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YTHESUNIVERSAL CAR Past the half million mark have gone the figures of Ford progress. More than five thousand Fords have been sold to date. We couldn’t give you better proof of Ford merit. Everywhere you'll find the Ford the favorite car. Five hundred dollars is the price of the ) Ford run-about; the touring car is five fifty; the town car seven fifty—f. o. b. Detroit complete with equipment. Get catalogue and particulars from . Northern Automobile Co. Bemidji, Minn. = Drug Store Movies: “THE SCENTED ROSE" Permit us to call your attention to our fine line of perfumes. Most delicate and delightful in odor they are and pleasingly low in price. Sample " them. We aim to please the discriminating. We also have fine sachet powders. Netzer’s Pharmacy Twelve Reasons Why You Should Buy Your Groceries of Us No. 2. BECAUSE you positively get +~ honest weight. Our scales are regularly inspect- ed and sealed. They weigh you out what you pay for. Short weight and long business life don’t hiteh. - Wm. _Mc(]uai_g Phone No.l Our Rolls and Buns Taste Fine! Just Pure Milk. Take Omar's Word For It. And lately, by the bakery door agape, Came shining through the dusk a floury shape Bearing a vessel in bis hand, and He bid me taste of it; t'was not—the grape. We use good pure milk in our mixing. You should by all means have us deliver reg- ularly our rolls or buns or biscuits. Saves time and fretting at home. It'll please the men folk, madam. Try and see. i MAY RESULT IN MORE FIGHTING Colorado Officials Plan to Disarm Strikers. REGULARS REACH SCENE United States Troops Occupy Dif- ferent Points in Troubled Section. Killing of National Guard Surgeon Adds Tenseness to Situation. Denver, May 1.—The battle at Forbes, where seven mine guards and two strikers are known to have been killed, caused state officials to an- nounce that drastic action would have to be taken immediately in the coal strike situation. In all probability an effort will be made to disarm the strikers, although the officials are confident this will lead to a renewal of hostilities. For this action Governor Ammons looks to the United States troops who now occupy portions of the strike zone. The occupation of Las Animas and Fremont counties by United States troops and the taking of additional testimony at Trinidad at Coroner B. B. Sipe’s inquiry into the Ludlow dis- aster of April 20 were the other chief events in the Colorado industrial war. Federal soldiers who reached Fre- mont county formally took charge of the district. The Second squadron of the Fifth cavalry reached Trinidad in a drenching rain. Troops to Fight Center. ‘What disposition would be made of the troops from Fort Leavenworth, under Major Holbrook, who arrived in the Trinidad district, was not known, but it was expected that a detachment would be sent into Wal- senburg, where the most serious fighting of the strike’s history has taken place. Nine identified dead and probably many more whose death was not re- ported ‘was the result of the fight- ing Wednesday and Wednesday night. The death of Major P. P. Lester, a prominent physician of Walsenburg, on the battlefleld, his body pierced with three bullet holes, while he was striving to save the life of a wound- ed ‘'guardsman—was one of the agen- cles which added to the tense feeling. The battle at Walsenburg was fought between 100 state soldiers di- vided into two commands and more than four hundred strikers entrenched in rifie pits behind the lava forma- tion of the hills, which form a semi- circle around Walsenburg from north to south for a distance of three miles. The militia had started to the Wal- sen mine at the far end of the ridge, to aid in, the defense of that property against further attacks by the strik- ers. POSSE KILLS BANK ROBBER Recovers Four Thousand Dollars Se. cured by Bandit. Willis, Tex., May 1.—Four thousand dollars in gold and currency, stolen from the Willis State bank here by a lone bandit, was recovered several hours later when a posse shot and fatally wounded a man they had trailed from the edge of town. Sam Beard, Jr., cashier of the bank, also recovered a diamond stud which the robber snatched before he used a { rifle to persuade the official to ac- company him through the streets as a safe conduct pass. | MEXICANS PREPARE TO FIGHT Building Fortitications Sixty Miles Southeast of Capital. ' Mexico City, May 1.—Dispatches said to have been received from Pueb- i 1a, about sixty miles to the southeast of the federal capital, on the railroad, sthte that the authorities there are actively engaged in preparing fortifi- cation works. The railroad foundry in the vicinity is declared to have been ordered to deliver 200 cannon to the government within a wonth, making a delivery of fifty guns weekly. BIG WHEAT CROP PROMISED Conditions in Kansas the Best in Many Years. Topeka, Kan.,, May 1.—Kansas con- ditions at present indicate a yield of more than 135,000 bushels of wheat, F. N. Coburn, secretary of the board of agriculture, gave out the monthly crop report showing the wheat condi- tion for April 25 is 96.5 per cent of a normal crop on 8,333,000 acres. The condition is the best since 1903 and on the largest acreage the state has ever known. Californians Are Prisoners. Hanford, Cal, May 1.—Governor Hiram W. Johnson has received word that D. H. Harroun, former engineer with the California state ‘ railroad commission, is being held with his wife and daughter by the Mexican federals in Reguas Calientes. The governor immediately wired Secretary of State Bryan asking for an investi- gation and the release of the Ameri- eans. Try a Ploneer want ad. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER CAPTAIN RUSH. B R S T e I Y AT Leader of the. United States Forces That Entered Vera Cruz. ‘ e —— A | Photo by American Press Association. HOPE OF RESCUE: IS VERY REMOTE More Bodies Taken From West Virginia Mine. CONDITIONS ARE BETTER inspectors Enter Colliery and Find Little Gas and No Damp—Express Belief That Some of the Entombed Men May Be Alive. Eccles, W. Va., May 1.—After twen- ty-four hours’ exhausting effort Chief Henry and a party of West Virginia mine inspectors reached the bottom of shaft No. 5 of the New River col- lieries, where 158 miners were buried by an explosion last Tuesday. They found little gas and no damp and ex- presged the belief that conditions were such that some of the entombed miners may still be alive. J. W. Paul, chief engineer of the Pittsburg station: of the bureau of mines, descended the shaft in com- pany with government rescue men from the other two crews here. They had proceeded only a short distance from the bottom when they found six bodies so badly burned that identifica- tion. was impossible. Penetrating further into the galleries they located others. Work was temporarily suspended while 2 man was sent to the surface to prepare the crowd for the news. Soon after the first bodies were hoisted out and placed in a temporary morgue. The crowd made a rush for the tip- ple, but was held back by deputy sher- ifs and guards. Fans were at once started in the hope that the entries could be cleared of gas and the pumps were set in mo- tion so that the rescue parties could reach the farthest recesses of the mine. The entire lamp of an English lighthouse can be lowered to near sea level in foggy weather when it would be obscured in its usual position. Arabian women never show their faces. LADIES! URkAL YOUR CRAY Look years younger! Use Grand- mother’s recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur and nobody will know. The use of Sage and Sulphur for re- storing faded, gray bair to its natural color dates back to She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy' and abundant. Whenever ber hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this sim- ple mixture was applied with wenderful effect. But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by ' asking at any drug store for a 50 cent bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy,” :you will get this famous old Tecipe which can be depended upon to yestore natural color and beauty to the hair ‘and is splendid for dandru.., dry, feverish, itchy sealp and falling hair. A well-known downtown druggist says it darkens the hair :s0. naturally end. evpl;!gd flm‘t’ nobod_vpl can tell it has been applied. You simply dam 4 sponge orPaQit brush with' it 'mp;ndnw_ 18 through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By moming the gray hair ‘dis- appears, and after another applica two, it becomes. beautifully ‘dark, soft and abundant, grandmother’s time. || THIS MUCH OF THE 'REAL TOBACCO CHEW is AS SATIS‘F‘(’!NC AS THAT WAD Yol HAVE IN YOUR CHEEK THE GOOD JUDGE AND THE liIOVICE nibble of “Right-Cut” has - more good tobacco sub- stance than a cheekful of the old kind. . It’s the Real Tobacco Chew. Pure, rich, mellow, full-bodied tobacco—. seasoned and sweetened just enough. A ready chew—short-shred, cut fine. You don’t have to grind it. Just tuck it away and let the flavor come—easy and steady. The Real Tobacco Chew BT== — 10 Cents a Pouch SK your dealer today. If he doesn’t sell “Right- Cut,” send us 10 cents in stamps. We’ll send you a pouch. ' :Ve mmmntie it to e pure chewing tobacco and better than the old kind. WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY 50 Union Sguare, New York Photography The art of knowing how in photography. Just enough light here—not too much there—putting the shadows where they will bring out the proper lines—posing the subject without the aid of me- chanical devices so that the true character and. personality will stand out prominently—there's the “know-how” of artistic photograpny. “You get this skill all in a nut shell when you buy a Ko- dak. Be your own photographer. We'll show you how. - We have had years of ex- perience in Kodak work. A Kodak for every purpose. As for prices, you'll be surprised how reason-- able they are. ; OSCAR ERWIG BARKER'S DRUG AND JEWELRY STORE BEMIDJI, MINN.