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D tere teneet ern f AGE FOUR PEER OL ILE OF TRG > 929108 WERALB-REVIEW WEDNESDAY, MAY 17,1911. Gren Rayits Therae-Ave ished Every Wednesday By E. C. KILEY. TWO DOLLARS A YEAR IN ADVANCE Entered at the Postoffice at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, as Second Class Matter. Official Paper of Itasca County ENTOMOLOGIST ON CUT-WORM PLAGUE Washburn Issuca Belletin. Prescrib- ing Three Methods to Com- bat Insects. State Entomologist Washburn has gent out a bulletin on the subject ef the cut worm plague with instruc- tions for combatting it. He prescrib- es three methods: Remedy No. 1—Mix Paris green with dry bran until the compound is quite green in color, add water to make the mass of the consistency of thicken dough. If not real green add more Paris green. Sweeten this with cheap molasses or cheap syrup of sugar. At sundown, or shortly after, put heaping tablespoonfuls of this at mtervals through the gardens, where cut worms are most obnoxious. The should not be too close to a efuft lant, for in event of rain the Paris n would be washed down to the ts of the plant and injure it. A foot away from any plant would be safe. Remedy No. 2—Place shingles or boards at intervals on the ground in the garden, where cut worms are causing mischief. These worms work at night and will hide under these pieces of concealment at the approach of daylight, where they tan be found and killed. Remedy No. 3—Faithful cultiva-j tion, killing, the worms when found, is helpful. If a plant is cut during the night the worm can almost in- pieces of variably be found fear the surface ef the soil an inch or so from the plant Many Promotions. size. This is not only the greatest day’s work done by a shovel this season, but in the history of mining on the range. Mr. Hayes and the men working with him are being con- gratulated on every side.—Nashwauk Herald. Will Erect Hospital. The Oliver company is noted for the excellent care given those who are unfortunate enough to be injur- ed while in their employ and we un- derstand they will shortly erect a ten-room hospital opposite the office now occupied by Dr. R. T. Glyer. This hospital will be modern in ev- ery respect, fitted with all the lat- est conveniences and heated by a steam heating plant. Dr. Glyer will, we understand, make his residence in the hospital—tIron Index, Marble. Notice of Election. Notice is hereby given that a spec- ial election will be held in the Vil- lage of Marble on the 8rd day of June 1911, at the Town Hall of the Town of Greenway, situated in said village for the purpose of voting on the proposition of issuing ninety-six (96) bonds of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars each and one (1) bond for One Thousand Three Hundred Nine- ty-nine and 63-100 ($1,399.63) Dollars of said village in the aggregate a- mount of Ninety-seven Thousand Three Hundred Ninety-nine and 63- 100 ($97,399.63) Dollars of which Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars is to become due December 1, 1912, and Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars on December ist each and every year thereafter until December 1, 1920, and One Thousand Three Hundred | Ninety-nine and 63-100 ($1,399.63) Dol- lars on December 1, 1921, bearing in- terest at the rate of five (5) per cent per annum, payable semi-annu- ally, the proceeds thereof to be us- ed for the purpose of refunding the floating indebtedness of said village, to be numbered and to mature as set forth in the resolutino now on file in the office of the Village Clerk. Dated this 17th day of May, A. D. 1911. ' J. E. GRAVEL, Village Clerk. HR May 17-23 ‘ I. I. May 20-27. Notice of Sealed Bids. Notice is hereby given that sealed bids for publishing the Council Pro- ceedings of the Village Council of the Village of Marble, Minn., for the ceived by said Village Council at the office of the Village Clerk, Marble, Minn., up until Eight o’clock p. m., official year 1911-1912, will be re-| CAUCUS CHOICE — jyARE7 IN HANDS FAILS TO LAND” OF INSURRECTOS Senate Takes Seven Ballots f0° gonoral Navarro and Several President Pro Tem Hundred Men Surrender. PROGRESSIVES REMAIN FIRM eASUALTY LIST QUITE LARGE Those Who Did Not Vote for Senator Clapp Were Paired, Thus Result. ing in No Election. Total Dead Estimated at Sixty-five and Wounded at Two Hundred and Fifty. Washington, May 12.—The incapac- ity of the Republican party in the senate to control a caucus edict with- out the aid of the progressives was | demonstrated in the senate when, after more than two hours of effort and as a result of seven ballots, the senate failed to elect Senator Gallin- ger of New Hampshire as president pro tempore to succeed Senator Frye of Maine. The deadlock was due to the oppo- sition of the progressive Republican senators, five of whom voted against and three of whom were paired against Mr. Gallinger. The first ballot totaled seventy-three votes, of which Mr. Bacon, the Demo- cratic candidate, received 35; Mr. Gal- linger, the Republican candidate, 32; and Mr. Clapp 4; while Mr. Bacon voted for Mr. Tillman and Mr. Clapp for Mr. Bristow. Messrs. Bristow, La Follette. Gron- na and Poindexter voted for Clapp. Messrs. Cummins, Bourne, Works and Crawford, progressives, all were ab- sent, but paired for Senator Clapp ex- cept Mr. Crawford, who was ill. Nec- essary to choice, 37. The only cnange in the second bal- lot was that Senator Gallinger, who had refrained from voting on: the previous roll call, voted for Mr. Lodge, increasing the total vote to seventy- four, and making thirty-eight neces- sary to elect. The figures for each candidate were unchanged throughout the voting until on the last vote Sena- tor Bradley retired from the chamber, thus reducing the vote by his own ba!- jot and that of Senator Taylor of Ten- nessee, who was paired with him. Ciudad Juarez, Mex., May 11.—This little bullet riddled city is the provi- | sional capital of Mexico and Francisco iL Madero, Jr., provisional president, and his staff have taken complete pos- session after winning the bloodiest battle of the Mexican revolution. All the dead have been buried. A conservative estimate by physicians as well as by insurrecto leaders who surveyed the fighting puts the federal dead at nearly fifty and the rebel loss at about fifteen, with a total of nearly 250 wounded on both sides. The actual number of lost probably never will be known, as deserters | Were many and the dead have been ouried quickly. On the American side of the line five have been killed and about seven- teen wounded, many of them being in- nocently engaged at a distance from the river front. The actual surrender of the town by General Navarro took place about 1 o'clock, General Navarro giving his sword to Colonel Garibaldi of the in- surrecto army after the rebels had completely surrounded the barracks and threatened to annihilate the gar- rison within. His eyes dimmed as he surrendered, but Colonel Garibaldi, with a hand- shake that bespoke his admiration for the brave fight the federal leader had made, assured him of the desire of the | rebels to afford him every courtesy. AFTER SHORT, SAVAGE FIGHT Tijuana, Lower California, Captured by Insurrectos. | San Diego, Cal., May 10.—Tijuana, AS COMPROMISE CANDIDATE | Lower California, was captured by the |insurrectos after a short. savage fight Taking effect last Monday there everal new places made in the force at the Hill mime. A new position was created, that of assistant pit boss and Chief Clerk W. *n was selected for the nice promo- Monday the 12th day of June, 1911; at which time and place such bids will be opened and considered. The Council reserves the right to reject any or alli bids. By order of the Village Council of the Village of Marble, Minn. his is a very ind he well deserves it. H. C.| J. B, GRAVEL, ck promoted to the posi- Village Clerk. | f ief clerk, another well de- — me promotion. J. C, MeKusick NOTICE. n made day pit boss and en- Notice is hereby given that all new duties Monday. He i = | dogs not licensed as provided by or- eceeded in his old posi- dinance No, 4 of the village of Mar- ; I Robertson, who was ble, will be disposed of by the vil- ormerly his assistant on the night|jage marshall on May 20, 1911. Li- shift—Iron Index, Marble. n Nelson Mentioned for President Pro Tem. of Senate. Washington, May 14.—The names of Senators Nelson, Lodge and Burton are mentioned as possible compromise | candidates in connection with the of- | fice of president pro tempore of the | senate, over which there is a dead- | lock between the Republican factions. | The opinion is quite general now that | Senator Gallinger, the caucus nominee | of the regulars, will fail of election. | Senator Nelson refuses to make any comment on the report that his name | probably would be between the regulars and the progres- sives. proposed as a| means of compromising the troubles | The attack was a complete surprise | to the federal forces. Confident that the flanking party of forty men sent out of Tijuana had |forced the rebels to retire the defen- ders were resting in supposed secur- lity when the assault came at day- break. All but one or two of the !flanking party are thought to have been killed or wounded LINER SINKS IN. IN COLLISION Nearly Two Hundred Passengers Taken Off Safely. New York, May 13.—More than 200 | Persons were saved from death at sea | off the Virginia capes when the Unit- | ed Fruit company’s steamer Admiral Smashed Loading Records. A record in loading cars with a} !censes can be obtained at the of- | flee of the clerk. W. E. BAWDEN, Village Pres. steam shovel was made this week | at the Hull-Rust mine at when shovel No. 1287, run by Jack | Hayes, loaded 600 cars of the T-yard | fice. jin good condition. FOR SALE—Some office furniture Hibbing and a new Monarch typewriter, all Call at this of- THEY WANT THE EARTH! | JACK JOHNSON | IS WILLING) Farragut rammed and sent to the bottom the Ward liner Merida, bound Will Meet Jim Flynn Flynn if Assured of to this port with 187 passengers and $10,000 for His End. a full cargo of merchandise. Chicago, May 11—Jack Johnson,| Roused from their comfortable heavyweight champion, declared he | berths by the shock of the collision would take pleasure in “knocking the | the passengers shivered in their night head off” Fireman Jim Flynn, Al Kauf.- | clothing until lifeboats and rafts from | mann’s conquerer, if guaranteed $10,- |the Merida and Admiral Farragut | 000, win, lose or draw. |could be put into commission, after He has received a wire from Cass | Which they were transferred to the Walsh, promoter of the Empire Ath- | Farragut. letic club of Kansas City, askin; his | terms. % asking Dis FIVE PERISH IN MINE FIRE If the terms are accepted Johnson Ee says the battle must take place be- fore June 1, as he sails for England on June 5. | Others Are Saved by Government Rescue Corps. Wilkesbarre, Pa, May EAT ERE ET bodies of five men, suffocated by LION CAUSES NIN NINE DEATHS | | smoke from a fire in the Boston col- | Hery of the Delaware and Hudson Beast Breaks (Gage in in Theater Fire company at Larksville, near here, and Blocks Escape. | have been recovered. Edinburgh, May 11—An enraged | The government rescue corps res lion, maddened by burns and in fear jeued several miners who had been of death, was directly responsible for | Overcome by smoke from certain 12.—The From every point of the compass the Mail Order Octopus is reach ing its myriad hands to grasp and grab and gobble the retail busines: af your own town. Nothing that is grabbable and gobbleable escape: the Mail Order clutch unless the people stand together against the Octopus. The Mail Order people want the earth, and unless you refuse to trade with them and systematically patronize your home merchants and manufacturers they will get your part of the earth and you will have to get off it. A word to the wise is a whole language. Sasi a st the loss of at least nine lives in a fire The animal’s master, the “Great La- | fayette,” and two of his assistants are among the victims. They lost their | lives trying to quiet the terrified ani- mal which escaped from its cage and | blocked the main exit from the dress- | ing rooms in which many of the artists , were penned. Tampa Employes Wall Walk Out Because of Judge’s Decision. Tampa, Fla., May 12.—Five thou sand tobacco workers walked out and a general strike is threatened in the cigarmaking trades as the result of the action of Judge Wall in the cir- cuit court upholding the verdict against three men charged with in- timidating nonunion workmen. Brewery Workers Strike. Milwaukee, May 14.—Approximately 500 brewery employes, embracing sev- eral trades, including carpenters, mill- wrights, electrical workers, painters and metal workers, are on strike for an increase in wages. Five of the leading breweries are involved. The brewers say the strike will not affect them for several weeks. that destroyed the Empire Music hall. | |TOBACCO ~WORKERS STRIKE. death. The fire was about a mile from the mouth of the shaft and the flames | worked their way to the outside where there is an outcrop of coal. DR. ARRHENIUS I: IS HONORED Given First Gibbs Meds Medal by American | Chemical Society. Chicago, May 14.—Svante Arrhenius, Ph. D., professor in the University of | Stockholm, director of the Nobel insti- tute, was given the first William Gibbs medal by the Chicago section of the American Chemical society at a ban- quet in the gold room of the Congress hotel. The medal, which was founded by William A. Converse, was present- ed by Professor Alexander Smith, president of the society. Professor Arrhenius gave an ad- dress on “Electrolytic Dissociation.” COLONEL HIGGINSON DEAD and Abolitionist Passes Away at Cambridge. Cambridge, Mass., May 10.—Colonel Thomas Wentworth Higginson, his- torian and author, minister and sol- dier, one of the last of the group of famous scholars and abolitionists of half a century ago, died at his hocks | here, aged eighty-seven. Historian HOUSE WIRING AND FIXTURE HANGING A SPECIALTY Electrical Supplies ‘an dad Machinery Ww. N. DELCOUR ELETRICAL CONTRACTOR Leave Orders at HARDWARE DEP’TMENT Henry Hughes @ Co. P. O. BOX 154 Grand Rapids, Minn The Diamond Feed Co. Carries on hand a full line of Hay, Rough Feeds, Shorts, Bran, Oilmeals, etc ard is per- pared to attend your wants cn short notice Deliveries made to any Part of the village. Phone orders will receive prompt attention FW. C. TYNDALL SPRING WORRIES Everybody has their worries about this time of the year and if you are worrying aboutthe weave or cut of your spring suit, come in and let us lighten you of your burden. Our line of samples is more complete than ever and our designs are more perfect in shape, fit and looks. No use having that troubled feeling as long as we are in business. Perhaps your last year’s spring and summer suits need repairing and cleaning, or maybe they only need pressing. No matter what it is, we can fix them up in the proper manner. ‘‘Satisfaction is our motto.’’ Yours For Satisfaction, Wacthel & Hansen We also handle a fine line of ladies’ tailor made garments and invite inspection. set aes Vo MA Wy Cae ae4 an 2 IM, oa ait a qi ; We've just received our new tba “ Queen Quality Z styles for Shring ij and they're beauties. We did not if believe such footwear possible at the . price. The makers have outdone | ~— themselves. Smart, snappy styles with plenty of comfort and service—just what you have been looking for. You'll buy here eventually. Why not to-day ? The PIONEER STORE _ JHN BECKFELT, Prop. The REXALL Store has 300 reme- dies for 300 ailments WE have two, for two thousand ailments A Gem Trio and A Chauncy Russ Come in and try one. We know then you will call again every day THE CHAUNCY RUSS PARLOR Opposite the Gem Theatre