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80 AUTOS LEAVE NEW YORK TOMORROW ON 1,500 MILE TRIP ON WAY TO FLORIDA New York, Oct. 13.—The 1911 Glidden tour, the premier event of its kind in the automobile world, will start from this city tomorrow morning. Before it is ended the con- testants will have made a journey of some 1,500 miles that will take them through nearly all of the Eastern and South Atlantic states. There will be thirteen days of traveling, and, with the stop-overs, the end will come on October 26 at Jacksonville, Fla. The tour will start with about four-score contestants, the entry list being the largest and most represen- Start Oct. 14 New York Oct. 15 Philadelphia Oct. 16 Gettysburg Oct. 17 Staunton Oct. 18 Roanoke Oct. 19 Winston-Salem Oct. 20 Charlotte Oct. 21 Anderson Oct. 22 Atlanta Oct. 23 Atlanta Oct. 24 Atlanta Oct. 25 Cordele Oct. 26 Live Oak \ tative since the event became an an- nual fixture. All week men and cars have been arriving here from the South to join the cavalcade. In all nearly thirty makes of cars will be represented, while an equal number of cities will figure in the eontest. The route of the tour will be from this city to Philadelphia, Gettysburg, Roanoke, Winston-Salem, Charlotte, Anderson, Atlanta, Cordele, Live Oak and Jacksonville. A two-day stop- over will be made in Atlanta for the automobile track races to be held in that city. The complete itinerary follows: Daily Night Stop Mileage Philadelphia 95.1 Gettysburg 120.1 Staunton 182.3 Roanoke 90.8 Winston-Salem 124.3 Charlotte 135.6 Anderson 160.6 Atlanta 144.2 (Sunday stop-over) (Monday stop-over) Cordele 167.5 Live Oak 149.1 Jacksonville 85 e A A A A A A A AP MAKE-UP OF MICHIGAN TEAM Rather Pecullar Because of Fact That | Most of Stars Hall From One of Three Cities. The make-up of the first team that| Coach Yost of Michigan has been lin- Ing up is pecullar because of the fact that the men for the most part hail from one of three towns. Ann Arbor contributes three, Cap- tain Conklin, Bogle and Allmendinger, all linemen. Detroit furnishes five, | of whom four were on the cemtral high team together, white the fifth was playing for D. U. S. They are Garrels, Craig, Patterson and Torbet from Central and Pontius from the Elmwood school. Saginaw sends two of the other three men, Carpell and Thomson, who played om the same team in the northern town. The eleventh and most famous play- | er on the team, by virtue of his hav- ing won a place on Camp’s All-Amert- /cen team, Stan Wells, halls from Ohio, and from a town that was only !known to its inhabitants until Wells made the two forward passes that took the ball down to the three-yard line In the Minnesota game, and then made the remaining three yards on two bucks through the left side of the Minnesota line. Amon the players to occupy a prom- Inent position on the second team is Frank Plcard of Saginaw, of last year's reserves. Schulte Wouldn’t Quit. When Frank Schulte was seventeen years old his father offered him $1,000 to burn his uniform and quit baseball. “Wildfire” recently sald his daddy thinks differently of the matter now. Frank Plcard. Weather Now Interferes. Football has sc degenerated that it 1s coming to be looked upon as unus- ual when teams practice in spite of raln. It used tw be that they gloried In that sort of weather. ILLINOIS HAS A GREAT FOOTBALL TEAM Coaches Hall With the game with Minnesota on November 26 to decide the Western in- tercollegiate conference championship as the goal toward which to turn their eyes, the Illini football men are in grand form. Coaches Hall and Lind- gren, both alumnl of Illinols, are again back coaching and expect to turn out the banner eleven of the west this year. - Only four veterans have been lost to the team by graduation—Captain Butzer, guard; Twist, center, and Bernsteln, halfback. All the other vet- erans of the team that went through the season last year without losing a and Lindgren. game or being scored on against the best there was, with the exception ot Minnesota, have weathered the gales of scholastic standing and financial’ discrepancies and are out on the field getting ready to win the conference championship. Daubert Makes Record. Jake Daubert of the Superbas has set up a world’s record this season. Daubert has not muffed a fairly thrown ball at the initial corner during a game. What errors he has commit- ted have been made on wild throws to second and on fumples. CRCIRORRRCRCR RO ISR R © Thursday’s Baseball Results. @ ©®®©®®Q®O®¢9©0® National hlm W. Pet. New York . 54 -847 Chicago . 62 697 Pittsburg . 69 +558 Philadelphia . ..79 73 +520 St. Louis . 74 508 Cirlcinnati : 83 .458 Brooklyn 86 .427 Boston . 107 291 New York, Oct. 13.—New York closed its season yesterday by drop- ping a double-header to Brooklyn. In the first game, Pagon held the lo- cals to three hits, while in the sec- ond game Dent was effective in pinches. The second game was a farce. First game— R. H. E New York “e 0 3 4 Brooklyn . 3 5 0 Ames and Myers Ragon and Mil- ler. Second game— R. H. BE. New York Brooklyn : Drucke, Maxwell, Faust and Hart- ley; Dent and Erwin. Cincinnati, Oct. 13.—Cincinnati finished the National league season "here yesterday by defeating Chicago. The game was loosely played and un- interesting, the smallest crowd of the season being present. Mitchell’s bat- ting and Bescher's base-running fea- tured. R H T Cincinnati . .......... 4 10 1 Chicago 12 2 Humphries, Boyd and McLean, Sev- eroid; Slapnicks and Graham, :@0@@@@@@@@@@@@@ {® Football Games Tomorrow ¢ POOOOOPOPOG OO OO % EAST Yale University vs. Virginia Poletechnic Inst., at New Haven, Conn. Harvard University vs. Williams College, at Cambridge, Mass. Princeton University vs. Colgate University, at Princeton, N. J. University of Pennsylvania vs. Villanova College, at Philadelphia. Wist Point vs. Rutgers College, at West Point, N. Y. Annapolis vs. Washington & Jef- ferson College, at Annapolis, Md. Carlisle Indians' vs. Georgetown University, at Washington, D. C. Cornell University vs. Pennsylva- nia State College, at Ithaca, N. Y. Syracuse University vs. University of Rochester, at Rochester, N. Y. Amherst College vs. Trinity Col- lege, at Hartford, Conn. Dartmouth College vs. Holy Cross College, at Hanover, N. H. Brown University vs. Bowdoin Col- lege, at Providence, R. L Wesleyan University vs. Union Col- lege, at Middletown, Conn. WEST. University of Chicago vs. Purdue University, at Chicago. University of Michigan vs. Michi- gan Agricultural College, at Lansing, Mich. 3 University of Wisconsin vs. Grin- nell College, at Madison, Wis. University of Illinois vs. Lawrence College, at Urbana, Il University of Nebraska vs. Kansas Agricultural College, at Lincoln, Neb. University of Notre Dame vs. St. Viators, at Notre Dame, Ind. University of Kansas vs. St. Mary’s College, at Lawrence, Kas. Marquette University vs. William and Vashti College, at Milwaukee. University of South Dakota vs. South Dakota State College, at Brook- ings, S. D. North Dakota -Agricultural vs. North Dakota S. S., at Wahpeton, N. D. State University of Iowa vs. Morn- ingside College, at Iowa City, Ia. Hamline University vs. Pillsbury, at St. Paul, Minn. - University of Utah vs. Denver Uni- versity, at Denver, Colo. Dakota Wesleyan College vs. North Dakota A. C,, at Fargo, N. D. SOUTH. University -of Georgia vs. Univer- sity of Alabama, at Birmingham, Ala. Vanderbilt University vs. Polytechnic, at Nashville, Tenn. University of Virginia vs. Swarth- more College, at Charlottesville, Va. University of Tennessee vs. Geor- gia Tech, at Atlanta, Ga. University of South aCrolina vs. Charleston College, at Charleston, S. C. University of West Virginia vs. Ohio University, at oMrgantown, W. Va. . Tulane University - vs. Loyisiana Southwestern Tndust. Inst., at New Orleans. Jonns Hopkins Umversity‘ vs. Stev- ens Institute, at Baltimore. Rose In the Football World. New York, Oct. 13.—Among the Eastern colleges few important foot- ball games are scheduled for decision tomorrow. Nearly all of the bigger teams will line up against weaker opponents, so that the games will be little more than practice matches for the important contests later in the season. Yale will play Virginia Polytechnic at New Haven, Harvard will meet Williams at Cambridge and Pennsylvania will play Vilanova on Franklin Field. Princeton will have Colgate for an opponent and Brown will meet Bowdoin. * | others. (Cnnt!nued from first uge). est farmer couple was awarded to A. F. Warner and wife of Puposky, the two weighing 480 pounds. These Were Given Bride and Groom. - The following is a complete list of gifts awarded the bride and groom by the merchants of the city. The marriage license by Clerk of the Court Fred 'W. Rhoda, The Wedding ring by Barker’s Drug and Jewelry Store. A Mantle Clock by George T. Bak- er & Co. A pair of ‘White’slippers B.nd hose by the Berman Emporium. A fine brass bed by Murphy Fur- niture Co. = "A year’s subscription to the Daily Pioneer by the Pioneer Publishing Co. A nickle p|nted tea kettle by the Given Hardware Co. One dozen cabinet photographs by N. L. Hakkerup. Fifty high grade wedding an- nouncements by the Marcum Print- ing Company. One Palmer wash boiler by A. B. Palmer. One rocking chair by J. P. Lahr. A wedding dinner by the Markham: Hotel. A set of dishes by Floyd Brown. One bottle of perfume, and pocket book for the groom by Netzer’s drug store. A blue and white enameled dish pan by Grotte's variety store. One dozen American Beauties by A. E. Webster. A leather seated rocker by C. J. Woodmansee of the Majestic Theater. Twenty-five per cent of the gross receipts of the Market Day Matinee at the Majestic Theater. $10 in gold by the Brinkman Fam- ily Theater. METHODIST MINISTERS ASSIGNED Rev. Charles Flesher Returned By Minneapolis Conference toBemidji. The Northern Minnesota M. E. conference at Minneapolis made the following appointments: Rev. S. L. Parish, Fergus Falls. J. B. Hingeley, corresponding secretary, board of conference claim- ants. E. C. Clemants, field secretary, board of conference claimants. * Robert . Forbes, corresponding secretary, board of home missions and church extension. Fergus Falls districtappointments: A. H. McKee, superintendent, Fergus Falls, Akeley, B. Green; Barnesville, G. S. Fenske; Battle Lake, supply; Breckenridge, C. P. Kreast; Bemidji, C. "H. Flesher; Bena G. O. Parish; Cass Lake, G. O. Parish; Deer Creek, supply; Eagle Bend, J. Carter; Frazee, G. A. Warner; Foxhome, N. Hanby; Hereford supply; Hewitt and Bertha, W. W. 8. Perry; Menahga, A. J. Abbott; Otter Tail, John Knight; Osakis; H. D. Greene; Park Rapids, J. S. Kingan; Perham, sup- ply; Richville, supply; Rothshy, G. C. Fenske; Verndale, A. J. Water; Walker, J. C. Jewell; Wadena, J. T. Dodds. The Wisconsin Anti-Tuberculosis Association convened in annual meet- ing at Milwaukee with a large ‘at- tendance of health officers, physi- cians, school superintendents and At the concluding session to- morrow night the association will meet jointly with the State Confer- enee of Charities and’ Correction to listen to an address by Dr. Richard C. Cabot of Harvard University, one of the world’s most eminent authori- ties on the treatment and preven- tion of tuberculosis. His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught, the successor of Earl Grey as Governor-General of Canada, landed at Quebec, from the steamship Empress of Ireland this morning amid a salute of guns from the Cita- del and the tumultous demonstration of thousands of people massed upon the wharves and the terraced heights of the city. His Royal Highness was met and welcomed by official repre- sentatives of the Dominion and driv- to the Parliament House, attended by his staff and escorted by several troops of military. Thousands of cheering people lined the streets. In the legislative council chamber, which was decorated for the occa- sion, the Duke took the oath.as Gov- ernor General, An 01d Team. The Hittites were an ancient nine of more than local fame. Their in- side play was very fine; they studied well the game. They bested Babylon one year by twenty points or so; left Tyre and Sidon in the rear and beat out Jericho.—Washington Herald. Cucumbers Classified. A New York’magistrate has ruled that cucumbers™re fruit and may be sold on Sunday like green apples, They frequently have a similar effect. Not Really Camel’s Hair, Camelshair brushes are not made from the hair of camels, but from the tailsof Russian and- Siberian squir- rels. It always makes 4 man mad when his - younger brother tells his sons about the. deflltry thelr father Juged try, perhaps; 80 many original, peculiar and inter- eating words and phrases of a techni- cal-cum-slangy ‘nature as the lumber industry of Canada. Timber tracts, says Canada, are divided into *Hmits” or “birth The growing timber on a inct 1s a “stand” and the contents of a “stand” aere measured in “feet’—a “foot” being a board one foot square by one inch thick and not a cubic foot. is to “cruise” it, the man who does the work is a “cruiser,” and his report thereon is a ‘“cruise.” Trees are “falled,” and the man who ‘“falls” them is a “sawyer” A man who works in"a ‘lumber camp is known as & “lumberjack” or ‘“shanty man.” When going ‘up to camp he speaks of “up to the shanties”” Timber mcta that have suffered from the fll effects of forest fires are sald to be “brooly,” which is, of course, a cor ruption of “brule” (burnt). The Glowworm. The glowworm is not a worm, but a species of beetle, to which the com- mon firefly or lightning bug is closely related. The true glowworm is the female and is without wings. Its short legs and long body give it a vermiform appearance, and it can ‘withdraw its triangular head Into its neck. The adult insect feeds but lit- tle. Indeed, there is reason to sup- pose that the adult male does not feed at all. The larva, on the other hand, 18 carnivorous and devours small mol- luscs, either dead or alive. The light given out by the glowworm comes from a yellowish substance located on the underside of the abdomen. Though this light appears to glow steadily, it is really intermittent, con- sisting of flashes in quick succession, about 100 to a minute. Besides the ordinary light rays, Rontgeu rays are emitted. Sp{derspns an aid to astronomy are recognized to such an extent that cer- tain species are cultivated solely for the fine threads they weave. No sub- stitute for the spider’s thread has yet been found for bisecting the screw of the micrometer used for determining the positions and motions of the stars. Not only because of the remarkable fineness of the threads are they val- uable, but because of their durable qualities. spiders raised for astronomical pur- poses withstand changes in tempera- ture, so that often in measuring sun spots they are uninjured when the heat is so great that the lenses of the mi- crometer eyepieces are cracked. These spider lines are only one-fifth to one- seventh of a thousandth of an inch in diameter, compared with which th threads of the silkworm are large and clumsy. The Name of London. The old name for the city of London was Lynden or Llynden, meaning “the city by the lake” An old tradition ‘was founded by Brute, a descendant of Aeneas, and that it was first called New Troy or Troynovant. In the time and was then known as Lud’s Town, or Caer-Lud. This latter is probably the correct version of the origin of the name of London if for no other rea- son because it is such an easy matter to detect a similarity between the ex- pressions London and Lud's Town. It is claimed by some writers that there was a city on the present site of Lon- don in the year 1107 B. C., and it is known that the Romans founded a city there and called it Londinium in the year 61 A. D. The Benevolent Butler. A Calcutta correspondent reports “a truly horrible incident” which befell an English lady. Her butler was in the habit of calling loudly beneath her window every evening about 7. His cry suggested that he was calling el- ther the cattle or the chickens home; but, though she had neither, the lady for some time took no notice until one evening, having the curiosity to look, she was horrified to see the but- ler, like a dusky pied piper, surround- ed by a troop of rats. There were quite fifty of them, from the big bandicotes to small muskrats, all being fed on the remains of her soup, meat and other bits. In a plague country this was an amusement that ‘was speedily ended.—Times of India. An Odd Concrete House. A summer house of concrete In-a garden in one of the suburbs of Ha- vana is built in imitation of a log and straw hut, and it is said that the illu- slon remains even after a close exami- nation. To make the fllusion more complete in parts of the fictitious tim- ber trunks the artist has lmitated the work of the teredo worms, and some of the pillars appear to be bored by them. To make a survey of a stand of timber| gives us to understand that London of Lud it was surrounded by a wall| i on:'wlm. speaks flnl'l!.lh might. b. put down successively in half a dozen places whera English is supposed to be thé mother tongue and hear as many dialects spoken, not one of which he would understand until it was_interpreted. An old Lancashire worthy and a London lady were one day occupants of a rallway carrlage. The train had been waiting long at a certain station, and there was no ap- pearance of it starting when the worthy remarked: “They're a gly, tanglesome lot here.” “I beg your pardon,” said the lady. “I'm sayin’ they're a gey daidlin’ lot here” “I really beg yonr pardon, sir. 37 “I'mobservin’ they are a vera dreich Iot here the nicht.” “Really I must again beg youl' par- don. I don’t comprehend you.” “T was just tryin’ to say that the train was late. “Indeed, sir, it is—very late,” agreed the lady and then collapsed.—London Tit-Bits. Orderliness Is Big Asset. To teach children habits of neatness, system and order is-to insure some de- gree, at least, of success. Yet they are often brought up amid disorder and confusion, allowed to throw things down just where they use them and to form slovenly and slipshod habits. They are not taught to put things where they belong, and consequently they grow up shackled with bandi- caps which they can rarely throw off. If there is any delusion in the world it is that doing “things just for now,” dropping things wherever one may happen to be temporarily, saves time. On the contrary, this is a great time waster and -a great demoralizer of character. A bad habit not only tends to repeat itself, but to increase the tendency in that direction. If you were not taught the beautl- ful lesson of orderliness in your youth, teach it to yourself now.—Success Mag- azine. Needed a Sea Turn. Captain Lane had retired from active pursult of his beloved calling and had turned his attention to town affairs. Having succeeded in rousing the citi- zens to the need of a drinking fountain and also to the need of two coats of paint on the town hall, Captain Lane The threads of certain |feit himself a valued and important person. One day he was asked by a sojourn- er in the town to give his opinion of the present administration. “It's. pretty fair,” said the captain slowly. “Of course there’s things that could be different and would be better 50, but on the whole ’tis pretty fair. But now I'll tell ye—I'm speaking from experience; you understand—things at they could be run till the people o this country make up their minds to stop "confining their votes to landlub- bers!”—Youth’s Companion, OSLER RIGHT; YOUTH SUCCEEDS AGE Gray Hair is First Sign of Age, Harmless Remedy Restores to Natural Color. Osler isn’t the only man who turns down old age. In the business world the “young man” is always the one who picks the plums. “new thought,” “new talent,” etec. and the old man is passed by iu the race. One of the first signs of coming age is the appearance of gray hairs. When you see them, act promptly. Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy will correct this sign, which so often deceives people into thinking that age is really upon them. It is a well-known fact that Sage and Sul- phur will darken the hair. Sage and Sulphur will darken the hair. Wy- eth’s Sage and Sulphur combines these old-time remedies with other agents which remove dandruff and promote the growth of the hair. The manufacturers of this remedy authorize the druggists to sell it un- der guarantee that the money will be refunded if it fails to do exactly as represented. Don’t look old before your time. Get a bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur today, and see what an im- provement it will make in the ap- pearance of your hair. This preparation is offered td the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- gists. Da Vinci's Writings. Although Leonardo da Vinci was a voluminous writer, he never published a single line during his lifetime. After the master’s death in France his manuscripts were taken back to Italy. His heirs proved unworthy, and the precious writings were grad- ually dispersed. Loose pages were often detached and were either given away as relics or stolen. No attempt was made to publish any of his treatises, except that on painting, for more than 300 years after his death. This was partly owing to the great difficulty of deciphering his handwrit- ing. Da Vinci was left handed and always wrote in oriental fashion, from right to left. Besides this, his orthog- Faphy is peculiar to himself. He ab- breviates some words and joins others together and employs neither stops nor accents.—London Chronicle. ‘The Moral. ““The persistency with which children see in a fable some other moral than the one which it is intended that they shall see is often distressing,” remarks a Philadelphia instructor of the young. “I had recited to one little boy the story of the wolf and the lamb and had followed it up with the remark: “‘And now you see, Tommy, that the lamb would not have been eaten .| by the wolf if he had been gnod and sensible.” “‘Yes, I understand’ sald Tommy. “If the lamb had been good and seli sible we. nmnld have had him to ea FOR SALE A small but well equipped and established legal NEWSPAPER AND JOB PLANT in town of about 500 in one of the richest counties in North- ern Minnesota. A large field, only five papers in county. Paper did $645 worth of coun- ty publishing last year, Plant and building and lot they oc- cupy. can be bought for $900 cash or $500 down and $450 long time, 8 per cent interest. This is good paying business but takes too much time away from my local business to look after it. A. L. LaFreniere - Crand Rapids - the seat o' gover'ment won't be run as | It is an age of | s l}ent-a-Wnrd ‘Where cash accompanies cop; will publish all “Wzmt Ads” forialf cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the reg'nlm' rea&e of one ceuta word will IV‘RY HOME MAS A WANT AD For Rent--For’ Sale--Exchange -=Heolp Wanted ork Wanted =-Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED AP AT OUR AUCT'ON SALE MONDAY, October 16th we will have several cars good, heavy boned Dakota colts from ! to 4 years old, some good big nares; with colts and the regular run of draft, farm and gen- eral purpose horses. Will also have two c.rs good young horses that must be soid to settle an es- tate. South St. Paul Horse Co., Union Stock Yards, South St. Paul, Minn. D. D. Brunson, Mgr. WANTED—Competent girl for house- work. Mrs. W. L. Brooks, 519 Be- midji Ave. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE—Coal stove 17 in. fire pot, used only four months. In- quire of Ray F. Murphy, Phone 319. FOR SALE—Round Oak Heater. Mrs. Geo. Kirk, 1109 Lake Blvd. FOR RENT FOR RENT—Two furnished or un- furnished rooms to rent. 701 Mis- sissippi Ave., cor. Tth; phone 622. FOR RENT—One nished. Men preferred. St. front room fur- 511 3rd LOST AND FOUND LOST—Saturday 2 $20 bills. Finder return to tiis office and receive liberal reward. LOST—Small white poodle dog. Please return to 420 Minn. Ave. for reward. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great ctate of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is the Fargo Daiiy and Sunday Courier-N@ws, the only seven day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succedding insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. Talk to the people In prosperous North Dakota through the columns of the Grand Forks Herald; read every day by 30,000 in 150 towns and rural routes in the northern half of the state. Classified ads, for sale, help wanted, exchange, real estate, etc., for 1-2 cent a word each insertion. Send stamps to The Herald, Grand Forks, N. D. KKK KKK KKK KKK KK * WANTED—Old cotton rags at * this office. No silk, gunny ¥ sacks, grain sacks or overalls * accepted Cut all buttons off. * Cash paid. **i«*k*#***l«i* * k ok Kk WANTED TO TRADE—What have you to trade for new standard pia- no? Call at second hand. store, 0dd Fellows Bldg. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. WANTED—Work . cooking for small crew by man and wife; experienced cooks. Address X Y Z, this office. WANTED—Washing to do at home. Address Y, care of Pioneer. EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- dayllto12a.m.,, 1to 6 p.m., 7 to 9 p. m. Sunday 3 to 6 p.m. Monday 7to 9 p. m. BEATRICE Librarian. T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies’ and Geats' Suits to Order. Ory Cleaning, Pmmu and Reparring a 315 Mlnul Avenve EXTRACTS & SPICES and the famous TURKISH RETIEDIES ‘Place your order with GHRIST M, JOHNSON Box 56 Nymore, Minn. LE— P S33 s g £ 1