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A VOLUME 3. NUMBER 133. ..Ladies’ Fall Styles and prices: s «.Men’s C Men’s Heavy all wool White 15 0'Leary & Bowser Our stock of Suits, Coats, Skirts and Furs, 1s now complete and covers a wide range of We are showing the new styles in Men’s long overcoats. newest styles in Men’s suits can be found on our tables: :: Special Bargains! Men’s silk embroidered Black Cat Hose, the 50c¢ kind, 39 Cents a Pair Boys' 50c Hats, black or gray, 25 Cents Each Boys’ $1.50 Hats, all colors, $1.00 Each Garment for $1.50 Each 1000 yards white and fancy Outing Flannels, 5¢ a vyd Mennin’s Toilet Powder 15 Cents a. Box 1 lot 25¢ Toilet Soap 19 Cents a Box of 3 cakes Lyon’s Tooth Powder 19 Cents a. Box Tooth Brushes, 10 Cents Each Garments... lothing... The Underwear, worth $2.00 a i MARKET QUOTATIONS. ‘ r —— Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, Sept. 25.— Wheat— Sept., 82%c; Dec., 827c; May, 85% @88%c. On track—No. 1 hard, 86c; No. 1 Northern, 85%c; No. 2 North- ern, 82c. St. Paul Union Stock Yards. St. Paul, Sept. 26.—Cattle—Good to <hoice steers, $4.505.60; common to fair, $3.75@4.25; good to choice cows and heifers, $3.50@4.25; veals, $2.00@ $.50. Hogs—$5.00@5.40. Sheep—VYear-| Hng wethers, $4.50@5.25; good to <hoice native lambs, $5.00@5.50. Chicago Union 8tock Yards. Chicago, Sept. 25.—Cattle—Beeves,| $3.40@6.30; cows and helfers, $1.26@ 4.60; stocKers and feeders, $2.25@ 4.40; Waestern, 33.10@4.75. Hogs— Mixed and butchers, $5.15@5.75; good heavy, $3.35@5.70; rough heavy, $5.00 €5.20; light, $5.16@5.65. Sheep, $3.50 @4.85; lambs, $4.25@7.60. Duluth Wheas and Flax. Duluth, Sept. 26.-—~Wheat—To arrive —No. 1 Northern, 827%c; No. 2 North. | ern, 79%c. On track—No. 1 North- em, 827%c; No. 2 Northern, 79%c; Sept. (old), 82%e; Sept. (new), 19%ec; Dec., 783%c: May, 82%c. Flax —To arrive, 973c; on track, 99c¢; Sept.. 99¢; Dec., 97%c; May, $1.011%. Chicage Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Sept. 25.—Wheat—Sept., | 843%4c; Dec., B53@85%c; May, 87% @87%c. Corn—Sept., 52%.c; Oct., 52c; Dec., 46%@456%c; May, 44%c. Oats) —S8ept., 273%c; Dec., 28%@28%c; May, 30% @303%c. Pork—Sept., $16.50; Oct., $15.00; Jan., $12.321,@12.35. Flax —Cash, Northwestern, 98%gc; South- western, 92c. Butter—Creamenies, 17 @20%c; dairies, 17T@18%c. Eggs— 163 @17%c. Poultry—Turkeys, 16c; | chickens, 1lc: springs, 10c i TROOPS ENTER 'FINLAND. Large Forces of Czar's Soldiers Sent to Strengthen Garrisons. Helsingfors, Finland, Sept. 26.— large forces of Russian troops have already been drafted into Finland. Over 1,200 men have arrived at Hel- singfors to reinforce the garrison of 8veaborg, which is adjacent to Hel- singfors, and garrisons at other points bave aiseo heen reinforced by 700 m! 1,600 meu. H Sixty-five Horses Perish. Wilmington. Del., Sept. 26.—Fire pompletely destroyed McDaniel Bros.’ large livery and boarding stables. Sixty-five horses were burned to death and about 150 carriages and ‘wagons, together with tons of hay and feed, were destroyed. The loss will exceed $39,000. i GENSURE FRARCIS JOSEPH HUNGARIAN PARTY LEADERS DE- NOUNCE COURSE OF AUSTRO- HUNGARIAN RULER. Budapest, Hungary, Sept. 26.—The executive committee of the coalition parties, summoned to discuss the sit- uation arising from the ultimatum pre- gented to the Hungarian leaders by the king-emperor, has passed what amounts to a severe vote of censure of his majesty and his advisers. The committee in the resolution expresses the deepest regret that the king-em- peror did not listen to the statesmen summoned by him to Vienna, who represent the majority in the Hun- garian parliament and constitute, therefore, the Jeaders of the nation in its public affairs. The committee further indignantly censures those who advised his ma- jesty to take such a course and ap- proves the action of the coalition lead- ers in refusing to negotiate with Count Goluchowski and in declining the memorandum presented by the king- emperor as a violation of the constitu- tion and unsuitable for the settlement of the present cc itutional cenflict. BOMB EXPLOSION AT PEKING. Four Minor Officials Killed and Many Persons Injured. Peking, Sept. 26.—At the Peking railway station, as a train carrying one of the four misslons ordered abroad to study foreign political meth- ods was leaving, a bomb was exploded inslde a private car, killing four minor. officlals and wounding more than twen- ty persons. The wounded include ince Tsal Tche, who heads tae most-important-of “tire—missions, and- ‘Wu Ting Fang, former minister to the United States, both of whom receivedl slight injuries. The perpetrator of the outrage, who was in the car, was blown to pieces. The edict appointing the missions was issued July 16. The missions are to study iorelgn systems of govern- ment because the dowager-empress in- tended, it is said, to issue a decree at the new year for the establishment of & parliament twelve years hence. Seven Years for Embezziement. New York, Sept. 26.—James P. Hen-! mesgey, 2 clerk who recently con- fessed io stealing $40,000 from the estate of D. Percy Morgan, has been sentenced to state’s prison for seven|eholera and 2 years. - According to -his - confession|in the last 24 the clerk: Jost the $40,000 in racetrack}246 cases o PACKERS FIX RATES RAILROADS HAVE LITTLE TO SAY IN REGARD TO TARIFFS ON DRESSED MEATS. PRESIDENT STICKNEY ON THE STAND TO GET THE PACKERS’ BUSINESS CARRIERS MUST ACCEPT PRICE OFFERED. Chicago, Sept. 26.—“The packers fix the rate,” declared A. B. Stickney, president of the Chicago Great West- ern Railway company, testifying for the defense before the interstate com- merce commission during the day re- garding freight rates on live stock and live stock products from the Missouri river to Chicago. In answer to a question as to how. the charges were made President Stickney replied: “In fixing the rate on dressed meat we don’t have very much to say. The packer generally makes the rate. He comes to you and always makes you feel that he is your friend. Then he asks you how much you charge for certain _shipments of dressed meats. The published tariff may be 23 cents per 100, but he will not pay that. You say to him: °‘T'll carry your meat for 18 cents.” He says: ‘Oh, no you won'’t. I won't pay that’ Then you say: ‘Well, what will you pay for it?” He then replies: ‘I can get it hauled for 16 cents.’” So you haul it for 16 cents per 10u. He generally tells you that if you want the business you must haul the meat for the price he names.” President Stickney denied that his road bad paid any claims for damages or rebates since the Grosscup injunc- tion. —_— NOW NUMBER ONE HUNDRED. Memorials to Mikado Against Ratifica- tion of Treaty. § Tokio, Sept. 26.—The emperor is giving personal attention to the memo- rials presented {o the throne against the terms of the .peacé-arrangemient’ with Russia. These memorials now number nearly 100. . The agitators who are trying to interview privy councillors advocate the refusal to rat- ify the treaty of peace and the public is almost unanimous in demanding the resignation of the cabinet. Even the moderates do not conceal their grief at the result of the negotiations. WORKMEN CAUGHT Buiiding in Course of Construction at Buffalo Collapses. Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 26.—A brick building in course of construction on the north side of Ferry street near Herkimer street collapsed during the afternoon. The crash came without warning and all of the ten men work- ing on the building, bricklayers and carpenters, were caught in the ruins. Ambulances were called from all the hospitals and firemen were hurried to the scene. Eight men who were taken out were badly injured and the two still in the ruins are believed to be dead. iIN RUINS. SITUATION IS {MPROVING. Cooler Wexther Aids in Wiping Out Yeilow Fever. New Orleans, Sept. 26.—With Sep- tember practically gone and the fever under countrol New Orleans is looking to a rapid cleanup of the prevailing fever here. A spell of excellent weather has set in and as the days grow cooler there will be a steady disappearance of mosquitoes, it is hoped, even before frost comes. There is a steady inpodr of people from all sections of the country. The most favorable feature of the report for the past twenty-four hours for New Orleans is the small number —of-persons..shown to be..now -unde treatment—288. This is the smallest number, since Aug. 8. OPPOSES “ TARIFF~ REVI Senator Dick of Ohio Declares He Is 1 a Standpatter. { 1 Columbus, O., Sept. 26.—Senator Dick during the day came out in 3 declaration that he is still with the standpatters on tariff question. “I am still a standpatter,” he. said, “and firmly believe that nothing should be done with the tarift at this time. I don't believe in revisfon of the schedules. I believe that congress at the coming session will do nothing with the tariff in spite of the talk to i the contrary.” Only Ywe Néw Thotera Casss, . | Berlin, Sept. 26.—The official bul- letin anpounces that 2 .new cases of deaths have occurred "CALLS WIFE TO SPE - New York, Sept. 26.—A small' fire- FIVE OMAHA COUNCILMEN GIVEN THIRTY DAYS FOR VIOLAT- ING AN INJUNCTION. HELD BULTY OF CONTEMPT OF COURT WERE ENJOINED FROM EXTEND- ING A CERTAIN FRANCHISE, BUT DISOBEYED. Omaha, Sept. 26.—Five city council- men—Dyball, Bach, Evans, Hunting- ton and Schroeder—have been sen- tenced to thirty days in jail and to pay the costs of an injunction suit, for violating the provisions of which they were sentenced. These five mem- bers of the council were enjoined by Judge ‘Sutton from passing an or dinancé’ entering into an agreement with the Omaha Gas company for the extension of a gas franchise. They were served with the injunction of the court, but passed the ordinance the foliowing day. They were cited for contempt and were given the sen- tence mentioned. Counsel for the al- dermen have appealed to the supreme court for a stay of execution and |- pending a decision the men were placed in the custody of the sheriff. FINALLY LANDED IN JAIL. Colored Residents of Clayton, Attempt to Lynch Negro. St. Louis, Sept. 26.—A negro at- tenmpted to assault the wife of Deputy Sheriff A. J. Shores at Clayton and was shot by Shores and badly wound- ed. negroes from the congregation of a colored church, who attempted to iynch the negro, Robert Taylor, but were prevented and Taylor was safely Mo., | ianded in"jail. - Deputy Shores had alighted from a #treet car and hearing a woman’s| scream and seeing a negro running he fired and the negro fell. Later: he discovered it was his own wife whom_ the negro had. seized as she was on -her way . home from a neighborhood visit. He found her in a fainting; condition on the sidewalk. FIGHT DUEL AT DANCE. Panic Occurs in Crowded Hall at Lew- isburg, Ky. Maysville, Ky., Sept. 26.—Henry Ed- wards, aged twenty-three, was .shot and instantly killed at Lewisburg, this county, by Clarence Turner, aged twenty. There was a dance in prog- ress and Edwards went to the place and wanted to dance with a girl there who had been dancing with Turner. Turner objected. Both began firing at each other at close range, which created. a panic, men and women climbing out of windows and dropping to the ground, bruising themselves considerably. No one but Edwards was struck by bullets and when the shooting was.over he staggered to the door, where he fell dead. Turner is In jail here, claiming self-defense. * SAVED BY THE POLICE. Man Who Fires Into Street Car Nar rowly Escapes Lynching. Kansas City, Sept. 26.—Frank Mi- kell, an Italian who shot into a crowd- ed street car a mile from the business district because he had been ejected from the car, was chased by a crowd of men that gathered quickly and was badly beaten before the police rescued him. Mikell sought refuge in a base- ment from which he was dragged by the ‘crowd and it probably was due only to the arrival of the police that he was not killed. The bullét fired by Mikell shattered the glass windows in the car above. the heads of the pas- sengers, barely mism’ng a number of persons. Husband at- Other End Then’ Sends estranged, Mrs. Henry Koch pressed her ear to the speaking tube leading from the vestibule of the apartmemI BEMIDJ1, MINNESOTA, TUESD "Y, SEPTEMBER 26, 1905. GITY. FATHERS JAILED) i MINNESGTA : HISTORICAL A Pioneer Want Ad e Wi Do’ It 11 HAS $4,700,000 DEPOSITS KANSAS CITY STATE BANK DE- CIDES TO GO INTO VOLUN- TARY LIQUIDATION. Kansas Cléy,'Sept. 26.—The Kansas City State bank, Wiley C. Cox presi- dent, failed to open its doors during THREE BADLY INJURED. RAttack Made on Fortune Tellers’ Camp Near Milwaukee. Milwaukee, Sept. 26.—A camp of itinerant Scotch fortune tellers near this city was attacked and the occu- pants so roughly handled that one woman sustained serious injuries and another woman and a man will be confined to their beds for some time. The Scotch people have been carry- Ing on their work in this vicinity for some time and at the last camping place became involved in numerous the day, having gone into voluntary | guarrels and personal encounters with liquidation. last July, catching depositors for sev- eral hundred thousand dollars. The Kansas City State bank was or- ganized in 1888 and had a capital of $200,000. The last statement showed loans of $4,000,000, deposits $4,750,- 000, surplus $14,000. % The following notice was posted on the door. at the opening_ hour: “This bank has gone into voluntary lquidation through the Fidelity Trust comprny.. Thecks drawn agaiust the- bank will be patd on presentation o the Fidelity Trust company. The Kansas City State bank holds $587,000 of the city’s money. Wiley ©O. Cox, president of the bank, is one of the oldest and best known men in Missouri. The Fidelity Trust company, one of Kansas City’s strongest banking houses, has taken over the business of the Kansas City bank and is paying the depositors in the ordinary way, on demand. : S8ELLING BIGELOW SECURITIES. Sanker’s Mining 8tocks Bring Little or Nothing. Milwaukee, Sept. 26.—A long list of stocks, bonds and securities formerly beld by Frank G. Bigelow, the default- ing bank president, were auctioned off to the highest bidder by the Wiscon- sin Trust ‘company, trustee in the bankruptcy proceedings. Up. to noon, when an adjournment was taken, only sbout half the list had been disposed of, bringing $121,400 on properties having a face value of $790,497. The list includes a large amount of mining stocks, which brought little or noth- ing. NG CAUSE FOR STRIKING. will benefit by the Increased price. Th NG TUBE Tagy o e - Eene, they | New York, Sept. 26.—Baron Komura, —Bullet-Into His-Brain.. = | Milwaukee, Sept.’ New York, Sept. 26.—Asgenting re- Bnyder, who came from New Orleans luctantly to listen to one last word |[On Wednesday last, is believed by the from her husband, from whom she was | Bealth authorities to be afflicted with yellow fever in a mild form. Her con- ditlon 1s not serious and her relatives Bituminous Miners 8atisfied With Con- ditions, Operators Say. The bank had loaned | Mr Ramlow, who lives near the grove ;slss.ooo to the bank of Salmon & |in which the fortune {Salmon at Clinton, Mo., which failed | pitched their tents. The shooting attracted a mob of | tellers had Ramlow’s son and Frank Geiger, a companion, lis- tened to a recital of the wrongs al- leged to have been practiced on the father and in their wrath determined to wipe out the Highlanders’ camp. Clubs and other missiles were pro- cured and after a well planned flank movement a, sudden attack was made and the occupants, taken completely by surprise, were worsted. The two men who planned and executed the at- tack are now in jail. i e - SAILORS. FALL TO DEATH. Drop From Mast of Vessel and Lives Are Crushed Out. Houghton, Mich., Sept. 26.—Frank Revard and Fred Malache, sailors on the barge Godfrey, are dead as the re- sult of falling from a mast which they were scraping preparatory to painting to the dock, sixty-five feet below. Malache fell twenty-five feet further, into the hold. Revard died while be- ing hurried to the hospital, while Malache lingered in great agony for some hours. He suffered a'broken leg and was badly battered and bruised. Revard never regained consciousness. Both men resided in Mount Clemens, Mich. Pleads for Abused Rich Man. Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 26.—Chancellor E. Benjamin Andrews of the Univer- sity of Nebraska, in an address here, declared that the popular hostility tp- wards persons of wealth is one of the most dangerous signs of the times. In his address, which was to the stu- dents, he complimented the men who had amassed great fortunes and were using them intelligently. Public Health Association Meets. Boston, Sept. 26.—Physiclans, sur- geons and bacteriological experts from all parts of the United States, Canada Columbus, O., Sept. 26.—The big |and Mexico have come to this city to coal operators here say that the re- | attend the thirty-third annual meeting port from the East that the bituminous | of the American Public Health asso- miners from Ohio will join‘the an- | clation which opened during the day thracite miners to enforce an eight- | and will hour workday {s not true. The in- erease of 15 cents a ton on coal at the mine goes into effect Oct. 1 .and the continue until Friday night. WILL SAIL" ON OCT: 2 operators say that the miners in Ohio | Baron Komura Leaves New York for ey " Yellow Fever at Milwaukee. whom she is visiting do not fear con- house ‘where she lived in East New | tagios. York. a cry of fear. Hurrying down stairs the woman found her husbend lying on the vestibule floor, shot through the head. Ten minutes, later the doc- tors pronounced him dead. lxp!o.ioi\ in Firewerks Factory. A second later she heard aJ muflled report and: sprang back with | | Snowfall of 8ix inches:: ‘ Mount Washington, N. H., Sept. 26, —Snow to the depth of six inches covers the summit of Mount Washing- ton and lies on the ground to a lesser ] House. The thermometer registersd 36, 1 as far down as the Halfway . Jape Ridiculd Russian Story. Vancouver Wednesday. the Japanese peace envoy, has so tar recovered from his illness that he will n bis_journey o Japan on day- - Fhe-baren Will be- Qe iii. . companied Yy Mr. Sato, who remained with the baron when the rest of the suite started for home after the peace megotiations had been cgncluded. They will go by rail to Vancouver, whence they will sail on the steamer Empress of India Oct. 2. . AMERICAN TRADE ACTIVE.. No Evidence of Boycott Conditions at 5 Shanghai. . Washington, Sept. 26.—Consul Gen- eral Rodgers, at Shanghai, has cabled -| the state department as follows: ““There i8 no longer any evidence of boycott comditions in or about Shang- hai and American trade is active, par- cularly with the northern part.of Chins, and there has been no stamp- ing of goods .(boycott marks) as was of affairs’ seems to be satistactory.” ‘I veported. - Onthe’whole the com