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i ¢ § The Cause of Snoring. This Is not for you, because you | never snore. No oune ever does snore himsel?. It is always the other fellow. But you can read this and then tell that guilty other fellow how to break himself of his bad habit, for 1s merely a bad habit and as such can be overcome. It is caused pri- marily by Improper breathing—that is, breathing through the mouth instead of through the uo: —so, lrst of all, care should be taken during waking hours to breathe correct The habit once formed of keeping the mouth as firmly closed as possible, he will be less likely to sleep with it open, Then see that your troublesome snorer has a proper pillow. e should sleep with his head as flat as possible, for if his head is pushed forward and the u bent the tongue drops back ag the soft palate and forms an obstry tion which makes all the unius sounds we hear when the ai; past 1t.—St. James' Gazett The Last Match Saved Them: The ship had lain beealmed in a trop- feal sea for three days. Not a breath of alr stirred the mirrovlike surface of the sea or the limp sails (hat hung from the yards like drapery carved in stone. The captain resolved to wait no longer. He piped up all hands on deck and requested the passengers to also come forward. I must ask all of you," he said, “to give me every match that you have.” Wonderingly the passengers and crew obeyed. The captain carefull the matches in his hands handed him bhis store until all been collected. Then he threw all overboard but one, drew a cig: from his pocket and, striking the sol tary match on the nmiainmast, endea ored to light it. In an Instant ous gale swept over the deck, guished the match and filled the and the good ship Mary Ann through the waves on her Pearson’s Weekly. The Cod’s Bill of Fare. - An Interesting exhibit in the South Kensington museum, London, illus-| trates the ommivorous nature of the cod’s diet. Among the fish failing a prey to its voracions maws we note the young of the herring, dab, whiting and sand eel. Shrimps and young lob- sters also form an important item in the cod’s menu. The strangest part of the cod's diet perhaps is the mouse, whose thick covering of bristles mighit be thought to render it unwelcome to any stomach. Large whelks and shells of whelks with their indwelling bermit | crabs are also largely devoured. From its partiality to mollus! in fact, the cod may become an a shell collector. Wond ual of the Mollus “some good mnorthern been rescued unbroken from the stom- ach of the cod.”—London (lobe. Growing Flowers In Winter, A long run of dark days in winter is bad for the flor It matters little how cold the weather is, provided there s sunshine, for the heat can al- ways be maintained to the point, and_ with sunshine flowers will bloonr just as freely when the ther- mometer shows an outdoor tempera- ture of zevo as at the freezing point, though of course more money must be spent for coal. But when, day after dav. for weeks at a time, clouds over- hang the sky, nothing will grow as it should. The carnation buds develop slowly until they are half open and walt for sunshine, and if it does not come in four or five days the blooms decay. So also It Is with callas and roses. They will open -halfw then, ! without sunlight, will quic! Bt. Louis Globe-Demgerat. ¥ spoil.— ~How They Dance In Hungary. With the exception of the Spaniards there 1s no nation in dances like the Hungarians. They love 1t with a love that amounts to a passion. They not only go In for It heart and soul, but they will dance on anything, in any sort of weather. A paddock, a village street, a stable yard, the earth- en floor of a wayside csarda—it is all the same to them. Not the scorching sun or the whi ng dust or the pelting rain or the falling snow will deter them. They all dance beautifully too. It seems to be in their blood. Burope that Customs of Brittany. Brittany alone, of all the provinces of France, seems to have preserved its types and individuality. To be Breton woring | torced | proper | 18 by no means to Le French, The old | wen to this day chatter in the Celtic tongue. The Breton mother when not i at work in the fields sits in the door of her cottage plying the distaff and recit- ing the old™legends and quaint folk | songs to the white coifed baby beside her. The Breton woman still wears the costume of her mothers before her and Is satisfied in it. Too Heavy to Keep. Magistrate (to prisoner)—Miserable being, ndt only have you robbed your | employer of the fruits of long years of i labor, but you have dissipated it in the wililest extravagance. Prisoner— That is true, but I couldn't keep the " stolen money; it weighed too heavily on wy consclence.—Loisirs. Try This. Bill had a billboard. Bill also bad a board bill. The board bill bored Bill iso that Bill sold the billboard to pay his board bill. So after Bill sold his billboard to pay his board bill the board bill no longer bored Bill, The Right One. “8ir, I want your daughter’s hand.” “You may have it with the greatest | pleasure, dear boy, if you'll take the one that's always in my pocket.”—Bal- timore Sun. Use For Spoiled Beer. “There Is' no need,” sald a brewer, *for us to throw away beer that has turned sour, nor is there any need for as to try to doctor it up. We have a ready sale for our spoiled beer among cement makers. Don’t think from this that cement makers have a morbid taste for sour beer. Nothing of the kind. They use this beer in making cement for leather joints. It takes the place of acid, being cheaper and yet just as good.” A Wonderful Fish. The Bohemians have a proverb, “Ev- ery fish has another for prey.” Thé wels (silurus) has them all. This is the largest fresh water fish found in the rivers of Europe except the stur- geon. Tt often reaches five or six feet In length. It destroys many aquatic birds, and we are assured that it does not spare the human species. On the 3d of July, 1700, a peasant took one near Thorn that had an infant entire in its stomach. They tell in Hungary of children and young girls being de- voured on going to draw water, ands they even relate that on the frontiers of Turkey a poor fisherman took one i that had in its stomach the body of a woman, her purse containing gold and a ring. The fish is even reputed to have been taken sixteen feet long. | The Carlyles’ Maid. The Carlyles had a maid who was untidy, useless in all ways, but “abounding In grace” and in conse- quent censure of every one above or below her and of everything she could not understand. After a long apostro- phe one day as she was bringing In dinner Carlyle ended with, “And this I can tell you—that if you do not carry the dishes straight, so as not to spill the gravy, so far from being tolerated in heaven. you won't be even tolerated on earth.” Origin of the Cross Bun. The exact significance or origin of the cross bun is mot too certain. A superstition regarding Dakea vreua uu Gonl Friday appears to have existed from an early period. Bread so baked was kept by a family all through the ensuing year under the belief that a few gratings of itin water would prove a specific for any ailment.—Leeds and Yorkshire Mercury. ! Suspiciously Cheap. Schoppen — The price seems but I'm afraid of antique rugs. know the old saying, “Snug as a"— Salesman—“As a bug in a rug.” { Ha! Ha! But there are no bugs about l|lu< rug. Mrs. Schoppen (shrewdly)— No? I half suspect the presence of a little humbug.—Philadelphia Press. Mrs. low, You Her Troubles. Teacher—Who was the most patient person that ever lived? Student—Mrs, Job. Teacher—How do you make that out? . Student—Why, Job endured a ‘whole lot, but she had to endure Job.— Judge. He who seeks a brother without a fault will have to remain without a brother.-~Talmud. Notice to Horsemen The Black Prince, Sired by Black Diamond, and he by Brilliant,Fis"a beautiful black, American bred Percheon, seven years old, weighing 1760 pounds. Will make the teason of 1987 ai my stable, Bemidji,; Minn. For further particulars call on or write Wes Wright, owner, or M. Splan, manager, Bemidji, Minn, e -{ General Kuroki and his party were PASSES DOLLAR MARK December Wheat on the Chicago Market Goes to $1.03. General Grant end Major Strong, the' latter commanding Fortress Monroe. All honors were accorded the dis- tinguished Japanese and after break- fast General Kuroki and party pro- ceeded by special boat to review the great fleet of American and foreign warships in Hampton Roads, after which they landed at the Jamestown SHRINERS IN WRECK Spec;ial on Southern Pacific De- railed by Defective Switch. E \ EXCITING SCENES'IN THE PIT Entire Country-Seemed to Be Back of the Buying Movement and Brokers Were Unable to Fill Orders as Rap- Idly as Received. Chicago, May 14—Wheat took a tremendous jump at the opening of the board of trade, initial prices show- ing a gain on the leading options. of 1% to 8 cents, the latter advance be- ing on the December delivery, which sold at $1.03. The opening on the board was the wildest ahd most excited that has heen seen in several years, the pre- dictions made by the bulls on Satur- day night that “dollar- wheat” would soon be a reality being brought about within a few calls after the opening, both September and December selling above the predicted price, December going as high as $1.03. The trade was too big and too broad to follow exactly, but every commission house was stacked up with buying orders which were to take the wheat at the market price. The feeling in the country that the winter wheat crop has been badly hurt was even stronger than on Sat- urday and the demand came from all parts of the United States. . Many traders realized heavily on the enormous bulge at the opening, but the big demand continued and the selling had apparently not the slight- est effect. Prices continued to ad- vance steadily. The Liverpool market was reported strong and there was a sharp advance at Minneapolis because of small world’s shipments and un- favorable weather in the Northwest. The scene on the board of trade for the first half hour after the opening was the wildest that has been wit- nessed there since the collapse of the Leiter corner in 1898. Brokers made the most frantic efforts to fill orders for wheat, but in many cases were un- able to buy within 2 to 3 cents of the expected price so rapid were the fluc- tuations. Whole Country Buying. The entire United States seemed to be back of the buying movement and although the conservative traders on the local board seemed to be large- ly of the opinion that the advance was too abrupt to hold the flood of buying orders from the country continued and it was evident that for some time at least the market would have ample support. At 10:45 the buying pressure, which was responsible for the wild opening of the market, was less urgent. Long wheat was being thrown upon the market in large quantities and prices were much steadiér. The excitement had so far subsided that it was possi- ble for traders to execute orders with some degree of certainty. The market at this time had reacted considerably. December wheat was down to 99, 4 cents below the high mark; Septem- ber was selling at-98% cents and July at 96 cents. ‘The mariet Was comparauvely yutct after 11 o’clock and prices held steady around 96 for July and 97% for Sep- tember. Numerous reports poured in from the Southwest as to the amount of damage done by the green bug and the buying orders from the country continued in unabated volume. Pro- fesslonal traders, however, sold heav- ily and threw much long grain upon the market. TUnder heavy selling for profit all of the options sold off, July declining to 94%, September to 96% and Decem- ber to 987%. The volume of trading was enormous and the strong-buying demand continued until the close. Final quotations found the July op- tion up 4 cents, at 95%@95%. Sep- tember was also up 4 cents, at 97%. December was 4% cents higher, at 99 cents. GREAT DAMAGE TO WHEAT Light Crop Predicted in Kansas and Nebraska. Omaha, May 14—A special train filled with a committee of fifty mem- bers of the Omaha Grain Exchange, which has been making a tour of in- vestigation of the Nebraska and Kan- sas wheat fields, has returned here. The concensus of opinion follows: “Wheat, especially in the southeast- ern portion of Nebraska, has suffered about 10 per cent, owing to the influx of green bugs and continued drought: Sumner county, Kan., will not make over 40 per cent. The bugs have done great damage to the fields we have ex- amined. Some members declare the entire crop ruined between Caldwell, Kan,, and Wichita, a distance of forty miles. The party agrees that the yield of wheat this year will be very light as compared with former years. We find wheat it mighty bad condition.” ‘The party covered the districts of Kansas and Nebraska which have in the past always raised bumper crops, going as far south as the Oklahoma state-line. Threatened.Strike at Canal. Panama, May 14—The threatened strike of steam -shovel engineers and cranemen has not taken place. A few dissatisfied men have gone back to the United States, but there is no appre- clable break in the ranks of the steam shovel men. The rainy season has begun in earnest and the steam shov- els will not take out yardage at the rate maintained for thé last few months. KUROKI AT JAMESTOWN. Distinguished Japanese Visitor Views Exposition. Norfolk, Va., May 14—The day’s elaborate celebration at the James- town exposition was ushered in by the firing:of a salute of seventeen guns from ‘Fortress Monroe incident to the arrival at Old Point Comfort at 6:16 @ m, of General Baron Kuroki, his staff and party, accompanied by Gen- eral O. BE. Wood as official escort, met at the Old Péint Comfort pler by exposition grounds for the exercises of the day, which included an addresg by President Harry St. George Tucker of the Jamestown Exposition company and a parade and review of the fed- eral troops on the camp at the exposi- tlom, together with several thousand sailors landed from the American and foreign warships in Hampton Roads, all being reviewed by General Kuroki; the Japanese vice admiral, Sir Gero Tjuin; Duke de Abruzzi; Grant and Wood; Admiral Evans and other American and foreign army and navy dignitaries. tween crews from the American and foreign warships. EIGHT- HBUH LAW UPHELI] But Court Declares Dredgers Are Not Laborers. Washington, May fined by the trial court. The suits pose of testing the applicability of the improvements, _but other points also were necessarily involved. The court held the law to be constitutional, but held that it does not apply to laborers and mechanics on dredges and that men so employed cannot be held to be employed upon public wrks. all came to the supreme court on writs chusetts. Justice Holmes’ opinion was based on the cases of William H. Ellis and 'the’ Eastern Dredging com- other six cases were decided along the same lines. Justice Moody delivered a dissenting opinion. The decision will have immediate bearing upon the letting of contracts for the $87,000,000 worth of river and harbor work au- thorized by the last session of con- gress. Most of the contracts under that law were held up by the war de- the cases. employed on dredges in river and har- bor improvements are not laborers or mechanics was based on the ground that in effect such men are seamen, 10 whom the law is not applicable. SENSATION AT MADISON. Said That Monev Is Being Used In Senatorial Contest. ‘Wisconsin special from Madison, Wis., says: Politicians about the statehouse are somewhat exercised over rumors that money is being used to influence the election of a United States senator. Two members of the assembly, it is said, have confessed that they have been approached, or believed they had, and are somewhat exercised over it. FOURTEEN MEN DEAD. Premature Explosion in a North Caro- lina Mine. _ Charlotte, N. C.,, May 14—As the result of a premature explosion at “Camp 2%,” on the South and West- ern railway near Marion, N. C., four- teen men are dead, eight bodies hay- Ing been recovered. Foreman Kidd's body was badly mangled Strike of Rlch Iron Ore. Duluth, May 14.—A very important strike of iron ore-has been made in the old Breitung shaft of the Minne- sota mines near Tower, on the Ver- million range. It is said that the strike will add at-least ten years to the life of Minnesota’s oldest iron mine and further devélopments under- ground may prove that it will be even more important than that. Dramshop Bill Talked to Death. Jefferson City, Mo., May 14—The extra sesslon of the legislature called | by Governor Folk adjournet during the day. The bill that Governor Folk especially wisfied to be enacted, that to regulate the dramshops of St. Louis county by placing them under the control-of an excise commissioner, was killed in the senate, Senator Gard- ner talking it to death. HAYWOOD GASE RESUMED Task of Selecting a Jury Continues at Boise. ‘Boise, 1da; May 14—Tie task of selecting a jury has been resumed in the case of William D. Haywood, sec- ['retary and treasurer of the Western Federation of Miners, charged with complicity in the assassination of for- mer Governor Steunenberg, and may be completed within the next four or five days, according to the judgment of opposing counsel. There is growing impatience among those who came here”to attend the trial to hear the opening address of the prosecution, which prohably will be delivered by James H. Hawley, ‘leading counsel for the. prosecution. Just how far the state’s attorneys will go in outlining the case they hope to prove aga‘nst Haywood is problemat- ical. They may choose to state their case’ in a most general way, glving no actual hint of the testimony they claim to have, or, on the other hand, the opening address may be a propo- sition as broad as the attorneys ex- pect to prove under the most fayor- able rulings of the court. Generals At noon a salute of 800 guns was fired in Hampton Roads commemorative of the landing of the first English_settlers in 1607. Among the features of the day were races be- 14. — Justice Holmes of the supreme court of the United States ‘during the day an- nounced the decision of the court in a number of cases involving the con: struction of the eighthour law of 1892, by which the employment of la- borers and mechanics on public works is limited to eight hours per day. The defendants were all prosecuted crim- inally and were all found guilty and were instituted especially for the pur- law to laborers and mechanics em- bloyed on dredges in river and harbor There were seven of the cases and of error from the United States dis- trict court for the district of Massa- pany vs. the United States and all the: partment pending the settlement of Justice Holmes’ opinion that men Milwaukee, May 14—An Evening DEAD NUMBER THIRTY-TWO Twenty of the Victims Were Residents of Reading, Pa, and a Majority of the Others Were From Buffalo and Elsewhere in the East. Santa Barbara, Cal, May 14— Thirty-two people lost their lives in the wreck of the Shriner special at Honda, a small town on the Southern Pacific. Most of the victims of the catastrophe were members of the Is- malia temple of Buffalo and the Rajah temple of Reading, Pa. The train car- ried 145 members of these two frater- nities and their families and friends. Of the dead twenty were residents of Reading, nine of the-others being res- idents of Buffalo, Cleveland and other Eastern towns and three were Pull- man employés. Of the - twenty or more_ injured many are-terribly hurt and will probably die. The wreck was caused by a defec- tive switch and the train was running at the rate of fifty miles an hour at the time. The coaches were smashed to pieces by the impact. There was no warning of the impending calamity. The special plunged upon the defec- tive switch and in an instant the big locomotive, baggage car, diner and Pullman coupled with it were hurled together in a huge heap of wreckage. The engine shot forward on the broken track, tearing-up-the rails- and ties and twisting the huge iron spans into fishhooks. The baggage car half bur- ied itself in the sand on the right side of the locomotive. It was smashed almost to kindling wood. The dining car, in which were thir- ty-two persons eating their nooday meal, leaped-into the air and was thrown directly on top of the demol- ished locomotive. Nearly every per- son in this coach was instantly killed. Scores were scalded by steam escap- ing from disconnected pipes in the kitchen of the diner. The terror and turmoil of the scene was indescribable. Many of those ‘who escaped instant death by the first impact were crushed by the rear coaches hufled upon the wreckage. Others, pinioned _in the debris, were roasted alive. The wreckage caught fire from the coals of "the engine, but was extin- guished in a few minutes by the pas- sengers who escaped mJury LAKE STEAMER DESTROYED Magnificent New Vessel Eurns in De- troit Shipyard. Detroit, May 14—The magnificent new passenger steamer City of Cleve- land, under construction at the plant of the Detroit Shipbuilding company for the Detroit and Cleveland Navi- gation company and designed to run between Detroit and Cleveland, was swept by fire early in the day and is a total loss except for her hull and ma- chinery. How much they have been damaged cannot be determined until the hull is pnmped out and a careful examination made. The loss, which falls upon the Detroit Shipbuilding company, a branch of the American Shipbuilding company, is about $700,- 000 and is fairly well covered by in- surance. The fire broke out just before day- light in some mysterious manner. There are rumors afloat that an in- cendiary is suspected. The officials of the shipyard are at a loss to ex- plain the fire, as there were two watch- men on the steamer and another at the gate to the shipyard. The City of Cleveland was launched at Wyandotte Jan. 5 and was to have been turned over to the Detroit and Cleveland Navigation company about June 30. She is 444 feet long and Is designed to carry 4,500 passengers, with sleeping accemmodations for 1,600. The interior woodwork and fittings were practically completed and the machinery and boilers installed. THEIR BOAT CAPSIZED. La Crosse (Wis.) Couple Drowned In the Mississippi. La Crosse, Wis.,, May 14—Ventur- ing—into the Mississippi in a small skiff, with waves lashing and break- ing four feet high, V. Van Camp and his sweetheart, Rosa Wright, were drowned and E. O. Ellsworth, a friend, *had-a thrilling escape from death. The river was the roughest on rec- ord under a thirty-mile gale. Van Camp and his party rowed to the mid- dle of the river, when a huge wave capsized-their boat. Ellsworth clung to the overturned craft, but Van Camp and the girl were drowned. Robbers Blow Open Safe. Minneaypolis,- May 14—Using a charge of dynamite strong enough to demolish a dozen safes cracksmen blew open a safe in the offices of the Crescent Creamery company, getting ‘away with $90 and some papers. Al- though neighbors heard the detona- tion the police were not aware of the robbery until day&h Serious Fire in Minnesota Town. Rush = City, Minn., May 14—Fire originating in the Johnson block de- stroyed the entire block, together with one or two buildings of lesser value and importance. 1t was, feared the entire community would be wiped out. The estimate of the loss is $20,000. The orlgln of the fire is not known. IDIAZ DISCUSSES SITUATION Mexico Will Flght Guatemala if It Is g Necessary. New York, May 14—In the course of a lengthy interview in the City of Mexico, published in the Herald here, President Diaz gave a statement of the feeling of Mexico towards Guate- mala. “Mexico,” he said, “has throughout all this trouble with Guatemala, which came ‘so near forcing us into war, maintained: the attitude of a friendly ‘power. That attitude is still main- talned. We do not want to shed blood to show the Guatemalan government the error of its ways and will not re- sort to that extreme measure unless gome overt act or insult be commit- ted which will demand the infliction by Mexico of a short sharp punish- ment.. “If it becomes necessary to have war we will make it a very brief one. Mexico’s present wonderful develop- _ment and progress must not be hin- dered by a long drawn out confiiet. The blow, if struck, will be hard and quick.’ President Diaz then reviewed the events leading up to the present dif- ferences with Guatemala down to the withdrawal, of the Mexican minister. “Not,” he said, “with the idea of sev- ering diplomatic relations, but to get him out of the way of receiving any-| WANTS ONE CENT A WORD. —————— e ————— HELP WANTED. WANTED—For U 8. army, able- - bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 19 and 85, citi- zens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles Block, Bemidji, insult from that government which would compel Mexico to administer a deserved punishment by force of arms. There the matter rests for the time. That is why there is no war. It is only a temporary condition, however.” FRENGH CABINET MAY QUIT Asks Vote of Confidence on Its Labor Policy. deputies, during the debate on the government’s policy towards labor, Education Minister Briand announced that if the house did not support the government’s disciplinary measures the ministers would not retain their portfolios. The debate was adjourned for a day-when the government will ask for a vote of confidence. FEW . NEGATIVE VOTES. German Reichstag Passes Second Reading of Modus Vivendi. Berlin, May 14—The reichstag, with only a few negative votes, passed the second reading of the commercial modus vivendi between Germany and the United States. Only some Conser- vatives and anti-Semites, representing agrarian constituencies, voted against the measure. They took the ground that the arrangement meant no ad- vantage to Germany in an agricultural way. Herr Kaempf, second vice president of the reichstag, in reporting the work of the cominittee, said that a proposal had been made to set a limit on the time in which the modus vivendi must be denounced. Another proposal was that the reichstag reserve the right of Tdetermining the date of the denuncia- tion, while othier members of the com- mittee demanded that the government denounce the agreement June 1, 1910, at the latest. The government had promised to supply the.reichstag with information from time to time as to how the arrangement was working. Thereupon the committee adopted the measure without exacting specific pledges. Count von Kanitz, one of the lead- ers of the Conservative party, com- plained that Germany's yielding atti- tude “strengthened the United States in her reckless tariff policy.” Farinhand Suspected of Crime. Tekamah, Neb., May 14—Walter Copple and wife, living just across the line from the Omaha Indian reserva- tion, twelve miles east of here, were murdered during the night. The sher- iff is searching for Bert Phillips, a farmhand for Copple, who is suspect- ed of knowing something of the crime. Phillips and a mule from Copple’s barn is missing. __ Pretender’s Forces Defeated. Melilla, Morocco, May 14.—It is ru- mored here that the army of the sul- tan has won a victory over the forces of the prgtender near Marchica. The casualties on both sides are reported to be heavy and the government troops are sald to have captured 200 prison- ers. Where Diners Had to Be on Time. Closely paraliel to the fag end of the Euston road and visible from it at various turnings is a street which be- longs to few men's London. It is a dingy, granite paved, populous street of no attraction. Yet this street has known better times and ‘eager guests. In the house he knew as 43, now oblit- erated by a big new~warehouse, Dr. ‘Willlam Kitchener entertalned his fel- low wits and gourmets. He had am- optics, cookery and music. His din- ners were often elaborate experiments in cookery, and the guests had to rec- ognlze this fact. Five minutes past 5 was the minute, and 1f % guest came late the janitor had irrevocable orders not to admit h’im, for it was held by the mythical “committee of taste,” of whom Kitchener was “secretary,” that the perfection of some of the dishes was often so evanescent that “the delay of one minute after their arrival @t the meridian of concoction ‘will render them no longer worthy of men of taste.” —T. P.’s' Loodon Weekly. When Cleveland Said “By Gosh!” — “A long legged friend of mine, who may be called Bill Jennings as well as Paris, May 14—In the chamber of | ple means to ride his three hobbles, A Mina. \WANTED: For the U. S. Mar- " ine corps; men between ages 21 and 35. An opportunity to see the world. For full infor- mation apply in person or by letter to 208 Third Street. 'WANTED: Competent girl for general housework. Mrs, Thomas Bailey. WANTED: Two dishwashers,at once. Good wages. Markham Hotel. WANTED: Two girls for kitchen work. Inquire Hotel Mark- ham. 2 FOR.SALE. FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kirid ‘of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE: Good all arourd horse, sorrel, and will weigh 1,100. -J. H. Wagner, Bemidji, Minn, FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head, mounted; will be sold cheap. Inquire at this office, LOST and FOUND * LOST—Black and white English setter, -'Answers to the name of “Rod.” Liberal reward will be paid for return of dog to W. R. Tait, Bemidji. FOR RENT. FOR RENT: Large front room, furnished: 105 Irvine Ave. MISCELLANEOUS. B VSN UV U LU UUUS I PPoony PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays and Saturdays, 2:30 to 6 p. m. Thursdays 7 to 8 p. m. also. Library in base- ment of Court House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, librarian. PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWYER . WM. B.MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW Practices before the United States Supreme Court—Court of Claims—The United States General Land Office—Indian Office and Con- gress. Special attention given to Land Con- tests—Procurement of Patents and Indian Claims. Refer to the members of the Minne- sota Delegation in_Crongress. fices. 420 New York Avenue, Washington, D. D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office_opposite Hotel Markham. - E. E, McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW {djl, Minn, ~ Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: iles Block DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SUI!GBON Telephone Number Third St.. one block west of 18t Nat'l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer, Phone 40. 404 Beltrami Ave. DENTISTS. Dr. R. B. Foster, SURGEON DENTIST PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK. - DR. J. T. TUOMY - -Dentist First National Banl. Bu Id'g. Telephone No. 230 anything else,”” says Emerson Hough in Appleton’s Magazine, “always in- sisted that he was responsible for the opening of the Cherokee country. ‘I went down'to Washington,’ said he, ‘to see Cleveland about it. I went up to the door’of Cleveland’s house—right at the front door—and I knocked, and T beard Cleveland holler out to me, “Come in!” his cabinet there too. I says to Cleve- land, “Cleveland, them Injuns has got to go and them cow men too.” I put it to him right plain. = Cleveland he lis- tened, and by and by He got up and come and put his hand on my shoulder, and® says he, “Bill, by gosh, she “popst”* ¥ The Condition. “Do you think you could be oom!ort— able on $10,000 a year?” - “Yes, I belleve. T could if the. peonla next door hadn’t more than $0,000 a year and my wife knew 1t.”—Chicagg Record-Herald. The greatest pleasure ve It 3 Want Ads I went In, and there was | Cleveland sittin’ in the parlor, with all FOR RENTING A “PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. - Pioneer