Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, November 1, 1911, Page 9

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‘PAGE EIGHT. idvu GNVi5 WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1, 1911. © THE STATE News of Especial Interest tu Minnesota Readers, MOTRER tia chi PERISH 1BOUT TH Stove Explodes and Burns House Near Granite Falls. The farmhouse of Ole Johnson, two miles down the river from Granite Falls, was destroyed by fire and his wife and one child were killed by the flames. Mr. Johnson says he had been try- Micon love aud'as it would ct bare | WELL RECEIVED EVERYWHERE readily he went out after some kind- ling. While he was away he heard an ex- j t iates W: t ploaiph ‘adi, ‘ooking’ up) saw’ the’ en President at SPpieels es Warmth of tire lower part of the house ablaze. | | Welcome Given Him by the Peo- Rushing to the house he succeeded ple of Minnesota. in getting owt the youngest child, but , his wife and the older child had been left in the kitchen and it was impossi- ble to enter this room on account of welcome tendered President Taft in the heat. | Minnesota. . Fri | 3 om the time he en- After the fire had consumed the | tered the state at Glencoe he was house pieces of the stove were found | i | Teceived by cheering crowds. At @cattered about the room and some Shakopee two progressive legislators, Pieces were found in other rooms and | genator M. E. Cla; . EB. pp and Congressman 2 fo MT AO te ee | C. R. Davis, took part in the welcome Hearty and whole souled was the | would aid in starting the fire by pour- | | ing kerosene on the hot coals. executive's remarks were well re- suIT BEGUN AT MINNEAPOLIS | ceived and Mr. Taft showed that he Government Takes Action Against the #Ppreciated the warmth of his greet: Lumber Trust. | ine. The government’s fifth suit in its | fight to break up the so called lumber trust was begun in the United States court at Minneapolis, where most of the defendants live. The bill was filed by United States District Attor- ney Charles C. Houpt. It is directed against the Northwest Lumbermen’s association, the Lumber Secretaries’ Bureau of Information, an Tilinois corporation already under fire in another suit against the trust ernor Hberhart and a prominent group OU owe it to yourself and the boy to buy him clothes in which he will look his best and that will give the wear and satisfaction that boys | clothes should. If you will buy him Hercules All Wool Shower Proof Suits and other places. Everywhere the of Mankato, who turned out by thou- sisted upon carrying out the original program, including an automobile , in the open at the state normal school, &@ public address at the opera house and a dinner at the Elks’ club, fol- lowed by another short drive through the city to the Great Western depot. Addresses Crowd at Minneapolis. MADE BY brought in Colorado; Luke W. Boyce, At Minneapolis the president dis- DAUBE, COHN & COMPANY |} | owner of a private detective agency at ¢ussed trusts, international peace and CHICAGO Minneapolis, who is charged with spy- | railroad regulation before a large au- dience. After an introduction by Cyrus Northrop, in which the former presi- dent of the University of Minnesota and former instructor of Mr. Taft pic- tured the ‘president as the greatest of progressives because of his work in behalf of universal peace, the presi- dent made an address of an hour in which he discussed in detail the tariff ing on independent lumber dealers who had the temerity to violate trade “ethics” laid down by the alleged trust, and the Lumberman Publishing company, a Minnesota corporation which issues the Mississippi Valley Lumberman, a trade journal, which the government charges has been the organ of the trust in this section. | INDICTED ON A NEW CHARGE Mayor Dumas of Cass Lake Pleads i Not Guilty. Having learned that he had been jointly indicted with Edward and Ed- win Geralds and Ed Leclare for the alleged crime of arson in the third de- gree, committed at Blackduck on Fo Sale By March 19 last, Dr. Delbert F. Dumas, LIEBERMAN Bross ‘ietea ona charge’ of an ateempt at you will not only please the boy with a suit that has real style—but will also please yourself because you will save money on his clothes, Tailroad regulation question. The discussion of the trust question gave the president occasion to repeat his answer to the charge that he had Any Hercules suit you buy will out- wear two|suits of any other make re- gardless of price. Come into our store and Iet us show them to you, emasculate the anti-trust act and in more vigorous language than before. | “Of course,” he said, “there is not the slightest foundation in such a statement. Of course, I never had an understanding with any judge I ever put upon the bench upon any subject. “And the man, or the men, who make such a charge lightly reveal the fact that they have no realization of the iniquity, the corruption that would be involved in such an understanding.” Talks on Peace at St. Paul. The reception given President Taft at St. Paul was most cordial and he pees SE a arson at Puposky, came into court at Bemidji to enter a plea of not guilty. No attorney for the state happened to be present, and the Cass Lake may- or had to wait several minutes before he could make his plea to the new charge. In the meantime Attorney E. E. Mc- Donald, special counsel for the state EVEN A HEN CACKLES when she wants the public to know she has laid a new fresh egg, shouldn’t we make a big handsome new Fall ; and Winter woolens which we’ve re- why noise about the i from our famous Chicago tail- im the arson cases, was called, and he did not disappoint his audience in the Ed. V. Price & Co.? See them moved the arraignment of Dr. Dumas, talk he gave them. ure, and you'll not be sur- } who waived the reading of the indict- In clear cut, simple sentences he dis- ment and entered a plea of not guilty. , Bonds were fixed at $3,000, which makes a total of $24,000 bonds now up on behalf of the doctor. cussed the peace treaties which he has negotiated with England and France, explained their every detail and showed how they would be an ex- ample to other nations which would be an important step in avoiding bloody conflicts between nations. The president was in a happy mood. The speech in substance was one he had given before, but his many happy expressions and his ridicule of some of the arguments against certain pro- visions of the treaties brought many a round of laughter and applause from his audience. The Auditorium, where the pres- | ident spoke, has seen just as large ‘@ crowd a few times before, but | mo larger. For the Auditorium was | filled with 10,000 people, just as it was filled last year when the president spoke at the conservation congress and the day following when Roosevelt \ spoke there. | ALLEGED SLAYER ARRESTED Officers Get Chisholm (Minn.) Woman HOUSE WIRING AND FIXTURE HANGING A SPECIALTY | ‘ itor, Sleae. Mrs. Rosie Aspich, a prominent Chis- | holm woman, was arrested after a | long siege on a charge of poisoning her Electrical Supplies and Machinery _ husband, whose death ten days ago | was supposed to have beem due to al- W.N. DELCOUR j cium |. ‘Fhe body was exhumed and an au- ELETRICAL CONTRACTOR | topsy made by the officials disclosed | the presence of poison in the stomach. | Mrs. Aspich is being held in the Hib- | bing jail without bail pending the ac- \ tion of the grand jury. |HURLS HIMSELF TO DEATH | | Chisholm (Minn.) Miner Drops on Ex- ploding Dynamite Charge. After waving his hand in a fare- well saluie to his fellow workmen, Miles Subalz of Chisholm, twenty- |two years of age, rushed forward, threw himself upon a charge of dyna- mite about to explode and was blown | to pieces before the eyes of his horri- | fied companions. j) Subalz was an employe of the Leon- | ard mine at Chisholm. d that they are being praised he most particular dressers in reasonable. Ed. Prices very rschbach. SUPERFLUOUS HAIR, MOLES, WARTS Permanently removed by electricity. Exclusive specialist, expert operator. MISS AMES, 425 Lindley-Skiles Building, 620 1-2 Nicollet, Minne- apolis, Minnesota, Phones: Main 414, Center 3330. 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 and is per- pared to attend your wants on short notice Deliveries made to any Part of the village. Phone orders will receive prompt attention W. C. TYNDALL Motorcyclist Hurled to Death. Henry Knutson of St. Paul, twenty- two years of age, was hurled from his motorcycle by an automobile driv- en by John Cramsie and died a few minutes later in the operating room at St. Luke’s hospital, where he was taken in an automobile. Cramsie is held at Central station pending in- vestigation by Coroner Jones. left the house the woman thought she | that was formally extended by Gov- | of Minnesotans from the Twin Cities | Rain had no terrors for the people | sands to greet the president, who in- | question, the control of trusts and the | CHINESE REBELS | a moveRN HOTEL THE RIVERSIDE RETAKE HANKOW City Recaptured From Gov- ernment Troops. ‘FIGHTING MOST FURIOUS Estimated That One Thousand Revo- lutionists Were Killed and More Than Two Thousand Wounded in Recent Engagements—State of Ter- ror Prevailing at Peking Evidenced by Further Edicts. San Francisco, Nov. 1.—A dispatch Teporting the recapture of Hankow by the rebels 'was received here from Shanghai. According to the message the rebel army from Hanyang moved against the imperial forces and sur- rounded the city, compelling them to withdraw, after capturing two regi- ments. Four field cannon were among the spoils of the engagement. Hankow, Nov. 1.—The revolutionists have rallied and reorganized their ! forces and are furiously contesting drive through the country, an address | the imperialist advance on Hanyang. The insurgents still hold a section of the city, which separates the foreign concessions from the native city. The Red Cross doctors estimate that | 1,000 revolutionists have been killed set up the supreme court with the | understanding that the judges would | and between 2,000 and 3,000 wounded during the fighting of the past three days. The first attack of the imperialists was repulsed with heavy loss, the reb- els fighting with fanatical bravery. The government troops, however, ad- vanced again and again and although the rebels held their position their losses were very heavy against the firing of the well trained imperial troops. ADDITIONAL EDICTS ISSUED Chinese Throne Shows Indications of Being Terror Stricken. Peking, Nov. 1—The state of terror which has taken possession of the en- tire imperial court was further evi- denced by a long list of edicts supple menting the previous remarkable proclamation, offering further conces- sions of the most radical character. The latest edicts indicate that even though the dynasty survives, Manchu Tule is at an end. The tansfer even of the cabinet of- fices to native Chinese is ordered and the throne swears that “Hereafter Manchus and Chinese shall be regard- ed equally,’ meaning that the elabo- Tate system of Manchu pensions, which are now paid to practically every member of the race, will be dis- continued and the Manchus left to earn a living by their own enterprise. All the edicts are written in the: first person, as coming from the infant emperor himself. This is unusual and is apparently a device adopted by the throne’s advisers in a pathetic attempt to create among the people a feeling of personal loyalty for their sover- eign. The edict makes a complete capitu- lation to the demands of the national assembly and even go so far as to offer extravagant praise to the rebels for bringing about the great reforms which are promised. The throne abjectly acknowledges its incapacity, pleads ignorance of af- fairs, asks that its lapses be pardoned and requests the assistance and advice of all citizens. Finally it makes an hysterical effort to rally Chinese and | Manchus alike to the royal standard by hinting at grave foreign dangers, | which it thinks should be faced by a United China. Condemned His Own Relatives. In his struggle for existence the boy emperor even condemns many of his own closest relatives. The present officialdom, he declares, has not sought the interests of the people, but only its own pockets. The revolutionists are unimpressed by the flood of edicts from the em- peror. They declare that the dy- mesty’s partial surrender has come too late. Moreover, they do not trust the throne, regarding their present posi- tion as too strong for yielding to prom- ises which they feel are ineincere. The revolutionists point out that such edicts as these, wherein the throne’s own appointees and relatives are called thieves and scoundrels, do not tend to encourage . confidence. What the edicts state regarding the methods ot the present administration is, of course, admitted by the revolu- tionists, but the throne’s plea of ig- norance hitherto is regarded as in- creditable. While the edicts have apparently failed of their hoped for effect in con- “ciliating the rebels, they have stirred up a most formidable opposition from | @ new source. The announcement that most of the Manchu officeholders must go and that all the Manchu! pensions \.ill be cut off immediately produced a pronounced disaffection in the ranks of the Manchus and many members of this race at once began talking of a massacre of revenge. There are indications already that these proposals will find support, par- ticularly among the, younger Manchu princes, who will now be stripped of their high offices and unable longer to exploit their positions. J. F. McCORMICK, Propr. Newly Furnished Rooms, Large, Well Ventilated, Heated and Lighted. ACCOMMODATIONS BY DAY OR WEEK RATES REASONABLE Second Street and Leland Avenue, Grand Rapids. RETURNING TO GRAND RAPIDS NORTHWESTERN UNITED DOCTORS OF MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. AN ASSOCIATION OF PROMINENT PHYSICIANS GIVING FREE MED- | ICAL SERVICES TO THE SICK | AIND MEDICINES AT COST. ONE DAY ONLY The Northwestern United Doctors, largest doctor specialists in the Unit- ed States, practicing in Minnesota, Michigan, Iowa, Nebraska, Wisconsin North and South Dakota, organized and licensed by the states for the purpose of treating diseases, deform- ities and all curable ailments without surgical] operation. All that is asked | in return for these valuable services is that every person treated will state the result to their friends, and thus prove to the sick and afflicted | that at last treatments have discovered that are absolutely and certain in their effect. By their developed system no more | operations for appendicitis, gall stones, kidney stones, tumors, goiter, piles or cancer. They were among the first in America to do away with the knife, blood and pain in the suc- cessful treatment and cure of these dangerous diseases. Diseases of the stomach, intestines, liver, skin, nerves, heart, spleen, ) kidneys and bladder, rheumatism, | sciatica, diabetes, bedwetting, leg ulcers, epilepsy, or fits, etc., all | treated with gratifying success. | Selected cases of consumption, asthma, bronchitis and catarrhal] dis- | eases absolutely cured with combina- tion of medicine, hygiene, diet, exer- cise and the important uses and ad-| vantages of clothes, occupation, etc. been sure Many cases of deafness are fre- | quently cured in sixty days, Loss | of sight, cataract, granulated lids !and old weak, watery, sore eyes | treated after a plan that knows no | fail. In long standing, deep-seated, | chronic diseases of men and women, ! and slow growths and undeveloped | children’s diseases, a treatment that | |is absolutely certa'n in its effects | can be had and depended on. Eczema, salt rheum, eruptions, liv- er spots and chronic diseases of the skin quickly cured. An absolute guar antee in every case accepted for | treatment. Patients with cancer, tumor and tu- bercular glands not larger than one to two inches usually cured with} with one treatment, and this with- | out pain, | Patients with growths larger than two inches are not invited to call. No matter what your ailment may be, no matter what others have told you, no matter what experience you have had with other physicians, it} will be to your advantage to treat} with the Northwestern United Doc-| ‘tors Specialists. Even if your case} |is incurable they will give you such | | advice that will relieve you and stay | the disease. Do not put off this duty you owe} yourself, your friends, and your rela- tives, it may save your life. If you have kidney or bladde: trou-| | ble, bring a two-ounce bottle of your| For Sale. One Victor phonograph, 50 records, all good selections, and one black robe, 10 links of new Russian iron stove pipe. 3 elbows.—Phone No. 168. ‘@> Eyes Dr. Larson, the eye specialist, will make his next regular visit to Grand Rapids on usual dates the 15th and 16th of every month. All those having defective eyes or in need of the proper service for the fitting of glasses, cordially invited to call at Hotel Pokegama the 15th and 16th of every month. LARSON & LARSON. | | urine for analysis. | This free offer is for this trip only. Hours 11 a. m. to 8 p. m. | Married ladies must come | their husbands and minors with ‘ their parents. | Noy. 1-8. | Good Custom Tailored C lothe s can't be furnished be- low a certain price, and the man who buys them for less will soon discover i'that he has spent money for a costly experiment. Through our Chicago tailors Ed. V. Price &8 Co. we are enabled to de- liver reliable clothes that we know em- body fine woolens cut in latest fashion and hand needled by A : iskilled artisans for the lowest price con- sistent with quality. French dry cleaning and Pressing of ladies and gentlemen’s garments, Furs altered and remodeled. Work with called for and delivered. Phone No. DENNIS & HERSCHBACH pics

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