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A IS "6 wii I Low Fares y* TO Expositions In the matter of service we reoognize absolutely no competitors. We confess it without a blush. If you are in doubt, get acquainted with our methods. To make our service more complete, we need you as a subscriber. A good suggestion. Place your order today. Zenith 1 elepkone ompany CLYDE IRON WORKS FOUNDEBS and MACHINISTS Cor. 20tk At. A W. HteUcu SUDltatWHtU. I Daily March 1 to N«v. 30 Via The Northern Pacific Railway and .'Great Northern Pacific Tiiss. 0.'VWw MmTTi' 1 S. S. Co. along the Scenic Highway through some of earth's grandest and most inspiring scenery to &pokaoe, Seattle,Tacoma,Portland, in^ with steamship lines' at thine points, the Great Northern Pacific Steamship Company at Astoria or nul route at Portland for San Francisco. SEE Yellowstone National Park View the strange phenomena unequalled beauty of Wonderland. SEND FOR FREE TRAVEL LITERATURE including hand some Exposition folder and let us assist you in planning your 1915 vacation, xHOMA», Geo. Agt. c. r. O'DONNEtla, City W. So- Pass. Agt., 334 nerior 1 Rt(M SUNMb Hyiiwrili! MmMbmr. Hizlac HMUMV. RAILROAD TIME TABLES* DULUTH *IBON JtANOE B. B. Le^ve DULUTH Arrive 7:30 A.M. tll:30 A.M. Knife River. Two Harbors, Ely, Tower, 2: IS P.M. Aurora, Biwa bik, M'Klnley, *llr,30 P.M. Eveleth, Gil bert and Vir ginia •Daily. fDaily except Sunday. tSunday only. {Freight train carrying passengers. 5 35P.&J. tlO:16P.M. *10:45 P.M. Duluth, Missabe & Northern By. 1 Laav I Hlbblng, Virginia, Kve-| letb, Coleraliie tMoun-l tain Iron, Chlsholm. Bbaron, (Buhl) .Spar ta, tBlwabik Hlbblng, Virginia. Bve lath, Coleralna, Chls halm, Sharon, (Buhl). Virginia, Chlsholm, Hlb blng tDaily. tB*cept Sunday. Again, except for that stipulation, the Chancellor might issue Injunctions against libellous statements before publication, so as to make any kind of publication, no matter how lawful It might be nor how useful, a fear some thing to ^venture, lest'the Chan- condcleijce* {which was eOastio, in stead of the law of the land/which was rigid. Again, except for that stipulation, the Chancellor might get to Issuing ingenious injunctions^ against criminal conduct in labor strikes, when in the process of social evolution the time for them should come or against in nocent acts or words by. strikers, such as asking other .workers to join them in the strike or against strikers them selves and might, by thus subjecting strikers to arbitrary- trials by him self with Juries, so Intlmidateorgan ized workers that they would not dare to g* o& with lawful strikeS in lawful ways 16St they get tangled in his web-of judge-made law. But this wis prevented by that com-" promise between those! old" English chancellors and those old English judges^ The. compromise- left the 'Chancellors, with their King's con science. to deal with quarrels between property claimants over peculiar questions of property rights but ques tions of -human, liberty, and of all other human rights except property rights outside of- crime, were given up by the Chancellors. America's "Downfall." This iyimportant to Americans. For our country- was orginally a collec- 1776, they retained the' British laws at that time'in force among them. So we had chancery courts, and law courts apart ..from chancery courts, with different groups of judges in each, and our chancery courts were not allowed to manufacture judge made'law affecting human liberty or freedom of speech or of the press, nor to try criminal cases on pretense-of trying cases of contempt of court. If we had continued this separation of chancery and law courts, it is prob able that.no Chancellor in our country would ever have ventured to grant m junctions, either creating crimes or forbidding those the law created. The judges of the other courts would have seen to that for judges are pretty jealous of their powers, and this would have encroached upon the powers of the law judges'. But in course of time tile distinc tion betwen chancery courts and law courts was abolished with us not in form everywhere, but in fact, for the same men came to sit as judges in both courts. It was ^as if the King's conscience had been turned over to the law judges, so that if ready-made law wouldn't fit a particular' case they could peer into their chancery powers and construct judge-made law for that case. After this there Were no law judges to be jealous of chancellors, for they were themselves both chan cellors and law judges and In due course the chancellor in ,thgin. usurped a good .deal of their authority, as law judges, without any protest. So Judge made law .for particular cases en croached upon foe regular law- for all cases.* 'Judges. Many people approve this, because they think that justice is only a" ques tion of doing the right thing In .' each case, it flight bo if judges 'Were In fallible. But judges .are mere men, and, like all the rest of- us, they have their hearts chock-full ofr all icinds devils, -mm- Mr. Ch«st6*ton myi. The only way, then to do justice in particu lar cases is to apply the general rule*. This may make misfits sometimes, but never with the dajagf^bua' conse quences of judge-made .law. For isn't it plain that business association, personal frlehship and preju dice are powerful influences, in court* where Judge-made law flourishes? It certainly, has been so inihl* coun try since the distinction? between chancellors and law Judtfetf^d# a.bol i^h'eff- Jfone. «tt i£e. judges ar^e inter ested. now "In holding-any otherset[fa judges in check, and we haVe"gov ernment by. injunction." -Its feenefi. claries are business men when, labor strikes are on,, and its- victim is' or ganized labor. Through injunctions forbidding law1 less acts by labor strikers, judges usurp the power to try strikers for crime, without witneses or juries and to punish them at 'witt~l»t-for' the crime, indeed, but fbrcon tempt of court in having committed the crime Business conscience now, thesejud£es in making criniinai laws: Court Made law. Please observe that'"no *21 "t.44 am •8.50 pm •7.68 pmj 2tbid Jtt It 1 DCe S.ll pa »io.ti am Ml pm Baags Oaf• Observation Car ^Hissaba Points. Solid Vaatibula Train. Office 4!l Wast Superior 8tr«et. Phoaa set. LABOB AND THIS LAW. A BIT OF HISTORY (Omttned inn page l) might go to .the Chancellor and gay: "My neighbor threatens to stea} my pigeons, and the regular judges won't head him of, .nor..punish him for stealing them until he steals them is that according to the King's con science?" And then the Chancellor could reply: "It is not according to ftie King'sj coinscHenoe the Kingfa conscience revolts at it. I will issue an injunction forbidding your neigh bor to steal your pigeons and then if your pigeons disappear I will pun ish him for contempt of court for breach of that injunction." 19 that 1 a!*.®'iIIW8Jan^ STO0B8SrUI.00-0P. VALLEJO, 0*U*. VALLEJO, Cal., M'arch 1».—The tirit annual report ot the Associi tion of Mare Island Employes shows th|t, the nivy yard workers hAvd not only won thoir loni iljg&t acatnst o^pressire ferirage cohditlons, but they are now independent of the private ferry monopoly doer*ting be tween this city and th& M&re Island naVy yard. THE STRANGE CASE OF WINIFRED COLLINS A Combination of Events Not Lttwljr to H«ppan More Than Once. By MARGARET C.DEVEKEAUX tion of British colonies, governed by coming westward and was standing the laws of England and when they toward the island of Madeira when seceded from the mother country in get not only the power tb aetlw jurie® cast in the trial of criminal cases, but matted wfth blood, washed also the power to act iuif 'leglsStttii^i Jectjo^ ^punishlng^crirtu^ W W ganized labor, nor to preventing them There were other contusibh* on the then cut bff from relative*,- whd were also then, try out the question of giiilt, cut off ftom mer. If 'she hid come^to of'centuries has proved to be' neces sary'for the protection of innocence. ThiB makes our judges dictators. Now a dictator on a judge's bench- is just as bad *as one on a monarch's throne, and that is the motel of this story about organised labor and judge, made law.—in Uf and Labor. The fight started several years *So, when the workers attempted to maintain their own system. The courts held this was a violation oiF the- state ferry franchise law. The State Federation ot Labor assisted in having the lftw changed. Liter the ljavy dojpnrtment objected, but WM Withdrawn *hen Repr^son- tative Baker presented the workers' •Me of the departnient offlciafs at Washington. N«U VWBI At the present time the associa tion own 8 t$ree boats and his leftist iurw noais and has leased rental n| ISSO per month. The r* pOrt shews that insurance to the iaiditet of 180,000 Is carried on trdperty, and the satisfactory con dition of affairs has illnstrated to workenr the practi«ai beneftts that will follow co*6peratlon. 1ASCK TMLPR.^, TQItONTO, Ont., March 19.—Board of directors of. the labpr, temple in this city favor purchasing a new site.'The Present building i« a', magnificent, monument to organised labor, and is a' saccess financially, Aut the quarters fre proving too staliU to %ccomodat« the growing Torototo trads union move-v The ocean steameV Albert Corwith —. --w—— had passed, the strait* of Gibraltar the man in the crow's nest informed the' third mate o,n duty at' the time that something that looked like wreckage had appeared oh the port quarter. The ship was put off her course a few points, and On drawing nearer a ship's boat Was found Wedged in between a portion of a mast, a spar and some cordage. Meanwhile the captain had come on deck and was looking through his glasses at 1 1 1 the floating objects 'Isn't there some one in that boat, Mr. Itenshaw.?" he asked of the. third mate, Who was also using his binocu a "It looks that way,rsir." "Lower a boat and find out." The engines' were' stopped, a boat waf lowered, and the ,mate was pulled to the wreckage.: He, returned bear ing the body of a young woman. f'Dead?" asked the captain as the boat pulled alongside. "I think not,.sir." The gangway was lowered, and the woman was .carried, on. deck.* The mate had taken a flask with him and had given her a swallow of brandy. The ship's surgeon took charge of her and gave her an additional stimulant and soon after taking it she opened her eyes. "Bring some broth from the galley as soon as it can be prepared," said the doctor. Fortunately the dinner hour was at hand and the soup was ready. The girl closed her eyes and -had apparent ly relapsed into unconsciousness, but on being given a little of the broth she opened them again and' this time seemed to" take in- the men bending over her. -r -The surgeon- ^frected that she be takferi'-Welbw and turned over to the stewardess to bb put fnto a berth. It was soine time^ before the cast away was in" condition to-. :be ques tioned. Then. the.surgeon^. Dr. Reeves, undertook the task. The examination was brief, for the girl^Temembered nothing tfibck sof JS'ing- on' the 'ship's deck with'a number of men looking down uponv'her On the-return "of the rescue party the captain had1 Sent for the third mate, who had-been in« charge of it,, and asked him' if in the' wreckage he had seen anything to indicate to what Ship it had belonged. To this 1 Hen- shaw replied that ^e had not. There* was nothing that ^would have been likely to bear ttyfc vessel's name except the boat in whichgirl wa^ found, and this had ^been^bj battered by the aurrounding wreckage that mosjt of the paint ^adr biseh rubf^d Off. The offi cer had looked for a name' on the boat and had seen, only narta of a few remaining letters on the starboard stern. They resembled a or a C, an A and'ah,. or an^.N and were prob ably the last letters of the name of the ship to which the boat belonged. The captain had reproved the offi cer for Inot bringing the boat: with him, whereupon the flatter-, excused The stewardess, finding the cast- it and fowna^tiiaBit Itmd coin% from a contusion''of th« scalp. She in tended tO'call the ddctttr's attention to it, but ^it did not' seetn. to her to be o« much inlpoitaiice and1 was heal nbhe that were jerious. Here war a case of a girl of -twenty I,^W\Way' Flt,l®ut earth from another plaftet she cotild nf ®®t- have-been a- greater stranger. The ship on which she had sailed would Either "be reported missing or would make port, but neither of these hap penings would be likely to aive a ciew to the girl's identity. The Albert Corwith was bound for Boston and was due .there, about ten days after picking up the castaway. This did not give much time for a de cision as ti» what to do with the cast away When the ship reached^ port. In a few -days she waa Sufficiently ^re stored. to go. On deck and before the voyage was ended .was quite herself With the exception of. memory. She was srtill oblivious to the past. The captain headed a gubocriirtidn paper With, a substantiai amount. and it was pissed through the ship. The amount raised was given to the podr girl who niust go ashore to an-iinremembered world. The girl Was much moved, when the JhOniey Was given her and accepted it, hoping that some day 'she might benefit sOme one to a like amount. She must .h|tve a name since her own "Waii "lost, aiidi she decided to take that .of the ship whose crew had. rescued her. She would call herself Alberta Corwith. T^o yeirs^ before Uie resuce of th« eaitaway- a young man and a girl of eighteen were standih# on an emi netice hear Portland, Me., looking out to sea. On the morrow .they Were to part, for the girl was going to Europe to study art. "I tfotft like to think, Winifred'" said the man. "tiat the broad Atlantic Will be betwen us for so long a time. I shall 'scratch off tevery day on the Calendar as it passes till I have you With me again/' -y "It will not be lonlf, Tom," .replied the girl.. ','A year in not so riong as it was when we were children. A month iin't. much mbre than a week was, then, and it1 Is only eighteen rt, nUt ?&&&&*£ t':S\ ?, J, the Atlantic to Havre. She studledi both in France and Italy during a year and a: half, as she had intended, then went to^ Genoa to "sail for home. She wrote her lover that she would 'leavfc Genoa on a certain date In an ooean Steamer the name of which She gave him. When the ship came in. Toil Gilbreth was on the 0ock eagerly scanning the- passengers who de scended the gangway looking for his Winifred. The ljtoe grew thin ahd she had not appeared. The 'last per son descended, but not the girl he was looking for. Running, up the gangway, he sought the purser ^.nd asked him. if the name of. Winifred Collins was on the passenger list. It was not. '-'b The mystery was not solved withiii a week or two as Gilbreth supposed it would be. A monthxpassed and there were^. no tidings of Winifred Two months passed and her lover was in an agony of fear and suspense. Cablegrams to Genoa brought only the-information that her oiame was on the register of a hotel there the day the steamer on which she was to have sailed left port. She had paid her bill and left the-house two days later. Gilbreth went abroad in search of his bethrothed, .but, finding no trace of her, returned disappointed and in despair. He knew not which way to turn to continue his search. -Thinking that she might have sailed by another ship, he searched the records of Ships that had' Within that limit or time sailed from Italian ports and found that a small American owned ship, the Pelican, had sailed from Leghorn two days after the date Winifred wius to havg sailed from Genoa, but w$ts overdue several months^ Here was a clew to information concerning Winifred, but undesirable information. If Winifred had missed the ship on which she was to have .sailed and taken the Pelican• fnftead she was probably lost. Tom hoped that the clew he had found was in correct. One. day a friend of Tom's who knew of his trouble called his at tention to an item that had been floating among the newspapers men tioning the rescue of a: woman iat sea. It included mention of the-parts of letters on the boat from which she #as**~ taken.: He inferred that they A. N. the last*three letters of- the-: word Pelican. Then he knew that he was on the track of his be trothed. All now depended on his finding Al berta.- Corwith, Who had been merged in the millions of New York's inhabi tants. -There was but one medium by which she could be found. If that failed th^ task was impoS^ble. If Alberta Corwith had remained- in, 'New York the chances were far better] cthin if she had gone elsewhere. Tom laid out a system of advertising by which the New York field should be first covered, intending to extend the search throughout the United States: if the New York field did not produce the desired result. His advertise-, ment read, "Information wanted of Alberta Corwith." Within a month after the- insertion Tom receives a-not,'fromC a itriy.-gbbds firm in New Ybrfe jci^ff informing him that an Alberta Corwith was em ployed in one of their departments. Tom took the next train for. New York, went to the address mentioned and, on in inquiry, learnecpth£t Miss Corwith would be found in the cloak department. There he found Wini fred Collins. He sprang forward to clasp her ifv his. arms, but she recoiled He told'^ her who she was and that ne was her finance. She listened with inter est to what he said, but did not re member ever having seen him before. Winifred being found, the next question Was, could her memory be restored? The case was submitted to 'Physicians, who gave various re ports. -I'O'he medical man suggested that while knocked about i£ the boat among the wreckage the castaway might have received a blow on thi iiead that had produced the amnesia He examined Winifred's head and found a slight depression.' This was •the place from Which the Stewardess had washed away the clotted blood. Soon after this discovery Wini fred's skull Was operated upon. Sev eral person whom she had known be fore going abroad, Including her. be trothed, stood about her' when she came out from the effects of the an* aesthetic. Though suffering from it, her' "eye brightened, and on seeing her lover she attempted to hold out her arms to him. The case of .Winifred Collins ex cited marked attention owing to the strange combination of circumstances which .composed it. She had taken a train froin Paste which should Have? landed her In Genoa a couple of hours before the leaving of the steamer on Which she had intended to cross the Atlantic A railroad accident de layed- ttye train four 'hours. The story of the shipwreck was clear in her mind up to. i° certain point. After that is was a blink. She remembered, getting intothe ship's boat with several of the.crew and a few events after doing so. Then the mental record Stopped. The doc tors believed that at this point she received the* blow which suspended her memory till the .moment it- was restored by, the operation. Sponge Gnke, Orange Filling. Mix well together, three egg yolks* .three-fourth of a cupful: of sugir, the grated /ind of qhe lemon, one cup ful of'sifted flour and one teaspoon ful of baking powder. ^hen' well beaten together add a little salt and the whites of three eggs beaten stiff Bake for 16 .minutes, in Washington pie. tins. For the filling beat together the juice of one orange, with a little of the grated rind, one egg, one cup ful of sugar and two tableSpoonfutt of warmed. butter, and cook in a dou ble. boiler until it thickens. Sprea^L be tween the layers of cakg, WHEN SOOT MBBSB^ SfJpti The-lady waa the owner -of a, small Shop, writes the-LondonJCti Patroniie iw^ iadtatry. --You Wanit Office CAPITAI% OUR iraravisiiin Auuuvr trnmuok. 1 The .Steamer haying sailed on heif arrival, hearing that the ship from Leghorn would .sail the nest day, she went there and boarded it. seelnir her home, and carrying the c**h ha#-that 'contained the day's re ceipts. It was jfenerally, heavy. rtou muft he dotnSweel," remarked iirb- iS^^SSSe and Work Shirts Our largd faietories offer emplwTmAif let many Superior tmd Dvdntii people. JU1 th^ worloroams «r« models with reference to cle&oiiiiees end cnnitatioiL "NoErUilaad" gumente wear well.' -€top3 BAteria&s are wed thanou^ioiit. Especial oare takea nxader favoraible oobditioDs results in nraixfaotiiring 4ihe ideal garment for woric iognieiL A high-grade garment for reasonable ifioney. F. A. Patrick & Gmipany KANOTACTUIUHfca in THjE ONLY POUCY which pays fof Aocldent, 8lekhes^ Total DtsabtUty^or TV»lhffiuui ac cident or natural catwes, and PW*Maa savings ^und fox^old age,. Ig the PERFECT PROTECI16 ISSUED ONLY BY THE RELIANCE LIFE INSURANCE -COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH, Fire Insurance and Suretj^Bondii Manley-McLennan Agency, GenJlgents COAL, Pie WON, COKE, SUNDRY BY-PRODUCTS 57 AV6. W. THE FIRST NATIONAL QULUTH, MINN. DULUTH N POUCY WaHyHfaB. OooL' iVamt Qaar IhateJfca^eaa «n|or n» to'tbe )astt»ttff. That is why the ELCORA ta eo popular with particular people. ft la DeUdons, leswHoes and Dainty. It la made upon hoaor, hf aklltot verkmenfrem the beet frade of Hsnas Leaf. A8K YODlDEALER. n^XTXH CIGAR COMPANY us w«aizcniGuuiffir. Hew Phone eiS Old Fhoae ieM ay," th*"lMr ifo^ repiyT "NOTHING BETTER" v\- DULUTH BRKnfflNGt MAUINCl OOl. it 3 !CV 'A i* a giiid hit business. ^~But she d4d UdesI the moderate drawings the contained the counter wetrhts. not' disclose -that be- The ff» :l