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WILL USE MILITIA 10 CAPTURE DIETZ CAMERON DAM MAN TO BE TAKEN . BY TROOPS IF HE DOES NOT SURRENDER. GOVERNOR WILL TAKE ACTION Chippewa Falls, Wis., Nov. 14. — When Gov. James O. Davidson was here last September he _ stated that John F. Dietz could not be allowed long to continue to defy the laws of Wisconsin. He had been asked by Sheriff Gylland to assist, in sending the state militia, to capture the Cam- eron dam man, but Gov. Davidson did not care to do so until he had posi- tively learned that the Sawyer county authorities had exhausted all means at their disposal. It is firmly believed here that Dietz’s capture will soon be effected and that Gov. Davidson will give the desired aid. The fact that the majority of the voters indorsed. Dis- trict Attorney Frank L. McNamara, who pledged himself to put an end to the fiasco, and that Attorney General Sturdevant has informed Gov. David- son that I has authority to call out the militia to capture Dietz, would seem to bear out this position. LABOR LEADERS IN SESSION. American Federation of Labor Hears Gomper’s Annual Report. Minneapolis, Nov. 14.—The feature of the opening session here yesterday of the twent of the Americ MINNESOTA DEFEATS CHICAGO GOPHER TEAM IS UNDISPUTED ‘FOOTBALL CHAMPION OF THE WEST. Chicago, Nov. 13..— In one of the most fiercely fought battles known ta the Western gridiron Minnesota de feated Chicago at Marshall field by a score of 4 to 2. From first to last there was ne question as to which was the superior eleven, and to-day Minnesota is admit tedly the undisputed champion of the West in college football. She won the game and title by the persistence of her offensive and defen sive play throughout the fully sixty minutes of the contest, and Chicag¢ must give to the wonderful Gophei eleven all the credit which the score indicates. SEVEN SUE CITY’S MAYOR. Victims of New Richmond “Polic« Court” Want Damages. New Richmond, Wis., Nov. 13.—Fol lowing on the heels of the decision 0} Judge Otto W. Arnquist in Hudson declaring illegal the so-called police court in this city, seven young mer who were arrested and fined by the court have jointly retained Hudson at torneys to begin suits for false im prisonment against Mayor S. N. Haw kins. Football Player Is Killed. Great Falls, Mont., Nov. 13.—In 4 football game at Fort Shaw between the Great Falls and the Fort Shaw In dian team, James Curtis, fullback for the Great Falls team, was killed in 4 scrimmage, internal injuries bringing about death. Farmer Killed in Runaway. St. Paul, Nov. 13—Henry Pomme: xth annual bebe ening, a farmer living near Langdon an Federation of Labor} yinn, was thrown from his wagon was the exhaustive report of President | quring a runaway on the East Sixth Gompers, in which in a detailed man- street bridge and almost instantly ner he outlined the progress of the 1@-|}ieq, His skull was fractured and ber movement throughout the country, laying special stress on the advent of unionism into the political arena and recommending that this course be strictly adhered to. A strong plea Wa8} pojcaro, his neck broken. Two Accidentally Killed. Norway, Minn., Nov. 13. — Angele head clerk of the Penn store made for the employment of Ameri-| 4¢ yylcan, was found dead in his can labor on the Panama canal. At the conclusion of President Gom- pers’ address, which was well re- home, death resulting from touching 2 live electric wire. Frank Nora was killed at a Pine Creek lumber camp by ceived, the annual report of Secretary} 9 fanling tree. Frank Morrison was read, which show- ed the federation to be in not only spl -ndid financial condition, but also Corn Shredder Victim. Kerkhoven, Minn., Nov. 13.—While strc iger in membership than ever be- feeding a corn shredder, Edward Lien fore. two weeks. GIRL HELD CAPTIVE. Charges Bring Arrest’ of Her Alleged Importers. Butte, Mont., Nov. 14. — Charles] a bullet hole over the eye and living| The sessions will continue for} } 24 his left hand caught in the shred. ding rolls and the entire forearm was so badly mangled that it was neces sary to amputate it to save his life. Boy Found Dying. Perry, Iowa, Nov. 13.—Found with HARRY L. WILLIAMS, Coach of the Minnesota university football team which became cham- pions of the West by defeating the University of Chicago. |. PEOPLE P. OMINENT IN THE PUBLIC EYE — | t MRS. STUYVESANT FISH, Who, while shopping in London, becomes possessor of diamonds and tur- quoise gem that will open eyes of society when It is worn, ES % M. BRIAND, Minister of public worship in the Clemenceau cabinet, who has clari- fied the internal situation in France sefetive to separation of church and | state. Charlier and Eugenie Pierre have been | just long enough to say that he did} held to await the action of the fed-| not know how it happened, Wilber eral grand jw for an alleged viola-| Perry, sixteen years of age, was pick tion of the immigration laws in im-|ed up near Woodward. . porting into this country Josephine = So Hoffer, a nineteen-year-old girl, for Baby Scalded. il purposes. The Hoffer girl St. Peter, Minn., Nov. 13. — While told a pitiful tale of having been lured | playing about with his little sister, from her home in Alsace by Charlier] the two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs and the woman and having been held} Thomas Shea of Le Sueur Center fell) a prisoner since her arrival in Butte. |into a pail of boiling water and was) — terribly scalded. Murder Is Charged. Mont., Nov. 14. — Austin y, a veteran of the Spanish- American war. is d in the hospital here from the effec of a wound said to have been inflicted by Maj. W. B. Deeney. Deeney is under charged with murder. Butte, O'Mz May Be Cold in Death in Woods. Duluth, Nov. 14. — Grave fears are felt for the safety of William Furlong, an aged resident of Arrow, forty miles north of Hibbing, who, it is believed, has perished in the forest. Mr. Fur- long left home Oct. 29 and nothing has been heard of him since. Killed by Marshal, Allison, Iowa, Nov. 14. — Marshal Rufus Cooper shot and almost instant- ly killed James Deere, while he was yying to place the man under arrest. marshal at once surrendered him- ‘ in self-defen Suffocation Causes Death. Fergus Falls, Minn., Nov. 14.—Jo- s 1 Young was seized with an epilep- . fit while in bed at the insan& hos- pital here and turning over buried his face in his pillow and suffocated. ——— Fined for Illegal Voting. Fergus Falls, Minn., Nov. 14.—Kris- ten K. Berger of the town of Friberg pleaded guilty to the charge of illegal voting in the district court here and was fined $75 and costs. Killed by Own Wagon, Williston, N. D., Nov. 14.—While Ralph Raum was driving down a hill his four-horse team became frighten- ed, ran away, threw him out and the heavy lumber wagon ran over him, killing him. qa ete Si VE A ae Find Stolen Papers. Prescott, Wis., Nov. 14.—The checks and notes that were stolen from the Hager & Winberg store last month at Bay City were found in a freight car at Chicago. The car had been ship, from Bay City loaded with) baled hay. , Furnace Blows Up. Colfax, Iowa, Nov. 13.—While put ting coal into the furnace Mrs. D. 8S. Duffus was badly hurt by an explosion which wrecked the furnace. The arrest, | cause of the explosion is a mystery.) Car Cuts Off Foot. St. Paul, Nov. 13.—G. D. Tomasso, seventeen years old, was run down by a work car of the city railway. His right foot was severed and he received serious spinal injuries. Gas Jet Left Open; Two Des Moines, Iowa, Nov. 13.— R. Campbell and Frank Merriam were found asphyxiated in a boarding house} yesterday. A gas jet carelessly left open was responsible. Man Is Crushed. Aberdeen, S. D., Nov. 13.—The top- pling over of a pile of heavy freight He claims the shooting was done} qoors which he was unloading from al car probably fatally injured John Gil- f bert. Gored by a Bull. Eveleth, Minn., Nov. 13. — John Bragnight, a farmer living near here, was gored by a bull and so seriously injured that it is believed he will not recover. Impaled on Stic’ 4 Foley, Minn., Nov. 13.—Little Au- gust Blalki, eight years old, fell from a straw stack and was impaled on a sharp stick. He died in a short time. Es Woman Killed by Train. Mason City, Iowa, Nov. 13.—Mrs. O. Putney was run over and instantly killed by a Rock Island train Killed While Hunting. Gilmore, Iowa, Nov. 13.—John Halli- nan was accidentally shot and killed |‘ while hunting in the country south of here. 7" Log Rolling Fatal. © Biwabik, Minn., Nov. 13—Two men were drowned while ‘engaged in a log rolling contest at a logging camp JOSEPH W. BABCOCK Of the Third Wisconsin congressional district, who is one of the most widely known Northwestern men in | the national capital, and who was defeated for re-election by James |W. Murphy. COL. WILLIAM PITCHER, Of the Twenty-seventh infantry, U. S. A., who is likely to be tried by court- martial because of an alleged inter- view in which negroes as soldiers were slurred. In Minnesota Ng xg State News ot the Week Briefly Told Hubert Leinders died near Fountain City from injuries received from a horse’s kick. 4 ‘John Lofgren died in St. Paul from lockjaw produced by a wound inflicted by a rusty nail. Oscar Jenson, seventeen months old, was drowned in a washtub in the yard of his home in Minneapolis. Paul Kriese, six years old, of Pres- ton, was shot by a rifle in the hands of Reuben Rappe, about the same age. Emma Maria Gavin, six years old, was run down by a street car near her home in St. Paul and probably fatally hurt. sei y eOavahy . Mrs. Augusta Alexander was struck by an interurban car in Minneapolis and seriously injured. Her recovery is | doubtful. | E. S. Collins of Minneapolis was | drowned in Wood lake at Wood Lake | by the swamping of his boat while | hunting ducks. Owing to the prevalence of scarlet fever in Spring Valley the public schools were ordered closed by the board of health. Dan Armstrong is the first victim of the approaching hunting season at | Aitkin. He was accidentally shot by | a companion hunter. There are several cases of diph- | theria in Elk River, and in order to | prevent its spread the board of educa- | tion has closed the schools. | Ole E. Olson was overcome by gas in the Beaufort hotel in Minneapolis) | and is in a serious condition. There is little hope of his recovery. Henry Walo was robbed of $125 in gold and a certified check for $650 by pickpockets while he was riding on an interurban car in Minneapolis. Despondent because he could not free himself of the drink habit, John Swenson, a well known merchant tailor of Stephen, committed suicide. A Rock Island passenger train was derailed three miles west of Ellsworth and thrown down a_ twelve-foot em- bankment, injuring ten passengers se- riously. William Kleinfelter, employed as a switchman, was run down by a switch engine in St. Paul. He died a short while afterward in St. Luke’s hospital from his injuries. The Lenhart Wagon Company of Minneapolis sustained a loss of $4,000 in a series of three fires which oc- curred between 9 o'clock Saturday night and 4 o’clock Sunday morning. | Jack Touri was sentenced at Duluth | to spend ten years and four months in | Stillwater. Aug. 5 he killed Sam Al- | jala at Biwabik, on the Mesaba range, | the trouble occurring in a drunken row. | Clifford St. Louis attempted to com- mit suicide in 2 saloon in Minneapolis by taking carbolic acid. His room- mate discovered his intention in time to knock the bottle containing the acid from St. Louis’ lips. | Andrew Maloney of Preston was | seriously injured by two vicious sows. He tried to drive them into the pen when they turned\on him and he fell down, and when rescued both hands and one leg were badly lacerated. Gerald Shiely, eleven years old, was shot in the right side of the neck by Vivian Hession, a fourteen-year-old boy, at St. Paul. The shooting, accord- ing to eye-witnesses, was without in- tent. It is not thought that the wound will prove fatal. | Fie Shiga | Mrs. Alvaren Allen, wife of the early | proprietor of the Merchants hotel, St. | Paul, laid down the burden of life at | the age of seventy-six, after a pro | And Why Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Are a Specific for Dangerous Physical Declines. The symptoms of general debility vary according to the cause but weakness is always present, a tendency to perspire and fatigue easily, ringing in the ears, sometimes black spots passing before the eyes, weak back, vertigo, wakeful- ness caused by inability to stop thinking, and unrefreshing sleep. The cause of the trouble may be some drain on the system or it may be mental or physical overwork, sometimes insufficient nutri- tion due to digestive disturbance. In the latter case there is generally a loss of appetite and a coated tongue as well as general languor and debility. Miss Lula M. Metzger, a stenographer, living at 71 Mill street, Watertown, N.Y., suffered for over a year from general debility. ‘It wascaused by overstudy,” she says, ‘and I had no ambition, didn’t want to go anywhere, my food didn’t taste good, I was run down, lifeless and listless. I took medicines but they failed to help me. Finally friends recom- mended Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills to my mother and she got some for me. I took them for some time and was entirely | cured and have had uo return of the | trouble.” Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cure debility because they actually make new, red, rich blood, and as the blood carries | nourishment to all the organs and tissues of the body, nerves as well as muscles, the new blood stimulates the organs to do the work that nature expects of them and normal health follows. Not only is this treatment sufficient to cure de- bility but many severe nervous disorders as well. The pills are sold by all druggists, or will be sent postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenec- tady, N. Y. Send for free diet book. WAGES ON RUSSIAN FARMS. Agricultural Laborer Receives Only $32 a Year and Subsistence. The extreme poverty and the low standard of living of peasants from whom the agricultural laborers are re- cruited assure a low level of wages for agricultural labor. The average wages will appear almost incredibly low from an American point of view, not withstanding the general complaints of the estate holders concerning the unreasonable demands of the laborers. According to an official investigation embracing the decade of 1882-1891, the average annual wages for a male agri- cultural worker in Russia were less than $32 and for a female worker less than $18. To this must be added the cost of subsistence, which is equally low, being on an average $24 for a male and $22 for a female worker for a whole year, so that the average cost of employing a laborer for the entire year is equal to only $55 for the mael and $40 for the female. The wages for the summer season of five months are almost equal to the annual wages, being $22 for the male and $13 for the female laborer. PATENTS. List of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Reported by Lothrop & Johnson, patent lawyers, 911 Pioneer Press building, St. Paul, Minn.: Elling O. Berg, Madison, Minn., automatic grain- weighing device; Tobias A. Oren, Bo- rtp, Minn., display reel; John F. Ran- dall, Brookings, S. D., soap holder; Austin L. Russell, Minneapolis, Minn., propelling apparatus for boats; Frank M. Rutten, Crary, N. D., yielding clevis for plows. Her Affinity. “Katherine, you are nounced vegetarian.” “Yes, dear.” “Well, the new boarder around the corner will just suit you for a hus- such a pro- band.” “Gracious! Why so?” “Because he has tomatolike cheeks, pumpkin-colored hair, and carroty whigkers.” Turkeys Wanted. Also Ducks, Geese, Chickens, Butter, | Eggs and V. Highest Prices Paid, No Ccm i arged. Witt's Meat Market 5th St. and ist Ave. So. t 1 nneapolis, Minn. Looking Forward. “But what does he live on?” “He is living at the expense of a W DEBILITY SHOWS — tracted illness of five years. She Was | lawyer who expects to be employed to | conscious to the last and realized that) preak a rich uncle’s will when the ARTHUR TWINING HADLEY, Yale president who assails ethics of business world. SIRES Sic SSUES Sk Stricken by Mysterious Disease. El Paso, Tex., Nov. 32. — Twelve ‘occurred in Marfa and vicinity, in Pec- WILLIAM MARCONI, Inventor who accompanies king and queen of Italy on visit to new tele- graphic station at Coltano. Three Break Jail. Toledo, Ohio, Nov. 13.—‘Red” Me- deaths from a mysterious cause have | Guire, who is charged with the mur der of Marshal Thornton of Perrys- ‘sidio county, and the community is | burg, escaped from the jail at Bowling ‘panic stricken. Local physicians have | Green, together with two other pris- ‘been unable to diagnose the disease. Packers’ Cases Postponed. Chicago, Nov. 13. — Trial of the oners held on charges of burglary. Train Is Thrown Frém Track. Bloomington, Ill, Nov. 13. — The charges against the various .packing | Nashville special on the Illinois Cen- companies under indictment, alleging | tral road was wrecked at Buckley. a combination in restraint of trade | The whole train left the track. Fifteen and. commerce, has been ‘postponed of the passengers and train crew were til Dec. 10. t the end had come. | | Determined to make certain his at-| tempt to end his existence, Philip Smith, aged s“ixty years, of Cloquet, weighted his body with heavy stones, | waded into the river at the dam a short distance northeast of that place, | and fired a bullet into his head. Death | was instantaneous. Market day at Pelican Rapids Sat- | urday was a success. Farmers com- menced to arrive early and many from fifteen miles around were present. At noon a good dinner was served free to all the farmers and their families at the town hall. In the afternoon trad- ing at the stores was heavy. Norman McLean is critically ill at his home in Anoka, having suffered a severe stroke of paralysis. The entire right half of the body is paralyzed and he is unable to speak a word, though conscious of all that occurs. Two prisoners being held in the county jail at Ortonville for burglary committed at Graceville, made their escape by breaking through the roof. They were captured by the authorities. at Granite Falls and brought back by Sheriff Gowan. ae uncle dies.” SHIP YOUR HIDES AND FURS to the Ola ble N. W. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapol ublished 1890. Keep the wolf ot worry from your door and you will not need to fear muny other wild beasts. Mrs. Win: For children te flammation alla: Soothing Syrup. ac pitens the gun! es in- ures wind colic. a bottle. The best way to win men to God is to be a man. NOT YOUR HEART If you think you have heart dis- ease you are only one of acountless number that are deceived by indi- gestion into believing the heart is affected. Lane’s Family Medicine the tonic-laxative, will get your stomach back into good enaition, and then the chances areten toone ‘that you will have no more symp- toms of heart disease. 2 Sold by all dealers at 25c. and soc.