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Yours for uni- formity. Yours for great- est leavening power. Yours for never failing results. Yours for purity. Yours for economy. Yours for every- thing that goes to make up a strictly high grade, ever- dependable’ baking powder. That is Calumet. Try it once and note the im- provement in your bak- ing. See how much more economical over the high- priced trust brands, how much better than the cheap and big-can kinds. Calumet is highest in quality —moderate in cost. Received Highest Award— World's Pure Food Exposition. KNOWN VALUES ?UBLISHERS CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS- ING ASSOCIATION PAPERS E ARE MEMBERS Bapers. 1o, Ml Dacte. ot ghe States aud Janada. Your wants supplied—anywhere ang lime by the best mediums in the country. Get our membership lists—Check papers you want. We do the rest. Publishers Classified Advertising Associae tion, Buffalo, N. Y. New-Gash-Want-Rate ,-Gent-a-Word ‘Where cash accompanies copy we will publish all “Want Ads" for half- 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--Exchange ~--Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. AELP WANTEL AGENTS WANTED — Highest Cash paid weekly with part ex- pense allowance. No cash invest- ment, nothing to buy; outfit Free and Home territory. Experience unnecessary. Do you want steady work and be earning $15.00 to $30.00 per week? The Hawks Nursery Co., Wauwatosa, Wis, WANTED—For 1he Uaited States army, ablebodied unwarried men bewween ages of 18 and 35; citizens of the United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write thc Eoglish language. For in formation apply to Recruiting Officer, 4th Sr., and Minnesota Ave., Bemidji, Minne:ota, WAN I ED—Girl for general bouse work. Mrs. J. E. Black, 815 Be. midji Ave. WANTED—Good cook, good wages, 515 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—A good girl for general housework, 903 B ltrami. O™ sace FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. Th. Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you an shor notice. FOR AEN1 FOR RENT—Five room house. In- quire of William C, Klein. LOST and FOUND LOST—A bunchof keys. to Blue Front restaurant. Return MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—To rent a piano. In- quire at 917, Minnesota Ave. R F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR . AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltrami Ave. Phone 319-2. large string of refugees. AMERIGANS ARE TOLD TO LEAVE Consul at Juarez So Advises Countrymen. REBEL ATTACK IMMINEN Force of Revolutionary Leader Almost Within Sight of the Border City, Which He Proposes to Make His Capital After Its Capture—Refugees Continue Their Flight Across the River Into Texas. 2 States consul: Announces that it has opened a 8. first days of January and July. Deposits made on or hefore the fifth day of any calendar month will draw interest from the first of the month in which the deposit is made. Money may be withdrawn at any time and the partial. withdrawal of an aceoung does not impair the interest on the remaining portion of the deposit. De- posits do nothave to remain in the bank six months'to draw interest. In- terest will be paid on all sums remaining on deposit for three or more months next preceeding January and July first. A Savings;Account is the most practical way of . accumulating money El Paso, Tex., Feb. 6.—The follow- and upon the above terms the Security State la,pk solocits your business. ing notice was publicly proclaimed in Ciudad Juarez, signed by the United = The Secumy . OF BEMIDJI vlng: Deplrtmant And wnll receive deposits of one doliar or more and pay interest thereon. at the rate of four per cent per annnm, the interest to be pnyabu every six months, on the fatp Bank “Having received notice officially from .El Ceneral En Jefe P. Orozco, a prominent commander of the pro- visional anti-re-electionists in Mexico, that he will initiate an attack on the city of Juarez without delay, I would earnestly advise that all Americans, all foreigners and all noncombatants should absent themselves from Ciudad Juarez until such time as-a state of tranquillity shall have been estab- lished.” Just when Orozco and his followers will make the attack on Juarez is a little indefinite, but it is very definite indeed that the attack of the young| - revolutionary leader on the border city, which, according to his own statement, he intended making the provisional capital of -Mexico, would not be long delayed. Official notice of the intended at- tack reached the American consul at 10:30 p. m. In this notice Orozco said he would attack within twenty-four hours. Couriers from his camp, about ten miles from Juarez, said he expect- ed first to reconnoiter the town before striking, and that he was awaiting re- inforcements. Juarez, too, was look- ing for reinforcements for the federal garrison, but revolutionists said none might. be looked for from the south, where Colonel Robago and his shat. tered command were. A renewed exodus from Juarez took place when the officlal notice of in- tended attack reached the American oonsul. The notice was at once made public and within a few minutes the international bridge to El Paso bore a DONE FOR HONOR OF ARMY Captain Haines Justifi of Ann New York, Feb. 6.—From Sing Sing prison, where he is serving a seven- year sentence for the murder of Will- iam E. Annis, whom he accused of making love to his wife, Captain Peter C. Haines, whose resignation from the army has been accepted by'the pres. ident, has made a pathetic appeal “for justice” to Secretary of War Dick- inson. “I am resigning for the sake'of my three children,” he says, “iu order that I shall not be dropped from the rolls.” The killing of Annis, whom he shot down in cold blood on a float at the Bayside Yacht club May 16, 1908, while the magazine man was dressed in a bathing suit and unarmed, was necessary “for the honor of the United States army,” according to Captain Haines. z TROOPS HELD IN READINESS Governor Wold Prevent Lynching of North Carolina Negro. Raleigh, N. C., Feb. 6.—As a result of the killing of Deputy Sheriff Mum- ford and the probable killing of Chief of Police Glover at Wilson by an un- known negro desperado, when the offi- cers were trying to arrest him, serious trouble is impending. Governor Kitchen has ordered Com- pany K, Second regiment, and the Wil- son light infantrr to be subject to the orders of the sheriff of Wilson county to prevent a lynching or serious race war should the negro be caught. JOSEPH G. ROBIN ARRAIGNED New York Promoter Charged With Larceny of $100,000. New York, Feb. 6.—When arraigned before Judge Swann to plead to eight indictments charging the larceny of more than $100,000, Joseph G. Robin. the promoter, through his counsel, William T. Jerome, interposed demur rers to the indictments. He alleged that the presentments did not conform to the law and that they had not been properly signed by the district attorney. the Killing For Use of Canadian Warships. Victoria, B. C., Feb. 6.—Work will begin at once on the construction of ® large drydock at Esquimalt, to be used fn the building of Canadian war- ships for the Pacific, according to word received from Ottawa, Strychnine Tablets Kill Child. Sioux Falls, S. D., Feb. 6.—The lit- tle daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Mat- thews, aged two and one-half years, is dead as the result of finding and swallowing several strychnine tablets belonging to the parents. WILL WAR ON SAFECRACKERS Bankers of Five States Organize De. tective Force. Kansas City, Feb. 6.—The organiza- tion of a detective forces which will aid county and state authorities in the capture of -bank robbers was the plan adopted at the meeting of the officials of the State Banking associa- tions of five states. The detective force will have head- quarters in Kansae City and will op erate only for the cnptur’ -of bank rob- hare - ‘MRS, WILLIAM T. BULL. Widow of Famous New York Surgeon, Who lIs Seriously. lll. PROBABLY FELL OFF PIER Fate of Missing Philadelphia Postmas- ter Still in Doubt. Atlantic City, N. J.,, Feb. 6.—The whereabouts of Richard L. Ashhurst, postmaster of Philadelphia, who dis- appeared on the Strand last Monday night, is still unknown to his friends. He dropped completely out of sight and did rot leave the slightest clue by which he could be traced. Whether the family of the postmaster know anything concerning his disappearance cannot be learned. Chiet of Police Woodruff, 'who says he was notified ofthe disappearance of Mr. Ashhurst the night he dropped out of sight, expressed the belief that the man s dead. The last person to see him was the chair .pusher, who wheeled h'm to the million-dollar pier at 8:45 o'clock Monday night. UNABLE TO HOLD OUT LONGER Chicago Garment Workers Seeking Their Old Places. Chicago, Feb. 6.—Thousands of gar- ment workers who have been on strike for weeks sought their old jobs back, admitting that they have been beaten in their fight with the employers and willing to accept almost any terms that would bring them food. Declaring that it was useless fur- ther to coptinue the uneven struggle the strike committee ordered the strike called off and the 25,000 gar- ment workers who were still out are seeking their jobs. The effect of calling off the Strike is that the workers may return to work as individuals, that the “open shop” policy will be continued and that the employers will treattheir employes’ grievances as they please. The strike has been on for twenty- two weeks, during which time 45,000 men and women have been out, involv- ing 250 firms. It is estimated that the employers have lost $10,000,000 in trade and the workers more than $3,500,000 in wages. A At least six deaths are directly at- tributed to the strike. LION'S WOUND IS FATAL Brother of English Cabinet Member Dies in Africa. Nairobi, British East Africa, Feb. 6. —George Grey, a brother of Sir Ed- ward Grey, the British minister of foreign affairs, is dead at the hospital to which he was removed following his encounter with a lion a few days ago. Mr. Grey, with several companions, was stalking lions near the Athi river when -he separated from the others and ‘was suddenly set upon by a large beast. He was wounded fatally be- fore his friends could come to his res- cue. PRESIDENT DAVILA TO uIT Bonilla Will Shortly Assume the Presidency of Honduras. New Orleans, Feb. 6.—President Davila of Honduras will abdicate his office immediately and-flee to Mexico, according to a cablegram received here from Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras. According to this message Davila has asked President Taft to secure for him a safe departure from Hon- duras. Bonilla, it is expected, will enter Tegucigalpa within a few days and assume the presidency, to which he was elected in 1906 for a term or six years. HE WANTS L0GS ON FREE LIST Lumber Baron Opposes Re- ciprocity Treaty. BUSINESS IN BAD SHAPE Edward Hines, Before the House Com- mittee, Asserts There Has Been More Failures Since the Passage of the Payne Bill Than for Several Years Before—Blames Retailers for « Increased. Price of Lumber. ‘Washington, Feb. 6.—The National Association of Lumber Manufacturers of the United States, through their president, Edward Hines, protested to the ways and means committee of the house against the Canadian reciproc- ity bill as threatening disaster to the lumber manufacturers of this country. The gravamen of Hines’ complaint was that the proposed trade agree- ment permits of the admission into the United States free of duty of wood for the manufacture of wood pulp, but still excludes logs for the manufac- ture of lumber. He said that there are billions of feet of pine timber on the Canadian side, in close proximity to America, that the logs can be float- ed down stream into American terri- tory, but that they are excluded by prohibition " of the Dominion provin- cial government. When Mr. Hines suggested an amendment to the pending bill to in- clude frée admission of' logs for the manufacture ! of lumber Chairman -Payne of tlie committee suggested that any amendment of the bill would simply mean’ killing the bill. Mr. Hines wanted the committee to ‘wait until next Thursday to hear a delegation of lumber manufacturers from the Pacific coast, but the com- mittee will take up later the question of extending the hearing. Recites Lumbermen's Woes. Mr. Hines complained of bad busi- mness to. the committee in behalf of the lumber manufacturers. He sald they had submitted to a reduction in duties of 37% per cent carried by the Payne bill, which had wrought great distress to the trade,'and they wanted to come before the committee and tell how the proposed trade agreement with Canade would further hurt the lumber affairs of the United States, but the lumbermen could not possibly get here before next Thursday. Mr. Hines said there had been more faflures among lumber manufacturers since the Payne bill went into effect than for several years before. He went on in this strain for some time, reciting a rate of higher cost of labor, higher cost of horses, supplies for the men and all that sort of thing. Champ Clark looked up from a copy of the Pike County News, which he was perusing, to ask in his blunt way how it was that the price of lumber had increased. “We hadn’t got out of town,” grum- bled Mr. Olark, “before the price of lumber jumped up a dollar a thousand although we had reduced the duty.” This sally led to quite a discussion, until Mr. Hines finally got out by lay- ing the blame on the retailers, who, he said, were not controlled by his assoclation at all. | TO.SECURE BIG EXPOSITION $an Francisco Committee Spent One Hundred Thousand Dollars. New York, Feb. 6.—The story of how California’s committee of lobby- ists won over the house of representa- tives to San Francisco’s side in the dispute over the location of the 1915 world’s fair was told. by H. H. de Young, proprietor of the San Fran- cisco Chronicle, in an address to the California society here. “The fight to get the exposition has cost the' San Francisco committee $100,000, said the speaker, “but not a cent was spent wrongfully. The efforts of the committee in the last stages of the fight were directed mainly against the New Orleans dele- gation, toward getting the constitu- ents of congressmen all over the coun- try to urge their representatives by telegraph to vote for San Francisco.” Teaching Senators to Pray. Topeks, Kan., Feb. 6.—t a session of the state senate recently Rev. A. F. Randall, the chaplain, requested the senators to repeat with him the Lord’s Prayer. Only eight senators ‘were able to join in its audible repeti- tion. Since that the chaplain has dis: tributed coples of the book of common Dprayer of the Episcopal church among m -onhn CLARENCE W. WATSON. Chosen for Short Senate Term by Democrats of West Virginia. WILD WEST IN NEW YORK Six Men Shoot Up Saloon and Make Their Escape. ‘New York, Feb. 6.—Six ‘men, all armed with heavy revolvers, entered by twos at the three entrances to the saloon of, Henry Fehn on Upper Sec- cnd avenue. At a signal from the leade™ all six began blazing away at the mir- rors and glassware. About forty shots were fired, with _such excellent effect that broken glass was strewn all over the place by the time two policemen ran up, attracted by the fusillade. The bluecoats found the saloon empty except for the two bartenders, who were crouching unin- jured close to the floor behind the bar, in fear of a renewal of hostilities. The six visitors had departed as sud- denly and silently as they came. The police believe that they intended to rob the saloon of the $600 in the till, but were frightened at the racket their revolvers caused. FEAR FOR SAFETY OF MISSIONARIES May Have Been Slain by Hun- ger Maddened Natives, Shanghai, China, Feb. alarm for the safety of American mis- sionaries in the famine districts of Anhui and Kiangsu provinces is ex- pressed by members of the relief com: | mittee and efforts are being made to get into communication with those in the “outlying districts. It is feared the missionaries may have been the victims of their charity, a8 numerous instances of hunger mad-: | dened mobs attacking and murdering | persons known to possess even insig- nificant supplies of food are reported by field agents. Orders have been issued that no re- lef be given by missionaries as indi- viduals, but only "as representing the organized relief bodies. Two million lives at $1.50 each was the estimate of their task made by officers of the famine relief committee. For $1.50 they declared they could save one person from starvation un- til spring. In the famine districts the streets are peopled by unburied dead and beg- gars, At Shuanchien a mob of desperate famine sufferers in the early stages of the famine sacked the town, kill- ing a large portion of the inhabitants. The remainder, in fear of summary punishment by the authorities, have wmade their escape from that district. 6.—Great | No. 22 and 40, 10c 15¢c BargainsinRitibons We'aré offering 4 boxes of taffetta silk ribbon, colors white, cream, light blue, pink, cardinal and black at the following prices. "2 3-4 o 3 inches wide | 'LEARY-BOWSER CO. a Yard No. 60 and 80, 3 1-2 1o 4 inches wide a Yard pare it with others. Touring Car Value With You Can Now Verify This| Your Own Eyes 1911 E. M. F. “Touring Car,” $i000 There are many good cars made nowadays and any good car is a good investment. Il ly believe that Studebaker E. M. F. cars offer the | Yet we honest- best value for the money of any on the market. We ask you to see the E. M. F. before you buy. Com- Comparison has sold more E. M. F. cars than all their advertising. We extend an invitation to both ladies and gentlemen to come in and see our new Model, 5 passenger Touring Car, which is now on exhibition in our new show room. We have a brand new catalogue, ask or write for it. If you are in the market or if you are not, come in ‘and see the car anyway. Northern Automobile Co. Regular Price $1.00 ... ..$ 125.. ... 150 .4 ois L35 ek, 2. 250 . 2.4 INVALID CUSHIONS Regular Price ~Sale Price $4.50 . . . $3.00 HANSON's ALNOND CREAM = 25¢ BOTTLE Sale Price L05 1.20 1.75 1.90 2.25 S Posto"loa ¢o ner Fountain Syringes These Are All the Guaranteed Rubber _Goods 70 .86 RUBBER GLOVES 35¢ Pair Geo. A. Hanson A. D. S. DRUG STORE £ T PHOHI 304 {Discount Sale on Rubber Goods ] 30 to 50 per cent Discount on All the Following Goods Sale Runs Saturday, Monday and Tuesday, February 4, 6 and T, Hot Water Bottles Regular Price Sale Price $150 ...... $1.05 200 ...... 140 225...... 155 250 . ..... L75 Combinations Regular Price Sale Price $275 ... . ... $1.90 300 ...... 210 3.75 ... 260 BATH SPRAYS Regular-Price " Sale Prics $2.50 $1.25 MY ALMOND