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i { ] i [N INTEREST QF PEACE Premier Franco Resigns the Dic- tatorship of Portugal. NEW REGIME IN CONTROL Entire Change of Government Followe | the Assassination of King Carlos and the Crown Prince—Second Son of Dead Ruler Ascends the Throne. Lisbon, Feb. 4—Premier FrnncoE has relinquished power and a new | cabinet has been formed with Admiral | Ferreira do Amaral as the president | in the place of the late dictator, Franco. ‘This step signalized the practical ‘withdrawal of Franco from power. He | agreed to this measure as one Cfllc“-i lated to pacify hostile public opinion at & time when only a spark was needed to inflame the whole country and hurl it headlong to revolution. It is nevertheless believed that Franco | will still be the “man of power,” but | his official prerogatives are at least | shorn of real authority. H The opening session of the new council has been held. King Manuel II. appeared before his ministers and | with a voice vibrant with emotion said: “I am yet without experience either in science or in politics. I place my- self entirely in your hands, needing and believing in your patriotism and ‘wisdom.” The new cabinet is made up of coalition elements in the.hope of rec- onciling the many disturbing elements. Some of the new ministers have been notably opposed to Franco’s iron rule. ; Not one of the Franco ministers re- mains, so that his regime disappears ‘with him. The city is still in the throes of | intense excitement and the authorities continue to follow unceasingly the de- tails of the plot which culminated in the assassination of the king and his heir. Arrests are being made by the wholesale in Lisbon and all suspicious persons still at liberty are under po- lice surveillance. The authorities are maintaining a strict sensorship on all outgoing tele- graphic messages. King Manuel has announced his in- tention of summoning parliament and of taking the oath to preserve the in- tegrity of the kingdom before that body. The chamber, which was dissolved by Premier Franco, will reassemble before the holding of the regular elec- tlons. KING AND HEIR KILLED. Detaiis of Double Tragedy Streets of Lisbon. Lisbon, Feb. 4—The tragedy result- ing in the deaths of King Carlos and Luiz Philippe, the crown prince, and the wounding of the king's second son, Prince Manuel, occurred while the royal family was being driven from a railroad station to the palace Queen Amelie, who strove lo save the crown prince's life by throwing her- self upon him, was unhurt. A band of men waiting at the corner of the Praco do Commercio and the Rua do Arsonal suddenly sprang to- ward the open carriage in which the royal family was driving to the palace and, leveling carbines, which they had concealed upon thew, fired. The king and the crown prince, upon whom the attack was directed, were each shot three times and they lived only iong enough to be carried to the marine arsenal near by, where they expired. Almost at the first shot the king fell back on the cushions dying and at the same moment the crown prince was seen to half rise and then sink back on the seat. in the { withdrawn bocatse the independ | This is cne of the con Queen Amelie jumped up and threw hersell toward (ke crown prince in an apparent ellcrt to save his life at the cost of her owr, but the prince already had received his death wound. The police guard fired upon the as- sassins and kiiled three of them, ORDERED TO LISBON. British and Spanish Warships Going to Scerc of Trouble. Gibraltar, Feb. 4.—The British cruiser fleet has sailed tfrom here for 1dsbon. Madrid, Feb. 4.—T government has ordered the cruiser Princessa de Asturias to proceed (o Lisbon, The dispatch ctf the cruiser to Lis- bon, it is explained by the newspapers, is to put ihe warship at the disposi- ton of the Spanizh minister. Vote of Sympathy Withdrawn. Pudavest, Web. 4.--A vcte of sym- pathy with the family of the late King Carles of Periugal, moved by the Hun- rian cabizst in (ke diet, has been oppesed if on the ground that King i Carlos had violated the constitution of his country. JRGES FEDERAL CONTROL Commissior.er of Corperations Smith Submits Annual Report. Washiugten, Feb. 4.—Public opinion fas been prompt and efficient in the correction of commercial evils when those evils stat specifically. usions reached by Herbert Kuox Smith, commissioner of corpora‘ions, and cxpressed in the enrnal veport of the cperatiens of the bursau of ccrporaticns just made pub- lie. Naturally under prezent condi- tions the real power cf public opinion such casos as may be illy stated. says Comw “Phus, “the experience of the bor to point logically extension of such ro: Smith, eau scems to the nced for an w'ts by the crea- i~sioner tion of & general admi-i= rvive sys- tem of supervision of ‘ Ve cor- porations, which sh n sub- stantially the same for nished now for a few ¢ essential facts relating to a'l the great interstate corporations. Whether the sysiem takes the form of a federa license plan or a simple rejuiremont that interstate corporations shall make reports and submit their books | to a federal bureau is of little conse- quence so long as the information nec- essary for publicity is obtained. The thing that is important is to arrive at a system which will accomplish the re- sult; which will enable the govern- ment to deal with such corporations in the main by administrative super- vision rather than by judicial proce- dure; whose methods will be pre- ventive rather than penal; and, most fiaportant of all, a system which will afford a permanent practical ground for contract and co-operation between the government officials charged with this work on the one hand and cer- porate managers on the other.” DEMURRER IS OVERRULED Santa Fe Road Must Answer Charge of Rebating. Chicago, Feb. 4—Judge Landis, in the United States district court, has overruled the demurrer of the Atchi- son, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad company to the federal indictment charging the company with granting rebates to the United States Sugar and Land company. Counsel for the railroad asked the court to pass the matter until a ruling could be had in the case against the Great Northern railroad now pending before Lhe supreme court of the Unit- od States. In that case, they said, it was coutended that the passage of the Hepburn act repealed the Elkins law under which the indictment had been Yound and therefore granted immunity to the defendants. Judge Landis, however, declared that hc could not wait for the action of he higher court and overruled the demurrer. The railroad company was given two weeks in which to plead to /e indictment. CARTER @ TAIT Real Estate and Fire Insurance A FEW CHOICE PROPERTIES FOR SALE AT BARGAIN PRICES 607 Irvine Ave. House and lot; 6 rooms, finely finished; lot 50 by 140 to 20 ft. alley. Price 8x600 easy terms. 10 room house, finest location for $2,000, half cash, Two large dwellings on Bemidji Ave. Business lot, Minnesota Ave. We write fire and plate glass insurance on Lake Boulevard. A shap $1600 and $1900 Price $475. Money to loan on farm lands IME IS SAVED BY TAKING AN EXPRESS MORE TIME IS SAVED BY TAKING THE LIMITED THE MOST TIME IS SAVED BY USING OUR LONG DISTANCE LINES Save All the Time You Can “Use The Northwestern’” NORTHWESTERN TELEPHONE EXGHANGE COMPANY GAR-GOL cunes SORE THROAT Owl Drug Store, Bemidiji, Minn. BLOW AT BOYCOTTS Supreme Court Holds Them in Vio- Iation of Anti-Trust Law. LOWER TRIBUNAL REVERSED Decision Is Against Hatters’ Union of North America and Federation of Labor, of Which Former Is a Sub- ordinate Organization. ‘Washington, Feb. 4.—That section T of the anti-trust act awarding to the complainant three times the amount of damage sustained by a combination in restraint of interstate trade can be in- voked to prevent a boycott by organ- ized labor was held in a decision by the supreme court of the United States in the case of we & Co., hat manufacturers of Dauoury, Conn., VvS. Martin Lawlor and 200 other members of the United Hatters’ union of that city. The decision of the court was announced by Chief Justice Fuller and reversed the holding of the United States circuit court of appeals for the Second circuit. The opinion of the court was unanimous and no dissent- ing view was presented. “We think,” said Chief Justice Fuller in conclusion, “that a case within the statute was set up and that the demurrer should have been overruled.” The decision, therefore, reversed the ruling of the lower court and the case was remanded with direction to proceed accordingly. Chief Justice Fuller said: “In our opinion the combination de- scribed in the declaration is a com- bination ‘in restraint of trade or com- merce among the several states’ in the sense in which these words are used in the act and the action can be main- tained accordingly and that conclusion Rests on Judgments of This Court to the effect that the act prohibits any combination whatever to secure action which essentially obstructs the free flow of commerce between the states gr restricts, in that regard, the liberty of a trade to engage in busi- ness.” The suit was instituted by Loewe & Co. in the United States circuit court for the district of Connecticut. The company, alleging damages by a boy- cott against their factory to the ex- tent of $80,000, asked for a judgment for $240,000 in accordance with the terms of the Sherman act. Not only the members of the Hatters’ union but the American Federation of Labor, of which the union is a subordinate or- ganization, was included in the bill. In the complaint it was alleged thai the labor organizations had under- taken to compel the manufacturers to unionize their factory, as a large ma- jority of other hat factories in the United States had been forced to do, and it was asserted that when they failed in this effort the union hatters withdrew and Induced other employes to do so. This act was followed by the declaration of a boycott against T.oewe's hats wherever they were found and as the firm controlled an extensive trade throughout the coun- try the boycott extended to many states, which, in the language of the bill, constituted a combination to Hmit - and restrain interstate com- mcrce. BLAMES ADMINISTRATION. Howard Elliott Says Railroad Building Has Ceased. Lewiston, Ida., Feb. 4.—Blaming anti-trust legislation for the cessation in railroad building, except on pro- jects well under way, President How- ard Elliott of the Northern Pacific railroad said: “Not satisfied with the havoc al- ready wrought by extreme and un- wise statements President Roosevelt made another attack on corporations. His recommendation for federal con- trol of the stock issue of corporations is so rabid as to be alarming. The encroaching power given commissions over railroads has checked building for years to come and the West must suffer for this unwise legislation. This talk about watered stock is untrue. There is not a single drop of water in any of the railroad stocks of the coun- try. It. would be impossible to re- Dlace the railroads for the par value of the railroad stocks of the country to- day. © “It is time the people called a halt to this vicious legislation, for it must be checked if future devélopment is to be expected.” '_MESSAGE OF SYMPATHY. President Sends Condolences to New King of Portugal. ‘Washington, Feb. 4.—The following eablegram of sympathy for the king of Portugal has been dispatched by President Roosevelt: “I hasten to express to you and to your hereaved queen mother my heart- felt condolence hy reason of the tragic death of your royal father and brother. The American people feel a peculiar bond of sympathy with the royal fam- 1ly and the yeople of Portugal in their great affliction and they have been in- éxpressibly shocked and grieved at the dreadful tragedy.” ) The senate adopted without debate a resolution offered by Senator Cul- lom, chairman of the committee on foreign relations, as follows: “Resolved, That the death by un- lawful and inhuman violence of the king and crown prince of Portugal is sincerely deplored by the senate of the United States of America. { “Resolved, That a copy of these res- olutions be deMvered to the president of the United States with the request that he communicate the same to the government of Portugal LITTLETON No Action at Present to Secure Re— lease of Harry Thaw. New York, Feb. 4—According to an- nouncements made it is not likely that any action will be taken looking toward the release of Harry K. Thaw ADVISES DELAY, from the Matteawan asylu for a month. It is said that Martin W. Littleton, Thaw's chief counsel, Wwill leave the latter part of the week for a vacation and will probably be gone at least fwo or three weeks. In the meantime no move will .be made to secure Thaw's release. on habead corpus proceedings. Mr. Littleton un- derwent g heavy strain during the trial of the case and'is sald to be In need of rest. It is said that Mr. Lit- tleton is opposed to any immediate at- tempt to secure Thaw’s release from the asylum and it is not unlikely that no move will be made until some time after he returns from his vacation. ‘While Thaw is anxious that a writ be sought immediately Mr. Littleton is sald to have succeeded in convincing the members of his family that such a move a this timé would be ill ad- vised. YOUTH KILLS HIS MOTHER Police Find the Woman Died of Stran- gulation. Syracuse, N. Y., Feb. 4—William H. Gray, Jr, eighteen years old, sum- moned the police to his home, saying that he had killed his mother. When officers reached the house they found the wother, Clara Gray, dead from strangulation. The youth’s story is that he had been sitting reading when his mother called him down stairs; that when he reached the lower floor she made a lunge at him with a razor, inflicting a deep wound on his right arm, and that in attempting to re- strain her he choked her. Young Gray said that when he found his mother was dead he was s0 frightened that he did not give the alarm for an hour or more, when he called up his brother and the police. To his brother he telephoned: “Mother is done for; I have killed her.” Members of the family and neigh- bors say that Mrs. Gray was a very high strung woman, prone to hysteria, verging on insanity. Young Gray is a stenographer and for a few weeks was employed at the city hall, where he was regarded as erratic. Ris father is a railroad engineer. Former Head of G. A. R. Dead. Rockford, Ill, Feb. 4—Colonel T. F. Lawler, postmaster of Rockford and former commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, is dead. The Original Organ .Grinder. ‘When barrel organs, once the usual accompaniment of the magic lantern, came into use a native of the province of Tende was one of the first who trav- eled about Europe with this instru- ment. In his peregrinations he collect- ed money enough to enable him to pur- chase from the king of Sardinia the title of count of the country where he was born, for which probably in a time of war he did not pay above 1,000 guineas. With the remainder of his money he purchased an estate suit- able to his rank and settled -himself peaceably for the remainder of his days in his mansion. In the entrance hall of his dwelling he hung up his magic lantern and his organ facing the door, there to be carefully preserved till they moldered to dust, and he or- dered by his will that any one of his descendants who should cause them to be removed should forfeit his inherit- ance and his patrimony revert to the next heir or in failure of a successor to the hospital of Tende. Only a few years ago the organ and lantern were still to e seen carefully preserved.— Pearson’s Weekly. Murdered by a Statue. The death of Kenith, the half myth- ical king of Scotland, was one of the most curious and remarkable in his- tory, if it may be called a historical fact. It seems that Kenith had- slain Cruthlintus, a son, and Malcolm Duf- fus, the king and brother of Fennella. She, to be revenged, caused Wiltus, the most ingenious artist of the time, to fashlon a statue filled with automatic springs and levers. Finished and set up this brazen image was an admirable work of art. In its right hand Wiltus placed a ewer and in the left an apple of pure gold finely set with diamonds and other precious stones. To touch this apple was to court death. It was so arranged that any one guilty of such vandalism would be immediately rid- dled with arrows shot from loop- holes in the statute’s body. Kenith was invited to see the wonder and, kinglike (and just as Fennella hoped), tried tospluck the imitation fruit. He was instantly riddled with poisoned ar- rows, dying where he fell. Still Ahead. _ A congressman says he was riding in a smoking car on a little one track road and in the seat in front of him sat a jewelry drummer. He was one of those wide awake, never-let-any- one-get-the-better-of-him style of men. Presently the train stopped to take on water, and the conductor neglected to send back a flagman. A limited ex- press, running at a fate of ten miles an hour, came along and bumped the rear end of the first trajn. The drum- mer was lifted from his seat and pitch- ed head first against the seat ahead. His silk hat was jammed clear down over his ears. He picked himself up and settled back in his seat. No bones had been broken. Then he pulled off his hat, drew a long breath and, straightening up, said:' “Hully gee! ‘Well, they didn’t get by us anyway!” At the height of their nightly quar- rel the other day Mrs, Blank choked back a sob and said reproachfully: “I was reading one of your old let- ters today, James, and you sdid in it that you would rather live in endless torment with me than in bliss by your- self.” “Well, growled. I got my wish,” Blank The following advertisement of olive oll is the work of a Rio Janeiro firm: ‘““Ours olives oils have garantized of fitts quality. Diligently fabricated add filtrated, the consumer will find with them, the good taste and perfect pres- ervation. For to escape to any conter- feit, Is necessary to requiere on any botles this contremare deposed con- formably to the law. The corks and the boxes hare all marked with the fire.”—Case and Comment. Absence of Mind. . Many amusing auecdotes are told of Blshop Burnet’s absénce of mind, but few perhaps are more siriking and have been less repeated than the fol- lowing, which Lord Orford used to re- late: Burnet was once dining with the Duchess of Marlborough after the great duke’s disgrace. In the course of conversition, speaking of Marlbor- ough’s great qualities, great services and great fall, Burnet compared the duke. with Belisarius, the great Ro- man. “But how in reason,” exclaimed the duchess, “could so great a gGneral be abandoned ?” “Ah, my lady, do you know what a cursed brimstone of a wife he had?” The hearers, to the good Burnet's surprise, were confused and dumb struck with the force of the parallel he discovered in the cases of the Roman and the Englishman.—St. James’' Ga- zette, The Count Too Touching. In the long corridor of an uptown ho- tel they tell of a certain foreigner who until recently held court there of even- ings. At last he dlsappeared, and then each of the men who had nightly been entertained by his flow of anecdote and his abundance of witty stories con- fessed that he had lent the count various sums, ranging from $100%up. The total scemed so formidable that a movement was set on foot to bring the defauiter back, his whereabouts hav- ing been ascertained. But funds were needed for the purpose. One of the big men of Wall street who was a creditor on the count’s books to the ex- tent of $500 was approached for a sub- scription, “Not on your llfe"' said he. “I don’t want him back. He'll borrow more money from me if he gets in town. But 'l subscribe $25 toward a fund to send him back to France if he’ll agree to sail from Boston.”—New York Globe. Recipe For Making Money. First catch your capital, however small, or if homemade, such as from savings, so much the better. Place in a steady, secure position, where it will not be disturbed, and allow to stand. Skim off all that accrues without waste and with that at the proper season make a stiff paste of business, in ‘which place your capital or as much of it as you can_use with advantage. A little ripe judgment should be added. Season with hope and enterprise and stir briskly with a bunch of fresh energy. While your pie is cooking watch it carefully- yourself and see that nothing goes wrong. Keep up a good fire until it begins to brown and don’t take too much off the top for tasting until' the whole is well cooked; then enjoy the result.—London Graph- fe. Square Bullets. In 1718 an _Englishman, James Puc- kle, secured a British patent for what seems to have been an attempt at a breechloading rapid firing gun. An original feature of the invention was the use of two different breech plates, one for square bullets, to be used against the Turks, and the other for round bullets, to be used against Chris- tlans. It is curious to find two oppos- ing tendencies in the same invention— first, the desire to construct a gun that should be more effective because more destructive, and, second, a desire to recognize certain ethical distinctions in its use. If a round bullet was too good for a Turk, a square one was too bad for a Christian.—London Chroni- cle. Stereotyping. It is claimed that stereotyping was known in 1711. Tt was practiced by William Geq of Edinburgh about 1730. Some of Ged’s plates are to be seen at the Royal institution, London. A Mr. James attempted ‘to introduce Ged’s process in London in' 1735, but failed. Stereotype printing was used in Hol- land during the last century, and a quarto Bible and a Dutch folio Bible were printed there. It was revived I London by Wilson in 1804. Since 1830 the durability of stereotypes has been greatly increased by electrotyping them with copper or silver. The Cure. Professor W. E. Grange, author of the “History of Primitive Love,” al- luded in the course of a lecture in Bos- ton to the modern cynical view of love that prevails: “I remember once hear- ing a bricklayer and a plumber discuss love. ‘I hold,” said the bricklayer, ‘that if you are terribly in love the way to cure yourself is to-run away.’ The plumber shook his head and sneered. ‘That will cure you. he said, ‘provided you run away with the girl.’” - Short and Out. “Where is Mr. Middleman?” asked the caller at the broker’s office. “I think he’s out on a little matter of wheat,” replied the bright clerk. “Qut long?” “Certainly not. If he had been long, he would have been'in. It's because he was short that he’s out’—Philadel- phia Press. Chemical. % In Prestbury churchyard, near Mac- clesfield, England, may be found the following epitaph on a chemist: Willie’s dead—we're full of woe— We'll never see him more. He thought to drink of H20, 'Twas H2S04, A Vicious Dig. Patty—I always think of all the une kind things I have said during the day before I fall asleep at night. Patricia —Dear me! Do you stay awake as long as that? Many a fellow has his nose to the grindstone without sharpen!ng his “wits.—Philadelphia Record. Self Composed. She—He is a person of perfect ease and possession and is thoroughly at home anywhere. He—Yes, he even has | the faculty of making you feel a total stranger in your own housep—bondon Tit-Bits. Fear and Danger. Nervous Old Lady (to deck hand on steamboat) — Mr. Steamboatman, is there any fear of danger? Deck Hand (carelessly)—Plenty of fear, ma’am, but not a bit of danger. i 1 High Grade Watches a Spécialty. Fine and Complicated Watch Repairing. Geo. T. Baker & Co. Watch Inspector for M. & I. and B. F, & L. F. Rys. Located in City Drug Store rain Humor, of the German comic papers to employ continnously the same characters as “producers of mirth” is the subject of an article in a Berlin paper by Ludwig Bauer. The writer mentions as the most conspicu- ous of the funny figures the absent- minded professor whose habitual um- brella losing proc es have made generations laugh. This figure had its | origin at a time. he says, when the man of letters was a helpless person In the active world—a dreamer dwell- ing in realms away from the actual and therefore blind to his surround- ings. In this form he has been rep- resented in the comie papers. But Germany, he thinks, not the professor, has been and is being caricatured. The professor today must be a wide awake man, for science is no longer an is- land. These are not the days for sleep and for dreams. Another abused char- acter is the lientenant who, having no foe to fight, is always shown as wmak- | ing conquests where Amor has comn- mand. The old maid is another of the | stock figures, aud oue of equal impor- tance is Mr. Newlyrich. Of the latter it is said: “He is always full of fear and suspicion. been misplaced, and he sways from side to side like a timid rope walker. This makes him really funny, and we | must laugh at his anties.” | Too Slow to Be a Soldier. | In a room on the top floor of a large | factory a boy jvas amusing himself by going through the bayonet exercise with a long handled brush in lieu of-a | rifie. His boss, coming quickly upon him, gave him a box on the ear for wasting his time. The sudden blow caused the lad to lose his balance and fall down the hoist shaft, but fortu- | nately he kept his hold on the brush,! the handle of which, getting across the | | | shaft, broke his fall and enabled him to grasp the chain, down which he slid in safety. The boss was horrified at the effect of his action and rushed breathless and gasping with fear down the eight flights of stairs to the base- ment, expecting to find a mangled body for which he would have to ac-| count. He was, however, just in time | to see the lad drop on his feet un- harmed, so, recovering his self pos- session and his breath, he exclaimed: “Want to be a soldier, eh? Well, you're too slow for that. Why, man, 1 can walk down all those stairs quick: er than you can fall down the holst shaft.”—London Answers. Toward the Pole. Ice eight feet thick on the ocean and snow falling even in summer—such is the weather experienced in the polar regions. When the air is dry and still it is remarkable how low a tempera- ture can be borne with ease. One ex- Dlorer tells us that with the thermome- ter at 9 degrees it was too warm for skating. The summer weather in this region is, mereover, in some respects pleasant and healthful. Within the arctic zone there are wonderfully col- ored sunrises and sunsets to be seen. They are both brilliant and impressive. But the nights—the nights are monot- onous and repelling. A rigid world buried in everlasting snow, silent save for the cracking of the ice or the wail of the wind. Travelers in these re- glons experience many discomforts. The keen air causes their skin to burn and blister, while their lips swell and crack. Thirst,- again, has been much complained of, arising from the action of the low lempel_:mue on the warm body. Only Night Air at Night. Speaking of Florence Nightingale and her efforts to keep the world healthy, it seems pertinent to make special mention of her mission in be half of the open window at night. In the early years of her labors much un- intelligent opposition to this wmethod | of wentilation because of the supposed ! harmfulness” of ‘the night air was ex- pressed, but Miss Nightingale had one stock argument in support of her posi- tion, it being the question, “What afr shall we breathe at night but night air?” It was unanswerable {fom: her opponents’ point of view, even if it did not always convert them, but it did lead a countless number into. saner ways of living and along the way to the present methods of treating tuber- culosis.—Boston Transcript. The Dolphin Violin. Tke Dolphin violin was so named on account of the beauty of the wood, the back of the instrument resembling the color of a'dolphin. It was made by Stradivarius in 17 14, and it is consider- ed the most beautiful violin in the world. It Is owned by an Englishman He knows that he has [ and is valued at £5,000.—Musical Home Journal. WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED FOR U. S. ARMY: Able- bodied unmarried men, between ages of 18 and 35; citizens of United States, of good character and \temperate habits, who can speak, read, and write English For information apply to Recruit ing Officer, Miles Block, Bemidji Minn. WANTED—District manager for the Washington Life Insurance company —exclusive territory — great opportunity for a young man —experience not necessary. Write to B. H. Richardson, Manager, 318 Manhattan Bldg., St. Paul, Mian. WANTED—Two girls, at the Brink- man Hotel. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Upright piano; will sell cheap if taken within two weeks. Inquire of J. C. Smith, at the M. E. Carson farm. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR RENT. CrrrA Ao FOR RENT: One furnished room, with or without board. 1121, Bemidji avenue. MISCELLANEQUS. { PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues- days, Thursdays and Saturdays, 2:30to 6 p. m., and Saturday evening 7:30 to § p. m. also. Library in basement of Court House. Mrs. Harriet Campbell, librarian. Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pion eer ot i Ar