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BRING MORE CATTLE INTO MINNESOTA (Continued from first page). @are more cows+in/Minnesota than in Illinois. . You will ‘also notice that JYowa shows up wvery well in the total |- ,mumber ofitattle and of swine. * “I'believs that in taking up this plan we should confine ourselves to ‘“the one thing and not allow our- selves to be diverted by the consider- tion of other plans which might gaturally grow out of the success of 'his proposed; plan, but which can etter be taken up later. ‘¢ *This, in a general way, suggests vt;he object for ‘which I have invited ‘.‘?’ou to meet with me.” 1. Companson of Stock. Mileh Cows Other Cattle “Nllinois 1,007,000 “fowa .. ..1,337,000 Wisconsin .1,504,000 -Minnesota .1,129,000 Missouri 782,0Q0 - Kansas .... 689,000 Nebraska .............. 607,000 2% X KKK R R R KR KKK * TAMARACK RIVER * AR KK KA K KKK KKK Mrs. Peter Back is visiting her sister Mrs. 0. J. Norman. . Mrs. A. G. Miller visited at the tome of her brother, A. B. Saxitd re- cently. ‘Mr. and Mrs. H, L. Bower, were €ransacting business in Bemidji last week. ' Mrs. Wm. Pritsman and sister Miss Ella Saylor and Mrs. Leonard Oliver, Bpent Sunday with' Mrs. P. Sarff. Ole Miller and Stanley Kreta, were Bemidji visitors last week. o Everybody are busy picking cran- Pperries. TWENTY ISSUES AWAIT DECISION - “imfi' Conferees Nearing End of Task. AFOREIGN ‘ROLICY PEND Admlmslralmn's Method of ' Dealing B With Other Countries Under the v‘ #Proposed fietalla{ory Provisions of the. Bill Stlll Uhae!tled. Washmgwn, .Sept. 25.—Twenty 'filarply contested issues in the tariff @®ill remained to be settled when the ‘@ouse and semate ' conferees reas- ‘sembled for i what many believed would be the vconcluchng day of their ~gerk. l’l‘he policy of ‘the administration to- ward foreign countnes involving the 4) roposed retaliatory provisions of the <4aviff, the 5 per cent discount on ~goods brought in American. ships and -4hhe -prohibition against goods made by child labor and gther, similar fea- ~qures were still to' be settled. « The conferees were also prepared . ~for a final de ision of the perplexing €otton futures tax question, involving ¢he Clark amendment proposing a| 4ax of 50 cents per bale on all trades dn cotton futures-where actual delivery ‘Was not made. Compromise Is Proposed. * As a compromise Southern senators and representatives, supported by the agricultural department and Post- ‘4master General DBurleson, have pro- wosed reducing the tax to 5 cents per “bale, when the contracts specified ‘government cofton grades and those grades were delivered or the differ- ence in value paid in cash. ' Senator Pomerene of Ohio carried -to President Wilson his fight for the 8enate amendment to the tariff bill -4dmposing an equal internal revenue duty on all wines and spirits. + “I merely put the president in pos- .Hession of the. facts,” said the senator, a8 heileft the” exdcutive offices. He added that the '.president had not committed himself on the subject. ~#The’ California’ wine men are fighting #he tnx Total Cattle Swine 1,228,000 2,235,000 4,315,000 2,607,000 3,944,000 8,720,000 1,135,000 2,639,000 2,030,000 1,139,000 2,268,000 1,702,000 1,444,000 2,233,000 4,087,000 1,778,000 2,476,000 2,611,000 1,902,000 2,509,000 3,789,000 $20,000 was found in his accounts, is|- under arrest at Montreal, according to announcement made here by a private detective agency. INSURED FOR HALF MILLION 8t. Paul Realty Man Takes Out Big Policy for Benefit of Company. St. Paul, Sept. 25.—An insurance policy on the life of Watson P. David- son for $500,000 was taken out through George B..Graves, general agent of the State Mutual Life Assurance cothpany of Worcester, Mass. It is said to be the largest life in- surance policy ever taken out in the Northwest. The policy is made payable to the Oregon and Western Colonization com- pany, of which Mr. Davidson is the active head. The purpose of the enor- mous policy is to protect the company in the event of the death of Mr. Dav- idson. It is known as corporation life msunnce LIONS TERRORIZE AUSTRIANS Beasts Carry Much Live Stock to Lairs in Hills. Berlin, Sept. 25.—Terror reigns among the population of Styria, Aus- Aria, arising from the depredations of a loness and her cubs and a number of wolves-and ‘hyenas ‘which recently escaped from a menagerie, according to dispatches reaching . here from Gratz. The wild beasts have established thelr lair in the center of a region of inaccessible -mountain country ex- tending over 400 square miles. They have seized and evoured 200 cattle and 400 sheep. The inhabitants will not allow their children to ge to school in the remote districts. NORWEGIAN SHIP IS SUNK Collision on - River Elbe Results in Serious Damage to Vessel. Hamburg, Germany, Sept. 25.—The steamship Graf Waldersee of the Hamburg-American line, while as- cending the River Elbe during thz night, wegian steamer Norge. The liner struck the Norge a glanc- ing blow on’ the starboard side, rip- ping her open below the water line. Te Norge sank immediately. There were no casualties on either vessel. The Graf Waldersee left Philadel- phia for this port Sept. 11. MOLECULES ARE INVISIBLE. Yet Their Tracks Through Space Can Be Discerned. It came to be evident about the mid- dle of the last century that, in order to explain certain facts connected with the relative weights of gases, matter must not merely consist of atoms, but that these atoms must have the power of uniting in small groups. In form- fog a compound, so. For instance, carbonic acid gas must consist of one atom of carbon, which, along with {wo atoms of oxy- gen, forms a smafl group of three atoms.. ‘The novelty of the:conception was In the notion that oxygen itself, in the state of gas, as it exists, for example, in the air, consists of small groups of atoms; in this case, two. To such small -groups of atoms was given the name "AN"EL'S YOUNG WlFE “.L molecules. A molecule is that portion of a substance which can exist in the ’Brlde of Portugal'. Ex-King Rushed free state, as oxygen does in air. An to Private Hospital. Munich, Sept: 25.—The wife of for- wmer King Manuel of Portugal, who was Princess Augustine Victoria, daughter of Prince Willlam of Hohen- zollern, was taken suddenly ill here and was rushed-‘to a private hospital. “The -physicians have made mno state- . ment. The ‘young people were mar- ried early this ‘month at Sigmurgen -and ‘'were spending their honeymoon here. MISSING CLERK ARRESTED Man Charged ‘With $20,000 Shortage i . Held in Montreal. :New York, Sept..25.—John G. Schild- knecht, $20 a mk clerk of the Wash- buin-Crosby Milling - company, atom generally. exists in combination. but atoms may and sometimes do ex- ist separately, in which case they also are termed molecules. Now, can molecules be seen? Is their existence a mere assumption? The an- swer to that question is, No, they can- not be seen, but artificial molecules can be made which correspond so elosely in their behavior to real mole- cules that the existence of real mole- cules is practically certain. Moreover, although no one has ever seen a mole-' cule, still the track of a molecule mov- ing through space has: been seen, and, Just as Rebinson Crusoe was right in | inferring the existence of man Friday from his footstep imprinted in the sand, 0. the real existence of a mole- cule may just as certainly be inferred Who| erom the track it leaves.—Sir William .kept: two automobiles and a retinue Ramsay in Harper’s. of servants and disappeared two weeks|, ago when a lhorhge of more @m —~ It ] am— collided" with the small Nor-| indeed, this must be | STATE TROOPS AID: IN FIGHTING FIRE Fiames Sweeping Redwood:For- esis in Galifornia, San - Francisco, Sept. 25.—Forest fires burning in various sections of Northern California have already caused losses estimated at consider- ably more than $1,000,000. 2 In Napa county a territory eighteen miles. long and five miles wide has. been laid waste and 600 men are hard at work trying to check the spreading flames. been done in Capell, Foss and Gor- don canyons, where Ttanch houses; orchards 'and grain ‘fields have beén in the path of the fire. A desperate fight is being made to save Napa Soda springs and Wilson’s Inn, both of which are in danger. Wild Horse valley, ten miles east of Napa, ie threatened and state troops are aiding large forces of fire fighters at that point. In Capell and Foss valleys seventeen houses and much’ grain have been destroyed. In Santa Cruz county the fire is|. roaring through thick underbrush and big redwoods toward Santa Clara county. Fokk kbbb 1 OREGON FIXES 9925 AS Portli.nd. Ore., a ruling which will’ become a. s wage of $9.25 a week foraduit < 20 minutes as the maximum <% making 6 p. m. the latest hour < year in.a mercantile estabhsh % Bofo ke ol ot ot ok oo oo e ook b s oo o oo b o o AR RSO RRPR) GENERAL DIAZ ON WAY BACK Former President of Mexico, Who.Was Exiled, Sails From Spain. Madrid, Sept. 25.—General Potfirio Diaz, former president of Mexico, is on his way home, ending an exile of nearly two and one-half years, accord- ing to report. General Diaz is sdid to have sailed Tuesday from Santander, Spain, aboard the steamer Espaign, The then president, Madero, exiled Diaz, and since that time the dictator, who is eighty-three years of age, has spent most of his time in France. Albanians Defeat Servians.’ Belgrade, Sept. 25.—The Servian government officially admitted defeat at the hands of the Albanians in the frontier fighting. Reports said®that 6,000 Albanians, commanded by for- eigners, invaded Servia at Dibra and captured that’ city after routing the Servians, CHATTY WELSHMEN. Most Talkative, It Is Said, of All the British Islanders. I8 the Welshman the most: gutnloun man in the British isles? The result of an impartial test by a London ‘news- paper has shown that for actual talka- tiveness the typical Welshman heads the list; next in order come Irishmen, then Scots. nnd last of all the English- man. Unohtruaively made in a number of well known London restaurants, clubs and public places, the tests invariably gave the same results. By means. of a test watch the following mble was compfiled: ‘Welshmen—Very tulnfive, animated in manner and speaking at an average rate of 200: words a minute. A * Irishmen—Also “ very talkative; but less animated in manner; average rate of speech, 160 words. Scotchmen—Far less -talkative nd deliberate in manner; spoke at an av- erage rate of 120 words. Bnglishmen—Almost silent, rarely the first to speak; dogmatic and delib- erate in manner, speaking 100 w 120 words a minute. - The comparative silence of; t.lm_ men; in striking contrast to the vivaclousf] chatter of the women folk, 'was: as usual noticeable. A curious detafl was| that dark men were always the Mgnr i talkers. £ The greatest damage has|' MINIMUM WAGE, . + it Sept. 25— + i The industrial -welfare. .com- -} < migsion of Oregon. has -adopted -+ |} ‘law Nov. 23; fixing a mintmum '+ | women clerks ;who are mot ap: ‘s prentices, defining 8§ hours and |} day’s ‘work and fifty hours as & i the maximum for a week, and =+ |} at which any woman may be || employed on any day of the <-|j ment. Lo | CAPTURING ZANZIBAR. Berio Comic Battle That Deposed the Gay Sultan, Zanzibar reminds every visitor of ‘the towns described in “The Arabian Nights.” It is a.typical Arabian town, and there seems to be a mystery and a romance behind every door. The town was ruled for hundreds of years by a sultan until the English took charge. _ |.. There is still a sultan, ‘who receives a salary from the English govern ment, but some day he will he deposed. and there will be no further pretense of a sultan having anything to do with the government. The old palace of the sultan—an ugly affair, which looks like a boarding house—is used for of- fices by the British. Near the palace is the harem, now deserted. since the :present siultan has but one wife. The sultan, who had trouble with the English, was educated in England and spent much of hix time and all of his revenues in’'Parfs. One da§ an'Eng lish ‘gunboat sailed into the harbor, and the captain told the gay sultan that be had been ousted. The sultan resented -the high handed proceeding and sent word to the defenders of his dignity to sink the English gunboat and put the lmlolent captain in the dungeon. f There wus an old fort near the pal- i ace. on the walls of which were mounted a few -rusty. cannon.. defenders of the sultan tried to fire these at the English gunboat, but they burst, one by omne. and almost wiped out the sultan’s defensive force. The captain of the English gunboat then began dropping shells into the palace and, with one solid shot, sank the sul- tan’s navy—a small vessel which car- ried four guns.—F. W. Howe in Howe's Mouthly. PALPITATION OF THE HEART. It Is Usually c=uted by Nervous or Digestive. Troubles. Palpitation ix tarely if ever due to any disease or w It is almost invarinbly the result of nervous or digestive (ronble. The beat of the beart arises within itself. There are nerves in the muscles of the heart, and they regulate its boeating. although the speed or, rate of (he Leating is not of .their chéosing. If. they were not| . held in check they would set a rate about double that which is actually maintained. The heart Is supplied from the brain with two pairs of regulating nerves. One pair, the cardio motor nerves, act only to spur up the beart to quicker action. They are usually- inactive, waiting the oceasion for applying the spur. ‘The other pair, the cardio in- tkness of the heart. | The{ bibitory ‘nerves. are always in. action. » It bas been said that the heart runs in a pair of tightly held reins, and the simile is true, for these merves check the speed. Fear, worry, disorder of the stomach » Or nervous system causes these cardio inhibitery nerves to relax: then the heart begins to race. There is noth- ing the matter with the beart itself. and no one need be alarmed about that organ just because it beats too rapidly. Its palpitation is due to a psycholog- ical or a physical cause. something that has caused the relaxation of the reins and allowed the cardio motor nerves to apply.the spur.—New York World. v, The Manifestation. “Papa.” said the young girl sweetly, “l feel it in my bones that you are going to buy me a new hat.” “Abh. do you?" chuckled papa. which bone do you feel it?" “Well. I'!n not sure, but 1 think it’s in my wisbhbone.” “In In a Way. “Are you acquainted with Mrs. Hifly. ¥ your fashionable neighbor?” “Only 1o a roundabout way. Her cat boards at my house.”—Kansas City Journal I A Special Collection of Dancing Frocks and Street Dresses ' at $13,50 to $47.50 s NS Exclusive Schneider Bros. Co., WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN’S READY TO WEAR CLOTHES FALL SHOWING OF AUTHENIC MODES Tailored Suits, Dresses, Frocks, Costumes Coats, Wraps and Skirts A superior, practical display of all authoritative modes for fall and win- ter, embracing the adaptions of the foremost models by Paris- Modiste, and the smartest effects from the principle American dressmakers. this showing we have attempted to delineate all the principle style points that will be in vogue for fall and winter ke In The New Coats are Smart The tailored coats are made of the most unique and effective fabrics in history of fashions, all of these coats coats are moderately priced. 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