Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| e HARTMAN * ARRESTED Alleged ‘Adulterer Brought Back to Bemidji by Sheriff Bailey Today. WAS {APPREBENDEB AT LA-|ateam belonging toJ. A. Me- CROSSE, IDAHO. Bonds Fixed at $300 and Hearing Will Come Up on April 11 at 10 0’Cloek. W. W. Hartman,who is accused in a warrant issued some time ago of adultery, was brought back to Bemidji this afternoon by Sheriff Bailey after an absence of nearly two months. Hamn'an made his escape from the city after a very highly sensational affair in which he took the most prominent part and which re- sulted in a complaint being made against him charging him with adultery, Hartman was arrested by the police at LaCrosse, Idaho, on a description furnished by Sheriff Bailey, who was notified by tele- graph of the capture. Sheriff Bailey left last Monday for Idaho after being assured that Hartman would accompany him to Bemidji without requisition papers being secured. The sheriff returned with his prison- er this afternoon. Hartman’s bonds were fixed at $300 and his preliminary examin- ation will come up April 11 at 10 o’clock a. m. INSANE OVER GIRL HE LOVES Henry Hendrickson Adjudged Insane in Judge Clark’s Court Today. Henry Hendrickson, 20 years of age and a resident of White Earth, Ward county, N. D., was this afternoon adjudged insane after an examination before Judge of Probate Clark and a number of physicians. Hen- . drickson seems to have gone in- sane over a girl with whom he is infatuated and has the delusion that someone is looking for both himself and the girl with a gun, wishing to destroy them. The insane man will be held at the county jail pending the action of the state board of control, Lurions risning. 4 Very curious is the method of fishing followed by. the Chinese in the strait of Malacca. - The fisherman lets down from the side of the boat a acreen of white canvas stretched on wood. The shoal of fish mistake this for some floating obstruction and try to leap over it, with the result that the fish Jump into the boat and are thus cap- tured. This method Is employed by Malays in thelr waters. Scotlana Yard. Beotland Yard, widely known as the headquarters of the London police, 1s a historical place, said to have been the site of a palace where kings of Scot- land were recelved when they came to London. It Is near the banqueting hall, “Whitehall. The Scotch kings retained possession of it from 939 till the rebel- Hon of William of Scotland. Milton, Sir Christopher Wren and other nota- bles lived in Scotland Yara. He Is Deliberate, Mrs. Sparks—Your husband is a very deliberate man. isn't he? Mrs. Slow- man—Indeed he fs. Mrs. Sparks—Did you ever know him to do anything in 8 hurry? Mrs. Slowman—Never! He plans every movement with the utmost deliberation and linge:s stu iously over every detail. 1 have often thought that It he ever dies suddenly it will be an awful shock to him. TEAM DROWNS |WILL BE HELD IN MUD LAKE Valuable Horses Belonging|i when there ‘are but few acres under cnlt.ivation.\ This alone is responsible for the few animals kept. ‘duced there is no profit in live stock. " Hay at its best, will pro- duce only from three 'to three and one-half tons per acre during the season. be grown to take the place of hay, and will produce from five to eight tons of cured feed to the acre. growing of fodder-corn of the greatest importance in this sec- tion of the state. Corn will not generally mature for grain in the northern tier of counties to any profitable extent, but for fodder it yields abundantly and attains sufficient maturity for this purpose, to J. A. McAvoy Breaks Through the Iece. . The valuable horses composing Avoy, the Bemidji liveryman, were drowned in Mud Lake Sat- urday affernoon. Mr. McAvoy had driven to Island Lake in the forenoon and was on his return to Bemidji. While crossing Mud lake the horses broke through the ice and in spite of efforts to pull them from the water both drowned. Mr. McAvoy drove across the lake on his way to Island Lake and naturally thought that there would be no danger in crossing the lake on his return. Light and Telephone Wires Mixed. The electric light and tele- phone wires between the Remore hotel and the C, H. Miles build- ing became entangled last night and a short circuit resulted, a number of phones and electric lights in several business build- ings being placed out of commis- sion temporarily. The damage was repaired this morning, ENJOINING THE AUDITOR Red Lake Falls Can Serve Injunction on The Vote. Latest news from Red Lake Falls in regard to the county seat fight that is sweeping over Red Lake county that the county seat be changed from Red Lake to Thief River says that the Red’ Lake people will restrain the auditor from issuing the_call either for calling the county board for ordering the election or beyond this enjoining him from ordering the election. The writ issued by Judge Watts will be operative after five days, or next Monday. After that time there is no appeal to a higher court from thewrit. Noactionhas yet been made and undoubtedly will not te made to push the mat- ter to the supreme court. While the Thief River attor- neys, A. A, Miller, E. M. Stanton and Cooke and Richardson are at present awaiting the action of the Red Lake attorneys in the matter it is very probable that they are exerting themselves to the utmost to vounteract any probable action as soon as it is made. The action of the peremptory writ is to compel the county board to act in the matter of the ordering of the election. It isa charge from the court. TOMORROW Conference Between Commit- tees of Operators And Miners Postponed. New York, April 9.—At the re- quest of the operators, the con- ference between the committees of the coal operators and miners scheduled to be held today to consider the schedule in the anthracite field was postponed until tomorrow. worse than before. SORES ano ULCERS TROUBLESOME-OFFENSIVE-DANGEROUS Nothing is more discouraging than to have an unhealthy sore or ulcer resist one treatment after another, sometimes scabbing over and apparently getting well, then returning with renewed energy and becoming Sores and ulcers are not due to outside causes; if they were, salves, plasters, lotions, etc., would cure them. They are kept up by a diseased and polluted condition of the blood brought on by the absorption of refuse and waste matters of the body into this vital fluid. ~These acccumula- 'Experimerit A GROWING! FEED—FODDER - CORN. meadow on the farm the growing tation Bulletin Where there 1s not natural th feed _becomes a very t factor, and especially Unless rough feed is pro- Fodder.corn may This large yield makes the Plant in rows three feet apart and from three to four inches apart in the row. The rows may be double—that is, two rows about three or four inches apart nd then the thr ee feet between the double rows to allow cultiva tion. The plants grow up so thick that no weeds grow in the row. No ears are formed, owing to the thick growth. All the nutriment of the plant goes into the stalk and leaves. The stalks are fine in texture and are eaten up as clean by the animals as a good quality, of hay, A grain drill is best for plant- ing, stopping up all cups except those at right intervals. When a grain drill is not used, it may be sown with a garden drill, or in the absence of this, it may be sown by hand, running furrows three feet apart, sowing along ic the furrows and cover with har row. The ground should be plowed and harrowed first and gotten in the best possible condi- tion, The fodder-corn crop should be cultivated once a week during the growing season. The ground should b3 manured for fodder- corn. In faet, the soil cannot be too rich for this crop. For seed ahy kind of ordinary seed corn will do. It should- be sown between- May 20th and June 1st. Sow from 3 pecks to 1} bushels per acre, owing to wheter in single or double rows. Any seed house will supply the seed at ‘from $1 1o $1.50 per bushel. This fodder-corn will attain sufficient growthin ninety days tocut. . It is best about two weeks after the tasseling stage, but may be cut even before tasseling out if danger of frost. Itis most cheaply harvested with a corn binder, but it may be cut by hand. In either case shock up in field right after cut- ting and let stand in the field till after the ground is frozem. It may be stacked upin the barn- yard in long, narrow shocks, set- ting the bundles upright, as there is danger of heating i stacked like hay. It should be fed from the time of cutting, asit' loses in feed value late in the winter, owing to excessive drying out. " One acre of fodder-corn prop- erly grown will feed two to three cows throughout the winter. Try an acre, atleast, to begin with. It can be grown for less thana a dollar a ton, and for dairy cows is equal to the best timothy hay. Northeastern Minnesota can be made the dairy section of the state, but the first step must be in growing seed. A. J. MCGUIRE, The Father of Scfence. Hippocrates is looked upon by &nat- omists as the father of the science. He died in 877 B. C. The modern scl- ence began in Italy in the thirteenth century, The first anatomical plates, designed to show the size and relative position of the bodily organs, were pre- pared and colored by Titian. All the great painters and sculptors have been careful students of anatomy. Michael Angelo, Raphael and Leonardo da Vin- ci were noted for their anatomical re searches. tions find their way into the blood, usually because of an inactive and sluggish condition of the system. Nature intends that they shall be carried off through the usual channels of waste, 2 gerfom their duties properly leave the matter to sour and ferment. lood then, in its effort to keep the system healthy, absorbs these poisons and cut or wound the sore is formed, and the constant atter through it keeps the place open and irritated Another cause for old sores and ulcers is the pol luting or weakening of the blood from the re- at the first bruise, drainage of foul m B0 it cannot heal. but the different members failing to The mains of some constitutional trouble or the effects of a long spell of sickness. S. S S @ [ PURELY VEGETABLE. SWIFT begins at the fountain-head and drives out all Ppoisonous matter and germs, and makes a last- ing cure. the influence of S. S. S.' the inflammation gradually leaves, the flesh takes on a healthy color, and soon the place is permanently healed. Book on sores and ulcers and any medical advice withs ont charge. SPECIFIC ATLANTA, As soon as the system gets under ANTA B ‘Chinese Rebels Beheaded. Canton, March [7.—The leader of the rebels of Kuangsi province and three others who were implicated in the attack on the house of Rev. Dr. | Andrew Beattie, the American mis- sionary at Fati, in February, were be headed March 12, 2 On the Common Highway. _We are learning that a standard of social ethics s not attained by travel- ing & sequestered pathway, but by walking on the thronged and common | road where all must turn out for ome another, and at least see the size of ont another's burdens.—Jane Addams. ‘officiating. EDDED AST NIGHT flikkaffip'- Thompson Nup- tials Celebrated at Nor- wegian Lutheran Church. Anders . Nels Peter = Lac-son Haklkerup and Miss Louise Marie Thompson were last night mar- Tied at the Norwegian Lutheran church, Rev. 8. E. P. White of the First Presbyterian church The church ~was beautifully decorated for the oc- casion ‘and about 25 ' intimate friends and relatives of the con- tracting. parties witnessed the ceremony. After congratula- tions had been extended to the wedded pair, the party repaired to the future home of .the bride and groom on Bemidji avenue, where an elaborate wedding sup- per was served and where many beautiful and costly gifts were received by the bride and groom, Mr. Hakkerup, the groom, is engaged in the photograph busi- ness in Bemidji and has made this city his home for a numter of years. He 1s one of the sub- stantial business men of the city and has| the best wishes of fa large number of friends, as has his bride, who has also been a resident of Bemidji for a number of years and is popular with a wide circle of friends. REFUSED TO MOVE ITS POLES Telephone Company Blocks Attempt to Secure Down Town Ball Park. — The attempts of the promoters of'a down town base ball park and a base ball team for next summer have been blocked for the present so far as the park is concerned on account of the re- fusal of the- Northwestern Tele- phione company te remove a num- ber of its poles, located in the proposed grounds between Sec- ond and Third streetarand lrvine and America avenues: The base ball men are determined to have| - a down town park for: next sea- son, however, and although they have abandoned the:site ovigin- ally planned upon several others are under consideration and there is no doubt but that & cen trally located plotof ground will be secured. NO RAISE FOR SUPT. O’NEIL Senator LaFollette to Block Provision in Indian Ap- propriations Bill. . —_— Washington, D. C., April 9.— Senator LaFollette, of Wisconsin, is gunning after several wood chucks in the Indian appropria- tion bill. At a meéting of the senate committee on Indian affairs, LaFollette moved to strike out of the bill a provision of in- creased payments to be allowed Supt. O'Neil, superintendent of logging on the Chippewa reser- vation, and his assistants, dating back from the time of their ap- pointment. The motion preyail- ed, but it is quite likely thatan effort will be made to restore it when the bill comes up for derate in the open senate, The in- creased allowances were put in by the house committee onIn- dian affairs. There will be opposition to re- moving the restrictions of aliena- tion from individual half breeds on_several reservations, includ- ing the famous George Lydeck case at Cass Lake, Minn. Where to Get Tt. ““A simple look is all. I crave,” sald the sentimental young man to the hefress. “Then you'C better consult your mir- ror,” mi e repl d tartly. Official Correspondence. A fourth class postmaster—and he doesn’t live in Billville—sent the fol- lowing to headquarters in Washiag: ton: 2 “This. wil make three times that I've told you I'm laid up with a bad leg, havin’ shot myself in jthe left leg—the one that was wounded in- the war— MEDICINE IN THE KITCHEN drugs. which are now used only in formally prescribed mixtures or pills | are capable of introduction into the more welcome output of the domes- tic kitchen. It is often difficult when a medicine has to be taken frequently and over long periods of time to be sure that the patient does Dot grow- careless or forgetful. If, however, instead of taking his pill after his daily meals, that pill were, without altering the taste of the dish and without losing its own effi- cacy, combined with the patient’s dinner instead of preceding or fol- lowing it, the physician’s orders would be more consistently carried out by connivance on the part of the cook than they are with the co- operation of the druggist. Such a relegation of the dispenser’s-duties to the hands of the chef can only be achieved by familiarity on the part of the medical man with the work of both his subordinates. No Waiters, No Tips, No Delays. Ingenious automatic restaurants have recently been introduced in Berlin. Cabinets with glass fronts line the walls, and through these glass fronts are to be seen rows,and rows of little elevators, with the slots and mechanism for working ‘them. Shelves all around on the iittle elevators bring up hot soups, ‘ot roasts, cold meats. pies, sand- wiches, tea, coffee—in fact,” what- ever is ‘on the menu, and that is changed “daily. All the, customer has to do is {0 decide what he wants, drop his coin in the little opening and await results. In less than a minute up comes his meal, raised by electricity from the kitchen in the basement, and it comes either steam- ing hot.or’ice cold, just as ordered, and clean, fresh and sweet; with no dirty handed waiter with black cuffs and ' greasy napkin to take your appetite away while handing it to you.—Technical World. Singular or Plural? A discussion starts up somewhers every now and then as to whether the “United States” as a nomina- tive requires a singular or a plural verb. The late David Dudley Field, one of the ‘ablest scholars and con- stitutional lawyers of his time, said that the use of a singular verb with United States. not only violates a rudimentary rule of syntax, but mis- represents the fundamental princi- ple .on which our national system is founded. The Union is one, and the United States government is one, but the United States are sev- eral. Therefore we should say, “The United States are not at war with any nation,” not “is not at war.” The distinction may seem a fine one, but most of the best schol- ars say that it should be made. CONDENSED STORIES. The Professor Was Not Interested In the Measure. For some time George Dexter Clark, former chairman of the Re- publican city committee, has been greatly deceived by the resemblance which Professor C. D. Hazen of Smith college bears to Representa- tive Winslow H. Edwards of East- hampton. His confusion of the two led to many amusing interviews, in which Professor Hazen was asked ““HOW ABOUT THAT LIQUOR BILL?" his opinion on political matters. His replies were often along other lines than those expected by Clark. Matters culminated on a train to Springfield a short time ago, when Mr. Clark and Professor Hazen oc- cupied seats opposite each other. Raising his voice so that it could be heard above the roar of the train, Mr. Clark yelled, “How about that liquor bill “What liquor bill ?” demanded the astonished professor. “I know noth- ing about any liquor bill.” “Why, of course you know,” per- sisted Mr. Clark. “You introduced it into the house.” “Introduced nothing!” said Dr. Hazen. “Aren’t you Representative Ed- wards ?” asked Mr. Clatk. “No.” “Oh!”—Boston Herald. : Mil Mildew can be removed from lin- en by a preparation of soft soap, powdered starch and salt, used in equal proportions and to which the juice of a lemon has been added. aint both: sides of -the linen tg_flt the linen out in the _BEMI_DJI, VESUVIUS STILL _ Experiments hazo'shown that IN_ERUPTION Quantity of Ashes and Cinders Thrown ~Up in Last 24 Hours Is Unprecedented. PEOPLE ARE SUFFERING FROM PANIC STATE BOARD TO TAKE ACTION Epidemicin Schools Are Increased protection of school children is to be brought about by the state board of health through an extension of powers by the new code. Regulations are now being pre- pared and will be adopted by the board soon which will put upon local boards of health the duties of providing physicians for every school and of adopting drastic measures when necessary to pre- vent epidemics and improve sani- tary conditions in the school. The rules of the board of health, when adopted, will require the local board of health in each city, village or township to appoint one or more school physicians, who will be assigned to cover every school in the district. The physicians must call at the schools daily or as often as pre- scribed by the local boards of health. They must make medi- cal examinations of all pupils re- ferred to them and are given authority to further examine teachers, pupils and janitors and make such inspections of build- ings as they consider necessary 0 protect the health of the pupil. Contemplated. carts have been its fusion exists. Comforting. to widowers today.” “What was his text?” hopel’ ” Unavailing Pursait. Naples, April 9.—The quantity of ashes and cinders thrown up by Mount Vesuvius within the last 24 hours is unprecedented. An analysis shows this discharge lto be chiefly composed of iron, Drastic Measures to Prevent [sulpher and magnesia. Ievacuation of the threatened vil- lages and towns continues but means to transport the inhabit- ants are lacking although thous- ands of soldiers with artillery sent to the places where the sufferers most need assistance. At many places the people are suffering from a ipanic and a state of great con- “Qur clergyman preached a sermon “‘Sorrow not as those that have no “Don’t be so sweeping in your judg- ments. There's that prominent man I mentioned just now, who I am sure has always pursued an upright life.” “That may be, but he's never caught up with it.”"—Baltimore American. can be closed at once. given power to . Ehe local boards of health will safety of the pupils. Wasteful Negligence To use Poor Paint is False Econemy Good paint used when needed is a profitable in- vestment—not an expense. Buy HEATH & MILLIGAN’S best prepared paint, then you will be sure you will get your moneys worth and your buildings will get the protection. 3 “H” and “M” paint recommended and used by - painters for first class work everywhere. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST, ALWAYS. J. A. LUDINGTON J. P. POGUE’S LIVERY, FEED ANE SALE STABLE be given authority to require’ teachers to report each day upon the case of every child who shows the least sign of ill health. Whenever any contagious disease is found 1n the school, the school Local health officers will be inspect the schools at all times as to their cleanliness and sanitary condi- tion and will also have power to close the schools until they are put in proper condition for the MINN.