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. l Investigate Verfililliofi Irdn Stocl(s. Ask Frecl LaFavar — Tom Smart E. R. Getchell Smart-Getchell lce Co. Ice delivered by the load to any part of the city. Give-us your order for delivery this sum= mer. Our lIce is the kind that is clean, and we’re always at your service. quart bottles for:. ..o A o Fancy Olives Sunkist Oranges 25¢ per dozen = Fancy Prunes 20 pounds Prunes BOT e s ssnes STaSitaennats 50 pound box of Prunes for . 10 pound box for... Dill Pickles In gallon lots or more, per gallon... 7 large bars of Soap for 25¢. SHOES In the shoe line we have ladies’ shoes from $ 1 to $3.50, also splendid bargains in men’s and boy’s shoes. A large and complete line of rubber foot- wear, dry goods, ladies’, men’s and children’s under- wear. Our line is very reasonable in price. It will pay you to give the goods a thorough inspection. W. G. SCHROEDER Phone 65 and 390 Corner Fourth and Minnesota The Pioneer---10¢ per Week KOOCHICHING-BELTRAMI GCOUNTIES FORM SOCIETIES [Continued from First Page] trami County D_evelopment Associa- tion,” which was agreed upon as the name of the new society. It was the sease of the meeting of the delegation that a meeting, be called, at some date in March to be selected by the secretary, at which time permanent oreanization of the society will be perfected and plans outlined for a vigorous campaign for reapportionment and the general development of this county, co-oper- ating with the other twenty-nine counties that are members of the parent organization, the Northern Minnesota Development association. As delegates to the meeting to be held in March, every commercial club in the county will be allowed one delegate, and each town clerk will also be allowed to participate in the meeting. Five members of the county organization will constitute a quorum, so that it will not be a difficult matter to hold a meeting at any time and transact business with dispatch. The spirit left mth every delegate at the adjournament of the recent monster meeting was of such a nature that it will be lasting, and the matter of reapportionment and development will continue to be uppermost - in the minds of the northern counties - until after the election next fall; and it is a cer- tainty that any person aspiring to election to the legislature from this section will be compelled to go on record as favoring the principles of the development association which were so forcibly expressed in the resolutions adopted at the meeting. Cotton Workers Ask Raise. Fall River, Mass., Feb. 19.—An ad vance of nearly 10 per cent in the min imum wage scale over those of the ex- isting sliding scale is the particular request of the spinners, weavers, card: ers and slasher tenders’ unions, whose| { demands were received by the Manu facturers’ association. 1 take pleasure in announcing that I have purchased the proud to introduce the G. W, CHAPLIN interests and am now in a position to give NORTHWESTERN AUTOMOBILE owners a continuance of the services formerly rendered, supplemented by such improvements as my five years’ connection with the institu- tion suggests. Beginning the New Year with every Northwestern 1910 Model in our allotment sold, we are POPE-HARTFORD Motor Car for which we have secured the agency. Owners of Pope-Hartfords are cordially invited to call on me. DEMONSTRATOR WILL ARRIVE JANUARY 15TH T. M. ANDERSON | Fifth Avenue and Fifth Street South, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. %mmmmmmmm% on time. you. | |GOOD PRINTI ‘ Is as valuable an adjunct to ; - a successful business as any other article in your line. Some printeries do printing and others turn out good y printing. We claim to belong to the latter class and any job turned out "at this shop is guaranteed to be first class. The Pioneer has the stock and facilities for giving you figures on large lots and get- ting the printed matter to you Let us figure with NG | | pair hurried to the city hall and at MRS, CLARENCE MACKAY. Quits Organization Led by Mra. O. H. P. Belmont. FIRST MOVE IN WARFARE Mrs. Mackay. Quits Suflraqo Organiza- tion Led by Mrs. Belmont. New York, Feb. 21.—Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay, president of the Equal Franchise society, has resigned her place’ on the legislative committee of the New York State Wonian Suffrage association, of which Mrs. O. H. P. Belmént is the leading spirit. The resignation is taken' as the first shot fn an open warfare bétween the two leading suffragist camps and their generhls, which has been quietly brew- ing for some months. Mrs. Mackay says she resigns in order to devote her energies to her.own organization. TRAIN GOING RAPID SPEED IS DITGHED Score of Persons Are Injured, hut No One Killed. Menom:nee, Mich,, Feb. 21.—North- western train No. 2, southbound, left the rails at Little Suamico while run- ning petween thirty-five and forty miles an hour. @ Nineteen people were seriously hurt, but ho one was killed, the escape of the passengers from death being per- haps the most miraculous in the his- tory of railroading in this country. The train, consisting of four heavily loaded sleepers, baggage, mail, ex- press and two day coaches, went into the ditch and overturned, piling up, a mass of wreckage. Most of the injured were in the day coaches and the Pullmans had to be chopped open to let out the passen- gers. The smoking car was hurléd 400 feet from the right of way. PROBING SWOPE MYSTERY Pmmn Expenl Testify Before the Grand Jury. Kansas City, Feb. 21.—Dr. Walter S. Hafnes of Chicago wenl before the grand’jury here to tell"Bfs story of the examination”of ‘the”Viscera of Coloriel Thomds H. and Chrisman Swop# and the ‘contents of the stom- ach of Miss Margaret Swope. Prose- cutor!Conkling stated th&t“every step in the scientists” hunt for pofson would be gone into. At Independence, Mo., before Judge ‘Walter Powell, arguments were re- newed on the injunction to restrain the attorneys of Dr. B. C. Hyde from taking further depositions in slander’ suits. . ACROBAT’S WORK IS RAPID Secures Divorce and Agaln Weds in Twelve Minutes. New York, Feb. 21.—Otto T. Max Unger, an acrobat, was divorced and married in twelve minutes. At 3 o’clock, when the decree was signed, Malenie Anne Brogel, whom he was to marry, sat beside Unger in court. Before the ink had dried the 3:05 had taken out a marriage license. In the meantime Alderman White had been summoned to the city hall by telephone. He arrived at 3:09 and at 3:12 the pair were married, Molton Metal Fatal to Two. Omaha, Feb. 19.—J. Kalike and H. Antone, laborers, ‘are dead and Oscar Myers, gaug boss, is fearfully injured as a result of being burned by molten copper at the American Smelting and Refining company’s plant. The acci- dent was the result of an explosion in a huge forty-ton converter. Harmon to Lead Democrats. New York, Feb. 21.—“Governor Jud- son Harmon will be the next Demo- cratic nominee for president and Gov- ernor Marshall of Indiana will prob- ably occupy the second place on.the ticket.” This is the forecast of Colonel John W. -Tomlinson of Birmingham., Ala., who is now in New York. Colo- nel Tomlinson is a member of the Democratic national committee. Miners Fall Eight Hundred Feet. Newton, N. J,, Feb. 19.—Tipped out of an overturned mine bucket like peb- bles from a hod two laborers in the Taylor mine of the New Jersey Zinc company here fell 800 feet to the bot- tom. of the shaft and were dashed {c] death. It is not known what caused the bucket to ovanun. P O GLAVIS IS TOLD T0 STEP DOWN “Defense” Has Nothing More to Ask Witness. HENRY - W. HOYT CALLED Attorney General of Porto Rico, For- . merly United States District Attor- ney at Nome, Alaska, Teils of His In- timate Acquaintance With Glavis and Speaks Highly of His Services to the Government. ‘Washington, Feb. 21.—Attorney Ver- trees sprung a surprise at the Ballin- ger-Pinchot hearing by announcing that he did not care to cross-examine Louis R. Glavis any further. Henry M. Hoyt, attorney general of Porto Rico, was called as the second witness for the “prosecution.” When the committee adjourned the previous day there was no indication that the cross-examination of Glavis was at an end. He had not been ques- tioned as to his conversation with Mr Ballinger, especially the one in which Glavis declared Mr. Ballinger asked him not to press_the investigation -of certain coal claimants until after the campaign in 1908. Mr. Vertrees, how- ever, had followed the tactics through- out of jumping from one part of the witness’ story to another and back again. ‘When - Mr. Vertrees announced the close of the cross-examination Attor- ney Brandeis said he desired to make no redirect examination. Mr. Hoyt then was called. He said he had been United States attorney at Nome, Alaska, from 1904 to 1907. After that he was a special assistant in the department of justice until appointed attorney general of Porto Rico. Mr. Brandeis first questioned the witness as to his knowledge of Glavis’ service to the government. “His work always was of a very high order,” replied the witness: “I knew him intimately. - His work was thorough and intelligent.” The wit- ness next was questioned as to the circumstances leading up to his visit to Attorney General Wickersham, At the Request of Glavi: - to protest against the coal land act of 1908. Mr. Hoyt detailed a visit Glavis made to him and told of Glavis’ com- plaint that under the Pierce decision the Cunningham claims would surely go to patent. “I told Mr. Wickersham,” cont!nued Hoyt, “that I had become interested in the matter to save the administra- | - tion from what I considered a very serious mistake.” Mr. Hoyt said he and Mr. Glavis felt that Mr. Wickersham would reach con- clusions different from those of Mr. Pierce. “I teld the attorney general,” he went on, “that I'had worked with Mr. Glavis and knew him to be an honor- able -and upright young man; that I ‘would be entirely accountable for him. I also said that Glavis knew he was doing an unusual thing in going over the heads of his superiors; but that he ‘would let the matter drop if Mr. Wick- ersham agreed with Mr. Pierce. I said I did not think that lands of the value of the Alaska coal fields should be passed from the government on the opinfon of any less official than that of the attorney general, or that other- wise there wauld be a big scandal. Mr. Wickersham agreed that he should act on the matter and said he would fix it up with Mr. Ballinger. He said he would also say something for Glavis; that the boy had been overzealous, perhaps. OPENING OCCURS ON MARCH 1 Line Already Forming at Los Angeles Land Office. Los Angeles, Cal, Feb. 21. —Two hundred and fifty persons are waiting patiently in front of the United States land office. They and probably others will remain in that same spot on the pavement day and night until March 1, unless they can afford substitutes. The reward for 173 of these patients will be a forty-acre homestead on the Yuma irrigation project. Good places in the line are wortk from $150 to $1,000. FIGHTING HAS BEEN RESUMED Battle at San Vicente, Nicaragua ’ Again Under Way. Managua, Feb. 21.—Fighting at San Vicente between the government forces and the insurgents under Gen- erals Estrada, Mena and Matuty has been resumed. Generals Vasquez and Godoy took the offensive against the insurgents in the engagement and sent their infantry against the enemy’s position. The result of the fighting has not been made known here, nor has the number of casualties been given out. Robbers Shoot City Marshal. Oklahoma City, Okla., Feb. 21.—-Cal Perry, city marshal ‘of Blanchard, a town seventy-five miles south of here, was shot and seriously wounded in a battle with seven robbers who had blown up the vault of the First State bank of Blanchard. The robbers es- caped on hand cars. NEIL BURGESS, ACTOR, DEAD Made a Great Success in “The County Fair.” the actor, 1s dead at his home hefe. He had. been suffering from diabetes for about a year. He was sixty-nine years old. Mr. Burgess made his greatest suc- cess on the stage in a single play, “The County Fair,” which was first pro- duced in 1888. The comedy, with Mr. Burgess as its star, had a phenomenal run of more than four years at a New York theater. CURTIS, GUILD, JR. Ex-Governor. of -Massachusetts Bitterly Assails J. P, Morgan. N REMOVED TO PENITENTIARY Negro Sought by Wnuld Be Lynchers at Cairo, Il Cairo, Ill, Feb. 21.—Surrounded by a hundred infantrymen twelve con- victed prisorers who were sentenced by Judge William Butler to various terms were hurried out of town to Chester penitentiary. Among the pris- oners was John Pratt, the negro purse snatcher, whose arrest resulted in an attempt to lynch him and ended in the death of the leader of the mob and the injury of four others. The plans of the militafy and civil officials to get the negro out of town without a demonstration were entirely successful. Few people knew of the move and the crowd that saw the de- parture was small. A squad of sol- diers’ accompanied the prisoners ‘to Chester. LEGISLATOR'S SON FATALLY WOUNDED Nileged Jitted Girl Accused of the Grime. Carroll, Man., Feb. 21.—Claiming he had broken his promise to marry, Lot tie McCullock, a pretty young woman of this town, it is alleged, shot and fatally wounded Fred Carroll, son of the member of parliament for South Brandon. Carroll had just married Miss Shark, a young woman prominent in 'South- ern Manitoba social circles. The girl is said to have called Car- roll to the door of his residence and fired bullets repeatedly into his body. A special train carrying surgeons was at once ordered from Winnipeg. The girl is in custody. She came . New York, Feb. 31—Nell m. here from Ontario a year ago. Head of Catholic Order Dead. Chicago, Feb. 21.—Rey. Father Cyp- rian Banscheid, provincial of ‘the Ro- man Catholic Order of St. Francls, died at Ashland, Wis., of paralysis. In 1906 he was elected head of St. Louis province, wlth headquarters at &t. Louis. GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES : Minneapolis Wheat. , Minneapolis, Feb. 19,—Wheat—May, $1.13%; July, $1.13% @1.13%. On track —No. 1 hard, $1..15@1.16; No. 1 North- ern, $1.14%,@1.16%; No. 2 Northern, $1.14% @1.15%; No. 3 Northern, $1. 07%@1.12%. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Feb. 19.—Wheat—To arrive | | and on track—No. 1 hard, $1.145%; No. 1. Northern, $1.14%; No. 2 Northern, $1.12%; May, $1.14%@1.14%; July, $1.14. Flax—In store, to arrive, on track and May, $2.20%; Sept.,.$1.70. 8t. Paul Live Stock. St. Paul, Feb. 19.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $6.75@17.50; fair to good, $5.00@6.75; good to choice cows and hcifers, $4.25@5.25; veals, $5.50@7.25. Hogs—$8.95@9.05. Sheep—Wethers, $6.60@6.85; yearlings, $7.00@7.90; spring lambs, $8.00@8.60. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Feb. 19.—Wheat—May, $1.- 14@1.14%; July, $1.04%; Sept., $1.- 00% @1.00%. Corn—May, 66%c; July, 65% @65%c; Sept., 67% @67%c. Oats —May, 47%@47%c; July, 44%c; Sept., 41%@41%c. Pork—May, $23.- 66; July, $23.60. Butter—Creameries 26@29c; dairies, 21@25¢c. Eggs—21¢ 26c. - Pdultry—Turkeys, 17¢; chickent md sprlngs, 16c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Feb. 19.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.50@7.90; Texas steers, $4.16@5.25; ‘Western steers, $4.50@6.15; stockers and feeders, $3.25@5.60; cows and heifers, $2.35@5.90; calves, $7-25@9.-| 75. Hogs—Light, $8.86@9.30; mixed, $8.90@9.35; heavy, $8.90@9.37%; rough, $8.90@9.05; good to choice heavy, $9.06@9.37%;. pigs, $8.30@9.15. Sheep—Native, $4.50@7.35; yearlings $7.60@8.70; lambs, $7.25@9.28. Calumet Baking Powder New-Cash-Want-Rats ',-Cent-a-Word ‘Where cash accompanies cop will publish all “Want Ads” for a.]f- cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceuta word will be charged. EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchango --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Good wages. Inquire 910 Beltrami. — FOR SALE. FOR SALE—The Brummond & Kulander stock of general merchan- dise at Walker and Laporte, Minn. ‘The Walker stock and fixtures will inventory about $13.000. The Laporte stock and fixtures about $5000. Both stores are open, with our representative in charge, who will be glad to show you through. Address all offers to J. P. Gal- braith, Trustee, 501-6 Endicott Bldg. St. Paul, Minn. FOR SALE—Cockrills, Rhode Is- land Reds and White Wyandots eggs for hatching, $1.50 a settirg. J. E. Svenson, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE OR TRADE—Choice Nymore Lots; for price and pa:- ticulars write to —J. L. Wold, Twin Valley, Minn. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR RENT e rnrennnnr oo FOR RENT—Farm with good buildings, snap for right party. " Address P. O. Box 776, City. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room, Steam heat, . 520 Bel- trami avenue. LOST and FOUND LOST—Pension papers of John Lowe, return to Pioneer for $5.00 reward, FOUND — Ladies’ fur muff at Armory. Apply at postoffice. MISCELLANEOUS PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues days, Thursdays and -Saturdays 2:30to 6 p. m, and Saturda)y evening 7:30 to 9 p. m. also. Library in basement of - Court House. Miss Peatrice Mills,librarian, If you want to hire good horses for hauling cedar, cordwood or lumber, write H. M. Clark, * Minn. Kelliher, 5500 in Gold For a Good Corn Name Speak up now! Name ournew Cornl Get Gold! Just get a sample packet of our Nameless Corn and then namelit, - This paper will publish the name of the new corn when selected by the judges, and the winner of the. syn wilt’ it: be our mame or somebody clsc’s mame Fooause you dve not try? ‘Awaken o this reniackable offer! You have a few days yet in which to act. De- cide now to enter the Big Contest by wi {ng quickly for a sample Backet of “Nama: Enclose two 3 cent stamps. (We S coupons for these stamps). Do "év:mk:s Corn ™ for sale-this sea pre 3 Get in touch with oottt Fum or ity 5 have seen sl er: il ave ndous 1910 Offering Fhabnee Suarae Seed. nawmmwyanmuw 0 00 WiT oo bt Soptented to Kaow you ave planted the seeds that. eat crops, s-\ur Grand 1010 Soed., Flant and Bom ore: is free. On pages 101-102 of catalog will be Yomaa particulars regarding the of 160 Y. Salrer yields onanza Ouiadurin the le;!onoflhill::.‘ v{ihe‘mxgwn 7 end seo what he Say ‘abous . Enclose 4o less Com e R D Drize ofce. JOHN A _SALZER SEED oOMPANY, . 8th SL., La Crosss, Wie. JAMES ADAIR _ PITTSBURG, PA. for Sale at The Ploneer. Office. ~ i x| { | ¥ i « fL W i