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It HE lining in you: Clothcraft Clothes is in keeping with the Clothcraf: standard of all-wool anc guaranteed tailoring, It is perfectly put ir and inspected with the same critical care given to every part of a Cloth: craft garment. You simply cannoi pick a flaw in Clothcraf: trimmings, finish, style, shape and fit. So genuinely good are Clothcraf: clothes that the makers put the strongest guaranty on them eve written for clothes—and we bac} every word of that guaranty. Guaranteed pure All-Wool in th¢ fashionable shades and weaves a $10 to $25. Where else can you find anything like this? You can’t Then why waste time looking farther? &35, Clothérafi AllWool Clothes 31O to $ 25 HORSES We are ready at all times to fill your horse Tequiremeats and make a special feature of handling the logging trade, Fill your wants at the big Stock Yards market where a large stock is always or. hand and where the best brices prevail for good stock . S0. ST. PAUL HORSE GO. S0. ST. PAUL, MINN. “The House With a Horse Reputation.” ‘R. F. MURPHY "FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Pffice 313 Beltrami Ave. Phone 319-2. SEEKS LIFE OF AMERICANENVOY Mexican Mob Attacks Am- bassador Wilson. SERIOUS RIOTING OCCURS Demonstration Against Citizens of United States Result of Lynching of Mexican in Texas Several Days Ago—Several Residents of Capital City Killed by Police in Efforts to Restore Order. San Antonio, Tex., Nov. 11.—Advices received here from Taredo state that rioters in Mexico City attempted the ‘life of United States Ambassador Wil- son. The report came from sources considered reliable. The attempt on the life of the ambassador was made early in the afternoon. The attack was the culmination of an anti-American demonstration in which two Mexican students and a Mexican onlooker were killed by the police in an attempt to preserve order. Bitter feeling was %hroused as a re- sult of these fatalities and further trouble was expected. On account of a rigorous censorship reports reaching here are meager. BECAUSE OF TEXAS LYNCHING Cause of Anti-American Demonstra- tions in Mexico. Mexico City, Nov. 11.—Intense anti- American feeling is prevalent here and troops and police are on guard all over the city, keeping the crowds from collecting and endeavoring, in a passive way, to safeguard the inter- ests of American citizens. The American colony is wrought up over attacks on American citizens, during which an American flag was torn, spat upon and reviled. This in- dignation is made worse by the fact that the Mexican government had am- ple warning that the anti-American outbreak was to be expected and made no provision whatever to prevent it. Ambassador Wilson has made strong representations to the Mexican offi- cials, who have promised to protect Americans and to punish those guilty of insulting the American flag. The rioting followed bitter attacks that have been made by the Mexican press upon America and Americans, following the burning at the stake in Texas on Nov. 3 of Antonio Rodri- guez, a Mexican, for the murder of a woman. , DIPLOMATIC PROTEST MADE A Bird’s Barbed Wire Fence There may be seen along the road- ! sides in Central America a brown wren about the size of a canary which builds a unest out of all proportion to its ap- parent needs. It selects a small tree with horizontal branches growing close together. Across two of the branches it lays sticks fastened together with tough fiber until a platform about six feet long by two feet wide has been constructed. On the end of this plat- form nearest the tree trunk it then builds a buge dome shaped nest a foot or so high with thick sides of inter- woven thorns. A covered passageway is then made from the nest to the end of the platform in as crooked a man- ner as possible. Across the outer end. s well as at short intervals along the inside of this tunnel, are placed cun- ning little fences of thorns with just space enough for the owners to pass through. On going out this opening is closed by the owner by placing thorns across the gateway, and thus the safety of the eggs or young is as- {ured.—Brooklyn Eagle. Penknives. Nowadays we use penknives prinel- pally for sharpening pencils, There was a time, however, when they were used primarily for doing something else. They used to be just what their name would indicate—they were *“pen- knives.” The ancients used pens made of goose quills, just as our fore- fathers did up to about a hundred years ago. The quill ped was made by hand, of course, and whenever the point of one would break or lose its elasticity it was up to the penman to put a new point or “nib” on the quill. This was done with a small knife, and hence we have the word that has out- lived the quill pen a hundred years— “penknife.” In the olden times the penknife was a necessary accessory of the writing desk. When the clasp- knife came in the smaller sizes took their name from the little desk knife, while the bigger ones were called “jackkmives.' *‘jack” signifying any- thing masculine or big and strong.— Kansas City Star. Saw It In a Dream. For many years ivory manufacturers were trying to devise a machipe for turning out a billiard ball as nearly perfect as possible and at the same time avoiding waste. Among those who strove to perfect such a machine was Mr. John: Carter of the firm of John Carter & Son. well known ivory manufacturers of half a century ago. whose premises- will: stand in Bishops- gate. -One night after Mr. Carter had been striving to solve- the problem for some time he suddenly awoke his wife by shouting out., I have got it™™ and rashed downstairs: inte his study. where ke made a drawiug of the l:xst‘ kuife. for the want of which- he: had been so leng waiting in:erder to cem- plete his machine. It appears that he| had fallen asleep and dreamed abwut the machine. and in the dikam the so- lutiow of the difficulty was-revealed! to: him.—London Standard. Brown Eyes and Color Blndness.. €olor blinduess is one of. the gread Minister Wilson Complained of Antii American Outbreak. Washington, Nav. 11.—Official dfs- patches giving details of the anti- American demonstration in Mexico City reached the state department from United States Ambassader Wil son and Arnold Frasklin, the Ameri- can consul general. Mr. Wilsor een- firmed the press repuorts that he pro- tested to the Mexican department of foreign relations against the insults offered Americans and that the riot Raw Ffirs Raw Furs Furs Repaired Highest market price paid for Mink, Skunk, Coon and Musk- rats and all kinds of Raw Furs. Ship direct to us and Save Fur Dealer’s profit. We use our own skins that’s why we can pay the Highest Market price for your skins. Send us your horse and cow |¢ hides to be made into Coats and Ry . One trial shipment:of .Raw Yurs will convince. PIONEER FUR CO. 1183 Beech St:|St. Paul, Minn. Expert{Fur Repairing Reasonable Price F. M. FRITZ Naturalist Taxidermist Fur Dresser Mounting- Game Heads, Whole 1 Animals, Birds, Fish, Fur Rugs st i and Horns Decorafive and Scientific Taxidermy in all its branches Al Work Guaranteed MOTH grew out of the !ynching of & Mexi- can, Antonio Rodrigmez; atf Rock Springs, Tex., on Nov. 3 Mr. Franklin’s dispatch said tlhat the riotous students who paraded the streets cried “Death tiv Amhericans!™ and threatened the conwalate general. He alss told how these studemts lkad pulled an American flig from a busi- ness house and had trampled &t under Toot. FIFTY-ONE MINERS: DEAB [Eighteem Have Been Wescued Alive From Colorad Mine. Trinidad, Colo., Nast 1li—Shartly after midnight the dresry appearance of dead wagons carryinge black, shroud- ed figures from the mouthr of the Victor American Fuel eompany’s No. < mine at Delagua began and by day- light firtv-one corpsew of victims of Coloradiw’s latest coal mifre horror had been breught to the surface and laid in: a long raw in the temporary morgue. Eighteen miners have beenr brought:| to the surface alive. NEGRO HANGING FROM POLE Telephone Men Figd Cause of Wire: “Trnowhlie.” Macon, Ga., Naw.. 11.—Telephone “trouble men” looking, for wire trouble: near Montezuma, Ga., came upon: the cause in an unexpected and gruesome form when they faund the body of a negro dangling from a pole and tan- gled up with the telephone wires. This was the negro Iynched by a mob the morning. before, charged with the murder of Marshal Bush of Monte- zuma. The “trouble” was removed. Big Prize for Water Flight. New York, Nov. 11.—The prize of $5,000 recently offered in Havana for a flight between that city and Key West will probably be increased to a total of PROOF and First Class in Every Particular 'Bemidii_ . _M_innesota | NEEECTIVE PAGE | $20,000 or miore, according to advices received here. A wealthy Havana man has already added $5,000 to the prize and assurance is given that the congress of Cuba will vote an addition~ al $10,000. el drawbacks to a large percemtage o} man who would enlist in the United States marine ecorps. accordimg to thes| recruiting officers, “We have a box filled witkzdifferent | colored yarn.” said am officemr of that braoch of the service. “Wer ask the- prospective recruit to pick omt green: | for instapce. If he is color-blind. he will invariably pick all the =ed yarn. ‘We place it all back in the bex again: and ask kim to pick out the red. In nine cases out of ten out will.come the green. | the nigdt. A Humble Hero. ‘Every student of history remembers Captain Perry’s dispatch after the bat- tle of Lake Erie, a sentence terse and yet glowing. “We have met the en- emy, and they are ours.” Every one remembers the great and significant result of the fight, but few perhaps have heard of one humble worker who served his country just as truly there as if he had been on deck amid shot and shell, earning glory as well as the reward of a good con- science, » Just as the ships were going into ac- tion the mate of the Lawrence said to Wilson Mays, who was ill and unfit for service: . “Go below, Mays; you are too weak to be here.” “1 can do something, sir,” was the stout reply, “What can you do?” “I can sound the pump, sir, and let a strong man go to the guns.” Then he sat down by the pump and thus released for active service a man who had more muscle, and when the fight was over there he was found with a bullet through his heart. Barred the Red Heels. Otice actors used to say that they were going *“‘to study a part for per- formance:"” now the saying is that one “gets up in a part”’ which may be one of the reasons why there were once more studied performances than there are now. As an esample of how much can be safely left to the intelligence of even tried actors is the case of the Napoleonic play that Charles Frohman was once rehearsing. JIn the midst of the dress rehearsal an actress of sup- posed all around experience, cast for one of the Paris street demizens, one of the mob of revolutionists, was dis- covered gayly decked out in patent leather shoes with jolly red Lieels. “No, my child,” said Mr. Frohman, “pot red heels and a revolutionist too.” “But they look ever so much prettier and give color to the scene,” persisted the actress. “That may be.” continued Mr. Frohman, “but the mob did not wear red heeled shoes; get your color | with a red handkerchief or from jour makeup table. but not with red heels:” Successful Trap Shooting. i Aimr youwr gun a little above the shed || protecting the tiaps. GGive the call || “Pull.™ Do mot get rattled. Get your i bird as it is going up or at its maxi- | murer height and then fire, aiming’ about six or eight inches akead and a |} trifle befow it. The tendency is al- ways to shoot too high, not allowing for the speed of the deseent. Above all things fire. even if ysu know you Theactive youngster—the real doy—is seldom thought- ful of his clothes. You think your boy would wear out iron. Maybe he would, but he won’t wear out Hercules Made by Daube, Cohn: & Co., Chicago, Il Hercules suits are made of materials that are guaranteed to be absolutely all pure wool. They are Shower Proof Coat sleeves are double lined at the arm pits, of such good material that there is but one chance in a million of the sleeve lining breaking. Pants are lined with the strongest of all materizl, *Herculone.” Butrons? They never come off. The button holés never pull out. Your oy will always be well dressed in a Hercules. They please the youngster and save papa’s pocket book. MADSON, ODEGARD & (0. ONE-PRICE CLOTHIERS COAL I am ready to receive your orders for your winter’s coal and you can save money by buying coal early of C. E. BATTLES 413-415 Beltrami Ave. Phone 21 Full Line of are going to miss. There is nothing so " Risconcerting or fatal to the peise as ar ware ” nves an 0[ In un s te allow a fairly zhrown target to get E ’ aitogether away without shooting at it at all. When callimg “Pull™ put some | ginger inte it. Rark it an old trap | shot used fo say. Don't falter ft. as | thougl apeiogizing for Leing alive. It ] hurts your vonfiderwe and rattles m:-{ trap pullerss If yow stand with: yeour | | gun seady ;;;M mumiite “Pull’ three or { Are Gna ranteed 10 four simes before the farget ix rhrovwn the cliances are l overwhelinfg rhat p you: will missi—C. @ Peters im: Outimg. | ! 5 9 Justice at: A1l Hours. Despite- theis preference for'm repuls flean farm. of government, the- Frenchy are iny some' sespects: a conservative nation. A. Paris contesaporary. discov- ered ther one of the dbors. of tle pa- lais de- justice: is left: ajar threughout | This. door kas neves beem shut since- Marvh: 4. 1628, when: Louis: «XI1L ordained tliat it should remaim | erpetually open “so timt my sabjeets. may be- alle tor seek justice at alh | ttours: cf. the day and might” How- | ever; am enterprising: journalist wihwo | vAmother strange thing I Have no-4,raconted’ himself at. kiie: door ini the ticed is that most persons who areligmal meurs of tlie morning: was: «color blind have brown eyes. Ounce in|' promptiy-ejectediby. a watchman, Amd awhile a person with eyes of ‘a: differ- ¥ wijen e quoted: the ordinance-of 1618 -ent: color is afilicted that waw.but a he reply was, “If yow don’t elear off’ 4 general rule they are perssms With.|'voy'|l find! yourself coming iix by the brown: eyes.”—Kansas City Star. - prisonexs’ door: tbmorrow.” He Smoked. A, Finawcial' Deadliock. “What a2 smell of smoke i8: about!’§ «“Whe. it that man: who has. beem sit- Do- you allow your husband: e smoke- ting behind tbe bar day afver day?” in the parlor?” inquired; the stranger-a Crimson Galeh. “He doesn't. as a rule, “That's *Stagecoack Charley. He's merning” — in-a. peeuliar predicament.. e went to “You are very wrong to allow any¥| town, last week an' ot bis. zeeth: fixed. exceptions whatever. my deaP WOmAI: | Then, he. come hete an'. bein' broke. You ought not to allow him:to smoke'| ran ap- a bill on the strem’th of his under any possible circumstances, evam| $T worth: of gold: fitin’. Charley won’t but thiss '{““as good as the Universal” oace." “But. my dear woman.. titis mownr ing he simply had to smoke. His:eeat| gyway witl the collateral. an® theve you was. om fire.”—New York Jsurnal. Good Policy.. Mrs. Stubb—Why, John; the last family that oecupied this house. left some old jars in the. pantry. Mr. Stubb—H'm! Mary, that is a good policy. Mrs. Stubb—What is & good pelicy? Mr. Stubb—Why, when yow submit to kavin' the nuggets pried out. an’ the proprietor wom't let him git are’—Washington Star. The Trouble. “Have you explained the germ sys- tem to your children? Everything should be om a practical basis these: days.” *“No,” replied the old fashioned, citir || zen. “It seems inconsistent to tell ’em: | move leave your family: jars. behind | ) 4o pelieve in fairies and then try | you.—Chicago Ne Cooking a Hare, “You've heard the-recipe for cooking & hare?” “Yes. TFirst cateh: your kare.” land Plain Dealar: He Would, Indeed. a4 man’s wife is called@ his better half. Wedmore—You would if you had to divide your salary with one.—Boston Transcript. Serious Business. Policeman—Hi! What are you doing up that ladder? late)—Hush! wife is already asleep.—Fliegende Blat- ter. Good humor and gen’e;bslty carry the day with the popular heart all over the world.—Alexander ‘Siuith. — “No. First catch your-cook.”—Cleve- Finally he came to the end. Singleton—I eannot understand why | by remembering how much I expect of Husband (returning | cerned it I'm only seeing if my | American. to get ’em to believe in microbes.’ Pittsburg Post. A Useful Reflection. The optimist was reciting some of the numerous articles in his creed *Oh, there is one more, after all,” he said. *On the days when I reflect how lit- tle I really amount to I cheer miyself others.” . Her Age. “I understand that heiress Jobbins married was rather old. What was her age?" “I guess as far as Jobbins was con- was heritage.”—Baltimore Heart Trouble. “Faint heart never ‘won fair lady.” “Faint .heart basino business to try to win anything: faint heart ought to Universal Heaters It’s im the flues and the: general comstruction of a: heater that makes it an: econonzical stove in the use: of fuel. Universal Heat~ ers.are built to give last— ing satisfaction. When a dealer tells you that the stove he’s trying to sell is: i6e Ry then, of course, you know he honestly thinks the Uni- versal stove is the best Y stove: made. ) i GIVEN HARDWARE CO0. swpemiaL univErsaL MR. RENTER Have you ever stopped to think that every few years you practically pay for the house you live in and yet do not own it? Figure 1t up for yourself. Theodore Roovsevelt says: “No Investment on earth is so safe, so sure, so certain to earich its owners as undeveloped realty.” We will be glad to tell you about the Citv of Be- midji. and quote you prices with easy terms of payment if desired on some of the best residence and business propertv in that rapidly growing City. A letter addressed to us will bring you 1ull part cu- lars or if you prefer to see the property, call on H. A. | Simons, at Bemidji. The Soo ‘Railroad will be running its freight and passenger trains into Bemidji within a few months; investigate the opportunities offered for businesson a | small or large scale. ; ‘Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co 404 New York Life Building i MINNESOTA | ST. PAUL Subscribe 'For The Pioneer -