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. i - AAmerican Physician Honored. New York, April 30.—In recogni- BATTLE : |s tion of his services to science and his assistance in supplying France with 5 anti-meningitis serum during the epi- b demic of cerébro-spinal meningitis in g 1909, President Poincare has confer- red upon Dr. Simon Flexner, director : 5 of the laboratory of the Rockefeller S s S Institute for ‘Medical Research, the Cross of Chevaller of the Legion of | gms . . ik =~ " Fighting Renewed in Four, Bodles Found:in Ruins. Portland, Or8,, April“a0.~Four bod- ies have been recovered from the ruins of ‘buildings destroyed by fire in East Portland. The fire swept through a thickly populated residen- Colorado. TEN MORE ARE KILLED Blood Still Flows Despite Call- *ing Out of the United States Troops. ++++++++'P+++++++:: AR““N“ THE wquD b Forbes, Colo., April 30.—Sev. 4. en men lie dead in the Forbes i E [+ camp of the Rocky Mountain -« uN A n“up nF 0"_ < Fuel company. Most of the <+ mine buildings are In ashes. °k < Nine defenders are missing, < <+ but are believed to have reach- < i i 4 ed the Majestic mine. Three < .3'5’&3’:.5";;22’,"‘3;".‘,;’.‘Jfl:’.':f;’fi": 4 strikers are thought to have o good watch like the Bemidji Spe- < been killed in the latest out- - cial is? Take the hairspring for + break in the Colorado labor instance. One mule of this wire 4 war. Ll weighs less than half a pound. The balance wheel makes 18,000 vibra- [§ % ok LR R R R R R R Denver, Colo., April 30.—Fighting between militia and mine guards and strikers continued in the strike zone in Las Animas county despite the proclamation by President Wilson and g | the sending of federal troops. There were no reports of fatalities, k| but a’check of casualties in Tuesday’s conflict shows six wounded, one prob- | ably fatally and two seriously. Reports received by General Chase were that in a twohour fight which began at 5 a. m. at Forbes, in Las Animas county, the boarding house f| bad been burned. 9 At 7:30 he was advised that the fi| strikers were retreating over the hills | in the direction of Berwind canyon. FIVE YEAR GUARANTEE :_’ Two troops of Twelfth cavalry are expected to reach the Fremont county We give a five year guarantee § mines shortly. with each Bemidji Special watch g Orders were issued by General —because they give us the least s & s & | Chase to the seventy-one militiamen rouble in making good our guar- B t i % antee. Bemidji-Spocial mame. |10 that district when relieved to en ments are now being fitted in the new style 25-year case with safety [ bow, that cannot pull or twist out. [ Thi a very popular model and retails for, watch com- tions an hour—157,000,000 a year. It moves 3,558 miles a year on Ig]ss than one-tenth of a drop. of oil. = B If alocomotive, having six foot driving wheels, wers started at the equator, and should run until its wheels had performed the same number of revolutions that a bal- ance wheel does in one year, it would make more than twenty- eight complete circuits of the earth. The Bemidji Special is ad- justed to every changs and condi- tion. Baked in an oven, frozen in a refrigerator, adjusted to position, put through a 700 hour test for ac- [ curacy, can you wonder why this wonderful watch is The Standard of this community today. the troops there in “cleaning up that district.” Troops for Ludiow Next. After that General Chase said atten. tion will be given the Ludlow region until the arrival of federal troops from Fort Leavenworth. Colonel W. A. Davis reported the situation quiet at Louisville, in North- ern Colorado. i Fighting at Walsenburg was re- sumed at 9 a. m., guards and militia defending the Walsen mine against 6ED, T, BAKER & C0, & Manufacturing Jewelers 118 Third 8t. Near the Lake train at once for Walsenburg to aid! a2 considerable body of strikers wha were firing at long range. Quiet prevailed at Louisville, where \SlNG MR\AND W":E ‘ Tuesday was fought one of the most most sanguinary. battles of Colos industrial war. - Other, camps in Northern Colorado flelds were report. ed orderly, i B Upon: receipt of advices from the governor that he was uncertain how long the militia would be kept in the field in the absence of advices wheth- er federal troops were to be sent to that district, District Attorney C. A. Carlson and Sheriff Buster continued perfecting the organization of citizen volunteers for protective duty. Special civillan officers were named to have charge of equipment, ammu- rition and other supplies. DUKE OF ARGYLL. Former Governor General of Canada Seriously Il London, April 30.—John Douglas Sutherland Campbell, Duke of Argyll, is suffering from double pneumonia and his condition is said to be serious. He was taken ill a week ago at Kent House, East Cowes.. The Duke of Argyll was governor general of Canada between 1878 and 1883. MANY REFUGEES START HOME Americans Jailed at Aguas Calientes Reach Mexico City. ‘Washington, April 30.—Gaston Schmutz, United- States consul at Aguas Calientes, and 110 other Ameri- cans who were thrown into jail by Mexican federals at that place last week, reported to the state depart- ment their safe arrival at Mexico City, en route to Vera Cruz. Notice 2 Open bids will be received by the Board of Supervisors of the town of O’Brien, at the town clerks office at |- nine o’clock a. m. May 15th 1914 for clearing, grubbing and grading three miles of road. J. L. HIGGINS, Town Clerk. || With_the Colorado strike. * ;| clair was ‘released. 5 | court, said they were Mrs. Elizabeth| conditions which would render the Store Hours, 7:30 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. Saturdays, 10 p. m. log Remnant Sale of Wash Goods and Dress Goods in Basement BEMIDJI, MINN. This store is ready as never before to supply your every need for the coming season. Assortments are broader and better, styles have been more carefully chosen in obedience to fashions mandates; qualities §t have been critically selected for their dependabilities. | Ladies' Suits We received this weck from a Philadelphia manufacturer a shipment of ladies’ suits. We want to sell them all by Saturday night and made the price for 1 lot, a suit...$12.00 Another lot, a suit. .§13.50 Petticoats Garments that are in perfect harmony with the new spring and summer styles. They are exquisitively soft and come in a beautiful variety of colors, in all the elab- orate styles, including Pantaloon Petticoats. Prices run from, a garment. 95c¢ to $6.00 Children's Rompers Our_ spring line of rompers arrived this week. They represent the best there is in the romper line; good materials, well made; the Keystone Brand, a garment 50c and 75¢ Wash Dresses It will pay any mother to see our girls’ wash dresses. If she wants to save work, she can do so by buying one of our dresses; if she desires to make the girls dresses, she can gain much useful information from 3 close inspection of our girls’ dresses, a resB.. il R e 50c to $5.00 Summer Underwear Comfort in underwear is what you need, next to that, durability. and reasonable price, In Munsing- wear you get the best fitting, the most durable, the most reasonable priced underwear made. A garment 90c to $3 Special Bargains this Week Ladies' Hose ‘ _ Laces Ladies' Waists ! - Ladies’ Low Shoes _ Men’s Department - 210 Third Street stdewalk in front of 26 Broadway, - “I wasn't dol a thing “but walk ing up and down the street with a 2 3 r plece ‘of e on my arm,” sald Sin- P“T UNBER ] ARREST clair. “A policeman stopped me and A artiat : said that if 1 did not stop walking I would have to go along with him. 1 told the policeman I did not see templed 10 Entor it of 7 o i - 2 0% “John D. Rockefeller, Ir. my associates under arrest.” Big Sum for Pressing Needs. - New York, April 30.—Executors New York, April 30.—Upton S:nclair,| and trustees under. John Jacob As: hia wife and three women were ar-|.tor's will allowed $1,688,311 to meel rested after a demonstration at the| ‘“pressing needs of the estate.” Mrs, offices of John D. Rockefeller, Jr...in| Madeline Force Astor, the widow, was the Standard Oil building. They had| &iven 3100.000 in cash. come to make a protest in connection N Ask Powers to Act. The prlloherl were taken to the Old Berlin, April 30.—The South Ameri- Slip police station, where Mrs. Sin | can mediators have approached the| Buropean powers with the request The other women, who were placed| that those nations exert influence on in cells pending: their arraignment in| President Wilson to have him make Freeman, an English suffragette, who| success of the negotiations possible Las once been in jail in Mrs. Em- meline Pankhurst, Mrs. Margaret Rem: ington Charter and Mrs. Donie Leit: ner. All had been arrested on the ‘Results are ‘most always certain when you use a Ploneer want ad. One-half cent a word. Phone 31. TWENTY PERISH _ THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1914, — the Park Point shore, and the unger. tow dragged her back into deep wa- ter where she sank at a gpot jp the lake said ‘to “have no bottom.” Qars, | parts of lifeboats crushed by the seaq 3 wl and other flotsam were flung on the S22 4 5 5 beach of the Point. The Noble was a freight vesgel owned by the Capital Transportation tom Just Outside har- s i bor at Duluth, - STATE WITHOUT IRSURANCE South Dakota Depends on Fireproot State Buildings. Duluth, April 30.—The same giant| ' pjerre, S. D, April 30.—South Da. seas that prevented the lighthouse | kota state building_s s00n Will be with. keeper from reaching the South light| out insurance.” After paying Sl_lh',]:m on the Duluth piers washed ashore| in premiums the frt:ne‘ns _a:lowmg all int wreckage from| policies to lapse. The legislature sey- ::e M.’i'e"f.;;"l? ::n‘;:m:vn Noble and| eral years ago nabs‘-f;di a la\tv l'quuiring uildings it mutely told vesselmen of the sinking ;{_’oo‘r‘_‘z"’,‘_:;“:in e m‘;deemr;le‘_ of that vessel with her clt-lew of tv:::'- ok appropriation of ;{ m';,d‘;fl:f theerile m o $150,000 to meet any emergency that b might arise from fire loss and elim. pe]:::“ginbe\!'::: t‘l':; h:::t's:?;t}o‘;:‘g‘;:: jnated all appropriations for insur. the beacon of the harbor entrance. fnce. Driven onward, the vessel struck,| Pioneer wants bring it 1s believed; on the sand flats off|one half cent a word, cash. results Paige “36” as a Buy Figuring from the many different viewpoints that occur to a man, this car or that car either looms up big as a possibility; or fails to at- tract. Certain basic facts hold good with all buyers. These few things we list below about the Paige “36”, will, if you know cars, identify this car as one of superior worth. Read them: ] v Multiple disc’ cork insert clutch running in oil. A Wheelbase 116 inches; wheels 34x4 inches. . Gray & Davis large unit electric lighting and starting system, the same used on Lozier and other high-priced cars. . _ Bosch ignition. = - Electric horn. : Dimmers in headlights, - Frederick Crowned fenders, Demountable rims, You see there is everything there that good buying sense would de- mand. Now, the price of $1275 is a new expression of motor car mer- chandising. We say “new” because it is the first time any such array of standard features has been offered at such a moderate figure. Don’t take a chance. Don’t “do - without” this or that. Don’t think you can surround any car with a value that isn’t there. As abuy, the Paige “36” out- shines the field. We don’t expect you to take our word for this— you’d mark yourself a poor buyer if you did; without making compar- isons. That’s the way to decide—make comparisons. We invite you to. E. Murphy - Automobile Co. Mitchell | Northwestern Distributors - .,Paigé_ -