the  Repub- 
lican party.  But  how  Is  It  out  West?  Cum- 
mins, Borah,  Sherman,  La  FoUette,  Mann  and 
Clapp  have  not  one  wor**  of  criticism  for 
Germany,  but  they  think  ur  government  haa 
shown  too  much  patler  ^e  with  England  for 
the  hardships  the  war  has  visited  on  vessels 
on  the  high  seas  laden  with  American  mer- 
chandise. 

*  •       a 

One  things  Is  manifest  to  the  dullest  un- 
derstanding, and  that  Is  that  the  foreign 
policy  of  the  Democratic  administration  is 
going  to  be  as  paramount  in  1916  as  slavery 
was  In  1860,  as  Southern  reconstruction  In 
1868,  as  the  tariff  In  1892,  and  as  silver  was 
In  1896.  Of  that  there  Is  no  sort  of  doubt. 
The  Democrats  are  going  to  indorse  the  for- 
eign policy  of  Wilson  and  nominate  him  for 
re-election.  The  Republicans  are  going  to 
denounce  that  policy.  That,  too,  is  certain. 
Whom  will  they  nominate?  God  knows.  The 
wily  ones,  while  condemning  Wilson,  would 
straddle  the  paramount.  That  can't  be  done. 
We  have  fallen  on  times  when  a  political 
party  must  give  a  reason  for  the  faith  It 
asserts.  In  1844  James  K,  Polk  was  elected 
president  by  running  as  a  free  trader  In  Illi- 
nois and  as  a  protectionist  in  Pennsylvania; 
but  this  year  no  Republican  is  going  to  be 
elected  by  running  as  an  anti-German  in 
Massachusetts  and  a  pro-German  In  Wiscon- 
sin. 

Of  course  If  they  nominate  Roosevelt  or 
Root  the  candidate  would  be  the  platform. 
But  whoever  the  candidate,  he  wlU  have  to 
tell  the  American  people  where  he  stands  and 
particularize,  not  generalize,  when  he  comes 
to  criticize  the  neutrality  proclaimed  and 
practiced  by  Woodrow  Wilson. 

And  thus  with  serene  confidence  the  Demo- 
crats enter  upon  the  contest,  so  far  as  con- 
cerns the  German  vote,  at  least. 


Dulutli  and  The  Herald 


BouqiKti  and  BrlckbaU  Froa  tbe  Pk«. 

Ab  Oatslde  View. 

It's  always  Interesting  to  get  the  views  of 
outsiders  on  home  people,  so  this  from  the 
Hill  City  News  U  worth  while:  "We  nave 
received  a  copy  of  an  address  made  by  Hon. 
Chester  A.  Congdon  of  Duluth  before  the 
men's  club  of  the  First  Methodist  church  of 
that  place.  The  address  is  entitled  'Patriot- 
ism', but  after  reading  it  we  have  come  to 
the  conclusion  that  it  has  been  misnamed. 
•Preparedness'  would  better  fit  this  speech 
than  'Patrtotlsm'.  Mr.  Congdon  Is  an  able 
speaker  and  he  sets  forth  his  theories  in  a 
convincing  manner,  but  when  he  says  that 
Germany  and  Japan  will  combine  to  conquer 
the  world  after  this  present  war  Is  over  we 
think  he  is  going  a  bit  too  far." 

*'A99mnintr   a«d    **lwktmmr-    ««•■■    the   Right 

After  quoting  The  Herald's  commentary  on 
the  fact  that  not  one  of  the  eight  hundred 
thousand  French  war  orphans  was  the  chlia 
of  a  man  responsible  for  the  war.  the  Cass 
Lake  Times  adds:  "And  for  those  responsible 
for  this  infamy  Is  It  too  much  to  wish  that- 
they  should  suffer  eight  hundred  thousand 
tortures,  not  to  mention  the  additional  thou- 
sands for  the  fatherless  little  ones  In  the 
other  nations  Involved  in  this,  the  cruelest  of 
all  wars,  a  war  to  satisfy  the  lust  of  Greed 
only?  Reading  these  appalling  facts  one  may 
well  question  why  God  has  abdicated  in  favor 
of  Satan."  He  hasn't,  brother.  He  hasn't  """ 
don't  get  discouraged. 


So 


Rather  Roogh  oa  T.  R. 

•  It's  rather  rough  on  T.  R.,  but  the  Sun- 
beam Sunbeam  may,  at  that,  be  Justified  in 
the  following:  "The  Duluth  Herald  suggests 
the  name  of  T.  R.  Falls  for  a  change  of  name 
for  our  county  seat.  This  would  only  make 
a  bad  matter  worse  by  making  more  Inquiry 
how  the  name  originated.  In  fact,  they  would 
be  like  the  young  lawyer  by  the  name  of 
Swindle,  whose  sign  read  A.  Swindle,  Attor- 
ney-at-Law.  A  friend  asked  him  why  he  did 
not  use  his  entire  first  name,  and  he  replied 
that  his  first  name  was  A-d-a-m,  which 
would  make  his  sign  read  'A-dam  Swindle, 
Attorney-at-Law.'  " 


Don't  Be  Too  CxacUag. 

It's  not  well  to  be  too  exacting  In  a  case 
where  a  newspaper  Is  mainly  busy  trying  to 
make  right  appear  wrong,  so  the  Grand 
Rapids  Herald-Review  should  be  less  caustic 
In  remarks  like  the  following:  "In  a  leading 
and  well  thought  editorial  the  Duluth  News 
Tribune  Indorses  the  policy  of  President 
Wilson.  It  even  becomes  lavish  in  Indorse- 
ment of  all  he  has  been  contending  for  In  his 
dealings  with  foreign  nations.  In  the  same 
Issue,  on  the  same  page,  by  the  same  edi- 
torial writer,  the  News  Tribune  concludes  an 
editorial  on  the  president's  policy  with  this 
outburst:  •Mr.  Wilson  should  fish,  cut  bait 
or  quit  a  Job  evidently  too  great  for  him.' 
The  News  Tribune  should  change  edltorg  or 
remain  silent  on  subjects  that  It  does  not 
understand." 


Judges  and  Political  Office 


From  tbe  Nf»  York  Ewnlnf  Pwt. 


Justice  Charles  Evans  Hughes  wa«  not  the 
first  Justice  of  the  supreme  court  to  hold  that 
no  man  ought  to  desert  the  bench  for  po- 
litical office.  When  he  was  a  Judge  of  the 
United  States  circuit  court,  on  June  20,  188/, 
David  Josiah  Brewer  of  Kansas,  afterward 
associate  justice  of  the  supreme  court,  made  a 
speech  on  this  subject,  never  hitherto  pub- 
lt(shed.  It  was  at  a  dinner  given  at  Kansas 
City,  Kan.,  by  David  Morgan  Edgerton,  now 
of  Chicago,  to  the  Yale  alumni  of  the  South- 
west, of  which  Judge  Brewer  was  president. 
On  that  occasion  Judge  Brewer  said  in  Pa'.t- 

"I  believe  the  most  valuable  officials  te  the 
American  people  today  are  the  Judges.  1 
would  not  boast,  but  I  would  be  willing,  like 
the  apostle,  to  magnify  tny  office;  for  I  be- 
lieve that  the  Judge  today  stands  as  the  one 
offtcer  whose  fidelity  to  his  trust  Is  worth 
more  to  the  liberties  of  this  country  than  the 
faithfulness  of  any  other  official  the  land 
knows. 

••In  no  country  Is  an  Independent  Judiciary 
more  needed  than  in  this,  where  the  people 
rule.  There  is  no  despotism  so  terrible  as 
the  despotism  of  a  majority,  and  there  Is  no 
despotism  or  government  which  will  be  so 
cruel  as  a  government  of  a  majority,  unless 
there  Is  some  official  or  tribunal  in  a  measure 
independent  of  them.  •  •  •  It  Is  human  »o 
err,  and  judges  are  but  human — some  of 
them  more  so  than  others.  •  •  •  It  is  asking 
a  good  deal  for  a  man  to  stand  up  In  the 
face  of  popular  passion  and  say:  'I  defy  you. 
I  represent  no  man  or  class  of  men,  no  party 
or  parties,  and  I  stand  independent  of  the 
people.  I  represent  nobody  but  the  majesty 
of  the  law!'  •  •  • 

•There  is  another  thing  which.  In  my  Judg- 
ment, is  equally  Important  with  permanent 
tenure  of  office  (the  Judge  had  been  arguing 
for  appointive  and  permanent  judges),  and 
that  is.,  closing  the  door  of  political  aspira- 
tion to  the  person  that  asks  the  position  of  a 
Judge.  We  know  how  In  this  country  many 
men  have  made  the  Judicial  bench  a  step- 
ping-stone to  political  power,  and  the  temp- 
tation win  always  seek  him.  I  would  revise 
Dante's  Inferno,  and  write  above  the  Judicial 
portals  the  words:  •He  who  enters  here 
leaves  all  political  hopes  behind.'  I  would 
bar  him  forever  from  becoming  eligible  for 
any  other  political  office,  so  that  he  would 
have  no  other  prospect  of  official  honor  or 
advancement  than  that  which  he  can  earn  In 
the  discharge  of  his  official  duties.  •  •  •" 
• 

Just  a  Moment 


•J 


Too  Bad  It  Wasn't  In  Foree. 

Sympathetic  regret  that  The  Herald's  sug- 
gestion Isn't  operative  already  Is  shown  In 
this  from  the  Perham  Enterprise-Bulletin:, 
"The  Duluth  Herald  suggests  an  amendment 
to  the  primary  law  which  will  permit  candi- 
dates to  be  initiated  by  petition.  This  Is  for 
the  benefit  of  deserving  but  ttmld  aspirants 
who  will  not  scramble  for  an  office.  The  idea 
Is  sound.  If  operative  now  it  would  have 
saved  seventy  Minnesota  editors  urging  F.  B. 
Kellogg  to  do  something  he  was  just  spoiling 
to  do." 


It   is   needful    to   have   patience   with   the 
ignorant.       • 

Lack  of  "protection"  never  ruined  any 
industry  yet,  but  let  that  pass. 

Like  some  others  who  have  been  urging 
the  tariff  commission  plan,  obviously  the 
News  Tribune  does  not  know  that  it  is 
impossible  to  endow  a  tariff  commission 
with  power  to  change  tariff  schedules. 
Tariff-making  is  tax-levying.  The  Constitu- 
tion puts  the  tax-levying  power  in  the  hands 
of  congress,  and  congress  cannot  delegate 
it.  No  tariff  commission  bill  empowering 
the  commission  to  fix  tariff  duties  with  the 
power  of  law  ever  has  been  proposed  by 
anybody,  because  it  is  impossible  under  the 
Constitution.  All  any  tariff  commission 
can  do  is  to  investigate  and  report;  and 
uobody  who  knows  what  he  is  talking  about 
has  been  speaking  about  any  other  kind  of 
a   tariff  commission. 

To  have  a  tariff  commission  with  powers 
analogous  to  those  of  the  interstate  com- 
merce commission,  which  apparently  has 
been  the  morning  paper's  idea  of  it,  it 
would  first  be  necessary  to  amend  the  Con- 
stitution— if  that  were  desirable — so  con- 
gress could  delegate  the  tax-levying  power. 
Every  tariff  bill  ever  passed  has  been  osten- 
sibly a  revenue  bill,  and  has  been  so  en- 
titled— "a  bill  for  an  act  to  provide  revenue 
for  the  government,"  is  the  usual  form. 
Those  who  have  conceived  of  a  tariff  com- 


Rippling  Rhymes 

By  Walt  Mason 

Gardening. 
I  do  not  like  to  dig  and  till  the  gar- 
den— it's  too  hard  a  chore;  I'd  rather 
take  a  dollar  bill  and  buy  my  onions 
at  the  store.  When  first  the  vernal 
breezes  blow,  men  feel  desire  to  hew 
the  soil,  and  with  their  spades  and 
rakes  they  go,  and  sing  and  chortle  as 
they  toil.  But  vernal  breezes  soon  ex- 
pire; the  sizzling  wind  of  summer 
blows,  and  sets  the  toiler's  beard  afire, 
and  tans  his  neck  and  bakes  his  noSe. 
And  as  he  sweats  'neath  burning  skies, 
and  gives  the  noxious  weeds  a  whack, 
a  million  ants  and  bugs  and  flies  crawl 
up  his  legs  and  bite  his  back.  And 
then  he  hates  his  sawed-off  farm,  tie 
growls  enough  for  seven  gents;'  his 
cauliflowers  lose  all  their  charm,  his 
string  beans  look  like  twenty'cents.  Oh, 
I  have  gardened  in  the  past,  and  know 
the  fervor  born  of  spring  glows  bright 
a  wJiile,  but  does  not  last;  it  is  an 
evanescent  thing.  I  do  not  like  the 
rake  and  hoe,  I  will  not  ply  theitt:  ^y 
more ;  when  I  want  turnips  I  will  go 
and  buy  the  blamed  things  at  the,i^t(3ire. 

.  (Pr»t«;t««  kr  Tbe  Adaou  NtanpaMt  0frrlcal 


The  Literary  Test. 

Springfield  Republican:  We  can  make  a 
German  into  an  American  in  a  generation 
far  more  easily  If  he  has  not  too  much  kultur 
under  his  hat.  if  he  comes  here  unlettered, 
densely  Ignorant  even,  he  comes  at  least 
from  economic  necessity  out  of  a  land  that 
has  been  none  too  kind  to  him.  and  here  he 
owes  everything  he  gets  in  property,  educa- 
tion, and  social  advancement  to  the  country 
of  his  adoption.  The  learned  professor  comes 
to  us,  on  the  other  hand,  the  Ideal  immigrant 
according  to  the  literacy  test,  but  fully  per- 
suaded perhaps  that  his  fatherland  has  a 
civilization  and  even  a  conception  and  habit 
of  government  far  superior  to  our  own. 

This  Is  no  argument  for  the  exclusion  of 
immigrant  professors  or  editors,  or  univer- 
sity graduates  of  any  sort  whatever.  We 
shall  continue  to  welcome  them  even,  and  to 
prlae  their  efforts  to  Improve  our  civilization 
and  form  of  government.  Yet  this  very  class 
of  men,  with  their  learning  and  deep-grained 
loyalty  to  the  country  of  their  origin,  dis- 
close to  us  the  absurdity  of  the  literacy  test 
for  Immigrants  as  an  agent  for  promoting 
the  Amerlcanisation  process.  If  we  desire 
immigrants  who  will  never  write  America 
with  a  small  "a,"  It  might  be  well  to  catch 
them  young  and  teach  them  how  to  read  and 
write  ourselves. 


When  Teddy  Had  E:a«a«h  War. 

New    York    World:      Once    In    his    life 


Col. 


Roosevelt  had  all  the  war  that  he  wanted, 
and  It  was  when  a  real  war  was  In  progress 
and  the  chances  of  service  appeared  to  be 
good.  After  the  capture  of  Santiago  the 
American  troops  in  Cuba  were  exposed  to  the 
fevers  that  formerly  prevailed  In  that  island. 
The  Colonel  became  greatly  alarmed,  and,  as- 
sisted by  a  few  other  officej-s,  be  prepared  a 
round-robIn  petition  to  the  commanding  gen- 
eral. Insisting  that  the  army  must  be  moved 
north  or  perish;  that  Its  efficiency  had  been 
destroyed;  that  it  could  not  survive  the  rainy 
season,  and  that  at  all  hazards  it  must  be 
withdrawn  from  the  enemy's  country.  This 
is  the  same  warrior  who  now  is  vituperatlve- 
ly  angry  because  we  have  not  sent  a  big 
army  into  Mexico  for  vengeance  and  con- 
«uost.. 


The  literary  Test  for  Voters. 

The  leaven  is  working,  all  right.  Here  is 
the  Cokato  Enterprise  indorsing  The  Herald's 
attitude:  "The  Duluth  Herald  is  now  taking 
up  the  cudgel  in  favor  of  establishing  a  lit- 
eracy test  for  voters — which  Is  about  the  best 
little  literacy  test  that  can  be  Imposed.  There 
are  thousands  of  people  voting  in  every  state 
who  are  not  qualified  to  designate  their 
choice  for  office  or  otherwise  to  vote  intel- 
ligently, and  a  test  of  this  kind  would  be  a 
mighty  fine  thing.  As  It  is  now,  the  system 
of  making  United  States  citizens  and  voters 
is  altogether  too  slipshod." 

♦ 

Russia  and  the  Civil  War 

Louisville  Post:  Since  the  American  Civil 
war  there  has  been  controversy  as  to  the 
part  Russia  played  in  that  conflict,  and  as  to 
the  meaning  of  the  czar  sending  ships  to 
American  waters  with  sealed  orders.  This 
controversy  has  been  waged  with  renewed 
Interest  since  the  present  European  war,  and 
especially  with  an  effort  to  prove  that  Russia 
was  the  friend  of  the  North  during  this  try- 
ing period. 

When  there  was  an  evidence  that  the 
United  States  might  become  disrupted  In  the 
early  part  of  the  '608,  naturally  all  the  for- 
eign countries,  who  had  a  reason  to  fear  our 
competition  and  growing  power,  were  In 
favor  of  doing  anything  to  bring  about  such 
a  disruption.  England  and  France,  our  two 
greatest  competitors,  were  foremost,  it  Is 
thought,  in  wishing  to  see  the  United  States 
dissolved,  and  It  was  claimed  that  they  were 
preparing  to  intervene.  Russia  was  asked  to 
Join  In  this  intervention,  but  she  refused, 
and  In  answer,  her  fleet  was  sent  to  New 
York  harbor  as  well  as  to  San  Francisco 
with  sealed  orders. 

It  Is  further  claimed  that  the  commander 
of  the  New  York  fleet  was  in  constant  com- 
munication with  the  Russian  legation  .it 
Washington,  and  the  Russian  minister  was 
also  in  daily  communication  with  Secretary 
Seward,  and  that  if  Louis  Napoleon  of 
France  made  any  further  move  toward  In- 
tervention, the  Russian  admiral  was  Instruct- 
ed to  break  his  seal  and  read  his  orders. 
These  orders  were  as  follows:  "Report  to 
Abraham  Lincoln  for  further  orders." 

On  the  face  of  it  such  an  order  would  seem 
rather  unusual,  that  the  ruler  of  one  country 
would  order  his  admiral  with  his  fleet  to  re- 
port to  the  ruler  of  another  country. 

The  mission  of  this  Russian  fleet  has  never 
been  disclosed  officially.  Throughout  the 
winter  of  1863  and  1864  a  Russian  fleet,  un- 
der the  command  of  Admiral  Lesoffsky,  lay 
in  New  York  harbor. 

The  following  statement  by  Thurlow  Weed 
may  be  found  in  his  •'Life."  Vol.  II,  864-347: 
"Sitting  in  my  room  one  day  after  dinner. 
Admiral  Farragut  said  to  his  Russian  friend. 
Admiral  Lesoffsky.  "Why  are  you  spending 
the  winter  here  in  idleness?'  'I  am  here,' 
replied  the  Russian,  'under  sealed  orders,  to 
be  broken  in  a  contingency  that  has  not  yet 
occurred.' 

"During  this  conversation  the  Russian  ad- 
miral admitted  that  he  had  received  orders 
to  break  tho  seals  If,  during  the  rebellion, 
we  became  involved  In  a  war  with  foreign 
nations." 

Mr.  Weed  adds:  "The  latter  revelation  l« 
corroborated  by  a  well-known  New  York 
gentleman,  who  was  In  St.  Petersburg  when 
the  rebellion  began  and  who,  during  an  un- 
official call  upon  Prince  Gortschakoff  was 
shown  by  the  chancellor  an  order  written  In 
Alexander's  own  hand  directing  his  admiral 
to  report  to  President  Lincoln  for  orders  in 
case  England  or  France  made  a  move." 

Elson,  In  his  "History  of  the  United 
States."  says:  "Various  motives  for  the  ac- 
tion of  Russia  were  given,  the  most  plausible 
of  which  is  that  the  Crimean  war  has  left 
with  ber  bitterness  towards  France  and 
England." 

• 

The  Watf. 

Childless  ones  whose  eyes  are  kind. 
Take  him  quick  and  let  him  find 
All  of  love  that  he  has  missed! 
Little  rose-leaf  face  unkissed — 
Let  it  press  against  your  lips. 
Kiss  his  fragile  flnger  tips! 
Such  a  tiny,  helpless  form! 
Take  It.  clasp  It  fast  and  warm! 
Let  his' nestling  body  bless 
Arms  that  ache  with  emptlneaa! 
—Bertha  Gemeaus  Woods    In    the    Youth's 
Comyaolon. 


Dally  Streagth  aad  Cheer. 

ComiiUed  fay  lohn  G.  Qulnlui.  tiia  Suoahlae  Kas. 

The  Other  Fellow,  John  I.  40-46— The  first 
thing  that  occurs  to  a  saved  man  Is  to  see 
others  saved,  and  the  best  place  to  begin  Is 
the  hardest — at  home.  "My  brother"  was  the 
affectionate  thought  of  Andrew.  The  tidings 
taken  from  a  brother's  lips  are  the  sweetest 
in  the  world.  He  did  not  nag  or  scold  or 
assume  a  "holier  than  thou"  air.  His  words 
were  simple,  eager,  rather  blunt — he  Just 
took  his  brother  right  along.  That  Is  what 
we  find  him  doing  the  balance  of  his  days. 
He  did  not  write  any  Gospels  or  Epistles  or 
build  churches;  he  Just  got  folks  to  come 
to  Christ.  Did  you  ever  swell  a  congrega- 
tion by  a  single  soul?  I  don't  ask  you  If 
you  ever  endowed  a  church  or  supported  a 
missionary — but  did  you  ever  take  any  man 
by  the  hand  and  say:  "Come,  meet  my  Mas- 
ter," or  Is  your  Lord  about  t*.e  last  one  you 
ever  think  of  presenting  your  friends  to? 
Andrew  had  his  share  of  glory  in  pentecost&l 
Peter.  "That  Is  my  brother  preaching;  I 
brought  him  and  Christ  together."  Remem- 
ber today:  "He  brought  him  to  Jesus." — Q. 
W.   Bull. 


O    Thou    who    didst    send    forth    Thy    Ron! 

May  the  purity,  simplicity  and  beauty  of  tbe 

Holy    Child.    Jesus,    be    poured   like   a    sweet 

fragrance    through    our    hearts      and      lives. 

Bless     the    absent    and    those    we    love,    the 

strangers    and    the   lonely,   and    may    we   all 

meet    in    the     great     home-coming. — F.     B. 

Meyer. 

Dayton,  Ohio. 

• 

What  He  Wanted  to  Kaaw. 

Washington  Star:  •'Where  do  you  Intend 
to  spend  the  summer?" 

"I'm  going  to  find  some  nice  quiet  place  In 
the  country  where  you  are  not  required  to 
dress  elaborately,  where  the  food  Is  simple 
and  wholesome  and  abundant  and  the  expense 
moderate." 

"What  I  wanted  to  know  Is  where  you  are 
going.  I  don't  care  anything  about  your 
pleasant  dreams." 


Twenty  Years  Ago 

From  Th«  Herald  of  UiU  dat«,  1S96. 


•  ••A  singular  find  has  been  made  in  the 
new  Montana  mine  In  the  Minnesota  Iron 
company's  property  at  Tower  in  the  shape  of 
a  small  fissure  of  float  copper  In  loose  rock 
running  horizontal  to  the  vein  of  iron  at  a 
depth  of  806  feet. 


•••The  assets  of  the  Henry  H.  Bell  estate 
were  sold  at  auction  this  morning  by  W.  D. 
Gordon,  acting  on  behalf  of  Assignee  Clinton 
Markell.  The  bank  property  at  3  West  Su- 
perior atreet.  Including  the  vault,  fixtures, 
etc.,  on  which  a  valuation  of  150,000  was 
placed,  was  bid  in  by  Miron  Bunnell  at  a  bid 
of  $8,160,  the  purchaser  assuming  a  mort- 
gage of  $17,600.  The  Warner  building  next 
the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  block  on  East  Superior  street, 
a  three-story  brick,  subject  to  a  mortgage  of 
$16,000  and  paying  a  rental  of  $1,932  a  year, 
was  next  offered.  It  was  sold  to  C  S.  Sar- 
gent for  $2,676,  making  $17,675  the  actual 
purchase  price.  Lots  in  Portland  division 
and  Lake  county  lands  were  also  sold. 


■■>»^- 


•••Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today. 
38;  maximum  yesterday,  40;  minimum  yes- 
terday, 13. 


•••M.  El.  Fillatrault,  a  former  resident  of 
this  city  but  of  late  residing  at  Two  Harbors, 
where  he  held  the  position  of  postmaster, 
died  there  yesterday  of  heart  disease.  The 
remains  will  be  taken  to  Faribault,  Minn., 
for  Interment. 


•••a.  W.  Norton  of  Louisville,  Ky.,  arrived 
In  Duluth  today  to  Ibok  after  his  large  prop- 
erty Interests  here. 


•••Louis  Goldnamer,  manager  of  the  boys' 
department  at  the  Great  Eastern,  returned 
today  from  New  York.  /*• 


•••Capt.  W.  C.  Brown  of  Buffalo,  superin- 
tendent of  marine  for  the  Northern  Steam- 
ship company,  arrived  In  I>uluth  yesterday. 


•••The  Booth  steamer  H.  R.  Dixon  left  yes- 
terday for  Isle  Royale,  being  piloted  through 
the  Ice  belt  by  the  Singer  tug  Excelsior. 
Among  her  passengers  were  Henry  ICayhew 
and  Christ  Soderberg  for  Grand  Marais,  C 
Harris  for  Poplar  river.  G.  H.  Malone,  wife 
and  children  for  Wenagerle  Island,  and  G.  H. 
Feldtman,  president  of  the  Wendigo  Copper 
company,  and  a  party  of  miners  for  Isle 
Royale.  There  were  also  twenty-eight  pros-.^ 
pectors  who  will  disembark  at  Grand  Marais  ** 
and  begin  the  exploration  of  the  Cook  county 
nickel  belt.. 


•••At  the  Westminster  Presbyterian  church 
at  West  Duluth  yesterday.  George  Skinnor 
and  Neil  McKenzie  were  ordained  as  deacons. 


•••A  deputy  sheriff  left  this  afternoon  for 
Tow^r  carrying  a  warrant  for  Edward  Ball, 
manag&a  of  the  Minnesota  Iron  mines,  who  is 
charged  with  violating  a  statute  which  pro- 
vides that  a  man  shall  not  be  discharged  be- 
cause he  Is  a  member  of  ^  labor  union.  Th^^ 
complaint  Is  sworn  %o  by  C.  J.  Rlnn.  wh«v 
claims  Capt.  Ball  told  him  he  was  discharged 
because  he  belonged  to  the  miners'  union. 
The  prosecution  U  tnstisated  by  the  FederaU 
•d  Trades  Msembly  of  Duluth. 


:«^^>»V.>.  .^  J»  ■«»» 


1 


Thursday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


CI 


'i 


I 


i 

t 

i 

1 

■  iM      i 

THE  OPEN  COURT 

««■»*■«  of  The  Herald  v  Inrlted  to  mmke  frw  u«  of 
this  column  to  express  their  Idew  about  the  topics  of 
[i-iHTnl  Interest,  but  dlscimlon  of  terUrUn  religious  dlf- 
.en-nies  In  barred.  Letter;  miiU  not  ^ic-setJ  3<»  wor*!* 
^the  ihorter  the  In  Iter.  They  must  be  written  on  on* 
Bide  of  the  paprr  only,  and  tlfy  must  be  aecoapanled  In 
ffer;  raK  by  the  name  and  addraa  of  tbe  wrltter  though 
thev  need  not  be  published.  A  dgaed  lett«r  h  alwayi 
Biofe  efferU»e,   biwerer. 

The  Herald  does  not  publish  original  rerse.  Cootrlbu- 
tlons  of  thin  nature  that  are  submitted  for  tbo  editor'! 
p'TiHul  must  lie  accompanied  by  a  stamped  and  addressed 
rnvelopp,  If  their  return  Is  desired.  Otherwlae  uo  nianu- 
•alpt  win  be  returned. 


'•PREPAREDNESS"  SERMON 

REPORT  STRIKES  SPARKS 


•4- 


•<m>*MA> 


To    the    Editor    of    The    Herald: 

Never  before  have  I  attempted  to 
break  Into  print,  but  my  attention 
has  been  called  to  extract«  from  a 
«<ermon  reported  in  your  paper  of  Sat- 
tirday,  the  8th  inst..  and  aa  an  Amer- 
ican   I    find    It    hard    to    keep   quiet. 

Thin  sermon,  I  note.  1«  the  cloainic 
one  of  a  Herles  on  "Preparedness,"  and 
If  the  othera  were  In  the  same  strain 
they    certainly     iieerl     attention. 

When  a  man  tella  his  conKrepatlon 
that  "there  Is  not  the  aliKhtest  Rround 
for  apprehending  an  attaok  on  ,thla 
country  by  any  |»ower  whatsoever,"  ho 
Is  making  a  statement  that  is  merely 
Ilia  own  personal  opinion  and  he 
knows  he  cannot  offer  the  slightest 
assurance  that  the  statement  Is  true; 
and  when  he  a<lds,  "unless  we  greatly 
prepare  for  It" — Piffle!  Uill  Bryan 
only  has  p;Uent  rights  on  that  pe- 
culiar   brand    of    reasoning. 

How  In  the  name  of  all  that  Is  wise 
can  preparing  against  a  certain  evil 
firing    that    evil'.' 

Tniluth  should  abolish  her  police 
force,  and  so  avoid  all  disorders  and 
crime. 

Abolish  her  fire  department,  we  will 
have    no    more    firea. 

If  we  did  not  prepare  for  cold 
weather    we    would    not    have    winter. 

If  we  did  noi  try  to  prepare  for 
heaven,  by  going  to  some  of  our 
churches,  we  would  at  least  miss 
hearing  a  lot  of  piffle  against  pre- 
raredness. 

In  regard  to  the  statement  that  "It 
Is  stated  by  most  unimpeachable  and 
rioat  expert  authorities  in  this  coun- 
try that  we  have  the  moat  powerful 
navy  In  the  world — excepting  only 
that  of  Great  Britain,"  he  certainly 
must  have  been  misquoted  In  your 
paper,  for  oven  "Jost-phus  the  Small" 
himself  never  made  such  a  claim.  We 
probably    rank    fourth. 

A!^  to  our  coa.st  defenses,  they  may 
be  very  good  as  far  as  they  go,  but 
they  are   located   at  only  a  few   points. 

The  gentleman  asks,  "Who  are 
those  back  of  the  clamor  for  pre- 
paredness?" and  then  proceeds  to  In- 
sult anyone  who  believes  we  should 
be  prepared  to  defend  the  country  in 
which    we    live. 

They  are.  according  to  him,  crlm- 
Jnals  and  liars,  or  simple  silly  dupoa, 
-beljig  u.<»ed  as  tools,  and  there  are 
some  who  "are  burning  with  desire 
to  dlstinguisii  themselves  on  the  bat- 
tlefield"—  to  suffer  torture  and  prob- 
ably death  to  satisfy  an  unholy  am- 
bition   for  glory . 

A  mind  that  can  conceive  «uch 
motives  would  hardly  be  expected  to 
be  able  to  appreciate  a  high  sense  of 
duty    to    one's   country. 

"Providence  seems  to  have  singled 
out  the  I'nited  States  to  be  the  ban- 
ner bearer,  not  for  war,  but  of  peace, 
among    the    nations    of    the    earth." 

I  can  agree  with  tl>e  gentleman  In 
this  only  of  all  his  sermon;  but  un- 
Jess  we  are  prepared  to  defend  our 
country,  I  fear  about  the  only  ban- 
ner wo  can   bear  will  be  a  white  flag. 

Thanking    you    for    the    space,    I    am, 

AMRRICAX. 

Duluth,    April     12. 

PINCHOT  AGAIpTwARNS 

AGAINST  SHIELDS  BILL 


CMS  (Ueer  $  Sunday  Scbool  Ce$$on 

Written /or  Tht  Herald  By  Rev,  J.  S.  KtrtUy,  D.  D. 


'HhifcH  ■■£ 


81XDAV  SCHOOL  I.ESSOXt    APRIL  IC 


Act*  z,   1-231     Prtrr  and  Cornelias. 


To  the  Editor  of  The  Herald: 
•  The  iniquitous  Shields  bill,  giving 
eway  the  waterpowern  on  our  naviga- 
ble streams,  about  which  I  wrote  you 
on  Feb.  15,  has  be<'n  driven  through 
the  senate,  but  It  has  not  passed  the 
house.  There  is  still  a  good  chance 
not  only  to  stop  this  raid  on  publio 
property,  but  to  pass  a  fair  and  hon- 
est  waterpower  bill   In   Its  place. 

Everything  I  said  about  the  Shields 
bill  In  my  letter  to  you  was  confirmed 
in  the  debate.  According  to  Its  own 
eupporters,  this  bill  turns  over  to  the 
power  Interests  waterpower  equiva- 
lent to  twice  the  mechanical  pow«*r  of 
every  kind  now  used  In  the  United 
States,    or     enough     to     meet     the     de- 


CONNECTIO.V. 

We  left  Pet»'r  at  .loppa.  where  he 
lodged  with  a  man  named  Simon,  who 
followed  the  trade  of  a  tanner.  I  won- 
der why  the  writer  gives  the  vocation 
of  this  man  who  was  host  to  Peter 
when  he  doesn't  think  it  worth  while 
to  tell  what  calling  the  man  Aeneas, 
whom  he  cured,  or  any  other  man,  fol- 
lowed. The  reason  is  simple  and  very 
significant.  To  touch  a  dead  body  de- 
filed a  Jew  ceremonially  and  a  man 
who  made  It  his  business  to  handle 
dead  bodies  in  any  way  was  perpetual- 
ly defiled.  Tanners  were  a  necessity, 
but  they  were  to  be  shunned.  The  na- 
ture of  the  business  made  It  fitting 
that  they  should  have  their  tanneries 
out  by  the  seaside  or  by  a  flowing 
stream,  but,  in  addition,  the  prejudice 
of  the  Jews  compelled  them  to  keep 
out  of  town  with  their  horrible  bus'- 
ness.  Everybody  shunned  the  tanner. 
If  a  woman  married  a  man  and  learned 
afterward  that  he  was  a  tanner  it  was 
legal  ground  for  a  divorce.  There's  evi- 
dently something  the  matter  with  Pe- 
ter's orthodoxy  when  he  beconjes  the 
guest  of  a  tanner.  He  Is  being  pre- 
pared to  take  the  final  step  to  reach 
the  cientiles  with  the  gospel. 
> 

THE   LESSON. 

I. 
A  Gentile   Appileant.     1-8. 

"Now  there  was  a  certain  man  In 
Caesarea,  Cornt'lius  by  name,  a  cen- 
turion of  the  band  called  the  Italian 
band,  a  devout  man,  and  one  that 
feared  God  with  all  his  house,  who 
gave  much  alms  to  the  people,  and 
prayed  to  cJod  always.  He  saw  a  vision 
openly,  as  It  were  about  tiie  ninth 
hour  of  the  day,  an  angel  of  God  com- 
ing In  unto  him  and  sa>lng  to  him, 
Cornelius.  And  he,  fastening  his  eyes 
upon  him,  and  being  affrighted,  said. 
What  Is  It.  Lord?  And  he  said  unto 
him.  Thy  prayers  and  thine  alms  are 
gone  up  for  a  memorial  before  C»od. 
And  now  send  men  to  Joppa.  and  fetch 
one  Simon,  who  is  surnamed  Peter;  he 
lodgetli  with  one  Sinton,  a  tanner, 
whose  house  la  by  the  seaside.  And 
when  the  angel  that  spake  unto  him 
was  departed,  he  called  two  of  his 
household  servants,  and  a  devout  sol- 
dier of  them  that  waited  on  him  con- 
tinually, and  having  rehearsed  all 
tilings  unto  them,  he  sent  them  to 
Joppa." 

1.  PREPARED. — This  man  has  been 
divinely  prepared.  It  la  Important,  for 
he  is  to  be  the  first  (Jentlle  convert 
admitted  Into  the  church  as  a  human 
being  and  not  as  a  Jew.  The  gospel 
had  gone  to  the  Samaritans,  but  they 
were  part  Jews;  It  has  embraced  the 
eminent  Ethiopian,  but  he  had  already 
become  a  Jew  by  adoption,  with  all 
the  renunciations  of  his  heathen  faith 
and  by  the  ceremonials  with  which  a 
proselyte  was  always  welcomed.  It  Is 
hard  for  us  to  understand  why  a  Gen- 
tile couldn't  become  a  Christian 
without  first  becoming  a  Jew.  But  we 
must  remember  tliat  Jews  composed 
the  church  In  the  beginning  and  they 
thought  It  was  the  exclusive  posses- 
sion of  their  nation.  They  had  to  get 
their  eyes  open  to  the  largeness  of 
the  gospel,  a  little  at  a  time.  This 
is  the  test  case.  The  example  has 
been  selected  with  care — a  thorough 
Gentile  so  that  there  could  be  no 
doubt  of  the  case;  a  man  as  accept- 
able to  the  local  Jews  as  could  be 
found  anywhere,  because  of  his  per- 
sonal (^'iracter,  his  impressive  offi- 
cial  position,    his   respect   for  the   Jew- 


mands  of  200,000.000  people.  This  It 
does  In  perpetuity,  although  pretend- 
ing to  limit  the  grant  to  fifty  years. 
;  Small  wonder  thero  Is  pressure  to  get 
It   through! 

On  March  21  a  substitute  for  the 
Shields  bill  was  reported  to  the  house 
of  representatives.  Unlike  the  Shields 
bill,  this  house  bill  makes  no  per- 
petual grant  of  public  waterpower, 
but  wisely  and  In  fact  sets  a  limit  ot 


ish  faith — for  while  he  was  not  a  for- 
mal proselyte,  he  had  learned  the 
truth*  the  Jews  had  taught  him  about 
the  one  true  God  and  had  gone  so  far 
as  to  adopt  the  Jewish  formal  hours 
of  prayer  and  his  regular  alms-giving 
to  tlie  poor.  God  had  selected  blm  and 
prepared   him. 

2.  INSTRUCTBDi  —  Note  aereral 
things — that  God  sent  an  angel  to 
solve  the  first  problem  aa  to  where  to 
find  instruction;  that  he  was  to  send 
men  for  Peter,  and  he  thus  g^ave  as- 
surance to  the  shrewd  man  that  Peter 
would  not  spurn  him,  by  saying  ho 
was  lodging  with  a  tanner;  that  his 
sending  for  Peter  would  set  the  Gen- 
tiles knocking  at  the  door  and  not  the 
reverse,  a  very  wise  thing,  really  a 
confession  by  him  that  "salvation  is 
of  the  Jews."  This  would  appeal  to 
every  thing  nobly  human  and  Christian 
In  I'eter  and  the  others. 
II. 
TIae  Prepared   Pre^arlMtr.  ^IC 

"Now  on  the  morrow,  as  they  were 
on  their  journey,  and  drew  nigh  unto 
the  city.  Peter  went  up  upon  the 
housetop  to  pray,  about  the  sixth  hour; 
pnd  he  became  hungry,  and  desired  to 
eat;  but  while*  they  made  ready,  he 
fell  into  a  ti^nce;  and  he  beholdeth 
the  heaven  opened,  and  a  certain  ves- 
sel descending,  as  It  were  a  great 
sheet,  let  down  by  four  corners  upon 
the  earth;  wherein  were  all  manner 
of  four-footed  beasts  and  creeping 
things  of  the  earth  and  the  birds  of 
the  heaven.  And  thei^  came  a  voice 
to  him.  Rise,  Peter;  kill  and  eat.  But 
Peter  said.  Not  so.  Lord;  for  I  ha%'e 
never  eaten  anything  that  Is  common 
and  unclean.  And  a  voice  came  unto 
him  again  tbe  second  time.  What  God 
hath  cleansed,  make  not  thou  common. 
And  this  was  done  thrice;  and  straight- 
way the  vessel  was  received  up  into 
heaven." 

1.  SELECTION'.— Peter  is  selected 
to  open  the  gates  of  the  church  to  the 
(ientiles  In  this  test  case  because  If 
his  stout  preludlces  are  broken  down 
then  anybody  s  will  give  way,  and  fur. 
ther  because  he  is  the  It-ading  man  at 
Jerusalem  and  his  example  and  in* 
fluence    will    carry. 

2.  TRAINING. — As  we  hav«  aeen  he 
has  been  approaching  this  point  ever 
since  he  went  down  to  Samaria  to  take 
part  in  the  work  down  there.  But  the 
broadening  work  was  started  when 
Jesus  took  them  through  Samaria  and 
talked  with  the  woman  at  the  well 
and  later  took  them  up  the  const  of 
Tyre  and  Sidon  among  the  Gentiles. 
The  news  of  the  conversion  of  the 
Ethiopian  enlarged  his  sympathies. 
His  work  on  the  way  In  healing  Aene- 
as and  raising  Dorcas  from  the  dead 
ha.I  given  him  a  new  consciousness  of 
power  and  a  sense  of  responsibility 
The  stay  with  the  tanner  was  a  blow 
to  his  prejudices.  I  imagine  that  the 
tanner  had  been  converted  on  some 
visit  to  Jerusalem,  and  now  Peter 
drifted  to  his  house  almost  without 
knowing  It.  and  I  strongly  suspect 
that  If  he  had  known,  when  he  left 
the  city,  that  he  was  headed  for  Cor- 
nelius he  i^'ould  have  wanted  to  send 
some  one  else.  But  th*  preparation 
Is  completed  by  the  vision  on  the 
housetop,  when  he  saw  in  a  sort  of 
ecstacy.  that  great  sheet  coming  down 
fiom  the  fskies  with  all  sorts  of  ani- 
mals, clean  and  unclean,  in  It,  and  was 
told  to  eat  whatever  he  wanted,  and 
h-*  made  his  protest  against  the  swine 
and  everything  else  forbidden  by  the 
law  of  Mose-s,  and  was  told  that  God 
had  cl**an8ed  It  all  and  that  he  was  not 
to    set    himself    against    God,    he    knew 


that    it    meant     something    about    the 
Gentiles;     and     when     the     niesaenger* 
from   Cornelius  came' latr  that   moment, 
he  knew  what   It  mMUtt. 
III. 

The   Two   Bronght  "Wm^tUfr,  17-33. 

"Now  while  Peter  was  much  per- 
plexed in  himself  what  the  vision 
which  he  bad  seen  might  mean,  behold 
the  men  which  were  sent  by  Cornelius, 
having  made  inquiry  for  Simon's  house, 
stood  before  the  gate  and  called  and 
asked  whether  Simon,  who  was  sur- 
named P<Tter,  was  lodging  there.  And 
while  Peter  thought  on  the  vision,  the 
Spirit  said:  Behold,  three  men  seek 
theo.  But  arise  and  get  thee  down 
and  go  with  them,  nothing  doubting, 
for   I   have   sent   them." 

1.  NEW  WORK. — The  vision  came 
before  the  work.  New  experiences 
mean    new    responsibilities. 

2.  NEW  MAN.— Peter  was  a  new 
man.  He  showed  new  qualities,  cau- 
tion and  carefulness.  His  caste  feel- 
ing seems  gone,  for  he  has  lodged 
with  a  tanner,  and  has  entertained 
the  three  tJentllea  over  night,  an  un- 
heard of  thing.  Let  us  read  through 
the  whole  atory  to  see  how  Peter 
went  to  Cornelius  and,  with  a  humil- 
ity and  a  fraternity  we  hardly  ex- 
pected to  find  In  him,  showed  the 
noble  Roman  his  Savior  and  baptized 
him  and  all  the  crowd  of  believers. 
But  we  find  that  they  called  him  to 
account   for  it  at  Jerusalem. 


WHAT  THE  HASTRR8  SAY. 

The  two  visions  fitted  into  each 
other,  confirmed  each  other,  inter- 
preted each  other.  We  may  estimate 
the  greatness  of  the  step  in  the  de- 
•velopment  of  the  church  which  the 
admission  of  Cornelius  into  it  made, 
and  'the  obstacles  on  both  sides,  by 
the  fact  that  both  visions  were  needed 
to  bring  these  two  men  together. 
Peter  would  never  have  dreamed  of 
going  with  the  messengers  if  he  had 
not  had  his  narrowness  beaten  out  of 
him  on  the  housetop,  and  Cornelius 
would  never  have  dreamed  of  going 
to  Joppa  If  he  had  not  seen  the  angel. 
The  cleft  between  Jew  and  Gentile 
was  so  wide  that  God's  hand  had  to 
be  applied  on  both  e\de»  to  press  the 
separated  parts  together.  He  had 
plainly  done  it.  Arid  that  was  Peter's 
defense. — McLaren. 

The  Instant  that  a  man  obeys  a 
divine  command,  that  nuunent  the  duty 
ceases  to  be  irksome..,  What  a  trans- 
forming touch  has  tblfl  sublime  vir- 
tue! 1  wish  I  could  cfam  into  a  .single 
word  my  profound  conviction  that  the 
most  common  things  of  life  are  the 
most  sacred.  The  tasks  we  moat  Indig- 
nantly spurn,  these  potuiess.  In  a  super- 
lative degree,  that  lioly,  blessed  ele- 
ment. Dirt  is  as  sacred  as  sunlight, 
is  It  not?  In  what  respect  does  tbe 
digging  of  a  sewer,  to  drain  off  the 
poisons  which  threaten  human  life, 
fall  so  far  below  In  dignity  and 
sublimity,  the  writing  of  a  book  or 
painting  of  a  picture?  The  "com- 
monness" is  In  the  mind  that  scorns. — 
Goss. 


PERTI.\E!VT   QUESTIONS. 

1.  What     is    the    relation       between 
praying    and    giving? 

2.  Why   couldn't   the   angel    himself 
I  instruct  Cornelius  without  sending  for 

Peter? 
[       3.     Does    God    still     select    men    for 
j  specific  duties,  and   how? 

I.     Why  Is     religious     prejudice     so 
strong? 

6.     How    should      the    conservatives 
I  and   radicals   treat   each   other? 

6.     Must    every    rare    experience    be 
.  turned    Into    service? 


AMUSEMENTS. 


NEW 


ALWAYS 
A  CiOOD 
SHOW 


GRAND 


11    A.   M. 

rXTlL 

11   P.   M. 


E\TIRB  NEW  SHOW  TOMGHT. 

The  Mudtown  Minstrels 

Svran  A   Swan — Bolger  BroM. 

Le    Clair  A    Sampnon — Sellg-Tiiliano 

Ne*VM — Concert    Orclic»tra. 

Photoplay.**  I>e  I.uxe. 

MATS  lOc/.'.'rNITES  10-20 


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THEATER  BEAUTIFUL 


Laat  Apitearniire  Today  of 
II.    II.    \%  AllNEIl    la 

"THE  RAIDERS" 

FRIDAY  AND  SATURDAY 
PAULINE   FREDERICK 

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From   Mary   Johnston's    Novel. 


LYRIC  ^  LYRIC 

EVERYBODY'S   THEIATER. 

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FRIDAY    AND    SATURDAY 

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In   "Til  10  FOUNDLING." 

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In  the  title  roles,  A  gripping 
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REFINED 
BURLESQUE 

JACK  REED  AND   HIS  RECORD- 
BREAKERS. 
Chorus    Girl    Stunt    Night   Thursday 
Nights,  2S«  to   7Sci   Mats..  2Sc-S0c. 


It  Certainly  Beats  All  Creation  How  All  Duluth  Is  Going  After 

Seats  at  the 

LYCEUil  THEMER 

Next   Sunday,   Monday,  Tuesday  and  Wednesday   Nights  and 
Sunday  and  Wednesday  Matinees. 


IT  PAYS  TO 


Wt  npMtW  Bit  BOH' 
nesi  —  tat  M  rfUs't 
k  ■  •  «  •vtrykatfy  Is 
tMm  hti  i*t\4*i  ta  go. 


COHAN  k  UKRRIB  DO 
NOT  n.AIM  IT  la  TVS 
BE8T  K.VUCKAL  COMEPY 
IN  THE  WOULD  —  TffltT 
ADMIT  IT. 


ADVERTISE 


fifty  years.  Nevertheless.  It  is  not  yet 
a  good  bill.  For  example.  It  gives 
away  the  public  waterpowers  without 
oompensathm.  There  Is  no  reason  why 
the  waterpower  corporations  should 
not  pay  for  what  they  get.  The  rest 
of  us  do.  The  house  bill  should  bo 
amended  accordingly. 

If  the  house  corrects  Its  own  bill 
and  then  passes  It.  the  good  bill  from 
the  house  and  the  bad  bill  from  the 
8»>nate  will  go  to  conference,  and  the 
differences  will  be  adjusted  by  the 
conferees.  The  managers  of  the  water- 

i)Ower  campaign  believe  that  a  ma- 
orlty  of  the  conferees  will  be  friendly 
to  them,  and  will  report  a  bill  In  their 
Interest.  They  will  then  try  to  rush 
the  conference  bill  through,  probably 
In  the  confused  and  crowded  final 
hours  of  the  se.ision.  Such  a  plan  has 
often  served  the  special  Interests  in 
the  past,  and  it  1»  dangerous  ni»w. 

During  the  debate  on  the  Shields 
bill,  this  cour.se  was  openly  advised. 
There  was  und^r  discussion  an  amend- 
ment giving  preference  to  the  appli- 
cant for  a  public  waterpower  who  of- 
fers the  best  t^^rms  to  the  public.  One 
of  the  supporters  of  the  Shlt^lda  bill. 
Senator  Nelson  of  Minnesota,  aftt-r  re- 
ferring to  the  amendment  as  "bad  and 
vicious,"  went  on  to  say:  "It  Is  some- 
thing that  we  can  eliminate  In  con- 
ference. •  •  •  We  might  let  it  go 
In  and  then  dispose  of  it  in  confer- 
ence." (Congressional  Record.  March  8, 
1916.   page  4286). 

We  can  beat  this  plan  only  by  let- 
ting the  pt'ople  understand  the  facts. 
This  power  the  intere-sts  have  set  out 
to  prevent  by  confusing  thi»  public 
mind  with  Interested  statements  and 
personal   attacks. 

I  am  asking  for  your  help  once 
more  to  get  .the  hous*)  to  pass  a  good 
bin.  and  then  to  stand  by  it.  no  mat- 
ter what  the  conferees  may  do.  If  the 
house  stands  firm,  the  people  will  win 
this  fight.  But  the  house  needs  to 
know  that  the   people  are   behind   it. 

Let  me  call  your  attention  again  to 
the  Ferris  bill,  a  good  bill  dealing 
with  waterpower  on  public  lands  and 
national  forests,  which  has  twlcft 
pa.ssod  the  house.  An  undesirable 
substitute,  the  Myers  bill,  now  before 
the  senate,  gives  the  public  waterpow- 
ers  away  In  perpetuity.  Under  It  the 
power  Interests  could  occupy  and  ex- 
ploit the  Grand  Canyon  Itself,  tho 
greatest  natural  wonder  of  this  con- 
tinent. 

The  waterpower  Interests  want 
everything  or  nothing.  In  the  last 
eight  years  they  have  killed  eight 
waterpower  development  bills  that 
were  fair  both  to  the  corporations 
and  to  the  public.  What  the  people 
need  Is  waterpower  development  on 
equitable  terms  without  further  de- 
lay. They  can  have  what  they  want 
by  letting  the  house  know  It.  Sincerely 
yours.  GIFFORD  PINCHOT. 

Mllford.    Pa..    April    10. 

PUPIL  OF  ROY  HOLMFs 

DEFENDS  MR.  DENFELD 


To  the  Editor  of  The  Herald: 

The  slanderous  remarks  made  about 
Superintendent  of  Schools  R.  E.  Den- 
feld  are  cutting,  and  certainly  show 
tho  narrowness  of  the  authors  of  the 
1  remarks.  I,  too,  am  a  student  of  Cen- 
tral high  and  a  pupil  of  Mr.  Holmes, 
which  I  have  been  for  the  last  two 
years.  I  regard  my  teacher  as  a  thor- 
ough friend  and  feel  as  If,  In  time  of 
stress,  I'd  as  soon  confide  In  him  for 
advice  as  my  owji  relatives.  There  Is 
no  question  In  my  mind  as  to  Mr. 
Holmes'  way  of  teaching  being  "A- 
No.  1,"  and  the  man  is  respected  high- 


er 


CONSTIPATLON 

and  West  Baden  Sprudd  Water  cannot 
exist  in  the  same  body  one  hour. 
At  your  druggist— small  bottles,  15c; 
Urge  bottles,  35c 

WEST  BADEN 

snuuKLisrER 

loaiutfMtnvi 


ly  by  all  his  students.  He  has  a  won- 
d»-rful  character  and  It  certainly  Is  a 
pity  such  unjust  accusations  have 
been  thrown  at  him,  so  to  speak. 

But,  on  the  other  hand,  the  char- 
acter of  Mr.  Denfeld  is  a*  large  as  Mr. 
Holmes',  only  In  a  different  light. 
Both  men  are  men  of  learning  and 
have  equal  po'nts  to  be  considered. 
Both,  too.  are  very  good  friends  of 
mine.  Having  known  Mr.  Holmes  for 
throe  years  and  Mr.  Denfeld  all  my 
lifetime.    I   can   say    this   readily. 

That  he  (Mr.  Denfeld)  should  be  so 
cruelly  criticized  by  two  students  who 
should  be  loyal  to  him  rather  than 
mutinous  is  a  thing  that  should  be 
frowned  upon  with  scorn.  And  fur- 
ther, that  a  club  composed  of  men 
should  applaud  and  laugh  over  two 
such  boys'  remarks  Is  sickening,  to 
say  the  least. 

It  la  my  wish  for  you  to  print  the 
challenge  that  the  Munger  club  ow*>s 
an  apology  to  Mr.  Denfeld.  The  cut- 
ting remark  of  "A  chip  of  the  old 
block"  is  absolutely  absurd  to  throw 
at.  a  man  of  his  character.  "Reward 
doth  come  to  him  who  works  and 
waits"  might  be  a  good,  appropriate 
slogan  for  the  general  public  today 
and  to  the  "bunch  of  nuts  on  the  hill," 
the  Munger  club. 

The  board  of  education  will.  In  time, 
tell  Its  side  of  the  story.  Let's  all 
wait  fi)r  It  patiently,  but  In  the  moan- 
time  let's  cut  out  the  mud-sllnglng 
set  In  vogue  by  our  "Mongrel  club" 
on   the  hill. 

JOHNSTONE    M.'  WALKERST. 

Duluth.  April   12. 


QUESTIONS  AND 
ANSWERS 

Thif  tf^ptitisrat  doet  not  prrt^ned  to  b«  inriUlbla.  It 
win  pn>afar,  iMWrfrr,  t«  sosirer  quMUons  sent  to  It  bj 
reiderj  of  The  R«rild  tfl  the  best  of  its  abillt)',  reserving 
th«  rlcbt  to  igtiore  kll  that  air  trlfltnn  or  uf  oonnTii  otilf 
to  the  qorttloaer,  or  Uwt  ask  for  adrice  on  legal  or  med- 
ical quntions. 

To  reeelTe  attention,  etefy  incpilry  miHt  bear  the  name 
and  a<14r*«  of  thii  person  sendtng  it.  This  In  not  wanted 
for  publicatiou,  but  ai  an  crldnice  of  food  faith. 


"A  Reader."  Bralnerd:  What  sort 
of  wedding  is  celebrated  after  being 
married    fifteen    years? 

Ans.:    Crystal. 


"Perplexed  Three."  Duluth:  Would 
you  kindly  straighten  out  this  little 
bet:  A  bets  that  "America"  Is  the 
"national  anthem."  and  B  bets  that 
the  "Star  Spangled  Banner"  Is.  C  bets 
that  "America"  was  the  national  an- 
them, and  was  changed  to  the  "Star 
Spangled   Banner"    of   late. 

Ans.:  All  bets  are  off,  for  there  Is 
no  "national  anthem."  "America"  was 
so  regarded  by  many  until  the  "Star 
Spangled  Banner"  was  designated  by 
the  army  authorities  as  the  air  to 
receive  special  recognition  at  mllltarv 
ceremonies,  but  no  "national  anthem^' 
has   ever   been   selected. 


"Bud":  Can  a  person  bom  In  Minne- 
sota, after  spending  ten  years  In  a 
Minnesota  insane  asylum,  be  trans- 
ferred to  an  asylum  in  Wisconsin  If 
his  parents  are  property  owners  In 
Wisconsin? 

Ans.:  Probably  not  unless  some  ar- 
rangement Is  nuide  for  paying  for  liv- 
ing expenses.  A  letter  to  the  Wiscon- 
sin state  board  of  control  at  Madison, 
Wis.,  giving  all  the  circumstances, 
would   bring    the   desired    Information. 


"Subscriber."  Duluth:  What  has  been 
done  about  the  Krantz  case?  I  wish 
to  know  if  some  person  has  been 
bought  off,  or  was  it  because  she 
was  an  orphan  s^lrl,  that  she  had  uo 
one  to  fight  her  case,  .that  he  was 
let  go?  He  ought  to  get  ninety-nina 
years    and    one    day    behind    the    bars. 

Ans.:  The  accused  has  not  been  "let 
go,"  nobody  has  been  *bought  off," 
and  the  case  Is  taking  the  regular 
course.  A  continuance  was  granted 
on  petition  of  defendant's  counsel,  on 
account  of  the  attorney's  Illness. 
Meanwhile  the  defendant  Is  out  on 
ball  and  Is  to  be  tried,  at  the  May 
term    of    the    district    court. 


"Inquirer."  Duluth:  How  can  I  get 
s  stain,  caused  by  water,  out  of  a 
leather   table   cover? 

Ans.:  It  Is  practically  impossible  to 
remove  auc^  spots,  at  ther  ate   gen- 


« 


.— — 


r^'i^^.  :35^^  ^'i  ^^SC7«^y^,^v^- 


:iX»?^,v'    '^r 


^  Your  Health  Account 
Is  Overdrawn^ 

* /CONSTIPATION    has  over  night— don't  expect  It  to. 

§^  become  chronic  with  But    it    will    restore    normal 

^*^  you    because  youVc  activity  of  the  bowels  in  the 

either  neglected  it,  or  depended  course  of  a  week  or  ten  days 

for  relief  upon  laxatives  and  under  ordinary  conditions. " 

cathartics  which  have  only  left 

you  worse  off 

•'Constipation,  or  rather,  the 
auto-intoxication  which  con- 
stipation causes,  b  responsible 
for  your  headaches,  your  bil- 
iousness, and  also  for  the  nerv- 
ousness and  despondency  which  NujoI  i,  odorlcs.,  tasteless  and  colore 
you  complain  of.  less.  It  can  be  t&ken  In  any  qoantlt/ 

The  use  of  mineral  oil  is  the  re-    ^^«*  »»»™- 

cognized  treatment  for  COnsti-     Write    for    booklet,  **The    Rational 
pation,  and  the  purest  form  of    Treatment  of  Constipation."    If  yooc 

mineral  oU  is  Nujol.  Itacteaa    ^.^^fiLhT'f  Ji^nl^i '^  '^Tf  ^'^ 

,  t.      •     I  1    L  •        .       a  pint  bottle  of  IN  UK>1  prepaid  to  any 

a  simple  mechamcal  lubncant.     ^^^^  i„  ^le  United  Sutc.  on  receipt 

It    won  t  relieve  constipation     of  75c — money  order  or  stamps. 

STANDARD    OIL    COMPANY 

(New  Jersey) 

Bayonne'  New  Jersey 


f> 


Nujol  Is  entirely  free  from  the  danffen 
which  attend  the  nse  of  hablt-formlng 
laxatires  and  cathartics.  It  does  not 
act  like  a  medicine — a  physic  or  purge* 
bat  oils  the  walls  of  the  Intestines  as 
a  delicate  machine  is  oiled,  and  thos 
facilitotei  the  passage  of  wast* 
matter. 


i 


i 


A  PUREW 
MINE 


to.  *r  M 

*■«  h.iir  ■ 


THE  PURE  WHITE 
MINERAL    OIL    I 


ApproTed  byt 

Barvsy  W.  Wdey.  Wreetor  0«oi 
HoocekespiDg  Bureau  of  Vooda 
isnitp**'*"  »Bd  Health. 


1*1 


4.   -^\<r*'- 


pM^^s^SS^^^^i^'Si^SS^^ift^li^i^ 


For  Sale  at  All  Duluth  Drug  Stores 


■fL.  a 


IP"* 


Wm 


^^^i^^F^ 


Why  BiUs  Paid  By 
Check  Stay  Paid 

The  checks  you  write  on  your  account 
with  this  bank  are  orders  in  writing. 

We  honor  your  check  only  upon  proper 
indorsement — for  your  protection  and  ours. 

The  checks,  cancelled  and  returned  to 
you,  are  a  complete  record  of  each  business 
transaction,  reinforced  by  the  record  on  our 
ledgers. 

How  can  such  evidence  be  disputed?  You 
need  never  pay  a  bill  the  second  time  if  you 
are  checking  on  this  bank. 


THE  CITY  NATIONAL  BANK 


DULUTH 


MIINMCSOTA 


A 


iikrilto^ 


i^rtft 


erally  caused  by  the  spreading  of  the 
oil  used  in  finiahing  the  surface.  The 
usual,  treatment  is  to  get  some  of  the 
oil  used  in  finishing^  such  g^oods  and 
rub  it  over  the  whole  surface  of  the 
leather.  The  oil  can  be  obtained  at 
any  place  where  leather  finishing  la 
done. 


"G.."  Winnipeg:  Who  wrote  "Laugh, 
and  the  W.orld  Laughs  With  You." 
and  what  is  the  correct  wording  of 
the    quotation? 

Ans.:  The  lines  are  from  "The  Way 
of  the  World."    by   Ella   Wheeler  WU- 
ccnc.      Those    usually   Quoted   are: 
"LauRh,    and    the    world    laughs    with 

you; 
Weep,  and  you  weep  alone." 


POEMS  ASKED  FOR. 

The  Herald  acknowledges  with 
thanks  the  receipt  of  the  following: 
"On  a  Beautiful  Night.  With  a  Beauti- 
ful Girl"  and  "My  Hula  Hula  -ove." 
from  Mrs.  Archie  Snyder  of  White  Pine 
Mine.  Mich.  ("My  Hula  Hula  Love" 
appeared  in   these  columns     April     6). 

"Little  Annie  Rooney."  from  Mrs.  P. 
Marks    of    Greenland.    Mich. 

Requests  have  been  received  for  the 
following:  "Just  Plain  Folks."  "In  the 
Valley  Where  the  Bluebird  Sings." 
"Two  Little  Girls  in  Blue"  and  "Silver 


How's  This? 

We  oflfer  Ore  Hundred  Dollars 
Reward  for  any  case  of  Catarrh 
that  cannot  be  cured  by  Hall's 
Catarrh  Cure. 

r.  J.   CHENEY  A  CO.,  Toledo.  0. 
We,  the  andenlgiwd.  h»»«  known  F.   J.   Cheney  for  the 
lut   15  ffars,    and   belleT?   him    ptrfertly   hooorable   la 
all    btuloeas    tranMCtloiu    tiid   flnanclally    able    to    carry 
out  any  oblliatloni  niad<  by  hi$  Arm. 

N.MIO.NAL  B.i.NK  OF  COilMEBCE. 
Toledo,  0. 
Hall'i  Catarrh  Cur?  is  taken  intemallr,  aetlni  directly 
upon    tbe    blood    and    mucous    turfacea    of    the    lyateai. 
Teatlnonlah  sent  frw.     PrU»  75  c*nU  per  bottle.     a«M 
by  «u  Prugflita. 
Taka  Hall'i  FaoUy  nils  far  eoostl^tloa. 


Heels"   from   Mrs.   Archie     Snyder     of 
White  Pine  Mine.  Mich. 

"Tell  Mother  I'll  Be  There,"  from  Mrs. 
P.  Marks  of  Greenland.  Mich.,  who  also 
asks  for  one  beginning: 

"A   drunkard    reached      his     checrlesa 
home. 
The  storm   without  was     loud     and 
wild. 
He  forced  his  weeping  wife  to  roam. 
A   wanderer,   friendless,      with      her 
child." 


On  a  BeamUfol  Nlglat,  With  «  Beaatlfol 
Ulrl. 

Summer  night,  a  rippling  stream,  king 
and  queen   dream  love's  dream. 

Don't  intrude,  it  would  be  mean.   Happy 
only  by  their  lonely, 

Pouting  lips  a  question  press:     "Love 
me.  dear?"     Answer  "Yes!" 

Head    at    rest,    on   manly   breast — were 
you  ever  there? 

Chorus. 

On  a  beautiful  night  with  a  beautiful 
girl. 

With  your  arms   round   her   tight  and 
and  your  senses  awhirl; 

O.  you  joy  night  in  Junet     O,  you  sou- 
venir spoon! 

Under  the  yellowy,  mellowy,  look-but- 
don't-tellowy   moon. 

Chapter  two:     The  summer  thro,'  fond 

adieu,  trains  choo-chool 
Till    next   year   nothing    to    do   in    the 

moon  line,  in  the  spoon  line. 
Christmas   here,     to  all     good     cheer. 

greet'ngs,  dear — ain't  that  queer? 
Hang  it  all!   Just  can't  recall  what  wa» 

the  girl's  name. 

I^lttle  AjaMl«  RoMier- 

A  winning  way,  a  pleasant  smile, 
Dressed  so  neat,  but  quite  in  style; 
Merrj'  chaff  your  time  to  while. 

Has  little  Annie  Rooney. 
Every   evening,    rain   or  shine, 
I  make  a  call  'twiict  eight  and  nine. 
On  her  who  shortly  will  be  mine — 

Little  Annie  Rooney! 

(Chorus.) 
She's  my  sweetheart,  I'm  her  beau. 
She's   my   Annie.   I'm   her   Joe. 
Soon  we'll  marry,  never  to  part. 
Little  Annie  Rooney  is  my  sweetheart. 

The  parlor's  small*  but  neat  and  clean. 


And   set   with   taste   so  seldom   seen. 
And  you  can  bet  the  household  queen 

Is  little  Annie   Rooney. 
The  fire   burns  cheerfully  and   bright. 
As   a   family    circle    round   each   night 
We  form,   and  every  one's   delight 

Is  little  Annie  Rooney. 

We've  been   engaged   close   on  a  yean 
Tho   happy   time   Is   drawing   near. 
I'll  wed  the  one  I  love  so  dear — 

Little   Annie    Rooney. 
My  heart  so  long  has  stood  the  test; 
My  friends   declare   that   I'm   a  Jest, 
But  one  who  knows  Its  value  best, 

Is  little  Annie  Rooney. 


Most  everybody  knows  Duluth  Her- 
ald Want  Ads  bring  results. 
m  ^ 

Sweden  has  smelted  iron  for  more 
than  twenty  centuries  and  some  of  the 
ancient  furnaces  still  are  in  existence. 

KEEP  THE  KToiiEYSllfEir 


Health  la  Worth  Saving,  and  Some  Da« 

lath  Pe«^e  Know  Uow  to 

Save  It. 

Many  Duluth  people  take  their  lives 
in  their  hands  by  neglecting  the  kid- 
neys when  tUey  know  these  organs 
need  help.  Weak  kidneys  are  respon- 
sible for  a  vast  amount  of  sufTering 
and  ill  health — the  slightest  delay  is 
dangerous.  Use  Doan's  Kidjiey  Pills — 
a  renxedy  that  has  helped  thousands 
of  kidney  sufferers.  Here  la  a  Duluth 
citizen's  reconunendation. 

Mrs.  H.  A.  W'att.  416  North  Fifty- 
second  avenue  west.  Duluth.  says: 
"Not  only  I,  but  another  of  the  family, 
have  used  Doan'a  Kidney  Pills  with 
excellent  results.  One  of  the  fainllv, 
especially,  had  trouble  with  the  back 
and  kidneys,  and  Doan's  Kidney  Pills 
brought  help  at  once.  When  I  feel  that 
my  kidneys  need  attention.  I  use 
Doan's  Kidney  Pills  and  they  never 
fall  to  benefit  me.  They  are  the  beat 
medicine  for  the  kidneys  that  I  know 
of." 

Price,  60o.  at  all  dealers.  Don't  sim- 
ply ask  for  a  kidney  remedy— ^ot 
Doan'0  Kidney  Pills — the  same  that 
Mrs.  Watt  bad.  Foster-Mllbum  Cow 
Propa..  Buffalo^  N.  Y« 


■ 

■ 


*• 


m* 


K4ifai 


■•    I      ■■  if 


^  ■  W  iWI    .1— ■  I    .       K^v- *' 


K'»  '"  «l"*U 


r 

• 

^ 

1 

p^ 

■ 

■ 

- 

12 


Thursday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


AprU  13, 1916. 


NEWS  AND  VIEWS 


JUL 


<•     BOWLJNG    •- 


THE  SPORT  WORLD  ^^ 

BoxiDg 


PARAGRAPHIC  COMMENT 

OF  THE  SPORTING  WORLD 


BY  BRUCE. 

"Speaker  will  help  Cleveland,"  says 
a  press  dispatch.  The  next  question 
is,  will  Cleveland  render  Speaker  any 

assistance? 

*  *      * 

The  Era  of  Progress. 

A  number  of  golf  clubs  are  being 
organized  in  North  Dakota.  This 
puts  to  show  that  those  behind  the 
game    have    overcome    a    very    great 

handicap,  as  N.  D.  is  a  dry  state. 

«      *      • 

There  is  Consistency. 

Connie  Mack  declares  he  has  the 
lowest  priced  team  in  the  American 
league.  A  glimpse  of  the  league  rec- 
ords will  not  c(»nvince  the  impartial 
observtr    that    the    members    of    the 

team  were  underpaid  in  the  least. 

■»      •      « 

Good  News  for  Yale. 

Percy    >iaii{:hton    is    to    cor.ch    the 

Harvard    football     team    during    the 

coming    season.       Mr.     Haughtcn^  is 

fearid   almost   as   much   by   the   Yale 

stiidttits  as  is  Fr;:nk  Hinkey. 

«      •      ♦ 

The  Unmentionable  Crime. 
Tris  Speaker  ha«;  convincingly 
proved  to  the  world  what  an  unspeak- 
able crime  it  is  to  demand  money  of 
a  big  league  baseball  manager.  It  is 
believed,  as  a  result  of  the  punish- 
ment meted  out  to  Speaker,  that  few 
players   will   possess    the    temerity   to 

brook  material  wrath  in  the  future. 

«      •      • 

He's  Trying  to  Be  Right. 

Jc^s  Willard  has  admitted  that  he 
is  not  a  great  actor.  There  is  reason 
to  believe  that  Jess  has  been  rea<\;ng 

the  life  of  \Va>^hington. 

*  •      • 

The  Crying  Evil  of  the  Age. 
The  James  bc^s  and  Younger 
brothers  have  been  harshly  reviled 
for  the  somewhat  uncouth  and  primi- 
tive ways  they  employed  to  obtain 
money,  but  think  of  what  Tris  Speak- 
er is  willing  to  do  in  order  to  accu- 
mulate the  base  metal. 

0       *        m 

Past  Differences  Forgotten. 

Carl    Morris    and    Gunboat    Smith 

fought  a  draw  the  other  evening.    The 

harsh    feeling   that    once    existed    be-  { 

tween    the    two    men    seems,  to   have 

been  healed. 

•  *      * 

You  Can't  Keep  Them  Down. 

A  man  n.imed  Mike  McCarthy  has 
been  made  golf  instructor  of  a  New 
York  club.  The  versatility  of  the 
Irifh  race  is  little  short  of  phenome- 
nal. 

«      «      • 

A  Man  Ideally  Fitted. 

Elmer  McDeviit  is  teaching  the 
manual  of  military  drill  to  a  large 
squad  of  raw  recruits.  It  is  no  easy 
natter  to  make  Elmer  lose  his  tem- 
per or  become  impatient,  as  he  coach- 
ed tb-e  members  of  the  Northwestern 

football  team  for  two  years. 

•  *      • 

Hank  Favoritism  Shown. 

Joe  Tinker  seems  to  have  a  pull 
%vith  the  schedule  makers  of  the  Na- 
tional league.  His  team  has  been 
permitted  to  open  the  season  with  the 

Cincinnati  club. 

•  *      « 

Here  Is  a  Wonderful  Example. 

-y^  The  Quakers  never  believed  in  do- 
ing anything  until  they  were  power- 
fully moved.  It  is  hereby  suggested 
that    Connie    Mack's    team    be    called 

the  Quakers. 

*  *      • 

A  Case  of  Genuine  Affection. 
It  is  said  that  there  is  little  senti- 
ment in  baseball,  that  consideration 
cuts  but  small  figure,  that  personal 
friendship  is  practically  nil.  That  is 
not  precisely  true,  however.  Every 
once  in  a  while  some  case  of  deep 
and  abiding  affection  is  manifested. 
For  instance,  John  McGraw  could 
have   sent  Jim  Thorpe   to   cither  the 


Cincinnati  or  Cleveland  teams,  but  he 
chose  to  send  him  to  Milwaukee. 

m        *        * 

How  Circumstances  Alter  One. 

Kectnt  pictures  of  Tris  Speaker 
show  that  player  strangely  altered. 
His  face  is  seamed  and  his  hair  tinged 

with  graj'. 

0      •      * 

Maybe  That's  the  Reason. 

A  New  York  bartender  preaches 
temperance  to  the  customers  of  the 
saloon  in  which  he  works.  Maybe 
the    proprietor    of    the    place    is    his 

brother-in-law. 

•      *      • 

Possibly,  You  Can't  Tell. 

Meadows,  a  pitcher  on  the  St. 
Louis  National  league  team,  wears 
spectacles.  It  is  possible  that  the 
poor  chap   is   endeavoring   to   see   his 

finish. 

«      *      « 

Personality  is  a  Great  Asset. 

Garry  Herrmann  must  be  a  man 
blessed  with  a  wonderfully  pleasing 
personality  and  a  remarkable  gift  for 
retaining  friends.  He  is  president  of 
the  Cincinnati  team  and  yet  is  a  very 
popular  man  in  his  home  town. 


BASEBALL  STANBINGS 


THE  GREATEST  CREW  IN 

THE  ENTIRE  COUNTRY 


THE  DULUTH  SENIOR  FOUR. 
HORAK,  D.  MOORE,  RHEINBERGER,  P.  MOORE. 


American  League. 

AVon.  Lost.  Pet. 

Detroit      1  0  1.000 

Ft.     Loulp     1  0  1.000 

Wa.?hinglon    1  0  1.000 

Boston    1  0  1.000 

Chicago      0  1  .000 

Cleveland     0  1  .000 

New    York     0  I  .000 

Philadelphia     0  1  .000 

Y*K(rr«1iiy*R    Rr«altH. 

Bcstcn.    2:    I'hllndf Iphia,    1. 
■Washington,    3:    New   York,    2. 
St.    Louis.    6:    Cleveland,    1. 
Detroit,    4;    Chicago,    0. 

Gannfs  Todnjr. 

Detroit    at    Chicago,    cloudy.        ^ 
Ft.    Louis    at    Cleveland,    cloudy. 
WaJ=hlngton   at  New  York,   cloudy. 
Phiiadelphla  at    Boston,    clear. 

—    '■    » 

National  League. 

"Won.  Lost.  Pet. 

Philadelphia     1  0  1.000 

Boston     1  0  l.OdO 

Chicago      1  0  1.000 

St.    Louis     1  0  l.OuO 

Pittsburgh     0  1  .000 

Cincinnati      0  1  .000 

Brooklyn      0  1  .000 

New    York    0  1  .000 

\>«>trr«lii>*«    ReknKii. 
Philadelphia,    6;   New  York,   4. 
Bo.«5ton,   6;   Brooklyn,   1. 
Chicago,    7;    Cincinnati,    1. 
6t.    Louis,    2;    Pittsburgh,    1. 

Gamrs    TiNlay. 

Chicago    at    Cincinnati,    clear. 
Pittsburgh    at    St.    Louis,    cloudy. 
New    York    at    Philadelphia,    cloudy. 
Boston    at    Brooklyn,    cloudy. 


EXHIBITION  GAMES 


NATIONAL  LEAGUE 


AMERiOAN  LEAGUE 


GIANTS  LOSE 
TOJHILLIES 

League  Champs  Win  Out 

5  to  4— Kauff  Fails 

to  Hit. 


Cubs    Defeat    Reds    and 

Pirates  Lose  Close  Game 

to  Cardinals. 


WHITE  SOX 
LOSEJIPENER 

Tigers  Blank  Comiskey  Men 

4  to  0,  Covaleskie  Pitching 

Star  Game. 


Kaws  Beat  Topeka. 

Kan.«!as  City,  Mo..  April  13. — The 
Kansas  City  team  of  the  American 
association  defeated  the  Topeka  club 
of  the  "Western  league  In  the  second 
and  final  game  of  their  exhibition  sc- 
ries,   7   to   6.      Score:  R.  H.  R 

Topeka 6  11     3 

Kansas   City    7     6     2 

Batteries — Lambeth.  Vess  and  Wels- 
sing;  Humphries,  Cochreheam  and 
Brey. 

Terre  Haute  Swamped. 

Louisville.  Ky.,  April  13.— Louisville 
batters  pounded  three  Terre  Haute 
Central  league  pitchers  for  twenty- 
two  hits  hero  yesterday  and  the  lo- 
cal American  aesoclation  team  won, 
18   to  2. 


Detroit  Releases  Pitcher. 

Detroit.  Mich..  April  13. — "Rube" 
Marshall,  a  pitcher  obtained  by  De- 
troit from  the  Chattanooga.  Southern 
league  club,  has  been  released  to  the 
Montreal  Internationals. 


The  big  noise 
in  hatdom 


i^SSB* 


Ask  your  hat  man 


Clean-up  Your  Hands— Use 


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I 


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Removes  Inks,  Grease,  Stains  and  Dirt.  Leaves 
the  hands  soft  and  smooth.  Contains  no  grits  or 
minerals.  Just  the  thing  for  autoists  because  it 
can  be  used  without  water. 

Relieves  and  Prevents  Chapped  Hands. 
For  Sale  Everywhere.  Only  10  Cents. 

Made  in  Duluth. 


Phll.adelphla.  April  13.— Bad  pitching 
by  Stroud  in  the  ninth  inning  gave 
Philadelphia  the  victory  over  New 
York  in  the  opening  game  of  the  sea- 
ton  here  yesterday  6  to  4.  With  two 
out  In  the  home  team's  half  of  the 
ninth  and  the  score  tied,  Stroud  gave 
.Stock  a  base  on  balls.  The  latter  stole 
second  and  advanced  to  the  plate  on 
two  wild  pitches  by  Stroud,  ending  the 
game. 

Both  Alexander  and  Anderson  were 
hit  hard  at  the  start,  the  latter  being 
taken  out  after  two  innings,  while 
Alexander  settled  down  and  battled  It 
out  with  Stroud.  Three  former  Ftd- 
eral  league  stars  played  with  New 
York,  Raridcn  and  Roush  doing  fine 
work,  while  Kauff  failed  to  get  a  hit, 
although  he  sent  In  the  first  run  for 
New  York  with  a  sacrifice  fly. 

Before  Mayor  Smith  tossed  out  the 
first  ball,  each  member  of  the  Phila- 
di  ,>hia  club  who  was  with  the  team 
last  year  and  Manager  Moran  was 
given    a   gold   watch.     Score:       R.  H.  E. 

New  York   20100100  0—4     8     2 

Philadelphia     ...120001001—5     7     3 

Batteries — Anderson,  Stroud  and  Rar. 
idcn;  Alexander  and  E.  Burns. 


Chicago  7;  Cincinnati  1. 

Cincinnati,  Ohio.,  April  13. — Toney's 
wildness.  coupled  with  ragged  fielding 
by  the  Cincinnati  club  at  critical  mo- 
ments and  some  exceptionally  timely 
hitting  by  the  Cubs,  enabled  Chicago  to 
win  the  opener  here  yesterday  by  a 
score  of  7  to  1,  before  a  crowd  that 
filled  every  available  seat  at  Redland 
field  and  overflowed  Into  the  outfield. 
The  hitting  of  Flack,  F.  Williams  and 
Zimmerman  all  counted  in  the  run-get- 
ting for  the  visitors,  while  Louden  car- 
ried off  the  batting  honors  for  Her- 
zog's  team.     Score:  R.H.  E. 

Chicago    2000  3  0020—7     9     2 

Cincinnati    0  10  0  0  0  0  0  0—1     7     2 

Batteries — McConnell  and  Archer, 
Toney,  Schulz  and  Wlngo. 

Boston  5;  Brooidyn  1. 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y.,  April  13. — Boston 
beat  Brooklyn  In  the  opening  game  of 
the  National  leagoie  season  here  yes- 
terday 5  to  1.  A  large  crowd  witnessed 
the  contest  despite  the  cold  weather. 
President  Tener  of  the  National  league 
and  Heydler  and  Barney  Dreyfus  of  the 
Pittsburgh  club  were  among  the  spec- 
t.ators.  Timely  hitting  won  for  the 
Braves,  Mageo  being  especially  proml- 
nent  at  bat.  Rudolph  was  Invincible, 
txccpt  In  the  fourth  when  the  Superbas 
bunched  a  double  and  two  singles  for 
the   only   run.     .Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Boston     ..0  10110101 — 6     9     0 

Brooklyn    00010000  0 — I     6     2 

Batteries — Rudolph  and  Gowdy;  Che- 
ney and  Miller. 

St.  Louis  2;  Pittsburgh  1. 

St.  Louis,  Mo..  April  13.— St.  Louis 
defeated  Pittsburgh  in  the  opening 
game  of  the  season  here  yesterday  in 
a  pitchers"  battle  between  Doak  and 
Kantlehner  by  a  score  of  2  to  1.  Er- 
rors were  responsible  for  the  runs 
made  on  both  sides.  The  winning  run 
came  In  St.  Louis'  half  of  the  ninth. 
Long  popped  to  Schults,  Betzel  singled, 
stole  second,  went  to  third  when  Wil- 
son threw  wild  over  second,  and  scored 
on  the  squeeze  play.  Hornsby  laying 
dov/n  a  good  bunt.  Wagner  got  three 
hits  and  a  base  an  balls  for  an  average 
of    1.000.     Score:  R.  H.  E. 

PItt.-iburgh     0  0  0  0  0  0  10  0—1     ^     2 

St.  Loula    00000010  1—2     8     2 

Bfltterles — Kantlehner  and  Wilson; 
Doak  and   Snyder. 


LONGVIEW  TENNIS  CLUB 
DIRECTORS  WILL  MEET 

A  meeting  of  the  directors  of  the 
Longview  Tennis  club  is  scheduled  for 
today.  The  place  of  meeting  is  room 
1200,  Alworth  building.  There  will  be 
a  discussion  of  the  plans  for  the  new 
$2,500  clubhouse  and  also  general  plans 

for   the   opening  of  the   tennis  season. 

« 

HradH    WlNeonMln     National     Life. 

Oshkosh,  Wis..  April  13. — C.  R. 
Boardman  of  Oshkosh  was  elected 
president  of  the  Wisconsin  National 
Life  Insurance  company  at  the  annual 
meeting  here.  He  succeeds  «Jf.  M. 
Paine,    resigned. 


Walter  Johnson  Wins  11- 
Inning  Contest  From  Yan- 
kees—Otfier  Games. 


Chicago,  April  18. — Pitcher  Covales- 
kie made  four  hits  yesterday,  one 
more  than  he  allowed  the  whole  Chi- 
cago team  and  Detrdlt  won  4  to  0, 
scoring  all  Us  runs  In  the  first  two 
Innings.  Long  hits  by  Cobb,  Bush, 
Veach  and  Covaleskie,  who  Included  a 
triple  and  double  in  his  four,  were 
factors  in  the  visitors'  victory,  and 
caused  the  retirement  of  Russell  in 
the  second  Inning.  Faber,  bis  succes- 
sor, did  well  and  gave  way  to  a  pinch 
hitter   and   Wolfgang    held    the    Tigers 

safe  In  his  part  of  the  game.  Fielding 
features  were  catches  by  Stanage  and 
by  Veach  of  Detroit. 

One  of  the  several  bands  which  was 
fin  hand  to  add  to  the  gaiety  of  the 
opening  game  concluded  its  work  with 
"The  Wearing  of  the  Green."  The  tune 
was  very  appropriate  to  the  occasion 
as  President  ComLskey  had  just  com- 
pleted painting  his  seats  and  chairs 
green,  and  the  paint  had  not  fully 
dried  when  the  game  started.  Hun- 
dreds of  spectators  reported  to  the 
office  after  the  game,  displaying 
green  paint  on  their  garments  while 
the  telephone  was  busy  with  "fans" 
tiling  their  complaints  to  the  man- 
agement. President  Comiskey  said  he 
was  sorry  that  the  paint  did  not  dry 
and  promised  to  settle  with  all  those 
who  became  decorated. 

The  crowd,  estimated  at  33,000  per- 
sons, was  the  largest  which  has  wit- 
nessed an  opening  game  in  the  local 
American   league   park.   Score:   R.  H.  E. 

Detroit     3  100000  00—4     8      1 

Chicago    000  0  00000-0     8     2 

Batteries — Covaleskie   -and    Stanage; 
Russell,   Faber,  Wolfgang  and  Schalk. 
•     II — 

Washington  3;  New  Yorit  2. 

New  York.  April  13 — New  York  and 
Washington  opened  the  American 
league  season  here  yesterday  under 
ideal     conditions.     An     exciting,     well- 

glayed  eleven-lnnlng  game  was  won 
y  Washington,  3  to  2.  The  game  was 
a  pitchers'  battl6'  between  Waltei: 
Johnson  and  Ray  Caldwell,  and  the 
bat  of  Second  Baseman  Morgan  won 
for  the  Washington  star.  Morgan 
drove  in  two  of  Washington's  runs, 
including  the  winning  score  in  the 
eleventh.  Milan  scored  a  run  for 
Washington  in  the  first  Inning  with  a 
home  run  drive  Into  right  field  stands. 
Washington  tallied  another  in  the  sev- 
enth on  McBrlde's  double,  Johnson's 
sacrifice  and '  Morgan's  single.  New 
York    tied    In    the    same   inning,    when 


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Gilhooley  and  Magee  opened  with 
scratch  singles.  Baker's  long  single 
scored  Gilhooley  and  placed  McGee 
on  third  from  where  he  scored  on 
Gedeon's  sacrifice  fly.  Jamleson  opened 
the  eleventh  for  Washington  with  an 
Infield  bunt;  Moelier  ran  for  him., 
Williams      fouled      out      and      McBride 

frrounded  to  Baker  for  what  appeared 
0  be  an  easy  out,  but  Gedeon  dropped 
the  throw  at  second  base,  both  men 
being  safe.  Morgan  then  drove  in 
Moelier  with  a  single.  Score:  R.  H.  E. 
Washington  1000001000  1—8  10  0 
New  York  ..0000002000  0—2  6  8 
Batteries — Johnson  and  Williams; 
Caldwell   and   Nunamaker. 


Boston  2;  Philadelphia  1. 

Boston,  Mass.,  April  13. — The  Red 
Sox  opened  the  season  with  a  2-to-l 
victory  over  the  Athletics  yesterday. 
The  usual  inaugural  ceremony  of  flag- 
raising  with  band-playing  preceded  the 
start  of  play.  Mayor  Curley  threw  the 
first  ball.  Manager  Carrlgan  waa  giv- 
en a  great  floral  horseshoe. 

Run-making  proved  difficult  for  both 
teams  and  errors  figured  in  each  tally. 
Notwithstanding  the  wildness  of  Nab- 
ers.  Philadelphia's  first  pitcher,  the 
Red  Sox  were  unable  to  score  during 
his  four  innings  of  twirling. 

With  Bush  pitching  in  the  sixth,  a 
poor  throw  by  Pick  opened  the  way  to 
a  Boston  run  when  Shorten's  singlo 
sent  Hoblitzell  home.  In  the  next  in- 
ning, Barry's  infield  hit,  errors  by 
Bush  on  two  bunts  and  Scott's  sacrifice 
fly  scored  a  second  run.  It  was  not 
until  the  ninth  that  Philadelphia 
scored,  a  base  on  balls,  an  error  by 
Ru#h  and  La  Joie's  single  «««*'"»  J" 
the  run.    The  score:  R-  w.  u. 

Philadelphia  ...000000001—1  i  4 
Boston    OOOOOllOx— 2     6     1 

Batteries — Nbbers,  Bush  and  Schang, 
Meyers;  Ruth,  Foster  and  Thomas. 

St.  Louis  6;  Cleveland  1. 

Cleveland,  Ohio,  April  13.— Cleveland 
lost  the  opening  game  to  St.  Louis,  6  to 
1  chiefly  because  they  could  not  hit 
Groom,  ex-Federal  league  Pltcher. 
Groom,  while  somewhat  wild  held  the 
Clevelanders  to  three  hits,  being  effec- 
tive with  men  on  bases.  Mitchell,  who 
started  the  game  for  Cleveland,  was 
lacking  in  control  and  after  he  had 
passed  the  first  two  men  in  the  sixth 
inning,  gave  way  to  Bagby,  who  was 
effective  after  that  Inning.  The  sup- 
port given  the  Cleveland  pitchers  was 

Tris  Speaker  played  his  first  game 
as  a  Cleveland  player.  He  fielded  spec- 
tacularly and  walked  three  times,  be- 
ing pas.sed  purposely  twice.  The  crowd 
was  the  largest  that  ever  witnessed  an 
opening  game  in  Cleveland.  Mayor 
Davis    pitched    the    first    ball.      »^f®- 

St.  Louis o^HSiSSS-?   •   i 

Cleveland    10  0  0  0  0  0  0  0—1     84 

Batteries — Groom  and  Hartley;  Mit- 
chell, Bagby  and  O'Neill. 


MEETING  OF 
SPORTSMEN 

E.  A.  Cleasby  Will  Address 

Protective  Game  League 

Members. 


COLLEGE  BASEBALL 


Wisconsin  is  Lucky. 

South  Bend.  Ind.,  April  13. — Al- 
though outhlt  9  to  2.  Wisconsin  won 
from  Notre  Dame  here  yesterday,  1  to 

0.  An  error,  stolen  base  and  scratch 
hit  in  the  fourth  resulted  in  the  only 
run  of  the  game.  Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Wisconsin     00010000  0 — 1     2     2 

Notre    Dame    ...0  00  0000  00 — 0     9     1 

Batteries — Brann,  Cusik  and  Kloser; 
Edgren,  Mapres  and   Keenan. 

Mercer  Ties  Michigan. 

Macon,  Ga.,  April  12. — Curtis  of  Mer- 
cer struck  out  ten  University  of  Mich- 
igan players  yesterday,  but  a  combin- 
ation of  hits  and  errors  resulted  in  a 
ten-lnnlng,    6-to-6    tie.      Score:   R.  H.  E. 

Mercer    ^  1®     0 

Michigan    6     '^.  ,° 

Batteries — Curtis  and  Clements;  Ad- 
rus,    Ohlmacher    and    Dunne. 

YairWinTEaslly. 

New  Haven,  Conn.,  April  13. — 
Bunched  hits,  coupled  with  errors  by 
the  visitors,  gave  Yale  an  easy  12-to-6 
victory  over  the  Fordham  nine  here 
last    night       Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Yale     2  1  3  1  0  0  0  5x— 12  12     2 

Fordham    101  110  001 —  B     7     5 

Batteries — Garfield  and  Munson; 
Martin  and  McGinn. 

Middies  Beat  Cornell. 

Annapolis,  Md.,  April  13.— After  tak- 
ing the  lead  in  the  third  inning  and 
then  holding  the  sailors  for  two  more 
sessions,  Cornell  yesterday  afternoon 
lost  to  the  midshipmen,  6  to  2.     Score: 

R.  H.  E. 

Cornell     00  20  00  000 — 2     4     4 

Navy     00000122  x— 6     6     3 

Batteries — Perkins  and  Clark;  Blod- 
gett   and   Connelly. 

Tigers  Win  Easily. 

Princeton,  N.  J.,  April  12. — Princeton 
defeated  Rutgers  here   yesterday,   9  to 

1.  Wildness  on  the  part  of  the  visi- 
tors* pitchers,  combined  with  their  er- 
rors and  hard  hitting  by  Princeton 
gave  the  locals  an  easy  l^ad,  while 
Chaplin  held  his  opponents  safe.  Er- 
rors by  O'Kane  and  Tibbots  gave  Rut- 
gers  its    only    run. 


E.  A,  Cleasby  of  Eau  Claire.  Wis., 
United  States  inspector  of  the  migra- 
tory bird  law,  has  been  engaged  to 
speak  before  the  members  of  the  Du- 
luth branch  of  the  Minnesota  Game 
Protective  league  at  the  session  of  the 
league  that  will  be  held  this  evening 
in  the  Commercial  club  assembly 
room.  There  will  be  an  Informal  din- 
ner at  6:30  o'clock.  Following  the  din- 
ner will  be  the  meeting.  All  the  mem- 
bers of  the  league  are  requested  to  be 
present  at  the  dinner,  which  will  form 
a  regular  part  of  the  meeting. 

Plans  for  the  annual  convention  of 
the  league,  which  will  be  held  here 
during  the  coming  summer,  will  be 
considered.  A  sportsmen's  snow  will 
also  be  staged  in  connection  with  the 
annual    meeting. 

At  the  meeting  tonight  Mr.  Cleasby 
will  go  into  detail  in  regard  to  the 
working  of  the  migratory  bird  law. 
His  talk  is  expected  to  prove  both 
instructive  and   interesting. 


spring  training  trip  has  caused  hifl 
many  friends  in  this  section  of  th« 
country  to  hope  he  will  become  a  De- 
troit regular. 

DOe  TEAMS  BREAK 
LAST  YEAR'S  RECORD 

Two  Hours'  Gain  Made  in 

All-Alaska  Sweepstake 

Races. 

Nome,  Alaska,  April  13. — Two  hours 
ahead  of  last  year's  time  and  running 
neck  and  neck,  four  of  the  five  con- 
testants with  their  racing  dog  teams  In 
the  aU-AIaska  sweepstakes,  arrived  in 

Haven  yesterday  at  7:32  a.  m.,  147 
miles  from  Nome. 

Those  who  arrived  at  Haven  were 
Robert  Brown,  Fred  Ayer  and  Fred  Del- 
zene.  each  with  fourteen  dogs,  and 
Leonard  Seppel  with  seventeen  Siber- 
ian wolf  hounds.  Brown  and  Delzene 
are  driving  Malamutes  and  Ayer,  a 
team  of  fox  hounds. 

Paul  Kjestad.  with  his  four  bird 
dogs,  had  not  been  reported  at  Haven. 
The  course  is  from  Nome  t©  Ca:.die  and 
return,  412  miles. 


PITCHERS  ARE  DROPPED, 

Bob  Wright   and   Zabel   Let   Go  By 
Cubs;  Cunningham  With  Tigers. 

Bob  Wright  has  been  sent  to  Mobile, 
Ala.,    of    the    Southern    association,    by 

the  Chicago  Cubs.  Wright  pitched  for 
the  Virginia  team  of  tlie  Northern 
league  last  year  and  was  accounted 
one  of  the  best  twirlers  in  the  league. 
The  big  fellow  received  a  tryout  with 
the  Cubs  during  their  Southern  train- 
ing jaunt,  but  it  is  evident  that  Joe 
Tinker  felt  satisfied  that  the  recruit 
was  in  need  of  more  seasoning. 

Zabel,  another  former  Northern 
league  twirler,  was  also  dropped  by 
the  Cubs,  being  sent  to  the  Los  An- 
geles team  of  the  Pacific  Coast  league. 
Zabel  was  one  of  the  greatest  pitchers 
ever  produced  in   this  league. 

George  Cunningham  is  with  the 
Tiger  squad  that  is  in  Chicago.  It  le 
expected  that  the  youngster  will  be 
carried  regularly — at  least  for  a  while. 
The    showing    of    Cunningham    on    the 


JIMMY  AZiN[  iS 
Am  JOY  MOORE 

Little  Duluth  Boxer  Wants 
Match  With  the  Caveman 
—Confident  He  Can  fVlake 
a  Great  Showing. 


Jimmy  Azlne,  about  the  only  Duluth 
fighter  of  recent  years  who  has  made 
a  serious  bid  for  fame,  arrived  here 
last  evening  f.nd  lost  no  time  in  en- 
deavoring to  induce  local  boxing  club 
officials  to  match  him  f-gnlnst  Roy 
Moore,  the  lad  who  stepped  little  Jim- 
my before  the  Minneapolis  Bcxl::g  club, 
some  months  ago. 

With  a  chest  mrld«"-d  in  a  miniature 
replica  of  Tom  Sharkey's  huge  and 
burgeoning  front,  and  lookJrig  in  the 
very  pink  of  condition.  Duluth's  hope 
in  the  featherweight  cla^s.  for  Jimmy 
has   about      decided      forsake    the    116- 


The 
Mer- 
chant 
says: 


SENIOR  FOUR 
MENTO  ROW 

Announcement  Made  That 

Will  Prove  Cheering  News 

to  B.  C.  Followers. 


Members  of  the  Duluth  senior  four 
are  to  row  this  season! 

This  announcement  has  been  made. 
It  win  proye  the  most  joyful  parcel  of 
news  that  has  been  let  loose  for  some 
time,  insofar  as  the  Duluth  Boat  club 
followers  are  concerned. 

With  the  members  of  this  four,  Ned 
Ten  Eyck  will  have  Just  thirteen  senior 
oarsmen  to  count  upon.  With  these 
thirteen  men  It  is  expected  that  the 
club  will  make  a  great  showing  in  the 
senior  event  of  the  Northwestern  and 
National  regattas.  Upon  the  green 
material  will  devolve  the  task  of  win- 
ning in  the  Junior  and  intermediate 
events  of  the  two  regattas. 

Cook  and  Peary  weather  has  so  far 
conspired  to  prevent  the  water  coming 
out  party  of  the  oarsmen.  It  is  ex- 
pected the  *sprlng  opening  will  be  cele- 
brated within  the  next  few  days. 

Little  Jack  Nevell  has  completed  the 
float.  All  that  now  remains  is  for 
the  ice  to  vanish  from  the  bay,  the 
weather  to  moderate,  and  the  boys  to 
accumulate  many  flannels  and  divers 
woolens. 

Should  the  weather  moderate  in  the 
slightest,  it  is  expected  that  the  crew 
men  will  hit  the  water  during  the 
present  week. 


I  am  a  merchant 

I  can  afford  to  smoke  any  cigarette  I  UkCt 
reaardless  of 


Tlie  answer  is:  No  other  cigarette  gives 
me  such  real  enfoymenl  as  ^'Helmar^ 
Tnridsh  cigarettes. 

ThmmMmmt  iobaceo  §mt>  c%ar*M«0  tmTuHMu 

Om^  fMy  imn  cmite  §or  mmyltody^  mtgmrmHm   mmtm 
gmntlmman'm  Mvolr** 


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Thursday, 


THE    DULUTH     HfeRALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


IS 


pound  clAsn.  believ-'s  desptte  a  coupl^ 
of  r.*vfrii-9  that  h<^  can  yet  cltnib 
to  th«»  l«>p  anil  make  a  real  name  for 
hlm»e|f  In  the  realm  of  flHtlaiia. 

Azitie  would  ltk«  to  meet  Roy  Moore 
a(  a  weJ«ht  flsrure  around  the  120- 
nouud  mark.  The  little  Dululhlan  la 
supremely  confident  that  he  can  take 
tlir  m.asure  of  Moore,  the  cave  man,  at 
tfiis  fi^:ure.  .... 

A  cleaiK  ut  little  chap,  a  likeable  lad, 

b 


th"*  "Y"  respectively,  both  put  up  m, 
great  race,  and  the  result  wa*«  a  tie. 
Hrutflord,  however,  almost  flew 
around  the  track  In  the  228  and  noaed 
out  Kelley  for  ttrat  place.  Kelley  cut 
looso  in  his  favorite  race,  the  440.  and 
although  he  was  hard  preoi*ed  all  the 
v.ny  by  younjf  McKay  of  rentral,  he 
crossed  the  tape  flrat.  The  mile  run 
proved  H  thriller.  Th»?  "Y"  represent- 
atives In  this  event  not  a  good  lead 
at   the  start.  tl:e  high  school  pair  con 


"Y"  ATHLETES 
CAPTURE  MEET 

Central  Boys  Put  Up  Hard 

Battle:  Final  Score  Is 

53  to  33, 


How  to  Sneeze,  Blow  and  CougrT 


Hrutfiord  Is  Star  Performer, 

Making  16  Out  of  33 

Points. 


H/  a  total  score  of  68  to  23  athletes 
or  the  local  Y.  M.  C.  A.  last  evenlns 
In  the  ^ssorlition  gymnasium  captured 
th'.-lr  annual  dual  indor  track  meet 
with  the  Central  hiifh  school  repre- 
a  ntatlves.  the  meet  being  somewhat 
onv-sided  but  exceptionally  Intereiitina 
all    th-.-    way    through.  .   ..    .^       ,„ 

The  meH.t  sturte.l  fast  with  the  30- 
yari  dd^h.  won  by  Hrutfiord.  For  the 
ueKt  fe\v  evnts  the  total  score  went 
very  evenly,  but  soon  after  this,  the 
older  and  more  experienced 
frt.ni  the  association  forged 
leiil  and  from  th.'n  on  the  winner 
was'never  in  doubt,  although  the  high 
school  lads  put  up  a  game  tight  all 
the    way. 

Star    Athletea    Tied. 

fr  the  10')-yiUcJ  dash  Hrulflord  and 
Kelley.  Btar  performers  of  Central   and 


athletes 
Into    the 


deciding   the   winner. 

The  pole  vault  proved  exciting, 
some  good  work  being  done  by  all  of 
the  representatives.  Turley.  former 
rnlverslty  of  Missouri  athlete,  Hrut- 
l  fiord  and  Stevens  all  tied  f'»r  first 
I  place,  but  when  the  tie  was  Jumped 
<»ver.  Turley  crept  over  the  bar  and 
no.sed  out  Hrutfiord  who  had  been 
,  Injured  by  a  bad  fall.  Anderson  of 
I  Central  and  Parsons  of  the  "Y"  shot 
the  high  Jump  bar  up  to  ff  feet,  4 
iucheH,  almost  equaling  the  high 
school  reeord,  where  both  men  tied, 
being  unable  to  clear  th.-  fifth  Inch. 
Relar  Rare  Tkriller. 
The  relay  race  was  one  .if  the  most 
e.xclting  events  on  the  whole  program.  1 
The  Y.  M.  C.  A.  men  were  favorites,  i 
having  such  stars  a.s  Halley  and  Kel- 
ley. Kelley  started  for  the  "Y"  and 
up  to  the  time  that  the  third  man  had  I 
finished  on  b<>tlj  sides,  the  older 
sprinters  had  almost  a  lap  lead  on 
Central.  Hrutfiord.  running  last  for 
the  high  school,  started  almost  a  lap 
behind  the  last  V.  M.  C.  A.  man.  The 
high  s<-ho<>|  wKiilwind  shot  around  the 
track  like  a  bull.l  and  rapidly  ate  up 
the  distance.  The  tinl.'sh  was  excep- 
tionally close.  th»'  association  repre- 
sentatives    winning     by     a     matter     of 

Inchej*. 

The  big  star  of  the  meet  was 
Hrutflord  of  the  high  school  aggrega- 
tion. The  fleet  athlete  from  the  liill- 
top  gathered  a  total  of  16  points,  the 
result  of  two  firsts,  a  tie  for  first, 
and  a  tie  for  second.  The  work  of 
the  high  school  ki.l  more  than  came 
ui>  to  expectations  and  promisoii  a 
wonderful   season    for   him    this  spring. 

Kelley,  noted  University  of  Penn- 
sylvania sprintr-r,  and  winner  In  sev- 
eral A.  A.  U.  m.et.s.  al.so  matie  a  great 
showing,    getting    a    total    of    13    points. 

A     tabulated     result     of     th.i    several 
events    of    .the    meet     follows. 
30-Yard    Ilanb. 

Hrutflord,    Central,    flist;    Bailey 


Nowadays  the  doctor  haa  to  teach 
people  how  to  stand,  sit.  breathe,  eat. 
brush  the  teeth,  dress,  work  and  play. 
We  have  offered  suggestions  about  all 
—  of    these    things    In 

this  department 
.N'ow  let  us  explain 
how  one  should 
snueze.  blow  the 
nose,  and  cough. 

A  good,  hearty 
sneeze  is  an  excel- 
lent thing  for  the 
health.  It  is  na- 
ture's own  antidote 
or  p  r*o  i«  h  y  I  actic 
against  coryza  and 
various  other  Infec- 
tions gaining  en- 
trance through 
nasal  mucous  mem-  I 
I>rane.     To  suppress  I 


M.  C 


Y. 

A.. 


Y, 

C, 


M. 

A., 


,  Cen- 
thlril. 


depo.^ited   with 
u.*^  is  <;afe- 
giiarcled  by 
appro v^ed  aifd 
up-to-date 
methods. 
1*2 very  de- 
positor of  this 
bank  is  ac- 
corded 
courteous 
treatment  and 
the  most  Hberal 
terms  con- 
sistent with 
sound  banking. 

American 

Exchange 

National 

Bank 


- 


M.   C.  A.,   second:    Higglns,   Y 
third.      Time — 3  1-5   s.conds. 
loo- Yard     Uawk. 
Hrutflord.   Central,   and    Kelly. 
C.  A..   tl«-.l   for  first;  Bailey.   Y.  M 
third.      Time — 12    seconds. 
•  Half    Mile. 
Olson.  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  first;  Arnold 
tral,     second;     Burns.      Central, 
Time — 2    minutes    12  4-5   seconds. 
Shot     Put. 
Patton,   Y.   M.   C.   A.,    first;   Munch.   Y 
M.    C.    A.,    seiond;    K.lly,    Y.    M.    C.    A. 
third.      Distance — 37    feet    7    Inches. 
230-Var4l     Uaith. 
Hrutfiord.  Central,  first;   Kelly,  Y.  M. 
C      A.,     second:     P.ailey,     Y.     M.     C     A.. 
thirti.      Time — 2i»    seconds. 

Hiffh     JMOBp. 

Anderson,    Central,    an.l    Parsons,    Y. 
M.  C.   A.,   tied  fo   rfirst;   Hitfgins.    Y.   M. 
C.    A.,    third.      Height— 5    feet    4    inches. 
Mile    Rub. 
.Tentoft,   Central,    first;    Maske,   Y.    M. 
C.     A.,     second;     <Jow.     Central,      third. 
Time — 5    minutes    12    seconds. 
Pole   Vault. 
Turley,    Y.    M.   C.    A.,    first;    Hrutflord. 
Central,   and  Stevens,  Y.   M.  C.  A.,  tied 
for   second.      Height — 9    feet. 
440-Vard     I)a«h. 
Kelly.    Y.    M.    C.    A.,     first;     McKay. 
Central,    second:     Kerr.     Y.      M.    C.     A., 
third.      Time — 1    minute    I  J-5    seconds. 
Relay    Raee. 
Four  men  on  each  team;   won  by  Y. 
M     C.    A. 


ear.  Also  It  giw«M  a  mAre  effectual 
clearing  of  the  nasai  passkge.  Alsw  it 
causes  no   abnormal   congAtlon. 

Troublesome  cough  ly***'"  persists 
long  after  the  ortglnllf  IrrltatKm  or 
cause  has  disappeared.*  Or  a  cough 
may  be  frequent,  harsh,  annoying  to 
the  IndlYidual  and  all  about  him,  yet 
without  noticeable  exp«(ttoratlon.  Take 
It  from  Dr.  A,  A.  Pleyt^  of  the  Wiscon- 
sin state  «anatorlum;^*the  following 
Is  excellent  f^i*  one  forced  to 
to  the  deslrfe  to  cough:  Fold  the 
handkerchief  into  a  Ave-lnch  square 
pad.  Hold  it  over  the  moutl.i  tightly, 
not  loosely.  Tlien  cough.  The  noise 
is  muffled  by  the  hai^«rrh1ef.  With 
practice  you  can  ieariv  to  cough  almost 
silently — a  very  desirable  acconapUsli- 
the  twent.  too<  when  the  sermon  Is  tiresome 
and  long  drawn  out.  Besides,  be  It 
noted,     this     muzzles    jiiut     cough     and 


VICTIM  STHi 
UNCONSCIOUS 

Edward     Tahr,     Injured 

By  Jitney,  Has  Small 

Chance  to  Recover. 


I  plan 
J  yield 


Driver  Absolved  of  Blame 

and  Released  By  the 

Police. 


WlLUAM9RALXMa;.X:' 


a  sneeze,  for  a  little! 
as  pending { 
the  conclusion  of  the  sermon  (preach- 
ers generally  are  brief  nowadays),  you 
make  gentle  pressure  upon  the  upper 
lip  upward  against  the  base  of  the 
nose  with  the  edge  of  She  Index  finger. 
Hut  tt)  muzzle  a  sneeze  which  Is  bound 
to  com«".  and  for  the  sake  of  your 
healtii  should  come,  you  simply  hold 
your  handkerchief  over  your  nose, 
thus  avoiding  the  spraying  of  the  al- 
mosi>here  with  infectious  droplets,  and 
perhaps  saving  your  neighl»or  from 
catching  your  "cyld."  If  you  fall  In 
this  duty  you  deserve  punishment  quite 
as  mueh  as  the  Impossible  person  who 
spUs    on    the    floor. 

Mo.-i  people  Injure  themselves  in 
blowing  the  nose.  The  wrong  way  to 
do  this  Is  by  grasping  the  proboscis 
firmly  l)etween  the  fingers  and  blowing 
for  all  the  world  as  though  the  Inten- 
tion were  to  balloon  the  lungs  and 
burst  the  ear  drums.  The  right  way 
is  by  closing  only  one  nostril  at  a 
time  by  pressure  and  then  blowing  the 
other.  This  obviates  the  risk  of  forcing 
Infectlou.s  secretions  up  into  the 
eustacliian  tube  and  perhaps  setting  up 
earache  or  inflammation  of   the  middle  | 


makes    you    a    iompara^lv<jly 
valid  to  be  at  large 


safe    in- 


QIESTIOXS    AKD    ANSWERS. 
Serum  PenueateM  the  Entire   Systeui. 

You  doctors,  contends  an  anti-some- 
thing, have  serum  on  the  brain.  Even 
whooping-cough  must  now  be  "in- 
jected"! 

Answer — Every  good  doctor  has  his 
brain  full  of  serum,  also  his  liver, 
heart,  lungs,  and  other  functionally  ef- 
ficient organs.  You  ^ntis,  i)erhap8. 
rely  upon  a  good  grade  of  Ink  to  main- 
tain your  circulation.  There  Is  no 
serum  In  the  vacclne'^hlch  prevents 
and  cures  whooping-cough. 

MS'hy  Our  (•randfatiivrat  Roi»e  Earir- 

When  I  was  a  young  man  I  always 
got  up  before  6  o'clock,  a  grandfather 
writes,  deploring  his  grandson's  lazi- 
ness. 

Answer — In  those  ^ay*  the  air  In 
your  bedroom  becam|  u^  afiominable 
that  you  simply  couran't  "stand  It  any 
longer,  so  you  were  -up  bright  and 
early  In  the  morning  Nowadays  the 
sleeping  quarters  in  Hpt^-Hlgent  house 
holds  are  the  healti 
house,  and  the  yo^ 
spend    too    much    time 


l«t    part    of    the 
\k  i  person  can't 
there. 


:i 


CHICKEN  CROQUETTES 
FATAL  FDR  PsF,  MURPHY 

Grand  Counsellor  of  Minne- 
sota U.  C.  T.  Is  Ptomaine 
Poisoning  Victim. 

.'Stillwater,  Minn..  April  13.— Patrick 
F.  Murphy.  45  years  old.  grand  coun- 
sellor for  the  Minnesota-North  Dakota 
Jitrlsdlctlon  of  the  V.  f.  T.  of  America, 
and  well  known  traveling  man  for 
twenty  years,  died  at  his  home  at  6 
p.  m.  Tuesday,  after  a  throe-days'  sick- 
ness resulting  from  ptomaine  poison- 
ing 

Mr.  Murphy  was  taken  111  at  Spooner. 
WU.,  Mojnlay.  a  few  hours  after  eat- 
ing  some  chicken   croquette.*. 

• 

Piled  *■  South  Dak««a. 
Pierre,  8.  D.,  April  13. — The  name 
of  Senator  Cummins  of  Iowa  for 
president,  and  E.  J.  Burkett  of  Ne- 
braska for  vice  president,  as  Repub- 
lican nominees  under  the  state  pri- 
mary act.  were  filed  with  the  secre- 
tary    of    state    yesterday. 


Dr  Brady  »iil  «ns»ff  til  fcljnMl  lelteri  p?rt«ininc  to  ii*«Uh.  If  your  qufstion  1*  <  #|r«l  Intfffst  It  win  be 
ainwrr.d  ttiKMicb  th.*"-  columns;  If  iu>t  it  will  be  WBW^rH  pcMooally  If  sUmpwl,  »4drMf^  mwlppf  U  fnclowd. 
pr.  Bi«d>  "ill  itut  pr  Mrile  for  luOivliJual  rmf j  or  ni4k<  dl4Ci><»i<n.  Ad**-*.  Pr.  WilRlkit  Bradr.  rare  of  tUi 
ne«>.>«l><'r.      Prutwtwl   bj-   The   Adanu   Ne«si»i»(XT  Sertlo*  \^ 


i^^^^^^t 


Knocked  down  by  a  jitney  bus  last 
night  at  11  o'clock.  Edward  Tahr. 
aged  35,  has  been  unconscious  at  St. 
Luke's  hospital  for  twelve  hours.  He 
sustained  a  concussion  of  the  brntn 
and  a  possible  skull  fracture,  and  has 
but  a  slight  chance  to  live,  aay  phy- 
sicians. 

Tahr,  who  lives  at  1105  "West  Michigan 
street,  was  waiting  for  a  street  car  at 
Kleventh  avenue  west  and  Michigan 
street,  when  the  jitney,  driven  by 
Michael  Mignella.  struck  him.  Mlg- 
nella  was  absolved  of  all  blame  for 
the  affair  and  released  by  pol'ce  after 
a   short   investigation. 

The  Jitney  was  going  west  on  Michi- 
gan street,  parallel  to  a  Duluth  and 
Superior  car.  As  the  car  and  the  auto 
reached  Eleventh  aveque.  Mignella 
was  driving  at  about  the  same  speed 
as  that  of  the  street  car.  and  was  a 
few  feet  ahead  of  the  rear  gates. 

At  the  east  crossing  he  noticed  two 
men  standing  'n  the  center  of  the 
street,  waiting  to  board  the  car.  Tahr 
was  about  five  feet  from  the  curb, 
and  his  companion  was  four  or  Ave 
feet   nearer  the   car  track. 

Mignella  sounded  his  horn  and  threw 
on  the  brakes,  he  said,  but  knew  that 
he  would  be  unable  to  stop  In  time, 
so  he  turned  shari)ly  towards  the  curb, 
thinking  that  Tahr  would  jump 
forward.  The  man  didn't  move  a  step 
until  the  fender  struck  him,  Mignella 
told   police. 

Edward  Kerwln  and  Edward  Randell. 
Commercial  club  employes,  who  were 
riding  in  the  jitney,  confirmed  Mig- 
nella's  version  of  the  accident  and 
laid  all  the  blame  on  Tahr.  Mig- 
nella stopped  his  machine  and  waited 
until  the  police  emergency  arrived. 
Then  he  reported  at  headquarters. 

The  injured  .man  was  rushed  to  the 
hospital  and  Police  Surgeon  Harry 
Klein  was  summoned. 


PUPILS  WILL 
PROTECT  GAME 

Minnesota  League  Branch 

Formed  at  Central 

School. 


Three  Prominent  Conserva- 
tionists Give  Addresses 
at  Meeting. 


In 

officers 


this 
and 


CONFIDENCE  in  Your  DENTIST 

means  supreme  satisfaction  to  you.  We  can't  win  your 
confidence  unless  you  give  us  a  tHal.  The  ''•«<'"  ^''tr'fat 
perform  expert  dentistry  at  low  cost  U  that  we  treat 
hundreds  of  patients  where  tha  ordinary  den- 
treats  onlT    It's  tl^   ▼•l«»a  •«  fc«a»«e«a  M 


de- 


Students  of  Central  high  school.  In- 
terested In  the  conservation  of  wild 
life,  yesterday  afternoon  orgaiilzed  a 
high  school  branch  of  the  Minnesota 
(Jame  Protective  league,  to  be  af- 
filiated with  the  stale  organization 
and  directly  connected  with  the  Du- 
luth branch.  Nearly  100  boys  enthus- 
iastically responded  to  a  call  made  by 
F.  B.  Carey,  head  of  the  commercial 
department  at  Central,  and  vice  presi- 
dent of  the  Duluth  branch  of  the  state 
league,  and  following  several  Interest- 
ing talks  by  men  prominent 
work  the  boys  elected 
organized    th^lr    branch. 

KIre  Addre«»es  fJlvea. 
Thre  men  prominently  connected 
with  the  conservation  move  In  the 
Northwest  addressed  the  young 
sportsmen.  James  A.  Lawrle,  secre- 
tary-treasurer of  the  state  commis- 
sion; George  S.  Stevens  prominent 
Duluth  nature  lover,  and  t'Vw"' 
Cleasby.  district  inspector  of  the  na- 
tional migratory  bird  law.  were  in- 
troduced by  Mr.  Carey  as  the  prin- 
cipal speakers,  and  they  all  praised 
the  boys  for  their  efforts  to  save  the 
rapidly    vanishing   wild    life. 

"The  boys  and  young  men, 
Glared  Mr.  I^wrle,  "have  a  far  greater 
influence  in  this  work  than  most  of 
them  realize.  I  believe  that  a  high 
school  branch  would  be  able  to  do 
especially  good  work  towards  check- 
ing the  methods  of  the  reck  ess  and 
careless  slaunhterer  of  wild  life,  and 
that  a  systematic  co-operation  be- 
tween the  young  and  the  older  sports- 
men would  be  able  to  ^accomplish 
wonderful  results  In  this  big  field. 
<;ame    Sanetaary. 

Mr  Lawrie  spoke  of  an  attempt 
that  was  being  made  to  liave  a  cer- 
tain tract  of  land  near  Milepost  49 
on  the  D.  &  I.  R-  railroad  converted 
1 

w"uldrbe''anowed.  The  land  at  pres- 
ent he  declared,  contained  a  larue 
amount  of  deer  and  other  game,  and 
that  it  would  make  an  Ideal  place 
for  a  refuge.  Fishing  will  be  encour- 
aged to  keep  out  the  poachers,  an.l 
members  of  the  high  school  organiza- 
tion will  probably  have  charge  of 
much  of  the  work  of  -•t»»>li.hlng  the 
park,  putting  up  ligns  in  tt.  taking 
care    of    it    and    acting    somewhat    as 

"^^Mr"  Lawrie  also  Impressed  the 
necessity  of  establishing  a  hatchery 
for  brook  trout -In  this  vicinity,  de- 
claring that  the  streams  Tn  this  part 
of  the  state  that  otherwise  would  be 
nearly  stripped  by  Augiist.  could  be 
kept     talrly    well    stocked    throughout 

Tlve*eUughterlng  of  harmless  birds 
and  animals  within  the  city  limits 
despite  the  law.  was  well  brought  out 
by  Mr.  Stevens  In  his  talk.  He  de- 
clared that  the  numbers  of  feathered 
folk  were  annually  decreasing  around 
his  little  summer  resort  near  Fond  du 
Lac  due  to  the  deplorable  methods 
of  the  persons  who  went  out  merely 
to  kill  whatever  they  saw.  Most  of 
the  birds,  however,  still  appreciate 
kindness,  he  said,  and  It  Is  pos.slble 
to  get  many  of  them  to  eat  out  of 
one's    hands. 

Natwral   Ea*»ilr«  •*  <»•««'•      .    ,^ 

Mr  Cleasby  brought  out  in  his  talk 
the  necessity  of  protecllng  the  wild 
life  from  its  natural  enemies.  H^  de- 
clared that  not  so  much  attention 
should  be  paid  to  the  conviction  and 
prosecution  of  law  violators  as  to  ,th- 
protection  of  the  game 
place,  from  these  persons 
explained     the    appalling  ,,   .    a 

Wild   fowl  and   the   effects   that   It  had 
had    on    the    agricultural    world. 

T  F  Phillips,  head  of  the  physics 
department  of  Central,  and  a  promi- 
nent Duluth  sportsman,  interestingly 
explained  the  methods  of  camera 
hunting,  declarinc  that  a  good,  un- 
usual picture  of  aome  wild  creatura 
required    far    more    skill    than    merely 


shooting    the    animal    from   some   long 
distance.  i      \ 

Following  th«  addresses  the  stu- 
dents organized  their  branch.  The  fol- 
lowing officers  were  eiledted:  Ned  Mc- 
Nulty.  president;  Harvey  Owens,  vice 
president;  Albert  tiross,  treasurer,  and 
Lawrence  Moore,  secretary.  A  com- 
mittee was  appointed  to  draw  up  a 
constitution  and  the  next  meeting 
will  be  held  on  the  Wednesday  after 
vacation,    two    weeks    front    yesterday. 

HSKEH  TO  HEAD 

POLICE  REUEF 

Duluth's   "Finest''   Lineup 

Before  Acting  Chief  for 

Inspection. 

Duluth'a  "finest"  lined  up  before 
Acting  Chief  Fiskett  yesterday  after- 
noon for  the  annual  review  and  inspec- 
tion, with  sixty  odd  men  In  the   troop. 

After  reviewing  the  men,  the  com- 
manding officer  made  a  careful  ln.<ipee. 
tlon  of  ujilforme.  guns,  handcuffs  and 
other  equipment.  In  several  cases  new 
Hnlforms  were  ordered. 

Just  before  the  inspection,  the  Du- 
luth Police  Relief  association  held  its 
annual  nieetlng  and  elected  officers  for 
the  cumipg  year.  Capt.  Fiskett  was 
re-elected  presidi-nt;  Sergeant  David 
Butchart  w^s  re-elected  vice  president- 
Secretary  Fred  .Johnson  was  elected 
treasurer,  succeeding  Lieut,  (iustav 
i..ahti  and  Lieut.  Schulte  was  re-elected 
secretary. 

The  association  fund  now  amounts  to 
t23.4'j0.  according  to  the  trea.surer's  re- 
port. Of  this,  120.000  Is  Invested  In  city 
bonds.  A  resol«it<on  providing  for  the 
purchase  of  f.l.OOO  more  of  bonds  was 
adopted. 

Two  death  benefits  "H^ere  paid  during 
the  year.  One  of  $5<HJ  went  to  the 
heirs  of  Former  Patrolman  William  E. 
Terry,  who  dieri  In  Missouri  several 
months  ago.  and  one  of  $100  went  to 
ex -Patrolman  Frank  j^rqvlnsky,  now 
of  Bovey,  Minn  The  latter  was  for 
the  death  of  a  wife.  j 


PREDICT  BOOM 
IN  jUILDING 

Great  Activity  in  Northwest 

Foreshadowed  By  Orders 

for  Materials. 


Contractors  Order  Goods 

as  Never  Before  in  This 

Territory. 


)n  the  u.  &  I.  «••  I »«••"«"  v^/i...r.  ..^^ 
nto  a  game  sanctuary,  where  fish  ng 
>ut     no     game     hunting    of    any      kind 


N.  Y.  PRESBYTEflY  CASTS 
DOUBT  ON  BIBUE  TALES 

New  York,  April  l,"?.— ^The  New  Tork 
presbytery  Is  today  6n  record.  S4  to  3, 
that  the  biblical  story  of  the  virgin 
birth  of  Christ  and  'Qther  Bible  mir- 
acles are  not  to  be  accepted  too  liter- 
ally. The  action  was  taken  In  accept- 
ing as  ministers  three  graduates  of 
the  Union  Theological  seminary  who 
refused  to  affirm  the  virgin  birth  story 
and  refused  to  acknowledge  the  rais- 
ing of  Lazarus  from  the  dead,  or  the 
i^arrative  of  Jonah  and  the   whale. 


PIMPLES  ON  FACE 


■^r»" 


th.)    first 

He    well 

decrease    of 


Also  Blotches.     So.  Severe  Irrita- 
ted Parts  by  Scratching.   Very 
Annoying,    In  Six  Months 

HEALED  BY  CUTICURA 
SOAP  AND  OINTMENT 

"I  bad  a  cass  of  sitiD  tronbla  that  vaa 
pretty  bad.  It  cama  <m  ^  plmptos  and 
aort  of  btotches  and  would  Itch  and  bum 

torn  to  awake  In 

The  itching  and 

so  severe  that 

affected  part* 

by   seratcWttt     They    ware 

prfacipallyJl  my  Taos  and 

were  vct^BW^ldng. 

"Aft«3WP>B3r  spealdoff 
favorabljrfrfi^uticura  Soap 
and  Otatmant  I  derittod  to  try  them.  I 
noticed  great  relief  amm^f*^'^'^  "^  » 
quarter  of  a  box  of  -«nt4eura  Ointment 
tocethsr  with  the  Soa0~VDBl  la  oesrty  six 
months  I  was  haaled.*'  Hfrtgned^  Leander 
8.  Corn.  209  lafajr«!t*B.^  blTd..  Detroit, 
Mich..  Sept.  1.  1915.      \    ,, 

Sample  Each  FVc^  by  Mall 

with  32-p.  Skin  Book  oa  rsQuaat.     Ad- 
dress post-card  »*Catienra,  Dapt.  T,  Bas- 
.**    Sold  througbouik  the  world. 


Remarkable  activity  In  building  op- 
erations over  the  whole  Northwest  dur- 
ing the  present  season  Is  foreshadowed 
In  the  extent  of  the  orders  being  placed 
for  supplies  and  materials  of  all  kinds. 
Contractors  and  dealers  are  report- 
ed to  be  ordering  goods  on  a  scale  that 
has  perhaps  never  before  been  equaled 
in  this  territory.  Trade  authorities  say 
that  so  urgent  has  the  demand  become 
for  materials  for  use  In  building  proj- 
ects, that  manufacturers  are  experien- 
cing difficulty  In  filling  orders  In  some 
lines. 

€ialn  For  Plambera. 
William  F.  Harper,  manager  of  the 
Duluth  Plumbing  Supplies  company, 
said  today  that  an  increase  of  100  per 
cent  during  the  last  three  months  over 
last  year  had  been  recorded  by  his 
hou.se  in  plumbing  and  heating  sup- 
plies. "Exceptionally  prosperous  con- 
ditions are  prevailing  in  the  mining 
districts  of  Montana  and  through  the 
farming  territory  of  North  Dakota  and 
Western  Minnesota,  and  business  men 
are  counting  upon  a  splendid  season, 
according  to  reports  we  are  receiviii« 
from  our  salesmen  covering  those 
grounds,"   Mr.  Harper  averred. 

His  information  is  also  to  the  effect 
that  many  building  projects  mounting 
up  to  a  large  aggregate  will  be  under- 
taken this  year  In  the  range  towns  and 
through  the  Northern  Michigan  Copper 
country.  In  the  latter  territory.  It  is 
regarded  as  certain  he  finds  that  many 
Improvements  In  the  building  line  that 
had  been  held  in  abeyance  for  years 
vk'iil  be  undertaken  this  season.  The 
copper  mining  interests  are  reported 
to  feel  so  sanguine  that  production  of 
the  "red  metal"  will  require  to  be 
maintained  almost  at  the  peak  for 
years  that  they  now  feel  warranted  In 
proceeding  with  projected  btUlding  im- 
provements. 

Heavy  Saleii  Foree. 
The  Duluth  Plumbing  Supplies  com- 
pany is  now  employing  three  salesmen 
on  the  rt>ad,  covering  a  territory  in- 
cluding Minnesota.  Northern  Michigan, 
Northern  Wisconsin,  North  Dakota  and 
Montana.  It  Is  specializing  In  the 
Kohler  enameled  plumbing  ware  made 
at  Kohler.  Wis.,  which,  on  account  of 
Its  distinctive  features,  has  attained 
wide  notice.  A  gratifying  trade  has 
al.so  been  built  up  in  Capitol  heaters 
and  radiators,  that  line  having  been 
carried  by  It  for  years.  An  Interesting 
display  of  these  goods  »*,now  being 
staged  at  Its  showrooOts.  802-04  vN  est 
Michigan  street. 


4 

«-  .-r^— W- 


"^Nations 

Hi^heft  Marked  Brewing 

BECAUSE  of  BUDWEISER^S  sterling 
I  quality  and  goodness,  it  has  made 
"  millions  of  friends.  On  land  or  sea 
—at  home  or  abroad— this  beer  is  justly 
honored  as  "the  greatest  of  them  ^. 
Continuously  brewing  an  honest  beer 
of  a  unifomi  Quality  Purity  Mildness  and 
exclusive  Saazer  Hops  Havor,  has  created 
a  demand  for  this  world-famed  beverage 
that  exceeds  any  other  beer  by  millions  of 

botdeS.  ANHEUSER-BUSCH-  SZ  LOUIS.  US.  A. 


r— - 


Vbitors  Id  St.  Loins  are  oourteouat/  tovtted  to  inspect 
our  pUnf  coven  141  acres 


^Sr 


Means  Moderatioa 
W.  A.  Wagner 


Distributor 


Dtilath.  Minn. 


SHORT-TIME  FURNITURE  STORAGE 

Possibly  your  leaso  expires  April  Ist.  and  you  can't  get  Into 
your  new  place  until  May.  Then  store  your  goods  here  during  tho 
month.  Many  of  our  patrons  use  our  storage  facilities  one  or  two 
months  at  a  time.  Clean,  dry,  sanitary,  storage  rooms.  And  very 
moderate  charges. 

DULUTH  VAN  &  STORAGE  COMPANY 

18  FOURTH  A\EXUI::   WEST. 


»— — 


^- 


FOR  raillTllie,  UTHOSMPHIIG,  EII6AmC,  BIWIIIG! 

QUICK  SERVICE  AND  EXPERT  WORKMANSHIP.  CALL 

J.  J.  LeTOURNEAU  PRINTING  CO. 


231   WE8T  FIRST  STREET. 


lh«  nitfi^^^ 
I  hTftat4|r^ 


BANK  DEPOSITS 

Next  Report  in  Duluth  Ex- 
pected to  Show  Heavy 
Gains. 

Deposits  in  Duluth  national  and 
state  baJ>li»  hare  now  attained  new- 
high  figures  and  it  is  predicted  that 
the  next  statement  of  conditions  will 
show  a  gain  of  several  million  dol- 
lars over  the  last  report  as  on  March 
4,  That  Is  thought  to  be  due  to  em- 
ployment at  good  wages  being  better 
here  than  in  years  and  to  the  influx 
of   considerable     new     capital   to     the 

city.  ..»,«»,. 

An  official  of  the  First  National 
bank  said  today  that  Ub  savings  and 
general  d<^poBlt.s  have  gone  up  sur- 
prisingly during  the  last  few  weeks. 
"It  iB  difficult  to  say  where  the  money 
is  coming  from,  but  nevertheless  it  is 
accumulating,  presumably  on  account 
of  general   conditions,"   he  said. 

Local  bankers  say  that  the  call  for 
funds  for  employment  in  Industrial 
and  comnaerclaj  dlroctions  has  picked 
up      remarkably      Uit«lr      and      taking 


everything  Into  account  they  "f*^ 
the  outlook  as  promising  a  record 
year's   bvielness.  ^^_ 

llGALTiGHfFOR 
WIRELESS  STATIOH 

French    Company    Would 

Take  Tuckerton  Plant 

From  Germans. 

Trenton.  N.  J.  April  13.— The  legal 
fight  of  the  Compagnle  Unlverselle  D^ 
Telegraphle  Et  Do  Telephonic  Satis  Fil 
a  I'Yench  corporation,  against  the 
HochfrcQuenz-Maschlnen  Aktiengesell- 
schaft  Fur  Drathlose  Aktlengesell- 
German  concern,  to  get  title  to  th* 
Tuckerton  wireless  telegraph  station, 
was  renewed  in  the  court  of  chancery 
here  yesterday. 

The  court  of  errors  and  appeals  re- 
cently decided  that  a  court  of  the  Unit- 
ed Slates  could  not  hear  a  suit  between 
belligerent  nations.  taking  the  vi^hv 
that  neutrality  might  better  !><•  pre- 
served by  upholding  the  legal  rights  of 
litigantt»  than  by  Ignoring  them. 

In  lt»  answer,  filed  In  the  court  of 
chancery  yesterday,  the  German  cor- 
poration again  brought  up  the  question 
of  neutrality  and  contended  that  the 
litigation  should  be   dismissed. 

According  to  the  contention  of  the 
French  concern,  the  German  corpora- 
tion agreed  to  sell  the  station  before 
the  outbreak  of  the  war.  Direct  com- 
munication from  Tuckerton  is  pos««lble 
with  the  wireleas  station  at  Ellvese, 
Prussia,  and  the  German  corporation 
claims  that,  although  the  French  con- 
cern had  no  ^>ptlOB  on  the  Eilve««  sta- 


tion, no  attempt  had  been  made  to  pur- 
chase It. 

The  intention  of  the  suit,  the  answer 
alleges,  is  to  prevent  official  communi- 
cation between  the  L'nited  States  and 
Germany.  It  Is  averred  that  officials 
of  the  United  States  have  transmitted 
confidential  messages  from  Washlug- 
ton  to  Berlin  by  use  of  the  Tuckerton 
station  and  that  Ambaiisador  von 
Bernstorff  also  has  communicated  with 
the  German  government  by  use  of  th» 
New  Jersey  station. 

Cessation  of  wireless  communication 
between  Tuckerton  and  Germany,  by 
order  of  the  court,  would  be  contrary 
to  policy  and  contrary  to  the  duty  of 
neutrality  incumbent  upon  and  as- 
sumed by  the  United  States,  the  Gor- 
man  company  claims. 

ENGINEERS  HOLDING 
MEETING  AT  CHICAGO 

Chicago.  April  13. — A  two-day  con- 
ference of  delegates  from  engineering 

societies  from  New  Cngland  to  Cali- 
fornia, representing  th«*  views  of 
100,000  men  who  are  r<gard»^d  ai?  "pro- 
fessional engir.eers."  b«*gan  here  t">- 
drty.  being  called  by  a  "get-together^ 
bpirlt  that  the  recent  agitation  on  ths 
subject  of  preparedness  has  inspired, 
even  among  conservative  profesj^lonal 
men.  notably  electrical,  mining  and 
civil  engineers. 

Delegates  from  small  and  large  en- 
gineering organizations — city,  slate 
and.  national— will  discuss  in  detail 
large  questions  affecting  all  profes- 
sional engineers  and  It  is  expecto* 
that  the  conference  will  result  In  « 
union  that  will  effectively  work  for 
the  general  welfare  of  the  professlo*. 

The  principal  subjects  to  be  dis- 
cussed are  the  benefits  of  co-operstlon 
in  securing  greater  efficiency  and  th« 
methods  successfully  followed  In  I'hlla- 
delphla.  St.  Louis.  St.  Paul  and  oth*r 
cities. 




1947 


Icock 

PLASTERS 


Rheumatism, 

Lame  Back* 
—Any  Local  Pain. 


AhMVS  Immmm 


ii« 


"~a     DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


14 


Thursday, 


THE     DULtJTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


>*. 


* 


^>^>^^S^>^'i^^^>^>^^t^im^im^^t^^>^f^l^0^^»^»^l^*^t0^^*^>^k^*^<^^^*^t^t^t^»^*^^^^)^^^^: 


OvUl/ir  REPORTER 


A  Nice  Pleasant  Memory 


By  "HOP" 


Me.  "TO  Your,  pe:(^t(5T5? 

10  PULLFOR(Me-- 


i 


Broady;    superintendent 
tlon,   Lowry  Smith. 


of     oonstiuc- 


plant  \\t\it 
8tiindi>(>int 
loot  t;iken. 
thfnie  iiU.' 
about    *500 


f«r  more  costly  from  the 
uf  dani«K«»  done  than  the 
The  tliicvfs  Meciired  some- 
$35  f«>r  the  junk,  while 
dainai^e   was  done   to   valu- 


ibl<     miHhinery    in    the    faetory. 


BRASS  THIEF 

K  ^FNTFNHFD  big  game  preserve 

10  OCillLllULU.  FLOODWOOD'S  DESIRE 


tain    Heeiman 
.seven     feet    of 
that    on    May   3 
bis    lake. 


recalls  that  there  was 
snow  on  April  18  and 
the  Ice  was  out  of  the 


Gets  One  Year  at  Grand 

Forks  After  Being  Caught 

in  Moorhead. 


Said  to  Have  Been  Impli- 
cated in  Moorhead  Ex- 
press Office  Theft. 


Commercial  Club  Petitions 

Game  Commission  to 

Establish  One. 


<^r:.nd  Forks.  X.  P..  April  13.— One 
yr^nr  in  the  state  peniteotiary  at  Bls- 
rnr.rok  v.as  the  Mnl«nie  Judf?e  Cooley 
in  djsiriel  louri  yesterday  afternoon 
imposed  on  Kdward  Ivons.  arrested  In 
Moorhead.  Minn.,  on  the  charge  of 
.st<  .ilinsr  hrasi.««  and  copper 
fror.i  tin  flHX  fiber  mill  here 
hjitl    pUaded    Kviilty. 

The  ease  ajrainst 
to  be  implieatcd  in 
up    lat*  r 


13.— (Spe- 
Floodwood 
club   held   its  annual   meet- 
night  and  re-elected  prac- 
the    old    officers   as    follows: 
M.    W.    Hlnpley;    vice    presl- 
E.    Prandmier:   secretary,  (>.   I. 
treasurer.    E.   H.   Robinson;  di- 


Floodwood,     Minn.,     April 
elal    to    Tlie    Herald.) — The 
t'ommereial 
Ing  Tuesday 

tlcally   all 
President, 
dent,    .1. 
Idzort  1< 


GREAT  PAVING  PUN 
FOR  BISMARCK,  N.  D. 

Proposition     to     Expend 
Nearly  Half  Million  Im- 
proving City. 


Garfield    Black- 


fixtures 
after  he 


r.    H.    Smith    said 
the     theft,     comes 


Mixed  ill    Anodier  Crime. 

Arthur  «;<'ff.  sptiial  agreiit  for  the 
Northern  racilic  railway,  has  been  in 
th«  litv  investigating  pa.st  actions 
of  l^'up.  He  lonsulted  the  prisoner 
nnd  claims  to  have  obtained  an  admis- 
mf.n  fn.ni  liini  that  he  participated  in 
the  lobberv  of  the  Xorthern  Pacido 
exprts.s  office  at  .Moorhead  on  April 
13,  1J»14.  when  $U'ft  in  cash  and  two 
small    checlts    were    stolen. 

AccordinK  to  I^our's  story,  he  was 
"lianpinK  around"  tlte  Xorthern  Pa- 
cific d«  pot  at  Moorhead  on  tlie  night 
«.f  the  crime.  Thrfc  other  fellows 
•whom  he  claims  he  did  not  know  ap- 
proachrd  him  while  the  agent  was 
out  and  said  th<  y  were  going  to 
a  littlf  job."  Thi.-<  was  about  5:30 
o'clock  in  the  afternoon.  Long  eays 
they  asked  him  to  stand  guard  at  the 
north  door  of  the  station  and  warn 
th'm  if  anv  one  came.  The  prisoner 
dtelares  that  he  did  not  ask  any  ques- 
tions, but  went  to  the  nortli  door  and 
and  waited.  Soon,  he  says,  sonic  one 
4  a  me  to  the  door,  opened  it  and 
whcivtd  out  $24.  Long  declares  that  he 
then  "beat  it,"  that  he  hasn't  seen 
the  other  men  since  that  time  and 
does  not  know  who  they  are. 
a     The     recent     robbery     at     the     fiber 


rectois,    A.    *.'.     Broun 
wood  and  J-   ^V.   .Vew. 

Three  new  members  were  admlttid 
and  now  practically  every  business 
man  is  a  member.  Tlnotigh  the  efforts 
of  the  club  and  co-operation  witli  tlie 
village  council,  the  streets  liave  been 
put  into  good  condition,  cement  walks 
and  cros.«jings  laid,  a  mucli  needed  deei> 
well,  which  now  furnishes  abundance 
water  for  the  village  was  secured,  the 
cemetery  Improved  and  electric  llyhts 
installed.  The  club  also  helped  the 
settlers  in  securing  new  roads,  and 
Improving  the  old  ones  by  enlftting 
the  co-operation  of  County  Commis- 
sioner Kauppl.  The  traveling  library 
whicli  lia.s  proved  to  be  a  very  popular 
institution  has  also  been  secured  by 
the  club  and  maintained  at  its  ex- 
pense. • 
M'nnt    Gmne    PreMerre. 

The  club  will  yietltlon  the  state 
game  commission  asking  that  a  game 
rffuge  be  established  near  liere,  along 
the  St.  Louis  river.  The  proposed  lo- 
cation is  bounded  by  the  Duluth-St. 
Vincent  state  highway  on  the  nortli. 
Judicial  ditch  No.  4  on  the  east,  the 
McCarthy  brook  down  to  its  mouth  at 
the  St.  Louis  river,  on  the  soutli  and 
"pull  !  the  (Jreat  Northern  railway  tracks  on 
the  west,  embracing  something  like 
6. COO  or  7,000  acres  of  land  with  the 
St.  Louis  river  almost  In  the  center. 
Tlie  club  decided  to  hold  an  annual 
basket  picnic  sometime  in  .June  or 
.July  for  the  members  of  the  club  and 
their  families  on  the  sliores  of  Prairie 
lake. 


in- 


the 

161  blocks, 

cost  of  nearly 


SIMPLE  APPLICATION 
THAT  DISSOLVES 

BLACKHEADS 

No  mere  squeezing  and  pinching  to 
t,'»t  rid  of  those  unsightly  blemishes, 
Mackhcadfi.  There  Is  one  simple,  safe 
.ind  su!f  way  to  get  them  out  and 
that  is  to  dissolve  them.  To  do  this 
Just  get  about  two  ounces  of  powdered 
neroxin  f»om  your  druggist — sprinkle 
A  little  on  a  hot,  wet  sponge — rub 
briskly  over  the  blackheads  for  a  few 
seconds — w-as-h  the  parts  and  every 
kiackhead   will   be   gone. 

Pinching  and  squeezing  out  black- 
heads make  large  pores  and  you  can- 
not K»t  all  of  the  blackheads  out  this 
way — while  this  simple  application  of 
p<»wdered  neroxin  and  water  dissolves 
every  particle  of  them  and  leaves  the 
■kin"  and  pores  in  their  natural  con- 
dltlen.  Any  druRKlst  will  (n'll  you  the  ixiwdtrfil  ner- 
nin  ..i.i'  uu<::t  two  ounces  will  be  all  you  will  ever  need. 

— AdviTtis^nicut. 


Lost  Health 

And  Strength  Restored 

Men  who  are  afflicted  with  some 
chronic  ailment  or  special  disease 
of  the  class  or  description  that  we 
trea*.  find  In  wasting  health  and 
strength  a  most  Important  reason 
for  seeking  out  specialists  In  such 
diseases. 

Every  day  patients  com©  to  us 
privately  who  have  let  go  such 
troubles  until  they  are  In  a  seri- 
ous condition,  who  are  nervous,  ir- 
ritable and  "not  themselves,"  some- 
times despondent  and  even  hope- 
lees.  They  lack  energy  and  vitality, 
have  poor  appetites,  have  lost  con- 
fidence In  themselves  and  often  the 
derangement  has  affected  the  whole 
Byutem  and  made  them  most  miser- 
able. 

Our  combined  methods  of  treat- 
ment are  sure  to  check  the  trouble. 
build  up  the  ey.stem,  restore  the  vi- 
tality and  strength  and  health  la 
regained 

What  we  have  done  for  others 
we  can  do  for  you;  you  get  the 
best  for  the  least  expense.  Consul- 
tation free.  Office  hours,  »  to  «; 
Wednesday  and  Saturday,  9  to  8, 
and  holidays,  10  to  1. 

Pro^essive  Medical 
Doctors.  Inc* 

1    WBST    BUPKRIOR    STREirr. 
Dalath,  Mlua. 


WOULD  BAR  BRIDGE  USE. 

Sheboygan.    Wis..    Coroner    Would 
Prevent  Repetition  of  Fatalities. 

Sheboygan,  Mis.,  April  13. — Arrest 
for  the  hundreds  of  factory  workmen 
who  make  use  of  the  Northwestern 
railroad  bridges  and  right  of  way  on 
their  way  to  and  from  the  factories 
is  the  recommeiulation  made  by  Cor- 
oner Van  Zanten,  following  the  kill- 
ing of  George  Schmidbauer,  18  years 
old,  by  a  passenger  train  here  on 
Tuesday,  and  the  killing  of  Mrs.  P.ar- 
net  Henzelmann  by  another  North- 
western   passenger    train    on    Monday. 

Schmidbauer,  en  route  to  the  Dil- 
lingham factory,  heard  nnd  saw  the 
train  but  miscalculated  and  did  not 
step  aside  soon  enough.  He  was 
thrown  down  an  embankment  and  his 
neck    broken. 


Bismarck,    N.    D.,    April    13.— The 
itiative    and     referendum     ma^    be 
voked   to  set  on   foot   here   the   largest 
paving    plan   ever   conceived    in    a   city 
of  this  8ize  as  a   result  of  a  conference 
of    the    lending    realty    owners    of 
city.     It  Is  proposed  to  pave 
nine  niile.s  of  street,  at 
half   a   million. 

The  movement,  a  result  of  sentiment 
which  has  been  developing  in  Bis- 
marck for  months,  has  back  of  It  the 
heaviest  taxpayers  in  the  city,  inter- 
ests which  control  a  very  large  per- 
centage of  all  the  property  affected, 
and  which  will  be  assessed  for  far  the 
I  greatest  proportion  of  the  cost  of  pav- 

I      The    district    covered    comprises    the 
entire    heart    of    Bismarck      from    Main 

(Street  to  the  Capitol  boulevard  on  the 
north  and  from  Washington  and  Han- 
nifin avenues  on  the  west  as  far  as 
Twelfth  street  to  the  east,  a  total  area 
of  approximately  ninety  square  blocks. 
DlMtrlbutlon  of  Paving. 
The  paving  will  be  distributed  over 
the  district  named  as  follows:  Main 
street,  10  blocks;  Broadway.  13;  Thay- 
er 13;  Rosser,  13;  Avenue  A,  16;  Ave- 
nue B.  15;  Avenue  C,  9;  Mandan  ave- 
nue 4;  First  street.  B;  Second  street, 
6-  Third  street,  6;  Fourth  street,  10; 
Fifth  street,  10:  Sixth  street,  10:  Sev- 
enth street,  8;  Eighth  street,  8;  Ninth 
street,  8.  .      

COLLEGE  PROFESSOR 

GETS  CIVILIAN  JOB 

Agiieultural   College,   N.   D.,  April  13. 

Ftalph  Darner,  professor  of  Industrial 

chemistry  at  the  Agricultural  college, 
has  handed  his  resignation  to  Presi- 
dent  Ladd,   effective   June   1. 

Prof.  Darner's  work  In  paints  ana 
varnishes  has  been  of  such  high  qual- 
Itv  as  to  attract  the  attention  of  the 
manufacturers  of  the  country  and  has  | 
brought  about  an  unusual  competition  i 
for  his  services.  Mr.  Darner  leaves 
the  Agricultural  college  for  a  high 
position  with  the  Ohio  Varnish  com- 
pany at   Cleveland,   Ohio. 

BRAINERD  JOTTINGS.     ! 

Bralnerd,    Minn.,    April    13.— (Special  I 
to    The    Herald.)— The    business     mens, 
organization    will    be    Incorporrted   and  j 
a    permanent     secretary     engaged.        A  t 
committee   was  appointed,   including  A. 
T     Fisher,      F.      H.      Gruenhager,    C  on 
O'Brien,  C.  A.  Beale.  Ole  Peterson  and 
Alvln   Arnold,   to   attend   to    It. 

Kagle  Hose  Company  No.  4  elected 
the  following:  Foreman.  Peter  Peter- 
son; first  assistant  foreman,  Frank 
Brandt;  second  assistant  foreman,  An- 
dred  Aro;  secretary,  Julius  Twist,  and 
treasurer,    Andrew    Peterson. 

The  Bralnerd  Tennis  club  elected: 
President.  W.  C.  Cobb;  vice  president, 
C.  J.   Duffey;   secretary-treasurer,  B.   J. 


AUSTIN  DOUBLE  FUNERAL 

Former  Hotel  Keeper  and  Wife  Buried 
in  Same  Grave. 

Austin,  Minn..  April  13— A  double 
funeral  was  held  here  yesterday  after- 
noon from  the  Baptist  church  for  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  John  E.  Robinson,  old  resi- 
dents, and  both  were  buried  in  the 
same  grave. 

i      After  being  married  fifty-seven  years 

I  ihev  died  only  a  few  days  apart.     Mrs. 

I  Robinson   died   in   Los   Angeles   April    6, 

i  and  her  husband,  who  brought  her 
bodv  here  for  burial,  r'led  the  day  he 
reached  here.  Both  were  natives  of 
New  York  state,  Mr.  Itoblnson  being 
born  In  Monroe  county  Sept.  24,  1837, 
and  Mrs.  Robinson  In  Rochester,  Dec. 
6,  1840.  They  were  married  Dec.  9, 
18B8,  coming  to  Mower  county  in   1862, 

[locating  at  Lansing,  where  both  taught 
school.     They  moved  to  Austin  in  1882, 

I  where  they  ran  the  Robinson  house  for 
several   vears.      Mr.   Robinson   also  was 

I  .lustlce  of  the  peace.  He  served  in  the 
Civil   war   in   B  company.   Second  Mlh- 

■  nesota  cavalry. 

I      Mr.  and  Mis.   Robinson  were  the  par- 

'ents  of  five  children,  two  of  whom  died. 

!  William  H.  died  in  1879  and  Otis  H.  In 

I  1907.      The   three   living   are   Mrs.    F.    E. 

iGleason  of  tnls  city,  Mrs.  Louis  Dav- 
idson of  Los  Angeles,  Cal.,  and  John 
F.   of   Steele.   N.    D. 


1916.  The  transfer  of  farm  land  was 
brisk  last  year  .-ind  with  prospects 
excellent  now,  a  great  movement  of 
land  seekers  from  the  cential  states 
is    practically    assurred. 


in    Lake 


PIONEER  HOUGHTON 

WOMAN  IS  CALLED 

Houghton.  Mich.,  April  13.— After  an 
illness  of  two  years  Mrs.  Jane  Hunt, 
widow  of  the  late  John  P.  Hunt,  one 
time  president  of  Houghton,  died  here 
Mondav  afternoon  at  the  home  of  her 
daughter.  Mrs.  W.  T.  Gray,  aged  76. 
A  native  of  England  she  came  as  a 
child  with  her  parents  to  the  United 
States  in  1848  and  in  1860  to  the  Cop- 
per country,  Capt.  Edwards  settling 
at  the  Manhattan  mine,  Keweenaw 
county. 

twice    married,    her 

with    Frederick    W. 

1867.     Mrs.    Gray    of 

H.    Sewell    of   Great 

the    surviving    chll- 

marriage.    She   was   mar- 

P.  Hunt  in  1874  and  Miss 


BAGLEY  IS  PRESENTED 
FOUNTAIN  BY  MAYOR 

Bagley.  Minn.,  April  13.— Dr.  P.  J. 
BJorneby,  mayor  of  Bagley,  has  pre- 
sented this  village  with  a  public 
watering  fountain.  The  doctor  has 
been  mayor  of  Bagley  against  his  own 
personal   wishes   for  some  years. 

neMprlbes   "S<«<e   Inmiranee." 

Bralnerd,  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — CJeorge  W.  Lawson, 
secretary-treasurer  of  the  State  Feder- 
ation of  Labor,  spoke  on  "State  Insur- 
ance" at  the  chamber  of  commerce 
meeting  here  and  explained  how  lower 
liability  Insurance,  if  provided  fy  the 
state  on  the  Ohio  plan,  would  give  the 
worker  a  greater  measure  of  compen- 
sation than  under  present  conditions, 
where  such  high  premiums  are  paid  on 
liability  Inrurance  placed  with  private 
companies. 

• 

Body   \%'afthe<l    AKhore. 

Maiden  Rock.  Wi?..  April  13. — The 
body  of  Ole  Nelson  of  Red  Wing,  who 
with  his  eon,  David,  of  Maiden  Rock, 
was  drowned  while  crossing  Lak.^ 
Pepin  near  here  in  December,  was 
washed  ashore  here  Tuesday. 


interment      was    made 
cemetery,  Caluintl. 

Houghton  —  The  Portage  township 
board  has  made  the  appoiixtmenis  of 
township  officers  for  the  year.  Joseph 
F  Hambitzer  was  re-named  township 
attorne>.  Dr.  G.  A.Conrad,  health  offi- 
cer; Charles  Cosby,  night  watch  at- 
Hurontown.  and  Hugo  Krellwitz,  su- 
perintendent  and   sexton    of   the   ceme- 

*^Negaunee — Dr.  A.  W.  Haidle.  presi- 
dent of  the  stale  board  of  dental  ex- 
aminers, has  gone  to  Detroit  to  at- 
tend the  sixteenth  annual  meeting  of 
the  Michigan  State  Dental  society, 
which  will  be  held  at  the  TuUer  hotel. 
During  the  gathering  a  .special  "meet- 
ing of  the  Michigan  state  board  of 
dental  examiners  will  be  held. 

Ishpemlng — L.    C.    Schroder,    who    re- 


View  I  ceivers  of  the  Moore  creamery  and  if 
they  can  come  to  terms  this  plant  will 
be  ptirchastd.  If  not  the  laimers  will 
build. 

Ftrgus  Falls — Eruk  Erikson.  a  ba- 
ker, has  purchased  a  lot  from  Lake  & 
Lowr.\',  on  Lincoln  avenue  west,  and 
will  erect  a  new  iwo-story  brick  block 
thereon. 

Stillwater — Judge  J.  C.  Nethaway 
has  received  a  memorial  from  the  ai- 
toineys  of  Kanabec  county,  unani- 
mously requesting  him  to  be  a  candi- 
date for  Judge  at  the  fall  election  and 
commending  his  course  as  district 
judge. 

Rochester — Ten  thousand  one  hun- 
dred and  ten  operations  were  per- 
formed at' St.  Mary's  hospital  here 
during  1915,  according  to  the  twenty- 
sixth    annual    report.      The    death    rate 


signed  as  manager  of  Grinnell  Bros.'  j  was  1.7  per  cent.  The  total  number 
Escanaba  branch  store,  1«  here  prepar-  of  patients  operated  upon  during  last 
Ing  for  the  opening  of  his  new  music  I  year  was  8,265:  7.568  were  out-patients 
house  In  the  McEncroe  building.  and    697    in-patients. 

Marquette — Mayor  Begole  has  re- 1  International  Falls — G.  W.  Swenson. 
celved  the  skin  of  a  white  deer,  shot  a  grocer,  has  closed  his  store  and  is 
at  his  hunting  camp  on  the  Escanaba  j  preparing  to  move  to  Duluth,  where  he 
river  last  fall.  ,formeily    lived,    and    where      he      will 

Houghton— Sv  Evans,   electrical   con- 1  again   enter  business, 
tractor,    is   putting  up   the   new   40-foot  i      Bemidji — The    two    children    of      Mr. 
tower   on    the    Masonic   temple    roof   for    and  Mrs.  Carl  Spai  of  the  town  of  Lib- 
the  weather  bureau.     When  the   tower   erty     died    of    scarlet     fever    at 
Is    completed    an   expert   of   the    bureau  ,  home  Sunday  night.      They  were 


will    come    to    Houghton    lo    install    the 
new  system  of  electric  night  signals. 


Anstln.     Minn..    Snieldr. 

Austin.  Minn.,  April  13. — Herbert 
Emery,  34  years  old,  committed  sui- 
cide bv  cutting  his  throat  with  a 
razor.  Illness  and  flnanclat  trouble 
are  supposed  to  have  prompted  the 
deed.  Emery  is  survived  by  his  widow 
and  a  child. 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS 


Mrs.  Hunt  was 
first  union  being 
Sewell,  April  29, 
Houghton  and  F. 
Falls,  Mont.,  are 
dren  of  this 
rled  to  John 


Estelle  and  Robert  Hunt  survive. 
Other  surviving  members  of  Mrs. 
Hunt's  Immediate  family  In  Hough- 
ton are  two  brothers,  James  P.,  and 
John  Edwards,  and  a  sister,  Mrs. 
Mary  E.  Sheldon. 

nonagenXrian  IS~ 

CALLED  IN  NEGAUNEE 

Negaunec,  Mich.,  April  IS. — Patrick 
Flnnucan,  92  years  of  age,  a  pioneer 
resident  of  Negaunee,  died  April  11 
at  the  home  of  his  son-in-law,  Her- 
man Bergerson,  county  road.  Mr.  Fln- 
nucan had  been  falling  during  the 
past  winter.  He  had  been  a  resident 
<if  Negaunee  for  forty-two  years  and 
wa.s  widely  known.  He  Is  survived  by 
two  daughters  and  two  sons,  Mrs. 
Herman  Bergerson  and  Mrs.  Jerry 
Bennetts,  of  this  city;  John  Flnnucan 
of  this  city,  and  Daniel  Finnucan  of 
Iron    River. 


THREE  ARE  ARRESTED  Tlimi«lin«5  flF 

ON  MURDER  CHARGE  KEEP  THOUSAHDS  OP 

PATIENTS  OUT  OF  THE 
NATION'S  HOSPITALS 


Marinette.      Wis.,       April       13. — lohn 

Smto,  35  years  old,  and  John  Knock, 
28  years,  old,  of  Milwaukee,  and  Mrs. 
Rosle  Gugar,  35  years  old.  of  Stelton, 
Pa.,  have  been  arrested  charged  with 
murdering  .Joseph  Heller  <if  Mllwau-  I 
kee.  on  Dec.  28,  1914,  at  Catallne,  near 
here.  They  are  charged  with  robbing 
Heller  and  hiding  the  body  beneath 
the  railroad  ties,  where  it  was  found 
the    following   March. 

Knock    ran    away    with    the    woman,  , 
it    is    charged,    and    met    Heller    at    the  , 
Lakevlew       hotel.      Milwaukee.       They 
then   went   to  Hlles,   Wis.,    where    they  j 
lived   In  the  home  of  Santo.     The  hus-  i 
band   of   Rosle   threatened  to   have    the 
men   arrested    for   white   slavery.      Th»» 
party  separated.    The  woman   returned 
home.     Heller    was     never     seen     alive 
again.     His   body    was     buried    as    un- 
identified.   Lee      Dargus      of     Pembine, 
Wis.,    was    arrested     on     a     charge     of 
murder    on    the    testimony    of    two    in- 
mates   of   the    Green    Bay    reformatory. 
Later  he  was   released   when   the  boys 
admitted   they  were  trying  to  railroad 
Dargus    to    Jail. 

ENTITLED  TO  MONEY. 

South  Dakota  Cannot  Be  Beaten  Out 
of  Tripp  Estate  Bequest. 

Madison,  Wis.,  April  IS.— That  the 
<laim  of  the  state  of  South  Dakota  to 
$30,000  of  the  $600,000  bequest  granted 
by  the  will  of  the  late  J.  S.  Tripp, 
Prairie  du  Sac,  Wis.,  to  the  University 
of  Wisconsin  cannot  be  defeated,  is 
tlie  opinion  of  Attorney  General  Owen, 
to  the  board  of  regents  of  the  uni- 
versity. 

The  claim  of  South  Dakota,  based 
upon  the  lav/  of  that  state.  Is  levied 
against  property  owned  by  Tripp 
there. 


SOO  PAIR  INDICTED 

FOR  COUNTERFEITING 

Marquette,  Mich..  April  13. — The 
Federal  grand  jury  here  after  a  short 
session  has  adjourned.  So  far  as 
known  only  two  indictments  were  re- 
turned. These  were  against  James 
Pollington  and  Sylvester  A.  Young, 
both  of  the  Soo,  on  three  counts,  that 
of  manufacturing  counterfeit  money, 
of  attempting  to  defraud  by  passing 
this  money,  and  of  having  molds  and 
dies  In  their  possession.  The  offense 
is  alleged  to  have  been  committed 
Feb.  22.  Pollington  was  arraigned  and 
pleaded  guilty.  Their  trials  will  occur 
the  latter  part  of  the  week. 


Bessemer — Frohton  Swanson,  an  old 
resident  of  Ramsay,  was  found  hang- 
ing In  his  wood  shed.  He  left  a  note 
blaming  local  politicians  for  prevent^- 
Ing  his  nomination  for  township  treas- 
urer. 

Ishpeming — Twenty-five  men  from 
Norway  and  Iron  Mountain  arrived  and 
are  employed  hy  Hoose  and  Pearson  on 
their  contract  Job  at  North  Lake  from 
the  Cleveland  Cliffs  company  to  strip 
several  acres  cf  the  land  there  so  that 
that  company  can  do  open  pit  mining. 

Negaunee — At  the  first  meeting  of 
the  new  city  council  Mayor  Edward 
Anthony  told  the  council  and  audience 
that  the  greatest  possible  attention 
would  be  given  to  the  city  and  the  peo- 
ple during  his  administration  and  that 
the  city  would  be  run  as  economically 
as  possible,  aird  that  every  taxpayer  In 
the  city  would  be  treated  properly  in 
regard  to  the  city  taxes. 

Laurlum  —  At  the  village  council 
meeting  President  IngersoU  reappoint- 
ed the  old  officers  and  seventeen  appli- 
cations for  liquor  licenses  were  acted 
upon.  Laurlum's  quota  is  eighteen  and 
one  more  will  probably  be  granted  at 
the  next  meeting  of  the  council. 

Houghton  —  The  Houghton  county 
board  of  supervisors  held  their  first  of- 
ficial meeting  for  the  new  year  Tues- 
day. Peter  Poisson,  representing  the 
Hancock  township,  succeeding  Matt 
Salmu.  Is  the  only  change  in  the  per- 
sonnel. A.  D.  Johnston  of  Sidnaw  was 
re-elected  chairman  of  the  board. 

Calumet — The  funeral  of  Charles  N. 
Rowland,  who  died  Sunday  night,  vras 
held  from  Uie  family  residence  at 
I.Aurium  Wednesday  afternoon  at  2 
o'clock.  Rev.  A.  B.  Sutcllffe  of  the 
Laurlum    M.    E.    church    officiated    and 


Eau  Claire — A  section  of  the  stone  j 
riprapping  on  the  south  side  of  the  i 
west  approach  lo  the  Water  street  ; 
bridge  has  been  taken  out  by  the  : 
high    water. 

Milwaukee — The  report  of  the  elec- 
tion commission  shows  that  $22,000  ! 
was  spent  by  the  city  to  conduct  the  i 
regular  election  on  April  4  and  the  i 
prlmarv  two  weeks  before.  Of  this  j 
sum.  $i 3,013  was  spent  for  salaries.        I 

Madison — The    acts    of    Judge    F.    W.  j 
Chadbourn    while    sitting    In    superior) 
court  at   Fond  du  Lac  were  upheld   by 
the     state     supreme     court,     despite     a 
former  decision   which   did   away   with 
the   court. 

Oshkosh — Government  seeds  have 
found  a  useful  channel  of  distribution 
In  this  city.  L'pon  request  from  this 
city.  Representative  M.  K.  Reilley  sent 
a  supply  of  garden  seeds  to  be  dis- 
tributed among  people  who  are  receiv- 
ing public  aid. 

Kewaskum — John  Carl  Petri,  cheese 
manufacturer  and  stock  buyer,  died 
after  a  brief  illness  with  hemorrhage 
of  the   brain. 

Milwaukee  —  Crushed  beneath  a 
large  clamshell  coal  bucket  when  a 
cable  broke  at  the  Pennsylvania  Coal 
company's  yards,  foot  of  Fifteenth 
street  yesterday,  Peter  Tonkowitz, 
aged  38.   was  Instantly  killed. 

Plainfield — The  winter  rye  crop  in 
this  vicinity  has  come  through  the 
winter  fairly  well,  notwithstanding 
the  heavy  coating  of  ice  that  covered 
the  ground  during  the  latter  part  of 
the  winter.  Farmers  think  the  pros- 
pect for  a  good  crop  Is  favorable. 


Western 


Drug      Merchant 
National    Health 


Discusses 


BORDER  CITY  MAY 

HAVE  NAVAL  MILITIA 

International  Falls.  Minn..  April  13. 
— Guy  Eaton  of  Duluth,  naval  militia 
commander,  while  here  Monday  talked 
over  the  proposition  of  recruiting  a 
company  here.  He  will  return  in 
about  two  weeksv  at  which  time  a 
public  meeting  will  be  called 
cuss  the  matter.  If  sixty 
young  men  can  be  enrolled, 
pany  will  be  formed  and  a 
boat   placed  on   the  lake. 


AVOID  ALL  MEAT 
IF  KIDNEYS  AND 
BLADDER  BOTHER 

Uric  Acid  in  Meat  E)fcites 

Kidneys  and  Irritates 

the  Bladder. 


to    dis- 
eligible 
a     corn- 
training 


SPRING  OF  1883 

OPENED  SLOWLY 

Devils  Lake,  N,  D..  April  W.— (Spe- 
cial lo  The  Herald.) — Capt.  B.  E. 
Heernian,  one  of  the  earliest  white 
settlers  of  North  Dakota,  assures 
farmers  that  there  is  nothing  wrong 
with  the  way  winter  Is  melting  into 
spring    thiij   year.      Back   In   1883   Cap- 


MONRAD  J.  OL8EN 
tt  Des  Moinei^  la.,  said.  In  an  Inter^ 
view  today, 

"It  each  person  In  this  country  would 
take  an  occasional  laxative  dose,  our 
hospitals  would  lose  thousands  upon 
thousands  of  patients." 

Mr.  Olsen  further  stated  that  he  was 
familiar  with  and  had  sold  all  the  va« 
rlous  laxatives,  and  that  In  his  opinion, 
Rexall  Orderlies  is  the  most  pleasant 
and  sure  remedy  for  constipation. 


We  have  the  exclusive 
for  this  great  laxative. 


selling  rights 


L  M.  TREDWAV 


Mn 


DESERTED  FAMILY 

SENTTOIRONWOOD 

International  Falls,  Minn.,  April  13. 
— Mrs.  Maxin  and  children,  who  were 
deserted  some  time  ago  at  Ray  by  the 
husband  and  father,  and  who  have 
since  been  living  on  the  county,  were 
shipped  to  Ironwood,  Mich.,  Monday 
by  Judge  Berg,  by  authority  of  the 
county   board. 

ISHPEMING  CHURCH 

WILL  BECOME  FLAT 

Ishpeming.  Mich.,  April  13. — Eman- 
uel Skoglund  has  started  plastering 
the  double  flat  building  at  the  cor- 
ner of  Third  and  High  streets,  being 
remodeled  by  L.  Erlckson  &  Son  for  J. 
E.  Branlund.  The  property  was  for- 
merly Calvary  Baptist  church,  and  in 
order  to  convert  It  into  a  flat  it  was 
necessary  to  watost  rebuild  the  struc- 
ture. •  When  the  building  is  cOYn- 
pleted  Mr.  Branlund  viU  have  a  most 
desirable   prorp*iHy. 


DAKOTA  BRffiFS    | 


their 
3  and 
4  years  old  end  had  been  111  for  a  week. 
Funeral  services  were  held  Tuesday 
at   the   Spal    home   at   Liberty. 

Walker — F.  C.  Peterson  of  St.  Paul 
will  make  ills  home  en  a  160-acre  farm 
eleven  miles  from  Walker,  which  he 
bought  last  year.  It  contains  fifty 
acres  Improved  and  situated  on  the 
shores   of  a  fine   lake. 

Fairmont — Arthur  A.  Kamperl.  farm- 
er of  Rolling  Green,  aged  28,  is  defend- 
ant in  a  divorce  case  in  district  court 
In  which  his  wife  charges  him  of  in- 
fidelity. Kampert's  wife  and  three 
children  are  now  making  theJr  homo 
here  with  her  parents,  Mr.  and  M:». 
Charles    Lesch. 


GIRLS!  LOTS  OF 
BEAUmi  HAIR 

25-Cent  Bottle    of  '^Dan- 

derine"  Makes  Hair  Thick, 

Glossy  and  Wavy. 

Removes    All     Dandruff, 

Stops  Itching  Scalp  and 

Falling  Hair. 


MUCH  UNO  ACTIVITY 
AROUND  DEVILS  LAKE 

Devils  Lake,  N.  D.,  April  13.— (Spe- 
cial to  The:  Herald.)— -A  thirty-day 
transfer  record  ot  1863,996  breaks  all 
previous  marks  for  Ramsey  county. 
Real  estate  tnen  of  the  lake  region 
are  confident  of  much  actlvily  during 


Take  Salts  at  First  Sign  of 

Bladder  Weakness  or 

Kidney-Backache. 


Kidney  and  Bladder  weakness  re- 
sults from  uric  acid,  says  a  noted 
authority.  The  kidneys  filter  this  acid 
from  the  blood  and  pass  it  on  to  the 
bladder,  where  it  often  remains  to  ir- 
ritate and  Inflame,  causing  a  burning, 
scalding  sensation,  or  setting  up  an 
Irritation  at  the  neck  of  the  bladder, 
obliging  you  to  seek  relief  two  or 
three  times  during  the  night.  The 
sufferer  is  in  constant  dread,  the  wa- 
ter passes  sometimes  with  a  scalding 
sensation  and  is  very  profuse;  again 
there  is  diflflculty  in  avoiding  it. 

Bladder  weakness,  most  folks  call  it, 
because  they  can't  control  urination. 
While  it  is  extremely  annoying  and 
sometimes  very  painful,  this  is  really 
one  of  the  most  simple  ailments  to 
overcome.  Get  about  four  ounces  of 
Jad  Salts  from  your  pharmacist  and 
take  a  tablespoonful  in  a  glass  of  wa- 
ter before  breakfast,  continue  this  for 
two  or  three  days.  This  will  neutralize 
the  acids  in  the  urine  so  it  no  longer 
is  a  source  of*  irritation  to  the  bladder 
and  urinary  organs  which  then  act 
normally  again. 

Jad  Salts  is  inexpensive,  harmless^ 
and  is  made  from  the  acid  of  grapes 
and  lemon  juice,  combined  with  lithia, 
and  is  used  by  thousands  of  folks  who 
are  subject  to  urinary  disorders  caused 
by  uric  acid  irritation.  Jad  Salts  is 
splendid  for  kidneys  and  causes  no 
bad  effects  whatever. 

Here  you  have  a  pleasant,  effer- 
vescent llthia-water  drink  which 
quickly  relieves  bladder  trouble — Ad- 
vertisement. 


Kllldcer.  N.  D.— W.  L.  Richards  and 
Robert  Wilcox  have  received  their 
water  right  from  the  state  for  using 
the  Spring  creek  supply  for  Irrigat- 
ing purposes  at  their  farm  three  miles 
west    of    here. 

Bismarck,  N.  D. — The  first  families 
of  Burleigh  county  and  Bismarck  are 
looking  forward  with  anticipations  of 
a  genuine,  old-fashioned  good  time  at 
the  meeting  of  sons  and  daughters 
of  the  seventies  and  eighties,  called 
for  the  Commercial  club  rooms  Sat- 
urday   evening. 

Mlnot,  N.  D. — The  Elks  have  in- 
stalled the  following  officers:  A.  M. 
Thompson,  exalted  ruler;  S.  W-  Fas- 
set,  esteemed  leading  knight:  M.  W. 
Whaleii,  esteemed  loyal  knight;  W.  A. 
Mulroy,  esteemed  lecturing  knight;  W. 
E.  Tooley,  treasurer;  Newell  R.  Olson, 
secretary;  C.  C.  Spillane,  tyler;  George 
McClure,  trustee;  J.  R.  Pence,  delegate 
to   the   grand  kidge. 

Berthold,  N.  D. — The  local  lodge  of 
Odd  F'ellows  has  started  a  movement 
that  It  Is  hoped  will  result  In  secur- 
ing a  good  band  in  Berthold.  It  is 
planned  to  make  it  an  Odd  Fellows' 
organization. 

Fargo,  N.  D. — Efforts  to  put  a  stop 
to  the  shipment  of  liquor  from  out- 
side sources  Into  North  Dakota  are 
being  made  by  United  States  Attorney 
M.  A.  Hlldreth  and  procedure  Is  being 
made   through    the   pure   food   laws. 

Portland,  N.  D. — The  Luverne  Ledger 
has  been  sold  to  J.  E.  Fladeland  of 
Portland,  who  is  moving  the  plant  to 
larger  quarters  and  is  putting  in  new 
equipment. 

Fargo.  N,  D. — The  Fargo  Presbytery 
has  been  in  session  here  two  days 
with  Rev.  E.  E.  Saunders  as  moder- 
ator, and  thirty  lay  and  clerical  dele- 
gates   present. 

Valley  City.  N.  D. — Through  the 
generosity  of  the  Carnegie  peace  foun- 
dation, the  coming  normal  summer 
school  here  will  offer  a  number  of 
courses  In  International  relations. 
Prof.  W.  M.  Wemett,  head  of  the  de- 
partment of  history  and  social  science, 
and  president  of  the  North  l?akota 
School  Peace  league,  will  conduct  four 
such    courses. 


Crookston — W.  F.  Wentzel,  one  of 
the  progressive  farmers  of  the  Red 
River  valley,  residing  seven  miles  west 
of  the  city,  has  received  a  9-month-old 
Shorthorn  bull,  purchased  a  few  days 
ago  from  James  J.  Hill.  The  animal 
was  raised  at  Mr.  Hill's  North  Oaks 
farm. 

Fosston — W^llllam  Trulson'e  right 
arm,  so  seriously  lacerated  when 
caught  in  a  power  woodsaw,  was  am- 

f»utated  above  the  elbow  and  he  is  do- 
ng    well.      Mr.    Trulson    is    a   brother- 
in-law  of  Johnnie  Johnson  of  Queen. 

Stillwater — Mrs.  Norman  Gates  of 
Duluth  was  In  the  city  Monday  to  at- 
tend the  fimeral  of  her  grandmother, 
Mrs.  George  Bishop. 

Little  Falls — No  decision  has  been 
made  by  the  Farmers'  Creamery  asso- 
ciation, which  was  recently  formed 
here  as  to  a  building  for  its  creamery. 
An    offer   has   been   made   by    the    re- 


To  be  possessed  of  a  head  of  heavy, 
beautiful  hair;  soft,  lustrous,  fluffy, 
wavy  and  free  from  dandruff  is  mere- 
ly a  matter  of  using  .i  little  Danderlne. 

It  is  ea.sy  and  inexpensive  to  have 
nice,  soft  hair  and  lets  of  it.  Just 
get  a  25  cent  bottle  of  Knowlton's 
Danderlne  now — all  drug  stores  rec- 
ommend it — apply  a  little  as  directed 
and  within  ten  minutes  there  will  be 
an  appearance  of  abundance;  fresh- 
ness, flufflness  and  an  Incomparable 
gloss  and  luster  and  try  as  you  will 
you  cannot  And  a  iracj  of  dandruff  or 
falling  hair;  but  your  real  surprise 
win  be  after  about  two  weeks'  use, 
when  you  will  see  new  hair — fine  and 

downy   at   first — yes but   really   new 

hair — sprouting  out  all  over  your  scalp 
— Danderlne  Is,  we  believe,  the  only 
sure  hair  grower,  destroyer  of  dan- 
druff and  cure  for  Itchy  scalp  and  it 
never  fails  to  stop  falling  hair  at  once. 

If  you  want  to  prove  how  pretty 
and  soft  your  hair  really  la,  moisten  a 
cloth  with  a  little  Danderine  and  care- 
fully draw  it  through  your  hair- 
taking  one  small  strand  at  a  time. 
Your  hair  will  be  soft,  glossy  ana 
beautifuL  In  Just  a  few  moments— a 
delightful  surprise  awaits  everyon* 
iirho  tries  tltls. — ^Advertlaemeut. 


!*-•» 


1 1  tti  ■  I  I  w 


i 


II 


/^ 


p^a. 


■MM. 


'■                       1 

* 

n 

Ij 

i\ 

1 

— ^ 


'„ 


Thursday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


£2 


April  13, 1916. 


15 


— —  r*- 


I 


mm- 


WIFE  REFUSES  TO 

LEAVE  FINLAND 


B«'cau.s'»  hia  wife  refusM  to  come  to 
Amerl  a  to  live  wiih  hlni  after  he  had 
provided  h^T  a  home  hero,  Janko  Ka- 
pakUo,  32,  also  known  em  Jaako  Saarl, 
today  /started  null  for  divorce.  Mr.<«. 
Fanny  Kapakko,  3i).  who  lives  In 
Yppjiri,  pnii!?h  of  Pyhojokl,  province  of 
Oulu,    F"! aland.    Is   tho   defendant. 

Tht-y  w-re  married  In  1908  A  year 
later  Kapakko  rume  to  the  l.'nlted 
State;*.  He  sottled  In  Duluth  and  on 
many  ocraslon.**  h&n  tried  to  induce  her 
to  Join  him.  Sh<>  has  repeatf>dly  ro- 
fuS'<l  nnd  has  also  notified  him.  she 
pays,  that  {jh«  will  not  live  with  him  In 
th<^  rvf'iit  that  ho  returns. 

Kft;iakko  seeks  tho  custody  of  a  6- 
year-tild  son.  now  livingr  with  the 
mother. 


mmti^ 


Not  Krpt  Vntm  Pnblle. 

tfOndon.  April  1.1 — rTfml.T  Asqulth 
deni'-ij  today  that  iht-  numbi-r  of  deaths 
raus'  d  hy  Zeppelin  raldj  had  been  kept 

f!'or!i    piihM^    Kr''>\v!r-il.i". 


Till:  .stout:  for  skhvice.      | 

113-1 1S-1J7-1  ID    Went     SupeHor    St.. 
Duluth.    MJaa. 


-M  - 


!■     t      ■!     i<ri 


—^ 


Household 
Requisites 

of  Sterling  Quality  at 

Moderate  Prices  Friday 

and  Saturday— 


EASTER 

TABLE 

DECORATIONS 

f'nndle  Rlioks  and 
shades,  alao  elec- 
tric llifht  lamp.'». 
in  small  slzea.  All 
at  m'>  derate 
a.  prices. 


CUT    GLASS    MAYONNAISE 

SETS. 
Complete    bo-.vi,    plate    anil    ladlrt 
t<»    match.      Special  •  I    C\f% 

prl.  c.    aet     #  *  '^V 

ETCHED    AND 

CUT   GLASS 

SHERBETS. 

TUMBLERS, 

ETC. 

SpTial  prices 
Friday  and  Satur- 
day. 

Ktrlied  Sherbet  fjJlatti^c*,  e«cli.lS« 
Ktclird  Water  <;la««e«,  eaoh.  .  .5c 
Plain    Water    Gla«ae«,    eaeh....4c 

BLUE  JAPANESE  CUPS 
AND  SAUCERS. 

Reiruliir  price 
$2.00  per  dozen. 
Special  Friday 
and  .'>.\tU2'day, 
<  up  and  I  ^^ 
saucer  for  ■  *'*' 


BAKING  CASSEROLES, 

Brown  color  outside,  white  lined. 

3-piRt    alae,   Mperlal    prire 35c 

5-plJit    Mise,    special    price 4Se 


WEST  DULUTH 


HKRALD  BRANCH  OFFICSSi 
Speneer   Pharmaer,  403  C*atral   AT*aaa,    A4TertUlac 


aa4    SakaeHptleaa. 
A.  Jem««a,   Flftr-aev*atli   Avena*   \%  est   aa4   GraB4   Aveaac,  Dtmtwtkmttom. 


Hsrald'9   West  Duluth   reporter   may  be   reached   aftar 
hour  of  arolnc  to  press  at  Calumet  173-M  and  Colo  24?. 


MANY  HOUSES 
TO  BE  BUILT 


About  150  Structures  Will 

Be  Put  Up  During  This 

Season. 


More  Than  Score  of  Res- 
idences Now  Being  Con- 
structed in  West  Duluth. 


GAINS  SHOWN 
BY  CHURCHES 


Annual  Meeting  of  Duluth 

Presbytery  Comes  to 

Close. 


About  IGO  new  rosidonco  buildinfirs 
will  be  ererted  In  West  Duluth  this 
summer,  accordliiif  to  conservative  es- 
timates of  real  estate  men  In  this  end 
of  the  city.  More  than  a  si-ore  of 
n<^w  houses  arft  now  under  consjtruc- 
tlon,  and  more  are  being  planned 
dally. 

J.  A.  Scott.  Jr..  one  of  the  youmjer 
butldinK  contractors  of  West  Duluth, 
has  four  houses  under  construction. 
Two  of  these,  one  of  which  la  of  tho 
bungalow  style  are  belna  erected  for 
Di.  Dunbar  F.  Llppltt  on  Sixtieth  ave- 
nue west.  Just  north  of  Green  street. 
These  win  cost  approximately  $3,000 
each. 

The  other  two  buildlnKS  are  belnqr 
erected  on  Main  street  for  Chris 
Evans.  These  will  cost  |2.500  each. 
Tli<»  houses  will  be  thorouiflily  mod- 
ern, each  having  a  full  basement,  heat- 
ing plant,  and  other  modern  conven- 
li-ncf.s. 

The  Kriodler-Doyle  company  is  put- 
ting up  a  re.sldence  building  at  Ftfty- 
I  Ijfhth  avenue  and  Klliior  street  and 
another  on  Fifty-ninth  avenue  and 
Polk  street.  lioth  will  be  modern. 
costing    about    $3,000. 

Johnson  and  I^arson,  contractors, 
have  under  construction  two  houses 
on  the  southeast  corner  of  Cody 
street  and  Fifty-ninth  avenuf>.  The«e 
buildings  will  be  ready  to  be  occu- 
pied within  another  month.  On  the 
northeast  corner  Albert  Hanson  Is 
ronstrut'ting  a  residence  that  will  cost 
about    $2,500. 

N'els  Almqulst  has  just  started  ex- 
cavations for  the  construction  of  three 
re.sidences  at  the  north^-ast  corner  of 
Fifty-seventh  avenue  and  Cody  street. 
T7iese  buildings  will  oust  about  $2,6u0 
each. 


U.  S.  DEfSlTY  MARSHAL  ENDS 
WtEEN  YEARS'  SERVICE 


CASH  PRIZES  FOR  BEST 
LAWNS  AND  GARDENS 

A  series  of  cash  prize.s  will  be  offered 
to  residents  of  Proctor  who  will  take 
part  In  the  cleanup  and  beautifying  of 
the  village  according  to  announce, 
ment  made  last  night  at  a  banquet  hell 
by  the  business  men  at  the  Odd  Fellows 
h.-tll.  The  prizes  will  Include  first,  see. 
rnd  and  third  prizes  for  the  best  kept 
lawns,  flower  gardens  and  truck  gar- 
d«"ns. 

The  banquet  last  night  was  attended 
hy  fifteen  residents  and  business  men 
of  the  community.  R.  K.  Welsh  presi- 
dent of  the  organlztalon,  appointed  a 
rommitt*'e  to  make  plans  for  the  con- 
t..><t  and  start  tho  cleanup  of  the  vil- 
lage. 

A  shelter  for  farmers*  teams  will  be 
built  at  a  central  place  In  tho  village 
at  once.  Money  for  this  purpose  has  , 
been  subacrlbed  by  tho  business  men. 
The  shelter  will  provide  accommoda- 
tions for  four  teams. 

Lodge  Social. 

Excelsior  Rebekah  lodge  entertained 
at  a  social  at  the  odd  Fellows  hall  for 
members  of  tho  West  Duluth  lodge, 
T.  O.  O.  F..  and  Rebekah  lodge.  A  read- 
ing by  Miss  Alta  Utley  and  her  brother, 
and  an  address  by  Capt.  J.  A.  Mc(»ll- 
vray  featured  the  program.  The  affair 
was  attended  by  about  sixty  members 
of  the  two  societies. 

West  Duluth  Briefs. 

p.  C.  Valley  of  Virginia  was  a  guest 
yesterday  at  the  residence  of  Oeorge 
O.  Cooper,  719  North  Fifty-fourth  ave- 
nue   Wt'St. 

I'lans  for  a  celebration  to  be  held 
on  April  26  In  honor  of  winning  the 
Hfad  of  tho  Lakes  membership  ban- 
ner, were  made  at  a  meeting  of  Xon 
excelled  homestead,  No.  4276.  B.  A.  Y., 
last    evening. 

Zenith  council  No.  6,  Modern  Samar- 
itan.-*, initiated  a  class  of  ten  new 
members  at  its  meeting  last  evening 
at  <ireat  Eastern  hall.  A  social  hour 
followed    the    work. 

Mrs.  R.  Li.  Myrick,  who  has  been 
spending  the  winter  at  the  home  of 
h'-r  mother,  Mr.i.  E.  J.  Melhorn,  607 
South  Seventieth  avenue  w<'st,  left 
yesterday  for  her  home  In  Saskatche- 
wan,   Canada. 

Watch  repairing.  Hurst.  West  Ouluth. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Andrew  SJodeen,  615 
North  Sixtieth  avenue  west,  will  en- 
tertain this  evening  for  the  sewing 
circle  of  the  Morning  Star  lodge.  No. 
IT.    I.    O.    ii.    T. 

VIctrolas  and  records  at  Spencer'a 
Easy  payments  If  desired. 


"A  dyed  sparrow  may 
pass  for  a  mountain 
canary,  until  the  dye 
wears  off." 

— And  so  the  flrst  thing  you 
want   to   know   about   your 

NEW  EASTER  SHOES 

la:  Will  they  look  good  after 
the  first  few  weeks?  Will  they 
wear?  You  can  depend  upon 
every  pair  uf  Wieland's  Shoes  aa 
Footwear  of  Class. 

S29   WEST  FIRST  ST. 


Presbyterian  churches  and  missions 
of  the  Duluth  Presbytery  have  made 
substantial  gains  during  the  last  year, 
according  to  reports  given  yesterday 
at  the  business  meeting  of  tho  Pres- 
bytery held  at  the  Westminster  church, 

Flftyelghth  avenue  and  Ramsey  street. 
The  convention  clo8»;d  with  addresses 
and  a  special  musical  program  last 
night. 

All  departments  of  the  church  work 
In  this  district  have  shown  an  Increa.s*'. 
The  contributions  to  work  outside  dur- 
ing the  last  year  have  been  largely 
Increased. 

Rev.  Harvey  Easier  of  Sandstone, 
Minn.,  was  elected  moderator  to  suc- 
ceed Rev.  A.  H.  Mutchler,  whoso  terra 
expired.  Rev.  O.  D.  Slater,  pastor  of 
the  Hazelwood  Presbyterian  church, 
was  temporary  secretary  and  Rev. 
William  Mapson  of  Ely  was  stated 
secretary  In  the  absence  of  Rev.  J.  U. 
South«rland. 

Rev.  Mr.  Mutchler,  the  retiring  mod- 
erator, and  Rev.  J.  F.  Harrackman  were 
elected  ministerial  delegates  to  the  na- 
tional meeting  of  the  Presbytery  and 
Rev.  John  A.  Mciiaughey  and  Rev.  W. 
L.  Htaub  were  chost-n  alternate  dele- 
gates. The  lay  delegates  include  the 
elder  of  the  Grand  Rapids  church  and 
P.    Silliman   of   Hibbing. 

Rev.  Mr.  E«.sley  presided  at  the  serv- 
ices la.st  evening.  The  principal  ad- 
dross  was  given  by  Kev.  William 
Schriver  of  New  York  city,  who  Is  at 
the  head  of  the  dei)artment  of  Immi- 
gration and  city  extension  work  for  the 
national  presbytery.  Rev.  Mr.  Schriver 
spoke  <»t  the  work  among  the  foreign 
burn  residents  of  tlit?  big  cities  and 
In  the  mining  districts  of  Pennsylvania. 

Mrs.  John  McLeod  of  Duluth  gave  an 
address  on  the  effect  of  the  European 
war  on  missionary  work  in  Western 
Asia  and  Turkey.  The  program  also 
Included  a  violin  solo  by  Rev.  William 
Jobush  of  Eveleth  and  songs  by  the 
pastors'   quartet. 

At  noon  and  8  o'clock  last  evening 
the  ladies'  aid  society  of  the  churth 
se^^■ed  dinner  and  supper  for  the  dele- 
gates. There  were  forty-four  visiting 
ministers  and  about  twenty  lay  dele- 
gates attending  the  niesbytery.  Tlu- 
meeting  was  one  of  the  best  attended 
In  the  history  of  tho  Duluth  Pres- 
bytery. 

Will  Be  Guest  of  Lodge. 

Mrs.  Alice  Holmos  of  St.  Paul,  grand 
chief  of  the  Pythian  Slstf-rs  of  Minne- 
sota, will  bo  guest  of  honor  at  the 
meeting  of  Zenith  Temple  No.  50.  to  bo 
held  this  evening  at  the  Odd  Fellows 
hall,  601*  North  Central  avenue.  Mrs. 
Holmes  Is  making  a  tour  of  Inspection 
of  tho  various  temph-s  of  the  state. 

The  principal  feature  of  tho  evening 
will  be  the  initiation  of  a  class  of 
twelve  candidates  at  which  Mrs.  Hoimr-s 
will  preside.  A  social  entertainment 
has  been  planned  following  the  'busi- 
ness meeting. 

WILLlEGiN 
PAVING^WORK 

Contractors  Ready  for  First 

and  Superior  Street 

Jobs. 

• 

Work  on  two  big  paving  Jobs  will 
begin    next    week. 

It  was  announced  this  morning  that 
Rogers  Sc  McLean,  who  were  recently 
awarded  the  contract  to  pave  First 
street,  from  Twentieth  to  Thirtieth 
avenue  west,  will  begin  operations 
within  the  next  ten  days,  and  that 
D.  H.  Clouxh  &  Co.  win  start  on  East 
Superior  street  next  Tuesday  morning, 
if  the  contract  for  the  improvement 
is  awarded  to  the  General  Contract- 
ing company  at  the  council  meeting 
on  Monday.  In  that  event,  both  Im- 
provements should  be  finished  and 
ready   for   traffic   some    time   in    June. 

Because  of  the  warm  weather  th»'^ 
last  ten  days  and  the  rains  during 
the  last  twenty-four  hours.  It  Is  be- 
liev'd  that  the  frost  Is  now  out  of 
the  ground  and  that  excavating  can 
be  done  without  any  difficulty.  Rogers 
&  McLean  expect  the  material  for  tho 
pavement  and  a  crew  of  men  will  be 
started  as  soon  as  all  the  equipment 
Is    assembled. 

If  the  (;;oneral  Contracting  company 
is  awarded  the  contract  to  pave  East 
Superior  street  the  concrete  base  will 
be  laid  by  D.  H.  Clough  &  Co.,  it  was 
announced,  and  the  work  of  tearing 
up  the  surfacing  of  the  present  pave- 
ment  will    begin    on    Tuesday    morning. 

As  soon  as  work  Is  started  on  East 
Superior  atreet  the  roadway  will  be 
clos'-d  to  traffic  from  Sixteenth  to 
Twenty-third  avenue  until  the  Im- 
provement Is  finished.  Traffic  will 
use    First    and    Jefferson    streets. 

It  Is  generally  admitted  at  the  city 
hall  that  the  General  Contracting  com- 
panv  will  be  awarded  the  contract 
on  Monday.  Trinidad  lake  asphalt 
will  be  laid  over  a  concrete  base,  ac- 
cording to  the  specifications.  A  spe- 
cial machine  to  tear  up  th-e  present 
surface  has  been  ordered  and  will  ar- 
rive  within    a  day   or   two. 

♦■ — ■ 

rnrranaa    Note    Dellvereii. 

Washington.  April  13. — Gen.  Carran- 
«a's  note  proposing  withdrawal  of 
American  troops  from  Mexico  was  de- 
livered to  Secretary  Lansing  by  Eleslo 
Arredondo,  his  ambassador,  this  after- 
noon. 


George  J.  Mallflry.' "deputy  United 
States  marshal  at  'Du^j^th.  will  retire 
from  office  Saturda|y  «tj midnight  after 
fifteen  years  8ervl\»ej  tor  Uncle  Sam 
under  United  Sta|c^.  Marshal  Grlm- 
sliaw.  who  will  aiaf>  retire  with  all 
other  deputies  of  hi/ regime.  Mr.  Mal- 
lory's  term  expired  last  December,  and 
since  that  time  has  been  awaiting  the 
appointment  of  his  successor.  His  suc- 
cessor will  be  Scott  Cash  of  Duluth, 
well   known  in    Duluth. 

Bu«y  Days  Toward  Close. 

Mr.  Mallory's  last  two  weeks  In  of- 
fice have  been  featured  by  more  of- 
ficial business  trips  than  for  almost 
any  similar  period  in  the  history  of  his 
office,  and  he  still  has, a  lot  of  office 
work  to  do  before  turning  over  the 
keys  to  Mr.  Cash,  who  will  assume  his 
duties  Monday  morning. 

Today  Mr.  Mallory  returned  from  a 
series  of  trips  that  havp  taken  up  his 
time  night  and  day  for  more  than  ten 
days. 

A  week  ago  last  Monday  he  took 
twenty-three  prisoners  to  Minntapolis, 
setting  a  new  record  In  the  transporta- 
tion of  prisoners  in  this  state.  All  but 
two  of  th'  .se  were  giVt-n  sentences  of 
sixty  days  In  Jail  and  the  payment  of 
$100  fine.  The  prisoners  were  arrested 
on  Indian  reservations  charged  with 
violating  the  Federal  liquor  laws.  They 
were  transferred  to  Minneapolis  so 
that  they  could  be  sentenced  at  once 
and  begin  the  serving  of  their  sentence 
without  til©  necessity  of  waiting  for 
the  opening  of  the  July  term  of  the 
Federal  court  hero. 

PrlMoners    ComnLltted. 

Thirteen  of  the  prisoners  were  taken 
to  the  Carlton  county  jail,  three  to  the 
St.  Louis  county  Jail,  two  to  the  Itasca 
county  Jail,  two  to  the  Ramsey  county 
Jail  and  one  to  the  Otter  Tall  county 
jail.  Mr.  Mallory  had  the  task  of  com- 
mitting these  prisoners  and  several 
others  to  other  cities  within  the  short 
period  of  ten  days,  In  addition  to  other 
official  matters,  making  his  clo.slng 
days  in  office  among  the  busiest  of  his 
tenure. 

Ho  also  took  Janies  H.  Rohe,  St. 
Paul,  alleged  white  ilaver,  from  Duluth 
to  Minneapolis  for  trial.  Rohe  was 
arrested  In  St.  Paul  on  a  charge  of 
bringing  a  woman  from- Canada  to  Du- 
luth for  Immoral  purposes.  Tlie  evi- 
dence In  Robe's  case  was  Insufficient, 
Mr.  Mallory  said,  and  he  was  released 
by    the    court   in    the   Mill    City. 

Mr.  Mallory  returned  from  his  last 
official  trip  today.  Tomorrow  and  Sat- 
urday he  will  devoto  his  time  to  mak- 
ing out  commitment  and  release  papers 
for  various  prisoners  and  straighten 
out  odds  and  end*  *n  the  office  pre- 
paratory  for   his  successor. 

"I   leave  the  office  without   regrets," 


GEORGE  J.  MALLORY. 


D.  H..  4-lS-lS. 


"Watchful  waiting 
not  needed 


»r 


said  Mr.  Mallory  today.  "I  have  served 
nearly  fifteen  years  and  during  that 
whole  time  my  relations  have  been 
most  cordial  with  attorneys,  court  of- 
ficers and  others,  and  Insofar  as  pos- 
sible I  have  been  on  friendly  terms 
with  all  the  prisoners  with  whom  I 
have  come  In  contact.  I  leave  the  of- 
fice with  the  best  of  feelings  toward 
my  coworkers  and  with  all  whom  I 
have  come  In   contact   with." 

When  asked  regarding  his  plans  for 
the  future,  Mr.  Mallory  said  that  he 
had  not  decided  yet  on  his  future 
work. 

Mr.  Cash,  who  succeeds  Mr.  Mallory. 
i.s  the  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Dan  Cash 
of  this  city— one  of  the  oldest  families 
in  the  city.  Mr.  Cash  was  lieutenant 
In  Company  G  during  tho  SpanLsh- 
American  war  and  has  been  prominent 
in  the  work  of  the  Spanish-American 
War  Veterans  ever  since.  .  He  also 
ran  for  commi.ssioner  when  the  com- 
mis-'ion  form  of  government  was  first 
in.stliuted  here. 


ISHTSano^HADOWS 

JJoiiCE  Court 


Tired  feet  tn  daytime 

Aching  feet  at  nighl 
Corns  on  the  left  foot 

Eunices  on  the  right 
Bethe  your  feet  vlth  Caiodde 

Then  put  on  your  ahoa 
And  svln«  »ior\g  v»  Avanua 

Uics  other  paople  do. 
r  AehlDf . 


Instant  Rrikf 

RetulU  poalt 
druggist 


.and 


gww:y  Pset'  Coraa.  Cat- 
lousas.aadSon  Baaioos. 
It  Denetrates  th«  pores 
and  removes  the  cause. 
tusraaiMd.  C«t  a  boa  froa 
r  the  oamt. 


FORGOT  UTTLE 

MAHER  OF  UU 

Magazine     Solrcitors     Ar- 
rested on  Complaint  of 
Hotel  Manager. 

Pretty  little  awburn-halred  Generleve 
Franks  was  very   angry  this   morning. 

She  stamped  a  high  gray  boot,  size 
four,  and  said  things  when  Chief  of 
Police  John  McSweeney  arrested  James 
Stephenson  and  Roland  D.  Olln,  two 
men  with  whom  she  has  been  working. 

Miss  Franks,  with  the  two  me-n,  reK- 
Istered  at  the  Spalding  hotel  last 
Thursday.  On  Monday  evening,  when 
something  was  said  by  the  Mtotel  man- 
agement about  the  high  cost  df  living, 
she  became  very  indignant  and  said: 

"Send  a  boy  to  my  suite  for  my  bags 
—at  once!"  ^  ^,, 

The  boy  went  to  the  rooms  and  Miss 
Fr«mks,  carrying  two  grips,  left  the 
building  in  a  huff. 

Night  Clerk  Roy  Quigley  thought 
he  recognised  the  grips  as  those  of 
the  men  and,  hurrying  to  their  room, 
verified  his  suspicions.  A  satchel  which 
Miss  Franks  had  carried  when  she  ar- 
rived was  in  the  room.  It  was  filled 
with    valueless    magatines. 

He  then  hurried  to  the  Soo  Line  sta- 
tion to  find  thatth^three  had  left.  He 
boarded  the  next  Superior  car  and  the 
trio   boarded   It   at    the    next   corner. 

Powerless  to  arrest  the  men,  Quigley 
took  the  grips  and  left, the  car.  Police 
looked  for  llicm  w htm ; the  car  reached 
the    Interstate    bri4^«.r^.but    they       had 

flown.  -"'■     i     . 

Warrants  were  Issued  charging  them 
with  defrauding  ti^  innkeeper,  and 
Chief  McSweeney  of  Cloquet  found 
them  today.  D<^tecLlve  Herman  Toewe 
left  for  Cioquet  early  In  the  day  and 
returned  shortly  after  noon  with  his 
prisoners. 

Miss  Genevieve  was  .  not  molested. 
Th-'  two  boys  will  he  arraigned  In  mu- 
nicipal court   this   altefnoon. 

GIRL  FRIENDSlN  COURT. 

One  a  Prisoner  and  Other  Is  the  Com- 
plaining Witness. 

Two  girl  friends  appeared  In  police 
court  this  morning,  one  of  them  a 
prisoner,  and  tho  other  the  com- 
plaining witness. 

For  several  weeks  they  worked  to- 
gether In  a  West  Superior  street  res- 
taurant, and  chummed  together  when 
they  were  not  working.  Yesterday 
Clara  Erlckson  lost  her  muff,  and  she 
accused  Clara  Ben,  her  erstwhile 
friend,    of   taking  It. 

"I  didn't  know  it  was  her  muff, 
said  Miss  Ben  today,  after  pleading 
not  guilty  to  a  charge  of  petit  larceny. 

She  will  be  given  a  hearing  this  aft- 
ernoon. 

BURGLAR  AW.  AMATEUR. 

Broke  into  Commission  House  But  Got 
Nothing. 

An  amateur  burglar  broke  Into  the 
commission  house  of  John  Morrell  A 
Co.,  108  West  Michigan  street,  early 
this  morning,  but  was  frightened 
away  before  he  had  a  chance  to  ateal 
anything  of  value. 

Police  found  the  rear  door  open  a 
few  minutes  after  the  burglar  call 
was  sent  In;  but  the  burglar  was 
missing.  He  had  smashed  a  pane  of 
glass  and  had  forcM  the  padlock  on 
the  door.  ,  . 

"I  saw  a  abort'  man,  dressed  In 
dark  clothes  rtiftnl^  away  from 
there  Just  a  little  while  ago,''  said  a 
nearby  watchman.^' 

Police  are  searci^Wg  for  the  "short 
man."  j^    ^ 

PULLMAN  P^  HOTEL 

Railroad  Men  For§ot.^o  Register  and 
Aro  AmmimI. 

Two  railroad  jn«H.  giving  the 
namAs  of  James  Fi  i^JWllson,  12,  and 
William  Alley,  14.  W*fe  arrested  early 
this  morning  for-  sleeping  In  the 
"Pullman"   hotal.     X    •• 

When  they  raa  *but  of  funda  th^y 
visited  the  rallrdad ''irards  near  the 
Union  station  aaC  taok  up  a  temp(>- 
rary    abode   la  a   Ihrilman    car    which 


was  not  In  use,  and  which  had  been 
sidetracked. 

There  wa.s  no  porter  to  bother  them, 
and  the  service  was  a  little  ragged, 
but  the  hotf*l  was  a  good  one,  at  that, 
they  admitted  to  police.  A  Great 
Northern  special  officer  turned  them 
over  to  Patrolmen  Wanvlck  and 
Youngstrom. 

Thpy  were  fined  JIO  and  costs  for 
trespass. 


Nothing  is  to  be  gained 
now  by  "watchful  wait- 
ing." All  the  new  styles 
in  suits  are  here  and  noth- 
ing newer  will  come. 

No  store  offers  you 
greater  choice  of  famous 
makers. 

Stein-Bloch,  Sincerity, 
Society,  Sampeck  are  all 
names  to  conjure  with  in 
the  world  ot  first  class 
ready-to-wear  clothing. 

More  than  that,  they  are 
all  makers  who  have  a 
reputation  to  guard  and 
who  will  overcome  the 
present  dye  and  price  dif- 
ficulties without  lowering 
their  standard  of  value 
and  workmanship. 

Spring  is  here,  at  least 
in  the  store  and  the  styles 
exhibited. 

The  newest  of  the  new 
Spring  Overcoats  at  $10, 
$12.50.  $14.50,  $15,  $20, 
$25  and  $30. 


Duluth, 
Mina. 


^^^^'''-Ji^ 


Slip-ons  and  Rain  C<»ats 
at  S3.95,  $5,  $7.50.  $8.50, 
$10,  $12.50,  $15. 

•  • 

Men's  and  Young  Men's 
Suits  at  $10.  $12  50.  $U.50 
(Columbo).  $17,  $20,  $25, 
$:iO,  $;J5  and  $40. 

•  • 

Boys'  and  Children's 
Suits  at  $2.  $2.50.  $:3, 
$:^.50,  $4,  $4.90  (Little  Co- 
lumbo), $6,  $6.50,  $7.50, 
$8.50,  $10,  $12.50,  $15  and 
$16.50. 

Everwear  Hose  for  men, 
women  atid  children. 

•  • 

Easter  in  ten  days.  Pre- 
pare! 


% 


CI«UMn|  Cs 
Foot-Note:   Walk  In  Ilanan  Shoea 


At  Third         ft 
Ave.  West.       ^ 


Most  everybody  knows   Duluth  Her- 
ald Want  Ads  bring  results. 


TRUSTEES  SALE 

The  stock  of  drugi,  etc.,  belonging 
to   the  bankrupt  estate   of 

R.  J.  TREZONA, 

doing  business  as 

ELY  PHARMACY,  Ely,  Minn., 

will  be  sold  for  cash  to  the  highest 
bidder,  on  Monday,  April  17,  1916,  at 
1 :00  p.  m.  at  the  store  building  at  Ely. 
Inventory  may  be  inspected  at  631 
Manhattan  Bldg.,  Duluth.  Sale  sub- 
ject to  confirmation  by  the  court. 
W.  O.  DERBY,  Trustee. 


CHARITIES  CONFERENCE, 

Miss  Edna  Meeker  Invited  to  Attend 
Indianapolis  Convention. 

Miss  Edna  G.  Meeker,  secretary  of 
the  Associated  Charities,  has  received 
an  Invitation  from  the  Indiana  com- 
mittee on  arrangements  to  attend  the 
forty-third  annual  session  of  the  Na- 
tional Conference  of  Charities  and  Cor- 
rection to  be  held  May  10  to  17  at  In- 
dianapolis. 

The  national  conference  is  the  largest 
and  Is  considered  to  be  one  of  the  most 
important  conferences  of  Its  kind  In 
the  world.  Eaeh  year  It  brings  to- 
gether representative  social  workers 
from  all  parts  of  America  who  meet  to 
discuss  great  social  problems  relating 
to  the  care  of  the  helpless  and  the  bet- 
terment of  humanity  to  prevent  more 
helplessness. 

» 

Most  everybody  knows  Duluth  Her- 
ald  Want  Ads  bring   results. 


Cironna    Seen    Xo    Shortage. 

Wa.shlngton,  April  13. — Calculations 
by  Senator  Gronna  that  the  smaller 
acreage  of  winter  wheat  and  the 
year's  Import.s  of  sisal  show  there 
could  be  no  shortage  of  binder  twine 
this  season  was  the  feature  of  today's 
session  of  the  senate  sisal  committee 
investigation. 


Q-BAN  DARKENS 
GRAY  HAIR 


Ewerybody  Uses  It  —  So  Hamiy. 
llMless-4f«  Dye. 

By  applying  Q-Ban  Hair  Color  Re- 
storer, like  a  shampoo,  to  your  hair 
and  scalp,  ail  your  gray,  streaked 
with  gray,  prematurely  gray  or  faded, 
dry  or  harsh  hair  quickly  turns  to  an 
even,  beautiful  dark  shade,  so  every 
strand  of  your  hair,  whether  gray  or 
not,  becomes  glossy,  fluffy,  lustrous, 
aoft,  thick,  with  that  even,  dark  shim- 
mer of  beautiful,  radiant,  healthy  hair 
— Just  as  you  like  to  have  your  hair 
appear — ^faacinatlng  and  abundant, 
without  even  a  trace  of  gray  showing, 
only  naturaJ,  evenly  dark,  lovely  hair. 
Q-6an  is  absolutely  harmless;  no  dye, 
ready  to  u»e.  Only  50c  tor  a  big  bot- 
tle at  the  Orpheum  Pharmacy,  Du- 
luth, Minn.  Out-of-town  folks  sup- 
plied  by  mail. — ^Advertisement. 


GO  TO 


We  will  be  there  to  help 
you  select  your  Lot. 


SUISIDAY 


LAKESIDE  LAND  COMPANY 


CLASS  RATES 
UNCHANGED 

New  Package  Freight  Line 

Issues  Tariffs  Effective 

Friday. 


Iron   and   Steel   Schedule 

Equalized  as  to  Buffalo 

and  Cleveland. 


Washington,  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Great  Lakes  Tran- 
sit company,  operating  the  lake  ves- 
sels recently  divorced  from  railroad 
ownership  by  order  of  the  Inter.state 
commerce  commiseion,  today  filed  its 
port-to-port  freight  tariffs  with  the 
interstate     commerce     commission,     to 

take    effect    tomorrow.  ,     ^   ^ 

These  rate's  are  all  local,  between 
ports  on  the  Great  Lakes,  no  through 
rail-and-lake  rates  having  been  pre- 
sented to  the  commission.  1  he  class 
rates  hetween  Buffalo  and  Duluth  are 
as    follows:  ^„„  , 

First  class,  33  cents  per  100  pounds 
second  class,  31  cents;  Rule  -.5.  -i6 
cents;  third  class,  24  cents;  Rule  -6, 
19  cents;  Rule  28.  19%  cent»;  fourth 
class.  17  cents;  fifth  class,  16  cents; 
sixth   class,    12>4    cents. 

Grain  and  Iron. 

The   rate    on    grain    and    grain    prod- 
ucts  is   11 V-    cents   per   100    pounds   and 
on    iron    and    steel    products    11    cents  ^ 
per  100   pounds.  ^     m.,       u 

These  rate*  apply  to  traffic  h''- 
tween  Buffalo,  Cleveland.  Detroit  and 
Erie  on  the  East,  and  Chicago.  Du- 
luth and  Superior  and  ports  In  tne 
upper  peninsula  of  Michigan  on  the 
West.  

Tariff  schedules  on  file  at  the  of- 
fice of  the  traffic  commissioner  of  the 
Duluth  Commercial  club  show  that  the 
tariffs  Just  filed  with  tne  Interstate 
commerce  commission  In  Washington 
are  identical  with  those  of  the  rail- 
road-controlled lines  put  out  of  bu.sl- 
ness  by  the  divorcement  order  last  fall, 
so  far  as  the  class  rates  are  concerned. 
The  rate  on  grain  and  grain  products. 
which  Is  east  bound  business.  Is  the 
same  as  last  year,  but  there  is  a  dif- 
ference on  Iron  and  steel  products. 

The  former  rate  on  the  latter  from 
Buffalo  under  the  old  conditions  was 
12»i  and  from  Cleveland,  lit*.  It 
was  announced  some  time  ago.  and 
puUlished  at  that  time  In  The  Herald 
that  the  rates  on  iron  and  steel  Prod- 
ucts would  be  eQuallzed  as  to  Buf- 
falo and  Cleveland,  and  the  new  tariff 
provides  for  that  equalUation  as  it 
will  be  seen,  by  making  the  rate  of 
11   cents  a  hundred   pounds   from   both 

points. 

This  is  exceptionally  advantageous 
to  this  part  of  the  country  as  it  gives 
a  much  lower  rate  from  C.  F.  A  ter- 
ritory, and  overcomes  to  some  ejcte,'>^ 
the  system  in  vogue  in  that  territory 
of  making  the  rate  from  points  there- 
in, with  Baltimore  as  a  basis,  on  a 
combination   of  loc-al   rates. 

This  Is  being  fought  by  the  Duluth 
traffic  commission  In  favor  of  a  pro- 
portional  rate. 

The  announcement  that  the  port-to- 
port  tariff  would  go  into  effect  April 
14  was  made  in  Tha  Herald  laat  night. 

—— ♦ 

U»99   rttm6m    Itt   ChHltr. 

San  Francisco,  April  It— Frans 
Bopp,      consul     general    of     Germany 


here,  and  four  others  pleaded  not 
guilty  today  In  the  I'nlted  States  dis- 
trict court  to  Indictments  involving 
violations   of   neutrality. 


WILL  PROTECT 
SONG  BIROS 


Federal  Law   Will  Be  En- 
forced in  Duluth  This 
Year. 

Protection  for  song  birds  that  pass 
thfl  summer  in  Duluth  will  be  given  by 
the  police,  humane  society  and  Federal 
Audubon    agents. 

Th«    United    Stat*»s    game    laws    pre- 

:  scribe  a  fine  of  f  100  foi  the  destruction 
of  migratory  song  birds,     and     E.     A. 
Cleasby   of   Eau    Claire,    district    inspec- 
tor   under   the    Federal    migratory    bird 
I  law,   has  ask^d  th>-  local  authorities  to 
I  assist   him    in   prosecuting   offend«;rs   in 
I  this  vicinity. 

I  "Song  birds  have  been  ruthlessly 
I  slaughtered  by  ini.schievous  anj  igno- 
I  rant  p'  rsons  In  past  summers."  said 
I  John  G.  Ross,  humane  agent,  today. 
j  "This  year  we  propose  to  erert  every 
I  moans   to   prosecute   offenders." 

Th.;  following  birds  fall  un.ler  tha 
protection  of  the  statutes:  Robin,  cat- 
bird, song  sparrow,  crow  blackbird, 
j-ed-wing  blackbird,  blupjay,  brown 
thrush,  hrown  thrasher,  herniit  thrush, 
stone  thrush,  bluebird,  wren,  moadow 
lark.  V  oodp'^'cker,  swallow,  martin, 
mocking  bird,  redblrd.  mourning  dove, 
American  goldfinch,  bobolink.  Haiti, 
more  oriole,  orchard  oriole,  r'alifomla 
red-headed  linnf-t,  California  brow^n 
linnet  and  other  migratoiy  and  In- 
sect! vorou.s    birds. 

Duluth  policegirn  have  been  In- 
structed to  wateh  out  for  the  destruo- 
tion   of  song  birds. 


COMPLIES  WITH  LAW 
AND  LOGS  GO  FORWARD 

In  regard  to  the  seventy-nine  cars  of 
logs  at  Knife  River,  belonging  to  the 
Alger-.Smith  Lumber  eompany,  which 
were  complaln<»d  against  by  Os'^ar  Ar- 
neson.  manager  of  the  state  timber  de- 
partment of  the  state  auditor's  oXfic», 
settlement  was  reached  by  the  company 
having  tho  logs  bark-marked  according 
to  the  demand  from  the  state  official. 
Hereafter  the  bark -marking  which  has 
b»f"ome  almost  obsol*'!'^  from  disuse, 
will  be  resumed  until  Bome  steps  can 
be  tak<»n  to  have  it  abolished. 

It  wag  announced  (>t  the  offices  of 
the  company  today  that  the  logs  in 
question  were  only  briefly  detained 
and  weT«  then  forwarded  to  their  des- 
tination. 


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Thursday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


—      I  m  tm  • 


ON  THE  IRON  RANGES 


VIRGINIA  PROGRAM 
HONORS  AVON  BARD 

Shakespearean  Affair  to  Be 

Given  in  Range  City 

School. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  11.— (Special 
to  The  Hd-ald.)— In  keeping  with  the 
Bhakespeare  tercentenary  celebra- 
tion all  ovtr  the  world  this  wo*  k  the 
literary  sochties  of  the  high  srhool 
Will  rtndcr  the  following  program  in 
the   Tfch    high    t«)murrow    evening: 

Mni<ic     "Tho   Life    of   William   Shake- 
•pf-ar.',"     Walttr      Xtlson,    coached    by 
Uisa  ilould;    "The   Theater  at  the  Time 
of       Shake.speare.'        Jeannette       l?aer, 
Ooached  bv  Miss  T'.urnhani;  music;  pro- 
logw     Mildr.d     l.o<«her.      coached      by 
Miss    Marfurlane;     "A»   You     Like     It. 
Risalind.    <;orirude      Jenkins;    Orlando, 
Wheelock      Sherwood;       Cella.      (Jrace 
Toung:    coached    by    Mls.s   CN.ehran   and  I 
Mian    Simons;    "Taming    of    the    Shrew. 
K.,   Kdna   Chainpeau;    P..    Winlleld  Mar- 
tin;   f..aehed   bv   Miss    Keardon;    "Julius 
Catsar."    ISrulus.    Howard    Spain;  /-»«- 
•lus.    William     OHomke;     coaehed     by 
Mr.    rfelffer;   "Kathryn   and    Henry    v. 
King    Henry.     Huben     Laird:      Kathryn 
Frances    I'eake;      waiting    maid.    Char- 
lotte L,uke;  coached  by   Mr.  Sc»»arr  and 
MlB.s   Work;    music. 

FOUR  GHiLDREN  IN 
SAME  FAMILY  DIE 

Scarlet  Fever    Plays  Sad 

Havoc  in  Home  Near 

Chisholm. 

Chlsholm.  Minn.  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Four  of  the  five  chil- 
dren of  John  Huhonen.  a  farmer  living 
In  Sturg<on  township,  twenty  miles 
north  of  lierc.  died  during  the  last  ten 

{lays  of  scarlet  fever,  which  was  con- 
racted  by  all  members  of  the  family, 
according  to  a  report  made  by  Dr.  A.  li. 
Klik.  tl.|iiity  coroner,  wlio  returned 
from  tlic  H\ihon(n  fartn  Tuesday. 
I'lilil  .\n  Attention  to  It. 
When  th.>  chililn  n  became  sick  with 
the  fever  no  attention  was  given  to  the 
alckness  and  no  physician  summoned. 
The  serious  predicament  of  the  family 
was  not  known  until  the  ijldf  ."l  girl 
died  and  the  coroner  was  notified. 

An  effort  was  made  to  check  the 
fever  of  the  four  remaining  childnn, 
but  the  sickness  had  lingered  too  long 
and  one  by  one  all  di«d.  excepting  the 
young«-st,  wh<»  Is  still  in  a  prernrious 
condition  and  but  little  hope  is  held 
out   for   his   n  covery. 

SPECIAL  GRAND 

JURY  CALLED 

Will  Look  Into  Marble  Kill- 
ing Case,  Starting 
Friday. 

Grand  Rapids.  Minn..  April  13. — 
(Bprcial  to  The  Herald.)— Judge 
Wright,  late  yesterday,  ordered  a  spe- 
cial grand  Jury  drawn  to  consider  the 
Atana.'^off  murder  case.  The  grand 
Jury  will  convene  on  Friday  morning 
and  tlie  Investigation  into  the  killing 
Will  be  taken  \ir  at  once. 

This  action  v.  ill  avoid  the  necrssary 
of  holding  Atanasoff  and  one  witness 
until    the   Si  plember   term   of   court. 

Atanasoff  Is  alleged  to  have  shot 
and  killed  Gei.rge  Chrlstoff  near 
Marble  Monday,  and  is  now  here  in 
Jail. 

NIBBING  SOLDIERS 

TO  DRILL  IN  PARK 

nibbing.  Minn..  April  13. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  local  militia 
company  mustered  to  full  strength 
and  the  members  showing  more  en- 
thusiasm than  ever  before  will  foon 
•tart  open  air  drills  to  give  the  mem- 
bers an   idea  of  what   marching  means. 

The  armory  is  too  small  for  such 
purposes  and  the  Hibbing  baseball 
park  will  be  utilized  by  the  militia 
Doy»  In  getting  Into  shape  for  thl.-i 
year's  work  at  camp. 

considerabTeTuilding 
in  hibbing  suburb 

nibbing.  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)  —  Alice,  a  suburb,  is 
enjoying  a  building  boom.  Several 
new  residences  are  being  built  in  the 
park  addition.  .T.  Mullavitch  is  build- 
ing a  store,  26  by  88.  which  will  be 
finished    in    a    few    weeks. 

A.  <).  Frederl<  k  is  building  a  lum- 
ber yard.  Mr.  Frederick  has  eleven 
contracts  so  far. 


by  648,  of  whom  280  were  adults  and 
368  Juvenile  readers.  The  total  num- 
ber of  borrowers'  cards  In  force  are 
3.153—1,624  by  adults  and  1.628  by 
children.  There  were  44.860  volumes 
lent  for  home  use. 


VIRGINIA  POLITICS 
ARE  ALL  ROILED  UP 

Mayor   to  Veto    Dahl  Ap- 
pointment and  Executive 
May  Face  Recall. 

Virginia.  Minn..  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  local  political 
situation  was  not  Improved  late  yes- 
terday with  the  announcement  by 
Mavor  Hoylan  that  he  would  veto  the 
appointment  of  Slgert  S.  Dahl  as  city 
attorney,  but  whether  the  matter  will 
come  to  an  Issue  at  the  next  meeting 
(Jrace    ^,j    ^^^^   council    Is    uncertain,    as   Mayor 


TEAM  IS  DROWNED 
IN  LAKE  VERMILION 


Horses    Being    Driven    to 

Tower   on   Ice  When 

They  Go  Through. 

Tower.  Minn.,  April  13. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  valuable  team  of 
horses  belonging  to  P.  H.  Anderson, 
was  drowned  In  Lake  Vermilion,  near 
St.  Mary's  Island,  Tuesday,  about  5 
p.   m. 

Arvld  Anderson  was  returning',  on 
the  Ice,  from  the  Trout  lake  camp, 
where  he  had  taken  a  load  of  supplies 
and  was  accompanied  by  a  man  from 
camp.  When  the  ice  broke  and  the 
horses  became  immersed,  Anderson's 
helper  fled  to  the  shore,  leaving  An- 
derson alone  to  rescue  the  team.  One 
of  the  horses  was  almost  out  of  the 
water  when  ho  again  fell  In,  and  the 
lone  man  was  unable  to  do  any  more 
for  them.  Anderson  arrived  in  town 
last  evening,  having  gone  six  miles 
back  to  camp  to  get  dry  clothes.  He 
says  there  would  have  been  no  question 
of  the  horses  being  saved  had  his  com- 
panion not  deserted  him. 

Trout    Lake    Camp    Qolta. 

The  Trout  lake  camp  discontinued 
operations  yesterday  and  fifty  horses 
were  brought  down,  arriving  here  last 
night  by  the  overland  route  via  Eagles 
Nest,  a  much  longer,  but  safer  way. 
The  warm  weather  and  the  rain  of  the 
past  few  days  has  played  havoc  with 
most  of  the  ice.  Many  of  the  lumber- 
men who  came  down  yesterday  went 
throjgh  it  several  times.  There  is 
very  little  hard  ice,  most  of  It  being 
frozen  slush  caused  by  the  freezing  of 
the  heavy  snows  which  covered  the 
solid  Ice  when  it  had  assumed  only  a 
five  or  six-inch  thickness.  An  early 
break-up  is  looked  and  hoped  for.  as 
a  great  deal  of  work  Is  to  be  done  on 
various  holdings  up  the  lake,  and  there 
is  no  chance  now  of  jcetting  any  sup- 
plies out  until  navigation  opens. 


noylan  last  night  received  a  telegram 
announcing  the  critical  illness  of  a 
relative  at  Kalamazoo,  Mich.,  and  he 
may  leave  the  city  for  some  time. 

If  Dahl's  appointment  Is  passed 
over  the  mayor's  veto  the  votes  of 
seven  aldermen  will  be  required. 
Dahl's  friends  are  confident  he  will  re- 
ceive them.  Dahl,  in  a  statement, 
thanks  his  friends  for  the  support  ac- 
corded him  and  declares  that  he  has 
no  enemies  politically  and  that  the 
fight    is    over. 

Humors  of  the  starting  of  a  recall 
election  which  will  involve  the  mayt>r 
and  members  of  the  council  are  rife, 
but  so  far  no  petitions  have  been  put 
in  circulation.  The  present  patronage 
flglit  is  one  of  the  most  bitter  in  the 
hlstorv  of  the  city  and  is  commanding 
general  attention  and  partisanship 
from   the  public, 

NIBBING  AUTO  CLUB 
AFTER  NEW  MEMBERS 


Will  Increase  Membership 

and  Pull  Off  Several 

Road  Stunts. 

Hlbblng.  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Hlbblng  motor  club 
last  night  elected  the  following  offi- 
cers: President,  E.  W.  Coons;  secretary, 
Paul  AVlilard;  treasurer,  W.  J.  Ryder; 
first  vice  president.  F.  H.  Holladay; 
second  vice  president.  Dr.  II.  K.  Read; 
governing  board,  L.  J.  Mlcka.  Dwight 
Booth,  Dr.  Butchart,  Fred  Klass  and 
Dr.  Placklock. 

The  report  of  the  treasurer  showed 
a  nice  sum  In  the  treasury  and  the  as- 
sodati'^n  to  be  In  a  healthy  condition. 
The  club  is  associated  with  the  Ameri- 
can Automobile  ass«>clation  and  also 
with  the  state  association,  and  has  de- 
rived much  benefit  from  both.  It  Is 
planned  to  Increase  the  membership 
150  more  and  an  active  campaign  will 
be  started  at  once  to  this  end.  A  race- 
track, road  trips  and  several  other 
features  are  planned  for  this  year.  The 
club  also  decided  on  radiator  emblems 
for  the  different  car  owners  belonging 
to  the  association. 


DAMAGE  SUITS 

VERY  NUMEROUS 

Virginia  Loses  Three  and 

Man  Is  Being  Sued 

for  $1,000. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— This  term  of  district 
court  will  make  a  record  for  damage 
suits  if  the  pace  started  is  kept  up. 
So  far  there  have  been  three  tried  In 
which  the  city  of  Virginia  was  de- 
fendant and  In  each  case  the  munici- 
pality  lost, 

Mrs.  Laura  Keith  sued  for  $6,000 
for  a  fall  on  a  walk;  her  husband 
sued  for  $2,600  for  the  loss  of  her 
services,  and  the  Jury  gave  the  woman 
$660  and  the  man  $160.  Another  Jury 
gave  John  Thorsell  $2,500  in  his  suit 
against  the  city  to  recover  $7,000  for 
damages  claimed  as  a  result  of  his 
motorcycle  hitting  a  hole  on  Hemlock 
8tr«'et. 

Today  the  court  and  a  Jury  are 
hearing  the  damage  case  or  Matllla 
vs.  Lento  to  recover  $1,000  for  in- 
juries alleged  to  have  been  sustained 
during  a  fight  near  Plwabik  last  year. 

SOME  MESABAORE 
IS  BEING  SHIPPED 

Operators    Generally    Are 

Waiting  for  Navigation 

to  Open. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  13.— (.Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Shipments  of  ore  In 
limited  quantities  arc  beginning  to 
move  off  the  Iron  ranf^e. 

While  no  considerable  volume  of  ore 
will  be  moved  until  navigation  Is  for- 
mally opened,  ore  Is  being  loaded  at 
the  Victoria  and  Union  shafts  and 
some  shipments  are  being  made  from 
the  Alpena  to  the  Minnesota  Steel 
plant 


CHISHOLM  LIBRARY 

■ASKS  FOR  $9,000 

Chlsholm.  Minn.,  April  13. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  library  board 
Monday  evening  decided  to  ask  the 
coun<-il  for  $9,000  for  the  maintenance 
Of  the  library  during  the  year,  an  In- 
crease of  $L',000  over  last  year's  appro- 
priation. 

The  librarian's  anuual  report  showed 
6. 040  volunus  owned  by  the  library,  of 
which  1.452  were  added  by  purchase 
last   yeaV  and  I'S  were  gifts. 

The    number    of    borrowers    Increased 


NEW  HIBBING  M.  E. 
CHURCH  DECIDED  ON 


Directorate     of     Church 

Starts  Movement  for 

New  Edifice. 


April  13.— (Special  to 
a  meeting  of  the  dl- 


Today  And  A 
Generation  Hence 

The  flight  of  time  makes  us  think  ol 
the  future.    The  baby  of  today  reflects 

what  greatness  may  b«  ^ 
acquired     when      ba 

f;row3  up.  And  any  i 
nflucnee  that  brings  | 
relief  to  the  expectant 
mother  la  the  first  anc^ ; 
greatest  of  obligations,  i 
There  l3  a  splendid  i 
remedy  kn  o  w  n  as 
•'Mother's  Friend"  that 


Hibbing.  Minn., 
The  Herald.)— At 
rectorate  of  the  Methodist  Episcopal 
church  hold  today  and  presided  over  by 
Rev.  Dr.  Burns,  district  superintendent, 
active  plana  were  executed  for  building 
a  new  church.  Several  sites  were  dls- 
cufsed.  .     , 

A  committee  on  location  consisting  of 
n.  B.  Beal,  Ralph  Barker  and  Wallace 
Hosklns  was  appointed.  B.  B.  Beal. 
J.  E.  Smith  with  a  third  man  to  be 
chosen  will  make  up  a  finance  commit- 
tee. C.  K.  Everett.  J.  Knowlton  and 
Rev.  R.  W.  Adair  will  act  as  a  commit- 
tee on  plans  and  specifications. 

The  president  of  the  church  shows 
that  at  the  present  time  there  is  $3,000 
as  a  nucleus  of  a  fund  which  will  have 
to  be  Increased  to  $26,000  in  order  to 
complete  the  building   planned  for. 


The  Commodore 
some  shipments  to 
last  few  days. 

Announcement  Is 
kins   mine,   In    the 
open»   pit    property 
and 
per. 


^   pit 
will 


has     been     making 
Allouez  during   the 

made  that  the  Per- 

Aurora   district,   an 

will    be     reopened 

bo  a  heavy  early  season  ship- 


BIG  STRIPPING  JOB. 

Winston-Dear  Company  Gets  Large 
Contract  From  Shenango  Co. 

Chisholm.  Minn..  April  13. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — A  stripping  contract 
requiring  the  removal  of  much  yard- 
age and  expected  to  cover  three  years 
has  been  awarded  by  the  Shenango 
Furnace  company  to  Winston  &.  Dl-ar. 

The  property  to  be  stripped  will 
Join  the  Buffalo  &  Susquehanna  pit 
and    the    Sellers    Townsite    forty    and 


GYM  DEM0NSTR.4TI0N 
IN  GILBERT  SCHOOL 

Gilbert,  Minn.,  April  13. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  gymnastic  demon- 
stration will  be  given  Friday  evening 
at  the  high  school  auditorium  here 
under  the  direction  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Leo  Jj.  Michaels,  supervisors  of  phys- 
ical training.  The  following  program 
will  be  presented: 

Selection,  high  school  orchestra; 
maze  marching,  girls;  Trekarlspolka. 
a  Swedish  dance,  nine  girls;  mat 
work,  boys  of  the  fourth  and  fifth 
grades;  Swedish  days  order,  girls  of 
fourth,  fifth  and  sixth  grades;  "Jump- 
ing Jack's  Jubilee."  seven  girls;  In- 
dian club  drill,  girls  of  seventh  and 
eighth  grades;  apparatus  work,  bovs 
and  girls;  Gootlund  quadrille  (Swed- 
ish), girls  of  seventh  and  eighth 
glades;  mat  work  (advanced),  boys; 
"Rejane"  (a  French  minuet),  girls  of 
seventh   and   eighth   grades;    races    and 


OFFICIAL  MAP  OF  THE  WEATHER 


pf  Agriculture.  Weather  Bureau^... 

les  F  Marvin, Chief 


WIND  SCALE. 

Miles  Per  Hour 
0  to    3 


^^•1  Vveci 
Unde 


Calm  

Ught  8lr 

Light  breeie 

Rtntle  breeze. . 
Modtrnte  breeze 
Fresh  breeze  — 
Strong  bretie. . 
Moderate  gale. 
Fresh   gale.... 

Strong  gale 

Whole  gale 

Storm 

Hurricane 
H.  W. 


,  ^tt'iily-ririli  tiierlJInii  IIk' 

Ml  lt'UI|Kin|lMt'.       Q^lcsi 
"'4  li.jiir-. 


EXPL/HNATORY   NOTES. 

Air  pr«<itutc  f»duicJ  In  H't  level.     Is'Txiis (coOlinuoiiJ  lines)  ]i3-,i  lliri.u;li  |Mjiiili  ofiliu.iJ  iiif  |>rr->ufe. 
^  |>»illy  iluuilv;    9ct(>;:J\;    R  lain;    S  ^noiv;   Vni'Uit  iuuiiKj;.     .\iiu\<s  l\y  tiiili  llic  iuikI      .'^lint](<I 


3  to    8 

8  to  12 
.12  to  18 
.19  to  23 
.23  to  28 
.28  to  34 
.34  to  40 
.40  to  48 
.48  to  50 
.50  to  65 
.^)  to  75 

Over  75 

RICHARDSON, 
?arecasttr. 

hoTiiLi.m  (.l.jiu.1  lim«) 
iiiias  IhbW   |>icvf|>it;iliuii 


RAIN 


The  weather  man 
says  "rain  or 
snow."  Well  it  feels 
like  It.  The  day  Is 
gloomy  without 
producing  results 
such  as  a  washing 
rain,  and  It  is  chil- 
ly enough  for  rath- 
er heavy  wraps. 
But  the  dust  has 
been  laid  anyway. 

A  year  ago  today 
was  Bunny  and 
warm.  The  sun  rose 
this  morning  at 
6:24  and  will  set  this  evening  at  6:63, 
giving  13  hours  and  29  minutes  of  sun- 

^Mr!  Richardson  makes  the  following 
comment  on  weather  conditions: 

"Cooler  weather  prevails  over  the 
Rocky  mountains*.  Eastern  slopes.  Up- 
per Mississippi  valley  and  Saskatche- 
wan. Very  mild  temperatures  are  the 
rule  from  Pennsylvania.  Ohio,  Indiana, 
Illinois,  Missouri  and  Eastern  Kansas 
southward.  Precipitation  (mostly  rain) 
occurred  over  Canada,  the  lake  region. 
North  Atlantic  states,  the  Rocky  moun- 
tains and  the  Southwest  during 
Wednesday  or  last  night.  Snow  w'as 
falling  this  morning  at  Denver,  Coio., 
and  Devils  Lake.  N.  D.  Heavy  frost  at 
Boise,      Idaho,    and   light   frost  at   Salt 

Lake  City,  Utah. 

•         — 
General   Foreeasta. 

Chicago,  April  13.— Forecasts  for  the 
twenty-four    hours    ending    at    7    p.    m. 

Minnesota  —  Partly     cloudy  tonight 
and  Friday:   rain  or  snow  In 
portion    tonight;     cooler 
portion  tonight;   warmer 
west  portions  Friday.  ...      ,    i.* 

Wisconsin— Partly  cloudy  tonight 
and  Friday:  cooler  in  southwest  por- 
tion   tonight  and   In  southeast   portion 

Iowa— Partly  cloudy  tonight  and 
Friday;  cooler  tonight;  warmer  In 
northwest  portion  Friday.  ,^„,„Kf 

North  Dakota— Generally  fair  tonight 
and  Friday;  warmer  Friday  and  In 
northwest  portion  tonight.  .  _,  , 

South  Dakota— Fair  tonight  and  Fri- 
day; warmer  Friday  and  In  extreme 
west  portion  tonight. 

Montana— Fair   tonight  and   Friday; 

warmer  tonight.  „     ,,         ,      ^  .    *„ 

Lower  Michigan— Partly  cloudy  to- 
night and  Friday. 

Upper  Michigan  —  Local 
snows  In  east,   cloudy 
tonight;  Friday  fair. 


LOCAL  FORECAST 

nuluth,  Superior  and  Tlclnl<T> 
Inrludlng  the  Meniaba  and  A'er- 
mlilon  Iron  rangewt  Italii  or  Know 
tonight  wUH  lowent  temperature 
about  30  deg.  Friday  partly 
eloudy  and  Marmer.  FrcNh  nortli- 
^veHterly  MliidM,  beeumiug  vari- 
able Friday. 


l|t*****************-^|HN^*^|t*** 


Temperatures. 

Following  -were  the  highest  temper- 
atures In  the  last  twenty-four  hours 
and  the  lowest  in  the  last  twelve,  end- 
ing at  7  a, 


m.: 

High  Uw 


In 
in 


northeast 

southeast 

north  and 


Abilene  80 

Alpena  50 

Amarlllo 

Battleford    J2 

Bismarck   ^ 

Bolae    54 

Boston    54 

Buffalo  40 

Cairo 

Calgary    48 

CharUs  City  

Charleston  W) 

Chicago  78 

Concordia  

Davenport    ; . 

Denver    66 

Des  Moines  88 

DeUls  Lak«   40 

Dodge  76 

Ddbiiipie  82 

DULUTH    36 

F:dnionton    M 

Kscanaba   40 

Fort  Smith   

Galveston  72 

Grand    Haven 60 

Green   Bay    48 

Helena   46 


66 
36 
48 
26 
36 
30 
42 
36 
62 
30 
46 
56 
64 
54 
62 
32 
54 
32 
52 
56 
32 
34 
36 
64 
68 
42 
.^4 
34 


Houghton  34 


In 


rains  and 
west  portion 


60 

'.80 

,.54 
.78 

!;78 


Huron 

IndlAnapnIig 
Jacksonville 
KamloojM  . . 
Kansas  City 
Keokuk  .... 
KnoxvlUe  .. 
La  Crossa  .. 
I.and(  r   .... 
I/>uisville  .. 
Madi.'ion  ... 
Maniuette 
Medicine 
Memphis  . . 
Miles  City 
Milwaukee   48 


Hat., 


.78 
.62 
.48 
.56 
.72 
.54 


Minuedosa 


.34 


42 
62 
.-.8 
40 
61 
64 
60 
46 
30 
62 
44 
32 
24 
64 
30 
42 
32 


High  Low 

Modena    54  30 

Montgomery  80  54 

Montreal 34 

Moorhead   60  36 

Nashville   64 

Sew  Orleans  80  60 

New  York  56  42 

North  Platte 78  46 

Milaboma  74  62 

Omaha   86  52 

I'urry  Sound 36 

Phoenix   72  50 

Pierre  70  42 

Pittsburgh   56  62 

Port  Arthur    48  32 

Portland,    Or    ....56  44 

Prince   Albert 32 

Qu'Appelle  28 


Raleigh    80 

Rapid  City 60 

Roseburg    64 

Koswell   

St.  Louts 86 

fit.  Paul 60 

Salt  Lake  City.... 66 

San  Diego  60 

6an  Francisco   ...70 
Sault  Ste.   Marie.. 50 

Seattle   50 

Sheridan    50 

Shreveport   80 

Sioux  City 82 

Spokane    54 

Sprlnpflcld.  HI 

Springfield.   Mo 

Swift  Current 44 

Tampa   80 

Toledo    54 

Valentine 

Washington  70 

Wichita   

WilUston  42 

WInnemuccR    50 

Winnipeg    40 

Villowstone  40 


60 
E6 
38 
44 
66 
40 
3S 
f.0 
60 
34 
46 
26 
62 
48 
36 
64 
62 
8 
58 
42 
44 
4S 
60 
.'.4 
26 
34 
18 


The 
Presl- 


bas  been  a  safeguard,  i  will   be  called   the  Webb   pit. 


a  helpful  dally  iDflO:- 
cnce,  to  a  host  oi 
women.  Applied  exter- 
nally to  tiic  niusclea 
they  become  pliant; 
Ihey  stretch  wilhout  undue  pain,  there  ia  an 
absence  of  distress,  the  nerves  are  soothed 
by  taking  away  the  burden  of  leaving  all  to 
lust  natural  condition.^. 

There  is  In  "Mother's  Friend"  the  direct 
mnd  immediate  help  that  all  expectant  moth- 
ers require.  Used  by  their  own  hand,  guided 
hj  their  own  minds,  they  learn  at  once  the 
blessed  relief  from  morning  sickness  result- 
ing from  undue  stretching.  They  experience 
dally  calm  and  nightly  rest.  It  Is  indeed 
••Mother's  Friend."  Get  a  bottle  today  of 
any  druggist.  Then  write  Bradfleld  Regulator 
Co.,  410  Lamar  Bldg.,  Atlanta,  CJa.,  for  one 
ef  the  roost  entertaining  and  valuable  little 
books  ever  presented.     It  is  grortli .  wiUof 


Stripping  will  be  done  on  a  new 
era  of  the  Webb  property  located  to 
the  south  of  the  underground  work- 
ings and  will  not  Interfere  with  un- 
derground work,  which  Is  being  pu.il.ed 
at  maximum  capacity  with  200  men  on 
the   payroll. 

The  Webb  is  classed  as  a  Hlbblng 
mine  and  officials  of  the  Winston  & 
Dear  company  arrived  In  Chlsholm 
Tuesday  and  started  preparing  equip- 
ment, used  in  stripping  the  Dunwoody 
mine  In  this  district,  for  removal  to 
the  Hibbing  district  when  the  new 
work   will   be  started  at  once. 


Organising  Hlbblnr  BarberN. 

Hi»>bing.  Minn..  April  13. —  (Sp<^oial 
to  The  Herald.) — Walter  Dunlop 
state  Inspector  of  barber  shops  ana 
secretary  of  the  state  barbers'  union, 
is  here  organizing  the  local 
Into  a  union. 


Thin  Folks  Who 

Wantjo  Get  Fat 

Increase  in  Weight  Ten  Pounds  or  More 

"I'd  certainly  give  most  anything  to 
be  able  to  fat  up  a  few  pounds  and 
stay  that  way."  declares  every  exces- 
sively thin  man  or  woman.  Such  a  re- 
sult Is  not  Impossible,  despite  past 
failures.  Most  thin  people  are  victims 
of  mal-nutrltlon,  a  condition  which 
prevents  the  fatty  elements  of  food 
from  being  taken  up  by  the  blood  as 
they  nre,  when  the  powers  of  nutrition 
are  normal.  Instead  of  getting  Into 
the  blood,  much  of  the  fat  and  flesh- 
producing  elements  stay  In  the  Intes- 
tines until  they  pass  from  the  body  urn 
waste. 

To  correct  this  condition  and  to  pro- 
duce a  healthy,  normal  amount  of  fat, 
the  nutritive  processes  must  be  artl- 
ftclally  supplied  with  the  power  which 
nature  has  denied  them.  This  can  prob- 
ably best  be  accomplished  by  eating  a 
Sargol  tablet  with  every  meal.  Sargol 
Is  a  careful  combination  of  six  splen- 
did assimilative  agents.  Taken  with 
meals,  they  mix  with  the  food  to  turn 
the  sugars  and  starches  of  what  you 
have  eaten  into  rich,  ripe  nourishment 
for  the  tissues  and  blood  and  Its  rapid 
effect  has  been  In  many  cases  reported 
remarkable.  Reported  gains  of  from 
10  to  25  pounds  In  a  single  month  are  by  no  means  in- 
frcQuent.  Yet  its  action  Is  perfectly  natural  and  abso- 
lutely harmless.  Sargol  Is  sold  by  Boyce  Pnig  store  and 
other  dniggists  eveowhere  and  every  package  contains  a 
■uarHUtee  oT  weight  Increase  or  money  twwk. 

NOTE — Sargol  is  recommended  only  as  a  flesh  builder 
and  while  excellent  results  In  casi-s  of  nenous  indiges- 
tion,   etc.,    have    been    reported,    care    sliould    be    taken 

of  weight  is  desired. 

— Advertlaement. 


barberartbout  using  It  unlen  t  gain 


games,  girls;  "Gathering  Peas  Cods 
(an  English  dance),  girls  of  the  sev- 
enth and  eighth  grades;  wrestling, 
bovs:  dumb-bell  drill,  girls;  (a)  Hirn- 
garian  Grief  Dance,"  (b)  "Skip  Ma 
Lou,"  girls;  classic  and  muscular  pos- 
ing,' L.  L.   Michaels^ 

SCHOOL  BOYS  HAVE 
COMMERCIAL  CLUB 

It  Is    Organized  By    High 

School  Students  of 

Ely. 

Kly.  Minn..  April  13.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — The  high  school  boys'  Com- 
mercial club  was  organized  Tuesday 
night  at  the  high  school  building, 
following  officers  were  elected 
dent,  Douglas  Nankervls;  vice  presi- 
dent, Walter  Carlson;  secretary.  Wil- 
ton Gianottl;  sergcant-at-arms.  Elmer 
Makl  The  constitution  and  by-laws 
were  drawn  up  and  adopted.  The  ob- 
ject of  the  club  is  "Training  for  Citl- 
zenshlp."  The  meetings  will  be  held 
the  last  Thursday  of  each  month. 
VHf  of  Lantern  Slldeii. 

A  general  teachers'  meeting  was  held 
in  the  high  school  assembly  room  on 
Wednesday  afternoon  at  5  f  clock.  A 
lecture  was  given  by  Principal  W.  E. 
Englund  on  "The  Use  of  the  Lantern  in 
the  Public  Schools." 

The  lecture  was  Illustrated  by  slides, 
showing  their  use  in  classics,  history, 
geography    and    biology.  ,    ,    v„    - 

The  meeting  was  preceded  by  a 
lunch  served  by  the  domestic  ecience 
department. 

GETS  WAR  POSTAL 

Chisholm      Woman      Hears      From 
Brother  Now  Serving  in  Egypt. 

Chisholm.  Minn..  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Mrs.  Norman  Macken- 
zie has  received  a  war  postal  froni  her 
brother.  George  Popple,  a  range  find- 
er in  the  New  Zealand  volunteer  in- 
fantry      brigade,        "somewhere"       In 

^  Mr  Popple  has  been  In  some  of  the 
most'  rigorous  campaigning.  He  en- 
tered the  British  service  at  the^flrst 
call  for  volunteers,  enlisting  at  Chris- 
church  N  Z..  and  left  for  the  Gal- 
llpoll  peninsula  with  the  first  New 
Zealand  volunteer  contingent.  He  was 
severely  wounded  at  the  Dardanelles 
campaign  and  was  sent  to  one  of  the 
base  hospitals.  When  he  recovered  he 
was  assigned  to  and  is  now  serving 
with  a  regiment  of  the  army  operat- 
ing in  Egyptor  on  the  Tigris  river. 

PERSGNATrNJURY 

CASE  BEING  TRIED 

Grand  Rapids,  Minn.,  April  13. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.)— A  jury  was 
selected  vesteBday  and  the  trial  com- 
menced of  the  personal  Injury  case  of 
F  F  Seaman  vs.  The  Great  Northern 
Railway  Company.  This  case  will  prob- 
ably last  welllnto  next  week,  ana  at 
the  close  of  «OtMrt  will  adjourn  for 
Easter  vacation.  A  dozen  or  more 
railroad  men,  tloetors  and  others  wit- 
nesses are  enJo/lMT  the  hospitality  of 


the  applications 
the  school  author- 
of  picking  the  best 


Grand    Rapids    while    awaiting      their 
turn  to  testify  In  the   case. 

SCHOOrDENTAL  JOB 
IN  HIBBING  POPULAR 

Several  Applications  From 

Dentists  Received  By 

School  Head. 

Hibbing,  Minn..  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  bills  for  the  month 
were  allowed  by  the  school  board  last 
night.  Supt.  C.  C.  Alexander  reported 
receiving  applications  of  several  den- 
tists for  the  position  of  school  dentist, 
and  the  board  directed 
placed  on  flle  to  give 
ities  an  opportunity 

A  gallery  in  the  Lincoln  high  school 
building  was  di.scussed  by  the  board. 
A  gymnasium  for  the  Jefferson  and 
Washington  school  buildings  was 
deemed  a  necessity,  and  Supt.  Alexan- 
der was  Instructed  to  confer  with  the 
school  architect  on  plans. 

The  building  committee  was  instruct- 
ed to  visit  the  Kelley  Lake  school  and 
Brooklvn  school  and  see  what  addi- 
tion.", if  any,  are  necessary. 

Walks  for  the  Alice  school  building 
were  ordered  built. 

VIRGINIA  INSURANCE 
RATES  ARE  REDUCED 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— The  General  Inspec- 
tion company  of  Minneapolis  an- 
nounces a  reduction  in  local  tire  insur- 
ance rates.  On  one-story  brick  build- 
ings there  is  a  reduction  .frf^V^f.^?"^® 
to  42  on  two-story  brick  buildings 
from  68  to  46,  on„  one-story  frame 
buildings  from  $1.08  to  90  on  two- 
story  frame  buildings  from  $1.13  to  95. 

Ely   K.    P.    Meeting:. 

Ely.  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  third  degree  was 
conferred  by  the  Knights  of  Pythias 
lodge  at  its  hall  last  night,  followed 
by  a  banquet. 

Firxt  Aid  T^eetnre. 

Ely,  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — A  first  aid  lecture  and 
demonstration  was  held  at  the  Zenith 
mine  Tuesday  night.  These  lectures 
are  given  the  first  and  second  Tuesday 


of  each  month  About  fifty  men  are 
notified  for  each  meeting;  they  are 
divided  Into  squads  of  four  men  each, 
and  the  lecture  is  then  given  by  the 
president  of  the  First  Aid  association 
or  a  physician  and  is  demonstrated  by 
the  different  squads  and  afterward  ex- 
amined by  the  physician.    

DIES  AFTER  OPERATION. 

Chlsholm  Woman    Unable    to  Stand 
Shock  of  Goiter  Removal. 

Chlsholm,  Minn.,  April  13.— The 
shock  of  an  operation  for  removal  of 
goiter  performed  in  the  Soudan,  Mmn^. 
hospital  proved  too  much  for  Mrs.  N. 
Kurtl  of  Chisholm  and  she  died  just 
a  dav  previous  to  her  thirty-eighth 
birthday.  The  body  is  here  and  the 
funeral  will  be  held  tomorrow.  Her 
husband  and  six  children,  one  son  and 
five  daughters,  the  oldest  of  whom  is 
15,   survive. 

DOUBTS^LID"  LAW 

CAN  BE  ENFORCED 

Chlsholm,  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— President  Webber 
of  the  village  council  last  night 
bluntly  told  the  council  and  peti- 
tioners for  stricter  enforcement  of  the 
lid  here  that  he  did  not  think  the 
liquor  laws  could  be  enforced  as 
strictly  as  some  claimed,  because  he 
doubted  if  a  jury  would  convict  on 
much  of  the  evidence  secured.  He 
made  this  statement  when  the  peti- 
tion was  read  from  Finnish  and  Scan- 
dinavian societies  urging  enforcing 
the  Ud,  and  H.  W.  W.  Runquist  sought 
to  speak  in  behalf  of  the  petitions. 
The  village  head  said  he  thought  the 
petitions  were  brought  in  and  the 
matter  raised  to,  as  he  termed  it,  "put 
the  council  in  the  hole."  The  Dower 
Lumber  company  got  the  contract  for 
furnishing    a    lot    of    cement    at    $2.16 

per  barrel. 

» 

Ylrglnlan    Burled. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  13.— The 
funeral  of  John  Omer  Olson,  18-year- 
old  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Aaron  Olson 
of  Virginia,  who  died  following  an 
attack  of  typhoid  fever,  was  held  thi.s 
afternoon  at  2  o'clock  and  an  hour 
later  from  the  Swedish  Lutheran 
church.  Rev.  Hugo  Thorene  officiat- 
ing, with  interment  in  Greenwood 
cemetery.  Olson  was  first  taken  111 
at  Tower  and  it  is  said  the  Illness 
spread  to   his  heart,  which  resulted   In 

death. 

— • 

Virginia   Barber*    I'nlonla^d. 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  13.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Virginia  barbers  have 
organized  a  local  union  with  Sam 
Brown  president  and  Joseph  Kindred 
secretary  and  twenty-two  members. 
Walter  Dunlap.  secretary  of  Duluth 
union,  formed  the  organization  to  reg- 
ulate hours  of  labor  and  general  shop 
conditions. 

VILLA  SAID  TO 

BE  .AT  URBINAS 

(Continued    from   page    1) 


from   New   York,   Boston     Philadelphia. 

San  Francisco  and  S^^^^/^/^  J  be^T?  re- 
believe  the  men  involved  haxebe^n  re 

sponsible  for  fires  on  at  least  ^""^^2 
three  steamers  that  have  caused  $4,000.- 
000  damage.  They  assert  *»»^y„^|o! 
evidence  that  bombs  made  *"  f  ,^°?^a 
ken  factory  ostensibly  operated  for  the 
manufacture  of  fertilizer  were  sent  to 
all  parts  of  the  country.  The  use  lO 
which  they  were  put  other  than  foi 
the  destruction  of  steamers  has  noi 
been  disclosed. 

Sent   By   A'on   Pap*n.  ^ 

Detectives  asserted  today  that  one 
of  the  prisoners  said  he  had  been  eeni 
to  the  factory  in  Hoboken  by  Capt. 
Franz  von  Papen,  former  military  at- 
tache of  the  German  embassy  at  A\  ash- 
Ington,  who  was  recalled  at  the  re- 
quest of  the  United  States. 

The  Hoboken  factory  was  a  smalj 
structure  in  which  a  few  men  were 
employed.  One  of  the  prisoners  told 
the  police  it  was  used  at  first  to  make 
fertilizer  for  shipment  to  Germany 
through  neutral  countries,  and  that  the 
Germans  extracted  lubricating  oil  from 
the   fertilizer   after   its  arrival    in   Ger- 

Bo'th  Becker  and  von  Klelst  are  said 
by  the  police  to  have  confessed  makingr 
the  bombs.  The  parts  played  by  Capt. 
Wolperts  and  Capt.  Bode  have  not 
been  told.  It  is  hinted  that  the  first 
clew  to  the  conspiracy  came  to  the 
police  as  a  result  of  a  dispute  between 
the  men  higher  up  in  the  conspiracy 
and  the  chemist  who  supplied  the  ex- 
plosives. Many  of  the  bombs  are  said 
to  have  failed  to  explode,  and  conse- 
quentlv  the  chemist  was  chidcd  and 
had  difficulty  over  his  payment. 

Di.scovery  of  the  plot  was  brought 
about,  according  to  the  authorities  of 
Hoboken,  through  the  discontent  of  a 
man  who  had  quarreled  with  the  lead- 
ers over  money  payments.  The  Ho- 
boken authorities  said  that  this  man, 
whose  identity  is  withheld,  told  thern 
that  Capt.  Boy-Ed.  the  German  naval 
attache  in  Washington,  and  Capt.  von 
Papen,  the  military  attache,  had  be- 
fore their  departure  from  the  United 
States  placed  a  large  sum  of  money 
at  the  disposal  of  the  bomb  maker**, 

ANTI-LYNCHMAN 
ON  MISSION  WORK 


'ifl^ 


leels 


Run-over    H( 
Are  Unsightly- 
Overcome  This  by 
Wearing 

Teimbadis 


DOUBLC  -  WEAR 


[RubberHeel 

Interchangeable 


H.  F.  Wessel  of  St.  Paul' 
Trying  to  Stir  Oppo- 
sition Here. 

In  an  effort  to  arouse  antl-LyncTi 
sentiment  among  Democrats  of  Duluth 
and  St.  Louis  county,  Henry  F.  Wessel 
of  St.  Paul  is  In  Duluth  for  a  day  or 
two  and  is  a  guest  at  the  St.  Loula 
hotel.  Mr.  Wessel  was  formerly  Iden- 
tified with  the  Lynch  wing  of  the 
party,  but  later  broke  away  and  went 
to  the  Xowell  faction,  following  the 
appointment  of  his  brother,  J.  S.  Wes- 
sel of  Crookston  to  the  United  States 
marshalship,  for  which  he  was  a  can- 
didate. Mr.  Wessel  was  also  candidate 
for  postmaster  of  St.  Paul,  but  was 
side-tracked. 

He  declares  that  although  Fred  B. 
Lynch  was  indorsed  for  national  com- 
mitteeman by  a  majority  of  the  dele- 
pates  and  alternates  who  met  In  the 
West  hotel  in  Minneapolis  last  Sat- 
urday, Lynch  has  lost  out;  and  iie 
eolioes  the  statements  made  then  by 
Z.  H.  Austin  and  others,  that  the 
fight  wMll  be  carried  to  St.  Louis  If 
necessary.  Mr.  Wessel  is  r.ltfrnate  for 
Mr.  Austin  as  delegate-at-large  and 
was  a  candidate  for  the  same  office 
him.relf,   but  was  defeated. 


Mojada,    which    was    its   connection    by 
the  Mexican  Northern  railroad. 
Directed  By  Villa. 

On  their  way  to  Sierra  Mojada  they 
sacked  the  town  of  Corllla.  The  belief 
that  Villa  himself  is  directing  the 
operations  of  the  bandits  Is  supported 
by  a  report  received  from  Ojlnaga. 
stating  that  Col.  Riojas,  the  commander 
there,  had  Information  that  Villa  had 
doubled  In  his  tracks  and  was  200  miles 
southwest  of   that  town. 

Ojlnaga  is  directly  across  the  border 
from  Presidio,  Tex.,  and  about  150 
miles  north  of  Sierra  Mojada. 

Another  circumstance  that  gives 
color  to  this  location  of  the  bandit 
chief  is  the  fact  that  Canuto  Reyes,  at 
the  liead  of  a  large  number  of  men, 
was  reported  from  Torreon  a  week  ago 
to  be  traveling  north  in  the  direction 
of  Sierra  Mojada.  It  was  the  belief  at 
the  time  in  Torreon  that  Villa's  no- 
torious ally  was  on  his  way  to  join 
the  brigand  in  chief.  If  it  proves  true, 
Villa  has  completely  evaded  the  Amer- 
ican troops  who  have  been  driving 
south  at  an  amazing  speed,  and  are 
reported  very  close  to  the  Durango 
border. 

Bant  of  American  TroopM. 

Sierra  Mojada  is  140  miles  east  of 
the  nearest  point  at  which  American 
troops  are  known  to  be.  It  is  on  the 
eastern  side  of  a  vast  desert,  known 
as  the  Bolson  Mapiml  and  south  of  an- 
other dreary,  waterless  waste  called 
Dolson  de  Los  Lipanes.  Its  only  con- 
nection with  the  west  is  by  the  Mexi- 
can Northern  railroad  along  which  the 
Villistas  advanced,  burning  bridges, 
destroying  telegraph  lines  and  tearing 
up  the  tracks  as  far  as  they  were  able. 

Little  credence  is  given  reports  here 
from  Ojlnega  that  Villa  plans  to  turn 
north  and  attempt  a  raid   on  Presidio. 

It  Is  believed  far  more  probable  that 
the  bandit,  if  he  is  at  Sierra  Mojada. 
has  chosen  that  desolate  and  Isolated 
spot  for  the  concentration  of  his  forces 
and  those  of  Canuto  Reyes  with  the  in- 
tention of  sweeping  down  in  force  on 
Torreon  after  the  American  troops  are 
withdrawn  from  Mexico.  Numerous  re- 
ports from  Mexican  sources  agree  that 
Villa  is  convinced  the  soldiers  of  the 
United  States  will  soon  be  recalled 
and  that  he  will  be  then  able  to  rally 
all  the  anti-Carranzlsta  factions  in 
Northern  Mexico  to  his  standard. 


PUT  BOMBS  ON  VESSELS 

(Continued   from   page    1.) 

plosions  while  on  her  way  to  Mar- 
seilles, France.  Unexploded  bombs 
were  found  in  her  cargo  after  her  ar- 
rival there. 

Police  Capt.  Thomas  Tunney,  who  has 
charge  of  the  case,  regards  the  arrest 
of  the  four  prisoners  as  the  most  im- 
portant stride  yet  made  in  the  detec- 
tion of  a  great  conspiracy  to  destroy 
•teamshlpa  sailinir  with  war  munltioos 


DULUTHIANS  GIVEN  PATENTS. 


Several  New  Inventions  Reported  By 
Washington  Office. 

Several  Duluthlans  have  juPt  been 
granted  patents  on  new  inventions  ac- 
cording to  a  dispatch  from  Washing- 
ton, D.  C.  Charles  J.  Kennedy  hag 
been  granted  a  patent  on  a  device  for 
cleaning  and  drying  safety  razor 
blades;  Rudolph  C.  Kruschke,  on  a 
guard  for  trolling  hooks;  John 
tinson,  on  a  ttump  p-jller. 


Mrir« 


WOMEN'S  CLUBS  ARE 
MEETING  AT  ASHLAND 

Ashland.  Wis.,  April  13. — President 
J.  D.  Brownell  of  Northland  college 
today  addressed  the  convention  of  the 
Eleventh  district  of  the  Wisconsin 
Federation  of  Women's  Clubs,  which 
opened  a  two-day  session  here  yester- 
day with  about  100  delegates  present 
from  Superior,  Rhinelander,  Lady- 
smith,  Ironwood,  Iron  River,  Phillips. 
Mellen.  Bayfi«ld,  Tomah.  Tomahawk. 
Park  Falls,  Eau  Claire,  Chippewa  Falls 
and   Ashland. 

Each  club  is  credited  with  two  dele- 
gates and  there  also  are  large  dele- 
gations of  visitors. 

State  President  Mrs.  D.  O.  Kinsman 
of  Whitewater  and  the  corresponding 
secretary,  Mrs.  A,  W.  Shelton  of 
Rhinelander,  ar<;  here. 

President  Brownell  spoke  today  en 
"The  Development  of  the  American 
Drama."  Judge  Garvin  spoke  on 
"Criminal    and    Community." 

The  session  opened  at  2:30  yester- 
day afternoon.  Rev.  E.  S.  Ruth  gave 
tho  invocation,  which  was  followed  by 
music  by  the  clubs.  Mrs.  McDonald 
delivered  the  address  of  welcome, 
which  W'as  responded  to  by  Mrs.  C.  E. 
Alvord  of  Washburn.  Mrs.  D.  O.  Kins- 
man, the  state  president,  then  gave 
the  president's  address.  A  vocal  solo 
by  Miss  Hoyer  of  Ashland  and  an  ad- 
dress by  Mrs.  Fuller  on  rural  life 
closed  the  afternoon  sesslcn. 

A  banquet  was  given  by  the  Monday 
club  for  the  delegates  last  night  at 
the    Knight   hotel. 


HOW  GOOD  THAT 
MUSTEROLE  FEELS! 


It 


Gets  to  That  Sore  Spot 
Like  Magic 


A-a-h!  That's  delicious  relief  for 
those  sore  muscles,  those  stiff  joints^ 
that  lame  back. 

MUSTEROLE  is  a  clean,  white 
ointment,  made  with  the  oil  of  mus- 
tard and  other  home  simples. 

It  does  the  work  of  the  old-fash- 
ioned mustard  plaster,  minus  the  plas- 
ter and  minus  the  blister! 

You  simply  rub  MUSTEROLE  on 
the  spot  where  the  pain  is — rub  It  on 
briskly — and  the  pain  is  gone. 

Xo  muss,  no  bother.  Just  comfort- 
ing, soothing  relief — first  a  gentle 
glow,  then  a  delightful  sense  of  cool- 
ness. And  best  of  all.  no  blisters  like 
the  old-fashioned  mustard  plaster  used 
to  make. 

There  is  nothing  like  MUSTEROLE 
for  Sore  Throat,  Bronchitis,  Tonsilitis, 
Croup,  Stiff  Neck,  Asthma,  Neuralgia, 
Headache,  Congestion,  Pleurisy,  Rheu- 
matism, Lumbago,  Pains  and  Aches  of 
the  Back  or  Joints,  Sprains,  Sord 
Muscles,  Bruises,  Chilblain.s,  Frosted 
Feet  and  Colds  of  the  Chest  (it  often 
prevents  Pneumonia). 

At  your  druggist's,  in  25c  and  50<S 
Jars,  and  a  special  large  hospital  sizo 
for  $2.50. 

Be  sure  you  get  the  genuine  MUf?« 
TEROLE.  Refuse  imitations  —  get 
what  you  ask  for.  The  Musterole 
Company,  Cleveland,  Ohio. 


■TT* 


4- 


""♦■*" 


■t    -^ 


i 

1 

• 

> 

1 

. 

• 

■  f-- 


4 


< 


Thursday, 


THE     DULHTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


17 


MARKET  HAS 
HEAVYBREAK 

Wheat  Slumps  on  Better 

Weather  Reports  and 

Foreign  News. 


Flaxseed      Sells      Down 

Sharply  With  Absence  of 

Crushers'  Support. 


nnlath  Bonrd  of  Trade,  April  IS. — 
Th*  ntarkrt  »vai»  weak  around  the  elo«e 
on  •  renewal  of  MelllnK  In  Hympathy 
with  frenh  weakaew).  at  WlnnlpeR.  F»r- 
eiirn  ne»»»  wa/»  ulna  a  bearUh  faetor. 

May  wheat   rlo«ed  3'>Wr  off   and  Jaly 

l%c01'l.e  off. 

Mar  durum  rioted  2Vsr  off  and  July 
av,c    off. 

OatM  rloned  %e  up  at  4lM:<>  for  on 
the  trnrk;  ryr^,  anehaniced  at  ftSe,  aad 
bnrlcy  unrhaiiKed  at  from  6ar  to  71c. 

At  W  innipi-K.  yiny  oat*  elowed  un- 
rhan^ed  ti»  VnC  up  at  4.t  </i«  (9 -1.1 '4 e  aNked. 

At  St.  I.oul.i.  .%lay  wheat  elo«ed  at 
91.13  btd,  and  July   at  «l.ll'St    aaked. 

At  KanNan  City.  May  wheat  eloNed  at 
91.07Xh    axked.   and   .luly    at   «1.07>/i    bid. 

I'nts  ou  Minneapolis  May  wheat 
cloned  at   fl.lS'Hi,   and  call*   at   9l.'M'/*. 


raising  the  monthly  total  of  76.000  to 
110,000  ton.«f.  A  cable  from  Pari* 
states  that  the  goTernraent  propoaes 
to  fix  by  decree,  maximum  prices  fur 
bread,  meats  and  other  foodstuffs  dur- 
ing   th^i    war. 

•  •      • 
International     Wheat     Review    «ay«: 

"Market  Is  very  dull  owing  to  larger 
world's  shipments,  heavy  arrivals  and 
Increaalng  stocks.  Regarding  the  fu- 
ture of  the  market  It  remains  to  be 
seen  whether  the  Influence  of  big  sup- 
plies or  fears  of  smaller  crops  will  be 
the  stronger  Influence." 
.  •  • 
At  Minneapolis  Interest  In  cash 
wheat  was  not  as  good.  Blue  etem 
No.  1  northern  sold  at  2V4  to  5c  over 
May,  and  velvet  chaff  at  2(2  3c  over. 
Flour  trade  waa  very  dull.  Canadian 
wheat  Is  being  worked  to  local  millers. 

•  •      • 
Foreign   crop  aummary: 
Roumanla:    It    Is    officially    reported 

that  the  Central  powera  have  per- 
fected the  purchase  of  1.000.000  tons 
of  grain  and  shipment  overland  has 
already  commenced.  Prices  are  high. 
Russia:  The  minister  of  agriculture 
reports  that  crop  prospects  for  1916 
are  not  favorable,  as  weather  has 
been  against  grain. 
,  India:  Second  revised  official  report 
places  the  acreage  to  wheat  for  all 
India  at  30,227.000  bu.  This  compares 
with  last  year's  final  of  »a.230,000  bu. 
Crop  prospects  are  fair. 
«  •  • 
Regarding  linseed,  Broomhall  cabled: 
"ArRetitlne  flax  exports  this  week  are 
estimated  at  557.^0  bu.  mostly  to  the 
continent.  London  market  .opened 
firm  with  light  supplies.  The  strong 
freights  arc  Interfering  with  deliv- 
eries." 

•  •      * 

Weather    forecast: 

Illinois,  Missouri,  Minnesota  and 
Kan.sas — Un.settled.  probably  showers 
and    cooler.  .      _, 

Wia«onsln  and  Iowa— Part  cloudy 
tonight    and    Friday.  __  .^ 

Dukotas— Fair  tonight  and  Friday, 
warmer.  ,    .  .  - 

Nebraska — Part   cloudy    tonight   and 

Friday. 

•  •      ^ 

Broomhall  cabled 
"Wheat  opened  dull 
American  steadiness 
by  lar>;e  arrivals, 
changed  with  a  very  small 
Careo  market  was  ea.sy,  near  Man! 
tob«i3  6d  lower,  and  winters  Sd  lower. 
Australians  and  Argontinas  are  stead- 
ily held.  Mlller.H  are  holding  large 
stocks  and  foreign  arrivals  are  heavy, 
with    Canadian    offers    In    line.      Manl- 


from     Liverpool: 

and    later    eased. 

was   again   offset 

Spot      was      un- 


A  sharp  reaction  a|)peared  In  the 
wheat  market  today,  quotations  selling 
down  over  2 Vac  during  the  first  three 
hours'  trading. 

The  wcaknes.'j  wa.i  prompted  by  a 
lower  Uverpool  markH  In  cargoes. 
owing  to  accumulating  stocks.  Dam- 
ago  reports  over  th<>  winter  wheat 
territory  were  less  lurid,  and  progress 
wart  noted  In  spring  farming  opera- 
tions ovor  the  Northwest,  with  bettor 
weather       conditions.         Weakness       at 

Winnipeg    was    also    a    factor,    advices     

from  there  being  to  the  effect  that  their  j  tobas  and  winters  for  distant  delivery 
market     was     out     of     line     for     export,  ^-ere    unchanged    and    steady.    Contln- 


AMERICAN  WHEAT  MARKETS.  APRli'll  191C. 

!,_  onen  Hl^h.  LOW.  Close.         Aj^l  W.  Y'/.y^* 


May —  Open. 

Duluth     1.2lHa 

Minneapolis     ....1.22-21% 

Chicago     1.20-19% 

Winnipeg    1.1«V4-V4 

July— 

Duluth    l.tl% 

Minneapolis     ....1.21^4-% 
Chicago     1.16  %-S 

do    Sept 1.14^4-S 

Winnipeg     1.17 

do  Oct 1.12% 


High. 
1.21%i 
1.22 
1.20 
1.16% 

1.21% 
1.21% 

1.16% 
1.14% 

1.17% 
1.12% 


Low. 

1.17% 

1.18%-% 

1.16% 

1.14 

1.18%-%a 

1.18=*i-% 

1.14% 

1.11% 

1.14 

1.10% 


1.17%  l.M%a 

1.18%  1.12-"%  1.68% 

1.16%a         l.l»%-29  1.61% 

1.14%-%a  fct«%a  1.67% 


1.18%b 

1.18% 

1.14%-% 

l.ll%b 

1.14% 

1.10% 


lAl%-2tai  1.68% 


1.17% 
1.11%* 


1.4»% 
1.80% 
1.16% 
1.66% 


DULUTH  DURUM  MARKET. 

Open.  High.  Low.  Close.         Aprtl  12, 

May     1.16a  1.16a 

July    L16%a         1.16% 


1.12% 
1.18% 


1.12% 
1.13%a 


1.16b 
1.16%b 


DULUTH  LINSEED  MARKET. 

Open.  High.  Low.  Close.         April  12. 

Mar     2.16b  2.16  2.11 

July    2.17b  2.17%  2  11 

No, 


2.11 
2.12%a 


2.16%  a 
2.16% 


T'r  ago. 

1.78 

1.68%a 


T'r  ago. 

I.y8 

2.00% 


northern. 


Elevator  receipts  of  domestic  grain— Wheat.  20.266  bu.  last  year  71.824  bu; 
barley,  11,172  bu.  last  year  8,992  bu:  rye,  3.400  bu,  last  year  none. 

Shipments  of  domestic  grain— Barley,  3.1.667  bu,  last  year  188  bu. 

Elevator  receipts  of  bonded  grain— Wheat.  64,707  bu.  last  year  26.888  bu, 
oats    20.621  bu,  last  year  none;  barley.  1,745  bu,  last  year  none.  ^.^e: 

Shipments  of  bonded  grain — Wheat.  61.288  bu.  last  year  none;  oats.  i4.»6^ 
bu.  last  year  none;  barley,  1.218  bu.  last  year  none. 


Corn  and  Wheat  Buiietin. 


For  the  twenty  four  hours  rndiuc  at  8  •. 
April  13.  1916;  


m..  TiMindv. 


STATIONS— 


St»t#  of  I    Temperiture 
veathef;  Mtfh  1     Low 


irtpl- 

ItatioD 


demand,    tst.   I'a.il   . 

Wlmi'lmiii)    . 
Wortainstoa 


trade,  and  with  prospects  for  heavy 
d-llverles  In  the  three  Western  pro- 
vinces as  soon  as  the  congestion  at 
Fort  William  and  Port  Arthur  has 
been  relieved  after  the  opening  of 
navigation,  traders  are  becoming  rather 
apprehensive  regarding  merchandising 
pos.slbllltles.  Sales  of  Canadian  wheat 
to  Minneapolis  millers  on  an  extended 
Bcale  were  advised  today,  following 
similar  sales  at  Buffalo  noted  yester- 
flay. 

That  the  bonded  grain  In  the  eleva- 
tors here  must  have  been  largely 
placed,  however.  Is  assumed  from  the 
fact  that  good  all-rail  shipments  of  It 
are  being  made  this  closo  to  the  open- 
ing of  navigation.  Yesterday  100  cars 
6f  bonded  wheat  wero  loaded  out  on 
cars  on  this  side  of  the  bay. 

Clearances  at  the  seaboard  were 
heavy  today,  amounting  to  1,852.000  bu 
Of  wheat  and  flour,  and  It  la  intimated 
that  the  congestion  down  there  Is  being i 
relieved,  so  that  the  Buffalo  terminals 
fcre  getting  Into  good  position  to  take 
care  of  the  rush  of  shipments  down  the 
lak"S  at  the  opening  of  navigation. 
Apart  from  thl.s  point,  the  grain  move- 
ment at  the  Northwest  markets  Ib 
f>eing  maintained  In  large  volume,  and 
t  l.s  conceded  that  marketings  hero 
ivlll  become  broader  as  soon  as  eleva- 
tor spacf.  is  available.  At  Minneapolis 
todiy  214  cars  of  wheat  were  received 
again.st  101  last  year.  Chicago  had  369 
car.s  against  only  32  a  year  ago,  and 
Winnipeg  report<»d  311   cars. 

May     wheat     opened     unchanged     at 

11.21  Vj   and  declined  steadily  to  $118% 
t  the  noon  hour.     July  opened  V4®%c 
Off    at    81.21  ^*     and    declined    2c    more. 
May  durum  opened  unchanged  at  8115 
and    weakened    2%c.      July   opened    un- 
changed at  $1.16';   and  broke  2^*0. 
Slnnip   In  Flaxsr^d. 
Fl:ixsced     turned    easier      after     the 
opening     with     erushers     not    showing 
any    crreat    readiness    to    pick    up    fur- 
ther    supplies     for     the       time       being. 
Trading    was    the    quietest    In    several 
flay.''.       A    heavy    break     came    at    the 
clo»»    with   urgent  offerings    for  which 
ther"    wore    no    orders    In    the    market 
to    tuke.  _ 

CnMes    were     higher,    Buenos    Aires 

E losing  l^ic  up  at  $1.82%.  and  London 
•lie    up    at    $2.40%.  ^    ,„^^ 

M.iy  flax  opened  ViC  up  at  $2.16. 
rased  off  Ic  during  the  next  few  min- 
uter, fttid  closed  4%c  off  at  $2.11.  July 
followed  the  sairve  course  as  the  near 
future.  It  opened  V*c  up  at  $2.17  and 
clos.  d    4>to    off   at    $2.12  Vi    asked. 

At  Winnipeg  May  flax  closed  2%c 
off    at    $1.91    asked. 


to     absorb 


Canh    Sale«    Thnraday. 

No,  2  nnrUii-rn  wheat,  part  cir 

Na.  8  iiorth'^rn  wheat.  1  car 

No.  1  riurttum  wUial.  1.000  tw.  to  arrl»e 

No.  2  iMrtii-rn  wh'iit.  I  car,  smutty,  Iwndod. 

No    2  northern  wiieat.   1  car 

No.  2  i-.orihorn  wheat,  1  car,  tionJeil 

No.  1  dunim,  part  car 

No.   1  durum,  2  car;*   •••• 

No.  1  <1itrum,  300  bu.  to  arrlTO •• 

No.  2  durum,  1  car   

No.   3  durum,   1  car   

No.  3  mixed  durum,  1  car.... 
Ni.  2  mixed  durum,  2  can... 

Barley,    1   car   

Barley.   1  car   

Barley,   1  car  

Oata,   1  car.  No.  3  *hlt«  .... 
No.  2  ry«.  2  cars,  to  arrlw., 

2  rye,   1  car.  no  eraJe... 

2  rye.   part  car   


••••••• 


»•••••••••••• 


**t>a«a* 


No. 
No. 


MARKET  GOSSIP. 


.$1.18 
.  1.12 
.  l.l«Va 
.  1.10 
.  1.13% 
.  1.13 
.  l.UVi 
.  1.15 
.  1.13 
.  1.0^% 
.  1.<M% 
.  1.07 
.  1.10 
.67 

.6*5 

.42% 

.95 

.94 

.95% 


The  Indian  acreage  to  wheat  Is 
80,827.000.  against  32.230000  acres  last 
year. 

•  *      * 
Russian    winter    wheat   acre.ago    will 

show   a   decrease   of   about   80   per   cent. 
It   is    estimated. 

•  •  • 
A  cable  from  The  Hague  says:  "Hol- 
land is  negotiating  with  England  for 
permission  to  Import  a  larger  quantity 
Of  grain.  If  secured  It  Is  proposed  to 
Import  this  year  from  the  United 
States  1.180.000  tons  of  grain.  It  Is 
proposed  to  Import  Increased  amounts. 


ental      demand      continues 
freely   of   export    offer.-*." 

•  •      • 
Estimated        Argentine        shipments: 

Wheat.    2,400.000    bu;    last   week.    3.608,- 
000    bu;    last    year,    6,752,000    p\i 

Corn  636,000  bu;  last  week.  68<.000 
bu;    last    year,    619.000    bu. 

•  •      • 
Duluth  grain  stocks,   giving  changes 

In  four  days: 

Wheat — Western  and  winter.  7  •  8.000 
bu;  spring.  8.068,000  bu,  decrease.  27,000 
bu;  durum.  6,698,000  bu.  Increase,  39,000 
bu;  bonded,  6.317.000  bu.  decrease.  38.- 
000  bu;  total  wheat,  21.619,000  bu,  net 
decrease,  26,000  bu;  afloat.  768,000  bu. 

Coarse  grains— Oats,  2.039,00  bu.  de- 
crea.se  111,000  bu;  rye.  83.000  bu.  de- 
crease', 6,000  bu;  barley.  1,044,000  bu. 
decrease.  30,000  bu;  flax.  domestic. 
1.663,00  bu,  bonded.  75,000  bu:  total 
'  flax    1.78«.000  bu,  increase  net,  6.000  bu. 

Total  of  all  grains,  26.473.000  bu;  net 
decrease,  167,000  bu. 

•  •      * 
Clearance  reported:     Wheat.  1.762.000 

bu:  flour.   20.000  bbl;  together  equal  to 
1.852.000  V>u;  corn.  47.000  bu;  oats.  206.- 

000  bu. 

•  •       * 

Primary  markets  report  the  follow- 
ing receipts  and  shipments  today: 

Wheat — Receipts.  929,000  bu,  last 
year,  396.000  bu;  shipments,  767.000  bu. 
last  year.  366.000  bu. 

Corn— Receipts.  680,000  bu.  last  year. 
417,000  bu;  shipments.  590,000  bu,  last 
year.    551.000   bu. 

Oats— Receipts.  717,000  bu,  last  year. 
661,000  bu;  shipments,  545.000  bu,  last 
yt-ar.   808.000   bu. 

•  •      * 
D\iluth  bonded  grain  receipts:  Wheat, 

28  cars;  outs,  3  cars;  barley,  3  cars.  To- 
tal,  34  cars. 

•  •      * 
Cars  of  wheat  received:  Last 

Yesterday,  ago. 

Duluth    ,20  18 

Minneapolis    214  101 

Winnipeg 311  441 

Chicago    259  32 

Kansas    City,    bu    144,000  56,000 

St,    Louis,    bu    84,000  26,000 

•  •       * 
Cars   of  linseed   received:  Year 

Yesterday,  ago. 

Duluth    I  J 

Minneapolis     IJ  6 

Winnipeg     •  "• 

•  •      • 
Foreign     closing     cables:  Liverpool — 

Spot  wheat  closed  unchanged:  corn.  un. 
changed.  Bueno<i  Aires — Wheat.  Vic 
lower;  corn,  unchanged  to  %c  lower. 

•  «•      ♦ 
Duluth  car  Inspection:    Wheat — No.  1 

hard,  2;  No.  1  northern.  2;  No.  2  north- 
''rn  2;  durum.  9;  mixed,  5;  total  wheat. 
20  'last  year.  18:  flax,  3.  last  year,  6; 
oats,  1,  last  year.  6;  rye.  2,  last  year 
nono;  barley.  6.  last  year,  B;  total  of 
all  grains,  31.  last  year.  35;  on  track,  81. 

•  •  • 
There  were  no  sales  of  No.  1  north- 
ern wheat  on  the  Duluth  market  to- 
day. No.  1  northern  sold  at  $1.18  and 
No.  3  northern  at  $1.12.  Four  cars  of 
bonded  wheat  were  sold  at  from  $1.10 
to  $1.16Vs.  the  latter  price  for  No.  1 
northern    to    arrive. 

«      •      * 

C.  E  Lewis  &  Co.  had  the  following 
wire  from  Chicago  after  the  close: 
"Wheat  W1B  weak.  Europe  refused  to 
respond  to  our  strength  of  the  last  few 
days.  Cash  premiimis  faded  some 
more,  favorable  advices  from  Canada 
as  to  seeding  and  less  apprehension 
about  the  winter  wheat  crop  being  the 
Influences.  Support  was  poor.  Bulls 
were  more  disposed  to  sell  out  their 
holdings  than  to  add  to  theni.  The 
withdrawal  of  American  -  Holland 
steamers  from  transatlantic  service 
had  a  bearish  effect  on  sentiment. 
There  were  nice  rains  In  the  South- 
west Cash  demand  was  generally 
poor.  The  market  Is  still  largely  under 
the  Influence  of  the  new  crop  situa- 
tion. No  one  can  dispute  the  weakness 
of  the  old  crop  position." 


tU  CroMie    Ft.  llowJrl 

.MIniie«|).)IU     Cl0l«Jy| 

Alexandria     Cloudf  I 

(  aniplirll    Cloudy | 

I'rouk.stoo     (loudyl 

IMrolt    Cloudy  I 

timluth    CloudJi 

Montefldco    ..^.^ Pt.  Cloudy 

tMoorhead     Cloud) 

.New    llm    Pt.  Cl'Judy; 

Parli   Hapldj   Cloudy! 

Kw hesUr   Pt.  Cloudy, 

..Clear 
..Clear! 
..Clearl 

tHuroo    Pt.  Cloudy 

Mllbaulc    

IMllrhell     

tIMerre    Clear 

Pollo-k    

Kapid  City    Clear 

KedHrld    . .- 

Sioux   Kalli    

tWatertown     

tTanktun     

t  Auit'Oia    

tBliniarck    Balnlof 

tBottln>'au    

^BuvkbelU 

rltevils  LalM   Hnowlns 

l)lckln<<on    

|Kt"i-.en<leD    •••• 

lOruftou    

lOraiid  i-'orlu 

Jaiui-stuwn    

Langdoa    

tLarlroore    

Lisbon   ••• 

Minot     ...•.•...••.•••••••••#•••. 

{.Naifolron     ••......•••••••••••... 

JPeuhlna ....,.•• 

^Wabpetoo 
tWIlllUon    . 
tHarre    .... 
tMliet  City 
tMlunedosa 


68 

62 
66 
42 
42 
2* 
68 
60 
U 
40 
76 
58 
76 
70 


46 
42 
36 
34 
32 


Cloudy 

Clear 

Cloudy 

twiiiniixt     .....' Pt.  Cloudy 

tBattlerord     Clear 

tPrlnoe  Albert  , Cloudy 

tdu'AppcUa     Cloudy 

tSwlft  Current  t'I'w 

tEdmonton    Pt.  Cloudy 


58 

46 
50 


58 
36 


44 


42 
50 
54 
34 
40 
42 


44 


38 
36 
40 
32 
42 
40 
40 
38 


72 
70 

4i 
36 

TO 

42 

60 
72 
76 

5^ 
40 
38 

46 

3i 
82 


82 
30 

34 
32 


ao 

32 
34 
26 

82 

28 

8 

34 


0 

0 

.22 
0 

.16 
0 
0 
0 

.06 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


.02 
.14 

0 
.14 

0 
.10 
.28 
.01 

0 
.40 
.28 

0 
.01 
.02 
.12 

0 
.02 


HEAVY  SLUMP 

IN  ZING  STOCKS 


STOCKS  ARE 
LIQUIDATED 

Market     Disturbed     Over 
Latest  Aspects  of  Inter- 
national Situation. 


Four  to  Ten-Point  Declines 
in    Munitions,    Equip- 
ments and  Oils. 


.24 
.06 
36 
.40 
0 
0 


A  sharp  break  in  the  zinc  stocks 
was  the  feature  in  the  market  in  min- 
ing stocks  at  Boston  today.  The  re- 
mainder of  the  list  was  weak,  but 
price    changes    were    generally      mod- 

American  Zinc  sold  off  $3  to  $92 
around  the  close  and  Butte  &  Superior 
$1.62    off    at    $92.75. 

Calumet  &  Arizona  sold  62c  off  to 
$74.12;  Copper  Range  $1.12  off  to 
$63.38;  Greene-Canaw^a  $2.50  off  to 
$46.50;  Lake  26c  off  to  $16.60;  Mohawk 
$1.76  to  $97  and  Nocth  Butte  60c  off 
to    $28. 

Big  Monster  sold  off  to  $1.50  In  the 
Boston  curb  list  today.  Last  week 
it  made  a  sensational  advance,  being 
run  up  from  $1.76  to  $6. 

•  •      • 

London  metal  market — Copper,  spot, 
closed  up  £1  10s;  futures  up  £2  lOs; 
electrolytic,  unchanged;  tin,  spot,  up 
£1  68;  futures  up  £1  6s;  lead.  spot,  up 
10s:  futures  up  78  6d;  spelter,  spot, 
unchanged,   and   futures,    unchanged. 

•  •      • 

Paine.  Webber  &  Co.  had  the  fol- 
lowing from  Boston:  "Verde  Exten- 
sion is  to  double  its  output  to  4,000.000 
pounds  of  copper  monthly.  At  present 
prices  for  metal  the  Increased  pro- 
duction will  give  Verde  gross  earning 
of  over  $1,000,000   monthly." 

•  «      • 

Closing  quotations  of  Boston  curb 
stocks,  as  reported  by  Paine,  Webber 
&  Co.:  Bid.  Asked 

Butte  A  Zenith $   4.00 

Boston   &   Montana 71 

Butte  &  London 88 

Big  Ledge    1-68 

Bohemia    2.68 


Calumet  &  Montana.... 

Coppermlnes     

Carnegie  Lead  ft  Zinc. 


•—Inches  and   hundredths 
est  last  night.     J— .Not  Included  in  th«  a»era«e«. 

NOTE— The  a»crag>'  hluh«^t  and  lowest  Umperaturei  are 
made  up  at  each  tcnler  from  the   actual   numlicr  of  re 
porU    receUed,    and   the    average   precipitations 
number  of  sUllous  rrportinn  0.10  <*  more. 


-1-    Chief 
t— Highest  yesterday,  tow-  [f'alumet  &  Corbln.. 


.60 
2.06 
4.60 
1.76 

.06  % 


•   •«••• 


Cactus   Cons.    . 

Denn     • If?? 


from   Uu 


Davis  Daly 
Hotan   Copper 


1.63 

2.50 


Ofneral  summary.  rereWcd  from  Chicago:  Showw. 
mostly  light  and  widely  scattered  o»er  Southeast  Michi- 
gan extreme  Northern  Ohio,  Northeast  Illinois,  ertrema 
.Southeast  Nef)ra>k'a.  West -central  Mis,sotirt,  Kan.*a»  except 
northwrtt  and  extrems  wuthasl  portions,  extreme  Norlli- 
west   Oklahoma.    North   DalioU.   Northern   Minnesota,   and 

two  .statlun,  in  Montana,  anjounts  vary  greatly,  the  larg- 

St    Uiiig    .10    Inch    at    Langdon,    N.    l>.    -34    loch    *t  |  Xew   Baltic 


First  National    6.00 

Green    Monster    

Iron   Blossom    

Interstate-Callahan    

Jerome  Verde    •••.. 

Keating    ....••••••••••.••• 

Marsh    ••    ..•*■••  •'••  • 

Mother  Lode 


I  •   •  •  •  I 


iwdge  City,  Kan.,  other  places  mo»tly  less  than  .10  Inch 
Somevthat  lower  temperature  In  the  Northwest,  with 
minimum  below  freezing  In  Montana;  freezing  In  North 
Dakn|i  and  Northern  Minnesota;  still  warm  over  easum, 
central  and  soulliern  portions  of  region. 

H.  W.  RICH.\RnS0N,  Local  Forecaster. 


CHICAGO  MARKET. 


GRAIN,  STOCKS,  COTTON, 
PROVISIONS 

204  Board  of  Trado,  Duluth 


Members  New  Y»»k  Jtoek  Exr^nge 
kbers  New  Yors. 


ftlM 


Cotton  ExchaBg* 
Amd  All  Orala  K:xebaiigc'S. 


Otfteas  la  MlsmeitpulU,  St.  Paal 
wa4    Wlaalyeg. 


A  Good  Firm  to  Ship 
Your  Grain  to 

ATWOOD-URSON 
COMPANY,  Inc. 

Spscial  attention ,  »tv«n  to  OMMh 
grains.  Wo  »!▼•  all  shipments  our 
personal  attontion. 

Dulotli— Minneapolis 


Chicago.  April  18.— Rains  in  Ne- 
braska and  sales  of  Canadian  wheat 
for  shipment  to  Minneapolis  had  a 
bearish  effect  today  on  wheat.  Crop 
reports  showed  no  Improvement,  but 
for  the  moment  seemed  to  have  lost 
Influence  to  a  considerable  degree. 
Besides,  lower  quotations  from  Liver- 
pool tended  to  act  as  a  weight  on  the 
market  here.  The  opening  which 
varied  from  half  a  cent  decline  to  a 
shade  advance  with  May  at  $1.19%  @ 
1.20  and  July  at  $1.16%  ©116%.  was 
followed  by  a  decided  setback  all 
around. 

Stock  market  weakness  and  the  sus- 
pension of  Holland-American  steam- 
ship sailings  led  afterward  to  further 
losses,  which  were  increased  by  bet- 
ter weather  conditions  Northwest.  The 
close  was  heavy,  2Vi'??2%c  to  3%®3Vic 
net  lower  with  May  at  $1.16%  and  July 
at    $1.14%®!. 14%.  ^  ^     ^ 

Corn  sagged  with  wheat.  Cash 
houses  and  commission  concerns  as 
well  were  active  sellers.  After  open- 
ing %®%c  to  ^A&ViC  lower,  prices 
suffered   a   moderate    further  decline. 

Slowness  of  Eastern  demand  was 
more  than  an  offset  for  receipts  be- 
ing small.  Prices  closed  weak  at  %c 
to   Ti»®lc   net   decline. 

Oats  were  governed  by  the  bearish 
course  of  other  grain.  Trade  was 
light. 

Higher  prices  on  hogs  gave  strength 
to  provisions.  The  weakness  of  cereals 
appeared  to  be  ignored. 

Wheat— No.  2  red.  $1.20%  @1. 21:  No. 
3  red.  nominal;  No.  2  hard.  $1.19 %@ 
1.22;   No.    3   hard.    $1.14%  (31.17. 

Corn — No,  2  yellow,  TfifgiTSc;  No.  4 
yellow.  72%@73%c;  No.  6  white, 
73@7$Uc. 

Oats — No.  3  white,  48%@44Vic; 
standard.    45@45%c. 

Rye.  No.  2  and  No.  S.  nominal:  No. 
4,  89%c;  barley,  62®75c;  timothy, 
$4.60®8;    clover,    $10018.50. 

Pork,  $21.50®  23;  lard.  $11.60;  ribs, 
$11.87^12.37. 

»l«h. 
$1.20 


I  •  ■  •  •  •  I 


)••••••< 


1.50 

2.50 
23.50 

2.00 
.80 
.29 
.31 

2.75 
16.25 

1.60 

2.25 
.35 
.77 
.70 

SO* 


4.25 
.73 
.90 
1.87 
2.87 
.70 
2.12 
4.75 
1.87 
.06 
2.50 

2.66 
2.75 
6.12 
2.00 
2.76 
24.50 
2.06 

".31 

.     .33 

3.00 

15.50 

1.76 

2.50 

.40 

.79 


New  Tork,  April  13. — Over-night 
developments  in  the  European  and 
Mexican  situations  combined  to  de- 
press prices  at  today's  opening.  Ger- 
many's reply  regarding  the  Sussex 
and  the  request  of  Mexico's  de  facto 
government  for  the  withdrawal  of  our 
troops  resulted  in  numerous  initial 
declines.  Mexican  Petroleum  fell  1% 
points,  with  substantial  recessions  in 
Crucible  Steel,  Goodrich.  United  States 
Rubber.  Baldwin  Locomotive,  West- 
Inghouse  and  Metals.  United  States 
Steel  lost  half  a  point  on  the  sale  of 
1,600  shares  at  83%.  The  only  marked 
exception  to  the  lower  tendency  was 
Bethlehem  Steel,  which  recovered 
part  of  yesterday  8  loss  on  a  gain  of 
9   to   474. 

Early  losses  soon  gave  way  to  gen- 
eral recoveries  In  the  stock  market  to- 
day, but  the  improvement  was  brief, 
another  selling  movement  causing 
prices  to  go  lower  before  the  end  of 
the  first  hour.  Heaviness  continued 
to  center  about  the  Mexicans,  Petro- 
leum making  an  extreme  decline  of  4, 
with  two  points  loss  for  American 
Smelting.  Crucible  and  the  equip- 
ments, metals  and  motors  were  lower 
by  1  to  2  points  and  shipping  shares 
dropped    sympathetically. 

United  States  Steel  at  83%,  touched 
Its  minimum  of  the  month.  Reading 
was  heaviest  of  the  rails,  declining 
1%.  The  uncertainty  of  the  foreign 
situation  were  accentuated  by  a  fur- 
ther drop  In  French  exchange  to  the 
new  low  record  of  606.  Bonds  were 
steady. 

Activity  Increased  at  midday  when 
selling  assumed  broader  scope  and 
quotations  sought  lower  levels.  Liqui- 
dation was  in  evidence  but  the  short 
Interests  extended  Its  commitments, 
basing  its  attitude  on  the  confused  for- 
eign situation. 

Stocks  were  visibly  disturbed  over 
the  latest  aspects  of  the  international 
situation.  For  the  first  time  in  several 
weeks  liquidation  was  seen  in  all  parts 
of  the  list.  Mexican  issues  were  among 
the  first  to  yield.  Later  the  munitions 
group  and  similar  specialties  fell. 
Weakness  of  United  States  Steel  was 
among  the  disconcerting  features. 

Specialties  were  at  lowest  prices  In 
the  last  hour,  declines  then  ranging 
from  4  to  10  points  in  munitions,  equlp- 
tnents  and  ol'S-     The  closing  was  weak. 

NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

R«IMrt«d  by  Charlaa  B.   L«wu  A  Oow 


BARNES-AMES  COMPANY 

GRAIN  COMMISSION  AND  SHIPPING  MERCHANTS 
Room  201,  Board  of  Trade,  Duluth,  Minn. 
CorrMpondeats  of — 

THB  aMES-BARNES  CO.,  NEW  TORK 
THE  ZENITH  GRAIN  CO..  LTD.,  WINNIFEQ 


STEPHEN  H.  JONES 

RECEIVER.  SHIPPER  AND  COMMISSION 

MERCHANT 

BOARD  OF  TRADE  BUILDING,  DULUTH. 


Llboral  Advances  on  Conslgnm«nts 
Hemlttancea  Promptly  Mads 


Send  Ua  Samples  of  Tour  Qraln 
Correspondence  Solicited 


KENTKEL-TODD  CO. 

GRAIN  COMMISSION 

801  BOARD  OF  TRADE,  DULiUTH. 
•6  CHAMBER  OF  COMMERCE,   MINNKAPOMS. 


5,300;  10c  bleher;  range,  $9.25@9.50;  bulk.  $9.40® 
9  45. 

Cattle— RecflpU,  2.000;  killers,  steady;  ste»rs.  $5.00 
©■3.00;  rows  and  helfen,  $5.00i§^7.7o:  ralwg,  steady, 
JM.iyMjS.oO;  stofkfrs   and  feeders,   weak,   $5.0<VjJ[*.2d. 

Sbeop— Becelpta,  50:  steady;  laraJw,'  $3.50^310.75; 
tretbers,  $6.00(^8.50:  ewes.  $3.50^8.00. 


Midway  Horse  Market. 

Minnesota  Transfer.  St.  Paul,  Mlnu..  April  13.— Bar- 
rett *  Zimmerman  report:  Market  continu-3  e?en  In 
tone.  nellfiTles  to  local  teamsters,  transfer  companies 
and  contractors,  and  ihlpmenta  to  Isanti,  Miun.;  .Xdrlan, 
Minn.;  Lewisrtlle.  Minn.,  and  Orantsburg.  WU.,  make 
up  tbe  day's  clearance.  Becelpts  about  ninety  bead. 
Values  as  follows: 

iH-afters.  extra   

l>rafters,  choice   

Drafters,  common  to  (ood 

Kami  mares  and  horses,  eitra. . , 
Farm  mares  and  horses,  cbotCB 
Kara  horses,  common  to  good., 

IMIvers  and  saddlers 

Pelltwy  hon>es 


$160^215 
14i)'g  160 
125Cal45 
155^210 
140ral.» 
12.-.^140 

,  13<yal65 
135(SlW 


BTOCK0— 


I  High.  I  Low.   I  Clow. 


•   •   •   •   • 


New   Cornelia 

Oneco    

Onondaga    . . . 

Stewart    

Success    .... 

Sierra     

San   Antonio 

Toiiopah    «00 

Tonopah   Belmont 4.76 

Tonopah    Extension    €.00 

Verde    Extension    26.00 

Warren  Dev 600         .... 

BOSTON  COPPER  STOCKS. 

Raportad  bj  Palua.  WabMt  *  Co. 


6.25 

6.00 

6.12 

26.12 


STOCKS— 


Bid.  lAaked. 


•  ••••••  I 


Wheat—      Open 
May    ....$1,198^ 


1.16'ii 


July    ... 

Corn- 
May  ... 
July     .. 

Oats- 
May  ... 
July   ... 

Pork- 
May   ....23.15 
July    ....23.00 

I*rd— 
May   ....11.65 
July    ....11.K2 

Ribs— 


.74% 
.76Vi 

.43 


May 

July 


.12.42 
.12.57 


1.16% 

.75 
.76% 

.44»i 
.43U 

23.15 
23.15 

11.67 
11.87 

12.42 
12.57 


Low. 

$1.16% 

1.14Vi 


rioae. 


. • • » .^^ • 


.44% 
.43 


22.97 
22.97 

11.60 
11.77 

12.32 
12.47 


23.00 
22.97 

11.60 
11.77 

12.32 
12.47 


Alaska    . . 
Adventure 

Ahmeek    

AUouez     

American  Zinc 

Arcadian    

Arizona  Commercial  .%. 
Butte  &  Ballaklava  .j^^. 
Butte  &  Superior  ..... 
Calumet  &  Arizona  .... 

Calumet  &  Hecla 

Centennial    ^^*. 

v./ililiO      ••••■•••■•••••••• 

Copper  Hanero >•. 

Daly  West    '*•• 

East  Butte    

Franklin    

Goldfleld  Consolidated  . 

Granby    f . . 

Gieene-Cananea    

Hancock  Consolidated  • 

Inspiration   

Indiana  ...  ••......,..« 

Isle   Royale    

Keweenaw    * .  • 

L.ake   Copper    

Mass.  CoiMolidated   .... 

Mayflower 

Miami  Copper 
Michigan    .... 

Mohawk    

Nevada  Con.  . 
North  Lrfike 
Nlplsslne:  .... 
North  Butte  . 
OJibway  ..... 
Old  Colony  . . 
Old  Dominion 

Osceola     

Qulncy 

Ray   Con 

Santa  Fe  .... 
Shannon  . .  . . 
South    Liake 

Shattuck     

Shoe  Machinery  . . 
Superior-Boston  .. 
Superior    Copper    . . 

Tamarack      

Trinity     

Tuolumne     

United    Fruit     

U.    S.    Mining    

r.    S.    Mining    pfd.. 

Utah    Cons 

Winona      

Wolverine     •• 


....... 


..••«• 


)••.... 


.  .....  I 


I . . . . 


MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET. 


• — . 1         '  ■ 


SHIP  YOUR  GRAIN  TO 

CILAIN  COMMISSION  SINCE  1863 

C.  C.  WYM AN  &  CO. 


DULUTH 


MINNEAPOLIS 


ANDALL, 
EUABLE 

MINNEAPOLIS 


DULUTH 


ITCHEU  CO. 
ERCHANTS 

•      WINNIPEG 


Minneapolis.  Minn.,  April  13. — 
Wheat — Lower:  sale  of  Canadian 
wheat  for  shipment  here*  had  a  bear- 
ish effect  on  the  market.  Corn  and 
oats  saleii  were  small.  Wheat  re- 
ceipts. 214  cars,  compared  with  101  a 
year  ago. 

Wheat — May  opened  $1.22  to  $1.21%: 
high.  $1.22;  low.  $1.18»i  01.18%:  closed 

July  opened  $1.21%  to  $1.21%;  high. 
$1.21%:  low.  $1.18%  to  $1.18%:  closed 
$1  18% 

Cash':  No.  1  hard.  $1.23%:  No.  1 
northern.  $1.20!5i  «H.22% :  to  arrive. 
$1.19%®  1.21%:  No.  2  northern.  $1.17% 
@1.20%;    No.    3    wheat.    $1.12%  ©1.17%. 

Corn.  No.  8  yellow,  76%®76%c:  oats. 
No.   3   white.    41%(R42%c:   flax.    $2.13(g> 

2  16. 

Flour — Unchanged.  Shipments.  87,466 
bbl.  Barley,  64 (J? 72c:  rye.  94©  95c; 
bran,    $18.250  1900. 

New   York    Wheat. 

N«w    Tork.    ApHl    13— Wheal— May,    $1.24>^:    July. 

$1.17%. 

•         — 

IJverpooI    Grata. 

LlTffpooI,  April  13— Wheat— Spot,  No.  1  Manltob*. 
13»  7d;  No.  1  northern  spring.  ISi  Id;  No.  2  rwl, 
western  winter.  Hi  6<l. 

On— Spot.  AmerlCAa  mixed  new.  lOi  64. 


20 

4% 
99 
69 
91% 

8 

l!l 

92 

78% 
660 
16% 
68% 
63% 

3 
12% 

9% 
76c 
87% 
46% 
16 
46 

4% 
27 

6% 
16% 
18 

3% 

'55 

97 

16% 
1% 
7% 

27% 
2% 
2% 

69 

93 

94 

23% 
2% 
9 
7% 

83% 

67 
8% 

17% 

60 
8 

SOc 
144% 

73% 

62 

18% 


20% 
4% 


>7% 


69% 
92 

8% 

8% 

3% 
92% 
74 
664 
17% 
68% 
63% 

3% 
12% 

9% 
SOc 
88 
47% 
16 
46% 

4% 
28 

6 
16% 
14% 

4 
37% 

3% 
98 
17 

Vi 

28% 

2% 

2% 
69% 
94 

94% 
23% 

8 

9% 

8 
33% 
67% 

8% 
18 
62 

8% 
82 

146% 
74 
62% 
14 

4% 
68 


•  ••••• 


New  York  Money. 

New  Tork,  April  13. — Mercantile  pa- 

§er.  808%  per  cent.  Sterling  60-day 
Ills,  4.73;  demand,  4.76  7-16;  cables, 
4.77.  Francs,  demand,  6.07;  cables. 
6.06%.  Marks,  demand.  72%:  cables, 
72  11-16.  Kronen,  demand.  12%;  cables, 
12%.  Guilders,  demand.  42%:  cables. 
42'».  Lire,  demand.  6.46;  cables,  6.44. 
Rubles,  demand,  30%;  cables.  6.44. 
Bar  silver.  63c;  Mexican  dollars,  48 %c. 
Government  bonds  .  steady:  railroad 
bonds  easy.  Time  loans  Irregular;  60 
and  90  days  ,  2%  ©'3  per  cent:  six 
months.  3.  Call  money  steady;  high, 
2;  low,  1%;  ruling  rate,  1%;  last  loan, 
2;    closing  bid,    1%;   pffered    at   2. 

(Note— The  eustomary  way  ot  quoting  foreign  eiehanii 
Is  as  follows:  Sterling  quoted  at  lb  many  dollars  totbt 
P(Kum1;  Ovrman  exchange  so  ofajr  cents  to  foor  marks; 
frcttch  and  lUIian  exchaace  «•  aany  francs  or  Urs  t« 
the  dollar,  and  Anitrlan.  Russian  and  Scandinavian  »• 
change  quoted  so  many  cents  to  tht  unit  of  currency.) 


Am.    Tel.   &   Tel. 
Am.    Can,    com. 

do   pfd 

Am.  Beet  Sugar 

Am.  Hide  &  Leather. 

do    pfd 

Am.  Car  Foundry  . . 
Am.  Ice  Sec.  Co. . . . 
Am.   Locomotive    ... 

Am.    L.\n.,    com 

do    pfd 

Am.  Steel  Foundries 

Am.    Smelting    

do    pfd 

Alaska  Gold  Mines  Co. 
Allis    Chalmers,    com 

do    pfd 

Am.   Woolen,  com 
Anaconda    Copper 
Atchison    .... 
Atchison,     pfd 
Bald.    Loc.     . . 

B.  A   O.    com. 
Beth.    Steel,    com.... 
Butte   &    Superior 
Cal.    Pet'm..    com 
Canadian    Paciflc 
Central     Leather 

Clies.    &    Ohio    

Chlno    Copper    Co. . 

C.  Gt.    Westn.    com 
C.   Gt.   Westn.,   pfd. 

C,   Mil.   &  St.   P 

Colo.    Fuel    &    Iron. 

Con.     Gas     

Corn    Pro.    Co.,    ..... 
Crucible   Steel,   com. 
Cuban  Steel,  pfd 
Distillers    Sec... 

Krie    

Erie.   1st  pfd 

B.  F.  Good.  Co.,  com.. 

General   Electric 

General  Motor,  com... 
Great  Northern,  pfd... 
Great    Northern    Ore.. 

Gug.  Explor  Co 

Int.   H.   R 

Illinois   Central 

Insplr.    Cop.    Co 

K.   C.    Southern    

Kenn   Copper    

Lackawanna  Steel    . . . 

Lehigh    Valley    

Mont.  Pow.  &  Light  Co 
Maxwell    Motor    

do.   1st  pfd 

do,    2nd   pfd 

Mt'x.   Petroleum  Co.... 

Miami    Copper    

M.  &  St.  L.  Ry. 
Northern    Paclfi 

National    Lead     

Nev,    Copper    Co 

Norfolk    &    Western. 

N.  T.  Air  Brake 

N.    Y.    Central     

N.  T..  N.  H.  &  N.  H.. 
Ontario  &  Western  . 
Pennsylvania   R.    R.. 

People's    Gas    

Pitts.   Coal,   com 
Pitts.    Coal,    pfd 

Pressed    S.    C.    Co 

Ray    Copper     

Reading      

Republic  Steel   

Republic  Steel,  pfd.   . . 

Rock  Island    

Ry.  Steel  Springs  . . 
Southern  Pacific  .... 
Southern  Railway  ... 
Southern  Railway,  pfd 

Studebaker.   com 

Shattuck     

Tenn.   Copper   Co.    . . . 

Texas    Oil    Co 

Union  Paciflc    

U.  S.  Rubber 

U.  S.  Inds.  Alcohol  Co. 
U.  S.  Steel  

do  pfd    ............. 

Utah  Copper  

Westlnghouse 

Western  Maryland   . . 

Willys  Motor    , 

Woolworth    


Mules,  according  to  sU* 165<3215 

THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 


Dvlnth. 

46 


rc?''^'"'"-     46         64         64         80  96-126 

Tr«l?T. $3.a    $3.50    $4.^    $4.»        .^ 

Cuban    3.26      3.50      4.00      3.to      6M 

MISCELLA-NEOrs  KRIIT— 

8Uawbernes,    Loublana.   24   pint.    cr»t«8 3.50 

Pineapples.   36s,   crate o.OO 

rKANBKRRlF.i^ 
Cranberries,   Jerseys,    per  box 4.W 


Cranberries,  Evaporated,  36  pkgs.,  carton. 


Ei.   Fey.   80s        96-lUO        126 
Navels     $3.25    $3.50    $3.75 

Naveli    .  2.76     2.75     8.25 

Florldas     3.50      3.50 

Ex.   Fey.   Bloods 

Less  .10  In  6  and  10  box  lota 

LEMO.N*— 

Ex    Fey.   California,   box 

Ex.  Cb.  Calirornla,  box 

Limes,   Fancy,  box 

P.AN.\NAS— 
Bananas,  Fancy  Llmoo,  lb 


150 
$3.75 

3.50 
3.50 


176  200-250 
$4.U0    $4.25 


3.75 
3.50 


4.00 
3.50 
3.75 


BOX  APPLE*— 

Jonathan   

Boman    Beauty.... 

Uclldou*     

Spitseiiburg   

Winesaps     


»•••••••• 


»••••••• 


2708    SOOj    3601 

$4.73    $4.75 

.$4.25      4.50      4.50 

1    !>■» 

...............      X..My 

04% 

Urade 

Ex.  Fancy.  Fancy. 

$2.25      .... 

1.95    $1.80 

•••••••a      £ • wV  • • • • 

2.25 

Circle  r    Fancy 
Brand.     Grade. 
53.75 
3.25 


Fowls,  light  17 

FowiA.  heavy  ,•••.••..•....•.•...........•.*..     .2* 

Turkeys,  lb  25 

Ducks,   lb    .........••..••.•....•.......*.....     .15 

Oeese,  lb -18 

FROZEN  POULTRY— 

Broilers 2 

Friers  20 

Boasters  20 

Fowls,  light  18 

Fowls,  medium  |9 

Fowls,  heavy  20 

Ducks   1| 

Geese    .,.,.••..••.•........•..........     'i. 

Turkeys    .....................................     .*w 

Fresh  eggs,  dos ZlO     .Z3 

|l   4  1* 

Choic-  Umothy,  per  ton  $14.00 

No.  1  timothy,  per  t-jn *l*-?2^^  22 

No.  2  timothy,  per  ton 18.00@14.00 

No.   3  timothy,  per  ton 9.00®11.00 

No.  1  mixed  timothy,  per  Um 1S.00®14.01» 

No.  2  mixed  timoU»y,   per  ton lO.OOgU.Ofl 

No.  3  mixed  timothy,  per  ton 9.00^10.00 

1  pnlrte,  per  ton IS 

2  pralrU.   per  ton 12 


No 
No. 
No. 
No. 
No. 


3  prairie,   per  ton . . 

1  midland,  per  ton. 

2  midland,  per  too. 
Packing   hay,    per   ton.. 

By*   straw,   p?r   ton 

Oat  straw,  per  ton 


14.00 

13.0") 

9.00 

lO.O-l 

7.00 

6.00 

6.50 

a  6.00 


Chicago. 

Oilrago,  April  13.— Butter— Steady;  receipts.  4,747 
tubs;  creamery,  extras,  35c;  extra  tlrsts.  34%c;  Onrta, 
33'&34c;  swonds,  30<f  32c. 

Cheese— Sleady ;  new,  daUles.  17%'517%c;  twins,  16% 
iJi'WV;  Americas  IBUrtjie^ic;  horns,  16\^16\'': 
tK-tober  daUles,  17%iijl7W;  t»ln»,  17%(&17%c;  Amer- 
Icai,   1S1j18%c:  boms.    imiA^jV- 

Eggs— Receipts,  29,423  ca.v>s;  unchanged. 

Potatoes  —  Lower;  receipts,  35  cars;  Michigan.  Wis- 
consin, Minnesota  and  Dakota  white.  8y<S'94c;  Mlnae- 
sot.i  a.-id  Dakota  Ohlos.  73(&'80c. 

Pouluy— Alive,  loww;  fowls.  18%c;  springs.  18%c. 


.$3.65 


2!66 

Cbolca 
Grade. 
$3.26 
2.75 


•••••••• 


!••••• 


•      •      •     • 


— SHIP  YO— 


H.  POENLER  CO. 

(EsUblisbod  isit) 

GRAIN  COMMISSION 


MIMNBAPOUt 


IIULVTH 


47 

36% 

61% 

78% 


120 

42% 


46% 

»  •   •  ■    • 

67% 


72% 


119% 
41% 


46% 

•   •   •   •    • 

66% 


70% 


108%|102<« 

38%|  37% 


6% 
111% 

66 

17% 
121% 
141% 
102% 

61% 


67 


60% 
23% 
84 
60% 

i7% 
38 

97% 


140% 
34% 


182% 
64% 

168% 
83% 

117% 
82% 
68% 


6% 

111 
66% 
16% 

120% 

138 

101 
60% 


66% 


48% 
23% 
82 
49% 

17% 
87% 
96% 


187% 
83 


131% 
62% 

163% 
82% 

117% 
80% 
61% 


46% 

85 

50% 

76% 
166 
450 
119% 

41% 

21 
109 
102 

46% 

26 

66% 

74  «i 

77 

78 

71 

35% 

66 
103 

87% 

6% 

111% 

66% 

16% 
121 
138 
101% 

60% 

27% 

67 
103% 

26% 
102% 

48% 

23% 

82% 

49% 
108 

17' 

87% 

96% 

20% 

69 
138 

38 

61 
190 
131% 

52% 
163% 

83 
117% 

81 

61% 

30% 
227 
126 


>•••••••• 


box. 


••••••• 


2.25 
5.00 
6.00 

75 

05 

.70 

I6-I8 
2.16 

'.'.'.'.'.'.  I'M 
70 

.75 

4.50 

6.00 

1.25 

2.00 

2.00 

.60 

.66 

.80 

.75 

2.00 

.75 

1.70 

.08 

.50 

2.50 

3.00 

.35 

.45 

.76 

1.00 
.75 
.40 

6.60 


1.1 


Ckleago  L,lTC«toek. 

Chicago,  April  13.— Hog  prices  rose  today  Influenced 
by  the  fact  that  the  number  of  bogs  on  sale  was  lc» 
than  on  the  correspoudliu  day  last  week.  Cattle  offer- 
ings proved  mostly  of  unattractive  quality.  The  supply  of 
shffp  and  lambs  was  In  excess  of  what  bad  been  ex- 
pected. 

Hogs — Receipts,  15,000;  stitmg.  10c  above  yesterday's 
average:  bulk,  $0.65@^.8O;  light,  $9.^9.90;  mixed, 
$9.40^jfl.90;  heavy,  $9.25®9.90;  rough.  $9.25^.45; 
pigs,  $7.40^9.00. 

Cattle— Receipts,  5,000:  weak;  native  beef  steen,  $8.00 
frjIOflO:  mstem  steers,  $7.75<&8.70;  Blockers  and  feed- 
ers, $6.90^S.55;  cowi  and  belters.  $4.10^9.15:  calvea. 
$7.25(0'1O.25. 

Sheep— Receipts.  15.000;  weak;  wethers.  $7.00^9.30: 
lambs,  $7.75(511.85. 

• 

New  York  Cotton. 

New  York.  April  13. — Cotton:  Fu- 
tures closed  ateady.  May.  11.79;  July, 
11.98;  October.  12.07;  December.  12.25; 
January.   12.31. 

SoBth  St.  Paal  Uw—tf^ 

South  St.  r»ul.  Wan,.  Aprtl  13.  —  Hop  —  Keeripts, 


BitBBEL  APPLES— 

N    Y.    Baldwin 

Mo.    Ben   Davis 

Mo.    Ben   Davis   Lot  1-t.   bbl 

GREEN  N'EGET.KBLES— 
Asparagus,    Section,   crate........... 

Beans,   Green,   lb..   20c 

Beans,  Chi.,  Wax.  lb..  SJOe;  huapa 

Beets,    Bbl.    Block,    doi 

Calibage,   Bed,  lb    

CaiTOti  Barrel  Stock,  dos 

CauUfiower.      California,     Pony,     craU, 

crate     

Cauliflower.  Orr.  eraU   

Cucumbers.  Hothouae,  Eitn  Fancy,  dot. 

Celery,   Root,  dOB 

Cblves.    lx>x • 

Endive,    hamper,    bbl ..•.•.........••.. 

Egg  Plant,   crate 

Lettuce  L^af,  Chicago  Case.   40c;  3  doc 
Green  Onions,  doa..  25*!  box.^...... 

Head  Lettuce.   U..   crate,  $3.26;  bu,. 

Mint,   dozen    

Mushrooms,    lb    " 

Oyst*^  Plant,   doi    .-^••••••A- V" 

Parsley.  Hothouse,  dog.,  40c:  SnitiMn.  doi., 

Pepperj,   Fia.,   bskt..  40c;  crate 

Radishes.  Hothouse,   doi   

Badishea,   hamper   -.w  ;.:.••:,! 

Kl.tiharb.  California,  box,  $2.50;  lb 

Sballots.    dos    

Spinach,   bskt   

Tomatoes,  Fla.,  6  bikt..  crate 

Tomstoes.    Hothouse,    lb 

Water   Cress,    do* 

Turnips,    doa    

CELERY— 

Jumbo,   Blue  Ribbon,   dot. 

Large.   Red   Ribbon,   dox. ................... 

raacf.   White  Ribbon,  doz 

I'litrimmod   Celerv,    California,    crate 

WASHED    VEGETABLES— 

iViLshed  Parsnips,  per  bskt 

Washed   BeeU,    per   baskt 1 

ONION  SETS— Seed  Stock. 

Fancy   YelUw,    ba 2.60 

Fancy   Bed.   bu    2.75 

Fancy  White,   bu    8.^ 

SEED  PTATOES— 

Fancy  Early  Rose,  bu l-^ 

Fancy   Varieties,   bu Ji"\^:?? 

Red  River  hlo,  Burbauk.  Russets.  Carmen.  Rural.  King. 

VEGETABLES— 

Carrota.   Minn.,   cwt 

Beds,    Minn.,    cwt 

Bacas,   Minn.,  cwt   

Lima  Beans.  California.  Il> 

Garlic,    lb 

Horseradish,   Ex.   Fey.,   lb.,   lie:  bbl 

HorseradLsh,    lb.,   10c;   bbl 

Rorseradlsh,  8  oz.   bottle,  per  doi... 

Horseradish,    %  gal.   Jars,   each 

Navy  Beans.  Fancy,  H.  P.,  Mlchlcan,  ba 4.» 

Parsnips,    cwt 1» 

ONIONS—  „  ^ 

Onions.  Minn.,  Bed,  cwt.  $2.75;  Tellow.  cwt....  3.00 

Spanish  Onions,   crata   2. a 

Onlovw,   White,    Cummer  crate 3.00 

Onions,  Yellow  Texas.  New.   crats 2.00 

CABBAGE—  ^ 

Minn..   Cabbage,   Bulk,   cwt l.i» 

New  Cabbage.  La.,  per  crate 8.00 

New  Cabbage.  California,  crate 2.50 

POTATOES— 

Fancy   Potatoes,   Burbank.   bu .9? 

Sweet  Potatoes,  hamper 1.75 

New  Potatoes,  hamper.  $3.76;  bskt 2.S 

CHEESK—  ^^       ^ 

Block  Swiss,  lb   24     M 

Brick,   half  case,  lb 28 

Twins,  Wisconsin,  lb ...^... 20 

Twins,  New  York  Stata.  iD 21 

Young  Americas,  il  21 

BLTTEB- 
Jftrs,  lb  ••.••••••••••••••••••■••••••••••■••••     '^ 

Prints,  lb   «•••••>••••••••••••• ••     -^ 

Tub,   lb   ••■•••••#••■•■••••••••*••••••••     *^ 

VIrst  creamerj,  lb • ••     -34 

Procfss,  lb  ••■••••••••••••••••••••••••••••■ **•     ••y 

Dfttry,  lb  ....•••••••••••••••••■••••••••••**^    '^ 

MEATS- 

Beef,  native  steers,  lb.... 13     .13 

Beef,   western  steers,   lb 12     .12 

Cows,   butchers,   lb 11    .11 

Camp  cows,  per  lb 09    .10 

Mutton,    per   lb 13     .14 

Pork  loins,   per  lb   14     .16 

Lamb,  per  lb  17     .18 

Pork  Shoulders,  per  lb... 

Veal,  per  lb  11 

LIVE  POL'LTBY— 

Springs,  lb  

Fowls,  heavy,  lb  

Fowls,  light,  lb 

Geese,  lb 

Ducks,  lb   ...... ■ . . ..........................     . la 

DRESSED  POULTRY— 
Spring    21 


New  York. 

New  York,  April  13.— Butu-r— Steady;  recelpU.  7.002: 
creamery  extras.  92  .score.  37V4^37%c;  creamery  higher 
scoring,  38'^38%f;  fi«*»,  86V;i(3'37c;  seconds,  3»@36c. 

K:ggi— Irregular;  recelpte,  36.179;  fresh  gathered 
extru  23i'"@'i4c;  repilar  parked,  extra  firsts,  2i;V(l|i 
22>2C;  do "  flrsta.  20^4'&;22c;  seconds,  19'^'a20*j.r ; 
nearby  hennery,  whites,  flne  to  fancy.  25326c;  nearby 
hei'.ne.'j   browns.  24'&'24%c. 

Cheese- Irregular;  receipts.  881;  stata.  held  specials. 
IS'z*";  fresb  siwclals,  I7c;  do  average  run,  16V2(gl6%c; 
WUconsln  tftlM,  heM.  18'518%c. 

HIDES,  PELTS,  WOOL,  ETC. 


saltad   cows    and    stMn, 


flat.. 


No.    1    greeo 

all  weights 

No.  1  green  salted  balls 

Green  salted  and  branded  bides, 

No.  1  gr«en  salt«d  vaal  calf 

No.  1  green  salted  long-balred  ktpi,  8 

to  25  lbs  

No.  1  green  salted  kip.  15  to  25  lbs... 

Green  salted  deacons,  each 

Green  salted  bone  bidtr.  eacb 1.60 

Dry  Hide*— 

Territory  butchers,  over  15  lbs 24 

Murrain  and  fallen,  over  15  lbs 

Calf,  over  6  lbs 

Pry  salted  hides,  all  welghti.., 
Horse  and  mule  bides 

Tallow  and  Grease — 

No.  1  tallow 

No.  2  tallow 

irnwashed,   %  blood 

I'nwasbed,  medium,   %  blood 
f'nvashed,  coarse,  \l  nlood. 
Inwasbed.  low,  %  blood. 


*••••■••• 


.17 
1.50 

.07 
.06 
.28 
.25 
.22 
20 


F 

:^ 

1.15 
400 


.26 

.20 

5.00 

.08 
.07 


Hlanesots.  Dairata.  Wisconsin  sod  Iowa. 

RAW  FURS. 


.25 
.25 


*••••#•••••••• 


■•••••• 


2.00 
2.00 
1.00 

.06% 

.15 
8.00 
6.50 

90 

60 


Bear  

Bear,   cub  .. 

Beaver    

Bs'!ger   

Clv.'t   cat    .. 

Fibber    

Fox.  sliver  . 
Fox,  cross  .. 
Fox,  gray  .. 
Fox,  red   ... 

Lynx    

Mluk,  dark  . 
Mink,  brown 
ftUnk.  pals  . 
Otter,  dartt 


.......... 


Large.  Medium 
.$16.00    $12.00 


7.60 
.  10.00 
.  2.50 
.  .40 
.  S.OO 
.600.00 
.  25.00 
.  2.26 
.  9.00 
.  12.60 
.  4.00 
.  3.25 
.  2.75 
12.00 


Otter,  brown  10,00 

Raccoon   4.00 

Skunk,  black 4.00 

Skunk,   short   striped 3.25 

Skunk,  striped   2.50 

Weasel   76 


6.00 

6.50 

1.75 

.30 

20.00 
350.00 

20.00 
1.75 
7.60 
$.00 
3.00 
2.60 
2 
9 
7.50 
2.75 


:ii 


••••••• 


SmaU. 
$10.00 
5.00 
3.60 
1.25 
.25 
15.0) 
200.01) 
15.00 
1.25 
6.00 
6.50 
2.25 
1.75 
1.50 
7.00 
6.00 
1.75 
3.00 
2.25 
1.75 
.25 
Moskrats — WI<u-onslo  and  stinUar:  Large  spring,  56c; 
larga  winter,  42c;  large  fall,  80c;  Minnesota  and  slallar, 
large  wlntrr.  35c:  larg*  fall,  26c;  snail,  damaged  and 
kltji  at  proporilonate  valoe. 

North  Butte  Mining  Company. 

To   the   Stockholders: 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  an- 
nual meetingr  of  the  atockhclders  of 
the  North  Butte  Mining  company  will 
be  held  at  the  office  of  the  company, 
1400  Alworth  bulldinar.  Duluth.  Min- 
nesota, on  Monday,  tne  17th  day  of 
April  A.  D.  1916.  at  13  o'clock  noon, 
for  tVxe  election  of  three  director*  to 
hold  office  for  three  years,  and  the 
transaction  of  such  other  buslneos  as* 
may  properly  come  before  said  meet- 
ing. The  stock  transfer  books  will 
be  closed  from  April  Ist.  1916  to  April 
17th,  1916,  both  Inclusive. 

FI^BDERIC    R.    KENNEDY. 

Secretary. 

Duluth.    Minnesota,   March    28.    1916. 
D.  H..  March  28.  30.  April  6.  13.  1916. 
• 

Sierra  Consolidated  Mines  Company. 

To  the  Stockholders: 

Notice  is  hereby  given,  that  the  an- 
nual meeting  of  the  stockholders  of 
the  Sierra  Consolidated  Mines  oom- 
pany  will  be  held  at  the  office  of  tho 
company  in  the  Calumet  &  Arizona 
Mining  company  building  in  Warren, 
Ariz.,  on  Tuesday,  the  2nd  day  o^ 
May,  A.  D.  1916.  at  11  o'clock  In  th^ 
morning  thereof,  for  the  election  ot 
three  directors  for  a  term  of  three 
years;  and  the  transaction  of  such 
other  business  as  may  properly  coma 
before  said  meeting. 

The  stock     transfer     books    will    b** 
closed    from   April    20,    1918    to   May   2. 
1916.   both  inclusive. 
Dated  Duluth.  Minn.,  April  6.  1916. 
FREDERIC     R.     KENNEDY. 

Secretary. 
D.  H..  April  6.  18.  20,  27.  1916. 


PAINE,  WEBBER  &  CO. 

MEMBERS  NEW  TORK  AND  BOSTON  STOCK 
BXCHANQESL    CHICAQO   BOARD   OF  TRADB. 

HIGH-GRADE  INVESTMENTS 


m-d^ 


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18 


Thursday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


"DRUG  RING" 
BUSY  HERE 

I).  S.  Investigators  Charge 

Illegal    Traffic    in 

Narcotics. 


Agents  Declared  to  Be  at 

Work  in  Duluth  and 

Superior. 


the   L.uke«   in 

antl-narcotlc 

two   fcovarn-' 

woikliiB     in 


That  nanotU-  druRH.  pspcrlally  opi- 
um, art'  btinsr  nmiiKKl»'d  from  Canada 
find  sold  at  tin-  Head  of 
violation  of  the  Harrison 
law.  baa  been  prored  by 
mcnt  investigators  now 
Duluth  and  Sniicrlor.  Lartre  quantl- 
llva  of  drugs  are  said  to  have  been 
Pold  outside  of  the  <hannel.«  of  r.gu- 
lar  driiK  store  bushu.ss.  A  "drug  ring" 
i»  said  to  exist  at  the  Head  of  the 
Lakes. 

Under  the  Harrison  law  a  striet  ac- 
count Is  kept  of  all  drugs  sold  by 
wholesale  and  retail  ileaUrs  and  den- 
tists and  phvsielatis  must  keep  an  ac- 
curate account  of  all  habit-forming 
drugs    obtained    for   distribution. 

Ag.rits  'f  the  "drug  ring"  are  .said 
to  bi-  working  h.re  and  to  have  dis- 
post  <l  of  drugs  to  victims  of  the  habit. 
Two  investigators  of  the  government 
are  now  at  work,  and  expect  to  round 
up  a   number  of  law   violator*. 

(Jovernment  officials  have  had  much 
trouble  ever  since  this  law  went  Into 
I  ff'  ct  to  kiep  it  enforced  owing  to  the 
desjierate  nature  of  the  victims.  I>rug 
victims  in  ;-oine  parts  of  Xhc  I'nlted 
Slates  art  reported  to  have  died  from 
the  «  ffects  of  enforced  abstinence 
from  drugs,  and  unserupulovm  [lersons 
have  selzeil  upon  this  condition  to 
smuggle  and  otherwise  obtain  drugs 
illegally.  . 

At  a  Duluth  drug  store  some  time 
ago  the  name  of  a  well  known  physi- 
cian at  th.-  H»ad  of  the  Lakes  was  re- 
peatedlv  forged  to  obtain  narcotics  by 
prescription.      The    forgery    was    finally 

discovered. 

. > 

Most  everybody  knows  Duluth  Her- 
ald   Want    Ads    bring    results. 


CENTRAL  BUSINESS  COLLEGE 


30  Kast  Superior  street,  Duluth.  Spring 
term  April  10.  Full  commercial  and 
stenographic  courses;  catalogue  free. 
Harbii    ^-    Mcl'herson. 


City  Briefs 


simplex. 

The     now     -jystem     of     file     Indexing. 
Call  M.  I.  Stewart  company,    rhoncs  114. 

Benefit    Soolal. 

C.ustaf    Adolph.  lolge,    No 
Order,    will    v-nterlain    at    " 


255,    Vasa 
basket    so 


\riVt1I,         Mill       vii*^i*c«iit        «v       *♦        --' 

rial  tomorrow  evening  at  the  Camel's 
hall,  12  Kast  Superior  street.  The  af- 
fair will  be  in  the  nature  of  a  benefit 
flocial,  th''  proceed.s  of  which  will  go 
to  a  widow  who  has  children  to  sup- 
port. 


Hate    RoviMlun    Denied. 

According  to  a  dispatch  received 
from  Washington,  the  petition  of  the 
Sioux  Falls  Commercial  dub  for  a  gen- 
eral levislon  of  all  freight  rates  on  the 
♦  Ireat  Xorthf'rn  road  from  Duluth  to 
Sioux  Falls  ha.s  been  denied  by  the 
nierchaiidise  rates;  but  its  denial  was 
not  unexpected  here.  The  Duluth  Coni" 
mercial  dub  sought  to  Intervene  In  the 
case,  but  was  unable  to  do  so. 

—     - — m 

Heroveriiiic  From  Fall. 

Mi.-^s  .\nnie  McDougall  of  18  East 
Houl^vard  Is  recovering  from  a  fall  tn 
an  ley  sidewalk,  which  she  sustained 
eight"  weeks  ago.  Her  right  shouUV;- 
w:is  fractured  and  her  right  arm  and 
collar    bene    were    broken. 


Will  ChooMe  Mnlertnl. 

Property  own^-rs  along  Nineteenth 
R\enue  east  will  meet  In  the  coun- 
cil chambers  tomorpow  evening  and 
Btlect  material  for  the  pavement  to 
be  laid  from  Fourth  to  Eighth  street. 
The  bids  were  opened  last  Tuesday 
morning  and  If  the  materL-^l  Is  se- 
lected tomorrow  the  contract  will  be 
awarded    next    wiek. 


FileM    For    liegihlnture. 

Cliirence  A.  <;raham  of  Virginia  to- 
day filed  with  the  county  auditor  as 
a  candidate  at  the  June  primaries  f(>r 
the  nomination  for  reprtsenlative 
fr.*ni  the  Slxty-flrst  legislative  dis- 
trict. 


PrwIintiiiK  Root  Kiitatr. 

Millard  Itoot,  who  died  at  Kelsey,  on 
April  ♦>.  last,  left  an  estate  valued  at 
J2,2fiO,  according  to  papers  filed  today 
In  probate  court  by  his  widow,  Mrs. 
Maude  L.  Hoot,  who  asks  that  she  be 
granted  letters  of  administration.  Be- 
sides the  widow,  the  only  other  heir  is 
a  16-year-old  daughter. 


A«ldUlonM   (o  Bar   Library. 

Valuable  matter  pertaining  to  land 
cessions  are  contained  In  the  eight- 
eenth annual  report  of  the  bu- 
reau of  ethnology,  which  has  been  re- 
ceived at  the  Duluth  bar  library,  ac- 
cording to  Miss  Emma  Hicks,  librarian. 
Another  interesting  contribution,  she 
say.s,  has  been  promised  by  United 
States  Senator  Moses  E.  Clapp.  It  is 
Kappler'a  Indian  Laws  and  Treaties  In 
three    volumes. 


Bank  ClearlnKa  Tnereane. 

Though  the  aggregate  was  not  equal 
to  the  figures  of  last  weeH.  a  favor- 
able showing  was  made  in  Duluth 
bank  clearings  for  the  week  ended  to- 
day, an  increase  of  $798,766.11  being 
nhown  over  the  same  period  last  year. 
The  figure.s  were  $4,106,614.26,  as 
against  $3,306,848.16  a  year  ago. 


Fertilise    Voar  (•arden. 

Order  bag  of  Swift's  fertilizer;  makes 
productive  garden  ami  beautiful  lawn. 
Costs  but  little.     Koth  phones  618. 


To  Sing  "Kmauelpatlon"  Anthem. 

"Emancipation."   an   anthem,    will   bo 
Hung   at    St.    Mark's    A.    M.    E.    church. 


Sixth  street  and  Fifth  avenue  east, 
tomorrtiw  evening,  tieorge  Busso,  vio- 
linist, will  play  a  group  of  solos.  The 
anthem  opens  with  melodies  typical  of 
church  revivals  of  antebellum  days 
and  closes  with  patriotic  songs  and 
<  horuses. 


t 


Personals 


J.  T.  Uishop,  a  pron^nent  business 
man  of  New  Castle,  Ind.,  Is  at  the 
Holland. 

H.  L.  Vercoe,  an  attorney  of  Winni- 
peg,   Is    registered    at    the    Holland. 

Thomas  S.  Hardy  of  Toronto.  Ont.. 
is  at   the   Holland. 

William  Orr  of  Orr.  Minn.,  is  among: 
the  guests  of  the  Holland    for  the   day. 

Charles  J.  Nesbltt.  Jr.,  a  former 
resident  of  Duluth.  but  now  a  resi- 
dent of  St.  Louis,  is  registered  at  the 
Holland. 

J.  A.  .Semer  of  Escanaba,  Mich.,  a 
well-known  business  man  of  that  city 
and  well-known  In  businens  circlea 
heie,    is    registered   at    tb«   Holland. 

ALMOST  REIchTO 

CENTURY  MARK 


Gottlieb    Kaus,    Old    Res- 
ident, Dies  at  Ripe  Age 
of  94. 

Duluth  lost  one  of  Its  oldest  citizens 
this  morning  with  the  death  of 
Gottlieb  Kaus,  at  his  residence,  611 
East  Tenth  street.  Mr.  Kaus  was  94 
years   and    6    months    old. 

Although  vigorous  and  In  excellent 
health  up  to  within  a  few  weeks  of 
his  death.  Mr.  Kaus  has  d»  dined  rap- 
idly since  a  runaway  accident  in 
whiih   he   was   Injured   on   March   16. 

While  walking  along  First  avenue 
east  near  Second  street  on  that  day, 
he  was  knocked  down  by  a  runaway 
horse,  and  struck  In  the  head.  For 
more  than  an  hour  he  was  uncon- 
scious, members  of  the  family  said, 
and  then  Ife  rivlved  sufficiently  to 
walk     home     without     any     assistance. 

He  has  made  Duluth  his  home  for 
twenty-three  years.  Previous  to  that 
time  he  lived  In  Winnipeg  for  seven 
years,  and  before  that  he  lived  at  I'ort 
Huron.  Miih..  for  a  long  time.  In  ad- 
ilition  to  a  widow  he  leaves  five  chil- 
dren and  fiv.'  granddJlldren.  The  chil- 
dren are  Martha.  Fred,  August  and 
Manuel  Kaus  and  Mrs.  Julia  Parker. 
All    of    the    children    live    In    Duluth. 

Mr.  Kaus  was  the  oldest  n>ember 
of  the  First  Baptist  church.  Funeral 
services  will  be  held  Saturday  after- 
noon    at     2:30     o'clock,     and     the     Rev. 


TOO  LATE 
TO  CLASSIFY 


One  Coni  a  Word  Kacii  Ins<Ttlon. 
No  Atlvortiseinent  Loss  Thau  15  C'lits. 

YOl'  CAN'T  be  too  particular  for  us 
to  please  when  you  want  an  <xciulslte 
perfume.  Every  odor  we  have  Is  deli- 
cate and  exquisite.  Miss  Horrigaii. 
Oak    Hall   bldg. 


MARRIAGE  LICENSES. 


Sigrud  Uestad  and  Hendrlette  Doe- 
sen. 

Elof  .\ordln  and  Marion  Felldln. 

Rud«>lph  W.  Wahlln  and  Anna  E. 
Raymond,    both    of    I'rice    county.    Wis. 

WEDDING   PICTURES  are   a   specialty 
witn    Christensen.    25    W.    Superior   st. 

Wedding  Announcements — Engraved  or 
printed.  Consolidated  Stamp  and 
Printing  Co.,  14  Fourth  avenue  west. 

14,  18  AND  22K  SOLID  GOLD  WED- 
dlng  and  engagement  rings  made  and 
mounted  to  order  at  Henrlcksen's,  332 
West  Superior  street. 

Engraved  and   printed   birth  announce- 
ments.   Consolidated  Stamp  &  Print.  Co. 


BIRTHS. 


FnEl>RIKS— A   son 

to    Mr.    and    Mrs. 

4415    Cook    street. 
KtH.-^ZMORCK— Th«^  birth 

ter   <in   April   3    has   been 

Mr.    and    Mrs.    William 


was   born    April    6 
John    Fredrlks    of 

of  a  daugh- 
rt'ported  by 
Kolszmorck 

of    314    South    Twenty-sixth    avenue 

west. 
jEi'K— Mr.  and  Mrs.   Alex   Jeck  of  302 

South    Twenty-seventh    avenue    west 

are   the   parents  of  a   daughter   brrn 

April   6. 
SI.\<;HE1M— A    son    was    born    April    6 

to    Mr.   and    Mrs.     John     Singhelm     of 

1932   West    Michigan   street. 
GILBEHT— Mr.    and     Mrs.     Francis     G. 

Gilbert    of    2608    West    Second    street 

are  the  par«  nts   of  a  son  born  April  4. 
WEDDELI^The   birth    of   a    son    born 

April    8    has    been    reported     by     Mr. 

and    Mrs.      Louis      Weddell      of      1610 

West  Superior  street. 


MONUMENTS. 


LARGEST  STOCK  OF  HIGH-GRADE 
monuments  In  the  Northwest;  call 
and  inspect  before  buying  elsewhere. 
P.  N.  Peterson  Granite  Co..  230  E.  Sup. 

MONUMENTS  to  order  direct  from  fac- 
torles.  You  save  20  per  cent.  Charles 
Benson,  office  2301  W.  2nd  st.   Lin.  334. 


FUNERAL    FLOWERS    A    SPECIALTY. 
Duluth  Floral  Co..  121  W.  Superior  St. 


CARD  OF  THANKS. 

WE  WISH  TO  EXPRESs"oUR  DEEP 
appreciation  and  thanks  to  friends 
and  neighbors  for  the  beautiful  floral 
offerings  and  kindness  shown  during 
our    recent    bereavement. 

MR.    AND    MRS.    D.    J.    DORSET 
AND   FAMILY. 


BUILDING  PERMITS. 


NUXATED  IRON 

Increases  strength  of 
delicate,  nervous,  run- 
down people  200  per 
cent  in  ten  days  In 
many  instances.  $100 
forfeit  If  It  falls  as 
per  full  explanation  In 
large  article  soon  to 
appear  in  this  paper. 
Ask     your     doctor     or 

druggist    about    it.      Boyce    Drug    store 

always  carries  it  in  stock. 


To    Ralph    Lepovlch, 
the    east    side    of 
wealth        avenue, 
Dlck.son    and    Gary 

To  P.  T.   McCarthy, 
the    north      side 
street,        betweeti 


store    on 

Common- 

between 

streets. .$ 

garage  on 

of      SIxtn 

Twenty 


3.500 


CHICHESTER  S  PILLS 

^#_,r^^  TIIK  UIAMONU  BRAND.       a 

Lndlrst  AmkyourUrnmgUtfot/^ 
<'hl-clie*-ter'«  DUmond  Urait4^V\ 
riiU  In  Red  and  tiold  mrulliAV/ 
I  "xcs.    sealed    with    Blue    Ril.lwn.  \/ 
Take  no  other.    Buy  of  your    ^ 
nrummtitU  AskrorCin.Cin:8.TER*a 
IMAli<»N»  IIRAND  FILLH,  for  »*l 
yeafs  knuwn as  Best,  Satet,  Always  Reliable 

SOLDByDHUGGtSTSEVEKYWHEfiE 


sixth      and      Twenty-seventh 
avenues  east   

To  M.  S.  Hlrschfleld,  garage 
on  the  south  side  of  Fourth 
street,  between  Eighth  and 
Ninth   avenues   east    

To  Alexander  Rogenskl,  addi- 
tion to  dwelling  on  the  north 
side  of  Restormel  street, 
between  Grand  and  Michi- 
gan  avenues    

To  G.  T.  Elllngsen,  basement 
ttnder  dwelling  on  lot  12. 
block  1,  Piedmont  division, 
No.     2     

To  Alfred  Olson,  basement 
under  dwelling  on  the  west 
side  of  Twenty-second  ave- 
nue east,  between  I^ondon 
road  and  Soqth  street   

To  T.  D.  Fisher,  garage  on 
the  south  side  of  Jefferson 
street,  between  Sixteenth 
aud  Seventeenth  avenues 
east    

To  William  Nordstrom,  addi- 
tion to  dwelling  on  the  south 
side  of  Eighth  street,  be- 
tween Twentieth  and  Twen- 
ty-first   avenues    west     

To  John  Nystrom,  concrete 
piers  under  dwelling  on  the 
east  side  of  Ninety-second 
avenue  west,  between  Clyde 
and  Hulet  avenues 

To  Anna  Smart,  alterations  to 
dwelling  on  the  east  side  of 
Twenty  -  seventh  avenue 
west,  between  Michigan  and 
HuroA   streets 


R.  Edward  Sayles,  pastor  of  the  First 
Baptist  church,  will  officiate.  Burial 
will    be    at    Forest    Hill    cemettry. 

Mr.     Kaus      was     born      In      Russian 
Poland    In    1822. 


RECORD  PRICE  FOR 
eUERNSEY  BULL 


InTntlgation  and  adjustacBt  *t  rlalnu...  4.689.75 

Commissions   22,880.06 

galarlrs  of  omrrni,   accnts,  cvploim,  ts- 

amlnrrs'   and  Inspvctkw  fetn 97.855.34 

Pltidt-nds   to   stockholder* 36.552.00 

Lots  00  hJc  or  maturity  of  If^T*''  u^tS-.  1.744.97 

All  otbfr  dbl)ur»«-roent8   ^ 60.839.99 


$ 


268,8.rr.24 
1,939.463.88 


"May  King  of  Linda  Vista."  owned 
by  the  Jean  du  Luth  farm,  has  Just 
been  sold  for  $4,600,  the  highest  price 
ever  paid  for  a   Guernsey   bull. 

The  animal  was  sold  to  two  Massa- 
chusetts farmers.  The  new  owners  are  "•^■'|;  l^yj^, 
A.  L,  Lincoln,  who  owns  the  Rocky 
Reach  farm  at  Norwell,  and  C.  W. 
Barron,  who  owns  llie  Oaks  farm  at 
Cohasset. 


Total   dlslMirsf mf nts    

Balanie   

LEiniKK  A88tT91»El'.  31,  1915.       „  ^^^  ^ 

Book  »alue  of  real  fstat* $  342.^.00 

i  Book  »aluf  of  bonds  and  stoHw l-^^illi* 

fasti  in  offlrf,  trust  r4mpanin  and  bank*.  203. wt.61 

!  rrrmliims  in  cours'  of  poUectlans ^'^•^Ixi^ 

I  All  other  ledger  assets..*....^ 26,492.32 

ToUl  ledger  anets  (u  vet  t«1anr«>...$    1.939,466.88 

NON-LKitGtR   AS8KT8. 

Interest  and  rent«  dui-  and  Mci-u?d $ 

of    real    eatate.    bonds    and 
itork  over  book  falue.....„ 


Balance     358.402.55 

UCDGEB    ASSETS    DEC.    31.    1915. 

Mortgage   loans    $       283.460.38 

Bnok  \alue  of  bonds  and  stoclis '.  50.845.14 

Cash  In  offlre,  tnist  companies  and  banks.  15,755.16 

Prvmiums  io  course  of  coUerUons 8.341.87 


ToUl 

Interest 

Market 

stock 

Gross 


ledger  assets  <a<  per  balance)... $       358,402.55 

.\OX-U:i>r.EB   ASSETS. 

and  rents  dui!  and  accrued $  5,701.36 

Taloe  of   real   estate,    bonds   and 

ofer  book  value 160.36 


FISHERMEN  WILL 

MISS  "HISHBALL" 


Sportsmen  are  wc>nderlng  what  they 
are  going  to  do  after  April  17,  when 
the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  train  that 
leaves  the  Endlon  station  at  11:30  p.  m., 
will  not  carry  passengers  north  of  Two 
Harbors. 

General  Passenger  Agent  Johnson  of 
the  Duluth  &  Iron  Rang**  stated  today 
that  the  train  carried  few  passengers 
beyond  Two  Harbors  and  that  the  of- 
ficials of  the  road  had  found  that  It 
did  not  pay  to  carry  a  pai-senger  coach 
beyond   that   point. 

The  change  In  service  will  affect 
many  fishermen,  who  In  the  past  have 
been  In  the  habit  of  taking  this  train 
out  of  Duluth  Saturday  nights  and 
spending  Sunday  in  the  northern  fish- 
ing streams. 

M.AY  PAVE  NEXT  SUMiVlER. 

Petition     for    Superior     Street    Job 
Ready  to  Be  Filed. 

Superior  strtet  may  be  paved  next 
summer  from  Twenty-third  avenue 
east    to    the   Country   club. 

A  petition  for  the  Improvement  has 
been  In  circulation  for  some  time  and 
will  be  filed  some  time  this  afternoon 
or  tomorrow,  It  was  reported  this 
morning. 

Should  the  petition  contain  a  suffi- 
cient number  of  signatures,  the  Im- 
provement will  give  Duluthians  a  new 
pavement  from  Sixteenth  avenue  east 
out  to  the  golf  grounds.  The  stretch 
from  Sixteenth  to  Twenty-third  has 
already  been  ordered  and  the  contract 
for  it   will   be  awarded   next  Monday. 


HENKEL  RECOVERING. 

Would-Be  Suicide  Reported  Improv- 
ing at  St.  Luke's  Hospital. 

Joseph  Henkel.  the  laborer  who 
stabbed  himself  three  times  and  then 
cut  his  throat  with  a  pocket  knife 
Tuesday  afteinoon  In  the  Union  sta- 
tion waiting  room,  was  reported  as 
Improving  at  St.  Luke's  hospital  to- 
day. 

Henkel,  who  is  36  years  old,  was 
despondent  because  of  his  failure  to 
provide  for  his-  wife,  now  living  In 
Haudette,  Minn.  Correspondence  found 
In  his  pockets  contained  repeated  ref- 
erences   to   the   high   cost    of   living. 

Authorities  have  communicated  with 
Baudette  In  an  effort  to  inform  rela- 
tives  of   the   man's   whereabouts. 


5,391.49 
60,912.26 


rrrmiiinu 
due) 


assets   

DEPICT 


in 


$       364,264.27 

ASSETS   NOT   APSIITTED. 
course    of    collection    (past 
$  1,198.13 


Gross 


LORIMER  TAKES  STAND 
IN  HIS  OWN  BEHALF 

Chicago,  April  13. — William  Lorimer. 
former  banker  and  United  States  sena- 
tor, who  has  been  on  trial  here  for  sev 
eral  weeks  on  charges  arising  from  the 
failure  of  the  La  Salle  Street  Trust  iVi 
Savings  bank,  today  took  the  witness 
stand  in  his  own  behalf.  His  autobi- 
ography, it  was  said,  would  occupy  t^v- 
eral  court  days  and  it  was  understood 
that  much  of  it  would  be  devoted  to 
business  dealings. 


Real  Estate  Transfers. 


to   Albert   tiUiltz   ft   ux,    lot    9, 
lot  10,  blk.  100.  EndioD  dl\i- 


to  Krauk  Wagner,    Ivt   ^6, 
puluth   Prc>p«r.   First   dlvl- 


u<    Kliialifth    M. 
20.    Kuski>lUe 


(ham- 
addition 

Stanish, 
difllon. 


com- 


Cfttl   C.    .Mellin 

easterly  20  ft. 

slon    

PredtTiik  WeldcDiann 

East  Sixth  street, 

blon    

Unipl    (irons    ft    mar 

piun,     lot    3,     blk. 

to    IliblilMg    

Ered    A.    Koblnsoii,    tni.<Ue,    to    Frank 

lot    2.    blk.    5o,    Eveleih.    Cfntral 

No.    2    

Leonard    Kri\use   et    ux    to   McNlven    Land 

paijy.  lot  21.  blk.  28,  IhUholm 

Aunie    Kit!    et    al    to    Martin    Bailch,    lot 

»)lk.   8.  KitzTlUe   

Leanmn   (!.    Leonard   ft    ui   to   0.    U.    Ltonan), 

lot  5,  section  31.  71-21 

WlUT    E.    Hunt    ft    ui    to    C.    I.    Alixa.ider, 

lot*  1,  2,  blk.  12,  Soulhem  addition  to  Uib- 

tilng   

Albert   N.    S«aln   (I  ux   to   Frank   Zurloh,    lots 

1,  'i,  blk.  3,  Third  division,  Proctorknott 

Carrie    Oust    to    John    LarMm,    lot«    1,    2,    blk. 

34      Wi^'-rn    addition    to    (.hlsholm.     lot     1. 

bl.  24,  .Northern  addition  i>.  ChlHbolm 


15, 


Mortltnfr 


to 

of    «V«.    sfllon 

nw^    of    «w'4. 


«i-ctioo 
J. 


of   iWU, 

15,  50- 


HiaiDb,  fij 
15:  h\ii  of 
wction    14, 


.Arthur  lluwklnson  to  B.   A.   (ialf 

nwi.i  of  sw^.   sw>4  *»'  "*^'« 

20    

Earl   \\.    8t««art 

of   sw«4.    nV2 

nw>4,    lot    4; 

66-18   

Thomas    J.     Tr»>lll!on    to    Jinnlf    E.     tlemvnt", 

lot  im,   Lake  avt nue,   li'pvr  Puliith 

Edith    1).    Passraore    <t     al    to    Eir.il    Jt.hnson. 

lots  6,  7.  8.  blk.  7,  M"tor  Line  I'ark  dltlslon 
E     E.    Lindtilad   ct   ux   to  Fiank    Saxk.    lot   9, 

lilk.   1.   Whltwldfs  Third  addition  to  Ely 

I.aki-slde    Land   company   to  John   MakI,    lot   15, 

blk.   12!l,   l/incton  addition 

August  Waananen  ft  ux  to  Piter  W.   Waanani  n. 

ii>58   of    ne^.    e»i   of   nw^,    »ectlon    4,    56- 

12 

Carson  land  company  to  Joseph  follch,  lot  11, 

blk.   5.   Lcetonla   towr.sltp 

Pffpr    Wring   ft   ux    to    .loe    J.    Maras,    lot    13, 

Shapero  addition  to  Kininy»lde 

Joseph    (irudcu   to   Helen    (Justin,    lots   19,    20, 

Mk.    11.   WMtem  addition  to  Chlshf.lm 

Walter  P.   Harris  et  ui  to  M.   (».   Kraker,  lots 

11,   12,   13,   blk.    21,   Fir«t  addition  to  Gil- 

»*rt    

Ardiir   Hagliind  et   ux   to  Fri;nk    Ltndquhl.    west 

>i  of  s\ij,  n*%  of  ne»4,  seel  ion  35.  57-21.. 
Frank    Lliid(iul«t    ft    ux    to    Otto    F.    Haslund, 

nV^  of  nci4  of  ne*,*,  st-ction  35.  ri7-21 

Ardur  Hagltina  ft  ux  to  August  Lindqulst.  east 


lij  of  s',*.,  n\ii4  *•' 


nei.4.  section  Z'l 
ux    to    August 


900 


400 


350 


600 


200 


150 


150 


76 


56 


21... 

Frank  Llnd(|ui<it  et  ux  to  August  Lindqulst. 
sVj  of  s\i.  neVi  of  ne'.^.  wctlon  35,  57-12.. 

George  L.  Brozlch  et  ux  to  Frank  (Jraudishar. 
lots  7,  8,  fast  16  ft.  lot  9,  blk.  5,  Se- 
me r"s  .iddltlon   to  Ely 

Frank  Saiulo  ft  ux  to  Herman  Oiwn  Loftncs, 
lot  27,  fast  »2  lot  i».  blk.  12,  And-r- 
fons  Third  addition  to  Virginia 

Cill)frt  Johnson  to  .Mi-hatl  HfMlal,  lots  32. 
34.  blk.  18,  Superior  Vie*  addition.  Second 
division    

Agnes  Young  ft  mar  to  A.  B.  Bret*  and  E. 
J.  Scott.  w\i,  fV4  of  nn^,  wH  of  n»i4, 
nfftloii  ,^'>,  52-17  

Albert  Stoltx  et  ux  to  Carl  0.  .Mellin,  southrrly 
X>  ft.  northerly  70  ft.  lots  7,  8,  blk.  94, 
Endlon  division    

C.  F.  Colman  ft  ux  to  A.  D.  Swan,  lots  8. 
9.  blk.   4.  Colmans  Third  addition 

Bert  N.  Wheeler,  etc..  to  Edmond  C.  Haute, 
southvil;  33  ft.  loU  17.  18,  blk.  2,  Wlieeler's 
addition.    First   dhlsion 

C.  F.  C(<man  et  ux  to  William  E.  Mannc^y. 
lot  32.  Colmans  Flr-^t  A'-rc  Tract  nditltlon... 

A.  J.  Frpy  et  ul  to  Marie  Mayrr.  orta  and 
mineral  rlRlits  to  lot<  25.  2t'..  hi.  1.  Ki«kl- 
ville   addition   to   Hibldng 

Harry  W.   Giirtln  ft  ux  to  Alcxamkr  J.   Gurtln, 


aswtt $    2,006,770.63 

PEPICT   ASSETS   NOT   AI>MITTEI». 
Premiums    In    cours;   of   collfctlon    (past 

due)     $  239.b2 

Market  value  of  special  deposits  in  excess 
of  corresponding  liabilities 10,(91.84 


Total   Insets  not  admitted I 

Total  admitted  assMs 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims— 
In  process  of  ad.<ustment  and  reported. ..  .9 

Incurred  but  not  reported 

Bcslsted  

Tital    $ 

Net  unpaid  claims  except  liability  rlatais. 

Special  reserve  for  credit  losses 

I'nf amfd    pn-nilums    

Commissions  and  brokerage 

Surplus  reliisiirancf  reserte  and  contingency 

provision    • '. 

All   other   llablliUet 

Capital  stork  paid  up % 


11.081.46 
1.994,739.17 


24,891.00 

2,023.00 

10.000.00 

36.914.00 

36.914.00 

1..=)7.'>.00 

130.195.00 

682.25 

102.700.00 

7.150.00 

304.600.00 


Total  assets  not  admitted 

Total    admitted   assets 

LIABILITIES. 

Claims— 
In  process  of  adjustment  and  reported... 
Beslstfd     


Total   

.Net  unpaid  claims  fxcept  liability  claims. 

rnramed   prrmlums    

Crmmlsslons   and    brokerage 

All   other  liabilities. ...  .-v 

Capital  stock  paid  up 


1,198.13 
363,066.14 


3,595.66 
500.00 

4.095.66 
4.096.66 

60,882.45 

903.20 

4.042.06 

246.208.00 


OUidends  left  with  company   to  accumu- 
late     

Premiums  paid  In  advance 

PIvldends  du?  or  apportioned  policyholders 
All  other  ilabilities   

Total    Ilabilities   on    policyholders'    ac- 
count   $ 

I'nassigned  funds   (surplus ) 

EXHIBIT  OF  POLICIES,  1915. 
No. 
Policies  In  force  at  rnd  of  pr,'- 

Tlous  year   ^Last  (»lumn  only)30,460 
Pollclfs  in  force  at  close  of   thi' 
year   31,427 


19.117.70  I 

6,530.87  I 

295,063.94  : 

88,768.90  I 


7,384,350.41  i 
42,774.70  ] 

Amount.  I 


I  48,410,726.00  | 
48,916.938.00  i 


ToUl 
Surplus 


Live 


. . .t       583.816.25 
...$    1.410,922.92 

IN  191.'i. 
Premiums  Becplved. 

ndfllty    «54.15 

ToUl     J354.15 


Total  liabilities,   including  capital. 

Surplus  over  all   llahllltl»s 

Bl  SI.VESS   I.N  M1.N.NE.S0TA 


Stat*  of  MInnfsota,   Pepartmfnl  of   Insurance. 

I  Hfnby  Certify.  That  tin-  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Cuarantfe  Company  of  North  Amirica.  for  the  year  end- 
ing I>ec«-mb<'r  31st.  191.').  of  whl.-h  the  a»x>ve  Is  an  ab- 
stract, has  be«n  received  and  flled  In  this  departrntnt 
and  duly  approred  by  me.  3.  U.   WORKS, 

Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


liabilities.   Including  capital.... |       306.131.37 

over  alt   llablUttes 56,934.77 

BISI.NESS  IN  MIN.NESOTA  IN  1915. 

Premiums  Kfceivod.  Losses  Paid, 
stock   $    3,833.37    $    1.S30.00 


ToUls 


.$3,833.37    $    1,830.00 


SUtf  of  Minnesota,   Pepartment  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Statem'-nt  of  the 
Standard  Live  Stock  Insurance  company,  for  the  year 
ending  Pecember  31st,  1915.  of  which  the  above  is  an 
abstract,  has  been  received  and  flled  in  this  dcpartmpnt 
and  duly  approved  by  me.  S.   P.  WOKKS. 

Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


rXITED  STATES  CASUALTY  COM- 
PANY. 

Principal  office:    New  York,  N.  Y.     Organized  In  1895, 
Edson  8.   Lett,  president;  P.   «.   Lucketh,  secretary. 


At- 

srniue    In    Mlnmsota:      Ccmmisslontr 


J.  A.  HUNTEN, 

BRANCH  MANAGER. 

F.L  HULL,  CASHIER. 

202    Andrus   Bldg., 
Minneapolis. 

CAXADA   LIFK   IXSIB-^XCE   COM- 
PANY. 

Principal    office:      Toronto.     ( anada.       (Orsanlzed    la 

1847  )     H.   C.   Case,    pnsidrnt;  Charlts  B.   A>ns,   si-ire- 

tary.      Attorney    to    accept   service    In    .Minnesota:     Coin- 

missiomr  of  Inswance.  ^,„^ 

CASH   CAP1T.\L,   f  1.000,000.00. 

I.NIOME   IN   1915. 

First  year's  premiums $ 

Plridends  ami  surniidcr  values  applied  to 
purchase  paid  up  insurance  and  an- 
nuities      • 

CoiisUUratlon  for  ortKinal  annuities,  and 
supplementary    contracts.    Involving    life 

i-oiitingf  ncics     

Reneval    premiums    

Extra  premiums  for  disability  and  accident 


554,906.87 


1,248,784.91 


257,152.68 

4.397,220.02 

2.227.55 


ToUl  premium  income 

Rents   and   Interests 

(iross  profit  on  sale,   maturity  or  adjusl- 

roeut  of  ledger  assets 

From  all  other  sources 

Total  Incom?    $    9,527,140.43 

^tJ   r.*!.  .'I'.^'T:.  .'!!! . !" .  '".T:%  53,839,027.04 


6,4()0,292.03 
2.921.961.09 

73.547.39 
71,339.92 


Sum    J  b3,3t)6,l6< 

PISBl  H^EMENTS  IN  1915. 
Death,  endowment  and  disability  claims.  .$ 
Annuities    and    premium    notes    voided    by 

lapse    •  • 

Surrender  values  to  poUcyhold' rs 

1  Hv  Idends    to    pol  1(  yholdcrs 

Total   paid   policyholders...*. I 

Dividends  held  on  deposit  s-urrendercd  dur- 
ing the  year   

Pl»ldends   to   stockholders 

Commissions  and  bonut#f  to  agenU  first 
year's  premiums   

Commissions  on  renewals 

Commissions  on  annuiUrs  (original  and  re- 
newal t     , 

Salaries  and  allowances  for  agemics 

Agtiicy  m^rvlslon  and  branch  office  ei- 
peases    •  • • ■ 

Medical  Mamlners  feet  and  Inspection  of 

risks    ■ • 

Salarits  of  officers  and  employes 

Legal  exptnses   ••/\"V" 

Agents'  iwlances  .barged  oil 

iinn^  loss  on  sale,  maUirily  or  adjustment 

of  lfd?er  assets 

All  other  dlsburs  me  nts 


47 
3,399,014.16 

273.453.32 

1,542,736.83 
2,6O4,3CX.03 

7.819,572.34 

183,10 
200,000.00 

241.309.03 
187.195.84 

2.874.87 
40,387.65 

177.227.73 

42.306.09 

277.640.63 

10.889.64 

30,869.39 


642.735.86 


torney    to    accept 
of  insurance. 

C.\SH  CAPITAL,   $o00,fl00.00. 
INCO.ME   IN   1915. 
Preciiums  ricelved    (Net)  — 

A(  eident     $477,109.69 

H.alth    241,484.11 

Liability     752,740.09 

Workmen's  compensation 489,443.02 

Hat-  glass    50,842.66 

Steam    Itoller 41,423.64 

Buulary    and    theft 92.529.35 


Net  Increase  967  $       506,212.00 

Issued,  revived  and  inereastd  dur- 
ing the  year 4.964  $    7.713,860.00 

ToUl  terminated  during  the  year.  3.997  7,207.648.00 

BISINESS  IN  MINESOTA  IN  1915. 

iNo.  Amount. 

Policies  In  force  Dec.  31.  1914..  3,410  %    4,613,564.00 

Issued  during  the  y?ar 1,427  2,085,865.00 

Ceased  to  be  in  force  during  the 

year    744  ].10'.'.839.00 

In  force  December  31st,  1915...  4,093  5,596.589.00 


Lossrs  and  claims  incurred  during 
the  year   20 

Ixisses   and   claims  settlfd  during 
the   year    15 

Losses  and  claims  unpaid  December 
31st,   1915   6 


28,500.00 

23,500.00 

6,000.00 


BUY  A  HOME 

Whh  Your  Rent  Money 

No.  426' Thirteenth  avenue  east— a 
new   6-room   house;   Ptrlctly   modern. 

No.  1316  East  Ninth  street-— five 
rooms,  hardwood  floors  and  flniBn, 
city  water,   sewer,   bath.   gas. 

No.  816  East  Eighth  street— six 
rooms,  water,  sewer,  bath,  hardwood 
floors;  oak  finish  downstairs;  white 
enamel    finish    upstairs. 

Small  first  payment;  balance  same 
as    rent. 

EBY  &  GRIDI^EY 

608    PALLAOIO    BLDG. 


Received  for  premiums $       172,678.49 


State  of  MinnesoU.  Drpartment  of  Insuranw. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Sfcurily  .Mutual  Life  Insurance  company  for  the  year  end- 
ing IKconib;r  31st,  191S,  of  which  llie  above  is  an  ab- 
stract, has  bxn  ravivcd  and  flled  In  Uiis  department 
and  duly  approved  by  me. 

S.    D.   WORKS. 
Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


THE    .AMERICAN    CREDIT    INDEM- 
NITY COMPANY    OF  NEU'  YORK. 

Principal  offli-e:  New  York.  N.  Y.  Organized  in  1893. 
E.  M.  Treat,  president;  Joseph  J.  «;ross,  secretary.  At- 
tormy  to  accept  sfrviee  In  .Minnesota:  Commissioner  of 
Insurance. 

CASH  CAPITAL.   $350,000.00. 
INCOME   IN   1915. 

Premiums  received   (.Net)  — 

Crullt    $640,617.64 

Total  net  premium  income $ 

From  interest   and   rents 

Profit    on     sale     or     maturity     of     ledger 

ttSo.lo       ..,*.*......•.............■.. 

From   all  other  sources 


640.617.64 
60,604.45 

1,6.33.09 
1,071.82 


.1       703.927.00 


Sprinkler,    paid    out    

Fly-wheel    

Auto,   etc.,    Prop,    damage.. 

Workmen's    Coll 

Total   net  prrmlum  Income. 

From   interest    and   rents 

Profit  on  .sal?  or  maturity  of  ledger  ai-sets 
From   all   other  sources 


22.322.23 

253.06 

72,101.13 

1.028.98 


2,196,633.51 

127,936.83 

2.422.02 

375.63 


Total  Income    I    2,327.267.99 

Udger    assi'ts    r>ecfmbcr    31st    of    previous 
year     3,244,572.86 


Sum     $ 

DISBIKSEME.NTS  IN  1915. 
Claims  paid   (Net)- 

Accident    $248,178.47 

Hcilth    111.816.59 

Liability     411.239.98 

Workmen's    conip.'nsation 193.183.97 

Plate   glass    15.942.62 

Steam   boiler    1.436.17 

Burglary   and   thfft 30.4f,6.62 

Sprinkler    1.965.72 

Auto,    etc..    Prop,    damage 25,680.35 

Workmen's    Coll 1,295.18 

Net   paid   policyholders $ 

Investigation  and  adjustment  of  claims.. 

Commissions     

Salaries  of  officers,    agents,  employes,   ex- 
aminers'   and   inspection   fees 

Dividends   to   stockholders 

Loss  on  faie  or  maturity  of  ledjer  asssts. 
All   other  disbursements 


5.571,840.85 


1,041.195.67 
162.682.41 
509.845.13 

267.334.36 

49.950.00 

7.516.10 

147.493.20 


Total 
Balan" 


.1  9,618,985.81 
.  M,  717, 181.66 
1915 


nw 


14  of  8ei4.  s.>4  of  sei4,  s.etlo.i  35.  C3-12 


4.500 


175 
1 

200 
1 

1 
425 

1.000 

2.000 

1 
300 

150 
200 
250 

650 
158 
125 
525 

325 
1 
1 
1 
1 


830 

165 

1.240 

1 
1 

1 
1 

10 

1 


Total   disbursements    

ViiiGER  ASSETS  DEC.   31. 

Value  of  real  fstatc  owned ! 

Moitgage  loans    

Collattral  loans 

Preixiium  noUs  and  policy  loans 

Bonds  and  stocks  owned.......... 

Cash.    In    office,    banks    and    trust    com- 
panies    

Total  iM'cer  assets   (as  per  balanci-i . .  .$  53,717,181.66 
NON-LEDCER   ASSETS. 


3.694.028.29 
20.76n.S«S,34 

isr)..'i2o.oo 

8.9.'i7.080.80 
19,751,728.55 

367,955.78 


Interest  and  f»nts  due  and  arcnied. 
Net  dfffrred  and  unpaid  premiums.. 
All  other  nonkdger  asseU 


.$    1.674,675.40 
782,113.43 
7,644.59 


■  •••■••  i 


Gross  assets  

ToUl  admltUfl  a«-ts  .....•,•• 
LI.^BILITIES  PEC, 


.$  56,081,615.08 


disbursements    $    2,186,016.87 

e     ? 3,385.823.98 

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC.   31.   1915. 

Book  value  of  real  estate $ 

Mortgage   loans    

Book  value  of  bonds  and  stocks 

Ca^h  in  office,  trust  companies  and  banks 

Pnmtums  In  course  of  collections 

Ml  other  ledger  assets 

Total  ledger  as.sets   (as  per  balan-^) . . .% 
XON  LEDGER   ASSETS. 
Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued $ 


Total  Inrora?    

Ledger   assets   Dfctmber  31st  of   previous 
year    $    1,483,573.05 


Sum 


IN 


I 

1915. 


DISBCR9EMENTS 

Claims  paid   (Net- 
Credit    $468,452.80 

.Net    paid    poUc.'k.Mders $ 

Investigation   aud   adjustment  of  claims.. 

Ccmmissions     

Salaries  of  offlee.-s,   agents,   rmploycs,   fx- 

amlners'    and  Inspection  fees 

Dividends   to   stockholders 

Loss  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  assi-ts. . 
All  other  dlsbursL'mfnts 


2.187,500.05 


468.452.80 

16,617..58 

154.826.t) 

70.723.28 

7.000.00 

2.638.12 

112.130.94 


Total    disbursements    

Balance     

LEDGER  ASSETS  DEC. 

Book  value   of  Iwnds  and  stocks 

Cash     in     office,     trust     companies 

banks    

Pn-mlums  in  course  of  collections.... 
All  other  ledger  assi-ts 


..I 


and 


832,389.32 
1,355,110.73 

1915. 

$    1,243,556.55 


39.478.76 
10.679.20 
61,396.22 


EAST  END  HOME 

Situated  on  a  beautiful  upper 
corner  on  East  First  street,  sur- 
rounded by  some  of  the  f'nest  resi- 
dences in  the  city.  Lot  60  by  140 
feet  with  well  graded  and  sodJed 
lawn  and  shade  trees.  The  house 
has  seven  rooms  and  bath,  all  white 
enamel  finish  except  the  hall;  fire- 
place, hot  water  heating  plant, 
electric  light,  pas,  laundry  tubs, 
stone  foundation,  maple  floors.  Th© 
view  from  this  location  is  excellent 
and  the  property  can  be  bought  on 
easv  terms  at  the  very  low  price 
of_If  7.000.  <8216) 

Make  an  appointment  to  go  in  our  automobile  to 
to  s.-e  this  or  aiiv  other  prop  rty  you  wish  to  roiHlder. 

STRYKER,  MANLEY  &  BUCK 


Total   ledger  assets    (as  per  balance).. 

non-ij;dger  a.ssets. 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  aeciu^-d 


Gross 


1,355,110.73 
13,020.98 


assets   $    1,368,131.71 

DEDltT  .ASSETS  NOT  ADMITTED. 
Bills  receivable,  ^ents  balances  and  prem- 
iums in  course  of  collection   ipast  duel.$         33,057.24 
Book    value   of    ledger   assets   over   market 

value     5.274.99 

All   other   assets  not   admitt-d 


250.00 

231,750.00 

2,699.5.">4.62 

97.973.23 

308.220.64 

48.075.49 

8,385,823.98 

19.360.81 


ToUl 
Total 


Cress  assets   

DEPICT  ASSETS  NOT 
Book    value   of   ledger   assits   over 
value    

Total  admitted  assets I    3,190,205.39 

LIABILITIES. 


$    3.405,374.79 

ADMITTED, 
market 
, $       215,169.40 


Claims— 
In  process  of  adjustment  and  reported. 

Incurred  but  not  reported 

Bi'hUt"d     


..$ 


65,046.00 
12.105.00 
36.743.00 


Total    • 

Ntt  unpaM  claims  except  liability  claims 

Special  reserve  for  unpaid  liability  losses. 

Expenses  of  Investigation  and  adjustment. 

I'r.earned   premiums    

Commissions  and  brokerage 

Contingency  fund  and  reseae  for  reinsur- 
ance   

All  other  liabilities   

Capital  stock  paid  up 


Total  liabilities.  Including  caplUl 
Surplus 


113.894.00 

113,894.00 

439,916.00 

12.656.00 

1,084.822.98 

69.899.7S 

101,522.55 

67,494.08 

500,000.00 


.1    2,390,205.39 


oter   all    liabilities 

BISINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN 


800,000.00 


31. 


....$56,081,615.08 
1915. 


lla- 


Xet  reserve    ."•■.■■ 

Keserted  for  stipplemenlary  ronlracts, 
blllty  on  cancelled  policies 

Claims  due  aud  unpaid 

lieserve  for   death   losses  Inc-urted  but  un- 
reported     • :'""j 

Claims   adjusted    and   not   due   and   unad- 
justed and  reported 

DMdfiids   Ifft    with   company    ««   accum- 
ulate  • 

Premiums  paid  In  '•J''*"^  •••,••••,•,••.•••  • 

Dividends   due    or    apporttonrd   r-oHiihold- 

ers    

Spi-clal  reserves    • ,• 

Special  fund  to  bring  reserve  to  fomi>any  s 

valuation  basis   

All  oth?r  llsbllllles  


.$  46,144..370.00 


481,188.00 
169,601.49 

23,599.71 

240.945.81 

9,551.00 
7.744.15 

4.643,227.02 
523.186.36 

1.823.008.31 
128,182.71 


policyholders'    ac- 

$  54.194,604.56 

.: 1,(X)0,000.03 

887,010.52 


ToUl   llablllltles  on 

count   

Capital  stock  paid  up 

Ina-sslEUcd   funds    (surplus) 

ina.ssu.mu    j,^|jjjj,^  Q^.  poMcn.S,   1915. 

No. 
Policies   In   force   at  end   of  P^; 

vlmis  year  (Last  column  onlyi69,880 
Polici. «  in  fori-e  at  close  of   Ihe^ 

year    '^'-^- 


A  mount. 

$156,453,183.00 

159,320,937.00 


1,352 
6,696 


Net  Increase    •  •  • •  •  •  ■  •  ■ 

Iswied.  revived  and  increased  dur 

Ing  the  year •  •  •   •  • -  -, ,, 

Tntal  terminated  during  the  year,  j.344 

Total  t"™jjjj;gs  IN  MINNESOTA  IN  1915 

No 
Poll  les  In  force  Pec.   31.  1914.. 
Issued  during   the  year  ........ 

Ceased  to  be  In  force  during  the 

y»Kf      , 

In  force  December  31st,  1915.... 

Losses  and  claims  Incurred  during 

the   year    

Losses   and   claims 

the   year    

LOSS'S    and    claims 

ceraber  31tt.    1915. 


$    2,867,754.00 


599 
43 

57 
585 


15.946.197.00 
13,078,443.00 


Amount. 

1,622,066.00 

236,500.00 

126.473.00 
1.732,093.00 


settled   during 
unpaid    De- 


7 
6 


13,480.00 
7,480.00 
6.000.00 


Becflved  for  premiums. 


63.208.74 


Rfat-  of  Minnesota.  Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  Tliat  the  Annual  Klatemenf  of  the 
Canada  Life  A.<«irance  company  for  the  year  ending 
linTinhor  31st  1915.  of  which  the  alKjre  is  an  abstract, 
has  lUn   «celved   and  flled   In   tfcls  <i^V>innvnt^r>a   duly 

approved  by  roe.  .,       .   .     '  I^,  V'**»^«. 

"'^*^  Commissioner  of  Ins;irance. 


Aecldent      

Hralth    

Liability 

Workmen's    compensation 

Plate  gla.ss   

Steam   boiler    

Biirglary  and  theft. 
Automobile  property 


$ 

1915. 

Premiums  Keceived.  Ixjsses  Paid. 

$  3.4.^6.95  $  1,296.38 

1.323.50  527.12 

10.655.13  1.644.35 

11.938.66  8.8.35.15 

466.35  130.77 

;.;.. Ji34.70  

1.173.46  464.00 

damage 2.636.38  91C.«1 


Totals 


.$32,185.13    $13,814.38 


State  of  Minnesota, 
I    Ilerrtjy   Certify, 
United   States   Casualty 
ending   Decimher  .31st, 


ah^tracf.   has  been  received 
and  duly  approved  ly  me. 


Pepartment  of  Insurance. 

That  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Insurance  company,  for  the  year 
1915.    of  which   the    aliovc   is   an 


and  filed  In  this  department 

S.  D.   WOKKS, 
Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


SECURITY    MUTUAL.   LIFE  INSUR- 
ANCE   COMPANY. 

Principal  office:  Binthampton.  N.  Y.  (Organized  in 
1886.)  D.  S.  Dickenson,  president;  Charies  A.  La  Due, 
sccreury.  Attorney  to  accept  serrti-e  in  MinnesoU: 
Commissioner  of  Insurance.  K.  A.  Dickey,  manager  N. 
W  Dept  .  728  to  732  First  National,  Soo  Line  building. 
INCOME   IN   1915. 


assets  not    admitted $       176.7.'>5.78 

admliud  ass-ts   1,191,375.93 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims — 
In  process  of  adjustment  and  rcportfd...$         30.276.00 


Resisted 

Total    

Net  nnpaid  claims  rxccpf  liability  claims. 

Special  resene  for  credit  loss.-s 

Tneanicd   pp  niiunis    

Commissions  and   brokerage 

All  other   liabilities    

Capital   stock  paid   up 


Zo.i 


50.00 


66.026.00 

56.026.00 

304. 886. ')3 

248.497.32 

2.086.79 

28.991.93 

350.000.00 


Total 
Surplus 

Credit 


liabilities.    Including   capital.... $       990.488.57 

over  all  liabilities 200,887.36 

BISINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN  1915. 

Premiums  Hecetved.  Losses  Paid. 
$8,352.50    $11,359.11 


Totals    $8,352.50    $11,359.11 

SUte  of  Minnesota.   Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  That  the  Annual  Statement  of 
The  American  Cndit  Indemnify  Insurance  company,  for 
the  year  ending  Deccrab<T  31st.  1915.  of  which  the 
above  Is  an  abstract,  has  been  received  and  filed  In  this 
department  and  duly  approved  by  me. 

S.  D.  WORKS, 
Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


THE    RIDGELY    PROTECTIVE    ASSO 
CIATIOX. 

Principal  office:     Worcester.   Mass.     Orcaniiod  In  190" 
Francis  A.    Hariington,   prt.sident;   Fiank   C. 
secretary.      Attorney    to    acirpt    sfnice    In 
Commissiouer  of  insurance.         ».^„  „„^  ,„ 
CASH    CAPITAL,    $100,000.00. 
INCOME    IN   1915. 

Preniliims  received    (Net)  — 

Accident   and   health $410,373.52 

Total   net  premium  Income $ 

Polii7  fees    

From  interest  and  rents 

Profit  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  asseU 
From  all  other  sources 


Harrington, 
Minnesota: 


410.373.52 

<X».»)37.00 

22.560.49 

62.')0 

4.51 


Total   Income    

Ledger   asseU   December 
year     


3ist   of   previous 


Bum 


Claims 
Accident 
Health     . 
Net  paid 


DISBURSEMENTS  IN  1915. 
paid    (Net)  — 
$105,772.53 


145.708.55 

_._  iK'lio'liolders $ 

Investigation  and  adjustment  of  claims... 

Policy  f«s    

Ccmaiiss'.or.s     

Salaries  of  officers,  agents,  employes,  ex- 
aminers'   and  insp.'ction  fees 

Dividends   to    stockholders 

Loss  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  assets.. 
All    other    dlsburs.'menU 


493,638.02 
487,520. 18 
981,15S..10 


251,481.08 

6,833.23 

r.9.43«.UT 

20,213.52 

f 6.951. 33 

10.000.00 

237.60 

43.447.96 


First  year's   premiums 

Dividends  and  surrender  values 
purchase  paid-up  insurance 
tiuit  les     

Beneual   premiums    


applied  to 
aud    an- 


Total    premium    income $ 

Hents    and    interests 

Gross  profit   on   sale,    maturity  or   adjust- 

loent  of  ledger  assets 

From  all  other  sources 


186,674.83 


33.109.96 
1,450,602.14 

1,670,386.93 
346,003.22 

2,442.95 
6,265.82 


$    2,025,098.92 

previous 

7,016,206.89 


Total   income   

Leeigtr    asseU    Dtccmber   31st    of 
year     

Sum     $    9,041,305.81 

DLSBl  RSEMENTS  IN  1915. 
Death,  endovment  aud  disability  claims. $ 
Annuities    and    premium    notes    voided    by 

laps?    

Surr.-nd  r  values  to  poll<yl)olders 

Dividends   to   policyholders 


639.601.30 

75,896.19 
336,305.47 
110,327.72 


■TAND%.RD  LIVE  STOCK  INSURANCE 
"  COMPANY. 


THE 


In 


GUARANTEE      COMPANY 
NORTH     AMERICA. 

Principal    office:      Montreal.     Canada.       OrFanlzvd 
1851.      Hartland    S.    MacDougall.    president;    Hicl.ard 
Scott.    K"(Tetary.      Attorney    to    «c<Tpt    f Ttlce 
K'tn:    Commissioner  of  liis;iraniT'. 

CASH   (  APITAI,,    $304,600.00. 
INCOME    IN   1915. 

Premiums  received   (.Net!  — 

Fidelity    $173,723.70 

Surety    72.992.11 

Total   net  premium  income | 

From  Interest   and  rent* 

Frtim  all  other  soun-es 


OF 


In 

n. 

Minne- 


Prlmlpal  office:  Indianapolis,  Ind. 
Oscar    Hadley,    president;    Frank     I 
Attorney    to    accept    s-rvic^'    In 
or   insuramf .  ^.^^^  ^.^^^^^    $246,208.00 
INCOME   IN    1915. 
Premiums  received    (Nett— 

,  Live  stock    $112,226.  <0 

!  Total  net  premium  Incomt*.... ♦ 

i  Freiui   Interest   and   renU 

I  Iloflts  on  sale  or  maturity  of  ledger  assets 

I  Fnim  all  other  sources. . . . . , , 

Borrowed  money  «»•• 


(Organized  In  1911) 

Grubbs,    secretary. 

Minn-sota:     Commissioner 


Total   paid   poUo'holders $  1,162,130.68 

Dividends  held  on  deposit  surrendered  dur- 
ing the  year  5,086.31 

Commissions    and    bonuses    to    agents   first 

year's  premiums   84.486.71 

Commissions  on  renewals 93,386.96 

Agency  supenlslon  and  branch  office  ex- 
penses      116,971.34 

.Medical  examiners  fees  and  Inspection  of 

risks  31,670.44 

Salaries  of  officers  and  employes 93,955.54 

Legal  expenses   5,585.35 

Grt.ss  loss  on  sale,  maturity  or  adjustment 

of  leger  ass.'ts 3,019.99 

All  other  dishursemeuts 166,056.45 


Total   disbursements    $  478.6()3.27 

Balance     ••••,.  B02,5.T0.23 

LEDGER  ,\SSET8  DEC.  31,   1915. 

Book  value  of  bonds  aiul  stmks $  469,568.00 

Cash     In     office,     trust     companies     and 

banks    32,987.23 


502,555.23 
7,904.17 


Total   ledger  assets    (as  per  balamt).. 
•     XON-LEDGER   A.SSETS. 
Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued 

Gro>s  assets    t       510,459.70 

DEPICT  ASSETS  NOT  ADMITTED. 
Bock    value    of   ledger   assets   over    market 

v^!,,e    ,       25.4.1. .39 

All  other  assets  not  admitted *      10,148.00 


Total 
Total 


..$ 


ess  -ts    not    admitted 

admitted    asset-s 

LIABILITIES. 
Claims- 
Ill  process  of  adjustment  and  reported.. 

Incurn-d  but  not  reported 

Betisted     


Total     .*. $ 

Net  unpaid  claims  except  liability  claims. 

Special  reserve  for  credit  losses 

Expenses  of  investigation  and  adjustment. 

rneained   premiums    

All  other  liabilities | 

Capital  stock  paid  up 


35.619.39 
474.840.31 


53.766.37 

0.157.68 

77.00 


63,001.05 
63.001.05 
63.001.05 
981.19 
35.696.84 
10.173.72 
100.000.00 


11 2.216. 70 

18.265.98 

11.24 

.')72.23 

10.099.00 


ToUl  disbursements   ....^ 

Balance   

LEDGER  ASSET8  DEC.   31.   1915, 

Value  of  real  estate  owned $ 

Mortgage   loans    ] 

Collateral  loans  

Premium  notes  and  iwllcy  loans 

Bonds  and  stocks  owned 

Ca^^h.  in  office,  banks  and  trust  companies 

Bills  receivable  and  agents'  balances 

Suspense   aee-ount    


1,762.249.77 
7.279,056.04 


Total  liabilities.    Including  capital $       209.852.80 

Surplus  over  all  liabilities 264,987.51 

BUSINESS  IN  MINNESOTA  IN  1915. 

Premiums  Rpc"ived.  Losses  Paid. 
Accident   and   health i4.688.50       $2,724.16 


Totals    ^.688.50        $2,724.16 


246.715.81 

91.097.04 

379.39 


Total  Income   

Ledger    assets    Drrcmber 
year    


31st    of    previous 


338.192.24 
1.870.111.88 


Bum   . 

Claims 
Fidelity 
Hurety 
Net  paid 


IN 


$ 

1915. 


DlSBl  BSEME.NT8 
Paid    (.Net)  — 

$  31.1.^4.44 

13.120.7't 

polliTbolders $ 


2,208,304.12 


44,275.23 


Total   Income ♦ 

Leeiger    asseU    IVcember    Jlst  tif    previous 

year   

Increase  or  decrease  In  capital 

Sum     ' 

DISBIKSEMENXS  IN  1915. 

Claims  paid    (Nett-  -  ^ .  ^^  ^7 

Live  stock    $  54,006.97^ 

Net  |)aid  poiicyliold  rs > 

Imestlgatlon   and   i4djustMent  •f   claims.. 

Coniniissioiis     

Salaries  of  officers,   agents,   employes,  ex- 
aminers'  and  Inspectloq- f*? 

Dividends   to   sto<  kholders 

Bei'ta  ;•, 

Borrowed   money   repaid.. 
All    other    dlsburs.ci.nts. 


■  0  /•-«  •  ■  • 

I" 


141,175.15 

348,075.92 
181.34 

4W).4.'<2.41 


ii4.(Wi.97 

.';C5.1(5 

27.405.66 

17.558.16 

9.951.98 

900.00 

10.099.00 

10.743.63 


ToUl  dlstwrsemeuU 


•  •»•«•*••  •  a 


,.«       131.029.86 


Total  ledger  assets   (as  per  balance)...! 
NON-LEDGEB   ASSETS. 

Interest  and  rents  due  and  accrued $ 

Market  value  of  real  estate  over  Ixnik  value 
Net  dt  f erred  and  unpaid  premiums 


738.644.85 

1,890,257.50 

40.000.00 

1.549,931. :iO 

2.744,352.65 

287.582.39 

2:}.550.90 

4.736.45 

7,279,056.04 

ia''..'234.53 
123.355.15 
207.089.16 


Gross  asstts  

DEDUCT   ASSETS 

Ag.nts'  (k-blt  balances 

Book    value   of    Icdge-r    assets 

value    

All  Other  ass.ts  not  admitted, 


NOT 


over 


$    7,714,734.88 

AD.MITTED. 

$        23,050.90 

market 

253,359.10 

11,199.77 


Total  assets  not  admitted % 

Total  aelmittpd  ass  -ts 

LIABILITIES  DEC.  31.   1915. 

Net    r sirve    ..$ 

Besened  for  supplementary  contracts;  11a- 
bllUy   on    cancelled   policies 

Reserve    for    death    losses    Incurred    but   un- 
reported   

Claims  adjusted  and  not  due,  and  unad- 
justed and  reported 

Claims  resisted   


287,609.77 
7,427,125.11 

6,864,985.00 

46.596.00 

4.698.00 

37.000.00 
21,690.00 


State  of  Minnesota,  Department  of  Insurance. 

I  Hereby  Certify.  Tliat  the  Annual  Statement  of  the 
Rldgely  Protective  association,  for  the  year  ending  Pe- 
eember  31st,  1915,  of  which  the  above  is  an  abstract, 
has  ))een  received  and  filed  In  this  department  and  duly 
ipproved  by  me.  8.   D.  WORKS, 

Commissioner  of  Insurance. 


ac 


LEGAL    NOTICES. 

STATE   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 
St.  Louis — ss. 

District   Court,    Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 

Ada  M.  La  Fex,  John  R.  Robin- 
son, a  minor,  by  Aela  M.  Rob- 
inson (now  Ada  M.  La  Fex), 
his  guardian,  Ethel  Grace 
Frazer  and  Laura  Hazel 
Thompson,  Plaintiffs, 

vs. 

Laura    G.    Geddes    and    

Geddes,  her  husband,  and 
Henry  J.  F.  Sissons,  also  all 
other  persons  unknown  claim- 
ing any  right,  title,  estate. 
Interest  or  Hon  In  the  real 
estate  described  In  the  com- 
plaint hvrein.  Defendants, 


to   the   Above 


SUMMONS. 
T)>e   State   of  Minnesota 

Named  Defendants: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  re- 
quired to  answer  the  complaint  of  the 
plaintiffs  In  the  above  entitled  action. 


FOR  SALE 

5-ROOM  HOUSE 

at  a  bargain.  All  modern  improve- 
ments; hardwood  floors,  oak  finish, 
cement  sidewalk,  street  paved.  Up- 
stairs heated  with  hot  water  sys- 
tem; shade  trees,  nice  lawn;  $1,600, 
balance  mortgage  or  monthly  pay- 
ments. Call  Melrose  1678,  or  apply 
3130    Minnesota    avenue. 


EASY    PAYMENTS 

426  SEVENTEENTH  AVE.  EAST 

$5,500 

$600  eash,  balance  $50  per  month. 
An  opportunity  to  get  a  home  on 
very  easy  terms.  Six  rooms,  oak 
finish  first  floor,  white  enamel  sec- 
ond, hardwood  floors  throughout. 
Hot  water  heat,  laundry,  stairs  to 
attic,   stone   foundation. 

PULFORD,  HOW  &  COMPANY 

6C9  Alwortb   Bldg. 


GARY-DULUTH 

The  coming  Steel  Mill  Center  af  t)i«  Head  ot  the 
Lakes.  Tt)«  ideal  Hemesite  for  the  Mechanics  and 
Laborers  vrarklng  in  the  big  Shopt  and  Farnactt.  No 
Street  Car  Fare  to  pay  ani  ho  lettinf  tp  an  boor 
earlier  to  go  to  work. 

Locate  here  an4  reap  the  kenHIt  of  a  nc«  City  1b 
the   mating. 

Gary,  Ind.,  grew  from  a  sand  dune  to  a  city  of 
52,000  ropilatlon  In  eight  yean.  Watch  Gary-Da- 
iRth  grew. 

We  build  and  tell  hoaiet  on  small  cash  raymentt, 
balance  payable  like  rent. 

Lots  tell  from  $100  ip,  easy  termi. 

GARY-LAND  COMPANY 

(Incorporated.) 
SUITE  200  MANHATTAN  BLDC. 


REAL  ESTATE  LOANS 

RATES-5,  5>/2  and  6% 

Liberal  Prepayment  Privileges. 

REAL  ESTATE 

Bought,    Sold   and    Managed. 

INSURANCE 

Of   All    Kindi*   Piaeed   in    SIrongrct 
Com  pan  let*. 

F.  L  SALTER  CO. 

302-3    LONSDALE    BLDG. 


MAKE  AN   OFFER 

ElRhty-<hroe  feet  front  by  140  feet 
deep  on  Second  Htrect  at  Eleventh 
avenue  enat.  MiiKt  be  hold.  Brut 
apartment  location  in  city.  Firxt 
reaNonabie   offer   \«lll   be  accepted. 

MASSACKUSEHS  REAL  ESTATE  CO. 

M<  1.  3.        18  Phoenix  BUIg.    CJraiid  40. 


which  complaint  Is  flled  in  the  office 
of  the  clerk  of  the  said  district  court, 
and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your  answer  to 
the  said  complaint  on  the  etib.^criber, 
at  his  office.  In  the  city  of  Duluth,  hi 
the  said  county  of  St.  Louis,  within 
twenty  (20)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you  exclusive  of 
tl.e  day  of  such  service;  and  if  you  fall 
to  answer  the  said  'complaint  within 
the  time  aforesaid,  the  plalntilTs  In 
this  action  will  apply  to  the  Court  for 
the  relief  demanded  In  said  complaint. 
Dated  this  27th  day  of  March,  A.  D., 
1916. 
D.  G.  CASH  AND  JOHN  B.  RICHARDS, 

Attorneys  for  said  I'lalntifTs. 
Office,  309  First  National  Bank  lildg^ 

Duluth.   Minnesota. 
Residence,   2321    K.  First  Street, 

Duluth,  Minnesota. 


^ 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY   OF 

St.  Louis 88. 

District  Court,  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict. 
Ada  M.  La  Fex,  John  R.  Rob- 
inson, a  minor,  by  Ada  M. 
Robinson  fnow  Ada  M.  La 
Fex),  his  guardian,  Ethel 
Grace  Frazer  and  Laura 
Hazel  Thompson. 

Plaintiffs, 
vs. 

Laura    G.    Geddes    and    

Geddes,  her  husband,  and 
Henry  J.  F.  Sissons,  also  all 
other  persons  unknown  claim- 
ing any  right,  title,  estate. 
Interest  or  lien  in  the  real 
estate  descrlbt-d  in  the  com- 
plaint herein.  Defendants. 
NOTICE  OF  LIS  PENDENS. 
To  whom  it  may  concern: 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  an 
action  has  been  begun  and  Is  now 
pending  in  the  District  Court  of  St. 
Louis  County,  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict, State  of  Minnesota,  In  which  the 
above  named  plaintiffs  are  iilaintlffs 
and  the  above  named  defendants  are 
defendants;  that  the  *ald  action  In- 
volves the  title  to  Lot  One  Hundred 
Seventy-nine  (179)  of  Lake  Avi  nue, 
Upper  Duluth,  according  to  the  plat 
thereof;  that  the  ob.ie<  t  of  the  said 
action  is  to  quiet  the  title  of  the 
above  named  plaintiffs  In  and  to  the 
said  property  and  to  exclude  from  all 
right,  title  or  interest  therein,  the 
above  named  defendants  and  all  other 
persons  unknown,  claiming  any  right, 
title,  estate.  Interest  or  lien  in  the 
said  real  estate. 

Dated  this  29th  day  of  March.  1916. 
D.  G.  CASH  AND  JOHN  B.  RICHARDS, 
Attorneys  for  the  Plaintiffs  Herein 
Named. 
D.  H..  March  30.  April  6.  IS,  19K. 


-►" 


itflWMfc 


5=5^ 


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1 

«   mm^ 


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ir- 


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JkiMi^ 


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1 

I 


Thursday, 


THE     DUUUTH    HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


19 


OFFICIAL.  PROCEEDIXG9. 

Council  Chamber. 

Duluth.  Minn., 

April  10,  1918,  8  o'clock,  p.  m. 

Rogular   meeting. 

R.jII   call:  .  „ 

Pres<»nt  —  Commission«^r9  Farrall, 
M<>rritt,  Silbersteln,  Voaa,  Mayor 
i»rince — 5. 

Absent — None. 

Mayor  Prince  movM  to  correct  the 
rnlnutf-a  of  the  meeting  of  April  3, 
1916.  by  inserting  at  the  end  of  In- 
troduction and  consideration  of  ordi- 
nances the  following:  "The  ordinance 
|>y  Commlasloner  Merrltt  entitled  'An 
ordinanct^  to  appropriate  from  the  put>- 
Mo  utility  fund  the  sum  of  $9,000  for 
the  construction  of  a  bridge  and  the 
laying  of  an  Inverted  siphon  acro»» 
Tlscher's  creek  to  replace  the  pre«- 
ent  wooden  structure,'  was  read  the 
third  time. 

Commlsaloner  Merrltt  moved  the 
passage  of  the  ordinance  and  It  waa 
declared  pa.ssed  upon  the  following 
vot^■:  ..        -, 

Yeas — Commissioner  Farrell.  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln.  Voss.  Mayor  Prince— -B. 

Nays— None."  and  that  the  minute* 
as  so  corrected  be  approved  as  pub- 
lished in   pamphlet  form. 

PRESENTATION  OF  PETITIONS  AND 
OTHER   rOMML'NK'ATIONS. 
Katharine    Hampton,    claim   for   per- 

sunal    injury  ^  ^,  . 

fliarli.-  Olson,  claim  for  personal  in- 
jury.—I'ity   attorney.  .     .    ,.         ,, 

I,e!<»er  Park  Improvement  ciuo.  asK- 
Ing    for   various   Improvements. 

n  rt  ninham.  et  al,  for  the  construc- 
tion of  a  sanitary  sewer  in  Jefferson 
street  from  Twenty-'eighth  avenue  east 
to    outlf-t    in    Thirtieth    avenue    east. 

Autfiist  B.  Width,  for  concrete  walk 
on  Sixth  str<»et  between  Twenty-first 
avpnu.'  west  and  Twenty-s^-cond  ave- 
nues w»»»t  and  for  lowering  of  grade 
for    same. — Commlsaloner      of      public 

works.  J    ji    i 

Applications   for  extension   and  dlvl- 
on    of    assessment.^,    Noa.    254    to    Z7» 


was  upon  motion  of  Mayor  Prince  laid 
upon  the  table. 

By  Commissioner  Sllbersteln: 

Resolved.  That  application  of  J.  H. 
Wright  for  license  to  sell  Intoxicating 
liquors  at  No.  819  West  Superior 
street,  being  a  transfer  from  Jonn  P. 
Van  Dalen  at  the  same  location,  bo 
and  the  same  la  hereby  granted  and 
the  bond  accompanying  same  approved. 

Commissioner  Sllbersteln  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln,  Voss.  Mayor  Prince — B. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10.  1916. 

Approved  April  13.  1916. 


) 


INTRODI'CTION    AND    CONSIDERA- 
TKXV   OF    ORDINANCES. 
The     following     entitled     ordlnancea 
were   read   the   first  time: 
By   Mayor   Prince: 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  from 
the  public  welfare  fund  the  sum  of 
1364.60  for  the  purchase  of  playground 
apparatus" 


By  Commissioner  Sllbersteln: 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  from 
the  general  fund  the  sum  of  $2,250  for 
the  purohatie  of  an  automobile  for  the 
police  department  and  for  general  pur- 
poses." 


By  Commlsaloner  Mprritt:  . 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  from 
the  public  utility  fund  the  sum  of 
$125.00  for  the  purchase  of  one  liausch 
dt  Lomb  Engineer's  precise  level  with 
gradienter  for  the  water  and  light  de- 
partment." 


Frank 
avenue; 


for    photo- 
as    follows: 

6701    Orand 
at   No.    2302 


603    Oarfleld 
at    No.    917 


By   Commissioner    Merrltt: 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  from 
the  public  utility  fund  the  sum  of  $160 
for  the  purchase  of  one  three-speed 
Indian  motocycle  for  the  water  and 
light  department." 


lnrlu.<»ive. — City    treasurer. 
I,      P.    Gallagher,    et    al. 
graphers'  ordinance. 

Applications    for    license 

Cigarettes. 
S.     M.     Sobczyk.     at     No. 
avenu'». 

Aaetloneer^. 
r.arr»lt    &    Zimmerman. 
West   Superior  street. 
Hotels. 

KohM**n.    at    No 
Eli    H     Cholette. 
West    Mil  higan    street:    Matilda    Stark, 
nt  No    14'j2  Ninety-eighth  avenue  west; 
Han.-<en  &  t;ervais,  at  No.  631  West  Su- 
perior   street;    August    Molsio.    at    No. 
m-%    Lake    avenue       .«outh;       \V  Ullam 
Wauhkan.-n.    at    No.    120    One    Hundred 
and    Sooond    avenue    west;    \^  ell  or    and 
Cuohner.    at    No.    210      West      Superior 
stre.  t:    L     nerxsteln.    at    No.    621    ^^*;8t 
Superior   .street;    Manne   Arvila.   at  No. 
'>49   South   First     ivenue   eant;   A.   Berg- 
fitelii     at   No    612    West  Superior  street; 
W    F     Ueldel.   at  No.   615-f  West  Supe- 
rior .street:  Victor  Axelson.  at     -o.  237 
South   F'lrst   avenue  east;    F.    A.   Prince, 
at   .No    .118-20-22   West   Superior  street: 
L    *P     Juvlck,    at    No.    509    West    Supe- 
rior street;  PodoU  A  Vodery,  at  No.  204 
Lake  avenue  south:   Mrs    .Jane  Barrett, 
at    .Vo     26    Second    avenue    west;    Mrs. 
Cora    M     Davis,    at   No.    30   North    First 
avenue    west;    Robert    3.    Beau,    at    No. 
2801     West       Superior       slre»'t;       John 
Saarlnen,   at   No    267   South    First  ave- 
nue  east-   Nleholas   Chrl.stopher,   at   No. 
242    South    First    avenue    eai^t;    George 
W    Revnohm.  at  No.   426  West  Superior 
street  ;■  Albert  Cox,  at  No.  527  \^  est  Su- 
perior   street:    E.    R.    Rlbenack.    at   No. 
601-3    West    Superior      street;      E.      K. 
Rlbenack.    at    No.    514-6   West   SuP*?'!?' 
street-     E      R.     Rlbenack.     at    No.     616 
West   Superior  street;    E.    R.   Rlbenack, 
At   No    517-9  West  Superior  street;  Mrs. 
H.    Hunter,    at    No.    610    West    Superior 
street:  (Jertrude  Behrens,  at  No.  2  East 
First  street;   Mr.s.  Julia  Wallace    at  No. 
4'>1    West   Superior  street;   Gus  Egdahl. 
at    No    502   West   Superior   street;   Mike 
Rlnne    at   No.    320  Lake  avenue  south; 
Nora     RHlly.    at    No.    HB    West    First 
sire.^t;   John   H,   Piatt,  at  No.   220  Lake 
avenue    south:    L.    Bennett     at    No     2io 
Lake  avenue  south:  J.   D.  Campbell,  at 
No     l^-H   Lake   avenue   north;   John    V. 
Kreuzberg-r,  at   No.  119   East  Superior 
street;    Adolph    Tlfer.    at      No.      103-06 
take  avenue  south:   «}eorge  Larseti    at 
No      102    East    Superior      street:      Mrs. 
Mary    Smith,    at    No.    315    W*-\t   S^^^nd 
Mreet     M.   G.   Newell,    at   No.    605   West 
Michigan   street:    H.    E.    Mousso    at  No. 
10  Lake  avenue  north;   Bessie  Hanson, 
at    No     219    East    First    street;    James 
McDonald,    at     No.    628    West    Superior 
alreel;    Harry    Parsslnen.    at      ^o,.     12 
North    First    avenue    east;    M.    J.    Giea- 
son     at    No     122-3    Lake    avenue   south; 
Charley   Moran.  at  No    525  West  Supe- 
rior street;  Leonard  Usher,  at  No.  101- 
3-5    East    Superior  street:   Frank   Muc- 
cllli     at   No.   635  West  Sup^lor  street: 
Mary  Peterson    at  No.  14  East  Supertor 
stre-f    B.    H.    Sorley.    at    No.    118    East 
Superior  street:   Safron  Daucin    at  No. 
1528    Commonwealth    avenue;    H.    Her- 
inan.'ion.  at  No.  276  South  First  avenue 
east;    Lake    Superior   Investment    coin- 
pany    fby    R.    W.    Northop,    vice   presi- 
dent >     at    No.    20      avenue      west      and 
Ml.  hl'gan    street;    Joe    MlckolaczaK.    at 
No     2221    West    Michigan    street:    John 
Kertis.    at    No.       531       West      MichtKan 
fltreet;    Peder    Paulsen,    at      No.      522 "rfe 
West    Superior    street;    Mrs.    Anna   Le- 
saee     at    No     318    West    Second    street. 
Applications    and    bonds    for    license 

as   follows: 

HousemoverH. 

H  E.  Reau.  at  No.  629  Fourth  ave- 
nue ea.-4t. 

Pluoihers. 

L  A  Wick  Plumbing  &  H-ating 
company,    at    No.     117     Ea.st    Michigan 

*  ^^'^  Pool  and  Bllll:*rd«. 

Brooke  *  K  istner.  at  No.  30  East  Su- 
perior street.  8  tables;  W.  F.  Hatley 
at  No.  301  West  Superior  street.  8 
tablea- 

AaloonN. 

S.  I.  Levine.  at  No.  501  West  Supe- 
rior street:  H.  .1.  White,  at  No.  6.01 
Raleigh  street;  H.  Brown,  at  No.  2803 
West  Superior  street;  Wm.  Wickham. 
at  No.  31  Sutphin  street:  Frank  Peters, 
at  No.  5217  Ramsey  street,  being  ^ 
transfer  from  No.  2117  West  SuperlSr 
street. —Commissioner  of  Public  Safety. 
REPORTS   OF   OFFICERS. 

City  assessor,  certifying  assessment 
roll  levied  to  defray  in  part  the  ex- 
pense of  paving  and  otherwise  lin- 
Rrovlng  Central  avenue,  from  Cody 
Btreet  to  Columbia  street.— Commis- 
sioner   of   Finance. 

Commissioner  of  public  works,  sub- 
mitting bids  for  the  improvement  of 
SuDorlor  street  from  Sixteenth  ave- 
nue east  to  Twenty-third  avenue  east. 

At  this  point  P.  McDonnell  ad- 
dressed the  council  relative  to  the  Im- 
provement of  Superior  street  between 
Sixteenth  avenue  east  and  Twenty- 
third  avenuS  east. 

Commissioner  of  public  works,  sub- 
nilitinsr  bids  for  the  sprinkling  and 
cleaning  of  streets  of  the  city  of  Du- 
luth  for   the  season   of  1916. 

Commi.ssioner  of  public  utilities, 
recommending  the  repairing  of  trucks 
on   aerial   bridge. 

Rev-ommending  promotion  of  Ruben 
Nelson  from  the  position  of  messen- 
ger to  that  of  office  assistant  of  the 
water  and   light   department. 

Reommending  appropriation  of  $160 
for  the  purchase  of  a  three-speed  In- 
dian motorcycle  in  exchange  for  one- 
Bpeed  Indian  motorcycle,  now  In  use 
by  the  water  and  light  department. 

Recommending 'purchase  of  Bausch 
&  Lomb  engineer's  precise  level  for 
the  water  and  light  department. 

Commissioner  of  public  safety,  ap- 
proving applications  for  hotel  licenses. 
— Received. 

UNFINISHED  BUSINESS. 

The  resolution  by  Commissioner 
Voss  confirming  the  assessment  levied 
to  defray  In  full  the  balance  of  the 
cost  of  paving  and  otherwise  improv- 
ing r.a.st  First  street  from  Twenty- 
eighth  avenue  east  to  Congdon  park, 
was  laid  over  for  one  week  for  fur- 
ther consideration. 

The  resolution  of  Mayor  Prince  va- 
cating all  but  fifteen  feet  of  the  build- 
ing line  easement  on  the  south  side  of 
First  street.  between  Twenty-sixth 
avenu.^  east  and  Thirtieth  avenue  east. 


By  Mayor  Prince: 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  from 
the  general  fund  the  sum  of  $606  for 
Installing  a  ventilating  system  In  the 
offices  of  the  city  assessor  and  health 
department,   In   the  City   Hall." 


The     following     entitled     ordinances 
were  read  the  second  time: 
By   Commissioner    Sllbersteln: 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  from 
the  public  safety  fund  the  sum  of  $306 
for  the  purchase  of  underground  cable 
for  the  fire  department." 


By   Commissioner  Merrltt: 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  the 
sum  of  $176.67  from  the  public  utility 
fund  for  the  purchase  of  thirty-slx-lnch 
specials  for  the  water  and  light  depart^ 
ment." 


By  Commlslsoner  Merrltt: 

"An  ordinance  to  appropriate  from 
the  puMlc  utility  fund  the  sum  of  $800 
to  bo  used  for  the  purpose  of  Improv- 
ing and  parking  the  grounds  at  the 
Woodland  and  Orphanage  pump  sta- 
tions, main  reservoir  at  Thirty-fourth 
avenue  east  and  the  Lakewood  pump 
station   grounds." 


The  ordinance  by  Mayor  Prince  en- 
titled "An  ordinance  to  appropriate  the 
sum  of  $2,600  from  the  general  fund 
for  the  services  of  a  special  attorney 
In  the  case  of  the  City  of  Duluth  vs. 
the  Duluth  Street  Railway  company, 
known  as  the  "East  Ninth  Street  Case." 
was  read  the  third  time. 


rltt  Sllbersteln.  Vosa.  Mayor  Princa — B. 
Nays — None. 
Adapted  April  10.  1916. 
Approved  April  II,   l*l<t 

Bjr  Commissioner  Voss: 

Resolved.  That  bills  ara  hereby  al- 
lowed, and  It  Is  hereby  directed  that 
orders  be  drawn  on  the  city  treasurer 
to   pay  the  same,  as  follows: 

PUBLIC  SAFETY  FUND. 
Fire  I>e»artasent. 
Carnegie  Fuel  company.  $32.40;  Du- 
luth Telephone  company,  $162.51; 
Qrether  Fire  Equipment  company. 
118.00;  The  Herald  company.  $2.26;  In- 
terstate Auto  company.  $63.43;  R.  ft  R. 
garage.  $9.61;  Zenith  Telephone  com- 
pany. $14.60;  American  La,  France  Fire 
Engine  company,  $73.10. 

PUBLIC  SAFETY  FUND. 
PwUvc  Drpartmeat. 
Armour  A  Co.  $82.50;  Acme  laundry. 
$5.76;  Al  Blewett.  $11. 46;  Burgess  Elec- 
tric company.  $10.20;  City  of  Duluth 
water  and  light  department.  $32.12; 
Duluth-Edison  Electric  company, 
$28. 82;  Duluth  Paper  &  Stationery  com- 
pany. $3.00;  the  Fidelity  &.  Casualty 
company  of  New  York,  $25.00;  J.  D. 
Hoar.  $9.00;  Kelley  Hardware  company. 
$16.90;  Kelley-How-Thonison  company. 
$8.49;  H.  D.  McKercher  (contingent 
fund).  $61.10;  Northwestern  OH  com- 
pany. $74.20;  Northwestern  Fual  com- 
pany. $16.70;  Northwestern  Tire  com- 
pany. $66.59;  Northern  Electrical  com- 
pany. $3.00;  Orpheum  pharmacy.  $2.60; 
L.  A.  Paddock  company,  $14.96;  West- 
ern Union  Telephone  company,  $8.79: 
Yale  laundry,  $2.00;  Zimmers  West  End 
Harness  shop.   $1.86. 

PUBLIC    SAFETY    FUND. 
Health    Oepartmeat. 
Duluth    Hardware     company.       $3.96; 
The  Herald  company,   $2.25;   Minnesota 
state   board   of  health,   $60.00. 
LIBRARY  FUND. 
Duluth    Telephone    company.    $17.04; 
Detroit     Publisliing     company.     $46.38; 
Duluth    Glass    Block    store,    $76.06;    Du- 
luth-Edlaon    Electric    company.    883.46; 
Frances    E.    Earhart,    librarian.    $66.66; 
Norman  C.  Hayner  company.  $8.76;  Kel- 
ley  Hardware   company,    $4.60;     Henry 
Lyes.  $4  50;  A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co..  $694; 
Northern    Electrical    company.      $20.52; 
Pittsburgh      Coal      company.      8117.01; 
Thomson-Williams    company,     $8.70;   D. 
Van  Nostrand  company.   $982;  Waldorf 
Bindery  company.  $119.68. 

PUBLIC  WELFARE  FUND. 
Park  Uepartmeat. 
City  of  Duluth  water  and  light  de- 
partment. $1.45;  Duluth  Lumber  com- 
pany. $79.69;  Northern  Hardware  com- 
pany, $20.47;  Thomeon-Wllllams  com- 
pany, $4.50;  Western  Fuel.  Feed  & 
Transfer   company.    $4.65. 

PUBLIC  WELFARE  FUND. 
Welfare  D«'partMent. 
J.  R.  Ratchelor  (contingent  fund), 
$14.80;  The  Herald  company.  $2.26. 
PUBLIC  WORKS  FX'ND. 
J.  T.  Armstead.  $2,760.00;  Austin- 
Western  Road  Machinery  company. 
$20.00;  City  of  Duluth  water  and  light 
department,  $9.86;  Duluth-Edison  Elec- 
tric company,  $26.40;  division  of  pub- 
lic works!  contingent  fund),  $99.96; 
Duluth  Hardware  company,  $10.64;  Du. 
luth  Brass  Works  company,  $3.00; 
Johnstown  Land  company,  $40.00;  Kel- 
ley-How-Thomson  company.  $1.03;  Kel- 
ley Hardware  company.  $16.60;  Mar- 
shall-Wells Hardware  company.  $9.26; 
Northwestern  Leather  company,  $9.45; 
Northern  Hardware  company.  110.00; 
Standard  Oil  company,  $23.50;  Stand- 
ard Salt  &  Cement  company.  $33.33;  E. 
\^ltn 


Mayor  Prince  moved  the  passage  of 
the  ordinance  and  It  was  declared 
passed    upon    the    following   votf<: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 


The  ordinance  by  Mayor  Prince  en- 
titled "An  ordinance  to  appropriate  the 
sum  of  $260  from  the  general  fund  for 
the  services  of  a  special  attorney  In 
the  armory  case,  now  pending  before 
the  supreme  court,"  was  read  the  third 
time. 

Mayor  Prince  moved  the  passage  of 
the  ortllnance  and  It  was  declared 
passed  upon  the  following  vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,   Voss,  Mayor  I'rlnce — 6. 

Nays — Nono. 


The  ordinance  by  Commissioner  Far- 
rell entitled  "An  ordinance  to  appro- 
priate the  sum  of  $385  from  the  public 
works  fund  for  the  purchase  of  one 
horse-drawn  sweeper  for  the  public 
works  department,"  was  read  the  third 
time. 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
passage  of  the  ordinance  and  It  was 
declared  passed  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln.  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 


The  ordinance  by  Commissioner  Mer- 
rltt entitled  "An  ordinance  to  appro- 
priate from  the  public  utility  fund  the 
sum  of  $400  for  changing  partitions  of 
the  general  office  at  the  water  and 
light  department,"  was  read  the  third 
time. 

Commissioner  Merrltt  moved  the 
passage  of  the  ordinance  and  it  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell.  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 


The  ordinance  by  Commi-'ssioner  Mer- 
rltt entitled  "An  ordinance  to  appro- 
priate from  the  public  utility  fund  the 
sum  of  $1,100  for  the  purchase  of  an 
electrically  operated  centrlfusral  pump, 
at  New  Duluth,"  was  read  the  third 
time,  and  upon  motion  of  Commissioner 
Merrltt  It  was  laid  over  for  one  week 
for  further  consideration. 


H.    WTiltney   Motor  company.   $14.02. 
PERMANENT    IMPROVEMENT    FUND. 

Minnie  A.   Pearson.    $225.00. 

PUBLIC  UTILITY  FUND. 

North  Western  Fuel  company.  $18.70; 
Neptune  Meter  company,  $118.05;  A.  P. 
Smith  Manufacturing  company.  $420.00; 
National  Meter  company.  $64.69;  Mar- 
shall-Wells Hardware  company.  $74.16; 
Northern  Electrical  company.  $11.02; 
L.  Merrltt  and  D.  A.  Reed  (contingent 
fund).  $3,540.08;  Zenith  Furnace  com- 
pany.  $6,453.84. 

GENERAL    FUND. 

Chamberlain-Taylor  company.  $5.00; 
division  of  public  works.  $2.24;  Duluth 
Paper  &  Stationery  company.  $115.96; 
Duluth-Edison  Electric  company, 
$3,301.97;  Duluth  Telephone  company, 
$31.38;  The  Herald  company.  $538.77; 
Gust  Holmgren,  $2.93;  Ideal  Moistner 
company,  $1.50;  Thomas  F.  McGllvray, 
$25.00;  Merrltt  &  Hector,  $33.16;  may- 
or's office  (contingent  fund),  $36.69; 
Northern  Electrical  company.  $20.62; 
W.  C.  Sargent.  $10.00;  Whitney  Wall 
company,    $45.00. 

GENERAL    FITND. 
<lnfeetloas    DlMeaae«) 

R.  N.  Metcalfe,  per  W.  H.  Gurnee. 
attorney.  $71.83:  Board  of  Trade  livery, 
$19.00;  City  of  Duluth  water  and  light 
department.  $32.32;  Duluth  (ilass  Block 
store.  $10.53;  Duluth  Trunk  company, 
$2.00;  Duluth-Edison  Electric  company, 
$19.35;  I.  Frelmuth.  $2.23;  Greer  Print- 
ing company.  $6.26;  Kny-Scheerer  com. 
pany,  $8.75;  Kelley  Hardware  company, 
$5.37;    Anton    Moe.    $105.85;    N.    McDou- 

fall,    $4.60;    Pittsburgh    Coal    company, 
15606;   Smith   &.  Smith,   $24.60;   Stone- 
Ordean-Wells  company.  $57.36. 
PERMANENT       IMPROVEMENT       RE- 
VOLVING    FUND. 

Duluth  Hardware  company,  $10.60; 
division  of  public  works,  $30.26;  The 
Herald  company,  $42.80;  Northern 
Hardware  company.  $79.76;  Rankin 
Printing  company,  $76.00. 

Commissioner  Voss  moved  the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution  and  it  was  de- 
clared adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioner  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10.  1916. 

Approved  April  12,  1916, 


Twenty-seventh,  anremte    west   wester- 
ly  160   feet. 

A  four-foot  ptank^  walk  on  the 
easterly  side  of  PKfcMo  avenue,  from 
Third  street   to  Vernob   street. 

A  four- foot  oWtTiTt  walk  on  the 
northerly  side  of  Sffrenth  atreet,  from 
Seventeenth  avenue  east  to  Eigh- 
teenth avenue  east. 

A  four-foot  Iklap:lc,  walk  on  the 
westerly  side  or  Belinont  road,  from 
Fourteenth  avenue*  -east  to  Parkland 
avenue.  •  z--  ■*•  .     ^       ^ 

Resolved  furthe•#^That  It  la  hereby 
directed  that  said  work  be  done  by 
contract,  the  cost  thereof  to  be  paid 
out  of  the  perman*rtti  Improvement  re- 
volving fund;  and- H  Is  further  or- 
dered that  an  aMtesement  be  levied 
upon  the  property  ''*eneflted  by  the 
construction  of  said  walka.  to  defray 
the  cost  thereof,  with  such  other  ex- 
penses as  under  the  provisions  of  said 
charter   may    be   assessed. 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,   Voss,  Mayor  Prince— f. 

Nuys — None. 

Adopted— April    10,    1916. 
'  Approved— ApHl  12.  1916. 

By    Commissioner    Farrell: 

Resolved.  That  public  convenience 
and  safety  requires  the  construction 
of  sidewalks  as  follows,  and  It  is 
hereby  ordered  that  the  same  be  con- 
structed: 

A  five-foot  cement  walk  on  the 
easterly  side  of  Twehty-fourth  avenue 
west,  from  Fifth  street  to  Eighth 
street. 

A  five-foot  cement  walk  on  the 
westerly  tide  of  Twenty-fourth  ave- 
nue west,  from  Fourth  street  to  Sev- 
enth street. 

A  six-foot  cement  walk  on  the 
northerly  side  of  Fifth  street,  from 
Twenty-sixth  avenue  west  to  Twenty- 
seventh  avenue  west,  except  where 
already   built. 

A  nve-foot  cement  walk  on  the 
northerly  side  of  the  Snlvely  road, 
from  Sussex  avenue  to  Livingston 
avenue. 

A  flve-foot  cement  walk  on  the 
northerly  side  of  Lewis  street,  from 
Waverly    avenue    to    Harvard   avenue. 

A  six-foot  come«t  walk  'on  the 
southerly  side  of  Superior  street,  from 
Twenty-tirth  avenue  west  to  Twenty- 
eighth   avenue  wesft' 

A  flve-foot  cement  walk  on  the 
southerly  side  of  Tioga  street,  from 
Fifty-ninth  avenue  east  to  Sixtieth 
avenue   east.  ...n 

Resolved  further;  That  it  is  hereby 
directed  that  sald,]WOfk  be  done  by 
contract,  the  cost  Ihereof  to  be  paid 
out  of  the  permaneJSt  improvement  re- 
volving fund;  and'U  is  further  ordered 
that  an  assessment  toe  levied  upon  the 
property  benefited  by  the  construction 
of  said  walks,  to-  defray  the  cost 
thereof,  with  such  other  expenses  as 
under  the  provlsiQi»«.,of  said  charter 
may   be  assessed. 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell  Mer- 
rltt   Sllbersteln.  Voss,  Mayor  Prince.— 4. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted— April   10,  1916. 

Approved — April    12,    1916. 

By  Commissioner   Fjirrell: 

Whereas,  a  proper  *nd  sufficient  pe- 
tition has  been  presented  to  this  coun- 
cil, petitioning  for  the  Improvement  of 
Fifty-sixth  alley  west,  from  Bristol  to 
Rannsey  street,  in  the  city  of  Duluth. 
St.  Louis  county,  Minnesota,  as  pro- 
vided by  section  62,  chapter  9,  of  the 
charter  of   the   city   of   Duluth. 

Resolved.  That  It  Is  hereby  ordered 
that  the  following  Improvement  be 
nuide.  to-wlt: 

That  Fifty-sixth  alley  west,  from 
Bristol  to  Ilamsey  street,  bo  graded 
and  paved  with  concrete,  and  that  all 
other  work  necessary  or  Incidental 
thereto  be  done.  '-.■ 

That  the  estimated  cost  of  said  im- 
provement, as  previously  estimated  by 
the  city  engineer,  under  order  of  this 
council,  is  as  follows:  $1,466.90  for 
16-foot    concrete. 

Resolved  further.  That  said  work  be 
done  by  contract,  the  cost  thereof  to 
be  paid  from  the  permanent  improve- 
ment revolving  fund;  and  it  Is  hereby 
ordered  that  an  assessment  be  levied 
upon  the  property  specially  benefited 
by  said  Improvement,  according  to  ben- 
efits received,  to  defray  the  cost  there- 
of, with  such  other  exprtxses  as  under 
the  provisions  of  the  city  charter  may 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt.  Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — S. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  191«. 

Approved  April  12,  1916. 


the  city  engineer,  under  order  of  thia 
council.  Is  as  follows: 

13.334.10  for  ffraTel,  2t  feet  wlda— 
combined  curb  and  gutter. 

13.873.10  for  crushed  rock  macadam, 
26  feet  wide— combined  curb  and  gut- 
ter. 

I4.122.89  for  rocmae,  16  feet  wide- 
combined  curb  and  gutter. 

Resolved  further, -That  la  pursuance 
of  section  8  of  ordinance  407  of  the  city 
of  Duluth.  the  city  engineer  la  hereby 
directed  to  make  an  eatUnate  of  the 
cost  of  the  above  mentioned  improve- 
ment: and  that  the  city  assessor  la 
hereby  directed,  after  auch  estimate 
has  been  made,  to  proceed  at  once  to 
assess  80  per  cent  of  such  portion  of 
said  estimated  cost  of 'said  improve- 
ment as  is  assessable  under  and  pur- 
suant to  the  terms  of  said  ordinance. 

Commissioner      Farrell      moved      the    —   —  ,. 

adoption  of  the  resolution,  and  it  waa    Lawrence  Peterson  at  623   v^est  Supe 


cenae  are  hereby  sranted  aa  follows: 
CICIARETTES. 

S.  11  Sobezyk  at  $701  Grand  ayenue. 
AlJC'riONEERS.  ^    ^ 

Barrett  &  Zimmerman  at  2302  West 
Superior  street. 

HOTELS. 

Q.  W.  Reynolds  at  426  West  Superior 
street.  Robert  S.  Bean  at  2801  West 
Superior  street.  R.  G.  Spear  at  208  West 
Superior  street.  Leonard  Usher  at 
101  t'-S  East  Superior  street.  Henry 
Parsslenen  at  18  North  First  avenue 
east.  Mary  Peterson  at  14  East  Superior 
street.  M.  Lawrence  at  319  West  Supe- 
rior street,  E  P.  Le  Flohlc  at  321  West 
First  street.  Julius  Flnne  at  628  West 
Superior  street.  Oscar  Wick  at  323 
West  Second  street.  Charles  H.  Hall  at 
613  West  Superior  street,  Oscar  Wick 
at  620  West  Superior  street,  Harry  N. 
Johnson  at   620 H      West    First     street. 


declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell.  .  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince— •• 

Nays— None. 

Adopted  April  10.  1916. 

Approved  April  12,  1916. 


By   Commissioner  Farrell: 

Resolved.  That  It  Is  deemed  neces- 
sary for  public  convenience  and  safety, 
which  necessity  Is  hereby  declared  to 
exist,  and  it  is  hereby  ordered  that  the 
following  Improvement  be  made,  to- 
wlt: 

That  a  sanitary  sewer  be  constructed 
across  Nineteenth  avenue  east  at 
Seventh    alley. 

Resolved  further.  That  said  work  be 
done  by  day  labor,  the  cost  thereof  to 
be  paid  from  the  permanent  Improve- 
ment revolving  fund,  which  cost  has 
been  estimated  at  $140.99  by  the  city 
engineer;  and  It  is  hereby  directed  that 
an  assessment  be  levied  upon  the  prop- 
erty specially  benefited  by  said  im- 
provement, according  to  the  benefits 
received,  to  defray  the  whole  cost 
thereof,  with  such  Qther  expenses  as 
under  the  provisions  of  the  city  char- 
ter may  be  assessed. 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  The  resolution,  and  It  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — B. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  1916. 

Approved  April   13,  1916. 


rlor  street,  Frank  MucclUl  at  636  West 
Superior  street,  George  D.  Lucore  at 
2001  West  Superior  street,  T.  J.  Cote  at 
712  West  Superior  street,  Bessie  Han- 
son at  219  East  First  street,  M.  J.  Glea- 
son  at  122-3  Lake  avenue  south,  Mrs. 
S.  M,  Smith  at  16  Second  avenue  west. 
Resolved  further.  That  applications 
for  licenses  are  hereby  granted  and 
bonds  accompanying  same  approved  as 
follows: 

HOUSEMOTHERS. 
Reau    at    629    Fourth    avenue 


Company,    known   as    the   "Eajst   Ninth 
Street  Case." 

Sec.  2.     This  ordinance  shall  take  ef- 
fect and  be  in  force  thirty  days  after 
its    passage   and    publication. 
Passed  April  10,  1916. 
Approved  April  12,  1916. 

W.  I.  PRINCE, 
Attest :  Mayor. 

W.  H.  BORGEN. 
City    Clerk. 


H. 

east. 


R. 


By   Commissioner  Farrell: 

Resolved.  That  It  Is  deemed  neces- 
sary for  public  convenience  and  safety, 
which  necessity  Is  hereby  declared  to 
exist,  and  It  is  hereby  ordered  that  the 
following  improvement  be  made,  to- 
wit: 

That  a  sanitary  sewer  be  constructed 
across  Nineteenth  avenue  east  at 
Seventh  street. 

Resolved  further.  That  said  work  be 
done  by  day  labor,  the  cost  thereof  to 
be  paid  from  the  permanent  improve- 
ment revolving  fund,  which  cost  has 
been  estimated  at  $146.98  by  the  city 
engineer;  and  It  is  hereby  directed  that 
an  assessment  be  levied  upon  the  prop- 
erty specially  benefited  by  said  im- 
provement, according  to  the  benefits 
received,  to  defray  the  whole  cost 
thereof,  with  such  other  expenses  as 
under  the  provisions  of  the  city  char- 
ter may  be  assessed. 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution,  and  it  waa 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell.  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln,  Voss.  Mayor  Prince — S. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  1916. 

Approved  April  12.  1916. 


The  ordinance  by  Commlslsoner  Sll- 
bersteln entitled  "An  ordinance  to  pro- 
vide for  the  dredging  of  the  fill  of 
ashes  and  cinders  l.vlng  adjiicent  to  the 
(Mty  Incinerating  plant,  at  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota." was  laid  over  for  one  week  for 
further  consideration." 


MOTIONS  AND  RESOLt^TIONS. 
The  resolution  by  Commissioner 
Voss  confirming  the  assessment  for 
improving  Central  avenue  from  Cody 
street  to  Albion  street  was  with- 
drawn on  motion  of  Commissioner 
Voss. 


The  resolution  by  Commissioner 
Farrell  awarding  the  contract  for  the 
Improvement  of  Superior  street  be- 
tween Sixteenth  avenue  east  and 
Twenty-third  avenue  east  to  the 
General  Contracting  company,  on  Its 
bid  of  $47,575.16,  was  laid  over  for  one 
week  under  the  provisions  of  the  city 
charter. 


By  Commissioner  Voss: 

Resolved,  That  application  numbers 
254  to  279,  inclusive,  of  owners  of  prop- 
erty for  extension  of  time  In  which 
to  make  payment  of  the  remaining  por- 
tion of  assessments  are  hereby  ap- 
proved, and  the  extensions  of  time  re- 
quested In  said  applications  be  and 
liereby  are  granted,  such  payments  to 
be  made  in  not  to  exceed  three  In- 
stallments, payable  In  one,  two  or  three 
years,  the  first  Installment  to  be  due 
and  payable  Oct.  1,  1917. 

Commissioner  Voss  moved  the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution  and  It  was  de- 
clared adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners     Farrell,     Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,   Voss,  Mayor  Prince — B. 
Nays — None. 
Adopted  April  10.  1916. 
Approved  April  12.   1916. 


The  resolution  by  Commissioner 
Farrell  awarding  the  contract  for  the 
improvement  of  Eighth  street  from 
Twenty-second  avenue  west  to  Twen- 
ty-fifth avenue  west,  and  Twenty-sec- 
ond avenue  west  from  Piedmont  ave- 
nue to  Eighth  street,  to  E.  A.  Dahl  & 
Co.,  on  their  bid  of  $12,601.86,  was  laid 
over  for  one  week  under  the  provis- 
ions of  the  city  charter. 


The  resolution  by  Commissioner 
Sllbersteln  awarding  the  contract  for 
the  furnishing  of  an  automobile  for 
the  police  department  to  the  North- 
western Cadillac  company,  on  Its  bid 
of  $2,250  was  laid  over  for  one  week 
under  the  provisions  of  the  city 
charter. 

By  Mayor  Prince: 

Resolved,  That  the  contract  for  In- 
stalling a  ventilating  system  In  the  of- 
fices of  the  city  assessor  and  health 
department  In  the  citv  hall  be  and 
hereby  la  awarded  to  "U".  G.  Joerns  & 
Co.,   on    their   bid  of  $605.00. 

Mayor  Prince  moved  the  adoption  of 
the  resolution  and  it  was  declared 
adopted  upon  the  fololwlng  vote: 

Yeas  —  Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln.  Voss.  Mayor  Prince — 5. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10.   1916. 

Approved   April   12,    1916. 

By  Mavor  Prince. 

Resolveil,  That  the  contract  for  fur- 
nishing playground  apparatus  be  and 
hereby  Is  awarded  to  the  Hill  Stand- 
ard Mfg.  company,  on  Its  bid  of 
$864.60. 

Mayor  Prince  moved  the  adoption  of 
the  resolution  and  It  was  declared 
adopted    upon    the    following   vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners    Farrell.    Mer- 


By  Commissioner  Voss: 

Resolved.  That  the  city  treasurer  be 
and  hereby  is  authorized  to  accept 
from  the  owner  of  the  west  14 V4  feet  of 
lot  423,  the  east  14  feet  of  lot  426,  block 
79,  Duluth  Proper.  Second  division,  and 
the  owner  of  the  west  1V»  feet  of  the 
east  12  «4  feet  and  the  west  37 \i  feet  of 
lot  406,  block  48.  Duluth  Proper,  Sec- 
ond division,  the  amount  of  the  origi- 
nal assessment  levied  against  said  lots 
to  defray  the  expense  of  paving  and 
Improving  West  First  street  from 
Twentieth  avenue  west  to  Thirtieth 
avenue  west,  plus  $1.60.  the  estimated 
cost  of  publishing  this   resolution. 

Commissioner  Voss  moved  the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution  and  It  was  de- 
clared adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell.  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — B. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  1916. 

Approved  April  12,   19K. 

Bv  Commissioner  Voss: 

"Resolved.  That  the  city  treasurer  be 
and  hereby  Is  authorised  to  accept 
from  the  owner  of  the  north  92 \4  feet 
of  lots  1,  2  and  8,  block  66.  Endlon 
division,  the  amount  of  the  original 
assessment  levied  to  defray  the  ex- 
pense of  paving  East  Superior  street, 
plus  $1.60,  the  estimated  cost  of  pub- 
lishing this  resolution. 

Commissioner  Voss  moved  the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution  and  It  was  de- 
clared     adopted      upon     the     following 

vote:  »,..,, 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell.  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln,  Voss.  Mayor  Prince — 5. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10.  1916. 

Approved  April  12.   1916. 

By   Commissioner   Farrell; 

Resolved,  That  public  convenience 
and  safety  requires  the  construction 
of  sidewalks  as  follows,  and  It  Is 
hereby  ordered  that  the  same  be  con- 
structed: .... 

A  four-foot  plank  walk  on  the 
northerly   side   of   Sixth     street,    from 


By    Commissioner   Farrell: 

Resolved.  That  tlve  resolution  passed 
by  this  council  March  20.  1916,  order- 
ing the  improvement  of  Minnesota 
avenue,  from  the  end  of  the  present 
pavement  on  the  northerly  side  of 
Thirty-eighth  street  to  the  northerly 
side  of  Forty-third  street,  be  and  Is 
hereby  amended  to  read  as  follows: 

"Resolved,  That  this  council  deems 
it  necessary  that  Minnesota  avenue, 
from  the  end  of  the  present  pavement 
on  the  northerly  line  of  Thirty-eighth 
street  to  the  southerly  line  of  Forty- 
third  street,  be  graded  and  paved;  that 
the  roadway  from  the  northerly  line 
of  Thirty-eighth  street  to  the  southerly 
line  of  Lower  Duluth  be  designed 
twenty-one  feet  wide,  paved  with  con- 
crete, and  with  concrete  curb  on  the 
easterly  side,  conforming  with  the 
present  Improvement  from  Twelfth 
street  to  Thlrty-eighith  street;  that 
the  roadway  from  the  southerly  line 
of  Lower  Duluth  to  the  southerly  line 
of  Forty-third  street  be  designed 
twenty-five  feet  wide,  and  paved  with 
concrete,  without  curb;  that  provision 
be  made  for  the  drainage  of  surface 
water;  and  that  all  work  be  done  which 
is  necessary  or  Incident  to  the  said 
Improvement;  and  that  this  council 
hereby  declares  the  necessity  of  such 
Improvement,  and  its  determination  to 
have  the  same  made. 

"That  the  estimated  cost  of  said  im- 
provement, as  previously  estimated  by 
the  city  engineer,  under  order  of  this 
council,  la  as  follows:  $11,821.04  for 
concrete. 

"Resolved  further.  That  it  Is  pro- 
posed to  make  said  Improvement  by 
contract,  and  to  pay  the  cost  thereof 
from  the  permanent  Improvement  re- 
volving fund,  and  to  assess  such  part 
of  the  cost  thereof  as  the  city  charter 
does  not  provide  shall  be  paid  by  the 
city,  upon  the  property  specially  bene- 
fited by  said  improvement,  within  300 
feet  thereof. 

"Resolved  further.  That  In  pursuance 
of  section  8  of  ordinance  407  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  the  city  engineer  Is 
hereby  directed  to  make  an  estimate 
of  the  cost  of  the  above  mentioned  Im- 
provement: and  that  the  city  assessor 
is  hereby  directed,  after  such  estimate 
has  been  made,  to  proceed  at  once  to 
assess  eighty  (80)  per  cent  of  such 
portion  of  said  estimated  cost  of  said 
Improvement  as  Is  assessable  under 
and  pursuant  to  the  terms  of  said  or- 
dinance." 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln^  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None.  _   _ 

Adopted  April  10.  191«. 

Approved  April  12,   1916. 

By   Commissioner  Farrell: 

Whereas.  A  proper  and  suCnelent 
petition  has  been  presented  to  this 
council,  petltlonlnc .  for  the  Improve- 
ment of  Tenth  street  from  Eighth  ave- 
nue east  to  Ninth  avenue  east.  In,  the 
city  of  Duluth,  St.  Louis  county.  Min- 
nesota, as  provided  by  section  62,  chap- 
ter 9,  of  the  charter  ot  the  city  of  Du- 
luth; 

Resolved.  That  It  la  hereby  ordered 
that  the  following  Improvement  be 
made,  to-wlt: 

Grading  and  paring  with  gravel  or 
crushed  rock  macadatn,  cement  curb 
and  gutter,  with  a  flve-foot  walk  on 
both  sides,  of  Tenth  street  from  Eighth 
to  Ninth  avenue  east. 

That  the  estimated  coat  of  aald  im- 
provement, aa  preTiouelr  eatlmatad  by 


By  Commissioner  Farrell: 

Resolved.  That  It  Is  deemed  neces- 
sary for  public  convenience  and  safety, 
which  necessity  Is  hereby  declared  to 
exist,  and  It  Is  hereby  ordered  that  the 
following  Improvement  be  made,  to- 
wlt: 

That  a  sanitary  sewer  be  construct- 
ed across  Nineteenth  avenue  east  at 
Eighth    alley. 

Resolved  further.  That  said  work  be 
done  by  dav  labor,  the  cost  thereof  to 
be  paid  from  the'  permanent  improve- 
ment revolving  fund,  which  cost  has 
been  estimated  at  $140.98  by  the  city 
engineer;  and  It  Is  hereby  directed 
that  an  assessment  be  levied  upon  the 
property  specially  benefited  by  said 
Improvement,  according  to  the  benefits 
received,  to  defray  the  whole  cost 
thereof,  with  such  other  expenses  as 
under  the  provisions  of  the  city  char- 
ter may  be  assessed. 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  waa 
declared  adopted  upon  the  fcrflowlng 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 8 

Nays — None. 

Adopted    April    10,   1916. 

Approved  April  It.  1916. 

By  Commissioner  Farrell: 

Resolved,  That  the  Duluth  Street 
Railroad  company  is  hereby  granted 
permission  to  erect  a  waiting  station 
on  the  west  side  of  Wallace  avenue  at 
the  Intersection  of  Wallace  avenue  and 
Hawthorne  road,  provided  this  permis- 
sion shall  be  considered  as  only  tem- 
porary and  subject  to  revocation  by 
this  council  at  any   time. 

Commlssi.jner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  waa 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,   Voss.  Mayor  Prince — 6 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April   10.  1916. 

Approved  April  12,  1916. 


I^L^^BERS. 

L  A.  Wick  Plumbing  and  Heating 
company  at  117  East  Michigan  street. 
POOL  AND  BILLIARD  TABLES. 
Brooks  &  Kastner.  eight  pool  tables,  at 
30  East  Superior  street;  W.  F.  Hatley. 
eight  pool  tables,  at  301  West  Superior 
street. 

Commissioner  Sllbersteln  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  1916. 

Approved  April  12.  1916. 

By  Commissioner  Sllbersteln: 

Resolved,  That  it  is  hereby  directed 
that  fire  hydrants  be  placed  as  fol- 
lows: 

Second  avenue  west  and  Fourth 
street  and  at  Lake  avenue  and  Fourth 
street  to  connect  with  the  upper  cen- 
tral   reservoir    system. 

Commissioner  Sllbersteln  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  waa 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted    April    10,    1916. 

Approved   April    12,   1916. 

Bv  Commissioner  Sllbersteln: 

"Resolved,  That  the  commissioner  of 
public  safety  be  and  hereby  Is  author- 
ized to  advertise  for  bids  for  the  sale 
of  the  building  owned  by  the  city, 
located  on  the  rear  of  lot  48,  East 
Third  street.  Fond  du  Lac,  formerly 
used   as   a   Jail. 

Commissioner  Sllbersteln  moved 
the  adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it 
was  declared  adopted  upon  the  fol- 
lowing   vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt  Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted    April    10     1916. 

Approved    April    12,    1916. 

By   Commissioner   Sllbersteln: 

Resolved,  That  the  commissioner  of 
public  safety  be  and  hereby  is  author- 
ized to  employ  Dr.  M.  A,  Nicholson 
to  assist  In  the  health  department 
from  March  9,  1916.  to  March  31,  1916. 
his  total  compensation  for  aald 
period    to   be    $80.00.  ^     ^ 

Commissioner  Sllbersteln  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
ritt,  Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — B. 

Nays — ^None. 

Adopted    April    10,   1916. 

Approved   April   12,   1916. 


Ordlaaacc   Hew   7S9, 

By  Mayor  Prince: 

AN  ORDINANCE  TO  APPROPRIATB 
THE  SUM  OF  $260.00  FROM  THE 
GENERAL  FUND  FOR  THE  SERV- 
ICES OF  A  SPEX7IAL  ATTORNEY  IN 
THE  ARMORY  CASE.  NOW  PEND- 
ING BEFORE  THE  SUPREME 
COURT. 
The    City    of   Duluth    does    ordain: 

Section  1.  That  there  be  and  here- 
by Is  appropriated  from  the  general 
fund  the  sum  of  $260.00  to  pay  one- 
half  of  the  fees  of  Frank  Crassweiier. 
appointed  by  this  council  as  special 
counsel  for  the  city  of  Duluth  in  the 
case  of  Aad  Temple  Building  Associa- 
tion vs.  City  of  Duluth,  now  pending 
before  the  supreme  court. 

Sec.   2.     This  ordinance     shall     take 
effect  and  be  In  force  thirty  days  from 
and   after  Its  passage  and  publication. 
Passed  April  10,  1916. 
Approved  April  12.  1916. 

W.    I.    PRINCE, 
Attest:  Mayor. 

W.  H.  BORGEN. 
City    Clerk. 


Ordlaaare  Ne.  740. 

By  Commissioner  Farrell: 
AN  ORDINANCE  TO  APPROPRIATB 
THE  SUM  OF  $386.00  FROM  THE 
PUBLIC  WORKS  FUND  FOR  THE 
PURCHASE  OF  ONE  HORSE- 
DRAWN  SWEEPER  FOR  THE  PUB- 
LIC WORKS  DEPARTMENT. 
The  City   of  Duluth  does  ordain: 

Section  1.  That  there  be  and  here- 
by Is  appropriated  the  sum  of  $385. 00 
from  the  public  works  fund  for  the 
purchase  of  one  horse-drawn  sweeper 
for    the    public    works    department. 

Sec.  2.     This  ordinance  shall  take  ef- 
fect and  be  In  force  thirty  days  after 
Its     passage     and     publication- 
Passed  April  10.   1916. 
Approved  April  12,   1916. 

W.    I.    PRINCE. 
Attest:  Mayor. 

W.  H.  BORGEN. 
City    Clerk. 


ORDINANCE    NO.   T41. 

By   Commissioner   Merrltt: 

AN  ORDINANCE  TO  APPROPRTATK 
FROM  THE  PUBLIC  UTILITY 
FUND  THE  SUM  OF  $400.00  FOR 
CHANGING  PARTITIONS  OF  THE 
GENERAL  OFFICE  AT  THH 
WATER  AND  LIGHT  DEPART- 
MENT— 

The  City  of  Duluth  does  ordain: 

Section  1.     That  there  be  and  hereby 

is  appropriated  from  the  public  utility 

fund   the   sum   of   $400.00    for   changing 

partitions  of  the   general   office  at  the 

water  and  light  department. 

Sec.    2.     This    ordinance    shall     take 

effect  and  be  in  force  thirty  days  after 

Its  passage  and  publication. 
Passed — April    10,    1916. 
Approved— April   12,  1916. 

W.  L  PRINCES 

Mayor. 

Attest: 

W.   H.   BORGEN. 
City  Clerk. 


By   Commissioner   Merrltt: 

Resolved,  That  the  manager  of  the 
water  and  light  department  be  and 
hereby  Is  authorized  to  purchase  one 
Bausch  and  Lomb  engineer's  precise 
level  with  gradienter,  for  the  water 
and  light  department,  at  a  cost  not 
to   exceed   $126.00. 

Commissioner  Merrltt  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  it  waa 
declared  adopted  upon  the  followlnif 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt  Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — B. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted    April    10,    1916. 

Approved    April    12,    1918. 


By  Commissioner  Farrell: 

Resolved,  That  contracts  for  clean- 
ing and  sprinkling  streets  with  water 
be  and  hereby  are  awarded  as  follows: 

For  District  No.  2,  to  Dominlck 
Scandin,   on   his  bid  of   $159.07. 

For  District  No.  3,  to  Dominlck 
Scandin,  on   his  bid  of  $144.38. 

For  District  No.  6,  to  Louis  Nordl, 
on   his   bid   of   $164.00. 

For  District  No.  7,  to  Jos.  Cavallaro, 
on  his  bid  of  $126.00. 

For  District  No.  8.  to  Tony  Gerraro, 
on   his  bid   of   $180.82. 

For  District  No.  9  to  Frank  Mlchel- 
eggl,  on  his  bid  of  $138.70. 

For  District  No.  10,  to  Dominlck 
Scandin,   on    his    bid   of   $156.39. 

For  District  No.  11,  to  Jos.  Caval- 
laro, on  his  bid  of  $128.00. 

For  District  No.  12,  to  Frank  L.  Fox, 
on  his  bid  of  $139.20. 

Resolved  further,  that  it  is  hereby 
directed  that  bonds  with  "personal*' 
sureties  be  accepted  on  the  above  con- 

♦ pa Qf ft 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  waa 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt. Sllbersteln,  Vosa,  Mayor  Prince — 6 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April    10.   1916. 

Approved  April  12,  1916. 

By  Commissioner  Farrell: 

Resolved.  That  the  bids  for  cleanlng- 
and  sprinkling  the  streets  with  water 
be  and  hereby  are  rejected  for  the  fol- 
lowing districts,  to-wlt:  District  No. 
4;  district  No.  6.  district  No.  13. 

Commissioner  Farrell  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — i. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  1916. 

Approved  April  12.  1916. 

By  Commissioner  Sllbersteln: 

Resolved.  That  applications  for  li- 
cense to  sell  Intoxicating  liquors  are 
hereby  granted,  and  the  bonds  accom- 
panying same  approved,  as  follows: 

Ollie  Lowry  at  220  East  Superior 
street  being  a  transfer  from  Richard 
Sheasby,  at  the  same  location;  Peter 
Beschenbossel  at  416  East  Fourth 
street,  Frank  L.  Johnson  at  1819  West 
Superior  street.  Lovrence  Kovach  at 
m  West  Superior  street.  Theodore  Q. 
Frerker  at  420  West  Superior  street 

Commissioner  Sllbersteln  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  waa 
declared     adopted  upon  the  following 

vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell.  Mer- 
rltt Sllbersteln,  V^osa,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  111*. 

Approved  April  12.  IfM. 

By  Commiaatoner  Silberatein: 
ResoWed.     That  applications  for 


Bv   Commissioner  Merrltt: 

"Resolved.  That  the  manager  of  the 
water  and  light  department  be  and 
hereby  Is  authorized  to  purchase  one 
three-speed  Indian  motorcycle  by  turn-  | 
Ing  In  the  present  one-speed  Indian 
motorcycle,  now  In  use  In  the  water 
and  light  departnvent.  and  a  cash  pay- 
ment not  to  exceed  $160,  for  the  ex- 
change. 

Commissioner  Merrltt  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. . 

Adopted  April  10,  1916. 

Approved  April  12,  1916. 


NOTICE   OF     HEARING     ON     ASSESS- 
MENT     FOR       LOCAL       IMPROVE- 
MENTS— 
City  Clerk's  Office. 

Duluth  Minn..  April  IS.  1916. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  as- 
sessment levied  to  defray  In  part  the 
expense  of  paving  and  otherwise  im- 
proving Central  avenue,  from  Cody 
atreet  to  Columbia  street,  has  been 
completed,  and  the  roll  Is  now  on  file 
In  my  office,  and  that  on  Monday. 
April  24th,  in  the  Council  Chamber  of 
the  City  Hall,  Duluth,  Minnesota,  at 
3  o'clock  P.  M.  the  council  will  hear 
the  appeals  of  parties  aggrieved  by 
said  assessment,  and  that  unless  suf- 
ficient cause  is  .shown  to  the  contrary 
the  assessment  as  made,  will  be  con- 
firmed at  the  meeting  above  men- 
tioned. 

W.   H.   BORGEN, 

City    Clerk. 
D.   H..  April   18,    1916.    D  1919. 

CITY    irOTICBS. 

STATE  OF   MINNESOTA,    COUNTY  OF 

ST.  LOUIS — ss. 

Notice  la  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to  vlevr 
the  premises  and  appraise  the  damages 
which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  tak- 
ing of  private  property,  or  otherwise, 
in  the  condemnation  of  an  easement 
for  slopes  or  retaining  walls,  for  cuts 
and  fills,  on  both  sides  of  Tenth  street, 
from  Fourth  to  Sixth  Avenues  East 
have  filed  In  the  office  of  the  City 
Clerk  of  the  City  of  Duluth,  Mlnne- 
Isota,  a  plat  showing  the  lands  in  which 


By   Commissioner    Merrltt: 

Resolved,  That  the  promotion  of  Mr. 
Ruben  Nelson  from  messenger  at  $30.00 
per  month  to  that  of  office  assistant 
at  $40.00  per  mouth,  in  the  office  of 
the  water  and  light  department,  be  and 
hereby  Is  approved. 

Commissioner  Merrltt  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell,  Mer- 
rltt Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — B. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10.  1916. 

Approved  April  12,   1916. 


By  Commissioner  Merrltt: 

Resolved.  That  the  commissioner  of 
public  utilities  be  and  hereby  Is  author- 
ized to  order  two  of  the  trucks  now  in 
use  on  the  Aerial  bridge,  turned  down 
and  re-tlred  with  tire  steel. 

Commissioner  Merrltt  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution  and  It  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Commissioners  Farrell.  Mer- 
rltt, Sllbersteln,  Voss,  Mayor  Prince — 6. 

Nays — None. 

Adopted  April  10,  1916. 

Approved  April  12,   1916. 


At  this  point  Lfc  Dworshak.  J.  R. 
ZweifeU  H.  McKenzle  appeared  before 
the  council  relative  to  the  proposed  or- 
dinance regulating  non-resident  pho- 
tographers. 


At  this  point  H.  C.  Pulton  appeared 
before  the  Council  relative  to  the 
building  line  easement  on  W^est  Third 
street  between  Twenty-third  avenue 
west  and  Twenty-fourth  avenue  west. 

On  motion  of  Mayor  Prince  the 
Council  adjourned  »*  *-}»^*^^*'(f^jj^-  ^ 

City  CHerk. 


Ordlaaaee  "K:  738. 

Mayor  Prince: 


If- 


Hv   Mayor   jrrmcc. 

A^  ORDINANCH  TO  APPROPRIATB 
THE  SUM  OF  $2,600  FROM  THE 
GENERAL  FUND  FOR  THH  SERV- 
ICES OF  A  SPECIAL  ATORNEY  IN 
THE  CASE  OF  THE  CITY  OF  DU- 
LUTH VS.  THE  DLTLUTH  STREET 
RAILWAY  COMPANY,  KNOWN  AS 
THE  "EAST  NINTH  STREET  CASE." 
The  City   of  Duluth  does  ordain: 

Section  1.  That  there  be  and  hereby 
Is  appropriated  from  the  general  fund 
the  sum  of  $2,600  to  pay  the  fees  of 
Francis  W.  Sullivan,  appointed  by  this 
council  aa  special  counsel  for  the  city 
of   Duluth   In  the  case  of  the  City   of 


It  is  proposed  to  condemn  such  ease- 
ment, which  lands  are  aa  follows,  to- 
wlt: 

All   that  part   of  Lots  81.   83,    86   and 

87,  m  Block  160,  Duluth  Proper,  Third 
Division,  lying  within  21.2  feet  more 
or  less,  of  Tenth  Street;  all  that  part 
of  Lots  77,  79.  Block  159.  Duluth  Prop- 
er. Third  Division,  lying  witliin  41.8 
feet  more  or  less,  of  Tenth  Street;  all 
that  part  of  Lot  80,  Block  125,  Duluth 
Proper,  Third  Division,  lying  within 
38  feet,  more  or  less,  of  Tenth  Street; 
all  that  part  of  Lot  82.  Block  124.  Du- 
luth Proper.  Third  Division,  lying  with- 
in 40.6  feet  more  or  less,  of  Tenth 
Street;  all  that  part  of  Lots  84,  86. 
Block  124.  Duluth  Proper.  Third  Divi- 
sion, lying  within  77  feet  more  or  less, 
of   Tenth   Street;    all    that    part    of   Lot 

88,  Block  124,  Duluth  Proper,  Third 
Division,  lying  within  32.4  feet  more 
or    less,   of  Tenth   Street. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will 
meet  in  the  City  Clerk's  office,  in  the 
City  Hall,  City  of  Duluth.  Mlnnesota. 
on  May  10.  1916,  at  9  a.  m.,  and  will 
thence  proceed  to  view  the  premises 
and  appraise  the  damages  for  the  prop- 
erty to  be  taken  or  which  may  be 
damaged  by  such  Improvement  and  as- 
sess the  benefits  In  the  manner  pro- 
vided by  law. 

G.  C.   ARMSTRONG. 

W.    M.    MILLER. 

A.    SCHAEFBR, 

R.    F.    BIRDIE, 

J.  W.   SHEPHERDSON, 

Appraise  ra 
D.  H..  April  6.  13.  1916.     D  1910. 

STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 
ST.   LOUIS— ss. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to  view 
the  premises  and  appraise  the  danuiges 
which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  tak- 
ing of  private  property  or  oth.>rwlse 
in  the  condemnation  of  an  easement 
for  slopes  or  retaining  walls,  for  cuts 
and  fills  on  West  Eighth  Street,  from 
Twenty-second  Avenue  West  to  Twen- 
ty-fifth Avenue  West  have  filed  In  the 
office  of  the  City  Clerk  of  the  City  of 
Duluth,  Minnesota,  a  plat  showing  the 
lands  In  which  It  is  proposed  to  con- 
demn such  ea'iement  which  lands  are 
aa   follows,    to-wlt: 

All  that  part  of  Lots  361.  368,  Block 
174  Dulutn  Proper,  Second  Division, 
lying  within  3  feet  more  or  less  of 
Elfrhth  Street:  all  that  part  of  Lota 
371  373,  376  and  377.  Block  173,  Du- 
lutii  Proper,  Second  Division,  lyina 
within  4  feet  more  or  less  of  Eighth 
Street;  all  that  part  of  Ix>ts  385.  887 
and  389,  Block  172.  Duluth  Proper. 
Second  Division,  lying  within  3  feet 
more  or  less  of  West  Eighth  street; 
all  that  part  of  Lots  9,  10,  11  and  12, 
Block  7,  Spalding's  addition,  lying 
within  5  feet  more  or  less  of  West 
Eighth  Street. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will  meet 
In  the  City  Clerk's  office,  in  the  City 
Hall,  City  df  Duluth,  Minnesota,  on 
May  10,  1916.  at  9  a.  m..  and  will  thence 
proceed  to  view  the  premises  and  ap- 
praise the  damages  for  the  property 
to  be  taken  or  which  may  be  damaged 
by  such  Improvement  and  assess  'he 
benefits    In    the    manner    provided 

O.  C.   ARMSTRONG. 

W.   M.   MILLER. 

A.  SCHAEFER. 

R.  F.  BIRDIE. 

J.  W.  SHEPHERDSON. 

Appralsera. 


Duluth  va  The  Duluth  Street  RallwayiD.  H-,  April  t,  18.   1916.   D   1901. 


by 


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Thursday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  13, 1916. 


-»- 


I 


LRGAL    X0TICF:S. 


ARTICLES  OF  INCORPORATION 
-OF— 

RED   SAND   LAKE 
COMPANY. 

KNOW  ALL  MHN  HY  THESE  PRES- 
ENTS, That  we,  the  un<lfrpiened,  <!o 
hereby  aspoclntc-  ourHelvcs  logfthc  r  for 
the  purpose  of  forming  a  corporation 
under  the  provisions  of  chapter  fifty- 
eight  (58)  of  thi'  general  statutes  of 
Minnesota  of  1913.  and  acts  amendatory 
thereof,  and  do  hereby  agree  upon, 
adopt  unci  sign  the  following  articles  of 
incorporation: 

ARTICLE  I. 

The  name  fif  this  corporation  shall  he 
RED  SAM)  LAKE  COMI'ANY.  and  its 
prirt  ipal  pincf  of  business  and  Its 
prlnripal  office  shall  be  in  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota. 

The  gen.  ral  nature  of  the  business  of 
this  corporation  shall  be  the  buying, 
owning,  selling,  leasing,  mortgaging 
and  dealing  generally  in  all  species  of 
real,  perlmal  and  mixed  estate,  bonds, 
notes,  mortgag'S,  stocks  and  all  species 
of  financial   securities. 

ARTICLE  n. 

The  time  eif  eomm»neement  of  this 
corporation  shall  be  April  15th,  lf>16, 
and  the  p.rlod  of  Its  continuance  shall 
b»    thirty  <30)  years. 

AKTle'LE  III. 

The  names  and  places  of  residence 
of  the'  persons  forming  this  corpora- 
lion  are  as  follows: 

Dani.l  A.  Fitzpatriclt,  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota. 

John    R.    Meining,    Duluth.    Minnesota. 

Edward    Dorniedy,   Duluth.  Minnesota. 

John   A.    Eliluud,    Duluth,    Minnesota. 

Abn- r     Rrotherton.     Duluth,     Mlnnc- 

<IOtU. 

ARTICLE  IV. 

The  management  of  the  business  and 
affairs  of  this  corporation  shall  be 
vested  in  «  board  of  llVf  (6)  directors, 
who  shall  be  elected  annually  by  the 
utockholders  at  their  annual  meeting  to 
be  h<  Id  on  tiie  second  Tuesday  of  Feb- 
ruary in  eaih  and  every  year  during 
the  life  of   this  corporatiem. 

I'ntil  the  first  annual  meeting,  the 
board  of  directors  shall  be:  Daniel  A. 
Fitzpatrick.  .John  R.  Meining,  Edward 
iKirmtdy,  Je>hn  A.  Eklund  and  Abncr 
lirotherton.  all  of  Duluth,  Minnesota. 

The  offieers  eif  the  corporation  shall 
be  a  preside  nt,  vice  president,  secretary 
are!  treasurer,  and  shall  be  elected  by 
the  board  of  directors  and  shall  hold 
office  as  may  be  provided  for  in  the 
by-laws  which  may  be  adopted  by  the 
board  of  directors.  Two  or  more 
offices  abov»-  specified,  other  than  the 
board  of  directors,  may  be  held  by  one 
and  the  same  person  except  the  offices 
of  prtsident  and  vice  president. 

Until  thf  lirst  annual  meeting  and 
the  election  of  their  successors,  the 
officers  of  this  ce>rporati<m  shall  be: 

Daniel  A.  Fitzpatrick,  I'resident. 

.Tohn  A.  Eklund.  Vice  I'resident. 

Edwnnl  Dormedy,  Secretary  and 
Treasurer. 

ARTICLE.  V. 

The  aniouJit  eif  the  capital  stock  of 
tliis  corporatiem  shall  be  fifty  thou- 
sand dollars  ($50,000.00),  divided  into 
fifty  ihousan«l  (50.000)  shares  of  the 
par  value  e>f  one  dollar  (?1.00)  caeh, 
payable  in  cash  or  In  property,  or 
both,  as  required  by  the  board  of  direc- 
tors. 

ARTICLE  VL 

Tht  highest  anu>unt  of  indebtedness 
or  liability  to  which  this  corpf>ratie>n 
nhall  at  anv  erne  time  be  subject  is 
fifty   thousand   dollars    ($50,000.00). 

IN  WITNESS  WHEREOF,  We  have 
hereunto  set  our  hands  and  seals  this 
7th  dav   of   April,    1!«16. 

DAM  EL  A.    FITZPATRICK.     (.«!eal) 
JOHN  R.  MEININd.  (S^-al) 

EDWARD  DORMEDY.  (Seal) 

JOHN  A.   EKLl'ND.  (Seal) 

AHXER   BROTHERTON.  (Seal) 

Signed.  Sealed  and   Delivered 

in  Presence  of: 
S.   J.   COLTER. 

As    to   Fitzpatrick,   Dormedy,   Eklund 
and  Pre'thertem. 
V.   A.    DASH, 

As   to   Ml  ining. 
JOHN  T.   KKNNV. 

As  to  all. 


luth,  Minnesota.  Thursday,  April  20th. 
1916,  at  4  o'clock  P.  M.,  a  President, 
Vice  President.  Secretary  and  Treas- 
urer, all  of  whom,  except  the  Secretary, 
must  be  members  of  the  Board  of  Di- 
rectors. 

I'ntil  the  first  annual  meeting  the 
Roard  of  Directors  shall  consist  of  the 
three  (3)  incorporators,  to-wit:  A.  (». 
McKnIght,  L.  U.  Young  and  S.  H.  Nel- 
son. 

The  n\imber  of  directors  may  be  In- 
creased to  five  (6)  or  seven  (7)  at  any 
regular  or  special  meeting  of  the  cor- 
poration by  resedutlon  adopted  by  a 
majority  of  all  the  stock  then  issued. 

Vacancies  in  the  Board  of  Directors 
or  in  any  of  the  offices  shall  be  filled 
by  the  Board  of  Directors  until  the  next 
annual  meeting. 

ARTICLE  V. 

The  amount  of  the  Capital  Stock  of 
this  corporation  shall  be  One  Hundred 
Thousand  Dollars  ($100,000.00)  divided' 
Into  100.000  shares  of  the  par  value  of 
One  Dedlar  ($1.00)  each,  which  shall  be' 
paid  In  money  or  property  as  the  Di- 
rectors   may    determine. 

ARTK'LE  VI.  I 

The    highest   ame)unt    of   Indebtedness 
or    liability    to    which    this    corporation  I 
shall    at    anv    time    be    siibject    shall    be. 
One    Hundred   Thousand    Dollars    ($100.- 

lisr  WITNE.«;S  whereof.  We  have 
hereunto  set  our  hands  at  Duluth.  Min- 
nesota, this  8th  day  <^'  April    1916 

A.   O.    McKNiCJHT. 

L.  U.  YOPNO. 

S.  H.  NELSON. 
In   Presence    of: 

A.  C.   WICK. 

B.  I*  WHEELER. 


State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis 

On"^thls  8th  day  of  April,  1916,  be- 
fore me,  a  Notary  Public  within  and 
for  eald  county,  perse. nally  appeared 
A.  t;.  McKnIght.  L.  U.  Young  and  S.  H. 
Nelson,  to  me  known  to  be  the  persons 
described  in  and  who  executed  the 
foregoing  instrument,  and  acknowl- 
edged that  they  executed  the  same  as 
their  free  act  and  deed. 

BERT  N.  WHEELER. 

Notary  Public. 
St.  Louis  County.  Minn. 
Mv  commission  expires  March  1.  1917. 
(Notarial   Seal.  St.   Louis  Co..   Minn.) 

State      of     Minnesota,     Department      of 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
strument was  filed  for  record  in  this 
office  on  the  Idth  day  of  April.  A.  p. 
1916  at  9  o'clock  A.  M..  and  was  duly 
rece.'rdeel  In  Boeik  B-4  of  Incorporations, 
on  uace'  608. 
on  pag     ^^^^^  ^    SCHMAHL.     B. 

Secretary  of  State. 


245748. 

OFFICE  OF   RECLSTER   OF   DEEDS. 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

T~hereby  certify  that  the  within  In- 
strument was  filed  in  this  office  for 
record  April  11.  1916,  at  9:30  A.  M.. 
and  was  duly  recorded  In  Book  18  of 
Misc..  page  248. 

CHAS.   CALLIOAN. 

Register  of  Deeds. 
By  C.  L.  LOF<5REN. 

Deputy. 

D.  H..  April  12.  13,  1916. 


State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 

On  this  7th  day  of  April.  1916.  before 
me.  a  notary  public  In  and  for  saiel 
county,  personally  appeareel  Daniel  A. 
Fitzpatrick.  .leihn  R.  Meining.  Edward 
Dormedy.  John  A.  Eklund  and  Abner 
Brothertem.  to  me  kne»wn  to  be  the 
persons  described  in  and  who  executed 
the  f«vregoing  instrument,  and  they 
acknowledged  that  they  executed  the 
tame  as  their  free  act  and  deed. 
JOHN  T.    KENNY. 

Notary  Public. 
.<^t.  Louis  County.  Minnesota. 

My  commission  expires  Aug.  10.  1918. 
(Notarial  Seal,  St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn.) 


State     of     Minnesota,    Department     of 

Stale. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  in- 
jstrument  was  filed  for  record  in  this 
office  on  the  10th  day  of  April.  A.  D. 
1916,  at  9  o'clock  A.  M..  and  was  duly 
recorded  in  Book  B-4  of  Incorporations, 
on   page    C09. 

JULIUS  A.  SCHMAHL, 

Secretary  of  State. 


215740. 
OFFICE   OF   RE(  SISTER   OF    DEED.S. 
State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 
— ss. 

I  hereby  certify  that  the  within  In- 
strument was  filed  in  this  office  for 
record  April  11,  1916.  at  8:30  A.  M.,  and 
was  duly  recorded  in  Book  18  of  Misc., 
page  245. 

CHAS.   CALLIGAN. 

Register  of  Deeds. 
By  C.  L.  LOFtiREN, 

Deputy. 
D.  H..  April  12.  13,  1916. 


CERTIFICATE  OF  INCORPORATION 
— OF— 

ANDERSON  METER 
COMPANY. 

"Wc.  the  under.'^lgned,  associate  cirr- 
•elves  for  the  purpose  of  forming  a 
corporation  pursuant  to  the  Laws  of 
Minnesota,  and  to  that  enel  do  subscribe 
and  acUne)wledge  the  following  Cer- 
tificate of  Incorporatle.n: 
ARTICLE    I. 

The  name  of  this  corporation  shall  be 
ANDERSON  METER  COMPANY;  the 
general  natur^  of  Its  business  thall  be 
to  manufacture  and  sell  automatic 
water  meters  and  any  improvements 
or  attachments  to  said  automatic 
water  meters;  to  buy,  own.  sell,  hold 
or  otherwise  deal  In  Letters  Patent  for 
auch  meters*  or  to  license  the  manufac- 
ture and  sal»>  e>f  said  meters  under  said 
Letters  I'atent;  to  buy.  own.  sell  pat- 
ents and  patent  rights  that  are  in  any 
way  connected  with,  incidental  to  and 
relating  to  said  meters;  to  purchase, 
own,  hold,  sell,  option,  lease,  mortgage 
anel  e>therwi8e  deal  in  any  and  all  kinds 
of  preiperiy,  real,  personal  or  mixed, 
and  to  do  all  other  such  acts  anel  to 
transact  all  other  sueh  business  as  may 
be  properly  incident  to  and  necessarily 
ce>nne<'tetl  with  any  of  the  lines  of  busi- 
ness above  mentioned;  the  principal 
place  e)f  transacting  its  business  shall 
be  Duluth,   Minnesota. 

ARTICLE   n. 

The    period    of    duration    of    this    cor- 
poration shall  be  thirty  (30)  years  from 
and  after  April  19th,  1916. 
ARTICLE  III. 

The    names    of    the    incorporators    of 
this    corporation    are    A.    (.;.    McKnIght, 
L.    U.    Young    and    S.    H.    Nelson,    all    of 
whom   reside  at    Duluth,   Minnesota. 
ARTICLE  IV. 

The  management  of  this  corporation 
ahall  be  vested  in  a  Board  of  Directors 
consisting  of  not  less  than  five  (5)  nor 
more  than  seven  (7)  of  Us  stockholders, 
who  thall  be  elected  each  year  at  the 
*  annual  meeting  of  the  stockholders, 
which  shall  be  held  at  the  Company's 
office  at  Duluth,  Minnesota,  on  the  sec- 
ond Tuesday  In  May  of  each  year  at 
frtur  o'clock  I'.  M.  The  first  meeting 
of  the  stockholders  shall  be  held  May 
9.  1916.  at  317  Providence  Building, 
Duluth,  Minnesetta,  at  4  o'clock  P.  M., 
and  no  notice  need  be  given  of  this 
meeting. 

There  shall  be  elected  at  the  first 
meeting  e>f  the  Board  of  Director*  to 
be  held  at  317  Providence  Building^  I>u> 


CITY    NOTICES. 

STATE    OF   MINNE.SOTA,    COUNTY    OF 

ST.    LOUI."^ — 88. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to  view 
the  premises  and  appraise  the  dam- 
ages which  may  be  occasioned  by  the 
taking  of  private  property  or  other- 
wise in  the  condemnation  of  an  ease- 
ment for  slopes  or  retaining  walls,  for 
cuts  and  fills,  on  both  sides  of  West 
Third  Street,  from  Twenty-fifth  to 
Twenty-sixth  Avenue  West,  have  filed 
in  the  office  e)f  the  City  Clerk  of  the 
City  of  Duluth,  Minnesota,  a  plat  show- 
ing the  lands  in  which  it  is  proposed 
to  condemn  such  easement,  which 
lands    are    as   follows,    to-wlt: 

All  that  part  of  Lot  411.  Block  114, 
Duluth  Proper,  Second  Division,  lying 
within  37.4  feet,  more  or  less,  of  the 
Ne>rth  Lire  of  Third  Street;  all  that 
part  of  Lot  406,  Block  86.  Duluth  Prop- 
er, Second  Division,  lying  within  7.6 
feet,  more  or  less,  e>f  the  south  line  of 
Third  Street;  all  that  part  of  Lot  408, 
Block  86.  Duluth  Proper.  Second  Divl- 
sion.  lying  within  26  feet,  more  or 
less,  of  the  south  line  of  Third  Street; 
all  that  part  of  I.K)ts  410  and  412. 
Block  86.  Duluth  Proper.  Second  Divl- 
.sion.  lying  within  41.2  feet,  more  or 
less,  of  the  south  line  of  Third  Street; 
all  that  part  of  Lots  414  and  416, 
Block  86.  Duluth  Proper,  Second  Divi- 
sion, Iving  within  40.2  feet,  more  or 
less,  of  the   south  line  of  Third   Street. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will 
meet  in  the  City  Clerks  office.  In 'the 
Citv  Hall.  City  of  Duluth.  Minnesota, 
on  May  10.  1916.  at  9  a.  m.,  and  will 
thence  preiceed  to  view  the  premises 
and  appraise  the  damages  for  the  prop- 
erty to  be  taken  or  which  may  be  dam- 
aged by  such  Improvement,  and  assess 
the  benefits  in  the  manner  provided  by 

G.   C.   ARMSTRONG, 

W.   M.    MILLER, 

A.    SCHAEFER, 

R.    F.    BIRDIE, 

J.   W.   SHEPHERDSON. 

Appraisers. 
D.    H.,    April   6,    13,   1»16.     D   1909. 

STA.TE   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OP 
ST  LOUIS— ss. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointctl  to 
view  the  premises  and  appraise  the 
damage  r  which  may  be  occasioned  by 
the  taking  of  private  property  or  oth- 
erwise in  the  condemnation  of  an 
easeme-it  for  slopes  or  retaining  walls 
for  cuts  and  fills  on  Forty-third  ave- 
nue east  between  Lombard  street,  and 
the  alley  north  of  Logiibard  street, 
have  filed  In  the  office  of  the  City 
Clerk  of  the  City  of  Duluth,  Minne- 
sota, a  plat  .showing  the  lands  in 
which  It  !»  proposed  to  condemn  such 
easement,  which  lands  are  as  follows, 
to-wlt: 

All  that  part  of  Lot  9.  Block  8.  Lon- 
don addition,  lying  within  38.4  feet 
more  or  less  of  Forty-third  avenue 
east;  and  all  that  part  of  Lot  16, 
Block  7,  London  addition,  lying  within 
11.4  feet  more  or  less  of  Forty-third 
av  nue   east. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will 
meet  in  the  City  Clerk's  office  in  the 
City  Hall.  City  of  Duluth.  Minnesota, 
on  May  10,  1916.  at  9  A.  M.,  and  wi:i 
thence  proceed  to  view  the  premises 
and  appraise  the  damages  for  thb 
property  to  be  taken  or  which  may 
be  damaged  by  such  improvement  and 
i  assess  the  benefits  in  the  manner  pro- 
i  vided    by    law. 

'  «;.   C.   ARMSTRONG, 

W.    M.    MILLER, 
A.    SCHAEFER, 
R.    F.    BIRDIE, 
J.    W.    SHEPHERD.S(XN. 
Appraisers. 
D.   H..   April   6.    13,    1916.    D  1903. 

STATE  OF   MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OP 
ST.  LOUIS— ss. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to  view 
the  premises  and  appraise  the  damages 
which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  tak- 
ing of  private  property  or  otherwise 
in  the  condemnation  «jf  an  easement 
for  slopes  or  retaining  walls,  for  cuts 
and  fills  on  West  Ninth  .Street,  at  the 
intersection  of  said  West  Ninth  Street 
with  F'lrst  Avenue  West,  have  filed  In 
the  office  of  the  City  Clerk  of  the  City 
of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  a  plat  showing 
the  lands  In  which  It  is  proposed  to 
condemn  such  easement,  which  are  aa 
follows,   to-wlt: 

All  that  part  of  Lot  18,  Block  114, 
Duluth  I'roper,  Third  Division,  lying 
within  33.4  feet,  more  or  less,  of  Ninth 
Street;  all  that  part  of  Lot  17,  Block 
132.  Duluth  IMoper.  Third  Division,  ly- 
ing within  8  feet,  more  or  less,  of 
Ninth   Street. 

The  unelerslgned  appraisers  will 
meet  In  the  City  Clerk's  e.fflce  In  the 
City  Hall,  City  of  Duluth,  Minnesota, 
<>n  May  10,  1916.  at  9  a.  m.,  and  will 
thence  proceed  to  view  the  premises 
and  appraise  the  damages  for  the 
property  to  be  taken  or  which  may  be 
damaged  by  such  improvement  and  as- 
sess the  benefits  in  the  manner  pro- 
vided by  law. 

G.    C.    ARM. STRONG, 

W.   M.   MILLER, 

A.    SCHAEFER, 

R.    F.    BIRDIE. 

J.  W.  SHEPHERDSON, 

Appraisers. 
D.   H..  April  «,   18,  191«.     D  illl. 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 
ST    LOUIS— «8. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to  view 
the  premises  and  appraise  the  dam- 
ages which  may  be  occasioned  by  the 
taking  of  private  property  or  other- 
wise in  the  condemnation  of  an  ease- 
ment for  slopes  or  retaining  walls,  for 
cuts  and  fills,  on  Grand  Avenue,  be- 
tween Sixty-sixth  and  Sixty-aeventh 
Avenue  West,  have  filed  in  the  office 
of  the  City  Clerk  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth, a  plat  showing  the  lands  In  which 
It  is  proposed  to  condemn  such  ease- 
ment which  lands  are  as  follows,  to- 
wit  : 

All  that  part  of  Lots,  1,  2  and  8, 
Block  14.  Hunters  Grassy  Point  Ad- 
dition, Third  Division,  lying  within 
18.9  feet  of  Grand  Avenue;  all  that  part 
of  Lots  4  to  11  inc.  Block  14.  Hunter's 
(Jrassy  Point  Addition.  Third  Division, 
lying  within  40  feet  more  or  less  of 
Grand  Avenue;  all  that  part  of  Lots 
12  and  13.  Block  14.  Hunter's  Grassy 
Point  Addition,  Third  Division,  lying 
within  38  feet  more  or  less  of  Grand 
Avenue;  all  that  part  of  Lots  12,  13.  14, 
16.  Block  19.  and  all  that  part  of  Lot 
16.  Block  20.  Hunter's  Grassy  Point 
Addition.  Third  Division,  lying  within 
36.2  feet  more  or  less  of  Grand  Avenue; 
and  all  that  part  of  Lot  1.  Block  13. 
Hunter's  (Jrassy  Point  Addition.  Third 
Division,  lying  within  20  feet  more  or 
less  of  Grand   Avenue. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will  meet 
in  the  City  Clerk's  office.  In  the  City 
Hall,  of  the  City  of  Duluth.  Minne- 
sota, on  May  10,  1916,  at  9  a.  m..  and 
win  thence  proceed  to  view  the  prem- 
ises and  appraise  the  damages  for  the 
property  to  be  taken  or  which  may  be 
damaged  by  such  Improvement  and  as- 
sess the  benefits  in  the  manner  pro- 
vided   by    law. 

G.   C.   ARMSTRONG, 

W.     M.     MILLER, 

A.   SCHAEFER, 

R.    F.    BIRDIE. 

J.    W.    SHEPHERDSON. 
Appraisers. 
D.   H..   April   6.   13.   1916.      D   1906. 

STATE   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 

ST.    LOUIS — ss. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to 
view  the  premises  and  appraise  the 
damages  which  may  be  occasioned  by 
the  taking  of  private  property  or  oth 
erwlse  In  the  condemnation  of  an 
easement  for  slopes  or  retaining 
walls,  for  cuts  and  fills,  in  Belnumt 
alley,  from  Chester  parkway  to  Park- 
land avenue,  have  filed  in  the  office 
of  the  City  Clerk  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth. a  plat  showing  the  landa  in 
which  it  is  proposed  to  condemn  such 
easement    which    lands   are   as    follows. 

^All  that  part  of  Lot  IB.  Block  2. 
Parkland  division,  lying  within  17  feet 
more  or  less  of  Belmont  alley;  all 
that  part  of  Lot  36,  Block  2,  Parkland 
division,  lying  within  18  feet  more  or 
leps  of  Belmont  alley;  all  that  part  of 
Lot  14,  Block  2.  Parkland  division,  ly- 
ing within  23.4  feet,  more  or  less  of 
Bdlmont  alley;  all  that  part  of  Lot  37, 
Block  2,  Parkland  division,  lying 
wlehln  21  feet  more  or  less  of  Belmont 
alley.  ,  ,,, 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will 
mv-et  in  the  City  Clerk's  office,  in  the 
City  Hall  of  the  City  of  Duluth.  Min- 
n'^-sota,  on  May  10,  1916.  at  9  A.  M.. 
and  win  thence  proceed  to  view  the 
premises  and  appraise  the  damages 
for  the  property  to  be  taken,  or 
which  may  be  damaged  by  such  im- 
provement and  rssess  the  benefits  in 
the   manner  provided   by  law. 

O.    C.    ARMSTRONG, 

W.  M.   MILLER, 

A.    SCHAEFER, 

R.    F.    BIRDIE. 

J.    W.   SHEPHERD.SON. 
Appraisers. 
D.  H,.  April   6,   13.   1916.    D  1904.       


STATE   OF  MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OP 
ST.    LOUIS— ss. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to 
view  the  premises  and  appraise  the 
damages  which  may  be  occasioned  by 
the  taking  of  private  property  or 
otherwise  In  the  «-ondemnatlon  of  an 
easement  for  slopes  or  retalnln.^r 
walls,  for  cuts  and  fills,  on  West 
Eighth  street,  from  First  to  Second 
avenues  we  st.  have  filed  In  the  office 
of  the  City  Clerk  e)f  the  City  of  Du- 
luth, a  plat  showing  the  lands  In 
which  It  Is  proposed  to  condemn  such 
easement  which  lands  are  as  follows, 
to-wlt: 

All  that  part  of  Lots  17  and  19.  In 
Block  114.  Duluth  proper  Third  divi- 
sion, lying  within  28.6  feet  more  or 
less  of  Eighth  street;  and  all  that 
part  of  Lot  21.  Block  114,  Duluth 
proper.  Third  division,  lying  within  8 
feet  more  or  less  of  Eighth  street;  all 
that  part  of  Lot  18.  Block  91.  Duluth 
proper.  Third  division,  lying  within 
36  feet  more  or  less  of  Eighth  street; 
all  that  part  e.f  Lot  20,  Block  91.  Du- 
luth pre)per.  Third  ellvlslon.  lying 
within  61.6  feet  more  or  less  of 
Eighth  street;  and  all  that  part  of 
Lot  22,  Block  91,  Duluth  proper.  Third 
division,  lying  within  36.2  feet  more  or 
le-»3  of  Eighth  Street. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will 
meet  In  the  City  Clerk's  e)fflce.  In  the 
City  Hall,  of  the  City  of  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota, on  May  10.  1916.  at  9  A.  M.. 
and  will  thence  proceed  to  view  the 
pr-'mlses  and  appraise  the  damages 
for  the  property  to  be  taken  or  which 
may  be  damaged  by  such  improve- 
ment and  assess  the  benefits  in  the 
manner  provided  by  law. 

G.    C.    ARMSTRONG. 

W.   M.    MILLER, 

A.    SCHAEFER, 

R.    F.    BIRDIE. 

J,   W.   SHEPHERD.SON. 
Appraisers. 
D.  H..  April   6.   13.  1916.    D  1906. 

STATE    OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 

ST.    LOi:iS— S9. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to  view 
the  premises  and  appraise  the  damages 
which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  tak- 
ing of  private  property  or  otherwise 
In  the  condemnation  of  an  eaaement 
for  slopes  or  retaining  walls,  for  cuts 
and  fills  on  both  sides  of  Wallace  Ave- 
nue, from  St.  Marie  Street,  to  Bruce 
Street,  and  on  Woodland  Avenue,  from 
St.  Marie  Street,  to  Bruce  Street,  have 
filed  In  the  office  of  the  City  Clerk 
of  the  City  of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  a 
plat  showing  the  lands  in  which  it  la 
proposed  to  condemn  such  easement, 
which  lands  are  as  follows,   to-wit: 

All  that  part  of  Lot  13.  Block  1,  Glen 
Avon  Sixth  Division,  lying  within  13 
feet  more  or  less  of-  Wallace  Avenue; 
all  that  part  of  Lot  1.  Block  2,  tilen 
Avon  Fifth  Division,  lying  within  16.3 
feet  more  or  less  of  Wallace  Avenue; 
all  that  part  of  Lot  28.  Block  1,  Glen 
Avon,  Sixth  Division,  lying  within  29.6 
feet  more  or  less  of  Woodland  Avenue- 
all  that  part  of  Lot  9,  Block  2.  Le- 
magie  Park  Division,  lying  within  26 
feet  more  or  less  of  Woodland  Avenue; 
all  that  part  of  Lot  10,  Block,  2  Le- 
magie  Park  Division,  lying  within  33.2 
feet   more  or  less  of  Woodland  Avenue. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will  meet 
in    the   City   Clerk's   office    In    the   City 
Hall,     City     of    Duluth,    Minnesota,    on 
May  10.  1916.  at  9  a.  m..  and  will  thence 
proceed  to  view   the   premises  and  ap- 
praise the  damages  for  the  property  to 
be  taken  or  which  may  be  damaged  by 
such  Improvement  and  assess  the  bene- 
fits  In   the  manner  provided   bv   law 
G.  C.    ARMSTRONG, 
W.     M.     MILLER. 
A.   SCHAEFER, 
R.   F.    BIRDIE. 
J.    "W.    SHEPHERD.SON. 
Appraisers. 
D.   H.    April    6,    13,    1916.    D   1908. 

NOTICE  OF  PROPOSED  VACATION 

OF  STREETS— 

Notice  Is  hereby  given.  That  there 
has  been  filed  In  my  office  a  petition 
asking  for  the  vacation  of  all  of  the 
streets.  avenueS  anel  alleys  lying  and 
situate  in  Rosedale  Addition  to  Du- 
luth. according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof,  lying  east  of  Commonwealth 
avenue. 

Such  petition  will  be  heard  and  con- 
sidered by  the  City  Council  of  the  City 
of  Duluth,  In  the  Council  Chamber 
City  Hall,  Duluth.  Minnesota,  on  May 
8th.  1916.  at  8  o'clock  P.  M..  at  which 
time  and  place  the  said  City  Council 
will  investigate  and  consider  said  mat- 
ter, and  will  hear  the  testlmonv  and 
evidence  on  the  part  of  parties  Inter- 
ested. 

Dated  at  Duluth.  Minnesota.  April 
6th.    1916. 

W.    H.    BORGEN, 
City  Clerk.  City  of  Duluth 
D.    H.,   April   «-18-20-i7,   19l«.      D   1900. 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 
ST.  LOUIS— 88.  f  . 
Notice  is  herebar  ffven  that  the  un- 
dersigned apprainera;  appointed  to 
\iew  the  premises  and  appraise  the 
damages  which  may.  be  occasioned  by 
the  taking  of  private  property  or  oth- 
erwise in  the  condemnation  of  a 
Building  Line  Easement  on  Seven- 
teenth Avenue  East,  from  Seventh  to 
Eighth  Streets,  haveJIled  In  the  office 
of  the  City  Clerk,  of  the  City  of  Du- 
luth. Minnesota,  a '  plat  showing  the 
lands  in  which  it  is'  proposed  to  con- 
demn such  easement  which  lands  are 
as   follows,    to-wit: 

All  that  part  of  Lot  1.  Block  2.  Park 
Drive  Division,  lying  within  8  feet 
more  or  less  of  Seventeenth  Avenue 
East:  all  that  part  of  Lots  8  and  9. 
Block  1.  Park  Drive  Division,  lying 
within  8  feet  more  or  less  of  Seven- 
teenth Avenue  East;  all  that  part  of 
Lot  16,  Block  2,  Park  Drive  Division, 
and  all  that  part  of  Lot  16.  Block  27. 
Highland  Park  Division,  lying  within 
8  feet  more  or  less  of  Seventeenth  Ave- 
nue East. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will 
meet  In  the  City  Clerk's  office.  In  the 
City  Hall,  City  of  Duluth.  Minnesota, 
on  May  10,  1916.  at  9  a.  m..  and  will 
thence  proceed  to  view  the  premises 
and  appraise  the  damages  for  the  prop- 
erty to  be  taken  or  which  may  be  dam- 
aged by  such  improvement  and  as- 
sess the  benefits  In  the  manner  pro- 
vided   by    law^. 

G.    C.    ARMSTRONG, 

W.    M.    MILLER. 

A.  SCHAEFER, 

R.    F.    BIRDIE. 

J.  W.  SHEPHERDSON. 

Appraisers. 
D.   H..   April   6.   13,   1916.      D  1902. 


STATE  OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY  OF 

ST. 'LOUIS — 88. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  un- 
dersigned appraisers,  appointed  to  view 
the  premises  and  appraise  the  damages 
which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  tak- 
ing of  private  property  or  otherwise 
m  condemnation  of  an  easement  for 
slopes  or  retaining  walls,  for  cuts  and 
fills,  on  both  sides  of  Grand  Avenue, 
from  Seventy-first  to  Seventy-second 
Avenues  West,  have  filed  In  the  of- 
fice of  the  City  Clerk  of  the  City  of 
Duluth,  a  plat  showing  the  lands  In 
which  It  Is  proposed  to  condemn  such 
easement  which  lands  are  as  follows, 
to-wit:  ^        ,  ^    -.^t     , 

All  that  part  of  Lots  6  and  7,  Block 
17,  Hunter  &  Markell's  Grassy  Point 
Addition,  lying  within  17  feet  more 
or  less  of  Grand  Avenue;  all  that  part 
of  Lots  8  and  9,  Block  17.  Hunter  & 
Markell's  Grassy  Point  Addition,  ly- 
ing within  41  feet  more  or  less  of 
(;rand  Avenue;  all  that  part  of  Lots 
16  and  16.  and  17.  Block  13.  Hunter  & 
Markell's  Grassy  Point  Addition,  lying 
within  21. B  feet  more  or  less  of  Grand 
Avenue;  all  that  part  of  Lots  18  and 
19  and  20.  Block  13.  Hunter  &  Markell's 
Grassy  Point  Addition,  lying  within 
36.6  feet  more  or  less  of  Grand  Ave- 
nue. 

The  undersigned  appraisers  will  meet 
in  the  City  Clerk's  office  in  the  City 
Hall,  of  the  City  of  Duluth,  Minne- 
sota, on  May  10,  1916.  at  9  a.  m.,  and 
will  thence  proceed  to  view  the  prem- 
ises and  appraise  the  damages  for  the 
property  t»  be  taken  or  which  may  be 
damaged  by  such  Improvement  and  as- 
sess the  benefits  In  the  manner  pro- 
vided  by   law. 

G.  C.   ARMSTRONG. 
W.     M.     MILLER, 
A.   SCHAEFER, 
R.   F.   BIRDIE. 
J.    W.    SHEPHERDSON. 
Appraisers. 
D.    H..    April    6    13.    1916.    D    1907. 

OFFICE   OF   THE  COMMISSIONER   OF 

PUBLIC  UTILITIES — 

City  of  Duluth.  Minn.. 

April  12,  1916. 

Sealed  proposals  will  be  received  at 
the  office  of  the  Manager  of  the  Water 
and  Light  Department  until  11:00  A.  Mi 
Saturday,  the  22nd  day  of  April.  1916. 
for  laying  of  gas  and  water  mains  in 
the  various  streets  and  alleys  in  the 
city  of  Duluth.  A  certified  check  for 
10  per  cent  of  the  amount  bid.  made 
payable  to  the  order  of  the  treasurer 
of  the  City  of  Duluth.  must  accompany 
each  proposal.  Proposals  must  be 
addressed  to  the  Manager  of  the  Water 
and  Light  Department,  City  of  Duluth, 
and  Indorsed  "Bid  for  laying  Water  and 
t;a8  Mains."  Successful  bidder  must 
furnish  surety  bond  for  the  amount  of 
the  contract.  The  city  reserves  the 
right  to  reject  any  or  all  bids. 

Specifications      and      bidding      blanks 
may    be    obtained    at    the    Office   of    the 
Water  and  Light  Department. 
CITY  OF  DULUTH. 

W.  H.  BORGEN, 

Clerk. 
LEONIDAS  MERRITT. 

Commissioner. 
D.  H.,  April  12,   13,  1916.     D  1918. 

NOTICE  OF  PROPOSED  VACATION 

OF  STREETS — 

Notice  is  hereby  given.  That  there 
has  been  filed  in  my  office  a  petition 
asking  for  the  vacation  of  all  of  the 
streets,  avenues  and  alleys  lying  and 
situate  in  Everett  Park  Addition  to 
Duluth,  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof. 

Such  petition  will  be  heard  and  con- 
sidered by  the  City  Council  of  the  City 
of  Duluth,  in  the  Council  Chamber, 
City  Hall,  Duluth,  Minnesota,  on  May 
8th  1916,  at  3  o'clock  P.  M.,  at  which 
time  and  place  the  said  City  Council 
will  investigate  and  consider  said  mat- 
ter, and  will  hear  the  testimony  and 
evidence   on   the  part  of  parties   inter- 

est  cd 

Dated     at    Duluth,    Minnesota,    April 

6th.   1916.  „^„^„.. 

W.    H.    BORGEN. 
City   Clerk.    City    of    Duluth. 
D.    H..    April    6-13-20-27,   1916.      D   1899. 


LGGALi    NOTICES. 

STATE    Of"m1NNESOTA.   COUNTY    OF 
ST.    LOUIS— SS. 

District   Court,    Eleventh   Judicial   Dis- 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  application 
of  H.  G.  Stevens  to  register 
the  title  to  the  following  de- 
scribed real  estate  situated  in 
St.  Louis  County,  State  of 
Minnesota.        namely:  The 

Northwest  Quarter  ^f  the 
Southeast  Quarter  (NW>i  of 
SE>4),  and  the  South  Half  of 
the  Northeast  Quarter  (SVi  of 
NE*4),  ail  in  Section  Eighteen 
(18),  Township  Fifty-five  (66) 
North  of  Range  Twenty-one 
(21)  West  of  the  Fourth  (4th) 
Principal  Meridian,  according 
to  the  government  survey 
thereof, 

Applicant, 
against 

Otis  W.  Saunders,  Harriet  L. 
I'eck,  as  administratrix  of  the 
estate  of  Willys  B.  Peck,  de- 
ceased; State  of  Minnesota, 
Granville  A.  Burns,  Unknown 
heirs  of  Willys  B.  Peck,  de- 
ceased, and  all  other  persons 
or  parties  unknown  claiming 
any  right,  title,  estate,  lien  or 
Interest  in  the  real  estate 
described     in     the     application 

Defendants. 
NOTICE. 

To  Otis  W.  Saunders,  one  of  the  above 
named    defendants;    Flora    D.     Smith, 
guardian  of  the  person  and  estate  of 
Otis   W.    Saunders,   ward;    and    to   all 
other  persons  whom  It  may  concern: 
Take    notice.    That    the    above    named 
applicant    will    move    the   above    named 
court    at   a  special   term   thereof   to   be 
held  at  the  court   house   in   the  City  of 
Duluth.    in   eaid    St.   Louts   County   and 
I  State    of    Minnesota,    on    Saturday,    the 
'29th  day  of  April.    1916.   at   9:30   o'clock 
in  the  forenoon  of  said  day.  or  as  soon 
thereafter  as  counsel  can  be   heard,  for 
an  order  appointing  some  suitable  per- 
son   as    guardian   ad    litem    of   the    said 
Otis  W.  Saunders  in  above  proceedings. 
ABBOTT.  MACPHERRAN,  LEWIS  ^ 
GILBERT, 
Attorneys  for  Applicant, 
1001  Alworth  Building, 

Duluth,    Minnesota. 
D.  H.,  March  30,  April  6,  13,  1916. 


ORDER    OF   HEARING   ON   PETITION 
FOR     LICENSE     TO     SELL.     MORT- 
GAGE  OR   LEASE   LAND— 
State  of  Minnesota. 

County  of  St.  Louis. — ss. 
In    Probate    Court.      In    the    Matter    of 
the  Estate  of  Ella  V.  Cook.  Decedent. 
The  petition  of  Wirt  H.  Cook  as  rep- 
resentative  of  the  above   named  dece- 
dent  having  been  filed   In   this  Court, 


FOR  JIENT— HOUSES 

—HOUSES— 


J.   D.   Howard   &   Co.,    Providence  Bldg. 


1610'^  and  1612  E.  Superior  st.;  mod- 
ern brick  houses,  z  and  8  rooms; 
finely   decorated   to   suit   tenant. $40. 00 


1427-1429     E.     Superior    St.;     modern, 
detached   8-room  houses;   hot   water      i 
heat,    hardwood     floors     throughout;       *■ 
decorated   to  suit  tenant $46.00 


6  rooms,  201  Isanti  st.;  furnace 
heat     $25.00 

6  rooms,  4623  Cambridge  st.;  furnace 
heat     $26.00 

9  rooms.  107  8th  ave.  w.;  heat  and 
water    furnished    $46.00 

9  rooms.    6809   London    road $30.00 

10  rooms,  621  W.  2nd  St.;  steam  heat; 
modern     $46.00 

10  rooms.  16  W.  6th  st.;  hot  water 
heat;  hardwood  floors  throughout, 
at     »50.00 


#  FOR  RENT.  * 
Sf,                              if, 

^  Nicely  located  7-room  house,  new-  •^ 

#  ly  redecorated  throughout;  stone  •^ 
-;g.  foundation,  full  basement,  hard-  ii- 
4^  wood  floors;  located  in  a  pleasant  i^ 
?(.  residence  district  overlooking  city  * 
'»  and  lake.     Rent  $22.60.     Apply—        * 

#  L.  A.  LARSEN  COMPANY.  * 

#  Either  phone  1920.  H- 

#  * 


—FOR  RENT — 


417  2nd  ave.  e..  7  rooms $30.00 

110  W.  2nd  St.,  10  rooms 36.00 

430  E.  Superior  St.,  7  rooms 26.00 

1609  E.  3rd  st.,  8  rooms 36.00 

112  S.  16th  ave.  e..  8  rooms 36.00 

429  10th  ave.  e.,  8  rooms 42.60 

127  E.  3rd  St..  8  rooms,  furnace 
heat,  fireplace,  bath  and  gas 
rent      S6.00 


STRYKER.  MANLEY  &  BUCK, 
Main  floor,  Torrey  bldg. 


—FOR  RENT— 


609  W.  3rd  st.;  beautiful  view;  11- 
room  house  with  furnace,  two  fire- 
places, bath,  gas  and  electric  light; 
so  arranged  that  it  could  be  used  as 
rooming  house  or  two  fiats;  com- 
bination coal  and  gas  range  in  two 
kitchens. 


STRYKER.    MANLEY    &    BUCK. 
Main    Floor.   Torrey    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — A  very  desirable  8-room 
thoroughly  modern  house  on  E.  1st  st.. 
near  8th  ave..  which  has  been  thor- 
oughlv  redecorated  and  is  in  excel- 
lent (fondition;  hot  water  heating 
plant.  For  rental  and  other  partic- 
ulars calls  F.  L  Salter  Co..  303  Lons- 
dale   bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  house,  all  modern 
except  heat,  $20  per  month.  420  S. 
18th  ave.   e. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  house,  al!  modern 
except  heat,  $20  per  month.  521  S. 
22nd  ave.   e.  Call  Grand  1196.  Mel.  S0o6. 

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  house.  No.  406 
N.  24th  ave.  w.;  water,  gas.  electric 
lights,  toilet,  bath  and  hard\(»od 
floors;  st  »ve  heat;  water  paid;  reason- 
able rental:  vacant  May  1.  F.  I.  Sal- 
ter Co..   303   Lonsdale   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  nouse  at  corner 
of  Fifth  ave.  e.  and  Superior  st.; 
bathroom,  electric  lighting,  gas  con- 
nection for  kitchen  range,  new  paper 
and  paint.  Inquire  of  C.  F.  Graff, 
406    Lonsdale    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — For  the  summer — Modern 
5-room  house;  hot  water  heat.  gas. 
electric  light,  bath,  hardwood  floors; 
furnished  complete,  or  4  rooms  un- 
furnished; reasonable  to  right  party. 
Grand  2349-X. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat.  $8;  4-room 
flat.  $12.60;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; sewer,  gas.  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers,  611  Alworth  bldg.       

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  modern  house. 
No.  214  Vi  E.  2nd  St.;  hot  water  heat- 
ing plant;  very  easy  walking  distance; 
$85  per  month.  F.  L  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 10-room  heated  house  in 
East  End.  Rent  $70.  Includes  heat,  hot 
and  cold  water,  janitor  service.  See 
N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Providence  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  house,  310  W.  6th 
St.;  modern  except  heat;  newly  deco- 
rated; Immediate  possession.  Inquire 
rental  dept.,   Bridgeman  &   Russell. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  house,  rear  of  109 
W.  6th  St.;  rooms  large  and  well  light, 
ed;  can  be  arranged  for  two  families 
if  desired.     Call  617  Lake  ave.  n. 

FOR  RENT  —  6-room  house;  clean, 
freshly  papered;  634  Garfield  ave.; 
rent  $16;  water  free.  Inquire  Wing 
real    estate    office,    Palladlo    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 9-room  East  end  home;  all 
modern  conveniences;  will  lease  for  5 
years;  references  required.  Call  Mel. 
6406. 

FOR  RENT — Seven-room  house,  125  7th 
ave.  w;  bath,  closet,  coal  range,  elec- 
tric lights;   $22  per  month.    Mel.  3864. 

FOR  RENT — House  at  637  >/4  Garfield 
ave.;  warm,  neat;  city  water  in  house; 
rent  $10  per  month.  Inquire  store,  637. 

FOR  RENT — 1301%  E.  2nd  St.,  6-room 
modern  house.  Inquire  Henry  Nesbitt 
&  Co.,  814  Sellwood  bldg.;  Mel.  1686. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  house;  modern 
except  heat;  Park  Point.  Inquire  Ed- 
mont.  18  Third  ave.  w. 


FOR  RENT — Fine,  light,  modern  house 
at  1420  E.  4th  st.  See  P.  Jotinson,  219 
W.  Superior  st. 


FOR  RENT — 8-room  house,  230  3rd 
ave.  w.;  newly  papered.  Inquire  32  E. 
Superior  st.  


FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  house  in 
East  end.  S.  S.  Williamson,  516  Tor- 
rey  bldg; 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  house;  light, 
airy  rooms;  large  yard.     30  12th  ave.  e. 


FOR  RENT — Nos.  1718  and  1720  E.  Su- 
perior St.      E.   P.    Alexander. 

FOR      RENT — 6-room      modern      house. 
1130  E.    Srd   St.      Price   $30.    


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 
FR0IIIPAG^2[AND22 

^^___^PERSON/a 

*  —TALK  TO  GILIUSON—  » 

"k-  * 

*  IF     YOU     W^ANT     TO     BUY     ANY  * 

*  GRADE  PIANO— PIANO  DIRECT  * 
■»  FROM  THE  MANUFACTURER,  * 
•^  AT  AN  ACTUAL  SAVING  OF  $100.  * 
^  * 

*  DON'T      BE      ATTRACTED      by  # 

*  spacious.      misleading      advertise-  * 

*  ments  offering  pianos  at  your  own  ^ 
it-  price,  and  even  below  cost.  * 

*  INVESTIGATE  FIRST,  and  the  * 
■^  results  will  surely  reimburse  you  ie 
i(-  for  the  time  you  spend.  Call  and  * 
ii-  let  us  refer  you  to  customers  who  # 
is-  have  purchased  Raudenbush  i^ 
^  pianos    from    us    within    the    past  H- 


WANTED  TO  BORROW— $1  600  on 
dwelling  house  and  store  building 
and  two  lots;  good  location  in  Vir- 
ginia, Minn.,  will  pay  8  per  cent.  6 
years.  Write  T  116.   Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BORROW — $2,000  at  6 
per  cent,  first  mortgage  security  on 
modern  new  house.  502  Providence 
bldg.     Phone   Mel.    414    Grand    2367-A. 

WANTED  TO  BORROW — $400  for  3 
years,  on  2  buildings  valued  at  $1,000. 
with  $900  insurance;  will  pay  10  per 
cent   Interest.    Write   G   93.    Herald. 


Have   Lange    do    your    repairing    right. 
Cash  for  old  gold.     13  Lake  ave.  n. 


representing,  among  other  things,  that 
for  reasons  stated  In  said  petition,  it 
is  necessary  and  for  the  best  interests 
of  the  estate  of  said  decedent  and  of 
all  persons  interested  therein,  to  sell 
certain  lands  of  said  decedent  in  said 
petition  described  and  praying  that  li- 
cense be  to  him  granted  to  sell  the 
said  land:  It  is  ordered.  That  said 
petition  be  heard  before  this  Court, 
at  the'  Probate  Court  Rooms  in  the 
Court  House,  in  Duluth.  in  said  Coun- 
ty, on  Monday,  the  24th  day  of  April, 
1916,  at  ten  o'clock  A.  M.,  and  all  per- 
sons interested  in  said  hearing  and  in 
said  matter  are  hereby  cited  and  re- 
quired at  said  time  and  place  to  show 
cause,  if  any  there  be.  why  said  peti- 
tion should  not  be  granted.  Ordered 
further.  That  this  "order  be  served  by 
publication  in  The  Duluth  Herald  ac- 
cording  to   law. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  29th. 
1916. 

By  the  Court. 

S.  W.  GILPIN.  Judge  of  Probate. 

Attest:     A.   R.   MORTON, 

Clerk  of  Probate. 
Seal.  Probate  Court,  St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn. 
^D.  H..  March  30.  April  6.  13,  1916. 


^^^REAUESTAUJL^^ 

-f  FIRST   MORTGAGE   LOANS.  * 

if.  We  advance  funds  as  needed  on  * 
if  first  mortgage  building  loans.  w 
Favorable  terms.  » 


W.  M.  PRINDLE  &  CO., 
Lonsdale   bldg. 


s 


#  week. 

ifr 

* 


-THEY    INVESTIGATED— 


THE    RAUDENBUSH   &    SONS 

PIANO  CO., 

S.  E.   GILIUSON,   Mgr.. 

232  West  First  Street. 


PERSONAL — Everybody  can  furnish 
their  home  right  now  at  one-half  price 
and  less,  from  the  Cameron  Furniture 
Co.  stock,  which  is  being  closed  out 
at  tremendous  sacrifices.  May  1  we 
close  our  doors;  lease  expires;  you 
must  hurry  or  miss  this  opportunity. 
Salesrooms,    2110-2112   W.  Superior  st. 

PERSONAL — If  you  want  a  cabin  built 
or  your  acre  tracts  cleared,  any  road 
building  or  any  other  kind  of  con- 
tracting, for  prompt  work  see  Axel 
Hagstrom,  at  811  N.  Lake  ave.,  or  call 
Mel.  4285. 

PER.SONAL — Ladles!  Ask  your  drug- 
glst  for  Chichester  Pills,  the  Diamond 
Brand,  for  2&  years  known  as  best, 
safest,  always  reliable.  Take  no  other. 
Chichester  Diamond  Brand  Pills  are 
aold   by  druggists   everywhere. 

PERSONAL— Hotels,  hospitals,  cafes 
and  rooming  houses;  buy  your  linens, 
etc.,  of  us  at  lower  prices  than  linen 
houses  In  Chicago  or  New  York.  Du- 
luth Linen  Co.,  228  E.  Ist  st.  Let  us 
prove   it. 

FURNITURE  for  quick  sale;  will  sell 
cheap;  6-room  furniture,  complete  or 
by  the  piece.  Apply  1106  E.  3rd  st., 
or  call  Mel.  7663.  Call  mornings  be- 
fore noon,   or  after  6. 

PERSONAI^Middle-aged  gentleman 
with  good  position  and  some  means 
wishes  to  meet  Scandinavian  lady  of 
middle  age;  object  matrimony.  Write 
P  99.   Herald. 


4#';^-:^-^-\^^^^^^n>^»»'^^^^^^^^'^^* 

MONEY  TO  LOAN — Any  amount,  any 
time-  quick  service:  building  loans  a 
specialty,  5,  5»a  and  6  per  cent.  Cooley 
&  Underhill,  209-10-11   Exchange  bldg. 

ST  LOUIS  AND  CARLTON  county  farm 
loans;  can  handle  any  good  farm 
loan;  terms  right;  no  delay.  Northern 
Farm   Loan   Co.,    102    Providence    bldg. 

REAL  ESTATE  LOANS— Easy  terms; 
repay  loan  monthly  or  yearly  or  before 
five  years.  Northern  Securities  &  Loan 
association.  Commercial  bldg. 

CASH  ON  HAND  to  loan  on  city  anel 
farm  prop?rty:  any  amount,  lowest 
rates,  no  delay.  Northern  Title  Co., 
612   First   National   Bank   bldg. 

IF  YOU  OWN  a  lot.  see  us  about  fi- 
nancing the  building  of  your  home. 
Duluth  Lumber  Co..  Mel.  112.  Lin.  112. 

Monev   at  Lowest   Rates. 

Any   Amount;    No   Delay. 

Little  &  Nolte  Co.,  Exchange  bldg. 


PERSONAL — Get  away  from  washing 
troubles  by  sending  your  family  wash 
to  us;  5^c  per  pound.  Lutes'  laundry, 
808  E.  2nd  st.  Phone  Grand  447,  Mel. 
44  7,  for  our  wagon. 


For  tired  feet — The  new  violet  rays 
treatment  in  connection  with  foot 
massage  gives  wonderful  relief.  Com- 
fort  Beauty  Parlors,  109  Oak  Hall  bldg 

MADE-TO-MGASURE  Shirts,  Underl 
wear.  Raincoats,  Neckties,  Suit  or 
O'coat.  $18;  Ladies'  Suits,  spring  se- 
lections.    C.  N.  Hamilton.  315  E.  Sup.  st. 

All-around  carpenter  work,  by  day  or 
contract;  reasonable  terms;  also  uphol- 
stering.   26>/2  Mesaba  ave.  Gr'd  2361-A. 

Personal — Electric  vacuum  cleaners  for 
rent,  $1.60  a  day.  The  Moore  Co.,  319 
W.    1st    St.;    Mel.    6860,    Grand    2064-X. 


RAGTIME  positively  taught  in  20  les- 
sons; free  booklet.  J.  L.  Denver  32  W, 
2nd  St.     Open  7  to  10  p.  m.     Mel.  7720. 


MASSAGE— Margaret  Nelson.  218  W. 
Superior  St..  room  8,  Srd  floor.  Also 
appointments    at    your    home. 


PERSONAL — Carpenter  work  neatly 
done,  either  by  day  or  contract.  John- 
son Bros..  Grand   2121-Y. 


Personal — Effective      scalp      treatment. 
Mrs.  Vogt's  Hair  Shop.  106  W.  Sup.  st. 

Personal — Combings  and  cut  hair  made 
Into  beautiful  switches.  Knauf  Sisters. 

PER.SONAL — Laelles.     have     your     suits 
made    at    Miller   Bros..    405    E.    Sup.    St. 

PERSONALS  —  Wanted     lace     curtains. 
25c  pair;   ladles'   washings.     Mel.   7051. 

Corns,    bunions    removed:    electric    foot 
massage  for  tired  feet.  Miss  M.  Kelly. 


DR.   GULDE,   Eye.    Ear,  Nose  specialist, 
324  Syndicate  bldg.,   Minneapolis. 


WANTED — Piano  for  storage  in  home; 
phone    dining   hours.      Mel.    1685. 


PERSONAL — Get     your     hats     at     cost. 
219    E.    Superior  st. 

PERSONAL— For    sick    people,    flowers. 
Duluth  Floral  Co. 


if,  HORSES— GUARANTEED —  if 

if.  HORSES.  it 

if.  We  have  everything  in  the  horse  f^ 
■^  line.  Country  bought,  free  from  1^ 
■^  the  diseases  of  the  city  markets,  if^ 
^  Always  glad  to  show  stock;  al-  if. 
if.  ways  give  a  written  guarantee;  •jt 
#  always  give  square  deal.  Part  ^ 
if.  time  if  desired.  # 

if  TWIN  PORTS  HORSE  MARKET,  » 
if.  W.    E.    BARKER.    Prop.,  if 

if  18  First  Avenue  W.  if 

if^ifif-}f^i:-^!:-  .^  i^ifi^i6i6^-^-?^  :¥*  ■!^:;ii'if 


if-:^if^if'yfi('i^i(-i}'}i^^i^i^)^ii^X^i^^f'i^i^-}f^ 

if.  DRAFT  AND  DELIVERY  HORSES,   if 

*  FARM  MARES.  (iENERAL           if 

if.  PURPOSE   HORSES.                    if. 

if.  All     our     horses    are    Minnesota  ^f 

if-  raised.     .Sales  made  on  time  if  de-  ^ 

if  sired.      Buy    from    an    established  -,i^ 

if  dealer.     Also,   we   guarantee   every  ^ 

■^  horse   to  be  as  represented.                  if 

if  ZENITH  SALE  STABLE,              *■ 

if  MOSES   GOLDBERG,   Prop.,           * 

if  524  West  First  Street,                 * 

^  Two  blocks  from  union  depot.       ^ 
i(^i^if^}fif^-^i*^if^':6i^ifi^^^i^^i^-^'^'^^^ 

HORSES  HORSES  HORSES 
If  In  the  market  for  horses  be  sure  and 
see  our. offerings.  We  have  from  200 
to  300  head  constantly  on  hand.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Barrett  &  Zim- 
merman, Duluth  Horse  Market,  23rd 
ave.  w.  and  Superior  st.  H.  J.  Walt, 
manager. 


FOR  SALE  —  Single  spring  wagon, 
good  condition,  reme^vable  canvas 
top,  suitable  for  light  delivery;  rea- 
sonable price.  Peyton  Paper  Co.  Both 
phones   118. 


FOR  SALE — Brown  mare,  weighs  be- 
tween 1,050  and  1.100;  city  broke,  not 
afraid  of  automobiles  or  stii^et  cars. 
608  N.  66th  ave.  w.  Call  Cole  301. 

FOR  SALE — Delivery  horses;  sale  and 
boarding  stables;  flrst-class  service. 
Western  Sales  Stables,  26-28  E.  1st  st. 
John  Gallop,  proprietor. 

HAR-VESS  WASHED  and  oiled,  repair- 
ing  neatly  and  promptly  done;  give 
us  a  trial.  Herian  &  Merlirg.  106  W. 
1st  St.  Mel.   4668. 

FOR  RENT — Barn  room  at  rear  of  412 
W.  Srd  St..  suitable  for  small  shop. 
Apply  to  E.  L.  Palmer.  Amerlcan^x- 
change  bank. 

NOTICE  TO  my  friends  and  former 
customers,  I  am  again  in  business  at 
128    E.    Michigan    st.      Frank    Jordan. 

Have  your  harness  washed,  oiled  and 
repaired  at  the  Duluth  Harness  shop; 
reasonable  figures.     26  E.  Ist  st. 

HORSES.  WAGONS  and  harness  for 
sale;  driving  and  draft;  $26  and  up. 
Call  at  once.  218  E.  2nd  st. 


FOR      SALE — Cheap,      small      delivery 
horse.      Duluth   V^an   &   Storage   Co. 

FOR     SALE — Cheap,     team     of    horses. 
Call    Park    21-X. 


AUTOMOBILES?  Prac- 
tically every  one  in  Duluth 
and  the  Iron  Range  towns 
who  will  buy  one  this  year  is 
a  Herald  reader. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN — Loans  made  on 
timber  and  farm  lands.  John  Q.  A- 
Crosby.    305    Palladlo   bldg. 

ANY  AMOUNT  OF  MONEY  for  loans  on 
improved  farms.  Bickell,  Kyllo  & 
Co.,   205   Exchange   bldg 


MONEY   ON   HAND  for  real  estate  loans. 
Stewart    G.    Collins.    710    Torrey    bldg. 

For  Farm  Loans  and  Farm  Lands,  see 
Ebert-Walker  Co.,  316-16  Torrey  bldg. 

MONEY    TO    LOAN    on    city    property. 
De    Caigny    &    Paepe.    609    Providence. 


MONEY    TO   LOAN — Any   amount.   Ben- 
jamin  F.    Schwciger.    1932    W.    Sup.    st. 


CITY    AND    FARM    loans.     William    C. 
Sargent,    Providence     bldg. 


MONEY  TO  LOAN 


if  JIO    OR    MORE * 

it  LOANED    TO   ANYONE  # 

if.  On  furniture,  pianos,  etc..  or  hold-  # 
■^  ing  a  steady  position,  at  rates  # 
if  honest  people  are  willing  to  pay.  i^ 
if  See  us  first  and  get  a  square  deal.  ^ 
•jp  Money  In  your  hands  in  few  hours'  i^ 
if.  time.  Low  rates.  Easy  payments.  * 
if  DULUTH  LOAN  CO..  * 

if  307  Columbia  bldg..  303  W.  Sup.  st.  if. 
i^  Hours:  8  a.  m.  to  6  p.  m.;  Wednes-  if. 
if  day  and  Saturday  to  8  p.  ra.  <» 
if.  Mel.  2355;  Grand  1224.  * 

MONEY   TO   LOAN. 

From  One  to  Ten  Monthly  Payments. 

On  Furniture,  etc.,  at  Lowest  Rates. 

Example  of  Cost  Per  Month: 

$16,  if  paid  in  1  month $0.90 

, 3  months 0.70 

, 6   months 0.44 

$26.  if  paid  in  1  month 1.10 

,.       „       „    3  months 0.95 

„       ,,       ,.    6   months 0.80 

$50,  If  paid  in  1  month 2.25 

„       „       ..    3  months 1.60 

6  months 1.25 

Charges  on  other  amounts  in  proportion. 

Even  lower  rates  on  Jewelry,  etc. 

DULUTH  REMEDIAL  LOAN  ASS'N. 

401  First  National  Bank  bldg. 


SALARY  AND  CHATTEL  LOANS. 

Don't  you  need  a  little  money? 

.  ,     We  have  it  to  loan. 

BORROW  $10.00,  RETURN  $0.40  WEEK 

BORROW  $20.00,  RETURN       .80  WEEK 

BORROW  $30.00,  RETURN     1.20  WEEK 

Other   amounts    in    proportion. 

DULUTH  FINANCE  CO., 

301   Palladlo  Bldg. 

Hours:    8  a.  m.  to  6:30  p.  m.;  Wednesday 

and   Saturday   evenings   until  9   o'clock. 

Both  phones. 

LOANS      ON      DIAMONDS,      WATCHES, 
etc.     Example  of  cost: 

$10,   paid   back   one   month 50c 

$16,   paid   back  one   month 76c 

$26     paid    back    one    month. ..  .$1.00 
'       KEYSTONE   LOAN  CO.. 
22  W.  Superior  st. 

WE  LOAN  on  all  kinds  of  personal 
security  at  lowest  rates.  Call  on  us. 
Duluth  Mortgage  Loan  Co.,  "W.  Horkan. 
New   1598-D;   Mel.   3733.  

Loans  on  watches,  diamonds,  guns,  etc. 
Keystone  Loan  Co.,   22   W.  Superior  st. 


MORTGAGES-FARM  AND  CITY 

— MORTGAGES — 


Bank.  Trust  and  Insurance  companies 
invest  their  money  in  our  farm  mort- 
gages because  they  are  safe,  conserva- 
tive, and  return  them  6  per  cent  on 
their  money.  Why  not  make  your 
money  net  you  6  per  cent.  We  have 
mortgages  in  small  or  large  amounts. 
Titles  guaranteed. 


BICKELL-KYLLO  &  CO.. 

206  Exchange  bldg., 

Duluth,  Minn. 


^TOmjU^IDMBOI^S 

"WANTED  TO  BUY — 300  shares  Mutual 
Iron  Mining  company  stock;  quote 
lowest    price.      T    122.    Herald. 


FOR  SALE — 100  shares  Cuyuna  Iron  & 
Manganese:  give  cash  offer.  Write 
X  97.  Herald. 


-^  it> 

^  80  ACRES * 

■^  # 

if  Adjoining  city  limits;  $40  per  acre;  if. 
if  only  2  miles  from  end  of  Duluth  i^ 
if  Heights  car  line,  on  Swan  Lake  i^ 
if.  road;    suitable    for  subdividing.  ^ 

if.  A.  W.  TAUSSIG  &  CO.,  * 

if     ^  407  Providence  Bldg.  # 


FOR  SALE — 320  acres  only  five  miles 
south  of  Marbl^.  where  the  big  mines 
are;  splendid  agricultural  land;  worth 
today  on  account  of  location  at  least 
$50  per  acre;  I  must  sell  quickly  as  I 
need  the  money;  no  reserves;  price 
if  taken  at  once.  $17.60  per  acre.  Fos- 
broke,  303  Commerce  bldg.,  St.  Paul, 
Minn. 


FOR  SALE — Nine  acres  of  fertile  land, 
cleared,  fenced,  in  timothy  and  clover; 
walking  distance  S6th  ave.  e. ;  some 
buildings,  nice  creek,  good  water; 
$2  700  on  easy  terms.  Greenfield  Real- 
ty'Co.,  416  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — .Sixty-acre  farm,  3  miles 
northwest  of  Wentworth,  Douglas 
county;  good  farm  buildings;  reason- 
able terms.  A.  J.  Modine,  Wentworth, 
Wis. 


FOR  SALE — Lake  frontage;  If  you 
want  a  piece  of  land  on  nice  lake, 
call  on  us.  We  have  it.  Northern 
Realty    Co.,    627    Manhattan    bldg. 


FOR  SALE — House  and  10  acres  on 
Vermilion  road,  2V4  miles  from  end  of 
Woodland  car  line;  5  acres  cleared. 
Write   O   999.    Herald. 


BARGAIN— $1,000  cash  buys  80  acres 
In  63-14,  close  to  Consolidated  mines. 
Northern  Realty  Co..  627  Manhattan 
bldg. . 

BEAUTIFUL  RIVER  front  farms  at 
Meadowlands  on  easy  terms.  Uno 
Llndstrom.  31  E.   Michigan  st.  Duluth. 

FOR  SALE — 40  acres  half  mile  from 
Munger,  on  road;  $860.  easy  terms.  E. 
E.  Helland.  101   39th  ave.  w.,  Dulnth. 

FOR  SALE — 40  acres,  mile  from  Mun- 
ger, on  main  road.  Owner.  4919  Ram- 
sey St.,  West  Duluth. 


Parties    desiring    to    clear    lands,    writ© 
F.  J.  Kupplnger,  Davenport.  Iowa. 

I  BUY  and  sell  lands  and  limbeTl     Geo. 
Rupley.  612  Lyceum  bldg. 


^' 


^_ 


•J? 


DRESSMAKING 

WANTED — Plain      sev.'Ing.      Children's 
clothes  a  specialty.  PtaoB«  MeL    Si  70. 


■*"^PT 


«Hm 


<-■ 


1    ■■> 


Thursday, 


THE    DVf.UTH    HERALD, 


April  13, 1916. 


.)- 1 


ABSENT-MINDED  ABNER — That  Movey  Money  Keeps  Moving  I 


By  Walt  McDoggall 


MO/EY  MONEY 
HOW  NICE!  BE.  VERY 
CAREFUL  AND 
DO  NOT  TEAR 
IT,  BUB. DEAR 


Ybu  BCT  t  Ll) 
C>»/LYLeTHlM 
PLAY  VV/TH  IT 
\a/he:n  I  AM 

AROUNO 


OH.M5U  FIFTY  BONES  f 
GoaHi  THAT\A/ASA.CL.OSC 


I 


ANOTHEJ^S^QCKLII^ 
THAT  MIGHT  Bt  RATAL. 
ATMYACfeJ 
p'li  "" 


GRA^fs/PA  WON 
LE-MME  HAVe 


^E*«»<" 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES 


I     FOR  SALE  HOUSES— Continued 


SI'LI:ND1D   VALUES.  * 


JFOR^ALEJ^OUSES— Continued^ 
FOR  SALE-MISCELLANEOUS 


—TWO  HOUSE  BARGAIXJ 


I 


* 

2915  East  First  street— 7  room.i  *  I  *; 
and  bath,  hot  water  heat,  two  #  i  # 
ftreplacf-H,  laundry  tubs,  livJnK  *  |  *■ 
ik  room  t1nl»h.*d  in  niahosany.  din-  ■*  jjt 
fe  Itis  room  whit*"  rnamol,  upstairs  •A-  A' 
%  vhit'^  t-namlf,  hardwood  lloor.^,  '^  Vf 
Sf,  ct-nuiil  walks  and  paved  ulreots.  -A?  j  ^ 
&  i>nf  of  the  best  designed  houses  '^-  "^ 
&        In  East  end.  *  |  * 

^  if-    >i- 

Ai  623  SlxtooTith  avf-nue  east — 6  rooms  H-.-X- 
^  -   ■     -■       —         ■•   -"    i(. 

# 

if- 
«•- 


*|*  * 

flOO    cash    nnd    balance    on    amall  *• '  ^  — TALK  TO  OILIUSON'—  * 

njonthly  payments   takes  2-fam-   *• ,  v^  if   IT'S  A  * 

lly    hou84'.    »14    X.    66th    ave.    w.  *    ^ij.  SECON'D-HAN'D  PIANO  TOU  ARE  * 


Thi.««  place  mu.st  be  sold  before  *  f^ 
May  1.  Movo  In  now.  rent  one  if- 1  i^ 
flat  and  1ft  the  tenant  help  you  *- 1  ^ 
pay    for    the    property.      Thia    Is  if- 


LOOKING  FOR. 


Rtjcht    now   he   ha«    eight   excep- 
tional   bargains.      Prices   from   (SC 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 
0N^ESJ0AND22 

FOR  SALE— MISCELLANEOUS 

(Contlnurd.) 


FOR  SALE— REAL  ESTATE 


—LOTS   FOR    SALE.— 


nn    excellent   opportunity   to   get  "A(-    v.t  to  $195,  cash  or  easr  terms, 
a   home   cheap. 


and   bath.     The  owner   must  «»;il   5*- 


In  next  ten  day.H. 


CIS    Fourth    avenuo    east — Two    6- 
room  Hats  and  two  baths;  snap. 


1609  Jefftrson  street—"  rooms  and 
maids'    room.      This    Is    an    eapt-- 

cially   well-bnllt.    modern    home,  it- 

pleasaiitlv    located    on    nice    lot;  it 

very  desirable  residence  district.  * 

A  buap.  '^ 

if- 

and  -;?• 


A  beautiful  10-room  modern  house 
east  of  18th  ave.  e..  In  the  very 
best    residential    section    of    th«  if- 
city.       This    place    was    built    of  ^ 
the    very    best    material;     large, 
beautiful  lot.     On  account  of  the 
owner    leaving     city,    the      place 
will   be  sold   at   a  sacrifice.     Can  ■# 
make  any  reasonable  terms  to  a  ^ 
reliable    party.      Don't    delay    If  ^ 
you  want  thi.«<  place.     |1,600  cash  •* 


S.  F>.  GILIUSON,  Manager  of 
THE    RAUDEN'nrSH    &    SON'S 
rLA.NO  CO.. 
232  West  First  Street. 


* 
*    * 


$800    takes    a    lot    100    by    140    feet 
Last  hillside.     Easy  terms.      (301) 


on 


$550    takes    a    40    by    80-foot 
block  from  9th  st.  car  line. 


##****#«N^iWP**#**»WWo¥«^-***#  I  %9M  takes  a  16t  on  E.  ?th  st. 


if- 


FOR  SALE. 

FINE  USED  KNABE  PIAXO. 

Mahogany  case.     |140.  on  easy 
terms.     Addeess  A  960,  Herald. 


* 


$1,500    takes    a    fine   lot    on   E. 
St.     FiQ«   location.    (0527) 


lot      on* 

(9S5«) 
Superior 


WHITNEY   WALL   COMPANY, 

Torrey    Bldg. 

Mel.    1368:    Grand    810. 


* '  **A«-**«**«*J^*i^**j&«-##«'X-«-««*    FOR   SALE— Btdro<?ni.    dining   and    llv-  !  f  «> 


PROFESSIONAL  AND  BUSINESS  GUIDE 


Ready  reference  of  the  professional 
men  and  leading  business  firms.  Her- 
ald readers  who  do  not  find  the  line 
of  business  they  are  seeking  will  con- 
fer a  favor  by  requesting  of  us  the 
information  desired. 


CALL  324  FOR  REPRESENTATION  IN  THIS  COLUMN 


—ALUMINUM  SPECIALS— 


will   handle  It. 

EBERT-WALKER   COMPANY, 

815-16  Torrey  Building, 

Duluth,  Minn. 


4513    Cook**    street — 7     rooms 

bath,  hot  water  heat;  bungalow,  if- 1  •»Jii»^'.tj^j^i^;<Wit»»»»##»»^>»»»^^^f^.^ 


a- 
« 

J^  Here  Is  something  that  Is  a  rec- 
*  *  ord-breaker.  Think  of  It!  Thirty- 
.^  !  ^  five  ple«  es  of  good  aluminum  ware 
if.  I -if-  for  only  |5.a8;  another  set  consist- 
* '  a-  Ing  of  seven  pieces  at  ST. 98. 
.Jl**.  ENOER  &  OLSON, 

if.]  if-     Nineteenth   Ave.   W.  and   Sup.  St. 


t' 

if 
* 

* 
* 


luarly    new 


1024  East  Ninth  street — Hot  water  ^| 
heat,  full  basement,  6  rooms  and  -^ 


ATTRACTIVE  HOMES  FOR  SALE. 


610  East  Seventh  street — Hot  wa- 
ter Ivat,  coneiete  foundation,  6 
ri>oin3  and  bath,  lino  basement; 
nearly  new. 


(22-21)  Here's  a  beautiful,  modern 
bungalow;  located  East  end;  6  rooms; 
hot  water  heat,  fireplace,  oak  finl:ih 
and  hardwood  floors;  new  house;  price 
$6,000. 


bath;  solid  brkk.  nearly  new. 


Hunter's  Park  home — 6  rooms  and 
bath,  atono  foundation,  hot  wa- 
ter heat,  full  basement,  best 
kind   of   tlnlsh. 


m 

f- 

*  1118 
*i   2026 


„  East  Third  street — 7  rooms 
and  bath,  stone  foundation,  full 
basement;   centrally  located. 


(17-16) 
on    Srd 
floors. 


Nice  7-room  house.  West  end, 
St.;  good  ba.sement.  hardwood 
nice    lot;    price    $3,300. 


# 

% 

s 


* 

East  Fifth  street— 7  rooms  i} 
and  bath,  hot  water  heat,  full  # 
basement;   very  attractive.  •# 

* 

4114  CWad.stone  .street — 5  rooms  and  if 
bath,  hot  water  heat,  full  base-  H- 
nient;    bungalow.  *• 

if- 

The  houses  are  all  attractive  and  if- 


modern.      Kock-bottom    prices. 


Exclusive  Sale. 

W.   M.  PRI.VDLE   St   CO., 
Main  Floor,  Lonsdale  Bldg. 


'  Hlook  this  over— 

—SMALL  PAYMENT  HANDLES  IT— 


|2  500  for  a  well-built  new  house  with 
e'roo.nia  and  bath  on  14th  ave.  e.,  near 
8th    St.;    1   block    from    street   car   line; 

fewer,  water  and  g»8  and  electricity 
n  the  house.  Sni;ill  cash  payment  re- 
quired; balance  monthly.  Lot  40  by 
80  feet.  Do  not  delay  Investigating 
this  proposition. 

WHITNEY    WALL    COMPANY. 

Torrev    HldR. 

Mel.    1368;    Grand    810. 


tomorrow  morning,  afternoon  or  eve- 
ning. Mrs.  Henry  Abraham,  2422  E. 
3rd   St. 

FOR  SALE — Brass  bed,  spring,  mat- 
tress, $10;  missloH  couch,  $10:  dresser, 
$10;  used  only  8  months.  Call  M.  W. 
Turner.   218  E.   1st  st. 

FOR  S.A.LE  —  Fine  oak  combination 
sideboard  and  china  closet:  cost  over 
$50;  will  sell  for  $20.  Call  at  2108 
E.    5th  St. 

^        FOR  sale: — One  new  metal  shoe  !«hln- 

iiedVoomril^ingVoorn  and' dining  room  1    Ing  stand,  at  a  bargain.     Gopher  Shoe 

at    your    own    price;    act    i>romptly    If  |    Repair   Co.,    17    2nd   ave.   w.  

you   wish  to  participate  In  these  real  <5\i  E— Thoroughbred   male   spitz 

\uVzU2   "^*S'«^^"i'.-^~"*'"''"'""      ^''•'       do^:   we^Fl^Ln/d    7'monthrold.'ca^^^ 


if'  ?r 

■'  —WEST    END   BARGAIN—  if 

or  sale — Fine  BO-ft.  lot  on  lower  ■^- 
de    of    Superior    St..    in    heart    of  -^ 
ing   room   tumiUxre,    draperies.    Orien- |  lii^  West    end's    business    dlstrtct;    has  ^\ 
tal    rugs,   odd    chairs,   davenport,    cur-    ;i  frontage  on  Michigan  st   also;  can  >> ' 
tains,  library   t*ble.   Ice   box,    etc.;  aU  I  ^  be  bought  40  per  cent  below  actual  * 
to  be   sold  verr  cheap.     Come  now  or  i  ^.-  value,   on   easy  terms. 


■Jfl 


FOR  SALE — Furniture  stock  to  be  tor. 
pedoed  quickly.  We  will  positively 
vacate  salesrooms  before  May  1  re- 
gardless of  the  sacrifice;  everything 
must  be  sold,  even  though  the  price 
concession  is  more  than  one-half,  this 
means  you  can  praetlcally  furnijsh  the 


W.    Superior    st. 


(27-41) 
rt'oms; 


Fine  home  on  car  line;  7 
hardwood  floors.  full  batli. 
large  porch;  fine  view  of  lake;  near 
school;  large  new  chicken  house;  lot 
50x140;  fine  lawn  and  garden;  price 
only   $3,000;   make  your  own  terras. 


LITTLE  &  NOLTE  CO., 
Exchange   Building. 


MAKE     US    AN     OB'FER- Splendid     3- 

family  brick  flat,  near  center  at  city; 
fiiif  condition:  good  frame  house  on 
rear  of  lot  rents  for  $20  per  month. 
You  can  occupy  a  fine  6-room  flat 
and  also  have  an  Income  of  $48  per 
month,  or  entire  Income  of  $68  per 
month.  Here's  a  splendid  bargain. 
Paved  street.  Price  $6,500.  Make  us  an 
offer.  Little  &  Nolte  Co.,  Exchange 
bldg.  {19-U) 

A  <;OOD  HOME  AND  INVESTMENT. 
$800  cash  and  $35  per  month  for  No. 
606  E.  6th  St.;  2  6-room  flats  with 
stone  foundation,  hardwood  floors, 
electric  light,  gas  for  cooking  and  2 
separate  bathrooms;  rental  value  $43 
per  month;  price  $4,200.  Inquire  own- 
er,  .7.    P.   Z.,   at    same   address. 


FOR   SALE.  •5^ 

it-  '^ 

^.  House,  1130  7th  are.  e.;  6  rooms  ^- 
«.  and  bath,  all  modern  except  heat,  fi- 
if-  Small    cash    payment,    balance    on  if- 

f  terms  to  suit.     Mel.  971  or  Lin.  264.  it- 
or   call   Grand   1789-Y   evenings.  V^ 

if 

'  —FOR    SALE— WEST    END— 


f-room  hou.«»e.  23rd  ave.  w.;  avenue 
paved,  cement  walks  In;  a  bargain; 
|2,700. 

Vernon  st. — A  6-room  house  with 
t;omplete  plumbing;  paved  street;  lot 
60  by  110;  price  $1,925.  Get  this— 
tor  terms  see  ua. 


DeCATGNY    &    PAEPE, 
609    Providence   bldg. 


—HOUSE  FOR  SALE— 


(20-13)  Five-room  brick  house.  Tery 
close  In;  hot  water  heat;  full  base- 
ment; corner  lot:  here's  a  nice  home 
on  any  terms  you  ntay  wish;  see  It 
Quick. 

LITTLE   &   NOLTE  Co.. 
Exchange    Building. 


FOR  SALF, — Lakeside,  bungalow  of 
4  finished  rooms,  room  In  attic  un- 
finished; concrete  foundation,  hot  wa- 
ter heat,  oak  finish,  beamed  ceilings; 
tile  floor  In  kitchen;  large  lot.  fine 
garage;  price  |2.600.  easy  terms. 
(Greenfield  Realty  Co..  416  Providence 
bldg. 

FOR  SALE — 6-room  modern  home  just 
completed;  extra  well  built,  very  com- 
plete; splendid  location,  with  view 
over  lake:  will  make  good  proposi- 
tion to  right  party.  Greenfield  Realty 
Co.,   416   Providence  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — 7-room  house  1  block 
from  car  Hue.  Newly  remodeled.  60 
foot  lot  on  improved  street.  Small 
cash  payment  and  balance  like  rent. 
Will    pay    vou    to    look    this    up.      Call 


r 


60th  ave.  e. 


710  Boulevard  w.  7  rooms.  modern, 
half  block  from  Incline.  Walking  dis- 
tance from  business  section.  For  ap- 
pointment to  see  this  house  call 
Dtiuglas  C.  Moore,  711  Palladio  bldg. 
Melrose    7752. 

1714  E.  6TH  ST Brand   new.  6   rooms. 

modern,  oak  finish,  laundry,  hot  water 
heat  stone  foundation,  location  none 
better;  lot  60x150.  Term-S  $1,000  cash; 
balance  to  suit.  Mel.  S715.  J.  D.  S. 


W. 


HURON    ST..    29TH    AVE, 
TWO    HOUSES 
I    and    6    rooms    eaelu    with    60-foot    lot. 
Prlie      $2,000:      $1,000      cash,      balance 
monthly.     Can  be  sold  singlj-. 


Mel. 


A.    A.   FIDER    CO., 
201    First    National    Bank. 
X6.  Grand    1833-X. 


fan  SALE — Hunter's  Park  home  by 
owner.  A  very  attractive  8-room 
house,  practically  new  with  all  con- 
venlejice.s.  Grounds  nearly  an  acre  In 
size.  Well  Improved  with  shrubbery, 
large  garden,  fruit  trees  etc.  Beauti- 
ful view.  Capital  needed  for  other 
purposes.  Price  $8,500,  terms  to  suit. 
If  Int'Tcited   write  A.   M.  C.   Herald. 

FOR  SALE — We  have  some  fine  lots 
at  43rd  ave.  w.  and  4th  st.  Also  some 
at  60th  ave.  c.,  only  1  block  from 
car  line.  Will  build  you  a  house  on 
any  of  them  after  ycur  own  plan. 
Will  take  some  cash  and  balance  on 
easy  terms.  Call  evenings.  Cole  271-Y. 
Mel.    7203.     Erlckson    <k    Olson. 

Ji'OR  SALE — West  end  burgaln;  don't 
miss  it;  located  In  business  district  at 
2ist  ave.  w.;  adjoins  fine  new  brick 
btilldlng;  lot  60x140  feet;  building  on 
lot  with  Income  of  $86  per  month; 
one  of  the  best  buys  In  the  city;  price 
only  $7  000.  Little  &  Nolte  Co..  Ex- 
change  bldg.  (17-18) 


FOR  SALE — Eight-room  house,  ar- 
ranged for  two  families.  In  first-class 
condition;  will  sell  cheap,  as  I  am 
going    farming.      Call    1620    E.    6th    st. 

FORSALE— A  snap,  on  easy  terms.  7- 
room  house  with  bath,  at  price  lum- 
ber- corner  lot  60x140.  $2,650;  look  up 
at  once.  4402  Cooke  st.    R.  R.  Forward. 

FOR  SALE — By  owner,  modern  2-flat 
brick  building;  6  blocks  from  First 
National  bank;  $6,000.  Address  E  940. 
Her  a  Id^ 

FOR  SALE — By  owner,  new  9-room 
modern  house  on  Jefferson  st.  Call 
Mel.    1481. 

FOR  S.\LE — 5 -room  house  and  lot,  60x 
100:  cheap  for  quick  sale.  Call  at  37 J2 
W.  8th  St. 

i  PRIV.'^TE     HOME     before     and     during 
confinement;  good  eare  by  experienced 

nurse;  infarts  tared  for.     Mrs.  Flnkle. 

213   W^   3rd  St.   Mel.   2454. j  ^^^^  SALE— Cheap 

PRIVATE  HOME  for  women  before  and       ^n    oak    sideboard 


during  confinement;  expert  care;  In- 
fants cared  for.  Ida  Pearson.  M.  D., 
284    Harrison   ave..  St.   Paul.      


TALKING  MACHINES— Largest  stock 
In  the  city.  Complete  outfits  at  special 
prices.  Be  sure  you  get  the  New  Co- 
lumbia Grafonola;  awarded  three 
grand  prizes  and  two  gold  medals  at 
the  worlds  fair;  douMe-faced  records 
66  cents;  ask  for  catalogues  free;  only 
exclusive  talking  machine  store  In 
Duluth.  largest  stock.  Edmont,  18 
8rd  ave.   w. 

FOR  SALE — Dining  room  set.  ma- 
hogany dresser,  library  table  rock, 
er.  sanitary  couch,  book  case.  Domes- 
tic machine,  mattress,  two  large 
rugs  and  dishes.  432  E.  2nd  st. ,  18 
Granville  apartment.  Call  mornings 
or  evenings   after  7   p.   m.  Mel.    6917. 

FOR  SALE — Entire  stocV  of  furniture 
contained  in  salesrooms.  2110-2113 
W.  Superior  st.,  will  be  sold  for  50 
per  cent  less  than  retail  price,  to  cash 
buyers.  Thousands  of  pieces.  Just 
what  you  need  to  furnish  the  home 
cosily.      Cameron   Furniture   Co. 

FOR  SjVLE — Very  cheap  to  close  out 
quick,  one  Bond  player  piano,  al.-<o 
two  fine  pianos,  walnut  and  oak 
cases.  If  you  are  planning  to  purchase 
a  piano,  don't  fall  to  see  thescr.  Wa 
can  arrange  terms.  R.  R.  Forward  A 
Co.,   124    E.   Superior   st. 

FOR  SALE  CHEAP— Office  furniture; 
1  roll-top  desk.  1  roll-top  typewriter 
desk,  1  quartered  oak  long  table,  2 
revolving  desk  chairs,  I  counter  parti- 
tion with  plate  glass.  206  Lonsdale 
bldg.;    Mel.    204. 

F^R  SALE — Two  tubular  boilers,  78- 
Inch  diameter,  12  feet  long,  allowed 
110  pounds  steam  pressure;  boilers 
are  in  first  class  condition.  Apply 
Duluth-Superlor  Dredging  Co.,  46th 
uve.   w. 

FOR  S.\LE — Clean  sweep  of  every 
piece  of  furniture,  rugs  and  stoves, 
all  go  regardless  of  cost,  at  half  and 
many  less.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co..  122- 
124   E.  Superior  st. 

FOR  SALE — Automobile  garage;  port- 
able; size  14  by  20;  price  $76;  corru- 
gated Iron:  can  be  used  for  any  stor- 
age purpo.se.  Call  at  112  W.  1st  at. 
Phone   Mel.    641. 

P'OR  SALE — An  assortment  of  fixtures, 
Includliig  lighting  fixtures,  suitable 
for  furniture  or  other  store,  will  sell 
cheap.  R.  R.  Forward  &  Co.,  124  E. 
Bup.    St. ^ 

FOR  SALE — Second-hand  woodworking 
machinery,  portable  sawmill,  trans- 
mission appliances,  pipes  for  st^am. 
water  and   furnaces.   Duluth  Mach.  Co. 

FOR  SALE — $760  player  piano  for  $285 
and  $376  piano  for  $225,  also  $300 
piano  for  $165.  cash  or  time.  Korby 
Piano  Co..   26  Lake  ave.   n. 

DiXJS  of  all  breeds  bou«ht  and  sold: 
expert  on  dog  diseases;  dogs  boarded. 
Stamp  for  reply.  Gordon  Dale  Kennels. 
Park    Point.    Mel.    6101. 

FOR  SALE — Used  gas  ranges,  re-enam- 
eled and  put  In  good  repair  at  very 
easy  figures.  Anderson  Furniture 
Co..  21at  ave.  w. 

FOR  SALE — Two  velvet  store  window 
drapery  and  window  floor  covering; 
will  sell  cheap.  121  1st  ave.  w.  Mel. 
1366. 

FOR  SALE — New  $85  cabinet  gas 
range  nerer  been  used,  price  rea- 
sonable.  Mel.    7483.    1809   Jefferson   st. 

or  exchange,   gold- 
and    Idaho    heater, 
4  E.  6th  St. 


dog; 
Mel. 


well  trained,  7 
8018. 


FOR  SAI.,E — Ono  set  of  *lngle  harness, 
cheap  If  taken  at  once.    418  6th  ave.  e. 

FOR  SALE — $350  new  piano;  will  take 
$126    cash.      Address    A    941.    Herald. 

FOR   S.\LE— Furniture,   odds   and   ends 
at    half    price.      Boston    Music    Co. 

FOR   SALE — Collapsible   baby    go-cart, 
goi^    conditlu<t.    704    E.    4U>.    at. 

FOR    SALE — Fleinlsli      oak      buffet,     1 
sectional  bookcases.     Mel.  €236. 


*  A.  W.  TAUSSIG  &  CO.,  #  , 

-}(.  407  Providence  Bldg.  # 

if  if4fif'if'9f*ifif-if^ci:'if^ifi(-if^-^ifi!-^7:-  ■:y}^ 

FOR  SALE — Snap;  $2,500  cash  will  buy 
a  double  lot.  60x140  feet,  on  Com- 
monwealth ave..  N*ew  Duluth  business 
section;  all  Improvements;  adjoining 
60  feet  held  at  $3,500.  Axel  Friedman. 
200   Manhattan  bldg. 

FOR  SALE— ^Jarden  tract.  160  by  140 
feet,  with  water,  gas  and  sew^er;  only 
5  blocks  from  Lakeside  school;  $50 
cash,  $15  monthly,  no  Interest;  price 
$?60.  Greenfield  Realty  Co.,  416  Pro- 
vidence bldg. 

FOR    SALE — Big   lots.    Improved,    with 

water,    gas   and    sewer,    near    Lakeside 

school;  $360  each.  $10  cash.  $6  monthly. 

Greenfield   Realty   Co.     416    Providence 

i    bldg. 

IFOR  SALE— Lots  60x140  feet,  good 
garden  tracts.  $276  each,  $5  monthly; 
right  where  people  live.  Greenfield 
Realty  Co..   416    Providence  bldg. 


ACCOUNTAWTS. 

JAMES  "s?  MATTESON.   C.   P.    A, 

(Minnesota  and   Wisconsin), 

700-701    Alworth   Building. 

Audits.    Estate    and    Commercial 

Accounting   and    Investigations. 

Established    1909. 

Phones:  Mel.   4700;  Grand  71. 


—JOHN    E.    MACGREGOR— 

Public   Accountant   and   Auditor. 

601    Sellwood    Bldg.      Mel.    67a. 

DAVID    QUAIL    &    CO. 

Chartered  Accountants. 

Certified    Public    Accountants. 

401    Torrey    Bldg.,    Duluth. 

Highest    references.      Inquiries   invited. 

AWNINGS.   TE3¥TS,    PACK§ACKS. 

Polrler  Tent  &  Awning  Co.,  413  E.  Sup. 
Both  phones.  Horse  and  wagon  covers. 

AWNINGS— Duluth  Tent  &  Awning  Co., 
1608    W.    Superior  St.    Lin.    86. 


FOR   SkLE — Iron    bed.      with      spring, 
small   kltcherf  table-.     Mel.  1777. 


FOR      SALE — Large       $lxe      Universal 
range:  cheap.     323  8th  ave.  w^ 


FOR  S.\LE — Child's  white  enamel  crib; 
gg-cart      209   Pittsburgh   ave. 

FOR  SALE — Brown  wicker  baby  buggy; 
price  reasonable.     Mel.  2636. 

FOR    SALE- 

table.     1816 


-Golden    oak 
E.    2nd  St. 


dining    room 


FOR  SALE  —  Manure: 
("all    CJrand    1964-A. 

F(JR  SALE— 
dence  bldg. 


FOR 
40S. 


orders     taken. 


rash  register.     603  Provl- 


SALE— Piano,    cheap.     Call    Mel. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES 


FOR  SALE— Lot  14,  block  62,  Gary, 
First  division;  sidewalk,  sewer  and 
water:  cheap  for  cash;  $650.  James 
Adcock,  1151r^  W.  1st  St. 

FOR  SALE — Corner  lot  58  by  150.  20th 
ave.  E.  and  Jefferson  St.;  will  sell 
cheap;  am  leaving  city.  H.  B.  Wein- 
ateln.  106   W.   Michigan  at. 

FOR  a  home  site  at  Englewood  Farms 
or  a  cottage  site  at  Pike  Lake,  see 
"W.  Van  Brunt.  108   Providence  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — $2,000  cash  will  buy  10 
choice  lota.  Fiftyfirst  avenue  west.  C. 
F.  W.   Korth.  6020   Roosevelt  at. 


FOR  SALE] — City  property,  houses  and 
lots:  farms  and  timber  land.  O.  G. 
Olson,  314  Columbia  bldg. 


FOR  RENT— STORES  AND  OFFICES 


ASHES,  CIKDERS.  BTC,  REMOVED. 

Ashes,    cinders    and    manure    removed. 
Merrill.    Mel.    1890;    Grand    1488-X. 


ARCHITECTS. 

GILIUSON   &   CARSON,    818-14   Glencoe 
bldg.      Mel.    5622;    Grand    1785-X, 

CARDSI 

Business  Cards,   300,   $1;  Calling  Cards, 
100.  39c.  Kask  Prlntery,  114  E.  Sup.  st. 

CAMERAS  AJTD  KODAKS. 

—ARCADE    CAMERA   SHOP — 
110  W.   Superior  st.   Amateur  finishing', 
kodaks  and  camera  supplies. 


HAT  SHOP. 

Any  Panama,  straw  or  soft  hat  cleaned. 

blocker     or     remodeled. 

Special  attention  to  mall 

orders.  New  Grand  Shine 

parlors,  210  W.  Superlori 

St.     Grand  689. 

THE      CENTRAL      HAT 

works.    S09    W.    Sup.    St. 

Gus  Klntonls,    manager. 

lats  cleaned,  reblocked 

-  , — : *"<!    repaired.     We    call 

for  and  deliver.  Grand  ISStJa 


MUSICAL   IXSTRUME.VTS. 


^:".-9t 


A.  Haakonsen.  dealer 
and  expert  repairing, 
at  J.  W.  Nelson's,  i 
E.   Superior  st. 


Gibson  mandolins  and  guitars,  banjos, 
banjo-mandolins,  old  violins,  cellos. 
Ben    B.    Miller,    agent.    Grand    1622-X. 

Pianos,  violins,  vlctrolas.  sheet  music, 
etc.     Boston   Music   Co. 


CARPET  CLEANING   WORKS. 

INTERSTATE    CARPET     Cleaning   Co. 
1908    W.    Michigan    st.      Both    phones. 

WE  RENT  electric  cleaners.  $1  to  $1.60 
per  day.     Anderson  Furniture  Co. 


CHIMNEY     SWEEP. 

ED   McCARTY.      chimney      sweep    and 
furnace   cleaning.    Call   Lake.   46-L. 


if 
if 
» 
■if- 
* 


_L(X>K  Tftl^  UP  QUICK— 

FOR  SALE. 
ESTABLISHiiP  FISH  COMPANT, 


jf.  With  full  fishing  equipment,  first 

if.  class  ateam  tug   with  steam   net 

hauler,     gasoline     launch     and     a 


f&  STOREROOM    AND   FULL  if 

*  BASEMENT.  -ff 
jj^  # 
if  Suitable  for  store,  laundry  or  small  -;^  i  KNUDSON — Chimney  sweep  and  furnace 

*  factory,    126    E.    lat   St.;    very   rea-  *|    cleaner.  Fire  headquarters,  Mel.  46. 
^  sonable   rent.  i^ 
if.  RICHARDSON,   DAY  &  CHEADLE  if 

*  COMPANY,  if 
if                   Exchange  Building.  ■J* 


^  «^ 

*  HAVE  THREE  NICELY              if 

ie  ARRANGED  ROOMS.                 if 

if  if 

if-  Suitable    for    doctor    and     dentist  ii- 


DANCING   ACADEMY. 

RYAN'S — The  school  that  makes  good 
dancers.  Classes:  Mondays,  Tuesdays 
and    Thursday.     Call    Mel.    4618. 


COFFIN'S  ACADEMY— Classes  Monday, 
Tuesday    and    Thursday.  Either  phone. 


FRENCH    DRV    CLEANERS. 


#  or  Polish  preferred.     Apply- 

•*         ANDERSO.N'S  DRU(J   STORE. 

■*  2901   West  Third  Street. 


^  number    of    sklfts.    full    equipment  ^!^  ofClce;  good  location;  Scandinavian  •?r  |  PHONE    1245    and    our    auto    will    call 

*  of      nets,    fish    house      at      Grand  ^    ---■■•---       -  - 
Sr-  Marais  and  Isje  Royale.     Will  sac-  i!^ 
;•<  rlflce    price    f^r    quick    acceptance,  if 
T>t  Other  business  to  attend  to  Is  rea-  *    ..^ 

*.  son  for  seHinSO-Eaulpnaent  in  good  #   .;^-:i^5,'.:;!t^7,^jit^-:?,^';;(i.;^,i^3*i^f,^^ 

•4.  <>r>niiitlnn   to  «lart  operations  soon  if    • • 

*  as    lake   openl.     A   good   man    can  H  \  i^';:'ifiC'1fiS-iHfi(^(if-ii'iC-i6^?ci(rif^if-7(^ifi(-ii^ 
i^  easily  clear  60  per  cent  of  his  In-  if^^ 
ft  vestment  In   one   season.     Address  ^  |  » 
,i  V   96,  Herald.  *i* 

%^yf.}y};.if'if^yifTi^if^if'if'i(-^t-if^i^-^-^^'-^^i'^ 


MOTION  PICTURE  EQUIPMENT. 


MOTION  PICTURE 
oullits  bought,  sold 
and  exchanged.  Bar- 
gain list  free.  Na- 
tional Equipment  Co., 
.Motion  Picture  Ma- 
chines and  Supplies, 
417  W.  Michigan  «t., 
Duluth. 


MEDICAL  BATHS. 

DR.  K.  A  LEE,  chiropractic  special- 
ist; cure  or  no  pay  for  rheumatism 
stomach  and  kidney  trouble.^  Bath* 
1826    E.   Superior  st.   Mel.    8125. 


OPTOMETRIST  AND  OPTICIAN. 

CONSULT  A.  L.  NORBERG,  optomet- 
rist and  optician,  201  Vi  W.  1st  st.  for 
economical  buying  and  correct  fitting 
of  glasses;  satisfaction  guaranteecf. 
We  grind  our  own  lenses.  Established 
In  business  1891.  Registered  by  ex- 
amination   1901 


PIANOS  REPAIRED  AMD  TUNED. 

—THE     PI.\NO    SHOP— 
Tuning,   finishing  and  lepairlng.  Greg- 
ory   &    Kristensen.    1805    W     Superior 
gt.    Melrose    5621;    Lin.    295-X. 

DULUTH  PIANO  Repair  factory,   alley 
entrance,   812 ^^    W.    Ist   st.   Mel.    464. 


MRS  K.  THORSTKNSON,  nurse  and 
midwife;  private  home.  1602  28th  St., 
Superior,    Wis.      Ogden    851-X. 

MRS.  H.  OLSON,  graduate  midwife; 
private  hospital  and  home.  329  N. 
61th  ave.  w.  Phones,  Cole  173;  Cal.  270. 

MRS.  HANSON,  graduate  midwife;  fe- 
male complaints.  413  7th  ave.  e.  Zen. 
1225. 

Mrs  Ekstrom.  graduate  nildwlfe.  1921  Vii 
W     3rd   St.     IJn.    163-D:    Mel.   7168. 


nearly  new. 


FOR  SALE — Two  second-hand  pianos 
In  first-class  order.  The  Piano  Shop. 
18 OS  W.  Superior  st. 


WALLPAPER 

Experienced   and   reliable   paper-hanger 


F(3R  SALE — Household  furniture,  ex- 
cellent condition;  owner  leaving  cltjr. 
Call   «$1    E.    2nd  st. 


FOR  SALE — New  cedar  rowboats  and 
launches.  Patterson  Boat  Co..  tth  ave. 
w.  and  Railroad  st. 


FOR  S.\LE — Player  piano,  with  music, 
at  a  bargain:  eiwy  payments.  Edmont. 
18   »rd   ave.   w. 

FOR  SALE — Glass  floor  display  case. 
6x3;  very  cheap.  Call  Miss  Horrlgan. 
(3ak    Hall    bldg. 

FOR     SALE — Complete     4-room     outfit 


FOR  SALE— Buffet  and  family  liquor 
store  In  St.  Paul.  Minn.;  established 
fifteen  years;  long  lease;  Independent; 
large  family  trade;  agency  for  oue  »t 
the  best  beers  In  America.  Price 
$14  000.  or  will  consider  partner  for 
h a  1  f.     Address  U  124.  Herald. 

FOR  RENT — 16 -room  hotel  In  a  new- 
sawmill  town  on  the  Iron  Range,  on 
a  1  or  2-year  lease;  furnished  com- 
plet<»ly;  rent  very  reasonable.  Also  a 
good  opportunity  here  for  a  barber 
shop.     Write  M  86,  Herald. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  sale  gro- 
cery  store.  12  blocks  from  end  of 
Woodland  car  line  on  Calvary  road; 
will  consider  renting  building  and 
selling  stock  and  fixtures.  Grand 
2212-D.  

BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  sale— At  a 
bargain,  old  established  tailoring, 
cleaning  and  repair  shop,  doing  first 
class  business;  reason  for  selling,  oth- 
er business.     Write  F  71.  Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Hotel.  32  rooms,  doing 
good  business;  fine  chance  for  some 
one;  Superior  street  depot  location; 
$700  will  handle;  hurry;  deal  with 
owner.      Write   IT   110.   Herald. 


if- 
if\ 

* 


if 

'  if.  Portion  of  office  In  office  building  -/f 

#  at  Superior  st.  and  3rd  ave.  w.;  ^i 
■?{.  very  desirable  and  cheap.  Write  ?^  j 
if.  Y  112.  Herald.  -X- 

*  *| 
ii-  if 


Prompt   attention    to    out-of-town   or- 
ders.   East    End    Dry    Cleaners. 

FUH.MTURE   RE-COVERED. 

Let  Forsell   do   your   UPHOLSTERING. 
334    E.    Superior    st.     Both    phones. 


-WILL  RENT- 


FLORIST    AND    NURSERYMAN. 

Duluth  Floral  Co..  wholesale,  retail;  cut 
flowers,    funeral    designs.    121  W.  Sup. 


F^nrSXTE-Newly  built.  6-room  house;  j  ^^r,t'furni.h*new'  and"  upTo^-datT  0^^    I    of  nearly   new  furniture.  826   6th  ave. 
all   conveniences,      except      heat,      full      .^--g    and     paper     an     ordinary     sized  I    e..    upstairs.      

nd 


stone  basement,  also  new  barn;  cheap 
small  cash  payment,  balance  monthly 
Call    310    N.    62nd    ave.    w. 


FOR  SALE— 724  10th  ave.  e..  «-room 
hou.^ie;  absolutely  modern;  hot  water 
heat;    part    cash.     Phone   Mel.    3927. 

FOR  SALE— Cheap,  by  owner.  S-room 
house:  25-foot  lot.  Call  3«ll  Water 
0X,;   Grand   ISSS-A. 


room   for   $4.50.  .,  ,     . 

neutly   dnne;    prompt   and   satlsfactorjr 
work    guaranteed.       Decorator.    31    1^ 
2nd  St.     Mel.  430$;  Grand  596-X. 


UPHOLSTERING 


Furniture.    Automobiles    —    Reasonable 
price,  E.  Ott,  lit  1st  ave.  W.  Phones. 


FOR  sale: — $660  player  piano;  cash  or 
terms  can  be  arranged.  $246.  Z  167. 
Herald. 

F<JR  SALE — Pretty  white  and  tan  fe- 
male toy  fox  terrier.  17  W.  5th.  Mel. 
4229. 


FOR   SALE — I   have   a   dandy   6-month, 
old  female  Airedale;  $6.     Douff.  182-lf. 


FOR  SALE — By  owner,  small  grocery 
store,  postofflce  In  connection;  located 
near  railroad  shbps;  prl<e  reasonable; 
terms  If  desired.  Address  O.  O. 
Woods.    Hopper.    Minn. 

FOR  SALE — A  «niall  cigar  store;  good 
location,  cheap-  rent,  doing  a  good 
business:  owner  going  in  a  larger 
business.     Call  3l«  E.   6th  st. 

FOR  SALE— Moviskg  picture  theater. 
Jolng  nice  buskn««s;  owner  In  other 
business:  bear  eJosest  Investigation. 
Write  owner.   ICaH4.   Herald. 


FUNERAL    DIRECTOR. 

OLSEN'"&^'HOP?S?iANr^0rr'w.    Su- 
perior St.;  Lin.   10;  Mel.   7620. 


PAPERS    AND    MAGAZINES    BOUGHT. 

DON'T  THR(JW  away  old  magazines 
and  newspapers;  we  buy  them.  Du- 
luth Paper  Stock  Co.  Grand  2025.  Mel. 
6339. "^^ 

PAINTING  AND  PAPERING. 

WHEN  YOU  want  to  paint  and  paper, 
call  Dudley  for  right  prices,  Mel. 
1390-X;    (irand    1488-X. 

PATENTS. 

All  about  patents:  consultation  free. 
S.  Geo.  Stevens.  716  Fidelity.  Mel.   3121 


PLUMBING. 

tIiE   ^ANI-f  ARY^Plumbing^  Co!.    34 
1st    St..    plumbing    and    heating. 


W. 


FOR    RE.XT     stores. 

At  818  W.  1st  St..  most  central  and 
best  business  location  on  W.  Ist  st.; 
fine  storeroom.  25  by  140.  In  strictly 
fireproof  building;  with  lowest  in- 
surance rate  in  city;  will  decorate  to 
suit;  possession  May  1.  Call  Grand 
or   Mel.    226. 

W.  C.   SHERWOOD  &  CO., 

118    Manhattan    Bldg. 

FOR  RENT — New  store  building.  29o8 
W".  Srd  St.;  30  by  70.  suitable  for  dry 
goods  and  millinery;  furniture  or 
general  merchandise;  steam  heat; 
ready  May  1.  Apply  Anderson's  Drug 
Store.    2904    W.    3rd   st. 


FOR   RENT— (3ne 
for     restaurant; 


could   be   used 


FOR  SALE3 — Boat  and  boatbouse;  one 
24-foot  gasoline  boat  with  20-hor8e 
power  engine;  fully  equipped:  all  In 
good  condition;  speed,  16  miles;  for 
sale  cheap,  $825  takes  It  or  trade  for 
automobile.  Call  Cal.  319-L  between 
6  and  7  p.  m. 


living    rooms; 


BUSINESS  CHAJ^cfes— Young  man  has 
few  hundred  dO|llars  to  Invest  In  some 
good  business  '  with  services.  Write 
P   127.   Herald.,;  ,',      


FOR  SALE — By'rtilmer.  small  rooming 
and  boarding  lv»Mse  near  depot;  $500 
will  handle  it;  low  rent.  Write  Z  118. 
Herald.  ;      ;  


store; 

three 
full   basement  and   icebox;   rent  cheap 
If  taken   at   once.     Write  or  call   Mrs. 
Hanna    Carlson.    Iron    Junction.    Minn. 

FOR  RENT — Floor  space  suitable  for  I 
storage  or  small  manufacturing  con-  I 
cem.  Call  Lane-Golcz  Printing  Co..  ! 
182  W.  Michigan  st.;  Mel.  1604.  Grand  I 
2369-D.  I 

SUMMER  RESORTS  | 

FOR  SALE — La-ge  camp  sites  on  beau- 
tiful Lake  Vermilion;  sand  bathing 
beaches,  parks,  docks,  wells,  etc.; 
monthly  payments  as  low  as  $2.  with- 
out interest;  all  sites  sold  on  our 
"money  back"  guarantee.  Gray-Wer- 
tln  Co.,  Alworth  bldg.,  Duluth. 

FOR  SALE — Prettily  located  summer 
cottage  on  Poltegaraa  lake,  five  miles 
from  Grand  Rapids.  Good  auto  road. 
Fine  fishing  and  hunting.  A.  L.  La 
Frenlere.  Grand  Rapids.  Minn. 

BEAUTIFUL  wooded  camp  sites  on 
Akiey's  Point.  Lake  Vermilion.  1  acre 
In  slxe.  Map  and  Information  from 
Wakemup  Bay  Outing  Co..  606  Torrey 
bldg..   Duluth.  Minn. 


FOR  SALE — 23  foot.  6  foot  beam  mo- 
torboat.  4  cylinder.  12-horse  power 
Kermath  engine  new  in  1914.  run 
V3ry  little  since  then,  now  at  Duluth 
Boat  club,  might  assume  on  small 
piece  of  land;  prefer  cash.  C.  D.  Bed- 
ford,  Rushmore,   Minn. 


FOR  SALE — 6  launches  and  2  hulls;  20 
to  40  feet.  Peterson  Boat  Livery,  Su- 
perlor.     Old  phone. 

FOR  sale: — Two  16-foot  rowboats  and 
boatbouse.     Call  Grand  996.  C.  Schobor. 


LOST  AND  FOUND 

LOST Child's    cross    of    sapphires    and 

pearls  on  f:ne  gold  chain  some  time 
late  last  summer.  Liberal  reward  for 
return  of  It  or  Information  regarding 
It.     Phone  MeL  8206. 

LOST — Win  party  who  found  parcel 
containing  1  doxen  spoons  near  26th 
ave.  w;  and  2nd  st.  return  them  to 
2426  W.  2nd  st.  and  receive  reward. 


TIMBER  LANDS 


' 

* 

m^  * 


W^INDOW^   CLEANING. 

National  Window  Cleaning  Co.,  expert 
In  cleaning  woodwork,  wall  paper. 
marble,  etc.  Our  work  must  prove  sat- 
isfactory;  prices   reasonable.   Mel.  680. 


TIMBER  and  cut-over  lands  bought; 
mortgage  loans  made.  John  Q.  A. 
Crosby.  806   Palladio  bldg. 

FOR  SALE  —  Several  good  timber 
claims,  cheap.  Northern  Realty  Co., 
627  Manhattan  bldg. 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 

Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Rail  Road. 

"YermlUon    Roate." 


DUUTH— 

1       Lewe. 

kntm. 

Enlf*    Slver,    Two    H»r1ian, 
•tmv,    Eljr,    Wlnton.    Au- 
iw*.     Blwatiik,     McKinkr 
gpwtit.      Ikvelrtii,     UUtjeft, 
Viictnla. 

•  7-.3te.m. 
1130!>.«. 

tllJOi.a. 

SlOlop*. 
sl0.4&p.a. 

•— Dall/.  t— I)«l^  txctvi  Sunday,  t— MlMd  trata 
learn  dall/  frun  Flftf^ntti  Avemw  VmA  StAttoa. 
5— Mixed  train  arrlTcs  daily  rxrept  Sunda>-  at  FlflMDth 
AtroiM  £a«t  StatiaB.  x— Arrtni  Lolua  Depot  ~ 
only. 


FOR    SALE — Cerltt^lly   located   proper- 
ty,   used    for    i^idliig    house;    5-year 


lease  to  good  parties. 


206  Palladio  bldg. 


FOR   SALE — Grocery   business;   for   In- 
formation   calbdarand   659-D;    Melrose 


WATCHES  REPAIRED 

Bring  your  watch   to  Garon    Bros.,  to 
have  It  repaired   right.   217   W.   1st   st. 


jiisciitE  m  m  nEiJuo 


LOST — Saturday  afternoon,  black  fox 
muff  in  some  store  on  Superior  street; 
reward.     Call  Mel.  2863  or  Ltn.  104-A. 

FOUND — Gold  watch  fob;  owner  can 
have  same  by  paying  for  advertise- 
ment.    Grand   1666-Y. 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED 

BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED— 
Strictly  private;  references  must  be 
furnished.      801   E.    4th  st. 


DULUTH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 

Offices     42«  Weirt  Sapert*r  St, 


Leafe. Antw. 

r  Elbblai,   Chktaola.   Vlrflnla.  E«*-i 
•7:40bb(    leth,   Coleralnr.    Sharon.    tMnun-    1*  33lM 

(       t«lii   liw.    tipaita.    BiwaUk.       i 

f       Ulbbiof.    CUslMliB.    Sbarao, 
1Ham\  Virdnla.    Kfekt^ 

i  CoteralM. 

f        \lP|tai«, 

A  CtOihela 

I.  HlbMsc. 


n84l«a 


I*^ 


»mim 


•— Daily. 
•Uk. 


t— Dally   except    Soaiay.     $— Exee^    H- 


BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED— A  pri- 
vate family:  84.6«  per  week.  Call  at 
3   S.   6l8t   ave.   w.  

Modem    furnished     room    with    board. 
Mel.  4184.  tl*  EL  8rd  ■«. 


Cafe   Observation    Car.    Mlssabe    Rang* 
Points.   Solid  Vestibuled   Train. 

BVLUTM  k  MITVCM  HINMCSOTA  RAILWAY. 

tllM.  618  tHMiaU  ll^a..   IMatk. 

TratM   iimwirt   at  Kaife   ni«r  dally    (esinpt  SanSay) 

Vltli  D    *  I.  ■.  t»>w  >M*ls>  ixdatk  at  TJ6  a    m. 

utWm  •(  IMlutk  (Ka«M)  at  If  J&  p.  a.     Ukmh  si 


1 
1 

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■f  ■-  f.UMIMIII  .im-.U  ■    ■! 


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Thursday, 


THE  DUIiUlH  HERALD     ap  1 13  me 


COME  Ti  TII^E 


TELEPHONE 

YOUR  WANT  ADS 

-TO  THE- 

DULUTH  HERALD 

Both  Phones  324 

T  E  I.  1:  r  II  O  .\  K       WANT      ADS— Are 

chaiK'tl  lit  th«'  =ame  rate  as  oash  ads, 
and  collti  tlons  will  be  made  at  your 
home  or  offlte  as  soon  as  possible 
thereafter.  This  is  an  acoommodatlon 
eervlre,  and  pavmetit  should  be  made 
promptly  when  the  bill  la  presented. 
»o  a-j  to  avoi.l  furtlier  annoyance  and 
to  aid  the  efficiency  of  our  service. 
Alwuv.s  ask  that  your  telephone  ad  be 
repeal,  d  back  to  you  by  the  telephone 
ad  tak«r,  to  make  sure  that  it  has 
bcfii  concctly  taken. 
DI.IM)  ADS — No  answers  to  blind  ads 
will  be  Kivtn  unh  s.s  ticket  is  pros<nt- 
ert  at  time  of  request.  Always  save 
tlck<t  .showinf?  key  number  when 
pla<  In^  blind  ads.  Herald  employes 
are  not  permitted  to  tell  who  any  ad- 
vertiser is.  Answers  to  out-of-town 
blind  ails  will  be  forwarded  without 
extra  co.^Jt. 


One    «>iit    a    Word    Each    Insertion. 
Ku  Adv«'rllnement   I.rnn  Than   15  Out*. 

"         HELP  WANTED^MlALf 

11\'AXTED — Duluth  Jobber  desires  re- 
liable njlddle-aped  man  with  clean 
record  as  city  salesman;  prefer  one 
that  has  had  drygoods  experience; 
ealnry  and  commission;  grlve  full  par- 
ti" ulars  as  to  experience  and  refer- 
ences.     Write    Y    86.    Herald. 

WANTICD — Youner  man,  be  a  barber. 
We  teach  you  cheaply  and  thoroughly 
and  furnish  tools  free.  Write  or  call 
for  free  catalogue.  R.  Modern  Barber 
coUeRe.  20>>.  K.  .Superior  st.,  Duluth, 
or  333   K.    7th  St..   St.   Paul.  Minn. 

WAXTKD — Uoy.  over  16.  In  a  general 
capacit.v,  one  that  would  like  to  learn 
the  linen  business;  must  be  clean  cut 
and  willlnK;  wages  54  weekly  to  start; 
answer  in  own  handwriting  with  par- 
ticulars.     U    117.    Herald. 

^'ANTKD — Men  with  some  cash  capi- 
tal to  travel  with  moving  picture 
ehows;  get  our  bargain  lists.  National 
Kquipnient  Co.,  motion  picture  ma- 
chine.vand  supplies,  417  W.  Michigan 
ct..    DttJuth.  Minn. 

HAVC  r.OOD  POSITIONS— 

leal  and  com- 
is     and     non- 

'especially  welcome.     Consul- 


>r  mei«jjn  i-lorlcal.  technlci 
lercial^llnes.       Strangers 


talinn   free, 
department. 


Y.  M.  C.  A.   Employment 


I 


';1*:aHN  TI:i.K<;H.\1'HY  —  Itailroad. 
crnunereial  wireless,  also  touch  type- 
■«*ritlnp:  earn  board  while  learning; 
•*\'rlte  for  free  catalogue.  American 
Telegraph    College.    Minneapolis. 

WAXTKD— Button's  Business  college. 
Mi'orhead.  Minn.,  guarantees  a  posi- 
tion after  three  months  at  |60  to  $100 
per  month;  pay  tuition  out  of  your 
salary;  we  pay  railroad  fare^ 

WAXTKD — Young  man.  17  or  18  years 
of  age  for  office  work;  must  be  ac- 
curate nt  figures  and  willing  to  work; 
cplendid  chance  for  advancement. 
Write   V   104.    Herald. 

WAXTEl^ — 600  hunters  to  know  wo 
loan  money  on  rifles,  shotguns,  re- 
volvers; will  hold  till  next  season  be- 
fore sold.  Keystone  Loan  Co.  22  W. 
Superior    «t. 

WA.N'TKD — Customers  who  cannot  af- 
ford to  pay  the  large  retail  price  on 
their  pi.ino.  Talk  to  Gllluson  and  get 
your  piano  direct  from  the  manufac- 
turer. 

W  A  XT  I:D— Orderly  and  general  utility 
man  for  small  hospital:  one  who  can 
run  auto;  $50  per  month,  board  and 
room.  N.  D.  Kean.  M.  D..  Coleralne, 
Minn. 

WAXTKD — 16  rough  carpenters^  45c 
per  hour;  4  pipetttters.  45c  per  hour; 
1  machinist.  46c  per  hour.  Superior 
Plumbing  Co.,  603  Tower  ave.,  Supe- 
rior. 


tVAXTED — Experienced  solicitors;  wo 
need  a  few  more  good  men  for  Duluth 
and  Superior.  Call  for  Mr.  Keil,  Bell- 
net  Installment  Co..  L'02  K.  Superior  st. 

WAXTKD — Railway  mall  clerks;  com- 
mence $75  month;  sample  examina- 
tion questions  free.  Franklin  Instl- 
tute.    Dept.    1860,    Rochester.    N.   Y. 

WAXrKD— Man  and  wife  to  take 
charge  of  farm;  experience  with 
hcr.-ies,  cattle  and  general  farm  work; 
fi..ber.      Write    Y    126,    Herald. 

WAXTKD — Man  and  wife  to  work  on 
farm  7  miles  north  of  Hibbing.  Ap- 
ply 30  Washington  ave..  Flat  B. 
Crand    1865-Y. 

W^ANTKD— Machinists  and  molders. 
No  labor  troubles.  Apply  Lake  Shore 
Engine  works.  Marquette.  Mich. 

WA.VTED  —  Reliable  man  as  porter; 
must  bring  good  reference;  steady 
wiuk.      Apply   at   Frelmuths. 

WAXTKD — First-class  pants  and  vest 
maker;  steady  work.  Morrison's  tailor 
ahop.  20  6th  ave.  w. 

WAXTIOD — At  once,  2  flrst-elass  coat- 
makt  rs.  also  a  young  bushelman.  322 
W.    Superior  st. 

WAXTKD — Coatmakers,  also  trouser 
and  vestmaker.  Hultgren  &  Bowden 
Co.,   Wolvin   bldg. 


WAXTKD— T'ants  and  vest  maker  at 
once.  David  Redeen,  tailor,  Buhl. 
Minn. 


WANTED — Oood  chef  for  Duluth-Port 
Arthur  passenger  boat.  Write  T  108. 
Herald. 


WAXTKD — First-class  tailor.    Apply  at 
once.    A.  Hoekstra.  2429  W.  Superior  st. 


WANTKD — Cash     paid     for     diamonds. 
Watches   repaired.   $1,  6  S.  6th  ave.   w. 

WAXTKD — I»elivery     boy     for     grocery 
■tore.      Write   or  phone   Douglas   41. 

WAXTKD — At    once,     two    coatmakers. 
Pi   Santo  &    Howe,   410  W.   1st  st. 

WA.XTED — Man    and    wife    to   work    on 
farm.     Apply  1926  W.  1st  st. 


WAXTKD — Pressfeeder        for 
press.     Apply  112   W.  1st  St. 


Gordon 


WANTKD — Bushelman  at  once;   steady 
work.     213  W.  Ist  st. 

WAXTKI  >— T  allors.     Louis     Nelson.     30 
E.    Superior  st. 

WANTED— Barber;   steady;    at   123   W. 
1st    St.    


WAiy]EDJ^JENT^ 

WA.N'TKD  TO  RENT — 8-room  house, 
lake  shore.  Lester  Park,  Lakeside  oi 
on  Park  Point.  William  C.  Sargent, 
Providence    bldg. 

WANTED  TO  RENT — 3  unfurnished 
rooms  for  light  housekeeping,  central. 
Broad  620-R,  evenings  only. 

WA.NTED  TO  RK.NT — A  6 -room  house, 
with  yard  and  building  that  can  be 
used  as  shop.     Call  Mel.  6642. 

T^  r>    1(^    RENT — Large    furnished 

■  .n  park  Point,  aullable  for  six 
^ople.     H  130.  Herald. 


One    Cent    a    Word    Each    InNertlon. 
Xo  Advertisement   I..eMi  Than   IS  Centn. 

■!6  # 

>V4  WANTED.  * 

4  * 

■.'i>  Experienced  girls  to  make  mackl-  f^ 

-^  nuws,  shirts,  pants  and  overalls.  '?i- 

a-  Apply—  if- 

;V  CHRISTEXSE.X-MK.VDEXHALL-  ■:(■ 

*  (;RAHAM  CO..  * 

a-  616  West  First  Street.  •* 

LEARN  TO  CUT  and  make  your  own 
waists  and  dresses.  You  can  easily  do 
It  after  taking  the  course  In  practical 
instruction.  Make  clothes  while  learn- 
ing. Miss  Gray's  school.  3rd  floor.  Geo. 
A.  Gray  Co.  Also  all  sizes  and  styles 
of  patterns  cut  to   measure. 

WANTED — $2.60  per  day  paid  one  lady 
In  each  town  to  distribute  free  circu- 
lars for  concentrated  flavoring  in 
tubes;  permanent  position.  F.   E.  Barr 

Co..   Chicago. 

WANTED  —  Women  as  government 
clerks,  $70  month;  Duluth  examina- 
tions coming.  Franklin  Institute.  Dept. 
646  N.,  Rochester.  N.  Y.  


shiny  suits  at  once.  We 
taking  the  shine  out. 
Cleaners.  131  E.  Supe- 
1168. 


WAXTKD — 600 
specialize     In 
Orpheum    Dry 
rlor    St.      Mel.  

WAXTKD — 600  .shiny  suits  at  once.  We 
specialize  In  taking  the  shine  out. 
Orpheum  Dry  Cleaners.  131  E.  Supe- 
rior   St.      Mel.  1168. 


WANTED  —  Thoroughly  experienced 
and  willing  second  girl,  between  2o 
and  35  years  old;  family  of  two.  923 
E.    Stiperlor   St. 

WANTED — Young  girl  to  assist  with 
housework;  small  family;  one  who  can 
go  home  nights.  Apply  16  S.  17th 
ave.   e.  


WANTED— Competent  girl  for  general 
housework,  where  sucond  girl  is  kept. 
Mrs.   E.  A.  Sllberstein.   2328  E.   3rd  st. 

WANTED — <Jirl  for  general  house- 
work; small  family;  $26  per  month; 
no  washing;  references.  2319  L.  Ist  st. 

WA.XTEt>— At  once:  girl.  16  to  18  years 
old  to  care  for  children  and  help  with 
housework.      Apply   1018   E.    3rd   st. 

WANTKD — School  girl  to  mind  chil- 
dren after  school  hours  and  Satur- 
days.   Mel.    6726.    119    Mesaba    ave. 

WANTED — <;irl  to  assist  In  waiting  on 
trade;  experienced  preferred.  Gopher 
Shoe  Repair,   17   2nd  ave.   w. 

WANTKD — Competent  girl  for  general 
housework;  four  in  family;  good 
wages.     6421  Glenwood  st. 

WANTIOD — CJlrl  for  general  house- 
work; 2  In  family;  good  wages.  Mel. 
186.    1626    Jefferson    st. 


WANTED — Experienced  clerk  for  con- 
fectionery store.  Apply  Charles  Stra- 
tlg,  307   W.  Superior  st. 


WANTED — At  once,  disliwasher.  one 
who  can  go  home  nights.  Nora  hotel, 
1916   W.   1st  St. 

WANTED— c:irl  who  understands  bush- 
el work.  Apply  East  End  Cleaners, 
926   E.   Superior   st 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  house- 
work.  909  E.  4th  st.  Call  mornings 
or   evenings^ 

WANTED — First-class  trimmer  for  eve- 
ning work.  Elite  millinery,  319  E. 
Superior  st.  

WA.XTED — tJlrl  for  general  house- 
work; family  of  two.  Apply  1601  E. 
Superior  st. 

WANTED — Competent  girl  for  general 
housework;  no  washing.  1614  E.  Su- 
perior  St. 


WA.N'TKD — At    once; 
farm.      Address    Box 
Minn. 


housekeeper     on 
7,     Deer     River, 


WAXTKD — Good,       experienced       cook; 
must  furnish  reference.  2401  E.  6th  st. 


WANTED — Good       girl       for      general 
housework;    3   In   family.  1028  E.  2nd  st. 


WANTED-— 2  experienced  girls  to  help 
on    pants   and   vests.      26    I'hoenix   blk. 


WANTED — Experienced  cashier:  refer- 
ence.^    required.      Write   X121.   Herald. 


WANTED— Neat      girl      fof        general 
housework;   three  adults.      Lin.   256-D. 


WANTED — <tlrl    between      17      and      20 
years.     Call   1801   E.   6th  after  7   p.  m. 


WANTED — Girl      for     general      house- 
work.    14  N.  19th  ave.   e.  Mel.  6963. 


WANTKD  —  Girl     for     general     house- 
work.    31   Kent  road;   Mel.  2556. 


WANTED  —  Girl      for      general      house 
work.      1901   E.   6th  St.;  Mel.   3347. 


WANTKD — t;irl    to    take    care    of    chil- 
dren after  school.     821  E.  2nd  St. 


WANTED — Scandinavian    girl    for   gen- 
eral  housework.     2231   W.    4th  st. 


WANTKD — Girl  for  general  housework 
616  W.  3rd  st.     Frank  Mucilla. 


WANTKD — Girls    at    Somers'    Employ- 
ment office.  13  E.  Superior  st. 

WANTED— Lady     solicitors;     no     ped- 
dllng.      1806    W.    Superior   st. 

WANTB:D — Good       girl       for       general 
housework.     318    10th    ave.   e. 

WANTED — 2      girls      to      address      en^ 
velopes.     Apply  at  Gately's. 


WANTED — Young    girl    to    assist    with 
housework.     1603  E.  4th  st. 


WANTED — Maker  and  apprentice  girl. 
114    W.    4th    St.    Millinery. 


WANTED— <:irl      for      general    house- 
work.     1206   E.   3rd  st. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general    housework. 
1116  E.  3rd  St. 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
130  6th  ave,  w. 

WANTED— Girl  to  help  in  kitchen.  2631 
W.  Superior  st. 

WANTED— Sewing    girl     at     419 »^      E. 
6th  St. 


WANTED^Experienced   cook.     1306    E. 
2nd    St. 

WANTKD— Maid  at  1816  E.  2nd  st. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  By  college 
graduate,  position  as  lady's  companion 
and  secretary  or  children's  governess; 
best  of  references  given.  Write  H 
123,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —  First-class 
lady  stenographer  and  bookkeeper 
open  for  position;  highly  recommend- 
ed; can  take  position  at  once.  I'hone 
Mel.    1140^ 

SITUATION  WANTED — Refined  mld- 
dle-aged  woman  would  like  position 
as  housekeeper  where  maid  is  kept. 
Phone  mornings  or  evenings.  Mel. 
3670. 


SITI'ATION  WANTED — Practical  nurse 
with  hospital  training  wants  cases; 
confinement  preferred;  reasonable 
prices;  best  of  references.  Call  Mel. 
8132. 


SITUATION  WANTED— By  young  lady 
as  bookkeeper;  3  year.s'  experience. 
Call  between  9:30  and  12  and  1  to  6:30 
p.    m.   Grand    1 625-D;    Mel.    2317. 

SITUATION  wXnTED  —  By  young 
woman,  as  dentist's  or  doctor's  assist- 
ant;  experienced;  goo<l  reference  fur- 
nished.    T  129,  Herald. 


SITITATION  WANTED  —  Young  lady 
wishes  position  as  office  girl;  very 
good   penman.      Write  G   100,  Herald. 

SITUATION        WANTED     —     PracTiral 
nurse      wishes      position.      Mel.      7046 
Mrs.    Aleda    Halverson. 


SITUATION  WANTED— Work  by  the 
day;  store  and  office  cleaning  a  spe- 
cialty.    Call    IJn.   607-Y. 


SITUATION  WANTKD— By  experienced 
stinographer.       Call    Cole    287-D. 


R^omsT^ 

Duluth  Floral  Co..  wholesale,  retail,  cut 
flowere.   funeral  designs.  121  W.  Sup.  at 


For  ''Goodness''  Sake 

and  for  economy  sake,  too,  every  reader 
of  this  paper  should  acquire  the  thrifty 
habit  of  reading  the  Food  Products  ad- 
vertising that  appears  in  The  Herald 
every  Friday  night. 

Not  only  will  you  find  the  newest  foods 
advertised,  but  you  will  also  have  an  op- 
portunity to  select  from  a  complete  list 
of  Saturday  meat  and  grocery  bargains. 

Old  Ben  Franklin  Said 

*'A  penny  saved  is  a  penny  earned." 
Watching  the  Market  Basket  advertis- 
ing in  The  Herald  will  enable  you  to 
save  a  tidy  amount  each  week  in  your 
living  expenses.  Start  tomorrow  to  read 
the  ads,  if  you're  not  already  doing  it. 
Earn  money  by  saving  it. 


One    Cent    ■    Word   Each   Insertion. 
No  Advertlaement  L.eMM  Than  15  Cents. 

?ORJENT^FUiTS' 

—FLATS— 


J.  D.   Howard  &  Co.,   Providence   Bldg. 


One    Cent    a    Word    Each    Insertion. 
Ko  Advertisement  L,esN   Than   16  Cents. 

^oultryTnd  eggs' 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD  IS  THE  REC- 
OGNIZED   POULTRY    MEDIUM. 
It  Is  the  official  paper  of  the  poultry 
raisers    of    Duluth    and    Northern    Min- 
nesota. 

CIRCULATION  LARGEST. 
RATES  LOWEST. 
The  Duluth  Herald  has  the  largest 
cliculation  of  any  newspaper  In  Min- 
nesota loutsido  the  Twin  Cities).  Its 
charges  for  classified  advertising  are 
less  per  thousand  circulation  than 
those  of  any  other  paper  in  the  state. 

Hatching  eggs  from  celebrated  "Point 
o'  I'ines  Farm,"  largest  and  finest 
modern  poultry  plant  in  N.  W.  Pure- 
bred egg-laying  strains.  S.  C.  W.  Leg- 
horns. 15  eggs,  $1.60;  100.  $5.  S.  C.  R. 
L  Reds.  15  eggs.  J1.76;  100.  |6.  Write 
now.      Reserve,    Wis. 

FOR  SALE— Eggs  for  hatching.  S  C. 
White  Leghorn,  $1  a  setting  of  J16, 
or  $5  per  hundred.  Barred  Plymouth 
of  laying  strains  on  free  range.  Both 
phones,  Mel.  7363.  Grand  1019-A.  St. 
James'   Orphanage. 

FOR  SALE — Hammerbeck's  hardy,  dis- 
ease-resisting, winter-laying,  exhibi- 
tion White  Leahorns;  winners  wher- 
ever shown;  eggs  and  chicks.  Send  for 
price  li.«'t.  H.  J.  Hammerbeck,  Supe- 
rior.  Wi.s. 

FOR  SALE— Hatching  eggs  from  this 
years  winning  R.  C.  R.  I.  Re<ls;  Vic- 
land  strain;  year-iound  layers;  $1.50 
fcr  15.  $4.50  f»>r  50;  order  early.  I.  W. 
<iilleland.  607  S-  71st  ave.  w.  Cole  116-A. 

HATCHING  EGGS  from  my  choice 
S.  C.  White  Leghorns;  no  better  lay- 
ing strain;  16  eggs  $1;  100  eggs  $6. 
Mrs  T.  J.  Griffith.  4309  London  roail, 
Duluth;  Lake.  69-K. 

Park  &  Pollard's  poultry  feeds 
are  the  best.  Scratch  feed,  egg 
mash,  growing  feed,  etc.;  wheat 
corn,  etc.  Get  price  list.  Tess- 
inan   Bros.   Co..   26-40    E.    Mich,  st. 

Foit  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  high- 
class  Barred  Plymouth  Rocks.  White 
Wyandottes.  R.  C.  Black  Minorcas. 
White  Leghorns,  Anconas  an.l  turkeys. 
J.    T.    Mlchaud.    Lake.    298-L;    I'ark    4. 

FOR  SALE— White  Rock  eggs.  Flshel 
famous  strain.  No.  1  pen,  $1.60.  15; 
No.  2  pen.  $2,  16.  Herbert  J.  Prout, 
Iron  wood.    Mich. 

FOR  SALE — S.  C.  Rhode  Island  Red 
hatching  eggs.  S.  E.  Patterson.  4628 
Regent  st.     Phone   280-L  Lake. 


One    Cent    a    Word   Each   InNertlon. 
Xo  Advertisement   Lean  Than   15  Cents. 

ON  MGES^  AND  21 

—THE  NEW  ALEXANDRIA— 
A  few  desirable  rooms  now  vacant  at 
special  rates;  well-heated  and  com- 
fortable apartments.  Private  tele- 
phone In  every  room.  Dining  room  in 
in    connection.    322    W.    2nd   et. 

'  — METROPOLE    HOTEL — 

101-5  Lake  ave.  s.;  hot  and  cold  run- 
ning water  in  every  room;  steam 
heat  and  other  modern  conveniences; 
rates    $2    per    week    and    up. 


—ELGIN  HOT 

Nicely    furnished,    steam-heated    rooms; 

best    beds    in    the    city;    hot    and    cold 

rui-.nlng   water.     Rates   $2   and   up   by 

the  week.     321  W.  1st  st. 

MELROSE     HOTEL. 
818    W.    2nd    St.,    well    heated,    pleasant 
rooms    and    board    at    special    winter 
rates.    Mel.    4301;    Grand    2166-X. 

FOR  RENT— When  renting  3  nicely 
furnished  rooms,  bedroom,  dining  room 
and  kitchen.  Including  choice  of  gas 
or  coal  range,  you  would  have  to  pay 
125  to  $35  per  month.  Why  not  buy  a 
Kelly  3-room  outfit  for  $69  and  fur- 
nish your  own  rooms.  Pay  for  It 
monthly  on  our  dignified  credit  plan 
and  be  money  ahead.  F.  S.  Kelly 
Furniture   Co.,    17-19   W.    Superior   st 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room  in  mod- 
ern flat;  private  family;  rent  rea- 
sonable to  responsible  lady;  central. 
Call  Mel.  6686.  or  Grand  2409-A. 

NOTICE — Save  money  on  buying  linens, 
bedding,  etc..  We  sell  at  wholesale; 
get  our  prices.  J.  G.  Valentine  Co.,  8 
E.  1st  St. 


F<^>R  RENT — 2  unfurnished  rooms; 
downstairs;  (suitable  for  housekeep- 
Ing.     Grand  829-A. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room  with 
kitchenette  for  light  housekeeping. 
322    W.   3rd   st. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms;  all  con- 
veniences; $1.75  per  week.  323  8th 
ave.  w. 

FOR  RENT — I'leasant  furnished  front 
room;  gentleman  preferred.  709  E. 
Ist    St. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room,  all  con- 
veniences.  126  E.  6th  St.   Grand  1631-Y. 

FOR  RENT — 2  furnished  rooms  for  light 
housekeeping.     No.  1  W.  Superior  st. 

FOR  RENT — Steam-heated  room  for 
light  housekeeping:.     121  E.  2nd  st. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room;  modern. 
614   1st  ave.  w.     Mel.  3886. 

FOR  RENT — Two  furnished  rooms; 
modern.     210  3rd  ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT — Four  rooms;  all  conven- 
iences.    424  E.  7th  St. 

FOR  RENT — Large  furnished  front 
room.     727  E.  2nd  st. 


R.    1.    RED    settings.    7Bc    Jap    Silkies 
settings.  $3.     H.  I.  Gooch:     Mel.  3861. 

FOR   SALE — Barred     Plymouth      Rock 
eggs,  $1  per  setting.     Call  Douglas  66. 

FOR   SALE — White   Orpington   eggs,    $1 
a  setting.     C.   Hegg.      Cole   361-Y. 


_^mjimoiMvm  y^ 

SITUATION  WANTED— A  young  man 
Is  looking  for  a  position  as  cabinet 
or  Ftairbullder  foreman;  have  10 
years'  experience  as  stairbullder  and 
eight  years  as  cabinet  maker;  can 
read  blue  prints  and  draw  details; 
will  furnish  reference.  If  Interested 
write  Y  119.  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED — Sober  young 
man  wants  work.  Janitor,  elevator 
operator,  bell  boy,  bus  boy.  porter  or 
kitchen  helper;  also  can  work  in  print- 
ing office,  store  clerk;  can  get  good 
reference.     Address  X  107.   Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED — A  young  man, 
able  to  speak  English.  Finnish  and 
Swedish  languages,  wants  some  kind 
of  light  work,  preferably  in  men's 
furnishing  store.  ••21,"  107  Lake  ave. 
s.,   Metr«)pole   bldg^ 

SITUATION  WANTED — Bright,  ener- 
getic young  man,  age  19.  wishes  posi- 
tion as  mechanical  draftsman  or  some 
other  position  with  chance  for  ad- 
vancement; good  habits;  references. 
Write   H   96.  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED — Young  married 
man  with  ability  as  salesman  or  col- 
lector wishes  engagement  after  April 
20;  first  class  refer«nccs  and  bonds 
furnished.     Write  11 3.  He  raid. 

SITUATION  WANTED — Janitor  and 
watchman,  aged  60;  good  habits,  trust- 
worthy and  reliable  in  every  respect 
if  you  want  a  good  man.  Call  A.  P. 
Cook,   courthouse. 

SlTUATlf>.N  WANTED — By  chef,  white 
man.  married,  20  years  experience  in 
hotel  and  restaurant  cooking,  meats 
and  pastry.  R.  C.  Kelly,  307  8*a  st. 
n..  Fargo.  N.  D. 

WANTED — Position  as  cook,  man  and 
wife;  washer  and  launder.  «ieneral 
all-around  repairman,  in  hotel  or  in- 
Btitution.    Write    K    84.    Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED — A  colored  man 
Just  from  the  south  wants  a  job  as 
chauffeur.    Call    Mel.    2709. 


WANTEDJO^Y 

LET  US  SELL 
TOUR  HOUSE  TODAY. 


WHO 


BUYERS 
MEAN    BUSINESS 


are  daily  asking  us  for 
6,  6  and  7-room  houses. 
We  cant  meet  the  de- 
mand. Do  you  want  to 
sell  YOUR  house?  See  us 
today— NOW. 


C.   L.   RAKOWSKY    &    CO., 
200    Exchange    bldg. 

Wanted  to  Buy — Furniture,  heaters  or 
ranges;  we  pay  liberal  prices,  or  will 
allow  you  to  exchange  for  new  furni- 
ture. East  End  Furniture  Co.,  120  E. 
Superior    st.      Grand    2013-X. 

WE  PURCHASE  real  estate  contracts, 
mortgages  and  notes.  Northern  Eqult- 
lea    Co..    612    1st    Kat.    Bank    Bldg. 

WANTED.  TO  BUY— Will  pay  best 
prices  for  second  hand  clothing.  406 
West    Michigan    st.    Grand    2361-A. 

Will  buy  partially  Improved  farm. 
State  price,  exact  legal  description,  in 
letter.  Address  A  927.  Herald. 

We  give  cash  or  new  furniture  for  used 
furniture  or  stoves.  Joe  Popkln,  108 
E.    Superior   st.     Melrose    C4d8. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— Light  1 -horse 
farm  or  lumber  wagon;  must  be  In 
good  shape.    Cole  23Z-A. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — K  or  7-passenger 
second-hand  car;  state  terms.  Ad- 
dress  P  120,  Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY— Large  or  small 
tract  of  land  for  Investment.  Address 
I  69.  Herald. ^ 

WE  PAY  20c  for  heavy  hens.  Call 
Grand  326;  Mel.  81.  L.  Polinsky  &  Co. 


LITMAN    BUYS    clothing    and    bicycles. 
1811   W.    Superior  »t.  Lin.   129-D. 


H.    Popkln   buys   stoves   and   furniture. 
Grand    2337-A.    Mel.    1182. 

WANTED    TO    BUY — Small    light    row- 
boat.     Call   Mel.   7»64. 


STOVE  RBFAIRS 


WE  CARRY  In  stock  repairs  for  10,000 
different  stoves  and  ranges.  C.  P. 
'Wlcsertc  &,  Sons.  AM  £.  Superior  at 


3  rooms.  230  Pittsburgh  ave.;  water 
paid     $6.00 

4  rooms.  303  S.  61st  ave.  w^. ;  water 
paid     $12.00 

4  rooms.  303  S.  61st  ave.  w.;  water 
paid     $18:00 

5  rooms,  1604  London  road;  heat  and 
water     $20.00 

5  rooms.  229  W.  6th  St.;  water 
paid      $16.00 

7  rooms.  1408 V4  E.  2nd  St.;  hot  water 
heat    $30.00 

i^  "^ 

*  FOR  RENT.  * 

*  ^^ 

*  We  have  some  desirable  rooms  ■* 
^  for  light  housekeeping  or  offices  vf 
*•  at  123  W.  Superior  st.  and  220  W.  * 
•ilf  Superior  st.;  rent  from  $8  to  $16  ^- 
*>  per   month.  * 

h-  ZENITH  REALTY  CO..  * 

■»  4  South  First  Avenue  East.  * 
'?(•  ^ 

FOR  RENT — At  315  W.  4  th  St.,  6 
rooms,  bath,  kitchenette  and  large 
wardrobes.  Will  rent  to  one  party  or 
divide  and  rent  to  two.  Building  en- 
tirely remodeled,  as  good  as  new; 
redecorated  throughout;  large,  light 
airy  rooms;  2  fireplaces.  All  con- 
veniences, including  heat.  W.  C.  Sher- 
wood    &    Co.    118    Manhattan    bldg. 

FOR  RENT— At  120  W.  4th  St.,  front  5- 
room  flat  and  bath;  eyery  room  light, 
airy  and  in  splendid  condition;  all 
conveniences  except  heat;  $23  per 
month,  with  bath.  AV.  C.  Sherwood  & 
Co.,   118   Manhattan   bldg. 


FOR  RENT— May  1,  at  118-120  W.  4th 
St.,  2  3-room  flats;  fine  lake  view 
and  large  covered  porch;  large  rooms. 
Will  decorate  to  suit.  $15.00  per 
month.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118 
Manhattan   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — $12.60;  4-room  flat  on  the 
second  floor,  2011  W.  Superior  st.; 
hardwood  floors,  water,  electric  lights, 
bath  and  toilet;  stove  heat;  very  con- 
venient location.  F.  L  Salter  Co..  303 
Lonsdale  blag. 

FOR  RENT — Finest  7-room  modern  flat 
In  city;  all  outside  rooms  In  Minne- 
sota flats.  118  E.  4th  St.;  only  $45  per 
month.  Including  heat  and  janitor 
service.  Chas.  P.  Meyers,  611  Al- 
worth   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 1  3-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building;  1  4-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building.  Apply  Anderson  Drug  Store. 
2904  W.  8rd  st. 


FOR  RENT— 3-room  flat,  $8;  4-room 
flat,  $12.60;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out, sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers,    611    Alworth    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  4-room  furnished 
apartment  on  third  floor  of  Munger 
terrace  for  two  months.  References 
required.  $32.60  per  month.  F.  1.  Salter 
Co.,    303    Lonsdale    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Desirable  flats,  houses 
and  stores.  If  you  are  considering 
making  a  change  we  Invite  an  op- 
portunity for  serving  you.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,  303  Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  4-room  steam-heated 
flat  near  Garfield  ave.  and  Superior 
St.;  water,  gas.  electric  lights,  toilet 
and  bath;  bargain  at  $16.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,   303  Lonsdale  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Small  heated  apartment 
in  desirable  location  in  East  end;  all 
conveniences;  janitor  service;  $40  per 
month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Provi- 
dence  bldg. 


FOR  RENT— 6-room  flat,  central  loca- 
tion with  hardwood  floors,  bath,  gas 
and  all  conveniences  but  heat;  $20 
per  month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Pro- 
vidence  bldg^ 

FOR  RE.NT — Flat,  303  Oxford  st,  five 
rooms  and  bath;  modern  except  heat; 
fireplace;  garden;  $20  per  month.  See 
William   C.   Sargent,   Providence   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat  and  bath, 
all  hardwood  floors  and  flnishing. 
106  N.  27th  ave.  w.  All  conveniences 
except    heat    at    $12.50    per    month. 

FOR  RENT — Attractive  6-room  apart- 
ment; East  end;  white  enamel  bath- 
room, electric  light,  gas  range,  fur- 
nace,  laundry;  $27.     Mel.  1801. 

— FOR  RENT — 
7-room    flat.    716    W.    2nd    st,    heat   and 
water  furnished,  $30.    William  C.  Sar. 
gent.  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 6  rooms  and  large  alcove, 
hot  water  heat;  all  modern  conveni- 
ences. 6  W.  4th  St.  Call  Louis  Oreck. 
416   W.   Superior  st. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat,  ground  floor; 
hardwood  floors  and  finish;  modern 
except  heat;  walking  distance.  Call 
Grand  2069-A. 

\  FOR  RENT — May  1,  6-room  heated  flat, 
newly  d>'C.>r.%ted  throughout;  fine  lake 
view;  all  light  rooms;  $45.  Mel.  2695; 
814   !•:.   Ist  St. 


One   Cent   a   Word   Each  Insertion. 
Xo  Advertisement  Less  Than   15  Cents. 

,^     —FOR  RENT  MAY  1—      * 

•^  ^ 

ii.        BY  MASSACHUSETTS  REAL    7^ 
^  ESTATE  CO.,  18  PHOENIX  BLDG.  * 

'»  f 

a-  * 

^  Heated     flat,     6     rooms;     excellent  ^ 

■^       janitor     service;     706 '^     E.     4th  * 

•vY-       St.— $40.  '^ 

^  ^ 

*  6-room    heated    flat,    with    janitor  -;¥■ 
*-      service,  at  928 >/i  E.  2nd  St.— $30.  *- 

*  —  ii- 

■^  6-room  house,  with  heating  plant,  ii- 
•!i-       at  822   E.   4th  St.- $27.60.  # 

-*  4-room  flat,  with  bath,  at  4011^  E.  if' 
a-       4th  St.— $16.60.  a- 

if-  * 

a-  Offices  In  Phoenix  and  Fargusson  ie 
if-       buildings  at  reasonable  rates.        ■f^ 

a-  * 

*  H.  L.  GEORGE,  Agent.  *■ 

*  Mel.  3;  Grand  49.  •>?- 

*  « 

—FOR  RENT— 

519  E.  Superior  st.,  6  rooms;  water, 
toilet  and  electric  light,  $14. 

1116  E.  Ist  St.;  7  rooms $35.00 

1901  W.  3rd  St.;  6  rooms $16.00 

125  1st    ave.    w. ;    6    rooms $18.00 

114  Park   ave.;    6    rooms $14.00 

2619  W.   3rd  St.;   6  roonis $20.00 

STRYKER.  MANLEY  &  BUCK. 

Main  Floor,  Torrey  Building. 

Both  Phones  165. 

FOR  RENT— 4-room  furnished  flat, 
ground  floor;  electric  light,  gas:  use 
of  phone;  will  rent  cheap  If  taken  at 
once;     706  Lake  ave  S.,  near  bridge. 

FOR  RENT — 4  rooms;  clean  and  neat; 
924  Garfield  ave;  rent  $10  per  month; 
water  free.  Inquire  Wing's  office, 
Palladlo   bldg. 

FOR  RENT— 5  large  light  rooms;  gas. 
bath,  and  electric  light;  hardwood 
floors  and  finish;  newly  tinted.  624 
2nd   ave.    w. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat;  all  conveni- 
ences; up  to  date.  Call  between  9  and 
12   mornings.     Mel.   3272. 

FOR  RENT — Very  desirable  flat;  large 
rooms;  fireplace;  modern.  1809  Jef- 
ferson  St. 

FOR  RENT— 3  and  4-room  flats; 
modern    except    heat.      618    E.    2nd    st. 

FOR  RENT— Talk  to  Giliuson  if  you 
want  to  rent  or  buy  a   good   piano. 

FOR  RENT — Five- room  heated  flat. 
1927    W.    3rd    st.;    Mel.    8358. 

FOR  RENT — March  1,  nice  5-room 
flat.      424   9lh   ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flats,  1  fur- 
nished.      317   E.    5th   st. 


I  Matteson.   S<c 


SECRIETJOC[ETIES^ 

PAU;STI.NE   LODGE   .NO.    79.    A.    F.    *  A. 

M.— Regular  meetings  Hrst  an<l_tl»Jrd  MM- 
day  evenings  of  each  montb  at  7:30  o'clodt, 
Nert  nieeUng.  April  3,  1916.  Work- 
Third  degree  by  past  masters;  6:30  dinner. 
Clement    G.    ToRuscnd.    W.    M.;   Jamn    8. 


FOR  RENT — Heated  7-room  flat  In 
Dacey  apartments  with  water,  heat 
and  janitor  service.  Call  Mel.  or 
Grand    423. 

P'OR  RENT — Large  4-room  furnished 
heated  apartment  In  first  class  condi- 
tion and  very  central.     Mel.  3932. 


FOR  RENT — Five  rooms,  newly  dec- 
orated; modern  except  heat;  $22.60, 
water  paid.      1111   E.    2nd   st. 


FOR  RENT— 3-room  flat,  219  E.  6th 
St.;  bath;  $12  per  month.  William  C. 
Sargent,  Providence  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  furnished  flat; 
central  West  end;  modern  in  every 
respect.     Call  Lin.  466-A. 

FOR  RENT — Modern  6-room  flat;  heat; 
$35  per  month;  18  E.  4th  st.  Inquire 
Bridgeman-Russell    Co. 

FOR  RENT — Five-room  flat;  down 
stairs;  modern  except  heat;  nice  and 
clean.     2321  W.  3rd  st. 


FOR  RENT — Six-room  modern  flat; 
newly  built;  heated;  centrally  lo- 
cated.    681  W.  3rd  st. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  brick  flat. 
607  E.  6th  St.  Call  702  7th  ave.  e,  or 
Grand   1706-Y. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat,  all  conveni- 
ences except  heat.  Inquire  608  W. 
2nd    St. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  i-room  flat.  Ap- 
ply 902  E.  3rd  st ,  or  call  362  either 
phone.  


FOR  RENT — Strictly  modern,  heated 
flat,  4  rooms  and  alcove.  227  11th 
ave.  e. 


FOR  RENT — Modern  5-room  flat,  hot 
air  heat;  newly  decorated.  611  \^  E. 
6th  St. 


FOR    RENT — 4-room      furnished      flat; 
all   conveniences.      Call    916    E.    6th   st. 

FOR     RENT — 4-room     modern     flat.      S. 
S.    Williamson.    616   Torrey   bldg. 


FOR    RENT  —  6-room      brick      corner 
apartment.  East  end.  Mel.   1481. 


FOR    RENT — 6-room      modern,    heated 
flat.   314   2nd  ave  east.   Mel.   4448. 


FOR   RENT — 6-room   flat,    modern.     204 
E  4th  St.    Call  Grand  1905-A. 

FOR     RENT — 6-room     flat;     remodeled. 
Grand   1651-X;    731    W.    1st    st. 


FOR      RENT — Elegant      6-room      flat; 
very  central.     608   W.    3rd   st. 


FOR    RENT — 4-room    flat.      1027    Park 
Point;    call   Lincoln    102-Y. 


FOR    RENT — 6-room    flat,    all    conven- 
iences.  $14.   617    2nd   ave.   e. 


FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat,  all  conven- 
iences ;  $17.     817  E    6th  st. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room,  modern  flat.  7 
E.    6th    St. 

FOR  RENT — Modern,  4-room  flat.  912 
£.  7  th  St. 


AUTOS  AND  MOTORCYCLES 


98    PER  CENT  OF  AUTO  BUYERS 
READ  THE    DULUTH   HERALD. 

Tiie  names  In  which  automobile  li- 
censes are  Issued  have  been  checked 
with  The  Duluth  Herald's  .subscription 
lists,  and  it  was  found  that  98  out  of 
every  100  people  who  buy  cars  read 
The  Duluth  Herald.  If  you  have  a  car 
for  sale  or  trade,  offer  it  in  this  auto- 
mobile column  and  you  will  reach  prac- 
tically every   one  who  will  buy. 


*  * 
if-               WE  HAVE # 

-^  * 

f,i  A  fine  Oakland  6-cyllnder  car  that  •Sr 
a-  we  can  sell  for  $750;  1914  model.  H- 
i^  Here  you   have  a  chance  to  get  a  •^ 

#  big,  easy-riding  car  for  little  if 
'^  money;  It's  a  bargain.  Also  have  -;^ 
if-  other  bargains  In  used  cars.  It  i^ 
ii^  will  pay  you  to  come  and  see  us.  ii- 

a-  * 

ii-  REO  SALES  COMPANY.  H^ 

if^  307  East  Superior  St.  * 

iC'  Old  phone,  6134  Mel.  O^ 

a-  New  phone,  823-Y  Grand.  * 


lO.MC  LODGE  .NO.  186,  A.  F.  t  A.  M.— 
Regular  meeting  second  and  foartb  Monday 
evenings  of  each  month  at  7:30.  St jt 
meeUng.  April  24,  1916.  Work— S;cond  de- 
gree. William  J.  Works.  W.  il.;  Burr 
Porter.  Sec. 

KKYSTO.NE  THAPTEE  .VO.   20.   R.   A.    M.-l 

Stated  ronvocations.  second  and  fourth 
Wednesday  evenings  of  each  montb  at  730 
o'clocjt.      Next   meeting,    special,    .\prll    26, 

1914,   «t  4  p.   m.     Work— Bojal   Anh  de- 

grer.  i..gular  meeting  at  7:30.  Work— Regular  biisinesf 
and  Royal  Arch  degree.  Stanley  L.  Mack,  H.  P.;  Al- 
fred Le  Richeaux,   Sec. 

nULlTH  COr.NTIL  .NO.  6.  B.  t  S.  M.— 
Stated  cooTocatlons.  third  Friday  of  eacii 
month  at  7:30  oclo«k.  Next  mf^tlng. 
April  21,  1916.  Work— Royal  and  Stlert  ud 

suptnxcellent   degree.      Majnard    W.    Turner,    T.    1.    U.) 

Alfred  Le  Ricbeux,  secretary. 


recorder. 


DILITH   COMMJi.NDERY   .NO.    18.   K.    T.— 

Stated  convocations  first  Tuesday  of  eack 
month  at  7:30  oilock.  Next  conclaw, 
April  18,  1916.  Prill  at  old  armory. 
Charles  H.  Fugle.   Com.;  Newton  H.   Wilson, 


lotting.     Eva  : 


J^ 


■octal. 


scorn SH    rite  —  REGILAR    MEETINCg 

every  Thursday  evening  at  8  O'clock.  .N'ert 
meeting,  April  13.  1916.  Work  —  Regultl 
business  and  balloting.  Burr  Porter,  sec- 
retary. 

ZENITH    CHAPTER    NO.    25,    ORPER    OF 

eastern  Star — Regular  meetings  sicoiid  and 
fourth  Friday  evenings  each  month.  Next 
meeting,  Friday,  April  14,  1916,  at  7:30 
o'clock.  Work — Regular  business  and  bal- 
Eva  M.   Punbar.  W.  M  ;  Ella  F.  Gearhart.  Sec. 

MIZPAH  SHRINE  NO.   1.    ORDHR  OF   THI 

White  Shrine  of  Jerusalem— Regular  meet- 
ings first  Saturday  evening  of  each  montk 
at  8  o'clock.  Next  meeting,  regular,  May  6. 
Initiation  and  balloting,  (rt-rtrude  Bittes, 
W.   H.   P.;  Etta  Tnvlranus.  W.  8. 

EICLID  CHAPTER  NO.  56.  ORDER  OF 
the  EasterA  Star— Meets  at  West  l>i:luth 
Masonic  temple  the  first  and  third  Tues- 
days of  eai-h  month  at  7:30  oiiix-k.  Next 
meeting,  April  18,  1916.  Ballottlng  and 
Flora  L.  Clark,  W.  M.;  MUdred  M.   Boss,  See. 


ElCLlD  LODGE  NO.  198,  A.  F.  k  A.  M. 
— Meets  at  West  Duliilb.  aeconii  and  fcurtli 
Wednesdays  of  each  month  at  7:30  p.  m. 
Next  meeting,  April  12.  Work  First  d^ 
gree.  H.  W.  Launers,  W.  M. ;  A.  Bun- 
leavy,   secritar>-. 

DLLITH  CHAPTER  .NO.  59,  B.  A.  M.— 
.Meets  at  West  Duluth  first  and  third 
Wednesdays  of  eath  montb  at  7:30  P.  m. 
Next    meeting,    April    19.    1916.      Work— P. 

M.   and  M.  E.   M.   degrees.     Roll  call  and 

refresuments.     W.   A.   Pittenger,   H.   P.   Dunleavy.   Sec. 

LAKESIDE  LODGE  NO.  281,  A.  F.  &  a! 
M.— Meets  first  and  third  Mondays  of  e»c|| 
month  at  8  o'clock  at  Masonic  ball,  Forty- 
flfth  avenue  east  and  Robinson  street.  Next 
meeting,  April  17,  1916.  Regular  biLsiness. 
Work— First  degree.  William  A.  Hicken.  W, 
M.;  George  E.  Nelson,  secrrtarj-,  4530  Cooke  street  east. 

TRINITY  LODGE  NO.  282.  A.  F.  *  A.  M. 
—.Meets  first  and  third  Mondays  at  S  c'clocfc 
In  Woodman  hall.  Twenty-first  avenue  weet. 
Next  meeting  regular,  April  17.  1916.  W'orli 
—Second  degriH".  E.  H.  Pfelfer,  W.  M., 
1918  West  Third  street;  B.  E.  Wh:eler, 
secretary,  2032  West  Superior  street. 

A.  0.  r.  w.  * 

FIDELITY    LODGE   NO.    105  —  MEETS   AT 

Maccabee  hall,  21  Lake  avenu:  north,  every 
Thursday  at  8  p.  m.  Visiting  members  wel- 
e.ime.  E.  A.  Vogt,  M.  W. ;  J.  A.  Lubausky, 
ret-order;  0.  J.  Munold,  financier,  217  Etai 
Oriental  degree  April  27. 


Fifth  street. 


FOR  SALE— Cheap,  for  cash,  1914  6- 
passenger  Paige  touring  car;  36-H.  P., 
completely  equipped,  electric  lights, 
starter  and  horn,  best  grade  Oordori 
seat  covers,  4  good  tires,  1  extra  tire 
and  rim,  bumper  and  tire  chains;  run 
11,000  miles;  guaranteed  in  first-clasa 
condition;  $650.  cash  only.  R.  &  R. 
garage,    rear    310    W.    2nd    st. 


HARIEY-DAV  DSON 


OXY-ACETYLEXE  welding,  cutting 
and  carbon  burning;  all  work  guaran- 
teed satisfactory  or  no  charge;  99 Vi 
per  cent  pure  oxygen  for  sale.  Duluth 
c;as  &  WeUinK  Co.,  2110-2112  W. 
Michigan  st.    Mel.  7064;  Lin.  643. 

New    1916    models. 
Come        and        see 

them.         Machines 

sold  oil  time  payments;  also  bargains  in 
used  machines,  on  easy  terms.  Motor 
Cycle  Repair  shop,  402-404  E.  Sup,  st. 

FOR  SALE — 1  1913  model  35,  7-passen- 
ger Studebaker,  run  3,000  miles,  A-1 
condition;  1  1912  6-passenger  Cadillac, 
just  overhauled  and  in  good  condition. 
Either  of  above  a  bargain.  Write 
J    952,    Herald. 

GUARANTEED  tire  repairing  at  low 
prices;  our  new  tires  will  save  you 
money  on  mileage.  Duluth  Auto  Tire 
Repair  Co..   313  E.  Superior  st. 

YOUR  OLD  CASINGS  are  worth  money 
to  you  with  our  system  of  double 
treading;  see  us.  Herlan  &  Merling, 
105  W.   1st  St.     Mel.    4668. 

B'OR  SALE — Ford  demountable  rlms; 
crown  fenders,  radiator  hoods  and 
shells,  all  kinds  of  tires.  Johnson 
Auto  Supply. 

FOR  SALE — 1916  Maxwell  6-passenger 
touring  car.  Call  Theo.  O,  Furlund 
Auto    Co.    6-7    E.    1st    St. 

FOR  SALE  —  6-passenger  Hudson; 
cheap  for  quick  sale.  Call  after  6  p. 
m.      819   W.    3rd   st. 

YOUR  CAR  repaired  at  your  garage; 
A-1  mechanics.  Harrison  &  Son,  Mel. 
6642.     2721  Huron  st. 


A.  0.  U.  W.— DVLLTII  LODGE  NO.  10-. 
meeia  every  second  and  fourth  Tiicsday 
nights  at  Axa  hall.  221  WV>t  Superior 
street.  Next  meeting,  April  11,  1916,  kt 
^ 8  p.   m.     .Marvin  E.   Heller,   >I.   W. ;  R.   G, 

Foole,   recorder;  E.  F.  Heller,  financier,  509  Second  «H« 

nue  east. 

ZENITU  COUNCIL  SO.  161^  RUYaZ 
league,  meets  the  first  and  tlilrd  Tburi- 
days  in  the  montb,  at  8  o'clock,  in  tba 
old  Masonic  temple.  Sup. rlor  street  and 
Second  avenue  east.  0.  S.  KemptOD, 
archon,  Wolvin  building;  H.  A.  Uall,  col* 
lector,  18  East  First  street. 

DlLlTH    LODGE    NO.    28,    I.    0.    0.    F.-^ 

Next    meeting,     Friday    evening,     .\pril    14, 
1916,    at    8    o'clock,    221    West    Sup^riof 

stieet.   third  floor.     Work— First  degree  will  be  coiiferrwJ. 

(Kid   Fellows  welcome,     (harles   F.    Ottincer.    .N.    G. ;  jl 

A.   Braff.   Bee.   Sec. 

K.    OF    P. 

NORTH  STAR  LODGE  NO.  35,  K.  OK  P.-4 
Meets  every  Tuesday,  7:30  P.  m.,  sixth 
floor,  Temple  building,  Superior  strett  end 
Second  avenue  east.  Next  meeting.  April 
18,  1916.  Work— First  rank.  W.  H. 
Hamilton,  C.  C,  care  of  Duluth  T.-lephone  companv;  B. 
A.  Rowc,  M.  of  F.,  205  First  National  bank;  R  A, 
Bishop.  K.  of  R.  and  S.,  505  Palladlo  building. 

ZENITH   CAMP  NO.   6,    WOODMEN   0» 

the  World,  meets  on  first  and  third 
Friday  nights  of  month,  at  Forester^ 
ball,  Fourib  avenue  west  and  first 
street.  J.  H.  Ltrkin,  cWk,  312  Six- 
tieth avenue  east.     Lakeside  23-K. 


M.UESTIC  REBEK.MI  LODGE  NO.  60,  I. 
0.  0.  F.— Regular  meetings  first  and  third 
Thursdays  of  each  month,  8  p.  m.,  221 
West  Superior  street.  Next  meeting  Tlnirs- 
day  evening,  April  6.  Initiation.  Regu* 
lar  drill.  .Mrs.  Henrietta  Shaw,  \.  (j.l 
Liiliun  John.son,  secretao'.  Grand  2113-Y, 


WILL  TRADE  small  farm,  near  city, 
for  auto;  roadster  preferred.  614 
Manhattan   bldg. 


ACRE  TRACTS         

FOR  SALE — 3-acre  truck  farm;  new 
house,  full  concrete  basement,  barn, 
chicken  house,  good  well;  half  acre 
in  raspberries,  currants  and  apple 
trees-  cheap  if  taken  at  once.  John 
J  Ro'we,  Mel.  7328- ring  1,  R.  F.  D.  3, 
Duluth. 

FOR  SALE — Before  May  1,  1  acre,  4- 
room  house,  barn,  good  well;  1  mile 
from  car  line;  owner  leaving  town; 
l^rlTe  $800,  or  offer.  X  128,  Herald. 

VOR~SALB — Acre  tracts  one  mile  from 
sti-eet  railway;  $125.  $10  down  $5 
monthly.  Wahl-M^sser,  Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Cabin  and  acre,  4  blocks 
fr.m  English  Inn;  cheap  for  cash  if 
taken   at   once.   Write  Z   111.   Herald. 

FOR  SALE — Half  acre  near  power  sta- 
tion Bav  Vl'?w  Heights.  Charles  Lar- 
sen  'l60i  W.  Superior  st. 


DCH  TH  HOMESTEAD  NO.  3131.  BROTH- 
erhood  of  American  Yeomen,  meets  every 
Wednesday  evening  at  8  o  clock  sharp,  la 
Maix-abee  hall.  21  Uke  avenue  i.orth. 
Herbert   F.    Hanks,    foreman;  J.   J.    Pnlmer, 

cnii.-..p,...uint,   office   in   his  drug   store,   ;iia2   West   Third 

•treet.     Melrose  3769;  LlDcoln  511-Y. 

M.   W.   A.  "" 

1MPERI.\L  C.\MP,  2206  —  MEETS  .\T 
Forester  hall.  Fourth  avenue  west  and 
First  street,  second  and  fourth  Tuesdays  oi 
^'T^T—  each  month.  Wajue  E.  Richardson,  con- 
sul;  KoiK-rt  Rankin,  clerk,  care  Rankin  Printing  cunirany. 
"^  CLAN  STEWART  NO.  50,  0.  S.  C^I 
Meets  first  and  third  Wednesdays  tacli 
month,  8  p.  m..  U.  0.  F.  hall,  iornei 
Fourth  awnue  west  and  First  street.  .Next 
,  I.,  regular  meeting,  .\prll  19,  1916.  p.  A, 
Cameron,  chief;  John  Gow,  Sec;  John  Burueit,  Fin  dec 
813  Torrey  building. '* 

MODERN    SAMARITANS  * 

ALPHA    COINCIL    NO.    1— T.\KE    NOTICEl 

That  the  Samaritan  degree  meets  fh"  first 
and  third  Wednesdays,  and  the  Beneficent 
degree  the  second  and  fourth  Wednes<lays  of 
the  month,  at  12  East  Superior  stn^et. 
Empress  theater  building.  W.  B.  Henderson,  G.  S.; 
John  F.  Daris.  scrilie;  F.  A.  Noble,  F.  S.,  201  FlTSl 
National   Bank  building;  Mrs.  H.   P.   Lawson.  lady  G.  9. 

Jjj^  WERE  MA-WAIP  TRIBE  NO.  17.  1.   0.  U\ 

fl^^L  M.,    meets   the   second   and   fourth   Monday! 

^BB  of  the  month,   at  8  p.   m.   sharp,   at  .M»c- 

JnB  cabee    hall.    21    Lake    avenue    north.      Next 

"Wn  meeting,    April    24.      Dance.      H.    H.    Bart- 

.JHJ^  >llng.  sachem;  H.  J.  MctJinley,  chief  of  rec« 
^JP^P'urd,  307  Columbli  building. 

ORDER  OF  OWLS,  DILCTH  NESt 
No.  120O— Meetings  are  held  trtrj 
Wi-dnesday  evening  at  Owls'  ball.  118 
West  Superior  street,  second  fioor, 
Joseph  E.  Feaks,  secretwj',  302  East 
-Fifth   street. 

MODERN  BROTHERHOOD  OF  AMERICA.-i 
Duluth  Central  Lodge  .No.  450.  M.  B.  A., 
meets  first  and  third  Tuesdays  at  41g 
West  Superior  street.  Charles  V.  Hanaoo, 
secretao',  507  West  Fifth  street.  ittith 
ptione   No.    2211 -Y   Grand. 

SIVSTIC  WORKERS  OF  THE  WORLD.-i 
Zenith  Lodge  .No.  1015  meets  the  second 
and  fourth  Mondays  of  the  month,  at  8 
p.  m.,  at  Rowley  hall,  112  West  First 
street,  iipsUlrs.  E.  A.  Ruf,  seiretar|r 
and  treasurer.  1331  East  Seventh    treet. 


phui.     tiram 
Grand  1991 -Y 


DILITH  TEMPIi:  NO.  186,  CAMELS  OP 
the  World,  meets  every  Thursday  eveuiiiB  a| 
8  o'clock  sharp,  at  Camels'  Temple  hall, 
12  East  Superior  sUeet.  Business  meeting 
Thursday,  April  13.     W.  H.   Konkler.   ruler, 

Grand    909-Y.      Martin    Johnson.    s«iTetary. 

...arid   1588;   Melrose.    3979;   temple   ball   phone. 


FOR  SALE— COWS 

FOR  SALE — S.  CJoldflne  will  arrive 
with  a  carload  of  the  finest  assort- 
ment of  fresh  milch  cows  Thursday. 
April  13.  Both  phones;  1016  N.  6th 
ave.  w.  Take  Incline  car  to  8th  St.. 
walk  2  blocks  northeast. 

FOR  SALE — Cows,  some  fresh,  some 
will  be  In.  In  a  few  days;  also  10- 
months-old    bull.      Klossner,    Carlton, 


Co.E 


THIRD      INFANTRY,      M.      V       gi, 

meets  every  Thursday  evening.  8  p.  m!, 
.Armory,  Thirteenth  avenue  east.  .Next 
mi-eting,  April  13.  George  W. 
Btlles,  rmptaln;  William  A.  Brown,  first  UeutenantI 
John    J     Harrison,    second   lieutenant. 

W~WEST  DLLLTH  LODGE  NO.  1478.  LOUl 
Order  of  Moose,  meets  every  Wedn  ^d^y  it 
Moose  hall.  Ramsey  street  and  Central  ave- 
nue.     H.    J.    White,    secrttary,    201    North 

Flfty-s-cond  avenue  west. _^_^ 

f=  i^  BENEVOLE.NT  ORDER  OF  BEAVERS-^ 
JOBifr  Duluth  Lodge  No.  155,  B.  0.  B.. 
'JP9HS>-  meets  Thursday,  March  2  and  16.  191& 
at  Woodman  hall.  Twenty-first  avenue  west  and  Fitw 
Street.  K.  A.  Franklin,  sctretarj',  2006  West  Suptrtfl* 
rtreet.     Lincoln  169-A; 

DLiLTH  LODGE  NO.  506.  LOYAL  ORDeI 
of  Moose,  meets  etery  Tuesday  at  8  o'cloek. 
Moose  hail,  224  West  First  itreet.  Cad 
Schwi,  aecreUiy. 


IW 


^ 


■"' 


< 


-   -4 


^f- 


f'^ 


"it-i    i>«gi«    «  iij— i»^a 


LAST  EDITION 


THE  DULUTH  HERAlS^ 


FRIDAY  EVENINQ,  APRIL  14, 1916. 


TWO  CENTS. 


VOLUME  XXXIV-NO.  5.  FRIDAY  EVENINQ.  APRIL  14. 1916.  JT \ TWO  CENTS. 

BANDITS  TRY  TO  CAPTURE  U.  S.  f/dPPLY  TRAIN 


C 


U.  S.  WILL  MAKE  FINAL  DEMAND 
ON  GERMANY  FOR  EVIDENCE  OF 
GOOD  FAITH  IN  SUBSEA  POLICY 

WILL  BE  SENT 
TO  BERLIN  IN 


IRELAND'S  AnORNfY  GtNHIAl 
UNIONIST  WITHOUT  COMPItOMISE 


id 


SHORT  TIME 

Accumulation  of  Evidence 

in  Many  Cases  Being 

Prepared. 


Other    Cases   in   Addition 

to  Sussex  to  Be 

Cited. 


President  and  His  Cabinet 

Consider    Matter    at 

Prolonged  Meeting. 


MIEMORE  IS 
BUSY  AGAIN 

Introduces  Resolution  That 

Troops  Must  Not  Be 

Withdrawn. 


DEEP  ANXIETY  IS  FELT 

OVER  FATE  OF  CAVALRY 
FORCEATPARRALME] 


American  Troopers  Known 

to  Be  Far  Outnumbered 

Bi  Mexicans. 


Mexican  Developments  Are 

Closely  Watched  By  Both 

Houses  of  Congress. 


Lack  of  .Definite  Informa- 
tion /(fouses  Fears  for 
Ttieir  Safety. 


COMMANDER  Of  ZfPPElIN  ONE 
Of  GfRMAN  MARTYRS  Of  WAR 


American  Consul  Edwards' 

Reports  Sax  Hostilities 

Have  Ceased. 


Waphlngton.  April  14.— After  a  pro- 
lonirod  cabln.t  nieftinR  today  !t  was 
announced  that  a  communication  to 
Germany  would  go  forward  as  planntd 
probably  within  the  next  forty-elRht 
hours.  It  was  said  the  caee  was  com- 
plete without  the  affidavits  whUh  ar- 
rived today  on  the  Btenmer  St.  Paul. 

The  plan  to  present  the  American 
case  with  the  accumulation  of  evidence 
that  not  the  Sui?sex  al«>ne  but  other 
ehlps  aH  well  have  been  dentroyed  In 
violation  of  Oermany'H  promise  to  the 
Unltid  Slates  r»nudnid   unchanged. 

The  preeldent  and  the  cabinet  are 
understood  to  have  agreed  that  the 
preaentation  of  th.  facts  shall  be  ac- 
^ompanl.d  by  a  dc  t^nlte  and  fll'«l  re- 
mand for  evidence  of  (Jermany  b  good 
fal  I  and  cbM-rvance  cf  h.  r  guaraiw- 
JeeH  but  probably  not  by  any  time 
llmU  which  properly  could  be  described 

""•l^f;;.  ^'^lS:"l."?"colle<.ted   by    secretary 
lanH  ng  was  placed  bef..re  the  cabinet 
today       AftldavltB    on    the    Sussex    caae. 
whi.h  arrived  on  the  etenmer   St    Paxil 
^l, ,.  not  b.  f.,re  the  cabinet,  but  it. was 

(Continued   on   page  1«.   third  column.) 

AUSTRIANS  KEPT  FROM 
VERDUN  BY  ITALIANS 

Aggressive   Operations   to 

Keep  Teuton  Forces  From 

Withdrawing. 

Washington,  April  14.— An  Italian 
eeneral  •'taff  statement  describing 
Tpeiaticna  de.Mgncd  to  k^ep  Austria 
from  withdrawing  forces  from  her  own 
eouth.rn  frontier  to  aid  in  the  German 
drive  agalnBt  Verdun  was  made  public 
here  la>.t  night  by  the  Italian  embassy. 

"AVlwn  tile-  operations  against  Verdun 
began  the  Italian  general  staff  decided 
to  bring  energetic  pressure  to  bear 
upon  th.lr  own  front.  In  order  to  pro- 
vent  the  Austrlans  sending  troops  to 
thf  French  front.  This  plan  was  suc- 
oessfullv  carried  out  by  means  of  con- i 
tinned  "atta.k.-.  which  were  begun  on 
March  8.  and  which  resulted  In  gains 
to  us  In  n.arly  all  sectors.  About  100 
prisoners,  also  machine  gun.s  and  other 
arms  ami  ammunition,   w^-re  captured. 

GEN.1ERRERA 
MAKES  CALL 


Mexican  Commander  Visits 

Gen.  Pershing  at  the 

Front. 


J.  H.  M.  CAMPBELL. 

Ireland  has  a  new  attorney  general 
In  J  H.  M.  t'ampbell,  who  is  the  right 
V.anci  man  of  Sir  Edward  (arson. 
Campbell  is  a  Unionist  without  com- 
promise. He  was  made  lord  <  lian-el- 
loi-  of  Ireland  by  the  coalition  cabinet 
In  June  last,  and  his  appolntrnent 
cauKed  a  crisis,  whereupon  he  offered 
to  resign.  His  appointment  to  be  at- 
torney    general     followed. 

AGAINJEGUN 

Germans  Deliver  Violent  At- 
tacks on  French  West 
of  Meuse. 


Infantry  Attacks  East  of 

River  Are  Repulsed, 

Says  Paris. 


Agosta,  Villa  Leader,  Said 

to  Have  Quit  the 

Bandit. 


Pershing's  Camp  at  Front,  April  7 
via  aeioplane  to  Columbus.  N.  Mex.. 
April  14.— A  report  reaching  here  from 
Mexican  sources  last  night  was  that 
Julio  Agosta.  a  Villa  leader  near  Guer- 
rero, had  declared  he  would  no  longer 
fluht  against  Americans.  Agosta  had 
been  ^o'^fsldered  one  of  Villa's  most 
steadfast  men.  His  announcement  If 
trut.  is  taken  as  strengthening  the 
rcDorts  that  Villa  has  met  with  se- 
rufus  defection  among  his  own  people. 

A  conference  of  considerable  sig- 
nificance and  of  unusual  picturesque- 
ncHH  took  place  here  today  when  Oen. 
l^iuls  Herrera,  commander  of  the  tar- 
l^^nza      army.'    called      upon      General 

■  ''*'The"meetlng   took   Place    in    the   njld- 
-  dl.    of  a  yellow   grass   dried   mesa,    five 

m  les    broad,    and    twenty    ml  es    long. 

wlh   mountains   wailing  all   ^'de*.   «";; 

a    grass    fire    raging    up    the    side    of    a 

nearby   mountain,   curtaining  the   east- 


(Contlnued   on   page   1«.   fir»t  •olumn.)  1 


Paris.  April  14.  11:46  a.  m. — West  of 
the  Meuse  a  violent  bombardment  was 
delivi-red  by  the  c;t.rinans  against  the 
French  lines  to  the  west  of  Hill  304,  i 
says  the  French  official  coninuinlcatlon 
this  morning.  Yest.rday  evening  to 
the  east  of  the  Meuse  small  attacks 
were  made  on  the  French  positions 
south  of  Douaumont.  but  which  were 
completely  repulsed.  There  was  a 
lively  bombardment  south  <>f  Haudre- 
monf.  In  the  Woevre  district  artillery 
duels  took  place. 

The  Xlermans  are  now  bombarding 
the  French  lines  at  Verdun,  apparently 
with  a  view  to  an  earjy  return  to  the 
policy  of  delivering  a  serlcH  of  short, 
sharp  blows  at  different  points  on  the 
line.  The  object  of  this  method  of 
warfare  Is  considered  by  military  of- 
ficers to  disorganize  the  system  of 
reserves  by  diversity  In  the  points  at- 
tacked and  by  gradually  wearing  down 
the  defenders  to  prepare  for  an  op- 
portune m6ment   for  a  general  assault. 

ENORMOUSTdSS  AT 
BAniE  OF  VERDUN 

Berlin  Says  French  Losses 

Are  150,000;  Paris  Places 

German  Losses  200,000. 

Berlin,   April   14.   by   wireless   to   Ray- 

viile The  French  losses  In  killed  and 

wounded  in  the  fighting  around  Ver- 
dun savs  the  Overseas  News  agency, 
are '  computed  to  have  reached  up  to 
the  present  time  a  total  of  160.000  of- 
flcf-rs    and    men,    or    about    four    army 

corps.  ^, 

The  news  agency  continues: 
"According  to  a  correspondent  from 
the  front  the  French  authorities  are 
spreading  reports-  regarding  heavy 
German  losses  before  Verdun.  It  Is 
said  that  one  battalion  of  chasseurs 
lost  1.012  men,  or  about  Its  total  nurn- 
ber  it  Is  also  reported  the  Eighteenth 
army  corps  lost  17.000  officers  and  men 
fn  storming  the  village  and  fortress 
of  Vaux.  This  corpa  never  participat- 
ed In  the  fighting  for  the  village  or 
the    fortress    of   Vaux.         .      „,  .    . 

Great    Percentage   Slightly   Wop»d*«i. 
••The    French    calcuilate    the      O^-rnmn 
losses    at    the    round    figure    «'    200.000. 
The    German    casualties    happllv    have 
not  been   In   proportion    to   the   Import- 
ance   of    the    (Jerman     gains.       Besides 
among    the    casualties    is    a    Rf^-at    Per- 
centage  of  men  who  were  only  slight- 
ly wounded.  »„i,^„ 
'•The     number     of     prisoners     taken 
by    the   French    Is   Insignificant,   as   the 
only    soldiers    captured    by    them    were 
some   who  were  too  bold  and  advanced 
far   beyond   their   goal. 

'•As  the  French  are  steadily  retreat- 
ing they  must,  of  course,  give  imag- 
inary figures.  The  Germans,  on  tho 
other  hand,  have  .for  seven  weeks  been 
burying  dead  Frenchmen  on  the  bat- 
tlefield and  rescuing  French  wounded, 
so  they  are  able  to  compute  figures  re- 
B-ardlng  the  French  losses,  which  are 
'alculated  to  have  reached  150,000,  or 
four  army  corp«." 


Washington,  April  14.— Represent 
atlve  McL.emore  of  Texas,  whose  reso 
lutlon  to  warn  Americans  off  belliger- 
ent ships  raised  one  of  the  liveliest 
rows  In  the  present  congress,  today 
Introduced  a  resolution  declaring  that 
••the  American  military  for.es  must 
not  for  any  reason  be  withdrawn  from 
Mexico  until  Francisco  Villa  has  been 
killed,  captured  or  forced  into  exile." 
Tlie  r»soluti<»n  was  referred  to  the 
foreign  affairs  committee. 

In  both  houses  of  congress,  Mexican 
devflopinents  were  watched  closely 
and  there  was  an  under-current  of 
sentiment,  chiefly  among  Republicans, 
that  the  embargo  on  munitions  of  war 
everywhere  In  Mexico  flhould  be  en- 
forced. 

Chairman  Stone  of  the  foreign  re- 
lations committee,  after  conferring 
with  Secretary  Lansing,  said  the 
state  department  hud  no  information 
not   made    public. 

PreMcnt    Problem. 
."The    problem    confronting   this    gov- 
ernment is  how  long  It  would  be  wise 
Io    keep     an     expeditionary     force     In 
fexico."    said    Senator    Stone. 

"They  have  succeded  In  breaking 
up  some  of  Villa's  bands  and  have 
accomplished  something. 

"But  we  have  recognized  the  de 
facto  government  In  Mexico  and 
agreed  to  send  an  expeditionary  force 
Into  Mvcico  for  a  certain  purpose. 
How  long  can  we  let  that  army  stay 
in  a  foreign  country  where  friction 
already  exists  and  where  more  fric- 
tion Is  bound  to  develop?  If  we  ad- 
here to  our  policy  toward  Mexico  we 
cannot  keep  the  army  there.  To  my 
mind  the  only  alternative  to  with- 
drawing the  troops  sooner  or  later  is 
Intervention." 

GERMANS  SANK  EIGHTY 
VESSELS  IN  MARCH 

Berlin.  April   14,  wireless  to  Sayvllle. 

— A    statement    Issued    by    the    German  | 

admir.ilty  under  date  of  April  13  says 
that  In  the  month  of  March  eighty  i 
trading  vessels  belonging  to  hostile 
countries,  with  an  aggregate  tonnage 
of  207.000.  were  sunk  by  German  sub- 
marines   or    mines. 

^ 

Child  PolMoned  Playing. 

Rochester,      Minn.,     April     14. — Arian 


Washington.  April  14.— Deep  anxiety 
was  felt  In  official  circles  today  over 
the  fate  of  MaJ.  Tompkins  and  his 
little  force  of  cavalry,  attacked  in  I'ar- 
ral,   Mex.,   on  Wednesday. 

Known  to  be  outnumbered,  perhaps 
beleaguered.  In  a  district  notoriously 
antl-Ametlcan,  It  wa*  feared  that  the 
troopers  might  be  In  grave  danger. 
Lark  of  Information  from  the  Isolated 
detachment  intensined  the  anxiety  for 
their  safety. 

.\o   Further    Fighting. 
American     Consul      Edwards     at     Li 
Paso  telegraphed  today  his  reports  In- 
dicated    there     had     bfen     no     further 
fighting    with    A.nerlcftn    troops    since 
the  affray  at  Parral  Wednesday  night. 
Consul      Edwards      said      Americans 
reaching  El  Paso  from  the   interior  of 
Mexico   brought  varltd   rumor*   of   the 
flKlitlng  at  I'arral.  but  no  confirmation 
of   the   report   that    160   Mexicans   were 
killed.      All    his    Information    was^  thHt 
ns  ,  re 


LINE  OF  AUTO  TRUCKS 

ATTACKED  IN  NIGHT 

BY  MOUNTED  MEN 

Two  Assaults  Made  in  Endeavor  to  Cut 

Out  Automobiles  Engaged  in 

Transporting  Supplies. 

Bandits  Repulsed  By  Fire  of  Guards, 

One  Mexican  Being  Killed;  No 

Americans  Hurt. 


Paulson.  2\4  years  old.  son  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Peter  Paulson  of  this  city,  met 
sudclen  death  from  drinking  carbolic 
acid.  The  child  foimd  the  bottle  in  a 
pile  of  rubbish   while    playing. 


the     Americans  .Vetlrec^     from     Parral 
(Continued  On  page  16.  third  column.) 

BRITISlTGASi^LTIES 
IN  OFR^  RS  23,963 

Losses  of  875  ih  February 

Bring  Total  ot  War  to. 

That  Figure. 

London,  April  l4.-Offlcer.'  caiualtjr 
lists  for  the  month  of  February  show 
that  the  British  army  lost  268  killed. 
697  wounded  and  16  mlssln*,  a  total  of 
876.  This  brings  the  aggregate  loss 
since  the  beginning  of  the  war  to  28.- 
963  of  whom  7,420  haf*  been  killed  or 
have  died  of  wounds.  14.766  wounded, 
and    1,787    are    missing   or   prisoners   of 

^In  February  losses  W^re  h«"aylest  in 
the  Indian  contingent  operating  In 
Mesopotamia  and  the  Persian  gulf,  the 
returns  showing  63  officers  killed,  166 
wounded  and   7   nilsslng. 

""^d^V'"^Yorkshl  e"   8      klUed,'      33 
wounded.    ,J°'7;Vi„;ry     13    killed.    28 

wounded;     t'^'O      j,      ''       '   r        kille<l  IS 

wounded;  Canadian^  6  Kilie<i,  in 
'"During      the      month      Brlg.-Oenerals 

brigadier  generals   wounded. 


LIEUT.  ODO  LOEWE. 


In  Berlin  First  Lieut.  Odo  Loewe  is 
one  of  the  martyrs  of  the  war.  He 
was  in  command  of  the  Zeppelin  L.  19, 
which  was  wrecked  In  the  North  sea. 
An  English  fishing  boat  came  along 
and  Lieut.  Loewe  begged  that  he  and 
his  men  be  taken  off  as  prisoners, 
but  the  fishermen  said  they  were 
afraid  the  Germans  would  overpower 
them,  so  they  sailed  away  af»a  loft 
them   to   drown. 


COMMITTEE  REPORTS 
MARSHALL  GUILTY 

House  to  Take  No  Action 

on  Charges  for  Two 

Weeks. 

Washington,  April  14. — A  house  se- 
lect committee  today  submitted  a  re- 
port pronouncing  United  States  Attor- 
ney Marshall  of  New  York  guilty  of 
contempt  for  criticizing  a  house  sub- 
committee Investigating  Impeachment 
charges  preferred  against  him  by  Rep- 
resentative Buchanan.  Chairman  Moon 
Informed  the  house  he  would  request 
no  action  for  at  least  two  weeks  in 
order  to  give  Mr.  Marshall  opportunity 
to  consider  It. 

Ci«ld   Fish   and  BIrda  Perlafc. 

Burlington.  Iowa.  April  14.— A  thou- 
sand or  more  gold  fish  and  several 
hundred   canaries,   parrots     and     other 

'birds    perished      early      today      when   a 

;  three-story  brick  building,  the  first 
fieor  of  which  was  occut-ed  bv  the 
Perry  Devlne  bird  store,  collapsed. 
Devlne.    and   his      wife     and  .a      frletjd 

i rushed    out    of    the    rear    door    just    In 

'  time  to  avoid  being  crushed. 


General  Pershing's  Camp  at  Front, 
April  12,  via  aeroplane  to  Chihuahua, 
April  13.  via  131  Paso  Junction.  April 
14. About  forty  mounted  men.  be- 
lieved to  be  Villa  men  of  General 
Tarango'a  command,  attacked  last 
night  an  automobile  supply  train  ar.d 
were  driven  off  after  a  short  fight,  i 
There  were  no  American  casualties. 
One    Villa   bandit    was    klUed. 

Qeueral  Pershing  yesterday  moved 
hie  camp  south,  penetrating  far  '^^^o 
Villa  territory,  where  he  V'""^  ' 
numerous  Constitutionalist  detach- 
ments under  General  Garza,  who  gave 
the  Americans  friendly  greeting  and 
co-operation.  ..     .      ,^ 

.  Aeroplanes      which      were      first      to 
reach    this    new    front    yesterday    had 
remarkable    adventures,    but    all    came 
through       safely.       General       P^rshuis 
traveled    here    In    an    automobile    train 
of   supply    trucks,    which    made    a   rec- 
ord   breaking    trip.  .w^.,* 
Pershtnr    Several    MIlea   Ahead. 
The    fight    which    occurred    about    « 
o'clock    last    night    was    a^veTal    miles 
In    the    rear    of    the    automobiles    car- 
rying   General    Pershing    and    his    es- 
cort     It  lasted  about   twenty  minutes. 
When    the    bandits    who    tried    to   cap- 
ture one  truck  came  up,  the  ^Americans 
poured    in    five    volleys    which    ended 
the  fight  completely.     There  were  two 
attacks,    the    first    a    slight    one,    and 
directed  against  a  forward  truck    Ihe 
last    attack    was    a    rush    as^f,'"/^^  ..tf^ 
rear  trucks,  during  which  bullets  flew 
ala^nst    the    automobiles    and    poured 
through  the  brush   which   covered   the 

"t^^  bandits  seemed  to  think  the  cut- 
Ing  off  of  the  rear  truck  would  be 
easy  because  some  of  them  got  within 
A.  few  feet  of  It  before  the  Amer- 
fcansr  who  were  withholding  their 
fire,  cut  loose.  The  American  sol- 
diers   thought    they    hit    solne    of    the 

bandits.        .         ™^  -,    „..* 

Ballet    ThroBgli    Hat. 

Harry    Gosnear    of    the    auto    trucK 


train,   a    resident    of   Philadelphia,    got 
a   bullet    through    his    hat. 

At  the  Constitutionalist  camp  wlthli* 
a  few  miles  of  the  scene  of  the  fight- 
ing. It  was  reported  that  three  bandits 
were  killed  during  the  first  part  of 
the  week.  Lieut.  A.  R.  Christie  of 
the  aero  squad,  commanded  the  men  Irt 
the  fight.  Capt.  T.  F.  Godd  of  the 
aero  squad,  who  has  the  command 
of  the  trucks  in  front,  formed  hla 
men  to  attack  the  bandits,  but  the 
fight  was  over  too  quickly  for  his 
men  to  get  into  action.  The  first 
car  attacked  carried  the  personal  ef- 
fects and  food  for  General  Pershing 
and   hU  staff. 

■    -.  .* 

Tio  Word  From  Pershing. 

.«5an  Antonio,  Tex.,  April  14. — 
Through  press  dispatches  Gen.  Fuuston 
learned  that  another  skirmish  between 
Mexicans  and  Americans  had  occurred, 
this  latest  encounter  being  that  pre- 
cipitated by  the  forty  mounted  men 
who  attacked  the  supply  train  Tuesday 
night,  but  midday  passed  without  any 
news  from  Gtn.  Pershing.  He  also  in- 
«let^d  that  he  had  j-eceived  no  instruc- 
tions    from     Washington.       Efforts     to 

(Continued    on    pagel 6.  fourth  column.) 


NEARLY  20,000 
GOARD  BORDER 

_£ 

United  States  Regulars  Ex- 
tend From  Brownsville 
to  San  Diego. 


UNCLE  SAM:    -YOU'LL  HAVE  TO  EXCUSE  ME:  TM  TOO  BUSY." 


BRITISH  TO  PAY  U.  S. 
PACKERS  $  1 5,0CO,0<M 

Settlement  for  Seizure  of 

American  Beef  Finally 

Agreed  Upon. 

London,    April    14.— Chandler    P.    An- 
derson,   formerly    counsellor    for      the] 
state    department    at    Washington,    and  ■ 
now  the  representative  of  the  Chicago  j 
meat  packers  In  the   prize  court  cases. 
Involving    cargoes    valued    at    between 
$15  000.000    and    $20,000,000,    slated    last 
night  that  a  settlement  with  the  British  | 
government  had  been  agreed  upon  and  i 
that  the  money  would  be  paid  over  to- 1 

dft  V  I 

-i  wish,"  said  Mr.  Anderson,  "to  ex- 
press my  appreciation  of  the  fairness  j 
with  which  the  negotiations  with  the  | 
representatives  of  the  British  govern-  , 
ment  have  been  conducted  and  the 
friendly  consideration  with  which  I  and  I 
my  clients  have  been  treated."*  1 

Mr    Anderson  represents  the  Armour,  ] 
Swift    Hammond  and  Morris  companies.  . 
B     Ll'oyd    Grlscomb,     representing    the 
Schwarzschild     &     Sulzberger   company 
also    Joined    In    the    settlement    on    the 
same  basis  as  Mr.  Anderson.  ,   ,      . 

Mr  Anderson  said  the  amount  to  be 
paid  by  the  British  government  would 
be  announced  later^^ 

TURKS"PUT  RUSSIAN 

CAVALRY  TO  FLIGHT 

Constantinople,  April  14,  via  Lon- 
don. The  following  official  statement 
was  made  public  here  today: 

"A  force  of  Persian  warriors  and 
Turkish  detachments  on  the  morning 
of  the  eighth  attacked  Russian  cav- 
alry, some  three  regiments  strong,  in 
the  vicinity  of  Sujbulak  and  put  it 
to  flight  In  the  direction  of  Urumlah 
(Persian  Armenia).  Otherwise  there 
were    no    Important    engagements. ' 


Pershing's  Line  Into  Mexico 

Is    Being    Rapidly 

Strengthened. 


El  Paso.  Tex.,  April  14 —More  than 
19,000  United  States  regulars  are 
guarding  the  Mexican  border  from 
Brownsville,  Tex.,  to  San  Diego,  Cal., 
while  hurried  troop  movements  south- 
ward from  Columbus,  N.  Mex.,  show 
that  the  line  of  communications  reach- 
ing over  400  miles  into  Mexico  to  the 
advance  guard  of  Gen.  Pershing's  ex- 
peditionary force  Is  being  rapidly 
strengthened   to   meet   any    emergency. 

American  scouts  are  watching  the 
Pulplto  pass,  which  leads  from  .Sonom 
into  the  Casas  Grandes  district  of 
Chihuahua  state  for  the  appearance  of 
Gen.  Arnulfo  Gomez,  commanding  a 
body  of  2,600  Carranza  Infantry  and 
cavalry.  Gen.  Gomez  is  awaiting  or- 
ders from  the  Mexican  minister  of 
war.  Gen.  Obregon,  to  meet  In  Chi- 
huahua for  the  announced  purpose  of 
taking  up  the  pursuit  of  Villa.  In  the 
event  of  trouble  with  the  de  facto  gov- 
ernment. Gen.  Gomez  would  be  In  po- 
sition to  strike  the  line  of  American 
communications  at  Casa«  Grandes. 
Battle    LaMted    Three    Honra. 

There  are  unconflrmrd  reports  that 
the  battle  in  Parral  was  more  desper- 
ate than  Indicated  In  the  Mexican  of- 
ficial advices  and  that  It  lasted  for 
three  hours.  One  report  had  It  that 
mere  than  100  Mexican  civilians  and 
Carranza  soldiers  were  klllvd  and 
wounded  and  that  one  American  soldier 
was  killed  and  several  wounded..  The 
Americans  were  said  to  have  used  a 
machine    gun    In    the    battle. 

The  advance  guaro  which  met  the 
unexpected  attack  In  Parral  probably 
has  passed  the  Chlhuahua-Durango 
line  and  now  Is  In  a  district  where 
Villa  has  a  strong  following  and  where 
there    Is   little    love    for    the   "gringos.. 

From  different  sections  of  Lower 
Chihuahua  come  vague  reports,  of  dis- 
orders arising  from  economic  condi- 
tions and  that  the  de  facto  govern- 
ment is  having  difficulty  m  maintain- 
ing order. 


SUMMARY  OF  THE  WAR  NEWS 


Fi^ench  positions  near  Hill  304  in  the  ; 
Verdun  sector  went  of  the  Meune  were 
■uhjectcd  to  violent  bombardment  lant 
night.  It  was  an  operation  similar  to 
tiMMie  which  usually  precede  infantry 
attacks  and  Indicates  that  the  next 
phaae  of  the  German  aaaault  on  Ver- 
dun   may    develop    shortly. 

East  of  the  Hver  there  1m  recrude- 
scence of  activity  on  the  part  of  the 
Germans,  although  no  heavy  actions 
arc  recorded  In  the  off  trial  French 
communication   of   today. 

A  small  attack  on  French  poaitlons 
Kouth  of  Douaumont  in  the  part  of  the 
line  where  some  of  the  heaviest  fight- 
ing of  the  Verdun  campalim  has  taken 
plLe.  la  sal*  hr  the  ^r*"**  """.^J- 
flee  ta  have  h«*n  repulsed.  Alou« 
Tsrioua   >e«tlo>a   uf   the   front   east    of 


the       rtvcr     the     artillery      wis*      more 
active. 

The  TnrklHh  war  office  report*  the 
defeat  of  three  Runsian  cavalry  regl- 
mentK  by  a  mixed  force  of  Pemlana 
and  Turku  In  Pernlan  Armenia.  Sev- 
eral minor  cnKagcmentt*  had  occurred 
along  the  coaMt  of  A«iia  Minor  between 
conMt  defcn«e«  and  warbhipw.  one  of 
^vhich  is  said   to  have   been   hit. 

The  extent  of  the  damajcc  to  «h!p- 
ping  of  the  Entente  ailic*  nince  the 
inauguration  of  the  new  German  «iub- 
marine  eampalga  is  Indicated  by  au 
offirial  atatcment  from  the  IJermau 
admiralty,  it  la  auld  that  in  March 
eighty  trading  ▼eaads  of  hostile  na- 
tioua  with  an  aggregate  tonnage  of 
aOT.OOtt,  were  sunk  by  German  Bubma- 
rluca    •r   by 


-itei 


■  -»  J-- 


I 


^     DEFECTIVE  PAGE 

1  1  in  il  -  1 


W9 


Friday, 


THE 


Mfc 


UTH     HERALD, 


AprU  14,  1916. 


Weathor-   Ftir    tun  r'  r    :,n,1    Paturd.iv        ^i^lnr     t.-mp*raturo.     Moderate     to     fre.h    aouthwe.terly    wind.. 


The  price  the  nation  knows 

The  quality  the  nation  trusts 

From  Maine  to  California 
$  1  7  means  style  plus  all 
wool  fabrics  plus  expert 
tailoring  plus  guaranteed 
satisfaction. 


INVESTIGATION  IS 
BROWING  BROADER 

Various   Other   Cities   In- 

cludeAin  Plots  to  Blow 

IJUP  Ships. 


Traob 


Styleplus  dfir 
Clothes   *»' 


ra«M  MMiK  nf  •••  I  MB 


nho  aaac  prlc*  the  nation  avr^ 


Makk 


mt. 


have  taught  the  nation  to  respect 
their  quality  and  to  applaud  their 
never-changing  price.  You  cannot 
get  any  better  style.  The  fabrics 
are  all  wool  and  guaranteed.  Few 
men  think  they  need  better.  In  finish 
the  clothes  represent  the  appear- 
ance a  gentleman  appreciates. 

We  are  proud  to  sell  such  clothes 
for  $  1  7 .  One  of  the  great  makers 
has  made  it  possible  by  special- 
izing in  a  big  way  on  a  suit  of  one 
known  price. 

They  are  the  clothes  for  all   men  for  all    occasions, 
assortment  of  fabrics  and  models.  • 

Special  styles  for  young  men 


New   YoiflL'  4 

Juatioe   off^ilJa 

splracy    t<'l;  Vte 
munitions  l4.jti>'..  . 


rll  14. — The  «cope  of 
by    department    of 

fnto  the  allegred  con- 
)  up  ships  carrying 
he      Entente      allies. 


broadened  today  to  Include  the  various 
other  cltlc3,  particularly  Savannah  and 
New   Orleans. 

Eigrht  arrests  of  Germans  allegred  tQ  ] 

have  been  engagod  in  the  manufaAtXire 
and  distribution  of  fira  tombs  had 
been  niade  up  to  tolsTy  and  the  au- 
thorities were  i»rarchlnp  for  a  ninth 
man.  Dr.  Wither  T.  Scheele,  head  of 
the  Nev<^  Jersey  Ammunition  &  Chem- 
ical company  of  Hoboken,  at  whose 
plant  the  police  «ay,  the  bombs  were 
charged  with   explosive   materials. 

Thof  «eclare4  that  the  eight  pris- 
oners, mainly  employes  of  the  North 
German  Lloyd  and  Hamburg-Amer- 
ican Steamship  companies,  were 
active  only  in  the  execution  of  the 
plot,  the  manufacture  and  distribu- 
tion   of    the    bombs    by    which      It    Is 


charged    fires    were    started    on    more 
than    thi.rty  steamers. 

SAKING  POWDER  CASE. 

North   Dakota  Pure   Food   Commis- 
sioner Is  Prosecuting  Action. 

Fargo,  N.  D..  April  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — ^Whether  Ingredients 
can  be  put  Into  foods  or  beverages 
which  are  not  necessary  to  their  man- 
ufacture and.  though  not  injurious, 
tend  to  make  the  foods  appear  better 
than  they  really  are.  will  be  tested  out 
In  a  case  started  against  the  \a.lu- 
met  Baking  Powder  company  by  Pure 
Food   Commissioner  E.    F.   Ladd    today. 


The  case  was  started  in  district  comr| 
here  on  the  seizure  of  «lx  cans  of  Calo- 
met  baking  powder  and  will  be  car- 
ried  through   the   court* 

Commissioner  L<add  contends  thj 
baking  powder  in  question  contains  4 
email  quantity  of  albumen,  which,  in  4 
waterglass  teat,  make.'j  the  product 
appear  belter  than  others  not  contain- 
ing it,  and  wliich  has  really  no  effeot 
on  the  quality  or  strength  of  the  pow- 
der Recently  Attorney  General  Henry 
J.  Linde  gave  an  opinion  that  the  food 
commlbsioner  did  not  have  a  case 
against  the  Calumet  people,  but  the 
action    ii   started    and    will    be    tested 

out. 

• 

Balmacaan     spring    coats.    $>.75.      "I 
Winners"   removal  sale. 


Parts 


New  York 


Duluth 


Cincinnati 


Washington,  D.  C. 


O' 


Big 


.  Jt 


-«•<••■ 


mUm  f* 


J 


Superior  Street  at  First  A  venue  West 
Present 

Wonderful  Easter  Displays 

The  Easter  Displays  of  Women's  Misses'  and  Girls'  Fashionable  Apparel 

include  the  most  extensive  and  diversified  assortments  of  outer  attire  for  all  occasions  that 
^e  have  ever  had  the  privilege  of  presenting  to  the  public.  Special  consideration  has  been 
givep  V?  Sports  Costumes  appropriate  for  both  indoor  and  outdoor  pastimes  in  town  or  country. 
Exclusive  tcltra  and  cofiservative  modes  in  Tailored  Suits,  Sports  and  Utility  Coats  and 
Suits;  Street,  Afternoon  and  Dance  Costumes;  Evening  Gowns  and  Wraps,  Blouses  and  Mil- 
linery, reproduced  from  the  latest  Paris  Fashions. 

Utility,  Sports  and  Dress  Coats 


Women's  and  Misses'  Suits 

Featuring  many  new  smart  models  in  Serge,  Gabar- 
dine, Velour  Checks,  Silk  or  Wool  Jersey,  Poiret  Twill, 
Scotch  tweeds  and  Novelty  fabrics  in  plain  or  combi- 
nation effects. 

At  $29.50.  $35.  $45.  $55  Upward 

Handsome  Costume  Suits 
„  At  $55.  $59,  $65  and  $75 

O!  Silk.  Faille,  Taffeta  and  Cloth  and  Taffeta  Combinations. 


Exclusive  Cloth  or  Silk  textures— for  touring,  street 
and  outing  wear — imported  Pastel  Checks,  Velours  de 
Laine,  Silk  Bolivia,  Guernsey  Cloth,  Gabardine,  Twill 
Taffeta,  Faille  and  Novelty  fabrics— in  Pastel  shadings 
and  vivid  colorings,  with  here  and  there  touches  and 
soundings  of  fur. 

At  $15.  $19.  $25.  $35  Upward 


ALL  FIREMEN 
ORGANIZED 

JCommittee  Formed  to  Carry 

on  Fight  for  Double 

Platoon. 


hall  laat  Monday.  It  will  bp  known  as 
tho  double-platoon  committee,  and  It 
win  be  In  charge  of  all  details  pertain- 
ing to  actlvltU^s'  In  behalf  of  the  pro- 
posed change  In  labor  conditions  for 
flrem'-n. 

The  flromen  are  arrangrlng  to  fi- 
nance the  campaign  th»-maelves  If  pos- 
sible, and  the  wives  of  the  nu-inbers  of 
the  department  are  arranging  for  a 
dance  tn  the  near  future  to  raise  fun'is. 
Many  of  the  firemen  ac  th»>  beginning 
of  the  campaign  for  tho  double  platoon 
syfitem  hoped  that  the  matter  might  be 
■ettled  without  resorting  to  a  special 
election,  but  now  they  aay  that  this 
was  the  only  course  open  to  them  be- 
cause of  the  attitude  of  the  city  com- 
mission. 


Every    company    of    thi    Puluth    fire 

.Idfpartinent   was    represented    In   a   gen- 

-eral  committee  appointed  to  carry  on  a 

Vigorous  campaiJjn    in     behalf     of     the 

Initiative    ordinance    filed    at    the    city 


Opportunities  for  You 

In  the  grocery  and  meat  market  ads  In 
The  Herald  tonight. 


$25  spring  suits  now  only  114.76. 
Winners"   removal  sale. 


ASSESSOR  TO 
CANVASS  CITY 


Deputies  Will  Be  Given  Fi- 
nal  Instructions 
Next  Week. 


fEaster  Millinery  Sale 


At 


of  Great  Importance 

^8,  >10,  n2 

Former  Values  $14  to  $22. 


TAe  ^Q^tJoJUL  Stor0 

Saturday.  April  15th,  with  each  purchase  at  the  Soda 
Fountain  amounting  to  25c  we  will  give 

Pree— A  Beautiful  Souvenir  Spoon 
of  the  State  of  Minnesota 

These  spoons  are  AIX  Community  Silver  and  usually 
retail  for  75c  each.  With  each  purchase  amounting  to  50c 
we  will  give  two  spoons,  etc. 

The  following  menu  will  be  served  at  the  fountain  from 
11 :30  to  2  p.  m.  and  from  5:30  to  7  p.  m. 

==1V1EN  U 


Split    Pea    Soup 10« 

Roant   Bc«f   wltb  flfaahvd 

Po4ato«M     •>« 

nnktMl  Bean«  A  Brown  Bread  15c 

.HpMKht-ttI    Itttlienne     10« 

(ream    Ma«hed    FotatoeM 10c 

Potato  Salad   with  Boloima 

SauMage      ISe 

Lima  Braiin   In   Cream 5« 

l.reen    I'epper    Stuffed   with 

Chicken  Salad    B5« 

ruiuatu   Stuffed  with  Chicken 

SHind SSe 

Slleed    Tomatoen     .....lOc 

>>llrod    Ciiruiubers     lOe 

U^e    Puddiug    lOe 

PIES 

\  pple « *« 

Apple   a    la    Mode 10c 

Pumpkin      ^ •« 

Cherry     5c 


SALADS 

Chleken     SOc 

Potato     lOa 

Fruit     lOe 

Cabbaire    Pimento     15« 

CAKES 

Lady    Baltimore    B« 

Aitcrelf  ood     5« 

Chocolate     6« 

RoekM     5e 

BREADS 

Cruaty    Rolls    5e 

Parker     IIouHe    RoU« B« 

Rye    Bread    So 

Bread    and    Batter Be 

DoHKhikuts     B« 

Coffee,    per     cap S« 

Tea,    per    pot Sc 

Hot   Chocolate    10c 

ICE    CREAMS 

FrcMh    Strawberry    10c 

Pineapple    Mouitae     10c 

Pineapple    lee     10c 

Strawberry     Sundae     10c 

Harmony     Sundae     15c 

Janice   Sundae    20c 


Twenty  Men  Will  Begin  Tak- 
ing Personal  Property 
Valuations  May  1. 


«N-xt  week  Deputy  Aesessor  Fowler 
will  make  preliminary  plans  for  ob- 
talningr  the  annual  personal  property 
valuations. 

On  May  1  twenty  men  will  start  on 
a  complete  canvass  of  the  city  to  ob- 
tain personal  property  valuations  and 
a  complete  list  of  money  and  credits, 
according  to  an  announcement  made 
today  by  Deputy  Fowler.  These  men 
will  meet  a  week  from  tomorrow  morn- 
ing in  the  city  assessor's  office  to  re- 
ceive final  Instructions  preparatory  to 
the    beginning    of    the    work. 

Last  year  the  personal  property  In 
Duluth  was  assessed  at  $14,262,042, 
while  the  moneys  and  credits  of  local 
residents  totaled  $19,678,722.  Indica- 
tions point  to  a  large  increase  for  thU 
year,   according    to   Mr.    Fowler. 

The  deputies  who  will  start  on  May 
1  will  set  valuations  on  all  the  per- 
sonal properly  of  the  city,  after  which 
assebsments  will  be  made  by  City  As- 
sessor Scott.  Before  the  books  are 
made  out  and  sent  to  the  county  au- 
ditor the  city  tax  review  board,  con- 
sisting of  the  mayor,  city  clerk  and 
fussessor,  will  meet  and  consider  ob- 
jeotiona  to  the  assessments.  This  board 
will  sit  In  session  during  the  last  week 
In  June.  After  the  auditor  certifies 
to  the  books  they  are  sent  to  the  state 
board  before  the  tax  rolls  are  made 
out.  ^  .,■ 

The  personal  property  tax  for  this 
year  will  be  payable  on  Jan.  1,  1917, 
the  last  day  being  March  SI.  Half  of 
the  real  estate  taxes  must  be  paid  by 
June  1  and  tho  remainder  by  Nov.  1, 
according  to  state  tax  laws. 


One  hundred  high-class  Hats  have  been  taken  from  our  reg- 
ular stock.  In  order  to  make  room  for  the  incoming  mid-sum- 
mer arrivals  we  place  these  Hats  on  sale  for  quick  disposal. 
There  are  Sailor  Hats,  Poke,  Mushroom  and  Turban  effects 
— in  Straw,  Silk  and  various  combinations,  smartly  trimmed 
with  Wings,  ribbons,  flowers  and  smart  novelties.  An  oppor- 
tunity to  purchase  your  Easter  Hat  at  a  very  moderate  cost. 


Afternoon  and  Street  Dresses 

Tomorrow  we  will  feature  an  attractive  assortment  of 
smart  models  suitable  for  afternoon  and  street  wear. 
The'  materials  are  Taffeta,  Georgette  Crepe,  Chiffon 
and  plaili  and  novelty  Silks  in  large  variety  of  styles 
and  colors. 

'  At  $25,  $29,  $35,  $45  Upward 

Smart  Silk  Dresses  at  $19.50 

We  specially  feature  tomorrow  three  smart  models  in 
Taffeta  and  Silk  and  Georgette  Dresses  in  checks, 
stripes  and  solid  colors.    Regular  values,  $25. 


.   Lovely  Easter  Blouses 

We  feature  for  tomorrow  a  number  of  very  attractive 
styles  in  Blouses  and  Waists  at  very  attractive  prices — 
in  fine  quality  Voiles,  Batiste,  Handkerchief  Linen, 
Crepe  de  Chine,  Georgette  and  Silk  in  plain  colors, 
stripes,  checks,  plaids  and  all  the  new  high  shades. 

At  $1.95,  $2.50,  $3.75.  $5  and  $6.75 

Afternoon  and  Costume  Blouses 

AT  $8.50,  $10,  $12,  $15  UPWARD.     ' 
Of  Georgette,  Crepe  de  Chine,  Novelty  Silks,  fine  Voiles 
and  Laces.  _. 


Through  the  courtesy  of  the  Harmony  Toilet  Goods 
Labratorics  of  Boston,  Miss  Craig  a  beauty  specialist  of 
Boston,  will  be  at  our  store  the  week  of  May  1st. 

Miss  tlralK  teaelkes  a  Freneh  MaiM»a«e  IlyKlfnr  of  the  Skin  and 
Phynleal  Culture  of  the  Fare.  To  make  aiipo4ntiM*-ntii  for  yonr  hoiue. 
rail  IWelrone  2«5.  or  <;rand  714.  ^o  rharve  la  mat!*"  f«r  her  wervlces. 
8b«  U  here   to  demonstrate  the   Harmony  Line  of  Toilet  Articles. 

E.  M.  TREDWAY,  Druggist,    108  West  Superior  St. 


FISHING  SEASON 
OPENS  TOMORROW 

We  have  a  complete  stock 
of  the  finest  Fishing:  Tackle 
»n  the  city,  and  can  save  you 
25%  on  your  outfit. 
AUo  Complete  Stoek  of  Tires 
•Md    Auto   ArreMHorleN. 

SIE6EL  HARDWARE  CO. 

IAS     RA9T     SrPBRlOR     iT. 

Melrose    890 — Grand     160. 


Smart  Easter  Fashions  for  Juniors  and  Girls 

Suits,  Coats,  Tub  Frocks,  Party,  Dance  and  Confirmation  Dresses 


JUNIORS'  SUITS— 12  to  17  years; 
smart  models,  in  Serge,  Gabardine,  Twills, 
Checks  and  Novelty  Fabrics;  dressy  or 
pllln  tailored  styles;  lined  with  Peau  de 
Cygne-  $17.50  to  $35 

GIRLS'  COATS— 6  to  16  years;  prac- 
tical models  in  Serge,  Gabardine,  Silk, 
Velour  Checks  and  Novelty  materials; 
plain  tailored,  belted,  cape  and  novelty 
effects-  $6.75  to  $25 

Separate  Middy  Blouses  and  Middy  Skirts. 


PARTY  AND  CONFIRMATION 
DRESSES— Charming  styles  in  Lace. 
Voile,  Batiste,  Net,  Georgette  and  Silk — 
many  trimmed  with  dainty  Laces  and 
Embroideries—  ^5  Jq  ^25 

GIRLS'  TUB  FROCKS— In  French  and 
Ramie  Linen,  Bedford  Cord,  Devonshire 
Cloth,  Repp,  New  Cloth,  Anderson  Ging- 
ham and  Percale — in  Russian,  Empire, 
Bolivia,  Norfolk  and  Middy  styles— 

$lto$15 


mvH  Corsets,  Brassieres,  Boudoir  Caps,  Petticoats,  Crepe  de  Cfiine  Underwear 


"11— 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


^ 


^  » 


■«nr 


r^^^^"" 


-K— 


Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


April  14, 1916. 


St] 


HERALD    EMPLOYES    BID    FAREWELL 

Q     ®     Q     ®     Q     ®     9 

TO  "BRUCE"  AT  AN  INFORMAL  BANQUET 


For  the  purpose  of  bidding  him 
God-spoed  and  good  luck,  also  to  let 
him  know  the  esteem  In  which  he 
is  hfld  by  his  fellow  workers.  'The 
Htrald's  citj'  n«ws  staff  and  buslnesii 
office  force  entertained  at  a  farewell 
dinner  last  evening  for  Robert  Bruce 
Llggftt,  for  seven  years  sporting 
editor  of  The  Herald.  The  dinner  was 
served  In  the  Dutch  room  of  the  St. 
Louis  hotel.  So  far  as  The  Herald 
Is  concerned  he  wHl  be  "through"  to- 
morrow, and  will  go  East  to  enter 
another    line    of    endeavor. 

When  the  crowd  gathered  In  the 
Dutch  room  the  door  opened  and 
Lawrence  Duby  "horned  In"  with  the 
remark  that  he  "gut-.ssfd  that  he  was 
as  good  a  friend  of  Hob  Llggett's  ns 
Anybody,"  and  he  proposed  to  break 
Into  the  farewell.  The  rest  agreed 
and  gave  him  a  chair.  Outside  of 
the  chief  entertainer  of  the  boys'  de- 
partment of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  the  at- 
tendance was  confined  to  the  busl- 
XXfsn  offlct'  force  of  The  Herald  and 
th»-   m»'mber8  of  the   news   department. 

Nineteen  sat  at  the  table,  all  Inti- 
mate friends  of  the  "deceased."  J.  E. 
Rcxkwell.  city  editor,  acted  as  toast- 
ma.stcr  «i\d  "got  by."  Charles  Mc- 
Donnell, offki.-U  orator  of  The  Herald, 
had  a  grievance  agulti.st  the  toast- 
master,  however,  because  Just  •»  Roon 
AS  "Mac"  pot  on  his  feet  the  two- 
mlniite  limit  was  called  on  him.  He 
was  permitted  to  finish  his  «peech 
later,  but  It  probably  did  not  have 
thf»  same  effect  as  It  would  have  had 
without  about  half  a  dozen  other 
speecljes    .sandwiched    in   between. 

"Uruce,"  as  the  departing  sportlnff 
editor  Is  known,  was  extended  the 
most  sincere  felU-ltatlons  and  good 
wishes;    also   It    was   Impressed   on    him 


that  "the  gang"  Is  sorry  that  he  will 
no  longer  be  one  of  them.  He  re- 
plied In  a  manner  which  showed  his 
appreciation  and  assured  his  hosts 
that  aside  from  business  benefits,  he 
hated  to  go,  and  leave  the  associa- 
tions   of   many   years'    standing. 

Tho.se  present  were;  R.  B.  Liggett. 
Col.  William  P.  Henry,  business  and 
advertising  :nanager;  J.  E.  Rockwell, 
city  editor;  George  Hunter,  clrcuLi- 
tlon  manager;  Robert  Berlnl,  Charles 
McDonnell.  S.  John  Schulte.  Russell 
E.  McCord,  Earl  Galaway,  T.  F.  Olson, 
Coleman  F.  Naughlon.  P.  J.  Robinson, 
Lawrence  Duby.  Stanley  Mack,  8.  D. 
Forgy,  A.  B.  Kapplln.  Helmer  Gren- 
ner,  Fred  B.  Teske  and  Jamea  A. 
Stuart. 

''CUB"  BUCK  HERE  TO 
ADDRESS  "Y"  BOYS 


Badger    Football    Captain 

Will  Speak  at  Annual 

Banquet. 

"Cub"  Buck.  Wisconsin's  1916  foot- 
ball captain,  arrived  In  Duluth  thta 
morning  to  be  the  guest  of  the  boys' 
department  of  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  where 
he  Is  to  apeak  tonight  at  the  boys' 
fourteenth  annual  banquet.  Buck  la 
a  fine  type  of  college  athlete  and  the 
fact  that  he  Is  a  strong  exponent  of 
clean  athletics  has  made  him  a  popu- 
lar speaker  for  college  men  and  boys. 


E.  W.  Peck  will  arrive  from  Minneap- 
olis this  afternoon.  Mr.  Peck  la  to  b« 
the  toastmaster.  Under  the  hands  or 
a  committee  of  women  the  big  gym- 
nasium, where  the  banquet  will  be 
served,  has  been  transformed  Into  a 
garden,  and  those  who  have  been  used 
to  playing  games  In  It  will  hardly  be 
able  to  recognize   it. 

The  banquet  wlU  begin  promptly  at 
6:30.  The  boys'  department  orchestra 
of  eight  pieces  will  provide  a  program 
during  the  dinner  period.  One  of  the 
features  of  the  program  will  be  some 
magical  wonders  by  Evans  Phelan.  Mr. 
Phelan  was  a  member  of  the  boys'  de- 
partment thirteen  years  ago.  Laurence 
Duby  will  give  a  black-face  specialty. 
George  Ward  will  sing  "America"  and 
Wlllard  Thorp  will  play  a  guitar  aolo 
with    a    mouth    organ    accompaniment. 

Several  boys  have  won  a  place  tn 
the  Hustler  club  and  they  will  be 
guests  this  evening.  Sitting  at  a  table 
of  honor  they  will  each  receive  the 
official  emblem  of  the  club  and  one  of 
their  number  will  be  elected  to  attend 
Camp  Miller  for  a  week  free.  The  list 
follows:  Fred  Zollner,  Harry  Gu  nn. 
Herman  Griffith,  Russell  Burns  Ballus 
And  rson,  John  Bennett.  Oscar  Flaaten, 
Arthur  Anderson.  Clyde,^,  ^Jf "»^,1' 
Leonard  Hendrlckson.  Harold  Mitchell. 
Donald  McGregor,  Clifford  Melander. 
William  Upham.  Robert  Currle^  Roy 
Anderson,  Robert  Welchert.  WUliam 
Hasklns,  Arthur  Olson.  Clinton  Wlberg. 
Ray  Bartholdl.  The  Hustler  with  the 
most  points  will  receive  a  large  boys 
departnieiit  blanket  and  the  next  two 
highest   will    each    receive   a   tnedal. 

Secretary  McLeod  announces  that  the 
gallery  of  the  gymnasluin  will  open  at 
730  for  parents  who  will  like  to  hear 
the  program  and  speeches. 

♦ 

I.  W.  W.  A«Ua««»  "Flo«<*d.»» 

Ashland  Wl.T.  April  14.— Pleading 
guilty  to  a  charge  of  drunkenness. 
Albert  Torn,  representing  the  I.  W.  \\ .. 
who  has  been  agitating  at  Barksdale. 
the  headquarters  of  the  Dupont  Pow- 
der company,  near  here,  trying  to  or- 
ganize the  men.  was  fined  $100  here. 
Sentence  was  suspended  on  condition 
he  leave  town,  and  he  did. 


$2.98  Taffeta  Silk  Petticoats 
in  black  and  colors  (^p  pn 
Saturday  only y>^'^*7 

$1.00 


$1.50  Sateen  Petti- 
coats Saturday  at.. 


New  Onyx  Silk  Hosiery  at  $1.00  Here. 
24  and  26  WesTSuperior  St.— Near  First  Ave.  West 

Saturday;  A  Sale  of  Newest  Spring  Styles  in 

Suits  at  $19.75 

—  Worth  Regularly  $25.00- 

Th  price  will  be  the  most  sensational,  when  qual- 
ity styles  and  beautiful  materials  are  considered;  a 
choice  of  over  fifteen  clever  models,  for  women  and 
misses— Shepherd  Checks,  Taffeta  Silks,  Silk  and 
Cloth  Combinations,  Gabardines,  Serges,  Poplins, 
in  colors,  -navy,  blue,  black,  Belgian  blue  and  green. 
Consider  yourself  fortunate  to  purchase  one 
^  of  these  beautiful  models  Saturday  at  $19.75 

200  Attractive  Suits 

at  $25.00,  $29.75, 
$35.00  to  $45.00 

Nowhere  else  will  you  find  such  an  enor- 
mous variety  of  charming  models;  the  sea- 
son's popular  styles  and  materials  priced 
$5.00  to  .$10.00  less. 


500  Spring  Coats 

Marvelous  showing  of  over  100  different,  snappy  styles,  in 
coats,  for  almost  every  purpose,  and  every  popular  material  in 
demand. 


Just  25  new  Golfine  Coats;  all 
lined  in  coral  and  q*^  /l/l 
ijreeii ;  Saturday yjO*  \J\J 

200  Attractive  Spring  Coats; 
Silks,  Gabardines,  Coverts, 
White  Chinchillas,    Jersey  and 

ft?^'.'."!".?' $15.00 


100  Nobby  Serge,  Poplin  and 
Chinchilla    Coats;    black    and 

::!:j'l^T'!^!:.$io.oo 

200  Charming  Spring  Coats,  at 

^^■r:'':.'''.$l9J5 


Clearing  Out  Our  Entire  Stock  of 

Exquisite  Dresses 


that  were  on  display  for  opening  at  almost  below  their  actual  cost 


50  Beautiful  Dresses;  only  one  of 
a  kind,  were  to  C/i?   ^(1 

$21).75,  now  at tpiO.yJXJ 

2 J  Stunning  Model  Dresses,  that 
were  to  $45.00,  now   (f  O^   JK 


10  Exquisite  Dresses,    that  were 
up  to  $75.00,  now       Jf^/C  Qf) 


at 


65    Pretty    Silk    Dresses,      were 
up  to  $19.75,  now         C^i  p  ^Q 


at 


Choose  Your  Easter  Blouse 

Here  From  Hundreds  of  the  Newest  Styles  at  Low  Prices 


^v 


: 
i^      ■■       ■     ■  ■     ■       ■     ■       •»       ■  I 


100  Fancy  Georgette  Blouses; 
1  frill  and  Jabot  effects;  others 
with  lace,  and  tailored;  an 
amazing  variety  of  ^/r  /!/) 
styles;     Saturday.  .  .^>0,\JU 


200  Beautiful  Silk  Blouses:  an 
endless  selection  of  newest 
models,  in  crepes,  crepe  de 
chines,  novelties  and 
lingeries,  at. 


$3.75 

300  Pretty  Silk  Waists  $1.98 

Think  of  buying  an  attractive,  stylish  Silk  Blouse  at  $1.98  In  the  face 
of  the  big  advance  prices  on  silks;  an  alluring  selection  of  styles  suit- 
able with  your  new  suit. 


98 


500  Newest  Cotton  Waists  and 
Middy  Blouses  in  a  Big  Sale  at 

Don't  fall  to  look  these  handsome  styles  over  Just  for  comparison. 
You'll  find  a  neat  striped  organdy,  some  In  rich  cloths,  volleys,  batiste, 
fancy  novelty  wash  materials,  Jap  silks  and  a  dozen  8|yle8  in  middies, 
all  priced  at  98c. 

145  Taffeta  Silk  and  Wool  Poplin  Skirts,  in  new  pleated  styles ; 
just  the  style  for  school  girls,  and  many  styles  (f^ pT    /)/! 

for  women,  all  at KpU  •\J\J 


^ 


«#»*»»»«(*»iM»»»»»»«»»«*»**»*«*«»#»»»«»**»*»*«»»*»»»»* 


/ 

■->*  ^»mm0mitfm^ 


Women  •  Wcaratlea  Tkat  Will 
Grace  tke  Easter  Promenade! 


^\ 


A  Brilliant  Display 
6{  New  Easter  Hats 


Couldn't  resist  saying  a  word  of  these  very  recent 
originations.  True  enough,  Paris  inspired  them  and 
"Silberstein's"  artists,  not  content  to  merely  repeat 
beauty,  have  modified ;  yes,  at  times  improved  on  the 
original.  We  are  rightfully  proud  of  our  collection 
of  Hats  at — 

$5.00,  $7.50,  $iom 

$12.50,  $15  and  $16.50 

They're  the  added  charm  of  intrinsic  quality,  too, 
for  many  of  them  are  trimmed  with  the  dainty  im- 
ported trimmings,  French  Flowers,  French  Motifs, 
Porcelain  and  Bead  Ornaments,  Ribbon  Cockades- 
creations  to  cap  the  beauty  of  Easter  costume  however 
charming.  (Millinery  Salon,  Third  Floor.) 


(D 


Suits 

for  young  girls  as  well  as  for  the  women  are  careful  copies  of 
originals  by  Lanvin,  Paquin,  DrecoU  and  Jenny,  among 
others,  and  hardly  any  two  of  them  are  alike.  This  means 
that  there  is  the  greatest  variety  in  the  collection. ,  There 
are  fine  tailored  styles,  both  simple  and  smart;  novelty 
styles  of  taffeta  or  faille  or  wool  fabrics,  sometimes  elabor- 
ate with  embroidery,  sometimes  gay  and  dashing  with  bril- 
liant linings  or  collars.  It  is  impossible  to  go  into  details 
about  them ;  we  shall  simply  say  that  thev  are  of  the  latest 
fashion.  Silk  Suits  of  Tafifeta  and  Faille  and  many  new 
Sport  Suits  shown  in  our  marvelous  collection,  and  best  of 
all  reasonably  priced— $22.50,  $25,  $27.60,  $29.50,  $32.50,  $35, 
k     $37.50  and  $39.50. 

WHAT  A  WONDERFUL  CALL  FOR 

Sport  Coats  and 
Ckecked  Coats 

Numerous  women  prefer  them  to  any  other  for  warmer 
days  just  because  they  do  look  springlike.  Prices  for  the 
plainer  kind  at  $12.75  and  running  up  to  $29.50. 

Separate  Skirts 

Sport  Skirts,  TafYeta  Skirts,  Wool  Skirts  and  skirts  of 
every  description,  and  hardly  one  of  them  without  a  novel 
feature,  a  slit  or  a  curved  pocket,  a  fancy  girdle  and  oddly 
pointed  yoke  or  some  uncommon  fashion  of  using  the 
fullness--$5  up  to  $25. 

Also  showing  Tailored  Linen  Waists,  in  plain  and  striped 
effects,  all  the  new  Spring  shades— $3.50,  $3.75  and  $3.95. 
Also  Fine  Georgette  Crepe  Waists  in  the  very  newest  styles. 
And  a  most  comprehensive  showing  of  Afternoon  and  Eve- 
ning Dresses  for  misses  and  women.  It  will  pay  you  to 
see  them. 


« 

s 

« 

i 


m 


Easter  Accessories 

Novelty  Gloves,  Black  and  White  Ribbons,  New  Hair 
Ornaments,  Smart  Hand  Bags,  newest  Paris  Jewelry, 
beautiful  new  neckwear.  (Just  arrived,  Maline  neck  rufts.) 
Imported  Veils  and  Veiling  and  complete  stocks  of 
Spring  Hosiery  and  Underwear. 


m 
m 
m 
« 
« 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
m 
« 

* 

« 

« 

« 

« 

* 
« 


b»»»»*»»»»»»**»»»**»***»****»**************^**^^^^ 


FOLLOWS  HIS  "FARE" 

Q  Q  <&  ®  Q 

FROM  CAR  TO  JITNEY 

"Fare,   please." 

•Twas  the  famlllaf  fxpresBlon  of  a 
street  car  conductor  who  had  stopped 
off  his  car  and  had  taken  hold  of  a 
man  who  had  Just  jumped  Into  a  Jit- 
ney   bus. 

It  happened  at  Fifteenth  avenue 
east  last  evening.  Several  woodsmen 
had  come  In  on  the  late  train  on  the 
D  &  I.  R.  railroad  and  arrived  at  , 
the  corner  of  Superior  street.  Just 
a»  the  street  car  bound  west  arrive" 
at  the  corner  several  of  the  woods- 
men Jumped  on  the  c«r.  but  the  Jit- 
ney buses  were  also  there  to  receive 
passengers.  . ,      .,  *      ., 

One  man  who  had  evidently  got  on 
the  street  car  at  Sixteenth  or  Sev- 
enteenth tivenue  and  had  not  paUl  a 
fare.  Jumped  off  th<»  car  as  »ts  gates 
were  closing,  and  Into  one  of  the  Jit- 
neys. The  conductor  brouKht  his  car 
to  a  stop  with  a  Jerk  and  Jumped  after 

"Fare  please,  and  be  quick  about 
It."  he  said,  as  he  laid  his  heavy  hand 
on  his  former  passepier.  He  got  his 
money  and  everybody  Was  happy  ex- 
ofpt    the   victim.  ,      ..     .     »    ## 

'•These  guvs  can't  ring  in  that  stuff 
on  me."  was  the  only  comment  made 
by    the    conductor.  _ 

BRITISH  GOVERNMENT 
REDUCING  FREIGHT 

I.ondon,  April  14.— Government  ac- 
tion In  the  matter  of  reducing  freight 
rates  Is  apparent  In  piost  directions  of 
the  market,  .ind  fears- are  entertained 
by  those  who  at  present  are  reaping  a 
harvest  In  the  sections  hitherto  un- 
touched by  government  mea»"'"*s  that 
their  turn  will  soon  come  for  a  scaling 
downwards  In  quotations 

The  most  notable  reduction  Is  1"  tne 
river  Plate  market,  where  Inste.^d  of 
176  shillings  per  ton  being  P«'a.  ,\o 
bring  maize  to  Europe,   only  116   snu- 


D.    U..    4-14-lt. 


Your  Easter  Suit  is 
ready  for  a  try-on 
at  The  Columbia 


It  Too  Fat  Get 

More  Fresli  Air 

BE   MODERATE    IN   VOIR   DIET   AND 

REDtCE    YOVR    WKKiHT— TAKE 

OIL    OF    KOREIN. 

Lack  of  fresh  air.  it  is  said,  weakens 
the  oxygen-carrying  power  of  the 
blood,  the  liver  becomes  sluggish,  fat 
accumulates  and  the  action  of  many 
of  the  vital  organs  are  hindered  there- 
by. The  heart  action  becomes  weak, 
work  is  an  effort  and  the  beauty  of 
the   figure  Is   destroyed. 

Fat  put  on  by  Indoor  life  Is  un- 
healthy and  if  nature  Is  not  assisted  In 
throwing  It  off  a  serious  case  of 
obesity  may  result. 

When  vou  feel  that  you  are  getting 
too  stout,  take  the  matter  In  hand  at 
once.  Don't  wait  until  your  figure  has 
become  a  Joke  and  your  health  ruined 
through  carrying  around  a  burden  of 
unsightly   and   unhealthy   fat. 

Spend  as  much  time  as  you  possibly 
can  in  the  open  air;  breathe  deeply  and 
get  from  Boyce's  Drug  Store,  331  W. 
Superior  St..  or  any  druggist  a  box  of 
oil  of  koreln  capsules;  take  one  after 
each   meal   and   one   before   retiring  at 

night.  L       .         M  jt 

Weigh  yourself  ev*y  few  days  ana 
keep  up  the  treatment  until  you  aro 
down  to  normal.  OH  of  korein  is  ab- 
solutely htrmless.  Is  plewMt  to  Uke  h«lp»  the  dl- 
t-Mlon  anrt  fTcn  a  ffw  i)»y»'  trf»tm»nt  h»s  befn  r«-port*<I 
to  tbo«  •  DoUcetbU  rtduciioo  1«  vfeUht.r-AdTerlitement. 


>w- 


Be  here  tomorrow. 
$10  to   $40. 


lings  is  said  to  be  obtainable.  North 
American  markets  are  also  easier. 

These  lower  rates  apply  only  to  Brit- 
ish steamers,  as  the  authorities  nave 
no  control  over  neutral  tonnage;  but 
some  move  Is  contemplated  In  order 
to  bring  neutrals  Into  line  by  restrict- 
ing Insurance  and  bunkering  facilities. 

Certain  sections  of  the  shipping 
world  are  optimistic  regarding  the 
Dardanelles  being  free  for  Russian 
shipments  before  the  end  of  the  year. 

m         • 

Belted  back  spring  suits,  111.26.  "3 
Winners"   removal  sale. 

CONTRACTS  OMlL  FOR 
BIG  ORE  TONNAGE 

Great    Northern   Trustees 

Have  Orders  for  1,100,000 

Tons  Already  Booked. 

Great  Northern  ore  trustees  have  so 
far  closed  contracts  for  the  sale  of 
1,100,000  tons  of  Iron  ore  this  season, 
according  to  advices  from  New  Tork. 
Negotiations  are  also  reported  to  be  in 
progress  for  the  disposal  of  a  large  ad- 
ditional tonnage,  and  It  Is  expected 
that  Interesting  announcements  In  that 
connection  will  be  made  shortly. 

The  trustees  are  keeping  their  or- 
ganization fully  engaged  at  present  In 
mining  operations  and  stock  piling  m 
preparation  for  the  enormous  demand 
for  ore  cgnsldered  certain  to  come  as 


scon  as  the  season  is  in  full  swing.  It  ! 
is  considered  probable  that  the  great 
bulk  of  the  ore  will  be  taken  from 
mines  that  are  held  in  fee  and  upon 
which  no  royalties  for  ore  mined  will 
have  to  be  paid  to  outside  owners. 
Tliat  is  expected  to  lead  to  a  larger  re- 
turn for  the  trustees  than  during  the 
period  when  the  properties  were  leased 
to  the  United  States  Steel  corporation 
as  a  considerable  proportion  of  the 
ore  then  mined  was  taken  from  prop- 
erties not  owned  by  Great  Northern 
Ore.  In  view  of  the  bright  prospects 
for  the  season,  the  market  in  that  se- 
curity has  been  strong  on  the  New 
York   Stock   exchange  lately. 

MAN'S  DOUBLE  CASHED 
FRAUDULENT  CHECKS 

La  Crosse,  Wis.,  April  14. — A  double 
who  Is  not  careful  In  obeying  the  laws 
Is  blamed  by  John  Berry.  Winona 
county  farmer,  for  his  arrest  and  de- 
tention here  as  a  suspect  In  connection 
with  the  passing  of  four  fraudulent 
chicles 

Berry  made  good  a  check  for  $16. 
which  he  was  charged  with  passing  In 
Winona,  in  order  to  save  his  family 
embarrassment,  but  refuses  to  stand 
further  losses.  Merchants  who  cashed 
the  checks  here  declare  Berry  Is  not 
the  man. 

APPOINTED  CARRIERS 

OUT  OF  AITKIN 

Aitkin,  Minn..  April  _  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Postmaster  A.  L.  Ham", 
ton  has  received  notice  of  the  official 


appointment  of  Otto  Tonlus.  who  has 
been  temporary  carrier  on  Rural  Route 
No.  1  as  regular  carrier,  and  thf  ap- 
pointment of  Adam  Oray  as  carrier  on 
Route  No.  8,  which  has  been  carried 
temporarily  by  H.  W.  Haugan. 

Lester  Spalding,  who  was  r<  <ently 
discharged  from  the  English  army,  ar- 
rived  home  Tuesday  night  to  visit  hi* 
parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.  L.  Spalding. 

Mrs.  C.  A.  Amundsen  of  St.  Paul,  who 
has  been  visiting  her  sister,  Mrs.  W.  F. 
Murphy,  for  a  week,  left  Wednesday 
for  Bralnerd  to  Join  her  husband  and 
they  will  make  their  home  on  a  farm. 
Mr.  Amundsen  was  a  week-end  guest 
at  the  Murphy  home. 


Matting 
Suit  Cases  $1  and  Up 


>^^ 


Quality 


M^"^ 


Scn'ice 


VlORITZ   l/kWJt.  (.  MOR)Tr^,OX 

ITAPLISMCD  »88b^ 


ESTABL 


Dulutk  Trunk  Co. 
Superior  St.,  220  West 


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I  

— I —  H  -f^iMaaMMHHH 


! 

i 


Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


April  14,  1916. 


-«• 


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. 


QmEMTM. 


Pre-Easter  Sale  Saturday 

The  r)ricntal  Shop  presents  its  compliments  to  the 
women  who  know  and  appreciate  the  distinctive 
fashion  possibilities  of  our  great  metropolis  style 
source  and  who  regularly  turn  to  our  shop  for  the 
best  Spring  ai)parel  that  is  just  a  little  different, 
and  style  without  extravagance. 

Easter  Blouses  at  Special  Prices 

New  arrivals  hourly — not  daily- 
keep  nur  Blouse  section  interesting  is 
anii)lc  proof  of  our  keen  watchfulness 
for  e\ery thing  that  possess  correct 
style,  sniurtness  and  fashionable  lines. 

Tomorrow — not  hundreds,  but  thou- 
sands, of  beautiful  blouses  are  on  spe- 
cial sale  that  are  a  delight  and  lesa  ex- 
pensi\  e. 

BLOUSES  AT  $1.95 
Are  of  \'uile,  Batiste,  Organdy,  Crepe 
de  Chine,  Striped  Tub  Silks;  some  are 
tucked,  others  are  embroidered;  still 
others  are  |)lain  tailored ;  dozens  of 
moijelri  to  choose  from. 

BLOUSES  AT  $3.50 

Xcw  Crepe  de  Chines,  Georgette 
Crepes,  fine  French  Voiles,  in  many 
daintv  models.    The  kind  that  is  worth  $6.00. 

FRILL  BLOUSES  AT  $6.75. 

()i   Ceortrctte.   Dainty  Crepe  Blouses,  combined  in  tone  colors, 

at  onlv  $5.75. 

I'retty  Tucked  Blouses  of  Georgette  Crepe,  with  dainty  sleeve 
and  collars,  at  $5.75. 

Clever  tailored  models  with  hand  hemstitching,  hand  embroid- 
erv  and  hand  tucking,  at  $5.76.  The  kind  that  bears  a  touch  of 
the  original  Paris  model,  and  other  blouses  that  are  so  beautiful. 

Wonderful  Beaded  Georgette  Blouses  at  $6.75.  $9.60,  $12.00, 
$15.50  and  $18.50. 

Beautiful  Lace  Blouses  at  $8.50.  $12.50,  $17.50,  $22.50. 

You'll  Find  Your  Easter  Suit  In  Our  Shop 

The  Most  Wonderful  Assemblage  That  Fashion  Ever  Presented. 


A  collection  of  suits  which  includes  every  desirable  model 
and  from  which  ever}'  undesirable  model  has  been  eliminated  and 
specially  priced  for  tomorrow  at — 

$25.00,  $29.50  and  $35.00 

The  suits  have  the  unique  distinction  of   originality — their 
unusual  and  exclusive  style  features  mark  them  apart  from  mod- 
els that  become  quickly  commonplace. 
Distinctive  originations  are  our  Silk  Suits  at  $39.50,  $45  and  more 

Beautiful  Gowns 

For  Street  and  Afternoon  at — 

$  1 7.50,  $19.50,  $27.50  and  $32. 50 
Evening  Gowns 

An  assemblage  of  models  which  interpret  the  best  modes  and 
models  of  Lanvin,  Jenny,  Lucile,  Drecol  and  other  couturiers  of 
note  at — 

$57.50,  $60.25,  $72.50  and  More 


'DULUTM5-DAINTIF.5T-&HOP 

2.7  WEST-SUPERIOR- ST. 


NOTED  I.  W.  W.  WOMM 
TO  LECTURE  HERE 

Elizabeth  Gurly  Flynn  Com-^ 

ing  for  Sunday  and 

Monday. 

Suoday  and  Monday  next.  Dulutiilans 
win  havo  an  opportunity  to  hear  * 
woman  who  1«  a  unique  flcure  on  the 
American  platform.  Bhe  U  Ellxab«th 
Gurly  Flynn,  not  unknown  to  I>uluth-  , 
laiis,  for  eke  spent  ■oiive  tlnve  here  a  ' 
few  years  affo.  and  mad*  znuny  ac-  j 
qiiulntaiicea.  ,  I 

Miss  Ilynn.  or  Mrs.  Jones  In  real 
life,  has  devoted  her  life  to  the  af-  : 
fairs  of  working  people.  And  Is  one  of  ; 
thf  most  radical  of  the  radicals.  She 
Is  a  leader  In  the  I.  W.  W.  and  has  i 
been  a  participant  la  Innumerable  es-  \ 
capades  and  disturbances  Involving 
members    of   that   organization. 

Miss  Flynn  was  In  Duluth  at  the 
time  of  the  big  strike  on  the  range;-i 
•otue  years  ago.  and  mad*  several 
speeches  there  then.  She  showed  her- 
Kelf  to  be  a  street  orator  of  no  mean 
ability. 

Her  real  name  Is  Mrs.  John  A.  Jones. 
While  she   has   been   known  as  a  labor 


ELIZABETH    GURLY    FLYNN. 

aRltator  for  a  good  many  years  «»he  is 
only  2J  years  of  age  now.  She  be- 
came a  Socialist  speaker  on  the  streets 
of  New  Tork  when  a  mere  schoolgirl, 
and  was  arrested  once,  on  a  chaiKe  of 
speaking  on  the  streets  without  a  per- 
mit. 

Five  years  ago  she  married  John  A. 
J«nc8  of  Minnesota,  a  labor  agitator 
also.  Elizabeth  did  not  want  to  marrj' 
John,  but  wanted  to  live  with  hlra  in 
defiance  of  law  and  convention.  But 
Jones  was  afraid  to  do  that,  for  the 
authorities  were  after  him,  and  he 
feared  arrest  on  a  technical  ch«.rge,  so 
th«y  had  to  bow  to  orthodox  methods 
of  union.  While  they  were  on  their 
honeymoon,  Jones  was  thrown  Ihto 
prison,  and  their  married  life  has  been 
sensation    after    sensation. 

She  will  speak  in  Duluth  twice  on 
her  coming  visit.  Sunday  afternoon 
she  will  give  an  address  at  Flnnl.sh 
hall,  18  Lake  avenue  north,  on  "I.  W. 
W.  History.  Structure  and  Methods" ; 
and  oji  Monday  evening  she  will  talk 
at  Sloan's  ball,  Twentieth  avenue  west 
and  Superior  street,  on  "Solidarity, 
Labor's   Road   to   Freedom." 


New     spring     suits,   $7.96,  at  the    "3 
Winners"     removal     sale. 


FORMER  RANGE 

WOMAN  BURIED 


Funeral  for  Mrs.  Peter  A. 

McNaugtiton  Held  in 

Duluth. 

Funeral  services  for  th.>  late  Mrs. 
Peter  A.  McNaughton,  wife  of  Peter  A. 
McNaughton,  now  of  Edmonton,  Alta., 
but  formerly  of  Virginia,  Minn.,  were 
hold  this  afternoon  at  2  o'clock  from 
the  residence  of  J.  P.  McDonald,  2016 
Kast  Second  street.  Rev.  George  Brew- 
er of  the  First  Presbyterian  church  of- 
ficiated and  Interment  will  be  at  For- 
est Hill  cemetery. 

Mrs.  McNaughton  died  at  Battle 
Creek,  Mich.,  on  April  6,  after  having 
been  under  treatment  at  a  sanatorium 
there  for  some  time.  Her  maiden  name 
was  Mary  Jane  Martyn. 

She  was  married  to  Mr.  McN'aughton 
in  Superior  on  Feb.  5,  1896.  In  addi- 
tion to  her  husband,  she  leaves  her 
mother,  Mrs.  Mary  Jane  Martyn;  a 
brother.  J.  A.  Martj-n  of  Rice  Lake, 
Wis.,  and  five  sl.sters.  They  are  Mrs. 
J.  P.  MrDonald  of  Duluth.  Mrs.  L.  Troy 
of  MUwauk.e,  Mrs.  D.  O.  McKay  of 
Carniangay,  Alta.;  Mrs.  Peter  Schu- 
macher of  Montanrt  and  Mrs.  H.  Streh- 
lau  of  Seattle,  Wash. 
» 

Opportunities  for  You 

In  the  grocery  and  meat  market  ads  in 
The  Herald  tonight. 


BODIES  OF  TWO  FOUND 
IN  MISSISSIPPI  RIVER 

La  Crosse,  Wis..  April  14.— The  find- 
ing of  the  bodies  of  Olaf  Nelson,  70. 
and  his  son.  David.  26.  on  the  shore  of 
the  Mlyslasippl  near  Lake  City  yester- 
dciy  solved  the  mystery  surrounding 
their  disappearance  Dec.  7,  last.  Xh** 
men   evidently  drowned  when  crossing 


RHEUMATIC  OR  BIL- 
IOUS? GET  TREX  NOW 

Twenty-five  Cents  Worth  Is  Plenty; 
Try  It!  Take  Harmless,  Sooth- 
ing Trex  for  Just  a  Few  Days. 


Then  no  more  Intense  rheumatic 
pains;  goodbye  chronic,  miserable  con- 
stipation; no  more  sore,  aching  back, 
trex  Is  wonderful!  Acts  right  off. 
Trex  Induces  natural  drainage  of  the 
entire  system;  promptly  opens  your 
clogged  up  liver  and  bowels;  cleans 
the  stomach  of  fermenting,  gassy 
foods  and  waste;  eliminates  Irritating 
rheumatic  poisons;  relieves  fevorlsh- 
ness,  headaches.  <llzzlnens  and  bllloua 
misery.  Don't  stay  "knocke<l  out"  aiiy 
longer.  Get  this  quick  relief  today. 
25c.    at    M.ittlx    Drug   Btorea,    or    direct 

trom    H.    B.    Denton    &    Co..    (Not    Inc.), 
(eardstown.    Illinois. 


the  Ice.  It  was  thought  they  were 
victims  of  foul  play,  but  the  finding 
of  $135  In  Mr.  Nelson's  pockets  dis- 
proved that  theory. 

•—. 

Blue  serge  trousers.    $2.60.   at   the  "1 
Winners"     removal    sale. 


H6HTS  POUCE; 
THROWS  COIN  AWAY 

Peter  Gavolovich,  Insanity 

Suspect,  Gives  Officers 

Hard  Struggle. 

Street  urchins  and  adults  scrambled 
for  money  at  I^ke  avenue  and  Supe- 
rior street  yesterday  aftornoon,  when 
Peter  Gavolovich.  a  huge  woodsman, 
scattered  $86  along  the  street. 

(iavolovich    tried    to    leap    from     the 
rapidly  moving  police  touring  car  after 
he   had   thrown   his      money      out,      and 
I  fought      desperately      with      Patrolman 
Harllng.    who    held    him.     Driver    BJarl 
I  Eckard    and    Patrolman    Isaacson    came 
1  to    Harllng's    a.^^slstance    and    the    glunt 
was  overpowered  and  returned  to  head- 
quarters.    The  money  was  recovered. 
I       The  man  was  brought  in  early  In  the 
!  day   an   an   Insanity  suspect,   and   after 
I  I'ollce  Surgeon  Harry  Klein  had  exam- 
ined   him,    they   decided   to  st-nd   him    to 
I  a    brother    living    In    Oloquet.      He    was 
'  bulng  taken  to  the  depot  when  he  tried 
j  to  lump  from  the  ear, 

Pollco    placed    him    in    a    paddt^l    oell 
!  at  iMadqiiartHrs  and   ha  wUl   be  turned 
ov«r  to    the   probata  court    today. 


KOOCHICHING  RAIDS 

BRING  IN  FAT  SUM 

International  Falls,  Minn.,  April  14. 
— The  Koocliichlng  county  treasury 
has  been  swelled  $1,100  by  recent  fines 
imposed  upon  blindpiggers  who  were 
roundi'd  up  in  rald.s  conduct  d  by 
Sheriff  White  and  County  Attorney 
Jevne.  In  the  Inst  fifteen  rfays  fifteen 
alleged  lawbreakers  were  rounded  up 
In  this  locality  and  haled  before 
Judge  FraJik  Palmer  In  nDuniclpal 
court. 

Ten  pleaded  gi'llty  to  keeping  un- 
licensed drinking  places  and  were  fined 
$7&  .\nd  costs  each,  as  follows:  Lewis 
La  Londe  and  O.  M.  Paulson  of  Little- 
fork.  Ed  Ek.  James  Brennan,  R.  G. 
Huggles  and  John  Campbell  of  Ranter. 
John  Kichter.  J.  Gleason.  M.  Rowan 
and    Eddie    Bowen    of   Ray. 

Five.  Glen  Savllle  and  George  El- 
liott of  this  city  and  Tom  Hanson.  Tom 
Beaton  and  C.  H.  Clapp  of  Ranier, 
waived  examination  and  were  bound 
over   to    the    grand   Jury. 

MISSISSIPPI  is 

RISING  AT  AITKIN 

Aitkin.  Minn.,  April  14. —  (.Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  water  In  the  Missis- 
sippi rlv«r  here  is  11.1  fsot  above  the 
low  water  mark  and  rising  at  the  rate 
of  a  foot  a  day.  The  tee  la  floating 
and  may  go  out  at  any  time. 

The  Tamarack  school  has  ba«fi  closed 
this  week  on  account  of  surface  water 
having  flooded  the  basenuint  and  put 
the    heating   plant   out    of   order. 


WHEN  LIVER  IS  TORPID 


or   sluggish   all   the 
of    your    body    are 
ston^ach   and   t>ow«l 
ai'hed,     your    skin 
and  you  have  "th« 
I'Mlls— gentle    and 
Irritate    nor    gripe, 
druggists    ar    C.    1. 
Mass. 


other   vital   organs 

affected — you    have 

troubUM.   your  head 

loses    Itji    cl  earners, 

blues.'    Take  Hoods 

thorough.       Do    not 

I'rice    tie.    of    all 

Hood    Co..    Lowell. 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE     | 


Safe  of  Etuter  Candies 


Our  Annudf  Before  Easter  Sale  of  fln« 
Candles  began  todajr  and  contlnties  tomor- 
row till  9:30  p.  m.  All  of  our  very  best 
bulk  chocolates  included;  liberal  reductions. 


Get  Your  Security  Vouchers 


with  every  purchase  of  10c  or  more.  They 
are  a  direct  saving  to  you  on  all  pur- 
chases. A  full  book  is  w^orth  $2  in  mer- 
chandise. 


tnen^s  Suits  Were  Never  Prettier 

is  is  the  verdict  of  every  woman  who  visits  our  Salons  on  the  Second  Floor.  We  cannot  recall  in  our  thirty-three  years 
of  busings  any  single  time  when  the  Suits,  Coats,  Dresses  or  in  fact  any  of  the  women's  wear  has  been  prettier,  more  stylish  or 
more  reasonably  priced  than  now.     Choose  early  while  stocks  are  complete. 

Stylish  Wool  Suits  $19,50 

Another  shipment  of  those  smart  stylish  models  which  so  many 
wixnen  have  been  waiting  for.  Poplins,  Serges  and  Gabardines,  in  a 
variety  of  medium  and  navy  blues,  tan,  checks  and  black,  at  $19.50. 

The  Best  Serge  Suits  $25  Will  Buy 

We  do  not  hesitate  to  say  this  because  we  know  it  to  be  a  fact. 
They're  of  reliable  mannish  Serges,  beautifully  tailored  and  lined. 
Clever  belted  models  in  black,  navy,  Hague  and  a  variety  of  neat 
checks,  at  $25. 

Exclusive  Models  at  $32.50  to  $45 

Hand-some  Custom  Tailored  Suits  made  of  fine  imported  Gabar- 
dines, Poplins,  Tafi'etas,  Silk  Combinations  and  Serges,  in  gray, 
bookie,  hay,  navy,  black  and  checks.  Every  one  an  exclusive  model. 
Priced.  $32.50  to  $46.00. 

Spring  Coats  at  $19.16 

A  Most    Extraordinary    Before    Easter    Event — 
Beautiful  Spring  Coats  Much  Less  Than  Regular 

This  is  a  truly  extraordinary  showing  of  new  Spring  Coats — 100 
in  all,  and  every  one  a  much  higher  value  than  this  economical 


Bargain  Square,  Main  Floor 

$1.50  Petticoats  $1.25 

Women's  Black  Twill  Halcyon  Petticoats  with  black 
and  whit?  stripe  flounce;  full  flare.  \'ery  well  made  and 
servicejible.    A  regular  $1.50  value,  tomorrow,  at  $1.25. 


Sale 

Of;»» 


price  indicates.  Nobby  swagger  styles ;  full  lined.  Handsome  ma- 
terials such  as  Whipcords,  Poplins,  Coverts,  Checks  and  Mixtures, 
in  navy,  Copenhagen,  green,  black  tan  and  fancies.  Not  a  coat  in 
the  lot  worth  less  than  $25.00 — in  our 
Pre-Easter  sale  at 


$19.16 


Here  and  There 
in  the  Store 

— Easter  Novelties,  Favors, 
Nut  Cup^,  Snapi>ers,  Fancy 
Boxes — a  complete  showing  in 
the  Candy  Section — 

— Main  Floor. 

— Rosaries  ^or  Easter  gifts ;  in 
many  different  colored  beads ; 
guaranteed  ^  for  five  years,  at 
only  $1. 

— JPoweiry '8efUon-r-3f aln  Floor. 

— Ear  Drops  in  coral,  jet  and 

pearl.     Will  be  very    much    in 

vogue  for  spring,  special,  39c. 

"^^  — Main  Floor. 

— Solid  Gold  I-avalliers  with  a 
\'ai-ie^'  o|  beautiful  stone  set- 
tin^Si  '?r$2.50  value,  special  at 

$1.75.  _  —Main  Floor. 

—Skirts  Tailki^d  to  Order- 
Any  of  our  new  spring  styles 
for  the  miking  at  $2.50.  Select 
your  own  materials — we  will 
guarantee  to  make  a  skirt  to 
your  entire  satisfaction,  b<3th 
m  fit  and  workmanship. 

— Main  Floor. 

New  Summer 
Underwear 
for  Women 

Fine  Ribbed  Cotton  Lisle 
Vests ;  low  neck,  sleeveless 
stvle.  Made  with  a  neatlv  de- 
signed  crocheted  yoke.  Also  in 
plain  band  and  beaded  top.  A 
very  choice  selection  of  gar- 
ments at  25c  to  $1.50. 

Combination  Suits  for  wom- 
en, in  fine  ribbed  cotton  lisle 
and  mercerized  materials; 
white  and  pink  colors.  In  low 
neck,  sleeveless,  knee  length 
styles,  with  beaded  and  band 
tops.  Also  with  bodice  of 
Italian  silk  and  lisle  bottoms. 
Prices  range  from  50c  to  $2.50. 

Children's  Combination  Suits 

of  fine  ribbed  cotton ;  medium 
weights,  in  Dutch  neck,  elbow 
sleeves,  ankle  length,  or  low 
neck,  short  sleeve,  ankle  length 
styles,  with  drop  seat.  Sizes  2 
to  12  years,  priced  at  50c  to  75c. 

- — ^oaemear— Main  Floor. 

Women's  and 

Children's 

Hosiery 

We  are  now  showing  a  fine 
lot  of  Women's  \'egetable 
Fiber  Silk  Hosiery,  in  the  new- 
est Spring  shade,  including 
black  and  white.  It  would  be 
ad\'isable  for  you  to  supply 
your  needs  now  as  prices  are 
rapidly  advancing  on  these  self 
same  qualities.  A  pair,  29c, 
39c,  50c  and  59c. 

Children's  Cotton  Stockings 
— In  a  serviceable  heavy  qualr 
ity  for  l>ovs ;  fine  or  C(3arse 
ribbed.  .A.Iso  of  fine  giiaze  cot- 
ton, with  guaranteed  garter 
top»,  for  children ;  black,  tan 
and  whijc  colors  ;  priced  a.s  fol- 
lov's:  Si/e^  5  to  0,  15c;  71  j  to 
8J..,  17c;  0  to  10.19c. 

Children's .  Silk  Lisle  Stock- 
ingfl — \  light  weight,  very  elas- 
tic qualhv;  fast  black,  seam- 
less; maae  with  double  rein- 
forced heels  md  toes.  (.>ur 
leader,  dzes  5  to  9^,  at  30c. 
r— HoHlerjp — Mala  Floor. 


Dainty  New  Arrivals  in  Easter. 

Neckwear 

Just  opened  many  dainty  new  ef- 
fects which  are  now  on  display  for  the 
approval  of  discriminating  women. 

Rich  colored  Georgette  Crepe  Col- 
lars in  many  handsome  beaded  and  em- 
broidered effects ;  all  new  shaped  which 
will  add  a  jaunty  air  to  your  new 
spring  suit,  dress  or  coat. 
In  the  all  white  Georgette  Neckwear  you  will  find  \'estees, 
Collar  and  Cuff  Sets  and  clever  new  designs  in  separate  col- 
lars ;  a  choice  of  embroidered  lace  trimmed,  plain  hemstitched, 
frilled  and  fichu  effects,  at  a  range  of  prices  from  65c  to  $3.50. 
Ostrich  Ruffs — ^A  complete  line  in  the  Neckwear  Section. 
You  may  select  from  either  plain  colored  or  combination  ef- 
fects, at  $1.69  to  $10.00.  — Xeckwear— Main  Floor. 


Women!  ''Make  Your  Feet  Happy!'' 

Wear  the  Comfortable 
and  Stylish 

RedCross  Shoes 


the f oof 


Comfort  in  shoes  is  very  easy  to  at- 
tain ;  but  comfort  with  style  and  dur- 
ability is  decidedly  hard  to  attain  and 
is  very  seldom  found  except  in  Red 
Cross  Shoes.  Our  new  Spring  showing  is  now  most  complete 
in  all  of  the  very  newest  lasts  and  leathers.  Any  woman 
who  is  particular  about  the  smallest  details  in  the  nicety  of 
dress  (and  most  women  are)  can  be  fitted  here  to  her  entire 
satisfaction  with  a  pair  of  these  stylish,  comfortable  shoes.  A 
choice  of  either  button  or  lace  styles  at 

$^.00,  $4.50  and  $5,00 


Warner  Corsets 


for  a  Neat,  Stytish  Appearance. 

We  are  headquarters  for  these 
wonderful  Corsets,  with  which  thou- 
sands of  knowing  women  the  world 
over  are  enjoying  grace,  beaut}'  and 
supreme  comfort  everj-  day  in  the 
year. 

The  lines  vary  to  fit  any  figure 
from  the  slimmest  to  the  plumpest. 
But  the  quality,  the  style,  the  fit  are 
always  the  same. 

\\'e  show  a  complete  assortment 
of  style  and  prices,  but  today  fea- 
ture one  at  $2  of  heavy  coutil  with 
double,  medium  length  skirt ;  me- 
dium low  bust,  graduated  front  steel 
and  six  hose  supporters — 


at  $2 


Second 
Floor 


Clever  Hats  for 
Children 

Very  chic  little  drooped 
shapes,  of  China  Milan ;  trim- 
med with  ribbons  and  velvet 
bands.  In  white  with  blue,  rose 
and  black  trimmings;  also  in 
black  with  Tuscan. 

Thev  are  so  dainty  and  neat 
you'll  fall  in  love  with  them  on 
sight.    Specially  priced — 

at  75c 

Hats  for  the  Miss 

Refreshing  new  shapes  in 
Sailors,  Tricorns  and  Poke  ef- 
fects ;  of  hemp,  Milan  hemp 
and  Lisere  braids.  The  trim- 
mings are  of  quills,  fancy 
Oriental  ribbons  and  flowers. 
A  profusion  of  rich  new  color- 
ings to  select  from  at  $1.50  to 
$6.00.  — Second  Floor. 

Ribbons 

for  Your  "Easter  Bonnet" 

Or  for  trimming  that  new 
gown,  or  for  sashes.  In  fact, 
ribbons  for  all  purposes  which 
women  want  them. 

Here  you  will  find  a  very 
choice  selection  of  Moires, 
Satins,  Taftetas,  Dresdens,  etc. 
All  the  most  wanted  spring 
shades,  including  many  rich 
plaids,  at  25c  to  $2. 

All  Bows  Tied  Free. 

— KiblK>n^ — Rlain   Hoor. 


Men  !  You'll  Surely 
Want  New  Shirts 
for  Easter — 

Here  Are  the  New  Stiff 
Cuff  Styles  at  $1. 

Men  of  styles  are  now  demand- 
ing Laundered  Cuff  Shtrts  for 
Spring  wear.  Our  wide-awake 
shirt  section  is  prepared  to  meet 
the  demand,  with  a  very  elaborate 
display  of  the  newest  patterns,  in 
strmed  and  ne^t  figured  effect.^. 

They  are  exceptionally  well  tailored  and  dressy 
in  appearance.  Every  shirt  is  guaranteed  as  to 
fastness  of  color  and  wear.  Selections  are  now  at 
their  best  in  a  very  special  showing  at 


Annex— 
*Maia  Floor. 


$1 


"Showers'*  of 

Umbrellas 

at$l 

Our  "shower"  of  Spring  Um- 
brellas has  already  arrived  in 
preparation  for  Spring  show- 
ers. The  new  "Windbrella"  is 
both  waterproof  and  windproof 
— if  it  blows  wrong  side  out  it 
can  be  instantly  returned  to  its 
proper  shape  and  no  harm 
done. 

Made  with  staunch  patented 
steel  frames  and  rods,  with  cov- 
ers of  fast  black  American  taf- 
feta. A  variety  of  handles,  at 
only  $1. 

Women's  26-inch  Umbrella 
made  from  fine  Union  Taffeta, 
with  a  serviceable  steel  frame 
and  sterling  mounted  handle. 
A  $2  value  at  $1.75. 

— ^Main  Floor. 


Book  Section 

Testaments  and  Prayer 
Books  Reduced. 

This   will   be   your   last   op- 
portunity    to  .  buy     Key     of 
Heaven     Testaments,     Prayer 
Books    and    Psalm     Books    at 
these  saWngs — only  a  few  left. 
$2.00  values  now  $1.50 
$1.50  values  now  $1.00 
$1.25  values  now     75c 
$1.00  values  now     65c 
75c  values  now    50c 

— ^Bookfe — ^Maln  Floor. 


•^.m,jmmmMin^^^usi 


« 


>—  III 


,t^<^ 


y 


.fc-if-Tna    I,   p. 


yen  nrt 

i 


l| 


Friday, 


* 

~ 

I 

r    - 

ECONOMY  IN 
ELECTIONS 


Four   Charter  Amendments 

Will  Be  Submitted  With 

Ordinances. 


YOU'LL  LIKE 
THESE  CLOTHES 


Men  who  buy  carefully, 
who  wish  to  look  "dressy" 
without  freakish  effects,  will 
readily  appreciate  the  splen- 
did values  of 


OLOTHES" 

SUITS  and  TOPCOATS 
$10  to  $25 

RAINCOATS 
$3.48  to  $12 

The  latest  in  Hats,  Shoes 
and  Shirts  will  always  be 
found  at 


Four  anif-ndnientg  to  the  city  charter 
will  be  submitted  to  the  voters  of  the 
fity  at  the  same  time  that  the  Initia- 
tive ordinances  tiled  this  week  are  put 
lo  a  public  vote. 

This   announcement   was   made   todiy 
by  T.  T.  Hudson,  chairman  of  the  char- I 
lor  commission,   who  paid  that  the  four! 
am«'ndments   recommended   by    the   <»pe- 1 
olal   committee    several    weeks    ago   are  j 
now  ready  for  presentation   to  the  city 
commissioners.         These     will     be     sub- 
mitted   as    soon    as    the    council    sets    a 
date    for    an    election    on    the    initiative 
mf-asures    calling    for   a   double    platoon 
system  for  the  fireman  and  the  ousting 
of  all  the  saloons  in  the  city  by  July   I, 
1917. 

"We  have  been  holding  these  amend- 
ments with  a  view  of  submitting  them 
when  an  election  Is  called,"  said  Mr. 
Hudson.  "The  city  will  thus  save  the 
expense    of  an   additional   election." 

H.  H.  rhelps,  a  member  of  the  char- 
ter comnjlsslon  and  the  special  amend- 
ment committee,  said  that  they  were 
awaiting  the  supreme  court's  decision 
on  the  armory  referendum  case,  in 
order  to  consider  a  plan  of  amending 
that   section   of   the   charter. 

The  •  four  amendments  already 
agreed  upon  and  which  will  be  sub- 
mitted to  the  voters  probably  at  the 
priniarv  election  on  June  1"J.  change  the 
city's  preferential  voting  plan  back  to 
the  state  voting  system,  extend  the 
non- advertised  purchased  limit  from 
JlOO  to  $!;00,  provide  for  assessments 
for  the  cutistructlon  of  arterial  high- 
ways and  r»duce  the  interest  on  ex- 
tended assessments  from  7  to  6  per 
cent.    Increasing    the    lime    limit    from 

three   to  rtve  years. 

• 

Opportunities  for  You 

In  the  grocery  and  meat  market  ads  In 
Tin-  Herald   tonight. 


L 


405-7  West  Superior  Street. 


WILLIAMS 
HASjIGNED 

Heavy-Hitting  Indian  to  Play 

With  Duluth  White 

Sox. 


Stored  and 
Insured 

We  have  a  summer  repair  de- 
partment which  Is  maintained  at  a 
lower  coBt  than  in  season.     Thus  all 

Repairing,  Remodeling  and 
New  Orders 
which  can  be  done  during  the  sum- 
mer  will    be    done   at   considerable 
saving  to  you. 

DULUTH  FUR  CO., 

22  \Vi:sT  SI  PFHIOIl  ST. 

(Upstairs) 
Melrose  6526 — Grand  335-A. 


Chief  Williams,  the  Indian  outfield 
member  of  last  year's  Duluth  baseball 
teiun.  came  to-  Duluth  today,  attached 
hia  signature  to  a  lf>16  contract,  and 
will  be  aeen  In  right  field  when  the 
season  opens,  according  to  the  an- 
nouncement of  Manager  Darby  O'Brien. 

The  chief  states  he  is  in  the  very 
best  of  condition.  According  to  his 
statement,  he  has  been  outdoors  most 
(.f  the  winter  and  is  very  little  over 
I)laying    welpht    right    now.  ».^,.,,, 

Last  seasi.n  the  good  chief  belted 
the  pill  to  the  sweet  and  insplrlne 
tune  of  .324,  batting  eighth  from  the 
top  of  the  swat  column.  If  the 
Aborigine  can  duplicate  this  feat  dur- 
ing the  coming  season,  he  will  prove 
quite   a   power    on    the    offense. 

The  signing  of  Williams  gives  the 
Dook  quite  a  nifty  crew  of  candidates 
for  his  outfield.  It  will  prove  a  case 
of  the  survival  of  the  fittest.  McGraw 
.'^chreiber,  Schroeder,  Vigerust  and 
.\ltman  are  going  to  endeavor  to  be- 
come regulars.  Of  these  men,  Altman 
slammed  the  spheroid  to  the  tune  of 
314  in  116  games,  while  young  Mc- 
(Jraw  hit  at  the  lusty  figure  of  .333 
for  twenty  games,  being  fourth  in  the 
batting  averages.  Schroeder  hit  for 
308  In  109  games.  This  will  give  the 
book  a  group  of  .300  hitters  to  choose 
hl.s  outfield  from.  Schrelber  Is  expected 
to  hit  away  up  in  this  circuit  during 
the    coming    season.  ,^    ^     . 

O'Brien  stated  today  that  he  ex- 
pects a  large  crew  of  candidates  on 
hand  Monday.  The  Dook  made  an 
inspection  of  Athletic  park  today  and 
found  the  field  in  very  fair  playing 
condition.  With  the  exception  of  a 
few  wet  plfices  in  the  outfield,  a  game 
of   baseball    could    be   played    today. 

White  Hope  Born  to  Wlliards. 

Chicago,  April  14. — An'  eight-pound 
baby  b»>y  was  born  to  the  wife  of 
Jess  Wlllard,  champion  heavyweight 
of  the  world,  last  night.  It  was  learned 
today.    He   is  the  fifth  child. 


The  Choice  of  Musicians 

New     No.    6     Reproducer    and 
Violin  Tone  Chamber. 
The  only  instrument  that  will 
reproduce  a  true  tone. 

EiilOlfiT 

i8  THIRD  AVENUE  WEST 


M 


SUPERIOR 


PIANO 
QUALITY 


^•hlch  will  please  you,  and  our  sell- 
ing plan  saves  you  money.  Many 
makes,  stvles  and  wood  finishes  of 
■World'.s  leading  standard  pianos  and 
player  pianos  to  choose  from  on  our 
two  floors.     Call  or  write. 

KORBY    PIANO   CO., 

Duluth'8    Oldest    Piano    Hou.se, 

2(1  Lake  Avenue   North. 


Policemen  Ask  "Raise.'* 

Members  of  the  police  force  of  Su- 
perior filed  a  formal  request  yesterday 
with  the  mayor  and  city  commission- 
ers a.sklng  for  an  Increase  in  pay. 
A  committee  of  members  of  the  force, 
consisting  of  Lieut.  .Tohn  A.  Kelly, 
St-rgeant  William  L..  Miller  and  Pa- 
trolmen John  W.  McNamara,  Martin  E. 
Witness  and  M.  J.  Mangan,  presented 
the  request.  The  city  commission  will 
take  the  matter  under  discussion  at 
Its  meeting  next  week. 

Held  for  Shoplifting. 

Mrs.  Sophia  Branstrom.  S8.  40 
Hughltt  avenue,  was  arrested  yester- 
day afternoon  on  a  charge  of  shop- 
lifting. She  was  arrested  at  Roth 
Bros,  store  after  one  of  the  clerks 
had  noticed  her  tuck  something  under 
her  coat.  On  being  examined  at  the 
police  station  by  Emma  Tyler,  police- 
woman, two  pieces  of  chinaware  were 
found.  The  police  suspect  that  the 
woman  Is  responsible  for  a  number  of 
petty  thefts  that  hav«  been  reported 
by  the  stores  recently. 

_ *. — 

RIoHnv  In  Irrlanil. 

Berlin,  April  14,  by  wireless  to  Say- 
ville Advices  received  from  Amster- 
dam by  the  Overseas  News  agency  state 
that  political  rioting  In  Ireland  has  ex- 
tended and  that  street  fighting  has  oc- 
curred at  several  points  along  the 
coast.  The  British  military  authorities 
are  reported  to  have  taken  control  at 
various  places  and  to  have  suppressed 
more    Irish   newspapers. 

♦ 

Iiidiann    Plead    Unllty. 

Green  Bay.  Wis.,  April  14.— Eight 
Menominee  Indians  pleaded  guilty  be- 
fore Judge  Geiger  today  to  taking 
liquor  on  the  Menominee  reservation 
and  were  fined  from  $100  to  $200  and 
committed  to  terms  of  from  two  to  six 
months  In  the  house  of  correction. 
Fourteen  others  entered  pleas  of  not 
guilty  and  were  committed  to  the  Mil- 
waukee county  Jail  in  default  of  bail. 
»  

Herald  wants  ads  will  find  a  buyer 
for  your  used  car.  They  reach  98  per 
cent  of  the  automobile  buyers. 


7 


I 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


5 


Time  to  Be  "Dressing  Up"  for  Easter! 


LET  us  repair  your  furs!    We  store  them 
free!    (Payments  deferred  till  fall,  if  you 
wish).     Inquire  Second  Floor. 


We  have  made  uniisnal  preparations  this  season  to  please  women  who  have  failed  to  anticipate 
their  Easter  wants  early!  We  have  done  this  by  arranging  for  shipments  from  New^  York  so 
timed  as  to  make  our  Easter  display  on  the  Second  Floor  as  large,  alluring  and  varied  in  the 
styles  included,  as  those  of  the  week,  or  wet?ks  previous.  Alterations  next  week  will  be  made 
promptly,  and  your  suit,  frock,  evening  gown,  wrap  or  blouse  will  be  delivered  without  fail  for 
wear  on  Easter  Sundavl  .... 

Here  Is  a  Timely  Sale  of  Crepe  de  Chine 
Waists  at  Only  $2.95 

And  just  in  time  for  your  Easter  preparations!  Lovely  little 
Crepe  de  Chine  blouses,  including  both  plain  colored  effects  and 
candy  striped  waists,  all  sorts  of  attractive  plaids,  in  a  fine 
quality  Crepe  de  Chine — styles  absolutely  "up-to-date"!  This 
is  a  typical  Glass  Block  sale' event  for  Saturday,  and  you'll  wish 
to  be'on  hand  early  while  the  "choosing",  is  the  best!  (While 
you're  on  the  Second  Floor,  don't  fail  to  see  the  delightful  little 
frocks  at  $19.75,  $22.75,  $24.75,  $26.75  and  $29.75.) 


Drug  Specials! 

Drug  Dept.  (Main  Floor). 
$2.25  Ivory  Candle  Stocks  (in 
old  rose  or  yellow)  tiny  electric 
lights;  fine  for  bedroom  use, 
D  $1.79. 
39c  French  Rice  Powder  (all 
scents).  25c. 

$1.00  Pavlow  Toilet  Water,  85c. 
50c  Pebeco  Tooth  Paste,  39c. 
50c    Willow  Theatrical    Cream, 
39c. 


flflWiriiiiii^ 


You  Need  a  New  Corset  to  Go  With  That 
Alluring  New  Easter  Wardrobe! 

You  need  it,  because  only  a  new  corset  c^n  give  you  the  correct  figure 
lines  for  Spring,  191G.  There  has  been  a  decided  change  in  the  sil- 
houette. The  old  corset  will  "do"  no  longer!  (Yesterday  we  over- 
heard a  woman  say,  "it  is  hopeless;!  am  too  stout!)  Because  a  woman 
is  stout — or  even  inclined  to  be  stoat — does  not  mean  that  she  cannot 
obtain  figure  lines,  and  look  exactly  as  well  as  her  more  slender  sister. 
Stout  figures,  properly  corseted,  are  even  a  better  foundation  for  the 
gown  than  a  slender  figure.  Whether  your  figure  is  slender,  medium 
or  stout,  we  can  give  you  a  corset  suited  to  just  your  needs.  M-ay  we 
suggest,  for  instance,  American  Lady  Corsets?  We've  designs  for  all 
types  of  figures ;  we  have  them  in  many  modish  models  for  both  the 
stout  and  medium  stout  figure.  — (Corset  Dept.,  Third  Floor) 


Stunning  Spring 
Millinerx 

It's  little  more  than  a  week  from  Easter! 
And  such  hats  as  we're  showing!  A  won- 
derfully alluring  assemblage  of  exclusive 
Spring  styles ! 

Smart  Trimmed  llats 
at  $5.00 

The  choice  is  really  astonishing!  Superb 
models  that  look  all  of  $10  and  $15,  and  are 
nothing  short  of  surprising  at  this  price! 

N?w  Sport  Hats,  New  Spring  Hats 
for  Miss?s  and  Children 

Sport  hats  of  the  new  striped,  knitted  silks, 
in  all  shades  (beginning  as  low  as  $3).  And 
the  most  capitating  group  of  Children's  and 
Misses'  Hats  we've  ever  shown  for  Easter! 
(Millinery  Dept— Third  Floor) 


Rug's  and  Curtains  For 
pring'  House  Reg'eneration 


Cv«ry  Shad*  Equipped  wkk  Vu4w  S^aty  Wina  Ot«ic« 


Time  To  Be  Planning 
On  PorcK  Shades! 

Fvcry  VUDOR  porch  shade  is  re-in- 
forced  at  both  edges  with  heavy, 
double  warps — four  warps— and  six 
nches  from  each  edge  there  is  another 
set  of  double  warps— four  warps;  and 
jvide  shades  are,  in  addition  to  this, 
•e-lnforced  midway  of  the  shade  with 
jtill  other  double  warps— four  warps. 


Just  a  reminder!  The  first  of  ]vlay  is  coming  fast,  and  it's  time  to  be 
thinking  of  the  alterations  you've  planned  for  your  house!  The  Glass 
Block  offers  you  ideal  service — and  an  uncqualed  choice  in  rugs,  dra- 
peries, willow  furniture,  linoleums, etc.  Won't  you  try  us?  (4th  Floor) 

For  Automobiling-'Donegal  Rugs 

To  see  a  Donegal  is  to  want  one.  Its  long  soft  fleece,  its  snug  warmth, 
its  amaaing  lightness  and  its  beautiful  colorings  win  its  way  to  your 
heart  instantly.  Donegal  Rugs  are  made  in  Ireland  by  skillful  weav- 
ers working  over  their  hand  looms  in  that  slow  Old  World  fashion 
that  insures  faithful,  perfect  work.  Donegal  Rugs  can  be  washed  over 
and  again  without  injury.  With  average  care  they  will  last  a  lifetime. 
The  patterns  vary  from  pure  white  through  the  conservative  old  fa- 
vorite checks  to  the  most  brilliant  combinations.  They  have  a  multi- 
tude of  uses  .  Indoors  and  outdoors;  on  the  hotel  and  clubhouse  ve- 
randa; for  a  cozy  nap;  for  the  invalid's  chair;  for  car,  steamer,  golf  and 
travel  they  are  indispensable.  (Fourth  Floor.) 


Beautiful  Rag  Rugs 

Our  new  arrivals  in  rag  rugs  are  un- 
usually attractive  and  are  selling  fast. 
Two  different  styles  imported  rugs 
of  clean  white  chintz,  prettily  deco- 
rated by  Chinese  artists  in  Chinese 
designs  and  colors.  Others  of  artistic 
figured  cretonne,  in  all  desirable  col- 
ors. 

18x36-inch  size  Sells  at  85c 

27x54-inch  size  sells  at $1-95 

30x60-inch  size  sells  at $2.25 

36x72-inch  size  sells  at $2.95 


Easter  GIqvcs  for  Ea||:cr  Wearing  (Silk  or  Kid) 

Silk  Gloves,  either  plain  or  embroidered,  and  in  all   the  new  shades.     Our 
Kid  Gloves  show  the  latest  styles  in  black  and  white,  sand,  Newport.    Then 
there  are   the   new   "washable"   gloves,  now  being  worn  so  much.     We  have 
them  at  two  prices — $1.50  and  $1.75. 
Children's  Gloves  (silk)  tan  or  white,  2-clasp,  at  50c. 


SucK  Neckwear  As  We're  Showing  These  Days 

Cape  collars,  for  instance,  scalloped  with  the  long  back,  ruffled  or  lace  edges, 
(with   colored   borders),   in   pique,   organdy.  Georgette  crepe,  25c  to  $2.75. 
Other  new  collars  in  organdy,  crepe,  etc.,  priced  25c  to  $2.75.  ... 

Very  new  is  the  organdy  crepe  collar,  with   broad   colored    stripes,   in    pink, 
blue  or  lavender,  and  plain  white  border!     You'll  like  it!  (Main  Floor.) 


Have  You  JomccI? 

Our  25c  Progressive  Cluh 

Sale?— Is  Now  Being 

Formed! 

Twenty-five  cents  is  the  initial  pay- 
ment on  the  wonderful  Florence 
Rotary   Sewing   Machine. 

.This  is  a  scientific  automatically  ad- 
'justable   payment   plant     that     has 
money  saving  advantages  that  ap- 
peal to  all.    Come  in  and  let  us  ex- 
plain fully. 

Do  Your  Spring  Sewing 
On  This  Great  Machine 


Boys! 

Time  to  get  your  boy  that  new 
Spring  Suit.  Boys'  Norfolk  Suits — 
blue  serge  or  mixtures  —  mighty 
smart,  and  durable,  too!  (Two  pairs 
of  pants!)  Priced  at  $3.95,  $4.95, 
$5.95,  $6.50.  $7.50  and  up. 
For  little  fellows  (3  to  8).  all-wool 
serge  suits,  at  $3.95  and  $4.95.  (Cun- 
ning short  Russian  jackets  with 
wide  belt.)  Ask  to  see  them. 
Little  boys*  overcoats  in  complete 
line,  sizes  2>i  to  8  at  $2.95,  $5  and  $6. 
Spring  Hats  and  Caps  from  50c  to 
$2.00.  (Second  Floor).. 


SilKs 


M 


f 


Smart  Neckw«ar  at  SOc 

Attractive  weaves  and  beautiful  pat- 
terns in  our  newest  collection  of 
smart  neckwear  for  Spring. 
Men's  heavy  pure  Silk  Hose  in  all 
the  wanted  shades,  BOc. 
Men's  Fine  Fiber  Silk  Hose  in  white, 
black,  gray,  navy  and  Palm  Beach, 
at  25c. 


At  75c  a  yard  we're  oftering  stun- 
ning Satin  Striped  Silk  Waistings, 
36  inches  wide,  in  beautiful  (wash- 
able) colorings  —  new  designs — 
green,  tan,  navy,  Copenhagen,  rose 
heliotrope  on  other  white  or  ecru 
backgrounds.  An  Easter  bargain, 
especially  timely! 

Rich  Taffeta  Silks 

We're  showing  Taflfeta  Silks  (all 
sorts  of  attractive  qualities  to 
choose  from),  stibstantial,  firm,  re- 
liable fabrics  in  practically  every 
shade.  Navy,  Belgian  blue,  Russian 
green,  new  browns,  taupe,  etc.,  as 
well  as  lovely  pastel  and  evening 
tints.  Also  ivory,  white  and  twen- 
ty difterent  qualities  in  the  deepest 
black!     (Priced  $1.25  and  up.) 


HigK  Grade 
SKoes  For 
Men 


R 


ble  Prices! 


A  Sale  of  Mouldings 

Remnants  of  very  fine  picture  mouldings; 
(unusually  good  designs^  will  go  tomor- 
row at  bargain  prices.  Inquire  in  the 
Picture    Shoppe— Third    Floor. 


easona 

The  best  shoes,  and  the  most  rea- 
sonable prices.  That's  our  motto, 
and  we're  sticking  to  it  in  spite  of 
the  steady  rise  in  the  cost  of  shoes 
on  account  of  war  conditions!  We 
can  still  ofter  Duluth  men  the  fa- 
mous 

Howard  and  Foster  Shoes  at 

$5  and  $6~Nettieton  Shoes 

at  $6.50  and  $7 

Both  makes  known  the  country  over 
for  fine  quality  leathers  and  fashion- 
able, perfect-ntting  lasts! 
Use  our  Shoe  Repair  Department! 
Work  called  for  and  delivered  freel 


"H  ■!■ 


> 


■".'  J*'*'"- 


>Hi»-»"BP»l»»" 


6 


Friday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


AprU  14,  1916. 


Duffy's  20    Years 

An  article  must  possess  merit  to 
warrant  Is  continual  use  lor  20 
years.  Mr.  King  lias  used  Dolly's 
for  20  years  because  he  finds  It  a 
benellcial  tonic-stimuiaa!.  About 
three  years  ago  he  wrole: 

"Duffy's  Pure  Malt  Whiskey  has 
done  me  a  world  of  j?ood  and  has  ©n- 
ablt'd  me  to  stand  my  work  in  the 
boiling  hot  sun  all  summer.  I  am  past 
60.  yet  have  superintended  my  men  all 
summer  and  lo8t  a  day  only  when  It 
storm«'d  too  hard  for  them  to  come 
out.  I  am  sure  1  could  uot  have  done 
SM  hn<l  it  not  been  for  the  strength 
Duffy's  K.ive  me.  I  never  lost  a  day 
the  past  two  winters  that  a  man  could 
possibly  work  in  the  open." — Harry  U. 
Kinjf.  25»  Summer  Ave..  Newark,  N.  J. 

After  20  yturs  of  Judicious  use,  he  Is 
a.s  tlnn  a  bflii-ver  in  Duffy's  today  as 
ever,  for  he  recently  wrote: 

"I  continue  using  Duffy's  as  I  have 
been  f<ir  the  past  20  years  and  I  will 
alwuy.4  use  it.  Duffy's  Malt  is  worth 
more"  to  me  than  a  diamond." 

Duffy'sPure  Malt  Whiskey 

beneiiis  the  seat  of  most  ills-  lh«-  sUmmc-li.  Keep  the  stomach  in  condition  af' 
natur.-  fntended  and  health  invariably  follows.  The  pre.scribed  advice  of  a 
t'lble-^poon  of  Duffy's  in  equal  amounts  of  water  or  milk  before  meal.s  and  on 
retirini,'  is  worth  follovvlnK.  The  system  in  good  condition  is  better  able  to 
iesi.s:  attack  by  cough.s,  cold,  grip  and  pneumonia  germs  now  prevj^t. 

''Get  Duffy's  and  Keep  Well/' 

Sold    in    .^i:.\I.r:D    ni)TTLi:a  only.       Beware    of    Imltatluns 

KiAVf-  «.»•♦  nuflv'N  from  your  local  druKsUt.  grocer  or 
Nlllr'  <b»»**r.  »I.«M»  prr  bottle,  irlie  eHiniol  ■u|»|»l>  you, 
IIV  I  ka    ^,  r|,^u„_  Solid  fur  UMfful  household  boiikirt  free. 


MK.  II.  R.  K'lN'G 


The    Imfty    Malt    Whisk -y  Co..    Rochester.    N.   Y. 


Exclusive  Easter  Footwear! 

The  extent,  completeness  and  attractiveness  of  this  Spring  ex- 
hibit of  boots  and  pumps,  reflects  the  importance  of  the  foot- 
wear in  fashions  for  women.  Hii^h  boots  in  the  newest  colors 
are  here  and  at  prices  that  are  very  moderate.    We  have 
Just  opened  a  rare  assemblage  of  pumps  and  low  cut 
models  of  great  beauty— Distinctively  new  models,  j 

You  should  buy  yours  now.       ^bvf'^=*^a«r'^'ir<''fl 


.^i 


$ 


3.50 


:-i-i,»M-**!" 


rensen 

Shoe  stores 

i  Mail  Orders.  Send  for  Style  Book  ! 
$T.  PAUL-MINNEA>>OLIS-DULUTK. 

121-Wttf  Superior  Rr««f 


LODGE  MUST 
STAND  LOSS 

Court  Rules  E.  P.  Towne 

Need  Not  Pay  A.  0.  U.  W. 

$2,500. 


Money    Was    Secured    in 

Liquidation  of  Loan  to 

Man  Now  Missing. 


LORRiLLARD  IS 

BEING  PRAISED 

American  Diplomat's  Aid  to 
War  Prisoners  Favor- 
ably Regarded. 

(C«rrMi»nd«nce  of  the  Auodated  Pre«,) 
Zurich.  Switzerland.  March  20. — Aft- 
^r  publlshins  many  Joking  stories  of 
thd  efTort3  of  George  L.  Lorrillard.  the 
recently  appointed  American  chars*^' 
d'ait'air.'s  to  Serbia,  to  And  the  court 
to  which  Ite  waa  accredited,  the  Vien- 
nese newspapers  are  now  praising  his 
zealous  notivitieu  in  aidlii??  Austrian 
and  Hungarian  prisoners  of  war  In  Al- 

Ac  ordlng  to  th»>  latest  reports.  Mr. 
LorriUaid  found  5i»0  of  these  pn.son- 
ei »  at  Scutari  and  another  600  at  Ales- 
sto.  After  satisfyin«  himself  that  they 
were  Iti  Rood  hands,  Mr.  Lorrillard 
Kave  the  AlbaniHU  families  shvlterlnK 
the  men  out  of  purd  charity,  a  gener- 
ous recompense.  At  Alesslo  he  bought 
uy  all  the  tlsh  and  Bi'ead  In  the  town 
and  personally  dl^'trlbuti'd  It. 

Ambassador  p.-nfleld.'3  untlrlnar  la- 
bora   in    Iho   Interests   of   the  Austrlans 


and  Hiinjcarlans  scattered  abroad  are 
also  thankfully  acknowledged  by  the 
Vienna  pres.^.  Uetween  the  end  of 
July.  1914,  and  the  Slst  of  December 
la.st,  the  emba»«y  In  Vlt-nna  had  re- 
ceived 11.710  letters  from  these  unfor- 
tunately eltuatt-d  persons;  and  des- 
patched 10,020  to  them.  Altogether  the 
embassy  had  handled  In  this  period 
5!»,010  letters,  of  which  17.280  belonged 
to  American  citizens,  or  4.000  less  than 
those  of  Austrlans  and  Hungarians. 
The  remaining  20,030  lotter.<^  belonged 
to  I{elt;lan3,  French,  English,  ItallauH 
and  Japanese,  all  of  whose  Interests 
are  under  the  protection  of  the  Amer- 
ican embassy. 

SECOND  MAN  GUILTY 
IN  BAFF  MURDER  CASE 

Ne^v  York.  April  14. — A  verdict  of 
guilty  of  murder  in  the  first  degreee 
wa.s  r'turned  by  a  Jury  lato  yesterday 
against  Frank  Ferrara  for  his  share  in 
the  slaying  of  Barnet  Baff.  the  poultry 
dealer,  who  was  killed  by  gunmen  al- 
leged to  have  been  hired  by  business 
rivals.  Ferrara  is  the  second  man  to 
be  convicted  for  the  crime,  and  two 
more  remain  to  be  tried.  (Jluscppo 
Arlohlello  was  found  guilty  last  week. 

The  Jury  was  out  an  hour  and  a  half. 
Ferrara  was  remanded  to  the  Tombs 
for  sentence  April  20. 


In  a  suit  to  determine  which  of  two 
Innocent  parties  la  to  stand  the  loss 
of  a  defaulter  who  was  acting  as  a 
middle  man,  E.  P.  Towne  scored  a 
victory  over  the  grand  lodge  of  the 
Ancient  Order  of  United  Workmen  of 
Minnesota.  The  sum  of  |2,500  is  In- 
volve<1. 

In  district  court  yesterday  afternoon 
Judge  Fesler  handed  down  a  decision 
to  the  effect  that  Mr.  Towne  was  not 
obligated  to  repay  the  sum  of  $2,600. 
which  was  paid  to  him  Ln  liquidation 
of  a  loan  obtained  by  C.  J.  ODonnell, 
formerly  of  this  city,  but  whose  pres- 
ent   residence    Is    unknown. 

The  facts  in  the  case  are  that  In 
March  of  1909,  O'Donnell,  who  was 
then  connected  with  the  Hartman- 
o'Donnell  agency,  obtained  a  loan  from 
Mr.  Towne  for  $2,500,  He  gave  as 
security  what  purported  to  be  a 
mortgage  on  lot  89.  East  Fifth  street, 
this  city,  owned  by  Mrs.  Emma  M. 
Anschutz.  The  mortgage  bore  thu 
signature     of    Mrs.     Anschutz. 

The  Hartman-O'Donnell  agency  had 
authority  from  Mrs.  Anschutz  to  lease 
her  property,  to  pay  her  taxes  ani 
Insurance,  collect  rents  and  make  re- 
pairs,  but  not  to  sell  or   mortgage. 

Mr.  Towne  believed  the  signature 
on  the  note  and  mortgage  to  be  gen- 
uine. O'Donnell  paid  the  Interest 
promptly  and  In  June,  1911.  he  offered 
to  pay  off  the  $2,500  If  he  could  ob- 
tain a  $5,000  loan  on  the  property. 
ODonnell  applied  to  the  grand  lodge 
of  the  Order  of  United  Workmen  for 
the  loan.  It  was  granted  and  two 
cheeks  were  sent  to  Duluth.  each  for 
$2,500.  One  of  them  was  turned  over 
to  Mr.  Towne.  who  gave  In  return 
a  satisfaction  of  mortgage  which  was 
re(>orded.  The  other  was  payable  to 
Mrs.  Anschutz  and  went  Into  U'Don- 
nell's    pockets. 

Mrs.  Anschutz*  signatures  were  all 
forgeries  and  she  claimed  that  she 
had  nothing  whatever  to  do  with  the 
deal.  In  a  suit  brought  by  the  grand 
lodge  against  her  to  recover,  she  was 
victorious.  The  grand  lodge  then  sued 
Mr.  Towne  and  again  they  have  lost 
out.  It  Is  probable  that  the  case  will 
be    appealed    to    the    higher    court. 

RELAfm 
EXCELLENT 


Cordial  Understanding  Be- 
tween Japan  and  the 
United  States. 


For  Sorejired,  Swollen  Feet;  For  Aching Jender, 
Calloused  Feet  or  Painful  Corns-Use  ''Tiz!" 


Whole  year's  foot 

comfort  for  only 

25  cents 


I  U8C  'Til'  when 
my  feet  ache,  bum 
orpulfup.  It's  finer 


Good-bye.  sore  feet,  burninsr  feet, 
swollen  feet,  tender  feet,  tired  feet. 

Good-bye.  corns,  callouses,  bunion?, 
and  raw  spots.  No  more  shoe  tlght- 
nesB.  no  more  limping  with  pain  or 
drawing  up  your  face  In  agony.  "Tlz" 
Is  magical,  acts  right  off.  "Tlz"  draws 
out  all  the  poisonous  exudations  which 


puff  up  the  feet.  Use  "Tlz"  and  wear 
smaller  .shoes.  Use  "Tlz"  and  forget 
your  foot  misery.  Ah  I  how  comfort- 
able your  feet  feel. 

Get  a  2B-cent  box  of  "Tlz"  now  at 
any  druggist  or  department  store. 
Don't  suffer.  Have  good  feet,  glad 
feet,  feet  that  never  swell,  neA'er  hurt, 
never  get  tired.     Beware  of  Imitations! 


Japanese  Foreign  Minister 
Says  Germany  Tried  to 

Create  Discord. 

* 

(Com%p9f*4tnc»  of  tlw  A»»ccl»t«<  Pret*,)  ** 
Toklo.  March  7. — "The  relations  be- 
twetn  the  United  Statea  and  Japan 
have  always  been  excellent,  notwith- 
standing disturbing  rumors  at  times  to 
the  contrary,"  aald  Baron  Ishll.  the 
minister  of  foreign  affairs,  during  an 
address  last  night,  "but  as  far  as  I  can 
judge,  they  have  never  been  better  or 
as  good  as  they  are  today."  The  min- 
ister was  speaking  at  the  annual  din- 
ner of  the  America's  Friends  associa- 
tion, an  organization  composed  of  Jap- 
anese who  are  especially  interested  tn 
nuilntaining  the  good  relations  between 
Japan  and  the  United  States.  Viscoont 
Kentaro  Kaneko.  a  member  of  the 
piivy  council,  presided,  and  among 
thu&e  present  wero  Premier  Count 
Okuma  and  George  W.  Guthrie,  the 
American  ambassador.  Baron  Ishil 
said:  .  ^ 

"We  all  remember  about  a  quarter 
of  a  century  ago  the  creation  of  the 
cry.  'the  yuUow  peril.'  1  did  not  un- 
derstand it  then  and  I  do  not  now,  but 
4t  orlgljuated  from  a  certain  power  In 
Europe,  whose  real  aim  was  to  create 
discord  10  serve  her  own  purposes  of 
domination,  to  crush  down  the  newly 
rising  nation  In  the  Far  East.  Happily 
for  humanity's  sake,  the  American  peo- 
ple understood  the  motives  behind  this 
power.  This  European  power  today  Is 
now  frankly  and  op-nly  embarked  on 
her  ambition  of  world  conquest." 
Source  of  Trouble  Removed. 
He  eontlnued:  "The  result  is  that 
the  relations  between  Japan  and  the 
Ignited  States  are  better  than  at  any 
previous  time,  because  that  power  Is 
too  much  occupied  with  her  own 
troubles  and  cares,  and  the  relations 
between  the  United  States  and  Japan 
are  now  left  to  be  regulated  by  them- 
selves. Therefore,  we  find,  when  left 
without  this  source  uf  Intrigue,  that 
there  never  has  been  a  better  or  more 
cordial  understanding  between  the  two 
nations  bordering  the  Pacific  than  at 
present.  We  have  every  reason  to  con- 
gratulate ourselves  on  the  elimination 
of  this  source  of  trouble,  for  it  be- 
speaks a  bright  future:  for  this  power 
Is  and  will  be  too  busy  for  some  time 
to  Interfere.  With  the  continual 
growing,  better  under.-^tandlng  of  the 
motives  of  each  country,  this  relation- 
ship will  grow  year  by  year  more  Ideal, 
more  cordial,  as  It  Justly  ought  to  be." 
Military  Kxpanalon. 
Premier  Okuma  made  a  reference  to 
the  United  States  both  at  the  America's 
Friends  dinner  and  at  a  luncheon 
which  he  gave  yesterday  at  his  offi- 
cial residence  to  the  Japanese  and  for- 
eign journalists.  He  referred  to 
President  Wilson's  advocacy  of  mili- 
tary expansion  and  said  that  It  was 
forced  upon  the  United  States  by  the 
war  In  Europe.  He  added:  "The  Ideal 
of  peace  and  the  principle  of  dem- 
ocracy so  strongly  upheld  by  President 
Jefferson  and  others  are  now  being 
relegated  to  the  background  and  the 
military  expansion  movement  Is  being 
vigorously  pushed  forward  by  Mr.  Wil- 
son Why?  P>ecau.-ie  the  American  in- 
terests are  threatened.  Germany  and 
Au.itrla  are  menacing  the  safety  of 
American  Uvea  on  the  sea,  and  the 
submarines  are  threatening  the  coast 
of  South  America.  The  Teutonic  spirit 
of  patriotism  Is  being  carried  too  far, 
and  the  United  States  l.s  suffering  from 
this  pestilence.  All  this  has  naturally 
forced  the  Americans  to  get  ready  for 
any  emergency,  hence  a  great  military 
expansion  movement  has  suddenly 
sprung  up." 

Count  Okuma  thought  that  Japan 
and  the  United  Statea  working  to- 
gether could  do  a  great  deal  towards 
rescuing  thp  world  from  the  calamity 
now  oppr.s.'it.p   it 

Tfce  r&!ucHe  Rrvolattoa. 
Tb«  premier  made  aeveral  reference« 


Splendidly  Ready  For  Easter  With  a  Complete  Display  of 

Smart  Spring  Styles  in  Suits  and  Coats 

Extensive  variety  in  an  unusually  broad  range  of  styles,  fabrics  and  colors,  at  prices  especially  interesting  in  view  of 
being  in  the  midst  of  the  Easter  fashion  season,  at  very  moderate  prices  considering  the  good  styles  and  quality. 


Suits  $  1 7.75^  $22.75  upward  i  Coats  at  $  1 0.75,  $  1 4.75  upward 

Of  Gabardine,  Poplin,  Serge  and  Checks,  in  all  the  best  spring  '  Special  lot  of  White  Chinchillas,  sport  models,  values  up  to 
shades,  in  smart  and  distinctive  design — surprising  values  at  i  $19.75,  now  $10.75.  Coats  of  admirable  character  in  splendid 
$17.75  and  $22.75.  Suits  of  exceptional  quality  and  style,  $27.75.  1  variety  for  formal  dress  and  street— $14.75,  $17.75  and  $19.75. 


Al 


Dresses  at  $5»98  Upward  Skirts  and  Waists 

Silk  and  Serge  materials  and  combina-  just  arrived.  Taffeta  Skirts  in  blue  and 
tions  of  two  or  more  fabrics — trimmed  in  '  black,  plain,  box  plait,  yoke  and  smock- 
individual  and  fascinating  ways — newest  {  ing  effects,  priced  at  $8.00  and  $9.  Many 
modols  |inii  shades — suitable  for  street  or  i  very  attractive  values  in  new  silk  waists 
afternoon  wear.  i  at  $2.48  and  $3.75. 


Special  Hats  $2.98 

An  interesting  variety  of  large  Sail- 
ors and  smart  little  Turbans  in  new  col- 
ors, tastefully  trimmed ;  the  very  latest 
modes ;  value?«  cannot  be  matched  at 
this  price— $2.98. 


Dress  Well— Never  Miss  the  Money.     We  Invite  Your  Charge  Account 


i»  (  v. 


Take  advantage  of  the  opportun- 
ities offered  by  our  "Charge  Ac- 
counts" and  select  your  Spring  and 
Easter  needs  now,^  f  '^ 


DULirri-SUPERIOR-VIRGINIA-HlBBIKG 


Do  not  forget  that  we  also  have 
the  newest  styles  in  Petticoats,  Cor- 
sets, Hosiery,  etc.,  Children's  Coats 
and  Shoes, 


-r-»- 


to  China.  whcriN  he  believed,  the  revo- 
lution was  srpltsrlng  -wovse  and  threat- 
ened to  become  nation-wide.     9*'  com- 
pared the  aftuation  in  China  with  that 
In    Mexico    and    expressed  'Ihe    opinion 
that    the    United    Statea    could    under- 
stand the  feelings   of  Japan.      He  add- 
ed:      "If    the    great     republic     of    the 
United    States   And    the    Japanese,  em- 
pfl%     should     dh-operate     In     brlnglnjr 
about  peace  In  China  we  shall  succeed. 
Japan   wlahes   to   Join   America   In    this 
work    of    bringing    back    peace    In    the 
world  and  In  restoring  order  and  peace 
In  China"  ...... 

The  prime  minister  feared  that  If 
the  Chinese  revolution  became  worse 
China  might  be  divided  into  two  con- 
testing factions.  He  estimated  that 
there  were  now  about  3.500  Germans 
resident-  In  China  and  thwight  that 
many  were  engajred  In  various  forms 
of  intrigue.  The  Japane!i<»  government 
was  taking  ep«oiAl  niea8ure.=<  against 
these  Germans  and  Japan's  allies  could 
rest  assured  that  everything  was  being 
done  to  safeguard  their  Interests. 
.  ■ 

SHOOTINGOF  LINCOLN 

•5  -5  ^     AFTER  CIVIL  WAR     ©  ©  -? 

RECALLED  BY  ''VET" 

Duluth  veterau*  of  the  Civil  war 
well  recall  what  happened  Just  fifty- 
one  years  ago  today. 

April  14  Is  the  anniversary  of  the 
assassination  of  Abraham  Lincoln  and 
the  oft-repeated  story  of  a  nation's 
tragedy  in  the  trying  days  that  fol^ 
lowed  the  war.  will  be  again  brought 
to  mind. 

Asa  Dallev.  veteran  of  the  war  and 
rustodlan  of  Memorial  hall,  courthouse, 
was  In  Louisville  when  the  news  of  the 
death  of  the  great  emancipator  came. 

"Nobody  believed  It  at  first."  he  said, 
"but  the  thought  nearly  paralyzed  us. 
Then  came  the  message  of  confirma- 
tion There  w***  several  deaths  In 
Louisville  that  day.  The  same  was 
true  In  almost  all  cities  near  the  line 
between  the  North  and  the  South. 
Unionists  were  •fwfurlated  and  anyone 
showing  thff-  sMglitest  disloyalty  was 
shot  down  tn  his  tracks." 

MAY  EXTEND  EiGHT- 
HOUR  STATUTE 

Law  for  Working  Women 

Now  Applies  to  Only 

Four  Cities. 

Only  four  cities  of  the  state  come 
within  the  eight-hour  law  for  women 
employes  as  It  now  stands  on  the  stat- 
ute books.  But  when  the  1917  legis- 
lature convenes*  an  attempt  will  be 
made  to  amend  the  statute  so  that  it 
will   cover  more  cities  and   villages. 

When  Miss  Victoria  Erlcson.  deputy 
factory  Inspector  for  this  district, 
makes  her  spring  tour  of  Inspection  of 
employment  conditions  In  the  cities, 
villages  and  towns  of  St.  Louis  and 
other  northern  counties,  she  will  Rath- 
er statistical  Information  which  will 
be  filed  with  the  state  factory  Inspec- 
tor at  St.  Paul.  ,  , 

The  present  eight-hour  law  for 
women  employes  applies  to  cities  of 
the  first  an^Sf^J^d  class.  There  are 
three  cities  M  the  first  class  In  the 
state.    Mlnnpat)oU^    St.    Paul    and    Du- 


luth.  Winona  Is  the  only  city  which 
comes  under  the  classification  of  a  sec- 
ond class  city. 

According  to  Miss  Erlcson.  a  rigid 
Inspection  of  factories,  stores  and  oth- 
er places  where  women  and  minors 
may  be  employed,  will  be  made. 

NEW  FREIGHT  LINE 

ACROSS  THE  PACIFIC 

(C«mipoR4enc«  of  tlw  AtMdatH  Preu.) 
Toklo.  March  7. — Another  company 
Is  plajinlng  to  Inaugurate  a  freight 
service  between  the  United  States  and 
the  Far  Elast.  It  Is  known  as  Shosho- 
yoko.  a  shipping  and  coaling  firm  of 
Toklo,    and    It    U    preparing    to    place 


four  ships  on  the  Pacific,  runnins 
monthly.  The  promoters,  who  already 
send  ships  on  the  Australian  route, 
believe  that  the  freight  rates  for 
goods  shipped  across  the  Pacific  are 
high  enough  to  permit  unsubsldized 
companies  to  make  a  profit  In  com- 
petition with  the  three  big  subsidized 
companies,  the  Nippon  Yusen  Kalsh.a. 
the  Toyo  KLsen  Kalsha  and  the  Osaka 
SUosen    Kaisha. 

JAPANESE  SAY  LIGHT 
CRUISER  IS  SUPERIOR 

(Corrt*pon4enc«  of  th«  Anoclatod  Pnn.) 
Tokio.     March     10. — Naval     men     are 
especially   interested   in   the    two    light 


cruisers  authorized  by  the  last  diet 
which  will  soon  be  laid  down  In  Japa- 
nese shipyards.  They  think  that  the 
war  in  Europe,  more  particularly  the 
battle  of  Heligoland,  has  demon- 
strated the  superior  qualities  of  this 
type  of  light  and  speedy  scoutship 
which  made  Its  strength  felt  In  the 
successful  engagement  with  the  Ger- 
man squadron.  The  Japanese  ships 
will  be  constructed  along  the  same 
ILn^  as  the  British  cruiser  Arethusa, 
although  the  definite  details  are  kept 
secret.  Special  attention  will  be  paid 
to  the  construction  of  the  two  ves- 
sels, which  are  scheduled  to  be 
launched  In  1918.  At  the  pre.sent  time 
Japan  possesses  no  light  cruisers  of 
this    clsiss. 


tlMiirT- 


TIHIDS  DS  A  REIL  BOiA  FliE 

CLOSINGOUT  FURNITURE  SALE! 


Entire  building  must  be  emptied  by  May  first, 
regardless  of  manufacturers^  cost.  Thousands 
of  pieces  for  livingroom,  bedroom  and  dining' 
room  are  going  overboard  at  a  fraction  of  ttteir 

real  value. 


Jhtl 


?< 


^: 


l*^: 


'Jti^^.M^m^^^^^^'!^^-^'^: 


CASTOR  lA 

For  Infants  and  Children 

In  Use 


Always  bears 

the 
Signature  of 


$50  BUYS  THIS  LARGE  OVERSTUFFED  DAVENPORf 

Upholstered  with  Verdure  Tapestry— Real  value  is  $125.    We  have 
arm  chair  and  rocker  to  match  at  $25  each.    Easily  worth  double. 

AGAIN  WE  SAY  COME  -  DELIVERIES  EVERYWHERE! 

CAMERON  FURNITURE  COMPANY 

2110  and  2112  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET 


o»iJ 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


■*""""*■  ■  * 


.  I   I  Ml      IHl* 


"f^ 


■     ■  ■■  ■■!'  ■■        ■■ 

I 


< 


^V 


1  y)fintw-»w«ii>.«i 


aroT     Kr   r. 


'I 


Friday, 


CROSS,  FEVERISH 
CHILD  IS  BILIOUS 
OR  CONSTIPATED 

Look,Mottier!  See  If  Tongue 

Is  Coated,  Breath  Hot  or 

Stomach  Sour. 


"California  Syrup  of  Figs" 
Can't  Harm  Tender  Stom- 
ach, Liver,  Bowels. 


STATE  OF 
CHIHUAHUA 


Receiving    Third    Visit    of 

Body  of  United  States 

Soldiers. 


Place  Where  Patriot  Priest, 

Hidalgo,  Was  Executed 

in  1811. 


WashinKton.  April  14. — "Chihuahua 
City  Is  figuring  with  almost  as  much 
persistence  in  the  news  dispatches  of 
today  as  did  Vera  Cruz  during  the 
'Tamplco  Incident.'  yet  the  average 
American's  only  mental  association 
with  the  name  of  the  capital  of  the 
largest  state  in  the  Mexican  republic 
Is  that  'It's  the  place  the  funny  little 
dogs  come  from,' "  says  a  primer  Is- 
sued by  the  National  Geographic  so- 
ciety, which  tells  of  the  Importance 
of  this  city  of  40.000  Inhabitants, 
whose  history  antedates  by  more  than 
a  Quarter  of  a  century  the  first  per- 
manent settlement  made  by  Europeans 
in  the  United  States,  at  St.  AuKUStlue, 
Fla.,    In    1566. 

"The  marih  of  Gen.  Pershing's  puni- 
tive exp<ditlonary  force  marks  the 
third  visit  of  a  body  of  United  States 
sc'ldlers  to  this  centtr  of  the  mining 
industry  of  the  state  of  Chihuahua, 
which  is  as  large  as  the  combined 
areas  of  Ohio  and  I'ennsylvanla, 
—  continues    the     bulletin.       "During     the 

irx.#.rv   ninthf^r   realize*     after    plvlnK  i  Mexican      war      that      unique      Missouri 
m.  ?n.?r,n      "(California     SvruD     of  I'nwyt'-.  ^'o'-   A.    W.   Doniphan,   captured 

her  chlUlron  California  »i/"P  .  «' i  1,,^  •'^ity  with  a  force  of  less  than  a 
Figs."  that  this  iH  their  Ideal  laxative.  VhouVand  men  in  1847,  and  in  the 
becau.se  thoy  lovo  it.s  pleasant  t«sto  '  yjj„,g  ^.3^  it  fell  again  before  the 
and   It   thoroughly  clean.se.s  the  ten<ler    Americans    under   Gon.    Price. 


little  stomach,  liver  and  bowels  with- 
out  griping. 

When  cross,  Irrltablo,  feverish  or 
breath  Is  bad,  stomach  sour,  look  at 
the  tongue,  mothf-r!  If  coated,  give 
a  teaspoonful  of  this  harmless  "fruit 
laxative,"  and  in  a  few  hour.s  all  the 
foul,  con-stiputed  waste,  sour  bile  and 
undigested  food  passes  out  of  the  bow- 
els, and  you  have  a  well,  playful  child 
again.  Whin  th«'  little  .sysKni  is  full  of 
cold,  throat  sore,  has  stomach-ache, 
diarrhoea.  Indigestion,  colic — remem- 
ber, a  good  "Inside  cleansing"  should 
always  be  the  first  tr«atment  given. 

Millions  of  mothers  kL»p  "California 
Byrup  of  Figs"  handy;  they  know  a 
teaspounful  today  saves  a  sick  child 
tomorrow.  Ask  your  druggist  for  a 
50-cent  bottle  of  "California  Syrup  of 
Figs."  which  has  directions  for  babies, 
children  of  all  ages  and  grown-ups 
printed  on  the  bottle.  Beware  of 
counterfeits  sold  here,  so  don't  be 
fooled.  Get  the  genuine,  made  by 
"California  Fig  Syrup  Company." — 
Advertisement. 


WILL  NOT  RESIGN 
EVEN  IF  DEFEATED 

Unique   Attitude   Assumed 

By  Government  of  the 

Netherlands. 

(Correspondence  cf  the  Associated  PrtM.) 
The  Hague.  Mar<-h  30. — The  present 
constitutional  position  In  the  Nether- 
lands Is  a  remarkable  one  in  the  his- 
tory of  modern  constitutional  states, 
being  the  outcome  of  the  extraordinary 
clrfumstances  In  which  the  country 
finds  Itself.  The  present  Kovernment 
has  announced,  and  already  put  into 
practice  on  sevf-ral  occasions,  the  the- 
ory that  only  Individual  ministers  need 
fall  if  the  bills  Introduced  by  them 
(with  of  course)  the  approval  of  the 
whole'  cabinet)  are  defeated  In  parlia- 
ment, and  the  ministry  as  a  whole  pro- 
ceeds with  Its  work  as  If  nothing  had 
happened.  The  prime  minister.  Mr. 
Cort  Van  Der  I..inden.  a  sound  Liberal 
and  (  onsecjuently  a  great  respecter  of 
good  constitutional  rules,  has  just  pub- 
licely  declared  In  the  first  chamber 
of  the  Dutch  parliament  that  even  If 
the  proposals  for  the  revision  of  the 
Constitution,  whkh  form  the  main 
Item  of  the  government's  legislative 
program  and  for  which  he  is  personally 
responsible,  should  be  re.iected  by  par- 
liament,  he   will   remain   In  office. 

It  seems  super-constitutional,  says 
one  press  organ,  and  a  unUiue  develop- 
ment In  the  evolution  of  modern  con- 
etitutioiial  Ideas,  when  a  cabinet  may 
have  its  entire  legislative  program  re- 
jected and  coolly  stay  In  office  as  If 
nothing  particular  had  happened.  There 
are,  however,  naturally  good  grounds 
for  the  "super-constltutlonalism"  of 
the  present  Dutch  ministry;  and  It  Is 
silently  Indorsed  by  the  nation  as  a 
whole.  TTiev  are  found  In  the  perilous 
position  of  the  country.  The  ministry 
will  not  make  a  cabinet  question  of 
any  subject  of  Internal  politics  because 
It  considers  Itself  a  cabinet  of  foreign 
affalr-q.  and  its  ralson  d'etre  the  pre- 
servation of  the  country's  Independence 
and  safety.  Thus,  while  Mr.  Cort  Van 
Der  Linden  Is  nominally  minister  of 
home  affairs,  he  makes  it  clear  that 
he  really  regards  himself  as  the  guard- 
Ian  and  director  of  the  national-Inter- 
national policy  of  the  Netherlands,  say- 
ing In  effect  that  only  a  direct  vote  of 
censure  on  himself  and  his  colleagues 
will    bring   about   their  resignation. 


HAVE  DARK  HAIR 

AND  LOOK  YOUNG 


Nobody  Can  Tell  When  You 
Darken  Gray,  Faded  Hair 
i         With  Sage  Tea. 


Where    IlltlniKO    Wn«    Kxcculed 

"Chihuahua      is       more       accustomed, 
however,   to   seeing   Its   people  engaged 
in    Internecine   strife    than   In   opposing 
a    foreign    foe.      It    was    here,    for    ex- 
ample,   that    the    patriot    priest,    Hidal- 
go,    was     executed     In     1811,     following 
the     failure     of    the     revolution     which 
he    led    In    an    effort    to    throw    off    the 
Spanish     yoke.        The     most     Imposing 
monument   In  the  city  is   In   memory  of 
this    beloved    national    hero,    the    inci- 
dents   of   whose   death    are   as    pathetic 
as     the     passing     of    any     martyr    since 
the    days    of   Joan    of   Arc.      The    priest 
was  condemned   to  die  at  dawn.  While 
being    led     to     the    place    of     execution 
he    remembered    that   he    hdd    left  aome 
.sweetmeats      under      his      pillow.        He 
asked    one    of    the    soldiers    to    return 
for  them,  and  when  they  were  brought 
he  distributed    them    with    his   blessing 
among     the     members     of     the     firing 
squad.      Knowing   that    the    misty   light 
of    dawn    would    make    It    difficult    for 
the     soldiers     to     aim     accurately,     the 
priest  calmly  placed   his  hand  over  his 
heart    against    the    black    robe    so    that 
they  could   locate   the  vital   spot. 
Agrricultural    InterrwtM. 
"While    the    mining    in<hi8try    In    the 
territory  contiguous  to  Chihuahua  City 
is     four     times     as     lmportai>t     as     the 
agricultural        Interests,        nevertheless 
the    raising    of   corn,    fruits    and    cotton 
is    Important    and    an    Interesting    fea- 
ture of  the  last  named  product  Is  that 
its    manufacture    into    cloth    dates   back 
to   the  davs  of  Cortez.   who  sent  to  his 
sovereign."   the    king   of    Spain,    some   of 
the    finely     woven     material     from    the 
land    which    utilized    cotton    for    cloth- 
ing even  before  Europe  knew  Its  uses. 
•Legends   of  the  Toltecs.   recorded  In 
their    sacred    books,    tell    us    that   Quet- 
zalcohuatl.    god    of    the    air.    grew    cot- 
ton   of    all    colors    In    his    garden,    and 
taught    Its    many    uses.      As    to    colored 
cotton,    the    Mexicans    have    never    felt 
the     pinch    of     a     dyestuff    famine,     at 
least   red  dyestuff,    for   this  country    Is 
the    home    of    the    cochineal,    that    odvl 
Insect      whose      dried      bodies      furnish 
such    a    wonderful    and    lasting    scarlet 
coloring     matter.       It     was     not     until 
1703,     the     vary     year     In     which     the 
Spanish     settlers    reached     the    present 
site  of  Chihuahua  City   and   dlscovere* 
the    Santa    Eulalle    mine,    that    It    be- 
came   known    that    cochineal    was    not 
a    seed    or    bloom    of    a    plant    attached 
to   the  cochineal   fig.   but   a   bug. 
Cotton    Perennial. 
"In    some    parts    of    Chihuahua    cot- 
ton  Is   perennial   and  It  Is  unnecessary 
to    plant    it    oftener    than    once    every 
ten   years.  .  . 

"The  spinning  of  woolen  yarn  ana 
weaving  of  woolen  cloth  is  one  of  the 
Industries  of  Chihuahua  City,  dating 
back  to  the  Importation  of  the  merino 
sheep  by  the  Spaniards  In  1641.  It 
should  be  remembered.  Incidentally, 
that  all  the  domestic  animals  of  Mex- 
ico date  from  the  Spanish  conquest, 
and  the  herds  of  cattle,  goats,  sheep 
and  swine  which  now  find  excellent 
pasturage  on  the  plateau  surrounding 
Chihuahua  have  sprung  from  the 
original  Spanish  stock,  except  for  the 
few  new  strains  introduced  within 
very  recent  years  In  an  effort  to  im- 
prove the   standard. 

Sliver  MIneM. 
"Of  the  23.191  mining  properties  list- 
ed In  Mexico  in  1906  five-sixths  of 
them  produce  sliver,  and  of  these  the 
Santa  Eulalle.  twelve  miles  outside 
Chihuahua,  is  the  most  famous.  It 
has  produced  as  high  as  20.000  tons 
of  silver-bearing  ore  a  month.  The 
handsome  parish  church  In  the  capi- 
tal which  was  In  the  course  of  con- 
struction for  three-quarters  of  a  oen- 
Uiry.  was  built  from  a  tax  levied  on 
the   output   of    this   mine. 

"When  the  Aztecs  worked  the  Chi- 
huahua mines  their  skilled  artificers 
u«ed  reed  blowpipes  In  melting  the 
metals.  They  also  made  a  bronze. 
much  the  same  as  that  used  In  Lu- 
rope.  but  they  did  not  know  the  uses 
of  Iron,  even  though  there  was  be- 
fore them  that  mountain  of  almost 
solid  Iron  only  a  few  miles  outside 
the  city  of  Durango.  a  mountain  near- 
ly a  mile  long,  a  third  of  a  mile  wide 
at  the  base  and  nearly  700  feet  high, 
worth  It  Is  estimated,  as  much  as  all 
the  gold  and  silver  produced  In  the 
mines  of  Mexico  In  two  centuries. 
<«IIanKli>ir  ot  JndaH." 
"It  seems  practically  certain  that 
some  of  Gen.  Pershing's  soldiers  will 
qnend  Easter  week  In  Chihuahua, 
where  they  will  have  an  opportunity 
to  witness  one  of  the  oddest  customs 
practiced  In  any  civilized  country— 
the  'hanging  of  Judas'  on  Saturday 
before  Easter  Sunday.  This  ceremony 
Is  performed  in  many  cities  and  usu- 
ally takes  place  before  a  pulque  sa- 
loon A  rope  is  stretched  from  an 
uDoer  window  of  the  saloon  to  a 
bu  Idlng  across  the  street.  It  Is  low- 
ered and  an  effigy,  a  curious  affair, 
usuallv    with     a    grotesque  .nose     like 


f  t  ^t     rt    ^j 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


•    April  14,  1916. 


r 


SMOKE 


■^-.v^-r^i?: 


V?^:^'-:: 


m^ 


WATER 


**I  am  going  to 
surpass  all  pre' 
vious  endeavors'* 
—J.  Vertelney, 


MEN,  WOMEN  AND  CHILDREN!  STOP!  LOOK  AND  LISTEN! 

THE  ONLY  REAL  GENUINE  MONEY-SAVING  VALUES  IN  DULUTH  CONFRONTS  YOU  HERE  TOMORROW! 

Looking  forward  to  a  prosperous  spring  and  summer  I  ordered  heavily.    When  fire  broke  out  in 

mil  store  I  tried  to  cancel,  which  was  refused.  Then  I  made  a  spot  cash  offer,  tvhich  was  accepted.  This  offer  enables  me 
to  sell  lower  than  my  original  fire  sale  prices.  Tomorrow  this  store  will  he  turned  into  a  carnival  of  money-saving  proposi- 
tions where  costs  are  set  aside  and  values  not  considered.  Every  man,  woman  and  child  reading  this  competition-defying, 
price  slaughtering  proposition  will  he  benefitted.    Thousands  of  dollars'  worth  of  seasonable  wearables  to  select  from. 

READ!  REFLECT  AND  ACT  QUICKLY! 


2,000  yards  Outing  Flannels,  all 
colors,  15c  values, 
for  only 

12c  Ginghams,  checks 
and  plaids 

15c  Ginghams, 

per  yard 

15c  Percales,  light 

and  dark 

Ladies'  Knit  Under- 
wear for 

Ladies'  Black 
Hose,  pair 

Ladies'  Burson  ^    ^^#^ 

Hose,  pair I    ^bw 

Ladies'  Vegetable 
Silk  Hose 

Men's  Sox, 

the  pair 

Children's  Hose,  f%/^ 

the  pair WW 

Men's  Suspenders 

for  only 

Ladies'  Union  Suits, 
low  neck ;  50  values . 
House  Dresses,  up 
to  $2.00  values 


4c 

4c 

5c 

6c 

6c 

5c 

.2c 

19c 

5c 

6c 

14c 

19c 


Ladies'  Skirts,  up 
to  $5.00  values . . . 

Ladies'  Handkerchiefs 

for  only 

(Six  for  5c) 

Ladies'  50c  Fitrite  0^/% 
Union  Suits,  low  neck  fca^Tw 
Hand  Embroidered 
Night  Gowns,  $2  val. 

Children  Union  Suits  ^%  ^tg% 

— 75c  values »■  "r  w 

$1.00  Petticoats, 

colored 

$1.25  Black  Sateen 
Petticoats 

A  few  Ladies* 

w  aisvs  ...•••••••••• 

Ladies'  Stylish  ^.^^#% 

Waists,  $1.50  val. . .  .."Vwi^ 

Men's  Union  Suits 

up  from 

Men's  Balbriggan,  2-    O^l/^ 

pieQe,  5Pc  values ^■"T  w 

One  lot  of  Rain 

Coats 

Men's  $6.50 
Rain  Coats . . 


49c 
.5c 


Men's  $8.00 
Rain  Coats. 

Boys'  Knee  Pants, 

up  from 

Men's  Pants,  values 

to  $4,  up  from 

Men's  Mackinaws,  F.  A.  Patrick 
and  the  Zenith  ^^  ^2  Ok  Ct 
—$12.50  val . .  9  V  ■  W  O 

Boys'  Macki-  ^^  ^  dSi 
naws, val. to $6 9   I    awO 

$8  to  $10  Boys  ^  •!      A  O 

Overcoats ^^    I   ■  ^f  ^9 

Men's  $1  Work  and  I  Cl#^ 
Dress  Shirts I  WW 

Boys'  Hats  and  C^#% 

Caps W*# 

Boys'  Overalls,  %   ^L/^ 

Indigo  dye I   "T  w 

Men's  Overalls,  ^%d#^ 

$1.25  values W  W  V 

Boys'  &  Men's  Jersey 

Sweaters,  $2.50  val. .. 

One  lot  of  White  1   ^^ 

Sweaters I    WW 

Men's  $3.00 
Hats 


Boys'  Shoes  up 
from 


$1.98  S-'''" 69c 


89c 

Girls'  Shoes,  ^^C{#^ 

$2.00  values W  OC 

Men's  Dress  Shoes,  Work  Shoes 
and  Oxfords  up  ^^Ct#^ 

from wOC 

Men's  $5.00  O  Q  #^ 

Packs WWW 

Men's  Work      ^^  ^  C^Ct 

Shoes,  to  $4 ... 9    I  BwO 

Boys'  Suits        ^  f  ^  Q 

for  only 9   ■  ■"•O 

Boys' $6 Fancy  ^9    QQ 
Worsted  Suits .  9  b^  ■  W  O 

Boys'  Blue    Serge    Suits— $7.50 

values,  for         4^  ^2    Ofi 
only 9wbwO 

75c  Crib    '  OO/^ 

Blankets WWW 

Large  Bed  Blankets    ^  g|  ^ 
up  from •    ^#  W 

$5.00  Heavy      ffi^  I      O  fi 
Wool  Blankets  ^    I    b  W  O 

$7.50  Blankets  ^^    Qft 
for  only ^Pinaw^' 


THE  WESTERN  SALES  CO, 


DULUTH'S  GREAT  MONEY-SAVING  STORE. 


14  EAST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


NEXT  DOOR  TO  OLD  EMPRESS  THEATER. 


.( 


Grandmother  kept  her  hair  beauti- 
fully darkened,  glossy  and  attractive 
•with  a  brew  of  Sage  Tea  and  Sulphur. 
Whenever  her  hair  took  on  that  dull, 
faded    or    streaked     appearance,     this 

Blmple  mixture  was  applied  with  won-  usuauy  wim  ".."'"'""^rr.-  .-«♦  »;„i 
derful  effect.  By  asking  at  any  drug ,  our  comic  valentines  a  high  hat  and 
store  for  "Wyeth's  Sage  and  Sulphuf  a  long-tal  c-* J-  tied  ^t^o  ^U.  ^  Then 
Compound."  you  will  get  a  largo  bot-    *V«trh    has    been    applied    to    the    coat- 


called  from  the  Interior  to  take  the 
ihalr  of  ophthalmology  and  otology  In 
the  medical  school  In  the  University  of 
Nanking.  Mrs.  Butchart  and  four  chil- 
dren survive  him.        

ARGENTINE  GRAIN 

PESSIMISTIC 


This  simple  mixture  can  be  depended 
upon  to  restore  natural  color  and 
beauty  to  the   hair. 

A  well-known  downtown  druggist 
Bays  everybody  uses  Wyeth's  Sage  and 
Bulphur  Compound  now  because  it 
darkens  so  naturally  and  evenly  that 
nobody  can  tell  It  has  been  applied — 
it's  so  easy  to  use,  too.  You  simply 
dampen  a  comb  or  soft  brush  and 
draw  It  through  your  hair,  taking  one 
Btrand  at  a  time.  By  morning  the 
gray  hair  disappears:  after  another 
application  or  two,  it  Is  restored  to  its 
natural  color  and  looks  glossy,  soft  and 
beautiful.  This  preparation  is  a  de- 
lightful toilet  requisite.  It  Is  not  In- 
tended for  the  cure,  mitigation  or  pre 


the  center  of  the  figure  and  a  wild 
scramble  follows  for  the  hat  or  the 
shoes  or  perhaps  the  coat — a  prize  for 
some  lucky   onlooker." 

DR.  JAMES  BUTCHART 

IS  DEAD  IN  CHINA 

(C«mi»on<rne«  of  tlit  AiMclatttf  Pnu.) 
Nanking,  March  10. — Dr.  James  Rut- 
rhart,  a  member  of  the  NankJng  uni- 
versity medical  school  staff,  died  at 
the  foreign  hospital  here  Feb.  IB  from 
the  effects  of  blood  poisoning  con- 
tracted several  months  ago.  Dr.  But- 
member   of   the   Christian 


Allies  Do  Not  Compete  and 

Able   to    Dictate 

Prices. 

(tmtiwtnitnt*  tf  tb*  AiMciatti  Prtu.) 
Buenos  Aires,  March  10. — With  the 
carnival  season  now  making  its  annual 
entry  there  are  no  outward  signs  of 
anything  but  prosperity  in  the  capital 
of  the  Argentine.  So  far  as  society  is 
concerned.  It  Is  exulting  over  the  fav- 
orable prospects  for  the  opera  season 
which,  the  newspapers  say.  will  make 
Buenos  Aires  the  center  of  the  operatic 
world  this  year.      ..        ,      .       .  . 

The  general  feeling  in  business  cir- 
cles regarding  economic  conditions, 
however,   is  rather   pessinustic. 

The  fact  Is,  the  price  of  grain,  which 


chart   was   a    ...>,...-..    .......    ..-- 

/orelgn  mission  and  an  American.  He 
tended  for  the  cure,  miiiganon  or  pre-  had  served  In  the  ChlncBe  mit^slon  field 
yenUon  of  di»ea*©.--Advcrtlsement.      |  for  twenty-Xlve  years,  and  was  recently 


I 


TO  REMOVE  DANDRUFF 


■  I* » • '«- 


Get  a  2B-cent  bottle  of  Danderine  at 
any  drug  store,  pour  a  little  Into  your 
hand  and  rub  well  Into  the  scalp  with 
the  finger  tips.  By  morning  most,  if 
not  all,  of  this  awful  scurf  will  have 
disappeared.  Two  or  three  applica- 
tions will  destroy  every  bit  of  dan- 
druff; stop  scalp  Itching  and  falling 
hair. — Advertisement. 


guages  the  prosperity  of  the  provinces, 
has  fallen  precisely  when  a  substantial 
Increase  in  price  was  anticipated.  The 
markets  of  Great  Britain  and  her  allies 
are  practically  the  only  ones  open  to 
Argentine  produce,  and  having-  organ- 
ized a  collosal  "corner,"  Great  Britain 
has  become  the  granery  and  storehouse 
of  the  group.  She  buys  for  all.  carries 
for  all.  pays  for  all.  By  thus  doing 
away  with  competition  between  them- 
selves, the  allies  are  In  a  position  to 
dictate  prices  rather  than  have  prices 
dictated  to  them. 

The  Argentine  producers  find  that 
while  the  European  demand  is  always 
for  more,  the  supply  Is  arranged  from 
England  by  limiting  the  number  of 
steamers  nvallable  for  the  River  Platte 
trade.  All  grain- must  be  forwarded  by 
freighters,  the  mail  boats  being  requisi- 
tioned for  the  transport  of  chilled 
meat.  The  scarcity  of  freight  vessels 
has  accordingly  given  rise  to  serious 
congestion  of  the  grain  shipments. 

At  Galvan,  and  the  stations  near  Ba- 
hla  Blanca,  the  port  shipment  for  the 
southern  zone,  there  were  at  the  end  of 
last  month  140,000  tons  of  wheat  stored 
in  elevator  sheds  or  stacked  In  the 
open  awaiting  shipment,  and  at  Inter- 
mediate stations  along  the  ,<^reat 
Southern  railroad  there  are  9,600,000 
sacks  of  wheat  and  oats  stacked  in  the 
open.  Similar  conditions  prevail  along 
the  Great  Western  and  Central  Argen- 
tine lines.  In  fact,  up  to  the  end  of 
last  month,  the  grain  of  this  years 
harvest,  loaded  or  ready  for  loading, 
was  only  123,000  tons.  For  the  same 
period  last  year  th%,  total  wap  444»O00 
tons  Thus  far  charters  »p  to  the  16th 
of  July  next  for  Ai<Eentiiie  grain  ag- 
gregate only  650.000  ton.s,  which  la  ap- 
1  proximately.  1.060.000  tons  short  of  the 
!  total    for   the   corresponding   period   of 


scarcity  of  workers  that  high  prices 
had  to  be  paid.  It  was  only  through 
the  timely  action  of  the  department  of 
labor,  which  organized  the  unemployed, 
and  regulated  the  supply  In  accordance 
with  the  geographical  zones  and  the 
actual  demand,  that  the  harvesting  of 
the  crops  has,  so  far,  been  accom- 
plished. In  regard  to  the  grain,  the 
oats  are  of  exceptional  quality  and 
quantity.  The  wheat  has  yielded  heav- 
ily, but  the  grain  Is.  generally  speak- 
ing, light  In  weight,  being  from  three 
to   four  pounds     per  bushel   under  the 

standard.  ^         x,     i    i„  „^* 

In  regard  to  corn  the  outlook  Is  not 
so  favorable.  It  l.s  estimated  that  the 
actual  vleld  along  the  Western  railroad 
lines  w"ill  \3f  60  per  cent  less  than  was 
officially  forecast.  The  early  crop 
turned  out  well,     but  locusts,  hall  and 


1  last  year. 


Y 


Owing  to  the  fact  That  a  large  num- 
ber of  Italian  harveft  hands  have  gone 
back  to  Italy  and  me  g»-neral  current 
of  Immigration  has-  b*en  mf  ager,  the 
Kraln-growers  hav^  also  had  some 
Uouble  with  labor,  there  being  «uch  a 


w 


FRECKLE-FACE 


Sun  and  Wind  Bring  Out  Tgly  Spots. 
Hofv  to  Remove  Easily. 

Here's  a  chance.  Miss  Freckle-face, 
to  try  a  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  doef* 
give  you  a  clear  complexion  the  ex- 
pense Is  trifling. 

Simply  get  an  ounce  of  othlne — 
double  strength — from  any  druggist 
and  a  few  applications  should  show 
you  how  easy  It  Is  to  rid  yourself  of 
the  homely  freckles  and  get  a  beauti- 
ful complexion.  Rarely  Is  more  than 
one  ounce  needed  for  the  worst  case. 

Be  sure  to  ask  the  druggist  for  the 
double  strength  othlne  as  this  Is  the 
prescription  sold  under  guarantee  of 
money  back  if  It  falls  to  remove  frec- 
kles. 


drouth  accounted  for  the  falling  off  In 
the  yield.  The  estimated  output  of  this 
grain  available  for  export  Is  given  by 
the  Central  Argentine  railroad  at 
1,800,000  tons,  while  last  year  the  same 
line  gave  for  export  2.400.000  tons. 
There  is  still  a  good  deal  of  last  year's 
grain  on  hand. 

Altogether  the  situation  in  the  Ar- 
gentine and  South  America  generally 
is  rather  ambiguous.  With  visible  as- 
sets worth  millions  of  dollars  on  hand 
and  with  ready  markets  awaiting  sup- 
plies, these  perishable  assets  cannot  be 
forwarded  or  liquidated  for  lack  of 
freighters.  This  handicap  Is  empha- 
sized by  the  fact  that  under  the  Influ- 
ence of  the  war  in  Europe  and  the  high 
prices  offered  for  vessels,  the  nascent 
mercantile  marine  of  Argentina  has 
practically   vanished  from  Bight. 

troublewtFthe 
san  u^  indians 

Serious     Clashes     Only 

Avoided   By   Tact   of 

American  Officers. 

(Correspondence  or  the  Asioc'.aUd  Prtit.) 
Panama,  .\pril  1. — For  several  months 
the  U.  S.  S.  Leonldas,  which  has  been 
engaged  In  surveying  the  Atlantic  coast 
of  Panama,  has  had  numerous  difficul- 
ties with  the  San  Bias  Indians.  Serious 
clashes  have  been  avoided  only  by  the 
tact  and  patience  of  the  officers  of  the 

One  annoyance  the  officers  have  had 
to  contend  with  has  beon  the  removal 
of  cloth  markers  that  the  surveyors 
placed  along  the  shore.  The  Indians 
found  the  bright  calico  too  great  a 
temptaUon  To  reeiat.     AXwr  uuuieroa* 


remonstrances,  the  officers  threatened 
that  for  each  marker  stolen  a  certain 
number  of  cocoanut  trees  would  be 
felled  in  reprisal.  This  had  the  de- 
sired effect,  for  after  a  few  trees  had 
been  chopped,  the  Indians  realized  that 
the  price  was  too  high  to  pay  for  a 
few     cents'     worth     of     bright    colored 

cloth. 

_ • — 

Guaranteed  waterproof  raincoats.  15, 
at  the  "3   Winners"   removal  sale. 

national"parks  as 

LARGE  AS  NEW  JERSEY 

Washington.  April  14.— Tho  fourteen 
national  parks  of  the  United  States 
cover  4,666,966  acres,  or  7,290  square 
miles,  as  large  nearly  as  New  Jersey. 
They  contain  more  features  of  con- 
spicuous grandeur  than  are  readily 
accessible  In  all  the  rest  of  the  world 
together. 


The  Treatment  of 
Influenza  or  La  Grippe 

It  is  quite  refreshing  these  days  to 
read  of  a  clearly  defined  treatment 
for  Influenza  or  La  Grippe.  In  an  ar- 
ticle in  the  "Lancet-CUnlc,"  Dr.  James 
Bell,  of  New  York  Cit.v.  says  he  is 
convinced  that  too  much  medication 
is  both  unnecessary  and  Injurious. 

When  called  to  a  case  of  la  grtppp.  the  paUent  1J 
usually  aetn  when  the  feter  U  trcsent.  as  the  ehJU 
which  occaiionally  ushers  In  the  disease,  has  practically 
passed  away  Dr.  Boll  then  orAn  that  the  Umels  be 
opened  frely  with  talti.  ■Actolds"  or  cltraU  of  mag- 
I  ne-sla  For  the  high  feter.  aerere  headache,  pain  ana 
I  g.  neral  soreness,  one  antl-kamnla  tablet  evety  tfcrc* 
ho«iM  1«  quickly  followed  fcy  comitlel*  reUef.  A>k  f«f 
A-K  TableU.  They  are  al»  anezcelltd  fw  be^daUir^ 
oeunlsU  and  lU  paiaa. 


1 


— ;■■- 


'  -  r 


» 


.3IGI  M  IhqA 

Friday, 


.a  JAHSH 


aHt 


»V6bh'^ 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


Apra  14,  1916. 


29  and  31  West 

Superior  St 


G.  A,  ORECK  &  SONS  CO.,  Sole  Proprietors. 


29Mi4  3iWMt 
Superior  St. 


OUR  $20,000  APRIL  INCREASE  SALE 

is  a  decided  saving  event  for  the  thrifty  shopper— The  foremost  ready-to-wear 
store  in  Duluth  will  demonstrate  its  leadership  more  forcefully  than  ever  during 
this  sale.     Your  inspection  of  a  few  of  the  '  'specials ' '  offered  for  tomorrow  will 

—  prove  this  to  your  entire  satisfaction. 

350  Easter  Suits 

For  Women  and  Misses 

Values  from  $17.50  to  $32.50  will  be 
grouped  in  a  Pre- Easter  Sale  tomorrow 


Values  up  to 
$18.50 


Values  up  to 
$24.50 


Values  up  to 

$32.50 


You'll  like   their  crisp    newness — their    splendid 
materials— their  smart  trimmings  and  the  very  mod- 
erate prices.     There  are  mannish  worsteds,  gabar- 
dines, poplins,  fine  twills,  two-tone  checks  and  the 
popular  silk  and  wool  combinations.    Breezy  little 
Norfolks,    flaring    peplums,    loose    backs — all   th« 


wanted  styles  oi  the  Easter  season.    They'll  be  ready    tomorrow— in   a   big   pre-Easter   sale— at   the 
very  low  prices  of  $12.75.  $16.75.  $22.50. (Mam  Floor.) 

Special  Selling  oi 


An  Easter  Ottering  ot 

Fine  Coats 

$6.75,  $10.75,  $14.75 
up  to  $24.75 

Latest  style  expressions  of  silk,  tan 
covert,  poplin,  gabardine,  novelty 
plaids,  checks,  golfine  and  chinchilla — 
iiinumcrnble  models  for  sport,  utility, 
street,  niot.-)r  wear,  etc.     <*•■*■  «•''•»'•> 


Special  $9.50  Coats.. 

of  gabardine,  checks, 
plaids,  etc— Tomorrow 

Basement 


$4.95 


Smart  Easter  Hats 


$5.00 

Fascinating  new 
styles  In  becoming 
dress  shapes, 
jaunty  sailors  and 
small  hats,  copies 
of  hlgrh-prlced 
niodt-Ls.  Included 
are  Milan,  Llaere 
and  Milan  Henip 
Sailors^  Trlcornee. 
Poke  Bonnets  ana 
Mushroom  Shapes, 
smartly  trimmed 
with  flowers  and 
bows.  R  e  g  u  1  ar 
19.00  and  |10.0|. 
values,   $5.00. 

(Third   Floor.)    SR. 


Speclal--2,000  Waists  on  Sale 


This  department  is  growing  by  leaps  and  bounds  and  only  be- 
cause we  are  gi^  ing  you  better  merchandise  for  less  money. 
Tomorrow  we  have  a  most  unusual  showing  of  new  spring 
waists,  consisting  of  unusually  fine  quality  Georgette  crepes, 
Crepe  de  Chines,  Pussy  Willow,  Habutais,  Organdie,  Im- 
ported Voiles  and  many  Nov- 
elty Stripes,  beautifully  made 
and   finished 

— Miiln    Floor. 


$1.98,  $2.98 


500  Crisp,  New 
Lingerie  Waists 

More  than  30  distinctive 
styles  of  fine  crisp  voiles, 
marquisettes  and  lawns, 
beautiful  all-over  effects: 
some  lace  trimmed;  $1.50 
values;  choice — 


35c  Fiber  Silk  Hose- 
All  colors  and 
sizes,  now  at. 


25c 


EASTER  NECKWEAR 

Dainty    new    atyle*    Jn*t    lii — 

25f^,  50€^,  65^  to  ^1.95 


Genuine  Leather  Bags 
—$2.00  values,     QQ^ 


now  at. 


Basement  Specials  ior  Saturday 

$1.49 


69  Suits  for  women  and 

misses 

Poplins,  Serges,  Mixturos,  etc.;  light  and  dark 
colors.  Plenty  navy  and  black;  values  up  to 
J19.50,  Basement  price,  $8.50. 


200  Trimmed  Hats  worth 

up  to  $5.00,  at 

Shapes  worth  up  to 
|52.50,  at 


1,000   y'\~.   Apron    Gin^chams?; 
standard  »c  tiuallty,  yard... 

Yard-wide    Percales;    regu- 
lar 12Vic  kind 


12V4C   and    15c   Manchester 
Percalea   and   Shirtings.... 


5e 
7c 
9c 


190  <jalatea  Cloth  of  standard 
duality  in  atripea  and        12V3C 

checks    

25o  Scotch  Plaid  GinRhams;  \±o 

guaranteed    fa^t    colors *     "*' 

Boys'  Wa>^h  Suits  of  striped  gg^ 
Galatea  Cloth;  $1.00  value.. v*'^ 
Children's  60c  Gingham  29C 
Drc8.ses,  laced  yoke,  special.-"'^ 
Girls'  89e  Scotch  Plaid  Gingham 
Dresses*,   trimmed   with  59C 

plain  Chambray    


Boys*  Spring  Suits 

at  hxfi  Reduifiions 

Norfolk  Suits  of  good  quality 
wool  and  cotton  Cashmere;  all 
sizes;  13.60  value  S2L49 

Boys'  Norfolk  Suits  of  good  wool 
mixtures  with  two  pairs  pants; 
(5  00    and   $5.50  ^Q  QS 

value.«!  at   #0»»U 

Norfolk  Suits  with  two  pairs 
pants,  full  lined,  all  wool  mix- 
tures; regular  $7.00  ^4  9S 

Boys'  iblsO  Bliie"  Serge  Suits  for 
confirmation  and   graduation   ex- 

«;;^;f^^.^A' $6.00 

Blue  Serge  Suits  worth  up  to 
16.50;   sizes  6   to   18:  S3.49 


13.60   and      $4.00     Skirts,     serges, 
L-heclcs   and   stripes;  tfO  ^O 

all  sizes   9A»'V9 

Black    and    white    checked    Rain- 
coats,  16.60   value  *0  AC 

$1.25  Sateen  Petticoats  with  fiO^ 
elastic  adjustable  top OJF^ 

11.00    House    Dresses    In 
light  or  dark  colors 

$1.00   Wash   Waists;   new 
clean   stock;  choice 

Middy   Blouses  for  misses 
and    women;    worth    $1.00.. 
86c  Corsets,    made  with    4 
supports;  all  sizes;  special 

Children's     19c      Hose;      medium 
weight;    ribbed  '191/sn 

styles    at    M.AfdK> 


59c 
49c 
.49c 
44c 


\..JV^u/lcna^^Slpf^^ 


MAII  ORDER 


ETITION 


Trade  TaiPer    Editor    Ad- 
dress^ dluth  Sale  Man- 
agers'{Association. 

Merchahtei'Must  Figiit  Mail 

Order    Houses    With 

OwnWeapons. 


GERMAN  COMMENT 
ON  SUBMARINE  NOTE 


Ttiink  Answer  Shows  Bona- 
fide  and  Thorough  Char- 
acter of  Investigation. 

B  rlln,  April  14,  via  London. — The 
■view  of  the  German  newspapers  Is 
that  the  German  answer  to  the  Ameri- 
can   note     regarding    the    Sussex    and 


In  the  Early  Stages 

ot  Tuberculosis 

your  chances  for  di-feating,  this  dread- 
ed affection  depend  largely  on  your 
ability  to  restore  normal  body  func- 
tions. 

To  do  this,  one  requirement  Is  proper 
attention  to  diet  and  pure  food.  Also 
rest  and  fresh  air,  day  and  night. 

Where  the  system  is  run  jlown  and 
likelihood  of  serious  consequences 
thus  Increased,  Eckman's  Alterative 
may  prove  beneficial,  as  it  has  in  many 
cases. 

This  Is  a  lime  treatment — but  un- 
like any  other.  For  here  the  lime  con- 
tent is  so  combined  with  other  ingredi- 
ents as  to  be  easily  assimilated  by  the 
average  person. 

A  trial  can  do  no  harm,  since  Eck- 
man's Alterative  contains  no  poison- 
ous or  habit-forming  drugs.  At  your 
di-uggist's. 

]<:ckinaa    Laboratory,    Pklladelphla. 


other  steamers  shows  the  bonafide  and 
thorough  character  of  the  investiga- 
tion conducted  to  clear  up  the  cases, 
and  also  that  there  can  be  no  talk  of 
a  violation  by  Germany  of  the  assur- 
ances given  the  United  States  regard- 
ing Uermany's  manner  of  conducting 
her  submarine  warfare. 

The  newspapers  say  that  three  of 
the  cases  referred  to  by  the  United 
Statis  have  absolutely  been  cleared  up, 
that  the  fourth  is  open  to  further  in- 
vestlgatX^^n  when  more  details  are  fur- 
nished, and  that  a  frank  offer  has  been 
made  to  submit  the  fifth  to  arbitra- 
tion. 

The  Lokal  Anzelger  says: 

"One  should  everywhere  take  as  an 
example  the  correct  and  humane  atti- 
tude of  our  submarine  commanders,  in- 
stead of  breakinc:  out  Into  scolding  as 
soon  as  an  English,  French  or  neutral 
vessel  with  American  citizens  aboard 
suffers  damage." 

The  newspapers  point  out  a  number 
of  cases  in  which  ships  that  have  been 
torpedoed  are  declared  to  have  sought 
to  flee  after  they  had  been  told  to 
stop.  Capt.  Persius,  naval  expert  of 
the  Tageblatt.  says  the  case  of  the 
Sussex  shows  the  difficulties  under 
which  a  submarine  labors  in  trying  to 
establish  the  character  of  a  vessel  be- 
fore It  Even  if  it  should  occasionally 
happen  that  an  Innocent  ship  suffers, 
says  Capt.  Persius,  it  must  be  taken 
into  consideration  that  it  Is  an  un- 
fortunate accident  which  Is  unavoid- 
able in  war. 


Mall    Robbers    S»Bten«<4. 

Green  Bay,  ..ts.,  April  14. — Follow- 
ing pleas  of  guilty  in  Federal  court 
this  morning,  John  Ruth  of  Green 
Bay.  and  John  O'Connor  of  Mil- 
waukee, were  sentenced  by  Judge  A. 
C.  Geiger  to  Federal  prison  at  Leav- 
enworth, Kan.,  and  house  of  correc- 
tion at  Milwaukee,  respectively.  Ruth 
robbed  the  inaLls  in  this  city.  His 
term  will  be  eighteen  months.  O'Con- 
nor altered  and  forged  a  money  order. 
His    term    will    be   alx    mouths. 


I     DAY  IN  GONfiRESS     \ 

4»  senate:.  « 

4t       Resaned  divraaiilon  of  army  re-  it 
-^  orfcanlsatlun     bill.  ■« 

4fe       SUal   Investigation  centlnaed.       'k 

%  uousic  Ik 

^       DlsruMHlon    ot    aKriraltvral    ap-  » 
^.  proprlatlun    bill    continued.  ^ 


»»JK)fc3i(»  »******»»»*»*  »»»*»** 


wni 


mm 


Rheumatism! 

Acute         Muscular 
Chronic      Sd&tica 

Rheumatic  pains  of  any  nature 
ditappear  under  the  soothing  and 
warming  influence  of  Sloan's 
Liniment.  Apply  it  lightly — no 
need  to  rub  it  in — it  penetrates 
•nd  brings  relief  at  once. 

Sloan's 
Liniment 


a 


EILLS  PAIN 

"Keep  a  bottle  in  your  home.** 
Pike  XSc.  IDs.  tU9 


With  an  adtfress  by  H.  S.  Mclntyre 
of  the  Twin  City  Commercial  Bulletin, 
aa  a  feature,  the  Dulutb  Sales  Man- 
agers' assocllltWpD  held  a  meeting  dur- 
ing the  noon  hotir  today  at  the  Com- 
mercial club.  Regular  business  was 
disposed  of.  after  which  Mr.  Mclntyre 
Hpoke  on  "Mail  Order  House  Compe- 
tition." 

Mr.  Mclntyre  was  brought  here  by 
the  Duluth  sales  managers  because  of 
his  familiarity  with  the  subject.  His 
articles  and  speeches  on  mail  order 
house  competition  and  the  way  to 
comba*  If,  has  attracted  a  great  deal 
of  attention  and  he  is  in  considerable 
demand  for  such  addresses  as  he  gave 
here  today.  Mr.  Mclntyre  said,  in 
part: 

"Considerlrg  the  mail  order  proposi- 
tion, one  findst  that  there  are  three 
distinct  and  separate  periods.  The 
first  may  be  characterized  as  being 
the  period  in  which  the  retailers  were 
prone  to  rave  and  literally  tear  their 
hair  wJienever  catalog  houses  were 
mentioned  in  their  presence.  The  sec- 
ond period  was  one  in  which  the  re- 
tailers talked,  and  in  some  Instances 
put  into  application  a  sort  of  embargo 
upon  the  products  of  the  consumer — 
that,  is  to  say,  they  considered  and  oc- 
casionally refust'd,  to  purchase  hl.s 
•produce,  to  ^jLtend  him  credit  regard- 
loss  of  his  d«'slrabllity  aa  a  credit 
risk  and  Jn  otlier  ways  tried  to  whip 
him    into    line. 

"These  ,  two  periods,  which  were 
trade  antngonizers  rather  than  trade 
producers?  have  happily  gone  Into  the 
discard  and  been  succeeded  by  the 
present  ptr(^i.  in  which  the  retail 
mail  orderChp\i8e  is  looked  upon  as  a 
large  carm»fftHor  of  the  local  mer- 
chant. This  Is  essentially  a  etep  in 
the  right  *ll»eftion  because  they  are 
to  all  Intcofs^nd  purposes  nothing 
more  or  less'  tnan  a  legitimate  form 
of  competition,  even  while  certain 
methods  and  tactics  which  they  use 
are  decidedly  exaggerated  in  their 
nature. 

CoaapetJtora    Anyway. 

"That  does  not  alter  the  basic  fact 
that  they  are  competitors.  In  consid- 
ering any  .object,  it  la  necessary.  In 
order  to  -^et  a  direct  view  of  the 
proposition,  to  analyze  the  conditions 
which  obt#Uied-at  the  time  the  move- 
ment tftarflei.^p  order  to  see  Just  what 
the-  coiitrwiifflnf:    cau.see    were. 

Hfn  applying  theee  principles  to  the 
.conditiun«,  which  resulted  In  the 
origin  and  growth  of  the  mall  order 
house,  we  find  that  there  were  at 
v.jAaat  nve  distinct  factors.  Thea*.  five 
were  poor  stocks,  long  credit,  -tel^r  mar- 
gins and  lack  of  advertising  on  the 
I  .-irt  uf  the  community  with  the  em- 
pftMl*i^  PuBfcd  by*  fhe  mail  order 
hrwse  ^l*»i  ffce^' >n8e  of^'m'dfering  and 
the  Tiovi-lty.  wiiich  -attached  in  the 
minds  of  the  con.'tumers  to  the  catalog 
idea    of    doing    business. 

"In  order  to -get  on  a  basis  where 
he  can  succesiifUlly  meet  and  partly 
overeomo  this  ro'mpetUion,  It  is  neces- 
sary for' Aho  retailer  to  undergo  a 
reversion  to-  first  -principles.  In  doing 
this,  he  must  have  well  chosen  stocks, 
must  have  a  limited  and  well  con- 
ducted credit  system,  must  be  aat- 
iBfled  with  reasonable  marprlns,  must 
do  effective  advertising,  and  finally 
must  be  of  real  service  to  the  com- 
munltv   in    which    he    Is   located. 

"t'onsldertng  each  one  of  these  five 
factors  singly,  we  find  in  the  matter 
of  well-chosen  stocks,  that  it  Is  neces- 
sary for  the  local  merchant  to  handle 
both  staple  and  novelty  lines.  Tills 
does  not  mean  that  he  must  buy  un- 
wl.iely  of  the  so-called  novelties.  It 
does  mean,  however,  that  he  muFt 
have  a  sprinkling  of  these  In  his 
stock,  the  same  being  chosen  as  the 
result  of  an  observation  of  the  char- 
acteristics and  needs  of  his  particular 
community.  Frequent  trips  to  market, 
reading  trade  papers  and  talks  with 
the  traveling  Salesmen  are  all  essen- 
tial as  laying  the  basis  for  a  correct 
choice  of  the  stock  of  a  retail  store. 
Must  Attract  By  DiNvlay. 

"Having  the  stock.  It  must  be  dis- 
played in  an  attractive  way  an  dneces- 
parlly  It  must  be  bought  on  the  right 
basis. 

"Inasmuch  as  in  the  majority  of  com- 
munities a  straight  cash  basis  Is  not 
feasible,  the-  Wkerchant  must  exercise 
due  Judgment  In  the  granting  of  credit 
and  must  tfeojTict  his  credit  business 
upon  a  llmH!#f10me  basis.  In  thl.s  con- 
nection, there  is  no  doubt  but  what  a 
system  of  tnjiH'dl.s(Ounts  whereby  the 
cash  purchascrRls  given  a  certain  dif- 
ferential as  compared  with  the  longer 
time  credit  buyer  is  a  big  factor. 

"In  order  tp  price  merchandise  at  a 
reasonable  ttiarrin  and  at  the  same 
time  get  profits  it  is  quite  essential 
that  the  ^:etaller  make  a  thorough 
study  of  •Biaft- order  house  literature 
and  play  the  game  according  to  the 
rules  laid  dowM  therein.  In  his  adver- 
tising he  mtreft'  use  copy  which  really 
tells  somethiug  regarding  the  merchan- 
(Mse  and  which' tends  to  create  a  desire 
for  the  same..  In  this  connection  I  am 
firmly  of  tha  opinion  that  the  open 
flght  or  parallel  column  method  of  ad- 
vertising one's  ability  to  meet  mall  or- 
der house  quotations  !s  very  essential. 
This  Is  oppoaed  by  some  on  the  ground 
that  It  Is  «,ot  strictly  according  to  busi- 
ness ethics.  "While  this  is  a  moot  ques- 
tion, the  preponderance  of  evidence 
would  seem  to  be  in  favor  of  such 
methods. 

Maat   Be   off   Real    Service. 

"Finally,  if  a  merchant  Is  conforming 
to  the  four  principles  laid  down  so  far, 
he  must  conduct  his  store  upon  such  a 
basis  that  it  will  be  of  real  service  to 
the  community.  The  time  is  past  when 
a  merchant  can  appeal  for  business  on 
the  basis  of  charity.  He  must  deliver 
the  goods  at  the  right  prices.  That 
merchandise  values  In  the  main  as 
given  by  these  houses  are  not  difficult 
to  meet  has  been  proven  conclusively 
by  Investigations  which  I  have  made 
In  the  line  of  matching  up  their  offer- 
ings. The  attitude  of  the  wholesaler 
at  the  present  time  and  his  deaire  to 
co-operate  In  every  way  with  the  re- 
taller  In  the  solving  of  this  problem 
promises  well  for  the  future.  One  of 
the  most  favorable  signs  of  the  past 
fcT*'  weeks  la  the  action  taken  by  the 
National  "Wholesale  Dry  Goods  asso- 
ciation, which  contemplates  a  thorough 
Investigation  along  these  lines,  and  it 
is  to  the  credits  of  Duluth  that  a  man 
high  In  the  wholesale  circles  of  your 
city  occupies  a  most  Important  place 
upon  this  committee." 

Fall  ta  Indlet  Brute. 

Minneapolis,  Minn.,  April  14. — (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  grand  Jury 
yesterday  failed  to  find  sufficient  evi- 
dence to  warrant  an  Indictment  against 
Theodore  Kiirson,  who  confessed  that 
he  kicked^ jitod  .beat  his  mother,  Mrs. 
Charlotte  tuirson.  shortly  before  her 
death,  April  1.  Larson,  now  serving  a 
yrorkhouse  sentence  for  vagrancy, 
probably  will  escape  further  prosecu- 
tion. 

COMESTolSHUND; 
WgigMlLWAUKEEAN 

Ashland,  "Wis..  April  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Miss  Isabelle  Andress, 
daughter  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  CT.  Andress, 


Winner 

NMma-fadfic 


2 


Youll  Do  Better  at  Kelly s 

nd 


Day 

Today's  Success 
to  Be  Repeated 

Tomorrow! 

HOOSIER 

Kitchen  Cabinet 

Gold  Medal 

■         Sale 

hJtXUJ  "Hooaier  Beauty'' 

Another  big  gathering  of  home  folks  today  to  see  the  new 
Hoosier  Kitchen  Cabinets  demonstrated  as  thousands  of  people  saw 
them  at  the  Panama-Pacific  Exposition  in  San  Francisco  where 
Hoosier  won  the  Gold  Medal.  Bring  your  friends  and  neighbors 
tomorrow,  as  many  ladies  did  yesterday.  See  how  a  million  modern 
housewives  do  their  kitchen  work  in  half  the  time  it  takes  mcDSt 
women.  See  the  many  exclusive  features  that  have  made  the  Hoosier 
outsell  any  other  five  makes  of  kitchen  cabinets  combined. 

No  Other  Cabinet  Has  These  Points  of  Saperiorlty 


1.  See  the  Shaker  Flour 
Sifter.  Sifts  flour  three 
times  as  fast  as  rotary 
sifters.  Makes  it  fluf- 
fy and  light.  Can't  wear 
out.  Avoids  grit  or 
broken  wire. 

2.  See  the  Revolving 
Spice  Castor.     It  puts 


the  spices  you  need  at 
your  finger  tips.  No 
danger  of  knocking 
over  any  or  spilling 
thejn. 

3.  Sec  the  Hoosier  Dou- 
blc-Acting  Sugar  Bin. 
Holds  three  times  the 
sugar  most  bins  con- 
tain.    So  you  can  buy 


in  economical  quanti- 
ties. The  only  sugar 
bin  from  which  it  is 
easy  to  take  sugar  out 
of  top  or  bottom. 

4.  See  the  Full  View 
Roll  Doors,  exposed  to 
view,  sanitary,  clean- 
able,  instantly  remov- 
able. 


|ClHbT( 
$1 


See  the  40  Ways  That 
Hoosier  Saves  You  Labor 

How  it  saves  you  miles  of  walking  to  and 
fro  about  your  kitchen  to  collect  and  put  away 
supplies  each  meal.  How  it  lets  you  sit  down 
comfortably  at  your  work  with  400  articles  all 
handily  arranged  at  your  fingers'  ends.  How 
it  leaves  your  kitchen  tidy  and  gives  you  hours 
of  freedom  for  other  things. 

See  the  new  models — the  low  prices  and  the 
easy  terms  we  are  offering  on  every  Hoosier 
cabinet  in  this  sale. 

You  will  learn  more  about  the  modern  ways 
of  housekeeping  in  ten  minutes  than  you  could 
learn  by  reading  the  magazines  for  a  year. 
Don't  miss  this  big  treat  that  so  many  people 
saw  at  the  San  Francisco  Fair.  Come  tomor- 
row without  fail. 


$14.25 
$44.50 

$1  on  Delivery 

$1  Weekly 

No  Extra  Fees 

Money-Back 

Guarantee 


living  near  Marshfleld,  Wis.,  was  mar- 
ried here  this  week  to  Walter  J.  Ken- 
ning of  Milwaukee.  Mr.  Henning  is  a 
member  of  a  company  having  a  $2,600 
contract  to  electrify  the  government 
building  here,  and  he  is  in  charge  of 
the  work.  Miss  Andress  arrived  at 
Ashland  Tuesday  at  5  p.  m.  and  the 
wedding  ceremony  took  place  an  hour 
later  at  the  Congregational  parsonage. 
Rev.  J.  W.  Jordan  ofHclating. 


TRUSTEE'S  SALE 

I  will  sell  for  cash  to  the  highest 
bidder  on  Saturday,  April  15,  at  10:00 
a.  tn.,  all  of  the  wood,  amounting  in 
all  to  about  100  cords,  belonging  to 
the  bankrupt  estate  of 

J.  D.  O'CONNELL, 

doing  business  as 

CITY   WOOD   YARD. 

Sale  will  take  place  at  the  yard  on 
second  alley  between  Second  and 
Third  avenue  west. 

Sale  subject  to  confirmation  by  the 
court.  W.  O.  DERBY,  Trustee. 


STYLE  TO 
GRAND  CONCUVE 


Knights  Templars  of  Copper 

Country  to  Have  Special 

to  Detroit. 

Calumet,  Mich.,  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Between  160  and  200 
members  of  Montrose  commandery. 
Knights  Templars  of  Calumet,  and  of 
Palestine  conimandery  of  Houghton, 
many  of  them  with  their  ladles,  will 
attend  the  grand  conclave  at  Detroit 
in  June.  Each  of  the  Copper  Country 
commanderles  will  send  either  four  or 
five  platoons  to  participate  in  the  ejt- 
hibitlon   and   competitive  drills   at   the 


ASK  FOR  and  GET 

HORLICK'S 

TBS  0RI6INAI. 

MALTED  MILK 

ChMp  MbsUtotM  oo0t  T09 


grand  conclave,  while  many  more  will 
take  part  in  the  grand  parade  and 
pageant.  The  Copper  Country  knights 
will  go  to  Detroit  In  an  all-steel  spe- 
cial train  over  the  copper  range  and 
Milwaukee  railroads,  by  way  of  Mil- 
waukee   and    Chicago. 

It  lis  probable  that  the  famous 
Calumet  &  Hecla  band,  which  has 
won  first  honor  medals  and  prizes  in 
international  band  concerts,  both  In 
Chicago  and  Boston,  and  which  Is 
known  all  over  the  country,  will  ac- 
company the  Copper  Country  com- 
manderles to  Detroit.  Reservations 
for  the  two  commanderles  have  been 
made  at    the   Hotel   TuUer. 

The  Copper  Country  knights  desire 
particularly  to  show,  by  a  large  at- 
tendance at  the  grand  conclave,  ap- 
preciation for  the  splendid  attendance 
of  Southern  Michigan  Knights  Templar 
at  the  grand  conclave  In  Calumet  and 
Houghton    last    June. 

UNDBER6H  MAKES 

GOOD  BY  HUNG 


Has  $150  in  Political  Kitty; 
Candidate  for  the 


Lake  street,  on  the  ea«t  side  of  the 
C.  N.  right-of-way  is  claimed  to  b<> 
the  cause  of  a  team  running  away, 
by  which  the  plaintiff  sustained  In- 
juries. 


Opportunities  for  You 

In  the  grocery  and  meat  market  ads  la 
The  Herald  tonight. 


Senate. 


St.  Paul,  Minn..  April  14. — Charles  A. 
Llndburgh,  representative  In  congress 
from  the  Sixth  Minnesota  district,  filed 
his  petition  for  the  Republican  nomi- 
nation for  the  United  States  senate 
with  Secretary  of  State  Schmahl  yes- 
terday. His  petition  was  taken  to  the 
Capitol  by  C.  W.  La  Du  of  Minneapolis. 

With  the  petition  was  the  announce- 
ment of  Lindbergh's  withdrawal  from 
the  race  for  governor.  He  had  paid 
$60  for  his  governorship  filing.  This 
cannot  be  paid  back.  He  deposited  an 
additional  |100  to  cover  the  filing  for 
senatorshlp. 

WARROAD  TEACHERS 

ARE  HIRED  AGAIN 

Wari-oad,  Minn.,  April  14. — (SpeclsJ 
to  The  Herald.) — The  following 
teachers  have  been  re-engaged  for 
service  In  the  Warroad  schools  for 
next  year:  Professor  Wilcox,  Profes- 
sor Johnson.  Miss  Aim,  Mrs.  Dana, 
Miss  Dam.b^rg,  Miss  Posten  and  Miss 
Roberts.  Miss  Ruth  Damberg  of 
Biwabik  has  also  been  engaged  to 
teach,  but  there  are  still  several 
vacancies. 

Ths  town  Is  the  dafeadant  in  a 
dainagre  suit  of  $600  for  personal  In- 
Jurlea  brought  in  behalf  of  Mrs.  Sever 
Johnson.      One    of    the    old    posts    on 


EXPENSIVE  BED  SPRING.... 

Man  Near  Warroad  Fined  for  Beating 
Pair  Who  Broke  It. 

Warroad,  Minn.,  April  14. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Fred  Sprlnghorn 
was  tried  In  Justice  of  the  Peace 
Berglund's  court  Monday  on  a  charge 
of  assault,  preferred  by  two  peddlers, 
who  had  taken  a  room  at  the  Spring- 
horn  place.  After  they  retired  the 
bedspring  broke,  for  which  Mr.  Spring- 
horn  demanded  immediate  payment  of 
damages.  This  was  refused  and  Mr. 
Springhom  "beat  up"  his  guests.  The 
court  concluded  he  had  exceeded  tho 
limit  and  decreed  thirty  days  in  jail 
or  $20  and  costs,  from  which  an  ap- 
peal   has   been    taken. 


BETTER  THAN  CALOMEL 

Thousands  Have  Discovered  Dr, 

Edwards'  Olive  Tablets  are 

a  Harmless  Substitute. 

Dr.  Edwards'  Olive  Tablets — the  sub- 
stitute for  calomel — are  a  mild  but 
sure  laxative  and  their  effect  on  the 
liver  Is  almost  instantaneous.  Thejr 
are  the  result  of  Dr.  Edwards'  deter- 
mination not  to  treat  liver  and  bowel 
complaints  with  calomel.  His  efforts 
to  banish  it  brought  out  these  llttlo 
olive-colored  tablets. 

These  pleasant  little  tablets  do  th« 
good  that  calomel  does,  but  have  no 
bad  after  effects.  They  don't  injur* 
the  teeth  like  strong  liquids  or  calo- 
mel. They  take  hold  of  the  trouble 
and  quickly  correct  it.  Why  cure  tha 
liver  at  the  expense  of  the  teeth?  Calo- 
mel sometimes  plays  havoc  with  tho 
gums.     So  do  strong  liquids. 

It  ts  best  not  to  taka  calomel,  but 
to  let  Dr.  Edwards'  Olive  Tablets  taka 
Its    place. 

Most  headaches,  "dullness"  and  that 
la«y  feeling  come  from  constipation 
and  a  disordered  liver.  Take  Dr.  Ed- 
wards' Olive  Tablets  when  you  feel 
"loggy"  and  "heavy."  Note  how  they 
"claar"  clouded  brain  and  how  ther 
"perk  up"  tha  spirlU.  At  lOe  and  25a 
per  box.     All  druggists. 

The  Olive  Tablat  Corapaay.  Colum- 
bus. O. 


DEFECTIVE  PAGE     | 


i 


Biei  .^i  rhnA 


■ 


u 


a  A  n  it « 


w   I 


Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


April  14,  1916. 


I ,    ■■II— «• 


i- 


-m^f 


GOOD  PRODUCE 
FORUSTER 

Fruits  and  Vegetables  Are 
Plentiful   at    Reason- 
able Prices. 


H- 


l 


Cauliflower  and  Asparagus 

flre  Features;  Apples  Are 

Selling  Well. 


WILL  TRAVEL 
TO  FARNORTH 

Fishing  and    Hunting    Ex- 
pedition From  Seattle 
to  the  Arctic. 


John  Borden,  Chicago  Capi- 
talist, to  Sail  in  Great 
Bear. 


Supplies  of  grecnstuffs  and  fruits  for 
Easter  trade  will  be  libt^ral  and  they 
"Will  cover  a  wide  range  of  delicacies, 
local  commisBlon  men  say.  It  is  ad- 
mitted, however,  that  prices  will  be 
firm,  owing  to  unfavorable  weather 
conditions  at  many  of  the  Southern 
and  Far  West  producing  points.  A 
lower  range  of  quotations  is,  however, 
expected  within  the  next  couple  of 
weeks. 

In  the  vegetable  list  cauliflower  and 
asparagus  are  features.  with  ship- 
ments of  the  former  coming  from  both 
California  and  Oregon.  Beans,  car- 
rots, celery,  tomatoes  and  lettuce  are 
other  items  largely  In  demand.  The 
market  in  potatoes  is  firm,  owing  to 
the  falling  off  in  supplies  on  account 
of  bad  roads  and  the  fact  that  farm- 
ers are  engaged  in  their  spring  work. 
It  is  believed  that  stores  of  tubers  in 
growers'  hands  through  this  district 
are  still  liberal.  New  I..oulslana  and 
California  cabbage  Is  now  being  of- 
fered at  a  reasonable  price  basis. 
Good  Apple  SnleH. 
A  good  call  is  being  met  with  In  ap- 
ple.s.  according  to  the  Fltzsimmons- 
Palmer  company,  the  Culbertson  Bros, 
company  and  the  Stacy-Merrill  Fruit 
company.  Supplies  of  barrel  fruit  are 
now  confined  mainly  to  Baldwins  and 
with  a  maintenance  of  the  present 
acale  of  sales  It  is  predicted  that 
Btocks  will  be  exhausted  within  a  few 

Demand  for  oranges  Is  reported  to  be 
expanding  with  the  good  quality  and 
low  quotations  of  the  navels  offering. 
I.,ouislana  strawberries  have  been  ad- 
vpncVd  slightly,  supplies  being  af- 
fected by  rains  in  California.  Cuban 
grapifruit  is  now  on  the  market,  as 
well  as  the  Pacific  coast  product,  and 
it  is  said  to  be  commanding  a  good 
sale. 

Heavy  Batter  Rxporta. 

Butter  prices  are  unchanged  at  36 ^4) 
88  cents  per  pound  for  the  best  cream- 
ery. The  war  is  said  by  dealers  to  be 
to  blame  for  the  present  high  market 
In  butter,  and  on  the  outlook  dealers 
are  of  the  opinion  that  consumers  are 
likely  to  be  compelled  to  pay  higher 
figures  for  dairy  products  during  the 
coming  summer  than  In  years.  Ex- 
porters have  been  bidding  up  for  all 
the  available  stock  on  the  Eastern 
markets,  heavy  shipments  having  been 
made  to  England  so  far  this  month. 
The  make  of  butter  in  this  territory- 
is  reported  by  the  Brldgeman-Russell 
company  to  be  increasing  steadily  and 
It  Is  expected  that  a  substantial  ton- 
nage will  be  shlppt;d  from  Duluth  to 
Eastern  points  with  the  resumption  of 
service  for  the  season  by  the  package 
freight  steamers. 

Eggs  are  also  on  the  same  basis  as 
a  week  ago  at  22(gi23  cents  a  dozen. 
The  consumption  of  eggs  here  and  at 
other  points  through  the  country  is 
reported  to  be  the  heaviest  on  record, 
thus  accounting  for  their  firm  market. 
Thus  far  packers  have  not  entered  the 
market  to  any  extent  as  the  trade  has 
been  expecting  an  easing  off  in  quota- 
tion*. Dealers  In  the  egg  market  are 
reported  to  be  timorous,  heavy  losses 
having  been  pocketed  on  last  season's 
operations. 

Guaranteed  waterproof  raincoats,  ?5, 
at  the  "3   Winners"  removal  sale. 


Chicago,  April  14 — ^Whcn  the  schoon- 
er Great  Bear  sails  from  Seattle  about 
the  middle  of  May  on  a  fishing  and 
hunting  trip  to  the  Far  North — a  trip 
which  has  been  planned  partly  as  a 
summer  vacation  and  partly  as  a  com- 
mercial venture — she  will  start  on  a 
Journey  that  will  take  her  about  B,000 
miles  from  Seattle  and  will  not  end 
till  about  the  middle  of  November.  In- 
cidentally, John  Borden,  Chicago  cap- 
italist, sportsman  and  traveler  and 
one  of  the  vessel's  owners,  will  help 
the  explorer,  Vllhjalmur  Stefansson — 
if  help  is  needed — relocate  the  conti- 
nent   he    discovered    in    the    polar    re- 

8l""3.  ,,,    . 

Mr.  Borden,  on  his  Journey,  will  be 
accompanied  by  Capt.  Louis  Lane, 
long  time  a  resident  of  Nome,  Alaska, 
and  for  years  a  gold  miner,  fur  trader 
and  whaler,  and  by  three  Chicago 
guests,  who  are  going  Just  for  sport — 
Norrls  H.  Bokum,  C.  K.  Knickerbocker 
and  R.  B.  Slaughter — and  the  schooner 
will  carry  a  crew  of  twenty-four 
sturdy   seamen.  .     .   .    ^ 

With  Mr.  Borden,  Capt.  Lane  is  Joint 
owner  of  the  vessel,  which.  Including 
her  equipments,  cost  I7C.O0O  and  Is  137 
feet  long,  32  feet  beam,  with  a  draft  of 
14  feet  and  a  speed  of  seven  knots  per 
hour.  She  carries  three  sails  and  as 
an  auxiliary  force  an  oil-burning  en- 
gine of  160  horse  power.  Her  oaken 
hull  Is  sheathed  in  Ironwood,  a  heavy 
timber  from  the  Philippines,  almost  as 
Impervious  as  Its  name  indicates. 
Provl»lon«  for  the  Trip. 

The  Great  Bear  will  carry  25,000 
gallons  of  fuel  oil  and  about  $3,000 
worth  of  provisions — canned  vege- 
tables and  fruitd,  sugar,  coffee,  flour, 
meal  and  salt  meats — enough  to  last 
the  entire  Journey.  A  complete  kitchen 
will  be  provided  and  will  be  in  charge 
of  a  chef  of  long  experience.  A  medi- 
cal chest,  fitted  up  according  to  the 
list  authorized  by  the  government  for 
its  vessels,  will  be  a  pait  of  the  ship's 
equipment.  No  physlciim  will  accom- 
pany the  expedition,  as  Mr.  Borden 
says  his  experience  In  Northern  waters 
has  given  him  sufficient  training  to 
handle  any  ailments  peculiar  to  the 
Northern  country  that  might  come  to 
himself   or   his  men. 

There  will  be  private  staterooms  for 
each  of  the  guests  and  comfortable 
berths  for  each  man  of  the  crew. 
Cards,  books  and  a  big  phonograph 
will  be  among  the  things  on  board  to 
provide  entertainment  for  the  long 
Arctic   nights.  ,      ,,  ^ 

Capt  Lane,  though  only  86  years  of 
age,  is  as  much  at  home  in  a  boat  on 
the  icy  seas  of  the  north  as  would  be  a 
landsman  In  an  automobile  traveling 
city  streets.  He  has  been  a  dweller  In 
the  Alaskan  country  since  he  was  a 
child  of  twelve  and  has  spent  much  of 
his  time  on  the  water.  He  will  be  in 
active  charge  of  the  boat  as  captain, 
but  will  co-operate  with  Mr.  Borden  In 
all  matters  of  management  except  the 
actual  technical  details  of  handling  the 
vessel.  It  was  Capt.  Lane,  who,  last 
August,  came  to  the  rescue  of  the  ex- 
plorer. Stefansson,  with  timely  sup- 
plies, when  Stefansson  and  the  remnant 
of  the  original  party  that  went  to  the 
northern  regions  with  him  had  been 
given  up  for  lost. 

Prevlona   Notable   Voyage. 
Mr.  Borden  is  well  fitted  by  experl- 


Problem 


How  to  Fed  Well  During  Middle 
life  Told  by  Three  Women  Who 
Learned  from  Experience. 


The  Change  of  Life  is  a  most  critical  period  of  a 
woman's  existence,  and  neglect  of  health  at  this  time  invites 
disease  and  pain.  Women  everywhere  should  remember 
that  there  is  no  other  remedy  known  to  medicine  that  will 
so  successfully  carry  women  through  this  trying  period  as 
Lydia  E.  Pinkham's  Vegetable  Compound,  made  from 
native  roots  and  herbs.     Read  these  letters:  — 

Philadelphia,  Pa.— "I  Btarted  the  Change  of  life 
five  years  ago.  I  always  had  a  headache  and  back- 
ache with  bearing  down  pams  and  I  would  havo 
heat  flashes  very  bad  at  times  with  dizzy  spells  and 
nervous  feelings.  After  taking  Lydia  E.  llnkham's 
Vegetable  Compound  I  feel  like  a  new  person  and 
am  in  better  health  and  no  more  troubled  with 
the  aches  and  pains  I  had  before  I  took  your  won- 
derful remedy.  I  recommend  it  to  my  friends  for  1 
cannot  praise  it  enough."— Mra.  Margaret  Grass- 
man,  759  N.  Ringgold  St.,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 

— Beverly,  Mass.— "I  took  Lydia  E.  Pinkham's 

Vegetable  Compound,  for  nervousness  and  dyspt>psia.  when  I  was 
going  through  the  Change  of  life.  I  found  it  veir  helpful  and  I 
have  always  spoken  of  it  ta.other  women  who  suffer  as  I  did  anc 

have  had  them  try  it  and  they  also  have  received  l 

good  results  from  it."— Mrs.  Georgb  A.  Dunbar, 
17  Koundy  St.,  Beverly,  Mass. 

Erie,  Pa.— "I  was  in  poor  health  when  the 
Change  of  Life  started  with  me  and  I  took  Lydia 
E.  Pinkham's  Vegetable  Compoimd,  or  I  think  I 
should  not  have  got  over  it  as  easy  as  I  did.  Even 
now  if  I  do  not  feel  good  I  take  the  Compound 
and  it  restores  me  m  a  short  time.  I  will  praise 
your  remedies  to  every  woman  for  it  may  help 
them  as  it  has  me."— Mrs.  E.  Kisslino,  Wl  East 
24th  St.,  Erie,  Pa. 

No  other  medicine  has  been  so  successful  in  reUevingf  woman's 
suffering  as  has  Lydia  E.  Pinkham's  Vegetable  Compound. 
Women  may  receive  free  and  liolpf  ul  advice  by  writing  the  Lydia 
E.  Plnkham  Medicine  Co.,  Lynn,  Mass.  Such  letters  are  received 
and  answered  by  women  only  and  lield  in  strict  confidence. 


SALE  LASTS 

ONLY  SEVEN 

DAYS! 


SALE^  ADJUSTER'S 


Mail   Orders 

Accompanied 

by   Money 

Orders    Receive 

Prompt 

Attention. 


GIGANTIC  UNDERTAKING! 

COSTS  ARJE  SET  ASIDE  AND  VALUES  FORGOTTEN! 


SALE  STARTS  SATURDAY,  APRIL  15th,  AT  9  A. 

EVERY  ITEM  READ  MEANS  DOLLARS  SAVED!  ^-^OUR  ENTIRE  STOCK  IS  DOOMED! 


6c 


Closing  Out  Our  Entire  Stock  of 

DRY  GOODS 

8c  Bleached  Cotton  Crash 
Toweling,  while  it  Q^ 

lasts,  the  yard O V 

Calico — Light  and  dark  col- 
ors ;  8c  value,  during  Mm^ 
this  sale .....•• •  •  ■  %0 

3,000  yards  Curtain  Scrim — 
flowered  borders,  C^ 

12j^c  value,  yard 9I# 

10c  Ginghams,  checks 
and  plaids,  the  yard . . 

MENS'  SUITS 

Latest  Styles  for  Easter 
Wear. 

$8.00  values $3.98 

$10.00  values $4.98 

$12.50  values $6.48 

Men's  Business  Suits,  values 
to  $18.00—  &(Jk  QO 

choice  at. ^vavO 

Large  lot  of  Men's  Suits — 
finely  tailored,  (11  QQ 
worth  to  $25. . .  .^11b«IO 

Blue  serges  included. 


Men's  Overalls, 
75c  values 


39c 


BOYS'  PANTS 

50c  values 19c 

75c  values 39c 

Men's  Handkerchiefs 2c 

Shop  Caps 6c 

Men's  15c  Sox 6c 

25  dozen  Men's  Dress  Shirts 
—values  to  $1.00,  |  A-^ 

while  they  last XUv 

Men's  blue  chambray 
Working  Shirts 

Men's  two-piece  Balbriggan 
and  Mesh  Knit  1  Q|^ 

Underwear Xwv 

Men's  75c  Balbrig- 
gan Union  Suits . . 

Boys'  Dress  Shirts,  r^ 

50c  values 3  v 

Boys'  Hats  and  Caps,  <  A^ 
values  to  $1.50 lUU 

Men's  Hats,  worth 

to  $A>l/v  ........... 

Men's  Gordon         (1    AO 
Hats,  $3  values. .  .^X>aO 

MEN'S  PANTS 

$1.00  values **••  .69c 

$1.50  values  98c 

$2.00  values $1-19 


29c 


48c 


69g 


BOYS'  SUITS 

Prices  in  Boys'  Departments 
cut  beyond  recognition. 

$3.50  values $1.75 

$4.00  values $1.98 

$5.00  values $2.48 

$6.00  values $3.98 

All  Wool  Blue  Serge,  $10.00 
values — sizes  to  ^M  AQ 
10,  at ^4.90 

All  Wool  Blue  Serge — sizes 
to  17;  $12.00  Sfl  A  A 

values  at ^UbIIU 

NOTIONS 

Silk  and  Machine  1  g^ 

Thread,  spool A  V 

Pins,  per  paper Ic 

Hair  Pins,  package Ic 

Safety  Pins,  card 2c 

Pearl   Buttons,  doz 2c 

Coate's  Crochet  Cot- 
ton, spool 


Ladies'  Furnishings 

lOc 
6c 
9c 

low 

23c 
14c 
29c 

House 

69c 
89c 

:  Satin 

39c 
49c 


Ladies'  Knit  Un- 
derwear, 35c  value. 

Ladies'  Fast  Black 
Hose,  pair 

Ladies'  Boudoir  Caps, 
25c  value,  special 

Ladies'     Union    Suits, 
neck,  sleeveless,  knee 
length ;  50c  value 

Ladies'  3rassieres, 
50c  values,  at 

Ladies'  $3.00  Auto 
Dusters 

Ladies*    All    Linen 
Dresses— $3.00 
values 

Ladies'  and  Misses 
$2.50  Skirts 

Ladies'  Red  and  Blue  Satin 
Petticoats,  $1.00 
value 

$1.00  White  Muslin 
Petticoats 

Ladies'    Waists    and    Shirt 
Waists ;  values  to  1  A -^ 

$3.00  at iUU 

Ladies'  and  Misses* 
$3.00  Rain  Coats . . 


BARGAINS  IN 
SHOES 


( 


98c 
49c 


Ladies'  $3.00  Oxfords,  sizes 
to  $4,  special  CQ|% 

at  only 0%lv 

Ladies'  $4.00  Shoes, 
sizes  to  4 

Infants'  75c  Shoes, 
special  at 

Large  assortment  of  Chil- 
dren's Hi-Cut  Shoes,  QQa 
values  to  $1.75 ...  Ovv 

Girl's  School  Shoes,,  button, 
extra  special, 
the  pair 

Men's     Dress    and    Work 
Shoes,  $2.50 
values 

Large  line  of  Ladies',  Misses' 
and  Children's  White  Can- 
vas Shoes,  Slippers  and 
Mary  Jane  Oxfords;  clean 
stock ;  during  this  CQ|% 

sale,  up  from ww  v 

A  large  and  complete  line  of 
$5.00  and  $6.00  Packard 
Shoes  for  men,  ^M  AA 
the  pair ^)4.UU 


ABOVE  ARE  ONLY  A  FEW  OF  OUR  NUMEROUS  BARGAINS! 

THE  PEOPLES  BARGAIN  STORE 

221  and  223  WEST  FIRST  STREET,  DULUTH. 


,nce  for  hi.  v'">V''»'^^^';''S.,i°ll"tIi 
KS\«'.".^e ".  no..b..  voy...  .n^H. 
f„T  y«h?'  AlJLJSri:'  from   the   coa.t 

iyiK%>/hThrsr„fuor'T..X^ 

^B?"%v\r.  r.ssr^,??r^o?rh2  0^2 

^u'f  "e'x'??r.S?."'.hat'!i  A'a-a  'o\'  « 
that   Kot   the   salt   of   the   sea   Into   his 
ii^fn^ ^n^^aused  tHe  lure  of  the^north 

{>°e   saVd.*'thar^hi^'fonhcomln«    trip    Is 

**The%"oite  of  the  Great  Bear  will  take 
her  throulh  the  Pacific  ocean  for  a 
Sfstance'^^of  about  2.000  miles  on  the 
first  lee  of  the  long  Journey  from  Se- 
nfie  on  which  she  win  reach  the 
Aleutian  Islands,  where,  as  she  turns 
northward  she  will  expect  to  encounter 
much  floating  ice.  This,  however  Is 
not  expected  to  hamper  her  as  her 
Three  treat  sails  and  her  powerful 
on  btrn^K  engine  are  regarded  as  am. 
Die  to  make  the  handling  of  the  boat 
?isy  though  the  desired  «P«|?  °f  «7«^", 
knots  an  hour  may   not  be  attained  at 

ali  times.  .     .     _ 

luto  the  Artie  Ocean. 

Another  thousand  miles  wiU  orlng 
her  to  the  Gulf  of  Anadir,  off  the 
Siberian  coast.  Then  she  will  Pas*  '"to 
the  Arctic  ocean  and  will  circle  Point 
narrow  through  the  Beaufort  sea.  and 
favinT'added  another  2.000  miles  to  the 
distance  traveled  from  Seattle  she  will 
reach  Coronation  gulf,  off  the  north- 
ern coast  of  Canada,  where  the  Jour- 
ney  will  end.  The  return  will  be  made 
over   the   same    route.  *  ,,„   .  .,« 

The  travelers  on  the  Great  Bear  are 
going  to  harpoon  the  bowhead  whale, 
which  Is  valuable  for  Its  oil  and  whale- 
bone, and  will  hunt  with  shot  Kuns  the 
elder  duck  for  Itq  valuable  down.  Thou- 
sands of  dollars  worth  of  game  is  ex- 
pected to  be  bagged. 


SHRINE  GIRLS  WILL 

MAKE  LOCAL  DEBUT 


Arab  patrol  of  Aad  temple,  Nobles 
of  the  Mystic  Shrine,  will  atage  a 
vaudeville  show  at  the  Orpheum-Strand 
theater  on  May  2  and  3  and  at  the  Su- 
peHor  Grand  on  May^  4.  featuring  the 
Shrine  girls  as  the  headllners  of  the 
entertainment.  ^  ,,,  . 

The  proceeds  of  the  show  will  go  to 


pay  the  expenses  of  the  Pat/o^  t°  ^^® 
[mperlal  council  meeting  at  Buffalo 
next  July.  There  will  be  fifty  Shrln- 
ers  In  t>ie  Duluth  delegation,  which 
win  leave  here  on  special  cars  Juiy  »• 
Prof.  A.  F.  M.  Custance,  who  or- 
ganized the  Shrine  girls  several  years 
ago,  Is  In  charge  and  the  fact  that 
these  young  women  will  make  their 
first  public  appearance  at  this  time  is 
Interesting  to  Duluthlans,  who  have 
heard  of  their  entertainments  staged 
at  the  semi-annual  Shrine  ceremonials. 
The  Shrine  girls  will  close  the  show 
with  a  thlrty-mlnute  musical  extrava- 
ganza. There  will  be  eight  acts  alto- 
gether, Including  several  specialty 
numbers    from    the    Twin      Cities      and 

Th%^*8how  will  Include  McEvoy  of 
Chicago,  a  magician;  the  Temple  band, 
consisting  of  fifty  pieces,  under  the 
direction  of  Charles  Helmer;  a  fifteen- 
minute  silent  drill  by  the  patrol,  the 
movements  executed  In  double-quick 
time;  the  Scottish  Rite  quartet,  direct- 
ed by  Prof.  Custance;  Mrs.  Donna  Rlb- 
lette  Flaaten,  well-known  Duluth  so- 
prano; a  dancing  specialty,  featuring 
the  latest  dances;  a  puzzling  musical 
novelty:  the  Shrine  girls  and  a  spe- 
cialty  comedy    sketch.  .    ^    .    w 

The  show  committee  appointed  by 
Capt.  A.  H.  Paul  of  the  patrol  to  as- 
sist Prof.  Custance  follows:  Lieut. 
Jones,  chairman;  C.  E.  Lonegren,  A.  B. 
KappUn.  Harvey  C.  Bunchanan,  E.  J. 
Garland  and  J.  T.  Lundqulst. 

LIQUOR  DEALERS 

WANT  EXTENSION 

Would  Have  Prohibition  in 

Manitoba  Postponed 

Two  Months. 

Winnipeg,  Man.,  April  14, — A  move- 
ment Is  under  way  among  liquor  deal- 
ers In  ManltobSL,  which  voted  out  Its 
saloons  at  an  election  last  month,  to 
petition  the  government  for  two 
months  of  grace  In  order  to  dispose  of 
stock  on  hand.  Should  th«  petition 
meet  with  favor,  the  province  will  not 
go   "dry"   until  Aug.  1. 

"We  have  been  with  you  for  two- 
score  yea-rs,  and  another  sixty  days 
win  matter  lltUe,"  Is  the  plea  of  the 
Uquar  dealers.  ._.^... 

On  the  other  hand,  the  prohibition 
leaders  hotly  protest  against  any  ex- 
tension of  time.  They  point  to  the  fact 
that  more  than  three-fourths  of  Cana- 
dian territory  already  has  voted  out 
saloons  and  confidently  predict  that 
before    the    new     year     Quebec     alone 


among  the  provinces  will  retain  the 
liquor  licensing  system  and  that  even 
here  licensing  will  be  restricted  to 
Montreal,  Quebec  and  a  number  of 
large  urban   centers.  ^       .    . 

The  possibility  of  the  dominion  gov- 
ernment passing  rigid  prohibition 
measures  has  made  large  liquor  deal- 
ers In  Quebec  as  well  as  in  other  sec- 
tions uneasy.  It  is  said.  Several  meas- 
ures pertaining  principally  to  the  ship- 
ment of  spirits  from  wet  to  dry  terri- 
tory now  are   before  parliament. 

On  Sept.  IB,  Ontario,  for  years  con- 
sidered the  stronghold  of  the  Cana- 
dian liquor  Interests,  will  go  dry  by 
direct  legislation,  which  will  continue 
effective  until  after  the  war.  Licenses 
will  be  extended  from  May  1  until  Sep- 
tember upon  payment  of  a  nominal  fee. 
After  the  war,  and  a  considerable  time 
after  the  return  of  the  soldiers,  a  ref- 
erendum will  be  taken.  In  the  mean- 
time, the  law  will  not  interfere  with 
importation  of  liquor  for  private  con- 
sumption, but  win  provide  extremely 
heavy  fines  for  violations  of  the  regu- 
lations stipulated.  .,._     ^  ,      « 

The  320  licenses  in  Alberta  province 
will  be  canceled  July  1  n^**  a"<*^  ^°® 
sale  of  liquor  henceforth  prohibited. 

Saskatchewan  province  now  has  one 
of  the  most  stringent  curtailment  laws. 
aU  liquor  traffic  being  controlled  by 
the  provincial  government.  No  person 
may  use  liquor  except  In  his  own  home. 

Nova  Scotia  entered  the  prohibition 
ranks  March   IB,   1916,   by  a  legislative 

vote 

In  New  Brunswick,  nine  of  the  four- 
teen counties  are  dry. 

A  local  option  law  in  Quebec,  passed 
before  confederation  and  which  now 
covers  about  900  parishes  or  approxi- 
mately two-thirds  of -the  province.  Is 
in  effect.  Except  In  large  cities  there 
are  practically  no  licensed  bars. 

Total  prohibition  has  been  adopted 
by  Newfoundland,  the  Island  colony, 
abolishing  sale,  manufacture,  lm.porta- 
tlon  and   transportation  of  liquor. 

In  the  Northwest  territories  the  sale 
of  liquor  Is  regulated  by  the  dominion 
license  law. 

Early  in  the  summer,  railroads  are 
expected  to  discontinue  sale  of  liquor 
on  dining  cars  because  of  Xhe  great 
stretch  of  dry  territory  in  the  West. 


per  cent  on  the  average  of  the  material 
as  it  comes  to  the  factory  is  unsulted 
for  canning  and  it  Is  discarded,  as  well 
as  large  quantities  of  fish  of  other 
species  caught  with  the  salmon.     To  a 


great  extent  this  material  Is  now 
wasted.  On  th«  Atlantic  coast  an  In- 
dustry of  considerable  proportion  hM 
developed  In  the  production  of  nsn 
scrap  for  fertilizer  purposes. 


ONLY  2  DAYS  MORE 

W.  S.  KIRK'S  SALE 


-OF- 


U.S.  ARMY  AND 
NAVY  GOODS 

LEAVING  DULUTH  FOR  GOOD  APRIL  17 

Your  last  chance  to  buy  Uncle  Sam's  Goods  at 

Baiguin  Prices. 

W.  S.  KIRK 

313  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREETl 


WASTE  OF  MATERIAL 

FOR  FERTILIZERS 

Washington,  April  14— Waste  of  pos- 
sible fertilizer  and  flsh  oil  material  in 
connection  with  flsh  canning  operations 
oft  the  Pacific  coast  Is  estimated  by 
department  of  agriculture  experts  to 
amount  to  at  least  ?1.126,000  every 
year.  In  the  salmon-canning  Industry 
Investigation  has  shown  that  about  30 


CHARLES  C,  JONES, 
Chairman  Show   Comxmttee. 


ammm 


N^w  stt^los  r 


X    \ 


,  t,      ._' 


i»VI. 


mW^ 


A  Roofing  That  Is 
Cheaper  by  the  Year 

You  can  buy  "just  as  good"  roofings  for  very  little  a 
they  are  worth  just  what  you  pay  for  them.  They  cost  1< 
by  the  foot  but  more  by  the  year  of  service.    Drop  m  and  see 


nd 
ess 


We  have  stamped  ,_ 
"O.  K.— A  I,**  because  we  know  it 
is  the  square*  deal  roofing.  Cus- 
tomers tell  us  so  right  along.  It  is 
fire-resisting  vreatkerproof  and 
wear-proof  and  it  saves  repair  bills 
wbererer  it  is  used. 

In  manT  instances  |Hl-tCll-OlO  is 
still  weatnexproof  after  more  than 
20  years  of  service.  You  can  buy 
cheaper  roofings — but  sooner  or 
later  you  are  bound  to  find  out 
irrhy  they  are  cheaper. 


||||-itlt*OQ  is  ^  Ions  run  roof- 
ing built  for  permcnenco  and  alL 
weather-exposure. 

The  U.  S.  Court  of  Appeals  has 
recently  enjoined  imitators  from 
using  the  word  "Rubberoid  or  any 
similar  name  as  the  trade  name  or 
brand  "  of  their  roofing. 

When  you  are  in  this  neighbor- 
hood again,  stop  in— you'll  be 
Interested  in  HO-iW-OlO.  We  seU 
the  genuine  with  the  "Ru-ber-oid 
Man  ••  (shown  above)  on  eveiy  roll 


BAXTER  SASH  &  DOOR  CO. 


i 


sssss 


1 


DIJL.UTH,  MINN. 


I 


II 


^*m0'^tfmmmm 


•W 


M—t*"*"^**-^**^-"*^^ 


VJJIMJI 


^K- 


i'J 


Friday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


L  Society  *  Women^s  Clubs  *  Music  *  Drama 

V  '  ^_  I     I    -i_i-ui— L-r-«_i— «.— I-  i-~ii~i-~    -   —   -  —  —   -    —  —  —  —  —  .---    —  —  — ,— ,  —  —    -    -^-,   -,^  -Li-L-»-i  Li---i--~>i~i— i~i-i~ii~i~     -—  -■     -—    -—  —   -^»»»»w»«  x^^ji^.^  «^^»»»    ■-  —  —---  —  —  —  .1  -^^-^^-.  —  —  —  —  —    - ^^ ,^^^-,  —  — ii-ii-»r'^rfc — r~ 


■*« 


Snatrhm  and  pafrh««  of  sreen  are 
brarfanlnir   to    iiPP*»r- 

Thr  lilac  bnNhrN  ore  baddlnir  already 
and  It  (Mkrw  little  ImaiclBatloa  to  pic- 
ture lllaca*  JonquJla.  daffodlU  and  d«n- 

dellonii. 

Tbia  nomlnir  a  proud  Dnlntblan  ex- 
hibited a  bunch  of  lllnea  ttmt  had  been 
ahlpped  froaa  the  •onthem  part  of  the 
Mtate.  With  another  tveek  of  uklld 
weather  It  will  be  time  to  uncover 
hvahcN  and  bei^in  work  In  the  flower 
garden.  For  the  next  two  week*  icar- 
denn  and  elothea  will  oeeupx  •  Inrxe 
ahare  of  the  time  of  the  averaxe  Du- 
lath    woman. 

*  * 

*  KVIONTS  OF  TONKiHT  * 
■)|t                                      ANU  TOJMORHOW.  «, 

^  •  ^ 

0  The  annual  concert  of  the  r»u-  41 
^  Ivth  Phllatbea  anion  will  be  m 
^  iclven  at  S  o'clock  t«>iilicht  at  the  ^f 
jft  FlrMt     i»re«byterlan     church.  •# 

»  Th*-  Aftcnro  Hoclcty  will  jclve  4j» 
»  an  entertainment  at  8  o'clock  to-  W 
^  niKfat  at  the  Flmt  Norweiclan  J 
j((.  Lutheran  churrh  for  the  rund  for  » 
^  a  home  for  old  Morwearl*n  men  * 
^   and    women.  T 

J  The  "Ulawntha"  pageant  will  ^ 
be  prcMrntcd  nt  H  o'clock  tonlKht  * 
Mt  at  the  FlcKt  >IetliO€ll»it  church.  * 
^  A  formal  danelns  party  will  be  #• 
^  Blven  at  Coffln'n  academ/  to-  * 
^   nlKht.  ^< 

^  Adele  iMcC'laran  I.lKKCtt  will  * 
4ft  lfl>e  two  mtory  h«>urM  tomorrow  ^ 
^  fn<»rninK.  from  H»  to  1 1  and  1 1  to  * 
^  12  o'clock,  nt  the  Hex  theater,  # 
^  under  the  au»»|»lce«  of  the  fed-  # 
■i  crated  club*  of  the  city,  for  the  * 
^  Mtate   federation   endowment   fund,  -ir 

Events  of  Interest. 

Company  C,  Thkrd  infantry,  Mlune- 
eota  National  Ctmird,  will  jflve  a 
nionihlv  danrliiff  party  Wednesday 
night.   April    26,   in    thu  assembly   room 

of  tile  armory. 

•  *       • 

Twenty  couples  attended  the  dan- 
clnR  party  that  was  K'ven  last  night 
by  tl)M  I'rogress  club  in  the  vestry  of 
Ttmpl''  Emanuel.  The  club  was  or- 
ganized    recently     by     young     men     of 

the  temple. 

•  *      • 

The  Woman's  Relief  corps  held  a 
rcKular  meeting  yesterday  in  Memorial 
hall,  courthouse.  It  was  announced 
that  the  annual  department  convention 
of  th.  W.  R.  C.  will  be  held  in  Minne- 
apolis. Juno  7.  8  and  9.  Headquarters 
•will  be  at  the  West  hotel.  The  national 
convention  will  be  held  in  Kansas  City, 
Aug.    28   to   S«n)t.   1. 

Mrs.  K.  S.  Farrell  of  1832  East  Third 
etreet  will  entertain  the  members  of 
the  corps  and  their  friends  at  a  thimble 
bee  Easier  Monday.  The  corps  will  en- 
tertain at  cards  at  Memorial  hall  May  4. 

•  •       • 

Mis  William  Cutllflf  of  731  West 
Se<'ond  street  entertained  yesterday 
from  4  to  7  o'clock  in  honor  of  the 
seventh  birthday  of  her  daughter. 
Helen.  Pink  and  white  were  decora- 
tlonn  at  the  table,  where  covers  were 
laid  for  the   following: 

Eileen  Morrissey.       Lois  Phillips, 


Will  Conduct  Story 

Hours  at  the  Rex 


Dorothy  Anger- 

nveior, 
Muriel  Ames, 
(Jriol  AniPB, 
Florence  Phillips, 


Ruth  Schieleen, 
Beatrice  Frlnk, 
Ruth  Toungdahl, 
Alice  McDonald- 


*  *       •      • 
Mr     and    Mrs.    Ernest   La'chmund.    221 

Sixteenth  avenue  east,  will  entertain 
At  an  informal  musicale  tomorrow 
right  at  their  home. 

*  *       « 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Ernest  Lachmund  will 
present  their  pupils  at  the  fourth  of 
the  series  of  studio  recitaJs  they  have 
given  this  winter  next  Thursday  after- 
noon at  4  o'clock.  At  ane  of  the  pre- 
vious recitals  the  works  of  Cyril  Scott 
were  featured,  while  at  another  recital 
the  afternoon  was  devoted  to  the  works 
of  Beethoven.   Mozart   and   Haydn. 

*'Hiawatha"  Pageant 

At  First  M.  E.  Church 

Scenes  In  the  life  of  Hiawatha,  from 
his  childhood  to  his  departure  "to  the 
Jand  of  the  hereafter,"  will  b«  shown 
In  the  "Hiawatha"  pageant  which  will 
be  given  at  8  o'clock  tonight  at  the 
First  Methodist  church.  Miss  Mary 
Bhesgreen  will  read  Longfellow's  poem 
and  Mrs.  Stella  Prince  Stocker  will 
play  melodies  which  she  has  transposed, 
from  those  of  the  Ojibways,  the  tribe 
to  which  Hiawatha  belonged.  The 
scenes    and    tableatix    will    be:     - 

"Hiawatha's  Childhood."  "Hiawatha's 
Fasting."  "Hiawatha's  Wooing,"  Hia- 
watha's Wedding  Fea.st,"  "The  Ghosts." 
"The  Famine,"  "Hiawatha's  Departure," 
"Hiawatha's  Return  from  the  Hunt," 
"Hiawatha's  Wrestle  with  Mondamln," 
"I  Will  Follow  You  My  Husband,"  "The 
Lonelv  Arrow-maker."  "The  Wedding 
Feast."  "Death  of  Minnehaha."  "Hia- 
watha'.^ Departure  to  Land  of  tlie  Here- 
after,"   and    "Tranformatlon    Scene." 

m 

Spring  Assembly. 

Friday  night,  April  28,  hag  been  set 
aa  the  date  for  the  spring  party  given 
by  the  Assembly  at  the  Spalding,  the 
committee  In  charge  consisting  of  A. 
Laird  Goodman.  Fred  E.  Wolvln  and 
Laurence   S.    Gordon. 


hers,  which  was  composed  of  Mrs.  Bes- 
sla  Owens.  M.  E.  C;  Mrs.  Laura  De- 
tret.  E.  S.  T.;  Mrs.  Anna  Larson.  B. 
J.  T.;  Mrs.  Lucy  Purdy.  M.  of  T.  •  Mrs. 
Mary  R.  Ryan-  M.  of  R.  C;  Mrs.  Emma 
Wick.  M.  of  F.;  Mrs.  Lydla  Palmer.  P. 
of  T. ;  Miss  Velma  Schnuckle,  G.  of  O. 
T.;  Mrs.  Mae  Cutliffe  and  Mrs.  Minnie 
McHugh.   O.   of  T.  ,         »,. 

An  address  was  made  by  Mrs.  Alice 
S.  Holmes,  state  grand  chief,  who  Is 
making  her  annual  official  tour  of  the 
state.  A  banquet  and  reception  fol- 
lowed the   Initiation   ceremonies. 


TBaenf 


ADELE  McCLARAN  LIGGETT. 

Adele  McClaran  Liggett  will  give 
two  story  liours.  at  10  and  11  o'clock 
tomorrow  morning  at  the  Hex  theater 
under  the  auspices  of  the  Duluth 
clubs  belonging  to  the  state  federa- 
tion. 


Church  Meetings. 

A    Lenten    service   will   be  held   at   t 
o'clock  tonight  at  Trinity  cathedral. 
•      •      • 

A  Lenten  service  will  be  held  at  8 
o'clock  tonight  at  St.  Paul's  Episcopal 
charch. 

Equestrian  Tea  Dances 

Latest  Thing  in  Gotham 

Equestrian  tea  dances,  with  many 
of  the  dancers  In  riding  togs.  Is  the 
latest  Innovation  for  metropolitan  res- 
taurant patrons,  says  the  New  York 
Review. 

The  first  of  these  riding  teas  was 
given  recently  In  the  Domino  room 
at  Bustanoby's,  at  Sixtieth  street  and 
Broadway,  and  came  as  a  result  of 
the  nrvany  requests  of  tho3e  who  ride 
In  the  park  and  who  are  also  devotees 
of  the  dance  to  enjoy  conveniently  a 
combination  of  the  two  sports.  Here- 
tofore riders  have  dropped  In  for  tea, 
but  have  hesitated  about  dancing.  The 
teas  arranged  for  them  will  be  thor- 
oughly   equestrian    In    atmosphere. 

Edith  Mae  Copes  and  Nelson  Homer 
Snow,  the  clever  stars  of  the  Bustan- 
oby  cabaret  de  luxe,  will  present  a 
"boots  and  saddles  dance"  In  costumo 
every    afternoon. 

s  Do  Wonderful 

Work  for  Armies 

The  Red  Cross  dog  has  won  a  glori- 
ous place  In  the  literature  of  this  war, 
but  there  are  other  dog  heroes.  The 
sentry  dogs,  "trained  to  silence,"  do 
excellent  service,  particularly  at  lone- 
ly posts.  The  patrol  dog  runs  ahead 
of  marching  men,  and  by  ltd  serene  or 
anxious  attitude  Indicates  whether  the 


Dog 


Several    social    affairs    havf    been  I  road  la  clear  or  whether   there  is   dan 


arranged  In  hcuior  of  Mrs.  Liggett  and 
Miss  Mary  Dillon  of  St.  Paul,  who  wlU 
accompany   her. 


Glen-Hunt-Wood  niale  chorus,  directed 
by  R.  Buchanan  Morton  of  Glen  Avon 
church.  The  program  will  begin  at 
8   o'clock. 


Y.  W.  C.  A.  Notes. 

The  Y.  W.  C.  A.  gymnasium  will  be 
open  tomorrow  afternoon  and  on  fol- 
lowing Saturdays  until  further  notice, 
from  3:80  till  6  o'clock,  fox  roller 
skating.  It  will  be  open  to  all  girls, 
but  a  special  rate  will  be  glvtsn  to  those 
who  bring  with  them  their  member- 
ship  tickets. 

The  Phllatbea  Y.  W.  C.  A,  vesper 
service  at  the  association  building  at 
4:30  o'clock  Sunday  afternoon  will  bo 
addressed  by  Dr.  C.  M.  Wilson,  who 
organized  the  first  Phllatbea  class  In 
Duluth.  Miss  Margaret  Smollett  will 
'give  special  musical  numbers.  Phlla- 
tbea and  association  members,  as  well 
as  other  young  women  ■of  the  ctty,  are 
Invited. 


Lei  Us  Go  to  Market 


yoa 


Arl| 

mfts  . 

MudMaj  or  d 
df)rrj«a  tli 
nv0tro4^  -mori 


thought    what     you 

m6si'  4o    tomorrow    morning, 

do    you    live    one 

imef      Well,     to- 

_,  _    ^   -morning    you     must 

dfcld#  w^hat  you  will  have  to 

eat   foV  that  day,    for  Sunday 

and  for  Monday  morning's  breakfast. 
Let's  see.  that  Iv  about  six  meals,  isn't 
It?  But  you  might  Just  as  well  plan 
for   seven,    for  tfte    family    all   enjoy  a 


bite  late  Satwday  night  and  bften 
want  a  little  lunch  about  4  o'clock 
Sunday  aftemo<m.    Don't  you  wish  you 


cogld  dismiss  those  seven  meals  from 
your  mind  by^^lrlly  quoting,  "Suf- 
ficient unto  each  day  Is  the  evil 
thereof  7^ -Bi»t'»  you  cannot;  so  take 
your  pencil  in'  hand  and  plan  your 
marketing  list  t(«ay.  ■  It  Is  good  that 
marketing  with  basket  on  arm  Is 
In  style  again,  but  I  have  noticed  that 
when  spring  '  comes  trips  outdoors 
for  any   reason  are  popular. 

Snnday^s  meals  add  new  difficulties 
and  some  burdens  to  family  life.  On 
this  day  a  vast  number  of  people  have 
more  to  eat  than  they  have  all  the 
rest  of  the  week  put  together,  for 
thay  make  Sunday  dinner  a  free-for- 
all  affair,  to  which  relatives  and  In- 
timates drop  In  if  they  please.  Tf 
this  Inconveniences  no  one  It  is  de- 
lightful: but  Mf  the  mother  of  the 
family  is  the 'crtok  also  I  believe  she 
would  gladly  follow  Dr.  Johnson's  ad- 
vlco  and  lead  her  procession  of  guests 
to  an  Inn.  He  said:  'In  a  tavern  the 
more   noise   you   make,   the   more   trou 


ble   you    are  and   the    more   things   you 
call    for,     the     better   you     are     1 
The  family,    however,  have  a  1 


good,  as  the  piece  de  rlstance,  and 
teasing  Bobby  almost  blushes  as  he 
re  nembers  how  he  once  said  this  was 
"something  so  tough  It  resisted  all 
efforts  to  carve  it."  Beside  the  splan- 
dld  roast  with  its  moist,  rich  stuf- 
fing, its  brown  gravy  ana  mounds  of 
wnlte  fluffy  potato,  there  is  a  sweet, 
extra  alluring  and  dainty. 

The  table  decorations  are  not  elab- 
orate on  Sunday;  the  courses  are  few. 
but  the  care,  the  precision  and 
thought  that  has  gone  into  the  meal 
makes  it  almost  sacred  to  the  family. 
After  all.  Dr.  Johnson  was  a  peevish 
fellow.  Did  not  his  own  wife  advise 
him  to  disperse  with  grace  before 
meals  because  he  grumbled  so  at  the 
table?  We  don't  want  his  advice 
about  dinners,  or  inns,  or  hotels.  All 
w^  need  is  a  pencil,  a  scrap  of  paner 
and  our  thinking  cap;  we  can  plan 
seven  meals  in  almost  as  many  min- 
utes. 

HHWTT   FOR    SrWDAY   DIWIITOR. 

Centsrplece.    a    bowl    of    daffodils    set 

on  a  flat   mirror  with  fern 

leaves  arf-und   it. 

FVult    Cocktail. 

Clear  Soup  with  Noodles. 

Radishes.  Onions. 

Crawn  Roast  of  I>amb.         Mint  Sauce. 

Potato  CVoouettes. 

Small    Peas    Buttered. 

Asnarague    In    Sauce  w^lth   Bread   Rolls. 

Presh    Tomatoes    Sliced    and    Chilled. 

(dress  with   clnegar  and   sugar> 

Cheese   Palls.  Wafers. 

Marahmallow    Pudding    with    Maple 

Sauce. 

Coffee. 

(Prot«;t*d  by  Adams  Newip»per  Serrlee.) 


Used  in  Millions  ol  Tea  Pots 
Daily— Every  LcaJ  is  Pure 

Every  iidusion  is  alike  delicious 

"SALADA" 


ElSf 


April  Is  tlie 

Di 


Montk  of 
lamonds 


One  value  we  offer  is  a  beautiful  Solitaire  Diamond  of 
exceptional  blue  white  color  set  in  a  dainty  Platinum  Top 
Ring ;  a  most  extraordinary  value  at — 


$40.00 


Bagley  ii7  company 

Jewelers  and  Silversmiths 

3J5  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET 

Established  1885 


liked 
.  _   Jong  list, 

of  reasons  for,  Sunday  dinner  at  home.'  Tonutrrow — Wlwit      la      Today's 
T!iore   Is   always   something    especially  For  SagarT 


Priee 


Lodge  Notes. 


Entertainment  for 

Suburban  Residents 

Final  arrangements  for  "surprise 
featur.'s"  at  tonight's  "soiree  and  cafe 
donaut"  at  Glen  Avon  Presbyterian 
church,  were  made  at  noon  today  by 
the  committee  In  clvarge  of  the  en- 
tertainment. "We  want  to  make  It 
A  'get-acquainted  affair*  for  old  resi- 
dents and  newcomers  In  the  whole 
Hunters  Park  and  Woodland  district," 
said  Simon  Clark,  chnlrman  of  the 
committee.  "If  any  two  people  get 
away  without  knowing  each  other  It 
won't  be  our  fault.  And  I  can  say 
witn  all  due  modesty  that  any  who 
fall    to    come    will    be    sorry    later." 

Musical  features  for  the  evening 
will    be    furnished    by    members   of    the 


e: 


Gate  City  temple.  No.  10.  Pythian 
Sisters,  Initiated  a  class  of  candidates 
this  afternoon  at  the  Camel  hall.  The 
ritualistic  work  was  exemplified  by  a 
special    team   selected    from    the    mem- 


EASTER  SALES 

Of    Fancy    and    Useful    Articles    and 

Home  Cookery, 

SATURDAY,    APRIL.   15th, 

7   Kaat    Superior  -Street. 

BY  TRINITY  GUILD  OF  TRINITY  CATHEDRAL. 


ger.  The  message-carrying  dogs  must 
be  gifted  with  a  large  degree  of  Intelli- 
gence and  scent  These  brave  crea- 
tures often  go  forty-eight  hours  with- 
out rest  or  food,  while'  carrying  Im- 
portant messages  over  snowbound, 
mountains  where  the  telephone  wires 
are  down,  or  where  It  Is  impossible  to 
lay  a  wire.  It  is  also  of  special  inter- 
est to  note  the  Eskimo  dog.  an  animal 
that  has  heretofore  figured  only  in 
narratives  of  Arctic  exploration  and 
adventure,  is  doing  Its  useful  bit  as  a 
"war  dog"  In  the  Vosges  mountains, 
where  valleys  and  peaks  Ho  deep  In 
snow.  The  supply  of  dogs  was  ar- 
ranged by  a  former  French  consul  In 
Alaska,  Lieut.  Haas,  who  sent  several 
hundred  over  and  came  hlnrvself  at  the 
end  of  last  autumn  to  Instruct  those 
men  of  the  Chasseurs  Alpines  who  were 
put  In  charge  of  the  dog  teams.  A 
regular  dog-transport  service  with 
sleighs  has  been  established  in  the 
mountains  of  Alsace  to  keep  the  troops 
in  the  front  line  supplied  with  muni- 
tions and  stores.  The  dogs  are  organ- 
ized In  "companies"  of  200  or  220  ani- 
mals each.  The  dog  teams  w-ork  with 
nine  dogs  each,  four  couples  and 
leader.  Over  60  pe 
dogs  have  been  wou 
quarter  killed  by  bullets 


Tldd,  formerly  of  Meadowlands,  Minn. 
Mrs.  Arnold  has  been  spending  some 
time  at  Old  Point  Comfort,  Va.,  previ- 
ous to  golijg  to  Hampton. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  Walter  W.  J.  Croze  and  son, 
Wilfred,  114  Seventh  avenue  east,  will 
leave  tonight  for  Chicago,  where  they 
will  'visit  Mrs.  Croze's  brother.  Dr.  J. 
W.  Whiteside.  Mr.  Croze  will  Join 
them  there  next  week  and  they  will  go 
on  East  to  spend  Easter. 

•  «r        • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  O.  W.  Johnstone  and 
daughter,  Genevra.  of  1616  East  Supe- 
rior street  will  leave  tonight  for  a 
visit  in  St."  Wdl.      , 

'  .    :•      *      • 
Mrs.  R.  R.  IJaUey  will  return  tomor- 
row from  a 'Visit. In  Minneapolis. 
•■(.if)     ♦      * 
W.  M.  Prin'dle  is  exi>ected  .home  the 
t.  v.-    -  i 

^  •oj  ■ 


fBedi 

l^        fiV  Clara 


Time  Tales 


Ingram  Judson 


[nded.'and  'i*ou1"i  *|j£W/«>i  TUtle-Mouse  WQuts 

llets  or  shells.  ^^W  ^^..  fn   ]Uln\i0 


Personal  Mention 

Mrs.  Casslus  Bagley.   2480  East  First-; 
street,    has   returned      from     a     several 
weeks'  Eastern  trip. 

•  *       • 

Mrs.  B.  E.  Baker,  2231  East  Third 
street,  has  returned  from  a.  four 
weeks'   Eastern   trip. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  E.  Magner,  1925 
East  First  street,  will  return  tomor- 
row from  a  three  months'  Souttxerti 
trip. 

•  *      • 

L.  B.  Arnold  will  leave  tomorrow  to 
Join  his  wife  and  children  at  Hanu>- 
ton.  Va.,  where  they  are  visiting  Mr. 
Arnold's     sister,      Mrs.     John      Newton 


to  Move 

''IaJRE   NOt\o  suppose   that 

l»f^  because    Tpmmy    T'ttle- 

e     and     his     little     mate 

te  May  in  the  bam  with 

hilfiKens   during    the  cold 

nt«r    lliat    they     meant    to 

jttay.lMre    all    the   year^  For 

me4ii/^o^ng   of  the  sort.  They 

Otten    their    happy    home 


first    part    of    next    week    from    Cali- 
fornia. 

•  e      • 

Miss    Ramona    Hoopes,    Glen    Avon, 

.will   arrive   Saturday  from  Chicago  to 

pass  the  Easter  vacation  at  her  home. 

•  *      * 

Miss  Maude  Sherwln  of  Hunter's 
Park  has  returned  to  Chicago  after 
visiting  her  parents.  Dr.  and  Mrs.  Sher- 
wln. 

•  •      * 

Mrs.    Stanley   R.    Holden.    East   First 
street,      returned     yesterday     morning 
from  a  trip  to  New  York. 
.  •      •      •> 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Edward  Snyder  of 
1829 H  East  Superior  street  are  moving 
to  Two  Harbors. 

•  *      • 

Col.  Andrew  D.  Davidson,  East  Su- 
perior £treet,  is  seriously  ill  at  his 
home.  On  account  of  his  Illness  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  Davidson  have  canceled  a 
trip  South. 

•  *      • 

Mrs.  R.  W.  Mars  and  Miss  Bessie 
Mars  left  yesterday  afternoon  for  Chi- 
cago to  spend  Easter  week. 

•  *      • 

Mr.  snd  Mrs.  Inland  B.  Duxbury  of 
1709  Jefferson  street  will  leave  tonight 
for  a  visit  of  a  week  or  two  in  Cale- 
donia. Minn. 

•  •      • 

Mrs.  Etta  Wheelock,  who  has  been 
seriously  111  at  her  home.  No.  1  Osborne 
terrace,   was  yesterday  removed  to  St. 

Mary's  hospital. 

•  •      • 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  H,  B.  Benesovitz  and 
little  daughter,  Edna  Ethel,  of  807  East 
Fifth  street,  will  leave  Sunday  for  a 
week  in  Hibblng. 


a  ^ 


For  the  Housewife's  Eye 

Some  More  or  Less  Valuable  Information  About  the 

Retail  Markets. 


ticvi  Southern  peaw,  20e  ■  «uart. 

CnrrotH,  turiiipit,  beets,  from  5@8e  • 
buaeh. 

C'allfornla  celery,   lOe  a   stalk. 

C'lieMtniitt,  10c  a  pound. 

Ne^v  Southern  onlonit,  3  pounds  for 
25e. 

Anparagns,  a  S-yooad  buneh  for  20e. 

Berries,  2  i^lnt  boxes  for  3Be|  17 Vie 
apiece. 

Hens,  fresh  killed,  25e  a  pound. 

Spring  ehlckeiia,  'ZHe  a  pound. 

L>ar«led  beef  tenderloin.  35e  a  pound. 

Flnan   haddie,   18c  a  pound. 

Trtpe,  15e  a  pound. 

Freiih  plekercl,  15e  a  pound. 

Beef  heart,  lOe  a  pound. 

Michigan  chub  wlUteAsh,  20c  a  ponnd. 

Squabs,  35c. 


Unfortunately,  there  weren't  any 
squabs  on  the  market  this  morning,  but 
If  there  had  been,  they  probably  would 
have  been  86c  or  thereabouts.  It  can't 
be  aathentlcally  said  hereabouts. 

Strawberries  are  higher,  though  the 
boxes  remain  as  low  at  the  top  and  as 
high  at  the  bottom  as  of  yore.  Why 
ntake  them  17  V4  cents  when  there's  no 
such  thing  as  a  half  a  cent,  and  the 
grocers  know  you  know  It?  It's  mis- 
leading and  for  baif  a  cent  we'd  ex- 
pose 'em. 

California  celery  is  beinc  sold  by  the 
stalk.  At  first  glance  the  stalks  look 
more  like   the   famous   California   Red- 


wood trees  except  that  they  are  white 
(or  will  be  after  the  Gold  Dust  Twins 
do  their  work).  At  any  rate  for  10 
cents^  you  surely  get  some  stalk  and 
arrangements  have  been  made  with  the 
different  van  and  storage  companies 
for  its  safe  and  unruffled  delivery 
rather  than  stalking  It  to  Its  lair. 

In  case  you  have  a  yellow  or  blue 
dining  room,  the  suggestion  Is  made 
that  Michigan  club  white  fish  comes 
in  beautiful  tones  of  gold  and  brown. 
Heaven  alone  knows  what  color  it 
would  be  after  cObklng — but  why  not 
serve  It  au  naturel  Just  so  they  can  see 
that  you  have  it  and  that  it  matches — 
then  take  it  out  and  give  it  to  some 
dog — a  yellow  or  tan  dog  preferably 
or  a  dog  with  a  yellow  streak  even. 
Gold  fish  on  pieces  of  blue  toast  would 
bo  artistic  and  Indigestible  In  case 
there  «.re  none  of  these  Michigan  fish 
to  be  had. 

Next  to  the  girlish  pig.  the  ox  seenrui 
to  furnish  us  with  more  food,  both  for 
thought  and  otherwise,  than  any  of  its 
contemporaries,  but  it  saddens  one  to 
think  that  tripe  comes  fro-n  the  well- 
loved  creature.  There  Is  something  ap- 
pealing, almost  bovine,  about  an  ox 
that  It  hurts  to  think  he  would  harbor 
such  a  victual  as  this.  Personally  we 
admit  a  desire  to  be  president  of  a 
Club  for  the  Prevention  of  Tripe — at 
least  to  restrict  It  from  being  exploited 
in   the  city   limits. 


Women  acquainted 
ith  Fownes  quality  in 
ALL  idnds  of  gloves,  are 
demanding  Fownes  silk 
gloves, — with  reason. 

Smartest,  most  satisfactory. 
— but  they  cost  no  more. 

All  lengths,  s 
and  shades. 

Double-tipped? 

— Of  coursel 

Ask  your 
dealer. 


Peggy  Peabody's  Observations 

Women  and  Her  Clothes 


Clothes,  women's  clothes?  How  many 
crimes  are  committed  In  their  name? 
Another  girl  brought  to  the  bar  of 
Justice  for  the  theft  of  $400,  wJilch  she 

has  confessed  was 
stolen  BO  that  she 
might  for  once  grat- 
ify her  desires  for 
pretty  clothes.  Noiy^ 
It  Isn't  In  the 
heart  of  any  wom- 
an to  blame  an- 
other for  wanting 
pretty  clothes, 
though  the  Idea 
sliould  firmly  be 
Instilled  Into 
everyone  that  no 
loss  of  honor  -^r 
self-respect  should 
be  Involved  In  the 
securing  of  the 
dainty  things  for 
which  all  women  yearn. 

We  are  often  Judged  nowadays  by 
the  clothes  we  wear,  though  I  presume 
this  Is  no  new  thing.  Human  nature 
has  ever  had  its  tendency  to  Judge  by 
externals.  In  this  respect  we  are  not 
altogether  blameworthy,  for  those  who 
pay  proper  attention  to  the  clothing 
of  their  body  can  be  counted  upon  to 
have  a  proper  respect  for  all  other 
matters  pertalnlag  to  our  common  hu- 
manity. But  I  sometimes  wonder  If 
the   girl   who  ■w^^»  hard   for  her  liv- 


ing ever  stops  to  consider  what  other 
people  may  think  of  her  extravagance 
In  wearing  apparel  and  feminine  fin- 
ery of  all  kinds. 

From  tbe  highest  to  the  lowest  too 
much  Importance  is  placed  upon  the 
matter  of  clothes  and  thereby  there 
are  many  w^omen  undone  and  will 
continue  to  be  so  until  they  learn  how 
very  little  there  is  that  Is  worth  while 
outsMe  the  narrow  limit  of  duty  and 
honorable,  straightforward  conduct.  It 
is  no  one's  business  how  you  spend 
the  money  you  earn.  Truly  not.  If 
you  choose  to  spend  every  cent  you 
can  spare  from  living  expenses  to 
adorn   ourself,   that   Is  your  affair. 

But  do  you  realize  how  adverse  Is 
the  criticism  which  follows  the  work- 
ing girl  who  arrays  herself  like  a 
woman  of  leisure  for  her  duties,  what- 
ever and  wherever  they  may  be?  If 
the  world  says  nothing  more  unkind. 
It  comments  upon  her  lack  of  taste 
and  common  sense  and  whispers  that 
some  day  she  may  have  need  for  the 
nrioney  which  she  spends  so  freely  and 
foolishly  for  things  that  seem  extrava- 
gant, if  not  utterly  beyond  her  posi- 
tion, socially  and  otherwise. 

Whatever  a  girl's  position  In  life,  or 
however  able  she  may  be  to  gratify 
her  wants,  It  would  be  well  for  her 
to  remember  that  simple,  unostenta- 
tious clothes  are  better  Investments?, 
for  the  working  girls  at  least,  for 
wear  while  in  the  performance  of 
duty. 


thex 

had  not   ^^,„. 

in  the  Ma  "lOC^  near  the  golden-glow 
bed — no, Jj^OT«aI  And  they  often  whis- 
pered tJl^afth  other  about  the  fun 
they  wotfid  vhave  when  they  moved 
back    there  M^Aln.  > 

'"I  must  say,  though."  snia  Mrs. 
Tomn^if  at  Ihe  end  of  one  of  their 
talks,  '^that  Ifs  much  easier  )to  j'a'se 
dWldrcn  In  the  barn.  I  can  ^eep 
track  of  thenj  longer.  And  then,  too, 
there  are  not  so  .many  enemies  to 
harm  them.  >  Owls  and  hawks  are 
mighty  scare*  In  the  winter.  I'm  glad 
to    say!" 

"True  esoufhl  True  enough."  agreed 
Tommy;  "but  now.  our  babies  are 
grown  big  .  wioviffti  to  take  care  of 
themselves,  abd  I  want  to  move  back 
to    the    log." 

"Don't  be  In  such  a  hurry.  Tommy," 
said  Mrs.  Tommy,  good-naturedly. 
"Why  do  you  want  to  leave  all  the 
good  food  we  have  here  In  the  bam? 
It's  only  the  middle  of  April — there 
may  be  many  a  storm  yet.  and  I  for 
one,  am  satisfied  to  stay  here  a  cou- 
ple   of    greeks    l*tger." 

Tommy  sighed.  Of  course  he  could 
see  the  -good  sense  of  what  Mrs. 
Tommy  said.  Rut  he  had  the  moving 
fever  in  his  .system  and  he  simply 
could  not  settle  down  to  anything — 
he  kept  thlnHinr  and  thinking  about 
tliat  movlnp,  h4,fwa8  going  to  do.  If 
you  have  ie'Ve|r<'"  Wnoved  yourself,  you 
win  know  Juat  "hiOW  he  felt;and  if  you 
have  not  moved— well,  there's  no  use 
trying  to  explath  it  to  you,  you 
wouldn't  understand. 

Mrs.  Tommy  looked  kindly  at 
Tommy.  "Pear  me,  such  a  sigh!"  she 
laughed. 

"I  suppose  so,"  admitted  Tommy; 
"but  I  am  so  tired  of  waiting!  I  wish 
I  CO, lid  do.  ilmvthing  special  toward 
moving."  --    ». 

"Well,  yoc  can,"  said  Mrs.  Tommy, 
as  a  suddwi  hpJrVY  thought  occurred 
to    her.  *      f    ; 

Tommy  immoalately  sat  up  and  took 
notice. 

"Right    now?"    ^e    demanded. 

"Right  now,"  Mrs.  Tommy  assured 
him. 


mfeam^  (§ 

366  Mh  Avenue,  Bsw  ffonJi 

O/nnounce  dpecuu   Q)xliiJaiilQn  ox 

C^pruxa  and,  c)iuiifnc/t  u  amnions 


ai 


Jfw    e) 


-J/uiuin 


AMUSEMENTS 


TONIGHT'S  AHRACTIONS. 

Nirw  GRAND — ^Vaudeville  and  photo- 
plays. 

REX — Pauline  Frederick  in  "Audrey," 
photoplay. 

LYRIC — Mary  Plckford  in  "The 
Foundling,"  photoplay. 

ZEL.DA — Anita  Stewart  and  Earle 
Williams  In  "My  Lady's  Slipper," 
photoplay. 

GOOD  COMEDY  AT  GRAND. 

"Rube"^  Act  and  Big-Time  Banjoists 
Make  Hit. 

The  new  show  at  the  Grand,  which 
began  a  week-end  engagement  yes- 
terday. Is  one  of  the  laughing  hits  of 
the  season,  and  in  addition  has  many 
other  attractive  features  that  prove 
popular  with  the  audiences.  The  nu- 
merous photoplays  also  contain  a  Idt 
of  clever  comedy  features. 

Crelghton,  Belmont  and  Crelghton 
as  the  "Mudtown  Minstrels,"  lead  as 
laugh  producers.  As  three  Yankees, 
two  men  and  a  girl,  they  do  a  num- 
ber of  stunts  that  are  both  original 
and  clever.  Their  burlesque  of  a 
number  of  songs  is  entertaining  but 
not   musical. 

The  Bolger  Brothers,  Just  off  the 
Orpheum  circuit,  are  among  the  best 
banjoists  ever  heard  at  the  Grand. 
They   play   both    classical   and    popular 


e)aiu/ulau' 

jJcudiAxui  and  (£)^ef^ma't/aox^lc6» 
uilxa  j2)fnaat  Kjoat^^and  Q^uaIa 


numbers,  and  are  equally  popular  in 
rendering   either. 

The  burlesque  of  a  strong-man  act 
my 'Lie  Clair  and  Sampson  i»  a  scream. 

The  athletes  are  aided  by  secret 
wires  from  the  flies  and  "marvelous" 
stunts  are  done  with  ease. 

Swan  and  Bwan,  a  man  and  a  girl, 
are  dancing  Jugglers,  who  do  many 
interesting   turns. 

Jack  Mulhall  and  Gretchen  Hart- 
man  are  featured  In  a  two-reel  film 
entitled  "Alias  Jlmmle  Barton,"  "An- 
vils and  Actors"  is  a  funny  comedy, 
and  the  "Canimated  Noos  Pictorial'* 
shows   many    caricatures    of    interest. 


S3S. 


IDE. 

(gr  RUTH 


|i\LK§ 


GAMBMN 

Emotion  Sprees 


'Dear   me,    mmeh   ■    lUgUf   Mtec    lau^ued. 


"Tell  me,"  said  Tommy,  and  he  sat 
down  to  listen,  for  he  could  easily 
see  by  the  expression  in  Mrs.  Tom- 
my's nrlght  black  eyes  that  she  was 
planning  something  he   would   like. 

"You  go  over  to  the  log  this  very 
day  and  make  a  passage  through  the 
leaves  that  we  laid  In  front  of  the 
door.  Then  run  back  here  and  carry 
as  maniy  loads  as  you  want  of  the 
good  corn  that  is  stored  In  here  for 
the  chicks.  You  lean  put  it  way  back 
in  the  far  end  of  the  log  and  then 
when  we  mdve  '■^e  will  have  a  supply 
of   for-d   all   refCy   'or   rainy   days.'' 

"That's  »■  oieautlful  plan!"  cried 
Tommy  delightedly.  And,  without 
saying  another  word,  he  darted  off  to 
do    his    work.. .-      , 

(Copfitttt—Xmn  Intram  JudMo.) 

TusswifW  'TnmiT  Chansea  His 


"What  would  women  do  if  they  could 
not  cry?  What  poor,  defenseless  crea- 
tures they  would  be  r'--Jerome. 

"Did  you  like  the  play?"  I  asked  a 
friend  of  mine  anent  a  play  she  had 
told  me  she  was  to  attend. 

"Oh,  my  dear,"  she  said,  "it  was 
beautiful!  I  cried  all  the  time.  I 
wouldn't  have  missed  it  for  any- 
thing!" 

"You  look  tlredfc"  X  said 

"Oh,  yes,"  she  answered,  "Fm  all 
done  up.  I  always  am  after  aJiythlng 
like  that.  It  takes  tt  right  out  of  me 
to  cry." 

She  Has  N«  Use  for  Otlwr  Kinds  •t 
Spreeit. 

No|V,  If  my  friend's  washerwoman 
had  come  to  her  and  said,  "I  was  on  a 
spree  yesterday.  I'm  all  tired  out  to- 
day." I  know  she  would  have  been  hor- 
ribly shocked. 

And  yet,  hadn't  she  been  on  a  spree 
herself?  A  spree  of  emotion,  which,  as 
she  freely  admitted,  "took  it  right  out 
of  lier." 

Tears  have  their  place  in  -our  liyes. 
"Tears,"  someone,  has  said,  "are  the 
safety  valve  of  the  heart  when  too 
much  pressure  Is  laid  upon  it."  Dry- 
eyed  grief  is  always  the  most  danger- 
ous. You  remember  the  bereaved  wife 
in  Tennyson's  "Princ3ss,"  who  was  near 
insanity  from  grief  over  her  husband's 
death  because  she  could  not  find  relief 
In  tears.  Her  attendants  tried  in  every 
way  to  make  her  give  way.  Then 
Anally: 

"Rose,  a  nurse  of  ninety  years. 

Set  his  child  upon  her  knee — 
Like  summer  tempests  came  her  tears — 

•Sweet,  my  child.  1  live  for  three.'  " 


DoM't  TTse  tbe  Safety  Talye  T*o  Often. 

A  safety  valve  is  an  Invaluable  thing 
— at  the  right  time.  But  if  you  opened 
the  safety  valve  at  times  when  there 
was  too  little  instead  of  too  much 
pressure,  you  would  take  away  from 
the  power  in  the  engine.  And  that  Is 
Just  what  some  women  do  when  they 
permit  themselvea  to  indulge  too  freely 
in  tears. 

I  know  a  woman  who  cries  easily. 
Excitement,  pity  (often  aelf-plty),  anger 
and  many  other  emotions  are  apt  to  re- 
sult in  a  swift  shower.  "I  love  to  cry," 
she  says,  "I  have  such  a  beautiful  re- 
laxed feeling  afterwards." 

"And  how  do  you  feel  the  rest  of  ths 
dayr*  I  asked  her.  ^    ^ 

"Well,"    she    confessed,    'Tm   apt    to 
feel  rather  tired." 
She  Got  Hold  of  Hevself  and  Held  Ob. 

A  friend  of  mine  once  suffered  a 
serious  Injury  to  her  back.  She  had  to 
He  still  for  months,  and  it  was  uncer- 
tain if  she  would  ever  walk  again.  The 
doctor  found  her  crying  one  day.  "If 
you  let  yourself  go."  he  said,  "I  cannot 
help  you.  You  must  not  cry."  She  ex- 
erted her  self-control,  got  hold  of  her- 
self and  never  let  so  again,  and  today 
she  Is  well.  The  doctor  says  there  are 
few  women  he  could  have  saved,  be- 
cause there  are  few  who  would  not 
have  let  themselves  go. 

That  is  Just  what  crying  mean»-~ 
letting  yourself  go — flinging^  self-con- 
trol to  the  winds.  Sometimes  It  is 
Justifiable,  because  it  relieves  an  unen- 
durable pressure,  clears  the  air  like  a 
thunder  storm;  but  be  careful  that  you 
don't  get  the  habit.  Crying  over  every 
little  thing  is  a  self-indulgence,  and  it 
weakens  the  character.  Just  like  any 
other  self-indulgence. 

(ProteHed  bf  Adanu  Wewipipg  Bfrrtoc.) 


The    Selig    Tribune    News    shows    cur- 
rent events   of   international  interest. 

Theater  Gossip. 

"Every  once  in  a  while,"  says  Mlsa 
Blza  Frederic,  who  is  one  of  the  prin- 
cipal    players    in 
SAYS  STAGE  FOLK  the     cast     of     "It 
ARB  REAIi  Pays      to      Adver- 

HOau:  LOYISRS.       tlse,"       the      new 

farcical  comedjt 
from  the  pens  of  Roi  Cooper  Megruo 
and  Walter  Hackett.  which  Cohan  and 
Harris  wjll  produce  at  the  Lyceum  the- 
ater Sunday,  April  16,  for  four  nights 
and  Wednesday  matinee,  "a  writer  of 
theatrical  topics  sends  a  deploring 
wall   on   the   decadence   of   domesticity 


YourNlneiy.ripst 
birthday  —  how  aro 

Vou  going  to  oelebrate  it^ 
You  can  Uve  to  cdebratt  it 
py  ecrting  tha  right  kind  of 
foods.  Oiva  Naturaa 
chanoa.  Stop  digging  jrour 
grava  with  yoor  taatb.  Cof 
out  heavy  tnaat8»  atan^ 
^>od8  and  aogu  paatxte  and 
leat  Shraddad^Whaat  Bia- 
cuit  It  8uppii08  all  tha  m^ 
trlmcnt  for  wcxk  or  play 
with  tha  least  tax  upon  tfaa 
<iigestive  organs. 


t 


iMade  at 


J^|U«.  N.  Xl 


Paster  fireefiMg! 

Be  am   early  bird  and   order  from 

DULUTH  FLORAL  CO. 

121  WEST  SUPERIOR   ST. 


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DEFECTIVE  PAGE 


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Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


11 


amonff  the  p»-ople  of  the  stage.  Rome 
cf  them  assuming  that  their  Individual 
opinion  Is  that  of  the  world  at  large, 
go  so  far  as  to  say  that  it  ia  the  lack 
of  love  for  the  flr»side  that  influences 
towards  stape  careera,  especially 
amoiiK  thf  gcntlrr  «ex,  and  I,  for  one, 
dtKlro  to  aay  that  it  is  not  true. 

"I  have  a  great  many  dear  friends  in 
the  profession  who  are  shining  ex- 
amples of  domestic  virtue,  begrudging 
♦  ven  th»'  time  tliat  must  be  spent  in  the 
theater,  and  who  only  continue  the 
practice  of  their  profession  because  it 
pay.«<  better  than  the  average  occupa- 
tion, and  thereby  furnishes  the  where- 
wit!)al  for  tlie  better  exercise  of  their 
domestic  life.  Ah  a  matter  of  fact,  to 
have  a  home  of  tluir  own  is  the  fore- 
most ambition  of  ninety-nine  out  of  a 
hundred  players.  Few  of  them,  inore's 
the  pity,  get  nearer  their  coveted  goal 
.than  a  dinky  little  flat  rented  for  the 
vacation  days  during  the  summer.  Kut 
there  are  many  of  them  who  not  only 
own  a  home  In  the  city  but^n  tiie  coun- 
try as  well,  and  most  of  them  are 
models  of  housewifely  skill  and  manly 
provision. 

"Knowing   all    this   to   be    tru<'.    I.    for 


one,  resent  this  continual  claim  of  the 
layman  that  actors  do  not  known  how 
to  live.  Why  pick  out  the  actors? 
Why  not  throw  the  searchlight  on  oth- 
er walks  of  life?  The  sacredest 'word 
In  tiie  English  language  Is  'home.'  It 
ranks  alongside  of  that  other — 'heaven' 
— yet  where  do  the  families  of  today 
spend  their  lives?  At  home?  No,  de- 
cidedly  no. 

"Making  good  biscuits  and  an  ap- 
petizing cup  of  coffee,  maintaining  a 
home  In  order  and  beauty  should  be 
the  fundamental  lessons  in  the  educa- 
tion of  girl.s.  If  the  average  mothers 
could  be  brouglit  to  tills  belU'  it  would 
do  more  to  emancipate  the  sex  than 
'Votes  for  Women'  will  ever  accom- 
ii.  At  least,  the  domestic  accom- 
plishments would  appeal  to  prospective 
husband.s  who  now  shy  at  the  thought 
of  matrimony,  fearing  that  their  choice 
would  turn  out  to  be  tango-lovin** 
turkey-trotting  nonenltles,  whose 
iiands  have  never  been  busied  In  the 
ancient,    honorable   and   honest   occupa- 


[^^^S^S^ 


AreYouOneof  Them? 


who  **fair'  for  this  "splash"  that  some  cheap  out- 
of-town  "fliers"  try  and  do  pull  over  on  many 
innocent  Duluth  spring  purchasers  by  their  al- 
luring so-called  "Direct  from  Paris"  spring  ap- 
parel, but  which  in 
actuality  is  general- 
ly not  half  as  good 
as  the  Suits,  Coats 
or  Dresses  that  your 
own  Duluth  mer- 
chants always  have 
on  hand  and  not  at, 
\  'Direct  from  Paris 
price,  but  in  an  ac- 
:ual  saving  to  you  of 


$10.00 


TO- 


$20.00 


NOTE — But  seven  shop- 
ping days    left  before 
Easter. 

SAMPLE  CLOAK  &  SUIT  SHOP 

OVKIl   118  AND   120  WKST  SUPERIOR  STRKET. 

Elevator  service  through  KoUey  Hardware. 
D.  VAN  BAALEN  A  i'O. 


tlon      of      washing      the      after-dinner    ^> 

dishes."  1  ■ 

•      •      • 

Pauline    Frederick    as    "the    barefoot  i 

beauty,"   a   radiantly    happy   girl,   with  \ 

hair    streaming    behind  \ 

"BAUEFOOT^    her  as  she  speeds  mad-  ; 

BKAI:tv         ly  down  the  coarse  and 
AT  THE  REX.  wins    the    race,    Ig    one  1 
of  the  scenes   in  "Aud-  ; 
rey,"  which  holds  the  screen  today  and 
tomorrow  at  the  Rex. 

This  beautiful  star  plays  the  title 
part  of  Mary  Johnston's  celebrated 
novel,  "Audrey,"  and  the  story  be- 
comes all  the  more  vivid,  even  to  those 
who  have  read  the  novel  many  times, 
by  the  handling  of  a  capable  cast  un- 
der the  direction  of  Adolph  Zukor, 
president  of  the  company,  that  secured 
the  exclusive  rights  to  the  Audrey 
novel  for  pictures. 

In  the  story  and  the  play  Audrey  Is 
forced  to  take  refuge  with  an  old 
woman  who  Is  supposed  to  be  a  witch. 
The  neighbors,  hearing  this,  form  a 
mob  to  kill  them  both.  Adroitly  hid- 
ing the  old  woman.  Audrey  Is  forced 
,  Into  the  water.  She  swims  to  Safety, 
hut  this  does  not  tell  the  story  com- 
pletely, and  no  word  description  can 
tell  It  as  the  screen  does,  under  the  fine 
work  of  Miss  Frederick  and  her  capa- 
ble  fellow-actors. 

IMctographs,    which    have    Interested 
Duluth   patrons  so  long,  will  be  shown 
also  on  these  two  days  at  the  Rex. 
»       *      • 

Mary   Plckford   earned    her  fame,  and  ; 
well  known  as  she  Is  as  a  film  favorite,  i 
It    was    not    Influence 
"I.ITTI.K  MAH%"  of        producers,        her  j 

HI-:ti  H.\S  TO      beauty  alone,  nor  any  i 

THE  L.VRIC.       one    thing    that    gave 
her  such  an  enviable 
reputation. 

Hard  work  and  talent  and  that  rare 
and  subtle  charm  of  hers  which  be- 
longs to  no  other  young  woman,  are 
all  elements  In  her  succeKs.  In  "The 
Foundling"  Miss  Plckford  will  be  seen 
today  and  Saturday  at  the  L.yrlc,  mat- 
inees and  nights. 

"The  Foundling"  has  been  seen  hero 
before,  and  Is  returned  to  the  Lyric 
because  many  could  not  see  the  picture 
before.  It  is  of  the  usual  number  of 
reels,  and  no  additional  price  is  asked. 
The  play  haji  been  pronounced  Just 
fitted  to  Miss  Plckford.  Bray  cartoon.-) 
and  I'athe  travel  features  will  be  shown 
on  both  days. 

*      •      • 

"My  Ladv's  Slipper"  with  Anita  Ste- 
wart and  Earle  Williams  featured  In 
the     title     roles    will 

"MA'  LADY'S  close  its  engagement 
SI.IPrKR"  at  the  Zelda  theater 

AT  THE  XELDA.  after  this  evening's 
performance. 

This  story  Is  one  of  the  best  from 
Rev.  Cyrus  Townsend  Brady's  pen  and 
under  the  able  direction  of  Ralph  W. 
Ince  was  made  what  it  really  1»,  a 
screen  masterpiece.  The  scenes  are 
laid  In  the  period  of  Louis  XVI.  and 
the  Parisian  atmosphere  is  upheld 
throughout   the  entire   production. 

The  stars  are  assisted  by  such  well 
known  players  as  Jos-ph  KUgour. 
Harry  Northrup.  William  Shea.  Julia 
Sawyne  Gordon  and  others  of  repute. 

Coming  tomorrow  for  one  day  only 
Maurice  Costello  a  big  favorite  with 
n'otlon  picture  goers  will  make  his  ap- 
pearance for  the  first  time  In  more 
tlian  a  year  In  Duluth  In  a  gripping 
story  of  romance  and  adventure.  "The 
Crown  Prince's  Double."  a  five  part 
Blue  Ribbon  feature.  Costello  has  the 
role  of  crown  prince  of  Ostrau,  who  Is 
driven  Into  exile  by  a  revolution  in  his 
principality.  Costello  also  plays  a  dual 
part. 

Opportunities  for  You 

In  the  grocery  and  meat  market  ads  In 

The  Herald  tonight. 

— « 

THE  FIRST  "PUSH  BUTTON." 
Magazine  of  American  Industry: 
Benjamin  Franklin  invented  the  elec- 
tric "push  button."  This  was  accom- 
plished In  1761.  He  "8ho<rked"  the  rail- 
ing In  front  of  his  Philadelphia  resi- 
dence, finding  the  Idlers  of  the  street 
were  too  fond  of  gathering  under  his 
window.  This  so  alarmed  them  that 
they  no  longer  gave  the  philosopher  of- 
fense. 


East  Y  Neckwear 

Fasclnatlqir  n^  style* — dainty 

as  can   be.  * 

Prices  ranve    ■  . .  .25r  to  96.50 
S<rong   llaew.  .  .65o,   »8e,  91.25 

Which  wlll^ou  have — they're  all 

mighty  goo4  looking. 


THE  STORE  FOR  SERVICi:.  

lis- lift- 11 7- 119  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET.  DULUTH.  MINN. 


For  Sunday  Letters 

Refined    stationery    adds    much 
to  vour  writing. 
Boxed  papern — Crane'ti  ArlMo- 
cralle    qnalttlrM.     SSo    to    91.25> 

See    the    6Sc    and    98c    boxes—un- 
usually  fine — you'll   agree. 


Easter  Garment  Selling  Is  Now  at  High  Tide ! 

Our  garment  section  is  overflowing  with  fashionable  apparel  for  women  who  appreciate  distinction  in  dress 

Tomorrow's  assortments  are  splendidly  complete.  Several  l  You  will  fare  much  better  lluin  those  who  wait  until  next 
belated  shipments  have  arrived  this  week.  You  will  enjoy  see-  week.  You  know  that  the  scarcity  of  dyes  makes  it  dangerous 
ing  the  many  pretty  things— and  you  will  still  more  enjoy  trying  to  delay  choosing.  Later  on  many  materials  will  be  unpro- 
on  some  of  these  fetching  fashions.  curable. 

Choose  the  style  that  is  most  becoming  to  you.  |       Choose  now.  Get  the  shade  you  want  when  you  can  get  it. 


See  the  Easter  Suits,  Coats  and  Dresses  at 


25 


STOP,  LOOK  AND  USTEN! 

Tomorrow,  Saturday,  April  15th 
at  12:00  o'Clock  Noon 

Wc  open  in  the  Oak  Hall  Building,  No.  11  Second  Avenue  West,  a 

SPECIALTY  BOOT  SHOP 

We  will  place  on   sale   a  $5,000  stock  of  up-to-date   shoes,  consisting  of  Men's    and    Women's 
Footwear,  at  a  saving  to  you  of  from  $1.02  to  $1.!>2  a  pair. 

How  can  we  do  it?  We  will  explain — For  Spot  Cash.  We  purchased  a  bunch  of  traveling 
Ticn's  samples  and  countermanded  orders.  We  lealt  direct  with  the  manufacturers  and  paid  no 
commissions.     Some   lots   we   bought   from   one-  hird  to  one-half  off. 

FOR  THIS  OPENING 

\Vc  purchased  some  of  the  newest  novelties  in  Women's  Shoes,  consisting  of  white,  gray,  cham- 
pagne, green,  purple  and  Havana  brown. 
Others  charge  $4.00  and  up.    Our  price— 


We  have  specialized  in  garments  to  sell  at  these' 
prices.  We  have  persuaded  .some  of  our  best  mak- 
ers to  co-operate  with  us.  We  have  chosen  un- 
usually good  materials.  We  have  worked  in  little 
style  touches — we  have  marked  them  to  sell  on  ex- 
ceptionally close  margins. 

You  will  certainly  appreciate  the  style,  the  qual- 
ity we  have  for  you  at  these  very  popular  prices. 


Urre  Are  Special  Styleit  for 

Each   of  the  Following 

T>pe«. 

.Jaunty  models  for  the 
Juvenile.  Thlc  styles  for 
the  youthful.  Becoming 
models  for  the  slender  fig- 
ure. Fashionable  "stouts" 
that  appear  slender.  Re- 
fined styles  for  the  matron. 
Lovable  models  for  the 
elderly. 


Of  course,  there  are  some  for  more  and  some  for  less, 
but  the  prices  mentioned  above  seem  about  what  nine 
women  out  of  ten  prefer  We  wish  we  could  promise  as 
good  values  a  month  hence,  but  that  now  seems  alto- 
gether impossible  for  any  house  to  hope  for. 

We  will  look   for  you  tomorrow.       Better 

come   early.       You'll    get    quicker  service. 

You   know  how  busy  we'll  be   later,  and   if    any    little 

changes  are  needed — Ukely  we  can  do  them  in  time  for 

your  Sunday  wear. 


There  Is  Some  One  Partic- 
ular Style  in  Millinery 
Most  Becoming  to  You. 
Which  Is  It? 

It  may  be  a  broad  brimmed  sailor  with  lots  of 
dash  and  daring.  It  may  be  a  quaint  little  Poke 
as  demurely  modest  as  the  proverbial  daisy.  It 
may  be  a  high-crowned  flower  pot  in  full  bloom 
to  add  height  taken  away  by  the  season's  shorter 
skirts.  It  may  be  a  toque  of  rare  charm.  It  may 
be  one  of  scores  and  scores  of  various  shapes  and 
trims  for  fashion  this  season  gives  a  wide  latitude 
of  choice. 

Choose  which  you  will  at  Gray's — 
'tis  fashionable  if  its  becoming. 

And  in  a  season  like  this  one  may  well  be 
thankful  that  at  Gray's  there  are  milliners  who 
are  close  students  of  style  and  artists  in  its  ex- 
pression. They  study  your  requirements  and  as- 
sist in  selecting  a  hat  that  expresses  your  indi- 
viduality. We  hope  to  have  the  pleasure  of  serv- 
ing you  tomorrow. 

Let  us  send  your  hat  home  for  Sunday. 


Here  Is  One  of  the 
Crinoline  Bags. 

How  Do  You  Like  It  ? 


They  are  decid- 
edly different  and 
rather     cunningly 
shaped,  we  think, 
—quite  bouffant — 
and  in  Hue  just  a 
miniature  of  some 
of  the  new   ideas 
in    skirts.      How- 
ever,   we    will 
be    glad    to 
show  you  them 
and  hear  j'our 
opinion. 

They  are  of 
moire  and  armure  silk,  very  dain- 
tily fitted  with  coin  purse  and 
mirror  in  rich  old  rose,  navy  and 
black   at   $6.50  each. 


Jflorist 

921  €a£rt  Wv^  Street 

The  Only  Grower  of  Plants  and  Cut  Flowers  In  Duluth. 

Cxtenb£(  a  Corbial  Snbttatton 
to  gou  to  liJiiit  l^ii  #rcen!jou£(cj( 

^unbap,  ^ril  16 

anb  ^ee  ?|isi  ^onbcrf  ul  ©isplap  of 
Casfter  plants:  Proton  in  Bulutf) 


Custom  Decrees  New 
Hosiery  For  Easter 

Here  are  the  fashion  favored  silk 
hose  in  this  season's  newest  tints, 
also  the  wanted  black  and  white. 
Try  a  pair  of  these  pure  dye  full- 
fashioned  ho.se.  We  recommend  the 
quality.    All  sizes,  $1  the  pair. 

Other  silk  hose  at  75c  the  pair. 

Fiber  silk  hose,  50c  the  pair. 

"New  Fashioned"  lisle  hose. 

These  "New  Fashioned"  cotton 
lisle  hose  arc  fashioned  without  a 
seam.  The.y  are  narrowed  in  the 
knitting  instead  giving  maximum 
comfort  and  service. 

All  sizes,  black  and  white,  25c  and 
35c  the  pair. 


Easter  Togs  for  the  Little  Tots 


Dress  up  the  little  folks  for  Easter  and  note  their  keen  appreciation  of  the  new  sum- 
mer clothes. 


Here  are  new  dresses,  new  coats  and  new 
hats  for  your  choosing.  Bring  the  children  to 
our  third  floor  tomorrow  and  try  on  the  new 
things.  See  what  is  the  most  becoming  and  what 
is  best  suited  for  their  inidividual  needs. 

Dresses  of  dainty  sheer  materials  in  patterns 
and  styles  that  will  give  jouthful  charm  to  the 
little  maid.  Unustial  effective  styles  at  $2.50  and 
$3.50.     Others  at  as  low  as  50c  up  to  $15.00. 


Boys'  tub  suits,  very  special  value  at  $1.25. 
Other  qualities  at  75c.  $1.00,  $2.00  and  $2.50. 

Boys'  and  girls'  hats.  Smart  mannish  styles 
in  all  cloth  or  nifty  cloth  and  straw  combinations 
at  50c,  75c  and  $1.25.  The  50c  ones  are  especially 
good-looking. 

Simple  little  straw  shapes  for  girls  most  effec- 
tively trimmed  at  50c  to  $7.00.  There  is  quite 
a   pleasing   variety   at  $125. 


Let  Your  Easter  Footwear  Be  Royal  Queen  Quality 


You  will  certainly  appreciate  the  good-looking  Queen  Quality  shoes  this  season. 

For  years  you  have  known  of  Queen  Quality.  You 
know  that  Queen  Quality  shoes  are  always  good  shoes 
and  when  you  see  the  stylish  models  we  have  ready  for 
you  tomorrow  you  will  be  delighted.  There's  a  snap 
and  a  style  about  them  that  appeals  to  your  good  taste. 
There's  that  substantial,  serviceable  quality  look  that 
appeals  to  your  good  sense.   ■|m|iu|i\\^v|y   ^||  I  IjT   x     g 


Not  only  that  the  assort 
ment  of  sizes  is  so  complete 
and  so  car.efully  graded  that 
you  may  find  a  shoe  that 
seems  to  Satisfy  every  inch 
of  your  foot. 


And  this  season  when  skirts  show  the  shoes  as  prom- 
inently as  they  do  one  cannot  be  too  careful  in  get- 
ting a  shoe  that  is  exactly  right. 

So  let  our  shoe  experts  fit  you  tomorrow.  Let 
them  find  a  shoe  that  will  exactly  suit  your  fancy  and 
be  the  last  word  in  style. 

The  price  will  be  reason- 
able. 

$3.50,  $4.00,  $4.50,  $5.00, 
$5.50  and  $6.00. 

Choose  which  you  will — 
you  will  have  fullest  satis- 
faction here  now. 


I 


>  *> 


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II  I   ^  B" 


♦— ■*■ 


I. 


^iiWi    »i««i»,^i«»«<i— i— 1  I    VM  Bill 


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12 


Friday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


THE  DULUTH  HERALD 

AN   INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER 

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TODAY  IN  HISTORY.  ? 


Lincoln  assassinated,  1865. 

On  the  nlKht  of  April  14,  1866.  Lin- 
coln attendfd  a  perfornmncp  of  "Our 
A.iMilian  C'dUiilir'  at  Ford'.-s  thpat^r. 
VVhil.  hr  ."at  in  his  box  John  Wilkos 
Hcoih.  a  diHsipated  and  fanatic  actor, 
shot  him  In  tho  head  from  behind  and 
ipnp.d  to  the  staRe,  shoutt  d  "Sic  sem- 
p«i  lyraiinis."  and  tscapod  through  the 
wliii;.>».  Lincoln,  stricken  unconscious, 
w.is  moved  to  a  house  across  the  str^nt, 
wli'  I'    ho  dltd  next  mornlnj. 

KK.\|tI\G— (Afflllahle  In  Duluth  public  llhrary)— 1.  T. 
Mfir-".  Jr.,  "Ahralium  l.linoln.  a  HUfory"  U'lteuded  and 
Infriiiiifd,  thMigh  Komewhut  partisan);  Carl  Kchuri, 
"Al.r.iiiain  Uncoln"  (a  iioubU  ami  bympdthetl<:  bto- 
graphlial  i-ssay). 


t 


COMPLEXITIES. 

The  plot  thickens. 

GcTinany  dctties.  and  we  cannot  believe 
her  denial. 

Mexico  asks  us  please  to  step  out  of  Mex- 
ico, and  wc  can't  think  of  doing  it  with  our 
vital  errand  undone. 

The  clash  at  Parral,  where  American  sol- 
diers entering  the  town  were  fired  upon  by 
suspicious  natives  and  a  fight  occurred, 
shows  the  tinder  nature  of  what  we  are 
dealing  with  there;  though  we  have  yet  to 
learn  if  the  American  officers  used  the  best 
judgment  in  marching  into  town  when  the 
understanding  was  that  they  were  to  avoid 
towns. 

Meanwhile  Germany's  flimsy  defense  is 
mere  irritation,  sounding  alfiiost  like  con- 
temptuous defiance,  and  is  confirmation  of 
the  belief  that  her  submarine  policy  of  late 
has  lifcn  not  only  in  wanton  disregard  of 
solemn  pledges  to  us,  but  of  international 
law  and  the  laws  of  humanity  and  decency. 
A  break  is  increasingly  difficult  to  avoid, 
and  Germany  is  destroying  even  the  desire 
to  avoid  it. 

In  the  domestic  field  the  oil  trust,  over 
whom  the  nation  in  the  Roosevelt  and  Taft 
time  gained  a  great  victory,  shows  the  same 
old  remorseless  efficiency  in  greedy  exac- 
tions. Wc  indicted,  tried  and  convicted  the 
oil  trust,  and  sentenced  it  to  capital  punish- 
ment. 

"But  what  srood   came  of  It  at  last?" 
Quoth  little  Pett-ikln. 
"Why,  tliat  I  cannot  tell."  «ald  he; 
r.ut  'twas  a  famous  vlctoree." 

The  nation,  confident  and  strong  in  the 
good  sense,  sanity,  poise  and  patriotism  of 
the  president,  will  in  all  these  matters  hope 
for  the  best  but  be  ready  for  the  worst. 


April   freezes  bring'  May  sneezes. 

• • 

WHAT  IS  THE  OPPOSITION  PROGRAM? 

Whether  their  nominee  is  Roosevelt, 
Hughes,  Root,  McCall  or  La  Follette,  it 
seems  fairly  well  assured  that  the  Republic- 
ans will  enter  the  campaign  with  the  idea  of 
making  our  foreign  relations  the  issue.  The 
tariff  issue  is  dead,  the  "hard  times"  cry  is 
impossible  and  Wilson's  economic,  fiscal 
and  social  achievements  are  beyond  criti- 
cism. Tiiere  seems  to  be  nothing  left  but 
the  issue  of  foreign  relations. 

The  Republicans  must  be  aware  of  the 
delicacy  of  this  issue.  What  seems  a  good 
stand  for  them  in  June  may  be  utterly 
worthless  in  November.  What  they  criti- 
cize in  June  may  justify  itself  overwhelm- 
ingly before  fall.  Theories  advanced  now 
may  be  exploded  before  harvest  time. 
Charges  made  now  may  fall  to  the  ground 
in  midsummer.  Events  are  happening  fast 
the  world  over,  and  no  possible  conception 
of  an  opposition  foreign  policy  can  be  guar- 
anteed  to  remain  sound  over  night. 

But  taking  matters  as  they  stand,  what 
would  Repiiblicans  do  about  them  besides 
vaguely  criticize  what  Wilson  did  or  did 
not  do?  If  they  condemn  his  policies,  what 
policies  do  they  offer  in  place  of  them? 

They  may  urge  greater  preparedness;  but 
they  must  do  that  at  their  own  risk,  for  the 
chances  are  ten  to  one  that  before  the  cam- 
paign is  fairly  begun  a  program  of  pre- 
paredness as  great  as  the  majority  of  the 
American  people  will  tolerate  will  be  en- 
acted into  law. 

They  condemn  the  Wilson  program  to- 
ward Mexico.  What  would  they  have  done? 
How  are  they  to  get  around  the  fact  that 
for  two  years  President  Taft  followed  much 
\ht  same  program?  They  condemn  "watch- 
ful waiting';  do  they  dare  advocate  inter- 
vention? 

They  condemn  the  Wilson  attitude  to- 
ward the  European  conflict.  What  will 
they  offer  in  place  of  it?  Will  they  pro- 
pose an  ultimatum  to  Germany  calling  upon 
it  to  abandon  its  submarine  warfare  on  mer- 
chants ships,  threatening  war  if  it  fails  to 
obey?  Will  they  propose  ari  ultimatum  to 
Great  Britain  directing  it  to  revoke  its  or- 
ders in  council,  threatening  war  if  it  re- 
fuses? 

The  Republicans  must  raise  an  issue 
against  the  Wilson  administration.  They 
cannot  raise  it  by  mere  partisan,   uncon- 


structive,  bushwhacking  criticism.  When 
they  say  Wilson's  policies  have  been  wrong, 
they  must  also  say  what  alternative  policies 
they  offer.  Against  a  policy  that  has  kept 
us  honorably  out  of  war,  they  must  set  up 
a  policy  that  will  sound  better,  that  will 
have  the  virility  and  force  they  clamor  for, 
and  that  yet  will  not  plunge  us  into  war. 

Where  Republican  statements  thus  far 
liave  not  been  mere  echoes  of  Wilson,  they 
have  been  wholly  unconstructive  criticisms 
without  any  offer  of  better  policies.  Roose- 
velt and  Root  condemned  Wilson  for  not 
having  protested  against  the  German  in- 
vasion of  Belgium;  yet  Roosevelt  is  on  rec- 
ord as  having  at  the  time  argued  against  a 
protest,  and  Root,  though  he  was  then  in 
public   life,   was  utterly  silent. 

Intrinsically,  the  Republican  position  is 
that  the  Republicans  are  out  and  want  to 
get  in.  But  that  doesn't  interest  a  very 
large  proportion  of  the  voters.  It  is  enough 
to  prompt  Republicans  to  criticize  and  con- 
demn; it  is  not  enough  to  enlist  public 
sympathy.  iCor  will  criticism  and  condem- 
nation win  an  election.  The  only  way  the 
Republicans  can  win  is  not  only  to  convince 
the  voters  that  the  Wilson  policies  have 
been  wrong,  but  to  convince  them  that  the 
Republican  candidate  has  a  stronger,  wiser 
and  better  policy. 

That,  as  the  Republicans  will  find,  is  not 

so  easy  as  mere  carping  criticism. 

# 

Now  that  the  precedent  has  been  estab- 
lished of  sinking  a  cargoluss  ship,  maybe  we 
can  look  nf.Kt  for  attacks  on  persons  who 
presume  to  think  about  what  they  might  do 
If  they  had  the  money  to  buy  a  few  steamera 
for  commercial  purposes. 

• 

THE  ISSUE  OF  "AMERICANISM." 

The  campaign  issue,  if  the  Roosevelt 
forces  win  at  Chicago,  is  to  be  "American- 
ism," they  say,  and  "Patriotism." 

As  to  Roosevelt  winning  at  Chicago, 
that's  settled.'  Roosevelt  will  be  the  nomi- 
nee. The  party  dares  not  beat  him,  know- 
ing that  if  it  docs  he  will  most  certainly 
turn  around  and  repeat  his  great  1912  act, 
when  he  scuttled  the  ship  because  they 
would  jiot  let  him  play  captain.  The  Re- 
publicans must  take  him,  whether  they  like 
it  or  not;  and  there's  an  end  of  that. 

As  to  the  issues,  it  will  be  fine  for  Roose- 
velt— if  it  works. 

Though  events  and  the  public  have  a  way 
of  making  issues  that  at  all  times  is  em- 
barrassing to  politicians.  Politicians  al- 
ways try  to  force  hand-picked  issues  that 
will  make  it  easy  for  them.  Events  and  the 
public  almost  invariably  push  forward  is- 
sues of  their  own  without  regard  to  what 
the  politicians  want.  .  McKinley,  for  in- 
stance, eagerly  desired  to  make  the  1896 
campaign  hinge  on  the  tariff  issue;  but  al- 
most immediately  the  tariff  was  forgotten. 

The  Roosevelt  plan  will  be  ridiculously 
simple  and  easy — if  it  works. 

All  he  has  to  do  is  to  stand  everybody. 
up_every  voter,  the  whole  country  over. 

"Attention!  All  who  are  for  America  and 
are  patriotic  kindly  step  to  the  left.  Very 
well;  thank  you.  That's  the  Roosevelt  fol- 
lowing. Now  if  those  who  are  against 
America  and  are  unpatriotic  will  kindly — 
What!  Nontf?  Ah  ha!  You  see?  It's 
Roosevelt  by  acclamation!" 

Great!     If  It  would  only  work! 
• 

It  does  seem  as  If  Shakespeare's  tercen- 
tenary wouldn't  be  a  bad  time  for  the  elvil- 
iTied  world  to  agree  on  aome  way  of  spelling 
his  nanit^. 


Not  Politics  But  Business 


Editorial 


William  Allen  White,  the  most  Idealistic  of 
•11    the    rrogresslve    leader$    who    have    fol 
lowed     Col.     Rooaevelt's     polltlcaJ     fortune 
hastens  to  welcome  Root  and  Lodge  and  Pen 
rose  and  Sm»ot  and   "the  other   Republican 
who     opposed     us     In     1»12."     provided     the 
"swing  In  behind  our  banner"  and  remember 
that  "they  are  coming  to  our  leader  and  our 
program." 

Mr,  White  knows  little  of  the  Republican 
party  and  leas  of  Col.  Roosevelt  If  he  thinks 
that  there  Is  a  solitary  Progressive  atom 
drifting  In  the  wave  of  this  Republican 
movement  to  nominate  the  colonel  for  presi- 
dent. "Our  leader"  Is  there,  but  "our  Pro- 
gram" Is  In  the  garbage  pall. 

The  Roosevelt  candidacy  la  not  politics 
but  business,  and  the  Republicans  who  are 
hospitable  to  it  are  hospitable  for  business 
reasons.  That  is  why  It  Is  almost  certain  to 
aucceed  at  Chicago.  Business  of  a  certain 
kind  is  In  control  of  the  Republican  party 
and  that  particular  kind  of  business  now 
finds  tho  colonel  very  useful  to  Its  purposes. 

His  foreign  policy  la  perfectly  adapted  to 
the  objects  of  the  great  munltlona  manufac- 
turers, the  head  of  whom  Is  the  firm  of  J.  P. 
Morgan  &  Co. — "the  Morgan  Inter^Sta  that 
have  been  so  frlondly  to  us." 

His  preparedness  program  is  likewise  per- 
fectly adapted  to  the  objects  of  the«e  munl- 
tlona makers,  for  they  wish  to  put  the  United 
Statea  on  a  war  basis  In  time  of  peace. 

Hla  Mexican  policy  fits  In  with  all  the 
plans  of  the  banking  houses  that  Invested  in 
Huerta  securities  which  they  are  afraid  that 
Carranza  will  Invalidate.  It  fits  In,  too.  with 
the  plans  of  those  American  Interests  in 
Mexico  which  have  good  reason  to  know  that 
any  honest  Mexican  government  will  cancel 
their  concession*.  They  want  a  Blg-Stlck 
protectorate  over  Mexico  which  will  con- 
tinue the  privileges  that  they  acquired  from 
a  corrupt  and  despotic  government  at  the 
expense  of  the  Mexican  people. 

Col.  Roosevelt's  tariff  policy  has  always 
been  the  tariff  policy  of  the  monopoly  pro- 
tectionists, and  the  monopoly  protectlonlst.s 
are  among  the  fiercest  enemies  of  President 
Wilson. 

As  for  W^all  Street,  it  alwaya  prefers  a  R**- 
publlcan.  however  erratic  and  uncertain,  with 
whom  It  can  do  buslnesH,  to  a  Democrat, 
however  stable  and  consistent,  with  whom 
it  cannot  do  business.  Wall  Street  may  havo 
some  bitter  recollections  of  Theodore  Roose- 
velt, but  It  can  never  forget  that  Woodrow 
Wilson  Is  the  man  who  plugged  the  pipe  Hngj 
Into  the  United  States  treasury. 

The  Old  Guard  knows  the  colonel  and' 
knows  how  to  deal  with  him.  It  worked  with 
him  for  years  and  the  partnership  was  prof- 
itable to  all  concerned.  For  reasons  of  party 
expediency  it  was  obliged  to  oppose  him  In 
1912  but  It  much  prefers  the  colonel  to  a 
man  like  Justice  Hughes,  who  will  neither 
bargain  nor  barter. 

In  the  matter  of  the  German  vote,  we  have 
no  doubt  that  negotiations  are  already  pend- 
ing. 

What  Mr.  White  fails  to  understand  Is  that 
"our  program"  is  Hannalsm  under  a  new 
management,  with  all  the  old  elements  or 
Hannalsm  plus  militarism,  imperialism  and 
war. 

Dollar-government  Republicans  are  willing 


HONESTY  IN  POLITICS. 

On  September  23,  1914,  Theodore  Roose- 
velt said  that  wc  had  no  responsibility  to- 
ward Belgium,  that  we  should  not  protest 
against  the  German  invasion  unless  we 
were  ready  to  fight,  and  that  we  should 
cling  to  our  policy  of  neutrality  and  non- 
interference. One  very  good  reason  he 
gave  lor  this  was  that  if  we  keep  our  hands 
out  of  the  war,  we  will  at  the  war's  end  be 
in  a  better  position  to  help  toward  making 
peace. 

In  this  spring  of  1916,  the  opening 
months  of  the  presidential  campaign,  Theo- 
dore Roosevelt  denounces  President  Wil- 
son like  a  pickpocket  because  he  didn't  pro- 
test and  interfere  when  Belgian  neutrality 
was  wantonly  violated. 

Maybe  he  changed  his  mind. 

Well,  if  he  did,  WHY  NOT  BE  HON- 
EST AND  SAY  SO?  Wouldn't  that  be 
the  square,  manly,  honest  thing  to  do? 

But  not  Theodore  Roosevelt.  He  had  the 
Outlook  say — the  same  Outlook  which  had 
to  undertake  the  job  of  explaining  that 
when  he  said  he  wouldn't  under  any  cir- 
cumstances be  a  candidate  for  a  third  term 
it  didn't  mean  that  he  couldn't  take  a  third 
cup  of  coffee,  or  words  something  like  that 
— he  has  the  Outlook  say  that  his  words 
have  been  misinterpreted,  though  words 
could  not  possibly  be  plainer;  and  he  tries 
to  bluster  through  with  it! 

How  quaintly  and  characteristically 
Rooseveltianl; 

And   Roosevelt  was  the  man   who  made 

"the  square  deal"  a  popular  saying! 

• 

No  doubt-  some  good  souls  are  worrying 
becatiiie  our  troops  In  Mexico  are  not  getting 

practice  enouEh  In  trench  warfare. 

■—% 

IT  FITS  LIKE  THE  PAPER  ON  THE  WALL. 

Ormsby  McHarg,  late  Bull  Moose  dele- 
gate rustler,  is  organizing  with  the  slogan 
"\  Business  Man  for  President,"  and  with 
Mr.  du  Pont  as  his  prospective  candidate. 

Mr.  du  Pont  is  a  powder  maker.  He  is 
profoundly  convinced  that  this  prepared- 
ness business  cannot  possibly   go  too  far. 

He  is  also  a  "practical  man,"  like  Harri- 
nian  and  the  Colonel. 

Surely  this  is  the  very  thing  the  Colonel 

has  been  looking  for.     Why  seek  further? 

« 

Few  things  surpass  green  atocklngs  when 
It  comes  to  persistence  In  attracting  atten- 
tion. 


Why  It  Must  Be  Roosevelt 


(Ind.  Dm.) 


Joseph  H.  Choate,  who  is  supporting  Ellhu 

ot  for  president,  finds  It  Inconceivable  that 

Republicans    should    nominate    Theodore 

sevelt.     Why  Inconceivable? 

he  Roosevelt   disqualifications   which   Mr. 

oate  aummarizea  have  little  to  do  with  the 

issue: 

Mr.    Roosevelt    Is   not    a    "tried"    Re- 
publican,  or   rather   he   was   "tried"    in 
1912  and  found  wanting'.    He  then  de- 
liberately   attempted     to     destroy     the 
4^  w%  party,    bolted    from   it    and    set    up    his 
.r -jP  Progressive  machine  for  the  sole  pur- 
'      pose  of  defeating  Mr.  Taft  and  grati- 
fying his  own  selfiah  aims. 

Th's  serves  verj'  well  as  a  description  of 
what  Jloosevelt  did  In  1912.  but  it  In  no  way 
acts. as  a  barrier  to  Roosevelt's  nomination 
iy  the  Republicans  in  1916.  It  may  be  an 
advantage  to  him. 

In  1905  William  Randolph  Hearst,  who  was 
a  Tammany  member  of  congress  from  New 
'York  c'ty.  bolted  the  renomlnatlon  of  Mayor 
MeClellan.  organized  a  political  party  of  his 
own  and  ran  for  mayor  on  an  Independent 
ticket.  During  that  campaign  he  made  most 
vituperative  and  libelous  attacks  upon 
Charles  F.  Murphy.  He  even  caricatured 
ICurphy  as  a  convict  In  prison  stripes,  and 
iuthough  he  did  not  aucceed  in  defeating 
Mayor  MeClellan  he  came  within  2,000  votes 
Of  It. 

The  next  year.  1906,  Charles  F.  Murphy 
nominated  William  R.  Hearst  for  governor. 
It  was  even  necessary  for  Tammany  to  steal 
the  nomination  after  Grady  had  done  "the 
dirtiest  day's  work  of  my  life"  In  order  to 
give  it  to  Hearst,  but  Hearst  was  nominated, 
and  Hearst  accepted. 

The  Republican  party  today  is  guided  by 
the  same  lofty  standard  of  political  morals 
that  guided  Tammany  In  1906.  It  la  under 
the  same  sort  of  corporation  control,  those 
that  dominate  the  Republican  party  beiutf 
rather  more  greedy  and  aggressive,  but  all 
of  them  centering  in  Wall  Street  and  Its 
great  financial  houses.  Theodore  Roosevelt's 
political  principles  do  not  differ  esseptlajly 
from  William  Randolph  Hearst's  political 
principles.  In  practice  Hearst  apends  his  own 
money  and  Roosevelt  spends  Perkins'  money, 
but  that  distinction  Is  not  important. 

Tammany  surrendered  to  Hearst  In  1906 
because  he  had  a  political  party  of  his  own 
which  controlled  the  balance  of  power  In  the 
state.  Roosevelt  is  in  a  situation  no  less  fa- 
vorable than  Hearst's.  His  political  party, 
with  himself  as  its  candidate,  holds  the  bal- 
•an'ee  of  power.  In  1906  it  would  have  seemed 
•Inconceivable"  to  Mr.  Choate  that  Tammany 
would  nominate  Hearst  for  governor,  yet 
Tammany  did.  With  this  illustrious  prece- 
dent, why  should  Mr.  Choate  regard  it  as  In- 
conceivable that  the  Republicans  will  nomi- 
nate Roosevelt  for  president  in  1916? 

Mr.  Choate  forgets  that  Wall  Street  wants 
a  reunited  Republican  party,  and  unless  the 
party  Is  reunited  there  will  not  be  much 
"aoap."  But  with  a  reunited  party  the  Re- 
publican campaign  contributions  for  1916 
will  out-Hanna  Hanna  and  the  glad  old  "na- 
tional-honor" days  of  1896.  Every  Repub- 
Uo^ti  politician  wants  some  of  that  money 
for  his  organization,  and  he  understands  tlie 
■eerms  on  which  it  Is  to  be  had — party  har- 
hfony.  There  can  be  no  harmony  which 
leaves    Roosevelt    out   of   the    reckoning,    and 


.„    .ake    «<>«-;;;^-    •."„'„';»f;;,-'',%;';reUh.  ha,  .he  ,h,p-h.„d.     W...  street  ..  more 


help  them  ove 

Is  the  mo.«(t  available  man;  for  if  they  reject  ' 
him  he  can  poll  enough  votes  as  a  Progress* 
Ive  candidate  to  make  the  defeat  of  their 
ticket  certain.  Col.  Roosevelt-  is  willing  to 
make  a  deal  with  anybody  if  such  a  deal  will 
give  him  even  a  flehting  chance  lonmmt  back 
to  the  White  House.  Thai  is  the  paychoiflsy 
of  the  situation. 

Mr.  White  and  his  Progressive  friends  may 
as  well  face  the  facts  first  as  last. 


A  Great  Liberal  of  Olden  Times 

I'e  all  thln|4r  '     - 
the    treasury"  '      New 


\% 


Ran  Francisco  Bulletin:  "Abov 
good  policy  Is  to  be  used  that 
and  moneys  of  a  state  be  not  gathered 
a  fe'w  hands;  for  otherwise  a  state  may  h^' 
great  stock  and  yet  starve;  and  money  Is  like 
muck,  not  good  except  It  be  spread.  This 
Is  dotie  chiefly  by  suppressing  or.  at  leait, 
keeping  a  straight  hand  upon  the  devouring 
trades  of  usury,  ingrosslng.  great  pasturage* 
and   the  like." 

In  other  words,  according  to  Sir  Francis 
Bacon,  who  died  three  centuries  ago.  the 
centralization  of  wealth  is  bad,  great  land- 
holdings  are  bad.  and  the  "devouring  trades" 
by  which  non-producers  absorb  the  profits  of 
producers  are  bad.  His  own  England,  dis- 
regarding his  warning,  has  been  a  shocking 
example  of  a  state  whose  "stock"  was  great, 
but  whose  people.  In  about  ten  per  cent  of 
the  cases,  were  actually  undergoing  slow 
starvation. 

"Ingrosslng"  •would  now  be  called  specula- 
tion. "Only  a  few  of  the  farmers  who  raised 
last  year'a  crop."  says  Collier's  Weekly,  dis- 
cussing grain  prices,  "were  much  benefited 
by  the  rise.  The  poorer  onea  had  to  sell 
their  wheat  as  soon  as  it  was  threshed  and 
take  what  the  big  dealers  were  willing  to 
pay."  That  is,  the  "hig  dealers,"  who  had 
taken  no  part  in  the  farmers'  struggle  with 
the  soil,  soaked  up  most  of  the  compensatlnif 
profit.  In  bad  years  the  farmer  bears  the 
loss;  In  good  years  someone  else  frequently 
makes    off   with   the    gain. 

To  the  Elizabethan  mind  this  was  rankly 
immoral.  To  modern  Americans  it  i.<«  prob- 
ably not  so  much  Immoral  as  impolitic,  not 
bad,  but  bad  business.  On  that  basis  some* 
thing  may  be  done  about  It.  But  even  our 
radicals  would  hardly  dare  to  be  as  extreme 
as  Sir  Francis  Bacon,  the  great  lord,  the 
dignified  philosopher,  the  property-loving 
conservative  of  three  centuries  back.  We 
have  set  up  economic  dogmas  that  were  not 
worshiped   In  his  time. 


,^an  willing  to  take  Roosevelt  in  order  to 
get  a  Republican  congress,  and  it  Is  Wall 
Street   that  pays  the  freight. 

There  might  have  been  a  Republican  party 
once  whose  surrender  to  a  third-term  bolter 
would  have  been  ''inconceivable,"  but  there  is 
no  such  RepuMlcan  party  today.  It  will 
never  be  said  of  the  very  practical  gentle- 
men who  now  control  It  that  they  have  that 
"chastity  ,of  honor  which  felt  a  stain  like  a 
uft  wound,"  Their  motto  la  the  motto  of  the 
plutocratic  father  of  Mr.  Dooley'a  parlor  So- 
cialist—"Get  the  goods." 


iDtyortant. 

Judge:  The  Suitor — Understand,  I  can  sup- 
port your  daughter  In  the  style  to  which  she 
Is  accustomed. 

Her  Father — Yes,  but  what  alimony  can 
you  pay  her  when  you  marry  again?  ^ 


Rippling  Rhymes 


By  Walt  Mason 


Tlie  Colonel's  DIaeovery* 

York  Herald:  If  his  travels  had  led 
him  tfl^jUiAt  direction,  the  colonel  might  have 
discovered  his  whiskered  devll-blrd  In  a 
glass  case  In  the  Brooklyn  museum.  Or  If  he 
had  turned  to  the  Encyclopedia  Britannica, 
eleventh  edition,  volume  XIII.  page  64S,  he 
would  have  found  a  column  signed  Alfred 
Newton,  fellow  of  the  Royal  society,  on 
'•what  English  writers  call  the  oll-blrd,  tha 
ateatomls  carlpensls  of  the  ornithologists,  a 
very  remarkable  bird,  first  described  by 
Alexander  von  Humboldt."  and  «o  on,  with 
full  details  as  to  the  creature's  habits  and 
characteristics,  as  noted  by  a  dozen  sclentlHo 
observers.  But  as  a  matter  of  fact,  the  devll- 
4>lrd  was  his  original  discovery. 

The  colonel  was  born  to  be  a  discoverer, 
and  all  his  life  he  has  lived  up  to  his  duties. 
He  discovered  Cuba,  British  East  Africa  anl 
the  River  of  Doubt.  He  discovered  wildcats, 
mountain  lions,  bears  and  sparrows.  He  dis- 
covered the  Irl.««h  sagaa  Edward  Arlington 
Robinson  and  Thucydides.  He  discovered 
civil  service  reform,  Armageddon,  social  Jus- 
tice and  the  Golden  Rule.  It  would  require  a 
work  the  size  of  the  Encyclopedia  Britan- 
nica to  do  Justice  to  the  colonel's  discoveries 
In  literature  and  ornithology.  In  poetry  and 
politics,  in  morals  and  geography.  The  col- 
onel's discoveries  are  national  events.  So 
M«rrch  24,  1916.  will  be  marked  In  the  calen- 
dar as  the  day  he  first  told  the  world  of  flnJ- 
Ihg  the  devll-blrd  in  Trinidad. 

# 
The   Sin   of  the  Coppenter  M«a. 
The  coppenter  man  aald  a  wicked  word. 

When  he  hltted  his  thumb  that  day. 
En  I  know  what  It  was,  because  I' heard. 

En  It's  aomethin'  I  dassent  say. 

He  growed  us  a  house  with  rooms  Inside  It, 

En  the  rooms  Is  full  of  floors; 
It's  my  papa's  house,  en  when  he  buyed  It. 

IX.  was  nothln'  but  Just  outdoors. 

En  they  planted  atones  In  a  hole  for  teeds. 
En  that's  how  the  house  began. 

But  I  bet  the  stones  would  have  Just  growed 
weeds. 
Except  for  the  coppenter  man, 

"Tne  coppenter  man's  got  a  face  all  black. 
With  a  bib  sewed  on  to  his  pants. 

With  pockets  In  front  en  round  the  back. 
En  he  makes  a  house  grow  like  planta. 

En  the  coppanter  man  said  a  wicked  word, 
When  he  hltted  his  thumb  that  day; 

En  I  know  what  It  was,  because  1  heard, 
En  it's  somcthin'  I  dassent  say. 


Somehow  that  prefix  "sub"  is  unfortunate 
In  moat  of  the  words  it  gets  mixed  up  with — 
except,  of  courae.  kubacriba. 


Sports. 

I  watch  the  young  men  sporting,  and 
tussling  and  cavorting,  at  divers  manly 
games,  at  wrestling,  Greek  and  Corn- 
ish, and  boxing  bouts  tin-hornish,  until 
they  break  their  hanies.  It  gives  them 
satisfaction  to  get  their  forms  in  action, 
to  strain  their  bones  and  thews ;  life  in 
their  veins  is  bubbling,  no  rheumatiz  is 
troubling  the  feet  that  fill  their  shoes. 
They  have  no  gout  or  glanders,  ring- 
bones or  yaller  janders,  no  spavins  on 
their  joints;  if  vagrant  pain  should  hit 
them,  they  merely  bid  it  quit  them,  and 
promptly  it  aroints.  I  see  them  .strive 
and  tussle,  exerting  every  niuscle — 
they  call  such  horse-play  fun;  and  iriL*^**' 
the  shade  I'm  sitting,  a-weeping  on  mj^  \.«" 
knitting;  my  active  days  are  done.  My    Eijkbe  coppenter  man  said  it  wasn't  bad, 

inintvi  ar*»  <iHff  miH   ru<fv    mv  wmeW^rs*-       •^•»  J'O"  hltted  your  thumb,  kerpat! 
joints  are  Stm  ana  rUst>,  my  wniSkersjr;  „^^j^^^,^  ^^^^  coppenter  man  to  be  had. 

gray  and  dusty,  I  creak  whene'er  I  walk^ ..  li  it  wasn't  for  words  like  that 
and  you  may  hear  me  sighing  when  I    j^^^  tt,^^^  ^„n't  no  coppenter  men. 
am  sadly  trying  to  drill  around  a  block.       we'd  aii  have  to  live  in  the  bam. 

Oh     Youth    when    \p-e  i«j  trazintr  iinon     '^tiUise  there  wouldn't  be  any  houses,  en  then, 
Kjn,    louin,  ^vnen  .Age  is  gazing  upon        ^^^  ^^^^  would  we  do— by  dam' 

your  sports  amazing,  and   energy   SQ|J     f 

Lhe  coppenter  man  said  a  wicked  word, 
ben  he  bitted  his  thumb  that  day, 
know  what  It  was,  because  I  heard, 
it's  aomethin'  I  dassent  say. 

— Edmund  Vance  Cooke. 


fine,  Age  feels  its  portion  bitter,  an<i4''C 
says,   "Though   not  a  quitter,  I  mus^ 
take  in  my  sign." 

(ProWinM  lir  TlM  AiUau  NewtMlMr  Senica) 


£a  then  he  took  lota  of  window  holea. 
But  hfc  wouldn't  tell  where  he  found  'em. 

En  then  he  aiiwed  out  some  sticks  and  poles 
En  he  growed  a  house  right  round  'em. 

En  the  black  on  his  face  isn't  soft  like  fuzz, 
■"Cause  he  rubbed  his  face  on  me. 

En  It  feeled  like  the  fur  of  a  chestnut  does 
When  it  gets  offen  the  tree. 

En  the  coppenter  man  took  a  board  en  aald 
He'd   skin   It   en   make   some   curls. 

En  I  hung  'em  onto  niy  ears  en  head 
En  they  made  me  look  like  girls. 

En  he  squinted  along  one  side,  he  did. 
En  he  aqulnted  the  other  aide  twice, 
Hn  he  told  me,  "You  squint  it,  kid," 
T  'Cause  the  coppenter  man's  reel  nice. 

But  tha  coppenter  man  said  a  wicked  word, 
*''When  he  hltted  his  thumb  that  day; 
^ald  it  out  loud,  too.  'cause  I  heard, 
lt'8  somethln'  I  dassent  say. 


Keeping  Up  With 

Minnesota  Editors 


8catt«red  ConnftnU  By  knd  About  Ncwspapen 
la  the  Goplii'r  3Ut«. 


Theae  Varyinv  Huuin  Xee«l*t 

To  every  city,  town  and  village  its  own 
peculiar  problems  and  necessities!  For  in- 
stance, the  Plummer  Pioneer  thus  calla  at- 
tention to  a  crying  evil  within  its  own  baili- 
wick: "From  the  melodious  squeak  that 
emanatea  from  the  windmill  over  the  village 
well,  one  would  be  led  to  believe  that  the 
European  war  had  affected  the  price  of  oil. 
For  heaven's  sake,  aomebody  get  busy  with 
the  lubricant." 


Statesmanship  Is  Needed, 

Not  Cheap  Partisan  Flings 

Editorial  in  tlK  Newark  News  (tep.) 


SubKcrlptlOB  Conteata. 

Straight  language  and  true  is  this  from  the 
Princeton  Union:  "The  Lake  City  Leader  ex- 
presses its  disapproval  of  subscription  con- 
tests, but  adds  that  it  is  the  only  policy 
that  will  keep  alive  a  weak  publication  that 
relies  more  on  pleadings  than  publishing 
to  survive.  The  fact  is  that  a  contest  sel- 
dom bolsters  up  a  languishing  paper.  The 
public  bec.')mes  weary  of  continually  being 
importuned  to  lend  support  to  a  publication 
guiltless  of  merit,  and  eventually  turns  a 
deaf  ear  to  the  sobbing  solicitor." 


Remember  Dr.  Harvey  W.T 

The  enemies  of  our  former  head  of  the 
pure  food  bureau  at  Washington  simply 
can't  let  up  on  him,  it  seems.  Here's  the 
Sauk  Rapids  Sentinel  saying  "That  man 
Villa  is  a  Wiley   cuss." 


Mary  Brlnga   Baek  ■  Text. 

Mary  McFadden's  trip  to  the  war  zone 
was  not  all  In  vain.  She  brought  back  a 
text  that  the  editors  are  finding  worth 
using.  The  Fergus  Falls  Journal,  for  in- 
stance, says:  "Mary  McFadden,  a  Duluth 
newspaper  woman,  has  just  returned  from 
Europe,  and  says  the  soldiers  in  the  trenches 
entertain  little  enmity  toward  the  men 
against  whom  they  are  fighting.  She  asked 
one  sol  Her  if  he  hated  the  men  on  the  other 
side,  and  his  reply  was  'What  Is  the  use  of 
hating  anybody,  when  we  are  all  dead  men 
tc  morrow.'  The  war  zone  Is  not  the  only 
place  where  this  aentlment  Is  worth  con- 
sidering." 


Still  Aaother  Comment. 

Still  another  comment  is  furnished  by  the 
St.  Cloud  Journal-Press,  which  quotes  Mary 
and  then  says:  "Is  It  worth  while  for  any- 
one to  hold  hate  In  his  heart  against  any 
other  individual?  The  tomorrow  in  which 
we  will  end  our  earthly  career  will  be  here 
in  a  short  time — days,  weeks,  months  or 
years.  The  man  who  hates  only  hurts  him- 
self. The  man  who  loves  his  neighbor  is 
on  the  road  to  happiness  here  and  here- 
after." 


WHmt  Yon  DoIhr.  Dadf 

Paste  this,  from  the  Virginia  Virginian, 
in  your  hat  or  somewhere  where  you'll  think 
of  it  often:  "One-half  of  the  boys  in  the 
world  go  wrong,  if  they  go  wrong  at  all, 
because  they  do  not  havo  the  proper  contact 
with  their  fathers,  or  their  father.s  are  not 
the  right  kind  of  men.  When  a  boy  believes 
in  his  father  and  when  the  twain  are  'chiles' 
we  will  wager  almost  anything  that  the  out- 
come will  be  good." 


By  the  form  of  his  recent  criticism  of  the 
present  administration  and  Its  policies  Col. 
Roosevelt  is  raising  one  very  serious  ques- 
tion as  to  his  desirability  as  the  standard 
bearer  of  the  Republican  party  during  the 
campaign,  or  as  president  thereafter.  Hla 
attitude  is  too  colored  with  personal  and  po- 
litical animus  to  depict  fairly  what  he  waa 
criticizing  or  how  he  would  better  it.  He 
spoke  as  the  politician. 

Seriously  and  soberly,  is  this  a  time  when 
such  an  attitude  ought  to  color  our  politics 
or  share,  after  its  possible  success,  in  fram- 
ing our  policies  and  legislation? 

This  is  a  critical  time  for  the  nation.  W* 
cannot  say  whether  It  will  be  less  or  more 
critical  at  the  •war's  end.  It  Is  a  time  of  be- 
ginnings, of  opportunities  and  haza;-d8.  We 
sail  forth  into  new  seas,  into  an  altered 
world,  surcharged  with  unforeseen  dangen* 
and  opportunities. 

It  seems  to  us  that  what  is  called  for  now 
Is  statesmanship  rather  than  politics,  the  de- 
bate on  policies  rather  than  the  bandying  of 
personalities,  a  campaign  of  education  and 
enlightenment  rather  than  what  Col.  Roose- 
velt is  starting.  Do  we  not  need  definite 
constructive  alternatives  rather  than  merely 
destructive  criticisms,  analyses  rather  than 
misrepresentations.  reasoned  arguments 
rather  than  appeals  to  feelings? 

There  are  plenty  of  angles  on  which  Col. 
Roosevelt  might  have  centered  sound  criti- 
cism of  the  Wilson  administration.  And  his 
criticism  would  have  been  welcome  and  fur- 
nished a  real  rallying  point.  But  his  ques- 
tions were  wholly  beside  the  case.  They  did 
not  accurately  reflect  either  what  Wilson 
said  or  what  he  referred  to.  They  distorted 
his  meaning  so  that  the  colonel  could  have  a 
massacre  of  straw  men.  Attacks  of  this  kind 
are  more  likely  to  mislead  than  guide  the 
public.  The  hotter  the  campaign  the  better 
— but  it  need  not  get  off  the  level  of  state- 
craft down  to  personal  politics.  The  colonel 
hit  below  the  belt  when  the  face-guard  of- 
fered an  opening. 


Glory  Hanelujah! 

A  lot  of  folks  don't  realize  the  truth  of 
the  Redwood  Falls  Gazette's  conclusions  In 
the  following,  but  there  are  more  and  more 
every  year  who  do  realize  it:  "Billy  Sunday 
last  week  called  on  Cardinal  Gibbons  ai  his 
Baltimore  home.  'We  had  a  pleasant  visit 
and  I  enjoyed  It,'  says  Sunday.  'I  had  a  very 
pleasant  visit  with  Mr.  Sunday  and  wished 
him  god.speed  in  his  work,'  says  the  car- 
dinal. A  significant  thing — this  visit — 
helping  to  prove  that  bigotry,  narrowness 
and  rclifflou.o  prejudice  are  pastor  passing." 
Glory  hallelujah! 


Wisconsin  Clippings 


Thlngi  the  Badger  State  Kdlton  Kn  Saylnf. 


mtat  hot  Ye  Nature  Fakera! 

Fond  du  Lac  Commonwealth:  A  Texas 
farmer  has  T.  R  beat  to  a  standstill  when  it 
comes  to  animal  discovery,  and  the  Lone 
Star  statesman  didn't  go  off  his  own  farm  to 
do  his  exploring  either.  According  to  a  newa 
dLspatch  from  Beaumont.  Tex.,  J.  W.  Kin- 
near  plowed  up  on  his  farm  a  blind,  fur- 
bearing  snake  that  has  four  legs  and  crawls 
backward.  The  reptile  Is  eighteen  Inches 
long  and  three  and  a  half  around,  its  back  Is 
black,  its  stomach  flesh  color;  "when  irritated 
it  turns  yellow,  and  no  one  knows  what  It 
eats  for  the  blame^i  thing  has  gone  on  a 
hunger  strike.  Nature  fakers  are  hereby 
challenged  to  go  ahead  of  that  tale. 


Interstate  Advlee. 

Wausau  Record-Herald:  The  split-log  drag 
is  a  humble  tool,  inexpensive  and  homely  to 
look  at,  but  It  is  the  best  road  implement 
known  to  the  present  generation.  And  the 
time  to  use  It  Is  now. 


The  Trouble  In  a  Close  Vote. 

Oshkosh  Northwestern:  Superior  has  gone 
dry  by  a  very  small  plurality.  And  It  Is  too 
bad  to  have  a  ^[uesUon  of  this  kind  decided 
by  a  close  vote,  for  it  doubtless  will  mean 
endless  wrangling  and  bickerings  over  the 
result,  with  another  effort,  at  the  fii^st  op- 
portunity, to  reverse  the  decision  of  this 
year. 


That's  Their  Beat   Preparation. 

Green  Bay  Press-Gazette:  Somebody  has 
been  so  unkind  as  to  suggest  that  the  "pre- 
paredness" luncheon  of  Messrs.  Roosevelt, 
Root  and  Lodge  was  to  prepare  for  the 
worst. 


Superior  Certainly  I«   Drier. 

Marinette  Eagle-Star:  La  Crosse  is  pok- 
ing fun  at  Superior  because  the  latter  is  ice 
and  snow  bound  yet.  But  reports  from  La 
Crosse  indicate  that  the  Crescent  city  people 
will  have  to  put  on  web  feet  if  they  are  to 
survive. 


A  Tip  to  Villa. 

Eau  Claire  Telegram:  The  New  Yorker 
Herold  (pro-German)  is  for  Hughes.  Pro- 
•gresslve  ftepubllcans  of  Wisconsin  have  been 
Imagined  by  a  leading  Eastern  newspaper  to 
have  a  scheme  on  to  turn  to  Hughes  In  the 
convention  In  order  to  shut  out  Roosevelt. 
Wisconsin  Stalwart  leaders  have  favored 
Hughes.  But  if  the  Justice  suddenly  spoke 
up  and  told  all  he  thought  about  everything 
and  everybody,  what  would  be  the  result? 
Something  would  have  to  "give." 


That  Awful   Wlseonaln  Thirat! 

Manitowoc  Herald:  With  Superior  gone 
dry  the  Jitney  buainess  between  that  city  and 
Duluth  win  be  given  an  Impetus. 

'     '  '   ♦ 

Indomitable  Belvlaua. 

Arthur  Gleason  In  the  Century  Magazine: 
With  no  country  left  tb  fight  for,  homes 
either  in  ruin  or  soon  to  be  shelled,  relatlvea 
under  an  alien  rule,  the  home  government  on 
a  foreign  soli,  still  this  second  army,  the  first 
having  been  killed,  fights  on  in  good  spirit. 
Every  morning  of  the  summer  I  have 
watched  those  of  them  that  have  been  rest- 
ing in  La  Panne,  boys  between  18  and  25, 
clad  in  fresh  khaki,  go  riding  down  the  pop. 
ular  lane  from  La  Panne  to  the  trenches,  the 
first  twenty  with  bright  sliver  bugles,  their 
cheeks  puffed  and  red  with  the  blowing. 
Twelve  months  of  wounds  and  wastage,  wet 
trenches  and   tinned   food,   and  still   they   go 

out  with  hope. 

• 

When   Women  Vote. 

I^ulsville  Courier-Journal;  "Who  is  that 
lady?" 

"Our  peerless  leader,  Mrs.  Clncinnatua 
Wombat.  Called  right  from  the  flralesa 
cooker  to  the  senate." 


Just  a  Moment 


T 


Dally  Strength  and  Cheer. 

Compiled  by  John  0.  Qulnius.   tha  SunshlM  Mas. 
A  little  bird  I  am. 

Shut    from    the   fields   of   air; 
And   In    my   cage   I  sit   and  sing 
To  Him   who  placed   me   there; 
Well  pleased  a  prisoner  to  be. 
Because,   my  God.   it   pleases   Thee! 


We  command  and  exhort  by  our  Lord 
Jesus  Christ  that  with  quietness  they, 
work. — 2   Thess.   ill.   12. 

There  is  an    order  in  our  dally   life. 

Like    that    the    holy    angels    constant    keep; 

And   though    Its   outward   show   seems  but   a 

strife. 
There    dwells    within    a    peace      like      oceans 

deep. 

— Jones  Very. 


The  enemy  of  that  grand  central  habit  of 
interior  patience  Is  haste;  haste  of  thought, 
haste  of  judgment,  haste  of  manner,  haste  of 
speech.  Even  natural  powers  of  every  kind 
become  true  strength,  when  they  work  sub- 
missively and  harmoniously  under  the  direc- 
tion of  Divine  light  and  the  movement  of 
Divine  grace;  and  this  dl.sclpllned  subjection 
at  every  point  under  the  dominion  of  Christ 
our  Lord,  ruling  us  by  111.=!  grace,  makes 
the  soul  the  serene  organ  of  the  Holy  Spirit, 
for  the  animating,  controlling  and  guiding 
of    our   souls. — William    Bernard   Ullathorne. 


We  are  conformed  to  Him  In  proportion  as 
our  lives  grow  in  quietness.  His  peace 
spreading  within  our  own  souls.  Even  amid 
all  that  outwardly  disturbs  us  we  have,  if 
we  have  Him,  the  same  peace,  because  He 
Is  our  peace,  sustaining  our  whole  being.— 
T.  T.  Carter. 


Hear  my  prayer  for  our  sovereign  and 
country,  for  those  who  exercise  authority, 
or  enact  laws,  or  pronounce  judicial  de- 
cisions. Enlighten  those  who  teach  the 
young,  or  write  books,  or  edit  newspapers. 
Give  peace  in  our  time,  good  Lord,  I  besuech 
Thee. — F.    B.    Meyer. 

Dayton.  Ohio. 


'Ark       'Ark! 

Boston  Dally  Advertiser:  A  grand  opera 
entitled  "Noah"  Is  announced  from  the  other 
side.  More  stuff  about  preparedness,  prob- 
ably. 


Twenty  Years  Ago 


From  Ths  Herald  of  this  date,  1896. 


••♦Samuel  F.  Wadhams  this  morning  filed 
his  bond  as  assessor  of  the  city  of  Duluth 
with  County  Auditor  Halden.  No  successor 
having  been  appointed  and  confirmed  within 
the  time  required  by  law,  Wadhams  clalma 
to  hold  over  for  two  years  more.  Last  ev^i- 
ning  he  reported  to  the  city  council  appoint- 
ment of  the  following  deputy  asse<;sor3: 
George  E.  Long,  Harry  Wlthrow,  B.  J.  Mc- 
Laughlin. J.  H.  Gray,  H.  M.  King.  W.  W. 
Allen,  L.  F.  Merrltt,  A.  F.  Stewart.  N.  N.  Ola. 
R.  H.  Doran.  R.  C.  McKinley,  F.  H.  Barnard 
and  W.  H.  Crulkshank. 


•••Sol  Smith  Russell  appeared  at  the  Ly- 
ceum last  evening  In  "The  Rivals"  by  Sheri- 
dan. 


•••Frank  M.  Guthrie,  who  has  been  freight 
agent  of  the  Lehigh  Valley  railroad  at  Du- 
luth for  several  years,  has  Just  received  an 
addition  to  his  duties,  being  made  passenger 
agent  also. 

•••The  engagement  of  MUs  Mary  Schnei- 
der to  Eugene  C.  Larpenteur  of  Minneapulia 
Is  announced. 


♦♦•Miss  Minnie  Kortin  of  Escanaba,  Mich., 
Is  in  Duluth  visiting  Miss  Lucy  Peterson. 


•••Mrs.  S.  S.  Flfield  of  Ashland  la  spending 
a  week  In  Duluth,  visiting  Mrs.  S.  E.  Peachcy 
and  other  friends. 


•♦♦A  Winnipeg  dispatch  announces  th« 
death  of  Sir  John  C.  Schultz  at  Monterey, 
Mex.,  where  he  had  gone  with  the  hope  of 
benefiting  his  health.  Dr.  Schultz,  as  he  wn* 
more  generally  known,  was  a  prominent 
figure  among  the  pioneers  of  the  Canadian 
Northwest.  He  took  a  leading  part  in  the 
stirring  scenes  connected  with  the  half-breed 
rebellion  of  1869-70  led  by  Louis  Riel.  Ho 
was  captured  by  Riel  and  sentenced  to  death, 
but  escaped  and  traveled  in  the  middle  or 
winter  through  the  snow-covered  country  to 
Rainy  lake  and  finally  reached  Duluth  and 
safety.  The  terrible  Journey  and  great  hard- 
ships shattered  his  health,  and  throughout 
the  remainder  of  his  life  Dr.  Schultz  w^as  an 
Invalid. 


•♦♦Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today, 
38;  maximum  yesterday,  46;  minimum  yes- 
terday, 36. 


•••Ben  Habberstad.  who  has  been  absent 
from  West  Duluth  for  over  a  year,  hag  re- 
turned to  take  a  position  with  Gottwald  A 
Hanni. 


•♦♦E.  W.  Mosher  of  the  West  Duluth  firm 
of  Mosher  &  Rnittle,  is  oix  the  road  as  Bales- 
man  for  the  Sprague-Warren  Grocery  com- 
pany of  Chicago. 


•••Ch.  Trautvetter  Is  endeavoring  to  se- 
cure Edward  Kuss,  a  famous  basso,  to  give  • 
concert  in  Duluth.  He  is  an  old  friend  of 
Prof.  Trautvetter. 


•••Mr.  and  Mrs.  H.  C.  Merrltt  and  Mrs.  L. 
J.  Merrltt  left  thia  afternoon  for  San  Diego. 
Cal. 


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Priday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  14, 1916. 


13 


THE  OPEN  COURT 


IrMVn  of  Tbr  Hfr»ld  «re  Inrltfil  fn  mtkf  fr*«  uie  of 
this  column  to  fipn-M  tbrlr  l*'as  »l)out  th'  topics  of 
irmrsl  Interest,  liut  disnmlon  of  sectarian  religious  dif- 
ferences IK  liamd.  Utters  inui>t  not  eiwfd  300  words 
—the  shortii  the  txtt-r.  They  must  be  wrltltn  on  one 
fide  of  tlio  papir  only,  and  tbey  muxt  be  accompanied  li) 
r*try  rase  hy  tiie  name  and  address  of  the  vrlttrr  tlioiigh 
tlieao  nrrd  nut  b^  published.  A  bl(oed  letter  U  alaays 
jnore  eifectl»e,    howewr. 

The  Herald  da«s  not  publish  orlKlnal  verM.  CODtribu- 
tinns  of  this  nature  that  are  submitted  for  the  editor's 
(ii-HLiHl  mu^t  b«  accnmpanl'-d  by  a  stamped  and  addri'<'s<'d 
envelope.  If  their  reti'ID  U  <le|ilre<|'  Otherulje  no  manu- 
fcrlitt  will  1«  Rturned. 


FINDS  INJUSTICES 

IN  OUR  TAX  SYSTEM 


To   Ihe   Editor  of  The   Herald: 

For  TTiany  year»  pawl  yvf  have  been 
wondtririK  why  small  property  own- 
«-r8  are  taxed  lo  such  an  extent  that 
It  Js  almost  beyond  their  ability  to 
meet  It.  A  ray  of  light  will,  however, 
occafllonally  penetrate  the  ml.st  and 
enable  a  person  to  see  clear  Into  the 
matter. 

Under  the  pre.sent  system  each  town 
elects  an  as8(88or.  Such  assessor  Is 
paid  out  of  the  Reneral  fund  fur  his 
service.  He  is  und<  r  oath  and  by  law 
required  to  Inspect  and  value  lands, 
timber  and  improvements  on  every 
forty-acre  tract  or  fraction  of  same 
In  his  town.ship  When  he  is  through, 
the  town  bo-ird  nu  ft>*  and  acts  as  a 
board  of  equalization  and  has  power 
to  lower  or  Increa."***  the  valuation  and 
adjust  or  cfirrect  any  error  that  th« 
ns.oe.s.Mors.  In  their  Judfifment,  may  have 
made.  Wiwn  this  is  done  they  attach 
their  official  approval  and  signature 
to  the  tax  list  and  transmit  It  to  their 
county    auditor's    office. 

Such  tax  lists  are  in  each  county 
laid  before  the  county  commls8lC)ner», 
who  act  as  another  board  of  equaliza- 
tion, and  here  the  unfairness  of  our 
•system  begins  to  creep  In.  How 
could  county  commissioners  go 
through.  In  detail,  such  a  tremendous 
task  and  do  it  Justice?  It  would  take 
practically  all  their  time  to  do  it,  and 
then  they  would  not  be  In  position  to 
kn)A'  unless  they  Inspecttd  all  the 
lands    themselves. 

Before  the  county  board,  each  tax- 
payer has  a  right  to  appear  and  reg- 
ister his  complaint  If  he  feels  that  his 
tax  is  too  high;  and  here,  as  a  result 
of  this  privilege,  the  real  mischief 
gels  a  firm  hold.  An  ordinary  tax- 
payer, a  farmer,  for  Instance,  who 
holds  160  acres  and  Is  overtaxed,  will 
find  that  it  docs  not  pay  him  to  spend 
a  dav  or  two,  pay  fare  to  the  county 
neat  and  there  pay  his  hotel  bills  be- 
cause he  could  not  expect  that  his  ap- 
pearance before  the  board  would  re- 
sult in  so  much  reduction  on  his 
taxes  that  It  would  cover  the  ex- 
pen.«es.  Ht-  keeps  paying  his  taxes 
grudgingly  and  wonders  why  they  are 
so   high. 

On   the  other  hand,   it  will   pay  well 


AMUSEMENTS. 


LAST  TIME  TODAY 

MY  LADY'S 
SLIPPER 

ANITA  STEWART  and  EARL  WILLIAMS 

'I'lic  greatest  rOKtunie  play  ever 
produced.  Written  by  Hev.  Cyrun 
ro««sih<ii«i  nrjul>  nsid  «llr<o<rd  by  (lir 
greatest  itf  them  all.  Hnlph  >V.  Inoe. 

TOMORROW  ONLY 

M.^IRK  K    COf»TKI,I.O. 

(he   Mk    fiMurite.  In  m   thrillinir  atory 

lit    r«>nianee    and    adventure, 

THE  CROWN 
PRINCE'S  DOUBLE 

A  mii-4   KEATl  HF. 

SPECIAL    LADIES'    AND    CHILDREN'S    MATINEE. 

ThlM    In   a    play   that    i>«ill    pleawe    the 

••kiddleH" — brlniE    (hem    along. 


fe»r  a   big   holder  to  appear   before   the 
board  or  have  some  one  else  to  present 
his  case.    The   records  In  the  different  ' 
county    offices   will,    I    am   sure,    if   an  : 
investigation   is   made,    reveal   that  the  ' 
big  holder*  who  have  thought  it  worth  | 
while    to    appear     with     a     kick     have 
been    well    rewarded. 

Personally  I  have  seen  examples  and  | 
know  how  these  things  work.    One  of 
our   lumber  concerns    nas   Just   sent   In 
to    the    assessor's    office     of     St.     Louis 
county    a    list     of     soVne     of     Its     landu 
which  are  claimed   to  be  unreasonably 
assessed.     This   over-assessment    la    the  ' 
very  same  figures  that  the  small  hold- 
ers     hav«»      paid      when      they     owned  i 
these    lands    and    before    they   sold    out  i 
to    this    particular     corporation.      They] 
now  ask  and  expect  to  have  the  valu»  i 
ation  on  these  combined  lands  reduced  I 
just  a   little  over  $900,000.     As  ground 
for    this      request,      these     lumbermen 
argue   that   they,    being   the   owners   of 
these    lands    now.    have    a    right    to    re- 
quest  Just    so     much     reduction     under 
what   would   be    a    reasonable    assess- 
ment  to  make   up   for   what   the   previ- 
oU.'»    owners     have    been     assessed     too 
much.     This,    my    Illustration,    alludes 
to  Just   one  of  the  small  samples. 

If  similar  corporations  d<»n't  think 
that  they  get  a  fair  shake  at  our 
county  boards,  they  have  another  ap- 
peal to  our  state  tax  commission, 
which  Is  so  remote  from  most  of 
the  lands  in  question  that  it  must 
necessarily  be  only  guess-work  with 
them;  but  they  are  expected  to  adjust 
and  give  u  fair  deal  to  any  holder,  big 
or  small,  who  thinks  It  worth  while, 
or  is  able  to  appear  before  them.  It 
Is  also  said  that  at  the  state  hearing 
Jhe  most  tinkering  has  been  done. 

How  does  this  sort  of  a  system  ap- 
pear to  an  ordinary  taxpayer  with 
ordinary  brains?  It  seems  to  me  that 
this  system  was  Invented  with  the 
Intention  to  benefit  the  big  land  hold- 
ers and  discriminate  against  the  many. 

In  Wisconsin,  I  understand,  thf 
chairman  e)f  each  town  board  is  called 
to  his  county  seat  to  act  as  a  mem- 
ber of  the  board  of  equalization.  Such 
chairmen  are  in  position  to  know 
something  of  the  value  of  the  land 
and  timber  In  their  respective  dis- 
tricts. In  our  case  It  is  mere  guess- 
work because  our  boards  can't  be 
familiar  with  conditions  concerning 
things  they  never  have  seen  and  never 
will   know   any  thing  about. 

This  Is  not  the  only  evil  with  our 
present  tax  system.  The  small  land 
hf)lder  Is  the  one  who  generally  Im- 
proves his  land.  As  soon  as  he  begins 
to  Improve  he  realizes  that  he  Is  fined 
for  every  move  he  makes.  His  taxes 
at  that  tirne  commence  to  climb  bv 
jumps  and  bounds.  "Would  It  not 
seem  reasonable  to  give  the  indus- 
trious man  a  chance  and  exempt  him 
to  the  extent  of  from  $600  to  $1,000 
on    his   first   Improvement? 

It  Is  of  the  highest  Importance  that 
we,  as  citizens  and  taxpayers,  reflect 
on  these  things  and  endeavor  to  get 
men  to  the  legislature  who  will  aim 
to  do  Justice  to  all  people  whether 
rich  or  poor,  regardless  of  circum- 
stances  or  station    in    life. 

JOHN   MATTSON. 

Kelsey.  Minn..  April   12. 


ELY  TAXPAYER  FEELS 


AGGRIEVED  AT  MAYOR 


Home  of  Metro  Wontferplayi  and  Bl|  4  Feataret. 
A. MY   SEAT— lOc. 


NEW 


AI.WAY§ 
A  UOOU 
SHOW 


GRAND 


11    A.    M. 

VNTlIi 

H   V.  M. 


The  Mudtown  Minstrels 

S«an   A    Sf^an — Bolger  Brow. 

Le    Clair   &    Sampnon — Sellg-Trlbune 

Jirwm — Concert   Orchestra. 

PhotoplayM  lie  I.uxe. 

MATS  lOc^t'.'iNITES  10-20 


Eex 


Eex 


THEATER  lEAUTIFUL         'Y  THEATER  BEikUTIFUL 

A   Superb    I'Irture   Play. 
TOO  A\     .\M>    TOMOnnO'W. 

PAULINE  FREDERICK 

''AUDREY" 

with   pirtOKrnpliN   shoivii   In   addition 


To   the  Editor  of  The  Herald: 

In  tlie  last  city  election  we  elected 
a  good  body  of  councllmen,  and  the 
mayor  may  be  all  right,  but  before  he 
qualified    he    made    the    first    mistake. 

The  newly  elected  mayor  let  go  two 
of  the  police  force  who  had  lived  here 
with  their  families  for  many  years. 
Whether  they  worked  against  him  or 
not  I  do  not  know.  There  are  hun- 
dreds of  good  <  itizens  and  taxpayers 
in  this  city  who  would  be  capable  for 
this  Job,  but  what  did  he  do?  He  put 
one  man  in  on  this  Job  who  came  to 
town  less  than  two  months  ago,  and 
no  one  seems  to  know  him  except  one 
or  two  with  whom  he  Is  boarding. 
He  may  be  a  tramp  for  all  that,  and 
now  walks  the  street  with  club  and 
star,  and  so  many  worthy  and  heavy 
taxpayers  have  been  here  since  the  be- 
ginning of  the  city. 

That  new  man  claims  he  was  a  po- 
lice officer  In  some  other  place  before. 
Why  didn't  he  stay  there  and  keep  the 
Job?  But  as  I  heard,  he  was  on  that 
Job  only  a  few  days  and  was  dis- 
charged. 

I  would  advise  our  newly  elected 
mayor  to  look  Into  the  matter  very 
carefully  and  he  will  see  that  I  am 
right. 

Thanking  you  for  the  space.  Yours 
truly,  A  TAXPAYER. 

Ely.  Minn..  April  12. 

QUESTIONS  AND 
ANSWERS 

Tbis  (lopartmrnt  does  not  pretened  to  hf>  Inftlllble.  It 
«lll  endiaior,  howevrr,  to  aiuwcr  qurstloii*  srut  to  it  by 
rr:.dcr!i  or  The  Hrrald  to  tbe  best  of  Its  ability,  reserrlni 
the  right  to  Ignore  all  that  are  trifling  oi  of  concrrn  only 
to  tbe  (luestlonrr,  or  that  ask  for  adTlce  on  legal  or  med- 
IchI   (|ue8tlons. 

To  ri'Cfive  attention,  every  Inquiry  must  bear  the  name 
unil  aililre'is  of  the  person  sending  It,  This  ia  not  wanted 
fur  publication,  but  as  an  evldenct!  of  good  faltb. 


Come  Saturday 

and  Let  Us  Outfit  You  in 

We  Big  Duluth  Clothes 

for  Easter 


Men's  Easter  Suits 
$10  to  $35 


New  Spring  Overcoats 
$10  to  $30 


Easter  Hats 
$1.50  to  $5 


Raincoats 
$3.95  to  $20.00 

Easier  Necfcwear 
60c  to  $1.50 


Easter  Shirts 
$1  to  $3.00 


Easter  Gloves 
$/  to  $3 


Bostonian  Shoes  for  Easter 
$3.50  to  $6 


Great  showing  of  Boys*  Easter  Suits  with  two  pairs  of  pants  at 
$4.95,  $6.96  and  $7.96.    Other  grades  as  low  as  $2.45  and  as  high  as  $18, 

Boys'  Easter  Shirts,  Neckwear,  Blouses,  Hosiery,  Shoes,  Gloves,  etc, 


Special  showing  of  Mcn*s  Easter 
Suits  and  Overcoats  at 


$  1 0.00 


WILLIAMSON  &  MENDENHALL 


i 


tr-» 


a  non-partisan  basis  Instead  of  on  a 
false  and  mlsrepresentatlve  partlean 
basis:  (4)  centralization  of  authority 
and  of  responsibility  to  an  extent  that 
Is  Impossible  under  aldermanlc  govern- 
ment (the  Initiative,  referendum  and 
recall  privileges  always  accompany 
the  commission  form);  (6)  Increased 
efficiency  In  the  management  of  city 
affairs,  such  as  could  not  be  obtained 
under  the  aldermanlc  system. 

Mrs.  A.  J.  Kroencke,  Covington. 
Minn.:  Will  you  please  publish  th« 
names  and  addresses  of  professors  who 
give  harp  lessons  In  and  around  uu- 
luth?  Wish  to  take  some  lessons  as 
early  as  possible;  know  of  no  Instruc- 
tors In  this  part  of  the  country. 

Ans.:  We  cannot  give  business  aa- 
dresses  In  these  columns. 


LYRIC  ^  LYRIC 

EVERYBODY'S    THEATER. 
That    Wonderful    Pletar« 

THE  FOUNDLING 

—with— 

MARY  PICKFORD 

FRIIIAV    AND    SATURDAY 
Matinee   and    Mght. 

(Return    EnKaf?em.nt.) 


Jack  Jasper,  Ely,  Minn.:  Will  you 
kindly  publish  In  the  columns  of  the 
Open  Court  your  solution  of  the  fol- 
lowing crlbbage  conundrum:  The  op- 
ponent leads  off  with  a  deuce,  dealer 
plays  four-spot,  following  which  the 
opponent  plays  six-spot,  dealer  plays 
three-spot,  opponent  again  playing 
seven-spot,  and  finally  dealer  playing 
five-spot.  Is  this  a  run  of  six  holes? 
The  writer  held  that  the  above  plays 
netted  a  run  of  six  holes,  following 
which  an  argument  ensued  and  run 
not   being   allowed. 

Ans.:  Yes,  It  Is  a  run  of  six,  and 
should   have   been   allowed. 

A.  P.  Tngve,  rambrldge,  Minn.: 
Kindly  print  In  brief  the  essential 
points  of  difference  between  the  com- 
mission form  of  government  and  the 
ordinary  form  of  city  government. 
Also,  wherein  do  the  advantages  for 
the  commission  form  chiefly  He? 

Ans.:  Old-style  city  government  con- 
sists of  a  mayor  and  a  council  the  lat- 
ter composed  of  men  elected  to  repre- 
sent the  different  sections  of  the  city. 
These  officials  all  serve  with  little  or 
no  pay,  and  devote  such  of  their  spare 
time  to  city  affairs  as  they  see  fit. 
Usually  they  are  elected  on  partisan 
basis,  the  division  being  according  to 
their  affiliation  with  the  parties  In  na- 
tional politics,  though  national  politics 
has  nothing  to  do  with  city  affairs. 
Commission-governed  cities  are  gov- 
erned by  commissions  consisting  of 
(usually)  three  or  five  men,  each  of 
whom  Is  elected  by  the  city  as  a  whole, 
and  represents  the  whole  city.  Thes* 
men  devote  their  entire  time  to  the 
city's  affairs,  and  are  paid  enough  to 
make  It  worth  their  while  to  do  so. 
The  great  advantages  of  commission 
government  over  aldermanlc  govern- 
ment are:  (1)  Having  the  officials 
each  represent  the  whole  city  Instead 
of  only  part  of  it;  (2)  having  officials 
who  make  the  city's  business  their 
business:    (3)    electing   city   officials   on 


TRUSTEES  SALE 

The  stock  of  drugs,  etc.,  belonging 
to  the  bankrupt  estate  of 

R.  J.  TREZONA, 

doing  business  as 
ELY  PHARMACY,  Ely,  Minn., 

will  be  sold  for  cash  to  the  highest 
bidder,  on  Monday,  April  17,  1916^  at 
1 :00  p.  m.  at  the  store  building  at  Ely. 
Inventory  may  be  inspected  at  631 
Manhattan  Bldg.,  Duluth.  Sale  sub- 
iect  to  confirmation  by  the  court. 
W.  O.  DERBY,  Trustee. 


The  Box  Office  Boys  of  the 

LYCEUM  THEATER 

Say    that    if   any    more    attractions   are   booked   which 
have  an  advance  sale  like 

"IT  PAYS  TO  ADVERTISE" 

They  are  going  to  strike  for  more  money. 

All  re^cordit  are  be'lng  brokei)  for  advaner  hookingM,  mo  if  you 
have  to  take  uniiatlMfactory  seat*  ihrnuKh  ^valtlng  until  the  last 
moment,  you  have  only  yOurMelf  to  blame. 

FOUR  DAYS — Starting     Sunday     afternoon;     matinee 

also  Wednesday. 


INDIAN  COUNTRY 

LICENSES  ISSUE 

Matter   Is  Coming  Before 
Judge  Stanton  in  In- 
junction Case. 

Bemldjl.  Minn.,  April  14— (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Are  the  saloons  at 
Kelllher   operating   In    violation   of   the 

law? 

Can  the  saloons  of  Bemldjl  and  oth- 
er Northern  Minnesota  towns  open  un- 
der the  protection   of  state  licenses? 

These  questions  involving  the  le- 
gality of  saloon  licenses  issued  In  the 
so-called  "Indian  country"  will  be  an 
Issue  In  a  hearing  which  will  come 
before  Judge  C.  W.  Stanton  in  cham- 
bers  here   on   Monday. 

Whether  or  not  the  Bemldjl  council 
may  refund  the  liquor  license  moneys 
to  former  Bemldjl  saloon  keepers 
whose  places  were  closed  by  the  Indian 
treaty  lid  In  1914  will  also  be  threshed 
out  at  the  hearing,  which  is  on  In- 
junction proceedings  to  stop  a  refund 
of  unused  license  money  to  ten  Be- 
mldjl saloon  keepers,  the  Bemldjl 
council  at  a  meeting  held  last  Septem- 
ber allowing  the  bills  of  the  saloon 
keepers,  but  were  unable  to  pay  the 
money  until  It  had  been  received  from 
a  special  tax  levy  made  last  October, 
the  first  installment  which  would  have 
been  evallable  In  the  March  settlement 
belnar  stopped  by  the  Injunction. 
Sayii  SaloonM  Still  Run. 

The  complaint,  which  was  made  by 
E.  C.  McGregor  In  behalf  of  citizens 
of  Bemldjl,  says  that  "notwithstanding 
said  order,  the  liquor  license  holders 
continued  thereafter  to  operate  their 
respective  saloons  In  the  places  and 
with  the  facilities  theretofore  used, 
designating  their  respective  places  of 
business  as  'soft  drink  parlors,'  and 
continued  throughout  the  lives  of 
their  respective  licenses  aforesaid  to 
sell  at  retail  in  said  places  of  business 
Intoxicating  and  malt  liquors." 

The  matter  of  returning  these  license 
moneys  appears  to  be  optional  with 
the  city  council,  which  may  rescind  Its 
action   of   last    September    If    It    su   de- 

The  question  to  be  decided  by  the 
court  is  whether  the  city  had  the  right 
to  Issue  saloon  licenses  In  the  Indian 
treaty  zone.  If  It  is  found  that  such 
licenses  were  Issued  Illegally,  then  the 
licenses  of  the  village  of  Kelliher 
must  be  Illegal.  On  the  other  hand.  If 
it  is  found  that  they  are  legal,  then 
the  saloons  In  all  places  closed  by  the 


Indian  treaty  may  obtain  a  atate  li- 
cense. It  Is  expected  that  the  matter 
will  be  taken  to  the  supreme  court, 
no  matter  what  Judge  Stanton's  de- 
cision may  be.  ^ 

RED  RIVER  STIU 
CONTINUES  TO  RISE 

Much  Property  at  Grand 

Forks  and  East  Grand 

Forks  Flooded. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D..  April  14.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.)— E.  Hovde,  United 
States  weather  observer,  has  Issued  a 
flood  warning  forecasting  that  the 
Red  river  will  continue  to  rise  stead- 
ily until  Sunday,  when  It  will  reach 
thirty-seven  feet — two  feet  above 
flood  stage.  Mr.  Hovde's  warning  Is 
based  largely  on  conditions  along  the 
Red  Lake  river.  The  Ice  Is  moving 
out  steadily,  causing  the  river  to  rise 
four  feet  In  twelve  hours. 

The  situation  here  became  critical 
late  yesterday,  when  the  government 
gauge  registered  thlrty-flve  feet. 
Pumps  were  Immediately  put  Into  use 
and  basements  on  Third  street  and 
De  Mers  avenue,  two  principal  streets, 
pumped    out. 

Baat  Grand  Fork*  Hard  Hit. 

East  Grand  Forks  residents  have 
been  hit  harder  than  those  on  the 
west  side.  The  Minnesota  city  Is 
lower  and  the  water  has  spread  over 
a  greater  territory,  causing  a  large 
number  to  move.  In  the  north  end  of 
town,  between  fifteen  and  twenty 
families  have  had  to  move,  while 
nearly  as  many  have  been  driven  from 
home  In  the  south  end.  The  city  park, 
located  In  the  most  beautiful  section 
of  the  city.  Is  almost  entirely  Inun- 
dated and  last  night  the  water  started 
to  run  across  the  road,  threatening 
many    residences    opposite    the    park. 

For  two  days,  water  has  entirely 
surrounded  the  plants  of  the  Stand- 
ard Oil  company  and  the  Grand  Forks 
foundry,  and  yesterday  afternoon 
employes  had  to  use  boats  to  get  to 
and    from   the   structures. 

The     Northern     Pacific     and     Great 


B 


Northern  railroad  companies  have 
established  special  guards  on  their 
bridges,  and  the  former  road  has  a 
man  watching  the  roadbed  approach- 
ing the  west  end  of  the  bridge. 
Tkree    Parka    Flooded. 

Three  local  parks  are  flooded, 
Lincoln  park  In  which  Is  located  the 
golf  course,  is  a  veritable  lake,  while 
Central  park  Is  rapidly  being  Inun- 
dated. Riverside  park  also  is  almost 
entirely   under   water. 

Ontario       store,       the      Metropolitan 
theater,      the      Scandinavian-American 
bank    and    the     WIdlund     block     base-  ; 
ments   all    have    w^ater    In     them    and  | 
men  are  kept  busy  pumping  them  out.  j 
In    the    WIdlund    building,     the    base- 
ment    dairy      lunch,      run      by      Harry 
Harm,    is    threatened.     Other    buslnesa 
places     probably     will      have      flooded 
basements    today    or   tomorrow. 

EXPECT  SEEDING 

TO  START  SOON 

With    Favorable    Weather 

Red  River  Farmers  May 

Plant  Next  Week. 

Crookston,  Minn.,  April  14. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— With  favorable 
weather  there  will  be  some  wheat 
ceedlng  done  In  this  section  next  week. 
Work  will  not  be  general,  but  well 
drained  farms  In  some  localities  will  be 
In  shape,  and  probably  40  per  cent  of 
the  farmers  will  be  able  to  start  work. 
In  sections  that  are  flooded  nothing  to 
c>peak  of  can  be  done  much  before  May 
1.  The  wheat  acreage  will  probably  be 
reduced  from  16  to  20  per  cent  below 
average,  but  the  total  acreage  will  not 
be  affected  materially,  as  more  barley 
and  flax  will  be  seeded,  and  the  corn 
acreage  will  be  greatly  increased  to 
provide  additional    fodder. 

Farmers   Getting   Reatlesa. 

As  always  happens  on  a  season  later 
than  ordinary,  the  farmers  are  rest- 
less, and  are  prepared  to  rush  work 
when  the  ground  is  ready.  There  will 
be  no  delays,  and  many  are  buying  ad- 
ditional horseflesh  and  machinery  in 
order  to  finish  their  work  In  a  shorter 
space  of  time,  which,  in  a  large  meas- 
ure, make  up  for  a  shorter  seeding 
season. 


GO  XO 


LESTER   F»ARfC 


We  will  be  there  to  help 
you  select  your  Lot. 


LAKESIDE  LAND  COMPANY 


WKatI  A  Mtnsible  ciga« 
rette>  Yes — you  can 
prove  itl 


WATER  REFUSES 


TO  RUN  UP  HILL 

Part  of  Judicial  Ditch  in  Polk 
County  Overflows,  Dam- 
aging Lands. 

Crookston,  Minn.,  April  14. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Farmers  residing  on 
from  10,000  to  15.000  acres  of  fine  land 
northeast  of  Crookston  are  besieging 
county  commissioners,  who  refer  them 
to  Judge  Watts,  as  the  cause  of  com- 
plaint is  Judicial  Ditch  No.  60,  con- 
structed last  year.  It  was  a  much 
needed  waterway,  with  laterals  thirty- 
five  miles  in  length,  having  its  source 
In  some  lowlands  near  the  famous 
Pembina  trail  in  Red  Lake  county, 
north  of  Dorothy.  Until  within  two 
miles  of  the  Red  Lake  ri'er  the  ditch 
runs  south,  but  at  that  point,  in  an 
effort  to  suit  some  land  owners,  the 
ditch  was  turned  abruptly  east  for 
one  mile,  paralleling  the  Red  Lake 
river,   which   runs   west. 

The  effort  to  make  the  water  run 
uphill  for  that  mile  has  proved  a  flat 
failure,  as  instead  of  following  the 
course  prescribed  by  the  surveyors  of 
the  Judicial  ditch,  the  flood  waters 
this  spring  arrogantly  persisted  In 
running  down  hill,  and  as  a  result 
a  lake  accumulated  at  the  right  angie. 
till  the  dam. formed  by  the  roadway, 
six  feet  high  by  the  dirt  taken  from 
the  ditch,  gave  way,  and  now  a  seven- 
ty-foot washout,  constantly  widening, 
is  letting  the  floods  over  thousands  of 
acres  of  perfectly  good  farm  land, 
which  closely  resembles  a  ducK  pre- 
serve. 

The  water  is  pouring  over  roadways, 
belter  skelter  through  fields,  flooding 
hen  coops  and  pig  stys  and  lapping  far 


from    eoothlngly    at      sleeping      porch 
supports. 

Break  MlgM  Be  Stopped. 

Could  the  break  be  stopped  up  with 
sandbags  at  once  the  damage  would 
not  b©  serious,  as  the  frost  is  not  out 
of  the  ground  but  a  few  inche.'',  but 
the  flooding  of  fields  will  continue 
for  a  week  or  ten  days  unless  some- 
thing is  done.  As  it  ia  a  judicial 
ditch,  the  commissioners  nave  no  pow- 
er to  act,  as  the  ditch  has  not  been 
accepted  from  the  contractor,  but  an 
effort  is  to  be  made  to  have  the  coun- 
ty commissioners  act  under  the  emer- 
gency, and  With  a  crew  of  40  or  60 
men  and  many  farmers  who  would  vol- 
unteer fill   In  the   washout. 

The  bridge  at  the  mouth  of  the 
ditch  has  been  washed  out.  making  it 
necessary  for  the  farmers  beyond  it 
to  cross  the  Gentllly  bridge  and  make 
a  circuit  to  Crookston  on  the  south 
side  of  the  river.  Farmers  having  hay 
on  the  opposite  side  of  the  river,  from 
which  they  live,  are  strictly  up  against 
it  till  a  temporary  bridge  is  fixed  up. 


BAGLEY  BALL  CLUB 

WILL  GIVE  DANCE 

Bagky.  Minn.,  April  14. —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  annual  masquerade 
ball  of  the  Bagley  baseball  club  will 
be  held  at  the  high  school  gym  Satur- 
day evening.  Lunch  will  be  served  bjr 
the  senior  girls  of  the  high  school.  No 
one  will  be  allowed  on  the  floor  unless 
masked,  and  everyone  will  unmask  at 
11  o'clock.  It  is  expected  that  a  largo 
crowd  will  attend. 

The  high  school,  with  the  financial 
assistance  of  the  business  men  of 
Bagley,  has  arranged  for  three  con- 
tests among  the  boys'  and  girls'  clubs 
of  the  associated  schools  around  Bag- 
ley — poultry,  pig  and  bread-making 
contests.  Prizes  have  been  donated  by 
the  business  men  of  Bagley,  and  they 
will  be  presented  at  the  annual  county 
f.-jlr,  which  will  be  held  here  Sept.  28, 
19  and  30. 


Takhoma  Biscuit  — the  Sunshine 
Soda — is  the  only  soda  cracker  that 
"splits  in  two."  No  crumbs,  no 
waste,  no  muss. 

Buy  Takhoma  — you'll  like  this  crisp, 
flaicy  cracker,  with  the  fresh-from-the- 
oven  taste. 

A  Sunshine  paper  doll  in  colors  in  each  package  of 
Takhoma  Biscuit.  Pretty  dresses  in  other  packages. 

yposE -Wiles  Qiscurr  (ommny 

Bahtra  of 


from  die 
Thousand 
Window 
Bakeries 


biscuits 


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rmmt^mmmimmt^mm''  <m 


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Mapi^HM>~^i^- 


14 


Friday, 


THE     DULlJTj'H     HERALD. 


April  14,  1910. 


SATURDAY  SPECIALS 

49  tb  First  Patent  Flour.  .$1.55 

8  bars  Lenox  Soap 25c 

1  tb  Cocoa 25c 

4  cans  Peas 25c 

A  No.  1  Steel  Cut  Coffee. .  .25c 

ZENITH  CO-OPERATIVE 
ASSOCIATION 

I*.   <;.   I'hIllipH,   MnKr. 


WEST  DULUTH 


HKRALD   BHANCH   OFPICBfi 


Spcnrrr    I' 
A.   JeM«ra 


•harmarx.  4<*t   Ccatrai   AT«a«c,    Adverttalas    mni    Sab««HptlOBa. 
I,    Kirty-Bf-vwath    Avrnur    H>«t    aad    Uraad   Aveaa*.    DUtrlbuUoa. 

Herald'n    WoBt    Uuluth    reporter    may   b«    reached    »(t«r 
hour  of  »oln»  to  press  at  Calumet  173-M  and   Cole  247. 


I     IIAVK    OI'KNKD    rr   A 

New  Florist  Store 

AT   r.625    KAMSKY  STREET 

in  F..ubi.st«r"H  .storo  and  can  8«»rve 
your  wants  in  the  Mower  line.  We 
are  h«-a«l<|uartors  for  all  kind.?  of 
S«'.ds.  I'lants  and  Cut  Flowers  for 
all  octasions.  Itlg  supply  of  Eastor 
lA\i(-s   for   Easter. 

C.  G.  JOHNSON, 

562."»    Ramsey    Stffct. 


FIRST  CARS  IN 
SEVENWEEKS 

Morgan    Park    Extension 

Likely  to  Be  Ready 

June  1. 


ronstru«Hlon     work     on     the     Morgan 

Park    extension    of    the    Duluth    Street 

I  railway  liii'Vs  will   h»'  under  way  within 

I  another  w-.k.     A  <rew    of   men  ataited 

I  work    v.-.sl.  rday    In.-^tHllinjr    the    switch 

at   Ih.-  "w.-'^teni  end   of  th.-   Sevcnty-flrat 


^- 


1 


?J  FINAL  WIND-UP 


OF  THE 


i 


4  LEADERS'  CLOTHING  CO. 

Is  Now  Clearing  Awau  Everything 
From  Its  Shelves  and  Counters 


If  you  have  waited  for  opportunity,  here's 
your  chance!  Every  Suit,  Overcoat,  Slip-on — 
in  fact  everything  in  the  store  is  greatly  reduced 
for  quick  selling.  Positively  your  greatest  op- 
portunity of  the  year  to  buy  your  new  Spring 
outfit  at  prices  so  low. 


SUITS! 

•    $7.50  values  selling 
out  at — 

$2.98 

Blue  Serge  Suits,  $18 
values  at  this  final 
clean  up  at — 

$12.86 


SLIP-ONS! 

$5.00  values,  Anal 
clean-up — 

$2.98 

$6.00  values,  final 
clean-up — 

$3.98 


mY  FAMCY  SUIIT  < 
m  THE  HOyjE—   '^ 

All  Latest  Styles,  now... 


Whether  you  want  a  Hat,  Cap,  Shoes, 
Shirts,  Underwear  or  anything  in  cloth- 
ing or  furnishings,  you'll  find  it  here  at 
greatly  reduced  prices. 


IS  EAST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


SHOE  NEEDS 


PALM 
SUNDAY 

Palm  Sunday  is  al- 
ways the  big  Spring 
dress  rehearsal — just  a 
week  before  the  Easter 
dress  parade — so  prud- 
ent folks  will  make  it  a 
point  to  get  supplied 
with  the 

NEW  EASTER 

SHOES  BY 

TOMORROW 

The  children's  shoe  needs,  of  course,  ai'e  uppermost 
on  Saturday — but  grown  folks,  too,  will  share  in  the 
glorious  new  spring  styles  and  excellent  values. 
Extra  help  tomorrow — let  us 
serve   you   with    (iood    Shoes. 

Stacy  Adams  Men's  Shoes. 
222  West  First  Street. 


Hvenue  brldgrP-  This  will  connect  the 
double  ^ack  with  the  single  track  ex- 
tension   made   last    fall. 

The  frost  Is  now  fairly  well  out  of 
the  ground  and  It  is  exi><<ted  that  by 
the  time  the  switch  haa  been  Installed, 
which  will  probably  be  In  four  or  Ave 
days,  that  the  ground  will  be  ready  to 
work  west  of  ElRhty-tlrst  avenue. 

A  conservative  estimate  of  six  weeks 
is  placed  on  the  time  that  It  will  take 
to  complete  the  line  Into  the  steel  plant 
suburb.  The  cars  will  probably  be 
ready  to  operate  to  this  suburb  on 
•June  1.  Every  effort  to  accomplish 
this  will  be  made  accordtng  to  state- 
ments made  by  officials  yesterday  al- 
though they  said  that  It  might  take  a 
week  or  two  longer,  depending  entirely 
on  the  weather  conditions. 

New  Can  Ordered. 
Several  cars  have  been  ordered 
which  will  be  put  Into  service  on  the 
new  line.  These  cars  are  Identical 
with  the  newest  cars  now  In  operation 
on  the  line  and  will  cost  the  company 
nearly  $7,000  each.  The  cars  are  ex- 
pected to  arrive  the  latter  part  of 
next  month.  Some  of  the  new  cars 
will  be  put  Into  service  in  Superior, 
where  the  company  expects  on  July  1 
to  replace  the  present  single  truck  cars 
on  the  Billings  Park  line  with  the 
double  truck   type. 

Ten  men  went  to  work  on  the  extt-n- 
t>U>n  job  yesterday  and  an  additional 
Jive  men  were  put  to  work  this  morn- 
ing. The  cr.'w  will  be  gradually  li»- 
creased  until  a  total  of  about  200  men 
will  be  employed  on  the  construction 
of  the   line. 

A  single  track  will  be  put  In  on  all 
of  the  straight  stretches  of  the  r«)ad, 
but  double  tracks  will  be  built  around 
curves  and  from  the  entry  Into  tlie 
steel  plant  proi>erty.  This  will,  for  the 
time,  be  sufficient  double  track  road 
according   to  officials. 

The  company's  sub-station  which 
will  supply  the  power  to  the  Morgan 
I'ark  line  which  has  been  under  con- 
struction near  the  eastern  end  of  the 
SnilthvUle  subway.  Is  completed  and 
wltliln  another  two  weeks  the  machln- 
eiy  will  be  in  place  ready  to  distribute 
the  power.  This  station  has  been  built 
at  a  cost  of  about  $^6,000.  The  build- 
ing while  small.  Is  of  a  handsome  de- 
sign. ,  . 
Arranging  Srhedulr. 
A  schedule  for  the  operation  of  the 
lars  Is  being  arranged.  A  canvass  of 
the  prospective  patrons  of  the  line  is 
also  being  made  in  order  to  ascertain 
lust  what  kind  of  service  will  have  to 
DO  furnished  mornings  and  evenings. 
The  schedule  for  cars  during  the  day 
has  not  yet  been  decided  on  but  It  Is 
intimated  that  the  service  will  be  at 
least   half   hourly. 

Cars  on  this  line  will  be  operated 
between  Morgan  I'ark  and  Twenty- 
fourth  avenue  east  during  the  day. 
Extra  cars  will  be  run  between  the 
park  and  Fifty-seventh  avenue,  which 
will  take  care  of  the  heavy  traffic  of 
morning  and  night.  The  running  time 
belweer*  these  latter  two  points  is  es- 
timated at  about  half  an  hour. 

Two  fares  will  be  charged  for  pas- 
sengers wishing  to  go  from  Morgan 
Park  to  Duluth  but  only  one  fare  will 
be  collected  to  points  west  of  Forty- 
ninth  avenue.  The  western  one  fare 
limit  from  points  uptown  has  been 
changed  from  Seventy-flrst  avenue 
west  to  Eighty-fifth  avenue  according 
to  an  agreement  between  the  company 
and  managers  of  the  Norton  division 
which  Is  being  opened  as  a  residence 
district  this  spring.  Under  this  ar- 
rangement, a  five-cent  fare  will  carry 
I>a38engers  from  Lakeside  to  Eighty- 
fifth  avenue  west  or  from  Fifty-ninth 
avenue  west  to  Morgan  park. 

LODGE  TEAM  DOES 
TO  TWO  HARBORS 


Ladies'^  Easter  Neckwear 

in  a  grand  assortment  of  new  neck 
fixings  In  colors,  fischus  and  ruffles 
and   tabs,  at — 


2SCf  ^3Bic,  SOc,  6Sc,  7Sc 


•«WIICIIK  VALUU  MMM  ftUPIIIMr* 
at  antf  as  WIST  SUPUUOII  STMIT. 


New  Easter  Ribbons 

In  a  varied  assortment  of  plain  and 
fancy  colorings  and  Moires  at  our 
usual   popular   prices — 

19c,  25c,  29c,  33c,  39c 


Magnificent  Easter  Exi^ibit 

At  Usual  Popular  Prices 


A  Beautiful  Easter  Showing  in 
Women  'sand  IVIisses '  Suits 


Large  lots  of  very  latest  styles — unpacked  daily — 
authoritative  in  every  line ;  charmingly,  fresh  and 
attractive ;  models  to  suit  every  taste ;  made  up 
in  beautiful  new,  materials,  shown  in  the  new 
spring  shades  :  new  checks,  new  stripes;  also  navy 
and  black;  great  values;  on  sale  Saturday  at 
$29.50,  $24.50,  $19.50  ^17  SO 

NEW  SPRING  SUITS— Smart  clever  models; 
10  distinct  styles  to  select  from  ;  d^  f  C  OA 
a  special  leader  for  Saturday,  at.  .  ^X^»  W 

EASTER  COATS — An  immense  assortment  of 
beautiful,  late  style  models,  slu)wn  in  tweeds, 
gabardines,  poplins,  serges,  silks,  cliinchillas,  etc. ; 
wonderful  values  ;*on  sale  Satur-  d^^^  ^A 
day,  from  $35.00  down  to .^lA !/■  W 

NEW  SPRING  COATS— In  a  large  assortment 
of  styles  and  materials,  specially  d^C  OCT 
featured  for  Saturday  at  $7.50  and      ^9m^^ 

EASTER  BLOUSES— A  magnificent  range  of 
charming  new  ideas;  lovely  Georgette  crepes, 
crepe  de  chines,  laces,  nets,  etc. ;  comes  in  high 
colors  and  soft  tones ;  wonderful  values  arranged 
for  Saturday  at  $5.95,  $4.95,  CO  QC! 

$3.95   and ^dCm^^ 

NEW  SPRING  WAISTS— 20  distinct  styles,  in 
1  wonderful  range  of  sheer  fabrics;  the  best  waists 
ever  shown ;  all  sizes ;  don't  miss 
seeing  these  waists,  now  at 


$1.00 


Easter  Dress 
Goods  and  Silks 

oG-inch  All-Wool  Black  and  Xavy  Coating 
Serge ;  double  warp  cloth;  a  rcg-      ^  ^    CO 

ular  $2.00  quality,  at,  per  yard ^Am9^ 

50-inch  All-Wool  Gabardine  Cloth  ;  they  come 
in  all  colors  and  black;  at  ^1    ^O 

special   per   yard ^Am^\^ 

54-inch  Chiffon  Broadcloth;  sponged  and 
shrunk;  all  colors  and  black;  4(9  OO 

regular  $2.50  kind,  at,  per  yd ^^»  W 

42-inch  Black  and  White  Shepherd  Check 
goods ;  guaranteed  to  wash,  at,  ^O/^ 

per  yard w VW 

36-inch  Plain  Colored  \^'ash  Silk,  Crepe  de 
Chine  and  Fancy  Striped  Crepes;  JtCa^ 
regular  5i)c  kind,  at,  per  yard '^^ 

Black  and  Colored 
Taffeta  Silks 

36-inch  Black  Taffeta  Silk  Chiffon ;  finish  pure 
dye  cloth,  now  at,  per  ^1    25 

yard 4^*»^*# 

36-inch  $2.00  Qualitv  Black  Taf-     ^«    ^£J 

feta  Silk,  at,  per  yard ^Am%9^ 

36-inch  $2.00  Quality  Colored  Taffeta  Silk; 
navy  blue,  Alice  blue,  Nile  green,  pink,  Old 
Rose  and  medium  brown  at  ^1    ^O 

special,  per  yard ^Am^\^ 


Maccabees  Will  Compete  in 

Drills  to  Be  Held 

Saturday. 

The  degree  team  of  West  Duluth 
Tent  No.  2.  K.  O.  T.  M.,  will  go  to  Two 
Harbors  tomorrow  evening  to  compete 
with  three  other  teams  for  the  loving 
cup  offered  by  Edward  H.  Haas,  state 
commander  of  the  order.  This  is  the 
third  contest  to  be  held  for  the  cup.  the 
other  two  having  been  held  at  Virginia 
and    with   Duluth  Tent   No.  1. 

In  both  the  former  contests  the  Two 
Harbors  team  has  been  awarded  the 
prize  for  being  best  drilled.  A  special 
effort  will  be  made  by  the  West  Du- 
luthlans  to  get  the  prlxe  this  time  in 
order  that  the  fourth  contest  of  the 
series  may  be  held  at  West  Duluth. 
If  the  Two  Harbors  team  wins  the  con- 
test tomorrow  evening  the  cup  becomes 
\t!^  property. 

The  local  team  consists  of  eleven 
members,  with  Judge  H.  W.  I.,anner3  as 
manager.  About  fifteen  members  of 
the  West  Duluth  tent  have  planned  on 
taking  the   trip. 


PLAN  JOINT  SERVICE  OF 
PRAISE  E.ASTER  MORNING 


The    annual    Joint      Easter      morning 


Union  Suits 
for  Women 

Women's  Union  Suits — 
Wide  and  narrow  knee ;  fine 
ribbed;  special  for  ^EZg^ 
tomorrow   at ^^W 

Rxtra   staeM    onir ^« 

Wom<ui's  Fine  Ribbed 
Unioa^uits-*Wide  and  nar- 
row knee ;  r>Oc  ^O/* 

values,  , at. .; O^C 

Women's  Hose — In  black 
and  colors;  Wayne  Mills 
and  Black  Cat  brands;  col- 
ors guaranteed  ab- 
solutely fast,  at. . . . 
Kayser's  Silk  Gloves — Long 
and  short,  black  and  colors, 
at  from  $1.50  ITO/^ 

down   to ^WW 

Men's  $1.00  Dress  Shirts— 
These  are  made  of  good 
quality  percale,  and  come  in 
pretty  neat  stripes      ^0#^ 

\t  only #^C 

Boys*  T.wo-picce  Wash  Suits 
— In  plain  and  striped  cham- 
brays;  sizes  2  to  4C/)/« 
6  vears,  at ^VU 


One  Hundred 
Trimmed  Hats  at 

$5.00 

Marvelously  different  hats, 
beautiful  and  distinctive  be- 
yond description,  yet  they're 
only — 

$5.00 


A  Tremendous  Easter 
Showing  of  Trimmed 
and  Untrimmed 

Hats 

Nowhere  Can  You  Find 
Their  Equal 

These  Unmatchable 

Values  Speak  for 

Themselves 

Two  Hundred  I/n- 
Trlmmed  Shapes  at 

98c   $1.98 

Values  to  $2.50  Values  to  $4.00 
These  shapes  require  but  very 
little  trimming  to  make  them  ap- 
pear like  $6  and  $10  hats,  yet 
they're  only — 

98c       $1.98 


No  woman  will  miss  this  opportunity  to  get  her  Easter  Hat  at 
a  mere  fraction  of  its  real  worth. 


New  Wash  Goods 

New  Percales  in  a  fine  line 
of  light  and  dark  patterns; 
12>2C  quality,  f /)#% 

yard AVC 

1,800  yards  of  Xew  Dress 
Ginghams  and  fine  Shirtings 
in  mostly  dark  and  medium 
colors,  special,  "f  ^#% 

the  yard Jll/C 

32-inch  English  Shirting 
Madras ;  a  beautiful  assort- 
ment of  fancy  stripes  on  ligh^ 
grounds ;  regular  35c  qual- 
ity, special  for  OOliL^#% 
Saturday ^^"^2^ 

36-inch  best  quality  full 
count  Percalesj^  a  beautiful 
range  of  patterns  ^  g— . 
per  yard a9C 

Extra  Special — Romper  Ga- 
latea ;  colors  absolutely  fast, 
in  stripes,  checks  and  small 
figures;  regu-  f  C#* 

lar  19c  quality. .         *^V 

32-inch  Zephyr  Gingham  in 
fancy  checks,  plaids  and 
stripes;  regular  18c  value, 
now  selling  ^  OlM^ 

at,  the  yard *ifc  /XW 


praise  service  hold  by  the  young  peo- 
ple's societies  of  the  various  churches 
of  West  Duluth  will  be  held  this  year 
at  the  Westminstt-r  Presbyterian 
church  Fifty-eighth  avenue  west  and 
Ramsey  street.  A  special  musical  pro- 
gram   Is   being  arranged. 

The  young  people's  societies  taking 
part  win  be  those  of  the  West  Duluth 
Baptist.   Third    Swedish   Haptlst.   Swed- 

a 


SPECIAL  SALE 

JACOBEAN  ROCKERS 


A  special  lot  of  fine 
Jacobean  Rockers,  in  the 
popular  fumed  oak  finish, 
well  built,  upholstered  in 
real  Spanish  leather,  value 
$13.50  to  $15.00,  at  $9.86 
each. 

See  our  four  floors  of 
homefurnishings  for  good 
values. 


21  At  Avenue  West 
and  Superior  St. 


iFour  Floors  of 
nonio   Good.-. 


iM 


Ish  Mission,  Merrltt  Memorial,  Asbury 
Methodist,  and  the  Christian  Endeavor 
societies  of  the  Westminster,  Hazel- 
wood  and  Morgan  l^ark  Presbyterian 
churche."*  and  the  Smlthville  Methodist 
churches.  Mrs.  Byron  W.  Brooks  of 
the  Asbury  church  will   be  leader. 


ONE  TELEPHONE 

IN  DEPOT  ENOUGH 

The  West  Duluth  station  of  the 
Northern  Pacific  railroad  does  not  re- 
quire  a  Zenith  telephone,  in  the  opin- 
ion of  the  officials  of  the  company, 
expressed  In  a  communication  received 
in  reply  to  a  request  of  the  West  Du- 
luth Commercial  club  to  Install  fluch 
service.  The  communication  was  re- 
ceived by  R.  Fisher,  secretary  of  the 
club  yesterday,  and  will  be  read  to 
the   members  this  evening. 

The  communication  pointed  out  that 
I  the  station  had  now  the  Bell  telephone 
I  and  that  this  connection  was  sufficient 
'  to  care  for  all  of  the  telephone  busl- 
1  ness  of  the  station. 

!      This  evening  the  club  will  entertain 
I  at    another  of   Its    "Ladies'    Nights."    A 
I  musical    program.      refreshments,      and 
dancing  are  planned. 

Entertains  at  Bridge. 

Mrs.  R.  J.  Fisher,  G82  North  Fifty- 
sixth  avenue  west,  entertained  yester- 
day afternoon  at  a  bridge  party  for  a 
number  of  her  friends.  Auction  bridge 
was  played  at  three  tables.  The  guests 
were:  Mrs.  Elliott,  J.  Aman,  Mrs.  W.  A. 
Pond.  Mrs.  E.  W.  F.  Boerner,  Mrs.  T.  F. 
Olsen,  Mrs.  R.  Y.  Dunn.  Mrs.  E.  J.  Zauft, 
Mrs.  Frank  E.  Watson.  Mrs.  T.  F.  Wle- 
land,  Mrs.  R.  Dennis,  Mrs.  Hall  and 
Miss  Wieland. 

West~Duluth  Briefs. 

F:urlld  chapter.  No.  66.  Order  of  the 
Eastern  Star,  will  entertain  for  Masons 
and  their  families  at  a  social  follow- 
ing the  business  meeting  of  the  chap- 
ter. Tuesday  evening  A  musical  pro- 
gram  Is   being  planned. 

Mrs.  Alice  Holmes  of  Minneapolis, 
grand  chief  of  the  Pythian  Sisters,  was 
guest  of  honor  last  evening  at  the 
meeting  of  Zenith  temple,  held  at  the 
Odd  Fellows'  hall,  initiatory  cere- 
monies for  a  class  of  twelve  members 
was  fallowed  by  a  musical  program 
and   social. 

The  Citizens'  State  bank  Is  open  for 
all  .banking  business  from  6  to  8  P-  m. 
Saturdays. 

i  Emll  Hanson  of  Iron  River  is  spend- 
I  Ing  a  few  days  visiting  at  the  home 
i  of  iJeorgo  <).  i'ooper.  719  North  Fifty- 
i  fourth  avenue  west 
1  iDitlatlon  will  feature  the  meeting 
I  of  West  Duluth  lodge.  No.  145,  A.  O. 
I  r.  W..  at  its  meeting  next  Wednesday 
evening  at  Gllley's  hall,  822  North  Cen- 
,  tral  avenue. 

I      The  Ladies'  Aid  Society  of  tho  West 
.  Duluth  Baptist  church.  Fifty-ninth  and 


what    vehicle 


Grand   avenues,   will   entertain   tomor-    hospital,    not    specifying 

row  evening  at  its  annual  spring  sup-    should  be  used. 

per  and  sale.  The  supper  will  be  served        On    Wednesday   Mrs.    Bridget   Olbeau 

at    6:80    to    8    o'clock.      The    women    In  ;  filed  a  claim  against  the  city  for  $6.0<i« 

charge  Include  Mrs.  Herbert  Ford,  Mrs.  I  damages,   alleging   carelessness   on   tig 

A.  Grover,  Mrs.  R.  F.   Dunn.   Mrs.  D.  G.  j  part    of    the      city       In      removing    h   r 


Hunt,  Mrs.  Rose  Paradise.  Mrs.  Earl 
Freeman,  Mrs.  A.  C  Ritchie.  Mrs. 
Glelle.  Mrs.  George  Smith.  Mrs.  N. 
Erlokeon,  MUs  Buell,  Mrs.  Andrew 
Carlson  and  Mrs,  H.  C.  Brown. 
Watch  repairing.  Hurst.  West  Duluth. 

PHYSICIAN  DENIES  HE  GAVE 

ANY  SPECIAL  INSTRUCTIONS 


daughter    to    the 
died  on  March  20, 


hospital,    wh'ie    6i<« 


Dr.  A.  A.  Giroux  denies  that  he  gave 
the  health  department  any  special  in- 
struction regarding  tho  removal  of 
Georglana  Glbeau  to  the  contagious 
hospital  on  March  14. 

He  claims  that  he  simply  notified  the 
health  department  of  the  case,  as  he 
Is  required  to  do,  with  a  request  that 
the   young   woman   be   removed   to   the 


Death    to   the   Fir. 

Madison,  Wis.,  April  14. — Reports 
coming  to  the  state  board  of  heal'h 
say  never  before  has  such  great  activ- 
ity against  fly-borne  disease  be.  n 
started  so  early  In  so  many  placei*  la 
the  state.  Many  cities  are  already  en- 
listed in  fly-flghting  campaigns  and 
organized  propaganda  is  giving  impe^ 
tus  to  the  battle. 


FlgrhtlnK    at    Canton. 

Hongkong,  April  13.  via  London, 
April  14.— -Fighting  between  govern* 
ment  troops  and  revolutionaries  took 
place  at  Canton  last  night  when  sol- 
diers opposed  the  landing  of  the  rebel-s, 
Casualties   numbered   about  thirty. 


IRON  IS  GREATEST  OF  ALL  STRENGTH 
BUILDERS,  SAYS  DOCTOR 

A  Secret  of  the  Great  Endurance  and  Power  of  Athletes 


Ordinary     ^axated     Iron     Will     Make 

Delicate,   Mervons,  Rundown   People 

200    Per    Cent    Stronger    In    TvkO 

'WeekR'  Ttme  In  Many  Case*. 

NEW  YORK.  N.  Y. — Most  people 
foolishly  seem  to  think  they  are  going 
to  get  renewed  health  and  strength 
from  some  stimulating  medicine,  se- 
cret nostrum  or  narcotic  drug,  said  Dr. 
Sauer,  a  well  known  specialist  who 
has  studied  widely  In  both  this  coun- 
try and  Europe,  when,  as  a  mat- 
ter of  fact,  real  and  true  strength  can 
only  come  from  the  food  you  eat.  But 
people-  often  faU  to  get  the  strength 
out  of  their  food  because  they  haven't 
enough  Iron  in  their  blood  to  enable  It 
to  change  food  Into  living  matter. 
From  their  weakened,  nervous  condi- 
tion they  know  something  Is  wrong 
but  they  can't  tell  what,  so  they  gen- 
erally commence  doctoring  for  stom- 
ach, liver  or  kidney  trouble  or  symp- 
toms of  some  other  ailment  caused  by 
the  lack  of  Iron  In  the  blood.  This 
thing  may  go  on  for  years,  while  the 
patient  suffers  untold  agony.  If  you 
are  not  strong  or  well,  you  owe  it 
to  yourself  to  make  the  following  test: 
See  how  long  you  can  work  or  how 
far  you  can  walk  without  becoming 
tired.  Next  take  two  five-grain  tab- 
lets of  ordinary  nuxated  Iron  three 
times  per  day  after  meals  for  two 
weeks.  Then  test  your  strength  again 
and  see  for  yourself  how  much  you 
have  gained.  I  have  seen  dozens  of 
nervous,  run-down  people  who  were 
ailing    all    the      while,      double      their 


strength  and  endurance  and  entirely 
get  rid  of  all  symptoms  of  dyspepsia, 
liver  and  other  troubles  in  from  ten 
to  fourteen  days'  time  simply  by  tak- 
ing iron  In  the  proper  form.  And 
this  after  they  had  In  some  cases  been 
doctoring  for  months  without  obtain- 
ing any  benefit.  But  don't  take  the 
old  forms  of  reduced  Iron.  Iron  acetate 
or  tincture  of  iron  simply  to  save  a 
few^  cents.  You  must  take  iron  in  » 
form  that  can  be  easily  absorbed  and 
assimilated  like  nuxated  iron  if  you 
want  it  to  do  you  any  good,  otherwlsa 
it  may  prove  worse  than  useless.  Many 
an  athlete  or  prize-fighter  has  won 
the  day  simply  because  he  knew  the 
secret  of  "great  strength  and  endur- 
ance and  filled  his  blood  with  Iron 
before  he  went  Into  the  affray,  while 
many  another  ha»  gone  down  to  In- 
glorious defeat  simply  for  the  lack  of 
iron. 

NOTE — Nuxatnl  Iron  recorameniled  alWTe  br  Dr. 
S«uer  li  not  *  patent  mwllflne  nor  secwt  remedy,  bnl 
on?  vMch  Is  well  known  to  drugcisls  and  wboss  inm 
con«tllueata  ij  mWely  prescribed  by  eniincut  physlclmai 
eterywhfre.  I'nllke  tl»  older  Inonjanlc  Iron  prodiKls.  It 
I*  etoily  akiimllati>d,  docs  not  injure  the  t«tli.  main 
them  blark,  nor  upaet  the  itowach;  on  the  routrary,  it 
li  a  most  p<>t«ut  rejaedy.  In  nearly  all  fiirms  of  indlcn- 
tlon,  as  well  a«  for  nvrvous.  run-itown  coudltions.  Th« 
Maniifacfurere  hare  siich  great  ronfldeni-r  iu  Nuxated  Iron 
that  they  offer  to  forfeit  $100.00  to  any  charitable  li.rtJ- 
tutton  If  they  cannot  take  any  man  or  woman  under  60 
who  lacka  tron  and  lucr^-ase  th'-lr  .v-roiiglh  L'OO  l)er  rent 
or  orer  In  four  weeki"  tlras  provided  they  have  uo  seiioui 
orsanli-  trouble.  Tliey  alio  offer  to  refund  your  mooef 
If  It  does  not  at  least  double  your  strtn«th  and  ea4sr< 
atw  In  ten  days"  time.  It  In  dl-ven-ted  In  this  elty  tt 
BuyM  Dtvc  tt4iR  and  all  other  drucgisU. 


».'jtri»iUC 


I 


*— 


'  •  I* 


Friday, 


THE     DULUTH   -HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


15 


■ 

I 

mt       '       % m        ■  « 

! 

I 

. 
«    I    ■  ■   ■  ■  ■"« 


1 

I 

■ 

4 *- ^r- 

■ 


I 
I 

I 

■■III  I       I 

I 

» 


Ill    11    h-vtm      m 


'^ 


A-      s' 


^ 

M 


•C'oyyritffat  H«it  Schaffner  Ii  Siaa 


I 


It's  Tim«  You 
Thought  About  Your 

Spring  Clothes 

WITH  Easter  but  one  week 
off  your  clothes  deserve 
your  immediate  consideration. 
You  can't  make  a  mistake  in 
selecting  a  suit  or  topcoat  bear- 
ing a  Hart  Schaffner  &  Marx 

label. 

Let  Us  Show  You  the 
Different  Variations  of 

Varsity  Fifty-Five 

"Most  Stylish  Suit  in  America" 

$18  upwards 

Spring  Topcoats  in  fancy  or  plain 
weaves.     Some     new    ideas    in    a 
plaited  back  Topcoat — $1G..")0  up. 

NOTE:  Xow  arrivals  In  our  B^ya'  Dcpartmrnt — Sultn, 
Caps,  Hats,  Shoes — everything  a  boy  needs.  We  shall  be 
pleased    to    have   mothers    Inspect   our    Boys'    Stock. 

Kenney-Anker  Co. 

409  AND  411  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


; i_ 


.  t    ■      ill. '<■ »■   •     "       35 


ODD  FELLOWS  WILL 

GATHER  AT  PALISADE 

Palisade,  Minn.,  April  14. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  members  of  Pal- 
l<«H(i<'  lodge  of  Odd  Fellow.s  are  pie- 
purtn^  to  commemorate  the  97th  an- 
i:iverHary  of  the  birth  of  Odd  Fellow- 
.shlp  in  the  United  States  on  April  26. 
Aitiiln,  Uemer,  McCJre^ror  and  other 
lodReu  are  expected  to  send  delega- 
tions. 

There  will  be  open  house  all  after- 
noon   and    in    the    evening    a    program  i 


rendered,  followed  by  a  dum-e.  Attor- 
ney W.  A.  Pitlenger  frum  Diiiiith  will 
deliver  the  anniversary  addretia. 

» 

Defeat    RlMauirrk    Bondn. 

Bi.smarck,  X.  D.,  April  14. — Taxpay- 
ers and  voters,  many  of  them  women, 
\V<Mlii->"day  snowt'd  under  tii»'  proposi- 
tion of  the  school  board  to  Issue  160,000 
bond8  for  th«  erection  of  a  new  school- 
hou.se.  Out  of  A  total  vote  of  356  tht-re 
were  ^03  votea  aKalnat  the  propoaitlun 
and  60  votes  for  It.  Two  spoiled  their 
ballots,  one  forgetting  to  mark  the 
slip  anil  another  voting  both  for  and 
against  it. 


M'     ■ 


"  ^^ 


The  new 

Arrow 

COLLAR 

Spring  style,  in 
two  heights 

LEXICON-aVitM, 

CLOETT.  PEA80DY  CrCO.  INC  JMXK£RS 


DRY  ELECTION 
IS^SURED 

Initiative     Petition     With 

5,179  Signatures  Filed 

Thursday  Afternoon. 


Checl<ing  Will  Begin  Satur- 
day; Work  on  Firemen's 
Appeal  Almost  Complete. 


With  the  filing  yesterday  afternoon 
of  an  Initiative  ordinance,  calling  for 
the  elimination  of  all  saloons  In  the 
rity  by  July  1,  1917,  it  is  virtually 
certain  that  a  "wet"  and  "dry"  elec- 
tion will  be  called  by  the  city  commls- 
slon*»r8.  The  dry  petition,  as  it  is 
called.  wa.>4  filed  by  W.  L..  Smithies  and 
L.  U.  Touhg.  There  are  2S6  separate 
forms,  with  a  total  of  6.179  signatures. 

City    Clerk    H«rgen     announced     this 

morning  that  the  checking  of  the  pe- 
tition would  begin  tomorrow,  as  work 
on  the  firemen'a  petition  will  not  be 
tlnished  until  tonight.  Thn  latter 
tneasure,  he  said,  is  nearing  com- 
pletion and  will  be  submitted  to  tho 
Council  next  Monday,  with  his  cer- 
titricate  of  sufficiency.  It  is  probable 
thHt  both  initiative  measure.^  and  the 
niternative  to  each,  should  the  coun- 
cil decide,  on  alternative  ordinances, 
will  be  submitted  to  the  voters  of  the 
city  on  June  19,  the  regular  primarv 
election  day.  In  thi.<j  way,  the  city 
will  be  saved  the  expense  of  a  special 
election. 

A.s  far  as  Is  known  by  some  of  the 
older  city  officials,  the  only  liquor 
flection  ever  held  here  was  two  years 
ago,  when  the  Hicken  code  was 
adopted.  That  was  not  a  wet  and  dry 
flKht.  but  merely  an  election  on  an 
ordinance  regulating  the  llQUor  busl- 
t\<  s.s   in   this  city. 

Leaders  In  the  "dry"  light  an. 
nounced  la.st  night  that  a  vigorous 
canipaitrn  would  be  begun  within  a 
few  day**.  Speakers  will  be  brt)UKht 
from  all  parts  of  the  West,  they  said. 
» 

Belted  back  spring  suits,  $11.26.  "3 
Winners"   removal  sale. 


NEW  WAY  TO  TAKE 
RADIUM  PHOTOS 

Replaces  Costly  Process  of 

Photographing  on  Glass 

Negative. 

(C«tTeipoRri«nc«  or  tht  Atioclatid  Preu.) 

Paris,  March  :;5. — Charles  Valllant. 
head  of  the  radiographic  laboratory 
of  the  Larlboldiere  ho.qpltal  In  Paris, 
has  announced  a  successful  nu-ans  of 
replacing  the  present  costly  process 
of  X-ray  photographing  on  a  glass 
negative  with  printing  directly  onto 
papei . 

V.'iillanfs  new  process  uses  ordinary 
.sensitized  paper  for  taking  radiuiii 
photographs.  The  cost  of  the  paper 
is  only  a  twentieth  of  that  of  the 
glass  negative,  and  there  la  also  a 
saving    In    weight    and    space. 

Valllant  has  only  three  flnKer.<»  left 
out  of  ten,  nam>-|y  two  forefingers 
and  a  thumb,  the  forefinger  of  the 
left  hand  and  the  thumb  and  fore- 
finger of  the  right.  The  rest  of  his 
fingers  he  lost,  one  after  the  other, 
by  holding  them  at  the  end  of  a  tube 
thus  trying  on  himself  the  penetra- 
tive effects  of  the  radium  rays.  Re- 
peated amputation,  however,  did  n(>t 
lessen  Vailiant's  enthusiasm.  He  Is 
already  the  discoverer  of  a  radlo- 
Kraphlc  method  of  determining 
wlietli>r  or  not  an  infant  was  born 
dead    or    alive.  * 

The  Infant  born  dead  comes  out  on 
the  negative  completely  dark,  whereas 
it.s  having  uttered  a  cry,  or  lived  an 
instant,  an  hour,  or  ten  hours.  Is 
proved  by  the  development  on  th-j 
plate,  first  of  the  stomach  and  then 
of  the  lung!«.  The  practical  legal  re- 
sult is  that  Infanticide  can  now  be 
detected  without  recourse  to  an 
autop.sy. 

For  the  moment  Vailiant's  mind  is 
concentrated  on  getting  the  most  out 
of  radiography  for  the  benefit  of  th<* 
wounded  in  war.  "I  want,"  he  says, 
"to  extract  all  the  secrets  I  can  from 
science,  so  as  to  help  the  surgeon  to 
operat"*  with  greater  certainty  and 
save  as  many  heroes  as  possible.  My 
little  personal  war  is  with  science 
and  I  mean  to  make  her  pay  me  for 
my     amputations." 


LIGNITE  IS  FOUND  IN 
EIGHTEEN  COUNTIES 

Burleigh    County,    N.    D., 
Leads  All  in  Its  Pro- 
duction. 

Bismarck.    N.    D..    April    14. — (.Special 
to       The       Herald.) — Burleigh       county, 
through    the   big    plant    established    at 
Wilton     some    years    a»ro    by    the    late 
Senator   Washburn  of  Minnesota,   leads 
all    other  counties   of  North   Dakota    In 
}  lignite     production.       Ward     county    is 
I  next  with  the  large   plant  at   Kenmare; 
Divide  county  with  its  large  production 
at    Noonan    is    third,    and    Stark,    Will- 
lam.M  and  other  counties  follow  In  order. 
j  Public     mines     from     which     lignite     is 
I  .'.hipped  are  operated  in  eighteen  of  the 
flfty-two     counties     of     the     state,     and 
I  mines   used   only   for   private  consump- 
tion   are    found    in    a    large    number   of 
other  counties. 

The  United  States  geological  survey 
of  the  state  shows  that  lignite  coal 
beds  are  found  under  38,000  square 
miles  of  the  .=5tate  and  the  total  do- 
posits  are  estimated  at  600.000,000.000 
tons,  a  quantity  sufficient  to  aup4>ly 
the  entire  United  States  for  an  almost 
Indefinite  period. 

State  I^naineer  GatherM  Data. 
State  EnKlneer  IMIss  is  ex-oftlclo  coal 
mine  inspector  and  Mr.  Robinson,  one 
of  his  assistants,  has  spent  the  p.ist 
four  months  on  the  annual  Inspection 
and  gathering  data  concerning  the 
^  production  of  the  publicly  operated 
mines. 

The  figures  of  the  past  eight  years 
shows  an  increase  from  .320.712  tons  to 
686.704  tons  for  the  pa.-'t  year.  The 
value  of  the  output  in  1916  was  placed 
at  $922,586.  While  the  gain  in  produc- 
tion has  not  been  as  large  as  some  of 
th<-  enthusiastic  advocates  of  the  use 
of  lignite  coal  would  de.sire,  it  has  been 
sufficiently  encouraging  to  make  many 
4>oople  of  the  state  believe  there  is  a 
great  development  In  sight  for  lignite 
coal  In  the  near  future. 

The  Inspector  reports  very  few  fa- 
talities In  lignite  mine.s  and  the  larsrer 
number  of  these  were  in  private  holes 
in  the  ground  witliout  adequate  protec- 
tion. There  have  been  no-  labor  trou- 
bles at  any  of  the  public  plants  and 
conditions  are  officially  reported  ag 
very  satisfactory. 


DR.  WILLOUGHBY  TO 
RETURN  FROM  CHINA 

(CorrtMontftiicc  tf  tiM  AHKiatW  frtw.) 

I'ekln.  March  10. — Dr.  William  Frank- 
lin    Willoughby,    legal    adviser    to    the 


ri^]AbeM4riina 


One-half  \W  vrorM  don't  know  bow 
th'  other  luilf  ilodKcy  taxes.  Xothin's 
■1  bad  aM  U'm  painted — by  an  aoMiteur 
artist. 

(Prot«ct«<l  by  AdwiM  a<'«!4>ftper  Senior.) 


Chinese  governmeat,  completes  his  con- 
tract here  in  May  and  will  return  to 
the  United  States,"  ♦here  he  will  be- 
come a  niember  of  t|j'e  Princeton  uni- 
versity faculty.  Dr. 'Willoughby  was 
formerly  treasurer  of,  Porto  Rico. 
«_,« 

NO  "GOLD  ORCHARD" 


©  ©  •i* 


IN  DULUTH 


C^  ©  © 


BUTCHANCETOV/ORK 

Ther«;  is  plenty  oi  money  In  Du- 
luth»but    it    doesn't    grow    on    trees. 

That  is  the  conclusion  that  a  migra- 
tory  worker  has  com*  to  after  a  visit 
to  the  Zenith  City.  He.  with  a  num- 
ber of  other.s.  having  finished  a  win- 
ter's work  In  other  parts  of  the  North- 
west, came  to  thiij  cjty,  hearing  that 
it  was  an  lOldorado  with  gold  growing 
on  the  trees.  He  came  just  at  the 
transition  period  between  winter  and 
spring  and  may  hav^  to  wait  a  few 
days  before  getting  fteady  employment 
for    the    season.  ;     " 

Manager  Burke  of  the  Minnesota 
Free  Employnient  bureau  said  a  num- 
ber of  men  were  in  the  same  position 
as  the  fellow  seeking  an  Eldorado. 
Spring  work  has  not  opened  up  yet, 
and  it  is  expected  that  the  labor  mar- 
ket will  be  dull  now  until  navigation 
and    other    spring   activity    opens. 

"There  is  no  need  for  pessimism," 
said  Mr.  Burke  today.  "We  expect  the 
best  year  for  labor  In  the  history  of 
the  Northw«»st,  but  the  cold  weather 
has  kept  back  spring  activity  and  the 
winter  work  \%  just  over.  In  two  or 
three  \\-eeks  there  will  be  a  great  de- 
mand for  labor  hete,  but  just  now 
there   is    no   rush." 

He  said  working^tnen  coming  to  Du- 
hith  have  told  him  that  Duluth  has 
the  reputation  of  being  a  "gold  or- 
chard." where  money  could  be  picked 
off  the  trees,  and  that  this  impres- 
sion had  brought  many  men  here  Just 
as  .<to.on  as  they  had  finished  winter 
work  IjK^ther  parts  of  the  Northwest. 


WESTEND 


GIRL  FELLED  BY  AUTO. 

Has  Narrow  Escape  Froin  Serious  In- 
jury White  Crossing  Street. 

Alfreda  Nelson,  an  8-year-old  school 
girl,  living  at  2730  West  Michigan 
street,  had  a  narrow  escape  ^rom 
serious  Injury  at  4:20  o'clock  yester- 
day afternoon  as  she  was  crossing  Su- 
perior street  on  her  way  home  from 
school.  Noticing  an  .automobile  ap- 
proaching but  a  few  feet  away  she 
became  excited  and  stepped  back  In 
front  of  the  machine,  which  knocked 
her  down.  The  front  part  of  the  ma- 
chine passed  over  her,  but  the  wheels 
did  not  toucli  her  body.  The  ma- 
chine was  driven  by  Dr.  J.  W.  Ekblad, 
wlio  stopped  the  machine  within  three 
feet    after    striking    the    child. 

The  girl  claimed  to  be  unhurt  and 
walked  home.  The  physician,  after 
examlng  her  for  possible  broken 
bones,  offered  to  take  her  home,  but 
the    girl    preferred    to    walk. 

WANTS  SIGNALS  INSTALLED. 


French  Naturalization  Club  May  Ask 
Soo  Line  for  Warnings. 

The  French  NaturalUatlon  club  will 
hold  its  regular  meeting  this  evening 
at  the  French  hall,  Twenty-fifth  ave- 
nue west  and  Third  street.  One  of 
the  principal  subjects  to  be  taken  up 
will  be  ttie  discussion  of  dangeroi. 
grade  railroad  crossliigs  in  this  end 
of    the    city. 

Members  of  the  club  will  seek  to 
have  the  Soo  line  install  warning  de- 
vices at  its  crossings  on  Twenty- 
eighth  and  Twenty-ninth  avenues. 
Both  crossings  are  said  to  be  dan- 
gerous owing  to  buildings  near  tl»<' 
track  preventing  pud«strians  from 
noticing  the  aj'proai  h  of  trains. 
m  — 

Theater  Manager  Host. 

Members  of  Trinity  lodge.  No.  282, 
A.  V.  &  A.  M.,  will  \i^  guests  of  E.  A. 
Nelson,  manager  of  the  Star  theater 
on  Monday  evening,  at"  the  presenta- 
tion of  a  four-reel  feature.  "Osman 
Temple,  Trip  to  Panama."  Invitation 
for  the  Masons  to  attend  this  show 
at  the  close  of  the  '  Monday  evenlnp 
business  session,  wag  received  by  E. 
H.  Pfeiffer,  master  *  the  lodge,  yes- 
terday. 

Trinity  lodge  will  confer  th'*  sec- 
ond degree  on  a  class  of  candidates 
before  attending.  The  special  ar- 
ransements  for  the  Masons  will  be- 
gin   at    about    10    o'clock. 

Young  People's  Program. 

A  musical  and  literary  program  will 
be  given  by  the  Baptist  Young  Peo- 
ple's union  of  the  Central  Baptist 
church.  Twentieth  avenue  west  and 
First  street,  this  evening.  A  lecture 
on  "South  India"  with  stereoptlcon 
scenes,  will  be  one  of  the  features. 
The  program  will  also  include  a  violin 
solo  by  Miss  Ruby  Lowe,  tenor  solo 
by  Walter  Paulson,  violin  duet  by 
Miss  Lowe  and  Miss  Inez  Huey,  ac- 
companied   by    Mrs.    C.    W.    Bartow, 

West^  End  Brids. 

Miss  Ethel  Marsh.  ifiOS  Helm  street, 
returned  today  from  a  visit  with  rela- 
tives in    the    Twin    Cities. 

Mrs.  H.  M.  Carr,  8907  West  Third 
street,  left  yesterday  to  spend  a  week 
visiting    relatives    in    St,    Paul. 

Progress  lodge  No.  6,  Degree  of 
Honor,  entertained  last  evening  at  a 
card  party  at  the  Columbia  hall.  Five 
hundred  and  progreBsl\e  pedro  were 
played    at    twenty    tables. 

Peter  Carlson  of  Minneapolis,  who 
has  been  spending  a  week  visiting 
friends  In  this  end  of  the  city  left 
for    his    home    yesterday. 

John   Burman   and.  Heury   Rlckett  of 


West  End  Undertaking 
Company 

2118  WEST  FlhST* STREET. 
Nybcrg  &  Crawford,  3Ianascr8. 


Of  Unquestionable  Quality 
for  Men  and  Young  Men 

^O  MAN  who  wears  Gately  clothes 
'*'  ^  need  fear  criticism  of  his  apparel — 
He  knows  that  style,  tailoring  and  fabric 
are  the  best  and  he  also  knows  the  price 

he  paid  was  correctly  based  on  value  he  receives. 

SUITS  for  EASTER 

The  "pinch  back" — a  half  belted  coat,  cut  in  at 
the  waist — as  shown  here,  is  one  of  the  most  fa- 
vored models  for  young  men.  The  conhcrvative 
dresser  will  find  other  models  in  more  subdued 
colors  and  staple  styles,  priced  at — 

$15,  $18,  $20  and  $25 

Topcoats  at  $18  to  $25 

in  classy  models  with  trim  shoulders  and  loose 
backs.     You  should  have  one. 


Raincoats  $7.50  to  $15 

You'll  not  dread  spring  showers  in  these 
guaranteed  rainproof  coats. 

New  Styles  in  Hats,  Shoes  and  Furnishhigs 
— Correct  for  Easter  and  Spring  Wear 

Your  Credit  Is  Good 

PVUTH  -  SUPERIOR  -  VISOIKU-  KIQ0IN9 


' 


Staples  were  visitors  in   the  West  end 
yesterday. 

Miss  Frances  Adele  Ensign,  princi- 
pal of  the  Lincoln  Junior  high  school, 
will  'leave  this  evening  for  St.  Louis, 
Mo.,  where  she  will  spend  her  Easter 
vacation  visiting  relatives.  She  will 
return   home    Easter    Monday. 

The  Young  People's  Society  of  tho 
First  Swedish  Methodist  church, 
Twentieth  avenue  west  and  Third 
street,  will  be  entertained  this  eve- 
ning by  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Albert  Broman. 
A  program  has  been  arranged  for  tho 
evening.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Broman  are 
celebrating  their  twenty-fifth  wedding 
anniversary  this  evening  In  connection 
with   the  affair. 

Modern  shoe  repairing  at  Economy 
Shoe  Works.  COI  20th  A.  W.  A.  Thoren. 

♦ 

Ashland  Singers  Leare. 

Ashland.  Wis.,  April  14.— The  North- 
land College  Glee  club  has  started  on 
Its  annual  spring  tour  through  the 
state.     The  first   concert  will   be  given 


at  Hayward  and  from  there  the  club 
will  contlni:e  to  Spooner.  Cumberland, 
Barron,  Rice  Lake,  Bloomer,  Eau 
Claire,  Osseo,  Fatrflcld,  Mondovi,  Mar- 
athon. Neilsville,  Marshfield,  Ellis, 
Burnamwood,  Antlgo,  Rhlnelander, 
Prentice,  Medford,  Phillips,  Park  Falls 
and  Mellen,  returning  to  Ashland 
May  7, 


FOR  STERILIZATION  LAW. 

Wisconsin  Club  Women's  President 
Advocates  Support  of  That  Idea. 

Ashland,  Wis.,  April  14.— Mrs.  D.  O. 
Kinsman,  state  president  of  the  Fed- 
eration of  Women's  Clubs,  speaking 
here  before  the  Eleventh  district  con- 
vention, urged  women  to  support  the 
state  law  that  proposes  to  sterilize  and 
segregate  the  mentally  unrtt.  She 
made    this    declaration    during    an    ad- 


dress covering  the  activities  of  th« 
clubs    and    their    mission. 

The  speaker  emphasized  that  th« 
home  is  the  fundamental  force  in 
which  there  Is  unity,  for  before  a 
woman  is  a  club  woman  she  is  a 
daughter,  a  wife,  a  mother,  and  lience 
home  is  the  first  Interest  that  create* 
the  desire  for  the  conservation  of  tho 
good. 

Mrs.  E.  C.  Alvord  of  Washburn  re- 
sponded to  Mrs.  George  McDonald's 
address  of  welcome.  Mrs.  McDonald, 
as  president  of  the  Monday  club,  cited 
three  aims  for  women  In  club  work — ■ 
the  advancement  of  the  spirit  of  youth 
and  the  preparation  for  the  future;  the 
club  woman's  duty  to  the  immigrant 
and  her  interest  In  the  advancement 
of  tho  rural  school. 

An  Interesting  talk  on  rural  life  was 
given  by  Mrs.  H.  E.  Fuller  of  Sanborn. 
She  Is  a  rural  school  teacher  and  in 
her  talk  recited  interesting  and  amus- 
ing Incidents  which  dealt  with  her 
work. 


A  CHEERFUL 
KITCHEN 

Mother  spends  so  much  of  her  time  in  the 
kitchen  that  she  should  have  cheerful  sur- 
roundings, and  kitchen  furniture  will  make 
her  work  easier  and  pleasanter.  Consult  us 
about  the  best  kitchen  ranges,  kitchen  cab- 
inets, linoleums,  and  so  on.  We  will  gladly 
take  any  old  piece  of  your  furniture  in  ex- 
change for  something  new,  and  the  balance 
will, be  divided  into  the  easiest  of  weekly 
payments. 


WE  SELL  GARLAND  RANGES 

The  best  range  to  buy  is  the  one  that  will  give  longest  and  most  satisfactory  service. 
Forty-five  years  of  success  stamp  GARLANDS  as  most  perfectly  meeting  the  housewife's  require- 
ments. You  are  positive  of  making  a  sound  investment  when  you  put  a  Garland  into  the  kitchen. 
Exchange  your  old  range  for  a  Garland.    Easy  payments. 


No  Cash  Necessary,  Your  Old  Furniture  Will  Do 


EXTENSION  TABLE 

No.  726  Vi.  is  buUt  of  oak,  in  either 
the  fumed  or  golden  finish.  42- 
inch  top,  six  feet  when  extended. 
Supported  by  6-lnch  non-dividing 
pedestal.     Price.  ^Q  7S 

only ^^«  •  ♦* 

Pay  60c  a  week. 


INLAID  LINOLEUMS—  tt  %    QQ 

High  grade,  sq.  yd....    W^*^^^^ 

PRINT  LIXOLFX'MS— 

good  designs,  sq.  yd 

Bright   colors,    per 
square  yard • . 


•   ••••• 


High  quality,  per 
square  yard 


»••••• 


6Sc 


EXTENSION  TABLE 

Extension  to  large  size,  built  of 
either  fumed  or  golden  finished 
oak,  with  45-inch  top  and  8-Inch 
non-dlvidlng  pedestal;  will  extend 
to  full  six  feet;  hand-^4 '^  f%fk 
somely  finished ^*  ■  m\^%M 

Payable  75c  a  week. 


«*»- 


I  ■  ■■'  >    J    I'    I 


m^ri^/mr' 


/ 


"  ■>  r 


16 


Friday, 


THE    DULJJTH    HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


m 


t 


D.  II.,  4-14-ltt. 


■i 


122  AND  124  EAST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


There  /s  Only  a  Few  Days  Left  of  Our 

Cleanup  Sale 

Cost  of  goods  is  lost  sight  of.  There  are  hundreds  of 
articles  going  at  prices  dealers  cannot  buy  them  for.  Any- 
thing to  clean  out  stock.  Our  store  will  be  open  every  night 
fn.m  April  15  to  22  until  9  p.  m.,  to  close  out  balance  of 
goods. 

Dining  Tables  ilL 


j>> 


Our      178      0-ft. 
I>lninie      TMblrn, 

Av  u  r  t  h    lib. 60, 
I'lean-iip   price, 


$8.75 

And  flfveral 
othf IB  to  selt-ft 
from. 


Oar  S  0  -  I  n  r  h 
O  r  a  nd  RapUlM 
Tablet  reKular 
J69.60,  cl'-an-up 
price,  like  pic- 
ture,  only — 


$25.00 

With      chairs 
to  match. 


Our  54-inch  Grand  Rapids  TaMc<=  extend  8  feet  long;  (f  OQ  ^f) 
(like  picture*;  regularly  $65.00;  clean-up  price.,  ^^c/.v^t/ 

^^  itli    ten    Cane    Seat    Chairs   to   match;   regularly  (^^    ^/l 

$9.00;  cleanup  price,  only tp*T,%J\J 

Mattress  and  Bedding  Department 


Our  Cotton  Top  M.atre.sscs; 
clean-up    price,  tf*  Q    /I  PZ 

only    if>^.^D 

Our  C(>tton  Combination  Mat- 
tresses in  gor>d  grade  .\rt  Tick- 
ing; clean-up  sale       (^/T    Y  ^ 

price   ^)\J  •  /  yJ 

Our  Sagless  Springs,  any  size; 
clean-up  price,  (T*  Q    O^ 

only tpO,^0 


Our  Superior  or  All  Cotton  Felt 
Mattresses,  good  grade  Art  or 
Stripe  tickings — all  clean  cot- 
ton felted,  clean-up  <^0  Q^ 
price   ipCj,K/KJ 

Our  hand  made  oil-tempered 
Bo.\  Springs;  made  up  to  order; 
any  ticking  to  suit;  actually 
worth  $24.00;  C//J    ^/l 

clean-up  price....  y}  J  \J  •yJLf 


We  have  a  large  ^tock  of  Steel,  Brass 
and  \\<u)d  Bids,  from  $6.f»U  up,  to  close, 
your  choice  of  many  cme-half  price  and  less. 
More  than  25  to  select  from. 

Our    15    Circassian    Wood    Bed;    regularly 
$29.50;  (like  picture);  clean-      (f  /  /    T/C 

up  s;ile  price V  i  1  •  i  kJ 

Our    1445    SHkIis    Circassian     Walnut     Bed; 
regularly  $52.50;  clean-up         099    ^/l 

sale   price,  only xpL^i^  tUXJ 

(This    is    a    beauty.) 
Our  No.  160-3('  size  Vernus  Martin;  regularly  $6.00;       <^0    Qri 

clean-up  sale  price ^>^,%J\J 

Our   Xo.  444  V-M    Steel  Beds,  plain  design;  regular    C^O    Qr\ 

$8.00 ;  c!ean-up  price  yjO  •\/\J 

Oiir  No    613-30  size  Vernus  Martin  Steel  Beds;  reg-      (fO    Q^ 

ularly  $7.00;  clean-up  price V^^  .i7«^ 

Our  Solid  Oak  Chiffoniers,  five  drawers,  without  <^^  A^ 
mirrors;  clean-up  stock  sale  price,  only yj^**T%y 

O-r  \*o  318  Oak  Chiffoniers  with  mirrors;  clean-up  d^O  Q^ 
^ale  price    ^0*UO 

Our  \o   32CI  Oak  Chiffoniers  with  mirrors;  regularly      jfn    QK 

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GEN.HERRERA 

MAKES  CALL 

(Continutd    from    page    1) 

ttrn  pky  with  smoke.  The  two  staffs 
•at  in  th»-  open  in  a  circle  on  era-  kL-r 
'  boxes  and  bacon  tins,  the  only  aval' 
able  chairs  in  the  AmcrUan  h<  ad- 
Quarttrs  camp.  A  hot  .sun  blazed  on 
the  tln.s  and  flashed  from  the  silver 
backs  on  the  leather  encasing  the 
Itgs  of  the  military  officers. 
lledKe  Markn  Q«iarterM. 

*"  A  hedge  of  dried  yellow  daisies. 
General  Pershing's  windbreak,  and  a 
rectangle  of  cottonwood  boughs  laid 
on  the  ground,  marked  the  outliu'^ 
of  General  Pershing's  "qunrters,' 
where  the  conferees  sat.  A  boy  could 
have  stepped  over  the  boughs.  It  was 
the  flr.st  meeting  by  (Jeneral  Pershing 
Plnce  the  American  expedition  crossed 
the  bord<r.  with  a  general  of  the 
Mexican     staff.       Herrera    had    arrived 

""  with  twenty-five  men  several  hours 
earlier  at  the  ranch  houses  about  a 
mile  from  the  American  camp.  His 
first  greeting  there  was  from  an 
American  private,  a  cavalryman  who 
was  at  the  ranch  trying  to  buy  food. 
This  private  walked  up  to  the  Mex- 
ican, whose  coming  Into  this  region 
was  unannounced,  and  held  out  his 
hand  to  the  general  of  whose  rank 
he     was      ignorant.      General    Herrera 

SS'  ahook    hand.s. 

Herrera  then  .«!ent  word  by  his  staff 
to  Oen.  Pershing  that  he  had  arrived^ 
on  his  way  with  a  per.sonal  bodyguard 
from  Chiljuahua  to  Santa  Rosalia,  to 
the  south  of  here,  in  the  hunt  for  Villa. 


The  conference,  Oen.  Pershing  said  this 
afternoon,  was  verv  pleasant.  Gen. 
Herrera,  he  said,  told  him  about  dis- 
position of  Mexican  troops  and  In- 
quired about  positions  of  some  of  the 
American  columns.  Shortly  before 
sunset  Herrera  and  his  escort  rode  out 
of  camp  to  rejoin  his  troops,  who,  he 
said,  were  already  on  the  way  to 
Santa  Rosalia.  He  said  he  had  sev- 
eral   hundred    men. 

Watch  Herrera. 

The  American  scouts  in  camp 
watched  Gen.  Herrera.  They  said  they 
had  been  reliably  Informed  about  two 
weeks  ago  that  Herrera  had  declared 
after  the  American  expedition  crossed 
the  border  'tliat  If  the  Ajnericand 
passed  rasas  Grandes  he  would  Join 
Villa.  Since  that  time  the  Americans 
have  progressed  so  far  to  the  south 
that  Casas  (Jrandes  Is  but  a  short  first 
section    of    the    American    line. 

Herrera's  reinforcements  did  not  ar- 
rive, it  Is  said,  and  In  consequence. 
Villa's  command  outnumbered  the  Car- 
ranzaistas  who  tried  to  block  his  path. 
Today's  conference,  however,  seemed 
to  indicate  that  Herrera  was  keeping 
in  the  Villa  chase.  He  asked  many 
questions  about  Villa,  apparently  not 
knowing  much  about  the  course  of 
thi'  bandit.  Herrera  had  heard  troops 
at  camp  today  say  that  Villa  already 
Is  dead,  but  said  he  knew  nothing  ex- 
cept the  rumor. 

The  supply  train  of  mules  following 
a  cavalry  column  which  went  south 
from  here  yesterday  was  fired  upon 
several  times  some  distance  ovit  of 
this  camp.  The  supply  train  guard 
chased  the  Mexican.^  who  did  the  shoot- 
ing,   taking    them    along    as    prisoners. 


Remedy  Prescribed 

By  Many  Doctors 


Compound    of   Simple    Laxative 

Herbs  Proves  Most 

Efficient. 

Dr.  W.  A.  Evans,  writing  for  the 
Chicago  Tribune,  makes  the  assertion 
that  practically  everyone,  at  some 
time  or  other,  suffers  from  constipa- 
tion. This  applies  regardless  of  age 
or  condition  in  life. 

The  congestion  of  stomach  waste  in 
the  bowels  is  evidenced  in  various 
ways;  bloat,  eructation  of  foul  stom- 
ach gases,  sick  headache,  langour,  all 
indicate  constipation,  and  call  for 
prompt  attention,  not  only  t«)  relieve 
the  present  discomfort  but  also  to 
avoid  possible  disease  that  follows 
neglect  of  this  important  function. 

Harsh  cathartics  and  violent  purga- 
tives should  not  be  employed,  as  these 
afford  only  temporary  relief,  while 
they  serve  to  shock  the  entire  system. 
A  mild  laxative  such  as  Dr.  CaldwdTs 
Syrup  Pepsin  is  far  preferable  and  is 
now  the  remedy  generally  used  and 
prescribed  by  many  doctors.  It  is 
free  from  opiate  or  narcotic  drugs, 
acts  easily  and  pleasantly,  without 
griping  or  other  pain  and  is  a  safe, 
infective   family   remedy. 

Mr.   Chas.   Schcll,   132   Church   St., 


UNION  LABOR 
WETS_ACTIVE 

Effort  Said  to  Be  on  Foot 
to    Swing    As- 
sembly. 


Dry  Advocates  Being  Urged 

to  Attend  Meeting  at 

Owls'  Hall. 


That   an   attempt    will    be    made    to 

throw  the  Duluth  Labor  Assembly  Into 

the   ranks   of   the   "wets,"   opposing   the 

Initiative   ordinance    for   a    local    option 

election    filed    yesterday,     is    predicted 

by    those    union    men    of    the   city    who 
are    in    favor  of   the   petition. 

The  assembly  will  meet  at  the 
Owla'  hall  tonight,  and  It  is  expected 
that  the  "drys"  will  be  well  repre- 
sented to  be  in  readiness  to  thwart 
any  attempt  to  put  a  "wet"  resolution 
through. 

It  is  feared  that  a  fight  on  the  liq- 
uor question  Just  now  would  be  ex- 
tremely perilous  to  the  Labor  For- 
ward Movement  which  is  now  meet- 
ing with  great  success  in  Duluth.  It 
Is  pointed  out  that  many  of  the  labor 
leaders  are  signers  of  the  Initiative 
dry  petition,  and  that  bringing  the 
Issue  before  the  a.ssembly  would  split 
Its  ranks. 

"Dry"  union  labor  men  are  today 
urging  members  of  a  similar  leaning 
on  this  question,  to  be  present  and 
uphold    the    cause. 

—  • 

126  .spring  suits  now  only  $14.75.  "3 
Winners"    removal   sale. 


DEEP  ANXIETY  IS  FELT 
OVER  FATE  OF  CAVALRY 
FORCE  AT  PARRAL,  MEX. 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 


MR.  CHAS.  SCHELL 

Grenada,  Miss.,  writes  that  he  found 
relief  himself  by  using  Dr.  Caldwell's 
Syrup  Pepsin  and  now  keeps  it  on 
hand  for  family  use.  .\  bottle  of  Dr. 
Caldwell's  Syrup  Pepsin  should  have 
a  place  in  every  family  medicine  chest. 
A  trial  bottle  can  be  obtained,  free 
of  charge,  by  writing  to  Dr.  W.  B. 
Caldwell,  454  Washington  St.,  Monti- 
cello,  Illinois. 


Wedne.sday  and   there  wa»  no  news  of 
furtlier   hostilities. 

Arrival  in  the  suburbs  of  Mexico 
City  la.st  night  of  Gen.  Carranza  with 
ills  retinue  from  Viueretaro  was  re- 
ported by  Special  Agent  Rodgers.  who 
said  it  was  believed  Carranza  planned 
to  remain  there  during  the  negotia- 
tions for  withdrawal  of  liie  United 
.States  troops. 

Secretary  Baker  said  today  there  had 
been  as  yet  no  chang*-  in  Gen.  Fun- 
ston's  orders  but  dcillned  (o  discuss 
questions  of  policy  raised  by  the  Car- 
ranza note.  The  border  commander's 
hands  were  entirely  free,  he  said,  to 
make  any  necessary  disposition  of  the 
30,000  men  under  his  command.  Dls- 
l>atch  of  troops  to  strengthen  the  sup- 
porting lines  or  the  shifting  of  border 
forces  to  places  best  adapted  to  event- 
ualities are  matters  of  which  Gen.  Fun- 
ston,  himself.  Is  the  only  Judge,  in  the 
war  department   view. 

Troops  Involved   Unknown. 

Officials  here  were  still  unable  to 
determine  today  Just  what  troops  were 
Involved  in  the  Parral  affray.  Tlie 
opinion  prevailed,  however,  that  it  was 
a  detachment  of  the  Thirteenth  caval- 
ry, although  some  officers  believe  It 
might  have  been  a  detachment  of  the 
Tenth. 

An  official  version  of  the  Incident  Is 
anxiously  awaited  and  may  have  gr.-at 
weight  In  determining  the  course  to 
be  pursued  by  the  administration. 

Telegrams  transmitted  to  Secretary 
Lan.«ing  yesterday  by  the  Carranza 
embassy  here  are  believed  reliable  but 
even  these  do  not  agree  on  details  of 
what  occurred.  Mexican  advices  from 
the  border  offer  still  other  versions  of 
the  affair.  Since  Gen.  Carranza  aharp- 
ly  criticized  the  American  commander 
In  transmitting  a  report  of  what  hap- 
pened, officials  here  feel  It  Is  necessary 
to  have  the  American  officers'  own  re- 
port before  any  conclusion  can  be 
reached. 

When  Secretary  Baker  left  the  cab- 
inet meeting  he  said  there  was  "abso- 
lutely no  change  in  the  Mexican  situa- 
tion," and  that  the  status  of  the  Amer- 
ican troops  was  the  same. 
•  —  — 

Quiet    at    Rl    Pa«o. 

El  Paso.  Tex.,  April  14. — In  spite  of 
alarming  rumors  and  considerable  ap- 
prehension, the  night  in  El  Paso  and 
Juarez   passed   peacefully. 

On  the  surface  the  Mexicans  In  both 
cities  have  only  a  languid  Interest  In 
the  situation  brought  about  through 
Gen.  Carranza's  request  for  the  with- 
drawal of  the  American  troops  and  the 
clash  at  Parral.  The  only  noticeable 
excitement   Is  among  the  Americans. 

Battle  With  Xativea. 

Washington,  April  14. — American 
troops  in  Mexico  have  had  their  first 
battle  with  the  natives  at  the  moment 
Gen.  Carranza  is  urging  their  with- 
drawal. On  Wednesday  night  troop- 
ers of  the  Seventh  cavalry,  under  MaJ. 
Tompkins,  were  fired  upon  in  Parral, 
a  Villa  stronghold  In  West*  rn  Chihua- 
hua, were  pursued  to  the  suburbs, 
while  the  Carranza  garrison  took  a 
doubtful  part  in  the  affray,  and  were 
attacked  again  during  the  night. 

Complete  Information  regarding  the 
losses  to  the  American  troops  or  to  the 
Mexicans  had  not  reached  Washington 
last  night.  Secretary  Raker  Informed 
President  Wilson  that  a  brief  dispatch 
to  the  war  department  said  that  ac- 
cording to  unofficial  reports,  one 
American  cavalryman  was  killed  and 
the  troopers  used  a  machine  gun 
against  the  Mexicans. 

Mr.  Baker  announced  later  that  he 
had  ordered  Gen.  Funston  to  take  any 
steps  that  might  be  necessary  to  pre- 
vent  further  trouble. 

When  asked  whether  this  might 
mean  the  enforced  use  of  Mexican  rail- 
roads for  the  movement  of  soldiers 
and  supplies,  he  said  <Jen.  Funston  was 
on  the  ground  and  would  act  as  any 
emergency  required. 

U.  S.  Wiill/iAKE  FINAL 
DEMAND  ON  GERMANY 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 

said  other  evidence  was  so  complete 
that  they  were  not  entirely  necessary 
to  the  preparation  of  the  case  of  the 
United  States. 

The  president  and  the  cabinet  showed 
no  dl.Mposltlon  to  let  the  Mexican  situ- 
ation postpone  action  on  the  submarine 
question. 

The  administration  considers  the 
German  note  practically  shows  that  .a 
submarine  attacked  the  .Sussex. 
♦ 
Evldenee  Arrive*. 
New  York,  April  14. — <Ju«rded  by  Sii* 
Charles  Allum  of  the  British  foreign 
office  the  evidence  in  the  Sussex  case, 
which  lias  been  gathered  for  the  Amer- 
ican state  department,  arrived  here  on 
the  American  line  steamship  St.  Paul. 
It  Included  affidavits  of  the  survivors 
and  was  part  of  an  exceptionally  large 
amount  of  embassy  mall,  filling  twenty 
big  .><acks.  The  affidavits  are  those 
gathered  by  attaches  of  the  American 
'  embassies  in  Paris  and  London. 
I  Among  the  St.  Paul's  686  passengers 
I  was  Edward  Huxley  of  Englewood,  N. 
J.,  president  of  the  United  States 
Rubber  Export  company  of  this  city, 
who  was  a  passenger  on  the  Sussex, 
escaping  uninjured.  Mr.  Huxley,  after 
confirming  previously  cabled  news  dis- 
patches regarding  the  attack  on  the 
Sussex,  stated  posltivelv  that  from  the 
hour  that  the  vessel  left  the  British 
shore  until  the  moment  that  she  was 
attacked  and  for  nine  hours  thereafter 
not  another  vessel  was  sighted  except 
the  destroyer,  which  came  to  the 
rescue. 

Mr.  Huxley  made  this  assertion  in 
connection  with  the  text  of  Germany's 
note  of  April   10   to  the  state  depart- 


ment,  citing   an   attibcf   by   a   German 
cubmarlne    on    an    unimmed    vessel    In 
the  vicinity  of  the  Suslex  at  the  hour 
when  the  latter  met  wUh  mishap. 
Carried   No   Antnianltlon. 

Mr.  Huxley  also  said  he  was  positive 
the  Sussex  carried  no  "al?nmunltion.  The 
German  note  declared  that  a  "violent 
explosion"  on  the  ship  which  was  tor- 
pedoed warranted  "the  certain  conclu- 
sion that  great  amounts  of  munitions 
were  aboard." 

When  he  and  other  passengers  were 
In  the  Junior  officers'  room  on  board 
the  rescuing  destroyer,  Mr.  Huxley 
said,  a  warrant  officer  who  had  talked 
with  the  captain  of  the  Sussex  declared 
that  the  captain  had  said  that  he  had 
seen  the  wake  of  a  tOMedo. 

Mr.  Huxley  show^M  letter,  which, 
he  said,  had  beeff  fatten  by  Capt. 
Thomas  Carroll.  jT€|Hh  embarkation 
officer  at  BoulogrftjVfance,  In  which 
Capt.  Carroll  said; 

•I  have  Just  helped  take  from  the 
poor  Sussex,  beached'n'earby,  the  body 
of  a  woman  with  a  piece  of  a  German 
torpedo  Imbedded  in  her  stomach." 

The  Sussex  had  on  board  only  three 
military  officers — two  French  and  one 
Russian — Mr   Huxley  declared. 

It  was  understood  that  Mr.  Huxley 
planned  to  visit  Washington  to  confer 
with  state  department  officials  regard- 
ing the  Sussex. 

Has    Prench    Information. 

Paris,  April  14. — The  American  gov- 
ernment is  now  in  possession  of  the 
Information  obtained  by  the  French 
government  which  led  to  the  assertion 
that  the  steamship  Sussex  was  tor- 
pedoed by  a  German  submarine.  Full 
details,  even  to  the  name  of  the  com- 
mander and  number  of  the  submarine 
have  been  communicated  privately  to 
the   American    government. 

The  ministry  of  marine  was  not 
prepared  today  to  make  this  informa- 
tion public  but  It  has  been  given  not 
only  to  the  United  States  b^^  all 
other   governments   Interested. 

One  reason  the  authorities  refrain 
from  giving  out  details  Is  that  It  Is 
their  understanding  that  they  are  act- 
ing In  conformity  with  the  wishes  of 
the  American  government.  It  is  also 
the  desire  of  French  officials  to  give 
Germany  an  opportunity  to  reply  to 
the  statement  that  the  name  of  the 
commander  and  member  of  the  sub- 
marine are  known. 


BANDITS  TRY 
TO  CAPTURE  U.  S. 

SUPPLY  TRAIN 

(Continued    from    page    1.) 

get     official     Information     from     Gen. 
Pershing  were  continued. 

An  aeroplane  has  Joined  In  the 
scouting  operations  undertaken  to  as- 
certain the  location  of  Gen.  Arnulfo 
Gomez's  forces  and  the  route  they  are 
following. 

Gen.  Funston  was  still  endeavoring 
early  today  to  learn  from  Gen.  Persh- 
ing the  American  side  of  the  story  of 
the  fight  at  Parral. 

Silence  on  the  subject  was  not  taken 
at  headquarters,  however,  to  mean 
that  General  Pershing  was  unaware 
of  the  fight,  or  that  he  was  doing 
nothing  to  assist  the  detached  and 
menaced  cavalrymen.  General  Funston 
and  his  staff  officers  realized  that 
General  Pershing  must  first  receive 
from  Parral  the  storj*  of  what  oc- 
curred, and  because  of  his  own  loca- 
tion far  to  the  front,  perhaps  beyond 
the  most  advanced  wireless  station, 
might  have  to  use  couriers  in  get- 
ting the  account  of  the  development.'^ 
of  the  past  forty-eight  hours  back  to 
the    border. 

Secretary  Baker's  Instructions  had 
not  reached  General  Funston  early 
today,  but  already  scouts  were  In- 
vestigating Carranza  troop  movements 
in  northern  Mexico  in  that  part  of 
the  country  through  which  the  line 
of  communications  extends,  and  of- 
ficers In  charge  of  detachments  dis- 
tributed along  the  line  from  Colum- 
bus to  Casas  Grandes  had  taken  steps 
to  guard  against  attacko. 

Any  extensive  movement  of  troops 
along  the  line,  th*  seizure  of  rail- 
roads or  the  dispjUch  of  additional 
men  Into  Mexico  wiU  depend  upon  the 
exact  wording  Of  Secretary  Baker's 
instructions  and  upon  the  character  of 
General  Pershing's  expected  report. 
» 

Colored  Troops  !■  Flgkt. 

Pershing's  Camp  at  Front,  Mez., 
April  7,  by  courier  to  Columbus,  N. 
Mex.,  April  14. — About  thirty  men  of 
the  Tenth  cavalry,  colored,  who  were 
In  the  fight  with  Villa  bandits  April 
1  at  Aguas  Callentes,  arrived  here 
today  for  rest  and  reoutflttlng. 

Then  men  were  sure  they  had  killed 
more  than  th©  three  dead  covered  in 
the  official  report.  Three  times  the 
Villa  forces,  numbering  about  150,  at- 
tempted to  ambush  the  advance  guards 
of  the  Tenth.  The  Mexicans  fought 
with  considerable  military  strategy. 
Not  more  than  three  troops  of  the 
Tenth  participated  In  the  fight,  which 
lasted  an  hour  and  a  half. 

The  Tenth  cavalry  was  riding  for 
Guerrero  when  they  approached  the 
town  of  Aguas  Callentes.  One  of  their 
guides  warned  them  that  a  consider- 
able body  of  mounted  troops  must  have 
passed  along  the  road  ahead  of  them. 
The  horses'  tracks  were  still  fresh. 
The  advance  guard  of  the  Tenth  went 
forward  cautiously  as  they  approached 
town,  which  was  hidden  behind  a  hill. 
Nearing  the  top  of  the  rise  the  advance 
was,  without  warning,  subjected  to 
volley  fire,  coming  simultaneously 
from  both  sides  of  the  road.  Troop  E 
of  the  Tenth  was  brought  up  at  a  trot, 
while  F  troop  went  around  to  flank 
the  Villa  bandits  and  drive  them  out 
of  the  hill.  Troop  H  was  hurried  for- 
ward. 

As  E  troop  rounded  the  Jiill  at  a 
gallop  it  came  within  a  minute's  ride 
of  the  Villa  forces  on  that  side.  One 
Villa  tnan  was  killed  In  this  part  of  the 
skirmishing  by  a  pistol  shot  at  about 
fifty  yards.  The  moment  that  E  troop 
appeared  the  Villa  bandits  i-ode  for  the 
side  of  a  mountain  overlooking  the 
town. 


PROGRESSIVE  WISHES 
REPUBLICAN  SUCCESS 

Governor    Jotinson,    How- 
ever, Says  He  Will  Con- 
tinue Bull  Mooser. 

San  Francisco.  April  14. — "I  wish 
you,  within  your  party,  an  over- 
whelming success,"  said  Governor 
Hiram  W.  Johnson,  Progressive  candi- 
date for  vice  president  four  years  ago. 
In  an  open  letter  here  today  to  a 
group  of  candidates  for  election  as 
delegates    to    the    Republican    national 


SUPREME  FOR 
AILING  SKIN 


Nothing  Like  Poslam  and  Poslam  Soap 
to  Drive  Awajii  Unsightly  Affections. 

Let  your  own  nkla  4kO  you  how  won- 
derfully efficient  Fpslam  Is.  how  easily 
and    quickly    It    drlrea   away     Pimples, 
•  heals     Eczema,     disposes     of     Rashes, 
'  soothes   and     allays    Inflammation.      A 
:  splendid  test    Is    to    apply    to  a  small 
affected  surface  at  night  and  note  im- 
:  proved     condition    of   the   skin    in    the 
]  morning.     Inflamed     complexions     are 
'  cleared  In  this  brief  time,  and  better- 
1  ment  should  be  seen  In  any  eruptlonal 
'  disorder 

Eczema  knows  no  surer  treatment. 
Poslam  Soap  Is  the  safe  soap  for  use 
on  the  skin  with.  Or  apart  from  treat- 
ment with  Poslam.  . 

For  sample,  send  4c.  stamps  to  Emer- 
gency  Laboratories.    32   West   26th   St., 
j  New  York  City.     Sold  by  all  druggists. 


convention,  designating  themselves 
united    Republicans. 

On  the  official  ballot  these  men 
appear  simply  as  Republicans.  The 
governor  says  In  his  letter  he  will 
continue  to  be  a  Progressive  as  long 
as  that  party  lasts,  "or  until  there 
shall  be  what  every  man  who,  fol- 
lowing passing  events  looks  forward 
to — Joint  action  upon  common  ground 
of  the  Progressive  and  Republican 
parties  at  their  natinal  conventions 
In    June." 

"I  trust  that  every  forward-loolt- 
Ing  man  or  woman,  not  of  that  (Re- 
publican) party  In  the  past,  but  ex- 
pecting to  affiliate  with  It  In  the 
Immediate  future,  will  vote  with  you 
In  the  ensuing  presidential  preference 
primary,"  was  the  concluding  sentence 
of    the    letter. 


M'[W[N  NLES  m 
COMMISSION[R$HIP 


CHARLES  A.   McEWEN. 

Charles  A.  McEwen  of  Duluth 
Heights  has  thrown  hi»  hat  In  the 
ring  In  the  fight  for  the  office  of 
county  (fr.mmlssioner  from  the  First 
district.  This  morning  he  filed  with 
the  county  auditor  for  the  nomina- 
tion at  the  June  primaries. 


MAY  PROCEED 
WITHVOTING 

Effort    to  Enjoin    Proctor 

School  Authorities  Comes 

to  Naught. 

Efforts  on  the  part  of  a  minority  to 
enjoin  the  school  authorities  at  Proc- 
tor from  proceeding  to  elect  directors 
for  a  school  board   have  failed. 

Yesterday  afternoon  in  district 
court.  Judge  Fesler  denied  an  applica- 
tion for  a  temporary  injunction  re- 
straining the  election.  On  Marcn  30 
the  question  of  a  change  from  a  com- 
mon district  to  an  Independent  district 
was  voted  on  and  was  carried  by 
nine  votes.  The  opposition  .  to  the 
change  instituted  a  contest,  claiming 
that  a  correct  count  and  canvass  of  the 
votes  will  show  that  the  change  was 
defeated. 

Those  opposing  the  change  insti- 
tuted a  taxpayers'  suit  against  the 
present  school  board  to  restrain  it 
from  perfecting  plans  for  a  reorgan- 
ization. Two  of  the  three  members  of 
the  present  board  H.  J.  Code  and 
William  McMurtrie  passed  a  resolution 
that  the  school  board  would  not  em- 
ploy councel  to  defend  the  action  but 
H.  J.  Barncard.  clerk  of  the  board, 
took  It  upon  himself  to  hire  an  at- 
torney and  to  go  to  court  with  the 
action.  The  refusal  of  the  two  mem- 
bers to  defend  a  suit  brought  against 
the  board  has  been  the  subject  of 
much  crltlcisim  among  Proctor  voters 
who  have  followed  the  situation. 

Women      will      vote     at     tomorrow's 


election. 


HURLEY  SALOONS 
GET  REGULATIONS 


New    Town     Board    An- 
nounces Orders  That  Must 
Be  Observed. 

Hurley,  Wis.,  April  14. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  new  town  board  at 
its  first  meeting  this  week  made  the 
following  appointments:  Attorney, 
George  E.  Foster,  salary  JIBO  per  year; 
fire  steward,  Sam  Swanson.  S65  per 
month:  assistant  fire  stewart  and  high- 
way commissioner,  Edward  Smith,  $60 
per  month;  superintendent  of  police, 
James  Collins,  $70;  night  watchman, 
Anton  Gastaldi,  $60  per  month.  Su- 
pervisor Erspamcr  was  named  as  poor 
commissioner. 

Saloon  Regulations. 

The  board  laid  down  certain  rules 
regarding  the  regulations  of  saloons 
as  follows:  All  saloons  In  Hurley  shall 
not  open  before  6  a.  m.  and  shall  close 
at  12  o'clock  p.  m.  (midnight),  and. 
during  closing  hours  all  screens  and 
obstructions  shall  be  removed  from  the 
front  so  that  the  rear  end  of  the  bar- 
room can  be  clearly  seen  from  the 
street;  any  violator  of  these  rules  will 
be  subject  to  a  fine  of  not  more  than 
$10  upon  conviction. 

BRITISH  DEFEAT 

■  TURKISH  FORCES 

London,  April  14. — Defeat  of  the 
Turkish  forces  in  Mesopotamia  by  the 
British  was  reported  officially  today. 
In  an  engagement  on  the  Tigris  the 
Turks  were  driven  back  from  one  and 
one-half  to  three  miles. 

FREIGHT  RATES  FOUND 
TO  BE  UNJUSTIFIED 

Washington,  April  14. — Rearrange- 
ment of  freight  rates  Increasing  the 
charges  on  lumber  over  the  Chicago 
&  Northwestern  and  the  Chicago,  Mil- 
waukee &  St  Paul  railways  from 
points  In  Minnesota,  Wisconsin  and 
the  Upper  Peninsula  of  Michigan  to 
points  on  the  Milwaukee  road  west 
of  the  Mississippi  river  has  been 
found  unjustified  by  the  Interstate 
commerce    commission. 

IS  KNOCKED  DOWN  BY 
JITNEY  BUT  NOT  INJURED 

The  4-year-old  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
J.  Nelson,  1906  West  Fourth  street, 
had  a  narrow  escape  from  Injury  by 
a  Jitney  driven  by  Mrs.  Shea  at  6 
o'clock  yesterday  afternoon  at  Twen- 
ty-third avenue  west  and  Superior 
atreet.    The   child    was    crossing    the 


AKJERICA'S   GREATEST  CLOTHING   SPECIALISTS 

COME  TO  THE  ''3  WINNERS'' 

REMOVAL  SALE 

FOR  YOUR  EASTER  CLOTHES 


On  May  1st  we  n%ove  into  our  new  store  at 
119  East  Superior  Street.  Every  dollar's 
worth  of  our  present  stock  of  New  Spring 
SuitSf  Topcoats,  Raincoats  and  Trousers 
must  be  sold.  Come  here  toniorrow  and 
save  nearly  half  on  your  spring  clothes. 


SUITS  AND     SUITS  AND 


TOPCOATS 

All  the  newest  styles  and 
colors,  now  only — 

*7.95 

SUITS  AND 
TOPCOATS 

The  very  finest  made, 
now  only — 

*14.75 


TOPCOATS 

Gpod  $20.00  values, 
now  only — 

*11.25 

ALL  WOOL 
TROUSERS 

Blue  serges  included, 
now  only — 

'2.50 


ONE  LOT  LIGHT  COLORED  TR0USERS....$1.65 
ONE  LOT  SMALL  SIZE  SUITS  AT  ONLY...$5.00 


lis  EAST  SUPERIOR  STREET 

(Opposite   the  City   Hall) 


SCHE 


EASTER 
SHOES 

Ladies'  High  Cut  Lace" 
Boots  with  blue  vamps  and 
white  top — $8.00. 

Also  High  Cut  Lace  While 
Calf  Boots,  $7.00. 

We  have  also  a  complete  line  of  Black 
Hi  Cut  Shoes  in  either  lace  or  button, 
at $3.60  to  $6.00 

Bring  the  children  to  have  them  fitted  with 
our  Nature-Form  Shoes,  as  we  take  particular 
pains  to  fit  the  children  properly. 

Xlie  Suf  f  el  Co. 

103  West  Superior  Street. 


street  with  his  mother  at  the  time  and  | 
stepped  back   in   front  of  the   machine.  ■ 
The    child    was     knocked     down     but ! 
sustained  only   slight  scratches  on  the 
forehead.     He    was    taken    into    Olson's 
drug:    store     on     the     corner     where     a 
physician    was    called     and     examined 
him.   but  found   no  other    injuries    ex- 
cept  the   bruise. 

• : 

OToole  to'Sveeced  Mnrphy. 

La  Crosse,  Wis.,  April  14. — Rev.  Am- 
brose Murphy,  who  for  the  last  twenty- 
eight  years  has  been  in  charge  of  St. 
James'  Catholic  church  on  the  North 
side,  will  be  succeeded  by  Rev.  Edward  i 
P.   O'Toole   of   Ellsworth,  Wis.,   accord-  i 


ing  to  announcement  today.  Rev. 
Murphy,  who  has  been  a  leader  In  every 
progressive  movement  in  the  city,  has 
been  transferred  to  St.  Gabriel's  church 
at   Prairie  du  Chien. 


Owatonna   la  "Wet.'* 

Owatonna,  Minn.,  April  14. — Owaton* 
na  drys  lose.  Recount  of  the  votes  cast 
on  the  licence  question  at  the  city  elec- 
tion of  March  14  may  reduce  the  wet 
margin  of  41  to  40,  but  it  Is  believed 
this  is  the  best  the  dry  element  can 
expect.  Emil  Zamboni,  George  Peachy 
and  Dr.  Milo  B.  Price  acting  as  judges, 
found  759  dry  votes  cast  against  807 
wet. 


RuntnJ>mrth9a9tmothingtitnconnaetumwoiihS.S.5, 
Th^y  ttrm  •MWiCioii  wBortk  your  coffwuicration. 


4'4^, 


s.ss 


PrkaSuioK^i*. 


TKSNrTvrancfli 


Pure  Vegetable  Ingredients 
Fifty  Years  Successful  Use 

'THE   FIRST  MEANS  TO   YOU- 

A  remedy  for  Rheumatism,  Catarrh, 

Malaria  or  Skin  Troubles,  that  has 

qualities  to  drive  these  impurities 
from  the  blood,  and  vegetable  ingredients 
that  build  the  blood  up  to  normal  healthy 
conditions,  without  the  usual  violent 
effects  mineral  drugs  have. 

THE  SECOND  MEANS— 

You  are   not   experimenting  when  treating 
with  S.  S.  S.    The  merits  of  this  remedy  are  fully  established,  and 
thousands  have  found  in  it  the  way  to  renewed  vigor  and  vitality. 
If  you  see  signs  of  blood  impurities,  start  at  once  on  a  bottle  of 
B.  S.  S.     Get  it  at  any  druggist. 

Thb  Swift  Specific  Co.,  Atlanta,  Ga. 


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Friday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 

3m: 


April  14,  1916. 


CmfVD     THE  CUB 
OUUv/lr   REPORTER 


Scoop  SignaU  When  to  Back 


^Of=  COURSt  sM  VTH 
THE  DRVLLlMVOORl 
M0U1H-"<0U  Cf\Nt 
TALK- BUT  (HAKt 
50ME  5l6rNVAiHEM 

XM  HURTiNQ- 
XOU  AND  ILL. 


I 


■  ^^^^t^»^^* 


NEWS  OF  THE  NORTHWEST 


DESIRE  ONE 
TO  PULL  OUT 

North  Dakota  Republicans 

Want  Burdick  or  Fraine 

to  Quit  Race. 


fAVORS  fLtaRIC  CHAIR 
fOR  DISCONTENT  MAKERS 


Candidates   to    Meet  and 

Agree  Upon  Withdrawal 

of  One. 


Bismarck.  N.  D.,  April  14— (Special 
to  Tho  Herald.)— It  soon  may  be 
known  whether  the  recent  efforts  of 
the  Ropubllcans  to  »et  togethor  haa 
eueceeded.  Friends  of  Former  Lleut-'n- 
ant  Governor  Burdick  of  WlllLston. 
Lieutenant  Oovernor  Fraine  of  Grafton 
and  G.  J.  Smith  of  Ryder,  the  three- 
aspirants  for  the  Republican  nomina- 
tion for  governor,  are  to  hold  a  con- 
fpre.nce  here  to  talk  over  the  dltua- 
tlon. 

It  Is  understood  that  .both  Burdick 
and  Fraine  have  expressed  a  wlUlnir- 
ness  to  abide  by  the  result  of  the  con- 
ference and  neither  la  disposed  to  push 
his  own  interests  beyond  a  point  where 
Republican  success  at  the  state  pri- 
maries in  June  may  be  Jeopardize'! 

Friends  of  Rurdlck  insist  that  as  he 
made  the  race  two  years  ago  and  has 
a  wide  acquaintance  over  the  state,  he 
may  be  the  more  formidable  candidate. 
The  supporters  of  Fraine  point  out  the 
fact  that  he  defeated  Kraabel  for  li-u- 
tenant  governor  two  years  ago  and 
demonstrated  his  strength  by  that  vic- 
tory and  that  he  Is  entitled  to  pro- 
motion. 

One  Mumt  Be  Eliminated. 
It  is  generally  admitted  that  either 
can  be  nominated  in  June  If  the  other 
is  not  In  the  race.  It  Is  equally  evi- 
dent that  If  iHJth  remain  in  the  contest 
It  Is  quite  possible  that  the  Non-Partl- 
san  league  candidate  mljfht  win  the 
nomination. 

Republicans  say  the  necessity  for  re- 
ducing the  number  of  candidates,  not 
only  for  the  governorship,  but  for  ail 
the  state  offices.  Is  quite  apparent  if 
Republican  success  is  to  be  assured. 
It  Is  contended  that  If  the  non-partisan 
candidates  should  win,  the  entire  or- 
ganization w(»uid  fall  Into  the  hands 
of   the   SoolallstH.  . 

Should  Col  Fraine  decide  to  with- 
draw, his  friends  will  insist  on  his 
seeking  a  renomlnation  as  lieutenant 
governor  A.  T.  Kraabel  of  Clifford, 
defeat'd  bv  Fraine  two  years  ago.  is 
again  a  candidate.  State  Senator  Ja- 
cobsen  of  Hettinger  county  may  run. 
but  will  not  If  Col.  Fraine  desires  to 
be  a  candidate. 

The  meeting  to  be  hold  either  Sat- 
urday or  Monday  will  devote  its  con- 
ferences entirely  to  state  and  lesisla- 
tlve  offices  and  keep  hands  off  the 
United  States  senatorial  controversy. 

» 

Doctor  Die*  While  Motorlns. 
Green  Hay.  Wis..  April  14— I>r.  R 
F  "Williams,  living  five  miles  "north 
of  here,  died  of  heart  failure  while 
driving  his  automobile  on  a  busy 
street    here    yesterday.      Howard    God- 


F.  T.  CUTHBERT. 
Devils  Lake.  N.  D-.  April  14 -(Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald  )—F.  T.  Cuthbert  of 
Devll.s  Lake,  candidate  for  rfP^esenta- 
tive  in  congress  from  the  ^'irst  North 
Dakota  dlatiict,  la  niakfng  a  atrong 
plea  against  Socialism  in  his  campaign. 
Mr  Cuthbert  declared.  In  opening  hib 
campaign  here,  that  the  ,t'r",^'"*V  w" 
was  too  good  for  Soclallst-L  W,  W. 
agitators,  breeding  discontent  over  the 

''°Mn7';.thbert  recounted  the  events  of 
his  political  career,  declaring  that  It 
would  be  his  ambition.  If  elected,  to 
serve  the  people  in  such  a  manner 
that  on  his  return  to  Ramsey  county 
he    would   have   no   regret   to  offer. 

The  speaker  went  into  detail  in 
dealing  with  his  platform,  consider- 
able lime  being  devoted  to  the  income 
tax  A  rural  credit  measure,  to  elim- 
inate exhorbitant  Interest  rates,  was 
dl3c  Josod.  being  sirongly  favored. 


frey  Milwaukee,  seeing  the  doctor 
slump  In  his  seat,  leaped  «"  the  car 
and  stopped  It  before  It  collided  with 
other     traffic. 


ChU-ago.  and  from  Cleveland,  bought 
wild  lands  near  Moquah.  most  of  them 
settling  in  that  immediate  vicinity, 
but  others  buying  Isolated  tracts  here 
and  there.  Some  of  them  built  earthen 
houses,  somewhat  similar  to  the  sod 
houses  foriperly  so  common  In  Ne- 
braska. At  Moquah,  they  built  their 
own  Catholic  church,  with  a  local 
priest  of  their  own  and  have  proved 
quite  thrifty.  Their  success  has  un- 
doubtedly Inspired  similar  organiza- 
tion*. 

ANOTHER  PAYING 

JAIL  BOARD  BILL 

Copper   Country  Man  De- 
tained in  Bastile  Under 
Unusual  Procedure. 

Hojghton.  Mich..  April  14.— Talk 
about  being  Imprisoned  for  debt,  as 
was  the  custom  in  the  early  days  of 
this  country  until  the  states  passed 
laws  forbidding  the  practice,  Arthur 
Rounnavaarl  of  Calumet  Is  getting  a 
dose  of  It  that  is  making  him  very 
tired. 

He  Is  being  held  In  the  Houghton 
county  jail,  while  John  Aho,  the  man 
who  Is  charging  him  In  civil  suit  for 
damages  amounting  to  $5,000  Is  pay- 
ing his  bo.ird  and  lodging  to  the 
county. 

This  is  the  flr.-4t  time  a  man  has  been 
held  like  this,  as  far  as  the  present 
county  officials  can  ascertain.  Roun- 
navaarl Is  held  on  order  of  Judge 
O'Rrlen  of  the  circuit  court.  The  act 
under  which  it  is  possible  to  hold  him  I 
by  law  is  known  as  a  writ  of  capias 
ad  repondendum.  and  It  Is  believed  ' 
that  this  is  the  first  tlT.e  that  use  of 
this  act  has  b»'cn  made  in  this  county. 
He   Admitted   ANMsnlt. 

At  the  present  April  term  of  circuit 
court  Rounnavaarl  pleaded  guilty  to  a 
charge  of  doing  great  bodily  harm,  he 
having  been  arrested  for  stabbing  Aho 
during  a  quarrel  Judge  O'Brien  re- 
leased Rounnavaarl  with  a  heavy  fine 
and  costs,  which  were  paid.  Aho  evi- 
dently Is  not  pleased  with  having 
Rounnavaarl  released.  In  spite  of  the 
fine,  and  now  will  commence  civil  suit 
for  the  payment  of  $5,000  damages,  re- 
sulting from  the  stabbing  affair.  In 
the  meantime  A»  o,  In  order  to  have 
Rounnavaarl  held,  must  continue  to 
pav  his  board  to  the  county  until 
such  time  as  the  trial  takes  place  in 
circ'ilt  CO  irt.  Rounnavaarl  has  one 
hope.  That  Is  if  the  trial  Is  put  oft 
long  enough  so  that  Aho  will  become 
tired   of  paying  his  toard. 


I  prove    the    greatest    community    event 
ever    attempted    in    this    eectlon.      The 
I  educational     Institution*     of     the     two 
I  cities    will    figure    prominently    1 1    the 
affair.       The  program.  In  brief,  follows: 
Eight  Days'  Pr«Kvam. 
Saturday,      May      6.  —  Afternoon.      1 
o'clock  —  Pageant       procession       with 
Fargo    and    Moorhead    citizens    partici- 
pating.     Over   1,000    school   children    In 
line.        S     o'clock — Games,     songs     and 
dances  at  Island  park;  reception  to  the 
court   of   Queen    Elizabeth.      Evening — 
"Merchant  of  Venice"  at  Moorhend  nor- 
mal school  by  students  of  the   Institu- 
tion. 

May  7. — Morning,  a^mor.s  on  Shape- 
speare  and  the  Bible,  at  the  churches. 
Evening — Union  service  and  mass  meet- 
ing, auditorium  If  possible. 

May  8. — Matinee  at  Orphcum  theater 

"Much    Ado   About   Nothing,"    staged 

by  North  Dakota  Agricultural  college. 
Evening — at  Orpheum  theater.  "Ham- 
let." staged  by  Sacred  Heart  academy. 
-Rsllbevenlng.A  etaoln  shrdlu  cmfwya 
May  9. — Matinee  at  Orpheum  theater, 
"Hamlet,"  staged  by  Sacred  Heart 
academy;  evening  performance,  Or- 
pheum theater.  "Much  Ado  About  Noth- 
ing." staged  by  North  Dakota  Agri- 
cultural  college. 

May  10— Matinee  nt  Orpheum  theater, 
"Tho  Taming  of  the  Shrew,"  staged  by 
Bargo  college.  Evening  performance. 
Orpheiim  theater.  "A3  You  Like  It,** 
staged  by  Fargo  high  school. 

May  11 — Matinee  at  Orpheum  theater, 
"As  You  Like  It,"  staged  by  Fargo  high 
school.  Evening  performance.  Orpheum 
theater,  "The  Taming  of  the  Shrew," 
staged  by  Fargo  college. 

May  12 — Matinee  at  Orpheum  theater, 
"Twelfth  Night."  staged  by  Western 
School  of  Expression.  Evening  per- 
formance. Orpheum  theater,  "Midsum- 
mer Night's  Dream."  staged  by  Hutch- 
inson School   of  Expression. 

May  13 — Matinee.  Orpheum  theft^r, 
"Midsummer  Night's  Dream,"  staged  by 
Hutchinson  School  of  Expression. 
Evening,  Orpheum  theater.  "Twelfth 
Night."  staged  l)y,  We^stem  School  of 
Expression. 

Week  will  be  closed  lyr  merchants  of 
the  city  In  pyrotechnic  display  along 
nroadway. 


st^ 


HAVE  ROSY  CHEEKS 
AND  FEEL  FRESH  AS 
A  DAISY— TRY  THIS! 


Says    glass    of    hot    water    with 

phosphate  before  breakfast 

washes  out  poisons. 


To  see  the  tinge  of  healthy  bloom  in 
your  face,  to  see  your  skin  get  clearer 
and  clearer,  to  wake  up  without  a 
headache,  backache,  coated  tongue  or 
a  nastv  breath.  In  fact  to  feel  your 
best,  day  In  and  day  out.  Just  try  In- 
Blde-bathlng  every  morning  for  one 
week.  ,  ,    .    , 

Before  breakfast  each  day.  drink  a 
glass  of  real  hot  water  witli  a  tea- 
•poonful  of  limestone  phosphate  in  it 
as  a  harmless  means  of  washing  from 
the  stomach,  liver,  kidneys  and  bowels 
the  previous  day's  indlgeitlble  waste, 
•our  bile  and  toxins;  thus  cleansing. 
•  weetenlng  and  purifying  the  entire 
alimentary  canal  before  putting  more 
food  Into  the  stomach.  The  action  of 
hot  water  and  limestone  phosphate  on 
an  empty  stomach  is  wonderfully  In- 
vigorating. It  cleans  out  all  the  sour 
fermentations,  gases  and  acidity  and 
Jives      one    a    splendid      appetite      for 

)reakfast.  ,     .  ,,        ^  . 

A  quarter  pound  of  limestone  phos- 
phate will  cost  very  little  at  the  drug 
»tore  but  is  sufficient  to  demonstrate 
that  '  Just  as  soap  and  hot  water 
cleanses,  sweetens  and  freshens  the 
»kln  so  hot  water  and  limestone  phos- 
phate act  on  the  blood  and  Internal  or- 
gans. Those  who  are  subject  to  con- 
stipation, bilious  attacks,  acid  stomach, 
rheumatic  twinges,  also  those  whose 
■kin  Is  sallow  and  complexion  pallid, 
are  assured  that  one  week  of  inside- 
bathing  will  have  them  both  looking 
and  feeling  better  In  every  way.— Ad- 
vertisement. 


COLONISTS  FOR 

ASHLAND  GOUNH 

Many  Bohemian  Families  to 

Settle  on  Large  Land 

Tract  Purchased. 

Ashland.  Wis..  April  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  recent  purchase  of 
38.000  acres  of  wild,  cut-over  land  at 
Shanagolden.  Ashland  county,  will  be 
followed  as  soon  as  weather  condi- 
tions permit,  by  the  location  of  100 
Bohemian  families  on  the  newly  pur- 
chased tract,  to  be  followed  by  others, 
as   quickly   as   possible, 

Shanagolden    is   on    the    Soo    line.    In 
central    Ashland    county,    and   until    re- 
cently,  has  been  the  center  of  logging 
operations      extending     to     the     head- 
waters of  the  Chippewa,   with  Glidden 
as     the     shipping     point.      Lumbermen 
have    been    operating    In    the    vicinity 
for    twenty    years,    but    owing    to    the 
entire  absence  of  railroads,  except  the 
Sou.  which  passes  directly  through  the 
,   county  without   tapping  the  forest   re- 
I   glon.  the  rough  country,  and  the  more 
I  or    less     difficulty     of     operation,     the 
country   has    been    cleared   slowly,   and 
I   until    comparatively    a    recent    period, 
I   considerable    portions    of    the    cut-over 
I  land    was    abandoned    as    soon    as    the 
'   timb»-r   was   removed,    the   land  became 
the  property  of  the  county,  on  account 
of   unpaid    taxes,   and   was   offered    for 
8al»»    by    the   county     at     60     cents     per 
acre      The   discovery   of   the    unrivalled 
adaptability  of  the  soil  for  the  growth 
of    hay,    alfalfa,    root    crops    and   grain 
has    changed    all    this,     although     land 
can   still    be   bought  at  as  low  a   price 
as   |5    pel    acre,   although   this  figure   is 
much  below  the  average  figure,  choice 
tracts    of    farm    land    near   the    city   of 
Ashland,     bringing     this    winter,     $100 
per  acre. 

Looked  Over  Lands. 
Representatives  of  the  Bohemian 
colonists,  including  farmers  from  the 
viclnitv  of  Cedar  Rapids,  Iowa,  and 
Illinois  and  Minnesota,  spent  two 
years  looking  over  the  country  for  a 
suitable  place  for  the  formation  of  a 
colony.  They  visited  Montana,  Min- 
nesota, Florida  and  other  places, 
finally  favoring  the  Shanagolden  tract 
in  Ashland  county.  To  carry  the  deal 
through,  the  Ashland  County  Farm 
Land  company  was  formed,  and  an 
office  waa  estabii^shed  in  Minneapo- 
lis. The  company  Is  composed  In  part 
of  the  Bohemians  themselves,  who  will 
make  it  possible  for  others  of  their 
nationality,  to  settle  on  the  tract,  and 
as  other  wild  land  can  be  easily  ob- 
tained in  the  vicinity,  the  promoters 
see  visions  of  one  of  the  largest 
Bohemian  colonies  In  the  United 
States. 

The  success  of  a  local  land  com- 
pany. In  forming  a  Polish  colony  In 
the  vicinity  of  Moquah,  on  the  North- 
ern Pacific  between  Ashland  and  Iron 
River,  undoubtedly  had  Its  effect  on 
the  Bohemians.  Five  years  ago.  350 
Polish  families,  a  number  of  'whom 
came    from    the    stockyard    district    of 


FESTIVAL  IN  HONOR 
OF  SHAKESPEARE 

Fargo  and  Moorhead  Will 

Pay  Tribute  to  Poet 

Next  Month. 

Fargo.  N.  D..  April  14.— The  people 
of  Fargo  and  Moorhead  aided  by  resi- 
dents of  adjoining  sections  will  pay 
honor  to  William  Shakespeare  during 
what  Is  called  a  Shakespeare  festival  to 
be  carried  on  In  tho  two  cities.  May  6 
to  May  12. 

It  is  predicted  Shakespeare  festival 
week     In     Fargo     and     Moorhead     will 


SUPERFLUOUS 
HAIR  REMOVERS 
ARE  DANGEROUS 


Don't  Use  Polflonoas  So-callod 
Sup^rfiuoiLs  Hair  Removers. 


You  may  escape  permanent  Injury  If 
you  use  so-called  hair  removers,  but 
you  cannot  escape  an  Increased  growth 
because  after  each  removal  the  hair 
Is  bound  to  grow  out  more  bristly  and 
In  time  will  beconve  so  coarse  that 
nothing  win  remove  It  but  a  razor. 

The  only  safe  way  to  remove  hair 
is  to  devitalize  It.  It  Is  useless  to 
use  pastes  or  rub-on  preparations  be- 
cause they  only  remove  hair  from  the 
surface  of  the  skin,  DeMiracle.  the 
original  liquid  depilatory  devitalises 
hair  by  attacking  It  under  the  skin  as 
well    as   on    the    skin. 

Imitations  of  DeMiracle  are  as 
worthless  as  pastes  and  rub-on  pre- 
parations because  they  lack  certain 
Ingredients  that  DeMiracle  alone  con- 
tains which  give  it  the  power  to  rob 
hair  of  Its  vitality.  DeMiracle  works 
equally  well  for  removing  hair  from 
face,  neck,  arms  and  under  arms  or 
from  limbs  to  orevent  it  from  showing 
through    stockings. 

Remember  DeMiracle  is  the  only  de- 
pilatory that  has  a  binding  guarantee 
In  each  package,  which  entitles  you 
to  your  money  if  It  falls.  Insist  on 
the  "genuine  DeMiracle  and  you  will 
get  the  original  liquid  hair  remover. 
Others  are  worthless  imitations — re- 
fuse   them.  ^    ^^ 

DeMiracle  is  sold  In  $1,00  and  $2.00 
bottles.  The  larger  size  Is  the  most 
economical  for  dermatologists  and 
large  users  to  buy.  If  your  dealer 
will  not  supply  you,  buy  a  bottle  from 
I  Frelmuth.  or  order  direct  from  us. 
The  truth  about  the  treatment  of 
superfluous  hair  mailed  In  plain  sealed 
envelope  on  request.  DeMiracle  Chem- 
ical company  Dept.  12-F.  Park  Ave, 
and    12fth     St.,     New    York. 


WiU.  BEfiiN  WORK 
ON  BRAINCRO  PUNT 

•• ''  ' '  ■ 

Company     Organized     to 

Erect   Gas  Works  in 

Crow  Wing  City. 

Bralnerd,  Minn.,  April  14. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Bralnerd  Gas  & 
Electric  company  has  been  Incorpor- 
ated for  $100,000  by  St.  Cloud  capital- 
ists, with  Bralnerd  as  Its  principal 
place  of  business  and  St.  Cloud  as  Its 
principal  branch  office.  The  Incorpora- 
tors are:  President,  A.  G.  Whitney; 
vice  president.  R.  L.  Gale;  secretary, 
A.  J.  Bemls;  treasurer,  P,  H.  CoUlg- 
non   and  O.  W,   Plank. 

Mr.  Whitney  Is  at  the  head  of  the 
Whitney  utilities  of  St.  Cloud  and  sur- 
rounding territory,  his  activities  In- 
cluding the  operation  of  gas  and  elec- 
tric plants,  electric  street  railway  and 
other   Industries. 

R.  L.  Gale  Is  th* ,  president  of  the 
Cold  Storage  comjSatJy  of  St.  Cloud. 
A.  J.  Bemls  Is  a  well,  known  engineer- 
ing expert  and  the  general  manager  of 
all  of  the  Whitney  utilities.  P.  H. 
Colllgnon  Is  of  St.  Cloud.  G.  W.  Plank 
Is  the  private  secretary  of  Mr.  Whit- 
ney. * 
To  Start  Bralnerd  Work. 

Construction  work  will  soon  be  un- 
der way  on  the  large  gas  plant  here. 
The  Northern  Pacific  railway  Is  about 
to  commence  construction  of  a  spur 
track  to  the  gas  plant  site.  Mains 
will  soon  be  laid  and  ttie  town  served 
In   summer. 

Mr.  Whitney  has  been  In  Florida 
for  some  time  and  Is  expected  here 
and  in  St.  Cloud  shortly  and  will  de- 
vote much  personal  attention  to  the 
project.  H,  G.  Williams,  In  charge 
of  gas  plants,  will  superintend  op- 
erations In  Bralnerd^M*  '■  enthusias- 
tic over  Bralnerd  4A4!  the  prospects 
for  doing  business. 

N0RTHl)AK()1lf«  HURT 
SERIOUSLY  IN  RUNAWAY 

Fargo.  N.  D..  April  14.— E.  C.  Moe,  a 
pioneer  of  Cooperstqiwn.  Is  still  In  a 
critical  condition  In  St.  Luke's  hospital 
here  as  the  result  of  his  team  running 
away  a  few  days  a^o.  Both  legs  are 
broken  and  he  Is  internally  Injured. 
His  relatives  are  trying  to  be  located. 


afternoon  at  the  M.  E.  parsonage.  Rev. 
U.  8.  Vlllars  officiating.  The  bride 
is  the  daughter  of  W.  Q.  Macka- 
man  and  the  bridegroom  is  a  son  of 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  Vorce.  The 
young  people  will  live  on  the  Macka- 
man  farm  at  Cedar  lake. 

FRAZEEGJRL  BRIDE 

OF  ST.  PAUL  MAN 

Frazee.  Minn.,  April  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — On  Wednesday  evening 
at  the  residence  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  John 
Kohler.  their  daughter.  Sadie  Louise 
Kohler.  became  the  bride  of  Raymond 
R.  Rockwell  of  St.  Paul.  In  the  pres- 
ence of  relatives  and  Immediate 
friends.  Rev.  F.  L.  Erlangher.  pastor 
of  the  Methodist  church,  officiating, 
Mr.  and  Mrs  Rockwell  will  be  at  home 
after  May  16  at  1037  Iglehart  avenue, 
St.  Paul. 

DIORITEMINEIS 
TEMPORARILY  CLOSED 

Ishpemlng.  Mich..  April  11.— The 
American  mine  at  Dionlte  has  discon- 
tinued mining  operations  for  a  few 
days,  while  repairs  are  being  made  In 
the  shaft,  Monday  the  skip  was  pulled 
to  the  top  of  the  shaft  when  the  rope 
gave  away  and  the  skip  fell  to.  the  bot- 
tom of  the  mine.  On  Its  rapid  descent 
it  tore  away  much  of  the  timber  and  It 
will  require  a  few  days  to  complete  the 
repairs. 

Start    MInot   Ballding. 

Mlnot.  N.  D..  April  14.— Contractor  D. 
A.  Dlnnle  Is  working  on  the  foundation 
of  the  Moline  machinery  warehouse 
and  distributing  depot,  which  will  be 
one  of  the  best  structures  of  lU  kind 
in  the  city.  The  building  will  be  50  by 
140  feet  three  stories  above  a  full 
basement,  and  will  be  finished  In  an 
architectural  style  In  keeping  with  the 
size  of  the  structure  Itself. 

The  contract  calls  for  the  comple- 
tion of  the  building  by  Aug,  1, 


been  damaged  by  recent  high  water. 

Stevens  Point — D.  L.  Hunter,  mem- 
ber of  the  county  board,  residing  near 
Junction  City,  Is  In  the  hospital  here 
with  lockjaw  as  the  result  of  a  cut 
on  his  foot.  He  tried  to  kick  away  a 
slah  of  wood  while  sawing  with  a 
machine  on  his  farm  and  slipped  and 
struck  the  saw  with  his  foot. 

Sheboygan  —  The  Wisconsin  Chair 
company  of  this  city  and  Port  Wash- 
ington, controlled  by  Fred  A.  Ben- 
nett, has  won  its  suit  In  the  supreme 
court  against  the  state  industrial 
commission  and  Martin  Borsenik  an 
employe  of  its  Port  Washington  plant, 
to  set  aside  an  award  of  $760  for  the 
loss  of   an    eye. 

Milwaukee — The  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce of  Milwaukee  has  been  granted 
permission  to  Intervene  in  the  inter- 
state commerce  commission  hearing 
on  the  appeal  of  the  Grand  Trunk 
railway  of  Canada,  that  It  be  per- 
mitted to  continue  operating  its  lake 
boat  line  under  the  Panama  canal  act. 


DAKOTA  BRIEFS 


WISCONSIN  BRIEFS  | 

La  Crosse— Rev,  Edward  P,  O'Toole, 
Ellsworth,  Wis.,  has  been  appointed  to 
succeed  Rev.  Ambrose  Murphy  as  pas- 
tor of  St.  James  church  on  the  North 
side.  It  was  announced  Thursday  by 
Bishop  James  Schwebach.  *^atheT 
O'Toole  win  take  charge  of  the  parish 
In  May,  when  Father  Murphy  Is  sched- 
uled to  leave  for  Prairie  du  Chlen. 

Sparta— A  branch  of  the  Equity  so- 
ciety was  organized  here  with  a  mem- 
bership of  about  twenty.  Including 
many  of  the  prominent  farmers  in  tne 
community.  The  following  officers 
were  elected:  W.  H.  Hanchett,  presi- 
dent- R,  J.  Watson,  vice  president; 
Theodore  Reutten,  secretary-treasurer 
Judge  Mahoney  of  Viroqua.  president 
of  the  State  Equity  society,  assisted  In 
starting  the  organization. 

Milwaukee— Edward     R.     Tinker     of 
New   York,   John   Barnes,   counsel,   and 
Percy  H.  Evans,  actuary  of  the  North- 
western   Mutual    Life    Insurance    com- 
pany, have   been   appointed   trustees  of 
that   company    to    fllj.  vacancies   in   the 
board  until  the  general  election  In  July. 
Milwaukee— Gilbert     W,     Barber,     a 
pioneer   of  Milwaukee   county,   died  on 
Tuesday  at  his  home  In  Allegan,  Mich. 
He  was  the  Son  of  Bendiah  and  Olive 
(Gilbert)    Barber,    of    the    earliest   set- 
tlers of  this  county.    He   was   born   in 
the    town    of    Wauwatosa    on    Feb.    14, 
1842.  and  was  by  occupation  a  farmer. 
Madison — The  attorney    general    ad- 
vised the   Wisconsin   railroad    commis- 
sion   that    treasurers    of    cities    under 
a   general   or  special   charter   may   ap- 
point  deputies   to   perform    any   minis- 
terial   duties,     but     not     discretionary 

functions.  .....      ^  ,ij   .   .» 

Grand  Rapids  —  The  Consolidated 
Water  Power  and  Paper  company  of 
this  city  has  placed  an  order  for  10,- 
000  barrels  of  cement  to  be  used  in 
the  construction  work  on  their  dam. 
The  ea»t  portion  will  be  rebuilt,  and 
the  Biron  dam,  also  owned  by  this 
company,    will    be    repaired.    It   having 


Bismarck.  N.  D. — Seven  families  with 
many  carloads  of  farm  machinery, 
household  goods  and  livestock,  ha^'j 
gone  to  Fort  Clark  district  within  the 
past  few  weeks,  according  to  fcJ.  H. 
Farln,  real  estate  man  of  the  city. 

Agricultural  College,  N.  D.— Dr.  E.  F. 
Ladd,  president  of  the  North  Dakota 
Agricultural  college,  has  been  honored 
by  the  secretary  of  the  navy  with  an 
appointment  as  associate  member  of 
the  naval  consulting  board  of  the 
United  States. 

Grand  Forks,  N.  D.  —  Thomas  M. 
Swlggum,  who  for  the  past  eleven 
yoars  has  been  connected  with  the 
Grand  Forks  Mercantile  company  In 
tlie  capacity  of  sales  aan,  has  been  ap- 
pointed sales  manager  to  succeed  W.  A. 
Haverson.  who  has  been  conncctc  1  with 
the  Arm  for  several  yfars. 

Mandan,  N.  D. — Local  Elks  have  in- 
stalled the  following  officers:  Exalted 
ruler.  L.  S.  Royer;  esteemed  leading 
lujight.  H,  R,  Bltzlng;  esteemed  lectur- 
ing knight,  Benno  Schlmansky;  es- 
teemed loyal  knight,  John  O'Rourke; 
secretary,  G.  1.  Solum;  esquire.  John 
Tlmmerman;  Inner  guard.  Roy  Dow; 
tiler,  Fred  Tharpe;  chaplain.  I.  T.  Lar- 
.son:  organist.  H.  H.  Williams. 

Mlnot.  N,  D.  —  John  Walrath  of  St. 
Paul,  has  been  appointed  assistant 
trainmaster  of  the  Mlnot  division  of 
the  Great  Northern  railroad  to  fill  the 
place  made  vacant  by  the  Injury  of  W. 
F.  Benton  of  Mlnot.  W.  P.  Benton  was 
struck  by  a  snowplow  last  winter  while 
directing  the  clearing  of  some  traok  in 
tho  West.  He  has  been  unconscious 
most  of  the  time. 

Fargo,  N.  D.  —  The  assessors  of  Cass 
county  hfld  a  meeting  with  (bounty 
Auditor  William  R.  Tucker  Wedne.<>iday. 
the  meeting  proving  to  be  the  best  at- 
tended of  any  that  has  been  held  In  the 
history  of  the  county.  Of  the  fifty-nine 
assessors  of  the  county,  all  but  three 
were  present.  Mr.  Tucker  went  over 
the  entire  schedule  with  the  assessors 
and  each  Item  was  explained  to  them. 

Valley  City,  N.  D. — The  bids  for  the 
eonstructlon  of  the  new  concolldated 
school  In  Green  township  were  opened 
Tuesday.  Those  blading  were  W.  .f. 
Curren,  |11.'704;  Math  Mikktlson.  $11,- 
600;  L.  C.  Stuewig,  $11,448;  Sampson  & 
Olson.  $11,293.60.  The  lowest  bidder 
was  awarded   the  contract.  • 

Fargo,  N»  D. — Chairman  H.  H.  Perry 
and  Secretary  F.  W.  McLean  of  the 
Democratic  state  central  committee  is- 
sued notice  of  a  meeting  of  the  com- 
mittee and  party  here  April   21. 


Lutheran  church  there  that  will  be  of 
three    days'    duration. 

International  Fails — An  employe  of 
the  paper  mill  named  George  Slias. 
aged  24  years,  died  at  the  hospital 
Tuesday  night.  He  Is  survived  by  m 
family,  who  accompanied  the  remains 
to   Michigan. 

Stillwater — Superintendent  Hollands 
told  the  board  of  education  that  the 
graduating  class  of  1916  of  the  high 
school  was  a  unit  In  deciding  against 
the  use  of  the  caps  and  gowns,  first 
worn  by  a  class  in  Stillwater  In   1915. 

Bemidji — A  hearing  will  be  held  at 
the  courthouse  Saturday  at  10  o'clock 
a.  m.,  on  the  construction  of  a  new 
judicial  highway  in  Koochiching  an. I 
Beltrami  counties.  The  road  Is  to  be 
established    near    Northome. 

Rochester — Mrs.  Rosella  Eaton.  o«e 
of  the  earliest  of  pioneers  to  come 
to  Olmsted  county,  died  April  12  at 
her  home  In  Byron.  Mrs.  Eaton  was 
nearly  91,  having  been  born  at  Lan- 
caster. Pa..  June  8,  1825.  In  1861  she 
moved  to  South  Carolina.  Four  years 
later  she  migrated  to  Minnesota  and 
settled  near  Byron.  She  is  survived 
by  one  son.  Charles  Kesson  of  Byron; 
one  daughter.  Mrs.  Mary  J.  Webb  of 
Byron,  and  three  brothers  and  two 
sisters* 

Hinckley — Will  Purdy  left  for  Lis- 
bon, N.  D.,  where  he  has  a  position 
for    the    coming   year. 


PENINSULA  BRIEFS 


MISSING  EVELETHIAN 
IS  LOCATED  AT  TOVVER 

The  local  story  in  Wednesday's  Her- 
ald stating  that  Mrs.  Austin  Law  and 
her  two  children,  living  at  Eveleth, 
would  like  to  find  their  husband  and 
father  who  has  been  missing  since  last 
December  got  quick  sesults.  Yesterday 
The  Herald  recelvetl  a  telephone  mes- 
sage from  the  Merchants  &  Miners' 
bank  of  Tower.  Minn.,  stating  that  a 
man  of  that  name  c«.lled  at  the  bank 
.yesterday  and  cashed  two  time  checks 
i.<^sued  to  him  by  the  Trout  Lake  Lum- 
ber company,  the  pre  su;nptlon  being  he 
worked  for  that  concern  last  winter. 
He  has  left  Tower  and  It  could  not  be 
learned  today  whether  he  had  gone  to 
Eveleth   to  Join   his   t^mlly. 

DULUTHIAN  W£DS" 

AITKIN  YOUNG  WOMAN 

Aitkin.  Minn.,  Artril  14. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Mlsi), Sadie  Tate  of  Ait- 
kin county  and  Le^uHe  Jeffries  of  Du- 
luth  were  married  Wednesday  noon  at 
the  Methodist  parsonage.  Rev.  U,  S. 
Vlllars  performing 'the  (Ceremony,  They 
left  In  the  afternoon  for  West  Du- 
luth.  where  they  yrlll  make  thelx 
home.  }  .         _  _      . 

Miss  Lois  MackatrilUi  mnd  Beryl  Reed 
Vorce,  well  knowtf  young  people  of 
this    place,    were  j^rried    Wednesday 


FACE  FULL  OF 
UGLY  BLOTCHES 


Itching  Almost    Unbearable. 
Night  Could  Not  Sleep  Good. 
Face  Looked  Bad. 


At 


HEALED  BY  CUTICURA 
SOAP  AND  OINTMENT 


"Large  bumps  broke  out  on  my  forehead 
aad  face.  Tbey  were  hard  and  red  and 
ftatered.  My  face,  for  a  long  whfle.  wss 
ItOl  of  ugly  blotches  and  the  Itdiing  was 
almost  unbearable.  At  night  I  could  not 
sleep  good  and  my  face  looked  so  bad  I 
WM  aloMMt  ashamed  to  go  to  scbooL 

"The  trouble  bad  lasted  about  four 
months  before  I  began  to  use  Cutlcura  Soap 
and  Ointment.  After  the  first  application 
I  began  to  notice  a  difference  In  the  appear- 
ance of  my  face,  and  after  three  months' 
treatment  with  the  Cutlcura  Soap  and 
Ointment  I  was  he^ed."  (Signed)  Miss 
Anna  Shephetd.  R,  F.  D,  8.  North  Man- 
chester, Ind..  Aug.   17,  lOlS. 

Keep  your  skin  clear,  scalp  dean  and 
tna  from  dandruff,  and  hair  live  and  glossy 
by  using  Cutlcura  Soap  and  Ointmeat. 

Sample  Each  Free  by  Mail 

with  32-p.  Skin  Book  on  wauest.  Ad- 
dress post-card  "CalU.'ura,  De»t.  T,  ■••- 
tmu"    Sold  througbout  t)»  wvrld. 


Crookston — Eight  teachers  to  suc- 
ceed those  who  did  not  place  their 
applications  for  re-election  have  been 
chosen  by  the  school  board  and  have 
accepted    the  call    to   fill   vacancies. 

Big  Falls — Two  more  scarlet  fever 
cases  were  detected,  one  at  John  Ekc- 
berg's  and  the  other  at  Leslie  War- 
nei-'s  home,  both  being  very  mild 
cases  and  likely  the  patients  will  re- 
cuperate   soon. 

Owatonna — Over  700  farmers  met  In 
Owatonna  today  and  organized  the 
Owatonna  Packing  company.  Included 
among  the  stockhold<.'rs  are  farmers 
from  all  parts  of  southeastern  Min- 
nesota. The  new  packing  company 
is  to  be  organized  'With  $150,000  cap- 
ital. 

St.  Cloud — George  Selmg,  a  quarry 
man  employed  at  the  Granite  City 
quary.  Is  at  the  hospital  suffering 
from  a  fractured  arm  and  a  fractured 
skull  and  possibly  Internal  Injuries. 
Selmg  was  riding  down  Into  the  pit 
in  the  grout  carrier  when  he  fell  out 
of  the  carrier  and  dropped  a  distance 
of  forty  feet  to  the  bottom  of  the  pit. 

East  Grand  Forks — Mrs.  Mary 
Armes.  aged  32,  died  after  an  illness 
of  seven  months'  duration  of  tuber- 
culosis. She  was  the  daughter  of 
Mr,  and  Mrs.  F.  W.  -Kolars  of  this 
city.  She  is  survived  by  her  parents, 
several  brothers  and  sisters,  her  hus- 
band and  four  stepchildren.  She  has 
made  her  home  in  East  Grand  Forks 
since  1892,  and  was  educated  In  the 
local  schools.  She  entered  the  sana- 
torium  at    Dunselth    for    treatment. 

Ada — The  Commercial  dub  has 
elected  the  following  officers:  Presi- 
dent, A.  W.  Austin;  vice  president. 
D.  C.  Llghtbourn;  secretary.  Herman 
Thune;  treasurer,  Ray  Betcher.  The 
club  has  nine  directors  and  the  three 
first  named  officers  are  members  of 
the  board  of  directors.  The  city 
council  is  represented  by  three  mem- 
bers on  the  board  of  directors,  as  fol- 
lows: Mayor  C.  C.  Allen,  Aldermen 
Betcher    and    Zamzow. 

St.  Cloud — Charging  that  her  arrest 
was  malicious  and  the  action  brought 
at  that  time  was  without  foundation, 
Mrs.  Martin  Dumbrosky  of  CoUege- 
vlUe  has  brought  suit  against  her 
brother-in-law.  Peter  Dumbrosky,  for 
damages   amounting   to   |5,000. 

Isanti — The  Pine  City  Electric  com- 
pany began  supplying  service  to 
Isanti  last  week  and  the  work  of  wir- 
ing buildings  Is  going  on  as  rapidly 
as  possible.  It  Is  expected  to  have 
the  service  practically  complete  about 
May    1. 

Crookston — Rev.  J,  F.  Melom  of  Dal- 
ton.  Minn.,  Rev.  J.  N.  Johnson  of  Fer- 
gus Falls,  and  Rev,  O.  M.  Hanson  of 
Crookston  went  to  ICentor  Wednesday 
Xo    attend    a    meeting    of    the    Hauges 


Hancock — George  Henry  Thomas,  ag<'d 
25,  was  killed  In  No.  2  shaft  at  the 
Quincy  mine  about  4  p.  m.  Tuesday. 
The  young  man  Is  survived  by  his  wife 
In  England  and  by  two  brothers,  ("apt. 
Fred  Thomas  and  Arthur  Thomas,  at 
the  Quincy  location. 

South  Range — George  Michael  Kata- 
nactr.  aged  about  32  years,  died  at  hie 
home  here  Tuesday  of  heart  trouble. 
He  Is  survived  by  his  wife  and  one 
child  and  one  brother  at  South  Range. 
He  also  leaves  his  father  and  mother, 
three  sisters  and  one  brother  In  Min- 
neapolis and  a  sister  at  Iron  Rlvor, 
Wis. 

Hancock — The  local  chapter  of  the 
Eastern  Star  elected  the  following 
officers:  Worthy  matron.  Clara  Ing- 
ram; worthy  patron,  Thomas  Stodden; 
associate  matron,  Mrs.  Mayme  Ingram; 
conductress,  Alice  Bell;  associate  con- 
ductres.«<,  Mrs.  Jr-ssie  Maunders;  sec- 
retary, Harriet  Tilton;  treasurer,  Mrs. 
Mary   Scott. 

Calumet — Funeral  services  will  be  held 
Friday  for  Alexander  S.  Kibeak,  aged 
36.  who  died  Tuesday.  He  Is  survived 
by  his  parents,  two  brothers,  John  and 
Joseph  of  Milwaukee,  who  arrived  to 
attend  the  funeral,  also  two  married 
sisters,  Mrs.  Frank  Nowakoskl  and 
Mrs.  Michael  Marlnskl.  both  of  Calu- 
met 

Baraga — At  the  Federal  court  la 
Marquette  Wednesday  Judge  Sessions 
gave  an  order  of  Judication  In  the  mat- 
ter of  the  hearing  in  denial  of  bank- 
ruptcy of  Charles  and  William  Laurn 
of  Baraga. 

Calumet — The  jury  that  investigated 
the  death  of  John  Mehrens.  whose  de- 
composed body  was  found  last  week  in 
the  old  Pinten  building  on  Pine  street, 
returned  a  verdict  that  he  came  to  his 
death  some  time  between  Aug.  16  last 
and  April   8  from  causes  unknown. 

Ishpemlng — The  Rf>publlcan  district 
convention  will  be  held  in  this  city  In 
the  Butler  theater  the  afternoon  of 
Wednesday.  April  20.  and  will  be  at- 
tended by  twenty-four  delegates  from 
all  the  counties  In  the  district,  for  the 
purpose  of  electing  two  delegates  to 
the  national  convention  to  be  held  In 
Chicago  June  7.  Two  alternates  will 
also  be  elected. 

Negaunee — Announcements  have  been 
received  here  of  the  marriage  of  Larry 
Hickley  to  Miss  Mildred  Phillips,  an 
Arizona  girl,  at  Dos  Cabezos.  Mex.,  near 
where  Mr.  Hlckcy  Is  employed  In  dia- 
mond drill  work. 

Ishpemlng  —  Several  changes  have 
been  made  In  the  routes  of  the  mail 
carriers  lately.  Most  of  the  routes  to 
the  south  of  the  city  have  been  altered, 
and  the  amount  of  mall  of  several  of 
the  carriers  will  be  increased  or  de- 
creased. Several  changes  were  made 
In  the  routes  of  Henry  Treblicock, 
Steye  TerrlU  and  Victor  Viking. 
■  ■  '■  ''  ...  -gg 


STOMACH  AILMERTS 

THE  NATION'S  CURSE 


Wonderful  Remedy 
Quickly  Restores 
BUtBjuoo  -sjinBaj  anoiaAJBiu  sji  q.:>jBM. 
•X«poj  ©sop  auo  Xjx  suon^J^do 
\v3\%inu  wnoijas  pajuaAaad  puB  'S9.\\\ 
ajam  paABs  kbh  M  aaBp^p  Xubk      "<>!* 

--BtUlUBUUI    OJUOJUO  8XBn«   PUB   «dltlOOS 

■\xx9ya&a  am  uioaj  KuonajooB  (BqajB) 
-BO  puB  »iiq  snouoKiorl  r»t^)  i>'d-)dAVS  JI 
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'saupsa^ui  puB  tjaBtuojg  oqi  jo  sas^i.T. 
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9JOUI     SUJS-HBO     luaiUllB     OU     Sj     ^JSMX 

no  alcohol — no  hablt-formlng  drugs. 
Book  on  Stomach  Ailments  FREE. 
Address  Geo.  H,  Mayr.  Mfg.  Chemist. 
Chicago,  Better  yet — obtain  a  bottla 
of  Mayr's  Wonderful  Remedy  from 
any  reliable  druggist,  who  will  refuoA 
your  money  If  It  Calls, 


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Friday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


Baseball 
Rowing 


NEWS  AND  VIEWS  OF  THE  SPORT  WORLD  \^i^^^ 


■'•     BOWL.IIVO    •- 


Boxing 


REAL  "COMEBACK"  IS 


BASEBALL'S  PROMISE 


A  GREAT  SEASON  IS    :  ' 

PREDICTED  FOR  KENT 


'nterest  Great  in  the  Na- 
tional Pastime— Present 
Season's  Conditions  Much 
More  Rosy  Than  Pnose  of 
Year  Ago — The  Northern 
League  Faces  a  Great 
Year— Could  Sam  Lang- 
ford  Beat  Jess  Willard? 


m 


BY  BRUCE. 

rr^RLY,  Fans,  this  looks  like 
a  great  x^'*""  f*'i"  baseball. 
Wctltiodaj's  attcndajico  fig- 
_  iires  and  the  K^'^ral  cnthusi- 
™  asm  that  marked  the  inaugu- 
ral of  ihf  lOi'i  stas<Mi  in  the  two  ma- 
jor lcaKUe«;.  is  a  glowing  augury  of 
success.  With  the  bird  of  prosperity 
flapi»ing  l>old  and  confident  wings — 
with  the  meddlcssome  Feds  out  of 
the  way.  and  with  the  magnates  in  a 
more  docile  frame  of  mind  toward  the 
interests  of  the  public,  there  is  little 
doubt  that  the  baseball  progress  of 
the  present  year  will  soar  unto  the 
high  marks  of  the  great  national 
pastime. 

There  has  been  a  decided  tendency 
during  the  last  five  years  or  more  to 
focus  attention  on  the  major  leagues 
at  the  expense  of  the  smaller  leagues 
of  the  country.  When  adversity  fell 
adrift  of  the  path  of  the  big  fellows, 
it  was  reflected  in  even  greater  de- 
gree, relatively  speaking,  on  the  little 
fellows.  Now  that  it  appears  finan- 
cial success  is  about  to  return  to  the 
big  leagues,  it  is  to  be  earnestly 
hoped  that  the  little  leagues  of  the 
country,  the  very  bulwark  of  baseball, 
will  share  in  sotiie  measure  in  this 
new  era  of  prosperity. 

For  example,  now.  we  can  take  the 
Northern  league.  Only  the  pluck  and 
gameness  of  the  magnates  kept  the 
league  going  after  the  Fourth  of  July, 
always  the  crucial  period  for  the 
smaller  baseball  circuits.  The  revival 
in  baseball  interest  seems  universal — 
not  confined  to  any  section  of  the 
country.  There  is  hope,  aye  more. 
even  promise,  that  the  Northern  will 
emerge  from  the  slough  of  despond 
of  1915  and  enjoy  one  of  the  greatest 
seasons  in  its  history,  just  as  the  ma- 
jors promised  to  recoup  the  los.^es 
many  of  the  teams  of  these  two  great 
organizations  suffered  last  season. 

Here,  a  little  more  than  two  weeks 


KS.  I.ouir  iH  n  k  e  ■ 
your  last  yrnr'N 
lint  look  like 
neiv  —  at  m  m  a  I  I 
roMt — brlni;  It  in 
tomorrow. 

LOUIS  ZORBAS 

SHOE  SHINING  PARLOR 

.ti9  WfHt  Sup.  nt. 


previous  to  the  opening  of  the  North- 
ern league  baseball  season,  there  is 
promise  that  better  baseball  will  be 
playid  this  year  and  that  the  game 
will  be  patronized  in  a  far  more 
liberal  manner. 

Duluth  had  one  of  the  worst  sea- 
sons in  its  baseball  history  during 
iyi5.  The  patronage  reached  a  low 
ebb.  It  cost  Owner  Blume  real  mon- 
ey to  support  the  game  here,  for  from 
the  very  start  baseball  proved  a  los- 
ing prC)position.  The  siime  was  true 
of  practically  every  team  in  the 
league.  If  the  judgment  of  President 
L>urmei>>ter  and  his  associates  is  cor- 
rect, the  season  that  is  about  to  open 
will  prove  one  of  the  best  in  the  his- 
tory of  this  class  D  organization. 

Darby  O'Brien's  recruits  are  about 
to  start  their  practice  season.  If  the 
hopes  oi  the  Dook,  in  regard  to  the 
ability  of  his  green  men,  arc  realized, 
the  \Vhite  Sox  will  take  the  field  this 
seast)n  with  one  of  the  fastest  teams 
that  has  represented  this  city  in  many 
years. 

Every  club  in  the  Northern  will,  it 
is  believed,  be  stronger  than  last  sea- 
son. New  blood  will  be  seen  in  ac- 
tion. Only  the  best  of  the  old  men 
will  be  retained  by  club  owners.  Ma- 
terial is  plentiful  this  year — last  year 
it  was  scarce. 

Even  though  more  players  have 
been  thrown  on  the  baseball  market, 
John  Burmeister  and  every  club  own- 
er have  agreed  that  the  spavined  and 
dead  and  gone  player  will  not  find  a 
warm  welcome  in  this  circuit.  A 
hardy  lot  of  youngsters,  together 
with  real  stars  of  fast  minor  leagues, 
have  been  signed,  according  to  the 
early  spring  dope  sheet.  Speed  has 
been  aimed  at — and  if  the  hopes  and 
expectations  of  the  Northern  league 
magnates  arc  welded  into  material  ac- 
complishment, the  fans  around  the 
circuit  are  sure  to  witness  some  real 
baseball,  when  the  official  playing 
season    of    the    Northern     league     is 

ushered  in  on  the  afternoon  of  May  4. 

•      *      • 

Just  a  Longing  Desire. 

Some  ardent  followers  of  pugilism 
there  are  who  desire  devoutly  that  a 
certain  situation  of  Marquis  of 
Queensberry  affairs  could  be  brought 
about.  These  ardent  ones  wish  that 
Jess  Willard  could  be  induced  to  i 
meet  old  and  tottering  Sam  Langford. ! 

If  some  rigid  disciplinarian  could 
get  this  black  pugilistic  throwback 
out  in  the  woods  and  wilds  and  put 
him  through  a  real  course  of  condi- 
tioning and  then  send  him  blazing 
forth  to  battle  Willard,  the  affair 
would  be  watched  with  pentup  inter- 
est. ^^'illard  is  long  and  possesses  a 
big  expanse  of  open  front.  What,  oh 
what,  would  Tham  Langford,  with 
that  piston-like  left  and  trip  hammer 
right  of  his,  do  to  Willard? 

A  great  and  momentous  question 
that,  when  affairs  of  the  ring  are  con- 
cerned, and  one  that  is  agitating  a  lot 
of  followers  of  the  game. 

Langford  is  one  of  the  great  fight- 
ers of  all  time.  No  true  litie  has  ever 
been    obtained   as   to    his    great    stan- 


ROY  KENT. 

Not  only  will  Roy  Kent  be  u«ed  to  stroke  the  senior  eight  this  year,  but 
he  will  also  double  with  Walter  Hoover.  Last  year  at  SprinKfleld  Kent  and 
Osman  won  the  senior  doubles.  It  looks  now  as  if  Oainan  w-lll  not  be  back. 
Therefore  Kent  and  Hoover  will  be  sent  to  the  htakeboat  In  the  senior  doubles 
event.  From  the  manner  In  which  Roy  Is  worklnir.  this  promises  to  be  bia 
greatest  season. 


GOLFERS  OUT 
ON  miNKS 

Many    Northland    Players 

Are  Daily  Preparing  for 

Season. 


Great    Year   Is    Expected 

for  ttie  Country  Club 

Golfers. 


dard.  Could  this  black,  squat,  thick, 
cave-like  man,  a  modern  Hun  with 
uncouth  and  rough  ideas  regarding 
fighting,  beat  the  largest  pugilist  in 
the  history  of  pugili.sm? 

Langford  annihilated  Gunboat 
Smith  in  a  punch — when  the  Gunner 
was  supposed  to  be  good.  He  seems 
to  topple  them  all,  when  so  disposed. 
Given  the  greatest  opportunity  of  his 
somewhat  checkered  ring  career, 
pointed  for  a  championship  tilt,  what 
would  Langford  do  against  the  best 
man  the  white  race  can  bring  for- 
ward? 

Again,  let  us  repeat,  the  query  is  a 
most  interesting  one. 


BASEBALL  STANDiNeS 


AMERICAN  LEAGDE 


Rally  Fails  to  Save  Tigers. 

Chicago,  April  14. — Chicago  batted 
DausK  hard  yesterday  and  won  from 
Detroit  8  to  6,  though  a  ninth  Inning 
rally  in  which  Cobb  cleared  the  bases 
with  a  double,  counted  Ave  runs  for 
the  visitors.  Up  to  the  ninth,  David 
Danforth  had  Detroit  practically 
helpless.  Manager  Jennings  repeated- 
ly called  attention  to  the  Chicago 
pitcher's  habit  of  rubbing  the  ball  on 
his  clothes,  but  Umpire  O'Loughlln 
failed  to  find  on  It  any  Indication  that 
a  variety  of  the  "emery  ball"  was  be- 
ing used.    Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Detroit      0  0  0010006—610     1 

Chicago     01821010  x— 8     9     1 

Baileri'-s — Dauss.  Dubuc,  Boland 
and  Stanage;    Danforth  and  Schalk. 


Food  for  Thought 


ff;RE  IS  a  beer  for  brain  workers  as  well  as  for 
men  of  brawn.     It  possesses  all  the  elements  that  im- 
part vigor  to  the  system,  aid  the  tired  brain  and 
strengthen  the  nerves  as  well  as  producing  bone  and  muscle. 

All  the  nutritive  ingredients  of  a  perfect  beer  arc 

found  to  the  highest  degree  in 


BEER 


The  brainiest  men  of  almost  all  nations  have  been 
consistent  beer  drinkers.  The  deepest  thinking  scientists  and 
pure  food  experts  have  endorsed  beer  as  a  wholesome  food 
product. 

""        THEQJIAMM  BREWIHG  CO. 

ST.  PAUL 


€^ 


National  League. 

Won.  Lost.  Pot. 

Boston    I  0  1.000 

Philadelphia     1  1  -600 

Chicago    1  1  BOO 

St.    Louis     1  1  .600 

Pittsburgh     1  I  BOO 

Cincinnati      1  1  BOO 

New    York    1  1  -600 

Brooklyn      0  1  000 

Yesterday'*    ReMnHs. 

New    York,    2;     Philadelphia,    0. 
Cincinnati.    8;   Chicago.    2. 
Pittsburgh,    4;    St.    Louis,    0. 

Uamea   Today. 

Boston    at    Brooklyn,    rain. 
New    York    at    Philadelphia,    cloudy. 
Pittsburgh    at    St.    Louis,    cloudy. 
Chicago    at    Cincinnati,    cloudy. 

♦ 

American  League. 

Won.  Lost.  Pet. 

St.   Louis    2  0  1.000 

Boston     2  0  1.000 

Washington      1  0  1.000 

Detroit     1  1  61' 

Chicago     1  1  600 

Cleveland     0  2  .000 

New   York    0  1  .000 

Philadelphia 0  2  .000 

Yesterday's    Result*. 

Chicago.    8;    Detroit.    6. 
Boston.    8;    Philadelphia.   2. 
St.   Louis.    4;    Cleveland,    2. 

Games  Today. 

Washington    at    New    "i  ork.    rain. 
St.    Louis    at    Cleveland,    rain. 
Dftrolt    at   Chicago,   clear. 
Philadelphia    at    Boston,    cloudy. 


NATIONAL  LEAGUE 


Giants  Shut  Out  Phillies. 

Philadelphia.  April  14. — A  bunted 
ball  and  tho  failure  to  cover  third 
base  proved  the  turning  points  of  a 
pitching  duel  between  Tesreau  and 
Mayer  yesterday  and  New  York  de- 
feated Philadelphia.  2  to  0.  Neither 
team  was  able  to  prore  until  the  ninth 
Inning,  when  Doyle  led  off  for  New 
York  with  a  single.  Fletcher  beat  out 
a  bunt  and  when  third  base  was  left 
uncovered.  Doyle  raced  there,  drawing 
a  throw  by  Luderus,  while  Bancroft 
was  hustling  for  the  bag.  The  ball 
went  to  left  field  and  Doyle  scored, 
while  Fletcher,  who  reathed  second  on 
the  play,  scored  on  Kauff's  sacrifice 
and  Merkle's  single.  In  each  of  two 
innings,  Philadelphia  made  a  double 
and  a  single,  but  both  times  double 
plavs  prevented  scoring:  Soore:  R.  H.  E. 

.New  York    00000000  2—2     6     1 

Philadelphia     ...00000000  0—0     6     2 

Batteries — Tesreau  and  Rarlden; 
Mayer    and    E.    Burns. 


MY  W.  ANDERSON,  Agent 

616  West  Michigan  Street,  Dulutii,  Minn. 

Zenitb,  Grand  1800 PHONES Duluth,  Melrose  1S9I. 


Reds  8:  Cubs  3. 

Cincinnati.  Ohio,  April  14— Heavy 
'  hitting  by  Cincinnati  coupled  with  sev- 
♦  ral  costly  errors  by  the  visitors,  al- 
lowed the  locals  to  take  the  second 
game  of  the  serlps  from  Chicago  here 
yesterday.  8  to  3.  Vaughn  was  hit  hard 
and  was  forced  to  rettre  In  the  third 
inning,  but  Packard  was  little  bet- 
ter Insofar  as  stopping  the  heavy  bat- 
ting of  the  Cincinnati  team  was  con- 
cerned. Mollwltz's  hitting  had  con- 
:  8idorable  to  do  with  the  scoring  of 
his    team.    Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Chicago    OOOOlOll  0—8     8     4 

Cincinnati     0  1  4  0  2  0  1  0  x— 8   13     3 

I       Batteries — Vaughn.       Packard       and 
I  Archer,   Fisher;   Dale  and  Clarke. 

Cardinals  Shut  Out. 

St.  I^uls,  Mo.,  April  14. — Adams  al- 
lowed  St.  Louis  but  one  bit  and  Pitts- 
burgh shut  out  the  locals  yesterday.  4 
to  0.  St.  Louis  did  not  get  a  man  past 
first  base.  Pittsburgh  made  their  four 
runs  In  the  seventh.  Meadows  weak- 
ened and  gave  two  bases  on  balls 
which,  with  a  sacrifice  and  errors  by 
Miller  and  Hornsby.  let  in  a  run.  With 
the  bases  full,  Sallee  then  replaced 
Meadows.  Two  hits  off  him  caused 
two  more  runs,  and  with  the  bases 
full  he  passed  Balrd.  forcing  In  an- 
other.   Score:  R.  H.  E. 

Pittsburgh    00000040  0 — 4     8     1 

St.    Louis    00000000  0-0     1      2 

Batteries  —  Adams  and  Schmidt; 
Meadows,  Sallee  and  Snyder. 


Champions  Win  Again. 

Boston,  Mass..  April  14. — The.  Red 
Sox  won  again  from  the  Athletics  yes- 
terday, 8  to  2.  Three  Philadelphia 
pitchers  proved  either  wild  or  easy  of 
solution  by  the  Boston  batsmen.  Mey- 
ers, who  pitched  the  last  seven  In- 
nings was  the  best  of  the  lot.  Except 
In  the  sixth  Inning,  when  Strunk  and 
Oldring  each  doubled  on  top  of  Crane's 
hit,  the  Athletics  could  do  nothing 
with  Shore.  Pennock,  who  flnlshea 
for  Boston,  was  wild.  Shotten's  field- 
ing and  the  base  running  of  Barry 
and    Gardner      were      featurea.      Score: 

R    Tj    rg 

Philadelphia    ...000002000—2'   4"    2 

Boston     40  120  100X — 8      9     0 

Batteries — Richardson,  Meyers  and 
Meyers;  Shore,   Pennock  and  Agnew. 

Eighth  Fatal  to  Indians. 

Cleveland.  Ohio,  April  14. — Morton 
weakened  in  the  eighth  and  allowed 
four  hits  and  a  pass  which  netted  St. 
Louis  four  runs  and  the  victory.  4  to 
2.  Prior  to  the  eighth.  Morton  had 
fanned  eight  and  allowed  but  two  hits. 
A  running  catch  by  Tobin  of  a  drive 
by  Speaker  In  the  eighth  prevented  a 
tied   score.    Score:  R.  H.  B. 

St.    Louis    00000004  0 — 4     8     1 

Cleveland     000001010 — 2     8     S 

Batteries — Davenport  and  Hartley; 
Morton,  Covaleskie  and  O'Neill. 

DOG  RACE  NEARS  END. 

Malamutes   and  Wolf    Dogs  Lead  in 
Annual  All-Alaska  Sweepstakes. 

Nome,      Alaska,        April      14 Robert 

Brown,  with  his  team  of  fourteen  mal- 
amutes, and  Leonard  Scppala,  with 
seventeen  Siberian  wolf  dogs,  were 
leading  yesterday  In  the  412-mlle  all- 
Alaska  sweepstakes  race,  which  be- 
gan Tuesday  morning  and  probably 
will  end  late  today. 

All  the  teams  have  left  Candle,  the 
turning  point  In  the  race,  206  miles 
frf>m  Nome.  Brown  and  Seppala  were 
last  reported  from  Gold  Run,  twenty- 
four   miles    this   side  of   Candle. 

Brown  arrived  at  Gold  Run  at  10:09 
o'clock  yesterday  morning  with  twelve 
dogs  in  harness  and  two  tied  behind 
the  sled.  His  time  for  the  230  miles 
he  has  traveled  since  leaving  Nome 
was  49  hours  6  minutes.  Seppala  ar- 
rived at  Gold  Run  at  10:41  and  left  at 
11:09.  His  time  to  Gold  run  was  49:40. 
Seppala  was  driving  sixteen  of  his 
dogs.     One  was   running  loose. 

Fred  Ayer  left  Candle  at  8  o'clock. 
Four  of  his  dogs  were  badly  worn  and 
were  running  loose.  The  other  ten  fox 
hounds  composing  his  team  were  In 
good  condition.  Delzene  got  under  way 
eight  minutes  behind  Ayer.  Only  one 
of  Delzene's  dogs  was  out  of  harness, 
but  two  of  the  others  had  sore  front 
feet.  Paul  KJegstad  was  the  last  to 
leave  Candle. 


They're  off,  the  golfers,  on  the 
Northland  links. 

Mere  percolations  of  golf  were  dis- 
cernible a  week  ago  last  Saturday. 
Said  percolations  consisted  of  the  more 
enthusiastic  and  hardy  members  of  the 
club,  the  thirty-third  degree  players, 
so  to  speak.  Last  Sunday  about  thirty 
players  were  out  on  the  course  and 
during  the  present  week  there  has  been 
a  steadily  increasing  number  of 
players. 

There   Is   some    snow    In    the    ravines 

as  yet,  but  the  greens  and  the  greater 

part  of  the  course  are  In  excellent 
shape.  The  links  are  In  «uch  shape 
that  players  are  able  to  play  over  the 
entire  course. 

Dick  Clarkson,  the  professional  In- 
«tructor  of  the  club,  returned  during 
the  week  and  has  been  getting  every- 
thing in  shape  for  the  upenlng  of  the 
season. 

This  Is  expected  to  prove  one  of  the 
greatest,  If  not  the  very  best,  season 
In  the  history  of  the  club.  With  the 
transmlssisslppl  and  the  national 
open  to  be  played  in  Minneapolis  and 
the  state  golf  championship  scheduled 
for  St.  Paul,  the  Northwest"  will  re- 
flect the  Interest  that  is  sure  to  be 
stirred  up  In  the  game. 
I      A    number    of    new    players    are    ex- 

Sected  to  make  a  good  showing  In  the 
orthland  club  during  the  coming  sea- 
son.    R.  S.  Patrick  is  to  resume  active 
playing  this  year.     It  Is  generally  be- 
lieved   that    the    Northland    club    will 
]  aehleve   its   highest   level    of   golf  effl- 
1  clency  during  the  approaching  season. 

proteWon 
of  bird  life 


E.  A.  Cleasby  Tells  Duluth 

Sportsmen  Song  Birds 

Must  Be  Saved. 


ICE  BLOCKS 
THE  OARSMEN 

Crew   Candidates   Cannot 

Get    on   Water   Until 

Course  Is  Free. 


to  intr<Tduce  the  so-called  Haughton 
system  of  football  coaching  at  the 
University  of  Wisconsin,  will  leave 
Cambridge  to  begin  tlieir  new  duties 
on    A.pril    23. 

Ernest  W.  Soucy,  end  on  last  year's 
team,  who  is  also  to  assist  at  Wis- 
consin, will  be  unable  to  help  in  the 
spring  practice  as  he  is  seeking  a 
place  in  the  Harvard  eight-oared  crew. 


Ice  packed  around  the  float  has  pre-  | 
vented  the  oarsmen  of  the  Duluth  Boat  1 
club   from    getting   on    the    water.      The  j 
oarsmen  have  been  wilting  for  the  ice  [ 
to  break   up.      The   men  will   carry   the  i 
boats  from  the  clubhouse  to  the  canal 
float.   Just    as   soon   as   the    Ice   breaks 
away,   and   row  In  the  canal,   which   is 
ccmparatively  free  from  ice. 

At  the  rate  the  ice  is  breaking  up.  it 
Is  expected  that  the  bay  will  be  free 
enough  of  floating  ice  to  permit  of 
rowing  on  the  regular  cour.se  within 
the  next  few  days. 

Acknowledgments  have  been  re- 
ceived from  the  officials  of  several 
Eastern  boat  clubs,  in  response  to  the 
invitations  sent  out  by  the  Duluth 
Boat  club  official-s,  Inviting  some 
eighty-one  clubs  to  take  part  In  the  na- 
tional  regatta. 


REAL  ANGLERS  TO 
CAST  fOR  TROUT 


Many  of  Duluth  Fishermen 
WJii  Try  to  Bag  a  Catch 
onOpening  Day  of  Season. 


f  HARRY   GEORGE   DOES  ^ 
BRA^-E    RESCUE  ACT.  ^ 
*  ' 

#  Harry     Georfre     r%nm     the  only  ^  ', 

¥t  competitor  In  the  fall  dresn  life-  A 
'»  saving  competition,  held  last  ctc-  ^ 
^  nlng  In  the  V.  M.  C.  A.  tank.  The  ^ 
4.  Idea  In  for  a  swimmer  to  leap  into  ^ 
^  th«  water  -witH  rcKuIatlon  «treet  ^ 
^  clothca  and  rescue  a  dummy,  the  ^ 
«  dummy  last  cTcnlng  being  a  sack  ^ 

*  of  Mand.  * 
W  Georgrc  talked  to  the  end  of  ^ 
^  the  tank  In  a  neat  snit  of  wear-  ^ 
-)!(  Ing  apparel,  auddenly  leaped  into  ^ 
ik  the  tank,  swam  under  water,  4f, 
lift  grubbed  the  nack  of  aand  and  « 
^  vlgorouMly  a»»iMted  it  to  "Mhore."  W 
W^  The  brave  and  gallant  act  brought  ^ 
%i  forth    an    enthualaKtic    iuind    from  ^ 

#  the    npectntors.      The    brave    rca-  -k 

*  cucr  made  the  re«cue  In  three  ^ 
-ak  mlnutCM  and  fifteen  seconds.  k 
M^.  The  contest  wan  in  the  pcnta-  ^ 
MH  thaion.  Tkie  other  CTcnta  will  be  ^ 
^  completed    at    a    later    date.  k 

^  T 

kL  jif  ^^  J»^A#  ^^^^k  ,^^   V  "^f  ^b*  "^  '^'  ^b*  *^  ^U*  "^  ^L"  "A"  "^  'A'  ^^  ^f  ^^f  1^  mB 

WISCONSIN  FOOTBALL 
TO  BE  HAUGHTONIZED 

Cambridge.  Mass..  April  14. — Dr.  Paul 
Withlngton,  one  of  Harvard's  former 
football  stars,  and  John  A.  Doherty, 
substitute  Quarterback  on  last  year's 
varsity  eleven,   who  has  been   engaged 


E.  A.  Cleasby  of  Eau  Claire,  inspec- 
tor of  migratory  birds,  delivered  a  talk 
last  evening  before  the  Duluth  branch 
of  the  Minnesota  Game  Protective 
league,  explaining  the  working  of  the 
Federal  bird  law,  describing  its  bene- 
fits and  telling  what  it  had  accom- 
plished In  the  way  of  protection  to 
birds. 

Mr.  Cleasby  requested  that  every 
member  of  the  Duluth  league  co-oper- 
ate enthusiastically  in  the  protection 
of  Minnesota  songbiids.  He  declared 
that  ruthless  slaughter  of  insectivo- 
rous birds  would  soon  result  in  the 
txterniination   of  bird   life  In   America. 

The  following  birds,  coming  under 
the  protection  of  the  statutes,  the 
speaker  stated,  should  be  adequately 
protected: 

Robin,  catbird,  song  sparrow,  crow 
blackbird,  red-wing  blackbird,  bluejay, 
brown  thrush,  rusty  blackbird,  hermit 
thrush,  wood  thrush,  bluebird,  wren, 
meadow  lark,  woodpecker,  swallow, 
martin,  flicker,  redbird,  mourning 
dove.  American  goldfinch,  bobolink, 
Baltimore  oriole,  red-headed  linnet, 
brown  linnet  and  other  migratory  and 
in.sectivorous  birds. 

Plans  for  the  sportsmen's  show, 
which  will  be  held  in  the  Duluth  Curl- 
ing club  Aug.  10  and  11.  were  dis- 
cussed. The  show,  as  announced  pre- 
viously, will  be  given  over  to  an  ex- 
hibition of  game  and  wild  animal  life 
and  hunting  paraphernalia.  The  show 
Is  expected  to  prove  one  of  the  most 
complete  of  Its  kind  ever  given  in  the 
West. 


BACK  TO  OLD  PLAN. 

Atlanta,  Ga..  April  14. — The  Southern 
association  will  begin  Its  sixteenth  sea- 
son In  four  cities  of  the  .South  today. 
The  schedule  this  year  reverts  to  the 
old  plan  of  140  games,  with  the  season 
closing  Sept.  9,  Instead  of  the  scheme 
of  160  games  tried  out  last  year. 

Atlanta  will  pl«y  today  at  Mobile, 
Birmingham  at  New  Orleans.  Chatta- 
nooga at  Nashville  and  Little  Rock  at 
Memphis. 


A  large  number  of  Duluth  trout 
fishers  will  leave  tonight  for  the  trout 
streams  that  abound  in  the  vicinity  of 
the  city.  Tomorrow  marks  the  open- 
ing of  the  trout  fishing  season  and  it 
is  expected,  despite  the  fact  that  con- 
ditions point  to  a  rather  backward 
season,  that  more  than  the  usual 
number  of  enthusiastic  followers  of  the 
late    Isaac    Walton    will    try   their   luck. 

Surface  snow  in  the  many  streams 
will,  it  is  believed,  make  real  catclif-s 
Impossible  for  some  time  to  come. 
While  the  streams  are  opening  the  vast 
amount  of  snow  in  the  woods  and 
along  the  river  banks  will  cause 
muddy   waters   for  some   time. 

The  weather  of  the  last  few  days 
has  helped  a  great  deal,  though,  and 
the  season  will  be  marked  by  the  usual 
enthusiasm  that  is  a  delightful  part 
of  the  sport   of  angling. 

Some  of  the  best  known  of  Duluth's 
fishermen  have  prepared  to  go  out  to 
nearby  streams. 

BENNY  LIOilARD 

MAY  BOX  HERE 


Crack  New  Lightweight  Is 

Wanted  By  Duluth 

Club. 

Officials  of  the  Duluth  Boxing  club 
are  negotiating  with  Benny  Leonard, 
the  sensational  New  York  lightweight, 
with  a  vlew^  of  using  the  new  Ghetto 
champion  here  against  some  topnotcher 
of  the  lightweight  brigade.  If  the  lo- 
cal officials  succeed  in  coming  to  terms 
with  the  boy  under  the  management  of 
Billy  Gibson,  it  is  not  known  at  this 
time  just  what  man  will  be  chosen  to 
oppose  him.  Leonard  is  rapidly  being 
recognized  as  the  leading  contender 
for    the    crown    now    reposing    serenely 


Frtun 
NOBTHtoSaU'i 

,EASTioWE$T, 


^io5st6reis;m 


SELECT  TOW  Mil 

FCR  EASTEI 
TOBORROI 


^cities 


lOXFORD 

WITH  THIS  O.VAL  BUTTON  HOLE 


Ct.OK»T  SRANO  ^^^Ba^*    IN  AMKIttOA 

UNITKO  SHmT  A  COLL  An  CO..  TROY.  N.  V . 


Northrop  Makes  Good. 

Louisville,  'Ky.,  April  14.— Louisville 
batters  hit  four  Terre  Haute  pitchers 
at  will  here  yesterday  and  the^  local 
American  association  club  won,  17  to  5. 
Northrop  was  the  first  Louisville 
pitcher  to  go  through  a  whole  game 
this  season.  He  probably  will  work  In  ] 
the  opening  association  game  with  i 
Minneapolis  here  Tuesday.     Score: 

R.  H.  E. 
Terre  Haute. .  .0  0  8  0  0  0  0  0  2—  6  d  4 
Louisville    00230661X — 17  13     1 

Batteries — Gilbert,  O'Connor,  Crum, 
Whitehouse  and  Laross,  Hargraves, 
Eggleston;  Northrop  and  Crossin. 

Badgers  Beat  Notre  Dame. 

South  Bend.  Ind.,  April  14. — First 
Baseman  Simpson  stole  home  In  the 
ninth  inning  with  two  out  and  won  the 
gaflie  for  Wisconsin  yesterday  from 
Notre   Dame.     Score: 

R.  H.  E. 

Wisconsin     00000  1002 — 3    «6     1 

Notre  Dame 01000100  0 — 2     6     0 

Batteries — Monon  and  Koser;  Walsh 
and  Andres. 

Cornell  Wins  From  Pennsy. 

Philadelphia,  April  14. — Bunched  hits 
and  wildness  of  Cromwell,  one  of  the 
home  team's  pitchers,  gave  Cornell  the 
victory  over  the  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania yesterday,  3  to  0.  Russell  held 
Pennsylvania  to  two  hlts.^ 
• 

Macon  Easily  Defeats  Michigan. 

Macon.  Ga..  April  14. — Mercer  batted 
two  pitchers  out  of  the  box  here  yes- 
terday and  won  from  Michigan  easily, 
6  to  3.  The  game  was  called  at  the 
end  of  the  seventh  to  permit  the  Wol- 
verines to  catch  a  train. 
—        » 

Other  Games  Yesterday. 

At  BloominBton.  Ind.:  Indianapolis 
American  association.  7.  9,  0;  Indiana 
university,  6.  9.  4.  Batteries — Willis, 
Rogge  and  Schang;  Shiveley,  Smith 
and  Detar.  Schmidt. 

At  Cambridge.  Mass.:  Harvard,  7; 
University  of  Maine.  1. 

At  Annapolis:     Tufts,  4;  Navy,  1. 


XOMORROW  all  over  the  United  States 
•■•  NEWARK  Shoe  Store*  will  show 
the  most  beautiful  styles  at  $2.50  that 
the  NEWARK  Shoe  Maker  ever  produced. 
These  perfectly  benched  creations  have  a 
wealth  of  style  never  yet  seen  anywhere  in 
America  in  shoes  at  $2.50.  They  have  a 
wealth  of  value  never  surpassed  by  ANY 

{3.50  shoe;  *nd  they  have  a  wealth  of  comfort 
hat  many  of  the  highest  priced  sljoes  cannot 
boast  c^.    Pick  out  your  pair  for  Easter  tomorrow. 


>!eio!?ei<i>fi 


OTMi 


ShM^o 


pMel 


SHOE  Ai-MEN 

i 

T  ■■i$3^ycaue 

NewarK  Shoe  Stores  Co. 


DULUTH    STIRE 


326  West  Superior  Street 

St.   LmIi  Hitti   Billtfiii. 

Other  Newark  Stores  Nearky:     MlnseapalU  antf  St.  fail. 

When  •rderlni  by  nail,  ineta<e  lOe  Partct  PmI  ehzrtes. 
Open  Saturday  ntflite  sntil  10:30.     28S  Stare*  In  97  Cities 


A«k  For  No.  354— Buperb  Tan  Oxford.  In  lace  or 
button    bhicheri     adcntificatly    shaped    niikle, 

insurinsr  close  fit,  without  bol^.    Juat  the  model 
or  the  man  who  wants  a  medium,  neat  toe. 


Aak  For  No.  852 — Hcre'a  the  new  mahogany 
ahade  in  button  or  blucber.  A  remarkably 
beautiful  modeL 


%m^^. 


i 


-T 


■^^mm 


■»     II 


*  rw- 


J 


•V.     . 


1 

i 

I 

i          i 

i 

4. 

1 

1 

1 

*HH|^HHHg 

hHIHHHH 

|||^IH|BHHI 

■■■■Bit 

Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


W 


OD    the    clasjilcal     onion    of    Frederick 
\v  firth. 

An  attempt  U  belhgr  made  to  gecure 
the  new  armory  for  a  hlgr  bout.  Fall- 
JnK  In  'his,  Ed  Whalen  may  attempt  to 
•lajfp  a  contest  In  the  blgr  curling  club 
auditorium.  It  1«  figured  that  a  bout 
betw<«-'n  two  topnotchera  would  draw 
geneiuualy  In  Duluth,  and  the  officials 
of  the  rlub  are  endeavoring  to  secure 
a  hall  that  will  accommodate  a  large 
crowd. 


Daiton  Goes  to  Reds. 

Cincinnati.  Ohio.  April  14. — Manager 
Charles  Herzog  of  the  Cincinnati  Na- 
tional.s  announced  last  night  that  he 
had  siRned  Jack  Daiton,  who  played 
last  yeui-  in  the  outfield  for  the  Buf- 
falo Ftderalw.  Daiton  has  been  In- 
■truct»*d  to  report  at  once. 
» 

Eight  Players  Released. 

Philadelphia.  April  14 — Eight  play- 
ers w"re  released  yesterday  by  Man- 
ager McOraw  of  the  New  York  Na- 
tionals. They  are:  First  Baseman 
Rodriguez  and  Outfielder  Elsh  to  the 
New  I.oiidon.  Conn.,  club;  Catcher 
Bandbrrg,  pitcher  Walker  and  Infleld- 
er  Bhepnor  to  Albany,  and  Infielder 
BabhliiKton.  Oulfl'lder  Farroll  and 
Pitcher  Kramer  to  Uochester, 

fewerTires~and 
smaller  damage 

Last  Month  Easier  on  Du- 
luth Firemen  Than 
March,  1916. 

DuUith  had  but  twpnty-on»»  fires 
durintf  March,  and  the  damage  to  build- 
ings and  their  contents  aggregated 
only  $23,546.  The  monthly  report  of 
State  Fire  Marshal  Robert  Hargadlne, 
made  p\Jbllc  today,  shows  that  March, 
1916,  was  an  easier  month  for  firemen 
than   March,  1915. 

Throughout  the  state,  there  were  290 


HAVE  NAME  OF 
COMMANDER 

French  Also  Know  Number 

of  Submarine  Near  the 

Sussex. 


Information  Given  By  Crew 

of  Captured  German 

Submersible. 


The  Crisis 


flren  during  March,  1916.  the  report 
show.'*,  lomparrd  with  256  a  y<'ar  ago. 
Duluih  had  twenty-seven  in  March  last 
year,  and  the  damage  estimate  was 
137,110,  nearly  a  third  more  than  that 
for   th<'   past   month. 

Mr.  Hargadlne's  report,  showing  the 
valuf  of  buildings  and  contents,  and 
the  lo.=is  by  fire,  in  the  different  cities, 
follows: 

March.    lOlA. 

No.  of    — Bulldlnis  and  rontcnts— 
Fires  Value  Of        D»ma«f  To 

St.    P..11 65        $1,071,750        %     28,630 

MinnMpoUH    82  l,542.9r>  188,432 

Dulutb    21  772.150  23,645 

OuUlde    132  B;17,085  174.962 

March,    1»15. 

St     Pial 52        $1.654,0eS        |     34,980 

Mlnne.|)..lb    80  822.56S  142,228 

Puluth   27     ■        3»W.900  87,410 

OutsMe     97  585.740  261,403 

HimslvlLL  joTn 

PUBUSHER'S  STAFF 

■  ^ 

Glass     Block    Advertising 

Manager  Gets  Position 

in  New  York. 

R.  D.  HlUis.  advertising  manager  of 
the  tJlass  Block  store,  will  leave  this 
afternoon  for  New  York,  where  he  will 
join  the  staff  of  Georffe  H.  Doran  & 
Co.,  publishers. 

Mr.  Hillis  has  made  an  enviable  rec- 
ord during  the  time  he  has  been  em- 
ployed at  the  local  department  store, 
his  advertisements  having  attracted  at" 
tention  from  men  prominent  In  adver- 
tising circles  throughout  the  North- 
west. 

Ilecently  the  engagement  of  Mr.  HIl- 

11s    to    MI.18    Alice    Rogers,    daughter   of 

J    W.    A.    Rogers    of    Buffalo,      was      an- 

}    nouncod.     They    will    be      married       on 

-    May    16.     Mr.    Hillia    is     a     nephew     of 

F.  A.  Patrick. 


Paris,  April  14. — The  German  note 
en  the  Sussex,  signed  by  the  foreign 
minister,  von  Jagow,  has  led  to  wide- 
spread discussion  by  government  of- 
ficials, the  public  and  the  press  and 
has  brought  the  quick  rejoinder  that 
the  French  government  Is  In  posses- 
sion of  documents  establishing  the 
name  of  the  commander  and  the  num- 
ber of  the  submarine  reported  for  the 
Sussex    incident. 

The  inquiry  at  the  ministry  of  ma- 
rine last  night  elicited  the  statement 
that  the  name  of  the  commander  and 
the  numbei  of  the  U-boat  would  not 
be  made  public  for  the  present,  as  It 
was  considered  sufficient  to  state  the 
fact  that  this  information  Is  in  the 
hands  of  the  government.  The  de- 
partment will  wait  and  note  whether 
Germany  aMU  persist  In  Its  denial.  It 
was  declared. 

It  Is  learned  that  It  was  from  the 
office»"s  and  crew  of  a  German  subma- 
rine now  held  prisoners  by  the  French 
that  what  Is  considered  corroborative 
evidence    has    been    obtained    that    the 


SuHsex  wa.s  attacked  by  a  German  sub- 
marine. The  name  of  the  commander 
of  this  boat  was  divulged  at  the  same 
time.  The  officers  and  crew  now  h<"ld 
prisoners  were  not  those  aboard  the 
submarine  alleged  to  have  attacked 
the  Su.ssex,  but  cruised  In  the  same 
locality  until  their  ciaft  was  sunk 
twelve  days  after  the  Sussex.  At  the 
American  embassy  the  German  note 
was  carefully  scrutinized  by  Ambassa- 
dor William  Graves  Sharpo  snd  Naval 
Atta-les  L.leut.-Command<*r  W.  R. 
Sayles  and  Lieut.  B.  L.  Smith  in  the 
light  of  sixteen  American  affidavits 
and  the  fragments  of  a  missile  which 
lay    before   them. 

CorreNpond*  IVIth  Sansex. 
It  was  particularly  noted  that  Herr 
von  Jagow's  description  of  the  steamer 
which  the  German  submarine  sank  on 
March  24  at  8:65  o'clock  In  the  after- 
noon, corresponded  closely  with  the 
appearance  of  the  Sussex  as  described 
hejre.  the  Sussex  having  a  black  and 
white  stack,  which  It  was  pointed  out 
might  be  taken  for  a  gray  stack  in  the 
distance,  with  a  small  upper  forward 
bridge  enveloped  in  canvas,  which 
would  also  correspond  with  Herr  von 
Jagow's  description  of  a  gray  bridge 
and  two  large  masts. 

Thy  difference  In  time  between  the 
sinki'ig  of  the  steamer  described  by 
Herr  von  Jagow  and  the  explosion  on 
the  Sussex  Is  accounted  for  among 
American  naval  officer*  by  the  one 
hour's  difference  between  German  and 
French  time.  It  was  also  noted  that 
no  other  steamer  ever  has  been  re- 
ported as  having  been  sunk  or  dam- 
aged at  the  same  locality  at  about  the 
same  time. 

The  fragments  of  the  missile  In  the 
possession  of  the  embassy,  It  Is  as- 
serted, also  give  further  corroboratory 
evidence,  but  the  exact  nature  of  this 
will  not  be  disclosed  for  the  present. 
The  fragments  were  shipped  to  the 
state  department  at  Washington  last 
night.  Each  piece  of  metal  has  a  tag 
attao'ued  gl\lng  precise  and  technical 
details,  as  well  as  data  embodying  a 
comparison  with  German  bronze  tor- 
pedoes in  possession  '  of  the  naval  au- 
thorities at  Toulon  and  the  British  ad- 
miralty. 


In   pneumonia  and  some   other  acute 

Illnesses  there  Is  a  time.  In  most  cases, 

when    the    high    fever    disappears    and 

the    patient    experiences    marked    relief 

-  from  the   symptoms 

I^^"^^^"**^^^!  he  heui  been  suffer- 
^    ''^^^   •         ln»-       This     sudden 
^^t^iij^  disappearance  of  the 

'  ^m  .Tl».  '  fever  Is  called  the 
crisis.  It  Is  eagerly 
welcomed,  and  by 
no  means  a  fearful 
event.  The  word 
crisis,  as  thus  ap- 
plied. Is  not  the 
same  as  the  crisis  of 
a  battle  or  some 
great  movement. 
The  crisis  of  pneu- 
monia Is  favorable 
in  Itself,  always.  It 
occurs   at   any   time 

mUAMBIW/Mft[hrtwemh'X  '" 

Why  the  crisis? 

It  occurs  In  a  few  hours,  perhaps  ten 
or  fifteen  hours — the  temperature 
drops  from  108  or  104  deg.  or  higher 
down  to  normal  or  two  or  three  de- 
gress below  the  normal  98  deg.  A  pro- 
fuse sweat  accompanies  the  fall  In 
temperature.  All  of  this  Is  a  distinct 
relief  to  patient  and  physician.  There 
Is  no  particular  reason  why  a  change 
for  the  worse  should  be  feared  at  or 
near  the  time  of  the  crisis.  Indeed, 
If  the  patient  can  weather  his  seizure 
up  to  the  crisis — that  Is.  If  a  crisis  Is 
hla  lucky  lot — then  he  will  In  all  prob- 
ability come  through  a  winner,  pro- 
vided he  has  not  squandered  his  sub- 
stance  In    wrong   living. 

The  crisis  comes  when  the  blood  has 
mobilized  sufficient  antidote  or  anti- 
toxin to  overcome  or  neutralize  tbe 
poisons  produced  by  the  pneumococcl 
(pneumonia  germs)  which  have  In- 
vaded the  lung.  The  critical  aweat 
carries  out  a  tremendous  quantity  of 
polKon.  Hence,  physicians  endeavor  to 
take   the   hint   and   apply   hot   mustard 


foot-baths  or  dtaatineasurea  to  main- 
tain or  encourage  sweating  in  the 
course  of  pneuinbiVia  and  other  Ill- 
nesses caused  hy  the  ubiquitous  pneu- 
mococous. 

It  Isn't  the  damace  to  the  lung  that 
makes  the  pnmjspRta  patient  so  des- 
perately 111.  Yl  ^"o^  **^**^'  because 
the  lung  is  stfe^  solid  for  days  after 
the  crisis,  days  After  the  patient  feels 
and  is  so  much  better.  Pneumonia  Is 
a  disease  that  VUls  by  poisoning  the 
body.  It  must  be  treated  In  that  light. 
In  order  to  accomplish  anything.  L<ocal 
applications  te  tne  chest,  excepting  for 
relief  of  pain,  are  of  lltUe  value.  If  any. 

Not  only  pneumonia,  but  bronchitis, 
quinsy,  sere  throat,  and  even  "cold"  in 
the  head,  are  often  produced  by  the 
pneumococcus.  One  man's  coryxa  or 
sore  throat  germs  cause  another  man's 
pleurisy  or  pneumonia.  That  Is  why 
the  much  too  common  "cold"  should 
be  spatially  Isolated  In  every  Instance. 

QUESTIONS    AND    ANSWERS. 

What    a    Phystctan   Is. 

As  long  as  a  healer  doesn't  give 
drugs  or  "physlek"  he  isn't  a  physician, 
and  hence  should  not  be  compelled  to 
study  medicine,  writes  a  devotee. 

Answer — Your  dictionary  is  a  mis- 
print. The  word  physician  really 
means  a  sclentiat,  and  drugs,  or 
"physic,"  take  uiTjuSt  about  2  per  cent 
of  the  five  year*  he  spends  acquiring 
his  medical  education.  The  rest  of  the 
time  he  studies,  d,iet,  electricity,  hydro- 
therapy, psychology,  diagnosis,  physi- 
ology. pathoU)gy,  anatomy,  hygiene, 
bacteriology,  oBrfetrtcs,  surgery,  mas- 
sage and  tfhemlslfy. 

How  «•.  ^ult  Tebarc*. 

Can  you  give  Jtny  suggestions  upon 
quitting  smoking?     I   want   to   give  It 

up   and   can't, 

Answer — The  way  to  discontinue  Ls 
to  discontinue.  We  have  a  letter  of 
helpful  suggestions,  if  you  will  supply 
the  desiderated  stami>€d,  addressed  en- 
velope. 

Dr.  Br.dy  win  tiMW.r  .11  .l«n*d  ktter,  perUtaln*  to  health.  U  ^^f  ^'>*;^''^^f^,^^V\^^^ 
tnwmd  through  tb«e  clumn,;  if  not  It  will  be  .Bs«rH  P«''«"*'l'  "  4^""^' ..\JSS!r*  ^"^c^Zl^s 
Dr.  Brady  will  not  prcsfrllje  for  Individual  cases  or  make  (JiacnoMS.  Address,  Dr.  wunaa  unnj,  can  m  »ui» 
newstiitprr.     ProtecUd  by  The  Adjuns  .Newspaper  Serrtoe.  ■'   i    • 


WOULD  HAVE 
PEOPLE  READY 


President   Prays   America 

May  Not  Be  Drawn  Into 

Conflict. 


Asks  If  Country  Is  Ready  to 

Uphold  Humanity's 

Interests. 


■^■^■^^^^1^%^^^^^ 


When  you  ask  for  a  Lahpher 
hat  and  get  it — that's  an 
investment.  When  you  ask 
for  one  and  don*t  get  it — 
you're  taking  an  awful 
chance. 

LANPHER  HATS 

The  price  is  $3,00 


LIST  OF  100  "EASY"  WORDS  IS.^  PREPARED 
TO  TEST  THE  PUPILS'  SPELLIHj?:  ABILITIES 

How    do    you    spoil    that   simple   and  i  one  or  two  scttools' fourth  graders  Will 
....  .J  ..,««i.-u«<>"  have  a  chance- at  them: 

much  used  word  "tonight? 

If  you  spell  it-  the  way  It  has  Just  |  ^^ 
been  spelled,  you're  wrong.  Noab 
Webster,  the  man  who  acquired  fame 
as  a  compiler  of  dictionaries,  says  so, 
and  Supt.  R.  E.  Denfold  of  the  city 
schools  agrees   with    him. 

Webster  spells  It  "to-night,"  and  It 
was  not  until  yesterday  that  scores  of 
school  teachers  learned  they  were 
misspelling  the  word  by  leaving  out 
the  hyphen.  Notwithstanding  this  de- 
cree virtually  every  newspaper  In  the 
country  has  adopted  the  style  of  spell- 
ing the  word  without  the  hyphen. 

Supt.  Denfeld  prepared  a  list  of  one 
hundred  words  the  other  day.  and  each 
grade  school  child  is  being  given  an 
examination  on  them,  so  that  the 
school  authorities  will  know  whether 
Duluth  children  can  spell  well  ;  or 
poorly.  .  „  ,_  * 

"Those  words  look  easy."  says  Mr. 
Denfeld,  "but  they  are  100  of  the 
spelling  demons  of  the  English  lan- 
guage.!' 

Here  are  the  words,  but  If  they  look 
too  easy,  remember  that  they  are  be- 
ing given  to  children  In  the  fifth, 
sixth,    seventh    and    eighth    grades.    In 


wblrh 

e«dl(? 

becinidng 

their 

»ee*M  ' 

blue 

Khm 

TileWtty 

tbaufb 

irpsrate              " 

wet#      1 

eoalnc 

don't 

■smer 

early 

meant 

t*  vjsi'  ' 

Instead 

budiitM  . 
manf 

tOSfjOf"'    • 

«a«r 

tbrousb 

friend 

forv 

etery 

kome 

boar  . 

they 

bwn 

trouble 

hklf 

ilnct 

amonc 

bretk 

mod 

busy 

boy 

^Ivayi 

ballt 

•«•*■„.■ 

whi^ 

rolor 

*«»'<'■ 

women 

maklnt 

'  t»M 

done                •£, 

dear                •  ' 

week 

bear 

<uea       - 

often 

^u    •'  ^"«'' 

Whole 

won't 

writinc 
heard 

&,.-'- 

cough 
pieee 

doet 

Vtielher 

raise 

once 

bcUm, 

•Om 

would 
ean't 

read 

uld 

sure 

boarM 

loose        % 

fho*»;)  ■' 

•boej 

lOM 

tired 

fo-nlfht 

Wednesday 

-    cranmar 

wrote 

rountry 

mlnnto 

enough 

Vebruary  ^ 

any 

■ugar 

know 

much 

wtraitbt 
truly 

FOR  PRINTIN6,  LITHOGRAPHING,  ENGRAVING,  BINDING! 

QUICK  SERVICE  AND  EXPERT  WORKMANSHIP,  CALL 

J.  J.  LeTOURNEAU  PRINTING  CO. 

231    WEST  FIRST   STREET. 


I 


THE  UNION  STAMP 


IS  THE  PEACEFUL,  UP- 
LIFTING, EDUCATIONAL 
ECONOMIC  EMBLEM  OF 


THEORGANIZED  SHOE  WORKERS! 


It  aims  to  secure  bigger,  better  and  happier  working  and 
living  conditions  for  Union  Shoe  Workers  by  progressive 
means;  never  by  destructive  measures. 


\m  midusimp  shoes 


BOOT  AND  SHOE  WORKERS' UNION 

246  SUMMER  STREET,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Write  for  list  of  union  shoe  factories. 
Affiliated  With'  .American  Federation  of  Labor. 


SHOOTING  AFFAIR 
AVERTED  BY  POLIOE 

Husband  Discloses  Inten- 
tion to  Bartender  Who 
'Phones  Headquarters. 

Quick  action  by  police  probably  pre- 
vented a  Bhootlnsr  affray  In  a  boarding 
house  at  Sixth  avenue  weat  and  First 
street  last  nlarht.  George  Costello.  a 
recent  arrival  from  South  St.  Paul, 
threw  away  hla  revolver  and  cartridges 
when  he  saw  the  officers.  He  Is  held 
on  a  chargre  of  attempted  assault. 

Costello  said  he  was  going  to  kill 
his  wife  and  those  who  befriended  her. 
when  she  refused  to  go  wl*h  him.  He 
left  the  boarding  house,  going  to  a 
nearby  pawnshop,  where  he  purchased 
a  revolver  and  two  boxes  of  cartridges. 

On  his  way  back  to  the  boarding 
house  he  stopped  at  a  saloon  to  get  a 
little  bottled  courage,  and  incidentally 
displayed  the  gun  to  the  bartender. 

"Going   to   shoot  my   wife,"    he   said. 

The  bartender  telephoned  police,  and 
Driver  Fred  Dlnkel.  with  Patrolman 
A.  A.  Wanvlck,  reached  the  boarding 
house  almost  as  soon  as  Costello  did. 
They  recovered  the  gun  and  captured 
the  would-be  slayer  after  a  short  chase. 
• 

*  COUNCIIi  TBTDORiErS  i 
$                      PL.  AN  NINO  COMMITTBB.  ^ 

^  * 

^       City     rominlnnloii^ra     yesterday  ^ 

$  Indorsed  the  proposed  rity  plan-  •#. 
nlng  rommlttee  as  ■asrsreMted  at  ^ 
m  tk«  annaal  meeting  of  the  pahlle  ^ 
ijf  affairs  eorttailttee  »t  the  Comnaer-  4 

#  elal  olab  IVednesday  evening.  « 
'ij^  This  committee,  consisting  of  « 
^  prominent  men  experienced  In  m 
^  work  of  this  natnrc,  wonid  study  ^ 
■*  all  problems  arising  in  the  con-  * 
m  strvctlon  of  terminals,  d<»cks,  * 
^  highways,  vladncts  and  street  « 
^  car  extennlons  and  the  laying  o«t  4[ 
^  of  parks,  lndust«lal  sites  and  m 
«  restdentUl    districts.  ^ 

1IEATS"  WrU.  MISS 
CAFE  BRIGHT  liBHTS 


the  hotel  carrying  two  suitcases  which 
belonged  to  the  men  in  the  party.  Chief 
John  McSweeney  of  Cloquet  arrested 
the  men  yesterday  and  held  them  until 
Detective  Herman  Toewe  arrived  on 
the  scene. 

Miss  Genevieve,  auburn  haired  and 
chic  stamped  her  foot  la  vain,  for  De- 
tective Toewe  wanted  the  two  boys  to 
return  to  Duluth  with  him,  and  there 
the  argument  ended.  The  girl  was  not 
molested. 


Washington,  April  14.  —  President 
Wilson,  speaking  at  a  Jefferson  day 
banquet  of  Democrats  from  all  parts 
of  the  country  here  last  night,  prayed 
that  the  United  States  would  not  be 
drawn  into  a  quarrel  not  of  Its  own 
choosing,  but  asked  if  the  people  were 
ready  to  go  In  where  the  Interests  of 
America  were  coincident  with  the  in- 
terests of  humanity,  and  have  the 
courage  to  withdraw  when  the  inter- 
ests of  humanity  had  been  conserved. 
He  was  Interrupted  by  cheers  and 
shouts    of   "yes." 

During  his  address,  the  president 
had  mentioned  the  European  war  and 
the  Mexican  question  without  intimat- 
ing what  were  his  plans  in  either  of 
the  problems  confronting  the  United 
States. 

He  declared  that  in  the  present  sit- 
uation the  responsibility  was  with  the 
Democratic    party    because    that    party 

controls  the  government  and  that  "It 
Is  fur  us"  to  hold  the  balance  even  and 
not  to  allow  some  malign  influence  to 
depress  on©  side  or  tlie  other. 
Review's  Achievements. 
Most  of  the  speech  was  devoted  to 
reviewing  the  achievements  of  the 
Democratic  party  during  the  last  three 
years,  and  to  a  criticism  of  the  Re- 
publicans as  the  party  with  a  "pro- 
vincial spirit."  The  president  asserted 
that  the  nation  was  better  prepared 
than  ever  before  to  show  how  America 
can  lead  the  way  along  the  path  of 
light. 

The  president  declared  that  he  was 
not  Interested  in  personal  ambition, 
nor  even  enthusiastic  over  party  suc- 
cess, but  that  he  was  Interested  in  see- 
ing the  load  depressing  humanity 
lifted.  He  mentioned  many  Republican 
leaders  by  name  but  when  he  spoke  of 
ambitious  men  there  were  shouts  of 
"T.  R." 

What  the  nation  demands  now,  the 
president  said,  is  service  essentially 
non-partisan,  not  only  in  consideration 
of  foreign  affairs,  but  in  domestic  af- 
fairs as   well. 

Refers  to  Mexleo. 

Referring  Incidentally  to  Mexico,  he 
told  of  how  a  man  had  urged  that 
trustees  for  that  nation's  welfare  be 
chosen,  and  of  his  reply  that  nd  nation 
had  achieved  real  prosperity  and  hap- 
piness for  Its  masses  through  a  trus- 
teeship imposed  on  it  from  above. 

It  was  the  first  speech  of  a  political 
nature  the  president  had  made  for 
several  months  and  was  delivered  be- 
fore an  audience  Including  ne9.rly  all 
the  members  of  his  cabinet.  Demo- 
cratic members  of  the  senate  and 
house.  Democratic  state  chairmen  from 
many  states  and  other  high  officials 
of  the  nation  and  states  gathered  to 
attend  the  annual  banquet  of  the  Com- 
mon Council  club. 

The  president  was  referred  to  re- 
peatedly as  "the  next  president"  by 
Senators  Hollis  and  Walsh  and  Repre- 
sentative Glass,  who  preceeded  him. 
and  each  utterance  of  his  name  was 
received  with  enthusiastic  applause. 

Senator  Walsh  spoke  of  the  presi- 
dent as  a  man  who  shuns  war  as  the 
supreme  calamity  which  can  befall  the 
nation,  but  who,  nevertheless  prepares 
for  war. 

"May  God  continue  to  preserve  the 
nation  of  peace,"  the  senator  added. 

Mrs.  Wilson  and  the  wives  of  the 
cabinet  officers  occtipied  a  box  during 
the  speaking. 

»'  - 

Blje  serge  trousers,  fS.KO,  at  the  •^ 
Winners"    removal    sale. 


The  Practical  White  Enamel 

SATINETTE  is  the  beautiful  finish  for  your  home.  It 
is  durable  as  well  as  beautiful,  does  not  turn  yellow  with 
age,  can  be  washed  without  the  slightest  injury. 

Enamel 


THAOt  WAim 


WHITE   (doss,  Rubbed  Effect  and  Flat) 
The  Immaculate  Finish  of  Refinement 

The  enamel  most  generally  specified  by  architects  for  homes, 
public  buildings  and  hospitals.  Because  it  is  beautiful  enough  for 
the  home — durable  enough  for  public  buildings  and  hospitals,  Is 
proof  positive  of  its  superior  merits. 

Practical  finishing  information  furnished  on  request.  Address 
Department  A  6 ,  2600  Federal  St.,  Chicago,  111, . 

ASK  YOUR  DEALER 

PAINE  &  NIXON  CO. 

BtSTUBtrTOfti  roB 

STANDARD  VARNISH  WORKS 

NEW  YORK  CHICAGO  SAN  FRANCISCO  LONDON 

hUsTDsrionsI  VanuiK  Co..  Limited.  Toronto 

Lars Mt  U  tk«  world  and  Snt  to  ocUbH»h  doSnlt*  Quality  Staadarda. 
Avudad  Madal  •(  Eenor,  rasam*>rMtte  Zntorsatlonal  Ezpoalttos,  IMS 


!•»— 


FLOOR  FINISH 

The  one  perfect  Floor 
Varnish.  Hardens  over 
niarht:  doesn't  scratch  or 
mar. 

luRi»iinRnniniiiinnminnnnironB8UBnun 


——No.  2 

The  Standard  for  more 
than  40  years.  For  finest 
interior  woodwork. 


STAINS 

oil  and  Add.  In  all 
popular  shades.  Ttie/ 
do  not  fads. 


DUHnmuuiifflnumanuimBnffliniinnnuiMnuwiHiiin 


CHINA  IS  PREPARING 
FOR  COMPLETE  CENSUS 

(CoiTNSoadeiiM  af  tlw  AMoelatad  Pnia.) 
Pekln,  March  10. — China  Is  prepar- 
ing to  take  a  complete  census.  The 
minister  of  Interior  has  Inaugurated 
the  work  in  Pekln  and  will  extend  it 
to  various  provinces  before  tlve  end 
of  1916.  The  cost  is  ©stlnuuted  at 
1200,000.  ^ 

SWEDEN  OBJECTS  TO 
SEIZURES  BY  GERMANS 

(CarraasMrfaasa  ST  Ilia  Aaaselatad  Praaa.) 
TokLov  March  10. — The  alleged 
seizure  of  steel  and  Iron  shipments  by 
German  warships  from  Swedish 
steamers  bound  for  Japan  has  caused 
^reat  Inconvenience  to  Japanese 
manufacturlnar. 

Swedish  steel  and  Iron  Is  used  here 


In  the  making  of  twisted  wire  and 
cables  and  cutlery.  A  series  of  com- 
plaints were  lodged  with  the  Swedish 
legation,  ajjd  It  Is  understood  that 
Sweden  has  been  vigorously  taking  un 
the   matter  with  Germany. 

SWORD  OF  HONOR  IS 

IN  A  PARIS  MUSEUM 

(CormpoatfMiea  af  the  Anaelatad  Pren.) 
Paris.  March  26. — The  sword  of 
honor  presented  to  King  Albert  o* 
Belgium  by  public  subscription  haa 
been  placed  under  a  glass  case  In  the 
Petit  Palais,  one  of  Paris'  museunus. 
The  weapon,  purchased  by  the  peunie* 
of  the  French  school  children,  w^UI 
remain  there  until  the  Germans  hav* 
been  driven  out  of  Belgium,  when  It 
Is  expected  that  King  Albert  -wlU 
come  to  visit  Paris  and  sheathe  th* 
naked  blade  when  he  receives  it  fruiB 
the    hands    of    its    custodians. 


Youths,  Who  Dodged  Hotel 

Bill,  Are  Sent  to  Work 

Farm. 

Roland  D.  Olln  and  James  Atkinson, 
both  18.  both  pompadoured  and  both 
carefully  manicured,  will  miss  the  mu- 
sic, th«  soft  lights  and  the  chatter  of 
cafes  during  the  next  few  weeks. 

With  the  aid  of  pretty  little  Gene- 
vieve Frank,  their  traveling  companion. 
Olin  and  Atkinson  figured  out  a  new 
way  of  evading  their  hotel  bill,  but 
they  were  caught  In  the  act,  thanks,  to 
a  watchful  clerk,  and  now  the  boys 
win  serve  thirty  days  at  the  work  farm 
because  they  haven't  $42. SO  with  which 
to  pay  their  fine. 

Miss  Gehevleve  paid  her  bill,  and  left 


BAVARIA  FEEDING 
REST  OF  GERMANY 

Has  Increased  Exports  of 

Cattle  t0^4O,OOO  Head 

Mbnttily. 

rCarr«i«aitfa«M  sf  tka  AiMclatad  Pran.) 

Munich,  Germany,  March  16. — 
Though  her  Imports  of  cattle  have 
dwindled  away  to  a.lmost  nothing,  Ba- 
varia more  than  any  other  German 
state,  has  done  her  share  of  help- 
ing to  feed  the  rest  cf  Germany  by 
increasing    steadily    her    exports. 

Figures  just  completed  show  that 
during  the  month  prior  to  the  war. 
with  an  average  monthly  Import  of 
4,000  head  of  cattle,  Bavaria  exported 
but  14.000;  .Increased  this  to  30.000 
head  In  December.  1*16.  and  to  40.000 
head   In   January'.   1916. 

Before  the  w&r  Bavaria  Imported  on 
an  average.  1,(M)0;000  hogs  a  year,  and 
now  Imports  nqne.  Tet  during  all  the 
months  of  the  conflict  she  has  stead- 
ily sui>i>lied  her'netghboring  and  allied 
states  with  tb<J  ever  rare  swine.  In 
addition,  she  has  turned  over  to  the 
army  on  an  average,  ^4.000  head  of 
cattle   monthly. 

Countlets  oxen, have  been  sent  from 
Bavaria  to  other  parts  of  Germany, 
notably  East  Prussia,  where  they  are 
urgently  needed  .  In  place  of  horses 
Bavaria,  too,  has  reduced  her  annual 
use  of  butter  to  three  kilograms  per 
person,  and  thua-Ls  able  to  supply  part 
of  the  fifteen  kilograms  por  person 
used    annually    In    North    Germany. 


Saves  Rheumatics 
Cost  of  IVips  to  Ex- 
pensive Sanatoriums 

lliBlll^^ 


ew  (Stetv-Bklity-Blgbt)  |T*g; 
•CM  maota  llkslbs  famous  vJiMku 
waters  of  Hot  Springs  and  ASricaaa 
Rheamatlo  resorts.  ^8088  KkMM- 
•*«•(  raliave  your  BhaomajmBi— 
moat  brlac  aboot  baneftdalra* 

roar  BfMMsr  wfli   |a  iauMdiataijr 
Mtomad  by  y5>ardraBcM.    San 

al  Adriea  on  Rbaomstlsm?' H 
ia  aatboritadva  and  aetaotlM, 
aad  wflt  cnabtairouto  detaet  aad 
treat  Inflaimnatory.  Oirofde,  Ar- 
ticalar  and  M  nacular 
Writa  <or  it  at  one*.    / 

I.MlMMMK 


For 
partictdan 
address 
J.  Af.  NEAFUS, 

Traoeling  Pass.  AgL^ 
607  PaUadio  Building, 
DULUTH.  MINN. 


■wcr         .     M       •t.PM.M 

8l3Bt^Eliktr-Eicht 


THE  REST  WAYANY  DAY 


/ 


I 


>»i 


h^ 


vnasHi" 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


105  and  107  West  Superior  Street 

Many  Large  Shipments 
of  New  Garments 


4- 


■i 


/ 
/ 


\ 


^ 

f 


Have  Been  Received  Within  the 

Past  Few  Days  to  Replenish 

the  Ones  Sold. 

Style  Distinction  and 
Exceptional  Values 

Are  the  Features  of  the 
New  Arrivals. 

Tailored  and  Semi- 
Dressy  Suits,  $19.50,  $25, 
$29.50  and  $35.00. 

Exclusive  and  Dressy 
Suits,  $39.50,  $45,  $48.50, 
up  to  $135. 

Utility  and  Motor  Coats, 
$15,  $19.50,  $22.50  up  to 
$75. 

Smart  Separate  Skirts, 
$4.95,  $6.50,  $7.50  to  $25. 

Handsome  Blouses  and 
Waists,  95c,  $1.50,  $1.95 
up  to  $35. 


1/ 


And  Now  for  the 

Great  Easter 
Millinery  Display 


I 

1 


Our  Millinery  Depart- 
ment is  radiant  with 
brightness^of  Easter  Mil- 
linery. Our  Miss  Towle, 
the  manager  of  the  Mil- 
linery Dept.,  has  just  re- 
turned from  the  Eastern 
markets  with  many  orig- 
inal and  novel  adapta- 
tions of  foreign  models, 
as  well  as  high-grade 
creations  of  Eastern  mo- 
distes. 

A  Wonderful  Display 
of  Dressy  Hats,  Street 
Hats,  Sport  Hats,  etc. 


\ 


w 


w 


/ 

; 

/ 


i 


SSSSSS'SSSSSS.^SSSSS'^'SSSSSS^SSSSS^SSSSSSSSSS:^ 


J 


CANADA  NOW  HAS 
MAIL  CENSORSHIP 


covered,   but   nothing   like   the   present 
situation   has  been  seen. 


i 


A  censorship  of  first-class  mail  from 
Canada,  which  affects  thousands  of 
firms  and  individuals  of  the  Northwest, 
Is  in  effect  now,  it  was  discovered 
when  all  letters  at  the  local  postoffice 
were  found  today  to  have  been  opened, 
▲cross  the  open  ends  were  pasted 
•tickers  informing:  the  recipients  that 
the  correspondence  liad  been  censored. 
On  the  back  was  stumped  the  word 
"censored." 

Since  the  war  bepran  occasional  evi- 
dences of  the  censorship  have  been  dls- 


PROVIDES  FOR  SALE 
OF  CHIPPEWA  LANDS 

From  Th(  NeraM  Wuhinitoa  Bar«u. 
Washington,  April  14. — Representa- 
tive Stconerson  today  Introduced  a  bill 
providing  that  Isolated  tracts  of  ceded 
Chippewa  lands  in  Minnesota  shall  be 
subject  to  sale  at  public  auction  under 
the  law  of  1895.  There  are  a  number 
of  small  tracts  of  land  In  the  ceded 
portions  of  Indian  reservations  that  are 
not  subject  to  homcstea«d  entry  but 
that  may  be  bought  under  this  act  by 
Individuals. 


\>. 


THOROUGHBREDS 


IN 


MEN'S  CLOTHES 

Is  What  YoD  Get  in  Our  Hickey-Freeman- 
Qualiiy  Suits  and  Overcoats 


You  can  tell  a 
thoroughbred  from  a 
mongrel  and  you 
play  absolutely  safe 
if  you  place  your 
money  on  this  qual- 
ity stuff  for  prices 
are  quite  ordinary — 
$20.00,  $22.50,  $25.00 
and  $30.00— just  ^he 
same  as  for  other 
kinds. 


And  our  Stetson 
Hats  are  in  this  class 
— and  our  Wilson 
Bros,  and  Karl  &  Wilson  Shirts — and  our  Fownes* 
Gloves — and  our  Just  Wright  Shoes — thoroughbred 
things  for  men  to  wear,  but  costing  just  common 
prices. 

MAY  WE  SHOW  THEM  TO  YOU? 


<^ 


FLOAN  &  LEVEROOS 


EAST-TO-DULUTH  LAKE  TO 
ADJUSTED;  NOT  TO  TWIN  CITIES 


■B! 


'Ii;;||i!l|l:!iir:!il!l!lll|i!ifi!^ 


lii''iiliiiiii;iiiiiiiihil.iiiiilil'iiiiil 


iiai liaiiiiliilliilllPiii!!':^ 


im,,,,,,,,j,H^.,,  =»i,,,,,|,,J|ii!li||,i|iy^ 


Wij     it'     H|ll|:i: 


Eastern  Trunk  Lines  Agree 

to  Former  Division; Old 

Rates  Maintained. 


Lake   Line   and   Western 

Roads  Fail  to  Reach 

Agreement. 


The  Eastern  trunk  lines  have 
reached  an  agreement  with  the  Great 
Lakes  Transit  company,  the  new  pack- 
age freight  line  merger,  on  a  division 
of  rates  and  the  latter  company  is  fil- 
ing its  tariffs  from  all  Eastern  points 
to  Duluth  with  the  Interstate  com- 
merce commission  today.  The  com- 
mission agreed  some  time  ago  to  per- 
mit the  (Jreat  Lakes  company  to  put 
In  Its  rates  at  a  day's  notice  because 
of  the  fact  that  it  was  recently  formed 
and     negotiations     with     the     railroad 

lines  might  take   longer   than  usual. 

The  rates  from  Eastern  points  to 
Duluth  win  be  the  same  as  those  used 
by  the  package  freight  lines  during 
the  last  two  seasons,  those  from  New 
York,  for  example,  being  as  follows: 
First  class,  62  cents  a  hundred  pounds; 
second  class,  64  cents;  third  class,  41 
rents;  fourth  class.  30  cents;  fifth 
class,  26  cents;  sixth  class,  21  cents; 
rule  25,  46  cents,  and  rule  26,  33  cents. 
No    ANrrrement    Weat   of   Here. 

The  rates  from  the  East  to  the  Twin 
Cities  or  other  points  beyond  Duluth 
have  not  yet  been  announced,  for  the 
< Jreat  Lakes  company  has  not  reached 
a  satisfactory  agreement  with  the 
Western  lines  as  yet.  It  Is  believed, 
however,  that  an  agreement  will  be 
reached  before  long,  otherwise  should 
the  shipping  season  open  before  such 
agreement  Is  reached,  the  Twin  Cities 
win  have  to  pay  for  their  lake-and- 
rall  shipments  and  receipts  the  East- 
to-Duluth  rate  plus  the  local  rate  from 
Duluth  to  the  Twin  Cities,  which  would 
be  considerably  higher  than  the 
through  rate.  Then  Traffic  Commis- 
sioner Trickett  and  others  In  Minne- 
apolis would  doubtless  be  heard   from. 

It  Is  understood  that  the  agreement 
reached  with  the  Eastern  lines  was  a 
distinct  victory  for  the  Great  Lakes 
company.  The  roads  were  disposed  to 
demand  a  greater  division  of  rates 
than  they  had  been  getting,  but  the 
executive  committee  of  the  Great  Lakes 
company  refused  to  be  held  up,  and 
told  the  roads  they  could  take  what 
they  had  been  getting  or  do  without. 
Roada   Aeeept    InevitAble. 

They  also  told  the  roadd  that  they 
would  carry  the  matter  up  to  the  In- 
terstate commerce  commission  for  ad- 
justment. The  Federal  commission, 
having  really  fathered  the  independent 
lino  by  virtue  of  its  divorcement  of 
the  lake-and-rall  lines,  was  expected 
to  favor  fair  treatment  of  its  child,  so 
the  roads  decided  not  to  carry  the 
matter  that  far  and  today  an  agree- 
ment was  reached  whereby  the  roada 
accept  the  same  rate  division. 

The  Great  Lakes  Transit  company  is 
having  another  difficulty  Just  now^, 
namely,  that  of  obtaining  terminal  fa- 
cilities here  so  far  as  the  Great  North- 
ern road  Is  concerned.  An  agreement 
has  been  reached  with  the  Northern 
raclflc  road  for  dock  facilities  al- 
thotigh  nothing  has  been  signed  up 
yet;  but  the  Great  Northern  refuses  to 
agree  to  the  terms  offered,  which  In- 
clude the  Great  Lakes  Transit  com- 
pany furnishing  Its  own  men  to  do  the 
unloading  work.  It  la  expected  that 
some    agreement    will    be    reached    be- 


fore long,  however,  otherwise  the 
Great  Northern  will  probably  be  cut 
out  of  business  coming  by  the  lake 
line,  so  far  as  any  through  rates  are 
concerned.  The  Port  Huron  &  Duluth 
Steamship  company  Ib  also  involved  In 
the   matter. 

firstIat  to 
leave  harbor 


Steamer  Briton  Will  Go  to 

Port  Arthur  for 

Screenings. 


Upbound  Boats  Will  Clear 

From  Buffalo  Next 

Wednesday. 


WESTERNER  MAKES 
RICH  STRIKE 

E.  V.  Green,  the  CALIFORNIA 
CACTUS  JUICE  MAN,  as  he  is  Bome- 
tlmes  called,  who  has  succeeded  in 
stirring  up  some  of  tho  principal 
cities  In  the  country  with  his  new  dis- 
covery called  CACTUS  JUICE,  made 
from  the  juice  of  CALIFORNIA  fruit 
and  cactus  planta  that  grow  in  the 
fertile  valley  and  the  deserts  of  CALI- 
FORNIA, and  Is  Indorsed  by  many 
thousands  of  people  In  the  United 
States  who  have  been  restored  to 
health  and  happiness  by  this  MAS- 
TER MEDICINE. 

I  shall  be  in  Duluth  probably  a 
month  or  more,  and  I  w^ant  every 
one  to  come  to  the  Lyceum  Pharmacy, 
431  West  Superior  street,  and  talk  to 
me  and  try  this  famous  medicine.  Ex- 
mayor  of  Lancaster,  Ohio,  stated  that 
he  recommended  CACTUS  JUICE, 
also  that  It  benefited  his  wife  when 
all  other  failed — C.  M.  Rowlee. 

My  theory  is  that  stomach  trouble 
Is  the  foundation  of  a  great  many  dis- 
eases and  I  attribute  most  of  the  ills 
in  this  world  to  disorders  of  the  stom- 
ach. ^     , 

I  believe  that  the  stomach  of  the 
civilized  nations  are  degenerating, 
from  centuries  of  abuse.  Seventy-flve 
per  cent  of  all  Americans  are  in  poor 
health  owing  to  weakened  digestive  or- 
gans, caused  from  eating  too  much 
meat.  There  would  be  very  little  sick- 
ness If  we  would  observe  Nature's 
laws,  take  time  to  eat,  masticate  our 
food  properly,  diet  ourselves,  and  ab- 
stain from  so  much  animal  flesh.  We 
do  not  observe  these  laws  set  down 
by  nature  th'erefore  we  must  assist 
nature  In  every  possible  way.  The 
one  thing  that  will  help  you  is  CAC- 
TUS JUICE  and  I  will  be  at  the  LY- 
CEUM PHARMACY  starting  Saturday 
morning  to  tell  you  all  about  this 
wonderful    preparation. 

BUT  ASK  ANY  DRUGGIST  IN 
YOUR  CITY. — Advertisement. 


The  first  steamer  to  leave  this  har- 
bor for  another  port  will  be  the 
Briton  of  the  Massey  Steamship  com- 
pany, and  she  will  leave  port  either 
tonight  or  tomorrow  morning,  de- 
pending wholly  on  weather  and  Ice 
conditions.  She  will  go  light  to  Port 
Arthur  and  Fort  William  to  load 
screenings,  which  will  *  be  brought 
back  here.  R  is  not  Improbable  that 
she  will  make  several  similar  trips 
within    the    next    two    weeks. 

The  first  steamers  to  leave  Buf- 
falo for  the  Head  of  the  Lakes  will 
likely  be  some  belonging  to  the  Pitts- 
burgh fleet,  and  they  will  leave  the 
lower  lake  terminal  next  Wednesday. 
When  they  will  reach  this  port  Is 
problematical  of  course,  and  will  de- 
pend on  what  success  the  Ice  crusher 
Algomah  will  have  In  St.  Mary's  river 
In  her  present  attempt  to  open  up 
the  passage  there  for  ships.  Should 
she  be  successful,  the  steamers  that 
leave  Buffalo  next  Wednet^day  will 
likely  g:et  through  to  Duluth  by  the 
end  of  next  week  or  the  first  of  the 
following    week. 

The  first  steamer  to  be  shifted  for 
grain  loading  will  be  the  J.  J.  H. 
Brown,  and  she  will  be  sent  tomor- 
row to  elevator  K  to  take  on  wheat. 
Following  that  movement  It  Is  likely 
that  the  shifting  of  steamers  will  be- 
come general  In  this  harbor  until  all 
of  those  under  charter  have  been 
loaded. 

The  Pittsburgh  Steamship  company 
has  five  vessels  here,  one  a  steamer 
and  four  barges.  Two  of  the  barges 
the  Malda  and  the  Bell,  were  released 
yesterday,  as  reported  in  The  Herald 
last  evening,  but  they  have  not  yet 
been  moved  to  the  ore  docks  to  load 
ore,  for  the  reason  that  It  is  not 
thought  advisable  to  rush  this  mat- 
ter fust  now,  and  ore  trains  are  be- 
ing held  at  Proctor  to  await  more 
auspicious  conditions. 
.  No  further  attempts  to  break  the 
Ice  In  the  harbor  were  made  by  the 
tugs  today.  It  la  regarded  ap  un- 
necessary as  the  Ice  is  rapidly  rot- 
ting, and  it  Is  not  expected  that  ships 
will  have  much  trouble  in  being 
moved  about  by  the  tugs,  when  the 
work  begins  tomorrow.  The  ice  in 
the  lake  was  blown  out  quite  a  dis- 
tance yesterday  and  last  night,  and 
Is  still  a  considerable  distance  out. 
but    Is    being    slowly    blown    In    today. 

BREAKING  ICE  IH 
ST.  MARY'S  RIVER 

Sault  Ste.  Marie,  Mich.,  April  14— 
Considerable  Interest  Is  taken  here  in 
the  effort  being  made  by  the  Ice 
crusher  Algomah  to  break  the  Ice  In 
St.  Mary's  river  and  Lake  Superior. 
The  Algomah  left  St.  Ignace  at  9:80 
a.    m.,    but    up    to    last    night    had    not 

been  reported  at  Detour.  The  Ice  In 
Mud  lake  is  reported  heavy,  although 
the  weather  has  been  very  favorable 
for  the  destruction  of  tho  Ice  field. 
There  has  been  no  frost  at  night  to 
counteract  the  sun's  rays  dut-lng  the 
day,  and  a  drizzling  rain  has  been 
falling. 

From  below  Six-Mile  Point  In  Hay 
lake  to  Cedar  reef  in  the  upper  river 
there  is  open  water.  Beyond  that  to 
Whiteflsh  the  field  is  ^olld.  Fisher- 
men are  still  plying  their  vocation  on 
the  ice  In  Whiteflsh  bay.  About  five 
or  six  Inches  of  slush  Is  on  top  of 
the  Ice.  Above  Whiteflsh  Point  It  Is 
wlnrowed  heavily.  Outside  of  this  the 
ice  field  has  moved  off  shore  about  a 
mile. 

The  Caandian  canal  1»  ready  for  op- 
erations at  any  time.  The  American 
canal  will  be  ready  next  week. 

ICE  crusheFreaches 

DETOUR;  GOING  TO  SAULT 

Sault  Ste.  Marle„  Mich.,  April  14. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  steamer 
Algomah,  under  charter  by  the  Can- 
adian government,  to  attempt  to  force 
a  passage  through  St.  Mary's  river 
and  Whiteflsh  bay,  arrived  at  Detour 
at   9:80    this   morning. 

Ice  conditions  have  not  changed 
much  In  the  last  few  days  generally. 
A  considerable  amount  of  slush  has 
formed  over  .the  blue  Ice  by  warm 
weather  during  the  day,  and  a  lack 
of  frost  at  night,  but  there  still  re- 
mains about  fifteen  Inches  of  hard, 
blue    ice    on    the    average. 

The  Algomah  expects  to  leave 
Detour  for  Sault  Ste,  Marie  at  noon. 
She    will    strike    the    heaviest    Ice    just 


Pajamas 


SPECIAL— About  15  flj  1  Cfl? 
dozen— $2»50  values  at..%p  JL.  •OO 

Easter  Hats  and 
Haberdashery 

are  interesting — attractive  styles  or  colors.  You  cannot 
better  the  prices  anywhere,  but  you  can  obtain  many 
things  not  found  elsewhere. 

SIEWERT'S 

304  West  Superior  Street 


rtt^MMMMbidaidMiilliY 


Jugt  ilbout  ^i)oes! 


Those  Made  at  the 
Walk -Over  Factory 


lUK  lUU  tit  UiHUmt 


They  wear  longer  than  al- 
most any  other  shoes  because 
the  Walk-Over  method  of  try- 
ing and  testing  materials  in- 
sures the  highest  quality— 

They  look  better  than  al- 
most any  other  shoes  because 
Walk-Over  employs  only  the 
most  skilled  workers,  who  are 

past  masters  in  the  art  of  shoe 
making — 

They  are  more  comfortable 
than  almost  any  other  shoes 
because  Walk-Over  uses  over 
2,000  different  lasts  so  that 


every  type  of  feet  can  be  fitted 
with  the  exactness  of  custom- 
fitting— 

They  are  more  economical 
than  almost  any  other  shoes 
because  of  the  longer  service 
and  the  greater  satisfaction 
they  render* 

You  can  test  these  Walk- 
Over  claims  any  day  you  like 
at  any  price  you  like  from  $4 
to  $12 — and  please  remember 
that  we  stand  behind  every 
claim  with  our  money -back 
guarantee  of  complete  satis- 
faction. 


m         ^ 


WALK-OVER  BOOT  SHOP 


106  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET 


SteMiiii 


fl5|i'P!!S!iJ|ii!' 

■•..■,,r...L..uiui"".-iili  rt 


ELECTRIC  WASHER 

has  relieved  our  house   of  the 

usual     Monday    "wash-day 

drudgery"  and  has  more  than 

paid  for  itself.    I  KNOW  that  my.  clothes  are  so  clean 

and  are  v^earin^  much  better.     CMay  we  prove  these 

FACTS  to  YOU  by  a  FREE  demonstration  of  an  "Eden"  in 

your  home?    May  be  purchased  on  liberal  payments  if  desired. 


Northern  Electrical  Co,, 


210  and  212 
West  First  St. 


above  Detour  and  If  she  succeeds  In 
breaking  througrh  there  prospects  will 
look    favorable. 

Light  List' Available. 

A   revised   list   of   lights   and    light- 
houses  on   the   Great   Lakes,    both    on 


the  American  and  Canadian  sides,  has 
Just  been  issued  by  the  government 
and  may  be  obtained  by  mariners  at 
the  customs  office  and  at  the  hydro- 
graphic  oC£ice  in  the  Torrey  building. 
This  is  unusually  early  for  this  Issue. 
It  usually  comes  out  well  after  the 
season  of  navigation  is  on. 


Ten  Children  to  Homes. 

Appleton,  Wis.,  April  14. — Ten  of  the 
fifteen  children,  ranging  from  1>^  to 
16  years,  in  the  families  of  George  and 
Joseph  Besaw,  brothers,  both  .widowers, 
were  sent  to  various  state  institutions 
today  becaus«  of  alleged  improper 
care. 


EST  LILIES  AT  BEST  FilCE 

FROM  SATURDAY,  APRIL  15,  TO  EASTER  SUNDAY 

WM.  JAAP  WILL  HAVE 

1.000  POTS  OF  LILIES  ON  SALE 

AT  10  WEST  SUPERIOR  ST.,  ARCADE  SHOP 

Prices  from  50c  to  $1.50—3  to  9  buds  and  blossoms. 

200  Rose  Bushes  at 75c  to  $2.50  500  Tulips ^ 25c  to  $1.00 

100  Hydrangeas $1.00  to  $4.00  100  Daff  Pots 25c  to  $1.00 

50  Azaleas $1.00  to  $2.50  200  Cinerarias 75c  to  $1 

500  Hyacinths 25c  500  Primola 50c  to  $1.00 

SPECIAL  PRICES  TO  CHURCHES  ON  APPLICATION. 
To  those  who  can  spare  the  time,  you   should   enjoy  these  pleasant   days  by 
car  riding  out  Lester  way. 


X 


^^ 


. 


I 


4 


M  [t *"' 


Fridayi 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


T —  —  — 

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■''"■  "h,'*'-?    "'^iV.-'lT*^'  »        ."          '"'    -    •--  - 

^^^^^^n^^^>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 

^^■^ 

April  14,  1916. 

^^^^^^T^ 

^^ 

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—  I  *■"'   <* 


t 


■^ 


'»■-«' 


irwn 


We  Are  Considerate 

While  we  expect  our  patrons  to,  as  far  as  possible,  meet  their 
obligations  with  us  promptly,  we  are  fully  aware  of  the  thousands  ol 
unforeseen  circumstances  that  arise  at  times  to  upset  the  best  of  plans. 
We  do  not  expect  impossibilities.  The  entire  object  is  accommodation. 

WE  ARE  HERE  TO  STAY.  We  expect  to  sell  to  you  again. 
We  hope  to  furnish  the  homes  of  your  children.  We  want  to  alwayi 
hold  your  good  will,  and  we  know  the  only  way  we  can  do  it  is  to 

merit  it   by   being  sincere  and  fair. 


Our  Terms 


down,  $2.50  per  month, 

on    4(2.'>.UO    «\or(h. 

down,  $3.50  per  month, 
uu  |i:a.oe  ««rurrk. 

down,  $4.50  per  month, 
(ui  945.00  north. 

down,  $5.00  per  month, 

ui>  1|IS4).(M)   v»or(h. 

down.  $5.50  per  month, 

on   $S5.<>0    ^>urtb. 

down,  $6.00  per  month, 

on  9«U.U0   Morth. 

down,  $6.50  per  month, 

on  •«5.(«0  won  Ik. 

down,  $7.00  per  month, 
on  rzO.OV  «\«rth. 

down,  $7.50  per  month, 

on  |17S.(K>   viorlh. 

down,  $8.00  per  month, 

oil    $HO.<M>   i\orth. 

down,  $8.50  per  month, 

on  985.00  worth. 

down,  $9.00  per  month, 

on  IWO.OO    «^orth. 

down,  $9.50  per  month, 

«Mi  «»S.IN)   Morth. 

down,  $10.00  per  month, 

on    flOO.OO    worth. 


at  ihe  eamc  time  drawing  expense  ac- 
counts from  the  stat«.  It  in  clalm«a 
that  In  some  cases  the  lumber  com- 
panies have  boarded  thom  Ire.f  In  the 
camps  wht-re  they   were  workLn^r. 

It  Is  ex)>ected  that  as  soon  as  t*»e 
state  auditor  returns  from  Washing- 
ton, he  will  confer  with  the  attorney 
Rtneral's  office  with  reference  to 
prosecutions  which  may  follow,  If  tfce 
facts  «t  haAd  ^'arxant.  If  criminal 
IiKJCtfodlng."  are  Instituted.  It  Is  con- 
Hldered  likely  that  the  matters  will  be 
placed  In  the  lianAs  of  the  various 
county  attorni-yn  In  whose  Jurisdic- 
tion the  alleffod  trrerularltles  baTe  oc- 
curred. . 

Mr.  Scrlbner  today  et»te4  that  he 
knew  nothing  of  the  prosecutions,  but 
persistent  rumors  from  St.  Paul  have 
It  that  the  autborUlPS  have  plann«^ 
to  take  criminal  action  whM-evfT  star 
infraction   of  the  laws  are    found. 


1 71  ONt-IIWBIIED  AND    170 
l/j        aVtNlY-milttli'J 


tooUte 
to  qlassify 


One  Cent  m,  ft^Wd  Each  Insertion. 
Jifo  AAwrtlBcntent  Le^s  Than  16  C.;* 

YOr  CAN'T  hi  tfd  partlrular  for  us 
to  please  whel  >'mi  want  an  exquisite 
perfiuoe.  Evefc'  Aor  we  have  is  dell- 
oats  anfl  i^i^Mimt*.  Miss  Horrigan 
Oak   Hall   bld^ 

WANTED  —  Oood  girl  for  general 
housework,   ffj:^  ^   l«rt   st. 

FOR  RENT — 8  furnished  rooms  for 
light  housekeeytec  ^ownslai.'**.  124 
19th  avp.  w.       ■ 

F<."»K  RKN'T— T.orC'p  room,  kitchenette, 
cornplt-iflv  furi>jajjed  for  light  hnuse- 
kneplng:  furnace  heat:  electric  lig'hts, 
gas,  bath,  phoy.  618  W.  ird  at. 

MARRIAtiE  UCEftSeS^ 

Noah  Woods  and  Anney  Gill. 


■  ■      ■ 

■ 
> 

■ 

I 
I 

I 


Toung  men  and  young  women  wwe 
recommended  by  the  Duluth  Business 
university  to  paying  clerical  positions 
during  the  past  year.  Over  106  good 
positions  were  offered  during  the  year 
to  which  the  colkge  had  no  young 
people  to  recommend.  Business  pros- 
ppcts  never  looked  brighter  at  th* 
Head  of  the  Lakes  than  now.  There 
is  no  more  promising  city  on  earth  to- 
day than  Duluth  and  no  better  business 
tralnlnK  school  on  earth  than  the  Du- 
luth Business  university.  College  day 
a!»d  night  school  will  be  open  all  sum- 
mer, no  vacition.  New  classes  in  all 
departments  on  Monday,  April  17.  Lo- 
.atiim,  118-120  Fourth  avenue  west 
Christie  building. 


DULUTH.  MINNESOTA     ^^^ 


Personals 


•TEDDING   PKTt^RES  are  a  specialty 
with    Chriwtensen.    25    W.    Superior  «t. 


Wedding  Annoufteetnents — Engra^'ed  or 
printed.  Consolidated  Stamp  and 
Printing  Co..  li  Fourth  avenue  west 

14.  18  AND  22K  SOLJD  UOLD  WED- 
dlng  and  engM^ement  rings  nuide  and 
mounted  to  order  at  Hanrlcksen's,  Hi 
West  Superior  Btreet 

Engraved  and   printed   birth  announce' 
menta.    Consollda-ted  Stamp  &.  Print.  Co. 


House  Cleaning 

eeials! 


Cedar  Oil  Mops 


Magic  Cedar  Oil  Mop.  This  is  a  large  sized  triangular 
shaped  mop  with  long  handle,  and  also  regular  25c  bottle 
of  oil  with  every  mop — Houseckaning  special 


BIRTHS. 


Service  First 

Is  Our  Claim 

Every    article    we    sell 
I  must  be  strong  in  service- 
giving  properties,     or  we 
won't  sell  it. 

PERHAPS 

You  have  long  wanted  a 
range  that  would  cook, 
broil  and  bake,  using  coal, 
wood  or  gas. 


HAVE 
YOU? 


Geortf  H.  Vivian,  county  treasurer, 
is    visllini?    today    in    Ely. 

Miss  Ethel  Norrls,  assistant  to  j. 
(i.  Roes,  agent  for  tho  Duluth  Humane 
society,  ha.s  returned  from  a  trip  to 
.St.    Paul    and    Faribault. 

W.  A.  Evert  on  of  Deer  River  »• 
registered   at   tTi.-  McKay. 

J.  W.  Lirko  of  Aitkin  is  among  the 
guests  of  the  McKay. 

Amy  and  Edna  Anderson  of  Moos* 
Lake  are  among  the  guests  of  the  Mc- 
Kay. _ 

G.  D.  McDonald  of  Deer  River  is 
.stopping  at  the  Sipaldinc:  for  the  day. 

Mr*.  C.  C.  Watson  of  liufTalo  and  her 
two  children  arc  registered  at  the  Hol- 
land. 

Leroy  E.  Miller.  Northwestern  maa- 
figer  of  the  motor  department  ot  the 
International  Har*-eeter  company,  iB 
stopping  at  the  Spalding. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Harry  G.  Williams  of 
Aberdeen.  S.  D..  will  arrive  this  eve- 
ing  to  spend  a  week  with  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Pred  P.  Houghton  of  1880  East  Fourth 
»tre<rt.  Mrs.  Williams  is  Mr.  Hough- 
ton's sister. 


City  Briefs 


KIL.BY — A  daughter  was  bom  April  13 
to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Walter  i.  KUby  of 
1229  Glenn  street. 

I'ELTO — The  btrth  of  a  eon  on  Feb.  28 
has  been  reported  by  Mr.  and  Mrs 
Frank  O.  Pelt*  of  4002  Regent  street 

O.STREICH — ^Mr.       And       Mrs.        Albert 
Ostrelch  are  the  parents  of  a  daugh 
ter  born  April  8  at  St.  Mar>''s  hospital. 

PETERSON — A.  son  was  born  April  10 
to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Alfred  J.  Peterson 
of  481  North  Blxtleth  avenue  west.      I 

RUUSKA — The  birth  of  a  son  on  April 
11  has  been  reported  by  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Aro  Ruuska  at  11  South  Sixtieth 
avenue  west. 


Sad  Irons 

A  good  set  of  Sad  Irons — 3  irons, 
stand  and  handle —  fiQtf* 

special 0«FV 


I 


Deaths  and  Funerats 


] 


LARSON^Anton  Lar.sitn,  aged  BO.  died 
at  a  local  hospital  last  night  after  a 
abort  illnesJi.  Th^  body  will  be  sent 
to  East  Lake.!  Minn.,  today,  where 
relatives  will  take  charge  of  ar- 
rangements. Fuaeral  services  prob- 
ably will  be  ^«ld  in  East  Lake. 


MOmMMEMTS. 


LARGEST  STOCfc  OF  HIGH-GRADE 
monuments  in  the  North wejit;  call 
and  in.spect  before  buying  elsewhere. 
P.  N.  Peterson  Granite  Co.,  230  E.  Sup. 


91aM>l< 

The  new  system  of  file  Indexing. 
Call  M.  I.  Stewart  company.    Phones  111. 

Facaa  B»t«t«  S«ttl«'A. 
Mary  Fagan,  widow  of  Richard  H. 
Fagan,  well  knowTi  mining  man  who 
fommitted  suicide  at  his  office  In  thjt 
Manhattan  building  on  April  26,  I'lp. 
will  receive  |B0,66».feJ>  as  sole  heir 
of  the  esiat**.  In  probate  court  yes- 
t.rd*iy  .ludge  Gllt>in  fixed  the  Inher- 
itance   tax    at    J6»1.49. 

Xtutt^TM'   Day.   S««day.   April    !«. 

Twelve  lai^t  gictuhouses  full  of 
bli>oiwt»«  plants  on  exhibition  Sunday, 
Apr*!  16.  Everybody  welcome.  J.  J. 
I.e  BorlouR.  florist.  »21  East  Third 
.street.  Duluth's  only  grower  of  planU 
and    cut    flowers. 


The  Round  Oak  Chief-Three  Fuel. 
No  one  else  in  Duluth  has  them. 


Then  you  are  the 
family  we  wouM  like  to 

talk  to. 

you  CAN  OFFER 

One  thousand  ex- 
cuses for  not  ha^^ng 
one,  but  not  one  reason 
why  you  don't  need 
one. 


A  &  10 


IHJ4>UTtls  M4NNfiS0TA 


MONUMENTS  to  order  direct  from  fac- 
tories. Tou  save  20  pei-  cent.  Charles 
Benson,  office  2»P1  W.  2nd  at.   Lin.  <84. 

FUNERAL    FLOWERS    A    SPECIALTY. 
Duluth  rioral  Co.,  121  W.  Superior  St. 


RICHESON  MAY 

NOT  APPEAL 


Walter  J.  Rlcheson.  deputy  clerk  of 
the  municipal  court,  who  was  found 
guilty  of  mlsappropiiating  funds  en- 
trusted to  his  keeping,  will  probebly 
not  appeal  to  the   hisher   courts. 

It  is  understood  that  early  next  week 
he  will  appear  before  the  court  for 
sentence.  The  offense  Is  punishable  by 
a  term  of  not  more  than  seven  years 
in   a  penal   Institution.     The  defendant 


A  PROBLEM  SOLVED 


W 


.r' 


WW 
SfKX 

Can  you  buy  the  Novelty  Shoes 
and  also  have  plenty  of  money  left 
for  the  rest  of  your  Easter  tog- 
gery? 

Ans.:  Yes;  if  you  buy  your  shoes 
at   the    Family   Shoe   Store. 

We  have  just  received  a  new 
shipment  of  Novelty  Shoes  in  the 
latest  styles  and  colors  from  some 
of  the   best   manufacturers. 

Come  upstairs  and  be  convinced. 

THE  FAMILY  SHOE  STORE 

317  WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 

Opposite  the   St.   LouLs   Hotel. 
We  are  upstain. 


Is  26  years  old  and  It  Is  within  the 
discretion  of  the  court  to  send  him  to 
the  state  reformatory  or  the  state  pen- 
itentiary. 

prosecutTons 
mayresult 

trregularities     in     Timber 
Scaling  Will  Be  Investi- 
gated Wednesday. 


Prosecutions  are  expected  to  follow 
the  investigation  which  Oscar  Arneson, 
deputy  state  auditor  and  manager  of 
the  state  land  department,  and  tha 
state  timber  board  are  makine:  Into 
alleged  irregrularitles  charged  agrainst 
certain  companies  buyln^r  timber  from 
the  state  under  contract,  and  state  loc 
scalers  and  land  examiners. 

Definite  action  will  probably  not  be 
taken  until  after  State  Auditor  J.  A.  O. 
Preus  returns  to  St.  Paul  from  Wash- 
ingrton.  He  Is  expected  back  Wednes- 
day, and  a  meeting  of  the  state  tlmbsr 
board  wni  be  held  in  St.  Paul  on  that 
day.  Frank  O.  Scribtier,  surveyor 
Kcneral  of  log's  and  lumber  for  this 
district,  will  appear  before  the  board 
at  that  time  and  place  such  informa- 
tion as  he  has  at  hand  at  the  disposal 
of  those  who  are  Invcstlgatlniff  re- 
cent charges   made  by  Mr.  Arneson. 

It  Is  understood  that  not  only  arc 
deputy  state  scalers  Involved,  but  also 
state  land  examiners  who  are  In  the 
employ  of  the  state  auditor's  office  and 
who  are  expected  to  give  the  state  the 
protection  of  a  check  against  the  conat 
made  by  the  scalers.  In  tho  cases  of 
some  of  the  state  land  examiners,  it  Is 
charged,  many  have  been  living  at  the 
expense   of   the   lumber  companies  and 


mXfarr   Cl«*    mm    M«>et. 

The  Ja<kson  Welfare  club  will  hoM 
a  regular  meeting  this  evening  at  the 
Jackson  school.  J.  H.  Darling  and 
Park  Manasrer  Cleveland  will  address 
the  club  members  during  the  eve- 
ning. 

(;irl  liiberN  at  Lyceam. 

Young  w-oro»n  will  usher  at  the 
Lyceum  theater  in  the  future,  accord- 
ing to  an  announcement  made  last 
(  vening  by  Manager  Morrissey.  Prac- 
tically ever^'  theater  in  the  city  now 
•  mploys  young  women  ushers.  Includ- 
ing   the    N.^w    <Jrand,    Rex,    Zelda    and 

Lyric   theaters. 

■ 

Forestry    Men    Will    Meet. 

Local  members  of  the  Minnesota 
Forestry  association  will  attend  the 
forti<th  annual  meeting  of  the  organ- 
ization to  be  h*-ld  at  the  "West  hotel 
in  Minneapolis  on  Thursday.  April  27. 
Motion  pictures  of  the  Lakes  and 
forests  In  the  state  will  be  shown  1 
liurlng    the    sessions. 

*  Honi»1«m1  Matron  lU. 

Mrs  E.  W.  W^athcrhi  ad,  matron  of 
St  Louis  county  hospital,  who  has  be^ 
ill  for  the  last  week,  was  taken  to  St. 
Mary's  hospital  today,  following  a 
nt-rvuus  breakdown. 

-I       ■  ^ 

■  Temple   Scrvlees. 

Dr  Maurice  Lefkovlts  of  Temple 
Emanuel.  St-venth  avenue  east  and  Sec- 
ond street  will  pnach  on  "The  Holy 
Trinity  of  the  Jew.s"  at  the  regular 
Temple  E^manu«^  services  tomorrow 
eveiilng.  Tht-  services  will  commence 
at  8  o'clock  and  aro  open  to  the  public. 

■  »  ' 
Woald  Pave  Avenoe. 

A  petition  was  filed  yesterday  for  the 
paving  of  Twentieth  avenue  east  from 
Fifth  to  Eighth  street.  The  owners 
ask  for  a  one-course  concrete  pave- 
ment. The  petition  will  be  presented  t» 
the  commissioners  next  Monday. 

■  »         - 
Knoeked    Down    by    Auto. 

An  8-yt»ar-old  girl,  Freda  Johnson, 
was  bowled  over  by  an  automobile 
yesterday  afternoon  while  playing  in 
the    street      near    her      home      between 


BUILDING  I»ERM1TS. 

To  C.  A.  Anderson,  dwelling  on 
east  side  of  Fifty-flrst  avenue 
east,  between  Oakley  and 
Ulendalo  streets    I    ,2,000 

To  the  Lenox  Hotel  company, 
alterations  to  top  floor  6t 
building, on  tho  north  eltte  of 
Superior'  street,  netween 
Sixth  and  Sevetith  avenues 
w.-st    ftOO 

To  P.  L.  Mort^^ru(J,  garage  on 
the  south  side  of  Fifth  street, 
between  Twenty-sixth  and 
Twenty-sevanth  avOuues  west  tOO 

To  B.  W.  Hlnge^^i(rtlrage  on  the 
west  side  of  El^hteeath  ave- 
nue east,  between  Fifth  and 
Sixth  streets    t69 

To  F.  A.  Berg,  reahingling 
dwelling  on  the  north, side  of 
Third  street,  between  Fif- 
teenth and  Sixteenth  avenue* 
east   178 

To  Matt  Konf-ozny,  garage  on 
the  west  side  of  Twenty- 
sixth  avenue  west,  between 
Third  and  Fourth  streets 100 


ihk  Sale  Tomorrow 


A  good  sized  Splint 
Clothes  Basket — jast 
like  cut,  at — 

19c 


Housewives 
Attrition 

have  ^pratited  for  a  long 
time  lie  It  to  keep 
your  alvmlnum  kettle* 
and  pans  bright  as  wil- 
ver. 

Surissalu 
Cleaner 

sltould  be  a  part  of 
every  l»«TOHUoepep'w  nvt- 
fiti  all  next  wee>k  a 
targe  Mice  cake  JDg» 

f*r  walr •"*' 


A  neat  and  handy 
kitchen  set,  consist- 
ing of  5  pieces ;  a 
bread,  flour,  sugaf, 
coffee  and  tea  box — 
these  are  all  white 
jnameled  and  labeled 
what  they  are  to  l>c 
used  for — special  for 
this  week — 

79c 

Curtain  Stretchers 

Adjustable   pin,   extra   large  and 

made  strong — something  that  will 

not  fall  to  pieces —  0<|    OQ 

.special  at ^Xa^iF 

Kitctien  Cooking  Sets 

35-piece  Aluminum  Kitchen  Cooking  Set,  con- 
sisting of  kettles,  i>ans,  bread  pans,  cake  tins, 
pie  tins,  etc.,  a  very  special  price  gj/?  QQ 
all  next  week ^tl«^0 

27  pieces  of  the  Old  English  Gray  Ware— consisting  of  a  large  Dish    Pan,    Roaster,    Stew 
Pans,  Collandcr,  Milk  Pans,  Pudding  Pans,  Cake  Pans,  Frj-  Pan,  ^^  ^" 

Dipper,  etc.,  special  for 


$2.98 


SHOP  IN  THE  WEST  END 


Orders 


Taken. 


NGER  & 


THE  BIG  WrST  CND 
FURNITURE  HOUSE 


LSON 


t9ih  Av«.  W»<^t 
a»»d  Superior  St 


Ask  to  See  Our 
Peninsular  Coal 
&   Gas   Ranges 


'  He  i'mferseU  T/jcm  All.   * 


Twenty-eighth  and  Twenty-ninth  ave- 
nue* w^?st,  on  Michigan  street.  The 
driver  of  the  car  was  not  identified. 
He  stopped  long  enough  to  learn  that 
the  child's  injuries  were  slight. 
—    ■  .  ■  ^ 

Eleetcd  t«  Ftil  Beta  Kappa. 

Wendell  T.  Bums,  son  of  Kev.  and 
Mrs.  M.  P.  Burns  of  this  city,  has  been 
ejected  to  the  acholarship  fraternity, 
Phi  Beta  Kappa,  at  the  University  of 
Minnesota.  Tho  Puluth  boy  is  a  fresii- 
man  "Haw"  at  the  ♦TJ-  and  has  already 
received  his  bachelor's  degree. 
I  m 
Here's  Baslnrss   for   Some   Bank. 

If  a  savings  bank  could  get  all  the 
men  who  saved  $10  in  thfse  sooond 
floor  shops  to  deposit  that  saving.  Its 
saving  account  bustness  would  Jump 
up  more  than  a  jnlHlon  dollars.  No 
wonder  this  shop  is  famous — $26  values 
for  $16:  full  dress  suits  $16.  Hollands 
Clothes  shop,  318  West  Superior  street, 
second  floor. 


F«r  Catarrhal  Deafness 

and  Head  Noises 

Here  In  America  there  Is  much  suf- 
fering from  catarrh  and  head  noises. 
American  people  would  do  well  to  con- 
sider the  methods  employed  by  the 
Sngllsh  to  combat  this  Insidious  dis- 
ease. Everyone  knows  how  damp  the 
English  climate  Is  and  how  dampness 
affects  those  suffering  from  catarrh. 
In  England  they  treat  .catarrhal  deaf- 
ness and  head  noises  as  a  constitution- 
al disease  and  use  an  Internal  rt-raedy 
for  It  that  is  really  very  efficacious. 

Sufferers  who  could  scarcely  hear  a 
watch  tick  tell  how  they  had  their 
hearing  restored  by  this  English  treat- 
ment to  such  an  extent  that  the  tick 
of  a  watch  was  plainly  audible  seven 
and  eight  Inches  away  from  either  ear. 

Therefore,  if  you  know  someone  who 
is  troubled  with  catarrh,  catarrhal 
deafness  or  head  noises,  cut  out  this 
formula  and  hand  it  to  them  and  you 
will  have  been  the  means  of  saving 
some  poor  sufferer  perhaps  from  total 
deafness.  The  prescription  can  be 
easily  prepared  at  home  for  about  75c 
and   Is   made  as  follows: 

From  your  druggist  obtain  1  oz.  of 
rarmlnt  (Double  Strength),  about  76e 
worth.  Take  this  home,  and  add  to  It 
\i,  pint  of  hot  water  and  4  ounces  of 
granulated  sugar:  stir  until  dissolved. 
Take  a  tablespoonful  four  times  a  day. 

Parmlnt  la  need  in  this  way  not  only 
to  reduce  by  tonic  action  the  inflam- 
mation  and  swelling  in  the  Eustachian 
Tubes,  and  thus  to  eQuallze  the  air 
pressure  on  the  drum,  but  to  correct 
any  excess  of  secretions  in  the  middle 
ear.  and  the  results  It  gives  are  usually 
renrvarkably  ««ick  and  effective. 

EfMT  pfTCon  wh*  lia.<  ntofk  In  mj  form  drnfld  cl*i 
thLi  rprtpe  •  trlil  &Dd  fm  tiMBMtfM  fram  thb  dt- 
itractlw  iUksm. 


Trades   Anm^mMr   Holds   Satofcer. 

All  unions  HfiWiatt»d  with  the  Duluth 
Trades  aa.sr-rably  were  represented  at  a 
smoker  and  ret-t<>geth.r  meeting  held 
at  Brown's  hall,  Kast  Superior  street. 
Postmaster  WiUia«  E.  McEwen  and 
President  E  G.  Hall  of  the  Minnesota 
Federation  of  l*abor  were  speakers.  It 
was  decided  to  arrange  for  one  night 
of  the  campaign  during  Labor  For- 
ward week  for  the  building  council.  A 
meeting  of  tha  X**>orers'  union  also 
was  held  last  nlgriU 

WIlilTTO 
ELKS'  CLUB 

Three  Additional  Stories  Will 

Be  Built  This 

Year. 


have  the  building  finished  next  '»"• 

The  present   Elks'   building   and  site 
cost   approximately    $110,000.     Recently 


during  the  fall  of  191S. 

The  complaint  in  th^  case  Is  a  paper 
of   fifty-four    pages.      Boyeson    &    Flor 


thSbo£?d  of  Trade  started  negotiations  !  of  St.  Paul  are  attorneys  for  the  plain 
for  the  purchase  of  the  Elks'  building  ;  tiff, 
and  plans  were  made  at  that  time  to 
construct  a  new  clubhouse  at  ^o^arth 
avenue  west  and  Second  street,  but  the 
matter  was  later  dropped.  As  a  re- 
sult, the  lodge  has  now  taken  the  first 
step  toward  erecting  a  complete  lodge 

building.  ^     ^        ., ,,, 

The  forty  roonvs  on  the  top  floor  wiu 
be  rented  only  to  members  of  the 
fraternity.  An  elevator  also  will  be  In- 
stalled wb>en  the  Improvements  are 
started. 


CONTRACTORS 
ASKJ70.000 

Bring  Suit  Against  Power 

Company  for  Big 

Sum, 


When  work  on  the  construction  of 
the  big  Island  L*ke  storage  dara  of 
the  Great  Northern  Power  comp«iy. 
near  Taft  in  this  county,  was  complet- 
ed last  sununer,  E.  S.  Johnson  &  Co., 
contractors,  failed  to  agree  with  the 
power  company  as  to  remuneration 

Their  dispute  has  been  carried  iato 
district  court.  George  H.  Wright,  a« 
trustee  for  the  contractors,  today  be- 
gan suit  against  the  power  company 
to  recover  $70,413.23  and  Interest  from 
Sept.    1,    191*.      Tlie    work    was    begun 


ARRANGING  DETAILS 
FOR  NEW  MERGER  FLEET  I 

Buffalo.  N.  T.,  April  14.— Announre- 
ment  is  made  that  the  three  combina- 
tion passenger  freight  steamers,  Tion- 
esta,  Juniata  and  Octorara  of  the  Great 
Lakes  Transit  corporation  will  be 
equipped  with  wireless. 

Freight  ships  of  this  line  are  to  be 
black  to  the  load  water  line  and  tan 
above.  Houses  will  be  white.  Stacks 
will  be  red  with  black  band.  House 
flags  will  be  red  ground,  divided  into 
four  sections  by  white  bands.  Initials 
of  white  G.  L..  T.  C.  will  occupy  the 
four  squares. 

Masters  and  mates  will  wear  uni- 
forms   like   those    of    the   Anchor    line 

officers  last  year. 

e     ■" 

Senate  Working  on  Army  Bill. 

Washington,  April  14. — The  senate 
continued  work  today  on  the  army 
reorganization  bill  under  the  rule  lim- 
iting speeches  to  ten  mimites  each. 
This  rule  will  be  enforced  until  next 
Tuesday  afternoon,  when  final  action 
on  all  amendments  and  the  bill  itself 
Is  to  be  taken. 


ONAIZ 

IkV^UMM 


Gettlne  Milk   From  W4»ie»«nln. 

St.    Louis,    April    14.— As   a  result  of 
the    decision    of    the    Southern    Illinois 
Milk  Producers'  association  to  demand  ^ 
$1.40  a  hundred  pounds   for  milk  senlj 
+/-.  St    T.0111S  dealers,   the  blK  dairies  of    - 


Everybody  brightens  up 
for  Easter. 

No  housecleaiiing  is  com- 
plete without  Xational  Maz- 
da lamps  in  all  sockets. 

National  Mazda  lamps  are 
the  way  to  better,  brighter, 
whiter  light. 

We    have    the    size     you 
\NTint.     Telephone   your   or- 
der today. 
Melrose  7657.  Grand  1625-X 

UNIVERSAL  ELECTRICAL 
APPLIANCE  CO. 

112  EAST  SUPERIOR  ST, 


to  St.  Louis  dealers,  the  big  dairies  of 
this  city  are  receiving  large  consign- 
ments of  milk  from  Xorthe»n  Illinois 
and  Wisconsin. 

m 

Mares  to  %«a«1i  WMt. 
Madison.    Wis.,     April     14. — Attorney 
Geineral  Owen  appeared  before  the  su- 
preme court  today  and  made  a  motion 


to  quash  the  writ  of  the  state  board 
of  normAl  regents  in  a  mandamus  ac- 
tion to  c«mpel  the  secretary  of  state 
to  audit  a  bill  for  construction  work 
on  the  Whlta  Water  nornwil  school. 
The  secretary  contend.s  that  the  $50,000 
for  building  work  at  White  Water 
was  repealed  by  the  1916  legislatura. 


4-L4-U. 


Throa  stories  will  be  added  to  the 
Elks'  club  building  this  summer  at  a 
total  cost  of  approximately  $50,000. 

Tentative  plans  haTe  been  aubmitted 
by  the  board  of-  trustees  and  approved 
by  members  of  the  fraternity,  accord- 
ing to  an  announeenient  made  today  by 
H.  J.  Huber.  one  of  the  trustees.  The 
other  members  of  the  board  are  W.  H. 
Alexander  and  J.  L.  Crawford.  A  J. 
McCuUoch,  extklted  ruler  of  Duluth 
lodge.  No.  133,  \i  behind  the  plan  and 
one  of  the  leaders  in  the  movement 
to  increase  the  facilities  of  the  fouUd- 

Accordlng  to  the  plana  outlined  by 
Mr.  Huber,  the  present  structure  will 
be  remodeled  entirely,  with  the  fol- 
lowing arrangement  in  view:  Cafe. 
kitchen  and  ladle**  parlor  on  the 
ground  floor;  gymnasium,  locker  rooms 
and   shower   batlv*  j.on    the    third   floor; 

on  the  fourth  < 
Ing  the  entire 

,    ,     „  eeplng    rooms 

wltii  private  baths  on  the  sixth  floor. 
The  First  strept iii»OT  will  be  rented 
as    formerly. 

Kelley  &  Wyilains  will  b^  retaiaad 
as  architects,  and  The  contract  wUl  ke 
awarded  this  spring,  Mr.  Huber  said, 
so  that  construction  work  can  begin 
some  time   in  June.     It  is  planned   to 


ground  floor;  gymnasium.  1( 
and   shower   batlvj .  on    the 
billiard  and  cafdiiftioms  on 
floor;  lodge  ro«»r,occupyini 
fifth    floor,    and   forty    slee 


Easter  in  a  week, 
Select  the  Boy's 

new  Outfit 
tomorrow  at  the 

Columbia 


Boyi'  Suits  $2  to  $16.50. 


/ 


SI   m     I  *    ■         "■ 


m>^~.mtmm^tam 


W»f-  "''""Mf'  *'^— *»Wg!'W^ 


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Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


THE  THRIFTY  HOUSEWIFFS  MARKET  BASKET 


"Economy,  the  Poor  Man's  Minf'—TUPPER. 


"jtbithe  Saved  Is  a  Dime  Made."— BENJAMIN  FRANKLIN. 


YOU  cannot  believe 
that  we  save  you  as 
much  money  as  we 
really  do  until  you  have 
bought  here  once,  and  you 
will  be  surprised  how 
much  better  our  meats  are. 


..THE  PUBLIC. 
MEAT  MARKET 

6  Lake  Av*.  South.  N«ar  Cornar  Suparlor  St. 


Fancy  Veal  ^  ^1 
Breast 1^2 


2C 


Fancy  Veal 
Stew 


10* 


Pork  Loins 

-Cut  from 
youns  pig..... 


n 


Little  Pig  t  O^ 
PorkRoastl^2C 


Pork  Chops  I  £J^ 
Nice  Iean...l0< 


SlGdkS  PorterhouseZO^ 


Veal 
Roast. 


15 


\\  iii;\    vol'  111  V 


C    MARIGOLD  OLEOMARGERIWE     '^P^^^'  '  '^ 


Veal 
Steak. 


18< 


Fresh  Spared  Ol 
Ribs,  per  lb.  I Z2^ 


Tiif  <;iriit  flutter  SuhMtltute.  yoii 
can  !><•  >>ur«*  uf  tlic  quality  and 
you  can  t-at  any  (luantity, 
and    €OMtM    but,    per    lb.  .  .  . 


BONELESS  RIB  ROAST- 

'l'li<*  rconomloal  cut;  no  btineM, 
no  wnMte,  all  nic-at —  OA^^ 
rollrd.  tied,  ready  for  the  /IIC 
oveu,    per  lb..   '.iSe-:i'2c fcWW 


Spare  Ribs,  |"^ 
Shoulder 9C 


Fresh  Liver 

Sllcoilasyou 
Ilka  It-.. 


Prime  Steer  1  jj 
Pot  Roast...  13^ 


Choice  Beef' 
Boiling... 

Corned  Beef' 

Sucar 
Curad  — 

Mutton 


Lamb 
Stew.. 


FRESH  DRESSED 
CHICKENS,  DUCKS 


.MII,\\\IKI:K    MADK    SAFSAGE    ami    rye    bread — Dli-I.   PICKLES. 


is  a  food  of  unsurpassed  purity.    Every  step 
in  Its  iruinufacturo  is  under  the  watchful  eye  of 
U.  S.  Government  Inspectors. 

Leading    domestic   science    schools 
in  America»and  others  who  teach  scientific 
cookery,  demand  economy  with  excel- 
lence and  insist  upon  Glendale. 
Spread  it  on  thick— the  price 
permits    it.     If    your    dealer 
does  not  have  it,  phone  us 
his  name. 

A*  M  O  U  R  jAl  COMPANY 

DIJLUTH,     MINN. 
I.  O.  Flaher,  Maaasev 

Phones — Mel     8208: 
Orand  281. 


nara'a 


Li£«l 


Oral  Lkb*!  Star* 


ass 


McKenzie  &  McGhie 


GROCERS 

301  and  303  East  Superior  St. 


Both  Phones  997 


Bob    White    Soap — A    fine 
soap;  per  box 


quality  of  white 


$3.35 


Peas — 3  cans;  very 
fine,    for 


25c 


Duluth    Imperial    F  1  o  u  r — 
Per  49-lb.  sack  &'4    fir 

Eggs — Strictly  fresh ;   ffSfg^ 
per   doz Uii\j 


Head  Lettuce — Fancy 
and  solid;  each 


lOc 


Mammoth  White  Asparagus 
— Not  the  common  OA^ 
kind;  per  lb QV\, 

New  Carrots — Large 
bunches;  per  bunch. 

Silvef  Skin  Bermuda  Onions 
—For  boiling ;  per   .         r  ^ 

Strawberries;  per 
box 


It's  a  Happy,  Healthy  Breakfast  With 

Balis  efJi 


FLORIDA'S  FINEST  GRAPEFRUIT  AND  ORANGES 


BUY  THEM  BY  THE  BOX 


YOUK  GROCER  SUPPLIED  BY 

CULBERTSON  BROS.  CO.,  Distributers 


SPECIAL  FOR 
SATURDAY 

1,000 

Easter  Lily 
Plants,  each 

Sunday,  April  16,  Is  Visitors'  Day  at  tlie 

Greenhouses  of 

J.J.  LeBORIOUS, 

921  EAST  THIRD  STREET. 


The  Only 
Grower  of 
Plants  and 
Cut  Flowers 
In  Duluth 


HOUSEWIFE-WHY  GO  DOWN  TOWN 
FOR  SATURDAY  SPECIALS 


3  Cans  Carnation  Milk 25c 

3  Cans  Sugar  Corn 25c 

3  Cans  Jvinc  Peas 25c 

3  Cans  Mustard  Sardines 25c 

3  Cans  Pears  25c 

3  Packages  Quaker   Oats 25c 

3  Packages  Maccaroni, 

Spaghetti,  Noodles 25c 

Large  Jar  Heinz'  Apple  Butter, 

regular  price  40c,  for 30c 


26-30  oz.  Pure  Preserves;  regu- 
lar price  30c,  for 25c 

Regular  20c  Codfish,  package. .  18c 

Regular  25c  Rolled  Oats 22c 

Large  Bottle  Pickles   10c 

3  Packages  Nu-Jell   25c 

3  Packages  Flavo  Jell 25c 

3  Packages  Tryphosa 25c 

Fresh  Comb  Honey 22c 

Fresh  Country  Eggs,  doz 22c 


MEATS    ARE    ALWAYS    TENDER    AND    JUICY— PRICES    RIGHT. 

GIVE    VS   A   CALL. 

12th  AVENUE  MEAT  &  GROCERY 

Grand  2129-Y — IMIONES — MelroBc  6271. 


LA.  PADDOCK  GO 

117  East  Superior  St. 

Phones — Melrose  234-264. 
Grand    234-48. 

49-lb.  sack  ^1   CC 

Flour ^1-Uil 

Fancy  Creamery  Butter,    Q7a 
per  lb Ollf 

Asparagus  (tall  cans  i  Oa 

finest  quality)    LQ%f 

Red  Raspberries,  IRp 

per  can   XOv 

Sliced  Peaches  (fine  1R|* 

quality),  per  can XOv 

Can   Apricots   (fine  1 1Jl* 

quality)  per  can X«W» 

Bacon  (fine  OKr 

quality),  per  lb fcUv 

Our  Special  Coffee,  Otir 

per  lb fc*'v 

Sweet  Navel  Oranges,  per 
dozen 15c  and  18c 

2  cans  Salmon,  large  s'ize-25c 
Hams,  (Extra  Fancy,  Mild 

Cured)  per  lb 22c 

Peaches  (in  Syrup) 15c 

Sliced  Pineapple  (large  can)  15c 
4  cans  Peas  for 25c 

3  cans  Corn  for 25c 

3  cans  Tomatoes  for 25c 

3  cans  Milk  for 25c 

3  cans  String  Beans 25c 

3  Cans  Soup 25c 

Green  Onions,  per  bunch — 5c 
Fresh  Tomatoes,  per  lb — 15c 

3  pkgs.  Rolled  Oats 25c 

4  pkgs.  Corn  Flakes 25c 

GREEN  VEGETABLES. 
Cauliflower,  eaeamberiu  head 
lettuce,  UBpurajnw.  Bplnach,  new 
beeta,  new  earrotn,  new  turnips, 
tomatoes,  radUliea,  sreen  onions, 
new  eabbase.  pie  plant,  esK  plant 
and  oyster  plants. 


^IBA06JM4B!i/^ 


WE  PAVE  THE  WAY 

Our  money-saving  prices  and  high-grade  meats  open  the  road 

TO  GOOD  HEALTH 

and  a  fair  start  on  a  bank  account.    Glance  over  the  following  items 
and  you'll  believe  what  you  read. 

FANCY    CREAMERY    BUTTER,   lb 35^ 

BACON.  BY  THE  STRIP,  lb....' 15< 


Beef  Stew,  lb 10<-12H<* 

Nice,  Tender  Steak,  lb 17^ 

Roast  Lamb,  lb 15^ 

Lamb  Stew,  lb tZ^if' 

Lamb  Chops,  lb 20<* 

Veal  Stew,  lb 10< 

Veal   Roast,  lb 12H^-15< 


Roast  Pork,  lb 12  H  ^ 

Spare    Ribs,    lb 12  i^  f 

Link  Sausage,  lb lOf 

Bulk  Sausage,  lb lO^ 

Salt  Pork,  dry  or  pickled.  12  H  t 

Best  No.  1  Ham,  lb 19f 

Pot  Roast,  lb 14< 


We  have  a  fancy  lot  of  Fresh  Killed  Chickens  at,  lb..  ..22< 


UULUTH    MEAT  SUPPLV    CO 

.    MEAUaUARTLRS      FOR     PKIMt.     MtATS 

f1.Pl.M  MciR-203J4t2fl5   W.FinST   5t 


John  Mann  Grocery  Go 

1002-1004  East  Second  St. 

CHICKENS—  90« 

Spring,   fancy,  per  lb AtfV. 

PORK  LOINS—  -jOp 

Small  pig  ioin,  lb iOV 

GRAPEFRUIT—  OC^ 

Florida;  large  size,  3  for.^*'^ 

LETTUCE—  -I  Ap 

Home  grown,  3  for *V^ 

RADISHES—  ff#» 

Home  grown;  large  bunch.  ■'^' 

ASPARAGUS—  Offp 

Large    bunch,    3    for **V^^ 

PIE  PLANT—  ao 

Per   lb ^^ 

HAMS—  OOrf» 

Medium  size,   per  lb ^t**^^ 

BACON—  04^ 

Ky  strip  or  half  strip,  lb.*"  ^^^ 

EGGS— 

Fre.sh   from  the  country,   OQ^ 
per   doz £lO^ 

FLOUR— 

Flr.st  patent,  ^-f    /»A 

49-lb.    sack    ^l-cUU 

MACARONI  QOC 

or  Spaghetti,  cut,  4  for.  .w^ 

PRUNES— 

St.   Clair's,   medium       ^-f    A  A 
size,   10-lb.   box 9J-*"" 

PEACHES—  lie 

Extra  fancy,   per  lb **.^' 

SOAP—  ,     25c 

Bob    White,    7   bars  for..**«'^ 
OLD  DUTCH  25o 

Cleanser,    3    for a-v^ 

POLISH  MOP—  2QP 

Special   for   Saturday *<«^*' 

MATCHES—  20c 

Large    package    asv^* 

TOILET  PAPER—  25c 

Crepe,  4  rolls  for ^v^^ 


Ryan  &  Russell 

3Sn  i;%KST  FIRST  STREET. 
<>irand    1020 — Me  i  roue   1060. 


IT  Will  PAY  YOU  TO 

SEND  YOUR  GROCERY 

ORDERS  TO  US  I 

The  low  cost  to  you ;  the 
high  quality  maintained ;  our 
prompt  delivery  system  will 
endear  this  store  to  you. 

We  treat  phone  orders  just 
the  same  as  though  you 
were  here  in  person.  Just  a 
trial  order  will  convince  you 
of  the  truth  of  our  state- 
ments. 

START  TOMORROW! 


Park  Point         drilvrrlen. 

AVedneHdayN   and   Safurdarn. 

Lakriiide  dciiverim  Tue«> 
dam    and    FridayM. 


OHbtaUB^ 


^ 


^Special  Notice!^ 

The  Independent 
Meat  Company 

32  West  First  Street 

is  now  under  new  manage- 
ment and  solicits  your  pa- 
tronage on  a  basis  of  highest 
grade  Fresh,  Salt  and 
Smoked  Meats,  Poultry, 
Eggs  and   Butter. 

Prices  always  the  very 
lowest  consistent  with  the 
high  quality.  Phone,  Grand 
1758. 

Chas.  Lindahl,  Mgr. 


LOGAN  CO. 

Corner  10th  Ave.  E.  and  4tli  St. 

FLOUR—  Ig'i    JPff 

Best  Patent  9-l>*VU 

SWIFT'S  CLEANSER-«ff  ^ 
8  cans  ^UC 

SOAP-  9ff^ 

8  bars  White  Soap....AUV 

ORANGES— 
Sunkist,  sweet  and         ^^k^ 
juicy,  per  peck v"^ 

GRAPEFRUIT—  ^fln 

Per  dozen tf  V V 


B.  G.  JOHNSON 

Grocer    Since    1907. 
801     EAST     SECOND     STREET. 

Grand    12— Melrose    2651. 

SPECIALS  FOR  SATURDAY 

Fresh  Eggs,  doz 23c 

Fancy  White  Potatoes,  pk..2Sc 
7  bars  Ben  Hur  Soap  for... 25c 

Best  Lard,  lb 14c 

Our  delivery  service  is 
always  good. 


Why  Not  Buy  the  Better  Kind? 


IT  COSTS  XO  MORE — MACHINE  DRIED 

Made  of  genuine  Semoline  flour,  specially  milled  for  CILmax  Red.D 
Cut  Macaronla  and  Red  D  Cut  SpagbetU,  which  assures  you  of  tiie 
highest  quality  that  money  and  skill  can  produce  in  the  form  of 
macaroni,  spaghetti  and  genuine  egg  noodles. 

Beware  of  imitations.     ASK  for  the  package  with  the  RED  D. 

THE  PFAFFMANN  EGG  NOODLE  CO.,  Cleveland.  Ohio 

Branch  Office— 1230  Lisbon  Ave.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 


Sugar  Baskets  for  Easter 

The  Minnesota  Candy  Kitchen  will  have  on  display  a  beau- 
tiful line  of  Artistic  Sugar  Baskets — 

$3.00  and  up 

Something  Entirely  New  in  the  Line  of  Sweets. 
Order  one  tomorrow. 

MINNESOTA  CANDY  KITCHEN 

111  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


i 


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Friday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


ass 


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5««>'Ay;i:.i3 


THE  THRIFTY  HOUSEIIiFES  MARKET  BASKET 


"Fmnomv.  the  Poor  Man's  Minf'—TUPPER. 


"AtOime  Saved  Is  a  Dime  Made."— BENJAMIN  FRANKLIN. 


Duluth  Marine  Supply  Co. 

Foot  of  Fifth  Avenue  West 

Both  Phones  780 

WE  CLOSE  AT  5  P.  M.,  SATURDAYS.  ORDERS  FOR 
DELIVERY  RECEIVED  UNTIL  3  P.  M. 


Large  shipment  India  River  Florida  Oranges,  all  sizes,  from, 

per  doz 25<  to  40f 

Per  half  case $1.90     Per  case . .  $3.75 

Sweet  Luscious  Navel  Oranges — 

Large  sizes,  per  half  case $1.40     Per  case.  $2. 75 

Small  sizes,  per  half  case $1.75     Per  case     $3.40 

APPLES!        APPLES!        APPLES! 

Extra  Fancy  Large  Jonathans,  per  box $3.2.% 

Choice  Small  Jonathans,  per  box $1.35 

Baldwin  or  Russttt  Apples,  10  lbs.  for -AOf 

Direct   shipment   Strawberries,   2   boxes 25* 

Dr.  Phillips'  Florida  Grapefruit— 

36  size,  per  doz  $1.00  Per  Yi  case  $1.15  Case  .$2.90 
46  size  per  doz  .  90<  Per  Vi  case..$l.«5  Case.  $3. 25 
80    size*,   per   doz..     OOt     Per  54  case     $1.00     Case     $3.75 

DELICIOUS  FRESH,  CRISP  VEGETABLES 

Florida  Tomatoes,  small               j    Round  Radishes.  12  to  the 
baskets,   each    25f  \       bunch,  per  bunch 5# 


Florida  Head  Lettuce,  strictly 

fine,  per   head 10< 

Duluth  Leaf  Lettuce,  3  for.lOf 
Wax  or  Green  Beans,  qt...l5f 
Cauliflower  or  Egg  Plant, 

each 15* 

Green  Onions,  3  bunches . .  lO* 


Artichokes,  each   lO* 

Rhubarb.  4  lbs 25* 

Sweet  Potatoes.  6  lbs 25* 

New  Potatoes.  4  lbs 25* 

Crisp.  White  Celery,  stalk.  ..5* 
Strictly  Fancy  Potatoes, 
60  lbs.  for $1.00 


CAIA/TAV   ^^  becoming  a  necessity  in  all  well  regulated 
dnW  I  HI    kitchens,  per  can 25* 

Undernoted  Are  Very  Special  Values— DO  NOT  MISS  THEM! 

Full  Quarts  Queen  Olives,  each 35* 

Cross  &  Blackwell's  Orange  Marmalade,  per  jar 20* 

45c  jars  Preserved  Ginger,  each 30* 

25c  jars  Preserved   Ginger,  each  20c,  or  3  for 55* 

No.  1  cans  Kidney  Beans.  6  for 25* 

No.  2  cans  Early  Crosley  Corn,  4  for 30* 

No.  2  cans  Early  June  Peas.  4  for 30* 

No.  2  cans  Red  Ripe  Tomatoes.  3  for 30< 

No.  1  cans  Hawaiian  Pineapple,  3  for 25* 

No.  2  cans  Hawaiian  Pineapple,  2  for 25* 

Large  size  Pineapple,  whole  or  sliced  Peaches,  can  15c;  6  cans. 88* 

No.  2  size  Flag  Bartlett  Pears,  15c  per  can;  6  cans 85* 

Large  size  Olive  Zest,  per  bottle 20* 

Monarch   Brand   Baby   Corn,   6   cans 70* 

Douglas  White  Gloss  Starch,  6  packages 35* 

Rich  Fragrant   Coffee,   1-lb.  cans,  each 30* 

English  Breakfast  Tea,   Extra  Fme.  per  lb «-  o.t 

10-lb.  boxes  Table  Figs,  per  box '^f 

Bob  White  Soap,  8  bars ,;  ^X 

Bob  White  Soap.  33  bars  for $1.00 

10  bars  Swift's  Pride  Soap 25* 

Shelled  Pecans,  per  lb JO* 

Honey    Fresh   Pineapples,   each ^VV^^^ 

Walker's  Pepsin  Breakfast  Food,  specially  recommended.  pkg.lOr 


JOHN  E.  ROOS 

GROCER 

508  West  Third  Street. 

My  STORE  IS  HEADQIT.\RTERS 

l\>n    COU.VTHY    BUTTER. 
(loud  Ualry  Butter  In  JarM,  lb. 26c 
Fuiiry    Dairy    Duttcr   In   Jar», 

IKT    Il> 4 32c 

3    ouii!«    Milk ' 25e 

4»-lb.    HRok    Flour fl.55 

3  c«n.«*  <'orn,  Fe«»,  Tomatori*.  .25« 
Lust  chanre  to  Ket  Potat«»cii  at, 

per   bu..  «l.tO.     Order  nowt 

Pork    LolBM,    per   lb t7e 

9^5%  discount  on  all  orders  of 
$10.00  or  over.  Order  for  Monday 
dfliverv.   Molro.<«e   4709;    C.rand  187 


—All  Kinds  of— 

BURPEE'S  SEEDS 

Our  prices  in  Duluth  are  the 
same  as  Burpee's  in  Philadelphia 

THE  ALPHA  FLORIST 

131  West  Superior  Street. 

Melrose  1336.   1376.         Grand  1626. 


^vertisement  No.  12  —  110  lines  x  2  cola. 


-#' 

. 

■  1 

Sdvs 

Mary'^Macci 

*'So  I  says  to  Mrs.VanCleve,  I  says: 
*Let's  give  them  children  something 
for  breakfast  that*ll  last*em 
till  twelve  o'clock.'  I  says, 
'Let's  give  'em  Cream  of 
Barley.^  And  she  did — 
and  she  is  a  sensible  missus, 
«he  is.    She's  strong  for 

Cream  "^  Barley" 

(At  Ygiv  Groccn)  , 


»»aUM«\4BVHI 


SATURDAY  SPECIALS  IN 

GOOD  MEATS 

Fresh  Killed  Chickens.  .23c 

Veal  Roast 15c 

Veal  Stew 10c 

Veal  Chops 18c,  15c 

Pork  Roast 15c 

Spare  Ribs   12V^c 

Pot  Roast 15c.  nViZ 

Lean  Beef  Boiling 10c 

Porterhouse   and   Sirloin 

Steak    20c 

Potato  Sausage,  3  links. 25c 
Cream  Sausage  made  from 

selected  pork,  lb 20c 

morkTnelson 

1902    WKST    SUPERIOR    ST. 

I'.tith    Phont'jj. 


DulutbPffiision  Co. 


17  FlAST 

W.  J.  Le; 


\^K  WKST. 

tz.  Prop. 


SPECIAL  FOR 
SATIHRDAY 

Strictly  Fr€»h  Cream- 
ery Butter. . ......  37c 

Pure  Lard  T- IStJ/^c 

Neck  Spar^  Ribs 5c 

Fresh  Pork  Loins. .  .16c 
Pork  Roast. .....12^c 

Sirloin  and  t*orter- 

house  Steak,  lb . . .  18c 
Bok>gna  Sausage  —  10c 

Polish  Sausage 10c 

Liver  Sausage 10c 

Potato  Sausage,  ring. 5c 

Special  Polish  Sausage 

for  Easter. 


1 


National  Meat  Nlarket 

I.onlR  Ckeplr,  Prop. 
««    WRST    FIRST    ST. 

Where  quality  relffna  supreme 
and  price  is  a  secondary  consld- 
eratioa. 

Special  for  Saturday 

Pork  Loins,  lb , 16c 

Pork  Shoulder*,  lb 1254c 

Pork  Butts,  lb 15c 

Bacon,  by  the  strip,  lb I8c 

Veal  Shoulder,  lb. UV^c 

Veal  Stew,  lb 10c 

Pot  Roast,  lb .... . .  Ilc-12i^c.l5c 

Rib  Roast,  the  best,  lb. .  .15c-17c 
Sirloin  and  Porterhouse 
Steaks — from  prime  steers. 20c 

Leg  of  Mutton,  lb 20c 

Leg  of  Lamb,  lb 22c 

Lamb  Stew,  best,  lb ..;... .  1254c 

EXTRA  SPECIAL 
Home  cured  and  smoked  Pork 

Loins,  lb 20c 

Smoked  Spare  Ribs,  lb 18c 

Try  our  home  made  Sausage 
for  your  Sunday  breakfast. 
It's  deUcious. 


"STOP  Mm  SHOP"  AT 

LUNDMARK&FRANSON'S 


—AND  GET— 


"The  World's  Best  to  Eat"  In 

Groceries,  Meats  &  Home  Baking 


Tomators,    1>a.sk<>t    25c 

.iXsparagiis,   bunch    10c 

(Kxtxa  large  bunches.  .30c) 

Shallots    6c 

Green  Onions.  2  bunches  for. 5c 

New  Turnips,  bunch 5c 

New  Beet8,  bunch 7c 

New  Carrots,  bunch 7c 


Celer J-.    per    fttalk 7c 

New  Potatoes  and  New  Peas. 

Extra  fam-y  Sunldst  Oranges, 
per  |K<'k    50c 

Extra  fancy  large  Grapefruit 

Ripe  Olives,   per  can 10c 

Large  boctle  Queen  Olives. .  .25c 


The  Meat  Department  handles  the  choicest  meatus  at  right  prices. 

Our  branch  store  at  802  East  First  street  is  now  open  for 
business  and  you  will  find  that  the  same  prices  as  quoted 
above  will  prevail  there. 


THE   STORE    FOR    SERVICE. 

lis- 115- 11 7- 119  WcHt  Superior  St, 

Duluth.  Bllnii. 


V0'^ 


Spring 
Reqiiirements 

for  Hoin«  and  Garden 
in  the  Basemtnt  Store 


LAWN  AND   GARDEN   RAKES, 

HOES,    SPADING    FORKS. 

SPADES,    ETC. 

Rakes  from    25c 

39c 

SpaJing     Forks: 
from  75c  ^Stf* 

down  to   . . .  ^^'i'*' 


nnj  T5«    down    to 
I  U  p  Hoi's  from 
I  I  I  76c   to    


KoiG  fender 


_^^^         Ji»  new  Am»rlc«n  Maearoai  Product. 
A  1.       . ikIoTHBRS  Macaroni  Company.  Mia 


Sunday,  Jlpril  i6 

€a$ter  flower 
$Dow 

Drop  in  and  see  our  display 

Both  phones— Old  77;  New  138 

LESTER  PARK  GREENHOUSE 

WBliam  Jaap 


"*im. 


J 


MORE  A.ND  \«0RE:  PEOPL^E 

find  It  economy  to  buy  our  bakinff, 
because  it  is  Home  Baking?. 

The  quality  is  up  to  the  highest 
standard.  Our  candies  are  also 
home-made   and    fresh   daily. 

FOR  UASTfilK  —  Cream  candy. 
Easter  egr^a  and  Easter  bunniea, 
which  make  appropriate  grifts  and 
table  ornaments.  Home-made  cakes, 
pies,  ealads  and  Hot  Cross  buns, 
nothlnpT  more  delicious;  names  put 
on  Easter  egrf?s,  to  order.  When 
downtown  shopping:  drop  in  and  try 
our  delicious  coffoe  and  lunches. 
"WIZ    DKLIVER. 

BON     TON 

25    WEST    SUPERIOR    STREET. 

Phone.s — Melro.so    ll'z^;    tirand    1166. 


REX  ISN'T  LIKE   ORDINARY   BEERS — 
KINGLY  IN  WIIOLESOMENESS,  SPARKLE  AiN'D  FLAVOR. 


DUSTLESS  HANDLED 
DUSTERS. 

For  dustlnr  furniture  and  stairs; 
roffulur  price  39<\  Special  OK#» 
price   Friday   and   Saturday'. ..  "«'*' 


Melrose  73 


Grand  7S, 


«fl|REARTIFIClAL»f 
MAdP^FXITYW/rfER! 


DULUTH 


I6E 


COWPAHY 


WIIOLES.M.r:  ASD  RETAIL 

James  Hart.    President. 

Office — ft  EAST  FIRST  STREET 


ALWAYS  SATISFIES  MEN  WHO  KNOW  GOOD  BEER. 

MPHat)e  a  Case  Sent  Home^Wti 

BREWED  AND  BOTTLED  BY  BREWERS  OF  A  BETTER  BEER. 

DULUTH  BREWING  &  MALTING  CO. 

DULUTH,  MINN. 


Illlllllll 


Big,  Generous  Tins,  25c. 


WHITE   WOOL 

WALL 

DUSTERS. 

For  dustinp-  walls  and  ceilings;  has 
long;    and    short    handles;    two  alz'^s 

Sniall    stae,    M|»eeial B9c 

I.arir  ;  ••■««  •fM^<*lal.  .  •  > 91. IS 


ALUMINUM 
SAUCE 
PANS. 

3  quart  elz«^;  regular  price  65c.  Spe- 
cial price  Friday  and  %Qc 
Saturday   **  ^*' 

SPECIAL    PRICES    ON    GAL- 
VANIZED TUBS. 
No.  1  aU'?.      7Qc 
special *  ^*' 


No.  a  size.      AQ<* 
special O^** 

No.  3  size*  1     in 
■peclal . .  V  »  •  ■  V 


GRANITE- 
WARE 
COFFEE 
POTS. 

2  quart  size, 
special  Friday 
and    Saturday, 

25c 


{Fird-Glass) 


Glass  Dishes 
for  Baking 


Why  Sawtay  Is  Better  Than  Cow-butter  for  Baking 

Bake  a  cake  with  SAWTAY  and  one  with  cow-butter.  Let  them  both 
stand  for  four  or  five  days.  The  cow-butter  cake  will  be  dry,  stale  and 
with  an  odor  of  rancidity.  The  SAWTAY  cake  wiU  be  as  fresh  and 
tweet  as  the  day  you  made  it. 


SPECIAL   PRICES 
ON   GARBAGE 
CANS    TOMOR- 
ROW. 


10  gal.  size, 
special  at.. 
IB  sal.  size, 
special  at. 
20  gal.  size, 
.special  at. 
80  gal.  size, 
i^pecial    at. 


/* 
To  keep  our  'Housefurnishing 
Dept.  the  mo»t  Complete  and  up- 
to-date  In  the  qlty,  we  take  the 
pleasure  of  announcing  the  ar- 
rival of  «'Pyrei'»  Gla«a  Baking 
UiNbrn,  consisting  of  casseroles, 
pie  plates,  o^l'Ui^  bread  pans, 
oval  bakers  and  petite  raarmites. 


"Pyrex"  is  tl^  only  glaas  that 
win  stand  th*  changes  of  tem- 
perature in  baking  and  l4  tto 
bright  and  clean. 


1009^  Vure  Butter-crf-Nuts 

IbrBaldiig,Shartenmg,Fryuig8  Caa^^bUmg 


I  cup  thick  crMm 
V4  cup  S«wta)r 
I  cup  tugu 
I  agg       I  cup  milic 


.  VAV 


The  taste  in  cow-butter  is  bacteria. 
After  baking  a  cow-butter  cake, 
the  taste  gets  stronger  until  it  is 
rancid.  SAWTAY  is  neutral, 
without  a  taste,  and  will  not  turn 
rancid. 

SAWTAY  is  economical — use 
one-fifth  less  than  cow-butter. 

Since  it  will  not  absorb  an  odor  or  flavor  and 

therefore  cannot  impart 
one,  SAWTAY  may  be 
used  over  and  over,  viz., 
fry  onions,  strain  through 
cheese-cloth,  then  fiy  fish, 
strain,  and  use  for  baking 
u.^     fiW  the  most  delicate  cake. 


BANANA  SHORT  CAKE 

8  b«n«nM  a  cups  flour 


4  tM*pooniuIi  tjaking  powder 
I  uaapoonful  mU 
I  Maspoonful  vanilla 
.  ___^       ^  ahredded  cocoanut 

Cream  SAWTAY,  add  sugar  and  continue  creaming.  Add 
egg  beaten  until  light.  Alternate,  adding  milk  and  ailted  dry 
ingredient*.  ISeet  w«ll  and  add  vanilla  last.  Bake  mzUym 
in  •  quick  oran  15  minutea.  Beat  cream  until  tvS  and 
•weeten  if  d«»ired.  Place  aliced  banana*  and  whipped  cream 
between  layer*.  On  top  put  more  cream  and  t>anana*  and 
over  with  shredded  cocoaaut. 


t.'^J 


£:^^ 


pj 


BARNEY   &   BERRY    SIDE- 
WALK  ROLLER  SKATES. 

Special    prlcta    tomorrow. 

Plain  bearing.  4Sc 

per  pair   •  •  •     ^2, 

Roller   bearing,  CI    \S 

p*r  pair ^  •  .  J V 


These  are  fd4  size  Curtain 
Stretcher.-*.  8  ft-lby  12  ft.,  with 
non-ruBtablo  nlffkel-plated  pins; 
to  acquaint  you  belter  with  the 
Kelloy  Housefurnishing  Dept., 
these  II. :5  8tveteher«  on  £Aj^ 
sale  Saturday  uiid  Mon-  nTiC 
day,   two  days   only,   at.... 


Butrher     Kiilt%|, 

quality,  but  cl«;a 
8-inch  slie  on  >a 
day  and  Monday  only  at 

Parlag  KnJvea.  very  good      f  S|» 
auality,    at ^ 


ot  cheap  In 
in  price;  the 
Satur-      5Q^ 


•    ••••••• 


\r%i^iJy%M^ 


^iiLiiiiEZ3ii*rari 


l^»'S* 


Saiutay  is  Economical 
— Use  One-Fifth  Less. 

SAUT^  PRODUCTS 
CORP. 

Woohrorth  Towtr 
NewYotk 


^«H»„..«»*' 


'/) 


^:^ 


lV.i"  .  ••   •'■!    -•      '     ll-,»i  n 

i..t_,.4-.k.J.^{7iKlB  J 


jmn. 


zz3m: 


^jjll'"^ 


■•.•.  V, 


"^t^. 


^:^ 


SAWTAY 

'^X'fWliutlorolN^iO    ^ 


*  A!BG"^'"'4i 


'». 


•//♦J 


J^\ 


Z    •  • " rVifW>ai||MlM», 


\ 


"■^»r«BW»« 


) 


24 


Friday, 


THE     DULUTH     HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


ON  THE  IRON  RANGES 


OFFICIAL  MAP  OF  THE  WEATHER 


CLEANER  VIRGINIA 
CAMPAIGN  UNDER  WAY 

Clean-up     and     Paint-up 

Week  Work  Now  Being 

Outlined. 

Vlrctnla.  Minn..  April  14  — (SpeoiRl  to 
Thf-  Herald.)— At  a  meeting  of  the 
general  committee  on  cleanup  and 
pnintiip  w«  •  k  Ht  the  rlty  hall  last 
nipht  plans  were  outlined  for  the  ram- 
paiK"  tor  a  ileantr  olty.  The  program 
will  be  compleied  next  Monday  eve- 
nJnp. 

The  police  and  fire  departments,  the 
rlty  8tie<t  department,  3,000  Hthool 
«hildren  and  various  eivlc  elubs  and 
fraternal  orsanizatlons  will  partici- 
pate In  the  week's  campaign.  The 
clty'H  «  hnnhes  will  also  have  their 
part  In  It  and  special  attention  will  be 
called  to  the  plans  for  cleanup  Wf-ek 
at  the  Sunday  services  of  Sunday, 
April    30. 

To  Extend  All  Over  CMy. 

The  ranipaiKn  will  extend  to  every 
part  of  t»i»-  city.  Streets  and  alleys, 
public  grounds,  vacant  lots,  business 
housts.  tenements,  flats,  lawns  and 
gardens  will  all  be  factors  In  the  w;ork 
of  the  w.ek.  Spe*  ial  attention  will  be 
given  to  the  palntup  feature.  Prop- 
erty owners  will  be  encouraged  to 
paint  bu.slneSB  and  residence  property. 
The  committee  in  charge  of  cleanup 
and  palntup  week  Is  as  follows:  Chair- 
man.  Al  G.  Flournoy.  general  salesman 
for  the  Vlinliila  &  Ualny  Lake  rom- 
panv;  HI  hools.  Dr.  P.  T.  Colgrove; 
stre.  ts  and  alleys,  Otto  A.  Polrler;  city 
ligiits  \V  H.  Katon:  palntup.  Douglas 
Greeley;  garden.o  Otto  A.  Stnngel;  flre 
prevention,  James  .Sttrkney;  store 
frr.nt<j  R.  M.  .Jerreis.sflti:  sanitation.  Dr. 
MWhel.son:  housing  conditions.  Miss 
Mollie  Horns:  lawns,  A.  F.  Thayer; 
landscRpt  gardtiM*,  Mrs.  Otto  A.  Tolrler; 
halls  and  lodges,   Adolph  Rraa. 

MACCABEE  TEAMS 
TO  HAVE  CONTEST 

Duluth,  West    Duluth   and 

Virginia  to  Meet  Two 

Harbors. 

Two  H«rbors.  Minn.,  April  14. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — On  Saturday  eve- 
ning the  Maccabees  will  hold  the  third 
contest    for    the    championship    of    the 

nortliern  part  of  the  state  at  Olen 
hall.  The  degree  teams  competing  will 
be  Two  Harbors,  Duluth.  West  Duluth 
and    Virginia. 

The  Two  Harbors  boys  have  twice 
been  victorious  in  the  contests  and 
now  have  the  loving  cup  donated  by 
the  state  commander  in  their  posse."?- 
slon.  In  order  to  hold  the  cup  as 
their  permanent  property  they  will 
have  to  win  one  more  contest.  If 
they  arr  not  successful  -on  Saturday 
evening  there  will  be  one  more  chance 
at  a  contest  to  be  held  in  West  Du- 
luth. State  Commander  Edward  H. 
Haas    will    be    present. 

Deputy  State  Commander  A.  L.  El- 
derkln  of  Minneapolis  is  here  getting 
thing.H  in  shap»-  for  the  contest.  After 
the  f  xempllflcation  of  the  degree  work 
by  the  different  teams  lunch  will  be 
served    in    tht-    Iron    Dock    hnll. 

CHISHOLM  COUNCIL 
DECIDES  ON  PAVING 


Graham,  supported  by  Trustee  Munro, 
the  bid  of  the  Dower  Lumber  company 
was  accepted. 

AppotiKmrntN    Made. 

The  following  appointments  were 
made:  Juliua  Marchessl,  poundmasler; 
John  Hren,  dog  catcher;  Anton  Gerzln, 
humane  officer;  Alex  McDonald,  elec- 
trical inspector.  The  last  two  at  a 
salary  of   (26   per  month. 

The  village  engineer  was  authorized 
to  call  for  bids  on  reinforcing.  Joint 
protection  plates  and  elastic  filler. 
Bids  to  be   opened   April   18. 

NIBBING  PLAYERS 
ARE  BEING  SECURED 

Some  Men  Who  Have  Been 

Good  Witti  Other  Clubs 

Being  Signed. 

Hlbbing,  Minn..  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — With  the  probable 
signing  of  Wines,  Fort  William's  star 
Inflelder  of  last  year,  the  Hlbbing  nine 
win  have  the  foundation  for  another 
good  team.  Wines  Is  a  third  base- 
man.  Roberts,  former  Michigan  state 
league  pitcher,  will  arrive  tomorrow. 
Chief  Williams  will  come  Saturday. 
McGe©  win  be  here  on  Sunday.  Will- 
iams and  McGee  are  base  runners,  ad- 
ding strength  to  a  department  which 
was  woefully  weak  last  year.  The 
other  members  of  the  Hlbbing  team 
who  will  be  out  are  Capt.  Jerry  Kd' 
monds.  Withers.  Wilson.  Williams, 
Gelselman.  C.  Booth.  D.  Booth  Hook, 
er  and  Burrows.  The  local  baseball 
pacture  is  being  put  into  shape  and 
within  a  week   or  so  will  be  ready. 


MOUNTAIN  IRON  HAS 
EARLY  MORNING  HRE 


^  A I  TO.  ftTAI.I.ED  ON  I-AKE  OP  ^ 
«     TIIK  WOODS  ICU,  if  RC  0«  F.nKD.   ^ 

ilie  ^ 

*  Wnrroad.  Minn..  April  14. —  ^ 
^  (Kprelal  to  The  Herald. » — Tbe  big  ^ 
^  Amerloaii  aiitomohllr,  O'M'ned  by  Mjt 
^.  William  llader,  (bat  haw  stood  out  ^ 
^1  on  the  I.Mkr  of  the  Wood*  Ire  # 
>  «lnre  early  In  the  winter,  was  ^ 
^  brought  In  Wedneitdny  by  Art  ^ 
^  rilddlngN.  The  long  rxpo«nre  to  ^ 
^  the  weather  did  not  neena  to  have  ^ 
^  injure<i  It  In  any  way.  a*  It  waa  ^ 
Mlh  brought  In  under  lt»  own  power  ^ 
^  to  within  a  mile  of  «hore,  when  ^, 
^  It  ran  out  of  Kaotoilne,  and  was  ^ 
^  luiuird    to    town.  # 

jfcAWA^lilAATtAlfc^lTfclfcAAAlk^W  ifc  A  A  ill  A  111 

IS  nearly'drowned. 

Homesteader    Loses    Horses    While 
Crossing  Lal(e  Near  Cusson. 

Virginia.  Minn..  April  14 — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Crossing  the  Ice  at 
Moose  lake,  near  Cusson,  yesterday, 
John  Lehto,  Finnish  homesteader,  nar- 
rowly escaped  drowning.  Lehto  was 
hauling  a  load  of  hay  from  a  neigh- 
bor's homestead  when  his  team  broke 
through  the  Ice.  In  attetnpting  to  res- 
cue them  one  of  the  animals  struck 
him  in  floundering  In  sucli  a  way  that 
he  was  dazed  and  fell  into  the  water. 
A  son  who  saw  his  plight  ran  to  his 
aid  and  rescued  him.  The  horses  were 
drowned  In  about  fourteen  feet  of 
water. 


Building  Occupied  By  Sa- 
loon   Is    Practically 
Gutted  By  Flames. 

Mountain  Iron,  Minn.,  April  14. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  volun- 
teer fire  department  was  called  out 
at  1  o'clock  Thursday  morning  to  fight 
a  fire   In   the   building  In  which    Kelly 

&  Derlto  have  a  saloon.  The  fire 
had  attained  considerable  headway 
when  discovered  and  made  a  spec- 
tacular blaze  before  it  was  gotten 
under  control.  The  fire  aeema  to 
have  started  In  the  celling  of  a  back 
room,  near  where  an  electric  light 
switch  was  located,  and  spread  rap- 
Idly  to  the  upper  story  and  roof.  The 
roof  caved  In,  the  upper  story  was 
gutted,  and  the  building  as  a  whole 
was  practically  ruined.  A  steel  cell- 
ing In  the  first  story  helped  to  check 
the  flames  and  to  prevent  complete 
destruction.  Kelly  &  Derlto  have  been 
In  business  here  for  a  dozen  years 
or  more  and  no  doubt  when  the  In- 
surance Is  adjusted  steps  will  be 
taken   to   rebuild. 

Could  .\ot  Find  Clothen. 
The  lighting  system  of  the  village 
was  out  of  order  when  the  fire  broke 
out.  which  retarded  the  efforts  of 
the  fire  fighters  in  that  they  could 
not  readily  find  their  clothes  and 
equipment.  The  night  patrolman  and 
night  fireman  were  In  the  power  plant 
working  to  remedy  the  defect  when 
a  barefooted  boy  dressed  only  in  his 
night  clothes,  rushed  In  and  told  the:n 
of  the  fire.  The  boy  Is  Haranan  and 
he  will  receive  the  same  pay  as  the 
otljer    fire    fighters. 


Considerable    Street    Im- 
provement Is  Ordered  By 
Village  Board. 

Chisholm,  Minn.,  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  H.  raid.) — Paving  of  Chestnut 
•treet  from  the  Swan  river  right  of 
way  to  Fourth  avenue,  First  avenue 
from  Chestnut  to  Walnut  streets  and 
paving  of  the  alleys  between  Lake  and 
Chestnut  streets  and  Lake  and  Maple 
fttreets  from  Central  to  Third  avenues 
wns  authorized  by  the  vlllatie  council 
Wednesday  nlglit. 

I'resident  Webber  read  to  the  council 
from  tlie  village  ordinances  outlining 
the  duties  of  the  health  officer  and 
stated  that  he  wished  to  show  to  the 
council  that  thei  action  taken  which 
removed  the  control  of  the  detention 
hospital  from  the  health  officer  was 
not  In  accordance  with  the  provisions 
of  the  ordinances.  He  stated  he  did 
not  desire  to  bring  the  matter  up 
again  and  was  willing  to  let  It  stand 
as  It  was 

A  petition  signed  by  fourteen  resi- 
dents on  Hickory  and  Ash  streets  and 
Third  and  Fifth  avenues  asking  that 
street  lights  bo  Installed  on  tliose 
streets  was  referred. 

Library   ^'nntn   Money. 

Ferdinand  Drotnlng  of  the  libr.-xry 
board  told  the  council  that  the  library 
year  was  completed  March  31  and  the 
budget  of  last  year  was  exhausted.  An 
outline  of  the  requirements  for  the 
ensuing  y»ar  was  given.  Action  was 
deferred   until   tlie   next  meeting. 

Residents  i>t  Elm  street  petitioned  to 
have  the  alley  in  the  rear  of  their 
property   lowered   and    drained. 

Bids  as  follows  on  furnishing  10,000 
or  less  barrels  of  cement  were  opened: 
The  King  Liimber  company.  $2.18  per 
barrel  F.  O.  B.  Chisholm  and  $2.22  per 
barrel  at  the  warehouse;  the  Dower 
Lumber  company.  $2.16  per  barrel  F.  O. 
B.  Chisholm  and  $2.21  per  barrel  at 
the  warehouse.     On  motion  of  Recorder 


FIGHT  GAME  PRESERVE. 

Property     Owners     Near     Proposed 
Tract  to  Make  Objection. 

Hlbbing  Minn..  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  movement  to 
start  a  game  preserve  near  the  Dupont 
powder  works  may  meet  with  objection 
on  the  part  of  property  owners  living 
near  the  lands. 

Two  owning  lands  adjoining  the  pro- 
po.oed  game  refuge  contend  that  if  the 
lands,  6,000  acres  In  all,  are  used  as  a 
safety  zone  for  birds  and  animals,  It 
will  mean  that  the  Individual  property 
owners  will  not  be  allowed  to  do  any 
shooting  on  their  own  lands,  as  the 
laws  will  forbid  any  hunting  or  fishing 
on  the  territory  included  in  the  game 
refuge. 

Both  m^  refused  to  sign  the  petition 
for  the  smarting  of  a  presenve,  and 
state  that  they  will  not  do  so  unless 
they  are  assured  that  their  own  lands 
wilt  not  be  subject  to  the  same  restric- 
tion placed  on  the  refuge  lands  In  gen- 
eral. 


Get  a  10  Cent  Box  of 
"Cascarets"  and  see. 


VIRGINIA  UNDERTAKER 
OUT  FOR  LEGISLATURE 

Virginia,  Minn.,  April  14. — (.<5peolal  to 
The  Herald.) — C.  A.  tJraham.  local  un- 
dertaker, has  filed  as  a  candidate  for 
the  lower  house  of  the  legislature  from 
the  Sixty-first  district,  the  position  at 
present  filled  by  Representative  Thomas 
Olll.  Slxtus  Llndahl.  retail  liquor  deal- 
er, is  another  prospective  candidate 
from  Virginia.  Representative  (Jill 
has  declared  himself  a  candidate  for 
re-election,  and  Representative  Ch.irles 
T.  Murphy  of  Aurora  will  also  be  a 
candidate  to  succeed  himself. 


They're  fine  I  Cascarets  liven  your 
liver,  clean  your  thirty  feet  of  bowels 
and  sweeten  your  breath.  You  eat 
one  or  two,  like  cundy,  before  going  to 
bed  and  in  the  morning  your  head  is 
clear,  tongue  Is  clean,  Htomach  sweet 
and  breath  right.  Get  a  box  from  your 
druggi.st  and  enjoy  the  nicest,  gentlest 
liver  and  bowel  cleansing  you  ever  ex- 
perienced. Ca.scarets  stop  sick  head- 
ache, biliousness,  indigestion,  bad 
breath  and  constipation. 

Mothers  should  give  a  whole  Cas- 
caret  to  cross,  bilious,  sick,  feverish 
children  any  time.  They  are  harmless 
and  never  grip©  or  sicken. — Advertise- 
Diint. 


FORMER  BALL  PLAYER 
IS  HOLDING  REVIVAL 

Hlbbing.  Minn..  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Rev.  Mr.  Leach,  for- 
mer professional  ball  player,  who  has 
forsaken  the  diamond  to  save  souls.  Is 
holding  a  series  of  meetings  at  the 
village  hall  In  Alice  under  the 
auspices  of  the  Union  church.  Meet- 
ings will  be  held  tomorrow  evening 
and  .Sunday  night  and  are  open  to  tha 
public. 

NASHWAUK  COUNCIL 

DISCUSSES  WALKS 

Kashwauk,  Minn.,  April  14. —  (Special 
to  Tlie  Herald.) — The  village  council 
Wednesday  evening  considered  tho 
matter  of  constructing  cement  side- 
walks and  curbs  on  Second  and  Third 
streets  In  the  Southern  addition,  and 
City  Engineer  James  Williams  was  in- 
structed to  get  estimates  and  report  at 
the   next   meeting. 

August  Lindewall  and  Tom  Brown 
were  appointed  cow  herders  and  to 
commerce  on  May  1.  .James  Williams 
was  appointed  city  engineer.  Thomas 
Hedman  was  appointed  stavtnger  at  a 
salary  of  $76  per  month. 

The  matter  of  garbage  cans  was  also 
taken  up  and  the  clerk  was  instructed 
to  advertise  for  bids. 

The  clerk  was  instructed  to  have 
bills  printed  In  several  different  lan- 
guages notifying  property  owners  to 
liave  their  premises  cleaned  of  all 
debris  which  is  to  be  deposited  In  the 
alleys,  the  clean  up  mu.Mt  be  made  be- 
fore May  20,  when  the  garbage  will  be 
hauled  to  the  dumping  grounds  under 
the  direction  of  the  street  commis- 
sioner. 

The    board    of    health    has    Issued    a 
notice  that  all  premises  must  be  ready 
tor  a  sanitary  Inspection  by  May  1. 
♦ 

To  Remodel  ClilMholin  Depot. 

Chisholm,  Minn.,  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Missabe  railroad 
will  start  work  soon  on  extensive  al- 
terations of  the  local  depot  and  in- 
stalling of  sewers  and  sanitary  appli- 
ances 

Additions  will  be  built  onto  both  the 
ladles'  and  men's  waiting  rooms  and 
toilet  fixtures  and  sanitary  drinking 
fountains  installed.  Several  easy  chairs 
will  be  placed  in  the  ladles'  waiting 
room. 


WANT  LOTS  OFFERED. 

Mountain  Iron  Club  to  Petition  Own- 
ers to  Sell. 

Mountain  Iron,  Minn.,  April  14. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  Com- 
mercial club  Tuesday  evening  directed 
Secretary  Frazer  to  write  officials  of 
the  Missabe  Northern  Townslte  com- 
pany, a  subsidiary  of  the  Oliver  Iron 
Mining  company,  to  induce  the  concern 
to  place  some  of  the  many  lots  which 
It  holds  in  this  village  on  sale  to  the 
public.  Many  of  the  niost  desirable 
lots  in  the  village  have  been  acquired 
by  the  company  in  the  last  few  years 
and  all  have  been  withdrawn  from  the 
market.  With  the  street  car  service 
now  existing,  the  natural  presumption 
".8  that  many  people  would  buy  lots  and 
build  homes  here  if  It  were  possible  to 
do  so. 

The  secretary  was  also  Instructed  to 
write  to  Agent  Webb  of  the  D..  M.  & 
X.  and  ask  him  to  endeavor  to  have  a 
sidewalk  built  from  the  village  walk 
to  the  D..  M.  &  N.  depot. 

On  the  second  Tuesday  In  May  the 
annual  meeting  of  the  club  will  be 
held.  Including  a  "smoker."  The  pres- 
ent officials  are:  President,  D.  A. 
Mitchell;  first  vice  president,  Charles 
Walker;  second  vice  oresldent,  J.  F. 
Muench;  secretary.  V.  f.  Frazer;  treas- 
urer. H.  J.  Henderson. 

WILL  RUN'bUSIiNE. 

Service  to  Be    Established    Between 
Grand  Rapids  and  Hibbing. 

C.rand  Rapids.  Minn.,  April  14. — The 
Mesaba  Rang©  Transportation  com- 
pany will  make  five  round  trips  be- 
tween Grand  Rapids  and  Hibbing  each 
day,  touching  all  Intermediate  points 
beginning  next  Saturday  morning  at 
8:30  o'clock  when  the  first  big  car  will 
leave  Pokegama  hotel.  the  Grand 
Rapids  station.  The  trips  to  Hlbbing 
will  bo  made  In  three  hours  and  a 
charge  of  $1.60  will  be  made  for  pas- 
sengtls.  Tho  second  car  will  leave  at 
10:30  o'clock  and  the  third  will  leave 
for  the  same  points  during  the  after- 
noon, the  last  at  5  o'clock.  Five  cars 
win  leave  Hibbing  each  day  at  prac- 
tically the  same  hours,  arriving  in 
Grand   Rapids   three   hours   later. 

In  addition  to  this  service  which 
places  all  range  towns  In  very  close 
touch  with  each  other,  the  company 
will  make  two  evening  runs,  one  leav- 
ing at  7:30  o'clock  for  Bovey  and 
Coleralne  and  the  other  at  10  o'clock 
for  Calumet. 


NASHWAUK  BUILDING. 

Several  Structures  Are  Going  Up  in 
Range  Village. 

Nashwauk.  Minn.,  April  14. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  Mace  Iron  Min- 
ing company  is  erecting  three  cottages 
on  the  mine  property  Just  north  of  the 
village.  Andrew  Nelson  of  Virginia, 
has  the  contract  and  work  commenced 
the  first  of  the  week, 

Toney  Dl  Gulseppi  is  erecting  a  resi- 
dence, 20  by  24.  two  stories,  on  his  lot 
on   Second   street. 

Charles  Makl  Is  erecting  a  cottage, 
21    by   24,   one   story,   on   Second   street. 

At  the  Qulnn-Harrlson  mine  a  large 
and  commodious  boarding  house  and 
store  building  is  in  course  of  erec- 
tion. 


To  Talce   Nanhnank   Job. 

Hinckley.     Minn..     April     14. — George 
Meyers    has   been    placed   in   charge   of 


Improved 

Appetite 

usually  follows  the  use  of 

GrapeNuts 

for  breakfast. 

This  food  comes  to 
you  in  the  form  of  crisp, 
nut-like  granules  with 
the  true  grain  sweetness 
of  whole  wheat  and 
malted  barley. 

Served  with  a  little 
cream  or  good  milk,  and 
a  sprinkle  of  sugar  if  de- 
sired, Grape-Nuts  is  a 
delicious  food  with  just 
enough  "chewiness"  to 
win  the  appetite  and 
start  digestion. 

"There's  a  Reason ' 

At  Grocers — 


15c  the  package. 


Ob<r<iiitii>ti«  ls\>» 
l>.^k<  lliioiigh  |>oi 
i.r  (II  iiidi  cr  I'" 


tl  B  »  in  .»f  ti 

(•u  »r  c<|ii.ii  ic 

•  It:    III   |4.t    i4   li 


WIND  SCALE. 

Miles  Per  Hour 

Calm  Oto    3 

Ucbt  air 3  to    8 

Ufht  brwie 8  to  12 

(Jentle  hntte 12  to  18 

Uoderate  brr<>K...19  to  23 

Fresh  breeie 23  to  28 

Strong  brwxe. 
Moderate  gale 
Fresh  gale... 
Strong  gale... 

Whole  gale 50  to  65 

Storm    ^  to  75 

Hurricane Orer  75 

EXPLANATOPv    NOTES  ^  '"■  ''''^'SL. 

ily.flnii  iiierlilian  dm*.     *ii  piff'ufc  rtdinfil  lo  »»•  lot),     lit . . '^'coDlilluolll  linct)  |.  .1  Ihrtuj-li  |.i;.nii  vrii|Ui«      .pic^suie.     JsoriitRMS  (Jouil  Im ») 
ii.|.ii.ilMic.     Q  lUai.   ©  p.irll>  cloiiily,   0  iluuj^;   R  ibia,  ^  tnow,   M  rfpoil  lanflng.     Auo.ij  l]j  >uili  \U  w..nl     MudiJ  miaa  kbow  |.iiii|  iL-in/ii 


28  to  34 
34  to  40 
40  to  48 
.48  to  50 


iS 


CPhQ 


Can  you  beat  It? 
The  weather,  we 
mean.  Hard,  it 
must  b«  acknowl- 
edged, for  today  Is 
one  of  the  prettiest 
of  the  year  so  far. 
What  the  future 
holds  is  problem- 
atical, for  only  last 
night  snow  was 
predicted.  It  didn't 
come.  of  course, 
but  that  does  not 
signify  that  It  may 
not  be  merely  de- 
layed. A  year  ago  today  was  sunny 
and  warm.  The  sun  rose  this  morning 
at  6:22  and  will  Bct  this  evening  at 
6:66.  giving  thirteen  hours  and  thirty- 
three  minutes  of  sunlight. 

Mr.  Richardson  makes  the  following 
comment   on    weather  conditions: 

"The  disturbance  centered  over  Lake 
Ontario  caused  light  to  copious  rains 
Thursday  or  last  night  from  North  At- 
lantic states  and  the  lake  region 
southwestward  to  Texas,  New  Mexico 
and  Arizona.  Westerly  winds  are  the 
rule  In  the  lake  region,  moderately 
strong  on  Lake  Erie  and  rather  light 
elsewhere.  Cooler  weather  prevails 
over  the  southern  lake  region,  the 
Central  Valley  states  and  Southwest. 
In  the  Northwest  the  temperature  has 
risen  generally.  Light  frost  last  night 
at  Salt  Lake  City,  Utah." 

General  Forecaata. 

Chicago.  April  14. — Forecasts  for  the 
twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  p.  ra. 
Saturday: 

Minnesota — Fair  tonight  and  Satur- 
day:  rising  temperatu/e. 

Wisconsin — Fair  tonight  and  Satur- 
day;  rising  temperature  Saturday. 

Iowa — Fair  tonight  and  Saturday; 
warmer  Saturday  and  in  weat  and  cen- 
tral portions  tonight. 

North  Dakota — Fair  tonight  and  Sat- 
urday; warmer  tonight. 

South  Dakota — Fair  tonight  and  Sat- 
urday; rising  temperature. 

Montana — Fair  tonight  and  Saturday; 
warmer  tonight,  except  in  north  central 
portion. 

Lower  and  Upper  Michigan — Fair  to- 
night and  Saturday;  rising  tempera- 
ture Saturday. 


a  section  on  the  Great  Northern  at 
Nashwauk,  Minn.  Mr.  Meyers  has 
worked  on  the  section  here  for  several 
years.  He  will  leave  in  a  few  days  for 
his  new  position. 

ATANSOFF  HAS 

BEEN  INDICTED 


"  ^n  ^p^*^*  ^  ^^^pT^  .^  ^  *p  ^  ^f^^^  4^  ^%  ^  *f»  ^\  ^f%  *f\  ^f\  J^  ^ 

I     LOCAL  FORECAST     I 

^  Dalath.  Snperior  and  TlHnlty.  ^ 
0  Inclndlng  the  Menalia  and  Ver-  ^ 
^  nilllon  Iron  rangeiii  Fair  weath-  ^ 
•ifr  er  tonight  and  Saturday.  RUlng  ^. 
jjf  temiterature.  Moderate  to  freith  ■'jfi 
^  Mouthwesterly  wind*.  ^ 

*  ^ 

Tempera  tnreM. 

Following  were  tlie  highest  temper- 
atures in  the  last  twenty-four  hours 
and  the  lowest  in  the  last  twelve,  end- 
ing at  7  a.  m. : 

nieh  Low 


HlKb  I/ow 

A»)lleDe    80  W) 

Alpina  40  36 

Amirlllo  36 

Battlcford    40 

Rlsmarik    60  32 

Boiw    62  42 

Boston    60  42 

Buffalo  64  36 

ralro 54 

Calgary    62  30 

Iharlp*  Illy  36 

Charleston  .......86  60 

Chlcano    74  44 

Conrordia    28 

DaTenport    40 

Der.fer   40  32 

Del  Moloes  56  38 

iHvlls  Uke  46  34 

Dodge  52  88 

Pubunue 60  40 

DULUTH    U  32 

Edmonton    70  32 

llM'Buaba   48  36 

Fort  Smith   60 

GalveiitoD  74  68 

Uraud   Haven   ....50  38 

Gretn  Bay  58  40 

Hatre  64  48 

Helena    56  34 

Houghton   34 

Huron  50  30 

Indianapolis   4S 

J«rk<!onville     84  58 

Kaniloops  66  40 

Kansas  City   €6  44 

Krokuk   42 

Knoxvllle  84  60 

La  Crosse   42 

Lander   28 

Louisville   80  52 

Madison   66  40 

Marquette    .'lO  34 

Medl.ine   Hat 76 

Mrniphij  . . 
.Mi Irs  ('.^y  . 
MiUauK.e   56 


44 


..74      66 
.62      36 


42 


Mlnncdosa  46  28 

Mndcna    54  30 

.Montgomery   82  58 

Montreal    56  34 

Moorhead  46  30 

Naslivllle   66 

Xew   Orleans  82  64 

.New  York  50  40 


.\orth   Platte 58 

Oklahoma  68 


30 

48 


Omaha  ^..56  38 

Pan^'  Sound  54  36 

Phoenli    56  48 

Plirre  60  28 

Pittsburgh   72  58 

Port  Arthur  38  32 

Portland.   Or 70  46 

Prince  Albert 


.54      38 
Qu'.\ppeUe  44      38 


Raleigh  86  62 

Rapid  City 64  .32 

Roseburg    80  46 

Roswell    40 

Bt.  Lonla 74  50 

St.  Paul 46  34 

Salt  Lake  nty....54  42 


Ban  Diego  . . . 


.66      52 


Ban  Francisco 78  50 

Sault  Ste.   Marie.. 40  32 

Seattle  60  46 

Sheridan    56  28 

Shrcvi'port   82  62 

.Sioux  City 58  34 

Spokane  62  44 

Rprlngtlold.    Ill 46 

Kprtngf.pld,  Mo 46 

Swift  Current 66  40 

Tampa   .^..80  56 

Toledo  74  48 

Valentine   26 

WashlnKton   72  58 

Wichita    46 

Winiston    64  38 

Wlnnipcif   46  32 

Yelloastone  54  28 


and  Hans  Martinson,  janitor  of  the 
village  hall.  Pav  for  common  labor 
was  advanced  from  $2.25  to  $2.40  and 
for  team  and  man  from  $6  to  $5.60.  ix. 
developed  In  the  discussion  that  in- 
creased living  cost  makes  it  impos- 
sible for  a  man  with  a  family  to  live 
properly   on  $2.25  a  day. 

• 

Bnry  Chisholm  Woman. 

Chisholm.  Minn..  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  funeral  of  Mrs. 
Nicholas  Kurttl,  who  died  Tuesday  at 
the  Soudan  hospital,  was  held  this 
afternoon  from  the  Finnish  Lutheran 
church.  Rev.  Mattl  Lehtonen  officiat- 
ing. Interment  was  made  in  the  local 
cemetery. 

The  Kurttl  family  has  lived  In  Chis- 
holm for  a  number  of  years.  Mrs. 
Kurttl  Is  survived  by  her  husband  and 
six  children. 

■    ■    ..    »    ■  — 

Woodsman  DleN  In  Virginia. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Fred  Burton,  woodsman, 
died  at  a  local  hospital  yesterday  fol- 
lowing an  illness  of  several  weeks. 
The  body  was  prepared  for  burial  by 
Graham  &  Eckes.  Efforts  are  being 
made  to  get  in  communication  with 
Burton's  relatives,  who  are  said  to  re- 
side in  St.  Paul. 


Many  Hibbing  Mnrrlagea. 

Hibbing.  Minn.,  April  14.— (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Since  the  first  of  the 
year,  ten  couples  have  been  married 
by  Judge  Brady  and  according  to  the 
judge  if  the  rate  keeps  up.  all  rec- 
ords will  go  by  the  boards  and  1916 
will  pass  into  history  as  the  big  mar- 
riage year  of  Hlbbing.  In  1918  th« 
judge    married    thirty-eight    couples. 

Meaaba   Ships   Freight. 

Hlbbing.  Minn..  April  14. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — That  the  Mesaba 
range  Is  going  to  experience  the 
busiest  season  in  Its  history  is  the 
opinion  of  L.  B.  Cronholm,  who  is 
here  for  the  Soo  line,  and  states  that 
the    amount    of    freight    being    shipped 

!  from  Twin  City  points  to  Hibbing  is 
the  biggest  In   the  history  of  his   rail- 

I  road. 


Special  Grand  Jury  Quickly 

Returns  Bill  Against 

Slayer. 

Grand  Rnpids,  Minn.,  April  14. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — The  special 
grand  Jury  called  by  Judge  Wright  to 
look    into    the      charge      against    Steve 

Atansoff,  charged  with  the  murder  of 
George  Chrlstoflf  In  their  rooms  over 
a  saloon  near  Marble  last  Monday,  was 
charged  by  the  court  this  morning 
and  retired  to  consider  the  case  pre- 
sented against  the  accused  by  County 
Attorney  Stone. 

The  grand  jury  filed  into  court  at 
12:30  p.  m.  and  reported  a  true  bill 
against  Atansoff.  charging  murder  In 
the  first  degree  and  the  court  dis- 
charged the  special  inquisitors. 

TWO  HARBORS  CONCERT. 

Marine    Band   of   City   to   Entertain 
Next  Tuesday. 

Two  Harbors.  Minn..  April  14. —  (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — The  first  appear- 
ance of  the  Marine  band  of  this  city 
under  Its  new  director.  Carl  J.  Breds- 
sen.  will  be  at  the  Star  theater  on 
Tuesday  evening,  when  the  following 
program  will  be  given:  "Electorate 
March"  (George  Rosenkrans);  "Bohe- 
mian Girl."  selection  (An.  HayesJ ; 
"Obertass."  violin  solo  (Wlenlawskl), 
(^larence  O.  Gronaeth  of  Duluth.  Fred 
C.  Doerr,  accompanist;  "The  Passing 
Band."  patrol  (Eilenberg);  "Xokomls." 
Indian  intermezzo  (E.  L.  Lach); 
"Tannhauser."  selection  (Wagner); 
"Love's  I.,onglng,"  serenade  (Slebel- 
Fenton)-  "Hunter  and  Hermit,"  over- 
ture (C.   H.  Dolby)^ 

CONDUCTOR  HAS 

MOVED  TO  DULUTH 

Two  Harbors,  Minn.,  April  14. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — Joseph  J. 
Paker  and  family,  who  have  made 
their  home  here  for  the  past  ten  years, 
have  moved  to  Duluth.  Mr.  Baker 
will  continue  as  a  conductor  for  the 
Iron   Range   railroad. 

John  W.  Woodfill  was  here  over 
Sunday  visiting  his  parents,  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  J.  W.  Woodfill.  Mr.  Woodfill  has 
Just  returned  from  Cleveland,  where 
he  spent  the  winter,  and  will  resume 
his  duties  as  assistant  agent  for  the 
Pittsburgh  Steamship  company  at  Du- 
luth. 


retary,  Richard  Coad;  treasurer,  Lewis 
J.  White;  S.  D.,  A.  S.  James;  S.  S..  Sam- 
uel Rapson;  J.  S.,  Harry  A.  Lhinn; 
marshal.  Philip  A.  Maurice;  chaplain, 
William  Mitchell;  tyler.  Reuben  K. 
Toms. 

The  Eastern  Star  chapter  served  a. 
banquet  for  the  visiting  members  and 
the   members   of   the   local    lodge. 

^ 

Rnglneera   Sue  Gilbert. 

Virginia,  Minn..  April  14. — Kimball  & 
Fay,  Chisholm  engineers,  have  Insti- 
tuted suit  in  district  court  against  the 
village  of  Gilbert  to  recover  $2,368. 
claimed  for  preparing  plans  for  the 
new  filter  and  water  system  in  Gilbert. 
The  plaintiffs  allege  they  had  an 
agreement  under  which  they  were  to 
be  paid  15  per  cent  of  the  total  cost 
of  the  plant.  The  cost  was  $56.- 
183.30.  and  they  allege  their  share  is 
$8,277.49.  Thev  were  paid  $6,918.73 
and  the  suit  is  for  the  balance.  A 
claim  presented  to  the  Gilbert  village 
council    was   not   allowed. 

« 

Nashwauk   Anto   Collision. 

Nashwauk,  Minn.,  April  14. — (Special 
to  The  Herald.)— Cars  belonging  to 
Lee  Johnson  of  Hibbing  and  Dan  Ste- 
vens of  tills  place  collided  near  the 
Hughes  store  a  few  days  ago  with  dis- 
astrous result  to  both  machines.  The 
driver  of  the  Hlbbing  car  was  talking 
to  some  girl  friends  sitting  In  the  back 
seat  and  In  making  the  turn  took  the 
wrong  side.  Stevens'  car  suffered  the 
breaking  of  one  of  the  head  lights  and 
the  damaging  of  a  fender  while  the 
Johnson  car  was  put  out  of  commis- 
sion with  a  bent  front  axel  and  minor 
injuries.  The  occupants  were  not  In- 
jured. 

-    ■     -   -  ♦ 

Knife  River  CInb  Meeting. 

Knife  River,  Minn.,  April  14.— (Spe- 
cial to  The  Herald.) — Mrs.  Francis  B. 
Davis  announces  that  the  Evening 
Card  club  will  meet  at  the  home  of 
Mrs.  Fred  Allard  Saturday. 
• 

Coleralne  Appointments. 

Coleralne,  Minn..  April  14. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — The  village  council 
has  appointed  the  following:  A.  M. 
P«  terson.  village  attorney;  C.  W.  Lynn, 
marshal;    Martin    L.    Cady,    policeman. 


ELY  MASONIC  LODGE 

NOW  CONSTITUTED 

Elv.  Minn..  April  14. — With  several 
visiting  Masons  present  the  local  Ma- 
sonic lodge,  which  has  been  working 
under  a  special  dispensation,  was  for- 
mally constituted  last  night  and  the 
following  officers  installed:  W.  M., 
George  T.  Ayers:  S.  W..  Charles  Tre- 
aona;  J.  W.,  William  A,  McCurdy;  sec- 


Cocoanut  Oil  Fine 

For  Washing  Hair 


If  you  want  to  keep  your  hair  In 
good  condition,  be  careful  what  you 
wash  it  with. 

Mo.«»t  soaps  and  preparded  shampoos 
contain  too  much  alkali.  This  dries 
the  scalp,  makes  the  hair  brittle,  and 
is  very  harmful.  Just  plain  mulslfied 
cocoanut  oil  (which  is  pure  and  en- 
tirely greaseless),  is  much  better  than 
the  most  expensive  soap  or  anything 
else  you  can  use  for  shampooing,  as 
this  can't  possibly  injure  the  hair. 

Simply  moisten  your  hair  with  wa- 
ter and  rub  it  in.  One  or  two  tea- 
spoonsful  will  make  an  abundance  of 
rich,  creamy  lather,  and  clean.ses  the 
hair  and  scalp  thoroughly.  The  lather 
rinses  out  easily,  and  removes  every 
particle  of  dust,  dirt,  dandruff  and  ex- 
cessive oil.  The  hair  dries  quickly 
and  evenly,  and  it  leaves  it  fine  and 
silky,  bright,  fluffy  and  easy  to  man- 
age. 

You  can  get  mulslfied  cocoanut  oil 
at  most  any  drug  store.  It  Is  very 
cheap,  and  a  few  ounces  is  enough  to 
last  everyone  in  the  family  for  months. 
— Advertiaement. 


Mountain   Iron   Ball. 

Mountain  Iron,  Minn..  April  14. — 
(Special  to  The  Herald.) — A  masquer- 
ade ball  will  be  given  in  the  village 
hall  on  Friday  evening,  April  28,  under 
the  auspices  of  the  young  men  of  the 
village.  Music  will  be  furnished  by 
Olson's  orchestra  of  Virginia. 

* 

Park    Board    Stirka. 

ChLsholm  Minn..  April  14. — Not  hav- 
ing been  officially  advised  of  the  abol- 
ishment of  the  park  board  by  the  vil- 
lage council  the  members  of  the  former 
body  met  and  decided  to  a«k  the  vil- 
lage council  for  an  appropriation  of 
$22,000  for  this  year's  work. 


Plaintiff  Gets  SI. 

Virginia.  Minn.,  April  14. — After  long 
deliberation  the  district  court  jury  that 
heard  the  damage  case  of  Sanfred  Man- 
tella  vs.  Henry  and  Gust  Lehto  for 
an  alleged  assault  In  a  camp  near 
Aurora,  returned  a  verdict  for  the 
plaintiff.  He  sued  for  $1,000. 
—^ 

Want  Flnnegan  Reappointed. 

Grand  Rapids,  Minn.,  April  14. — The 
village  council  has  been  petitioned  to 
reappoint  B.  C.  Flnnegan  as  a  member 
of  the  water,  light  and  building  com- 
mission. Mr.  Flnnegan  has  served 
three  years,  the  full  term  for  which 
he  had  been  appointed  upon  the  or- 
ganization of  the  board. 

CITY  PARKSlRE 
BEING  MADE  READY 

Water  Will  Be  Turned  on 

and  Pavilions  Opened 

Saturday. 

All  the  public  parks  in  the  city  will 
be    opened    officially    tomorrow. 

Mayor  Prince  announced  this  morn- 
ing that  Park  Manager  Cleveland  is 
hard  at  work  cleaning  up  the  parks 
and  preparing  them  for  their  official 
openings.  A  crew  of  men  is  busy  re- 
moving the  winter's  collection  of  rub- 
bish and  dirt,  opening  up  the  com- 
fort stations  and  pavilions  and  turn- 
ing  on    the    water   for   the   year. 

With  the  warm  weather  the  last 
few  days  the  parks  will  be  opened 
this  year  about  two  weeks  earl'er 
than  in  former  years.  Already  they 
have    been    quite    freely    used. 

Many  improvements  to  the  parks 
are  being  planned  this  vear  by  Park 
Manager  Cleveland,  including  comfort 
stations,  grading  of  boulevards,  the 
planting  of  bushes  and  flowers  near 
the  Lakewood  and  Woodland  pumping 
stations,  and  the  addition  to  the  fa- 
cilities at  the  municipal  bathing  beach 
in    Fairmont   park. 

DEVELOPERS  HAVE 
MEETINB  AT  WALKER 

Walker,  Minn.,  April  14. — (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — The  Cass  County  Devel- 
opment association,  together  with  the 
Cass  County  Jefferson  Highway  as- 
sociation, convened  here  today  in  the 
largest  gathering  ever  assembled  In 
the  county.  Every  speaker  on  the 
piogram  is  present,  among  whom  are 
many    outside    sptakers    of    note 

District  court,  which  is  fn  session 
here,  was  adjourned  in  order  4o  make 
additional  room  for  the  convention,  as 
the  attendance  is  fair  to  equal  to  the 
winter  meetings  of  the  Northern  Min- 
nesota Development  association  In 
numbers. 

Among  the  out-of-town  speakers 
present  are  Frank  Eddy.  Carlos  Avery, 
Fred  Sherman  of  the  immigration  de- 
partment. tieoriTd  UcCartbj  of  Duluth, 


ff 


TiREO  LOOKIKG  WOMEN 

Pome  women  always  wear  a  worn, 
tired  look.  It  is  tiie  outward  sign  of 
nervousness,  neuiasthenia  r»erliape, 
with  its  characteristic  symptoms  ox 
worry,  headaches  and  sleepleesncsa. 

Overwork,  grief,  undue  excitement, 
the  late  hours  and  nenous  strain  of  » 
Btrenuous  social  season,  lack  of  out-of- 
door  exercise,  any  or  aU  of  these  may 
be  responsible  for  the  trouble  but  the 
most  common  cause  at  this  season  of 
the  vear  is  the  grip, 

■^^  hatever  the  catise,  if  you  feci  the 
need  of  more  stren^  try  the  great 
non-alcoholic  tonic.  Dr.  Willianis'  Pink 
Pills.  As  the  nerves  get  their  liourish- 
ment  from  the  blood  the  treatment 
must  be  directed  toward  building  up  tbe 
blood.  Dr.  'Williams'  Pink  Pills  act 
directly  on  the  blood  and  with  proper 
regulation  of  the  diet  hare  proved  of 
the  greatest  benefit  in  many  ca^e8  of 
neurasthenia.  A  tendency  to  anemia, 
or  bloodlessness,  shown  by  most  neu- 
rasthenic patients,  is  also  correttod  by 
these  tonic  pills.  Your  own  drug^^t 
sells  Dr.  Williams-  Pink  Pills  or  they 
will  be  sent  by  mail  on  receipt  of  price, 
60  cents  per  box ;  six  boxes  $2.60. 

"Write  for  the  free  booklet,  "Diseases 
of  the  Nervotis  System"  and  a  diet 
book.  Address:  Dr.  Williams  Medi- 
cine Co.,  Schenectady,  N,  Y, 

— ^Advertisement. 


secretary  of  the  Northern  Minneeota 
Development  association^  W.  H.  Oem- 
niell,  superintendent  of  T.  M.  &  I.  rail- 
way, and  others  from  Brainerd,  Be- 
midji  and  county  villages.  Senator  P. 
H.  McGarry  spoke  this  morning  on  tho 
revolving  fund  amendment  and  waa 
followed  by  Representative  Farley 
Dare  of  Walker,  who  gave  an  address 
on  needed  legislation.  The  attend- 
ance Is  over  300  and  the  program  will 
continue  throughout  the  day. 

TO  COlPiiTE 
C.  S.  SYSTEM 


New  Classifying  Ordinance 

Will  Become  Effective 

in  One  Week. 


Employes  of  City  Who  Have 
Worked  Thirty  Days  Ex- 
empt From  Tests. 


Beginning  with  Saturday.  April  22, 
Duluth  will  have  a  complete  civil  serv^ 
ice  system. 

The  ordinance  pa.ssed  by  the  city 
commissioners  on  March  20,  classifying 
the  city's  civil  service  system  so  that 
it  complies  with  the  provisions  tf  the 
charter,  will  become  effective  a  week 
from  tomorrow. 

The  civil  service  system  was  never 
thoroughly  enforced,  even  after  the 
adoption    of    the    present    charter,    and 

last  year  the  state  examiners  recom- 
mended a  more  stringent  enforcement 
in  their  annual  report  to  the  council. 
At  that  time  the  commissioners  decid- 
ed to  pass  an  ordinance  classifying  the 
service  and  taking  the  first  step  to- 
ward enforcing  its  regulations  in  the 
future. 

According  to  the  ordinance  passed 
last  month,  the  following  department 
heads  are  exempt  from  the  civil  scrvlca 
regulations: 

Dlvlalon   of  I>jiblle  Affairs. 

Manager  of  parks,  librarian,  man- 
ager of  welfare  department,  recreatioa 
director,   building  inspector. 

DlriMlon   of  Finauee. 

Treasurer. 

Dlvlalon  of  Public  Works. 

City  engineer,  manager  of  mainte- 
nance department,  manager  of  clerical 
department. 

Division  of  Pnblle  Safety. 

Chief   of   police,    manager   of   clerical 

department,    police    surgeons,    chief    of 

fire     department,      director     of     publlo 

health,  assisting  physicians  and  nur&ea. 

Division  of  Public  Utilities. 

Manager  of  water  and  light  depart- 
ment. 

The  charter  already  exempts  the  city 
commissioners  and  the  city  attorney, 
assessor,  clerk  and  auditor,  who  are 
appointed  by  the  council,  while  the  new 
ordinance  exempts  all  day  laborers. 

Employes  of  the  city  who  will  have 
worked  for  thirty  days  up  to  next  Sat- 
urday, when  the  ordinance  becomes  ef- 
fective, will  not  be  requlrfd  to  take 
examinations  if  they  have  not  already 
done  so.  In  this  way  the  city  etarta 
out  with  a  "clean  slate."  Payroll* 
must  be  submitted  to  the  civil  service 
board    on    the    first    and    sixteenth    of 

each  month  by  each  commissioner. 

♦_ 

Opportunities  for  You 

In  the  groceiy  and  meat  market  ads  In 
The  Herald  tonight. 


MINING  OFFICIALS 

VISITING  RANGE 


William  A.  Rogers,  Hugh  Kennedy, 
John  Kennedy.  Harold  T.  Clement  an4 
W.  S.  Rogers,  all  of  Buffalo,  officials 
of  the  Rogers-Brown  Mining  company, 
were  in  Duluth  early  today,  en  route 
to  the  ranges,  where  they  will  make 
an  inspection  of  the  Susquehanna  mine, 
which  is  controlled  by  the  Rogers- 
Brown  company. 

The  mining  officials  came  here  In  a 
special  car  and  left  early  for  the  range. 
The  steel  men  will  spend  several  days 
on   the   range   Inspecting  the   property. 

New  spring  suits,  17.96,  at  the  "$ 
Winners"     removal    sale. 


>ukurjy 


STREET  CAR  DELAYS 

The  Following  Areth«  Causes  of 
Interruptions  In  Street  Car 
Service  on  Thursday, 
April  13, 1916. 

A  disabled  car  on  West  Fourth 
street  delayed  a  westbound  West 
Fourth  and  Piedmont  avenue  car 
11  minutes  from  7:35  a.  m. 

A  Duluth  bound  Interstate  car 
was  delayed  10  minutes  from  1 :6S 
p.  m.  at  the  Lambom  avenue 
bridge,  which  was  open. 

Complaints    and    suggestions    given 

prompt  and  courteous  attention. 

Telephones:    Melrose  260; 

Lincoln  66. 


m 


m 


itjtammamti 


^r^m^m^^- 


y 


m  is  I* 


"«•*«  ar 


Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  14,  1916. 


25 


■ 

' 

1 

\ 

L 

WHEAT  AGAIN 
TURNS^WEAK 

Market  Easier  With  Selling 

on  Better  Souttiwest 

Crop  Reports. 


la«t  y«'»r.  58;  oats.  1.  last  year,  IT;  r>-e, 
3,  laat  rear,  3:  barley,  S.  last  jrear,  i; 
total  uf  all  grains,  i9,  lAaX.  year,  93.  oa 
track.  17. 

*      *      • 
Cars  of  wheat  received:  Year 

Yesterday.  a«o. 


Flaxseed  Slumps  to  New 

Low  Levels  on  This 

Movement. 


68 

T8 

1>1 

42 

46.000 

49.000 


,\pHI    14. — 

lid    tke 

were    alMve 


n«lu1h    Board    »t    Trade. 
Ihe    Market    wa<»   ii««ll    "liek    a 
rluHe.     I»««    rl«>i«liiK     prlrew 
tli«-  low   of  the  day. 

May    »%beat    elujied    'Ste    ••    aad    July 


I  *• 


-*^t 


May    durum    cloned    -"^le    o«    aad    July 
^iC   ofT. 
OatM    eloned     Kr    nn    at    41  %c    for    on 


Duluth     22 

Minneapolis 241 

Wlnnifyeg-     184 

Chtcatfo     ' ^91 

Kansas  City,  bu 105,000 

St.  Ltmls.   bu   103.000 

•  •      • 

Cars   of  Ilnsoed   received:  Year 

Yesterday,  ago. 

Dulnth     Kono  8 

Minneapolis     K  H- 

Winnipeg    12  14 

•  •       • 

ForolRn  rlo»ln<  cables:  Liverpool — 
Spot  wbfat,  uni-hang»?<l  to  Zd  lower; 
corn.  1^2d  higher.  Buenos  Aires — 
Whea^,  unchanged;  com.  unchanged. 

•  *       * 

Operations  in  cash  wheat  were  lim- 
ited on  tho  Duluth  marJcet  today.  Oii« 
car  o«e  northern  to  arrlvt  sold  at 
$1.18  ^fc.  and  one  car  No.  2  northorn  at 
$1.17 '/i.  Millers  were  bidders  for  evary- 
tliing   offered. 

*       *       * 

H.  IP.  Eraerson.  clilef  stock  grain  in- 
spectoifl,  wa»  a  visitor  on  the  Duluth 
board'iof  trad*-  today.  He  said  that 
MlnnettpoUs  grain  men  look  for  a 
(tiackehing  off  in  the  grain  movement 
shortly  on  account  of  farmers  being 
busy  with  their  spring  work.  He  pre- 
dicts that  the  acreag»»  sown  to  April 
wheat  this  s.>a»ou  will  show  a  con- 
nldfiable  dtcr»-aae,  as  farmers  are  be- 
hind with  their  plowlnK  on  account  of 


AMERICAN  WHEAT  MARKETS.  APRIIf^,  1916. 

Low.  Close.  AprtWM.  Tl.t^^' 

l.U\».         l.lT^b  l.ll«  IMH 

1.1  STi 
1.16  V* 


Kay —  Open. 

Duluth    l.lT^sa 

MinneapoUa    ....1.17S-li 

Chicago    1.16%-15> 

Winnipeg     1.14-18% 

July- 


High. 
1.18^ 
1.19% 
1.18% 
1.15S 


Duluth 

Minneapolis 

Chicago 


.1.17»ia 
.1.17^-18 
.1.14H-13% 


do  Sept.    l.ll\-5i 

Winnipeg     1.14%-^ 


till-    tr««'l»j    rye. 


Ic   olT   at   JMc,   Hiid   har-  I  the   backward  .spring,   and  tlif^re   wa.s 


It-y    unc.hatiaed    at    frooi    6.tc    to    Tie. 

At  Wiiftlpvit,  -Hay  oatx  «U»»ed  S»e  up 
■  t    4:i-Mr. 

At  St.  I-ouU.  May  »*l»e«t  rUsMrd  at 
91.12*'^    und    July    at    fl.tl^n. 

\t  Kaiixaa  City,  nay  wh»at  cloned  at 
»l.07>s    l»ld   and   July    at   9l-»T'* 

futn  on  .MluneapoMa  Slay  wheat 
riuMcd   at   |I1.15T»    and   call»   at   »1.2«. 


great  falling  off  in  the  ar^-a  plowed 
i  ladt    fall. 

I  •       •       * 

I      Arsrwntlna      vi.sible      supply  —  Wheat, 
.11.4<i8,0u0   bu.  airainut  1I,«4«,«H)0  bu   last 

w»».-k  and  »,2»«.000  bu  la»t  year;  corn. 
12,737,000  bu,  agaiiiat  2,933,000  bu  last 
I  week  and  1.760.000  bu   last  year. 

*       *       * 

I-   »  •      Argentine  slilpnients:     Wheat.  2,068.- 

Thfre    wa-"«    a    good    trading    marKet  .  ^^^    ^u   against   3.608.000    bu    last   weok 

in   wheat    today,  with  'he  honor.s  about  |  g^„j    6,76:;.000    bu    last    year;    since    Jan. 

tv«>n.     At   tlie  start  quotations  sold  off  .  j     :>i».(H))<.000,000    bu;    year   ago   at    same 

to   the  extent  of    ^sc.  due  to  lower  L.lv-  Uj,„^^    4li.»21.00«    bu;    two    years    ago    at 

erpool   <  ables   and   better  reports   from  \  same    time.    22,892.000    bu.      Com,    W8.- 

t.ver  tiie  winter  wh^at   territory.   I^ater  ;  j^oo    bu    against    587.000    bu    last    week 

th.-    niarl<et    advanctd    ISf    on   advices  |  a^„jj   51»,'>00  ba   last   year.     Oats.   1,700,- 

>vOt    bfHter    Kastern    millers'    Inquiry.    A     ooo    hu    a«ain3t    450.000    bu    last    week 

reaction  appeared  subsequently,  helped  j  and   1>SO.OOO   bu  last   year. 

alons    by     th.-     rumor    that    orders    for  "       *       *         ,.  ^    .w. 

three  cargoes   of  wheat   had   been   can-         Argentine    shipments    of    unseed    this 

celed    by    the    BritisJi    government.  |  week  were  624.000  bu.  Including  171.000 

From     a     supplier     .standpoint,     mar-  |  bu  to  Atiierha.     On  passage  to  America 

ket    rondllion.s    are    bearish    with    large  ,  wa.-»    1, 8^7.000    bu.      lUieno*  Aires   closed 

•rled    In    this    country 


do    Oct. 


Mar 

July 


.1.11 


1.19% 
1.19H 

1.18V4. 

1.18^ 
1.1C% 
1.11^ 


1.13 

1.17% 

1.16% 

1.13% 

1.11% 

1.14 

1.09 


1.18% 

1.16%-% 

1.18% 


1.18%b 

1.18%a 

l.lSa 

1.12% 

1.14% 

1.10  %b 


1.65 
1.61 
%a  1.68% 


1.66 

1.61% 

l.S8^4 

1.17% 

1.61% 


DULUTH  DURUM  MARKET,  r 

Open.  High.  Low.  ^\°^^-         ^P'*'?'- 

..M2a  1.12%  1.11%  111^» 

.1.12%a         1.14  1.12%  118b 


DULUTH  LINSEED  MARKET 


Maj 

July 


Open. 
..2.11 
..2.12 


2.12 


Low. 

2.03% 

2.05 


Close. 
2.06b 
2.07%b 


1.1S»% 
1.1|\» 

ET.  J 

Aprlinj. 


2.11  .<• . 


Y'r  ago. 

1.78 

160 


Y'r  ago. 

1,»9% 

8.«3 


No.    1    northern, 


nniuth    cln««»-      Wheat On    track:      No.    1    bard.    fl.l9%r  »,  ,.» 

$1.16V-1.19nr  .Vo.  2  nSrth;:;tC  $1.12%-1.16U:  No.  1  ^'''rrul'* 'tlTsv'^VbVttn^ 
Vo  a  on  Lracit  $1  05 "-.-1.10%  ;  Montana  No.  2  hard,  to  arrive,  ll-M%:  Mbntana 
~*'-  I'^Jn^r^ck.  $il6%-il«\':  May.  $1.17%   bid;  July    $1.18%   bid 

-  -     -•       "     -•""*        <i'o   arrive:      No.   1,    »l.ti^. 


LOSSES  ARE 
RECOVERED 

Stocks  Start  Lower  Under 

Heavy  Selling  But  Meet 

Support. 


No 
track 


No.    1.    $1.11%;    No.    2.    $1.06%. 


D«irum— on 

SkiS^-  Jufy  VlVi  wl^  Lrnst'e<n:bVirack.  $2:66:2.077  Vo-^rriV^  i^-^f^^li^^ 
t?!o?%  h?d  Oatt-()ti  trWck.  41%e:  to  arrive.  41%c.  Rye—On  track.  »4c;  to  ar- 
rive.  940.     Barley— On  track,  68-71C  „»,...    ,,  .»a,  ku    l«J   vear  8'  fl&7   bu: 

Elevator  receipts  of  domestic  grain— wheat.  82.208  bu.  'js^  V^/  »-.»»7  ou. 
bartey    3  193  bu    la^l  year  2.U0  bu;  flax.   4.601  bu.  last  year  IS.OIO  bu. 

sVlDm'nta  of  doni.^'.tle  gra»n_Oat«.  1,600  hu,  last  year  none. 

IlivTtor  recelp^S^of  bonded  grain-Wheat.  106.688  bu,  >"»  T^*/  ".«n^;,  «**': 
9,6»»   bu,   laat  year  none;  barley,    11.433  bu.   last  year  none;   flax.    2.912  bu.   last 

^''^''shS'ments  of  bonded  grain-Wheat.  145.608  bu.  last  yeMfflone;  oat«.  46.718 
bu.  last  year  none;  barley.  6.969  bu,  last  year  none.  ^,  ,. 


( 

■ 


: 


[ 

1 

. 

■  '  •  '  ■■  t 

-k 

\ 

1 

, 

I 

stocks    being    car 

and  «'an>uJa  and  larye  tonnaff.s  on  ine 
farms  .still  to  be  marketed.  On  the 
..ppoKlte  of  the  slate  the  trade  l=i  ro.,k- 
onlnt'  upon  gnatly  reduced  crops  for 
tlie  present  Keasi>n  and  nven  un.ler  tne 
most  favorable  conditions  from  now 
on.  a.s  the  acre  it?e  plowed  last  fall  in 
the  Northwest  was  much  smaller  than 
n  year  ago  and  the-  backward  siirtng 
Is  holding  up  farminK  operations  in 
both  the  American  and  «.  anadi an  vv  «?»'• 
Reports  from  seven  points  in  N-^rtn 
Dakota  today  were  to  the  effect  tbat 
li  will  be  a  week  .v«t  before  farmers 
win  be  able  to  get  upon  the  land  to 
do  any   work.  , 

The  trade  Is  gratified  at  tl^e  pre.«- 
ent  good  clearances  at  the  seaboard, 
regarding  them  as  Indicating  tnat 
ocean  shipping  conditions  must  be 
better.  Today  clearaitces  '>f  wheat  and 
flour  amounted  to  1,314.000  bu.  The 
rush  of  shipment'^  of  bonded  grain 
from  here  to  the  seaboard  continues. 
196  000  bu  of  wh.at.  oat.^  and  barley 
being  loaded  out  fmm  the  elevatorn 
ve.sterdav  on  cars.  In  some  quarters 
it  ts  feared  that  the  proml.^ed  heavy 
shipments  of  Canadian  wheat  /<>••  ex- 
port will  have  a  weakening  ♦'"^^L  . 
the  market  In  -XmeH^an  grain.  In  that 
.xports  of  It  are  likely  to  be  merely 
I'omhKil   for  a  time  ,   .i  i-ti 

May  wheat  opened  %<•  off  at  *}^\>^' 
Wf-akened  %c  more,  bulged  to  »1.18''« 
and  then  broke  mc  aro»md  the  noon 
h.  ur  July  opened  %c  off  at  »i  \' ^z 
e.'ised  off  L!,c  more,  moved  up  to  »1.1»**» 

and  then  broke  l'*^"-       ,  -,   .,^    .i  n 

Mav  durum  opened  '••jO  off  at  •!  i*. 
f-a.sed  off  ^c  more,  moved  up  l%c.  and 
then  broke  to  $1.12.  July  oP^"*;**  ^'■*^ 
iitt  at  $1.12%.  advanced  to  $1.14  anJ 
later   weakened    ^jc. 

Flaxaeed  Sl^oips. 
Linui.latlon  appeared  in  flaxseed  at 
the  opening  and  prices  wer.-  carried 
down  3%c.  Some  ^"PP*;''^^  ^^'''^l 
crushers  appeared  at  the  low  point 
anl  a  .slight  rally  occurred.  Later  tho 
market  turned  dull  with  quotations 
fractionally  up  from  the  bottom  dur- 
ing the  greater  part  of  the  session. 
A  fresh  slump  come  around  the  close 
and  priros  were  carried  down  to  new 
low  level.^.  There  was  no  special  news 
out  and  the  catching  of  »top-loss  or- 
ders wa.s  regarded  a.^  th>  main  Influ- 
enee   in    breaking   prices.  ^    ...     „ 

Cables    were   about    a   standoff.    Bue- 
*'no3  Aires  closed    %c   off   at    $1.32;   and 
London    unchanged    at    $2.40%. 

May   flax    opened   unehanged    at   $-.11 

tid  closed  Ec  off  at     $2.06     bid.     July 

opened    Vjo    off  at    $2.12   and   closed   6c 

off  at   $207V,    bid.  ,     .^     -„ 

At     Winnipeg.     May    flax    closed     ,o 

off    at    $1.84    a.sked. 


Rn( 


ra«h    Salea  Friday. 

No.   1  northern  wlient.  l,tW»>  bu,  lo  wrhw 

No.  2  iiortlnTii  wl\i>at,  2  '•«« 

No.   2  n.>rtlir;n  whfat,  1  e«r 

No.  1   durum,    1    c»r 

No.  2  uixi'l  iliirum,  2  ••mv  la  "tare 

No!  1  niixeil  iliirmn.  1  i*»r    

N').  2  rye,  700  bu.  to  •rrlw 

No.   1  fliix,  1  CM 

B«rley.   1  '*''  •■■ 

MARKET  GOSSIP. 


1  IS'h 
1.17^ 
1.1S% 
1.12'.a 
l.OO'g 
1.12 

.94 
2.12 

.67 


Duluth  grain  stocks,  giving  changes 
In    five   (lays:  ,, 

■^heat — Western  and  winter,  ..S.coo 
bu-  spring,  8.069.000  bu.  aecreaS'=»,  26.000 
hu-  durum  6.727.000  bu.  Increase.  68.- 
000  bn;  bonded,  5.266,000  bu.  d.-rrea.^e. 
89,000  bu:  tot.nl  wh.at,  21.698,000  bu, 
net   decrease.   47.000   bu;    afloat.    758.000 

bu. 

Coarse  grain* — Oats.  2.001,000  bu.  de. 
-crease,  140.000  hu:  rye,  33.000  bu.  de- 
crca.'^e  6.000  bu;  hurley,  1,052.000  bu. 
decrease.  22.000  bu :  flax.  domestic. 
1.668.000  bu.  bonded.  73,0<W  bu;  totAl 
flax     1.746.000    bu,     increase,     net.     14.- 

000  bu.  .  „„„  . 

Total  of  all  grains,  26.430,000  bu;  net 
decrease,  110,«)00 

•  *       * 

Clearance  reported:  Wheat,  1.088.0<>0 
bu:  flour,  28,000  bbl:  together  equal  to 
1.314,000  bu;  corn.  106,000  bu;  oats,   66,- 

0l>0  bu. 

«       *       « 

Primary  markets  report  the  follow- 
ing  receipt.^  and   shipments  today; 

Wheat Receipts.     1.010.000     bu.     last 

y.-ar    369  000   bu;   shipnienta.    956.000  bu. 

Corn Receipts.  671.000  bu.  last  year. 

493.000  bu:  shipments.  557,000  bu,  last 
y.a'r     1.263,000   bu. 

Oats— Ree-lpts,  621.000  bu.  la-it  year. 
573.000  bu:  shlpm.nts.  1. 581,000  bu.  laat 

year,   631,000  bu. 

•  •       •  ■ 

Duluth  car  ln.«»pection:  Wheat — No. 
1  northern,  1;  No.  2  northern,  1;  No.  4. 
3-  durum.  12;  mixed.  4;   total  wheat.  22. 


steady.      Weather    was    fine    and    move- 
ment to  the  porta  liberal,  but  shipping 

was  dilYlcult. 

•  *      •     . 

At  Minneapolis  cash  wheat  was  in 
grnid  demand  and  Arm  compared  with 
the  futures.  There  was  no  Important 
outside  demand.  Some  demand  ap- 
pear* d  for  Canadian  wheat,  but  no 
off'Ts.  as  spread  was  too  narrow  today. 
Blue  .««tem  No.  1  sold  at  2%c  to  4%c 
over  May.  velvet  chaft  at  2c  to  3c  over 
and  fancy  blue  stem  at  5c  over  May. 
All  millers  reported  flour  demand  dull. 

•  •       • 

Weather    forecast: 

Illinois — Fair  tonight  with  cooler  In 
SoulheaJt.  probabl>  frost  tonight;  Sat- 
urday   fair    and    warmer. 

Mis«ouri — Partly  cloudy  tonight  and 
Saturday,  probably  unsettled;  cooler 
tonight;    Saturday    warmer. 

Wisconsin.  Mlnne.>*ota.  Iowa.  North 
and  South  Dakota  and  Nebraska — Fair 
tonlffht    and    Saturday,    warmer. 

Kansas — Part  cloudy  tonight  and 
Saturday,  probably  showers  In  -^  ulh. 
warmer  Satur^lay  and  in  north  and 
west    tonight. 

•  «      « 

A  Winnipeg  wire  said:  "Investiga- 
tion of  the  causes  of  Manitoba's  un- 
pr'-vedented  grain  congestion  was  be- 
gun by  the  provincial  k^istin  oommis- 
slcn  in  speeia!  se.saion  here  today. 
Hundreds  of  thou.ianda  of  bushels  of 
the  finest  wh-ar.  on  the  continent  arj 
lying  In  the  o^en,  subject  n  the  ele- 
mtr.ts,  boca-.i»«b  of  a  .-<iarcuy  of  cars 
to  move  them.  The  goveri.mcni,  weary 
of  waiting,  will  tak-;  charge  of  the 
situation   and    move   the   crop." 

•  •       • 

Broomha.l  cabled  from  Liverpool: 
"VV'Tieat  was  easy  under  continue<l 
pressure  of  nearby  Monitobas  and 
weakness  In  Chicago.  Spot  market  was 
easy,  urged  to  2d  lower.  Amerh-an 
grad>s  are  steadier;  cargo  nuirket  'vas 
easy;  nearby  Manltobas  .»d  lower, 
distant  6d  lower.  Winters  were  6d 
lower.  Argentine  and  Australians  were 
not  quoted.  expectations  are  for 
large  arrivals  to  the  United  Kingdom, 
with  liberal  world's  shipnvents.  Con- 
tinent is  absorbiuk;  export  offers,  but 
arrivals  are  Inadequate." 
*       •       • 

Modern  Miller  saya:  "Reports  Indi- 
cate no  improvement  in  the  soft  win- 
ter wheat  area.  Heavy  damage  is 
confirmed  and  plowing  up  of  fields  is 
increasing  with  Improved  weather. 
Kansa.-i  wheat  crop  shows  Improve- 
ment and  high  promise  exeept  In  a 
few  districts  where  Hessian  flies  were 
abun<lant  last  fall  and  now  exist." 
«       •       • 

Charles  E.  Lewis  &  Co.  had  the  fol- 
lowing closing  wire  from  Chicago:  "It 
was  a  very  choppy  wheat  market.  It 
early  advanced  on  erop  reports  but 
later  turned  weak  on  reports  of  can- 
cellation of  the  British  government's 
recent  purchases.  An  earlier  opening 
of  navigation  than  expected  whleh 
would  give  Canada  the  preference  In 
export  demand  and  further  disturbing 
political  rumors  from  Washington  la- 
ter denied,  causing  some  recovery. 
Meal  weather  is  reported  for  seeding 
in  the  Northwest  and  Canada.  World's 
shipments  promise  to  be  heavy.  The 
congestion  in  May  was  considerably  re- 
lieved today  and  the  premium  was  re- 
duced." 


of  receipts  tended  to  lift  prices,  and  so, 
too.  did  talk  of  improved  demand  from 
the  teaboard.  After  opening  %c  oK  to 
a  shade  up,  the  market  scored  a  mode- 
rate general  gain. 

In  th»  last  part  of  the  day  corn 
eased  off  somewhat  when  wheat  prices 
underwent  a  deeded  sag.  The  close 
was  steady  at  %®%  to  %c  net  ad- 
vance. _   „.»..•.. 

Oats  took  the  same  course  as  other 
cereals.  Uberal  sales  to  the  East  were 
reported.  .         _.. 

Higher  prices  on  bogs  gave  strength 
to  pr.>vislon8.  Buying,  however,  was 
not  aggressive.  . 

Wheat— No.  2  red,  np^.^p^^  »  red 
$1.18  tf  1.19%:  No.  2  hard,  $1.17%:  No.  3 
hard,  $1.12% -» 1.14. 

Com— No.  1  yellow.  T7%c:_No.  2  yel- 
low   7S'67S%c:   No.   4   white,    .2«h«Sf-- 

Oats— No.  8  white.  44i»46c:  standard, 

"'^iTye^^Nominal:   barley,   62® 75c:   tlm- 
^^S;Vk'i?Kf.1r07?  llV'd^l! '?0:   rye, 

$1.H% 
1.16% 


Wteat—     Op^n. 


.fl.l.->% 

l.iat 


.«% 

.42% 


.viv 

July 
r 

May 

July 
Oi 

Mm  ... 

July    ... 

Poffc— 
Mar   ...23.12 
July   ....22.95 

UH— 
M«r   ....11.62 

July  ...u.ao 

Mto— 
Mar    ....12.a& 
July   12. j2 


Itm. 

$1.15J4 
1.13% 


now. 

$1.16% 
1.15 


.44% 
.43% 

23.17 
23.15 

11.72 
11.10 

12.42 

12.62 


.74% 

.75ia 

.44% 
.42% 

23  07 
'22.96 

11.62 
11.80 

12.85 

12.50 


23  07 
23.06 

11.67 

n.» 

12.37 
12.35 


bureau  statistics,  announced  today, 
show  the  600.000  bpl«r''  Hiark  was 
passed  for  the  first  J^me/  as  far  as 
records  show.  Indlcalvops  isre  that  the 
year's  consumption  of  cotton  In  the 
United  States  will  be  a  reoord  one. 

* 1 y 

Saatk  St.  ravl . Xlvestock. 

South  St.  Paul.  iHon.,  April  14. — 
Hogs — Receipts,  9,600;  10c  higher; 
range.    $9.86^960;    bulk.    $9.50iS^9.66. 

Cattle — Receipts,  2,600;  killers  steady; 
steers  $6.00^9.00;  cows  and  heifers. 
$5.00(&7.76;  calves,  steady.  $4.60#9.50; 
stockers  and  Coders,  steady.  16.00® 
8.26.  .       ^ 

Sheep — Receipts,  60;  steady;  lambs. 
$6.50 'U  10.75:  wethers.  $6.00 -g  8.60;  ewes. 
$S.60i[8.00.       ______ 

BOSTON  COPPER  STOCKS. 

Bworttd  tv  rtiuk,  WAMr  *  Oa 


Dealings  on  Largest  and 
Broadest  Scale  of  Re- 
cent Weeks. 


Ex.    Ck.    CaUfwaU.   bos.. 

Limea.  Faney.  b«i 

BiLNX.'US— 
BauAuai,  Faacy  Union,  lb. 


.$4.26     4.S0 


••••••■ 


Hrad  Lfttucp,  La.,  doz 
Uea4  Ltttuw.  hasiiwr. 

.     ^  .  ^  MiJil.  doi   

New    York.    April    14. — Increased   aj>-    .MuiihrooKa.  U)  

prehension  over  the  International  crisis  *****  '"'"''•*•  -ja' 

caused  further  heavy  selling  at  todays  Kpsm,  Fla.,  takt.,  40c;  crate 

opening.     There  were   declines  of  1   to  fcwiWiM,  Hotbou*^,  •ks-..---- 

_  .      „      ■  ^  ...      .  .  .  BlmSarb.  Call.,  boi,  2.2o;  lb.. 

8  points  In  Mexican  Petroleum.  Amerl-  Miallots.  (ton  I..... 

can  Smelting,  Texas  company,  Crucible   S*'°**^'i'w^-ioi 

and  Lackawanna  Steels,  the  prominent    xmSps,  Aiz  . . .'.'.'.'.I'.'.'Ji'.V.V. 

motors  and  equipments,  mercantile  ma-       TOMATOKti— 

rlne    preferred.    Industrial    Alcohol    and  |  ?[:^;^'  jj',f  •  ^^^  "•'^:: 

the    metals.     Union    Pacific      and      I^rie !  y^ej,,,^.,"   Hothoose.   airtou 

were   the   only   heavy    rails,   yielding   a  i     nxtaT— 

.point    or     more.      Aside       from       United  I  Jcsin.  Blue  Ribbon,  dos...... 

States    Steel,    whose    initial    sale    con- i  Large.  IM  Bibboo,  lioz 

sisted  of  one  lot  of  3.600  shares  at  half  I  » ""o.  wbit*  Ktbbw,  des 


BOX  APPLES—  Ex.  Faney.  Fano'. 
Jonathan,  dlacmint  72-IOOb,  35c  per  boi.$2.25  .... 
■anan  Beauty   ^ !•%    $l.aO 

DfllclOQS     .•••,•••.••••••••■••..■*.•••.    2*ar         •**' 

Sitltaeiibwi    ., 8. $5      ..^ 

Wtoe^aps 2.25      2.00 

Flrck!  F  Fancj-  Choice 

BABBEL  .\PPLE3—  Brand.    Gra*.  Ovde. 

N.  Y.  Baldwin ....    $3.75    M.^ 

Mo.  Ben  Daris 3.^      3.23      2.^ 

Mo.  Ben  Davis  Lot  1-t.  lot 2.25 

GK£KN  VtGKTABLES— 

AgMiragui,   BmI  Bib.  crate , 2.5o 

AgMragus,     Strtioo     Imp.     crate,     2.25;     fancy 

crate    !•» 

Peans.  Grean.  lb..  aOc,  hamper 5.00 

feeaaa.  CM.  Wax,  lb..  aOe,  hamper 6.W 

Beeta.   Bbl.   sUx-k.  doi ^.. .......     .m 

CaUHse,   R«d.   lb «» 

larrou  Barrel  StO'-k.  dOi .i -Jf 

Cauliflower,  lamarnia  Pony,  crate,  tf-U  craU..  2.16 

tanUflower,  «rr,  crate Z.gJ 

lunmben.   Hotbouae.   Extra. Fancjc,  doa. J.. 90 

Celery.  Boat.  «aa ••      5 

Chives,   box    .•..•■••......■.... .^ ...•*,»..••* •   .*i^ 

Ktalite,   hU ...^... ....-v.,..,.., ?"5 

Ka  Plaat,  H).,  12%e;  crate..'. 5.00 

Lttture  Leaf,   CUnisa  Case,   40c;  3  dsc.  bn. 

Green   Ouions.    doz. ,   25c ;  box 

$1 ;  bu ..•••■^ ....... 


4.50        Mink,   brown 

1.25       Mtak,  pale  

Otter,  dark 

04%  i  Otter.  br»wB  ....... 

1  Earnxm    . . .  ."'..".* . . 

SlTink.   bUi-k    

{  Skunk.   rtMTt   itrtsed 

Skunk,  striped  

Wraael 


••••••••• •■••••« 


40e;  testlMrn,  doa. 


aes****  ■ 


••••••••a 


a  •  •  •  •  •  • 


»  a  a  •  •  •  I  A*, 


■  *•••••• 


Corn  and  Wheat  Buiietin. 

For   U»   t^rentj-four   howi   enJln*    at   i   a.    m..    Frtdajr. 


April  14: 


8TATlONft- 


Stitc  of,   Temperature  |clp*- 
•eattar.  Uick  i    Uw  lUUon 


»••••••••• 


..Ikev; 
..Clear! 
..Clear, 
..Clear  I 
..Oar, 
..CImwi 
. .  Clear! 
..Clear 
. . Clear' 
.  .i'karl 
..C»e«| 
..Ckari 
..•War 
..Clear; 
..  Clear > 
..Uaar, 

I 

Cl«ri 


a  •  •  ■  •  a 


tL«   Craniie    

MlaneaqMlto    . . . 

Al'-xdWirU    

Cam|>l>eU    

t'ruoksluii   

Uotrult   

tUaliftb    

Halstad    

)tonte«Mra     .... 

tMuurtKad    

New   L'lm    

Park   Ua»iJa    ... 

Uo<;ht  HliT    

tst.    Paul    

Wluni-basn  .... 
WortbUntoa  . . , 
t^biT'teeu     .... 

Tllupja    

.Mil>jMk    

t.Vlli'^wn    

tl'i.  tT»"      

Pullnck    

tBapld   aty    ... 

Bedfleld     

Sioux  Fall*  ... 
tWui.*rtown     . .  • 

tWnktoa     

{.KBttnU     

tllSmarrk  .... 
tlwils  Lake  .. 
tWillisWn  .... 
B't'ieaMii    

UllKltOW 

tlla«r«    

L -wHtown    ::,"  'il' 

fMile*  City    '^l«»^j 

witMux  i.";.'i'"Ji^ 

+Mtnn«!da»*    Ft.  Cbaioy 

TWliuUpeg    •"«■•' 

tBaUlef.jnl    •.;.'-..l?SJ 

tlrlnre  AlUrt   "•  < »«»* 

ta...\ppell*     '^rllHIw 

tS»ifl  fwr-nt    i.-r!^. 

ttJmooiun    PvUoudj 


.Clearl 

I 

.Clear, 

I 

I 


■••••• 

I 

.Clear  I 
.Clear 
ChMdyi 


46 
40 

42 

46 

4« 
GO 
62 
4tf 
50 
44 
54 
46 
56 
56 

50 
4!i 

SO 

60 
50 
59 


50 
46 

54 
60 
64 
64 
58 
62 
50 
46 
4C 

54 
44 

66 
70 


42 
96 

» 
24 
32 

at 

32 
90 
90 

ao 

32 
» 
34 
34 
94 
30 

30 
32 

28 

28 
» 
30 


32 
34 

38 
22 
2S 
48 
30 
96 
34 
28 
32 
40 
38 
48 
40 
32 


0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 

0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


BTOCKa— 

Alaska    . . 
Adventure 

^Lhmeek    

Alloues     

Anieriean    Zinc    . . .  .'.-n  . 

Arcadian     »^it. 

Arizona  Commercial    .7. 
Butte   ft   Ballaklava    . .  • 
Butte  &  Superior   . . 
Calumet    A.   Arizona 
Calumet  &.  Hecla 
Centennial     

Chlno      

Copper    Ranee 

Daly    West    . . 

East    Butte    ... 

Franklin     .  .  .«  . 

Goldfleld    Cons. 

Granby     

Greene-Cananea 

Hancock  Cons. 

liksplratlon 

Indiana 

Isle    Royale 

Keweenaw 

Lake   Copper 

Mass.    Cons 

Mayflower 

Miami     Copper 

Michigan     .... 

Mohawk     .  . . . . 

Xevada   Cons    , 

North    Lake    . 

Nlplssine     ... , 

North    Butte 

Ojibway     ....... ..i> 

Old    Colony,   . 

Old    Dominion 

Osceola • .  • 

Qulncy    '•  !'• 

Ray    Consolidated. 

Santa    Fe 

Shannon   

South    Lake 

Shattuck    

Shoe   Machinery..,. 

Superior    Boston, ,. 

Superior    Copper... 

Tamarack    

Trinity    .. 

Tuolumne    . . 

United   Fnilt 

U.   S.  Mininer 
do   pfd    . . . 

i;tah  Cons.    . 

Victoria  .... 
Winona  .... 
Wolverine    .  ■ 


a  point  recession,  early  deallnirs  were 
notably  free  from  large  Individual  of- 
fering.**. 

Supporting  orders  were  of  a  more 
substantial  character  In  the  stock 
market  today,  leading  stocks  soon  re- 
covering to  or  over  final  prices  of  yes- 
terday's session.  Dealings  were  on  the 
largest  and  broadest  scale  of  recent 
weeks,  the  first  hour's  business  ap- 
proxinuitlnc  300.000  shares.  It  was  re- 
garded as  significant  that  activity  was 
most  pronounced  on  the  rebound.  Rails 
again  displayed  more  firmness  than 
any  other  group,  but  United  States 
Steel  also  reflected  steady  absorptlou. 
Attention  continued  to  focus  on  Wash- 
Ington,  another  severe  break  In  Paris 
exchange  being  Ignored.  Bonds  were 
steady. 

The  short  Interest  made  efforts  to 
depress  prices  again  in  the  early  after- 
noon, but  met  with  Indifferent  success. 
Steel  and  other  Itiaders  making  pronyt 
recoveries.  Some  minor  specialties 
were    relatively    strong. 

Prices  made  further  upward  progress 
in  the  last  hour  when  little  remained 
of  the  early  setb&ck  except  In  Isolated 
Issues.      The   closing   waa   strong. 

NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

»<portad  by  Ch*rt*  «.  Ls'na  *  Oa. ^ 

I  High.  I  Low.    I 


>•*••• a 


1.15 
.  1.80 
,  2.15 
.  2.IS 
.  .50 
.  .65 
.  .80 
.  .75 
.  2.00 
.  .75 
.  .OK 
.  .50 
.  2.00 
.  .4^ 
.     .75 

,.  3.00 
..  .55 
,.  1.75 

,.  1.00 
,.     .75 

..     .40 
3.06 


■•»••••■•••••••• 


a««««a«a 


lutrinuned  C'-'lei}-,  Fla.,  crate 

WA.SHLD  ^TiGKTABLEl?— 
WasSi'd   PdTiiniiJS.   ptT  l)skt... 
Wasfaed  Heels,   por  bskt , 

OSIOS  SKTH— Seed  Stock— 

Kaucy   Tellow.    ba 

ranry  B<  bu   ... 
KancT   Whlta,   bu 

«EKD  P<ITAT1»es— 
Fancy  Early   Uiae,   bu. 
I- "wicy  Varl'ties.  bo ... . 
Bed  Ulver  Uhio.  Burbauk,  »ameU,  Carman.  Bural.  Kistt. 

VEtirTAP.LKS— 

C£rrots,  Minn.,  cwt ••.•.••«. 

boeta.  Mian. ,  cwt  

BiisaK,  Minn.,  rwt  

l.lBM  Beanii.  CallfomU,  lb 

(  iirUf.   lb 

HuneradUh,  Ex.  Fey.,  tk..  lie;  bbl 

Hort.Tadlsk.   lb,,   lOr;  bhi 

Horarradlsb,   8  v..   bottle,  per  doi 


1.10 
L2» 

2.50 
2.7S 
3.25 

1.1£ 
1.26 


2.23 
2.00 
1 


.15 
8.00 
6.50 

.90 


STOCKS 


•    •    •    •    • 


CHICAGO  MARKET. 


"  •— Inchea  and  hiimlredths.     t-Hlghe*  yemtrday,  low- 
est last  niiikl      t-Nat  luchided  In  the  aterafef. 

\(ytr— Thif  a»erJMr  bUh»st  ar.i  lowe^  tJ-mpiTalurej  are 
■uide  up  at  each  .vtitw  from  th.-  r^"'  """"'^  ^ 
Srtl  r«T»T^.  «nd  Ui.«  »n>r«»  pr-.lplUtloiuj  from  tba 
niimber  of  itaUoiia  reporUig  0.10  «  Kun- 

On.^il  -immary.  reerf»ed  fram  Chlfa«o:  WeU  dU- 
irib^  raid.  U«l  varyin*  de^edly  la  «no«nU  from 
mTtuiht  to  mod.-ralrty  heary  In  Ohio  ^^PJ,,'*^- 
r,«tr*l  l«.rtl..n*.  Mlrhl«an.  In.llana.  Illinois.  MJ;^ 
OUahoma.  ea:*lem  half  of  Kaiua^.  "^r-me  S-^utheaat 
V^X,  soathrm  half  oT  Iowa,  ami  «"<J'he«-;t  *«*: 
.«.^the  larg...t  an>ou..t.  by  sUf's  heln«  1.00  Inch  at 
EmporU.  Kan..  76  Uuh  «t  StllU.ter,  Skl^.  •&♦  in^ 
«r  Umar  !*».,  and  Keokuk,  lo**,  .48  H>fha* 
laosmj"  MUh..  .:V1  at  Pecrla.  111.,  .ft  -  Los^najort. 
liid       a2    at    Cle.eUnd.    Ohio.      Fa*r    weather    p^itTally 

wwh^i  the  .NwU.*«t.  Caliler  weather  a«aln  o»^- 
•r;«7ir  the  PlalTu  ttnin  anU  central  laUeysi.  »ith 
ZTi^JioJ^^f^"^^  m  N«th  a..d^st  Minne- 
sota,   extreme    ?<orU«rest    low*.    Nebnuki    «»«?»?  li 

North    UakoU    esi-ept    rUlii«    temperature    in 
H.   W.  Bini.iRD.SON. 
Local  Forecaster, 


QUIETER  TVAlHIie 

IN  TN^  COPPERS 


kota    and 
iiortUu''a  porttoo. 


New   York   Wheat. 

New    York.    April    14.— VS  heat— May, 
$1.24  Vt:  July.  $L1_7V». 

MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET. 


GRAIN,  STOCKS,  COTTON, 
PROVISIONS 

204  Board  •f  Trad*,  Dulaih 

Itfenbers  New  Y«»k  Stock  Bxehamge 

iMeaHber*  New  V«rU  C-.>tt«m  klaxikaaite 

Amd  All  Ormlm  Kxchamcea. 


OfflcM  Im  MImmeiapolls,  t«.  Pmml 
aad    Wlmjal»«g. 


Chicago.  ApHl  14.— Except  at  the 
immt'dlate  opening,  wheat  trad^-rs  to- 
day seem«*d  to  b>*  di.^poi^fd  to  minimize 
the  seriousness  of  Mexican  and  (German 
difficulties,  and  to  be  guided  by  influ- 
ences that  had  a  more  tangible  bearing 
on  supply  and  demand.  Assertions  that 
the  rainfall  In  Nebraska  was  much 
less  plentiful  than  had  been  supposed 
gave  an  advantage  to  the  bulls,  and 
helped    to    cause    a    rapid    recovery    '"  1  _Fractlonally       lower: 

values.     The  upturn  was  aided  also  by        rr«^i.  j^        ^ 

reports  that  foreigners  were  purchas- 
ing future  deliveries.  Opening  prices, 
which  varied  from  the  same  as  yester- 
day's finish  to  %'S\c  lower,  were  fol- 
low^tl  by  a  decided  advance  all  around. 
Word  that  the  H'llland-American 
line  hid  yielded  to  strikers'  demands 
and  that  efforts  would  he  made  to  re- 
plenish Dutch  stocks  of  wheat  was  a 
bullish  factor.  Later,  though,  appar- 
ently baseless  rumors  In  relation  to 
the  German  ambassador  and  the  call- 
ing of  troops  by  President  Wilson  led 
to  a  sharp  setback  In  prices.  The 
close  was  unsettled,  varying  from  a 
shade  off  to  \c  net  advance,  with  May 
at  11.16 ^fc-ffllCH  and  July  at  11.15. 
Com  swayed  with  wheat.     Lightness 


Minneapolis.  Minn.,  April  14.— Wheat 

the  market 
o|>*?ned  weak  but  regained  most  of  Its 
early  losses  on  unfavorable  weather 
rt^ports  from  some  sections.  In  the 
cash  market,  corn  and  oats  swayed 
with  wheat.     Closing   prices  were  un- 

^'''whe'^t:    Receipts,  241  cars;  compared 
with  73  a  year  ago 


A  Good  Firm  to  Slilp 
Your  Grain  to 

ATWDOD-URSON 

COMPANY,  Inc. 

SoMlal  attantlon  given  to  eaak 
grains.  Ws  »!▼•  all  shipments  our 
personal  attsntloa. 

Dulutli — MlBseapolls 


ANDALL, 
ELIABLE 

MINNEAPOLIS 


Grain  M 


ITCHEa  CO. 
ERCHANTS 


DULUTH 


WINNIPEG  \ 


HiS^^'^Vi^.^^  Toi:^  A'iVt:?;  '^foVeJ: 

'^^u'lroieu^.  'n^    to    111;:    M.*^. 

*^d;"No.n"h:^;d.^",r?i^^-^5^i 

northern.  |l-20Vi®122«,:  to  arrive. 
Sl.lS'aei.Zl'S:  Xo.  2  northern  II.IS-^ 
(irl20^4:  No.  3  wh^at.  $1.12<ff  1.1  <  ^fc. 

Corn.  No.  »  yellow  75  M.  ^7«V«c:  oats. 
No.    S    white.    42«42^4c.      Flax.    »2.08@ 

Flour  10c  lower:  f^ncy.lO  50:  first 
clears.   14.80.     .Shipments.    79,850   bbls. 

Parley,  63® 71c:  rye.  9SS9-lc;  bran. 
$18. 25 1*19.00. 

m — 

Llverpmol    Cirala. 

Liverpool.  April  14.— Wheat— Spot 
No  1  Manlioba,  ISs  5d:  No.  2.  ISs  2d: 
No.  2  red  western  winter.  Us  M;  No. 
1  northern  spring,  ISs.  Com— Spot 
American  mixed  new,  10s  8d. 

—  ■  ^ — — 

Chlrago    LiTestoek.  

Chl<-am>  April  14.— .^ft'-r  m\  aii^«-uiv  of  thnv  wreka 
th"  no  hrtf  reappeareil  t.xlHT.  The  rfamm  for  the  ad- 
w„<T  In  value.i  «*i  »  Hvlv  .1-munJ  fr.)ra  speriUatora 
tn<l  shipper*.  Th*  UmlleU  rvo.luU  of  cattle  w^t.  all 
that  the  tr.».K'  ha.l  n,>,.<l  of.  On  ncfomit  of  hl<h  prir^ 
Imyers   kept    awai    a,H   murh    as   po«U»le    fp>m   Jwep   anfl 

'"hSIs— BeeelijU    17,000;   strong;  5c   to   lOe   ahoee   yea- 

mlx^    |y:>^io»tO;  h.Mvy,  $9.33^10.<*:  fta,h.  |9.35 
69.":  piei,  r^.lO^yS^V  ^  .       ._  ,     . 

raftl.^— R«t1i>u,     1.«W«;    tti-a*r:    natlw    fceef    steei^ 

U*(\fT*,    $0.9O^iS.6l);    c«i»    awl    belfm.     14.10^9.30, 

i-al»es,    $7.2ij«fi  10.25.  •-  n.v  .a  oc. 

lamba,  |7.7:.*ai.80- 

rmttmm    Statlvtlrs. 

Washington.  April  14. — Cotton  mSnu- 
facttners  used  more  raw  cotton  dur- 
ing Blan'h  than  in  any  one  month  be- 
fore  In     the   nation's    history.      Census 


Apart  from  the  «lnc  Issues,  trading 
was  Qulet  In  mining  •  stocks  at  Bos- 
ton today.  At  the  start  those  stocks 
were  weak  but  Ute^  they  rallied 
sharply. 

After  opening  38  cents  up  at  $92.38, 
Butte  ft  Superior  sold  off  to  $91.50  and 
then  It  advanced  to  •  25  cents  above 
yesterday's  close  at  $33^8.  American 
Zinc  opened  $1  off  at  $90.50.  and  sold 
around  the  close  76  cents  up  at  $92.25. 

Calumet  &  Arizona  sold  In  the  late 
Uadlng  25  cents  off  at  $73.60:  Copper 
Range  unchanged  at  $«3.60;  Granby  25 
cents  up  at  $88.26,  ex-dlvldend  $160: 
Greene-Cananea  60  cents  off  at  $46: 
Lake  26  cents  off  at  <1«;  Keweenaw 
a  shade  up  at  $5.87:  North  Butte  25 
cenU  off  at  $27.50,  ^nd  Osceola  60 
cents    off   at    $92.60. 

•  •     •• 
London    metal    marjtet:    Spot    copper 

closed  up  if;  futures  Unchanged;  elec- 
trolytic, up  £1;  tin.  ^ot.  up  178  8d; 
futures,  up  5s:  lead,  ^spot,  up  2s  fid; 
spelter,  spot.  unchangfBdj  futures,  un- 
changed. 

•  •      .*  . 
The   copper  metal  w4 11  sell   up   to  30 

cents  a  pound  within  the  next  few 
weeks  is  now  being  spredlcted  by  au- 
thorities in  the  trade.  A  large  con- 
sumer Is  reported  to  have  bid  up  to  29 
cents  a  pound  yesterday  for  a  round 
lot  of  copper  for  June  delivery.  Spot 
copper  Is  said  to  be  practically  off  the 
market  and  some  of  the  large  com- 
panies are  sold  up  for  a  considerable 
period  ahead.  Copper  for  July  delivery 
Is  selling  at  28  cents  and  the  leading 
producers  are  quoting  27H  cents  for 
the  balance  of  the  year.  Realizing  that 
a  large  shortage  Is  Iftiely  to  develop 
on  account  of  the  enormous  export 
sales  made  recently,  consumers  are  re- 
ported to  be  eager  to  contract  for  any 
delivery  of  copper  they  can  obtain. 

•  •      • 

Closing  quotations  of  Boston  curb 
stocks,  as  reported  by  Paine,  Webber 
&   Co.:  Bid.  Asked. 

Butte  A  Zenith J. . .% 

Bingham   Mines    ......;..   ^ 

Boston    ft   Montana....^.. 

Butte  ft  London  ...,*,»,• 

Big  Ledge   ..••*,. 

Bonemla •*  . . 

Calumet  A  Montana 

Coppermlnea    

Carnegie  Lead  ft  Zinc... 

Chief 

Calumet  ft  Corbln 

Cactus  Cons *»•* 

Denn     

Davis  Daly   . . . 
Hotan  Copper 

First   National    ••••• 

Iron    BIos!>om    .•,^... 

Interstate-Callahan    »*^^t.' 

Jerome  Verde •,».}(>• 

}v eating  •••....••.••.«.... 
Marsh     .•...••••••••. ••j«.» 

Mother  Lode   ,,. .i^a. 

New  Baltic    ...•.«••  al,^!' 

New  Cornelia   /AVS'    *7'5k 

Oneco   IvKl'     V  « 

Onondaga V.V/.     *.?§ 

Stewart  ..,,,..,  ••.•,«•• 
Success     .•...,,•••••♦• ••V 

Sierra     .«»,••••  •si^l* 

San    Antonio    ......  «i'.>  ,1.. 

Tonopah    •  ..J«'.l««  • 

Tonopah  Belmont  ..w»««l 
Tonopah  Extension  V»..* 
Verde  Extension  •  •  •'•  .c . .. 
Warr«B  Der. *.Av» 


Am.  Tel.  ft  Tel 

Am.  Can.,  com 

Am.  Beet  Sugar.    " 

x-div.     V^ 

Am.  Hide  ft  Leather. 

do  pfd   

Am.  Car  Foundry.... 

Am.  Locomotive 

Am.   Lin.,    com 

do    pfd 

Am.    Smelting    

Al.    Gold   Mines   Co . . 

AlUs    Chalmers,    com 

Am.    Sugar    

An.    Tobacco    Co 

Am.    Woolen,    com.... 

Anaconda    Copper     ... 

Atchison    . . 

Bald.    Loc 

B.   ft  O.,  com 

T>        T>        ^p 

Bethieheni   steel,  com. 

Butte    &    Superior    

Cal.    Petroleum,    co.t.. 
Canxdl.in    Paclfl:     .... 

Central    Leather     

Ches.    &    Ohio    

Chino  Copper  Co 

Chi.  Grt   West.,  com.. 

do    pfd •• 

Chi,   Mil.    ft   St.    P 

Col.  Fuel  ft  Iron 

Corn   Pro,  Co 

Crucible   Steel,    com... 

Distillers*  Sec 

Erie 

Erie,  Ist  pfd 

B.   F.  G'rlch  Co.,  com. 

General  Electric 

Great  Northern  pfd — 
Great  Northern  Ore... 

Gug.   Explor.  Co 

Insplr.  Cop.  Co 

Kenn    Copper     

Lackawanna    Steel     . . 

Lehigh    Valley     

Mont.    P.    ft    L.    Co... 

Maxwell    Motor     

Max.    Motor,    2d    pfd.. 

Mex.     Pefm     Co 

Missouri     Pacific     .... 

Miami   Copper    

Nor.   Pacific 

National    Lead 

Nev.  Copper  Co 

Norfolk  ft  Western... 

North    American 

N.  T.  Air  Brake 

N.-T.   Central 

N.  v..  N.  H.  &  N.  H.. 
Pennsylvania    R.    R... 

People's  Gas 

Pits.    Coal.    com.     . . . . 

Pressed  S.  C.  Co 

Ray  Copper  

Reading 

Republic  Steel   

Rock   Island    

Ry.  Ste-'l  Springs  ... 
Southern  Pacific  .... 
Southern  Railway  ... 

Studebaker.  com 

Shattuck    

Tenn.   Copper  Co.    .. . 

Texas  Oil  Co 

Union   Pariflc    

U.   S.   Rubber    

U.  S.  Inds.  Alcohol    Co. 

U.  S.  Steel    

Utah  Copper   

Western    Union    

Westlnghouse    

Western  Maryland   .  . 


128     1127% 


69% 
6S\i 

51 

««% 
73VS 

48% 
97% 
20% 
28  >4 


110%  1110 


85  <4 

102% 

103 
85  V« 
85% 

469 
92% 
2S 

166 
52% 
81 
68% 
12% 
31 
98 
42% 
19% 
90% 
4« 
.36 
60% 
77% 

166 

119% 
41% 
20% 
45% 
65% 
76% 
77 
78 
72% 


128 

69  V4 

68 

»% 
61 

66% 
73 
24% 
48% 
97% 
20  V4 
28% 
110% 
194 
47 

84%     85  U 
102%,  102% 


58% 

67% 
9% 
60% 
64% 
71% 

>    •    a    •    • 

46 

96% 
19% 

27% 


100% 
85 
85% 

460 
91% 
21% 

165 '4 
61% 
80% 
68 
12% 
34% 
92% 
41% 
18% 
86% 
44% 
34 

50% 
75% 


102% 
85% 
86V2 

469 
92% 
22% 

165% 
62% 
60% 
53% 
12  Vi 
34% 
93 
42% 
19% 
»0% 
46 
34% 
60% 
7% 


..11% 


*••••••■••••• 


14 

14 

17 


164%I166 
119%!119% 
41%|   41% 


20% 
44% 

64 

73% 
76% 
77% 
70% 


64%!   63% 


102% 
4% 

37% 
111% 

65% 

17 
121 

66% 
187% 
103 

61% 

67 


99% 
4% 

37% 
110% 

66% 

16% 
120 

66 
135% 
100% 

60 

56% 


20% 

46% 

56% 

76  Va 

76% 

77% 

72 

64% 

101% 

4% 

37% 

111 
66% 
17 

120% 
66% 

137% 

102 
61% 
66% 


Horaeradlsh,  V>  tial.   Jan.  each. 

Navy  Beans,  raftcy.  H.  P..   MliMsMi.   hu 

I'arsnlpa.  cwt  

0.M0N»— 
Ookni,  NUnn..  Bod,  cwt.,  $2.75:  Yellow  cat. 

Ki>anl3h  Oniooa.   crate , 

tfuions.   White,   Cummpr  rrate 

ttnlmii.  Tellow  Teaan,  .Ve«.  crate 

LABBAGK— 

tliim.    Cabbacp,   Fan<7   Bulk,    cwt 

New  Cabbage,  La.,  p«r  crate 

New  Catibace,  lollfomla,  crate 

rorrATM:&— 

Fancy  PutHto^^,   Burbank,  bu 

8»*«t  I'olatoes,  hamper   

NVw  Potatoes,  hamper.  $3.75:  bsia 

Block  Swiss.  Ih  24 

Brick,  half  casp,  lb   

Twina,  Wtacoaatn,  Ih   

Twins,  New  York  State,  lb 

Tuong  Americas,  lb   , 

BlTTKJi— 

JSrSf       IV       •••••••■•■•««*a«*aaa«a*  •••••••■•••••• 

Prints,,  Id  ••■■•■•■•■•■>•••••■•■•••••••••••••• 

Tut),   ib   •.••••••••••••••••• ■ 

First  (Tftniery,  lb  

Proct?9§,  It)   .•••«■••••«••••■•••■••••■•■••■••  ^^ 
vurv,  iM  ■  ■•  •  •  •■■•••••■••••••••••••••■••■■  '^v 

MEATS— 

B<^f.  Batlre  uteer^.  B) ....13% 

Bt^,  iMstern  ateers.  lb.. 

rows,  hwtrhers,  lb  

Camp  coas,  per  lb 

llutton.  per  Ib 

Pork  lolDb,  per  lb  

Ltmb.  per  lb  

Pork  SbOHlden.  per  lb,,. 
Veal,  per  lb  

LIVE  POILTKY— 

Springi.  lb   

Fowls,  heary,  lb 

FowU,  light,  lb 

Oeeite,   lb 

Ducks.   Ib    

PRESSED  POILTRY— 

Spring    

Kowls,   Ugbt   

Fowls,  heavy  

^rkers.  lb 

Ducks,  Ib  

Geese,  lb  

FROOCN  POULTRY^ 

Broilers    

Frlen  

Roasters     

Fowls,  tight  . 
FowU,  medium 
Fowls,  heary  . 
Ducks 

TtirkfTH •••••■••••••a 

E0G8— 

Fre^h  eggs,  doi 

No.  1  tbnothy.  per  ton 

•No.  2  timothy,  per  ton 

No.  3  timothy,  per  ton 

No.  1  mbtert  timothy,  per  ton. 

yo.  2  mixed  timothy,  per  ton. 

No.  3  mixpd  timothy,  per  ton. 

No.  1  prairie,   per  ton 

No.  2  prairie,  per  ton 

No.  3  prtlrle.  per  ton 

No.  1  midland,  per  ton 

No.  2  midland,  per  ton. 


.50 
4.25 

l.ffi 


*••••••• 


.U 


3.00 
2.S0 
2.0O 
1.99 

2.25 
8.00 
2.50 

.95 
2.00 
2.S 

.23 

.20. 

.20 
.21 
.21 

.38 

.r 

.36 
.34 
.80 

.25 

.14 

.18 

.12 

.10 

.K 

.16% 

.18 

.13 

.14 


3.25       2.50  1.75 

2.76       2.00  1.50 

...  12.00       9  00  7.00 

...  10.00       7.50  6.0<1 

...    4.00       2.7*  1.7:> 

...    4.00        ....  8.00 

...    8.25        ....  2.25     . 

...    2.50        ....  1.75 

75         .45  .25 

Muskrati — Wi'rf-oii,in   and   similar:     Large   wrlag.  50e; 
,  laige  aint<-r.  42c;  large  fall,  30c:  MlnsaaoU  and  stmllar. 
Urge   wittU-r,   35c:  large  fall.   25c:  small,    iliimaird  aad 
kiti  at  proportlooate  rilae. 

» 

Real  Estate  Transfers. 

Daniel   W.   Beatt  et  wi  to  Franli  KUnta.   lot  2. 

hik.  36.  Biw^aik 250 

Andrew    UeikkUa    lo    Joiui    Mutioaen,    e%    tt 

«*%   ^    n«»%.    »%   of    mtV    of    sw%,    sec- 

Uos  32.  52-:j5.... 9m 

Lundmark    4c    Frauiwn    Beal    Estate    company    to 

Luiulauirk      4      Frasaan      Uroreo'      cnmtiauy. 

amiUh^lT    69    ft.    lot    11.    blk.    41.    Partial^ 

divisfcm    1 

Saleua   BOli   to   Pra«k   Bcikklla,    •%   af   •»% 

or  se%,  setilon  27,  58-19,  eicept  two  acres..  600 

^bn   Moreoa    to   Henry    Paepe.    wesUrlr   W  ist 

M.  blk.  .31,   KnAoM  division 1 

Henriette  G.   Bunch  et  u.ar  to  P.   T.   Fasdrem. 

toU    19.    20.    Mk.    126,    West    Duluth.    FtfUi 

diUUm    650 

Lake«Mr   L^d   company    to   Utrn   )takl.   lot   15, 

blk.  129.  LmMao  aSdltass 250 

Frank   Thomas   rt   uz   to   LugeiUa   Pagnucno,    lot 

1.  blk.  n.  nwabik 2.100 

Felia    A.    Wagner    et    mar    to    Arcadian    Realty 

compav.  lot  9,  blk.  1.  Colman's  addition 1 

Andrew    Antler.<ou    et    \ix    tu    luiht*  Osuele.    lot 

20.  blk.  3.  First  addltian  t j  Bah! 2.700 

Vircinla    Kainl'*    itealt)'    company    :o    Victor 

Jokenen,    lot   18.    blk.    11.    Falnlew   addition 

to  Virginia   350 

FOOTWEAR  WRl 
SEU  STHl  HIGHER 

Duluth  Factory  Has  Supply 

of  Leather  Sufficient  for 

Fall  Orders. 

Footwear  is  likely  to  sell  at  sub- 
stantially higher  prices  yet  within  tho 
-next  three  months  In  the  opinion  of 
manufacturers.  Ju.^t  how  far  prices 
will  be  advanced  cannot  be  foretold 
authorities  in  the  trade  say. 

"We  were  fortunate  In  having  pro- 
tected ourselves  In  leather  supplies  so 
that  we  are  In  position  to  take  care  of 
our  customers  in  fall  orders."  said  F. 
E.  Church,  manager  of  the  Northern 
Shoe  company  tods}-.  Factories  which 
did  not  succeed  in  covering  themselves 
In  their  leather  supplies  are  In  a  dif- 
ficult position,  as  everytliing  In  the 
way  of  raw  materials  is  still  going  up. 
he  pointed  out. 

Last  week  an  average  advance  of  at 
least  1  cent  a  pound  In  sole  leather 
was  reported,  in  some  Instances  ths 
raise  being-  as  much  as  2  cents.  Since 
March  1.  the  advance  In  sole  leather 
lias  been  from  2  to  6  cents  a  poutul. 

FOURTH  BODY  TAKEN 
FROM  FLOOD  WATERS 

Winona.  Minn..  April  14.  —  (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — While  the  funeral  wsjs 
being  held  here  today  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
Peter  B.  Crogan  and  their  daughter, 
who  were  drowned  when  their  auto- 
mobile was  driven  off  the  bridge  ap- 
proach Into  the  flood  waters  of  th« 
Mississippi  rWer  on  Monday,  ths  body 
of  the  fourth  member  of  the  family. 
Donald,  aged  3.  who  met  death  In  the 
same  accident,  was  recovered  near 
where  the  automobile  left  the  road. 


AWARDS  TO  MATES 

FOR  GOOD  UPKEEP  WORK 


■  •••aa»a 


B«*S*SSSSa 


•  ••••••••••••••••••••••••WW 


••■••••••••••■••••••••• 

••••••••••••••••••••••a 

tasssese*************** 


>••••••••■ 


t  17^ 

I  n 


102%!102%|102% 
26  I  25%l  26 
49%|  48  i  49% 
23%|  23  I  23% 
88  I  81%!  82  V 
49%!  49  I  49% 
17%  17 
87  87 
96%  96  I  96% 
20         19%l   19% 

138%I1S6%'1S8% 
83     I   Sl%l   S3 
61      I   50%l   60% 

190%il88      Il90% 

1S1%!1S0%|131% 
68%l  62%l  63 

166%!151     11661.4 


Awards  to  mates  of  the  Cleveland- 
Cliffs  Iron  company's  fleet  for  care- 
fulness have  just  bt»en  made.  M.  J. 
Brown  of  the  Pontiac  and  W.  B.  War- 
ner of  the  Peter  White  tied  for  first 
place  In  the  Class  A  boats  for  upkeep. 
The  two  prizes  \»'ere  added  together 
and  divide^  making  $60  to  each.  In 
Class  B  boats  A.  J.  Rathburn  of  the 
Andaste  won  first  prize  of  f50  an4 
Christ  Anderson  of  the  Frontenac  sec- 
ond   prize   of   830. 

For  the  best  kept  log  C.  O  Rydholm. 
mate  of  the  steamer  W.  G.  Mather,  w<)n 
the  larger  prize  of  |50  and  Chris  An- 
derson  the  second   prize   of  $25. 

The  award  of  $26  each  for  carr>ing 
the-  personal  Injury  pennant  through 
the  season  went  to  Mates  Rydholm. 
steamer  Mather;  Georges  H.  Niles, 
steamer  J.  R.  Sheadle;  F.  W.  Watson, 
steamer  Michigan;  Brown,  steamer 
Pontlao;  Anderson,  steamf^r  Frontenac; 
Rathburn.  steamer  Anda.Hte;  Warner, 
steamer   Peter  White;    W.   F.   Amsbary. 

steamer  Presque  Isle,  and  D.  J.  Hyslop. 

1:5  0'i'^i4.<»0  I  steamer  Angellne. 
'.'..11.00^12.00  1  J.  H.  Sheadle  told  the  new  men  In 
..  10.00^12.00  :  the  line  that  it  was  more  Important 
..  IS.iiOfi  14.00  j  for  a  master  to  come  through  the  sea- 
..  12.00'?/ 1.^.00  1  gon  with  a  good  average  than  to  make 
•■  oS^'lrtli^i '•'''11'*"'  records  on  single  trips.  Safetr 
"    fiorr    -  (J) '  ^'*^^    particularly    emphasized. 


.20 
.20 

.i:> 

.16 

.16 

.21 
.17 
.21 
.2.-) 
.18 
.18 

.25 
.20 

.» 
.18 
.19 
.20 
.18 
.IS 
.24 


....22    .23 

$14.50©  15.00 
l.-;.00^  14.00 

lo.oo-aii.oo 


fc:te%r::;:::::::.-.:::::::::  fi  §  CANNOT  ENFORCE  THE 

Oat  itrtw,  per  ton   ^  ^''"  '^ '" 


5.50(3  6.00 


88% 
81 

88% 
62% 

30% 


82% 
79% 
88% 
61%{ 
SO     1 


83% 
80% 
88% 

62% 
30% 


t    ■    •    S    •  •    90   •   • 


4.00 

$   4.25 

12.18 

18.00 

.71 

.73 

.82 

.84 

1.68 

1.87 

2. 68 

2.87 

.60 

.70 

2.00 

2.12 

4.60 

4.76 

1.76 

1.87 

.06% 

.08 

2.60 

•    •    •   • 

K.60 

.  .    .   • 

1.6S 

2.00 

2.50 

2.76 

6.60 

6.7S 

2.60 

2.76 

23.60 

24.60 

1.TS 

1.87 

.80 

•  •    •    • 

.24 

.26 

.n 

.83 

2.76 

8.00 

16.00 

16.00 

1.25 

1.50 

2.26 

2.50 

.tc 

.40 

.7t 

.80 

.70 

•  •    a    • 

s.eo 

.   .    •    * 

coo 

6.25 

4.T5 

5.00 

8.12 

8.28 

IS.7S 

21.M 

i.M 

•  *  •  • 

Keww    York     Money. 

\ew  York.  April  14.— Mercantile  paper,  Sfr'SU. 
StwUng.  60day  bills,  4.73;  demand.  4.76^.  ^rabies, 
4  77  11-16  Francs,  demand,  $6.06%:  cables.  Jfl.OS'v 
MvU  demand,  73%;  cables,  73%.  Kronen,  demand, 
l'>tS'  cables  12  40.  Guildpra.  demand.  42%:  cables, 
42%.'  Ure,  demand.  6.47:  cables.  6.46.  Rubles,  de- 
mand.   .30%;    cables,    30*8. 

Bar  sllrer,  61%:  Mexican  dollars,  4S%. 

Ooaeniment  bonds,   «t-«dy:  railroad  «)ond.s    easy. 

Time  loaM.1,  Arm;  60  and  90  days,  2%©3;  three 
months.  3(!i3%.  „ ,        „  . 

ran  money,  firmer:  high.  2%:  low,  1%;  rultni  rate, 
2;  last  loan,  2;  closlnf  Md,  R4:  offered  at  2. 

'  (Ntte— The  cuatomary  way  of  quotlnf  foreign  exchanit 
b  u  follows.  Sterling  quoted  at  so  many  dollars  to  Um 
ponnd:  German  exchange  so  many  cenU  to  four  madu: 
rreneh  and  Italian  exchange  so  many  francs  or  Ure  U 
the  *)llar,  and  Austrian.  Russian  and  ScandlMftan  «i- 
ctumv  quoted  to  many  cents  to  the  unit  of  cunuxv.) 

m 

New   York   Cotton. 

New  York  April  14.— Cotton:  Futures,  steady;  May, 
1L88:    July!    11.39:    October,    12.13;    December.    12.30; 

JaiuMry,  12.34. 

—  • 

London    Money. 

London,  April  14. — Money  was  in 
brisk  demand  and  discount  rates  were 
steady.  The  stock  market  was  steady. 
American  securities  were  affected  by 
the  political  situation  and  closed  dull 
and  easy,  ^ 

THE  PRODUCE  MARKETS. 

Dulnth. 

Fc^Gr^aoT"^''^"'      4«  54  64  80  96  120 

^^rJCT $3.»    13.78    $4.00    $4.00      .... 

Cubss  Grape 

rr^     8.25     8.75     4.00     3.85 

MISCELLA.VXOfS  ntt-'IT— 

Btrawfeenles,  LouisiaBa.  24-plnt.  cases 

Plneasples,  36s,   crate 

CRANBERRIK8— 

Cranberries,   Jerseys,   pK  box. 

Cranterrles,  Evaporated,  36  pkgs,  carton 

08ASGE&-  ^^       176  200ffiO 

nJ.U    .$3.25    $3.50    $3.75    $3.75    $4.00    $4.25 

*^NaSls    .  2.75     8.10     3.25     3.50     3.75  4.00 

riorldas    3.76      ••ii 

Bxtr*  Fancy   Bloodi o.lb 

est  288*.  75c;  324i wn."  -wi'  -^ 

uaio.\»-       .     ^  *70i    3(^  3eo» 

Ei.   fey.  CallfomU.  box $4.75    $4.75 


New  York. 

New  Yw*,  April  14.— Butter— Lower  and  unsettled;  re- 
eelpu,  7,119:  creamer>-  extras,  92  score,  36>;''/36%c; 
creamery,  higher  scoring,  87%'a37%c;  firsts,  35%'g 
36%c:  iecond.s,  35®35%c. 

Efp— Irregular;  receipta.  27,396:  'resh  cathered 
extraa,  23»'^'!fi24c;  regular  packed,  extra  firsts,  22'.4'a 
22%c;  flrsU.  20H'a22i';  sewmds,  19WV»20%';  nearby 
hennery  whites,  line  to  fancy,  ZjiQ'Xc;  nearby  hennery 
browas.  23>2f(24c.  .,         ,  , 

Theese— Irregular;  receipts,  2,10«:  sUte,  held  s-p.'c.ils, 
Igio-;  fresh  si)eclals,  17o;  do  awrafe  mn,  16Vi'Ul»>%<^; 
Hiiconsln,  twins,  held,   18fil«',2C. 
m 

Chicago. 

Chicago,  April  14. — Butter — Steady; 
receipts  8.399  tubs;  creamery  extras. 
36c:  extra  firsts,  34%c;  firsts,  33f  34c; 
seconds,    30(§32c. 

Cheese — Steady:  new  daisies,  l4%(ff 
17%c:  twins,  16%@16%c:  Americans, 
16%ei6%c;  horns,  16%@16%c.  Oc- 
tober daisies,  17%@17%c;  twins.  17% 
@'17%c;  Americas.  18@18%c;  horns, 
18 @ 18c. 

Eggs — Receipts.  32,200  cases;  un- 
changed. .    ^       ,_ 

Potatoes — ^Lower:  receipts,  65  cars, 
Michigan.  Wisconsin,  Minnesota  and 
Dakota  white.  80@90c:  Minnesota  and 
Dakota   Ohlos,    70®  78c. 

Poultry — Alice   unchanged. 

HIDES,  PELTS,  WOOL,  ETC. 


SUNDAY  CLOSING  LAW 

Milwaukee,  Wis.,  April  14. — Thers 
will  be  no  more  Sunday  closing  cases, 
according  to  a  statement  of  District 
Attorney  Zabel  today  following  the  dis- 
agreement of  the  Jur>'  In  the  case  of 
William  Youngbluth,  charged  with  vio- 
lation of  the  Sunday  closing  laws. 

"I  believe  that  this  office  has  tried 
its  best  to  secure  a  conviction  under 
the  Sunday  closing  law,"  said  Mr.  Zabel, 
"but  it  is  apparent  that  public  senti- 
ment Is  against  closing  delicatessen 
stores  on  Sunday." 


lievee  Breaks  Near  Hms«atine. 

Muscatine,  la.,  April  14. — ^A  break 
in  the  levee  protecting  the  Drury 
township  drainage  district  oppcsite 
Muscatine  early  today  caused  a  flood 
of  the  lowlands.  Scores  of  families 
were  forced  to  the  roofs  of  their  homes, 
whlK-   much   livestock   was   drowned. 


No     1    green    salted    cows    and    ateen, 

•II  welghU .- 

No.  1  green  salted  bulls 

Green  salted  and  branded  hides,  flat.... 

No.  1  green  salted  real  calf 

No.  1  green  ulted  long-haired  Ups,  8 

to  25  lbs  

No.  1  green  salted  kip,  15  to  25  Ibe... 

Green  salted  deacons,  each 

Green  salted  hots*  hide*,  each 1,50 

Iiry  Hides — 

Terrltoty  batcheti,  o»«r  15  Iba .M 

Murrain  and  faUca,  omr  15  Iba 16 

Calf,  mrer  6  lbs 34 

Dry  salted  Mdis,  all  wdgbu 17 

Horse  and  mule  bides 1.50 

Tallow  and  Grease — 

No.  1  tallow 07 

No.  2  tallow,  ..•..•..,••■*...•..••.. .     .VW 

Cnvasbed,  %  blood ^ 

Unwashed,  medium.  %  biscd a 

I'nwashed,  coane,  %  Uoad S 

Unwashed,  low,  %  blood 20 

Minnesota.  Dakota.  Wlsconale  and  Iowa. 

RAW  FURS. 


.16% 
.13% 
.14 
.20 

.16% 

.18 
1.15 
4.00 

.28 
.20 
.26 
.20 
5.00 

.08 
.17 
.30 
.28 
.25 
.25 


3.50 

3.25 
6.00 

4.00 
2.75 


Bear   

Bear,  cuii  . 
Beaver  .... 
Badvr  .... 
Q*et  eat  . 
Fisher  .... 
Pox.  sUrer 
Fox,  cross  . 
Fox,  gray  . 
Fox.  red   .. 

Lynx    

Mink,  dark 


■•e*w**«*a 


>■•••»•■•••• 


•••■••«• 


■••••■•a 


••••••••a 


Larr. 

Medium. 

Small. 

$16.00 

$12.00 

$10.00 

7.50 

6.00 

5.00 

10.00 

6.50 

3.50 

2.50 

1.75 

1.25 

.40 

.80 

.25 

25.00 

20.00 

15.00 

500.00 

Kn.oo 

200.00 

25.00 

20.00 

15.00 

2.25 

1.75 

1.25 

.    9.00 

7.50 

6.00 

,  12.50 

9.00 

6.50 

.    4.00 

3.00 

2.25 

WANTED  TO  BUY 


AT  ONCE. 

One   Telephone    Booth.      Must    be 
good  condition.     Call  or  write 

AMERICAN  SECURITY  CO. 

Palladio  Bldg. 
Uromnd  Floor. 


in 


THE     OI>B     LOT     REVIEW — 

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Lots  of  New  York  Stock  Ex- 
change securities.  Issued 
weekly.  $1.00  a  year.  Send 
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way. New  York  City. 


I.  N.  POWER 

BROKER 

STOCKS  AND  BONDS. 
ROOM    *'B."    Pkoemlx    Block. 

Write  for  Reliable  Mining  Informa- 
tion   on  All   Stocks. 
Melrose   1485.  Oramd    148S. 


Harrte    Elected  X:i 

New  York,  April  14.— Edwin  F.  Har- 
ris of  Saratoga  county  was  elected 
chairman  of  the  Democratic  state  com- 
mittee today.  He  succeeded  Wllllara 
Church  Osbom. 


PAINE,  WEBBER  &  CO. 

MEMBERS  NEW   YORK   AND  BOSTON   STOCK 
EXCHANGES.    CHICAGO    BOARD    OF    TRADE. 

HIGH-GRADE  INVESTMENTS 

Corrv«»OBdcaco  I»T»t*d. 


h-***- 


4«iwii  111  a-WH  ij  ' 


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'I 


1 


fP     26 


Friday, 


THE    DULUTH    HERALD, 


April  14,  1916. 


Y 


CONTESTED  DIVORCE 
ACTION  BEING  HEARD 

A.  cont*>8tfd  divorce  action.  In  which 
Mrs.  SHtah  Jane  Polrler  is  sec  king  a 
legal  Bt-paratlon  from  her  husband,  Jo- 
mtrph  Polrler,  on  the  grounds  of  cruelty. 
l8  biing  heard  before  District  Judge 
Cant  today.  The  Polrlers  were  mar- 
ried on  Sept.  7,  1908.  in  this  city.  Mrs. 
iv-irit-r  claims  that  on  many  occasions 
her  hu.fband  lia.s  mistreated  her.  Last 
Augu.ot.  she  say.s.  he  had  her  examined 
In  probate  cuurt  for  her  sanity,  but  the 


court  discharged  her  and  found  her 
husband's  claims  untrue.  Polrler  de- 
nies the  charges  and  blames  his  wife 
j  for  the  domestic  trouble.  There  are 
two  children,  Evel>n,  6.  and  Lo- 
ralnne,   3. 

DAHL  TO  GET  CONTRACT. 

Submits  Lowest  Bid  for  Paving  Fifth 
Avenue  West. 

E.  A.  Dahl  will  be  awarded  the  con- 
tract to  pave  Fifth  avenue  west  from 


17  and  19  East 
Soperfor  Street 


ABRAM'S 


K^  Block  East  of 
Lake  Avenoe 


Tomorrow  the  city-wide  distribution  will  begin.  Stirring 
sale  in  full  swing.  Hundreds  of  beautiful  Spring  Coats,  Suits, 
Dres.ses,  Millinery,  etc.,  for  Easter.  We  can  save  you  from  $10 
to  $12  on  your  Spring  apparel. 

Suits — We  have  hundreds  of 
suits  in  most  every  kind  of  ma- 
terial. We  have  no  room  to 
describe  them.  Come  and  see 
them— $39.50  down  to  $22.50, 
$18.50,  $14.50  ^Q  Qf 

Dresses  —  $15.00  Tafifeta  and 
Crepe  de  Chine  QtfJ  lyff 

Dresses ^i»iu 

In  all  shades  and  the  newest 
styles,  in  misses'  and  women's 
sizes. 

Millinery — Before  buying  your 
Kaster  Hat,  come  and  see  us. 
Why  should  you  pay  the  big 
price  when  you  can  buy  it 
here  at  a  great  saving.  Prices 
ranging  from  $15.00  ^4  QC 
down  to ^J.««F» 

Children's  Coats  for  Easter  are 
now  ready  in  all  the  newest 
styles  and  materials.  Prices 
range  from  $15.00  ^-i  AQ 
down  to ^J.««FO 

Women's  High  Top  Boots  in 
black,  white,  tan,  etc. ;  all  this 
season's  latest.  Why  pay  $5 
and  $6.    Our  special    a^O  Qm 


$6.98 


Coats — Attractive  coats,  much 
under  priced  at  $18.50,  $12.50, 
$10.00.  $8.75 

The  styles  are  up  to  the 
minute,  in  shepherd  checks, 
chinchilla,  poplin,  taffeta,  ga- 
bardine, moire  and  others. 


price  Saturday. 

$5.00  Silk  Waists 
at 


$1.98 


Superior  street  to  the  courthouse  pava- 
ment. 

Bids  opened  this  morning:  by  Secre- 
tary Culver  of  the  works  division  show 
that  Mr.  Dahl  submitted  the  lowest 
proposal  and  at  the  council  meetlngf 
next  Monday  Commissioner  Parrcll  will 
Introduce  a  resolution  awarding  him 
the  contract.  The  street  will  be  paved 
with  sandstone  blocks. 

The  bids  follow:  E.  A.  Dahl, 
14.259.60;  A.  A.  Bodln  &  Son,  $4,389; 
Ekhind-HedberK  &  Co.,  $4,466.30;  D.  H. 
riough  &  Co.,  $6,686.60;  Rogers  &  Mc- 
Lean, $4,419;  Palmer  Construction  com- 
pany, $6,000;  Magnus  Peterson  com- 
pany,  $4,364,  and   J.^  Johnson.   $4,431.60. 

THREElARLOADS 

OFLOeS  SEIZED 

Taken  at  Cusson  for  Not 
Being  Marked  Accord- 
ing to  Law. 

St.  Paul.  Minn..  April  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.) — Three  carloads  of  logs 
were  seized  by  the  state  auditor's  of- 
fice  at   Cusson,    Minn.,    while    on    their 

way  to  the  mills  of  the  Virginia  & 
Hainy  Lake  Lumber  company.  The 
logs  were  not  marked  as  rcQulred  by 
law. 

The  auditor's  men  reported  by  long 
dl.stnnoe  telephone  that  six  Inches  of 
8110W  fell  yesterday  In  Koochiching 
and  Northern  St.  Louis  counties,  en- 
abling lumber  companies  to  accom- 
plUh  some  late  logging. 

CIVIL  WAR  VETS 

OFFER  SERVICES 


SI 


i: 


1 1\EW  SERVICE  I 

I  to  Milwaukee      i 


Commencing  Sunday,  April  16th,  the 

following  schedule  will  be  in  effect  to 

Milivaukee  via  the 


Members  of  Soldiers'  Home 

Write  Patriotic  Letter 

to  Governor. 

St.  Paul,  Minn.,  April  14. —  (Special 
to  The  Herald.) — Civil  war  veteran."^ 
at  the  Minnesota  soldiers'  home  have 
heard   again   the  call   uf  thtir  country. 

Today    Governor    Burnqulst   received 

a     written     offer    signed     by     veterans 

of  '61  to  '66,  offering  their  servU-e 
In  what  they  deemed  to  be  the  ap- 
proaching  hour   of   ne^. 

It  was  a  pathetic  but  none-the-le.ss 
patriotic  communication.  Han<l8  too 
old  to  firmly  grasp  the  pencil  signed 
this    volunteer    call    to    arms. 

Within  twenty-four  hours  the  sign- 
ers set  forth,  they  who  have  been 
living  at  the  state  home,  would  b<- 
ready  to  answer  the  call  of  the  drums. 

Following  Is  their  communication  to 
the    governor: 

"We,  the  undersigned,  old  veteran.« 
of  the  civil  war,  members  of  the  Min- 
nesota soldiers'  home,  feeling  that  th  > 
time  has  arrived  when  we  can  he  of 
use  again  to  our  old  and  glorious 
country.  In  some  useful  capacity,  re- 
lieving the  X)unBer  and  trained  sol- 
diers for  the  field  service  at  the 
front,  again  tender  through  our  gov- 
ernor our  services  to  the  state  or  to 
the  United  States  government  in  any 
capacity    we    can    serve. 

"As  the  fire  of  patriotism  kindles 
In  our  breasts  as  of  yore,  we  know 
and  feel  we  can  do  something  .ind 
there  Is  service  we  can  render,  and 
we  are  only  too  willing  to  undertake 
it  and  trust  that  our  services  will 
be  accepted.  Wo  can  be  ready  In 
twenty-four  hours,  for  Instance,  to  go 
to  the  relief  of  Fort  Snelling  and  let 
the  boys  there  march  out  at  the  tap 
of  the  drum  for  active  service.  lh«  y 
being  relieved  by  the  old  veterans  of 
"61    to    '66." 


1  ELEVEN  OF  CREW 


I  ChiG(paniNorfli\fetemLme  | 


REPORTED  HISSING 


Lr.  Duluth ^  5:55  pm 

Lv.  Superior 6:15/>ni 

Ar,  Milwaukee      •     •    •     .  6:40  am 
Ar.  Chicago 8:30  am 

All-Steel  Sleeping  Cars,  open  sections  and  clrawing  room, 
may  be  occupied  at  Milwaukee  until  8:00  am.  You  travel 
on  the  famous  All-Steel  Chicago  Limited  offering  a 
superb  Observation-Lounging  Car  and  Dining  Car  Service. 

Returning 

Lv.  Chicago 6:00 /)/« 

Lv,  Milwaukee       ....  8:20  pm 

Ar.  Superior 8:03  am 

Ar.  Duluth 8:30  am 


TICKET  OFFICES 

DITLUTH,  302  W.  Superior  Street 
SUPERIOR,  910  Tower  Avenue 


Captain  and    Eleven    Men 

From  British  Stiip  In- 

verlyon  Landed. 

Queenstown,   April  14. — Capt.  Charles- 

ton  and  eleven  men  of  the  British 
flteamshlp  Inverlyon  were  landed  to- 
day and  reported  that  their  vessel  had 
b)>en  sunk  by  a  submarine  on  Tuesday 
afternoon.  One  of  the  members  of  the 
crew  who  was  rescued  Is  an  American, 
William  Loss.  Another  boat  from  the 
Inverlyon  containing  eleven  men  Is 
misslnff. 

DanlMh    Ship    Strike*    Mine. 

London.  April  14. — The  Danish  steam- 
er Dorothea  struck  a  mine  Monday 
and  foundered  Immediately,  says  a 
Lloyds  Amaterdam  dispatch.  The  crew 
was  saved  and  landed  at  Ymuiden.  The 
captain  was  wounded. 


The  only  vessel  named  Dorothea 
mentioned  In  the  Maritime  registers  Is 
the  Danish  bark  Dorothea  of  216  tona. 
She  was  last  reported  at  La  Ruchelle, 
Oct.   19. 


Orlorkhrad  Torpedoed. 

Barcelona,  via  Paris,  April  14. — The 
stt-amer  Malloroa  has  arrived  here 
from  Majorca.  On  the  voyage  she 
picked  up  the  crew  of  the  British 
steamer  Orlockhead,  which  had  been 
torpedoed. 


Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 


The  Orlockhead  was  last  reported  as 
having  sailed  from  the  Clyde  March  19, 
for  Genoa.  She  was  a  steamer  of  1,946 
tons  and  was  built  In  1913.  Her  home 
port  wa3   Belfast. 

o 

Balmacaan  spring  coats,  $9.75.  "3 
Winners"  removal  sale. 


X>.    U.,    4-14-l«. 


That  new  Hat  for 
Easter  awaits  your 

head  at 
The  Columbia 


$1  to  $5. 


CITY  NOTICES. 


CONTRACT  WORlt 
Office     of      CommkM^oner      of      Public 

Works.  ^ 

City  of  Duluth;  M!^n.,  April  14,  1916. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
Commissioner  of  Public  Works,  in  and 
for  the  corporation  of  the  City  of 
Duluth,  Minnesota,  at  his  office  In  the 
City  Hall  In  said  city,  at  11  o'clock, 
A.  M.,  on  the  26th  day  of  April,  A.  D. 
1916,  for  the  Improvement  of  Tenth 
street  In  said  ctty  from  Eighth  ave- 
nue east  to  Ninth  avenue  east,  ac- 
cording to  the  plans  and  specifications 
on  file  In  the  office  of  said  Commis- 
sioner. 

A  certified  check  for  ten  per  cent 
of  the  amount  of  the  bid,  payable  to 
the  order  of  the  Treasurer  of  the  City 
of  Duluth,  must  accompany  each 
proposal. 

The  City  reserves  the  right  to  re- 
ject any  and  all  bids. 

CITY    OF   DULUTH, 

By    W.    H.    BORGEN. 

Clerk. 
JAMES  A.  PARRELU 

Commissioner. 
D.   H.,  April   14  and  16,   1916.    D  1920. 


LEGAL    NOTICES. 


PETITION     FOR     APPOINTMENT     OF 
GUARDIAN  AD  LITEM— 

State  of  Minnesota.  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 
District   Court,    Eleventh   Judicial   Dis- 
trict. 
Adams  Mining  Company, 

Plaintiff, 
vs. 
George  H.  Mann,  Minnie  Max- 
field,  George  B.  Williams, 
Floyd  D.  Williams,  Perly 
Williams.  Fay  WilllHms, 
Minnie  Williams  MacAdam, 
Roy  WllUr^ms,  John  J.  Rupp, 
Christian  Hupp,  Eva  Graham 
Swartwout,  Ella  Graham,  Ella 
Kerr  Stewart,  Cora  Kerr  Stew- 
art, Hannfih  K*err,  Homer  A. 
Day.  William  Kerr,  Emma 
Cooney,  Emma  Tope,  Jennie 
Profrock,  Manson  A.  Kerr, 
LInnte  Miles,  Ada  Black  and 
all  other  persons  unknown 
having  or  claiming  an  Interest 
in  the  property  described  In 
the  complaint   herein. 

Defendants. 
To   the   District   Court   of   the   Eleventh 
Judicial  District  of  the  State  of  Min- 
nesota,  in   and  for  the  County  of  St. 
Louis: 

The  petition  of  the  undersigned, 
Adams  Mining  Company,  the  plaintiff 
in  the  above  entitled  action,  respect- 
fully shows: 

That  the  above  entitled  action  has 
been  commenced,  and  la  now  pending, 
in  said  court,  for  the  purpose  of  parti- 
tioning the  land  described  In  the  com- 
plaint herein;  that  the  above  named 
defendant,  Roy  Williams,  Is  a  proper 
party  defendant  In  said  action,  and  is 
an  Insane  person;  that  said  defendant. 
Hoy  Williams,  ha.i  no  guardian  of  any 
l<ind  within  this  State,  and  Is  not  a 
resident  of  or  within  this  State,  but  Is 
a  resident  of  the  State  of  Michigan, 
and  is,  as  affiant  Is  Informed  and  be- 
lieves, confined  In  the  State  Asylum 
for  the  Insane  In  the  City  of  Pontlac, 
in  said  State. 

That  no  appearance  by  or  on  behalf 
of  said  Insane  party  defendant  has  beon 
made  In  this  action;  that  no  applica- 
tion for  the  appointment  of  a  guardian 
ad  litem  for  him  has  been  made,  to  the 
best  of  deponent's  knowledge  and  be- 
lief; that  summons  In' this  action  has 
been  duly  served  on  said  defendant, 
and  that  more  than  twenty  (20)  days 
have  elapsed  since  the  service  of  the 
summons  upon  the  above  named  de- 
fendant. 

That  on  the  6th  day  of  May,  1916,  at 
9:30  o'clock  in  the  forenoon,  or  as  soon 
thereafter  as  counsel  can  be  heard,  at 
the  Court  House  In  the  City  of  Duluth, 
in  the  County  of  St.  Louis  and  State 
of  Minnesota,  this  application  will  be 
presented  to  the  said  court,  or  to  one 
of  the  Judges  thereof,  for  the  purpose 
of  securing  the  appointment  of  a  guar- 
dian ad  litem  for  aald  insane  defen- 
dant. 

Afflnnt  further  deposes  and  says,  that 
the  subject  of  this  action  Is  real  prop- 
erty In  the  State  of  Minnesota,  and  that 
said  defendant  claims  to  have  an  In- 
terest therein  or  Me»  thereon;  that  the 
plaintiff  asks  to  have  the  same  par- 
titioned according  to  the  respective 
rights  or  Interests  of  the  parties  inter- 
ested  therein;  or  for  the  sale  of  such 
property,  or  a  part  thereof.  If  it  ap- 
pears that  a  partition  cannot  be  had 
without  great  prejudice  to  the  owners. 

Wherefore,  your  petitioner  prays 
that  Arthur  W.  Hunter  of  Duluth. 
Minnesota,  who  is  a  competent  and  re- 
sponsible and  disinterested  person,  be 
appointed  guardian  ad  litem  for  said 
Insane  defendant,  Roy  Williams,  for 
the  purposes  of  the  above  entitled 
action. 

Dated  April  14th,  1916. 

ADAMS  Ml.VING  COMPANY; 
By  CRASSWELLER,  CRASSWELLER 

&  BLU,  Its  Attorneys.    ' 


State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 

Arthur  H.  Crassweller,  being  first 
duly  sworn,  deposes  and  says: 

That  he  is  one  of  the  attorneys  for 
the  applicant  above  named;  that  he  has 
read  the  foregoing  petition  and  knows 
the  contents  thereof;  that  the  same  's 
true,  except  as  to  matters  therein  stated 
on  information  and  belief,  and  as  to 
such  matters  he  believes  It  to  be  true. 

ARTHUR  H.  CRASSWELLER. 

Subscribed   and   sworn    to    b^ore    me 
this  14th  day  of  April,  1916. 
A.  J.  ROTH, 

Notary  Public, 
St.  Louis  County,  Minnesota. 

Mv  commission  expires  June  21,  1920. 
(Notarial  Seal,  St.  Louts  Co.,  Minn.) 
D.  H.,  April   14,  21,  28.   1916. 


ORDER  FOR  HEARING  ON  PETITION 
FOR   ADMINISTRATION— 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 
In    Probate    Court.      In    the    Matter    of 
the    F^state    of    Adeline    Ms^hew,    de- 
cedent. 

The  petition  of  Edward  Mayhew, 
having  been  filed  in  this  Court,  repre- 
senting, among  other  things,  that  Ade- 
line Mayhew,  then  being  a  resident  of 
the  County  of  St.  Louis,  State  of  Min- 
nesota, died  Intestate,  In  the  County 
of  St.  Louis,  State  of  Minnesota,  on  the 
24th  day  of  March,  1916,  leaving  es- 
t«ie  In  the  County  of  St.  Louis,  State 
of  Minnesota,  and  that  said  petitioner 
is  the  son  of  said  decedent  and  pray- 
ing that  letters  of  administration  of 
the  estate  of  said  decedent  be  granted 
to  Mabel  Mayhew.  It  Is  ordered.  That 
said  petition  be  heard  before  this 
Court,  at  the  Probate  Court  Rooms  In 
the  Coifrt  House  In  Duluth,  In  said 
County,  on  Monday,  the  24th  day  of 
April,  1916,  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 
suld  petition  should  not  be  granted. 
Ordered  further.  That  this  order  be 
served  by  publication  In  The  Duluth 
Herald,  according  to  law,  and  tliat  a 
copv  of  this  order  be  served  on  the 
County  Treasurer  of  St.  Louis  County 
not  less  than  ten  days  prior  to  said 
day  of  hearing,  and  that  a  copy  of 
this  order  be  mailed  to  each  heir  of 
decedent  at  least  fourteen  days  before 
said   date   of    hearing. 

Dated  at  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  30th, 
1916. 

By  the  Court, 

S.  W.  GILPIN. 
Attest:  Judge  of  Probate. 

A.  R.  MORT(5N. 

Clerk  of  Probate. 
(Seal,  Probate  Ct.,  St.  Louis  Co.,  Minn.) 
D.   H..   Mch.    SI,  Apr.  7,  14. 

ORDER     TO     EXAMINE     FINAL    AC- 
COUNT— 

State  of  Minnesota, 

County   of   St   Louis. — ss. 
In    Probate    Court.      In    the    Matter    of 
the    Estate   of   Joseph   Sellwood,   De- 
cedent. 

The  petition  of  R.  M.  Sellwood  and 
La  Rue  S.  Mershon  as  representatives 
of  the  above  named  decedent,  together 
with  their  final  account  of  the  admin- 
istration of  said  estate,  having  been 
filed  in  this  Court,  representing,  among 
other  things,  that  they  have  fully  ad- 
ministered said  estate,  and  praying 
that  safd  final  account  of  said  admin- 
istration be  examined,  adjusted  and  al- 
lowed  by  the  Court,  and  that  the  Court 
make  and  enter  (ts  final  decree  of  dis- 
tribution t4  the  rttsiduo  of  the  estate 


FOR  SALE— Fine  level  lot,  60  by  140 
feet,  between  41st  and  42nd  ave.  e. 
on  Gladstone  St.;  water,  gas,  and 
sewer  20  feet  in  on  lot;  price  $760; 
If  Interested  write  P.  L.  Sonneson, 
223  E.  7th  St.,  or  call  Mel.  7831  eve- 
nings. 


FOR  SALE — Snap;  |2,600  cash  will  buy 
a  double  lot,  60x140  feet,  on  Com- 
monwealth ave.,  New  Duluth  business 
section;  all  Improvements;  adjoining 
60  feet  held  at  $3,500.  Axel  Friedman, 
200   Manhattan   bldg. 

FOR  SALE^IOarden  tract,  160  by  140 
feet,  with  water,  gas  and  sewer;  only 
6  blocks  from  Lakeside  school;  |50 
ca.sh,  116  monthly,  no  Interest;  price 
3960.  Greenfield  Realty  Co.,  416  Pro- 
vidence bldg. 

FOR  sale:— Chester  Park  lot,  E.  6th 
St.,  between  13th  and  14th  aves.,  size 
80  by  140  feet;  price  reasonable;  can 
be  sold  on  part  time  If  desired.  In- 
quire  1306  E.  6th  st. 

FOR  SALE — Lot  near  9th  ave.  w,  and 
1st  St.;  sewer  and  water  In;  only  $460; 
100  by  140  corner,  12th  ave.  w.  and  6th 
St.,  only  $660.  W.  W.  Huntley,  26  Lake 
ave.   n. 

FOR  SALE— Big  lots.  Improved,  with 
water,  gas  and  sewer,  near  Lakeside 
school;  $360  each.  $10  cash,  $6  monthly. 
Greenfield  Realty  Co.  416  Providence 
bldg.   

FOR  SALE — Lots  60x140  feet,  good 
garden  tracts,  $276  each,  $6  monthly; 
right  where  people  live.  Greenfield 
Realty  Co.,    416    Providence  bldg. 

FOR  SALE — Lot  14.  block  62,  Gary. 
First  division;  sidewalk,  sewer  and 
water;  cheap  for  cash;  $660.  James 
Adcock,  116 '/4  W.  1st  st. 

FOR  SALB: — Lot,  Colman's  First  addl- 
tlon.  Woodland,  can  be  bought  cheap 
for    quick    sale.    Write   Z    132,    Herald. 

FOR  SALE— $2,000  cash  will  buy  10 
choice  lots,  FIftyflrst  avenue  west.  C. 
F.  W.   Korth,  6020  Roosevelt  st. 


FOR  SALE — City  property  houses  and 
lots;  farms  and  timber  land.  O.  O. 
Olson,  814  Columbia  bldg. 


FOR  SALE— By  owner,  lot,  18th  ave.  e. 
1011   E.   7th  St. 


FOR  RENT— STORES  AND  OFFICES 

•}^  At 

')(-  STOREROOM   AND  FULL  * 

*  BASEMENT.  ■;$, 

*  # 

*  Suitable  for  store,  laundry  or  small  ^ 

*  factory,    126    E.    1st   St.;    very    rea-  *■ 
•jif  sonable    rent.  * 

*  RICHARDSON,   DAY  &  CHEADLE   * 

*  COMPANY,  ^ 
it-                  Exchange  Building.  ■Jg. 

*  * 

*  WILL  RENT ^ 

ii'  Portion  of  office  in  office  building  * 
iSf  at    Superior    st.    and    3rd    ave.    w.;  ^ 

*  very  desirable   and   cheap.     Write  -J^ 

*  Y  112,  Herald.  -x- 

%  * 


FOR    RENT    STORES. 

At  318  W.  1st  St.,  most  central  and 
best  business  location  on  W.  Ist  st.; 
fine  storeroom,  28  by  140.  in  strictly 
fireproof  building;  with  lowest  In- 
surance rate  In  city;  will  decorate  to 
suit;  possession  May  1.  Call  Grand 
or    Mel.    226. 

W.  C.    SHERWOOD  &  CO., 

118    Manhattan    Bldg. 

FOR  RENT— New  store  building.  2908 
W.  3rd  St.;  30  by  70,  suitable  for  dry 
goods  and  millinery;  furniture  or 
general  merchandise;  steam  heat; 
ready  May  1.  Apply  Anderson's  Drug 
Store,    2904   W.    Srd   st. 


FOR  RENT^vAt  119  W.  1st  St.,  store- 
room, 26  by  76  feet;  can  be  divided 
and  rented  to  two  parties  if  neces- 
sary at  $30  per  store;  will  decorate 
to  suit.  W.  S.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118 
Manhattan    bldg. 


FOR  RENT — One  store;  could  be  used 
for  restaurant;  three  living  rooms; 
full  basement  and  icebox;  rent  cheap 
If  taken  at  once.  Write  or  call  Mrs. 
Hanna    Carlson,    Iron    Junction,    Minn. 


FOR  RENT — Floor  space  suitable  for 
storage  or  small  manufacturing  con- 
cern. Call  Lane-Golcz  Printing  Co., 
182  W.  Michigan  st;  Mel.  1604,  Grand 
2869-D. 


of  said  decedent  to  the  persons  en- 
titled  thereto,  and  for  the  discharge 
of  the  representative  and  the  sureties 
on  their  bond.  It  is  ordered,  that 
said  petition  be  heard,  and  said  final 
account  examined,  adjusted  and  al- 
lowed by  the  Court,  at  the  Probate 
Court  Rooma  in  the  Court  House,  in 
the  City  of  Duluth  in  said  County, 
on  Monday,  the  24th  day  of  April, 
1916,  at  ten  o'clock  A.  M.,  and  all  per- 
sons Interested  in  said  hearing  and  in 
said  matter  are  hereby  cited  and  re- 
quired at  said  time  and  place  to  show 
cause,  if  any  there  be,  why  said  peti- 
tion should  not  be  granted.  Ordered 
further,  that  this  order  be  served  by 
publication  In  The  Duluth  Herald,  ac- 
cording to  law. 

Dated    at    Duluth,    Minn..    March    SI, 
1916. 

By  the  Court, 

S.  W.  GILPIN,  Judge  of  Probate. 
Attest:   A.   R.   MORTON, 

Clerk   of  Probate. 
Seal  Probate  Court.  St.  Louis  Co..  Minn. 
D.  H.,   March   31.  April   7,   14.   1916. 


ORDER     TO     EXAMINE     FINAL     AC- 
CO  U  NT- 
State    of    Minnesota, 

County  of  St.  Louis — ss. 
In  Probate  Court.     In  the  Matter  of  the 
Estate   of   Amanda  W.    Foster,    Dece- 
dent. 

The  petition  of  W.  S.  Foster,  as  rep- 
resentative of  the  above  named  dece- 
dent, together  with  his  final  account  of 
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  admin- 
istration be  examined,  adjusted  and  al- 
lowed by  the  Court,  and  that  the  Court 
make  and  enter  Its  final  decree  of  dis- 
tribution 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.  It  is  ordered.  That  said  petition 
be  heard,  and  said  final  account  exam- 
inetl,  adjusted,  and  if  correct,  allowed 
by  the  Court,  at  the  Probate  Court 
Rooms  in  the  Court  House,  In  the  City 
of  Duluth  In  said  County,  on  Monday 
the  8th  day  of  May,  1916.  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 
order  be  served  by  publication  In  The 
Duluth  Herald,  according  to  law. 

Dated  at  Duluth.  Minn..  April  14th, 
1916. 

By  the  Court, 

S.  W.  GILPIN,  Judge  of  Probate. 
Attest:    A.  R.   MORTON, 

Clerk   of  Probate. 
Seal,   Probate   Ct.,   St.   Louis  Co.,   Minn. 
STEARNS  &  HUNTER,  Attorneys. 
D.   H.,  April  14,    21,   28,   1916. 

SUMMONS— 

State     of     Minnesota,     County     of     St. 

Louis — ss. 
District   Court,    Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
Elna    J.    Canary,  Plaintiff, 

vs. 
Bradford    H.    Canary, 

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  on  file  In  the  of- 
fice of  the  Clerk  of  the  above  named 
court,  and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your  an- 
swer to  said  complaint  on  the  sub- 
scriber at  his  office  in  the  Alworth 
Building,  Duluth,  Minnesota,  within 
thirty  (SO)  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you,  exclusive  of 
the  date  of  such  service.  If  you  fall 
to  serve  your  answer  within  the  time 


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 

■»  HORSES— GUARANTEED—  *, 

#  HORSES.  -hr  I 
it-      We  have  everything  In  the  horse  ■^l 

#  line.     Country   bought,    free   from  ■){■] 
i^  the   diseases   of  the   city   markets,  ie 
■^  Always    glad    to    show   stock;     al-  * 

#  ways  give  a  written  guarantee;  *• 
if'  always  give  square  deal.  Part  it 
-^  time  If  desired.  # 

#  TWIN  PORTS  HORSE  MARKET,     » 

#  W.   E.    BARKER.    Prop.,  * 

#  18  First  Avenue  W.  * 


^  DRAFT  AND  DELIVERY  HORSES,    it 

*  FARM  MARES,  GENERAL  it 

*  PURPOSE  HORSES.  # 
it^  All  our  horses  are  Minnesota  it 
it  raised.  Sales  made  on  time  If  de-  it 
•^  sired.  Buy  from  an  established  ^ 
^  dealer.  Also,  we  guarantee  every  it 
it  horse  to  be  as  represented.  it 
it  ZENITH  SALE  STABLE,  # 
it  MOSES  GOLDBERG,  Prop..  # 
it  624  West  First  Street.  « 
it  Two  blocks  from  union  depot.  it 
it-:iit^»i(-iti6-?6^i^i^itititr}6'iti(-itit^}6^6iti6it^)t 


HORSES  HORSES  HORSES 
If  In  the  market  for  horses  be  sure  and 
see  our  offerings.  We  have  from  200 
to  300  head  constantly  on  hand.  Part 
time  given  if  desired.  Barrett  &  Zim- 
merman, Duluth  Horse  Market,  23rd 
ave.  w.  and  Superior  st.  H.  J.  Walt, 
manager. 


FOR  SALE  —  Single  spring  wagon, 
good  condition,  removable  canvas 
top,  suitable  for  light  delivery;  rea- 
sonable price.  Peyton  Paper  Co.  Both 
phones   118. 


FOR  SALE — Brown  mare,  weighs  be- 
tween 1,060  and  1,100;  city  broke,  not 
afraid  of  automobiles  or  sti'^et  cars. 
608  N.  66th  ave.  w.  Call  Cole  801. 


FOR  SALE — Delivery  horses;  sale  and 
boarding  stables;  first-class  service. 
Western  Sales  Stables,  26-28  E.  Ist  st. 
John  Gallop,   proprietor. 


FOR  SALE — Light.  covered,  two- 
seated  surrey;  rubber  tires.  Inquire 
210  First  National  Bank  bldg.,  or  M. 
W.   Turner   &   Co. 


HARNESS  WASHED  and  oiled,  repair 
ing    neatly    and    promptly    done;    give 
us  a  trial.   Herlan  &  Merllng,  105  W 
1st  St.  Mel.  4668. 


FOR  RENT — Barn  room  at  rear  of  412 
W.  3rd  St..  suUable  for  small  shop. 
Apply  to  E.  L.  Palmer,  American  Ex- 
change bank. 


NOTICE  TO  my  friends  and  former 
customers,  I  am  again  In  business  at 
128    E.    Michigan    st.      Frank    Jordan. 


Have  your  harness  washed,  oiled  and 
repaired  at  the  Duluth  Harness  shop; 
reasonable  figures.     26  E.  Ist  st. 


HORSES.  WAGONS  and  harness  for 
sale;  driving  and  draft;  $25  and  up. 
Call  at  once.  218  E.  2nd  st.     • 


FOR  SALE  —  1-horse.  spring  wagon; 
good  condition.  823  N.  69th  ave  w.; 
Cole  398-Y. 


FOR      SALE — Cheap,      email      delivery 
horse.     Duluth  Van  &  Storage   Co. 


_^nwioNjvmE^ 

SITUATION  WANTED— A  young  man 
is  looking  for  a  position  as  cabinet 
or  stalrbullder  foreman;  have  10 
years'  experience  as  stalrbullder  and 
eight  years  as  cabinet  maker;  can 
read  blue  prints  and  draw  details; 
win  furnish  reference.  If  interested 
write  Y  119,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— By  boy  19 
years;  sober  and  trustworthy;  would 
like  to  work  In  a  wholesale  house 
where  there  would  be  chance  for 
advancement;  best  of  references. 
Write    V    133,    Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— A  young  man, 
able  to  speak  English,  Finnish  and 
Swedish  languages,  wants  some  kind 
of    light    work,    preferably    In    men's 

•  furnishing  store.  "21,"  107  Lake  ave. 
s..  Metropole  bldg. 


SITUATION      WANTED— High      school 
graduate    wishes      position    as    book 
keeper  or  stenographer;  general  office 
or  clerical  work;  willing  to  work   for 
advancement.     Write  P  135,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— Young  married 
man  with  ability  as  salesman  or  col- 
lector wishes  engagement  after  April 
20;  first  class  references  and  bonds 
furnished.     Write  113,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— Janitor  and 
watchman,  aged  60;  good  habits,  trust- 
worthy and  reliable  in  every  respect 
if  you  want  a  good  man.  (;all  A.  P. 
Cook,  courthouse. 


SITUATION  WANTED— By  chef,  white 
man,  married,  20  years  experience  in 
hotel  and  restaurant  cooking,  meats 
and  pastry.  R.  C.  Kelly.  307  8»i  at. 
n.,  Fargo,  N.  D. 


SITUATION  WANTED— Man  and  wife 
to  take  charge  of  farm;  experience 
with  horses,  cattle  and  general  farm 
work;  sober.     Write  Y  126,  Herald. 


WANTED — Position  as  cook,  man  and 
wife;  washer  and  launder.  General 
all-around  repairman,  in  hotel  or  In- 
stitution.   Write    K    84,    Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  By  young 
man  in  drug:  store;  desires  to  learn 
druggist  business,  with  small  salary. 
Write   H   138.   Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— By  licensed 
chauffeur,  age  20,  used  to  heavy  work, 
as  truck  driver  or  family  chauffeur. 
Write  Y  134,  Herald. 


^SITUATIOinvyi^^ 

SITUATION  WANTED— Young  grirl 
would  like  place  in  private  family  In 
Weift  Duluth  where  services  could  be 
rendered  to  help  pay  for  room  and 
board;  references  furnished.  Write 
X  136,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  By  college 
graduate,  position  as  lady's  companion 
and  secretary  or  children's  governess; 
best  of  references  given.  Write  H 
123,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED  —  First-class 
lady  stenographer  and  bookkeeper 
open  for  position;  highly  recommend- 
ed: can  take  position  at  once.  Phone 
Mel.    1140. 

SITUATION  WANTED— By  half  or 
whole  day.  washing  and  ironing  or 
cleaning  by  experienced  woman. 
Please  call  or  send  card  to  322  W. 
6th  St. 

SITUATION  WANTED — Practical  nurse 
with  hospital  training  wants  cases; 
confinement       preferred;       reasonable 

r rices;    best   of   references.      Call    Mel. 
132. 

SITUATION  WANTED— By  young  lady 
as  bookkeeper;  3  years'  experience. 
Call  between  9:30  and  12  and  1  to  5:30 
p.   m.   Grand   1626-D;   Mel.    2317. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —  By  young 
woman,  as  dentist's  or  doctor's  assist- 
ant; experienced;  good  reference  fur- 
nished.    T  129,  Herald. 


SITUATION  WANTED— General  light 
office  work  by  a  young  lady;  sten- 
ography and  bookkeeping.  Address 
T  187,  Herald. 

SITUATION  WANTED  —  Experienced 
stenographer  wishes  a  position;  good 
penman.    Inquire  Mel.  8937;  Lin.  609-A. 


SITUATION        WANTED    —     Practical 
nurse      wishes     position.      Mel.      7046 
Mrs.    Aleda    Halverson. 


{SITUATION  WANTED— Work  by  the 
day;  store  and  office  cleaning  a  spe- 
cialty.    Call   Lin.   607-Y. 


SITUATION  WANTEIX-By  experienced 
stenographer.      Call    Cole    287-D. 


aforesaid,  plaintiff  will  apply  to  the 
court  for  the  relief  demanded  In  her 
said  coHiplaint. 

W.  H.  GURNEE. 
Attorney    for    Plaintiff. 
802  Alworth  Building. 
Duluth,    Minn. 
D.   H.,  April  1,  14,  21,    1916. 


^         FIRST  MORTGAGE  LOANS.  * 

*  •» 

*  We  advance  funds  as  needed  on  * 
■i^  first  mortgage  building  loans.  iff 
it  Favorable  terms.  * 
* 

it  W.  M.  PRINDLE  &  CO., 

it  Lonsdale  bldg. 

it  9 

»»  }tiH{iHl^»^it^ii'y{-mtit^it^iM^itil^':^it 

MONEY  TO  LOAN — Any  amount,  any 
time;  quick  service;  building  loans  a 
specialty,  6,  6^4  and  6  per  cent.  Cooley 
&  Underbill,  209-10-11   Exchange  bWg. 

ST.  LOUIS  AND  CARLTON  county  farm 
loans;  can  handle  any  good  farm 
loan;  terms  right;  no  delay.  Northern 
Farm   Loan   Co.,   102    Providence    bldg'.r 

REAL  ESTATE  LOANS — Easy  termsl 
repay  loan  monthly  or  yearly  or  before 
five  years.  Northern  Securities  &  Loan 
association.  Commercial  bldg. 

CASH  ON  HAND  to  loan  on  city  and 
farm  property;  any  amount,  lowest 
rates,  no  delay.  Northern  Title  Co., 
612   First  National  Bank  bldg. 

IF  YOU  OWN  a  lot,  see  us  about  fl- 
nancing  the  building  of  your  home. 
Duluth  Lumber  Co.,  Mel.  112,  Lin.  112. 

Money  at  Lowest   Rates. 

Any  Amount;   No   Delay. 

Little  &   Nolte  Co.,  Exchange  bldg. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN — Loans  made  on 
timber  and  farm  lands.  John  Q.  A« 
Crosby,    806   Palladlo  bldg. 

ANY  AMOUNT  OF  MONEY  for  loans  on 
Improved  farms.  BIckell,  Kyllo  Se 
Co.,  206  Exchange  bldg 

WILL  LOAN  any  part  of  $2,000  on  first 
mortgage  at  6  per  cent.  Address  T 
146.  Herald. 

MONEY  ON  HAND  for  real  estate  lo.uis. 
Stewart   O.    Collins,    710   Torrey    bldg'. 

For  Farm  Loans  and  Farm  Lands.  se« 
Ebert-Walker  Co.,  316-16  Torrey  bldg. 

MONEY  TO  LOAN  on  city  property^ 
De    Calgny    &    Paepe,    609    Provl.lencOk 

MONEY  TO  LOAN— Any  amount.  Ben^ 
Jamln   F.    Schwelger.    1932   W.   Sup.   st. 

CITY  AND  FARM  loans.  William  C\ 
Sargent,    Providence    bldg. 

■^  ■  I.  ■  -.jii  I.  — ^ 

MONEY  TO  LOAN 

it^i6^^'-?6i}it'i6itit^ititititi6'iti6it^iti^i^::-:^i^ 

'it  110  OR  MORE « 

Hr  LOANED  TO  ANYONE  * 

it-  On  Furniture,  Pianos,  etc.,  or  hold-  # 
it  Ing  a  steady  position,  at  rates  f^ 
^  honest  people  can  afford  to  pay.  i^ 
it-         YOU  PAY  10%  PER  YEAR.  i^ 

*  $0.09  Interest  on  $10  for  1  monrli.  -^ 
it  $0.12  Interest  on  $*6  for  1  month.  * 
•^  $0.17  Interest  on  $20  for  I  month.  * 
it  $0.21  Interest  on  S26  for  1  month.  ;* 
■)(■  $0.42  Interest  on  $60  for  1  month.  * 
it  Reasonable  Commission  Charges.  ■» 
^  DULUTH  L<JAN  CO., 
it  307  Columbia  bldg.,  303  W.  Sup.  st. 

*  Hours:  8  a.  m.  to  6  p.  m.;  Wcdnes- 
it        day  and  Saturday  to  8  p.  m. 
^  Mel.  2356;  Grand  1224. 

%itii^:ii^it^^ii-^7t^i^-^^ii^'^'^-^:i-  ^  -f ' 

MONEY   TO   LOAN. 

From  One  to  Ten  Monthly  Payments. 

On  Furniture,  etc.,  at  Lowest  Kates. 

Example  of  Cost  Per  Month: 

$16,  if  paid  In  1   month $0.90 

„       „       „    S  months 0.7Q 

6  months 0.44 

$26,  If  paid  in  1  month I.IQ 

„       „       „    8  months 0.9S 

.,       ,,       „    6   months.  ..•••••.. .    0.80 

$60,  if  paid  In  1  month 2.28 

„       „       „    8  months 1.60 

„      „      „   6  months 1.2o 

Charges  on  other  amounts  In  proportion. 

Even  lower  rates  on  Jewelry,  etc. 

DULUTH  REMEDIAL  LOAN  ASSN. 

401  First  National  Bank  bldg. 

SALARY  AND  CHATTEL  LOANS. 

Don't  you  need  a  little  money? 

We  have  It  to  loan. 

BORROW  $10.00,  RETURN  $0.40  WEEK 

BORROW  $20.00,  RETURN   .80  WEEK 

BORROW  $80.00,  RETURN  1.20  WEEK 

Other   amounts   in   proportion. 

DULUTH  FINANCE  CO., 

801   Palladio   Bldg.  • 

Hours:    8  a.  m.  to  6:30  p.  m.;  Wednesday 
and  Saturday   evenings  until  9   ocloclc. 
Both  phones. 

LOANS     ON     DIAMONDS,      WATCHE^ 
etc.     Example  of  cost:  * 

tlO,   paid   back  one   month 60c 

$15,   paid   back  one  month 76o 

$25    paid   back    one   month. ..  .$1.00 
'      KEYSTONE  LOAN  CO., 
22  W.  Superior  st. 

WE    LOAN    on    all    kinds    of    personal' 
security  at  lowest  rates.     Call   on   ua, 
Duluth  Mortgage  Loan  Co.,  W.  Horkan* 
New  1698-D;  Mel.  8738. 

Loans  on  watches,  diamonds,  guns,  etc, 
Keystone  Loan  Co.,  22  W.  Superior  st. 


MORTGAGES—FARIWAND  CITY 

—MORTGAGES — 


Bank,  Trust  and  Insurance  companies 
Invest  their  money  In  our  farm  mort'< 
gages  because  they  are  safe,  conserva* 
tlve,  and  return  them  6  per  cent  on 
their  money.  Why  not  make  you* 
money  net  you  6  per  cent.  We  hav4 
mortgages  In  small  or  large  amountsi 
'Titles  guaranteed. 


BICKELL-KYLLO  &  CO., 

206  Exchange  bldg.. 
Duluth.    Minn. 


WANTED  TO  BORROW 


—WANTED— LOAN— 


Would  like  to  hear  from  party 
who  has  money  to  loan  on  first 
mortgage  on  high-class  real  es- 
tate security.  Will  pay  good  In- 
terest. Address  A  944,  care  of 
Duluth  Herald. 


WANTED  TO  BORROW — $1  600  on 
dwelling  house  and  store  building 
and  two  lots;  good  location  in  Vir- 
ginia, Minn.,  will  pay  8  per  cent.  S 
years.  Write  T  116.  Herald. 


WANTED  TO  BORROW— $2,000  at  • 
per  cent;  first  mortgage;  security, 
brick  store  building;  value  $6,000. 
Axel  Friedman,  200  Manhattan  bldg-. 
Phone  Mel.  1669,  Grand  904. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— 300  shares  Mutual 
Iron    Mining      company      stock;    quote 
lowest    price.      T    122,    Herald. 
■  ■  ■   ■        ■■■■"  ■  '  T  ■   r 


FOR  SALE — 8-acre  truck  farm;  new- 
house,  full  concrete  basement,  barn, 
chicken  house,  good  well;  half  acre 
in  raspberries,  currants  and  apple 
trees;  cheap  if  taken  at  once.  .lohn 
J.  Rowe,  Mel.  7828-rlng  1,  R.  F.  D.  3, 
Duluth. 


FOR  SALE — Before  May  1,  1  acre,  4- 
room  house,  barn,  good  well;  1  mile 
from  car  line;  owner  leaving  town; 
prtce   $800,   or   offer.   X  128,   Herald. 


FOR  SALE — Acre  tracts  one  mile  from 
street  railway;  $126,  $10  down.  $5 
monthly.  Wahl-Messer.  Lonsdale   hldg-. 


FOH  SALE— Cabin  and  acre,  4  blocks 
fr  >m  English  Inn;  cheap  for  cash  it 
taken   at   once.    Write   Z   111,    H.  raid. 


FOR  SALE — Half  acre  nenr  power  sta- 
tion. Bay  V^lew  Heights.  Charles  Lar- 
sen,  1601  W.  Superior  st. 


JOABD^NDJOOM^FFERE^ 

BOARD  AND  ROOM  OFFERED — A  pri- 
vate family;  $4.60  per  week.  Call  at 
8    S.    61st   ave.    w. 


Modern    furnished     room     with     board. 
Mel.   4184.   218   E.   3rd  st. 


Subscribe  for  The  Herald 


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Friday, 


THE     DULUTH    HERALD. 


April  14,  1915. 


27 


ABNER 


It  Seems  That  Blow  Wpn't  Hurt  Grandfather  After  All ! 


By  Walt  McDougall 


NOT  A  SOUL  IN  SIGHT  BUT 
THAT  STREE-T-CLtAK/ElR    I'M 
SURE  HE  MU5T  HAVE!  SEEIN  BUB  3 
MOV/EY  MOME-V  BL.OWOUT  QP 


•  •■'''•     '     -<» 


"fc*. .  ■  I 


FOR  SALE— HOUSES  |  J[OFL^AIL£HOUSES— ^^ 

:r:r"rCwril2^^'^*^^i^v^^^^^  1714  E.  6TH  ST.— Rrand  nrw.  6  room 

*^Ai:V-':¥'-^-'V*i¥'..-<<:->'****A'*--^-  a:?c-t«^?v-^      modern,  oak  fInlHh.  iRundry.  hot  wat« 

'5i  boat,  stone  foundation.  liJ<:al'"n  "'^'l*'  I  f 
I  b«tt;r:  lot  60x150.  Terms  J 1000  ca.h;  * 
'^i. ;     balance  to  ault.   Mel.  3(16.  J.   U.  o.         j  ^ 


FOR  SALE— MISCELLANEOUS 


FOR  SALE. 


"^t  balh.     two    lavatories. 
"^  boat  and  a  Rood   K!«.rag*; 


'  FOlt 
On«»    of    tho    most    mod*»rn    real-  ■^^ 
d»^n<-.-   i>ropf»rtle.t  In   chol»o   hllUlde  -^ 
dl:*trlrt  of  \V.«t   Duluth.                         '* 
This    home    had    7    largo    rooms.  •»    


SALE — ElKht-room     house,     ar- 


ranged for  two  families,  in  flr8t-cla»»    ^       Rlirht 

condition:    will    "r.", /^^'i,^?-    '^''-A,  *«T  i  *  *»o"*l    * 
^olnjf    farming.      Call    16.i0    h..   <th    Bt.  ^  j^,  j^jg 


*  —TALK  TO  GILTUSON—  ^ 

IF   IT'S  A  ^      * 

SECOND-HAND  PIANO  YOU  ARE  * 

^  LOOKING  FOR.  *■ 

Rlirht  now  he   ha»   eight  ^^c^V-  * 
bartfaina.      Prices    from    |&€  * 


cash  or  easy  terms. 


hot    water  *•    FOU^SALE-A^.n^ap.^on  ea«>;^;erm..  ^-  ,  ^  S.  E.OILTJ^SON.^  Man.^or  ot^ 


* 


^       Lot  is  90  by  l-'6  and  ha.s  a  good  * 
*.  el*»v«tlon   abov»>   th-^  Btreet.  VS- 


ber;  corner  lot  60x140.  |2,«50;   look  up  '  ^ 
at  once.  4402  Cooke  Bt.    R.  R.  Forward-  '  # 


THE    RAUDENHrSIl    &    SONS 
PIANO  CO., 

•^  v.. -„■„         ^        ,    ,  . „      .»  232  WtBt  First  Street. 

^       ran  8   11  thU  for  Jl.OOO  cash  and  *-!  „^„    SALE— By    owner,    modt-rn    2-nat    «  * 

*.  balance  monthly  iKiynT^ntd.     Price  ^      brick    bulldlnir:    6    block.s    from    First    <MM!«^A^VMW?'*****^-«MMt*^«**«^^ 


*  J5.20O 

■*'-  ^ 

■^  Nice    now    home    on 

';^  modern     txcopt     boat; 

^  nvnt,    7    j?ood    rooms. 

"^  cash,    takofl    this. 

#  For  a  f'^w  d»iy.«t  can  offer  a  good  it 


E.    8th    Bt.:  *• 

full     baso-  ■?;•■ 

11.600.    half  A^ 


■      ■ 

I 

. 

I 
I 

■ 


*  modfrn  7-room  house  on  68th  ave.,  ;lf 
•f(.  on  -single  lot.  for  $2,100.  on  very  * 
•^8-  good  t -rma.  * 

It  * 

#  R.  C.  WEDDELU  'X- 
^  308  Ct'ntral  Avenu«.  ^ 
i(:  Open  evenings.  * 

"HfoR    sale— west    END— 


National  bank;' |6, 000.    Address  E  040. 
Herald. 


FOR    SALE— By    owner,       n.-w    9-r«;!,om    ^  —ALUMINUM  SPECIALS—  # 

modern    house   on   Jefferson    st.     CallN^  if. 

Mel.    1481. h^       Here  Is  something  that  Is  a  rec-  ')(■ 

KOR  SALE_6-room  house  and. lot. ,6 Ox  <  ^  Sll'^r^"!:-,  rolrl^.Cfnl'n'um'wi?;  t 

set  consist-  # 

.98.  ^ 

if,  enge'u  a  OLSON.    *  *i 

*.     Ninotoenth  Ave.   W.  and   Pup.   St.     ii. 


Mel.    1481.  \ii.       Here  Is  something  tliat 

Wm  SALE— B-room  house  and  lot.  60x  '  ^  ord-breakor.     Think  of  it 

w .   Bin  ai.  ^  ^  1,^^  jjf  seven  pieces  at  17 


house,     23rd     ave. 
(joment    walks    In; 


6-rooin  house.  23rd  ave.  w. ;  avenue 
paved. 

$2,700. 

Vernon  st. — A  6-room  hou5»c  with 
complete  plumbing:  paved  .ntreet;  lot 
50  by  llO;  price  $1,925.  Get  this — 
for   terms   see   us. 


PERSONAL^ 

#  —TALK  TO  GILIUSON—  -» 

%  IF     YOU     WANT     TO     BUY     ANY  *; 

#  (;RADE  PIANO— PIANO  DIRKC  r  ^ 
£  FROM  THE  MANUF.ACTURLR.  * 
*.  XT  AN  ACTUAL  SAVING  OF  $100.  f 


BE      ATTRACTED      by  *- 
misleading      advertise-  * 


FOR  SALE — Furniture  stock  to  be  tor- 
pedoed quickly.  We  will  positively 
vacate  salesrooms  before  May  1  re- 
gardless of  the  sacrifice;  everything 
must  be  sold,  even  though  the  price 
concession  is  more  than  one-half,  this 
means  you  can  practically  furnish  the 
bedroom,  living  room  and  dining  room 
at  your  own  price;  act  promptly  If 
you  wish  to  participate  In  these  real 
bargains.  Cameron  Furniture  Co., 
2110-2112   W.    Superior   st.  


ADDITIONAL  WANTS 
ONMGES  26  AND  28 

FOR  SALE^^^SiiScELUNEOUS 

(Contlaaed.) 


—LOOK  THIS  UP  QUICK— 


ft-  

#  FOR  SALE. 

*-    ESTABLISHED  FISH  COMPANY. 


it.  With  full  fishing  equipment,  first-  * 
)^  class   steam   tug  with   steam   net-  •» 


iv ,  ■jg.  hauler,  gasoline  launch  and  a  ^ 
*-CJfr  number  of  skiffs,  full  equipment* 
*l*  of      nets,    fish    house      at      Grand  * 

*  !  if.  Marals  and  Isle  Royale.  Will  sac-  * 
*^  rlflce    price    for   quick    acceptance,  if- 

*  if.  Other  buslnads  to  attend  to  Is  rea-  ■^ 
*,7t  Bon  for  soiling.  Equipment  In  good  H 
*■;#  condition  to  start  operations  soon  X- 
^' '  T^  as    lake   opens.      A  good   man   can  i(r 

^  "^-Ij^  easily  clear  60  per  cent  of  his  In-  H 

Vf#-\<^#'r.i#i?'*^#*il^*^!'^Nf**'^***^  *-  vestment  In  one  season.     Address  ^ 

a.  V  »«>,  Herald.  # 


FOR  SALE. 

FINE  USED   KNABE  PIANO. 

Mahogany  casfe'.V  $140.  on  easy 
terms.     Addresi  A  »B0.  Herald. 


DeCAlGNY    &    PAEPE, 

50I>    Providence   blJg. 


—HOUSE  FOR  B.VLE— 


(80-13)  Five-room  brick  house.  Tory 
close  in;  hot  water  heat;  full  base- 
m'^nt;  corner  lot;  here's  a  nice  home 
on  any  terms  you  nuiy  wish;  see  It 
quick. 


bargain;    ^       DON'T 

if.  spacious ^ 

ii.  ments  offering  pianos  at  your  own  # 

*■  price,  and  even  below  cost.  it^ 

-Ai        INVESTIGATE    FIRST,    and    *"«*  i  TALKING    MACHINES— Largest    stock 
ie-  results   will   surely    reimburse  you  *'  • 

H.  for  the  time  you  spend.  Call  and  ^ 
jl^  let  US  refer  you  to  customers  who-* 
if.  have  purchased  Raudenbuah  *• 

a.  pianos    from    us    within    the    past  # 

%  ^***LtHEY   INVESTIGATED— 

*        THE    RAUDENBUSH    &    SONS 


LITTLE   &   NOLTE  Co.. 
Exchange    Building. 


MAKE  US  AN  OFFER— Splendid  3- 
familv  brl.  k  flat,  n-ar  center  of  city; 
fine  condition:  good  frame  house  on 
rear  of  lot  r-^nta  f<ir  $20  per  month. 
You  can  occupy  a  fine  6-room  flat 
and  also  have  an  Income  of  $48  per 
njonth  or  entirp  in'ome  of  $68  per 
month.  Here's  a  .splendid  bargain 
Paved  .street  Price  $6,500.  Make  un  an 
offer.  Little  &  Nulte  Co..  »'^xchange 
bldg.  {I'i-U) 


PIANO  i:o„ 

S.  E.  GILIUSON,  Mgr., 

232  West  First  Street. 


In  the  city.  Complete  outfits  at  special 
prl<'P8.   Be  Bure   you   get   the  New  Co- 
lumbia     C;rafonola:      awarded      three 
*   ..v.."*'iH*""«1-7  1S.\    Krand   prizes   an.l    two   gold   medals   at 
within    the    past  W-j    ^,^^  worlds   fair;   double-faced   records 

(6  cents;  ask  for  catalogues  free;  only 
exclusive  talking  machine  store  In 
Duluth.  largest  stock.  Edmont.  18 
Srd  ave.   w. 


FOR  SALE — Thorotighbred  male  spitz 
dog;  well  trained,  .7  months  old.  Call 
Mel.    8018.  ■ 

FOR  SALE — One  set  of  single  harness, 
cheap  If  taken  at  onoe.    418  6th  ave.  e. 

FOR  SALE — $260  new  piano;  will  take 
$126    cash.      Address   A   941.    Herald. 

FOR  SALE— Furniture,  odds  and  ends 
at    half   price.      Bo.ston    Music    Co. 


FOR   SAI^E — Collapsible   baby   go-Cart, 
good    condition.    T04    E.    4th.    st 


FOR    SALE — Flemish      oak      buffet.     2 
sectional  bookcases.     Mel.  €236. 


FOR  SALE — Child's  white  enamel  crib; 
go-cart.      309    Pittsburgh   ave. 

FOR  SALE— Brown  dicker  baby  buggy; 
price  reasonable.     Mel.  2636. 


FOR    SALE — Golden    oak    dining    room 
table.     1816    E.    2nd  Bt. 

FOR  SALE- 
dence  bliik> 


Cash  register.     508  Frovl- 


BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  Sale— Ce- 
ment plant,  consisting  of  block  ma- 
chine, sewer  pipe  and  brick  machine. 
In  good,  live  city  of  8.000  Inhabitants; 
small  capital  required;  best  of  rea- 
sons for  selling.     Write  U  139,  Herald. 


FOR  RENT — 16-room  hotel  In  a  new 
•awmlll  town  on  the  Iron  Range,  on 
a  1  or  2-year  lease;  furnished  com- 
pletely; rent  very  reasonable.  Also  a 
good  opportunity  here  for  a  barber 
shop.     Write  M  86,  Herald.  


PROFESSIONAL  AND  BUSINESS  GUIDE 


Ready  reference  of  the  professional 
men  and  leading  business  firms.  Her- 
ald readers  who  do  not  find  the  line 
of  business  they  are  seeking  will  con- 
fer a  favor  by  requesting  of  us  the 
information  desired. 


CALL  324  FOR  REPRESENTATION  IN  THIS  COLUMN 


ACCOUmPAJTTS. 

JAMES   S.   MATTESON.   C.    P.    A. 

(Mlnne.<)ota   and   Wisconsin), 

700-701   Alworth   Building. 

Audits,    Estate    and    Commercial 

Accounting   and    Investigations. 

Established    1909. 

Phones:  Mel.  4700;  Grand  71. 


— JOHN    E.    MACGREGOR — 

Public   Accountant   and   Auditor. 

601    Sollwood    Bldg.      Mel.    670. 


rUIfERAL    DIRECTOR. 

OLSKN^X^HOPPENYAnT  2014    W.    Su- 
perior  St.;    Lin.    10:    Mel.    7620. 


DAVID    QUAIL    &    CO, 

Chartered  Accountants, 

Certified    Public   Accountants. 

401    Torrey    Bldg.,     Duluth. 

Highest   referencea.     Inquiries   Invited. 


FOR 

405. 


SALE — Piano,    cbenp.     Call    Mel. 


FOR    S4.\LE— Hunter's     Park    home    by 

owner.        A     very     attractive     S-roopi       __ _ 

Vinine     nractlcallv    new    with    all    con-    _ . . ; 

Seni^nceiorounds  nearly  an  acre  in  PKRSONAIj-LadlesI^Ask    your    drug 


-^^  owner. 


PERSONAL — Everybody  can  furnish 
their  home  right  now  at  one-half  price 
and  less,  from  the  Cameron  Furniture 
Co.  stock,  which  Is  being  closed  out 
at  tremendous  sacrifices.  May  1  we 
close  our  doors;  lease  expires;  you 
must  hurry  or  miss  this  opportunity. 
Salesrooms,    2110-2112   W.  Superior  st. 

PERSONAL. — If  you  want  a  cabin  built 
or  your  acre  tract*  cleared,  any  road 
building  or  any  other  kind  of  con- 
tracting, for  prompt  work  see  Axel 
Hagstrom.  at  811  N.  Lake  ave..  or  call 
Mrl.   4286. 


FOR  SALE — Dining  room  set,  ma- 
hogany dresser,  library  table,  rock- 
er, sanitary  couch,  hook  case.  Domes- 
tic machine,  mattress,  two  large 
rugs  and  dishes.  432  E.  2nd  Bt.  18 
Granville  apartment.  Call  mornings 
or   evenings  after  7   p.    m.   Mel.   6917. 


FOR  SALE — Entire  Btock  of  furniture 
contained  In  salesrooms.  2110-2112 
W.  Superior  st.  will  be  sold  for  60 
per  cent  less  than  retail  price,  to  ca.*h 
buyers.  Thousands  of  pieces.  Just 
what  you  need  to  furnish  the  home 
cosily.      Cameron   Furniture   Co. 


=f= 


AUTOS  AND  MorbRCYCLES 


size  Well  improved  with  shrubbery, 
large  garden,  fnilt  trees,  etc.  Beauti- 
ful view.  Capital  needed  for  other 
piirposes.  Price  $8,600.  tf-rms  to  suit. 
If  Interested  write  A.  M.  C.  Herald. 


FOR  SALE — We  have  some  fine  lots 
at  43rd  ave.  w.  and  4th  st.  Also  some 
at  60th  ave.  e..  only  1  block  from 
car  line.  Will  build  you  a  house  on 
any  of  them  after  ycur  own  plan. 
Will  take  some  cash  and  balance  on 
easy  terms.  Call  evenings.  Cole  271-Y. 
Mel.     7203.     E:rUkson    &    Olson. 

FOR  SALE — West  end  bargain;  don't 
miss  it;  located  in  business  district  at 
2l3t  ave  w. ;  adjoins  fine  new  brick 
building;  lot  50x140  feet;  building  on 
lot  with  Income  of  $86  per  month; 
one  of  the  best  buys  In  the  city;  price 
only  $7,000.  Little  &  Nolte  Co..  Ex- 
change  bldg.    <^7-18) 

FOR  SALE — Lakeside,  bungalow  of 
4  finished  rooms,  room  in  attic  un- 
finished; concrete  foundation,  hot  wa- 
ter heat,  oak  finish,  beamed  ceilings; 
tile  floor  In  kitchen;  large  lot,  fine 
garage;  price  $2,600.  easy  terms. 
Greenfield  Realty  Co..  416  Providence 
bl.ig. 

FOR  SALE — 6-room  modern  home  Just 
completed;  extra  well  built,  very  com- 
plete; splendid  location,  with  view 
over  lake,  will  make  good  proposi- 
tion to  right  party.  Greenfield  R -alty 
Co.,   416   Providence  bhlg. 


FOR  SALE — 7-room  house  1  block 
from  car  line.  Newly  remodeled.  60 
foot  lot  on  Improved  street.  Small 
cash  payment  and  balance  like  rent. 
Will  pay  you  to  look  this  up.  Call 
1722  N.  60th  ave.  e. 

^Yo  Boulevard  w.  7  rooms,  modern, 
half  block  from  Incline.  Walking  dis- 
tance from  business  section.  For  ap- 
pointment to  see  this  house  call 
Douglas  «:.  Moore,  711  Palladio  bldg. 
Melrose    7762.  


gist  for  Chichester  Pill*,  the  Diamond 
Brand,  for  26  years  known  as  best, 
safest,  always  reliable.  Take  no  rHher. 
Chichester  Diamond  Brand  Pills  are 
•old   by  <3iruggi8tB   everywhere. 

PERSONAL — Hotels,  hospitals.  cafes 
and  rooming  houses;  buy  your  linens, 
etc..  of  us  at  lower  prices  than  linen 
houses  In  Chicago  or  New  York.  Du- 
luth Linen  Co..  228  E.  1st  «t.  Let  us 
prove  It. ___^ 

FURNITURE  for  quick  sale;  will  sell 
cheap;  6-room  furniture,  complete  or 
by  the  piece.  Apply  1106  E.  3rd  St.. 
or  call  Mel.  7668.  Call  mornings  be- 
fore noon,   or  after  $. ^^^ 

PERSONAL — Middle-aged  gentleman 
with  good  position  and  some  means 
wishes  to  meet  Scandinavian  lady  of 
middle  age;  object  matrimony.  Write 
p  99.   Herald.       

PERSONAL — Oet  away  from  washing 
troubles  by  sending  your  family  wash 
to  us;  6Hc  per  pound.  Lutes'  laundry. 
808  E.  2nd  st.  Phone  Grand  447.  Mol. 
447.  for  our  wagon. 

For  tired  feet — The  new  violet  rays 
treatment  In  connection  with  foot 
massage  gives  wonderful  relief.  Com- 
fort Beauty  Parlors.  109  Oak  Hall  bldg 

M*ADE-TO-MEASURf.  Shirt*.  Under- 
wear.  Raincoats.  Neckties.  Suit  or 
O'coat,  $18;  Ladles'  Suits,  spring  se- 
lections.    C.  N.  Hamilton,  316  E.  Sup,  st. 

All-around  carpenter  work,  by  day  or 
contract;  reasonable  terms;  also  uphol- 
stering.   26  H  Mesaba  ave.  Gr'd  2861-A. 

Personal — Electric  vacuum  cleaners  for 
r*»nt  $1.80  a  day.  The  Moore  Co..  819 
W.    1st   St.;    Mel.    6860.    Grand    20B4-X. 

RAGTIME  positively  taught  In  20  les- 
sons; free  booklet.  J.  L.  Denver,  S2  W. 
2nd  St.     Open  7  to  10  p.  m.     Mel.  7720. 


FOR  SALE— Very  cheap  to  close  out 
quick,  one  Bond  player  piano,  also 
two  fine  plano.s.  walnut  and  oak 
cases.  If  vou  are  planning  to  purchase 
a  piano,  don't  fall  to  see  these.  ^\  e 
can  arrange  terms.  R.  R.  Forward  A 
Co..   124   E.   Superior  Bt. ^ 

FOR  SALE — Two  tubular  boilers.  78- 
Inch   diameter.    12    feet    long,    allowed 

110  pounds  steam  pressure;  boilers 
are  In  first  class  condition.  Apply 
Duluth-Suporlor  Dredging  Co..  46th 
ave.  w. 

FOR  SALE— Set  Brltannlca  Encyclo- 
p(>dia,  2  bed  couches,  dressers,  hall 
tree  Morris  chair,  sectional  book- 
case and  other  furniture.  Will  sell 
very  reasonable.  Mel.  1671.  711  E. 
1st   St. 


98   PER  CENT  OF  AtTTO  BUYERS 

READ  THE  DULUTH  HERALD. 
The  nam*B  In  which  automobile  li- 
censes are  Issued  have  been  checked 
I  with  The  Duluth  Herald's  subscription 
lists,  and  it  was  found  that  98  out  of 
every  100  people  who  buy  cars  read 
The  Duluth  Herald.  Jf  you  have  a  car 
for  sale  or  trade,  offer  It  In  this  auto- 
mobile column  and  you  will  reach  prac- 
tically every   one  who  will  buy. 

%  WE  HAVE a- 

if.  * 

*  A  flne  Oakland  6-cyllnder  car  that  * 

#  we  can  sell  for  $750;  1914  model.  *■ 
if  Here  you  have  a  chance  to  get  a  # 
if-  big,  easy-riding  car  for  little  if 
if  money;  it's  a  bargain.  Also  have  if 
if  other  bargains  In  used  cars.  It  i^ 
i^  will  pay  you  to  come  and  aee  ua. 


FOR  SALE  —  Beautiful  mahogany 
piano;  fine  condition-  cost  $376  new; 
used  very  little;  $lS6  cash,  or  can 
arrange  terms  to  responsible  party; 
for  Interview  write  Z  140,  Herald. 

FOR  SALE — An  assortment  of  fixtures. 
Including  lighting  fixtures,  suitable 
for  furniture  or  other  store,  will  sell 
cheap.  R.  R.  Forward  A  Co.,  124  E. 
8up.    •t. 

FOR  SALE — Second-hand  woodworking 
machinery,  portable  sawmill,  trans- 
mission appliances,  pipes  for  steam, 
water  and   furnaces.   Duluth  Mach.  Co. 


BUSINESS  CHANCES — For  sale  gro- 
cery etore,  18  blocks  from  end  of 
Woodland  car  line  on  Calvary  road: 
will  consider  renting  building  and 
•elllng  .  stock  and  fixtures.  Grand 
2212^5.  

BUSINESS  CHANCES — For  sale — At  a 
bargain,  old  established  tailoring, 
cleaning  and  repair  shop,  doing  first 
class  business:  reason  for  selling,  oth- 
er  business.     W^rite  F  71,  Herald. 

BUSINESS  CHANCE— For  rent,  at 
Cro.sby,    Minn.,    store.    24    by    40,    and 

Fihotographer'B      gallery      on      second 
loor     Win  rant  together  or  «eparate. 
Write  Box  821.  Crosby,  Minn. 

FOR  SALE— Sy  owner,  small  grocery 
store,  postofflce  In  connection;  located 
near  railroad  shops;  price  reasonable; 
terms  If  desired.  Address  O.  O. 
Woods.    Hopper,    Minn. 

FOR  SALE — A  small  cigar  store;  good 
location,  cheap  rent,  doing  a  good 
business;  owner  going  In  a  larger 
business.     Call  313  E.   5th  st. 

FOR  SALE — Moving  picture  theater. 
Jolng  nice  business;  owner  In  other 
business;  bear  closest  Investigation. 
Write  owner,  K  964,   Herald. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES — Young  man  has 
few  hundred  dollars  to  Invest  In  some 
good  busln'iss  with  services.  Write 
p    127,    Herald. 

FOR  SALE— By  owner.  «mall  rooming 
and  boarding  house  near  d^P<'t;  $600 
win  handle  It;  low  rent.  Write  Z  118, 
Herald. 

BUSINESS  CHANCES— For  «al*— Gro- 
cery, confectionery  and  cigars;  fine 
corner  location,  near  a  park.  Mel. 
7338.  


AWNINGS.    TENTS,    PAOKSAOKS. 

Polrler  Tent  &  Awning  Co.,  418  E.  Sup. 
Both  phones.  Horse  and  wagan  covers. 

AWNINGS — Duluth  Tent  &  Awning  Co., 
1608    W.   Superior  st.    Lin.    1.6.       


ASHES,  CINDERS,  IDTO.,  REMOVED. 

Ashes,    cinders    and    manure    removed. 
Merrill.    Mel.    1390;    Grand    1488-X. 


ARCHITKOTS. 

GIl^SON~&"cARSWr8r3-14  Glencoe 
bldg.      Mel.    5622;    Grand    1785-X. 


UAT   SHOP. 

Any  Panama,  straw  or  soft  hat  cleaned, 

blocker     or     remodeled. 

Special  attention  to  mall 

orders.  New  Grand  Shine 

parlors,   210   W.  Superlori 

St.     Grand  639. 


THE      CENTRAL     HAT 

orks     809    W.    Sup.    St. 

us   Klntonls,    manager. 

ats  cleaned,  reblockod 
,^  i— -— —   -nd    repaired.     We    call 

forand  deliver.  Grand  1697-A. 


Ml'SICAl.   INSTRUMENTS. 


^^^ 


A.  Haakonsen.  dealer 
and  expert  repairing, 
at  J.  W.  Nelsons,  i 
E.   Superior  «t. 


CARDS! 

B^T^Hi^^rCai^d^'^SO^rTlT  Calling  Cards. 
100,   39c.   Kask  Printery.  114   ETSup.  st. 

"cameras  AND  KODAKS. 

—ARCADE    CAMERA   SHOP— 
110  W.  Superior  st.  Amateur  finishing, 
kodaks  and   camera  supplies. 


# 

t 


REO  SALES  COMPANY. 
807  East  8«*perior  St. 
Old  phone.  6184  Mel-. 
New  phone,  828-Y  Grand. 


FOR  SALE — Centrally  located  proper- 
ty, used  for  rooming  house;  6-year 
lease  to  good  parties 


05  Palladio  bldg. 


FOR  SALE — $750  player  piano  for  $286 
and  $376  piano  for  $226.  also  $300 
piano  for  $166,  cash  or  time.  Korby 
Piano   Co..   26   Lake   ave 


n. 


FOR  SALE — For  particular  people,  by 
the  owner,  up-to-date  In  every  par- 
ticular 7-room  modern  house.  ^  111 
be  on  the  premises,  5319  E.  Superior 
St..  until  Wednesday,  April  19. ^ 

FOR  SALE — Newly  built.  6-room  house: 
all  convenience.^,  except  heat,  full 
stone  basement,  also  new  barn;  cheap: 
small  cash  payment,  balance  monthly. 
Call    310    N.    €2nd    ave.    w. 

FOR  SALE — $160  cash  balance  $17.50 
p«r  month,  buys  a  6-room  cottage, 
one  half  block  to  car  line;  good 
barn;  lot  50  by  125.  Price  $900.  225 
Manhattan    bldg. 


MASSAGE — Margaret  Nelson.  218  W. 
Superior  St..  soom  8,  3rd  floor.  Also 
appointments   at    your    home. 


FOR  SALE — By  owner,  4-room  cottage; 
water,  lights,  hardwood  floors;  near 
two  car  linos;  $1,200,  easy  terms.  62l0 
Greene  St.,  West  Duluth.  Phone  Og- 
den    699-D. 

FOR  SALE — Nearly  nevf  modern  7- 
room  house  at  Lakeside;  furnl.^hed  or 
unfurnished;  very  reasonable.  For 
full  particulars  address  X  144,  care 
Herald. 

FOR  SALE^Summer  house  and  lot, 
40  by  200.  at  4l8t  st..  Park  Point.  Con- 
venient  to  boat  club.     Call  Mel.   6476. 


PERSONAL — Carpenter  work  neatly 
done,  either  by  day  or  contract.  John. 
Bon  BroB.,  Grand  2121-Y. 


DOGS  of  all  breeds  bought  and  sold; 
expert  on  dog  diseases;  dogs  boarded. 
Stamp  for  reply.  Gordon  Dale  Kennel*, 
Park    Point.    Mel.    6101. 


FOR  SALE— Cheap,  for  cash,  1»14  B- 
passenger  Paige  touring  car;  36-H.  P., 
completely  equipped,  electric  lights, 
starter  and  horn,  ,  test  grade  Gordon 
seat  covers,  4  good,  tires,  1  extra  tire 
and  rim.  bumper  apd  tire  chains;  run 
11,000  miles;  guaranteed  In  first-class 
condition;  $660,  ca»*»r  only.  R.  *  R. 
garage,    rear    310    W.    2nd    st. 


OXy-ACETYLENE  welding,  cutting 
and  carbon  burning;  ail  work  guaran- 
teed satisfactory  04^  no  cliarge;  98^4 
per  cent  pure  oxygen  to^^nale.  OuWth 
Gas  &  WelJlng  Co,  2110-2112  W. 
Ml(  higan  st.    Mel.  7064;  Lin.  643. 


HAHLty-OAVIflSONi 


New    1916    models. 
.Come       and        see 


them. 


Machines 


FOR  SALE — Grocery  business;  tor  in- 
formation call  Grand  669-D;  Melrose 
3442. 


CARPET   CLEANIXCi   WORKS. 

INTERSTATE   CARPET     Cleaning  Co. 
1908    W.    Michigan    St.      Both    phones. 


WE  RENT  electric  cleaners.  $1  to  $1.50 
per  day.     Anderson  Furniture  Co. 


CUIHNBI'^     SWEEP. 

ED  McCARTY,  chimney  sweep  and 
furnace   cleaning.    Call   Lake.   46-L. 

KNUDSON — Chimney  sweep  and  furnace 
cleaner.  Fire  headquarters.  Mel.  46. 


Gibson  mandolins  and  guitars,  banjos, 
banjo-mandollns,  old  violins,  cello*. 
Ben    B.    Miller,    agent.    Grand    I<a2-X. 

Pianos,  violins,  vlctrolas,  sheet  rausto, 
etc.     Boston   Music   Co. 

'  ■  '  ■»— 

MOTION  PICTURE  EUVIPMKNT. 


MOTION  PICTURE 
outfit*  bought,  sold 
and  exchanged.  Bar- 
gain list  free.  Na- 
tional Equipment  Co., 
.Motlrn  Picture  Ma- 
chines and  yupplies. 
417  W.  Michigan  st., 
Duluth. 


OPTOMETRIST  AND  OPTICIAN. 

CONSULT  A.  L.  NOKBERG.  optomet- 
rist and  optician,  201  Vk  W.  Ist  st.,  for 
economical  buying  and  correct  fitting 
of  glasses;  satisfaction  guarante<:;d. 
We  grind  our  own  lenses.  Estitblislted 
in  business  1891.  Registered  by  ex- 
amination   1901. 

PIANOS  REPAIRED  AND  TUNED^ 

—THE     PIANO    SHOP— 
Timing,  finishing  and  reiyairlng.  Greg- 
ory   4    Krlstensen.    1806    W     Superior 
St.   Melrose   6621;   Lin.    296-X. 


COLD  BATHS. 

DR.  K.  A.  LEE,  D.  C— Good  for  fat 
people;  cure  or  no  pay  for  rheumatism, 
stomach  and  klaney  troubles,  Bath*. 
1826    E.   Superior  st.   Mel.    81.i6. 


WANTEDjrOJUY 

LET  US  SELL 
YOUR  HOUSE  TODAY. 


sold  on  time  payments;  also  bargain*  In 
used  machines,  on  ejisy  terms.  Motor 
Cycle  Repair  shop,  402-404  E.  Sup.  Bt. 


FGR  SALE — Used  gas  ranges,  re-enam- 
eled and  put  In  good  repair  at  very 
easy  figures.  Anderson  Furniture 
Co.,  21st  ave.  w. 


FOR  SALE— New  $36  cabinet  ga* 
range,  never  been  used,  price  rea- 
sonable.   Mel.    7483.   1809   Jefferson   st. 


FOR  SALE — Two  second-hand  piano* 
In  flr*t-class  order.  The  Piano  Shop, 
1806  W.  Superior  st. 


FOR  SALE — Household  furniture,  ex- 
cellent condition;  owner  leaving  city. 
Call  481  E.   2nd  st. 


FOR  Si\X,E— 724  10th  ave.  e.,  6-room 
hou.<<e-  absolutely  modern;  hot  water 
heat;    part   cash.     Phon^   Mel.    3927. 

FOR  SALE— $150  cash  and  $12.60  per 
nionth  buys  a  7-rcf.m  house,  2  blocks 
from  car  line;  this  Is  a  snap.  Price 
$1  260     225    Manhattan    bldg. 


Personal — Effective      scalp      treatment. 
Mrs.  Vogf*  Hair  Shop,  106  W.  Sup.  *t. 

Personal — Combings  and  cut  hair  made 
Into  beautiful  switches.   Knauf  Sisters. 

PERSONAL — Ladles,     have     your     suits 
made   at  Miller  Bros..   406   B.   Sup.   St. 

PERSONALS  —  Wanted     lace  ^J'lrtalns. 
25c  pair:  ladles'   w-ashlngs.     Mel.  7061. 

Corns,    bunions    removed;    electric    foot 
massage  for  tired  feet.  Miss  M.  Kelly. 

DR.   (}ULDE.  Eye,   Ear,  Nose  specialist. 
324  Syndicate  bldg..  Minneapolis. 

WANTED — Piano  for  storage  In  home; 
phone    dining    houre.      Mel.    1685. 

PERSONAL,— Ladles,    get    your   hats   at 
cost.     219  E.  Superior  st. 


PERSONAL — For    »lck    people,    flower*. 
Duluth  Floral  Co.  


FOR  SALE — New  cedar  rowboat*  and 
launches.  Patterson  Boat  Co.,  6th  ave. 
w.  and  Railroad  st. 


FOR  SALE — Player  piano,  with  music, 
at  a  bargain;  easy  payment*.  Edmont. 
18  Srd  ave.  w. 

FOR  SALE — Tilass  floor  display  case. 
6x3;  very  cheap.  Call  Miss  Horrlgan. 
Oak    Hall    bldg. 


FOR  SALE — 1  1918  mAdel  85.  7-passen- 
ger  Studebaker.  riin  3,000  miles.  A-1 
condition;  1  1912  6-BassengeT  Cadillac. 
Just  overhauled  and  In  good  condition. 
Either  of  above  a  "bargain.  Write 
J    962.   Herald.  


GUARANTEED  tire  repairing  at  low 
prices;  our  new  tire*  will  save  you 
money  on  mileage.  Duluth  Auto  Tire 
Repair  Co..  818  E.  Superior  at. 

YOUR  OLD  CASINGS  are  worth  money 
to  you  with  our  system  of  double 
treading;  see  us.  Herlan  &  Merllng, 
106  W.   1st  *t.     Mel.   4«68. 


FOR  sale: — 6-room  house.  $700,  $200 
ca.sh  $10  per  month;  on  Duluth 
Heights.     Call  Mel.   7276. 

FOR  Sale — Cheap,  by  owner,  l-room 
house:  26-foot  lot.  Call  2211  Water 
St.;    Grand    186S-A. 


FOR  SALE— COWS___ 

FOR  SALE — fi.  Goldflne  will  arrive 
with  a  carload  of  the  finest  assort- 
ment of  fresh  milch  cows  Thursday. 
April  13.  Both  phones;  1016  N.  6th 
ave  w.  Take  Incline  car  to  8th  st. 
walk  2  blocks  northeast. 


FOR  SALE — A  carload  of  fresh  milk- 
ers and  close  springers  will  arrive 
for  Levlne  Bro*..  Sunday.  April  16. 
8''1   4th  ave.   e.   (Srand    1268:   Mel.   4702. 


FOR  SALE — Complete"  4-room  outfit 
of  nearly  new  furniture.  826  6th  ave. 
e..    upatalr*. 

FOR  SALE — $650  player  piano;  cash  or 
term*   can    be    arranged.    $245.    Z   867. 

Herald. 

FOR   SALE — Fine   pedigreed    Airedales; 

male  8  months,  female  6  month*.     Mel. 

7838. 

FOR    sale: — Furniture.    6-room    outfit. 

complete;  $360;  big  bargain.     Call  Mel. 

8116. 


FOR  SxVLB — Ford  demountable  •''m*; 
crowti  fender*,  radiator  hoods  and 
shells,  all  kinds  of  tire*.  Johnson 
Auto  Supply.  


BUYERS 
WHO    MEAN    BUSINESS 

are  dally  asking  us  for 
6  •  and  7-room  house*. 
We  can't  meet  the  de- 
mand. Do  you  want  to 
•ell  YOUR  house?  See  u* 
today— NOW. 


DANCING   ACADEMY. 

RYAN'S— The  school  that  makes  good 
dancers.  Classes:  Mondays.  Tuesdays 
and    Thursday.    Call    Mel.    4618. 


COFFIN'S  ACADEMY— Classes  Monday. 
-Tuesday    and    Thursday.  Either  phone. 


FRENCH    DRY    CLEANERS. 


PHONE  1246  and  our  auto  will  call. 
Prompt  attention  to  out-of-town  or- 
ders.    East  End  Dry  Cleaners. 

J  - 

FURNITURE  RE-CO\^RED. 

£;;''i:^^:;;{r5r?S^iruTHOLS"rERiNo. 

334   E.   Superior   st.    Both   phones. 


DULUTH  PIANO  Repair  factory,  alley 
entrance,   812^    W.    let  st.   Mel.    464. 


PAPERS    AND    MAGAZINES    BOUGHT. 

DON'T  THROW  away  old  magaxlnes 
and  newspapers;  we  buy  thetn.  Du- 
luth Paper  Stock  Co.  Grand  2025.  Mel. 
6839. 


PAINTING  AND  PAPERING. 

WHEN  YOU  want  to  paint  and  paper, 
call  Dudley  for  right  prlcea  Mel. 
1390-X;    Grand    1488-X. 


PATENTS. 

All    about    patents:    consultation 
B.  iifo.  Stevens.  716  Fidelity.  Me] 


free. 
3121^ 


C.   L.   RAKOWSKY   A   CO.. 
200    Exchange    bldg. 


WANTED  TO  BUY — Would  like  nice 
modern  home  of  7  or  8  rooms  East. 
In  exchange  for  fine  home  In  Minne- 
apolis, close  to  Lake  Calhoun.  Ad- 
dress W.  F.  Worrell,  Marshall-Wells 
Hardware  Co. 

Wanted  to  Buy — Furniture,  heater*  or 
ranges;  we  pay  liberal  prices,  or  will 
allow  you  to  exchange  for  new  furni- 
ture. Ea«t  End  Furniture  Co..  120  E. 
Superior    *t.      Grand    2013-X. 

WE  PURCHASE  real  estate  contracts, 
mortgages  and  notes.  Northern  Eqult- 
le*    Co..    612    l*t    Nat.    Bank    Bldg. 


FLORIST    AND    NUBSERYMLAN. 

Duluth  Floral  Co    "^holesaffe   retail;  cut 
flowers,    funeral    designs.    12L.\^  •  Hup. 


PLUMBING. 

THEr.<4ANITARY    Plumbing   Co.,    84    W, 
1st    St.,    plumbing    and    heating. 


WINDOW   CLEANING. 

National  Window  Cleaning  Co.,  expert 
In  cleaning  woodwork,  wall  paper, 
marble,  etc.  Our  work  must  prove  sat- 
isfactory; prices  reasonable.   Mel.  680. 


POn  SALEi— 1914  Oakland  S-passenger 
touring  car.  Electric  light.-),  starter; 
cheap  for  cash.  Park  180-X,  evenings 
or    Sunday.  ' 


FOR  SALE— Light  delivery  box.  can 
be  used  on  Ford  roadster.  Price  $6. 
Call   Mel.   2651  or  Grand  12.       


FOR  SALE— 191S  Maxwell  6-passenger 
touring  car.  CaU  Theo.  O.  Furltind 
Auto   Co.   6-7   E.   l8(   at.  


FOR  SALE  —  R-passenger  Hudson; 
cheap  for  quick  sai^.  Call  after  6  p. 
m.      819   W.    3rd   st.^ 


YOUR  CAR  repaired  at  your  garage; 
A-1  mechanics.  H^rj;^on  &  Son,  Mel. 
6642.     2721  Huron ;8t.  ), 

WILL  TRADE  sm«rt' Yarm.  near  city, 
for  auto;  roadstec  preferred.  614 
Manhattan   bldg.  ^   ^^  

FOR    SALE — 6-paM«tger    touring    car. 
Inquire  826    E.    6tli,  .street. 

Bring   your  watch"'<W  Garoij    Bros.,  to 
bave   it  repaired  V|^.   217  W.   lat  st. 


WANTED  TO  BUY— Will  pay  best 
prices  for  second  hand  clothing.  405 
West    Michigan    st    Grand    2361-A. 


Win  buy  partially  Improved  farm. 
State  price,  exact  legal  description,  In 
letter.  Address  A  927.   Herald. 


We  give  cash  or  new  furniture  for  used 
furniture  or  stovee.  Joe  Popkln.  108 
E.    Superior    *t.      Melroae    6498. 


FARM  AND  MINERAL  LANDS 

iroR  SALE 320   acre*   only   five   miles 

^so?th  of  Marble,  where  the  bi«r  mines 
are-  splendid  agricultural  land;  worth 
"day  (m  account  of  location  at  least 
$50  per  acre;  1  must  sell  quickly  as  I 
need  thr money;  no  reserves;  price 
Pf' tSken  at  once.  117.60  per  acre.  Fo*. 
broke,  305  Commerce  bldg.,  St.  Paul, 
Minn.' 


FOR  sale: — Nine  acres  of  fertile  land. 
cl<*ared.  fenced.  In  timothy  and  clover; 
walking  distance  36th  ave.  e.;  some 
buildings,     nice     creek.     Kood     water; 

f2  700  on  easy  terms.    Greenfield  Keai- 
y'Co..  416  Providence  bldg. 

WILL  GIVE  LAND  In  payment  for 
clearing  other  land.  This  land  \s  o" 
main  highway  2  miles  from  Alborn, 
Minn.  Jame*  Larson,  2602  W.  Srd  »t., 
Duluth.  ^ 


^VANTED  TO  BUY — Light  1-horse 
farm  or  lumber  wagon;  must  be  In 
good  shape.    Cole  232-A. ^__ 

WANTED  TO  BUY — 6  or  7-passenger 
second-hand  car;  state  terms.  Ad- 
dress  P  120.  Herald. 

WANTED  TO  BUY — Large  or  amall 
tract  of  land  for  Investment.  Address 
I  69.  Herald.  

WE  PAY  20c  for  heavy  hen*.  Call 
Grand  325;  Mel.  81.  L.  Pollnsky  dc  Co. 


FOR  SALE— Lake  frontage;  1'  yo" 
want  a  piece  of  land  on  nice  lake. 
^1  on  us.  We  have  It.  Northern 
Realty    CO.,    627    Manhattan    bldg. 

RARGAIN— $1,000  cash  buys  80  acres 
.n  «a-14  close  to  Consolidated  mines. 
Northern  Realty  Co..  627  Manhattan 
bldg. --         — 

FOB    SALE— $226     buys     80     acres     of 

*^,od  landTii  St.  Louis  county;  good 
fltTe-    big  bargain.  225  Manhattan  bldg. 


T|MBERJJINM 

TIMBER  and  cut-over  lands  bought: 
mortgage  loans  made.  John  Q.  A. 
Crosby.  805   Palladio  bldg. 

FOR  SALE  —  Several  good  timber 
claims,  cheap.  Northern  Realty  Co., 
527  Manhattan  bldg. 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES, 

Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Rail  Road. 

*«Vermllioa    R— «e 

Dixurk— 


•  7.30«.a 


Arrli*. 


tll30».i 
^5J0p. 


BEAUTIFUL    RIVER    front    farm* 
«„„-i,»wiMnds    on    easy       terms.       I. 


at 

"Mpadowlands    on    easy       terms.       Uno 

?^inrrstrom.  31  E.  Michigan  st.  Duluth. 


FOR 


SALEJ— Fresh      milch      Guernsey 
lOU   E.   6th  St. 


UPHOL^t^iftlNC; 


LITMAN    BUYS   clothing   and    bicycles. 
1811  W.   Superior  st.   Lin.   129-D. 

H    PoDkln   buy*   stoves   and   furniture. 
6rrnr2337-A.    Mel.    1482. 


FOR   SALE— Pretty    white   and    tan    fe- 
male toy  fox  terrier.  17  W.  6th.     Mel. 

4229. I 

FOR    SALE — Sulkey,     good     condition;! 
excellent   spring.     Call    Grand   1799-D. 

FOR  SALE — Iron  bed  with  spring  and 
aniall   kitchen    table.     CaU   Mel.   1777. 

FOR  SALE — I  have  a  dandy  6-month, 
old  female  Airedale;  $5.     Doug.  182-M. 

FOR  SALE  —  Manure:     order*     taken. 
Call    Grand    1964-A.  -„^^,,.,^..,^,.-.iw-.v^^- — 's..-*^>,tt*.  ■■  • >-.^^.»— ^-^-.^-» — —  _^«„«..inD.    rio-vi^ 


WANTED   TO   BUY— Small    light    row- 
boat      Call  Mel.  7964^ 


JEWELRY  REPAIRED 


woR  SALE — 40  acres  half  mile  from 
Munger,  on  road;  $850,  easy  term*  E. 
E    Helland.  101  89th  ave.  w.,  Dulith. 


Knlf«    Rl*w,    Two    Hartwti, 
Tower.    Elr,    Wlnton,    Au-       t  3;i6p.ra. 
nra.     Blir»blk.     Mckinley       tUiOp.a.  1  |10:15p.i 
BfUU,     Knlcttr,     GUbert,  x104S*.b. 

VIrglnU.  I I 

•—Dally       t— P»ily    e«cept   »un<!«f.      $— lUud    trttn 

le«fe«     <UU7     troa     Flfteentk      Antiae     E«it      BUUoa. 

I Mixed  trtlD   •rrive*  d«liy  exc«pt   Sundty   tt  ElfUeoth 

Areou«    EMt    SUUon.      s — Arrlvet    toiuti    Depot    tuniiat 

only. 


DULUTH,  MISSABE  &  NORTHERN 
RAILWAY. 

Offleet     4S«  West  SapeHor  ft, 
Phonea,   SM. 


Ufa**. 


Arr1f«, 


f  IIltMot.   Chl«holm,    Vlrtlnl*.   Zit-  ^ 


FOR  SALE — 40  acres,  mile  from  Mun- 
ger on  main  road.  Owner,  4919  Ram- 
sey'st..  West  Duluth.  


Parties    desiring   to    clear    lands,    write 
F.  J.  Kupplnger.  Davenport,  Iowa. 

I  BUY  and  sell  lands  and  timber.     Geo. 
Rupley.  612  Lyceum  bldg. 


iUBSCIIIE  FOI TBE  HEIMI 


*T4laa^    leth,    Colerainr,    Hharon,    tMoua-    f*  3:2lM 
i        tain    Iron,    SparU,    Blwat-lk.        I 
f       Uibbln«.    dilobolBi,    Sbaroo,        | 
{  VlrdnU,    tnlttlx,  h*1041aa 

I  Coleralnc. 

r         Vlrglnli. 

OiUholia 

HlbUoc 


nM9m\ 


•—Dally. 
««Mk. 


f — Dally    except    Suoday. 


I— Sxcept    bT 


'<Cafe   Observation    Car.    Missabe    Range 
Point*.  Solid  Vestibuled  Train. 


MLITN  ft  NMTNERS  MINSCStTA  tAILWAY. 

t»«.   Ill   LMHtei*   •Ut..    tttotk. 

TrtiM  eomMt   at  Kolfe   Bi?er  daily    (except  Aiodar> 

■Mk  D    *  I.   B.   falM  leartac  Dolutt  at  7.30  a.   a.. 

vrMoc'  at  Duluth  (Kndloa)   at  lg:la  9.  >•     CMMMt  si 

CraBtf  •»«»  <>"■*  UaniM  ■!•*■  "^ '" 


—  "- 


Ml 


;i 


Friday, 


THE  BTILGTILHEBAIiD 


April  14,  1916, 


WANT  AD  RATES  AND 
INFORMATION 

Ic  a  word  per  day;  $1  per  line 
per  month.     Display  classified, 
72c  per  inch  per  day. 
Xo  ad  t«k<'n  for  less  than  15o. 


C»AH<;E  want  ads  win  not  be  run 
lonK«r  than  seven  days  without  re- 
newal order. 

AJA.  «'HAROE  WANT  ADS  ar*  due  and 
itavable  the  «anie  day  first  ln8<  rtlon 
of"i«d  apixarn.  AJl  out-of-town  wa"^ 
•  ds  ar«-  caHli    In  ndvante.     Mall   orders 

ftivtn  prompt  attention.  Address  all 
ettera    to   Want   Ad    Department. 

CKO.^^INfl  HOL'US— Want  ads  to  be 
.•lassifi<-d  proi»»rly  must  be  In  The 
Herald  off i(  e  by  11:30  a.  m.  on  the 
day  ad  Is  to  be  run.  Want  ads  re- 
ceived uft<»  .  lo.shiK  hour  will  b«-  Jn- 
«.  rted  under  the  headinK.  "T*'"  I.ate 
to  t'las.«ify." 

T  i:  l.  K  1-  11  o  N  K  W  ANT  ADS  ar.- 
cliurK'd  ut  the  aame  rat.-  as  cash  ads 
and  collection  will  be  made  at  youi 
home  or  offUe  a.s  >^oou  a.s  posBlble 
thereafter.  This  Is  an  ac«  ommodatK-n 
fcervi..  and  payment  should  be  made 
promptly  when  the  bill  is  presented 
HO  a.s  to  avoid  further  nnnoyame  and 
to  aid  tlie  effkieney  of  our  service. 
AlwHvs  ask  that  your  telephone  ad  be 
repeated  back  to  you  by  the  telephone 
ad  laker  to  make  sure  that  it  has 
hi .  n    «  orreetly    taken. 

BIJ.SI)  AD.**— No  answers  to  blind  ads 
will  be  Kiven  unle.»-8  tl«  ket  is  pre- 
nerited  at  tlm»*  of  request.  Always  save 
tl.ket  showing  k<  y  number  when 
plH<inK  blind  ad.s.  Herald  employes 
are  not  permitted  to  tell  who  any  ad- 
veitiser  is.  Auhwers  to  out-of-town 
blind  ads  will  be  forwarded  without 
extra    cost. 

THF-:  HEftAI.D  desires  to  R»ve  the  best 
service  to  its  reader.i  and  adv«rtls<rs. 
If  you  desire  any  sugKestlon  as  tt. 
tl.e  wording  of  J'our  ad.  call  the  Want 
Atl    l)«  partment. 


HERALD  TELEPHONE 
NUMBERS 

Ask  for  the  Want  Ad  Dept. 

NEWS   DEl'A  HTM  KNT 

EITHER 
LINE 


One    Cent    a    Word    Ravh    Insertion. 
\o  Advertlaeatent   Leaa  Tkan   IS  Oat*. 

WANTED — YounK  man  with  some  ex- 
perience to  run  small  moulder.  Apply 
Endlon  Lumber  Co.,   14th  ave.  e. | 

WANTED- lioys;  muat  be  16.  Grand 
bowling  alleys,  2nd  ave.  w.  and  Supe- 
rior  St. 


WANTED — Presafeeder       for 
press.     Apply  112  W.  Ist  st. 


Ciordon 


WANTED — Good,    strong:   boy    to   work 
In  tin  shop.    406  E.  1st  »t. 

WANTED — .Shoemaker,  repair.     Inquire 
A.  N.  Gordon,  iiary,  Minn.  


WANTED — Bushelman   at  once;   steady 
work.     213  W.  1st  st. ^ 

VVANTED — Tallora.     Louis     Nelson.     30 
B.   Superior  st 

WANTED     —    Cutter. 
Lumber  Co^ 

WANTED — Barber;    steady    work. 
W.   1st   St. 


Apply     Duluth 


123 


HELP  WANTED     FEMALE 


WANTED. 


Experienced  erirls  to  make  mackl- 
naws,  shirts,  pants  and  overalls. 

Apply— 

CUniSTEN.SEN-ME.NDENH.ALL- 

GHAHAM   CO.. 

616  West  First  Street. 


■:(■ 

it 

it- 


it- 
■>!■ 

if 


THE  LRISER  COMPANY 
has  opening:  for 

EXPERIENCED  SALESWOMAN 

for   the    cloak    and    suit   section. 

None  but   those  that  command  a 

big  salary   need  apply. 


a- 
it- 


I 

\ 


LEAHN  TO  CUT  and  make  your  own 
waists  and  dresses.  You  can  easily  do 
It  after  taklnjr  the  course  in  practical 
Inatructlnn.  Ulake  clothes  while  learn- 
ing. Miss  <;ray's  school.  3rd  floor.  Geo. 
A.  Gray  Co.  Also  all  sizes  and  styles 
of  patterns  cut  to  measure. 

WANTED  —  Women  as  Bovernment 
clerks,  $70  month;  Duluth  examina- 
tions comlUR.  Franklin  Institute.  Dept. 

64B  .v.,  Rochester.  N.  Y. 

WANTED — 600  shiny  suits  at  once.  We 
specialize  In  taking  the  shine  out. 
Orpheum  I>ry  Cleaners,  131  E.  Supe- 
rior   .St.      Mel.    1168^ 

WANTED— 600  shiny  suits  at  once.  We 
specialize  in  takliig  the  shine  out. 
Orpheum  Dry  Cleaners,  131  E.  Supe- 
rlor    St.      Mel.    1168. 

WANTED  —  Thoroughly  experienced 
and  willing  becond  girl,  between  25 
and  36  years  old;  family  of  two.  923 
E.    Superior  st^ _ 

WANTED — Middle-aged  lady  as  house- 
keeper for  two  old  people;  good  home. 
Mis.  T.  J.  Watt,  6416  Otsego  bt.  e., 
e  1 1  y^ 

WANTED^— Young  girl  to  assist  with 
housework;  small  family;  one  who  can 
go  home  nights.  Apply  16  S.  17th 
ave.    e. 


One    Cent    a    'Word    Each   Insertion. 
No  AdTertlMentent   Lean  Than   15  Cents. 

TdTrent^flatT 

it  9P 

•^  FOR  RENT.  *| 

a-  We  have  some  desirable  rooms  ■»  i 
^  for  light  housekeeping  or  offices  -^  j 
•;t  at  123  W.  Superior  st.  and  220  W.  *| 
-X-  Superior  St.;  rent  from  |8  to  |16  #1 
it^  per   month.  *l 

it-  * 

it-  ZENITH  REALTY  CO.,  # 

#  4  South  First  Avenue  East.         it- 

#  ^ 
■Ji^}(-:i^iti^ii^t^-;^t-fiititif^i':>^it^tii^^it^}i^it 

—FOR  RENT — 


619    E.    Superior    St.,    6    rooms;    water, 
toilet  and   electric   light,   $14. 


1116  E.  1st  St.:  7  rooms... {36.00 

1901   W.  3rd  St.;  6  rooms $16.00 

126   1st    ave.    w.;    6     roomi< $18.00 

114   Park    ave.;    6    rooms $14.00 

2619  W.  3rd  st.;  6  rooms. $20.00 


STRYKER,  MANLEY  &  PUCK. 

Main  Floor,  Torrey  Building. 

Both  Phones  166. 


FOR  RENT— At  316  W.  4th  St.,  6 
rooms,  bath,  kitchenette  and  large 
wardrobes.  Will  rent  to  one  party  or 
divide  and  rent  to  two.  Building  en- 
tirely remodeled,  as  good  as  new; 
redecorated  throughout;  large,  light 
airy  rooms;  2  fireplaces.  All  con- 
veniences. Including  heat.  W.  C.  Sher- 
wo«>d    &    Co.    118    Manhattan    bldg. 


One    Cent    a    Word   Bach    Insertion. 
Ao  AdverUaement  Le«»  Than   15  Cents. 

'ToOENlTlAfS^^^Xo^^ 

FOR  RENT — 4  rooms;  clean  and  neat; 
924  Garfield  ave;  rent  $10  per  month; 
water  free.  Inquire  Wing's  office, 
Palladio  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 5  large  light  rooms;  gas. 
bath,  and  electric  light;  hardwood 
floors  and  finish;  newly  tinted.  624 
2nd   ave.    w,      ^ 

FOR  RENT— 6 -room  flat;  all  conveni- 
ences; up  to  date.  Call  between  9  and 
12   mornings.     Mel.   3272. 

FOR  RENT — Very  desirable  flat;  large 
rooms;  fireplace;  modern.  1809  Jef- 
ferson  St. 

FOR  RENT— Talk  to  Giliuson  if  you 
want  to  rent  or  buy  a  good   piano. 

FOR  RENT— Five- room  heated  flat. 
1927    W.    3rd    St.;    Mel.    3368. 

FOR  RENT— May  1,  nice  5-room  flat. 
424  9th  ave.  e. 


FOR  RENT— At  118  W.  4th  St.,  front  6- 
room  flat  and  bath;  every  room  light, 
airy  and  In  splendid  condition;  all 
conveniences  except  heat;  $22  per 
month.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &  Co.,  118 
Manhattan  bldg. 


FOR  RENT— May  1.  at  118-120  W.  4th 
St.,  2  3-room  flats;  fine  lake  view 
and  large  covered  porch;  large  rooms. 
Will  decorate  to  suit.  $15.00  per 
month.  W.  C.  Sherwood  &.  Co.,  118 
Manhattan   bldg.  

FOR  RENT — $12.60;  4-room  flat  on  the 
eecond  floor.  2011  W.  Superior  St.; 
hardwood  Hoors.  water,  electric  lights, 
bath  and  toilet;  stove  heat;  very  con- 
venient location.  F.  I.  Salter  Co..  303 
Lonsdale  blag.  ^^^ 


WANTED — Girl  for  general  house- 
work; small  family;  $26  per  month; 
no  washing;  references.  2319  E.  1st  st. 


One    Cent    a    Wi»rd    Kaeh    Insertion, 
flu  Advertisement    l.ens   Tlian   15  Cents. 

WANTED  —  Federal  school  of  com- 
mercial deslening  l.s  offering  few- 
more  special  scholarships  before  May 
1;  asi^istant  registrar  will  be  In  city 
f(,r  few  da\8;  If  you  are  artistically 
liiclin.  d  and  like  to  draw  and  wish  to 
Increase  vour  present  income,  address, 
giving  «>Ke  and  where  employed, 
V   141.  Herald._^ 

WANTED^Dvtiuth  jobber  desires  re- 
liable middle-aged  man  with  clean 
record  as  city  salesman;  prefer  one 
that  has  had  dryKoods  experience; 
ealary  and  commission;  give  full  par- 
tlculars  as  to  experience  and  refer- 
ence 3.      Write    Y    86.    Herald. 

Wanted — Young  man,  be  a  barber. 
We  teach  you  cheapVy  and  thoroughly 
and  fiirnish  tools  free.  Write  or  call 
for  free  catalogue.  R.  Modern  Barber 
college.  20 'i:  E.  Superior  st..  Duluth, 
or  333   E.   7th  St..   St.  Paul.  Minn. 

WA.N'TED — High-grade  liquor  salesman  j    wnifes.     64"*^  Glenwo 

for  Northern   Wisconsin   by   old-estab- 

lishcd  house  carrying  full  line  of  well-    WANTED— Girl    to    ta 


WA.NTED  —  Chambermaid,  Saratoga 
hotel.  614  W.  .Superior  St.;  one  who 
can  room  and  board  at  home. 


WANTED  AT  ONCE— Second  cook.  $66 
per  month  and  board,  but  not  room. 
Oliver  cafe,   Hibbing,   Minn. 


WANTED — Good  girl  for  general 
housework.  Mrs.  I.Awrence,  2108 
Woodland    ave.    Mel.    1589. 


WANTED — Competent  girl   for  general 
housework;      four      In      family;      good 

od  st. 


advertised    and    popular   brands;    state 
age.    nationality,    experience    and    rtf 
erences, 


Addre.«is  Z  125,  Herald. 


WANTED — Men  with  some  cash  capi- 
tal to  travel  with  moving  picture 
«ihows;  get  our  bargain  lists.  National 
Equipment  Co.,  motion  picture  ma- 
chines and  supplies,  417  W.  Michigan 
St..    Duluth.  Minn. 

HWE  HAVE  GOOD  I'OSITIONS — 
For  men  In  clerical,  technical  and  com- 
mercial lines.  Strangers  and  non- 
members  especially  welcome.  Consul- 
t.Ttlon  free.  Y.  M.  C.  A.  Employment 
department. 


WANTED — Salesman  in  Duluth  terrl- 
torv  to  represent  one  of  the  best 
manufacturers  of  advertising  snecial- 
tlt  s  in  America.  Write  the  Novelty 
Advertising    Co..    Coshocton.    Ohio. 

LEAHN  TELE<;RAPHY  —  Railroad, 
commercial  wlr«less.  also  touch  type- 
writing; earn  board  while  learning; 
write  for  free  catalogue.  American 
Telegraph    College,    Minneapolis. 

WANTED — Button's  Business  college, 
Moorhead,  Minn.,  guarantees  a  posi- 
tion after  three  months  at  $60  to  $100 
per  month;  pay  tuition  out  of  your 
salary;  we  pay  railroad  fare. 


take  care  of  chil- 
dren after  school,  to  work  for  board 
and   room.     821  E.   2nd  st. 


One    Cent    a    Word    Bach   InNertlon. 
Na  Advertlaement    LesM   Than   15  Cents. 

>0ULTRYTNDT66f 


1  ■.!.•*.   a^^^^^^^^^i^     -.^^^ 

f:-: 

»    r*. '  i 
"■*.■- 
■^  ■  -. 

-'A  V. 

•<- 

7  .,y:.^JS 

One   Cent   a   IWard    Raoh   Insertion. 
No  AdTertlaenstfn*  LeiiH   Than    15  Cent*. 


WANTED — Experienced  clerk  for  con- 
fectionery store.  Apply  Charles  Stra- 
tlg,  307  W.   Superior  st. 

WANTED — Pressers  on  ladles'  clothes; 
good  wages  East  End  Dry  Cleaners, 
926  E.  Superior  St. 

WANTF^D — At  once,  dishwasher,  one 
who  can  go  home  nights.  Nora  hotel, 
1916  W.  1st  St. 

WANTED — Girl  for  general  house- 
work.  909  E.  4th  St.  Call  mornings 
or   evenings. 


WANTED — First-class  trimmer  for  eve- 
ning work.  Elite  millinery,  819  E. 
Superior  st. 


WANTED — Customers  who  cannot  af- 
ford to  pay  the  large  retail  price  on 
their  piano.    Talk  to  Giliuson  and  get 

rour   piano  direct  from  the  manufac- 
urer. 


■RANTED — Orderly  and  general  utility 
man  for  small  hospital;  one  who  can 
run  auto;  $50  per  month,  board  and 
ro<.m.  N.  D.  Kean,  M.  D.,  Coleralne, 
Minn. 

WANTED — 15  rough  carpenters.  45c 
per  hour;  4  pipefitters,  46c  per  hour; 
1  machinist.  45c  per  hour.  Superior 
Plumbing  Co.,  503  Tower  ave.,  Supe- 
rior. 

WANTED— Railway  mail  clerks;  com- 
mence $75  month;  sample  examina- 
tion questions  free.  Fr.inklln  Instl- 
tute.    Dept.    1860.    Rochester.    N.    Y. 

V'ANTED— Will  give  an  old  man  good 
home,  clothes  and  some  wages  to  do 
chores  around  summer  resort.  Call 
Grand    1999-X. 

Wanted — Man  and  wife  to  work  on 
farm  7  miles  north  of  Hibbing.  Ap- 
ply 30  Washington  ave..  Flat  B. 
Grand    1865-Y. 


WANTED — Competent  girl  for  general 
housework;  no  washing.  1614  E.  Su- 
perior  St. 


WANTED — At  once;  housekeeper  on 
farm.  Address  Box  7,  Deer  River, 
Minn. 

WANTED — Good  girl  for  general 
housework;   3  In  family.  1028  E.  2nd  st. 

WANTED — 2  experienced  girls  to  help 
on    pants   and   vests.      26   Phoenix  blk. 

WANTED — Experienced  cashier-  refer- 
ences   required.      Write   X121.   Herald. 

WANTED — Neat  girl  for  general 
housework;    three  adults.      Lin.   266-D. 

WANTED — ExperiencTtI  waitress  at 
City    restaurant.    608    W.    Superior    st. 

"20 
m. 


WANTED— Girl    between      17      and 
years.     Call   1801  E.   6th  after  7   p. 


WANTED  — Girl     for     general     house- 
work.    31  Kent  road;  Mel.  2556. 


THE  DULLTTH  HERALD  IS  THE  REO- 
OGNIZED    POULTRY    MEDIUM. 
It  Is  the  official  paper  of  the  poultry 
raisers    of    Duluth   and   Northern   Min- 
nesuta. 

CIRCULATION  LARGEST, 
RATES  L<JWEST. 
The  Duluth  Herald  has  the  largest 
citculation  of  any  newspaper  in  Min- 
nesota (outside  the  Twin  Cities).  Its 
charges  for  classified  advertising  are 
less  per  thousand  circulation  than 
those   of  any  other  paper  in  the  state. 

Hatching  eggs  from  celebrated  "Point 
o*  Pines  Farm,"  largest  and  finest 
modern  poultry  plant  in  N.  W^.  Pure- 
bred egg-laying  strains.  S.  C.  W.  Leg- 
horns. 15  eggs,  $1.50;  100.  $6.  S.  C.  R. 
I.  Reds,  16  eggs.  $1.76;  100.  $6.  Write 
now.     Reserve,    WlV 

FOR  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  Du- 
luth Po-ultry  show  prize-winning 
Barred  Plymouth  Rocks,  $1.60  for 
16;  also  eggs  from  fine  atrain  of  S.  C. 
White  I.,eKhorns.  $1.60  for  16;  $6  for 
100,  Marr  &  Son,  918  E.  7th  st.  Duluth. 

FOR  SALE — Eggs  for  hatching — S.  C. 
W.  Leghorns,  $1  setting  of  15  or  $6 
100;  Barred  Plymouth  Rocks.  $1.50  set- 
ting from  good  laying  strain  on  free 
range.  Both  phones.  Mel.  7363;  Grand 
1019-A.     St.  James'  orphanage. 

FOR  SALE — Ilammerbeck's  hardy,  dis- 
ease-resisting, winter-laying,  exhibi- 
tion White  Leghorns;  winners  wher- 
ever shown;  eggs  and  chicks.  Send  for 
price  list.  H.  J.  Hammerbeck,  Supe- 
rlor.  Wis.  

FOR  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  this 
year's  winning  R.  C.  R.  I.  Reds;  Vic- 
land  strain;  year-iound  layers;  $1.60 
for  16,  $4.50  for  60;  order  early.  I.  W. 
Gllleland,  607  S.  71st  ave.  w.  Cole  146-A, 

HATCHING  EGGS  from  my  choice 
S.  C.  White  Leghorns;  no  better  lay- 
ing strain;  16  eggs  $1;  100  eggs  $6. 
Mrs.  T.  J.  Griffith,  4309  London  road, 
Duluth;  Lake.  69-K. 


ADDITiMflL  WANTS 
ON  PAGIES^2^^  27 

£ORJEHT— ROOM^ 

—THE  NEW  ALEXANDRIA— 
A  few  desirable  rooms  now  vacant  at 
special  rates;  well-heated  and  com- 
fortable apartments.  Private  tele- 
phone In  every  room.  Dining  room  in 
In    connection.    822    W.    2nd    st. 

■  — METRUPOLE    HOTEI^- 

101-6  Lake  ave.  a.;  hot  and  cold  run- 
ning water  In  every  room;  steam 
heat  and  other  modern  conveniences; 
rates    $2    per    week    and    up. 


—ELGIN   HOTEL— 
Nicely   furnished,    steam-heated    rooms; 
best    beds    in    the    city;    hot    and    cfilA 
running   water.     Rates   $2   and   up   by 
the  week.     321  W.  Ist  »t. 


MELROSE 

HOTEL. 

318    W. 

2nd 

St..    we 

1    heated. 

pleasant 

rooms 

and 

board 

at    special 

winter 

rales. 

Mtd. 

4301;    Grand    2166 

-X. 

FOR  RE.NT — WJi*h  renting  3  nicely 
furnished  rooms,  bedroom,  dining  room 
and  kitchen,  including  choice  of  gas 
or  coal  range,  you  would  have  to  pay 
126  to  $36  per  month.  Why  not  buy  a 
Kelly  3-room  ©ntflt  for  $69  and  fur- 
nish your  own  rooms.  Pay  for  It 
monthly  on  our  dignified  credit  plan 
and  be  money  aliead.  F.  S.  Kelly 
Furnitirre    Co.,    17-19    W.    Superior   st. 


FOR  RENT — Furnished  room  In  mod- 
ern flat;  private  family;  rent  rea- 
sonable to  responsible  lady;  central. 
Call  Mel.  6685,  or  Grand  2409-A. 


WANTED — Scandinavian    girl    for   gen- 
eral housework.     2231   W.   4th  st. 


WANffED — Girl  for  general  housework. 
No  children.     412  N.  15th  ave.  e. 

WANTED — Glri  for  general  housework 
616  W.  8rd  st.     Frank  Mucllla. 

WANTED— Girls    at    Somers*    Employ- 
ment  office.  13  E.  Superior  st. 

WANTED— Good       girl       for      general 
housework.     318    10th    ave.   e. 

WANTED— Young    girl    to    assist    with 
housework.     1603  E.  4th  st. 

WANTED — Competent   girl    for   general 
housework.     1431   E.   3rd. 


WANTED — Man  desirous  of  connecting 
with  traffic  department;  correspon- 
dence confidential.     V  149.  Herald. 


WANTED — Machinists  and  molders. 
No  labor  troubles.  Apply  Lake  Shore 
Engine  works,  Marquette.  Mich. 

WANTED — Young  man  of  high  school 
education  to  learn  optical  business. 
W.    H.    Klndy,    29   W.    Superior  st. 

WANT1:d — Reliable  man  as  porter; 
must  bring  good  reference;  steady 
work,      .\pply    at    Fretmuths. 

WANTED — First-class  pants  and  vest 
maker;  steady  work.  Morrison's  tailor 
shop,  20  5th  ave.  w. 

WANTED — At  once.  2  first-class  coat- 
makers.  also  a  young  bushelman.  322 
W.    .Superior  st. 

WANTED — Coat  makers,  also  trouser 
and  vestmaker.  Hultgren  &  Bowden 
Co..   Wolvln  bldg. 

W^ANTED — IM'essers  on  men's  clothes. 
Apply  East  End  Dry  Cleaners,  926  E. 
Superior  St. 

WANTED — Pants  and  vest  maker  at 
once.  David  Redeen,  tailor,  Buhl, 
Minn. 

WANTED  —  Elevator  operator  with 
license.  Apply  to  engineer,  Christie 
bldg. 

WANTED— Cash  paid  for  diamonds. 
Watches   repaired,   $1,  5   S.  6th  ave.   w. 

WANTED — Delivery  boy  for  grocery 
store.      Write   or  phone   Douglas  41. 

WANTED — At  once,  two  coatmakers. 
Dl  Santo  &   Howe,   410  W.  Ist  st. 

WANTED — Man  and  wife  to  work  on 
farm.     Apply  1926  W,   1st  st. 


WANTED— Girl      for 
Mars    &    Pantaze. 


dishwasher      at 


WANTED— Girl  to  .help  in  kitchen.  2631 
W.   Superior  st. 

WANTED — Experienced   cook.     1306    E. 
2nd    St. 


Park  &  Pollard's  poultry  feeds 
are  the  best.  Scratch  feed,  egg 
jnash,  growing  feed,  etc. ;  wheat 
corn,  etc.  Get  price  list.  Tess- 
man  Bros.  Co.,  26-40   E.   Mich.  st. 


FOR  SALE — Hatching  eggs  from  high- 
class  Barred  Plymouth  Rocks,  White 
Wyandottes,  R.  C.  Black  Mlnorcas, 
White  Leghorns,  Anconas  and  turkeys. 
J.    T.    Mlchaud,    Lake.    298-L:    Park    4. 

FOR  SALE— Eggs  for  hatching;  S.  C. 
White  Leghorns.  Young  strain,  $1.25 
per  16.  Also  good  as  new  Old  Trusty 
incubator.  H.  F.  BJorlin.  2206  W.  1st 
St.     Both  phones. 

FOR  SALE — White  Rock  eggs,  Flshel 
famous  strain.  No.  1  pen,  $1.60.  15; 
No.  2  pen,  $2.  16.  Herbert  J.  Prout, 
Ironwood,    Mich. 

FOR  SALE— S.  C.  Rhode  Island  Red 
hatching  eggs.  S.  E.  Patterson,  4628 
Regent   st.     Phone   280-L  Lake. 


FOR  RENT — 2  unfurnished   rooms    for 

light    housekeeping;     also     room     and 

board;    all    conveniences.    707    W.    2nd 

St.    Mel.    3991. 

NOTICE — Save  money  on  buying  linens, 
bedding,  etc..  We  sell  at  wholesale; 
get  our  prices.  J.  G.  Valentine  Co.,  8 
E.  1st  St. 


FOR  RENT — Finest  7-room  modern  flat 
in  city;  all  outside  rooms  In  Minne- 
sota flats.  118  E.  4th  St.;  only  $45  per 
month,  including  heat  and  janitor 
service.  Chas.  P.  Meyers.  611  Al- 
worth  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — 1  3-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building;  1  4-room  flat,  steam  heat, 
gas  range  and  water  furnished,  new 
building.  Apply  Anderson  Drug  Store. 
2904  W.  3rd  st. 


FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  $8;  4-room 
flat,  $3  2.60;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out, sewer,  gas,  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers,    611    Alworth   bldg. 


FOR  RENT — A  4-room  furnished 
apartment  on  third  floor  of  Munger 
terrace  for  two  months.  References 
required.  $32.50  per  month.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co..    303    Lonsdale    bldg. 

FOR  RE.NT — Desirable  flats,  houses 
and  stores.  If  you  are  considering 
making  a  change  we  invite  an  op- 
portunity for  serving  you.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,  303  Lonsdale  bldg. ^______ 

FOR  RENT — A  4-room  steam-heated 
flat  near  Garfield  ave.  and  Superior 
St.;  water,  gas,  electric  lights,  toilet 
and  bath;  bargain  at  $16.  F.  I.  Salter 
Co.,  303  Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Small  heated  apartment 
in  desirable  location  in  East  end;  all 
conveniences;  janitor  service;  $40  per 
month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Provi- 
dence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  flat,  central  loca- 
tion with  hardwood  floors,  bath,  gas 
and  all  conveniences  but  heat;  $20 
per  month.  N.  J.  Upham  Co.,  714  Pro- 
vidence   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Flat,  303  Oxford  st,  five 
rooms  and  bath;  modern  except  heat; 
fireplace;  garden;  $20  per  month.  See 
William   C.   Sargent.   Providence   bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat  and  bath, 
all  hardwood  floors  and  finishing. 
106  N.  27th  ave.  w.  All  conveniences 
except    heat    at    $12.60    per    month. 


*  -;* 

*  FOR   RENT.                           * 

i  — -^— —                                 # 

it-  1022  E.  1st  St. — This  unusually  at-  it 

i(-  tractive    home    will    be    for    rent  -j^ 

■5e-  May  1.  Thoroughly  modern — $65.  ii- 

^  ^ 

-Jt-  116  Hardy  st.    (Woodland)— Thor-  ■» 


MattMon,  Src 


SECRETJOCIIETIES^ 

PAhESTINE  LODOE  NO.  79.  A.  F.  *  A. 
M.— Regular  mertlnp  flr»t  Md  third  Mon- 
day Mtnings  of  e»ch  month  At  7:30  oeledt 
.Nert  mrvUDg,  April  3.  1916.  Woi*— 
Third  Otgn*  bf  past  inMt«n:  6:30  dlBDcr. 
Ueaent    G.    Tomusend,    W.    M.;    James    9. 


I 


lO.MC  LODOE  XO.  186.  A.  F.  *  A.  M.— 
Rrguhir  mreting  R^cond  and  fourth  Monday 
eTHilngs  of  each  month  at  7-jO.  Sttt 
meeting.  April  24,  1916.  Work— SpttHMJ  *- 
grw.  WUliam  J.  Woriui.  W.  M.;  Buiff 
PorK-r,  Sef. 


^  -« 


* 


oughly  modern  detached  home  H- 
of  8  rooms;  large  porch,  sun  •^ 
parlor,  hot  water  heat,  full  ce-  it- 
ment  basement,  hardwood  floors  )t- 
throughout;  large  grounds,  ex-  ■jf 
ceptional  view,  block  from  car  ■Sfr 
line;  two  additional  nicely  fin-  * 
Ished  rooms  on  third  floor.  May  if 
1— $60.  it 


KKYSTOXE  CUAPTEK  .NO.   20.   R.   A.    M.— 

Stated  ronvooaiions,  second  aiid  fourth 
Wednesday  ewnlngs  of  each  rooDth  at  7  JO 
o'clock.  Next  meeting.  spe<lal.  April  2t, 
-  -  -  1914.  at  4  p.  m.  HorV— Boyal  Ar.-b  de- 
gree. Kegular  meeting  at  7  30.  Work— Begular  liusinew- 
and  Boj-al  Arch  d-gree.  Stanley  L.  Mack.  H.  P.;  Al- 
fred Le  -ttli'heaux.   Sec. 

UIXITH  fOl'XCrL  NO.  6.  B.  k  8.  M.— 
SUted  cooTocatlons.  third  Friday  of  facto 
month  at  7:30  o'clock.  Nert  me<tlnfc 
April  21.  1916.  Work— Boyal  and  Select  an* 

soptrtrxcellent   degree.      Maynard    W.    Turner,    T.    I.    M. ; 

Alfred  Le  Hlclieux,  secretary. 

DlLl'TH  COMMANPEBY   NO.    18.   K.    T.— 

.Stated    con»ocatlons    first    Tuesday    of    each 
month    at    7:.3fi    o'clock.      Next    i^nrlaw, 
AprU    18,     1916.      DriU    at    old    a-'-mocy. ' 
Charles  H.  rugle.   Com.;  Nerton  H.  Wilson, 

SCOmgH    BITE  —  REGl'UR    MEETlNOfl 

every  Thursday  eTenlng  at  8  o'clock.  Next 
nH-<Ung,  April  13.  1916.  Work  —  B<«ulai 
tu«.ine«is  and  balloting.  Burr  Porter,  sec- 
retary. 

ZENITH    CHAPTEB    NO.     25,     (MIUER     09 

Eastern  Star — Regular  meetings  sect>nd  hoi 
fourth  Friday  evenings  each  mnnth.  Next 
meeting.  Friday,  April  14,  1916,  at  7:30 
o'clock.  Work — Regular  iMisiness  and  bal- 
Fva  M.   Dunbar,  W.  M  ;  Ella  F.  Gfarhart.  See. 


1 


JOHN  A.  STEPHENSON  &  CO., 
Wolvln   Building. 


« 
* 


*^>>i?';.^;?*f^*-*«';^#-;^-;^is^Y'af^f^;g*^>^^'^ 


-FOR  RENT— 


417  2nd  ave.  e.,  7  rooms $30.00 

110  W.  2nd  St..  10  rooms 85.00 

430  E.  Superior  st..  7   rooms 26.00 

1509  E.  3rd  st.,  8  rooms 86.00 

112  S.  16th  ave.  e.,  8  rooms 35.00 

429  10th  ave.   e.,  8  rooms 42.60 

127    E.   3rd  st.,    8    rooms,    furnace 
heat,    fireplace,    bath     and     gas 

rent      36.00 


STRTKER,  MANLET  &  BUCK, 
Main  floor,  Torrey  bldg. 

—FOR   RENT— 


609  W.  3rd  st.;  beautiful  view;  11- 
room  house  with  furnace,  two  fire- 
places, bath,  gas  and  electric  light; 
so  arranged  that  it  could  be  used  as 
rooming  house  or  two  flats;  com- 
bination coal  and  gas  range  In  two 
kitchens. 


FOR  RE.VT — Nice,  heated,  furnished 
room,  with  or  without  light  house- 
keeping.   303   3rd   St.;   Mel.  8051. 


FOR  RENT — 2  unfurnished  rooms; 
downstairs:  suitable  for  housekeep- 
ing.    Grand  829-A. 


FOR  RENT — 2  furnished  rooms  to  man 
and  wife;  gas  range;  $6  per  month. 
2001    W.   7th   St. 


FOR  RENT — 2  heated  rooms  at  220 
W.  Superior  st.  $7.60  per  month.  In- 
cjulre    room    204. 


FOR  RENT — t)n«  furnished  room; 
heated,  bath  and  use  of  telephone. 
202   E.   3rd  st. 


FOR  RENT — Furnished  room  with 
kitchenette  for  light  housekeeping. 
322   W.   3rd   St. 


FOR  RENT — Rooms  for  light  house- 
keeping; all  'Conveniences.  228  E.  1st 
St..   upstairs. 


FOR  RENT — Furnished  rooms;  all  con- 
veniences; $1.76  per  week.  323  8th 
ave.  w.    • 

FOR  RENT — Pleasant  furnished  front 
room;  gentleman  preferred.  709  E. 
1st    St.  

FOR  RENT — Furnished  room,  all  con- 
veniences. 126  E.  6th  St.  Grand  1631-Y. 


FOR  RENT — Furnished   room;   modern. 
614   1st  ave.  w.     Mel.   3886. 


FOR   RENT  - 
stairs.      320 


—  2  furnished   rooms,  up- 
21st    ave.    w. 


FOR   RENT — Four    rooms;    all    conven- 
iences.    424  E.  7th  St. 


FOR      RENT — I.«rge 
room.     727  E.  2nd  st. 


furnished      front 


FOR  RENT — Attractive  6-room  apaxt- 
ment;  East  end;  white  enamel  bath- 
room, electric  light,  gas  range,  fur- 
nace, laundry;  $27.     Mel.  1801^ 


— FOR  RENT — 
7-room   flat.    716   W.   2r''    st.   heat  and 
water  furnished.  $30.     \.illlam  C.  Sar- 
gent. Providence  bldg^ 

FOR  RENT — 6  rooms  and  large  alcove, 
hot  water  heat;  all  modern  conveni- 
ences. 6  W.  4lh  St.  Call  Louis  Oreck. 
416  W.   Superior  "it.  


FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat  ground  floor; 
hardwood  floors  and  finish;  modern 
except  heat;  walking  distance,  call 
Grand   2059-A. 


FOR  RE.NT — Heated  7-room  flat  In 
Dacey  apartments  with  water,  heat 
and  janitor  service.  Call  Mel.  or 
Cirand    423. 

FOR  RENT — Pleasant  6-room  flat, 
main  floor;  modern  except  heat;  nice 
yard;  $26.     24  4th  ave.  e.     Mel.  5643. 

FOR  RENT — 3  4-room  flats;  newly  re- 
modeled; very  central.  329-33.1  E.  Su- 
perior St.     $17  and  $19.     Mel.  6618. 


FOR  RENT — Five  rooms,  newly  dec- 
orated; modern  except  heat;  $22.50, 
water   paid.      1111    E.    2nd   st. 


FOR  RENT — 5-room  flat;  all  modern 
except  heat;  big  yard;  $20.  423  E.  5th 
St.     Inquire  318   E.  6th  st. 


FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  219  E.  6th 
St.;  bath;  $12  per  month.  William  C. 
Sargent.  Providence  bldg. 


FOR  RENT — Five-room  flat;  down 
stairs;  modern  except  heat;  nice  and 
clean.     2321  W.  8rd  st. 

FOR  RENT — Six-room  modern  flat; 
newly  built;  heated;  centrally  lo- 
cated.     631  W.  3rd  st. 

FOR  RENT — 6  corner  rooms,  modern, 
private  bath.  631  W.  1st  st.  Inquire 
Mork  Bros. 


STRYKER,    MANLEY    &    BUCK, 
Main    Floor,   Torrey    bldg. 


FOR  RENT. 


One  6-room  house,  modern  except  heat; 

fireplace;    pine    trees    and    yard;    1626 

Minnesota  ave.  s. 
One  5-room  house,  electricity  and  gas; 

1531  Lake  ave.  s. 
One  4-room  house,  1616  Lake  ave.  s. 


MIZPAH  SHRINE  NO.  1,  ORUIIR  OF  THE 
White  Shrine  of  Jerusalem— Begiiler  meet- 
ings first  Katurdaj-  cTcniug  of  each  mctith 
.It  8  o'clock.  .Next  meeting,  regular.  Slay  6. 
Initiation  and  balloting,  ikrtmdi-  BatHi, 
W.  H.  P.;  Etta  Tn-vlianus.  W.  8. 


^t^Jff      EITLFD    CHAPTEB    NO.    56.     OBI»tR    0? 

Jft^     'he    Eastern    Star— Meets    at    Wert    Duluth 

^KSfiC^  MaM)nic   temple    the   first   and    third    Ttiei- 

wf         days  of  each  month  at  7".30  o'cloj-k.     Srif*' 

V  meeting,    April    18,    1916.      Ballottlnc   and 

social.  '  Flora  L.  Clark,  W.  M.;  .Mildred  M.  B0b«,  Sec. 


El  CUD  LODGE  NO.  198,  A.  F.  A  A.  M. 
— Meets  at  West  Duluth,  second  and  fourth 
Wednesdays  of  each  month  at  7:30  i>.  m. 
Noit  meeting,  April  12.  Work  First  de- 
gree. H.  W.  Lanij^rs,  W.  M.;  A.  Dua- 
leavy,   SK-retary. 


Inquire  EDMONT.   18  Third  Ave.  W^est. 

FOR  RENT — A  very  desirable  8-room 
thoroughly  modern  house  on  E.  1st  st., 

.  near  8th  ave.,  which  has  been  thor- 
oughly redecorated  and  is  in  excel- 
lent condition:  hot  water  heating 
plant.  For  rental  and  other  partic- 
ulars calls  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303  Lons- 
dale   bldg. 


DULUTH  CHAPTER  NO.  59.  B.  A.  M.— 
Meets  at  West  Duluth  first  and  tUrd 
Wednesdays  of  each  month  at  7:30  p.  m. 
.Next  meeting,  Apiil  IS,  1916.  Work— P. 
M.  and  M.  E.  M.  degrees.  Roll  r«U  and 
refresiimcnts.     W.    A.    Pllt-nger,   H.   P.   Dunlea«T,   Sec. 

'  LAKESIDE    LODGE   NO.    281.   A.    F.    A  A. 

)hl.— fleets  first  and  third  Mondays  of  each 
month  at  8  o'clock  at  Ma!«nlc  ball,  Foriy- 
flfth  avenue  east  and  Robinson  street.  Next 
meeting.  April  17.  1916.  Regular  business. 
Work— Urst  degree.     William  A.  Hlcken,  W, 

SI.;  George  E.  Nelson,  secretary,  4530  Cooke  street  last. 

TRINITY  LODGE  NO.  282,  A.  F.  k  A.  M. 
— Mcits  first  and  third  Mondays  at  8  o'clodi 
In  Woodman  hall.  Tweuty-nrst  avenue  west. 
Next  meeting  regula;,  April  17.  1916.  Work 
— Second  degree.  E.  H.  Pfeifer,  W.  M., 
1918  West  Third  street;  B.  E.  Whetier, 
secretary.  2032  West  Superioi  street. 

A.  0.  U.  W. 
FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  105  —  MEETS  AT 
Macrabee  hall,  21  Lak<  airnue  north,  ewry 
Thursday  at  S  p.  m.  Visiting  members  »el- 
ntme.  E.  A.  Vogt,  M.  W.;  J.  A.  Lubankky. 
recorder;  0.  J.  Murvold  financier,  217  EWB 
Oriental  degree  AprU  27. 


Fifth  street. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  house,  all  modern 
except  heat,  $20  per  month.  420  S. 
18th  ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT — 5-room  house,  all  modern 
except  heat,  $20  per  month.  521  S. 
22nd  ave.    e.  Call   Grand  1196.  Mel.  S036. 


FOR  RENT — A  5-room  house,*  No.  405 
N.  24th  ave.  w.;  water,  gas,  electric 
lights,  toilet,  bath  and  hardwood 
floors;  st  >ve  heat;  water  paid;  reason- 
able rental;  vacant  May  1.  F.  I.  Sal- 
ter  Co.,   303   Lonsdale   bldg. * 

FOR  RENT — 8-room  modern  house, 
near  courthouse,  329  5th  ave.  w.;  fur- 
nace heat,  fireplace,  hardwood  floors, 
etc.;  fine  yard;  rent  $35  per  month. 
.Johnstown  Land  Co.,  600  E.  Superior 
St.     Mel.  138;   Grand   138. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  house  at  corner 
of  Fifth  ave,  e.  and  Superior  st.; 
bathroom,  electric  lighting,  gas  con- 
nection for  kitchen  range,  new  paper 
and  paint.  Inquire  of  C.  F.  Graff, 
405    Lon.«idale    bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 3-room  flat,  $8;  4-room 
flat.  $12.50;  hardwood  floors  through- 
out; sewer,  gas.  water  and  electric 
lights;  centrally  located.  Chas.  P. 
Meyers.   611  Alworth  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — A  6-room  modern  house. 
No.  214^8  E.  2nd  st.;  hot  water  heat- 
ing plant;  very  easy  walking  distance; 
$35  per  month.  F.  I.  Salter  Co.,  303 
Lonsdale  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 10- room  heated  house  in 
East  End.  Rent  $70.  Includes  heat,  hot 
and  cold  water.  Janitor  service.  See 
N.  J.  Upham  Co..  714  Providence  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — 7-room  house,  rear  of  109 
W.  6th  St.;  rooms  large  and  well  light- 
ed; can  be  arranged  for  two  families 
If  desired.     Call  617  Lake  ave.  n.    

FOR  RENT  —  6-room  house;  clean, 
freshly  papered;  634  Garfield  ave.; 
rent  $15;  water  free.  Inquire  Wing 
real    estate    office,    Palladio    bldg. 

FOR    RENT — Modern,  furnished   house 

with    sleeping    porch  for    summer,    in 

normal     district,     to  family     without 
children.     Mel.   1148. 


WANTED  TO  RENT 

WANTED  TO  RENT— 8-room  house, 
lake  shore.  Lester  Park,  Lakeside  01 
on  Park  Point.  William  C.  Sargent. 
Providence   bldg. 

WANTED  TO  RENT— Three  unfur- 
nlshed  heated  rooms  for  light  house- 
keeplng.     Write  U  131,  Herald. 

WANTED  TO  RENT— 3  unfurnished 
rooms  to  couple  without  children.  May 
1;  walking  distance.     Mel.  6287. 

WANTEb~TO  RENT— 8  unfurnished 
rooms  for  light  housekeeping,  central. 
Broad  620-R,   evenings   only. 


WANTED  TO  RENT— Large  furnished 
cottage  on  Park  Point,  suitable  for  six 
people.     H   130,    Herald. 


WANTED  TO  RENT— 5-room  house  at 
Lakeside;  have  no  children.  Write  Y 
14  2,    Herald. 


WANTED  TO  RENT— Heated  3-room 
flat,  centrally  located.  Write  Y  160, 
Herald^ 


WALL^APER^ 

Experienced  and  reliable  paper-hanger 
will  furnish  new  and  up-to-date  pat- 
terns and  paper  an  ordinary  sized 
room    for   $4.60.     Painting  and   tinting 


R.    i.    RED    settings,    76c    Jap    Silkies 
settings,  $3.     H.  I.  Gooch:     Mel.  3351. 


FOR    SALE — Barred 
eggs,  $1  per  setting. 


Plymouth      Rock 
Call  Douglas  66. 


FOR    SALE — White    Orpington    eggs,    $1 
a  setting.     C.  Hegg.     Col.-  351-Y 


LOST  AND  FOUND 


PRimE^  HOSPITALS 

PRIVATE  HOME  before  and  during 
confinement;  good  care  by  experienced 
nurse;  infarts  cared  for.  Mrs.  Flnkle, 
213   W.   3rd   st    Mel.    2464. 

PRIVATE  HOME  for  women  before  and 
I    during    confinement;    expert    care;    In- 
fants  cared   for.      Ida   Pearson,   M.    D., 
I    284   Harrison  ave..   St.  Paul. 

;  MRS.    K.    THORSTENSON.     nurse     and 

midwife;   private  home.     1602  28th  st., 

!    Superior.   Wis.     Ogden   861-X. 

MRS.  H.  OLSON,  graduate  midwife; 
private    hospital    and    home.       329    N. 


68th  ave.  w.  Phones,  Cole  173;  Cal. 


0. 


LOST — Child's    cross    of    sapphires    and 
pearls    on    ftne    gold    chain    some    time 
late  last  summer.     Liberal   reward   far    _t 
return  of  it  or  information   regarding  1  Mrs.  Ekstrom,  graduate^  midwife.  1924V4 


MRS.    HANSON,   graduate  midwife;   fe- 
male complaints.     413  7th  ave.  e.  Zen. 

122:.. 


it.     Phone  Mel.   3206. 


LOST — Win  party  who  found  parcel 
containing  1  dozen  spoons  near  26th 
avo.  w.  and  2nd  st.  return  them  to 
2426  W.  2nd  st,  and  receive  reward. 

LOST — Folding  bill  book,  containing 
about  $40.  Reward  for  return  to 
Johnstad  School  of  Stenography,  or 
call    Grand    2354. 

LOST — Thursday,  diamond  sunburst 
brooch,  between  4th  ave.  e,  and  3rd 
ave.  w.  Return  to  209  Exchange  bldg. 
Reward. 

LOST — Saturday  afternoon,  black  fox 
muff  in  some  store  on  Superior  street; 
reward.     Call  Mel.   2863  or  Lin.   104-A. 

, 


W.   3rd   St.      Lin.   163-D;    Mel.    7458. 


BOATS  AND  MOTORBOATS 

FOR  SALE — Boat  and  boathouse;  one 
24-foot  gasoline  boat  with  20-horse 
power  engine;  fully  equipped;  all  In 
good  condition;  speed,  15  miles;  for 
sale  cheap,  $S2B  takes  it  or  trade  for 
automobile.  Call  Cal.  319-L  between 
6  and  7   p.  m. 


STOVE  REPAIRS 


FOR  SALE — 28  foot,  6  foot  beam  mo- 
torboat.  4  cylinder,  12-horse  power 
Kermath  engine  new  In  1914.  run 
v^ry  little  since  then,  now  at  Duluth 
Boat  club,  mlglit  assume  on  small 
lece  of  land:  prefer  cash.    C.  D.  Bed- 


n 


rd.    Rushmore,   Minn. 


FOR  SALE — 6  IsttBches  and  2  hulls;  20 
to  40  feet.  Peterson  Boat  Livery,  Su- 
perior.    Old  p*ie»e.  


neatly  done;    prompt   and  satisfactory    WE  CARRY  In  stock  repairs  for  10.000 „,»_^,  -*  ».. 

work    guaranteed.      Decorator,    31    W        different    stoves     and      ranges.     C.    F   '  FOR  SALE — Twojte-foot  rowboats  and 
tnd  St.     Mel.  4303;  Grand  696-X.  '      WiggerU   &   Sons,   410   E.   Superior  aui    boathouse.     Ofcll  i*rand  996.  C.  Schobcr. 


FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  brick  flat. 
607  E.  6th  St.  Call  702  7th  ave.  e,  or 
Grand   1706-Y.  

FOR  RENT— -Lower  6-room  flat;  mod- 
ern except  heat.  106  S.  27th  ave.  w. 
Mel.  1846. 


FOR  RENT — 4-room  flat,  all  conveni- 
ences except  heat.  Inquire  608  W. 
2nd    St. 


FOR  RENT — Strictly  modern,  heated 
flat,  4  rooms  and  alcove.  227  11th 
ave.    e. 


FOR  RENT — Furnished  *-room  flat.  Ap- 
ply 902  E.  3rd  St.,  or  call  362  either 
phone. 


FOR    RENT — 4-room      furnished      flat; 
all  conveniences.     Call   916   B.   6th  st. 

FOR    RENT  —  6-room      brick      corner 
apartment.  East  end,  Mel.  1481. 

FOR    RENT — 5-room      modern,    heated 
flat.   314   2nd  ave  east.  Mel.   4448. 

FOR   RENT — 6-room   flat,   modern.     202 
E   4th  St.    Call  Grand  1905-A. 

FOR     RENT — 6-room     flat;     remodeled. 
Grand  1661-X;   731  W.  Ist  st. 


FOR  RENT— 5729  Tioga  St.,  6-room 
modern  house;  desirable  home  for 
people  with  little  furniture;  $20.00. 
Mel.   3151. 


FOR"  RENT — Seven-room  house.  126  tth 
ave.  w;  bath,  closet,  coal  range,  elec- 
tric lights;    $22   per  month.    Mel.   3864. 


FOR      RENT — Elegant       6-room      flat; 
very  central.    608  W.  3rd  st. 

FOR    RENT — 4-room    flat.       1027    Park 
Point;    call  Lincoln   102-Y. 

FOR   RENT — 6-room   flat,   all   conven- 
lences.    $14.    617    2nd    ave.    e. 

FOR    RENT— 5-room    flat,    all    conven- 
iences ;  $17.     817  E.  6th  st. 

TOK    RENT — 1    4-room    and    1    6-room 
flat.     Apply  807  E.  6th  st. 

FOR      RENT — 4-roonr»      flats,      1      fur- 
nlshed.     317   E.   6th  st.  

FOR    RENT — 6-room,   modern    flat.      7 
E.    6th    St. 

FOR   RENT — Modern,   4 -room   flat.   912 
E.  7  th  St. 


FOR  RENT — House  at  537%  Garfield 
ave.;  warm,  neat;  city  water  in  house; 
rent  $10  per  month.  Inquire  store,  637. 

FOR  RENT— 1301%  E.  2nd  st.,  6-room 
modern  house.  Inquire  Henry  Nesbitt 
&  Co.,  814  Sellwood  bldg.;  Mel.  1686. 

FOR  RENT — Fine,  light,  modern  house 
at  1420  E.  4th  st.  See  P.  Johnson,  219 
W.  Superior  st. 

FOR  RENT — 8-room  house,  230  3rd 
ave.  w.;  newly  papered.  Inquire  32  E. 
Superior  st. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  house  in 
East  end.  S.  S.  Williamson,  616  Tor- 
rey  bldg. 

FOR  RENT — Furnished  house;  light, 
airy  rooms;  large  yard.     30  12th  ave.  e. 

FOR  RENT— Nos.  1718  and  1720  E.  Su- 
perior  st.      E.  P.   Alexander. 

FOR  RENT — 6-room  modern  house. 
1130  E.   3rd  St.     Price  $30. 


73a      A.    0.    U.    W.— DILITH    LODGE   NO.    30— 

c?5     meets     eteiy     secoiid     and     fourth     Tuesday 

nichts    at    Axa    hail.     221    West    SuiHrior 

street.      .Next    me«-ting,    April    11,    1916,    at 

8  p.   m.     Manin  E.    Heller,   .M.   W.;  B.   G. 

Koote,  recorder;  E.  F.  Heller,  financier,  609  Se<'0Dd  aft- 
nuc  east. 


ZENITH  COUNCIL  NO.  161,  RUYAIt 
league,  meet«  the  first  and  third  Thurs- 
days in  the  month,  at  8  o'clock,  in  tlM 
old  Masonic  temple,  Superior  street  and 
Sfcond  avenue  east.  0.  S.  KemptoD, 
archon,  Wolvin  building ;  H.  A.  Hall,  col- 
lector,   18  East  First  Untt. 

DULUTH   LODGE    .NO.    28,    I.    0.    0.    K.-j 

Neit    meeting,    Friday    evening,    April    14. 

1916.     at    8    o'clock.     221    Weit    Superior 
sfieef.  third  floor.     Work— First  degree  will   be  conferred 
Odd    Fellows   welcome.      Charles   F.    Ottinger.    .V     G      J 
A.   Braff.   Rec.   Sec.  "•....*. 


K      OF    P 
NORTH  STAR  LODGE  NO.' 35,   K.   OF  P  — 

Meets  every  Tuesday,  7:30  p.  m.,  sixth 
floor.  Temple  building.  Superior  street  and 
Second  avenue  east.  Next  meeting,  April 
18.  1916.  Work— First  rank  W  H 
Hamilton.  C.  C,  care  of  Duluth  Telephone  company  b' 
t:  J^^^i,  *'•  "'  ^■-  205  First  National  hank;  r'  A* 
Bishop,  K.  of  B.  and  8..  505  Palladio  building. 

ZENITH  CAMP  NO.   5.    WOODMEN   OP 

the    World,    meets    on    first    and    third   * 
Friday   nights  of   month,   at   Foresters' 
hall.     Fourth    avenue    west    and    first 
street.       J.   H.   Larkin,   clerk,  312  Six- 
tieth  avenue   east.      Lakeside   23-K. 


M.UESTIC  REBEKAH  LODGE  NO.  60,  I. 
0.  0.  F.— Regular  meetings  first  and  third 
Thursdays  of  each  month.  8  p.  m..  221 
West  Suprrior  street.  Next  meeting  Thurs- 
day evening,  April  6.  IniUation  Regu- 
lar drill.  Mrs.  HenrietU  Shaw,  N  G  j 
Lillian  Johnson,  secretary.   Grand  2113'-Y 


DULUTH  HOMESTEAD  XO.  3131,  BROTH- 
erhood  of  American  Yeomen,  meets  every 
Wednesday  evening  at  8  o'clock  sharr  in 
ilaccabee  hall,  21  Uke  avenue  north, 
•■_  .Herbert  F.    Hanks,    foreman;  J.   J.    Palmer, 

cori^»pv)iiurnt,   office   in  his  drug  store.   2132  West  TtUra 

•treet.     Melross  3769;  Uncoln  5U-Y. 


SUMMER  RESORTS 


FOR  SALE — Large  camp  sites  on  beau- 
tiful Lake  Vermilion;  sand  bathing 
beaches,  parks,  docks,  w#ll8,  etc.; 
monthly  payments  as  low  as  $2,  with- 
out interest;  all  sites  sold  on  our 
"money  back"  guarantee.  Gray-Wer- 
tln  Co.,  Alworth  bldg.,  Duluth. 

FOR  SALE — Prettily  located  summer 
cottage  on  Pokegama  lake,  five  miles 
from  Grand  Rapids.  Good  auto  road. 
Fine  fishing  and  hunting.  A.  L.  La 
Freniere,  Grand  Rapids.  Minn. 

BEAUTIFUL  wooded  camp  sites  on 
Akley's  Point.  Lake  Vermilion,  1  acre 
in  size.  Map  and  information  from 
Wakemup  Bay  Outing  Co.,  606  Torrey 
bldg.,  Duluth,  Minn. 


Duluth  Floral  Co.,  wholesale,  retail,  cut 
flowert.    funeral  designs.  121  W.  Sup.  at 


M.    W.    A. 
IJIPERIAL    CAMP,    2206    —    MEETS    AT 
Forester    hall.      Fourth     avenue     west     and 

First   street,   second   and   fourth   Tuesdays  of 

^iMl^'      fSfh    month.      Wayne    i;.    Richardson     con- 
tul;  jtooert  Rankin,  clerk,  care  Kankin  Printing  company. 

CL.%N     STEWART     NO.     uO.     0.     fi      C^ 
AlceU     first     and     third     Wednesdays     each 
month.    8    p.    m.,    U.    0.    F.    hali     corner 
Fourth   a»vnue   west  and  First   street       Next 
,     ..I-      ■    regular    meeting,    AprU    19,    1916     '  D     A. 
Camcrou,  chief;  John  Gow,  Sec.;  John  Burnett    Ftn    «<» 
313  Torrey  building. '  •• 

MODERN    RAMARITA.NS  ' 

ALPHA    COUNCIL    NO.    1_TAKE    NOTUT:: 

That  the  Samaritan  degree  meeU  the  first 
and  third  Wednesdays,  and  the  Beneficent 
degree  the  second  and  fourth  Wednesdays  of 
the  month,  at  12  East  Superior  stn-et. 
Empress  theater  building.  W.  B.  Henderson,  G  S  j 
John  F.  Darts,  scribe;  F.  A.  Noble.  F.  S..  201  First 
National  Bank  building;  Mrs.  H.   P.   Lawson.   lady  G.   8. 

WE-KE-MA  WAIT  TRIBE  NO.  17.  I.   0.   R^ 

M.,  meets  the  second  and  fourth  Mondays 
of  the  month  at  8  p.  m.  sharp,  at  Mac- 
cabee  hall.  21  I^ke  avenue  north.  Next 
meeting,  April  24.  Dance.  H.  H.  Bart- 
ling,  sachem:  H.  J.  McGinley,  chief  of  rec- 
ord, 307  Columbia  building. 

ORDER  OF  OWLS.  DULUTH  NEST 
No.  1200— Meetings  are  held  trenr 
Wednesday  evening  at  Owls'  hall,  418 
West  Superior  street,  second  floor. 
Joseph  E.  Peaks,  secretary,  302  East 
-Klflh   street. 

MODERN  BROTilKKHOOD  OF  AMERICA.-^ 
Duluth  Central  Lodge  No.  450.  M.  B.  A., 
meets  fi.'st  and  third  Tuesdays  at  41S 
West  Superior  street.  Charles  V.  Hanson, 
secrelao',  507  West  Filth  street.  ileniti 
plione   No.    221 1-Y   Grand. 

MYSTIC  WORKERS  OF  THE  WORLD.— 
Zenith  Lodge  No.  1015  meets  the  second 
and  fourth  ^londaj-s  of  the  month,  at  8 
p.  m.,  at  Rowley  hall.  112  West  First 
street,  upstairs.  E.  A.  Ruf,  secretary 
and  treasurer.  1331  East  Seventh  ftreet. 

DULUTH  TEMPLE  NO.  186.  CAMELS  OF 
the  World,  meets  everj'  Thursday  c\cnlijg  afe 
8  o'clock  sharp,  at  Camels'  Temple  hall, 
12  East  Superior  street.  Business  meeting 
Thursday,  AprU  13.  W.  H.  Konkler,  ruler, 
,  Grafid  909-Y.  Martin  Johni«u,  secretary, 
phoM.  ..lund  1588;  Melrose.  3979;  umple  haU  pbooe. 
Grand  1991-Y. 

THIRD    Infantry]     W.     nI     qT, 

meets  every  TImrsday  evening.  8  p.  m., 

.\rmory,  Thirioentu  avenue  east.     .Next 

meeting,      April      13.        Georfe      W. 

SUIea.     captain;    William     A.     Brown.    Urst    lieufuant; 

John    J.    Harrliion.    second    lieuionant. 

WWEST  DULUTH  LODGE  NO.  1478,  LO\aL 
Order  of  Moose.  meeU  every  Wedn  vrtv  at 
Moose  hail,  Ramsey  street  and  Central  ave- 
nue. H.  J.  Whit'.',  secretary.  iOl  Nortb 
Fifty -second  avenue  west. 

BENEVOLENT  ORDER  OF  BEAVKR!{-I 
Duluth    Lodgr    No.     155.     B.     0.     B., 

,^ nii-rts  first  and  third  Thursdays,  monthly' 

at  Woodman  hall.  Twenty-first  avenue  west  and  Kirsi 
Street.  K.  A.  Franklin,  secreury,  2005  West  Superior 
itnet.     Uncoln  169-A. 

DULUTH  LODGE  NO.  506.  LOYAL  OROeI 
of  Moose,  meets  every  Tuesday  at  8  o'clock, 
MooK  haU.  224  West  First  street.  Uil 
Schau,  sewetMy. 


Co.E 


1^ 


If