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Resigns Nymore Superintendency. C. L. Heftron of Bemidji, superin- tendent of the Nymore schools, tendered his resignation to the Nymore school board and it was accepted last evening. He will con- tinue to act as principal until June, when his present term expires, but will not return next year. Mr. Heffron has been principal of the Nymore school for the last four years and has developed that institu- tion to its present high standing, employing four teachers and having over 100 pupils. Mr. Heffron has been gradually getting into the real estate business and finds that his new work will occupy so much of his { certain portions of the country, has { | Durum Wheat Creates New Indusiry. The introduction of the Durum wheat into the northwest by the United States Agricultural Depart- wment a few years ago, as a plant to be grown in the semi-arid districts of resulted in adding a new industry to the northwest, which is fast taking on large proportions. As is well known, macaroni is a very valuable food produet, extremely palatable when properly prepared, and highly nutritious. A high grade macaroni can only be produced from Durum wheat flour, as the ordinary spring wheat flour does not contain a sufficient quantity of gluton and contains an excess quantity of starch. Macaroni made from spring flour is dark, soggy and unpalatable. Macaroni made from Durum wheat flour owing to the large quantity of gluton and the small quantity of starch, can always be recognized by its bright amber and creamy color when cooked. It pronuces a palatable dish of creamy flavor, such as the epicurse of France and Italy have looked upon with favor for many years. time next year that he will be unable to handle the principalship, offer at............ e 75¢ Corset torchon and German val for women, which is a in force as a special for and Monday ————— % We are the largest Ready-to-Wear Concern in Northern Minnesota. Extra quality' Nainsook Corset Covers with linen anteed to fit perfectly at this remarkably low. price. You simply can’t afford to overlook this offer. For Saturday and Monday 35c¢ Weoffer the best fine Gauze Lisle Onyx Dye Hose, with garter top, high spliced ‘heel and double toe This is an offering of remarkable value and one which will remain 3 Pair for $1.00 P e The Mother’s Macaroni Co. of Minneapolis, being located in the Women’s and Children’s BEMIDJI $19.65 suits at the price. Muslin U $3.50 Lace and Embroidery Insertion Cambric Skirts, Covers 55¢ lace and embroidery, guar- The reason for Knit Underwear 50c Hose. will again be mar! Saturday 35c--3 E_ve@u_fl Ready-to-We T. J. Grane & Co inspecting these new Coats. Irish Linens, French Linens, Serges and Tweeds $8.00, $9.00, $10.00, $11.65, $16.15 50c Gauzs Lisle Vests, 3 for $1 merely to introduce our complete Women. These Swiss Ribbed Gauze Vests, guaranteed to fit perfectly, day morning, but. as an induce- ment for Saturday and Monday you may choose at this price heart of the Durum wheat belt has natural advantages which places them in a position where they are able to place upon the market under Mother’s Brand a high grade maca- roni and spaghetti at a price which has made it a staple article of food, instead of a luxury, This is demon- strated by the fast growth of the Mother’'s Macaroni Co., which is today one of the largest in the country. The Mother's Brand of Macaroni and Spaghetti can be had at every retail grocery in the entire Northwest. The consumer who is seeking to purchase goods of quality, should be particular to ask for a Durum Wheat product, the leading brand which is “Mother’s.” Koochiching Prisoners Here. Sheriff Farrier of International Falls brought Carl Michelson and Pearl Russell, charged with grand larceny, to the Beltrami county jail last night to await the action of the Koochiching county grand jury, which convenes in July. Judge Bailey Improved. Judge H. W. Bailey is feeling much better today, according to statements given out by members of the family. Ready-to-Wear Garments MiINN. Low prices here don’t mean cheap goods---“not a bit of it.” We use the term “low prices” in the comparative sense only. Some goods are too cheap for us to handle, others too dear---in neither case do you receive proper return for your money expended. You can shop here with the full assurance that you are getting one hundred cents worth of value: for every dollar spent. We shall strictly adhere to our established prin- ciples of value giving which has been the means of our sturdy . growth, and owing to our greater purchasing power we wish to state ‘that we shall improve our recognized high standard of value. We Have Suits at Small Prices in which we affirm you get more for your outlay than in any suit we've seen. Simple Walking, Working, Traveling or School Suits, as plain as a pikestaff, but very good, The T. J. C. & Co. $24.15 Suit is a model of correct tailoring and good value. It’s really the standard for We are hoping that no woman will miss the pleasure of Rajah and Pongee Silks, nderwear Our Department of Women's Muslin Underwear contains so large and varied a assortment of _under- garments that any woman who fails to inspect this section of our store is truly missing a great _treat. made, cut full and well price. this offering is Department for ked 50c on Tues- for $1 On and After May '2nd, This Store ar Will Close at 6 p. G S 7. 5 | Money Back.on De- $2.00 Gowns $1.35 Four styles of low neck, Gowns made full length - and with linen lace and embroidery and German val trimmings. V neck Cambric Gowns with embroidery edge at the above Children’s ' perfect fitting Cambric Drawers, with embroidered 18c ruffle, 1 to 14 years.............. Children’s - Muslin Night Gowns, full length and width, to 14 yeaml.‘...............2.......3sc Good assortment of Infant's India Linen Dresses, 75¢ values, ssc that will sell..................... ™" SAMUEL L. GLEMENS, “MARK TWAIN,” DEAD Noted Humorist Died Last Night After Long lliness—Unconscious as He Expires. Redding, Conn.,, April 22, — Samuel Langhorn Clemens, (Mark Twain), died last night at 6:30 o’clock of agina pectoris.’ He became unconscious at 3 o’clock in the afternoon and never recovered consciousness, He was worn out by acute physical agony. Wednesday was a bad day for the little knot of anxious watchers at the bedside.. For long hours the gray, aquiline features lay moulded in the inertia of death, while the pulse sank lower, and lower, but late at night Mark Twain passed from stupor into the first natural sleep he had known since he returned from Bermuda and yesterday he woke refreshed, even faintly cheerful and in full possession of all his faculties. The burial will be in the family plot at Elmira, N. Y., where lie already his wife, his two daugh- One Price and we $2.35 elbow sleeve Nainsook m. ters, Susan and, Jean, and his infant son, Langhorne. No date has been set, as the family is still undecided whether there shall be a public funeral first in New York city. i It is probable that Stormfield will be kept as a summer place by Mrs, Gabrilovitch, who is very fond both of the house and the country, although her hus- band’s musical engagements make 1t necessary that she spend a part of each year abroad. Mr. Paine, Clemen’s attorney, said tonightthat Mark Twain had put his affairs in perfect order and that he died well off, though by no means a rich man, Mrs. Gabrilovitch will aid Mr. Paine in the final decision as to what use shall be made of unfinished manuscripts. Robbed on Lake Shore. John Ingerbert of Blackduck, who showed a large amount of money in an envelope to strangers in a local saloon Tuesday, .was robbed by an unkuown companion who wanted to show him a time.” Ingerbert had $34983 in an envelope and while walking up the the lake shore near Twelfth street, the stranger who accompanied knocked him down and ran awav with the, money, The sheriff was notified but no one has been arrested. ' Game Laws Enforced. .. ... .| John Gustafson, a “tie peeler” liv- ing at Orth, was fined $50 or.60 days in the county jail a few ‘days ago, according to S. C. Bailey of'_vBeli:jdj_i, the local game warden, who has just returned froma trip up north. Gustafson killed a deer March 30, He pleaded guilty : before Justice H. ]. Engelking of Orth. Torkelson Funeral At Bagley. J. W. Torkelson, the pioneer resi- dent of Bagley who was killed re- cently ina wreck near Crookston, was buried at Bagley yesterday. The funeral cortege was exceptionally large. Mr. Torkelson is survived by a wife and four children. Marriage License. Harry' Hardy to Ida David, both of Nymore. DARING ESCAPE FROM PRISON facrey g Five Convicts at Fort Leavenworth Capture Switch Engine. Leavenworth, Kan., April 22.—Five train robbers, serving life sentences, escaped from the federal prison mear here. Within a short time two of the men were recaptured and the other three are surrounded in the brush within a short distance of the prison. The break for liberty was the result of a cleverly planned plot upon the part of the five convicts. Its execu- tion was most daring. Tws of the convicts were at work im the carpenter shop and the others were in the tailor shop. A Union Pa- cific switch engine had backed into the prison yard. At the sound of the whistle the men dashed into the yard and made toward the engine. Level: ing dummy guns at the engineer the men c¢limbed ipto the™ ¢ab and com: pelled him to:reverse his -engine., . -} The engine with the convicts abo: rushed through the west gite into the open country ‘and: soom; was speedi toward the woods.” MANY MEN REPORT FOR WORK Pressed Steel Car: Company's Plant | Resumes 'Operatiohs. Pittsburg, April 22.—When the hour for the resumption of work arrived at the plant of the Pressed Steel Car company in Schoenville over 2,800 men, more than at any time since the present strike at the plant was inau- gurated, reported for work. There were no signs of the disorder; which resulted in the shooting of two men and the serious. injury of amother. Extra deputy police, numbering about thirty-five, ;are on duty about the car plant stockade. Patrolman. James McDaniels, shot in the riots, is reported to be in a serious condition and may die. PREDICTION OF OLD INDIAN Sloux Warrlor Says Comet Molng Stormy Summer. ¥ Sioux Falls, S. D, April 22—"The star which swallows its tail,” is the manner in which an aged Sioux war: rior from’the Piné Ridge reservation refers to Halley’s comet. In the course of an interview at.Interior, &' small town near the reservation, the old Indian stated he could distinctly remember ‘the last previous' visit of the' comet when he was a mere boy. The old warrior stated further that this summer season would be stormy and restless with much violent weather. IN HOPE OF SAVING VESSEL Valuable Cargo on the Minnehaha Thrown Overboard. i Hugh Town, Scilly Islands, April 21; —The remainder of the cargo of the wrecked steamer Minnehaha is-being: thrown overboard in the hope that the vessel ‘thus* lightered . might - escape and be saved. - i waters. Cases of motor cars, typewriters, sewing machines and other valuable merchandise were dumped into the | ment that a wholesale desertion of from the reef upon which she struck | ELK CHARMS . We manufacture in our own workshop a large variety in origival and special designs. Genuine teeth and solid gold mountings only $6.00 and up. Charms can be made more valuable by the addition of precious stones, Our Repair Department ... .There is no better repair work in the jewelry line done anywhere than right here in our own store. Understand us—we are makers of jewelry and know -~ how. GE0. T. BAKER & (0. Manufacturing Jewelers 116 Third Street CHINESE RIOTS " ARE SPREADING hti‘-l*‘oreign Outbreak Re- mewed Near Changsha. BEMIDJI MINN. New-Gash-Want-Rats ,-Gent-a-Word EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted =-Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. e S S PN S S WANTED—Young men to leain automobile business by mail and prepare for positions as' chaffeurs and repair men. We make you expert in ten weeks; assist you to secure position. Pay big; work pleasant; demand for men great; reasonable; write for particulars and - sample lesson. . Empire fiut‘t;mobile Institute, Rochester, ANOTHER MISSION BURNED Church Building at :Ningsiang and School at Yiyang Destroyed, but the People Connected With Them Are «8aid to Have Escaped—Believed No Americans Are Located in the ‘District Affected. WANTED—Competent girl for general housework. Mrs. R. H. Schumaker, 608° Bemidji. Peking; "April 22.—The lawlessness of the natives which began at Chang: sha, the capital of Hunan province, is reported to be spreading. Advices re- ceived here state that riots have oc- curred at Ningsiang, the site of a Protestant mission, about thirty miles ‘West of Changsha. A mission school Yiyang, twenty miles north of Ning- iang, has been burned. The foreign- TS are said to have escaped harm. Foreign residents at Yochow are preparing to leave that place. These reperts are coupled with the state- WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Mrs. A.'L. Molander, 1118 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. 903 Beltrami Avenue. I FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Or trade for city property 160 acres land one mile from Big Falls; 60 acres under cultivation. - Address Roger Mar- tin, Bemidji, Minn, FOR SALE—Hotel furnished complete, with 42 rooms, office and bar, and. three lots, in Kelliher, Apply Craig Hotel, Kelliner, Minn.. ; f the troops has taken place. One hundred Chinese from the Chi- nese cruiser that recently arrived at Changsha are guarding the foreign settlement there. No ‘Americans in District. New York, April 22.—According to the best advices obtainable here there &re no American missionaries at eith- er Ningsiang or Yiyang. The Norwe- gian ‘Missionary ‘society, with head- quarters at St. Avenger, Norway, has & mission at Ningsiang, but of how \many workers s not known here. At Yiyang the same soclety, according to the last report, conducts a medical | work under a Dr. Nisen, a Norwegian physician. . There is one other soclety known to be represented at Yiyang, the Wesley- an Missionary society of London. Its most recent report placed on the ground there but a single missionary, C.' S. Champness. FOR SALE—Own a $600 home. $200 cash and $10 per month.'6- room house, acre land. 6 minute walk to P.. O. Phone 553. e Inquire T. Beaudette, 314 Minne- sota. FOR SALE OR TRADE—Choice Nymore Lots; for price and pai- So far as is known here no Amert. | ticulars write to —J. L. Wold, can missionaries are stationed at Yo- | _ LWin Valley, Minn, Show, whlch the forelgn residents | FOR SALE—Household furniture 1' oo, fesorted to, be preparing to stoves and canned goods. H. A.' b George, 1001 Irvin Ave. 2 222 PROPOSES FURTH Efi CHANGE Congressman Fowler Would Have House Elect All Committees. ‘Washington, April “22.—A further change in the rules of the house was proposed by Representative Fowler of New Jersey, one of the progressives, who introduced a resolution providing for the selection of committees of the house by election. It was referred to the rules ‘committee without the fight which was expected when Repre- sentative ‘Hardwick of Georgia called for a quorum in view of the impor-| . tance of the subject. g 4 = WANTED—Laundry work. 8 R { Ruarantee first-class hand work. _ Warsaw, Ind, Apnl 22 Home Laundry. Phone 497, Brown, one of the four men who cap- | slabshos ool el s AR tured Jefterson Davis at the close of | WANTFD—Day work to house clean the Civil war, is dead at Leesburg, e L1414 A0 i e e Seventh St. and America Ave. J. S. Hanson. % FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Four-room house. ‘A. Klein. 3 LOST and FOUND LOST—A bunch of keys on ‘key ring—Return to this office. ! ! - 'MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—Mjy residence, corner or go out by the day. Phone to s —